key: cord- - d esp authors: walker, peter j.; firth, cadhla; widen, steven g.; blasdell, kim r.; guzman, hilda; wood, thomas g.; paradkar, prasad n.; holmes, edward c.; tesh, robert b.; vasilakis, nikos title: evolution of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviridae date: - - journal: plos pathog doi: . /journal.ppat. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: d esp rna viruses exhibit substantial structural, ecological and genomic diversity. however, genome size in rna viruses is likely limited by a high mutation rate, resulting in the evolution of various mechanisms to increase complexity while minimising genome expansion. here we conduct a large-scale analysis of the genome sequences of animal rhabdoviruses, including genomes which we determined de novo, to identify patterns of genome expansion and the evolution of genome complexity. all but seven of the rhabdoviruses clustered into well-supported monophyletic groups, of which eight corresponded to established genera, seven were assigned as new genera, and two were taxonomically ambiguous. we show that the acquisition and loss of new genes appears to have been a central theme of rhabdovirus evolution, and has been associated with the appearance of alternative, overlapping and consecutive orfs within the major structural protein genes, and the insertion and loss of additional orfs in each gene junction in a clade-specific manner. changes in the lengths of gene junctions accounted for as much as . % of the variation in genome size from the smallest to the largest genome, and the frequency with which new orfs were observed increased in the ’ to ’ direction along the genome. we also identify several new families of accessory genes encoded in these regions, and show that non-canonical expression strategies involving turbs-like termination-reinitiation, ribosomal frame-shifts and leaky ribosomal scanning appear to be common. we conclude that rhabdoviruses have an unusual capacity for genomic plasticity that may be linked to their discontinuous transcription strategy from the negative-sense single-stranded rna genome, and propose a model that accounts for the regular occurrence of genome expansion and contraction throughout the evolution of the rhabdoviridae. rna viruses are among the most structurally and ecologically diverse of all life forms [ ] . their genomes may consist of positive (+) sense, negative (-) sense or ambi-sense singlestranded (ss) rna, or double-stranded (ds) rna, and may take the form of a single or multiple segments that are packaged in single or multiple particles. rna viruses also employ a plethora of strategies for replication and gene expression, and encode a vast array of structural and nonstructural proteins, many of which are unique and have multiple, highly specialized functions [ ] . despite their diversity, rna virus genomes are ubiquitously small, averaging only kb, and with a maximum size of~ kb for some members of the order nidovirales [ , ] . this size limitation has been linked to high mutation rates (a mean rate of~ mutation /genome /replication) due to replication with an error-prone rna-dependent rna polymerase that lacks proofreading capability [ , ] . high error rates are thought to limit genome sizes because, as size increases, the number of deleterious mutations also increases to levels beyond which reproduction of the fittest variant cannot be guaranteed [ , ] . due to this fundamental evolutionary constraint, rna viruses have employed various mechanisms of genome compression, such as the use of alternative or overlapping open reading frames (orfs) and the evolution of multiple functions for individual proteins [ , , ] . for some rna viruses, increases in genome size have been associated with increases in the size of replicative proteins [ ] and the presence of helicase and proof-reading exonuclease domains [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, the mechanisms and evolutionary context that would favour increased genome size and complexity, given constraints on replication efficiency, are currently unknown [ , ] . the rhabdoviridae is one of the most ecologically diverse families of rna viruses. rhabdoviruses have been identified in a very wide range of plants and animals, including mammals, birds, reptiles, and fish with many transmitted by arthropod vectors [ , ] . the family includes rabies virus (rabv), which causes over , human deaths annually [ ] , vesicular stomatitis indiana virus (vsiv), which has served as an important model for the study of many aspects of mammalian virus replication and virus-host interactions, and many other important pathogens of humans, livestock, farmed aquatic animals and food crops. the nonsegmented [-] ssrna rhabdovirus genome is packaged within a characteristic bullet-or rodshaped particle comprising five structural proteins-the nucleoprotein (n), polymeraseassociated phosphoprotein (p), matrix protein (m), glycoprotein (g) and rna-dependent rna polymerase (l) [ ] . the genome features partially complementary, untranslated leader (l) and trailer (t) sequences and five orfs arranged in the order '-n-p-m-g-l- '. each orf is flanked by relatively conserved transcription initiation (ti) and transcription termination/ polyadenylation (ttp) sequences which orchestrate expression of the five corresponding capped and polyadenylated mrnas [ ] . rhabdovirus genomes may also contain additional orfs encoding putative proteins, which are mostly of unknown function. these may occur as alternative or overlapping orfs within the major structural protein genes or as independent orfs flanked by ti or ttp sequences in the regions between the structural protein genes [ ] , some of which appear to have arisen by gene duplication [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . here we undertake the first large-scale analysis of the evolution of genome size and complexity in a family of [-] ssrna viruses. we demonstrate that remarkable changes in genome size and complexity have occurred in rhabdoviruses in a clade-specific manner, primarily by extension and insertion of additional transcriptional units in the structural protein gene junctions, followed by occasional losses. we also show that rhabdoviruses have evolved a large number of accessory proteins and that the use of non-canonical gene expression strategies appears to be common, particularly amongst vector-borne rhabdoviruses. our data set comprised the complete or near-complete genome sequences of animal rhabdoviruses, including viruses isolated from various vertebrates and arthropods for which we determined the sequences de novo (s table) . incomplete genomes lacked only the extreme terminal sequences. all rhabdovirus genomes contained the five canonical structural protein genes (n, p, m, g and l); however, there was remarkable diversity in the number and location of other long orfs. across the data set, we identified additional orfs nt in length of which shared no detectable protein sequence similarity with any other protein in our data set or with those in public databases (s table) . these additional orfs were located either within the structural protein genes or in additional transcriptional units located in regions between these genes (fig. ) . the additional transcriptional units were annotated by using relatively conserved ti and ttp motifs. the core ti sequence (uugu) was conserved with some minor variations (cugu, uugc, uuga, ucgu, ugau) employed in some viruses. the ttp motif g[u] was also conserved, with the variation a[u] occurring only in several genes of one virus (chov). due to the large number and diversity of additional orfs, we adopted a standard nomenclature that does not necessarily reflect structural homology. unless previously assigned a distinctive name (e.g., befv g ns , α , α , β and γ proteins), all orfs nt were assigned names according to the following rules: i) each additional transcriptional unit was designated u (unknown) followed by a number as they appeared in order in the genome presented in positive polarity (i.e., u , u , u , etc); ii) the first orf within each transcriptional unit was assigned the same designation as the transcriptional unit; and iii) each subsequent orf within any transcriptional unit (alternative, overlapping or consecutive) was designated by letter (i.e., u x, u y, u z) (s table) . alternative orfs are defined here as those which occur in a different frame within another longer orf; overlapping orfs are alternative orfs which extend beyond the end of the primary orf; and consecutive orfs are those which do not overlap but follow consecutively within the same transcriptional unit. the arbitrary cut-off of nt ( aa) was selected on the basis that two small basic proteins of and amino acids (c and c') have been shown to be expressed from an alternative orf within the vsiv p gene [ , ] . these are the smallest known rhabdovirus proteins. to determine the evolutionary history of the rhabdoviruses studied here, we inferred a phylogenetic tree using conserved regions of the l protein of all viruses in our data set as well as the recently described north creek virus (norcv) [ , ] (fig. ) . all but two of these rhabdoviruses (norcv and mouv) clustered into well-supported monophyletic groups (bootstrap proportion [bsp] ); however, many of the deeper nodes were unresolved throughout the phylogeny. eight of the well-supported clades corresponded to the eight established genera (lyssavirus, vesiculovirus, perhabdovirus, sigmavirus, ephemerovirus, tibrovirus, tupavirus and sprivivirus) and we assigned a further seven clades as proposed new genera (almendravirus, bahiavirus, curiovirus, hapavirus, ledantevirus, sawgravirus and sripuvirus). the taxonomic assignment of the two remaining clades was considered to be ambiguous (s table) . for simplicity of expression we refer here to all as 'genera', whether existing or proposed, but we recognise that taxonomic proposals require consideration and ratification by the international committee on taxonomy of viruses (ictv). although the analysis was limited by the availability of single isolates of most viruses, apparent structure by geographic location or reservoir host was not observed in the phylogeny. however, multiple genera appeared to be primarily associated with bats (i.e., ledanteviruses, lyssaviruses), fish (i.e., perhabdoviruses, spriviviruses) or ungulates (i.e., ephemeroviruses, tibroviruses, vesiculoviruses). vector-borne rhabdoviruses were present in of the groups, dominating the dimarhabdovirus supergroup, but were largely absent from clades associated with bats (lyssavirus), flies (sigmavirus) and fish (perhabdovirus, sprivivirus) (fig. ) . the exception to this trend was the tupavirus clade, which comprised viruses that have not yet been associated with a vector species, and for which little is known about their ecology or distribution. each of the seven newly proposed rhabdovirus genera formed an independent, well-supported monophyletic group in the l protein phylogeny (bsp ), and comprised viruses with similar genome organization ( fig. ; fig. ). in several instances, viruses clustered closely with other members of a genus, yet we considered them to be unassigned species due to major differences in genomic architecture (see below). for example, the newly proposed genus curiovirus comprises a monophyletic group of four viruses isolated from biting midges (culicoides sp.), sandflies (lutzomyia spp.) and mosquitoes (coqillettidia and trichoprosopon spp.) from the forests of south america and the caribbean (s table) . the genomes of curv, irirv, rbuv and itav all have one or more orfs located between the m and g genes, and the g and l genes. in contrast, the closely related aruv and inhv lack additional genes between the m and g and for this reason we have excluded them from the genus curiovirus at this time. we also recognize the previous suggestion that curv and itav should be assigned to a new genus for which the name bracorhabdovirus (brazilian amazonian culicoides rhabdoviruses) was proposed [ ] . however, our analysis clearly indicates that this monophyletic group has a broader host range and geographic distribution than this regionally-derived name suggests. five of the novel viruses (comprising four putative new species) identified in this study were assigned to established genera. two of these, koolv and yatv, clustered within the existing ephemerovirus clade, (bsp ) and possessed the characteristic genome organization of ephemeroviruses, including a non-structural glycoprotein gene (g ns ) followed by a viroporin newly proposed genera are indicated by a † symbol. cytorhabdovirus, novirhabdovirus and nucleorhabdovirus outgroup sequences were excluded from the tree as they were too divergent to establish a reliable rooting. the tree is therefore rooted arbitrarily on one of two basal clades (genera almendravirus and bahiavirus) that comprise viruses isolated from mosquitoes. (α ) and several other small proteins ( fig. ; fig. ). similarly, two novel viruses isolated from biting midges (culicoides insignis), swbv and bav, clustered within the genus tibrovirus (bsp ) and exhibited the conserved n-p-m-u -u -g-u -l genome organisation ( fig. ; fig. ; s table) . swbv was assigned as a new species (sweetwater branch virus), but bav is closely related to tibv and may be regarded as the same species (tibrogargan virus). finally, a novel tupavirus (klav) identified from two species of vole (microtus and clethrionomys spp.), clustered with the tupv and durv clade in the l protein phylogeny ( fig. ; s table) . a more detailed rationale for the assignment of viruses to existing and proposed new genera is provided as supplementary text. we identified a . % variation in genome size from the smallest genome (fukv, ledantevirus; , nt) to the largest in our data set (koolv, ephemerovirus; , nt). all genomes, including those for which extreme terminal sequences were unresolved, appeared to fall within this range. variations in genome size were associated with: i) variation in the length of intergenic regions (igrs) between transcriptional units; ii) variation in the length of ' and ' untranslated regions (utrs) within individual transcriptional units; iii) the presence of additional transcriptional units containing long orfs; and iv) the presence of overlapping or consecutive long orfs within individual transcriptional units. an examination of genome size across the phylogeny revealed a general trend towards larger genomes in the lower third of the tree, which is comprised of the hapaviruses, curioviruses, tibroviruses and ephemeroviruses, as well as several unassigned viruses (s fig.) . although this may indicate that an enhanced capacity for genome expansion is a property specific to this group, variation in genome size can also be observed between viruses in the majority of genera in the data set. several clade-specific patterns were evident when the lengths of the transcriptional units and igrs were compared within and between rhabdovirus genera (table ) . ledantevirus genomes were smallest on average ( . × the length of the l) whereas ephemeroviruses genomes were the largest ( . × the length of the l, table ). interestingly, although substantial variation in the length of gene junctions was observed in several genera (including ephemeroviruses and lyssaviruses), most variation in genome size occurred as the result of the presence of new, non-canonical orfs in the regions between the structural protein genes (table ) . although new orfs were observed in each igr across the phylogeny (n-p, p-m, m-g and g-l) their location was primarily restricted to a single igr within each genus. for example, while hapavirus genome expansion occurred primarily in the p-m junction, genome expansion in the ephemeroviruses occurred at the g-l junction and tibrovirus and curiovirus genomes contained additional orfs primarily in the m-g junction (table ). this suggests that once a new orf arises at a particular gene junction within a lineage, further expansion is more likely to continue at the same gene junction, rather than begin anew elsewhere in the genome. whilst the genome architecture in some viruses was highly compact, others featured long stretches of sequence with non-ascribed function that occurred primarily as 'utrs and 'utrs within transcriptional units (fig. ) . the proportion of untranslated sequences within or between transcriptional units ranged from . % (fukv; nt) to . % (wcbv; nt) and did not correlate with genome size. furthermore, although all lyssaviruses (such as wcbv) featured a high proportion of untranslated sequences (primarily evident as a very long 'utr in the g gene), there was no consistent association between the proportion of untranslated sequences and genus assignment (fig. ). for example, in the genus hapavirus, the proportion of untranslated sequences in the two largest genomes varied from . % (ngav) to . % (ljv). similarly, in the genus ephemerovirus the proportion of untranslated sequences varied from . % in the smallest genome (yatv) to . % in the largest genome (koolv). the presence of long stretches of untranslated sequence, which occurred primarily within transcriptional units, suggests these regions may be functional. however, it is unclear at this time why they are present in some rhabdoviruses and not in others. gene duplication. previous studies have provided evidence of gene duplication in the rhabdoviridae, involving the g and g ns genes [ , ] and the β and γ genes [ ] in the ephemeroviruses, and the u , u and u genes in the hapaviruses flav and wonv [ , , ] . to identify further examples of gene duplication, we conducted a blast analysis of all proteins in our database (e-value < e- ) and used clustalx alignments to confirm sequence similarity. by this analysis, orfs located between the p and m genes of most hapaviruses encode proteins which share detectable sequence similarity. this family of homologous p-m intergenic region proteins (pmips) includes the u , u and u proteins of ljv, wonv, pcv, orv, ljav, manv, mqov, flav, hpv, kamv and mosv (s fig. and s fig.) , as well as the u x proteins of manv and glov which are encoded in orfs overlapping their respective u orfs (s fig.) . although pairwise alignments provide clear evidence for homology, the hapavirus pmips share generally low levels of sequence identity and no universally conserved motifs, indicating considerable structural and functional divergence from their ancestral homolog. proteins encoded in the p-m region in other hapaviruses (i.e., joiv u , ngav u , u x and ngav u ) failed to display significant similarity with the pmips or evidence of gene duplication but this may be due to further structural divergence. additional evidence of gene duplication included the u and u proteins of joiv (encoded in orfs located between the g and l genes), and the n-terminal regions of the p proteins and the upstream u accessory proteins of the sripuviruses chov and smv, each of which share significant sequence similarity (s fig.) . these data suggest that the u protein of the sripuviruses originated from a duplication of the p gene, with the downstream copy of the gene retaining the parental function. similarly, in the curioviruses there is extensive amino acid sequence similarity between the u proteins of curv and irirv and the n-terminal region of the g proteins, suggesting evolution of u through partial duplication of the g gene, which lies immediately downstream. putative accessory genes were found to be abundant and varied greatly in number and location in each genome (fig. ) . a complete list of orfs > nt is annotated in s table. in most cases, homology searches detected no significant amino acid sequence identity with entries in genbank. however, various rhabdovirus accessory gene families were identified based on amino acid sequence identity in our custom blast searches, or common structural characteristics. viroporins. viroporins are small hydrophobic proteins that oligomerize in host cell membranes to form hydrophilic pores, disrupting various cellular processes and promoting virus replication [ ] . orfs encoding viroporin-like proteins were found in more than one-third of the rhabdoviruses in the data set, either as overlapping or consecutive orfs within the g gene, or in additional transcriptional units following the g (or g ns ) gene (fig. ) . orfs encoding putative viroporins were evident in the genomes of all ephemeroviruses, tibroviruses, hapaviruses, bahiaviruses, almendraviruses and curioviruses, as well as the unassigned species aruv and inhv (fig. ) . several of these proteins have been identified previously [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . like the befv α protein for which viroporin activity has been confirmed experimentally, these proteins have the structure characteristics of class ia viroporins, including a central transmembrane and a highly basic c-terminal domain. however, although located in similar positions in the genomes, they are generally too divergent in sequence to establish orthology [ , ] . other small transmembrane proteins. small proteins with a predicted central transmembrane domain but lacking other characteristics of class a viroporins were identified in several other rhabdoviruses (s fig.; s table) . transmembrane proteins with an n-terminal ectodomain are encoded in the gx orf of sripuviruses and the u orf of one curiovirus (rbuv). however, in other curioviruses (curv and irirv), transmembrane proteins are encoded in the u orf and are predicted to have the reverse membrane topology to the rbuv u protein. sequence alignments further suggest these proteins are not orthologous. there is also a small double-membrane spanning protein with a predicted short ectodomain loop encoded in an alternative orf in the fukv m gene that is not present in other ledanteviruses. other small hydrophobic (sh) proteins. small highly hydrophobic proteins ( . - . kd) lacking predicted transmembrane domains are encoded in all tupaviruses (as independent transcriptional units following the m gene) and sripuviruses (as overlapping orfs within the m gene) (s fig.; s table) . all have similar hydropathy profiles with a highly hydrophilic n-terminal domain extending to the centre of the sequence, but sequence identity indicative of orthology is restricted to closely-related viruses. several of these sh proteins have been identified previously but their function remains unknown [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . large class i transmembrane glycoproteins. all ephemeroviruses encode a class i transmembrane glycoprotein (g ns ) in the orf following the g gene [ , , , ] . ngav (assigned to the proposed new genus hapavirus) also encodes a g ns protein with similar structural characteristics [ ] . however, as we found no evidence to support recombination between ngav and any ephemerovirus, the ngav g ns gene is likely to have arisen by an independent duplication event of the upstream g gene with which it shares amino acid sequence identity. orf u immediately following the mcov g gene (genus hapavirus) also encodes a large class i transmembrane glycoprotein but lacks the set of conserved cysteine residues that are characteristic of g and g ns proteins, and our homology searches failed to identify similarity with any known protein (s fig.) . other genus-specific accessory gene families. orthologous sets of accessory genes occur in genus-specific patterns in each of the structural protein gene junctions ( fig. ; s table) . in addition to the hapavirus pmip genes, these include genes in the n-p junction of sripuviruses chov and smv (u proteins), the m-g junction of curioviruses (u and u x proteins) and tibroviruses (u and u proteins), and the g-l junction of curioviruses (u x proteins) and ephemeroviruses (α , β, γ and δ proteins) (s fig. to s fig.) . some of these orthologous gene sets have been described previously [ ] . most encode proteins without remarkable structural characteristics and of unknown function (s table) . several general architectural patterns in the arrangement of orfs were evident, implicating several mechanisms of non-canonical gene expression. non-cannonical expression mechanisms are used commonly in other families of rna viruses to increase genome complexity without significantly increasing genome size [ ] . the patterns we observed in this data set were associated with consecutive, overlapping of alternative orfs within individual transcriptional units. consecutive orfs and turbs motifs. consecutive long orfs with termination and initiation codons that are either overlapping (e.g., uaaug) or separated by a short stretch of nucleotides were common in several groups of rhabdoviruses (fig. ) . as previously observed for flav, this 'stop-start' arrangement is commonly preceded by a 'termination upstream ribosome-binding site' (turbs), which contains a short sequence motif that is complementary to the loop region of helix of s ribosomal rna [ , ] . the turbs may also contain flanking anti-complementary sequence motifs that are predicted to form a stem-loop structure. this arrangement was found in the m transcriptional unit in the sripuviruses, the g transcriptional unit of several hapaviruses (flav, hpv, manv, mqov, kamv, mosv and glov) and the transcriptional unit between the p and m genes of glov. the 'stop-start' arrangement also occurs in the transcriptional unit between the g and l genes of aruv, allowing expression of the u orf, but in this case the turbs appears to be further upstream of the stopstart site. finally, the α gene transcriptional unit in most ephemeroviruses contains consecutive orfs encoding a viroporin (α ) and a second protein of unknown function (α ). in kotv, a tubrs is evident upstream of the stop-start site but in other ephemeroviruses the turbs appears to be more cryptic. overlapping orfs and ribosomal-frame shift (rfs) sites. overlapping orfs are common in rhabdovirus genomes and represent a second common architectural arrangement requiring non-canonical gene expression. overlapping orfs occur within the n transcriptional unit (wonv, orv, pcv, mcov, manv), the g transcriptional unit (wonv, orv, pcv, bgv, harv) or within additional transcriptional units between the p and m genes (manv, ngav) or the m and g genes (curv, irirv, rbuv). expression of the second orfs in these arrangements would require either internal initiation in an alternative reading frame or another mechanism such as rna editing or a ribosomal frame-shift (rfs) to extend the first orf. use of alternative initiation codons has been reported in the m and p genes of vsv and the p gene of rabv, and rna editing has been described in the p gene of paramyxoviruses [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . although not described previously in mononegaviruses, potential rfs sites were identified in some of these rhabdovirus gene overlap regions, featuring the 'slippery' sequence motifs uaruuuuuuca (bgv, harv, msv) or ccnuuuuuuga (wonv, orv, pcv) followed by a predicted stem-loop structure (s fig.) . these sequence motifs and associated stem-loop structures most closely resemble the- rfs that allows expression of gag-pol in hiv- and other lentiviruses [ , ] . alternative orfs and leaky ribosomal scanning. the third architectural arrangement involves the use of alternative orfs within a longer orf. this arrangement was described previously in vsiv, in which two small basic proteins of and amino acids (c and c') are expressed from an alternative orf within the p gene [ , ] . on this basis, we scanned the rhabdovirus genome data set for alternative orfs of various size ranges and observed that the frequency varied from~ . /genome for orfs in the range of - nt ( - amino acids) tõ . /genome for range - nt ( - amino acids) (fig. ). alternative orfs amino acids occurred in each of the structural protein genes (n, p, m, g and l) and in the additional transcriptional units between the p and m genes. they were most common in the p and least common in the m genes. as observed in other viruses, expression of these alternative orfs could occur by leaky ribosomal scanning, allowing initiation of transcription by a proportion of ribosomes on the alternative start codon [ ] . although, it is not known which (if any) of these alternative orfs are expressed, several factors are likely to be important in determining the probability and level of expression: i) the kozak contexts of the first and alternative initiation codons; ii) the length of the alternative orf (longer orfs are less likely to occur by chance); iii) the location of the alternative orf (distally located orfs are less likely to be expressed in long transcripts); and iv) the expression level of the transcript (l gene transcripts are likely to be the least abundant). for example, short orfs with initiation codons in poor kozak context at the distal end of the l gene are not likely to be expressed at significant levels, if at all. however, in some cases, closely related viruses were found to contain alternative orfs at the same genome location, with initiation codons in good context and encoding predicted polypeptides with high levels of sequence identity (s table) . such arrangements occurred in the n table. doi: . /journal.ppat. .g genes of hpv and flav, the p genes of manv and mqov, the u and m genes of kamv and mosv, and near the start of the g genes of the sripuviruses (niav, sriv, chov and smv); these proteins are considered very likely to be both expressed and functional. we have conducted a detailed analysis of the structural organisation and genome evolution of a family of negative-sense rna viruses-the rhabdoviridae. previous studies have surveyed known rhabdoviruses for biological and genomic diversity, revealed phylogenetic relationships, and considered factors that may have determined their rates of evolution [ , , , ] . in this study, we greatly expanded the repertoire of rhabdovirus genome sequences, which demonstrate extensive variation in genome size and complexity, allowing the assignment of seven proposed new genera. we also identified patterns of accessory gene evolution and expression, and showed that changes in rhabdovirus genome length and composition have occurred throughout the evolutionary history of the family, primarily through the generation and loss of new transcriptional units. this observation is especially striking given the obvious constraints on viral genome size [ ] . the most remarkable aspect of this analysis is the number and variety of additional orfs identified in rhabdovirus genomes, which provides a very different perspective of the family and its evolution than had been obtained from studies of the traditional prototype members (vsiv and rabv). as many of these orfs occur as additional transcriptional units complete with conserved transcriptional control sequences, there is a high likelihood that they would be expressed in infected cells. expression of orfs located in additional transcriptional units has been demonstrated previously for several ephemeroviruses and for the hapavirus wonv [ , , , , , ] . others occur as either alternative or overlapping orfs. further studies are required to determine which of these orfs may be expressed, but we suggest that expression is likely when both the encoded amino acid sequence and the translational context are conserved in related species. notably, very few of the additional orfs detected in this analysis encode proteins with identifiable sequence similarity to other known proteins. sequence similarity, when detected, occurred only between closely related viruses assigned to a genus and, although some accessory protein families were identified, these were more commonly related by shared structural characteristics, such as charged or transmembrane domains, than by sequence. this has been observed previously for so-called orphan ('orfan') proteins in other viruses and bacteria. it has been suggested that the uniqueness of orphan proteins, or their restriction to a single species or genus, is the result of creation de novo, rather than by recombination or lateral gene transfer, and that they play an 'accessory' role in viral pathogenicity or transmission instead of having functions in virion structure or replication [ ] [ ] [ ] . it has also been observed that many orphan proteins are predicted to be highly disordered in structure or, when ordered, structural resolution has revealed unique folds [ ] . as such, future determination of the biological activities of the plethora of novel proteins identified here will require functional studies that may well provide important insights into aspects of infection and immunity as well as fundamental cellular processes and pathways. substantial variation in genome size and complexity was also observed in many rhabdovirus genera, suggesting that the length of the genome is not heavily constrained in all members of the family. indeed, the presence of new orfs and/or very long stretches of non-coding sequence within or between transcriptional units was noted frequently. previous observations have demonstrated that foreign genes of up to~ kb can be inserted into the vsiv genome without significant disruption to viral replication in vitro [ , ] . expanded vsiv genomes were morphologically similar but proportionally longer than wild-type viruses, suggesting that the unique morphology of the rhabdovirus particle may more readily accommodate genome expansion than other virion structures. a significant body of evidence suggests that genome size in rna viruses is likely to be constrained by low replication fidelity [ , ] , and a relationship between genome size and error rate has been observed in a diverse array of organisms [ ] . however, if the genome sizes of rhabdoviruses are constrained by selective pressures other than (or in addition to) those imposed by the background mutation rate, genome expansion may not require a concomitant reduction in polymerase error rates. as the mutation rate of rhabdoviruses has only been determined experimentally for vsiv thus far (~ × - subs/ nucleotide/replication), it is impossible to assess whether the increases in genome size observed here have been associated with concomitant reductions in mutation rate [ ] . it is also striking that while some rhabdovirus genomes appear to have undergone major changes in length and complexity, others contain only the ' and ' promoter regions and five canonical transcriptional units with minimal ' and 'utrs. this suggests that the acquisition and loss of new genes and intergenic regions may be a regular feature of rhabdovirus evolution. previous studies of rna viruses have concluded that constraints on genome size imposed by polymerase error have led to various strategies to minimize genome size while increasing functional complexity, such as gene overlaps and protein multi-functionality [ , ] . given these size constraints, it is unclear why long non-coding regions would arise both within and between transcriptional units and be maintained throughout the evolution of some rhabdovirus genera. it has been known for many years that a long '-utr of unknown function (ψ region) in the g gene of rabv is unnecessary for efficient replication in cell culture or in mice, but may play a role in neuroinvasion [ ] [ ] [ ] . indeed, the retention of similar ψ regions in all lyssaviruses and the existence of long utrs and igrs in other rhabdoviruses suggests that they must provide some fitness advantage in vivo, such as stabilising rna secondary structure, serving as a source of, or targets for, micro rnas, or attenuating transcription of downstream genes to achieve the most effective balance of gene expression. indeed, an analysis of patterns and rates of sequence evolution in the rhabdoviridae and other families in the mononegavirales revealed that, although non-coding regions are less conserved than those that encode proteins, their evolutionary rates are associated with relative genomic position, suggesting that they impact on gene expression [ ] . additional orfs and non-coding sequences occurred at all junctions of the canonical structural protein genes (i.e., n-p, p-m, m-g, and g-l), although there was variation in both the frequency of insertion and the extent of expansion. notably, insertions at the n-p junction are rare, with a single additional orf present in the closely related sripuviruses chov and smv, and short overlapping orfs present within the n gene transcriptional unit in some hapaviruses. it has been reported previously in a study of vsiv recombinants that only the n-p gene junction was refractory to the stable expression of an inserted transcriptional unit, and resulted in a virus with significantly reduced replication efficiency [ ] . in contrast, transcriptional units inserted at other gene junctions were stably expressed, maintained through repeated passages and had no effect on replication efficiency. as the insertion of additional transcriptional units attenuates expression levels of all downstream genes, this may be associated with the importance of maintaining precise control of n and p protein ratios in infected cells to ensure efficient switching between the transcription and replication modes of the ribonucleoprotein complex [ , ] . the relationships, locations and contexts of additional orfs in various viruses lead us to propose a general model for rhabdovirus genome plasticity, which can account for both gains and losses in genome size and complexity (fig. ) . in each of these viruses, small orfs of various lengths occur within most transcriptional units; and although only those nt have genomic evolution in rhabdoviruses been catalogued here, there are numerous other smaller orfs throughout most genomes. it is reasonable to assume that, although the polypeptides encoded in many of these orfs may not be expressed at all during infection, some may be expressed through leaky ribosomal scanning. these are likely to represent a rich genetic resource for the evolution of new functional genes in rna viruses [ ] , triggering the rapid evolution of highly specialised functions. contemporarily, the evolution of a suitable kozak context, turbs motifs and ribosomal frame-shift sites would allow optimal expression within the parental transcriptional unit. ultimately, these new orfs may become uncoupled from the parental gene through gene (sequence) duplication [ ] . as observed previously, this process would allow unconstrained evolution of the new orf and loss of the redundant copy of the parental orf [ , ] . alternatively, new genes may also evolve independently of existing orfs. in some rhabdoviruses in our data set, very long non-coding regions (up to nt) were present either within or between transcriptional units that could serve as a resource to spawn genes de novo in the absence of the evolutionary constraints imposed on alternative or overlapping orfs. this is most likely to occur when orfs are present in transcribed non-coding regions (utrs) such as the ψ region of wcbv in which, uniquely amongst lyssaviruses, an orf of nt has been identified [ ] . the creation of new genes de novo in non-transcribed igrs, such as those present in the g-l gene junctions of ljv, kotv and koolv, almost certainly would require prior or simultaneous evolution of new or modified transcriptional control sequences to allow their expression. we recognise that other mechanisms of genome expansion are also possible. in central american isolates of vsiv, for example, imprecise reiterative insertions of up to nt in the '-utr of the g-gene (variations of '-uuuuuaa- ') have been attributed to non-templated extension by polymerase stutter at the ttp sequence [ , ] . although homologous recombination appears to be very rare in mononegaviruses [ ] , and we found no evidence of lateral gene transfer, we cannot exclude their involvement in rhabdovirus genome expansion. it is also evident that although there is an overall trend toward an expansion of genome size and complexity in the rhabdoviruses, gene loss is also likely to have occurred periodically throughout the evolution of the family. for example, the ephemerovirus γ proteins appear to have been lost in arv and obov, and the hapavirus pmips are entirely absent only from mcov (fig. ) . although our data suggests that gene gain is a more frequent process than gene loss, we acknowledge that, if loss is very frequent, we might not be able to observe it given the available data. this may be resolved in the future with the acquisition of significantly more genomes sampled more closely in time. indeed, as defective-interfering particles are known to occur commonly in rhabdoviruses, a mechanism for purging redundant sequences appears to be readily available [ ] [ ] [ ] . nevertheless, it is evident that a remarkable capacity for genomic plasticity through the gain and loss of accessory functions has been a central theme of rhabdovirus evolution. although our analysis was limited to the rhabdoviridae, similar mechanisms of genome expansion appear to occur in other families of non-segmented (-) ssrna viruses (mononegavirales). for example, amongst the paramyxoviridae genome length varies by . % from human metapneumovirus ( , nt) to beilong virus ( , nt) , and paramyxoviruses also contain novel accessory genes in transcriptional units inserted at various gene junctions [ ] . the apparent propensity for genome expansion in mononegaviruses may be due to their discontinuous transcription strategy which generates multiple viral mrnas. sequence insertions within and between the individual transcriptional units of mononegaviruses are less likely to disrupt gene expression than in (+) ssrna viruses in which the genome commonly encodes a single polyprotein which is processed post-translationally. finally, this study has also provided an important advance in rhabdovirus taxonomy, allowing the assignment of six new species to existing genera and the assignment of species to seven proposed new genera as well as the identification of six new unassigned species. there are currently no formal criteria for genus demarcation in rhabdoviruses. a system of genetic classification (demarc) that allows demarcation of viral taxa based on pairwise evolutionary distances has been proposed and, for picornaviruses, was shown to be comparable to expertbased taxonomic classification [ , ] . however, the application of this approach to the rhabdoviridae would likely require a larger set of sequenced genomes at lower taxonomic levels [ ] , and would be compromised by extensive rate variation among lineages (as this leads to biases in genetic distance measurements). in the taxonomy of higher organisms, to be descriptively useful, a genus should be monophyletic, reasonably compact, and ecologically, morphologically, or biogeographically distinct [ ] . our assignment of new genera in the rhabdoviridae has been based primarily on the identification of well-supported monophyletic groups using unambiguously aligned regions of the l gene, together with a consideration of common features of genome organisation and known aspects of viral ecology. genome organisation has proven here to be a useful taxonomic marker as similar arrangements of accessory genes and other conserved elements of genome architecture appear to be the result of significant evolutionary events that provide resolution between the family and species levels. for some of the new genera, host and/or vector associations have also been relatively informative but in many cases, only single isolates of a species are available and else little is known of their ecology. it is likely that the proposed assignments of viruses to genera and the placement of the proposed unassigned species will evolve into a more complete taxonomic description as more viruses are discovered and as ecological data accumulates. details of the viruses included in this study, including taxonomic status, sources and dates of isolation, and genbank accession numbers of genome sequences are given in s table. all but three viruses sequenced in this study were obtained from the world reference center for emerging viruses and arboviruses (wrceva), located at the university of texas medical branch, galveston. of the remaining viruses, fukv and koolv were obtained from the collection held at the csiro australian animal health laboratory, geelong, and joiv was obtained from the qimr collection held at the queensland university of technology, brisbane, and kindly provided by dr john aaskov. viruses sequenced in this study were prepared as described previously [ ] . with the exception of hpv, itav, curv, glov, inhv, nmv, mebv, yatv, ldv, garv, cntv, irirv, rbuv, barv, ljav, keuv, mcov, smv, chov, pcv and bav, which were sequenced directly from infected suckling mouse brain, viruses were sequenced from viral preparations grown in bhk-bsr, c / or vero cells monolayers. sequencing was performed using either the illumina hiseq or miseq platforms. viral rna was fragmented by incubation at °c for min in . l of fragmentation buffer (illumina ). a sequencing library was prepared from the sample rna using an illumina truseq rna v kit following the manufacturer's protocol. samples were sequenced using the × paired-end protocol. reads in fastq format were quality-filtered and any adapter sequences were removed using trimmomatic software [ ] . the de novo assembly program abyss [ ] was used to assemble the reads into contigs using several different sets of reads and k values from to . the longest contigs were selected and reads were mapped back to the contigs using bowtie [ ] and visualized with the integrated genomics viewer [ ] to verify that the assembled contigs were correct. total reads ranged from . to million and the percentage of reads mapping to the virus genome in each sample ranged from . % to %. details are available upon request. assembly of full genome sequences was performed as previously described [ ] and predicted orfs > amino acids in length were identified across each genome using geneious . . (biomatters ltd). for each non-canonical orf > amino acids in length, we sought to identify putative homologues by first comparing the protein sequence to the complete non-redundant protein sequence database available on genbank using the blastp and psi-blast search algorithms, as well as to the uniprot database using the hidden markov model alignment-based algorithm hhblits [ ] . for these searches, we investigated all matches with an evalue < . we then created a custom protein database containing all orfs > amino acids in length from our data set ( proteins) and performed a custom blast search to identify homologues within this data set. here, an e-value of < e- was considered a significant match. amino acid sequence alignments containing all putative matches to each orf were then created using clustal x and evidence of structural and sequence similarity was investigated by visual inspection. structural predictions for proteins were conducted using compute pi/mw, sig-nalp, tmhmm, tmpred, netnes and netnglyc available through the expasy bioinformatics resource portal (http://www.expasy.org/). to quantify the location and extent of variation in genome size in our data set, we compared the average length of each genomic region within and between rhabdovirus genera. for all viruses, we normalized the length of each gene region (from the ti to ttp sequences, inclusively) and intergenic region by dividing by the length of the corresponding l gene, which varied least across the data set (coefficients of variation: n = . , p = . , m = . , g = . , l = . ). as there was substantial variability in the proportion of the ' and ' utrs that were included in the sequence data set, we considered each genome to begin at the first ti sequence and end at the final ttp sequence for this analysis. to infer evolutionary relationships among animal rhabdoviruses, we compiled sequences of the l (rna-dependent rna polymerase) protein, as this was the most highly conserved protein across the data set. we initially attempted to root the tree using a standard outgroup method. members of the rhabdovirus genera that infect plants (i.e., cytorhabdovirus and nucleorhabdovirus) were excluded as their sequences were highly divergent. we therefore utilized four members of the genus novirhabdovirus (infectious haematopoietic necrosis virus adb ; viral hemorrhagic septicaemia virus bah ; hirame rhabdovirus aco ; and snakehead rhabdovirus np ) as outgroups. unfortunately, these novirhabdovirus sequences were also far too divergent (>> amino acid change per site under multiple amino acid substitution models; results available on request) to establish a reliable rooting for our data set, as three different basal groups were identified using different models of amino acid substitution, although overall tree topologies were similar among substitution models (results available on request). in addition, the use of the novirhabdoviruses as outgroups resulted in excessive numbers of residues being removed following gblocks pruning (see below). based on the observation that most known rhabdoviruses are either insect viruses or replicate in insect vectors, it has been reasonably argued that plant and animal rhabdoviruses may have origins in insects [ ] . we therefore selected the rooting scheme that best fit this theory. to this end, we choose one of the two basal clades from the novirhabdovirus-rooted tree, comprising viruses isolated from mosquitoes (i.e., the almendraviruses), as the most divergent group. we then repeated the phylogenetic analysis (procedure described below) excluding the novirhabdoviruses and rooting it on the almendraviruses. importantly, the choice of outgroup did not influence relationships either between or within the major clades demonstrating strong bootstrap support (bsp ). the alignment used for the final tree inference (i.e., excluding the novirhabdoviruses) was comprised of amino acid sequences aligned using the muscle program [ ] , with ambiguously aligned regions removed using the gblocks program with default parameters [ ] . this resulted in a final sequence alignment of taxa, amino acid residues in length. the phylogenetic relationships among these sequences were determined using the maximum likelihood (ml) method available in phyml . [ ] employing the wag+g model of amino acid substitution and subtree pruning and regrafting (spr) branch-swapping. the phylogenetic robustness of each node was determined using , bootstrap replicates and nearest-neighbour branch-swapping. fig. (a-d) . amino acid sequence alignments of small accessory proteins encoded in the genomes of ephemeroviruses. (pdf) s fig. (a-d) . amino acid sequence alignments of the u , u x proteins, u x and u x proteins of the curioviruses, and of the rbuv u protein with the itav u protein. (pdf) s fig. (a, b) . amino acid sequence alignments of the u and u proteins of tibroviruses. (pdf) s fig. (a-e) . analysis of the potential ribosomal frame-shift sites in the sequence overlap regions of curioviruses and some hapaviruses. 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virus, a novel paramyxovirus with the largest genome of non-segmented negative-stranded rna viruses partitioning the genetic diversity of a virus family: approach and evaluation through a case study of picornaviruses toward genetics-based virus taxonomy: comparative analysis of a genetics-based classification and the taxonomy of picornaviruses genetics-based classification of filoviruses calls for expanded sampling of genomic sequences phylogeny of titmice (paridae): ii. species relationships based on sequences of the mitochondrial cytochrome-b gene trimmomatic: a flexible trimmer for illumina sequence data abyss: a parallel assembler for short read sequence data fast gapped-read alignment with bowtie integrative genomics viewer hhblits: lightning-fast iterative protein sequence searching by hmm-hmm alignment plant and animal rhabdovirus host range: a bug's view muscle: a multiple sequence alignment method with reduced time and space complexity improvement of phylogenies after removing divergent and ambiguously aligned blocks from protein sequence alignments new algorithms and methods to estimate maximum-likelihood phylogenies: assessing the performance of phyml . key: cord- - g rwsm authors: arruebo, manuel; vilaboa, nuria; sáez-gutierrez, berta; lambea, julio; tres, alejandro; valladares, mónica; gonzález-fernández, África title: assessment of the evolution of cancer treatment therapies date: - - journal: cancers (basel) doi: . /cancers sha: doc_id: cord_uid: g rwsm cancer therapy has been characterized throughout history by ups and downs, not only due to the ineffectiveness of treatments and side effects, but also by hope and the reality of complete remission and cure in many cases. within the therapeutic arsenal, alongside surgery in the case of solid tumors, are the antitumor drugs and radiation that have been the treatment of choice in some instances. in recent years, immunotherapy has become an important therapeutic alternative, and is now the first choice in many cases. nanotechnology has recently arrived on the scene, offering nanostructures as new therapeutic alternatives for controlled drug delivery, for combining imaging and treatment, applying hyperthermia, and providing directed target therapy, among others. these therapies can be applied either alone or in combination with other components (antibodies, peptides, folic acid, etc.). in addition, gene therapy is also offering promising new methods for treatment. here, we present a review of the evolution of cancer treatments, starting with chemotherapy, surgery, radiation and immunotherapy, and moving on to the most promising cutting-edge therapies (gene therapy and nanomedicine). we offer an historical point of view that covers the arrival of these therapies to clinical practice and the market, and the promises and challenges they present. chemotherapy, surgery and radiotherapy are the most common types of cancer treatments available nowadays. the history of chemotherapy began in the early th century, but its use in treating cancer began in the s. the term "chemotherapy" was coined by the german scientist paul ehrlich, who had a particular interest in alkylating agents and who came up with the term to describe the chemical treatment of disease. during the first and second world wars, it was noticed that soldiers exposed to mustard gas experienced decreased levels of leukocytes. this led to the use of nitrogen mustard as the first chemotherapy agent to treat lymphomas, a treatment used by gilman in . in the following years, alkylating drugs such as cyclophosphamide and chlorambucil were synthesized to fight cancer [ , ] . kilte and farber designed folate antagonists such as aminopterin and amethopterin, leading to the development of methotrexate, which in achieved leukemia remission in children [ ] . elion and hitchings developed -thioquanine and -mercaptopurine in for treating leukemia [ , ] . heidelberger developed a drug for solid tumors, -fluorouracil ( -fu), which is up to now an important chemotherapy agent against colorectal, head and neck cancer [ ] . the s saw the design of corticosteroids, along with the establishment of the cancer chemotherapy national service center in , whose purpose was to test cancer drugs. at that time, monotherapy drugs only achieved brief responses in some types of cancers [ ] . by , the first cancer to be cured with chemotherapy, choriocarcinoma, was reported [ ] . during the s, the main targets were hematologic cancers. better treatments were developed, with alkaloids from vinca and ibenzmethyzin (procarbazine) applied to leukemia and hodgkin's disease [ ] [ ] [ ] . in the s, advanced hodgkin's disease was made curable with chemotherapy using the momp protocol [ , ] , which combined nitrogen mustard with vincristine, methotrexate and prednisone, and the mopp protocol [ , ] , containing procarbazine but no methotrexate. patients with diffuse large b-cell lymphoma were treated with the same therapy and, in , a cure for advanced diffuse large b-cell lymphoma was reported using protocol c-mopp, which substituted cyclophosphamide for nitrogen mustard [ ] . surgery and radiotherapy were the basis for solid tumor treatment into the s. this led to a plateau in curability rates due to uncontrolled micrometastases. there were some promising publications about the use of adjuvant chemotherapy after radiotherapy or surgery in curing patients with advanced cancer. breast cancer was the first type of disease in which positive results with adjuvant therapy were obtained, and also the first example of multimodality treatment, a strategy this manuscript reviews the evolution of oncological treatments available today, together with several immunotherapeutic approaches and nanoscale-based therapeutics including successes, drawbacks and recent progress. the concept of immunotherapy in medicine incorporates the use of components of the immune system, including antibodies (abs), cytokines, and dendritic cells, to treat various illnesses, such as cancer, allergies, and autoimmune and infectious diseases. immunotherapy also includes the use of vaccines for the prevention of allergies and tumors. immunotherapy adds new dimensions to clinical practice, offering much more specificity, higher efficacy, directed therapy, less toxicity, lower secondary effects and better tolerance. although immunotherapy can be used for several illnesses (macular degeneration, autoimmune diseases, etc.), in the case of cancer, the aim of immunotherapy is to kill tumor cells (either directly or indirectly) or to help patients' immune systems destroy tumors. of all the types of anti-tumoral immunotherapy, this review will focus on the use of antibodies, their history, problems and current applications. antibodies (abs) are one of the most important defense mechanisms for vertebrate animals. they are produced by b cells, which, after antigen-mediated activation, undergo differentiation to secretory (plasma) cells thus producing soluble antibodies. antibodies are highly specific, and they recognize and eliminate pathogens and disease antigens, but can be deliberately generated to recognize different target molecules (tumor markers, bacteria, receptors, cytokines, hormones, etc.). thus, abs can be used in many applications, including diagnostic techniques, research and therapy (against infections, tumors, transplants and autoimmune diseases). antibodies were described in ( figure ) by von behring and kitasato as "anti-toxins" that appeared in the serum of animals after immunization with inactivated toxins (toxoids) [ ] . the researchers noted that protection could be transferred to other animals through the use of these antisera, thus beginning what it is known as "serum therapy" for treating infectious diseases (diphtheria and tetanus) in humans. soon after, these sera elements were described as "anti-bodies" because they could be directed not only against toxins, but also against a large variety of organisms and compounds (bacteria, proteins, chemicals, etc.). immunotherapy initially began with the use of antisera obtained from animals such as horses and sheep containing, among other things, a mixture of antibodies from the activation of different b cell clones, so-called "polyclonal antibodies" (pabs). in , felton and bailey obtained pure antibodies, but it was not until the s, thanks to the work of porter and edelman ( nobel prize winners), that the ab structure became known. after the introduction of abs to therapy, researchers observed that the transferred defense was only temporary (as opposed to vaccination, which induces long-term memory). in addition, it often incurred anaphylactic responses that were occasionally fatal and which greatly reduced their use in human therapy. however, these problems did not prevent pabs from being used successfully in diagnostic cancers , techniques and even in preventive therapies. anti-snake venom, ant-tetanus and anti-rh+ gamma globulins are still being used in clinical practice. figure . history of antibodies. in von behring and kitasato showed that it was possible to generate anti-toxins (against tetanous, diphtheria), and soon after, therapy with antiserum containing antitoxins were used in patients. it took several years to purify the antibodies ( ) and even more to know their structure. on , milstein and köhler developed the first monoclonal antibody, and the generation and application of monoclonal antibodies started (on diagnosis, research and therapy), initiating the modern immunology. in the s, the first anti-tumoral monoclonal antibody was tested and molecular biology techniques started to designed chimeric and humanized antibodies. later on, transgenic mice carrying human ig genes and other animal models were used to produce fully human antibodies. in , cesar milstein and george köhler ( nobel prize winners) succeeded in generating monoclonal antibodies (mabs) by fusing mouse b cells with b cell tumors (myeloma) to create hybrid cells, which were immortal and had the capacity to produce large quantities of a single (monoclonal) antibody [ ] . in , genetic studies by susumu tonegawa revealed the basis for the vast diversity of antibodies, identifying the process of somatic recombination in immunoglobulin genes [ ] . since the publication of the monoclonal antibody technique, mouse and rat mabs have been used in many laboratories with thousands of applications in various scientific fields, in diagnostic techniques (clinical, food, environmental), research and in therapy (antitumor, autoimmune diseases). monoclonal antibodies have helped in the discovery of new molecules (such as the identification of more than membrane proteins, grouped under the cd concept or cluster of differentiation), transcription factors, viral, plant and bacterial proteins, phosphorylated compounds involved in death by apoptosis, factors involved in enzymatic cascades and many more. as an example of their usefulness, the current classification of leukemia by the world health organization is based on the presence or absence of membrane molecules recognized by monoclonal antibodies that define leucocyte populations in various stages of differentiation. but one of the greatest achievements with monoclonal antibodies is their use in human therapy. surgery, chemotherapy and radiotherapy are not specifically directed to tumor cells and may also affect healthy tissue. antibodies can provide specificity and lower toxicity, opening new therapeutic possibilities. the first evidence of this potential came in when a patient suffering from lymphoma responded to treatment using a mouse mab directed specifically against his tumor b lymphocytes [ ] . this response rapidly encouraged research into the production of potentially therapeutic abs. however, clinical trials results revealed that many patients receiving this therapy developed an immune response directed against the therapeutic abs, a response known as hama (human anti-mouse antibodies) or hara (human anti-rat antibodies). some even developed anaphylactic reactions, especially after repeated administration. the high immunogenicity of antibodies due to their large size compared to conventional pharmaceutical drugs, and differences in the pattern of glycosylation between murine and human abs, once again led to the cessation of antibody use in therapy. completely human mabs needed to be developed to avoid immune rejection, but their production was much more complex than initially thought. in contrast to mouse or rat myeloma cells, human myeloma cells proved difficult to adapt to continuous growth in vitro. researchers tried to resolve this problem by immortalizing b cells using the epstein-barr virus (ebv) [ ] and by fusing human b cells with well-established murine myeloma (obtaining heterohybridomas) [ ] . however, the low production of antibodies in these cells, the instability of heteromyeloma cells and numerous technical problems lead to the search for alternative methods for generating human-like mabs in the mid- s. one of these methods was the modification of murine mabs through genetic engineering ( figure ). several antibody molecules and some antibody fragments are shown. chimeric (mouse-human) antibodies carry mouse heavy and light variable domains (in yellow) being the rest of the molecule of human origin (in red). in the case of humanized antibodies, only the hypervariable regions are mouse derived (in yellow). it is possible to generate bi-specific antibody molecules, using different heavy and light chains (each arm will have a different specificity). fab: fragment antigen binding; scfv: single chain fragment variable; vh: variable domain from the heavy chain. chimerization (murine variable domains linked to constant regions of human heavy and light chains), humanization (only hypervariable regions of murine origin), primatization (chimeric structure of human and primate origin) and the design of recombinant antibody fragments, such as fv (variable fragment), fab (antigen binding fragment), scfv (single chain variable fragment) and minibodies (artificial polypeptides with a structure based on the igv domain), are some of the methods that have been used over the last years to reduce antigenicity and maintain the binding affinity and specificity of the original ab. rituximab, a chimeric anti-cd mab, was the first mab approved by the fda for antitumor therapy. however, a year earlier, several mabs conjugated with radioactive elements were approved for in vivo tumor detection. every year since then, several mabs have been approved for therapy in the us and europe, and more than half of them are chimeric or humanized mabs (see table ). in addition to fully engineered antibodies, antibody fragments also have advantages compared to whole antibodies, especially in terms of the rate of solid tumor penetration. jainr [ ] determined that an intact igg molecule needed hours to move mm into a solid tumor, whereas a fab fragment reached the same distance in hours. while the expression of chimeric and humanized antibodies was carried out in eukaryotic hosts, such as mammalian or plant cells, bacteria have been the most widely used organism for the production of recombinant antibody fragments [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, despite numerous advantages, such as avoiding animal immunization and hybridoma production, their low cost and easier production [ ] , antibody fragments have shorter circulating half-lives compared to full-size antibodies, lack glycosylation and lack effector functions due to the absence of their fc region (unless added). thus, antibody therapies using incomplete antibodies have been relegated to those cases where rapid elimination of antibodies from the blood is required and to local therapy (e.g., macular degeneration). modified versions, such as pegylation of fragments (modification of a molecule by linking of one or more polyethylene glycol chains) [ ] to improve circulation half-life, glycosylation and fc region engineering are some of the recent approaches used by researchers to overcome these problems [ ] . in the mid s, thanks to the development of molecular biology techniques and microinjection and manipulation of embryonic cells, several groups created various transgenic mice models carrying human igs genes ( figure ). the introduction of human ig loci in these mice was carried out using various vectors, such as miniloci, yeast and human artificial chromosomes (yacs and hacs, respectively) and p vectors. transgenic mice can be immunized with almost any ag (including human tumor cells), and their spleens can be used to obtain hybridomas following the conventional protocol [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . moreover, mice can produce human abs of intermediate/high affinity because they can introduce mutations in their human igs transgenes through the mechanism of somatic hypermutation. fully human monoclonal antibodies show several advantages in human therapy, which include low or no immunogenicity, better interaction with human effector systems and patterns of glycosylation and a longer half-life in human serum. in recent years, many fully human mabs have been introduced into clinical trials and some of them have been approved by regulatory agencies (table ) . in addition to the use of transgenic mice to generate fully human mabs, other alternatives have been developed, such as the use of immunodeficient mice receiving human hematopoietic tissue, the use of chicken eggs with human ig coding genes inserted into embryonic cells and the generation of transgenic tobacco plants for producing human mabs. moreover, several groups are working on modifications of the basic antibody structure to generate monovalent and multispecific reagents that may have various therapeutic properties and even completely new structures. examples of these new reagents include antibody alternative protein scaffolds based on leucine-rich repeat molecules of lamprey variable lymphocyte receptors (vlrs), libraries of fibronectin domains and designed ankryin repeat proteins (darps) [ ] . with all these novel antibody formats, immunogenicity, stability and aggregation problems should be carefully considered. soon after mabs generation was reported in , the potential of mabs became clear and many companies showed interested in developing new reagents for diagnosis and designing new equipment, among other contributions. however, when it came to the field of human therapy, pharmaceutical companies did not initially show much interest in the development of monoclonal antibodies, although several research groups were showing promising results in preclinical and clinical studies. the reasons for their reluctance are many: . a number of pharmaceutical companies had experience with generating small compounds, most of them chemically synthesized, but not with generating large biological molecules produced by cells. moreover, sophisticated equipment and cell culturing under controlled conditions, with full quality assurance, are necessary for antibody production. . there was the perception by pharmaceutical companies that production of mabs was not going to yield sufficient profit. most companies preferred to concentrate their efforts on developing analogues of well-known drugs rather than on new products, while at the same time most clinicians opted for trials using combinations of known agents. this view took years to change. advances in mab engineering helped develop more effective mab drugs with high specificity, improved potency and stability and decreased immunogenicity, which helped change the companies' initial reluctance. . in terms of clinical trials, there were concerns about the cost of the trials (around times more expensive today than years ago), the time required for preclinical pharmacology and toxicology studies (which are much more regulated) and the difficulty in conducting early clinical trials. since new drugs can only be tested against advanced and usually heavily pretreated disease, it is unlikely that dramatic responses will occur with these patients. . the requirement for fetal calf serum in cell hybridoma cultures introduced another problem when mad cow disease was identified in the early s. the fda proposed a limit on materials used in some medical products in order to keep them free of the agent thought to responsible for mad cow disease (also known as bovine spongiform encephalopathy or bse), making it necessary to find alternatives, such as enriched media without serum. since , mabs have entered clinical studies for various diseases, with % of those currently in clinical development. some of these mabs are listed in table . the first mab approved for cancer therapy was rituximab (rituxan tm ), a chimeric antibody directed against cd , for non-hodgkin's lymphomas. since then, many others have reached the market, including those for the treatment of breast cancer (trastuzumab, herceptin ® ), acute myeloid leukemia (gemtuzumab ozogamicin, mylotarg tm ), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (alemtuzumab, campath- h ® ), colorectal tumor (cetuximab, erbitux tm ) and several types of cancer (bevacizumab, avastin tm ). companies such as genentech inc., amgen, bristol-myers-squibb, imclone systems and trion pharma represent only a portion of the pharmaceutical companies involved in the antibody market related to cancer therapy ( table ) . new developments have also occurred in the immunoconjugate field and many of them are currently being explored by the pharmaceutical industry. immunoconjugates include antibodies linked to cancer-killing agents such as drugs, cytokines, toxins and radioisotopes. the objective is for the antibody to act as a transporter for the cancer-killing agent, concentrating the agent directly in the cancer cell, with minimal damage to healthy cells. although conjugated antibodies showed toxicity in the past, more recent approaches under development appear to decrease unwanted side effects. pharmaceutical companies are developing immunoconjugates independently, forming partnerships with specialized players and even acquiring small biotech companies that are focused on the field of immunoconjugates. although the challenge of their potential immunogenicity requires special attention, there are several practical advantages to immunoconjugates over single antibodies. these include lower dosages, which may lead to lower treatment costs and fewer side effects; the reintroduction of antibodies that historically have shown low efficacy in isolation; the possibility of using bacteria or plant cells to produce immunoconjugates rather than using mammalian cell cultures (decreasing costs and complexity) and the large number of potential combinations (antibodies-cancer killing agents) that are possible. the advantages of immunoconjugates over single antibodies make them crucial players in new cancer therapy developments. although many researchers have worked on monoclonal antibodies and cancer (close to , reports on this subject can be found in pubmed (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed) the therapeutic mab market moved much more slowly than initially expected, due mostly to the problems indicated above. this situation has changed in recent years and mabs are now the largest class of biological therapies under development, representing a multi-billion dollar worldwide market. as reported recently by scolnik [ ] , the mabs currently marketed in the us have a sales growth rate of % compared to less than % for small-molecule drugs. oncology and autoimmune diseases are the most successful indications for these drugs, with five mabs having sales in excess of $ b. thanks to basic research, researchers are identifying new biomarkers, which could be potential targets for mabs. there are currently numerous mabs at various developmental stages and it is expected that many of them will be available for clinical use in the near future. chemotherapy, radiation therapy and surgery are the most common types of cancer treatments available today. more recent treatments, which are at various stages of development, include angiogenesis inhibitor therapy, biological therapies (including interferons, interleukins, colony-stimulating factors, monoclonal antibodies, vaccines, gene therapy and nonspecific immunomodulating agents), bone marrow and peripheral blood stem cell transplantation, laser therapy, hyperthermia, photodynamic therapy and targeted cancer therapies [ ] . in the last two decades, a large number of nanoscale and nanostructure-based therapeutic and diagnostic agents have been developed, not only for cancer treatment but also for its prevention and diagnosis [ ] . targeted cancer, hyperthermia, photodynamic and gene therapies are just some of the cancer treatments that use engineered nanomaterials. these therapies can be used in isolation or in combination with other cancer treatments, thereby taking advantage of their ability to target tumors (actively or passively), to respond to physical or chemical stimulation (internal or external) and to deliver therapeutic genes to the cell nuclei. the main objective of nanomaterials in cancer treatment is to deliver a therapeutic moiety to tumor cells in a controlled manner (depending on the required pharmacokinetic) while minimizing side effects and preventing drug resistance. nanoscale and nanostructured materials may also be used in diagnosis to detect and prevent pathologies as soon as possible, ideally being able to sense cancer cells and associated biomarkers. compared to conventional therapies, nanoparticles show six clear advantages in cancer treatment and/or diagnosis: ( ) they can be synthesized in specific sizes and with surface characteristics to penetrate tumors by taking advantage of the enhanced permeation and retention effect (epr) (a mechanism known as passive targeting); ( ) they can be engineered to target tumor cells by surface functionalization with biomolecules that attach to tumor-specific cell markers (a mechanism known as active targeting); ( ) they can be engineered to penetrate cells and physiological barriers (e.g., blood-brain barrier, blood-retinal barrier); ( ) they can increase the plasma half-life of carried chemotherapeutic drugs, which are usually highly hydrophobic; ( ) they can protect a therapeutic payload from biological degradation; and ( ) they can be synthesized as multifunctional platforms for combined imaging and therapeutic applications (theragnostic nanoparticles). examples of various nanostructured materials with potential applications in oncology are shown in figure . the advantages of biocompatible nanomaterials have contributed to their significant expansion in cancer treatment. targeted therapies for oncology are predicted to reach a billion euro global market by [ ] . the total market for nanobiotechnology products reached as high as $ . billion in [ ] . table compiles some of the clinically approved nano-based therapeutics for cancer treatment and diagnosis. many other nanoscale or nanostructure-based therapeutic and diagnostic agents are currently in clinical trials at various stages of development. in , zhang et al. [ ] reported on clinical trials being conducted for nanoparticle-based therapeutics. a year later, ongoing clinical trials using nanoparticles for cancer were mentioned by bergin [ ] , and at present, there are more than clinical trials under development [ ] . this large number of commercial nano-based therapeutics for use in cancer treatment is also reflected in the exponential increase in scientific publications and patents involving nanomaterials in recent years. figure shows the evolution over the last decade in the number of published scientific papers and issued patents involving nano-based applications developed to fight cancer. the number of papers and patents involving traditional forms of therapy (chemotherapy, radiation therapy and surgery) grew linearly over the last decade. however, the use of the terms "nano-" and "cancer" has shown exponential growth over the past decade, demonstrating a major focus on nano-based tools applied to cancer treatment and diagnosis. recent advances in the use of nanoscale and nanostructured-based therapeutic agents in cancer treatment are reported below. nanoparticles are engineered to achieve cell targeting by using selective moieties (e.g., antibodies and their fragments, carbohydrates, peptides, nucleic acids), which binds to its corresponding antigen, cell surface carbohydrate or over-expressed receptor in tumor cells. the rapid cellular proliferation of these cells is also exploited by coupling the nanoparticles with different biological agents, such as folic acid. the rationale for coupling these carriers with folic acid is that the folate receptor is over-expressed in a broad range of tumor cell types, including solid and hematological malignancies [ ] . once it has reached the target, the cargo is released into the interior of the cell, and ideally, a signaling marker attached to the vector will aid the physician in visualizing the tumor. such a vector may also be grafted with a moiety (usually peg), which retards recognition by the reticuloendothelial system (res) to increase nanoparticle systemic circulation. in addition to recognition moieties, carried drugs and signaling elements attached to nanoparticles, numerous authors have also envisioned and designed vectors with additional functionalities, including cell-penetrating moieties, combinations of several drugs, combinations of drugs and genes, prodrugs (which become drugs upon biochemical modification by tumor cells), stimulus-sensitive agents that can be externally triggered and molecules for evaluating therapeutic efficacy. the more functionality added to the vector, the better the chances of reaching the target; however, its chances of being detected by the res also increase. therefore, currently marketed nanoparticles use passive targeting and active targeted nanoparticles are still being developed. examples of active targeted nanoparticles are reviewed elsewhere [ ] . targeted nanoparticle fabrication remains a challenge due to the multiple steps involved, which include biomaterial synthesis and assembly, targeting ligand coupling/insertion, drug loading, surface stabilization and final purification, which could cause batch-to-batch variations and, therefore, quality concerns. for this reason, single-step synthesis of targeted nanoparticles by self-assembling pre-functionalized biomaterials provides a simple and scalable manufacturing strategy [ ] . mass production is also a serious concern and continuous synthesis procedures are therefore still being sought. when using batch reactors to synthesize nanoparticles, several drawbacks usually appear, including: ( ) heterogeneous distribution of reactants and temperatures in the reactor; ( ) insufficient mixing; ( ) variations in the physicochemical characteristics of products from different batches; ( ) their inherent discontinuity; and ( ) the numerous post-synthesis purification steps that are usually required. in order to overcome these disadvantages, microfluidic reactors (e.g., micromechanized micromixers, capillaries, junctions) have been used in the continuous synthesis of nanoparticles to precisely control reaction temperatures and residence times, thereby rendering nanoparticles with narrow particle-size distributions. other continuous synthesis processes are usually preferred when synthesizing nanoparticles on a large scale (e.g., laser pyrolysis, arc discharge methods). another concern is the adaptive response of the immune system after repeated applications of nanoparticles. immunological memory, created from the primary response to a specific nanoparticle, provides an enhanced response to secondary encounters with the same type of nanoparticle. as an example, the recognition of pegylated liposomes by anti-peg antibodies has been reported to occur between to days after the first administration of peg-liposomes, leading to fast clearance from circulation [ ] . finally, one of the last major barriers to achieving the transition of targeted nanoparticle use into clinical practice is the complete understanding of potential toxicological properties of these materials, along with their exact pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics. in spite of these hurdles, many research groups are focusing their efforts on solving them. other groups are also directing their efforts towards designing more efficient targeted nanoparticles for cancer treatment in terms of structure, morphology, biocompatibility and surface functionalization. some of those advances will be described later in this document. novel targeted theragnostic nanoparticles have been synthesized and their bi-functionality demonstrated. among them are perfluorocarbon nanoemulsions, which are in clinical trials [ ] . quain et al. [ ] coupled pegylated gold nanoparticles to a single-chain variable fragment antibody, which recognized the epidermal growth factor receptor overexpressed in many types of malignant human tumors, and demonstrated the targeting capabilities of these vectors in nude mice bearing human head-and-neck tumors. the nanoparticles were also able to function as tags for spectroscopic detection with surface-enhanced raman spectroscopy. magnetic targeting has also been used as a physical method for targeting and visualizing tumors. effects of magnetic targeting on the extent and selectivity of nanoparticle accumulation in tumors of rats harboring orthotopic l-gliosarcomas were analyzed using magnetic resonance imaging (mri) [ ] . sun et al. also demonstrated the targeted drug release capabilities of iron oxide nanoparticles conjugated with a drug (methotrexate) and a targeting ligand, chlorotoxin, while monitoring tumor-cell specificity in vivo using mri [ ] . weng et al. demonstrated the targeted tumor cell internalization and imaging of multifunctional quantum dot-conjugated immunoliposomes, in vitro and in vivo [ ] . in this targeted delivery system, anti-her single chain fv fragments were attached to the end of peg chains located on the surface of liposomes. targeting via extracellular activation of the nanocarrier is a promising method for achieving active targeting using physiological stimuli present in the tumor environment. triggering mechanisms that only release the transported cargo of nanocarriers into the tumor environment take advantage of its acidic ph and uncontrolled enzyme production. a complete description of these systems is reported elsewhere [ ] . tumor targeting of prodrugs that become active once they reach tumor cells is another novel strategy for avoiding unwanted side effects of the drug, and it allows for the delivery of large doses of drugs. following this approach, dhar et al. [ ] synthesized pt(iv)-encapsulated prostate-specific membrane antigen targeted nanoparticles of poly(d,l-lactic-co-glycolic acid) (plga)-poly(ethylene glycol) (peg)-functionalized controlled release polymers. after reduction in the interior of the tumor cells, the prodrug becomes cisplatin, which cross-links on nuclear dna. photodynamic therapy (pdt) is a technology that uses a photosensitizer that is activated upon exposure to visible or near infrared (nir) light, and transfers energy to molecular oxygen, thereby generating reactive oxygen species (e.g., singlet oxygen, free radicals, peroxides). the subsequent oxidation of lipids, amino acids and proteins induces cell death. a complete review of photosensitizers is reported elsewhere [ ] . fda-approved photosensitizers absorb in the visible spectral regions below nm, where light penetrates only a few millimeters into the skin. pdt is therefore limited to treatment of certain types of skin cancer and its effectiveness for other tumors is not yet apparent [ , ] . pdt is usually performed as an outpatient procedure and may be repeated and used in combination with other therapies, such as surgery, radiation and chemotherapy [ ] . photosensitizers are susceptible to photobleaching under light irradiation, and have therefore been loaded within nanoparticles to avoid this drawback. most photosensitizers are also highly hydrophobic, so nanoparticles are being explored as carriers to increase their bioavailability. noble metal nanoparticles have proven very useful as agents in photodynamic therapy due to their enhanced absorption cross sections, which are four to five orders of magnitude larger than those offered by conventional photoabsorbing dyes [ ] . silica nanoparticles synthesized in the non-polar core of micelles have been used to entrap the water-insoluble photosensitizing anticancer drug -devinyl- -( hexyloxyethyl) pyropheophorbide. upon nir light irradiation, nanoparticles embedded in hela cells generate singlet oxygen, resulting in a reduction in the percentage of cell survival [ ] . many other photosensitizers have been embedded within inorganic nanoparticles for pdt, including meta-tetra(hydroxyphenyl)-chlorin (m-thpc) [ ] . a complete review of various nanoparticulate-based carriers for pdt is reported elsewhere [ ] . preclinical studies will determine the added translational value of pdt therapies using photosensitizers loaded into these novel nanoparticles prior to their use in clinical settings. hyperthermia, as an anticancer therapy, consists of heating a tumor to inhibit proliferation of cancer cells with the aim of destroying or rendering them more sensitive to the effects of conventional protocols of radiation and chemotherapy. in fact, hyperthermia is currently used as an adjunct therapy to radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy. when cells are heated beyond their normal temperature they can become sensitized to conventional therapeutic agents such as radiation and chemotherapy. when high temperatures are used, typically above °c, the heat causes irreparable damage and results in tumor cell death in a process known as thermal ablation. the success of local thermal ablation consists of destroying the entire tumor mass without damaging adjacent vital structures. this requirement is particularly important for patients with limited reserves of tissue function. hyperthermia treatments make use of microwaves, ultrasounds and radiofrequency, which can be focused and used locally to target the tumor. a significant advantage of thermal technology is that it is minimally invasive. mild heat increases blood flow in the tumor, allowing chemotherapy to exert greater effect on cancer cells. by depressing the metabolic activity of target cells, heat also reduces the oxygen demand in the tumor and tumor tissue oxygenation increases, which makes hyperthermia one of the most potent radiosensitizers available [ ] . results from clinical trials conducted under quality assurance guidelines have shown hyperthermia to be beneficial in the treatment of several types of solid tumors, including breast cancer, melanoma, sarcoma and locally advanced cervical cancer, with reports demonstrating improved overall survival, as compared to patients who only receive radiotherapy or chemotherapy [ ] [ ] [ ] . it is widely accepted that the benefits of hyperthermia will significantly increase with refinements in heating delivery technologies as well as in monitoring strategies that ensure optimal thermal dose coverage, resulting in advanced local tumor control and prolongation of overall survival. integration of hyperthermia with emerging imaging technologies, such as non-invasive mr-based thermometry, will help unveil the full potential of hyperthermia for treating cancer. nanotechnology may offer a window of opportunity to improve heat delivery. for example, highly focused ultrasound energy transfer to deep brain tumors may be difficult to achieve due to the skull's electromagnetic barrier. magnetic fluid hyperthermia (mfh) uses iron oxides as a heating source due to their excellent magnetic properties and good compatibility [ ] . depending on the route of administration, magnetically mediated hyperthermia can be classified into two main types: arterial embolization hyperthermia, where arterial supply is used to deliver magnetic particles into the tumor tissue, and direct intratumoral injection hyperthermia. magnetic nanoparticles for hyperthermia settings show the advantage of being able to achieve site-specific tumor targeting through the aid of an external magnetic field. magnetic nanoparticles can also be simultaneously traced using mri. these nanoparticles are then selectively heated by application of a high frequency alternating magnetic field. magnetic energy dissipation from the nanoparticles (brown and néel relaxations) induces heating, which produces cell death at temperatures above °c. significant antineoplastic effects of mfh treatment were initially observed in animal models of glioma [ ] and prostate cancer [ ] . consequently, phase i and ii clinical trials with thermotherapy using magnetic particles have been conducted to treat prostate carcinoma [ ] and glioblastoma multiforme [ , ] . it has been demonstrated that magnetic hyperthermia in conjunction with a reduced radiation dose leads to longer survival following diagnosis of first tumor recurrence compared to conventional therapies in the treatment of recurrent glioblastoma [ ] . limiting factors of magnetic hyperthermia have been reported, including patient discomfort at high magnetic field strengths as well as irregular intratumoral heat distribution even upon direct intratumoral injection [ ] . magnetoliposomes, i.e., magnetic nanoparticles encapsulated within liposomes, have been designed to achieve active targeting of tumor cells by electrostatic interaction before hyperthermia treatment [ ] . other active strategies, including antibody-functionalized magnetoliposomes, have been used in combination with hyperthermia, demonstrating effective targeting and cytotoxic responses when applying alternating magnetic fields in tumor-bearing mouse models [ ] . the harnessing of therapeutic effects of nanoparticle-driven hyperthermia will likely take advantage of the feasibility of using these vectors to load drugs or biological agents and trigger their release upon heating, in order to increase tumor control and disease-free survival. the use of magnetic hyperthermia to trigger drug release has also been demonstrated as feasible in combinatorial approaches for cancer treatment. purushotham et al. [ ] developed magnetic nanoparticles coated with a thermoresponsive polymer poly-n-isopropylacrylamide (pnipam). with these nanoparticles, simultaneous hyperthermia and drug release of therapeutically relevant quantities of doxorubicin at hyperthermia temperatures was achieved in vitro. in vivo targeting of those doxorubicin-loaded nanoparticles injected directly via the main hepatic artery to hepatocellular carcinoma in a rat model was followed by mri examination. nir-absorbing nanoparticles have the advantage of being able to absorb or scatter light, thus producing heat, which increases the temperature in the tissue where the nanoparticles have been embedded. this region of the electromagnetic spectrum is notable for minimal absorption by water and biological chromophores [ ] . therefore, nir light is preferable as a trigger in biomedical applications because it has maximal penetration of tissues due to their minimal absorbance at those wavelengths [ ] . hemoglobin and water, the major absorbers of visible and infrared light, respectively, have their lowest absorption coefficient in the nir region (around - nm). nir light has been shown to travel at least cm through breast tissue and cm through skull/brain tissue and deep muscle using microwatt laser sources (fda class ), while light at higher power levels (fda class ) has been shown to penetrate through cm of muscle and neonatal skull/brain [ ] . the use of sio /au nanoparticles (nanoshells) as nir-absorbing tags is also considered for the photothermal ablation of solid tumors [ ] . a pilot study on patients with refractory head and neck cancer is currently being conducted [ ] . au/aus sulfide nir-absorbing nanoparticles ( - nm) provide higher absorption than nanoshells ( % absorption and % scattering for au/aus versus % absorption and % scattering for sio /au nanoshells) as well as potentially better tumor penetration [ ] . other nanoparticles used in nir include hollow gold nanoparticles, which are smaller than sio /au nanoshells thus giving them prolonged blood circulation half-life and increased chances of reaching the tumors [ ] . maltzahn et al. [ ] demonstrated that (peg)-protected gold nanorods exhibit superior spectral bandwidth, higher photothermal heat generation per gram of gold and longer circulation half-life when compared to gold nanoshells, as well as an approximately two-fold higher x-ray absorption than a clinical iodine contrast agent. nir-absorbing nanoparticles have also been functionalized with anti-her antibodies to achieve tumor targeting in medulloblastoma cells [ ] . hollow gold nanoparticles were loaded with an Į-melanocyte-stimulating hormone analog [ ] , a potent agonist of melanocortin type- receptor overexpressed in melanoma, demonstrating selective photothermal ablation of b /f melanoma. nanoshells have been loaded into cells of monocyte lineage, which acted as carriers. once incorporated into human breast tumors in nude mice, the photoinduced cell death of nanoparticle-loaded macrophages was able to induce the death of malignant cells in the tumor's hypoxic microenvironment [ ] . current studies are focused on engineering more efficient nir-absorbing nanomaterials and on their functionalization with targeting moieties. compared to currently available non-invasive procedures with capabilities of increasing the temperature of target tumors, the main drawbacks of magnetic and nir-absorbing nanoparticles arise from their necessarily invasive nature as well as from the relatively indiscriminate nature of the tissue damage. due to their efficient intracellular uptake, concerns regarding acute and long-term effects of inorganic nanoparticles accumulation and cytotoxicity are emerging in the biomedical research community [ ] [ ] [ ] . despite the increasing number of newly developed nanoparticles designed for hyperthermia applications, the number of studies addressing their toxicity is low [ ] . collected data indicate that size, crystallinity, shape and surface chemistry strongly influence the mechanism of inorganic nanoparticle internalization by cells, their biodistribution, metabolism and potential toxicity, highlighting the great importance of increasing understanding of healthy and tumor cell interactions with nanoparticles. it is expected that ongoing studies will help reconcile conflicting data and demonstrate the safety of inorganic particles to those reporting transient or acute in vivo toxicity. gene therapy aims to treat diseases by introducing dna, rna, small interfering rna and antisense oligonucleotides into specific target cells or tissues to restore missing functionality and to eradicate pathogenic dysfunction. the therapeutic gene material is delivered to specific target cells using efficient vectors that aim to sustain stable, regulated gene expression without creating unwanted side effects. viral carriers, organic cationic compounds, recombinant proteins and inorganic nanoparticles are the four kinds of carriers currently being explored for gene delivery applications [ , ] . all of them show advantages and disadvantages, but none of them fulfill the criteria for an ideal vector. indeed, viruses can be regarded as nanoparticles due to their dimensions, regular geometries and well-characterized surface properties. the most widely used viral vectors for gene transfer include adenoviruses (ad), which are the dominant gene delivery systems in clinical settings, adeno-associated viruses, herpes simplex- viruses, retroviruses and lentiviruses [ ] . viruses are very efficient carriers; however, some of them have limited dna cargo capacity, can cause immunogenicity and toxicity and their manufacture is rather expensive. in general, synthetic delivery systems prevent specific immune responses and may carry higher amounts of material, without strict limitations on the size of the genetic drugs. the concept of gene therapy was initially envisioned in the s, but due to the cumbersome nature of the testing required to design and produce effective and safe vectors, gene therapy systems were not fully developed until the early s. the first clinical trials were approved in , and during the s numerous vectors carrying various therapeutic genes were engineered, and their usefulness was tested in preclinical studies. due to a simplistic belief in the straightforward success of gene therapy, many of these viral vectors rapidly moved to clinical settings. although success could be demonstrated in some early clinical studies, even when conducted with far from perfect vectors, serious adverse effects and patient deaths led to rigorous regulation of gene therapy protocols for human use. the evolution of currently successful cancer strategies discussed in sections and also included significant failures and setbacks, which did not restrain investments in chemotherapy and immunological therapies. however, the pharmaceutical industry has not yet developed a single cancer gene therapy product, and so the development of genetic medicines has been left to academic institutions and small biotechnology companies. in addition, the drawbacks of clinical trials for gene therapy led to extended periods of severe cuts in public research funding. the fda has not yet approved a human gene therapy product for sale, although gene-related research is growing rapidly and many clinical trials are ongoing. most of these are in phase i or ii and are aimed at dose determination and toxicity assessment [ ] . due to the unknown safety profile of gene vectors, design and approval of human trials were facilitated for life-threatening diseases. approximately , trials have been conducted worldwide since , and more than two-thirds of them were conceived for cancer diseases. due to the complex nature of cancer, the numerous gene therapy approaches for fighting it include strategies for restoring mutant suppressor gene functions, inactivating oncogenes, expressing suicide genes and eliciting protective immune responses [ ] . oncolytic viruses have also been engineered that exploit tumor cells characteristics by replicating them in these target cells as a method for improving the dissemination of biological agents in solid tumors [ ] . for the delivery of therapeutic genes encoding proteins with cytotoxic or anti-angiogenic actions, transcriptional targeting using regulatable promoters has been explored as a way of restricting transgene expression to an optimal therapeutic window [ ] . to date, there are two gene therapy products available on the market for clinical use, both of which have been approved for cancer treatment in china. since china has been the only country in the world where gene therapy is licensed for practice. these products are adenoviral vectors marketed under the brand names gendicine tm and oncorine tm [ , ] . gendicine tm is a p -overexpressing, replication-incompetent ad for the treatment of head and neck squamous cell cancer in combination with radiotherapy. oncorine tm is an e b- k-gene-deleted oncolytic ad, similar to the discontinued onyx- [ ] . a few examples of viruses that have almost reached the market are given below. cerepro ® (sitimagene ceradenovec) is an adenoviral vector containing the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene cdna under the control of a cytomegalovirus promoter, manufactured by ark therapeutics ltd., for the treatment of high-grade glioma with oral ganciclovir [ ] . cerepro ® demonstrated significant efficacy in a recent phase iii trial, but a further trial is still required before approval in order to provide a sufficient level of evidence of clinical benefit [ ] . similar to gendicine tm , advexin tm (contusugene ladenovec; ing ) was developed by introgen therapeutics inc. as a replication-impaired, adenoviral vector carrying the p tumor suppressor gene under the control of a constitutive viral promoter. numerous human cancers have abnormalities in some of the molecules associated with the p pathway, contributing to tumor resistance to a variety of conventional therapeutics. preclinical data has demonstrated increased amounts of p wild-type protein after transduction with advexin tm , and phase ii and iii trials were conducted in unresectable recurrent head and neck squamous cell carcinoma [ ] . responders to the adenovirus therapy had a characteristic p profile, with either low expression of mutated p or wild-type p inactivated by upregulation of inhibitors. genetic immunotherapy was conceived to deliver immune mediators as an efficient and safe approach that also prevents the need to produce and purify large amounts of recombinant proteins [ ] . tnferade tm , developed by genvec [ ] , is a second-generation adenovirus vector containing e , e and e deletions harboring a tnf-Į gene, functionally controlled by the radiation-inducible egr- promoter. tnferade tm was successfully tested in multicenter phase ii and iii randomized controlled trials in combination with chemoradiation in patients with locally advanced pancreatic cancer [ ] . despite initially encouraging results, genvec stopped the phase iii trial in march , as an interim analysis could not demonstrate relevant evidence of effectiveness. an example of a retroviral vector in cancer gene therapy is rexin-g£, currently in clinical trials for advanced pancreatic, metastatic breast cancer, osteosarcoma and soft tissue sarcoma [ ] . rexin-g£ is a replication-incompetent, collagen-targeted vector, encoding a dominant negative mutant of the human cyclin g gene, which makes it lethal to cancer cells [ , ] . impressive results were obtained in phase i and ii clinical trials, which demonstrated unprecedented tumor control, prolonged survival and clinical remissions in late-stage cancer patients [ ] . genomic and proteomic technologies are quickly evolving to detect specific molecular targets in patient tumor samples, fulfilling the promise of a personalized treatment approach. information collected from these emerging technologies will help engineer vectors that carry therapeutic genes specifically targeted to the specificities of individual tumor properties. it is now envisioned that future cancer gene therapies will use a combination of viral and non-viral vectors tailored to meet patientspecific tumor characteristics. consequently, many research groups have focused their efforts on the generation of synthetic carriers that incorporate features that mimic the biological mechanisms of viral gene delivery. the ideal synthetic vector would incorporate a polycationic sequence to condense nucleic acids and a coating to evade the reticuloendothelial system. it would exhibit colloidal stabilization properties to prevent accumulation in the lung capillaries, and would contain specific target-cell entry, endosomal escape and nuclear localization signals. the goal is to synthetically manufacture biodegradable vectors than can be administered systemically to reach micro metastases. these carriers were initially prepared from polymers, lipids and dendrimers [ ] . the first non-viral gene therapy trial was conducted in , on patients with advanced melanoma who received intratumor injection of dna-liposome complexes [ ] . the results demonstrated for the first time the safety and feasibility of cancer treatment by gene therapy protocols using non-biological carriers. cationic polymers have demonstrated superior gene transfer properties to those of polymers having anionic or neutral charge at physiological ph. however, most clinical trials have been conducted with carriers classified as safe [ ] , such as the nonamine polymers polyvinyl pyrrolidone and poly(lacid co-glycolic acid). allovectin- tm , a registered trademark of vical incorporated (san diego, ca, usa) is a promising cancer gene therapy product formulated with a cationic lipid system. allovectin- tm contains a bicistronic plasmid encoding human leukocyte antigen-b and beta- microglobulin. this plasmid allows the immune system to recognize metastatic melanoma lesions as foreign by incorporating a mhc class i complex into the tumor through direct injection, as demonstrated in phase i/ii trials [ ] . a phase iii trial is currently being conducted to compare the efficacy of allovectin- tm to conventional chemotherapy. encouraging results were also obtained in a recent phase i trial conducted on women with recurrent, chemotherapy-resistant ovarian cancer to assess the safety and tolerability of a plasmid carrying the human gene for interleukin- plasmid formulated with a synthetic lipopolymer, polyethylene glycol-polyethyleneimine-cholesterol [ ] . currently, numerous nanostructured systems are being developed and tested in preclinical studies. for example, self-assembled nanoparticles containing sirna, carrier dna, protamine and lipids, including polyethylene glycol and a ligand, anisamide, to target cancer cells were prepared and tested by li et al. [ ] . these authors demonstrated the high efficiency of these systems in delivering genetic material to xenograft tumors after intravenous administration in athymic nude mice. folate groups have also been linked to liposomes for sirna delivery, which resulted in significant suppression of xenograft growth in mice [ ] . folate-peg-polymeric nanoparticles have also been tested in vivo for suicide gene therapy applications, using ganciclovir as a prodrug [ ] . peg-modified gelatin-based nanocarriers have been used in vivo to deliver plasmid dna encoding for the soluble form of the extracellular domain of the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor- (vegf-r or sflt- ) in antiangiogenic therapy [ ] . upon intravenous administration, overexpressed sflt- was therapeutically active as shown by suppression of the xenograft tumor growth. nanoparticles also offer the ability to monitor the delivery of genetic material. tan et al. [ ] were able to synthesize chitosan-based nanoparticles encapsulating quantum dots coupled to sirna and demonstrate efficient silencing and transfection tracking. finally, inorganic nanoparticles are also under development, which, despite their low synthesis efficiency, have the significant advantage of low toxicity and easy functionalization [ ] . for example, magnetic liposomes have also been tested in magnetic hyperthermia settings to induce therapeutic tnf-α expression driven by the promoter of the stress-inducible gadd gene [ ] . the combined thermal and gene therapy treatment significantly arrested tumor growth in nude mice, which encouraged the refinement of this type of cancer gene therapy, which was then successfully tested in preclinical studies [ ] . after more than two decades of cancer gene therapy using biological vectors, preclinical studies yielded excellent results and clinical trials reported satisfactory results in terms of reporting mild or no long-term toxicity. however, a real breakthrough cannot be claimed in clinical therapy. the reasons for the different outcomes of preclinical and clinical trials include the inherent limitations of rodent models, which develop homogeneous tumors arising from clonal cell lines, while tumors found in clinical practice are composed of heterogeneous cell types. the therapies described in sections and also confronted similar limitations during their development. the main players in gene therapy, vectors and transgenes, will evolve to achieve the highest possible degree of specificity for targeting cancer cells. nanotechnology has already engineered powerful non-biological carriers of a variety of therapeutic genes that have demonstrated efficacy and safety in preclinical tests. since current knowledge of cancer cell biology is far from complete, ongoing and future clinical trials with these synthetic systems are expected to suffer similar drawbacks in terms of efficacy as those experienced with viral gene therapy systems. as we have seen from other therapies that have already been incorporated into the clinical routine of cancer treatment, the success of cancer gene therapies will be preceded by many failures, which will likely be due to a greater extent to our technological limitations than to flaws in their general concept. this review has tried to summarize the history and evolution of the most common types of cancer treatments available today, but also new therapies under study in the last years. in addition to surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, hyperthermia, photodynamic therapy or immunotherapy, new therapies are now at different stages of development trying to decrease drug toxicity in health tissues and increase efficacy by targeting tumor angiogenesis, by exploring cell and gene therapy, or by using new nanostructures for diagnosis or therapeutic purposes. nanotechnology is offering new products, which either used alone, due to their intrinsic properties, or in combination with other biomolecules (anti-tumoral drugs, folic acid, albumin, antibodies, aptamers) could be used to target cancer cells. however, the history tells us that the fight against cancer is not an easy task. many types of cancers are able to resist to conventional therapies, and different combinations of drugs and therapies (e.g., surgery together with radiotherapy and chemotherapy) are usually the only way to destroy tumoral cells. this may be also true for the new therapies arriving now to the clinic. much more studies are required but these new ways of treatment are opening doors to hope for many patients waiting for a successful therapy. symposium on advances in pharmacology resulting from war research: therapeutic applications of chemical warfare agents nitrogen mustard therapy: use of methyl-bis (h-chloroethyl) amine hydrochloride and tris (h-chloroethyl) amine hydrochloride for hodgkin's disease, lymphosarcoma, leukemia, and certain allied and miscellaneous disorders 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predict p gene therapy efficacy in recurrent, squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck improvement of different vaccine delivery systems for cancer therapy translation of the radio-and chemo-inducible tnferade vector to thetreatment of human cancers molecular engineering of matrix-targeted retroviral vectors incorporating a surveillance function inherent in von willebrand factor inhibition of metastatic tumor growth in nude mice by portal vein infusions of matrix-targeted retroviral vectors bearing a cytocidal cyclin g construct noteworthy clinical case studies in cancer gene therapy: tumor-targeted rexin-g advances as an efficacious anti-cancer agent gene delivery with synthetic (non viral) carriers direct gene transfer with dna-liposome complexes in melanoma: expression, biologic activity, and lack of toxicity in humans handbook of pharmaceutical excipients a phase study of high-dose allovectin- in patients with advanced metastatic melanoma phase-i clinical trial of il- plasmid/lipopolymer complexes for the treatment of recurrent ovarian cancer tumor-targeted delivery of sirna by self-assembled nanoparticles folate-linked lipid-based nanoparticles for synthetic sirna delivery in kb tumor xenografts folate-linked nanoparticle-mediated suicide gene therapy in human prostate cancer and nasopharyngeal cancer with herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase antiangiogenic gene therapy with systemically administered sflt- plasmid dna in engineered gelatin-based nanovectors quantum-dot based nanoparticles for targeted silencing of her /neu gene via rna interference heat-inducible tnf-alpha gene therapy combined with hyperthermia using magnetic nanoparticles as a novel tumor-targeted therapy targeted hyperthermia using magnetite cationic liposomes and an alternating magnetic field in a mouse osteosarcoma model we greatly appreciate the support from grants mat - -c - from the ministerio de ciencia e innovación (ministry for science and innovation, spain), fundación mutua madrileña, ibercaja, fundación ramón areces and the ramón y cajal program. n.v. is supported by program i sns from the fondo de investigaciones sanitarias (healthcare research fund, spain). m.a. is especially indebted to the graduate students and researchers of ina for providing some of the images in figure . we also greatly appreciate the support from the inbiomed ( / , xunta de galicia), immunonet (soe /p /e , immunotherapy network, sudoe-feder) and hinamox ( ° eu program) projects. we thank josé me, r. esteban and a. esteban for their help in compiling data. cancers , the authors declare no conflict of interest. key: cord- - y ho x authors: bekaert, michaël; firth, andrew e.; zhang, yan; gladyshev, vadim n.; atkins, john f.; baranov, pavel v. title: recode- : new design, new search tools, and many more genes date: - - journal: nucleic acids res doi: . /nar/gkp sha: doc_id: cord_uid: y ho x ‘recoding’ is a term used to describe non-standard read-out of the genetic code, and encompasses such phenomena as programmed ribosomal frameshifting, stop codon readthrough, selenocysteine insertion and translational bypassing. although only a small proportion of genes utilize recoding in protein synthesis, accurate annotation of ‘recoded’ genes lags far behind annotation of ‘standard’ genes. in order to address this issue, provide a service to researchers in the field, and offer training data for developers of gene-annotation software, we have gathered together known cases of recoding within the recode database. recode- is an improved and updated version of the database. it provides access to detailed information on genes known to utilize translational recoding and allows complex search queries, browsing of recoding data and enhanced visualization of annotated sequence elements. at present, the recode- database stores information on approximately genes that are known to utilize recoding in their expression—a factor of approximately three increase over the previous version of the database. recode- is available at http://recode.ucc.ie the term 'translational recoding' describes the utilization of non-standard decoding during protein synthesis and encompasses such processes as ribosomal frameshifting, codon redefinition, translational bypassing and stopgo ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . what is often considered as a decoding error-e.g. a frameshifting error or mistranslation of a particular codon-may occasionally benefit the organism by increasing its fitness and survival. in such instances the propensity for the decoding 'error' may be selected for during evolution, leading to the formation of a particular sequence context that elevates the frequency of the 'error'. to discriminate such cases of programmed decoding 'misbehaviour' from promiscuous translational errors or translational noise, the term recoding is used. the position within an mrna where a recoding event takes place is termed the 'recoding site'. sequence elements responsible for increasing the efficiency of recoding events are termed 'recoding stimulatory signals', and a minimal sequence fragment that allows recoding to take place at the natural efficiency (i.e. relative to the level of standard decoding at the recoding site) is termed a 'recoding cassette'. recoding can benefit gene expression in a number of ways. it can regulate gene expression by being part of a sensor for particular cellular conditions. prominent examples include ribosomal frameshifting in bacterial release factor (rf ) and eukaryotic antizyme mrnas. in both instances, ribosomal frameshifting is required for the production of the corresponding active full-length protein products. in the rf mrna, the efficiency of frameshifting is negatively regulated by the cellular concentration of its product, rf , providing an autoregulatory circuit for its biosynthesis ( ) ( ) ( ) . in the antizyme mrna, the efficiency of frameshifting is modulated by cellular levels of polyamines, whose concentration in turn is controlled by antizyme ( , ) . thus, this mechanism ensures the maintenance of antizyme production at the levels required to support physiologically appropriate concentrations of polyamines. recoding can also be used for the diversification of protein products encoded by a single gene. an illustrative example is in bacterial dnax mrna, where frameshifting allows synthesis of two different protein subunits-sharing the same n-terminal part-from a single open reading frame (orf) in its mrna ( ) ( ) ( ) . a presumed constant ratio of frameshifting in dnax ensures a fixed stoichiometric balance between these two subunits ( ) . this balance, then, is independent of the absolute levels of dnax transcription and translational initiation on its mrna. similarly, in many viruses recoding is responsible for setting a ratio between protein products (such as those encoded by gag-pro-pol genes in retroviruses) produced from a single mrna ( ) . recoding also provides rna viruses with a mechanism for the translation of downstream orfs on polycistronic rnas [other mechanisms include leaky scanning, shunting, reinitiation, iress and the production of subgenomic rnas ( ) ] and may also be involved in global regulation mechanisms, such as mediating the switch between translation and replication on the same genomic rna ( ) . finally, recoding provides a way for the incorporation of non-standard amino acids-e.g. amino acids that share their codons with termination signals (the most prominent example of which is selenocysteine, encoded by uga) ( ) ( ) ( ) . for further information on the diverse variety of recoding functions, see recent reviews ( , , , , ) . recoding cassettes may be composed of a variety of diverse sequence elements. for example, primary nucleotide sequences may promote re-arrangements of trna molecules relative to their codons in mrna inside the ribosome or affect recognition of trnas or release factors in the ribosomal a-site. on the other hand, many recoding signals act in the form of rna secondary structures, such as simple stem-loops, or more complex pseudoknots, kissing stem-loops and other structures that involve interactions between considerably distant rna regions ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . trans-acting rna signals affecting ribosomal decoding through complementary interactions with ribosomal rna ( - ), or through the nascent peptide acting within the ribosome exit tunnel ( , , ) , are also known. some recoding events-such as selenocysteine insertion-require the presence of additional specialized machinery such as selenocysteine trnas, selenocysteine-specific translation factors and several other components of the selenocysteine biosynthesis and insertion pathway ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) . recent reviews on stimulatory signals involved in the modulation of recoding events and molecular mechanisms of recoding provide further details ( , , , , ) . despite considerable progress in the development of computational tools for the prediction of protein coding genes in sequenced genomes, the identification and annotation of recoded genes lags far behind. the hurdle lies not so much in the fact that recoded genes do not obey standard rules of genetic readout but, rather, in the considerable diversity of recoded genes and sequence elements responsible for recoding. even among evolutionarily related genes, all utilizing recoding, the diversity of recoding signals can be considerable. an extreme example is when orthologous genes utilize recoding at different stages of gene expression to achieve the same goal. an example is in dnax, where ribosomal frameshifting is employed by enterobacteria, but transcriptional slippage is used in thermus thermophilus ( ) . a similar situation occurs in bacterial insertion sequence (is) elements, where a certain group of is elements utilizes transcriptional slippage to produce orfa-orfb fusions, while many other is elements utilize ribosomal frameshifting for the same purpose ( ) . the diversity of recoding functions, combined with the wide spectrum of unrelated sequence elements involved in recoding, makes the design of a uniform model of recoding intractable. nonetheless, in recent years, we have witnessed the development of specialized models and computational tools for the identification of particular subsets of recoding cassettes, or tools that are specific to recoding events in particular groups of homologous genes ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . these developments, at least partially, were facilitated by the availability of a compiled dataset of known recoded genes collected together in the recode database (http://recode.genetics.utah.edu), which was initially launched years ago ( , ) . to facilitate further development of computational tools for the prediction of recoded genes in the ever faster growing body of sequence data, as well as to provide bench researchers with upto-date information on recoding, an efficient means of recode database population and annotation are now required. in this article, we describe the incarnation of the database, recode- . the major advances of recode- (hosted in a new location http://recode.ucc.ie) over previous versions include a new web design allowing enhanced visualization of stimulatory signals, a uniform recodeml format for the annotation of recoded genes, and a significantly larger number of entriesincluding many recently identified cases-that altogether have more than doubled the size of the database since its last published update. the data are stored in a local postgresql database that is queried by php scripts embedded in the web interface. the schema of the postgresql database is shown in figure . the database stores information on individual genes that utilize recoding, the mechanisms and stimulatory signals involved, and references to the original literature sources that describe the recoding events. in order to facilitate the uniform annotation of recoding events, we have designed an xml-based format for the annotation of recoded genes, recodeml. the document type definition for recodeml is available at the recode- web site at http://recode.ucc.ie/dtd the extensibility of the recodeml format will allow incorporation of new annotation, if required, for newly discovered types of recoding, and the associated features, as they are being discovered. the database handles batch importation of properly designed recodeml entries into the postgresql database, thus facilitating rapid population of the database with new data. the data in the database may be explored in two ways. they may be browsed by one of the three categories: kingdom (archaea, bacteria, eukaryotes and viruses), organism and type of recoding. the data may also be searched directly by key words that can be inserted into the search field. searches that use regular expressions are allowed. the output of a database search is a list of recode- entries in a short format that includes organism name, kingdom, genus, type of recoding event, status of figure shows an example of sequence annotation for the human oaz gene, alongside a diagram of a stimulatory rna secondary structure, and the recode- logo. unlike recode- , where all data on recoding events were introduced manually, recode- also utilizes automated identification of recoding events by the recently developed computer programs arfa ( ) and oaf ( ) , that are able to identify and annotate + frameshifting events in mrnas of bacterial rf s and eukaryotic antizyme (oazs), respectively. however, a significant source of recoding events remains to be serendipitous discoveries by experimental studies that sometimes are complemented by more systematic studies of large groups of similar genes ( , ) . therefore, a large proportion of new data are still populated manually or semi-manually. to ease manual population of recoding events, a special form has been designed that is available in the database upon user registration. user registration needs to be approved by one of the database contributors. the novel data in the database include rf mrnas identified by arfa, events identified by oaf, new selenoprotein genes ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) and new viral annotations ( ) including the newly discovered frameshift cassettes in potyviruses ( ), alphaviruses ( ) and the japanese encephalitis group of flaviviruses ( ) . the database will expand in accordance with the growth of available sequence information that will be scanned by one of the existing programs for recode annotation. we also plan to continue developing tools for the automatic identification of recoding events from nucleotide sequences. as the field grows and the number of recoded genes progressively increases, it becomes harder to extract data from the relevant literature and a number of novel recoded genes may escape the database. therefore, we encourage users and researchers in the field to submit their data directly to the recode- database. we are also willing to provide help with the analysis of potential new recoding events. reprogrammed genetic decoding in cellular gene expression programmed translational frameshifting recoding: translational bifurcations in gene expression programmed ribosomal frameshifting goes beyond viruses: organisms from all three kingdoms use frameshifting to regulate gene expression, perhaps signaling a paradigm shift a case for ''stopgo'': reprogramming translation to augment codon meaning of ggn by promoting unconventional termination (stop) after addition of glycine and then allowing continued translation (go) coupling of open reading frames by translational bypassing recoding: expansion of decoding rules enriches gene expression expression of peptide chain release factor requires high-efficiency frameshift the function, structure and regulation of e. coli peptide chain release factors release factor frameshifting sites in different bacteria ribosomal frameshifting in decoding antizyme mrnas from yeast and protists to humans: close to cases reveal remarkable diversity despite underlying conservation autoregulatory frameshifting in decoding mammalian ornithine decarboxylase antizyme the gamma subunit of dna polymerase iii holoenzyme of escherichia coli is produced by ribosomal frameshifting translational frameshifting generates the gamma subunit of dna polymerase iii holoenzyme programmed ribosomal frameshifting generates the escherichia coli dna polymerase iii gamma subunit from within the tau subunit reading frame structural probing and mutagenic analysis of the stem-loop required for escherichia coli dnax ribosomal frameshifting: programmed efficiency of % programmed ribosomal frameshifting in hiv- and the sars-cov alternative translation strategies in plant viruses long-distance rna-rna interactions in plant virus gene expression and replication eukaryotic selenoprotein synthesis: mechanistic insight incorporating new factors and new functions for old factors selenoprotein synthesis: uga does not end the story selenium: its molecular biology and role in human health recoding in bacteriophages and bacterial is elements the role of programmed- ribosomal frameshifting in coronavirus propagation frameshifting rna pseudoknots: structure and mechanism structure, stability and function of rna pseudoknots involved in stimulating ribosomal frameshifting rna pseudoknots and the regulation of protein synthesis a - ribosomal frameshift element that requires base pairing across four kilobases suggests a mechanism of regulating ribosome and replicase traffic on a viral rna slippery runs, shifty stops, backward steps, and forward hops: - , - , + , + , + , and + ribosomal frameshifting upstream stimulators for recoding overriding standard decoding: implications of recoding for ribosome function and enrichment of gene expression use of trna suppressors to probe regulation of escherichia coli release factor translational bypassing without peptidyl-trna anticodon scanning of coding gap mrna a nascent peptide is required for ribosomal bypass of the coding gap in bacteriophage t gene protein factors mediating selenoprotein synthesis solution structure of secis, the mrna element required for eukaryotic selenocysteine insertion-interaction studies with the secis-binding protein sbp selenocysteine inserting trnas: an overview p-site trna is a crucial initiator of ribosomal frameshifting a new kinetic model reveals the synergistic effect of e-, p-and a-sites on + ribosomal frameshifting nonlinearity in genetic decoding: homologous dna replicase genes use alternatives of transcriptional slippage or translational frameshifting transcriptional slippage in bacteria: distribution in sequenced genomes and utilization in is element gene expression knotinframe: prediction of - ribosomal frameshift events arfa: a program for annotating bacterial release factor genes, including prediction of programmed ribosomal frameshifting ornithine decarboxylase antizyme finder (oaf): fast and reliable detection of antizymes with frameshifts in mrnas predicting genes expressed via - and + frameshifts recode: a database of frameshifting, bypassing and codon redefinition utilized for gene expression database resources of the national center for biotechnology information pseudoviewer : generating planar drawings of large-scale rna structures with pseudoknots sequences that direct significant levels of frameshifting are frequent in coding regions of escherichia coli conserved translational frameshift in dsdna bacteriophage tail assembly genes comparative genomics of trace elements: emerging dynamic view of trace element utilization and function dynamic evolution of selenocysteine utilization in bacteria: a balance between selenoprotein loss and evolution of selenocysteine from redox active cysteine residues trends in selenium utilization in marine microbial world revealed through the analysis of the global ocean sampling (gos) project the selenoproteome of clostridium sp. ohilas: characterization of anaerobic bacterial selenoprotein methionine sulfoxide reductase a an extended signal involved in eukaryotic - frameshifting operates through modification of the e site trna an overlapping essential gene in the potyviridae discovery of frameshifting in alphavirus k resolves a -year enigma a conserved predicted pseudoknot in the ns a-encoding sequence of west nile and japanese encephalitis flaviviruses suggests ns ' may derive from ribosomal frameshifting we would like to express our appreciation to the colleagues who have contributed data for the previous versions of the database. conflict of interest statement. none declared. key: cord- -dcid emx authors: sällman almén, markus; bringeland, nathalie; fredriksson, robert; schiöth, helgi b. title: the dispanins: a novel gene family of ancient origin that contains human members date: - - journal: plos one doi: . /journal.pone. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: dcid emx the interferon induced transmembrane proteins (ifitm) are a family of transmembrane proteins that is known to inhibit cell invasion of viruses such as hiv- and influenza. we show that the ifitm genes are a subfamily in a larger family of transmembrane (tm) proteins that we call dispanins, which refers to a common tm structure. we mined the dispanins in eukaryotic species, covering all major eukaryotic groups, and investigated their evolutionary history using bayesian and maximum likelihood approaches to infer a phylogenetic tree. we identified ten human genes that together with the known ifitm genes form the dispanin family. we show that the dispanins first emerged in eukaryotes in a common ancestor of choanoflagellates and metazoa, and that the family later expanded in vertebrates where it forms four subfamilies (a–d). interestingly, we also find that the family is found in several different phyla of bacteria and propose that it was horizontally transferred to eukaryotes from bacteria in the common ancestor of choanoflagellates and metazoa. the bacterial and eukaryotic sequences have a considerably conserved protein structure. in conclusion, we introduce a novel family, the dispanins, together with a nomenclature based on the evolutionary origin. membrane proteins are essential for the ability of all cellular organisms to respond and interact with their environment. therefore they have attained large research interest and are one of the major groups of drug targets [ ] . we have previously estimated that % of the human genes codes for alpha-helical membrane proteins and provided a comprehensive classification based on their function and evolutionary origin [ ] . however, the identification and annotation of many membrane bound protein families is still being revised. we have during recent years worked on the annotation of both g protein-coupled receptors [ , ] and solute carriers [ ] and most of the genes of these large superfamilies now have a clear identity and annotation. there is however still large work to be done to clarify the identity, annotation and the evolutionary history of several families of membrane bound proteins. establishing a rigid nomenclature based on evolutionary information and structural features of the predicted proteins facilitates prediction of the functional role of these genes that often have only have been studied in large gene or transcription consortia. in previous studies we have found that membrane proteins with few transmembrane (tm) helices are less studied than other. this is particularly true for tm proteins where more than % of the about proteins remained unclassified. interestingly, we found evidence for several uncharacterized homologues to a small group of genes known as the interferon-induced transmembrane proteins (ifitm) family. the ifitms constitute a group with four human members (ifitm - , ) that are found in a consecutive order on chromosome , having two transmembrane ( tm) helices. the ifitm gene is not present in human, but is located in proximity to the other four genes in the mouse genome. the ifitm - proteins were identified years ago as being upregulated by interferons (ifn) [ ] . recently they received considerable attentions as ifitm - were found to prevent infection of a growing list of viruses such as hiv- , sars influenza a h n , west nile and dengue fever viruses [ , , , ] . hence, proteins of the ifitm family mediate part of the antiviral response orchestrated by ifns. however, the ifitm family is also involved in other processes such as oncogenesis, bone mineralization (ifitm ) and germ cell development (ifitm and ) and ifitm has not been identified as interferon-inducible [ , , , ] . although the biological roles of the ifitm genes are emerging, no thorough evolutionary analysis has been performed on this group. in this study, we sought to infer the evolutionary history of the human ifitm genes and identify potential homologues. we mined eukaryotic species, covering all major eukaryotic groups, and found that the ifitms form a subfamily in a larger novel family that has ten human members in addition to the four ifitm genes. we propose dispanins as a novel name for this family, which refers to their common tm structure. further, we find that the eukaryotic dispanins first appeared before the radiation of metazoa and that they branch out into four subfamilies (a-d). more surprisingly, we also discover that the dispanins are found in a large range of bacteria and in brown alga. in total, we collected eukaryotic ifitm homologues from h. sapiens ( genes) m. musculus ( genes), g. gallus ( genes), x. tropicalis ( genes), d. rerio ( genes), p. marinus ( gene), c. intestinalis ( gene), b.floridae ( genes), s. manosoni ( gene), s. purpuratus ( genes), n. vectensis ( genes) and m. brevicollis ( gene). no ifitm genes could be detected in any of the remaining analyzed proteomes, which covers all other major eukaryotic groups. the search of the nr database with hmmer did not get any hits outside metazoa except bacteria, choanoflagellates and the brown alga ectocarpus siliculosus ( genes). nine genes were deemed as pseudogenes based on annotation and sequence analysis and removed from further analysis. in addition to the four previously identified human ifitm genes, ten novel human homologous genes were detected. these ten genes together with the four ifitm genes form a human gene family that we choose to call dispanins based of their common tm structure. in uniprot we identified annotated ifitm homologues from full bacteria proteome sets spread over seven different phyla (see table s ): acidobacteria ( genes), actinobacteria ( genes), cyanobacteria ( genes), tg ( gene), bacteroidetes ( genes), firmicutes ( gene) and proteobacteria ( genes). out of these, bacterial sequences from species were included for further analysis. no viral or archaean genes were annotated as ifitm homologues in uniprot. the phylogeny of the vertebrate dispanins ( figure ) allows the division of the dispanins into four subfamilies a-d that are supported by strong confidence with respect to posterior probabilities (pp) or bootstraps (pp. . and bs. % for all nodes). we propose a common nomenclature for the dispanins that are based on their subclass and a number (dspa etc). the proposed names together with previous gene symbols and accession number can be found in table s . the finding of two dispanin homologs in the brown alga e. siliculosus, which is evolutionary distant to metazoa, and the single dispanin in the close metazoan relative m.brevicollis are the two only non-metazoan eukaryotic dispanins. a blast search gives that the e. siliculosus proteins have a higher similarity to metazoan family members (best hit e-value, ) than bacterial dispanins and m. brevicollis. the m. brevicollis dispanin share a conserved splice site with all metazoan family members, which suggest that the eukaryotic dispanins first emerged in a common ancestor of m. brevicollis and the metazoan lineage. within the metazoan lineage the dispanins have been lost in at least two separate occasions, i.e. t. adhaerens and in the ecdysozoan lineage (d. melanogaster and c. elegans). the vertebrate dispanins sort into subfamilies a-d ( figure ). the dspa subfamily has six human genes (dspa , dspa a-d and dspa ) of which the dspa a-c corresponds to ifitm - and dspa to ifitm . dspa d (ac ) and dspa (ac ) are two novel identified genes, closely related to the ifitm family. the phylogenetic tree indicates that the dspa genes have undergone an independent duplication in h. sapiens and m. musculus and these were given a species specific nomenclature, e.g. dspa a-d in human. the dspa , dspa , dspa genes in the phylogenetic tree do not have any clear human orthologs. the dspb subfamily is only found in tetrapoda and contains three human genes called dspb (tusc ), dspb (tmem ) and dspb (prrt ) whereas dspb is only present in g. gallus. dspc (tmem a), dspc (tmem b) and dspc (tmem ) make up the human dspc subfamily, which is represented in all investigated vertebrates. the dspd (pprt ) gene is found in all the vertebrate species except the basal organism p. marinus whereas dspd (al ) is mammalian specific. five vertebrate genes and all invertebrate were excluded from the phylogenetic analysis and instead classified into subfamilies by using a blast approach (table s ) . some genes could not unambiguously be classified into the vertebrate subfamilies: c. intestinalis ( gene), s. mansoni ( gene), b. floridae ( genes), s. purpuratus ( genes), n. vectensis ( gene) and m. brevicollis ( gene). by combining the results of the phylogenetic analysis and blast classification, we created a schematic overview of the organisms' gene repertoire and a schematic picture of the dispanin family's evolutionary history, which suggests that the invertebrate dispanins share more similarity towards the dspc and d subfamilies than dspa and b ( figure ). all the members of the human dspa are located on chromosome except for dspa d which resides on chromosome . the genes of the other subfamilies are not enriched on any chromosome. several features are common to all the eukaryotic dispanin proteins ( figure ). they comprise two transmembrane helices that are predicted between and amino acids in length with the second helices often being slightly longer. the dispanins are rich in both glycosylation-and phosphorylation sites that predominantly are found on the nterminus. the n-terminus is often long (. amino acids) compared to the c-terminal (, amino acids) and both are always oriented towards the outside of the cell. the dispanins contain several conserved motifs ( figure and ), which are found both among eukaryotes and bacteria. the most conserved pattern is the g-d motif and the a-x( )-a motif, both situated in the intracellular loop between the transmembrane helices that also is frequently rich in positive amino acids (k and r). the first helix is the most conserved with an alanine (a) residue and double cysteine c-c (c-f-c in the dspb family) motif whereas a glycine (g) residue is the most conserved in the second helix. another highly conserved motif, though only amongst the eukaryotes, is the single aspartic acid (d) on the n-terminus, flanking the first helix. analysis of the exon structure in the protein sequences was made for all eukaryotic dispanins except e. siliculosus where no such information was found. the eukaryotic dispanins have a conserved splice site in the intracellular loop that separates the two transmembrane helices into different exons ( figure ). this site is only missing in the s. mansoni dispanin and the mouse dspa f genes. the vertebrate proteins of the dspa and dspb subfamilies only have these two exons whereas the whole dspc subfamily and the dspd proteins have an additional exon that codes for their n-terminus. the dspd proteins that only are found in mammals seem to have lost their n-termini exon. all the classified b. floridae and s. purpuratus sequences has the corresponding splice site in the n-terminus, whereas the n. vectensis and m. brevicollis proteins has - and exons respectively. we provide evidence that the four ifitm genes together with ten additional human genes, known as tusc , tmem , prrt , tmem a, dspc , tmem b, tmem , ac , al and ac , form a novel gene family that we call the dispanins, which refers to the tm membrane topology that is common to all identified members. this family is the second largest tm family in the human genome, superseded only by the inwardly rectifying potassium channel family that has members [ ] . except for the tm memebrane topology the dispanins are not homologous or share domains with any other tm proteins in the human genome and constitute a distinct gene family. we have discovered that this family is found in metazoan, the choanoflagellate m. brevicollis and the brown alga e. siliculosus, but not in other eukaryotes. surprisingly it is widely present in bacteria where it is found in several different phyla such as actinobacteridae, acidobacteria, cyanobacteria, bacteriodetes, firmicutes and proteobacteria. the highest number of bacterial dispanins is detected in actinobacteria and proteobacteria, which diverged around three billion years ago [ ] . we find that dispanins in eukaryotes and bacteria have high sequence similarities and share several conserved sequence motifs (figure ) , which is strong evidence for a common evolutionary origin and possibly a functional relationship. as the family is found in several bacterial phyla we suggest that it first emerged in bacteria to later be introduced in eukaryotes through a horizontal gene transfer event. however, we were not able to construct a stable phylogenetic tree including bacterial and eukaryotic dispanins. as the eukaryotic dispanins only is widespread in metazoa it was unexpected to find the family in the evolutionary distant brown alga e. siliculosus (figure ). our sequence analysis supports that all metazoan dispanins have their origin in the common ancestor of m. brevicollis and metazoa as the choanoflagellate share a conserved splice site in the intracellular loop with nearly all metazoan dispanins (figure ) . however, the finding of the family in e. siliculosus suggests that the family has undergone two horizontal gene transfer events. as the e. siliculosus dispanins are more similar to metazoan family members than m. brevicollis and bacteria we propose that the first horizontal gene transfer event was from bacteria to a common ancestor of choanoflagellates and metazoa followed by a second transfer between metazoa and brown alga. during the course of metazoan evolution the dispanins have expanded and diverged into four distinct subfamilies. however, it has also been lost in the basal metazoa t. adhaerens and the ecdysozoan lineage, which show that it is not essential for all metazoan life. although we were unable to create a stable phylogenetic tree that include both vertebrate and invertebrate sequences blast searches suggest that the dspc and d subfamilies are the oldest of the vertebrate subfamilies as the invertebrate sequences has higher resemblance to these two subfamilies ( figure ) . moreover, the dspc and d subfamilies forms a separate cluster from dspa-b (figure ) . hence, the phylogenetic analysis suggests that the dspa and b subfamilies have their origin close to the radiation of teleost, although dspb have been lost in d. rerio (figure and ) . the dspc family is found in two to three copies in all vertebrates and is the most widespread family as the blast classification suggest that it is present in two invertebrate species and e. siliculosus. in mouse, the family members are expressed predominantly in brain tissues (dspc /tmem a, dspc /tmem b) or ubiquitously (dspc / tmem ). dspc (tmem a) has been proposed to have a role in striatial functioning and the pathophysiology of huntington's disease and is localized to the golgi apparatus [ ] . the dspd family has been lost at several occasions, both in vertebrates and invertebrates ( figure ). the mouse dspd (prrt ) gene is ubiquitously expressed with the highest expression in b-cells according to biogps [ ] . however, no previous studies have been performed on the dspd subfamily. the dspb subfamily is found in tetrapoda and has three members in human and mouse. mice expression profiles from biogps shows that dspb (prrt ) is exclusively expressed in brain tissues and that dspb (tusc ) is expressed in dorsal root ganglia and adipose tissues. in agreement with this expression data, dspb (tusc ) has been suggested to be involved in neural regulation of adipocyte differentiation and is regulated by pparc [ , ] . the dspa/ifitm subfamily is the most numerous and the mouse and human genes are all clustered in a consecutive manner on chromosome six and eleven, respectively. these regions share a conserved synteny (http:// cinteny.cchmc.org/) and are flanked by the athl and b galnt genes on each side, which is strong evidence for the genes to have their origin in common evolutionary gene duplications. this is supported by the phylogenetic analysis ( figure ) for dspa (ifitm ) and dspa (ac ), which have orthologs in all tetrapoda. however, for the dspa group (dspa a-d/ifitm - and ac ) the phylogeny suggests that m. musculus and h. sapiens have undergone independent expansions of the group. rather than being created by independent gene duplications in the two species, it is possible that these genes are subject to concerted evolution, where paralogous genes within a species are more conserved towards each other than towards orthologs in other species. this phenomenon is most common in tandemly repeated genes, such as the dspa group, and is believed to primarily be the result of recombination mechanisms [ ] . interestingly, also the dspa a-f genes of x. tropicalis seem to have undergone and independent expansion. however, the phylogeny is not strong enough to prove that the dspa a-f genes are orthologous to the mammalian dspa genes (figure ). the dspa/ifitm subfamily is the most well studied and is a multifunctional family of which its antiviral properties are best understood [ ] . the family is expressed in many mouse tissues with the highest expression in mast cells, macrophages and osteoblasts according to biogps. we add two novel human members to this subfamily: dspa d, which is closely related to dspa c (ifitm ) and dspa , which forms a distinct cluster (figure ). both these genes are poorly characterized. microarray data from array express (www.ebi.ac.uk/ arrayexpress/) shows that dspa is upregulated by interferon after exposure of macrophages to interferon-gamma in a study (e-geod- ) where dspa a-c (ifitm - ) also were induced [ ] . the mouse dspa gene is like the other genes of this subfamily situated on chromosome seven, but is . mbp away from the dspa (ifitm) cluster where the other genes reside. hence, dspa could explain the mild phenotypes and be responsible for the suggested functional redundancy that was found when deleting the whole dspa (ifitm) loci [ ] . the dispanin family has several conserved motifs across subfamilies that are also detected in bacteria (figure ) . one of the most prominent is the double cysteine motif (c-c) in the first transmembrane helix. this motif has recently been shown to undergo post-translational modification through s-palmitoylation in dspa c (ifitm ), which increases hydrophobicity [ ] . further, yount and colleagues shows that the antiviral activity of dspa c (ifitm ) is dependent on this modification, which induces clustering of the proteins. as this motif is highly conserved, it is likely that s-palmitoylation is an important regulatory mechanism also among the other subfamilies. intriguingly, this motif is also found in the bacterial dispanins even though bacterial proteins do not undergo s-palmitoylation. hence, the cysteine motif of the may have other means of structural and functional importance apart of from the s-palmitoylation. in this study, we introduce the dispanin family, of which the ifitm genes constitute a subfamily. in addition to the ifitm genes we identify novel human dispanins and investigate the family's evolutionary history and suggest that the eukaryotic members are descending from bacteria through a horizontal gene transfer. thus, the expansion and diversification of dispanins in vertebrates may reflect the evolution of a larger functional repertoire, which is a supported by the distinct expression profiles figure . the protein features and topology of the dispanin subfamilies. the picture shows the membrane topology and sequences features of a representative human member of each subfamily. conserved motifs and residues are shown and those which have a sequence identity of more than % are framed in black and those with - % sequence similarity are framed in blue. predicted phosphorylation (green) and glycosylation (orange) sites are shown. doi: . /journal.pone. .g of the subfamilies. by identifying homologs to the ifitm genes and establishing the dispanins as a family together with a solid detailed and evolutionary based nomenclature for the vertebrate genes, we provide a fundament for future functional characterization these genes. the whole proteome dataset for the following eukaryotic species was included in the analysis: homo sapiens, mus musculus, gallus gallus, xenopus tropicalis, danio rerio, petromyzon marinus, drosophila melanogaster, caenorhabditis elegans, saccharomyces cerviciae, schistosoma mansoni, apis mellifera, anopheles gambiae, pediculus humanus, ixodes scapularis, daphnia pulex, oryza sativa, pristionchus pacificus, acyrthosiphon pisum, trypanosoma brucei, leishmania braziliensis and ciona instestinalis were downloaded from ensembl; strongylocentrous purpuratus was downloaded from spbase (www.spabase.org); branchiostoma floridae, nematostella vectensis, trichoplax adhaerens, phytophtera soyae, thalassiosira pseudonana, naegleria gruberi and monosiga brevicollis were downloaded from the joint genome institute; dictyostelium discoideum was downloaded from dictybase (www.dictybase.org); arabidopsis thaliana was downloaded from tair (http://www.arabidopsis.org/); entamoeba histolytica was downloaded from amoebadb (http://amoebadb.org); paramecium tetraurelia was downloaded from ncbi; tetrahymena thermophila was downloaded from uniprot; trichomonas vaginalis was downloaded from trichdb (http://trichdb.org); giardia lamblia was downloaded fromgiardiadb (http://giardiadb.org). all proteomes were searched against a local installation of the pfam database (v. ) [ ] using hmmer [ ] and the script pfam_scan.pl, which was obtained from the pfam ftp-site (ftp://ftp. sanger.ac.uk/pub/databases/pfam/tools/), with pfam's default settings. in pfam, the ifitm family is represented by a specific hidden markov model [pfam: p ]. all the proteins that were assigned to this model in the pfam-search were considered to be homologous to the ifitm family and were therefore included for further analysis. the script pfam_scan.pl uses the homology criterion set by the pfam database, which is based on a manually curated gathering threshold for each model. the gathering threshold for pf is a score of . . the sequence datasets were controlled for annotated pseudogenes and transcript variants from the same gene. in the case of multiple transcript variants, the longest sequence was kept. the resulting non-redundant datasets were used for the analysis. the bacterial sequences were obtained by querying uniprot (www.uniprot.org) for the pfam id [pfam: pf ]. thereafter, the sequence set was downloaded by browsing by taxonomy and restricting it to species with a full proteome set. to assure that no lineages were missing in the selection of proteomes the nr protein dataset from ncbi was downloaded. the nr datasets contained , , ( - - ) protein sequences from a wide range of organisms. the dataset was searched against the pf pfam model using hmmer with default settings and sequences with a score above the pfam gathering threshold ( . ) were deemed as homologous to ifitm. mafft-einsi was used, with default settings, to create a multiple sequence alignment (msa) for the vertebrate protein sequences [ ] . the msas were thereafter examined and refined in jalview . . [ ] , i.e. the sequences were trimmed and well conserved and aligned regions were kept, which included aligned amino acid columns. phylogenetic analysis was performed with a bayesian approach implemented in mrbayes [ ] . the following settings for the eukaryote proteins were adjusted: the analysis was run using a gamma shaped model for the variation of evolutionary rates across sites (rates = gamma) and the mixed option (aamodelpr = mixed) was used to estimate the best amino acid substitution model. we generated trees and the markov chain monte carlo analysis reached well below a standard deviation of split frequencies of . . each hundred tree was sampled from the mcmc run and the first % of the sampled trees were discarded (burnin = . ) to reassure a good sample from the posterior probability distribution. a consensus tree was built from the remaining trees with the mrbayes sumt command using the % majority rule method. the sump command was used to assure that an adequate sample of the posterior probability distribution was reached during the mcmc procedure. to validate the phylogenetic inference with mrbayes a maximum likelihood method implmemented in raxml was used [ ] . the combined rapid bootstrapping and search for the bestscoring ml tree option (-f a) in raxml was used to create bootstraps (-# ) using a gamma model of evolutionary rates and the jtt substitution model (-m protgammajtt). the jtt substitution model was identified as the most suitable model in the bayesian analysis and therefore selected for the maximum likelihood phylogeny. the consensus phylogenetic tree found with mrbayes was drawn in dendroscope . and the bootstrap support values from raxml were annotated on the corresponding nodes [ ] . the phylogenetic tree was used to determine subfamilies by identifying clusters with a high posterior probability and bootstrap support. invertebrate sequences were excluded from the phylogenetic analysis as they induced highly unstable topologies together with m. musculus, d. rerio and x. tropicalis sequences. these excluded sequences were categorized into their respective subfamilies by using a blast search towards the categorized sequences. the top five hits were examined to classify the invertebrate and excluded sequences into subfamilies. a sequence was assigned to the subfamily if four out of the five top hits are from the same subfamily. several resources were used to identify the protein sequence features of the dispanins. netphos . [ ] identified potential phosphorylation sites. netnglyc . and netoglyc . [ ] were used to find possible n-and o-glycosylation sites respectively. transmembrane helix prediction was made using tmhmm . [ ] . motifs were found manually through jalview . . and the server meme . . . finally, emboss:cons was used to create consensus sequences of the different dispanin families that emerged from the phylogenetic analysis and the bacterial sequences. the consensus sequences were aligned together with the m. brevicollis and the invertebrate sequences. the resulting msa was viewed and trimmed in jalview and the conserved region around the tm helices was kept. splice sites were detected in the eukaryotic dispanins by studying their annotation in the respective databases and align them to their genome using blat at the ucsc genome browser website (http://genome.ucsc.edu). table s this is a record of all identified dispanins together with their accession numbers, nomenclature and species belonging. (xls) trends in the exploitation of novel drug targets mapping the human membrane proteome: a majority of the human membrane proteins can be classified according to function and evolutionary origin the g-proteincoupled receptors in the human genome form five main families. phylogenetic analysis, paralogon groups, and fingerprints structural diversity of g protein-coupled receptors and significance for drug discovery the solute carrier (slc) complement of the human genome: phylogenetic classification reveals four major families transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulation of interferon-induced gene expression in human cells the ifitm proteins inhibit hiv- infection the ifitm proteins mediate cellular resistance to influenza a h n virus, west nile virus, and dengue virus identification of five interferon-induced cellular proteins that inhibit west nile virus and dengue virus infections distinct patterns of ifitm-mediated restriction of filoviruses, sars coronavirus, and influenza a virus identification of the ifitm family as a new molecular marker in human colorectal tumors characterization of the osteoblast-specific transmembrane protein ifitm and analysis of ifitm -deficient mice ifitm/mil/ fragilis family proteins ifitm and ifitm play distinct roles in mouse primordial germ cell homing and repulsion bril: a novel bone-specific modulator of mineralization timetree: a public knowledge-base of divergence times among organisms capucin: a novel striatal marker down-regulated in rodent models of huntington disease biogps: an extensible and customizable portal for querying and organizing gene annotation resources characterization of tusc , an adipocyte gene co-expressed in peripheral neurons molecular characterization of the tumor suppressor candidate gene: regulation by ppargamma and identification of tusc coding variants in lean and obese humans concerted evolution: molecular mechanism and biological implications transcriptional profiling of the human monocyte-to-macrophage differentiation and polarization: new molecules and patterns of gene expression normal germ line establishment in mice carrying a deletion of the ifitm/fragilis gene family cluster palmitoylome profiling reveals s-palmitoylation-dependent antiviral activity of ifitm the pfam protein families database a new generation of homology search tools based on probabilistic inference recent developments in the mafft multiple sequence alignment program jalview version -a multiple sequence alignment editor and analysis workbench mrbayes: bayesian inference of phylogenetic trees raxml-vi-hpc: maximum likelihood-based phylogenetic analyses with thousands of taxa and mixed models dendroscope: an interactive viewer for large phylogenetic trees sequence and structure-based prediction of eukaryotic protein phosphorylation sites prediction, conservation analysis, and structural characterization of mammalian mucin-type oglycosylation sites a hidden markov model for predicting transmembrane helices in protein sequences key: cord- - uqa j authors: cervera, héctor; ambrós, silvia; bernet, guillermo p; rodrigo, guillermo; elena, santiago f title: viral fitness correlates with the magnitude and direction of the perturbation induced in the host’s transcriptome: the tobacco etch potyvirus—tobacco case study date: - - journal: mol biol evol doi: . /molbev/msy sha: doc_id: cord_uid: uqa j determining the fitness of viral genotypes has become a standard practice in virology as it is essential to evaluate their evolutionary potential. darwinian fitness, defined as the advantage of a given genotype with respect to a reference one, is a complex property that captures, in a single figure, differences in performance at every stage of viral infection. to what extent does viral fitness result from specific molecular interactions with host factors and regulatory networks during infection? can we identify host genes in functional classes whose expression depends on viral fitness? here, we compared the transcriptomes of tobacco plants infected with seven genotypes of tobacco etch potyvirus that differ in fitness. we found that the larger the fitness differences among genotypes, the more dissimilar the transcriptomic profiles are. consistently, two different mutations, one in the viral rna polymerase and another in the viral suppressor of rna silencing, resulted in significantly similar gene expression profiles. moreover, we identified host genes whose expression showed a significant correlation, positive or negative, with the virus' fitness. differentially expressed genes which were positively correlated with viral fitness activate hormone- and rna silencing-mediated pathways of plant defense. in contrast, those that were negatively correlated with fitness affect metabolism, reducing growth, and development. overall, these results reveal the high information content of viral fitness and suggest its potential use to predict differences in genomic profiles of infected hosts. fitness is a complex parameter often used by evolutionary biologists and ecologists to quantitatively describe the reproductive ability and evolutionary potential of an organism in a particular environment (linnen and hoekstra ; orr ) . despite this apparently simple definition, measuring fitness is difficult and most studies only measure one or more fitness components (e.g., survival to maturity, fecundity, number of mates, or number of offspring produced) as proxies to total fitness (linnen and hoekstra ; orr ). in the field of virology, it has become standard to measure fitness by growth-competition experiments in mixed infections with a reference strain (holland et al. ; wargo and kurath ) . with this experimental set up, fitness is just the relative ability of a viral strain to produce stable infectious progeny in a given host (cell type, organ, individual, or species) when resources have to be shared with a competitor (domingo and holland ) . regardless its limitations, this approach provides a metric for ranking viral strains according to their performance in a particular environment/host. such a fitness measure has been pivotal for quantitatively understanding many virus evolution processes: the effect of genetic bottlenecks and accumulation of deleterious mutations (chao ; duarte et al. ; de la iglesia and elena ) , the rates and dynamics of adaptive evolution into novel hosts , the pleiotropic cost of host range expansion (novella, clarke, et al. ; turner and elena ; lali c et al. ) , the cost of genome complexity (pesko et al. ; willemsen et al. ) , the cost of antiviral escape mutations (novella et al. ; westerhout et al. ; mart ınez-picado and mart ınez ) , the topography of adaptive fitness landscapes (da silva and wyatt ; lali c and elena ; cervera et al. ) , and the role of robustness in virus evolution (codoñer et al. ; sanju an et al. ; novella et al. ) . but differences in viral fitness should also matter in genome-wide studies seeking to understand the mode of action of the viruses (i.e., the precise way they interact with their hosts). it has been argued that an integrative systems biology approach to viral pathogenesis would result in a better understanding of pathogenesis and in the identification of common targets for different viruses, therefore serving as a guide to a more rational design of therapeutic drugs (tan et al. ; viswanathan and früh ; bailer and haas ; barab asi et al. ; friedel and haas ; elena and rodrigo ; finzer ) . pioneering studies have ignored the high genetic variability of viruses in fitness and in mode of action. experimental evidence supports that even single nucleotide substitutions have significant effects on viral fitness regardless of whether they are synonymous or nonsynonymous, or they affect coding or noncoding genomic regions (sanju an et al. ; carrasco, de la iglesia, et al. ; domingo-calap et al. ; peris et al. ; acevedo et al. ; bernet and elena ; visher et al. ) . a common trend among all these studies is that, whenever fitness is evaluated in the standard host, the distribution of mutational effects is highly skewed toward deleterious effects, with a large fraction of mutations being lethal. furthermore, increasing evidence suggests that the distribution of fitness effects increases as the genetic divergence among two hosts (e.g., a tested host and the natural one) increases (lali c et al. ; vale et al. ; lali c and elena ; cervera et al. ) . together, all these observations suggest that the fitness of a given viral genotype depends not only on its own genetic background but also on the host where fitness is evaluated. arguably, differences in viral fitness reflect differences in the virus-host interaction. as cellular parasites, viruses need to utilize all sort of cellular factors and resources, reprogram gene expression patterns into their own benefit, and block and interfere with cellular defenses. all these processes take place in the host complex network of intertwined interactions and regulations. interacting in suboptimal ways with any of the elements of the host network may have profound effects in the progression of a successful infection and therefore in viral fitness; inefficient interactions may result in attenuated or even abortive infections. little is known about how viral fitness informs about the underlying changes occurring in host gene expression and protein function at a genome-wide scale. in this work, we have investigated the potential association between viral fitness and host transcriptional regulation upon infection as a first step into this direction. we have characterized the transcriptomic profiles of nicotiana tabacum l. var xanthi nn plants inoculated with a collection of genotypes of tobacco etch virus (tev; genus potyvirus, family potyviridae) that differ in their fitness in this natural host. analyses of gene expression data allowed us to characterize differential gene expression upon infection with different tev genotypes, as well as to identify sets of candidate genes whose expressions positively or negatively correlated with the magnitude of tev fitness. differences in expression for representative genes from these two categories were experimentally validated by an alternative method. differences in viral fitness and host symptomatology figure shows relevant information about the seven tev genotypes used for this study. the mutant genotypes differ from the wild-type (wt) genotype in a rather limited number of nonsynonymous mutations ( or ). however, their fitness values and the severity of symptoms induced differ widely. in this study, the fitness of each mutant genotype was estimated as the ratio of malthusian growth rates of the mutant and the wt (see materials and methods for details). significant differences existed among the fitness values of the seven selected b ). figure c illustrates the differences in symptoms induced by each one of the seven genotypes. symptoms ranged from the asymptomatic infection or local chlorotic spots characteristic of mutant as , the mild etching of mutant cla and the severe etching induced by the wt and the other mutants. no correlation exists between virus fitness and symptoms, a finding previously reported for this experimental system (carrasco, de la iglesia, et al. ). differences in viral fitness are associated with differences in the magnitude of the change in the host transcriptome first, we sought to test whether differences in tev fitness might be associated with differences in the gene expression profiles of infected plants. we hypothesized that viral fitness results from a particular interaction between virus and host factors and assumed that the outcome of infection of a wt virus in its natural host results from an optimal (from the virus perspective) modulation of the host's gene expression profile. as viral fitness is reduced, interactions are less optimal and, consequently, the gene expression profile of the plant will be increasingly different from that resulting from the infection with the wt virus. to test this hypothesis, we infected n. tabacum plants with each one of the seven tev genotypes described earlier. eight-day postinoculation (dpi) symptomatic tissues were collected for all mutants except for the very low fitness mutant as , for which tissues were collected dpi because the delay in symptoms appearance and severity ( fig. c ). total rnas were extracted, normalized, and used to hybridize n. tabacum gene expression  k microarrays (agilent). slides were handled as described in the materials and methods section; intensity signals were normalized using tools in babelomics (alonso et al. ) . normalized expression data are contained in supplementary file s , supplementary material online. figure a shows the clustering (unweighted average distance method; upgma) of average expression data for those genes that significantly changed expression ( -fold) among plants infected with the seven viral genotypes ( -way anovas with false discovery rate (fdr) correction; overall p < . ) relative to the mock-inoculated plants. regarding individual genes, two major clusters can be distinguished, one corresponding to the overexpression of genes related to stress response and a second one corresponding to the underexpression of genes involved with metabolism and plant development. to further explore the similarity in the perturbation induced by each viral genotype into the plants' transcriptome, we computed all pairwise pearson productmoment correlation coefficients (r) between the mean expression values for all genes in the microarray. these correlations were used as a measure of similarity to build a upgma dendrogram. the rationale for this analysis is as follows: the more correlated two expression profiles are, the more similar the effects induced in infected plants. when comparing expression profiles from a pair of infected plants, a high correlation may indicate that genes that changed expression relative to the mock-inoculated plants, are exactly the same in both samples, showing a similar expression pattern. conversely, if genes with differential expression do not match in the two profiles being compared, then the correlation will be low. figure b shows both the heat-map of the correlation coefficients and the resulting dendrogram. three clusters result from this analysis ( fig. b ). the first cluster is constituted by the three viral genotypes with the higher fitness values, that is, wt, pc , and pc . genotypes of intermediate fitness cla , pc , and cla constitute a second cluster. finally, plants infected with as show the most dissimilar gene expression profile. the heat-map is shown with viral genotypes ordered according to the upgma clustering. correlations decreased as the distance in the cladogram increases. within clusters, r > . , whereas between clusters the correlations ranged between . < r < . , except for plants infected with as , whose similarity with other infected plants was r < . . next, to further investigate the similarity between expression profiles of plants infected with different tev genotypes, we performed a principal components (pc) analysis of all the gene expression data. the percentage of total observed variance explained by the first three components was $ % (the first pc itself explained %). figure c shows the distribution of values in the space defined by the three first principal components. results are equivalent to those obtained with the two previous clustering methods, where genotypes are classified into three groups. wt, pc , and pc are closer in the space and characterized by positive values of first pc but negative values of the second and third pcs. cla , pc , and cla form a second group, with positive values of first and second pcs but negative values of the third. as before, as effect on host transcriptome is clearly different, and has negative values of the first and second pcs but positive of the only genes that show significant differences among all infections (oneway anova with fdr, adjusted p < . ) are included in the heat-map. hierarchical clustering of genes done with upgma by using the correlations between all pairs of mean profiles as distance metric. genes down-regulated (in blue) mainly correspond to metabolic and developmental processes, whereas genes up-regulated (in red) mainly correspond to stress responses. (b) tev genotypes clustered (upgma) according to the similarity of the mean expression profiles of plants infected with each one of them. the heat-map represents the value of the pearson's correlation coefficient between pairs of mean profiles. (c) representation of the three major principal components from the data shown in panel (b) . the three first pcs explain up to % of the total observed variance. lines link each genotype with the centroid of the d space. the arrow represents a putative trajectory of increasing viral fitness. (d) association between viral fitness and the magnitude of the perturbation (vs. mockinoculated control plants) both relative to wt (p ¼ . ). (e) association between viral fitness and the distance of each genotype to the wt (p ¼ . ), from the dendrogram shown in panel (b). cervera et al. . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe third. interestingly, figure c shows that genotypes are located in this principal component space following a trajectory of increasing fitness values (indicated by the arrow in fig. c ). along this trajectory, pcs switch sign in different directions. this transition suggests that the over-or under-expression of a set of genes is associated with particular levels of viral fitness: low fitness as is characterized by a positive third pc and a negative first pc while high fitness viruses are characterized by the opposite sign. that is, over-or underexpressed genes are not progressively accumulated as long as viral fitness changes. these genes will be evaluated in the following sections. following from our working hypothesis, if the wt virus has evolved to optimize its interaction with the host, it is logical that small departures in viral fitness will be associated with small deviations between the transcriptomes of plants infected with the wt virus and with viruses whose fitness is close to the wt. conversely, the less similar fitness between the wt and mutant viruses, the more dissimilar would be the transcriptional profiles of infected plants. to test this prediction, we have explored the following: ) the correlation between the similarity of transcriptional profiles of plants infected with the wt tev and with each mutant (again using pearson's r) and fitness and ) the correlation between the distance from wt in the cladogram shown in figure b and fitness. the results of these analyses are shown in figure d and e. as expected, both correlations were significant (r ¼ . , p ¼ . and r ¼ À . , p ¼ . , respectively; in both cases df) and of the expected sign. viral fitness and perturbation of host's transcriptomes . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe plants. the number of down-expressed degs ranges between (for as ) and , (for cla ), while in the case of upexpressed degs the range is slightly narrower: from (as ) to , (cla ). figure b illustrates the number of degs in common between all pairs of transcriptomes from infected plants. the heat-map shows a pattern of modularity, with three well-defined modules. the first module contains the three viruses with highest fitness (wt, pc , and pc ), the second module contains the three viruses with intermediate fitness (pc , cla , and cla ), and the very low fitness genotype as is the only member of the third module. the number of shared degs within each of these modules is > % of total. the number of shared degs between modules drops < %. next, following the same rationale as the previous section, we sought to determine whether the number of degs also depends on the difference in fitness from wt. in this case, we hypothesized that the overlap in the lists of degs must be similar for wt and viruses of equivalent fitness (e.g., pc or pc ), whereas the magnitude of the overlap between deg lists would decrease as differences in fitness became larger. figure c shows the counts of degs that are differentially expressed (for up-and down-expressed genes) between wt and the other six viral genotypes. as expected, pc , pc , and pc alter the same genes, though in a different magnitude (as shown in the previous section). the number of genes that are not in common with wt increases from cla ( ), cla ( ), and as ( ) of particular interest is the similarity between pc , a mutant of the replicase nib gene, and cla , a mutant of the vsr hc-pro gene. these two mutations led to close fitness values ( fig. a ), but also resulted in significantly similar gene expression profiles ( fig. b ). at first sight, one may argue that their impact in transcriptomic profiles should be different since these mutations affect virus proteins that are functionally unrelated. however, our results suggest that the effects on the overall virus-host interaction of each mutant are canalized in the same way. this clearly shows that viral fitness contains high information about the virus-host interaction. lists of genes are difficult to interpret and functional analyses provide a good tool to cluster genes into groups with related functions. to this end, we performed an analysis of enriched functional categories (go terms) for each viral genotype. figure illustrates the way that plants infected with each one of the seven tev genotypes differ in the functional categories significantly overrepresented relative to the mockinoculated plants. figure shows the go terms ordered from the highest to the lowest viral fitness. the upper plane shows the functional categories altered in plants infected with wt tev, with metabolic process (go: ) containing the largest number and photosynthesis (go: ) the smallest. regulation of response to biotic stimulus (go: ), defense response (go: ), immune system process (go: ), protein modification process (go: ), hormone-mediated signaling (go: ), and cell death (go: ) are all enriched in up-expressed degs, while photosynthesis, lipid metabolic process (go: ), and regulation of nitrogen compound metabolic process (go: ) are categories significantly enriched in down-expressed degs. categories such as metabolic process, unspecific response to stress (go: ), response to stimulus (go: ), response to abiotic stimulus (go: fig. . functional analysis associated to differential gene expression. artwork of meaningful biological processes (in a plane). categories that are overrepresented in the two lists of degs for each tev genotype (up-and down-regulated), either in one of them or in both, are indicated with different colors. in red, we represent categories that are significantly enriched by up-expressed degs, in blue categories that are significantly enriched by down-expressed degs, and in pink categories enriched in both types of degs; the surface of each circle is proportional to the number of degs included in each category. enrichments were evaluated by fisher's exact tests with fdr (adjusted p < . ). the different planes are organized according to viral fitness. we considered infected versus mock-inoculated control plants (for interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.). cervera et al. . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe ), localization (go: ), or transport (go: ) are enriched in both types of degs. therefore, overall speaking, genes involved in different aspects of plant defense pathways and response to infection are up-expressed, whereas genes involved in metabolism and photosynthesis are down-expressed. the second fitness plane corresponds to genotypes pc and pc , both of mild effect and carrying mutation in the ci gene. the most remarkable difference between these two genotypes and the rest of genotypes is the significant enrichment in up-expressed degs related to signal transduction (go: ) and regulation of gene expression (go: ). drifting down in the virus fitness scale, the next plane in figure corresponds to genotype pc , which shows a similar distribution of gos as the wt except for a lack of enrichment in up-expressed degs in the regulation of response to biotic stress category. next plane corresponds to genotypes cla and cla hyposuppressors of moderate fitness and carrying point mutations in the hc-pro gene. plants infected with these two viral genotypes differ from plants infected with the wt virus in three main functional categories: the loss of significant enrichment in the hormonemediated signaling category, and a significant enrichment in up-expressed degs into the localization and transport categories. finally, the bottom plane in the fitness scale corresponds to genotype as ( fig. ), which has a very week vsr activity, very low fitness and induces no symptoms or very mild symptoms. these differences in fitness and severity of symptoms have a direct translate into the enrichment of the different functional categories. compared with wt, metabolic process is enriched with down-expressed degs while nonspecific response to stress is very much enriched now in up-expressed degs, and response to stimulus, protein modification process, localization, and transport are not enriched in any particular type of degs. moreover, no significant enrichment in the hormone-mediated signaling module was found in plants infected with as , or for the other hc-pro mutant genotypes cla and cla . taken together, the results shown in the previous sections suggest that the transcriptomic response of plants to infection varies with the fitness of the virus being inoculated. this observation motivated us to identify genes whose expression significantly correlates with viral fitness; that is, systematic changes in virus fitness are associated with an increase or decrease in the expression level of a particular gene. this is a correlation analysis and as such does not assume a functional dependence between viral fitness and the expression of individual host genes. yet, it may provide a list of candidate genes to be considered as determinants of viral fitness. we computed a nonparametric spearman's correlation coefficient between viral fitness and the normalized degree of expression (z-score) for each one of the previously characterized degs correlation plots between host gene expression and viral fitness for those genes that significantly vary across all viral infections (one-way anova with fdr, adjusted p < . ), and that exhibit a significant positive (upper panel; red dots) or negative (lower panel; blue dots) trend (spearman's correlation test, p < . ). expression data represented as z-scores. (b) pie charts of biological and molecular functions. on the top, for genes whose expression increases with tev fitness (red dots in panel a); on the bottom, for genes whose expression decreases with fitness (blue dots in panel a). (for interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.). viral fitness and perturbation of host's transcriptomes . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe next, we sought to explore which functional categories and molecular functions, if any, were enriched among these two subsets of degs. results are shown in figure b and functional annotations are all reported in the supplementary file s , supplementary material online. there are significant differences in the distribution of positively and negatively correlated degs into different functional categories ( fig. b , left column; homogeneity test: v ¼ . , df, p < . ), although the difference in magnitude is moderate (cram er's v ¼ . ). among degs whose expression is positively correlated with viral fitness, biological regulation (go: ) and developmental processes (go: ) are strongly enriched compared with the negatively correlated degs. by contrast, negatively correlated degs disproportionally contribute more than positively correlated ones to the categories response to stimulus, localization, metabolic processes, and cell death. focusing on molecular functions ( fig. b , right column), a significant difference also exists among degs whose expression is positively-and negatively correlated with viral fitness (homogeneity test: v ¼ . , df, p < . ), with a magnitude of the difference in the moderate to large magnitude range (cram er's v ¼ . ). on the one hand, among positively correlated degs, nucleic acid binding (go: ) shows the largest departure from negatively correlated ones. on the other hand, catalytic activity (go: ) and transporter activity (go: ) are the two molecular functions that appear to be enriched among negatively correlated degs. together, these results suggest that positively correlated degs play a role in the transcriptional regulation of host defenses. by contrast, degs with negative correlation between expression and tev fitness participate more in catalytic and transport activities than genes with positive correlation, suggesting a redirection of resources by the host that is not independent of viral fitness. normalized expression data used in figure were estimated from changes in spot intensity in the n. tabacum gene expression  k microarrays (agilent). to validate these results with rt-qpcr, we selected four positively correlated and five negatively correlated degs that cover the entire range of observed significant spearman's correlation coefficients (supplementary file s , supplementary material online). they represent different biological functions and are expressed at different developmental stages and under different environmental situations (see below). the four positively correlated degs selected were (ordered according to the observed r s values): dicer-like gene (dcl ; r s ¼ . ), the gene encoding for the vq motif-containing protein (vq ; r s ¼ . ), the gene encoding for the gast protein homolog (gasa ; r s ¼ . ), and a gene encoding for a member of the lipase/lipoxygenase plat/lh family (plat ; r s ¼ . ). dcl is involved in defense response to viruses, maintenance of dna methylation and production of ta-sirnas involved in rna interference (parent et al. ) . vq is a negative transcriptional regulator of lightmediated inhibition of hypocotyl elongation that likely promotes the transcriptional activation of phytochrome interacting factor (pif ) during early seedling development, and participates in the jasmonic acid-mediated (ja) plant basal defense, as the vq proteins interact with wrky transcription factors . gasa encodes for a gibberellin-and brassinosteroid-regulated protein possibly involved in cell elongation (bouquin et al. ) , also reported to be involved in resistance to abiotic stress through ros signaling (o'brien et al. ) . plat encodes for a lipase/lipoxygenase that promotes abiotic stress tolerance (hyun et al. ) , is a positive regulator of plant growth, and regulates the abiotic-biotic stress cross-talk. the negatively correlated degs selected for validation are the adenosine kinase gene (adk ; r s ¼ À . ), the gene encoding for the small b chain of the rubisco (rbcs b; r s ¼ À . ), the agamous-like gene (agl ; r s ¼ À . ), the factor of dna methylation gene, (fdm ; r s ¼ À . ), and the granule-bound starch synthase gene (gbss ; r s ¼ À . ). adk encodes for an adenosine kinase involved in adenosine metabolism, including the homeostasis of cytokinines (schoor et al. ) , controls methyl cycle flux in a s-adenosyl methioninedependent manner and plays a role in rna silencing by methylation. rbcs b is involved in carbon fixation during photosynthesis and in yielding sufficient rubisco content (zhan et al. ) . agl is a dna-binding mads-box transcription activator modulating the expression of homeotic genes involved in flower development and maintenance of inflorescence meristem identity, transitions between vegetative stages of plant development and in tolerance to cold (lee et al. ) . fdm is an sgs -like protein that acts in rna-directed dna methylation participating in the rna silencing defense pathway (xie et al. ) . gbss is involved in glucan biosynthesis and responsible of amylase synthesis that is essential for plant growth and other developmental processes (denyer et al. ) . rt-qpcr-based relative expression data were calculated using the ddc t method normalized by each one of the two reference genes and then averaged (see materials and methods). to make expression data by microarray readings and rt-qpcr readily comparable, they were both transformed into z-scores. figure a shows the comparison of the two expression measures for the four degs with positive correlation with tev fitness and figure b for the five degs with negative correlation with tev fitness. two different plots are presented for each gene. in all cases, the left plot illustrates the relationship between the expression z-scores obtained with the microarray method (x-axis) and with rt-qpcr method (y-axis) for each one of the seven tev genotypes; the solid lines indicate the best linear fit between these two data sets. in this representation, a regression line of slope is expected if both quantification methods provide identical z-scores. in all nine cases, both expression z-scores are highly and significantly correlated; pearson's r values ranged from . (vq ) to . (gasa ) (in all cases df, -tailed p . ). if a more stringent holm-bonferroni correction of the overall significance level is taken, then vq would not remain significant. for each gene, the right plot shows both expression z-scores as a function of tev fitness; solid lines represent mbe the best linear fit between normalized expressions and tev fitness. in this representation, the more overlap between the two regression lines, the better the agreement between both quantitative methods. in this representation, vq and adk show the largest departure between both regression lines, though even in these extreme cases, the difference was not large enough as to be significant in a nonparametric wilcoxon's signed ranks test (p ! . in all nine cases) or in a student's t-test for the comparison of regression coefficients (p ! . ). thus, we conclude that, at least for the sample of genes analyzed, the observed correlations between host's gene expression and viral fitness are consistent for both experimental methods used to evaluate levels of gene expression. we further delineated a picture of virus-plant interaction reflected in precise alterations of transcriptomic profiles and regulatory networks. plant-virus interactions result from the confrontation of two players with opposed strategies and interests. from the plant perspective, activation of basal defenses, immunity, hormone-regulated pathways, and rna-silencing (some of which are not virus-specific) will result in an immediate benefit to control virus replication and spread. we found that some plant defense responses are expressed upon infection regardless the fitness of the virus, whereas other defenses are induced progressively as viral fitness increases. consistent with the first mode, we observed the activation of the genes eds and pad , components of r gene-mediated disease resistance with homology to lipases, in every infection (fig. a ). these are master regulators of plant defenses that connect pathogen signals with salicylic acid signaling (cui et al. ). salicylic acid is involved in resistance to a broad spectrum of pathogens, and in particular viruses (alamillo et al. ; conti et al. ) . consistent with the second mode, we observed the activation of many genes involved in defenses in proportion to tev fitness ( fig. a ). for example, the dcl and ago genes-key for the rna silencing response-, genes modulating resistance to pathogens such as the subtilisin-like protease (sbt . ), or genes expressing proteins involved in hormone-regulated defenses such as gasa and vq , brassinosteroids (e.g., brassinosteroid enhanced expression bee , brassionosteroid-signaling kinases and , brassinosteroid bak bri -associated receptor kinase), ethylene response factors (e.g., erf b, erf , or cytokine response factor crf ), and members of abscisic acid perception pathway (e.g., pyl -rcar , a regulatory component of the abscisic acid receptor family). likewise, genes involved in methylation-mediated stress responses, such adk , fdm or the methionine adenosyltransferase mat reduce their expression as virus replication is more efficient, thus resulting in less methylation and increased expression of genes that participate in apoptosis and posttranscriptional gene silencing (schoor et al. ) . in this way, the overexpression of genes that modulate histone acetylation or chromatin organization, such as the histone acetyltransferase hac and the chromatin remodeling factor r (chr ) would regulate differentiation, apoptosis, transcriptional activation, or ethylene response just as viral fitness increases. however, these activations have a cost, mainly in terms of resources that can be invested into secondary metabolism and development. consistent with this idea is the fact that many genes participating in metabolic processes (e.g., cysc , a cysteine synthase) are highly repressed upon infection ( fig. a ). there are also central genes for the plant metabolism whose repression correlates with viral fitness, such as gbss , photosystem components, or assembly factors (e.g., lhcb . and hcf ), rubisco subunits and atpases, catalases, transketolases, nucleotide and phosphate transporters, synthases involved in flavonoid, isoprenoid, ascorbate, or tryptophan biosynthesis, and gapdh ( fig. ). diverting host cell resources and reprograming the metabolic machinery to support rna metabolism and atp production is a general strategy both of plant ) and animal viruses (tang et al. ; tiwari et al. ) . tev achieves this reprogramming by altering the expression of a series of genes to its own benefit. for example, we found the expression of genes involved in actin cytoskeleton organization such as adf and pfn to be negatively correlated with tev fitness. the profilin pnf is an actinbinding protein and adf participates in the depolymerization of actin filaments that results from microbial-associated molecular patterns being recognized by the corresponding pattern-recognition receptors (henty-ridilla et al. ) . therefore, by downregulating this function, longer and more stable actin filaments are produced that virions can use to move around the cell from the er-associated replication factories to plasmodesmata. another example is the repression observed for the ubp b gene, a negative regulator of potyvirus translation, that would allow for a more optimal virus accumulation (hafr en et al. ) . genes involved in nonsense-mediated decay (nmd) defenses (wachter and hartmann ) , such as the atp-dependent rna helicase upf , also show reduction in levels of expression. other group of proteins that show alteration during viral infection are those involved in protein degradation, via ubiquitination and downstream into the proteasome pathway (e.g., ubiquitin-protein ligase , upl ; ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme , ubc ; ubiquitin e variant b, mmz ; ein -binding f box protein , ebf) or via autophagy (e.g., the atp-driven chaperone cdc c and the plant autophagy adaptor nbr ). moreover, tev activates in a fitness-dependent manner the expression of genes rh , an rna helicase, and pcap , a fig. . continued measured by microarray and in blue by rt-qpcr) and viral fitness. the solid lines represent linear models; the closer the slopes of both lines, the more similarity between microarray and rt-qpcr expression data. (a) genes whose expression increases with viral fitness (cases from fig. a , red dots). (b) genes whose expression decreases with viral fitness (cases from fig. b, blue dots) . bidimensional error bars represent sd. (for interpretation of the references to colour in this figure legend, the reader is referred to the web version of this article.) cervera et al. . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe membrane-associated cation-binding protein, also required by potyviruses for cell-to-cell movement (vijayapalani et al. ) (fig. a ), and of a diversity of transcription factors including global (e.g., gra , gte ), sequence-specific (e.g., sacl and spl ), gata/nac family members (e.g., gata , nac , nac ), bzip g-box finding factors (e.g., gbf and bzip ), and involved in homeotic gene expression (e.g., agl and homeobox- ). we also found genes related to genome integrity, (e.g., the cohesins syn and smc , and the chromatin protein spt ), dna replication and nucleosome assembly, alternative splicing (e.g., sf , an homolog nuclear splicing factor), chromatin transition (e.g., spt , an histone chaperone involved in transcription elongation from rnapolii promoters and regulation of chromatin transitions; or the histone acetyltransferase hac , a coactivator of gene transcription with a major role in controlling flowering time and also essential for resistance to bacterial infections), dna replication, and cell division (e.g., the mitotic cohesin rad and the cyclin-dependent protein kinase cych ). however, not all host factors recruited by the virus present alterations in their expression. according to our data, the translation initiation factor eif e, known to be exploited by tev for its own translation (robaglia and caranta ) , was found to be unperturbed ( fig. a ) while eif a and eif g expression is positively correlated with tev fitness. in essence, there are genes that are significantly altered (up or down) upon infection irrespective of the ability of the virus to replicate, genes whose expression correlates with this ability (positively or negatively), and genes that remain unaltered. nevertheless, this picture of virus-plant interaction may be biased by the limited number of viral genotypes analyzed in this work. three out of six genotypes correspond to hc-pro mutants. as a multifunctional protein, it is not surprising that different fitness levels can be reached by introducing mutations in different functional domains. but, certainly, more mutants should be analyzed in future work to provide a comprehensive picture and avoid bias toward certain virus proteins. in addition, we here focused on the transcription regulation, but other interlinked networks exist in the cell (e.g., metabolism, protein-protein interactions, . . .). to provide an insight on these other networks, we constructed the interactome ( fig. b ) of hc-pro with the host proteins known to interact with this virus protein (revers and garc ıa ) . we then contextualized our gene expression data over multiple tev infections. many of the cellular functions in which hc-pro participate (protein degradation, translation, redox processes, and cation signaling) are not regulated transcriptionally upon infection (or regulated marginally). presumably, the virus exploits these processes for its own benefit (mainly to enhance replication and movement within a cell), and the normal expression of the corresponding genes is sufficient for such subversion. by contrast, rna silencing and methylation are functions involved in defense against pathogens that are quantitatively regulated, as a sort of control strategy exerted by the plant, as long as they are needed, that is, according to viral fitness. biological systems and processes can be analyzed and modeled at every scale of complexity. it is expected that components of each level of complexity may contribute to determine the behavior of processes at other levels. the complexity at the molecular level (i.e., the lowest level of biological organization) is astonishing both in terms of possible elements (genes, functional rnas, proteins, and metabolites) and of interactions among them (barab asi et al. ) . thus, if the components at lower scales of complexity, presumed to be more accessible experimentally, are informative enough about the underlying processes, they result in excellent proxies to understand biological systems. in the case of a disease (in plants or animals), the symptoms exhibited by the organism have been traditionally used as macroscopic indicators of what occurred within the organism. this allows diagnosing diseases without the need to perform further analyses. however, symptoms are generally uncoupled from the magnitude of the perturbation at the molecular level in the host (with respect to a healthy state) (barab asi et al. ; finzer ) . this is particularly true in the case of a virusinduced disease, a paradigmatic example of a system-wide perturbation (tan et al. ; viswanathan and früh ; bailer and haas ; friedel and haas ; elena and rodrigo ) . here, we have studied for the first time the use of viral fitness as an indicator of the molecular changes occurring in the host upon infection. after all, the progress of a viral infection depends on the fitness of the virus mutant swarm. classically, viral fitness has been evaluated by means of parameters describing the absolute growth and accumulation, by competition experiments (holland et al. ; wargo and kurath ) , or even by correlating it with the development of host's symptoms (carrasco, de la iglesia, et al. ; wargo and kurath ) . we focused on the infections exerted by different genotypes of a given virus in the same host. fitness differences among genotypes are due to several causes. first, they may be a direct consequence of the effect of mutations on viral proteins, perhaps even resulting in altered folding, and thus jeopardizing their functions. second, in the case of mutations affecting regulatory regions (e.g., rna stems and loops), the effect may be due to altered structural configurations that impede the binding of virus own proteins or of cellular factors. plenty of examples illustrate the effect of mutations via these two mechanisms (bernet and elena ) . a third, more intriguing, yet poorly explored possibility is that mutated viral components (i.e., rnas and proteins) may interact in nonoptimal ways with the complex network of genetic and biochemical interactions of the cell as a whole. interacting in nonoptimal ways with any of the elements of the host regulatory and biochemical networks may have profound effects in the progression of a successful infection and therefore of viral fitness. in this work, we considered mutations affecting the ci protein (with rna helicase, atpase, and membrane activities), the viral replicase nib, and the hc-pro protein (vsr, protease, and helper-component during transmission by aphids). our results point out that fitness, irrespective of what type of mutation is introduced, is a good indicator of how a given mutant reprograms gene expression patterns, to its own benefit or as a consequence of cellular defenses (e.g., fig. c ). despite the interest of this hypothesis, none of the early studies tackled the relationship between genotype and fitness of the virus and transcriptomic profiles of the host in a systematic manner, but rather focused on comparing two viral genotypes. evolution experiments simulating the spillover of tev from its natural host n. tabacum into a novel, poorly susceptible one, arabidopsis thaliana, have shown that adaptation of tev to the novel host (i.e., concomitant to large increases in fitness) was associated with a profound change in the way the ancestral and evolved viruses interacted with the plant's transcriptome, with genes involved in the response to biotic stresses, including signal transduction and innate immunity pathways, being significantly underexpressed in plants infected with the evolved virus than in plants infected with the ancestral one (agudelo-romero et al. ) . further evolution experiments into different ecotypes of a. thaliana that differed in their susceptibility to infection illustrated a pattern of adaptive radiation in which viruses were better adapted to their local host ecotype than to any alternative one, but with viruses evolved into more restrictive ecotypes being more generalists than viruses evolved in the more permissive ones (hillung et al. ) . interestingly, these differences in fitness had a parallelism with differences in the transcriptomic profiles of plants from different ecotypes; the more generalist viruses altering similar genes in every ecotype, whereas the more specialist viruses altered different genes in different ecotypes (hillung et al. ) . similarly, a. thaliana plants infected either with a mild or a virulent isolate of turnip mosaic potyvirus also showed profound differences in the genes and functional categories altered (s anchez et al. ) . in this case, the more virulent strain mainly altered stress responses and transport functions compared with the mild one (s anchez et al. ) . in a recent study, the transcriptomic alterations induced in nicotiana benthamiana plants infected either with a wt tobacco vein banding mosaic potyvirus or a genotype deficient in the vsr were compared (geng et al. ) . both transcriptomes differed in many aspects, including repression of photosynthesis-related genes, genes involved in the rna silencing pathway, the jasmonic acid signaling pathway, and the auxin signaling transduction (geng et al. ) . altogether, the results reported in this study illustrate the complex interaction between viruses and their native host plants, and how the outcome of this interaction, in terms of viral replication and accumulation, correlates with the expression of host genes ( fig. a ). our observation that viral fitness correlates positively or negatively with the expression of certain genes is of particular interest. by simply measuring the fitness of the virus infecting a given host, we may predict the whole genomic profile of the host cell to characterize its state (molecular impact of infection). moreover, by specifically targeting host genes that are essential for high fitness virus variants but not for milder ones, we may prevent the cervera et al. . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe spreading of the former variants, whereas still allowing mild variants to replicate and, perhaps, act as attenuated vaccines that enhance the antiviral response of the plant. the infectious clone pmtev contains a full copy of the genome of a wt tev strain isolated from tobacco ( fig. a ; genbank accession dq ) (bedoya and dar os ) . six tev mutant genotypes were constructed by sitedirected mutagenesis starting from template plasmid pmtev as described in torres-barcel o et al. ( ) (mutants as , cla , and cla ) and in carrasco, de la iglesia, et al. ( ) (mutants pc , pc , and pc ) . figure a shows the characteristics of the seven genotypes used in the study. the pmtev-derived plasmids contain a unique bglii restriction site. after linearization with bglii, each plasmid was transcribed with mmessage mmachine sp kit (ambion), following the manufacturer's instructions, to obtain infectious -capped rnas. transcripts were precipitated ( . volumes of diethyl pyrocarbonate [depc]-treated water, . volumes of . m licl, mm edta), collected, and resuspended in depc-treated water (carrasco, dar os, et al. ) . rna integrity and quantity were assessed by gel electrophoresis. in addition, each transcript was confirmed by sequencing of a ca. -bp fragment circumventing the mutation site as described elsewhere (lali c et al. ) . in short, reverse transcription (rt) was performed using m-mulv reverse transcriptase (thermo scientific) and a reverse primer outside the region of interest to be pcr-amplified for sequencing. pcr was then performed with phusion dna polymerase (thermo scientific) and appropriate sets of primers for each transcript. sequencing was performed at ibmcp sequencing service. templates were labelled with big dyes v . and resolved in an abi xl machine (life technologies). nicotiana tabacum l. cv. xanthi nn plants were used for production of virus particles of each of the seven genotypes ( fig. a ). the -capped rna transcripts were mixed with a : volume of inoculation buffer ( . m k hpo , mg/ml carborundum). batches of -week-old n. tabacum plants were inoculated with $ mg of rna of each viral genotype by abrasion of the third true leaf. inoculations were done in two experimental blocks, the first one including as , cla , cla , pc , and their controls, and the second one including pc , pc , and their corresponding controls. all plants were at similar growth stages. afterward, plants were maintained in a biosafety level- greenhouse chamber at c under a -h natural sunlight (supplemented with w high-pressure sodium lamps as needed to ensure a minimum light intensity of par lmol/m /s) and h dark photoperiod. all infected plants showed symptoms - dpi, except the as infected plants, which remained asymptomatic and only showed erratic chlorotic spots. at dpi virus-infected leafs and apexes from each plant were collected individually in plastic bags (after removing the inoculated leaf), with the exception of the as infected plants that were collected at dpi. next, plant tissue was frozen with liquid n , homogenized using a mixer mill mm (retsch), and aliquoted in . ml tubes ( mg each). these aliquots of tevinfected tissue were stored at À c. rna extraction from mg of fresh tissue per plant was performed using agilent plant rna isolation mini kit (agilent technologies) following the manufacturer's instructions. the concentration of total plant rna extract was adjusted to ng/ml for each sample. each rna sample was resequenced again at this stage to ensure the constancy of the genotypes as described earlier. viral loads were measured by absolute real-time rt-quantitative pcr (rt-qpcr), using standard curves (lali c et al. ) . standard curves were constructed using ten serial dilutions of the wt tev genome, synthetized in vitro as described earlier, in total plant rna obtained from healthy tobacco plants treated like all other plants in the experiment. quantification amplifications were done in a -ml volume, using a gotaq -step rt-qpcr system (promega) following the manufacturer's instructions. the forward (q-tev-f -ttggtcttgatggcaacgtg- ) and reverse (q-tev-r -tgtgccgttcagtgtcttcct- ) primers were chosen to amplify a -nt fragment in the end of tev genome and would only amplify complete genomes (lali c et al. ). amplifications were done using an abi stepone plus realtime pcr system (applied biosystems) and the following cycling conditions: the rt phase consisted of min at c and min at c; the pcr phase consisted of cycles of s at c, s at c, and s at c; and the final phase consisted of s at c, min at c, and s at c. amplifications were performed in a -well plate containing the corresponding standard curve. three technical replicates per infected plant were done. quantification results were examined using stepone software version . . (applied biosystems). total rna was extracted and virus accumulation quantified by rt-qpcr as described earlier and detailed previously (lali c et al. ) . virus accumulation (expressed as genomes/ng of total rna) was quantified dpi for all genotypes with the exception of as , that was quantified dpi. these sampling times assure that viral populations were at a quasi-stationary plateau in n. tabacum (carrasco, dar os, et al. ) . these values were then used to compute the fitness of the mutant genotypes relative to that of the wt genotype using the expression w ¼ (r t /r ) /t , where r and r t are the ratios of accumulations estimated for the mutant and wt viruses at inoculation and after t days of growth, respectively (carrasco, de la iglesia, et al. ) . fitness (w) data were fitted to a generalized linear model with a normal distribution and an identity link function. the model incorporates two random factors, the tev genotype (g) and the replicate plants (p), with the second nested within the first: where l is the grand mean value and e ijk is the error associated with individual measure k (estimated from the three technical viral fitness and perturbation of host's transcriptomes . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe replicates of the rt-qpcr reaction). the statistical significance of each factor was evaluated using a likelihood ratio test that asymptotically follows a v probability distribution. this statistical analysis was performed with ibm spss version . total rna was isolated as described earlier and its integrity assessed using a bioanalyzer (agilent) before and after hybridization. the rna samples were hybridized onto a genotypic designed n. tabacum gene expression  k microarray (amadid: ), which contained , probes ( -mer oligonucleotides) and was used in a onecolor experimental design according to minimum information about a microarray experiment guidelines (brazma et al. ) . three biological replicates for each of the six tev mutant genotypes, four replicates for the wt tev, plus four mock-inoculated negative control plants were analyzed. sample rnas ( ng) were amplified and labeled with the low input quick amp labeling kit (agilent). the one-color spike-in kit (agilent) was used to assess the labeling and hybridization efficiencies. hybridization and slide washing were performed with the gene expression hybridization kit (agilent) and gene expression wash buffers (agilent) as detailed in the manufacturer's instructions kits. after washing and drying, slides were scanned with a genepix b (axon) microarray scanner, at mm resolution. image files were extracted with the feature extraction software version . . (agilent). microarray hybridizations were performed at ibmcp genomics service. interarray analyses were performed with tools implemented in the babelomics webserver (alonso et al. ) . firstly, all agilent files were uploaded together to standardize the expression-related signals using quantile normalization (bolstad et al. ). this process resulted in a matrix of normalized expression with genes in rows and samples (tev genotypes, controls, and their replicates) in columns, provided as supplementary file s , supplementary material online. to compare the expression profiles of two tev genotypes, the expression level corresponding to mockinoculated plants (control) was first subtracted. secondly, differential expression was carried out by comparing two different samples, including replicates (against mock-inoculated or wt tev-infected plants), by using the limma test (smyth ) with fdr according to benjamini and hochberg ( ) (adjusted p < . ). an additional criterion of at least -fold change in mean expression, that is jlog (fold change)j > , was imposed to discard genes presenting minimal increases or decreases. lists of degs, up-or down-regulated, provided in supplementary file s , supplementary material online. thirdly, one-way anova tests were performed to identify genes that vary across all conditions (with fdr as above, adjusted p < . ). to identify the genes shown in figure a , the test was done over all samples, including the control. by contrast, to identify the genes shown in figure a , the test was done over all samples corresponding to infections with distinct tev genotypes. an additional criterion of significant spearman's correlation between mean fitness and mean expression (p < . ) was imposed in this latter case. lists of genes whose expressions correlate with viral fitness, either positive or negative, provided in supplementary file s , supplementary material online. the similarity between expression profiles of plants infected with different tev genotypes was evaluated with a principal components (pc) analysis with matlab version r b (mathworks) with default parameters (singular value decomposition). the annotation of the individual probes in the agilent's tobacco microarray (files _d_aa_ .txt and _d_genelist_ .txt provided by agilent) was updated by blasting the oligo sequence file ( _d_fasta_ .txt) against the most recent version of the n. tabacum mrna database (ntab-bx_awok-ss_basma.mrna.annot.fna) available at the sol genomics network (fern andez-pozo et al. ) . sequences that did not return a significant blast hit were removed from the output. a total of , annotated probes were generated. in , cases, more than one probe pointed to the same n. tabacum gene (e.g., probes a_ _p and a_ _p were both complementary to gene eb ), and in those cases the target appeared twice in the output. each one of the hits could be associated with an alternatively spliced mature mrna in the sol genomics network database. we then proceeded to generate the list of n. tabacum orthologous genes in the a. thaliana genome. to do so, we used blast against the tair version ten database of a. thaliana cdnas (lamesch et al. ) , with a cutoff e-value < À . the resulting mapping between n. tabacum and a. thaliana orthologues is listed in supplementary file s , supplementary material online. the determination of the gene ontology (go) categories overrepresented within the lists of degs was carried out in the agrigo webserver ) by using the fisher's exact test (with fdr adjusted p < . according to benjamini and yekutieli [ ] criterion). for the graphical representation, we constructed a plane involving the most relevant categories, depicted as circles with size proportional to the total number of host genes belonging to that category (in log scale). in addition, with the lists of genes whose expression correlates with viral fitness, we calculated the pie charts associated to the following: ) biological function and ) molecular function in the panther webserver (mi et al. ). total rna was extracted from mg of fresh tissue of plants infected with each one of the seven tev genotypes as described earlier. the concentration of total plant rna was adjusted to ng/ml. nine candidate genes were selected to validate the effect of each tev genotype on expression. specific primers were cervera et al. . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe designed for each gene that amplified the matured version of their corresponding mrnas. primers were designed using oligo primer analysis software version (www.oligo.net). gene expression was quantified by rt-qpcr relative to the expression of two housekeeping genes (schmidt and delaney ) . the first housekeeping gen encodes for the l ribosomal protein (genbank accession l ). forward ntl -f ( -cccctcaccacagagtctgc- ) and reverse ntl -r ( -aagggtgttgttgtcctcaatctt- ) primers were chosen to amplify a -nt long fragment. the second housekeeping gen encodes for the elongation factor a (genbank accession af ). for this second gene, forward ntef a-f ( -tgagatgcaccacgaagctc- ) and reverse ntef a-r ( -ccaacattgtcaccaggaagtg- ) primers were chosen to produce a -nt long amplicon. amplifications were done in ml volume, using gotaq -step rt-qpcr system (promega) following the manufacturer's instructions. the forward and reverse primers for each target gene were chosen to amplify a - nt fragments in the corresponding tobacco mature mrna. amplifications were done using an abi stepone plus realtime pcr system (applied biosystems) and the following cycling conditions: the rt phase consisted of min at c and min at c; the pcr phase consisted of cycles of s at c, s at c, and s at c; and the final phase consisted of s at c, min at c, and s at c. amplifications were performed individually for each target gene (with the corresponding set of primers) in a -well plate containing three biological replicates and two technical replicates per infected plant. in addition, each plate incorporates the two housekeeping genes. since each plate served for the quantification of a single mature mrna together with the two housekeeping reference genes, a baseline value of . , resulting from averaging the threshold baselines of all plates analyzed, was used as default threshold. quantification results were examined using the stepone version . . software (applied biosystems). details on the primers used for amplifications, the size of the amplicons, the genbank identification ids, and rt-qpcr threshold crossing (c t ) values for the nine degs and the corresponding internal reference genes from the same samples are all reported in supplementary file s , supplementary material online. the microarray data that support the findings of this study have been deposited at ncbi geo with accession number gse . processed data are presented in the supplementary material online. all other relevant data are available from the corresponding author on request. supplementary data are available at labarchives under doi: . /h 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domain-mediated complex formation for its function in rna-directed methylation cosupression of rbcs b in arabidopsis leads to severe photoinhibition caused by ros accumulation viral fitness and perturbation of host's transcriptomes we thank francisca de la iglesia and paula agudo for excellent technical assistance, the evolsysvir lab members for help, comments and discussions, rachel whitaker for english proofreading, and lorena latorre (ibmcp genomics service) and javier forment (ibmcp bioinformatics service) for their assistance. this research was supported by grants from spain's agencia estatal de investigaci on-feder (bfu - and bfu - -p to s.f.e. and bfu - -p to g.r.) and generalitat valenciana (prometeoii/ / ). key: cord- -t aufs authors: aurrecoechea, cristina; barreto, ana; basenko, evelina y.; brestelli, john; brunk, brian p.; cade, shon; crouch, kathryn; doherty, ryan; falke, dave; fischer, steve; gajria, bindu; harb, omar s.; heiges, mark; hertz-fowler, christiane; hu, sufen; iodice, john; kissinger, jessica c.; lawrence, cris; li, wei; pinney, deborah f.; pulman, jane a.; roos, david s.; shanmugasundram, achchuthan; silva-franco, fatima; steinbiss, sascha; stoeckert, christian j.; spruill, drew; wang, haiming; warrenfeltz, susanne; zheng, jie title: eupathdb: the eukaryotic pathogen genomics database resource date: - - journal: nucleic acids res doi: . /nar/gkw sha: doc_id: cord_uid: t aufs the eukaryotic pathogen genomics database resource (eupathdb, http://eupathdb.org) is a collection of databases covering + eukaryotic pathogens (protists & fungi), along with relevant free-living and non-pathogenic species, and select pathogen hosts. to facilitate the discovery of meaningful biological relationships, the databases couple preconfigured searches with visualization and analysis tools for comprehensive data mining via intuitive graphical interfaces and apis. all data are analyzed with the same workflows, including creation of gene orthology profiles, so data are easily compared across data sets, data types and organisms. eupathdb is updated with numerous new analysis tools, features, data sets and data types. new tools include go, metabolic pathway and word enrichment analyses plus an online workspace for analysis of personal, non-public, large-scale data. expanded data content is mostly genomic and functional genomic data while new data types include protein microarray, metabolic pathways, compounds, quantitative proteomics, copy number variation, and polysomal transcriptomics. new features include consistent categorization of searches, data sets and genome browser tracks; redesigned gene pages; effective integration of alternative transcripts; and a eupathdb galaxy instance for private analyses of a user's data. forthcoming upgrades include user workspaces for private integration of data with existing eupathdb data and improved integration and presentation of host–pathogen interactions. a unique infrastructure and search strategy system distinguish the eukaryotic pathogen database resource (eupathdb, http://eupathdb.org) from other organism databases. the power of eupathdb lies in the ability to query across hundreds of data sets while refining a set of genes, proteins, pathways or organisms of interest. the interface is designed for easy mastery by biological researchers, enabling in silico experiments that interrogate diverse and complex data sets. despite the sophisticated strategy system, browsing gene pages and genomic spans or regions remains a simple and informative task in this innovative and valuable resource. eupathdb facilitates the discovery of meaningful biological relationships between genomic features such as genes or snps by integrating pre-analyzed data with sophisticated data mining, visualization and analysis tools that are designed to be used by wet-bench researchers. organized into free, online databases eupathdb supports over eukaryotic pathogens with genomic sequence and annotation, functional genomics data, host-response data, isolate and population data and comparative genomics. table provides a web address and a link to a list of organisms supported for each database. all databases are built with the same infrastructure and use the strategies web development kit ( ) , which provides a graphical interface for building complex search strategies and exploring relationships across data sets and data types ( figure ; strategy http://plasmodb.org/plasmo/im.do?s= b dd c ). as one of four national institute of allergy and infectious disease (niaid/nih) funded bioinformatics resource centers ( - ) eupathdb provides data, tools and services to scientific communities researching pathogens in the niaid list of emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases which includes niaid category a-c priority pathogens and many fungi. additional eupathdb support for the kinetoplastid and fungal research communities is funded by the wellcome trust in collaboration with genedb ( ), including support for focused curated annotation. this manuscript describes expanded content, features and tools added since that increase the data mining and discovery power of eupathdb. over the past years, eupathdb has routinely updated existing databases and added two new databases. we added new data, expanded the range of supported data types, enhanced infrastructure and added new analysis tools. eupathdb resources have been expanded to include fungidb (http://fungidb.org) ( ) , which supports fungi and oomycetes, and hostdb (http://hostdb.org), for interrogation of host responses to infection. hostdb supports host data obtained during infections by organisms supported by eupathdb's parasite lineage-specific databases. minot et al. ( ) , for example, infected murine macrophages with toxoplasma gondii strains and collected mixed parasitehost samples for rna sequencing. reads that align to the t. gondii genome are integrated into toxodb whereas hostdb houses those sequencing reads that align to the m. musculus genome. because all eupathdb databases employ the same data analysis pipelines, search strategy system, visualization and analysis tools, the t. gondii and m. musculus data can be compared. for example, one can easily identify parasite genes that are differentially expressed between two t. gondii strains from toxodb as well as host genes that are differentially expressed during infection with the same two strains from hostdb. enrichment analyses and comparison of these lists offers insights into host-pathogen interactions and responses. eupathdb tools are conceived and designed to reduce analysis barriers, enhance data mining and improve communication within and between the scientific communities we serve. the near-seamless integration of strategy results with tools for functional enrichment analyses and transcript interpretation as well as our new galaxy workspace and the availability of publicly shared strategies augment the data mining experience in eupathdb. galaxy workspace. eupathdb sites now include a galaxy-based ( ) workspace for large-scale data analyses, e.g. rna-seq read mapping to a reference genome. developed in partnership with globus genomics ( ), workspaces offer a private analysis platform with published workflows and pre-loaded annotated genomes for the organisms we support. the workspace is accessed through the 'analyze my experiment' (figure a ) tab on the home page of any eupathdb resource and can be used to upload your own data e.g. rna-seq reads, compose and run preconfigured or custom workflows ( figure b and c), retrieve your results, visualize them in eupathdb ( figure d ), and share workflows and data analysis results with colleagues. explore transcript subsets. transcript subsets occur when a multi-transcript gene has at least one transcript that does not meet the search criteria. for example, signal peptides are short sequences at the n-terminus of secretory proteins and eupathdb predicts signal peptides for all annotated genomes using signalp ( ) . the predicted signal peptide search returns genes and transcripts with predicted signal peptides. if one transcript of a multi-transcript gene excludes the exon containing the signal peptide, the search returns the gene but not the signal peptide-deficient transcript. searches and strategies that query transcript-specific data ( figure a ; strategy http://plasmodb.org/plasmo/im. do?s= df f e) are equipped with an explore tool for interrogating or filtering transcript subsets. the explore tool appears in the gene results tab above the table of ids ( figure c ) and offers filters for transcripts based on their inclusion in the result set. filters are applied to the strategy result and update the gene result list. for two-step strategies where both steps query transcript specific data, the explore tool offers further filters for viewing transcripts that were returned by both searches, either search or neither search. enrichment analyses. gene ontology, metabolic pathway and word enrichment analyses are available for gene strategy results to aid with their interpretation ( figure f ). these functional analyses apply the fisher's exact test to determine over-represented pathways, ontology terms and product description terms. clicking the analyze results tab of any gene strategy result ( figure e ) and selecting an enrichment analysis will open an analysis tab where users are prompted for parameter values. the results of an enrichment analysis are presented in tabular form and include a list of enriched go terms, pathways or product description words and associated data. public strategies. strategies marked as public when saved to a user's profile will also be shared with the community in the 'public strategies' tab of the 'my strategies' interface. users control the availability of the strategy and can remove it at any time. the panel also includes example strategies provided by eupathdb. data sets search tool. each data set integrated into eu-pathdb is documented with a data set record which contains information about the data including a description, contact information for the investigator that generated the data, literature references, and when available, example graphs and links to searches and genome browser tracks. links to data set records appear on gene pages and on search pages beneath the parameters. a searchable table of all data sets is available from the data summary tab in the gray drop-down menu bar. eupathdb's philosophy is to provide a data mining platform that allows users to ask their own questions in support of hypothesis driven research. the extensive range of data types (genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, etc.) maintained by eupathdb broadens the user's ability to mine extensively by providing multiple forms of experimental evidence to interrogate. as the omics world expands, eupathdb endeavors to support meaningful data types and has expanded its coverage over the past few years. source brought many genomes from this large and diverse research community. updates to eupathdb's reflow workflow system ( ) make it possible to quickly and reliably analyze and load data. thus, over the past years, numerous functional data sets have been loaded. data sets of interest can be located with the data set search tool described above. protein microarray. this new data type offers a measure of host response to infection by revealing pathogenspecific antibodies in host serum or plasma samples. a typical data set includes data from serum samples collected from patients during an infection (or from healthy controls) that were hybridized to arrays spotted with possible pathogen antigens (peptides representing gene products) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . searches that query this data type are classified un-d nucleic acids research, , vol. , database issue der immunology and graphs of a pathogen gene's antigenicity for each sample appear on gene pages. the searches employ the filter parameter for selecting samples based on clinical characteristics of patients when configuring the search ( ) . metabolic pathways. pathways are integrated from meta-cyc, kegg, trypanocyc and leishcyc ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) as networks of enzymatic reactions and substrate/product compounds. genes are mapped to pathways based on ec numbers. pathway record pages feature a cytoscape image which can be 'painted' with experimental data, e.g. gene expression values or ortholog profiles. for easy transition to functional analysis, gene search results can be converted to pathways using the transform to pathways function in the add step popup or users can run a pathways enrichment analysis of their gene result to identify pathways that are statistically enriched. compounds. compound records are integrated from the chemical entities of biological interest (chebi) database ( ) and associated to genes through metabolic pathway mappings. lists of compounds are returned based on molecular weight or formula, compound id, enzyme ec number, compound id and text. lists of genes and metabolic pathways can be transformed into their associated compounds using the transform function. a genome-wide loss of function screen using crispr technology is available in toxodb and provides a measure of a gene's contribution to parasite fitness ( quantitative proteomics. this new data type provides evidence for differential protein expression from experimental methods such as silac ( , ) . the searches appear under the proteomics, quantitative mass-spec evidence and return genes based on the fold change in protein expression between samples. gene pages include graphs of these data when available. copy number variation. whole genome resequencing data are used to estimate chromosome and gene copy number in re-sequenced strains ( ) . the median read depth is set to the organism's ploidy and each chromosome's median read depth is normalized to this value. contigs that are not assigned to chromosomes are excluded from this analysis. gene copy number is similarly calculated using a normalized read depth for each gene. to compare the number of genes in the re-sequenced genome to the reference genome, genes are grouped into clusters that are inferred to have originated by duplication. searches are categorized under genetic variation and either return genes with a certain copy number, or genes with different copy numbers between strains. polysomal transcriptomics. rna-sequencing of polysome or ribosome associated transcripts reveals potential translation events. data sets of this data type are available in plasmodb ( , ) and trytripdb ( ) . categorized under transcriptomics, rna seq evidence, the searches against this new data type return genes with differential translation potential (fold change search) or genes within a certain percentile rank within a sample. expression graphs and rna sequencing coverage plots are available statically in gene pages and dynamically in gbrowse. these coverage plots provide evidence for the cds and translational start site usage. metadata. biological sample characteristics such as host clinical parameters for pathogen isolates or blood samples offer valuable information for stratifying samples while configuring searches. eupathdb integrates metadata when available and presents it in the filter parameter interface to take advantage of the rich data type when selecting samples for data mining (see below). the most recent eupathdb release represents significant updates to the underlying data and infrastructure. in addition to refreshing all data to the latest versions, we added workspaces, redesigned our gene pages, incorporated alternative transcripts into gene pages and searches, updated search categories and contemporized the rna sequence analysis workflow. categories. searches, the experimental data sets they query, and genome browser tracks for visualization are now displayed with a common logic across the websites. the categories are based on the embrace data & methods ontology (edam) ( ) , which relates biological concepts with bioinformatic analyses. the result is a logical, consistent menu structure from home page to gene page to genome browser. for example, the category names and order in the home page 'search for genes' (figure b) is the same as the 'contents' section of the gene page ( figure c ). eupathdb's extensive record system documents integrated data and analysis results for entities such as genes, genomic sequences, snps, isolates, compounds and metabolic pathways. record pages have a new streamlined look, contain improved navigation tools, and are reorganized to reflect edam-based categories ( figure ) . to view the gene page for pf d , autophagy-related protein , putative that is highlighted in figure , go to http://plasmodb.org/plasmo/app/record/ gene/pf d . for example, in gene record pages, gene ids and product descriptions are prominently displayed in the upper left corner of the page with other pertinent gene information and links directly below ( figure a ). also at the top of the page are 'shortcuts' ( figure b ) which serve two functions--clicking on the shortcut's magnifying glass icon offers a larger view of the data, while clicking on the image (or its title) navigates to the data within the gene page. 'view in genome browser' links (e.g. above and below the gene models image in figure d ) accompany data that are also available for dynamic viewing in the genome browser. these links open the genome browser (gbrowse) ( ) with the pertinent data track added to the user's current browser session. the collapsible and interactive 'contents' section reflects the new edam-based categories and features a search function for quickly locating a category ( figure c ). the contents section remains stationary and visible while scrolling the gene page data ( figure d) . a section indicator (small blue circle) appears to the left of the category name of the data currently in view. clicking a category name directs the page to that data section. the check boxes to the right of the category names can be used to customize the data display. data from categories with empty check boxes will be hidden from view. data tables ( e, f and within figure d ) are collapsible, interactive, contain sortable columns and present transcript-specific information when data can be unambiguously assigned to a transcript. tables with two or more rows include a search function. the transcriptomics (figure e) , protein properties and features ( figure f ), mass spec -based expression evidence and sequences tables contain expandable rows for retrieving detailed information. each row of the transcriptomics table represents a data set and expanding a row reveals graphs, data tables, and a data set description, as well as coverage plots for rna sequencing data. expansion of the rows in the protein properties and features table reveals the domains, blastp hits and other analysis results pertinent to the transcript's protein product. the mass spec-based expression evidence graphic table shows proteomic evidence associated with each transcript. the sequences table offers genomic, coding, predicted mrna and predicted protein sequences for each transcript. human and mouse genes (hostdb) have extensive alternative transcripts and there is increasing evidence that many eukaryotic pathogen genes have more than one transcript. eupathdb infrastructure was updated to better represent transcript information. transcripts are graphically represented on gene pages and listed in gene page tables when data can be unambiguously assigned to a transcript (figure d ). all gene search results now include a transcript id column ( figure c ). the results of searches that query transcript-specific data (e.g. predicted signal peptide) contain an explore tool (see tools section of this manuscript) for investigating transcript subsets ( figure b ). filtering samples based on metadata. sequences from pathogen isolates and data from host clinical blood samples are often accompanied by rich metadata-sample characteristics including host, age, geographic location, disease status and parasitemia. eupathdb's new filter parameter ( figure ) increases the user's power to mine data via display of sample characteristics (metadata) on the interface for selection of samples while configuring a search or multiple sequence alignment. for example, the filter parameter makes it possible to compare the antigenicity of parasite genes between infected children and uninfected children within the same dataset. the filter parameter is available for searches and sequence alignments that access snp, chip-seq and hostresponse data. rna-sequence analysis workflow updated. our pipeline for analyzing and loading rna-sequence data was updated to use standard tools and to accommodate data sets with biological replicates. the new workflow aligns reads with gsnap and calculates fpkm/rpkm with ht-seq ( , ) . deseq is used to determine differential expression for experiments that have appropriate biological replicates ( ) . future development efforts at eupathdb will concentrate on expanding private analysis workspaces and better integration and support for host response to pathogen infection. the galaxy toolshed contains many tools for data analysis. we expect to enhance our existing galaxy workspace with new workflows such as alignment of resequencing reads and snp calls or production of multiple sequence alignments and phylogenetic analyses. critical to our expanded workspace will be the ability for users to fully integrate the results of their analyses into eupathdb so that they can query, view, and share their results in the context of the publicly available data in eupathdb. a high priority for eupathdb in the coming year is to better represent host responses to pathogen infection and enable users to mine these data to identify genes (or other entities) and relationships of interest. currently, only a few omics data sets are available for host response, but we expect this situation to change rapidly. we will be expanding not only the amount of host data that we load, but also the types of host response data so that we can include highthroughput metabolic and immune profiling and rich descriptions of all study, experiment and sample metadata. we will be loading these rich multi-dimensional studies and we will be implementing a variety of tools and analyses to mine these data at a systems level. the strategies wdk: a graphical search interface and web development kit for functional genomics databases eupathdb: the eukaryotic pathogen database ) patric, the bacterial bioinformatics database and analysis resource vectorbase: an updated bioinformatics resource for invertebrate vectors and other organisms related with human diseases virus pathogen database and analysis resource (vipr): a comprehensive bioinformatics database and analysis resource for the coronavirus research community influenza research database: an integrated bioinformatics resource for influenza research and surveillance. influenza other respir viruses genedb-an annotation database for pathogens fungidb: an integrated functional genomics database for fungi admixture and recombination among toxoplasma gondii lineages explain global genome diversity the galaxy platform for accessible, reproducible and collaborative biomedical analyses: update cloud-based bioinformatics workflow platform for large-scale next-generation sequencing analyses signalp . : discriminating signal peptides from transmembrane regions submicroscopic and asymptomatic plasmodium falciparum and plasmodium vivax infections are common in western thailand--molecular and serological evidence a prospective analysis of the ab response to plasmodium falciparum before and after a malaria season by protein microarray plasmodium falciparum protein microarray antibody profiles correlate with protection from symptomatic malaria in kenya malaria transmission, infection, and disease at three sites with varied transmission intensity in uganda: implications for malaria control a framework for global collaborative data management for malaria research kegg as a reference resource for gene and protein annotation leishcyc: a biochemical pathways database for leishmania major leishcyc: a guide to building a metabolic pathway database and visualization of metabolomic data the metacyc database of metabolic pathways and enzymes and the biocyc collection of pathway/genome databases trypanocyc: a community-led biochemical pathways database for trypanosoma brucei the chebi reference database and ontology for biologically relevant chemistry: enhancements for a genome-wide crispr screen in toxoplasma identifies essential apicomplexan genes quantitative proteomics using silac: principles, applications, and developments proteome remodelling during development from blood to insect-form trypanosoma brucei quantified by silac and mass spectrometry chromosome and gene copy number variation allow major structural change between species and strains of leishmania genome-wide regulatory dynamics of translation in the plasmodium falciparum asexual blood stages polysome profiling reveals translational control of gene expression in the human malaria parasite plasmodium falciparum extensive stage-regulation of translation revealed by ribosome profiling of trypanosoma brucei edam: an ontology of bioinformatics operations, types of data and identifiers, topics and formats the generic genome browser: a building block for a model organism system database htseq-a python framework to work with high-throughput sequencing data gmap and gsnap for genomic sequence alignment: enhancements to speed, accuracy, and functionality differential expression analysis for sequence count data the authors wish to thank members of the eupathdb research communities for their willingness to share genomicscale data sets, often prior to publication and for numerous comments and suggestions from our scientific advisors and the scientific community at large, which have helped to improve the functionality of eupathdb resources. we also thank past and present staff associated with the eupathdb brc project, and our research laboratory colleagues whose contributions have facilitated the creation and maintenance of this database resource. key: cord- -yiqdsf z authors: schlub, timothy e; buchmann, jan p; holmes, edward c title: a simple method to detect candidate overlapping genes in viruses using single genome sequences date: - - journal: mol biol evol doi: . /molbev/msy sha: doc_id: cord_uid: yiqdsf z overlapping genes in viruses maximize the coding capacity of their genomes and allow the generation of new genes without major increases in genome size. despite their importance, the evolution and function of overlapping genes are often not well understood, in part due to difficulties in their detection. in addition, most bioinformatic approaches for the detection of overlapping genes require the comparison of multiple genome sequences that may not be available in metagenomic surveys of virus biodiversity. we introduce a simple new method for identifying candidate functional overlapping genes using single virus genome sequences. our method uses randomization tests to estimate the expected length of open reading frames and then identifies overlapping open reading frames that significantly exceed this length and are thus predicted to be functional. we applied this method to reference rna virus genomes and find that it has both high sensitivity and low false discovery for genes that overlap by at least nucleotides. notably, this analysis provided evidence for previously undiscovered functional overlapping genes, some of which are coded in the antisense direction suggesting there are limitations in our current understanding of rna virus replication. gene overlap occurs when two or more genes share the same region of a nucleotide sequence in a genome. this occurs frequently in viruses, especially those with rna genomes, but has also been observed in bacteria and in eukaryotes including humans (smith et al. ; keese and gibbs ; veeramachaneni et al. ; nakayama et al. ). the high prevalence of gene overlap in viruses has been attributed to two complementary theories: gene "compression" and gene "novelty." compression theory argues that the size of viral genomes is constrained by factors such as high mutation rates and the small capsid structure housing the genetic material. this constrained genome size subsequently exerts selection pressure on genes to overlap to maximize genetic potential (belshaw et al. ; chirico et al. ) . gene novelty theory asserts that the constrained nature of viral genomes, combined with their limited noncoding regions, makes the generation of new genes difficult without major changes in genomic structure or input from the host genome. mutations in current genes that generate a new open reading frame (orf) then allow the generation of new genes within an established older gene in a process called "overprinting" (keese and gibbs ; sabath et al. ; brandes and linial ) . these theories are not mutually exclusive and both processes may be operating in virus genomes. overlapping genes may also function as a mechanism for regulating gene expression and reduce the probability of mutation fixation in overlapping areas as the resident genes may have competing selection pressures (krakauer ; dreher and miller ) . due to these evolutionary constraints, overlapping genes frequently encode proteins with accessory functions that play important roles in pathogenicity or spread (rancurel et al. ). overlapping genes were first detected following the discovery that the cumulative length of protein sequences in bacteriophage u exceeded the length of the genome (barrell et al. ). today, the detection of overlapping genes still largely relies on laboratory methods that isolate, sequence, and align individual proteins to reference genomes (fellner et al. ) . these and other potential laboratory methods such as ribosome profiling (irigoyen et al. ) are costly and time intensive, making large scale screening and identification of overlapping genes expensive. necessarily, these factors have led to the development of bioinformatics and theoretical methods for the analysis of overlapping genes that rely on genome sequence analyses alone. for example, synonymous sites that exhibit a reduced nucleotide substitution rate are indicative of functional overlapping proteins; because these substitutions affect two proteins they are usually expected to be deleterious and hence are observed at a reduced rate (firth and brown , ; jagger et al. ) . a number of other properties of overlapping genes have been article ß the author(s) . published by oxford university press on behalf of the society for molecular biology and evolution. this is an open access article distributed under the terms of the creative commons attribution non-commercial license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/ . /), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. for commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com open access used as effective bioinformatics makers, such as synonymous codon dissimilarity between newly generated overlapping genes and the remainder of the genome (pavesi et al. (pavesi et al. , , and the restriction that particular codon sequence orders place on alternative reading frames (lebre and gascuel ) . for example, the reverse complementary nucleotide sequence for two adjacent tyrosines (tat/c and tat/c) will be a/gta and a/gta, which always creates a stop codon (either a taa or tag after a reading frame shift of nucleotide). although these properties help in the development of bioinformatics techniques to discover unknown overlapping genes, they are restricted by their requirement for multiple genomic sequences or by their poor sensitivity. with the rapid rise of metagenomics to discover new viruses (bekal et al. ; ballinger et al. ; shi et al. shi et al. , , efficient and sensitive approaches of identifying overlapping genes that require genome sequence information alone will be essential. herein, we present a new statistical method for detecting overlapping genes in different reading frames that relies on only a single nucleotide sequence of a gene or genome. we apply this method to a large scale computational screening of all available (linear) rna virus genomes. the method estimates the theoretical expected length of orfs before a stop codon is reached in all reading frames within an established gene. if an orf exists of much greater length than predicted by this expected length, then we surmise that there has been selection against the accumulation of stop codons that shorten the putative orf. we conclude that this constitutes evidence that the orf in question provides functional benefit to the virus. despite its simplicity, we show that this method is a powerful way to detect functional overlapping genes that can be readily applied to large scale computational screening of all known viruses and to viruses newly discovered through metagenomics. our rationale is that overlapping orfs with functional benefit will result in negative selection against nucleotide substitutions that introduce stop codons within that gene. accordingly, the length of orfs (as measured by the distance between bookend stop codons) is likely to be larger when they are functional than what would be expected by random chance alone where stop codons could be introduced without penalty. hence, the defining characteristic of our method for the detection of overlapping genes is identifying orfs larger than expected by chance alone (fig. a ). we developed three tests for estimating the distribution of expected orf lengths. briefly, in the first test, we estimate the expected length of orfs by permuting codon positions in the original reading frame and then measuring orf lengths in other reading frames. this process is repeated to generate an expected distribution of orf lengths (codon permutation test, fig. b ). in the second test, instead of permuting codon positions, the codon order is unchanged and nucleotide substitutions that would introduce synonymous mutations in the original reading frame are randomly generated (synonymous mutation test, fig. c ), before measuring orf lengths in the other reading frames. in the third test, referred to as the combined test, the p values for both the codon permutation test and the synonymous mutation test must fall below some cut-off value. to demonstrate the applicability of this method, we first considered andean potato latent virus that contains a known overlapping gene. andean potato latent virus is a positivesense single-stranded rna virus (family tymoviridae) in which the i _gp gene, that encodes the putative the expected orf length based on codon composition is calculated. orfs longer than expected by random chance are identified. the expected orf length is estimated by one of three tests. for the codon permutation test (b) the codon sequence on the original frame is permuted and orf lengths on alternative reading frames measured for each permutation. for the synonymous mutation test (c), codons that preserve the original amino acid sequence are randomly generated and the length of orfs on alternative reading frames subsequently measured (note that codon replacement is not restricted to the example mutations shown in the figure, all of which occur in the third nucleotide positions, and that codon replacement with the original codon is also possible). the third test requires both the codon permutation test and the synonymous mutation test p values to be below some cut-off value. simple method to detect candidate overlapping genes . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe movement protein, is overlapping. i _gp is codons long, is located on frame þ , and is largely contained within the larger ( codon) i _gp gene that encodes the enzymes necessary for virus replication (methyltransferase, endopeptidase, helicase, and polymerase) ( fig. a ). we calculated the distribution of expected orf lengths on frames þ and þ using the codon permutation test. the distributions of these lengths are shown with the shading in figure b and c. the actual orf lengths on frames þ and þ on the unpermuted i _gp gene are represented by black dots on top of the theoretical distribution. for frame þ , we observe orfs, all of which have lengths within expected ranges (p ¼ . ). a different picture is observed in frame þ. although there are orfs, of which have lengths within the expected range, there is a single orf whose length far exceeds the expected distribution of lengths (p < . ); this is correctly identified as i _gp . the synonymous mutation test produces similar results in this example. to explore the possibility of using this method to screen for candidate overlapping orfs, we calculated both the sensitivity and false discovery rate of the codon permutation test, the synonymous mutation test, and a combined test that requires an orf to be larger than expected by both the codon permutation and synonymous mutation test. as there are too few coding regions within a single genome to estimate the sensitivity and false discovery rate with sufficient precision, we estimated the population sensitivity and false positive rate across a subset of viruses (linear rna viruses) known to contain many overlapping genes (see materials and methods section). accordingly, whole genome sequences were downloaded from reference linear rna viruses available on genbank; this produced a total of coding regions that were used to estimate the sensitivity and false discovery rate of each test. the codon permutation, synonymous mutation and combined test all rely on detecting overlapping orfs that are larger than expected by random chance. consequently, the sensitivity of these tests will depend on how much of a gene is overlapping (denoted as overlap length). the sensitivity and false discovery rate will also be dependent on the p value cutoffs used to determine if an orf is larger than expected by random chance, with higher p values providing higher sensitivity at a cost of greater false discovery. to understand these dependencies, receiver operator characteristic (roc) curves were generated across a range of p values, and across a range of overlapping gene lengths for all three tests ( fig. ). the number of true overlapping orf's used in this sensitivity set ranged from for overlapping orf lengths greater than nucleotides, to for overlapping orf lengths greater than nucleotides. we find that the three test (codon permutation, synonymous mutation, and combined) have similar sensitivities for p value cut-offs between . and . , with the synonymous mutation generally having the highest sensitivity, followed by the codon permutation test and then the combined test ( fig. , table ). however, for all three tests we also find that sensitivities are generally insufficient when the overlapping length is below nucleotides in length (< codons), but improve considerably as the overlapping length increases above nucleotides. importantly, the three tests show the expected distribution of orf lengths in frame þ (shaded area) calculated by permutation test, and the actual orf lengths on frame þ (black dots). the known frameshifted gene, i _gp , was clearly identified using the permutation test as its length was much larger than that expected by chance alone (p < . ). schlub et al. . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe considerable differences in false discovery rates, with the synonymous mutation tests showing the highest (worst) rates and the combined test with the lowest (best) rates. as the highest and lowest sensitivity tests (synonymous mutation and combined, respectively) are also the tests with the corresponding highest and lowest false discovery rates, we used the standard measure of a diagnostic tool-the area under the curve-to compare which test gave the best sensitivity and false discovery rate combinations. the area under the curve here will lie between and , with a value of . indicating a screening tool of no benefit, and a value of indicating a perfect screening tool with no error. accordingly, we find that the combined test consistently has the best sensitivity and false discovery rate combinations across all minimum overlap lengths, with an area under the curve increasing from . to . as the minimum overlap length increases from to nucleotides (table ). this demonstrates that the combined test is a successful screening tool with both high sensitivity and relatively low false discovery. synplot is a commonly used bioinformatic approach to identify overlapping genes by detecting reduced variability at synonymous sites (firth ) . although powerful, this method is necessarily constrained by the requirement for multiple sequences of sufficient diversity to robustly detect overlapping genes. in contrast, our method requires only a single sequence, and can therefore be applied in many situations where synplot would be inviable. quantitative comparisons of sensitivity and false discovery between the methods are difficult, as the factors associated with sensitivity in synplot (sequence diversity, recombination, and window size) are not present in our method. therefore, to make this comparison informative, we apply our method to the synplot validation data set (table from firth ) and report the results in table . this validation consists of gene overlaps with a minimum overlap length of nucleotides. we find that using a p value cut of value of . , the codon permutation method, synonymous mutation method, and combined approach detects , , and of the gene overlaps, respectively. these results are in agreement with our previous sensitivity estimates. for example, figure shows that the combined approach will have $ % sensitivity for overlaps of at least nucleotides when a p value cut-off of . is used. we next screened for previously undiscovered overlapping genes by using the combined test and a p value cut-off of . . this cut-off was chosen as only . % of any discoveries are estimated to be a false positive (table ) . we find evidence for undocumented functional overlapping orfs within all reference genomes of linear rna viruses. of these orfs, two had been previously described in synplot 's rna screening in (firth mbe not annotated within genbank, they were not necessarily undiscovered, as some existed within the ncbi protein databases. to remove these already discovered or hypothesized overlapping orfs, we performed a protein blast search of the undocumented overlapping orfs and found that nine had previously been discovered but were not annotated within the reference genome, thereby leaving newly discovered functional overlapping orfs from our method (table , supplementary materials s and s , supplementary material online). of these newly discovered orfs, we would expect approximately three to be false discoveries. to test if we can detect homologs of the newly discovered overlaps in other species, we aligned their protein sequence against the ncbi nt database using tblastn (supplementary material s , supplementary material online). we filtered the results to only include alignments with a similarity of at least % and where the alignment was at least % the length of the orf (material table . sensitivity, false discovery, and area under the curve for each test across a range of p value cut-offs and overlapping lengths. the discovered orfs ranged from to codons in length, with a median and interquartile range of . ( - . ) codons; were transcribed in the same direction (sense, frames þ and þ ) as the original gene with coded in the opposite direction on complementary nucleotides (antisense frames Àc , Àc , and Àc , supplementary material s , supplementary material online). in addition, of the orfs were located completely within their reference coding region, eight lay on the boundary and four encompassed the entire coding region, suggesting that the reference coding region may lie completely within the larger discovered orf. of these discovered orfs, a number are of particular interest and discussed in more detail below. the largest detected orf was codons long and located within nhumirim virus, a positive-sense flavivirus recently isolated from mosquitoes in brazil (pauvolid-correa et al. ) . unexpectedly, this orf is coded on a reverse complementary reading frame (Àc ), which means that unlike the other proteins in this virus, transcription must occur from a negative-sense rna template. this finding invites further investigation of the potential mechanisms by which transcription of reverse complementary reading frames might occur in positive-sense rna viruses. in addition, the th codon in this orf is a methionine (a common start codon) suggesting that a large component of the codons may be transcribed. a codon long orf was detected within the phosphoprotein p coding gene of bovine respirovirus virus (singlestranded negative-sense rna virus, family paramyxoviridae). this þ reading frame orf was particularly interesting because although its protein alignment didn't match any bovine respirovirus virus proteins, it did align with v proteins and rna editing derivatives within the phosphoprotein p gene of (galinski et al. ; wells and malur ) . these derivatives may play an important role in virus replication (durbin et al. ) , virulence (huang et al. ) , and/or the disruption of interferon expression (roth et al. ) , and the discovery is in agreement with that claims all three reading frames in the p gene of bovine respirovirus are expressed (pelet et al. ). the method also detected two new orfs of length and codons in phosphoprotein in another paramyxovirus, tioman virus. although one of these orfs was in the same sense (þ reading frame) the other was in the reverse complementary frame (Àc ). the three smallest orfs detected were in ligustrum necrotic ringspot virus, a positive-sense virus from the betaflexiviridae, okahandja mammarenavirus, a negative-sense virus from the arenaviridae, and simbu orthobunyavirus, a vector-borne negative-sense virus from the peribunyaviridae. these orfs had lengths , , and codons, and were in frames þ , þ , and Àc , respectively. interestingly, these were three of the four detected orfs that completely encompass their relatively short reference genes, suggesting that the reference gene may be entirely located within the orfs discovered by this method. we present a simple new method that uses a single genome sequence to detect candidates for overlapping genes. the method assumes that functional orfs are longer than expected by random chance as they experience selective pressure against mutations that introduce stop codons. we quantify this by using three ways to estimate the null distribution for orfs lengths within each reading frame of a gene, and use the null to identify those orfs significantly longer than predicted by random chance. this approach has a number of advantages over current bioinformatics methods to detect overlapping genes. in addition to being simple and quick, it only requires a single genome sequence. this is in contrast to other bioinformatic methods that require multiple sequences to estimate and compare nucleotide or codon diversity. this feature allows the method to be applied much more broadly in both metagenomics projects where genomes of new viruses are frequently only present in a single copy (bekal et al. ; ballinger et al. ; shi et al. ) , and also in screening scenarios such as demonstrated herein. the method is best suited to refine regions of the genome that contain candidates for functional overlapping genes, after which these regions can be further tested for functionality with more resource intensive laboratory methods such as protein isolation, ribosomal profiling (michel et al. ; ingolia ) , and studying the effects of introduced knock out mutations (chung et al. ) . a second important feature of our method is the relatively high sensitivity to detect overlapping genes, whilst maintaining acceptable false discovery rates. this is best achieved by using the combined test where newly detected orfs must be larger than expected by both the codon permutation and synonymous mutation tests. the combined test is advantageous as true positives are readily detected by both tests, so the constraint of requiring both tests to detect the orf does not impact the sensitivity. however, the combined test does substantially reduce the false positives rate, as false positives detected by one test are frequently excluded by the other. there is also scope to further reduce false discovery by modifying our method, or by imposing post analysis constraints, for example by calculating orf lengths from start codon to stop codon rather than between two stop codons. this was not considered for the screening results here due to variation in alternative start codons among viruses, but would be an important optimization in more targeted screening. one caveat to this method (and other bioinformatics approaches) is that sensitivity depends on the size of overlap, with smaller regions of overlap being more difficult to detect. unlike other methods, however, we explicitly calculated the sensitivity for many lengths of overlap and find that a length of at least nucleotides ( codons) is required before the method becomes effective. as this length increases to nucleotides ( codons), the method becomes a very powerful diagnostic tool as measured by an area under the curve equal to . . the estimate of this method's sensitivity and false discovery rates for an overlapping gene detection method is a strength, as although sensitivity can be calculated for other methods, false discovery estimation is often neglected and rarely reported due to a lack of negative controls. when it is reported, it is usually based on estimates of type error rates of p values, rather than comparison to a negative control as we have done in here. to demonstrate the utility of our method's effectiveness for overlapping gene screening, we individually analyzed all reference linear rna genomes available on genbank. this provided evidence for undocumented overlapping orfs of which we expect only to be false positives, although all should be verified experimentally. one notable orf identified here is the exceptionally long ( codons) antisense orf in nhumirim virus, a single-stranded positive-sense rna virus from the family flaviviridae, which suggests that this virus may employ a novel method of transcription and clearly merits further investigation. we also identified several undiscovered orfs in the phosphoprotein p within the paramyxoviridae family, a region known to frequently contain overlapping genes in other reading frames due to rna editing. within bovine respirovirus virus , the orf codon sequence discovered here aligned with many v proteins of other members of the paramyxoviridae. as the v protein in these viruses also overlaps with the phosphoprotein p protein, this suggests that the v protein also exists in bovine respirovirus virus . in other paramyxoviridae, notably tioman virus, we also identified antisense orfs in the phosphoprotein. the detection of antisense orfs is notable. antisense overlaps have been shown to exist in a number viruses that use dna as a replication intermediate including those in the herpesviridae (ward et al. ) , rep/orf in porcine schlub et al. . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe circovirus (he et al. ) and hbz/p and hbz/p in human t lymphotropic virus (arnold et al. ) . they are also suspected to occur in many more viruses with dna intermediaries, including a long suspected antisense protein (asp) in hiv- (torresilla et al. ; cassan et al. ). in addition, they have been infrequently suggested to occur in rna viruses that do not use dna intermediates, such as a more than amino acid (a) overlapping antisense hypothetical protein in rice black streaked dwarf virus (dsrna) (zhang et al. ), a aa overlapping antisense hypothetical protein in lymphocytic choriomeningitis mammarenavirus (-ssrna) (salvato et al. ) , and a possible aa overlapping antisense orf called "neg " in human influenza a virus (clifford et al. ; sabath et al. ) . our method can be used to investigate these further. for example, in the case of neg we find that a codon orf on in the neg reading frame (Àc ) is highly statistically unlikely by both the codon permutation and synonymous mutation methods, providing further evidence for a functional benefit of this orf. interestingly, however, a further frameshift of nucleotide (frame Àc ) would make orfs of such lengths much more likely (p ¼ . and . for codon permutation and synonymous mutation methods respectively), demonstrating the importance of the expected orf lengths on every individual reading frame, rather than just the sense direction. furthermore, when applying our method to hiv- , we find that the possible antisense orf (asp) is not substantially longer than expected by chance alone (p ¼ . and p ¼ . for codon permutation and synonymous mutation methods, respectively) in that reading frame. our results do indicate that antisense orfs are present at levels higher than currently expected. this does not necessarily mean that a transcribed protein is functional, although its presence may be indicative of some functional benefit, such as regulating expression by diverting ribosomes (pelechano and steinmetz ; beltran and garcia de herreros ) . importantly, our method's high detection of antisense orfs are in contrast to other bioinformatic screening methods which have been shown to have poor sensitivity to antisense orfs by computer simulations. this is because synonymous mutations in frame þ impact the reverse complementary frame (specifically frame Àc ) much less than other reading frames (mir and schober ) . although this feature would impact the sensitivity of our synonymous mutation test, as it would for all current methods, the codon permutation test will not impacted by this, and could be used in isolation when specifically screening for antisense orfs. overlapping genes play an important role in viral evolution (simon-loriere et al. ) , and are particularly prevalent in rna viruses with small genomes. however, the study of overlapping genes is limited by detection methods that either have high laboratory costs, or require enough sequences to make reliable substitution rate comparisons. our simple, but powerful, permutation and synonymous mutation method requires only a single genome sequence and is computationally quick to run. these properties make it an ideal choice for identifying candidate orfs in screening situations such as metagenomics viral discovery projects, or applied to large genome databases such as we have done here. whole genome sequences were downloaded for all viruses available from the ncbi ftp site ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ genomes/viruses. of the viral genomes, were rna viruses with linear genomes, and these were selected for analysis. all coding regions (annotated with a cds in genbank) were analyzed, excluding regions annotated with a "join" indicating some form of midsequence frameshift in the established gene such as a ribosomal slippage (leaving coding regions analyzed). the following notation is used to identify the different reading frames (supplementary material s , supplementary material online): þ is the original reading frame; þ or þ is a frameshift of or nucleotides, respectively ( to transcription); À , À , or À a frameshift of , or nucleotides, respectively, after the coding sequence has been reversed (i.e. to transcription); þc , þc or þc is a frameshift of , or nucleotides, respectively, on the complement of the coding sequence ( to transcription); and Àc , Àc or -c is a frameshift of , or nucleotides, respectively, on the complement and reversed coding sequence ( to transcription). þ , þ , þ , þc , þc , þc are considered the only viable reading frames as transcription on these frames occur in the to direction. for each coding region and for each viable alternative reading frame (þ ,þ ,Àc , Àc , Àc ) we performed the following analysis (summarized in fig. a ). first, the length of orfs between the stop codons "tga," "tag," and "taa" on that specific alternative reading frame was calculated. then, , new coding sequences were created by either randomly permuting the codons in frame þ (codon permutation test; fig. b ), or for each amino acid in reading frame þ , randomly choosing a replacement codon (for which the original codon is a possible candidate) that encodes the same amino acid (synonymous mutation test; fig. c ). for each of these , new coding sequences, the length of orfs between stop codons in that alternative reading frame was calculated again. the lengths of orfs over all , randomly generated coding sequences were pooled to calculate a theoretical distribution of the length of orfs on that specific alternative reading frame. for each orf length l in the original unpermuted coding sequence, the probability of observing a length as large or larger by random chance alone is calculated using this theoretical distribution as follows: where c is the empirical cumulative distribution function of the theoretical distribution of lengths calculated by permuting codons in the original coding sequence: that is, c(l) is the simple method to detect candidate overlapping genes . doi: . /molbev/msy mbe probability of sampling an orf length less than l on that specific reading frame. the value À c(l) has an interpretation similar to that of a p value testing whether or not the length l is sampled from the theoretical distribution of lengths calculated earlier. to correct this "p value" for the total number of alternative reading frame orfs, s, in the original coding sequence the following equation is used: this adjustment is analogous to a bonferroni adjustment of p values, here correcting for the number of orfs within a reading frame. small p values for an orf are interpreted as evidence that the orf in question is larger than expected by random chance alone and therefore provides evidence that there has been negative selection against mutations that introduce stop codons in this orf. from this, we can also infer that the orf is of functional benefit to the virus. the third test, denoted as the "combined test," requires that the p value for both the codon permutation test and the synonymous mutation test be below some cut-off value. the method was only applied to orfs on alternative reading frames that exist totally or partially within the parent orf. when orfs on alternative reading frames extended beyond the parent orf boundaries, its length was truncated to the length contained with the parent orf. this analysis was performed using r (version . . ; r_core_team ) and required the packages seqinr the sensitivity (true positive rate) is measured as the proportion of known overlapping genes within the downloaded reference genomes that are detected using our method. an orf identified with our method was considered a true positive if it was located on the same reading frame and overlapped with a gene already annotated in the reference genome. as the sensitivity of our method will be dependent on the extent of overlap, we calculated the sensitivity for detecting previously annotated overlapping genes where the minimum nucleotide length of overlap is , , , , , , and nucleotides. the false discovery rate calculation is more complex as the absence of an annotated overlapping gene does not exclude its biological presence so that distinguishing between false positives and new discoveries is not possible without extensive laboratory work. to overcome this, we conservatively estimated the false discovery rate of our tests by using the nonviable - reading frames (À , À , À , þc , þc , and þc , supplementary material s , supplementary material online) as a negative control. that is, as detected orfs on these frames cannot be transcribed into proteins and are therefore false positives, they serve as an estimate to what proportion of detected orfs on viable reading frames are similarly not functional. a search for sequences homologous to the newly discovered overlapping orfs was performed by aligning their protein sequences to the ncbi nt database using tblastn (tblastn . . þ). the e-value threshold was set to . while all other settings were set to their default values. the results were stored in a sqlite database ( . . ). for homologous sequence detection the alignments were filtered to include only alignments with similarity ! % and length ! % of the corresponding orf sequence. from each filtered alignment, the ncbi accession for the query (orf) and subject were extracted and the corresponding taxid and lineage obtained using ncbi entrez. a python tool taxmax.py was developed (https://gitlab.com/janpb/taxmax.git) to compare the ncbi lineage from each orf and its aligned sequence. the similarity between two lineages is described as a score between and . a score of indicates no similarity between lineages while a score of indicates both sequences have the same ncbi lineage. for each alignment the alignments positions were compared to check for orthologous positions. supplementary data are available at molecular biology and evolution online. enhancement of infectivity and persistence in vivo by hbz, a natural antisense coded protein of htlv- discovery and evolution of bunyavirids in arctic phantom midges and ancient bunyavirid-like sequences in insect genomes overlapping genes in bacteriophage phix discovery and initial analysis of novel viral genomes in the soybean cyst nematode the evolution of genome compression and genomic novelty in rna viruses antisense non-coding rnas and regulation of gene transcription gene overlapping and size constraints in the viral world concomitant emergence of the antisense protein gene of hiv- and of the pandemic why genes overlap in viruses an overlapping essential gene in the potyviridae evidence for a novel gene associated with human influenza a viruses translational control in positive strand rna plant viruses mutations in the c, d, and v open reading frames of human parainfluenza virus type attenuate replication in rodents and primates evidence for the recent origin of a bacterial protein-coding, overlapping orphan gene by evolutionary overprinting mapping overlapping functional elements embedded within the protein-coding regions of rna viruses detecting overlapping coding sequences with pairwise alignments detecting overlapping coding sequences in virus genomes rna editing in the phosphoprotein gene of the human parainfluenza virus type analysis of putative orf gene within porcine circovirus type newcastle disease virus v protein is associated with viral pathogenesis and functions as an alpha interferon antagonist ribosome footprint profiling of translation throughout the genome highresolution analysis of coronavirus gene expression by rna sequencing and ribosome profiling an overlapping proteincoding region in influenza a virus segment modulates the host response origins of genes: "big bang" or continuous creation? stability and evolution of overlapping genes the combinatorics of overlapping genes observation of dually decoded regions of the human genome using ribosome profiling data selection pressure in alternative reading frames overlapping of genes in the human genome nhumirim virus, a novel flavivirus isolated from mosquitoes from the pantanal on the informational content of overlapping genes in prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses viral proteins originated de novo by overprinting can be identified by codon usage: application to the "gene nursery" of deltaretroviruses gene regulation by antisense transcription the p gene of bovine parainfluenza virus expresses all three reading frames from a single mrna editing site r: a language and environment for statistical computing. version . . . vienna, austria: r foundation for statistical computing overlapping genes produce proteins with unusual sequence properties and offer insight into de novo protein creation deletion of the d domain of the human parainfluenza virus type (hpiv ) pd protein results in decreased viral rna synthesis and beta interferon (ifn-beta) expression is there a twelfth protein-coding gene in the genome of influenza a? a selection-based approach to the detection of overlapping genes in closely related sequences evolution of viral proteins originated de novo by overprinting the primary structure of the lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus l gene encodes a putative rna polymerase redefining the invertebrate rna virosphere meta-transcriptomics and the evolutionary biology of rna viruses the effect of gene overlapping on the rate of rna virus evolution dna sequence at the c termini of the overlapping genes a and b in bacteriophage phi x reviving an old hiv- gene: the hiv- antisense protein mammalian overlapping genes: the comparative perspective a novel herpes simplex virus gene, ul . , maps antisense to the ul gene and encodes a protein which colocalizes in nuclear structures with capsid proteins expression of human parainfluenza virus type pd protein and intracellular localization in virus infected cells package 'ggplot ' for r. elegant graphics for data analysis molecular characterisation of segments to of rice black-streaked dwarf virus from china provides the complete genome simple method to detect candidate overlapping genes this work was supported by an arc australian laureate fellowship awarded to ech (fl ). the authors acknowledge the university of sydney hpc service at the university of sydney for providing high performance computing resources that have contributed to the research results reported within this article. we thank an anonymous reviewer for suggesting the synonymous mutation method. key: cord- -fdb az v authors: casalino-matsuda, s. marina; wang, naizhen; ruhoff, peder t.; matsuda, hiroaki; nlend, marie c.; nair, aisha; szleifer, igal; beitel, greg j.; sznajder, jacob i.; sporn, peter h. s. title: hypercapnia alters expression of immune response, nucleosome assembly and lipid metabolism genes in differentiated human bronchial epithelial cells date: - - journal: sci rep doi: . /s - - -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: fdb az v hypercapnia, the elevation of co( ) in blood and tissues, commonly occurs in severe acute and chronic respiratory diseases, and is associated with increased risk of mortality. recent studies have shown that hypercapnia adversely affects innate immunity, host defense, lung edema clearance and cell proliferation. airway epithelial dysfunction is a feature of advanced lung disease, but the effect of hypercapnia on airway epithelium is unknown. thus, in the current study we examined the effect of normoxic hypercapnia ( % co( ) for h) vs normocapnia ( % co( )), on global gene expression in differentiated normal human airway epithelial cells. gene expression was assessed on affymetrix microarrays, and subjected to gene ontology analysis for biological process and cluster-network representation. we found that hypercapnia downregulated the expression of genes and upregulated . among these, major gene clusters linked to immune responses and nucleosome assembly were largely downregulated, while lipid metabolism genes were largely upregulated. the overwhelming majority of these genes were not previously known to be regulated by co( ). these changes in gene expression indicate the potential for hypercapnia to impact bronchial epithelial cell function in ways that may contribute to poor clinical outcomes in patients with severe acute or advanced chronic lung diseases. go biological process-associated gene clusters targeted by hypercapnia. major clusters from hypercapnia-downregulated genes are linked to immune response, nucleosome assembly, cell differentiation, oxidation reduction, and ion and lipid transport (fig. ) . clusters from upregulated genes induced by high co (fig. ) involve biological processes related to lipid metabolism, cholesterol biosynthesis, signal transduction, and transport. a number of these important clusters, labelled a-e in figs and , are analyzed in more detail in the following sections. their corresponding gene lists are depicted in figs , , and supplementary fig. . hypercapnia differentially regulates genes associated with innate immunity and nucleosome assembly. cluster a, represented in fig. a , includes hypercapnia-regulated genes involved in signal transduction, immune and inflammatory responses, and leukocyte chemotaxis. notably, tlr , multiple chemokines (ccl , cxcl , cxcl , cxcl , and cxcl ) and the il- receptor gene (il r) were all downregulated by elevated co . on the other hand, the il- receptor like gene (il rl ) was upregulated by hypercapnia. to validate the microarray results related to co -induced changes in key immunoregulatory genes, expression of cxcl , cxcl , ccl , ilr and tlr was also assessed by qpcr. we found that these genes were all downregulated at levels similar to those in the microarray analysis (fig. c) . indeed, the degree of co -induced downregulation of these transcripts assessed by qpcr and microarray was highly correlated (r = . ). in addition, to determine whether downregulation of a key immunoregulatory transcript by hypercapnia was accompanied by a similar change in protein expression, we assessed expression of tlr protein in differentiated nhbe cells. immunofluorescence microscopy ( fig. d ) and immunoblotting (fig. e ) both showed that exposure to % co for h decreased nhbe cell expression of tlr protein. full-length blots are included in supplementary fig. . taken together, these results suggest that hypercapnia would suppress airway epithelial innate immune response to microbial pathogens and other inflammatory stimuli. next, we analyzed cluster b, which includes hypercapnia-regulated genes that codify proteins involved in nucleosome assembly (fig. a) . the heat map in fig. b shows that hypercapnia downregulates genes encoding multiple family members of the core histones h a and h b , as well as the nucleosome assembly protein -like (nap l ), which regulates protein complex assembly, chromosome organization and dna metabolism. the only upregulated gene in cluster b is h f , encoding histone h , which is normally expressed in terminally differentiated and slowly dividing cells. to validate the microarray data from cluster b, we performed qpcr for selected transcripts whose expression was significantly altered in the microarray analysis. figure c shows that expression of the histone genes hist h ac, hist h bd, and hist h bk was downregulated by hypercapnia as assessed by qpcr, again similar to the microarray results. and others), cell surface receptor signaling (egfr, ifnar , il r and others) and apoptosis (bcl l , dapl , sema a and others). the impact of elevated co on expression of these genes would be expected to alter epithelial metabolism and barrier function, as well as innate immune and inflammatory responses. to our knowledge, the present study is the first to investigate the impact of hypercapnia on global gene expression in airway epithelial cells. of importance, we utilized primary nhbe cells cultured at ali to achieve a differentiated state closely resembling normal human bronchial epithelium. our principal finding was that hypercapnia altered expression of a small number of specific genes ( out of , transcripts assayed, or . %) in differentiated nhbe cells. of these, genes ( %) were downregulated, while ( %) were upregulated. thus, the effects of elevated co are highly selective, involving both differential repression and differential activation of specific gene subsets. the overwhelming majority of these genes were not previously known to be regulated by co . furthermore, gene ontogeny analysis showed enrichment of hypercapnia-regulated genes involved in a variety of fundamentally important cellular processes. altering expression of genes related to these processes would be expected to impart functional changes in bronchial epithelial cells, which could in turn influence the pathophysiology and outcomes of many respiratory diseases. our data show that hypercapnia alters expression of multiple components of the innate immune system, including downregulation of the il- receptor (il r); the neutrophil chemokines cxcl , cxcl and cxcl ; the mucosal-associated chemokines ccl and cxcl [ ] [ ] [ ] and importantly tlr . hypercapnia also upregulated cd and cd , which bind virus at the cell surface , . while hypercapnia downregulated tlr , it increased the expression of il rl , which has been shown to inhibit tlr activation defense against multiple respiratory pathogens [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . interestingly, airway epithelial tlr expression was reduced in patients with severe copd as compared to those with less severe copd , possibly due to hypercapnia in patients with advanced disease. reduced expression of immune response genes was also seen in the lungs of newborn mice exposed to moderate hypercapnia ( % co ) for the first two weeks of life . while the immune genes downregulated by hypercapnia in the newborn mice differed from those we found in nhbe cells, the mucosal immunity chemokine cxcl was commonly downregulated in both systems. taken together, these observations indicate that the airway epithelium is an important target for hypercapnic suppression of innate immune gene expression. this, along with the suppressive effects of elevated co on macrophage, neutrophil, alveolar epithelial cell functions [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] likely contributes to the deleterious impact of elevated co on lung injury and host defense. another cluster impacted by hypercapnia includes genes related to nucleosome assembly, which also have antibacterial properties. the nucleosome consists of - base-pair-segments of dna wrapped around a histone octamer containing one (h -h ) tetramer, two h a-h b dimers, and histone chaperones or linkers that facilitate nucleosome assembly . regulation of nucleosome assembly following dna replication, dna repair and gene transcription is critical for the maintenance of genome stability and epigenetic information . within this gene cluster, hypercapnia downregulated transcripts for the core histones h a and h b , the histone chaperone nap l , and the linker histone h . downregulation of histone gene expression can be triggered by dna-damage or indirect inhibition of dna synthesis and might lead to alterations of chromatin structure that would influence transcriptional regulation of many genes and even genome stability . exchange of core histones with histone variants might also alter the chemical nature and physical properties of the nucleosome, thereby affecting distinct cellular processes . in addition, histones h a and h b also can inactivate endotoxin and function as antimicrobial proteins , . we also found that elevated co upregulated nhbe cell expression of cholesterol and fatty acid biosynthesis genes, while downregulating atp-binding cassette (abc) transporters, which promote the efflux of cholesterol and phospholipids from the cell . interestingly, enveloped viruses subvert preexisting lipids for viral entry and trafficking and also reprogram lipid synthesis and lipid distribution in lipid rafts to establish an optimal environment for their replication, assembly and egress . furthermore, host defense against viral infection involves interferon-mediated downregulation of sterol biosynthesis . thus, hypercapnia-induced cholesterol accumulation might contribute to the entry, replication, and shedding of respiratory viruses in the airways. as noted above, in a previous study, we showed that hypercapnia downregulates the tca cycle enzyme idh , resulting in mitochondrial dysfunction and impaired proliferation of fibroblasts and a lung epithelial cells . however, in the current study, hypercapnia did not alter idh expression in nhbe cells, indicating that co -mediated regulation of gene expression is cell-type-specific. on the other hand, a number of genes involved in mitochondrial function were regulated by hypercapnia in nhbe cells. among these, upregulated genes included acyl-coa dehydrogenase short/branched chain (acadsb) and acyl-coa synthetase short chain family member (acss ), which encode enzymes involved in fatty acid synthesis and oxidation . genes downregulated by elevated co included gamma-butyretaine hydroxlase (bbox ), which catalyzes synthesis of l-carnitine, an essential co-factor in beta-oxidation ; kynurenine -monooxygenase (kmo), an outer mitochondrial membrane protein that hydroxylates tryptophan to form kynurenine ; bcl interacting protein (bnip ), a bh domain protein with pro-apoptotic activity ; and mitochondrial assembly of ribosomal large subunit (malsu ), an inhibitor of translation at the mitochondrial ribosome . the diverse activities of these genes indicate the potential for hypercapnia to disrupt multiple mitochondrial functions in nhbe cells. while the current study does not reveal the molecular mechanism(s) underlying hypercapnia-induced changes in gene transcription, other recent work suggests a path to elucidating components of a putative co -induced signaling pathway leading to inhibition of innate immune gene expression and impaired host defense. we previously reported that elevated co inhibits expression of antimicrobial peptide genes and suppresses antibacterial host defense in drosophila , suggesting that the immunosuppressive effect of hypercapnia is evolutionarily conserved. using a genome-wide rnai screen, we identified a small number of genes whose expression is required for co -induced immunosuppression in drosophila cells, and which are conserved in mammalian systems . flies deficient in of one these genes, a zinc finger homeodomain transcription factor known as zfh , were protected from co -induced mortality associated with bacterial infection . this opens up the opportunity to test whether orthologues of zfh and other genes identified in the drosophila screen mediate hypercapnic immunosuppression in mice and ultimately in humans. alterations in expression of innate immune and other genes in airway epithelial cells may be of central importance in the co -induced increase in mortality of pseudomonas pneumonia we previously observed in mice . in addition, the suppressive effect of elevated co on immune gene expression in the airway epithelium, along with similar effects on immune cells, suggest a reason why severe copd and other lung disease associated with hypercapnia all carry a high risk of pulmonary infection. bacterial and viral infections are a principal cause of acute copd exacerbations [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , which are linked to the need for hospitalization and to mortality , . thus, co -induced alterations in airway epithelial gene expression may underlie the increase in mortality associated with hypercapnia in advanced copd, as well as community-acquired pneumonia , adenoviral lung infections and cystic fibrosis . it is notable in this regard that reducing hypercapnia with noninvasive ventilatory support has been shown to decrease hospital readmissions and mortality in patients with severe copd , . further investigation of the molecular mechanisms and mediators of co effects on gene expression may reveal targets for pharmacologic intervention to prevent hypercapnic immune suppression in patients with advanced respiratory disease. humans without known lung disease were obtained from a commercial source (lonza). the cells were plated on collagen-coated plastic dishes, grown to confluence in begm tm bronchial epithelial cell growth medium (lonza), and passaged after enzyme dissociation with trypsin . cells from passage- were seeded onto -mm, . μm pore size, polyester, transwell inserts (corning) at . × cells per insert ( . cm ) and cultured in a serum-free medium , comprised of : mixture of bebm (lonza): dmem (mediatech), supplemented with hydrocortisone ( . μg/ml), insulin ( μg/ml), transferrin ( μg/ml), epinephrine ( . μg/ml), triiodothyronine ( . ng/ml), epidermal growth factor ( . ng/ml), retinoic acid ( nm), bovine pituitary extract ( . %), gentamycin ( μg/ml), and amphotericin b ( ng/ml). after the cells reached confluence in submersion culture, the medium above the inserts was removed and the cells were maintained in ali culture for two more weeks, at which point differentiation to a pseudostratified mucociliary epithelium with characteristics of airway epithelium in vivo was established , . differentiation after ∼ wk on ali culture was confirmed by the presence of beating cilia and mucus production, as previously described . culture of nhbe cells up to the point of full differentiation was carried out in an atmosphere of humidified % co / % air at °c. hypercapnia exposure. after differentiation, nhbe cells were cultured in ali for an additional h in humidified % co / % o / % n (hypercapnia) or maintained in humidified % co / % air ( % co / % o / % n ; normocapnia), as control. the growth medium was pre-saturated with appropriate co concentration for h prior to the addition to the cells. the pco and ph of the pre-saturated media were measured using a phox plus blood gas analyzer (nova biomedical corp). for the normocapnia-and hypercapnia-equilibrated media, the pco s were and mmhg, and the corresponding ph values were . and . respectively. to determine whether hypercapnia induces cytotoxicity, lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) release to the apical and basolateral compartments was assessed using a colorimetric cytotoxicity detection kit (roche) according to the manufacturer's instructions. absorbance at nm was measured using a versamax tunable microplate reader (molecular devices). percent ldh release was calculated as the amount of ldh measured in the basolateral supernatant or apical wash divided by the total amount of ldh in the culture (ldh in cell lysates plus that measured in apical and basolateral compartments) times . mini kit (qiagen). quality and quantity of each rna sample were assessed using a bioanalyzer (agilent). rna was hybridized to genechip ® human genome u . plus array (affymetrix). a total of chips, each hybridized to a crna from different normocapnic (n = ) or hypercapnic (n = ) nhbe cell cultures were used in this study. the u . plus arrays contain probes for approximately , transcripts and variants, including over , well characterized human genes. fluorescent images were detected in a genechip ® scanner and expression data were extracted using the genechip operating system v . (affymetrix). assessed by a statistical linear model analysis using the bioconductor package limma , (https://www.bioconductor.org/help/faq/), in which an empirical bayes method is used to moderate the standard errors of the estimated log-fold changes of gene expression. the moderated t-statistic p-values derived from the limma analysis were further adjusted for multiple testing by benjamini and hochberg's method to control false discovery rate scientific reports | ( ) : | doi: . /s - - -x (fdr). many genes whose expression signals were below background were defined as "absent". transcripts absent in all samples were filtered out, leaving , probes corresponding to , genes in the downstream analysis. the lists of differentially expressed genes were obtained by the fdr criteria of < . and fold-change cutoff of > . . differential gene expression in hypercapnia versus normocapnia was depicted in a pie chart, volcano plot of statistical significance (−log p value) plotted against log fold change, and hierarchical clustering by pearson correlation represented as heat maps generated using heatmapper and gene-e (https://software.broadinstitute. org/gene-e/). over representation analysis (ora) of gene ontology (go) terms from biological processes of all genes downregulated or upregulated by hypercapnia were separately analyzed using the gene ontology analysis innatedb tool which utilizes a manually-curated knowledgebase of genes, proteins, interactions and signaling pathways involved in mammalian innate immune responses. results from the innate db analysis were confirmed using genego metacore (thomson reuter), a separately curated database and pathway analysis tool. microarray data have been deposited to the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) gene expression omnibus (geo; http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/geo) complied with miame standards (accession number gse ). network ontology analysis. subsequent analysis of global expression changes and ontology network assessment on the differentially selected genes was performed using mathematica ® v . (wolfram research, inc., mathematica, version . , champaign, il ( )). ontology groups were generated using inbuilt genomedata, matching the annotated genes with pre-defined processes and intracellular functions. two approaches were used for analysis of genome wide expression changes: unbiased measurements of intra-network gene expression and fold-change ranked segmentation. unbiased intra-network changes were assessed for cellular processes that contained at least five genes in the post-screen data. mean-fold change, the variance of the fold-change, and pearson correlation of expression were measured for each process. intra-network heterogeneity of relative expression was measured by calculating the standard deviation of the relative expression for genes within any given ontological process. for instance, if a gene was classified as belonging to both "nucleosome assembly" and "signal transduction", it was assigned to both groups and a connection between these processes was indicated. to further understand the impact of hypercapnia-induced differential gene expression, cluster domains of go biological processes containing or more genes and with at least connections were also generated using mathematica ® v . . these processes were broadly grouped based on gene function and by their connections. quantitative taqman real-time rt-pcr. total rna was isolated from nhbe cells and first-strand cdna was generated using multiscribe ™ mulv reverse transcriptase (applied biosystems). the first-strand cdna was used to quantitate the mrna levels by taqman real-time pcr system (applied biosystems). the level of expression of eukaryotic translation elongation factor alpha (eef a ) was used as reference, and fold change of target genes was calculated by the ∆∆ ct method . immunofluorescence staining for tlr . after exposure to normocapnia ( % co ) or hypercapnia ( % co ) for h, differentiated nhbe cells were fixed with ice-cold % acetone/ % methanol for min. cells were blocked in pbs containing % bsa and . % triton x- then double-stained with : polyclonal rabbit anti-human tlr antibody (h- , santa cruz biotechnology) followed by : alexa fluor -conjugated goat-anti-rabbit igg (red) (invitrogen), and : monoclonal mouse anti-human acetylated tubulin antibody (clone - b- , sigma) followed by : alexa fluor -conjugated goat anti-mouse igg (green) (invitrogen). nuclei were identified by staining with µg/ml hoescht (blue) (sigma). images were obtained using a nikon te inverted fluorescence microscope (nikon) equipped with a spot rt monochrome digital camera (diagnostic instruments). all images were captured with the same gain and exposure time using metamorph software. immunoblotting for tlr . after exposure to normocapnia ( % co ) or hypercapnia ( % co ) for h, differentiated nhbe cells were lysed in ripa buffer (santa cruz biotechnology) supplemented with pmsf, sodium orthovanadate and protease inhibitor cocktail. lysate proteins ( μg/well) were resolved by sds/page - % gradient gels and transferred to nitrocellulose (bio-rad laboratories). membranes were probed with polyclonal rabbit anti-human tlr (h- ) antibody followed by hrp-conjugated anti-rabbit secondary antibody (pierce). blots were stripped and re-probed with monoclonal mouse anti-human β-actin (abcam) followed by hrp-conjugated anti-mouse secondary antibody (pierce) to confirm the equal loading. the signals were detected using enhanced chemiluminescence supersignal west dura substrate kit (pierce). tlr /βactin ratios were assessed using imagej . statistical analysis. data are presented as means ± se. differences between two groups were assessed using student's t test. levene's test was used to analyze the homogeneity of variances. significance was accepted at p < . . deaths: preliminary data for severe hypercapnia in critically ill adult cystic fibrosis patients carbon dioxide and the critically ill-too little of a good thing acute respiratory failure in obstructive lung disease. 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suppresses specific drosophila innate immune responses and resistance to bacterial infection identification of drosophila zfh as a mediator of hypercapnic immune regulation by a genome-wide rna interference screen influenza infection and copd importance of viral and bacterial infections in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbations predicting chronic obstructive pulmonary disease hospitalizations based on concurrent influenza activity infection in the pathogenesis and course of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease standards for the diagnosis and treatment of patients with copd: a summary of the ats/ ers position paper global strategy for the diagnosis, management, and prevention of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease non-invasive positive pressure ventilation for the treatment of severe stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: a prospective, multicentre, randomised, controlled clinical trial. the lancet effect of home noninvasive ventilation with oxygen therapy vs oxygen therapy alone on hospital readmission or death after an acute copd exacerbation: a randomized clinical trial mucin gene expression during differentiation of human airway epithelia in vitro. muc and muc b are strongly induced mucociliary differentiation of serially passaged normal human tracheobronchial epithelial cells characterization of mucins from cultured normal human tracheobronchial epithelial cells epidermal growth factor receptor activation by epidermal growth factor mediates oxidant-induced goblet cell metaplasia in human airway epithelium bioconductor: open software development for computational biology and bioinformatics limma powers differential expression analyses for rna-sequencing and microarray studies controlling the false discovery rate: a practical and powerful approach to multiple testing heatmapper: web-enabled heat mapping for all innatedb: systems biology of innate immunity and beyond-recent updates and continuing curation analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative pcr and the (-delta delta c(t)) method nih image to imagej: years of image analysis contributed reagents or analytic tools this work was supported by national institutes of health grants r hl , r hl , r hl and r hl ; and by a merit review from the department of veterans affairs. supplementary information accompanies this paper at https://doi.org/ . /s - - -x.competing interests: the authors declare no competing interests.publisher's note: springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.open access this article is licensed under a creative commons attribution . international license, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the creative commons license, and indicate if changes were made. the images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's creative commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. if material is not included in the article's creative commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. to view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ . /. key: cord- -nmi n h authors: petriccione, milena; mastrobuoni, francesco; zampella, luigi; scortichini, marco title: reference gene selection for normalization of rt-qpcr gene expression data from actinidia deliciosa leaves infected with pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae date: - - journal: sci rep doi: . /srep sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nmi n h normalization of data, by choosing the appropriate reference genes (rgs), is fundamental for obtaining reliable results in reverse transcription-quantitative pcr (rt-qpcr). in this study, we assessed actinidia deliciosa leaves inoculated with two doses of pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae during a period of days for the expression profile of nine candidate rgs. their expression stability was calculated using four algorithms: genorm, normfinder, bestkeeper and the deltact method. glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh) and protein phosphatase a (pp a) were the most stable genes, while β-tubulin and s-globulin were the less stable. expression analysis of three target genes, chosen for rgs validation, encoding the reactive oxygen species scavenging enzymes ascorbate peroxidase (apx), superoxide dismutase (sod) and catalase (cat) indicated that a combination of stable rgs, such as gapdh and pp a, can lead to an accurate quantification of the expression levels of such target genes. the apx level varied during the experiment time course and according to the inoculum doses, whereas both sod and cat resulted down-regulated during the first four days, and up-regulated afterwards, irrespective of inoculum dose. these results can be useful for better elucidating the molecular interaction in the a. deliciosa/p. s. pv. actinidiae pathosystem and for rgs selection in bacteria-plant pathosystems. multiplication and growth of p. s. pv. actinidiae in a. deliciosa leaf. during the time course of the experiment, the multiplication and growth of psa cra-fru . inoculated at - × cfu/ml and - × cfu/ml into a. deliciosa cv. hayward leaves was assessed. when inoculated at the lower dose, the growth of the pathogen within the leaf never exceeded cfu/ml and showed a peak of - × cfu/ml at nine dpi; no symptoms were observed in the inoculated leaves. by contrast, when the pathogen was inoculated at - × cfu/ml, it incited the appearance of tiny necrotic spots on many of the inoculated leaves of nine dpi (see supplementary fig. s online). in this case, only the green tissue was precisely removed to prepare the samples. selection of candidate reference genes, amplification specificity and efficiency. nine rgs, commonly used as internal controls for expression studies in other pathosystem, were screened in a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with the pandemic psa strain cra-fru . . to determine the specificity of the primer pairs used in this study, melting curve analysis and agarose gel electrophoresis were performed following the rt-qpcr experiment. a single peak in the obtained melting curve confirmed the specificity of the amplicon, and no signal was detected in the negative controls for all of the tested rgs (see supplementary fig. s online) . in addition, a single band with the expected size was detected in a single pcr product (see supplementary fig. s online) . the standard curve method using a pool of all of the cdna samples was performed to calculate the pcr efficiency (e) and the correlation coefficient (r ) of each primer pair. average e values ranged from . to . %, with r varying from . to . (table ). the results showed that all of the primer pairs were suitable for rt-qpcr analysis. expression levels of the reference genes. rt-qpcr was used to quantify the mrna levels of nine candidate rgs, and the expression stability was investigated. to determine the expression levels of the candidate rgs, the raw quantification cycle (cq) values were determined. the nine candidate rgs displayed a wide expression range, with cq ranging from . to . , across all of the tested samples, with mean cq values between . ± . and . ± . (fig. ). all of the tested rgs showed a normal distribution in cq values according to the kolmogorov and smirnov method. these genes were clearly distributed into different expression level categories. the results showed that cyp was the most expressed gene with the lowest mean cq ( . ). on the other hand, glo a was the least expressed gene with the highest mean cq value ( . ) . tub showed the most variation in expression level among the evaluated rgs by the larger whisker taps and boxes compared to the other genes, suggesting its low stability. most of the candidate rgs were highly expressed, with average cq values between and cycles, except sand and glo a, which showed average cq values at intermediate expression levels (fig. ). primer sequence ( ′- ′) bestkeeper and the deltact method) were used to evaluate the stability of expression of selected rgs. the analyses were performed for three comparison groups considering both low-and high-dose bacterial inocula in the leaves and their combined dataset. in each comparison group, the nine rgs were ranked from the most stable to the least stable. the data obtained from biological replicates were analysed separately to verify that the variation was not due to the treatment, but was intrinsic to the gene itself , . genorm analysis. nine rgs were ranked in three comparison groups based on their average expression stability (m-value), as shown in tables , and . all of the tested rgs showed an overall limited variance, with m-values lower than . , which was the default limit (m≤ . ), indicating a high stability level of the analysed genes in our experimental conditions. gapdh, pp a and ubc were the three most stable genes in this pathosystem, with slight differences in ranking for three comparison groups. in a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with a low dose of bacterial inoculum, gapdh was the most stable gene (table ) , while in leaves inoculated with a high dose of bacterial inoculum and when all of the sample sets were analysed together, pp a was the most stable gene (tables and ). tub was the least stable gene in three comparison groups (tables , and ). in this study we used the genorm algorithm to find the optimal number of suitable rgs required for proper normalization. in three comparison groups, genorm analysis revealed that by step wise calculation the pairwise variation value v / was lower than the threshold value ( . ), suggesting that two rgs could be used for normalization under these conditions (fig. ). this suggested that the optimal number of rgs for normalization was two and that the addition of the third rgs showed no significant effect on the normalization of gene expression. finally, gapdh and pp a were identified as the best rgs and selected for normalization by genorm. normfinder analysis. normfinder ranks the rgs according to their stability values under the tested conditions. the results of normfinder analysis were slightly different from those of genorm. however, in the three comparison groups, gapdh emerged as the most stably expressed gene with the lowest tub . table . average stability values (sv) of the nine candidate reference genes are shown for leaves inoculated with high dose of pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae inoculum. stability value. gapdh and pp a still occupied the next two top positions for higher stability when we considered the total dataset (table ) or in a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with a high dose of bacterial inoculum (table ) , while in a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with a low dose of bacterial inoculum, gapdh and act were the most stable rgs ( table ). the normfinder results indicated that tub was the least stable rg in the total dataset, confirming our genorm results. tables , and . in the total dataset, bestkeeper analysis highlighted six rgs characterized by the least overall variation, with sd < ; sand and eef- a were the most stable genes, with sd values of . and . , respectively (p < . ) ( table ). in a. deliciosa leaves with a low dose of bacterial inoculum, sand ( . ) was the most stable gene, followed by eef- a and glo a, with sd values of . and . , respectively (table ). in kiwifruit leaves with a high dose of bacterial inoculum, bestkeeper revealed that only the expression of tub overcame the stability threshold; cyp and gapdh were considered to be the most stable genes, with sd values of . and . , respectively (table ). the results of the deltact method were reported in tables , and . gapdh was the most stable gene for the three comparison groups. for the entire dataset, the results were similar to normfinder and genorm analysis, with gapdh and pp a as the top two ranked rgs, with a slight difference in the ranking (table ) . tub was the least stable gene in three comparison groups, as demonstrated by other statistical algorithms. in this study, to determine the consistency of the ranks of candidate rgs produced by genorm, normfinder, bestkeeper and the deltact method, the pearson correlation coefficient was employed ( table ). the pearson correlations achieved from the calculations were positive and significant for all methods, except bestkeeper. the most significant correlation of the rank of all rgs ranked by two methods was genorm and deltact in a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with a high dose of bacterial inoculum (r = . ), followed by normfinder vs. deltact in a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with a low dose of bacterial inoculum (r = . ) ( table ) . for the overall final ranking obtained by the four algorithms, the two top rgs for the total dataset were gapdh and pp a, while the least stable were glo a and tub. expression analysis of the target genes for reference gene validation. the expression of three genes encoding the reactive oxygen species (ros) scavenging enzymes ascorbate peroxidase (apx), superoxide dismutase (sod) and catalase (cat), induced during the systemic infection of kiwifruit leaves with psa, were chosen to further validate the reliability of the selected rgs for the normalization of rt-qpcr data. in this study, we followed two normalization strategies to determine the expression of these target genes. the first used the best two rgs (gapdh and pp a) given by ranking from four methods (genorm, bestkeeper, normfinder and deltact), and the second used the least stable rgs (tub and glo a). in a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with a high dose of bacterial inoculum, an up-regulation in apx mrna expression was observed during the time course of the experiment with . -and . -fold changes after and dpi, respectively. instead, when we used a low dose of bacterial inoculum, we observed an accumulation of the apx transcript after dpi with a . -fold-change and a gradual decrease from to dpi (fig. a) a down-regulation in cat mrna expression during the first dpi was observed, and subsequently, we registered a gradual up-regulation in cat mrna expression in a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with a low-and high-dose of bacterial inocula. the maximum level of the transcript was reached after dpi, with a . -and . -fold change in infected leaves with high-and low-dose bacterial inocula, respectively (fig. b) . similarly, we observed in the accumulation of the sod transcript, that the maximum average value after dpi was a . -and . -fold change, with low and high bacterial inocula, respectively (fig. c) . our results confirm that the transcriptional levels of apx, cat and sod are subjected to complex regulation in psa-infected kiwifruit leaves. this information is distorted when we normalize against the least stable genes, upon which the expression levels of apx, cat and sod were inaccurate and altered transcriptional profiles were displayed (fig. ). in research of plant molecular pathology, studies on gene expression patterns are important for understanding the biological process involved in host-plant interactions. presently, several methods can be applied to study gene expression levels, but rt-qpcr has become the primary quantitative method for the high-throughput and accurate expressing profiling of target genes. for rt-qpcr analysis, the requirement of a normalization method against rgs is important to achieve reliable results. as suggesting by the "minimum information for publication of quantitative real-time pcr experiments" (miqe) guidelines , the use of rgs as internal controls is the most appropriate normalization strategy . ideal rgs should be stably expressed in all cells or tissues and remain stable under different experimental conditions . several studies highlighted that there is neither a universal rg nor a defined number of genes to use, but the choice and an optimal number of rgs should be experimentally determined , . many reliable rgs have been determined in plant cells and across different plant species, developmental stages, and biotic and abiotic stresses . however, to the best of our knowledge, few studies have been carried out to assess rgs in bacteria-plant pathosystems . here, we assessed nine rgs for their use as internal controls in gene expression studies of the a. deliciosa response to infection by psa upon leaf infiltration using two different doses of bacterial inoculum. to identify the best rgs, four different statistical algorithms were used. combined use of genorm, normfinder, bestkeeper and the deltact method to select and validate the best rgs generated substantial discrepancies in the final ranking due to different mathematical models associated with each algorithm, as confirmed by other studies , , . as reported in other studies, the most discrepant results in gene stability ranking were obtained with bestkeeper . in the total dataset, pp a, gapdh and ubc were identified as the top three rgs using genorm, while gapdh, pp a and act were suggested as the most stable rgs by normfinder and the deltact method. according to bestkeeper, act, gapdh, pp a and ubc were ranked fifth to eighth, respectively. among all of the tested rgs, tub was ranked as the least stable gene in the four statistical algorithms, and its use as a rg should be avoided in rt-qpcr experiments in this pathosystem. to overcome differences in the ranking of rgs, we adopted the geometric mean of all four algorithms to obtain a final ranking . as suggested by several studies, the accuracy of rt-qpcr can improve by using more than one rg . the optimal number of candidate rgs for normalization of rt-qpcr data has been evaluated by genorm software. our results showed a pairwise variation v / value below . , which indicates that combination of two-rgs was sufficient for optimal normalization in the three comparison groups. the final ranking showed that the two top rgs for the total dataset were gapdh and pp a and can be used as rgs for rt-qpcr normalization in this pathosystem. gapdh was indicated to be a stable rg in a tomato-virus interaction , in virus-infected mammalian cells and in wheat infected with barley yellow dwarf virus (bydv) , but was the least stable rg in coffea spp. hypocotyls inoculated with colletrichum kahawae . pp a was a stable rg in virus-infected leaf tissues of nicotiana benthiamiana and in virus-infected arabidopsis thaliana . in our study, ubc was among the four most stable rgs, as demonstrated in coffea arabica leaves inoculated with hemileia vastarix , but was considered to be the least stable rg in common bean inoculated with colletotrichum lindemuthianum . tub was not confirmed as a stable normalization factor in our conditions, confirming our previous proteomic study that showed the variability of this protein in a. chinensis shoot during systemic infection with psa ; however, in other pathosystems, such as puccinia graminis f sp. tritici-infected wheat, tub was one of the most stable rgs . furthermore, this rg showed highly variable expression levels in closely related cereals, such as wheat, barley and oat infected with bydv; tub was unstable in wheat and reasonably stable in two other species . the sand transcript was ranked lower among rgs in our pathosystem than was identified in nicotiana benthiamiana and lycopersicum esculentum plants inoculated with viruses , . these variations in the expression profiles of rgs in different pathosystems confirm the need for validation for rgs under each specific condition. some rgs can be involved in different metabolic pathways and influenced in a plant tissue-dependent manner during plant-pathogen interactions . the suitability of the selected rgs has been evaluated analysing the expression levels in three target genes (apx, cat and sod) that encode for proteins that are directly involved in ros detoxification, protecting cells from oxidative bursts induced as responses to pathogen invasion . sod catalyses the dismutation of o to h o , cat dismutates h o to oxygen and water, and apx reduces h o to water by utilizing ascorbate as a specific electron donor . the balance between sod and apx or cat activities in cells is crucial for determining the steady-state level of o and h o . in our study, the accumulation of apx, cat and sod gene transcripts was strongly influenced by the dose of bacterial inoculum used. indeed, these genes involved in ros detoxification and the oxidative-stress response have a key role for bacteria survival and pathogenesis . the apx up-regulation during a relatively long time course of infection (i.e., days) was observed upon the twig inoculation with the same high dose of psa cra-fru . also in the case of a. chinensis "soreli" . in the same study, however, neither cat nor sod were found differentially expressed days after the twig inoculation. irrespective of the inoculum doses, both cat and sod resulted up-regulated during the first four days of infection, and, subsequently, their level in the leaf tissues declined. interestingly, a similar trend was observed for sod in the phaseolus vulgaris/p. s. pv. phaseolicola pathosystem after the inoculation of bean leaves with the same high dose of bacterial inoculum used in the present study (i.e., × cfu/ml) . in this study, however, the sod level in the bean primary leaves and into the apoplastic fluid starts to decrease and hours after the artificial inoculation. furthermore, in this study, we demonstrated that to correctly quantify apx, cat and sod, it was necessary to choose the rgs that had transcript levels that were not influenced by bacterial infections and that the use of inappropriate rgs can markedly change the expression pattern of a given target gene, leading to incorrect results. this is the first study in which a set of candidate rgs was analysed in terms of their expression stability in a. deliciosa leaves infected with psa. four different statistical algorithms showed slight differences in the final ranking of rgs, but by combining and analysing the data together, we demonstrated that two genes, gapdh and pp a, are the most stably expressed transcripts in all infected kiwifruit leaves. the validation of rgs in our study provides new information that will be useful for a better understanding of the molecular mechanisms implicated in the expression profiles of target genes in the a. deliciosa/p.s. pv actinidiae pathosystem. it should be considered that ideal rgs can vary with the pathosystem under investigation, and therefore, these genes should be carefully selected for each study conforming to the miqe guidelines. plant material, p. syringae pv. actinidiae inoculations and experimental design. two-yearold, self-rooted, pot-cultivated a. deliciosa "hayward" plants and the pandemic psa strain cra-fru . were used in this study . this bacterial strain was originally isolated from a. chinensis leaf spot and further characterized , . plants were maintained in an aseptic room with % relative humidity with natural light and no further fertilization after their transfer from the nursery. they were watered regularly. inoculation took place in spring (i.e., may). the strain was grown for h on nutrient agar (oxoid) with % sucrose added (nsa) at ± °c. subsequently, a low ( - × cfu/ml) and high ( - × cfu/ ml) dose of bacterial inoculum, determined using spectrophotometry, were prepared in sterile, distilled water. to avoid wounding, the inoculation occurred by gently spraying the suspensions on the abaxial surface of fully expanded, healthy, young leaves, until the appearance of homogenous water-soaked areas on the whole leaf lamina. twenty plants per dose were inoculated. artificial inoculations were performed separately, according to the dose. control plants were treated in the same way with sterile, distilled water. after inoculation, plants were maintained separately and were kept for h in a moist chamber ( % humidity), which was required for optimal infection. during the experiment, the multiplication and growth of the pathogen was assessed as previously described . leaves were collected after one day post-inoculation and at intervals of three days for days, immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at − °c until rna isolation. in the same treatment group (inoculated and mock inoculated), each biological replicate was obtained by pooling three leaves from different plants harvested at random. three independent biological replicates were performed for each sample with three technical replicates each. total rna extraction and cdna synthesis. total rna was isolated from a. deliciosa leaves inoculated with psa as well as from control leaves as described by rubio-piña and zapata-perez . residual genomic dna was digested by rnase-free dnase (invitrogen life technologies, carlsbad, ca, usa) according to the manufacturer's instructions. the rna concentration was quantified by measuring the absorbance at nm using a jasco v- uv/vis spectrophotometer (tokyo, japan). the purity of all of the rna samples was assessed at an absorbance ratio of od / and od / , while its structural integrity was checked by agarose gel electrophoresis. only high-quality rna with od / and od / > was used for subsequent steps. single-stranded cdna was synthesized from μ g of total scientific reports | : | doi: . /srep rna using an iscript ™ select cdna synthesis kit and oligo(dt) primers (bio-rad, milan, italy), according to the manufacturer's instructions. test. for this study, special attention was paid to a select set of nine candidate rgs (act, eef- a, pp a, ubc , sand, tub, glo a, cyp and gapdh) to investigate their robustness as internal controls for rt-qpcr in a. deliciosa. these genes belong to different functional and abundance classes to significantly reduce the chance that they are co-regulated. apx, cat and sod were selected as genes of interest. gene-specific primers, such as sand, tub, glo a, cyp, gapdh, apx, cat and sod, were designed in our laboratory using primer expression software version ( table ). the amplification efficiency of each candidate/target gene was determined using a pool representing all of the cdna samples. first, all of the primers were examined by end-point pcr, all of the chosen candidates/target were expressed, and specific amplification was confirmed by a single band of appropriate size in a % agarose gel after electrophoresis (see supplementary fig. s online) . in a second step, the pool was used to generate a five-point standard curve based on a ten-fold dilution series. the amplification efficiency (e) and correlation coefficient (r ) of the primers were calculated from the slope of the standard curve according to the equation : quantitative real-time pcr (qpcr). quantitative real-time-pcr was performed using a cfx connect real-time pcr detection system (bio-rad) to analyse the specific expression of each reference/ target gene. cdna was amplified in -well plates using the ssoadvanced ™ sybr ® green supermix (bio-rad), ng of cdna and nm specific sense and anti-sense primers in a final volume of μ l for each well. thermal cycling was performed, starting with an initial step at °c for s, followed by cycles of denaturation at °c for s and primer-dependent annealing (table ) for s. each run was completed with a melting curve analysis to confirm the specificity of amplification and lack of primer dimers. determination of reference gene expression stability. data analyses were performed on three groups: a) infected plants with a low dose of bacterial inoculum compared to the mock-inoculated plants dataset (ldi), b) infected plants with a high dose of bacterial inoculum compared to the mock-inoculated plants dataset (hdi), and c) the entire dataset (total). the stability of candidate rgs for several comparison groups was analysed with the following four applets: genorm , normfinder , bestkeeper and the deltact method . the raw cq values were converted into relative quantities and imported into the genorm and normfinder software programs; no transformed cq values are required for bestkeeper and the deltact method. genorm calculates an expression stability value (m) for each rg and then determines the pairwise variation (v) of each rg with all of the other genes. at the end of analysis, by stepwise exclusion of the gene with the highest m-value (less stable), this tool allows for the ranking of the tested rgs according to their expression stability. the optimal number of rgs required for normalization was determined by pairwise variation v n /v n + ( . recommended threshold). normfinder calculates the expression stability value (sv) for each gene, taking into account intraand inter-group variations of the samples set . a low sv-value indicates the high expression stability of this gene. bestkeeper is an excel-based software tool that selects best-suited rgs by performing a statistical analysis based on pearson correlation coefficient (r), standard deviation (sd) a coefficient of variance (cv). only genes with a high r value and a low sd are combined into bestkeeper index (bki) value using the geometric mean of their cq values. finally, this tool determines the correlation coefficient of each candidate rg with the bki value, along with the probability (p) value. the rg with the highest coefficient of correlation with the bki is considered to be the most stable. the deltact (dct) method compares relative expression of pairs of rgs within each sample to identify stable rgs . a ranking of the rgs using the four algorithms together was obtained as suggested by velada et al. . correlations among the stability values of rgs obtained with different software were analysed using pearson's correlations (p < . and p < . ). all statistical analyses were performed using the spss v. . . to confirm the reliability of the rgs, the relative expression profiles of apx, cat and sod genes were determined and normalized with the most stable and less stable genes. relative fold changes in gene expression was calculated using the comparative −ΔΔct method and normalized to the corresponding rgs levels , . statistical analysis. data are displays as mean ± standard deviation. cq values were tested for normality (kolmogorov-smirnov test) prior to analysis. statistical analysis of data was performed by one-way anova followed by lsd post-hoc test. calculation were performed using the spss v. . . transcript profiling in host-pathogen interactions relative quantification in real-time pcr proteomics approach combined with biochemical attributes to elucidate compatible and incompatible plant-virus interactions between vigna mungo and mungbean yellow mosaic india virus the miqe guidelines: minimum information for publication of quantitative real-time pcr experiments normalization of qrt-pcr data: the necessity of adopting a systematic, experimental conditions-specific, validation of references genome-wide identification and testing of superior reference genes for transcript normalization in arabidopsis real-time rt-pcr normalisation; strategies and considerations evaluation of reference genes for accurate normalization of gene expression for real time-quantitative pcr in pyrus pyrifolia using different tissue samples and seasonal conditions tracking the best reference genes for rt-qpcr data normalization in filamentous fungi standardization of real-time pcr gene expression data from independent biological replicates transcript profiling of a conifer pathosystem: response of pinus sylvestris root tissues to pathogen (heterobasidion annosum) invasion transcript profiling of poplar leaves upon infection with compatible and incompatible strains of the foliar rust melampsora larici-populina validation of reference genes for normalization of qpcr gene expression data from coffea spp. hypocotyls inoculated with colletotrichum kahawae detection of prune dwarf virus by one-step rt-pcr and its quantitation by real-time pcr evaluation of reference genes for quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction normalization in infected tomato plants reference gene selection and validation for the early responses to downy mildew infection in susceptible and resistant vitis vinifera cultivars selection and validation of reference genes for gene expression studies by reverse transcription quantitative pcr in xanthomonas citri subsp. citri during infection of citrus sinensis reference genes for accurate transcript normalization in citrus genotypes under different experimental conditions evaluation of reference genes for real-time rt-pcr expression studies in the plant pathogen pectobacterium atrosepticum pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae: a re-emerging, multi-faceted, pandemic pathogen pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae draft genomes comparison reveal strain-specific features involved in adaptation and virulence to actinidia species pseudomonas syringaepv. actinidiae (psa) isolates from recent bacterial canker of kiwifruit outbreaks belong to the same genetic lineage genomic analysis of the kiwifruit pathogen pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae provides insight into the origins of an emergent plant disease redefining the global populations of pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae based on pathogenic, molecular and phenotypic characteristics proteomic changes in actinidia chinensis shoot during systemic infection with a pandemic pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae strain proteomic analysis of the actinidia deliciosa leaf apoplast during biotrophic colonization by pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae accurate normalization of real-time quantitative rt-pcr data by geometric averaging of multiple internal control genes normalization of real-time quantitative reverse transcription-pcr data: a modelbased variance estimation approach to identify genes suited for normalization, applied to bladder and colon cancer data sets determination of stable housekeeping genes, differentially regulated target genes and sample integrity: bestkeeper -excel-based tool using pair-wise correlations selection of housekeeping genes for gene expression studies in human reticulocytes using real-time pcr a rapid transcriptional activation is induced by the dormancy-breaking chemical hydrogen cyanamide in kiwifruit (actinidia deliciosa) buds modified carotenoid cleavage dioxygenase expression correlates with altered branching in kiwifruit (actinidia chinensis) metabolic analysis of kiwifruit (actinidia deliciosa) berries from extreme genotypes reveals hallmarks for fruit starch metabolism characterization of two alcohol acyltransferases from kiwifruit (actinidia spp.) reveals distinct substrate preferences identification of suitable reference genes for real-time rt-pcr normalization in the grapevine-downy mildew pathosystem quantitative rt-pcr analysis of differentially expressed genes in quercus suber in response to phytophthora cinnamomi infection technical advance: transcript profiling in rice (oryza sativa l.) seedlings using serial analysis of gene expression (sage) selection and validation of reference genes for quantitative gene expression studies by real-time pcr in eggplant (solanum melongena l) reference gene validation for quantitative rt-pcr during biotic and abiotic stresses in vitis vinifera selection of reference genes for expression studies in cicer arietinum l.: analysis of cyp e gene expression against ascochyta rabiei normalisation of real-time rt-pcr gene expression measurements in arabidopsis thaliana exposed to increased metal concentrations analysis of qpcr reference gene stability determination methods and a practical approach for efficiency calculation on a turbot (scophthalmus maximus) gonad dataset identification and validation of reference genes for normalization of transcripts from virus-infected arabidopsis thaliana reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr normalization in caragana intermedia under different abiotic stress conditions the choice of reference genes for assessing gene expression in sugarcane under salinity and drought stresses identification of a novel reference gene for apple transcriptional profiling under postharvest conditions reference genes selection and normalization of oxidative stress responsive genes upon different temperature stress conditions in hypericum perforatum l reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr analysis in virus infected cells: sars corona virus,yellow fever virus, human herpesvirus- , camelpox virus and cytomegalovirus infections biphasic haustorial differentiation of coffee rust (hemileia vastatrix race ii) associated with defence responses in resistant and susceptible coffee cultivars validation of reference genes for rt-qpcr normalization in common bean during biotic and abiotic stresses reference gene selection for qpcr gene expression analysis of rust-infected wheat validation of reference genes for gene expression studies in virus-infected nicotiana benthamiana using quantitative real-time pcr assessment of reference gene stability influenced by extremely divergent disease symptoms in solanum lycopersicum l reactive oxygen and oxidative stress tolerance in plant pathogenic pseudomonas the antioxidant systems vis à vis reactive oxygen species during plant-pathogen interaction selected reactive oxygen species and antioxidant enzymes in common bean after pseudomonas syringae pv. phaseolicola and botrytis cinerea infection identification of pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae as causal agent of bacterial canker of yellow kiwifruit (actinidia chinensis planchon) in central italy molecular and phenotypic features of pseudomonas syringae pv. actinidiae isolated during recent epidemics of bacterial canker of yellow kiwifruit (actinidia chinensis) in central italy isolation of total rna from tissues rich in polyphenols and polysaccharides of mangrove plants guideline to reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative pcr and the −ΔΔct method this work was financed by the regione campania programme under the grant agreement ur.co. fi. (unità di coordinamento e potenziamento delle attività di sorveglianza, ricerca, sperimentazione, monitoraggio e formazione in campo fitosanitario), decreto dirigenziale n° del giugno . key: cord- -unr dvp authors: yoo, hyun jung; yoon, sung soo; park, seon yang; lee, eun young; lee, eun bong; kim, ju han; song, yeong wook title: gene expression profile during chondrogenesis in human bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cells using a cdna microarray date: - - journal: j korean med sci doi: . /jkms. . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: unr dvp mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) have the capacity to proliferate and differentiate into multiple connective tissue lineages, which include cartilage, bone, and fat. cartilage differentiation and chondrocyte maturation are required for normal skeletal development, but the intracellular pathways regulating this process remain largely unclear. this study was designed to identify novel genes that might help clarify the molecular mechanisms of chondrogenesis. chondrogenesis was induced by culturing human bone marrow (bm) derived mscs in micromass pellets in the presence of defined medium for , , or days. several genes regulated during chondrogenesis were then identified by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr). using an abi microarray system, we determined the differential gene expression profiles of differentiated chondrocytes and bm-mscs. normalization of this data resulted in the identification of , differentially expressed genes. to verify gene expression profiles determined by microarray analysis, the expression levels of genes with high fold changes were confirmed by rt-pcr. gene expression patterns of genes (hrad b, annexina , bmp- , contactin- , peroxiredoxin- , heat shock transcription factor- , synaptotagmin iv, serotonin receptor- , axl) in rt-pcr were similar to the microarray gene expression patterns. these findings provide novel information concerning genes involved in the chondrogenesis of human bm-mscs. mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) are present in a variety of tissues during human development, and in particular, are prevalent in adult bone marrow ( ) . mscs isolated from bone marrow (bm) and expanded in vitro in their undifferentiated phenotype, retain an extensive capacity for multi-lineage differentiation into chondrocytes, adipocytes, osteoblasts, and tenocytes under appropriate environmental cues ( ) . the presence of specific, distinct antigens identified by the monoclonal antibodies sh , sh , and sh , on the surfaces of marrow-derived mscs, that are not present on osteocytes and osteoblasts, suggests that these epitopes are developmentally regulated. the antigen which bound to sh antibody was identified as endoglin (cd ), a receptor for tgf-β , which potentially plays a role in mediating the chondrogenic differentiation of mscs and in their interactions with hematopoietic cells ( ) . chondrogenesis, the differentiation of mscs into chondrocytes, is crucial required for skeletal development and maturation, since the cartilage anlage is the model for bone formation. cartilage development thus includes the differentiation of mscs into chondrocytes, followed by their maturation, and eventual their hypertrophy and death ( ) . differential gene expression profiling has been widely performed to identify and characterize candidate genes that play potentially important roles in particular biological process ( ) . although the amount of information regarding the role of growth factors and cytokines as inducers and mediators of msc differentiation continues to increase, little is known about the gene expression profiling of msc chondrogenic differentiation. in this study, we employed abi genechips (representing > , genes) to identify genes differentially expressed during bm-msc chondrogenesis. abi is introduced technology based on nylonspotted mer oligonucleotides, that uses on oligomers to detect each gene for most genes, chemiluminescence to measure gene expression levels, and fluorescence to grid to normalize and identify microarray features. the abi gene list was compiled from information in public and celera databases ( ) . this study was designed to identify differential gene expression profiles and novel genes that might be involved in bm-msc chondrogenesis. mononuclear cells from bm aspirates were isolated by density ficoll-paque gradient separation. bm was placed in a ml syringe containing , units of preservative-free heparin, diluted : with phosphate buffered saline (pbs), resuspended in pbs to a final volume of ml, and layered over an equal volume of histopaque- , (sigma chemical co., st. louis, mo, usa). after centrifugation at , rpm for min, mononuclear cells were recovered from the gradient interface, rinsed twice in pbs, adjusted to a concentration of . × cells/ ml, and seeded onto -mm culture plates in dulbecco's modified eagle's medium-low glucose (dmem-lg; g/l glucose, jbi, seoul, korea) containing % penicillin-streptomycin (p/s; , units/ml, gibco/brl, new york, ny, usa) and % (v/v) heat-inactivated fetal bovine serum (fbs; hyclone, logan, ut, usa). total numbers of nucleated and viable cells were determined using a hemocytometer and trypan blue (gibco/brl, gaithersburg, md, usa) staining. cells were incubated at °c in a humidified % co atmosphere and allowed to adhere for hr. non-adherent cells were then removed. the medium was changed twice a week. when cells were %- % confluent, adherent cells were trypsinized ( . % trypsin, gibco/brl) at °c for min and replated in -mm culture plates. after passage , a morphologically homogenous population of adherent cells was obtained. during this expansion, medium was changed every - days. mscs that adhered to spot slide bottoms were fixed with - °c methanol ( %) for min. cells were then rehydrated in pbs for min at room temperature, washed three times with pbs, blocked with % bovine serum albumin in pbs, and incubated overnight at °c with sh (american type culture collection [atcc], rockville, va, usa) as a positive control. primary antibody (sh ) was removed by washing three times with pbs, and cells were then incubated with fluorescein isothiocyanate (fitc)labeled affinity-purified antibody to mouse igg + igm (h + l) (dinona inc., seoul, korea) for hr at room temperature. secondary antibodies were removed by washing three times with pbs. coverslips were mounted onto slides with a solution containing % pbs and % glycerol. labeled cells were observed under an axiovert (zeiss, thornwood, ny, usa). flow cytometry was performed to determine mscs positive for sh . cells were permeabilized with ice cold % methanol in pbs for min at °c, and washed three times. a fitc-conjugated sh antibody (dinona), diluted : in pbs, was then added, and cells were incubated for hr at °c. cells were analyzed within hr of staining using a flow cytometer (facscali-bur, becton dickinson, bedford, ma, usa). a total of × cells were collected for each measurement. negative control samples were stained with an isotype-matched irrelevant mab. to induce chondrogenic differentiation, , mscs were placed in a -ml polypropylene tube and centrifuged at , rpm for min. pellets were then cultured at °c in % co and μl of serum-free chondrogenic medium consisting of dulbecco's modified eagle medium-high glucose (dmem-hg, jbi) supplemented with ng/ml of transforming growth factor-β (tgf-β , r&d systems, minneapolis, mn, usa), nm dexamethasone (sigma-aldrich, st. louis, mo, usa), μg/ml ascorbate- -phosphate, μg/ml pyruvate, and mg/ml its + premix (becton dickinson biosciences, bedford, ma, usa; . μg/ml insulin, . μg/ml transferrin, . ng/ml selenious acid, . mg/ml bovine serum albumin [bsa], and . mg/ ml linolenic acid); the medium was replaced every - days for , , , or days. total rna was extracted from undifferentiated mscs and from pellets after , , , or days of differentiation using rneasy kits (qiagen, valencia, ca, usa), according to the manufacturer's instructions. and , μl of rlt buffer supplemented with beta-mercaptoethanol ( μl/ml) was added to the washed cells. rna integrity was assessed by gel electrophoresis and rt-pcr and concentrations were determined by measuring absorbance at nm. total rna was processed using the genesys applied biosystem facility (genesys, munster, germany), according to manufacturer's recommendations. each rna pool ( μg) was labeled with digoxigenin-utp using the abi chemiluminescent rt-ivt labeling kit v . . double-stranded cdna was prepared from total rna. utp-digoxigenin-labeled complementary rna (crna) was synthesized by in vitro transcription. labeled crna ( μg) was hybridized to abi human genome survey microarray v . , which was then incubated with alkaline phosphatase-linked digoxigenin antibody. phosphatase activity was then initiated to produce the chemiluminescent signal. chemiluminescent (crna) and fluorescent (spot background) signals of the crna and standard control spots were then scanned. chemiluminescent detection and image acquisition was performed using an applied biosystems , (ab , ) chemiluminescent microarrays analyzer, according to the manufacturer's instructions. using the software supplied with the ab , apparatus, the spot chemiluminescent signal was normalized over the fluorescent signal of the same spot to obtain normalized signal value. for inter-array normalization, global median normalization was ap-plied across all microarrays ( ). data analysis and data normalization were performed using the method described by quackenbush ( ) . for background correction, the mean intensities of areas surrounding spots were subtracted from spot intensities (local area background). data sets were normalized by dividing the mean intensity value of every spot (in duplicate) by sum of all spot intensities within a sample to eliminate experimental or data acquisition variations. normalized data were used to calculate the gene expression level ratios of different culture stages. a two-fold expression cut-off was applied. for hierarchical gene cluster analysis, expression ratios were calculated for all genes as described by eisen et al. ( ) . first strand cdna was synthesized using reverse transcriptase (rt) and μg of total rna. reactions were conducted in μl of buffer containing; . μl oligo (dt) - primer (gibco/brl, grand island, ny, usa), mm tris-hcl (ph . ), mm kcl, mm mgcl , mm dtt, . mm deoxynucleotide triphosphate (dntp) mixture (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa), unit rnase inhibitor (gibco/brl), and units of mmlv reverse transcriptase (invitrogen). after incubation at °c for min, reactions were stopped by heating at °c for min. to remove remaining rna, μl of e. coli rnase h ( mg/ml) was added to reaction mixtures and incubated at °c for min. cdnas obtained were used as a template for pcr amplification using gene-specific primers for target genes and for glyceraldehyde -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh). primer sequences are listed in table . the in vitro growth pattern of msc is shown in fig. . human bone marrow-derived mscs were cultured and expanded. dur- table . ing the log phase of growth, cells proliferated with a population doubling time of hr, and this growth period was followed by a confluent growth-arrested phase. colonies were examined approximately days after initial plating. a morphologically homogeneous population of % confluent fibroblast-like cells was obtained after weeks. the cells were replated into culture dishes and cultured for weeks. the replated cells were used for subsequent experiments. the cultured mscs were positive for sh by flow cytometry (fig. ) . mscs were pelleted into micromasses and differentiated in serum-free medium in the presence of tgf-β and dexamethasone. immediately after centrifugation, the cells appeared as flattened pellets at the bottom of tubes. one day later, pellets had a thickened lip, and between days and , pellet became spherical without any increase in size. pellets then grew in size and pellet diameters increased to about -fold on days and (fig. a) . using normalized microarray data, we identified , differen-tially expressed genes (fig. a) , which included , , , , , and genes exhibiting minimum to < , to < , to < , to < and > -fold changes, respectively. to verify gene expression profiles determined by microarray analysis, the expression levels of genes with high fold changes ( - fold changes, table ) were confirmed by rt-pcr. the expression levels of the genes selected (hrad b, annexin a , bmp- , contactin- , peroxiredoxin- , heat shock transcription factor- , synaptotagmin iv, serotonin receptor- , axl, and il- ) were analyzed by rt-pcr, by using total rnas obtained from samples (fig. b) . the expression levels of genes (hrad b, annexin a , bmp- , contactin- , peroxiredoxin- , heat shock transcription factor- , synaptotagmin iv, serotonin receptor- , axl) were low in undifferentiated cells and increased in differentiated cells by rt-pcr and microarray, but the expression pattern of il- was different. expression level of il- tended to be decreased in microarray, but increased in rt-pcr (fig. ). in this study, we determined gene expression profiles in differentiated chondrocytes and bm-mscs. the microarray technology used did not allow quantitative comparisons between the expressional levels of different genes, but did allow us to compare fold changes with time and quantify differences in the expressions of multiple genes. our results show the sequences for gene expressional changes during bm-msc chondrogenesis. microarray data showed that axl, synaptotagmin iv, hrad b, peroxiredoxin- , bmp- , heat shock transcription factor- , annexin a , contactin- and serotonin receptor- expressions were maintained in differentiating bm-mscs until day . axl is overexpressed in a number of tumors ( ) , and il- is known to mediate the transactivation and upregulation of axl with subsequent activation of pi k/akt and upregulations of bcl- and bcl-xl ( ) . on the other hand, synaptotagmin iv is required for the maturation of secretory granules in pc cells ( ) . human homologues of yeast rad (hrad b) encode ubiq-uitin-conjugating enzymes, and is highly expressed in lung cancer cell. it has been reported that dna repair and uv mutagenesis are defective in saccharomyces cerevisiae rad mutant ( ) . peroxiredoxin- is the most ubiquitously expressed member of the peroxiredoxin family, and is found in the cytoplasm, nucleus, mitochondria, and peroxisomes of many cell types ( ) . furthermore, recent studies have reported high levels of peroxiredoxin- expression in the bovine bladder, seminal vesicles, testes, adrenal gland ( ) , and in the rat liver, skin, lungs and nervous system ( ) . the role of peroxiredoxin- in cell differentiation and proliferation suggests that it has a possible role in growth and development. recent studies have confirmed that bmp- is a strong chemotactic component in cartilage cells produced by mesenchymal stem cells, and it can promote cartilage cells to secrete specific extracellular matrix (proteoglycans and collagen type ii). and bmp- can induce the differentiation of bm-mscs into cartilage cells, and that it offers a greater efficiency in repairing cartilage and subchondral bone defects ( ) . heat shock transcription factor- (hsf- ) has been shown to be a transcriptional regulator of heat shock protein gene expression during the differentiation and development of eukaryotic cells in a tissue dependent manner ( ) . hsf- plays an important role in fgf- stimulated osteoclast formation, and hsf- deficiency was found to modulate gene expression in stromal/ preosteoblast cells and affect osteoclastogenesis in the bone microenvironment ( ) . annexins bind to negatively charged phos- pholipids in a ca + -dependent manner and have a conserved structure. the human annexin, annexin a (alternative names: annexin ii, p , and lipocortin ii) is expressed abundantly in various human organs, including the placenta, lungs, heart, and liver ( ) . at the cellular level, annexin a is expressed on endothelial cell surfaces and acts as a co-receptor for plasminogen and tissue plasminogen activator ( ) . furthermore, annexins are commonly dysregulated in cancer ( ) and annexin a is upregulated in a variety of tumors and cancer cell lines ( , ) . contactin- is a cell surface adhesion molecule, which is normally expressed by neurons, oligodendrocytes, and human astrocytic gliomas ( , ) . previous studies have reported that mscs express il- , essential hematopoietic growth factor ( , ) and il- is also a potent apoptosis inhibitor and has many immunomodulatory activities ( ) . the serotonin receptor is the most recently identified member of the serotonin receptor family and is found in brain, mainly in the hypothalamus, thalamus, hippocampus, and cortex ( ) . in the present study, we performed microarray analysis during bm-msc chondrogenesis in vitro. we found that over , genes were expressed by bm-mscs during chondrogenesis, and we identified genes that were differentially expressed. these data may provide novel information of the genes involved in chondrogenesis of human bm-mscs. multilineage potential of adult human mesenchymal stem cells transgene expression and differentiation of baculovirus-transduced human mesenchymal stem cells cell surface antigens on human marrow-derived mesenchymal cells are detected by monoclonal antibodies gene expression profiling following bmp- induction of mesenchymal chondrogenesis in vitro. osteoarthritis suppression subtractive hybridization: a method for generating differentially regulated or tissue-specific cdna probes and libraries cross platform microarray analysis for robust identification of differentially expressed genes open software development for computational biology and bioinformatics microarray data normalization and transformation cluster analysis and display of genome-wide expression patterns gas induces growth, beta-catenin stabilization, and t-cell factor transcriptional activation in contact-inhibited c mammary cells a promiscuous liaison between il- receptor and axl receptor tyrosine kinase in cell death control synaptotagmin iv is necessary for the maturation of secretory granules in pc cells decreased hrad b expression in lung cancer differential cellular and subcellular localization of heme-binding protein /peroxiredoxin i and heme oxygenase- in rat liver cloning of bovine peroxiredoxins-gene expression in bovine tissues and amino acid sequence comparison with rat, mouse and primate peroxiredoxins bmp induces the differentiation of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal cells into chondrocytes heat shock factor is activated during mouse heart development rank ligand expression in heat shock factor- deficient mouse bone marrow stromal/preosteoblast cells differential expression of annexins i, ii and iv in human tissues: an immunohistochemical study specific interaction of tissue-type plasminogen activator (t-pa) with annexin ii on the membrane of pancreatic cancer cells activates plasminogen and promotes invasion in vitro annexin a on lung epithelial cell surface is recognized by severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus spike domain antibodies tenascin c and annexin ii expression in the process of pancreatic carcinogenesis redox regulation of annexin and its implication for oxidative stress-induced renal carcinogenesis and metastasis faivre-sarrailh c. f /contactin, a neuronal cell adhesion molecule implicated in axogenesis and myelination contactin is expressed in human astrocytic gliomas and mediates repulsive effects phenotypic and functional comparison of cultures of marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) and stromal cells gene expression profile of cytokine and growth factor during differentiation of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cell death deflected: il- inhibits tnfalpha-mediated apoptosis in fibroblasts by traf recruitment to the il- r alpha chain functional, molecular and pharmacological advances in -ht receptor research mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) have the capacity to proliferate and differentiate into multiple connective tissue lineages such as cartilage and bone. in this study, using an abi microarray system, the authors determined the differential gene expression profiles of differentiated chondrocytes and bone marrow (bm)-mscs. normalization of this data resulted in the identification of , differentially expressed genes. to verify gene expression profiles of microarray, rt-pcr was also performed. gene expression patterns of genes in rt-pcr were similar to the microarray results. these findings provide novel information concerning genes involved in the chondrogenesis of human bm-mscs. key: cord- - esrper authors: lin, cheng-yung; chiang, cheng-yi; tsai, huai-jen title: zebrafish and medaka: new model organisms for modern biomedical research date: - - journal: j biomed sci doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: esrper although they are primitive vertebrates, zebrafish (danio rerio) and medaka (oryzias latipes) have surpassed other animals as the most used model organisms based on their many advantages. studies on gene expression patterns, regulatory cis-elements identification, and gene functions can be facilitated by using zebrafish embryos via a number of techniques, including transgenesis, in vivo transient assay, overexpression by injection of mrnas, knockdown by injection of morpholino oligonucleotides, knockout and gene editing by crispr/cas system and mutagenesis. in addition, transgenic lines of model fish harboring a tissue-specific reporter have become a powerful tool for the study of biological sciences, since it is possible to visualize the dynamic expression of a specific gene in the transparent embryos. in particular, some transgenic fish lines and mutants display defective phenotypes similar to those of human diseases. therefore, a wide variety of fish model not only sheds light on the molecular mechanisms underlying disease pathogenesis in vivo but also provides a living platform for high-throughput screening of drug candidates. interestingly, transgenic model fish lines can also be applied as biosensors to detect environmental pollutants, and even as pet fish to display beautiful fluorescent colors. therefore, transgenic model fish possess a broad spectrum of applications in modern biomedical research, as exampled in the following review. although zebrafish (danio rerio) and medaka (oryzias latipes) are primitive vertebrates, they have several advantages over other model animals. for example, they are fecund and light can control their ovulation. spawning takes place frequently and no limitation in their spawning season. microinjection of fertilized eggs is easily accessible and relatively cheap. their embryos are transparent, making it easy to monitor the dynamic gene expression in various tissues and organs in vivo without the need to sacrifice the experimental subjects. their genome sizes are approximately to % of the mammalian genome, making them the only vertebrates available for large-scale mutagenesis. their maturation time takes only ~ months, which is relatively less laborious and time-saving for generating transgenic lines. in addition, many routine techniques of molecular biology and genetics, including knock-in, knockdown and knockout, are well developed in the model fish. therefore, zebrafish and medaka are new excellent animal systems for the study of vertebrate-specific biology in vivo. the f transgenic line can be established once the exogenous gene can be successfully transferred to the embryos, followed by stable germline transmission of the transgene to the f generation. generally, around - % of treated embryos have a chance to achieve germline transmission [ ] . it has been reported that a foreign gene flanked with inverted terminal repeats of adeno-associated virus can be used to enhance the ubiquitous expression and stable transmission of transgene in model fish [ ] . meanwhile, transgenesis can be facilitated by using the tol transposon derived from medaka [ ] . transposase catalyzes transposition of a transgene flanked with the tol sequence [ ] . the efficiency of tol- -mediated germline transmission could range from to % of injected embryos [ , ] . a cutting-edge technique has taken the study of fish gene transfer to new horizons, such as knockout zebrafish by the transcription activator-like effector nuclease (talen) system and the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (crispr) combined with crispr-associated proteins (cas ) [ , ] . the talen system involves the dna recognition domain of transcription activator-like effectors (tales) and a nuclease domain for generation of nicks on dna sequences. the crispr/cas system directed by a synthetic single guide rna can induce targeted genetic knockout in zebrafish. the main difference between these two systems is based on their recognition mechanisms. unlike the tales applied in the talen system, the crispr/cas system recognizes its target dna fragment by the complementary non-coding rna. the development of the talen and crispr/cas systems provides new genomic editing approaches for establishing genetic knockout fish lines [ ] . the fluorescence protein gene (fpg) has been widely applied as a reporter gene in studies of the transgene expression by direct visualization under fluorescent microscopy in vivo [ ] . many transgenic model fish lines harbor an fpg driven by various tissue-specific promoters, including the erythroid-specific gata promoter [ ] , muscle-specific α-actin promoter [ ] , rod-specific rhodopsin promoter [ ] , neuron-specific isl- promoter [ ] , pancreas-specific pdx- and insulin promoters [ ] , myocardium-specific cmlc promoter [ ] , liver-specific l-fabp promoter [ ] , bone-specific col a promoter [ ] , macrophage-specific mfap promoter [ ] , and germ cell-specific vasa promoter [ ] . using medaka β-actin promoter, tsai's lab generated a transgenic line of medaka displaying green fp ubiquitously around the whole fish from f through f generations in a mendelian inheritance manner [ ] . this is known as the first transgenic line of glowing pet fish, which was reported by science [ ] and far eastern economic review [ ] and honored to be selected as among "the coolest inventions of " by time [ ] . the dna sequences of the aforementioned promoters ranging from . to . kb are sufficient to drive the fpg reporter to mimic the tissue-specific expression of endogenous gene. however, some genes require a longer regulatory dna sequence, such as more than kb, to fully recapitulate the characteristic expression profiles of endogenous genes. in that case, bacterial artificial chromosome (bac) and phage p -dereived artificial chromosome (pac) have been commonly used for this purpose [ ] . for example, the zebrafish rag gene, flanked with pac dna containing kb at the ′ upstream and kb at the ′ downstream, can be expressed specifically in lymphoid cells. instead of using the tedious chi-site dependent approach, jessen et al. reported a two-step method to construct a bac clone [ ] . employing this protocol, chen et al. constructed a bac clone containing the upstream kb range of zebrafish myf and generated a transgenic line tg (myf :gfp) [ ] . this transgenic line is able to recapitulate the somite-specific and stagedependent expression of the endogenous myf at an early developmental stage. in summary, all the above transgenic lines should be very useful materials for studying both gene regulation and cell development. zebrafish is particularly useful for studying heart development for the following reasons: (a) zebrafish have a primitive form of the heart, which is completely developed within h post-fertilization (hpf). (b) the cardiac development can be easily observed in the transgenic line possessing a fp-tagged heart. (c) the zebrafish embryos with a defective cardiovascular system can still keep on growing by acquiring oxygen diffused from water. (d) discovery of genes involved in heart development can be facilitated by a simple haploid mutation method [ ] . for example, using the zebrafish jekyll mutant, which has defective heart valves, walsh and stainier discovered that udpglucose dehydrogenase is required for zebrafish embryos to develop normal cardiac valves [ ] . tsai's lab is the first group to generate a transgenic zebrafish line that possesses a gfp-tagged heart [ ] . this line was established from zebrafish embryos introduced with an expression construct, in which the gfp reporter is driven by an upstream control region of zebrafish cardiac myosin light chain gene (cmlc ). using this transgenic line, raya et al. found that the notch signaling pathway is activated is during the regenerative response [ ] . shu et al. reported that na, k-atpase α b and α isoforms have distinct roles in the patterning of zebrafish heart [ ] . this transgenic line should also be useful for studying the dynamic movement and cell fate of cardiac primordial cells. for example, forouhar et al. proposed a hydro-impedance pump model for the embryonic heart tubes of zebrafish [ ] . a d dynamic image of cardiac development has been developed [ ] . furthermore, hami et al. reported that a second heart field is required during cardiac development [ ] . thus, recently, nevis et al. stated that tbx plays a function for proliferation of the second heart field, and the zebrafish tbx -null mutant resemble the heart defects in digeorge syndrome [ ] . thus, the expression pattern of heart-specific genes could be analyzed based on heart progenitor cells collected in this transgenic line. the analysis of gene or protein expression dynamics at different developmental stages could also be conducted. furthermore, this transgenic fish is a potential platform for detecting chemicals, drugs and environmental pollutants affecting heart development, as detailed in following section. in vivo transient assay of the injected dna fragments in model fish embryos is a simple yet effective way to analyze the function of regulatory cis-elements. for example, myf , one of myogenesis regulatory factors (mrf), plays key roles in the specification and differentiation of muscle primordial cells during myogenesis. the expression of myf is somite-specific and stage-dependent, and its activation and repression are delicately orchestrated. using in vivo transient assay, chen et al. found that a novel ciselement located at − /- is essential for somite-specific expression of myf [ ] . lee et al. revealed that this − /- cis-element is specifically bound by forkhead box d , and proposed that somite development is regulated by the pax -foxd -myf axis [ ] . besides foxd , foxd , another protein in the forkhead box family, is necessary for maintaining the anterior-posterior polarity of somite cells in mesenchymal-epithelial transition [ ] . the expression of foxd is regulated by fgf signaling in anterior presomitic mesoderm (psm), which indicates that fgf-foxd -mesp signaling takes place in somitogenesis [ ] . furthermore, analysis of the loci of adjacent mrf and myf revealed the complicated regulation mechanism of the mrf genes. it was also found that the biological function of mrf is related to myofibril alignment, motor axon growth, and organization of axonal membrane [ ] . the molecular mechanism that underlies the repression of myf has also been reported. for example (fig. a) , a strong repressive element of zebrafish myf was found within intron i (+ /+ ) [ ] . this repressive element is modulated by a novel intronic microrna, termed mir-in or mir- [ ] . when myf transcripts reach the highest level after specification, the accumulated mir- starts to reduce the transcription of myf through silencing the positive factor dickkopf-related protein (dkk r or dkk a) for the myf promoter [ ] . itgα b is a receptor of secretory dkk a and that interaction between itgα b and dkk a is required to drive the downstream signal transduction which regulates myf promoter activity in somite during embryogenesis of zebrafish [ ] . dkk a regulates p a phosphorylation to maintain smad stability, which in turn enables the formation of the smad / a/ complex required for the activation of the myf promoter [ ] . however, when myf transcripts are reduced at the later differentiation stage, mir- is able to be transcribed by its own promoter [ ] (fig. b) . furthermore, increased expression of mir- interacts with its receptor itgα b, resulting in the phosphorylation of p a and the formation of the smad / a/ complex, which in turn, activates the myf promoter activity. when myf is highly transcribed, the intronic mir- suppresses the transcription of myf through silencing the dkk a [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . b at the late muscle development, mir- starts transcription at its own promoter and switches to silence homer b to control the homeostasis of intracellular calcium concentration ([ca + ] i ) in fast muscle cells [ ] . either mir- -knockdown or homer- b-overexpression causes the increase of homer- b protein, resulting in an enhanced level of [ca + ] i , which in turn, disrupts sarcomeric actin filament organization. in contrast, either mir- -overexpression or homer- b-knockdown causes the decrease of homer- b, resulting in a reduced [ca + ] i and thus a defective muscle phenotype [ ] controls the intracellular concentration of ca + ([ca + ] i ) in fast muscle cells through subtly reducing homer- b expression. the homeostasis of [ca + ] i is required during differentiation to help maintain normal muscle development [ ] . nevertheless, it remains to be investigated how mir- switches its target gene at different developmental stages. apart from the regulation of somitogenesis, myf is also involved in craniofacial muscle development. the functions of myf in cranial muscles and cartilage development are independent of myod, suggesting that myf and myod are not redundant. thus, three possible pathways could be associated with the molecular regulation between myf and myod: (i) myf alone is capable of initiating myogenesis, (ii) myod initiates muscle primordia, which is subdivided from the myf -positive core, and (iii) myod alone, but not myf , modulates the development of muscle primordia [ ] . furthermore, the six a gene was found to play an important role in the interaction between myf and myod [ ] . in cartilage development, myf is expressed in the paraxial mesoderm at the gastrulation stage. myf plays a role in mesoderm fate determination by maintaining the expression of fgf / , which in turn, promotes differentiation from neural crest cells to craniofacial cartilage [ ] . this research on myf not only reveals that it has different functions between craniofacial muscle development and somitogenesis, but it also opens up a new study field for understanding craniofacial muscle development. hinits et al. reported no phenotype both in myf knockdown embryos and myf -null mutant, suggesting that myf is rather redundant in somitogenesis of zebrafish [ ] . however, it is hard to reasonably explain why these embryos and mutant are all lethal and can't grow to adulthood. on the other hand, lin et al. reported an observable defective phenotype in myf -knockdown embryos, and claimed that the concentration of myf -mo they used can inhibit maternal myf mrna translation [ ] . this discrepancy might attribute the effectiveness of mo used or the different phenotypes between the knockdown embryos and knockout mutant in this case. the retina-specific expression of the carp rhodopsin gene is controlled by two upstream regulatory dna ciselements [ ] . one is located at − to − , which is the carp neural retina leucine zipper response-like element; the other is located at − to − , which is a carpspecific element crucial to reporter gene expression in medaka retinae. intriguingly, immediate activation of early growth response transcriptional regulator egr could result in the incomplete differentiation of retina and lens, leading to microphthalmos [ ] . another important factor for ocular development is the adpribosylation factor-like interacting protein (arl ip ). loss of arl ip function leads to the absence of retinal neurons, disorganized retinal layers and smaller optic cups [ ] . upon losing arl ip , retinal progenitors continued to express cyclin d , but not shh or p kip , suggesting that eye progenitor cells remained at the early progenitor stage, and could not exit the cell cycle to undergo differentiation [ ] . additionally, it has been reported that arl ip is essential for specification of neural crest derivatives, but not neural crest induction. tu et al. found that arl ip mutation causes abnormal neural crest derivative tissues as well as reduced expression of neural crest specifier genes, such as foxd , snail b and sox , indicating that arl ip is involved in specification, but not induction, of neural crest cells [ ] . furthermore, they found that arl ip could play an important role in the migration of neural crest cells because in the arl ip -knockdown embryos, crestinand sox -expressing neural crest cells failed to migrate ventrally from neural tube into trunk. more recently, lin et al. found that ras-related nuclear (ran) protein is conjugated with arl ip , and proposed that ran protein associates with arl ip to regulate the development of retinae [ ] . to date, no in vivo model system has been established to identify cells in the cns that can specifically respond with regeneration after stresses, and, even if identified, no method is in place to trace these responsive cells and further identify their cell fates during hypoxic regeneration. to address these issues, lee et al. generated a transgenic zebrafish line huorfz, which harbors the upstream open reading frame (uorf) from human ccaat/enhancer-binding protein homologous protein gene (chop), fused with the gfp reporter and driven by a cytomegalovirus promoter [ ] . after huorfz embryos were treated with heat-shock or under hypoxia, the gfp signal was exclusively expressed in the cns, resulting from impeding the huorf chop -mediated translation inhibition [ ] . interestingly, zeng et al. found that gfp-(+) cells in spinal cord respond to stress, survive after stress and differentiate into neurons during regeneration (chih-wei zeng, yasuhiro kamei and huai-jen tsai, unpublished data). micrornas (mirnas) are endogenous single-stranded rna molecules of - nucleotides (nt) that repress or activate the translation of their target genes through canonical seed-and non-canonical centered mirna binding sites. the known mechanisms involved in mirnas-mediated gene silencing are decay of mrnas and blockage of translation [ ] [ ] [ ] . probably the expression of ~ % of human genes is regulated by mirnas [ , ] . therefore, to understand gene and function in cells or embryos, it is important to exactly know the target gene(s) of a specific mirna at different phase of cells or at particular stages of developing embryos. instead of using a bioinformatic approach, the tsai's lab developed the labeled mirna pull-down (lamp) assay system, which is a simple but effective method to search for the candidate target gene(s) of a specific mirna under investigation [ ] . lamp assay system yields fewer falsepositive results than a bioinformatic approach. taking advantage of lamp, scientists discovered that mir- silences different target genes at different developmental stages, e.g., at early stage, mir- targets dkk a [ ] , while at late stage, it targets homer- b [ ] (fig. ) . in another example (fig. ) , mir- and mir- are two muscle-specific micrornas sharing the same seed sequences. they are able to modulate the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor aa (vegfaa) and serve as cross-tissue signaling regulators between muscle and vessels. since mir- and mir- share identical seed sequences, stahlhut et al. demonstrated that they can silence the same target gene, such as vegfaa, and considered them as a single cross-tissue regulator termed as mir- / [ ] . mir- / reduces the level of vegfaa, resulting in the inhibition of the angiogenic signaling [ ] . surprisingly, using the lamp assay system, lin et al. reported that the target genes for mir- and mir- are different [ ] . while mir- targets vegfaa, mir- targets seryl-trna synthetase gene (sars). sars is a negative regulator of vegfaa. although both mir- and mir- have identical seed sequences, the sars- ′utrs of zebrafish, human and mouse origins can be recognized only by mir- in zebrafish embryos and mammalian cell lines (hek- t and c c ), but not by mir- [ ] . conversely, the vegfaa- ′utr is targeted by mir- , but not by mir- . therefore, lin et al. concluded that mir- and mir- are actually two distinct regulators and play opposing roles in zebrafish angiogenesis. the mir- /sars/vegfaa pathway promotes embryonic angiogenesis by indirectly controlling vegfaa, while mir- /vegfaa pathway plays an anti-angiogenic role by directly reducing vegfaa. interestingly, they also found that the mir- /sars/vegfaa pathway increasingly affects embryonic angiogenesis at late developmental stages in somitic cells [ ] . it remains to be studied how mir- increases in abundance at late stage. different from mammals, zebrafish have the ability to regenerate injured parts in the cns. many mirnas have been found in the cns. since mirnas are involved in many aspects of development and homeostatic pathways, they usually play important roles in regeneration [ ] . it has been shown that several mirnas have prominent fig. mir- and mir- silence different target genes and play opposing roles in zebrafish angiogenesis. both mir- and mir- are musclespecific micrornas and share identical seed sequences. however, they silence different target genes to affect the secreted vegfaa level through different pathways [ ] . the mir- /sars/vegfaa pathway plays a positive role in angiogenesis since sars, a negative factor for vegfaa promoter transcription, is silenced by mir- , resulting in the increase of vegfaa. however, the mir- /vegfaa pathway plays a negative role since vegfaa is silenced directly by mir- . dynamic changes of mir- and mir- levels are also observed [ ] . the mir- level gradually increases between and hpf and significantly increases further between and hpf, while the mir- level is only slightly changed during this same period. consequently, vegfaa increases greatly from to hpf, which might be responsible for the continuous increase of mir- /sars/vegfaa pathway, but not mir- /vegfaa pathway. therefore, temporal regulation of the expression of mir- and mir- with different target genes occur during embryonic angiogenesis in somitic cells of zebrafish functions in regulating the regeneration process. for example, mir- promotes spinal cord repair by enhancing angiogenesis [ ] , and the mir- family represses proliferation in the adult mouse heart [ ] . furthermore, mir-nas mir- b and mir- are identified following optic nerve crush. by gene ontology analysis, mir- b and mir- are found to regulate genes, including eva a, layna, nefmb, ina, si:ch - a . , smoc , and sb:cb . these genes are involved in cell survival or apoptosis, indicating that these two mirnas are potential regulators of optic nerve regeneration [ ] . although the main hematopoietic sites in zebrafish differ from those in mammals, both zebrafish and mammals share all major blood cell types that arise from common hematopoietic lineages [ ] . moreover, many genes and signaling pathways involved in hematopoiesis are conserved among mammals and zebrafish. for example, scl, one of the first transcription factors expressed in early hematopoietic cells, is evolutionarily conserved. during definitive hematopoiesis, runx marks hematopoietic stem cells (hscs) in both mouse and fish. additionally, in differentiated populations, gata , the erythroid lineage regulator, pu. and c/ebp, the myeloid lineage regulators, and ikaros, a mark of the lymphoid population, are in accordance with the hematopoietic hierarchy in zebrafish and mammals [ ] . thus, the findings with respect to zebrafish blood development could be applied to mammalian system. genetic screening in zebrafish has generated many blood-related mutants that help researchers understand hematopoietic genes and their functions [ ] . for example, the spadetail mutant carrying a mutated tbx exhibits defective mesoderm-derived tissues, including blood. this mutant displays the decrease levels tal , lmo , gata , fli and gata in the posterior lateral mesoderm, indicating the important role of tbx during hemangioblast regulation [ ] . chemical screening in zebrafish using biologically active compounds is also a powerful approach to identify factors that regulate hscs. for example, it is well known that prostaglandin (pg) e increases the induction of stem cells in the aorta-gonad-mesonephros region of zebrafish, as demonstrated by increasing expressions of runx and cmyb, which, in turn, increases engraftment of murine marrow in experimental transplantation [ ] . in human clinical trials, the treatment of cord blood cells with dimethyl pge caused an increase in long-term engraftment [ ] , suggesting that a compound identified in zebrafish could have clinical application in humans. model fish are excellent materials for the study of human diseases due to some mutants display similar phenotypes of human diseases [ ] . in addition, essential genes and thereof regulation to control the development of tissues or organs are highly conserved [ ] . for example, tbx is a t-box transcription factor responsible for cell-type specification and morphogenesis. the phenotypes of tbx mutant are highly similar among mammals and zebrafish. thus, transgenic fish with heart-specific fluorescence could provide a high-through screening platform for drugs for cardiovascular disease. for example, the tsai's lab established a transgenic line which could be induced to knock down the expression level of cardiac troponin c at any developmental stage, including embryos, larva or adult fish. the reduction of troponin c resulted in mimicry of dilated cardiomyopathy, and the incomplete atrioventricular blocking disease in humans. therefore, this transgenic line is expected to make a significant contribution to drug screening and the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms underlying cardiovascular diseases. next, the effect of drugs on embryonic development was also studied. amiodarone, which is a class iii antiarrhythmic agent, is being used for the treatment of tachyarrhythmia in humans. however, amiodarone-treated zebrafish embryos were found to exhibit backflow of blood in the heart [ ] . subsequent research showed that amiodarone caused failure of cardiac valve formation [ ] . specifically, amiodarone induces ectopic expression of similar to versican b (s-vcanb), resulting in repression of egfr/gsk β/snail signaling, which in turn, upregulates cdh at the heart field, and causes defective cardiac valves [ ] . moreover, amiodarone was found to repress metastasis of breast cancer cells by inhibiting the egfr/erk/snail pathway [ ] , a phenomenon analogous to the inhibitory effects of amiodarone on emt transition observed in the heart. last but not least, although zebrafish has a twochambered heart, relative to mouse, rat, and rabbit, its heart rate, action potential duration (apd) and electrocardiogram (ecg) morphology are similar to those of humans. [ , ] . additionally, tsai et al. demonstrated that the in vitro ecg recording of zebrafish heart is a simple, efficient and high throughput assay [ ] . thus, zebrafish can serve as a platform for direct testing of drug effect on apd prolongation and prolonged qt interval, which is required by the fda as a precondition for drug approval. zebrafish become a popular experimental animal for the studies of human cancer [ ] , in part because the fish homologs of human oncogenes and tumor suppressor genes have been identified, and in part because signaling pathways regulating cancer development are conserved [ ] [ ] [ ] . amatruda et al. reported that many zebrafish tumors are similar to those of human cancer in the histological examination [ ] . the zebrafish transgenic line with skin-specific red fluorescence could be applied for skin tumor detection [ ] . when the embryos of this line were treated with solutions containing arsenic, the tumors induced on the skin could be easily identified by naked eye under fluorescent microscope. therefore, this transgenic line can be potentially used for the study of skin diseases. for example, the common skin cancer melanoma may be screened by the red fluorescence expression in this transgenic line. zebrafish transgenic line could also be applied to establish models simulating melanoma development. the human oncogenic braf v e was expressed under the control of the zebrafish melanocyte mitfa promoter to establish a melanoma model [ ] . combining skinspecific red fluorescence with mitfa-driven oncogene expression, the melanoma could be easily traced. therefore, transgenic lines and mutants of model fish could provide abundant resources for mechanistic studies and therapeutic research in human diseases. metastasis involves processes of sequential, interlinked and selective steps, including invasion, intravasation, arrest in distant capillaries, extravasation, and colonization [ ] . zebrafish is again an alternative organism for in vivo cancer biology studies. in particular, xenotransplantation of human cancer cells into zebrafish embryos serves as an alternative approach for evaluating cancer progression and drug screening [ ] . for example, human primary tumor cells labeled with fluorescence have already been implanted in zebrafish liver, and the invasiveness and metastasis of these cells were directly observable and easily traceable [ ] . to investigate the mechanism of local cancer cell invasion, human glioblastoma cells labeled with fluorescence were infiltrated into the brain of zebrafish embryos. it was observed that the injected cells aligned along the abluminal surface of brain blood vessels [ ] . by grafting a small amount of highly metastatic human breast carcinoma cells onto the pericardial membrane of zebrafish embryos at hpf, tumor cells were observed to move longitudinally along the aorta [ ] . similarly, highly metastatic human cancer cells labeled with fluorescence were injected into the pericardium of -hpf embryos. afterwards, it is possible to visualize how cancer cells entered the blood circulation and arrested in small vessels in head and tail [ ] . in another example, zebrafish embryos were injected with tumorigenic human glioma stem cells at different stages of metastasis, including beginning, approaching, clustering, invading, migrating, and transmigrating [ ] . thus, grafting a small number of labeled tumor cells into transparent zebrafish embryos allows us to dynamically monitor the cancer cells without the interference of immune suppression. apart from its utility in analyzing the mechanisms of tumor dissemination and metastasis, the zebrafish model can also be applied to screen potential anticancer compounds or drugs. in addition, zebrafish feature such advantages as easy gene manipulation, short generation cycle, high reproducibility, low maintenance cost, and efficient plating of embryos [ , ] . therefore, this small fish is second only to scid and nude mice as xenograft recipients of cancer cells. leukemia is a cancer related to hematopoiesis. most often, leukemia results from the abnormal increase of white blood cells. however, some human cancers of bone marrow and blood origins have their parental cells from other blood cell types. the search for efficacious therapies for leukemia is ongoing. interestingly, the developmental processes and genes related to hematopoiesis are similar between zebrafish and humans, making zebrafish a feasible model for the study of leukemia. in addition, gene expression in zebrafish could be conveniently modified by several approaches, e.g., mo-induced gene knockdown, talens and crispr/cas gene knockout, and dna/ rna introduced overexpression [ , ] . in the study of yeh et al. [ ] , the zebrafish model was applied to screen for chemical modifiers of aml -eto, an oncogenic fusion protein prevalent in acute myeloid leukemia (aml). treatment of zebrafish with chemical modifiers of aml -eto resulted in hematopoietic dysregulation and elicited a malignant phenotype similar to human aml. cyclooxygenase- (cox ) is an enzyme causing inflammation and pain. nimesulide is an inhibitor of cox and an antagonist to aml -eto in hematopoietic differentiation. fms-like tyrosine kinase (flt ) is a class iii receptor tyrosine kinase which is normally expressed in human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (hspcs) [ ] . internal tandem duplication (itd), which may occur at either the juxtamembrane domain (jmd) or the tyrosine kinase domain (tkds) of flt , is observed in one-third of human aml. zebrafish flt shares an overall , , and % sequence identity with that of human, mouse, and rat, respectively. however, the jmd and the activation loops of tkd are highly conserved, implicating that the functions of flt signaling are evolutionally conserved. overexpression of human flt -itd in zebrafish embryos induces the ectopic expansion of flt -itd positive myeloid cells. if those embryos are treated with ac , a potent and relatively selective inhibitor of flt , flt -itd myeloid expansion is effectively ameliorated [ ] . in another example, isocitrate dehydrogenase (idh) and are involved in citric acid cycle in intermediary metabolism. idh mutations are found in approximately % of cytogenetically abnormal aml, suggesting a pathogenetic link in leukemia initiation [ , ] . injection of either human idh -r h or zebrafish idh -r h, a mutant corresponding to human idh -r h, resulted in increased -hydroxyglutarate, which in turn induced the expansion of primitive myelopoiesis [ ] . taken together, these reports suggest that the molecular pathways involved in leukemia are conserved between humans and zebrafish. based on the aforementioned experimental evidence, zebrafish can be an exceptional platform for mimicking human myelodysplastic syndromes and establishing an in vivo vertebrate model for drug screening. several liver tumor models have been reported by liverspecific expression of transgenic oncogenes such as kras, xmrk and myc. these transgenic lines of zebrafish usually generate liver tumors with various severity from hepatocellular adenoma (hca) to hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) [ ] [ ] [ ] . these three transgenic liver cancer models have been used to identify differentially expressed genes through rna-sage sequencing. for example, researchers have searched genes either up-or downregulated among the three tumor models and analyzed the possible signaling pathways. then, correlation between zebrafish liver tumor signatures and the different stages of human hepatocarcinogenesis was determined [ ] . high tumor incidence and convenient chemical treatment make this inducible transgenic zebrafish a plausible platform for studying on liver tumor progression, regression, and anticancer drug screening. interestingly, zebrafish become a modern organism for studying on depressive disorders [ ] [ ] [ ] . because the physiological (neuroanatomical, neuroendocrine, neurochemical) and genetic characteristics of zebrafish are similar to mammals, zebrafish are ideal for high-throughput genetic and chemical genetic screening. furthermore, since behavioral test of zebrafish for cognitive, approach-avoidance, and social paradigms are available, the identification of depression-like indices in response to physiological, genetic, environmental, and/ or psychopharmacological alterations is feasible [ ] . actually, zebrafish display highly robust phenotypes of neurobehavioral disorders such as anxiety-like and approach-avoidance behaviors. furthermore, novel information of behavioral indices can be exposed, including geotaxis via top-bottom vertical movement [ ] . zebrafish behavior can also be monitored using automated behavioral tracking software, which enhances efficiency and reduces interrater variance [ ] . additionally, zebrafish offer a potential insight into the social aspects of depression [ ] and may be suitable for studying the cognitive deficits of depression [ ] and its putative etiological pathways [ ] . last but not least, zebrafish are highly sensitive to psychotropic drugs, such as antidepressants, anxiolytics, mood stabilizers, and antipsychotics [ ] [ ] [ ] , serving as an important tool for drug discovery. aromatic hydrocarbons, heavy metals and environmental estrogens are currently being used to test the impact of environmental pollutants on animals [ ] . these studies mainly focused on mortality and abnormality rates. however, the developing embryos may have already been damaged in a subtle way that would have precluded direct observation of morphology and detection of mortality. to overcome this drawback, transgenic fish can be used because they are designed to study (a) whether toxicants cause defective genes during embryogenesis; (b) whether pollutants affect the expression of tissue-specific gene; and (c) whether the impact of pollutants on embryonic development is dosage dependent. pollutants can be directly detected by simply observing the coloration change of cells before or after the pollutants can cause morphological damage. therefore, transgenic model fish are promising organisms for use as bioindicators to environmental toxicants and mutagens [ , ] . in addition, chen and lu reported that the environmental xenobiotics can be detected by a transgenic line of medaka carrying a gfp reporter driven by cytochrome p a promoter (cyp a-gfp) [ ] . furthermore, the environmental xenoestrogenic compounds can be specifically detected by a hybrid transgenic line derived from crossing between line cyp a-gfp and line vg-lux whose lux reporter activity is driven by a vitellogenin promoter [ ] . lee et al. reported another zebrafish transgenic line, termed huorfz [ ] , as it has been described in pervious section . at normal condition, the translation of the transferred huorf chop -gfp mrna in huorfz embryos is completely suppressed by an inhibitory uorf of human chop mrna (huorf chop ). however, when the huorfz embryos were under er stress, such as heat shock, cold shock, hypoxia, metals, alcohol, toxicants or drugs, the downstream gfp became apparent due to the blockage of huorf chop -mediated translation inhibition. therefore, huorfz embryos can be used to study the mechanism of translational inhibition. additionally, huorfz embryos can serve a living material to monitor the contamination of hazardous pollutants [ ] . besides the universal huorfz system, zebrafish could also be indicators for specific pollutants. for example, xu et al. reported a transgenic zebrafish tg (cyp a:gfp) which can serve as an in vivo assay for screening xenobiotic compounds, since cyp a is involved in the aryl hydrocarbon receptor pathway, and can be induced in the presence of dioxins/dioxin-like compounds and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons [ ] . additional advantages of zebrafish include the small size, abundant number, rapid development and transparent eggs. these features make this model fish more accessible for the studies of molecular toxicology. it is increasingly clear that the transgenic fish model is a powerful biomaterial for the studies of multiple disciplines, including molecular biology, developmental biology, neurobiology, cancer biology and regenerative medicine. it provides a simple, yet effective, in vivo approach to identify regulatory dna sequences, as well as determine gene function and molecular pathways. more importantly, an increasing number of papers have reported that (a) the defective phenotype of mutants of model fish can photocopy with known human disorders; and (b) drugs have similar effects on zebrafish and mammalian systems. therefore, the transgenic fish model offers a useful platform for high-throughput drug screening in biomedical sciences. additionally, it can serve as an environmental indicator for detecting pollutants in our daily lives. nevertheless, there are several limitations and caveats of this fish model. first, unlike mammals, fish lack the heart septation, lung, mammary gland, prostate gland and limbs, which make the fish model impossible for studies of these tissues and organs. additionally, fish are absent of placenta so that fish embryos are directly exposed to the environment (e.g., drugs or pollutants) without involving the placenta. second, fish are poikilothermic and usually maintained below °c, which may not be optimal for those mammalian agents adapted for °c in evolution. last, since the zebrafish genome is tetraploid, it is less straight forward to conduct loss-offunction studies for certain genes. the molecular biology of transgenic fish enhanced expression and stable transmission of transgenes flanked by inverted terminal repeats from adeno-associated virus in zebrafish identification of the tol transposase of the medaka fish oryzias latipes that catalyzes excision of a nonautonomous tol element in zebrafish danio rerio functional dissection of the tol transposable element identified the minimal cis-sequence and a highly repetitive sequence in the subterminal region essential for transposition a transposon-mediated gene trap approach identifies developmentally regulated genes in zebrafish heritable gene targeting in zebrafish using customized talens efficient genome editing in zebrafish using a crispr-cas system crispr/cas and talen-mediated knock-in approaches in zebrafish the aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein can be used as a reporter in live zebrafish embryos gata- expression pattern can be recapitulated in living transgenic zebrafish using gfp reporter gene high-frequency generation of transgenic zebrafish which reliably express gfp in whole muscles or the whole body by using promoters of zebrafish origin isolation of a zebrafish rod opsin promoter to generate a transgenic zebrafish line expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein in rod photoreceptors visualization of cranial motor neurons in live transgenic zebrafish expressing green fluorescent protein under the control of the islet- promoter/enhancer analysis of pancreatic development in living transgenic zebrafish embryos germ-line transmission of a myocardium-specific gfp transgene reveals critical regulatory elements in the cardiac myosin light chain promoter of zebrafish -bp liver regulatory sequence in the liver fatty acid binding protein (l-fabp) gene is sufficient to modulate liver regional expression in transgenic zebrafish establishment of a bone-specific col a : gfp transgenic zebrafish the macrophage-specific promoter mfap allows live, long-term analysis of macrophage behavior during mycobacterial infection in zebrafish expression of a vas:: egfp transgene in primordial germ cells of the zebrafish uniform gfp-expression in transgenic medaka (oryzias latipes) at the f generation random samples: that special glow genetics: fish that glow in taiwan coolest inventions : light and dark-red fish, blue fish and glow-in-dark fish modification of bacterial artificial chromosomes through chi-stimulated homologous recombination and its application in zebrafish transgenesis artificial chromosome transgenesis reveals longdistance negative regulation of rag in zebrafish multiple upstream modules regulate zebrafish myf expression use of the gal -uas technique for targeted gene expression in zebrafish udp-glucose dehydrogenase required for cardiac valve formation in zebrafish activation of notch signaling pathway precedes heart regeneration in zebrafish k-atpase is essential for embryonic heart development in the zebrafish the embryonic vertebrate heart tube is a dynamic suction pump four-dimensional cardiac imaging in living embryos via postacquisition synchronization of nongated slice sequences zebrafish cardiac development requires a conserved secondary heart field tbx is required for second heart field proliferation in zebrafish novel regulatory sequence − /- functions as a key element to drive the somite-specificity of zebrafish myf- foxd mediates zebrafish myf expression during early somitogenesis foxd mediates anterior-posterior polarity through upstream modulator fgf signaling during zebrafish somitogenesis inactivation of zebrafish mrf leads to myofibril misalignment and motor axon growth disorganization novel cis-element in intron represses somite expression of zebrafish myf- microrna- regulates fast muscle differentiation through modulating the target gene homer- b in zebrafish embryos novel intronic microrna represses zebrafish myf promoter activity through silencing dickkopf- gene zebrafish dkk a protein regulates the activity of myf promoter through interaction with membrane receptor integrin α b dickkopf- -related gene regulates the expression of zebrafish myf gene through phosphorylated p a-dependent smad activity myogenic regulatory factors myf and myod function distinctly during craniofacial myogenesis of zebrafish the transcription factor six a plays an essential role in the craniofacial myogenesis of zebrafish normal function of myf during gastrulation is required for pharyngeal arch cartilage development in zebrafish embryos differential requirements for myogenic regulatory factors distinguish medial and lateral somitic, cranial and fin muscle fibre populations retina-specific ciselements and binding nuclear proteins of carp rhodopsin gene egr gene knockdown affects embryonic ocular development in zebrafish the embryonic expression patterns and the knockdown phenotypes of zebrafish adp-ribosylation factor-like interacting protein gene arl ip plays a role in proliferation during zebrafish retinogenesis zebrafish arl ip is required for neural crest development during embryogenesis ras-related nuclear protein is required for late developmental stages of retinal cells in zebrafish eyes transgenic zebrafish model to study translational control mediated by upstream open reading frame of human chop gene a parsimonious model for gene regulation by mirnas gene silencing by micrornas: contributions of translational repression and mrna decay regulation of mrna translation and stability by micrornas micrornas: target recognition and regulatory functions microrna target predictions in animals labeled microrna pull-down assay system: an experimental approach for high-throughput identification of micrornatarget mrnas mir- and mir- regulate angiogenesis by modulating vegfa expression in zebrafish mir- and mir- target different genes to have opposing roles during angiogenesis in zebrafish embryos concise review: new frontiers in microrna-based tissue regeneration administration of microrna- promotes spinal cord regeneration in mice regulation of neonatal and adult mammalian heart regeneration by the mir- family integrated analyses of zebrafish mirna and mrna expression profiles identify mir- b and mir- as potential regulators of optic nerve regeneration transplantation and in vivo imaging of multilineage engraftment in zebrafish bloodless mutants hematopoiesis: an evolving paradigm for stem cell biology transcriptional regulation of hematopoietic stem cell development in zebrafish mutantspecific gene programs in the zebrafish prostaglandin e regulates vertebrate haematopoietic stem cell homeostasis prostaglandin e enhances human cord blood stem cell xenotransplants and shows long-term safety in preclinical nonhuman primate transplant models from zebrafish to human: modular medical models the heartstrings mutation in zebrafish causes heart/fin tbx deficiency syndrome the toxic effect of amiodarone on valve formation in the developing heart of zebrafish embryos amiodarone induces overexpression of similar to versican b to repress the egfr/gsk b/snail signaling axis during cardiac valve formation of zebrafish embryos cancer metastasis and egfr signaling is suppressed by amiodarone-induced versican v in vivo recording of adult zebrafish electrocardiogram and assessment of drug-induced qt prolongation zebrafish model for human long qt syndrome in-vitro recording of adult zebrafish heart electrocardiogram -a platform for pharmacological testing liver development and cancer formation in zebrafish zebrafish as a cancer model zebrafish modelling of leukaemias catch of the day: zebrafish as a human cancer model zebrafish as a cancer model system a keratin transgenic zebrafish tg(k ( . ):rfp) treated with inorganic arsenite reveals visible overproliferation of epithelial cells braf mutations are sufficient to promote nevi formation and cooperate with p in the genesis of melanoma the pathogenesis of cancer metastasis: the 'seed and soil' hypothesis revisited zebrafish xenotransplantation as a tool for in vivo cancer study metastatic behaviour of primary human tumours in a zebrafish xenotransplantation model calpain is required for the invasion of glioblastoma cells in the zebrafish brain microenvironment distinct contributions of angiogenesis and vascular co-option during the initiation of primary microtumors and micrometastases visualizing extravasation dynamics of metastatic tumor cells a novel zebrafish xenotransplantation model for study of glioma stem cell invasion quantitative phenotyping-based in vivo chemical screening in a zebrafish model of leukemia stem cell xenotransplantation zebrafish-based systems pharmacology of cancer metastasis discovering chemical modifiers of oncogene-regulated hematopoietic differentiation stk- , the human homolog of flk- /flt- , is selectively expressed in cd + human bone marrow cells and is involved in the proliferation of early progenitor/ stem cells functions of flt in zebrafish hematopoiesis and its relevance to human acute myeloid leukemia cancer-associated metabolite -hydroxyglutarate accumulates in acute myelogenous leukemia with isocitrate dehydrogenase and mutations regulation of cancer cell metabolism functions of idh and its mutation in the regulation of developmental hematopoiesis in zebrafish inducible and repressable oncogene-addicted hepatocellular carcinoma in tet-on xmrk transgenic zebrafish an inducible kras (v ) transgenic zebrafish model for liver tumorigenesis and chemical drug screening a transgenic zebrafish liver tumor model with inducible myc expression reveals conserved myc signatures with mammalian liver tumors xmrk, kras and myc transgenic zebrafish liver cancer models share molecular signatures with subsets of human hepatocellular carcinoma gaining translational momentum: more zebrafish models for neuroscience research zebrafish as an emerging model for studying complex brain disorders zebrafish models for translational neuroscience research: from tank to bedside zebrafish models of major depressive disorders threedimensional neurophenotyping of adult zebrafish behavior aquatic blues: modeling depression and antidepressant action in zebrafish social modulation of brain monoamine levels in zebrafish can zebrafish learn spatial tasks? an empirical analysis of place and single cs-us associative learning cognitive dysfunction in depression-pathophysiology and novel targets a larval zebrafish model of bipolar disorder as a screening platform for neuro-therapeutics role of serotonin in zebrafish (danio rerio) anxiety: relationship with serotonin levels and effect of buspirone, way , sb , fluoxetine and para-chlorophenylalanine (pcpa) in two behavioral models an affective disorder in zebrafish with mutation of the glucocorticoid receptor global water pollution and human health transgenic zebrafish for detecting mutations caused by compounds in aquatic environments mutational spectra of benzo [a] pyrene and meiqx in rpsl transgenic zebrafish embryos transgenic fish technology: basic principles and their application in basic and applied research gfp transgenic medaka (oryzias latipes) under the inducible cyp a promoter provide a sensitive and convenient biological indicator for the presence of tcdd and other persistent organic chemicals zebrafish transgenic line huorfz is an effective living bioindicator for detecting environmental toxicants generation of tg (cyp a:gfp) transgenic zebrafish for development of a convenient and sensitive in vivo assay for aryl hydrocarbon receptor activity the authors declare that they have no competing interests.authors' contributions hjt conceptualized, organized, charged and revised the content, and hjt, cyl and cyc wrote the manuscript together. all authors read and approved the final manuscript.• we accept pre-submission inquiries • our selector tool helps you to find the most relevant journal submit your next manuscript to biomed central and we will help you at every step: key: cord- -p v wi authors: bigot, yves; samain, sylvie; augé-gouillou, corinne; federici, brian a title: molecular evidence for the evolution of ichnoviruses from ascoviruses by symbiogenesis date: - - journal: bmc evol biol doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: p v wi background: female endoparasitic ichneumonid wasps inject virus-like particles into their caterpillar hosts to suppress immunity. these particles are classified as ichnovirus virions and resemble ascovirus virions, which are also transmitted by parasitic wasps and attack caterpillars. ascoviruses replicate dna and produce virions. polydnavirus dna consists of wasp dna replicated by the wasp from its genome, which also directs particle synthesis. structural similarities between ascovirus and ichnovirus particles and the biology of their transmission suggest that ichnoviruses evolved from ascoviruses, although molecular evidence for this hypothesis is lacking. results: here we show that a family of unique pox-d ntpase proteins in the glypta fumiferanae ichnovirus are related to three diadromus pulchellus ascovirus proteins encoded by orfs , and . a new alignment technique also shows that two proteins from a related ichnovirus are orthologs of other ascovirus virion proteins. conclusion: our results provide molecular evidence supporting the origin of ichnoviruses from ascoviruses by lateral transfer of ascoviral genes into ichneumonid wasp genomes, perhaps the first example of symbiogenesis between large dna viruses and eukaryotic organisms. we also discuss the limits of this evidence through complementary studies, which revealed that passive lateral transfer of viral genes among polydnaviral, bacterial, and wasp genomes may have occurred repeatedly through an intimate coupling of both recombination and replication of viral genomes during evolution. the impact of passive lateral transfers on evolutionary relationships between polydnaviruses and viruses with large double-stranded genomes is considered in the context of the theory of symbiogenesis. approximately two-thirds of these wasps are endoparasites, meaning that the larval stages develop within the body cavity of their hosts, typically other insects. among the most successful of these endoparasitic wasps are those that use lepidopteran larvae as hosts. owing to the economic importance of these insects and the utility of their wasp parasites as biological control agents, the ability of these parasites to develop within lepidopteran hosts without triggering an intense immune response has been the subject of numerous studies over the past forty years. early studies of the mediterranean flour moth, ephestia kuhniella, parasitized by the ichnemonid, venturia canescens, showed that eggs of this species are coated with particles that resemble virions [ ] [ ] [ ] and contain surface proteins that mimic host proteins, thus keeping the eggs and larvae from being recognized as foreign material by their host. these particles lack dna, and thus are not considered virions [ ] . with respect to both species number and mechanisms that lead to successful parasitism, endoparasitic wasps are known to inject secretions at oviposition, but only a few lineages use viruses or virus-like particles (vlps) to evade or to suppress host defences. in the family ichneumonidae, for example, four types of host defence suppression mediated by the injection of fluids or suspensions are known that lead to successful parasitism. ) fluid injected with eggs bypasses host defences without the aid of viruses or vlps [ ] . ) wasps inject a virus that replicates in both the wasp and lepidopteran host. one example is the wasp diadromus pulchellus, which injects an ascovirus, dpav [ ] into host pupae to circumvent host defence response. ) the wasp injects vlps capable of molecular mimicry and/or direct defence suppression. ) the wasp injects polydnavirus particles that contain genes coding for proteins that interfere with host defence responses. the last mechanism is by far the best-studied type of direct immune suppression by ichneumonid wasps, and occurs in many species belonging to genera campoletis, hyposoter and tranosema (ichneumonidae, campopleginae), and glypta (ichneumonidae, banchinae) [ ] . in these cases, female wasps inject eggs along with ichnovirus particles into their hosts. similarly, in certain lineages of endoparasitic braconid wasps, other types of immunosuppressive particles containing dna occur in the fluid injected along with eggs [ [ ] ; for a review, [ ] ]. once in the host, ichneumonid and brachonid particles enter host nuclei and their dna is transcribed, producing proteins that selectively suppress various steps in the host defence response. as a result of this unusual biology, these particles were described as symbiotic viruses belonging to new viral family, polydnaviridae [ ] [ ] [ ] since the 's, it was assumed that the dna in the polydnavirus particles, as with all other viruses, encoded typical enzymes and proteins for viral replication and virion assembly and structure. however, several recent genomic studies have shown that only a small number of the genes vectored into lepidopteran hosts, less than %, have homologs in other viruses. most viral dna is noncoding, except that which codes for wasp proteins involved in suppression of immune pathways, such as phenoloxidase activation and the toll pathways [ , , ] . even before these genomic studies, it was suggested that these particles were more similar to organelles than viruses [ ] . the similarities between particle structure and virions of known types of complex dna insect viruses are striking, and suggest these immunosuppressive particles originated by symbiogenesis between viruses and endoparasitic wasps, the same evolutionary process by which mitochondria and plastids originated from symbiotic bacteria [ ] . for example, most braconid wasps produce enveloped bacilliform particles classified as bracoviruses, and these resemble baculovirus and nudivirus virions [ , ] . similarly, ichneumonid wasps produce enveloped spindle-shaped particles classified as ichnoviruses that resemble virions of ascoviruses, viruses lethal to lepidopterans, which, interestingly, are vectored by endoparasitic wasps [ ] . it must also be noted that ichnoviruses resemble other true virus particles that are structurally very similar to virions of ascoviruses, but which remain unclassified because the lack of information about their genomes [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, ascoviruses and ichnoviruses display very different genome properties; similar genomic differences occur between bracoviruses and baculoviruses or nudiviruses, suggesting that convergent evolution led to the origin the different polydnavirus types from at least two different types of viruses. in ascoviruses, the genome consists of a single circular dna molecule ranging from -to -kpb in size [ ] . phylogenetic analyses of several viral genes have revealed that ascoviruses are closely related to iridoviruses [ ] , and likely evolved from them. in contrast, the genome of ichnoviruses is composed of multiple circular dna molecules ( to ) representing a total size of to kbp, all of which are replicated from the wasp chromosomes. the ichnovirus proviral genome is specifically excised and amplified in several segments in the female calyx cells, the only wasp tissue in which ichnovirus virogenesis occurs. after assembly, these particles are secreted into the female genital tract. once injected into the host, the ichnovirus genome does not replicate, and does not lead to the production of a new virus generation. the third characteristic of ichnoviruses is that most of the genes borne by the particles are not related to viral genes. among the annotated ichnovirus gene families, there are four (rep, prrp, n, and trv) for which no homology with known eukaryotic (or prokaryotic) proteins has been detected and for which no function has been proposed. among the remaining three (cys, ank and inx), cys-motif proteins have no clear homologs among eukaryotic (or prokaryotic) proteins, although the "cysteine knot" that they form is a folding domain found in many proteins, but not one that is necessarily related to eukaryotic host immune systems [ , ] . however, some protein domains and their putative functions suggest that they might be related to regulatory components of eukaryotic host defence systems that are not sufficiently elucidated. although the resemblance of the polydnavirus virions to those of conventional insect viruses suggests that the former evolved from the latter, to date no molecular evidence supports this hypothesis. in the case of ascoviruses and ichnoviruses, well-conserved genes found among the three ascoviruses sequenced so far (sfav a [ ] , tnav c [ ] , and hvav e [ ] ) are not found in ichnovirus genomes. as noted above, the principal reason for this is that the genomes of the latter viruses appear to contain mainly wasp genes, not viral genes. this highlights the need for new and alternative types of sequence data obtained from pertinent biological systems. in this regard, dpav has features that could provide important insights. indeed, it is the only ascovirus known to replicate in both its wasp and caterpillar hosts. it is transmitted vertically from wasp to caterpillars to suppress the defence response of the latter host, thereby enabling parasite development [ , ] . moreover, in males and females of d. pulchellus, the dpav genome resides in the nuclei of all hosts cells, providing a possible example of what may have been an intermediate stage in the symbiogenesis that led to the evolutionary origin of ichnoviruses. we recently sequenced the dpav genome, and a combination of our analysis of this genome and recent data from new types of ichnoviruses, as well as new software programs that elucidate protein relationships based on structural analysis, have enabled us to detect phylogenetic relationships between proteins encoded by open reading frames of dpav and the glypta fumiferanae (gfiv) and campolitis sonorensis (csiv) ichnoviruses. in support of the symbiogenesis hypothesis for the origin of ichnoviruses, data and analyses suggest two independent symbiogenic events, in agreement with what was previously proposed [ ] . the first led to the ichnoviruses in banchinae lineage. this hypothesis is based on the occurrence of a gene cluster present in gfiv and dpav . the second symbiogenic event led to ichnoviruses in the campopleginae wasp lineage. this hypothesis is based on relationships of the major capsid proteins among csiv, ascoviruses and iridoviruses. extending our investigations to proteins encoded by open reading frames of certain ascoviruses and bracoviruses, hosts and bacteria, in the light of recent analyses about the involvement of the replication machinery of virus groups related to ascoviruses in lateral gene transfer [ ] , we discuss the robustness and the limits of the molecular evidence supporting an ascovirus origin for ichnovirus lineages. the dpav genome sequenced by genoscope (france) is , -bp in length. its organization, gene content and evolutionary characteristics will be detailed in a separate publication (manuscript in preparation; additional file ). however, blast results obtained with several orfs in the dpav genome provide evidence that certain ichnovirus orfs have their closest relatives in an ascovirus genome. specifically, we identified a -kbp region that contains a cluster of three genes ( fig. , orf , and ; additional files and ) that have close homologs in a gfiv gene family composed of seven members [ ] . all contain a domain similar to a conserved domain found in the pox-d family of ntpases. to date, this pox-d domain has been identified as a ntp binding domain of about amino acid residues found only in viral proteins encoded by poxvirus, iridovirus, ascovirus and mimivirus genomes. these genes seem to be specific to gfiv, as they are absent in the three sequenced genomes of other ichnoviruses, namely csiv, tranosema rostrales ichnovirus (triv), and hyposoter fugitivus ichnovirus (hfiv). more specifically, in dpav , orf encodes a protein of amino acid residues that is % similar from position to to a protein of amino acid residues encoded by the orf contained in the segment c in the gfiv genome (fig. ) . these two proteins can therefore be considered putative orthologs. the c-terminal residues of this dpav protein are also % similar to the cterminal domain of the protein homologs encoded by the orf of the d and d gfiv segments, % similar to the n-terminal and the c-terminal domains of the protein encoded by the orfs r and l of the iridovirus civ and lcdv, and % similar with those encoded by orfs , and in the ascovirus genomes of hvav e, sfav a and tnav c, respectively. overall, this indicates that this dpav protein is more closely related to that of gfiv than to those found in other ascovirus and iridovirus genomes currently available in databases. orf encodes a protein of amino acid residues similar only with the c-terminal domain of three proteins encoded by the orfs , and , contained, respectively, in gfiv segments d , d and d . in contrast, orf is closer to iridovirus and ascovirus genes than to gfiv genes. this protein of amino acid residues is % similar over all its length to civ orf r orthologs in all iridoviral and ascoviral genomes and is only % similar over amino acid residues to the c-terminal domain of the gfiv protein homologs encoded by the orf , , , , and in, respectively, the c , c , d , d , d and d segments of this virus. analysis of the genes surrounding the dpav orf- - - cluster confirms that this virus has an ascovirus origin since this region contains orfs that are close homologs of genes in iridovirus and ascovirus genomes. upstream from the orf- - - cluster, an orf encoding the dna-dependent rna polymerase subunit c is present, which is an ortholog of the iridoviral civ orf r and the ascoviral sfav a orf . downstream from this cluster, there are two genes, absent in known ascoviral genomes, but similar to the iridoviral civ orf l and civ orf l. these two genes encode, respectively, a chromosomal replication initiation protein and zinc finger protein. in between them, a gene encoding a small protein is present that is similar to that encoded by the orf l of the iridovirus civ, and which corresponds to the ali-like protein also found in entomopoxviruses [ ] . since the three dpav genes have relatives in all ascovirus and iridovirus genomes sequenced so far, their presence in the dpav genome cannot result from a lateral transfer that occurred from an ichnovirus genome related gfiv to dpav . thus, as these dpav genes are the closest relatives of the pox-d gene family present in gfiv identified so far, they could be considered a landmark of the symbiogenic ascovirus origin of the ichnovirus lineage to which this polydnavirus belongs. an alternative explanation is that the presence of dpav -like genes in the genome of gfiv resulted from a lateral transfer from viral genomes closely related to those of gfiv and dpav . indeed, this might have happened when a glypta wasp was infected by an ancestral virus related to dpav . nevertheless, the symbiogenic origin of gfiv from ascoviruses is also supported by morphological features of its virions [ ] , which, aside from similarities in shape, also show reticulations on their surface in negatively stained preparations, a characteristic of the virions of all ascovirus species examined to date [ ] . because ascovirus virions and ichnovirus particles display structural similarities, we developed an approach to search for homologs of virion structural proteins in ichnoviruses. these approaches were initiated in and recently finalized, but some of the conclusions have been published [ ] . to date, only two virion proteins from the campoletis sonorensis ichnovirus (csiv) have been characterized [ , ] . the first is the p (acc n° aad ), a structural protein that appears to be located as a layer between the out envelope and nucleocapsid, and the second, p , a capsid protein (acc n° af ). presently, there are more than one hundred ascoviral or iridoviral mcp sequences in databases. blast searches using these sequences failed to detect any similarities between csiv virion proteins and ascoviral or iridoviral mcps, or any other proteins [ ] . to evaluate the possibility that homology between ichnovirus and ascovirus virion proteins may simply not be detectable by conventional blastp searches, we used a different method, wapam (weighted automata pattern matching; [ ] ). the models were designed on the basis of a previous study [ ] demonstrating that mcp encoded by ascovirus, iridovirus, phycodnavirus and asfarvirus genomes are related, and all contain conserved domains separated by hinges of very variable size. we investigated these conserved domains further using hydrophobic cluster analysis (hca, [ ] ). this map of the -kbp region of the dpav genome (embl acc. n° cu and cu ) that contains the gene cluster with direct homologs in the genome of the glypta fumiferanae ichnovirus amino acid sequence comparison resulting from a blast search done with the dpav orf as a query, and the best hit corresponding to the protein encoded by the orf of the ichnovirus segment gfv-c (subject; genbank acc. n° yp_ ) figure amino acid sequence comparison resulting from a blast search done with the dpav orf as a query, and the best hit corresponding to the protein encoded by the orf of the ichnovirus segment gfv-c (subject; genbank acc. n° yp_ ). analysis revealed that most conservation occurred at the level of hydrophobic residues, as expected for structural proteins (additional file a and b). the size variability of the hinges between conserved domains and the conservation of hydrophobic residues might explain why blast searches using iridoviral and ascoviral mcp sequences have limited ability to detect mcp orthologs in phycodnavirus and asfarvirus genomes. we designed two syntactic models (see materials and methods), which together were able to specifically align all mcp sequences of the four virus families. importantly, wapam aligned the csiv ichnovirus p structural protein with both models. complementary structural and hca confirmed the presence of the seven conserved domains in this csiv structural protein ( fig. a and additional file c). in addition to the above analysis, ten syntactic models were developed using proteins conserved in the three sequenced ascovirus species (sfav a, tnav c, and hvav a) and twelve iridoviruses [ ] . none of these and , typed in black) , dpav (lanes and , typed in blue) and sfav a (lanes and , typed in purple) . conserved positions among the amino acid sequence of csiv and those of dpav and sfav a are highlighted in grey. secondary structures in the three sfav a orf orthologs were calculated with the network protein sequence analysis at http://npsa-pbil.ibcp.fr/ and the statistical relevance of the secondary structures were evaluated with psipred at http://bioinf.cs.ucl.ac.uk/psipred/. c, e and h in lanes to respectively indicated for each amino acid that it is involved in a coiled, b sheet or a helix structure. using default parameters of psipred, upper case letters indicate that the predicted secondary structure is statically significant in psipred results. significant secondary structures are highlighted in yellow. in (a), the comparisons were limited to three of the seven conserved domains (additional file a, b and c), the , and . indeed, classical in silico methods appeared to be inappropriate to predict statistically significant secondary structures in conserved structural protein rich in b strand such as iridovirus and ascovirus mcp. in contrast, a complete and coherent domain comparison was obtained by hca profiles (fig. s b, c) . , developed from small proteins encoded by the dpav orf , sfav a orf , hvav a orf , and tnav c orf in the ascovirus genomes, and iridovirus civ orf l and mimivirus miv orf r genomes, respectively. importantly, these proteins have orthologs in vertebrate iridoviruses, phycodnaviruses, and asfarvirus. in sfav a, the peptide encoded by orf is one of the virion components. in ascoviruses, iridoviruses, phycodnaviruses, and the asfarvirus, they have been annotated as thioredoxines, proteins that play a role in initiating viral infection [ ] [ ] [ ] . database mining with our model revealed four hits with csiv sequences (acc n°. m , s , af , af ) each a homolog orf of sfav a orf . in fact, these sequences correspond to several variants of a single region contained in the b segment of the csiv genome. to date, these have not been annotated in the final csiv genome, probably because they overlap a recombination site. hca analyses confirmed that the hydrophobic cores were conserved ( fig. b and additional file d and e). the chromosomal locations of genes encoding these two csiv proteins, i.e., p and p , were also consistent with the symbiogenesis hypothesis. in fact, the orf encoding p is not found in proviral dna. it is notable that no orfs encoding orthologs of p or other structural proteins such as mcps are found in any of the other three ichnovirus genomes sequenced -triv, gfiv, hfiv [ , ] . therefore, this indicates that the orthologs of ichnovirus mcps and other virion structural proteins are also probably located in the genomes of these wasps, i.e., not in proviral dna. in contrast to this, we found that the gene encoding the csiv ortholog of sfav a orf is located within the proviral dna. whether ortholog proteins are similarly involved in the triv, gfiv and hfiv biology, their genes are not found in proviral dna, since no matches were detected in their viral genomes. the phylogenetic analysis performed previously on p and the sfav a orf orthologs [ ] indicated that they have an ancestor close to that of the ascoviruses and iridoviruses. as in the case of genes encoding pox-d family of ntpases in all ascoviruses, iridoviruses, and gfiv, genes encoding virion proteins cannot result from a horizontal transfer from a campoplegine or banchine ichnovirus genome to all ascovirus, iridovirus, phycodnaviruses and asfarvirus genomes. as the ascovirus genes encoding the two virion proteins investigated here are the closest relatives of virion proteins in csiv, they can be considered a landmark reflecting the symbiogenic origin of the two ichnovirus lineages from ascoviruses closely related to dpav . in fact, the difficulty encountered in elucidating their sequence relationships can be explained by a combination of the marked transition from ascovirus to ichnovirus, and the significant selection constraints that resulted as the latter virus type evolved from the former. analysis of available ascovirus, iridovirus and ichnovirus genomes provides some of the first molecular support for the hypothesis that ichnoviruses evolved from ascoviruses by symbiogenesis. however, examining genes shared only by ascovirus, iridovirus and ichnovirus genomes likely limits the sources of genes that contributed to the evolution and complexity of these viruses, especially of the role of lateral gene transfer. relevant to this is the recent finding that an important part of the mimivirus and phycodnavirus genomes had a bacterial origin [ ] . obviously, this did not lead to the conclusion that these viruses had a bacterial origin. the cytoplasmic environment in which these viruses replicate is rich in bacterial dna because their amobae and unicellular algae hosts feed on bacteria that they digest in their cytoplasm. thus, it has been proposed [ ] that lateral transfers of bacterial dna within these viral genomes were driven by intimate coupling of recombination and viral genome replication. indeed, replication of these viruses is similar to that of bacteriophage t . this mode of replication has been called recombination-primed replication. it permits integration of dna molecules with sequence homology as short as -bp [ , ] . the replication machinery used by ascoviruses, iridoviruses, mimiviruses, phycodnaviruses, and other nucleocytoplasmic large dna viruses (ncldv) [ , ] is common to all of them, despite differences in the specifics of replication in each virus family. it can therefore be expected that recombination-primed replication occurred repeatedly during evolution of both these viruses and the genome of their eukaryotic hosts. in an eukaryotic cellular environment in which bacteria, chromosomes, ncldv viruses and non-ncldvs (such as baculoviruses) intimately cohabit temporarily or permanently, recombination-primed replication is able to allow reciprocal passive lateral transfers between viral genomes, host chromosomes, and bacterial dna. under these conditions, lateral transfers are considered passive since they just result from the intimate environment and not from an active mechanism dedicated to genetic exchanges. in ascoviruses and iridoviruses, the occurrence of such lateral transfers is supported by blastp searches that detected the presence of orfs whose closest relatives have their origin within eukaryotic genomes (e.g., for dpav , in additional data , orfs , , , , , ), bacterial genomes (e.g., for dpav , in additional data , orfs , , , , and ) or viruses belonging to other ncldv and non-ncldv families (e.g., for dpav , in additional data , orfs , , , ). the transmission of ascoviruses is unusual in that they are poorly infectious per os and appear to be transmitted among lepidopteran hosts by parasite wasp vectors at oviposition [ , ] . the genome of the ascoviruses can be replicated in presence of polydnavirus dna either within the reproductive tissues of female wasps or within the body of the parasitized hosts infected by both polydnavirus and ascovirus. consequently, integrated sequences of ascovirus origin can be expected within wasp and polydnavirus genomes. reciprocally, sequences of polydnavirus origin may have been integrated in ascovirus genomes, whatever the wasp origin, ichneumonid or braconid. one gene family related to a bacterial family of n-acetyl-l-glutamate -phosphotransferase (acc. n° of the closest bacterial relatives yp_ , cam , zp_ , zp_ ), identified only within the sfav a, hvav e and tnav c genomes, supports this conclusion. it has been found in the genome of a bracovirus, cotesia congregata bracovirus (ccbv [ ] ; fig. ). since this gene is absent in the genome of microplitis demolitor bv, a related bracovirus [ ] , it is difficult to infer the direction of the lateral transfer between the common ancestors of the three ascoviruses and of the wasp c. congregata. however, they unambiguously indicate that there was at least one lateral transfer for this gene between the common ancestor of ascoviruses and the parasitic wasp. since iridoviruses, like ascoviruses and other virus species [ , ] , are, in some cases, vectored by parasitic wasps, databases were mined using all the available ichnovirus virus proteins as queries. we found no significant relationships between csiv, hfiv and triv genomes and genomes of their putative closest relatives ncldv and non-ncldv relatives. this indicates that passive lateral gene transfers from virus to eukaryotes that are successfully spread and maintained in ichnovirus genomes remain rare events. one case of such lateral transfer was described in the ccbv genome. in this genome, aside from the presence of cardinal endogenous eukaryotic retrotranposon and polintons that transposed in the chromosomal dna of the proviral form of ccbv [ ] [ ] [ ] , two genes encoding acmnpv p -related proteins, which have their closest relatives among granuloviruses (xcgv), were found. this suggests that ccbv contained at least two cases of lateral transfers between non-ncldv and a bracovirus. our results provide another source of evidence that passive lateral gene transfers have occurred regularly during evolution from bacteria to viruses and eukaryotes, and between viruses and eukaryotes [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . even if the pox-d ntpase genes in the gfiv genome, and the mcp and sfav -like genes in the csiv genome, indicate that they have an ascovirus origin, they provide only limited evidence supporting an ascovirus origin of ichnoviruses. indeed, their sequence conservation and biological characteristics suggest that there were repeated lateral transfers during evolution between ascoviruses and wasp genomes, including the proviral ichnovirus loci. this raises an important issue about the role of lateral transfers during co-evolution of the ncldvs and non-ncldvs, ichnovirus, wasp and parasitized host. indeed, genetic materials of various origins have been exchanged and maintained during co-evolution. this therefore suggests that ichnoviruses might be chimeric entities partly resulting from sev- symbiogenesis was first proposed as an evolutionary mechanism when it became widely recognized that mitochondria and plastids originated from free-living prokaryotes [ ] . the genomes of the endosymbiotic cyanobacteria and proteobacteria, respectively, at the origin of chloroplasts and mirochondria have evolved by reduction of several orders of magnitude to the approximate size of plasmids. concurrently, nuclear genomes have been the recipients of plastid genomes. this relocation of the genes encoding most proteins of the endosymbiotic bacteria to the host nucleus is the ultimate step of this evolutionary process, so-called endosymbiogenesis [ , ] . recent studies of plants have revealed a constant deluge of dna from organelles to the nucleus since the origin of organelles [ ] . this allows the host cell to have the genetic control on its organelles, in a relationship that is closer to enslavement or domestication than to a symbiosis or a mutualism in which the organelles would recover benefits from their contribution to the eukaryotic cell well-being. to date, this deluge of dna is considered to correspond to passive lateral transfers that result from the interactions between the life cycle of the organelle and nuclear replication. numerous cases of symbiogenesis between endocellular bacteria and a wide variety of eukaryotic hosts have been characterized. however, recent work has demonstrated that this evolutionary process was not restricted to bacteria. it also occurred between endocellular eukaryotes such as unicellular algae and fungal endophyte in plants [ , ] . endosymbiogenesis was also proposed as the evolutionary mechanism that allowed some invertebrate viruses with a large double-stranded dna genome related to the nudiviruses and the ascoviruses [ ] , to have led, respectively, to the origin of bracoviruses and ichnoviruses, which are currently recognized as forming two genera within the family polydnaviridae. although presently there is no definitive evidence ruling out the hypothesis that the resemblance between ichnovirus and ascovirus virions is only an evolutionary convergence, the genomic differences between ascovirus and ichnoviruses are in good agreement with the symbiogenetic hypothesis. indeed, they match an evolutionary scenario of endosymbiogenesis during which, from a single integration event of symbiotic virus genome, viral genes were lost and/or translocated from the provirus to other chromosomal regions (fig. ). in parallel, host genes of interest for the wasp parasitoid were integrated and diversified by selection and gene duplication in the proviral dna. in this scenario, the more ancient symbiogenesis, the rarer the traces of genes from viral origin in the ichnovirus genome would be. this constitutes a constraint that dramatically limits the possibility to investigate the evolutionary links between ascovirus and ichnovirus. results of our analyses demonstrate that the situation is also complicated by the fact that lateral gene transfers unrelated to the origin of ichnoviruses cause important misleading background noise. moreover, the scenario in figure is close to a previously proposed version [ ] , but is not consistent with results presented here, nor with recently accumulated knowledge on dna transfer from organelles into the nucleus. since endocellular environments favour lateral transfers between virus and wasp nucleus, it can be proposed that genes of virus origin that are involved in the ichnovirus biology were passively integrated in one or several loci, step by step over time, alone or through transfers of gene clusters, or even the entire viral genome. since parasitoid wasps are able to vector different viruses [ , ] , this second scenario opens the exciting possibility that virus genes involved in the ichnovirus biology might correspond to a gene patchwork resulting from transfers from viruses belonging to different ncldv and non-nclvd families. because of the background noise due to lateral gene transfers found in these systems, elucidating the origins of ichnoviruses will be very time-consuming, requiring new accurate experimental approaches to generate more robust evidence. sequencing wasp genomes to identify proteins of viral origin that are components of virions and involved in the assembly of these may well contribute to our understanding of how ichnoviruses and bracoviruses evolved from other insect dna viruses. searches for similarities were mainly developed using facilities of blast programs at two websites http:// www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/blast.cgi and http:genoweb.univ-rennes .fr/serveur-gpo/out ils.php ?id_rubrique= . for dpav genes having their origin within eukaryotic, bacterial or virus genomes belonging to ncldv and non-ncldv families, the closest gene was located using the distance trees supplied with each blast search at the ncbi website. construction of syntactic models: conserved amino acid blocks and positions described previously [ , ] and with new data sets were verified or determined using meme at http://meme.sdsc.edu/meme/meme.html. in the first step, we used motifs resulting from meme to make mast minings in databases at http:// meme.sdsc.edu/meme/mast.html. since meme motifs depend significantly on the data set use to calculate them, this approach did not enable an exhaustive detection of homologs among ascoviruses, iridoviruses, phycodnaviruses, mimiviruses and asfarviruses, and the detection sensitivity was ultimately very similar to that obtained with blast. to reach our detection objectives, we therefore constructed syntactic models that only included the most conserved positions and their variable spacing using wapam at the website. http://genoweb.univ-rennes .fr/ serveur-gpo/ outils_acces.php ?id_syndic= &lang=en. defining these models was obtained empirically until they allowed an exhaustive detection in refseq-protein and genbank databases of the homologs among ascoviruses, iridoviruses, phycodnaviruses, mimiviruses and asfarviruses. the procedures were done until we were only able to detect exact match with the syntactic model. whatever obtained with wapam, they required a confirmation with other approaches. here, we used psipred result comparison for regions with scores over and hca analyses for regions having scores lower than with psipred. this simplified the statistical treatment of the result obtained with wapam, since all exact matches have significance or a score of %. syntactic hypothetical mechanism for the integration and evolution of ascovirus genomes in endoparasitic wasps figure hypothetical mechanism for the integration and evolution of ascovirus genomes in endoparasitic wasps. schematic representation of the three-step process of symbiogenesis, and dna rearrangements that putatively occurred in the germ line of the wasp ancestors in the banchinae and campopleginae lineages, from the integration of an ascoviral genome to the proviral ichnoviral genome. sequences that originate from the ascovirus are in blue, those of the wasp host and its chromosomes are in pink. genes of ascoviral origin are surrounded by a thin black or white line, depending on their final chromosomal location. two solutions can account for the final chromosomal organisation of the proviral ichnovirus genome, monolocus or multilocus, since this question is not fully understood in either wasp lineage. more complex alternatives to this three-step process might also be proposed and would involve, for example, the complete de novo creation of a mono or multi locus proviral genome from the recruitment by recombination or transposition of ascoviral and host genes located elsewhere in the wasp chromosomes. this model for the chromosomal organization of proviral dna in polydnaviruses is consistent with data recently published [ ] . immune surface of eggs of a parasitic insect the resistance of insect parasitoids to the defense reactions of their hosts an insect glycoprotein: a study of the particles responsible for the resistance of a parasitoid's egg to the defence reactions of its insect host role of virus-like particles in parasitoid-host interaction of insects venom from the endoparasitic wasp pimpla hypochondriaca adversely affects the morphology, viability, and immune function of hemocytes from larvae of the tomato moth, lacanobia oleracea characteristics of pathogenic and mutualistic relationships of ascoviruses in field populations of parasitoid wasps polydnavirus genomes reflect their dual roles as mutualists and pathogens particles containing dna associated with the oocyte of an insect parasitoid family polydnaviridae. in virus taxonomy. eighth report of the international commitee on taxonomy of viruses edited by: fauquet cm virus in aparasitoid wasp: suppression of the cellular immune response in the parasitoid's host polydnaviridae -a proposed family of insect viruses with segmented, doublestranded, circular dna genomes genome sequence of a polydnavirus: insights into symbiotic virus evolution shared and species-specific features among ichnovirus genomes origin and evolution of polydnaviruses by symbiogenesis of insect dna viruses in endoparasitic wasps symbiosis in cell evolution hyenoptera: formicidae) from brazil the ultrastructure of microorganisms in the tissues of casenaria infesta (hymenoptera: ichneumonidae) apparent replication of an unusual viruslike particle in both parasitoid wasp and its host an unusual virus from the parasitic wasp cotesia melanoscela. virology viruslike particles in the ovaries of microctonus aethiopoides loan (hymenoptera: braconidae), a parasitoid of adult weevils (coleoptera: curculionidae) evidence for the evolution of ascoviruses from iridoviruses genomic sequence of spodoptera frugiperda ascovirus a, an enveloped, double-stranded dna insect virus that manipulates apoptosis for viral reproduction sequence and organization of the trichoplusia ni ascovirus c (ascoviridae) genome. virology sequenceand organization of the heliothis virescens ascovirus genome biological and molecular features of the relationships between diadromus pulchellus ascovirus, a parasitoid hymenopteran wasp (diadromus pulchellus) and its lepidopteran host, acrolepiopsis assectella dpav- , on thehemocytic encapsulation response and capsule melanization of the leek-moth pupa, acrolepiopsis assectella genomic and morphological features of a banchine polydnavirus: comparison with bracoviruses and ichnoviruses i am what i eat and i eat what i am: acquisition of bacterial genes by giant viruses the genome of melanoplus sanguinipes entomopoxvirus cloning and expression of a gene encoding a campoletis sonorensis polydnavirus structural protein a gene encoding a polydnavirus structural polypeptide is not encapsidated what does structure tell us about virus evolution? cluster of re-configurable nodes for scanning large genomic banks deciphering protein sequence information through hydrophobic cluster analysis (hca): current status and perspectives comparative genomic analysis of the family iridoviridae: reannotating and defining the core set of iridovirus genes the thioredoxin system in retroviral infection and apoptosis mimivirus giant particles incorporate a large fraction of anonymous and unique gene products cell entry by enveloped viruses: redox considerations for hiv and sars-coronavirus genetic recombination of the dna plant virus pbcv- in a chlorella alga common origin of four diverse families of large eukaryotic dna viruses evolutionary genomics of nucleo-cytoplasmic large dna viruses effects of the nonoccluded virus of spodoptera frugiperda (lepidoptera: noctuidae) on the development of a parasitoid parasitoid-mediated transmission of an iridescent virus non-poly-dna viruses, their parasitic wasp, and hosts the few virus-like genes of cotesia congragata self-synthesizing dna transposons in eukaryotes marvericks, a novel class of giant transposable elements widespread in eukaryotes and related to dna viruses evolution of viruses by acquisition of cellular rna or dna nucleotide sequences and genes: an introduction microbialgenes in the human genome: lateral transfer or gene loss? science are there bugs in our genome? science express genome-wide survey for genes horizontally transferred from cellular organisms to baculoviruses morphogenesis by symbiogenesis endosymbiotic gene transfer: organelle genomes forge eukaryotic chromosomes a cryptic intracellular green alga in ginkgo biloba: ribosomal dna markers reveal worldwide distribution forest succession suppressed by an introduced plant-fungal symbiosis unfolding the evolutionary story of polydnaviruses structure and evolution of a proviral locus of glyptapanteles indiensis bracovirus this research was funded by grants from the c.n.r.s. (pics n° ), the genoscope, the a.n.r. project in bioinformatics modulome, the ministère de l'education nationale, de yb is the leader of all aspects of the research on the biology, genomics, and evolution of dpav . ss coordinated the sequencing, assembly, and sequence quality control of the dpav genome. cag participated in the bioinformatics analysis of the dpav genome development of the manuscript. baf contributed original concepts regarding the evolutionary origins and role of polydnaviruses in endoparasitoid biology, provided virological expertise to optimize data interpretation, and participated in writing the manuscript. predicted orfs in dpav genome. key: cord- -ec qzurk authors: devaney, james; contreras, maya; laffey, john g title: clinical review: gene-based therapies for ali/ards: where are we now? date: - - journal: crit care doi: . /cc sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ec qzurk acute lung injury (ali) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) confer substantial morbidity and mortality, and have no specific therapy. the accessibility of the distal lung epithelium via the airway route, and the relatively transient nature of ali/ards, suggest that the disease may be amenable to gene-based therapies. ongoing advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of ali/ards have revealed multiple therapeutic targets for gene-based approaches. strategies to enhance or restore lung epithelial and/or endothelial cell function, to strengthen lung defense mechanisms against injury, to speed clearance of infection and to enhance the repair process following ali/ards have all demonstrated promise in preclinical models. despite three decades of gene therapy research, however, the clinical potential for gene-based approaches to lung diseases including ali/ards remains to be realized. multiple barriers to effective pulmonary gene therapy exist, including the pulmonary architecture, pulmonary defense mechanisms against inhaled particles, the immunogenicity of viral vectors and the poor transfection efficiency of nonviral delivery methods. deficits remain in our knowledge regarding the optimal molecular targets for gene-based approaches. encouragingly, recent progress in overcoming these barriers offers hope for the successful translation of gene-based approaches for ali/ards to the clinical setting. gene-based therapy involves the insertion of genes or smaller nucleic acid sequences into cells and tissues to replace the function of a defective gene, or to alter the production of a specifi c gene product, in order to treat a disease. gene therapy can be classifi ed into germline and somatic gene therapies. germline approaches modify the sperm or egg prior to fertilization and confer a stable heritable genetic modifi cation. somatic gene approaches use gene therapy to alter the function of mature cells. commonly used somatic gene therapy strategies include the overexpression of an existing gene and/or the insertion of smaller nucleic acid sequences into cells to alter the production of an existing gene. ali/ards may be suitable for gene-based therapies as it is an acute but relatively transient process [ ] , requiring short-lived gene expression, obviating the need for repeated therapies and reducing the risk of an adverse immunological response. th e distal lung epithelium is selectively accessible via the tracheal route of administration, allowing targeting of the pulmonary epithelium [ ] . th e pulmonary vasculature is also relatively accessible, as the entire cardiac output must transit this circulation. antibodies that bind antigens selectively expressed on the pulmonary endothelial surface can be complexed to gene vectors to facilitate selective targeting following intravenous administration [ ] . it is also possible to use gene-based strategies to target other cells central to the pathogenesis of ali/ards, such as leuko cytes and abstract acute lung injury (ali) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) confer substantial morbidity and mortality, and have no specifi c therapy. the accessibility of the distal lung epithelium via the airway route, and the relatively transient nature of ali/ ards, suggest that the disease may be amenable to gene-based therapies. ongoing advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of ali/ards have revealed multiple therapeutic targets for genebased approaches. strategies to enhance or restore lung epithelial and/or endothelial cell function, to strengthen lung defense mechanisms against injury, to speed clearance of infection and to enhance the repair process following ali/ards have all demonstrated promise in preclinical models. despite three decades of gene therapy research, however, the clinical potential for gene-based approaches to lung diseases including ali/ ards remains to be realized. multiple barriers to eff ective pulmonary gene therapy exist, including the pulmonary architecture, pulmonary defense mechanisms against inhaled particles, the immunogenicity of viral vectors and the poor transfection effi ciency of nonviral delivery methods. defi cits remain in our knowledge regarding the optimal molecular targets for genebased approaches. encouragingly, recent progress in overcoming these barriers off ers hope for the successful translation of gene-based approaches for ali/ards to the clinical setting. fi bro blasts [ ] . furthermore, gene-therapy-based approaches off er the potential to selectively target diff erent phases of the injury and repair process. th e potential to target specifi c aspects of the injury and repair processes such as epithelial-mesenchymal transition, fi brosis, fi brinolysis, coagulopathy and oxidative stress with these approaches is also clear. gene therapy requires the delivery of genes or smaller nucleic acid sequences into the cell nucleus using a carrier or vector. th e vector enables the gene to overcome barriers to entry into the cell, and to make its way to the nucleus to be transcribed and translated itself or to modulate transcription and/or translation of other genes. both viral and nonviral vector systems have been developed (table ) . viral vectors are the most eff ective and effi cient way of getting larger nucleic acid sequences, particularly genes, into cells (table ) . th e viral genome is modifi ed to remove the parts necessary for viral replication. th is segment is then replaced with the gene of interesttermed a transgene -coupled to a promoter that drives its expression. th e modifi ed genome is then encapsulated with viral proteins. following delivery to the target site, the virus binds to the host cell, enters the cytoplasm and releases its payload into the nucleus (figure ). th e size of trans gene that can be used depends on the capsid size. a number of diff erent viral vectors have been used in preclinical lung injury studies to date. adenoviruses have double-stranded dna genomes, have demonstrated promise in preclinical models [ , ] and are well tolerated at low to intermediate doses in humans [ , ] . advantages include their ease of production, the high effi ciency at which they can infect the pulmonary epithelium [ , ] and that they can deliver relatively large transgenes. a disadvantage of adenoviruses is their immunogenicity, particularly in repeated doses [ ] . newer adenoviral vectors, in which much of the immuno genicity has been removed, hold promise [ ] . while adenovirus-mediated gene transfer in the absence of epithelial damage is relatively ineffi cient [ ] , this may be less of a problem in ali/ards that is characterized by widespread epithelial damage. adeno-associated viruses (aavs) are single-stranded dna parvoviruses that are replication defi cient [ ] . a substantial proportion of the human population has been exposed to aavs but the clinical eff ects are unknown. aav vectors have a good safety profi le, and are less immunogenic compared with other viruses, although anti bodies do develop against aav capsid proteins that can compromise repeat administration. aav vectors can insert genes at a specifi c site on chromosome . th e packaging capacity of the virus is limited to . kb, restricting the size of the transgene that can be used. aavs are less effi cient in transducing cells than adenoviral vectors. successful aav vector gene transfer has been demon strated in multiple lung cell types including lung progenitor cells, in both normal and naphthaleneinduced ali lungs [ ] . aav serotypes have specifi c tissue tropisms, due to diff erent capsid proteins that bind to specifi c cell membrane receptors. aav- [ ] and avv- [ ] exhibit enhanced tropism for the pulmonary epi thelium [ , ] . aavs can transduce nondividing cells and result in long-lived transgene expression. aav vectors have been used in clinical trials in cystic fi brosis patients, underlining their safety profi le [ , ] . th ese rna viruses can transfect nondividing cells such as mature airway epithelial cells [ ] . th e virus stably but randomly integrates into the genome and expression is likely to last for the lifetime of the cell (~ days). th e transgene can be transmitted post mitosis, and there is also a risk of tumorigenesis if the transgene integrates near an oncogene. th e development of leukemias in children following gene therapy for severe combined immunodefi ciency highlights this risk [ , ] . while lentiviral vectors may be useful to correct a gene defi ciency associated with increased risk of ali, the long-lived gene expression of lentiviral delivered genes may be more suitable for chronic diseases than for ali/ards. nonviral delivery systems, while generally less effi cient than viral vectors in transfecting the lung epithelium, are increasingly used to deliver smaller dna/rna molecules (table ). strategies include the use of dna-lipid and dna-polymer complexes and naked dna/rna oligonucleotides, such as sirna [ ] , decoy oligo nucleo tides [ ] and plasmid dna [ ] . nonviral delivery systems are less immunogenic than viral vector-based approaches, and can be generated in large amounts at relatively low cost. plasmid vectors are composed of closed circles of doublestranded dna. as naked and plasmid dna contain no proteins for attachment to cellular receptors, there is no specifi c targeting to diff erent cell types and thus it is essential that the dna is placed in close contact with the desired cell type. th ese limitations make this approach less relevant clinically. th e therapeutic dna is held within a sphere of lipids, termed a lipoplex, or within a sphere of polymers, such as polyethyleneimine, termed a polyplex. lipoplexes and polyplexes act to protect the dna, facilitate binding to the target cell membrane and also trigger endocytosis of the complex into the cell, thereby enhancing gene expression. th ese systems can be modifi ed to include a targeting peptide for a specifi c cell type, such as airway epithelial cells [ ] . th ese complexes effi ciently and safely transfect airway epithelial cells [ ] , and they have demonstrated promise in human studies [ ] . sirnas are dsrna molecules of to nucleotides that can regulate the expression of specifi c genes. specifi c sirnas reduce infl ammation-associated lung injury in table . viral vector-delivered gene therapy relatively easily produced immunogenic [ ] adenoviral transfer of genes for a surfactant (dsdna genome) effi ciently transfect lung enzyme [ ] , angiopoietin- [ ] , hsp- [ ] , epithelium [ , ] apolipoprotein a- [ ] , and na + ,k + -atpase pump can deliver larger genes [ ] genes attenuate experimental ali well tolerated in lower doses [ , ] adenoviral delivery of il- gene attenuates zymosan ali at low doses, but is harmful at high doses [ ] adeno-associated virus good safety profi le; less limited transgene size aav vector gene transfer demonstrated in multiple vectors (ssdna genome) immunogenic diffi cult to produce in large lung cell types including progenitor cells in both inherently replication defi cient quantities normal lungs and following naphthalene-induced aav- and aav- lung epithelial ali [ ] tropism [ , ] transduce nondividing cells long-lived gene expression used in clinical trials for cf [ , ] lentivirus vectors transduce nondividing cells [ ] oncogenesis risk due to lentiviral transfer of shrna to silence cd gene (rna genome) integrate stably but randomly integration into genome expression suppresses silica-induced lung fi brosis into the genome [ , ] in the rat [ ] nonviral gene-based strategies plasmid transfer (closed easily produced at low cost no specifi c cell targeting electroporation-mediated gene transfer of the dsdna circles) very ineffi cient na + ,k + -atpase rescues endotoxin-induced lung injury [ ] nonviral dna complexes complexes protect dna less effi cient than viral vectors cationic lipid-mediated transfer of the na + ,k + -(lipoplexes or polyplexes) complexes facilitate cellular atpase gene ameliorated high-permeability targeting [ ] pulmonary edema [ ] lipoplex-delivered il- gene decreased clp-induced ali [ ] systemic cationic polyethylenimine polyplexes incorporating indoleamine- , -dioxygenase decreased ischemia-reperfusion ali [ ] dna and rna easily produced at low cost no specifi c cell targeting specifi c sirnas reduce infl ammation-associated oligonucleotides (sirna, smaller molecules that can lung injury in humans [ ] and in animal models shrna, decoy easily enter cells [ , ] oligonucleotides) target regulation of specifi c genes shrna-based approaches have reduced lung injury in animal models [ , ] cell-delivered gene therapy humans [ ] and in animal models [ , ] . shrna is a single strand of rna that, when introduced into the cell, is reverse transcribed and integrated into the genome, becoming heritable. during subsequent transcription, the sequence generates an oligonucleotide with a tight hairpin turn that is processed into sirna. shrnas have reduced lung injury in animal models [ , ] . decoy oligonucleotides are double-stranded dna molecules of to nucleo tides, which bind to specifi c transcription factors to reduce expression of targeted genes, and have been successfully used in animal models [ , ] . an alternative approach is to use systemically delivered cells to deliver genes to the lung. th is approach has been used to enhance the therapeutic potential of stem cellssuch as mesenchymal stem/stromal cells, which demon strate promise in preclinical ali/ards models [ ] . fibroblasts have also been used to successfully deliver genes to the lung to attenuate ali [ ] . preliminary data from a clinical trial in pulmonary hypertension show that endothelial progenitor cells overexpressing endothelial nitric oxide synthase (nos ) decrease pulmonary vascular resistance [ ] , highlighting the potential of cell-delivered gene therapy for ali/ards. nebulization of genetic material into the lung is eff ective [ ] , safe and well tolerated [ , , ] . th e integrity of aav vectors [ , ] and adenoviral virus vectors [ ] are maintained post nebulization, as are cationic lipid vectors [ ] and dna and rna oligonucleotides [ ] . a number of gene therapy clinical trials have utilized nebulization to deliver the transgene to the lung [ , ] , but without clear clinical benefi t to date [ , ] . intravascular delivery approaches target the lung endothelium. th ese approaches have been successfully used in preclinical studies of cell-based gene therapies [ , ] , and also with vectors that incorporate components such as antibodies to target antigens on the lung endothelium [ ] . successful gene-based therapies require the delivery of high quantities of the gene or oligonucleotide to the pulmonary epithelial or endothelial surface, require effi cient entry into the cytoplasm of these large and insoluble nucleic acids, which then have to move from the cytoplasm into the nucleus, and activate transcription of its product. multiple barriers exist that hinder this process, not least the natural defense mechanisms of the lung, and additional diffi culties that exist in transducing the acutely injured lung (table ). limitations regarding delivery technologies and defi ciencies in our knowledge regarding the optimal molecular targets also reduce the effi cacy of these approaches. th e lung has evolved eff ective barriers to prevent the uptake of any inhaled foreign particles [ ] . while advantageous in minimizing the potential for uptake of external genetic material (for example, viral dna), these barriers make it more diffi cult to use gene-based therapies in the lung. barriers to entry of foreign genetic material into the lung include airway mucus and the epithelial lining fl uid, which traps and clears inhaled material. th e glycocalyceal barrier hinders contact with the cell membrane, while the tight intercellular epithelial junctions and limited luminal endocytosis further restrict entry of foreign material into the epithelial cells. transducing the acutely injured lung may be diffi cult, due to the presence of pulmonary edema, consolidated or collapsed alveoli, and additional extracellular barriers such as mucus. gene-based therapies targeted at the pulmonary epithelium may be less eff ective where there is extensive denudation of the pulmonary epithelium, as may occur in primary ards. encouragingly, there is some evidence to suggest that ali may not substantially impair viral gene transfer to the alveolar epithelium [ ] . th e key limitation of nonviral vector approaches has been their lack of effi ciency in mediating gene transfer and transgene expression in the airway epithelium. viral vectors are immunogenic, due to the protein coat of the viral vector, and the immune response is related to both vector dose and number of administrations. th e potential to limit administration to a single dose in ali/ards may reduce this risk. however, the development of an infl amma tory response resulting in death following administration of a fi rst-generation adenoviral vector highlights the risks involved [ ] . additional limitations of viral vectors include transgene size, which is limited by the size of the capsid that encloses the viral genes. th e therapeutic potential of gene therapy for ali/ards is underlined by a growing body of literature demon strating effi cacy in relevant preclinical models. in considering the clinical implications of these studies, it is important to acknowledge that animal models of ards do not fully replicate the complex pathophysiological changes seen in the clinical setting. th is is highlighted by the fact that many pharmacologic strategies demonstrating considerable promise in preclinical studies were later proven ineff ective in clinical trials. nevertheless, these studies provide insights into the clinical potential of these strategies. adenovirus-mediated transfer of a gene that enhances surfactant production improves lung function and confers resistance to pseudomonas aeruginosa infection ( figure ) [ ] . adenovirus-delivered superoxide dismutase and catalase genes protected against hyperoxic-induced, but not ischemia-reperfusion-induced, lung injury [ ] . more recent studies have demonstrated the therapeutic potential of overexpression of a number of genes, including angio poietin- [ ] , hsp- [ ] , apolipo protein a- [ ] , defensin β [ ] and the na + ,k + -atpase pump [ ] . in contrast, overexpression of il- β can directly cause ali [ ] , while overexpression of suppressor of cytokine signal ing- worsens immune-complex-induced ali [ ] . intriguingly, intra tracheal administration of adenoviral vector incor porating il- , prior to zymosan-induced lung injury, improved survival at a lower dose but was ineff ective and even harmful at higher doses [ ] . an early murine study demonstrated that cationic lipidmediated transfer of the na + ,k + -atpase gene ameliorated high-permeability pulmonary edema [ ] . electroporationassisted gene transfer of plasmids encoding for na + ,k + -atpase reverses endotoxin-induced lung injury [ ] . th e lipoplex-delivered il- gene decreased lung and systemic organ injury induced by cecal ligation and puncture in mice [ ] . systemically administered cationic polyethyleni mine polyplexes incorporating indoleamine- , -dioxyge nase transduced pulmonary endo thelial cells and decreased lung ischemia-reper fusion injury [ ] . nf-κb decoy oligonucleotides, incorporated into viral vectors, attenuate systemic sepsis-induced lung injury when administered intravenously (figure ) [ ] . in animal models, both intratracheal [ , ] and intra venously [ , ] administered sirna successfully silence their target genes. shrna-based approaches have been used to suppress silica-induced lung fi brosis [ ] and to ameliorate lung ischemia-reperfusion-induced lung injury [ ] . more recently, aerosolization of sirna that targets respiratory syncytial virus viral replication was safe and potentially eff ective in patients post lung transplant with respiratory syncytial virus infection [ ] , clearly illustrating the therapeutic potential of these approaches for ali/ards. mei and colleagues enhanced the effi cacy of mesen chymal stem/stromal cells in endotoxin-induced ali by transducing them to overexpress angiopoeitin- (figure ) [ ] . mesenchymal stem/stromal cells overexpressing il- decreased alveolar infi ltration of cd and cd t cells following lung ischemia-reperfusion injury [ ] . bone marrow stem cells expressing keratinocyte growth factor attenuate bleomycin-induced lung injury [ ] . non stem cells can also be used to deliver genes to the injured lung [ ] . fibroblasts overexpressing angiopoeitin- attenuate endotoxin-induced lung injury [ ] , while fi broblasts overexpressing vascular endothelial growth factor and endothelial nitric oxide synthase can attenuate or even reverse endotoxin-induced ali [ ] . advances in the identifi cation of therapeutic targets, improvements in viral and nonviral vector technologies, and regulation of gene-based therapies by temporal and spatial targeting off er the potential to translate the therapeutic promise of gene-based therapies for ali/ ards to the clinical setting (table ) . viral vectors remain the focus of intensive research to optimize their effi ciency, to minimize their immuno genicity and to enhance their tissue specifi city [ , , , ] . strategies to develop less immunogenic vectors have focused on modifying the naturally occurring proteins in the viral coat [ ] . much research has been devoted to searching and characterizing both naturally occurring [ ] and engineered capsid variants from mammalian species [ ] . capsid protein modification has also been used to enhance tissue specifi city [ ] . envelope protein pseudotyping involves encapsulating the modifi ed genome from one virus, such as simian immuno defi ci ency virus, with envelope proteins from another virus, such as vesicular stomatitic virus. th is encapsu lation can enhance the therapeutic potential of viral vectors, by combining the advantages of one viral genome (for example, bigger payload or site-specifi c integration) with the tissue tropism of another virus. strategies to enhance the eff ectiveness of the lipoplexes used to deliver plasmids and other dna/rna oligonucleotides involve manipulation of the lipoplex lipid content and the use of targeting peptides. th e choice of lipid infl uences expression effi ciency by enhancing release of the genetic material within the target cell [ , ] . targeting peptides increases transfection effi ciency by directing the lipid to a particular cell membrane or cell type [ ] . physical methods of plasmid delivery such as electroporation [ ] and ultrasound can enhance gene transfer by bringing the plasmid dna into closer proximity with the cell membrane and/or causing temporary disruption of the cell membrane. other physical methods can also be used to increase in vivo gene transfer, including pressurized vascular delivery, laser, magnetic fi elds and gene gun delivery. th ese systems enable plasmid-based gene delivery to reach effi ciencies close to that achieved with viral vectors. successful gene therapy relies upon being able to target the injury site, and to control the duration and levels of gene expression. modifying the transgene dna to exclude nonmethylated cpg motifs, typical of bacterial dna, decreases the immune response and may increase transgene expression [ , ] . high-effi ciency tissue-specifi c promoters may improve the effi ciency and specifi city of transgene expression. lung-specifi c promoters include surfactant promoters [ ] such as the surfactant protein c promoter [ ] , a ciliated cell-specifi c promoter foxj [ ] , the cytokeratin promoter [ ] , and the clara cell -kda protein [ ] . promoters can also be used to target a specifi c phase of illness, switching on when required to produce an eff ect at the optimal time point. a related approach is the development of promoters that allow for transfected genes to be turned on and off . currently, the tetracycline-dependent gene expression vector [ ] is the most widely used regulated system as it has a good safety profi le. tetracycline is rapidly metabolized and cleared from the body, making it an ideal drug to control gene expression. however, the potential for an activator such as tetracycline to modulate the lung injury should be borne in mind. new-generation transactivators, with no basal activity and increased sensitivity, have now been developed [ ] . in an ards context, conditional regulation of gene expression by the combined use of a lung-specifi c promoter and the tetracycline-dependent gene expression system may be a useful approach [ ] . capsid protein modifi cation to reduce immunogenicity [ ] capsid protein modifi cation to enhance tissue specifi city [ ] envelope protein pseudotyping manipulation of lipoplex lipid content to enhance cellular uptake [ , ] use of targeting peptides on lipoplexes and polyplexes [ ] strategies to enhance gene transfer; for example, electroporation, ultrasound, gene gun delivery modifying transgene dna to eliminate bacterial motifs [ , ] development of high-effi ciency tissue-specifi c promoters [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] development of promoters that regulate gene expression [ ] enhanced therapeutic targeting nebulization technologies [ ] strategies to target the pulmonary endothelium [ ] improved cellular uptake of vector surface active agents to enhance vector spread [ ] reduce ubiquitination of viral capsid proteins [ ] better therapeutic targets enhancement or restoration of lung epithelial and/or endothelial cell function [ ] strengthening lung defense mechanisms against injury [ ] speeding clearance of infl ammation and infection enhancement of the repair process following ali/ards [ ] . an advantage of gene-based strategies is the ability to target specifi c cells within an organ; for example, the epithelial cells of the lung. novel nebulization technologies, which facilitate the delivery of large quantities of undamaged vector to the distal lung, demonstrate considerable promise in this regard [ ] . alternative approaches to spatial targeting include targeting specifi c receptors that are plentiful on the target cell to increase transfection effi ciency. an interesting development in this regard is the targeting of systemically administered therapies to the pulmonary endothelium using antibodies to proteins expressed preferentially on these cells ( figure ) [ ] . in these studies, the antioxidant enzyme catalase was conjugated with antibodies to the adhesion molecule pecam, which is widely expressed on pulmonary endothelial cells, and to a nonspecifi c igg antibody. th e anti-pecam/catalase conjugate, but not the igg/catalase conjugate, bound specifi cally to the pulmonary endothelium and attenuated hydrogen peroxide injury. specifi c strategies have been developed to maximize uptake of vector into alveolar epithelial cells. it is possible to enhance lung transgene expression with the use of surface-active agents such as perfl urocarbon, which enhances the spread of vector and mixing within the epithelial lining fl uid [ ] . agents that reduce ubiquitination of aav capsid proteins following endocytosis, such as tripeptide proteasome inhibitors, dramatically augment (> , -fold) aav vector transduction in airway epithelia [ ] . ultimately, the success or failure of gene-based therapies for ali/ards is likely to rest on the identifi cation of better gene targets. ongoing advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of ali/ards continue to reveal novel therapeutic targets for gene-based approaches. promising potential approaches include strate gies to enhance or restore lung epithelial and/or endothelial cell function [ ] , to strengthen lung defense mechanisms against injury [ ] , to speed clear ance of infl ammation and infection, and to enhance the repair process following ali/ards [ ] . ali/ards may be a particularly suitable disease process for gene-based therapies (table ). th is is supported by increasing evidence from relevant preclinical ards models for the effi cacy of gene-based therapies that enhance or restore lung epithelial and/or endothelial cell function, strengthen lung defense mecha nisms against injury, speed resolution of infl ammation and infection, and enhance the repair process following ali/ards. despite this promising preclinical evidence, the potential for gene based approaches to ali/ards in the clinical setting remains to be realized. multiple barriers exist to the successful use of gene-based therapies in the lung, which limit the effi cacy of these approaches. future research approaches should focus on overcoming these barriers, by developing more eff ective and less immunogenic vector delivery systems, developing strategies to focus gene expression on specifi c injury zones of the lung for defi ned time periods, and identifying better molecular targets that can take advantage of these potentially very powerful therapeutic approaches. abbreviations aav, adeno-associated virus; ali, acute lung injury; ards, acute respiratory distress syndrome; il, interleukin; nf, nuclear factor; shrna, small hairpin rna; sirna, small interfering rna. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. epidemiology of acute lung injury incidence and outcomes of acute lung injury one-year outcomes in survivors of the acute respiratory distress syndrome ventilation with lower tidal volumes as compared with traditional tidal volumes for acute lung injury and the acute respiratory distress syndrome. the acute respiratory distress syndrome network pulmonary-artery versus central venous catheter to guide treatment of acute lung injury prone ventilation reduces mortality in patients with acute respiratory failure and severe hypoxemia: systematic review and meta-analysis elbourne d: effi cacy and economic assessment of conventional ventilatory support versus extracorporeal membrane oxygenation for severe adult respiratory failure (cesar): a multicentre randomised controlled trial the acute respiratory distress syndrome optimized aerosol delivery to a mechanically ventilated rodent pecamdirected delivery of catalase to endothelium protects against pulmonary vascular oxidative stress adenoviral augmentation of elafi n protects the lung against acute injury mediated by activated neutrophils and bacterial infection aerosol delivery of a β-galactosidase adenoviral vector to the lungs of rodents adenovirusmediated persistent cystic fi brosis transmembrane conductance regulator expression in mouse airway epithelium airway epithelial cftr mrna expression in cystic fi brosis patients after repetitive administration of a recombinant adenovirus analysis of risk factors for local delivery of low-and intermediate-dose adenovirus gene transfer vectors to individuals with a spectrum of comorbid conditions modifi cation of nasal epithelial potential diff erences of individuals with cystic fi brosis consequent to local administration of a normal cftr cdna adenovirus gene transfer vector a phase i study of adenovirus-mediated transfer of the human cystic fi brosis transmembrane conductance regulator gene to a lung segment of individuals with cystic fi brosis aerosol and lobar administration of a recombinant adenovirus to individuals with cystic fi brosis. i. methods, safety, and clinical implications recent developments in adeno-associated virus vector technology analysis of adeno-associated virus progenitor cell transduction in mouse lung adeno-associated virus type (aav ) but not aav binds to the apical surfaces of airway epithelia and facilitates gene transfer adeno-associated virus type (aav ) vectors mediate effi cient transduction of airway epithelial cells in mouse lungs compared to that of aav vectors repeated adeno-associated virus serotype aerosol-mediated cystic fi brosis transmembrane regulator gene transfer to the lungs of patients with cystic fi brosis: a multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial safety and biological effi cacy of an adeno-associated virus vector-cystic fi brosis transmembrane regulator (aav-cftr) in the cystic fi brosis maxillary sinus lentivirus vectors pseudotyped with fi loviral envelope glycoproteins transduce airway epithelia from the apical surface independently of folate receptor alpha gene therapy of human severe combined immunodefi ciency (scid)-x disease cavazzana-calvo m: insertional oncogenesis in patients after retrovirus-mediated gene therapy of scid-x rna interference for α-enac inhibits rat lung fl uid absorption in vivo eff ect of antisense oligonucleotides to nuclear factor-κb on the survival of lps-induced ards in mouse electroporation-mediated transfer of plasmids to the lung results in reduced tlr signaling and infl ammation a receptor-targeted nanocomplex vector system optimized for respiratory gene transfer cationic lipid-mediated cftr gene transfer to the lungs and nose of patients with cystic fi brosis: a double-blind placebo-controlled trial rna interference therapy in lung transplant patients infected with respiratory syncytial virus in vivo gene silencing (with sirna) of pulmonary expression of mip- versus kc results in divergent eff ects on hemorrhage-induced, neutrophil-mediated septic acute lung injury silencing cd gene expression results in the inhibition of latent-tgf-β activation and suppression of silica-induced lung fi brosis in the rat prevention of lung ischemia-reperfusion injury by short hairpin rna-mediated caspase- gene silencing nuclear factor-κb decoy oligodeoxynucleotides prevent acute lung injury in mice with cecal ligation and puncture-induced sepsis eff ects of intratracheal administration of nuclear factor-κb decoy oligodeoxynucleotides on long-term cigarette smokeinduced lung infl ammation and pathology in mice prevention of lpsinduced acute lung injury in mice by mesenchymal stem cells overexpressing angiopoietin cell-based angiopoietin- gene therapy for acute lung injury stem cells and cell therapies in lung biology and lung diseases calculating expected lung deposition of aerosolized administration of aav vector in human clinical studies repeated aerosolized aav-cftr for treatment of cystic fi brosis: a randomized placebo-controlled phase b trial aerosol and lobar administration of a recombinant adenovirus to individuals with cystic fi brosis. ii. transfection effi ciency in airway epithelium inhibition of lung tumor growth by complex pulmonary delivery of drugs with oligonucleotides as suppressors of cellular resistance gene transfer to the lung: lessons learned from more than decades of cf gene therapy acute lung injury does not impair adenoviral-mediated gene transfer to the alveolar epithelium fatal systemic infl ammatory response syndrome in a ornithine transcarbamylase defi cient patient following adenoviral gene transfer adenoviral gene transfer of a mutant surfactant enzyme ameliorates pseudomonas-induced lung injury gene therapy for oxidant injury-related diseases: adenovirus-mediated transfer of superoxide dismutase and catalase cdnas protects against hyperoxia but not against ischemiareperfusion lung injury angiopoietin- increases survival and reduces the development of lung edema induced by endotoxin administration in a murine model of acute lung injury enhanced expression of -kilodalton heat shock protein limits cell division in a sepsis-induced model of acute respiratory distress syndrome human apoa-i overexpression diminishes lps-induced systemic infl ammation and multiple organ damage in mice protection against pseudomonas aeruginosa pneumonia and sepsisinduced lung injury by overexpression of β-defensin- in rats overexpression of the na-k-atpase α -subunit improves lung liquid clearance during ventilation-induced lung injury interleukin- β causes acute lung injury via αvβ and αvβ integrin-dependent mechanisms adenoviral-mediated overexpression of socs enhances igg immune complex-induced acute lung injury dose-dependent improvements in outcome with adenoviral expression of interleukin- in a murine model of multisystem organ failure pretreatment with cationic lipid-mediated transfer of the na + k + -atpase pump in a mouse model in vivo augments resolution of high permeability pulmonary oedema electroporation-mediated gene transfer of the na + ,k + -atpase rescues endotoxin-induced lung injury interleukin- gene transfer: prevention of multiple organ injury in a murine cecal ligation and puncture model of sepsis nonviral gene delivery with indoleamine , -dioxygenase targeting pulmonary endothelium protects against ischemia-reperfusion injury silencing of fas, but not caspase- , in lung epithelial cells ameliorates pulmonary apoptosis, infl ammation, and neutrophil infl ux after hemorrhagic shock and sepsis caveolin- sirna increases the pulmonary microvascular and alveolar epithelial permeability in rats interleukin- delivery via mesenchymal stem cells: a novel gene therapy approach to prevent lung ischemia-reperfusion injury bone marrow stem cells expressing keratinocyte growth factor via an inducible lentivirus protects against bleomycin-induced pulmonary fi brosis cell-based gene transfer of vascular endothelial growth factor attenuates monocrotaline-induced pulmonary hypertension microvascular regeneration in established pulmonary hypertension by angiogenic gene transfer tetracycline-inducible transgene expression mediated by a single aav vector effi cient transfection of non-proliferating human airway epithelial cells with a synthetic vector system tailoring the aav vector capsid for gene therapy artifi cial evolution with adeno-associated viral libraries analysis and optimization of the cationic lipid component of a lipid/ peptide vector formulation for enhanced transfection in vitro and in vivo stabilized integrin-targeting ternary lpd (lipopolyplex) vectors for gene delivery designed to disassemble within the target cell cpg-free plasmids confer reduced infl ammation and sustained pulmonary gene expression toll-like receptor expression reveals cpg dna as a unique microbial stimulus for plasmacytoid dendritic cells which synergizes with cd ligand to induce high amounts of il- targeting type ii and clara cells for adenovirus-mediated gene transfer using the surfactant protein b promoter development of lentiviral vectors with regulated respiratory epithelial expression in vivo expression of cftr from a ciliated cell-specifi c promoter is ineff ective at correcting nasal potential diff erence in cf mice a human epithelium-specifi c vector optimized in rat pneumocytes for lung gene therapy tight control of gene expression in mammalian cells by tetracycline-responsive promoters use of a new generation reverse tetracycline transactivator system for quantitative control of conditional gene expression in the murine lung construction of an rtta (s)-m / tts(kid)-based transcription regulatory switch that displays no basal activity, good inducibility, and high responsiveness to doxycycline in mice and non-human primates adenoviral vector transfection into the pulmonary epithelium after cecal ligation and puncture in rats ubiquitination of both adeno-associated virus type and capsid proteins aff ects the transduction effi ciency of recombinant vectors gp -stat regulates epithelial cell migration and is required for repair of the bronchiolar epithelium spatial and temporal expression of surfactant proteins in hyperoxia-induced neonatal rat lung injury intrapulmonary tnf gene therapy reverses sepsis-induced suppression of lung antibacterial host defense clinical review: gene-based therapies for ali/ards: where are we now? the present work was supported by funding from the health research board key: cord- -potmzdfs authors: sun, dong; wan, xin; pan, bin-bin; sun, qing; ji, xiao-bing; zhang, feng; zhang, hao; cao, chang-chun title: bioinformatics analysis of genes and pathways of cd b(+)/ly c(intermediate) macrophages after renal ischemia-reperfusion injury date: - - journal: curr med sci doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: potmzdfs renal ischemia-reperfusion injury (iri) is a major cause of acute kidney injury (aki), which could induce the poor prognosis. the purpose of this study was to characterize the molecular mechanism of the functional changes of cdllb+/ly c(intermediate) macrophages after renal iri. the gene expression profiles of cdllb+/ly cintermcdiate macrophages of the sham surgery mice, and the mice h, h and days after renal iri were downloaded from the gene expression omnibus database. analysis of mrna expression profiles was conducted to identify differentially expressed genes (degs), biological processes and pathways by the series test of cluster. protein-protein interaction network was constructed and analysed to discover the key genes. a total of degs were identified and assigned to model profiles. degs in profile were one of the predominant expression profiles, which are involved in immune cell chemotaxis and proliferation. signet analysis showed that atp al, atp o, cox i, cdc , rac and nhp were the key genes involved in oxidation-reduction, apoptosis, migration, m -m differentiation, and proliferation of macrophages. rps may be an appreciate reference gene as it was stable in macrophages. the identified degs and their enriched pathways investigate factors that may participate in the functional changes of cd lb(+)ly c(intermediate) macrophages after renal iri. moreover, the vital gene nhp may involve the polarization of macrophages, which may be a new target to affect the process of aki bule injury. a subsequent switch to m macrophages can suppress the inflammatory response and induce a proliferative repair phase [ ] . m macrophages are involved in producing extracellular matrix components, but may also contribute to the tissue fibrosis, should this process become dysregulated [ ] . the marker of macrophages may be diverse in different organs, therefore defining macrophages according to their function has become challenging [ ] . according to the whole genome microarray analysis data, the cd b + /ly c high population was associated with the onset of renal injury and produced proinflammatory cytokines. in addition, the cd b + / ly c int population demonstrated a wound healing phenotype [ ] . dragomir et al reported that cd b + / ly c lo cells were larger than cd b + /ly c hi cells, and more irregularly shaped. moreover, cd b + /ly c lo cells contained a highly vacuolated cytoplasm and an increased cytoplasm:nuclear ratio. rt-pcr analysis revealed that mrna expression levels related to proinflammatory proteins (for example, tnf-α, inos, and the chemokine receptor ccr ) were significantly higher in cd b + /ly c hi cells than in cd b + / ly c lo cells. in contrast, the mrna expression level of anti-inflammatory cytokine il- was reduced in cd b + /ly c hi cells when compared to cd b + / ly c lo cells [ ] . clements et al investigated the genes that were uniquely expressed in each population. it is necessary to consider of genes that were regulated in each phenotype over time [ ] . the purpose of our study was to evaluate the proportion of macrophages that changed at different time points after iri. we used microarray analysis to identify the differentially expressed genes (degs) in cd b + /ly c int macrophages of c bl/ mice and mice undergoing sham surgery or iri for h, h or days. we used the series test of cluster (stc) analysis, stc-gene ontology analysis and pathway analysis to identify changes in function and pathways in macrophages in the different groups. the protein-to-protein interaction (ppi) network was applied to select key genes by degree, which may help explain how macrophages were influenced at different time points. our study may provide further insight into a new target that affects the process of aki by changing the macrophage function. gene expression analysis was performed on an affymetrix mouse genome . array platform (affymetrix, usa) for which the transcription profile gse from the gene expression omnibus (geo) database, an open-access functional genomics data repository was downloaded. twenty-five male c bl/ mice ( to week-old) were divided into several groups and underwent either bilateral renal iri for min or sham surgery followed by reperfusion. for rna isolation and amplification for cdna production, macrophage populations were sorted on a bd facsaria ii cell sorter (bd bioscience,usa) based on cd b + /ly c high , cd b + /ly c int or cd b + / ly c low as previously described [ ] . we analysed the expression of cd b + /ly c int macrophages of the sham (gsm and gsm ), -h iri (gsm , gsm and gsm ), h iri (gsm , gsm and gsm ) and day iri (gsm , gsm and gsm ) groups to identify genes that are associated with this subset of macrophages. the probe-level data were converted into expression measures so that by taking the average expression value, the expression values of all probes for a given gene in each sample were reduced to a single value [ ] . next, the principal component analysis (pca) was performed and degs were identified as previously described [ ] . in our study, we used the effective statistical method for small samples to identify differentially expressed mrnas among the four groups of macrophages by gcbi (https://www.gcbi.com.cn/gclib/html/ index). these values include false discovery rate-adjusted p values and were considered significant when p< . . to validate the most probable set of clusters of four-time series, we used the stc algorithm of gene expression dynamics to profile the gene expression time series as previously described [ ] . the stc algorithm identified which profiles have a significant number of genes assigned and the result may indicate the change rule of samples at different time points. to identify functional changes in macrophages, we analysed the role of degs in each significant expression profile. analyses were based on the gene ontology (go) database in funrich . software as previously described [ ] . the degs of each significant expression profile was classified into a group of biological process categories from go annotation. go terms were considered significant at p< . . we identified the significant pathways that were changed in cd b + /ly c int macrophages. to identify the main biological function of cd b + /ly c int macrophages, pathways of genes with similar expression trend were analysed. analyses were based on the reactome database in funrich. the threshold of significance was considered as p< . . we created a ppi network to analyse the key genes which regulate other genes. based on the degs in profile , ppi was analysed by string . and the cytohubba app of cytoscape software (version . . ) as previously described [ ] . the combined score of the ppi value was> . . genes that showed a high degree were identified as key genes as previously described [ ] . cytohubba is an approach that has frequently been used to select hub genes, and provides topological analysis methods, including degree, maximum neighborhood component, edge percolated component, maximal clique centrality, density of maximum neighborhood component, and six centralities (bottleneck, eccentricity, closeness, betweenness, radiality, and stress) based on the shortest paths [ ] . genes that appeared in the top genes by more than ways in cytohubba were identified. the top hub forming genes were output by each of the ranking methods as a measure of significance. genes were considered significant when they were identified by both methods. we especially focused on the genes of the top degrees in the ppi network as previously described [ ] . in this study, we analysed degs from cd b + / ly c int macrophages, which were isolated from kidneys of mice undergoing sham surgery (n= ), and iri at h, h, and days (n= per group). figure a and b present the data before and after normalization. in fig. c , the pca score plots of the four groups are shown. a total of normalized degs were identified (p< . and q< . ) at different time points. to identify target genes among the genes, twenty expression profiles were evaluated by cluster analysis. each profile contained genes with a similar expression pattern after iri. among the profiles of genes, nine profiles (profile , , , , , , , and ) were significantly different (p< . ) ( fig. and table ). as shown in table , go terms that were downregulated after renal iri included cell cycle, inflammatory response, apoptosis, oxidation-reduction process, autophagy, and cell proliferation. profile consisted of genes that were stable at early time points and then rapidly decreased at later time points. to get insights into the biological effects of the genes in profile , we analysed the involved go terms using the go annotation in funrich . (the threshold of go terms was p< . ). biological processes such as transport and apoptosis showed the most notable enrichment of the target genes. moreover, chemotaxis of several immune cells was also decreased at day after iri. among the cellular component, extracellular vesicular exosome and mitochondrion showed a maximum enrichment, whereas protein binding and rna binding showed the highest enrichment of molecular function ( fig. ). we analysed the pathway enrichment using reactome database for degs of profile . p< . was considered for pathway analysis. the highest enrichment of pathway was demonstrated for neutrophil degranulation (p= . e- ) and respiratory electron transport (p= . e- ) ( fig. ). string analysis was used to obtain the ppi of the degs in profile . the minimum required interaction score was . . we gained a total of edges and nodes, accounting for . % of all degs. results demonstrated that gapdh (degree: ), hsp aa (degree: ), actb (degree: ), actg (degree: ), atp a (degree: ), atp o (degree: ), cdc (degree: ), pcna (degree: ), uqcr (degree: ) and cox i (degree: ), which all have a high degree, were identified as hub genes in the ppi network ( fig. ) . moreover, rhoa, rac , nhp , rplp , rpl , rpl , ppp ca, mrpl , and rps were among the top twenty degrees in the ppi network. in addition to string analysis, key genes were also identified by cytohubba. table presents genes that were considered to be the top key genes in more than ways of the topological analysis methods described above. because the changes of the genes with either a high degree or selected by cytohubba could regulate the expression of multiple genes, they were identified as key genes for further study. as aki could result in high mortality, it is important to take back to homeostasis by a suitable way [ ] . the cd b + /ly c int population is identified as wound healing population, which carries membrane receptors and chemokines associated with inflammation at the same time [ ] . understanding how the population changes may provide a new way to treat aki by modulating the immune system. in our study, we identified nine gene profiles, most of which were downregulated after iri. the proportion of cd b + /ly c int macrophages was at a maximum one day after iri and was markedly reduced at day after iri. taking this into consideration, the genes in the profile were involved in infiltration and proliferation. go analysis of profile showed that the genes related to the extracellular vesicular exosome were significantly changed, which was consistent with the finding that cd b + /ly c int macrophage could secrete anti-inflammation cytokines [ ] . go and pathway analysis indicated that immune cell chemotaxis (for example, neutrophil, leukocyte, lymphocyte, monocyte, and macrophage) and g /s progression were downregulated at later time points. in mitochondria, the oxidation-reduction process and respiratory electron transport were significantly involved after iri as at-p a , atp o, and cox i are also key genes in the ppi network. it would be required to further assess the vitality, switch and infiltration ability of cd b + /ly c int macrophages, given that cdc and rac were found to have an effect on apoptosis, migration, and m -m differentiation [ , ] . protein phosphatase a (pp a) is a bona fide tumor suppressor gene that is involved in mitosis and apoptosis [ ] . homologues ppp ca (pp ac) and ppp cb are the catalytic subunits of pp a [ ] . previous studies have shown that upregulation of ppp ca in systemic lupus erythematosus decreased il- [ ] , resulting in the generation of effector and memory t cells and the maintenance of regulatory t cells [ ] . moreover, it was suggested that reduction of ppp ca may play a role in anti-inflammatory progression by increasing osteoprotegerin (opg) expression and decreasing receptor activator of nuclear factor κb ligand (rankl) expression [ ] . in prostate cancer cells, loss of ppp ca facilitated epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition [ ] . taken together, the reduction of ppp ca in profile may be a reason why cd b + /ly c int macrophages decreased inflammation. rpl can induce the cell cycle, and the downregulation of rpl at day after iri may provide an explanation of the reduction of cd b + /ly c int macrophages. moreover, the depletion of rpl strongly suppresses cell cycle progression in primary human lung fibroblasts [ ] . rpl and rpl promote apoptosis and reduce cellular proliferation in tumor in vitro [ ] . however, it has also been reported that a heterozygous deletion or mutated rpl occurred in % of glioblastoma, % of melanoma and % of breast cancer cases [ ] . nhp , one of the key nodes in ppi, was significantly decreased when -day and -day cd b + /ly- c int macrophages were compared. nhp is a part of h/aca ribonucleoprotein particles (rnps), containing four common proteins, including the pseudouridine synthase cbf , nhp , nop , gar a and a substrate-specific h/aca rna. h/aca is considered to play a role in the biogenesis of spliceosomal small nuclear rna (snrna) and ribosomal rna (rrna) [ ] . depletion of nhp reduced all h/aca snornas and impaired global rrna pseudouridylation, which play a role in the uridine selection or isomerization processes as they are required for the synthesis and stability of particles [ , ] . nhp is highly expressed in spleen, thymus, small intestine, testis, ovary, prostate, colon (mucosal lining), skeletal muscle, kidney, heart, pancreas, placenta, and brain, whereas the expression levels in the liver are low [ ] . nhp mrna was barely detectable in peripheral blood leukocytes and lung. during the differentiation of u cells into monocytes and macrophages induced by -o-tetradecanoylphorbol- -acetate (tpa), the expression of nhp mrna was markedly decreased, but was upregulated during the retro-differentiation [ ] . nhp , htr, htert and nop could control telomere homeostasis, which is important for apoptosis and cell-cycle arrest [ , ] . thus, nhp may affect the polarization of macrophage. finally, it is important to identify which genes could serve as reference genes. we analysed the expression levels of gapdh, actb, Β m, hmbs, hprt, rplp , tbp, gusb, ppia, oaz , nono, tfrc, eef , hs-b ab , rps , sdha, ywhaz, ubc, rps , rplp , rp-l a, pum , psmc , pop , pgk , pes , mrpl , ipo , gadd a, elf , eif b , cdkn b, cdkn a, casc , abl , and pol a which are widely used [ ] [ ] [ ] . the data showed that rps may be an appropriate reference gene as its expression was stable in macrophages after renal iri. in our study, a total of degs were found. we analysed the genes that were stable at early time, but were abruptly downregulated at late time, investigated the function and molecular pathways that they were involved, and studied the critical genes involved. a possible explanation why cd b + /ly c int macrophages were reduced on day may be due to the fact that genes involved in the chemotaxis and proliferation were decreased. on the other hand, one of the key genes, nhp , may be involved in the polarization of macrophages. taken together, our study will increase insight into the functional changes of macrophages; therefore, identifying the critical genes involved may provide novel targets for regulating the quantity and phenotype of macrophages. incidence, outcomes, and risk factors of community-acquired and hospital-acquired acute kidney injury: a retrospective cohort study identifying acute kidney injury in the community--a novel informatics approach netrin- regulates the inflammatory response of neutrophils and macrophages, and suppresses ischemic acute kidney injury by inhibiting cox- -mediated pge production long-term outcome of severe acute kidney injury survivors followed by nephrologists in a developing country recognition and management of acute kidney injury in the international society of nephrology by global snapshot: a multinational cross-sectional study small interfering rna targeting tnf-alpha gene significantly attenuates renal ischemia-reperfusion injury in mice double-negative alphabeta t cells are early responders to aki and are found in human kidney vascular-resident cd -positive monocytes and macrophages control neutrophil accumulation in the kidney with ischemia-reperfusion injury microrna a modulates regulatory t cells expansion and attenuates renal ischemia-reperfusion injury gm-csf promotes macrophage alternative activation after renal ischemia/reperfusion injury distinct macrophage phenotypes contribute to kidney injury and repair macrophage-mediated injury and repair after ischemic kidney injury renal f / + cd c+ mononuclear phagocytes display phenotypic and functional characteristics of macrophages in health and in adriamycin nephropathy differential ly c expression after renal ischemia-reperfusion identifies unique macrophage populations role of galectin- in classical and alternative macrophage activation in the liver following acetaminophen intoxication improved normalization of systematic biases affecting ion current measurements in label-free proteomics data time-series analysis in imatinib-resistant chronic myeloid leukemia k -cells under different drug treatments differential gene expression profiling analysis in workers occupationally exposed to benzene funrich: an open access standalone functional enrichment and interaction network analysis tool proteomic differences between developmental stages of toxoplasma gondii revealed by itraq-based quantitative transcriptome analysis of chicken kidney tissues following coronavirus avian infectious bronchitis virus infection cytohubba: identifying hub objects and sub-networks from complex interactome effects of beta-catenin on differentially expressed genes in multiple myeloma mif inhibits monocytic movement through a non-canonical receptor and disruption of temporal rho gtpase activities in u- cells rac controls tumor growth, metastasis and m -m macrophage differentiation in vivo sv small t antigen and pp a phosphatase in cell transformation ppp ca knockout in mice spermatogenesis protein phosphatase a is a negative regulator of il- production in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus cutting edge: mechanisms of il- -dependent maintenance of functional regulatory t cells protein phosphatase a calpha is involved in osteoclastogenesis by regulating rankl and opg expression in osteoblasts restoration of ppp ca expression reverses epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition and suppresses prostate tumour growth and metastasis in an orthotopic mouse model loss of tumor suppressor rpl /rpl does not induce cell cycle arrest but impedes proliferation due to reduced ribosome content and translation capacity ribosomal proteins l and l activate tap by overcoming mdm inhibition the ribosomal protein gene rpl is a haploinsufficient tumor suppressor in multiple cancer types aca small nucleolar rna pseudouridylation pockets bind substrate rna to form three-way junctions that position the target u for modification cb-f p, a potential pseudouridine synthase, and nhp p, a putative rna-binding protein, are present together with gar p in all h box/aca-motif snornps and constitute a common bipartite structure nhp p and nop p are essential for the function of h/aca snornps expression of the human homologue of the small nucleolar rna-binding protein nhp gene during monocytic differentiation of u cells structure of the shq -cbf -nop -gar complex and implications for h/aca rnp biogenesis and dyskeratosis congenita telomere maintenance mechanisms and cellular immortalization identification of optimal reference genes for rt-qpcr in the rat hypothalamus and intestine for the study of obesity appropriateness of reference genes for normalizing messenger rna in mouse , -dinitrobenzene sulfonic acid (dnbs)-induced colitis using quantitative real time pcr identification of optimal reference genes for normalization of rt-qpcr data in cancerous and non-cancerous tissues of human uterine cervix the authors report no conflicts of interest. the authors alone are responsible for the content and writing of the paper. key: cord- -yyzbv ys authors: arslan, mehboob; yang, xin; santhakumar, diwakar; liu, xingjian; hu, xiaoyuan; munir, muhammad; li, yinü; zhang, zhifang title: dynamic expression of interferon lambda regulated genes in primary fibroblasts and immune organs of the chicken date: - - journal: genes (basel) doi: . /genes sha: doc_id: cord_uid: yyzbv ys interferons (ifns) are pleiotropic cytokines that establish a first line of defense against viral infections in vertebrates. several types of ifn have been identified; however, limited information is available in poultry, especially using live animal experimental models. ifn-lambda (ifn-λ) has recently been shown to exert a significant antiviral impact against viral pathogens in mammals. in order to investigate the in vivo potential of chicken ifn-λ (chifn-λ) as a regulator of innate immunity, and potential antiviral therapeutics, we profiled the transcriptome of chifn-λ-stimulated chicken immune organs (in vivo) and compared it with primary chicken embryo fibroblasts (in vitro). employing the baculovirus expression vector system (bevs), recombinant chifn-λ (rchifn-λ ) was produced and its biological activities were demonstrated. the rchifnλ induced a great array of ifn-regulated genes in primary chicken fibroblast cells. the transcriptional profiling using rna-seq and subsequent bioinformatics analysis (gene ontology, differential expressed genes, and keggs analysis) of the bursa of fabricious and the thymus demonstrated an upregulation of crucial immune genes (viperin, ikkb, ccl , il β, and ap ) as well as the antiviral signaling pathways. interestingly, this experimental approach revealed contrasting evidence of the antiviral potential of chifn-λ in both in vivo and in vitro models. taken together, our data signifies the potential of chifn-λ as a potent antiviral cytokine and highlights its future possible use as an antiviral therapeutic in poultry. viral pathogens pose significant threats to the poultry industry around the globe. this necessitates the development of novel and alternative antiviral therapies to contain the impacts of pathogens. avian influenza viruses (aivs) are a particular threat, which cause severe damage to the poultry industry, especially in developing countries where huge monetary losses are incurred [ , ] . public health is also threatened by aivs, owing to their zoonotic importance. active preventive strategies would minimize the risk of viral transmission to humans and also benefit the poultry industry. interferons (ifns) are pleiotropic functional cytokines with antiviral, antitumor, and natural immune-boosting effects. ifns play a significant role in eliciting an antiviral state in vertebrates [ ] . ifns are broadly categorized into three distinct types based on their molecular structure, receptor specificity, and induction pathway [ ] . type i ifns include ifn-α, ifn-β, ifn-ε, ifn-κ, and ifnω, and all signal via common cell surface receptors (ifnαr- ) and (ifnαr- ), which are situated on a broad range of cells [ ] . type ii ifns consist of ifn-γ, which is activated through highly specific ligand interactions with distinct ifn-γ receptors (ifn-γr ) and (ifn-γr ). the third family of ifns consists of ifn lambda, which interacts with a heterodimeric receptor complex (il- rα and il- β). ifn-λ was first discovered in mammals and subdivided into ifn-λ (also known as il- ), ifn-λ (il- a), ifn-λ (il- b), and ifn-λ [ ] . ifns are crucial in an innate immune response, as their expression and antiviral potential is dependent on their cognate receptor interaction in a particular system [ ] . in chickens, type i ifns primarily interact in fibroblasts, whereas epithelial cells (gastrointestinal and respiratory tract) are the primary site for the actions of type iii ifns [ ] . despite morphological diversity, ifns share integrated, interconnected, and a precisely coordinated cascade in immunity pathways [ ] . ligand recognition and interaction by ifn receptors results in rapid activation of janus kinase/signal transducers and activators of transcription (jak-stat pathway). this leads to phosphorylation of stat and stat , activation of interferon stimulated gene factor (isgf ), binding of ifn-stimulated response elements (isres), and expression of ifn stimulated genes (isgs) [ ] . once expressed, these isgs demonstrate an essential role in the antiviral response. it is evident from published data that ifns upregulate identical sets of isgs, which in turn express antiviral proteins. ifn-induced transmembrane protein (ifitms), viperin and myxovirus resistance protein (mx) are some of the potent antiviral proteins expressed in response to viral infections [ ] . once expressed, these isgs control viral replication, which provides an antiviral atmosphere to limit viral propagation in infected cells. compared to the mammalian ifn-λ repertoire (ifn-λ , ifn-λ , ifn-λ , and ifn-λ ), chicken ifn-λ is the sole member in birds and demonstrates structural identity with human ifn-λ . ifn-λ is chiefly involved in protection against viral infection of the respiratory and gastrointestinal tract epithelia (aiv, ndv, ibv), and due to the distribution of il- rα in epithelium-rich organs, ifn-λ demonstrates significant potential to limit viral propagation [ ] . while most of the current studies in chickens are mainly focused on type i and type ii ifns, we investigated the potential of type iii ifns in innate and adaptive immunity. previously, it was established that chifn-α presented a significant delay in the propagation of rous sarcoma virus and confirmed in vivo [ ] . it was also revealed that chifn-α treatment ameliorates infection progression in experimental chickens with highly pathogenic influenza a virus (hpaiv) subtype h n [ ] . compared to type i ifns, chifn-λ has also been shown to elicit moderate antiviral response in both the chicken macrophage cell line hd and primary chicken embryo fibroblasts (cef) [ ] . another published study demonstrated that cefs treated with recombinant chifn-λ induced isgs in a temporal fashion [ ] . however, the antiviral potential of chifn-λ in live animals (e.g., chickens) has not yet been investigated, which could provide evidence for the potential of chifn-λ in animals per se. to investigate the impact of exogenous chifn-λ on the innate immune system in chickens, we first expressed chifn-λ in a silkworm bioreactor platform utilizing a baculovirus expression vector system (bevs) [ ] . compared to the autographa californica nucleopolyhedrovirus (acmnpv)-sf cell expression system, the bombyx mori nucleopolyhedrovirus (bmnpv)-silkworm system possesses greater post-translational modifications and enhanced expression efficiency [ , ] . comparative transcriptomic profiling revealed the key mechanisms, signaling pathways, and expression patterns of genes involved in interferon-induced immunity. our results highlight the dynamics of chifn-λ roles in chicken innate immunity. bm cells (bombyx mori-derived cell line) were cultured and maintained at • c with % fetal bovine serum (fbs, gibco, usa) in tc (insect cell culture medium) (applichem, darmstadt, germany) as per the published literature [ ] . for co-transfection, bm cells were cultured at a constant density of × cells per well in six well plates for hours with tc media containing fbs. tc media without fbs was used to wash the cells twice and a mixture of transfection and co-transfection was introduced to cells. between - h post-transfection, fbs was introduced to the cell culture media. for viral amplification and expression, cells were infected with a multiplicity of infection (moi) of . for - h. the ensembl chicken genome database (ftp://ftp.ensembl.org/pub/release- /fasta/gallus_ gallus/dna/) was extensively screened for homologues of chifn-λ by employing the blast algorithm (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast/). a stretch of sequences demonstrating high sequence identity was identified and characterized. ] were acquired from the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) and aligned using the clustalw program, and phylogenetic analysis was performed using the neighbor-joining method with bootstrap n = in mega software (version ). amino acid sequences of ifn-λ from multiple species were aligned using the clustalw algorithm. the espript . (http://espript.ibcp.fr/espript/cgi-bin/espript.cgi) was utilized to analyze the sequences. in our previous study, we developed a novel defective-rescue recombinant bombyx mori bacmid (rebmbac) expression system [ ] . we used this in-house built and developed system to express chifn-λ. the rebmbac-silkworm expression system was employed to construct chifn-λ (interferon lambda- [gallus gallus]; sequence id: xp_ . ; length: ). briefly, in order to enhance expression efficiency by codon optimization, chifn-λ genes were optimized for expression in the silkworm (bombyx mori) and synthesized by genscript company (china). plasmid-containing orf + with gene of interest (chifn-λ) and pph as a promoter was co-transfected with rebmbac in the bm cell line. recombinant virus containing the chifn-λ gene was harvested - days post co-transfection. expression product was acquired after - days of silkworm/pupae infection. the plaque assay was performed to evaluate the recombination efficiency [ ] . luciferase assay kit (promega, usa) was employed to analyze expression quantity of luciferase in µg of protein lysate. the bradford method was used to measure the amount of protein [ ] . antiviral activity of chifn-λ was assayed in the gfp-reduction assay using recombinant vesicular stomatitis virus (vsv-gfp) [ ] . cefs were prepared from - days old specific pathogen free (spf) chicken eggs and maintained in cell culture flasks [ ] . after hours, cefs were stimulated with chifn-λ and cells were harvested after hours post treatment, snap frozen, and stored at − • c for further processing. all experiments were performed in triplicate. the present study was conducted in accordance with animal ethics guidelines and approval was given by the beijing administration office of laboratory animals, china. a total of newly hatched spf chicks were obtained from beijing arbor acre company ltd., p.r. china. chicks were reared in cages (n = birds/cage) and placed in six cages in a temperature-controlled environment at the biotechnology research institute, chinese academy of agricultural sciences (caas), p.r. china. birds were offered standard commercial feed obtained from cp group ltd., p.r. china. unrestricted access to water was provided via nipple drinker lines and ad libitum feed was offered. a treatment group of -day old chicks were injected daily with chifn-λ ( , iu/kg body weight) ( iu/ml). phosphate buffer saline (pbs) was injected intramuscularly to the control group. the bursa of fabricious and thymus were obtained by euthanizing the chickens at five days post-treatment. tissue samples were rapidly collected, snap-frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at − • c for further processing. total rna was extracted from virus-infected or mock-treated cefs (in triplicates), as per manufacturer's guidelines [ ] . similarly, a total of five immune organs (bursa of fabricious and thymus) were pooled (in duplicates) from randomly selected chicken from each virus-or mock-infected group. total rna extraction was performed as per manufacturer's instructions [ ] . extracted rna quality was analyzed by employing % agarose gel and rna integrity was assured using rna nano assay kit from bioanalyzer system (agilent technologies, ca, usa). extracted samples were sent to novogene beijing for sequencing. samples were sequenced using hiseq x ten (ilumina) and pe platforms. rna-seq generated from cef, bursa of fabricious and thymus samples of chicken (both chifnλ-treated and control groups) are presented in supplementary table s . reads were mapped to the reference genome database (ftp://ftp.ensembl.org/pub/release- /fasta/gallus_gallus/dna/). individually mapped reads for each sample were assembled by stringtie (v . . b) using a reference-based approach. featurecountsv . . -p was utilized to estimate read numbers mapped to each gene. fragments per kilo base of transcript sequence per million base pairs sequenced (fpkm) of each gene was analyzed on the basis of length of gene and read count mapped to this gene. differential expression analysis was accomplished by employing deseq r package ( . . ). using benjamini and hochberg's approach, p-values were adjusted for controlling false discovery rate (fdr). genes with (p < . , |log fold change|> ) observed by deseq were designated as differentially expressed. for differentially expressed genes, both gene ontology (go) enrichment analysis and kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) pathway enrichment was conducted using the clusterprofiler r package. go terms with adjusted p-values < . were considered as significantly enriched (http://www.genome.jp/kegg/). using the chicken ifn gene as a query, we constructed the phylogenetic tree by employing the neighbor joining method (bootstrap n = ). this demonstrates the relationship of chifnλ with its mammalian orthologues by illustrating that chifn-λ is distinct in its evolution. furthermore, this revealed the contrasting consensus sequence from databases including ensembl and genbank. chifn-λ encodes a putative protein of amino acids and further demonstrates typical characteristics of type iii ifns. a pairwise blast analysis demonstrated that chifn-λ shares %, %, %, % and % sequence similarity with recently characterized pig, mouse, human, cattle, and frog ifn-λ, respectively. based on amino acid homology, conserved amino acids among distinct avian and mammalian ifn-λ are identified. taken together, this comparative characterization further shows that chifn-λ shares characteristic features of type iii ifns (supplementary figure s a ,b). in order to construct chifn-λ, we employed a bevs study. in order to determine the expression efficiency, we used a luciferase reporter gene for quality control as we described previously [ ] . the luciferase gene was acquired from pgl -basic vector by employing bglii/xbai digestion and insertion into the bamhi/xbai-digested pvl vector to construct pvl -luc vector. a combination of pvl -luc and rebmbac dna was co-transfected in bm cells (figure ) . a viral plaque assay was used to determine a suitable virus strain with which to express luciferase. supernatant from bm cells containing recombinant bmnpv (rebm-luc) was harvested five days post-transfection before inoculation into silkworms. after four to five days, protein was harvested from silkworms and µg protein from lysed larval haemolymph was subjected to luciferase assays. luminescence detected from silkworm larval haemolymph was approximately . ± . × relative light units (rlu), compared to - rlu from luc-negative virus-infected samples. pcr amplification (qpcr) further verified and validated the chifn-λ gene expression in bevs (supplementary figure s c ). in order to construct chifn-λ, we employed a bevs study. in order to determine the expression efficiency, we used a luciferase reporter gene for quality control as we described previously [ ] . the luciferase gene was acquired from pgl -basic vector by employing bglii/xbai digestion and insertion into the bamhi/xbai-digested pvl vector to construct pvl -luc vector. a combination of pvl -luc and rebmbac dna was co-transfected in bm cells (figure ) . a viral plaque assay was used to determine a suitable virus strain with which to express luciferase. supernatant from bm cells containing recombinant bmnpv (rebm-luc) was harvested five days post-transfection before inoculation into silkworms. after four to five days, protein was harvested from silkworms and μg protein from lysed larval haemolymph was subjected to luciferase assays. luminescence detected from silkworm larval haemolymph was approximately . ± . × relative light units (rlu), compared to - rlu from luc-negative virus-infected samples. pcr amplification (qpcr) further verified and validated the chifn-λ gene expression in bevs (supplementary figure s c) . in order to investigate the possible biological, cellular, and molecular mechanisms involved in the cascade of interferon-induced immunity, we performed transcriptomic analysis on chicken embryo fibroblasts and organs of live chickens. transcriptomes from the bursa of fabricious and thymus (most important immune organs in chicken) were compared with the control group to identify differentially expressed genes (degs) among all groups. experimentation started at day post-hatch as this is a phase of rapid growth and development, and we hoped to achieve biologically active transcriptional changes. the differences in degs observed in the present study control cellular architecture, immune function, metabolic pathway, and muscular function. it has previously been established that huifn-λ signals via il- and il- r exhibit typei-like antiviral potential [ ] . protection from simian foamy virus (sfv) and avian influenza (ai) augments the antiviral functioning and further postulates its diverse antiviral potential against avian pathogens. in this context, we stimulated chickens with silkworm-expressed chifn-λ and profiled the gene expression in immune organs (thymus and bursa) and compared it with that in primary chicken fibroblasts using rna-seq. an overall low isg expression was noticed in chifn-λstimulated cef; out of , genes, were degs ( upregulated and downregulated) (p< . , │ log fold change │ > ) (figure a) . although cef do not possess receptors for ifn-λ, slight temporal expression of degs in response to chifn-λ treatment signifies its antiviral potential in primary cells. next, we monitored the gene expression in the thymus and bursa. between the chifn-λ-treated and non-treated thymus, a total of , genes were expressed. among them, genes were degs, in which genes were upregulated and genes were downregulated (figure b) . in the bursa of fabricious, out of , genes were differentially expressed ( upregulated and in order to investigate the possible biological, cellular, and molecular mechanisms involved in the cascade of interferon-induced immunity, we performed transcriptomic analysis on chicken embryo fibroblasts and organs of live chickens. transcriptomes from the bursa of fabricious and thymus (most important immune organs in chicken) were compared with the control group to identify differentially expressed genes (degs) among all groups. experimentation started at day post-hatch as this is a phase of rapid growth and development, and we hoped to achieve biologically active transcriptional changes. the differences in degs observed in the present study control cellular architecture, immune function, metabolic pathway, and muscular function. it has previously been established that huifn-λ signals via il- and il- r exhibit typei-like antiviral potential [ ] . protection from simian foamy virus (sfv) and avian influenza (ai) augments the antiviral functioning and further postulates its diverse antiviral potential against avian pathogens. in this context, we stimulated chickens with silkworm-expressed chifn-λ and profiled the gene expression in immune organs (thymus and bursa) and compared it with that in primary chicken fibroblasts using rna-seq. an overall low isg expression was noticed in chifn-λ-stimulated cef; out of , genes, were degs ( upregulated and downregulated) (p < . , |log fold change|> ) (figure a ). although cef do not possess receptors for ifn-λ, slight temporal expression of degs in response to chifn-λ treatment signifies its antiviral potential in primary cells. pathways [ ] (figure ) . due to the induction of a distinct subset of genes, a lower level of antiviral activity is observed as compared to type-i ifns. it is speculated that the activation of chifn-λ is similar to type-i ifns but they are diverse in functional capability. the chifn-λ have particular significance in viral infections of epithelial origin, where they are optimally active by eliciting a broad antiviral state. using conventional approaches, we have confirmed the expression of selected genes as shown in supplementary figure s a and s b. next, we monitored the gene expression in the thymus and bursa. between the chifn-λ-treated and non-treated thymus, a total of , genes were expressed. among them, genes were degs, in which genes were upregulated and genes were downregulated ( figure b ). in the bursa of fabricious, out of , genes were differentially expressed ( upregulated and downregulated) ( figure c ). interestingly, a relatively low number of genes overlapped among these three groups ( figure d ). in order to confirm the expression of degs, we used a conventional approach (qpcr) and show (supplementary figure s a,b) a scenario corresponding to the rna-seq data. on the basis of abundance and fold change, degs were further characterized (supplementary table s ). cumulatively, a significant upregulation of crucial cytokine and chemokine genes (il -β, ccl , ccl , and cx cl ) was observed. these are broadly involved in antiviral response, apoptosis, cellular proliferation and differentiation, cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction and inflammation pathways [ ] (figure ). due to the induction of a distinct subset of genes, a lower level of antiviral activity is observed as compared to type-i ifns. it is speculated that the activation of chifn-λ is similar to type-i ifns but they are diverse in functional capability. the chifn-λ have particular significance in viral infections of epithelial origin, where they are optimally active by eliciting a broad antiviral state. using conventional approaches, we have confirmed the expression of selected genes as shown in supplementary figure s a degs were further analyzed for go terms and the kegg pathway by utilizing deseq [ ] . of go terms associated with chifn-λ-treated cef, go terms were significant (p < . ) ( figure a ). in the bursa, among biological processes, we observed the wnt signaling pathway (wif /camk a), cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions (tnfsf ), the apelin signaling pathway (ryr /myl ), and the significant antiviral pathway (novel gene) in cellular components (figure b) . in the thymus, out of go terms, we observed significant, and in the bursa, out of go terms, were significant (p < . ). in order to understand the biological functions associated with degs, we further analyzed the data in three distinct categories, including biological processes (bp), cellular components (cc), and molecular functions (mf) (figure c) . degs were further analyzed for go terms and the kegg pathway by utilizing deseq [ ] . of go terms associated with chifn-λ-treated cef, go terms were significant (p < . ) ( figure a ). in the bursa, among biological processes, we observed the wnt signaling pathway (wif /camk a), cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions (tnfsf ), the apelin signaling pathway (ryr /myl ), and the significant antiviral pathway (novel gene) in cellular components ( figure b ). in the thymus, out of go terms, we observed significant, and in the bursa, out of go terms, were significant (p < . ). in order to understand the biological functions associated with degs, we further analyzed the data in three distinct categories, including biological processes (bp), cellular components (cc), and molecular functions (mf) ( figure c ). further to gene ontology and differential expression, we investigated kegg pathway enrichment. in cefs, significant enrichment was seen in pathways including the mapk signaling pathway ( further to gene ontology and differential expression, we investigated kegg pathway enrichment. in cefs, significant enrichment was seen in pathways including the mapk signaling pathway (fos/il b/fosb), the toll-like receptor signaling pathway (fosb, il l , il b, fos, ccl ), influenza a (il l /il b/ccl ), cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions (ccl /il l /il b/cx cr /ccl ), salmonella infection (fosb/il l /il b/fos), the nod-like receptor signaling pathway (il l /il b/ccl ), and herpes simplex infection (fosb/il b/fos/ccl ) ( figure a ). in bursa, wnt signaling (wif ), the apelin signaling pathway (ryr ), and the calcium signaling pathway (ryr ) were significantly observed ( figure b ). for the thymus, the nod-like receptor signaling pathway (plcb /mapk ), the mapk signaling pathway (srf/mapk ), influenza a (rsad /mapk ), and mapk (salmonella, toll-like, herpes simplex infection) were observed ( figure c ). collectively, apoptosis (jun/birc /ctsc/actg ), rna degradation (eno /btg /c d), the tca cycle (mdh /idh a), the p signaling pathway (perp /ccnb ), biosynthesis of amino acid (eno /idh a), influenza a (rsad /jun/actg ), and the toll-like receptor signaling pathway (jun) were among the most significant. here, we present the first comprehensive report on cloning and expression of chifn-λ by employing bevs and demonstrate that it is biologically active in both cef (in vitro) and live chickens here, we present the first comprehensive report on cloning and expression of chifn-λ by employing bevs and demonstrate that it is biologically active in both cef (in vitro) and live chickens (in vivo). the identification of this potentially significant ifn among the ifn family advances fundamental aspects and functionality of chifn-λ in avian type-iii ifns. it is evident from the data that this ifn, like human interferon lambda (huifn-λ) , demonstrates similar type-i ifn-like properties. however, a distinct pattern of expression of isgs in chifn-λ contrasts it from other type-i ifns. knowledge regarding ifns is fundamental as rapid outbreaks of viral pathogens cause huge economic losses to the poultry industry every year. the present study investigates the isgs and signaling pathways associated with avian immunity and will bring new horizons to target problematic viral pathogens, e.g., aivs, circulating within the poultry industry. interferon lambda is a biologically active type-iii interferon which primarily acts on epithelial tissues [ ] . studies have demonstrated the antiviral potential of ifn-λ against highly pathogenic avian influenza by eliciting a broad antiviral state [ ] . ifn-λ is structurally peculiar as it possesses five exonic regions located on chromosome , contrary to type-i ifns, which are intronless and situated on the z sex chromosome in chicken [ , ] . this is in agreement with human ifn-λ subfamily which are anatomically identical by possessing five exonic regions on chromosome of the human genome [ ] . furthermore, % of amino acids are identical between huifn-λii and chifn-λ, which signifies the similarity of these two ifns. however, unlike mammals, only one member exists in chicken (chifn-λ). this is in agreement with the other types of chicken ifns, which have fewer members compared to mammalian ifns [ ] . reduced expression of isgs in response to chifn-λ in our experiment demonstrates the fact that cefs are optimally less receptive to ifn-λ, which is in agreement with published reports [ ] . one study revealed that chifn-λ can actively inhibit the viral replication of ai in primary embryonic tracheal organ cultures and clec- (chicken lung cell line). it is further postulated that with treatment of chifn-λ, isgs are expressed significantly, especially mx gene, which is primarily expressed in epithelial rich organs (i.e., trachea, lungs, and intestine) was also observed in the present study [ ] . furthermore, studies have also revealed that a high degree of cell type specificity in receptor-ligand interactions make avian ifns distinct from mammalian ifns. recently, it has been established that chicken ifn-λ inhibits low pathogenic influenza virus replication in cefs; however, as compared to chifn-γ and chifn-β, higher doses are required to induce isgs and maintain the strong antiviral state in the cells [ ] . go and kegg analysis of each experimental group demonstrated overlapping biological functions. an important gene involved in the host response of infected samples is rsad , also termed viperin, which is one of the potent interferon stimulated genes (isgs) responsible for eliciting a broad antiviral state against a variety of viral and bacterial pathogens [ ] . in mammals, it is highly expressed in response to invading viral infections [ ] . elevated expression of viperin in chifn-λ-treated organs further augments the expression of isgs in response to injected ifn in vivo. viperin was upregulated in response to chifn-λ treatment, which is symbolic for all isgs. ifn-inducible transmembrane protein- (ifitm- ) is one of the potent isgs expressed in response to either type of ifn and plays an antiviral role by blocking cytoplasmic entry [ ] . it is further demonstrated that ifitm alters membrane fluidity, hence producing curvature in the outer leaflets of the membrane or by interfering with intracellular cholesterol homeostasis [ , ] . significant upregulation of ifitm in the chifn-λ-treated thymus augments the temporal expression of isgs in response to ifn treatment. further studies are needed to investigate the possible future role of chifn-λ as a potent and novel therapeutic in the poultry industry. although the immune response elicited by type iii ifns is still not very clear, in the present study we also found some novel genes involved in the cascade of the avian immune response. furthermore, in vitro exposure of cef to chifn-λ demonstrated a rapid surge of pro inflammatory cytokines. considering their vital role in immune pathways, cytokine gene expression is widely employed as an indicator for the immune response. we did observe some genes that were previously illustrated in publications; one such example is chemokine (c-c motif) ligand (ccl , ensgalt ) [ ] . chemokines are secreted chemotactic cytokines that play a fundamental role in the recruitment and migration of lymphoid and myeloid cells in target tissues, and hence govern the avian immune response [ ] . ccl is a chemokine secreted by monocytes that is capable of activating macrophages and t lymphocytes [ ] . ccl , like its mammalian orthologue, is responsible for recruiting lymphoid cells and is involved in the early immune response in chickens [ ] . likewise, ccl , ccl , and ccl were also upregulated in cef and are chiefly involved in the innate avian immune response. the present study describes the transcriptomic analysis of differential gene expression following exposure to chifn-λ and the resultant pro-inflammatory response in both cef and chicken tissues. this response ostensibly is due to rapid and sustained signaling via cell surface receptors and a surge of chemokines and cytokines, which in turn create an antiviral environment. a contrasting feature of the present study is the upregulation of the toll-like receptor (tlr) signaling pathway in all three treatment groups, where it is evident that numerous genes are upregulated in tlr mediated cytotoxicity. tlr , a unique chicken receptor expressed on the surface of fibroblasts, heterophils, and macrophages, shares % sequence identity with tlr [ ] . it is evident from experimentation that tlr is a broad spectrum tlr that has the capability to recognize heat stable components of both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, cpg oligonucleotides, lipopolysaccharide (lps), and tripalmitoylated lipopeptide [ ] . tlr , an avian-specific tlr, plays a significant role in avian immune responses against bacterial and viral pathogens. recently, it has been demonstrated that diacylated lipopeptide from mycoplasma synoviae activated tlr and regulated innate immune responses [ ] . similarly, significant upregulation of tlr , observed in the present study, highlights a possible role of chifn-λ against mycoplasma infections in chicken. however, it warrants future studies to delineate the molecular processes. it has also been established by repeated experimentation that chifn-λ has been seen to cause delay in viral excretion and the spread of highly pathogenic avian influenza (hpai) h n [ ] . it is evident that in mammals, ifn-λ elicits a protective antiviral response toward ai, whereas ifn-λ plays a minor role in lung epithelia [ ] . similarly, in the respiratory tract of chickens, not all mucosal cells are responsive to chifn-λ. therefore, treatments can only delay, but do not significantly support the complete removal of viral loads of h n or halt the virus crossing the epithelial barrier [ ] . however, for low-pathogenic avian influenza (lpai), it is evident that chifn-λ has demonstrated significant antiviral activities [ ] . recent reports revealed another contrasting feature of ifn-λ, where it significantly elicited strong antiviral potential on intestinal epithelial cells to control murine rotaviruses [ , ] . it will be fascinating to investigate in the future whether the same antiviral phenomena occurs, and chifn-λ might also demonstrate epitheliotropism like rotaviruses and halt viral pathogens of the gastrointestinal tract in chickens. nuclear factor kappa-b (nf-kb) is the most significant, evolutionarily conserved, pleiotropic, inducible transcription factor responsible for regulating genetic expression in a variety of fundamental processes, including apoptosis, growth, immune response, inflammation, stress response, etc. [ ] . notably, the upregulation of nf-kb in response to chifn-λ treatment on cef signifies their potent role in the immune response. activator protein (ap- ) is a transcription factor complex highly responsive for cytokine signaling and growth promotion [ ] . formed through noncovalent dimerization between the fos and jun family of nuclear oncogenes, this complex activates ap- -dependent genes, hence controlling cell proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis [ ] . consistent with these observations, our study demonstrated that many genes associated with this pathway were upregulated. this finding suggests a link between ap and the transcriptional cascade associated with recombinant interferon treatment. overall, transcriptomic analysis revealed significant upregulation of fos and jun in cef and bursa, and thymus of chicken. the innate immune response is a highly complex, precise, interconnected, and integrated response that relies on many factors. the genes investigated in our study control direct protein interactions and are significantly involved in the avian innate immunity cascade. however, further validation of a broad set of immunity-related genes will also be required to elucidate the mechanism of interferon-induced immunity. a more comprehensive study including a larger set of immune genes and multiple recombinant ifns, which will correlate their integrated role, will enable researchers to provide comprehensive insight into the avian innate response. other future studies involving backyard poultry to assess whether similar patterns of innate immunity prevail in indigenous breeds in response to chifnλ are also important and will further develop our understanding of avian immunity. in the current study, we employed rna-seq to illustrate vital transcriptomes involved in the cascade of avian biology and observed divergent results in recombinant interferon-treated chickens compared to a control group chickens. our data suggest that significant antiviral, cell cycle regulators, and biologically active genes are expressed in response to administered chicken ifn. functional characterization of these vital genes warrants further investigation to determine the future possible role for recombinant chicken ifn in the poultry industry. the authors declare no conflict of interest. phylogeography and evolutionary history of reassortant h n viruses with potential human health implications h n avian influenza virus in korea: evolution and vaccination avian interferons and their antiviral effectors characterization and transcriptional analysis of the mouse chromosome cytokine receptor gene cluster ifn-λs mediate antiviral protection through a distinct class ii cytokine receptor complex lambda interferon (ifn-λ), a type iii ifn, is induced by viruses and ifns and displays potent antiviral activity against 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than just antiviral cytokines a genomic analysis of chicken cytokines and chemokines characterisation of chicken zap the antiviral response. microbes infect palmitoylome profiling reveals s-palmitoylation-dependent antiviral activity of ifitm ifitm proteins restrict viral membrane hemifusion the antiviral effector ifitm disrupts intracellular cholesterol homeostasis to block viral entry marek's disease virus-induced immunosuppression: array analysis of chicken immune response gene expression profiling cloning, expression and functional characterization of chicken ccr and its ligand ccl unique chemotactic response profile and specific expression of chemokine receptors ccr and ccr by cd + cd + regulatory t cells identification, mapping, and phylogenetic analysis of three novel chicken cc chemokines unique features of chicken toll-like receptors expression of the avian-specific toll-like receptor in chicken heterophils is mediated by gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria, but not tlr agonists diacylated lipopeptide from mycoplasma synoviae mediates tlr induced innate immune responses ifn-λ: a new spotlight in innate immunity against influenza virus infection differential responses of innate immunity triggered by different subtypes of influenza a viruses in human and avian hosts type iii interferon gene expression in response to influenza virus infection in chicken and duck embryonic fibroblasts distinct roles of type i and type iii interferons in intestinal immunity to homologous and heterologous rotavirus infections interferon-λ and interleukin act synergistically for the induction of interferon-stimulated genes and control of rotavirus infection interferons and viral infections innate immune sensing of dna viruses neuronal activity-dependent local activation of dendritic unfolded protein response promotes expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor in cell soma key: cord- -zueoyesj authors: berretta, regina; moscato, pablo title: cancer biomarker discovery: the entropic hallmark date: - - journal: plos one doi: . /journal.pone. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zueoyesj background: it is a commonly accepted belief that cancer cells modify their transcriptional state during the progression of the disease. we propose that the progression of cancer cells towards malignant phenotypes can be efficiently tracked using high-throughput technologies that follow the gradual changes observed in the gene expression profiles by employing shannon's mathematical theory of communication. methods based on information theory can then quantify the divergence of cancer cells' transcriptional profiles from those of normally appearing cells of the originating tissues. the relevance of the proposed methods can be evaluated using microarray datasets available in the public domain but the method is in principle applicable to other high-throughput methods. methodology/principal findings: using melanoma and prostate cancer datasets we illustrate how it is possible to employ shannon entropy and the jensen-shannon divergence to trace the transcriptional changes progression of the disease. we establish how the variations of these two measures correlate with established biomarkers of cancer progression. the information theory measures allow us to identify novel biomarkers for both progressive and relatively more sudden transcriptional changes leading to malignant phenotypes. at the same time, the methodology was able to validate a large number of genes and processes that seem to be implicated in the progression of melanoma and prostate cancer. conclusions/significance: we thus present a quantitative guiding rule, a new unifying hallmark of cancer: the cancer cell's transcriptome changes lead to measurable observed transitions of normalized shannon entropy values (as measured by high-througput technologies). at the same time, tumor cells increment their divergence from the normal tissue profile increasing their disorder via creation of states that we might not directly measure. this unifying hallmark allows, via the the jensen-shannon divergence, to identify the arrow of time of the processes from the gene expression profiles, and helps to map the phenotypical and molecular hallmarks of specific cancer subtypes. the deep mathematical basis of the approach allows us to suggest that this principle is, hopefully, of general applicability for other diseases. in a seminal review paper published nine years ago, hanahan and weinberg [ ] introduced the ''hallmarks of cancer''. they are six essential alterations of cell physiology that generally occur in cancer cells independently of the originating tissue type. they listed: ''self-sufficiency in growth signals, insensitivity to growth-inhibitory signals, evasion of the normal programmed-cell mechanisms (apoptosis), limitless replicative potential, sustained angiogenesis, and finally, tissue invasion and metastasis''. more recently, several researchers have advocated including ''stemness'' as the seventh hallmark of cancer cells. this conclusion has been reached from the outcomes of the analysis of high-throughput gene expression datasets [ , ] . the new role of stemness as a hallmark change of cancer cells is also supported by the observation that histologically poorly differentiated tumors show transcriptional profiles on which there is an overexpression of genes normally enriched in embryonic stem cells. for example, in breast cancer the activation targets of the pluripotency markers like nanog, oct , sox and c-myc have been shown to be overexpressed in poorly differentiated tumors in marked contrast with their expression in welldifferentiated tumors [ ] . other authors suggest different hallmarks, with many papers pointing alternative processes as their primary focus of their research. the difference may stem from the fact that these authors prefer to cite as ''key hallmarks'' physiological changes which occur at a ''lower level'' scale closer to the molecular events. these authors cite, for example, ''mitochondrial dysfunction'' [ , ] (including, but not limited to ''glucose avidity'' [ ] and ''a shift in glucosemetabolism from oxidative phosphorylation to glycolysis'' [ , ] , ''altered glycolysis'' [ ] , ''altered bioenergetic function of mitochondria'' [ ] ), ''dysregulation of cell cycle and defective genome-integrity checkpoints'' [ ] , ''aberrant dna methylation'' [ ] (''promoter hypermethylation of hallmark cancer genes'' [ ] and ''cpg island hypermethylation and global genomic hypomethylation'' [ ] ), ''shift in cellular metabolism'' [ , , ] , ''regional hypoxia'' [ ] , ''microenviroment acidosis'' [ ] , ''abnormal microrna regulation'' [ , ] , ''aneuploidy'' and ''chromosome aberrations'' [ , , , , ] , ''disruption of cellular junctions'' [ ] , ''avoidance of the immune response'' [ ] , ''pre-existing chronic inflammatory conditions'' [ , ] , ''cancerrelated inflammation'' [ ] , ''disabled autophagy'' [ ] , ''impaired cellular senescence'' [ ] , ''altered nf-kappab signalling'' [ ] , ''altered growth patterns, not altered growth per se'' [ ] , ''disregulated dna methylation and histone modifications'' [ ] , ''tissue dedifferentiation'' [ , ] , and ''somatically heritable molecular alterations'' [ ] . this research enriches the list of the most important cancer hallmarks. however, these physiological changes occur at a ''lower'' molecular level they are likely related sub events of the orginial seven instead of newly discovered ''key hallmarks''. more recently, luo et al attempted a ''stress-based'' description of some of the hallmarks in terms of ''stresses'' (''dna damage/replication stress, proteotoxic stress, mitotic stress, metabolic stress, and oxidative stress'') [ ] . while this is an interesting descriptive grouping, it is still a phenotypical characterization. what is needed is a higher level unifying genotypical characterization, from which individual disregulated processes can be identified in a quantitative way using the existing high-throughput data capture methodologies. it is clear that a unifying hallmark is needed if we aim at quantifying the cell's progression. it is then evident for us that a unifying mathematical formalism is necessary to uncover the cell transcriptome's progression from a normal to a more malignant phenotype. we start our quest assuming an implicit working hypothesis common to many research groups around the world: the macroscopic physiological changes (i.e. hanahan and weinberg's ''hallmarks'') must also correlate with global alterations of the molecular profiles of gene transcription. it is also assumed that the ''hallmark changes'' occur along a certain timeline, but that some of the sub-processes discussed before are concurrent. these processes may start in a slow incremental way with some of the major changes being early events while others (e.g. tissue invasion and metastasis) are likely later processes triggered by new events during cancer progression. the timeline is not explicit and it is also likely that cancer subtypes progress to similar timelines. in some cases the sequence of events are better understood (e.g. some leukaemia subtypes [ ] ). the elicitation and regulation of molecular events is likely to be an ongoing quest during this century for many types of cancer. it is not to be assumed that some of the transitions of the transcriptome are gradual. that is a hypothesis that is unnecessary in this study. we envision that the progression of cancer may have ''switches'', with a number of concurrent converging events leading to macroscopic observable changes in the gene expression profile resulting in dramatic variations of expression patterns. for instance, these molecular switches could not be characterized by an ''oncogene'' but by a large number of the genes that have changed its transcriptional state. these abrupt changes may be triggered by the confluence of several non-linear interactions, and are likely to be related to the physiological hallmarks we refer to above. the presence of macroscopic observable changes that are computable from a large number of relatively smaller changes mean that it may be possible to find an objective mathematical formalism to infer the turning point at which these radical changes occur. it is then evident that computing the jensen-shannon divergences, the normalized shannon entropy, and the statistical complexity of samples reveal different global transcriptional changes. it is, however, not easy to infer if these changes would correlate with a gradual progression or sudden changes. however, one valid mathematical possibility is that the most important ''hallmark of cancer'', a unifying principle above all, is the existence of a measurable gradual ''progression'' from a well-differentiated gene expression profile (corresponding to a healthy tissue). this would reveal the timeline of a higher level process that is observable and measurable via a change of normalized shannon entropy and an increment of jensen-shannon divergences from the originating tissue type. if this is the case, by correlating the changes in information theory quantifiers with the expression of the genes we would be able to not only uncover useful biomarkers to track this progression but to explain the ''hallmarks'' in an ordered timeline. the timeline also yields clinical and translational important outcomes. such analytical methodology will naturally produce ''a continuous staging'' of the cancer samples, based on a solid foundations of information theory, based on the knowledge of transcriptional profile of healthy cells as reference to measure divergences. in addition, as a mathematical methodology, it can be applied to other high-throughput technologies for which a probability distribution function of observed abundances has been computed. with these ideas in mind, we provide a ''transcriptomic-driven'' method revealing important biomarkers for cancer progression a direction of time for which they are presented. the method, however, is generalizable to other type of high-throughtput techonologies (e.g. proteomic studies). we have chosen two types of cancers to study which are almost at the antipodes in terms of progression rates: prostate cancer and melanoma. prostate cancer progresses very slowly. pathological samples are common in autopsies of men as young as years old. by the age of more than % of men have these alterations, a fact that already shows a relationship of this cancer type with increasing age. the clinical management of prostate cancer requires the identification of the so-called gleason patterns in the biopsies [ ] , which after almost fifty years is still ''the sole prostatic carcinoma grading system recommended by the world health organization''. however, undergrading, underdiagnosis, interobserver reproducibility and variable trends in grading have been observed as major problems [ , ] . melanoma, on the other hand, differs from prostate cancer in its rapid progression [ ] and it is considered one of the most aggressive types of cancer. one of melanoma's usual markers of progression and concern (i.e thickness) is measured in millimetres, which gives a rough idea of how devastatingly fast the disease can spread. we will present our results starting with one prostate cancer dataset, followed by another in melanoma, to come back to the prostate cancer discussion using another highly relevant dataset. this is a departure from the alternative approach in which each disease is discussed in separate sections. however, after considering several possibilities, we are convinced that our approach is the most appropriate to showcase the technique and its power. details on the datasets and methods used are given in the 'materials and methods' section of this paper. we also refer to the original studies and manuscripts associated to the three datasets we analysed. and available at the web address given above). after imputation of missing values, we first calculated the normalized shannon entropy and the mpr-statistical complexity for the each sample. the flowing section explains the context in which our results were generated (refer to the 'materials and methods' section for detail on how our quantities are computed). the normalized shannon entropy measure is widely used in ecosystem modelling to quantify species diversity, where it is acknowledge as having great sensitivity to relative abundances of species in an ecosystem [ ] . we utilise the same sensitivity to differentiate a samples in cancer datasets. figure shows that the normalized shannon entropy of prostate cancer tumor samples do not differ much from normal samples. this is in contrast to lymph node metastasis samples that appear to have smaller values of normalized shannon entropy. a mathematical interpretation of this result is that the samples from lymph node metastases have cells that not only varied their transcriptomic profile, they have also ''peaked'' the distribution of expression values with significant fold increases on a smaller number of probes. this explains the reduction in normalized shannon entropy. we note that there are several mechanisms that can explain a macroscopically observable global reduction of transcription. for instance, this may indicate that a relatively large number of genes have reduced their expression levels by genome damage, changes in gene regulation, or other silencing processes. it is reassuring to observe that the changes of the most prototypical quantitative measure we can draw from information theory, the normalized shannon entropy correlate well with the transition between normal samples with to ones with metastases. however, it is also evident from that normal samples do not differentiate much from the tumor group (the normalized shannon entropy values do not differ much). it is then not the number of genes with high expression values, but the change in the distribution of expression levels on the molecular profile, that can provide the other measure that could distinguish these other samples. this must be handled by the other statistical complexity measures to be discussed next. several statistical complexity measures can be defined which aim to clarify our argument. we will first discuss the results of computing the mpr-statistical complexity measure (in the previous figure the y-coordinates correspond to the mpr-statistical complexity values of each sample). the mpr-statistical complexity is proportional to both the normalized shannon entropy associated to the transcription profile and the jensen-shannon's divergence between that probability density function and the uniform probability distribution. again, we refer the reader to the 'materials and methods' section for an explanation of how these magnitudes are computed. although the results of using the mpr-statistical complexity might not seem particularly impressive, there are a few reasons why we introduce them at this stage. we want to illustrate a fact that can already be observed when we employ this measure on this dataset. in this dataset, for a given entropy value interval, normal tissue samples tend to have relatively lower mpr-statistical complexity values than tumor and lymph node metastasis. this means that both prostate cancer and metastases samples diverge from a ''more uniform'' distribution indicating that the distribution ''peaks'' in fewer active genes. it also means that, in terms of jensen-shannon's divergence, the transcriptional profile of a normal prostate cell sample is ''closer'' to a uniform distribution than to the one that is observed in a prostate cancer cell sample. the reader will readily argue, and with reason, that the transcriptional profile of a normal cell is tissue-specific and that it hardly resembles that of a uniform distribution of expression values. that is correct and this observation motivates the introduction of two new statistical complexity measures. we generically call these two variants as 'm-complexities' (with 'm' standing for ''modified''). they have the same functional form as the mpr-statistical complexity, but instead of computing the jensen-shannon's divergence from a uniform probability distribution we compute it against an ad hoc probability distribution functions derived from the data. in this sense, these measures are more supervised then the mpr-statistical complexity is. another perspective is that the mpr-statistical complexity is a special case of this measure in which the ad hoc probability distribution function of reference is the equiprobability distribution. the relevance of this measure derives from being a general definition that allows [ ] . metastatic samples have typically lower values of normalized shannon entropy than normal samples and prostate cancer primary tumors. the reduction in normalized shannon entropy indicates that there exists a significant reduction on the expression of a large number of genes, or that the gene profile of metastatic samples has a more ''peaked'' distribution (due to the upregulation of a selected subset of genes). both possibilities just cited are not mutually exclusive. we also note that neither the normalized shannon entropy, nor the mpr-statistical complexity (as a single unsupervised quantifier), can help differentiate between tumor and normal samples, indicating that other information theory quantifiers are required for this discrimination. doi: . /journal.pone. .g accommodating several different reference states. we will use it to measure divergences to the ''initial'' and ''final'' transcriptomic states (two states of reference). taken as computed averages over normal samples, and respectively metastatic ones, these measures will allow tracking the processes of differentiation of a cancer cell from a particular tissue type. for example, using lapointe et al.'s dataset, the m-normal statistical complexity quantifier first requires the computation of the probability distribution function of the average gene expression profile of all normal prostate samples. afterwards, the normalized shannon entropy and the jensen-shannon's divergence of any sample profile will be computed using the divergence to that averaged normal distribution. analogously, we compute the m-metastases statistical complexity quantifier by first calculating the average profile of the metastases samples, and then generating the corresponding probability distribution function, finally computing the jensen-shannon's divergence with that profile. we refer to the 'materials and methods' section for details of the calculations. the results can be observed in figure . on the x-axis, the lymph node metastases have the largest values of m-normal indicating a divergence from the normal profile. in addition, the m-metastases values of normal samples tend to be higher than most of the metastasis samples (with the exception of only one). figure shows a gradual progression of the samples positions on this plane from a well-differentiated tissue type specific profile, first to a more heterogeneous primary tumor cluster, and finally to an even less differentiated metastatic profile. the result presented in figure shows that the prostate cancer samples, which are not metastases and therefore could have been scattered anywhere on the plane, are clustered on a particular confined area between the two other groups. we understand that there are reasons to be sceptical about this result being not just a simple consequence of the gene selection process used by lapointe et al. for example, if we assume that the , probes singled out by lapointe et al. in their figure one of ref. [ ] (and that constitute our original data) have been selected with a supervised method that try to distinguish between normal and metastases, then the relative position of normal and metastases samples is perhaps something to be expected. however, even under that assumption, what is not expected is the position of all primary tumor prostate cancer samples, linking the normal cluster of samples with the metastases one. note that the definition of both the m-normal and m-metastases measures do not use any information from the primary tumor prostate cancer samples, so the location of these samples between the normal cluster and the metastases, bridging them naturally is something to highlight. together with figure , it gives evidence that supports the working hypothesis that a gradual ''progression'' occurs, from the normal tissue specific profile to the metastasis one. indeed, following our line of argument, figure has even more relevance when we highlight the fact that the , probes have not been selected with a supervised method. the authors say that the only selection criteria was to single out the , cdnas whose expression varied most across samples. in the supplementary notes of their paper the authors say: ''we included for subsequent analysis only well measured genes whose expression varied, as determined by ( ) signal intensity over background . . -fold in both test and reference channels in at least % of samples, and ( ) -fold ratio variation from the mean in at least two samples; , genes met these criteria.'' as a consequence, figure has been generated without class selection bias only using the genes that have the most varied expression pattern. we now turn to another aspect of the statistical complexity and entropy analysis. we note that figure shows that the metastases samples have a clear reduction on normalized shannon entropy in comparison with the values observed for the normal samples. at the same time, metastases samples, as expected, have higher mnormal complexity than the normal samples ( figure ). it is then interesting to evaluate the value of the jensen-shannon divergence of these samples and to identify the genes that most correlate with the variations of jensen-shannon divergence to quantify one of the factors that is related to the statistical complexity changes. we have computed the correlation of the gene expression profile corresponding to each of the , probes. for each of the , probes, we computed both the pearson correlation (x-axis of figure ) and the spearman correlation (y-axis of figure ) of each probe profile with the jensen-shannon divergence having as probability distribution of reference that of a metastasis profile (these values are called jsm -pearson and jsm -spearman in the accompanying excel file provided). with this data, we have produced figure , a scatter plot of the values associated to each probe. in this figure, there are two probes that are immediately recognizable by any cancer researcher, and in particular for those in prostate cancer: klk /psa (prostate specific antigen) and fos. the interpretation of these scatter plots is not immediate and needs an introductory explanation. each dot corresponds to one probe of the array. for example, a dot that is very close to the origin of coordinates ( , ) indicates a probe such that its pattern of gene expression (across all samples) is not correlated with the jensen-shannon divergence to the average profile of a metastasis pattern. it is, in essence, a probe which is highly uninteresting in this regard. probes that have a high correlation, across all samples, either positive or negative with the jensen-shannon divergence to the average profile of a metastasis pattern are highly informative. they ''co-express'' with this measure. although we provide in the supplementary material the information corresponding to all probes, we will discuss just a few of them. this will allow the reader to understand these plots and will put our results in the perspective with current research in prostate cancer. we particularly highlight the position of klk / psa, fos and ccl . to our surprise, we have found which is perhaps the most famous biomarker in prostate cancer klk / psa (kallikrein-related peptidase ), probe g_ (correlations of . and . respectively). fos and klk / psa are the second and the fourth most negatively correlated probes in this ranking of all the genes in the microarray. with opposite signs for correlations are cdkn d, foxm , and brca . the following is a discussion of a selection of probes (highlighted in figure ) in the context of prostate cancer. cdkn d (cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor d, p , inhibits cdk ). one of the genes that has strong positive correlations is cdkn d, (cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor d, p , inhibits cdk ) (pearson correlation of . , spearman correlation . ), probe g_ . a gene that shows a positive correlation with the divergence of a metastasis profile indicates a gene that has a putative reduced expression on these samples. cdkn d is a known regulator of cell growth regulator and controls cell cycle g progression [ , ] . loss of cdkn d in cancer cells is one event which is generally associated to a more malignant phenotype. foxm . another probe that presents positive correlations is foxm (forkhead box m ), with pearson correlation of . and spearman correlation . ), probe g_ . it has been recently shown that the depletion of foxm still allows cells to enter mitosis but they are unable to complete cell division. as a consequence this leads to mitotic catastrophe or endoreduplication [ ] . foxm is considered a key regulator of a transcriptional cluster which is that is essential for proper execution of the mitotic program and the control of chromosomal stability [ ] . brca -(breast cancer , early onset). another gene with positive correlations is brca (breast cancer , early onset), probe g_ , with pearson correlation of . and spearman correlation . ). while the loss of brca function and its consequences in prostate cancer is being reconsidered [ , , , ] , brca is generally regarded as a ''tumor suppressor'', with an established role in maintaining genomic stability via its function in the homologous recombination pathway for double-strand dna repair. this result is supporting its proposed function. loss of brca function is thus a warning sign of the existence of error prone cell processes. in prostate cancer brca has been associated to promotion of invasion through upregulation of mmp [ ] . brca loss of function due to mutations is linked to poor survival in prostate cancer [ ] and rare germline mutations have been associated with early-onset of prostate cancer [ ] . ccl /mcp- (chemokine (c-c motif) ligand ). bone is one of the most common sites of prostate cancer metastasis; close to % of men who die of prostate cancer have bone metastasis [ ] . the successful metastatic process to bone follows from the activation of osteoclasts with bone resorption, which in turns leads to the release of different growth factors from the bone matrix [ ] . ccl has been previously reported as expressed in human bone marrow endothelial cells; the ccl stimulation promotes prostate cancer cell migration and proliferation [ , ] and it has been proposed as a paracrine and autocrine factor for invasion and growth of prostate cancer [ ] . as a consequence of this central role in the tumor microenvironment, ccl is being the object of several studies and is included in the list of potential targets for novel therapies [ , , , , , , , , , ] . fos (v-fos fbj murine osteosarcoma viral oncogene homolog). a probe for fos (g_ ; correlations of . and . computed with pearson and spearman) has a similar correlation than klk /psa. the high rank of fos was unexpected, but perhaps it is less of a surprise for some experienced researchers in prostate cancer as its role has been highlighted in the past [ , , ] . amplification of members of the mapk pathway was associated with androgen independent prostate cancer, and co-expression of raf , erbb /her and c-fos would lead to this phenotype [ ] . we will not discuss in depth the known relationships between fos, lamin a/c and prostate cancer. we leave this discussion for later, as lamin a/c will also appear in our study of the other prostate cancer dataset studied in this paper. lamin a/c appears as a member of a set of genes with reduced expression for higher grade primary prostate cancer samples (note that the current analysis that gave fos as a biomarker is on lymph node metastatic samples like here). however, we would like to point out a connection that is currently hypothesized between lamin a/c and fos, the gene we have just discussed. ivorra et al. have recently proposed that ''lamin a overexpression causes growth arrest, and ectopic c-fos partially overcomes lamin a/c-induced cell cycle alterations. we propose lamin a/c-mediated c-fos sequestration at the nuclear envelope as a novel mechanism of transcriptional and cell cycle control'' [ ] . in addition: ''c-fos accumulation within the extraction-resistant nuclear fraction (ernf) and its interaction with lamin a are reduced and enhanced by gain-of and lossof erk / activity, respectively.'' [ ] . these novel interactions between lmna and fos, their putative role in prostate cancer metastasis and their seemingly different behaviours in prostate cancer lymph node metastases warrant further investigation. sox (sry (sex determining region y)-box ). this transcription factor has been recently identified as having an importat role during embryogenesis and in the early stages of prostate development [ , ] and in testis determination [ ] , processes that link sox upregulation to cancer development [ ] . basal epithelial cells do express sox in a normal prostate. while there exists no detectable expression in lumina epithelial cells, sox has already been reported as ''expressed in primary prostate cancer in vivo, at a higher frequency in recurrent prostate cancer and in prostate cancer cell lines (lncap, cwr , pc , and du )'' [ ] . wang et al., also in [ ] add that: ''significantly, down-regulation of sox by sirna in prostate cancer cells reduced endogenous ar protein levels, and cell growth indicating that sox contributes to ar regulation and decreased cellular proliferation. these results indicate that sox in prostate basal cells supports the development and maintenance of the luminal epithelium and that a subset of prostate cancer cells may escape basal cell requirements through sox expression.'' an increased value of sox expression in advanced prostate cancer has been associated to tumor progression and the epithelial-mesenchymal transition [ ] . sox expression has been associated with a putative subgroup of prostate cancer [ ] , associated to lymph-node metastasis (as seems to be the case in this dataset) and has a know role in chondrogenic differentiation processes [ ] . klk /psa -(kallikrein-related peptidase )/prostate specific antigen. to finalize our initial discussion on this dataset, we address klk . the high ranking of klk /psa in our list is perhaps one of the most remarkable retrodictive outcomes of our approach. klk /psa (also known as prostate specific antigen) is a conspiquous member of our top rank list. it is perhaps the best blood biomarker for prostate cancer screening. its relevance and popularity as a target of studies is so wide that it makes unfeasible any serious attempt to uncover its relevance in the prostate cancer literature. a search using pubmed using the keyword 'klk ' (and the other alias names of this gene) reveals a total of , published papers. of course, many of these publications relate to its role for early screening, but in this study we are uncovering its role as a tissue biomarker. our results echoes a recent contribution by s. miyano's and his collaborators [ ] on a massive meta-analysis of microarray datasets. it is also in line with results from clinical studies that indicate that a -year psa value is useful for predicting prostate cancer recurrence. [ ] . certainly the dynamics of psa, now perhaps with fos and sox added to the set of biomarkers of interest, warrant further investigation for patient population stratification after initial treatment. the biomarkers discussed in this section warrant further investigation in prediction of lymph-node metastasis and clinical management of prostate cancer [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] . we refer the reader to the supplementary material to have a complete list of probes and their correlations with the information theory quantifiers. the following sections present the results that we obtained with a melanoma dataset. our aim is to observe if variations of the normalized shannon entropy and the statistical complexity measures, mpr-complexity and the modified forms m-normal and m-metastases, provide interesting results in a different disease and experimental setting. in this case we have selected a gene expression dataset from haqq et al. [ ] containing information of , cdnas in samples (figure two from the [ ] ). the samples include normal skin, nevi, primary melanoma and melanoma metastases. this datasets has more phenotypical characteristics for the group of samples. after an initial process of data cleaning, we removed probes which had an unsually high expression value on only a few samples, in some cases on a single one. the dataset we work with from original contributed by haqq et al.consists of , probes. first, we computed the normalized shannon entropy and the mpr-statistical complexity for each sample (refer to the 'materials and methods' section for a detailed presentation of these calculations). figure shows the values of these quantifiers for each sample. we first observe an important difference between figure and figure . in this melanoma dataset, neither the use of the normalized shannon entropy nor the mpr-complexity helps to discriminate between normal skin, nevi, primary and metastastic melanomas. nevertheless, we decided to present this figure for methodological reasons. we envision that some researchers will calculate the normalized shannon entropy and mpr-complexity using all the probes. we note that in figure one of haqq et al's original paper, the whole probe set was previously filtered by selecting those which vary across samples, thus indicating that they may have information about disease subtypes (although the phenotypic types were not biasing the selection). in this case we want to illustrate both the normalized shannon entropy and mpr-complexity calculated using all the probes does not give the expected benefits. we will now see the benefits of using the m-complexities. as we did for prostate cancer (see figure ), we aim at identifying if the use of the modified forms of the statistical complexity (the m-complexities) could give some insight where the normalized shannon entropy and mpr-complexity measures fail. to compute the m-normal measure, we need to define the average gene expression profile for a normal cell (which we call p ave ). we thus resort to the three normal skin profiles and we produce the average based on these profiles (details for computing the average profiles are given in the 'materials and methods' section). we call m-skin the resulting measure that relies on this profile. analogously, we need to compute a pattern for m-metastasis, and we proceed to calculate the p ave profile averaging over the metastases samples. the result is encouraging, as samples plotted in the (m-skin, m-metastasis)-plane cluster in groups, showing an important m-skin complexity transition between normal skin cells and nevi. most importantly, this method naturally shows that some of the metastatic samples have a large value of m-skin complexity, so we present the results of another experiment, aimed at clarifying this fact. in their original publication, haqq et al. classified the melanoma metastases in two groups due to their molecular profiles: five samples were classified as 'type i' and fourteen as 'type ' based on a hierarchical clustering approach. our result reinforced the view that the type ii melanomas metastasis is a pretty homogeneous group, we will present the results on the (mskin, m-metastasis i)-plane. this means that now the p ave profile will not be obtained by averaging over the metastases samples, but instead using only the samples which have been labelled as 'type ii'. as such, we aim at revealing if type i samples are indeed different in this plane, and if other clusters are also present. figure presents the results. the first fact worth commenting is the pronounced gap between normal skin samples and the nevi, primary, and metastatic melanoma samples as revealed by the mskin measure. note also that the m-skin is based on the average profile that of the normal samples, which indicates that no information about the profiles of metastasis are used, yet m-skin reveals that increasing values of this measure may be linked with a 'progression' from nevi to primary and metastasis melanoma profiles. we now introduce another useful technique to identify genes which correlate with the transitions. the challenge is to find genes which are related with the progression towards metastases profiles, even when we recognize that there the group of metastasis samples is heterogeneous (containing at least two groups). since the final outcome of figure and figure is that the normalized shannon entropy does not help much in this experimental scenario, we will concentrate only on one of the multiplicative factors of the mcomplexities, the jensen-shannon divergence. we compute two p ave profiles, one with the normal skin samples only, and the other with all the metastasis samples (regardless their type). we will call the two divergences jsm and jsm respectively. we then compute the spearman correlation of the profile of all gene probes in the array across the samples to both jsm and jsm . we have listed all probes according to the absolute value of the difference of these correlations, i.e. abs. diff. (probe) = |jsm (probe) jsm (probe)| in decreasing order. the results are provided as haqq-plosone-supfile.xls, in the sheet labelled 'results-correlation'. the rationale is to identify those probes which are highly correlated (both positively or negatively) with the jensen-shannon divergence of the normal tissue profile and that ''reverse signs''. for instance, a probe for the tp gene (tumor protein p , keratinocyte transcription factor ket), aa , is ranked in the third position. its correlation with the jensen-shannon divergence of the normal skin type is relatively high and negative (jsm = . ) while at the same time is has a positive correlation with the jensen-shannon divergence of the metastasis profile (jsm = . ). in the ranking, the first probe that presents the opposite behaviour is one for ada (adenosine deaminase), aa . figure helps to understand the relationship of these correlations with expression. not only are these genes well correlated with the divergences, they also seem to be good markers of the progression from one tissue type profile to the metastasis profile. we will now discuss three of these genes in the context of current biological knowledge on melanoma drivers and metastatic progression. we provide many references for one of them, spp (secreted phosphoprotein or osteopontin). the discussion on this gene will be left for later, when we will discuss specifc oncosystems related to cell proliferation, chemotaxis and responses to external simulus. figure shows the expression of ada (adenosine deaminase, aa ) as a function of tp (keratinocyte transcription factor ket, aa ). all normal skin samples, as well as nevi and a couple of primary melanomas have relatively low values of ada but they express tp . there is a change of roles in metastatic and some primary melanomas, which have reduced tp expression but increased values of expression of ada. as we will later see, these events correlate with other major transcriptional modifications which involve dozens of genes and that we have been able to map thanks to functional genomics bioinformatics tools. the role of spp will be discussed in that context after some references to tp , ada, and plk which follow. tp . the product of this gene [ , ] belongs to the same protein family of its more famous relative, tp , a gene that is often mutated in human cancers [ ] and highly regarded as a key ''tumor suppressor''. tp 's product, p , is a homologous protein to p , which is considered to be phylogenetically newer [ ] and also regarded as an important apoptotic and cell-cycle arrest protein. mice that lack tp are born alive with a propensity for developing tumours; mice that lack tp do not appear to be tumour prone, although, new results are partially contradicting earlier findings [ ] . it appears that the diverse roles of the isoforms of the p family reveal that there exists a crosstalk with the different isoforms of the p family that needs to be systematically investigated [ ] . it has recently been shown that p is a key regulator of the development of stratified epithelial tissues [ ] and that its deletion results in loss of stratified epithelial and of all keratinocytes [ ] . melanocytes also express two isoforms of p [ ] , but p expression is not reported in out of tumors in a tissue microarray study performed by brinck et al. [ ] . it is clear that the the role of loss of expression of tp in melanoma warrants further investigation. ada -(adenosine deaminase) and dpp /cd (dipeptidylpeptidase , cd , adenosine deaminase complexing protein ). a link between tp and ada has already been reported in the literature. ada is a gene involved in cell division and proliferatation [ ] and it has been suggested to have a regulatory role in dendritic cell innate immune responses [ ] .translational modification is also a function of p . sbisa et al. have proved that ada is a direct target of isoforms of p , which is an important discovery as ada has two tp binding sites, leading to a complex metabolic balance due to the different relationships between this trio and p yet to be completely elicitated [ , ] . several studies indicate elevation of adenosine deaminase levels in sera of breast [ ] , head and neck [ ] , colorectal [ ] , acute lymphoblastic leukaemia [ ] and laryngeal cancers [ ] . we observe a marked increase of expression of a probe for ada with melanoma progression while at the same time we observe a loss of expression of a probe corresponding to dpp /cd (dipeptidylpeptidase , cd , adenosine deaminase complexing protein ), a membrane-bound, proline-specific serine protease [ ] that has been attributed tumor suppressor functions [ ] . it has been previously reported that loss of dpp immunostaining helps to discriminate malignant melanomas from deep penetrating nevi, a variant of benign melanocytic nevus [ ] and early reports of their absence in metastatic melanomas exist [ , ] . as deep penetrating nevi can mimic the vertical growth phase of nodular malignant melanoma, and ada could potentially be downregulat-ing dpp [ , ] we believe that the elicitation of the complementary role of these two biomarkers to distinguish these two entities is necessary and also warrants further clinical studies. plk (polo-like kinase (drosophila)). another probe for gene that ranks high as a positive marker of metastasis is plk , polo-like kinase , serine/threonine protein kinase (aa ). plk is a centrosomal kinase [ ] which is figure . scatter plot showing the expression of the probe corresponding to ada (adenosine deaminase), aa (y-axis) and tp (tumor protein p ), aa (x-axis). all the samples that have tp expression are normal or nevi, with two primary melanomas still preserving tp expression but with higher ada. the trend reverses for the rest of the primary melanoma samples and the metastatic ones, which all express ada but not tp . doi: . /journal.pone. .g analogously, we compute the jensen-shannon divergence of each sample with the average metastastic profile and we also compute the correlation of each probe with this measure (y-axis). the position of one probe corresponding to the tp gene (tumor protein p , keratinocyte transcription factor ket), aa , is highlighted. the expression of this probe has a relatively high negative correlation with the jensen-shannon divergence of the normal skin type (jsm -spearman = . ) while at the same time is has a positive correlation with the jensen-shannon divergence of the metastasis profile (jsm = . ). the first probe that presents an opposite behaviour is one for ada (adenosine deaminase), aa . probes for spp (secreted phosphoprotein or osteopontin) and plk (polo-like kinase or drosophila) are also highlighted. while plk is currently less recognized as a biomarker in melanoma research, the importance of spp in cutaneous pathology [ , , , ] and in particular in melanoma [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] is increasing. using a -biomarker panel that included spp , kashani-sabet et al. used tissue microarrays on melanocytic neoplasms to show that spp expression collaborates significantly improving the detection of high percentage of melanomas arising in a nevus, spitz nevi, dysplastic nevi and misdiagnosed lesions [ ] . like in the case of prostate cancer ( figure , in which klk /psa -prostate specific antigen was highlighted), our method allows the detection of important biomarkers with a high degree of concordance with current biological understanding of metastatic processes. doi: . /journal.pone. .g regarded as being linked to centrosome maturation and spindle assembly [ ] . plk expression has also been singled out as a biomarker of a ''death-from-cancer'' signature, sharing with others the function of being an activator of mitotic spindle check point proteins. with other proteins it would has a stem cell-like expression profile phenotypically characterized by enabling metastasis with anoikis resistance and disregulated cell-cycle control [ ] . plk inhibition could be a common target for gastric adenocarcinoma [ ] , bladder cancer [ ] , colon cancer [ , ] , hepatocellular carcinoma [ ] , medullary thyroid carcinoma [ ] , esophageal cancer [ ] , pancreatic cancer [ ] and in some types of non-hodgkin lymphomas [ ] and breast cancer [ ] . plk 's spearman correlation with the values of the jensen-shannon divergence of samples with the normal skin profile is relatively high ( . ). plk also has a high value of (negative) spearman correlation with the values of the jensen-shannon divergence of samples with the average metastatic profile ( . in the comparison, it was found that metastatic malignant melanomas with expressed plk at markedly elevated levels (median, . % vs. . %; p-value, . ), concluding that plk is a reliable biomarker for patients at high risk of metastases, even when the most important prognostic clinical factor (breslow's maximum thickness of the primary malignant melanoma) indicates the contrary [ ] . we consider this an important finding as plk silencing is already part of an integrated oncolytic adenovirus approach currently being studied in mice models of orthotopic gastric carcinoma [ ] and has promise due to the lack of a reported measurable immune response of sirna-based therapeutics [ ] . another positive note is the less sensitivity to plk depletion of cells with a functional p [ , ] , and can help to sensitize cells to chemotherapy (as observed in lung cancer [ ] ). this constraint of aneuploid cancer cells to plk expression, particularly in cells with inactivated p [ ] , could be exploited by lentivirus-based rna interference [ ] . correlation analysis with jensen-shannon divergences reveals biomarkers for loss of cell adhesion, cell-cell communication, impairment of tight junction mechanisms and dysregulation of epithelial cell polarity. as discussed before, the probe for ada (adenosine deaminase) is the first that has a different trend. since we put all metastasis samples together in the same group when we calculated the average probability profile (and we have a heterogeneous group) we have on our ranking probes that appear before ada (we refer to the supplementary file haqq-plosone-supfile.xls). an analysis using gather (http://gather.genome.duke.edu/) [ ] to interpret the collective influence of the lack of expression of all these genes in the metastasis samples reveals an interesting new perspective. using gene ontology, we found that six of the genes identified by gather are related to epidermis development (cdsn, dsp, evpl, gjb , krt , krt ), p-value , . , bayes factor , and eight genes are related to cell adhesion (cdsn, cldn , dsg , dst, lgals , lrig , pcdh , pkp ), p-value, . , bayes factor . ank (ankyrin , erythrocytic), aa was also singled out as by our gene ontology analysis as related to the maintenance of epithelial cell polarity (p-value = . , bayes factor ). the use of another profiler of genome signatures (g:profiler, [ ] ) also reinforces the view that many genes that have lost expression are related to 'epidermis development' (col a , dsp, evpl, gjb , krt , krt , lce c, mafg, tgm ) with p-value = . e- . thirteen are associated with gene ontology function of cell communication (ank , cdsn, cldn , dsg , dst, gchfr, gjb , gpr , lgals , lrig , pcdh , pkp , ptger ), albeit with a pvalue of only . . gchfr is also involved in nitric oxide metabolism. if we add to the list of genes already recognized by gather the other probes that after ada in this ranking have also loss of expression (until we found pdxp (pyridoxal (pyridoxine, vitamin b ) phosphatase), the evidence is stronger, now col a , gjb , klk , and krt also is in this group (the bayes factor of this association returned by gather is now for the go term 'epidermis development'). 'cell adhesion' has now genes, cdsn, cldn , col a , dsc , dsg , dst, jup, lgals , lrig , pcdh , pkp , slit thbs (p-value, . , bayes factor ). these results are considered statistically very relevant as identifiers of a particular process which seems to be undermined by this collective loss of expression. if we put all this information together, we clearly observe a pattern of downregulation of gene expression that is associated with an impairment of epidermis development and the maintainance of its structure ( figure and table ). this is, perhaps, an instantiation of one of the ''extended hallmarks of cancer'' (that of ''tissue dedifferentiation''). this process includes the loss of function of genes that are essential for the maitainance of tight junction and epithelial cell-cell communication. while loss of epithelial structure is related to these genes, we observe that those that increase expression are associated to other developmental processes, not necessarily concerted in this panel. instead they show a pattern of increasing cell motility, chemotaxis and positive regulation of cell proliferation. we will first discuss the processes related to the loss of adhesion, which could be linked to an increased probability of metastatic potential of these cells. the loss of expression of plakophilin , junction plakoglobin, desmoplakin and desmoglein indicate deficiencies in desmosome processes. in general, this panel is composed of a number of genes that are losing expression during progression and that have gene ontology annotations related to tight junctions, gap junctions, adherens junctions and desmosomes, and an impaired set of processes that link, via intercellular channels and bridges, the cells of the epidermis. mutations in these genes are linked to a number of skin genetic diseases [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] the desmosome are cell-cell adhesive junctions which provide a mechanical coupling between cells. these junctions are found in several epithelial tissues and the decreased assembly of the desmosome has been shown to be a common feature of many epithelial cancers [ , ] . plakoglobin helps to connect transmembrane elements to the cytoskeleton [ ] . plakophilin [ ] (pkp , one of the genes in our panel above) is a desmosomal plaque component [ ] that stabilizes desmosomal proteins at the plasma membrane [ , ] and, with desmoplakin [ ] , recruits filaments to sites of cell-cell contacts [ ] . as a consequence, it has been proposed that the lack of pkp increases keratinocyte migration [ ] and loss of pkp expression in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma and in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma may contribute to an invasive phenotypic behaviour [ ] , perhaps as a consequence of the impaired recruitment of desmoplakin. the desmoglein-specific cytoplasmic region (dscr) is the site of caspase cleavage during apopotosis and is a conserved region of yet undefined function and unknown structure, but it specifies the function of the desmoglein family of cell adhesion molecules (of which dsg is a member). it has been recently shown that the dscr has a weak interaction with pkp , plakophilin (ectodermal dysplasia/skin fragility syndrome) and the cytoplasmic domain of desmocollin [ ] . plakoglobin is cleaved by caspase during apoptosis [ ] . in addition, kami et al. in ref [ ] also report and conclude that: ''desmoglein membrane proximal region also interacts with all four dscr ligands, strongly with plakoglobin and plakophilin and more weakly with desmoplakin and desmocollin . thus, the dscr is an intrinsically disordered functional domain with an inducible structure that, along with the membrane proximal region, forms a flexible scaffold for cytoplasmic assembly at the desmosome''. as previously discussed, all these genes progress towards a loss of expression, and they are highly correlated. figure shows the average expression of pkp /plakophilin (ectodermal dysplasia/ skin fragility syndrome), (nm_ ) and jup, junction plakoglobin, (bx ) on the x-axis against that of dsp, desmoplakin (nm_ hs. ) on the y-axis. again, we see a clear pattern of progressive reduction of expression from normal skin and nevi (green and yellow, respectively), primary melanomas (in orange) and melanoma metastases (red). joint loss of expression of claudin and members of the aquaporin family are also linked to a transition to a more malignant phenotype we note however, the gene ontology annotation is not the only way that we can make sense of this information. a detailed analysis of that list of genes reveals other proteins involved in tight junction, like aquaporin (aqp ). probes for aqp and claudin (cldn ) have reduced expression with the progression of the disease as shown in figure . aqp (gill blood group) is a member of the aquaporin family of proteins, and currently is recognized as an 'aquaglyceroporin' [ ] of great importance to maintain skin hydration of mammals epidermis [ ] . three proteins of this family (aqp , aqp , and aqp ) have probes that seem correlated with melanoma progression, all losing their expression in the process of going from normal skin to metastatic melanoma. aqp water channels have been pointed out as an essential pathway for volume-regulatory water transport in human epithelial cells [ ] . aqp is also selective for the passage of glycerol and urea and it has been suggested that osmotic stress up-regulates aqp gene expression in cultured keratinocytes [ ] . aqp was found to be the predominant aquaporin in human skin which increased expression and altered cellular distribution of aqp in eczema thus contributing to water loss [ ] . the putative involvement of aquaporins in the progression of melanoma, uncovered by our method in our results, warrants further investigation as it has been recently shown that another member of this family (aqp ) also facilitates hydrogen peroxide diffusion across membranes [ ] . it is suspected that aqp has other functions with a suggestion that it is involved in ultraviolet radiation induced skin dehydration [ ] . there is no probe for aqp in haqq et al.'s dataset that we could scrutinize from its trend with progression but we note that a novel strategy for drug development for melanoma (i.e. elesclomol) works by inducing apoptosis via a mechanism of elevation of reactive oxygen species (of course, including hydrogen peroxide in cancer cells) thus exploiting the ''achilles hell of cancer metabolism'' [ ] . claudin , cldn [ ] , a gene which is reported to be ''normally expressed in all the living layers of the epidermis'' [ ] , in concert with aqp , is a key component of the tight junction complexes of the epidermis. low cldn gene expression was correlated with shorter overall survival in lung adenocarcinoma. overexpression of cldn was correlated with suppression of cancer cell migration, invasion and metastasis [ ] . hoevel et al. report that re-expression of cldn , in breast tumor spheroids, induces apoptosis and they conclude: ''these findings support a potential role of the tight junction protein cldn in restricting nutrient and growth factor supplies in breast cancer cells, and they indicate that the loss of the cell membrane localization of the tight junction protein cldn in carcinomas may be a crucial step during tumor progression'' [ ] . tokes et al.also report that malignant invasive breast tumors are negative table . gene names and probe accession number of the probes with genes annotated with functions on cell adhesion, cell-cell communication, tight junction mechanisms and epithelial cell polarity shown in the heat map in figure . for cldn [ ] . as in breast cancer [ ] , in which reduced expression correlated with recurrence status, the low expression of cldn and other tight junction proteins seems to contribute to cellular detachment. the complementary set of correlations with the jensen-shannon divergences unveils biomarkers for cell proliferation, chemotaxis, and responses to external simulus. if the use of gene ontology has produced very peculiar results, helping us to link the loss of expression of genes with a significant change in epithelial structure and development. a natural question arises: ''which is the significance of another set, now arbitrarily chosen to be also of the same cardinality (i.e genes) with the complementary behavioural pattern?'' we have now listed all the probes according to diff. (probe) = jsm (probe) jsm (probe) in decreasing order. the results are provided as haqq-plosone-supfile.xls ('results-correlation' sheet). this now gives ada as the first ranked gene. again using gather [ ] on the first genes recognized by the software, and again using gene ontology, we observe as most important common function that of cell motility (ccl , cxcl , fprl , sema a, spp ), p-value = . , bayes factor , and chemotaxis (ccl , cklfsf , cxcl , fprl , spp ), p-value, . , bayes factor . the genes cxcl , spp , and wars, together with another gene that has been annotated as related to positive regulation of mitosis (sch ), have also been annotated as regulators of cell proliferation (pvalue = . , bayes factor ). using the g:profiler software [ ] , we obtain a complementary information. sixteen genes (including spp , sema a, lef [ ] , cd , als cr , dkk , cyfip , shc , ankrd , ifi , cited , and mid ) have been associated to the gene ontology term of 'developmental process'. spp -secreted phosphoprotein (osteopontin). spp is one of the most conspicuous melanoma biomarkers [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] (see also the references cited in figure and note its eminent position in this scatter plot). in , craig et al. reported that spp may work as an autocrine adhesion factor for tumor cells (see also [ , , ] ). they observed that ''spp mrna, which is barely detectable in normal mouse epidermis, was expressed at moderate-to-high levels in of epidermal papillomas and at consistently high levels in of squamous-cell carcinomas induced by an initiation-promotion regimen'' [ ] . the evidence is being constantly expanded on the role of spp as a molecular prognostic biomarker in melanoma [ ] . activation of spp may be an important event that allows the transformed melanocytes to invade the dermis as proposed by geissinger et al. in [ ] . this causes spp to avoid the apoptotic stimulus, one of the ''hallmarks of cancer'', which invasive cells will be receiving from this new tissue. if we extend the literature-based search so that we now include the first gene probes recognized by gather then we have gene probes associated with the gene ontology in terms of ''cell proliferation'' (p-value = . , bayes factor ), and 'regulation of cell proliferation', p-value = . , bayes factor ). however, other partners of plk appear and their function in 'mitotic cell cycle' (pvalue = . , bayes factor ) is increasingly present (in particular, the m phase of the mitotic cell cycle). the details of the gene ontology terms which are significant and the genes associated to them are listed in table . the analysis using g:profiler largely coincides with the analysis using gather, however, it retrieves genes associated with the m phase of mitotic cell cycle, namely: aurka and aurkb [ , , ] , bub [ , ] , cdca a/sororin/p [ ] , cdc [ , ] , chek [ ] , kif /mklp- [ , , ] , map /asap [ , ] , ncapd , ncapg [ ] , nek [ , , , ] , plk [ , , ] , pttg /securin [ ] , shc /p [ , , ] (discussed in the context of shc signalling), and tfdp /dp- [ ] . these are a significant finding by g:profiler (p-value = . e- ). we have listed above some of the genes gene associated to the m phase of mitotic cell cycle and associated references which are either to current research in melanoma and/or its biological function. we now list other genes which have been associated with the term 'cell proliferation' by gather. these genes are: arpc b [ ] , arpc (which, together with spp , is also in the novel -biomarker panel of kashani-sabet et al. [ ] ), bccip (brca and cdkn a-interacting protein)/p -and cdk- figure . expression of a probe for cldn (claudin ) (y-axis) as a function of a probe for aquaporin (x-axis). other members of the aquaporin family of proteins have a similar behaviour. aqp , together with cldn are key components of the tight junction complexes of the epidermis and their joint loss of expression seem to be related to a transition to a more malignant phenotype. we use the same color coding as figure . doi: . /journal.pone. .g associated protein ) [ ] , bst /bone marrow stromal antigen /tetherin [ ] , ccl /mip- alpha [ , , ] , cct , cdca /sororin [ , , , , ] , cenpf/mitosin [ ] , cxcl /chemokine (c-x-c motif) ligand (melanoma growth stimulating activity, alpha) [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] (in uveal melanoma see [ ] ), cxcl [ ] , flt /vegfr [ , , , , , , , , , , , , ] , fth /ferritin heavy chain [ , , ] (which may indicate a necessary condition for the mainainance of iron sequestration and suppression of reactive oxygen species accumulation [ ] ), fprl , lig /dna ligase [ ] (which, together with xpa and ercc is associated to dna repair in ionizing radition studies [ ] ), mcmdc , psen , nrp /neuropilin /vascular endothelial cell growth factor receptor [ , , ] , sema a (a member of the semaphorin family, of increasing importance in cancer research [ , , ] and in particular due to its observed upregulation in undifferentiated embryonic stem cells [ ] ), slamf /cd (a marker associated with hematopoietic stem cells [ ] ), spp /osteopontin (which, together with arpc , is also in the novel -biomarker panel of kashani-sabet et al. [ ] ) [ , , , , , , ] [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,- , , , , , , , , , , , , ] , stk [ , ] , and wars/tryptophanyl-trna synthetise [ ] . figure shows a heat map of discussed gene probes annotated with functions on cell proliferation. the references provided next to each gene help to related these upregulated genes in the context of current research in melanoma or with the m phase of mitotic cell cycle, showing a high degree of correlation between our results and with published literature. another microarray dataset we have selected to evaluate for the relevance of transitions of normalized shannon entropy and statistical complexity was contributed by true et al. [ ] in . the original goal of true et al. was to identify a molecular correlate for gleason patterns and, if possible, the clinically most worrisome patterns and . they partially succeeded by linking the expression of only genes with gleason pattern [ ] using a standard statistical analysis. in this study, we eliminated sample - c since data was acquired using a different platform and would not be useful for our analysis. the remaining thirty one ( ) samples were assayed with the gpl (fhcrc human prostate pedb cdna array v ) platform using , probes. we also eliminated all the probes with missing values, remaining , probes. we have first plotted the samples on the (normalized shannon entropy, mpr-statistical complexity) plane ( figure ). it was interesting to observe that there exists a high correlation between the two measures. samples that are entirely composed of gleason pattern tend to have a greater value of normalized shannon entropy than . . we can also identify a cluster of samples that present gleason patterns which are either or . note that there seems to be two outliers ( _ e and _ ) to the generic trend of the other samples. the two outliers are samples that correspond to samples labelled as having gleason patterns and both have unusually low values of normalized shannon entropy that are well below the values of the rest of the group. this raised a suspicion about the true nature of this phenomenon. if the labelling is correct, this may indicate a subsampled group of prostate cancer that has gleason pattern characteristics but very low entropy. alternatively, it may indicate an experimental bias for reasons we can not explain with the available clinical information. in order to clarify the situation, and see if we can declare these two samples as outliers of the other group, we performed another experiment. we have now computed two modified complexities, which we will call m- gleason and m-gleason ( figure ). the names are probably selfexplanatory, but a brief reminder follows. to calculate the mpr-complexity, by definition, we have used the equiprobable distribution as our probability distribution of reference (for the computation of the jensen-shannon divergence of the gene expression profile to this distribution). in the case of the m-gleason , the probability distribution of the reference is obtained averaging all the probability distributions of the samples that have been labelled as gleason (analogously, we calculated m- gleason ) . samples that have gleason pattern and appear as separate clusters in the (m-gleason , m-gleason ) plane with the two putative outliers of the general trend far apart (even if they have been used to calculate the average probability distribution function of the gleason pattern). even samples with gleason pattern are located closer to samples of gleason patterns , and , indicating that, perhaps, there exists a subsampled subtype of prostate cancer or there might be another experimental bias or factor that at present we can not resolve with the information we have for these samples. consequently, we have decided to eliminate both samples ( - e and pna_ - a) from further calculations. with these considerations, we now have a dataset with , probes and samples as our dataset for further analysis. figure shows the distribution of the samples using the normalized shannon entropy and the mpr-complexity. by definition, the positions of the samples in the plane do not change (this figure is basically ''zooming in'' one region of figure that contains these samples). we note again, however, that the samples seem to be separating in three different clusters. whether we can argue about the existence or not of these gaps in normalized shannon entropy, it is clear that there seems to be a progression as we have seen with lapointe et al's dataset. there is a group of three samples with gleason pattern that seem to have the the largest normalized shannon entropy values. there is also a cluster that only contains samples of either gleason pattern and , all with normalized shannon entropy values smaller than . . there is also very little variation (see figure ) of the positions of the samples on the (m-gleason , m-gleason )-plane, indicating a degree of robustness that the computation of these modified complexities have, even in the presence of some outliers. after observing that figure shows a correlation of gleason pattern score with normalized shannon entropy, we asked ourselves: 'which are the genes that most positively and negatively correlate with the transitions of normalized shannon entropy?' we have plotted spearman versus pearson correlation values of probe expressions to attempt to find those that best correlate, either positively or negatively, with the normalized shannon entropy values of the samples. the results have revealed some of the most relevant biomarkers of progression, and some unexpected newcomers. figure shows the pearson and spearman correlations of all the , probes in the dataset with the normalized shannon entropy values of the samples. we have highlighted some particular genes that are discussed below. cdkn c (cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor c (p , inhibits cdk ). when we compute the correlations of the probes expressions with the normalized shannon entropy values of the samples, the gene that has the most negative correlations is cdkn c (cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor c -p , inhibits cdk -nm_ ), which has been previously associated with the transition from prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (pin) to prostate cancer [ ] figure . we plot the values of two modified statistical complexities, which we will call m-gleason and m- gleason . instead of using the equiprobable distribution as our probability distribution of reference (for the computation of the jensen-shannon divergence of the gene expression profile to this distribution), as required for the mpr-statistical complexity calculation, we used a different one. for the m-gleason , the probability distribution of the reference is obtained averaging all the probability distributions of the samples that have been labelled as gleason (analogously, we calculated m- gleason ) . this is analogous to our approach in melanoma ( figure ) in which we used normal and metastatic samples as reference sets for a modified statistical complexity. we observe that, even in this case, _ e and _ continue to appear as outliers. in addition to the evidence, we have observed that the deletion of these two samples did not significantly alter the identification of biomarkers. doi: . /journal.pone. .g samples _ e and _ seem to be outliers to this trend, and in the case of _ the sample is not even close to a hypothetical linear fit which seems to be the norm for all the samples. figure will provide further evidence that may indicate that these two samples are outliers or not to the overall trend. doi: . /journal.pone. .g with the dedifferentiation process, with preoperative psa levels and the percent of gleason and cancers [ ] . amacr, cyclin g , cdk and cdk . other probes that also have high negative correlations with the shannon normalized entropy correspond to ccng (cyclin g ) cr , cdk (cyclin-dependent kinase ), cdk (cyclin-dependent kinase , tfiih basal transcription factor complex kinase subunit) [ ] , and amacr (alpha-methylacyl-coa racemase), an ''obscure metabolic enzyme (that has taken) centre stage'' [ ] as judged by the extraordinary convergence to this biomarker in prostate. we believe that our result is an important finding. amacr was not judged of importance according to the methodology used in [ ] and it was barely cited in that manuscript. here we present results, from an unifying biological and informational principle, which allows (using ref. [ ] 's own data) the identification of the most central current biomarker with a truly compelling body of support in independent studies [ [ , ] . knockdown of brca results in the accumulation of multinucleated cells, indicating that brca regulates gene expression of an orderly progression during mitosis [ ] , preserving chromosomal stability [ ] . brca showed decreased expression in a study involving immortalized prostate epithelial cells before and after their conversion to tumorigenicity [ ] . lack of brca function may impair activation of stat [ ] . inactivation of tp by somatic mutations is also associated to the panel of disruptions which are common for this ''tumor suppressor'' [ ] . one possible mechanism for gene silencing is cpg island methylation. rabiau et al.show in [ ] that brca , rassf , gstp and ephb promoter methylation is common in prostate biopsy samples. mannicia et al. suggest that the mitochondrial localization of brca proteins may be a significant factor in regulating the mitochondrial dna damage [ ] . sfpq -(polypyrimidine tract-binding protein-associated splicing factor). the most positively correlated gene with the loss of normalized shannon entropy is sfpq/psf (polypyrimidine tract-binding protein-associated splicing factor) (spearman correlation of . ), a multifaceted nuclear factor [ , ] which is also a putative regulator of growth factor-stimulated gene expression [ ] . this is extremely interesting as it has been recently shown that the ar/psf complex interacts with human psa gene and that psf inhibits ar transcriptional activity [ ] . the loss of expression of sfpq and other proteins that together regulate androgen receptor-mediated gene transcription [ ] (see also [ , ] ) may indicate they have a role not only as a biomarker of the progression and well as transitions of the disease to androgen independence. in a study of human labor, dong et al., also showed that sfpq acts as a progesterone receptor corepressor, thus putatively contributing to the functional withdrawal of progesterone [ ] . we will return to this particular gene later on the 'discussion' section as new evidence of its role in nuclear organization has been documented. cd -(tnfrsf , b-cell surface antigen cd ). the loss of normalized shannon entropy gives us several markers that indicate a de-differentiation from a epithelial basal phenotype and an increasing loss of control of cell cycle regulation (due to uncoordinated upregulation of cdk , cdk , ccng with their functional partners). this poses the question: what can we observe while looking at the genes that most positively correlate with the loss of normalized shannon entropy? we observe, second on the ranking of all samples, a probe for cd (tnfrsf , b-cell surface antigen cd ), bx with a spearman correlation of . . loss of cd expression has been previously reported in prostate cancer and it is the object of a study that attempts to establish dendritic cell gene therapies [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] . we will continue discussing cd in the following subsection in concert with other genes. another natural question can be asked: which is the extra information that we can obtain the by analysing the correlations with the mpr-statistical complexity in this case? as we have discussed before, and can be appreciated from figure , there is a strong correlation between the mpr-statistical complexity and the value of the normalized shannon entropy. it appears in prostate cancer, as in this gene expression dataset, the reduction of entropy is not the major factor responsible for the increase in mpr-statistical complexity. again, it is perhaps better to now look at one of the multiplicative factors of the statistical complexity measure, the jensen-shannon divergence to the equiprobability distribution, as this is increasing the mpr-complexity. cd . we present more evidence of the case of cd as a biomarker, since a probe for cd (bx ) ranks th (the spearman correlation of the probe expression with the jensen-shannon divergence from the equiprobability distribution is . ). cd is a member of the tnf receptor superfamily. notably, in out of archival prostate cancer samples palmer et al. have reported no cd expression [ ] . however, cd expression was present in normal prostatic acini, so they proposed that ''invasive prostate cancer is a cd -negative tumour'' (see the previous results of moghaddami et. al. [ ] ). matching our observations, they proposed that cd provides ''insight into progression of cancer from normal epithelium''; our proposed methodology is revealing this fact as well. depletion of cd in the tumour microenvironment may be central in avoiding the action of the immune system [ ] , as prostate cancer induces a progressive suppression of the dendritic cell system [ ] . it is perhaps a central piece which should be put together in the context of other pieces of information coming from immunotherapy [ , , , ] and pharmacological studies [ ] that warrant serious investigation towards the design of new and improved clinical studies [ , ] . cd molecule, complement regulatory protein. four probes for protectin [ , , ] , cd , with spearman correlations with the jensen-shannon divergence from the equiprobable distribution, ranging from . to . , rank between the st and th position (when we rank genes according to this correlation in ascending order). cd is an interesting gene as ''a comprehensive investigation of cd expression in prostate cancer has not been conducted yet'' [ ] . like lmna (which is ranked third and will be discussed later) the rank of cd / protectin means that these genes progressively loose expression of these probes. cd is expressed in the prostatic epithelium [ ] and in prostasomes [ ] ; secretory granules which are produced, stored and released by the glandular epithelial cells of the prostate [ ] . babiker et al. concluded in [ ] that prostasomes (via expression cd ) contribute to the protection of malignant cells from complement attack. we now investigate if the ratio of deltacatenin to cd can is a more robust biomarker for non-invasive prostate cancer detection, particularly after the results presented in [ ] . we also note that cd may be also relevant to reveal the heterogeneous nature of prostate cancer. its correlation was good, but is not lower than . , which in our experience, indicates that we may be dealing with at least two types tumors in this dataset. indeed, xu et al. obtained cd mrna levels were determined by real-time pcr in matched (tumor/normal) microdissected tissues from cases and they found that: ''high rates of cd expression were noted in % of prostate cancer cases and were significantly associated with tumor pt stage (p = . ), gleason grade (p = . ) and earlier biochemical (psa) relapse in kaplan-meier analysis (p = . ). on rna level, we found an upregulation in . % (five cases), although the general rate of cd transcript was significantly lower in tumor tissue (p = . )'' [ ] . they concluded that: ''cd protein is strongly expressed in % of adenocarcinomas of the prostate and and is associated with disease progression and adverse patient prognosis'' [ ] . jarvis et al. have previously hypothesized that cd expression, in some cancer cells, may help to regulate the immunological response, protecting them from the cytolytic activity of complement [ ] (see also [ , ] ). lmna (lamin a/c). the third probe in the ranking corresponds to a lmna (lamin a/c), ay . mutations on lmna have been linked at different human diseases [ , ] . lmna, due to its functions, could be involved in important cell fate decisions as lamins are involved in the organization of the functional state (and position) of interphase chromosome [ ] . lamins are ''scaffolders'' for the function of nuclear processes such as chromatin organization, dna replication, cellular integrity and transcription [ ] . as a consequence lamins are involved in several clinical syndromes [ , , ] . among the recent functions attributed to lmna is as an intrinsic modulator of ageing within adult stem cells via a mechanism where lmna act as signalling receptors in the nucleus. these observations correspond to pekovic and hutchinson who observed that dysfunction of lmna leads to inappropriate activation of self-renewal pathways and initiation of stress-induced senescense [ ] . in lmna-deficient mouse embryonic fibroblasts (lmna( / ) mefs), the loss of lmna''dramatically affects the micromechanical properties of the cytoplasm'', since ''both the elasticity (stretchiness) and the viscosity (propensity of a material to flow) of the cytoplasm in lmna( / ) mefs are significantly reduced'' [ ] . using ballistic intracellular nanorheology to evaluate the micromechanical properties of the cytoplasm of these cells, lee et al. conclude: ''together these results show that both the mechanical properties of the cytoskeleton and cytoskeleton-based processes, including cell motility, coupled mtoc and nucleus dynamics, and cell polarization, depend critically on the integrity of the nuclear lamina, which suggest the existence of a functional mechanical connection between the nucleus and the cytoskeleton. these results also suggest that cell polarization during cell migration requires tight mechanical coupling between mtoc and nucleus, which is mediated by lamin a/c'' [ ] (see also [ , ] ). in addition to these very interesting findings, a functional association of lmna and the retinoblastoma protein (prb) exists. nitta et al. have shown that prb needs to be stabilized by lmna for ink a-mediated cell cycle arrest and that somatic mutations in lmna may also have a role in tumor progression [ ] . in mammalian cells, lmna a) colocalizes with c-fos at the nuclear envelope, b) suppresses ap- through a direct interaction with c-fos and, in lmna-null cells perinuclear localization of c-fos is absent (but it is restored when it is overexpressed, c) lmna-null cells have enhanced proliferation [ ] . these results obtained by ivorra et al. are giving the indication that of yet another mechanism of cell cycle and transcriptional control mediated by lmna [ ] (see also [ ] ). lmna has also been proposed as an inhibitor of adipocyte differentiation [ ] . hutchingson et al. have proposed the alias of ''guardian of the soma'' for lamins a and c as they seem to have ''essential functions in protecting cells from physical damage, as well as in maintaining the function of transcription factors required for the differentiation of adult stem cells'' [ ] . from our results, we can not completely establish if the downregulation of cd and cd are enough to pinpoint an impaired or abnormal immune response. if we continue the inspection of the list, the first probes give us more supporting evidence. the probes correspond to different genes. five of these genes have genome ontology information annotated as ''defense response'', the above mentioned cd and cd as well as il r (interleukin receptor, cr ), xbp (x-box binding protein , ak ) and hla-a (major histocompatibility complex class i hla-a . , bu ). takahashi et al. [ ] report an inverse correlation between xbp expression and histological differentiation in a series of prostate cancers without hormonal therapy, the expression of xbp was localized in epithelial and adenocarcinoma cells of the prostate and the majority of refractory cancer cases exhibited weak xbp expression), mst /stk (along with mst /stk ) act as inhibitors of endogenous akt , a mediator of cell growth and survival [ ] . we can not yet know what reason is behind their joint downregulation, but another interesting common denominator is that out of genes share a regulatory motif for nf-kappab (according to transfac, v$nfkb_q _ ). a putative role for nf-kappab in prostate cancer has been reported based on the observation of the centrality of nfkb on two up-and downregulated networks compairing prostate tumors and healthy tissue [ ] and in a larger study by mcdonnel et al. [ ] ( core prostate cancer tissue microarrays from prostatectomy specimens). several other researchers are currently investigating different roles of the nfkb family in prostate cancer [ , , , , , , , ] and it could be a promising target for intervention [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ]. if we include other genes following the ranking order, the first genes in the ranking include that have the regulatory motif v$nfkb_q _ (gather reports for this list a p-value of . ). even when we double the list to the probes that correspond to the first different genes recognized by gather, of them have the regulatory motif v$nfkb_q _ , with p-value = . (atp ap , bcat , btg [ , , , , , , ] , c orf , c orf , ccl , cd , cd (already discussed), cd (already discussed), chi l , col a , commd , crabp , csrp , ctbp , ctgf (connective tissue growth factor, [ , , , ] ), des, dmn, dnajb , egf, emp , fhl [ , , , , , ] , gripap , gstm [ , ] , hbegf, il r, itga , itga , junb [ , ] , kiaa , kiaa , kiaa , klf , lamb , lmna (already discussed), nfatc , nfkb , nudc [ ] , p hb, pdk , pim , pisd, pxn, rap b, rnf , sara , sec a , sgta [ ] , slc a , srd a , stat [ , ] , tacstd , tbx , tmed , vps , wdfy , xbp [ ] , zak). this result indicates that our results support the importance of nfkappa-b and the huge amount of research effort to understand the role of the nfkappa-b activity and its potential as a target for intervention in prostate cancer (file s ). the group of biomarkers contains one of particular interest, stat . this gene is considered a survival factor in prostate cancer and a key regulator of the genetic transcriptional program responsible for progression [ ] . stat has been recently linked to hpn as one of the most robust pair of biomarkers for prostate cancer using an integrative approach that linked several microarray datasets [ ] . analysis using gather of this group reveals that six of these genes are in kegg pathway path:hsa , focal adhesion (egf, itga , itga , lamb , pxn, rap b, p-value, . ) and from these there are three in pathway:hsa , ecm-receptor interaction (itga , itga , lamb , p-value, . ) while four of these six are also in path:hsa : regulation of actin cytoskeleton, (egf, itga , itga , pxn, p-value, . ). lamb . alterations of the gene profile of lamb and cdkn c/p (ink c), a cdk inhibitor, have been reported on the transition from prostatic intraepithelial neoplasia (pin) to prostate cancer [ ] (see also [ ] ). ). the contribution of the loss of these integrins and the subsequent derived impairment on cell adhesion has been reported in several tumours. ren et al. in [ ] report that ''focal or no integrin alpha eexpression in human prostate cancer and soft tissue leiomyosarcoma was associated with a reduction of metastasis-free survival (for example, for prostate cancer with focal or no expression, -year metastasis-free survival was %, % ci = . % to . %, and for prostate cancer with at least weak expression, it was %, % ci = % to %; p-value,. )''. ''any method involving the notion of entropy, the very existence of which depends on the second law of thermodynamics, will doubtless seem to many far-fetched, and may repel beginners as obscure and difficult of comprehension.'' willard gibbs, graphical methods in the thermodynamics of fluids, ( ) the changes of the normalized shannon entropy and statistical complexity of the gene expression profile of a cancer cell are associated with the gradual deterioration of genome transcriptional information content due to the modification of its structural and functional integrity during disease progression. our results clearly suggest that we can track the cancer cell's progression by following observable changes in the shannon entropy and, in particular, by employing the jensen-shannon divergence of the gene expression profile of a sample to the normal expression profile. we have also shown if an average expression profile of some state of interest can be properly defined (i.e. distant metastasis) then the jensen-shannon divergence can help us to identify which probes best correlate with these measures resulting in useful biomarkers. before any thermodynamical consideration could be discussed, we note that there is a clear and objective informational perspective that our study delivers. in this study we have chosen to position ourselves as the 'receivers' of a 'transcriptional message'. in this experimental perspective the tumor tissue is the 'sender' (the source of information) and the high-throughput technology (gene expression microarrays in this case) can be regarded as the transmission medium (providing noise and distortion). as we explain in the 'materials and methods' section, the shannon entropy of a gene expression profile is the average expected surprisal of that profile understood as a message. the normalized shannon entropy makes this surprisal an intensive measure and the correlation of the gene expression patterns across samples with this measure can deliver useful biomarkers to track the progression of transcriptional change. after normalization, we have a measure that does not depend of the number of probes of the high-throughput technology, although, it obviously does depend on the type of probes used. we believe that the readers may have already noticed an apparent paradox. while some researchers understand cancer progression as a mechanism that increases entropy, we actually observe a reduction of normalized shannon entropy in this work. this means that our normalized average expected surprisal, as receivers of the transcriptional message, is smaller. we must then discuss the physical meaning of thermodynamic entropy, its current use in systems biology and cancer research genetics and the informational measure we use in this paper to clarify these notions in this context. in biomedical research there exists a certain consensus among cancer researchers that genetic instability or ''mutability'' is a major critical force of cancer progression, but it is not the only one to consider. it is clear that the mutational damage of key genes (like tp , tert, brca , rb , etc.), and the collective damage inflicted on key dna repair mechanisms (like nucleotide-excision repair and base-excision repair) collaborate for an increasing acceleration of the number of genomic changes. sub-microscopic alterations of the genome accumulate in cancer progression in an irreversible way and ''are compounded by the widespread scrambling of the chromosome structure, and thus the karyotype, found in cells from the great majority of solid tumours'' [ ] . in weinberg's own words [ ] : ''we learned that this chromosomal chaos also contributes this progression forward''. this ''chromosomal chaos'' [ ] or ''cancer as a chromosomal disease'' perspective is viewed by some researchers not as just a side consequence of mutational damage, but as the main core theme to understand a number of unexplained issues in cancer progression. ''in sum, cancer is caused by chromosomal disorganization, which increases karyotypic entropy'' [ ] . regarding the cancer types studied in this paper, one particular ''measure of disorder of a system'', aneuploidy, has been observed in poorly-differentiated prostate cancer cells and it is often associated with a more agreessive phenotype [ , ] , increased psa levels [ , ] , and correlate with gleason score [ , , ] . gene fusions and chromosomal rearrangements are other source of increase in the ''disorder'' of the genome organization and they are increasingly being recognized as a major player in prostate cancer progression [ ] . the increase in ''karyotypic complexity'' and ''extended aneuploidy and heteroploidy'' may be already enough to develop a malignant melanoma phenotype, as the report of gagos et al. indicate [ ] . the observed finding of aneuploidy in melanoma (also including uveal melanoma) is also increasingly important due to a number of different independent observations [ , , , , , , , , ] . it is in this context that the word 'entropy' has been used. the magnitude of the ''chromosomal chaos'' is also evident from comparative genomic hybridization (cgh) studies which show significant variations in the copy number of individual chromosomal segments. 'chaos' is really a very appropriate word to describe what we observe from cgh data. the genomic changes are not distributed uniformly at random. 'chaos' has been described by some researchers as ''a kind of order without any periodicity''. some common changes seem to consistently appear in several independently arising tumours of the same type, and sometimes the researchers suggest common links [ ] . our work has addressed, in part, this question: ''can we quantify the chaos observed in the genome from the increasingly available transcriptional data and relate it to tumour progression?'' if no commonalities were observed, we would not have found interesting biomarkers that seem that strongly correlate with the divergences from normal tissue types. we know from our results that these commonalities do occur. we need to go back to basics to explain these evolving concepts and resolve this apparent paradox. the phrase ''karyotypic entropy'' has been used in the past to define what is actually a divergence from the normal chromosome structure and it genomic organization. this denomination has also been employed by several authors, notably [ ] , but it has also been used in at least two other publications [ , ] . these works have in common the use of this term to refer to a ''disorder'', fuelled by the undergraduate textbooks indoctrination of associating increase of entropy in natural spontaneous processes with the increase of ''observed disorder'' in the system. we propose that the use of a natural measure of divergence, the jensen-shannon divergence, could not only be a more formal, but also more appropriate modelling approach. as such, we propose to introduce the term 'karyotypic divergence' or 'karyotypic jensen-shannon divergence' to replace this concept and to avoid a subjective approach. why is it the case that we observe the normalized shannon entropy of the transcriptional profile decreasing with cancer progression when intuitively our average expected surprisal (shannon entropy) should increase with progression? arieh ben-naim in his recent book ''a farewell to entropy: statistical thermodynamics based on information'' [ ] comments:''it is interesting to note that landsberg ( ) not only contended that disorder is an ill-defined concept, but actually made the assertion that 'it is reasonable to expect 'disorder' to be an intensive variable'''. ben-naim also states: ''in my view, it does not make any difference if you refer to information or to disorder, as subjective or objective. what matters is that order and disorder are not well-defined scientific concepts. on the other hand, information is a well-defined scientific quantity, as much as a point or a line are scientific in geometry, or mass or charge of a particle are scientific in physics.'' however, in a manuscript entitled ''can entropy and 'order' increase together ?'' landberg defines (in an attempt to decouple the notions of order and entropy), for a thermodynamical system that can be on n states the 'disorder' d(n) to be the normalized entropy (which is a function of n) divided by boltzmann's constant [ ] . 'disorder' then is an intensive magnitude bounded by and , and 'order' is defined as -d(n) . while landberg's decoupling argument between order and entropy [ ] may still be controversial in physics, the question is pertinent for our apparent paradox (the question that motivates this subsection). borrowing from the title of his paper we could now state the central question as ''can shannon entropy increase while the normalized shannon entropy decrease?'' the solution of this apparent paradox is a trick of escapologism, perhaps also paralleled by what a cancer cell may be experiencing (or ''reacting'' in response to increased sources of stresses), and it is worth discussing in this context. let h[x] be shannon entropy for an ensamble x with n different values. we will now assume, and here is the trick, that n is not a constant, but a function of time n(t). let d(x (n(t) )) be the normalized shannon entropy. by definition d(x(n(t))) = h(x(n(t)))/log (n(t)). then, just by taking the time derivatives it can be shown that the time variation of d(x(n(t))) can be negative, although the time rate of h[x] can be positive. where k is a constant. the escape to our paradox is ''achieved'' via making explicit the time variability of n(t). landberg explicitly mentions that biological systems are examples where growth processes increase n(t), and perhaps the increased diversity in the transcriptome of a cancer cell during progression is one of such examples. this discussion somehow resolves the apparent disassociations due to language barriers that may exist between the different disciplines (physics, information theory, molecular biology and oncology). a biologist may regard a cancer cell as an entity that, during progression, may ''spread'' its transcriptomic profile, including the generation of a large number of novel molecular species (due to adquired characteristics during its ''devolution'' from the normal type). in our informational perspective, this would be analogous to a situation in which the sender of a message, after some time, decides to increase the size of the alphabet of transmitted symbols. clearly, it is intuitive to think that the receiver would be in a situation of increased shannon entropy. however, if the receiver is not aware of the new symbols (or is not able to detect them) and some of the symbols of the previous alphabet are no longer used, the receiver would now perceive a reduction of normalized shannon entropy, observing an increasing order. we now borrow an illustrative example from landberg [ ] , but we add a twist to this argument for the purpose of illustrating this discussion. suppose we have a sender transmitting only two possible symbols (n = ), and we will assume that we have the same probability, let's denote this as ( / , / ). then the average expected surprisal (shannon entropy), is h(x) = , and the normalized shannon entropy is also equal to one. assume now that now our sender starts to transmit using another symbol, so that we now have theoretical probabilities of ( . , . , . ). then n = , and the average expected surprisal increases to h(x ) = . the normalized shannon entropy is now . /log ( ) = . … (a reduction). this 'third symbol' could actually represent a new ''molecular species'' or a protein isoform that would not be normally expressed in that tissue type [ ] , or even something entirely new, product of a mutational/deletional event. if our hypothetical high-throughput technology can only be detecting the first two symbols, and following the conventions we established in the 'materials and methods' section, we would be ''observing'' frequencies of ( / , / ) since the other events would not be detected with our equipment. as a consequence, the both the log ( ) = , shannon entropy and the normalized shannon entropy are both reduced to . . obviously, we can not count what we can not observe. as a consequence, a degenerating transcriptional profile that produces novel molecular species, and at the same time reduces those which we can not measure with a particular technology, would look increasingly more ordered. we envision that physicists may find here a fertile ground to explore new ideas and attempt novel mathematical formalisms for cancer progression from the realm of finite-state thermodynamics [ ] and in particular endorevesible processes [ ] and endoreversible thermodynamics [ ] . some molecular alterations would then be part of the set of revesible processes that could occur in a cancer cell, while other processes like aneuploidy or gene fusions could be truly ''irreversible genetic switches'' associated with cancer progression [ ] . if we assume that the process is slow (i.e. the times required for significant variations of the transcriptome's profile is large in comparison with the cell's processes time scales), and follwing the results of spirkl and reis [ ] , it may be possible that we have a constant entropy production rate exists during cancer progression leading to hauptmann's ''entropic devolution'' [ ] . hauptmann sees a malignant tumour as ''a dissipative structure arising within the thermodynamical open system of the human body'' that starts when ''a localized surplus of energy exists and there is no possibility to export entropy. an energetic overload in most malignant cells is indicated by their abnormally high phosphorylation state.'' his perspective, preceeded in part by dimitrov [ ] , klimek [ , ] and marinescu and viculetz [ ] might then fit well an endoreversible thermodynamic formalism. hauptmann says in [ ] ''i believe that cancer is a special kind of adaptation to energetic overload, characterized by multiplication and mutation of genomic dna (generation of new biomolecules which enhance the probability of survival under harmful conditions), and by chiral alterations (reduction of entropy by entrapping energy) leading to abnormal configurated biomolecules. in this regard the genetic alterations are probably secondary changes. cancer serves to dissipate energy in a type of developmental process but one in which the results are harmful to the whole organism: an entropic devolution.'' this thermodynamical perspective is now worth exploring and we will discuss it in this context. assuming that a cancer cell is in a state of ''energy overload'', without ''the possibility of exporting entropy'', could it lead to some type of ''genetic alterations''? which key mechanisms might be impaired? what consequences is this ''system'' delivering? could this be another hallmark for oncosystems indentification? in , in this book called ''theory of heat'', maxwell speculated the idea of ''a being, who can see the individual molecules'' and who has enough reactive intelligence to open and close a unique small hole existing between two communicating vessels (called 'a' and 'b'). an ideal gas filled both vessels, so that starting at uniform temperature the intelligent being could observe the molecules and close and open the hole accordingly to a mission: ''to allow only the swifter molecules to pass from a to b, and only the slower ones pass from b to a.'' the being, ''without expenditure of work raise the temperature of b and lower that of a in contradiction to the second law of thermodynamics.'' the ability of the ''being'' to use observable information about the system to lower the thermodynamical entropy has motivated many articles in physics and fuelled the imagination of many since it was originally introduced by mawell, and named as ''demon'' by thomson three years later [ ] . an excellent collection of articles until [ , , , , , , , , , , ] was edited by leff and rex [ ] . the maxwell ''demon'', far from being ''exorcised'' from physics, still inspires interesting new perspectives [ , , , , , , , , , , , , ]. in a letter to peter guthrie tait, maxwell writes about the ''demons'': ''is the production of an inequality of temperature their only occupation? no, for less intelligent demons can produce a difference in pressure as well as temperature by merely allowing all particles going in one direction while stopping all those going the other way. this reduces the demon to a valve. as such value him. call him no more a demon but a valve like that of the hydraulic ram, suppose.'' (from [ ] , p. ). maxwell gives again here a sign of his brilliant mind, ''degrading'' the demon to a valve, but also offering an inspiring perspective to oncosystems research. which types of mechanisms exist in biological systems, and particularly in individual cells, to control these differential values in key parameters? could changes of key physical parameters for metabolic processes of the cytoplasm and cell's organelles like temperature, volume, ph or electrochemical potentials be also implicated in cancer progression? the influence of temperature may be giving an interesting working hypothesis for further research. what are the consequences if cancer cells are a different type of open system which also operates at a different temperature than a normal cell? butler et al. have studied p and they argue that at temperatures above degrees centigrades wild-type p spontaneously loses dna binding activity. while folding kinetics do not show important changes in a range from to degrees c, the unfolding rates accelerate , -fold. this leads to a somewhat unexpected mechanism of p inactivation. it could be the case that a fraction of p molecules become trapped in misfolded conformations with each folding-unfolding cycle due to the increased frequency of cycling. the occurrence of misfolded p proteins can lead to aggregation and subsequent ubiquitination in the cell, leading to p inactivation [ , ] . if a key ''guardian of the genome integrity'' [ , ] and its remarkable conformational flexibility [ ] is challenged by an increase of temperature [ ] , its role in genotoxic damage and adaptive response (like that of the skin to uvb damage [ ] ) may be impaired. the same may occur for other members of the dna damage response. an increment in temperature has already been linked to skin carcinogenesis. boukamp et al. report in that [ ] ''exposure of immortal human hacat skin keratinocytes (possessing uv-type p mutations) to degrees c reproducibly resulted in tumorigenic conversion and tumorigenicity was stably maintained after recultivation of the tumors.'' on the other hand, natural gradients on physical biochemical properties can also be challenged in a cancer cell. this in turn derives in metabolic processes running under abnormal parametric circumstances. it is well-known that compartimentalization, in biological systems, naturally require the existence of mechanisms that would keep some key state variables relatively constant, or within bounds, for normal operation of the metabolic processes. one example is very illustrative and a case in point. instead of demons, holes, or valves, the cell requires pores in its membranes to allow osmotic regulatory processes, yet it should preclude the conduction of protons. this is a nanotechnological design problem not faced by maxwell, but certainly solved by biological systems without the need of an ''intelligent being'' as mawell cleverly pointed to tait in his letter. this discussion brings us to one of the gene families we have already discussed in this paper, the aquaporins [ , , , , , , ] . they are considered the primary water channels of cell membranes [ , , , ] . the specific functions of each member of this family are now being slowly mapped by several research labs around the world [ ] . their clinical role in cancer [ , , , , , , , , ] ,obesity [ ] , malaria [ , ] and other diseases is emerging [ , , , , , , , , , , , ] . in [ ] , our group observed the dowregulation of aqp in all melanoma cell lines studied of the nci- dataset of ross et al.; this dowregulation was also observed for the cns and renal cell lines. aqp was relatively upregulated for leukaemia and colon cell-lines (we refer the reader to the supplementary material of [ ] for details). inhibition of aqp in prostate cancer cells was already proposed as a mechanism that increases the sensitivity to cryotherapy treatment [ ] . the aquaporins are not ''an intelligent being'' in any real sense, yet they are so formidable selective that they could easily parallel maxwell demon's efficiency in creating the right conditions for the cell. wu et al. give us some clues on the role of point mutations in the aqp and how their effective electrostatic proton barrier can be impaired [ ] . the elicitation of the detailed mechanistic explanation of this extraordinary selectivity is under intense investigation with a number of techniques, including sophisticated molecular dyanamics simulations, for an overview of this field see [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] . one less known feature of aquaporins is that they may not only channel water, but also carbon dioxide and ammonia [ , , ] , glycerol [ ] and urea and other small solutes [ ] and, very relevant for cancer research, hydrogen peroxide [ ] . at least two of members of this family have been observed in the inner mitochondrial membrane in different tissues. this in turn may indicate mitochondrial roles for aquapotins in osmotic swelling induced by apoptotic stimuli [ ] . could it be possible that we can track cancer progression by looking at some of these ''maxwell demons''? we have seen in figure , that aqp has a reduced expression with increased progression in our melanoma dataset. cao et al., reported that ultraviolet radiation induced aqp down-regulation in human karatinocytes; thus aqp has become a strong and plausible link between uv radiation, skin dehydration [ , ] and photoaging [ ] . this may indicate an impared function on skin hydration [ , , , , , ] . the expression of aqp , as well as aqp , aqp , and aqp seem to be correlated with melanoma progression, indicating a common pattern of downregulation from the higher values in normal skin and benign nevi (see figure ). does a similar pattern of aquaporin downregulation exist in prostate cancer? wang et al. have looked at the expression and localization of aqp in human prostate using cell lines as well as patient samples. they have observed aqp mrna ''in both normal and cancerous epithelia of human prostate tissues, but not in the mesenchyme. in the normal epithelia of the prostate, localization was limited to cell membranes, particularly the basolateral membranes. however, the expression of aqp protein in the cancer epithelia was not observed on the cell membranes.'' this finding seems to implicate the subcellular localization of aqp as a possible indicator of a transition to a more malignant phenotype. lapointe's dataset allows us to see the downregulation of aqp and aqp . a large subgroup of primary prostate tumors has reduced levels of aqp and aqp as most of the lymph node metastasis samples [ figure ]. one critique that we are aware we could receive is that the current manuscript presents a novel methodology and an underlying unifying theory based on retrodictions or postdictions. indeed we have shown that the use of the normalized shannon entropy and the information theory quantifiers (the m-complexities and the jensen-shannon divergence) allow to monitor cancer progression and to identify the best biomarkers that correlate with the transcriptomic changes. our approach works in a retrodiction way in that it looks at data already obtained by other studies, but gives a unifying framework to track cancer progression. for instance, on true et al's dataset, our unifying hallmark of cancer gives not only maoa, which was already identified in the original publication, but also amacr, cd , cdk , etc. are very important biomarkers for prostate cancer. analogously, the identification of klk /psa in lapointe's dataset is another important retrodiction which shows the power of the method. in some sense our approach also works in a postdiction way, as it helps to evaluate the speculation that cancer cells have ''an entropic devolution''. our results show that the variations of normalized shannon entropy and jensen-shannon divergences indeed give measurable changes, and that these changes are related to important biomarkers in the two types of cancer studied in this work. in addition, we remark that we are literally making hundreds, or even thousands of predictions. the results in the 'supplementary material' provide this information for the detailed scrutiny of our peers. we believe that other probes with gene expression patterns in high correlation with the probes discussed in this paper, and perhaps less studied by immunohistochemistry and other methods in the two cancer types studied here, are worth exploring as a group of biomarkers. these predictions can be tested with further studies on staging and patient stratification. a very recent study by ballal et al. have linked brca to telomere length and maintenance and its loss from the telomere in response to dna damage [ ] (see also [ ] ). we have previously mentioned that brca is a conspiquous biomarker arising from the analysis of true et al.'s dataset using our methods. we found this to correlate with a preivous study that showed that brca has a reduced expression in immortalized prostate epithelial cells before and after their conversion to tumorigenicity [ ] . we also mentioned that the knockdown of brca leads to anaccumulation of multinucleated cells [ ] , preserving chromosomal stability [ ] . ballal et al. telomeric chip assays to detect brca at the telomere and reported time-dependent loss of brca from the telomere following dna damage. due to the role of telomeres in maintaining chromosomal stability [ ] and the inverse correlation of telomere length and divergent karyotypes in prostate cancer cell lines [ , ] (as well as the recognized role of telomere dysfunction in the induction of apoptosis or senescence in vivo [ , , , , , ] , increase of mutation rates [ ] , dna fragmentation [ ] , and their relation with dna damage signalling [ ] ), we checked for other probes of genes involved in telomeric function. from those which we were able to identify in true et al's dataset, we have found a strong high correlation of the expression of brca with terf /trf (telomeric repeat binding factor ) [ ] and a negative correlation with the expression pattern of terf ip (telomeric repeat binding factor , interacting protein) [ figure ]. finally, one particular type of probes has also caught our attention, and we would like to refer to them before concluding this section. with the denomination of 'non-coding rna' we identify those rna molecules which are functional but that are not translated into proteins. many microarray chips contain probes that are annotated as 'non-protein coding', indicating that there might be some valuable expression data that we can also mine for information. we note that our method, although employing transcriptomic data, does not limit its application to proteincoding information, and that the combined use of protein-coding and non-coding protein probe expression would allow a more comprehensive view of the transcriptional state of the cell. among non-protein coding, micrornas [ ] are gaining acceptance as key players in several cancers [ , , ] (including prostate cancer [ , ] ), but the so-called ''long noncoding rnas'' [ ] are also gaining a place in the scenario of cancer biomarkers (see [ ] , and [ , , ] ). we thus turned our attention to these probes that have been annotated as ''nonprotein coding'' and we highlight some of them that have very high correlation values with the normalized shannon entropy in true et al's prostate cancer dataset. in particular, the probes for malat / malat- [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] have a very conspiquous position (see figure ) . they located very closely to other protein coding biomarkers that have also lost expression and have been discussed in this work like sfpq, cd , brca , and tp (see figure ). malat has been recently pointed as a biomarker in primary human lobular breast cancer as a result of an analysis of over , roche highconfidence deep sequencing reads [ ] . an international team, searching on thousands of novel non-coding transcripts of the breast cancer transcriptome, has been able to identify more than three hundred reads corresponding to malat [ ] . this is a noncoding rna which was identified in in non-small cell lung cancer, was shown to be highly expressed (relative to gapdh) in lung, pancreas and prostate, but not in other tissues including muscle, skin, stomach, bone marrow, saliva, thyroid and adrenal glands, uterus and fetal liver [ ] . malat- , also known as neat , is considered to be ''extraordinarily conseved for a noncoding rna, more so than even xist'' [ ] . our results indicate that the reduction of expression of some non-coding rnas, in particular of malat- , and snora with respect to their normal expression in prostate, as well as the upregulation of snhg and snhg should be monitored as useful biomarkers to track disease progression. we will now address another non-coding rna called neat which, like neat , is also conserved in the mammalian lingeage. before we move onto neat , we will first recall a previous result. we have noted before the conspiquous position of sfpq/psf (polypyrimidine tract-binding protein-associated splicing factor) in figure . the expression of a probe for spqf has the highest correlation with the values of the normalized shannon entropy. we highlighted before that sfpq/psf is a putative regulator of growth factor-stimulated gene expression [ ] . the loss of sfpq expression during the progression of prostate cancer may be an important key to understand this disease or one of its subtypes. we have also mentioned that the ar/psf complex interacts with the psa gene (perhaps the most well-established prostate cancer biomarker) and that sfpq/psf inhibits ar transcriptional activity [ ] . kuwahara et al. showed that sfpq together with nono (non-pou-domain-containing, octamer binding protein) and pspc (paraspeckle protein alpha isoform, formerly known as psp ) are expressed in mouse sertoli cells of the testis and form complexes that function as coregulators of androgen receptormediated transcription [ ] . while new research results [ ] link sfpq and nono/p nrb with the rad family of proteins (largely regarded as another key protector of chromosome integrity as being involved in homologous recombination dna repair), it is perhaps sfpq and nono's co-localization in paraspeckles that make this group also remarkable [ ] . paraspeckles [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] are a novel nuclear compartment, of approximately . - mm in size, discovered in , by fox et al. in dundee scotland, following the identification of the protein pspc (af ) in the nucleolar proteomics project at lamond's lab which is described well by fox et al. [ ] . three years later, fox, bond and lamond showed that nono and pspc form a heterodimer that localizes to paraspeckles in an rna-dependent manner [ ] . paraspeckles are dynamic structures, observed in numbers that vary between and , that seem to control gene expression via retention of rna in the nucleus [ ] . a long noncoding rna called neat /men epsilon/beta [ , , , , ] , that colocalizes with paraspeckles, seems to be integral to their structure. depletion of neat erradicates paraspeckles and a biochemical analysis by clemson et al indicates that the neat binds with paraspeckle proteins sfpq/psf, p nrb/nono and pspc . neat is also known as tncrna (trophoblast-derived noncoding rna) [ , , , , , , , , ] and probes for tncrna exist on this dataset, we have observed in true et al.'s dataset that there exists a high correlation between the normalized shannon entropy with the expression of sfpq/psf, p nrb/nono, and tncrna. overall, this implies that the disruption of the function of the paraspeckles is correlated with the increasing signs of deterioration of normal transcriptomic state of the cells. while a causal relationship still needs to be proved, we admire the mathematical elegance of the normalized shannon entropy of the samples, a global measure of the average expected surprisal of the transcriptome, which in turn has lead us to consider the dysfunction of the smallest nuclear body as a putative biomarker of disease progression. the role of sfpq/psf in the control of tumorigenesis is under investigation [ ] and the information coming from these studies would need to be integrated with their role, together with p nrb/nono and tncrna, in paraspeckles if we want to achieve a better understanding of these mechanisms. in this contribution we have shown that for the melanoma and prostate cancer datasets studied, the quantitative changes of information theory measures, normalized shannon entropy, jensen- figure . the stacked average gene expression of probes corresponding to brca and terf (telomeric repeat binding factor ) in true et al's prostate cancer dataset. the first group of samples ( to in green) correspond to gleason pattern, indicating that most of the samples in this group have no significantly reduced expression of this pair of genes. the second group of columns ( to in yellow) correspond to gleason patterns and the last columns ( to in red) correspond to gleason samples. a very recent study by ballal et al. have linked brca , to telomere length and maintenance and its loss from the telomere in response to dna damage [ ] (see also [ ] ). there is an increasing trend of dowregulation, so it would be interesting to evaluate if indeed this pair of proteins could be an early marker of dowregulation useful to evaluate samples with gleason pattern , or if may constitute a biomarker useful to distinguish a prostate cancer subtype. doi: . /journal.pone. .g shannon divergence and the novel statistical complexity quantifiers defined here are in high correlation with gene expression changes of well-established biomarkers associated to cancer progression. in addition, variations of the basic technique (i.e. a modified form of statistical complexity) which allows us to better understand the phenotypic changes observed in these samples which are associated with the progression and the transitions of the gene expression profiles. for instance, in a properly defined statistical complexity vs. entropy plane, on a melanoma dataset first studied in ref. [ ] , samples appear in well differentiated ''clusters''. these clusters correlate well with the phonotypic characteristics of normal skin, nevi, primary and metastatic melanoma. in this ''complexity vs. entropy'' plane, primary melanomas samples appear ''bridging'' benign nevi and metastatic melanoma samples. our results may also suggest that the evolution of metastatic melanoma leads to at least two different subtypes. the normalized shannon entropy of a transcriptional sample profile is calculated associating the measured expression values of a gene with the relatively probability of being expressed. we have observed that, in general, the transcriptomes of tumour progressing cells tend to have lower values of normalized shannon entropy than normal ones. given a population of normal cells of a given tissue type it is then possible to compute useful measure of divergence of cancer cell profiles from the normal expression average profile, in terms of information theory quantifiers, the shannon eveness normalized entropy and generalized statistical complexity [ , , ] . in addition, our observation of the correlation of the statistical complexity of tumours with its natural progression allows an unprecedented way of finding biomarkers that links with the gradual deterioration of the genome integrity. the proposed methodology uncovered, for the first time, evidence of the putative role of impared centrosome cohesion in melanoma progression. statistical complexity has then been able to pinpoint otherwise unrecognized biomarkers in concert with existing ones, reinforcing the view that ''chromosomal chaos'' and ''cancer as a chromosomal disease'' can be a useful guiding principle to understand the molecular biology of cancer and uncover the timeline of its progression. this is a powerful method to uncover ''oncosystems'' instead of ''oncogenes''. ''oncosystems'' are a highly differentially disregulated set of genes that, if linked with the molecular ''hallmarks of cancer'' described in the introduction, and existing databases with putative common functional genomic annotations, can help to understand the biological progression pathways that drive the disease. on one of the prostate cancer dataset studied (obtained from a previous published study, [ ] ), we observe a gradual pattern of reduction of normalized shannon entropy from three well characterized tissue types: normal prostate, primary prostate tumours and lymph node metastases. on a different dataset on prostate cancer (from ref [ ] ), we observe that a group of samples having gleason figure is that we have now highlighted the position of s ome probes which have been annotated as corresponding to ''non-coding rnas''. in particular, we highlight those of malat (metastasis associated lung adenocarcinoma transcript , (non-protein coding)), snora (small nucleolar rna, h/aca box ); both increasingly downregulated, snhg (small nucleolar rna host gene (non-protein coding)) and snhg (small nucleolar rna host gene (non-protein coding)). the probes for malat /malat- [ , , , , , , , , , , , , , ] have a very conspiquous position, which we could judge a priori to be equivalent in relevance to those of the previously discussed roles of sfpq, cd , brca , and tp (see figure ). malat has been recently pointed as a biomarker in primary human lobular breast cancer as a result of an analysis of over , roche high-confidence deep sequencing reads. within the thousands of novel non-coding transcripts of the breast cancer transcriptome, guffanti al., identified more than three hundred reads corresponding to malat [ ] . this non-coding rna, first identified in in non-small cell lung cancer, was shown to be highly expressed (relative to gapdh) in lung, pancreas and prostate, but not in other tissues including muscle, skin, stomach, bone marrow, saliva, thyroid and adrenal glands, uterus and fetal liver (see figure four of ref. [ ] ). our results indicate that the reduction of expression of some non-coding rnas, in particular of malat- , and snora with respect to their normal expression in prostate, as well as the upregulation of snhg and snhg should be monitored as useful biomarkers to track disease staging and progression to a more malignant phenotype. interestingly enough, a study published in by nadminty et al. has shown that klk /psa modulates several genes, reporting a . fold downregulation of malat [ ] . while these results have been obtained using the human osteosarcoma cell line saos- , our results indicate that malat expression in the normal prostate and in cancer cells could also be considered as a relevant biomarkers to be tested in the future. doi: . /journal.pone. .g patterns and (two patterns which are typically associated to an aggressive phenotype) have lower normalized shannon entropy values than a subset of gleason pattern (a pattern which is normally associated to a less aggressive phenotype but which nevertheless is still of clinical concern). however, a group of samples having gleason patterns , , and is revealed; this mixed cluster has a mid-range entropy. this is an interesting fact which correlates with the limitations observed in ref. [ ] . we note the authors' comment: ''we were unable to identify a cohort of genes that could distinguish between pattern and cancers with sufficiently high accuracy to be useful, suggesting a high degree of similarity between these cancer histologies or substantial molecular heterogeneity in one or both of these groups.'' our results provide a conciliatory middle ground that explains the perceived clinical usefulness of gleason pattern classification, widely used around the world, while at the same time reveals the reason for the difficulties of obtaining a good transcriptional signature for the other two patterns [ ] . we have seen, through a detailed discussion of several biomarkers in three different datasets, that the variation of the gene expression distributional profile can be characterized via information theory quantifiers. our study also showed that current established biomarkers of the two diseases studied seem to correlate with those that best co-variate with these quantifiers. for instance, amacr, in our second prostate cancer dataset studied, naturally appears as one of the most correlated genes (in both the pearson and the spearman sense) with the pattern of variation of entropy of the samples. together with maoa, which is the highlighted gene in true et al.'s [ ] original publication, amacr is now being recognized as one of the best biomarkers in primary prostate cancer with approximately publications dedicated to it in the past five years. we have also shown that many gene probes that best correlate with the divergence of the normal tissue profile have been identified as useful biomarkers (via other accepted validation methods). this said, the use of other sources of information, like pathway or gene ontology databases has lead as to the identification of other cell processes that may be altered. we have presented a unifying hallmark of cancer, the cancer cell's transcriptome changes its normalized shannon entropy (as measured by high-througput technologies), while it increments its physical entropy (via creation of states we might not measure with our devices). this hallmark allows, via the use of the jensen-shannon divergence, to identify the arrow of time of the process, and helps to map the phenotypical and molecular hallmarks of cancer as major converging trends of the transcriptome. the methodology has produced remarkable postdictions and retrodictions that show that it can predictively guide biomarker discovery. we refer the reader to the original publications for details of methods for data collection, but we highlight here some aspects that are important to understand the data generation process for the purpose of our analysis. samples were obtrained from radical prostatectomy surgical procedures. samples are labelled as ''tumors'' if they contain at least % of cancerous epithelial cells, and they were considered as ''non-tumor'' if they contain no tumor epithelium and are from the noncancerous region of the prostate. the later samples were labelled ''normals'' although the authors alert that some may contain dysplasia. in this dataset, lapointe et al. have performed a gene expression profiling by using cdna microarrays containing , different human genes (unigene clusters). using mg of total rna from prostate samples cy -labeled cdna was prepared and cy -labeled cdna used . mg of mrna common reference, pooled from human cell lines (see ref. [ ] ). the fluorescence ratios were subsequently normalized by mean centering genes for each array, a relatively standard procedure. in addition, to minimize potential print run specific bias, lapointe et al. report that ratios were then mean centered for each gene across all arrays according to ref. [ ] . we have only used the genes that the authors report in their first figure, , genes that have been well measured and have significan variation in some of the samples. for the other details of their matrials and methods we refer the readers to the supporting notes and the materials and methods section of their original publication [ ] . samples were obtained from nevus volunteers and melanoma patients and only those samples that have more than % of tumor cells were profiled. the , cdnas used (research genetics, huntsville, al) represent , independent loci. (unigene build ).median of ratio values from the experiment were subjected to linear normalization in nomad (which can be accessed at http://derisilab.ucsf.edu), log-transformed (base ), and filtered for genes where data were present in % of experiments, and where the absolute value of at least one measurement was . . in this dataset, samples have information of , spots per array, with a total of , unique cdnas represented. the samples were obtained from frozen tissue blocks from radical prostatectomies accessioned and selected to represent gleason grades , , and . the samples are ''treatment naïve'', meaning that they were also selected such that their gene expression profile is also and the absence of any bias that the treatment before prostatectomy. the frozen sections ( mm) were cut from optimal cutting temperature medium blocks and immediately fixed in cold % ethanol. around , epithelial cells from both histologically benign glands and cancer glands were separately laser-capture microdissected (lcm). the authors of the study have also been very careful to include only one gleason pattern in each laser-captured cancer sample, following a process in which the patterns were assessed independently by two investigators.the matched benign epithelium was captured for each cancer sample for a total of samples. an important characteristic of this dataset is the normalization procedure. for each spot and in each channel (cy and cy ), true et al. substracted the median background intensity from the median foreground intensity, and subsequently the log ratios of cancer expression to benign expression were computed. these ratios were obtained by first dividing the background-subtracted intensities (prostate cancer/benign) and then taking the logarithm base . in the case that the median background intensity was greater than the median foreground intensity, the spot was considered missing. we refer to the original publication for the other aspects of imputation, spot quality and filtering, but, like in lapointe et al's study, they also filter to keep informative (expression ratios of benign versus cancer should at least be . -fold or greater in at least half of one of the gleason groups as one of the selection criteria). shannon entropy. in many circumstances, experimental measurements are associated with the accumulation of individual results which, ultimately, qualitatively and quantitatively characterized our experimental observations. the presence (or absence) of a particular result of an individual experimental measure is called an event. an event which can take one of several possible values is called a random variable. analogously, a random event is an event that can either fail to happen, or happens, as a result of an experiment. an event is certain if it can not fail to happen and it is said to be impossible if it can never happen. following andreyev [ ] , we will define the probability p(x) of an event x, as the theoretical frequency of the event x about which the actual frequency occurrence of the event shows a tendency to fluctuate as the experiment is repeated many times. the shannon information content of an event x (or the surprisal of an event x, [ ] ), is defined as h(x)~log p(x) following mckay [ ] , an ensamble x is a triple (x,a x ,p x ), where x is the value of a random variable, which takes on one of a set of possible values, a x~f a ,a ,:::,a i ,:::,a n g, having probabilities p x~f p ,p ,:::,p n g, with p(x~a i )~p i , p i § and x a i [a x p(x~a i )~ . the shannon entropy of an ensemble x (also known as the uncertainty of x), denoted as h[x], is defined to be the average shannon information content. it is the average expected surprisal for an infinitely long series of experiments. we use the theoretical frequencies to compute this average, and then we have suppose that we have a fair dice, the theoretical frequency of an event 'the dice shows a three' is / , (if the dice is assumed fair, the theoretical frequency is the same for any number from to ). in that case a hypothetical experimentalist guessing will have an average expected surprise of h[x] = log ( ) . we note the two natural bounds that the entropy can have. the shannon entropy of an ensemble x is always greater or equal to zero. it can only be zero if p(x~a i )~ for only one of the n elements of a x~f a ,a ,:::,a i ,:::,a n g. on the other hand, the shannon entropy is maximized in the case that p(x~a i )~ =n. this is the so-called ''equiprobable distribution'', a uniform probability distribution over the finite set. transcriptional shannon entropy. let f (j) i the expression value of probe i (i = ,…, n) on sample j (j = , …, m). for each sample j we first normalize the expression values. we interpret them as the theoretical frequency of a single hybridization event. we then define a probability distribution function (pdf) over a finite set as: the uniform (equiprobably) distribution is defined as i let h e~h ½p e ~log n, then in this paper we always use the normalized shannon entropy, defined as: i h e , j~ , . . . ,m the jensen-shannon divergence and the statistical complexity measures given a probability distribution function over a discrete finite set, is then straightforward to calculate its normalized shannon entropy if we have the theoretical frequencies. several measures of ''complexity'' of a probability distribution function have been proposed. in this work we have used statistical complexity measures. all the complexity measures used in this work are the product of a normalized shannon entropy of the probability distribution function, and a divergence measure to a reference probability distribution function. we follow earlier proposals by lópez-ruiz, mancini and calbet who first introduced a statistical complexity measure based on such a product in [ ] . the lmc-statistical complexity is the product of the normalized shannon entropy, h[p], times the disequilibrium, q[p]; the latter given by the euclidean distance from p to p e , the uniform probability distribution over the ensemble. in this paper we used a later modification which we refer as the mpr-statistical complexity [ ] which replaces the euclidean distance between p to p e by the jensen-shannon divergence [ , ] . the jensen-shannon divergence is linked in physics to the thermodynamic length [ , , , ] . we define the mpr-statistical complexity [ ] as: where q p (j) ,p e  à q j s p (j) ,p e  à , q is a normalization factor, and j s p ( ) ,p ( )  à is the jensen-shannon's divergence between two probability density functions p ( ) and p ( ) , which in turn is defined as j s p ( ) ,p ( )  à h p ( ) zp ( ) in this work, in many cases we compute the jensen-shannon divergences of a probability with a probability of reference which is not the uniform probability distribution over the ensemble. in general, it is the average over a subset of probability distribution functions which are consider to be either the ''initial'' of ''final'' states of interest. let p ave be such an average, then the m-statistical complexity of a probability distribution function p (j) , given a p ave of reference, is given by c (m) p (j)  Ã~h p (j)  à : j s p (j) ,p ave  à an illutrative example. in order to discuss a relatively simple example that can intuitively provide a grasp of the basic mathematical principles of information theory we present a hypothetical ''gene expression'' dataset involving four samples each with the expression of five unique probes corresponding to five genes (not necessarily different) as follows in table . one of the quantifiers that we use in this contribution describes a measure of order for a sample: the normalized shannon entropy also known as shannon evenness index [ ] . this section focuses on this quantifiers use and importance (refer to the 'materials and methods' section to see how this measure is calculated). in sample all probes have the same expression therefore it has the highest achievable value of normalized shannon entropy (h = ). the normalized shannon entropy values for samples and are the same (h = . ). sample , which tends to be less peaked and has the two most significantly expressed genes with the same value, has a higher value of normalized shannon entropy (h = . ) (see figure ). this simple example shows that the normalized shannon entropy variations of the gene expression profile convey information about global transcriptomic changes; however, this measure alone is not enough to characterize the deviations from normal tissue profiles. for example, assume that sample is the normal profile of a particular tissue type. assume that sample is the profile of a cancer cell that originated from that tissue type, the variation of normalized shannon entropy can be related to this malignant change. however, as sample illustrates, normalized shannon entropy is not enough to let us to measure the variation from a profile and at least another information theory quantifier is needed. we resort to statistical complexity quantifiers, which in turn use the jensen-shannon divergence [ ] to provide this complementary dimension [ ] (refer to the 'materials and methods' section for a mathematical definition of the jensen-shannon divergence). figure shows how the jensen-shannon divergence helps us to evaluate the variation between profiles. samples and , as perhaps intuitively expected, have the largest divergence between them, their jensen shannon divergence is . (js( , ) = table . an example dataset to illustrate the principles of shannon entropy and the information theory quantifiers used in this work. table . sample has the largest attainable value since the expression of all probes is the same. samples and , which have the same set of expression values, although in different probes, have the same value of normalized shannon entropy. as a consequence, there is a need for another quantifier of gene expression to address the permutational indistinguishability of these two expression profiles. the jensen-shannon divergence provides a natural alternative (see table ). doi: . /journal.pone. .g table . jensen-shannon divergence values using the example introduced in table . table . let h p (j)  à be the normalized shannon entropy of a transcriptional sample profile, then the mpr-statistical complexity c (mpr) p (j)  à is defined as being proportional to the product of the normalized shannon entropy times the jensen-shannon divergence of the profile with the equiprobable distribution (in the example above the equiprobable distribution is that of sample ). then we have where q is a normalization factor. once again, we refer to the 'materials and methods' sections for the accompanying formal mathematical presentation. as a consequence, we can plot the mpr-statistical complexity of the samples of our example as a function of the normalized shannon entropy as can be seen in figure . annotated genes. a full list of gene references in this paper along with their descriptions from ihop (http://www.ihop-net. org/unipub/ihop/) can be found in supplementary material reference file s . stemness, cancer and cancer stem cells stemness'' genomics law governs clinical behavior of human cancer: implications for decision making in disease management an embryonic stem cell-like gene expression signature in poorly differentiated aggressive human tumors mitochondrial localization, elk- transcriptional regulation and growth inhibitory 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diagnostic and therapeutic molecule a population of hla-dr+ immature cells accumulates in the blood dendritic cell compartment of patients with different types of cancer cytokine-mediated protection of human dendritic cells from prostate cancerinduced apoptosis is regulated by the bcl- family of proteins fas-mediated apoptosis in human prostatic carcinoma cell lines increased function and survival of il- -transduced human dendritic cells are mediated by up-regulation of il- ralpha and bcl- expression and function of the complement membrane attack complex inhibitor protectin (cd ) in human prostate cancer increased cd protein expression predicts a psa relapse in patients after radical prostatectomy differential expression of complement regulatory proteins decay-accelerating factor (cd ), membrane cofactor protein (cd ) and cd during human spermatogenesis flow cytometric technique for determination of prostasomal quantity, size and expression of cd , cd , cd and cd in human seminal plasma transfer of prostasomal cd to cd -deficient red blood cells results in protection against complement-mediated hemolysis identification of extracellular delta-catenin accumulation for prostate cancer detection possible immunoprotective and angiogenesis-promoting roles for malignant cell-derived prostasomes: a new paradigm for prostatic cancer? complement resistance of human carcinoma cells depends on membrane regulatory proteins, protein kinases and sialic acid the nuclear lamina. both a structural framework and a platform for genome organization the nuclear envelope, a key structure in cellular integrity and gene expression mouse models of the laminopathies laminopathies'': a wide spectrum of human diseases phenomics and lamins: from disease to therapy adult stem cell maintenance and tissue regeneration in the ageing context: the role for a-type lamins as intrinsic modulators of ageing in adult stem cells and their niches nuclear lamin a/c deficiency induces defects in cell 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that correlate with high grade features in treatment naive, organ-confined prostate cancer nf-kappab processing and p nuclear accumulation after androgenic stimulation of lncap prostate cancer cells diverse effects of zinc on nf-kappab and ap- transcription factors: implications for prostate cancer progression nuclear factor-kappab nuclear localization is predictive of biochemical recurrence in patients with positive margin prostate cancer id- expression promotes cell survival through activation of nf-kappab signalling pathway in prostate cancer cells suppression of hormone-refractory prostate cancer by a novel nuclear factor kappab inhibitor in nude mice mechanisms of constitutive nf-kappab activation in human prostate cancer cells bcl- suppresses apoptosis resulting from disruption of the nf-kappa b survival pathway gene expression profiling of human prostate cancer stem cells reveals a proinflammatory phenotype and the importance of extracellular matrix interactions molecular 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of human osteosarcoma cell line saos- the authors would like to thank three research associates of our centre (osvaldo rosso, carlos riveros and john marsden) for discussions on this topic. we thank the first two, in particular to osvaldo, for their collaboration on data cleaning and the computation of the entropy and jensen-shannon divergences. we thank marsden for his advice on editing the final draft. pm would also like to thank two stimulating discussions (decades apart) with dr. carlos reigosa and prof. elizabeth blackburn, as well as the invisible hand of prof. yaser abu-mostafa. key: cord- -y zpvw authors: tan, kai sen; andiappan, anand kumar; lee, bernett; yan, yan; liu, jing; tang, see aik; lum, josephine; he, ting ting; ong, yew kwang; thong, mark; lim, hui fang; choi, hyung won; rotzschke, olaf; chow, vincent t; wang, de yun title: rna sequencing of h n influenza virus-infected human nasal epithelial cells from multiple subjects reveals molecular pathways associated with tissue injury and complications date: - - journal: cells doi: . /cells sha: doc_id: cord_uid: y zpvw the human nasal epithelium is the primary site of exposure to influenza virus, the initiator of host responses to influenza and the resultant pathologies. influenza virus may cause serious respiratory infection resulting in major complications, as well as severe impairment of the airways. here, we elucidated the global transcriptomic changes during h n infection of human nasal epithelial cells from multiple individuals. using rna sequencing, we characterized the differentially-expressed genes and pathways associated with changes occurring at the nasal epithelium following infection. we used in vitro differentiated human nasal epithelial cell culture model derived from seven different donors who had no concurrent history of viral infections. statistical analysis highlighted strong transcriptomic signatures significantly associated with and h after infection, but not at the earlier -h time point. in particular, we found that the influenza infection induced in the nasal epithelium early and altered responses in interferon gamma signaling, b-cell signaling, apoptosis, necrosis, smooth muscle proliferation, and metabolic alterations. these molecular events initiated at the infected nasal epithelium may potentially adversely impact the airway, and thus the genes we identified could serve as potential diagnostic biomarkers or therapeutic targets for influenza infection and associated disease management. the global burden of inter-pandemic influenza is high. it is estimated to affect billion people annually, with - million severe cases requiring hospitalization or intensive care treatment, resulting in approximately . million deaths [ ] . worryingly, drug-resistant influenza strains are emerging at a rapid rate that will severely hamper the ability of our healthcare systems to contain influenza outbreaks [ ] . therefore, alternative strategies are needed against severe influenza infections during both seasonal and pandemic influenza outbreaks. the normal human airway epithelium is a pseudo-stratified layer of ciliated and non-ciliated columnar cells, goblet cells, club cells, and basal cells [ ] . the airway epithelium protects against airway infection via efficient mucociliary clearance (mcc), the production of inflammatory mediators and chemokines against viruses, and the recruitment of immune cells [ ] . when the influenza virus breaches the defense of the human airway epithelium, it causes a myriad of innate responses by the infected host in response to viral invasion [ , ] . among these changes are critical factors that can determine disease severity, and which may lead to the development of diagnostic, prognostic prediction markers, or anti-influenza therapies [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, few studies have hitherto been performed in relevant models [ ] and human models of influenza are not feasible due to potential severity of the infection. therefore, the mechanistic study of viral-induced airway changes using relevant models can lead to better understanding of the development of severe complications. additionally, we need greater clarity on the different immune responses in view of the rising prevalence of chronic diseases such as diabetes mellitus and asthma. patients with these disorders are especially susceptible to severe influenza complications compared to healthy subjects [ ] . thus, the establishment of a baseline response against influenza infection of "healthy" tissue is beneficial to facilitate future comparative studies to better manage influenza in patients with co-morbidities. although the study of host responses in influenza infection is not new, current in vitro cell lines cannot accurately represent human airway infection due to the lack of key mucociliary features [ ] . hence, we have previously developed an air-liquid interface (ali) human airway epithelial cell culture that is able to sustain influenza infection [ , ] . we have also further compared the transcriptomic responses of our infected human nasal epithelial cells (hnecs) with other in vitro and in vivo influenza infection transcriptomic studies [ ] . the comparison revealed that at their peak responses against influenza, the differential transcriptome signature in hnecs was highly similar to the signatures from other influenza infection models [ ] . interestingly, compared to the homogenous cell lines tested, our heterogenous hnec model exhibited a more comparable response to the clinical influenza studies, indicating that most responses were initiated at the nasal epithelium [ ] . therefore, in this study, we aim to further utilize the hnec model as a physiologically relevant in vitro model to clarify the nasal epithelial responses against influenza h n infection, which would then facilitate the identification of the key host factors that are significant for future studies. to establish host factors that are significantly altered in the nasal epithelium as a reference of early innate responses against influenza, the dynamic expression of the genes needs to be clearly elucidated. while there are many studies that utilize microarray analysis to identify the host responses against influenza, the limitation of the microarray is its inability to determine the full extent of gene changes due to its hybridization-based protocol [ ] . the aim of this study was to utilize rna sequencing (rnaseq) technology to not only reveal the hnec responses (from multiple individuals) against influenza infection, but also to identify those genes with high magnitude changes to serve as potential reference markers of the innate responses of influenza infection. given that rnaseq functions by reading virtually all the rnas present in the samples tested, we can also discern the magnitude of each rna change and mark them as the canonical responses. in addition, as rnaseq is not constrained by probe usage as in microarrays, they are therefore more reliable in detecting novel interactions during influenza infections of hnecs. hence, rnaseq analysis will further augment the transcriptomic data established previously by microarray analysis. the augmented baseline can then be applied to future clinical studies and practice against influenza infection, especially for comparison against patients with other underlying co-morbidities that may be affected by more severe disease. approval to conduct this study was obtained from the national healthcare group domain-specific board of singapore (dsrb ref: d/ / ) and the institutional review board of the national university of singapore (irb ref: . written consent was obtained from donors prior to the collection of the tissue biopsies. at the time of collection, all subjects were free of symptoms of urti. the medical backgrounds of the subjects are summarized intable s . the hnespcs were isolated and enriched from the tissue biopsies according to a previously standardized protocol [ , ] , which normalized the hnespcs to a baseline state that differentiates into hnecs resembling healthy tissues if they pass the quality control checks for their differentiation [ ] . following enrichment, the hnespcs were expanded further and subjected to ali culture in transwells for in vitro differentiation according to previous protocol as well [ , ] . briefly, primary cells were subjected to isolation for selection of hnespcs, which were enriched and expanded with dulbecco's modified eagle medium: nutrient mixture f- (dmem/f ) (gibco-invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa) containing ng/ml of human epithelial growth factor (egf, gibco-invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa), µg/ml of insulin (sigma, st. louis, mo, usa), . nm of cholera toxin (sigma, st. louis, mo, usa), . µg/ml of hydrocortisone (sigma, st. louis, mo, usa), nm/ml of , , -triiodo-l-thyronine (t ) (sigma, st. louis, mo, usa), µl/ml of an n- supplement (gibco-invitrogen) and iu/ml of antibiotic-antimycotic (gibco-invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa). the expanded hnespcs were then transferred onto -well . µm transwell inserts (corning, corning, ny, usa). once confluent, growth medium was discarded and µl of pneumacult™-ali medium with inducer supplements (stemcell technologies inc., vancouver, canada) was added to the basal chamber to establish ali conditions. the cells were cultured in ali culture for weeks, with media change every - days. after - weeks of differentiation, hnecs from a total of seven donors were then subjected to influenza h n virus infection. the influenza a strain used in this study is of the h n subtype (a/aichi/ / ) (atcc, manassas, va, usa). the virus was propagated using embryonated egg culture and used for all the infection in the hnecs. prior to infection, fully differentiated hnecs were washed with × dpbs and infected with the h n influenza virus at a multiplicity of infection (moi) of . and incubated for h at • c. after the h incubation, the viral inoculum was removed and the hnecs were incubated back in • c. the control hnecs were harvested for apical wash and rna prior to the infection at h post-infection (hpi). the infected hnecs were then harvested for the apical wash and rna following , , and hpi incubation at • c. at each infection time point, µl of x dpbs was added and incubated in the apical chamber for min at • c to recover progeny viruses as the apical wash. the plaque assay for viral quantification was performed using overnight mdck cultures (atcc, manassas, va, usa) at - % confluence in -well plates. the mdck cells were incubated with µl of serial dilutions (from − to − ) of virus from apical washes at • c for h, where plates were rocked every min to ensure equal viral distribution. after incubation, the inocula were removed and replaced with ml of avicel (fmc biopolymer, philadelphia, pa, usa) overlay, and incubated at • c for - h. after incubation, avicel overlay were removed, and cells were fixed with % formaldehyde in × pbs for h. formaldehyde was then removed, and cells were washed with × pbs prior to staining with % crystal violet for min before washing the stain away. the plaque-forming units (pfu) were calculated as follows: number of plaques × dilution factor = number of pfu per µl. at each time point after the collection of apical wash, the hnecs were lysed using rna lysis buffer. total rna was then extracted from the lysate using mirvana mirna isolation kit (life technologies, grand island, ny, usa). the extracted total rna was first subjected to nanodrop analysis to first ensure the rna quality, before being submitted for rnaseq analysis. then, ng from the remaining rna was subjected to cdna synthesis using maxima first-strand cdna synthesis kit (thermoscientific, pittsburgh pa, usa). after this, qpcr analysis was performed to evaluate the transcriptional levels of host response genes selected based on previous microarray analysis using pre-designed primers (sigma aldrich). each qpcr reaction was performed in duplicate using gotaq-qpcr master mix kit (promega, san luis obispo, ca, usa), and relative gene expression was calculated using the comparative method of -∆∆ct normalized to the housekeeping gene pgk . relative gene expression levels were presented as median values and interquartile ranges, while statistical significance was determined using the wilcoxon signed-rank test. all human rnas were analyzed on the agilent bioanalyzer (agilent, santa clara, ca, usa) or the perkin elmer labchip gx system (perkin elmer, waltham, ma, usa) for quality assessment with rna integrity number (rin) or rna quality score range from . - . and median of . . cdna libraries were prepared using ng of total rna and µl of a : , dilution of ercc rna spike in controls (ambion ® thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa) using smartseq v protocol [ ] , except for the following modifications: fastq files were mapped to the human genome build hg using star. gene counts were computed using featurecounts (part of the subread package) using annotations from gencode version . differential gene expression analysis was performed using edger in a paired fashion under r version . . . multiple testing correction was done using the method of benjamini and hochberg and p-values (false discovery rate; fdr) less than . was deemed to be significant. geneset enrichment analysis using data from gene ontology (go) was performed using the bioconductor package topgo, while the analysis using reactome pathway was performed using the vioconductor package reactomepa. both analyses were run in r version . . using multiple testing-corrected significant differentially-expressed genes. tnf-α, tnf-β, vegf, eotaxin/ccl , and pdgf-aa. samples and standards were incubated with fluorescent-coded magnetic beads which had been pre-coated with the respective capture antibodies. after an overnight incubation at • c, plates were washed twice. biotinylated detection antibodies were incubated with the complex for h, and streptavidin-pe was then added and incubated for another min. plates were washed twice again, then beads were re-suspended with sheath fluid before acquiring on the flexmap ® d (luminex) using xponent ® . (luminex) acquisition software. data analysis was done on bio-plex manager™ . . (bio-rad). standard curves were generated with a -pl ( -parameter logistic) algorithm, reporting values for both mfi and concentration data. results were then expressed as mean fold change compared with uninfected control, and p-values (fdr) of less than . were considered significant. prior to analysis, the responses of all seven hnecs donors following influenza infection were plotted on a principal component analysis (pca) plot. the pca plot indicated a degree of variability in the responses between donors and time points (figure ). nonetheless, the responses were clustered tightly enough following infection to signify their consistency of infection for further transcriptomic analysis-similar to those observed in our previous study [ ] . the respective capture antibodies. after an overnight incubation at °c, plates were washed twice. biotinylated detection antibodies were incubated with the complex for h, and streptavidin-pe was then added and incubated for another min. plates were washed twice again, then beads were resuspended with sheath fluid before acquiring on the flexmap ® d (luminex) using xponent ® . (luminex) acquisition software. data analysis was done on bio-plex manager™ . . (bio-rad). standard curves were generated with a -pl ( -parameter logistic) algorithm, reporting values for both mfi and concentration data. results were then expressed as mean fold change compared with uninfected control, and p-values (fdr) of less than . were considered significant. prior to analysis, the responses of all seven hnecs donors following influenza infection were plotted on a principal component analysis (pca) plot. the pca plot indicated a degree of variability in the responses between donors and time points ( figure ). nonetheless, the responses were clustered tightly enough following infection to signify their consistency of infection for further transcriptomic analysis-similar to those observed in our previous study [ ] . significant gene expression changes (fdr < . ) of infected hnecs were detected as early as hpi, and further increased at and hpi (table ; figure a ). also, the number of genes decreased in a linear fashion as the fold change in expression increased, as seen in the x fold change genes significant gene expression changes (fdr < . ) of infected hnecs were detected as early as hpi, and further increased at and hpi (table ; figure a ). also, the number of genes decreased in a linear fashion as the fold change in expression increased, as seen in the x fold change genes indicated in figure b , where about % of the significantly altered genes remained. at hpi, there were upregulated genes and downregulated genes. the major upregulated genes were the antiviral sensors and early response genes such as ifns, ifits, and ifis. interestingly enough, interferon lambda (ifnλ) gene ifnls was the earliest response interferon of infected hnecs, as opposed to interferons alpha or beta, at hpi. at later time points, the number of gene expression changes increased substantially, with upregulation of and genes, and downregulation of and genes at and hpi, respectively. there was augmented expression of antiviral effectors and inflammatory genes at both time points. ifnl remained the interferon gene with highest expression at both time points, while a marked elevation of cytokines such as cxcl and cxcl was also observed. considering downregulated genes, proliferative and transcriptomic functions appeared to be suppressed, with diminished expression of genes such as fmo , klk , and fosb. genes associated with metabolism, cell cycle, and dna repair were further suppressed following infection at and hpi. tables s -s list the complete set of significant gene expression changes, arranged according to their fold change (log fc). in addition, we have also verified that the genes showing major expression changes by rnaseq generally concurred with rt-qpcr analyses. of the genes tested by qpcr at hpi, all of them showed the same directional changes in expression as observed by rnaseq. hence, seven of these genes showed a p-value of < . (il i , ifnl (il ), cxcl , tnfsf , ifi , ccl , and cyp a ), one gene had a p-value of < . (ctgf), while only two genes were not statistically significant (tgfa and ano ) ( figure s ). indicated in figure b , where about % of the significantly altered genes remained. at hpi, there were upregulated genes and downregulated genes. the major upregulated genes were the antiviral sensors and early response genes such as ifns, ifits, and ifis. interestingly enough, interferon lambda (ifnλ) gene ifnls was the earliest response interferon of infected hnecs, as opposed to interferons alpha or beta, at hpi. at later time points, the number of gene expression changes increased substantially, with upregulation of and genes, and downregulation of and genes at and hpi, respectively. there was augmented expression of antiviral effectors and inflammatory genes at both time points. ifnl remained the interferon gene with highest expression at both time points, while a marked elevation of cytokines such as cxcl and cxcl was also observed. considering downregulated genes, proliferative and transcriptomic functions appeared to be suppressed, with diminished expression of genes such as fmo , klk , and fosb. genes associated with metabolism, cell cycle, and dna repair were further suppressed following infection at and hpi. tables s - list the complete set of significant gene expression changes, arranged according to their fold change (log fc). in addition, we have also verified that the genes showing major expression changes by rnaseq generally concurred with rt-qpcr analyses. of the genes tested by qpcr at hpi, all of them showed the same directional changes in expression as observed by rnaseq. hence, seven of these genes showed a p-value of < . (il i , ifnl (il ), cxcl , tnfsf , ifi , ccl , and cyp a ), one gene had a p-value of < . (ctgf), while only two genes were not statistically significant (tgfa and ano ) ( figure s ). we then further compared the transcriptomic alterations in the hnecs over time, following influenza h n infection. the number of gene expression changes mirrored the viral titer changes, which peaked at hpi, and were consistent between donors ( figure a ). approximately two thirds of genes at and hpi overlapped with other time points, while about one third of genes at hpi overlapped ( figure b ). the overlapping genes displayed similar directional consistency at the significant time points. in addition, congruent with the consistent viral titer with most gene expression changes at hpi, we also noted the most consistent alterations in expression of genes across donors. this is highlighted in figure c , which portrays the heatmaps of the top genes with the smallest p-value, together with their direction and magnitude of change. based on these analyses, we proposed that hpi represents the optimal time point for the subsequent pathway analysis to ascertain influenza-specific pathway changes. we then further compared the transcriptomic alterations in the hnecs over time, following influenza h n infection. the number of gene expression changes mirrored the viral titer changes, which peaked at hpi, and were consistent between donors ( figure a ). approximately two thirds of genes at and hpi overlapped with other time points, while about one third of genes at hpi overlapped ( figure b ). the overlapping genes displayed similar directional consistency at the significant time points. in addition, congruent with the consistent viral titer with most gene expression changes at hpi, we also noted the most consistent alterations in expression of genes across donors. this is highlighted in figure c , which portrays the heatmaps of the top genes with the smallest p-value, together with their direction and magnitude of change. based on these analyses, we proposed that hpi represents the optimal time point for the subsequent pathway analysis to ascertain influenza-specific pathway changes. we then further subjected the significant gene changes to gene set enrichment using both go and reactome databases. at time points , , and hpi, there were , , and significant (adjusted p-value < . ) go biological processes (table s ) and , , and significant (adjusted pvalue < . ) reactome pathways (table s ) , respectively. at the early time of hpi, interferon- we then further subjected the significant gene changes to gene set enrichment using both go and reactome databases. at time points , , and hpi, there were , , and significant (adjusted p-value < . ) go biological processes (table s ) and , , and significant (adjusted p-value < . ) reactome pathways (table s ) , respectively. at the early time of hpi, interferon-mediated antiviral responses were elevated as expected. at hpi, the pathways appeared to be more stabilized and consistent for both go and reactome analyses, despite displaying more gene expression changes at this time point. responses to influenza virus skewing towards type i immunity were predominant in the go analysis. the expected interferon-mediated functions by the epithelium validated the authenticity of our model, where we found enriched type i interferon (go) and rig-i (reactome) pathways with upregulation of nearly all significant gene members (data not shown). besides the interferon and antiviral pathways, we identified several functions of interest initiated by the nasal epithelium that may contribute to the pathology and pathogenesis of influenza. at hpi, go pathway enrichment analysis revealed that the nasal epithelium was actively involved in initial ifnγ signaling (go: ), despite not directly producing ifnγ. we also observed enriched function in apoptosis and necroptosis (go: and go: ), immune evasion (go: ), and other pathways that may lead to complication events such as smooth muscle proliferation (go: ) and response to fatty acid (go: ) ( table ). for the reactome pathway analysis, we selected pathways that were enriched with more than significant genes present in the enriched pathway, and these were generally in agreement with the go analysis (table ). in addition to ifnγ signaling ( ) and apoptosis ( ), it also revealed changes in epithelial-initiated b cell receptor signaling ( and ) and amino acid metabolism ( ) following influenza infection. it is noteworthy that these pathways were initiated at the epithelial level without the participation of immune cells, thus highlighting the relevant genes of interest for future studies. given that rnaseq analysis facilitates more accurate expression changes following infection compared to hybridization technology such as microarray, we conducted further analysis on the levels of gene expression changes to enable more stringent and accurate transcriptomic analyses for future studies. by comparing these results to a previous study that identified influenza-specific signatures, we verified that these genes were all expressed in infected nasal epithelium later at hpi, but not at hpi. furthermore, at both and hpi, all but one of the gene signatures exhibited elevated expression of > . -fold change (> . log fc) compared to uninfected control hnecs (table ). when we applied the higher fold change cutoff, the number of significant genes decreased by approximately % (figure a) , which was also congruent with the linear association observed earlier. therefore, future studies on early transcriptional alterations could consider adopting the . -fold change in expression as a more stringent threshold, which may be more feasible, especially for large transcriptomic studies that yield large numbers of data points. in addition, when compared to the previous microarray study on a similar hnec model [ ] , both rnaseq and microarray shared a high degree of overlap, with about one third and half of total genes from rnaseq and microarray overlapping, respectively ( figure b ). the overlap was generally observed in genes with highly altered expression, such as cxcl , cxcl , and rsad , which were changed to a similar magnitude in both rnaseq and microarray (table s ). when we compared the influenza signature genes, rnaseq revealed a more consistent increase in magnitude, i.e., at hpi, the magnitude of the gene change was generally higher than that of the microarray (table ). in addition, rnaseq was also able to detect novel genes with expression changes of high magnitude that were generally higher than those found by microarray only ( genes versus genes with elevated expression greater than . -fold). genes such as heatr , pdcd , il i , art , and kcnh were altered to a higher magnitude than the . -fold threshold. hence, rnaseq-based transcriptomic analysis may augment transcriptomic findings to identify novel gene responses against influenza in the future. from rnaseq and microarray overlapping, respectively ( figure b ). the overlap was generally observed in genes with highly altered expression, such as cxcl , cxcl , and rsad , which were changed to a similar magnitude in both rnaseq and microarray (table s ). when we compared the influenza signature genes, rnaseq revealed a more consistent increase in magnitude, i.e., at hpi, the magnitude of the gene change was generally higher than that of the microarray (table ). in addition, rnaseq was also able to detect novel genes with expression changes of high magnitude that were generally higher than those found by microarray only ( genes versus genes with elevated expression greater than . -fold). genes such as heatr , pdcd , il i , art , and kcnh were altered to a higher magnitude than the . -fold threshold. hence, rnaseq-based transcriptomic analysis may augment transcriptomic findings to identify novel gene responses against influenza in the future. after deriving the transcriptomes by rnaseq, we then further investigated whether the changes in expression of genes resulted in alterations in secretory cytokines and chemokines early in the infection of hnecs. initially, we detected significant reductions in multiple cytokines at hpi, with the exception of il- which was increased ( figure s ). this may reflect the initial immune suppression during influenza infection. however, at and hpi, less significant changes were observed, i.e., only increase in tnf-a and decrease in mdc and pdgf-aa were noted at hpi. this was followed by increase in ip- (cxcl ) and tgf-a and decrease in pdgf-aa seen at hpi. this analysis highlights changes in ip- , tgf-a, and pdgf-aa to be significant early responses in secretory cytokines/chemokines following influenza infection. our study has identified epithelium-initiated host responses which are found to be involved in both innate and adaptive responses. the finding is significant as we can now focus on the primary point of contact of influenza-the nasal epithelium in the study of early host responses for identifying host factors that can be utilized for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes [ ] . in addition, our study also showed that it is important for reference databases to use relevant human models like the hnecs model, which contains the mucociliary component of the airways, in order to provide closely representative host responses. while there exists a high number of microarray studies that showed the host responses using similar hnec models, there are only a small number of equivalent rnaseq studies. compared to microarrays, rnaseq analysis can provide a more comprehensive picture of the transcriptomic landscape, and is not limited by the hybrid library variant and concentrations [ ] . hence, in order to derive accurate magnitude of gene expression changes, we performed an rnaseq analysis of h n infection using the hnecs model. h n influenza virus was selected, given that it is a major circulating subtype over long periods of time. in addition, relatively lower efficacy of vaccines against this subtype prompted us to study its interactions with the primary host target to elucidate the immune responses and association with adaptive immunity [ , ] . this model has been previously evaluated to be a highly clinically-relevant model that can facilitate controlled infection of nasal cells from multiple individuals. in addition, we have also previously shown-by microarray analysis-that the nasal epithelium is responsible for the initiation of host responses following influenza infection [ ] . this renders the hnecs to serve as a valuable tool to analyze transcriptomics from different individuals infected under the same conditions to ensure consistent and relevant responses in humans. once the magnitude of gene expression changes was considered, several interesting findings emerged. firstly, the infected hnecs were observed with strong activation of antiviral genes and early inflammatory genes leading to type i immune responses. a large number of gene expression changes were of magnitude of over -fold difference (log to log fold change). most of the genes with high-magnitude expression changes were verified by qpcr, with statistical significance congruent with the rnaseq analysis. secondly, despite the absence of immune cells, the infected hnecs were able to generate strong type i responses that may likely aid the recruitment of cytotoxic cells to clear the infected cells. thirdly, in early responses of the hnecs, ifnλ genes, which represent type iii interferons, were more strongly induced than the more frequently observed type i interferons (ifnα and ifnβ), while type ii interferons were not produced by hnecs, in agreement with previous studies [ , ] . the induction of type iii interferons may reflect an important event within the hnecs where ifnλ, the initial responders against the infection, may be more beneficial in the antiviral response [ , ] . moreover, we also observed notable suppression of expression of certain genes following influenza infection, including suppression of proliferation and dna repair genes, which may contribute to the pathology and pathogenesis of influenza [ ] . finally, rnaseq also unraveled expression changes of certain newly-discovered genes in response to influenza infection of the upper airway cells. genes such as heatr [ ] , il i [ ] , tnfsf b (baff) [ ] , and pdcd (pd- ) [ ] are recently implicated in influenza pathogenesis and mucosal defense, thereby signifying the role of the nasal epithelium against influenza infection. furthermore, rnaseq identified altered expression of art and kcnh genes that were not previously detected in influenza transcriptomes. these findings hence further reiterate the value of rnaseq in enhancing data on influenza transcriptomes for reference in future studies. via pathway enrichment analysis, we have identified known antiviral pathways to validate the hnecs responses against influenza. in addition, we have also documented the potential pathways initiated by the nasal epithelium that may contribute to influenza pathogenesis as represented by the gene expression changes listed in tables and . by analyses using literature-inferred go and reactome databases, we have demonstrated that the nasal epithelium can play a role in the main antiviral signaling, i.e., ifnγ responses despite not being a direct producer of ifnγ. the pathway enrichment indicated that hnecs may serve as important regulators of type ii interferons. even though the effects of ifnγ are vital to the robust clearance of influenza viruses [ ] , there are reports of unregulated ifnγ being a contributor to inflammatory damage [ , ] . therefore, the over-production of ifnγ response factors such as icam and cd may contribute to inflammatory damage of the epithelium. hence, production of factors such as stat [ ] by the hnecs is also crucial in ensuring appropriate regulation of ifnγ-mediated expression of influenza response genes to modulate inflammation and to minimize damage. the primary contact of influenza virus with the nasal epithelium may subsequently lead to damage to the airway epithelium as well. this is apparent with the clear enrichment of the pathways of apoptosis, mitochondrial apoptotic processes, and necroptosis that contribute to cell death and mechanical barrier loss during infection [ , ] . genes such as ifi , bak , caps , tnfsf , and fas suggest active apoptotic cell death that not only destroys cells in the epithelial barrier, but may also serve to propagate the virus and to perpetuate the damage [ ] [ ] [ ] . furthermore, during virus infection, aberrant regulation of apoptosis may also lead to further injury to the epithelium and surrounding tissues [ ] . on the other hand, necroptosis pathways have also been observed to be enriched in influenza-infected hnecs. compared to apoptosis, the study of necroptosis in influenza infection is relatively new with contradicting findings [ ] . ripk /necroptosis studies appear to generate contradictory results as to whether necroptosis protects against or is detrimental during influenza infection [ , ] . hence, its increased expression during infection of hnecs warrants further investigation on its role in influenza-induced damage. in addition, we also noted enrichment of b-cell signaling pathways by the infected hnecs which may be vital for b-cell responses during the adaptive immune response [ ] . we noted that most genes enriched in the b-cell pathways were related to antigen recognition such as proteasome subunits (psme , psmb , psma , etc.) and b-cell receptor-associated genes such as dapp and card [ ] . however, changes in expression of certain growth factors (including ereg and fgfs) following influenza infection may lead to complications involving airway remodeling and recruitment [ , ] . further, the effects of the growth factors were further confirmed by the enrichment of pathways related to the proliferation of smooth muscle cells also induced by the infection. changes to airway smooth muscle cells are usually implicated in airway remodeling [ ] [ ] [ ] , and may also contribute to post-influenza complications. hence, the genes found in this study may be crucial for elucidating the nasal-initiated responses that may contribute to the pathology and pathogenesis of influenza infection of the airways. finally, another interesting pathway that may contribute to epithelial damage is the negative regulation of innate immune responses. these genes may serve as proviral factors and aid in immune evasion. for example, adar is a proviral factor that works in synergy with influenza ns to enhance viral replication [ ] . trafd is a negative regulator of toll-like receptor signaling which is upregulated in influenza-infected hnecs [ ] . dhx is a negative regulator of rig-i/mda signaling pathway [ ] . ceacam is involved in regulation of liver inflammation [ ] and its expression appears to exert antiviral effects on influenza virus [ ] . nmi binds to influenza virus ns and inhibits irf -mediated interferon signaling [ , ] . therefore, aberrant expression of genes in this signaling pathway may directly contribute to immune evasion of influenza, culminating in viral propagation and increased epithelial damage. we summarized the identified pathways (listed in tables and ) that alluded to immune evasion (negative regulation of innate immune responses), antigen processing (metabolism of amino acids and derivatives), and immunomodulation (interferon gamma signaling, b cell receptor signaling, and response to fatty acid) that may contribute to severity of influenza. there was evidence of direct pathway enrichment of potential influenza evasion strategies and/or immunomodulation with accompanying transcriptomic changes. the genes in the pathway may be analyzed for their immunomodulatory activity and whether their expression is beneficial to the virus (immune evasion) or the host (preventing cytokine storm). in addition, the infected hnecs also revealed modified responses associated with fatty acid, with many lipid signaling molecules such as leukotrienes that mediate antiviral responses and subsequent inflammation of the airway [ , ] . such modified responses may also determine the afforded in the airway and the severity of airway inflammation and damage. in addition, the modification may also affect the lower airway responses to inflammatory mediators; hence, the changes in these pathways may also suggest a potential mechanistic link to the pathogenesis of viral-induced exacerbation of chronic inflammatory diseases. lastly, we also noted enrichment of pathways related to amino acid metabolism, which is important in antigen processing and proteasomal degradation of foreign protein. the changes in these genes at the hnecs, the target site of influenza infection, may determine the effectiveness of antiviral responses mounted and may therefore influenza disease severity. in addition, we also compared our rnaseq analysis against previously reported influenza-specific signatures in order to improve future transcriptomic analysis [ ] . in vitro transcriptomic analysis yields a large number of differentially-expressed genes that would require additional criteria to identify functionally significant genes. by means of this comparison, we discovered that almost all influenza-specific signatures exhibited differences in expression of above . -fold. hence, we propose applying fold change of > . as a threshold for future in vitro transcriptomic systems analyses, in order to increase the stringency in detecting functionally significant gene changes. finally, we observed that, unlike the transcriptome, there were notably fewer cytokines that were readily secreted during the acute phase of infection. expression of cytokines was reduced at hpi, except for il- , which interestingly is implicated in influenza-induced acute lung injury [ ] . even fewer cytokines showed altered expression at later time points. among them, only tgf-a, ip- (cxcl ), and pdgf-aa were significantly altered at and hpi. these may be significant markers that can be detected in the secretion of influenza-infected mucosal surface that may influence the severity of influenza. ip- is a well-established ifnγ response gene, and serves as a useful marker for response against influenza [ , ] . tgf-a represents an important factor involved in the secretion of il- in response to influenza, and may determine the early appropriate innate responses to prevent severe disease [ ] . on the other hand, it is also involved in pulmonary fibrosis as a ligand of epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) and may contribute to complications in the lower airway [ ] . pdgf-aa was found to be elevated in the cerebrospinal fluid of influenza-associated encephalopathy [ ] , but was consistently reduced in hnec secretory fluid, thus warranting further investigation into its role in the infected nasal mucosa. the establishment of a reference transcriptome based on early responses of the human nasal epithelium model serves a key role in research on critical host factors involved in influenza. as the primary host contact with the virus, not only are immune responses against influenza important, but also the alterations in non-immune functions such as metabolism, cell content, and cell cycle, which may contribute to disease severity. in terms of translational potential, the model system identified gene expression changes of significant magnitude and pathways that impact responses against influenza and its severity. these genes may represent novel targets for future diagnostic and therapeutic development. under controlled conditions, the hnecs clinically establish the baseline for "normal" innate immune responses of the nasal epithelium against influenza viral infection. such a baseline can be particularly crucial when studying the changes in innate immune responses against influenza, especially in patients with underlying chronic diseases who may have aberrant airway responses against influenza. their antiviral responses may differ from "normal" subjects, and this study thus provides the basis for comparing the differential responses that culminate in more severe infections in patients with co-morbidities such as diabetes and chronic airway inflammatory diseases. such comparative clinical studies can potentially enhance the management of influenza viral infection in patients with chronic diseases. in conclusion, rnaseq technology allowed us to accurately quantify the magnitude of gene expression changes, as well as the relevant enriched pathways during h n influenza virus infection of hnecs, which can serve as a baseline for future clinical studies. the establishment of this baseline under controlled condition elucidated the antiviral innate response by the infected nasal epithelium, and highlighted the molecular factors and abnormalities in the upper airway that may contribute to influenza severity. furthermore, this study also culminated in the identification of novel gene signatures and host factors that may be harnessed for future research to develop influenza diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets. supplementary materials: the following are available online at http://www.mdpi.com/ - / / / /s , figure s . real-time quantitative pcr validation of genes selected from rnaseq analyses. pcr data are expressed as log fold change using median and interquartile range. statistical significance was determined using wilcoxon signed-rank test. * p < . , # p < . ; figure s . luminex assay of secreted cytokines/chemokines in the apical supernatant. luminex data are expressed as mean fold change from uninfected control. statistical significance was determined using fdr. * p < . ; table s . information of seven donors of hnecs; table s . significant enriched pathways based on reactome pathway database analysis; table s . list of significant genes with altered expression at hpi of influenza h n infection of hnecs analyzed by rnaseq and microarray [ ] . oseltamivir resistance-disabling our influenza defenses role of il- ralpha in modulating il- -induced muc ac and ciliary changes in healthy and crswnp mucosa epithelial damage and response human nasal epithelial cells derived from multiple individuals exhibit differential responses to h n influenza virus infection in vitro comparative transcriptomic and metagenomic analyses of influenza virus-infected nasal epithelial cells from multiple individuals reveal specific nasal-initiated signatures systems-biology approaches to discover anti-viral effectors of the human innate immune response uncovering the global host cell requirements for influenza virus replication via rnai screening. microbes infect cellular networks involved in the influenza virus life cycle cd , a novel host factor of nuclear export signaling in influenza virus infection propagation of respiratory viruses in human airway epithelia reveals persistent virus-specific signatures distinction between rhinovirus-induced acute asthma and asthma-augmented influenza infection a novel three-dimensional cell culture method enhances antiviral drug screening in primary human cells comparing bioinformatic gene expression profiling methods: microarray and rna-seq the use of nasal epithelial stem/progenitor cells to produce functioning ciliated cells in vitro full-length rna-seq from single cells using smart-seq predicting clinical severity based on substitutions near epitope a of influenza a/h n effectiveness of seasonal influenza vaccinations against laboratory-confirmed influenza-associated infections among singapore military personnel in - . influenza other respir in vitro model of fully differentiated human nasal epithelial cells infected with rhinovirus reveals epithelium-initiated immune responses ifnlambda is a potent anti-influenza therapeutic without the inflammatory side effects of ifnalpha treatment interferon-lambda mediates non-redundant front-line antiviral protection against influenza virus infection without compromising host fitness influenza infection induces host dna damage and dynamic dna damage responses during tissue regeneration heatr is upregulated during influenza virus infection in lung alveolar epithelial cells the il i enzyme: a new player in the immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment. cells cigarette smoke inhibits baff expression and mucosal immunoglobulin a responses in the lung during influenza virus infection highly pathological influenza a virus infection is associated with augmented expression of pd- by functionally compromised virus-specific cd + t cells new fronts emerge in the influenza cytokine storm inflammatory impact of ifn-gamma in cd + t cell-mediated lung injury is mediated by both stat -dependent and -independent pathways production of interferon-gamma by influenza hemagglutinin-specific cd effector t cells influences the development of pulmonary immunopathology h n influenza virus infection enhances oncostatin m expression in human nasal epithelium nf-kappab-dependent induction of tumor necrosis factor fas/fasl is crucial for efficient influenza virus propagation nucleoprotein of influenza a virus negatively impacts antiapoptotic protein api to enhance e f -dependent apoptosis and virus replication influenza a virus enhances its propagation through the modulation of annexin-a dependent endosomal trafficking and apoptosis programmed cell death in the pathogenesis of influenza dai senses influenza a virus genomic rna and activates ripk -dependent cell death zbp /dai is an innate sensor of influenza virus triggering the nlrp inflammasome and programmed cell death pathways the multifaceted b cell response to influenza virus influenza virus-induced type i interferon leads to polyclonal b-cell activation but does not break down b-cell tolerance neutrophils induce smooth muscle hyperplasia via neutrophil elastase-induced fgf- in a mouse model of asthma with mixed inflammation respiratory syncytial virus infection provokes airway remodelling in allergen-exposed mice in absence of prior allergen sensitization cd , a laminin receptor showing increased expression in asthma, contributes to airway hyperresponsiveness through calcium signaling regulation of human airway smooth muscle cell migration and relevance to asthma airway smooth muscle in asthma: phenotype plasticity and function. pulm pharm the interactomes of influenza virus ns and ns proteins identify new host factors and provide insights for adar playing a supportive role in virus replication yoshimura, a. fln , a novel interferon-and lps-inducible gene acting as a negative regulator of toll-like receptor signaling rna-and virus-independent inhibition of antiviral signaling by rna helicase lgp ceacam in liver injury, metabolic and immune regulation ceacam -mediated inhibition of virus production subcellular proteomic analysis of human host cells infected with h n swine influenza virus negative regulation of nmi on virus-triggered type i ifn production by targeting irf mast cells and influenza a virus: association with allergic responses and beyond leukotriene b enhances nod -dependent innate response against influenza virus infection multi-cohort analysis identifies conserved transcriptional signatures across multiple respiratory viruses interleukin- is critical in the pathogenesis of influenza a virus-induced acute lung injury influenza induces il- and gm-csf secretion by human alveolar epithelial cells through hgf/c-met and tgf-alpha/egfr signaling overactive epidermal growth factor receptor signaling leads to increased fibrosis after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) and platelet-derived growth factor (pdgf) levels in the cerebrospinal fluid of children with influenza-associated encephalopathy this article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the creative commons attribution (cc by) license we thank the surgeons and staff in the department of otolaryngology, national university hospital, singapore. we thank h.h. ong and t.t. he for the subject selection and recording. we thank m.c. phoon and s.h. lau for technical assistance in viral experiments. the authors would like to acknowledge the staff of the immunomonitoring platform at sign. the authors declare no conflicts of interest. key: cord- -q o w authors: griesenbach, u; geddes, d m; alton, e w f w title: gene therapy for cystic fibrosis: an example for lung gene therapy date: - - journal: gene ther doi: . /sj.gt. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: q o w gene therapy is currently being evaluated for a wide range of acute and chronic lung diseases. the requirement of gene transfer into the individual cell types of the complex lung structure will very much depend on the target disease. over the last decade, the gene therapy community has recognized that there is not even one vector that is good for all applications, but that the gene transfer agent has to be carefully chosen. gene therapy is particularly attractive for diseases that currently do not have satisfactory treatment options and probably easier for monogenic disorders than for complex diseases. cystic fibrosis (cf) fulfills these criteria and is therefore a good candidate for gene therapy-based treatment. this review will focus on cf as an example for lung gene therapy and discuss the progress made in this field over the last couple of years. gene therapy is currently being evaluated for a wide range of acute and chronic lung diseases including acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), cancer, asthma, emphysema and cystic fibrosis (cf), not least because of the comparatively easy noninvasive accessibility of the lungs through aerosols. the lung is a complex organ and can be roughly divided into two main regions: the airways, consisting of trachea, bronchi, large and small airways, which transport air to the peripheral lung, and the alveoli, where gas exchange takes place ( figure ). the cell types facing the lumen vary greatly from pseudostratified, columnar ciliated and nonciliated epithelium in the larger airways, to single-layer cuboidal epithelium in the small airways and type i and ii pneumocytes in the alveolar epithelium. the requirement of gene transfer into the individual cell types will very much depend on the target disease. in addition, tumour and perhaps inflammatory cells may also be important targets for gene transfer. over the last decade, the gene therapy community has recognized that there is not even one vector that is good for all applications, but that the gene transfer agent (gta) has to be carefully chosen depending on the cell type to be targeted, the number of treatments (one versus repeat administration) required, and the size and nature (secreted versus cellular product) of the gene to be delivered. gene therapy is particularly attractive for diseases that currently do not have satisfactory treatment options, and is probably easier for monogenic disorders than for complex diseases. cf fulfills these criteria and is there-fore a good candidate for gene therapy-based treatment. this review will mainly focus on cf as an example for lung gene therapy. cf is the most common lethal autosomal recessive disease in the caucasian population and affects approximately individuals worldwide. although several organs are affected, severe lung disease is the cause of most of the morbidity and mortality in cf individuals. the cf gene, the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (cftr), was cloned in and is a chloride channel located in the apical membrane of epithelial cells. mutations in the cftr gene lead to imbalanced ion and water movement across the airway epithelium, resulting in accumulation of sticky mucus, chronic bacterial infection and inflammation. proof-of-principle for cftr gene transfer was quickly established in vitro and in animal models. , the first clinical trials in cf patients were carried out in and to date trial protocols, most of which have been completed, are published (http//www.wiley.co.uk/genmed/clinica/). the initial hope was that cf gene therapy would progress rapidly, due to the ease of noninvasive access to the lungs, but delivery of the gene to the relevant cells remains a difficult task. here, we will review the considerable progress that has been made in pre-clinical and clinical gene therapy studies for cf over the last couple of years. in non-cf individuals, cftr is not expressed abundantly in the lungs, but high expression is seen in serous cells in the submucosal glands and isolated epithelial cells in the small airways. it is currently unclear which of these cell types is the main target for cf gene therapy. however, given that cf, at least in the early stages, presents as a small airway disease, airway epithelial cells (aecs) are likely to be an important target. topical delivery of gta to the lung is currently the preferred method for airway gene transfer. however, before the gta can reach the surface of the epithelial cells, a number of extracellular physical and immunological barriers have to be overcome (reviewed in ferrari et al and weiss ). briefly, the airway epithelium in the lung is generally covered by a thin mucus layer (figure ), whose main role is to trap invading foreign particles. it has been shown that mucus significantly reduces the transfection efficiency of most viral and nonviral gtas. however, transfection efficiency could be increased through pretreatment with mucolytics or the anticholinergic drug glycopyrrolate in vitro and in vivo. in cf patients, particularly at later stages in the disease, the airways are also filled with sticky sputum, consisting of inflammatory cells, cell debris, mucus and dna. to avoid the confounding effect of sputum in vivo, gene transfer should ideally be carried out early in the course of lung disease, before the lungs become filled with secretions. the glycocalyx is also a barrier to gene transfer and pretreatment with neuraminidase, which removes sialic acid residues, enhances adenovirus (ad) transfection of polarized cells in vitro. although not formerly shown, it is likely that cilia also lead to steric hindrance of gta to the apical surface of epithelial cells. in addition to the physical barriers, specific and nonspecific immune defences are important inhibitors of airway gene transfer. pulmonary macrophages have been shown to ingest gtas, and removal of these cells before transfection has increased reporter gene expression by % in animal models. however, it is unlikely that removal of macrophages is clinically feasible. in addition to the cellular immune response, humoral immune responses against gta are an important problem, severely restricting the use of viral vectors for chronic diseases such as cf. despite encouraging results in nasal and pulmonary tissues of pre-clinical models , and being well tolerated at low-to-intermediate doses in humans, adenovirusmediated gene transfer in the absence of epithelial damage has been inefficient in cf patients. this is mainly due to the absence of the coxsackie-adenovirus receptor (car) on the apical surface of the majority of human aecs, and highlights the important differences in receptor distribution of animal models and humans. in an attempt to increase the transfection efficiency of adenoviral vectors in vivo, gregory et al assessed the effects of sodium caprate (a tight junction opener) application to the luminal surface of aecs in mouse lung, with the rationale that car expression is higher on the basolateral surface of epithelial cells. gene expression in total lung homogenate was increased -fold, which further increased to -fold when adenovirus was complexed with -(diethylamino)ethyl ether (deae) dextran. however, it is unclear if this increase in gene expression was attributable to increased epithelial cell transfection. a controversial issue is whether such tight junction openers can be used clinically, given the heavy bacterial colonization present in the cf lung and the attendant risk of systemic invasion. in addition to problems with low transfection efficiency, the use of adenovirus for a chronic disease like cf is limited due to effective cellular and humoral immune responses against the virus. harvey et al delivered three doses of ad-cftr to the lung of cf patients months apart and demonstrated that after the third administration vector-specific cftr mrna was no longer detect- helper-dependent adenoviral vectors, which are depleted of all viral genes, are less immunostimulatory and have improved safety profiles compared to first-and second-generation viruses, which have only a subset of viral genes deleted. recently, it was shown that helperdependant adenovirus combined with the epithelial cellspecific cytokeratin (k ) promoter leads to reduced inflammation and more prolonged expression in murine airways. the use of adenoviral vectors for cf gene therapy is currently limited by low transfection efficiency and inability of repeated administration, but it remains to be seen if future virus improvements resurrect its use. aav vectors have attracted much interest due to their good safety profile, broad tissue tropism, long duration of expression, and suggestion of their superior escape from immune system surveillance compared with other viruses. several clinical trials have been carried out in the nose, sinus and single lobes of cf patients, all using the aav -based vector tgaav-cftr (targeted genetics corp.). this vector contains the complete human cftr cdna and uses aav inverted terminal repeat (itr)based promoter elements. phase i studies aerosolizing aav -cftr into cf patients with mild-to-moderate lung disease have been conducted. there were no safety problems and the vector was detected in the proximal airways: however, vector-specific mrna was not found. a phase ii trial was also undertaken in the maxillary sinuses of cf patients. although the good safety profile was confirmed, none of the primary end points, including the time to sinusitis relapse, histopathology and interleukin (il)- measurements, changed significantly when compared to the contralateral control sinus. most recently, results of the first repeat-administration lung trial (three doses of nebulized aav month apart) were published. the treatment was well tolerated and showed some evidence of improved lung function and reduced il- in induced sputum after the first administration. a follow-up trial sufficiently powered to detect pulmonary changes has recently started. the small packaging capacity of aav (o kb) precludes the use of this vector for transfer of larger genes. although there is enough space for the cftr cdna, it is not possible to include potent promoter/ enhancer elements. thus, all clinical trials carried out with aav -cftr have relied on the comparatively weak itr regulatory elements, which may in part explain the disappointing efficacy data described above. strategies to overcome the aav packaging problem have therefore been developed, including approaches based on transsplicing and homologous recombination. the basic principle of these techniques is to split the therapeutic cdna and required regulatory elements, and package them into two viruses, which when transfecting the same cell may recombine and generate a full-length therapeutic gene. one would speculate that both of these strategies would lead to reduced transfection efficiency, when compared with the administration of one intact virus to the lung. however, surprisingly, halbert et al have demonstrated that aav / (itr from aav and capsid from aav ) recombination-dependent vectors transduced lung cells in mice almost as efficiently as intact vector, with % of aecs being positive. several different isoforms of human aavs have been identified and further screening for new human and nonhuman primate isoforms is underway. it has already been documented that a virus with aav or aav capsid protein can enter aec more efficiently than aav viruses, but the overall transfection efficiency is still comparatively low. recently, the atomic structure of aav has been identified, which should enable rational engineering of vector capsids for specific cell targeting. shi et al have already identified specific regions within the capsid protein that can tolerate the insertion of small exogenous peptides and have made an attempt at incorporating integrin-targeting peptides into this region. it has been postulated that aav may not infect antigen-presenting dendritic cells and thereby avoids activation of the host immune system. if this is true, aavs, in contrast to other viruses, may be suitable for repeat administration. the results of repeat administration have been reported to vary greatly and may depend on the host, delivery route and aav serotype tested. , aurichio et al , have shown that aav / can be readministered once to the mouse lung months after the first delivery. most recently, fischer et al treated nonhuman primates with serial doses (three administrations) of aerosolized aav . this study goes some way towards demonstrating that repeat administration of aav maybe possible, despite increasing titres of neutralizing antibodies. importantly, repeat aerosolization of aav -cftr into cf patients is safe and well tolerated and phase ii efficacy trials are currently being carried out to determine if repeat administration in humans results in persistent gene expression. the murine parainfluenza virus type (or sendai virus (sev)), the human respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) and the human parainfluenza virus type (piv ) have all been shown to efficiently transfect aecs via the apical membrane , using sialic acid and cholesterol, which are abundantly expressed on the apical surface of aecs. these viruses have a negative-strand rna genome and replicate in the cytoplasm. they do not go through a dna intermediate and do not enter the nucleus. only sev has been assessed in animal models in vivo and is currently the most efficient virus for airway gene transfer. first-generation recombinant sev carrying cftr cdna can produce functional cftr chloride channels in vitro and after transfection of the nasal epithelium in cf knockout mice. further improvements in the sev vectors have been made by deleting the f-protein from the viral backbone (df), which rendered the second-generation viruses transmission-incompetent. inoue et al have further improved the df/sev vector by introducing mutations into the matrix (m) and hemagglutinin-neuraminidase (hn) proteins, which reduce the amount of virus-like particles that are produced after transfection, thereby further improving the safety profile. sev-mediated gene expression is transient (lasting for about days) and currently repeated administration is inefficient. several groups, including our own, are assessing a variety of immuno-modulatory strategies to improve the use of sev for chronic lung diseases. in contrast to retroviruses, lentiviruses transfect nondividing cells and are, therefore, suitable for transfection of terminally differentiated aecs. the virus stably integrates into the genome of transfected cells and expression is therefore likely to last for the lifetime of the cell (approximately days for aecs). however, when pseudotyped with the commonly used vesicular stomatitis virus g-glycoprotein (vsv-g), lentiviruses can only enter aec via the basolateral membrane, using the inorganic phosphate receptor pit . importantly, pit is also expressed on the apical surface and binds amphotropic virus equally well on both membranes. thus, other as yet unidentified factors contribute to the inefficient transfection of this virus via the apical membrane. vsvg-pseudotyped hiv-derived lentivirus carrying the cftr gene transiently and partially corrected the chloride defect in cf knockout mouse nose for up to days. however, to achieve efficient transfection in the mouse nose, pretreatment with the tight junction opener lysophosphatidylcholine was necessary. gene expression using b-galactosidase as a reporter gene was detected for up to days, without a loss in transgene expression. these results may suggest hiv integration into stem/ progenitor cells in the airways. however, longer followup will be required to determine this since the duration of follow-up ( days) overlaps closely with the projected lifetime of aecs of about days. it has previously been shown that lentivirus pseudotyped with envelope glycoproteins from the filoviruses ebola or marburg transfect aecs via the apical membrane, and that folate receptor alpha (fra) is a cellular receptor for filoviruses. a recent report has shown that fra is abundantly expressed on the apical surface of primary aecs, but interestingly does not appear to be absolutely required for filovirus uptake into the cells. in the presence of anti-fra-blocking antibodies, virus entry was not affected. this indicates that cellular entry of lentivirus pseudotyped with filovirus glycoproteins is likely more complex than via a single receptor. as mentioned, above members of the paramyxovirus family, such as sev and rsv, transfect aecs very efficiently. this is due to rapid interaction between the f and hn envelope glycoproteins with cholesterol and sialic acid residues on the cell surface, respectively. the f and hn proteins are therefore promising candidates for pseudotyping lenitviruses and kobayashi et al have recently described successful incorporation of f and hn envelope proteins into the capsid from simian immunodeficiency virus (siv). this vector was able to transduce polarized epithelial cells from both the apical and basolateral sides and we are currently evaluating this vector for airway transduction in animal models. importantly, unless lentiviral vectors are able to hit airway stem cells efficiently, they will likely need to be re-administered and therefore will face the same immune-response problems as other viral vectors. improving the efficiency of nonviral gene transfer to aecs has been a major focus with a variety of strategies being followed. several groups are modifying polyplexes such as polylysine and polyethylenimine (pei) by adding sugars, based on the rationale that aecs express lectins, which selectively bind and internalize glycoconjugates. although glycoconjugates containing lactose have been efficient in cell culture, [ ] [ ] [ ] their efficacy in vivo remains to be demonstrated. receptor-mediated gene delivery has been developed for aecs by targeting the serpin-enzyme complex receptor (sec-r). this receptor is responsible for the uptake of serine proteases bound to their cognate inhibitors into cells. the receptor recognizes a conserved five-amino-acid-binding motif, but tolerates large variation in the attached cargo. sec-r-directed complexes are prepared by condensing plasmid dna with a covalent conjugate of a peptide receptor ligand ( amino acids) and polylysine. ziady et al have recently demonstrated partial correction of the chloride transport defect in the nasal epithelium of cf knockout mice following administration of sec-r ligand complexed to a cftr plasmid. in nondividing cells, the nuclear membrane appears to be an important barrier to gene transfer and one reason why sec-r ligand polylysine complexes transfect airway cells efficiently might be their small size. with a diameter of - nm, these nanoparticles may be able to enter the nucleus via passive diffusion through the nuclear pore complex, which has a cutoff size of about nm. however, formulation and stability problems have so far prevented phase i clinical trials. peptides resembling integrin-binding domains have also been linked to plasmid dna and have been shown to transfect the airway epithelium of pigs when delivered at bronchoscopy. it remains to be established if antipeptide immune responses will interfere with using peptidecarrying nonviral formulations for chronic diseases, but the risk of immune responses against the peptide can be minimized by using conserved human peptide sequences. importantly, traditionally used animal models may not be suitable to evaluate efficiency or repeat administration of human peptide formulation, if the chosen sequence is not conserved within the animal model. another nanoparticle formulation, consisting of a single plasmid molecule compacted with polyethyleneglycol (peg)-substituted polylysine (polymer of lysines) has been developed. these dna nanoparticles have a rod-like structure ( - nm diameter, - nm length). a single-dose escalation study to evaluate the safety of nasal administration into cf patients has recently been carried out in subjects. in addition to assessing safety, secondary end points included assessment of electrical correction of the ion transport defects and molecular analysis for the presence of vector-specific dna and mrna. administration of the nanoparticles was considered safe. in most patients, plasmid dna could be detected in at least one nostril. there was no evidence of vector-specific mrna in any patient, which may have been due to insufficient sensitivity of the assay. partial correction of the chloride transport defect was demonstrated in seven out of patients, which persisted for up to days. although these initial results are encouraging, further phase ii trials will be necessary ultimately to determine the efficacy of these particles. in addition to improving nonviral dna condensing agents, several groups are improving the plasmid vectors for nonviral gene transfer. yew et al have demonstrated that reduction in cpg motifs in the pdna reduces the immunostimulatory capacity of pdna after systemic administration of liposome/pdna complexes. fewer changes in blood parameters of toxicity, reduced levels of inflammatory cytokines and decreased liver damage were observed after depletion of % of the cpg motifs. in addition, gene expression was prolonged in immunocompetent mice. similar results were observed after topical administration of liposome/pdna complexes to the lung (rk scheule, personal communication). gill et al have studied the effect of different promoters on persistence of lung gene expression by comparing the frequently used human immediate-early cytomegalovirus (cmv) promoter to the constitutive endogenous polyubiquitin c (ubc) and elongation factor a (ef a) promoters. although both eukaryotic endogenous promoters lead to about -fold less transgene expression at day , duration of gene expression was significantly improved when 'naked' pdna was administered to the lung (cmv: o week, ubc: weeks) and ubc-mediated gene expression reached cmv day levels approximately weeks after transfection. similar results were reporter by yew et al using the ubiquitin b (ubb) promoter. promoter silencing is likely to contribute to these results and it has previously been demonstrated that the cmv promoter is silenced by tnfa and infg, which are both upregulated after gene transfer. however, it is currently unknown why the ef a and ubc promoters are more resistant to gene silencing. despite the comparatively low transfection efficiency, nonviral gtas offer important advantages over viral gta for chronic disease. we and others are currently assessing a variety of physical delivery methods, including electroporation, magnetism, ultrasound and vibration, in an attempt to increase the transfection efficiency of nonviral formulations. electroporation has been successfully used to enhance transfection in a variety of organs including muscle. initial results for lung gene transfer are encouraging and demonstrate that the transfection efficiency of naked dna can be enhanced in the presence of electrical fields (and ian pringle, personal communication). clearly, important technical questions and safety considerations have to be resolved. systemic delivery has long been postulated as a means for lung transfection and intravenous (i.v.) injection of many nonviral gtas leads to lung transfection. it is important to note that for the vast majority of gtas gene transfer is only achieved in alveolar endothelial cells and maybe pneumocytes, because the gta gets trapped in the alveolar capillaries of the pulmonary circulation, the first capillary bed encountered after i.v. administration, but are found only rarely in the conducting airways, which are the targets for cf gene therapy. to be able to transfect the conducting airway epithelium, the gta has to pass through the pulmonary circulation, reach the left side of the heart and travel from there to the bronchial circulation, which supplies the airways (figure ) . here, the gta has to escape from the vessels and migrate through a dense layer of extracellular matrix to the basement membrane of the aecs. we have recently demonstrated that naked oligonucleotides are able to follow this route and transfect the cytoplasm of aecs efficiently. koehler et al have shown that the bronchial epithelium and submucosal glands can be transfected using plasmid dna complexed to the cationic liposome dodac:dope, although this was not reproducible with other lipids and appears to be a characteristic property of this particular liposome. a better understanding of liposome structure and charge interaction in the context of serum proteins will help with the rational design of nonviral gta for systemic cf gene therapy. the addition of ligands for receptor-mediated uptake may also improve the transfection efficiency of aecs after i.v. delivery and proof-of-principle for this concept has been published several years ago. ferkol et al have shown that addition of ligands to the polymeric immunoglobulin receptor increases aecs transfection following systemic administration. the addition of moieties to increase organ and cell-type specific targeting will be important to minimize systemic gene transfer and toxicity. alternative non-cftr cdna nucleotide-based therapies gene repair of the endogenous cftr gene has two major advantages over traditional gene therapy. if successful, gene repair should ensure gene expression for the lifetime of the cells and appropriate control of gene expression is likely because the endogenous cftr promoter is utilized. our preliminary results indicated that the genomic cftr locus could be modified in primary rat hepatocytes, but not primary aecs, using chimeraplasts (dna/rna hybrid oligonucleotides). hepatocytes have previously been shown to be easily amenable for gene repair strategies, most likely due to efficient uptake of repair molecules into the nucleus. in addition, a similar approach using small-fragment homologous recombination (sfhr) was able to reintroduce the wild-type cftr sequence into the lungs of cf knockout mice. overall, the mechanisms involved in figure schematic presentation of the pulmonary and bronchial circulation transporting gene transfer agents to the airway epithelium after intravenous injection (courtesy of steve smith, department of gene therapy, imperial college london). gene therapy for cystic fibrosis u griesenbach et al gene repair are not well understood and it is currently uncertain if the required 'repair' proteins are present in terminally differentiated aecs. in addition, uptake of repair oligonucleotides into the nucleus of aecs ex vivo and in vivo remains inefficient (uta griesenbach, unpublished observation) and is the first hurdle that needs to be overcome, before gene repair can be assessed. downregulation of gene expression through antisense molecules may be of therapeutical benefit in cf patients. lambert et al showed that antisense inhibition of the b-cell antigen receptor-associated protein (bap) increased expression of both wild-type cftr and mutant cftr and partially restored cftr chloride channel function. the exact function of bap is unclear, although the authors speculated that the protein may be involved in retaining mutant cftr in the er. several other chaperone proteins, mucins or the epithelial sodium channel (enac), which is hyperactive in cf, may be suitable candidates for antisense strategies. we have recently assessed rna interference-mediated gene silencing in the lungs in vivo, and although proof-ofprinciple could be demonstrated efficiency was low, likely due to low transfection efficiency. splicosome-mediated trans-splicing (smart) has recently been introduced as a means to generate wild-type cftr mrna in cf xenograft models. cells were transfected with very high titres of adenovirus that produced the so-called pre-therapeutic wild-type cftr mrna molecules (ptms), which are designed to promote trans-splicing with the endogenous cftr mrna. similar to gene repair, smart ensures celltype-specific expression of wild-type cftr mrna; however, the technology requires further optimization with respect to efficiency and specificity. the choice of the correct animal model is a crucial factor in developing gene therapy for cf. currently, the cf knockout mouse is the only cf animal model and although these mice do not develop the characteristic cf lung disease, they have the same ion transport defect as cf patients in their nasal epithelium. this, combined with the fact that the nasal epithelium can easily be exposed to gtas, makes the cf mouse nose an ideal organ for assessing and optimizing gene transfer. in addition, non-cf primates, , pigs and most recently sheep have been used to optimize airway gene transfer and allowed clinically relevant delivery methods such as nebulization to be assessed. more recently, first attempts have been made at generating cf ferret and sheep based on targeting of the cftr locus in somatic cells coupled with nuclear transfer (and jim mcwhir, roslin institute, personal communication). the success of pre-clinical and clinical cf gene therapy studies stands and falls with the assays used to evaluate gene transfer. the development of new cftr-specific assays involving epithelial cell-specific detection of cftr mrna and protein, bacterial adherence to aecs, airway surface liquid height measurements and others are currently a major focus of the uk cystic fibrosis gene therapy consortium (www.cfgenetherapy.org.uk). for clinical studies, the most relevant end points are a reduction in decline of lung function over time and of episodes of infection. however, these end points are not suitable for early phase ii trials, because large patient numbers ( ) and long follow-up ( months) would be required. it is therefore crucial to identify clinical surrogate end points (such as bacterial burden, inflammatory markers and imaging) that can be assessed in smaller patient cohorts with shorter follow-up. it is unlikely that one-time administration of a short acting gta will change these clinical surrogate end points, but will more likely require repeat administration and it is therefore important to design future gene therapy trials with these surrogate end points in mind. an extensive discussion about assays is outside the scope of this review, but has recently been reviewed. over the last decade, it became apparent that gene transfer to the aecs is difficult. this is perhaps unsurprising, given the lung has evolved to keep foreign particles out. the major obstacle for most viral gtas is the effective immune surveillance mechanisms in the lung, which prohibit repeat administration. many strategies to overcome this problem have already been explored, but have not yet been successful. in our view, this may be a difficult hurdle to overcome. nonviral gene transfer has traditionally been inefficient, but recently developed nanoparticles and ligand-targeting appear to be overcoming this problem. importantly, physical delivery methods to increase nonviral gene transfer are currently being assessed in the lung. although gene therapy for cf is not yet a clinical reality, the 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sequences in human airway epithelial cells using dna fragments control of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator expression by bap lacz sirna and antisense dna do not decrease b-galactosidase expression in the airways of k -lacz mice partial correction of endogenous deltaf cftr in human cystic fibrosis airway epithelia by spliceosome-mediated rna trans-splicing deposition and expression of aerosolized raav vectors in the lungs of rhesus macaques gene therapy for cystic fibrosis with aerosolized adenovirus-cftr: characterization of the aerosol and scintigraphic determination of lung deposition in baboons transfection efficiency and toxicity following delivery of naked plasmid dna and cationic lipid-dna complexes to ovine lung segments development of a ferret model of cystic fibrosis identifying treatments that halt progression of pulmonary disease in cystic fibrosis preclinical and clinical endpoint assays for cystic fibrosis gene therapy key: cord- - enr authors: nam, gyu-hwi; mishra, anshuman; gim, jeong-an; lee, hee-eun; jo, ara; yoon, dahye; kim, ahran; kim, woo-jin; ahn, kung; kim, do-hyung; kim, suhkmann; cha, hee-jae; choi, yung hyun; park, chan-il; kim, heui-soo title: gene expression profiles alteration after infection of virus, bacteria, and parasite in the olive flounder (paralichthys olivaceus) date: - - journal: sci rep doi: . /s - - -y sha: doc_id: cord_uid: enr olive flounder (paralichthys olivaceus) is one of economically valuable fish species in the east asia. in comparison with its economic importance, available genomic information of the olive flounder is very limited. the mass mortality caused by variety of pathogens (virus, bacteria and parasites) is main problem in aquaculture industry, including in olive flounder culture. in this study, we carried out transcriptome analysis using the olive flounder gill tissues after infection of three types of pathogens (virus; viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus, bacteria; streptococcus parauberis, and parasite; miamiensis avidus), respectively. as a result, we identified total , differentially expressed genes (deg) from viral infection, , from bacterial infection, and from parasite infection, respectively. to investigate the effects of pathogenic infection on immune response, we analyzed gene ontology (go) enrichment analysis with degs and sorted immune-related go terms per three pathogen groups. especially, we verified various go terms, and genes in these terms showed down-regulated expression pattern. in addition, we identified common genes ( up-regulated and down-regulated) present in three pathogen infection groups. our goals are to provide plenty of genomic knowledge about olive flounder transcripts for further research and report genes, which were changed in their expression after specific pathogen infection. viruses, viral hemorrhagic septicemia virus (vhsv) is affiliated to novirhabdovirus genus, which is a member of the rhabdoviridae family . the six gene were contained in the vhsv genome of about k bases and each of them coded nucleoprotein (n), phosphoprotein (p), matrix protein (m), glycoprotein (g), nonstructural viral protein (nv), and rna polymerase (l) in the following order '-n-p-m-g-nv-l- ' . infection of vhsv results in contagious viral hemorrhagic septicemia (vhs) in diverse fish species regardless of their inhabitation; seawater or freshwater . in east asia, a lot of infection cases into olive flounder have been reported steadily, since vhsv was detected in middle of s [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . a variety of scuticociliates have been reported as cause of scuticociliatosis in marine species including turbot, guppy, and southern bluefin tuna [ ] [ ] [ ] . in olive flounder, disease has been reported to be causing from various scuticociliates; uronema marinum, pseudocohnilembus persalinus, philasterides dicentrarchi, miamiensis avidus [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . interestingly, judging from infection experiments using various scuticociliates plus identification outcome of isolates acquired from olive flounders with symptom of ulcers and haemorrhages, miamiensis avidus was suggested as the major aetiologic agent of scuticociliatosis because of high pathogenicity and mortality rate compared with other scuticociliates , . infection of bacteria could sustain serious damage to fish. streptococcosis is known to be caused by a variety of streptococcic species; streptococcus parauberis, streptococcus iniae, streptococcus difficilis, lactococcus garvieae, lactococcus piscium, vagococcus salmoninarum, and carnobacterium piscicola, and has become major nuisance in olive flounder farms [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in particular, streptococcus iniae, lactococcus garvieae, and streptococcus parauberis have been introduced to be related with streptococcosis in olive flounder [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the main issue of aquaculture industry is to reduce economic loss by preventing mortality of fish from various pathogens. a large number of immunologic studies have been proceeded about various immune-related gens against pathogen infection , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . a huge quantity of genomic information from next generation sequencing (ngs) technique has been gradually increasing for the last few years, indicating that researchers could approach more comprehensive understanding view about genome of organisms than when they research a single gene level. with development of wide-sized analysis methods, it is not difficult to figure out change of gene expression level after any chemical treatment or environmental change. recently, studies to identify large-scale genes were conducted in the olive flounder genome for researches about vaccine, gonadal development, and sex determination [ ] [ ] [ ] . in particular, characterizing of immune-related genes was reported in olive flounder spleen tissue . a lot of studies reported earlier were focused on gene expression analysis of single pathogen and specifically defined the expression pattern of limited genes [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . further, infection by two or more pathogens were reported in the olive flounder genome , . in order to solve these problem, we need plentiful genomic information to respond rapidly to multiple infection of pathogens. however, researches, which were comprehensively analysed about change of gene expression pattern by different type of pathogens, have not been reported in the olive flounder genome, so far. in this research, we identified differentially expressed genes (degs) by transcriptome analysis and conducted gene ontology (go) analysis with genes identified. then, we tried to find important genes which showed consistently meaningful expression change in the results of three infection experiments. as a result, we determined up-regulated genes and down-regulated genes in common after infection of three pathogens. we aimed to provide essential genome information which is related with pathogen infection and explore the various consequences related to differential infections and find out the common strategies against specific candidates involved in disease progression in natural habitat of aquaculture. statistical summary of transcriptome analysis. to profile gene expression after infection of three pathogens (vhsv, streptococcus parauberis, and miamiensis avidus), transcriptome analysis was conducted using gill tissues of olive flounders, respectively. we prepared twelve olive flounders (three un-infected individuals as control, three virus-infected, three bacteria-infected, and three parasite-infected individuals) to raise confidence. to gain the sufficient number of transcripts, twelve independent rna samples acquired from normal and pathogen-infected olive flounder gill tissues were employed for construction of cdna library. then, these cdna libraries were sequenced using illumina hiseq , generating the numbers of approximately . million, . million, and . million raw reads from three control samples, . million, . million, and . million raw reads from bacteria-infected samples, . million, . million, and . million raw reads from virus-infected samples, . million, . million, and . million raw reads from parasite-infected samples, respectively (table ) . after trimming of low-quality reads and adaptor sequences, the number of clean reads acquired from control samples were average . million reads from control samples, average . million reads from bacteria-infected samples, average . million reads from virus-infected samples, and average . million reads from parasite-infected samples, respectively. then, we checked gene coverage whether the reads that we acquired are sufficient for quantitative gene expression analysis ( supplementary fig. ). the clean reads were assembled into , transcript sequences acquired from transcriptome analysis, we identified total , genes involving novel , genes from transcript sequences using interproscan database and non-redundant protein database in the ncbi ( table ). to figure out the effects of external pathogen for gene expression, we sorted out genes which showed expressional change after pathogens infection having p-value of < . when compared with control sample. as shown in table and fig. , the largest numbers of gene expression change were shown in vhsv infection group; total , degs were identified from transcriptome analysis. we showed information of degs derived from viral infection in supplementary to explore the functional enrichment of these degs, we performed go enrichment analysis using david tool table ). prediction following viral infection, we identified the degs with p-value of < . after infection with bacteria (streptococcus parauberis) and parasite (miamiensis avidus) ( table and table ). miamiensis avidus affected gene expression pattern in olive flounder genome and selected genes which showed expression change (supplementary table ). we identified degs caused by infection of miamiensis avidus; description samples u-i u-i u-i b-i b-i b-i v-i v-i v-i p-i p-i p-i number distributional pattern of total degs acquired from transcriptome analysis. after comparison of gene expression level among twelve transcriptome analysis, we identified degs after pathogen infection. then, we focused on selection of genes showing expression change pattern after three types of pathogen infection in common. as a result, we summarized up-regulated genes and down-regulated genes, respectively (fig. ) . we analyzed these degs to identify their gene symbol correctly using their sequences in non-redundant protein database of the ncbi database, and degs were annotated (table ) . we showed the rest of unannotated degs in supplementary table . with development of sequencing technique, numerous genomic researches have been reported to understand infection results by virus , , , bactria , , , and parasite in the olive flounder genome. a fundamental way to overcome disease outbreak from external pathogens is to approach from their genome level. it is essential to expand quantity of genomic information in pursuance of biological research about any target. investigation of overall gene expression change after pathogen infection would provide clues of cause of biological damage. gene regulation is essential for viruses, prokaryotes and eukaryotes as it increases the versatility and adaptability of an organism by allowing the cell to express protein when needed. phylogenetic diversity of pathogens (virus, bacteria and parasite) is also responsible for differential expression of genes in diseases. each individual pathogen causes disease in a different way, which makes it challenging to understand the basic biology of infection. in this study, we understood the relation between three types of pathogen infection and differential gene expression in the olive flounder genome through transcriptome analysis, respectively. the diverse pathogens used in this study, carry specific antigenic variations, which refers to the specific mechanism by which an infectious agent infect the fish and progress the disease. transcriptome analysis help us to understand the progression of disease in fish through pathogen infection based on diversity of pathogen (virus, bacteria and parasite). this study shows differentially expressed genes were up-and down-regulated at different extend in fish tissue. interestingly, virus and bacteria have more down-regulated genes while parasite have more up-regulated genes. this data signifies the fact that fish immune system interacts with bacteria and virus with the same strategy, while with parasite different due to difference in mode of infections between them. for efficient prevention against pathogen, it is important to understand which genes were activated/repressed after pathogen infection because their expression change means variation of metabolic system in body. in this study, we identified total number of , in vhsv infection group, , in streptococcus parauberis infection group, and degs from miamiensis avidus infection group, respectively (table ). given the difference in the number of degs among three pathogen groups, these results seemed that virus had the most impact on gene expression mechanism in the olive flounder genome among three pathogens. interestingly, , degs ( % of all degs) showed down-regulated pattern after viral infection. this phenomenon that global gene expression was decreased by viral infection must cause pathogenic disease by affecting immune-related gene expression level, finally leads to death. this view was supported by our findings (supplementary table ), which showed expression decrease pattern of all genes in the immune-related go terms. especially, go terms in viral infection group showed that all genes tend to be down-regulated after pathogen infection, indicating loss of resistance against pathogens by down-regulating the expression of immune-related genes. like this situation, functional information of genes acquired from go enrichment could help researcher to figure out critical biological pathway against any external factor. the immune mechanism in fishes is composed of a set of cellular and humoral system and divided into innate (inherit), and adaptive (acquired) substances. the understanding of fish immune system structure and function is essential for the development of new technologies and products to improve productivity. the transcriptome analysis bring exposure to basic difference in expression profile of all pathogens in the host. these differences were due to nature of parasite, their mode of infection, antigenic variations and many other factors. additionally, along with all above differences, disease progressed in host due to external surface variation of pathogens (viral, parasite and bacterial) and their appropriate recognition by host immune systems for making the basis to initiate microbial clearance , . disease research requires the knowledge of important key factors like method of avoiding host immune surveillance, antigenic variations, subversion of immune responses through phagocyte and inhibition of cytokines and chemokines in common with pathogen infections (viral, bacterial and parasite) , . on the other hand, the disease progression was different in accordance to type of pathogens. in case of viral infection, understanding of complement inhibition and blockade of cellular immunity is the most important, while parasite and bacterial infections required knowledge and research of innate pathway and acquired immunity , . our analysis indicates the complexity and difference of expression profile could be due to all the above reasons. in addition, important basis of fish vaccine is depending on innate and adaptive immunity . there were many vaccine types which depend upon antigens, live microorganisms or specific dna segment of pathogens or polyvalent vaccines. all above vaccines required complete knowledge of pathogenicity and deep research of efficacy . our study clearly indicates about various immune and antigenic genes which can be chosen for pathways analysis and use for therapeutic agents or as some vaccine candidates (supplementary table ) . despite of their different infection pathway, we wondered common degs which were affected from infection. as shown in fig. , total degs ( up-regulation and down-regulation) were identified in common in three pathogens, and of up-regulated and of degs were annotated by genomic database (table ; , genes (bacteria), and genes (parasites). these genes were specific for each pathogen so can be used as candidate genes for vaccination or therapeutic agents. in case of the down-regulation of gene (virus), gene (bacteria) and gene (parasites) in infection of fish, these genes were specific for specific pathogens so can be used as a diagnosis marker for specific pathogens. c-x -c motif containing , col a ; collagen type i alpha chain, col a ; collagen type i alpha chain, slc a ; solute carrier family member ) which showed highest expression change (down regulation) with fold change (log ) of ' <− . ' on at least two infection groups. in this study, we investigated all the above candidate genes and found their role in disease progression. we have listed these genes and their role in below headings. anpep, called as gene aminopeptidase n (apn), is metallopeptidase that exerts strong influence on various immune response mechanisms. for example, apn has been known to cause decomposition of cytokines and peptides used by neurons [ ] [ ] [ ] , and acts as receptor for viruses , . in addition, relation between expression level of apn and stimulated t-cell was reported . recently, it was suggested that apn controlled the balance of innate immune and adaptive immune by regulating tlr signal transduction pathway in myeloid cells . bglap, also known as osteocalcin, is a noncollagenous protein, mainly found in bone, which needs vitamin k for its synthesis. this protein was thought to play a role in calcium ion homeostasis and used as biological marker for bone formation . in addition, it concerns in endocrine regulation, especially in digestive system, by stimulating release of insulin hormone from β-cell of the pancreas and adiponectin hormone from fat cells, respectively . as well as these function, it has been reported to take a role in promotion of energy availability and sexual maturation of male by stimulation of testosterone biosynthesis , . cmc , called as mtcp , has been mainly reported to be related in various diseases. it was reported that mtcp gene affected t-cell homeostasis prior to process of leukemogenesis in transgenic mice . although the function of this gene has been entirely discovered, regulation error of mtcp gene affected on cell survival and cell growth . besides, this gene was known to be related in the pathogenesis of a subset of t-cell lymphoproliferative diseases , . col a and col a encodes the pro-α chain and the pro-α chain protein, respectively. the type i collagen, which is comprised by two pro-α chains and one pro-α chain, plays a role in reinforcement and support in most of all connective tissues such as bone, cartilage, skin, and tendon, and offers those tissues rigidity and elasticity , . this protein was reported to stimulate expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines and professional phagocytes in teleost fish gilthead seabream , . in addition, it has been reported that receptor-mediated interaction which is formed in between cells and collagen molecule might affect in wound healing, inflammatory, and immune response by activating various factors such as cytokines, growth factor, and matrix metalloprotease , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . slc a , also is known urea transporter (hut ), is important gene involved in urea transport and play role in physiology. in mammals, two types of urea transporter (slc a and slc a ) has been reported and were regulated by vasopressin hormone . the kidney uses urea to maintain the appropriate concentration and volume of blood. without control of these proteins, organism would result in extreme damage in urinary system. besides, a previous study has reported that genetic variation including nucleotide change is known to significantly influence blood pressure (bp) and metabolism syndrome , . as shown in supplementary table , immune-related degs were revealed as results of three pathogens infection. infection of pathogens caused activation of immune system to respond to invasion of harmful external elements, indicated that change of expression level of immune-related genes. the down-regulation of gene could sequentially influence on expression of various molecules positioned in down-streams in metabolic pathway. in this view, cd , which is one of down-regulated genes by infection of three pathogens on common, was reported to inactivate interleukin . representative function of this cytokine is to induce migration of neutrophils and granulocytes toward infection site. in addition, absence of cd considerably improves cross-presentation of soluble antigen via regulation of receptor-mediated uptake . thus, decrease of cd expression consequentially might activate immune response in the olive flounder. mtcp gene induced malignant t-cell transformation and was related in the leukemogenic process of mature t-cell proliferation . this gene was thought to maintain balance of immune response by t-cell. the innate immune system mediates the initial inflammatory response by pathogen infection or injury. for rapid response against external pathogens, infected cells secrete various cytokines to induce effector cells and complements. the type i collagen, which is comprised by proteins coded from col a and col a , was involved in the expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the innate immune system. however, two genes (col a and col a ) showed decreasing expression pattern after infection in our study. given sampling period ( days from infection) of olive flounders for this study, it might be explained that the adaptive immune response was activated in the olive flounder genome. it is hard to understand comprehensively about immune system of fish genome. however, our results were expected to contribute for further study by extend of genomic knowledge in the olive flounder. in conclusion, this study is helpful in understanding infection of the diversified pathogens (antigenic variation) and their role in disease progression in the olive flounder. the differentially expressed genes identified from transcriptome analysis using three types of pathogens could be useful to study the basic diagnosis and therapeutic mechanisms, and offer opportunities for designing the appropriate vaccines or drug targets for pathogen specific candidate genes. because of lack of genomic information or using one external infection factor, previous studies have been limited to understand global expression pattern of whole genes in the olive flounder genome. we hope that this research would contribute to achieve great outcome in various biological field. ethical statement. all experiments with the olive flounders in this study were carried out in accordance with the guidelines and regulation approved by ethical committee of pukyong national university. preparation of olive flounder gill tissues. gill tissues from twelve olive flounder (bw = ~ g, n = / group) including healthy and infected fish with each pathogen were used for this study. briefly, healthy fish (non-challenged), sampled fish at days post challenge (dpc) with s. parauberis at . × cfu/fish in / seawater of °c, sampled fish at dpc with vhsv at pfu/fish in / seawater of construction of cdna libraries for transcriptome analysis. building of transcriptome libraries were conducted by illumina's truseq rna protocol, and - μg of total rna were used in each samples. ampure xp beads (beckman coulter) and ambion fragmentation reagents kit (ambion, austin, tx) were used for extraction of poly(a)+ rna and their fragment, respectively. as the following steps, cdna synthesis, end-repair, a-base addition, and ligation of the illumina indexed adapters were carried out according to illumina's protocol. the size-selected - bp cdna fragments were loaded on a % nusieve : (lonza) agarose gel for libraries. the cdna fragments were recovered using qiaex ii gel extraction reagents (qiagen), and amplified using phusion dna polymerase (new england biolabs) for pcr cycles. the amplified libraries were purified by ampure xp beads, their concentration and product sizes were assessed on an agilent bioanalyzer. sequencing of paired-end libraries were conducted with the illumina hiseq , ( × nucleotide read length). transcriptome analysis and differential gene expression. transcriptome analysis were carried out with the rnaseq tuxedo protocol. mapping of sequences were conducted against the olive flounder draft genome (submitted at present) using tophat v . . with default options for paired-end sequences. transcripts expression were estimated using the cufflinks program v . . . total sequencing reads were subjected to preprocessing as follows: adapter trimming was performed using cutadapt with default parameters, and quality trimming (q ) was performed using fastqc with default parameters. processed reads were mapped to the olive flounder draft genome (submitted at present) using tophat and cufflink with default parameters . the differential analysis was performed using cuffdiff using default parameters. further, the fpkm values from cuffdiff were normalized and quantitated using r package tag count comparison (tcc) to determine statistical significance (e.g., p values) and differential expression (e.g., fold changes.). through these statistics analysis, we sorted degs having p < . and showed them as results. gene ontology analysis. deg set for go analysis was acquired from transcriptome analysis. degs were annotated from interproscan database and non-redundant protein database in the ncbi. david and uniprot tool were used for exploring the functional enrichment of these degs 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cross-presentation and t cell responses by inhibiting receptor-mediated antigen uptake differential gene and transcript expression analysis of rna-seq experiments with tophat and cufflinks tcc: an r package for comparing tag count data with robust normalization strategies this research was a part of the project titled "omics based on fishery disease control technology development and industrialization ( ), " funded by the ministry of oceans and fisheries, korea. g.n. wrote the main manuscript text, a.m. and j.g. supported arrangement of contents in manuscript, h.l. and a.j. supported to complete fig. , d.y. and a.k. prepared fish tissue samples, w.k. provided olive flounder genome reference sequence, k.a. provided bioinformatic advice for this study, d.k., s.k., h.c., y.c. and c.p. reviewed the manuscript, h.k. supervised entire flow of the manuscript and reviewed contents. supplementary information accompanies this paper at https://doi.org/ . /s - - -y.competing interests: the authors declare no competing interests.publisher's note: springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. license, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the creative commons license, and indicate if changes were made. the images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's creative commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. if material is not included in the article's creative commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. to view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ . /. key: cord- -rhpfpku authors: zhong, hui-hai; wang, hui-yuan; li, jian; huang, yong-zhuo title: trail-based gene delivery and therapeutic strategies date: - - journal: acta pharmacol sin doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rhpfpku trail (tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand), also known as apo l, belongs to the tumor necrosis factor family. by binding to the death receptor (dr ) or dr , trail induces apoptosis of tumor cells without causing side toxicity in normal tissues. in recent years trail-based therapy has attracted great attention for its promise of serving as a cancer drug candidate. however, the treatment efficacy of trail protein was under expectation in the clinical trials because of the short half-life and the resistance of cancer cells. trail gene transfection can produce a “bystander effect” of tumor cell killing and provide a potential solution to trail-based cancer therapy. in this review we focus on trail gene therapy and various design strategies of trail dna delivery including non-viral vectors and cell-based trail therapy. in order to sensitize the tumor cells to trail-induced apoptosis, combination therapy of trail dna with other drugs by the codelivery methods for yielding a synergistic antitumor efficacy is summarized. the opportunities and challenges of trail-based gene delivery and therapy are discussed. nucleic acid-based therapy has been considered one of the most promising strategies for the treatment of various diseases [ ] . tumor necrosis factor (tnf) plays an important role in the homeostatic regulation of the immune system [ ] . although tnf is potent in causing tumor necrosis, the first two clinical trials of tnflike molecules for cancer therapy failed because of lethal inflammatory shock syndrome and fulminant liver toxicity [ , ] . subsequentlyx, a novel tnf family member, tnf-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (trail), was found [ , ] ; this protein is a type ii transmembrane protein and can be released from the cell surface in soluble form via proteolysis [ ] . soluble trail is nontoxic to normal cells, and in fact, there is a trace amount of endogenous trail (~ pg/ml) in healthy adult plasma [ , ] . the trail protein is expressed in various tissues-predominantly in the spleen, lung, and prostate-and on the surface of cytotoxic t cells and natural killer (nk) cells [ ] . its death receptors (drs), dr and dr , are overexpressed in many types of cancer cells. importantly, trail is capable of killing tumor cells without causing lethal adverse effects [ , ] . apoptosis is an essential function of the maintenance of cellular homeostasis and prevents a number of diseases, including cancer [ ] . tumorigenesis is associated with defects in apoptosis regulation [ ] . there are two major apoptotic pathways: the intrinsic, or mitochondrial, pathway usually induced by chemotherapy [ ] , and the extrinsic, or dr, pathway that mediates extrinsic programs of cell death, such as trail-induced apoptosis. however, these two pathways usually associate with each other downstream via "crosstalk" [ ] . the extrinsic pathway is activated by extracellular proapoptotic stimulators that bind to cell surface receptors [ ] . there are five homologous human receptors for trail: the full-length intracellular death domain (dd)-containing receptors dr [ ] and dr (trail-r ) [ ] [ ] [ ] ; the decoy receptor (dcr or trail-r ), which lacks an intracellular domain; [ , , ] dcr (trail-r ), which contains a truncated dd; [ , ] and the soluble receptor osteoprotegerin (opg). among these receptors, only the binding of trail to dr or dr -because of their integrated intracellular structure-can induce an apoptotic effect; dr has the highest affinity for trail [ ] . however, trail/dcr binding cannot induce downstream signaling, because dcr lacks an intracellular domain, while dcr and opg act as nf-κb ligand receptors, which induce nf-κb activation but not apoptosis. after dr or dr binding to trimeric trail, the intracellular dd structure of the drs is altered, and binding to fas-associated death domain-containing protein (fadd) then occurs. then, fadd binds to procaspase- /- via the death effector domain (ded) on the n-terminus, thereby forming dr /dr -fadd-procaspase- /- , which is called the death-inducing signaling complex (disc). oligomerization and autocatalysis of procaspase- leads to the activation of caspase- , which consequently triggers cleavage of the effector caspases- /- /- to induce apoptosis. furthermore, caspase- promotes the release of cytochrome c, inducing intrinsic apoptosis via the mitochondrial pathway in type ii cells [ ] . the trail-induced apoptosis process is summarized in fig . the ability of the tumor-specific action of trail to induce the apoptosis of cancer cells while sparing normal cells is attractive and renders trail signaling a potential therapeutic target. to date, clinical trials of trail have focused on recombinant trail protein and antibodies against trail-r (table ) . however, clinical trials have shown inadequate treatment outcomes [ ] . the recombinant form of trail and anti-trail-r antibodies, as well as their combination with other components, have not achieved the expected efficacy [ ] . for example, the recombinant form of trail did not exhibit significant antitumor effects, partially due to its short half-life [ , ] , while tas , an antibody targeting dr , showed acute toxicity in a phase i clinical study [ ] . there are three major limitations of trail-based therapy: its short in vivo half-life [ , ] , its poor tumor-targeting efficacy, and resistance to trail monotherapy [ , ] . the emergence of nanotechnology has provided a useful tool to address these problems. trail-based nanotherapies offer the potential to improve the stability of trail and prolong its half-life in the bloodstream, to specifically deliver trail to target sites and to overcome resistance to trail [ ] . compared with direct administration of trail proteins, trail gene therapy also has the unique advantages of delivering trail-encoding dna into tumor cells to locally secrete the trail protein on the membrane or into the tumor microenvironment, thereby overcoming the limitations of recombinant trail protein. notably, combination therapies of trail with other anticancer agents via a codelivery system may solve the problem of trail resistance. trail gene therapy also benefits from the "bystander" effect, by which not only the host cancer cells but also the neighboring cancer cells can be killed by both secreted and membrane-bound trail [ ] . trail shows a unique advantage over other cell deathinducing ligands (e.g., fas ligand, fasl), of which only the membrane-bound form can induce apoptosis, while the intrinsic soluble form cannot [ ] . liposome-bound trail induces even more efficient apoptosis than the soluble form [ ] . trail-based gene therapy has been investigated in various types of tumors, such as hepatocellular carcinoma and cervical cancer. since the completion of the human genome project, the development of gene therapy has accelerated. gene therapy depends on the success of delivering specific nucleic acids to target sites by overcoming a series of biobarriers; in other words, it relies on the efficient delivery of vectors. viral vectors are well known for their high transfection efficiency, which mainly relies on their ability to integrate genes into the genome of host cells. this approach increases the risk of insertion mutations at the integration site, especially if there are hotspots near prooncogenes. thus, there is an urgent need to find a highly efficient vector with low genotoxicity and immunogenicity. nonviral vectors delivering genes typically via a nanosized platform are another option, with obvious advantages of safety and the high packing capacity of nucleic acids. in addition, advances in nanotechnology have provided good insight into rational designs for targeted delivery. although numerous nonviral vectors have been developed, the amount of data from clinical trials has been very limited due to their low transfection efficiency [ ] . thus, there is a pressing need to develop nonviral vectors with increased efficiency. nonviral vectors include cationic lipids, cationic polymers, and inorganic nanoparticles. polyethyleneimine (pei), for example, has high transfection efficiency in various cell lines. for the systemic delivery of gene therapeutics, delivery systems must cross a series of barriers, which is an important consideration in the design of delivery systems. regarding trail-based therapy, viral vectors are prominently used for cell therapy, while nonviral vectors deliver plasmidencoded trail (ptrail) to targets. in this review, we summarize trail-based gene therapeutic strategies and discuss the challenges facing clinical trials of trail. most gene therapy clinical trials involved viral vectors [ ] . modified viruses such as retroviruses, lentiviruses, adenoviruses, and adeno-associated viruses (aavs) are commonly used to deliver genes. viruses are able to transfer genes into many cell types, with highly efficient transfection. griffith et al. constructed a trail-encoded adenovirus and found that rapid expression of the trail protein and apoptosis of tumor cells were triggered by the activation of caspase- [ ] . oncolytic adenoviruses (oads) can selectively replicate in cancer cells while sparing normal cells; thus, these viruses have been used in clinical trials for anticancer therapy. el-shemi et al. applied systemic therapy with ad-Δb/ing (inhibitor of growth ) plus ad-Δb/trail in an orthotopic human hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) -bearing mouse model. this study found that the combination of these agents elicited potent eradicative effects by inducing apoptosis and immune responses, and suppressing tumor angiogenesis without causing obvious overlapping toxicity [ ] . in addition, the use of viral vectors has been explored for trailbased cell therapy, which will be introduced in section . because of the inherent shortcomings of viral vectors, including their limited dna packaging capacity, complicated production processes, broad tropism, cytotoxicity, immunogenicity, and tumorigenicity, nonviral vectors have also been widely investigated as an option for gene therapy [ ] . in contrast to viral vectors, nonviral vectors have the advantages of low immunogenicity, high delivery capacity, and easy preparation [ , ] . before they reach the target cells, delivery systems need to cross a series of biobarriers. in the physiological environment, positively charged complexes are more prone to bind serum proteins and aggregate and thus be cleared rapidly [ , ] . shielding the positive charge using polyethylene glycol (peg) or anionic materials such as γ-pga can be helpful. another challenge is selective accumulation at the target tissue, which requires specific designs, such as arming targeted ligands. subsequently, fig. pathway of trail-induced apoptosis. trail binds to five receptors, including four membrane-bound receptors (i.e., dr , dr , trail-r , and trail-r ) and one soluble receptor (opg). only binding to dr or dr results in receptor trimerization and recruitment of fadd via the dds of dr or dr . after further recruitment of caspase- , these proteins form a complex named disc, which can activate caspase- . in type i cells, caspase- activates caspase- and triggers apoptosis via the extrinsic pathway. however, in type ii cells, the intrinsic pathway is triggered via caspase- /bid/tbid, and consequently, bax/bak on the mitochondrial membrane is activated to induce the release of cytochrome c, which promotes the formation of the apoptosome with apaf and procaspase- . subsequently, activation of caspase- and caspase- is induced. figure adapted from fig. in ref. [ ] the dna of interest needs to be delivered to the nucleus for transcription [ ] . thus, the design of gene delivery systems should account for these considerations. polymers. cationic polymers are an important class of nonviral vectors. poly(l-lysine) (pll) and polyethyleneimine (pei) were developed for gene delivery in the s. subsequently, numerous cationic polymers have been developed and used, including poly [( -dimethylamino) ethyl methacrylate] (pdmaema), poly(β-amino ester)s, and various carbohydrate-based polymers and dendrimers. pei and its derivatives are the most commonly used polymeric vectors for gene delivery, with the advantage of the "proton sponge" effect, which facilitates the endosomal escape of gene drugs [ ] . however, the major hurdles to overcome for the in vivo use of pei are the substantial cytotoxicity related to its strong positive charge and the issue of its stability in the bloodstream [ ] . to address these issues, modification of pei and the surface coating have been investigated. for example, a γ-pga corona can shield the positive charge of the pei/dna complex, thereby decreasing its toxicity and increasing its stability. it has been reported that the γ-pga-coated branched pei/ptrail complex can efficiently transfect pancreatic stellate cells expressing fibroblast growth factor receptors [ ] . although pei k is the gold standard for polymer transfection, its high molecular weight generally causes high toxicity. therefore, many studies focusing on low-molecular-weight pei have been reported. for instance, a gene delivery system for brain targeting was established by using pei k modified with myristic acid (mc); mc-pei k /dna nanoparticles could interact with the cell membrane via the hydrophobic segment on mc that can be incorporated into the phospholipid bilayer. mc-pei k /porf-htrail nanoparticles were effective against the growth of intracranial tumors [ ] . furthermore, cell-penetrating peptide (cpp)-modified and mannosylated low-molecular-weight pei (termed man-pei k -cpp) was constructed as a vector to deliver ptrail for colorectal cancer treatment. man-pei k -cpp increased the cellular uptake efficiency and improved the efficiency of transfection [ ] . then, a ternary complex system was developed by a γ-pga-based γ-glutamyl transpeptidase (ggt)-targeting and surface camouflage strategy via a layer-bylayer self-assembly method. biodegradable polyanionic γ-pga protected the pei/pdna complexes from interaction with body fluid components and interacted with tumor-overexpressed ggt, which can mediate the endocytosis of nanoparticles for cervical cancer gene therapy (fig. ) [ ] . hyaluronic acid (ha) also acts as a biocompatible polyanionic biomaterial for shielding positive charges. an ha-decorated polyethyleneimine-poly(d, l-lactide-co-glycolide) nanoparticle (pei-plga np) system was established for targeted codelivery of ptrail and gambogic acid (ga) for triple-negative breast cancer (tnbc) therapy [ ] . ga was encapsulated into the hydrophobic core of pei-plga nps, while ptrail was adsorbed onto the positively charged np surface. the ha coating on the pei-plga nps not only functioned as a shell to neutralize the excess positive charge on the nps but also served as a targeting ligand by binding to the cd receptor on tnbc cells. a series of terpolymers were synthesized via the enzyme-catalyzed copolymerization of lactone with dialkyl diester and aminodiol. targeted delivery of ptrail to the tumor by the terpolymers resulted in significant inhibition of tumor growth with minimal toxicity in vivo, and the transfection efficiency was associated with the high molecular weight and increased hydrophobicity [ ] . intriguingly, it was found that preparation via a high concentration the clinical trials can be found at https://www.clinicaltrials.gov trail-based gene delivery and therapeutic strategies hh zhong process (i.e., a small reaction volume) resulted in large pei/dna complexes that had a higher gene transfection efficiency than their small counterparts prepared at a low concentration (fig. ) [ ] . the mechanisms were associated with macropinocytosis and fast dissociation. accordingly, large-sized pei/ptrail complexes exhibited increased anticancer efficacy via local or regional administration in subcutaneous xenograft and peritoneal xenograft mouse models. poly(beta-amino ester)s (pbaes) are a class of cationic synthetic polymers that can be used as nonviral gene carriers. these compounds are easy to synthesize, bind effectively to dna, and are hydrolytically degradable under physiological conditions. tzeng et al. reported the use of pbae nanoparticles containing ptrail for the selective transfection of cancer cells and the induction of apoptosis in several human cancer cells [ ] . additionally, shen et al. developed an ingenious vector comprising quaternary amines carrying n-propionic -acetoxybenzyl ester substituents; the -acetoxybenzyl ester group can undergo rapid intracellular esterase-catalyzed hydrolysis, which subsequently triggers a reversal of the polymer's charge from cationic to zwitterionic [ ] . due to the high cytosolic esterase activity in cancer cells but low activity in fibroblasts, the loaded ptrail can be delivered specifically into cancer cells without damaging fibroblasts, preventing the expression of wnt b (fig. ) [ ] . the same group also synthesized another enzyme-responsive cationic polymer, poly (pqdea), which is rapidly hydrolyzed by intracellular esterases to form anionic poly(acrylic acid) to confer low cytotoxicity and fast release of dna [ ] . pqdea/dna polyplexes were further coated with a lipid layer to generate serum-stable lipidic polyplexes (lpqdea/dnas) for in vivo use. lpqdea/ptrail strongly inhibited tumor formation as effectively as paclitaxel but gave less tumor relapse and longer survival. in addition, some inorganic materials have been modified with polymers for ptrail delivery. for example, a sandwich-type peicoated gold nanocomposite coloaded with ptrail and nucleartargeted dexamethasone (dexa) (termed au-pei/ptrail/pei-dexa) exhibited efficient transfection and significantly inhibited the growth of hep b tumors [ ] . a targeted iron oxide np coated with a chitosan-peg-pei copolymer and chlorotoxin was developed; this np efficiently delivered ptrail into human t g gbm cells and induced the secretion of trail [ ] . further, systemic administration to mice bearing t g-derived flank xenografts resulted in almost imperceptible tumor growth and induced apoptosis in tumor tissue. to overcome treatment limitations of adenoid cystic carcinoma, the fe o -pei-plasmid complex (fpp) was generated, in which iron oxide nps were modified by positively charged pei to enable them to carry pactert-trail [ ] . the efficiency of fpp-mediated transfection was sixfold higher than that of pei alone or of lipo , and fpp-mediated trail gene transfer efficiently inhibited sacc- tumor growth. dendrimers. dendrimers, which are characterized by their welldefined size and low polydispersity index, have been widely used for drug and gene delivery [ ] . jiang et al. reported a gene vector generated by polyamidoamine (pamam) and angiopep- another strategy has been reported in which transferrin (tf) was conjugated to a generation diaminobutyric polypropylenimine (dab) dendrimer; this delivery system harbors plasmids encoding for tnf-α, trail, or il- and leads to therapeutic effects on prostate tumors following intravenous administration [ ] . in addition, lactoferrin (lf)-bearing dab dendriplexes showed similar efficacy [ ] . later, coumarin-anchored low-generation dendrimers (g pamam dendrimers) were established to improve dna binding and gene delivery [ ] . the coumarin moieties endowed these materials with light-responsive drug delivery behaviors, and the drug-loaded nanoparticles exhibited complementary anticancer activity through the codelivery of -fluorouracil and ptrail. a triazine-modified dendrimer, g -dat , was synthesized and used as a vector for ptrail therapy, showing higher transfection efficacy than commercial transfection reagents such as lipo and superfect [ ] . furthermore, in vivo studies demonstrated that g -dat /ptrail efficiently inhibited tumor growth in osteosarcoma-bearing mice. pishavar et al. synthesized a vector composed of pamam dendrimers modified with alkyl-carboxylate chains, peg, and cholesteryl chloroformate for delivering ptrail, and these pamam g -alkyl-peg ( %)-chol ( %)-trail complexes inhibited ct tumor growth in mice [ ] . peptides and proteins. cationic peptides rich in residues such as lysines or arginines are able to condense dna. furthermore, conjugation of peptide ligands to delivery systems allows targeting to specific types of cancer cells [ ] . a biomimetic vector was developed for delivering ptrail to tumor; it contained an adenovirus μ peptide for pdna condensation, a synthetic cyclic peptide for tumor-targeting and intracellular delivery, a phresponsive synthetic fusogenic peptide for endosome escape, and a nuclear localization signal from human immuno-deficiency virus for intranuclear delivery [ ] . up to % of zr- - breast cancer cells were killed after exposure to ptrail in complexation with this vector. a dimerized hiv- tat peptide was used to formulate fig. illustration of the esterase-responsive charge-reversal polymer (erp) and its lipid-coated esterase-responsive polyplexes with trail plasmid for cancer gene therapy. a the erp is a pei whose amines are quaternized with propionic -acetoxybenzyl ester. hydrolysis of the phenolic acetate triggers the elimination of p-hydroxymethylphenol and consequent conversion of the cationic polymer into a zwitterionic form. b erp condenses plasmid dna into the polyplexes, which are easily coated with dc-chol/dope lipids to form lipidic esterase-responsive polyplexes (lerps). after i.p. injection into nude mice bearing hela cell-derived tumors, tumor cells internalize lerps into the cytosol, which is rich in esterases. the lerps disassemble and release the polyplexes to allow the esterases to trigger the charge reversal of the erp and thus plasmid release. these free plasmids enter the nucleus for effective gene expression, inducing apoptosis when delivering the trail gene. in tumor fibroblasts, the low esterase level cannot efficiently induce the charge reversal process, and the trail plasmids will not be expressed, preventing wnt b production. reprinted with permission from [ ] a nanoparticle vector (dtat np) to leverage the efficiency of this cell penetration strategy for tumor-targeted gene delivery [ ] . in cell culture, dtat np was an effective pdna transfection vector with negligible cytotoxicity. gene expression in tumor tissues lasted for > days after intratracheal administration. bolus administration of dtat np-encapsulated ptrail markedly attenuated the growth of tumors derived from lewis lung carcinoma cells. phosphatase and tensin homolog (pten) and trail genes loaded into zein nanoparticles showed antiproliferative activity against hepg cell lines, indicating their potential for gene therapy for the treatment of hcc [ ] . liposomes. cationic lipids have been widely used for nucleic acid delivery and for advances in gene delivery through their molecular design. cationic lipids can spontaneously form specific types of complexes for condensing and encapsulating dna into particles [ ] . huang et al. reported a novel lipid ( , -di-( z-octadecenoyl)- biguanide-propane (dobp)) that was elaborately designed by utilizing biguanide as the cationic head group [ ] . this novel cationic lipid acted as a gene carrier and had a metformin-like antitumor activity via activation of the ampk and inhibiting the mtor pathways. dobp-lpdtrail nps showed potent efficacy against tumor progression. then, these nps were used to transfer a secreted form of trail (strail) to tumor-associated fibroblasts in order to secrete cytotoxic proteins to tumor cells via lipidcoated protamine [ ] . strail triggered apoptosis in tumor cell nests adjacent to tafs. furthermore, strail converted the residual fibroblasts to a quiescent state, thus arresting the tumor growth and remodeling the microenvironment to facilitate the secondwave nanotherapy. the system showed good efficacy in an orthotopic xenograft model of human pancreatic cancer, where the desmoplastic stroma is a major barrier to the delivery of therapeutic nanoparticles. chen et al. developed a tumor-targeted lcpp (lipid/calcium/ phosphate/protamine) np to deliver ptrail into hcc cells in a mouse model of hcc [ ] . ptrail was entrapped in a phresponsive calcium phosphate (cap) core, and protamine was included to direct intranuclear delivery. trail resistance could be reversed by intracellular release of ca + from the cap core that induced dr up-regulation through camkii activation (fig. ) . other vectors. gong et al. developed a well-tailored and versatile "core-shell" ternary system (rrphc) for systemic gene delivery to treat aggressive melanoma [ ] . this system consisted of a core of fluorinated polymers (pfs) that bound to a plasmid (pdna) and a negatively charged multifunctional rrph (rgd-r -peg-ha) shell constructed by grafting a hyaluronan polymer with peg side chains, which were further conjugated with the r -rgd tandem peptide on the distal side, simultaneously targeting the cd receptors and integrin α v β receptors overexpressed on the neovasculature and most malignant tumor cells. systemic injection of the proapoptotic mtrail plasmid by rrphc ternary complexes inhibited the melanoma growth, without noticeable side toxicity. next, this group reported a similar system of an artificial virus core-shell to target cancer stem cell-like cells [ ] . the intravenously injected nanoparticles accumulated at the tumor sites while reducing the exposure to the normal tissues, and efficiently arrest the tumor growth, without obvious systemic toxicity. mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) are a population of fibroblast-like cells originally isolated from bone marrow and other tissues, including adipose tissue, peripheral blood, umbilical cord blood, and wharton's jelly, among others [ , ] . mscs have therapeutic potential in several pathological conditions and unique immunological features [ ] [ ] [ ] . in recent years, the cellular vehicle function of mscs has been used to transfer trail to the tumor parenchyma [ ] [ ] [ ] . lee et al. reported a novel application of magnetic core-shell nanoparticles for the dual purpose of delivering and activating a heat-inducible gene vector that encodes trail in adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells (ad-mscs) [ ] . this group developed a plasmid harboring the heat shock protein b' (hsp b ) promoter. the magnetic core-shell nanoparticles (mc nps) was composed of znfe o magnetic nanoparticle core and mesoporous silica shell, as well as a surface coating of pei for dna binding. the mc nps facilitated the intracellular delivery of the heat-inducible plasmid into ad-mscs via magnetic guidance, and after systemic injection, the engineered ad-mscs could home to tumors/metastases. trail expression could be specifically activated via the induction of mild magnetic hyperthermia (~ °c). this system enhanced control over the activation of stem cell-based gene therapies. it was reported that human mscs were transduced with trail and the ires-egfp reporter gene under the control of the tetracycline promoter using a lentiviral vector [ ] . the transduced and activated mscs led to the apoptosis and death in various cancer cells in coculture experiments. the in vivo studies demonstrated that the i.v. injected trail-expressing mscs significantly arrested the tumor growth. gao et al. transfected ptrail into mscs with a nonviral vector, pei -cyd, prepared by linking low-molecular-weight polyethyleneimine (pei) and β-cyclodextrin (β-cd) [ ] . the lung tumor homing ability of mscs expressing trail in vivo proved to be efficient for lung metastasis therapy. fig. shows a schematic of the specific process of this cell-based trail therapy. human umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells (humscs) were transfected by lentiviral vectors coding the strail with the alpha-fetoprotein (afp) promoter, and the treatment efficacy of these engineered humscs on orthotopically implanted hepatocarcinomas in mice was examined [ ] . humscs could migrate to the hepatocarcinoma, where the afp promoter was triggered by the early hepatic differentiation of humscs, and expressed strail at the cancer cells and yielded significant antitumor activity. dominici et al. transduced human ad-mscs with a retroviral vector encoding full-length human trail [ ] . ad-mscs could target various cancer cell lines in vitro, and reverse the trail resistance by coadministration of bortezomib. these ad-mscs targeted to tumors and induced apoptosis, without apparent side toxicity. the engineered mscs with trail expression also induced apoptosis by cell-to-cell contact in the trailresistant ewing sarcoma (ews) that is insensitive to amg , an antibody against the death receptor dr , too, and the treatment effect was confirmed in two orthotopic models of ews [ ] . despite these encouraging results, there is some concern regarding the safety of inoculating both wild-type and genetically modified mscs, especially regarding their possible damaging effects on normal organs, malignant transformation, and promotion of cancer growth [ ] . then, researchers incorporated suicide genes-the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (hsv-tk) and cytosine deaminase genes-into mscs to control their fate once infused [ ] . this approach is based on a variant of human caspase- that binds with high affinity to a synthetic, bioinert small molecule (ap ), leading to cell death [ ] . conventionally, mscs have been genetically modified for cancer therapy by using viral vectors that can elicit oncogenicity, thus limiting their use in clinical trials. chen et al. used nonviral agents such as a polylysine-modified polyethyleneimine (pei-pll) copolymer to generate genetically engineered mscs with suicide genes, namely, hsv-tk and trail [ ] . the mscs armed with suicide genes along with prodrug ganciclovir can induce significant antitumor effect to glioblastoma by intratumoral injection both in vitro and in vivo. another study on delivering the trail gene for stem cell-mediated gene therapy was conducted by using nonviral vectors (a less efficient but safer method). na et al. prepared the polyplexes of ptrail and bpei, and photochemical internalization (pci) was applied to improve the polyplex entrapping in hmscs and enhance the transfection efficiency of ptrail; the tumor-homing hmscs could also increase the trail secretion in the tumors [ ] . pci-mediated polyplex loading significantly enhanced trail expression in stem cells, and that homing ability enhanced cancer targeting. exposure of polyplex-loaded hmscs (ptrail/bpei@hmscs) to laser irradiation resulted in a beneficial therapeutic antitumor effect in a xenograft mouse model. in addition to mscs, hu et al. reported a dc cell-based therapy for colon cancer cells [ ] . tyrosine kinase receptor ligand (fl) and trail plasmids were constructed for combination therapy. fl, a hemopoietic growth factor, is important in progenitor cell proliferation and differentiation, which can enhance the proliferative and antitumor effect of dcs. these two plasmids were transfected into dcs by lipo . the combination of fl-carrying b trail expression and secretion were quantified by confocal microscopy and elisa, respectively. c sp -lcpp nps without pdna significantly increased dr expression in a dose-dependent manner in hcc cells. d the camkii inhibitor k a prevented the effects of lcpp nps on dr upregulation. e, f treatment with trail pdna loaded into sp -lcpp nps showed higher cytotoxicity in hcc cells than to control cells. however, these nps exhibited slight cytotoxicity in murine hepatocyte fl b cells. reprinted with permission from [ ] dcs and trail-carrying dcs showed a good level of apoptosis in colon cancer [ ] . although trail-induced apoptosis is an attractive therapeutic target, resistance to trail readily develops during treatment. this therapeutic resistance derives from two sources: intrinsic resistance in some highly malignant tumors [ ] [ ] [ ] and acquired resistance after repeated exposure to trail [ ] . resistance to trail is conferred by multiple receptors and involves a series of signaling pathways and activation of inhibitory molecules [ ] . trail signaling begins with the binding of trail to the death receptors. first, binding to decoy receptors (e.g., trail-r and r ) will not lead to the activation of downstream trail-signaling. second, mutation or downregulation of the functional drs (e.g., dr or dr ) can also result in resistance. for instance, transfection of mutated dr into sw colon cancer cells caused a lower efficacy of cell killing than transfection of the wild-type counterpart [ ] . low expression of dr contributed to trail resistance in anti-dr antibody therapy [ ] . in this case, upregulation of dr is a therapeutic strategy for sensitization to trail treatment [ ] . third, the multifunctionality of downstream trail signaling also induces resistance. the assembly of the disc can be inhibited by apoptosis inhibitors. for example, cflip, with a similar structure to caspase- , can inhibit caspase- activation after binding to fadd [ ] . the ratio of cflip/caspase- is correlated with trail resistance in various tumors, such as hepatocellular carcinoma and burkitt lymphoma [ , ] . in type ii cells, trail-initiating apoptosis is mainly mediated by the mitochondrial pathway (fig. ) . upregulation of the proapoptotic proteins bax and bak promotes cell death, while the antiapoptotic proteins bcl- and bcl-x l determine cell survival [ , ] . furthermore, inhibitors of apoptosis proteins (iaps) can block apoptosis by inhibiting the activity of the effector caspases (e.g., caspase- and caspase- ), and overexpression of iaps can confer trail resistance [ , ] . however, this effect can be reversed by iap antagonists such as smac/diablo, which promotes apoptosis by interacting with iaps [ , ] . the mechanisms are summarized in fig. . in addition, epigenetic changes play a role in trail resistance via the regulation of caspase- gene expression, and dna methylation can restore apoptosis in trail-resistant tumor cells. trail resistance is also related to nf-κb and mitogen-activated protein (map) kinases. however, these signaling pathways showed both proapoptotic and antiapoptotic effects [ ] . in conclusion, dr dysfunction and overexpression of cflip, bcl- , bcl-x l , and iaps contribute to trail resistance, and therefore, regulation of drs and inhibition of antiapoptotic proteins resensitizes cells to trail treatment [ ] . the resistance of cancer cells to trail has encouraged the investigation of combination therapy. in recent years, many multifunctional drug delivery systems, including liposomes, micelles, and polymeric nanoparticles, have been developed for the codelivery of genes and drugs. here, we summarize the delivery and therapeutic strategies of combinations of ptrail and different types of drugs. combination with trail sensitizers the combination of trail with its sensitizers is a promising strategy to overcome trail resistance. it was found that polyether ionophore antibiotics (e.g., monensin) can overcome trail resistance via endoplasmic reticulum stress induction, dr fig. the nonviral vector pei -cyd was used to transduce trail plasmid into mscs. trail-armed mscs showed a lung tumor-homing ability and an antitumor effect on lung metastasis-bearing c bl/ mice after i.v. injection. reprinted with permission from [ ] fig. inhibition of trail signaling results in trail resistance. when the disc assembles, flip (flice-like inhibitory protein) can competitively bind to fadd and limit the recruitment of caspase- . while bcl- and bcl-x l can inhibit bax and bak, tbid plays roles in inhibiting bcl- and bcl-x l and activating bax and bak in type ii cells. iaps can strongly inhibit the activation of effector caspases, as smac/ diablo is needed to interact with iaps to release effector caspases. figure adapted from fig. in ref. [ ] upregulation and cflip downregulation [ ] . huang et al. constructed a biocompatible nanosystem for the codelivery of ptrail and monensin, in which low-molecular-weight pei . k (lmw-pei) was intermolecularly crosslinked via disulfide bonds using sulfhydryl β-cyclodextrin as a linker (fig. ) [ ] . the resulting β-cd-sspei carrier, which can bind efficiently with ptrail, can serve as a carrier for codelivery, while monensin is encapsulated inside the cavities of the β-cyclodextrin molecules. the mo β-cd-sspei ptrail nanocomplex can further be modified by a polyanionic polymer γ-pga, thus protecting the nanocomplex from interaction with serum proteins and consequently extending its half-life in the bloodstream. furthermore, γ-pga/ mo β-cd-sspei ptrail can achieve tumor targeting via specific binding between γ-pga and tumor-overexpressed ggt, which can mediate the endocytosis of the nanocomplex. inside cancer cells, the acidic endosomal environment facilitates the detachment of γ-pga, whose conformation is ph-dependent, and the exposed pei facilitates endosomal escape. importantly, the intermolecular crosslinks of pei can be degraded, and ptrail and monensin can be released. monensin can increase intracellular ros levels and induce apoptosis. moreover, dr expression is upregulated, thus synergizing with trail-based treatment for colon cancer gene therapy. combination with chemotherapeutic drugs trail exhibits improved efficacy in combination with chemotherapy because chemotherapeutic agents can sensitize tumors to trail-induced apoptosis via crosstalk between the intrinsic and extrinsic pathways of cell death [ ] . the chemotherapeutic drugs doxorubicin (dox) and paclitaxel (ptx) were explored to determine their synergistic antitumor effect with ptrail. ebrahimian et al. reported a vector composed of polypropylenimine (ppi) modified with -bromodecanoic acid for the codelivery of ptrail and dox for tumor therapy [ ] . in addition, a host-guest conjugated nanoparticle for the codelivery of dox and ptrail was designed [ ] . the adamantane-conjugated dox (ad-dox, guest component) and the pei-cyclodextrin conjugates (pei-cd, host) were selfassembled into the supramolecular pei-cd/ad-dox, which further bound with trail dna to form the pei-cd/ad-dox/pdna snps. the snps exhibited the enhanced therapeutic efficacy with the significantly increased survival rate of the tumor-bearing mice. jiang et al. investigated the codelivery of the htrail-encoding plasmid open reading frame (porf-htrail) and dox using a tumor-targeting carrier, a peptide haiyprh (t )-conjugated polyethylene glycol-modified polyamidoamine dendrimer (pamam-peg-t ) [ ] . in this system, approximately dox molecules were bound to one porf-htrail molecule, and t served as a ligand targeting tumor cell-overexpressed transferrin receptors. this codelivery system induced apoptosis of tumor cells and efficiently inhibited bel- tumor growth in vivo. furthermore, the combination therapy strategy was further applied to glioma, in which dendrigraft poly-l-lysine (dgl), modified by the t peptide and conjugated with dox via a ph-sensitive hydrazone bond, was used to deliver porf-htrail to glioma tissue [ ] . in addition, other dual targeting systems have also been developed for the codelivery of dox and porf-htrail for glioma treatment [ , ] . regarding the combination of ptx and trail, an angiopep- peptide-modified cationic liposome (ang-clp) for the efficient codelivery of pegfp-htrail and ptx to glioma was reported. angiopep- can target the low-density lipoprotein receptorrelated protein (lrp) overexpressed on the bbb and on glioma cells [ ] . lu et al. developed two kinds of nanoparticles for the delivery of porf-htrail and ptx to glioma tissues [ , ] . porf-htrail was delivered by c(rgdyk)-poly(ethylene glycol)-polyethyleneimine (rgd-peg-pei). rgd can bind to integrin α v β , which is overexpressed in the neovasculature and on u glioblastoma cells. ptx was loaded in a cdx-poly(ethylene glycol)-block-poly(lactic acid) micelle. cdx is a peptide derived from the loop ii region of the snake neurotoxin candoxin, with a high-binding affinity to nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nachrs). dominici et al. investigated the combination of ptrail and ptx for msc therapy [ ] . ptx restored the sensitivity of pancreatic cancer to msc-delivered trail by reverting its prosurvival gene expression profile. additionally, a combination of cisplatin and trail with high anticancer activity was found [ ] . fig. the process of codelivery of ptrail and monensin nanocomplexes. as a trail sensitizer, monensin upregulates dr and sensitizes tumor cells to trail. reprinted with permission from [ ] trail-based gene delivery and therapeutic strategies hh zhong these results indicate that trail gene therapy in combination with chemotherapy can be promising for ovarian cancer therapy. although it is not fully known how chemotherapy sensitizes cells to trail-induced apoptosis, the effect may be related to a p independent pathway, in addition to changes in the expression of proteins involved in trail signaling, which also play an important role [ ] . combination with intracellular apoptosis-induced agents as trail induces extracellular apoptosis, its combination with agents mediating the intracellular apoptosis pathway can yield a synergistic effect. histone deacetylase inhibitors (hadci) induce cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in tumor cells, and hadci can resensitize trail-resistant cancer cells. codelivery of ptrail and vorinostat (saha) with a reactive oxygen species (ros)-triggered charge reversal polymer (b-pdeaea) produced a good antitumor effect [ ] . the increased transfection efficiency of ptrail and saha-induced ros accumulation caused significant apoptosis of the cancer cells. the mscs-based gene therapy for antiglioma was developed, in which hat-mscs was transfected by pires -egfp-strail [ ] . the engineered mscs effectively inhibited the proliferation of malignant glioma cells and upregulated drs, yielding a potent antiglioma effect in combination with panobinostat. iaps play an important role in cancer cell resistance to trail, and the combination of trail with iap antagonists can help sensitize cells to trail-induced apoptosis. ge et al. demonstrated that an oncolytic adenovirus coexpressing trail and smac, in combination with the cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk) inhibitor sns- , synergistically reinforced their individual anti-pancreatic cancer activities, and sns- enhanced zd -trail-ietd-smac-induced apoptosis [ ] . shi et al. developed an aav-mediated gene therapy that was characterized by coexpression of trail with mir- -zip, which produced a synergistic effect on the enhanced apoptosis induction via the sensitizing effect of mir- -zip by upregulation of pten and downregulation of survivin [ ] . compared with trail monotherapy, combination therapy provides enhanced treatment outcomes. therefore, combinations including trail-mediated therapy are a promising approach for cancer therapy. trail is a promising drug candidate for the treatment of many cancers. the investigation of trail-based therapy in clinical trials focuses on recombinant trail proteins and anti-trail antibodies, but delivery and drug resistance issues are the main hurdles in the successful translation of these results. trail-based gene therapy is another potential treatment approach. importantly, the codelivery systems loaded with ptrail and drugs combined with trail have been actively explored. the development of safe and efficient gene vectors is the central issue for gene therapy. the elegant design of advanced systems provides the tumor-targeted codelivery of both agents, thus achieving synergistic treatment effects. in addition, it is necessary to identify proper biomarkers for maximizing trail-based therapy, which can also provide helpful information for the appropriate selection of drug combinations. however, clinical trials have made little progress. efforts should be directed toward the rational design of appropriate formulations of trail to improve its in vivo pharmacokinetic profile and the exploration of biomarkers specific to trail-based therapy. the future application of trail may benefit from a better understanding of the anticancer mechanisms of trail as well as its combination with trail sensitizers. it is expected that as precision medicine progresses, trail-mediated antitumor functions will be better understood to allow the development of precise and effective trail-based treatments for patients. overcoming cellular barriers for rna therapeutics the cd (apo- /fas) and the trail (apo- l) apoptosis systems cachetin/tnf-alpha in septic shock and septic adult respiratory distress syndrome lethal effect of the anti-fas antibody in mice identification and characterization of a new member of the tnf family that induces apoptosis induction of apoptosis by apo- ligand, a new member of the tumor necrosis factor cytokine family exploring the trails less travelled: trail in cancer biology and therapy rankl/ opg/trail plasma levels and bone mass loss evaluation in antiretroviral naive hiv- -positive men apo l/ trail and the death receptor agonist antibody amg cooperate to promote receptor clustering and antitumor activity targeting trail in the treatment of cancer: new developments tumoricidal activity of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand in vivo safety and antitumor activity of recombinant soluble apo ligand a super way to kill cancer cells apoptosis-its significance in cancer and cancer-therapy cross-talk in cell death signaling proapoptotic activation of death receptor on tumor endothelial cells disrupts the vasculature and reduces tumor growth an antagonist decoy receptor and a death domain-containing receptor for trail the receptor for the cytotoxic ligand trail control of trail-induced apoptosis by a family of signaling and decoy receptors trail-r : a novel apoptosis-mediating receptor for trail cloning and characterization of trail-r , a novel member of the emerging trail receptor family the novel receptor trail-r induces nf-kappab and protects against trailmediated apoptosis, yet retains an incomplete death domain a novel receptor for apo l/trail contains a truncated death domain temperature-sensitive differential affinity of trail for its receptors. dr is the highest affinity receptor structural determinants of disc function: new insights into death receptor-mediated apoptosis signalling getting trail back on track for cancer therapy preclinical studies to predict the disposition of apo l/tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosisinducing ligand in humans: characterization of in vivo efficacy, pharmacokinetics, and safety unexpected hepatotoxicity in a phase i study of tas , a novel tetravalent agonistic nanobody(r) targeting the dr receptor phase i dose-escalation study of recombinant human apo l/trail, a dual proapoptotic receptor agonist, in patients with advanced cancer phase b study of dulanermin (recombinant human apo l/trail) in combination with paclitaxel, carboplatin, and bevacizumab in patients with advanced non-squamous nonsmall-cell lung cancer trailing trail resistance: novel targets for trail sensitization in cancer cells trail and apoptosis induction by tnf-family death receptors nanocarriers for trail delivery: driving trail back on track for cancer therapy antitumor activity and bystander effects of the tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (trail) gene membrane-bound fas ligand only is essential for fas-induced apoptosis liposomes decorated with apo l/trail overcome chemoresistance of human hematologic tumor cells polymers for gene delivery across length scales overcoming gene-delivery hurdles: physiological considerations for nonviral vectors adenoviralmediated transfer of the tnf-related apoptosis-inducing ligand/apo- ligand gene induces tumor cell apoptosis efficacy of combining ing and trail genes in cancer-targeting gene virotherapy strategy: first evidence in preclinical hepatocellular carcinoma non-viral vectors for gene-based therapy design and development of polymers for gene delivery nonviral vectors for gene delivery barriers to nonviral gene delivery progress in developing cationic vectors for non-viral systemic gene therapy against cancer a versatile vector for gene and oligonucleotide transfer into cells in culture and in vivo: polyethylenimine toxicity of cationic lipids and cationic polymers in gene delivery new path to treating pancreatic cancer: trail gene delivery targeting the fibroblast-enriched tumor microenvironment the use of myristic acid as a ligand of polyethylenimine/dna nanoparticles for targeted gene therapy of glioblastoma a mannosylated pei-cpp hybrid for trail gene targeting delivery for colorectal cancer therapy poly-gamma-glutamic acid-based ggt-targeting and surface camouflage strategy for improving cervical cancer gene therapy co-delivery of gambogic acid and trail plasmid by hyaluronic acid grafted pei-plga nanoparticles for the treatment of triple negative breast cancer biodegradable poly(amine-co-ester) terpolymers for targeted gene delivery nano-structural effects on gene transfection: large, botryoid-shaped nanoparticles enhance dna delivery via macropinocytosis and effective dissociation polymeric nanoparticle-based delivery of trail dna for cancer-specific killing esterase-activated chargereversal polymer for fibroblast-exempt cancer gene therapy enzyme-responsive charge-reversal polymer-mediated effective gene therapy for intraperitoneal tumors sandwich-type au-pei/dna/pei-dexa nanocomplex for nucleus-targeted gene delivery in vitro and in vivo nanoparticlemediated target delivery of trail as gene therapy for glioblastoma antitumor effect of human trail on adenoid cystic carcinoma using magnetic nanoparticle-mediated gene expression discovery of dendrimers and dendritic polymers: a brief historical perspective dual targeting effect of angiopep- -modified, dna-loaded nanoparticles for glioma therapeutic efficacy of intravenously administered transferrin-conjugated dendriplexes on prostate carcinomas regression of prostate tumors after intravenous administration of lactoferrinbearing polypropylenimine dendriplexes encoding tnf-alpha, trail, and interleukin- a self-assembled coumarin-anchored dendrimer for efficient gene delivery and light-responsive drug delivery triazine-modified dendrimer for efficient trail gene therapy in osteosarcoma modified pamam vehicles for effective trail gene delivery to colon adenocarcinoma: in vitro and in vivo evaluation peptide-guided gene delivery development of a genetically engineered biomimetic vector for targeted gene transfer to breast cancer cells intratracheal administration of a nanoparticle-based therapy with the angiotensin ii type receptor gene attenuates lung cancer growth pten and trail genes loaded zein nanoparticles as potential therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma advancing nonviral gene delivery: lipid-and surfactant-based nanoparticle design strategies a novel cationic lipid with intrinsic antitumor activity to facilitate gene therapy of trail dna targeting tumor-associated fibroblasts for therapeutic delivery in desmoplastic tumors a multifunctional nanocarrier for efficient trail-based gene therapy against hepatocellular carcinoma with desmoplasia in mice core-shell" nanoparticles-based gene delivery for treatment of aggressive melanoma multifunctional nucleus-targeting nanoparticles with ultra-high gene transfection efficiency for in vivo gene therapy minimal criteria for defining multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells human bone marrow and adipose tissue mesenchymal stem cells: a user's guide mesenchymal stem/stromal cells as a delivery platform in cell and gene therapies how do mesenchymal stromal cells exert their therapeutic benefit? mesenchymal stem cell therapy for autoimmune disease: risks and rewards understanding tumor-stroma interplays for targeted therapies by armed mesenchymal stromal progenitors: the mesenkillers adiposederived mesenchymal stem cells as stable source of tumor necrosis factorrelated apoptosis-inducing ligand delivery for cancer therapy trail delivered by mesenchymal stromal/stem cells counteracts tumor development in orthotopic ewing sarcoma models stem cell-based gene therapy activated using magnetic hyperthermia to enhance the treatment of cancer mesenchymal stem cell delivery of trail can eliminate metastatic cancer mesenchymal stem cells as a novel carrier for targeted delivery of gene in cancer therapy based on nonviral transfection suppression of orthotopically implanted hepatocarcinoma in mice by umbilical cord-derived mesenchymal stem cells with strail gene expression driven by afp promoter an inducible caspase suicide gene to improve the safety of mesenchymal stromal cell therapies inducible caspase -mediated suicide gene for msc-based cancer gene therapy an inducible caspase safety switch for t-cell therapy polylysine-modified polyethylenimine polymer can generate genetically engineered mesenchymal stem cells for combinational suicidal gene therapy in glioblastoma trail-secreting human mesenchymal stem cells engineered by a non-viral vector and photochemical internalization for pancreatic cancer gene therapy the roles of flt in hematopoiesis and leukemia nanoliposomemediated fl/trail double-gene therapy for colon cancer: in vitro and in vivo evaluation bcl-xl protects pancreatic adenocarcinoma cells against cd -and trail-receptormediated apoptosis sensitization for death receptor-or drug-induced apoptosis by re-expression of caspase- through demethylation or gene transfer resistance to tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (trail)-induced apoptosis in neuroblastoma cells correlates with a loss of caspase- expression mechanisms involved in development of resistance to adenovirus-mediated proapoptotic gene therapy in dld human colon cancer cell line molecular determinants of response to trail in killing of normal and cancer cells tumoricidal activity of a novel anti-human dr monoclonal antibody without hepatocyte cytotoxicity flice-inhibitory proteins: regulators of death receptor-mediated apoptosis cellular flice/caspase- -inhibitory protein as a principal regulator of cell death and survival in human hepatocellular carcinoma modulation of caspase- and flice-inhibitory protein expression as a potential mechanism of epstein-barr virus tumorigenesis in burkitt's lymphoma induction of apoptotic program in cell-free extracts: requirement for datp and cytochrome c the release of cytochrome c from mitochondria: a primary site for bcl- regulation of apoptosis synergy is achieved by complementation with apo l/trail and actinomycin d in apo l/trail-mediated apoptosis of prostate cancer cells: role of xiap in resistance x-linked inhibitor of apoptosis (xiap) blocks apo ligand/ tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand-mediated apoptosis of prostate cancer cells in the presence of mitochondrial activation: sensitization by overexpression of second mitochondria-derived activator of caspase/direct iap-binding protein with low pl (smac/diablo) smac, a mitochondrial protein that promotes cytochrome c-dependent caspase activation by eliminating iap inhibition identification of diablo, a mammalian protein that promotes apoptosis by binding to and antagonizing iap proteins mechanisms of resistance to trail-induced apoptosis in cancer loss of caspase- protein expression correlates with unfavorable survival outcome in childhood medulloblastoma monensin, a polyether ionophore antibiotic, overcomes trail resistance in glioma cells via endoplasmic reticulum stress, dr upregulation and c-flip downregulation. carcinogenesis targeting death receptors for drug-resistant cancer therapy: codelivery of ptrail and monensin using dualtargeting and stimuli-responsive self-assembling nanocomposites trail and chemotherapeutic drugs in cancer therapy evaluation of efficiency of modified polypropylenimine (ppi) with alkyl chains as non-viral vectors used in co-delivery of doxorubicin and trail plasmid in vivo treatment of tumors using host-guest conjugated nanoparticles functionalized with doxorubicin and therapeutic gene ptrail plasmid porf-htrail and doxorubicin co-delivery targeting to tumor using peptide-conjugated polyamidoamine dendrimer gene and doxorubicin codelivery system for targeting therapy of glioma choline-derivate-modified nanoparticles for brain-targeting gene delivery choline transporter-targeting and codelivery system for glioma therapy co-delivery of pegfp-htrail and paclitaxel to brain glioma mediated by an angiopep-conjugated liposome candoxin, a novel toxin from bungarus candidus, is a reversible antagonist of muscle (alphabetagammadelta) but a poorly reversible antagonist of neuronal alpha nicotinic acetylcholine receptors co-delivery of trail gene enhances the anti-glioblastoma effect of paclitaxel in vitro and in vivo msc-delivered soluble trail and paclitaxel as novel combinatory treatment for pancreatic adenocarcinoma in vitro and in vivo growth inhibition of drug-resistant ovarian carcinoma cells using a combination of cisplatin and a trail-encoding retrovirus is trail the holy grail of cancer therapy? saha (vorinostat) facilitates functional polymer-based gene transfection via upregulation of ros and synergizes with trail gene delivery for cancer therapy histone deacetylase inhibitor panobinostat potentiates the anti-cancer effects of mesenchymal stem cell-based strail gene therapy against malignant glioma synergistic antitumor effects of cdk inhibitor sns and an oncolytic adenovirus coexpressing trail and smac in pancreatic cancer combination of aav-trail with mir- -zip therapeutic strategy overcomes the resistance to trail induced apoptosis in liver cancer competing interests: the authors declare no competing interests.open access this article is licensed under a creative commons attribution . international license, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the creative commons license, and indicate if changes were made. the images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's creative commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. if material is not included in the article's creative commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. to view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons. org/licenses/by/ . /. key: cord- - mrzvsc authors: pavesi, angelo; de iaco, bettina; granero, maria ilde; porati, alfredo title: on the informational content of overlapping genes in prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses date: journal: j mol evol doi: . /pl sha: doc_id: cord_uid: mrzvsc in genetic language a peculiar arrangement of biological information is provided by overlapping genes in which the same region of dna can code for functionally unrelated messages. in this work, the informational content of overlapping genes belonging to prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses was analyzed. using information theory indices, we identified in the regions of overlap a first pattern, exhibiting a more uniform base composition and more severe constraints in base ordering with respect to the nonoverlapping regions. this pattern was found to be peculiar to coliphage, avian hepatitis b virus, human lentivirus, and plant luteovirus families. a second pattern, characterized by the occurrence of similar compositional constraints in both types of coding regions, was found to be limited to plant tymoviruses. at the level of codon usage, a low degree of correlation between overlapping and nonoverlapping coding regions characterized the first pattern, whereas a close link was found in tymoviruses, indicating a fine adaptation of the overlapping frame to the original codon choice of the virus. as a result of codon usage correlation analysis, deductions concerning the origin and evolution of several overlapping frames were also proposed. comparison of amino acid composition revealed an increased frequency of amino acid residues with a high level of degeneracy (arginine, leucine, and serine) in the proteins encoded by overlapping genes; this peculiar feature of overlapping genes can be viewed as a way with which they may expand their coding ability and gain new, specialized functions. a particular issue in the statistical analysis of genomic dna sequences concerns the characterization of codes and semantic patterns in the genetic language (trifonov ; smith ) . in this language, overlapping genes represent an unusual pattern, as two, or exceptionally three, out-of-phase reading frames may lie in a single nucleotide sequence. such an arrangement, called ''overprinting,'' is frequent in viruses, where it probably evolved to increase the density of genetic information (lamb and horvath ) . the first genes of this type were identified by barrell and co-workers ( ) in the genome of x , a single-stranded dna phage, and similar overlapping regions were later detected in many other genes belonging to dna or rna viruses of both prokaryotes and eukaryotes (normark et al. ; samuel and references therein) . translation of the different reading frames has been shown to be mediated by ribosomal frameshifting, which requires an upstream site of ribosomal slippage and a downstream stem-loop structure known as a ''rna pseudoknot'' (jacks et al. ; wilson et al. ; brierley et al. ). on the other hand, translation of multiple reading frames can occur simply by internal de novo initiation in an alternative frame and does not require ribosomal frameshifting (atkins et al. ; chang et al. ) . originally developed to maximize the efficiency of transmission of electronic signals, information theory (shannon and weaver ) was later utilized to evaluate the complexity of dna sequences (gatlin (gatlin , . in the past years, several papers have dealt with the connection between information theory and the analysis of overlapping coding regions (yockey ; granero-porati et al. ; smith and waterman ) . other studies have addressed the problem of the evolution of overlapping arrangement (miyata and yasunaga ; soeda and maruyama ; keese and gibbs ) and the restrictions imposed on proteins encoded by the overlaid genetic messages (sander and schulz ; smith and waterman ) . here, we present an analysis at different levels of complexity (divergence from randomness of mono-and dinucleotide composition, choice of synonymous codons, and frequency of occurrence of amino acid residues) of the informational content of overlapping genes. using information theory indices and statistical methods of sequence analysis, the constraints acting on overlapping coding regions were quantitatively evaluated and compared to those occurring in the nonoverlapping regions belonging to the same viral genomes. results obtained from the information theory approach and those derived from codon usage and amino-acid composition correlation analyses are discussed in terms of evolution of overlapping genes. the nucleotide sequences of the complete genomes of three prokaryotic (x , g , and ␣ coliphages), five animal (two avian hepatitis b viruses and three different strains of lentivirus human immunodeficiency type ), and four plant viruses (beet and barley luteoviruses, turnip and eggplant tymoviruses), all containing a large density of overlapping coding regions, were selected from the embl database (rice et al. ) . the genomic map of the five virus families is reported in fig. . divergence from randomness at the level of mono-and dinucleotide composition was evaluated, respectively, by the informational indices d and d (gatlin ) : where n is equal to (number of symbols in the genetic language) and p i is the relative frequency of base ''i'' in a sequence under examina-tion. entropy h is measured in bits per symbol and its maximum value, h max , corresponds to a % frequency for each base equalling bits/ symbol. the d index represents the divergence from maximum entropy due to constraints on mononucleotide composition. where p ij is the relative frequency of dinucleotide ''ij'' in a sequence under examination. the absolute frequency of dinucleotides is calculated by moving along the sequence with steps corresponding to one nucleotide position. the d index measures the divergence from an independent ordering of bases, thus accounting for the constraints acting on dinucleotide composition. therefore, for a random sequence with no order at any level we would expect values of d and d indices nearly equal to zero. the additional step of our analysis takes into account the comparison, at the level of both codon usage and amino-acid composition, between overlapping and nonoverlapping coding regions. correlation analysis of the codon choice was carried out using both the relative synonymous codon usage (rscu) index (sharp and li ) and the pearson correlation coefficient r. the rscu value for each of the degenerate codons was calculated as follows: where n codon is the total number of times a given codon is used in a given coding region, n aminoacid is the absolute frequency for the amino acid specified by that codon and its synonyms, and d is the degeneracy of that amino acid (when all synonyms are used with equal frequencies, a rscu value of for each codon is expected). a set of rscu values obtained from a given overlapping gene was then compared with that of the nonoverlapping regions of the same viral genome by means of the pearson correlation coefficient (r), whose values, ranging from − to , reflect a completely discordant or concordant degree in the usage of synonymous codons, respectively. at the level of composition in amino acid residues, the degree of similarity between proteins encoded by overlapping and nonoverlapping genes was carried out by the chisquare test (snedecor and cochran ) . data were arranged in a × contingency table to identify amino acid residues whose frequency of occurrence in proteins encoded by overlapping genes is significantly higher than that observed in the nonoverlapping counterpart. from each of the viral genomes under examination, two sets of data, including overlapping and nonoverlapping genes, respectively, were obtained and the constraints acting on base composition and base ordering were evaluated, respectively, by the d and d indices, whose values are reported in table . in eight cases, including ␣ , g , and x coliphages (bacalpha, mig xx, phix ), duck and heron hepatitis b viruses (hbdgenm, hbhcg), and strains of hiv- lentivirus family (hivbrucg, hivcam , hivndk), the d value of overlapping regions was found to be smaller than the d value of the nonoverlapping part. in two cases, corresponding to barley and beet luteoviruses (bydcg, bwyvfl ), the d values appeared to be similar and near to zero. the exception was repre-sented by the family of eggplant and turnip tymoviruses (tymvcg, mtyrpvp), with a d value of the overlapping sequences higher than the d value of the nonoverlapping ones. moreover, the d value considerably different from zero obtained from both types of coding regions in plant tymoviruses reflects the highest divergence from a random base composition in the set of sequences considered in our analysis. when analyzed with respect to the divergence from an independent ordering of bases (table ) , all the overlapping sequences exhibited, with the exception of tymoviruses, a higher d index value, as compared with the nonoverlapping counterpart. the graphical representation ( fig. ) of the average values of the d and d indices, calculated by grouping the viruses under examination in the five corresponding families (coliphage, hepatitis b virus, hiv- lentivirus, luteovirus, and tymovirus), led to the identification of two different informational patterns in the viral coding sequences. the first pattern is characterized by a clear tendency to possess, in the regions of overlap, a more uniform nucleotide composition (a lower d value) and more severe constraints in base ordering (a higher d value), with respect to the nonoverlapping regions lying in the same genome. it includes four of the five families considered in this study (coliphage, hepatitis b virus, hiv- lentivirus, and luteovirus). in the second pattern, which appears to be limited to the family of tymoviruses, both regions show, instead, similar compositional constraints, as evidenced by a slight variation of the corresponding d values. the additional step of our analysis concerned the relationship between the frequencies of synonymous codons in overlapping or nonoverlapping genes. for each of the five virus families, the nonoverlapping regions belonging to the corresponding members were combined into a single entity, while the two frames of each overlapping gene arrangement were considered as two sepa- (table ) were then characterized, thus increasing the statistical relevance of our analysis. for example, the nonoverlapping set of tymoviruses (see the genomic map of tymoviruses in fig. ) includes the coat gene and the nonoverlapping fraction of replicase gene of both eggplant and turnip virus. the overlapping regions of tymovirus family were considered, instead, as two distinct sets of data, the one including the overlapping region of replicase gene, the other the -kd protein gene. the subsequent correlation analysis (table ) evidenced that six overlapping genes exhibited a choice of synonymous codons highly different from that occurring in the corresponding nonoverlapping genes. they include the a, c, e, and k genes of coliphage family, the tat gene of lentivirus, and the vpg gene of luteovirus, all exhibiting an r value near to zero. the highest degree of relationship was found in the overlapping genes encoding the replicase and the -kd protein of tymoviruses, as evidenced by an r value of . and . , respectively. more generally, when the r mean values of the virus families were considered (table ) the overlapping regions related to the first informational pattern (coliphage, hepatitis b virus, hiv- lentivirus, and luteovirus families) exhibited a very low correlation with the usage of synonyms in the nonoverlapping counterpart, as documented by a range of variation from . in coliphage to . in hepatitis b virus. in contrast, a much higher relationship between overlapping and nonoverlapping regions (an r mean value of . ) was found in the family of tymoviruses, representing the alternative informational pattern. the statistical analysis testing a difference in the composition of amino-acid residues between each of the overlapping frame encoded proteins and the corresponding nonoverlapping counterpart was performed by the chi-square contingency-table test. data were arranged in a × table whose a, b, c, d values correspond to the content of a given amino-acid residue in a given overlapping frame (a), in the nonoverlapping frames (b), and to the total amount of the other amino acid residues in the same overlapping frame (c) and in the nonoverlapping frames (d). the counting of the chi-square values above the . cutoff (p < . for degree of freedom), expressing a significantly higher content of amino-acid residues in the overlapping genes, led to the general representation shown in fig. . it appears that the aminoacid composition bias within overlapping genes can be mainly ascribed to amino-acid residues with the highest level of codon degeneracy (e.g., arginine, serine, and leucine residues are expressed by six synonymous codons each and proline residue by four synonyms). this findings was also corroborated when considering the highest compositional differences. as summarized in table , out of a total of ten chi-square values higher than . (p < . ), four were ascribed to arginine, three to leucine, two to proline, and one to methionine residues. it has recently been proposed (keese and gibbs ) that overlapping gene arrangements may arise de novo, thus encoding novel specialized proteins; it has also been hypothesized that a new gene arisen in this way will have an unusual codon usage and will encode a protein with biased physicochemical properties. taking into account these observations, we have analyzed the informational content of viral overlapping genes at different levels of complexity. the use of information theory indices shows that viral sequences, albeit deriving from different sources, can be referred to two distinct patterns. considering that (luo et al. ) ''the smallness of d represents the abundance of vocabulary and the largeness of d represents the clarity of grammatical rules,'' the informational measures of overlapping sequences related to the first pattern (a low d value, a high d value, see fig. ) suggest a level of genetic information storage closely resembling natural languages. the occurrence of these constraints in coliphage, hepatitis b virus, hiv- lentivirus, and luteovirus also reflects a peculiar pattern in the usage of synonymous codons for most of the corresponding overlapping frames (table ) . since the most striking difference in the choice of synonyms concerns the family of coliphages, some speculations on the origin of its overlapping genes (see the genomic map shown in fig. ) can be proposed. for example, the codon usage pattern of overlapping frames encoding the structural ''scaffolding'' b and d proteins is well correlated (an r value of . and . , respectively) with that of the nonoverlapping genes, which encode the similarly structural j, f, g, and h proteins. this relatively high degree of correlation suggests an ancient origin for the b and d frames. on the other hand, the highly peculiar choice of synonyms in the genes e and k, which are entirely embedded within the d and a/c genes and exhibit an r value of . and . , respectively, supports the idea of a more recent acquisition. since a low expression of the gene e is necessary and sufficient to induce lysis of the host cell (blasi et al. ), its peculiar codon usage pattern could represent a mechanism to regulate the rate of translation, thus preventing premature lysis of the host. a low expression during infectious cycle could also be required for the gene k, whose regulative role consists in increasing the burst size of phage production (gillam et al. ) . the codon usage pattern of the region of gene a which overlaps both b and k genes (an r value of . with the nonoverlapping frames) contrasts with that found in the nonoverlapping part of the gene a (an r value of . ). this observation suggests that a shorter gene a originally terminated in close proximity to a preexisting gene b and that the present overlapping arrangement evolved by a new termination codon of the gene a beyond the gene b. in a similar way, the codon usage of the overlapping fraction of gene c (an r value of . with the regions of nonoverlap) markedly differs from that occurring in the nonoverlapping region (an r value of . ). considering that the gene c of x , g , and ␣ coliphages contains a second in-phase atg codon localized in the nonoverlapping region, we predict an originally shorter gene c which evolved using as initiator codon an upstream atg localized at the end of the gene a. the alternative pattern revealed by the information fig. . frequency of occurrence of chi-square values above the . cutoff value which reflect a significantly higher content of individual amino acid residues in proteins encoded by overlapping genes. is preserved in the overlapping regions (a ס %, t ס %, g ס %, c ס %), and this excess of c residues tends to be clustered in the third base position of codons. in fact, a % content of c residues occurs in the third base position of nonoverlapping regions, a % content in the replicase protein (rp) overlapping frame, and a % content in the -kd protein overlapping frame. the high degree of relationship in the codon usage (an r mean value of . ) likely suggests that, at variance with the case of x , the infectious cycle of tymoviruses may require, in all coding regions, a more uniform adaptation to the translationary machinery of the host. tymoviruses infect various members of the cruciferae (e.g., brassica rapa, arabidopsis thaliana) and they accumulate in leaves (bozarth et al. ) , where the highly expressed genes code for the small subunit of ribulose , -bisphosphate carboxylase and for the chlorophyll a/b-binding protein (murray et al. ). interestingly, the third base positions of the coding regions of these latter genes show a frequency of c residues ( %) similar to that occurring in all different frames of tymoviruses. since the base frequency at third degenerate position in nonoverlapping regions (a ס %, t ס %, c ס %, g ס %) is closely similar to rp overlapping frame (a ס %, t ס %, c ס %, g ס %) and contrasts with -kd protein frame (a ס %, t ס %, c ס %, g ס %), we can also predict that this latter overlapping gene arose later by superimposition on a preexisting rp gene. the statistical analysis of the amino acid composition evidenced that the peculiar amino-acid usage occurring in overlapping genes can be mainly ascribed to a significantly higher frequency of amino acid residues having the highest level of codon degeneracy (fig. ) . for example, the high content of leucine and arginine residues in the overlapping region of lentivirus env gene (table ) is related to a very peculiar choice of synonyms (leu/ cta . %; leu/tta . %; leu/ctc . %, arg/ aga . %, arg/cgc . %), when compared with that occurring in the lentivirus nonoverlapping regions (leu/cta . %; leu/tta . %; leu/ctc . %; arg/aga . %; arg/cgc . %). therefore, a localized high frequency of both leucine and arginine residues combined with a strongly different strategy of codon usage within the ancestral env gene frame can be hypothesized as a basic event to originate the tat, rev, and vpu overlapping frames. some overlapping genes exhibiting a strongly preferred occurrence of leucine or arginine residues (table ) have previously been demonstrated to perform a crucial function in the viral life cycle. for example, the high content of leucines in the overlapping e protein of coliphages lie within a transmembrane domain that is required to determine escherichia coli cell lysis (buckley and hayashi ) . the high frequency of arginines in the overlapping fraction of the core antigen of hepatitis b virus corresponds to a carboxyl-terminal signal that is involved in nuclear targeting of the protein (eckhardt et al. ) . a similar function has been ascribed to the polyarginine motifs of the rev protein of the hiv- lentiviruses (kubota et al. ). it has also been demonstrated (zapp et al. ) that the run of arginines in the center of rev protein is involved in the recognition, and nucleocytoplasmic transport, of unspliced viral mrnas. these data support the notion that the high frequency of amino-acid residues with a high level of codon degeneracy, which appears to be a peculiar feature of overlapping genes, can be viewed as a valuable tool with which to achieve a more flexible strategy in the choice of synonymous codons and/or to gain new specialized functions in the viral life cycle. binding of mammalian ribosomes to ms phage rna reveals an overlapping gene encoding a lysis function overlapping genes in bacteriophage x translational efficiency of x lysis gene e is unaffected by upstream translation of the overlapping gene d reading frame expression of orf- of turnip yellow mosaic virus is necessary for viral spread in plants characterization of an efficient coronavirus ribosomal frameshifting signal: requirement for an rna pseudoknot lytic activity localized to membranespanning region of x e protein biosynthesis of the reverse transcriptase of hepatitis b viruses involved de novo translational initiation not ribosomal frameshifting hepatitis b virus core antigen has two nuclear localization sequences in the arginine-rich carboxyl terminus the information content of dna gene k of bacteriophage x codes for a protein which affects the burst size of phage production informational parameters of an exact dna base sequence signals for ribosomal frameshifting in the rous sarcoma virus gag-pol region origins of genes: ''big bang'' or continuous creation? functional similarity of hiv-i rev and htlv-i rex proteins: identification of a new nucleolar-targeting signal in rev protein diversity of coding strategies in influenza viruses informational parameters of nucleic acid and molecular evolution evolution of overlapping genes codon usage in plant genes overlapping genes the embl data library polycistronic animal virus mrnas degeneracy of the information contained in amino acid sequences: evidence from overlaid genes the codon adaptation index, a measure of directional synonymous codon usage bias, and its potential applications semantic and syntactic patterns in the genetic language. in: colwell rr (ed) biomolecular data. a resource in transition protein constraints induced by multiframe encoding overlapping genes and information theory statistical methods molecular evolution in papova viruses and bacteriophages searching for codes in the sequences. in: colwell rr (ed) biomolecular data. a resource in transition hiv expression strategies: ribosomal frameshifting is directed by a short sequence in both mammalian and yeast systems do overlapping genes violate molecular biology and the theory of evolution? oligomerization and rna binding domains of the type i human immunodeficiency virus rev protein: a dual function for an arginine-rich binding motif we are grateful to professor franco conterio for support and encouragement. we also appreciate critical readings of the manuscript by simone ottonello and elena maestri. this work was supported by the national research council of italy and by the ministry of university and scientific and technological research. key: cord- -tdgu sr authors: reniere, michelle l.; whiteley, aaron t.; portnoy, daniel a. title: an in vivo selection identifies listeria monocytogenes genes required to sense the intracellular environment and activate virulence factor expression date: - - journal: plos pathog doi: . /journal.ppat. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tdgu sr listeria monocytogenes is an environmental saprophyte and facultative intracellular bacterial pathogen with a well-defined life-cycle that involves escape from a phagosome, rapid cytosolic growth, and acta-dependent cell-to-cell spread, all of which are dependent on the master transcriptional regulator prfa. the environmental cues that lead to temporal and spatial control of l. monocytogenes virulence gene expression are poorly understood. in this study, we took advantage of the robust up-regulation of acta that occurs intracellularly and expressed cre recombinase from the acta promoter and ’ untranslated region in a strain in which loxp sites flanked essential genes, so that activation of acta led to bacterial death. upon screening for transposon mutants that survived intracellularly, six genes were identified as necessary for acta expression. strikingly, most of the genes, including gshf, spxa , yjbh, and ohra, are predicted to play important roles in bacterial redox regulation. the mutants identified in the genetic selection fell into three broad categories: ( ) those that failed to reach the cytosolic compartment; ( ) mutants that entered the cytosol, but failed to activate the master virulence regulator prfa; and ( ) mutants that entered the cytosol and activated transcription of acta, but failed to synthesize it. the identification of mutants defective in vacuolar escape suggests that up-regulation of acta occurs in the host cytosol and not the vacuole. moreover, these results provide evidence for two non-redundant cytosolic cues; the first results in allosteric activation of prfa via increased glutathione levels and transcriptional activation of acta while the second results in translational activation of acta and requires yjbh. although the precise host cues have not yet been identified, we suggest that intracellular redox stress occurs as a consequence of both host and pathogen remodeling their metabolism upon infection. intracellular pathogens such as plasmodium spp., mycobacterium tuberculosis, salmonella enterica, trypanosoma cruzi, and leishmania spp. are responsible for an overwhelming amount of morbidity and mortality worldwide. successful dissemination of many of these pathogens requires complex life cycles that involve survival and replication in environmental or vector niches. to propagate within their hosts, these pathogens establish a variety of unique intracellular niches that are essential for their pathogenesis [ ] . although there is considerable understanding of how intracellular pathogens manipulate host cell biology to promote their pathogenesis, less is known about the precise mechanisms by which these pathogens sense their host cell. such an understanding may lead to targets for therapeutic intervention. in this study we used listeria monocytogenes as a model system for understanding virulence gene regulation of a facultative intracellular bacterium that transitions from extracellular to intracellular growth. l. monocytogenes is a ubiquitous environmental saprophyte capable of causing severe disease as a foodborne pathogen [ ] . l. monocytogenes is also a model system for studying bacterial adaptation to the host [ ] . the bacterial virulence program is coordinated with a life cycle that begins upon entry into a mammalian cell either by phagocytosis or bacteria-mediated internalization. to commence intracellular growth, l. monocytogenes must first escape from the hostile phagosomal environment by the expression and secretion of a cholesterol-dependent cytolysin, listeriolysin o (llo) that mediates destruction of the phagosome [ ] . upon entry into the cytosol, l. monocytogenes grows rapidly and expresses an essential determinant of pathogenesis, acta, an abundant surface protein that mediates host actin polymerization [ , ] . appropriate regulation of llo and acta is critical for l. monocytogenes pathogenesis and transcriptionally coordinated by the master virulence regulator prfa [ ] . prfa is a camp receptor protein (crp) family transcriptional regulator that is absolutely essential for l. monocytogenes virulence gene expression and pathogenesis [ ] . prfa-mediated gene expression is regulated by prfa abundance, affinity for target promoters, and activation via cofactor binding [ ] . prfa levels are controlled by three promoters. the most proximal promoter contains a site of negative regulation, while the most distal is a prfa-dependent readthrough transcript that is essential for appropriately high levels of intracellular gene expression [ ] [ ] [ ] . prfa binds a palindromic dna sequence (prfa-box) and deviations from a consensus sequence result in lower affinity dna-prfa interactions [ ] . the affinity of prfa for dna determines the degree of transcriptional activation prior to prfa allosteric activation [ ] . for example, the gene encoding llo (hly) has a high affinity prfa-box and consequently is expressed even during growth in broth when prfa is not activated. in contrast, the acta promoter contains a lower affinity prfa box and is not expressed during growth in broth [ , ] . upon entry into the host cell cytosol, prfa is over-expressed and is activated by a two-step process: first, binding of prfa to dna requires reduction of the four prfa cysteine residues while full transcriptional activation of prfa requires allosteric binding to glutathione [ ] . the requirement for glutathione can be bypassed by mutations that lock prfa in its active conformation (prfa à ) [ ] . strains with prfa à mutations constitutively express prfa-activated genes and consequently have growth defects extracellularly, demonstrating the importance of regulating virulence gene expression [ , ] . however, even prfa à strains grown in broth fail to synthesize the amount of acta observed intracellularly, which is likely attributable to translational control localized to the ' untranslated region ( ' utr) [ ] . despite these findings of exquisite gene regulation, little is known about trans-acting factors that affect expression of prfa or prfa-activated genes. in a previous study, a genetic system was designed to select for l. monocytogenes mutants that failed to express acta intracellularly [ ] . this screen led to the identification of l. monocytogenes glutathione synthase (gshf) and glutathione, a tripeptide antioxidant, as the allosteric activator of prfa. in this study we sought to further understand the host cues that are recognized by intracellular pathogens during infection. we returned to the forward genetic selection and exhaustively screened for additional mutants that failed to express sufficient acta intracellularly. this selection identified genes required at each stage of the intracellular lifecycle, including: vacuolar escape, prfa activation, and cell-to-cell spread. these data suggest a model of compartmentalized gene expression, furthering our understanding of the l. monocytogenes virulence program. the goal of this study was to identify genes involved in regulation of a principle virulence determinant in l. monocytogenes, acta. a bacterial strain was constructed that failed to replicate upon activation of the acta gene, which is specifically up-regulated during cytosolic growth and is essential for pathogenesis. this 'suicide' strain harbored loxp sites in the chromosome flanking the origin of replication (ori) and several essential genes. codon-optimized cre recombinase was expressed from the acta promoter ( fig a) . the suicide strain grew like wild type in rich media but was unrecoverable after infection of bone marrow-derived macrophages (bmms). a himar transposon library was then constructed in the suicide strain background and used to infect bmms. when bacteria were isolated at five hours post-infection (p. i.) nearly all mutants harbored transposon insertions in cre, the acta promoter driving cre expression (acta p), loxp sites, and gshf, encoding glutathione synthase. to identify additional genes required during infection, colonies were isolated at three and four hours p.i, generating a library of , transposon mutants from an initial inoculum of > million bacteria. colony pcr excluded strains with transposon insertions in cre and gshf, resulting in a collection of strains (fig a) . transposon mutants in the suicide background were screened individually for survival in bmms, narrowing the list to mutants. six transposon insertions were identified in hly and nine insertions in prfa, emphasizing that cytosolic access and prfa are absolutely required for acta activation and subsequent cre expression. saturation of the screen was further demonstrated after identification of insertions in the acta promoter driving cre and insertions in the loxp sites (which are each only nucleotides). the remaining transposon mutations were transduced into a wild type background and analyzed in a plaque assay, a highly sensitive measure of cell-to-cell spread, which is completely dependent on acta expression [ ] . using a threshold of %, mutants were identified that formed plaques significantly smaller than wild type in l murine fibroblasts (fig a and table ). with one exception, the transposon insertions were in open reading frames and likely resulted in loss-of-function mutations. the [ ] , teal arrows represent sites of transposon insertions, and numbers above these arrows correspond to mapped transposon locations (nucleotides ' of the start codon). bolded numbers denote the transposon insertions used in this study. transposon in the promoter of lmo (spxa ), a gene predicted to be essential in l. monocytogenes [ ] , resulted in a -fold decrease in spxa expression when the bacteria were grown in broth, essentially resulting in a knock-down strain (s fig). attempts to make an in-frame deletion of spxa using conventional methods were unsuccessful, consistent with a previous report [ ] . as the goal of this selection was to identify mutations that affect acta expression in vivo, we measured acta abundance during infection of bmms. four hours post-infection, cells were lysed and acta and the constitutively expressed p protein were analyzed by immunoblot. nine strains were found to express less acta than wild type after normalizing to p abundance ( fig b) . the work-flow of this selection used cre expression from the acta promoter plaque area as a percentage of wild type. data are the mean and error bars indicate the standard error of the mean (s.e.m.) for three independent experiments. p values were calculated using a heteroscedastic student's t-test and all strains are significantly different from wild type (p < . ). (b) quantification of immunoblots of acta and p during infection. acta abundance was normalized to p abundance and measured as a percentage of wild type. data are the mean ± s.e.m. of at least three independent experiments. (c) female cd- mice were infected with colony forming units (cfu) of each mutant. spleens were harvested hours post-infection and cfu were quantified. the solid lines indicate the median, and data represent three pooled experiments totaling n = mice per strain. p values were calculated using a heteroscedastic student's t-test * p < . ; ** p < . ; *** p < . . (d) gene expression of target genes measured by quantitative rt-pcr in wild type l. monocytogenes grown in broth compared to expression during infection of bmms. data are the mean ± s.e.m. of at least three independent experiments. p values were calculated using a heteroscedastic student's t-test * p < . . and plaque area as a criterion for inclusion in the core set of twelve mutants analyzed here. it was therefore unexpected that three mutants (lmo ::tn, lmo ::tn, and citc::tn) did not display a defect in acta abundance during intracellular growth. we hypothesize that these mutations may disrupt elements of bacterial physiology critical to appropriate cre activity or normal growth. the twelve mutants isolated by the genetic selection were identified based on in vitro assays for virulence. while these assays are correlated to in vivo outcomes, the importance of these genes to l. monocytogenes pathogenesis was confirmed in a murine model of infection. intravenous infection of mice revealed that four of the mutants displayed no virulence defect (lmo ::tn, rsbx::tn, lmo ::tn, and gtca::tn) while the remaining eight mutants were significantly attenuated ( fig c) . it was surprising that four mutants exhibited impaired plaque formation yet were fully virulent; it is possible that these four mutants are impaired in other aspects of pathogenesis not reflected by changes in cfu during these infection conditions. to determine if the plaque defects in these mutants were due to cell-specific defects evident only in the l murine fibroblasts used for plaque assays, cell-to-cell spread defects were also analyzed in tib- cells, a murine hepatocyte cell line (table ) . we observed consistent phenotypes between the plaque defects in tib- cells and l cells with the exception of citc::tn, p-spxa ::tn, and ohra::tn. however, these mutants were significantly attenuated during infection and thus it was unclear why they did not display a plaque defect in tib- cells. the specificity of the transposon insertion in seven of the eight attenuated strains was confirmed by expressing the disrupted gene in trans and complementing the plaque defect (s fig). attempts to complement the ppla::tn plaque defect were unsuccessful. however, ppla mutants are difficult to complement and the mutant we identified exhibited phenotypes consistent with published Δppla defects [ ] . other reports have identified genes necessary for virulence of l. monocytogenes by comparing changes in gene expression in vivo [ ] [ ] [ ] . in our analysis, only gshf was differentially transcribed between host cells and rich media (fig d) . it remains to be investigated if the activity of these genes is regulated post-transcriptionally in response to the host. in this study we focused on the following genes that were required for acta expression and pathogenesis ( fig b) . yjbh (lmo ) encodes a putative thioredoxin similar to yjbh in bacillus subtilis ( % amino acid similarity) [ ] . a transposon in l. monocytogenes yjbh was previously identified in a screen for mutants defective in llo production in vitro and was found to be attenuated in a competitive infection model [ ] . spxa (lmo ) encodes an arsc family transcriptional regulator similar to the disulfide stress regulator spx conserved in firmicutes ( % amino acid identity to b. subtilis spx) [ ] . the difference in nomenclature is due to the presence of a paralogous gene in l. monocytogenes (lmo or spxa ) that is % identical to b. subtilis spx while b. subtilis encodes only a single spx. in b. subtilis and staphylococcus aureus yjbh post-translationally regulates spx [ , ] , although it is not known if this function is conserved in l. monocytogenes. lmo encodes a hypothetical protein with a peroxiredoxin domain and is part of the organic hydroperoxide resistance (ohr) protein subfamily. it is cotranscribed with lmo , encoding a marr family transcriptional regulator which was not required for virulence, suggesting that lmo may act as a transcriptional repressor [ ] . in b. subtilis homologs of lmo and lmo are named ohra ( % amino acid similarity) and ohrr ( %), respectively, and we have adopted this nomenclature for consistency [ ] . arpj (lmo ) encodes a predicted amino acid abc transporter permease that was originally identified in a screen for genes with increased intracellular expression [ ] . however, the data presented here did not show an increase in arpj expression during infection of bmms. this may be explained by the different growth media and cell types used in the two studies. it is also possible that arpj is autoregulated, as the previous study analyzed arpj expression in an arpj transposon mutant. ppla (lmo ) encodes a lipoprotein whose secretion is increased in a prfa à mutant [ ] . the signal sequence of this lipoprotein is processed into a secreted peptide, which is required for vacuolar escape from non-phagocytic cells [ ] . finally, gshf (lmo ) encodes the only glutathione synthase in l. monocytogenes [ ] . glutathione has been demonstrated to be an allosteric activator of prfa and therefore gshf mutants are severely attenuated in vivo due to insufficient virulence gene expression [ ] . given the role of glutathione in activating prfa, we hypothesized that suppressor mutations of Δgshf might illuminate alternative pathways for prfa activation, potentially involving other genes identified. accordingly, we screened for mutations that increased the virulence of a Δgshf mutant. mice were serially infected with a high-inoculum of Δgshf, livers were harvested at hours p.i., homogenized, and diluted to inoculate naive mice. after four successive infections bacteria isolated from infected livers were analyzed by plaque assay. this approach previously identified a mutation in prfa that constitutively activates the protein (g s), known as prfa à , completely bypassing the requirement for glutathione during infection [ ] . the Δgshf prfa à suppressor forms % plaque; therefore, for these experiments we selected bacteria that formed intermediate-sized plaques, which were then subjected to genome sequencing. two suppressor mutants were isolated and found to encode a g>a mutation nucleotides ' of the prfa start codon (fig a) . this mutation lies within a previously identified site of negative regulation of prfa, the so-called "p promoter" (prfa p, fig a) and deletion of the - region of this promoter (Δp mutant) results in a - -fold up-regulation of the prfa p-dependent prfa transcript [ ] . we hypothesized that the prfa - g>a mutation also inactivated the p promoter and resulted in greater prfa abundance. indeed, the Δp gshf::tn double mutant and the Δgshf prfa - g>a suppressor mutants all formed plaques approximately % the size of wild type ( fig b) . these results did not directly implicate any of the other genes identified in our genetic selection, however these findings did highlight the impact of both prfa abundance and activation during infection. prfa expression is controlled by a feed-forward loop in which activated prfa drives its own transcription [ ] . strains expressing Δp or prfa à decouple prfa abundance and activation whereby Δp increases prfa abundance but still relies on glutathione for prfa activation; prfa à increases both the amount and activity of prfa, independent of glutathione. we next sought to determine if the other mutants identified in the screen affected prfa abundance or activation by transducing each into l. monocytogenes Δp and prfa à backgrounds and measuring the plaque size in each background ( fig c) . based on these analyses, mutants fell into three categories. the first category (yjbh::tn, p-spxa ::tn, ohra::tn, and arpj::tn) was unaffected by alterations in prfa expression or activity, indicating that these genes were required down-stream of prfa. in the second category was gshf::tn, which was partially rescued by Δp and completely rescued by prfa à , consistent with the demonstrated role for glutathione as the allosteric activator of prfa. the third category describes ppla::tn, which formed % plaques in both the Δp and prfa à backgrounds. these data suggested that the ppla mutant was capable of activating prfa (because it was rescued by Δp ) but was deficient in expression of prfadependent genes required early during infection before cytosolic access and glutathione-mediated activation of prfa. a principle difference between early and late prfa-dependent genes is that expression of early genes are less dependent on prfa activation by glutathione [ ] . the two early genes are hly (encoding llo) and plca, which share a high-affinity prfa-box and are transcribed by unactivated prfa [ , ] . the Δp mutation results in increased transcription of early genes but does not affect late gene expression, whereas prfa à increases transcription of both early and late genes. we hypothesized that strains rescued by Δp are specifically deficient in early gene expression. accordingly, we analyzed early gene expression (llo production) in broth for each mutant. several of the mutants were found to secrete less llo than wild type ( fig a) . to determine if the defect in llo production led to impaired phagosomal escape and thus a plaque defect, these mutations were transduced into a Δhly mutant over-expressing hly from a constitutive hyper promoter (ph-hly strain) [ , ] . in this background, efficiency of vacuolar escape should be equivalent in all strains, and indeed, equal llo secretion was confirmed in broth. constitutive expression of hly rescued the plaque defects of three mutants: p-spxa ::tn, ohra::tn, and ppla::tn ( fig b) . interestingly, there was discordance between llo production in broth and the defect in plaque formation one might predict from an llo deficiency. for this reason, measuring llo production in broth may be revealing aspects of bacterial physiology unrelated to llo production in vivo. the above results suggested that mutations in p-spxa , ohra, and ppla resulted in aberrant llo secretion and/or that these mutants were unable to survive in the harsh environment of the vacuole. constitutive expression of hly would likely overcome either defect. we attempted to segregate these two possibilities by analyzing sensitivity to vacuolar conditions, including reactive oxygen species which l. monocytogenes must adapt to in order to survive [ , ] . the response of each mutant to peroxide, disulfide stress, and organic hydroperoxide was analyzed by measuring their sensitivity to hydrogen peroxide (h o ), diamide, and cumene hydroperoxide (chp), respectively. knock-down of spxa and disruption of ohra or gshf significantly increased the sensitivity of l. monocytogenes to both peroxide and disulfide stress (fig c) . in accordance with its annotation and the published role of ohra in b. subtilis [ ] , the ohra::tn mutant was significantly more susceptible to chp ( fig c) . as these results suggested a role for redox control of virulence genes, we tested the hypothesis that host reactive oxygen or nitrogen species may be sensed by the bacteria during infection to activate acta. however, growth of the suicide mutant was not rescued in bmms lacking inducible nitric oxide synthase (nos -/-) or nadph oxidase (nox -/-) (s fig). therefore, l. monocytogenes may activate virulence genes in response to multiple redundant host cues or depend on yet unidentified host pathways. constitutive production of hly restored the majority of the plaque defect for p-spxa ::tn and ohra::tn, however, it did not restore the plaque to % of the parent strain ( fig b) . we hypothesized that these mutants might also be impaired in the ability to grow in the host cytosol, independently from virulence gene expression. all of the mutants identified in the screen grew similarly to wild type in bmms with the exception of p-spxa ::tn and ohra::tn (fig d) . in fact, p-spxa ::tn and ohra::tn were also the only mutants that exhibited growth defects in rich media (fig e) . these pleiotropic growth defects and sensitivity to redox stress are likely why ph-hly was only partially able to complement the plaque defect of these mutants (fig b) . previous work clearly demonstrated that glutathione was essential for transcriptional activation of virulence genes [ ] . in order to assess which factors might be independent of glutathionedependent transcriptional activation, we combined each transposon with an in-frame Δgshf mutation. the only mutation not epistatic to gshf was yjbh::tn, which produced an additive plaque defect ( fig a) . further, yjbh::tn was not rescued by constitutive activation of hly ( fig b) or prfa ( fig c) . together, these data suggested that yjbh was required for acta expression post-transcriptionally. indeed, transcript levels of acta were identical in bmms infected with wild type or the Δyjbh mutant ( fig b) . it is intriguing that arpj::tn was epistatic to gshf, yet not rescued by constitutive activation of prfa, indicating that arpj may contribute to glutathione-dependent transcriptional activation of acta through an unknown mechanism. the acta gene is preceded by nucleotides of untranslated mrna ( fig c) which is important for sufficient acta expression [ ] . a strain was constructed in which acta was expressed independent of prfa by expressing the entire acta transcript (including the ' utr) under the control of the constitutive hyper promoter in a strain deleted for acta (ph-acta strain, fig d) . acta protein abundance was then analyzed by immunoblot. in this background, acta abundance was equivalent among all strains when the bacteria were grown in broth ( fig e) . however, during infection of bmms, disruption of yjbh resulted in significant impairment in acta abundance (fig f) , indicating a failure to translationally activate acta. given that disrupting yjbh rescued the death of the suicide strain in which cre was expressed under acta p and the ' utr, these data indicate a genetic interaction between yjbh and the ' utr of acta. to further support this genetic interaction we engineered a fluorescent strain of l. monocytogenes in which rfp was expressed under the acta p promoter and ' utr (acta prfp, fig g) . during infection of bmms the Δyjbh acta p-rfp strain exhibited significantly less fluorescence than wild type acta p-rfp ( fig h) . unfortunately, we were unable to interrogate the effect of a yjbh mutation on acta abundance in the absence of its ' utr due to an inability to detect acta when the ' utr was deleted, consistent with this region being critical for acta expression [ ] . a drawback to ph-acta is that although acta is over-expressed in broth, this strain still elaborates much less acta in vivo and fails to form a plaque (fig e and f ). to analyze the role of translational activation during infection, the acta gene and ' utr were moved to a neutral locus within the l. monocytogenes chromosome [ ] . in this strain, acta was expressed only from the prfa-dependent acta p proximal promoter, eliminating read-through transcription from the distal acta p promoter (fig c) . this strain was called acta p and was only mildly impaired in plaque formation and virulence (fig i and j) . however, acta p yjbh::tn was unable to form a plaque (fig i) . the importance of acta translational activation was further underscored by a -log defect for acta p yjbh::tn in the livers of infected mice (fig j) . these data revealed a critical role for yjbh in acta activation that was less apparent in the wild type background due to redundant prfa-dependent promoters. in this study, rather than search for novel virulence factors or genes up-regulated in vivo, we screened for genes required for activation of an essential determinant of l. monocytogenes pathogenesis (acta) that is up-regulated over -fold during intracellular growth. mutants identified in the genetic selection fell into three broad categories: ( ) those that failed to reach the cytosolic compartment; ( ) mutants that entered the cytosol, but failed to activate the master virulence transcriptional regulator prfa; and ( ) mutants that entered the cytosol and activated transcription of acta, but failed to synthesize it (fig ) . this approach highlighted how and cfu were quantified. the solid lines indicate the median, and data represent two pooled experiments totaling n = mice per strain. in all panels, p values were calculated using a heteroscedastic student's t-test * p < . ; ** p < . ; *** p < . ; ns (not significant) p > . . doi: . /journal.ppat. .g once phagocytosed by a host macrophage, l. monocytogenes (light blue rods) requires the gene products of spxa and ohra to survive in the phagosome. by a mechanism that is not yet understood, ppla is required for vacuolar escape in non-phagocytic cells. yjbh and arpj are then required for cell-to-cell spread. the l. monocytogenes pathogenicity island- is pictured below. early genes (depicted in red) are those with high-affinity prfa boxes that do not require active prfa (teal) for transcription. late genes (depicted in blue) are those with relatively low-affinity prfa boxes that require activated prfa to be transcribed and these are required later during infection, in the host cytosol. the transition from unactivated to activated prfa requires glutathione (orange circles), which is synthesized by gshf. yjbh (magenta) is then required for translational activation of acta, although the mechanism is not yet understood. see text for more details, model is not drawn to scale. expression of virulence factors is spatially and temporally compartmentalized via regulation of transcription and translation during infection. one of the most striking findings of this study was that the majority of genes identified in the selection encode proteins predicted to control bacterial redox regulation, suggesting that redox changes represent one of the biological cues sensed by l. monocytogenes to regulate its virulence program. redox stress during infection can arise from endogenous by-products of bacterial metabolism and exogenously derived factors generated by the host. however, it remains to be discovered whether the redox stress that may trigger virulence gene expression is produced by the host, the bacteria, or both. yjbh, spx, ohra, and gshf have defined roles in maintaining redox homeostasis in the presence of disulfide and organic peroxide stresses in firmicutes. in b. subtilis ohra is a peroxiredoxin required during organic hydroperoxide stress [ ] . in s. aureus and b. subtilis yjbh interacts with spx to regulate the abundance and activity of spx [ , ] . specifically, yjbhbound spx is recognized by the clpxp protease and is degraded so that spx concentrations are low under steady-state conditions [ , ] . during disulfide stress the yjbh:spx interaction is disrupted by intramolecular disulfide bonds in both proteins that result in reduced proteolysis of spx. b. subtilis spx represses transcription of genes and activates transcription of genes [ ] , the majority of which are required to adapt to redox stress, including genes for production of the low-molecular weight (lmw) thiol utilized by b. subtilis, bacillithiol [ ] . l. monocytogenes spxa cannot be deleted and its regulon has not yet been characterized [ ] . similarly, in streptococcus pneumoniae simultaneous deletion of both spxa and spxa paralogues is lethal [ ] , supporting the notion that the spx regulon(s) may contain essential genes in some firmicutes. mutants exhibiting the most severe virulence phenotypes contained insertions in gshf, which encodes the sole l. monocytogenes glutathione synthase [ ] . glutathione is a tripeptide lmw thiol antioxidant present at millimolar concentrations that contributes to maintaining a reducing environment in both bacterial and host cells [ ] . not surprisingly, l. monocytogenes Δgshf mutants are more sensitive to redox stressors such as hydrogen peroxide and diamide and are -fold less virulent in mice, indicating that bacterially-derived glutathione is essential for pathogenesis [ ] . however, Δgshf mutants are fully virulent in l. monocytogenes harboring prfa à mutations that lock prfa in its constitutively active conformation. therefore, the primary role of gshf-derived glutathione during infection is to activate virulence gene expression via prfa activation, although we cannot rule out a contribution of imported host-derived glutathione [ ] . indeed, host-derived glutathione activates virulence gene expression in burkholderia pseudomallei [ ] . in the case of l. monocytogenes, gshf is transcriptionally up-regulated -fold during intracellular growth, suggesting the existence of an unidentified cue, likely redox-related, that stimulates glutathione production. the identification of many redox-related bacterial factors in this genetic selection led to our working model that specific redox changes during infection are sensed by the bacteria as a mechanism to identify their intracellular location and activate virulence genes appropriately. redox stress during infection could arise from host-derived antimicrobial factors. for example, the host generates antibacterial factors that assault invading pathogens with redox stresses, including: reactive oxygen species (ros), reactive electrophilic species (res) such as methylglyoxal, and reactive nitrogen species (rns) such as nitric oxide and peroxynitrite [ , , ] . interestingly, these redox stresses from the host are spatially compartmentalized. rns and ros are produced in the phagosome and once in the host cytosol, l. monocytogenes is confronted with res and mitochondrial-derived ros [ , ] . it is possible that the bacterial response to the redox stressors is also compartmentalized, requiring specific factors in the vacuole (such as spxa and ohra) and host cytosol (such as yjbh). eliminating host nitric oxide synthase (nos ) or nadph oxidase did not rescue growth of the suicide mutant (s fig). nos -generated nitric oxide is required for efficient l. monocytogenes cell-to-cell spread during infection, although this is due to the nitric oxide-mediated delay of phagolysosome maturation and not a direct effect on the bacteria [ ] . together, these data suggest that a combination of host factors are likely required to activate acta during infection. alternatively, the source of redox stress may come from bacterial metabolism via ros generated from incomplete reduction of oxygen during aerobic respiration [ ] . carbon source and phosphate abundance also affect the production of ros and methylglyoxal [ , ] . prfa activity has been demonstrated to be sensitive to available carbon sources [ ] . growth on plant-derived beta-glucoside sugars in the environment, such as cellobiose, represses prfa activation, whereas growth on host-derived sugars such as glucose- -phosphate stimulates prfadependent gene expression [ , , ] . therefore, entry of l. monocytogenes into the host cytosol results in a remodeling of carbon metabolism that may be linked to virulence gene regulation. glycerol is the principle carbon source used by l. monocytogenes intracellularly and growth on glycerol is a well-described stimulant of methylglyoxal production [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in b. subtilis, methylglyoxal stress stimulates the spx regulon and production of bacillithiol, a low molecular weight thiol used by b. subtilis to detoxify methylglyoxal [ ] . thus, the -fold increase in gshf transcript levels in l. monocytogenes may correspond to increased methylglyoxal production during infection, which would further link metabolism of an alternative carbon source to virulence. coupling of metabolism to virulence gene regulation may allow the system to remain off in the environment while remaining poised to turn on upon entering a host. considering our finding of multiple redox factors that are required for proper virulence gene expression, we speculate that changes in carbon metabolism could alter the endogenous levels of ros and res produced, thus affecting prfa activation and leading to the "sugar-mediated repression" observed previously [ ] . appropriate up-regulation of acta at the translational level is understood to require its ' utr, although the mechanism remains unknown [ ] . the data reported here further emphasize the sensitivity of acta translation to the environment in which l. monocytogenes is growing. in broth, the prfa à strain elaborated . % the amount of acta protein as compared to constitutively expressed acta (fig e) , and increased -fold during infection (fig f) , despite the fact that transcript levels of acta are equivalent in both growth conditions [ ] . these data emphasize the importance of the translational control of this virulence factor. importantly, yjbh was required for the increased abundance of acta protein during infection. in wild type l. monocytogenes, multiple prfa-dependent promoters may compensate for loss of translational activation; however, when acta was isolated under its most proximal promoter, disruption of yjbh resulted in an attenuation of over -logs in the livers of infected animals (fig j) . it seems unlikely that the thioredoxin yjbh activates translation of acta via direct binding to the ' utr. however, yjbh may indirectly activate translation via interaction with another factor (s) or modulation of a small-molecule signal produced by the host. prfa-dependent transcription and activation are regulated redundantly at multiple levels, including: a temperature-sensitive riboswitch [ ] , allosteric activation by glutathione [ ] , multiple read-through transcripts [ , ] , positive and negative promoter elements [ , ] , and yet to be fully characterized translational control. the complexity of acta activation is likely the result of selective pressure to respond appropriately to host-derived cues. this study investigated the virulence defects associated with failure to up-regulate virulence genes; however, over-production or inappropriate regulation of virulence factors extracellularly also results in a competitive disadvantage for l. monocytogenes [ , ] . how l. monocytogenes and other intracellular pathogens regulate virulence gene expression is central to understanding their pathogenesis. results reported here suggest that redox cues are a mechanism by which intracellular pathogens recognize the host and represents an exciting new area of further investigation. this study was carried out in strict accordance with the recommendations in the guide for the care and use of laboratory animals of the national institutes of health. all protocols were reviewed and approved by the animal care and use committee at the university of california, berkeley (aup- - - ). all l. monocytogenes strains are a derivative of wild type s [ , ] and were cultivated in brain heart infusion (bhi, difco), shaking at °c unless otherwise stated. all e. coli strains were cultivated shaking in lb (miller) at °c. antibiotics (purchased from sigma) were used at the following concentrations: carbenicillin ( μg/ml), streptomycin ( μg/ml), chloramphenicol ( . μg/ml for l. monocytogenes and μg/ml for e. coli), erythromycin ( μg/ ml), and tetracycline ( μg/ml). all e. coli strains are listed in table and all l. monocytogenes strains are listed in table . bacterial broth growth curves were performed as previously described [ ] . the suicide strain was a gift from peter lauer and bill hanson (aduro biotech); details of its construction are reported elsewhere [ ] . briefly, loxp sites were inserted on either side of the origin of replication by allelic exchange into a ΔactaΔinlb strain of l monocytogenes. a transcriptional fusion of cre with acta that included the acta p promoter, ' utr, and ribosomal binding site of acta, was inserted adjacent to a loxp site. knock-in of ppl derivative plasmids was performed by standard methods [ ] . briefly, constructed ppl plasmids were transformed into chemically competent sm e. coli, selecting on chloramphenicol. donor sm and recipient l. monocytogenes were mixed at a : ratio on a non-selective bhi plate at °c for - hours, then trans-conjugation was selected for by plating bacteria on bhi containing streptomycin plus either chloramphenicol (ppl ), erythromycin (ppl e), or tetracycline (ppl t). single colonies were re-streaked for purifying selection onto bhi containing the same antibiotics as used after trans-conjugation. in-frame deletions of genes was accomplished by allelic exchange using pksv -orit and conventional methods [ ] . briefly, the constructed knock-out plasmid was transformed into sm e. coli, recovered on lb containing carbenicillin, and trans-conjugated into l. monocytogenes by mixing the donor sm and recipient l. monocytogenes at a : ratio on a non-selective bhi plate for - hours at °c, the permissive temperature for pksv -orit to replicate in gram-positive organisms. trans-conjugation was selected on bhi containing both streptomycin and chloramphenicol at °c. after isolation of a single colony of l. monocytogenes containing pksv -orit at °c, bacteria were grown at °c on bhi agar containing both streptomycin and chloramphenicol to select for chromosomal integration. colonies were restreaked onto selective media at °c two additional times for purifying selection and integrated pksv -orit. this strain was then serially passaged at °c to enrich for excision and loss of pksv -orit. mutants that lost pksv -orit were identified by sensitivity to chloramphenicol using indirect patch-plating methods. finally, allelic exchange was confirmed by pcr and, when necessary, sanger dna sequencing. preparation of electro-competent l. monocytogenes and himar transposon mutagenesis were performed as previously described [ ] , generating a transposon mutant library that was not fully characterized previously [ ] . transposon junctions were mapped as previously described [ ] . the position of each himar transposon refers to to the distance of the insertion site, ' of the first nucleotide of each gene. transposons were mapped to the s genome, however, for continuity of nomenclature the egd-e loci names have been used. for reference: lmo (lmrg_ ), lmo (lmrg_ ), rsbx is lmo (lmrg_ ), yjbh is lmo transposons in the chromosome were introduced into different genetic backgrounds by generalized transduction using the phage u , as previously described [ , ] . briefly, a transducing lysate was generated by lysogenizing approximately cfu of l. monocytogenes transposon donor with approximately pfu of phage in - ml of . % lb agar containing mgso and cacl ( mm each) on lb agar and incubated overnight at °c. phage was soaked out of the agar by incubating with ml of tm buffer ( mm tris, ph . and mm mgso ) for - hours and these recovered phage stocks were filter sterilized. with the newly generated transducing lysate, l. monocytogenes recipients were lysogenized with pfu of lysate, incubated at °c for min in lb containing mgso and cacl ( mm each), and then plated on selective bhi agar at °c. when transducing the himar transposon using erythromycin selection, colonies appeared after two days. these colonies were purified by restreaking transductants for single colonies and verified by sequencing the transposon junction. u phage stocks were propagated using l. monocytogenes strain slcc- . knock-in plasmids were constructed as previously described using primers listed in table and reagents are from new england biolabs, unless otherwise specified [ ] . briefly, vectors for complementing yjbh and spxa were constructed by amplifying each gene along with its predicted native promoters using a reverse primer that appended a dna sequence encoding a six histidine affinity tag at the c-terminus. these dna fragments and ppl [ ] were then digested with kpni and bamhi and ligated using quick ligase, according to manufacturer's instructions. the arpj and ohra complement vectors were constructed by amplifying their entire predicted operon and predicted native promoter (arpj: lmrg_ -lmrg_ , ohra: lmrg_ -lmrg_ ) without addition of affinity tags. the dna fragment was combined with linearized ppl t harboring a transcriptional terminator [ ] and assembled using in-fusion cloning (clontech) or gibson assembly ultra (synthetic genomics). the ppl t.p hyper -acta vector was constructed by amplifying both ' utr and cds of acta (lmrg_ ), and combining the dna fragment with linearized ppl t harboring a modified pspac-hy (p hyper ) [ ] sequence: "aattgtgagcgctcacaattttgcaaaaagttgttgactttatctacaaggtgtgg cataatgtgtgtaattgtgagcgctcacaatt", inserted via gblock (idt), and a transcriptional terminator for assembly using in-fusion cloning (clontech). the pksv -orit-Δyjbh vector was constructed according to methods previously described [ ] . briefly, the vector was constructed by sequentially amplifying~ kb of homology flanking the yjbh coding region using primers in table . these two fragments were joined by sequence overlap extension pcr, which included the coding region for the first six and last six amino acids of yjbh. the final pcr fragment and pksv -orit were digested with kpni and psti (rsap was also included for the vector) and ligated using quick ligase. the ligation product was transformed into xl blue e. coli and transformants were screened by pcr for the presence of the insert, followed by sanger sequencing confirmation. the plaque assay was carried out by conventional methods [ , ] . briefly, l fibroblasts (generated previously from l cells [ ] and provided as a generous gift from susan weiss in , as detailed in sun et al. [ ] ) or tib- hepatocytes (atcc tib- ) were maintained in high-glucose dmem medium plus % fbs (hyclone), mm l-glutamine (gibco), and mm sodium pyruvate (gibco). cells were plated at . x cells per well in a six-well dish and infected the next day at an moi of with l. monocytogenes grown overnight at °c, stationary. the infection was allowed to proceed for one hour before the wells were washed twice with pbs and ml of medium plus . % agarose and μg/ml gentamicin was overlaid. at hours post-infection the plaques were stained with ml of medium plus . % agarose, μg/ ml gentamicin, and μl/ml neutral red (sigma). the plaques were then imaged at hours post-infection. plaque area was quantified using imagej software [ ] . each experiment represented an average of the area of at least five plaques per strain as a proportion to wild type plaques in that experiment. data are representative of at least three experiments. macrophage growth curves were performed as previously described [ , ] . briefly, bone marrow-derived macrophages (bmms) were derived from bone marrow of c bl/ mice purchased from the jackson laboratory and were cultivated/differentiated in high-glucose dmem medium containing csf (from mouse csf- -producing t cells), % fbs (hyclone), mm l-glutamine (gibco), mm sodium pyruvate (gibco), and mm -mercaptoethanol (bme, gibco). bmms were derived as previously described and plated in mm non-tc treated dishes that contained tc-treated coverslips at x cells per dish. these dishes were then infected at an moi of . for minutes, washed twice with pbs prior to replacing media, and gentamicin was added at μg/ml one hour post-infection. three coverslips were removed from each dish at . , , , and hours post-infection and added to ml of sterile water. coverslips were rigorously mixed prior to plating on lb agar. each graph is representative of three experiments and each data point represents the average of three coverslips. to analyze virulence, female cd- mice were infected intravenously (i.v.) via the tail vein using μl of sterile pbs containing cfu of each l. monocytogenes strain as previously described [ ] . the infection was allowed to progress for hours, at which point animals were euthanized and the spleens and livers were harvested. organs were homogenized in . % np- and serial dilutions were plated on lb agar containing streptomycin. graphs represent pooled data from at least two experiments of greater than four mice each. groups were statistically compared using a heteroscedastic student's t-test. in vivo suppressors were identified similarly to previously described methods [ ] . briefly, cd- mice were infected i.v. with x cfu of Δgshf for hours and the livers were harvested, homogenized, and μl was inoculated into broth. naïve mice were then infected with these liver homogenate cultures. after four successive infections bacteria isolated from infected livers were analyzed via plaque assay and two strains with intermediate plaque phenotype were selected for genome sequencing. genomic dna was isolated from l. monocytogenes using the masterpure gram-positive dna purification kit (epicentre) according to the manufacturer's instructions. genome sequencing and dna library preparation was performed as previously described [ ] at the vincent j. coates genomics sequencing laboratory at uc berkeley. data was assembled and aligned to the s reference genome (genbank: gca_ . ) demonstrating > x coverage. snp/indel/structural variation was determined as compared to the Δgshf parent strain using clc genomics workbench (clc bio). all immunoblotting was performed as previously described [ ] . briefly, for bacteria grown in broth, overnight cultures were diluted : into bhi, incubated for five hours at °c, shaking, then the bacteria were separated from the supernatant by centrifugation. for secreted proteins, the supernatant was treated with % v/v tca for one hour on ice to precipitate all proteins. the protein pellet was washed twice with ice-cold acetone, followed by vacuum drying. the proteins were dissolved in lds buffer (invitrogen) containing % bme using a volume that normalized for od of harvested bacteria, boiled for minutes, and separated by sds-page. for surface associated proteins, bacteria were suspended in μl of lds buffer containing % bme, boiled for minutes, and proteins separated by sds-page. immunoblots of bacteria grown intracellularly within infected bmms used -well dishes with bmms at a density of cells per well and infected with an moi of . one hour postinfection the cells were washed and media containing gentamicin ( μg/ml) was added. four hours post-infection the cells were washed twice with pbs and harvested in μl lds buffer containing % bme. the samples were then boiled and separated by sds-page. primary antibodies were each used at a dilution of : , , including: rabbit polyclonal antibody against the n-terminus of acta [ ] , rabbit polyclonal antibody against llo, and a mouse monoclonal antibody against p (adipogen). p is a constitutively expressed bacterial protein used as a loading control [ ] . all immunoblots were visualized and quantified using odyssey imager and appropriate secondary antibodies from the manufacturer according the manufacturer's instructions. transcript analysis in broth was performed as previously described [ ] . briefly, bacteria were grown overnight in bhi and subcultured : into ml bhi. bacteria were harvested at an od = . . transcript analysis during infection was analyzed as previously described [ ] . briefly, bmms were plated at a density of x cells in mm tc-treated dishes and infected with an moi of . one hour post-infection the cells were washed and media containing gentamicin ( μg/ml) was added. four hours post-infection the cells were washed with pbs and lysed in ml of . % np- . after collecting the lysate, the dishes were then washed in rnaprotect bacteria reagent (qiagen), which was combined with the lysate. bacteria were isolated by centrifugation. bacteria harvested from either broth or bmms were lysed in phenol: chloroform containing % sds by vortexing with . mm diameter silica/zirconium beads (biospec products inc.). nucleic acids were precipitated from the aqueous fraction overnight at - °c in ethanol containing mm sodium acetate (ph . ). precipitated nucleic acids were washed with ethanol and treated with turbo dnase per manufacturer's specifications (life technologies corporation). rna was again precipitated overnight and then washed in ethanol. rt-pcr was performed with iscript reverse transcriptase (bio-rad) and quantitative pcr (qpcr) of resulting cdna was performed with kapa sybr fast (kapa biosystems). primers used for qpcr are listed in table . disk diffusions were performed similarly to previously described methods [ ] . briefly, approximately x cfu from overnight cultures of bacteria were immobilized using ml of molten ( °c) top-agar ( . % nacl and . % bacto-agar) spread evenly on tryptic soy agar plates. after the agar cooled, whatman paper disks soaked in μl of % hydrogen peroxide, m diamide solution, or % cumene hydroperoxide solution were placed on top of the bacteria-agar. the zone of inhibition was measured after - hours of incubation at °c. bmms were differentiated and cultivated as described for bmm growth curves. cells were plated at x cells per well in a -well dish in media without antibiotics. the following day bmms were infected at an moi of with l. monocytogenes mutants that had been incubated at °c without shaking. after minutes cells were washed once with pbs and fresh media containing gentamicin ( μg/ml) was added. six hours post infection media was removed from each well, the cells were washed with ml of pbs, and . ml of pbs was replaced for each well. rfp fluorescence was measured using a plate reader (infinite m pro, tecan) with nm excitation, nm emission, and nm band filters. each well was interrogated times on an x grid and the edge reads were excluded. data were normalized by subtracting baseline fluorescence of wild type (without rfp) infected cells and plotting data as a percentage of wild type expressing acta p-rfp. each experiment represents three infected wells per l. monocytogenes genotype and data are representative of three pooled independent experiments. bacterial pathogen manipulation of host membrane trafficking listeria monocytogenes-from saprophyte to intracellular pathogen listeria monocytogenes: a multifaceted model listeriolysin o: a phagosome-specific lysin interaction of human arp / complex and the listeria monocytogenes acta protein in actin filament nucleation monocytogenes-induced actin assembly requires the acta gene product, a surface protein coordinate regulation of virulence genes in listeria monocytogenes requires the product of the prfa gene the prfa virulence regulon regulation of listeria virulence: prfa master and commander regulation of the prfa transcriptional activator of listeria monocytogenes: multiple promoter elements contribute to intracellular growth and cell-to-cell spread dual promoters of the listeria monocytogenes prfa transcriptional activator appear essential in vitro but are redundant in vivo pleiotropic control of listeria monocytogenes virulence factors by a gene that is autoregulated sequence variations within prfa dna binding sites and effects on listeria monocytogenes virulence gene expression differential activation of virulence gene expression by prfa, the listeria monocytogenes virulence regulator intracellular induction of listeria monocytogenes acta expression expression of listeriolysin o and acta by intracellular and extracellular listeria monocytogenes glutathione activates virulence gene expression of an intracellular pathogen a gly ser substitution in the transcriptional activator prfa causes constitutive overexpression of virulence factors in listeria monocytogenes prfa regulation offsets the cost of listeria virulence outside the host constitutive activation of prfa tilts the balance of listeria monocytogenes fitness towards life within the host versus environmental survival evidence implicating the ' untranslated region of listeria monocytogenes acta in the regulation of bacterial actin-based motility isolation of listeria monocytogenes small-plaque mutants defective for intracellular growth and cell-to-cell spread identification in listeria monocytogenes of meca, a homologue of the bacillus subtilis competence regulatory protein identification of a peptide-pheromone that enhances listeria monocytogenes escape from host cell vacuoles five listeria monocytogenes genes preferentially expressed in infected mammalian cells: plca, purh, purd, pyre and an arginine abc transporter gene intracellular gene expression profile of listeria monocytogenes the listeria transcriptional landscape from saprophytism to virulence yjbh is a novel negative effector of the disulphide stress regulator, spx, in bacillus subtilis development of a marinerbased transposon and identification of listeria monocytogenes determinants, including the peptidylprolyl isomerase prsa , that contribute to its hemolytic phenotype spx-rna polymerase interaction and global transcriptional control during oxidative stress wachenfeldt von c. the yjbh adaptor protein enhances proteolysis of the transcriptional regulator spx in staphylococcus aureus ohrr is a repressor of ohra, a key organic hydroperoxide resistance determinant in bacillus subtilis identification of novel listeria monocytogenes secreted virulence factors following mutational activation of the central virulence regulator a multidomain fusion protein in listeria monocytogenes catalyzes the two primary activities for glutathione biosynthesis allosteric mutants show that prfa activation is dispensable for vacuole escape but required for efficient spread and listeria survival in vivo prfa mediates specific binding of rna polymerase of listeria monocytogenes to prfa-dependent virulence gene promoters resulting in a transcriptionally active complex the ' untranslated region-mediated enhancement of intracellular listeriolysin o production is required for listeria monocytogenes pathogenicity in vivo effects of sporulation kinases on mutant spo a proteins in bacillus subtilis the role of the activated macrophage in clearing listeria monocytogenes infection localized reactive oxygen and nitrogen intermediates inhibit escape of listeria monocytogenes from vacuoles in activated macrophages construction, characterization, and use of two listeria monocytogenes site-specific phage integration vectors yjbh-enhanced proteolysis of spx by clpxp in bacillus subtilis is inhibited by the small protein yirb (yuzo) the yjbh protein of bacillus subtilis enhances clpxp-catalyzed proteolysis of spx a regulatory protein that interferes with activator-stimulated transcription in bacteria regulation of bacillus subtilis bacillithiol biosynthesis operons by spxa , a novel transcriptional regulator involved in x-state (competence) development in streptococcus pneumoniae the many faces of glutathione in bacteria host cytosolic glutathione sensing by a membrane histidine kinase activates the type vi secretion system in an intracellular bacterium inducible nitric oxide synthase and control of intracellular bacterial pathogens cells producing their own nemesis: understanding methylglyoxal metabolism how mitochondria produce reactive oxygen species nitric oxide increases susceptibility of toll-like receptor-activated macrophages to spreading listeria monocytogenes bacterial adaptation to oxidative stress: implications for pathogenesis and interaction with phagocytic cells life of listeria monocytogenes in the host cells' cytosol bacterial production of methylglyoxal: a survival strategy or death by misadventure? carbon-source regulation of virulence gene expression in listeria monocytogenes glucose- -phosphate utilization by listeria monocytogenes is prfa dependent and coordinately expressed with virulence factors carbon metabolism of listeria monocytogenes growing inside macrophages carbon metabolism of intracellular bacterial pathogens and possible links to virulence lethal synthesis of methylglyoxal by escherichia coli during unregulated glycerol metabolism methylglyoxal resistance in bacillus subtilis: contributions of bacillithiol-dependent and independent pathways an rna thermosensor controls expression of virulence genes in listeria monocytogenes dual roles of plca in listeria monocytogenes pathogenesis negative regulation of prfa, the key activator of listeria monocytogenes virulence gene expression, is dispensable for bacterial pathogenesis comparative transcriptomics of pathogenic and non-pathogenic listeria species adoptive transfer of immunity to listeria monocytogenes. the influence of in vitro stimulation on lymphocyte subset requirements comparison of widely used listeria monocytogenes strains egd, s, and egd-e highlights genomic variations underlying differences in pathogenicity cyclic di-amp is critical for listeria monocytogenes growth, cell wall homeostasis, and establishment of infection a broad host range mobilization system for in vivo genetic-engineeringtransposon mutagenesis in gram-negative bacteria. bio-technology the pamp c-di-amp is essential for listeria monocytogenes growth in rich but not minimal media due to a toxic increase in (p) avoidance of autophagy mediated by plca or acta is required for listeria monocytogenes growth in invasive extravillous trophoblasts restrict intracellular growth and spread of listeria monocytogenes functional impact of mutational activation on the listeria monocytogenes central virulence regulator prfa. microbiology (reading, engl) generalized transduction of serotype / and serotype b strains of listeria monocytogenes a prl mutation in secy suppresses secretion and virulence defects of listeria monocytogenes seca mutants enhanced growth of a murine coronavirus in transformed mouse cells nih image to imagej: years of image analysis role of hemolysin for the intracellular growth of listeria monocytogenes sting-dependent type i ifn production inhibits cell-mediated immunity to listeria monocytogenes constitutive activation of the prfa regulon enhances the potency of vaccines based on live-attenuated and killed but metabolically active listeria monocytogenes strains expression of the iap gene coding for protein p of listeria monocytogenes is controlled on the posttranscriptional level listeria monocytogenes is resistant to lysozyme through the regulation, not the acquisition, of cell wall-modifying enzymes mutations of the listeria monocytogenes peptidoglycan n-deacetylase and o-acetylase result in enhanced lysozyme sensitivity, bacteriolysis, and hyperinduction of innate immune pathways the authors would like to thank nancy freitag (university of illinois at chicago college of medicine), pete lauer, and bill hanson (aduro biotech) for strains and helpful discussions. the authors would also like to thank nicholas garelis and sonya john for technical assistance, gabriel mitchell for assistance with microscopy, chen chen for assistance with flow cytometry, and brittany ruhland and eric d. lee for critical reading of the manuscript. key: cord- -z butywi authors: joyce, collin; burton, dennis r.; briney, bryan title: comparisons of the antibody repertoires of a humanized rodent and humans by high throughput sequencing date: - - journal: sci rep doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: z butywi the humanization of animal model immune systems by genetic engineering has shown great promise for antibody discovery, tolerance studies and for the evaluation of vaccines. assessment of the baseline antibody repertoires of unimmunized model animals will be useful as a benchmark for future immunization experiments. we characterized the heavy chain and kappa light chain antibody repertoires of a model animal, the omnirat, by high throughput antibody sequencing and made use of two novel datasets for comparison to human repertoires. intra-animal and inter-animal repertoire comparisons reveal a high level of conservation in antibody diversity between the lymph node and spleen and between members of the species. multiple differences were found in both the heavy and kappa chain repertoires between omnirats and humans including gene segment usage, cdr length distributions, class switch recombination, somatic hypermutation levels and in features of v(d)j recombination. the inference and generation of repertoires (igor) software tool was used to model recombination in vh regions which allowed for the quantification of some of these differences. diversity estimates of the omnirat heavy chain repertoires almost reached that of humans, around two orders of magnitude less. despite variation between the species repertoires, a high frequency of omnirat clonotypes were also found in the human repertoire. these data give insights into the development and selection of humanized animal antibodies and provide actionable information for use in vaccine studies. rag , rag and artemis (among others). p and n nucleotides are added in the vh-dh and dh-jh junctions by artemis and tdt, dramatically increasing sequence diversity. after successful pairing of this newly formed heavy chain with surrogate light chain (slc), recombination of a light chain from v and j gene segments of the kappa or lambda loci occurs and the b cell swaps the slc for this new light chain. unless the immature b cell is autoreactive or anergic and undergoes receptor editing or clonal deletion, it matures into a naïve b cell and migrates to the periphery whereupon it can become activated by encountering antigen and form germinal centers with help from t-cells. sequence diversity is again enhanced in the germinal center by somatic hypermutation (shm) and/or class switch recombination (csr), two processes that depend on activation induced cytidine deaminase (aid). the omnirat was created by genomic integration of human immunoglobulin (ig) loci on a background of inactivated endogenous rat ig loci. it expresses chimeric heavy chains (i.e. human v, d, and j genes and rat constant genes) that pair with fully human light chains , . we sought to characterize the circulating antibody repertoire diversity in this animal and make comparisons to humans. high throughput antibody sequencing has been used to describe the circulating antibody repertoire of organisms, including more recently at unprecedented depth in humans . reverse transcription of antibody rna and combined tagging with unique molecular identifiers (umis) have allowed us and others , to correct for error and bias in antibody sequencing. using these methods to gain insight into the antibody repertoire of omnirats, we ask whether or not it accurately represents that of humans, and by extension allows for usefulness in the approximation of the human antibody response. we postulate that there are major differences in the repertoires due to distinctness in the ig loci genomic structure and genes that shape antibody diversity between species. here, we provide the most thorough description of humanized transgenic rodent antibody repertoires to date and leverage a novel extremely deep human dataset to make comparisons with implications of immediate use as a reference for omnirat immunization studies. we individually separated total rna from spleens and lymph nodes of three unimmunized omnirats and pcr amplified the heavy and kappa chain antibody v gene segments. the resulting amplicons were subjected to high throughput sequencing in conjunction with preprocessing and annotation by the abstar analysis pipeline (methods) which resulted in a mean of ~ × processed heavy chain sequences and ~ . × processed kappa chain sequences per transgenic animal (table s ). two previously published datasets , of the same humans which together contain a mean of ~ . × processed heavy chain sequences and ~ . × processed kappa chain sequences per individual were used for comparison. we started by making intra-animal comparisons, intra-species comparisons and inter-species comparisons of the immunoglobulin gene segment usage frequencies for each antibody repertoire by performing hierarchical clustering ( fig. ) and linear regression analysis (figs. s and s ). repertoires were found to cluster by species and tissue when variable heavy (vh) (fig. a) , diversity heavy (dh) (fig. b) , joining heavy (jh) (fig. c) and variable kappa (vk) (fig. s a ), but not joining kappa (jk) (fig. s b ) gene usage was examined. differences between the lymph node and spleens of individual omnirats were next investigated. vh gene, dh gene and jh gene usage frequencies between these tissues were highly correlated (fig. s ) , although a few vh gene segments were overrepresented in spleen as compared to lymph nodes including vh - , vh - and vh - (figs. a and s a). dh gene and jh gene usage remained highly correlated with minor differences in specific genes (figs. b,c, s and s b,c). inter-animal spleen gene usage was highly correlated for all three heavy chain gene segments (fig. s ). inter-human comparisons yielded similar, albeit slightly less correlated results (fig. s ). intra-species vh and dh usage comparisons made show much weaker correlations with lower r-squared values than any other previous comparison, while surprisingly jh gene usage was highly correlated (fig. s ). species specific gene usage biases were more predominant in variable genes (vh and vk) than in joining genes (jh and jk) (fig. s a-e) . we hypothesize that this may be due to species specific differences in variable gene order, but not joining gene order at the genomic loci , although no significant correlation between variable gene order and gene usage in the omnirat was found (data not shown). omnirats show a preference for dh gene families of shorter average length such as dh , dh , dh and dh as compared to humans which show a higher representation of longer dh genes from dh , dh , and dh families with the exception of dh - which appears at similar frequencies between each species (figs. b and s b). vk and jk gene usage frequencies were very similar for all comparisons made (figs. s - and s ). differences in cdr length distributions of each repertoire were next determined. the mean heavy chain cdr (cdrh ) length in humans is . amino acids, while in the omnirat we observed a mean cdrh length that is shorter with a mean length of . amino acids (fig. a) . there are minor differences in the kappa light chain (cdrl ) lengths between species with near identical average lengths of . and . for omnirats and humans respectively (fig. s c ). the frequency of light chains with a cdr of amino acids in length is an important consideration when choosing a model animal for vaccination experiments involving the germline targeting immunogen eod-gt which is in human clinical trials , , . this frequency of -amino acid cdrl s was lower in omnirats ( . %) than in humans ( . %) i.e. a factor of (fig. s c ). after observing a tendency for shorter cdrh lengths in the omnirat as compared to humans, we wanted to know if the number of n and p nucleotide additions in the heavy chain v-d and d-j junction sites were different. figure b ,c shows average v-d and d-j junction nucleotide addition lengths in the omnirat are indeed shorter as compared to humans. nucleotide additions in the v-j junctions of kappa chains are also shorter on average as compared to humans (fig. s e) . the longest dh gene segments are found in the dh family and the longest jh gene segments come from the jh gene family. gene segments from these families are important contributors to the generation of unusually long cdrh s in humans and are consistently found in certain broadly neutralizing antibodies (bnabs) that bind to the human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) envelope (env) glycoprotein, indicating the importance of these rearrangements in hiv vaccine studies . on average, the frequency of antibodies with d -j rearrangements in omnirats is . with little variation, while in humans the frequency of these antibody species is more variable between subjects with a higher mean of . (fig. d) . the preference of omnirats for shorter cdrh lengths and dh gene segments can be placed in the context of shorter dh gene lengths in the wild-type rat (rattus norvegicus) as compared to human dh genes (fig. e) , indicating a possible biologically intrinsic bias. we used igor to infer recombination models for each individual repertoire from , unmutated sequences allowing for the quantification of differences in features of heavy chain vdj recombination and generated , , synthetic sequences per model. cdrh length, vd insertion length and dj insertion length distributions from the synthetic sequence data (fig. s a-c) were found to be very similar to the observed data columns are antibody repertoires and rows are gene segments. data was scaled by calculating the z-score for each gene (row) and hierarchical clustering (euclidean distance metric) was done. a dendrogram representation of clustering is shown and indicates uniqueness in gene segment usage between the lymph node and spleen repertoires of the omnirat and between the omnirat and human repertoires. red and blue indicate high and low z-scores respectively (legend shown in a), and since it is calculated per gene it represents differences between repertoires and not the relative frequencies of gene segment usage in each repertoire. ( fig. a-c) . kullback-leibler (kl) divergence is a measure of how different two probability distributions are. kl divergence between models (fig. s d ) and model 'events' (fig. s e) were computed as previously described . kl divergence between pairs of omnirat models was found to be lower than kl divergence between pairs of human models for both complete and all event level calculations. the average pairwise omnirat model versus human model complete kl divergence calculation was found to be much greater than that of pairwise inter-animal calculations and more than twice that of pairwise inter-human calculations. "d-gene", "v-gene trim ( ')", and "d-gene trim ( ')" were among the events computed to have the mean highest kl divergence from pairwise inter-species event level model comparisons. class switch recombination and somatic hypermutation in omnirats. in supplementary fig. s a , the frequency of antibody isotypes is shown. the human repertoire contains average frequencies of . and . for igm and igg respectively as previously published , while in the omnirat antibody repertoire we observe mean frequencies of . and . for lymph node and spleen igg respectively and means of . and . for lymph node and spleen igm respectively. mean numbers of variable gene mutations in igm (fig. s b) , igg (fig. s c) and kappa (fig. s d) sequences of the omnirat were about half of those found in the human repertoire. the observed increase in shm of class-switched igg sequences as compared to igm sequences in the omnirat demonstrates the ability of the animal to generate memory b cells. we first examined clonotype (defined as identical vh gene, jh gene and cdrh amino acid sequence) diversity of the heavy chain repertoire for each individual animal. all sequences from lymph nodes and spleens were collapsed into unique clonotypes, separately for each tissue and animal. any clonotype found in both tissue compartments must have originated from different b cells, allowing for the measurement of repeatedly observed clonotypes. rarefaction curves for each animal were www.nature.com/scientificreports www.nature.com/scientificreports/ generated (fig. a) and indicate a low frequency of repeatedly observed clonotypes. we estimated diversity using chao , and recon , as previously described . diversity estimates were similar between the two estimators, ( . × - . × ) for chao and ( . × - . × ) for recon (fig. b) . we next estimated heavy chain sequence diversity for each animal (fig. c) and again found that both estimators broadly agreed, giving similar values of ( . × - . × ) for chao and ( . × - . × ) for recon. previously published estimates of both clonotype and sequence diversity in individual humans only exceed that in the omnirats by a maximum two orders of magnitude. this is surprising given that the omnirat is more restricted in cdrh length. for each combination of two or more animals, we computed the frequency of shared unique heavy chain clonotypes (fig. a) . there was on average . % of clonotypes shared between each combination of two omnirats. surprisingly, we found that . % of clonotypes were shared between all three of the animals. next, we pooled unique heavy chain clonotypes from all ten human subjects and measured the percentage of clonotypes in each animal that could be found in the total human pool (fig. b) . we found that ( . - . %) of each omnirat clonotype repertoire and . % of clonotypes combined from all animals could be found in the total human clonotype pool. shared clonotypes have shorter cdrh lengths than unshared clonotypes on average (fig. c) which is expected given that sequence diversity is expected to increase as the number of amino acids increases giving less of a chance for sharing. vh gene family usage between shared and unshared clonotypes indicates no major differences (fig. d) . sequence logos for amino acid long (fig. e) and amino acid long (fig. e) cdhr s from both shared and unshared fractions were made and indicate broad similarity between the two fractions. we set out to determine commonalities and differences between omnirat and human antibody repertoires to be used as a reference for vaccine studies. our results show that there exists substantial variation in gene usage frequencies and elements of recombination, indicating specific limitations of this animal model for predicting the human immune response. we found that by performing hierarchical clustering on gene segment usage, repertoires clustered together by both species and tissue. differences in gene segment usage between transgenic animal models and humans, as well as between tissues are expected. for example, multiple human ig loci transgenic rodents are reported to have gene usage profiles that slightly vary from that of humans , . furthermore, antibody repertoires from separate human tissues are known to deviate strongly enough to be clustered by hierarchical clustering . in our case, the lymph node repertoire from the omnirat was most likely able to be distinguished from that of the spleen due to the increased presence of antigen-experienced b cells in the latter as shown by somatic hypermutation and class-switched transcript frequencies. this indicates that tissue selection will affect the outcome of an antibody discovery campaign and reinforces evidence for normal b cell development by suggesting the existence of affinity maturation. investigation into cdr length distributions revealed that the omnirat prefers shorter cdrh s as compared to humans. interestingly, the mechanisms of this preference are due to decreased n additions, and a tendency to incorporate shorter dh gene segments. this result has also been seen in multiple other transgenic and wild-type rodents , , , . the specific reasons remain unclear, although the observation that wild-type rat germline d gene segment lengths are shorter suggests intrinsic species-specific mechanisms of selection as well as differences in tdt expression during bone marrow b cell development. we further speculate that another possible reason for intra-species variation can be attributed to distinct prior antigen exposure and divergent gut microbiomes , . the diversity of the omnirat heavy chain repertoire was shown to be slightly lower than that in humans. our results indicate biased gene usage and decreased junctional diversity are the primary reasons for the resulting repertoire diversity estimate comparisons. we also showed that there is a much higher frequency of 'public clonotypes' or clonotypes shared between members of this species than previously reported in humans , . lower sequence diversity combined with identical genetic background and highly similar gene usage are possible reasons for this result. in summary, we have determined specific differences between the omnirat and human antibody repertoires which must be taken into careful consideration when evaluating an antibody response in order to make predictions for human subjects. we have also shown that this animal's antibodies show signs of class switch recombination, somatic hypermutation and large diversity supporting its value for the discovery of monoclonal antibodies to targets that may not be immunogenic in other models. even though a high degree of variation exists, we still found many clonotypes to be shared between the species pools. finally, more studies will need to be done in order to characterize omnirat serum and memory b cell responses to immunogens. next-generation sequencing of omnirat antibody repertoires. total rna from spleens and lymph nodes was extracted (rneasy maxi kit, qiagen) from each unimmunized heavy chain and kappa chain only transgenic rat (omnirat, open monoclonal technology inc., palo alto, ca, usa) and antibody sequences were amplified as previously described except for different primers used during reverse transcription (table s ) . we chose to interrogate the antibody repertoires found in secondary lymphoid organs as opposed to peripheral blood due to the higher number of b cells. correct pcr product sizes were verified on an agarose gel (e-gel ex; invitrogen) and quantified with fluorometry (qubit; life technologies), pooled at approximately equimolar concentrations and each sample pool was re-quantified before sequencing on an illumina miseq (miseq reagent kit v , -cycle). all animal experiments were conducted in accordance with the institutional animal care and use committee of scripps research and approved by the institutional research boards of scripps research. (d) distribution of vh gene family usage for unshared clonotypes from the animal pool (black) or clonotypes shared by both species pool (red). (e,f) sequence logos of the cdrh s encoded by shared and unshared clonotypes of length (e) or (f). head-region amino acid coloring: polar amino acids (gstycqn) are green; basic amino acids (krh) are blue; acidic amino acids (de) are red; and hydrophobic amino acids (avlipwfm) are black. all torso residues are gray. murine antibody responses to cleaved soluble hiv- envelope trimers are highly restricted in specificity rational hiv immunogen design to target specific germline b cell receptors priming hiv- broadly neutralizing antibody precursors in human ig loci transgenic mice bacterially derived synthetic mimetics of mammalian oligomannose prime antibody responses that neutralize hiv infectivity a repertoire of monoclonal antibodies with human heavy chains from transgenic mice antigen-specific human monoclonal antibodies from mice engineered with human ig heavy and light chain yacs antigen-specific human antibodies from mice comprising four distinct genetic modifications human antibody production in transgenic animals transgenic mouse strains as platforms for the successful discovery and development of human therapeutic monoclonal antibodies mechanisms of central tolerance for b cells high-affinity igg antibodies develop naturally in ig-knockout rats carrying germline human igh/igκ/igλ loci bearing the rat ch region human antibody expression in transgenic rats: comparison of chimeric igh loci with human vh, d and jh but bearing different rat c-gene regions commonality despite exceptional diversity in the baseline human antibody repertoire clonify: unseeded antibody lineage assignment from next-generation sequencing data genetic measurement of memory b-cell recall using antibody repertoire sequencing toward a more accurate view of human b-cell repertoire by next-generation sequencing, unbiased repertoire capture and single-molecule barcoding massively scalable genetic analysis of antibody repertoires rapid and focused maturation of a vrc -class hiv broadly neutralizing antibody lineage involves both binding and accommodation of the n -glycan hiv- vaccines. priming a broadly neutralizing antibody response to hiv- using a germline targeting immunogen identification of common features in prototype broadly neutralizing antibodies to hiv envelope v apex to facilitate vaccine design high-throughput immune repertoire analysis with igor estimating the population size for capture-recapture data with unequal catchability how many different clonotypes do immune repertoires contain? robust estimates of overall immune-repertoire diversity from high-throughput measurements on samples complete humanization of the mouse immunoglobulin loci enables efficient therapeutic antibody discovery mechanisms that shape human antibody repertoire development in mice transgenic for human ig h and l chain loci tissue-specific expressed antibody variable gene repertoires intrinsic bias and public rearrangements in the human immunoglobulin vλ light chain repertoire immunoglobulin light chain gene rearrangements, receptor editing and the development of a self-tolerant antibody repertoire microbial symbionts regulate the primary ig repertoire b cell superantigens in the human intestinal microbiota high frequency of shared clonotypes in human b cell receptor repertoires moderated estimation of fold change and dispersion for rna-seq data with deseq. the authors thank all the study subjects for their participation. c.j., d.r.b. and b.b. planned and designed the experiments. c.j. performed experiments. c.j. analyzed data. c.j. wrote the manuscript. all authors contributed to manuscript revisions. the authors declare no competing interests. supplementary information is available for this paper at https://doi.org/ . /s - - - .correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to d.r.b. or b.b.publisher's note springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.open access this article is licensed under a creative commons attribution . international license, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the creative commons license, and indicate if changes were made. the images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's creative commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. if material is not included in the article's creative commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. to view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ . /. key: cord- -vj tv or authors: guo, feng-biao; dong, chuan; hua, hong-li; liu, shuo; luo, hao; zhang, hong-wan; jin, yan-ting; zhang, kai-yue title: accurate prediction of human essential genes using only nucleotide composition and association information date: - - journal: bioinformatics doi: . /bioinformatics/btx sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vj tv or motivation: previously constructed classifiers in predicting eukaryotic essential genes integrated a variety of features including experimental ones. if we can obtain satisfactory prediction using only nucleotide (sequence) information, it would be more promising. three groups recently identified essential genes in human cancer cell lines using wet experiments and it provided wonderful opportunity to accomplish our idea. here we improved the z curve method into the λ-interval form to denote nucleotide composition and association information and used it to construct the svm classifying model. results: our model accurately predicted human gene essentiality with an auc higher than . both for -fold cross-validation and jackknife tests. these results demonstrated that the essentiality of human genes could be reliably reflected by only sequence information. we re-predicted the negative dataset by our pheg server and genes were additionally predicted as essential. among them, were found to be homologues in mouse essential genes, indicating that some of the genes were indeed essential, however previous experiments overlooked them. as the first available server, pheg could predict essentiality for anonymous gene sequences of human. it is also hoped the λ-interval z curve method could be effectively extended to classification issues of other dna elements. availability and implementation: http://cefg.uestc.edu.cn/pheg supplementary information: supplementary data are available at bioinformatics online. catalogs of essential genes on a whole-genome scale, determined using wet-lab methods, are available for a large number of prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms which are provided in deg and ogee databases (chen et al., ; luo et al., ) . computational methods with high accuracy offer an appealing alternative method for identifying essential genes. computational methods are broadly divided into three types: machine learning-based methods combining intrinsic and context-dependent features (cheng et al., ; deng et al., ) , flux balance analysis-based methods (del rio et al., ; gatto et al., ; kuepfer et al., ) and homology search and evolutionary analysis-based methods (peng et al., ; wei et al., ) . with respect to essential gene prediction in bacteria, we integrated the orthology and phylogenetic information and subsequently developed a universal tool named geptop (wei et al., ) , which has shown the highest accuracy among all state-of-the-art algorithms. some studies have focused on essential gene prediction in eukaryotic genomes. in , chen and xu investigated protein dispensability in saccharomyces cerevisiae by combining highthroughput data and machine learning-based methods (chen and xu, ) . in , seringhaus et al. reported a machine learningbased method that integrated various intrinsic and predicted features to identify essential genes in yeast s.cerevisiae genomes (seringhaus et al., ) . yuan et al. integrated informative genomic features to perform knockout lethality predictions in mice using three machine learning-based methods (yuan et al., ) . lloyd et al. analyzed the characteristics of essential genes in the arabidopsis thaliana genome and used a.thaliana as a machine learning-based model to transform the essentiality annotations to oryza sativa and s.cerevisiae (lloyd et al., ) . recently, three research teams approximately identified essential genes in human cancer cell lines using crispr-cas and genetrap technology (blomen et al., ; hart et al., ; wang et al., ) . their results showed high consistency, which further confirmed the accuracy and robustness of the essential gene sets (fraser, ) . these studies provided an in-depth analysis of tumor-specific essential genes and feasible methods to screen tumor-specific essential genes (fraser, ; hart and moffat, ) . the essential genes screened by these three teams provided a clear definition of the requirements for sustaining the basic cell activities of individual human tumor cell types. practically, these genes can be regarded as targets for cancer treatment (fraser, ) . the data from these three groups provided a rare opportunity to theoretically study the function, sequence composition, evolution and network topology of human essential genes. one of the most important and interesting theoretical issues in modern biology is whether essential genes and non-essential genes can be accurately classified using computational methods. the models established in the aforementioned three eukaryotic organisms, s.cerevisiae (chen and xu, ; seringhaus et al., ) , mus musculus (yuan et al., ) and a.thaliana (lloyd et al., ) , involved intrinsic features, or intrinsic and context-dependent features. these context-dependent features included those features extracted from experimental omics data. however, the features derived from experimental data are frequently unavailable; consequently, this type of machine learning model cannot be extended to a wide range of genomes. in the present study, we addressed this problem in humans by using only intrinsic features derived from sequences, from which certain features can be characterized using a k-interval z curve. the k-interval z curve considered information of both adjacent nucleotide compositions and internal nucleotide associations. to facilitate the use of interested researchers, we have provided a user-friendly online web server, pheg, which can be freely accessed without registration at http://cefg.uestc.edu.cn/pheg. we extracted the gene essentiality data from the deg database (http://tubic.tju.edu.cn/deg/), the updated version of which contained human gene essentiality information from three recent works (blomen et al., ; hart et al., ; wang et al., ) . these essentiality annotations serve as the basis for constructing our benchmark dataset. the flowchart shown in figure illustrates the construction of the positive and negative datasets. in the three studies, datasets were provided. due to lines hct and kbm are represented by two datasets each, cancer cell lines (kbm , k , raji, jiyoye, a , hap , dld , gbm, hct , hela, rpel) are involved in total. blomen et al. and wang et al. identified the essential genes in the kbm cell line. we combined these two datasets into one gene set, kbm . a total of and essential genes were contained in the two datasets for hct . the genes in this dataset were markedly different from those in the datasets for the other cell lines, so this dataset was excluded. ultimately, essential gene sets were obtained, corresponding to a single cell line. essential genes, by definition, are indispensable for the survival of organisms under optimized growth conditions. those genes are considered the foundation of life (juhas et al., ) , and they should be persistent in a wide range of cell lines and species. therefore, we only retained genes that were identified as lethal genes in more than half of the investigated cell lines. when a gene appeared as essential in more than six cell lines ( / % ), it was selected as one sample in the positive dataset. according to this principle, we obtained a total of essential genes. we downloaded all of the protein coding gene sequences from the ccds database (harte et al., ) (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ccds/ccdsbrowse.cgi), and the annotations of protein coding genes were obtained from the hgnc database (http://www.genenames.org/cgi-bin/statistics, march , ), which contained annotation entries. the essential gene sequences were extracted according to the annotations, and genes with no counterpart in the ccds database were excluded. according to this criterion, we excluded genes and obtained essential genes. we used the essential gene annotation in the deg dataset, and the gene sequences were extracted from the ccds because the former did not contain the information for non-essential genes. for human essentiality annotations in the deg database, a number of scattered annotated essential genes aside from those in the cell lines were identified. a total of essential gene annotated entries (including conditional essential gene annotated entries) were obtained. among these annotations, there were many repeated annotation entries; therefore, there were considerably fewer unique entries. to obtain a more reliable negative dataset, i.e. absolutely non-essential genes, we excluded all of the human essential genes annotated in the deg database (luo et al., ) from the list of the protein coding genes. the remaining genes were regarded as the negative dataset, and their gene sequences were extracted from the ccds database. genes with no counterpart in the ccds database were also excluded. a total of non-essential genes were obtained using this method. ultimately, a total of gene entries were obtained in the benchmark dataset: essential genes and non- fig. . description of the construction of the human essential and non-essential gene datasets essential genes. the protein coding gene annotations are provided in supplementary material s , and information for the benchmark dataset is provided in supplementary material s . the originally proposed z curve variables might reflect the composition of a single nucleotide considering the features derived from phase heterogeneity of a single nucleotide (zhang, ; zhang and chou, ; zhang and zhang, , ) . herein, we provided a summary of the z curve method used for gene identification (zhang and wang, ) . let us suppose that the frequencies of bases a, c, g and t occurring in an orf or a gene fragment at positions , , , . . ., , , , . . . and , , , . . ., are represented by a , c , g , t ; a , c , g , t ; a and c , g , t , respectively. those symbols represent the frequencies of the bases at the st, nd and rd codon positions, respectively. according to the symbols defined above, the universal z curve mathematical expression is as follows (zhang and wang, ) : because composition bias for oligonucleotides in coding dna sequence (cds) regions or open reading frames (orfs) exists, the adjacent w-nucleotides z curve method was proposed (gao and zhang, ; guo et al., ) . let us suppose that w represents the length of the adjacent nucleotide sequence. the z curve variables for the phase-specific adjacent w-nucleotides can be calculated as follows: where k equals , , or to indicate that the first oligonucleotide bases are situated at the st, nd and rd codon positions, respectively. recent studies demonstrated the existence of long-range associations in chromosomes and showed that these associations are crucial for gene regulation (fullwood et al., ) . although the two adjacent nucleotides in the primary structure have no association in some cases, strong associations in terms of tertiary structure might exist. therefore, we introduced the k-interval z curve to virtually represent the interval range association. the details of this method are described as follows. let us used p k (s w x) to represent the frequency of oligonucleotides s w x in genes or orfs, where x is one of the four basic bases a, t, g and c. to facilitate this presentation, the length of the oligonucleotide s w is represented as w. according to the predetermined characters, we generated the universal equation for the k-interval z curve based on z curve theory as follows: where x, y and z represent the accumulation of the three base groups classified according to chemical bond properties. variable k denotes the phase-specific index of the first base in the nucleotide sequence s w , and k represents the intervals between s w and x. the first base in the oligonucleotide s w was located at position k. the core part of k-interval z curve forms oligonucleotide s w x. a schematic diagram of the formation of these oligonucleotides is shown in figure . the oligonucleotide window s w slides along a dna molecule sequence according to phase, forming oligonucleotide sets with base x, which is k intervals away from the last base of s w . the periodicity derived from three codons is denoted as s w x. when w is equal to and k is equal to , equation ( ) can be transformed into equation ( ). when w is more than and k is equal to , equation ( ) can be transformed into equation ( ). thus, the phase-specific single nucleotide z curve and phase-specific adjacent w-nucleotide z curve are incorporated into the k-interval z curve. using the k-interval z curve, we can extract more features to characterize dna sequences. according to equations ( ) and ( ), when w is greater than and k is equal to we can obtain   wÀ variables to characterize dna sequences. when w and k are greater than , we can obtain   w variables. for convenience, we used fv w,k to represent the variables with the length of w for oligonucleotides s w , and the highest interval length between oligonucleotides s w and base x is k. to obtain more information from a dna sequence, the final variable is described as fv w, k , where w represents the longest oligonucleotides and k is the highest interval. this variable can be represented as follows: where the symbol 'u' represents the union set of fv w,k , i.e. , . . .. fv , and fv , are the combination of adjacent phase-specific w-nucleotide z curve variables. we performed this prediction with w ranging from to and k ranging from to . according to the discussion above, we obtained variables for fv , . linear svms play a key role in solving ultra-large-scale data, reflecting the effectiveness, rapid speed and splendid generalization of this method in training and prediction. liblinear, designed by fan et al. ( ), is an easy-to-use, freely available software tool to manage large sparse data. the new version of liblinear (version . - ) supports not only classification, such as l -loss and l -loss linear support vector machine, but also regression, such as l -regularized logistic regression. given the ultra-high-dimensional feature vectors and large samples contained in the benchmark dataset in the present study, we used the liblinear software package for prediction. the new version of liblinear can be downloaded from https://www. csie.ntu.edu.tw/$cjlin/liblinear/. in the present study, we used the -fold cross-validation test to determine the best penalty parameter c with the penalty parameter from À to . we further adopted the jackknife test to assess the predictive power of our classifier. the area under the roc (receiver operating characteristic), curve, the auc, is often used to measure the performance quality of a binary classifier. an auc of . is equivalent to random prediction, whereas an auc of represents a perfect prediction. there is no bias for evaluating the performance of the unbalanced dataset through auc. therefore, we adopted the auc as a cross-validation criterion in the present study. first, the predictive power of a classifier can be influenced by the relevance and noise in the original features. second, additional time for training and predicting tasks can be increased due to the highdimensional features. feature selection (fs) technology is a powerful method for the removal of noise and redundant features from the original features. hence, the dimension of the features can be reduced. recursive feature extraction through svm linear kernels is a powerful fs algorithm (guyon et al., ) , but the correlation bias was not considered using this method. yan and zhang ( ) proposed an improved method, called svm-recursive feature extraction (rfe)þcorrelation bias reduction (cbr), which incorporates the cbr. the main concept is that the ranking criterion can be directly derived from the svm-based model. the feature with the smallest weight is excluded for each run time. the training process was repeated by incorporating cbr until the ranks of all features are obtained. we used svm-rfe þ cbr fs technology to perform feature selection and improve the performance of the classifier. the final features of this method were described by fvw ,k ., a value that contains information on the composition of the adjacent w-nucleotides (gao and zhang, ) and k-interval nucleotides. the association information was also captured by fvw, k . therefore, this method achieves improved performance compared with using the original z curve. the following results solidly confirmed this point. we performed a -fold cross-validation test with w ranging from to and k ranging from to . the detailed results are provided in table , showing that area under the curve (auc) values gradually increased with increasing k when w was fixed. an examination of the performance under variable values for w and fixed values for k revealed that the performance for the classifier improved with increasing values for w. as shown in table , we obtained an auc value of . under fv , . however, after utilizing the k-interval nucleotide composition, the performance was improved, for example, the best auc achieved for this model was . through the -fold cross-validation test under variable fv , . the auc was improved . % compared with fv , . the information redundancy and noise in the original features can influence the predictive power of a classifier, and highdimensional features also increase the time costs for training and prediction. fs technology can mitigate these disadvantages. the svm-rfe þ cbr method was adopted to rank these features in descending order based on the contribution of each feature. subsequently, the top features were used to constitute the initial feature subset to train and test the model, and the next features were added into the feature subset, followed by prediction using the same methods. this process was repeated until the top features had been added according to the rank order. the test results of each model were evaluated according to the auc scores via a -fold cross-validation test. the auc values for different top features are shown in figure a . among all features examined, the best auc of . was achieved for the top selective features. the final auc value was . % higher than that for fv , . to conduct an objective evaluation of this method, we performed a rigorous jackknife test based on the top selected features using the parameters determined via a -fold cross-validation test. we obtained an auc value of . . as expected, excellent performance was obtained after adopting the k-interval nucleotide composition and feature selection technology. those results illustrated that the essentiality of human genes could be well reflected by only sequence information. as we are extremely interested in the actual essential genes in the predicted results, we used the positive predictive value (ppv) to further refine. this evaluation index can be calculated using the formula tp/(tp þ fp), where tp (true positive) and fp (false positive) represent the number of real essential and non-essential genes among the positive predictions. therefore, the ppv reflects the proportion of actual essential genes among the predicted essential genes. we obtained a ppv of . % (tp ¼ , fp ¼ ) using the jackknife test based on the top features. sn (sensitivity), sp (specificity) can reflect the correctly predicted percentage of positive and negative samples, respectively. to give a comprehensive evaluation, we additionally calculated sn, sp. we obtained sp with value of . % and sn with value of . % under the default threshold of liblinear. note that the sn is much lower than sp and this case is cause by the unbalanced dataset (the size of non-essential genes is much larger than essential genes). one of the simplest cross validation tests is the holdout method. in this procedure, the dataset is separated into two subsets, namely, training and testing datasets. we randomly sampled one-fifth of the positive and negative samples from the benchmark dataset for the training model, and the remaining samples were used as the testing dataset. to comprehensively assess the method used in the present study, we repeated the holdout method times. the composition of our training and testing samples has differences in every holdout process. the mean auc score was used as the final evaluator. a mean auc score of . with a variance of . e- was obtained. additionally, the proportions of samples in the training and predicting datasets were changed for further investigation. one-tenth of the positive and negative samples were randomly sampled as the training dataset, and the remaining samples were used as the testing dataset. this procedure was repeated times. we obtained a mean auc score of . with a variance of . e- . these results further confirmed that this method was robust and accurate. features with fixed w and k values correspond to a specific group of variables. a total of special groups were obtained, namely, fv , , fv , , fv , . . .. fv , ; fv , , fv , . . .. fv , ; fv , , fv , . . .. fv , and fv , . we calculated the percentage of features in these groups, and the results are provided in table . for each group, there were two frequencies: p(a), which denotes the actual frequency of features in each group appearing in the top selected features, and p(e), which denotes the expected frequency of the features in each group appearing in the original features. therefore, p(a) was obtained based on the number of selected features in each group divided by , and p(e) was calculated by dividing the number of total features in each group by . p(a) and p(e) are listed in columns and , respectively. if p(a) is higher than p(e), then the group makes a higher-thanaverage contribution to the identification of essential genes. we calculated the selected tendentiousness using the formula p(a)/p(e)- , and the results are listed in column of table . we further conducted a hypergeometric distribution test for each group, and the p values are listed in column . figure b and table show that fv , (p ¼ . e- ), fv , (p ¼ . ) and fv , (p ¼ . e- ) are preferentially selected and are statistically significant. these results demonstrated that there are strong signals for classifying essential and non-essential genes when the character interval is equal to zero or one, but the other groups did not show these strong signals. to further confirm this result, the variables fv , , fv , , fv , , fv , , fv , , fv , and fv , , fv , , fv , , fv , , fv , and fv , were used as input features. improved performance was obtained under fv , , fv , and fv , compared with the other groups (table , those results demonstrated that the shorter interval association provides more information. however, longer interval association can still play an independent role. hence, integrating the interval information into adjacent ones could significantly improve our classifier's capacity of discernment (table ) . to facilitate the use of interested researchers, we constructed a userfriendly online web server named pheg (predictor of human essential genes), which is freely accessible at http://cefg.uestc.edu.cn/pheg. pheg's algorithm is based on the k-interval z curve. additional parameters are not necessary, making this server convenient to use. pheg can predict whether a query gene (or multi query genes) with fasta format is (are) essential using only the cds region of a gene (or multi genes) as input. we integrated logistic regression into the pheg server to estimate the reliability of the predicted results. hence, this server can output a probabilistic estimated value as a measurement of gene essentiality for the inputted coding region. this is the first available server for predicting human gene essentiality. comparatively, some computational models have been proposed for the other eukaryotes however all of them did not provide online prediction service. we re-predicted the genes in the benchmark dataset via pheg and obtained an auc ¼ . and ppv ¼ . %. a total of genes were identified as essential genes among the positive samples. this means the number of false negative samples is and tends to be a quite large number. however, this case is pervasive in the issue of essential gene prediction because the researchers try to keep a high tn proportion in order to correctively deal with a very high number of negative samples. among the negative samples in our benchmark, ones were predicted as essential genes by pheg. to estimate how many genes among those predictions are real essential genes, we calculated precisions using -fold, -fold, -fold and -fold cross-validation tests, and we obtained precisions with values of . %, . %, . %, . %, which were approximately %. hence, we expect that (  %) are correctly predicted essential genes. the information for these genes is provided in supplementary material s . addtionally, we used these gene sequences to conduct a blast (basic local alignment search tool) search against essential genes in the genome of mus musculus (mouse). the current mouse essential gene set is accessible in the ogee database (chen et al., ) . considering that no blast program is embedded in ogee, we downloaded the essential gene annotations (gene_essentiality) at (http://ogee.medgenius.info/downloads/) and extracted the essential gene annotation of m. musculus. we obtained the essential gene sequences according to the annotations (http://ogee.medgenius.info/ downloads/). a blast search was performed via ncbi-blast- . . þ-win .exe (shiryev et al., ) using the data from ogee, and homologs for genes were identified (e value < e- ) among the predicted essential genes. the details for these genes are provided in supplementary material s . the exome aggregation consortium (exac) incorporates high-quality exome sequencing data, and it provides rare opportunity to investigate lossof-function (lof) intolerance of a gene via quantitative index pli (lek et al., ) . herein, the genes identified as essential were further investigated using exac browser (http://exac.broadinstitute. org/). two-sample t-test illustrated that the mean pli values between those predicted essential genes and those remained nonessential genes in our negative dataset is significantly different (p < . ), indicating functions of the predicted genes are more vital. these results illustrated that at least a part of these genes have higher probability to be factually essential genes and have been overlooked in the essential gene screening in previous experimental studies. hence, pheg sever could be used to predict essentiality for anonymous gene sequences of human and closely related species, and identifying novel essential genes using pheg may supplement the essential gene list of human. the z curve has been widely used in the field of bioinformatics for tasks such as protein coding gene identification (chen et al., ; guo et al., ; guo and zhang, ; hua et al., ; zhang and wang, ) , promoter recognition (yang et al., ) , translation start recognition (ou et al., ) , recombination spots recognition (dong et al., ) , and nucleosome position mapping (wu et al., ) . however, correlation and k-interval nucleotide composition have not been incorporated into the z curve method. in the present study, we present a k-interval z curve based on z curve theory. the dna sequence can be understood as an ordinary character sequence; therefore, the method proposed in the present study has the potential for applications in mining characteristics from other character sequences and can be used as a universal feature extraction method for dna sequences. based on the k-interval z curve, we obtained excellent performance in human essential gene identification. this excellent performance might be attributable to the following points: first, we introduced the concept of intervals, reflecting association information and the k-interval nucleotide composition. second, we used feature selection technology in the present study. thus, noisy and redundant features could be removed from the original features. table shows the improved performance obtained under fv , , fv , and fv , compared with the other variable groups. further comparison of these results with other feature groups shown in table , and this comparison shows that the auc values obtained with k-interval variables are smaller than those obtained with adjacent variables. however, the performance can be improved after adding k-interval oligonucleotide association information (see table ). hence, the kinterval z curve should reflect additional important information for essential genes that cannot be contained in adjacent nucleotide association information. in , chen and xu used a neural network and svm to predict the dispensability of proteins in the yeast s. cerevisiae based on the protein evolution rate, protein-interaction connectivity, geneexpression cooperativity and gene-duplication data (chen and xu, ) . the next year, seringhaus et al. only used features to predict essential genes in s. cerevisiae and obtained a ppv ¼ . (seringhaus et al., ) . yuan et al. assembled a comprehensive list of candidate genomic features to predict a lethal phenotype in a knockout mouse using three machine learning methods (yuan et al., ) , and the best auc value was . . in , lloyd et al. investigated the relationship between phenotype lethality and gene function, copy number, duplication, expression levels and patterns, rate of evolution, cross-species conservation, and network connectivity, and the random forest-based model used in this study achieved an auc of . , which is significantly better than that obtained by random guessing (lloyd et al., ) . those previous researches in three eukaryotes illustrated classifiers can gave satisfactory prediction through combining sequence information with other features. for human essential gene identification, we only used the sequence composition and interval association information in the present study and still obtained an auc of . . considering that this result is better than the results obtained in previous studies using integrated features, the gene essentiality of the human genome can be accurately reflected based on only the sequence information. we also surveyed two other properties related to gene essentiality. homologous genes between human and other species were downloaded from hcop (http://www.genenames.org/cgi-bin/hcop). these data were used for calculating how many species maintain homologous genes compared with human. results of two-sample t-test illustrated that there is significant difference for persistence value between essential and non-essential genes (p ¼ . e- ). the mean persistence for essential genes was . , whereas the mean persistence for non-essential genes was . . we also downloaded the human protein-protein interaction data (biogrid-organism- . . .mitab.zip) from the biogrid database (stark et al., ) . results of network topology analysis revealed there is significant difference in the degree of connectivity between essential and non-essential genes via the two-sample t-test (p ¼ . e- ). the mean connectivity degree for essential genes was , whereas the mean connectivity degree for non-essential genes was . thus, essential genes tend to maintain persistence in more species and have more neighbors in protein-protein interaction networks than nonessential genes. if the two types of features are integrated in the future we think the classifier of essentiality could be further improved. gene essentiality and synthetic lethality in haploid human cells zcurve_cov: a new system to recognize protein coding genes in coronavirus genomes, and its applications in analyzing sars-cov genomes ogee: an online gene essentiality database understanding protein dispensability through machinelearning analysis of high-throughput data a new computational strategy for predicting essential genes how to identify essential genes from molecular networks? investigating the predictability of essential genes across distantly related organisms using an integrative approach combining the pseudo dinucleotide composition with the z curve method to improve the accuracy of predicting dna elements: a case study in recombination spots liblinear: a library for large linear classification essential human genes an oestrogen-receptor-alpha-bound human chromatin interactome comparison of various algorithms for recognizing short coding sequences of human genes flux balance analysis predicts essential genes in clear cell renal cell carcinoma metabolism zcurve: a new system for recognizing protein-coding genes in bacterial and archaeal genomes zcurve_v: a new self-training system for recognizing protein-coding genes in viral and phage genomes gene selection for cancer classification using support vector machines high-resolution crispr screens reveal fitness genes and genotype-specific cancer liabilities bagel: a computational framework for identifying essential genes from pooled library screens tracking and coordinating an international curation effort for the ccds project zcurve . : identify prokaryotic genes with higher accuracy as well as automatically and accurately select essential genes essence of life: essential genes of minimal genomes metabolic functions of duplicate genes in saccharomyces cerevisiae analysis of protein-coding genetic variation in , humans characteristics of plant essential genes allow for within-and between-species prediction of lethal mutant phenotypes deg , an update of the database of essential genes that includes both protein-coding genes and noncoding genomic elements gs-finder: a program to find bacterial gene start sites with a self-training method iteration method for predicting essential proteins based on orthology and protein-protein interaction networks predicting essential genes in fungal genomes improved blast searches using longer words for protein seeding biogrid: a general repository for interaction datasets identification and characterization of essential genes in the human genome geptop: a gene essentiality prediction tool for sequenced bacterial genomes based on orthology and phylogeny z curve theory-based analysis of the dynamic nature of nucleosome positioning in saccharomyces cerevisiae feature selection and analysis on correlated gas sensor data with recursive feature elimination human pol ii promoter recognition based on primary sequences and free energy of dinucleotides predicting the lethal phenotype of the knockout mouse by integrating comprehensive genomic data recognition of protein coding genes in the yeast genome at better than % accuracy based on the z curve a symmetrical theory of dna sequences and its applications a graphic approach to analyzing codon usage in escherichia coli protein coding sequences analysis of distribution of bases in the coding sequences by a diagrammatic technique z curves, an intutive tool for visualizing and analyzing the dna sequences we would like to thank dr. ke yan for providing the open source of the svm-rfe þ cbr script, prof. chun-ting zhang for inspiring discussions and providing invaluable assistance. conflict of interest: none declared. key: cord- - txwm wr authors: hu, yu‐chen title: baculovirus vectors for gene therapy date: - - journal: adv virus res doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: txwm wr since the discovery that baculoviruses can efficiently transduce mammalian cells, baculoviruses have been extensively studied as potential vectors for both in vitro and in vivo gene therapy. this chapter reviews the history of this research area, cells permissive to baculovirus transduction, factors influencing transduction and transgene expression, efforts to improve transduction, mechanisms of virus entry and intracellular trafficking, applications for in vivo and ex vivo gene therapy, as well as advantages, limitations, and safety issues concerning use of baculoviruses as gene therapy vectors. recent progress and efforts directed toward overcoming existing bottlenecks are emphasized. were first explored as vectors for the expression of human interferon (ifn-) in insect cells (smith et al., ) . since then, the potential of the baculovirus-insect cell expression system has been fully exploited for the production of numerous recombinant proteins (reviewed in beljelarskaya, ; luckow and summers, ; patterson et al., ) and baculovirus research advanced insect cell culture as a force in the field of biotechnology. one of the reasons for the increasing popularity of the baculovirus-insect cell expression system is safety, because baculoviruses are regarded as nonpathogenic to humans, and the baculovirus host range is restricted to insects and invertebrates. in , however, tjia et al. ( ) first found that baculoviruses can be internalized by mammalian cells and at least some of the viral dna reached the nucleus. the nuclear dna, however, did not persist and there was no evidence that baculovirus dna was transcribed in mammalian cells (tjia et al., ) . later, volkman and goldsmith ( ) demonstrated that baculoviruses can be internalized by nontarget vertebrate cells such as human lung carcinoma cell line a . carbonell et al. ( ) further confirmed that baculoviruses entered mammalian cells and mediated very low-level expression of escherichia coli chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (cat) under the control of polyhedrin and rous sarcoma virus (rsv) promoters. however, the significance of these findings was not widely noted until a decade later. in the mid- s, two pioneer groups reported that recombinant baculoviruses harboring a cytomegalovirus (cmv) promoter-luciferase gene cassette (hofmann et al., ) or an rsv long terminal repeat (ltr) promoter--galactosidase (-gal) gene cassette (boyce and bucher, ) efficiently expressed the reporter genes in mammalian cells. the data suggested a strong preference of baculovirus vectors to transduce hepatocytes of different origins (e.g., human and rabbit), because efficient transduction and high-level expression were only observed in primary hepatocytes and hepatoma cells. significantly, lower reporter gene expression was observed in several other cell lines (e.g., cos- and ) and little to no expression was observed in other cell types including a , cho, nih- t , and cv- cells. the authors suggested that the block to expression in less susceptible cells might be subsequent to viral entry, rather than the ability to be internalized by the target cells, because high-and low-expressing cell lines internalized similar amounts of virus (boyce and bucher, ) . one factor accounting for the low apparent transduction efficiency in certain cell types is promoter strength; shoji et al. ( ) showed that cells that were not transduced by a baculovirus-expressing -gal under the control of the cmv promoter could be efficiently transduced by a baculovirus expressing the same reporter protein under the transcriptional control of the stronger cag promoter. furthermore, shoji et al. ( ) compared the gene expression by baculovirus and adenovirus vectors using the same expression unit and observed the same level of expression in hepg , hela, and cos- cells by both vectors. they even demonstrated efficient expression and proper processing of hepatitis c virus (hcv) protein mediated by a baculovirus vector. these pioneering studies paved the way for use of baculoviral vectors as tools for gene delivery into mammalian cells. the list of cells permissive to baculovirus transduction has rapidly expanded. these cells include cell lines originating from cells of human (e.g., hela, huh- , hepg , keratinocytes, bone marrow fibroblasts), rodent (e.g., cho, bhk), porcine (e.g., cpk, pk ), bovine (e.g., bt), and even fish (e.g., epc, chh- ) origin (table i ). in addition, baculoviruses are capable of transducing nondividing cells, such as pk cells arrested in s phase (van loo et al., ) . transduction of primary cells, such as human neural cells (sarkis et al., ) , pancreatic islet cells (ma et al., ) , and rat articular chondrocytes , has also been observed. in addition, wagle and jesuthasan ( ) showed that baculoviruses successfully transduced the embryos of zebrafish. ephrinb a is normally expressed in the posterior region of developing somites and baculovirus-mediated misexpression by injection of the baculovirus expressing ephrinb a into specific tissues, caused abnormal somite boundary formation (wagle and jesuthasan, ) . moreover, we demonstrated that baculoviruses are capable of transducing mesenchymal stem cells (msc) derived from human umbilical cord blood and bone marrow , as well as msc-derived adipogenic, osteogenic, and chondrogenic progenitor cells (ho et al., ) . despite the rapidly growing list of cells permissive to baculovirus transduction, however, baculovirus transduction of cell lines of hematopoietic origin, such as u , k , raw . (condreay et al., ) , lcl-cm, and raji (cheng et al., ) , is inefficient. as the spectrum of cell types permissive to baculovirus transduction expands, the potential applications of baculovirus vectors are receiving increasing attention. table ii lists some of the applications of baculoviruses that have been explored (see also chapter by condreay et al., van oers, this volume) . hela boyce and bucher, ; condreay et al., ; hofmann et al., huh- boyce and bucher, ; condreay et al., ; hofmann et al., hepg boyce and bucher, ; hofmann et al., hek sollerbrant et al., wi condreay et al., mrc palombo et al., yap et al., mg condreay et al., ecv hu et al., a bhk condreay et al., hu et al., a rat hepatic stellate cells gao et al., mouse pancreatic cells ma et al., primary rat hepatocytes boyce and bucher, primary mouse osteoblasts and osteoclast in vitro and in vivo gene therapy airenne et al., ; boyce and bucher, ; hofmann et al., ; pieroni et al., ; sarkis et al., ; tani et al., cell-based assays ames et al., jenkinson et al., ; katso et al., studies of gene function clay et al., ; pfohl et al., studies of virology delaney and isom, ; dwarakanath et al., ; lopez et al., ; mccormick et al., ; zhou et al., protein production chen et al., ; ojala et al., ; ramos et al., virus vector production cheshenko et al., ; mccormick et al., ; poomputsa et al., ; sollerbrant et al., surface display ernst et al., ; grabherr and ernst, vaccine candidates abe et al., ; aoki et al., ; facciabene et al., ; tami et al., ; yoshida et al., c. mechanisms of baculovirus entry into mammalian cells the baculovirus gp glycoprotein is a major component of the budded virus envelope and is essential for virus entry into insect cells by receptor-mediated endocytosis (wickham et al., ) . following virus entry, gp further mediates the acid-induced endosomal escape, thus allowing for nucleocapsid transport into the cytoplasm and nucleus (blissard and wenz, ) . similarly, gp is essential for virus attachment and endosomal escape in mammalian cells . in support of the importance of gp is the finding that a monoclonal antibody specific for gp abolishes the capability of baculovirus vectors to transduce mammalian cells (gronowski et al., ) . a baculovirus overexpressing gp from an additional gp gene can incorporate $ . times the normal amount of gp on the virion surface and exhibit -to -fold more reporter gene expression in a variety of mammalian cells when compared to the control baculovirus (tani et al., ) . the importance of gp for virus transduction is further substantiated as a mutant virus lacking gp on the viral envelope failed to transduce mammalian cells (abe et al., ) . furthermore, gp of acmnpv was shown to rescue transduction of mammalian cells by hasnpv (helicoverpa armigera single nucleopolyhedrovirus), a virus that does not transduce mammalian cells. the range of mammalian cell types transduced by hasnpv expressing the gp of acmnpv was consistent with those transduced by acmnpv (lang et al., ) . although the importance of gp for virus entry has been documented, the nature of the cell surface molecule that interacts with the virus is unclear in both insect and mammalian cells (kukkonen et al., ) . initially, it was suggested that baculovirus transduction was liver specific and that asialoglycoprotein could be involved in virus binding (boyce and bucher, ; hofmann et al., ) . however, van loo et al. ( ) showed that pk cells, which do not express asialoglycoprotein receptors, can be successfully transduced, and hence asialoglycoprotein is not a key determinant. it was also shown that electrostatic interactions may be necessary for baculovirus binding to the mammalian cell surface because preincubation of cells with polybrene, a cationic compound that neutralizes negatively charged epitopes on the cell membrane, resulted in a rapid decrease in virus binding (duisit et al., ) . the same group also suggested that heparan sulfate may act as an important docking motif for baculovirus binding because removal of heparan sulfate from the cell surface by heparanase i or iii prior to transduction reduced transgene (lacz) expression by % % (duisit et al., ) . aside from heparan sulfate, phospholipids on the cell surface were suggested to serve as an important docking point for gp , thus facilitating viral entry into mammalian cells (tani et al., ) . on the other hand, by transient depletion of calcium using egta pretreatment, bilello et al. ( ) demonstrated that paracellular junction complexes are important barriers for baculoviral entry into primary hepatocytes. in contrast, we found that egta treatment of huh- cells and chondrocytes does not significantly enhance transduction efficiencies although disruption of cell junctions was apparent (unpublished data). despite the discrepancies in identification of the surface receptors, multiple lines of evidence suggest that baculoviruses are internalized by endocytosis (condreay et al., ; van loo et al., ) . by electron and confocal microscopy, matilainen et al. confirmed that baculoviruses enter hepg cells via clathrin-mediated endocytosis. however, baculovirus attachment to clathrin-coated pits seemed to be a relatively rare phenomenon, and therefore other internalization mechanisms (possibly via macropinocytosis) may also exist (matilainen et al., ) . virus attachment does not appear to be limiting, because baculoviruses can efficiently bind to nih- t , a cell line less susceptible to baculovirus transduction, even at c (stanbridge et al., ) . having entered the mammalian cell, budded virus is transported to the endosome, followed by acid-induced endosomal escape of the nucleocapsid mediated by gp . endosomal escape was first uncovered by treating baculovirus-transduced mammalian cells with a lysosomotropic agent (e.g., chloroquine), which inhibits endosomal maturation and subsequent baculovirus-mediated gene expression (boyce and bucher, ; hofmann et al., ) . the importance of endosomal escape was further confirmed by treating hepg cells with monensin, which blocked early endosome acidification and trapped the nucleocapsids in the endosome (kukkonen et al., ) . therefore, it is generally assumed that escape from the endosomes blocks baculovirus transduction of some mammalian cells (barsoum et al., ; boyce and bucher, ) . however, kukkonen et al. ( ) suggested that the block may lie not in escape from the endosome, but rather in cytoplasmic trafficking or nuclear import of the nucleocapsids. in cells nonpermissive to baculovirus-mediated transduction (e.g., eahy, mg , and nho cells), virus is internalized and routed to the endosome min posttransduction, and escapes from the endosome by h posttransduction, but the nucleocapsid does not enter the nucleus efficiently. accordingly, no detectable transgene expression is observed even with a very high virus load. in contrast, baculoviruses are capable of entering hepg cells (which are highly permissive to baculovirus transduction), escaping from the endosome and entering the nucleus h after transduction. consistent with this notion is that direct injection of nucleocapsids into the cytoplasm does not affect the translocation of nucleocapsids into the nucleus, demonstrating that endosomal escape is not necessarily a critical step (salminen et al., ) . nucleocapsids are transported into different subcellular compartments in different cells (abe et al., ) . in t cells, the nucleocapsids reached the nucleus where the transgene was efficiently transcribed following uncoating. however, in the nonpermissive macrophage raw . cells, the nucleocapsids appeared to be trapped by the phagocytic pathway, and degraded viral dna was then transported into toll-like receptor (tlr )-expressing intracellular compartments (abe et al., ) . in the cytoplasm, the nucleocapsids seem to induce the formation of actin filaments which probably facilitate the transport of nucleocapsids into the nucleus. cytochalasin d, an agent causing reversible depolymerization of actin filaments, strongly inhibits reporter gene expression, but does not prevent the uptake of enveloped virions inside cytoplasmic vesicles, or prevent their escape into the cytoplasm (van loo et al., ) . more recently, it was shown that disintegration of microtubules by microtubule-depolymerizing agents (e.g., nocodazole and vinblastine) significantly enhanced the nuclear transport of virus and subsequent transgene expression in hepg cells (salminen et al., ) , suggesting that intact microtubules constituted a barrier to baculovirus transport toward the nucleus. the viral genome, major capsid protein, and electron-dense capsids were also found inside the nucleus, suggesting that the nucleocapsid was transported through the nuclear pore (van loo et al., ) . all of these studies highlight the importance of intracellular trafficking for transgene expression. the proposed route of baculovirus entry and intracellular trafficking is illustrated in fig. . baculovirus transduction efficiencies vary considerably according to the cell type and can range from % for bhk cells to lower than % for nih- t cells (cheng et al., ) . baculovirus transduction of hepatocytes (e.g., hepg , huh- ) is particularly efficient, with efficiencies of up to % . because plasmid transfection of hepatocytes, a common approach for gene delivery into liver cells, is notoriously difficult (with a typical delivery efficiency of - %), the highly efficient baculovirus-mediated gene delivery has been exploited to study hepatitis b virus replication in hepg cells (delaney and isom, ) and to produce hepatitis delta virus-like particles (hdv vlp) in hepatocytes . the transduction efficiency may also be dependent on cellular differentiation state because transduction efficiency is only % % for undifferentiated human neural progenitor cells, but can be up to % % for differentiated neural cells at a multiplicity of infection (moi) of (sarkis et al., ) . likewise, transduction efficiency ( - %), transgene expression level and duration ( - days) vary widely with the differentiation state and lineage of the adipogenic, osteogenic, and chondrogenic progenitors originating from human mscs (ho et al., ) . the transduction efficiency is very high for adipogenic and osteogenic progenitors, but is relatively low for chondrogenic progenitors (fig. ). the transduction efficiency is also promoter-dependent because shoji et al. ( ) demonstrated that baculovirus-mediated luciferase expression driven by the cag promoter was tenfold higher than that driven by the cmv promoter. thus it is of interest to examine the efficiency of different promoters of viral and cellular origins in baculovirus vectors in mammalian cells. although various promoters have been cloned into baculovirus vectors to drive gene transcription (table iii) , only recently have spenger et al. ( ) systematically compared the transgene expression driven by simian virus (sv ), cmv, rsv, and a cellular promoter (human ubiquitin c) in cho, cos- , and hek cells. the cmv and rsv promoters were the most active in all cell lines tested, followed by the ubiquitin c promoter. sv promoter was the weakest among these four promoters. the transduction efficiency can be markedly enhanced by the addition of sodium butyrate, trichostatin a (condreay et al., ) , or valproic acid (hu et al., a) . these compounds are histone deacetylase inhibitors that induce histone hyperacetylation and lead to a relaxed chromatin structure (kramer et al., ) . the use of these drugs enhances baculovirus-mediated gene transcription, thereby highlighting the importance of the chromatin state of the baculovirus genome in the transduced cells for transgene expression. note, however, that cytotoxicity is often associated with the use of these drugs (hu et al., a) and the extent to which gene expression is upregulated is dependent on the promoter and the particular cell line (spenger et al., ) . another factor influencing the transduction efficiency and expression level in certain cell lines is the activation of mammalian promoters (e.g., the cmv promoter and the heat shock promoter) by a homologous region (hr) in the baculovirus (acmnpv) genome (viswanathan et al., ) . one of the hr regions, hr , enhances transcription from the polyhedrin and the drosophila heat shock protein (hsp ) promoters in insect cells (e.g., sf ) in trans (venkaiah et al., ). yet hr also functions in mammalian cells (e.g., vero and hepg ) as an enhancer when present in cis and in trans (viswanathan et al., ) . the upregulation of gene expression by hr probably stems from binding of hr with high affinity and specificity to nuclear factors in mammalian cells, thereby stimulating transcription (viswanathan et al., ) . the insertion of an additional copy of the hr region into the acmnpv genome thus represents an attractive approach for overexpression of foreign proteins in mammalian cells (venkaiah et al., ) . the additional hr also improves the genetic stability of the bacmid-derived baculovirus and consequently prolongs expression of the heterologous protein, because spontaneous deletion of the heterologous gene(s) in the foreign bacterial artificial chromosome sequences readily occurs (pijlman et al., (pijlman et al., , . another approach to enhancing the efficiency of baculovirus transduction of mammalian cells is to alter the transduction protocol. for transduction, typically the baculovirus is concentrated by ultracentrifugation hybrid chicken -actin promoter (cag) shoji et al., ; stanbridge et al., hepatitis b virus (hbv) promoter/enhancer delaney and isom, human -fetoprotein promoter/enhancer park et al., human ubiquitin c promoter spenger et al., hybrid neuronal promoter li et al., ; drosophila heat shock protein (hsp ) viswanathan et al., and resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline (pbs). the cells are then incubated with the virus for h at c in growth medium (e.g., dmem) (boyce and bucher, ; shoji et al., ; tani et al., ) . we developed a protocol by which incubation of unconcentrated virus (i.e., virus supernatant harvested from infected cell culture) with cells at lower temperature (e.g., c or c) for - h in pbs resulted in gene transfer into hela, chondrocytes hsu et al., ) , and human msc with efficiencies comparable or superior to those using traditional protocols. specifically, the transduction efficiencies of human msc derived from umbilical cord blood can be elevated from % (using the conventional protocol) to % (using the modified protocol). this protocol eliminates the need for virus ultracentrifugation, and hence not only represents a simpler approach but also reduces the chance for virus loss or inactivation during ultracentrifugation. a key determinant for the improved transduction efficiency is the incubation medium. we found that pbs is superior to dmem or tnm-fh (the medium for baculovirus production) in terms of transduction efficiency and transgene expression hsu et al., ) . comparison between the major components in pbs and medium revealed that nahco present in dmem or tnm-fh significantly reduced transduction efficiency (unpublished data), but the reason for this is unknown. the tropism and transduction efficiency of baculoviruses has been manipulated by modifying the envelope protein. modification can be performed by fusing a heterologous gene in frame at the end of the gp gene under the control of the polyhedrin or p promoter. the fusion protein, after expression as an additional copy, is translocated to the plasma membrane and incorporated into the viral envelope on virus budding. use of this approach was first demonstrated by fusion of human immunodeficiency virus- (hiv- ) envelope proteins to gp and the modified budded virus bound to the cd receptor on t cells (boublik et al., ) . a similar strategy was applied to construct avidin-displaying baculoviruses, which showed a -fold increase in transduction efficiency in rat malignant glioma cells and a -fold increase in transduction efficiency in rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells compared to the wild-type baculovirus (raty et al., ) . baculoviruses displaying heterologous envelope proteins, such as vesicular stomatitis virus g protein (vsvg), have also been constructed. these vectors transduce human hepatoma and rat neuronal cells at efficiencies roughly -to -fold greater than baculoviruses lacking vsvg (barsoum et al., ) . this pseudotyped virus also transduced cell lines that are transduced at very low levels by the unmodified baculovirus, thus broadening the tropism. the enhanced transduction efficiency and wider tropism are attributed to the increased transport of baculovirus dna into nuclei rather than to the increased binding or virus uptake (barsoum et al., ) . in contrast, specific targeting of baculoviruses to mammalian cells by displaying a single-chain antibody fragment specific for the carcinoembryonic antigen (cea) or synthetic igg-binding domains was also demonstrated (mottershead et al., ; ojala et al., ) . such viral targeting could reduce the virus dose required for in vivo gene therapy regimes, if baculoviruses can be engineered to bind efficiently to specific cell types. given the highly efficient gene delivery into many cell types, baculoviruses have captured increasing interest as vectors for in vivo gene delivery. tissues that have been targeted include rabbit carotid artery (airenne et al., ) , rat liver (huser et al., ) , rat brain (lehtolainen et al., ; sarkis et al., ; , mouse brain (sarkis et al., ) , mouse skeletal muscle (pieroni et al., ) , mouse cerebral cortex and testis (tani et al., ) , and mouse liver (hoare et al., ) . for baculovirus-mediated in vivo gene therapy, however, the complement system appears to be a significant barrier because systemic or intraportal application as well as direct injection into the liver parenchyma fail to result in detectable gene expression (sandig et al., ) . this failure stems from inactivation of the baculovirus vector in the presence of native serum, because baculoviruses activate the classical pathway of the complement system . hoare et al. ( ) further showed that both classical and alternative pathways are involved in the inactivation and suggested that naturally occurring igm antibodies with high affinity for baculoviruses may be partially responsible for the inactivation. various strategies have been employed to avoid complement inactivation. demonstrated that the survival of a baculovirus vector in human serum can be enhanced through treatment with a functional antibody-blocking complement component (c ). meanwhile, the complement inhibitor scr (soluble complement receptor type ) protects baculoviruses from serum inactivation in vitro and coadministration of scr along with intraportal administration of the baculovirus vector leads to hepatic expression in mice (hoare et al., ) . inactivation of baculoviruses in human plasma and whole blood can be prevented by treatment with cobra venom factor (cvf), an inhibitor of the complement system . by injecting cvf into mice one day prior to baculovirus adminis tratio n, sa rkis et al. ( ) demonstr ated that the baculov irus was not inactivated by the complement system and could transduce neural cells (mainly astrocytes) in vivo when directly injected into the brain of rodents. surprisingly, they observed the same level of expression in animals without treatment of cvf, suggesting that the baculovirus was not inactivated by the complement system. these contradictory observations were probably caused by the particular immunological characteristics of the brain (sarkis et al., ) or differences in stereotaxic coordinates and injection pressure, or speed (lehtolainen et al., ) . the complement inactivation problem can also be minimized by avoiding contact of the baculovirus vectors with blood components. by using a silastic collar, transduction of adventitial cells in rabbit carotid arteries was achieved and the efficiencies were comparable to those obtained with adenoviral vectors (airenne et al., ) . gene expression was transient remaining high level for week but disappearing by day , and the arterial structure and endothelium remained intact after baculovirus transduction. baculovirus vectors have also been injected into the rodent brain where complement proteins may be absent because of the blood-brain barrier, or the complement level in the brain may be insufficient to affect gene transfer (lehtolainen et al., ) . after in vivo injection into the brain, baculoviruses specifically transduced the epithelium of the choroids plexus in ventricles and the transduction efficiency was as high as ae %. in contrast, adenovirus vectors showed preference to corpus callosum glial cells and ventricular ependymal lining. hence, baculovirus vectors are especially useful for targeting of choroids plexus cells (lehtolainen et al., ) . a more cutting-edge approach to alleviate complement inactivation is the generation of complement-resistant baculoviruses by display on the viral envelope of decay-accelerating factor (daf), a regulator that blocks complement at the central step of both the classical and alternative pathways (huser et al., ) . such complement-resistant baculovirus vectors allow for a substantial improvement of gene transfer into neonatal rats in vivo after local injection into the liver parenchyma. expression of the transgene (human coagulation factor ix, hfix) was transient probably as a result of the generation of antibodies directed against the transgene product hfix, which might lead to clearance of either expressed hfix protein and/or positively transduced cells. alternatively, baculoviruses can be pseudotyped by displaying vsvg on the envelope. the vsvg-modified virus enhanced gene transfer efficiencies into mouse skeletal muscle in vivo and the transgene expression lasted days in dba/ j mice and days in balb/c and c bl/ mice (pieroni et al., ) . the vsvg-modified baculovirus also exhibited greater resistance to inactivation by animal sera and could transduce cerebral cortex and testis of mice by direct inoculation in vivo (tani et al., ) . in addition to expressing therapeutic proteins, it has been shown that transduction of saos- , hepg , huh- , and primary human hepatic stellate cells with a baculovirus expressing shrnas (short-hairpin rnas) targeting lamin a/c effectively knocked down expression of the corresponding mrna and protein (nicholson et al., ) . more recently, baculoviruses have been used to mediate rna interference (rnai) using a novel hybrid promoter consisting of the cmv enhancer and polymerase iii h promoter. the recombinant baculovirus was capable of suppressing expression of the target gene by % in cultured cells and by % in vivo in rat brain (ong et al., ) . these data suggest that baculoviruses may be used as delivery vectors for triggering rna interference for in vivo gene therapy. to date, most gene therapy studies using baculovirus vectors have focused on in vivo applications, yet relatively little is known about the potential of baculoviruses for ex vivo therapy. one relevant study was performed by establishing an ex vivo perfusion model for human liver segments (sandig et al., ) . the recombinant baculovirus was perfused through the liver segments for min and reasonable transduction rates were achieved in all perfused parts of the liver tissue. this study verified for the first time that baculovirus-mediated gene transfer is possible in liver tissue and is encouraging for future studies including in situ perfusion of intact livers with baculovirus vectors in animal models. in addition, we have demonstrated highly efficient baculovirusmediated gene transfer into articular chondrocytes , human mscs , and msc-derived progenitors (ho et al., ) , all being candidate cell sources for the treatment of disorders in connective tissues, particularly cartilage and bone. importantly, differentiation states of chondrocytes, msc, and msc-derived progenitor cells were not affected after baculovirus transduction. further, the transduction of primary rabbit articular chondrocytes with baculoviruses expressing bmp- significantly improved the secretion of extracellular matrix (ecm) and promoted the expression of chondrocyte-specific genes (unpublished data), thus implicating the potential use of baculoviruses for delivery of genes encoding growth factors for cartilage and bone tissue engineering. the ecm represents a barrier to baculovirus entry into chondrocytes because treatment of rat articular chondrocytes that had been cultured for days with enzymes (hyaluronadase and heparanase) effectively removed the ecm and enhanced virus uptake and gene expression (unpublished data). unfortunately, articular chondrocytes and osteoblasts are embedded in the ecm in vivo. therefore, the dense ecm surrounding the target cells constitutes a formidable barrier for in vivo baculovirus-mediated gene therapy for tissue engineering. as such, ex vivo gene therapy may be a more appropriate choice in the context of bone and cartilage tissue engineering. for instance, differentiation of mscs or progenitors toward a specific lineage pathway (e. g., osteogenic) may be modulated by ex vivo transduction with recombinant baculoviruses expressing appropriate growth factors (e.g., bmp- ). given the efficient transduction of the partially differentiated progenitors, these cells may be transduced again with baculoviruses expressing identical (or different) factors with high efficiency, followed by seeding into scaffolds and implantation into animal models. the transduced cells may continue to express the appropriate factors in vivo, thereby stimulating cell differentiation and tissue (e.g., bone) regeneration in an autocrine or paracrine fashion. to date, vectors used for gene therapy are divided into two categories: nonviral and viral. nonviral vectors comprise polymers (or liposomes) conjugated with polycations or other targeting molecules. however, the application of nonviral vectors is often restricted by the poor efficiency of delivery and transgene expression (verma and somia, ) . in contrast, viral vectors, such as retroviral, lentiviral, adenoviral, and adeno-associated viral (aav) vectors are in common use due to the more efficient cellular uptake and transgene expression. despite this, each vector has intrinsic advantages and disadvantages (table iv) . for example, retroviruses can mediate integration of viral dna into the host chromosome for permanent genetic modification; however, transcriptional silencing often occurs and results in transient expression. more critically, the random integration could lead to activation of oncogenes or inactivation of tumor suppressor genes and has resulted in unfortunate leukemia-like diseases in two x-linked scid patients treated with retroviral vectors (check, ) . lentiviral vectors, derived from human or simian immunodeficiency virus (hiv or siv), are emerging vectors capable of long-term expression in dividing and nondividing cells. however, the pathogenic nature of hiv or siv raises serious concerns about the safety of these vectors, and the production of high-titer virus stock is inefficient (lundstrom, ) . adenoviruses can effectively infect dividing and nondividing cells and mediate high-level transgene expression, but the transgene expression is often transient due to the elicitation of strong humoral and cellular immunity, which has also resulted in the death of a patient (marshall, ) . aav vectors can mediate sustained expression, but the packaging capacity is restricted and large-scale vector production is difficult. furthermore, the preexisting immunity to human aav vectors is comparable to that of adenoviral vectors (thomas et al., ) . in comparison with these common viral vectors, baculoviruses possess a number of advantages: baculovirus transduction is nontoxic to mammalian cells and does not hinder cell growth even at high moi (gao et al., ; hofmann et al., ) . our studies again confirmed this notion because transduction with a wild-type baculovirus did not cause any observable adverse effects to chondrocytes or human msc . cell proliferation, however, may be slightly retarded by transgene products, such as egfp , which could be toxic and might even induce apoptosis in some cells (detrait et al., ; liu et al., ) . fortunately, the cell growth rate was restored after several passages as egfp expression attenuates . moreover, baculoviruses do not replicate in transduced mammalian cells (hofmann et al., ; kost and condreay, ; sandig et al., ; shoji et al., ) . the nonreplicative and nontoxic attributes of baculoviruses are particularly important because retroviruses, lentiviruses, and adenoviruses are human pathogens, and hence emergence of replication-competent viruses (rcv) raises serious safety concerns. in contrast, baculoviruses are not pathogenic to humans, and hence the emergence of rcv is not an issue for baculovirus-meditaed gene therapy. the baculovirus (acmnpv) genome is large (% kb) and the maximum cloning capacity is at least kb because the adenovirus genome has been cloned into a baculovirus vector (cheshenko et al., ) . such a large cloning capacity provides flexibility for multiple genes or large inserts. this flexibility is particularly advantageous in comparison with retroviral and aav vectors whose cloning capacities are limited to - . kb and . - kb, respectively, and prohibit the cloning of regulatory sequences or large gene fragments (e.g., dystrophin). the production of retroviral, lentiviral, and aav vectors requires transfection of plasmids encoding essential genes into packaging cells (thomas et al., ) . the transfection process, however, is cumbersome, costly, and difficult to scale up. in sharp contrast, baculovirus propagation can easily be achieved by infecting insect cells in suspension culture (e.g., in spinner flasks or bioreactors) and harvesting the supernatant - days postinfection. scale-up of the production process is straightforward because large-scale insect cell culture processes are well-established. the production phase is initiated simply by adding virus solution to cultured cells. furthermore, the construction, propagation, and handling of baculoviruses can be performed readily in biosafety level laboratories without the need for specialized equipment. one of the problems associated with adenoviral and aav vectors is that most people are exposed to these viruses and develop corresponding neutralizing antibodies. circulating virus-neutralizing antibodies can preclude efficient transduction with the viral vector. in contrast, it is unlikely that people develop such preexisting immunity against baculoviruses. the use of baculovirus vectors in gene therapy, therefore, may avoid the problem of preexisting immunity. despite the promising aspects, baculoviruses have a number of disadvantages as gene therapy vectors. in vitro, baculovirus-mediated expression usually lasted from to days for common cell lines such as cho, hela, and bhk cells (hu et al., a) , although expression continued for days in adipogenic progenitor cells (ho et al., ) . in vivo, transgene expression typically declines by day and disappears by day (airenne et al., ; lehtolainen et al., ) . the duration of in vitro transgene expression can be enhanced by prolonging the transduction period (e.g., upto h) (hsu et al., ) or by supertransduction (hu et al., a) . nonetheless, the extent to which expression can be prolonged is limited because expression is generally restricted to less than month, which is significantly shorter than expression (in the range of months) mediated by retroviral, lentiviral, and aav vectors. one key difference between baculoviral and other viral vectors is that the genes carried by other vectors can persist in the host nucleus, either in an integrated or episomal form, for a longer period. however, tjia et al. ( ) demonstrated that baculoviral dna persists in the nuclei of transduced mammalian cells for only - h, as determined by southern blot (tjia et al., ) . we also found that the total transgene (egfp) copy number within baculovirus-transduced chondrocytes declined -fold (as determined by quantitative real-time pcr) while cell number increases . -fold in days, indicating that baculoviral dna degrades over time . the declining egfp copy number was concomitant with the decrease in mrna transcription level (unpublished data) as well as fluorescence intensity. to prolong transgene expression, palombo et al. ( ) designed hybrid baculovirus-aav vectors which contained a transgene cassette composed of the -gal reporter gene and hygromycin resistance gene (hyg r ) flanked by the aav-inverted terminal repeats (itr), which are necessary for aav replication and integration into the host genome (palombo et al., ) . hybrid baculovirus-aav vectors were derived with or without the aav rep gene (whose gene products are essential for viral dna replication and integration) cloned in different positions with respect to the baculovirus polyhedrin promoter. transduction of cells with the hybrid vector expressing the rep gene resulted in specific integration of itr-flanked dna into the aavs site of chromosome (palombo et al., ) . a similar baculovirus-aav hybrid vector incorporating an itr-flanked luciferase gene under a neuron-specific promoter was also employed for in vivo studies . even without the help of rep gene expression, the viral vector was able to provide transgene expression for at least days when tested in rat brains. these studies demonstrate an effective methodology for engineering of baculoviral vectors for sustained transgene expression. as described earlier, contact between baculoviruses and serum complement results in rapid inactivation. despite various attempts to minimize complement inactivation, to date the number of successful baculovirus-mediated in vivo gene therapy experiments in complement-competent animals is limited (hoare et al., ) . however, the complement system is also a potent barrier to in vivo administration of other gene delivery systems such as liposomes (marjan et al., ) , murine retrovirus (takeuchi et al., ) , and various synthetic dna complexes (plank et al., ) . intercellular junctions may be an additional hurdle to baculovirusmediated gene therapy because transient disruption of these junctions by egta treatment prior to transduction improved gene delivery efficiency into long-term cultures of primary hepatocytes (bilello et al., ) . bilello et al. ( ) also suggested the importance of the basolateral surface for virus entry at least for some cell types. in our laboratory, however, transient disruption of cell junctions failed to effectively enhance baculovirus-mediated gene transfer into chondrocytes and hepg cells that were cultured to overconfluence (unpublished data) , implying that other factors in addition to the paracellular junction complexes might be involved in transduction of these cells. another drawback associated with baculoviruses as gene delivery vectors is that the nucleocapsid is enveloped with lipids derived from the host cell membrane. the envelope structure is essential for virus infectivity due to the anchored gp (blissard and wenz, ) , but it also renders virus vulnerable to mechanical force and results in relatively low virus stability, a common problem also observed for other enveloped viruses such as retrovirus (wu et al., ) . typically, baculoviral vectors are concentrated by ultracentrifugation after harvesting from cell culture and resuspended in pbs prior to use. however, ultracentrifugation often leads to significant loss of infectivity probably due to damage to viral envelopes. ultracentrifugation also tends to result in virus aggregation (barsoum, ) . to alleviate these problems, we constructed a recombinant baculovirus with a hexahistidine (his ) tag displayed on the viral envelope, which enables virus purification by a simple immobilized metal affinity chromatography (imac) (hu et al., b) . the imac methodology results in high purity ( %) and obviates the need for successive ultracentrifugation steps. however, the recovery yield in terms of infectious titer is lower than expected (< %), probably because of damage to the viral envelope during the binding, washing, and elution steps. one possibility to alleviate virus loss during chromatographic purification steps is to display vsvg protein on the baculoviral envelope. display of vsvg on the retrovirus envelope has been shown to enhance virus stability and the same strategy may be applied to enhancing baculovirus stability. besides sensitivity to mechanical force, the half-life of baculoviruses is drastically decreased from h at c to - h at c (hsu et al., ) . such labile thermal stability, in conjunction with the tendency to be inactivated by serum complement, may further restrict the in vivo application of baculovirus gene delivery vectors. as mentioned earlier, baculoviruses are nonpathogenic to humans and are nonreplicative in mammalian cells. also, baculovirus dna tends to be degraded in mammalian cells. however, condreay et al. ( ) demonstrated that a recombinant baculovirus containing two expression cassettes (one harboring gfp under the control of the cmv promoter and the other harboring neomycin phosphotransferase under the control of the sv promoter) is capable of mediating stable expression. when transduced cells were selected with the antibiotic g , cell lines that stably maintain the foreign expression cassettes can be obtained at high frequency and exhibit stable, high-level expression of the reporter gene for at least passages. the frequency ranged from one clone in transduced cells to one clone in transduced cells, indicating that stable transduction is an efficient event. stably transduced derivatives have been selected from a substantial number of cell types (e.g., cho, hela, k ) , suggesting that stable cell lines can be derived from any cell type that exhibits transient expression (condreay et al., ) . such a stably expressing derivative (cho cell) was later confirmed to stem from the integration of baculovirus dna into the host cell genome as small, discrete single-copy fragments (merrihew et al., ) . these fragments, ranging in size from to kb, had randomly distributed breakpoints outside the selected region, suggesting an illegitimate mode of integration (little or no homology between recombining dna molecules). such integration resulted in at least two clones that expressed gfp for up to months. since leukemia-like conditions developed in two of the scid patients treated by retrovirus-mediated gene therapy, safety issues regarding whether and/or how vector dna integrates into the genomic dna are under scrutiny. although these stably expressing cell clones are obtained under antibiotic selection, and the integration occurs in a way different from that of retroviruses (which encode a viral integrase directing nearly full-length, single-copy integration events), the possibility that baculoviruses mediate spontaneous integration into genomic dna cannot be excluded. to date, there is no direct evidence showing that spontaneous integration of baculoviral dna occurs in the absence of an antibiotic resistance gene and selective pressure, but extensive studies examining the state and fate of introduced viral dna are necessary to further prove the safety of baculovirus gene therapy vectors. another concern regarding the use of baculoviruses is whether baculovirus endogenous genes are expressed. as long ago as , tjia et al. ( ) showed that baculovirus endogenous gene transcription is absent in transduced hela cells. using rt-pcr, stanbridge et al. ( ) assessed the expression of a number of baculovirus genes after transduction of human cells, and found no baculovirus gene transcripts in human cells. however, a study demonstrated that the baculoviral genomic early-to-late (etl) promoter is active and able to drive reporter gene expression in mammalian cells (liu et al., ) . although gene expression does not equate to virus replication, the possibility that other baculoviral promoters are also active in the transduced mammalian cells cannot be excluded. whether and how expression of baculoviral proteins at basal levels in the mammalian cells induces immune responses and how this may influence cellular gene expression and physiological state requires further investigation. the "achilles heel" of gene therapy is that immune responses used to tackle wild-type infections are activated against the vectors and/or the new transgene products (thomas et al., ) . although baculoviruses were found capable of entering mammalian cells as early as in (tjia et al., ; volkman and goldsmith, ) , the host response to baculovirus uptake, either in vitro or in vivo, was not evaluated until when gronowski et al. ( ) reported that administration of baculoviruses in vitro induced the production of ifn-and ifn-from human and murine cell lines. the ifn-stimulating activity of baculoviruses required live virus and was not due to the presence of viral rna or dna. furthermore, administration of baculoviruses induced in vivo protection of mice from encephalomyocarditis virus infection (gronowski et al., ) . a subsequent study discovered that baculovirus transduction of cultured rat hepatocytes disrupted phenobarbital (pb) gene induction, a potent transcriptional activation event characteristic of highly differentiated hepatocytes, and repressed expression of the albumin gene (beck et al., ) . but neither camp nor pka activities were affected by the virus. baculovirus transduction also induced the expression of cytokines, such as tnf-, il- , and il- , in primary rat hepatocytes, however, tnf-, il- , il- , il- , il- , il- , and ifn-were not detected in any of the baculovirus-exposed hepatocytes (beck et al., ) . airenne et al. ( ) found that in vivo administration of baculovirus to rabbit carotid artery resulted in signs of inflammation. more recently, abe et al. ( ) demonstrated that inoculation of baculovirus induced the secretion of inflammatory cytokines, such as tnf-and il- , in a murine macrophage cell line, raw . . in the same study, they also demonstrated that intranasal inoculation with a wild-type baculovirus elicited a strong innate immune response that protected mice from a lethal challenge of influenza virus (abe et al., ) . this protective immune response was induced via the tlr /myd -dependent signaling pathway (abe et al., ) . the production of inflammatory cytokines was severely reduced in peritoneal macrophages (pecs) and splenic cd c þ dendritic cells (dcs) derived from mice deficient in myd or tlr after stimulation with baculovirus. in contrast, a significant amount of ifnwas still detectable in the pecs and dcs of these mice after stimulation with baculovirus, suggesting that a tlr /myd -independent signaling pathway may also participate in the production of ifn- (abe et al., ) . the induction of cytokines required gp , however, gp itself did not directly participate in the tlr-mediated immune response. instead, the authors concluded that internalization of viral dna via gp -mediated membrane fusion and endosomal maturation which released the viral genome into tlr -expressing cellular compartments were necessary for the induction of innate responses (abe et al., ) . as mentioned earlier, membrane fusion and endosomal escape via gp are essential for nucleocapsid transport into the nucleus. hence it appears that transgene expression may be coincident with induction of the tlr /myd -signaling pathway. taken together, these findings suggest that baculoviruses may induce various immune responses in vitro and in vivo as for other viruses (e.g., adenovirus), thus raising questions as to whether this will compromise the use of baculovirus vectors for in vivo human gene therapy. which cytokines are induced by baculoviruses, and how cytokines modulate cellular and humoral immunities in vivo are not completely understood. the question of whether baculovirus-mediated ex vivo gene therapy elicits the immune response is also of interest. all of these questions need to be answered with more in-depth investigations to ensure the safe application of baculoviral gene therapy vectors. the immune response induced by baculoviruses makes it a promising candidate as a novel vaccine vehicle against infectious diseases (see chapter by van oers, this volume, . the ability of baculoviruses to induce immune responses was first exploited by aoki et al. ( ) , who found that a recombinant baculovirus-expressing glycoprotein gb of pseudorabies virus induced antibodies against gb protein in mice, suggesting that this recombinant baculovirus could serve as a vaccine candidate for pseudorabies. the feasibility of using baculoviruses as vaccine carriers was also demonstrated by abe et al. ( ) , who found that intranasal inoculation with a recombinant baculovirus expressing hemagglutinin (ha) of the influenza virus under the control of the cag promoter elicited the innate immune response and provided mice with a high level of protection from a lethal challenge of influenza virus. the level of protection is dependent on the route of administration, and intranasal administration is considerably superior to intramuscular administration although the latter induces significantly higher anti-ha igg levels. more recently, facciabene et al. ( ) demonstrated that intramuscular injection of a baculovirus expressing carcinoembryonic antigen (cea) induced a measurable anti-ceaspecific cd þ t cell response. the immunogenic properties of baculoviruses are not restricted to cea because intramuscular injection of another baculovirus (bac-e ) expressing the e glycoprotein of hcv induced an anti-e cd þ t cell response as well as the innate immune response such as natural killer (nk) cell cytolytic activity (facciabene et al., ) . interestingly, when bac-e is pseudotyped to display vsvg on the envelope, the minimal dose required to elicit a measurable t cell response was tenfold less, indicating that the vsvg-pseudotyped bac-e was a more potent vaccine carrier than the unmodified virus. this finding agrees with the previous statement that baculoviruses displaying vsvg provide for more efficient immunogen expression in transduced cells. baculoviruses can also provoke an immune response against an antigen when it is displayed on the viral surface. for instance, immunization with adjuvant-free baculovirus displaying rodent malaria plasmodium berghei circumsporozoite protein (pbcsp) on the envelope induced high levels of antibodies and ifn--secreting cells against pbcsp, and protected % of mice against sporozoite challenge (yoshida et al., ) . a more recent study further showed that baculovirus displaying severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus (sars-cov) spike protein on the envelope induced the release of il- in lung cells (chang et al., ) . these studies substantiate the potential of baculoviruses displaying immunogens as vaccine candidates. the broad range of mammalian cells permissive to baculovirus transduction, the nontoxic and nonreplicative nature, large packaging capacity, and ease of production make baculoviruses promising tools for gene therapy. despite these advantages, baculoviruses are inactivated by serum complement, which restricts the application of baculovirus vectors for in vivo gene therapy. additionally, the duration of transgene expression is generally short, thus baculoviruses may not be suited for long-term gene therapy unless a hybrid vector capable of integrating the expression cassette into the host genome (e.g., baculovirus-aav) is employed. nonetheless, baculoviruses, in conjunction with other viral vectors (e.g., adenoviral or lentiviral), may be administered sequentially to escape either preexisting or therapyinduced antiviral immunity. additionally, baculoviruses may serve as delivery vectors for triggering rna interference. baculoviruses carrying tumor-suppressor or suicide genes may also be used in combination with other treatments for cancer therapy (song and boyce, ; stanbridge et al., ) . given the highly efficient gene transfer to chondrocytes and mscs, baculoviruses expressing appropriate growth factors may be used for ex vivo genetic modification of cells prior to transplantation into animals. the growth factors, acting in either an autocrine or a paracrine fashion, potentially accelerate tissue regeneration in vivo. unlike the treatment of chronic disease, it is neither necessary nor desirable for transgene expression to persist beyond the few weeks or months needed to achieve healing (huard et al., ; lieberman et al., ) . as a result, long-term transgene expression is not critical in tissue engineering. hence, the combination of baculovirus-mediated gene therapy and tissue engineering may hold great promise. of course, to address the safety issues of employing baculoviruses in gene therapy, the dna integration, expression of baculovirus endogenous genes, and baculovirus-induced immune responses should be investigated. baculovirus induces an innate immune response and confers protection from lethal influenza virus infection in mice involvement of the toll-like receptor signaling pathway in the induction of innate immunity by baculovirus baculovirus-mediated periadventitial gene transfer to rabbit carotid artery bacmam recombinant baculoviruses in g protein-coupled receptor drug discovery induction of antibodies in mice by a recombinant baculovirus expressing pseudorabies virus glycoprotein b in mammalian cells concentration of recombinant baculovirus by cation-exchange chromatography efficient transduction of mammalian cells by a recombinant baculovirus having the vesicular stomatitis virus g glycoprotein baculovirus vectors repress phenobarbital-mediated gene induction and stimulate cytokine expression in primary cultures of rat hepatocytes a baculovirus expression system for insect cells baculovirus entry into nondividing hepatocytes is enhanced by transient disruption of intercellular junctions role of paracellular junction complexes in baculovirus-mediated gene transfer to nondividing rat hepatocytes baculovirus gp envelope glycoprotein is sufficient to mediate ph-dependent membrane fusion eukaryotic virus display: engineering the major surface glycoprotein of the autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (acnpv) for the presentation of foreign proteins on the virus surface baculovirus-mediated gene transfer into mammalian cells baculovirus-mediated expression of bacterial genes in dipteran and mammalian cells induction of il- release in lung cells via activator protein- by recombinant baculovirus displaying severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus spike proteins: identification of two functional regions gene therapy: a tragic setback baculovirus-mediated production of hdv-like particles in bhk cells using a novel oscillating bioreactor a rapid and efficient method to express target genes in mammalian cell by baculovirus a novel system for the production of fully deleted adenovirus vectors that does not require helper adenovirus recombinant baculoviruses used to study estrogen receptor function in human osteosarcoma cells transient and stable gene expression in mammalian cells transduced with a recombinant baculovirus vector hepatitis b virus replication in human hepg cells mediated by hepatitis b virus recombinant baculovirus reporter gene transfer induces apoptosis in primary cortical neurons baculovirus vector requires electrostatic interactions including heparan sulfate for efficient gene transfer in mammalian cells the use of recombinant baculoviruses for sustained expression of human cytomegalovirus immediate early proteins in fibroblasts baculovirus surface display: construction and screening of a eukaryotic epitope library baculovirus vectors elicit antigen-specific immune responses in mice high efficiency gene transfer into cultured primary rat and human hepatic stellate cells using baculovirus vectors the baculovirus expression system as a tool for generating diversity by viral surface display baculovirus stimulates antiviral effects in mammalian cells highly efficient baculovirusmediated gene transfer into rat chondrocytes transgene expression and differentiation of baculovirus-transduced human mesenchymal stem cells baculovirus transduction of human mesenchymal stem cell-derived progenitor cells: variation of transgene expression with cellular differentiation states complement inhibition rescued mice allowing observation of transgene expression following intraportal delivery of baculovirus in mice baculovirus-mediated gene transfer in the presence of human serum or blood facilitated by inhibition of the complement system efficient gene-transfer into human hepatocytes by baculovirus vectors the baculovirus system for gene delivery into hepatocytes investigation of optimal transduction conditions for baculovirus-mediated gene delivery into mammalian cells enhancement and prolongation of baculovirus-mediated expression in mammalian cells: focuses on strategic infection and feeding generation of chimeric baculovirus with histidine-tags displayed on the envelope and its purification using immobilized metal affinity chromatography gene therapy and tissue engineering for sports medicine incorporation of decay-accelerating factor into the baculovirus envelope generates complement-resistant gene transfer vectors development of a novel surrogate assay to measure hiv envelope/ccr /cd -mediated viral/cell fusion using bacmam baculovirus technology evaluation of cell-based assays for steroid nuclear receptors delivered by recombinant baculoviruses recombinant baculoviruses as mammalian cell gene delivery vectors histone deacetylase as a therapeutic target efficient and tightly regulated expression systems for the human cytomegalovirus major transactivator protein ie p in permissive cells baculovirus capsid display: a novel tool for transduction imaging the gp protein of autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus rescues helicoverpa armigera nucleopolyhedrovirus transduction in mammalian cells baculoviruses exhibit restricted cell type specificity in rat brain: a comparison of baculovirus-and adenovirus-mediated intracerebral gene transfer in vivo transduction of cultured fish cells with recombinant baculoviruses axonal transport of recombinant baculovirus vectors gene transfer approaches to the healing of bone and cartilage is green fluorescent protein toxic to the living cells? baculovirus etl promoter acts as a shuttle promoter between insect cells and mammalian cells overexpression of promyelocytic leukemia protein precludes the dispersal of nd structures and has no effect on accumulation of infectious herpes simplex virus or its proteins trends in the development of baculovirus expression vectors latest development in viral vectors for gene therapy baculovirus-mediated gene transfer into pancreatic islet cells liposome-induced activation of the classical complement pathway does not require immunoglobulin gene therapy death prompts review of adenovirus vector baculovirus entry into human hepatoma cells efficient delivery and regulable expression of hepatitis c virus full-length and minigenome constructs in hepatocyte-derived cell lines using baculovirus vectors chromosomal integration of transduced recombinant baculovirus dna in mammalian cells baculoviral display of functional scfv and synthetic igg-binding domains induction of apoptosis in rabbit kidney cell under high-level expression of bovine herpesvirus u(s)orf product rna interference mediated in human primary cells via recombinant baculoviral vectors specific binding of baculoviruses displaying gp fusion proteins to mammalian cells expression and trafficking of fluorescent viral membrane proteins in baculovirustransduced bhk cells hybrid cytomegalovirus enhancer h- promoter-based plasmid and baculovirus vectors mediate effective rna interference site-specific integration in mammalian cells mediated by a new hybrid baculovirus-adeno-associated virus vector hepatocyte-specific gene expression by baculovirus pseudotyped with vesicular stomatitis virus envelope glycoprotein baculovirus and insect cell gene expression-review of baculovirus biotechnology titration of k-atp channel expression in mammalian cells utilizing recombinant baculovirus transduction in vivo gene transfer in mouse skeletal muscle mediated by baculovirus vectors autographa californica baculoviruses with large genomic deletions are rapidly generated in infected insect cells evaluation of baculovirus expression vectors with enhanced stability in continuous cascaded insect-cell bioreactors activation of the complement system by synthetic dna complexes: a potential barrier for intravenous gene delivery generation of recombinant influenza virus using baculovirus delivery vector rapid expression of recombinant proteins in modified cho cells using the baculovirus system enhanced gene delivery by avidin-displaying baculovirus improvement in nuclear entry and transgene expression of baculoviruses by disintegration of microtubules in human hepatocytes gene transfer into hepatocytes and human liver tissue by baculovirus vectors efficient transduction of neural cells in vitro and in vivo by a baculovirusderived vector efficient gene transfer into various mammalian cells, including non-hepatic cells, by baculovirus vectors production of human beta interferon in insect cells infected with a baculovirus expression vector a novel method using baculovirusmediated gene transfer for production of recombinant adeno-associated virus vectors combination treatment for osteosarcoma with baculoviral vector mediated gene therapy (p ) and chemotherapy (adriamycin) effective transduction of osteogenic sarcoma cells by a baculovirus vector influence of promoter choice and trichostatin a treatment on expression of baculovirus delivered genes in mammalian cells baculoviruses as vectors for gene therapy against human prostate cancer sensitization of cells and retroviruses to human serum by (alpha - ) galactosyltransferase presentation of antigenic sites from foot-and-mouth disease virus on the surface of baculovirus and in the membrane of infected cells characterization of cell-surface determinants important for baculovirus infection in vitro and in vivo gene delivery by recombinant baculoviruses progress and problems with the use of viral vectors for gene therapy autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (acnpv) dna does not persist in mass cultures of mammalian cells baculovirus infection of nondividing mammalian cells: mechanisms of entry and nuclear transport of capsids an additional copy of the homologous region (hr ) sequence in the autographa californica multinucleocapsid polyhedrosis virus genome promotes hyperexpression of foreign genes gene therapy-promises, problems and prospects the homologous region sequence (hr ) of autographa californica multinucleocapsid polyhedrosis virus can enhance transcription from non-baculoviral promoters in mammalian cells in vitro study of autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus interaction with nontarget vertebrate host cells baculovirus-mediated gene expression in zebrafish adeno-associated virus inverted terminal repeats improve neuronal transgene expression mediated by baculoviral vectors in rat brain baculovirus as a highly efficient gene delivery vector for the expression of hepatitis delta virus antigens in mammalian cells general analysis of receptor-mediated viral attachment to cell surfaces expression of highly controllable genes in insect cells using a modified tetracycline-regulated gene expression system expression of target genes by coinfection with replicationdeficient viral vectors baculovirus virions displaying plasmodium berghei circumsporozoite protein protect mice against malaria sporozoite infection glycoprotein d or j delivered in trans blocks apoptosis in sk-n-sh cells induced by a herpes simplex virus mutant lacking intact genes expressing both glycoproteins the authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the national health research institute (grant nhri-ex - ei) and ministry of economic affairs (moea a p ), taiwan. key: cord- -loey xq authors: huh, changgoo; nagle, james w.; kozak, christine a.; abrahamson, magnus; karlsson, stefan title: structural organization, expression and chromosomal mapping of the mouse cystatin-c-encoding gene (cst ) date: - - journal: gene doi: . / - ( ) -b sha: doc_id: cord_uid: loey xq cystatin c (cstc) is a potent cysteine-proteinase inhibitor. the structure of the mouse cstc-encoding gene (cst ) was examined by sequencing a . -kb genomic dna containing the entire gene, as well as . kb of ′ flanking and . kb of its ′ flanking region. the sequence revealed that the overall organization of the gene is very similar to those of the genes encoding human cstc and other type- cst, with two introns at positions identical to those in the human gene. the promoter area does not contain typical tata or caat ☐es. two copies of a spl-binding motif, gggcgg, are present in the ′ flanking region within bp upstream from the initiation codon. a hexa-nucleotide, tgttct, which is a core sequence of the androgen-responsive element (are), is found in the promoter region. this region also contains a -nucleotide sequence, ′-agactagcagctgactgaagc, which contains two potential binding sites for the transcription factor, ap- . the mouse cst mrna was detected in all of thirteen tissues examined by northern blot analysis. cst was mapped in the mouse to a position on distal chromosome . the cystatins (cst) are a group of potent cysteineproteinase inhibitors. there are at least five distinct types in the cst superfamily, each type consisting of several proteins (rawlings and barrett, ; devos et al., ) . cstc belongs to the family of type- cst and consists of aa, with two intrachain disulfide bonds (barrett et al., ) . although the proteinase-inhibiting function of the cstc has been thoroughly investigated, less is known about its broader biological role. recent reports indicate that cstc may play a role in cancer progression (sloane, ) , bone resorption (lerner and grubb, ) , modulation of neutrophil chemotactic activity and inflammation (leung-tack et al., a,b) , and resistance to viral infection (collins and grubb, ) . furthermore, a point mutation in the cst gene, resulting in a leu~gln substitution, is the primary cause of autosomal dominant hereditary disorder, hereditary cstc amyloid angiopathy (hccaa) (grubb et al., ) . as young adults, carriers of this mutation suffer from repeated and massive brain hemorrhages due to deposition of the mutant protein in the walls of the cerebral arteries. the gene structures for several type- cst have been determined. the human cst and cst genes (saitoh et al., ) , and the human cst (abrahamson et al., ) and cst (freije et al., ) genes show very similar structural organization with respect to the number and position of the introns. structural analysis of the genes for these proteins will be necessary to understand the function and evolution of the members in the cystatin multigene superfamily. in this paper, we report the structural organization and expression of the mouse cst gene, compare its regulatory elements with that of other cst genes and map the cst gene in the mouse. using two primers mcyc : ( '-atg gcc agc ccg ctg cgc tcc ttg- ') and mcyc : ( '-ggc att ttt gca gct gaa ttt tgt cag- '), a -bp dna fragment within the coding region was generated from mouse cst cdna, labeled with p by random primer extension, and used as a probe to screen a ~,fixli genomic dna library from /sv mice (purchased from stratagene, la jolla, ca, usa). among several hybridizing clones, one clone, ~,cygl , was chosen for characterization. southern blot and pcr analysis indicated the presence of the mouse cst gene in a -kb dna insert. southern blot analysis of the genomic dna did not show any evidence for the presence of a cst pseudogene. a . -kb genomic dna fragment containing the entire gene, as well as . kb of ' flanking and . kb of ' flanking region, was subjected to nt sequencing. the -nt sequence covering the entire mouse cst gene is shown in fig. . comparison of the mouse cst gene sequence with that of the corresponding cdna (solem et al., ) revealed that the gene contains two intron sequences located between the nt triplets encoding aa - and - of the proposed mature polypeptide chain, exactly as in the human cst gene. the presence of two introns, at homologous positions, has also been reported in the other type- cst genes fully characterized to date: the human csti, cst and cst genes. the intron-exon junctions in the mouse cst gene are all close matches to the consensus sequences for the donor and acceptor splice sites of introns (mount, ) . some differences were observed between the exons of the genomic dna sequence and the published cdna, the five differences are summarized in table . two of these positions, and , are in the coding region. the nt in exon results in a gcc codon (coding for ala) towards the c-terminal part of the leader sequence. however, a ggc codon (coding for gly) was reported at this position in the published cdna. this gcc codon found in the genomic dna exists in the corresponding site of the rat and human cst cdnas. the nt ~ in exon forms a ttg codon for leu (ttt coding for phe in cdna). the differences between genomic and cdna sequence may be due to an error during cdna synthesis or due to polymorphism between the mouse strains /sv and balb/c. the sequence of the . -kb segment flanking exon of the mouse cst gene at the ' end, did not reveal a typical tata or caat box in the suggested promoter area. however, a tata-box-like taaaa sequence is present at - nt upstream from the start codon. a similar slightly atypical tata-box is found at the homologous position in the human cst gene (ataaaa), the human cst gene (ataaat), the human csti and cst genes (ataaa). the tata-box is preceded by a spl-binding gc-box sequence (pugh and tjian, ) with the core consensus sequence, gggcgg, ending nt upstream from the at-sequence. a corresponding sequence in the human cst gene is located slightly closer to the tatabox (distance nt). in the human cst gene, a gc-box is also found in the immediate '-flanking region (upstream distance from the at-sequence nt). by contrast, in the human csti and cst genes, a segment similar to the caat consensus is found instead of the gc box. a core sequence of the are, tgttct, is found nt downstream from the taaaa sequence. this hexanucleotide is located in a partial palindromic setting. some naturally occurring sequences and synthetic constructs containing this core sequence in a partial palindromic structure were shown to be inducible with androgens (ham et al., ) . this are is not found in the promoters of any other type- cst genes published. however, it is present in cst-related protein-encoding genes whose expression is regulated by androgen in the ventral prostate and lachrymal gland (chamberlain et al., ). an exact match of nine nt with the pituitary transcription factor (pit-l) recognition element is centered around nt - from the start codon, but is probably of low significance for the expression of the gene because multiple recognition elements have been shown to be needed for markedly increased expression of the rat prolactin gene by pit- (ingraham et al., recognized by the leader binding protein (lbp- ), '-wctgg- ' or its inverse, that is present in several copies in the hiv- promoter and contribute to its basal function (jones et al., ) , is strikingly abundant in the '-flanking region of the mouse cst gene. another five lbp-i motifs are found within a -bp segment in the first part of the first intron. transcription factor ap-l-binding sites that bind the jun-fos protooncogene complexes contain the consensus sequence '-tgactcagc. the mouse cst promoter contains two ap-l-like binding sequences within the sequence '-agactagcagctgactgaagc, immediately upstream from the first spl-binding site. this -mer sequence contains direct repeats of two adjacent potential ap-l-binding sites, each slightly deviating from the consensus sequence. it has been shown that two adjacent ap-l-like binding sites act synergistically to confer inducibility beyond that observed for a single ap- consensus sequence (friling et al., ) . the presence of the two ap-l-like binding sites in the promoter indicates that differences between the mouse cst gene sequence and that of the published edna (solem et al., ) position" genomic dna b cdna c aa a (genomic/cdna) c ( ) g ala/gly g( ) t leu/phe c ) t - gc ( ) at a the nt positions refer to fig. . b the nt refers to the genomic dna sequence. sequence was determined on both strands (number of independent sequencing runs in parentheses). c the nt refers to the cdna sequence. d the aa encoded by nt in columns genomic dna and cdna. transcription factor ap- may play a role in the cst gene expression. there is evidence that induction of gene expression by tgf- is mediated by transcription factor ap- . autoregulation of tgf- expression is mediated by the binding of ap- to a loose consensus binding site, tgagaca, in the tgf- promoter (kim et al., ) . a strong positive regulation of the cst gene by tgf- in serum free mouse embryo cells has also been reported (solem et al., ) . the presence of ap-l-like binding sites in the mouse cst promoter suggests that cystatin c induction by tgf-[ may be mediated by the ap-i complex, the y-flanking region of the human cst gene has a notably high g+c content, with > % g+c in the bp sequence upstream from the start codon. the g+c-rich region also includes the coding part of exon and the ' part of the first intron, which together represents a -bp segment with a g+c content of %, and contains cpg/gpc dinucleotides in a ratio close to unity (abrahamson et al., ) . the immediate '-flanking region of the mouse cst gene does not have such a strikingly high g + c content, but is more similar to the human cst , cst and cst genes in having a gc content of approx. %. however, the cpg/gpc ratio is / . in the bp region upstream from the start codon (as compared to / . over the entire . l-kb sequenced region), differing markedly from ratios of / , / and / for the human cst , csti and cst genes, respectively. thus, the mouse cst gene y-flanking region is not a typical housekeeping gene promoter having extremely high g + c content. rather it is similar to these promoters and the human cst promoter because it displays several spl-binding sites and contains a high number of cpg dinucleotides. this may indicate a low degree of methylation due to constant transcription of the gene (bird, ) . proposed promoter regions of several type- cst are compared in fig. (saitoh et al., : abrahamson et al., : freije et al., . sequence determination of the mouse cst gene . -kb '-flanking segment revealed no alternative polyadenylation signals in addition to the one present in the corresponding edna, bp downstream from the stop codon. analysis of short tandem repeats within the entire gene sequence revealed the presence of(gt)zl and (ga) in the region immediately '-flanking the polyadenylation signal and three stretches of perfect ct repeats, (ct) , (ct) and (ct) , bp further downstream. analysis of two multilocus crosses .was used to define the chr location for the mouse cst gene: (nfs/n or c /j × m. m. musculus) × m. m. musculus ) and (nfs/n ×m. spretus)×m, spretus or c /j (adamson et al., ) . dnas extracted from parental mice and progeny of the crosses were typed by southern blotting analysis for rflps of cst using the mouse cst cdna as probe. ssti digestion produced fragments of . and . kb in m. spretus and . and . kb in nfs/n and c /j mice, and bamhi fragments of . and . kb were detected in m. m. musculus and nfs/n, respectively. inheritance of the parental fragments was followed in both crosses and compared with inheritance of almost markers previously typed and mapped to all autosomes and the x chromosome. as shown in fig. the numbers given between adjacent loci represent percent recombination±the standard error calculated according to green ( ) . (b) chr linkage maps. the map on the right was generated from the two crosses described here and indicates the position of cst relative to the other markers typed in this cross. distances between adjacent markers (in centimorgans) are indicated to the immediate left of the map. the map on the left is an abbreviated version of the composite genetic map (siracusa and abbott, ) . numbers to the left of the map are centimorgan distances from the centromere. human map locations for homologs of the underlined mouse genes are indicated to the far left of this map. and distal to snap (encoding synaptosomal associated protein), markers which were typed in these crosses as previously described (joseph et al., ; grimaldi et al., ) . it has recently been shown that the human homolog of this gene maps to pll (schnittger et al., ) . this is consistent with our results, since the distal end of mouse chr contains a substantial region of linkage conservation with human chr (siracusa and abbot, ; fig. b ). the human cst is part of a cluster which includes up to eight members of the cst gene family (schnittger et al., ) further suggesting that the mouse homologs of these genes are likely to map to the same site on chr . we examined the expression of the mouse cst gene in different tissues by northern blot analysis using the mouse cst cdna probe. as expected, cst mrna was detected in all tissues examined, including stomach, brain, intestines, liver, muscle, spleen, heart, kidney, lung, pancreas, testis, uterus and ovary (data not shown). the pattern of the mouse cst gene expression is similar to that of its human counterpart. both species show expression of the gene in all tissues examined with high level of cst messenger rna in brain and testis, and lowest level in pancreas. this overall similarity between the two species indicates that mouse may be suitable for generating an animal model for the human genetic disease hccaa. structure and expression of the human cystatin c gene the mouse homolog of the gibbon ape leukemia virus receptor: genetic mapping and a possible receptor function in rodents nomenclature and classification of the proteins homologous with the cysteine-proteinase inhibitor chicken cystatin cpg-rich islands and the function of dna methylation isolation, properties, and androgen regulation of a -kilodalton protein from rat ventral prostate inhibitory effects of recombinant human cystafin c on human coronaviruses structure of rat genes encoding androgen-regulated cystatin-related proteins (crps): a new member of the cystatin superfamily structure and expression of the gene encoding cystatin d, a novel human cysteine proteinase inhibitor two adjacent ap-l-like binding sites form the electrophile-responsive element of the murine glutathione s-transferase ya subunit gene genetics and probability in animal breeding experiments genomic structure and chromosomal mapping of the murine cd gene abnormal metabolism of -trace alkaline microprotein characterization of response elements for androgens, glucocorticolds and progestins in mouse mammary tumour virus a tissue-specific transcription factor containing a homeodomain specifies a pituitary phenotype structural arrangements of transcription control domains within the '-untranslated leader regions of the hiv-i and hiv- promoters characterization and expression of the complementary dna encoding rat histidine decarboxylase autoinduction of transforming growth factor is mediated by the ap- complex molecular genetic markers spanning mouse chromosome neutrophil chemotactic activity is modulated by human cystatin c, an inhibitor of cysteine proteases modulation of phagocytosis-associated respiratory burst by human cystatin c: role of the n-terminal tetrapeptide lys-pro-pro-arg human cystatin c, a cysteine proteinase inhibitor, inhibits bone resorption in vitro stimulated by parathyroid hormone and parathyroid hormone-related peptide of malignancy a catalogue of splice junction sequences mechanism of transcriptional activation by sp ; evidence for coactivators evolution of proteins of the cystatin superfamily human cysteineproteinase inhibitors: nucleotide sequence analysis of three members of the cystatin gene family cystatin c (cst ), the candidate gene for heretary cystatin c amyloid angiopathy (hccaa), and other members of the cystatin gene family are clustered on chromosome pl . mouse chromosome . mammal cathepsin b and cystatins: evidence for a role in cancer progression transforming growth factor beta regulates cystatin c in serum-free mouse embryo (sfme) cells we thank dr. jakob reiser for critical reading of the manuscript. key: cord- -r wd yfa authors: sokol, deborah k.; lahiri, debomoy k. title: the genetics of autism date: - - journal: international handbook of autism and pervasive developmental disorders doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: r wd yfa this chapter is written to make the fast-paced, expanding field of the genetics of autism accessible to those practitioners who help children with autism. new genetic knowledge and technology have quickly developed over the past years, particularly within the past decade, and have made many optimistic about our ability to explain autism. among these advances include the sequencing of the human genome (lander et al., ) and the identification of common genetic variants via the hapmap project (international hapmap consortium, ), and the development of cost-efficient genotyping and analysis technologies (losh, sullivan, trembath, & piven, ). improvement in technology has led to improved visualization of chromosomal abnormality down to the molecular level. the four most common syndromes associated with autism include fragile x syndrome, tuberous sclerosis, q duplications, and untreated phenylketonuria (pku; costa e silva, ). fxs and q duplications are discussed within the context of cytogenetics. tsc is illustrated within the description of linkage analysis. an affected sibling-pair design in multiplex (having more than one affected member) families. this led to the identification of chromosomal abnormalities in such conditions as neurofibromatosis, tuberous sclerosis, and dyslexia (smith, ) . improving technology in the s enabled the detection of small genomic alterations of - kb and the direct visualization of these alterations in uncultured cells via fluorescent in situ hybridization (fish) . this technique ushered in the field of molecular genetics (li & andersson, ) and allowed the identification of chromosomal microdeletions and duplications in areas of the chromosome where there is already high suspicion that abnormality would exist. fish enables prenatal and cancer genetics screening and has led to the identification of genetic aberrations associated with angelman's and prader willi syndromes. in the past decade, microarray cytogenetics has permitted the study of the entire genome on a single chip with resolution as fine as a few hundred base pairs (li & andersson, ). such microarray technology represents a union between molecular genetics and classical cytogenetics. two types of microarray technology are used clinically: comparative genomic hybridization (cgh) and single-nucleotide polymorphism (snp) analysis. cgh directly measures copy number differences between a patient's dna and a normal reference dna spanning known genes, chromosomal regions, or across the entire genome. snp analysis, on the other hand, provides identification of a single point mutation via sequencing the gene in areas of suspected abnormality, previously identified via cgh or fish. another offshoot of microarray technology is submicroscopic chromosome copy number variation (cnv) analysis, in which deletions or duplications involving > -kb dna have been detected in patients with mental retardation, autism, and multiple congenital anomalies. there are several recent, detailed reviews of the genetics of autism (abrahams & geschwind, ; li & andersson, ; losh et al., ; o'roak & state, ) and this chapter summarizes those reviews. the reader is encouraged to first review the overview of gene expression (box . ) and essential nomenclature used in genetics (box . ). in addition, one must understand basic concepts pertinent to brain development (box . ) and to the neurobiology of autism (box . ) in order to understand its genetics. for example, there is a compelling rationale that genetically directed mechanisms that regulate the assembly of the brain during embryogenesis, when gone awry, may cause autism (costa e silva, ). box . overview of dna replication and gene expression * genes. a gene is a unit of hereditary material located in a specific place (locus) on a chromosome. most genes carry the instructions for producing a specific protein. a protein-coding human gene will have a coding sequence, which contains the information for protein production. the coding sequence may be broken up into several sub-sequences, or exons, which are separated by noncoding dna sequences, or introns. the coding sequence is flanked by a promoter and (usually) a -untranslated region ( -utr) that occur immediately before the coding sequence and by a -utr and a terminator that occur immediately after the coding sequence. promoters, terminators, utrs, and introns can regulate the activity of a given gene. at a molecular level, chromosomes are composed of long chains of deoxyribonucleic acid (dna) upon which genes are linearly arranged. the dna exists in a double helix and the helical strands are usually wrapped around histone proteins. in addition to dna and histones, chromosomes contain scaffolding proteins that provide structural support and may also participate in gene regulation. dna is a molecule composed of a chain of four different types of nucleotides. it is the sequence of these nucleotides that is the genetic information that organisms inherit. dna is double stranded with nucleotides on each strand complementary to each other. each strand acts as a template for creating a new partner strand. this is the physical method for making copies of genes that are inherited. both individual dna nucleotides and dnaassociated proteins can be chemically modified to produce epigenetic variation that may be in response to environmental conditions and might or might not be inherited in any individual case. epigenetic variation can significantly alter the expression level of a gene without changing its basic genetic code. dna replication. during dna replication, a dna strand is produced from component nucleotides using its partner strand as a template. this is done by dna polymerases that "proofread" to ensure accuracy and repair when necessary. despite these safeguards, errors called mutations can occur during the polymerization of this second strand. a mutation is any nucleotide sequence in a dna molecule that does not match its original dna molecule from which it is copied. radiation, such as ultraviolet rays and x-rays, viruses, and errors that occur during meiosis or during dna replication can cause errors in dna molecules. these mutations can have an impact on the phenotype of an organism, especially when they occur within the protein-coding sequence of the gene. kinds of mutations include the following: frameshift mutation: one or more bases are inserted or deleted. this can alter the entire amino acid sequence of a protein or introduce aberrant rna splicing. deletion. missing dna sequences can range from a single base pair to longer deletions involving many genes in the chromosome. insertion. additional nucleotides are inserted in the dna sequence and can result in a nonfunctional protein. duplication (or gene amplification). multiple copies of a complete gene or genes, increasing the dosage of genes located within chromosomes. inversion. dna sequence of nucleotides is reversed, either among a few bases within one gene or among longer dna sequences containing several genes. point mutations. known as substitutions, this is a replacement of a single base nucleotide with another nucleotide. missense mutations. a point mutation where a single nucleotide is changed to cause substitution of a different amino acid. nonsense mutation. a point mutation that results in a premature stop codon in the transcribed mrna and possibly a nonfunctional protein product. rna splicing mutation. a point mutation that inserts or deletes an intron/exon border necessary for splicing of heterogeneous nuclear rna to mrna. silent mutation. a point mutation that does not alter the amino acid coding for that codon. gene expression is the process in which genes express their functional effect through the production of proteins which are responsible for most functions of the cell. the dna sequence of a gene is used to produce a specific protein through a ribose nucleic acid (rna) intermediate. gene dna is the map which directs the production of the protein, normally following a one-way pathway: splicing translation gene regulation gives the cell control over structure and function and is the basis for cellular differentiation and adaptability of any organism. gene regulation is controlled by noncoding dna sequences, such as the promoter, terminator, or introns, and by epigenetic variation, such as differences in dna methylation and histone acetylation. this entire process takes place within the cell in the vicinity of the nucleus, where dna is housed and hnrna is spliced, and in the cytoplasm, where ribosomes are located along the rough endoplasmic reticulum. some proteins are further processed in the golgi apparatus if they are to be exported from the cell. the correspondence between nucleotide and amino acid sequence is known as the genetic code. rna transcription. in transcription, dna is used as a blueprint for the production of rna. transcription is performed by rna polymerase which adds one ribonucleotide to a growing rna strand, complimentary to the dna nucleotide being transcribed. this product is heterologous nuclear rna (hnrna). rna splicing. in splicing, hnrna is processed within the nucleus to remove introns which may function to partially regulate transcription and join exons, which code for the actual protein product. the product of slicing is mrna. translation. translation is the production of proteins by decoding the mrna that was produced by transcription and splicing. the mrna sequence is the template that guides the production of a chain of amino acids that form a protein. decade, this technique enables examination of the whole human genome on a single chip with a resolution as high as a few hundred base pairs. this resolution is at least -fold greater than the best prometaphase chromosomal analysis and therefore, it is the most sensitive for whole genome screen for deletions and duplications. penetrance. the proportion of individuals carrying a particular variation of a gene that also expresses an associated trait. for example, if a mutation has % penetrance, then % of those with the mutation will develop the syndrome, while % will not. is expressed along a continuous phenotype, whose extreme end may produce the disorder such as hypertension, reading disability, or attention-deficit disorder with hyperactivity (adhd). recessive genetic disorders. a number of genetic disorders are caused when an individual inherits two recessive alleles for a single gene trait, such as with cystic fibrosis, pku, or albinism. recessive alleles can be located on the x chromosome so that males are more affected than females (hemizygous), such as in fragile x. a microarray technique that identifies a single point mutation via sequencing the gene in areas of suspected abnormality as identified via cgh or fish. this looks at a smaller region with greater detail than does cgh. * * solomon, berg, and martin ( ) during embryologic development, the brain emerges from the neural tube, an early embryonic structure. the anterior neural tube expands rapidly due to cell proliferation and eventually gives rise to the brain. cells stop dividing and differentiate into neurons and glial cells, the main cellular components of the brain. the neurons must migrate to different parts of the developing brain to self-organize into different brain structures. the neurons grow connections (axons and dendrites) which often must span long distances to reach their target cells. growth cones are the highly motile filamentous connections that eventually form more stable synapses between neurons. neurons communicate with other neurons via these synapses. this communication leads to the establishment of functional neural circuits that mediate sensory-motor processing and behavior. associated with this period of synaptogenesis is a brief period of "programmed" cell death, a pruning process in which cells succumb during natural development (mattson & furukawa, ) . migration of cells from the ventricular zone lining the central canal of the neural tube to the developing cortex next takes place followed by a more protracted period of pruning (volpe, ) . one mechanism that allows cells to detach and migrate away from each other appears to be regulated by a "molecular switch" regulated by catenin adhesion proteins (dicicco-bloom, ). neuroligin, recently described in autism research, is a cell adhesion molecule found in the postsynaptic membrane. also, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (bdnf) is produced by the brain and regulates several functions within the developing synapse, including enhancement of neurotransmitter release. activity at the cns synapses occurs over the life span and is thought to underlie learning and memory. the excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate and its receptors, particularly the n-methyl-d-aspartate (nmda) receptor, initiate synaptogenesis through activation of downstream products. at the cns synapse, a nerve terminal is separated from the postsynaptic membrane by a cleft containing specialized extracellular material. localized vesicles are at the active sites and clustered receptors are at the postsynaptic membrane with glial cells that encapsulate the entire synaptic cleft. there is differentiation of the pre-and postsynaptic membrane following initial contact between two cells. this includes the clustering of receptors, localized upregulation of protein synthesis at the active sites, and continued neuronal pruning through synapse elimination. neurons within the cns receive multiple inputs that must be processed and integrated for successful transfer of information. the multiple inputs physically represent the plasticity of the brain. macrocephaly has been one of the "most widely replicated biological findings in autism" (mccaffery & deutsch, ) , affecting up to % of all children with autism. several reports have shown increased brain volume (macroencephaly/megalencephaly) in both white and grey matter with results varying as a function of age. mri volumetric studies have showed increased brain volume in younger (total ages - ) subjects compared to older (total ages - ) subjects (courchesne, carper, & akshoomoff, ; sokol & edwards-brown, ; sparks et al., ) . to explain the relevance of brain volume enlargement in autism, it has been proposed that brain "growth without guidance" occurs in young autistic children (courchesne et al., ) with premature expansion and overgrowth of neural elements and dendritic connections. indeed, brain enlargement appears to develop postnatally, arising before or during the early recognition of autistic behaviors -between months and years (courchesne et al., ) . proposed mechanisms underlying brain enlargement include overproduction of synapses, failure of synaptic pruning, excessive neurogenesis, gliogenesis, or reduction in cell death (mccaffery & deutsch, ) . the mechanisms underlying the tremendous growth of the typically developing embryonic brain, compared to the relatively more limited postnatal and adult brain growth, have been implicated in the brain enlargement seen in autism. this leads to the proposal that overstimulation of nuclear receptor-mediated gene transcription may increase neural progenitor cells that generate marked increases in cortical surface area (mccaffery & deutsch, ) . therefore, the number of neurons in the young cortex is a function of the number of proliferative cells present at the onset of neurogenesis. tumor suppressor genes which control brain growth and migration, when defective, could contribute to macrocephaly of failure in synaptic pruning. this explains the great interest in tumor suppressor genes such as pten as candidate genes for autism. recently, neuronal cell adhesion has been proposed as another mechanism involved in brain overgrowth in autism. cell adhesion suppresses brain growth, while abnormalities in adhesion promote growth or contribute to aberrant growth. it is believed that heterogeneous causes of autism may be associated with alterations in adhesion molecules of the synapse or cytoplasmic molecules associated with synaptic receptors. indeed, recent genetic evidence has found associations between autism susceptibility and other neuronal cell adhesion molecules, such as nlgn and astn and specific cadherins. there is an emerging theory, as recently reviewed in geschwind ( ) , that short-range brain connections may be overgrown and longer range brain connections between different brain lobules are reduced in autism. in autism, there has been a noted reduction in the size of the corpus callosum which connects the two cerebral hemispheres and reduced connectivity between the frontal and temporal lobes of the brain, locations responsible for language and social judgment. the preservation of normal short-range connections could explain some of the preserved processing functions such as visual perception or attention to detail experienced by many with autism (geschwind, ). three lines of research indirectly attest to the heritability of autism: twin studies, family studies, and the fact that autism affects more boys than girls. in general, hereditability appears to be greater when a broader definition of autism (including individuals with cognitive deficits and/or social impairment) instead of the specific dsm-iv criteria for autism is used. in the first twin study of autism (folstein & rutter, ) , the concordance rate in monozygotic (mz) pairs ( %) was significantly greater than that found in dizygotic (dz) pairs ( %). if the phenotype was expanded to include a cognitive or a language disorder, the concordance rates were and %, respectively. two subsequent studies found an mz/dz concordance rate of - % (steffenburg et al., ) or - % utilizing the specific phenotype, and % vs. % using the broader phenotype which included social or cognitive deficits . across twin studies of autism, the difference between mz and dz concordance rates is sizable, averaging roughly : (pennington, ). this rate is greater than that for other psychiatric disorders such as depression, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia (between : and : ), indicating a high heritability for autism (pennington, ). on the other hand, there was great variability in iq and clinical behaviors in the mz pairs concordant for autism in the study. in other words, there was no more similarity for these traits within mz pairs than that between individuals picked at random from different mz pairs who also had autism. as interpreted by pennington ( ) , this finding suggests that although autism is heritable, the genes may not dictate the exact phenotype. nonadditive interaction among genes (epistasis) and nonshared environmental influences likely contribute to these differences in phenotypes. further, the large disparity between the mz and the dz concordance rates has been attributed to epistasis (pennington, ). alternatively, rare gene variants causing a common disorder (autism), as described below, could contribute to this large mz/dz discordance. individuals with autism rarely marry and have children so that vertical transmission of the diagnosis from parent to child is rarely observed (pennington, ). however, genetic transmission is still possible as parents can transmit genetic risk factors without having the diagnosis themselves. family studies (cited in geschwind & konopka, ; pennington, ) suggest that the risk of autism is - % higher in siblings compared to the incidence of autism in the general population, and to that of other psychiatric disorders. several studies have shown that a broad autism phenotype is transmitted in families of individuals with autism (piven, ; rutter, ) . for example, first-degree relatives of individuals with autism were shown to be shy, aloof, and have problematic pragmatic language (rutter, ) . this pattern is consistent with the segregation of sub-threshold traits within these families (abrahams & geschwind, ) . finally, autism affects more boys than girls ( : ), a finding which has remained constant since kanner's first description of autism in , and despite the increasing incidence of this diagnosis. the predominantly male ratio has been attributed to an abnormality on the x chromosome (discussed below), or to sex linkage or genomic imprinting (lintas & persico, ; marco & skuse, ) . sex linkage involves a gene on the x chromosome transmitted from the mother to the son. as the son has only one x chromosome, this gene would be expressed. since the mother's daughter has two copies of the x chromosome -one from her father and one from her mother -the daughter likely would not express the abnormal phenotype. the most well-known example of a sex-linked disorder is hemophilia, which is on the x chromosome. genomic imprinting, on the other hand, is an epigenetic phenomenon wherein chemical modification of dna that does not alter the basic dna sequence or modification of the dna-associated histone proteins determines whether the maternal or the paternal copy of a specific gene is expressed. genomic imprinting has been determined for prader willi and angelman's syndrome. finally, increased risk for autism has been identified in the offspring of older fathers (reichenberg et al., ) . therefore, the gender and age of the parent may confer risk for offspring with autism. the conclusion drawn from indirect evidence is that autism is the most heritable and familial neurodevelopmental disorder (pennington, ) . with rare exceptions, however, autism does not appear to be the action of a single gene inherited in a strictly mendelian pattern (autosomal dominant, recessive, or x-linked; gupta & state, ; o'roak & state, ) . rather, there are reports of multiple, distinctly rare changes in the genetic code in small subsets of individuals that cause or contribute to autism. there may be multiple gene variants -"a conspiracy of multiple genes" (gupta & state, ) -that converge leading to a given phenotype. despite the indirect evidence for heritability and recent genetic technological advances, a genetic cause can be attributed to only - % of all cases (reviewed in abrahams & geschwind, ) , with a recent report suggesting a genetic cause can be uncovered in up to % of cases (schaefer & lutz, ) . further, abraham and geschwind ( ) state that no single genetic cause accounts for more than - % of cases -similar to what is seen in mental retardation, another condition without a single genetic cause. while numerous studies identifying candidate genes or makers have been reported, very few studies have been replicated (losh et al., ) . reasons to explain why candidates have not been agreed upon include the initial lack of uniform diagnostic criteria (strict vs. broad definition), limited power, varying methodology (losh et al., ) , and neglect of epigenetic factors modeling the disorder (lahiri, maloney, & zawia, ) . further, as with other conditions with a strong heritable component, it appears that different genes may contribute to distinct components of the condition which gives rise to the full disorder through concerted actions (losh et al., ; pickles et al., ) . consequently, it has been said that linkage technology has not "found the autism gene," but rather it demonstrated that more powerful technology is necessary to explain the multiple genes associated with autism (abrahams & geschwind, ) . no one knows just how heterogeneous the syndrome is likely to be, that is, how many genes or regions of dna (loci) may contribute either within a single individual or among the entire group of affected individuals. some of the chromosomal regions and genes that have been associated with autism are summarized in table . and will be addressed herein. in addition, it is important to distinguish between locus heterogeneity, which refers to a variation at many different genes or loci resulting in a similar phenotype, and allelic heterogeneity, which refers to different variations or mutations at the same locus leading to an identical or overlapping clinical picture. accumulating evidence suggest that both play a role in autism (o'roak & state, ) . recently, a rare-variant common disease model has been introduced (o' roak & state, ) . in this model, rare genes explain the common disease of autism. this makes sense in the darwinian tradition that a deleterious change in the human genome leads to reduced fitness and that this would not be likely to propagate within a population. autism fits the rare gene-common disease model as it begins early in life, impairs social interactions, and is associated with mental retardation which impacts reproductive fitness (o'roak & state, ) . the large difference seen between monozygotic and dizygotic concordance rates is consistent with de novo (rare gene) mutation. it appears that simplex families demonstrate de novo mutations more frequentlywith one family member with autism (sebat et al., ) whereas multiplex families demonstrate transmitted variants (bakkaloglu et al., ) . the search for rare variants has led to the study of families that are genetically isolated, with shared ancestry and prone to consanguinity (morrow et al., ; strauss et al., ) to locate recessive alleles. finally, rare sequence variations have been detected, thanks to improved technology such as cnv analysis. indeed within the last - years, bona fide risk genes have been identified due to the improved technology developed after the linkage method (abrahams & geschwind, ) . several of these risk genes will be discussed in the following sections. abrahams and geschwind ( ) write that two views underlie genetic autism research. the first is that rare variants involve an abnormality in a single molecule causing the clinical pathology in autism. mendelian inheritance (autosomal dominant vs. recessive) takes this form. technology compatible with this approach includes cytogenetics (including karyotyping and fish), gene association studies (analysis of genes and protein system from less complex genetic syndromes similar to autism such as rett and fragile x syndromes), linkage studies (including genome screens in affected sibling pairs), microarray technology, and cnv analysis. the second view involves the study of independent hereditary endophenotypes representing the core features of autism. an endophenotype is an operationally defined behavioral feature such as age of first spoken word. although there is a general consensus regarding endophenotypes commonly seen in autism, the behaviors may not be specific to autism, as delay in language acquisition accompanies many developmental disorders. ideally, endophenotypes represent discreet behaviors which do not overlap with other behaviors from the autism core domains (i.e., language, socialization, and rigid behavior). for example, poor eye contact, representing a deficit with socialization, is construed as being independent of repetitive behaviors, thought to represent the rigid behavior domain. genetic study of these discreet endophenotypes, largely undertaken via linkage studies, narrows the scope of analysis (losh et al., ; o'roak & state, ) . reports of chromosomal abnormalities detected by karyotyping first demonstrated that rare variants may contribute to autism (vorstman et al., ) . estimates of chromosomal abnormalities in autism range from to % (abrahams & geschwind, ; marshall et al., ; pennington, ; schaefer & lutz, ) so that genetic workup is now being recommended for all children diagnosed with autism (pennington, ; . chromosomal studies have produced a great interest in chromosome q - , the site of the most frequent chromosomal anomaly seen in autism (reviewed in veenstra-vanderweele & cook, ) . the maternally derived duplication of this region involves an imprinting mechanism. maternal interstitial duplication or supernumerary inverted duplication of q - is seen in - % of patients (cook et al., ; schroer et al., ) . clinical features of chromosomal derangement in this region include mental retardation, motor impairment, seizure disorder, and impairment in communication, in some but not all with autism or attentiondeficit hyperactivity disorder (adhd; cook et al., ; schroer et al., ) . the duplication of q - seen in some cases of autism is the opposite of deletions from the same region seen in angelman's syndrome (if inherited from the mother) or prader willi syndrome (if inherited from the father). angelman's syndrome, known as the "happy puppet" phenotype, involves mental retardation, epilepsy, ataxia, lack of speech, predominant laughing and smiling, and a high rate of autism. prader willi syndrome associated with mental retardation and hyperphagia is only occasionally associated with autism. presently, there is ongoing research regarding how duplications and deletions in this gene region lead to an increased risk of autism (veenstra-vanderweele & cook, ) . this region, however, has not been identified as one of interest in whole genome searches, perhaps due to its rarity (pennington, ). still, fish analysis of chromosome q - is often performed in evaluation of children with autism. recently, fish is being replaced by cgh due to improved detection of abnormality within the q - region. cytogenetic approaches provided the first evidence for an autism gene years ago when lubs ( ) identified an abnormal or "fragile" site on the long arm of chromosome x in four males with mental retardation, leading to the recognition of fragile x syndrome (fxs). this syndrome, associated with mental retardation and autistic features, is more severely expressed in males. fxs is caused by a deficiency of the fragile x mental retardation protein (fmrp), resulting from little or none of the disease gene fragile x mental retardation (fmr ) mrna. the fmr gene mutation consisting of expanded cgg repeats of > at chromosome site xq . is considered the origin of fxs. autism, using the broad definition, has been reported in up to % of males with fxs, and fxs can be found in as many as - % of individuals with autism (muhle, trentacoste, & rapin, ) . later studies, using dna measures of the fragile x mutation rather than cytogenetics and strict autism criteria, have found a smaller association between fxs and autism (pennington, ) . two investigations, however, which studied carefully controlled groups of fxs-negative and fxs-positive males matched on intelligence, found higher rates of the following autistic symptoms in fxs males: gaze avoidance and hand flapping (einfeld, molony, & hall, ) and stereotypic movements (including hand flapping, rocking, and hitting, scratching, or rubbing their own bodies), echolalia, gaze avoidance, and ritualistic behaviors (maes, fryns, van walleghem, & van den berghe, ) . studies of endophenotype behaviors rather than the strict autism criteria are more likely to uncover robust similarities between fxs and autism. exploring similarities between rare sub-groups of patients with a known disorder and those with a more common disorder (autism) provides a window into the shared biology between the disorders. fmrp has been shown to interact with multiple transcripts in repressing metabotropic glutamate receptor- (mglur ) signaling activity which regulates long-term depression (ltd) associated with synaptic elimination. without fmrp acting as a "brake," mglur-ltd is enhanced (bear, huber, & warren, ) . this favors an anabolic state which could contribute to the key features of fxs such as epilepsy, cognitive impairment, loss of motor coordination, and increased density of thin, long, dendritic spines in neurons (bear, ) . these observations have invited drug trials of glutamate receptor antagonists to reduce the expression of mglur (dolen et al., ) in individuals with fxs and in individuals with autism. other genes contributing to medical conditions such as alzheimer's disease are under investigation to determine if they, too, share biology with autism and fxs. the discovery of fragile x ataxia syndrome (fxtas) provides a precedent to study the relationship of developmental conditions across the life span within and between families. fxtas is an adult-onset ataxia/dementia syndrome found in older family members of individuals with fxs (hagerman, ; hagerman et al., ) . in contrast to what is found in fxs, fxtas occurs with a rise in fmr mrna level (hagerman, ) , fewer than repeats (basehore & friez, ) , and hypomethylation (berry-kravis, potanas, weinberg, zhou, & goetz, ) in the fmr cgg section on the x chromosome. this association of two clinically divergent disorders, regulated by the same gene produced in different doses, sets the stage for the investigation of the shared biology between autism, fxs, and other genes related to alzheimer's disease such as amyloid precursor protein (app). app, which is encoded by a gene on chromosome , is a large ( - amino acid) glycoprotein produced in several central nervous system (cns) cell types including microglia, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes, and neurons. after protein processing, mature app is axonally transported and can be released from axon terminals in response to electrical activity. app is believed to play an important role in neuronal maturation and in synaptogenesis as reviewed by lahiri, farlow, greig, giacobini, and schneider ( ) . app is of great interest because processing products of app can include the insoluble - -amino acid amyloid β-peptide (aβ- and aβ- , respectively), the principal component of the cerebral plaques associated with memory and cognitive decline in alzheimer's disease (alley et al., ) . recent research linking app to autism illustrates how association studies enable the generation of new hypotheses about the biology of autism and ultimately advance our understanding of this disorder. recently, we found evidence to support an association between autism and one of the app pathways established for alzheimer's disease. in contrast to the upregulation of the amyloidogenic pathway as seen in alzheimer's disease, we found evidence that there may be an upregulation of the nonamyloidogenic (α-secretase amyloid precursor protein, sappα) pathway in a small sample of children with severe autism associated with self-injurious and aggressive behavior. that is, children with severe autism expressed total sapp (representing the combined amyloidogenic and nonamyloidogenic pathways) at two or more times the levels of children without autism and up to four times the levels of children with mild autism (sokol et al., ) . overall, there was a trend toward higher sappα within the children with autism. one of the severely autistic children in this study had fxs. high levels of sappα have also been found in a sample of children with autism from an independent laboratory (bailey et al., ) . high levels of sappα imply an increased α-secretase pathway in autism (anabolic), opposite to what is seen in alzheimer's disease. this would be consistent with the brain overgrowth hypothesis attributed to autism, in contrast to the brain atrophy seen with the deposition of amyloid plaque in alzheimer's disease. coincidentally, via animal studies, westmark and malter ( ) concluded that fmrp binds to and regulates translation of app mrna through mglur , providing a potential link between neuronal proteins associated with ad and fxs. by way of mglur , fmrp provides the "brake," which if unchecked in conditions such as fxs would favor high levels of app. further, high levels of app have been found in another study of fmr knockout mice (d'agata et al., ) . these findings have led to enticing speculation that the app gene may influence several neurodevelopmental disorders across the life span. both chromosomal inversions and translocations have been reported near q in boys with autism. one of these translocation breakpoints identified the deranged gene as ray /st (fam a ), a putative tumor suppressor gene (vincent et al., ) , and work in this region is ongoing. mutations leading to amino acid changes have been found on the wnt gene on q in two families with autism, and one affected parent transmitting the mutation to two affected children (li et al., ; wassink, brzustowicz, bartlett, & szatmari, ) . the foxp gene on q was found to be disrupted in one family with an autosomal dominant form of specific language impairment (sli) (lai, fisher, hurst, vargha-khadem, & monaco, ) , and this was replicated in a larger study of sli (o'brien, zhang, nishimura, tomblin, & murray, ) , although initial studies failed to associate this with autism (newbury et al., ; wassink et al., ) . recently, foxp differences in gene expression were found between chimp and human cell cultures . compared to chimps, in human culture, the foxp gene affected transcription upregulation in genes and downregulation in genes. further, the foxp gene was shown to regulate downstream effects involving cerebellar motor function, craniofacial formation, and cartilage and connective tissue formation required for expressive language. as discussed in section "endophenotype," there is a suspected association between the chromosome q region and speech abnormality seen in autism. the reln gene maps to chromosome q . this gene encodes a protein that controls intercellular interactions involved in neuronal migration and positioning in brain development. a large polymorphic trinucleotide repeat in the -ytr of the reln gene has been implicated in autism in several studies (ashley-koch et al., ; persico et al., ; zhang et al., ) . further support for this candidate gene comes from the reln mouse model which carries a large deletion in reln and shows atypical cortical organization similar to cytoarchitectural pathological anomalies reported in the brains of individuals with autism (bailey et al., ) . pten is a tumor suppressor gene located on chromosome q . this gene influences the cell-cell arrest cycle and apoptosis or programmed cell death (lintas & persico, ) . pten inactivation causes excessive growth of dendrites and axons, with an increased number of synapses (kwon et al., ) . mutations in pten cause cowden's syndrome (macrocephaly, hamartomas, and autism). this gene has been of interest to autism researchers as macrocephaly has been considered to be one of the "most widely replicated biological findings in autism" affecting up to % of all children with the condition (mccaffery & deutsch, ) . butler et al. ( ) examined the pten gene in individuals with autism and macrocephaly. they discovered three with pten missense mutations. others have found pten mutations in macrocephalic patients with autism (herman et al., a (herman et al., , b . cytogenic abnormalities have included deletions and duplications involving q , q , q , p , p . , q, xp, and sex chromosome aneuploidies ( , xyy and , x/ , and xy mosaicism) (costa e silva, ; sykes & lamb, ) . these genetic findings have generated interest in testing the association of a number of candidate genes in these regions via linkage and animal studies. accumulating evidence points to the involvement of three genes (neuroligin, shank , and neurexin) in the synapse formation of glutamate neurons. glutamate is an excitatory neurotransmitter and aberrant glutamate function has long been suspected to contribute to autism. neuroligins induce presynaptic differentiation in glutamate axons. shank encodes for a postsynaptic scaffolding protein which regulates the structural organization of dendritic spines in neurons. consequently, shank is a binding partner of neuroligins. neurexin induces glutamate postsynaptic differentiation in contacting dendrites. altogether, these genes appear to contribute to glutamatergic synapse formation. neuronal cell adhesion is important in the development of the nervous system, contributing to axonal guidance, synaptic formation and plasticity, and neuronalglial interactions (glessner et al., ; lien, klezovitch, & vasioukhin, ) . derangement in cell adhesion could contribute to migrational abnormalities including brain overgrowth. neuroligins are cell-adhesion molecules localized postsynaptically at both glutamatergic (nlgn , nlgn , nlgn , nlgn y) and γ-aminobutyric acidergic (nlgn ) synapses (lintas & persico, ) . neuroligins trigger the formation of functional presynaptic structures in contacting axons. as mentioned above, they interact with postsynaptic scaffolding proteins such as shank (see below). the nlgn and nlgn genes are located at chromosomes xq and xq , , respectively, and mutations here have been associated with autism jamain et al. ( ) . extensive genetic screens conducted by several research groups have confirmed the low frequency of neuroligin mutations among individuals with autism (lintas & persico, ) . for example, jamain et al. ( ) found a frameshift mutation in nlgn and a missense mutation in nlgn in two unrelated swedish families, inherited from unaffected mothers. laumonnier et al. ( ) reported a frameshift mutation in nlgn in affected male members of a single pedigree. lawson-yuen, saldivar, sommer, and picker ( ) found a deletion of exons - of nlgn in a boy with autism and in his brother with tourette syndrome whose mother showed psychiatric problems and also carried the mutation. neuroligin mutation carriers, however, display a variety of syndromes, such as x-linked mental retardation without autism (laumonnier et al., ) , asperger's syndrome, autistic disorder of variable severity, and pdd-nos (yan et al., ) . the symptoms may be slow, or abrupt and associated with regression. despite intensive investigation, the low frequency of neuroligin mutations and the lack of similar phenotypes have led to the recommendation that neuroligins should not be included in widespread screens for individuals with nonsyndromic autism (lintas & persico, ). the shank gene is located on chromosome q . which encodes for a scaffolding protein found in the postsynaptic density complex of excitatory synapses binding to neuroligins. recently, two studies have reported a correlation between mutations affecting shank and an autism phenotype characterized by severe verbal and social deficits (durand et al., ; moessner et al., ) . of the seven patients reported with the shank gene mutations, five were deletions, one was a missense, and another a frameshift mutation. in addition, rare shank variations were present in the autism group, but not in the control group. these variations were inherited from healthy parents and they were present in unaffected siblings, perhaps demonstrating incomplete penetrance. another interesting observation is that in both studies (durand et al., ; moessner et al., ) , the shank deletion was inherited via a paternal balanced translocation. further, in both studies, siblings of the probands with shank abnormalities had partial q trisomy that resulted in attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (moessner et al., ) and asperger's syndrome with early language development (durand et al., ) . like neuroligins, shank mutations are very rare. however, because of the robust genotype-phenotype correlation reported in two studies (durand et al., ; moessner et al., ) , it has been recommended that children with severe language and social impairment obtain shank mutation screening (lintas & persico, ). presynaptic neurexins influence postsynaptic differentiation in contacting dendrites by interactions with postsynaptic neuroligins. three neurexin genes (nrxn , nrxn , and nrxn ) are located on chromosome loci q , q , and q . -q . , respectively. again, neurexin mutations are very rare. for example, two missense mutations were present in of ( . %) individuals with autism compared to none in controls (feng et al., ) . however, in this study, missense mutations also occurred in first-degree relatives who displayed heterogeneous phenotypes such as hyperactivity, depression, and learning problems. incomplete penetrance may explain these findings, or autism may be caused by neurexin acting synergistically with other susceptibility genes. neurexin- α is being intensely studied in mice as deletion in this molecule resulted in increased repetitive behavior, whereas social behavior was relatively intact (etherton, blaiss, powell, & sudhof, ). this implies an animal model for a discreet feature of autistic behavior (endotype), as discussed below. contactin-associated protein-like (cntnap ) is a member of the neurexin superfamily which involves a recessive frameshift mutation on chromosome q . it is one of the largest genes of the human genome and encodes caspr , a transmembrane scaffolding protein. cntnap has been associated with cortical dysplasia-focal epilepsy in an old order amish community (strauss et al., ) . autism was present in up to % of these individuals. we recently reported cntnap in an amish girl with epilepsy and autism who also showed hepatosplenomegaly (jackman, horn, molleston, & sokol, ). cntnap has been associated with an autism language phenotype in large studies of non-amish individuals (alarcon et al., ) . further, stage two of this investigation showed that cntnap was expressed in the language centers (frontal and anterior temporal lobes) of fetal brain (alarcon et al., ) . it has been recommended that amish children presenting with autism should be tested for cntnap gene mutation (strauss, personal communication) . this work again supports a language function associated with chromosome . methyl-cpg-binding protein (mecp ) works as a transcriptional repressor within gene-promoting regions involved in chromatin repression. this gene is located on chromosome xq and shows mutation in % of females with rett syndrome (pervasive developmental disorder, acquired microcephaly, epilepsy, and loss of hand function). this gene has been studied in children with autism, and mecp mutations are considered to be rare ( . - . %) in females with autism. interestingly, autism and rett syndrome share some similarities at the phenotypic and pathogenic levels, and both disorders were proposed to result from disruption of postnatal or experience-dependent synaptic plasticity (zoghbi, ) . among the rett mutations reported are a frameshift mutation, a nonsense mutation, and additional introns (lintas & persico, ). observe that mecp has not been associated with idiopathic autism in males so that this gene test is recommended only for females with autism. linkage studies involve determining whether the transmission of a chromosomal segment from one generation to another coincides with the presence of the phenotype of interest (gupta & state, ) . linkage can be utilized in mendelian inherited conditions and can also be used to study complex conditions such as in autism when mendelian inheritance is unlikely, and there is no hypotheses regarding the specific nature of transmission. linkage studies can be grouped into two types -the conventional study of a chromosomal region of interest in affected sibling-pairs from multiplex families and the more recent genome-wide linkage analysis in which every chromosome is evaluated simultaneously. in the sib-pair study method, siblings with autism are evaluated to determine whether they share any regions of the genome more frequently than would be expected by chance. genomic wide association studies compare genetic risk factors in the form of specific genetic markers in cases and controls. these markers are distributed within the entire genome rather than limited to specific gene regions such as in the sib-pair method. this enables a more unbiased ascertainment of regions of interest (losh et al., ) . several genome-wide scans of individuals with autism have been reported and evidence in favor of linkage has been determined for the majority of chromosomes (gupta & state, ) . the trouble with these studies is that the evidence has not reached statistical significance and there is lack of replication for many of these findings. statistical significance is calculated by a logarithm of the odds (lod) score. this score represents the logarithm of the likelihood ratio of observing the data under a model of linkage to observing the data under a model of free recombination (no linkage). an lod score of . in a sib-pair analysis is considered to be a significant linkage (lander & kruglyak, ) . suggestive linkage is an lod score of . , and a highly significant lod score is . . for replication studies, the replication threshold is considered to be . (lander & kruglyak, ) . by chance, one would expect to see a suggestive linkage peak once every genome scan or a significant peak once every scans (gupta & state, ) . most linkage studies have identified linkage regions reaching the level of suggestive linkage at best (freitag, ) . despite large increases in the size of patient cohorts, linkage signals have not increased significantly with sample size (abrahams & geschwind, ) . only three loci ( q, q, and q - ) have been replicated for nonsyndromic autism and are considered to have genome-wide significance. genomic-wide screens have engendered great interest in chromosome q with distinctive peaks involving two distinct regions: q - and q - (international molecular genetic study of autism consortium-imgsac, ; collaborative linkage study of autism, ). as chromosome q has been discussed in section "cytogenetics: rare mutations," chromosome and then q will follow the description of how linkage studies led to the discovery of the gene loci for a syndromic form of autism: tuberous sclerosis complex (tsc). the sibling-pair from multiplex family design has been used to study autism within many genetic loci, including those involved in tsc; the genomewide linkage analysis has detected linkage on chromosomes q, q, q , and novel loci. tuberous sclerosis complex (tsc) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by cognitive delay, epilepsy, and neurocutaneous growths including hamartomas (i.e., tubers) within the central nervous system and other organs. up to % of individuals with tsc have autism. the first suspicion of a chromosomal abnormality associated with tsc originated from a linkage study of protein markers within multigenerational families affected with tsc (fryer et al., ) . in eight of the families, abo blood group gene mapped to chromosome q . . many groups corroborated these results using larger numbers of families (au, williams, gambello, & northrup, ) . these linkage studies established the tsc gene, later discovered to encode hamartin, a growth suppressor protein. another tsc gene site was discovered via linkage studies on chromosome p . , known as tsc . this gene produces the tumor suppressor protein tuberin. further evidence showed that hamartin works together with tuberin in several cell-signaling pathways including a growth and translation regulatory pathway (p k/pkb), a cell adhesion/migration/protein transportation pathway [glycogen synthase kinase (gsk )/β-catenin/focal adhesion kinase/ras-related homolog (rho) pathway], and a cell growth and proliferation pathway [mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk)]. the tuberin-hamartin complex affects mtor kinase activity (au et al., ) , promoting tumor growth. this discovery has led to the study of rapamycin, a drug used in organ transplant and cancer treatment, as a therapy for suppressing growth of tumors in tsc (kenerson, aicher, true, & yeung, ) . other growth-promoting genes such as pten have been linked to the tuberin-hamartin gene complex as contributors to the general overgrowth in tsc. as previously discussed, pten is a gene of interest in autism. buxbaum et al. ( ) , together with the seaver autism research center (sars), reported a two-point dominant lod score of . on chromosome q in affected sibling pairs. in a second-stage screening which employed families with autism probands, the strongest linkage was at this same location. the imgsac study showed a strong linkage to q as described above, but also found linkage to q (imgsac, ) , with a more recent study also providing evidence for linkage to q (imgsac, b) . early recognition of the need for large patient cohorts and substantial genetic heterogeneity led to the establishment of the autism genetic resource exchange (agre) composed of over families. agre is a publically available resource of phenotypic data and biomaterials. genomic scan linkage analysis was performed on autistic sibling pairs from agre families together with analysis of those pairs from an independent sample of families from the same agre cohort (cantor et al., ) . when families with autism were stratified into only those with affected males, there was significant linkage at q - in both samples. the lod score for this replicated work was at genome-wide level of significance (lod score > . ). one positional candidate gene close to this region is the serotonin transporter gene (slc a ) which codes for a protein controlling the reuptake of serotonin in the synapse. this was exciting as elevated levels of serotonin have been determined in - % of cases of autism (cook et al., ) . indeed, relationship between the slc a site and a repeat polymorphic region in its promoter region ( httlpr) recently has been independently investigated (losh et al., ) . the chromosome q locus, however, has not been uniformly observed in subsequent, large-scale studies (schellenberg et al., ) which may be due to phenotypic heterogeneity. a very recent genome-wide linkage mapping study in a sample of , multiplex autism families (weiss, arking, daly, & chakravarti, ) identified significant linkage on chromosome p and suggestive linkage on chromosome q . in this study, no associations meeting criteria for genome-wide significance were found, suggesting there are not many common loci of moderate to large effect size. however, replication data revealed a novel snp locus on chromosome p . this region was adjacent to sema a, a member of the semaphoring axonal guidance protein family which has been shown to be downregulated in transformed b lymphocytes from autism samples (weiss et al., ). the authors further demonstrated lower sema a gene expression in autism brain tissue. this finding is in keeping with the suspected derangement in the migration of cortical neurons during embryogenesis in autism. microarray technology is transforming the identification of chromosome duplications and deletions (gupta & state, ) . this new technology, known as high-density, oligonucleotide-based array comparative genomic hybridization (acgh), is now available for widespread use. this technique uses patient dna and control dna, each labeled with a fluorescent tag (red or green). equal amounts of dna from patient and control are hybridized to known regions of the human genome pre-arrayed on a slide. if patient and control have equal copy numbers at a given locus, the color turns yellow, representing an equal measure of dna. if the patient has lost (deleted) a locus, only the control color is visualized. if the patient has an extra copy at a locus (duplication), the patient color predominates. the acgh probe may be enriched for known genes or specific chromosomal regions for known syndromes, or distributed evenly across the whole genome. this new technique is now available at all major medical centers and through signature genomic laboratories (www.signaturegenomics.com). single-nucleotide polymorphism (snp) analysis probes thousands of snps and provides data about copy number and genotype (li & andersson, ). the genotype can be used to study uniparental disomy (upi) seen in imprinting disorders and consanguinity. this technique is better at focused study of specific gene regions instead of the whole genome. additionally, snp analysis uses pre-established laboratory standards rather than intraexperimental controls. both snp analysis and acgh map produce copy number variation, and it is common for labs to first perform acgh and follow up with snp in specific regions of interest. today, cnv from several thousand nucleotides can be identified, greatly improving upon the sensitivity of conventional cytogenetics. sebat et al. ( ) showed that cnvs were present in % of affected individuals from singleincidence autism families (i.e., sporadic cases), contrasting with substantially lower rates observed in controls ( %) and autism cases from multiplex families ( %). this has led to the general expectation that de novo cnvs are more likely to be found in sporadic (and as it turns out, dysmorphic) cases. jacquemont et al., reported cnv rearrangements in ( . %) of patients with syndromic autism (including facial dysmorphism, limb or visceral malformations, and growth abnormalities). there were no reoccurrence or overlap in these variants for the eight children. chromosome q -p and neurexins were implicated in a linkage study using snp-cnv in , families with at least two affected individuals through the autism genome project (szatmari et al., ) . microarray technology, however, comes with the realization that typically developing individuals have more structural variants than previously imagined (sebat et al., ) . there is growing concern that cnv irregularities may not be pathological and therefore not be a cause of autism (tabor & cho, ) . these authors note that using diagnostic tools prematurely in a clinical context may be "unethical, either because of over-treatment, under-treatment, unwarranted labeling and stigmatization, or a false sense of security." certainly, further studies on large cohorts of children with the same deletion/duplication are necessary to enable clinical application of this technology. due to the phenotypic heterogeneity of autism and the lack of finding a specific gene, researchers have narrowed the scope of analysis to more pure, operationally defined behaviors/traits. endophenotypes are behavioral, physiological, and/or neuropsychological markers that are present in both affected and unaffected individuals. rather than searching for "autism genes," endophenotype investigations search for smaller grouping of genes that contribute to discreet phenotypes (losh et al., ) . this approach allows for measurement of "dosage" of a trait and can be applied to affected as well as unaffected individuals. specific language impairment (sli) is defined as the failure of normal development of language without hearing loss, mental retardation, or oral motor, neurological, or psychiatric impairment. this affects approximately % of children entering school (tomblin et al., ) . individuals with sli perform poorly on phonologically based tasks and many go on to develop dyslexia (stothard, snowling, bishop, chipchase, & kaplan, ). there appears to be neurostructural association between sli and autism (herbert et al., ; ) , and there is an associated finding of language delay in relatives of probands with autism (wassink et al., ) . several investigations have found strong linkage of sli to chromosome q (bartlett et al., ; ) and to chromosomes q and q (sli consortium, , . this finding is noteworthy as it directly overlies the q locus linked to autism (wassink et al., ) . a specific language marker, age of first word, has shown significant linkage to chromosome observed by five separate investigators (losh et al., ) . the q region has been the subject of intense investigation, as described above, and may be the loci associated with autism language. the restricted and repetitive behavior (rrb) endophenotype in children with autism is receiving attention (morgan, wetherby, & barber, ) . rrb comprises one prong of the autism clinical triad (language deficit, social deficit, and rrb). cuccaro et al. ( ) identified two factors underlying rrb as measured by the autism diagnostic interview-revised (adi-r): repetitive sensory motor actions and resistance to change. this is of interest as a genetic linkage signal has been reported for resistance to change on chromosome . it appears that the analysis of phenotypic homogeneous subtypes may be a powerful tool for mapping of candidate genes in complex traits such as autism. the recent marked increase in the incidence and awareness of autism has resulted in an increase in the number of children sent for diagnostic evaluation. the general consensus within the literature is that genetic consultation should be conducted on all persons with the confirmed diagnosis of autism. while referral for genetic consult is often preferred, often the primary practitioner, pediatrician, and/or pediatric neurologist are in a position to conduct the initial evaluation. further, clinical geneticists may not be available, particularly in underserved areas of the country, or a timely genetic evaluation may not be possible due to lengthy waiting lists. therefore, the clinician taking care of a child with autism may wish to initiate the genetic evaluation. recently, sequential guidelines for clinical genetics evaluation in autism have been published by schaefer, mendelsohn, and the professional practice and guidelines committee ( ) (see box . ). these evidence-based guidelines have evolved from an original retrospective study of patients referred for clinical genetics evaluation between the years and at the university of nebraska medical center (schaefer & lutz, ) . the guidelines are dynamic rather than static and have been updated, for example, as acgh has become more available. the stepwise approach was designed to balance cost with the expected yield of the tests. further, there is a pyramidal effect so that "earlier tiers have a greater expected diagnostic yield, lower invasiveness of testing, better potential of intervention, and easier overall practicality" . summarizing the diagnostic yields expected for the following investigations (high-resolution chromosome studies, %; acgh -beyond that detected by chromosome analysis - %; fragile x, %; mecp , % women only; pten, % if head circumference > . sd; other, %), it was predicted that utilization of these guidelines would lead to diagnosis in % of cases (schaefer, mendelsohn, and the professional practice and guidelines committee ( ) . finally, this stepwise approach has met the approval of third-party payers and families (schaefer & lutz, ). confirmation of diagnosis of autism by trained professional using objective criteria and tools sensory screening ( this initial step includes confirming the diagnosis of autism using objective (dsm-iv) criteria and/or standardized objective measures such as those discussed in chapter . an audiogram is obtained to rule out hearing loss and an electroencephalogram (eeg) is obtained if there is a clinical suspicion of seizures. cognitive testing, when appropriate, can determine mental retardation. finally, verifying the results of the newborn screen can help rule out rubella and pku. initial assessment involves a standard clinical genetic history and physical exam to identify known syndromes or associated conditions. included would be a wood's lamp examination of the skin to help rule out neurocutaneous conditions such as tsc. also, for suspected diagnoses, standard metabolic screening is performed to check for urine mucopolysaccharides and organic acids as well as serum lactate, amino acid, ammonia, and acylcarnitine profile. if not already performed, high-resolution chromosomal analysis and dna for fragile x is sent. if the studies in the first tier are unrevealing, the second tier checks for acgh duplications and deletions. for patients with pigmentary abnormalities on exam but with a normal leukocyte karyotype, skin biopsy can be obtained to obtain a fibroblast karyotype. for females, mecp gene testing is obtained; for children with head circumference greater than . sd from the mean, pten gene testing is recommended. lower yield tests have been reserved for this level: brain magnetic resonance imaging and serum and urine uric acid. further tests are outlined depending on the results (high or low) of the uric acid tests. we would add here that if a child has significant language impairment, a shank mutation should be ruled out. finally, new susceptibility loci that can contribute to the autism phenotype are continually identified and catalogued in the online mendelian inheritance in man (omim) database (http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sites/entrez). using this search engine, a patient's phenotype including dysmorphic features can be entered into the program to generate a list of possible genetic diagnoses. most clinical geneticists work with genetic counselors who interpret the findings into recurrent risks for full siblings. the tiered clinical genetics evaluation should identify two groups of individuals: those with and those without an identifiable etiology for autism. for those without an identifiable etiology, counseling should be provided according to multifactorial inheritance . that is, % recurrence rate if the proband is a girl and % if the proband is a boy. if a second child has autism, a reasonable recurrence rate, based upon published reports, is %. advances in autism genetics: on the threshold of a new neurobiology linkage, association, and geneexpression analyses identify cntnap as an autism-susceptibility gene memantine lowers amyloid-beta peptide levels in neuronal cultures and in app/ps transgenic mice investigation of potential gene-gene interactions between apoe and reln contributing to autism risk molecular genetic basis of tuberous sclerosis complex: from bench to bedside peripheral biomarkers in autism: secreted amyloid precursor protein-alpha as a probable key player in early diagnosis autism as a strongly genetic disorder: evidence from a british twin study molecular cytogenetic analysis and resequencing of contactin associated protein-like in autism spectrum disorders examination of potential overlap in autism and language loci on chromosomes , , and in two independent samples ascertained for specific language impairment a major susceptibility locus for specific language impairment is located on q molecular analysis of fragile x syndrome therapeutic implications of the mglur theory of fragile x mental retardation the mglur theory of fragile x mental retardation fragile x-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome in sisters related to x-inactivation subset of individuals with autism spectrum disorders and extreme macrocephaly associated with germline pten tumour suppressor gene mutations mutation screening of the pten gene in patients with autism spectrum disorders and macrocephaly replication of autism linkage: finemapping peak at q an autosomal genomic screen for autism an autosomal genomic screen for autism autistic children and 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association scan reveals novel loci for autism fmrp mediates mglur -dependent translation of amyloid precursor protein analysis of the neuroligin and genes in autism and other neuropsychiatric patients reelin gene alleles and susceptibility to autism spectrum disorders postnatal neurodevelopmental disorders: meeting at the synapse? science acknowledgment thanks to bryan maloney, m.s. for his help in editing this manuscript. key: cord- -rsqon w authors: abbas, mostafa; el-manzalawy, yasser title: machine learning based refined differential gene expression analysis of pediatric sepsis date: - - journal: bmc med genomics doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rsqon w background: differential expression (de) analysis of transcriptomic data enables genome-wide analysis of gene expression changes associated with biological conditions of interest. such analysis often provides a wide list of genes that are differentially expressed between two or more groups. in general, identified differentially expressed genes (degs) can be subject to further downstream analysis for obtaining more biological insights such as determining enriched functional pathways or gene ontologies. furthermore, degs are treated as candidate biomarkers and a small set of degs might be identified as biomarkers using either biological knowledge or data-driven approaches. methods: in this work, we present a novel approach for identifying biomarkers from a list of degs by re-ranking them according to the minimum redundancy maximum relevance (mrmr) criteria using repeated cross-validation feature selection procedure. results: using gene expression profiles for children with sepsis and septic shock, we identify degs and propose a -gene signature for reliably predicting pediatric sepsis mortality with an estimated area under roc curve (auc) score of . . conclusions: machine learning based refinement of de analysis is a promising tool for prioritizing degs and discovering biomarkers from gene expression profiles. moreover, our reported -gene signature for pediatric sepsis mortality may facilitate the development of reliable diagnosis and prognosis biomarkers for sepsis. pediatric sepsis is a life-threatening condition that is considered a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in infants and children [ , ] . sepsis is a systematic response to infection that is characterized by a generalized pro-inflammatory cascade, which may lead to extensive tissue damage [ ] . early recognition of sepsis and septic shock will help pediatric care physicians to intervene before the onset of advanced organ dysfunction and thus reduce the mortality and length of stay as well as post critical care complications [ ] . however, reliable risk stratification of sepsis, especially in children, is a challenge due to significant patient heterogeneity [ ] and existing poor definitions of sepsis in pediatric populations [ ] . existing physiological scoring tools commonly used in intensive care units (icus), such as acute physiologic and chronic health evaluation (apache) [ ] and sepsis-related organ failure assessment (sofa) [ ] , use clinical and laboratory measurements to quantify critical illness severity but provide little information about the risk for poor outcome (e.g., mortality) at the onset of the disease [ ] . several recent studies have proposed sepsis prognostic biomarkers (e.g., [ , , ] ) as well as sepsis diagnostic biomarkers (e.g., [ ] [ ] [ ] ) by differentiating between infectious and non-infectious systemic inflammatory response syndrome. to date, transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic data have been used to identify sets of genes, proteins, or metabolites that are differentially expressed among patients [ ] . however, a major challenge for developing clinically feasible sepsis biomarkers is to have a fast turnaround time [ , ] . recent advances in high-throughput transcriptomic technology have created opportunities for precision critical care medicine by enabling fast and clinically feasible profiling of gene expressions within few hours. for example, wong et al. [ ] used a multiplex messenger rna quantification platform (nanostring ncounter) to profile the expressions of previously identified three subclass-defining genes [ ] in - h. differential gene expression analysis is a commonly used computational approach for identifying genes whose expressions are significantly different between two phenotypes. given gene expression profiles for septic patients annotated with targeted outcome (e.g., survivals vs. non-survivals), this analysis typically associates a p-value (that could be corrected for multiple hypothesis testing) with each gene from the two groups (e.g. survivals and non-survivals). then, degs are those genes with p-values lower than a specific threshold (typically, . ) and user-specified thresholds for fold change (fc) for up-and downregulated genes [ ] . a typical de analysis of gene expression profiles often return hundred or more degs, where considerable number of them might be highly correlated with one or more other degs. against this background, we present a novel method for refining the results of the statistical de analysis methods via re-ranking and prioritizing the genes from the outcome of de analysis. specifically, we propose a hybrid approach that leverages: i) statistical de analysis for identifying a wide list of degs; ii) supervised feature selection methods for selecting an optimal subset of degs with maximum relevance for predicting the target variable and minimum redundancy among selected genes; iii) supervised machine learning methods for assessing the discriminatory power of the selected genes. using gene expression profiles from the blood samples extracted from children admitted to icu and diagnosed with sepsis or septic shock, we first report a list of degs and associated enriched functional pathways. then, we demonstrate the viability of our proposed gene re-ranking method in identifying a -gene signature for mortality in pediatric sepsis. finally, we make our python code (including notebooks examples for refining degs and analyzing biomarkers using two example datasets) publicly available at https://bitbucket.org/i rlab/rdea/. normalized and pre-processed transcriptomic gene expression profiles were downloaded from [ ] . these gene expression profiles represent peripheral blood samples collected from pediatric patients (later diagnosed with sepsis or septic shock) during the first h of admission to the pediatric icu. out of these pediatric patients, patients are non-survivals. affymetrix cel files were downloaded from ncbi geo accession number gse and re-normalized using the gcrma method in affy r package [ ] . probe-to-gene mappings were downloaded from the most recent soft files in geo and the mean of the probes for common genes were set as the gene expression level. we used limma r package (version . . ) [ ] to identify the differentially expressed genes with a benjamini-hochberg (bh) correction method. we calculated the fold change with respect to the non-survival (i.e., the upregulated genes are the genes with expression of the non-survival samples that are higher than the expression of these genes in the survival samples). we experimented with three commonly used machine learning algorithms for developing and evaluated binary classifiers for predicting mortality in pediatric sepsis: i) random forest [ ] with trees (rf ); ii) extreme gradient boosting [ ] with weak tree learners (xgb ); iii) logistic regression (lr) [ ] with l regularization. the three algorithms are implemented in the scikit-learn machine learning library (version . . ) [ ] . we used two feature selection methods that have been widely used with gene expression data, random forest feature importance (rffi) [ ] and minimum redundancy and maximum relevance (mrmr) [ ] . for the rffi method, we trained a rf with trees and then feature importance scores which quantify the contribution of each feature in the learned rf model were used to sort and rank the input features and only top k = , , …, were selected for training our classifiers. for mrmr feature selection method, we used the training data to select the top k features. these features were selected such that the objective function in eq. is maximized. let, Ω, s, and Ω s denote input, selected, and non-selected input features, respectively. the first term in eq. uses a relevance function f(x i , y) to quantify the relevance of the feature x j for predicting the target output y while the second term quantifies the redundancy among the selected features in s using the function g(x j , x l ). we implemented the mrmr algorithm [ , ] as a scikit-learn feature selection model using python. in our experiments, we used the scipy (version . . ) implementation of the pearson correlation coefficient to compute redundancy between features. for relevance functions, we considered three functions (implemented in scikit-learn): area under roc curve (mrmr_auc); χ (mrmr_chi ); and f-statistic (mrmr_fstat) . marker genes discovery and performance evaluation we identified top discriminative features (i.e., marker genes) and estimated the performance of the machine learning classifiers using runs of the -fold crossvalidation procedure. briefly, we repeated the following procedure times: first, the dataset was randomly partitioned into equal subsets (each with the same survivals to non-survivals ratio as the entire dataset). nine of the subsets were combined to serve as the feature selection and training set while the remaining subset was held out for estimating the performance of the trained classifier. this procedure was repeated times, by setting aside a different subset of the data as the test set. overall, we had iterations of train and test experiments. the reported performance is averaged over the iterations and the score of each feature represents the fraction of how many times this feature was selected in the iterations (i.e., a feature with a score of . means that this feature had been selected to train the classifier in out of iterations). we assessed the performance of classifiers using five widely used predictive performance metrics [ ] : accuracy (acc), sensitivity (sn); specificity (sp); and matthews correlation coefficient (mcc); area under roc curve (auc) [ ] . auc is a widely used metric and summary statistic of the roc curve. however, when several models have almost the same auc score, we can still compare them by examining their roc curves to determine if a model has an roc curve that completely or partially (in the leftmost region) dominates all other roc curves. we used the function find_enriched_pathway in the keggprofile r package (version . . ) [ ] to map the differentially expressed genes in kegg pathway database [ ] . in our experiments, pathways with adjusted p-value ≤ . and gene count ≥ were considered significantly enriched. based on absolute fold change ≥ . and adjusted p-value ≤ . , from a total of , genes were found to be degs between survival and non-survival septic pediatric patients (see additional file : table s ) and additional file : fig. s ). table shows the top degs when the genes are ranked using the absolute value of their fold change. only one gene, tgfbi, is down-regulated while the remaining nine genes are upregulated. tgfbi is among the genes that have been used in the sepsis metascore (sms) gene expression diagnostic method [ , ] . the top three upregulated genes are slc a , rhag, and ddit . slc a is found in the plasma membrane and mitochondria and plays a critical role at the onset of inflammation [ ] . both rhag (also called slc a ) and slc a belong to solute carrier (slc) group of membrane transport proteins. finally, increased expressions of dna damage inducible transcript (ddit ) gene had been associated with higher risks of mortality in sepsis patients [ , ] . in order to get biological insights into the functional rules of the identified degs, we used the keggprofile r package to identify enriched human kegg pathways in this set of genes. in our experiments, we did not threshold on the p-value, adjusted p-value, or minimum number of genes in the pathway such that the returned results include all kegg pathways that have at least one gene in common with the target set of genes. the complete set of results is provided in additional file : table s . we considered a pathway to be significantly enriched if its adjusted p-value is ≤ . and at least two degs are included in that pathway. using these criteria, we got significantly enriched pathways ( table ). most of these pathways had been linked to inflammation and/ or dna damage. additional file fig. s shows the heatmap of the correlation matrix of the degs. the figure shows that up-regulated and down-regulated degs are clustered separately. we also noted that within each cluster, every gene might be highly correlated with multiple other genes. can a small subset of the degs discriminate between survivals and non-survivals? here, we report the results of evaluating models obtained using a combination of three supervised classification algorithms, four feature selection methods, and possible values for the number of selected features (k = { , , …, }). additional file : table s shows the average performance metrics estimated over runs of -fold cross-validation experiments. figure shows the boxplots of the average auc scores for each combination of a classification algorithm and a feature selection method. interestingly, mrmr_auc is consistently the best feature selection method using any of the three classification algorithms considered in our experiments. surprisingly, we found that the models obtained using this feature selection method and lr algorithm not only have the best performance (in terms of auc scores) but also have the lowest variance in estimated auc (i.e., auc scores are between . and . ). additional file : table s shows the results of using the mann-whitney u test pairwise progesterone-mediated oocyte maturation . e- . e- fig. comparisons of lr, rf , and xgb classifiers evaluated using four different feature selection methods and runs of -fold crossvalidation experiments. each boxplot represents the distribution of average auc score of models evaluated using a given classification algorithm and feature selection method for selecting top k = , , …, features comparisons of classifiers (in fig. ) for each feature selection method. we found that the median auc score for lr is significantly higher than the median auc score for rf using the four feature selection methods. we also found that the median auc score for lr is significantly higher than the median auc score for xgb using mrmr_auc and mrmr_chi feature selection methods. figure shows that (using mrmr_auc feature selection) lr models outperformed corresponding rf and xgb models for any choice of the number of selected features in k = { , , …, }. based on this figure, one might conclude that we should not use more than features since adding more features did not yield any improvements in the auc score.. however, to accurately identify the best performing lr model, we inspected the average roc curves of these lr models (see additional file : fig. s ). the lr model using only features is dominated in the leftmost region of the curve (i.e., region corresponds to specificity greater than . ) by all other models. for a target specificity greater than . , the best roc curve corresponds to the model trained using top seven selected degs. we concluded that the best model (out of the models evaluated in this study) is based on lr algorithm and mrmr_auc method for selecting top seven degs. therefore, only seven genes are needed to achieve the highest auc score of . . due to the small dataset and the instability of feature selection methods, the top seven degs selected in each fold might be different. note that we conducted runs of -fold cross-validation procedure. thus, we chose seven degs times to train and evaluate the lr model. to determine the importance of each gene, we assigned each gene a score indicating how many times (out of ) this gene had been selected among the top seven genes used to train the classifier. then, we simply normalized the scores by dividing by such that gene importance scores of . , . , and . correspond to genes that have been selected , , and zero times, respectively. additional file : table s reports the gene importance scores for the degs. only genes have importance score greater than zero. the top genes and their importance scores are shown in fig. . we noted that three genes (ddit , rhag, and areg) had been consistently selected in each time. as a result of the small number of samples in our dataset, the performance of any predictive model estimated using -fold cross-validation procedure might vary for different random partitioning of the data into folds. therefore, the repeated cross-validation is essential for obtaining more accurate estimates of model performance. to examine if the repeated cross-validation is also necessary for obtaining robust estimates of gene importance scores, we repeated the preceding experiment using a single run of -fold cross-validation procedure. the resulting gene importance scores are reported in additional file : table s . only genes have non-zero scores. out of these genes, we found that genes are in the top genes determined using the repeated -fold cross-validation experiment. in summary, our machine learning based refining of degs outcome reduced the number of degs from to and provided an alternative ranking of these genes. next, we show how to use this ranking to determine the minimum set of degs that best discriminate between pediatric sepsis survivals and non-survivals. we used the top genes in fig. to search for a minimal set of genes that best discriminates between pediatric sepsis survivals and non-survivals. specifically, for top k = { , , …, } genes, we obtained the average roc curves of lr models estimated using runs of -fold cross-validation procedure (see additional file : fig. s ). we found no improvement in the roc curve when using more than top genes. figure shows the boxplots of the normalized gene expressions of these genes. interestingly, all genes are upregulated. the most expressed genes are cox b and ddit while the least expressed genes are prg and areg. using this panel of marker genes, we compared the three machine learning algorithms considered in this study. we found that the roc curve of the lr model almost dominates the two roc curves for rf and xgb classifiers (fig. ) . performance comparisons of these three classifiers are provided in table . the lr model has an average auc score of . while both rf and xgb have an average auc score of . . moreover, the lr model has the best sensitivity, specificity, and mcc. additional file table s shows the enriched kegg pathways of the marker genes. since these genes are minimally redundant with each other, it is hard to find pathways that include more than one of these genes. we found only two pathways, necroptosis (genes found: stat and tnfaip ) and pi k-akt signaling pathway (genes found: areg and ddit ), with more than one hit from the marker genes. we compared the lr model trained using the degs to the lr models trained using only top degs obtained using our proposed machine learning based gene ranking method (top _ml) and two other ranking methods based on absolute fold change (top _fc) and p-values (top _pv). the average roc curves of the four lr models are shown in fig. -a and the performance metrics of these models are reported in table . the model using the degs has the worst roc curve and the lowest performance estimates. the model based on top genes obtained using the absolute fold change ranking slightly outperformed the model based on top genes ranked using the p-values. finally, the model obtained using our proposed machine learning based ranking substantially outperformed all three models. although all the models based on the three ranking methods had acceptable performance (i.e., auc score ≥ . ), we found that the three sets of genes were not substantially overlapping with each other (see fig. -b) . every set of genes had at least unique genes and the only common gene among the three sets was ddit . figure also visualizes the gene expression profiles for survival and non-survival patients in a d space defined by the top three marker genes in these three lists. differential expression (de) analysis has been widely used to analyze gene expression profiles and uncover the underlying biological mechanisms for complex diseases [ , ] . in general gene expression profiles are characterized with high dimensionality (tens of thousands of genes) and high pairwise correlations between genes. therefore, the outcome of de analysis tools often includes hundred(s) of highly correlated genes (see additional file : fig. s ). therefore, it is impractical to use all degs for developing diagnostic and prognostic prediction tools. in general, identifying a gene signature (a small set of marker genes) can be done using domain knowledge or datadriven approaches [ ] . in this study, we presented a datadriven approach to prioritize the marker genes using an instance of the mrmr feature selection algorithm for selecting genes with the highest auc for predicting the pediatric sepsis mortality and the minimal redundancy among selected genes in terms of pearson's correlation coefficients. the novelty of our work includes the integration of feature selection methods into the statistical pipeline for de analysis, the introduction of a new relevance scoring function based on auc scores for the mrmr algorithm, and the identification of a -gene signature of mortality in pediatric sepsis. an interesting observation in our analysis is that the widely used performance metrics such as sensitivity, specificity, and auc might not be sufficient to draw accurate conclusions regarding how different models compare to each other particularly when models are very competitive with each other and there is no model with an roc curve that dominates the roc curves for the remaining models. this underscores the drawback of quantifying the roc curves using their auc scores without visualizing the roc curves for more accurate comparisons. another interesting observation is related to the observed surprisingly superior performance of lr models compared with rf and xgb models. this superior performance combined with the fact that lr models are linear interpretable models make lr algorithm a preferred choice for developing prediction models based on gene expression profiles as long as marker genes can be reliably identified. it should be noted that supervised machine learning algorithms combined with feature selection methods could be directly applied to identify marker genes from the entire transcriptomic profiles. however, this approach suffers two major limitations. first, the computation time might be extremely long because some feature selection methods including: mrmr which often has a run time in hours when applied to gene expression datasets with tens of thousands genes; feature selection based on genetic algorithms [ ] ; and network-based feature selection [ ] ) have expensive computational time proportion to the number of features. second, it is challenging to apply functional enrichment analysis to the identified set of marker genes because of the small number of identified genes and the lack of significant redundancy among these genes [ ] . therefore, it is less likely that these genes share any common functional pathways. the present approach utilizes supervised feature selection to refine the outcome of statistical de analysis. it will be interesting to explore novel approaches for separately applying statistical de and supervised feature selection to entire gene expression profiles and then integrate the outcome of the two methods. for example, networ-kanalyst tool [ ] supports comprehensive metaanalysis of multiple gene lists through heatmaps, venn diagrams, and enrichment networks. one interesting way for obtaining more than one list of degs is to obtain them using different statistical and machine learning approaches. our de and machine learning analyses suggested three -gene marker lists for predicting mortality in pediatric sepsis with average auc score ≥ . . these three lists had only one gene in common, which suggests the existence of multiple data-driven gene signatures for mortality in pediatric sepsis. similar observation had been reported by sweeney et al. [ ] where the authors had reported four sets of sepsis marker genes with only few genes in common. this underscores the need for independent validation set as well as wet laboratory experiments to validate some of these markers and confirm the reported biological insights. we have identified a signature of marker genes for reliably predicting mortality in pediatric sepsis. these genes have been determined using a novel machine learning data-driven approach for re-ranking and selecting an optimal subset of degs identified via a secondary analysis of, to the best of our knowledge, the largest publicly available transcriptomic cohort study for pediatric sepsis. our on-going work aims at: i) validating our proposed -gene signature using an independent test set; ii) testing and evaluating the proposed approach for identifying reliable biomarkers for challenging biomarker discovery tasks in critical care settings such as diagnosing and endotyping sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards); iii) adapting our approach for single cell gene expression analysis [ , ] . global epidemiology of pediatric severe sepsis: the sepsis prevalence, outcomes, and therapies study precision medicine in pediatric sepsis sepsis kills: early intervention saves lives improved risk stratification in pediatric septic shock using both protein and mrna biomarkers. persevere-xp defining pediatric sepsis the apache iii prognostic system: risk prediction of hospital mortality for critically iii hospitalized adults the sofa (sepsis-related organ failure assessment) score to describe organ dysfunction/failure. on behalf of the working group on sepsis-related problems of the european society of intensive care medicine persevere-ii: redefining the pediatric sepsis biomarker risk model with septic shock phenotype critical care medicine differential gene expression analysis reveals novel genes and pathways in pediatric septic shock patients a comprehensive time-course-based multicohort 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and max-relevance multi-view feature selection for predicting ovarian cancer survival using multi-omics data assessing the accuracy of prediction algorithms for classification: an overview the use of the area under the roc curve in the evaluation of machine learning algorithms. pattern recogn keggprofile: an annotation and visualization package for multi-types and multi-groups expression data in kegg pathway kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes benchmarking sepsis gene expression diagnostics using public data critical care medicine the slc family of zinc transporters. molecular aspects of medicine analysing differential gene expression in cancer edger: a bioconductor package for differential expression analysis of digital gene expression data genetic algorithms in feature and instance selection. knowl-based syst biomarker discovery in inflammatory bowel diseases using network-based feature selection network-analyst . : a visual analytics platform for comprehensive gene expression profiling and meta-analysis bayesian approach to single-cell differential expression analysis nature methods bias, robustness and scalability in single-cell differential expression analysis not applicable. supplementary information accompanies this paper at https://doi.org/ . /s - - - .additional file . supplementary tables s -s . the original dataset can be downloaded from ncbi geo repository (accession number gse ). the normalized and pre-processed gene expression profiles can be obtained from the synapse portal accessed at https://doi.org/ . /syn .ethics approval and consent to participate not applicable. not applicable. the authors declare no conflict of interest.received: february accepted: august key: cord- -jop rx authors: vignais, pierre v.; vignais, paulette m. title: challenges for experimentation on living beings at the dawn of the (st) century date: - - journal: discovering life, manufacturing life doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: jop rx “we can talk endlessly about moral progress, about social progress, about poetic progress, about progress made in happiness; nevertheless, there is a type of progress that defies any discussion, and that is scientific progress, as soon as we judge it within the hierarchy of knowledge, from a specifically intellectual point of view.” introduction of new exploratory methods such as biocomputing or bioinformatics and high-throughput screening, which involves the simultaneous processing of hundreds or even thousands of samples. this approach is in contrast with traditional biology, in which the research strategy is based upon the observation of effects obtained as a function of experimental parameters that are modified one by one. another aspect of modern times is that, with the irresistible trend in genetic manipulation towards a focus on human beings, certain areas of fundamental research are finding themselves locked into philosophical dilemmas that are matter for ethical and sociocultural consideration, and the subjects of fierce debate. instead of setting out to discover unknown mechanisms by analyzing effects that are dependent on specific causes, with some uncertainty as to the possible success of the enterprise being undertaken, which is the foundation stone of the bernardian paradigm of the experimental method, many current research projects give themselves achievable and programmable objectives that depend upon the means available to them: sequencing of genomes with a view to comparing them, recognition of sequence similarities in proteins coded for by genes belonging to different species, with the aim of putting together phylogenetic trees, synthesis of interesting proteins in transgenic animals and plants, analysis of the three-dimensional structure of proteins, in order to find sites that are likely to fix medicinal substances, and synthesis of molecular species able to recognize pathogenic targets. the facilities that are called into play include instruments that are often sophisticated, the performance of which, in terms of miniaturization, computerization and robotization, is far beyond that of apparatus that was in use a few decades ago. these facilities, applied to research into living beings, have entered the framework of a methodology that has been given the label biotechnology. proceeding handin-hand with applications that have become more and more meaningful in the domains of medicine, pharmacology, agronomy and animal husbandry, the biotechnological process has come to the fore as a new paradigm for the experimental method as applied to living beings. in addition to new discoveries, the driving forces behind biotechnologies are related to economic imperatives as well as the interest and support they receive from the political powers-that-be. the academic spirit that presides over fundamental science gives way to the entrepreneurial spirit that implements a rational programming of facilities and an efficient organization of scientific collaborations. as an example, the sequencing of the human genome, which includes three billion nucleotide base pairs, required the coordination of several dozen scientific teams around the world and the matching of several tens of thousands of results. research on dna provides a typical illustration of the way in which research has become divided, over the last few decades, between an approach and an interest that had previously been purely academic, and the increasing role of technology, which can be justified by the results that arise in the life of society at large, but which, because of these results, also gives rise to questions concerning how wellfounded some of these results are, particularly in the health domain. the experimental method, which had been confined to the laboratory, is now a matter for public debate. before it won acclaim, dna, which was isolated under the name of nuclein by johann friedrich miescher ( - ), at the end of the th century, had to undergo a series of structural evaluation tests that were spread out over the first five decades of the th century. an overall conclusion then came to the fore. dna is a polydeoxyribonucleotide that carries four cyclic bases, adenine, thymine, cytosine and guanine. each base is involved in the structure of a mononucleotide where it is itself associated with a sugar, deoxyribose, which is associated with a phosphate residue. dna was compared to a ladder, the rungs of which (mononucleotides) were linked by ester bonds between an acid group of a phosphate residue of a nucleotide and the free hydroxyl group of the deoxyribose of the following nucleotide. research committed them to this path. it was the curiosity of each, a new way of considering old problems, that led a few men and women to solve the problems of heredity." the middle of the th century saw an accumulation of experimental evidence showing that dna carries genetic information, and because of this, that it controls the transmission of hereditary characteristics: the proof provided in by oswald avery ( - ) , colin macleod ( - and maclyn mccarthy ( - of the transforming power of dna in pneumococcus, the highlighting by alfred hershey ( - ) and martha chase ( - , in , of the role played by bacteriophage dna as an infectious agent for bacteria, the revelation by erwin chargaff at the beginning of the s of the equivalence of molar concentrations of adenine (a) and thymine (t), on the one hand, and of cytosine (c) and guanine (g), on the other hand, in dnas arising from a multitude of sources, animal, plant and microbial, thus suggesting a complementary pairing of adenine and thymine, and cytosine and guanine. based on the pairing of a/t and c/g bases, the model of the double helix structure of dna, formulated in by james watson and francis crick, made it possible to understand the identical synthesis of double strands of dna by replication during cell division (figure iv. ) and, as a consequence, the conservation of hereditary characteristics in descendants. afterwards, it was found that the information contained in the dna base sequence determines the amino acid sequence in proteins. then the roles played by messenger rna and transfer rnas were elucidated, the former acting as a carrier of information between dna and the proteins being synthesized and the latter acting as double-headed adaptors, able to recognize nucleotide triplets (codons) in messenger rna and to specifically fix amino acids in order to position them on the ribosomes, the final result being the synthesis of a protein chain. in , the genetic code was deciphered. the veil of mystery that had covered the mechanism of the synthesis of proteins was lifted, and the decisive role played by nucleic acids in this synthesis was shown. later on, there were a few adjustments. although, in bacteria, proteins are coded for by a continuous sequence of nucleotide triplets in dna, in the s the surprising discovery was made that in eukaryotic organisms, genes are discontinuous and made up of coding dna sequences (exons) interrupted by non-coding sequences (introns). from the end of the s, françois jacob and jacques monod had postulated the existence of a dual determinism for protein synthesis and shown that, next to structural genes expressed as proteins, there are regulatory genes able to control the expression of the structural genes. the importance of the differential regulation of gene expression in cell differentiation in higher organisms was quickly recognized. from this point on it was possible to explain why a particular species of protein is more specifically expressed in a given tissue and another species of protein is more particularly expressed in another tissue, each type of tissue finding its specificity in its molecular components. this fantastic framework of knowledge, which was built up over a couple of decades, has been used as the foundation stone for the so-called central dogma of molecular biology, which explains the transcription of dna sequences into messenger rnas and the translation of messenger rnas into proteins and which, with only a few variants, is the same throughout the living world (figure iv. ) . the fascinating history of molecular biology was well described by james d. watson in molecular biology of the gene ( rd edition ). there are now many works concerning this subject and how it has progressed, including two well-documented books in french: the secrets of the gene by françois gros ( ) and histoire de la biologie moléculaire by michel morange ( ) . new strand a -double helix structure of dna and simplified representation of its self-replication. each strand of the parent molecule of dna acts as a matrix for the synthesis of a daughter molecule of complementary dna, in conformity with the rules of pairing: adenine (a) with thymine (t) and guanine (g) with cytosine (c). the double strands that appear are identical to each other and identical to the parent dna molecule. b -transcription of dna into messenger rna and its translation into an amino acid chain. diagram of gene expression in a eukaryotic cell. one of the strands of dna (the coding strand) has coding sequences (exons) and non-coding sequences (introns). it is said that the gene is split. the transcription of the exons, accompanied by their splicing leads to the formation of a messenger rna, the codons (nucleotide triplets) of which are translated into amino acids that are linked to each other by covalent bonds in order to form a protein chain. in prokaryotic cells (bacteria), the genes do not contain introns and are not split. a: adenine; c: cytosine; g: guanine; t: thymine; u: uracil. met: methionine; his: histidine; tyr: tyrosine; gly: glycine; phe: phenylalanine. interlinked with the epic rise of molecular biology, there was a succession of technical innovations that led to the synthesis of dna by chemical or enzymatic means, and to its being cleaved at specific locations, with the pieces that were obtained being joined together again . in , in geneva, werner arber (b. ) and daisy dussoix highlighted the restriction phenomenon, which involves the degradation of bacteriophage dna by a recipient bacterium. they discovered that an extract of e. coli has a restriction activity, and that this activity is of an enzymatic nature, caused by a nuclease that breaks the phosphodiester bonds in dna. in , the americans hamilton smith (b. ) and kent wilcox purified the first restriction enzyme from a strain of haemophilus influenzae. in , daniel nathans ( - and kathleen danna (b. ) at johns hopkins university in baltimore (usa) drew up the first restriction map based on the circular dna of the monkey sv virus, using a restriction enzyme that was named hindiii and a follow-up of the sequential appearance of shorter and shorter fragments resulting from the partial digestion of dna. in the following years, dozens of restriction enzymes were isolated, all of them endowed with a surprising specificity with respect to specific base sequences in dna ( figure iv . ). these enzymes were to be indispensable tools in genetic recombination experiments. the transformation of rna back into dna was observed by howard temin ( - ) and s. mizutani , in experiments on the rous sarcoma virus, a virus with rna that, when it proliferates in host cells, is able to synthesize a dna that is complementary to its rna. the enzyme responsible, reverse transcriptase, was purified by both h. temin and david baltimore (b. ) . starting with a determined messenger rna, it then became possible to work back to the dna, i.e., to the gene, by a simple enzymatic reverse transcription operation. dna that has been synthesized in this way is called complementary dna (cdna). in eukaryotic organisms, reverse transcription has proved to be all the more useful as a technique in that all cdna is coding, unlike the situation in vivo in which the genes are divided up into portions that are coding (exons) and portions that are non-coding (introns). the ability to cleave dna and to join together the fragments obtained in a deliberately chosen order, or, in other words, to manufacture previously unseen dna sequences by making new combinations, led to the dawning of recombinant dna technology and caused scientists to come to the sudden realization that the pandora's box that contains the secrets of life had been opened, that uncontrollable catastrophes might arise from this, and that there was a potential danger of causing tumorigenic viruses to reproduce in commensal bacteria such as the enterobacterium escherichia coli. in , around a hundred molecular biologists gathered together at the asilomar conference center near monterey in california, in order to discuss the dangers of the new dna technology. they proposed strict regulation to govern genetic manipulation. time and experience have shown that the risks being run were very low. in , dna sequencing methods were published. one of them made use of chemical techniques , the other made use of enzymatic techniques . applications were not slow in appearing. from , the team led by frederick sanger (b. ) in cambridge (uk) determined the first sequence of a genome, that of bacteriophage phix , which is nucleotides long. this was the beginning of an audacious adventure, the apparently senseless challenge being met with unbelievable rapidity thanks to the innovative methods of bioengineering, resulting, during the first years of the st century, in the sequencing of the human genome. analysis of the human dna sequence involved the participation of two rival groups, one of them being academic, coordinated by francis collins (b. ) , and bringing together dozens of laboratories around the world, and the other being a private californian company directed by craig venter (b. ) . at the beginning of the s, when everyone was persuaded that the rnas could be placed into three well defined categories, messenger rnas, transfer rnas and ribosomal rnas, it was with great surprise that it was learned that there were rnas that have catalytic properties (see thomas cech [b. ] ). these rnas, called ribozymes, have, in keeping with enzymatic proteins, structured catalytic sites that are able to catalyze rna or dna cleavage or ligation reactions. recently, engineering techniques have been used to obtain artificial ribozymes that have been found to be able to catalyze reactions as varied as oxidations or the synthesis of peptides and nucleotides, thus opening up wide-ranging possibilities of applications in molecular therapeutics, and, in addition, reinforcing the famous theory of the "world of rna" at the beginning of the appearance of life on earth . another discovery of the s was the role of methylation of dna bases, cytosine and adenine, and its deregulation in a certain number of pathologies: fragile x syndrome, scapulohumeral dystrophy, certain forms of cancer … in the past decade or so, basic proteins known as histones that are associated with the nuclear dna of eukaryotes in the form of a complex called chromatin and which had previously been assigned a structural role, have now acquired the status of functional partners. thanks to specific modifications of certain amino acids (acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation), histones control the state of condensation of the chromatin and the efficacy of transcription of dna contained in the chromatin, to such an extent that we now speak of the "histone code". the development of our understanding of histones is a good illustration of the complexification of a concept, the dna code, into an entity that comes closer to living reality, the dna code in partnership with the histone code. there has also been the discovery of interfering micrornas, small polymers made up of around twenty nucleotide units, the role of which is to control protein synthesis (chapter iv- . . ). methylation of dna, structural modifications of the chromatin histones, and blocking of transcriptional activity by interfering micrornas are a few of the major areas of research in a scientific domain that is in full expansion, epigenetics, which could be said to have "pipped the science of genetics at the post," and which explains the plasticity of the functions of living beings. with the arrival of restriction enzymes and reverse transcription, the foundation stones of genetic engineering have now been laid, and are ready to be used, this being all the easier in that synthetic chemistry is now able to manufacture dna chains that are several hundreds of nucleotides long, and progress in robotics and computing techniques made it possible for chemists to avoid carrying out tedious routine tasks by using completely-programmable machines. the hope that it would be possible to experiment on living beings by means of the manipulation of dna became a reality when the american researchers paul in the first work carried out on the expression of foreign genes, the use of plasmids as vectors was preferred, particularly that of plasmid pbr , because of its considerable replication capacity. in , a first success was obtained by herbert boyer and his co-workers, with the expression of the gene for somatostatin, a peptide hormone comprising twelve amino acids that negatively regulates the secretion of growth hormone, in the bacterium e. coli. because of its small size, the somatostatin gene was synthesized by chemical means. the expression of somatostatin in e. coli was verified using immunological and physiological criteria, thus demonstrating the validity of the procedure that was used. the following year, human insulin was produced in e. coli. fairly soon, yeast was substituted for this bacterium because, as a eukaryotic organism, it has enzyme systems that are able to carry out chemical finishing operations on neosynthesized proteins that bacteria are unable to do, for example the formation of disulfide bridges in insulin. genetic recombination is used in order to cause bacteria to manufacture a foreign protein of animal or plant origin. this involves the insertion of the fragment of animal or plant dna that codes for this foreign protein into a plasmid. the plasmid, a small ring of bacterial dna, acts as a vector for the foreign dna. in order to carry out insertion, plasmid dna is cleaved by an appropriate restriction enzyme. the foreign dna is obtained by reverse transcription from a useful messenger rna. its duplication is catalyzed by a dna polymerase. the s nuclease makes it possible to break the covalent bond between two strands of dna. in the following step, a terminal transferase is used to add four nucleotides for which the base is a cytosine (c) to each of the two dna strands. the same lengthening operation is carried out on the bacterial plasmid, but, in this case, the addition involves a sequence of four nucleotides for which the base is a guanine (g) (complementary to the cytosine c). the bacterial plasmid is hybridized in vitro with foreign animal or plant dna and then introduced into the bacterium which, using its own machinery, perfects the junction between the integrated dna and the plasmid dna. a very small volume of dna ( . - ml) is injected under the microscope into eukaryotic cells (hela cells in inset) using a micropipette with a very fine end that pierces the cell membrane. the swelling of the cells at the moment of injection can be seen (inset). supported by these successes, genetic engineering started to come to the fore as an application-oriented discipline. levels of performance that would never have been imagined half a century before were achieved, such as the production of growth hormone, interferons, blood coagulation factors and vaccines. in the final decades of the th century, phenotype transformations using genetic modifications that had previously been carried out in bacteria and yeasts were successfully attempted in animals and plants. it was observed that a mutated dna integrated into a plasmid and introduced into a fertilized mouse egg (by micromanipulation) modifies the mouse's genetic inheritance, which affects first the embryo and then the adult mouse with phenotype modifications. such mice, which are said to be transgenic because of the stable integration of a foreign dna into their genome, are now widely used as animal models in studies that aim to understand the mechanisms involved in high-incidence human pathologies such as cancer, diabetes, and rheumatoid conditions. in , two american researchers , ralph brinster (b. ) and richard palmiter (b. ) carried out a spectacular transgenesis experiment in mice. using microinjection, they introduced the growth hormone gene (obtained from the rat) into oocytes of mice from a "little" germ line. once the transgeneic mice had reached adulthood, they were giants. at present, the transgenesis technique is being applied both to the animal kingdom and to the plant kingdom. in the s, kary mullis (b. ) perfected an ingenious technique, the polymerase chain reaction (pcr), which makes it possible to produce several tens of thousands of copies of a fragment of dna. using this technique, it is possible to detect traces of a fragment of dna of a given sequence down to an attomolar concentration, i.e., one billion billion ( - ) times smaller than molar concentration. by the end of the th century, genetic engineering had become well-established and wide-spread, thanks to a mastery of techniques involving the manipulation of dna such as the accurate cleavage of a gene into fragments using commercially available restriction enzymes, the covalent assembly of two fragments of dna by ligases, the automated chemical synthesis of fragments of dna of more than one hundred nucleotides and the possibility of manufacturing a complementary dna (cdna) from a messenger rna by using a reverse transcriptase and automated dna sequencing. given this particularly well-equipped toolbox, the molecular biologist is now able to manipulate dna, that is to say, the chemical material that contains the information that is central to the functioning of living structures (microorganisms, plant and animal organisms), and thus to modify, at will, the genotype of these structures that the selective pressure of evolution has previously favored. genomics has produced enormous quantities of data that are stored in databanks. automated procedures have been invented to make the information contained in these data intelligible, these procedures forming the basis for a new discipline, biocomputing, or bioinformatics, which develops programs, or algorithm-based strategies, that are able to solve specific problems, of which the annotation of genomes, i.e., the identification of coding and non-coding sequences. while the annotation of the prokaryotic genomes is relatively easy, because of the absence of introns, that of the eukaryotic genomes is considerably more difficult because of the alternating exons and introns and the small proportion of coding exons (fewer than % in the case of the human genome). this explains why, at the time of writing, several hundred genomes of prokaryotes (around at the beginning of ) have been sequenced, as opposed to only a few dozen genomes of eukaryotes. annotation was carried out manually at first, but it has become automated and it is now possible to analyze thousands of items of genomic data. the comparison of nucleotide base sequences in dnas and of amino acids in proteins of different origins involves biocomputing. the identification of similar or identical regions that provide information about functional similarities and phylogenetic proximity involves the use of alignment methods. one of these methods, which is in current use, is called blast (base local alignment search tool). comparison of protein sequences has been particularly instructive in the science of evolution. it has highlighted evolutive processes in the phylogenesis of proteins and linked these processes to precise functions. it has been possible to deduce that, over time, different families of proteins with similar functions appeared independently and evolved along different routes. this is the case for membrane proteins whose polypeptide chain crosses the thickness of the membrane six or twelve times; thus, the mitochondrial membrane proteins that transport metabolites are formed by triplication of an element with two transmembrane segments, while proteins located in other membranes of the cell are derived from duplication of an element with three transmembrane segments. from this academic context arose the study of paleogenetics, a new discipline that compares dna sequences extracted from fossils and amplified by pcr with dna sequences of current species. in addition to being of immense interest to fundamental biology, genetic bioengineering has led to innumerable industrial applications making use of genetically modified microorganisms that are able to synthesize molecules with a high added value that can also be used in xenobiotic depollution operations. so much data has already been deposited, equivalent to the sequencing of more than one hundred billion nucleotides, that it is inevitable that there have been errors, some of which might prove prejudicial for future use (comparison of sequences, screening of drugs…). nevertheless, the ever-increasing numbers of genome sequencing projects for animal, plant and microbe species show the interest that is shown in understanding the genetic information present in different types of cells, in order to be able to exploit their potential. dna chips appeared in the last decade of the th century, and came to the fore as part of a new technical revolution, the "high throughput" revolution ( figure iv. ). an article written by the group headed by ronald davis and patrick brown (b. ) at the university of stanford gives a precise description of the hybridization technique used in dna chips. thus, around a hundred short dna strands, corresponding to portions of genes of the plant arabidopsis thaliana, commonly known as mouse-ear cress, a small plant in the brassicaceae (formerly cruciferae) family, are synthesized. a robot is used to deposit microquantities of these dnas in solution in a dot pattern on a small glass slide coated with poly-l-lysine, thus comprising a "chip" on which the covalently fixed dnas act as probes for specific molecules. a later step involves both the use of reverse transcription to produce complementary dnas (cdnas) from messenger rnas arising from the expression of genes in the same plant and the labeling of these cdnas with fluorescent ligands for use in screening. once these fluorescent cdnas have been denatured, i.e., after separation into single strands, they are brought into contact with the dna chip. the unhybridized molecules are removed by washing. a -the term dna chip corresponds to a small, chemically-treated glass (or sometimes silicon) plate on which a robot has deposited dna strands of known sequence in a pre-determined order. b -the dna chip may be used for different types of diagnostic procedures. in the differential diagnosis experiment represented here, messenger rnas are prepared from two cell samples that have been treated in parallel, the control sample (normal cell) and the experimental sample (pathological cell). these messenger rnas are reverse transcribed into complementary dnas (cdnas) by means of a reverse transcriptase. each of these two types of cdna, corresponding to the two types of messenger rna, is labeled by a chemical reaction with a specific fluorescent ligand (cy , which emits at nm and cy , which emits at nm). they are then hybridized with chip dna strands. after hybridization and then washing, the fluorescence emitted at nm and nm under laser irradiation are analyzed using an appropriate detection system. the differential expression of the genes in the control cell sample and the experimental sample (shown by a color difference) can thus be analyzed. hybridization between the fluorescent dnas called targets and the complementary nucleotide probes fixed to the dna chip is detected by means of an automated fluorescence detection system. at the beginning of the s, stephen fodor and his group, who were working at the affymax research institute (palo alto, california), developed an ingenious procedure for microphotolithography that led to the synthesis of a network of a thousand peptides on chemically pre-treated glass microscope slides. the resolution of the network was shown by epifluorescence microscopy after fixation of specific antibodies labeled with fluorescent probes. soon after this, microphotolithography was used for the manufacture of dna molecule networks on solid supports. from then on, two competing techniques for the preparation of dna chips became well-established, either the depositing on a solid support of cdna obtained by gene amplification (technique used by davis and brown), or the synthesis in situ of oligonucleotides carried out directly on a solid support (technique used by the american affymetrix company, arising from affymax). one considerable advantage of dna chip technology is that it provides information on the level of transcription of thousands of genes into messenger rnas (mrnas), in a simultaneous manner and in a relatively short lapse of time. experiments that previously required weeks, months or even years to be completed can now be carried out in a matter of hours. we therefore have a sort of instantaneous, precise, freeze-frame picture of the state of a cell at a given moment, with a great number of parameters explored in a semi-quantitative manner. dna chips are a typical example of the application of high throughput technology to the study of living beings. the panoply of mrnas produced by the transcription of dna is called the transcriptome. the method by which transcriptomes are obtained is called transcriptomics. it should be added here that there is not necessarily a correlation between the abundance of a mrna, evaluated on a dna chip, and the functionality of the corresponding protein, which depends on multiple factors that particularly involve post-translational modifications: phosphorylation, glycosylation, hydroxylation, and so on. at the end of the s, dna chips were being used extensively in the research programs of many biology laboratories. they are used in a variety of domains: human pathology, to differentiate between forms of cancer linked to multiform mutations; microbiology, to identify pathogenic germs; comparative genomics, to look at model eukaryotic organisms that have in common a certain number of genes; or even in populations genetics, to detect polymorphisms linked to a change in a single base in a dna sequence. as a complement to the dna chip technique, the fish (fluorescent in situ hybridization) method holds a key position in the study of cytogenetics. this method is based on hybridization between fluorescent nuclear probes of known nuclear sequence and of complementary motifs located in the dna of the chromosomes. it allows the detection of chromosomal modifications with a gain or loss of genetic material, such as those that are found in certain tumors. it is used in prenatal diagnostics to diagnose such modifications. protein chips, which are used to characterize the reactivity of proteins with respect to specific ligands, are another example of the application of high throughput technology. dozens of proteins of different types (antibodies, for example), as well as derivatives of nucleic acids or even molecules capable of being ligands of proteins that might arise from combinatorial chemistry (chapter iv- . ), are arranged in a network on small glass plates that are chemically treated to act as hooks to entrap specific proteins present in a tissue extract or serum ( figure iv . a). this procedure, which is essentially analytical in nature, is complemented by a functional study in which proteins that have been isolated in their native form, i.e., those that are capable of expressing the same functions that they posses in vivo, are deposited on a glass microplate. this type of biochip makes it possible to analyze the reactivity of the proteins that are fixed to it with respect to a multitude of targets (proteins, nucleic acids or pharmaceutical substances) (figure iv. b). antigens peptides a -biochip for the identification of proteins. different types of ligands, antibodies, antigens, dna or rna, small molecules with a high affinity and specificity, are deposited on a reactive surface. these biochips can be used to determine the level of expression of proteins and the type of proteins expressed in cell extracts. they can be used for clinical diagnostics. b -biochip for the functional study of proteins. native proteins or peptides are arranged in micronetworks on a reactive medium. biochips produced in this way are used to analyze the activities of proteins and their affinities as a function of posttranslational modifications. they are useful for identifying drug targets. analytical proteomics, which was still in its infancy in the last decades of the th century (chapter iii- . . ) has become a vigorous discipline. the association of liquid nanochromatography and of mass spectrometry allows the identification of peptides obtained by the trypsin hydrolysis of samples of proteins of around one picomole in size. applied to fundamental and pathological cell biology, the aim of analytical proteomics is not only to decipher the list of proteins on the scale of the cell, but also to highlight variations in the abundance of synthesized proteins as a function of environmental conditions. it also aims to determine the posttranslational modifications that are undergone by the proteins inside the cells, which, for a large part, control the specificity of their operation. in parallel with the study of proteomics, the study of peptidomics, or the study of all of the peptides (peptidome) present in animal and plant cells and in the fluids that bathe these cells, has developed. for example, several hundred different peptides have been found in the cerebrospinal fluid. structural proteomics, which deals with the three-dimensional structure of proteins, has also become a domain in which the activity has been increasingly dominated by high-throughput techniques. this is partly due to the fact that the pharmaceutical industry has given considerable, sustained attention to the understanding of the structure of proteins that could play the role of therapeutic targets. this is the case for protein kinases that catalyze, via atp, the phosphorylation of endocellular proteins, of proteases involved in hydrolysis reactions, or even of cell surface receptors that are able to combine with ligands such as hormones. the use of automated crystallization systems has become common in structural biology. from the classical technique of the hanging drop, in plates comprising wells, we have moved on to plates with , and, recently, wells. obviously, this increase in dimensions requires the use of an automated system that includes a robot in charge of transferring microaliquots of the protein solution into the wells and adding media that differ according to their ph, ionic force and molecular composition to these wells. the crystallization process is followed by an automated microscopic examination coupled with video photography. making use of the recent development of genomics and of proteomics, and a detailed inventory of the structures and functions of the different protein species of living beings, contemporary biology is now able to sketch out a scheme of molecular systematics, including a classification into phylla, families, and classes that echoes those of the zoological and botanical systematics of the th and th centuries. however, modern systematics does not tell us how protein macromolecules interact within dynamic networks. there is still an enormous amount of work to be done in order to achieve an understanding of the meaning of the dialogue between macromolecules in a normal or pathological cell context. this work will require a detailed analysis of metabolic pathways and of how they are controlled, and their evaluation in kinetic and thermodynamic terms. it will be accompanied by modeling (chapter iv- ). there is no doubt that it will be successful. making use of subtle differences in the qualitative and quantitative expression of genes, it will become possible to understand the molecular principles that modulate differences in morphology and in function between neighboring animal, plant or microbial species. the science of evolution should benefit from this. in medicine, the forecasting of predispositions for certain diseases should be made easier (chapter iv- . ), opening up the perspective of prevention strategies. using recombinant dna technology, metabolic engineering applied to microorganisms and plants should make it possible to improve the production of molecules that are of economic interest or can be used for drugs. the diversity of bacteria is amazing, much greater than might be supposed by looking at the number of bacterial species identified by culturing on appropriate media. in fact, the number of bacterial species that can be cultivated only represents % of the total number of existing bacterial species on the surface of the earth. there are two major reasons for this: we do not know the appropriate conditions for culturing these bacteria; a certain number of environmental bacteria live in symbiosis, acting as commensal organisms that benefit from the products secreted by other organisms. nevertheless, the study of the bacterial genome, without any clonal culture, has been carried out, and comprises a branch of genomics known as metagenomics. instead of looking at an isolated, well-identified bacterial species, in order to analyze the sequence of its dna, as has been done traditionally, researchers look at a heterogeneous bacterial sample from which the dna is extracted, amplified, and then sequenced by high throughput methods. computer processing of the data provides information about individual germs. craig venter, who had already gained notoriety with the sequencing of the human genome, recently applied "metagenomic" procedures to the study of the sequence of the "metagenome" of the bacterial species of the sargasso sea . he came up with nucleotide sequences corresponding to approximately million kilobases of non-redundant nucleotides, attributable to more than two thousand different genomes. the challenge to be met by metagenomics is to connect a function to its phylogenetic source and to extend this information to specific species within a bacterial community. group . in human biology, a metagenomics approach has been applied to the study of the population of bacteriophages present in the intestinal flora. approximately genotypes have been identified, a number that greatly exceeds the bacterial species of this flora . this result leads us to think that the luxuriant community of bacteriophages which cohabits with that of the intestinal bacteria may influence the diversity of the latter by selective bacterial lysis and also by promoting the exchange of genes between bacteria. a rapid overview of the history of the exploration of genomic dna over the last fifty years shows the rapidity with which a traditional experimental paradigm can move thanks to modern computing and robotics procedures. in less than twenty years, we have moved from the manual sequencing of dna that was developed at the end of the s to automated high throughput sequencing. at the turn of the st century, the sequencing of communities of genomes (metagenomics) has been substituted for the sequencing of individual genomes. dna and protein chips have become objects of everyday use in fundamental and applied biology. transgenesis is widely practiced. dna, a molecule that remained mysterious for a long time after it was discovered, delivered some of its secrets during the second half of the th century. the purpose of the first experiments on dna was to understand how dna, detector of the genetic code, transmitted its message. after having questioned dna, researchers moved on to manipulating it. the current aim is to use oligonucleotides to build nanoscale constructions with original and, if possible, useful, properties. in addition, the possibility that has recently become available of being able to interfere with the expression of the genome in living cells, with the intervention of small rna molecules, allows the programmed manipulation of the genome. another challenge, the extending of the coding power of the genetic code, now appears to be achievable. from the fact that each of the strands of the double helix overhangs in one direction, and in the other the strand with which it is paired, thus leaving a few bases free ( figure iv. ) . if two strands of dna with sticky ends are brought into contact, when the bases of these ends are complementary, a branched structure will appear spontaneously. using this principle as a basis, cube-shaped nanometric constructions that make it possible to encage molecules of interest have been built. the opening of the cage by appropriate devices liberates the encaged molecules, which can act as substrates in specific reactions. the cutting of a double strand of dna using restriction enzymes able to create fragments with cohesive ends (a) has been used to "build" an artificial construction (b), which, in this case, is a cube (c), but which could be an object of a different geometrical type. a dna nanomachine that is capable of movement is becoming a reality. one dna nanomachine, which is admittedly still rudimentary, has been put together based on the structural difference that exists between b-dna, the classical double helix that twists to the right, and z-dna, a double helix that twists to the left. a propensity to adopt the z-form is triggered when there is an alternating sequence of cytosine (c) and guanine (g) (cg sequence) in the dna. the experiment illustrated in figure iv. makes use of a duplex formed of b-double helices. the dna nanomachine constructed by n.c. seeman comprised a duplex of double strands of dna. one of the double strands, of the classical b-form of dna (right-hand twist), has been cleaved in such a way as to fix fluorescent molecular probes onto the cleavage zones. facing this cleavage zone, a short nucleotide sequence, in which the cytosine (c) guanine (g) motif is repeated, can be found in the other dna double strand, which is also of b-form. the addition of cobaltihexammine induces the transition of the cg segment from a right-hand twist (b-dna) to a left-hand twist (z-dna), which leads to a rotation of this segment and to a rotation of the assembly, which can be detected using fret (fluorescence resonance energy transfer) spectroscopy. one of the double helices has a short cg segment. facing the cg segment, the other double helix is interrupted, and its ends, where the interruption is, carry fluorescent molecular probes. the simple fact of adding a cationic substance such as cobaltihexammine, which neutralizes the negative charges of the phosphate groups, triggers a conformational transition, with the cg segment taking the z-form, causing a rotational movement of the assembly that is detected by the movement of the probes. there is no doubt that the use of dna strands in order to build nanomolecular constructions that are capable of programmed movement marks the beginning of an adventure that we may imagine will be rich in outlets for domains such as computer technology, nanomechanics and even the life sciences. in addition, the discovery that dna conducts electrical current gives rise to dreams of a revolutionary technology in which dna may be used in the design of electrical circuits, in competition with classical electronics . interfering rnas are non-coding rnas of around twenty nucleotides that control gene expression at post-transcriptional level. as with many discoveries, that of rna interference was the result of serendipity. it began during the s with observations made by two american research groups, that of victor ambros now at darmouth medical school, hanover, and that of gary ruvkun (b. ) at boston's massachusetts general hospital, that a gene named lin- , which is involved in the post-embryonic development of the nematode c. elegans, did not code for a protein, but for a small size rna that played an antisense role. this odd discovery was supported and made more explicit a few years later by the research groups of andrew fire (b. ) at baltimore's carnegie institute and craig c. mello (b. ) at the university of massachusetts in worcester . in order to block the production of certain proteins in the nematode c. elegans, the researchers used synthetic antisense rnas. the control involved the use of sense rnas according to a classical protocol. unexpectedly, protein synthesis was blocked in both cases, suggesting that a contaminant was present in the sense and antisense rna preparations. this contaminant was identified as a double strand rna (dsrna -double strand) that is, an rna that is folded back on itself in a "hairpin" loop because of the pairing of complementary bases (adenine vs uracil and guanine vs cytosine). in order to verify the mechanism by which the translation of messenger rnas into proteins is silenced, the nematode c. elegans was injected with a synthetic dsrna, part of the sequence of which was complementary to that of the gene unc- , known to code for a protein involved in muscular contraction. within a few hours, the worm was making disordered movements, suggesting that the dsrna interferes with the production of proteins in the process of muscular contraction. the mechanism of action of dsrna was quickly unraveled: dsrna gives rise to two single strand rnas after cleavage by a specific enzymatic mechanism. one of the single strand rnas (sirna -small interfering rna) is paired thanks to a complementarity of bases with a short sequence of messenger rna transcribed from the gene unc- . the result is a blockage of the translation of messenger rna into a protein, followed by the destruction of messenger rna. this phenomenon was named rna interference ( figure iv the dicer cleavage enzyme, which has a ribonuclease activity, cuts the double strand rna into two strands. in the presence of the risc (rna-induced silencing complex) protein complex, one of the rna strands finds a complementary nucleotide sequence in a messenger rna (mrna) and associates itself with this rna, making it unable to be translated into protein. we now know that eukaryotic cells from animals and plants produce and host interfering rnas that are said to be "natural" . natural interfering rnas, of around twenty nucleotides, are called micrornas (mirnas). although a few details differ between the modes of formation and action of natural interfering rnas and those of synthetic interfering rnas, in particular the fact that messenger rnas are not destroyed by mirnas but blocked in their translation, the effect of negative regulation on the production of specific proteins comes to the same thing ( figure iv. ). there is a far from negligible number of genes that code for mirnas. already, several hundred mirnas have been identified in the genomes of plants and animals. the amount of interest that they arouse, and the feverishness of the research being carried out on them, are in keeping with the major mechanisms that they control: embryogenesis, hematopoiesis, neuronal differentiation, etc. given an understanding of the genome sequence in man, the rat and the mouse, trials have begun that aim to achieve an understanding of how the expression of mammal genes of known sequence might be manipulated by the interplay of interfering rnas (chapter iv- . ). the treatment of viral infections such as aids or hepatitis b, which are worrying public health problems, could benefit from this new technology. it appears that interfering rnas have much more to give to us in the near future than they have taught us up until now. the deciphering of the genetic code in the middle of the s was the end of a first step in elucidating the mechanism by which a sequence of nucleotides in dna is translated into a sequence of amino acids in a protein (chapter iv- . ). during the years that followed, the subtleties of the transcription of dna into messenger rna and of the translation of messenger rna into protein via transfer rnas were explored in hundreds of laboratories around the world. particular attention was paid to the understanding of how a given amino acid is activated and bound to a transfer rna (trna) after being picked up by an aminoacyl-trna synthetase. nevertheless, the idea remained of a code in which triplets of purine and pyrimidine bases of messenger rnas are translated into natural amino acids. recently, methods have been developed that give more flexibility to the action of the aminoacyl-trna synthetases, or, in other terms, relax their specificity . synthetases that have been manipulated in this way are able to recognize non-natural amino acids and to incorporate them into proteins by working together with the ribosomal machinery. it is in this way that, at the time of writing, around thirty non-natural amino acids, obtained by insertion of different types of chemical residue (photoactivable, fluorescent or radioactive residues capable of acting as probes for structural and functional analyses) (figure iv. ) have been incorporated into protein structures. with such an innovation, an unexpected field of exploration has opened up to research in domains as far apart as pharmacology and the science of evolution, giving rise to burning questions: could such non-natural proteins have therapeutic properties? could they give a selective advantage to the organisms that host them? with the addition of non-natural amino acids to the genetic code and the demonstration that proteins containing such amino acids can function in living cells, in sum, with the transgression of the potentialities of the natural genetic code, the experimental method appears to challenge the order of living beings. the triumph of genetic engineering via the study of dna is not unique to biology. many other sectors are undergoing changes in their type of experimental approach, dictated by the technosciences and making use of computer sciences, robotics and high-throughput screening. however, given the many questions that its operation continues to raise, and its central position at the heart of scientific ethics, the study of dna remains a typical example of the way in which the experimental life sciences and the techniques that underlie them are evolving nowadays. "i perfectly agree that when physiology is sufficiently advanced, the physiologist will be able to make new animals or plants, as the chemists produces substances that have potential, but do not exist in the natural order of things." more than a century after claude bernard predicted a genetically manipulated world, it has come to pass. the molecular biologist, having original, highperformance methods for "tinkering" with dna, has moved on to the application and use of his technical expertise for utilitarian ends. during the s, with transgenesis, research on bacteria (chapter iv- . . ) opened up a new biological domain, that of genetically modified organisms (gmos). results led to predictions that it would be possible to transfer a fragment of dna corresponding to a gene of a certain species into the genome of another species and have this foreign gene express itself as a protein in the host cell. in , the successful trans-genesis of a gene for resistance to an antibiotic, kanamycin, in tobacco plants, signaled the beginning of the technology of the first plant-type genetically modified organisms, still called gmps (genetically modified plants). in , the birth of dolly the ewe unveiled the era of reproductive cloning in mammals, i.e., the identical reproduction of an already-existing organism. an additional step was taken with the first tests on the differentiation of embryonic stem cells towards different types of lines that are characteristic of well-defined tissues, such as nerve tissue, cardiac tissue or the hepatic parenchyma, thus opening up promising perspectives in regenerative medicine. the frontiers of the experimental method continue to be pushed back to the limit of what is feasible and sometimes into the realm of fiction, as in immunology, for example, with the idea of xenotransplantation, using "humanized" animal organs. given the universality of the genetic code, any gene that is introduced into the genome of a plant, whether that gene is of animal, plant or microbial origin, is able to replicate itself and be expressed as a specific protein. thus plant gmos or genetically modified plants (gmps) are able to express specific foreign proteins from another plant, a bacterial microorganism or an animal organism. in the s, a short time after fundamental research had revealed the feasibility of plant transgenesis, the first transgenic plant, the flavr savr tomato, was marketed in the usa. since this time, numerous other plant gmos have been cultivated on a large scale and become available on the world market, including corn, soya, rice, cotton and the poplar. one of the desired aims is to produce modified plants that are able to resist destruction by the herbicides that are commonly used to eliminate weeds, while another is to prevent predation by harmful insects. in the first case, transgenesis involves the insertion of a herbicide-resistant gene, and in the second case, the inserted gene codes for an insecticidal toxin. recently, plant gmos that produce proteins with a therapeutic effect have appeared, ranging from antibiotic peptides to antibodies or proteins as unexpected as human hemoglobin. current projects aim to create plants that are resistant to adverse conditions such as the dryness of arid climate zones. the preferred procedure for producing a plant gmo is to use a bacterium, agrobacterium tumefaciens, a microorganism that is able to insert fragments of its own dna into plant cells ( figure iv . ). the useful gene that we wish to transfer into the plant may be a gene for resistance to a pesticide such as glyphosate, marketed under the name of roundup, phosphinothricin (basta) or glufosinate (liberty). the plasmid is reintegrated into a. tumefaciens. during infection of a plant cell by a. tumefaciens the t-dna carrying the gene of interest is inserted into one of the chromosomes of this cell. the ti plasmid is isolated and cut using a restriction enzyme. a foreign gene, known as a gene of interest, is inserted into the t-dna of the plasmid. a plant is generated from a modified clone. all of its cells carry the foreign gene. transgene of interest in the case of the fight against insect predators, the useful gene is carried by a fragment of dna contained in the genome of the bacterium bacillus thuringiensis. this gene, called bt, expresses a toxin responsible for the insecticidal capability of b. thuringiensis. a current application involves the protection of bt corn with respect to the corn-borer, a devastating insect whose caterpillars are particularly destructive. another, more direct, gene transfer method, known as biolistics, involves bombarding plant cells with tungsten microbeads covered with modified dna. with the implementation of large-surface-area experimental fields and the first marketing of gm soya, in , the question of whether or not the advantages achieved with respect to crop yields are counter-balanced by risks for the environment and for consumers came to the fore. food risks could arise from the toxicity or allergenic power of artificially synthesized proteins. at the time of writing, this question remains unanswered, due to the lack of epidemiological studies carried out rationally over several years. when the first creations of gmos took place, the transfer of the gene of interest was carried out by means of the co-transfer of an antibiotic resistance gene. the transformed cells were selected according to the criterion of their resistance to this antibiotic, which involved a risk of dissemination of the resistance gene. this selection technique has been abandoned. in practice, it is difficult to evaluate the theoretical ecological risk of wild plants being invaded by genes that have been inserted artificially into gmos. as a precaution, zones used for experimentation of plant gmos are now surrounded by refuge zones, i.e., fields in which the same species of plants, in non-gmo form, are cultivated. there has been a much fiercer and completely legitimate debate concerning the presence of the terminator gene in seed from the first gmos marketed by the monsanto company in the usa. the terminator gene blocked germination of the seed from the cultivated plant, so it was necessary for the farmer to buy more seed from the company each season, thus creating a state of dependency. this technique is no longer in use, but the fact remains that most transgenic seed is patented, and therefore farmers who use such seed are dependent on the companies that posses this genetic know-how. the culture of plant gmos has spread around the world, covering more than a billion hectares of our planet, more than half of which are in the united states of america. this type of culture is used on a large scale for soya and in a less extensive way for corn, rape seed and cotton, but there are many other applications of plant transgenesis. among the countries that are actively involved we may mention argentina, brazil, canada and china, and more recently india, paraguay and south africa. while the policies of these countries are based on the fact that gmo products do not differ fundamentally from non-gmo products with respect to checks carried out a posteriori, and that there is thus no reason to prohibit them, european policy has taken refuge behind a principle of precaution, and it remains basically restrictive. although the moratorium on the culture and marketing of plant gmos that was put in place in was lifted in , mandatory labeling for any consumable product containing more than . % gmo remains dissuasive. the united states of america has refused to use such labeling. the worries that are aroused by plant transgenesis, which are often exacerbated by the diktats of ecology groups, must be analyzed in a reasoned manner. common sense and lucid thought dictate that the debate should be situated within a scientific perspective in which the main role is played by the experimental method in long-term applications. simple reflection leads us to think that with time parasites and self-propagating plants will develop a resistance to the most drastic treatments, as was the case for bacteria confronted with antibiotics. the perspective of an acquisition of uncontrolled resistances, which gives rise to so much passionate debate, is, in fact, only the first stage of a technology with promising applications. the mastery of plant transgenesis that was acquired through the first experimentations should, in fact, allow the emergence of plant gmos that are assigned to the production of molecules with therapeutic effects (drugs, vaccines, human proteins, vitamins…). in this domain, there have already been creations that include golden rice, which carries β-carotene, the precursor of vitamin a, banana plants that express a vaccine against hepatitis b and tobacco that produces human lactotransferrin and hemoglobin. if we just look at the production of golden rice as a palliative for vitamin a deficiency, it should be remembered that, in certain countries of our planet, this deficiency affects people's sight and is a frequent cause of blindness, that it generates problems with development and the immune response to infections, that it affects more than a hundred million children around the world and that it is responsible for the death of three million of them each year. if these plants are considered to be a material of choice for the production of proteins with a therapeutic effect, this is partly due to the yield of such crops over large surface areas, and also partly due to the low risk of transmission of viral pathogens to man, because of the species barrier, a risk that is less negligible when animal productions are involved. genetically modified plants are also potential factories for the manufacture of chemical products with an industrial impact, for example lubricants, perfumes and aromas. given the unpredictable outlets that plant gmos may have in human medicine and the different domains of the economy, plant gmo technology should be considered in a manner that is free of any pressure or passion, and, as far as the political authorities are concerned, it should be subject to appropriate measures to surround and protect certain strategic experiments. when looking at the worries being expressed by the european society, it should be remembered that the genetic inheritance of plants has never ceased changing, not only in the most of natural of manners, over millions of years, particularly with the mobility of transposable elements located in the genome, but also artificially, at the hands of farmers from ancient times onwards, with their methods of hybridization and selection. the nervousness of european authorities, showing an ignorance of basic scientific ideas, with the pretext of a principle of precaution, and sometimes political compromises that are exemplified by fluctuating and contradictory positions, runs the risk, in the short term, of causing their countries to lag disadvantageously behind the united states of america, which holds the majority of plant biotechnology patents. the principle of gene therapy is simple: the introduction of an appropriate gene into the cells of a patient who carries a mutation can correct the phenotypical consequences of this mutation, or, in other terms, cure the disease affecting the patient, or at least slow down its evolution. the technical difficulty involved in gene therapy is that of finding an appropriate vehicle or vector for the transfer of the gene and addressing it to an appropriate location in the genome of the host cell. the most commonly used vectors in human gene therapy are viral. a certain number of criteria are necessary for a transfer to be efficacious, including a high concentration of viral particles carrying the gene to be transferred (more than a billion viral particles per milliliter) and a good capability on the part of the foreign gene to be integrated into the host's genome. the patient's immune response remains a major worry in the use of viral vectors: at cell level it often leads to a proliferation of cytotoxic lymphocytes and, especially at humoral level, to the synthesis of antibodies directed against the viral proteins. in order to minimize its immune response, the genetic material of the viral vectors is modified. for ethical reasons, gene therapy is currently only applied to somatic cells, germinal gene therapy being rejected. somatic gene therapy has been experimented in the treatment of hereditary illnesses linked to hematopoiesis. one of the technical reasons for this choice is easy access to the progenitor cells of the bone marrow, with the aim of transfection. it was with this in mind that mouse gene therapy models were developed a few years ago. the sickle cell mouse is one of these models. human drepanocytosis (sickle cell anemia) is a serious disease that is caused by a mutation in the β protein chain of normal human hemoglobin a. the molecules of sickle cell hemoglobin s tend to aggregate and form fibers that obstruct the blood capillaries of the microcirculation. somatic gene therapy has been applied to these sickle cell mice. this involves an autograft of bone marrow hematopoietic cells transfected with a retrovirus hosting the gene coding for the β subunit of normal hemoglobin. encouraging results have shown the validity of this approach. in , a gene therapy protocol that had been applied with success to man was described by the group of alain fischer (b. ) and marina cavazzana-calvo at the necker hospital in paris (science, vol. , pp. - ). the purpose of this therapy was to bring about a long term remission in the case of an immune disease known as scid-x (severe combined immunodeficiency linked to a mutation on the x chromosome). because of their susceptibility to microbial and viral infections, babies who are affected can only survive in sterile rooms. they are known as bubble babies. in this illness, the hematopoietic progenitor cells of the bone marrow are unable to differentiate into t and nk (natural killer) lymphocytes because of a mutation that affects a cytokine receptor. previous experiments carried out on model mice show that scid can be corrected by in vivo transfer of the cytokine receptor gene into hematopoietic progenitors. the transfer of the gene of interest paired with a retroviral vector was carried out first in march , in two babies, one of them eleven months and the other two months old. progenitor cells from their own bone marrow, cultured and modified genetically, were injected into them. these were therefore autografts, without any risk of immune rejection. a remission of symptoms over a period of nearly a year, shown by the almost normal behavior of the babies' immune cells, encouraged the application of the same therapy to other babies. in total, ten babies were given this therapy. the enthusiasm that greeted the successes that were recorded was nevertheless tempered by fact that in the spring of , and again in the following year, a child who had undergone the gene therapy developed a leukemia characterized by an anarchical proliferation of lymphocytes, necessitating chemotherapy. these two occurrences were explained by the random character of the insertion of the gene of interest into the patients' genomes: insertion into a site close to a proto-oncogene had led to activation of this proto-oncogene and the proliferation of the lymphocytes. while the trial carried out at the necker hospital gave rise to great hopes, it nevertheless showed that there is still a long way to go before we achieve a targeted transfection of genes so that no undesirable consequences follow. here we have a typical example of the limits of an experimental method that is based on an in-depth technological know-how, but also on a still imperfect understanding of the complex arcana of the mechanisms that regulate the positioning and interaction of genes in the chromosomes of eukaryotic cells. this example highlights a harrowing ethical dilemma: should we not treat a patient whose illness is likely to be fatal, or attempt a therapy that may save the patient, without having any formal assurance of its success? an experimental medicine that has the power to modify the human organism via its genetic material is now able to take over from the experimental method that up until now operated on animals and plants. we can easily understand, given the progress that has already been accomplished and that which is to come in the domain of gene therapy, that the temptation will be great, in the future, to consider manipulations of the human germ cell genome as being licit, insofar as such manipulations make it possible to eradicate a handicapping defect in our descendents. at present, the idea of any attack on the germinal genetic inheritance has been rejected unconditionally on the basis of ethical considerations. nevertheless, the history of science shows that prohibitions that were once considered to be untouchable finish by being contravened. this was the case for abortion. in a text entitled why genetic engineering should continue its battle , james watson writes of his confusion when faced with a choice that is likely to become more and more insistent over the years: "dare we be entrusted with improving on the results of several million years of darwinian natural selection? or do the human germ cells represent on the contrary rubicons that geneticists will never dare to cross?" a mastery of the differentiation of stem cells and of cloning are two essential weapons in the biotechnological arsenal, the use of which for utilitarian ends, particularly in human medicine, gives rise to hope and disquiet, agreement and disapproval. at the beginning of the s, experiments carried out by the canadian biologists ernest mcculloch (b. ) and james till (b. ) attracted attention to the particular properties of cells in the bone marrow, the stem cells, which would subsequently be found in other tissues . the experimental protocol is simple. bone marrow cells from a mouse are injected into another mouse that has previously been irradiated in order to destroy its stem cells. the injected cells go to the spleen where they divide and form colonies that take the form of nodules of different sizes. the researchers realized that the cells of these nodules present differences in their potential for renewal, which is more or less rapid. they reinjected the nodule cells into mice from a second batch. the reinjected cells showed themselves capable of multiplying and generating several types of blood line. these observations suggest the presence in the nodules of progenitor cells that have a strong potential for self-renewal and self-differentiation. in the following years, these observations were confirmed and explained by two characteristic criteria of stem cells; self-renewal and differentiation into multiples cell lines with specific characteristics. from this point on, it was possible to understand the enigma of the amputated hydra in the experiments carried out by trembley, two centuries beforehand (chapter ii- . . ). we now understand why, like the hydra, organisms like the flatworm, the salamander, the starfish and the zebrafish are able to recreate an amputated or damaged part of their bodies. the hydra mobilizes stem cells that it has preserved since its birth. in the case of the salamander, regeneration involves the reprogramming of cells that have already been differentiated. like all stem cells, embryonic stem cells (or es cells) are able to self-renew and differentiate into the different types of known adult cell line, giving rise to different types of cell such as neurons, cardiac cells that are able to contract, or hepatocytes ( figure iv . ). this potential has led to the hope that es cells could be used in regenerative medicine. in a fertilized egg that has developed to the blastocyst stage, it is possible to distinguish a cell mass (inner cell mass, icm) which protrudes inside the blastocyst. the icm cells are removed and placed on a mat of irradiated (and thus unable to divide) fibroblasts that provide them with a support and nutrients (steps and ) so that they can proliferate. the stem cells arising from the icm cells, placed in a medium that has been specifically conditioned to provide cytokines and other biomolecules, are able to differentiate into various cell types (step ). at what stage of embryo development is it possible to remove es cells for experimental purposes? after fertilization by a sperm cell, the ovum undergoes a series of divisions that give rise to a microstructure, the blastocyst, the cells of which are called blastomeres. each isolated blastomere remains capable of producing an entire organism of fetus and placenta, by division and differentiation. at this stage, blastomeres are totipotent. five days after fertilization, the embryo has the form of a hollow sphere. an external layer of cells, the trophoectoderm, surrounds a cavity, the blastocele, inside which a small mass of cells, the inner cell mass, protrudes. from the beginning of the implantation of the blastocyt in the uterus, the trophoectoderm evolves to form the placenta. the cells of the inner cell mass take part in the process of differentiation that generates all of the tissues of the future adult organism. these are called embryonic stem cells (es cells). es cells are said to be pluripotent. isolated, they have lost their ability to give rise to a complete individual, but they have maintained the possibility of differentiating, according to their environment, into any of the two hundred cell types that make up animal tissues. during their division, es cells evolve from a stage of being pluripotent to a stage of being unipotent, passing through a stage of multipotency beyond a hundred cells. a state of multipotency characterizes cells that give rise to a restricted number of cell lines in the tissues in which they nest. this is the case for of the hematopoietic stem cells of the bone marrow that form the red blood cells and the white blood cells. the term unipotent refers to the progenitors, which give rise to a single type of cell, for example the hepatocyte of the liver or the cardiomyocyte of the heart. when es cells are cultivated for to days in a conventional nutritive medium, they multiply and aggregate. if the culture medium is supplemented with certain biomolecules such as insulin, retinoic acid, transferrin or fibronectin, the differentiation of the es cells is oriented towards cells of different types, such as neuron cells, glial cells or muscle cells. there are many publications about experiments concerning the grafting of differentiated stem cells in the mouse or the rat. for example, neuron precursors derived from the spinal cord or the brain are grafted into rats whose spinal chords have been injured. five weeks after the grafts are carried out, the transplanted cells have filled the area of the injury and differentiated into oligodendrocytes, astrocytes and neurons. what is more, after about twelve weeks, locomotive function has been partially restoredirradiated . other experiments involving the grafting of differentiated stem cells have been carried out on rats in which the dopaminergic neurons of the "substantia nigra" of the brain that secrete the neurotransmitter dopamine have been selectively destroyed by injection of -hydroxydopamine. the problems found in the rat as a result of this neuronal degenerescence mimic those found in man in patients suffering from parkinson's disease. dopaminergic neurons obtained by the differentiation of mouse es cells are grafted into the striatum of each of these rats, a region of the brain whose neurons communicate with those of the substantia nigra and play a fundamental role in the control of movement. this results in a significant improvement in the motor deficit, coupled with the establishment of functional synapses between the injected neurons and those of the host , . a recent publication bringing together the results of two french research teams, that of michel pucÉat (b. ) in montpellier and that of philippe menaschÉ (b. ) in paris, provides interesting information about how mouse embryonic stem cells, grafted into sheep cardiac tissue where an infarctus has been artificially induced, are able to colonize the infarct zone and regenerate cardiac contraction in a functional manner. moving from the mouse to the sheep constitutes a considerable species leap, and the absence of any immune rejection leads us to say that embryonic stem cells have an "immune privilege" . the use of es cells in regenerative medicine necessarily requires that their differentiation be regulated in an exhaustive manner into well-defined pathways, in order to produce homogeneous cell lines with a view to implanting them in damaged tissues. in fact, contamination with non-differentiated es cells is likely to cause tumors (teratomas) over the long term. the mastering of the use of es cell culture and differentiation, as well as of cloning, in such a way as to overcome problems of histocompatibility, is still in its infancy. for a long time, the mouse was the preferred animal model for experimental studies on the differentiation of es cells. in , the first es cells from mouse blastocysts were isolated and successfully cultured by two groups of researchers in great britain and the usa. it was only in that human embryonic stem cells (hes) were isolated for the first time and held in culture, on a nutritive layer of fibroblasts from irradiated mice. this delay with respect to the ability to culture animal es cells can be explained by the fact that the molecular machinery that activates replication and cell differentiation programs is not completely identical in man and the mouse . for example, a cytokine called lif (leukemia inhibitory factor), which is indispensable for the renewal of es cells in an undifferentiated state in the mouse, has no effect on human es cells. there are several other differences concerning the control of proliferation and differentiation in human and murine es cells by growth factors. briefly, the conclusions obtained from experiments carried while there is a highly promising future for the use of es cells, this future is littered with obstacles, and rigorous checks and balances need to be put in place. nevertheless, research on such cells is mandatory if we wish to move on to a regenerative medicine that aims to be a new frontier in the art of healing. after specific differentiation, hes cells could provide unlimited quantities of the tissues needed to replace damaged tissues responsible for handicapping illnesses (dopaminergic neurons in parkinson's disease, cardiomyocytes in myocardial infarction, pancreatic islets of langerhans cells in diabetes, fibroblasts in skin grafts, chondrocytes in rhumatoid arthritis). in addition, metabolic analysis of hes cells carrying defective genes whose phenotypical expression is known in human pathology should improve our understanding of the perturbed mechanisms, and could lead to pharmacological advances. as well as the technical difficulties involved, which have not yet been adequately overcome, the handling of hes cells is subject to much ethical debate in many countries, with those who object to it holding to their prejudices, which are linked to religious or cultural traditions. this is the case in france, where, nevertheless, a few timid dispensations had begun to appear at the time of writing. in contrast, in great britain, the law authorizes the isolation of hes cells for therapeutic purposes, using embryos of less than one hundred cells, produced by in vitro fertilization, and surplus to requirements. the british response to the burning question of whether an isolated hes cell may be considered as a potential human embryo is clearly "no", for, in order to be able to develop in utero, such hes cells would need to have the placental progenitor cells. an alternative to the use of es cells is to make use of adult stem cells. however, the proliferation capacity of adult stem cells is considerably lower than that of their embryonic homologues. the hematopoietic stem cell is the paradigm of the adult stem cell. it can differentiate into all known types of cells. in the last decade of the th century, several publications concerning the plasticity of the adult stem cell awakened a hope that these cells could transform the treatment of degenerative illnesses. certain of these publications stated that adult bone marrow stem cells, implanted into different types of tissues, differentiate into hepatocytes, cardiomyocytes or neurons, depending on the specific environment. careful re-examination of the techniques used revealed that, in certain cases, interpretation of the results as showing cell transdifferentiation was an erroneous one, and that the fusion of the bone marrow stem cells with cells from other tissues was a more plausible explanation. in any case, while not ignoring the use of adult stem cells, experimentation on hes cells remains a judicious choice, given our current state of understanding. in france, the law application decree that was issued on the th of february , revising the restrictive bioethical standards of , opens up the possibility of using human embryonic stem cells for scientific purposes, with certain ethical reserves being maintained. one of the obstacles to the stabilization over time of a stem cell graft in a receiver involves the phenomenon of rejection for reasons of histocompatibility. considered to be foreign by the receiver (host), grafted stem cells coming from a donor are rejected. this obstacle could be overcome by using the technique of cloning. based on experiments on several animal species, it is now accepted that the transfer of the nucleus of an adult somatic cell from a host into an enucleated oocyte makes it possible to obtain from this oocyte, which is once again nucleated, and which is the equivalent of a zygote and able to divide, es cells whose genome is identical to that of the host. because of this, the es cells are immunologically compatible with the tissues of the host. in man, such cells could be directed by differentiation towards stable cell lines creating well-defined tissues and organs (liver, muscle…) that could be used in regenerative medicine. this is the principle of therapeutic cloning. in march , korean veterinary researcher woo suk hwang (b. ) and his co-workers, who were recognized experts in animal cloning, announced in the american review science that they had succeeded for the first time in obtaining around thirty human blastocysts by cloning, i.e., by the transfer of nuclei of somatic cells into enucleated ova. this first experiment involved autologous cloning (ovum nuclei and enucleated somatic cells taken from the same woman). hwang and his team used ova, and the yield from the experiment was close to that obtained at that time for the cloning of mammals. using the inner cell mass of one of the blastocysts, they isolated a line of embryonic stem cells able to maintain a normal karyotype after several dozen divisions. this publication, which appeared in a highly prestigious scientific review, triggered an enthusiasm in the media that was in keeping with the spectacular nature of the team's exploit, tempered here and there by a few comments that were mainly linked to questions of medical ethics. in , there were numerous other articles by the same team on the same subject, reinforcing the first results with a heterologous cloning technique (ovum nuclei and enucleated somatic cells taken from different people), thus giving rise to great hopes that the era of regenerative medicine was near. at the beginning of , professor hwang's retractation of all his work, and a public confession of a spectacular fraud, were even more dramatic, offering certain media an occasion for a disproportionate level of fury against therapeutic cloning. however, despite such rear-guard combats, it is obvious that one day these technical difficulties will be overcome. human cloning, in order to obtain stem cells for therapeutic purposes, cannot escape the future. once this aim has been achieved, it will be spoken of as the outcome of a long story. the adventure of animal reproductive cloning began in . in developmental biology , two american researchers, robert briggs ( - ) and thomas king ( - described experiments involving the transfer of cell nuclei of embryos from a frog (rana pipiens), at the blastula and gastrula stages, into enucleated eggs of the same species. a high percentage of the clones obtained in this way were able to reach the tadpole stage when the transferred nuclei came from the early blastula stage, but only mediocre success was achieved when the nuclei came from the later gastrula stage. these experiments emphasized both the totipotency of the embryo somatic cells and the equivalency of the somatic cell nucleus and the nucleus of the fertilized egg in cell division and differentiation. briggs and king's publication did not arouse any particular interest. it is true that the s were dominated by the saga of molecular biology, which would reach its culmination in the deciphering of the genetic code. from the s onward, the first attempts to clone mammals (rat, mouse, pig) began. moving from the amphibian egg, which was a millimeter wide, to a mammal egg that was one hundred times smaller, presented a technical difficulty that would be overcome by a technique of cell-to-cell electrofusion. cloned embryos were thus obtained by nuclear transfer and then implanted into the uterus of a surrogate female. however, in all cases, the nucleus came from embryo cells. in february , the announcement made by ian wilmut (b. ), keith h. campbell (b. ) and their collaborators at edinburgh's roslin institute of the birth of the cloned lamb dolly had an immediate effect in the media. in fact, this was not only the cloning of a higher mammal, but, above all, the cloning by insertion of an adult somatic cell, in this case a mammary tissue cell, into an enucleated oocyte. this went far further than the experiment carried out by briggs and king, which essentially involved the transfer of embryo cell nuclei into enucleated frog eggs. the trick that gave wilmut and campbell their success was to bring the cells providing the nuclei to a quiescent state corresponding to the interphase stage of the cell cycle, by impoverishing their culture medium, before electrofusion with enucleated oocytes. although we should be aware that attempts were made before a positive result was achieved, this does not make it any less astonishing that the nucleus of a cell in its adult state, i.e., completely differentiated, was able to behave as if it were totipotent. despite being committed to a program of differentiation that is considered to be more-or-less irreversible, and which will give it a specific identity, the nucleus of an adult cell can be reprogrammed and become totipotent. since dolly, many other mammals have been cloned from nuclei of adult cells; mice, cows, goats, pigs, rabbits, cats, dogs, rats and horses. as far as ethical discussion about cloning is concerned (chapter iv. ), it is essential to note that the demarcation line between reproductive cloning and therapeutic cloning is situated where decisions are made concerning the destiny of the cloned blastocyst ( figure iv . ). the transfer of the nucleus of a somatic cell (liver, epidermis, muscle) containing n chromosomes into an enucleated oocyte gives rise to an egg ( n chromosomes) that is able to divide and to produce a blastocyst. the cells of the blastocyst inner cell mass (icm) can be used as stem cells that can differentiate into different types of cell line (therapeutic cloning). on the other hand, if the whole blastocyst is implanted into a uterus, it will produce an embryo which, after birth, will grow into an adult animal (reproductive cloning). reproductive cloning and therapeutic cloning therefore differ because of the fact that in reproductive cloning, the whole blastocyst is used, while in therapeutic cloning, only certain cells, corresponding to the inner cell mass (icm) of the blastocyst, are used. the structural and functional identity of the cells of a given tissue in an adult organism involves a basic mechanism: while each cell has the same set of genes, only some of the genes are expressed as proteins and the genes that are expressed differ according to the tissue involved. the key to the mechanism responsible is in the epigenetic type chemical modifications of cell dna, for example methylations, which repress the expression of certain genes without altering the expression of others. these modifications of the dna, which control cellular specificity (muscle, liver, brain…) are not very reversible, but, in certain circumstances, they can become so. this is what happens from time to time when the nucleus of an adult cell is inserted into an enucleated oocyte. we are thus able to assume that in the molecular arsenal of the oocyte cytoplasm there are substances that can cancel the epigenetic modifications of the dna present in the nucleus of an adult somatic cell and recreate a state of pluripotency in this nucleus, or, in other words, provoke the reprogramming of the somatic cell nucleus. in the long term, it is to be hoped that biochemical technology will be able to find and purify the molecules responsible for the nuclear reprogramming of somatic cells. the use of human oocytes for the purpose of therapeutic cloning is still subject to severe criticism. certain groups wish it to be prohibited, because of a fear of a drift towards reproductive cloning. to obviate this risk, the idea has been to make use not of human oocytes but of those of animals, transferring the nuclei of human somatic cells into them. even supposing that the technical difficulties involved could be overcome, the cells that would result, a sort of man-animal chimera, would also be the subject of an ethical debate, even if the purpose of this type of cloning were to be solely therapeutic. some japanese researchers have succeeded in creating mice according to a parthenogenetic process that involves adding the nucleus of an oocyte that is haploid ( n chromosomes) to another haploid oocyte, the result being the equivalent of a fertilized egg ( n chromosomes). this exploit is achieved by the invalidation of one of the genes (h ) involved in the control of the parental imprint. it is known that sexual reproduction in mammals involves a phenomenon called the parental imprint, which, by means of the methylation of dna and perhaps also of histones, allows the expressing or silencing of certain genes in male and female gametes. a single copy of a given gene, originating either from the oocyte or from the sperm cell, is therefore expressed, while the other is inactive. in the japanese experiment, if the mouse h gene had not been invalidated, the result would have been an anarchical development of the responsible genes involved in the parental imprint with overexpression in the case of some and an absence of expression in the case of others. these disturbances would have been incompatible with the viability of the embryo. however limited its application might be, the manipulation of the germinal genome poses the problem of the mechanism by which the parental imprint intervenes in the viability of the egg, a parameter that at the time of writing is still not completely understood, but is being actively explored. in boston, massachusetts, in , a kidney was transplanted from a healthy boy into his twin brother, who was suffering from a fatal renal anomaly. the success of this graft ushered in the era of transplantations of such organs as the heart, liver and kidney in man. in order to try to prevent the rejection of grafts, caused by an immune incompatibility between the receiver and the graft from the donor, different immunosuppressing treatments were tried, one by one, involving corticosteroids or cytostatic agents such as -mercaptopurine. in the s, a decisive step forward was made with the fortuitous discovery of the powerful immunosuppressive effect of the cyclosporin a, a cyclic polypeptide isolated from the mold tolypocladium inflatum. each year, human organ transplants into patients make it possible to save many lives. however, for some time now, organ transplantation has been suffering from penury of donors. one alternative to the homograft is the grafting of animal organs, or the xenograft, and, at the dawn of the st century, this type of graft has entered an active, promising phase, with the creation of pigs that have been partially "humanized" and are thus, as a consequence, immunocompatible. for reasons of genetic and physiological similarity, the first choice for such grafts was to use apes or monkeys. however, this idea was quickly abandoned, for several reasons; a non-negligible risk of viral infection due to the phylogenetic kinship of human and simian species; a slow growth rate; a low reproduction rate and, finally, laws that protect primates. these disadvantages are not found, or are at least minimized, in the pig: the risk of a viral infection passing from the pig to man should be low because of the species barrier (but nevertheless, it ought to be evaluated), the pig growth rate is relatively rapid, pig litters are large and pig organs are of a size close to those of man. hyperacute rejection of grafts is the critical obstacle that must be overcome before it is possible even to envisage the feasibility of xenotransplantation. hyperacute rejection is caused by the presence in man of natural antibodies (xenoantibodies) that accumulate throughout a lifetime and are directed against antigenic motifs carried by the products of the digestion of food or dust that is breathed in. xenoantibodies are mobilized when a xenograft occurs, and when they combine with xenoantigens brought by the graft this activates immune proteins such as the complement proteins. the catastrophic effect of this xenoantibody/xenoantigen combination is a vascular thrombosis followed by necrosis and rejection of the graft. the pig xenoantigen that is considered to be the one mainly responsible for the phenomenon of rejection in man is a sugar molecule, galactose α- , -galactose, located on the plasma membrane of endothelial cells. synthesis of this molecule requires the enzyme α- , -galactosyltransferase, which is present in most mammals, but absent in man and the primates. this enzyme disappeared in man around twenty million years ago, following a double mutation of the gene. in , cloning by nuclear transfer, associated with the invalidation of the gene coding for galactosyltransferase, made it possible to create pigs without galactose α- , -galactose . this performance shows that the xenotransplantation objective, although it can only be envisaged over the long term, is not based on false hopes. plant gmos, gene therapy, embryonic stem cells, therapeutic cloning, and xenotransplantation are a few of the many examples that show how far experimentation on living beings has progressed in just a few decades, from inquiries into the operating mechanism of an organ or a cell, in the interests of pure understanding, to a programmed process, planned with an objective in mind, the chances of success of this objective being analyzed and counted in terms of impact and cost-effectiveness. during the renaissance, ecclesiastical authorities, worried by the libertarian forces that were assailing them, applied the brakes to audacious questioning of dogma such as the circumterrestrial revolution of the sun that had, since ancient times, placed man at the center of the universe. nowadays, civil authorities, conscious of the potential but also of the possible misuses of genetic manipulation, insist on having the right to oversee such procedures. in truth, since the th century, governments have been interesting themselves in research on living beings and encouraging it, as long as its applications have allowed improvements in human health. this has been the case for vaccinations against infectious diseases or for prevention of microbial infections by means of aseptic or antiseptic methods. with the breakthroughs made in genetic manipulation at the end of the th century, it was more than just the results of experiments on living beings that attracted the attention of the political authorities, it was, above all, the manner in which the experimental method, with all its hazards, made use of living material, sometimes of human origin, in order to unlock mysteries. conscious of the social impact of emerging discoveries that are subject to considerable media coverage and are sensationalized in both the written and audiovisual media, the state, with the help of researchers and philosophers, has laid down a code of bioethics, applied through strict or even restrictive legislation. it remains to be seen whether the rules of this code will continue to be an inviolable absolute or will be modified according to the evolution of the moral codes and the cultures of nations. university teaching and the education of a society must now take into account not only the content of successive discoveries, but also the fallout of these discoveries, insofar as they concern man, and even the ethical justification of the methods that have allowed these discoveries. in "remaking" living beings according to imposed norms, and in scheduling, in a certain fashion, the manufacture of life according to new codes, certain questions move from the "how" to the "why", i.e., from the scientific domain that is accessible to human thought to the metaphysical sphere, with its problems of the limit of what is surmountable and tolerable in terms of ethics. in his birth of predictive medicine, jacques ruffiÉ ( - ) reminds us that medicine has evolved through three stages over the course of time: curative medicine, which has been practiced since ancient times and is still being practiced; preventive medicine, which is more recent, and is designed to prevent people from falling ill, either by vaccinating them, in the case of infectious diseases, or by recommending an appropriate diet and medication in the case of metabolic disorders such as diabetes or arterial hypertension that have been detected by means of systematic examination; and, finally, predictive medicine, a branch of medicine that is still in its early phases, and which is based on modern technology and is able to predict situations of risk because of anomalies detected in the genetic inheritance or because of exposure to environments that are reputed to be dangerous (for example, carcinogenic smoke, asbestos). about one and a half centuries ago, the publication of the introduction to the study of experimental medicine ( ) provided proof, based on scientific arguments, that the time had come to transfer the experience that had been acquired through the experimental method practiced on animal models to the ill person. after claude bernard, attentive to the progress made by ideas and techniques in the physical and chemical sciences, and making use of its own advances in the understanding of the living cell, both normal and pathological, experimental medicine was to live through a development that was without precedent in the history of humanity. to understand the causes of epidemics, nutritional deficiencies, metabolic deviations of hereditary origin and degenerative illnesses, and then to translate these causes in cellular and molecular terms, this was the process undertaken by medicine once it began to use the experimental method. in fact, for several decades, from the beginning of the th century, medicine had already undergone some major revisions of outdated practices and had inaugurated a new era in diagnosis. for example, the differential diagnosis of pulmonary ailments became possible because of the invention of the stethoscope by rené laennec ( - ) and the practice of auscultation and percussion by joseph skoda ( - ), the uncontested master of the vienna school. in france, pierre louis ( - ) used statistical methods to evaluate the efficacy of different treatments. armand trousseau ( - ), a pupil of pierre bretonneau ( - ) wrote a famous treatise on the hôtel-dieu medical clinic in paris. in great britain, chronic nephritis, with its identifying symptoms, was described by richard bright ( - ), paralysis agitans by james parkinson ( - ) and addison's disease, which affects the adrenal glands, by thomas addison ( - ). during the th century, many other famous names signaled the arrival of a medicine that was resolutely anatomoclinical in nature, in line with bernardian doctrine. "experimental medicine is thus a medicine that claims to understand the laws of the organism in sickness and in health, in such a way that it not only predicts phenomena, but also in such a way that it can regulate and modify them, within certain limits." in the introduction to the study of experimental medicine, claude bernard stigmatizes the relics of an empirical medicine that was still being practiced in his day and was forgetful of rationalism. the terms that he uses are without leniency: "i have often heard doctors who, when asked the reason for a diagnosis, reply that they don't know how they recognize such a case, but it is obvious, or who, when asked why they administer certain remedies, reply that they don't really know how to put it exactly, and that anyway they are not required to give a reason, because it is their medical tact and their intuition that guides them. it is easy to understand that doctors who reason in this way are denying science. what is more, it is impossible to be too forceful in rising up against such ideas, which are bad not only because they stifle any scientific seed in the young, but also, above all, because they favor laziness, ignorance and charlatanism." in order to evaluate the meaning of these words, it should be remembered that in claude bernard's time, the medical profession was far from considering the microscope as a useful instrument for the study of cell structures and that the cause and effect relationship between bacterial germs and infections was still to be shown. with the development of increasingly effective instruments for exploration, and of methods for microanalyses concerning a wide range of blood and humoral constants, throughout the th century, medicine, which was once empirical, has now become scientific. claude bernard's dream, experimental medicine, is now operative. this medicine is no longer content simply to determine the cause of an illness and to locate the affected organ, which was the major objective of clinical medicine, but it seeks to detect the mechanisms of pathological processes by means of histological and physicochemical explorations. this medicine is no longer willing to passively monitor the evolution of an infectious disease. after having identified the responsible germ, it tries to target this germ with the chemical weapon that is able to selectively destroy it. this medicine is no longer content simply to find remedies, it aims to understand the mode of action. it sets itself the goal of meeting challenges such as finding the genetic cause of degenerative illnesses or of cancers and developing appropriate therapies. it is supported by statistical data. when a new drug is implemented, the results are now evaluated by the double blind method: neither any of the patients (treated and non-treated) nor any of the investigators are aware of who has been administered with the drug and who has been administered with a placebo. in the surgical domain, audacious techniques have also led to considerable progress, particularly in neurosurgery and in cardiovascular surgery. thanks to robotics and to computer technology, remote surgery or telesurgery has become practicable, although up until not that long ago, it was only to be found in fiction. faced with emerging problems in public health, the task undertaken by experimental medicine is immense. in the middle of the th century, the spectacular recovery from high-incidence infectious diseases such as pneumococcal pneumonia, meningococcal meningitis or acute forms of tuberculosis, which that was brought about by antibiotics, gave rise to the idea that medicine had won a battle against the microbial world and that, from then on, it would be able to control the evolution of infectious diseases and to offer rational treatments. the gradual appearance of a microbial resistance to antibiotics has brought an end to this euphoric era. penicillin, for example, which was put on the market at the end of the s, was active on practically all strains of staphylococcus aureus. sixty years later, more than % of the strains of this same microbe are resistant to penicillin. the incidence of nosocomial infections, which are contracted in health care facilities, never ceases to rise. at present, around % of the hospitalizations that take place are complicated by the patient developing a nosocomial infection. equally worrying are the re-emergence of diseases that were once considered to be under control, such as tuberculosis or poliomyelitis in africa, and the emergence of new diseases such as aids, whose hiv virus (human immunodeficiency virus), which was identified at the beginning of the s, has generated a pandemic that has spread throughout the planet. infectious diseases are currently responsible for more than a quarter of human deaths. the koch bacillus responsible for tuberculosis and the pneumococcus kill three to four million people a year, around the world. in , hiv killed more than three million people, and more than forty million people are infected. one person is infected every seconds. in viral diseases, the role of vectors (insects, various animals) as well as the notions of contagiousness and aggressivity have been emphasized. we have only to remember the dreadful contagiousness and aggressivity of the spanish flu virus (influenzavirus ah n ) which, in - , killed more human beings around the world than the first world war that preceded it. in contrast, the sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome) epidemic of , the vector of which was doubtless the civet, a small carnivore raised in china and desired for its meat, was rapidly contained because of its low contagiousness and also because of the isolation measures that were taken. human behavior is not without its effect on the emergence of viral diseases. the growth in intercontinental travel and human migration, as well as intensive deforestation in africa and south america, which bring virus vectors into contact with man, are factors concerned in the emergence of viral diseases that risk being explosive and devastating. in this context, the history of the ebola virus and of the marburg virus, which cause violent hemorrhaging, is edifying. in , in the german village of marburg, an epidemic of unknown origin broke out, the illness manifesting itself with brutal suddenness by vomiting, diarrhea, a high fever and an increased tendency to bleed. this pathology, which was contained rapidly by means of drastic isolation measures, was found to be of viral origin. the pathogen concerned was a filovirus (filiform virus). a brief enquiry showed that the origin of the epidemic was contact between technicians of a pharmaceutical company and monkeys that had been imported from uganda and that were carrying the virus. in , two other epidemics, characterized by severe and often fatal hemorrhagic fevers, were reported in the sudan and the republic of the congo. here again, the illness was caused by a filovirus, the ebola virus. at the time of writing, only public health organizations, including the nih (national institutes of health) in the usa, have attempted to set up vaccination and therapeutic strategies. research on these dangerous viruses requires high security installations that are particularly costly, so that private companies are reticent about investing in work that is only targeted on poor regions and which concerns epidemics that have so far been contained successfully, although one day the ebola and the marburg virus could quite well escape their african niches. experimental medicine must also understand the colossal challenge of the five thousand hereditary diseases that are currently listed, the most handicapping of which are myopathies and neuropathies. given the means that are available to the contemporary clinician in order to assign each of these diseases to a genetic defect, one can only be amazed by the mass of information about them that has accumulated over a century, since the first diagnosis of a hereditary disease, alcaptonuria, which was made in by archibald garrod ( - ), a doctor at london's st bartholomew's hospital. alcaptonuria is a non-serious genetic flaw that can be detected easily by a blackening of the urine. it is the result of a blockage caused by the mutation of an enzyme involved in the catabolism of an amino acid, tyrosine, this blockage leading to the accumulation of homogentisic acid, the polymerization of which gives rise to a brownish color. the patient examined by garrod was a young boy. investigation of the family history revealed that transmission of the flaw was correlated to cross-cousin marriages and followed mendel's laws for recessive traits. garrod demonstrated other hereditary-type anomalies, cystinuria, porphyria and pentosuria. in , these observations were published in a work that became a classic: inborn errors of metabolism. in , the specific molecular defect of a metabolic anomaly linked to a mutation was identified for the first time by the german-born british biochemist vernon ingram. this was the hemoglobin defect responsible for drepanocytosis or sickle cell anemia: a glutamic acid in the β chain is replaced by a valine. the consequence of this simple change is a modification of the structure of the hemoglobin, leading to a sickle-shaped deformation of the red blood cells, the increased fragility of these cells and also a tendency towards cell lysis. this discovery made use of the electrophoresis and chromatography techniques that had just been introduced in biochemistry (chapter iii- . . ): such a discovery would not have been possible without these techniques. because of the progress made in molecular biology, the nosological framework of hereditary diseases has been greatly enriched over the last twenty years. for example, at present, more than one hundred hereditary-type myopathies have been identified by accurately locating molecular lesions in the genomic dna and characterizing the structural and functional modifications of the mutated proteins. certain health problems present real challenges for experimental research. this is the case for the spongiform encephalopathy caused by a prion (proteinaceous infectious particle) , which has all the more impact on the imagination because its etiology remains a mystery. it is also the case for degenerescence of the central nervous system correlated with aging, alzheimer's disease being a striking example, although, as far as familial forms of this illness are concerned, i.e., those of the hereditary type, it has been possible to link the invasion of the brain by a so-called amyloid peptide, which accumulates in plaques, on the one hand, and, on the other hand, the absence, due to a mutation, of an enzyme, a peptidase, which normally degrades the amyloid peptide. contemporary scientific medicine sometimes acquires a revolutionary aspect. here again, as with other disciplines involved in the study of living beings, it arises from discoveries resulting from the principle of serendipity (chapter iii- . . ). this was the case when, in january , a team in grenoble, france , led by the neurosurgeon alim-louis benabid (b. ) and the neurologist pierre pollack (b. ) discovered by accident that in patients affected by parkinson's disease a beneficial effect was achieved by deep, high-frequency electrical stimulation of the brain. the three major symptoms of parkinson's disease are muscular rigidity, a tremor when at rest and a slowing down of the execution of movements. in the s, the swedish team of arvid carlsson (b. ) , who won the nobel prize for physiology and medicine, demonstrated a relationship between the parkinson syndrome and a deficit in the secretion of a neurotransmitter, dopamine. a group of neurons that is limited to half a million (of the billion contained in the brain) produces this neurotransmitter in a small structure located in the midbrain, called the substantia nigra. the neurons of the substantia nigra have elongations that interact with different nerve formations (called nuclei) including the subthalamic nucleus. in , bergman et al. published an article that describes a curious relationship between a provoked lesion of the subthalamic nucleus and the disappearance of the signs of parkinson's disease in a monkey which had been made parkinsonian by chemical treatment. this publication led the team in grenoble to target their electrical stimulation on the subthalamic nucleus. this was completely successful. this electrical stimulation procedure, which is now well-codified, involves using stereotactic neurosurgical techniques, controlled by magnetic resonance imaging, to implant an electrode into the subthalamic nucleus. the electrode is connected to a generator that is implanted under the patient's clavicle. the generator sends brief electrical impulses of frequencies from to hz. under the effect of this stimulation, the characteristic symptoms of the illness, particularly the static tremor and bradykinesis, regress in a spectacular manner. the mechanism by which this stimulation acts is not yet understood. no doubt this has to do with complex phenomena involving the inhibition of certain neuron relays near to the substantia nigra, which remain to be deciphered. here we have a typical case of a progression from an experimental fact, discovered by accident, towards the analysis of its cause. from the point of view of the experimental method, it is interesting to make parallels between this discovery by serendipitous means of the beneficial role of electrical stimulation of the midbrain in parkinson's disease and cartesian style programmed research that aims to graft into the brain of parkinson's disease sufferers embryonic stem cells differentiated into dopaminergic neurons . civilian society and its armed force, the political authorities, have understood that experimental science has the tools, the method and the thought processes necessary to develop strategies for prevention and healing. immune cells of this person and induces the synthesis of immune proteins. finally, it seems relatively certain that hopes concerning gene therapy for hereditary diseases will be fulfilled within before too long (chapter iv- . . ). one of the traits that is characteristic of the period we live in, and which arises partly from the economic stakes involved, is the shortening of the time that elapses between a discovery being made and the application of that discovery. for example, interfering rnas, which were discovered in the s (chapter iv- . . ) are already the subject of therapeutic investigation. more than a hundred biopharmaceutical companies around the world are using them with a view to producing drugs from them . in mice, a certain number of synthetic interfering rnas have proved their efficacy in silencing genes which, following mutation, have acquired carcinogenic potential. however, the use of interfering rnas as therapeutic agents requires them to be stabilized, because they are fragile molecules. the group headed by achim aigner (b. ), at the school of medicine in marburg, germany, managed to stabilize a synthetic interfering rna by complexing it with polyethyleneimine, and this interfering rna is able to block the expression of a receptor involved in cancerization (c-erbb /neu(her- ) receptor). used in mice, such a drug appears promising. despite the undeniable progress that has been made, experimental medicine is still some way from finding solutions to some of the enigmas that it meets along the way, and which underline the complexity of living beings. some time ago, it was thought that after having invalidated a gene coding for a protein that is indispensable to a function, we would discover the secret of a cause-and-effect relationship. experimental practice has shown that, generally, this is far from being the case. another example of the complex relationships that exist in living beings is the interference of the mental and the organic. one experiment that suggests this interference was carried out on mice who had acquired a form of pathology similar to huntington's chorea, by transgenesis. mice from the same line were separated into two batches, one acting as a control, and the other being subjected to daily mental stimulation, including memorization tests. unexpectedly, the appearance of symptoms was noticeably slowed down in mice who had been subjected to mental gymnastics , as if the brain, by intentionally mobilizing its neuron activity, was able to secrete substances able to alleviate its own defects. in short, by means of possible retroactive mechanisms that are called upon by the mind, the brain appears to act as actor and spectator. at the turn of the st century, experimental medicine was being nourished by techniques inherited from experimental physics, chemistry, and even mathematics and computer technology, in the same way as the other sciences of living beings. the progress made in medical imaging techniques has been particularly impressive since the time, at the end of the th century, when the x-rays discovered by wilhelm rÖntgen made it possible to view the structure of the human skeleton. the saga of x-radiation continued through the th century (chapter iii- . . ). for the last few decades, new imaging techniques have come to the fore. they have spread rapidly, and been refined. ultrasound imaging, which is based on the principle of the reflection of ultrasound waves off of different kinds of surfaces, has become an everyday technique for viewing blood flow in blood vessels and the heart. however, it is mainly in the study of the brain that medical imaging has benefited from technical advances in the domains of physics and computer technology, and it has been innovative in assigning cognitive activities to well-identified anatomical structures. this functional neuroanatomy makes it possible, in a non-trauma-inducing manner, to monitor and locate the operation of neuron networks with great temporal and spatial precision, during various cognitive tasks such as reading and the written or oral expression of thought. the middle of the th century saw the gradual development of two methods for exploring zones of cerebral activity, electroencephalography and magnetoencephalography. at present, these techniques are being taken over by mri (magnetic resonance imaging) ( figure iv. ) . the principle of mri is based on the detection of hydrogen nuclei and their differentiation according to their environment. functional mri leads to the location of the areas of the brain that are active during calculation exercises, the perception of sounds, language and objects, and memorization, with a resolution of just a few millimeters. its power of exploration is such that it has been possible to analyze the brain response, in sleeping or awake babies who are only three months old, to auditory stimuli from language that either makes sense or does not make sense . the response, located in the left hemisphere and the prefrontal cortex, leads to the conclusion that, from the first months of life, there are zones of the brain that are potentially active before the first attempts at language appear. both in france (cea-saclay and the frederic joliot hospital at orsay) and abroad, recent mri performance has encouraged projects concerning the manufacture of instruments able to produce magnetic fields of around ten teslas, which allows an unequaled definition in the identification of areas of the brain assigned to specific cognitive functions and in the highly accurate determination of the location of pathological lesions. a technique that is complementary to mri is positron emission tomography (pet). this generally uses water labeled with oxygen ( o), a radioactive isotope of natural oxygen that has a very short lifetime ( s), produced extemporaneously in a cyclotron by bombardment of an n target with protons. the radiolabeled water is injected into the blood flow of the patient. it is found in greater concentration in the zones that are the most irrigated by blood capillaries. the positrons that it emits collide with the surrounding electrons and give rise to photons that can be detected by the appropriate apparatus. affected by a stimulus (whether this stimulus results from talking, writing or listening), the blood irrigation of the zones of the brain that have been specifically excited increases noticeably. the location of the positron emission provides information about the location of these zones. within a few dozen minutes, it is possible to locate a highly vascularized cerebral tumor. pet can use molecules other than water, such as organic molecules labeled with positron-emitting atoms, ( f) fluorine (half life min) and ( c) carbon (half life min). around twenty years ago, in canada, an analogue of l-dopa, the precursor of dopamine in the brain, f- -l-fluorodopa, was synthesized, and was found to be an excellent probe for determining the capture capability of the endings of the dopaminergic neurons in the striatum. in patients suffering from parkinson's disease, this capture capability is noticeably reduced. at present, pet involving f- -l-fluorodopa is being used to evaluate the survival of dopaminergic cells grafted into the striata of parkinson's disease sufferers , . nowadays, brain imaging techniques can be used to explore the electromagnetic anomalies of neurological or neuropsychiatric illnesses such as huntington's chorea, the different forms of alzheimer's disease or even autism, the genetic origin of which is in the process of being deciphered. a bridge has now been built between the molecular defects identified by genetics and the electromagnetic anomalies that result, analyzed by functional cerebral imaging. it was not so long ago that descartes considered that human thought was unconnected to a material support (chapter ii- . . ). we are not far from the era when broca located the language area in a specific zone of the brain after the autopsy of an aphasic patient (chapter iii- . ), thus opening the door to another scientific domain, neuropsychology, which had previously only been the subject of speculation. the consequences, from the societal point of view, were far from being insignificant. thus autism, which was once suspected of being caused by errors in the mother's behavior with respect to her child, has been shown to be a disturbance in the development of the fetal nervous system, in the temporooccipital region. while the neurosciences occupy a preponderant position in the medicine of the beginning of the st century, because of the development of techniques that aim to analyze even the functions of thought, emerging methodologies of another order, such as gene therapy (chapter iv- . ), are in the process of completely modifying our ways of treating and curing a range of previously incurable human diseases, from incapacitating immune disorders to cardiovascular diseases and cancer. "it is in the domain of thought about the future that man is singled out. we are beings who have an imagination. not content to live in the present, to profit from past experience, we remain haunted by a future that we are conscious of constantly entering. this obsession with the future has been a powerful driving force in cultural evolution. we seek to predict in order to avoid the worst and to better prepare for our tomorrows." by predicting potential dangers in subjects who are in good health, predictive medicine aims to provide the means of avoiding these dangers. these dangers can be intrinsic in nature, being written, for example, into a certain genome dna sequence, or they can be extrinsic in nature, linked to an unsuspectedly deleterious environment. in each generation, mutations occur, certain of which can lead to so-called genetic diseases; between and % of newborns are affected. besides these spontaneous mutations, there are also mutations arising from the genetic inheritance of the parents. the purpose of genetic counseling is to warn parents when the existence of a potentially serious genetic flaw is suspected. the highlighting of genes that give a predisposition for cancer (proto-oncogenes) is a convincing illustration of the power of predictive medicine. this involves genes that control the synthesis of growth factors, the activity of which is essential to embryogenesis and to the repair of damaged tissue. while they are normally subject to strict control by anti-oncogenes, proto-oncogenes are able to become active in an anarchical manner, under different influences, and to transform themselves into cancer-generating oncogenes. recently, mutations have been found in two genes, brca and brca , these mutations giving a predisposition for cancers of the breast and of the ovary. thanks to genetic exploration, it will soon be possible to predict whether a cancer of the breast will have a rapid progression leading to uncontrollable metastases or a slow progression. depending on the case patients will be subject to heavy chemotherapy or to a less aggressive treatment. in this context, targeted therapy with monoclonal antibodies is a source of great hope. while genetic inheritance has a role in cancer, the environment plays a notinsignificant role as well. this is the case, for example, in lung cancer sufferers who smoke tobacco, cancer of oesophagus in those who drink alcohol and job-related cancers in those working in factories producing colorants or materials derived from asbestos or tars. cardiovascular diseases are the primary cause of death in the more developed countries, involving either an infarctus, or a stroke. many risk factors for these diseases are known, i.e., metabolic deviations affecting cholesterol or the blood serum proteins involved in the transport of lipids. these metabolic anomalies result in a syndrome known as atherosclerosis, which is characterized anatomically by the deposit of fats in the form plaques in the arteries. while genetic factors are at the origin of these metabolic problems, the latter are clearly amplified by an inappropriate diet. the role of predictive medicine is to recognize the genes that are responsible, warn individuals of the risks they are running and to advise them about the types of lifestyle and diet that do not increase these risks. being able to predict, predictive medicine should be able to prevent by means of targeted drugs. within this context, it gives rise to reflection upon polymorphism linked to variation in a single nucleotide in the dna of the genome of an individual. known as snp (single nucleotide polymorphism), this polymorphism has proved to be a very useful auxiliary in molecular medicine. hundreds of thousands of snps are present in the human genome and several tens of thousands in genes coding for the proteins. where they are located differs according to ethnic backgrounds. among these snps, some appear to be linked to certain pathologies, such as certain forms of cancer or degenerative illnesses such as alzheimer's disease. in addition, in a small number of patients, the location of certain snps has been connected with previously-inexplicable drug incompatibilities. in line with these observations, pharmacogenomics, a branch of pharmacology that deals directly with genome sequence data, is trying to evaluate the impact of "snp variants" on the efficacy and toxicity of drugs and to understand the genetic bases that explain the differences that are observed in the responses of different individuals to the same medication . rather than using a standard drug that is not very efficacious or causes adverse side effects, it might be possible, depending on the genetic profile of the patient, to use a drug that is more appropriate to his or her genetic map. it is doubtless not just a fantasy to imagine that, in or years' time, a patient visiting the doctor will be offered a genetic map thanks to cells taken from the buccal mucosa. finding snp variants that are known to be responsible for drug incompatibilities in such a map will make a targeted prescription possible. it will allow the detection of genes for susceptibility to an illness, at the same time uncovering targets for new drugs. pharmacogenomics, which is still called new pharmacogenetics, contrasts with old pharmacogenetics in which, having found an adverse clinical response to a certain therapy, an attempt was made to identify the protein target of the incriminated drug, and then to go back to the gene coding for this protein, and to look for the mutation responsible for the aberrant response to the drug. the existence of customized predictive medicine, which would read the destinies of individuals in their genes, would not be without its consequences in the life of a citizen. by registering each citizen with a genetic map, matched with a named identity card, predictive medicine might begin to take on the aspect of a janus, with his beneficent face warning subjects of potential risks of metabolic problems, and guiding them towards the actions to be taken to lower the risks, but also with his evil face delivering each individual's intimate details to the indiscrete inquisitiveness of investigators who are operating towards their own ends (insurance companies, employers…). no less worrying would be the sly but predictable transformation of the individuality of the repaired or even doped human being within a system of imposed, docilely-accepted assistance. in the th and th centuries, the methodology for biological experimentation underwent a revolution caused by the progress made in the domain of chemistry, both analytical chemistry, with the deciphering of increasingly complex molecular structures, and also in synthetic chemistry, with the large-scale production of tens of thousands of new molecules. the effects of these molecules, which might eventually be used as drugs, were tested directly on animals. it was thus that in the german chemist paul ehrlich discovered salvarsan, a derivative of arsenic, which was active against a type of treponeme, the agent of syphilis. this was the result of a systematic analysis of the effect of synthetic products, aromatic derivatives of arsenic acid, on syphilis in rabbits. salvarsan was the th derivative that was tested, and this is why it was called for a long time before it was given the name salvarsan. sometimes, lucky chance shows surprising and unexpected properties in synthetic molecules. this was the case for chlorpromazine, which was initially used as an antihistamine. it was luck that led to its antipsychotic activity being discovered in . a new era opened up in psychiatry with the arrival of synthetic narcoleptics like chlorpromazine. a new chemical science known as combinatory chemistry, which dates from the s, has aroused an increasing amount of interest in pharmacology. this involves making two or more species of organic molecules that carry reactive functional residues react in solution or in the solid phase in such a way as to synthesize, by means of all possible combinations, a number of final and intermediary products that is situated in the hundreds or even the thousands, and which makes up chemical library or drug library. we can directly test all of the products formed on a sample of eukaryotic cells, in order to verify their effects (for example the inhibition of an anarchical proliferation of cancerous cells), or on microorganisms in order to evaluate an antibiotic capability. we can also proceed straight away with the fractioning of the reaction products and the testing of each of the fractions. if the response is positive, fractioning is continued until the molecular species responsible for the desired effect is obtained. other evaluation parameters for this molecule, such as its absorption, its toxicity and its metabolic future (distribution in the organs, chemical modifications and excretion) are then explored, first in cells, and then in animals (rats, mice), thus comprising pre-clinical tests. these screening operations, which are said to be high-throughput, require automation and robotization aided by powerful computer technology. each year, pharmaceutical companies screen tens of thousands of different molecules on hundreds of targets. complementary to combinatory chemistry, in silico chemistry works by molecular modeling and uses computer programs for the rational design of new drugs that are able to fix onto specific protein targets. the purpose of this is to provide a virtual follow up to modifications in the reactivity of a given drug molecule as a function of the modifications imposed on its structure, for example, the addition of residues that differ according to their electrophilic or hydrophilic properties, or according to the length of their side-chain. provided there is a chemical library and we know the three-dimensional structure of a macromolecule, for example an enzyme, as well as the nature of the residues that define its active site, we can hope to select and chemically modify a substance that is able recognize the active site of this enzyme and to make an almost perfect ligand out of it which is able to efficiently block the operation of the target enzyme. this method, which is based on computer-aided chemistry, is called "structure-based drug design", and has had some notable successes. it has made it possible to develop an inhibitor capable of blocking a protease involved in the replication of the aids virus. however, both in combinatory chemistry and in molecular modeling, the many successes that have been achieved remain modest in number compared to the means that have been deployed to achieve them. in terms of statistics, out of ten thousand molecules that are recognized as being efficacious for a given target in vitro, around one hundred are chosen for preclinical trials on animals, around ten are chosen for preclinical trials in man and only one will come out as a drug. the financial and economic effect is far from being negligible. it has even become a preoccupation in a system where merciless competition is the rule. in addition to synthetic chemistry, preparative chemistry, which is based on the isolation of natural molecules, is now the subject of renewed interest, due to the introduction of high-throughput techniques. high-throughput screening, which is an essential tool in combinatory chemistry, is also carried out to ensure the systematic detection and isolation of natural substances having interesting pharmacological activities such as antibiotic activities or anti-cancer activities, based on marine animals, microscopic fungi, prokaryotic organisms and various plants. for example, among the substances that have been isolated recently are cibrostatin, a specific cytostatic of melanoma cells, from a marine sponge, mannopeptimycin, a bacterial antibiotic from an actinobacterium streptomyces hydroscopicus and a whole set of alkaloids with a cytostatic activity with respect to human tumor cells from an exotic plant of the genus daphniphyllum. the molecular diversity of the living world is such that the reserves of natural products having pharmacological activities are far from being exhausted. so far, only a small percentage of the microbial species populating the earth have been listed. the depths of the oceans harbor many unknown species. thousands of insect species remain to be discovered in the canopies of tropical rainforests. exploration of the plant kingdom is far from being complete. the listing of natural molecules having a therapeutic activity has only just begun. the hunt promises to be a fruitful one, all the more so because the highthroughput screening methods that can now be used greatly increase the efficiency of the search. high-throughput screening, applied to natural molecules, has overturned the methodological procedures that were in use until recently, which progress through logical steps, using relatively simple artisanal analytical methods, from observation, often resulting from serendipity, to the isolation of the active substance. thus, in the th century, using inherited traditional knowledge that a decoction of cinchona officinalis bark calms malaria crises, pierre joseph pelletier ( - ) and joseph bienaimé caventou ( - ) decided to isolate the active substance of this bark. from the raw extract, they purified an alkaloid, quinine, which proved to be the anti-malarial substance they were looking for. more recently, the starting point of florey and chain's isolation of penicillin from the microscopic fungus penicillium notatum was the fortuitous observation made by fleming that this penicillium secretes an antibiotic factor (chapter iii- . . ). there are many examples in which serendipity has been the principle factor involved in the discovery of a drug, and this will no doubt continue to be the case. the appearance of a lucky chance, after all, is not incompatible with highthroughput practices. also, it is not impossible that in the future there will be a conjugation of the discovery of new natural substances and the use of combinatory chemistry, with the aim of manufacturing derivatives having a much greater power of action and quality of specificity from these substances . to sum up, the experimental method has caused contemporary medicine to take a giant leap forward, with the discovery of increasingly high-performance functional exploration techniques, the development of therapies using molecules that are already present in nature or are manufactured by synthesis and the more and more advanced understanding of molecular mechanisms that takes into account the basic idea of the pioneers of molecular biology was that the function of a macromolecule depended on its structure. thus, perutz's elucidation of the tetrameric three-dimensional structure of hemoglobin, and of its modifications depending on the degree of oxygenation, shed a considerable amount of light on the cooperative mechanism of the transition from the hemoglobin state to the oxyhemoglobin state (chapter iii- . . ). in the same way, an understanding of the structure of many enzymes, receptors and transporters of metabolites has shed light on their mechanisms. in a parallel manner to the exploration of the structures and functions of proteins, that of genomes has made remarkable progress. the subtle entanglements of genomics and proteomics that have become accessible to the experimental method are the order of the day. one major challenge for post-genomics is to understand how proteins, expressed by genes, interact with one another to generate functions that characterize cellular specificity. even more ambitious are attempts to understand the operation of organs or even of living organisms, based on mechanisms that are implemented at molecular level. these attempts lead straight to an integrated biology, that is, a biology that aims to understand the overall functioning of living beings. taking as its purpose the access to emerging functions, resulting from interactions between macromolecules, integrated biology first tries to invent methods that make it possible to detect these interactions. strengthened by the information obtained, it tries to integrate this information with a mathematized language into modules that attempt to simulate living beings. from the simplistic procedures of the middle of the th century, which were justifiable within the reductionist context of this period, and which involved considering each species of proteins as an autonomous functional entity, we have moved on to the idea that the different species of protein that inhabit a cell have a dialogue with one other, and that they may move from one endocellular organelle to another, depending on post-translational modifications (for example, phosphorylations) that change their conformation and, at the same time, their reactivity and their behavior. thus, an enzyme protein is not only defined by its catalytic performance with respect to a given substrate, but also by its place in a metabolic network where it interacts in a dynamic and transitory manner with a multitude of other protein species (figure iv. a) . the concept of cell signaling has also evolved. instead of considering that a cell membrane receptor, activated by fixation of an extracellular ligand (a hormone, for example), addresses the information received to an endocellular effector protein via a linear cascade of individual proteins, it has come to be postulated that communication between an activated receptor and its effector is mediated by proteins organized into interactive networks ( figure iv. b) . this machinery provides more flexibility in the addressing of messages to effectors. the diagram on the right shows that besides its catalytic function, protein a interacts with other proteins in the cell. b -case of the transduction of a signal that is external to the cell (a hormone, for example). the diagram on the left refers to the classical idea of signaling from a receptor r according to a linear cascade of protein-protein interactions inside the cell, leading to an effector z. the diagram on the right shows that the signal is spread through proteins organized into interactive networks. another subject to be considered is the density of macromolecules of all types, such as proteins, nucleic acids, lipids and polysaccharides, contained by a microorganism or a eukaryotic cell, which reaches values of to g/liter, denoting a semi-solid state or a considerable degree of compacting. however, for technical reasons, kinetic studies carried out in vitro on isolated enzymes have been carried out with solutions that are or times more dilute. conscious of this difference in scale between information obtained from in vitro studies and the in vivo reality, the biology of today is trying to re-evaluate molecular dynamics within the context of a cell. this is why we are seeing the birth of an integrated (or integrative) biology of functions, which, using modeling procedures, aims to achieve an understanding of the temperospatial dynamics of the interactive components inside cells. this holistic conception of biological systems ("systems biology ") has been made possible by progress in technological expertise in domains as varied as biochemistry, molecular biology, physical optics, electronics, nanomechanics, physical and mathematical modeling and computer technology. it is a necessary complement to the classical experimental method based on bernardian determinism which, in order to connect an effect with a cause, explores living beings in a manner that is often monoparametric and is inevitably reductionist. this signals a change in paradigm in the experimental approach to living beings. a particularly effective investigative method used to explore the dialogue between proteins is the double-hybrid by genetic construction, two proteins, p and p , whose interaction is to be tested, are expressed in the form of fusion proteins in yeast. protein p is fused with the binding domain (gal -bd) to the dna of gal , a protein that regulates the transcription of the β-galactosidase gene. protein p is fused with the activation domain of gal (gal -ad). insofar as p interacts with p (b), the gal transcription regulation activity is re-established, which is verified by the transcription of the reporter gene. if the opposite occurs, i.e., in the absence of any interaction between the two domains of gal (a), the reporter gene is not transcribed. the principle of this method is based on the modular nature of numerous transcription factors in eukaryotes. these factors contain both a dna-binding domain that includes a specific dna-binding site and a transcription activation domain that starts up the machinery for transcribing dna into messenger rna. these two domains can be dissociated and then re-associated in a functional manner, by forming hybrids with interacting proteins. a first protein, p , is fused with the dna-binding domain of a transcription factor by genetic manipulation, and a second protein, p , is fused with the activation domain of the same transcription factor. if p is able to interact with p , the transcription factor is reconstituted and the reporter gene upon which it depends can be expressed. the trapping technique, which is complementary to the double-hybrid system, was developed to make it possible to identify a set of interactive proteins within a cell. a protein that is included in this set (protein of interest) is fused by genetic engineering techniques to a short polyhistidine chain (called a tag). using this tag, the protein of interest is fixed to a solid medium containing nickel ions, a material that is reactive with respect to the polyhistidine chain. in the presence of a soluble cell extract, the protein of interest binds the cognate proteins of this extract, making it possible to retrieve a complex whose components, corresponding to interactive proteins, can be resolved after denaturing gel electrophoresis and then characterized ( figure iv . ). the techniques described above are backed up by cell imaging techniques that make use of confocal microscopy, which is more directly in keeping with living reality. the optical performance level of confocal microscopes has improved lately, with the arrival of biphotonic and multiphotonic lasers that illuminate precise points of the cell. as we have seen previously (chapter iii- . . ), it is possible to create a protein chimera made up of a protein of interest fused with a fluorescent protein, in this case gfp (green fluorescent protein), inside a cell. there are currently several variants of gfp that are able to emit fluorescent light at different wavelengths. this has allowed the development of a technique known as fret (fluorescence resonance energy transfer ) which explores the interaction between two fluorescent proteins. in practice, two gfp variants that have neighboring emission spectra are fused, by genetic engineering inside the cell, to two proteins of interest, p and p , that are suspected of being interactive. if this is the case, the fluorochromes that they carry are sufficiently close that the result is a modification in the intensity of the emission fluorescence of the donor fluorochrome (decrease) and of the receiver fluorochrome (increase), which is readily detectable. all of these studies, taken together, have given rise to the idea that endocellular proteins are organized into networks, that these networks are interactive and that their location in defined compartments of the cell is dependent on epigenetic events such as phosphorylations. two attributes can be found in integrated systems: firstly, the presence of modules, i.e., interactive motifs, which, like the pieces of a jigsaw puzzle, fit together to produce a complex, coherent structure, and, secondly, the emergence of functional properties due to the newly created interactions. the protein of interest p is expressed in the form of a protein fused to a protein "tag" t that is able to bind to a solid support with a specific affinity. the assembly is brought into contact with a cell extract. certain proteins of this extract, a, b and c, which are able to interact with the protein p, become fixed to the latter. in a second step, the tag t is freed from its attachment to protein p by means of a specific cleavage enzyme. the pabc complex that is recovered from the solid medium in soluble form is subjected to polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, in order to separate and identify its components. given an analytical description of the basic building blocks that are used to construct living systems, and an understanding of their modes of association in defined circumstances, it is normal to try to reconstruct, in their entirety, mechanisms that show the functioning of these systems. this idea was first applied to the yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae for different reasons, such as cell homogeneity (in principle, and, in any case, statistically speaking, all yeast cells have the same genome and the same proteome), an in-depth understanding of the genome and the proteome and the presence of a vast directory of well-characterized mutants. the use of techniques for the detection of interactions between proteins has revealed the existence of a potential dialogue of unexpected richness between a multitude of proteins ( figure iv. ) , in the yeast cell. it is necessary to reflect upon this evidence, which leads to the postulate that, for a given protein, there are mechanisms that restrict and select the many partners able to react with it at a precise moment.faced with a situation in which chance has the upper hand, leading to uncontrollable anarchy, it is necessary to have regulation, which is underpinned by darwinian logic. example of an interaction network involving the yeast sup prion protein. the line of dashes refers to experimental data concerning the interaction of sup with another protein, sup . the lines in bold refer to interactions taken from experimental data; while the fine lines refer to predictions, particularly phylogenetic ones. this logic arises from a choice of the most efficient reaction path, which is first of all dictated by the speed constants involved in the association and dissociation of molecular partners, without, however, neglecting any stochastic events that may arise. chemical modifications of proteins participate in this regulation, such as phosphorylation, glycosylation and acylation. the result at cell level is a coherent channeling of the information that is carried from a molecular signal. thus, fixation of a hormone onto a receptor induces a series of modifications to the intracellular proteins that channel information towards an effector terminal, for example an enzyme responsible for the production of a metabolite with a strategic function. how can the sum of the scattered experimental data that we have concerning the catalytic capabilities of a multitude of enzymes of cellular origin be integrated into the operation of a cell? how can we envisage the gene-enzyme relationship according to current evidence concerning the complexity of the genetic message? biocomputing, or bioinformatics, a science that emerged towards the end of the th century, proposes to try to answer these questions. at the turn of the th century, with the development of increasingly powerful computer microprocessors that are able to carry out complex operations with amazing rapidity, the hope arose that it would be possible to simulate processes as varied as the regulation of the cell cycle, molecular flow in metabolic pathways and the reception of molecular signals, for example from hormones by living cells, as well as the transmission of the messages that result. the dream of an in silico virtual biology has become achievable. the first mathematical theory of simple enzyme reaction kinetics was put forward approximately a century ago, by victor henri ( - ). born in marseilles to russian parents, victor henri studied in saint petersburg and then spent time at the universities of göttingen and leipzig before becoming established in paris. having an eclectic mind, studying both psychology and physicochemistry, he had the wonderful intuition that enzyme catalysis arises from a specific mechanism, different from that implemented in a chemical reaction. the study carried out by henri concerned the cleavage of sucrose (table sugar) into fructose and glucose by the action of an enzyme called invertase (sucrase). the term invertase was used because during reaction there was a change in the rotatory power of the sucrose solution, shown by a polarimeter. analysis of the reaction suggested that an enzyme-substrate complex is formed, which breaks down to regenerate the enzyme and liberate the product of the reaction. this analysis gave rise to an equation for the speed of the enzyme reaction as a function of substrate concentration. henri published the results of his experiments both in his thesis, which he presented to the paris faculty of sciences in , and in two articles that appeared in the reports of the academy of sciences , . in , in biochemische zeitschrift (vol. , pp. - ), leonor michaËlis and maud menten ( - ) confirmed the results of victor henri and formulated an equation that became a classic, describing the speed of formation of a product from a substrate in enzyme catalysis. since the period of these first studies, the concepts involved in enzyme kinetics have evolved considerably. the first metabolic pathway be deciphered was that of the degradation of glucose (glycolysis) , either into ethanol in yeast, or into lactic acid in muscle tissue. after this, researchers became aware that the activity of enzymes could be modulated as a function of covalent modifications of amino acid residues of their protein chain (phosphorylation, dephosphorylation, acylation…). metabolic flow analysis led to the idea of the limiting reaction. in the s, the idea that there is a single limiting reaction in a chain or a cycle of reactions gave way to the idea that metabolic control is distributed over several reactions, and that each reaction has its own, more-or-less intense control force. another complexity factor came to light with the discovery of allostery . allosteric enzymes have the particularity that they can fix reversibly onto a site that is different from the active site (allosteric site) molecules that are often the terminal products of a chain of reactions: the consequence of this is a conformational modification of the structure of the enzyme that has repercussions on the geometry of the active site and modifies its reactivity with respect to the substrate. in the s, faced with the complexity of the tangle of listed metabolic and signaling networks, attempts were made to use mathematical modeling to show the progress of the traffic of molecules inside a cell in relatively simple metabolic pathways such as glycolysis. in the modeling procedure, the concentrations of the different molecular species are considered to be variables whose variations over time depend on their speed of production and their speed of disappearance, which leads to a set of paired differential equations. with this procedure, we entered the domain of virtual biology. thanks to the creation of increasingly powerful software, the aim of virtual biology is to simulate signaling and metabolic pathways. in the longer term, the aim is to understand the molecular and cellular processes that direct embryo development, or to test the effects of drugs of known target on the metabolic behavior of the cell. metabolic engineering (which is already well developed) comprises two types of models, stoichiometric models and kinetic models. stoichiometric models describe metabolic networks in the stationary state, based on analytical data. kinetic models combine stoichiometric information and that concerning the catalytic capabilities of the enzymes in a metabolic network. in canada, the cyber-cell project plans to model the overall functioning of the machinery which, in the bacterium, includes its metabolism and its proliferation. the aim of the afcs (alliance for cellular signaling), which was launched in the usa, is to understand how signaling occurs in cells such as the b lymphocyte, the macrophage or the cardiac cell in response to different types of stress. the techniques that are used range from identification of all signaling network proteins to the evaluation of the flow of circulating information and to the integration of the data acquired into theoretical models. the european nerve synapse project makes use of similar procedures, with its long-term hope of linking the functioning of nerve cells with the cognitive and behavioral functions of living beings. this is a sizable challenge. in fact, there is far from being a real consensus concerning the principle of a demarcation between, on the one hand, cognitive functions such as language or memory, which are located in precise zones of the brain, and which could be reduced to physicochemical processes, and, on the other hand, forms reflective thought that are expressed through the creative imagination or by judgements concerning ethics or esthetics, the notion of personal responsibility, or even pictorial, architectural or musical beauty. should we see the human soul as the programmer of a superb computer that never ceases to develop from the embryonic state onwards, like john eccles ( - ) and others, or should we admit, like jean-pierre changeux (b. ), stanislas dehaene (b. ), daniel dennett (b. ) and others, that thought is not transcendent, and that it is intrinsically dependent on the brain, which is considered to be a neurochemical system, and thus look for the secret of the individuation of the human being in brain information storage mechanisms with retrocontrol loops associated with subtle neuron architectures, or, in short, refer to a sort of turing machine? whatever the case, in this domain, as in others, simple animal models are used in order to identify elementary processes that are able to explain easily-tested functions such as the memory in anatomical and physiological terms. this is the case for the sea slug or sea hare (chapter iii- . ) which, despite its rudimentary cognitive capabilities, provides information that can be used to reconstruct higher cognitive functions, present in the brains of mammals. it is clear that the cognitive sciences have reached a stage in which they are emerging from their infancy (chapter iv- . ). now, ingenious computing methods and a basis for reflection that has spread beyond the confines of psychology and philosophy, are available to them. they have set themselves the goal of producing an artificial intelligence, using ultrarapid computers as well as software that is able to model the operation of neural networks and to come close to the performance of human intelligence in terms of the power of their reactivity and their memorization. at present, many other biological systems are being subjected to multiparametric exploration, with the aim of producing models. this is the case, for example, with the program of the differentiation of certain white blood cells, the neutrophils (chapter iii- . . ), from precursors located in the bone marrow, a differentiation that leads to the emergence of functions such as phagocytosis that are implemented in the fight against microbial infections . in a domain that is closer to mechanical science, hydrodynamics, the digital simulation of the cardiovascular system has already made it possible to represent the physical phenomena associated with the propagation of a wave in deformable arteries during a cardiac contraction, in the form of equations, with a good approximation . in short, from a monoparametric approach that often began as being essentially and necessarily reductionist, the experimental method, applied to living beings, has become a "globalized", or synthetic, multiparametric approach, the aim of which is to understand the dynamics of molecular interactions in defined biological systems. making use of data obtained, the hope is to use mathematical processing to simulate the overall functioning of a cell, organ or organism. this new paradigm of the experimental method ("systems biology" ) is not limited to a simple accumulation of observations concerning a given biological system and their abstraction in mathematical form. the originality of this approach is that it formulates predictions of changes in the behavior of a system as a function of the manipulation of parameters such as substrate concentration, the presence of inhibitors, and so on. the mathematical processing of experimental data, with a view to learning about the functioning of complex systems by modeling, is supported by the technosciences, particularly biocomputing. it is linked not only to the enormous sum of accumulated knowledge concerning the structures and functions of living beings in the post-genomic era, and to the notion that the life of a cell depends on multiple networks of molecular interactions and thousands of enzyme reactions located in its different organelles, but also to the information that comes to it from its environment. a first type of modeling is based on observations made or experiments carried out on an easy-to-study model system. laws are drawn up from this. this so-called "bottom-up" (or synthetic) procedure, which proceeds from the simple to the complex, makes it necessary to have a set of very precise biochemical data. this great precision is all the more imperative in that any deviation, even a minimal one, in the integration of an experimental result can generate a mathematical model that is apparently plausible but which is unconnected to the living reality. the reverse, "top-down" (analytic) procedure proceeds from the overall operation of an organ and its theoretical analysis towards the specific mechanisms of its components. it takes into account the functioning of complex integrated systems such as the nerve and endocrine systems, immune and reproduction systems and the system controlling homeostasis, descending in stages towards the cellular, molecular and genetic levels. in the end, an understanding of living beings involves the management of an amazing capital of experimental data. this makes it necessary to consider all of the genes (genome), all of the transcripts coding for the proteins (transcriptome), all non-coding rnas (rnaome), all proteins expressed in a particular cell type (proteome) and all metabolites (metabolome) as a function of the enzyme catalyzers expressed and the energetics that underlie the catalyzed reactions, and, finally, to connect upstream events (mutations of genes and interference of messenger rnas, chemical modifications to amino acid residues in the proteins) to phenotypical modifications on the scale of the whole organism (phenome) (figure iv. ) . the goal of integrated or integrative biology ("systems biology") is therefore to put living beings into equations, that is, to represent them in virtual systems for which the behavior, accessible by means of calculation, can be predicted as a function of modifying parameters. in addition to the possibilities that are opened up in terms of a deeper understanding of physiological mechanisms, such virtual systems could be used for the design of new drugs or for the manufacture of economically valuable biomolecules. the diagram illustrates the different levels of complexity in the pathway that goes from all the genes together (genome) to all of the expressed characteristics (phenome) in the living being, passing via coding rnas (transcriptome) and non-coding rnas (non-coding rnaome), all the proteins (proteome), all addressing systems in the cell compartments (localisome) and all of the metabolic pathways (metabolome). at a scientific meeting held in sheffield, england, in january of , with the theme systems biology: will it work?, an argumentative discussion of the advantages as well as the disadvantages of an integrated, mathematized biology was useful in that it included a reminder that most of the parameters used in "systems biology" come from studies that are carried out in vitro on purified enzymes, and that it is not sufficient to know the value of the michaelian parameters (v max and k m ) in order to reach biological reality. in fact, in vivo, many enzymes record variations in activity that are hard to control due to allosteric type regulation or interenzyme contact; several enzymes of a metabolic pathway being able to interact to form a metabolon. however, by compacting several enzymes that catalyze contiguous reactions in a metabolic pathway, a metabolon considerably increases the catalytic efficiency of this pathway. another element of uncertainty arises from the protein density of the cell medium, and also from the fact that covalent modifications of enzymes can introduce a change in endocellular location (nucleus, organelles of the cytoplasm…). nevertheless, an approximative approach could limit itself to dealing with biological systems in modular terms, i.e., to considering them as being made up of a number of black boxes, each black box containing a series of reactions being processed mathematically together, with an input and an output. there is still a long way to go if we place ourselves on the cellular scale, but the end of the pathway seems even further away if we envisage the organism as a whole, taking into account the remote interactions between organs involving the interplay of chemical mediators. the brain plays a critical role in the dialogue between different organs, and in the regulation of the energy equilibrium in higher animals. this equilibrium can be disturbed by fasting or intense, prolonged muscular activity, or by an overabundant diet. the corrective response comes from a deep region of the brain, the hypothalamus, via the secretion of different types of peptides, some of which stimulate the appetite and others of which suppress it . while taking into account the multitude of parameters that affect the complexity of living beings on an individual level, the theoretical approach to the study of cell function by modeling has the advantage that it produces predictions and provides information about the validity of conclusions and of theories based on experiments that are old and accepted in the absence of contradictory elements. this was the case for the theory that stated that the state of activation of a gene is determined only by the presence in its environment of transcription factors. recent studies concerning the level of gene transcription in isolated cells have shown that there are probabilistic-type factors which mean that a given gene in a given cell can be activated at any moment. a review which came out in sums up this subject. in this review, the authors use modeling to analyze the behavior of cells in the process of differentiation during embryogenesis. their darwinian model, which associates contingency and selectivity, competes advantageously with the determinist (or instructive) model, based on an all-or-nothing logic, that has been implicitly accepted up until now. the darwinian model takes into account the occurrence of stochastic events at gene expression level, events that are partially linked to the structural modifications to the chromatin that depend on covalent modifications of an epigenetic nature (phosphorylation, methylation…). by basing itself on the existence of mutational fluctuations that arise by chance, associated with a selfregulation of gene expression, the model that is obtained shows that during embryogenesis a cell has a choice either to differentiate into another cell type or to remain in its initial state. differentiated cells stabilize their own phenotype and, in their surroundings, stimulate the proliferation of foreign cell phenotypes. a harmonious equilibrium between these two processes is the necessary condition for the setting up of the steps that lead to the arrangement of different cell types during organogenesis, which take place in an apparently inescapable order, in the absence of disturbances. a break in this equilibrium leads to an anarchical cell proliferation. generally speaking, from the point of view of experimental science, the lesson that can be drawn from current modeling experiments is that the bernardian determinism that has prevailed as the essential foundation stone of the methodology applied to the study of living beings may find itself being requalified by the taking into account of stochastic phenomena. this is the case when the number of reacting molecules is low and the probability of stochastic events is non negligible. the modeling of such systems necessitates having recourse to a complex mathematical formalism. it remains true that determinist models for simulation of the dynamics of living beings, represented by classical differential equations, are more-or-less valid when the number of reacting molecules involved is high and the reactions supposedly take place in a homogeneous medium. should "systems biology" be regarded as a resurgence of a physiology that has been somewhat neglected over the last few decades, but has been reinvigorated by a salutary hybridization of biologists and model-makers? in any case, this is the intention of the "physiome" project which has recently been launched on an international scale. it is also doubtless due to this state of mind that a trend which had gone out of fashion, involving the simulation of the performance of living beings by very elaborate concrete models, robots, is being reborn. an immense distance has been covered in just over two centuries, since the time when vaucanson presented automata in the forms of human figures, moved by ingenious springs and cogs, and giving the illusion that their movements were controlled by an intelligence, to a marveling public (chapter ii- . ). in the last decades of the th century, considerable progress was made in the understanding of the operation of the nervous system and in the development of technologies in which miniaturized electronics have come to the aid of already high-performance micromechanics. the brain being considered as an information processing machine, the aim is to understand the logic of this information machine by means of simulations on computers and, based on the results obtained, to construct robots whose electrical circuits take their inspiration from the operation of animal neurons. these robots are called biorobots or animats. insects have been chosen as a reference for the construction of such creatures because of the relative simplicity of their nervous systems: several hundred thousand neurons, in comparison with the billions of neurons present in mammals ( billion in man). the fly's system of vision has been favored as a subject of study because of the possibility it offers of being able to record the electrical response of neurons that can be identified one by one. in the middle of the s, in france, this inspired the pioneering work in biorobotics carried out by nicolas franceschini (b. ) and his team , (figure iv. ) . their objective was to study how an animal can avoid obstacles by means of its ocular perception and its movement-detecting neurons, the operation of which the team just analyzed using microelectrodes and a microscope-telescope specially built for the purpose. the fly's composite eye has elementary units or ommatidia, each carrying eight light receptor neurons. the electrical signals emitted by these neurons in response to captured light (at most a few dozen millivolts) are sent to subjacent neurons that are organized into three levels that correspond to the optical ganglions called the "lamina", "medulla" and "lobula". the lobula is a strategic decoding center which, because of the small number of neurons contained in it (sixty), has been the subject of in-depth electrophysiological investigation. each of the sixty neurons of the lobula operates as a signal integrator. the neurons of the lobula send their messages to motor neurons involved in the contraction of small muscles that control the guidance and stabilization of the fly's flight. based on an exhaustive study of the neuron wiring of the fly's eye, franceschini and his colleagues were able to reconstruct a facetted artificial eye that can retranscribe the light signals received optoelectronically. this artificial eye, the electronic components of which correspond to around one hundred movement detectors in the fly, was incorporated into the head of a robot. the recorded light signals were transmitted to the moving components of the robot. a -head of the blowfly, calliphora, seen from the front, showing the two compound eyes with their multifacetted array. each eye hides , photoreceptors that drive various image processors based on a few hundred thousand neurons. b -"elementary motion detector" (emd) neuron and its evolution over fifteen years: on the left, first generation ( ), using surface mounted device (smd) technology, compared to a one franc coin from that period; on the right, the version of the highly-miniaturized hybrid (analog + digital) emd circuit (mass . grams), compared with a one euro coin. c -autonomous vehicle ( kg) able to move around in a field of obstacles that it does not know about in advance. its vision is based on a genuine compound eye, whose circuits are inspired by those of the fly. it includes a network of "motion detecting neurons", transcribed electronically according to the principle analyzed in the fly's eye by means of microelectrodes and a specially-constructed microscope-telescope. this network is arranged around a ring that is about thirty centimeters in diameter. the recently-constructed roboflies, oscar and octave, only weigh around one hundred grams. d -routing of the electronic components (resistances, condensers, diodes and amplifiers that operate in their thousands) soldered onto the six-layer printed circuit-board that provides the connection between the sensors and the steering motor on board the autonomous mobile robot shown in (c). figure iv . illustrates the neuromimetic biorobofly constructed according to this principle. completely autonomous because of its on-board power supply, this robot was able to move around at high speed ( cm/s) in a cluttered area, avoiding the obstacles. this first "terrestrial" robofly, which was completed in , was followed by several much lighter brothers and sisters: fania, oscar and octave are aerial roboflys . constructed in , oscar is a captive robot that weighs around one hundred grams. it is equipped with an eye that reproduces the retinal microscanning of the fly's eye discovered by franceschini, oscar is able to rotate around a vertical axis because of its two diametrically opposed helices and can thus orient its view towards an object. if this object moves, oscar follows it with its eye, up to an angular speed comparable to the tracking speed of the human eye. produced in , octave is another aerial robofly that is able not only to take off and distinguish a relief, but also to land automatically and to react sensibly to a contrary wind in a turbulent atmosphere. on board, it has an electronic visuomotive self-regulation system, the operation of which is based on the signal processing operations that, in the insect, carry out the automatic pilot functions . the age of biorobotics, in which robots take their inspiration from animals, has only just begun . if specimens are still so rare, this is because behaviors for which we have a good understanding of the underlying neuronal bases are also rare. at the time of writing, a robot rat named psikharpax, with artificial muscles and a vision system that enables it to perceive objects in three-dimensional space, is being developed at the university of paris vi. almost in the realm of science fiction, we find hybrid robots obtained by hybridization of the living and the non-living. this is the case for the hybrid robot produced by japanese researchers, based on the silkworm moth. control of the nervous system of this insect is spread throughout its body. if its head is cut off, it continues to fly, which gave rise to the idea of replacing the head with an electronic transistor system . using a remote measurement device, it was possible to explore certain behavioral aspects of the insect. although the construction of hybrid robots may raise ethical objections, such technology is capable of giving rise to spectacular applications in the domain of prostheses. the neurological prostheses of the future will nevertheless require that a contact be made between living neurons and the electronic chips that are able to improve the inadequate processing of the physio- logical signal. such a contact was produced recently in a german laboratory directed by peter fromherz (b. ) . a small network of snail neurons, chosen because of their large size, was cultured on the surface of a silicon chip. a signal emitted at one location of the chip was able to be transmitted to another location via the synapse connection between two neurons ( figure iv. ) . on the molecular scale, mitochondrial atpase or atp synthase, with a size of around ten nanometers (chapter iii- . . ) was used recently for the manufacture of a biorobot that made its mark in the media as the smallest known rotating molecular motor. the membrane-type enzyme catalyzes the reversible reaction atp + h o adp + pi. this enzyme therefore has a double function; hydrolysis and synthesis. for this reason it is called atpase or atp synthase depending on the physiological context in which it is involved. in the mitochondria that oxidize metabolites, the enzyme operates like atp synthase. it catalyzes the synthesis of atp coupled to oxidation reactions. in the absence of respiration or of oxidizable substrates, the enzyme operates like atpase; it catalyzes the hydrolysis of atp. for ease of language, the enzyme will be designated here by the term atpase. it should be remembered that mitochondrial atpase includes two sectors, a hydrophobic sector, fo, characterized as a proton channel located inside the mitochondrial membrane, and a hydrophilic sector, f , carrying catalytic subunits that are arranged as if they were on a turret (see figure iii . c). fo contains two master parts of the atpase motor, i.e., a rotor comprising an assembly of around ten so-called "c" subunits and a stator that corresponds to the "a" subunit. the "c" subunit assembly is attached to the "γ" subunit of the catalytic sector f , which thus functions as a rotor. in , the british biochemist peter mitchell ( - ) showed that phosphorylative oxidation in the mitochondria is associated with a transmembrane transfer of protons. the mechanism involved is said to be chemiosmotic. the most important experiment involved an almost serendipitous observation, carried out with a simple ph meter. when a current of oxygen was passed through a suspension of mitochondria in an unbuffered saline medium, in the absence of adp and phosphate, an instantaneous acidification of the extramitochondrial medium occurred, shown by means of the ph meter electrode immersed in this medium. it was concluded that the sudden switch from anaerobiosis to aerobiosis, i.e., the start up of respiration, is correlated with an ejection of protons from the mitochondrial matrix to the extramitochondrial medium. afterwards, this fact was linked with several others, the whole leading to the formulation of the chemiosmotic theory. briefly, mitochondrial respiration generates a vectorial movement of protons from the interior to the exterior of the mitochondrion. because of this, a proton concentration difference is established on either side of the mitochondrial membrane. the electrical potential that is created in this way is used by the mitochondrial atpase in order to synthesize atp from adp and mineral phosphate. this process involves two correlated events: return movement of protons towards the inside of the mitochondrion across the fo sector of the atpase; rotation of the assembly of c subunits and the γ subunit that is interdependent with it. we have therefore moved from electrical to mechanical energy. during its rotational movement, the γ subunit establishes contacts with the three catalytic subunits of the f sector, in succession. one after the other, each of the three catalytic subunits in contact with the γ subunit undergoes a change in the conformation of its active site, which is at the origin of the synthesis of atp. in the absence of mitochondrial respiration, the reverse process occurs. the atp is hydrolyzed into adp and mineral phosphate, and the energy released at each of the three catalytic subunits is used to rotate the γ subunit in the reverse direction to that which accompanies the synthesis of atp. the existence of a rotational movement of mitochondrial atpase, which had been suggested on the basis of biochemical arguments and of structural data was authenticated by masasuke yoshida and his co-workers in japan in , thanks to an imaging technique . in a first step, the molecular system was simplified by being limited to the catalytic f sector of the enzyme. a methodological trick was employed: genetic engineering was used to modify the α and β subunits of this sector by fixing polyhistidine chains to them. because of the strong affinity between polyhistidine and nickel ions, the f sector α and β subunits were immobilized on a medium covered with nickel ions (carried by an organic molecule). an actin filament labeled with a fluorescent ligand was attached to the end of the f sector γ subunit. this assembly made it possible, under a fluorescence microscope, to display a rotational movement of the actin arm carried by the g subunit affected by the addition of atp and by its hydrolysis into adp and mineral phosphate. a similar rotational movement of the γ subunit carrying a metal microbar was observed by an american research group . remarkably, in , after having fixed a metal microbead onto the γ subunit, the japanese researchers demonstrated synthesis of atp from adp and mineral phosphate by rotating the γ subunit by means of rotation of the magnetic bead, induced by magnets. thus, the experimental coupling of a mechanical force and a chemical synthesis was demonstrated. in , the japanese research team succeeded in photographing the rotational movement of the enzyme powered by atp under the microscope, this time looking at the entire atpase complex, f fo. after having attached a gold microbead onto the "c" subunits of the fo sector, to act as a probe, the researchers were able to confirm that the rotational movement of these subunits depended on the hydrolysis of atp into adp and phosphate ( figure iv. ) . the whole of the mitochondrial atpase (atp synthase) does, in fact, function as a molecular rotational motor powered by a proton flow, rather like an industrial rotational motor powered by a fossil fuel or electricity. the analogy is a striking one; the γ subunit of the enzyme corresponds to the motor driveshaft and the "c" subunits correspond to the motor itself. because of its association with non-living structures, for example metal bars or gold beads, which are carried along in the rotational movement of the enzyme, it is possible to speak of molecular biorobots. this domain, in which nanomachines use macromolecules from the living world, has only just opened up, but its future is full of promise. the story of scientific progress made with respect to the mechanisms of phosphorylative oxidation via the functioning of mitochondrial atpase, from the time of mitchell's experiment with the ph meter until the time of the manufacture of yoshida's biorobots, is an exemplary one. it is typical of the way in which a mode of thought evolves over time, from a primary discovery resulting from serendipity or an experiment "to see what happens", leading to the proposal of the existence of a mechanism, to a carefully programmed project which, because of its inventive technicity, shows the validity of the proposed mechanism, and, in addition, demonstrates its future utilitarian value. nowadays, certain biotechnologists dream of being able to "synthesize life" in terms of cells that are able to imitate the performance of living cells. the concept of the "lab-in-a-cell " is coming to the fore , . nevertheless, it would be necessary to design an artificial cell that is an authentic replica of a living cell, and which benefits from all the attributes of a living cell. this is not achievable at the moment. thus, the current aim of nanobiotechnology is limited to scheduling the construction of artificial cells that are relatively simple both in composition and in function, for example, a microvesicle edged with a lipid membrane, containing a system of protein synthesis expressed from a short sequence of dna, as well as a system of atp synthesis able to supply the energy necessary for this protein synthesis. demonstration of a rotational movement of f fo mitochondrial atpase (atp synthase) , induced by atp. atpase or atp synthase (reversible catalysis enzyme that hydrolyzes or synthesizes atp) has two sectors (see figure iii . ). the membrane sector, fo, comprises an assembly of a dozen so-called c (rotor) subunits and an a (stator) subunit. the other, extra-membrane sector, f , is catalytic. it comprises three β catalytic subunits and three α non-catalytic subunits arranged in a ring, in alternating order. at the center of the ring is the γ subunit which is attached to the c subunits of the fo sector. subunits δ, ε and b stabilize the whole of the molecular complex. in the experiment illustrated in this figure, subunits α and β of the f sector of the enzyme have been genetically modified to include polyhistidine chains (his-tag, artificial ligand). due to the interaction of these chains with nickel ions (linked to an organic molecule) covering a solid support medium, the α and β subunits are immobilized. in addition, a gold microbead is fixed onto the ring of the fo sector c subunits by means of a chemical device (streptavidin molecule, artificial ligand). following the addition of atp, rotation of the microbead attached to the ring of fo sector c subunits is observed by microscopy on a black background. this rotation is dependent on (and at the same time an indicator of) the rotation of the c subunits, itself led by the rotation of the γ subunit in contact with the catalytic β subunits. note the ejection of protons. when the enzyme functions as atp synthase, the proton movement takes place in the opposite direction. "progress in biology is possibly mainly tributary to the drawing up of concepts or principles […] . in the process of elaborating concepts, which marks scientific progress in biology, there is sometimes a crucial step, when we realise that a more-or-less technical term that we had previously considered to cover a given concept, in fact covers a mixture of two (or more) concepts." ernst mayr translated from a french translation entitled history of biology. diversity, evolution and heredity - on the margins of the modeling and the difference in mathematized systems that comprise theoretical biology, particularly in silico biology, concepts are mental representations, often image-filled and idealized ones, of fundamental mechanisms that are deduced on the basis of experimental results. from the imaginary domain of the probable, they extrapolate constructions of the mind that are in phase with the facts and experimental data, within a reflective projection that gives them their meaning and makes it possible to make certain predictions. there are premonitory concepts. this was the case for the concept of the reflex arc that associates movement with sensation. this concept was already present in the ideas of descartes (chapter ii- . ), but it took more than a century before the theory of the existence of a reflex arc was supported by bell and magendie's demonstration of the existence of relay centers for sensory and motor nerves in the spinal chord (chapter iii- ). there have been premonitory concepts that, while they were demolished at the time they were first proposed, were shown to be completely accurate a few decades later. in the middle of the th century, the german pathologist jacob henle ( - ) needed a healthy dose of imagination and audacity in order to oppose the theory of the "miasma", a theory that was taught as a dogma, with a new theory that not only explained the spread of contagious diseases by microscopic beings, but also formulated the criteria for validating this theory, i.e., isolation of the pathogenic agent and its development in culture away from the diseased organism, then reproduction of the original pathology after injection of the pathogenic agent, which has been isolated, characterized and multiplied in a culture, into a model animal. thirty years would go by before the formulation of koch's postulates, based on experimental evidence (chapter iii- ). we may ask ourselves whether or not history is currently repeating itself in the case of spongiform encephalopathies that affect humans and animals, for which, according to the thesis of stanley prusiner (b. ) , the prion, as an infectious protein, is responsible. other evocative concepts hold the keys that open doors to domains that are unknown, but are potentially rich in information. it is thus that the double helix dna structure proposed by crick and watson, based on the complementarity of adenine-thymine and cytosine-guanine bases (chapter iv- . . ), led to the concept of dna replication with reconstruction of a double strand that is identical to the original double strand. the concept of dna replication spurred on matthew meselson (b. ) and franklin stahl (b. ) to develop an experimental protocol based on the labeling of the dna nucleotide bases of the enterobacterium e. coli with a heavy isotope of nitrogen, n, and on the differentiation of monocatenary dna strands in the process of synthesis by measurement of their density, as analyzed by centrifugation in cesium chloride gradients. in the same vein, jacob and monod's discovery of regulatory genes (chapter iv- . . ) gave rise to the concept of the operon which, in the bacterium, defines a genetic unit comprising structural genes and regulatory genes. the concept of the regulation of gene expression, extended to higher eukaryotes, makes it possible to explain the phenomenon of differentiation in cells with specific activities (muscle cells, nerve cells, epithelial cells…) by the silencing of certain genes and the activation of others. within the framework of bioenergetics, the chemiosmotic theory put forward by mitchell, in order to explain the coupling of mitochondrial respiration with atp synthesis (chapter iv- . ), gave rise to consideration of the concepts of transmembrane transport of metabolites and of vectorial metabolism. some generalizing concepts that carry a unifying virtue within them are known. one such is the concept of compartmentation. the cell is no longer considered to be a bag of enzymes, as used to be the case. it is now considered to be a compartmented structure in which each type of compartment corresponds to a type of organelle delimited by a membrane and characterized by specific functions. thus, because of the genetic material that is present in it, the nucleus of the cell holds the information necessary for the manufacture of proteins. the mitochondria, which are called cell power plants, are in charge of oxidizing the products of cell catabolism and using the resulting energy for the synthesis of atp from adp and mineral phosphate. the lysosomes are the garbage collectors of the cell. among the functions carried out by peroxisomes is the partial breakdown of very long chain fatty acids. the endoplasmic reticulum and the golgi apparatus are involved in the maturation and the secretion of proteins. the ribosomes represent the machinery upon which messenger rnas are displayed in order to be decoded into proteins. a sign of the extreme sophistication of this setup is that the membranes of the endocellular compartments are not sealed common walls. they contain proteins that act as selective transporters of metabolites or highly specific ion channels, allowing the exchange of messages throughout the cell. thus, each organelle, informed of the condition of the others, is able to adjust its own activity to ensure the greatest harmony of the whole. this conditioned compartmentation at cell level may be compared to the socialization of human communities. while endocellular organelles are compartments delimited by membranes, there are non-membrane-bound compartments in the cell, such as protein complexes in which two, three or even more proteins are closely linked. often, these are enzymes that catalyze reactions that are contiguous in a metabolic pathway. being compacted into a complex known as a metabolon results in an increased efficiency of the flow of metabolites by facilitating the channeling of this flow. concepts evolve, often adjusting their representations according to accumulated knowledge. a good example of this is the evolution of the concept of the gene since its formulation at the beginning of the th century. the term "genetics" was created in by the english naturalist william bateson ( - ) . the term "gene" was introduced three years later by the dane wilhelm johannsen. this term designated a principle which, in the chromosomes of fertilized egg, and in an intentionally vague manner, was supposed to have an influence on the phenotype of the progeniture. during the same period, the term "locus" appeared out of the experiments carried out by the american thomas hunt morgan on the drosophila, a locus being defined as a region of a chromosome which, when altered by a mutation, leads to a modification of the phenotype of the living organism. based on cross-breeding experiments carried out on hundreds of drosophila mutants, morgan and his co-workers drew up the first genetic maps. by chance, the salivary glands of the drosophila have a particular characteristic; the nuclei of their cells contain giant chromosomes called polytenes, which result from the association of a hundred replicate copies of chromosomes that, after staining, are visible under the optical microscope. on these chromosomes, it is possible to distinguish colored bands separated by clear bands. it was observed that specific mutations had specific effects on the arrangement and number of these bands. the material contained in the bands was therefore the site of mutations. in the middle of the s, the listing of more than bands made it possible to construct a cytological map that was already highly detailed. the concept of the gene, the material basis of inheritance, took root. the sporadic mutagenic effect of x-radiation in the drosophila, which was shown by the geneticist and biophysicist hermann mÜller ( - ), led the austrian physicist erwin schrÖdinger to question the sporadic event which, at the level of a target of a few dozen atoms, determines a mutation. he postulated that the target is located in the chromatin of the chromosomes, organized as an aperiodic crystal. the chemical nature of this target was identified with dna, following bacterial transformation experiments (avery, macleod and mccarthy, ) and experiments concerning bacterial infection by the bacteriophage (hershey and chase, ) (chapter iv- . . ). this is how the idea that gene = dna was born. the simple and reassuring idea that one gene → one enzyme, which was deduced from mutation experiments carried out by beadle and tatum on the mold neurospora crassa (chapter iii- . ), had only a limited lifetime. a first stumbling block appeared when it was shown that the activity of a gene, and in consequence its contribution to the phenotype, depends on nucleic elements outside the gene. the definition of the term "gene" was then extended to include promoting and regulatory sequences. in the case of the lac operon of escherichia coli, these sequences are located just upstream of the site where transcription begins. however, in eukaryotes, a regulatory sequence may be distant from the gene that must be transcribed and sometimes it may be involved in the regulation of several genes (chapter iv- . . ). in the s, the idea of the existence of the mosaic gene in eukaryotes appeared. a gene was now thought of as an assembly of several exons that originally in the chromosome are separated by introns. the alternative splicing of these pieces of genes gives rise to numerous possibilities for reconstitution, i.e., many messages coding for many different proteins. thus, however useful the concept of the gene has been with respect to its ability to generate discussion and to provoke experimentation concerning the molecular machinery responsible for the transmission of the hereditary characteristics, we can see that the term itself has not ceased to be the subject of readjustments, since the time it was first formulated. certain concepts are matched with metaphors. while some metaphorical concepts, particularly those that make use of images designed to grab the imagination, and to be easy to understand, tend to take liberties with the realities of living beings, they can also shed light on unsuspected mechanisms in sectors that have been neglected. metaphorical concepts are not a current fashion. it should be remembered that in his passions of the soul ( ), descartes, when asked "how limbs can be moved by objects of the senses and by the mind without the help of the soul," responds that this takes place "in the same way as the movement of a watch is produced only by the force of its spring and the arrangement of its cogs." later on, with lavoisier's clear vision of the vital role of oxygen, and his comparison of respiration with combustion, the concept of the chemistry of life, combined with that of bioenergetics, came to the fore, and was at the heart of studies on the metabolism. chemical reactions that liberate and absorb heat were substituted for the cogs of cartesian mechanics. the second half of the th century saw the birth and development of the concept of the program, a concept with computer technology connotations, which was destined to explain the phenomena of inheritance. this concept began to fill out from the moment when it became certain that, in its nucleotide sequence, dna contains the necessary information for the construction of the protein material of cells. for a certain period of time, the passion for molecular genetics eclipsed the interest that had previously been given to metabolic chemistry. the powerfulness of the metaphorical concept may be measured according to the effect it has in pushing scientific research in particular directions, with the results this has on society. thus, during the th and th centuries, the study of human pathology was impregnated with a strong iatromechanical current. physiological chemistry and its corollary, pathological chemistry, which emerged as disciplines in their own right in the th century and achieved full expansion in the th century, are our inheritance from lavoisier and the concept of discussion about concepts necessarily leads to a brief discussion of scientific semantics, as shown by the few examples given in the previous pages. as we have just seen, the word gene that was put forward by johannsen around one century ago did not have the same meaning at that time as it has now, a meaning that still remains fluid. the gmo, an acronym meaning genetically modified organism, which has been the subject of vehement diatribes over the last few years, becomes much less of an object of passion if it is considered within the context of evolution. after all, for the last two to three billion years, living organisms have been genetically modified constantly by spontaneous mutations, which is why the human beings that we are today are able to discuss them! the term cloning is another example of a semantic misunderstanding that leads to inaccurate interpretation and arouses the passions. the primary meaning of the term cloning is the multiplication and the identical reproduction of a living cell. the simplest and most unambiguous example is that of bacterial cloning, a bacterial cell producing millions of cells that are identical to the original cell by its multiplication in a nutritive medium. the term animal reproductive cloning does not carry exactly the same semantic weight. it should be remembered that, in eukaryotes, the preliminary act of the cloning procedure involves the injection of the nucleus (with n chromosomes) from a somatic cell into an enucleated oocyte (chapter iv- . . ; see also chapter iv- . ). the somatic cell nucleus, by providing its genetic equipment, gives the being that will develop in the uterus a phenotype that is practically identical to that of the somatic cell donor, but nevertheless not completely identical, as the cytoplasm of the enucleated ovum, with its mitochondria, provides a small but non-negligible fraction of genes, the mitochondrial genes. as for therapeutic cloning (in the absence of uterine implantation), this is used for the manufacture of differentiated cells that may be grafted into the individual who has donated the original somatic cell, with no immune-related rejection occurring. this is non-reproductive cloning. the passionate argument that has arisen because the term cloning is bandied about in an ill-considered fashion illustrates the confusion that can result from a lack of precision in the use of certain terms with a high level of media impact. "all the major problems of the relations between society and science lie in the same area. when the scientist is told that he must be more responsible for his effects on society, it is the applications of science that are referred to […] . no government has the right to decide on the truth of scientific principles, nor to prescribe in any way the character of the questions investigated." the progress of science is linked to that of civilization. it is in keeping with the state of mind, the beliefs, the lifestyle and the thought patterns of societies. in ancient greece, where manual work was considered to be servile, science remained essentially theoretical, confined to logic and dialectics, and strongly attached to questions of philosophy. the birth of experimental science in the th and th centuries went hand-in-hand with the rehabilitation of manual work. the technical side dominates in modern biology, which seeks to solve problems concerning the "how", rather than to address philosophical problems concerning the "why". as ian hacking (b. ) says in representing and intervening ( ), nowadays engineering, and not theorizing, is the greatest proof of scientific realism, which leads to the minimization of philosophical thought. in a skeptical biochemist ( ) , the polish-born american biochemist joseph fruton ( fruton ( - emphasizes the contrast between the th century and the first half of the th century, when eminent scientists were still interested in the ideas of the professional philosophers of the history of the sciences concerning the progress of experimental research and, in contrast, the end of the th century, when philosophy and the experimental sciences pretended to ignore one another. this is doubtless partly because the history of biology has become the history of biotechnologies to such an extent that, according to some, the objects being explored are so familiar that they are now part of the life of society. in pandora's hope ( ), bruno latour (b. ) considers that the current confrontation between subject and object, in which the researcher-subject explores the structure and function of the object, is being transformed into a human-nonhuman dialogue, in which the nonhuman-object becomes "socialized". taking yeast as an example, latour writes that it has been "working for millenia in the brewing industry, but now it works in a network of thirty laboratories where its genome is mapped, humanized and socialized like a code, a book, or a program of action that is compatible with our ways of coding, counting and reading […] . non-humans have become automatons, admittedly without rights, but much more complex than material entities." latour visualizes the human-nonhuman associations in the form of collectives that are organized into strata that implement the technical, the political, the social, the ethical, the ecological… the technosciences correspond to one of these strata, the sociotechnical stratum that is directly linked to the stratum of political ecology. in the same spirit, the belgian philosopher gilbert hottois (b. ), in his philosophies of the sciences, philosophies of techniques ( ) remarks that "laboratories produce things that go off to live their lives in society and in nature." thus, bacteria, yeasts or genetically modified plants are able to produce drugs such as insulin, growth hormone and vaccines for human medicine. these drugs become part of and indispensable to life in society. they are evaluated according to their market value by the companies that patent, manufacture and sell them, and according to the comfort they bring to the patients to whom they are administered. the financial management that results from their consumption becomes a worry for those responsible for public health, while their manufacture by specialized companies generates industrial activity and economic growth which may be measured according to how fashionable they are and how they sell. for a long time, society, while benefiting from scientific progress, remained indifferent to the experimental method, that is to say, the way in which knowledge progresses. in the last decades of the th century, society became aware, via information concerning the occasionally demonized exploits of genetic engineering, that science can "take liberties" with the human being. populations were well informed about the effects that genetic engineering could have on the mortality rates of pathologies such as cancer and diabetes or on degenerative illnesses of the nervous system, and about the closeness of possible solutions. however, they were also warned about the risks to which science was exposing humankind. remembering certain tragic episodes concerning hiv-contaminated blood transfusions, growth hormone and mad cow disease, and certain cassandra-like predictions, such as a catastrophic epidemic of spongiform encephalopathy that has happily yet to appear, society shows reservations when the media inform its members of new feats of modern technology. political authorities, for their part, afraid of potential problems, tend to follow the principle of precaution, which in fact hides a fear of risk. however, evaluating risk involves not being afraid of it but understanding it in a lucid and courageous fashion. informed by the media, which often use sensationalism, the citizen is increasingly calling into question whether certain practices involving the biosciences, such as cloning, or certain mercantile transactions such as the taking out of patents concerning gene sequences, or even experimentation on live animals, are well-founded. "the problem of experimentation on man is no longer a simple problem of technique. it is a problem of value. from the moment that biology concerns man no longer simply as a problem, but as instrumental to the search for solutions concerning him, the question arises of deciding whether the price of knowledge is such that the subject of the knowledge is able to consent to become the object of his or her own knowledge. we have no difficulty here in recognizing the still open debate concerning man as a means or an end; an object or a person. this is to say that human biology does not contain in and of itself the answer to questions concerning its nature and its significance." knowledge of life - written at a time when people were far from imagining how molecular biology was going to expand, the prophetic words of georges canguilhem ( - ) have maintained their philosophical validity. manipulation of the human embryo, whether this involves its creation by cloning or the modification of its genetic inheritance, obviously leads to the need to consider the societal, religious and political points that arise from the domain of bioethics and are a reflection of the period in which we are living. until recently, advances made in biology left moralists indifferent. this ceased to be the case when scientific experimentation began to look at the human embryo with a view to utilitarian ends in the health domain. the specter of cloning was brandished without any clear distinction being made between reproductive cloning and therapeutic cloning. biology became demonized. however, as biologist pierre chambon (b. ) said in an interview in the french journal biofutur: "in absolute terms, biology is unable to tell us whether the cloning of a human being is moral or immoral, it simply tells us whether it is biologically possible." the birth dolly the sheep in (chapter iv- . . ) triggered a virulent debate because now that the cloning of an animal had become possible, that of a human being became envisageable. the media sensationalized this debate all the more in that it was exacerbated by debate concerning gmos (chapter iv- . ). the dolly affair became a problem of society. up until then, the biosciences had been happy just to try and understand the mechanisms that explained the functions of living beings, but now, with the advent of gmos and cloning, it became obvious that a forbidden barrier had been crossed and that man had the power not only to transform but also invent himself. faced with this desacralisation of nature, the need arose for some philosophical reflection. this was given the name of bioethics, which is the title of the book, bioethics, a bridge to the future, which was written by the american biologist van rensselaer potter ( - ) in . the term bioethics covers philosophical considerations that range from the biosphere to the human person. bioethics tries to give a wider meaning to the moral codes which, in human societies, depend on ancestral traditions. it aims to prescribe that which is desirable according to the kantian maxim of the categorical imperative. in his what is bioethics? ( ), the belgian historian gilbert hottois reminds us that bioethics are above traditional morals, the latter being a set of norms that are most often spontaneously respected as good habits, without any critical reflection being involved, while bioethics, on the other hand, arises out of critical thought, analysis, discussion and the evaluation of established mores. over the last few years, the problems that are targeted by bioethics have moved towards today's burning issues. human cloning is an example. while allegations of the transcendence of man in nature may lead to human reproductive cloning being considered as a crime, strictly scientific considerations lead to an emphasis on the lack of responsibility shown by a few zealots, given the hazards involved in cloning in animals, such as the need to use a large number of oocytes in order to achieve success in cloning, the very low viability of the cloned embryos and the development of serious functional anomalies in the clones that survive. even supposing that scientific progress will one day overcome these difficulties, human reproductive cloning will come up against an insurmountable obstacle, the cloned subject's fear of finding that he or she is identical to the relative from whom his or her genetic inheritance comes. after all, the notion of manipulation of the human ovule with the aim of serial reproduction has often haunted science fiction stories. in brave new world ( ), aldous huxley ( - ) gives an apocalyptic vision of the budding of human eggs that produce hundreds of identical twins which are conditioned into classes and subclasses while being raised in jars, depending on the quality of the nutritive substances they are given. in the artificial uterus ( ), henri atlan (b. ) predicts that the raising of human fetuses in jars could well become an alternative to uterine gestation in a distant future. let it be understood that human reproductive cloning, which is no longer part of the domain of science fiction, as it has become feasible, must be considered as being reprehensible because it goes beyond the limits of reason, and is a denial of human transcendence. man as subject cannot be considered as an object. the problem of therapeutic cloning is quite different, although it leads to reticence and prohibition because the demarcation between therapeutic and reproductive cloning depends mainly on whether a cloned embryo is implanted in a uterus. while, at the time of writing, therapeutic cloning has been prohibited in france, germany and other countries, it is tolerated in great britain. in the usa, the prohibition only applies to publicly-financed researched, while each state has its own legislation, which is relatively flexible. the objective of therapeutic cloning is to provide patients with tissues that arise from their own selves, and are therefore immunocompatible and able to be grafted without there being any risk of rejection (chapter iv- . . ). it is based on the removal of somatic cells from the subject to receive the graft and the transfer of the nuclei of these cells into enucleated oocytes. the stem cells that are obtained after the first divisions are stimulated using appropriate growth factors. depending on the factor used, the stem cells differentiate to form a type of tissue (hepatic, muscular, nerve…) that can be used as a graft. such a procedure may be envisaged for patients who have suffered a serious, invalidating trauma, for example section of the spinal chord. a graft of immunocompatible nerve cells might make it possible to re-establish nerve continuity. a similar type of therapy has been considered for parkinson's disease, the cause of which is a degenerescence of certain cells of the encephalon (chapter iv- . . ). given the hopes that are raised by the possibility of such therapies, and the fact that, after all, such therapeutic cloning is the equivalent to an autograft, even if the ways in which the graft is obtained are slightly tortuous, the demonization and rejection of such practices should be reconsidered, calmly and coolly. another option for therapeutic cloning is the correction of mutations identified in the mitochondrial genome of a woman wishing to have children. it is, in fact, the mother's ovum that provides the fertilized egg with its complement of mitochondria that are indispensable for its viability. the manipulation involves inserting the nucleus of a fertilized ovum from the mother, obtained by artificial insemination, into an enucleated oocyte taken from a woman who is not suffering from the mitochondrial defect. the cytoplasm of the enucleated oocyte provides the stock of functional mitochondria that are indispensable to normal cell function in the future embryo. in a domain of the bioethics, in which rational objectivity comes up against deliberately technophobic religious and cultural considerations, it is useful to remember certain legal and legislative paradoxes. thus, in france, after having been considered to be a criminal act that was subjected to severe repression by the law up until , the right to have an abortion before the end of the third month of pregnancy became not only authorized but also protected by law. it is interesting to note that in the th century, thomas aquinas, the father of the church, had acknowledged that a fetus only becomes "animated" by the implantation of the soul by holy will in the third month after fertilization. another subject to be considered is pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (pgd), in which human embryos that have been fertilized in vitro are sorted in order to find those that are without defects, a practice which is on the verge of being a deviation in the direction of eugenics. nevertheless, pgd is the basis of a practice that is either already legalized or is in the process of being so in several european countries, the creation of so-called designer babies. a typical example is that of a designer baby arising from an embryo whose immune profile to that of an older sibling who is suffering from leukemia. in this case, there is good reason to hope that a graft of immunocompatible blood cells from the designer baby into the sibling who is suffering from leukemia will save the latter from death. out of the disharmony of opinions that arising from cultural tradition, religious conviction or simply scientific pragmatism, the american biologist and philosopher h. tristram engelhardt (b. ) , in the foundations of bioethics ( ) proposes a lay bioethics that is based upon the principle of permission. lay bioethics advocates tolerance while admitting that this tolerance in no way prevents anyone from taking up a personal position; it means that each human being has a moral sensitivity as well as the ability to reason and to choose within a defined limit of non-harmfulness and of justice. the individual is free to modify his or her destiny, or to manipulate his or her nature by genetic interventions because, adds engelhardt, "there is no lay moral foundation to prohibit such an intervention." when a researcher or the research organization that the researcher belongs to files for a patent for an invention with a patent office, it is necessary to demonstrate the novel and utilitarian nature of this invention. if a patent is accepted, this gives the person or body that filed it the exclusive right to make use of the invention over a pre-determined period of time, generally years, which is a means of protection, or, if desired, to allow others to make use of the invention by issuing a license to do so. in the domain of living beings, there has sometimes been confusion between invention and discovery. in , craig venter, known for his participation in the sequencing of the human genome, filed a demand for a patent covering the sequences of fragments of recombinant dna (cdna) called est (expressed sequence tags) that are obtained by reverse transcription from human brain messenger rnas, in the name of the nih (national institutes of health) at bethesda (usa). the patent specified that ests could be used as probes to characterize genes that are potentially involved in neurological ailments. the resulting outcry led the nih to withdraw its patent demand. in fact, the patenting of living beings has a long history that goes back to the patent that was filed in in france by louis pasteur, and then in in the usa, for the use, in brewing, of a yeast culture that was free from pathogenic bacteria. from this historical perspective, the case of ananda chakrabarty (b. ) set a legal precedent. in , chakrabarty filed a demand with the us patent office for a patent relating to a pseudomonas type bacterium which, by genetic modification, had acquired the ability to digest crude oil. his demand was refused. after an appeal and many legal battles, the united states supreme court overturned the patent demand refusal, the basis of the judgement being that any modified microorganism is a product of human ingenuity and has a specific name, characteristics and use. thus, from onwards, the arrival of an era of patents derived from genetic engineering was indicative of how this discipline was growing. in december of that year, stanley cohen and herbert boyer, acting on behalf of the university of stanford, patented a nucleic chimera comprising a recombinant dna carried by a vector. in , a patent concerning the growth hormone gene was awarded to the university of san francisco. in , the university of california at berkeley obtained a patent for the human insulin gene. in , the american company pioneer hi-bred succeeded in patenting a variety of corn in which genetic modification has led to an increased synthesis of tryptophan, an amino acid that is indispensable for animal feed. in , the genentech company acquired a patent for the gene coding for human gamma interferon. this was followed in japan by a patent for the gene coding for beta interferon. in the same year harvard university patented the oncomouse, a transgenic mouse whose susceptibility to cancer is greatly increased. after this, several species of transgenic animals were patented for utilitarian purposes, such as the production of human alpha- -antitrypsin taken from the milk of transgenic goats and used for the treatment of cystic fibrosis. the frenetic patenting of living beings has reached the domain of natural products arising from the plant world in tropical regions, the immensely varied essences arising from these plants being full of pharmacological potential. the potential for producing drugs of a considerable commercial value from such plants is very high. here we return to the problem of the patenting of genetically modified, cultivatable plants (gmps) (chapter iv- . ). thus, the experimental method, the principle of which is to acquire pure knowledge, finds itself led astray in its applications. whatever the motives that are given, particularly for manipulations that give rise to the manufacture of marketable products, the patenting of genomes for mercantile ends shows the regrettable, but unfortunately inevitable, direction in which the very spirit of a science, molecular biology, which half a century ago wished to be at the heart of an understanding of living beings, has drifted. the suffering of animals that are being experimented upon gives rise to a moral problem. the end of the th century saw large-scale demonstrations against vivisection and repeated demands for it to be abolished. today, there is renewed vigor in the call for the abolition of vivisection, without any real coherent basis. this desire to stop experimentation on animals ignores the imperatives of contemporary medicine, which must meet the challenge of pathologies whose increasing incidence is worrying, such as cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, cancer, and the degenerative illnesses that are linked with aging or are of genetic origin. it is true that animal experimentation inevitably leads to questions. are the stakes involved in a particular experiment, in terms of the acquisition of new knowledge, worth the suffering of an animal used in that experiment? is it not necessary to ensure that the experimental protocol is well-documented, that it is not redundant, or even that it has been the subject of previous studies carried out on cells in culture? it is easy to see the size of the methodological chasm that separates contemporary physiology from that of the time of claude bernard, when cell culture techniques were not yet being used, when the main instrument used was the scalpel and the researcher, using his or her imagination and creativity, had to develop specific protocols that were able to validate or refute a working hypothesis. each period in history operates in its own way according to its moral laws and its technical capabilities. the bloody operations carried out by magendie and by claude bernard in the th century, which were tolerated at this time despite criticisms from antivivisectionists, would not be permitted today. nevertheless, it is true that the physiologists of the th century, by means of the results of their experiments, wove a tapestry of new knowledge on which contemporary biologists were going to work and without which the level of understanding the modern science would be much lower than it is. animal experimentation remains indispensable in many areas of physiological investigation, in genomics, in toxicology and in pharmacology. it is a precondition for clinical trials of any new drug, being used to test for the drug's efficacy, its metabolism and any toxicity. however, not all data arising from animal experi-mentation can be extrapolated to man. the margin of uncertainty can be reduced by means of comparative trials on several animal species. because of their phylogenetic proximity to man, primates may seem to be the solution for experimentation prior to the application of a drug in man. this was the case for the development of a vaccine against hepatitis b. it has been proposed the grafting of stem cells in man should be preceded by experimentation in apes, in order to ensure the absence of tumorization over the long term. however, the researcher is confronted with a dilemma: should he or she ensure the safety of man with respect to possible deleterious effects or respond to ethical demands that recognize the very great genomic similarities between man and the chimpanzee. a consideration of cloning, patenting and animal experimentation practices illustrates the excesses of the experimental method in domains where political authorities consider themselves able to legislate. administrative decisions, often made in the absence of any dialogue with scientific authorities, can have serious consequences. thus, given the pretext of strict obedience to the principles of bioethics, which are a matter of tradition, and while certainly respectable, are nevertheless arguable, and also given the pretext of a sickly and unconsidered fear of the risk involved in certain experimental practices, and the absence of an intelligent evaluation of this risk, research, which until recently took place in a motivating atmosphere of liberty, may, over the long term, be weighed down with a highly prejudicial handicap and a limitless sense of discouragement. in the th and th centuries, experimental research, which was still in an emergent phase, was mainly artisanal, and in the hands of rare scholars. it took form during the th century in the west, particularly actively in germany, and became operational in the th century, under the aegis of governmental authorities, with the creation of institutes, the programmed recruitment of researchers and the allocation of renewable budgets. modern science, based on the principles of the experimental method, came to the fore much later in the east than in the west. the globalization of knowledge has meant that at present experimental science, in all domains, including that of the life sciences, has spread throughout the world, with even those countries that had become relatively backward in these domains because of their isolation catching up rapidly. nevertheless, it is true that the progress of the experimental sciences in the usa and in the united kingdom has been distinguished by pragmatic management of these countries' science policies, based on the excellence and the high degree of autonomy of their universities and research institutes with respect to recruitment and choice of subjects of study. the efficacy of this policy in the life sciences may be judged by the number of researchers who have won nobel prizes since the second world war (at the time of writing, more than in the usa and twenty or so in great britain as opposed to only in france). in france, research on living beings is carried out in the laboratories of universities, in institutes connected with higher education and in laboratories that are run by large organizations such as the national scientific research center (cnrs), the national institute of health and medical research (inserm), the national institute of agronomic research (inra), the atomic energy commission (cea), the national institute of research in computer processing and automation (inria), the national center for space studies (cnes) and the french institute of research on the seas and oceans (ifremer). equivalent bodies exist in countries other than france, some of them being institutes that are dedicated solely to research, and some being university laboratories that associate research and teaching. at the beginning of the th century, the function of researcher was most often associated with that of a professor occupying a chair at a university, surrounded by a few assistants, the professor directing the research work in his area of specialization. now, within a period of a few decades, the status of researcher has been modified greatly. today we talk of research careers classified according to level of expertise and technicality. management, or the supervision of career paths and the control of financing, is carried out by an administration that is itself highly hierarchical. the scientific process has undergone a metamorphosis, shown by changes in the behavior of researchers not only within the institutions in which they work but also in their relationships with the media, the political sphere and society. the teaching of the life sciences needs to take this into account. "long ago, there was a time when scientists recounted the exact circumstances of their discoveries, without shame, even when their recital showed up the fragility of their forecasts or an indecent collaboration on the part of every bit of luck. such times are past, and the researchers of today often like to make us believe that they only find what they are looking for. the thousands of pages pasteur's lab books provide an opportune reminder to us (and to program-makers or impatient users) that it is just as difficult to ask a question as to answer it, that a scientific discovery often occurs after a long, winding path, that rather than following the fashion, it is preferable to follow one's ideas, particularly if they are good ones, and are in advance of the fashion." jean jacques molecular dissymmetry, in "pasteur, workbooks of a scholar" - current technological progress, the accumulation of the scientific knowledge, the institutionalization of the public research and many other factors are disrupting a ritual of the experimental process that had survived until the middle of the th century, and even beyond. the experimental life sciences of the st century will necessarily see themselves remodeled with respect to their objectives and procedures. faced as it is by an increasingly tough international competition, the scientific community is also subject to restrictions in terms of operation and prospectives. an organization into small teams of a few researchers gathered around a boss, working in friendly interaction, is increasingly giving way to large groupings that sometimes seem like consortiums. focused on research subjects that are deemed to be "cost-effective", these superstructures are encouraged, or even imposed, in the sadly illusive hope that the will lead to greater efficacy. the person in charge of such large groups is taken up with everyday management tasks and by maintaining good relations with the administrative bodies on which his or her organization's survival depends. he or she may become distanced from the experimentation and forget the intellectual motivations that in the past caused his or her competence to be recognized. it should be emphasized that the secret of future successes lies in situations where young researchers are in direct contact with their bosses, and where friendly interaction with a known master teaches the apprentice researcher how to learn, how to think and how to experiment in a critical fashion. preoccupied by the rapid expansion of the scientific population, accompanied by the creation of laboratories whose operation necessarily requires financing, often on a large scale, political authorities, giving way to the requirements of media-fed public opinion, are interfering more and more, via administrative relays, in the control of the objectives of experimental research. short-term objectives, considered to be "visible", are favored. a priori, the viability of a project is judged according to the scientific context of the period and its impact on society, insofar as the project looks at health problems with a high degree of media coverage (cancer, degenerative illnesses, viral infections…) and often in agreement with a consensus that avoids going against the orthodoxy of the moment. this leads to a rigid management of projects that are financed and controlled according to objectives that have been fixed in advance, and that are all the more easily accepted by state authorities when they are somewhat fantastic in character. however, fundamental research proceeds from a playful activity, and for this reason, its efficacy is dependent on the passion of the researcher for the problem that he or she is studying. in contrast to what is believed by the narrow-minded, the effectiveness of a researcher in terms of discoveries depends upon the liberty that is given to this researcher, assuming, of course, that this liberty is underpinned by criteria of confidence such as the researcher's scientific past, his or her motivation, and judgements made concerning the researcher by impartial peers. it should not be forgotten that the determination of the three-dimensional structure of hemoglobin by max perutz (chapter iii- . . ) took around twenty years of solitary, uninterrupted and untiring labor. the theoretical and technical tricks that led to this success helped to open up the domain of the structures of giant macromolecules, several dozen kilodaltons in size, which no-one had dared study before. anyone who uses the experimental method realizes that while fundamental research must be organized, it cannot be scheduled. such a person knows that the pathways to discovery are convoluted, and that an inexplicable observation that appears unexpectedly during an experiment can sometimes, if the researcher is sufficiently perspicacious, be the beginning of an adventure that leads to a discovery. it was to just such a convoluted path that the belgian biologist christian de duve (b. ) alluded in his speech when he received the nobel prize for medicine and physiology in . after working at the university of saint louis in the usa, de duve, who had taken up a post at the university of louvain, belgium, decided to look at a research theme that had received a great deal of media coverage, diabetes and insulin. it was while operating on one of the subcellular fractions obtained from ground rat's liver, and analyzing certain of the enzyme activities of these fractions, that he was surprised to find, in one of them, enriched with mitochondria, a phosphatase activity that, paradoxically, increased with time, while the enzyme activities specific to the mitochondria declined. this was an activity belonging to organelles that were contaminating the mitochondria. dropping all research on diabetes, de duve set out to identify and characterize these unknown organelles. he discovered that they were involved in the breakdown (lysis) of molecules that are undesired by the cell and, for this reason, he called them lysosomes. the discovery of lysosomes helped to open a new chapter in cell biology and to attribute a molecular cause to diseases with serious prognoses whose etiology had remained a mystery up until then. these diseases were given the label lysosomal diseases. these diseases result from the absence of a lysosomal enzyme that is responsible for the breakdown of a given metabolite. the accumulation of this non-broken-down metabolite in the lysosomes leads to cell malfunction, which causes the lysosomal disease. as de duve said jokingly, if he had carefully followed the experimental process laid down in his diabetes research project, and if he had not given way to the temptation of "playing hooky" or "playing truant" he would never have mounted the podium in stockholm. in the same way, henri-gèry hers ( - ), a cell pathologist at the internationally renowned louvain school, remarked in an article published in the review médecine/sciences: "i believe we would obtain maximum value for the money devoted to research if we were willing to distribute it to those who have been shown to be productive, according to their needs, and without asking them for a program." hers concluded, in a tone that was deliberately playful, but thought-provoking, "such a simple system would lead to unemployment for a large number of administrators, which is why i suspect that it will never be adopted." research has its own set of ethics, driven by anticonformity and the creative imagination, capable of shaking up firmly-anchored ways of thinking and established hierarchies, and of leaving the researcher the freedom to express him or herself and to experiment off the beaten paths. as eccles says in evolution of the brain and creation of the conscience, it is important to distinguish between intelligence and imagination. intelligence is measured according to the rapidity and depth of understanding and clearness of expression. it may be measured and even given a numerical value. the same is not true for the imagination, a more subtle, unmeasurable phenomenon that cannot be learned. the imagination is one of the levers that is able to lift the boulder that hides scientific truth. the imagination is the ultimate weapon of research, which shakes up the knowledge acquired by the intelligence. nevertheless, the imagination must be tempered by a good critical sense that is able to perceive potential sources of artifacts, both in sophisticated instruments that act as so many black boxes from which already manufactured information emerges and in genetic or chemical cell exploration methods whose specificity must be carefully checked. the benefits that can sometimes be gained from prospective research that is far from dogma that is rooted in sterilizing tradition, the way in which knowledge progresses, most often by moving away from any orthodoxy, the way discoveries appear unexpectedly on the fringes of carefully put together projects, all of these points are matters for reflection for those in power in the worlds of politics, economics and industry. publication is an essential tool for communicating scientific knowledge, and is the judgement criterion for committees in charge of evaluating the creativity of a researcher. in order to have meaning, a publication must provide information that is sufficiently innovative with respect to parallel work carried out in other laboratories. here again, media coverage has quietly infiltrated the scene. its role is all the more perverse in that the rating of a publication is estimated according to its impact index, or, roughly speaking, the renown of the scientific journal in which it is published. curiously, it has happened that articles that would later be considered to be of primary importance have been rejected by highly prestigious journals, simply because the facts mentioned in the article and the conclusions made have not coincided with the orthodox opinions of the period and the traditionalist spirit of the journal's editorial committee. this was the case for an article which the biochemist hans krebs ( krebs ( - submitted to the british journal nature in . in this article krebs described a series of experiments showing that an endocellular metabolite, pyruvate, product of glycolysis, is completely degraded during a cycle of enzyme reactions. this degradation cycle would later be recognized as the central pivot of the intermediate metabolism. called upon to judge revolutionary scientific considerations, and unable to perceive their importance, nature's editorial committee rejected the article. krebs then sent his article to a journal with a relatively restricted audience, enzymologia. it was accepted and published in the two months that followed. the importance of the concept that was put forward in the article ensured that its author gained international recognition, leading to his winning the nobel prize for physiology and medicine in . for the researcher, publication is a way of making his or her work known. it is also the way in which the researcher learns about the work of others. while the rhythm at which publications in the life sciences appeared increased slightly in the first half of the th century, the second half of that century saw a great acceleration in this rhythm, leading to a difficult-to-manage proliferation of reviews and books. it has been estimated that in the last thirty years the volume of publications in the biological domain has increased five-fold; in the preceding twenty years it had already doubled. this accumulation of publications makes it harder for the researcher to judge the quality of the huge mass of published articles, even in the highly targeted domains that are within his or her area of expertise. the researcher, therefore, will deliberately choose a particular article according to the prestige of the journal in which it is published, which is not an inviolable criterion of quality. in addition, any judgement concerning the pertinence of a scientific article necessitates a dissection of the subtleties of the methodology, the well-groundedness of the experimental protocol and the validity of the results, by means of a careful examination of tables of results and graphs, and, finally, the logic of the discussion. this restrictive yet absolutely necessary requirement limits the number of articles that are likely to be screened. however, this is not the worse fault of publication today. there is another problem that is much more worrying. many documentation centers have reacted to this inflation in the scientific press by equipping themselves with computing facilities that are able to find, in data banks, articles that have been selected on the basis of a key word index, and to display them on screens. while acknowledging that this constitutes an inescapable change in the transmission of scientific know-how, it should be recognized that in browsing through the pages of a highquality scientific review, it is possible to come across an article containing an innovative idea or a useful technique, an advantage that is less available when using the on-line system of scientific publication that is most prevalent nowadays. mention should also be made of the requirement to publish frequently and within short time frames, for reasons of competitivity, when aspiring to obtain jobs or promotions, or even just to obtain recognition, this requirement being another factor that is prejudicial to fundamental research. it is the cause of worrying excesses, such as experiments that are hastily published and non-reproducible, or even the falsification of experimental results, occasionally within a context of considerable media coverage. although such practices, which are the exception rather than the rule, are rapidly detected and condemned in a scientific culture where information circulates freely, the publicity that they incite, which reaches society at large via the media, leads to an overall discrediting of experimental research. at present, one of the most noticeable trends in scientific publication is that of collectivism. while, in the th century, scientific articles were usually published in the name of a single author, occasionally two authors, and very rarely more than two, nowadays publications are often co-authored by several people, and when the work involves the analysis of structures, or the sequencing of genomes, several dozen researchers may be co-authors. from being the work of individuals, research has become collective. in domains whose complexity requires a wide selection of techniques that may range from physics to genetics, the hybridization of specific areas of expertise is certainly indispensable, and this requires the collaboration on a particular project of researchers who are sometimes physically remote from one another. the downside for the researcher, particularly one who is young, is that this requires him or her to abandon individuality and creativity. both collectivism and inflation in scientific publication are facts that are an integral part of contemporary science, facts which reflect an irreversible trend that it would be difficult to obviate. over the last few years, scientific publication has been subject to a type of restraint, in that certain "sensitive" data in the domain of molecular biology might be used for the manufacture of biological weapons in a form of terrorism known as bioterrorism. thus, the means of synthesizing de novo viruses (influenza virus, poliomyelitis) and the possibility of modifying their tropism by "directed molecular evolution" (change from a sexual tropism to a respiratory tropism for the aids virus) have been the subject of publications in prestigious journals. given sufficient means, terrorist pharmacists could well make use of such data in order to carry out malicious actions with catastrophic consequences . in order to please a public that is eager for progress and the sensational, politicians favor, by means of targeted financing, the types of organization that appeal to their sensibilities, such as the technological platforms. while recognizing that such platforms are now an integral part of the landscape of research on living beings, and that they must therefore be taken into account, and while acknowledging that projects which implement the latest technologies in different domains need to be federated, it is nonetheless vital not to underestimate the potential creativity of small groups of researchers, a point that was expressed by one of the greatest of contemporary biologists, arthur kornberg ( kornberg ( - , winner of the nobel prize for physiology and of medicine, in a speech given in : "as i view the steady growth of collective science and big science, the greatest danger i see is a dampen-ing of individual creativity and reversion to the old politics -the inevitable local politics that infects every group and institution." however, conscious of the metamorphosis that is occurring in the experimental method, and faced with a particularly inventive and all-conquering technology, fundamental research in the life sciences must come to terms. a century ago, fundamental research and technological research interacted all the more directly because they were both in their infancy. this is no longer the case. management of the ever-increasing amount of knowledge in the life sciences, and the degree of sophistication achieved by bioengineering techniques and instruments, is widening a gap that makes dialogue increasingly laborious. however, dialogue appears to be a guarantee of future progress. the solution can only come from an increase in cross-disciplinarity, which should begin with university teaching and the establishment of a recruitment policy that advocates the cohabitation of talents from different educational backgrounds in the same laboratory. fortified by such hybrid expertise, while maintaining its share of originality and liberty in the choice of problems to be studied, fundamental research on living beings can only be enriched by a marriage of reason with biotechnology. convinced of the necessity for such a marriage, stanley fields, the inventor of the double hybrid method (chapter iv- . ), in an article entitled "the interplay of biology and technology" (proceedings of the national academy of sciences, usa, , vol. , pp. - ), concludes,: "it is at the interfaces of biology and other sciences that many of the future discoveries will be made, at the interfaces of biology and engineering that these discoveries will come to be exploited, and at the interfaces of biology and ethics and law that their consequences for society will be decided." the desired dialogue between biology and technology also implies the breaking down of barriers that too often isolate fundamental research and so-called applied research, and the facilitating of consistent interaction between the discoveries made in the academic institutions and their application for utilitarian ends in private companies. this is where the twin demons of money and power raise their heads. already, at the turn of the s, a. bartlett giamatti ( - ) , who was then president of yale university in the usa, commenting on american university policies, spoke of a "ballet of antagonisms" between, on the one hand, commercial companies that are interested in the rapid cost-effectiveness of any new therapeutic advance and, on the other hand, non-profit university laboratories. recently, james j. duderstadt (b. ), emeritus president of the university of the michigan, argued that the university is a "counter-hierarchical" organism. in fact, its members are free to carry out the research that pleases them and to think in the ways that they wish to think, in any case within an academic norm that considers itself as being free from the constraints dictated by private interest groups. until recently, such behavior was considered as a sort of ethic which arose out of the university conscience and dignity. the crumbling away of this ethic in the final decades of the th century coincided with the rise of biotechnologies and the large-scale filing of patents relating to molecular genetics techniques that could be applied to the manipulation of living beings, by researchers in the public sector. the intrusion of the american private sector into public research laboratories, in the form of collaborations with transfer of "sensitive" information from the public to the private, has become such a worrying problem that drastic control measures have had to be taken. within this context, the american federal government, in february , issued a certain number of prohibitions targeting the national institutes of health (nih) of bethesda, particularly with respect to the retribution of researchers for services rendered to industry . these stands call for thought concerning the place that is currently held in universities with respect to fundamental research. without arguing against the efficacy of major research institutes, it is nevertheless necessary to remember the part played by the university in this domain. the university is not only the place where knowledge, both as it is now, in its current state of advancement, and as it has been, it is also the place where knowledge must be created by fundamental research. for the last few decades, under pressure from state policies, and also as a function of an improvement in social status, the world of the university has opened up to a wider public, leading to an influx of students that is sometimes so enormous that the task of teaching them has become overwhelming. because of this, the share of their time that university researchers can, in practice, devote to their research tasks has shrunk. this situation is highly prejudicial to the mission to innovate, which should be a priority. it is, in fact, during their university studies that the thought patterns of young students are forged by contact with teachers who not only instruct them, but also educate them by inspiring in them a motivation and an enthusiasm that gives rise to hope. how could this be true if the teaching faculty did not itself participate in scientific creation? "what can teaching, ex cathedra, do to guide the researcher? nothing, obviously. the researcher is trained in the laboratory. and the first stroke of genius on the part of a future researcher is to find a good boss. such a find will open up the royal road to success. the road will be opened -but the researcher must travel along it. a researcher may be taught many things. he or she can become familiar with techniques and with equipment. she or he can be assigned a problem to resolve. however, what is essential for the researcher is to know how to understand relationships between phenomena that seem unrelated, and to be able to progress from the particular to the general. a boss may develop such qualities in a gifted young researcher, but intuition is a gift; it cannot be taught." while the bernardian style experimental method, based on a working hypothesis aroused by an observation, followed by implementation of an experimental protocol, is still extant in the life sciences, and while "serendipity" is still the origin of great discoveries, "big science" , underpinned by sophisticated biocomputing or bioinformatics procedures, is intruding more and more, while genomics and proteomics are not far behind. the methods and instruments developed by the biotechnosciences have led to profound modifications in the ways that the structures and functions of living beings are investigated. for example, by varying multiple parameters in dna chips or protein chips, at the same time, the experimenter is able to ask questions that lead to grouped all-or-nothing answers (chapter iv- . . ). in combinatory chemistry, screening makes it possible to detect a molecule that is active for a given pathology from among a multitude of molecules (chapter iv- . ). the mathematical simulation of metabolic networks or of signaling chains is already well under way (chapter iv- . ). given this new technological outlook and the hope that it can provide rapid solutions to health problems subject to considerable media coverage, the teaching of biology in universities must not be limited to a description of current advances, no matter how brilliant and promising they may be. this teaching should return to its origins, be a reminder of history, and should not hesitate to use examples to illustrate how a major discovery can arise from a long period of wandering in the wilderness. in practical terms, while being conscious of the extraordinary complexity of living nature, and carefully avoiding the dangers of simplification, it is important to remember that the reductionist method was a necessary path to an understanding of the integrated, modelized biology that is emerging nowadays. at present, certain people call reductionism naive, but this is only the case insofar as we have faith in recent advances in integrated biology . with this in mind, it should be noted that the deciphering of the protein synthesis mechanism in prokaryotic microorganisms (chapter iv- . . ) was, along with the discovery of the genetic code, a jumping-off point for an inventory of similar, but noticeably more sophisticated, mechanisms in eukaryotic organisms. the reductionist "one gene, one enzyme" dogma, formulated on the basis of beadle and tatum's experiments on the mold neurospora crassa (chapter iii- . ) was a necessary prerequisite to a considerably more elaborate understanding of the relationship between the genotype and the phenotype. the way in which the nucleic acid and protein units in the tobacco mosaic virus spontaneously organize themselves (chapter iii- . ) acted as a basis for thought concerning the self-organization of macromolecular complexes in the cell. these few examples underline the fact that it is difficult to comprehend the scientific research process if we only refer to experiments carried out in the present, and if we do not have a clear idea not only of the way in which hypotheses, even false ones, were once formulated, but also of the way in which experimental work, which may have led to failures, was once carried out, or, in brief, if we do not look back at the past. let us add that it is occasionally good for us to show some humility when we take the trouble to examine the past. thus, the processes involved in the phagocytosis of bacteria by innate immune cells (neutrophils, macrophages), which are today studied in the greatest detail with particularly refined technical facilities, had already been perceived more than a century ago by metchnikoff, and even analyzed, admittedly with the clumsy means at his disposal, but with such accuracy that none of the conclusions formulated at that time have yet been disproved (chapters iii- . . and iii- . . ). the experimental method applied to the life sciences, the history of its birth and of its development, the way in which it is regarded by political and societal authorities, and, finally, the dependencies that are developing at present between the technosciences, human medicine and the different branches of the economic sector, all of these aspects should be covered by university teaching that includes not only the pure sciences, but also the human, political and economic sciences, as well as philosophy. the student should not be saturated with book-learning, but he or she should be taught to reason, to imagine and to criticize, not to accumulate knowledge in an indigestible catalogue, but to ask questions about the way in which certain, carefully chosen, items of knowledge have been acquired, and not to deliberately accept science in its current state without knowing what it was like in the past. he or she should understand what pathways of thought led to dogmas that were established and taught as truths being refuted, and favor experimentation, with its risks and questions, rather than well-smoothed, abstract theoretical presentations without rough edges. these should be the principles of teaching that is designed to open up young minds to creativity. in anglo-saxon countries, the worlds of industry and research that welcome the graduate manage to communicate with one another, but these worlds ignore one another in france, or at least remain reserved, a situation which is prejudicial from the economic point of view. if we look at the pharmaceutical industry in particular, we see that only half a century ago the pharmacopeia was limited to plant extracts or active agents isolated from these plants, with antibiotics quietly beginning to make their appearance. in the last decades of the th century, a great technological leap forward was made, with completely new methods in bioengineering, combinatory chemistry, and the finding of therapeutic targets in macromolecules, and this created a hiatus that severely handicapped countries that were unprepared for it. france, with its biological fundamental research training that is out of phase with that of the anglo-saxon countries, fell behind, and continues to be behind, a situation that is prejudicial for its economy. the remedy for this does not lie in incantatory speeches. it requires a volontarist policy for the management of experimental research. generally speaking, the fact that the major engineering schools in france, which recruit the scientific intellectual elite, students being chosen by competitive exams that select for intelligence rather than imagination, are unable to impose upon their students an end-of-course thesis that would authenticate their engineering degree, should not be tolerated. in contrast to other countries, in france only a small percentage of engineers have received doctoral training or had to present a thesis before entering their careers. the french dual system of major engineering schools and universities, which, a century ago, made sense for the economy of that period, has become completely obsolete, and deserves a courageous revision. "there is a question, much older than modern science, which has never ceased haunting certain men of science: that of the conclusions that the existence of science and the contents of scientific theories can lead to concerning the relationships that humankind has with the natural world. such conclusions cannot be imposed by science as is, but they are an integral part of the metamorphosis of this science." the new alliance. metamorphose of science - ( nd edition) in the s - s, the hybridization of the techniques of genetics, biochemistry and biophysics gave birth to molecular biology. with the resolution of the double helix structure of dna, the demonstration of its replication, the elucidation of the mode of expression of its nucleotide sequence as a sequence of amino acids in proteins and finally the deciphering of the genetic code, biology underwent a revolution of an amplitude similar to that which, at the end of the th century, saw a blossoming of the seeds of cell biology. the last decades of the th century represented the utilitarian era of molecular biology. the introduction of genetic engineering into biological experimentation dates to the beginning of the s. it was at this time that techniques were developed that made it possible to transfer a fragment of genomic dna from one species into the genome of another species. genetic engineering now fills a predominant position in the life sciences, supported by increasingly effective biocomputing or bioinformatics techniques. it is easy to understand that expertise and a high degree of knowledge about fundamental research is necessary in order to be able to master or even invent the genetic engineering techniques that are indispensable if we are going to produce biomolecules with a therapeutic impact, such as those that are currently being used in the pharmaceutical domain: insulin, growth hormone, blood coagulation factors, vaccines, etc. the engineering sciences that make up the greater part of contemporary biotechnology have now come to the fore in many domains of the life sciences. it is thus that a modernistic and original way of investigating nature has come into being. a multiparametric model, in which biocomputing or bioinformatics and high-throughput screening reign, is added to, or even substituted for, the bernardian model for the experimental method, based on observation, an a priori hypothesis, and experimentation to verify this hypothesis by varying a single parameter at a time. the aim of this globalized approach is to integrate the multiple reactions that take place almost simultaneously in different locations of a cell into a coherent whole, to rationalize the interpretation of the dialogue that operates between the different endocellular organelles, and finally to discover how the exchanges of information between cells in an organ and between organs in multicellular organisms are set up. we are therefore witness to the emergence of an integrated biology that has been labeled "systems biology". its long-term objective is to model the functioning of living beings and to theorize them. its development is encouraged by the perspective of consequences that could revolutionize certain sectors of the human economy and of public health. today, concrete, mechanical models, in the form of biorobots and hybrid robots, and, very recently, molecular motors are added to abstract models that are based on the logic of mathematics and algorithms, ushering in the era of nanobiomachines. becoming more utilitarian, the life sciences are imperceptibly detaching themselves from traditional philosophical concepts that try to explain the modes of reasoning of the researcher, or even to impose a framework for thought that is likely to orient his or her way of doing research. looking at genetic inheritance, contemporary experimentation has shown that at all levels of the tree of nature, including man, this inheritance can be modified. aware of his or her ability to influence the functioning and the destiny of living beings, the researcher is confronted with the dilemma of a desire for knowledge versus a questioning of the use to which discoveries may be put. there has never been such a real divorce between the world of phenomena that are understood by the experimenter and the world of noumena whose intelligibility is foreign to our senses. there has never been such a wide gap between the biotechnosciences, whose possibilities are coming to be seen as limitless, and a reflective analysis of thought, which wanders between freedom of action and prohibition. as society becomes aware of the potential applications of discoveries made concerning living beings, problems of bioethics, particularly those involving reproduction, have become problems of public interest. cloning and the production of stem cells are subjects that give rise to diatribes and passions. in the near future, genotyping, which is the result of progress in pharmacogenetics, could usher in a new form of customized medicine. elsewhere, the cognitive sciences that are bringing together philosophy and psychology in the domains of computer technology and artificial intelligence, and which are tackling the processes of thought, the creative imagination and memory, will no doubt be the subject of the considerable questioning concerning research on living beings with which the experimental method will be confronted in the st century. when faced with the way in which biotechnologies have erupted into the life of society, the mind travels back to the allegorical illustration that embellishes francis bacon's novum organum (see figure ii. ) , showing vessels returning from unknown lands, loaded with precious cargoes and returning to port having sailed past the pillars of hercules. at present, the challenge has been partially met, but a great deal remains to be done. innumerable cargoes have already reached port, but what will be the destiny of this precious merchandise? after all, the seeds of the idea of technoscience were already in place in the th century, in the philosophy of francis bacon and robert boyle (chapter ii- ). bacon recommended that the governments of the time promote experimental science by the creation of laboratories equipped with high-performance instruments and libraries, by the organization of researchers into teams and by appropriate financing. the utilitarian ends of scientific research were underlined. boyle imagined a situation in which laboratories were open to society and researchers were able to accept criticism. given innovations that upset tradition, protestations arose. the pneumatic machine or vacuum pump was the subject of the fameuse diatribe between boyle and the philosopher hobbes (chapter ii- . ). hobbes criticized the validity of boyle's conclusions, drawn from experiments that he qualified as doubtful. following his words, he came to see in the discoveries of experimental science a possible threat to the power of governments and the hierarchical layout of society. such overcautious opposition to the pursuit of knowledge is in no way anecdotal, it is still a reality, with the uprooting of genetically modified plants and the veto that has been placed in certain areas on stem cell research. this type of opposition is also shown when pressures or even vetoes are in operation that take into account more the opportunism of the moment than an in-depth understanding of science and of its history and that forget that freedom of the mind is a guarantee of its creativity, because, just as in the world of arts and letters, the world of scientific research is situated outside those norms that can be modulated by state decrees. the creativity of the researcher cannot be manufactured on demand. where it exists, it still needs to be detected and encouraged. the atp-synthase -a splendid molecular machine structure at . Å of f -atpase from beef heart mitochondria direct observation of the rotation of f -atpase powering an inorganic nanodevice with a biomolecular motor mechanically driven atp synthesis by f -atpase atp-driven stepwise rotation of fo-f atp synthase key: cord- - nasrbs authors: nan title: gene chip for viral discovery date: - - journal: plos biol doi: . /journal.pbio. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nasrbs nan comparing the genomes of related organisms, researchers can see what parts of the genomes are conserved-highly conserved genes tend to be important-and then focus on these regions to track down genes and determine how they function. to construct a draft sequence of the c. briggsae genome, the researchers merged genomic data from three sources-one derived from whole-genome shotgun sequencing, another from physical genome mapping, and the third from regions of a previously "finished'' sequence. for the shotgun sequence, the researchers extracted dna from worms, randomly cut it into short pieces, sequenced them, and then assembled overlapping sequences to create thousands of stretches of contiguous dna sequence. to help fill in the gaps between these "contigs,'' stein and colleagues developed a "fingerprint'' map of the genome as a guide for aligning the shorter fragments. the map also helped them identify inconsistencies and misalignments in the genome assembly. finally, they integrated the previously finished sequence to improve the draft genome sequence. using these massive datasets, the authors produced a high-quality genome sequence; although it does not quite meet the gold standard of a "finished'' sequence, it covers % of the genome and has an accuracy of . %. after confirming the accuracy of the draft, the researchers turned to the substance of the genome. examining two species side by side, scientists can quickly spot genes and flag interesting regions for further investigation. analyzing the organization of the two genomes, stein et al. not only found strong evidence for roughly , new c. elegans genes, but also indications that certain regions could be "footprints of unknown functional elements.'' while both worms have roughly the same number of genes (about , ), the c. briggsae genome has more repeated sequences, making its genome slightly larger. because the worms set out on separate evolutionary paths about the same time mice and humans parted ways-about million years ago, compared to million years ago-the authors could compare how the two worm genomes have diverged with the divergence between mice and humans. the worms' genomes, it seems, are evolving faster than their mammalian counterparts, based on the change in the size of the protein families (c. elegans has more chemosensory proteins than c. briggsae, for example), the rate of chromosomal rearrangements, and the rate at which silent mutations (dna changes with no functional effect) accumulate in the genome. this would be expected, the researchers point out, because generations per year are a better measure of evolutionary rate than years themselves. (generations in worms are about three days; in mice, about three months.) what is surprising, they say, is that despite these genomic differences, the worms look nearly identical and occupy similar ecological niches; this is obviously not the case with humans and mice, which nevertheless have remarkably similar genomes. both worm pairs-as well as mouse and human-also share similar developmental pathways, suggesting that these pathways may be controlled by a relatively small number of genes and that these genes and pathways have been conserved, not just between the worms, but also between the nematodes and mammals. this question, along with many others, can now be explored by searching the two species' genomes and comparing those elements that have been conserved with those that have changed. with the nearly complete c. briggsae genome in hand, worm biologists have a powerful new research tool. by comparing the genetic makeup of the two species, c. elegans researchers can refine their knowledge of this tiny human stand-in, fill in gaps about gene identity and function, as well as illuminate those functional elements that are harder to find, and study the nature and path of genome evolution. some , people live with partial or nearly total permanent paralysis in the united states, with spinal cord injuries adding , new cases each year. most research aimed at recovering motor function has focused on repairing damaged nerve fibers, which has succeeded in restoring limited movement in animal experiments. but regenerating nerves and restoring complex motor behavior in humans are far more difficult, prompting researchers to explore alternatives to spinal cord rehabilitation. one promising approach involves circumventing neuronal damage by establishing connections between healthy areas of the brain and virtual devices, called brain-machine interfaces (bmis), programmed to transform neural impulses into signals that can control a robotic device. while experiments have shown that animals using these artificial actuators can learn to adjust their brain activity to move robot arms, many issues remain unresolved, including what type of brain signal would provide the most appropriate inputs to program these machines. as they report in this paper, miguel nicolelis and colleagues have helped clarify some of the fundamental issues surrounding the programming and use of bmis. presenting results from a series of long-term studies in monkeys, they demonstrate that the same set of brain cells can control two distinct movements, the reaching and grasping of a robotic arm. this finding has important practical implications for spinal-cord patients-if different cells can perform the same functions, then surgeons have far more flexibility in how and where they can introduce electrodes or other functional enhancements into the brain. the researchers also show how monkeys learn to manipulate a robotic arm using a bmi. and they suggest how to compensate for delays and other limitations inherent in robotic devices to improve performance. while other studies have focused on discrete areas of the brain-the primary motor cortex in one case and the parietal cortex in another-nicolelis et al. targeted multiple areas in both regions to operate robotic devices, based on evidence indicating that neurons involved in motor control are found in many areas of the brain. the researchers gathered data on both brain signals and motor coordinates-such as hand position, velocity, and gripping force-to create multiple models for the bmi. they used retraining the brain to recover movement if you have ever spent an evening hoisting brews with your pals at the corner pub, chances are you never stopped to think-gee, how do i lift my glass now that it's only half full? it seems like a simple task-you raise that glass reflexively, whether it is empty or full-yet the neural calculations that determine the force needed to lift your arm smoothly to your lips in each case are anything but simple. the brain, it seems, operates like a computer to process variable cues-such as the weight of a glass and the position of your arm-to generate an appropriate response: lifting the glass. neuroscientists believe the brain builds a kind of internal software program based on past experience to transform such variable cues into motor commands. the brain's software, or internal model, depends on specialized sets of instructions, or "computational elements,'' in the brain. but exactly how the brain organizes these elements to process sensory variables that affect arm movements is far from clear. eun jung hwang and colleagues predict that these computational elements are based on a multiplicative mechanism, called a gain field, through time after time in biology, revelations about structure lead to insights about corresponding functional mechanisms. while evolution throws in the occasional spandrel, more often organizational structure serves a practical purpose. so naturally, neuroscientists wonder, does the architectural organization of the motor system reveal an underlying functional organization? progress on this question has been complicated by the fact that there appears to be no clear correspondence between the development of motor neurons centrally and their target muscles in the periphery. in the visual system, for example, retinal ganglion cells send axons in an ordered manner into the brain, where they form connections with neurons of the primary visual center in the brain responsible for detecting visual targets. the arrangement of these connections mirrors the neighboring relationships of the neurons in the retina, and so the neural map of connections in the brain is an "anatomical correlate'' of the arrangements in the retina. the origin of these anatomical relationships can be traced through the process of development, allowing scientists to link the assembly of this sensory system with the function of the neurons involved. matthias landgraf and colleagues now report that in the fruitfly drosophila the arrangement of motor neurons corresponds to the distribution of their target muscles. thus, anatomical correlates also exist in the motor system, in the form of a "myotopic map,'' where the arrangement of motor neuron dendritic branches in the central nervous system reflects the distribution of their target body wall muscles in the periphery. starting with the larger question of how the neural networks governing locomotion are specified and assembled during development, the researchers decided to see if they could identify an elementary principle of motor system organization. working in drosophila, they examined motor neurons and the body wall muscles they innervate. with an eye toward understanding the mechanisms directing the assembly of the motor system, the researchers concentrated on the early stages of development, when the motor neurons first establish their characteristic dendritic territories. they found that the dendrites of motor neurons innervating internal muscles and that those innervating external muscles do in fact project into distinct regions, corresponding to the distinct mapping of the muscles themselves. surprisingly, the arrangement of the dendrites in the myotopic map forms independently of the muscles they innervate. it may be, the researchers suggest, that the initial signals charting the location of the dendrites are set very early in development, when the coordinates for other structural elements are established. but that question requires further investigation. the researchers are among the first to reveal such an orderly underlying principles of motor system organization revealed which sensory signals to the brain are amplified by signals from the eye, head, or limbs. in this way, the brain can rely on past experience of one kind of sensory cues to predict how to respond to new but similar situations. while previous studies had established that some visual cues are combined through a gain field, this study shows that motor commands may also be processed via gain fields. this finding, the researchers demonstrate, accounts for a range of behaviors. based on previous studies showing that when people reach to various directions in a small space, they can extrapolate what they learn about the forces in one starting position to a significantly different position, it has been proposed that the way the brain computes movement is not terribly sensitive to limb position. citing other research with seemingly contrary conclusions-that the brain can be highly sensitive to limb position in calculating force and movement-hwang et al. set out to investigate whether-and how-the brain creates a template to translate sensory variables (limb position and velocity) into motor commands (force). they created a computer model to mimic the reaching behaviors observed by people in their experiments and found that the most accurate model used computational elements that are indeed sensitive to both limb position and velocity. if the brain processes these two independent variables through a gain field, it can use the relationship of the two variables-that is, the strength of the gain field-to adapt information about the force needed to move or lift something in one situation to accomplish a wide range of similar movements. when the researchers compared their model to previously published results, they found their model accounted for seemingly disparate findings. they explain that the brain's sensitivity to limb position can be either low or high after a task has been learned because the gain field itself is adjustable. the authors note that neurophysiological experiments suggest that the motor cortex may be one of the crucial components of the brain's internal models of limb dynamics. the next step will be to track the motor cortex neurons to see whether their activity supports this model. hwang et al. predict they will. novel "checkpoint" mechanism mediates dna damage responses connection between patterns of motor neuron dendrites and patterns of muscles. this organization, in the form of the myotopic map, may be mirrored by the patterning of processes of higher-order neurons, which form connections with the motor neuron dendrites themselves. in vertebrates, studies have shown that motor neurons are grouped into "pools'' and "columns'' that correlate with the muscles they innervate. but because these pools and columns represent the location of the cell bodies and not the areas of the spinal cord where the neurons receive most of their inputs, that is, their dendritic branches, scientists could not say whether the pools and columns are simply spandrels-an incidental result of the way motor neurons are generated-or mirror a functional organization of the motor system. this novel fi nding in drosophila will pave the way for future studies on the relationship between anatomy and physiology during development. it will be particularly interesting to discover whether such myotopic arrangements of motor neuron dendrites are unique to insects or whether this organizational principle occurs in other motor systems, including vertebrates. of all the tasks a cell must accomplish day in and day out, protecting its genome may be the most important. genomes confront all manner of potential assaults, from the strand-splitting action of gamma-radiation to the simple copying mistakes sometimes made when dna replicates before a cell divides. though some mutations are harmless, others can disrupt gene action, leading to cancer and other diseases. to guard against such events, healthy cells maintain quality-control "checkpoints'' that sense and respond to dna injuries, as well as to defects in dna replication, and that prevent cell division until the dna can be repaired. if the damage is beyond repair, apoptosis pathways set about the business of destroying the affl icted cell. many of the genes and protein complexes involved in these checkpoint responses have been identifi ed, but the biochemical mechanisms that in some cases trigger cell cycle arrest are not fully understood. experiments by philip hanawalt and his student david pettijohn at stanford university in suggested that the molecular machinery of dna replication and repair-which they discovered at sites of damage-are quite similar and closely linked. while many studies have since supported that link, viola ellison and bruce stillman, the director of the cold spring harbor laboratory, have found new evidence that the two processes may indeed coincide by showing that protein complexes regulating a cellular checkpoint in dna repair operate much like similar complexes involved in dna replication. the molecular pathways governing the replication of dna before cell division are well known. as the double-stranded dna molecule unwinds, different protein complexes step in to ensure that each strand is faithfully reproduced. two protein complexes required for this process are replication factor c (rfc) and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (pcna). in the s, stillman's laboratory isolated pcna and rfc and showed that they function together to "load'' pcna onto a structure in dna that is created after dna synthesis begins. pcna forms a clamp around the dna strand and regulates the dna polymerases that duplicate the dna double helix. studies in yeast had identifi ed a series of proteins required for the dna synthesis phase of the cell cycle and the dna damage checkpoint pathways; mutations in these proteins' genes make cells very sensitive to radiation (hence the name rad genes). a subset of these proteins, which are conserved in human cells, form two protein complexes-rsr and rhr-that function like rfc and pcna, respectively, with rsr loading the rhr clamp onto dna. ellison and stillman demonstrate that both pairs of "clamp-loading'' complexes follow similar biochemical steps, but, signifi cantly, rfc and rsr favor different dna structures for clamp loading. while it was known that the rsr/rhr complexes exist in human cells, it had not been established that the two types of clamps prefer different dna targets. the researchers also show that the rsr/rhr biochemistry depends on rpa, a protein known to be involved in the dna damage-response pathway. the discovery that rsr loads its rhr clamp onto a different dna structure was unexpected; it suggests not only that the two clamp loaders have distinct replication and repair functions, but also how the checkpoint machinery might work to prevent dna damage from being passed on to future generations. by establishing the chemical requirements of rsr/rhr interactions as well as the preferred dna-binding substrate, the researchers have charted the way for determining the different functions of these cell cycle checkpoint complexes and how the complexes' different subunits affect these functions. the researchers propose that the role of this checkpoint machinery is not as an initial sensor of dna damage, but rather as a facilitator of dna repair, stepping in after preliminary repairs to dna lesions have been made. ellison and stillman's work helps establish a biochemical model for studying how both of these checkpoint complexes function to coordinate replication and repair-and promise to help scientists understand how cancer develops when the checkpoint repair mechanisms fail. during animal development, cells gradually grow, multiply, and specialize to create the tissues and organs that shape and sustain multicellular organisms. the progression from a single cell to a thousand-, million-, or trillion-celled animal follows an exacting schedule and plan involving an elaborate network of genes and proteins. one of the primary mechanisms coordinating this process is cell-to-cell communication. cellular signaling regulates two crucial development mechanisms, apoptosis (programmed cell death) and cell proliferation, which work like chisel and clay to sculpt multiplying masses of cells into, say, a fly wing or a human finger. controlled by multiple signals operating at fixed intervals, the entwined pathways can be steered off-course by a single defect in the communication network, resulting in the death of a healthy cell, for example, or the survival of a damaged cell. such disruptions can lead to physical abnormalities, such as webbed hands and feet, when cells that should die remain alive; degenerative nerve disease, when healthy cells are killed; and cancer, when damaged cells survive and evade normal growth limitations. researchers have uncovered some of the mechanisms underlying these processes by studying genes involved in fruitfly (drosophila) development. following that tradition, stephen cohen and david hipfner have identified a gene critical to drosophila development that juggles cell growth and survival signals to help promote cell growth and prevent inappropriate apoptosis. they searched for genes associated with changes in tissue growth in fruitfly wings and identified some that can cause tissue "overgrowth''-abnormally large masses resulting either from cells growing faster than they divide or from cells escaping proliferation controls when they are overexpressed. among these is a gene that encodes a newly divide, and differentiate, most respond to the defect by killing themselves, even under conditions that normally promote survival. thus, cells without slik appear to have an intrinsic survival defect, suggesting that slik prevents apoptosis. when slik is overexpressed, cell proliferation increases, but so does apoptosis. only when apoptosis was blocked did the cells form tumor-like growths. this coupling of cell growth and cell death is characteristic of oncogenes (cancercausing genes), and slik also seems to function in both pathways. the authors point out that the signal to proliferate may inherently sensitize cells to apoptosis, as has been shown previously for some cancer cells. this may keep an individual cell under the control of its neighbors, who collectively monitor the needs of the organism. for a cell to respond to a signal by dividing rather than dying, it must get the appropriate signs from its comrades. slik, the authors demonstrate, is a key factor in determining whether a cell lives or dies. whether its mammalian counterparts play a similar role is yet to be determined. identified kinase that contributes to the regulation of cell proliferation and survival (or death, depending on the circumstance) during drosophila development. cohen and hipfner called the gene slik based on its similarity to two human kinase-coding genes (slk and lok). little is known about these human proteins, though previous studies suggest they may affect cytoskeletal dynamics and cell adhesion. in this paper, the authors report preliminary evidence supporting the notion that slik may regulate the cytoskeleton, the "backbone'' of the cell that confers structure and motility. interestingly, disturbances to cell adhesion and cytoskeletal structure are known triggers of apoptosis and are being explored as potential anticancer agents. kinases make up one of the largest families of proteins and are important regulators of cell signaling. to investigate the function of slik in drosophila, the researchers removed the gene and then studied the physical and cellular effects. they found striking delays in growth and developmental timing and showed that these effects result largely from the demise of the slik-deficient cells. while cells deprived of slik can grow, one might not expect that yeast lead terribly eventful lives, yet the singlecelled fungus must struggle to survive just like everyone else. and for yeastlike everyone else-survival means being able to detect and coordinate a rapid response to changes in its environment. though survival for humans is a bit more complicated, our cells use the same regulatory networks, which maintain cell growth and health when they work and contribute to diseases, from asthma to cancer, when they break down. given the variety of conditions even the lowly yeast is likely to encounter during its life, one might expect to find a multitude of molecules mobilizing a response. but yeast cells, it turns out, are fairly resourceful. as erin o'shea and colleagues report, just one protein in yeast activates different groups of genes in response to different amounts of an environmental stimulus. the researchers focused on how yeast responds to various levels of phosphate, an essential nutrient for all cells. one way that cells regulate responses to environmental stimuli is through the transcription (activation) of genes. these transcriptional responses are often controlled by a multistep process that shuttles gene-activating proteins into the nucleus, where they can generate the appropriate response for a given stimulus, or confines them to the cytoplasm if their gene products are not needed. during this process, called phosphorylation, the addition of a phosphate group to a protein-such as a receptor or transcription factor-acts as a mechanism for controlling gene expression. o'shea's team demonstrated that phosphorylation of a transcription factor called pho controls gene expression by controlling where that protein resides in the cell-in the cytoplasm or in the nucleus. as is the case with many proteins, pho can accept phosphate groups at multiple sites. to see whether the location of phosphorylation affects the action of pho , o'shea's team exposed yeast to different levels of phosphate and tracked the cellular response. they found that when yeast is deprived of phosphate, pho has no phosphate groups at any of its binding sites and enters the nucleus, where it binds to dna and activates a set of genes whose products can scavenge for phosphate or otherwise compensate for the scarcity. when yeast has ample supplies of phosphate, pho is phosphorylated and remains in the cytoplasm-unable to influence transcription-suggesting that the cells can absorb plenty of nutrients from their environs without having to engage a specialized foraging team. when the researchers exposed the yeast to intermediate amounts of phosphate, the results were surprising. middling concentrations of phosphate produced different forms of phosphorylated pho , which varied in their ability to activate genes, and so added to the number of possible responses. pho partially phosphorylated at one site, for example, could still enter the nucleus, but activated only one type of phosphate-recovery gene and not others. while it is not unexpected that differential phosphorylation could have different functional outcomes, the authors say, it is surprising that one enzyme acting on one transcription factor can create different phosphorylation patterns-and therefore different gene-expression patterns-in response to different amounts of a single stimulus. their results show that cells rely on a highly regulated series of interactions that induce subtle changes in gene expression to fine-tune their response to small environmental changes. and they do this in a remarkably efficient manner, relying on a small cast of characters to orchestrate the responses essential for survival. extraction, amplification, and decoding of viral sequences rapidly identify known viruses and classify new ones based on their genetic makeup. this was validated in march when the viral chip contributed to the identification of the cause for severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) as a novel coronavirus. in the article published in this issue, the researchers describe the chip (or microarray), how it was used in the classification of the sars virus, and how it provides direct access to viral genomic sequence. microarray technology works by taking advantage of the structural properties of dna. dna molecules normally exist as double helices, two complementary strands of nucleotides wrapped around each other. the microarray consists of a large number of single dna strands attached to a solid base. these probes (which in case of the viral chip represent sequences from all fully sequenced reference viruses) can be used to interrogate unknown sequences: if a solution containing such sequences is passed over the chip, similar sequences will "hybridize,'' or bond in a signature double helix. known viruses hybridize in a characteristic pattern and can be identified quickly. because bonding occurs even when the match between probe and sample sequence is not perfect, new relatives of known viruses can be identified as belonging to a particular family (such as coronaviruses, in the case of sars). to quickly obtain more information on a novel virus, it is then possible to "syphon off'' those viral sequences that stuck to their respective counterparts on the chip and to use the material to determine part of the genomic sequence. such sequence information provides more detail on how the new virus relates to known ones, which might provide clues about its origin and possible treatment strategies. faced with all manner of potential threats in the form of billions of different viral, bacterial, and chemical pathogens, the mammalian immune system relies on a "safety in diversity'' strategy for protection. with two distinct subsystems-one innate, the other adaptive-the immune system can recognize some trillion antigens. the innate system deploys cells programmed to quickly recognize microbes with a particular set of conserved molecular structures. the adaptive system relies on billions of uniquely outfitted lymphocytes (white blood cells) to identify just as many pathogens through their protein fragments, or antigens. a human being grinds out billions of these cells every day. in the absence of threats, the immune system maintains a quiescent state and many of these cells are discarded. but for the immune system, doing nothing takes a concerted effort. lymphocytes originate in the bone marrow, though not all differentiate there. one class of lymphocytes, called t cells, develops in the thymus, where every t cell acquires a one-of-a-kind receptor, called a t cell receptor (tcr), designed to recognize a different antigen. when an antigen gets bound by a tcr (a bound molecule is called a ligand), the antigen triggers a signaling cascade that tells the t cell either to attack the infected cell or to alert other immune cells of the infiltrator. but as jeroen roose, arthur weiss, and colleagues report, signaling pathways activated by bound tcrs appear to influence gene expression even in the absence of antigen or other receptor ligands, a process called ligand-independent signaling. these findings lend support to the notion that cellular signaling pathways regulated by surface receptors, like tcrs, exhibit a continuous low-level signaling (known as basal signaling) in the absence of a stimulus and that this continuous signaling, by influencing gene expression, has significant influence on cellular differentiation. roose, weiss, et al. focused on the tcr signaling pathway that regulates the expression of a group of genes, including rag- and rag- , that are activated in two distinct waves during t cell development. rag genes play a crucial role in t cell development, a highly complex, multistage process that involves a reshuffling, or recombination, of tcr genes and the activation of different proteins and genes at different stages. rag genes regulate the genetic recombination and ultimate cell surface expression of tcrs. using chemical inhibitors and mutant human t cell lines deficient in critical signaling components involved in antigen receptor-dependent pathways, the researchers found that the loss of specific functions or specific proteins affected an unexpected set of target genes. notably, when downstream components (the protein kinases erk and abl) were disabled in the basal signaling pathway, the researchers saw a resurgence of rag gene expression. while erk was already known to play a prominent role in signaling pathways downstream of the tcr, it now appears that abl may also be regulated in tcr pathways. most importantly, these findings suggest that signaling pathways thought to be triggered only by ligated receptors can influence gene expression on their own. and it may be through this type of signaling that tcr pathways help regulate t cell development by repressing rag gene activity. these basal signals, the researchers postulate, may in effect save the rag expression machinery until recombination is called for. if rag genes were expressed at the wrong time, they could cause inappropriate genetic recombination and create t cells that either lack function or attack healthy cells, as happens in immunodeficiency and autoimmune diseases. elucidating the mechanisms and components of this basal pathway will contribute important insights into the development and function of the immune system. but these studies also establish a model for investigating other signaling systems, to determine whether biologically functional basal signaling is a rare phenomenon or whether it is a fundamental cell process needed to control the profile of gene expression in the quiescent state. a multicellular organism can have more than different types of cells and as many as trillion altogether. during the process of development, an organism enlists the service of hundreds of signaling molecules and thousands of receptors to direct cell growth, differentiation, and morphological destiny. any given cell has no use for most of these signals and gets by with just a limited repertoire of receptors on its surface. once a signal reaches a receptor, it triggers a series of biochemical reactions as different molecules transform the external signal into a biological response, in a process called signal transduction. one cell type controls all of its cellular functions-both universal and specialized-with just a few dozen receptors; each receptor elicits a wide range of responses by triggering a small number of interacting pathways. exactly how a receptor produces the right response at the right time is a fundamental question in biology. of particular interest is a class of receptors-called receptor tyrosine kinases (rtks)that regulate cell proliferation, differentiation, and survival and play an important role in embryonic development and disease. growth factor receptors are an important subset t he protozoan parasite plasmodium falciparum causes falciparum malaria, a fatal parasitic disease in humans, and is transmitted by anopheles mosquito vectors (predominantly the anopheles gambiae complex and an. funestus in africa). there are about million malaria cases and - million deaths annually, the brunt of which are borne mostly in africa by children under years of age and by pregnant women. in many african countries, malaria poses a formidable challenge to an overburdened and underfunded public health system. the current malarial control strategies consist of chemotherapy directed against the malaria parasite and prevention of mosquito vector/human contact using insecticide-impregnated bednets and, to a lesser extent, indoor residual insecticide spraying and environmental control for reducing mosquito breeding sites. there are still no malaria vaccines in clinical practice. chemotherapy (the use of drugs to target disease) is used for both treatment and prevention. drug resistance is increasingly becoming a problem. some of the antimalarial drugs in current use include quinolines, artemisinins, antifolates, atovaquone/ proguanil, and antibiotics. chloroquine of rtks. the platelet-derived growth factor receptor (pdgfr) family activates downstream signaling enzymes that stimulate the growth and motility of connective tissue cells, such as vascular smooth muscle cells (vsmcs), oligodendrocytes (cells of the tissue encasing nerve fibers), and chondrocytes (cartilage cells). the pdgf beta receptor is essential for directing the differentiation of vsmcs. while studies of signal transduction of this growth factor have established a model of how receptor tyrosine kinases function, the role of individual downstream signaling components in a living organism is still unclear. using mouse molecular genetics, michelle tallquist and colleagues set out to determine the function of individual components in the pdgfr beta pathway. they discovered a quantitative correlation between the overall amount of signal produced by the receptor and the end product of the signal, formation of vsmcs. receptor responses, they report, are controlled in two ways: signaling was influenced both by the amount of receptors expressed and by the number of specific pathways engaged downstream of the receptor. surface receptors have "tails'' that project into a cell's interior. when a surface receptor is activated, a number of potential binding sites-modified amino acid residues-are exposed on its intracellular tail. ten of these sites can bind to proteins with a specific amino acid sequence, called an sh domain; proteins with these domains can then initiate a signal transduction pathway. by introducing mutations in the sh domain-binding sites in mice, the researchers could evaluate how the loss of a particular binding site-and therefore pathway-affected the function of the receptor. they had previously investigated the functions of two other downstream signaling proteins in similar experiments. surprisingly, tallquist et al. found that losing some of the individual components did not produce a significant negative physiological effect. only when multiple downstream signaling pathways were disrupted did the researchers see a significant effect on the population of the cells. reductions in the numbers of both activated receptors and activated signal transduction pathways produced reductions in the population of vsmcs. these results have not been seen in tissue culture before, suggesting that signal transduction is more complex in vivo and that future studies would benefit from incorporating a global approach, rather than targeting a single signaling component. the next step will be to investigate exactly how the individual pathways contribute to this result. it is also unclear whether these results apply only to these growth factor receptors or explain how rtks operate in general. such questions have significant clinical relevance. overexpression of the pdgfr beta pathway has been linked to a variety of serious diseases, including atherosclerosis and cancer. understanding how cells control the action of this growth factor is an important step in developing targeted therapies. since many of these conditions result from a growth factor stuck in the "on'' position, inhibiting overactive receptors promises to be an effective clinical intervention. (cq) is a cheap and widely used aminoquinoline, but cq-resistant parasites have become ubiquitous in endemic countries and other drugs are now used much more frequently (ridley ) . fansidar, a combination of sulphadoxine and pyrimethamine (sp), is a first-line treatment in several african countries, but resistance to sp is spreading rapidly. targeting the mosquito vector with pyrethroidimpregnated bednets, in addition to chemotherapy, is an effective method of controlling malaria transmission. however, pyrethroid resistance has been reported in an. gambiae s.s. in west africa, and there is concern about its emergence in east africa (chandre et al. ) . thus, the public health problem due to malaria is exacerbated by the emergence of drug-resistant parasites and insecticide-resistant mosquitoes. the clinical application of efficacious intervention tools is therefore an urgent imperative for malarial control. this brings into sharp focus the importance of genomics research for drugs, vaccines, diagnostics, and insecticides. the unraveling of the genomes of humans, p. falciparum, and an. gambiae has ushered in a new era of hope that genomics research will result in the development of new and better tools for malaria control. the p. falciparum genome of . megabases (mbp) distributed among chromosomes consists of , protein-coding genes (gardner et al. ) . p. falciparum possesses a relict plastid, the apicoplast, homologous to the chloroplasts of plants and algae. the apicoplast is essential for parasite survival and functions in the anabolic synthesis of fatty acids, isoprenoids, and heme (seeber ). these essential metabolic pathways are not present in humans and are therefore ideal targets for the development of safe antimalarial drugs. inhibitors of type ii fatty acid biosynthesis (triclosan and thiolactomycin) and mevalonateindependent isoprenoid biosynthesis (fosmidomycin and fr ) with potent antimalarial activities have been identified by computational mining of the genome data. the fact that fosmidomycin has rapidly entered into clinical trials underscores the great utility of genomics research in the control of malaria (lell et al. ) . about , proteins ( %) in p. falciparum have no known functions (gardner et al. ) . the greatest challenge of malarial functional genomics (the elucidation of the functions of genes encoded by an organism's genome) is to assign functions to these proteins, thus comprehensively identifying the proteins that function at various lifecycle stages and that function together to carry out particular cellular processes, e.g., red blood cell invasion, signal transduction, growth, vesicular trafficking, etc. the application of functional genomics approaches allows the properties of many genes and proteins to be assessed in parallel on a large scale. these approaches are being used to address specific questions about the biology of p. falciparum. gene profiling (determining which genes are expressed) by microarray technology allows a rapid, parallel analysis of genome-wide changes in gene expression over a variety of experimental conditions (e.g., chloroquine versus saline control), tissues, and cell types; these genes can be clustered (ordered by expression pattern) to identify those that function in the same process. one of the most promising applications of microarrays is the study of differential gene expression during the complex p. falciparum lifecycle, specifically the formidable and challenging task of determining which subset of the , genes is represented in the transcriptome of each stage (bozdech et al. ; le roch et al. ) . these approaches are beginning to yield invaluable insights about new vaccine candidates, novel drug targets, and the molecular basis of drug resistance. proteomics is the study of all the proteins expressed in an organism. global protein analysis offers a unique means of determining not only protein expression, but also interacting partners, subcellular localizations, and post-translational modifications of proteins of whole proteomes. analyses of the proteomes of parasites that have been exposed to distinct environmental stimuli (e.g., chloroquine versus saline control) or that manifest distinct phenotypes (drug resistant versus drug sensitive) might also facilitate the identification of biochemical drug targets and of the specific proteins involved in drug resistance. comparative genomics (the comparison of genomes of related species), on the other hand, will yield invaluable insights about the biology of and the pathogenesis of disease associated with different parasites, i.e., p. falciparum doi: . /journal.pbio. .g on the one hand and p. vivax on the other. the biology and pathology of the two parasites are quite distinct, e.g., the preference for reticulocytes (p. vivax) versus mature red blood cells (p. falciparum), the ability to cause severe (p. falciparum) versus mild (p. vivax) disease, and the implication of amino acid substitutions in pfcrt in cq resistance in one (p. falciparum) but not in the other (p. vivax). the mbp sequence of the nuclear genome of the pest strain of an. gambiae s.s. has been published in draft form and is considerably larger than the mbp assembled sequence of the fruitfly drosophila melanogaster (holt ) . the an. gambiae genome includes a treasure trove of odorant receptor genes and about genes that encode glutathione-s-tranferases, cytochrome p s, and carboxylesterases. these and possibly other genes probably play a critical role in human host finding and detoxification of insecticides, respectively, and could be exploited, using gene profiling, proteomics, and comparative genomics, for the development of novel mosquito repellants or traps and insecticides. the ability to introduce foreign genes into anopheles vectors is an exciting advance that might facilitate the development of transgenic mosquitoes that do not transmit malaria parasites (moreira et al. ) . however, the future implementation of this control strategy, if current technical hurdles can be overcome, must take into consideration concerns about the environmental impact of releasing genetically altered mosquitoes. scientists in endemic countries must be active participants in malaria genomics research and not just conduits for field materials for northern partners. however, the reality is that there is an increasing technological gap between endemic-and developedcountry researchers in the field. this needs to be urgently addressed. the world health organization special programme for research and training in tropical diseases have initiated a series of training workshops in bioinformatics in endemic countries; the howard hughes medical institute has supported one such workshop. the training must extend to other aspects of genomics and include infrastructure development. there is considerable optimism that genomics research will result in new drugs, vaccines, diagnostics, and tools for malarial vector control. strong linkages between genomics research and national malarial control programs will facilitate the translation of research findings into intervention tools. as it is for all new technologies, it might also be important for the communities in endemic countries to have a greater awareness and understanding of genomics research. this will enhance acceptance of the products and improve informed consent. there is therefore a unique opportunity for collaborations between social-economic scientists and genomics researchers. the challenges of searching the scientific literature t he standard "front end" for biomedical literature search is medline and its entrez query system. huge, well-managed, and nearly exhaustive, medline and its million references provide incredible ease and facility for anyone who can type a boolean query. though not quite a parallel for google-which runs a kind of popularity contest for web links in real time-the entrez search has opened up the literature to anyone with a web browser. to those who grew up chasing citations and papers through the aisles of a scientific library, entrez is a dream come true. and yet. suspend disbelief and imagine for a moment a kind of literature search dream-tool. "find me all references citing my gene of interest," you could ask. but why stop there? "find me all references citing some or all of my four genes of interest with expression or in vitro data." and then, "bring up the text of the paragraph in which these citations occurred so i can view them in context. and do it in real time." tools that can perform such searches would go beyond google because they avoid the repetitiveness involved in multiple searches. and they would go beyond entrez because they would search the entire medical literature in full-text format and not, as medline does, just the abstracts. furthermore, they would go beyond both types of searches in that they would be at least somewhat intelligent. such text-mining efforts are the next frontier for both academic and commercial groups that have sprung up from pasadena to boston to tel aviv. but how realistic is this venture? text-mining and its more universal relative "information retrieval" are still in their infancy. the first paper on text-mining for biology was published only in . furthermore, because biological text-mining comes so close to the challenge of comprehending human language-arguably the most complex invention in the history of the planet-it is what computer scientists call a "hard problem." so even here, at the embryonic and fun stage in this technology's history, the outcome and especially the timing of improvement are impossible to predict. language-processing software tools have been successfully applied in text-mining of nonscientific sources, especially to newswire content. computer programs can already perform all three levels of text-mining ( figure ) effectively: retrieving documents relevant to a given subject; extracting lists of entities or relationships among entities; and answering questions about the material, delivering specific facts in response to natural-language queries. information retrieval and extraction can be performed on news data at success rates of %- %, says lynette hirschman, a structural linguist. question-answering has been reported in the literature at % accuracy, she notes, which is "amazingly good." the question is, how soon can these levels be achieved for biology? good thing for biologists that hirschman has turned her energies in their direction. hirschman works in massachusetts at mitre corporation, a government-funded institution that pursues projects in the national interest, be they in defense and intelligence or, as in the case of textmining, "anywhere we can move an entire field forward," says hirschman. the good news from news-mining is that improvement seems to arrive in direct proportion to the time and energy expended by the research community. similar improvement has occurred in speech recognition by computers, she adds ( figure ). when people took successively harder problems and worked on them for four or five years, she explains, it caused error rates to drop, as a rule, by a factor of two every two years. one might think tackling the biomedical literature would be relatively easy, remarks hirschman: biology jargon has a lot of prefixes and suffixes, which can be parsed more easily than verbs and adverbs; it is highly regular, with greek-letter addons to gene or protein names signifying relatives or subtypes of the original proteins; and there are many resources available, such as databases and ontologies linking different biological terms. but whereas extraction of person and place names from news text routinely reaches %, results in biology remain mired in the %- % range. "it's a little depressing," warns hirschman. "even something as simple as a slash may imply two different entities or a single compound." a chorus of assent greets her observation. programmers eager to codify the rules of biology have been stymied by what one bioinformaticist calls "a sea of exceptions." moreover, there is a chronic lack of data that have been "marked up" by software or humans to indicate the roles played by some of the key words. this marking-up process, however it is done, is crucial for machine-learning tasks. getting these data is both hard and expensive, says hirschman. to move biology text-mining forward, she believes, requires organizing different academic and commercial groups so that they are at least working on the same problem. only then can standards emerge that will allow progress in the field even to be measured. this type of shared problem-known as a "challenge evaluation"-has become something of a "religion" in the speech and language community since the s, says hirschman. by putting out a set of data to train on and then issuing a "challenge" for each group to extract the same information or answer the same questions, "you compare apples to apples. in the process you build a research community." last year, hirschman and others ran the very first challenge evaluation in biology, the kdd cup (officially called the knowledge discovery and data-mining challenge cup). six weeks in advance, the organizers gave participants a training set of journal articles already included in the model organism database flybase, along with associated lists of genes and gene products, as well as relevant data fields from flybase. after building their software tools, the entrants were then asked to take a test set of articles and pretend they were curators: the tools were supposed to determine whether the articles were appropriate for curation, based on whether they contained experimental evidence for gene expression products, including both rna transcripts and proteins. eighteen participants took a shot at the kdd cup and their results speak of the infant state of the field. on average, they could assign only % of the papers correctly and could determine whether relevant gene products were present only % of the time. the winning entrant, a joint group from the israeli company clearforest ("see the forest and the trees") and marylandbased celera genomics, did better. doi: . /journal.pbio. .g the four levels of information retrieval: google and medline both use keywords to direct a searcher to documents. but the next level has been tough to crack. improved software would allow biologists to jump from the web or medline to specifics with a single query. (adapted with permission from the mitre corporation.) information retrieval and extraction can be performed on news data at success rates of %- %. the question is, how soon can these levels be achieved for biology? their entry made the right decision to curate % of the time and the right call on the presence of gene products % of the time. the winning group did so well by using a clever "trick," says hirschman admiringly. their program searched for figure captions and then applied multiple techniques to find those gene products they were looking for. the techniques applied by clearforest and others fall into two broad categories, statistical and heuristic. statistical techniques are the next step up from keyword searches. they count words such as genes or gene products appearing close to one another, but apply no linguistic insights, such as whether an adjective modifies a noun. by contrast, heuristic approaches use hand-crafted rules designed for specific datasets: e.g., january, february, march, etc., are months; the word following "mr." is a name; and so forth. this approach is labor-intensive but especially useful when there is only a limited amount of data-as is the case with single scientific papers or small groups of papers. some statistical approaches have been labeled with the nickname "bag of words" because they fail to account for grammatical relationships; e.g., "man bites dog" and "dog bites man" would drop the same three words in the bag. a key observation at the kdd cup was that the most basic statistical approach, which counts word occurrences at the document level, is not sufficient unless it takes into account at least some higher-level context, such as the part of the paper from which the search terms are extracted. furthermore, the more hand-crafted rules there were, the better. many of the top teams included biologists who applied their expertise to help create empirical rules that became part of the program instructions. this points to a general theme in machine learning: the greater the degree of human intervention, the better. the best programs are covered with fingerprints. although the march toward better text-mining systems is building momentum, there are two issues that could stop it in its tracks. the first is access. experts in text-searching uniformly cite access as a key obstacle for developing better search tools. "access is a bigger problem than algorithms" is how one machine-learning expert puts it, and a half-dozen others agreed. the present "balkanized" situation for text-processing is filled with "dead ends" and "short circuits" in information flow among biologists, says david lipman, head of the united states' national center for biotechnology information, which runs pubmed, the medline database, as well as the national library of medicine and other critical resources in biology and bioinformatics. it is as if readers are marine biologists on a coastline whose beaches are % private. at best, asking permission to view every article slows down the work. at worst, there are some important tools one can never build owing to the missing context. medline itself would be much more powerful if it were based on full text, experts say. owing to lack of access, says hirschman, "we miss a great deal by not having large corpora of full-text articles" included in the design of both the kdd cup and the next challenge evaluation, called biocreative, being held later this year. many of the relevant biological data are found outside abstracts, but getting access to full text is complicated at best. for manual searching, researchers traditionally fall back on portalhopping: jumping from one full-text subscription (to nature, science, or cell, for example) to another, or from one portal (highwire, web of science) to another. that way, many scientists routinely obtain access to as many as % of the journals they need. the rest they can usually request via interlibrary loan or order as photocopies online. however, this approach fails for most automated search programs. just sorting out the permissions and keeping up with changes in the portals dramatically increase the headaches for anyone trying to build a search tool. the second threat to text-searching programs ever becoming widely useful has more of the ring of linguistics jargon. the so-called " ontology problem" threatens successful searching based on the very specific nature of biological terminology. the issue here is not only that scientists are truly terrible about sticking to established terminologies. "scientists would rather share each other's underwear than use each other's nomenclature," as biochemist keith yamamoto is fond of saying. consequently, the scientific literature is a hodgepodge of identical or overlapping terms. a naïve text-parsing program does not know whether "cat" refers to the catalase gene, the chloramphenicol transferase gene, or a household animal. the challenge is to build an ontology describing all the important relationships so your computer program can navigate among them without asking you what to do. consequently, an ontology would prescribe rules for understanding the interactions among genes based on the appearance of certain verbs ("inhibit," "express"), nouns ("agonist"), or phrases. although within each narrow scientific subdiscipline it may be possible to build exquisitely useful textmining tools, as soon as programmers broach the borders of the narrowest subfields, they will run into a kind of heisenberg uncertainty principle of linguistics and science. every toolmaker doi: . /journal.pbio. .g is faced with the ontology problem in one respect or another, especially when the tool is meant to be a general one. david gilmour, chief executive officer of tacit inc., a knowledge management company in palo alto, california, is an industry veteran of exactly this war "and i have scars all over my body to prove it," he says. the issue in a nutshell, he explains, is that "ontologies scale poorly, and by the time they are useful," that is, large enough to capture most of the possible relationships among words, "they are unmaintainable." hirschman acknowledges that keeping up with the literature and new terminologies is challenging. adapting tools to new domains has traditionally been one of the "critical stumbling blocks" for text-processing technology, she says. the dynamic growth of biological terminology does not help. there are - alterations every week to the nomenclature section of mouse genome database web page. staying within one's narrow domain, then, could be a recipe for success, as long as the vocabulary and user questions remain tightly constrained, especially if there is a way to tiptoe around the access problem. that is apparently the case at wormbase, though the newly available tool there, called textpresso, is still being built. the motivation for textpresso was simple, says hans-michael mueller, a postdoctoral fellow in the lab of paul sternberg at caltech in pasadena, california, where wormbase-the genetic database for the nematode worm caenorhabditis elegans-is curated. "we want the user to be able to avoid going to the library to read all those papers [on genes and proteins] that your favorite gene interacts with. that is very tedious." the other goal is equally recognizable in the biology community: no mere mortal can hope to keep up with the burgeoning literature, even in the relatively narrow field of worm biology. mueller, a nuclear physicist by background, called textpresso "a search engine for full-text searches of abstracts and articles" that can help find answers to more challenging queries than simple keyword searches. mueller and his team use human "taggers" to mark up the corpus of text to indicate categories like "biological processes" ("late larval activation"), "genes" (let- ), and "molecular functions." then, like the clearforest-celera program, textpresso searches for combinations of categories in the same or neighboring sentences. the ontology relating the expressions and categories to one another is based both on scientific and common sense as well as linguistic components. in less than two years of work, mueller and his team have already marked up . million terms in , abstracts and , full-text papers. a typical search asks a question such as "what can be found out about the negative regulatory aspects of a genetic network in the pharynx?" answers emerge in the form of citations, abstracts, and, if available, a paragraph or so from the text of the relevant paper. textpresso went up-unpublicized-on the web in february this year and already receives a couple of hundred hits a day, a big number in a field of about , researchers. mueller estimates that textpresso is % accurate and that about % of the relevant papers have been included. textpresso needs full-text access to be as good as it is, says mueller. "we noticed" that drawing on full text "greatly increased the chances of a true hit," not a false positive. he managed to avoid the access issue by claiming a kind of "curator's privilege." only the curators see the full text. once the data are on the web, users can only get at most a paragraph, which falls within fair use, said mueller. if a user happens to subscribe to the journal in question, it is possible for him to click through, the publisher's portal and see the paper. whereas textpresso works exclusively on worm genetic data and commercial players like clearforest are just beginning to hunt for biological applications, a handful of companies have begun to market text-searching products to academic biomedical scientists. one such product is called quosa, for query, organize, share, and analyze. the software had its commercial launch in late . put simply, the program-available on an institution-wide basis and already installed for hundreds of researchers at massachusetts general hospital and the dana-farber cancer institute in boston-allows a search across one's own documents. a front end for the literature that cooperates with medline, quosa pulls in and prioritizes full-text papers. the program first allows the user to search for the relevant files and download them in full-text format to the extent permitted by her library's subscription agreements and licenses. once it becomes second nature to users, they rave about it. like the best of the firstgeneration software, quosa allows users to make connections they would not have otherwise made. like so many other early software products, its longterm success will hinge on demand as well as improvements made in the upgrades. because of the ontology problem, improvements in searching in the next couple of years are likely to result from the application of ever-better techniques within existing domains. collaborations among wormbase, flybase, and other model-organism database groups will help improve all their search tools. medline itself may benefit from more advanced search techniques, though these will be restricted to abstract searches. the big unknown for predicting further development of text-search tools is the path publishers will take. if each publisher or portal such as reed-elsevier or highwire were to license or develop its own tool for searching its own content, the result might be better than the status quo, but would still be unsatisfying. running the same search three times on three different subsets of content might be better than running it times-but wouldn't it be easier to run it just once? the transcriptome of the intraerythrocytic developmental cycle of plasmodium falciparum we are grateful to drs. lisa ranford-cartwright (university of glasgow, glasgow, united kingdom), ayoade oduola and yeya toure (world health organization, geneva, switzerland), and wilfred mbacham (university of yaounde, yaounde, cameroon) for critical comments on the manuscript. key: cord- -mqyvpepo authors: ma, z; mi, z; wilson, a; alber, s; robbins, pd; watkins, s; pitt, b; li, s title: redirecting adenovirus to pulmonary endothelium by cationic liposomes date: - - journal: gene ther doi: . /sj.gt. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: mqyvpepo somatic gene transfer to the pulmonary endothelium may be a useful strategy for modifying the phenotype of endothelium and/or vascular smooth muscle in disorders such as primary pulmonary hypertension, ards or pulmonary metastatic disease. adenoviral (ad) vectors, although highly efficient in liver gene transfer, have proven to be limited for pulmonary gene transfer with respect to efficiency, in part because of difficulty in assuring significant residence time in the lung and/or paucity of receptors for adenovirus on the endothelium. a recent study has shown that the use of a bispecific antibody to endothelial cells and ad vectors efficiently redirects ad vectors to pulmonary endothelium and improves gene expression in the lung. in this study, we report that pulmonary gene transfer by ad vectors can also be improved significantly via the use of cationic liposomes. preinjection of cationic liposomes followed by adenovirus led to a significant increase in the level of gene expression in the lung. the improvement in pulmonary gene transfer was associated with a decrease in the level of gene expression in the liver. gene expression in the lung lasted for up to weeks. this protocol, together with genetic modification of adenovirus, may prove to be useful for pulmonary gene transfer for the treatment of pulmonary diseases. this method may also be extended to pulmonary gene transfer using other types of viral vectors via vascular route. adenoviral (ad) vectors possess many attributes that favor their use in gene therapy, particularly their high efficiency. one of the key limitations to the use of ad vectors is the restricted tropism of the virus. systemic administration of ad vectors leads to gene expression mainly in the liver. pulmonary gene transfer by ad vectors via the vascular route has proven to be limited with respect to efficiency in part because of difficulty in assuring significant residence time in the lung and/or paucity of receptors for adenovirus on the endothelium. two approaches have been proposed to overcome the problem of restricted tropism: one is to genetically modify ad vectors to render them target cell-specific [ ] [ ] [ ] and the other one is to use bispecific conjugates to redirect ad vectors to target cells. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] several groups have reported selective delivery of ad vectors to various types of cells via genetic modifications of ad vectors. [ ] [ ] [ ] thus far, there is no successful report of targeted delivery of ad vectors to pulmonary endothelium using this approach. the concept of targeted delivery of ad vectors to pulmonary endothelium has been nicely demonstrated in a study by report that pulmonary gene transfer by ad vectors can also be improved significantly via the use of cationic liposomes. preinjection of cationic liposomes followed by adenovirus led to a significant increase in the level of gene expression in the lung. the improvement in pulmonary gene transfer was associated with a decrease in the level of gene expression in the liver. gene expression in the lung lasted for up to weeks. this protocol, together with genetic modification of adenovirus, may prove to be useful for pulmonary gene transfer for the treatment of pulmonary diseases. this method may also be extended to pulmonary gene transfer using other types of viral vectors via vascular route. gene therapy ( ) , - . doi: . /sj/gt/ reynolds et al using a bispecific antibody. the complexing of ad vectors with a bispecific antibody to ad vectors and angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace) leads to a significant improvement in the infection of endothelial cells that overexpress ace receptors. systemic administration of the complexed ad vectors also leads to improvement in pulmonary gene transfer. more importantly, the enhancement in pulmonary gene transfer was associated with a decrease in gene expression in the liver, although the level of gene expression in the liver is still substantially higher than that in the lung. in this study, we have shown that pulmonary gene transfer by ad vectors can also be significantly improved via preinjection of cationic liposomes followed by ad vectors. this protocol, together with genetic modification of adenovirus, may prove to be useful for pulmonary gene transfer for the treatment of pulmonary diseases. this method may also be extended to pulmonary gene transfer using other types of viral vectors via the vascular route. we recently showed that preinjection of cationic liposomes followed by plasmid dna led to efficient gene expression in the lung. to test whether preinjection of cationic liposomes can also enhance ad vector-mediated pulmonary gene transfer, groups of six mice received tail vein injection of various amounts of dotap:cholesterol liposomes followed by injection of adcmvluc. gene expression was assayed days following the injection. when adcmvluc alone was used, the liver had the highest level of gene expression (figure b) . a low level of gene expression was found in the lung and other organs. there was about a to -fold difference in the level of gene expression between the liver and lung (figure b) . preinjection of cationic liposomes significantly improved gene expression in the lung. as shown in figure a , increasing the amount of cationic liposomes from . to . mol/mouse led to a steady increase in the level of gene expression in the lung. at the dose of . mol dotap per mouse, a range of eight-to -fold increase in gene expression was observed in seven different experiments. continuous increase in dotap dose was not associated with a further increase in gene expression in the lung. interestingly, the improvement in gene expression in the lung was associated with a dramatic decrease in gene expression in the liver (figure b) . several studies have shown that complexation of ad vectors with cationic lipids/polymers improves infection of a number of cell lines in vitro [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and airway epithelial cells following intratracheal instillation in mice. to gene therapy examine whether lipid complexation can similarly enhance pulmonary gene transfer by ad vectors via the vascular route, adcmvluc was mixed with various amounts of dotap:cholesterol liposomes and gene expression was assayed days following the injection of the complexed adcmvluc. in contrast to sequential injection, premixing of cationic liposomes with adcm-vluc resulted in a decreased gene expression in all major organs examined ( figure ). complexation of cationic lipids with adcmvluc had minimal effects on infection of cultured mouse lung endothelial cells (mlec) at low doses and inhibited gene expression at relatively high doses (data not shown). figure shows gene expression in liver and lung days following injection of various amounts of adcmvluc, alone or following preinjection of dotap:cholesterol liposomes ( . mol/mouse). increasing the amount of adcmvluc from to × particles/mouse led to a significant increase in gene expression in the lung. further increase in adcmvluc dose was associated with a much smaller increase in gene expression in the lung. preinjection of cationic liposomes improved gene expression in the lung at all adcmvluc doses examined. increasing the virus dose also led to an increase in gene expression in the liver. however, in contrast to the lung, preinjection of cationic liposomes either had no effect or inhibited gene expression in the liver. figure shows gene expression in lung and liver at days , and following sequential injection of dotap:cholesterol liposomes ( . mol/mouse) and adcmvluc ( × particles/mouse). gene expression appears to peak at day and decline gradually thereafter. however, a significant level of expression could still be detected at day . a similar pattern was noticed when adcmvluc alone was injected into mice, although the level of gene expression in the lung was lower compared with the sequential protocol (data not shown). having defined the optimal conditions with adcmvluc, the sequential injection protocol was further evaluated using adcmvlacz as a reporter gene. mice received intravenous injections of dotap:cholesterol liposomes followed by adcmvlacz. seventy-two h after injection, mice were killed and lungs were fixed and stained for galactosidase activity using x-gal at °c. no blue cells were observed in the lungs of mice treated with a control vector (adcmvluc) (figure a ). in contrast, there was localized gene expression throughout the distal lung of mice that received adcmvlacz (figure b ). the primary loci of lacz expression appeared to be the capillary endothelium located within the alveolar septum ( figure b ). no sign of inflammation was noticed in any of the lung sections examined. the cell type of transfected cells was further analyzed by anti-platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule (pecam) immunofluorescence staining of lung sections of mice receiving cationic liposomes followed by adcmvegfp. pecam is a transmembrane adhesion molecule expressed at high levels on endothelial cells. as shown in figure a and b, egfp signal was substantially co-localized with pecam labeling, confirming that endothelial cells were the major cell type transfected. we hypothesized that the improved pulmonary gene transfer via the sequential injection protocol might be due to an increased uptake of ad vectors by the lung compared with i.v. injection of ad vectors alone. to test this hypothesis, mice received tail vein injections of adcm-vluc, alone or following the injection of dotap:cholesterol liposomes. at days and following the injection, mice were killed and lungs were perfused and collected. the amount of luciferase cdna in mouse lungs was evaluated by a semi-quantitative pcr. as shown in figure , the amount of luciferase cdna was slightly decreased from day to day . however, at both timepoints, greater amounts of luciferase cdna were detected in the lungs of mice that received sequential injections of cationic liposomes and adcmvluc, than in the lungs of mice that received adcmvluc alone. recent studies have shown that systemic administration of cationic liposome/dna complexes is associated with an acute proinflammatory cytokine response, - which can be partially overcome via the sequential protocol. to examine whether a similar cytokine response also we have shown in this study that preinjection of cationic liposomes followed by ad vectors significantly improves gene expression in the lung (figure a) . cationic liposomes enhance pulmonary gene transfer by ad vectors in a dose-dependent manner. the major cells that are gene therapy infected appear to be endothelial cells (figures and ) and gene expression lasts for up to weeks (figure ). the improvement in pulmonary gene transfer is associated with a decrease in the level of gene expression in the liver (figure b) . based on cytokine response, this protocol is safe and the liposomes used do not add to the ad vector-related toxicities ( figure ). the sequential injection protocol was initially described by song and colleagues to address the roles of cationic liposomes in cationic lipid-mediated pulmonary gene transfer via the vascular route. recently tan et al have extended these studies by showing that pulmonary gene transfer via sequential injection protocol is even more efficient than that via cationic liposome/dna complexes. moreover, the sequential injection protocol overcomes, at least partially, the cpg-related proinflammatory cytokine response that is associated with systemic administration of cationic liposome/dna complexes. the mechanism of pulmonary gene transfer via sequential protocol is not clearly understood at present. it might be due to a transient slow-down of pulmonary microcirculation by preinjected liposomes, which allows for efficient interaction of subsequently injected dna with the target cells (endothelial cells). the improved lung gene transfer by ad vectors via the sequential protocol might be due to a similar mechanism. this was supported by the observation that more viral dna was detected in lungs of mice that received sequential injection of cationic liposomes and ad vectors than in lungs of mice that received ad vectors alone (figure ) . the increased pulmonary uptake of ad vectors may play an important role in improving the efficiency of gene expression in the lung. ad vectors are likely to be taken up by endothelial cells in free form. a number of studies have shown that complexation of ad vectors with cationic lipids improves infection of cultured cells, especially those cells that lack the receptors for ad virus. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] complexation of ad vectors with cationic liposomes has also been shown to enhance the infection of airway epithelial cells upon instillation into mouse trachea. cationic liposomes enhance ad vectormediated infection mainly by improving the cellular uptake. however, mixing of adcmvluc with dotap: cholesterol liposomes had minimal effect on infection of cultured mouse lung endothelial cells (mlec) despite an increased cellular uptake of ad vectors (data not shown). at high doses, dotap:cholesterol liposomes inhibited infection of mlec in a dose-dependent manner (data not shown). similarly, mixing of dotap:cholesterol liposomes with adcmvluc led to a decreased level of gene expression in the lung (figure ). these differences might reflect the different cellular barriers in ad-mediated infection in different cell types. mlec might lack an efficient mechanism in mediating the release of ad vectors into cytosol following cellular uptake of cationic lipid-complexed ad vectors. despite an improved cellular uptake, cationic lipids may inhibit the subsequent release of ad vectors into cytosol, thus resulting in an overall decreased level of gene expression. more studies are needed to better understand the mechanism of infection of mlec via ad vectors, alone or complexed with cationic liposomes. several approaches have been proposed to redirect ad vectors to pulmonary endothelium. these include genetic modification to render the vectors endothelium-specific and the use of bispecific conjugate. thus far, there has been no successful report of improving ad-mediated infection of pulmonary endothelium via genetic modification of ad vectors. redirecting ad vectors to pulmonary endothelium has been demonstrated using a bispecific conjugate. our study provides a different approach that is also highly efficient in improving pulmonary gene transfer by ad vectors via the vascular route. the advantages of our method lie in its simplicity. cationic liposomes can be prepared in large quantities in a cost-effective manner. this protocol requires no modification of ad vectors, therefore it can be used for different ad vectors containing different therapeutic genes. this protocol might be combined with other approaches to achieve a synergistic effect in lung targeting. this method may also be extended to pulmonary gene transfer using other types of viral vectors that carry fewer side-effects than ad vectors. it should be noted that while the sequential protocol brings about a significant improvement in pulmonary gene transfer and a concomitant decrease in the level of gene expression in the liver, the absolute level of gene expression in the lung is still relatively lower than that in the liver. a similar phenomenon was also observed in the study by reynolds et al using a bispecific antibody. further improvements in lung targeting may require the combination of several different approaches and/or the inclusion of an endothelium-specific promoter. these possibilities are currently under investigation in this laboratory. chemicals , -dioleoyl- -trimethylammonium-propane (dotap) and dioleoylphosphatidyl-ethanolamine (dope) were purchased from avanti lipids (alabaster, al, usa). cholesterol was obtained from sigma (st louis, mo, usa). luciferase assay kit was from promega (madison, wi, usa). other chemicals were of reagent grade. for in vivo experiments, female cd- mice aged - weeks ( - g) were purchased from charles river laboratories (wilmington, ma, usa). the animals were kept at the university of the pittsburgh animal facilities. all experiments were conducted under protocols approved by the institutional animal care and use committee. adcmvluc is a recombinant e -, e -deleted ad vector expressing firefly luciferase under the control of the cytomegalovirus (cmv) promoter. adcmvlacz is a recombinant e -, e -deleted ad vector expressing escherichia coli -galactosidase (lacz) under the control of the cmv promoter. adcmvegfp is a recombinant e -, e -deleted ad vector expressing enhanced green fluorescence protein (egfp). they were propagated in a permissive cell line, purified by centrifugation through cesium chloride gradients and plaque titered on cells by standard techniques. liposomes containing dotap and cholesterol in a : molar ratio were prepared as follows. the lipid mixture in chloroform was dried under a stream of nitrogen as a thin layer in a -ml round-bottomed flask, which was further desiccated under vacuum for h. the lipid film was hydrated in % dextrose in water to give a final concentration of mg dotap/ml. preparation of small unilamellar vesicles by extrusion was performed as follows. the lipid solution was briefly sonicated, followed by incubation at °c for min and then sequentially extruded through polycarbonate membranes with the following pore sizes: . , . and . m. the size of liposomes was around nm as measured by dynamic laser scattering using a coulter n sd particle sizer (hialeah, fl, usa). if not otherwise indicated, the amounts of dotap:cholesterol liposomes and ad vector per mouse were nmol and × particles, respectively. all of the dilutions were made in saline. for sequential injection groups of six mice received first an injection of l liposome and then l adenovirus via the tail vein. control mice received adenovirus in l saline. in a separate experiment, adenovirus was mixed with various amounts of dotap:cholesterol liposomes and the mixtures were incubated at room temperature (rt) for min before injection. assay for luciferase activity at days or the indicated times following injection, mice were killed and organs were homogenized in ml of ice-gene therapy cold lysis buffer ( . % triton x- , mm edta, and . m tris, ph . ) with a tissue tearer (biospec products, bartlesvile, ok, usa) for s at high speed. the homogenates were then centrifuged at g for min at °c. ten l of the supernatant was analyzed with the luciferase assay system (promega) using an automated lb luminometer (berthod, bad wildbad, germany). the protein content of the supernatant was measured with the biorad protein assay system (biorad, hercules, ca, usa). luciferase activity was expressed as relative lights units (rlu) per milligram of tissue protein. mice received tail vein injection of dotap:cholesterol liposomes followed by adcmvlacz. three days later, mice were killed and lungs were perfused intravascularly with % paraformaldehyde in pbs and inflated with this fixative to near total lung capacity for h at room temperature. after rinsing with cold pbs, the lungs were incubated in x-gal staining solution (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa) overnight at °c. the lungs were then embedded in paraffin and thin sections were prepared. the sections were counterstained with eosin and viewed with a nikon light microscope. mice were injected with dotap:cholesterol liposomes followed by adcmvegfp. three days later, mice were killed and lungs were perfused intravascularly with pbs followed by % paraformaldehyde in pbs, and inflated with this fixative to near total lung capacity. the lungs were rinsed with cold pbs and immersed in % sucrose in pbs at °c overnight. the lungs were then quickly frozen in oct with dry ice. five-micrometer lung cryosections were then cut. following three washes in pbs containing . % bovine serum albumin and . % glycine (pbg buffer) sections were incubated in a : dilution of rat anti-mouse pecam (pharmingen, san diego, ca, usa) for h at rt, washed with pbg three times, and labeled with cy -labeled goat anti-rat igg (jackson immunoresearch laboratories, west grove, pa, usa) for h at rt. following three further washes with pbg the sections were stained with hoescht dye (sigma) for s and mounted in gelvatol (monsanto, st louis, mo, usa). cells were visualized using an olympus provis microscope (olympus, tokyo, japan) using a triple pass (blue/green/red) cube, which allows excitation at nm and collection at nm. images were collected using an optronics magnifier camera (santa barbara, ca, usa) or with a leica tcs nt confocal microscope with a × oil immersion objective at × pixel resolution. mice received tail vein injections of adcmvluc, alone or following dotap:cholesterol liposomes. at days and following injection, the mice were killed and the lungs were collected. genomic dna in lungs was extracted using the dneasy tissue kit (qiagen, valencia, ca, usa). six hundred ng of dna was analyzed by the mastercycle gradient pcr (eppendorf, westbury, ny, usa), using primers specific for the luciferase gene that generate a -bp fragment. primers were synthesized by mwg-biotech (high point, nc, usa) and their sequences were cgtcacatctcatctacctc (luc- ) gene therapy and gtatccctggaagatggaag (luc- ), respectively. after an initial denaturation for min at °c, cycles of amplification were performed using cycle times of s at °c, s at °c and min at °c. a -min extension step at °c followed the pcr amplification. amplification products were analyzed by electrophoresis on a % agarose gel. at h following injection, mice were bled from the retroorbital sinuses under anesthesia. the blood was allowed to stay at °c for h and then centrifuged at g for min at °c. serum was collected and stored at - °c until analyzed. in addition, the lungs of the mice were perfused with pbs intratracheally and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid was then collected. the concentrations of cytokines (tnf-␣, il- and il- ) in serum or bronchoalveolar lavage fluid were determined with the specific cytokine immunoassay kit (r&d systems, minneapolis, mn, usa). data were expressed as means ± standard derivations and analyzed by the two-tailed unpaired student's t test using the prism software program (graphpad software, san diego, ca, usa). data were considered significant if p Ͻ . ( * ) and very significant if p Ͻ . ( * * ). adenovirus vectors for gene delivery adenoviral vectors for liver-directed gene therapy genetic targeting of adenoviral vectors genetic targeting of an adenovirus vector via replacement of the fiber protein with the phage t fibritin efficient gene transfer into human cd (+) cells by a retargeted adenovirus vector targeted adenovirus gene transfer to endothelial and smooth muscle cells by using bispecific antibodies targeted gene delivery by tropism-modified adenoviral vectors a targetable injectable adenoviral vector for selective gene delivery to pulmonary endothelium in vivo molecular adaptors for vascular-targeted adenoviral gene delivery sequential injection of cationic liposome and plasmid dna effectively transfects the lung with minimal inflammatory toxicity virosomes: cationic liposomes enhance retroviral transduction complexes of adenovirus with polycationic polymers and cationic lipids increase the efficiency of gene transfer in vitro and in vivo polycations increase the efficiency of adenovirus-mediated gene transfer to epithelial and endothelial cells in vitro cationic liposomes enhance adenovirus entry via a pathway independent of the fiber receptor and alpha(v)-integrins polycations and cationic lipids enhance adenovirus transduction and transgene expression in tumor cells. cancer adenovirus complexed with polyethylene glycol and cationic lipid is shielded from neutralizing antibodies in vitro cationic lipids enhance cytokine and cell influx levels in the lung following administration of plasmid: cationic lipid complexes effect of immune response on gene transfer to the lung via systemic administration of cationic lipidic vectors contribution of plasmid dna to inflammation in the lung after administration of cationic lipid:pdna complexes cationic lipid:bacterial dna complexes elicit adaptive cellular immunity in murine intraperitoneal tumor models enhanced gene expression in mouse lung by prolonging the retention time of intravenously injected plasmid dna this work was supported by nih grants hl (to s li), hl and gm (to b pitt), and hl and ar (to p robbins). key: cord- -jwcmmfdw authors: zhao, yin-he; möller, michael; yang, jun-bo; liu, ting-song; zhao, jin-feng; dong, li-na; zhang, jin-peng; li, cheng-yun; wang, guo-ying; li, de-zhu title: extended expression of b-class mads-box genes in the paleoherb asarum caudigerum date: - - journal: planta doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: jwcmmfdw asarum caudigerum (aristolochiaceae) is a paleoherb species that is important for research in origin and evolution of angiosperm flowers due to its basal position in the angiosperm phylogeny. in this study, a subtracted floral cdna library from floral buds of a. caudigerum was constructed and cdna arrays by suppression subtractive hybridization were generated. cdnas of floral buds at different stages before flower opening and of leaves at the seedling stage were used. the macroarray analyses of expression profiles of isolated floral genes showed that genes out of the unique ests tested revealed higher transcript abundance in the floral buds and uppermost leaves. among them, genes were determined to be differentially expressed in the perianth, in the stamens, and genes in the carpels. quantitative real-time pcr of selected genes validated the macroarray results. remarkably, apetala (ap ) b-class genes isolated from a. caudigerum were upregulated in the perianth, stamens and carpels, implying that the expression domain of b-class genes in this basal angiosperm was broader than those in their eudicot counterparts. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article (doi: . /s - - - ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. typical angiosperm flowers comprise concentric arrangements of four types of organs, arranged from outward in: sepals, petals, stamens, and the inner carpels ). all of these whorls are interpreted as modified leaves, as goethe proposed years ago (pelaz et al. electronic supplementary material the online version of this article (doi: . /s - - - ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. ; ditta et al. ) . flowers develop under the control of homeotic genes, many of them from the mads-box gene family. they encode transcription factors that play crucial roles in the development of floral primordia and the establishment of floral organ identities (weigel ; theissen et al. ; theissen ; becker and theissen ) . the genetic regulation of floral organ formation in typical eudicot flowers, such as arabidopsis thalina or antirrhinum majus, was initially described with the abc model for the specification of floral organ identities coen and meyerowitz ) . since then, new classes of genes have been identified, such as d-function genes thought to be involved in ovule identity (angenent et al. ) . the four class e sepallata genes encode proteins that are apparently required in floral organ identity determination (pelaz et al. (pelaz et al. , ferrario et al. ; ditta et al. ) . the products of the a, b, c and e genes act in a combinatorial manner to achieve three types of activity. in the outermost whorl, a and e genes function to control sepal identity. in the second whorl, a, b, and e genes together specify petal identity. in the third whorl, b, c, and e genes act in concert to direct stamen identity, while in the innermost whorl, c and e genes determine carpel identity coen and meyerowitz ; honma and goto ; pelaz et al. pelaz et al. , theissen ; ditta et al. ). the functions of a and c genes are considered mutually antagonistic and the expression of one represses that of the other coen and meyerowitz ; drews et al. ; egea-cortines et al. ; pelaz et al. ; theissen ) . in higher eudicots, b-class gene products are represented by homologs of the arabidopsis thaliana genes apetala (ap ) and pistillata (pi), which control petal and stamen identity in the second and third whorls, respectively (jack et al. ; goto and meyerowitz ) . in addition to petal and stamen expression, however, ap and pi transcripts are detected in carpel tissue in basal angiosperms such as amborella and nuphar (kim et al. ) . other angiosperms and gymnosperm further possess a sister clade of b genes, termed bsister (bs) genes, and expression studies revealed that these genes are predominantly expressed in female reproductive organs (including carpels and ovules) (becker et al. ) . asarum caudigerum hance is a paleoherb belonging to family aristolochiaceae of the magnoliid order piperales, which is phylogenetically near the base among angiosperms (kramer and irish ; angiosperm phylogeny group ) . for another basal angiosperm genus, amborella (amborellales) actually the most basal lineage of the extant angiosperms (mathews and donoghue ; qiu et al. ; soltis et al. ; angiosperm phylogeny group ) , buzgo et al. ( ) and soltis et al. ( a) hypothesized that there is a gradual transition in the expression of b-class genes throughout the floral parts in basal angiosperms. they proposed a ''fading borders'' model of floral gene expression in these basal angiosperms, and kim et al. ( ) suggested that their b-class genes expression is broader than those of their counterparts in eudicots and monocots. in the present study, we investigated this hypothesis by studying mads-box genes in a little-studied basal angiosperm species, a. caudigerum. we took a genome-wide screening approach to study its mads box gene homologs. we analyzed the expression profiles of all genes expressed during floral bud development by macroarray. we identified mads-box homologs in a. caudigerum by phylogenetic analysis, and determined how its b-class genes are expressed through gene expression pattern analyses, qrt-pcr and rna in situ hybridization. we further showed that the b-class genes isolated from this basal angiosperm have a broader expression pattern than those of their counterparts in higher eudicots. plant materials, total rna extraction, dna sequencing, data analysis, and data deposition plants of asarum caudigerum hance were introduced from the wild in qiubei county of yunnan province, sw china, and cultivated in the botanical garden of the kunming institute of botany (chinese academy of sciences, kunming, yunnan, china). seedling leaves and floral organs of buds at several stages before anthesis were collected and transferred directly to liquid nitrogen. total rna was isolated from the frozen leaves and floral buds using trizol (shanghai huashun company, shanghai, china) according to the manufacturer's protocol. to identify floral organspecific genes and to elucidate their expression patterns, unique est genes were used in the present study: unique ests were previously published ; genbank est database dv -dv and dv -dv ), and unique genes from newly sequenced clones of the previously prepared cdna library described in zhao et al. ( ) were obtained and deposited in the genbank est database (ee and ee -ee ). protein similarity searches were performed against the ncbi database using the blastx program to assign putative functions to these ests. in the present study, e-values less than e - with more than nucleotides of the ests were considered significant. cdna macroarray preparation a cdna macroarray was prepared according to a previously published method (ji et al. ) , with minor modifications. the pcr product from each unique est was transferred from a -well plate to a nylon membrane (amersham biosciences, arlington heights, il, usa) using the biomek laboratory automation workstation (beckman coulter, fullerton, ca, usa). the pcr products were reamplified by pcr (perkin-elmer gene-amp pcr system ) using nested pcr primers and r provided in the pcr-select cdna subtraction kit (clontech, palo alto, ca, usa). these primers were complementary to sequences flanking both sides of the cdna insert. thermo-cycling conditions were as follows: one step at °c for min, followed by cycles of °c for s, °c for min, and °c for min. each clone was blotted in quadruplicates with the spots . mm in diameter and . mm apart. after air-drying, the membranes were denatured in . m naoh for min, neutralized in . m tris-hcl (ph . ) for min and then rinsed in distilled water for min. the blotted cdna samples were cross-linked to membranes using a lowenergy uv source and were baked for h at °c. sars virus genes, distilled water, and the pcr reaction solution were also transferred onto the membrane as negative controls. macroarray hybridization, washing, and radioactive scanning total rnas prepared from leaves at the seedling stage, uppermost leaves (upper leaves which close to floral buds), perianth, stamens, and carpels were reverse transcribed and used as probes for expression profile analysis. the reverse transcription reaction was performed in ll volumes set up as follows: ll oligo(dt) ( mm/ll), lg total rna and distilled water (up to ll). the mix was heated to °c for min, then quickly chilled on ice, and the contents collected by centrifugation at , g for s. then, ll of first-strand buffer, ll of . m dtt, ll of mm dntp mix ( mm each datp, dttp and dgtp), ll rnasin ( u ll - ), ll [ p]-dctp ( bq ll - ) and ll ( u) of superscript tm ii polymerase (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa) was added, the solutions mixed by gentle vortexing and incubated at °c for h. the probes were denatured at °c for min, and then chilled for min on ice before hybridization. membranes were pre-hybridized in ml church solution ( % bsa, mm edta, . m na hpo -nah po , % sds) at °c for h. the denatured probes were then added to the church solution and hybridization was carried out overnight at °c. after hybridization, the membranes were washed at °c in ssc, . % sds for min, in ssc, . % sds for min, then in . ssc, . % sds for min, and finally in . ssc, . % sds for min. they were then exposed to storage phosphor screens (amersham) for days. images were acquired by scanning the membranes with a typhoon scanner (amersham). data were analyzed using the gpc visualgrid software (http://www.gpc-biotech.com). the radioactive intensity of each spot was quantified as volume values and the local background levels subtracted, resulting in subtracted volume values, designated svol. the mean of all spot intensities in each membrane was used as the internal control, the subtracted volume value of which was designated sref. all images were normalized by dividing the svol of each spot by the sref value within the same image, resulting in a normalized volume value (nvol) for each spot. the nvol values were comparable between all images. the ratios of the signal intensities for each est in the uppermost leaves, perianth, stamens, and carpels, to those of the leaves at the seedling stage were calculated as measures of the changes in the differential expression of the genes represented by the cdna spots on the macroarrays. a twofold expression cutoff was applied to make the analysis more stringent, i.e., spots with a ratio equal to or more than two were judged significantly upregulated (jia et al. ) and loaded into the program hierarchical clustering explorer . (hce . ) for analysis (http://www. cs.umd.edu/hcil/hce/hce .html). total rna was reverse-transcribed with oligo-dt and reverse transcriptase (promega, madison, wi, usa) following the supplier's protocols. to examine the expression of the three putative mads-box transcription factors (dv , dv , dv ) and one gibberellinregulated gene (dv ), quantitative real-time pcr (qrt-pcr) was carried out with an abi prism ht sequence detection system (applied biosystems, foster city, ca usa). the a. caudigerum s rrna (dv ) gene was used as internal control for normalization of the template cdna. the dv sense primer was dv f ( -gtccatggcgggggagtttctctct ctttc- ) and the anti-sense primer dv r ( -ga agcagccattccaaggagtgtag- ); the dv sense primer was dv f ( -agccattccaagg agtgtag- ), and the anti-sense primer dv r ( -gcatacttacattccaggtcttc- ); the dv sense primer was dv f ( -attcgcatttcgta planta ( ) : - tccaac- ), and the anti-sense primer dv r ( -tgttatgcaaggcgcagatcgtg- ); the dv sense primer was dv f ( -aagaccaaggaa ggaggac- ), and the anti-sense primer dv r ( -cggccgcgaccacgctaatc- ); the dv sense primer was dv f ( -aggagactgcgttg atgtg- ), and the anti-sense primer dv r ( -caaatccaaacgaaagggacaat- ). qrt-pcr was performed in sybr green i pcr master mix (applied biosystems), containing nm of each primer and ll : diluted cdna. the pcr was performed under thermal cycling conditions as follows: cycle at °c for min, cycle at °c for min, cycles at °c for s, at °c for s, and at °c for s. following amplification, melting curve analyses were performed at °c for min followed by cycles of °c for s, °c for s, and °c for s. the data collected during each extension phase were analyzed initially using sds . (applied biosystems). the s rrna gene was used as an internal calibrator to standardize the rna content of the different tissues. measurement of the leaves at the seedling stage was used as a sample calibration control. the abundance of dv , dv , dv and dv transcripts was calculated using the relative -ddct analytical method (livak and schmittgen ) . the mean of triplicates of the same rna sample was used as final result of gene expression, and the standard deviation of the three reactions calculated. floral primordia at different stages of development were dissected in the greenhouse, fixed in faa ( % formaldehyde, % acetic acid, in % alcohol) for h, and were then dehydrated through a series of alcohol solutions ranging from to %. the materials were further dissected under a stereomicroscope, and the alcohol replaced by isopentanol acetate before the samples were dried in a hitachi hcp- co critical point dryer (cpd). the dried material was mounted on stubs and coated with gold-palladium. observations were made using a hitachi ky amray- b sem at kv and . - mm working distance. database searches and isolation of a putative b-class genes using the previously described est dv ), we performed race using the -race cdna amplification kit (clontech) according to the manufacturer's protocol. we subsequently performed database searches in genbank for the resulting mrna and predicted protein sequences. this enabled the elaboration of additional cdna sequence, deposited in genbank as eu . the complete coding region of eu was amplified by pcr using the specific sense primer eu f ( -gatccatgggctgcgcgacgtccaa- ) and anti-sense primer eu r ( -gtaggtgacc actttgttatgcaaggcgcagatcg- ). the conditions for amplification were °c for min followed by cycles at °c for s, at °c for s and at °c for min, plus a final extension at °c for min. pcr products were purified and cloned into pgem t-easy vectors (promega) according to the manufacturer's protocol, and finally the clones were sequenced. the putative mads-box amino acid eu isolated from a. caudigerum was aligned with those closely related to b-class genes and mads-box genes from genbank using clustal x (thompson et al. ) followed by manual adjustment where necessary. alignments were created from the relatively conserved mik amino acids (the nucleotides were too variable to be aligned unambiguously) while the c domain was excluded. a neighbor-joining (nj) tree was constructed using the pairwise deletion option in mega (tamura et al. ). genetic distances were estimated under the poisson correction model. floral buds were fixed in faa, and were dehydrated through a standard ethanol series. the buds were transferred to liquid nitrogen, shock-frozen, and were stored at - °c. frozen tissues were later embedded with an embedding optimum cutting temperature (oct) compound (''tissue-tek''; miles laboratories inc., elkhart, in, usa), sectioned at lm thickness and mounted on glass slides. rna in situ hybridization was carried out according to yang et al. ( ) with minor modifications. immunodetection with anti-dig antibodies conjugated with alkaline phosphatase was carried out using dig northern starter kit (roche, mannheim, germany) according to the manufacturer's protocol. a -bp antisense probe was prepared using the dv r ( -agatttagaccgta gagt- ) and the dv t primer containing the t promoter ( -taatacgactcactataggg- ). the sense probe was created using primer dv f ( -gg tatagcgtataatgagac- ) and the t promoter primer ( -aattaaccctcactaaaggg- ). in situ hybridizations were performed at °c and subsequent washes were carried out at °c. images were captured with an olympus microscope (olympus company, guangzhou, guangdong, china). total rna from seedling leaves, uppermost leaves, perianth tissue, stamens, and carpels was used to synthesize a set of probes for the macroarray experiments (fig. ). in total, genes out of the unique est genes tested showed an upregulated expression (table s ). of these, , , , and were upregulated in the uppermost leaves, perianth, stamens and carpels, respectively. the expression of , and upregulated genes overlapped in the uppermost leaves and perianth, perianth and stamens, and stamens and carpels, respectively (fig. a-c and table s ). the gene expression pattern in the perianth was very similar to that in the uppermost leaves ( fig. a-d) . however, we did not detect transcripts encoding putative mads-box transcription factors in the uppermost leaves (table and table s ). of the upregulated perianth transcripts (table s ), seven putative mads-box transcription factors (dv , dv , dv , dv , dv , dv , dv ), including three putative apetala -like proteins, two agl -like proteins, and two similar to putative mads protein were found (table ) . sixty-two genes were upregulated in the stamens (table s ). of the stamen-specific transcripts, three genes encoded mads-box transcription factors (dv , dv , dv ), including one putative mads box transcription factor, ap -like, and one putative mads protein (table ). carpels showed more upregulated genes than the other organs, probably due to their complex tissue types, with genes showing significant upregulation. they included three transcripts encoding putative mads-box transcription factors (table s ), two encoding putative ap -like proteins (dv , dv ), and one encoding a putative mads protein (dv ) ( table ) . the expression of three putative mads-box transcription factors (dv , dv , dv ) and one gibberellin-regulated protein (dv ) was further validated by qrt-pcr (fig. ) . our qrt-pcr results showed early floral organ development in a. caudigerum, floral primordia arise under transverse protuberances in axillary bract primordia. the whorl of the perianth appears first and then the first whorl of the androecium, quickly followed by the carpel primordia and then the second androecium whorl (fig. s ) . a. caudigerum usually has six carpels and two whorls of six stamens, although some buds have only five carpels and five stamens per androecium whorl. the second androecium whorl continues to develop when the first whorl has already matured. therefore, the series of floral organ development progresses from the first whorl to the third, then forth, and lastly to the second whorl. we used race to obtain the full-length coding sequence of eu and confirmed its homology with the previously published sequence dv (fig. ) . the paleoap motif was not present in pi genes, and was not well conserved in the bs genes (fig. ) . phylogenetic analysis was performed to further clarify the homology and relationships of the full-length putative ap -like mads-box transcription factor gene of a. caudigerum isolated in this study. the neighbor-joining analysis of the amino acid alignment yielded a high bootstrap support for the clade of ap -like mads-box transcription factor genes from asarum (bootstrap, bs = %), including eu (the full orf length of dv ) isolated from a. caudigerum. the latter formed a clade with ap - of a. europaeum (bs = %) (fig. ) , and thus was not a member of pi or bs gene fig. comparison of the distribution of upregulated floral organ genes showing more than twofold increase in transcript abundance between different whorls and uppermost leaves. a genes that were expressed in both the uppermost leaves and the perianth. b genes that were upregulated in both the perianth and stamens. c genes that were upregulated in both the stamens and carpels families. in addition, the ap -like b-class genes from asarum formed a cluster with ap - of saruma henryi (bs = %). in situ hybridization studies of the putative ap -like homolog in a. caudigerum to obtain information on the spatial expression pattern of the putative ap homolog isolated from a. caudigerum, rna in situ hybridization was performed. the putative mads-box protein dv , a partial fragment of eu was upregulated in carpels at two different stages of development: mid-development (fig. c , e, f) or late-development (fig. a, b, d) . in longitudinal sections, the signal was especially strong at the adaxial base of the cupules, where ovules would later develop, but was very weak in the perianth, and absent from the stamens ( fig. a -c, e). in transverse cross sections, a strong signal was also detected in the female reproductive structures (fig. d, f) . the use of sense probes for dv as a control resulted in non-specific signals (fig. g, h ). we have performed a macroarray analysis of gene expression in leaves and flowers at different stages of development in the paleoherb a. caudigerum, with special focus on mads-box genes. because genome information for a. caudigerum is not available, we employed a largescale screening approach to identify the target genes. in our study, it was noticeable that a considerable number of upregulated transcripts constituted heretofore-uncharacterized genes, or at least hypothetical proteins with unknown gene function. in addition, many transcription factors were differentially upregulated in the flower whorls. basal angiosperms are very interesting to the study of the origin, diversification, and evolution of angiosperms. using neighbor-joining analysis, we demonstrated that the putative mads-box transcription factor acap - isolated from a. caudigerum is a b-class gene based on the presence of conserved pi motif-derived and the paleoap motif (fig. ) and the positioning in the phylogeny (fig. ) . it did not fall anywhere near aeap - and the other bsister genes (fig. ) . although acap - most closely resembled aeap - , the former showed carpel expression that had not been detected in the latter (kramer and irish ) (fig. ) . the bsister gene aeap - , however, is expressed in female reproductive structures (kramer and irish ) . recent comprehensive expression studies in other plants groups revealed that bsister genes are mainly transcribed in female reproductive organs (becker et al. ; de folter et al. ) . why ap - from a. europaeum should behave differently from its a. caudigerum homolog is not yet understood. in the typical abc model based on a. thaliana, the b-class genes, ap and pi control the specification of petals in conjunction with a-class genes and stamens in conjunction with c-class genes in the second and third whorls, respectively coen and meyerowitz ; ma and depamphilis ) . the borders of b-function gene expression are also not so clear-cut in arabidopsis: ap and pi, the major arabidopsis b-function genes, are not entirely restricted to the second and third whorl of the flowers; instead, ap is expressed in parts of the first whorl, and pi is expressed in parts of the fourth whorl at early stage (jack et al. ; goto and fig. alignment of the conserved c-terminal domain of predicted proteins from b and bs lineage homologs. the pi and paleoap motifs (kramer et al. ; jaramillo and kramer ) are shaded meyerowitz ; chen et al. ) . it is believed that physical interactions of the two proteins are required for protein stability and in turn maintenance of their expression, so that in older flowers their expression is limited to whorls two and three (goto and meyerowitz ; riechmann et al. ) . it is possible that such a stabilization mechanism will not be present in basal angiosperms. based on our cdna macroarray data, the expression domain of b-class ap -like genes in a. caudigerum was found to be broader than for their counterparts in eudicots (fig. ) , as acap - expression was found in carpels, and other ap -like genes were also expressed in the perianth and stamens ( fig. ; table ). comparative studies of b-class ap gene homologs conducted in the family aristolochiaceae reported ap gene expression for the genera saruma and aristolochia (jaramillo and kramer ) . specifically, b-class ap genes were found to be expressed in the second, third and fourth whorls of saruma henryi, as well as the third and fourth whorls of aristolochia manshuriensis (jaramillo and kramer ) . this is consistent with the view of a broader expression pattern of b-class genes in basal angiosperms (buzgo et al. ; kim et al. ) . based on our sem observations, we found that the early floral organ development initiated in the sequence ( ) first whorl, ( ) third whorl, ( ) fourth whorl, and ( ) second whorl. therefore, the early floral organ development of a. caudigerum does not progress from the outer whorl inward, but instead the development of the second whorl is delayed. it is consistent with the hypothesis of buzgo et al. ( ) who suggested a gradual transition in the expression of floral b-class genes in amborella. our cdna macroarray data, rna in situ hybridization, and qrt-pcr results indicated that acap - /dv is expressed in carpels, and particularly strongly in the endothelium of ovules. this gene's unusual expression may explain the retarded development of the second-whorl organs. irish ( , ) proposed that the abc model was not rigidly fixed during the earliest stages of angiosperm evolution. irish ( ) cautioned that the applicability of this model outside of the core eudicots would require testing. indeed, several lines of evidence suggest patterns of gradual transitions among flowers that prompt a ''fading borders'' view of gene expression. this evidence includes the morphological transition between organ identities from perianth to carpels, the results from genome-scale phylogenomics research, and the implied gradual shift in the expression of the b-class genes across the flower in the basal angiosperms (kramer et al. ; buzgo et al. ; kim et al. ; soltis et al. a, b) . however, there could be antagonistic interactions between the a-class gene products, which are partially responsible for perianth identities, and the c-class genes, which specify stamen and carpel identities in the higher eudicots (coen and meyerowitz ; drews et al. ; theissen ) . in arabidopsis thaliana, apetala (ap ) of the a-class genes promotes the b gene expression domain by antagonizing agamous (ag) (zhao et al. ). winter et al. ( a, b) pointed out that an ancestral b protein from the gymnosperm gnetum gnemon binds dna in a sequencespecific manner as a homodimer, whereas in antirrhinum majus the def-like protein binds to dna only as a heterodimeric complex with the glo-like protein. less strict requirements for heterodimerization or autoregulatory upregulation may facilitate spatial shifts in the b-function in taxa outside of the eudicots, as detected by the broader gene expression of b-class genes among flowers of a. caudigerum, amborella and other basal angiosperm lineages. therefore, we support the contention that the abc model was not established at the outset of angiosperm evolution, but instead occurred in a simpler form in the basal angiosperms, and gradually evolved into the canonical abc model in the more derived higher eudicot lineages. a novel class of mads box genes is involved in ovule development in petunia an update of angiosperm phylogeny group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: apg ii the major clades of mads-box genes and their role in the development and evolution of flowering plants a novel mads-box gene subfamily with a sister-group relationship to class b floral homeotic genes genes directing flower development in arabidopsis genetic interactions among floral homeotic genes of arabidopsis floral developmental morphology of amborella trichopoda (amborellaceae) minimal regions in the arabidopsis pistillata promoter responsive to the apetala /pistillata feedback control do not contain a carg box the war of whorls: genetic interactions controlling flower development a bsister mads-box gene involved in ovule and seed development in petunia and arabidopsis the sep gene of arabidopsis thaliana functions in floral organ and meristem identity negative regulation of the arabidopsis homeotic gene agamous by the apetala product ternary complex formation between the mads-box proteins squamosa, deficiens and globosa is involved in the control of floral architecture in antirrhinum majus the mads box gene fbp is required for sepallata function in petunia function and regulation of the arabidopsis floral homeotic gene pistillata complexes of mads-box proteins are sufficient to convert leaves into floral organ the evolution of floral homeotic gene function the homeotic gene apetala of arabidopsis thaliana encodes a mads box and is expressed in petals and stamens apetala and pistillata homologs exhibit novel expression patterns in the unique perianth of aristolochia (aristolochiaceae) isolation and analyses of genes preferentially expressed during early cotton fiber development by subtractive pcr and cdna array annotation and expression profile analysis of full-length cdnas from stress-induced maize (zea mays l.) seedlings expression of floral mads-box genes in basal angiosperms: implications for the evolution of floral regulators evolution of genetic mechanisms controlling petal development evolution of the petal and stamen developmental programs: evidence from comparative studies of the lower eudicots and basal angiosperms molecular evolution of genes controlling petal and stamen development: duplication and divergence within the apetala and pistillata madsbox gene lineages complex patterns of gene duplication in the apetala and pistillata lineages of the ranunculaceae analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative pcr and the -ddct method the abcs of floral evolution the root of angiosperm phylogeny inferred from duplicate phytochrome genes abnormal flowers and pattern formation in floral development ) b and c floral organ identity functions require sepallata madsbox genes conversion of leaves into petals in arabidopsis the earliest angiosperms: evidence from mitochondrial, plastid and nuclear genomes dimerization specificity of arabidopsis mads domain homeotic proteins, apetala , apetala , pistillata, and agamous angiosperm phylogeny inferred from multiple genes as a tool for comparative biology the floral genome: an evolutionary history of gene duplication and shifting patterns of gene expression the abc model and its applicability to basal angiosperms mega : molecular evolutionary genetics analysis (mega) software version . development of floral organ identity: stories from the mads house a short history of mads-box genes in plants the clustal_x windows interface: flexible strategies for multiple sequence alignment aided by quality analysis tools from floral induction to floral shape evolution of class b floral homeotic proteins: obligate heterodimerization originated from homodimerization on the origin of class b floral homeotic genes: functional substitution and dominant inhibition in arabidopsis by expression of an orthologue from the gymnosperm gnetum a geraniol-synthase gene from cinnamomum tenuipilum expressed sequence tags (ests) and phylogenetic analysis of floral genes from a paleoherb species, asarum caudigerum ) mir regulates stem cell fate and defines the inner boundary of apetala and pistillata expression domain in arabidopsis floral meristem conflict of interest statement none. key: cord- -wgn rc authors: zhong, yi; hu, zhengchao; wu, jingcui; dai, fan; lee, feng; xu, yangping title: stau selectively regulates the expression of inflammatory and immune response genes and alternative splicing of the nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway date: - - journal: oncol rep doi: . /or. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: wgn rc double-stranded rna-binding protein staufen homolog (stau ) is a highly conserved multifunctional double-stranded rna-binding protein, and is a key factor in neuronal differentiation. rna sequencing was used to analyze the overall transcriptional levels of the upregulated cells by stau and control cells, and select alternative splicing (as). it was determined that the high expression of stau led to changes in the expression levels of a variety of inflammatory and immune response genes, including ifit , ifit , oasl, and ccl . furthermore, stau was revealed to exert a significant regulatory effect on the as of genes related to the ‘nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway’. this is of significant importance for neuronal survival, differentiation, growth, post-damage repair, and regeneration. in conclusion, overexpression of stau was associated with immune response and regulated as of pathways related to neuronal growth and repair. in the present study, the whole transcriptome of stau expression was first analyzed, which laid a foundation for further understanding the key functions of stau . rna binding proteins (rbps) are an important family of proteins related to rna metabolism. they dynamically bind rna to form a variety of complexes, including ribonucleoprotein particles (rnps) ( ) . rbps play a significant role in various cellular processes, including rna splicing, polyadenylation, rna editing, rna transport, maintenance of rna stability and degradation, intracellular localization, and translation control ( ) . recent studies have revealed that rbps are closely associated with muscular dystrophy, neurological disease, cancer, and mendelian disease ( , ) . staufen is a member of the double-stranded rna-binding protein family, which is involved in mrna transport and localization to different subcellular compartments ( ) . staufen proteins contain several double-stranded rna-binding domains ( ) . double-stranded rna-binding protein staufen homolog (stau ) plays a crucial role in mrna output, re-localization, translation, and stau -mediated mrna decay (smd) ( , ) . smd is also involved in the developmental process, such as myogenesis and adipogenesis, and possibly in angiogenesis ( ) . stau , by binding to the inverted repeat alu elements (iralus) on the 'utr of mrna, inhibits retention of iralus-containing mrna in the nuclei, thereby enhancing its nuclear export. moreover, stau binding to the iralus on the 'utr of mrna can promote translation of these mrnas by inhibiting the binding of protein kinase r (pkr) ( ) . in addition, stau is also an important mrna transport factor in neurons. after binding to the 'utr of mrna, stau can induce translation-dependent mrna degradation through direct interaction with upf . an upregulation of transcripts due to depletion of stau and upf may play a pivotal role in the differentiation process ( ) . stau expression can be used to regulate neuronal differentiation ( ) . studies have revealed that stau plays a substantial role in the immunity against the influenza virus and human immunodeficiency virus type i (hiv- ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . in order to study the possible biological functions of stau , a stau -regulated transcriptome in hela cells was obtained. to determine the gene expression profile and the alternative splicing (as) events in the genome, which are regulated by stau , high-throughput rna sequencing (rna-seq) was employed. in addition, the related results were validated in hela cells. a previous research demonstrated that ptb knockdown converted highly transformed hela cells to neuronal-like cells. they extended this analysis to multiple cell types of diverse origin, including human embryonic stau selectively regulates the expression of inflammatory and immune response genes and alternative splicing of the nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway carcinoma stem cells (nt ), mouse neural progenitor cells (n a), human retinal epithelial cells (arpe ), and primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts (mefs). upon ptb knockdown, all of these cells exhibited a neuronal-like morphology ( ) . comparative transcriptome analysis revealed that stau can selectively regulate the expression of inflammatory genes, including interferon-induced protein with tetratricopeptide repeats (ifit ), '- '-oligoadenylate synthetase-like protein (oasl), and interferon-induced protein with tetratricopeptide repeats (ifit ). furthermore, it was revealed that as of genes widespread in the 'nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway', including plekhg , arhgef , nr a , pdgfb, fgfr , and ralgds, was regulated by stau . overexpression of stau was closely associated with inflammation. collectively, the present research defined a potential regulatory pattern in which as of inflammatory and immune response genes was regulated by stau . it indicated that stau may be involved in the proliferation and survival of neurons ( ), differentiation, cell growth and apoptosis ( ), post-damage repair and regeneration, neurite outgrowth and retraction ( ) , and myelination ( ) . cloning and construction of plasmids. ce design . software (vazyme biotech co., ltd.). was employed to design primers for hot fusion ( ) . there was a gene-specific sequence and a pires-hrgfp- a vector (part no. ; agilent technologies, inc.) sequence ( - bp) in each primer. the designed primers contained two parts of a sequence, the sequence before 'atg' in the forward (f)-primer or 'agc' in the reverse (r)-primer matches of the pires-hrgfp- a vector and the other part of the sequence belonged to stau gene sequence, presented as follows: f-primer: agc ccg ggc gga tcc gaa ttcatg aaa ctt gga aaa aaa cca atg t and r-primer: gtc atc ctt gta gtc ctc gag agc acc tcc cac aca cag aca. ecori and xhoi (neb) were used to digest pires-hrgfp- a vectors for ~ - h at ˚c, which were then subjected to agarose ( . %) gel electrophoresis and purification using qiagen spin-column-based kit (qiagen gmbh) according to the manufacturer's instructions. trizol reagent (ambion) was used to extract total rna from hela cells, which was used to synthesize cdna by oligo dt primer. the cdna is the template to amplify insert fragments of the stau gene using the primers by polymerase chain reaction (pcr). the vectors and insert fragments were added to a microtube and ligated by clonexpress ii one step cloning kit (vazyme biotech co., ltd.). the ligand product was transformed into e. coli dh α, which was then added to a luria-bertani (lb) agar plate, containing µl/ml ampicillin (sigma-aldrich; merck kgaa), followed by overnight incubation at ˚c. the template used for pcr was dna extracted from dh α cells, using dna polymerase x green taq mix (vazyme biotech co., ltd.). the sequences of the universal primers were as follows: forward (f)-primer: aat taa ccc tca cta aag gg and reverse (r)-primer: gtc ctt atc atc gtc gtc tt. pcr procedures were carried out as follows: the samples were first denatured at ˚c for min, denaturation at ˚c for min, followed by cycles of annealing at ˚c for sec and extension at ˚c for min. universal primers were employed to screen colonies. sanger sequencing ( ) was used to verify the insert sequence. cell culture and transfections. human cervical carcinoma cell line, hela (cctcc no. gdc ) was obtained from the china center for type culture collection. hela cells were cultured at ˚c with % co in dulbecco's modified eagle's medium (dmem; gibco; thermo fisher scientific, inc.) with % fetal bovine serum (fbs; ge healthcare), µg/ml streptomycin (hyclone), and u/ml penicillin (hyclone). plasmid ( ng) (part no. ; agilent technologies, inc.) was transfected into hela cells using lipofectamine™ transfection reagent (cat. no. ; invitrogen; thermo fisher scientific, inc.) according to the manufacturer's protocol. transfected cells were harvested after h for reverse transcription-quantitative pcr (rt-qpcr) and western blot analysis. gene overexpression. stau overexpression was determined using glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh) as the control. cdna was synthesized according to the standard instructions followed by real-time quantitative pcr. rt-qpcr was conducted on the bestar sybr green rt-pcr master mix (dbi bioscience). the primers are presented in table si . the concentrations of the transcripts were then normalized to gapdh mrna levels using the -ΔΔcq method ( ) . the data were analyzed by student's t-test using graphpad prism software (version . ; graphpad software, inc.). cell proliferation assay. cell proliferation was measured by the -( , -dimethylthiazol- -yl)- , -diphenyltetrazolium bromide (mtt) assay. briefly, x cells were seeded in -well plates in triplicate. after h of transfection, mg/ml mtt solution was added into the cells. after h of incubation at ˚c, the mtt solution was removed. the insoluble mtt was dissolved in dmso. absorbance at nm was measured using a benchmark plus microplate reader (bio-rad laboratories, inc.). rna isolation and high-throughput sequencing. four groups of samples were prepared, namely, control cells and overexpression (oe)-stau cells (two biological replicates). prior to rna isolation, hela cells were first harvested. trizol reagent (ambion; thermo fisher scientific, inc.) was used to isolate total rna, which was then purified by phenol-chloroform and treated with rq dnase (promega corporation) to eliminate dna. the quantity and quality of the rna were verified by using smartspec plus (bio-rad laboratories, inc.) to detect the absorbance at a wavelength of - nm. agarose ( . %) gel electrophoresis was employed to detect rna integrity. rna-seq library was prepared using vahts stranded mrna-seq library prep kit (cat. no. nr ; vazyme biotech co., ltd.), and µg total rna was used for one sample. after polyadenylated mrnas were purified, they were fragmented and double-strand cdnas were produced. the double-strand cdnas were subjected to end repair, and poly(a) tails were added. they were then ligated to vahts rna adapters (vazyme biotech co., ltd.) and digested by heat-labile uracil-dna glycosylase (udg). before sequencing, amplification, purification, and quantification of the single-strand cdna were performed, the quantity of the cdna was rede-termined by qpcr using agilent (agilent technologies, inc.), and was finally stored at - ˚c. the library was prepared according to the manufacturer's protocol, which was applied to -nt paired-end sequencing using illumina hiseq x ten system (illumina, inc.). ablife performed the sequencing using the sequencing kit provided from illumina, inc. data processing and alignment. raw reads containing more than -n bases were first discarded. fastx-toolkit (ver. . . ) was used to trim the adaptors and bases of low quality from raw sequencing reads, and short reads less than -nt were removed, filtered for quality (fastq_quality_filter -q -p ) and against artifact sequences (fastx_artifacts_filter) and collapsed (fastx_collapse). base quality q was used to indicate the proportion of bases with a sequencing error rate < . %. rna-seq data presented in this study have been deposited in the gene expression omnibus of ncbi and are accessible through geo series accession number gse . using tophat v. . . ( ), clean reads were mapped to the grch genome and four mismatches were allowed. for calculation of fragments per kilobase of transcript per million fragments mapped (fpkm) ( ) and gene read counting, we applied specifically mapped reads, and by calculating the pearson correlation coefficient (pcc) for cluster analysis. analysis of differentially expressed genes (degs). the r bioconductor package edger ( ) was utilized to screen the degs. a false-discovery rate (fdr)< . and fold-change (fc)> or < . were set as the cut-off points for identifying degs. next, a volcano map was drawn to reveal the number of degs. as analysis. by applying the ablas algorithm ( , ) , regulated differential splicing events (rdses) and differential splicing events (dses) were identified. briefly, types of dses were detected by ablas on the basis of splice junctions directly extracted from mapping reads, including exon skipping (es), alternative 'splice site (a ss), alternative ' splice site (a ss), intron retention (ir), mutually exclusive exons (mxe), mutually exclusive 'utrs ( pmxe), mutually exclusive 'utrs ( pmxe), cassette exon, a ss and es, and a ss and es. sashimi plot by igv tools was used for as analysis. to assess rbp-regulated dses, student's t-test was performed to evaluate the significance of as events. the events, which were significant at a p-value equal to %, were considered rbp-regulated dses. we also analyzed the overlapping genes from the degs and regulated alternative splicing events (rases) between the samples were defined and quantified by using the ablas pipeline; and a venn diagram was drawn. as events and degs are validated by rt-qpcr. in order to validate rna-seq data, rt-qpcr was performed. the primers used for rt-qpcr are presented in table si . rna was reversely-transcribed into cdna using an m-mlv reverse transcriptase (vazyme biotech co., ltd.). rt-qpcr was performed by stepone real-time pcr system using the sybr-green pcr reagent kit (yeasen biotechnology co., ltd.). pcr procedures were carried out as follows: the samples were first denatured at ˚c for min, followed by cycles of denaturation at ˚c for sec, and then annealed and extended at ˚c for min. the procedures were repeated three times for all samples. the rna expression levels of all the degs were normalized against those of gapdh. in addition, an rt-qpcr assay was undertaken for dse validation. the primers used for detecting dses are presented table si . to detect alternative isoforms, a boundary-spanning primer of constitutive and alternative exons was used, as well as an opposing primer in one constitutive exon. the boundary-spanning primer of the alternative exon was designed according to a 'model exon' to detect model splicing, or an 'altered exon' to detect altered splicing. functional enrichment analysis. to sort out functional categories of degs, kobas . server ( ) was employed to identify kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) pathways and gene ontology (go) terms. enrichment was assessed using the hypergeometric test followed by benjamini-hochberg fdr adjustment for p-values. the heatmap was constructed by calculating the pearson correlation coefficient (pcc) of the degs. overexpression of flag-tagged stau promotes cell proliferation. in order to analyze the expression of stau -expressing vectors and its influence on the proliferation of human hela cells, the stau -transfected cells with gfp label and flag label (fused with the target gene) were successfully constructed. in addition, cells transfected with blank controls were considered as the negative control. after h of transfection, the expression level of gfp was detected to indicate whether the transfection was successful. the cells were harvested and detected by rt-qpcr and western blot assays. the results indicated a significant overexpression after cell transfection with stau -expressing vectors (fig. a) . thereafter, proliferation of stau -transfected cells was detected by mtt assay. compared with the control group, overexpression of stau promoted cell proliferation (fig. b) . rna-seq profiling of the transcriptional response to stau overexpression. in order to assess stau -mediated transcriptional regulation in human hela cells, four groups of samples were prepared, namely, control cells and overexpression (oe)-stau cells (two biological replicates). total rna extraction was carried out for the groups of samples, and the cdna library was prepared. then, the library was subjected to paired-end sequencing on illumina hiseq x ten to extract high-quality transcriptome data. quality analysis of clean reads indicated that the mean q quality score was . % ( ) . next, high-quality clean reads were aligned against grch human reference genome using tophat software (table i) . rna-seq data were analyzed and the expression levels of stau were quantified, which further demonstrated overexpression of stau (fig. c ). correlation analysis was undertaken to determine the variability in the gene expression level between each pair of the samples. moreover, cluster analysis was performed between the samples (fig. d ). as revealed in fig. d , there was a correlation between stau oe cells and control cells; there was also a significant correlation between the biological replicates. with analysis of degs among samples, criteria for significant difference were set to fc≥ or ≤ . and fdr< . . a volcano plot was drawn and the results revealed that significant degs were related to stau overexpression. among them, upregulated genes and downregulated genes were identified (fig. e ). this indicated that stau plays an extensive transcriptional regulatory role in hela cells. a heatmap of the expression levels of degs was plotted. the upregulated genes were represented in the red region of the experimental group, and downregulated ones in the red region of the control group. the results revealed a high level of consistency in stau -mediated transcription between the two groups of data ( fig. a) . the functions and potential biological roles of these degs were further analyzed. go enrichment and kegg pathway analyses were conducted for the upregulated and downregulated genes, respectively, and the top go terms were presented. it is generally believed that a p< . indicates significant difference, i.e., significant enrichment. thus, this threshold was defined as the cut-off. go functions were divided into three categories, namely, molecular function, biological process, and cellular component. as revealed in fig. b , genes regulating stau overexpression were primarily enriched in pathways related to inflammation and immune response. the upregulated genes in the oe-stau were enriched in 'defense response to virus', 'cytokine-mediated signaling pathways', 'transport', 'signal transduction' and 'synaptic transmission'; the downregulated genes were enriched in 'signal transduction', 'transmembrane transport', 'inflammatory response', and 'innate immune response'. studies have confirmed that for kegg pathway analysis, the cut-off was also set to p< . . the results revealed that the genes were enriched in a variety of pathways related to the immune system, inflammatory response, and nervous system (fig. c) ; the upregulated genes were primarily enriched in 'abc transporters' and 'tnf signaling pathway'. the downregulated genes were mainly enriched in 'systemic lupus erythematosus', 'rheumatoid arthritis', 'nod-like receptor signaling pathway', 'tnf signaling pathway', 'serotonergic synapse', and 'nf-κb signaling pathway'. then, among all the degs, genes related to cytokine-mediated signaling, inflammatory response, and immune response were selected and presented in the degs-based hierarchical clustering plot (fig. d ). among them, there were upregulated genes and downregulated genes. herein, upregulated genes (ifit , oasl, and ifit ) and downregulated gene [chemokine (c-c motif) ligand (ccl )] were analyzed in details in terms of coverage and distribution of reads (fig. e) . distribution of reads reflected the relative location of genes and the relative read abundance, which further demonstrated differential expression in control cells and stau oe cells. therefore, it could be concluded that stau selectively regulated genes related to inflammation and immune responses. fig. a . these genes were enriched in the cytokine-mediated signaling pathway, inflammatory response or other biological processes in the go database. to verify the reliability of rna sequencing, qpcr was conducted for hela cells. it was revealed that ifit , oasl, and ifit were significantly upregulated, while ccl was significantly downregulated (fig. b) , which was consistent with results of rna-seq analysis. the results of qpcr of the genes (ifi , s pr , ccl ) in fig. s were also consistent with rna-seq analysis (data not shown), and the non-deg cd was the control gene. stau regulates the as of genes enriched in the 'nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway'. regulated as events (rases) of stau in human hela cells were further analyzed. every sample in the rna-seq data was aligned to unique mapped reads on the reference genome for rase analysis. the results of exon detection in samples are presented in table Ⅱ . a total of , detected exons were achieved, accounting for . % of all annotated exons in the reference genome. splice junctions of each sample were then analyzed by using tophat software, and , known splice junctions (known_junction) and , novel splice junctions (novel_junction) were obtained (table iii) . various rases were statistically analyzed using ablas, and the detection results in each sample are presented in table Ⅳ . there were , detected rases, including , annotated rases in the genome (known as) and , non-annotated novel rases (novel as). due to the set-up of biological replicates, a student's t-test was used to compare the variation of as levels of each gene between two samples, and the criterion for significantly different as was set to p≤ . . as revealed in fig. a , a total of rases were detected, which are presented in table Ⅴ . among them, the major types of rases included a ss, a ss, es, and cassette exons. this indicated that stau had a retaining and promoting effect on exons in the entire genome. number and types of other differential rases were as follows: pmxe, pmxe, a ss and es, mxe, and a ss and es. the aforementioned results indicated that stau could regulate as in the genome of hela cells. an integrated analysis was performed for differentially regulated alternatively spliced genes (rasgs) and degs in different samples. there were genes with significant difference in terms of both the expression level and as level (fig. b) . similarly, go enrichment and kegg pathway analyses were undertaken on the differential rasgs, and the top terms are presented in fig. c and d. go terms and kegg pathways, in which rasgs were enriched are presented in table sii and siii, respectively. it was revealed that the genes whose as level was regulated by stau were mainly enriched in 'retrograde transport, endosome to golgi', 'muscle cell differentiation', and other reported stau -related pathways. the go term ranking the th was enriched in 'nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway' (~p= . ). table sii , key genes were selected for the detection of rase, namely, es, a ss, pmxe, and ir. according to the results of rna-seq ( fig. and fig. s ), the number of reads sequenced for each gene was over . then, for each gene, the number of reads for as between stau oe cells and control cells was compared, and a significant difference in the as levels was noted. to verify the reliability of the results, qpcr was performed in the hela cells. primers for the qpcr verification are presented in table si . rases detected by qpcr were consistent with those by rna-seq, which demonstrated that stau may play a significant regulatory role in the as of 'nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway'. rna-seq based on high-throughput sequencing is currently the most widely used transcriptome sequencing technology, which can promptly extract all the genetic information of the samples. rna-seq, has become one of the most representative high-throughput sequence-based techniques due to its high-throughput, high accuracy, and cost-effectiveness. it can be used to study the structure and function of genes, identify changes in gene expression, and explore as patterns that are regulated ( ) . in the field of life sciences, this method has been used to explore the pathogenesis of diseases, clinical diagnosis, and pharmacological research ( , ) . in the present study it was revealed that overexpression of stau promoted the proliferation of hela cells, which are useful for the study of gene regulation in the central nervous system, while the proliferation of neurons and glial cells in the central nervous system plays an important role in neuropathic pain ( ) . upregulation of stau caused upregulation or downregulation of numerous genes, including ifit , ifit , oasl and ccl . through functional analysis, changes in the expression levels of these genes may affect signaling pathways, such as 'defense response to virus', 'cytokine-mediated signaling pathway', and 'inflammatory response', which are closely associated with inflammatory immune response. in addition, the as of multiple genes was also regulated by stau , and the main enriched pathways not only include 'retrograde transport' and 'muscle cell differentiation', but also the 'nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway'. significant upregulation of ifit , ifit , and oasl genes was consistently indicated by rna-seq and qpcr of hela cells. the ifit family performs multiple functions, including antitumor effects and regulation of cell apoptosis and innate immune pathways ( , ) . it can also inhibit replication of flavivirus and coronavirus ( ) . siegfried et al stimulated wild-type bone marrow-derived macrophages (bmdms), ifit -/-, and ifnar -/-bmdms with lps, respectively. results of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa) test indicated that the mutant bmdms exhibited a significant reduction in the expression levels of tnf-α and interleukin- (il- ) than the wild-type bmdms. furthermore, shrna interference targeting ifit was performed in raw . macrophages. it was revealed that tnf-α and il- were also downregulated, suggesting a pro-inflammatory role of ifit ( ) . berchtold et al demonstrated that overexpression of ifit decreased the secretion of tnf-α in the raw . cells ( ). niess et al compared highly metastatic l . pl pancreatic tumor cells and lowly metastatic col fg pancreatic tumor cells. it was determined that upregulation of ifit promoted synthesis and secretion of il- ( ). liu et al revealed that the expression of exogenous ifit enhanced the inducing effect of nf-κb on tnf-α, without influencing tnf-α-mediated activation of nf-κb ( ) . furthermore, oasl is an interferon-stimulated gene (isg), playing a significant role in the immune response to viruses ( ) . activation of oasl can be induced by interferon (ifn). the expression of oasl can further stimulate the production of ifn, thereby forming a positive feedback ( ) . ifn-γ has a neuroprotective effect, and significantly promotes secretion of il- in astrocytes ( ) . inflammatory cytokines (tnf-α and il- ) are important molecules, mediating enhancement of hyperalgesia via increasing glutamic acid-induced excitatory current, thereby promoting the development of pain ( ) . excitatory synaptic transmission is mainly regulated by ampa and nmda receptors. inflammatory factors enhance their degree of excitation, promote the release of excitatory mediators, such as glutamic acid and substance p, and participate in the regulation of various pain signaling pathways ( , ) . therefore, tnf-α and il- play a vital role in np. in the present study it was also revealed that ccl was markedly downregulated. ccl , also known as monocyte chemotactic protein- (mcp- ), can activate monocytes in the inflammatory state, induce leukocyte migration reaction, regulate t-cell function, and participate in inflammation and immune response ( ) . recently, it has been revealed that ccl is highly expressed in drg neurons and spinal dorsal horn surface neurons during peripheral nerve injury ( ) . ccl is released in an activity-dependent manner from the synaptic vesicles in the central nervous system into the spinal cord ( , ) . the ccl expression in the spinal cord is not limited to neurons. after spinal nerve ligation, astrocytes can also upregulate ccl . additionally, the in vitro cultured astrocytes exhibited an upregulation of ccl by over -fold, which was rapidly released in a jnk-dependent manner ( ) . ccl secreted by astrocytes acts on ccr in the dorsal horn neurons. ccl can strengthen the release of glutamic acid from the injured neuronal presynaptic membrane and promote the function of glutamic acid receptors in the postsynaptic membrane. this inhibits gaba-induced inhibitory synaptic transmission, while causing rapid phosphorylation of eukaryotic protein kinase (epk) and activation of nmda receptors. as a result, central sensitization is induced in a direct, rapid and non-transcriptional manner ( ) . another study shows that mcp- and its receptor ccr in primary sensory neurons are involved in maintaining paclitaxel induced peripheral neuropathy ( ) . therefore, overexpression or depletion of ccl and ccr has a direct influence on np. the regulatory role of stau overexpression on rase of hela cells was further studied. a total of significantly differential rases were identified, which verified our speculation that stau can globally regulate the as events in the genome in hela cells. pathways in which the differential rasgs were enriched have been previously aforementioned. plekhg and arhgef are both rho guanine nucleotide exchange factors and activators of rho gtpases. a variety of biological effects can be regulated by rho gtpases, such as transmembrane transport, cell migration, adhesion, and proliferation ( ) . moreover, rho gtpases can participate in the immune response by regulating the rho/rock signaling pathway ( , ) . another study demonstrated that plekhg / flj can regulate the morphology of neuro- a cells, thereby playing a significant role in nerve growth and cell proliferation ( ) . arhgef is involved in the regulation of axonal growth by regulating the activity of rhoa ( ) . ralgds is one of the ras effectors and functions as a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for the small g-protein, ral, which regulates membrane trafficking and cytoskeletal remodeling ( ) . notably, ralgds has been revealed to promote neuronal differentiation ( ) and exert a key regulatory effect on neuronal plasticity and memory formation ( ) . ralgds has also been revealed to mediate cytoskeletal remodeling ( ) , promote cell proliferation ( ) , and facilitate oncogenic transformation ( ) . rondaij et al revealed that ralgds overexpression was conducive to promote the exocytosis of endothelial weibel-palade bodies (wpbs) ( ) . the proteins encoded by the fgfr and fgfr genes are all members of the fibroblast growth factor receptor (fgfr) family ( ) . they trigger the downstream cascade by binding to fgfrs, thereby playing a substantial role in promoting embryonic growth and development ( ) , development of the nervous system ( ) , and regulating the metabolism ( ) . other biological functions of the proteins are manifested in promoting injury repair ( ) , bone formation ( ) , and vascular and neural regeneration ( , ) . fgfr overexpression has also been revealed to be associated with tumor and bone diseases, as well as arthritis ( ) ( ) ( ) . all of the aforementioned genes were subjected to as analysis, and the results were validated by qpcr, which indicated consistency with rna-seq except for the qpcr result for the pdgfb gene that was inconsistent with that of rna-seq. it is already known that pdgfb plays a significant role in the growth and proliferation of vessels and nerves ( ) . herein, we further discussed the as events induced by pdgfb and the resultant alterations in gene functions as an example. platelet-derived growth factor (pdgf) is an important factor promoting cell growth. it consists of five homotypic or heterotypic dimerized ligands (pdgf-aa, -ab, -bb, -cc, -cd), which are formed by polypeptide chains (pdgf-a, pdgf-b, pdgf-c, pdgf-d), encoded by four different genes, via the disulfide bonds ( ) . both of its receptors pdgfr-α and pdgfr-β belong to the receptor tyrosine kinase (rtk) family ( ) . it has been demonstrated that pdgf can stimulate the division growth of fibroblasts ( ) , neuroglial cells ( ) and smooth muscle cells ( ) . in particular, pdgf-bb has been revealed to promote neuronal development and differentiation ( ) , and to play a neurotrophic role as well ( , ) . a number of scholars have demonstrated that pdgf-bb can regulate neuronal proliferation and differentiation by activating the pi k/akt and erk pathways ( ) , restore the proliferation and differentiation of damaged neural precursor cells, and reverse neuronal excitotoxicity. pdgfb has been demonstrated to play an important role in neuropathic pain ( , ) , and in the present study it was confirmed that staui regulated the alternative splicing of genes enriched in the 'nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway' including pdgfb, and thus is also associated with neuropathic pain. the present study confirmed that the pdgfb gene undergoes a ss events. the normal secretion of pdgf-b protein into the extracellular domain to bind to the pdgfr receptor-α and -β subunits and fulfill the biological effect is consequently affected. the qpcr results were consistent with our theory that stau promotes the retention of the pdgfb signal peptide, which mediates the neuroprotective mechanism and relieves neuropathic pain. stau promotes the retention of pdgfb signal peptide, which mediates the neuroprotective mechanism and relieves the neuropathic pain. we surmised that an even more complex regulatory mechanism is herein involved, while further studies should be conducted to confirm our findings. the present study revealed that overexpression of stau had a regulatory effect on gene splicing and transcription in hela cells. stau could positively regulate the transcription of genes related to inflammation and immune response. this regulatory effect also influenced the expression levels of pro-inflammatory factors and chemotactic factors. moreover, as of genes enriched in the 'nerve growth factor receptor signaling pathway' as well as 'retrograde transport, endosome to golgi', and 'muscle cell differentiation' was regulated by stau . a recent study demonstrated that several rna binding factors involved in local translation may play a crucial role in pain, including stau , a double-stranded dsrna binding protein, which is expressed in peripheral sensory neurons and may play a role in axonal mrna transport ( ) . therefore, it can be concluded that stau may be a novel potential therapeutic target for np. rna-binding proteins in mendelian disease rna-binding proteins: modular design for efficient function defining the rgg/rg motif a brave new world of rna-binding proteins a genome-wide approach identifies distinct but overlapping subsets of cellular mrnas associated with staufen -and staufen -containing ribonucleoprotein complexes staufen regulates multiple alternative splicing events either positively or negatively in dm indicating its role as a disease modifier lncrnas transactivate stau -mediated mrna decay by duplexing with 'utrs via alu elements control of somatic tissue differentiation by the long non-coding rna tincr kretz m: tincr, staufen , and cellular differentiation stau binding ' utr iralus complements nuclear retention to protect cells from pkr-mediated translational shutdown the ejc factor eif aiii modulates synaptic strength and neuronal protein expression lin b and mir- - p regulate neuronal differentiation by modulating staufen expression human staufen protein interacts with influenza virus ribonucleoproteins and is required for efficient virus multiplication impairment of the staufen -ns interaction reduces influenza viral replication hiv- requires staufen to dissociate stress granules and to produce infectious viral particles direct conversion of fibroblasts to neurons by reprogramming ptb-regulated microrna circuits nerve growth factor activation of nuclear factor kappab through its p receptor is an anti-apoptotic signal in rn schwannoma cells sortilin is essential for prongf-induced neuronal cell death neurotrophin dependence mediated by p ntr: contrast between rescue by bdnf and ngf neurotrophins in myelination: a new role for a puzzling receptor hot fusion: an efficient method to clone multiple dna fragments as well as inverted repeats without ligase dna sequencing-spanning the generations analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative pcr and the (-delta delta c(t)) method tophat : accurate alignment of transcriptomes in the presence of insertions, deletions and gene fusions transcript assembly and quantification by rna-seq reveals unannotated transcripts and isoform switching during cell differentiation edger: a bioconductor package for differential expression analysis of digital gene expression data transcriptome analysis reveals the complexity of alternative splicing regulation in the fungus verticillium dahliae celf preferentially binds to exon-intron boundary and regulates alternative splicing in hela cells kobas . : a web server for annotation and identification of enriched pathways and diseases alta-cyclic: a self-optimizing base caller for next-generation sequencing mrna binding protein staufen -dependent regulation of pyramidal cell spine morphology via nmda receptor-mediated synaptic plasticity staufen regulation of protein synthesis-dependent long-term potentiation and synaptic function in hippocampal pyramidal cells a loss of function allele for murine staufen leads to impairment of dendritic staufen -rnp delivery and dendritic spine morphogenesis rna-seq: a revolutionary tool for transcriptomics fragseq: transcriptome-wide rna structure probing using high-throughput sequencing rearrangements of the raf kinase pathway in prostate cancer, gastric cancer and melanoma cardiolipin externalization to the outer mitochondrial membrane acts as an elimination signal for mitophagy in neuronal cells interferon-induced ifit /isg protects mice from lethal vsv neuropathogenesis the interferon stimulated gene promotes apoptosis ifit potentiates anti-viral response through enhancing innate immune signaling pathways ifit is an effector protein of type i ifn-mediated amplification of lipopolysaccharide (lps)-induced tnf-α secretion and lps-induced endotoxin shock forced ifit- expression represses lps induced tnf-alpha expression at posttranscriptional levels overexpression of ifn-induced protein with tetratricopeptide repeats (ifit ) in pancreatic cancer: cellular 'pseudoinflammation' contributing to an aggressive phenotype ifn-induced tpr protein ifit potentiates antiviral signaling by bridging mavs and tbk differential regulation of the oasl and oas genes in response to viral infections oasl-a new player in controlling antiviral innate immunity neuroprotection by ifn-ү via astrocyte-secreted il- in acute neuroinflammation neuroinflammation and the generation of neuropathic pain cytokine mechanisms of central sensitization: distinct and overlapping role of interleukin- beta, interleukin- , and tumor necrosis factor-alpha in regulating synaptic and neuronal activity in the superficial spinal cord tnf-alpha and neuropathic pain-a review monocyte chemoattractant protein- (mcp- ): an overview spinal ccl pronociceptive action is no longer effective in ccr receptor antagonist-treated rats ccl is a key mediator of microglia activation in neuropathic pain states jnk-induced mcp- production in spinal cord astrocytes contributes to central sensitization and neuropathic pain role of the cx cr /p mapk pathway in spinal microglia for the development of neuropathic pain following nerve injury-induced cleavage of fractalkine induction of monocyte chemoattractant protein- (mcp- ) and its receptor ccr in primary sensory neurons contributes to paclitaxel-induced peripheral neuropathy rho gtpases: masters of t lymphocyte migration and activation threonine phosphorylation of flj /plekhg , a rho family-specific guanine nucleotide exchange factor, by epidermal growth factor receptor signaling regulates cell morphology of neuro- a cells contribution of small gtpase rho and its target protein rock in a murine model of lung fibrosis four-and-a-half lim domains (fhl ) protein interacts with the rho guanine nucleotide exchange factor plekhg /flj and regulates cell morphogenesis hspb silences translation of pdz-rhogef by enhancing mir- a and mir- expression to promote neurite extension activated ras interacts with the ral guanine nucleotide dissociation stimulator the structural basis of the activation of ras by sos rab gtpases implicated in inherited and acquired disorders beta-arrestins regulate a ral-gds ral effector pathway that mediates cytoskeletal reorganization ralgds couples growth factor signaling to akt activation activation of the ralgef/ral pathway promotes prostate cancer metastasis to bone guanine exchange factor ralgds mediates exocytosis of weibel-palade bodies from endothelial cells fibroblast growth factor- and fibroblast growth factor receptors - : expression and peptide localization in human decidua and placenta diverse fgf receptor signaling controls astrocyte specification and proliferation exploring mechanisms of fgf signalling through the lens of structural biology fibroblast growth factor receptor tyrosine kinases: molecular analysis and signal transduction growth factor regulation of fracture repair the role of basic fibroblast growth factor in peripheral nerve regeneration fgfr expression by astrocytes and their precursors: evidence that astrocytes and oligodendrocytes originate in distinct neuroepithelial domains the fgf family: biology, pathophysiology and therapy inhibition of tumor angiogenesis and growth by a small-molecule multi-fgf receptor blocker with allosteric properties basic fibroblast growth factor binding and processing by human glioma cells signal transduction mediated by the ras/raf/mek/erk pathway from cytokine receptors to transcription factors: potential targeting for therapeutic intervention the pdgf family: four gene products form five dimeric isoforms structural and functional specificities of pdgf-c and pdgf-d, the novel members of the platelet-derived growth factors family platelets as a source of fibroblast growth-promoting activity a platelet factor stimulating human normal glial cells a platelet-dependent serum factor that stimulates the proliferation of arterial smooth muscle cells in vitro a pdgf-regulated immediate early gene response initiates neuronal differentiation in ventricular zone progenitor cells protective effect of platelet-derived growth factor against -hydroxydopamine-induced lesion of rat dopaminergic neurons in culture neurotrophic activity of platelet-derived growth factor (pdgf): rat neuronal cells possess functional pdgf beta-type receptors and respond to pdgf immature neurons from cns stem cells proliferate in response to platelet-derived growth factor platelet-derived growth factor protects neurons against gp -mediated toxicity platelet-derived growth factor-bb restores human immunodeficiency virus tat-cocaine-mediated impairment of neurogenesis: role of trpc channels this work is licensed under a creative commons attribution-noncommercial we deeply thank dr wen chen for his significant technical and scientific comments. the present study was financially supported by the natural science foundation of hubei province, china (grant no. cdc ). this study was partially supported by ablife (experimental project no. abl- ). the data discussed in this publication are available under geo series accession number gse . yz performed the experiments and data analysis and was the main author of the manuscript. zh participated in the experimental design, carried out bioinformatics analysis, and partly contributed to the writing of the manuscript. jw and fd conducted the cell experiments and interpretation of the data. fl and yx designed the project, contributed to the analysis and interpretation of the data, and revision of the manuscript. all the authors read and approved the submitted final version of the manuscript. not applicable. not applicable. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. key: cord- -mvoq vln authors: nan title: autorenregister date: - - journal: med genet doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: mvoq vln nan complex mechanisms of dosage compensation regulate the mammalian x chromosome due to the presence of one copy in males (xy) and two in females (xx). x inactivation silences one x chromosome in females in early development, leading to specific epigenetic and structural changes. the inactive x chromosome becomes condensed and forms a bipartite structure within the nucleus, as we have shown by chromatin conformation analyses. specific long non-coding rnas are implicated in the formation of this unique structure. the inactive x chromosome is preferentially located near the lamina or the nucleolus. genes that escape x inactivation tend to be located at the periphery of the condensed inactive x chromosome. such genes are more highly expressed in females, and thus associated with sex-specific differences manifested even in early development. we have found that significant sex bias in gene expression are associated with escape from x inactivation in human tissues from normal males and females, and in tissues from individuals with sex chromosome aneuploidy, including turner or klinefelter individuals. institute for genomic medicine, columbia university medical center, new york, usa a central challenge in human disease genetics is the identification of pathogenic mutations. one key approach to distinguishing benign and pathogenic mutations is to use population genetic data to identify regions of the human genome under purifying selection. here i describe how the residual variation intolerance scoring framework has been applied to identifying pathogenic mutations in and outside protein encoding regions of the genome. next i report how these are related approaches are being used to identify pathogenic mutations in large-scale scale studies in epilepsy and other neurodevelopmental diseases. finally, i discuss how the identification of genetic causes of disease can inform treatment choices. scents indicate things, make promises, attract attention and stimulate imagination, feed anxieties and hopes: they are the salt in the atmospheric soup. we regard seeing and hearing as more important sensory functions, because they contribute more to conscious, cognitive processes of perception -but at moments of the greatest enjoyment we close our eyes and taste the scent, smell the taste. before the spirit and beauty of a person can fascinate us, our nose must become infatuated. the olfactory system in the nose acts as a window, monitoring environmental chemical information and convert chemical stimuli in electrical nerve impulses which are conducted along the olfactory sensory neuron to their glomerular target in the brain. olfactory receptors (ors) activation shows the distinguished (camp-based) transduction pathway for odorant perception. in buck and axel discovered the olfactory gene family, the largest gene family in the human genome, and postulated an exclusive expression in the olfactory epithelium. however, recent whole genome sequencing data from our and other labs show that ors have been found in every tissue of human body which was analyzed by next generation sequencing. the importance of such ectopic expression of ors is raised since the physiological function of some of ors was characterized. when identifying additional expression profiles and functions of or in non-olfactory tissue, there are limitations posed by the deorphanization of ors concerning the activated ligands and by the small number of antibodies available. in contrast to the olfactory sensory neurons which are believed to express all functional or genes (only one or type per cell), cells in non-olfactory tissues tend to express more than one individual or gene per cell. in addition, some of the signaling pathways in non-olfactory tissues seem to involve completely different components in comparison to the olfactory neurons. what is the functional role of these ectopically expressed olfactory receptors? evidences rapidly accumulate that ors participate in important cellular processes outside its primary sensorial organ where they function in odor detection and discrimination. in our lab the functional expression of the first was demonstrated in spermatozoa ( ) . in the meantime we could show the existence and function of ors in the cardiovascular system (heart, blood cells), the gastrointestinal system (small intestine, liver, pancreas), the genito-urinary system (kidney, testis, spermatozoa, prostate), the respiratory system (lung, smooth muscle cells), the skin (keratinocytes, melanocytes) and sensory organs (retina). interestingly we found a broad spectrum of important functions like cell-cell communication and recognition, tissue injury, repair and regeneration, cancer growth, progression and metastasis, nutrient sensing and muscle contraction. nevertheless the functional importance of ectopic ors is still not sufficiently understood. studies seeking to determine the function of ectopic ors are still in its infancy and require further intensive exploration. however, the potential of ors to serve a target for a wide range of clinical approaches is indeed given. this hold promises that the knowledge gained by future investigations would lead to deepen our understanding of or function in health and disease and may provide the basis for the development of applications in diagnosis and therapies in near future. enzyme replacement therapies have been developed over the last years for several of the lysosomal storage disorders (lsd's). the success of enzyme replacement therapy for gaucher disease paved the way for the development of similar treatments for the mucopolysaccharidoses, fabry and pompe disease and lately also for neuronopathic lysosomal storage disorders by intrathecal or intracerebral injections. in addition, small molecule approaches have been developed including substrate reduction therapies and chaperones, which can be used orally. while in gaucher disease enzyme as well as substrate reduction therapy results in reversibility of disease manifestations, with decreases in hepatosplenomegaly, normalization of blood counts and prevention of skeletal disease, this is unfortunately not the case for all patients affected with other lysosomal storage disorders. an important concept is the "window of opportunity for treatment" which is different for these disorders. for example, in fabry disease, early fibrosis fects are well defined, neither the specific mechanisms underlying neurological abnormalities nor the role of decreased cholesterol versus sterol precursor accumulation in disease pathogenesis have been clearly delineated. to identify cellular phenotypes and causative signaling pathways, we derived induced pluripotent stem cells (ipscs) from slos and lath subjects to model these diseases in vitro. slos subjects were known carriers of the most common dhcr mutations, including the intronic splice acceptor mutation c. - g>c and the missense mutation p.t m. while all ipscs demonstrated the expected biochemical defects due to dhcr or sc d mutations, cellular assays uncovered a defect in neural stem cell maintenance resulting in accelerated neuronal formation in slos ipscs. further molecular and biochemical analyses demonstrated inhibition of cholesterol-wnt interactions and loss of wnt/β-catenin activity mediated cellular phenotypes. however, this cellular phenotype was exclusive to slos, as lath ipscs did not exhibit a neural progenitor defect or inhibition of wnt/β-catenin activity. while this work demonstrates the utility of ipscs for modeling rare diseases and identifies signaling deficits potentially underlying slos phenotypes, questions remain regarding cellular and functional consequences, the specificity of lipid-wnt interactions, and the role of other disrupted signaling pathways in mediating developmental and functional deficits in these diseases. unpublished work using a variety of approaches will be discussed comparing the specific effects of cholesterol synthesis mutations on cell fate, functional activity, and lipid modulated signaling pathways to more precisely define the consequences of cholesterol synthesis defects and identify potential targets for patient therapy. induced pluripotent stem cell (ipsc) technology has become one of the major approaches for disease modeling since its first report in . the ability to reprogram cells from somatic into embryonic stem cell-like state and to differentiate them into desired cell types in the culture dish has allowed scientists to carry out the study of several diseases in cells such as neurons which, in the past, could not be isolated from living subjects. williams syndrome (ws), a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder where - genes are hemizygously deleted, is among those. despite cardiovascular abnormalities, its unique neurological phenotypes i. e. hypersociability is of our interest. for several decades, research on different neurological aspects of ws has been conducted in a variety of models such as patient-derived cell lines (lymphoblastoid cells and fibroblasts), post mortem tissue, and mouse models. however, the lack of physiologically relevant cell types such as neural progenitor cells (npcs) and neurons has left a critical gap in our knowledge the disease's cellular and molecular phenotypes. to fill this gap, we took the advantage of the reprogramming technology to capture the genomes of ws subjects in ipscs, which could be then differentiated into npcs and neurons, enabling evaluation of whether the captured genome with hemizygous deletion of those genes leads to relevant neuronal cellular phenotypes. dental pulp cells-derived ipscs of classical ws, rare ws and typical developing (td) subjects were neurally induced via dual-smad inhibition in order to generate npcs and neurons. we discovered that classical ws npcs exhibited increased apoptosis, and, therefore, doubling time, compared to td neurons. this could possibly contribute to the reduction in cortical surface area in classical ws individuals as assessed by magnetic resonance imaging. surprisingly, we found that rare ws npcs behaved similarly to td npcs rather than to classical ws npcs in terms of apoptosis. we confirmed that frizzled , which is deleted in the classical ws but not in our rare ws genome, is responsible for such phenotype via gain-and loss-of-function assays. moreover, classical ws neurons in general showed increased frequency of activity-dependent calcium transient compared to td neurons. finally, classical ws neurons acid alpha-oxidation, and ( .) glyoxylate detoxification. with respect to peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation peroxisomes catalyze the chain-shortening of certain fatty acids including very-long-chain fatty acids, but requires the active help of mitochondria to catalyze the degradation of acetyl-coa and the reoxidation of nadh as produced in peroxisomes. furthermore, with respect to ether phospholipid biosynthesis peroxisomes heavily rely on the endoplasmic reticulum to complete formation of ether phospholipids whereas fatty acid alpha-oxidation also requires the functional interplay between peroxisomes and mitochondria and the same is true for glyoxylate detoxification. recent evidence holds that the interaction between peroxisomes and the different subcellular organelles, including mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum, is mediated by specific tethering protein complexes which bring organelles physically together thereby allowing metabolism to proceed smoothly. the importance of peroxisomes in metabolism is stressed by the existence of a large group of single peroxisomal enzyme deficiencies of which x-linked adrenoleukodystrophy is best known. our current state of knowledge with respect to the role of peroxisomes in metabolism and the peroxisomal enzyme deficiencies will be presented at the meeting. huntington's disease: rna-sequencing, small rna-sequencing, chip-sequencing and gwas data. department of neurology, boston university school of medicine, boston, ma , usa huntington's disease (hd) is a dominantly transmitted neurodegenerative disease of midlife onset. recently several different unbiased genome wide studies in hd have been performed. these analyses point to a variety of pathological pathways that are associated with important features of the disease, including age at onset, cag repeat size, and the extent of neuropathological involvement. genome wide association studies (gwas) have identified several regions of the genome that contain genes that are associated with the age at onset for hd. the strongest of these is located at q . for rs for which a very rare allele (maf = . %) is associated with an approximate -year younger age at onset for carriers of the minor allele. the same locus contains an independent effect for rs where a more common minor allele (maf = . %) is associated with a . year older age at onset for carriers of this allele. these single nucleotide polymorphisms are in the region of fan , mtmr and several other genes; some of which are not expressed in brain and are not likely candidates for hd modification. eqtl analysis has not resolved which gene may be implicated. other gwas implicated loci include rs at q . and rs at p . . we have sought to combine the information derived from multiple platforms to gain additional insight into the pathways that may be implicated in hd pathogenesis. in this strategy, we have performed mrna-sequencing, small rna-sequencing and chip-sequencing using the h k me mark for active transcription and the repressive mark h k me in human hd brain samples with gwas genotyping. while the striatum is most involved in hd, the extent of neurodegeneration in post-mortem tissue precludes meaningful comparison between disease and control samples, and consequently we studied prefrontal cortex (ba ). several common pathways were seen across these three platforms. mrna-sequencing and mirna-sequencing data identified altered transcriptional profiles implicating developmental pathways involving the hox genes and related homeo-box domain genes (e. g. pitx , pou f , etc.) . notably, micrornas located in hox gene clusters were among those most increased and levels of these correlate with pathological involvement in the striatum. these genes, associated with early embryonic development, are commonly silent in normal adult brain, and were among the most differentially expressed genes in hd brain. these prominent statistical effects are driven by the near total absence of expression in normal brain. pathways implicated in mrna-seq and chip-seq studies, included immune function and regulation of gene expression. these associations were very strong, indicating a large immune reactive response in the hd in the heart is related to unresponsive disease and unfortunately fibrosis may occur already in an early stage, sometimes even without prior hypertrophy. whether earlier intervention will be beneficial is largely unknown. and then: what is early? many unresolved questions exist at this stage, including the following: -what is the natural history and "point of no return" for the different lsd's? -what is the natural history and "point of no return" for subgroups of patients within one lsd's? -what are the long term complications: treatments change the phenotype rather than cure the disease -what is the influence of antibody generation on clinical effectiveness? -how do we manage the extreme costs of these products, especially in light of the many unsolved issues with respect to effectiveness? surprisingly, so far healthcare professionals, governments and industry have failed to systematically address these issues, resulting in insufficient knowledge for potentially lifesaving treatments. early conditional access, followed by a strict, transparent, independent, collaborative evaluation in addition to fair pricing should be explored. after the recent explosion in sequencing throughput, variant interpretation has quickly become the bottleneck in our effort to usher in the era of genomic medicine. while homozygosity for apparently pathogenic variants in the context of disease states is a well-established phenomenon, homozygosity can uncover many medically relevant aspects of the human variome that are difficult to study otherwise. for example, seemingly benign variants may prove pathogenic in the homozygous state. this includes variants with benign prediction using in silico tools as well as variants in dominant genes with no phenotype in carriers because they represent bona fide recessive inheritance. variants that are associated with one phenotype in compound heterozygous states may express themselves quite differently phenotypically when homozygous. furthermore, previously reported pathogenic variants can be challenged when their presence in homozygosity is associated with no abnormal phenotype, thus improving the specificity of the annotation of the morbid genome. homozygosity for lof variants is a special scenario that allows us to study naturally occurring human "knockouts", a powerful tool to study the physiological context of genes in humans. finally, homozygosity in the context of autozygosity provides a robust mapping tool that can greatly aid in the identification of relevant variants, especially those that exert their pathogenic effect in ways that defy detection by our usual algorithms. by expanding the spectrum of phenotypes that are studied, one can unlock the full potential of homozygosity to understand the medical relevance of the human variome in it its full range from embryonic lethal to essentially benign. helmholtz zentrum münchen gmbh, institut für experimentelle genetik, ingolstädter landstr. , neuherberg, germany the inheritance of epigenetic information in mammals across generations has been controversial. some reports provided initial evidence that a paternal high fat diet may propagate obesity and glucose intolerance in offspring, but potential confounders such as molecular factors present in seminal fluid, paternal-induced alterations in maternal care or transmission of microbiomes were not ruled out in these studies. we have shown in mice that a parental high fat diet (hfd) renders offspring derived via in vitro fertilization (f ) more susceptible to develop excessive overweight and type diabetes (t d) in a gender and parent-of-origin specific mode. female, but not male, offspring from obese parents became significantly more obese during a hfd challenge than female offspring from lean parents. body weight trajectories and distribution patterns of individual body weights in female offspring from one obese and one lean parent demonstrate that paternal and maternal germline propagate obesity in a roughly equitable and additive fashion, but likely different mode of action. in contrast, a more deteriorated state of hfd-induced insulin resistance was observed in both f genders, albeit predominantly inherited via the maternal germline. towards the identification of epigenetic information in sperm and oocyte from hfd and low fat diet fed parents, we are currently analyzing their transcriptome and methylome signatures. the status of this analysis will be presented. we report for the first time epigenetic inheritance of an acquired metabolic disorder via mammalian oocytes and sperms excluding confounding factors. such an epigenetic mode of inheritance may contribute to the observed pandemic increase in obesity and t d prevalence rates, especially in an environment where nutrition is abundant. brain which may be a major influence contributing to neurodegeneration. in many instances enrichment of h k me at transcription start sites was not accompanied by a corresponding increase in expression. the apparent inconsistency suggests that common regulatory mechanisms in the hd brain are disrupted and this may contribute to a complex interplay of factors contributing to the neurodegenerative process. often findings in human hd brain samples conflicted with those reported in hd transgenic mouse models, suggesting that one may wish to be cautious in interpreting the significance of either type of study in isolation. the causal pathogesis of huntington disease, new therapeutic approaches r. laufer senior vp discovery and product development global r&d, teva r&d product development mgmt. hatrufa st, netanya, israel huntington disease (hd) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease characterized by progressive loss of voluntary motor control, psychiatric disturbance, cognitive decline and death - years after motor onset. hd is uniquely caused by a polyglutamine encoding cag expansion in the huntingtin gene (htt), which allows for identification of pre-manifest mutation carriers as much as decades before onset and should facilitate development of disease modifying therapies. yet over years after identification of the hd mutation, available therapies offer only symptomatic relief and are fraught with side effects. development of safe small molecule therapies for hd has been hindered by difficulties identifying and validating tractable drug targets within the disorder's complex pathogenesis. teva pharmaceuticals is developing potential novel treatments based on a mechanistic understanding of disease pathways common to neurodegenerative diseases. the progress of these studies will be reviewed. rare complete gene knockouts in adult humans p. sulem statistics department, decode genetics, sturlugata , reykjavik, iceland loss-of-function mutations cause many mendelian diseases. here have create a catalog of autosomal genes that are completely knocked out in humans by rare loss-of-function mutations. we sequenced the whole genomes of over , icelanders and imputed the sequence variants identified in this set into a total of chip-genotyped and phased icelanders. of the genotyped icelanders, around % are homozygotes or compound heterozygotes for loss-of-function mutations with a minor allele frequency (maf) below % in close to genes (complete knockouts). genes that are highly expressed in the brain are less often completely knocked out than other genes. homozygous loss-of-function offspring of two heterozygous parents occurred less frequently than expected (deficit of per , transmissions for variants with maf < %, % confidence interval (ci) = - ). we are currently systematically phenotyping such human complete knock out. this phenotyping lasts hours and attempts to cover most of the observable diversity in a non-invasive and cost efficient manner. i will demonstrate how using systematic phenotyping can advance the knowledge on individual gene knockout. we use results from in-house transcriptomics, existing animal models and complementary approaches to assess the observation in human. we will also discuss the scrutiny in other population in order to detect such complete knock-out. we will exemplify the impact of founder population and consanguinity in such an odissey. early onset and severe obesity can be inherited via loss of function mutations within the melanocortin pathway of hypothalamic body weight regulation. the most prominent player in this signalling pathway is the fat cell hormone leptin. leptin gene mutations were the first to be linked to monogenic early onset obesity. after binding of leptin to leptin receptors in the arcuate nucleus of the hypothalamus the neuropeptide msh is processed from the precursor pomc and acts as a ligand at the mc receptor. mutations in the leptin receptor gene, the pomc gene and the mc receptor gene were subsequently diagnosed in further patients with extreme early onset obesity. while leptin mutation patients can be treated with recombinant leptin -as shown already in the late s -all other monogenic obesity forms are leptin resistants, and additional leptin failed to decrease body weight. only recently pomc gene deficient patients were successfully treated with the msh-analogue setmelanotide (kühnen et al. ) . common severe obesity is defined by the lack of disease causing monogenic defects. a plethora of gwas identified a large number of snps in common obesity associated with the individual bmi but only to a low amount of not more then %. however, almost all these common obese patients are characterized by high leptin levels suggesting sufficient generation of leptin in the increased fat tissue and a state of leptin resistance. several new data concerning the contribution of epigenetic and genetic variants in the pomc gene locus argue for a role of the melanocortin pathway also in common obesity and imply, therefore, a potentially new treatment option also in common obesity based on msh-analogues. genome-wide association studies have highlighted the role of genetic associations with susceptibility to common inflammatory diseases, highlighting potential new insights into disease pathogenesis and opportunities for therapy. however understanding the functional basis of these associations and delivering translational utility remains a significant challenge to the field. non-coding regulatory genetic variants are most commonly implicated in such studies. recent work highlights how such variants are also major drivers of diversity in the immune response transcriptome. this talk will discuss approaches we are taking to try and establish functional links between immune phenotype-associated regulatory genomic and epigenomic variation, and specific modulated genes and pathways. i will describe insights from the application of expression quantitative trait (eqtl) mapping to define genomic modulators of the global transcriptomic response in different primary immune cell populations and to specific innate immune stimuli in health and disease. this work highlights the extent of local and distant context-specific eqtl, enabling resolution of immunoregulatory variants and the identification of specific modulated genes involving disease associated loci. examples will be described showing how mapping trans-regulatory loci can be a powerful approach for discovery and dissection of gene networks informative for disease. i will also show how we have applied analysis of the genetics of gene expression in patients with sepsis admitted to intensive care, revealing new insights into disease pathogenesis. further progress in this area will require characterisation of associated variants in the context-specific disease relevant epigenomic landscape in which they may act, requiring careful consideration of relevant immune cell types and environmental modulators to study, to-abstracts aktuellen stellungnahme der deutschen forschungsgemeinschaft sollen humane genomsequenzierungen die möglichkeit der rückmeldung von analyseergebnissen enthalten. als orientierung für einen verantwortungsvollen umgang mit dieser frage wird auf die projektgruppe eurat verwiesen. dennoch bleibt das problem der einordnung mitteilungswürdiger ergebnisse aus forscher-und probandensicht und der bereitstellung der für aufklärungs-und rückmeldungsalgorithmen erforderlichen ressourcen. darüber hinaus ist bis heute nicht geklärt, welche kommunikativen prozesse eine ausreichende basis für ein informiertes einverständnis darstellen. diese und weitere fragen möchten wir mit frau prof. dr. med. dr. phil. eva winkler (nationales centrum für tumorerkrankungen, heidelberg), herrn dr. phil. martin langanke (theologische fakultät, universität greifswald) und herrn pd dr. phil. peter burgard (universitätskinderklinik heidelberg) kontrovers diskutieren. die organisatoren werden in die fragestellung einführen, anschließend sind impulsreferate (ca. min) der referenten vorgesehen, bevor eine debatte mit dem publikum angeregt wird. fangerau, f. söhner (düsseldorf) in den er jahren erlebte die humangenetik wie eine reihe anderer medizinischer disziplinen auch eine erhebliche institutionelle ausweitung. in den er und er jahren wurde beispielsweise an den universitäten der brd das gros der humangenetischen lehrstühle, in den ausgehenden er und er jahren auch in der ddr, eingerichtet. ging vom symposium "genetik und gesellschaft" im rahmen des marburger "forum philippinum" die initiative aus, in der ganzen bundesrepublik genetische beratungsstellen zu gründen und damit die genetische forschung (wieder) medizinisch nutzbar zu machen. in dieser phase der etablierung der humangenetik auf akademischer und praktischer ebene setzt das geplante zeitzeugenprojekt ein. es will die entwicklung der humangenetik in ihrem selbstverständnis als quer-und als längsschnittfach (pfadenhauer : ) im deutschsprachigen raum ab den er jahren mit hilfe von expertengesprächen dokumentieren und analysieren. im forschungsprojekt sollen zwei komplexe von fragestellungen bearbeitet werden: ein wissenschaftshistorischer, in dem die entwicklung und anwendung von diagnostischen und therapeutischen techniken im mittelpunkt steht, und ein sozialhistorischer, in dem es um die etablierung und den ausbau der institutionen der humangenetik sowie um den verlauf der das fach betreffenden gesellschaftlichen debatten geht. neben der gründung von instituten und der fachgesellschaft sowie der normierung der ausbildung für ärztliche und naturwissenschaftlich ausgebildete humangenetiker sollen die funktion der historischen reflexion und bearbeitung der facheigenen nationalsozialistischen vergangenheit in den er jahren für die etablierung des fachs und der schwierige institutionelle trennungsprozess von der anthropologie mit ihren wirkungen auf das selbst-und fremdbild der humangenetik analysiert werden (weingart, kroll, bayertz ) . zusätzlich zur entwicklung in der brd sollen dabei auch die entwicklung des fachs in der ddr und mögliche deutsch-deutsche kooperationen zur sprache kommen (in jena befand sich z. b. in den er jahren das zentrale referenz-institut für genetische beratung in der ddr (vogel : ) . das projekt kann sich auf zahlreiche arbeiten zur geschichte der deutschen humangenetik stützen (vgl. kröner , cottebrune cottebrune , weingart ; bennike dysmorphism carrying a pathogenic variant in the ebf gene detected by whole-exome sequencing. five missense, two nonsense, one -bp duplication, and one splice-site variant in ebf were found; the mutation occurred de novo in eight individuals, and the missense variant c. c>t [p.(arg trp) ] was inherited by two affected siblings from their healthy mother who is a mosaic. ebf belongs to the early b-cell factor family (also known as olf, coe, or o/e) and encodes a transcription factor involved in neuronal differentiation and maturation. structural assessment predicts perturbing effects of the five amino acid substitutions on dna-binding of ebf . transient expression of ebf mutant proteins in hek t cells revealed mislocalization of all but one mutant in the cytoplasm in addition to nuclear localization. by transactivation assays, all ebf mutants showed significantly reduced or no ability to activate transcription of the reporter gene under control of the cdkn a promotor that corresponds well with loose association of ebf mutants with chromatin as demonstrated by in situ subcellular fractionation experiments. finally, rna-seq and chip-seq experiments demonstrate that ebf acts as a transcriptional regulator at cis-regulatory sequences and ebf mutant had reduced function due to partial disruption of the dna-binding domain. these findings demonstrate that ebf -mediated dysregulation of gene expression has profound effects on neuronal development in humans and add ebf to the growing list of genes in which mutations cause syndromic forms of intellectual disability. step, we performed wes in further unelucidated uhs cases and identified homozygous nonsense mutations in tgm (transglutaminase ) and in tchh (trichohyalin), respectively. elucidation of the molecular outcomes of the disease causing mutations by cell culture experiments of padi and tgm and tridimensional protein models demonstrated clear differences in the structural organization and activity of mutant and wild type proteins. by immunofluorescence analysis, we could demonstrate a diffuse homogenous cytoplasmic distribution of the wt padi , whereas in the mutants the proteins were observed to form large aggregates throughout the cytoplasm. by use of human anti-citrullinated protein autoantibodies, we could show a strong labelling in the wt whereas the staining of the mutants was barely above background. in order to demonstrate the importance of padi in hair shaft formation, we generated padi knockout mice. electron microscopy observations revealed morphological alterations in hair coat of padi knockout mice. for tgm , we performed a transglutaminase activity assay. the analysis results revealed that the wt had a significantly higher transglutaminase activity in comparison to the truncated protein. here, we report for the first time the identification of uhs causative mutations located in the three genes padi , tgm and tchh. the two enzymes responsible for posttranslational protein modifications, and their target structural protein, are all involved in hair shaft formation through their sequential interactions. these findings provide valuable information regarding the pathophysiology of uhs and contribute to a better understanding of this protein interaction cascade. this could be of further value for cosmetics and pharmaceutics industries paving the way for development of novel products. deadenylases are best known for degrading the poly(a) tail during mrna decay. the deadenylase family has expanded throughout evolution and, in mammals, consists of mg + -dependent ' end ribonucleases with mostly unknown substrate specificity. pontocerebellar hypoplasia type (pch ) is a unique recessive syndrome characterized by neurodegeneration with ambiguous genitalia (mim% ). we studied human families with pch , uncovering biallelic, loss of function mutations in toe , which encodes an unconventional deadenylase. toe -morphant zebrafish displayed mid-and hind-brain degeneration, modeling pch-like structural defects in vivo. surprisingly, we found toe associated with incompletely processed small nuclear (sn)rnas of the spliceosome, which is responsible for pre-mrna splicing. these pre-snrnas contained ' genome-encoded tails often followed by post-transcriptionally added adenosines. human cells with reduced levels of toe accumulated ' end-extended pre-snr-nas, and immuno-isolated toe complex was sufficient for ' end maturation of snrnas. our findings reveal the cause of a neurodegenerative syndrome linked to snrna maturation and uncover a key factor involved in processing of snrna ' ends. the kidney maintains acid-base homeostasis and electrolyte balance through highly specialized cells. in the distal nephron acid secretion is mediated by type a intercalated cells (a-ics) , which contain v-type at-pase-rich vesicles that fuse with the apical plasma membrane on demand. intracellular bicarbonate generated by luminal h+ secretion is removed by the basolateral anion-exchanger ae . dysfunction of type a intercalated cells results in distal renal tubular acidosis (drta) and human mutations in v-atpase subunits and ae are causative for this condition. for the ae r h mutation a dominant-negative trafficking mechanism was proposed to explain ae -associated dominant drta based on studies in mdck monolayers. to test this hypothesis in vivo and to test potential rescue strategies correcting this mistargeting defect, we have generated a r h knock-in mouse strain, which corresponds to the most common dominant drta mutation in human ae , r h. heterozygous and homozygous r h knock-in mice displayed incomplete drta characterized by compensatory upregulation of the na+/hco -cotransporter, nbcn . as expected for the r h mutation, red blood cell ae -mediated anion-exchange activity and surface polypeptide expression were unchanged. surprisingly, basolateral targeting of the mutant ae in a-ics was preserved in contrast to previous studies in mdck cells. instead, we found ae expression in a-ics strongly reduced in a r h dosage-dependent manner. additional cell culture studies in two widely used immortalized renal cell lines verified that targeting and half-life time of mutant ae protein was indeed preserved. surprisingly, atpase expression was reduced and its plasma membrane targeting upon acid challenge compromised. ultrastructural analysis revealed a loss of apical vesicles in a-ics, while we observed lysosomal inclusions and multilamellar bodies. accumulation of p -and ubiquitin-positive material in a-ics of knock-in mice suggest a defect in the degradative pathway, which may ultimately lead to loss of a-ics. highlighting the expression of ae specifically in a-ics, type b intercalated cells were unaffected. we propose that reduced basolateral anion-exchange activity in a-ics inhibits trafficking and regulation of v-type atpase, compromising luminal h+ secretion and possibly also lysosomal acidification. our findings illustrate the considerable, context-dependent complexity of ae -related kidney disease. b. vona , d. liedtke , k. rak , , r. katana , l. jürgens , pr. senthilan , i. nanda , c. neuner , mah. hofrichter , l. schnapp , j. schröder , u. zechner , s. herms , , , p. hoffmann , t. müller , m. dittrich , , o. bartsch , pm. krawitz , e. klopocki , w. shehata-dieler , mc. göpfert , t. haaf although many genes have already been identified as causing non-syndromic hearing loss (nshl), diagnostic rates of approximately % among hearing impaired patients suggest that many more genes are remaining to be identified. nshl is the most common sensory deficit that has a prevalence between one and two per newborns. furthermore, it demonstrates classic genetic heterogeneity with as many as % of coding genes in the genome anticipated to be involved in non-syndromic forms of deafness. autosomal recessive ( - %) and autosomal dominant ( - %) forms dominate inheritance patterns of deafness; however, in a small fraction of cases, x-linked deafness ( - %) can be observed. whole exome sequencing of a german family with diagnostically unresolved nshl revealed a novel missense variant predicted as pathogenic in the gene ferm and pdz domains containing protein (frmpd ) on chromosome xp . . this gene, also known as preso , was first described as a regulator of dendritic spine morphogenesis. previous screening of pathogenic cnvs in array based comparative genomic hybridization among families with heterogeneous x-linked intellectual disability (xlid) showed duplication of xp . including part of frmpd which implicated the gene in xlid. interestingly, a segregating truncating and a de novo missense mutation in frmpd have associated this gene with xlid, a phenotype not observed in our family. mouse expression studies localize frmpd to spiral ganglion neuron peripheral dendrites of the developing cochlea. in addition, we analyzed frm-pd knockdown and loss-of-function zebrafish mutants for innervation and structural defects in the otic vesicle and lateral line neuromasts. posterior lateral line neuromasts are observed with reduced axonal outgrowth that is also likely reduced in the lateral line nerve. abnormal innervation is also apparent in the otic vesicle. fluorescent neuromast labeling marked a significant reduction of overall otic vesicle and lateral line neuromasts in mutants versus wild type zebrafish. scanning electron microscopy revealed a pronounced absence of kinocilia in posterior lateral line neuromasts of frmpd -/zebrafish. furthermore, adult frmpd mutants show significantly delayed acoustically evoked behavioural responses compared to wild type fish indicating hearing impairment. investigation of transgenic drosophila insertion mutants detected a mild auditory phenotype i. e. a reduction in mechanical amplification gain and associated reduction in antennal fluctuation power. our results associate frmpd with x-linked hearing loss and suggest mutations in this gene are correlated with pleiotropic effects abstracts has also been demonstrated to be an important pathobiochemical feature in rtt. to test whether common deficits in mtor signaling could be responsible for the molecular pathogenesis underlying both syndromes, we generated and studied a novel cdkl knockout (cdkl -/y) mouse model and performed in vitro experiments in human cells. in cdkl -/y knockout mice loss of cdkl is accompanied by reduced phosphorylation levels of critical components of the mtor signaling cascade. these findings point at a regulatory role of cdkl /cdkl on mtor activity and function. to gain further insights into the possible mechanism through which cdkl /pi k interaction could regulate mtor signaling, we used hek-t cells as cellular model. following knock-down of cdkl , the amount of pi k protein was significantly reduced compared to controls. to evaluate the contribution of our findings to pathogenesis, we performed rescue experiments in cdkl knock-down hek-t cells using wild-type and patient-specific mutant cdkl constructs. further experiments are ongoing to clarify the molecular mechanism by which cdkl regulates pi k protein level in the cells. inferring expressed genes by whole-genome sequencing of plasma dna medical university graz, graz, austria, university of technology, graz, austria the analysis of cell-free dna (cfdna) in plasma represents a rapidly advancing field in medicine. cfdna consists predominantly of nucleosome-protected dna shed into the bloodstream by cells undergoing apoptosis. we performed whole-genome sequencing of plasma dna and identified two discrete regions at transcription start sites (tsss) where nucleosome occupancy results in different read depth coverage patterns for expressed and silent genes. by employing machine learning for gene classification, we found that the plasma dna read depth patterns from healthy donors reflected the expression signature of hematopoietic cells. in patients with cancer having metastatic disease, we were able to classify expressed cancer driver genes in regions with somatic copy number gains with high accuracy. we were able to determine the expressed isoform of genes with several tsss, as confirmed by rna-seq analysis of the matching primary tumor. our analyses provide functional information about cells releasing their dna into the circulation. institute of human genetics, fau-erlangen-nürnberg, erlangen, germany, institute of medical genetics, university of zurich, schlieren, switzerland rna-splicing is an important mechanism for eukaryotic gene expression and regulation. defective splicing significantly contributes to monogenic disease in humans. indeed, the mutational space for variants affecting splicing is larger than for coding variants. several computational methods have been developed to predict a variant's effect on splicing but lack predictive value outside the canonical splice sites and do not predict aberrant transcripts. thus the plethora of dna variants generated by recent advances in "next-generation" based sequencing (ngs) can be scored for a possible splicing effect, but a laborious wet-lab based confirmation and characterization is still required. rna-seq is widely used for quantification of gene expression and can be used to detect splicing events, but is limited for this use by the variable and often low read coverage of individual congenital anomalies of the kidneys and urinary tract (cakut) are the most common cause of chronic kidney disease in children. as cakut is a genetically heterogeneous disorder and most cases are genetically unexplained, we aimed to identify new cakut causing genes. using whole-exome sequencing and trio-based de novo analysis, we identified a novel heterozygous de novo frameshift variant in the leukemia inhibitory factor receptor (lifr) gene causing instability of the mrna in a patient presenting with bilateral cakut and requiring kidney transplantation at one year of age. lifr encodes a transmembrane receptor utilized by il- family cytokines, mainly by the leukemia inhibitory factor (lif). mutational analysis of further patients with severe cakut yielded two rare heterozygous lifr missense variants predicted to be pathogenic in three unrelated patients. lifr mutants showed decreased half-life and cell membrane localization resulting in reduced lif-stimulated stat phosphorylation. lifr showed high expression in human fetal kidney and the human ureter, and was also expressed in the developing murine urogenital system. lifr knockout mice displayed urinary tract malformations including hydronephrosis, hydroureter, ureter ectopia, and, consistently, reduced ureteral lumen and muscular hypertrophy, similar to the phenotypes observed in patients carrying lifr variants. additionally, a form of cryptorchidism was detected in all lifr -/mice and the patient carrying the lifr frameshift mutation. altogether, we demonstrate heterozygous novel or rare lifr mutations in . % of cakut patients, and provide evidence that lifr deficiency and deactivating lifr mutations cause highly similar anomalies of the urogenital tract in mice and humans. loss of cdkl associated with deficient mammalian target of rapamycin (mtor) signaling in mice and human cells we and other groups have shown that mutations in the x-linked cyclin-dependent kinase-like (cdkl ) gene cause a severe neurodevelopmental disorder with clinical features including intellectual disability, early-onset intractable seizures and autism, that are closely related to those present in rett syndrome (rtt) patients. rtt is caused by mutations in the x-linked mecp gene. cdkl is a serine/threonine kinase and to date knowledge about its functional roles is scarce. we searched for cdkl interacting proteins by yeast-two hybrid screens. one of the candidates identified in these screens is a subunit of the phosphatidylinositol- , -biphosphate -kinase (pi k). the results obtained in yeast could be confirmed in vitro in mammalian cells and in mouse brain by immunoprecipitation experiments and by co-localization studies. pi k phosphorylates membrane lipids which act as docking sites to recruit targets upstream of mtor and thereby regulate among major cellular processes synaptic plasticity, which is the cellular basis for learning and memory. alteration of mtor signaling gene tubes for stabilizing rna immediately after drawing the samples. the subsequent rt-pcr analysis showed that of the variants located at potential splicing sites indeed affect splicing. thus of these variants could be classified as deleterious (iarc class ), while one chek variant could not be unequivocally classified as the rt-pcr analysis identified only % of the mutant transcript indicating continued usage of the constitutive splice acceptor site. this led to the classification as a probably hypomorphic allele. the variants in cdh and mlh did not affect splicing and were classified as benign (iarc class ). none of the rare synonymous and nonsynonymous exonic variants showed any effect on splicing. in conclusion, this analysis allowed the disambiguation of out vus at potential splice sites into a definite category (either iarc class or ). this work highlights the importance of computational splicing prediction and validation using rt-pcr of peripheral blood rna to assess the pathogenicity of vus. this in turn, allows more accurate genetic counseling and clinical management of affected families. gliomas present the major group of neoplasia in the central nervous system. they typically show invasive growth and high recurrence rate and are currently not curable. idh mutations are detected in nearly % of low grade gliomas and are considered to play a key role in low grade glioma development. while it is known that idh / mutation leads to high-levels of -hydroxyglutarate ( -hg) that functions as an oncometabolite, little is known about the influence of idh / mutations on energy metabolism and metabolic reprogramming in the tumor cells. since patient derived idh mutant cells do not grow in cell culture, previous studies from our group and others used transduced cell lines that overexpress idh . in order to develop in vitro models with reduced side effects, we used crispr/ cas to introduce the idh r h mutation in a patient derived glioblastoma cell line. the edited cells expressed idh r h in western blot and expression levels of idh were comparable to the expression in wild type cells. the mutation was stable in long time culture experiments, without signs of senescence. moreover we found elevated -hg levels, proving that the idh r h neoenzymatic function is present in our cell lines. thus, we were able to edit and culture genomic idh r h mutated glioma cells for the functional analysis of the idh r h mutation for the first time without the effects of overexpression models. edited idh r h cell lines showed extended doubling times compared to wildtype cells. measurement of krebs cycle metabolites using mass spectrometry revealed elevated glutamate levels. we found enhanced atp-levels that could be a consequence of decreased atp consumption. additionally, the cells showed reduced viability compared to wildtype cells when cultivated in glycolysis inhibiting media, pointing out the enhanced dependency on glycolysis in idh r h cells. these results indicate changes in tumor cell metabolism and energy household induced by the idh r h mutation. since we and others could show that idh r h can alter nad+ and nadph levels, we tested if the idh r h mutated cells are more susceptible to selective inhibition of nad/p regenerating enzymes. esirna-silencing of nampt specifically decreased cell viability in idh r h but not wildtype cells with a concomitant increase of dead cells. in conclusion, we developed genes. thus, a standardized ngs based approach to characterize potential splice variants is lacking. hence we investigated the utility of hybridization based gene-panel enrichment and ngs of cdna. based on results of computational simulation we selected twenty rna-samples of patients with a known pathogenic splice-site variant in an inherited cancer predisposition gene. these variants were previously characterized by rt-pcr in our lab or in the literature. after rrna depletion and dna digestion we performed first and second strand cdna synthesis followed by "tagmentation"-based library preparation, targeted enrichment using the trusight cancer panel and sequencing on an illumina miseq platform. a computational pipeline was established to enable automated detection of aberrant splicing events by implementing different alignment and splice-junction detection algorithms together with filtering against control data sets. we also considered variant calling for the detection of allelic imbalance and gene-level expression analysis in this data. breast and ovarian cancer (bc/oc) predisposition has been associated with a number of high-and low-penetrance susceptibility genes. advances in sequencing technology has made multigene testing a practical option when searching for genetic variants associated with risk for bc/oc. variants of uncertain significance (vus), though, represent a major problem. we now studied patients fulfilling criteria for brca and testing using the next generation sequencing based trusight sequencing cancer panel on a miseq platform (illumina). data was analyzed after remapping with bwa to hg (grch ) using seqnext software (jsi) for variants in known high and moderate penetrance susceptibility genes (brca / , atm, chek , palb , rad c, rad d, nbn, cdh , tp , mlh , msh , msh , pms ) . besides deleterious mutations we also identified vus. of these, variants ( each in brca , brca , palb , rad c, rad d, cdh , and mlh , and in chek and mlh , respectively) affect possible splicing sites. in addition, synonymous and nonsynonymous variants outside the splicing sites ( in brca , brca and cdh , respectively, in rad d) were not reported in exome variant server or exome aggregation consortium (exac) databases, so far. no families were available to study familial segregation. for all these variants a potential effect on splicing efficiency was predicted by three different computational algorithms (bdgp: splice site prediction by neural network, netgene server and the human splice finder (hsf . ) algorithm). we took advantage that these genes are ubiquitously expressed to investigate possible effects of these variants on mrna splicing using easily accessible peripheral blood. as mrna is notoriously unstable, we used pax-abstracts was evaluated for both the individual markers and their combinations derived from multiple algorithms. pronounced demethylation of all markers was observed at baseline among cases compared to controls. risk of developing lc increased with decreasing dna methylation levels, with adjusted ors ( % ci) of . ( . - . ), . ( . - . ) , and . ( . - . ), respectively, for participants in the lowest quartile of ahrr, p . , and f rl compared to participants in the highest quartiles of each site among controls. the individual markers exhibited similar accuracy in predicting lc incidence, with aucs ranging from . to . . combination of the markers did not improve the predictive performance (auc = . ). the individual markers or their combination outperformed self-reported smoking exposure particularly in light smokers. no variation in risk prediction was identified with respect to age, follow-up time, and histological subtypes. ahrr, p . , and f rl methylation in blood dna are predictive of lc development, which might be useful for identification of risk groups for further specific lc screening, such as ct examination. over the past decades the search for disease causing variants has been focusing exclusively on the coding genome. this highly selective approach has been extremely successful however, recent data have revealed the importance of the non-coding genome in fundamental processes such as gene regulation, d chromatin folding, and pinpointed its role in disease. in this study, we systematically investigate the cis-regulatory landscape of pitx , a homeodomain transcription factor that is exclusively expressed in the hindlimb. mutations and non-coding structural variations at the pitx locus have been shown to associate with a variety of congenital limb defects including club feet, polydactyly, and arm-to-leg transformation (liebenberg syndrome). we performed in vivo enhancer reporter essays in transgenic mice and identified several limb enhancer elements at the pitx locus; surprisingly they all showed both forelimb and hindlimb activity, although pitx is never expressed in the forelimb. capture hi-c experiments revealed a hindlimb-specific chromatin-organization at the pitx locus, which enables its promoter to contact several enhancers bearing a pan-limb activity only in the hindlimb. this tissue-specific chromatin folding plays a determinant role to refine the unspecific limb regulatory landscape toward a highly controlled and hindlimb delimited transcriptional output. to gain a better understanding of the pathology of pitx associated limb defects, we used crispr/cas to generate a set of deletions and inversions in the pitx cis-regulatory landscape in mice. genetic perturbations of the regulated d chromatin conformation lead to an ectopic forelimb expression of pitx , resulting in an arm-to-leg transformation in mice and in human patients respectively. our data further highlight the role of non-coding mutations affecting chromatin folding in congenital disease and give new insights into the regulation of pitx during development and the pathomechanism of associated limb defects. hoxb , a member of the embryonic homeobox transcription regulators, has been identified as the first susceptibility gene specific for prostate cancer (prca). the founder missense mutation g e, which likely originated from finland, can be found in most populations of european ancestry. we determined the frequency of hoxb g e for the german population, assessed in a cohort of unrelated cases, each with positive family history of prca, sporadic prca cases and in controls. additional affected relatives from prca families were included to explore association with aggressive disease in subgroups with high gleason score (> ), advanced tumor stage, or psa at diagnosis > ng/ml. carriers of g e were rare in controls ( . %) and showed increased frequencies in both sporadic ( . %) and familial prca cases ( . %). estimated risks were or = . (p = . ) and or = . (p = . ), respectively. the risk effect size increased with the number of affected individuals per pedigree: or = . (p < . ) for or more, and or = . (p < . ) for or more affected men. the strongest association with clinical features was observed between g e and advanced tumor stage (or = . ; p < . ). in conclusion, the observed frequency of hoxb g e mutation carriers in our study cohort was intermediate as compared to the common prevalence in scandinavia and the rare occurrence in mixed european populations from the us. the risk estimates of hoxb g e and the stronger effect sizes in families with increasing number of affected relatives were in line with a high penetrant germline predisposition. the association between g e status and tumor stage may be of greater interest for clinical practice, but needs further validation. the absolute penetrance of the hoxb g e mutation should be investigated in further studies in order to elucidate its suitability as a genetic predictor for prca. smoking-associated dna methylation markers predict lung cancer incidence homozygous smn loss causes spinal muscular atrophy (sma), the most common lethal genetic childhood motor neuron disease. smn encodes smn, a ubiquitously expressed housekeeping protein, which makes the primarily motor neuron-specific phenotype rather unexpected. sma individuals harbor low smn expression from one to six smn copy genes, which is insufficient to functionally compensate for smn loss. however, rarely individuals with homozygous absence of smn and only three to four smn copies are fully asymptomatic, suggesting protection through genetic modifier(s). previously, we identified plastin (pls ) overexpression as an sma protective modifier in humans and showed that smn deficit impairs endocytosis, which is rescued by pls overexpression. here, we identify reduction of the neuronal calcium sensor neurocalcin delta (ncald) as a protective sma modifier in five asymptomatic smn -deleted individuals carrying only four smn copies. we demonstrate that ncald is a ca + -dependent negative regulator of endocytosis, as ncald knockdown improves endocytosis in sma models and ameliorates pharmacologically induced endocytosis defects in zebrafish. importantly, ncald knockdown effectively ameliorates sma-associated pathological defects across species, including worm, zebrafish and mouse. in conclusion, our study identifies a previously unknown protective sma modifier in humans, demonstrates modifier impact in three different sma animal models and suggests a potential combinatorial therapeutic strategy to efficiently treat sma. since both protective modifiers restore endocytosis, our results confirm that endocytosis is a major cellular mechanism perturbed in sma and emphasize the power of protective modifiers for understanding disease mechanism and developing therapies. mutations affecting coding or regulatory regions of smc cause dysregulation of condensins resulting in a phenotype reminiscent of cohesinopathies cornelia de lange syndrome (cdls) is a dominantly inherited malformation syndrome caused by mutations in genes encoding subunits (smc a, smc , rad ) or regulators (nipbl, hdac ) of the cohesin complex. this dna-bound complex regulates several chromatin-related processes such as chromosome segregation, dna-damage repair, transcription and chromatin structure. the project presented initially started with two children and their mother who showed clinical features reminiscent of cdls. while various sequencing approaches failed to identify the disease-causing mutation, a kb spanning deletion co-segregating with the phenotype was identified by array-cgh. besides the last exons of cylc , encoding a sperm head protein, no other genes were affected. subsequent in-silico analyses predicted the existence of a ~ kb tissue-specific regulatory element within this region, located approximately mb distant from the next protein-coding gene smc , which encodes a subunit of the cohesin-related condensin complex. significant reduction of smc expression was verified in patient's fibroblasts by qpcr analysis. accordingly, a strong dysregulation of smc was observed in hek and sh-sy y cells deficient for the putative kb regulatory element, which was deleted by crispr/cas genome editing. reporter gene assays further highlighted the functional relevance of the identified regulatory element in regulating the smc gene promoter. interestingly, we could prove on protein as well as on mrna level that alterations in smc expression are correlated with the dysregulation of other condensin subunits such as smc in patient's samples as well as in cris-pr/cas -generated cells. in a large exome sequencing project we have identified a smc frameshift mutation in an additional family with two patients who show clinical features overlapping with those seen in our initial family. quantitative pcr analyses in fibroblasts of both subjects also showed significant reduction of smc and smc expression, which is consistent with our findings in the first family. to further investigate whether alterations in condensin gene expression are specific for the dysregulation of smc , we have decreased smc levels in different cell types by sirna. quantitative protein as well as mrna analyses revealed reduced smc /smc expression. our data show for the first time the coordinated expression of different condensin subunits and its relevance for human disease. abstracts human pedigree. cardiac valves initially form through a process called endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition (emt) then subsequently elongate and mature during early juvenile life. expression analysis throughout embryonic and postnatal stages of adamts -/-mice revealed an expression in all cardiac valves after valve formation. high resolution, digital echocardiography showed that mice without adamts expression develop dysfunctional aortic valves early in life, reminiscent of the human phenotype. notably, the expression of adamts in the valve was restricted to valvular interstitial cells and not observed in endothelial cells. functional analysis using proteomic approaches suggest that the presence of ad-amts is necessary to maintain extracellular matrix remodelling during valve development and its maturation. not only do the lof mice fully recapitulate the human phenotype, they also highlight adamts as a novel marker for valvular interstitial cells to specifically target initial post-emt processes as well as serve as an important model to understand an ageing valve phenotype in humans. exome sequencing of bipolar disorder patients with rapid cycling implicates novel candidate genes in disease development bipolar disorder (bd) is a severe neuropsychiatric disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of mania and depression. bd has a lifetime prevalence of about % and a high heritability of about %. although recent genome-wide association studies identified the first susceptibility genes contributing to disease development, the cumulative impact of common alleles with small effect may only explain around % of the phenotypic variance (lee et al. ) . in consequence, rare variants of high penetrance have been suggested to additionally contribute to bd susceptibility. in the present study we focused on bd patients with rapid cycling (rc). rc is a course specifier of bd defined as having at least four recurrent episodes of acute illness within one year. since rc showed strong evidence for familiarity, we hypothesized that bd patients with rc might represent a more defined etiological subgroup and that rare variants of high penetrance might contribute to the development of rc in bd patients. we selected unrelated bd patients with rc of german origin and performed exome sequencing using the illumina hiseq platform. for data analysis, the varbank pipeline of the cologne center for genomics was used. we filtered for rare (minor allele frequency < . %), heterozygous and non-synonymous variants that were predicted to be possibly damaging or disease causing by at least of applied prediction tools. after these filtering steps, we identified a total of different genes which harbored rare functional variants in at least three independent patients. gene set analysis for these genes using consensuspathdb revealed decker , g. nuernberg , , d. hassel , g. a. rappold , mutations in the homeobox gene shox cause shox deficiency, the most frequent monogenic cause of short stature. the clinical severity of shox deficiency varies widely, ranging from short stature without dysmorphic signs to mesomelic skeletal dysplasia (léri-weill dyschondrosteosis, lwd). in rare cases, individuals with shox deficiency are asymptomatic. to elucidate the factors that modify disease severity/penetrance, we studied a three-generation family with five affected individuals with lwd using whole genome linkage analysis and whole exome sequencing. the variant p.phe cys of the retinoic acid catabolizing enzyme cyp c co-segregated with the shox variant p.val ala in the five affected individuals, while the shox mutant alone was present in three asymptomatic individuals. two further independent lwd cases with shox deficiency and damaging cyp c variants were identified. the identified damaging variants in cyp c affected its catabolic activity, leading to an increased level of retinoic acid. we also provide evidence that high levels of retinoic acid significantly decrease shox expression in human primary chondrocytes and zebrafish embryos. individual morpholino knock-down of either gene shortens the pectoral fins, whereas depletion of both genes leads to a more severe phenotype. together our findings demonstrate that shox and cyp c act in a common molecular pathway controlling limb growth and describe cyp c as the first genetic modifier for shox deficiency. heart valve dysfunction in men and mice is caused by loss of function mutations in adamts , a novel marker for valvular interstitial cells on a global perspective defects of the cardiac valves are one of the most common heart abnormalities in humans, with a substantial number of them requiring surgical intervention at least once in their life. several mechanisms have been proposed ranging from acquired to developmental causes, but thus far the majority can not be explained on the molecular level. here we report on the identification of a unique human family affected by multiple dysfunctional cardiac valves early in life. genetic screening revealed a homozygous deletion of the first eight exons in ad-amts , a novel candidate gene for valvular heart defects. to investigate its role in heart valve development, we designed a transgenic mouse model that reconstitutes the loss of function (lof) in adamts found in the statistically analyzing de novo mutations identified in > , id patients highlighted ppm d as a candidate id gene. ppm d is a type c phosphatase that functions as a negative regulator of cell stress response pathways by mediating a feedback loop of p -p signaling, thereby contributing to growth inhibition and suppression of stress induced apoptosis. we identified patients with mild-moderate id and a de novo truncating ppm d mutation. deep-phenotyping of the patients revealed in addition to id overlap for behavioural problems (adhd and anxiety disorder), hypotonia, broad based gait, facial dysmorphisms and periods of fever and vomiting. ppm d is shown to be expressed during fetal (brain) development and in the adult brain. all mutations were located in the last, or penultimate exon, suggestive of escaping nonsense-mediated mrna decay. both ppm d expression analysis and cdna sequencing in patient ebv-lcls support the presence of a stable, but truncated transcript, consistent with this hypothesis. exposure of patient's cells to ionizing radiation resulted in normal p activation suggesting that p signaling is not affected by the truncated protein. however, a cell growth disadvantage was observed. thus, we show that de novo truncating ppm d mutations in the last and penultimate exon cause syndromic id which provides novel insights in the role of cell cycle checkpoint genes in neurodevelopmental disorders. de novo truncating variants in asxl are associated with a unique and recognizable clinical phenotype harvard stem cell institute, department of stem cell and regenerative enriched pathways (q < . ) including actin cytoskeleton and calcium ion binding. subsequently we applied the residual variation intolerance score (rvis) and identified genes which were ranked among the % most intolerant genes in the genome. these genes included the previously reported genome-wide significant bd risk genes syne and mll . in addition, we identified novel, promising candidate genes which have not previously been implicated in bd development such as ryanodine receptor (ryr , affected in six patients) and huntingtin (htt, patients). both genes are ranked among the . % most intolerant genes of the genome. ryr encodes a brain expressed intracellular cation channel that mediates the rapid release of ca + from the endoplasmic reticulum, thus making it a highly plausible candidate gene for contributing to rc. abnormal expansion of a trinucleotide repeat in the htt gene causes huntington disease which is a neurodegenerative disease characterized by motor, cognitive and psychiatric symptoms. the seven most promising genes are currently being followed up by resequencing in larger cohorts of independent bd cases (including patients with rc) and controls of european ancestry using the single molecule molecular inversion probes (smmips) technology. de novo truncating mutations in the last and penultimate exon of ppm d cause a novel intellectual disability syndrome abstracts with gα. signaling properties of g protein complexes carrying mutant gβ subunits were further analyzed by their ability to couple to dopamine d r receptors by real-time bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (bret) assays. these studies revealed altered functionality of the missense mutations r g, g v, a t, p s, p l, a t, and d g but not for l f, h r, and k q. in conclusion, we demonstrate a pathogenic role of de novo and autosomal dominant mutations in gnb as a cause of gdd and provide functional evidence for a loss-of-function mechanism underlying the disease. comprehensive phenotyping and trio-exome analysis of children with neurodevelopmental disease whole exome sequencing (wes) has been proven as a powerful analytical tool to dissect the genetic basis of human hereditary disorders. here, we report on a prospective deep phenotyping and trio-wes study of children affected by previously undiagnosed and diverse complex neuropediatric disorders. all children underwent a standardised and comprehensive clinical work-up in a single centre that included detailed clinical evaluations by pediatricians and clinical geneticists, extensive laboratory and metabolic analyses, analyses of cerebrospinal fluid, mri of the brain and eeg, followed by trio-wes analysis. this systematic approach allowed to identify a pathogenic mutation in a known disease gene in altogether children ( %) and discovered a convincing candidate disease gene in additional children ( %). taken together, this translates into a successful genetic diagnosis of up to % in this cohort. in children with mutations in a known disease gene ( / = . %) the molecular diagnosis substantially influenced the clinical management and drug treatment. we further document an expansion of the phenotype in known disease entities in individuals. the extraordinary high gene discovery rate in our cohort emphasizes the potential of trio-wes even in a clinically inhomogeneous group of individuals with likely genetic disease. however, this requires a multidisciplinary approach including deep and sometimes reverse phenotyping, research-based interpretation of trio-wes identified genetic alterations, extensive review of the literature, use of several mutation prediction and protein-modelling tools, as well as openness and exchange of data with national and international researchers and clinicians working on similar diseases. exome sequencing of pooled dna samples for large-scale screening in individuals with sporadic intellectual disability b. popp, a. ekici, s. uebe, c. thiel, j. hoyer, a. wiesener, a. reis, c. zweier institute of human genetics, fau-erlangen-nürnberg, erlangen, germany high throughput sequencing has enabled identification of many novel disease genes and empowered diagnostic testing for heterogeneous disorders, especially for intellectual disability (id) where more than genes have been implicated. due to this extreme heterogeneity gene panels are ineffective, and expensive exome or genome sequencing is necessary. furthermore, many affected individuals have to be sequenced to confirm candidate genes and to refine the phenotypic spectrum. we now explored if pooling strategies could satisfy the need for a genome-wide, simple, cheap and fast screening technology. the asxl genes (asxl , asxl and asxl ) participate in body patterning during embryogenesis and encode for proteins that are involved in epigenetic regulation and assembly of transcription factors to specific genomic loci. germline de novo truncating variants in asxl and asxl have been respectively implicated in causing bohring-opitz and bainbridge-ropers syndromes, resulting in overlapping features of severe intellectual disability and dysmorphic features. to our knowledge, asxl has not yet been associated with a human mendelian disorder. in this study, we performed whole-exome sequencing in six unrelated probands with developmental delay, macrocephaly, and dysmorphic features. all six had de novo truncating variants in asxl . a careful review en abled the recognition of a specific phenotype consisting of macrocephaly, prominent eyes, arched eyebrows, hypertelorism, a glabellar nevus flammeus, neonatal feeding difficulties, hypotonia and developmental disabilities. although overlapping features with bohring-opitz syndrome and bainbridge-ropers syndromes exist, features that distinguish the asxl -associated condition from asxl -and asxl -related disorders are macrocephaly, absence of growth retardation and more variability in the degree of intellectual disabilities. we were also able to demonstrate with mrna studies that these variants are likely to exert a dominant negative effect, since both alleles are expressed in blood, with the mutated asxl transcripts escaping nonsense mediated decay. in conclusion, de novo truncating variants in asxl underlie a new neurodevelopmental syndrome, with a clinically recognizable phenotype. this work expands the germline disorders that are linked to the asxl genes. functional characterization of novel gnb mutations as a rare cause of global developmental delay over the past years, prioritization strategies that combined the molecular predictors of sequence variants from exomes and genomes of patients with rare mendelian disorders with computer-readable phenotype information became a highly effective method for detecting disease-causing mutations. the drawback of phenotype-based prioritization, however, is that they require a deep and comprehensive feature description to gain good performance. but in routine diagnostics, the naming of phenotypic features varies among clinicians, and sometimes a comprehensive phenotypic overview is not possible because of missing terminology. these gaps can be reduced by including a new layer of phenotypic information using facial recognition technology to detect dysmorphic features from two-dimensional photographs. automated image analysis is in principle able to identify any deviation from the norm and to quantify it objectively. we therefore developed an approach that combines facial dysmorphology novel analysis (fdna) technology with standard phenotypic and genomic features to identify pathogenic mutations in exome data. we have started collecting data from a diverse spectrum of patients with molecularly confirmed diagnoses in a multi-center study, and we present the current results. at the time of abstract submission more than patients from over contributing institutions were evaluated and used for simulation of a training set of exomes. automated facial recognition yields the correct diagnosis amongst the first ten suggested syndromes in more than two thirds of the cases and shows a high correlation with syndrome predictions that were based on expert annotated features. hereby, we could also confirm the diagnosis in cases with only subtle facial features. consequently, we used classical machine learning approaches to integrate scores based on the image analysis, phenotypic description and exome se-after initial evaluation of available computational methods by virtual pooling of exome data or simulated reads using different pooling fractions, we decided to exome sequence individuals with sporadic id in pools of samples each. this was suggested to be the optimal combination with a % detection rate. dna was mixed in equimolar concentrations and submitted for exome sequencing. read data was aligned to the human reference, and variants were called using a ploidy of . resulting variant calls in known id genes (sysid database) were then filtered for loss-of-function (lof) variants and for missense variants that were either previously reported as pathogenic or computationally predicted to be deleterious. furthermore, we screened id candidate genes and haploinsufficiency intolerant genes for lof variants. subsequently, sanger sequencing was used to determine the individual carrying each variant in the respective pool and to test segregation in the parents. this approach resulted in the identification of pathogenic variants (assumed or confirmed de novo) in known id genes (ahdc , ankrd , atp v b , cask, chd , kcnq , kmt a, kras, med l, rit , setd , tcf , wac, zbtb ), two pathogenic variants inherited from a symptomatic or healthy parent, respectively, (zmynd , ifih ), and a homozygous variant in the recessive trappc gene. this included loss-of-function and missense variants. additionally, we identified de novo variants in candidate genes. in our id cohort this resulted in a high mutation detection rate of %. thus, detection of rare variants from exome sequenced dna pools (pool-seq) is feasible and has a high detection rate similar other screening approaches. compared to affected-only exome sequencing this method can reduce costs by more than % with only marginal increase in sanger-sequencing costs and significantly speed up wet lab work with an acceptable increase in computational complexity. in contrast to targeted sequencing methods like molecular inversion probes or hybridization-based panels, our method has the advantage of allowing flexible re-analysis of the same data for new genes. in conclusion, we established exome pool-seq as a method for large-scale, cost-efficient and flexible sequencing in highly heterogeneous but well characterized disorders like id. three years of experience with targeted next-generation sequencing of developmental delay next-generation sequencing (ngs) has opened up new possibilities especially in the search for disease-causing mutations in disorders with common clinical features but a heterogeneous genetic background. the identification of the underlying genetic defect provides a clear diagnosis for patients more and more influencing their management and occasionally even their therapy, and it is the prerequisite for prenatal or preimplantation decisions in the affected family. ngs panels are used widely in clinical settings to identify genetic causes of various monogenic disease groups, such as intellectual disability (hu et al. ) , neurodevelopmental and neuromuscular disorders, among others. however, many new challenges have been introduced both at the technical level and at the bioinformatic level, with consequences including new requirements for interpretation of results, and for genetic counseling. we report on our experience with a targeted ngs panel comprising over brain related genes (mpimg- -test) in the routine clinical diagnostics of patients with syndromic and non-sydromic forms of developmental delay as well as patients with neuromuscular disorders. patients (age - ; mean ) with syndromic (s) or non-syndromic (ns) developmental delay or with neuromuscular symptoms (nm), seen at the genetic counselling unit of our institute, were analyzed with targeted exon enrichment and ngs. chromosomal re-arrangements and copy number variations were excluded in all patients previously by conven-it was recently shown that that clonal hematopoiesis can be driven by somatic point mutations. these acquired mutations occur with normal aging in up to % of older (> y) individuals ( ) ( ) ( ) and few reports in younger individuals. here we present a targeted re-sequencing assay that combines high throughput with ultra-high sensitivity based on single-molecule molecular inversion probes (smmip) ( ) . we have now analyzed dna from healthy blood donors from different age groups ( - ; - ; - ; - and - y) , with no previous diagnosis of cancer, for somatic mutation in loci. those loci included known drivers of clonal hematopoiesis ( ) ( ) ( ) and novel or candidate loci. the improved assay allows low-frequency variant detection with variant levels down to < . %. this improved sensitivity allowed the identification of somatic mutations in a limited set of loci in > % of old individuals, but also report those mutations in individuals of the youngest age group. most prevalent mutations include known hotspot mutations in dnmt a and asxl . here we show that somatic drivers of clonal hematopoiesis are more prevalent and occur in younger individuals than previously reported. these somatic events are age-related. however, the high prevalence and their occurrence in relatively young individuals implicates their origin as a common biological process involved in normal aging. a. m. nissen, j. graf, c. rapp, m. locher, a. laner, a. benet-pagès, e. holinski-feder medizinisch genetisches zentrum -mgz, munich, germany gene dosage abnormalities account for a significant proportion of pathogenic mutations in rare genetic disease related genes. in times of next generation sequencing (ngs), a single analysis approach to detect snvs and cnvs from the same data source would be of great benefit for routine diagnostics. however, cnv detection from exon-capture ngs data has no standard methods or quality measures so far. current bioinformatics tools depend solely on read depth which is systematically biased. we developed a novel approach based on: . utilization of five independent detection tools to increase sensitivity, . different reference sets for different kits and normalization against samples from the same sequencing run to improve robustness against workflow conditions, . definition of special quality thresholds for single exon events to minimize false negatives, . identification of reliable regions by assessment of capture efficiency using a reference set of cnv negative patients to minimize false positives. a cnv quence of the patients and could predict the pathogenic mutation among the top positions in a prioritized exome in more than % of the monogenic cases in our cohort. hence, our results show that computer-assisted facial recognition is not only a promising technology that could be applied in the routine diagnostic workflow, but also a technology that allows diagnosis in cases with non-typical clinical presentation and boosts the diagnostic yield in exome studies. the added value of rapid exome sequencing in critical clinical situations for critical clinical situations, turnaround times (tats) of exome sequencing need to be fast in order to have an impact on clinical decision making. we therefore set out to develop a fast exome sequencing approach (max. days). urgent exomes are preferably sequenced as trios to enable de novo analysis and assist data interpretation. dna library preparation is performed using the sureselect qxt protocol (v , agilent), and sequencing is done on a nextseq (illumina) with a high coverage ( - x). automated file handling allows rapid bwa mapping, gatk variant calling and annotation. a total of one-hundred samples have been sequenced until now using this rapid procedure: trio's, x mother and child, x parents plus children, and single cases. six trios with known aberrations were used for experimental setup. of the remaining families, in families (possible) pathogenic snvs were identified, of which some still need further follow up, whereas families remained negative after inspection of snvs and small indels. for cnv analysis, a trio based reference-free cnv approach is still under development. preliminary data show that all control cnvs ( kb- mb) are detected correctly, and retrospective cnv analyses of the other samples identified three possibly de novo cnvs that need further follow up. shorter tats days were already beneficial for some patients, i. e. an adult male suffering from myelofibrosis and autoinflammatory symptoms. a sting-like phenotype (= stimulator of ifn genes) was suspected, with a possible involvement of the jak/stat pathway. urgent exome sequencing was performed and results were available within days. interestingly, both a somatic variant in mpl (= trombopoetine receptor > myelofibrose) and a heterozygous variant in acp (trap, known immune dysregulation disorder) were identified, both fitting to the patients phenotype. based on these results the medication of the patient was changed, resulting in a substantial improvement of the patients constitution. in conclusion, we have implemented a rapid exome sequencing workflow for urgent cases. the rapid identification of pathogenic variants already had implications on patient treatment, underlying the added value of a fast genetic diagnosis. ement insertion, however, was spliced into the mrna of nabp , leading to a frameshift mutation and a premature stop codon, potentially altering or abolishing gene function. in summary, we have shown that transposon insertions, both common variants as well as rare or de novo variants, can be detected in wes data. such insertions in coding or regulatory regions of disease-relevant genes might therefore explain some of the cases in which no pathogenic coding mutation can be identified by wes. the influence of human genetic variation on epstein-barr virus sequence diversity: a genome-to-genome approach c. hammer , , a. loetscher , , em. zdobnov , genome-wide association studies (gwas) have identified common genetic polymorphisms that associate with clinical manifestation and immune response parameters of various infections. we here present an alternative approach, using variation in the virus sequence as phenotype, which is specific by nature and unique to genomic research in infectious diseases, for genome-to-genome (g g) association studies. building on the unprecedented possibility to combine large-scale human and viral genomic data, we explored interactions between human genetic variation and viral sequence diversity in individuals infected with epstein-barr virus (ebv). the major goal is the identification of key genetic players in the evolutionary 'arms race' between pathogen and host. ebv is the pathogenic agent of infectious mononucleosis and is associated with a broad spectrum of lymphoid and epithelial malignancies, including lymphomas and nasopharyngeal carcinomas. there is also evidence for a role of ebv in the pathoetiology of multiple sclerosis. its genome is approximately kbp long and encodes around proteins, not all of which have been definitely identified or characterized. it is known that high loads of ebv are present in patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus (hiv)-induced immunodeficiency. we therefore selected immunosuppressed patients included in the swiss hiv cohort study (shcs) with low cd + t cell counts, and quantified ebv copy number in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs). cell samples contained more than , viral copies in total and were subjected to target isolation and subsequent enrichment using the sureselect method by agilent biotechnologies, followed by illumina whole-genome sequencing. after data processing and quality control, variable amino acids were called as binary variables, resulting in > variable positions per individual in average. the same patients also underwent genome-wide genotyping to obtain host genetic variation, followed by imputation based on the haplotype reference consortium reference panel. the association analyses are currently ongoing, and we will present the results at the conference. we use logistic regression to test for association between host single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) and binary ebv amino acid variants. bonferroni correction is applied for multiple testing correction on the sides of both host and pathogen. stratification is taken into consideration by including principal components (pcs) for the host, and phylogenetic pcs for the virus. this project will offer a global description of the adaptive forces acting on ebv during natural infection. we have shown before for hiv that a virus genome associates much more strongly with human genetic variants than clinical endpoints. the analysis of all signals resulting from the interaction between human and viral genomes has the potential to identify novel host defense mechanisms, which could serve as future diagnostic and therapeutic targets. is called in a reliable region if at least two out of five tools are concordant for the respective cnv. the pipeline shows a sensitivity of % and a precision of %. within routine gene panel diagnostics we analyzed a total of patients indicated to have rare mendelian diseases for snv and cnvs. in patients a cnv was detected in genes associated with the respective individual phenotype. interestingly, in several cases the cnv completed the patients report as it was detected in genes with a recessive mode of inheritance where previously only a heterozygous pathogenic snv was found. overall, with the additional analysis of cnvs we increased the diagnostic yield from % (class , single nucleotide events) to %. however, there are still issues in the detection of cnvs from ngs data for routine diagnostics. cnv pipelines are very prone to errors caused by enrichment inconsistencies compared to snv detection tools. the assessment of sensitivity and specificity is difficult due to the lack of datasets to validate cnv detection pipelines. originally, the analysis of cnvs was performed mainly in patients with mental retardation disorders, resulting in a paucity of cnv data linked to other mendelian diseases. moreover, the identification of the actual size and thus the assessment of pathogenicity of a cnv is difficult, because targeted ngs gene panels do not cover all genes. in conclusion, ngs data is a suitable data source for the simultaneous detection of snvs and cnvs for clinical diagnosis; however, with the current tools it is only applicable in accurately validated regions. identification of transposon insertions in whole-exome sequencing data s. lukassen, n. Übelmesser, ab. ekici, u. hüffmeier, ct. thiel, c. zweier, a. winterpacht humangenetisches institut, erlangen, germany % of the human genome consists of transposable element derived sequences, the most abundant of which are l and alu elements, followed by endogenous retroviruses. several hundred of these elements remain active, leading to insertion frequencies of up to one in live births for alu elements and posing a threat to genome integrity. while most studies on transposons employ whole-genome sequencing (wgs) or target-enrichment based sequencing approaches, the most commonly used form of diagnostic high-throughput sequencing is currently whole-exome sequencing (wes). we were therefore interested in investigating transposon insertions in wes data as a possible source of disease causing mutations. we developed a software to call non-reference transposon insertions from single-end wes datasets by split-read mapping and analyzed exomes this way. on average, non-reference insertions were identified in each exome, with an average of . sites per patient identified in < = . % of other patients. of these rare variants, % were deemed plausible by visual inspection. automated confidence calls of the software were concordant with visual inspection in % of cases. in % of cases a plausible insertion was awarded a lower score by the algorithm and in another % not called at all. in % of cases the automated call appeared to be falsely positive, in another % at the wrong position within the same bp window. laboratory validation of convincing insertions revealed a % true positive rate, leading to an estimated specificity of %. when performing calls for reference l insertions on exomes, % ( % - %) of known elements whose flanking regions were covered by at least two reads were correctly identified, leading to a sensitivity of %. we thus estimate the average number of non-reference transposon insertions in our wes dataset to be ( - ). % and . % of sites identified were associated with alu and l elements, respectively, with the majority of calls stemming from evolutionary young transposons still assumed to be active. . % of sites were located within the cds, . % in the utrs of genes, . % spanned an intron/ exon border, . % were intronic and . % of insertions were found in intergenic regions. we then chose insertions within intronic ( ) or utr ( ) regions for further analysis. seven were not detected in the mrna. one intronic alu el-abstracts ws - novel insights into male-pattern baldness pathobiology via integration of differential hair follicle mirna and mrna expression profiles with gwas data male pattern baldness (mbp) is a highly heritable condition and the most common form of hair loss in men. the phenotype is characterized by a distinct pattern of androgen-dependent progressive hair loss from the scalp that is restricted to hair follicles (hf) in the frontal and vertex scalp area. the molecular mechanisms that underlie this characteristic pattern and the differences in androgen-sensitivity between hf subpopulations in the frontal/vertex and the occipital scalp remain however elusive. to gain novel insights into the underlying biology and contributing genes and pathways, we systematically investigated for a differential expression (de) of mirna-and mrna-genes in hf samples from the frontal and occipital scalp area of healthy male donors. array-based genome-wide mirna and mrna profiling revealed expression of mirnas and , mrnas in human hf, of which mirnas ( %) and , mr-nas ( %) showed a de between hf subpopulations. the strongest de mirnas included mir- , mir- and mir- . among the strongest de mrnas were the wnt-signaling inhibitor dkk , the protein kinase pak and the retinoid acid receptor rora. a subsequent pathway-based analysis in mirpathdb revealed that de mirnas targeted numerous interesting pathways. among them the wnt-and mtor signaling pathway which have been implicated in the control of hair follicle cycling, a mechanism that is disturbed in mpb affected hf and other plausible candidate pathways such as estrogen, thyroid hormone signaling or epidermal growth factor binding which have not yet been implicated mpb pathobiology. to yield further evidence for an involvement of de mirnas and mr-nas in the developement of mpb, we subsequently integrated our expression data with association data from a large gwas meta-analysis on mpb (n = , ). of the de mirnas and mrnas, only mirna (mir- b) and mrnas were located within mb of one of genome-wide significant mpb risk loci. notably, the analysis revealed a co-localization of de mirna, de mrna, and nominally significant association signals (p < - ) at other genomic loci, pointing towards a role of these genomic regions in mpb pathogenesis. among them a locus on chromosome q . that comprises the genes encoding the ephrin-type-b receptor (ephb ) and the prostaglandin transporter slco a . interestingly, ephrins have been shown to be regulated by androgens and to play a role in hf formation, proliferation and hair cycling. and expression of prostaglandin d , which is transported by slco a , has been found to be upregulated in balding scalp where it inhibits hair growth. in summary, our systematic analysis of differential mirna and mrna expression and the subsequent integration with genetic association data identified novel potential risk loci for mpb and numerous candidate genes and pathways that are likely to play a role in mpb pathogenesis and emphasizes the importance of data integration of large-scale omic-analyses. palaeontological genomic analyses have shown that interbreeding between anatomically modern humans and neandertals occurred in europe and asia . - years ago. approximately . - % of the modern european and asian genome consists of introgressed dna from neandertals. some of these introgressed regions have been suggested to contribute to several traits and phenotypes including major depression and other mood disorders. in order to further assess the role of neandertal ancestry in cognition and the contribution of genetic risk for psychiatric disorders, we performed genome-wide analyses of neandertal alleles in publicly available psychiatric genomics consortium (pgc) gwas summary statistics with samples sizes ranging from about to individuals for the following phenotypes: educational attainment, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (adhd), anorexia nervosa, anxiety disorders, autism spectrum disorder, bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder and schizophrenia. we estimated the proportion of heritability explained by snps in neandertal introgressed regions using stratified ld score regression (ldsc) and two sets of previously inferred neandertal introgressed regions. in a secondary analysis, we investigated whether specific functional annotations such as 'utr, promoter regions or histone marks within neandertal regions were significantly associated with selected phenotypes. we identified a modest enrichment of heritability in neandertal introgressed regions in anorexia nervosa, autism spectrum disorder, bipolar disorder and major depressive disorder, although none of the results were statistically significant. several functional annotations, such as h k me histone marks within neandertal introgressed regions, appeared significantly enriched for snps contributing to the heritability of anorexia nervosa and autism spectrum disorder. in bipolar disorder, dnasei digital genomic footprinting regions, h k ac histone marks and super enhancer regions within neandertal regions appeared particularly enriched for heritability. on the other hand, both sets of neandertal regions were slightly depleted of snps contributing to the heritability of schizophrenia. for example, one set of neandertal regions that contained % of all analysed snps only contributed to % of the variance of risk (standard error: . ; p-value: . × - ). in comparison to the rest of the genome, neandertal introgressed regions also contributed less to the heritability of educational attainment, adhd and anxiety disorders, although these findings were not statistically significant. to our knowledge this is the first study to systematically investigate the extent to which snps attributable to neandertal introgressed regions contribute to the heritability of several psychiatric/cognitive phenotypes. we are currently increasing our power to detect snp heritability in neandertal regions by applying the ldsc method to larger pgc datasets. harbor genes involved in the complement system, high density lipoprotein metabolism or extracellular matrix homeostasis. these pathways are known for their pleiotropic role in other conditions, such as cardiovascular disease, auto-immune diseases and cancer. here we aimed to investigate the extend of overlap between the genetic risk of various complex diseases and traits and the genetic risk for amd. methods: first, we catalogued , previously published, genome-wide significant variations associated with complex diseases or traits. next, we computed a genetic score by calculating the (weighted) sum of risk increasing alleles for each disease or trait. consequently, a higher genetic score indicates that an individual has more risk/trait increasing alleles of a given disease or trait. for each score, we computed the association with late stage amd using a dataset provided by the international amd genomics consortium (iamdgc) including , late stage amd cases and , controls. we also assessed the association of each variation individually with late stage amd risk in order to identify novel disease loci with strong evidence for pleiotropy. results: nineteen genetic scores of complex diseases and traits were significantly associated with amd risk (fdr < . ). most notably, all genetic scores related to autoimmunity were elevated in amd patients (p < . × - ), while scores related to cardiovascular disease were reduced in amd patients compared to controls (p < . × - ). we also found that the genetic scores of melanoma and related malignancies were higher in amd patients (p < . × - ). in addition, out of , variants, which were used to compute the genetic scores, were significantly associated with amd (fdr < . ), implicating novel, pleiotropic loci in amd risk. conclusion: our findings demonstrate a substantial overlap between the genetic risk of complex diseases/traits and the genetic risk for amd and provide evidence for novel, pleiotropic loci associated with amd. while our findings highlight common disease pathways that may facilitate to develop multi-use drug targets, they also challenge the notion that gene/genome manipulation could be applied in general terms to eradicate risk for a defined complex disease. worldwide genetic association study of exfoliation syndrome and glaucoma identifies common genetic variants at five new susceptibility loci exfoliation syndrome (pex), a complex systemic disorder of the extracellular matrix, is the commonest cause of secondary glaucoma in aging population and thus a major cause of blindness globally, affecting - million subjects worldwide. inside a large, international collaboration project a genome-wide association study (gwas) was carried out on , pex cases and , controls, recruited from countries across six inhabited continents, with replication in a further independent , cases and , controls from countries. significant association was observed at seven loci, of which two confirmed the already known associated loci at the genetic markers mapping to loxl -and cana a-gene, five are new (p < × - ). the five new loci map to chromosomes q (rs near flt -pomp-slc a , p = . × - ), q . (rs near tmem -arhgef , p = . × - ), p (rs at agpat , p = . × - ), p (rs at rbms , p = . × - ) and q (rs near sema a, p = . × - ). to determine the pathophysiological role of the three most significantly associated loci ( q , q . , p ), we investigated the expression and localization of the six related genes (flt , pomp, slc a , tmem , arhgef and ag- male-pattern baldness (mpb) is characterized by a progressive hair loss from the frontal and vertex scalp that affects ~ % of men at the age of years. epidemiological studies have shown positive associations between mpb and coronary heart disease (chd) and related phenotypes such as blood pressure (bp), diabetes (dm) or elevated blood lipid levels. the results however vary with regard to the associated pattern of hair loss (frontal or vertex) and the assessed endpoint measures for chd. and so far no study has investigated for a shared genetic determinant between the traits. using data from the heinz nixdorf recall study (n = , males) and a large meta-analysis on mpb (n = , ), we aimed at a systematic investigation of the association between mpb and chd on (i) an epidemiological and (ii) a genetic level. , men with vertex balding showed a higher bmi (β = . kg/m ), elevated fasting triglyceride (β = . mg/dl) and lower hdl-c levels (β = - . mg/dl). to assess the genetic overlap between mpb and chd, we created a risk score (rs) from mpb lead snps (p < × - ) and tested for association with chd and related traits phenotypes. no significant associations were observed. however, an age-stratified analysis revealed a % per allele risk increase for chd (hr = . , %ci: . ; . ) and a decrease in fasting triglyceride levels (β = - . ). we next used ld score regression analysis in to test for genome-wide genetic correlation between mpb and chd. the analysis revealed no significant correlations with cardiometabolic (n = ), lipid (n = ) or metabolic traits (n = ). finally, to investigate for a genetic overlap at single loci, we compared the mpb risk loci with reported gwas signals for chd. the analysis identified seven overlapping associations between mpb and bp (n = ); qt-interval length; atrial fibrillation; sudden cardiac arrest; and dm. for the majority of loci, the direction of effect differed between mpb and chd, opposing previous epidemiological findings. positive associations were identified between mpb and diastolic bp (fgf , q . ) and sudden cardiac arrest (atf , q . ). interestingly, fgf is known to stimulate cell growth and proliferation in multiple cell types, including cardiac myocytes and hair follicle (hf) cells, and atf is a hf expressed regulator of cell growth and differentiation that has been shown to prevent foam cell formation, which suggests that fgf and atf -signaling contribute to both traits. thus, our data support an association between mpb and chd related phenotypes and suggest that mpb deserves further evaluation as an additional risk factor for chd. pleiotropic effect of genetic variants associated with complex diseases and traits in age-related macular degeneration purpose: age-related macular degeneration (amd) is the leading cause of vision loss in western societies and is caused by both environmental and genetic risk factors. with regard to the latter, several associated risk loci abstracts otyping, results of which will be presented at the conference. of note, for nonsyndromic cleft lip with/without cleft palate (nscl/p), the most frequent form of orofacial clefting, risk loci have been detected by gwas so far, with some of them reaching (nearly) genome-wide or significant p-values in samples much smaller than cases. in the imputed nscpo dataset none of the presently known nscl/p risk loci showed a p-value < - . our data so far confirm previous molecular and epidemiological findings, that nscpo is genetically distinct from nscl/ p. furthermore, the results indicate that common variants alone might not contribute to the same extent to nscpo as compared to nscl/ p. the correlation between defects at specific imprinted loci and distinct imprinting disorder (id) was accepted for a long time. however, it is now put into question because of a growing number of patients with multilocus imprinting disturbances (mlid), i. e. the aberrant methylation at more than one imprinted locus. in particular, mlid is present in individuals with silver-russell syndrome (srs) and beckwith-wiedemann syndrome (bws), and it has meanwhile turned out that patients with opposite phenotypes can share common epimutation patterns. on the other hand, mlid always occurs as mosaicism and varies in different tissues of the same individual. interestingly, the majority of mlid carriers show only one specific id phenotype, though loci of other ids are affected in addition to the one specific for the phenotype. we become aware of a growing number of patients with unexpected and even contradictory molecular findings in respect to the clinical diagnosis for referral. amongst others, we detected the srs specific icr hypomethylation in p in two of our patients referred as bws. in the first case, the icr hypomethylation was detected only in lymphocytes but was not present in buccal swab dna. the patient only had a slight asymmetry, but showed normal growth and did not exhibit any other feature compatible with bws, nor with srs. the reason for the lack of clinical features is unclear, but is comparable to the observation in monozygotic, but clinically discordant srs and bws twins. here the unaffected twin often carries the epimutation only in lymphocytes whereas the affected one shows the alteration in additional tissues. a reason might be sharing of hematopoietic stem. it can be postulated that the patient presented here is born after an (undetected) twin pregnancy with early loss of the affected twin. in the second case, the initial diagnosis of bws was made due to asymmetry, though overgrowth or other features were not present. further clinical ascertainment did not confirm this diagnosis, but growth of the patient was in the lower percentiles, in concordance with the icr hypomethylation. these cases as well as further cases in our cohort confirm that there is an urgent need to provide detailed clinical data upon requesting molecular diagnostics for imprinting disorders. in fact, the growing number of patients with unexpected results complicates the interpretation and illustrates the broad phenotypic range, but also provides further insights in the etiology of ids and setting of imprinting marks pat ) by qrt-pcr, immunohistochemical-and western-blot analysis in genotyped ocular tissues of pex and control patients. all six genes displayed moderate mrna expression in all ocular tissues analysed, with highest levels in iris, ciliary body, and retina. however, only pomp showed a trend towards reduced expression in the presence of the rs risk allele, in both pex and control patients. in general, both mrna and protein expression of pomp and tmem were significantly reduced up to % (p < . ) in anterior segment tissues in pex eyes compared to controls. no differences in mrna and protein expression were detected for the remaining genes analysed. immunofluorescence analysis showed that pomp, a proteasome maturation protein, is ubiquitously expressed in most ocular cell types and that tmem , a transmembrane protein of unknown function, is primarily localized to endothelial cells of blood vessels and aqueous outflow structures. additionally, protein staining intensities for pomp and tmem were markedly reduced in anterior segment tissues of pex eyes compared to controls and co-localized to abnormal accumulation of pex material on ocular surfaces and in blood vessel walls. thus, at least two of the newly identified loci provide new biological insights into the pathology of pex syndrome/glaucoma and highlight a role for impaired proteasome function as well as vascular and trabecular endothelial dysfunction in the disease pathogenesis. nonsyndromic cleft palate only -evidence for a limited contribution of common variants in contrast to nonsyndromic cleft lip ± palate cleft palate only (cpo) is a common congenital malformation which might occur as part of a syndrome or in an isolated form, i. e., nonsyndromic cpo (nscpo). nscpo has a prevalence of : and is considered multifactorial with genetic as well as environmental factors contributing to the disorder. in a recent study we identified the first genome-wide significant locus for nscpo which has been independently confirmed in another study. in order to discover more nscpo risk loci we performed a genome-wide imputation study with gwas data from case-parent trios with european, asian and african ancestry which was retrieved from db-gap upon approved data access. notably, this gwas dataset had not yet been imputed, and we hypothesized that we can increase power to identify novel genetic associations by increasing the marker density and follow-up of suggestive findings by independent replication. genome-wide genotypes were imputed using impute based on genomes haplotypes, and snps were selected based on info-score > . and minor allele frequency > %. the imputation did not reveal any genome-wide significant snp, however, snps at loci showed p-values < - . loci with more than two variants below this threshold (n = ) were to be replicated using the massarray system (agena bioscience). three independent samples were used: two case/control replication cohorts from central europe ( cases, controls) and yemen ( cases, controls), and one european case-parent trio replication cohort (eurocran study; trios). in a first round we genotyped snps at eleven loci. one variant, rs at chr. q , showed p < . in the replication cohort and after combining replication and gwas data, resulted in a decrease of p-value from . × - to . × - . this indicates that this locus, which includes candidate genes such as igs , a known cell-adhesion molecule with yet unknown function in craniofacial development, might harbour a common risk variant with low effect size. we are currently performing a second round of gen-we report biallelic mutations in cad, encoding an enzyme of de novo pyrimidine biosynthesis, in four patients with developmental disability, epileptic encephalopathy, anaemia, and anisopoikilocytosis. two children died after a neurodegenerative disease course. treatment of two surviving children with oral uridine led to immediate cessation of seizures in both. a four-year-old girl, who was previously in minimal conscious state, started to communicate and walk with assistance after nine weeks of treatment. a three-year-old girl likewise showed developmental progress. blood smears normalised and anaemia resolved. our findings support the efficacy of uridine supplementation rendering cad deficiency a treatable neurometabolic disorder. delineation of the grin a phenotypic spectrum alterations of the n-methyl-d-aspartate (nmda) receptor subunit glu-n a, encoded by the gene grin a, have been associated with a spectrum of neurodevelopmental, speech and epilepsy disorders. we identified previously unreported patients with heterozygous pathogenic variants in grin a, including novel variants. after re-evaluation of all published grin a cases, previously reported patients met the acmg criteria for being pathogenic or likely pathogenic. thus, we are able to collectively review genotypes and phenotypes of individuals with grin a-related disorders. we show that the known phenotypic spectrum is expanded and ranges from near-normal development to severe and unspecific encephalopathy, comprising any disorder of speech development. furthermore, some patients do not display seizures. in contrast to previous reports, gri-n a missense variants cluster within the functionally most relevant domains. we are the first to describe genotype-phenotype correlations in grin a-related disorders, where carriers of pathogenic missense variants tend to have more severe neurodevelopmental phenotypes compared to carriers of truncating variants. the most severe end of the phenotypic spectrum was found to include novel features, such as infantile spasms and arthrogryposis and was associated with pathogenic variants in the pore-forming domain of grin a. the eponymic name galloway-mowat syndrome (gamos; omim ) has been coined for the association of early-onset nephrotic glomerulopathy, microcephaly with variable brain anomalies, and facultative diaphragmatic hernia. it is supposed to be inherited as an autosomal recessive trait and clinical as well as genetic heterogeneity has been suggested. in , wdr mutations were identified as a cause of gamos, but only a few cases have been reported to date. over the last years, we have collected dna samples and clinical data from unrelated families with one or more children affected by gamos or a gamos-like syndrome (glomerulopathy plus variable anomalies of brain morphology or function as inclusion criteria), including consanguineous families. in this cohort, we performed whole exome sequencing followed by targeted analysis by sanger and ngs multigene panel resequencing. in a total of families of this cohort ( %) the probable underlying genetic defect could be identified. in affected individuals from two consanguineous families, homozygous mutations of wdr could be found (vodopiutz et al., ) . thus, this gene accounted for only % of cases of our cohort. the affected child of another family had a novel homozygous mutation in arhgdia. this gene has previously been described in three families to cause early-onset steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (gupta et al., ; gee et al., ) , but there is some evidence that non-specific brain anomalies may also be part of the arhgdia-associated phenotype. fourteen and three index patients from unrelated families had mutations in one autosomal (osgep) and one x-linked gene (lage ), respectively, both encoding for components of the keops protein complex that has been implicated in transcription, telomere maintenance and chromosome segregation. no human phenotype has previously been assigned to mutations in this complex. notably, eight unrelated families with an identical mutation originated from the east asian population where the carrier frequency for this allele is . . in one consanguineous family with multiple affected children the disease segregated with a homozygous mutation in the sgpl gene encoding for sphingosine- -phosphate lyase. in four families, the kidney phenotype could be attributed to mutations in genes for non-syndromic nephrosis (nphs , plce , one novel gene), while the brain phenotype was apparently independent. in conclusion, the molecular genetic findings in this cohort confirmed that gamos is exceedingly heterogeneous, and still in almost half of the patients with a gamos-like phenotype the genetic cause remained unclear. on the basis of our findings we are now able to define new biologic mechanisms that are critically involved in both, brain development and integrity of the glomerular filtration barrier. genotype phenotype correlations are emerging. finally, we demonstrate that gamos can also be inherited as an x-linked trait. abstracts taminase gene (tgm ) is mutated in the majority of patients (around %), and its gene product, tgase , is therefore primarily targeted in our approach for protein substitution. patients with arci have an impaired skin barrier function, most of them are born with a collodion membrane and suffer subsequently from varying degrees of hyperkeratosis, erythema, transepidermal water loss and infections. the disease can be life threatening neonatally but lacks a causative therapy and is still only treated symptomatically. therefore, our aim is to develop a personalised, causative therapy where the defective protein is substituted topically via a nanocarrier. therapeutic, human tgase was synthesized in hek cells and assessed by western blot and flow cytometry analysis. enzyme activity was measured by in vitro assay. tgase was then coupled to a polyglycerol-based nanogel (dpg-ng) containing the thermoresponsive linker poly(n-isopropyl)acrylamide (pnipam), stabilising the enzyme as well as adding a thermal protein release trigger at °c, which is favorable for cutaneous applications. immunocytochemical stainings for tgase on monolayered basal keratinocytes that lack tgm expression confirmed the successful uptake of extrinsic tgase into the cells. further analysis over time showed that the enzyme was no longer detectable after h and consequently led us to define a treatment schedule for the following experiments. d full thickness skin models were used as in vitro system to determine barrier function and enzyme activity after treatment with varying concentrations of the dpg-ng/tgase complex. three different sets of skin models were used for these experiments: normal models mimicking the healthy skin with an intact barrier function, models where tgm was knocked down, and models made with arci patient cells with tgm mutations. franz cell tests on treated skin models lacking intrinsic tgase confirmed the impaired barrier activity in disease models, demonstrated an improved barrier function after repeated treatments with dpg-ng/ tgase and showed restored tgase activity using an in situ assay. furthermore, first toxicity tests using mtt revealed high biocompatibility of dpg-ng/tgase after treatment of d and d cell cultures. these findings are successful steps for an advanced topical drug delivery system and are a promising approach for causative therapeutic intervention in arci. after further optimization concerning protein dosage and thorough toxicity tests, we will adapt this system also for the use with other proteins involved in arci. pigmentation disorders (pds) comprise a large group of rare and heterogeneous disorders that are mainly characterized by various coloration abnormalities affecting single parts of the body or the complete integument. the large group of pds includes the autosomal dominant inherited hyperpigmentation disorder dowling-degos disease (ddd). ddd is genetically heterogeneous, and to date causal mutations in three genes, namely krt , pofut and poglut have been identified. after exclusion of mutations in these genes, we performed exome-and sanger-sequencing in six unrelated ddd-patients/families and identified six heterozygous truncating mutations in psenen encoding the presenilin enhancer protein . on closer examination of the histological sections, we came upon a novel feature that distinguished these individuals from previous ddd-cases by the presence of follicular hyperkeratosis. to assess the functional significance of psenen mutations in ddd pathogenesis, we performed mammalian cell culture based studies and knockdown experiments of psenen homolog psenen in zebrafish larvae (zfl). knockdown of psenen in zfl resulted in a phenotype with scattered pigmentation, which mimicked human ddd. in vivo-monitoring of pigment cells in the developing zfl suggested that disturbances in melanocyte migration and differentiation underlie ddd pathogenesis. interestingly, six of the psenen mutation carriers presented with co-morbid acne inversa (ai), an inflammatory hair follicle disorder. all individuals had a history of nicotine abuse and/or obesity, which are known trigger-factors for ai. although psenen mutations have been identified in a small subset (< %) of familial ai previously and the co-manifestation of ddd and ai has been reported for decades, our study is the first to demonstrate experimentally that mutations in psenen indeed can cause co-manifestation of ddd and ai, most likely triggered by predisposing factors for ai. thus, the present report describes a clinically and histopathologically novel ddd subphenotype in psenen mutation carriers, which is associated with an increased susceptibility to ai. protein substitution therapy for autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis (arci) overall burkitt lymphoma showed a low genomic complexity with a low number of snvs and svs. however, the integration of cnas, snvs and svs allowed us to identify recurrently affected genes, which are involved predominately in the pi( ) kinase pathway, tonic bcr signaling, and cell cycle regulation, chromatin composition and germinal center development. burkitt lymphoma (bl) is the most common mature aggressive b-cell lymphoma in childhood. the genetic hallmark of bl is a chromosomal translocation involving the myc oncogene and one of the immunoglobulin loci leading to myc deregulation. three epidemiologic variants of bl are differentiated: endemic (ebl), which occurs predominantly in equatorial africa and is associated with ebv-infection, sporadic (sbl), which occurs in westernized countries and immunodeficiency-associated. in addition, burkitt leukemia (b-al) is differentiated from bl in cases with more than % of the bone marrow cells being lymphoma cells. another rare bl-variant is myc-positive precursor b-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia coexpressing tdt and myc (tdt+bl). finally, we recently described a myc-negative variant which shows a typical alteration on chromosome (mnbll). the aim of the present study was to examine the epigenetic landscape of these bl variants. to this end, we analyzed the dna methylation of bl ( sbl, ebl, b-al, mnbll, tdt+bl) using the humanmethylation beadchip and contrasted the findings to diffuse-large b-cell lymphoma (dlbcl) and follicular lymphoma (fl). the majority of lymphoma were recruited in the framework of the icgc mmml-seq and mmml projects. the ebl were obtained from the nci ghana burkitt project. as controls, we used public available dna methylation data from b-cell burkitt lymphoma (bl), including its leukemic variant burkitt leukemia (b-al), is the most common type of pediatric b-cell lymphoma accounting for - % of new cases. its biological hallmark is the ig-myc translocation involving myc and mostly the immunoglobulin heavy (igh) locus or more rarely one of the immunoglobulin (ig) light chain loci. at the cytogenetic level the ig-myc translocation is the sole abnormality in around % of cases. overall, bl is characterized by a low genomic complexity. the aim of the present study was to analyze the genomic and transcriptomic landscape of pediatric/adolescent burkitt lymphoma by sequencing according to the guidelines of the international cancer genome consortium. a total of samples of bl/ b-al from pediatric/adolescent patients entered this sequencing study. all patients were treated in population-based prospective clinical trials. inclusion criteria were besides availability of suitable materials, consent to participate in the study and appropriate diagnosis: age at diagnosis (≤ years), the presence of ig-myc rearrangement detected by fish and/or whole genome sequence (wgs), absence of rearrangements of bcl or bcl genes. we performed wgs of tumor and matched control as well as transcriptome sequencing of the tumor cells according to the standards of the icgc (www.icgc.org). the pathognomonic ig-myc translocation was detected in of of the cases using wgs, but was observed in all cases by fish. an igh-myc juxtaposition was detected in patients and its variants igk-myc and igl-myc in and cases, respectively. we identified two different expression patterns of myc transcripts which were associated with the translocation breakpoint location. on the one hand the canonical myc transcript and on the other hand an alternative transcript with a transcription start site before the second exon. the latter produces an mrna which contains nucleotides not included in the canonical transcript but nevertheless it encodes the identical protein. the integration of single nucleotide variants (snv) and copy number aberrations (cna) identified a total of recurrently (≥ samples) mutated genes. myc, id , tp , ccnd , smarca , arid a, fbxo , ddx x were mutated in ≥ % of samples. in / ( %) cases, the id / abstracts ed. the annotation with the chromatin segmentation data of cd + t-cells from the blueprint project revealed enrichment of changes in methylation in distinct genomic regulatory elements in t-lgl. these differentially methylated functional regions were enriched for a set of transcription factor binding sites, known to be relevant in other lymphoid neoplasms. by bioinformatic analysis of methylation data and integration with gene expression data we identified hypermethylated and hypomethylated genes (e. g. bcl b, themis, zeb , hivep ) which point to candidate pathways potentially deregulated in the pathogenesis of t-lgl. conclusion: our study identified dna methylation changes in a set of candidate genes involved in various signaling pathways, which could potentially be used for diagnosis, prognosis and may become targets for novel treatment options. burkitt lymphoma (bl) is a mature aggressive b-cell lymphoma genetically characterized by a chromosomal translocation leading to ig-myc juxtaposition. treatment of bl is usually very successful particularly in children, with a cure rate of over % even among patients with advanced stage disease. however, the prognosis of the remaining patients experiencing disease progression and/or relapse is still very poor. bl has an overall low genomic complexity, thus secondary chromosomal changes in addition to the ig-myc translocation are rare. however, genomic complexity has been associated with aggressive disease and poor prognosis in various lymphomas including bl. because little is currently known about the underlying genetics of disease progression in bl we aimed at characterizing the molecular changes and characteristics that might lead to the relapse of bl. sequential tumor biopsies from initial diagnosis (id) and follow-up were available from a total of patients ( - years at id), which were divided into two groups: five patients experienced a relapse from their initial bl diagnosed - days after id (group ). in contrast, three patients developed twice a bl, i. e. presented with bl as secondary neoplasms diagnosed - years after id (group ). dna extracted from archival formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (ffpe) tissue was used to analyze genome-wide copy number alterations (cna) using the oncoscan® platform (affymetrix) and mutational landscape by whole exome sequencing (wes). analysis of the cna in the paired bl samples (group ) revealed an increase in genomic complexity in / pairs as in id a mean of cna was detected in contrast to . cna in relapse samples (p = . ). of note is that in all pairs, the relapse shared almost all cna which were present in id. wes analysis of group showed similar results in all analyzed pairs. in total, . % of mutations (median number of mutations = ) were shared in id and relapse. nevertheless, a considerable amount of mutations were unique in id and relapse with a median of ( . %) and ( . %) mutations, respectively. on the other hand, mutations detected in samples populations of various differential stages. furthermore, we investigated whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (wgbs) data of sbl and b-al in comparison to germinal center b-cell populations from healthy donors to decipher differentially methylated regions (dmr). these are defined as or more cpgs differentially methylated between two groups. unsupervised dna methylation analysis of bl, fl and dlbcl revealed that all bl variants cluster apart from the non-bl cases. thus, supporting on epigenetic level that all analyzed bl samples are bl variants. multigroup comparison (σ/σ max = . , q < e - ) separated the bl variants roughly in groups: ebl, ebv-positive sbl and all other bl variants. furthermore, this analysis revealed ebl to harbor a massive hypermethylation in comparison to all other bl variants. comparison of the dna methylation using the humanmethylation beadchip data of sbl and b-al revealed cpgs to be differentially methylated (σ/σ max = . , q < . ). in contrast, using the wgbs data of the same samples a total of dmrs could be identified which were mostly located in enhancer and polycomb target regions. in conclusion, we show that all analyzed bl variants share a similar dna methylation profile. interestingly, dmrs between sbl and b-al were mainly located in enhancer and polycomb regions. in contrast, ebl showed a massive hypermethylation in comparison to the other bl variants. thus, the differences identified by dna methylation analysis can improve the understanding of the biological and clinical differences of the bl variants. dürig , introduction: t-cell large granular lymphocytic leukemia (t-lgl) is a mature t-cell leukemia which often arises in the context of autoimmune disease. genetic changes like recurrent chromosomal aberrations are rare. recent studies identified somatic stat and tnfaip mutations in t-lgl cells. however, the molecular events driving leukemogenesis remain largely unknown. objectives: the goal of our study was to characterize the epigenetic basis of t-lgl to better understand leukemogenesis and potentially identify druggable pathways or diagnostic biomarkers for t-lgl. p. johansson , , l. klein-hitpass , g. castellano , k. kentouche , f. nicolau , i. oschlies , e. carrillo-de santa pau , m. przekopowitz , a. queiros , m. seifert , a. valencia , ij. martin-subero , em. murga penas , o. ammerpohl , u. dührsen , r. küppers , j. we analyzed the dna methylome of facs sorted tumor cells of t-lgl cases in comparison to benign αβ t-cell subsets. the infinium human methylation bead chip was used for analysis. we annotated our data with the publicly available chromatin segmentation data of cd + t-cells from the ihec/blueprint project. the expression levels of selected genes were tested by reverse transcription real-time pcr. results supervised analysis of t-lgl compared to benign cd + memory cells resulted in , cpg loci significantly (q < . ) differentially methylat- krawitz , , a. knaus , , m. jäger , , r. flöttmann , t. eggermann , b. hoechsmann , h. schrezenmeier paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (pnh) is an acquired disorder of the blood-forming system. typically, affected hematopoietic stem cells (hscs) in pnh harbor a single somatic loss-of-function mutation in the x-linked piga gene. previously, a pnh patient with a different molecular etiology has been described and herein we report three more cases of this new subgroup: a predisposing germline mutation in pigt, which is an autosomal gene of the glycosylphosphatidylinositol (gpi)-anchor synthesis pathway, is followed by a second somatic hit. by means of deep sequencing and array-cgh, we observed acquired deletions of mb to mb on chromosome q in pnh cells that include pigt as well as a region that is commonly deleted in myeloproliferative neoplasms and myelodysplastic syndromes and that is known to be differentially methylated. this results in a complete loss of expression of certain genes at this locus which is also thought to contribute to the clonal expansion. the deficiency of gpi-anchored proteins on pnh cells results in a lack of the complement regulatory proteins cd and daf/cd on the cell surface and leaves them more vulnerable to the c b- membrane attack complex. in contrast to classical pnh without any fully synthesized gpi-anchors, pigt mutations impair the transamidase that links the substrate to the anchor and thus result in an accumulation of unbound gpi molecules. this difference in the pathophysiology can also be visualized in flow cytometric analysis of peripheral blood: while cd and cd surface levels are reduced in all pnh cells, the atypical pnh cells due to a transamidase deficiency can be discriminated by a specific antibody, t mab, that binds free gpi anchors. besides the classical pnh symptoms of anemia, thrombosis, and hemolysis, patients with pigt mutations also manifest with additional autoinflammatory symptoms, such as urticaria, fever, arthralgia and meningitis, and it is hypothesized that the free gpi-anchor that accumulates in affected cells is causally related to autoinflammation. based on these findings, we propose the new entity of atypical pnh. background: the prevalence of metabolic disorders, in particular obesity has dramatically increased worldwide. genetic variants explain only a minor part of this obesity epidemics induced by physical inactivity and over nutrition. epidemiological studies in humans and animal models of di-from patients with secondary neoplasm (group ) were mostly unique to id (= , . %) whereas only . % of all mutations were shared in id and secondary neoplasm samples (= ). furthermore there were no shared cna in the corresponding samples identified by oncoscan® analysis. to sum up, the oncoscan® and wes analysis, of the paired bl group ( ) provide strong evidence for a linear clonal evolution, meaning relapses may directly evolve from the previous lymphoma clone rather than a common precursor. in contrast, results obtained for patients with secondary neoplasm (group ) showed no indication for linear but rather for divergent evolution. thus, analysis of recurrent mutations shared in id and second neoplasm samples can provide important information about disease progression and are therefore subject of ongoing analysis. y. murakami , t. hirata , s. murata , t. kinoshita , m. kawamoto , s. murase , h. yoshimura , n. kohara , n. inoue , m. osato , j. nishimura , y. ueda , y. kanakura , p. m. in runx mutated aml the number of runx mutations, loss of the wild-type allele and the number and kind of additional mutations impact on prognosis a. stengel, w. kern, m. meggendorfer, k. perglerovà, t. haferlach, c. haferlach mll munich leukemia laboratory, munich, germany, mll , praha, czech republic aml with mutated runx show a distinct pattern of cytogenetic and molecular genetic abnormalities and an adverse prognosis. we analyzed the impact of multiple runx mutations and runx wild-type (wt) loss on associated genetic alterations and survival. for this, aml cases with runx mutations (mut) were split in ( ) runx wt loss (n = ), ( ) > runx mut (n = ) and runx mut (n = ). cases were selected for mutation analyses of genes. in cases with runx mut, + was frequently found, whereas in wt loss + was the most abundant trisomy (+ : % in runx mut vs. % in wt loss, p = . ; + : % vs. %, p < . ). cases with > runx mut showed an intermediate distribution (+ : %, + : %). missense mutations were the most abundant mutation type in wt loss cases ( % vs. %, p = . ), whereas in runx mut, frameshift mutations were found more frequently ( % vs. %, p = . ). in cases with > runx mut, both were observed at similar frequencies (missense: %, frameshift: %). mutation analyses of selected cases revealed additional molecular mutations. % of cases showed at least one runx -accompying mutation (range: - ). the median of accompanying mutations was n = in the total cohort and in cases with runx- mut and > runx mut, whereas it was n = in runx wt loss. srsf ( %), asxl ( %), dnmt a ( %), idh ( %), sf b ( %), tet ( %) and bcor ( %) were revealed as most frequently mutated genes. cases with runx wt loss showed a higher frequency of asxl mut compared to the other cases ( % vs. %, p = . ), while u af mut were absent from this group ( % vs. %, p = . ). median overall survival (os) in the total cohort was months. wt loss (os: months) and > runx mut ( months) showed an adverse impact on prognosis compared to runx mut ( months; p = . and p = . , respectively). mutations in asxl and kras and the presence of ≥ additional mutations also negatively impacted os ( vs. months, p = . ; vs. months, p < . ; vs. months, p = . ). in univariate cox regression analysis runx wt loss (hr = . ; p = . ), ≥ additional mutations (hr = . ; p = . ), asxl mut (hr = . ; p = . ) and kr-asmut (hr = . ; p = . ) had an adverse impact on os. multivariate cox regression analysis revealed an independent adverse effect on os for runx wt loss (hr = . ; p = . ) and krasmut (hr = . ; p = . ). for / cases we received samples during course of the disease. in none of these cases, an evidence for a runx germline mutation was found by analyzing the mutation loads, thus all runx mutations are somatically acquired. taken together, we found strong differences between the subgroups in regard of cytogenetic and molecular genetic aberrations as well as regarding prognosis. thus, not only the presence and number of runx mutations but also the conservation of an intact runx allele as well as the number and kind of additional mutations is biologically and clinically relevant. abstracts different chromatin states, where methylation is inversely correlated with active histone marks. using the hardy-weinberg law, we estimate that there are dmrs with a maf> . . we hypothesized that cis-acting dna polymorphisms could be responsible for the inter-individual variation of the dmrs methylation levels. we genotyped . million snps in the five donors and found that / ( %) dmrs have methylation levels highly correlated (> . ) with the genotype of at least one nearby snp (± kb window). this correlation was verified in / dmrs by targeted bisulfite sequencing in monocytes from individuals used for wgbs and from additional individuals. to validate our results in a larger population and possibly find correlating snps outside the ± kb window for the remaining dmrs, we performed genome-wide association studies (gwas) using snp genotypes and illumina k cpg methylation data from blood samples of individuals from the heinz nixdorf recall study. these methylation arrays encompass only cpgs contained in of our dmrs, showing that they fail to identify a great number of potentially important regions. we certified that for these cpgs, monocyte and whole blood dmrs methylation levels were correlated, and performed a gwas with ~ , snp for each of the cpgs. for / cpgs, the correlation peak was near the cpg position. for each gwas, the snp with lowest p-value (in most cases p < e - ) was designated as lead-snp. snps in high linkage disequilibrium (r > . ) to the lead-snps were located within the corresponding dmr or bp to ~ kb from it. many regions are bound by ctcf and other transcription factors. it is likely that snps affect the binding of these factors and thus the methylation state of the region. we conclude that these inter-individual differences in dna methylation are mainly driven by genetic factors. the dystonia (dyt ) protein thap recruits the histone deacetylase hdac to mediate gene repression sektion für funktionelle genetik am institut für humangenetik, universität zu lübeck, lübeck, germany, institut für neurogenetik, universität zu lübeck, lübeck, germany dystonia describes a heterogeneous group of neurological movement disorders characterized by contractions in various muscles resulting in abnormal postures, involuntary twisting and repetitive movements. dystonia (dyt ), a primary torsions dystonia that first has an impact on cranio-cervical muscles causing problems with speaking and eating, is caused by mutations in the thap gene (thanatos-associated domain-containing apoptosis-associated protein ). thap belongs to the family of thap proteins that are characterized by the presence of an evolutionarily conserved specific dna-binding thap zinc finger motif at their n-terminus. in humans thap family members are known, designated thap to thap . interestingly, most of the dyt -causing mutations affect this thap domain. while we have previously described thap -mediated repression of specific target genes, the molecular mechanisms how thap regulates promoter activity are rather unknown. it is known, that other members of the thap family such as thap and thap interact with the histone deacetylase hdac to mediate transcriptional repression. we have performed yeast-two-hybrid and gst pulldown assays to identify a specific interaction of thap with hdac . by the use of truncated thap fragments we were able to narrow down hdac binding to the n-terminal thap-domain. for further functional characterization we have decreased hdac levels by sirna treatment or chemical inhibition and used taqman analyses to quantify the effect on thap -target genes expression. thus, a significant increase of thap -target genes expression was detected in those cells treated with hdac sirna. to further investigate whether the observed increase in gene expression is due to alterations of histone acetylation within the promoter regions we performed chromatin immunoprecipitation (chip) assays followed by qpcr using antibodies specific for different acetylated n-terminal residues of histone as markers for transcriptional active promoters. by this, we detected an increased acetylation within the promoter regions of thap target genes that are dysregulated in cells treated with decreased hdac levels. et-induced obesity indicate that epigenetic changes associated with adverse parental and/or intrauterine factors may contribute to the missing heritability of metabolic disorders. possible adverse paternal effects are likely transmitted by the sperm to the next generation. to prove this hypothesis, we have systematically analyzed the effects of paternal obesity on the sperm epigenome and its implications for the next generation. results: to study the possible transmission of paternal bmi effects to the next generation, methylation levels of eight paternally expressed imprinted genes (peg , peg , peg , peg , peg , peg , nespas and igf ), two maternally expressed imprinted genes (meg and h ), and the obesity related gene hif a were quantified by bisulphite pyrosequencing in sperm of donors (undergoing ivf/icsi) and fetal cord blood (fcb) of resulting offspring (conceived by ivf/icsi with the same sperm samples). hif a showed a significant positive correlation between sperm methylation and paternal bmi. this effect on the sperm epigenome was replicated in an independent cohort of sperm samples. for hif a, paternal bmi also showed a significant positive correlation with fcb methylation. on the other hand, peg /nnat exhibited a significant negative correlation between paternal bmi and fcb methylation. in contrast to pyrosequencing, deep bisulphite sequencing (dbs) allows one to study dna methylation at the single molecule level and enables us to distinguish between maternal and paternal alleles in fcb samples with an informative snp. epimutations which are defined as alleles showing > % aberrantly (de)methylated cpg sites can also be identified with dbs. upon performing dbs on sperm samples, we observed a higher epimutation rate in the high bmi ( - ) group when compared to the low bmi ( - ) group across the four studied genes (peg , hif a, h and nespas). we are presently analyzing dbs data in selected cord blood samples with an informative snp to separately quantify methylation at the paternal and maternal alleles. it is important to decipher the methylation of the paternal allele when studying whether sperm methylation alterations are transmitted to the offspring. conclusions: our results suggest that male obesity is associated with modification of the sperm dna methylome, which may affect the epigenome (in fetal cord blood) of the next generation. allele-specific dna methylation occurs at functionally different regions: ) at imprinting control elements, ) on the silent x chromosome in females and ) across the genome and probably dependent on the dna sequence in cis. the latter is termed haplotype-dependent allele-specific methylation and may contribute to inter-individual phenotypic variation. in a previous study on monocyte to macrophage differentiation, we showed that dna methylation differences between individuals were greater than between the two cell types. to study the genetic basis of these inter-individual differences in dna methylation, we analysed the methylome obtained by whole genome bisulfite sequencing (wgbs) of monocytes from five unrelated donors. for identifying differentially methylated regions (dmrs), we created two synthetic methylomes: one with the highest methylation values of each cpg in the five samples and one with the lowest methylation values. defining a dmr as a region of at least cpgs with a methylation level difference of at least . , we identified dmrs, which cover cpgs and fall into cer, respectively. we show that ns-associated rit mutants intensified signal flux through the mek-erk pathway upon growth factor stimulation. by using heterologous expression systems, we identified the p -activated kinase (pak ) as novel effector of rit . we found that rit interacts with the rho gtpases cdc and rac , both of which are crucial upstream regulators of pak . disease-causing rit mutations enhance protein-protein interactions and uncouple complex formation from growth factors. expression of both wild-type rit and its mutant forms resulted in dissolution of stress fibers and paxillin-containing focal adhesions from the cell center and increased cell movement. we conclude that rit is a potent regulator of actin dynamics, and dysregulated rac /cdc -pak signaling controlling cell adhesion and migration may be one aspect of the molecular basis of ns. medical systems biology, tu dresden, germany, institute for clinical genetics, tu dresden, germany, cancer science institute of singapore, national university of singapore, singapore, institute of molecular biology, mainz, germany telomeres are short repetitive ttaggg sequences that cap the ends of chromosomes. these stretches of dna are covered by proteins and rnas which together protect the putative double strand break from dna repair mechanisms and facilitate replication. however, telomeres shorten with every cell division due to the end replication problem. the ribonucleoprotein telomerase counteracts this process by de novo elongation of telomeric repeats but its expression is mostly confined to the germ line and stem cells. even in the latter its activity is usually not sufficient to completely prevent telomere shortening. all cancer cells are also faced with this challenge and while the majority of cancer cells rely on telomerase, approximately % of cancers ensure sufficient telomere length via the recombination-based alternative lengthening of telomeres (alt) mechanism. to better understand telomere biology we aimed to identify novel telomeric factors by systematically screening for telomere-binding proteins in cell lines from different vertebrates. here, we identified and characterized zbtb , a zinc finger protein, as a novel direct telomere-binding protein across the vertebrate lineage. zbtb is directly binding to telomeric dna in vitro and it is localizing to telomeres in vivo via one specific zinc finger domain in both telomerase-and alt-positive cancer cells. interestingly, zbtb knock-out cells have longer telomeres, suggesting that zbtb limits telomere elongation. in addition, the combination of chipseq, rnaseq and proteome analysis revealed a transcription factor activity for a small, but specific set of target genes of zbtb , linking its telomeric functions to mitochondrial metabolism. in conclusion, zbtb is a novel direct telomere binding protein with transcription factor activity that acts as negative regulator of telomere length. our data show for the first time a functional interaction of the 'dystonia protein' thap with the histone deacetylase hdac and therefore give new insights into the molecular mechanisms of thap -mediated gene repression. interestingly, previous functional studies as well as structure analyses revealed that only a subset of the dyt -causing mutations affecting the n-terminal thap domain alter thap -binding to dna. in ongoing studies we want to investigate the consequences of dyt -causing mutations on thap -hdac complex formation and its relevance in the molecular pathology of dystonia. reproductive homeobox (rhox) genes are clustered on the x chromosome and share a unique amino acid helix-turn-helix dna binding homeodomain. they were identified in several species as having important roles in reproductive tissues, notably in the testis. the human rhox cluster is composed of three genes: rhoxf and two copies of rhoxf (rhoxf a, rhoxf b) which are referred to as rhoxf / b. rhox proteins are expressed exclusively by germ cells in human testis and aberrant rhox methylation is associated with several sperm parameters. because little is known about the molecular mechanism of rhox function in humans, the aim of the study was to identify target genes of human rhox proteins and to investigate the impact of rhox mutations on protein function. using gene expression profiling, we identified genes regulated by members of the human rhox gene cluster. some genes were uniquely regulated by rhoxf or rhoxf / b, while others were regulated by both of these transcription factors. several of these regulated genes encode proteins involved in processes relevant to spermatogenesis, e. g. stress protection and cell survival. one of the target genes of rhoxf / b is rhoxf , suggesting cross-regulation to enhance transcriptional responses. the potential role of rhox in human infertility was addressed by sequencing rhox in a group of patients with severe oligozoospermia. this revealed two mutations in rhoxf (c. g>a and c. c>t) and four in rhoxf / b (- c>g, c. g>a, c. c>t and c. g>a), of which only one (c. g>a) was found in a control group of men with normal sperm concentration. functional analysis demonstrated that c. g>a and c. g>a significantly impaired the ability of rhoxf / b to regulate downstream genes. molecular modelling suggested that these mutations alter rhoxf /f b protein conformation. by combining clinical data with in vitro functional analysis, we demonstrate how the x-linked rhox gene cluster may function in normal human spermatogenesis and we provide evidence that it is impaired in human male fertility. colorectal cancer (crc). here, we proposed the possible molecular mechanisms responsible for crc initiation, progression and invasion using a network biology approach. materials and methods: in order to investigate the underlying crc pathogenesis, the dataset gse consisting of normal tissues, stage i, stage ii, stage iii and stage iv of crc were obtained from gene expression omnibus (geo) and further examined. the differentially expressed genes (degs) were subjected to protein-protein interaction databases and a ppi network was constructed for each crc stage. topological analysis of resulted ppi networks revealed functional hub genes and involved in crc development. furthermore, the overlap genes between four studied crc stages were determined and deeply evaluated to identify deregulat ed biological networks during crc development. a standard real-time pcr was performed to validate the in silico findings utilizing sw and ncm cell lines. results: the most important hub genes (cdk for stage i, ubc for stage ii, esr for stage iii and atxn for stage iv) and sub-networks were identified in crc stages. moreover, several novel biomarkers were also introduced for each crc stage. gene ontology (go) and signaling pathway enrichment uncovered the important roles of wnt, mapk and jak-stat signaling pathways in regulation of crc pathogenesis. functional annotation of overlap genes revealed that cell cycle regulating genes are the most highly regulated genes during crc initiation, progression and invasion. in vitro analyses confirmed deregulation of atxn and cdk , two hub genes of stage iv, in metastatic colon sw cells compared to normal colon ncm cell line. our study provides a new insight into the distinct molecular mechanisms underlying the pathogenesis of crc. the functional hub genes, sub-networks, prioritizes key pathways and novel crc biomarkers were also provided that can be useful in therapeutic programs. targeted next-generation sequencing approaches as well as next-generation whole exome sequencing are becoming more widespread in routine molecular diagnostics for patients with ataxia. however, since ngs at present is not suitable to detect (trinucleotide) repeat expansions, a pre-ngs testing for common polyglutamine expansion scas seems mandatory. but also sca subtypes caused by expansions in non-coding regions of genes like sca , sca , sca , and sca as well as other ataxias known to be associated with repeat expansions like the fragile x-associated tremor ataxia syndrome (fxtas) should be taken into account before applying ngs-based diagnostics. in order to find an optimal diagnostic strategy in future more information about the frequency and phenotypic characteristics of rare repeat expansion disorders associated with ataxia would be helpful. we therefore analyzed a cohort of patients with symptoms of cerebellar ataxia, dysarthria and other unspecific symptoms who were referred to our center for sca diagnostics and showed alleles in the normal range for the most common sca subtypes sca - , sca , sca , and sca . these patients were screened for expansions in sca , sca , sca , sca and fxtas as well as for the pathogenic hexanucleotide repeat in the c orf gene. no expanded repeats for sca , sca or sca were found in the analyzed patients. five patients with ataxia of unknown etiology showed sca cta/ctg combined alleles ( - ) that are discussed to be potentially pathogenic. one -year-old male patient with unclear dementia syndromes was diagnosed with a large ggggcc repeat expansion in c orf . and the analysis of the fmr gene identified one patient with a permutation (> cgg repeats) and seven patients poster *** = für den posterpreis nominiert preventive genetic counseling in neurogenetic disorders needs a better collaborative approach between genetic and neurology clinics -a report of four siblings with unverricht-lundborg disease: genetic counseling is the process of helping people to understand and adapt the medical, psychological and familial implications of genetic contributions to disease. for parents with a previous child or other family member with a known genetic syndrome expands options for preimplantation or prenatal diagnosis for the current or the future pregnancies. however, timely referral by health providers to genetic counselor and for discussing with couples regarding possible options is important. additionally, other factors such as personal decision making especially due to high price of some genetic services and uncertain results cause considerably delays to genetic testing. there are more than various types of inherited neurological disorders in which alterations in genes lead to an inherited condition such as huntington disease, inherited forms of alzheimer disease, ataxia, muscular dystrophies and epilepsies. the knowledge of the causative gene mutations in the affected individual is critical in the possible prenatal diagnosis in other members of the pedigree. therefore a multidisciplinary care team, including neurologist and genetic counselor for the conditions diagnosed as inherited neurological disorders is critical in prenatal setting and consideration of an effective management. here, our report of four siblings affected by a rare form of inherited epilepsy (unverricht-lundborg disease) with an autosomal recessive pattern highlights the importance of the needs for a better collaborative approach in the neurogenetic setting. in fact, the birth of four successive siblings affected by similar neurogenetics disorders in a specific family is showing the need for more attention to this important issue, especially in terms of intersectoral collaboration. poorebrahim hort: / differentially expressed transcription units). these differences in gene expression we detected did not correlate with dna methylation changes at the corresponding transcription regulatory sites. from our results we conclude that altered expression of imprinted genes indeed plays a role in tumorigenesis of germinal center derived b-cell lymphomas. however, the altered transcriptional regulation of these genes seems not to rely on the usual epigenetic mechanisms known from constitutional imprinting disorders. mf. abazari , h. bokharaie , m. asghari , v. poortahmasebi , h. askari , m. investigating the expression of genes associated with autism spectrum disorders to identify sex related differences s. berkel, a. eltokhi, g. rappold institute of human genetics, heidelberg university hospital, heidelberg, germany neurodevelopmental disorders such as autism, attention deficit and hyperactivity syndrome as well as language problems and learning difficulties have a higher prevalence in male individuals compared to females. autism is characterized by impairments in social interaction, communication deficits and restricted and repetitive behaviors. boys are more frequently affected than girls; the ratio of affected boys compared to girls is : for autism and : for asperger syndrome. in this study we aim to elucidate the reason for this gender difference by following up two hypotheses: ( ) risk genes for autism spectrum disorders (asd) might be expressed at different levels in males and females and ( ) asd risk genes might interact with sexually dimorphic pathways. first, we investigated the expression of genes associated with autism spectrum disorders, including the shank gene family, in the brain of male and female mice to identify sex-dependent differences. the rna expression levels were analyzed in five different brain regions (cortex, hippocampus, striatum, cerebellum, thalamus) at different developmental stages (e , e , p , p , p and adult) in male and female mice. we identified a sex dimorphic expression of shank and shank , but not of shank . due to the fact that early brain development is strongly influenced by sex hormones (estrogen, testosterone), we further investigated the influence of these hormones on shank expression in human neuroblastoma cells (sh-sy y) and primary mouse hippocampal neurons. a better understanding of the sex differences in the brain might help to explain the vulnerability for neuropsychiatric disorders like autism and paves the way to discover putative risk or protective factors for these disorders. imprinting defects in temple syndrome are caused by a failure in imprint establishment and/or maintenance j. beygo, c. mertel, g. gillessen-kaesbach, b. horsthemke, k. buiting institut für humangenetik, universitätsklinikum essen, universität duisburg-essen, essen, germany, institut für humangenetik, universität zu lübeck, lübeck, germany temple syndrome (ts ) is a rare imprinting disorder characterised by low birth weight and height, muscular hypotonia and feeding difficulties in the infant period, early puberty and short stature with small hands and feet and often truncal obesity. in a subset of patients with ts , the disease is caused by an imprinting defect (id) affecting the paternal allele of the imprinted region q . the id results in aberrant methylation of the three known differentially methylated regions (dmrs), the germline-derived primary dlk /meg intergenic (ig-)dmr (meg /dlk :ig-dmr), the postfertilization-derived, secondary dmr at the meg promoter (meg :tss-dmr), and the postfertilization-derived, secondary intragenic meg -dmr (meg :int -dmr). the meg /dlk :ig-dmr and the meg :tss-dmr are methylated on the paternal chromosome and hypomethylated in patients with ts and an imprinting defect. the meg :int -dmr is unmethylated on the paternal chromosome and hypermethylated in these patients. both the meg /dlk :ig-dmr and the with alleles in the grey zone ( to cgg repeats), thus suggesting that individuals with fmr repeat expansions in the gray zone may also present with neurological signs. bernhart , , , h. kretzmer , , r. wagener , c. mmml some genes are subject to the mechanism of imprinting, i. e. their expression depends on parental origin. they primarily function in the control of proliferation, fetal development and cellular differentiation. constitutional imprinting disorders are in part also associated with an increased tumor risk. loss of imprinting has been also described as somatic event in tumorigenesis. while this phenomenon has been broadly analyzed in solid tumors, data on alterations of imprinting in lymphatic neoplasms are largely missing. we analyzed the rna expression of transcription units/regions known or supposed to be subject to imprinting in two cohorts of normal b-cells and germinal center derived b-cell lymphomas. the first cohort (mmml) contains samples: burkitt lymphomas (bl), non-burkitt lymphomas (non-bl, including various subtypes like follicular and diffuse large b-cell lymphoma) and normal germinal center b-cell samples (gcbc, as controls). the second cohort (icgc mmml-seq) comprised samples with bl, non-bl and gcbc samples. gene expression was analyzed with affymetrix u a genechips in the mmml cohort and by rna sequencing in the icgc mmml-seq cohort. results of the transcriptional analyses in the icgc mmml-seq cohort were compared to the dna methylation available from a subset of the analyzed samples (kretzmer et al., nat genet, ) . of the transcription units sites, corresponding to transcription units, were present on the applied array used for the analysis of the mmml cohort. a two group comparison revealed significantly differentially expressed sites corresponding to transcription units between bl and non-bl including the plagl and peg genes. in total, and sites corresponding to and transcription units are differentially expressed between bl versus gcbc and non-bl versus gcbc, respectively. comparison of gene expression in the icgc cohort revealed differentially expressed sites corresponding to transcription units between bl and non-bl (overlap with mmml cohort: / differentially expressed transcription units), including again peg and plagl , differentially expressed sites corresponding to transcription units between bl and gcbc (overlap with mmml cohort: / differentially expressed transcription units) and differentially expressed sites corresponding to transcription units between non-bl and gcbc (overlap with mmml co-abstracts maintenance dna methylation of l promoters, spoc could function in targeting g a to l sequences. in conclusion our data implicate the epigenetic reader spoc in the suppression of line elements during germ cell development. s. bens , j. kolarova , m. kreuz , sh. characterization of the expression of the imprinted kcnk -gene in specific brain regions and the phenotypic analysis of kcnk knockout mice a kcnk /kcnk is a maternally expressed imprinted gene whose mutations are responsible for the maternally inherited birk-barel mental retardation dysmorphism syndrome. it encodes a member of the superfamily of k+channels with two pore-forming domains and is involved in the modulation of the resting membrane potential and excitability of neuronal cells. so far, only homozygous kcnk knockout mice with inactivation of both parental alleles were phenotypically characterized. these mice displayed cognitive deficits as well as a reduction of k+ leak current by %. in the light of maternal-specific imprinted expression of kcnk /kcnk and the maternal inheritance of the birk-barel mental retardation dysmorphism, a thorough phenotypic analysis of heterozygous kcnk knockout mice with inactivation of only the maternally inherited allele is also warranted. as first aim of our study, we characterized the parental allele-specific expression of kcnk in various regions of the mouse brain. quantification of allele-specific expression by pyrosequencing (quasep) method was performed for different brain areas from several developmental stages of (c bl/ xcast/ei) f hybrid mice. exclusive expression from the maternal kcnk allele was detected in the dentate gyrus, hippocampus, mesencephalon, medulla oblongata, thalamus and pons. biallelic expression with, however, a strong bias towards the maternal kcnk allele ( - % of the transcripts) was observed in the olfactory bulbs, cortex, cerebellum, striatum and olfactory tubercles. as the second aim of our study, the phenotypes of wildtype, heterozygous kcnk knockout mice with maternal inherited knockout allele (kcnk komat) and homozygous kcnk knockout mice (kcnk kohom) were comparatively examined in a behavioral test battery. due to the already known cognitive defects of kcnk kohom animals and especially the phenotype of the patients with birk-barel syndrome, it was assumed that kcnk komat and kcnk kohom animals show deficits in some of the tests. the spontaneous alternation in the y-maze test was significantly reduced by approximately - % in kcnk komat and kcnk kohom mice compared to wildtype mice indicating a clearly impaired working memory. in addition, kcnk komat and kcnk kohom mice displayed a reduced prepulse inhibition of startle response compared to wildtype mice indicating an impairment of sensomotoric gating, a process to filter out irrelevant information. acoustic startle response as a measure of anxiety levels was also significantly decreased, but only in kcnk kohom mice. our findings shall further elucidate the role of kcnk /kcnk in brain physiology and pathophysiology and open new avenues for treatment of cognitive dysfunctions in birk-barel syndrome. meg :tss-dmr act as imprinting control centres, although the meg / dlk :ig-dmr functions as an upstream regulator of the meg -dmr. so far, the function and regulation of the meg -dmr is unknown. the hypomethylation of the paternal allele in ts -id patients at the meg / dlk :ig-dmr and the meg :tss-dmr point to a failure in the establishment of the methylation imprint or to maintain the methylation imprint after fertilization. in this case, the incorrectly imprinted chromosome would be inherited from either the paternal grandfather or grandmother. to prove this assumption we are investigating the grandparental origin of the affected chromosome in our cohort of ten ts -id families by studying the parent-of-origin specific methylation of the three dmrs in combination with informative single nucleotide variants (snps). at the moment we have identified three families informative for the meg / dlk :ig-dmr, two families for the meg :tss-dmr and two families for the meg :int -dmr. so far we have obtained results in two families for the meg :tss-dmr. we found that in one case the allele harbouring the id was inherited from the paternal grandmother, but in the second case from the paternal grandfather, indicating that the id occurred after erasure of the parental methylation imprints. a complete lack of methylation observed in the majority of ts -id patients is therefore likely due to a problem in establishing methylation on the paternal chromosome, whereas in rare cases with methylation mosaicism, the id is probably due to a problem to maintain the paternal imprint after fertilization. bosch, s. lukassen, j. kaindl, j. schwarz, c. nelkenbrecher, a. herrmann, a. reichel, a. ekici, t. gramberg, t. stamminger, a. winterpacht humangenetisches institut, erlangen, germany, virologisches institut, erlangen, germany spoc /phf is a gene located on human chromosome region p . and mouse chromosome qe . the protein was first described in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer, where its expression correlated with tumour progression and reduced survival time. spoc is a reader of the epigenetic mark h k me / , dynamically associates with chromatin during mitosis and plays a role in chromosome condensation. spoc deficient mice show a pronounced hypoplasia of the testis with a progressive loss of germ cells. although loss of spoc leads to a significantly reduced chromatin condensation of the sex chromosomes in meiosis, the protein is not expressed in spermatocytes but in the undifferentiated precursor cells, the spermatogonial stem cells (sscs). here, we present chip-seq data of mouse testis tissue demonstrating that spoc strongly binds to evolutionary young l elements in undifferentiated spermatogonia. we show that in hek cells overexpression of spoc leads to repression of transposition activity of line-elements strongly indicating a role of spoc in l element suppression. the cell has developed several lines of defence against retrotransposition to maintain genomic integrity, including dna methylation. these defence mechanisms are most elaborate in spermatogonial stem cells since transposition events in these cells would have a dramatic impact on the next generation. therefore, the repression of retrotransposition is of fundamental importance for germ cell development and ultimately the quality of the gametes. moreover, we present medip results showing that the methylation levels of l sequences decrease upon spoc -knockout and demonstrate that the histone methyltransferase g a is strongly upregulated in preleptotene meiocytes of spoc -/mice. g a is expressed from spermatogonia until early meiosis where it regulates h k di-methylation and has been shown to be involved in the repression of l element in mouse spermatogonia. we are able to demonstrate that h k me levels are unaltered in spoc -/mice, suggesting a potential functional link between g a and spoc that does not affect the catalytic activity of g a. since g a can regulate de novo and medizinische genetik · lated to investigate ciliogenesis. data resulting from rnaseq experiments are analyzed by established informatics tools (tophat, cufflinks and derivatives thereof). we will show results from our work in progress and we hope to convince people to intensify rna analyses even in routine labs to uncover hidden mechanism and/or mutations impacting mrna splicing and thereby causing human disease. telomeres are located at the ends of chromosomes and have an essential role in the maintenance of genome stability. after each cell division, a small part of this specialized sequence is lost. when telomeres reach a critically reduced length, the cell either dies through apoptosis or enters a state of permanent cell cycle arrest. it has been demonstrated that telomere biology is directly linked to basic biological phenomena such as aging, tumorigenesis and maintenance of dna integrity. it is known that oxidative stress accelerates telomere shortening in cells, resulting in premature cell senescence. shorter leukocyte telomeres have been observed in type ii diabetes or degenerative disease like dementia and alzheimer disease as well in chromosomal instability syndrome, such as fanconi anemia (fa) and nijmegen breakage syndrome (nbs). any link between telomere length and inflammation has not yet been extensively studied in autoimmune diseases. accelerated length shortening might be related to autoimmune disease predisposition. yet the reasons for this shortening are likely manifold, including the individual genetic background, oxidative stress and chronic inflammation. in order to shed light on these relationships, we investigate genomic dna extracted from blood of patients diagnosed with multiple sclerosis and from patients with huntington disease. the samples were divided into age groups. stepone q-pcr was applied to detect the relative telomere length as a function of age. initially identified differences in telomere lengths still have to be confirmed in larger cohorts. background: intrauterine exposure to gestational diabetes mellitus (gdm) confers a lifelong increased risk for metabolic and other complex disorders to the offspring. gdm-induced epigenetic modifications modulating gene regulation and persisting into later life are generally assumed to mediate these increased disease risks. to identify candidate genes for fetal programming, we compared genome-wide methylation patterns of fetal cord bloods (fcbs) from gdm and control pregnancies. methods and results: using illumina's k methylation arrays and following correction for multiple testing, cpg sites ( of which are associated with genes) displayed significant methylation differences between gdm and control samples. three of four candidate genes, atp a , prkch, and slc a , from our methylation screen and one, hif a, from the literature were validated by bisulfite pyrosequencing. the gdm effect on fcb methylation was more pronounced in women with insulin-dependent gdm who had a more severe metabolic phenotype than women with dietetically treated gdm. however, the effect remained significant after adjustment for the maternal bmi and gestational week in a multivariate regression model. e. g. dekomien , , b. bellenberg , , n. trampe , , r. schneider , , c. prehn , , c. krogias , , r. kropatsch , , m. regensburger , , c. lukas , , r. gold , , human genetics, bochum, germany, ruhr-university bochum, germany, radiology, st. josef-hospital, bochum, germany, neurology, st. josef-hospital, bochum, germany, molecular neurology, erlangen, germany, university of erlangen, germany a pair of monozygotic -year-old twins suffering from hereditary spastic paraplegia (spg ) is described. patients underwent thorough clinical examination and magnetic resonance imaging (mri) and mr-spectroscopy (mrs) at tesla. genetic testing was performed by sanger sequencing and alternative splicing by rna analysis. clinically the patients presented a similar spectrum of symptoms with a higher level of disability in one of the patients. mri studies including morphometry and regional microstructural analysis by diffusion tensor imaging (dti) of the corpus callosum (cc) revealed marked thinning and corresponding increases of axial diffusivity (ad), radial diffusivity (rd) and apparent diffusion coefficient (adc) and reduction of the fractional anisotropy (fa) as compared to healthy controls in all cc sections, particularly in the anterior callosal body. there was marked supratentorial white matter reduction and to a lesser extent grey matter reduction in both patients. involvement of the cortico-spinal tracts was reflected by fa and rd alterations and cervical cord atrophy. the more strongly affected patient showed a higher degree of callosal microstructural damage and cervical cord atrophy. genetic testing of the spg gene revealed two mutations in compound heterozygous state, a known frameshift mutation as well as a novel synonymous exonic splice site mutation. this study shows similar but distinct clinical and imaging findings in monozygotic twins suffering from spg , suggesting individual downstream genetic effects. targeted next generation sequencing techniques tremendously improved our ability to identify sequence variants. however fixing disease causing mutation still lack behind because of several reasons: inappropriate gene specific data bank, insufficient prediction tools, incomplete analysis and others. in addition identified sequence variants are a mixture of severe disease causing mutations and a myriad of variants of unknown pathogenicity. in addition an unknown number of silent mutations, neutral polymorphism and sequence variants deeply buried in introns might severely influence splicing of the premature rna molecule. by solely analysis of the dna sequence this impact onto the integrity of the mrna is completely ignored. in order to catalog the mrna isoforms derived from genes of our interest we started to set up rnaseq technologies in our routine lab. to reduce the amount of data, to improve the power of analyses and to identify rare isoforms of transcripts we use targeted rnaseq to characterize the mrna molecules originating from those genes we are interested in (e. g.: hereditary breast cancer core genes ( genes), hereditary colon cancer ( genes), primary ciliary dyskinesia (pcd)( genes). genes involved in pcd offer the invaluable advantage that the respiratory epithelium where these genes are normally expressed can be sampled from the inferior turbinate of the nose by brush biopsy either from healthy probands or from patients suffering from pcd. in addition to direct preparation of rna from these cilia, cilia carrying cells or tissue can be cultured and manipu-abstracts long-range pcr and direct sequence analysis. the comparative analysis of parental haplotypes with the sequences flanking the deletion breakpoints in the patients revealed the absence of any de novo mutations in breakpoint-flanking regions of prs -mediated and prs -mediated type- nf deletions. we conclude that although nahr is a mutational mechanism causing large nf deletions, there is no evidence for a local mutagenic effect of these recombination events. hence it is unlikely that nahr underlying type- nf deletions involves error-prone translesion polymerases that would increase the de novo mutation rate in breakpoint flanking regions. furthermore, the detailed haplotype analysis of prs , a highly active nahr hotspot mediating the majority of large nf deletions, revealed that non-allelic homologous gene conversion (nahgc) between nf -repa and nf -repc, which results from non-crossover resolution of recombination intermediates, is the major driving force responsible for the haplotype diversity in this region. remarkably, the haplotype diversity patterns observed for nf -repa and nf -repc were markedly different indicating that during nahgc, nf -repa is disporportionately more often the donor sequence used to repair mismachtes in heteroduplex regions than nf -repc. we also noticed a correlation between haplotype diversity and the number of prdm a-allele binding sites suggesting that haplotype diversity and hence the nahgc rate within prs in nf-repa is regulated by prdm . heidelberg center for personalized oncology dkfz-hipo dkfz, heidelberg, germany dna methylation aberrations at differentially methylated region of imprinted genes interfere with the naturally parental-specific mono-allelic expression. that leads to a bi-allelic or absent expression of the imprinted gene, a cause of imprinting disorders (ids). we aimed at analyzing the genome wide dna methylation pattern of two patients with ids, namely transient neonatal diabetes mellitus (tndm) and multi locus imprinting disturbance (mlid), and their respective parents. the dna methylation profiles of these individuals were obtained by whole genome bisulfite sequencing (wgbs) on b cells sorted by magnetic cell isolation. the sequencing libraries were prepared as described in kretzmer et al. [ ] and sequenced on an illumina hiseq machine. wgbs data were processed with the methylctools toolkit. briefly, bisulphite-treated sequences were aligned with bwa-mem using a three-letter approach, and the methylation ratios were quantified for ~ . million out of . million cpg sites (coverage> ) genome-wide. quality control was performed to assess the quality of the dna methylation profiles and genetic fingerprinting was performed on the wgbs data confirming sample origin and family relationship. the wgbs data was further compared to already existing genome-wide human snp array . (snp array) and humanmethylation k bead array ( k) data, resulting in a good accordance with pearson's correlation coefficients > . . we detected an overall dna methylation level around % in all samples. already known dna methylation alterations, e. g. hypomethylation in plagl were validated by wgbs. by searching for differentially methylated regions (dmrs), defined as regions composed of at least five consecutive cpg loci showing a methylation difference between patient and corresponding parents above %, we identified dmrs in the mlid our study supports an association between maternal gdm and the epigenetic status of the exposed offspring. consistent with a multifactorial disease model, the observed fcb methylation changes are of small effect size but affect multiple genes/loci. the identified genes are primary candidates for transmitting gdm effects to the next generation. they also may provide useful biomarkers for the diagnosis and prognosis of adverse prenatal exposures and assessing the success of interventions during pregnancy. the nuclease hsnm b/apollo has a dual function in both dna-repair and maintenance of telomeres. as to the repair of dna interstrand crosslinks (icl), hsnm b/apollo is linked to the fanconi anemia (fa) pathway and cells depleted for hsnm b/apollo (sirna) resemble those from patients with fa. we have identified a single nucleotide polymorphism, rs , which is associated with quantitative differences in hsnm b/apollo expression (mrna). we analyze whether the differential expression relates to the degree of cellular sensitivity to the dna interstrand crosslinks inducing mutagen mitomycin c (mmc) and ionising radiation (ir), which induces, among other lesions, dna double strand breaks. all experiments are realized using lymphoblastoid cells derived from generally healthy donors. results of rt-pcr analysis of hsnm b/apollo expression and of the cell viability assays will be presented and discussed in the context of the potential usefulness of considering rs in predicting individual sensitivity to mutagens relevant in anti-cancer treatment. p-basepi- nahr events causing type- nf microdeletions are not associated with an increased mutation rate in breakpoint-flanking regions m. hillmer , , a. summerer , , v. f. mautner , , l. messiaen , , h. institute of human genetics, ulm, germany, university of ulm, ulm, germany, department of neurology, hamburg, germany, university hospital hamburg eppendorf, hamburg, germany, department of genetics, birmingham, usa, university of alabama at birmingham, birmingham, usa large deletions of the nf gene and its flanking regions are the most frequent recurrent mutations in patients with neurofibromatosis type (nf ). different types of large nf deletions have been identified which are distinguishable in terms of their size and breakpoint position. most frequent are type- nf deletions spanning . -mb and characterized by breakpoints located within the low-copy-repeats nf -repa and nf -repc which exhibit . % sequence homology within -kb. type- nf deletions are caused by non-allelic homologous recombination (nahr). two nahr hotspots have been identified termed prs and prs which encompass -kb and -kb, respectively. approximately % of all type- nf deletion breakpoints cluster within the prs and prs nahr hotspots. in this study, we analysed whether the nahr events causing type- nf deletions would be associated with an increased de novo mutation rate of sequences located in breakpoint-flanking regions. to do so, we sequenced the deletion breakpoint-flanking regions in the patients and compared these sequences with the homologous regions amplified from dna of the patients' parents who are not affected by nf . however, in the germline of these parents, the deletions were mediated by nahr and then transmitted to their offspring. the parental haplotypes within the prs or prs regions of nf -repa and nf -repc were analysed by in the alpl gene and inherited as an autosomal dominant trait can cause milder forms. so far detailed knowledge of the milder forms is lacking. patients with a mutation in the alpl gene were interviewed in a standardized questionaire concerning the different disease manifestations: teeth, bone fractures, pain of bones and muscles and quality of life. subgroups were formed with regard to the localization of the mutations in the three protein domains. patients with mutations clustering in the catalytic site of the molecule showed the most severe odontohypophosphatasia: one individual had premature primary tooth loss, % of patients showed adult tooth loss, % suffered from dental caries. the majority had the first manifestation before the age of . persons suffering from mutations in the two other domains reported a relatively high quality of live with low pain of muscles and bones. unexpectedly in all groups there was no significant difference in the portion of patients with bone fracture. conclusion: the clinical signs of dominant hpp are mostly unspecific. especially dental problems like severe adult teeth loss, an early manifestation of dental caries or enlarged pulp chambers can be a sign of odontohypophosphatasia and a dominant inherited mild hpp. mutations in the catalytic site of the alpl molecule are associated with a more severe odontohypophosphatasia. screening of non-neoplastic lymphatic tissues from children for the igh-myc fusion using a highly sensitive -color fish-assay burkitt lymphoma is a mature b-cell lymphoma which on the genetic level is characterized by the burkitt translocation t( ; )(q ;q ) juxtaposing the igh locus in q next to the myc locus in q . in a minor part of burkitt lymphomas, immunoglobulin light chain variants of the translocation result in overexpression of myc. despite being pathognomonic for burkitt lymphoma, the ig-myc juxtaposition alone is not sufficient on its own for a malignant transformation of the cell. other igh rearrangements like the igh-bcl fusion, typical for follicular lymphoma, were detected in a significant number of healthy individuals. for the igh-myc translocation, only scarce data in healthy individuals exist. this is most likely due to scattering of the breakpoints which are far more difficult to target by pcr than the igh-bcl translocation. therefore, we aimed at investigating if myc-translocation positive cells can also be detected in normal b-cell maturation. considering the epidemiology of burkitt lymphoma being the most common b-cell lymphoma in children, we focused on samples from young individuals. on the one hand, we analyzed non-neoplastic tissue specimen of bone marrow (n = ) (age range - , median age . years) and lymph nodes (n = )(age range - years, median age years). on the other hand, considering the typical clinical presentation of burkitt lymphoma, we included non-neoplastic tissue specimen containing peyer patches (n = )(age range hours- years, median age years). the specimen were analyzed using a four-color fluorescence in situ hybridisation (fish) assay with probes flanking the breakpoints on chromosomes and . in this setting, a positive result comprised the break on both chromosomes (seen as signal split for each locus) and fusion of the involved genes (leading to two different fusion signals). the assay was first validated on controls of cells with a normal male karyotype from healthy individuals as well as on five burkitt cell lines and each five ffpe embedded t( ; ) negative and positive tissues as negative and positive controls. the assay was then applied for the screening of a igh-myc fusion in the above mentioned paraffin-embedded tissues. successful hybridizations of overall , and ffpe sections from bone marrow, lymph nodes and peyer patches respectively could be obtained. trio and dmrs in the tndm trio. in the mlid trio / dmrs showed increased and dmrs decreased dna methylation in the patient's sample. of dmrs, are located in regions potentially associated with transcriptional regulation. further analysis revealed that / dmrs are associated with imprinted genes. in the tndm trio, we detected / dmrs to show hypermethylation in the patient compared to her parents and / dmrs with lower dna methylation. in these trio / dmrs are associated with regions potentially correlated to transcriptional regulation and dmrs with imprinted genes summarized, our results show that wgbs is a well suited and valid method for analyzing dna methylation. while the overall dna methylation levels does not differ between the analyzed patients and parents, a detailed analysis of smaller regions revealed the existence of respectively differentially methylated regions between the analyzed mlid and tndm patient and their parents. supported by bmbf through fkz: gm und gm and gm p-basepi- characteristic mutational profile in children of individuals exposed to ionizing radiation p. krawitz, h. manuel, a. knaus, g. hildebrandt, m. jäger, m. schubach, m. rodriguez de los santos, t. pantel, d. beule, s. mundlos, k. sperling institute for medical genetics and human genetics charite, berlin, germany the dna damaging effects of ionizing radiation are deliberately used in cancer therapy as well as feared in accidents related to nuclear technology. despite its influence on the exposed organism, irradiation was believed to have no major effect on succeeding generations, as irreparable dna damages were thought to result in cell death. recently, however, genome-wide mutation screenings in offsprings of male mice that were irradiated with high dosages showed an accumulation for certain de novo events. we therefore focused on these mutational classes in a small cohort of human individuals that were conceived while or after their fathers were exposed to high frequency radiation. in the whole genome sequences of such offsprings we could confirm de novo rates for single nucleotide variants in the order of - per base as previously reported. interestingly, however, we found de novo translocations of paternal origin as well as increased numbers of clustered de novo mutations that resemble the results from animal studies. this characteristic mutation profile might thus be used as an indicator of irradiation exposure in one of the individual's parents. from the upstream regular rb promoter. to test this hypothesis, we generated a genetic model carrying modifications in the rb promoter and in cpg using crispr/cas technology. data on the establishment of the model and first results will be presented. the gid/ctlh protein complex with its seven core protein members is conserved in all eukaryotic cells. in saccharomyces cerevisiae it functions as an ubiquitin ligase complex and regulates the metabolic switch from gluconeogenesis to glycolysis ( ) . recently, we could show that the vertebrate gid/ctlh complex also functions as an ubiquitin ligase, however substrates and exact function remain unknown ( ) . a growing number of components of the ubiquitin protein system (ups) are described to be regulators of ciliogenesis ( ). defects in such genes are considered to cause ciliopathies, genetic disorders with typical phenotypic variations in patients and model organisms ( ) . first data supports our hypothesis that the ctlh complex plays a major role in ciliogenesis, e. g. the ctlh subunit rmnd a localizes to the basal body which is a modified centriole of primary cilia in nih- t cells and rmnd knock down in xenopus laevis leads to defects in cilia formation of epidermal multiciliated cells. n. reich, m. sandbothe, r. buurman, b. schlegelberger, t. illig, b . skawran department of human genetics, hannover, germany background and aims: hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) is characterized by genetic and epigenetic changes that lead to a deregulation of important tumor suppressors and oncogenes in a multistep process. one of these epigenetic changes is the elevated expression of histone-deacetylases (hdacs) which contribute to a transcriptional repression of certain genomic regions by remodeling the chromatin structure. thereby, not only the expression of tumor-relevant genes is affected, but also the expression of micrornas (mirnas). selected mirnas have been shown to play important roles in carcinogenesis. we aimed to identify mirnas deregulated by histone deacetylation and to understand their functional consequences in hcc tumorigenesis. methods: histone acetylation was induced by the global hdac inhibitor trichostatin a (tsa) in four hcc cell lines (hle, hlf, huh , hepg ) and two immortalized liver cell lines (thle- and thle- ) in order to identify differentially expressed mirnas and messenger rnas (mrnas) by global expression profiling. findings were validated by transfection of microrna mimics and sirna-mediated knockdown in hcc cell lines, quantitative pcr, western blotting and luciferase reporter assays. results: after hdac-inhibition, hsa-mir- - p was significantly upregulated. the mir- - p holds tumor suppressive potential and its expression is reduced in different types of tumors. one predicted target gene of mir- - p is the hepatoma-derived growth factor (hdgf). this mitogenic growth factor is highly expressed in a variety of cancers, for example in hcc, and its expression correlates with a poor prognosis, irrespective of the tumor type. hdgf is a multifunctional protein that is involved in several signaling pathways, contributing to proliferation and metastasis of cancer cells, induction of angiogenesis and inhibition of apoptosis. incubation of hcc cells with tsa or transfection with mir- - p reduced expression of hdgf. luciferase assays indicate a direct regulation of hdgf by mir- - p. moreover, expression of the death receptor fas, which is a potential downstream target of hdgf, is also regulated by the mir- - p. a translocation t( ; )(q ;q ) was not detectable in any of the investigated tissues. with the established assay we were able to provide a highly sensitive tool for the detection of the translocation t( ; )(q ;q ). however, we did not detect normal b-cells carrying this translocation. this does not exclude that such cells exist. alternatively, the growth advantage conferred by myc may promote the acquisition of secondary genetic changes. this may result in a rapid tumorigenesis, that if occurring these cells only present as full blown burkitt lymphoma. myotonic dystrophy: links to the nuclear envelope p. meinke, s. hintze, s. limmer, b. schoser friedrich-baur-institute, munich, germany myotonic dystrophies (dm) are slowly progressing multisystemic diseases with a predominant muscular dystrophy -making dm the most frequent muscular dystrophy in adulthood. dm is caused by heterozygous dna-repeat expansions in the dmpk gene (dm ) or the cnbp gene (dm ). the repeat-containing rna accumulates in ribonuclear foci and splicing factors are sequestered to these foci, resulting in abnormal regulation of alternative splicing. dm patients show overlapping phenotype presentations with progeroid laminopathies, which are caused by mutations in nuclear envelope proteins. in search for molecular signatures of this overlap, we found an enrichment of nucleoplasmic reticuli in dm and dm patient myoblasts. additional, we found an alternative splicing of the lmna gene -both effects that are associated with progeroid laminopathies. this implies possible shared pathomechanism between dm and progeroid laminopathies. retinoblastoma is a tumor of the retina occurring in young children up to the age of five. it is caused by biallelic inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene rb . we have shown that human rb is an imprinted gene and as such characterized by differential dna methylation of a cpg island (cpg ) in rb intron . cpg is not methylated on the paternal allele and acts as a promoter for the alternative rb transcript, rb -e b. it is argued that expression of rb -e b is causative of the observed skewing of regular rb expression in favor of the maternal allele. a true gametic differentially methylated region (gdmrs) is established in only one of the parental germ lines. it is supposed to be stable during early embryonic development and to be passed on to all daughter cells. we could show that cpg is free of methylation in human sperm. publicly available methylome data on oocytes revealed that cpg is fully methylated in human oocytes. these data are in agreement with cpg being a maternal methylated gdmr. we showed that the level of cpg methylation is percent in blood, as expected. however, in eight tissues of three individuals we observed a gain of methylation at cpg ranging from to percent in liver and skin, and increasing to to percent in the other tissues (heart, kidney, muscle, brain, lung and spleen). interestingly, the degree of methylation was lower in fetal tissue than in adult tissue, as determined for brain and muscle. we also observed gain of methylation at cpg in two human embryonic stem cell lines and induced pluripotent stem cells. this is consistent with the finding of complete methylation at cpg in eight different retinoblastoma cell lines. we therefore conclude that cpg is an unstable dmr. in oocytes, dna methylation of gdmrs is established by transcriptional read-through from an upstream promoter. therefore, we hypothesize that gain of dna methylation at cpg is caused by run-through transcription erozygous state (nomenclature according to hgvs; reference sequence nm_ . ). in silico-analysis by alamut (version . . ) predict the loss of the donor splice site of intron of the atm gene. cdna-analysis was performed and revealed the loss of exon of the atm by a complex activation of two kryptic splice sites. a premature stop codon was generated giving rise to a truncated protein that leads to a pathogenic variant. the results of the genetic analysis are discussed in the context of the clinical findings. identification of the underlying genetic causes of gastric cancer will give a better view of the mechanisms that contribute to the pathophysiology of the disease. gemeinschaftspraxis für humangenetik und genetische labore, hamburg, germany, zentrum für diabetologie bergedorf, schwerpunktpraxis, hamburg, germany about - % of all pregnant women develop gestational diabetes mellitus (gdm) during their pregnancies and diabetes complicating pregnancy is associated with adverse maternal and perinatal outcomes, notably, risk of fetal macrosomia and neonatal hypoglycemia and development of diabetes after pregnancy. gdm is considered to result from interaction between genetic and environmental risk factors. the case of a -year old female german patient with a novel mutation in the pax gene (rare mody gene type ) as a cause of gestational diabetes mellitus is presented. we describe clinical, biochemical and genetic features of the patient, who developed gdm and gave birth to her child by cesarean section. mody genes type - were analyzed. sequencing the pax gene revealed a novel mutation in exon , pax ,c. delc, p.(leu cysfs* ); reference sequence nm_ . ), a deletion of a cytosine leading to a truncated, non-functional protein. to date, no small deletion has been detected in the pax gene. identification of the underlying genetic causes of gdm will give a better view of the mechanisms that contribute to the pathophysiology of the disease. furthermore, early identification may improve options to prevent gdm and complications for the mother and her child. the results of the genetic analysis are discussed in the context of the clinical findings. the modulation of dna methylation is highly flexible and plays an important role during cell differentiation. furthermore, the dna methylome alters considerably during aging. age related changes in the dna methylation of regulatory genes are assumed to have a major impact on carcinogenesis (teschendorff, ) . moreover, it was demonstrated that the chronological age of a human donor can be predicted with high accuracy by analyzing the dna methylation of a specific minor set of cpg loci which are aberrantly methylated during aging (horvath, ) . hence, we intended to investigate the effect of epimutations identified in different lymphoma entities in comparison with the influence of epigenetic changes in sequential b cell differentiation stages on the epigenetic age. the altered expression of the tumor suppressor mir- - p due to chromatin remodeling may play a fundamental role in hepatocarcinogenesis. we expect that histone deacetylation and putative target genes of epigenetically deregulated mir- - p can be targeted by new therapeutic agents. the microrna- family inhibits tgf-β-mediated liver cancer cell migration by targeting sox introduction: modulation of microrna expression is considered for treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc). therefore, we characterized the epigenetically regulated microrna- family (mir- a, mir- b, mir- c) with regards to its functional effects and target genes in hcc. methods: after transfection of mir- a, mir- b, and/or mir- c, tumor-relevant functional effects were analyzed using in vitro assays and a xenograft mouse model. binding specificities, target genes, and regulated pathways of each microrna were identified by microarray analyses. target genes were validated by luciferase reporter assays and expression analyses in vitro. furthermore, target gene expression was analyzed in primary human hccs compared to normal liver tissue. results: tumor suppressive effects, binding specificities, target genes, and regulated pathways of mir- a and mir- b differed from those of mir- c. transfection of mir- a, mir- b, and/or mir- c inhibited cell proliferation and migration, induced apoptosis, and reduced tumor growth to different extents. importantly, mir- a, mir- b, and, to a lesser degree, mir- c directly targeted sox , which codes for a transcription factor involved in epithelial-mesenchymal transition and hcc metastasis, and thereby inhibited tgf-β-mediated cell migration. conclusions: this study provides detailed insights into the regulatory network of the epigenetically regulated microrna- family and, for the first time, describes distinct tumor suppressive effects and target specificities of mir- a, mir- b, and mir- c. our results indicate that particularly mir- a and mir- b may be considered for mirna replacement therapy to prevent hcc progression and metastasis. novel mutation in the atm gene and activaton of two kryptic splice sites in an year old female patient with gastric cancer gemeinschaftspraxis für humangenetik und genetische labore, hamburg, germany, schwerpunktpraxis, hämatologie, onkologie und palliativmedizin, hamburg, germany, israelitisches krankenhaus, chirurgische klinik, hamburg, germany gastric cancer is a global public health concern, ranking as the third leading cause of cancer mortality. familial aggregation of gastric cancer is common in about % of the cases, and about half of these can be attributed to hereditary germline mutations. however, for most gastric cancer cases, whether genetic events contribute to cancer susceptibility remains unknown. here we present a case report of a patient with gastric cancer, a family history of breast cancer and a novel mutation leading to complex cryptic splicing in the atm gene. ngs panel sequencing and cnv/mlpa analysis of genes associated with gastric and breast cancer were performed. sequencing revealed a novel mutation in intron of the atm gene, atm,c. + g>a in an het-abstracts tions remained unidentified since positive deletion-junction pcr products could not be amplified. to identify the breakpoints of the deletions, we performed custom-designed microarray cgh analysis with a high resolution of probes located within and flanking the nahr hotspots prs and prs . the array analysis suggested that of the deletions exhibit breakpoints within prs , even although previously performed breakpoint-spanning pcrs with primers designed according to the reference sequence of the human genome have been negative in these cases. since prs exhibits high sequence diversity resulting from frequent nonallelic homologous recombination events without crossover, we surmised that haplotype diversity is responsible for the failure of the breakpoint-spanning pcrs performed with primers designed according to the reference sequence. therefore we characterized the haplotype diversity of prs in human individuals and designed deletion-junction pcr primers that facilitate the amplification of rare prs haplotypes. so far, we have identified the breakpoints of four of the type- nf deletions predicted to have been mediated by prs according to the array results. we are confident to identify further breakpoints by extending these analyses using primers suitable to amplify rare prs haplotypes. our findings indicate that the characterisation of nahr hotspots in terms of haplotype diversity is a premise to identify the breakpoints of nahr-mediated microdeletions by means of deletion-junction pcrs. p-basepi- *** array-based dna methylome analyses of primary lymphomas of the central nervous system ulm university, ulm, germany, university of cologne, cologne, germany, christian-albrechts-university kiel, kiel, germany, university hospital muenster, muenster, germany primary lymphomas of the central nervous system (pcnsl) are defined as diffuse large b-cell lymphomas (dlbcl) that are confined to the central nervous system (cns). although pcnsl cannot be distinguished from dlbcl by their morphology as well as their histology, they differ in prognostic outcome. the aim of the present study was to compare the epigenomic landscape of pcnsl and dlbcl. to this end, we analyzed the dna methylation of a total of pcnsl (cryopreserved or formalin fixed and paraffin embedded (ffpe)) using the infinium humanmethylation beadchip array (illumina) and contrasted these findings to dlbcl (kretzmer et al., ) . as controls, we used publicly available dna methylation data from a total of normal brain samples derived from different regions of the cns (gilbert et al., ; jaffe et al., ; kurscheid et al., ; mur et al., ; wockner et al., ) . after normalization of the data we performed thorough filtering and removed the random snps, all loci located on gonosomes, as well as those loci with a detection p-value > . in at least one of the samples, leading to , loci entering subsequent analyses. when comparing the dna methylation profiles of pcnsl versus dlbcl we identified differentially methylated loci (σ/σ max = . ; q < e- ). in order to remove those loci which represent a "brain signature", we compared dlbcl versus brain (σ/ σ max = . ; q < . ) based on the list of the previously identified loci. after removing this "brain signature", we ended up with loci that are differentially methylated between pcnsl and dlbcl. in a next step we wanted to make sure that the differences in methylation at these loci are not due to differences in starting material (cryopreserved versus ffpe) which is known to influence the outcome of the beadchip analysis. therefore, we compared the dna methylation profiles of five cryopreserved versus ffpe samples (derived from the same tissue samples) and identified differentially methylated loci (σ/σ max = . , q < . ). only five loci of both lists overlapped, which were subsequently removed from further analysis so that we ended up with a final list of loci which are differentially methylated between pcnsl and dlbcl. in order to analyze the biological implications of the differentially methylated loci we evaluated an enrichment of known functional groups (ku-additionally, our aim was to analyze whether entity-specific differences in the resetting of the epigenetic clock are generated during lymphomagenesis or derive from modified dna methylation in the germinal center b cells of origin. to address these issues, we performed dna methylation profiling (hum-anmethylation beadchip) of burkitt lymphoma samples (age - yrs), diffuse large b cell lymphoma samples (age - yrs) and follicular lymphoma samples (age - yrs) from the icgc mmml-seq and mmml-consortium (kretzmer et al., ) and the hematopathology section kiel as well as peripheral blood samples of healthy individuals ( - yrs) available from the same project and current publications of our group (kolarova et al., ; friemel et al., ) . in addition, we received b cell subpopulation samples ( - yrs) covering different stages of b cell differentiation that were measured in the same way (kulis et al., ; lee et al., ) . the epigenetic age of the samples was predicted using the "online age calculator" accessible at https://dnamage.genetics.ucla.edu and compared with the corresponding chronological age of the donors. in fact, the epigenetic age of peripheral blood samples of healthy donors was in high accordance with their chronological age (pearson's r . , p-value < . ) while the correlation between epigenetic and chronological age of sequential b cell differentiation stages was slightly lower (pearson's r . , p-value< . ). in contrast, the predicted epigenetic age of the burkitt lymphoma samples was significantly higher than the corresponding chronological age. this deviation may be interpreted as "epigenetic pre-aging". nevertheless, the epigenetic age of diffuse large b cell lymphomas and follicular lymphomas tended to be less affected. in conclusion, we found significant epigenetic pre-aging in burkitt lymphoma samples that seems to be induced during lymphomagenesis and does not derive from altered dna methylation patterns in the germinal center b cells of origin. moreover, no significant shift of the epigenetic age was observed for the other lymphoma entities, healthy blood samples and b cells of sequential differentiation stages. identification of type- nf deletion breakpoints mediated by rare prs haplotypes a. summerer , , m. hillmer , , v. f. mautner , , l. messiaen , , h. institute of human genetics, ulm, germany, university of ulm, ulm, germany, department of neurology, hamburg, germany, university hospital hamburg eppendorf, hamburg, germany, department of genetics, birmingham, usa, university of alabama at birmingham, birmingham, usa neurofibromatosis type (nf ) is a hereditary cancer syndrome with an incidence of in . in % of all nf patients, large deletions encompassing the nf gene and its flanking regions are causing the disease. the majority of all large nf deletions are of type- ; they encompass . -mb and are mediated by nonallelic homologous recombination (nahr) with crossover. the breakpoints of type- deletions are located within the lowcopy repeats nf -repa and nf -repc which exhibit high sequence homology to one another. previous studies suggested that type- deletion breakpoints cluster within the paralogous recombination sites prs and prs spanning -kb and -kb, respectively. in our present study, we investigated patients with type- nf deletions using long-range pcrs to detect breakpoints located within prs or prs . according to these analyses, ( %) of the breakpoints are located within prs and ( . %) in prs . however, ( . %) of the type- deletions were not positive for these deletion-junction pcrs. we surmised that some of these deletions may have breakpoints within the -kb region located between prs and prs . this -kb region also exhibits high sequence homologoy between the nf -reps which is a prerequisite for nahr. indeed, of the type- nf deletions exhibited breakpoints within this -kb region as determined by the analysis of seven overlapping deletion-junction pcrs. however, the breakpoints of dele-esophageal adenocarcinoma (ea) represents one of the most rapidly increasing cancer types in high-income countries. barrett's esophagus (be) is a premalignant precursor of ea and has an estimated prevalence of - % in the population. however, only . to . % of be patients develop ea. within an international consortium, we carried out a gwas meta-analysis in be patients, ae patients and . controls (gharahkhani et al., lancet oncology, ) . in a comprised be/ae analysis, we identified genome-wide significant risk loci, of which seven were previously unreported. the strongest associated new risk variant was identified for rs (p = . × - ), which maps within intron of the cftr gene. cftr encodes a protein that functions as a chloride channel and that is mutated in patients with cystic fibrosis (cf). mutations in cf lead to abnormal viscous secretions with altered chemical composition, resulting in dysfunction of the respiratory system and the gastrointestinal tract. the most common cf mutation is Δf , a deletion of three nucleotides in cftr that results in the loss of a single codon for phenylalanine on protein position . interestingly, cf patients show a highly increased incidence of gastroesophageal reflux, which represents the major risk factor for be and ae. in view of the phenotypic overlap for gastroesophageal reflux and cystic fibrosis, and for gastroesophageal reflux and both be and ae, combined with the association of cftr risk variants in patients with be and ae, it seems plausible that a common pathophysiological mechanism is triggered by cftr. in order to test this hypothesis, we analyzed the association of Δf in a european case-control cohort with be and ae patients. for this, we performed a genotyping assay of Δf in be patients, ae patients and controls. we could not observe a significant association (p = . ). this might be (i) due to insufficient sample power or (ii) due to the fact, that not Δf but other genetic variants at the locus might explain the underlying functional mechanism of the association. fine mapping of all genetic variation at the cftr locus and exten-lis et al., ). remarkably, cpg loci that are differentially methylated during normal b-cell maturation were significantly depleted. in turn we saw an enrichment of loci located in heterochromatin. in summary, we detected more than loci that are differentially methylated between pcnsl and dlbcl, which do not play a functional role in normal b-cell differentiation. replication study of gwas-identified genetic modifiers of age at huntington's disease onset although there is a strong correlation between cag repeat length and age at onset (ao) of motor symptoms, individual huntington disease (hd) patients may differ dramatically in onset age and disease manifestations despite similar cag repeat lengths. since the modifier variations described so far only account for a small fraction of the heritable contribution to the ao, the identification of loci and genes using genome-wide methods appears highly promising. against the background of incomplete understanding of the hd disease pathophysiology, the hypothesis-free approach of gwas offers an ideal starting point for the search of modifier genes. recently, a combined analysis of all gwa data to hd modifiers identified different loci with genome-wide significant signals for association to residual age at motor onset [gem-h. consortium]. interestingly, none of the most significant association signals and none of the trending snps in the european gwa analysis corresponded to any previously suggested candidate modifier genes. in order to be able to better assess these data, we tried to replicate the top ten associated gwas variants in a comprehensive cohort of german hd patients. we only found modest association with one of the top ranked snps (rs ), all remaining variations showed no correlation with the ao. this inconsistency highlights once again the difficulties of modifier searching in hd or any other monogenic disorder, which faces the same challenges as the genetic characterization of complex disorders. with an incidence of . - . / . malignant tumors of the thymus are a rather rare type of cancer. here we report the case of a man of german descent, who presented with a thymoma at age . in the pathological report the thymus tumor was described as an extremely unusual thymoma with partial loss of keratin and massive proliferation of myoid cells. it was subsumed to a primary thymic, partially epithelial neoplasia, resembling an uncommon b /b -thymoma. after the patient's death his widow looked for genetic advice concerning the risk of disease for her children. detailed personal and familial history brought up surprising information: thymoma was one of four cancers in our patient. he developed adenocarcinoma of the colon at age , squamous cell cancer of the nose/upper lip at years and in addition current cancer staging revealed a papillary renal cell carcinoma. according to family history his father and his uncle developed colon cancer with and years, the son of this uncle was diagnosed with colon cancer at age . this cousin of the propositus was referred to genetic counseling, because of msi-high-status and loss of mlh and psm in immunohistochemistry. he was found to have a deleterious mutation in exon of mlh gene (c. c>a, p.tyr stop) resulting in a premature termination of mlh -protein. our patient has never been tested for hnpcc. however a post mortem performed immunhistochemical examination of thymic cancer cells revealed an almost complete loss of mlh nuclear expression suggesting the presence of a mlh germline mutation and indicated hnpcc. considering the loss of mlh in tumor cells it is more than likely that the development of thymoma was the consequence of deficient dna mismatch-repair. there have been reports of rare tumors in hnpcc families in the last years (i. e. clear cell renal carcinoma and uterine sarcoma). pande et al. reported one case of thymoma in their registration of cancer occurrences in mutations carries from hnpcc families [ ] . our case emphasizes the importance of detailed family history and contributes to the discussion of widening the inclusion criteria for genetic counseling and testing for hnpcc. to this day the revised criteria of bethesda are used to identify families at risk. we propose that the established criteria have to be revised and rare tumors should be included. unknown partner genes in leukemias with rare translocations can be identified using targeted rna sequencing c. haferlach, n. nadarajah, m. meggendorfer, n. dicht, a. stengel, w. kern, t. haferlach mll, munic, germany in hematological malignancies fusion genes play an important role and function as therapeutic targets, impressively shown for e. g. bcr-abl and etv -pdgfrb. thus, the identification of fusion genes is the basis for precision medicine, selecting treatment based on genotype and providing markers for disease monitoring. the aim of this study was to test the value of targeted rna sequencing in a routine diagnostic work up. cases were selected harboring rearrangements of kmt a (n = ), runx (n = ), etv (n = ), pdgfrb (n = ), npm (n = ), rara (n = ) and jak (n = ) identified by chromosome banding (cba) and fish analyses. in none of the cases the partner gene could be identified using standard methods. targeted rna sequencing was performed using the trusight rna fusion panel (illumina, san diego, ca) consisting of probes covering genes known to be involved in gene fusions. this assay allows the capture of all targeted transcripts. sequencing was performed on nextseq (illumina, san diego, ca). analysis was performed with the rna-seq alignment app (basespace sequence hub) using star for alignment and manta for gene fusion calling with default parameters (illumina). sive functional analysis are needed to find the causal variant that explains how the cftr locus interferes with the pathomechanism of be and ae. a recent functional study indicated cftr as a tumor suppressor gene in murine and human intestinal cancer, providing further evidence for cftr as a true disease gene for be and ae. background: it has long been established that mutations in brca predispose for pancreatic adenocarcinoma with brca germline mutations identified in - % of familial pancreatic cancer cases. consequently, screening for pancreatic cancer has been recommended for mutation carriers with an affected first-degree relative since early detection has been shown to significantly improve -year survival from - % to %. for brca mutations, however, relevance in pancreatic tumorigenesis is still being discussed with several studies questioning an elevated risk of pancreatic cancer in families with brca mutations while others are suggesting that brca may also play an important role in predisposing to pancreatic cancer. clinical screening for pancreatic cancer commonly remains unavailable to brca mutation carriers and it has even been questioned whether brca should be analyzed in familial pancreatic cancer at all. clinical report: here we report on a year old woman with metastatic pancreatic cancer whose sister had died of pancreatic cancer at years of age. in this family we identified a pathogenic brca -germline mutation (brca : nm_ . :c. dupt,p.(leu phefs* )) by next-generation sequencing using a -gene panel. the index patients' tumor was available for genetic analysis and showed loss-of heterozygosity for brca . this strongly suggests the brca mutation to be causative of the pancreatic cancer development in this patient. when the family was first introduced to genetic counselling there was no evidence of breast-or ovarian cancer in any relatives. only after identification of the mutation did the index person reach out to distant family members and it was thereby revealed that a distant branch of the family had independently been counselled for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. in this part of the family, however, there had not been any cases of pancreatic cancer. subsequent predictive testing was offered to healthy family members and further mutation carriers could be identified. two women were referred to breast cancer screening. additionally, the mutation was identified in a relative with recurrent metastatic breast cancer at the age of years. for her and the index patient parp-inhibition therapy thus became a possible further treatment option. conclusions: in conclusion we propose next-generation sequencing approaches including the analysis of brca to be used in familial pancreatic cancer. we also argue that brca mutation carriers with pancreatic cancer cases in their family should be offered the same screening program as brca mutation carriers. within the framework of a study this could allow for more precise risk stratification in the future. contralateral dcis is unknown. only the male breast carcinoma was herceptin receptor positive, all other breast carcinomas of the chek mutation carriers were her negative. among our chek positive families we noticed the association with chek mutation and female breast cancer. we observed a contralateral breast cancer, male breast cancer and other tumors in our families as well. the majority of the observed breast cancers was estrogen and progesterone receptor positive and herceptin negative. while benign uterine smooth muscle tumors are among the most frequent human symptomatic tumors, their malignant or borderline lesions are only rare findings. both lesions can show somatic copy number alterations, but their patterns differ, thus constituting helpful diagnostic tools. aimed at an advanced classification of the lesions we have performed molecular inversion probe array analyses of these tumors. besides complex patterns of genomic alterations seen in nearly all cases, two of the lesions presented with copy number neutral uniparental disomies i. e. normal copy numbers with an apparent monoallelic origin. in one case, an upd of part of the long arm of chromosome was detected in a uterine leiomyosarcoma. the tumor showed genetic heterogeneity with gains and losses. in addition, the . mb segment located at q . -q . was clearly of monoallelic origin throughout all cells investigated. all other genetic alterations were restricted only to part of the cells of the sample thus reflecting the presence of tumor cells as well as normal bystander cells which in general characterizes mutations that had arisen during tumor development. in contrast, the upd that was detected in all examined cells clearly suggests its germline occurrence. the second tumor was a leiomyoma-variant of the type with bizarre nuclei. again, besides gains and losses an apparent germline upd was found that covered a . mb segment on chromosomal segment q . . upd for even the whole arm of chromosome repeatedly has been reported not to coincide with phenotypic manifestations. nevertheless, the question arises whether or not the observed upds might be related to a familiar predisposition for uterine muscle tumors. of note, as a result of genome-wide association studies snps on q recurrently have been found to be significantly associated with fibroid development. triple negativity is an independent predictor of germline mutations in breast cancer predisposing genes breast cancer is the most common cancer in women. - % of all tumors are triple-negative breast cancers (tnbc) lacking expression of estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor and human epidermal growth factor receptor . so far, tnbc have been mainly associated with mutations in brca , although recent studies also found mutations in other breast cancer susceptibility genes. a brca / -centered perspective thus may ignore the significance of other predisposing genes, whose relevance appears obvious as dna damage repair by homologous recombination is a complex process involving many proteins. in / cases with rearrangements involving kmt a (n = ), runx (n = ), etv (n = ), pdfgrb (n = ), rara (n = ), npm (n = ) or jak (n = ) the partner genes were identified. these were in kmt a rearranged cases: mllt (n = ), mllt (n = ), itpr , flnc, asxl , dcp b, maml and arhgef . in runx translocated cases partner genes were plag (n = ), prdm , mecom, zfpm , man a , n amt , and kiaa l. prdm , mecom and zfpm have previously been described in the literature as runx partner genes but were not suspected in our cases as partner genes due to complex cytogenetic rearrangements. the other identified partner genes have not been described so far. interestingly, prdm , mecom, zfpm and the newly identified plag are all members of the c h type zinc finger gene family. partner genes identified in etv rearranged cases were: abl , ccdc , clptm l, erg, foxo and cflar-as . wdr , zbtb , nfia and mprip were identified as partner genes of pdgfrb and rpp in an npm -translocated aml. in an all patient a jak -ppfibp fusion was identified leading to classification as a bcr-abl -like all. in an apl patient showing an ins( ; ) (q ;q q ) a zbtb -rara fusion was identified and thus resistance to all-trans retinoic acid, arsenic trioxide, and anthracyclines can be predicted. further in a case with t( ; )(q ;q ) an irf bp -rara fusion was detected. conclusions: targeted rna sequencing was able to characterize rare gene fusions and provided the basis for the design of rt-pcr based assays for monitoring mrd. targetable genetic aberrations were identified, which were not detected by cba enabling more individualized treatment. targeted rna sequencing may be a valuable tool in routine diagnostics for patients with rearrangements unresolved by standard techniques. female carriers of a pathogenic mutation in the chek gene are reported to have a life time risk of about - % to develop breast cancer. there is evidence for increased risks for contralateral breast cancer, male breast carcinoma and other types of tumors. in addition to well-known mutation chek :c. del, other pathologic mutations are being identified in the gene due to the inclusion of the gene in most breast cancer gene panels for dna testing. between - the center for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer regensburg cares for families with pathogenic or probably pathogenic mutations in the chek gene affecting nine female patients and one male patient ( × c. del, × deletion of exon , and × variants considered as likely pathogenic: c. g> c, c. c> t, c. a> c). the mean age of diagnosis of breast cancer (both sexes) was . years (range - years). the patient with the deletion of exon was first diagnosed at years of age and developed a contralateral breast carcinoma (dcis) at years of age. the male patient was diagnosed with breast cancer at years of age and at years with a renal carcinoma. one patient was diagnosed with a papillary thyroid carcinoma at age years and developed breast cancer with years. in out of the families, breast carcinoma diagnosed with . years on average, was reported in the family history. in addition, there were additional malignancies such as prostatic carcinoma, thyroid carcinoma, colorectal cancer, gastric carcinoma, leukemia, cervical carcinoma and malignant melanoma. none of the affected family members was tested for the respective chek mutation. the tumors with an initial diagnosis at years and years were estrogen-receptor-negative and progesterone-receptor-negative. the other of the breast cancers were positive for the estrogen receptor, of the tumors were positive for the progesterone receptor. the receptor status of the abstracts it has been shown that in d culture hescs can be differentiated into neural retina containing organoids. we established this differentiation schedule and started comparative differentiation of wildtype h hescs and the rb null derivative (g , rb mt/mt ) into neural retina. during the first weeks of differentiation into neural retina organoids generated from the rb mt/mt hescs have a smaller diameter and thinner retina layer compared to wildtype organoids. however, during the time-course the mutant organoids began to catch up. thus, at later stages no difference in size and thickness could be observed anymore. comparative immunostainings of cryosections at d show no difference in expression of the markers pax and sox between the wildtype and mutant hescs. further comparative immunostainings for markers specific for neural retina like e. g. rx and vsx at d and d are ongoing and will be presented. exome sequencing identified potential causative candidate genes for unexplained cowden syndrome purpose: cowden syndrome (cs) is a cancer predisposition syndrome characterized by the occurrence of breast cancer, epithelial thyroid cancer, endometrial carcinoma and various other findings such as mucocutaneous lesions and macrocephaly. cs belongs to the pten hamartoma tumor syndrome (phts) primarily associated with germline mutations in pten. in recent years, germline mutations in additional genes (sdhb, sdhc, sdhd, pik ca, akt , sec b) have been described in few patients; however, to date, in - % of patients meeting clinical criteria for cs the underlying cause remains unclear. methods: to uncover predisposing causative genes, the exomes of clinically well characterized, mutation negative patients with suspected cs were sequenced (illumina hiseq) using leukocyte dna. assuming a monogenic disease model, the called variants were filtered for rare (minor allele frequency ≤ % for homozygous/compound heterozygous variants and ≤ . % for heterozygous variants according to dbsnp, evs, and exac), truncating (nonsense, frameshift, highly conserved splice sites), and missense germline variants (predicted to be pathogenic by at least / in-silico tools). for data analysis and variant filtering the gatk software and the cartagenia bench lab ngs software were applied. all candidate genes were included in a pathway analysis (ingenuity). in a first preliminary analysis, we focused on known cancer genes and genes interacting with pten. results: after stringent filtering steps, comparison with large datasets from population-based controls, and detailed manual inspection to exclude artifacts, genes were affected by presumed biallelic variants ( homozygous and putative compound-heterozygous), one of these is a known cancer gene (cbfa t ); in genes biallelic variants were found in - patients. heterozygous variants were found in genes in - patients, but none of these are known cancer genes. in genes, heterozygous truncating mutations occurred in only one patient, of these are cancer genes (msh , wrn, kdm a, pml) . the phenotype of the patient with a msh frameshift deletion fulfilled key features of cs (early-onset metachronous papillary thyroid cancer, breast cancer, endometrial and colorectal cancer), however, the tumor spectrum is partly compatible with lynch syndrome/ hnpcc. examination of the colorectal cancer demonstrated microsatellite instability and a loss of msh protein expression. the pathway analysis of the remaining candidate genes identified several interacting partners of pten (grhl , ehhadh, cstf ). conclusions: preliminary data indicate that exome sequencing might identify potentially relevant causative genes for cs, some of which are recurrently mutated. the present work-up consists of the inclusion of further non-cancer genes, validation of variants by sanger sequencing, testing of to determine the prevalence of mutations we performed panel-based germline mutation testing of high and low-moderate penetrance breast cancer susceptibility genes (brca , brca , atm, cdh , chek , nbn, palb , rad c, rad d and tp ) in consecutive individuals affected with tnbc unselected for age at diagnosis or breast and ovarian cancer family history. age at diagnosis ranged from to years with an average of . and a median of years. in women ( . %) we detected a pathogenic mutation, with a higher frequency ( . %) in the group manifesting cancer before years. deleterious brca mutations occurred in . % of tnbc patients, predominantly frameshifting ( / , . %). the most frequent, both among brca mutations and in total, were the founder mutations c. dupc and c. _ delag. deleterious brca mutations occurred in . % of patients, all but one (c. du-pa) being unique. while no mutations were found in cdh and tp , mutations ( %) were detected in one of the six other predisposition genes (palb , chek , atm, nbn, rad c, rad d). no individual presented more than one mutation. almost half of all deleterious mutations ( . %) were detected in very young women aged years or less. the median age at diagnosis was significantly younger for brca ( years) and brca ( . years) carriers compared to patients without a mutation (p = . e- ; mann-whitney) or compared to non-brca / mutation carriers (p = . ). in contrast, patients with non-brca / mutations were not significantly younger than mutation negative women (p = . ). interestingly, family history had an independent influence on age at diagnosis. taken as a whole, women with family history had a median age at diagnosis years earlier than those without (p = . ). this difference was lost in mutation carriers while it remained in cases without mutation. in summary, our data confirm and expand previous studies of a high frequency of germline mutations in genes associated with ineffective repair of dna damage by homologous recombination in women with tnbcs. many of these women would go untested with current restrictive criteria. in order that each patient receives therapies tailored to her genetic status, gene panel based mutation testing should be offered to all women diagnosed with tnbc, irrespective of age at diagnosis or family history. p-cancg- *** neural retina differentiation of hescs as an in vitro model for retinoblastoma d. kanber, m. hiber, d. lohmann, l. steenpass institute of human genetics, university hospital essen, university duisburg-essen, essen, germany retinoblastoma is the most common eye tumor of early childhood. inactivation of both alleles of the retinoblastoma gene (rb ) results in the development of retinoblastoma. our aim is to establish a human cell-based model for retinoblastoma. using the crispr/cas system we have generated human embryonic stem cells (hescs) carrying a mutation either on one or both rb alleles. all the detected mutations are located in exon of the rb gene and close to the splice donor site of this exon. analyses on dna, rna and protein level were performed for three mutant and one double-mutant clone. the following genotypes were identified by deep sequencing (nm_ . (rb _v )): clone c , c. _ del, heterozygous; clones c and g , c. _ del, heterozygous; clone g , c.[ _ del; c. _ dup] (complex mutation on one allele), homozygous (loss of heterozygosity). the mutations of all four clones result in a premature stop codon in exon . on rna level we detected expression of mutant rb transcripts reflecting the genotype in all clones and an additional mutant rb transcript with skipping of exon in three clones. as the heterozygous clones also showed expression of the wildtype rb transcript, rb protein (prb) could be detected for these clones (c , c , g ) by western blot analysis. however, the double-mutant clone g showed no expression of prb. so far, we have characterized heterozygous and one homozygous clone. another three double-mutant clones are under investigation. the recurrent germline missense mutation g e in the hoxb gene has been demonstrated to predispose to hereditary prostate cancer (prca), despite the underlying pathogenic mechanism is not yet understood. molecular examination of a first set of g e positive tumors sought for somatic characteristics, and suggested that oncogenic ets gene fusions may appear at unusually low frequencies as compared to the general prevalence of ets fusions in prca ( % vs approx. %). hypothesizing that hoxb could predispose to ets fusion negative prca, we have analyzed cases from three european ancestry populations (finland, germany and us) for the coincidence of hoxb g e and the most common ets fusion, tmprss :erg, in corresponding tumor samples. while the prevalence of tmprss :erg fusions was similar among the three study groups (range: . - . %), the frequency of g e genotypes differed markedly between us ( . %), german ( . %) and finnish samples ( . %). despite the expected frequency gradient among study populations, all subsamples showed a strong enrichment of g e mutation carriers among tmprss :erg fusion negative cases as compared to fusion positive cases (center adjusted or = . ; %ci = . - . ; p = . ). consistent with the previous study, the crude frequency of the tmprss :erg fusion in hoxb g e carriers was . % (range . % - . %). examination of disease characteristics highlighted age at diagnosis to be associated with tmprss :erg negative status (per year or = . , p = , ) and by trend, also with the presence of the g e germline variant (per year or = . , p = . ). within the subtype of tmprss :erg fusion negative carcinoma carriers of g e were diagnosed . years earlier as compared to non-carriers ( . ± . years versus . ± . years, p = . ). in conclusion, this study demonstrated a significant tumor subtype specific association for hoxb g e mutation carriers having a higher frequency of tmprss :erg fusion negative prca. meta-analyses from case control comparisons suggested that subtype specific risk of hoxb g e for tmprss :erg negative prca could be as high as or = . , as compared to or = . , when prca is regarded as one entity regardless of fusion status. finally, although tmprss :erg negative prca is usually known to be associated with later ages of diagnoses, hoxb mutations may indicate a subgroup of earlier onset cases within the fusion negative entity. relatives to determine the phase of assumed biallelic variants and segregation with the phenotype where applicable. with to cases in million inhabitants per year adrenocortical cancer (acc) is a rare disease. due to often late diagnosis and limited treatment options prognosis for patients are poor with a year overall survival rate of to %. though knowledge about molecular genetic events in acc increased over the last few years no reliable molecular prognostic factors, no effective targeted cancer therapy and no personalized treatment approach has emerged to date. that's why we intend to establish a reliable method to define a molecular signature of accs that could be used for a prognostic classification of adrenocortical cancers, for planning an individualized therapeutic approach and for the identification of known or potential targetable molecular events in the single patient. in a retrospective study dna from acc and matched blood samples is sequenced to detect somatic single nucleotide variants (snv), small insertions and deletions (indel) and copy number alterations (cnv). sequencing data are then compared to clinical data e. g. tumor stage, resection status, ki -index and time of progression free and overall survival to define molecular prognostic factors. target enrichment of genes that are known to be associated with different entities of cancer is performed with the human comprehensive cancer panel (qiagen) and sequenced on a nextseq (illumina). data are analysed with gensearchngs (phenosystems). znrf , a gene that was also described to be involved in the development and the progression of acc a few years ago, is sequenced separately with sanger and analysed with gensearch (phenosystems). to date tumor samples and matched blood samples from patients were analysed. one or more tumors comprise one or more snvs or small indels in of genes of the panel and in znrf . snvs and small indels are most often found in tp , ctnnb and znrf with frequencies of %, % and % respectively. in of genes cnvs -duplications and deletions -occur. cdk is duplicated in over % of the cohort. mdm gains are found in over %. one can also find three types of cn patterns: a quiet type with low number of copy alterations, a noisy one with high number of chromosomal breakages and a chromosomal one with high frequency of alterations of chromosomal arms. while no correlation between snvs and small indels and clinical outcome could be found so far, cn patterns of the accs seem to correlate with progression free survival and overall survival. patients with a noisy cn pattern have a shorter progression free and overall survival than patients with chromosomal and quiet type. though tendencies in the correlation of molecular markers and prognosis for patients suffering acc can be recognized, further samples need to be analysed to confirm the results. it is planned to sequence another tumor samples and matched blood samples for this retrospective study and to validate the results in a prospective study with another patients. expression of mir- a- p and mir- - p was analysed in serum samples by quantitative pcr. the cohort of gcnis patients consisted of patients with a solitary testicle, who had undergone orchiectomy for contralateral tgct, and patients with two testicles, one of which with gcnis, but no concurrent tgct. twenty men with non-malignant testicular disease served as controls. additionally, in situ hybridisation (ish) with a probe against mir- a- p was performed on four testicular biopsy specimens known to harbour gcnis. sequential step sections of the corresponding tissue blocks were analysed immunohistochemically, using oct antibody to visualise gcnis. the median expression value of mir- a- p in gcnis-patients was . (interquartile range [iqr] = . ) which is significantly higher than the median expression of . (iqr = . ) in controls. both of the two gcnis subgroups had significantly higher mir- a- p levels than controls, with a median expression of . (iqr = . ) and . (iqr = . ), respectively. regarding mir- - p expression, there were no significant differences between gcnis and controls. using a relative quantity of as a cut-off value, the mir- a- p was able to detect . % ( % confidence interval [ % ci] = . - . %) of gcnis, while only % ( % ci = . - . %) of the controls were positive. in the subgroup with previous tgct . % ( % ci = . - . %) of gcnis could be detected and in the subgroup without previous tumour the rate was . % ( % ci = . - . %). the detection rates for all gcnis and for both subgroups were significantly higher than for the controls. ish staining demonstrated the expression of mir- a- p in gcnis cells in two of the four cases. in conclusion, this study indicates a new and minimal-invasive way of diagnosing gcnis by measuring serum levels of mir a- p. this approach is endorsed by the demonstration of mir a- p in gcnis cells by ish staining. however, the sensitivity is still low and thus, the method certainly needs refinement possibly by applying a panel of additional mi-crornas. nonetheless, measuring serum levels of mir a- p may constitute a valuable aid in clinical assessment of men afflicted with high-risk factors of tgct. p-cancg- *** the mir- a- p is a highly specific and sensitive serum-based marker for the diagnosis and follow-up of testicular germ cell tumours testicular germ cell tumours (tgct) are a paradigm of curable malignancies. clinical management largely relies on measuring the serum biomarkers. inopportunely, the markers beta-hcg, afp and ldh are only elevated in about % of patients. therefore, micrornas of the clusters mir- - and mir- / were proposed as novel serum-based markers. we evaluated four of the candidate mirnas (mir- a- p, mir- - p, mir- - p and mir - p) with regard to their usefulness as tgct markers. overall, serum samples from tgct-patients and from controls were analysed using quantitative pcr. the first consecutive patients and controls were analysed for all four mirnas. after roc-analysis only the marker with the greatest discriminative power was studied further. the decline of mirna expression after orchiectomy was quantified in cases and in metastasized cases the marker was analysed repeatedly during the course of chemotherapy. additionally cases with relapsing disease were studied. the mir- a- p featured the highest discriminative power (area under the curve: . ; % confidence interval [ % ci]: . - . ). in the entire cohort, patients could be distinguished from controls with a sensitivity of . % ( % ci: . - . %) and a specificity of . % ( % ci: neuroendocrine tumor of the adrenal gland: an unusual manifestation of tsc c. müller-hofstede, j. horvath, b. dworniczak, p. wieacker institute of human genetics, university of münster, germany we report on a young woman asking for the recurrence risk of the neuroendocrine tumor of her mother deceased at the age of . her mother clinically presented because of therapy-resistent hypertonia, dyspnoe, progressive edema in the legs and face and a caput medusae. mri scan revealed a tumor ( × cm) in the right adrenal gland with lymph node metastases compressing the v. cava inferior and synchronous metastases in lung and liver. laboratory examinations showed highly elevated levels of cortisol and adrenocorticotropin (acth). cerebral mri was normal suggesting an ectopic acth secretion by a non-pituitary tumor. histologically, an undifferentiated, largely necrotic tumor was described so that the neuroendocrine nature of the tumor could not be proven. she died within three weeks after diagnosis. on suspicion of multiple endocrine neoplasia type we initially performed a sequence analysis of men on tumor dna by next generation sequencing without detection of a pathogenic mutation. thereupon the molecular genetic panel analysis (nf , ret, sdhb-d,tmem , tsc , tsc , vhl) uncovered the heterozygous mutation c. c>t (p.arg trp) in the gene tsc . this mutation is already described as pathogenic (hu et al. ). in the tumor dna the allele frequency of the normal allele mounted up to %, whereas the allele frequency of the mutant allele came to % pointing to a loss of heterozygosity (loh). the mutation was confirmed by sanger sequencing. taken all together, we assumed, that the mutation in the gene tsc represents a germline mutation. mutations in the suppressor genes tsc and tsc cause tuberous sclerosis, an autosomal-dominant disorder, resulting in hamartomatous tumors in the heart, brain, kidneys, skin and other organs. once in a while it is discussed whether neuroendocrine tumors (nets) represent a characteristic of tsc. there are some case reports describing nets in the context of tsc, but mainly in connection with nets of the pancreas (e. g. insulinoma) or the pituitary. to the best of our knowledge there exists only one case report of a bronchial carcinoid as a result of a germline mutation in tsc (dworakowska et al. ) and no description of net of the adrenal gland due to a mutation in tsc or tsc . ngs provides the opportunity of wide-spread testing, even post-mortem, in order to get clarification for the descendants. although in our case we could not distinguish if the mutation detected represents a germline mutation or a somatic mutation, we were able to offer a predictive testing to the daughter and other family members. we report on a rare case of net of the adrenal gland because of mutation in the gene tsc . this case illustrates that in the differential diagnosis of nets, tsc genes should also be considered. germ cell neoplasia in situ (gcnis) is the precursor lesion of testicular germ cell tumours (tgct). if detected clinically, this lesion may herald a pending tgct. unfortunately, the only way of diagnosing gcnis is by testicular biopsy and subsequent immunohistochemical examination. therefore, non-invasive methods of diagnosis are required. mirnas of the mir- - and mir- / cluster had been suggested as serum biomarkers of full-blown tgcts. we aimed to explore the utility of these mirnas for the detection of the pre-invasive stage of tgcts and we looked to the expression of two mirnas in serum samples of gcnis patients. psmc ip located on chromosome q is a putative tumor suppressor gene that encodes for the nuclear psmc interacting protein. the protein functions as coactivator of steroid hormone mediated gene expression and is important for rad and dmc -mediated homologous recombination during dna repair of double-strand breaks. recently germline variants in psmc ip, also known as gt , tbip, and hop , have been identified with low frequency in early onset familial breast and ovarian cancer (hboc) patients and in a patient with apparently sporadic early onset breast cancer. somatic variants in psmc ip are frequently observed in breast, ovarian, and fallopian tube cancers. in this study, we analyzed a cohort of brca / mutation-negative hboc (n = ) or early onset sporadic breast cancer patients (n = ) for variants in psmc ip. we identified seven different heterozygous variants in out of index patients: c.- g>a (rs ); c.- t>a (rs ); c.- a>t (rs ); c.- c>g (rs ); c. g>a p.(trp *); c. + g>c (rs ); c.* g>a. these variants were not listed or at very low frequency (< %) in the exac database. carriers of psmc ip germline variants were mostly ( / ) affected by early onset breast cancer (median age of onset years). for three out of seven different variants (c.- g>a, c. g>a, and c* a>g), a possible impact on psmc ip expression or function was observed. the stop mutation c. g>a p.(trp *) was found in two sisters, which were both diagnosed with unilateral breast cancer at age . the premature stop codon is located within the dna-binding domain of psmc ip and is predicted to induce nonsense-mediated mrna decay (nmd). remarkably, c.- g>a was already described in familial breast and ovarian cancer, and was found once in this study in a female that developed unilateral breast cancer at the age of years. the variant c.- g>a (rs ) was shown to induce a slightly, albeit significant decrease of reporter gene expression. the c. *g>a variant was identified in a woman diagnosed with unilateral breast cancer at the age of years. luciferase reporter assays indicated an impaired effect of c. *g>a on microrna binding. germline variants in psmc ip are present in breast and ovarian cancer families. whether mutated psmc ip is a new risk factor for early onset breast/ovarian cancer in families with hboc and/or apparently sporadic early onset breast cancer remains to be shown. . - . %) with this marker. in patients without metastases the mir- a- p expression declined significantly after surgery. in metastasized cases the levels dropped sharply after chemotherapy. all of the relapses had elevated mir-levels, and expression decreased upon chemotherapy. mir- a- p has significantly higher sensitivity than each one of the classical tgct markers and than a combined panel of beta-hcg, afp and ldh ( . % vs . %). in non-metastasised seminoma the mir- a- p expression depended significantly on tumour size. mir- a- p is highly sensitive and specific for tgct. it correlates with the stage of disease and with treatment effects and it therefore fulfils the prerequisites of a valuable serum-based biomarker. the significant association with tumour bulk in localised disease provides evidence for the tgct being the primary source of mir expression. the sensitivity of mir- a- p surpasses that of classical tgct markers by far, and thus it may become the new gold standard for serum diagnostics of tgct in the coming years. co-occurrence of radioulnar synostosis and amegakaryocytic thrombocytopenia (rusat) was initially described as an inherited thrombocytopenia syndrome that is caused by a mutation in hoxa . in three simplex patients, de novo missense mutations in mecom were reported as an alternative origin of the disease (rusat ). mecom, identified as a common ecotropic viral integration site (evi ) in murine myeloid leukemia, is known as a key transcriptional regulator in hematopoiesis and sporadic myeloid leukemia. we report here on a novel mecom mutation cys gly (uniprot q - ) identified by whole exome sequencing in a family with rusat, hearing impairment, hand dysmorphisms, and patellar hypoplasia in four patients spanning three generations. notably, two of four affected individuals in our family developed a myeloid malignancy. the novel mecom missense mutation cys gly affects a heavily conserved cysteine residue in c h -zinc finger motif in the c-terminal zinc finger domain of mecom. this residue is crucial for the tetrahedral coordination of a zinc ion stabilizing the zinc finger conformation and thus, is essential for dna binding of the c-terminal zinc finger domain. our findings reconfirm the causality of mecom mutations and indicate that mecom mutations also need to be considered in familial rusat patients. in addition, we report for the first time that mecom germline mutations targeting the c-terminal zinc finger domain are associated with an increased risk for myeloid malignancies. this extends the rusat -associated phenotype and proposes that mecom germline mutations can cause a genetic predisposition to myeloid malignancy. (z., b. and s., d. contributed equally to this work) many genes that harbor rare mutations which entail a medium or high risk for breast cancer (bc) belong to dna double strand repair and have been identified by linkage analysis or by sequencing of candidate genes in bc families. in addition, a considerable number of common but low risk germline variants have been found in genome wide association studies. however, these predisposing factors yet only explain a fraction of bc cases. with the intention to identify low frequency variants conferring an intermediate bc risk, we performed an association study using a candidate gene approach and testing dna repair capacity with the micronucleus test (mnt) as an additional second phenotype. rs in the slx /fancp gene showed an association with bc that was pronounced in younger cases and was confirmed in a verification cohort (combined analysis of , cases, controls: or = . ( . - . ) , p = . for cases ≤ years). genotyping additional snps and imputation revealed a specific european haplotype of ca. kb length that spans slx and adjacent genes. it is tagged by the observed mutual dependence of the two phenotypes allowed a considerably improved interpretation of the results: (i) the unknown causal variant on the haplotype can be assumed to be present mostly in cases, indicating a rare variant with a rather strong effect; (ii) using this information on the two phenotypes in the association between the mnt results and bc improved considerably the identification of the specific risk among cases (< years) who carried the haplotype. roc curves for bc depending on mnt results revealed that the stratification on carriers of the haplotype increased the auc from . (p = . ) to . (p = . ). both associations can be best explained by a risk variant carried by a fraction of the haplotypes that is enriched in early onset bc cases. slx is the only gene in the tagged region which can be functionally related to both associated phenotypes, while for the other genes no connection to bc or dna repair is reported. inherited dna repair mutations: are they modifiers of brca and brca penetrance and age at onset of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer? background: inherited mutations in brca and brca are the most common causes of hereditary breast and ovarian cancer (hboc). the risk of developing breast cancer by age in women carrying a brca mutation is - % and - % in brca carriers. however, mutations in brca and brca only explain about % of all hboc cases. the lifetime risk varies between families and even within affected individuals of the same family. the cause of this variability is unknown but it is hypothesized that additional mutations or rare variants in genes that are possibly interacting with brca / in different dna-repair pathways contribute to this phenomenon. methods: we obtained samples of patients positive for brca or brca mutations and an age-of-onset (aoo) of breast cancer below or above years of age from the german consortium for hereditary breast and ovarian cancer. panel sequencing was done to screen germline dna for mutations in genes involved in different dna-repair pathways. variants were classified into five classes according to a modified version of plon et al ( ) . only truncating mutations and known pathogenic missense mutations were considered pathogenic or likely pathogenic. results: the patient group with an early aoo ( women) had developed breast cancer at a mean age of . years (± . ) and the control group ( women) had developed breast cancer at a mean age of . years (± . ). a total of , variants were detected in all patients and of these ( . %; % ci, . %- . %) were presumed to be deleterious. mutations were found in genes other than brca and brca . mutations were mainly found in single-strand break repair (ssbr %), double-strand break repair (dsbr %) and checkpoint factors ( %). the rest were found in genes with other functions such as brca / interactors, centrosome formation, and signal transduction. the putative mutations were found in women of the control group ( . %; %ci, . %- . %) compared to women of the patient group ( . %; % ci, . %- . %). the incidence of germline mutations in dna-repair genes did not differ according to the age of onset (p = . ). prevalence of additional germline mutations in dsbr in patients ( %) was not significantly different from prevalence of dsbr mutations in controls . % (p = . ) conclusions: the preliminary results failed to show a difference in mutation load between the two cohorts of brca / carriers sorted by age of onset. larger studies are needed and may provide further insight into the role of mutation load in hboc age of onset of brca / carriers. objective: glioblastoma stem-like cells (gscs) carry stem cell features and therefore seem to be responsible for tumor initiating, maintaining, recurrence and chemo-and/or radiotherapy resisting. the current knowledge on genetic and transcriptomic characteristics of these cells especially in comparison to glioblastoma tissue is still limited. the aim of this study is to compare the genetic and genomic profile of glioblastoma tissue and gscs. thereby, differences in involved genes and affected pathways on dna level as well as on gene expression level are identified. material and methods: peripheral blood and tumor tissue were obtained from patients with glioblastoma. tumor tissue derived explant cell culture and serum-free culture were established. based on multi-parameter magnetic-activated cell sorting (macs) technique, cd and cd labeled cell subpopulations of gscs could be isolated. the tumor tissue, serum-free culture, and the isolated cell subpopulations as well as blood were analyzed by snp array and gene expression (excluding blood) in a paired design. for preliminary characterization of gscs in the serum-free culture we confirmed the stem cell features of gscs by the expression of nestin, sox , and cd (applying immunofluorescence staining). results: our results of snp array analyses showed genetic aberrations in all analyzed cellular entities (tumor tissue and cell subpopulations, e. g. gain of chromosome , loss of q . , loss of q . ->q . , and complete loss of chromosome ). furthermore, distinct genetic differences between the cell subpopulations and tumor tissue were observed (e. g. loss of chromosome and segmental uniparental disomy of p . ->p . , only in cancer stem-like cell subpopulations). in addition, we detected many possibly candidate cancer genes and pathways which may have an influence on tumorigenesis. gene expression analyses revealed strongest differences between fresh tumor tissue and serum-free culture based cells, where more than a third of investigated genes were affected. when contrasting fresh tumor tissue with stem cell marker positive serum-free cultured cells, , genes were upregulated in the stem cell marker positive cells, whereas , genes where upregulated in fresh tumor tissue. within these genes, strongest enriched pathways in stem cell marker positive cells included positive regulation of cell cycle and cancer-related pathways, whereas in fresh tumor tissue predominantly immune-related pathways were found, e. g. myeloid leukocyte activation, inflammatory response and phagocytosis. conclusion: differences between gscs and tumor tissue using snp array analyses and gene expression were detected. our results may help to get more information about the molecular pathomechanisms of glioblastoma. it still needs more investigations on the field of genetic and genomic analyses between gscs and glioblastoma tissue to identify novel potential targets for therapy development. background: fanconi anemia (fa) is a rare inherited chromosomal instability syndrome associated with bone marrow failure as well as myelodysplastic syndrome (mds) and acute myeloid leukemia (aml). one-third of fa individuals exhibit bone marrow cytogenetic clones, notably gains of q and q and/or loss of / q, and % to % of fa patients developed mds/aml. in recent years, the application of high throughput technologies has revealed recurrent somatic mutations in genes implicated in myeloid malignancies. as additional genetic maladies facilitating mds/aml development in fa is lacking, we aimed to elucidate whether these mutations would be present in fa patients with mds/aml. methods: using illumina trusighttm myeloid sequencing panel (san diego, ca), we performed next-generation sequencing (ngs) on dna extracted from bone marrow specimens from fa mds/aml patients registered in the european working group of childhood mds. the sequencing panel targeted genes frequently mutated in hematologic neoplasms. results:. ten of the ( . %) evaluable patients had lesions ( to mutations per patient; missense, nonsense, insertion and duplication) in genes. the presence of a somatic mutation did not appear to correlate with complex karyotype or − / q. all affected genes occurred in isolation with exception of runx and kras. while of the mutations were pathogenic, were variance of unknown significance. mutations in genes involved in epigenetics (dna methylation, chromatin maintenance and cohesin complex; idh , tet , dnmt a, idh , ezh , rad and asxl ) and mutations in transcription factor genes (runx , ikzf and etv ) represented the most frequently affected genes. this was followed by mutations of genes encoding signaling molecules including the ras pathway (kras and ptpn ). altered runx was the most common lesion and occurred in individuals with aml, raeb or raeb-t. one patient with refractory anemia with ring sideroblasts (rars) had a mutation in the spliceosomal gene, sf b . conclusions: while the most common mutations encountered in sporadic cases of mds were in genes involved in rna splicing and epigenetics, these two broad categories of genes appeared to have less influence in our fa patients. most mutations were nonrecurring suggesting that there is no specific mutation pattern of these genes in fa-related mds/aml. however, runx mutations and also mutations involved in genes of the ras pathway appear to play a pathogenic role in fa mds/aml development. taken together, the data suggests that mutations in genes that cause clonal hematopoiesis in the population at large do not contribute significantly to fa hematopoietic clonal disease; however, particularly acquisition of runx and ras pathway alterations promote malignant myeloid disease progression. more extensive studies analyzing more patients are necessary to further define the secondary hits leading to fa myeloid disease. chromatin remodeling is a complex process shaping the nucleosome landscape, thereby regulating the accessibility of transcription factors to regulatory regions of target genes and ultimately managing gene expression. the swi/snf (switch/sucrose nonfermentable) complex remodels the nucleosome landscape in an atp-dependent manner and is divided into the two major subclasses brahma-associated factor (baf) and polybromo brahma-associated factor (pbaf) complex. somatic mutations in subunits of the swi/snf complex have been associated with different cancers, while germline mutations have been associated with autism spectrum disorder and the neurodevelopmental disorders coffin-siris (css) and nicolaides-baraitser syndromes (ncbrs). css is characterized by intellectual disability (id), coarsening of the face and hypoplasia or absence of the fifth finger-and/or toenails. so far, variants in five of the swi/snf subunit-encoding genes arid b, smarca , smarcb , arid a and smarce as well as variants in the transcription factor-encoding gene sox have been identified in css-affected individuals. arid is a member of the pbaf subcomplex, which until recently had not been linked to any neurodevelopmental phenotypes. in , mutations in the arid gene were associated with intellectual disability. in this study, we report on two individuals with private de novo arid frameshift mutations. both individuals present with css including id, coarsening of facial features, other recognizable facial dysmorphisms and hypoplasia of the fifth toenails. hence, this study identifies mutations in the arid gene as a novel and rare cause for css and enlarges the list of css-associated genes. the ubiquitin pathway is an enzymatic cascade including activating e , conjugating e , and ligating e enzymes, which governs protein degradation and sorting. it is crucial for many physiological processes. compromised function of members of the ubiquitin pathway leads to a wide range of human diseases, such as cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, and neurodevelopmental disorders. mutations in the thyroid hormone receptor interactor (trip ) gene (omim ), which encodes an e ligase in the ubiquitin pathway, have been associated with autism spectrum disorder (asd). in addition to autistic features, trip mutation carriers showed intellectual disability (id). more recently, trip was postulated as a novel candidate gene for intellectual disability in a meta-analysis of published id cohorts. however, detailed clinical information characterizing the phenotype of these individuals was not provided. in this study, we present seven novel individuals with private trip mutations including two splice site mutations, one nonsense mutation, three missense mutations, and one translocation case with a breakpoint in intron of the trip gene and clinically review four previously published cases. the trip mutation-positive individuals presented with mild to moderate id ( / ) or learning disability [intelligence quotient (iq) in one individual], asd ( / ) and some of them with unspecific craniofacial dysmorphism and other anomalies. in this study, we provide detailed clinical information of eleven trip mutation-positive individuals and thereby due to its heterogeneous etiology, primordial growth retardation is often a challenge for geneticists and clinicians in respect of diagnosis, therapy and prognosis. thus, pinpointing its genetic origin is required for a personalized treatment and prognosis. one syndrome mainly characterized by intrauterine and postnatal growth is silver-russell syndrome (srs), a clinically and molecularly heterogeneous disorder with a considerable overlap with other syndromes. in only % of patients with the characteristic srs phenotype the diagnosis can be confirmed molecularly, but % of cases remain without molecular diagnosis. in fact, in clinically less well characterized patients referred for diagnostic testing, the detection rate is less than %. however, systematic investigations on the contribution of mutations in genes which may be considered in the differential diagnoses of srs are still missing. we examined patients referred for molecular testing of srs but without molecular alterations associated with srs by ngs. a targeted ngs approach comprising genes implicated in the differential diagnoses of srs or suggested as srs candidate genes was performed. in patients fulfilling the criteria of srs accordingly to our recently developed clinical scoring system, disease-causing variants were found. these patients carried mutations in genes associated with bloom syndrome, mulibrey nanism, kbg syndrome, short syndromes or ig-f r-associated short stature, respectively. indeed, some of the differential diagnoses detected in our cohort have a major impact on clinical management, including cancer screening because of a high risk for tumor development. furthermore, we did not identify any pathogenic mutation in one of proposed srs candidate genes (e. g. mest, grb , copg ), thus raising the question whether these genes are indeed involved in the etiology of srs. we show that a (targeted) ngs approach is an important tool to identify the genetic cause in patients with unexplained growth retardation. furthermore, our data show (positive) clinical scoring in srs should not impede the consideration of differential diagnoses and other molecular causes. submicroscopic deletions of chromosome band p . have been reported in more than patients. common clinical features include intellectual disability/developmental delay, central obesity and behavioural difficulties. myt l became the main candidate gene for id and obesity since it is deleted or disrupted in all published patients. however, reports of deletions affecting only this gene and even more so of deleterious myt l sequence variants are very rare. to our knowledge, until now only two patients with de novo myt l point mutations have been reported. in the present study, we analysed a cohort of individuals with intellectual disability of unknown aetiology and their unaffected parents by whole exome sequencing. we identified de novo myt l sequence variants in two out of patients. patient carried a nonsense mutation (c. g>t, nm_ . ; gly *) whereas patient carried a direct splice site mutation (c. - a>g). according to prediction algorithms, both detected myt l variants are deleterious (patient : sift score , cadd score ; patient : cadd score . ). in addition, patient carried a de novo splice site variant in setd b. however, this variant is predicted to be benign (cadd score . ) as well as a known snv (rs , maf . ). a comprehensive clinical characterisation of the two patients yielded only mild or moderate intellectual disability, behavioural problems and muscular hypotonia as common clinical signs. surprisingly, obesity was only present in patient . postnatal tall stature and transient microcephaly were present in one patient each. this clinical picture is compared to the published phenotypes of patients with myt l point mutations, patients with microdeletions of only myt l and patients with larger p . deletions. with the reduced penetrance regarding obesity, the clinical picture of patients with myt l mutations is becoming more and more unspecific. the retina and anterior neural fold homeobox gene (rax) controls the embryonic eye development and is involved in human autosomal-recessive microphthalmia. so far only a few compound heterozygous mutations in rax have been described in microphthalmia patients. we report a first case of microphthalmia caused by a novel homozygous mutation in rax. the -month-old patient was born to consanguineous parents and presented with extreme microphthalmia, panhypopituitarism and developmental delay. mri of the brain showed bilateral agenesis of the anterior visual pathway and tractus opticus. ocular ultrasound confirmed bilateral anophthalmia. additionally, dysgenesis of the corpus callosum and an abnormal pituitary gland have been detected. the first child of these parents, who died shortly after birth, had also been diagnosed with bilateral anophthalmia. using panel diagnosis of the disease associated genome, we identified the homozygous pathogenic variant c. del, (p. fs) in rax. we performed a segregation analysis and confirmed that both parents are heterozygous for this variant. so far developmental delay and panhypo-expand the clinical spectrum of the trip gene in non-syndromic intellectual disability with or without asd. background: whole exome sequencing (wes) using next generation sequencing has proven to be a powerful tool in determining the underlying genetic cause of rare disorders. here, we show, that clinical follow-up and diagnostic re-evaluation can be crucial for uncovering further disease-causing mutations. clinical report and genetic findings: we report follow-up data of a previously published consanguineous family with two children, a boy and a girl, suffering from severe encephalopathy, hypotonia, microcephaly and retinal dystrophy. wes had shown a homozygous intronic splice variant in pgap (c. - a>g;p.?) causative for the symptoms. both parents were heterozygous carrier for the pgap variant (granzow, paramasivam et al, mol cell probes ) . in the next pregnancy, the unborn child presented hydrops fetalis, omphalocele, short tubular bones and cystic kidneys. chorionic villus sampling showed the fetus to be homozygous for the pgap variant. however, neither of these symptoms fit with a pgap -associated disorder. additional wes of fetal dna and re-evaluation in the family showed a homozygous nonsense variant in ift (c.g t;p.e *) consistent with a diagnosis of mainzer-saldino syndrome (mss) which is characterised by the association of renal disease, retinal pigmentary dystrophy, cerebellar ataxia and skeletal dysplasia, as a second diagnosis in the fetus. again, both parents were shown to be a heterozygous carrier for the ift variant. yet, as omphalocele was not accounted for by any of the identified conditions, a third genetic cause cannot entirely be excluded. alternatively, omphalocele may be a rare manifestation of mss, or be the result of a combination of both disorders. the couple opted for induced abortion. discussion: it is estimated that an individual carries multiple heterozygous variants for autosomal recessive disorders in his or her genome. especially in consanguineous families, this results in an elevated risk for children with more than one disorder. in recent publications of clinical exomes, double diagnoses have been reported in to % of investigated subjects. thus, the possibility of more than one causative gene should be carefully explored when working with wes and re-evaluation in case of additional clinical symptoms within a family should be considered. also, follow-up of families with rare genetic disorders may lead the clinical geneticist beyond the assumed single cause to multiple single gene disorders in the same family. conclusion: using wes, we have identified two independent single gene disorders in a consanguineous family demonstrating that clinical follow-up and diagnostic re-evaluation can be crucial for uncovering multiple disease-causing mutations in one family. we present a case study using molecular cytogenetic approaches on a year old boy presenting with microcephaly-brachycephaly, macroglossia and absent speech development. the boy is the first child of healthy, consanguineous parents of pakistani origin. following an uncomplicated pregnancy, the hypotrophic newborn was delivered at weeks weighing g. in the third month of life, the baby had viral meningitis. regular pediatric follow-up revealed psychomotor delay with hypotonia. creatine kinase, lactate and fibroblast growth factor measured in serum were high. subsequent investigations at the age of months included brain mri, electroencephalogram and muscle biopsy that gave hints of a mitochondriopathy or potential neuropathy of axonal type. due to the suspicion of a complex mitochondriopathy, whole exome sequencing was performed using a sureselect human all exon kit (agilent, mb v ) on a hiseq (illumina). the analysis revealed a heterozygous microdeletion of kb on chromosome q . which was classified as an unclear variant (uv), ehmt -gen was not affected. re-examination of proband's dna using array cgh detected a larger kb heterozygous deletion in the q . region (arr[hg ] q . ( , , - , , ) x ), encompassing exon of ehmt (euchromatin histone methyltransferase ; transcript nm_ . ). haploinsufficiency of this gene results in kleefstra syndrome (omim ), a multisystem disorder due to either microdeletions in q . encompassing ehmt or intragenic point mutations. mlpa analysis (ehmt mpla-kit p ) of parental dna further indicated a de novo origin of the deletion in our proband. a similar deletion has been described previously in a case presenting with clinical features of kleefstra syndrome [ ] strengthening the importance to include the ' part of ehmt in sequencing as well as cnv screening. in summary, our study clearly shows that array cgh is a valuable complementary approach to ngs especially for poorly covered regions in ngs i. e. exon of many transcripts. we report on a three-generation family with variable manifestations including delayed and incomplete tooth eruption, early tooth loss due to short dental roots, acroosteolysis, osteoporosis, tendon ruptures, joint hypermobility, muscle weekness, glaucoma, neurological features, and psoriasis. after detection of elevated cd /siglec -expression on monocytes and an upregulation of interferon-stimulated gene transcripts, singleton-merten syndrome was diagnosed. the novel heterozygous mutation c. c>g (p.thr arg) in ifih was found in three affected family members. singleton-merten syndrome is a very rare autosomal dominant interferonopathy, so far described in not more than four families. until now, only two different gain-of-function mutations in ifih have been detected. mutations in ifih are also associated with aicardi-goutière syndrome and recently features of both conditions were found in the same family. our findings expand the mutational spectrum of singleton-merten syndrome and demonstrate the high intrafamiliar variability associated with mutations in ifih . pituitarism have not been described in association with rax mutations. therefore we conducted array comparative genomic hybridization and karyotyping in the index patient. both tests gave normal results. prenatal diagnosis by chorionic villus sampling in the next pregnancy excluded a homozygous carrier status for this rax mutation. mutations in the phf gene are associated with borjeson-forssman-lehmann syndrome (bfls), an x-linked intellectual disability disorder affecting mainly males. female carriers usually show no or mild clinical signs. however, recent studies described females with de novo phf gene defects (mutations, deletions) and severe phenotypes resembling coffin-siris syndrome [ , ] . here, we report on a girl with a maternally inherited phf mutation and a phenotype resembling those described previously in affected females. the mother had learning difficulties and mild dysmorphological features (hypertelorism, prominent forehead). when seen at age months, the proposita showed muscular hypotonia, was unable to sit and had limited head control (developmental delay months). dysmorphic features included scaphocephaly, hypertelorism, a small flat nose with anteverted nares, low set, prominent ears, a high, narrow palate, absent labia minora and linear skin pigmentation on the thighs. ophthalmologic investigation identified strabism convergens of the left eye, hyperopia and an excavated papilla with a pale optical nerve. ultrasound showed patent foramen ovale, tricuspid insufficiency and a unilateral incomplete duplication of the renal pelvis. karyotyping performed elsewhere was normal ( ,xx). results of a genome-wide snp array analysis (affymetrix cytoscan hd) were also normal. using a targeted ngs approach for syndromic and non-syndromic developmental delay encompassing over brain related genes (mpimg- -test), we identified a heterozygous lof-mutation c. c>t (p.gln *) in the phf gene (encoding phd finger protein ). in addition, a human androgen receptor (humara) assay using blood dna showed a highly skewed x-inactivation ( : ). segregation analysis indicated a maternal origin of the variant. the mother also had skewed x-inactivation in blood. her husband and other daughter tested normal for the c. c>t variant. here, we describe the first female patient with a maternally inherited phf mutation and a severe phenotype. the mild phenotype in the mother might be due to different patterns of x-inactivation or to (undetected) mosaicism. this report represents the th case of a severely affected female patient with a phf gene defect. findings support the assumption [ ] that the female phenotypes of bfls might be more common than previously estimated. toms typical for ada deficiency such as fever, livedo racemosa, abdominal colics, arthralgias, and raynaud's phenomenon were observed months later. cecr sequencing (nm_ . ) revealed two previously described pathogenic missense mutations: c. g>c, p.(gly ala) and c. g>a, p.(arg gln). compound heterozygosity was confirmed by parental analysis. to the best of our knowledge, this combination of mutations has not been described until now. the p.(arg gln) is considered as founder mutation in the dutch population, but first phenotype-genotype analyses did not allow further prediction of clinical outcomes. ada deficiency should be considered in patients with childhood stroke despite the absence of systemic inflammation and cerebral vasculitis. congenital hyperinsulinism (chi) has been described as heterogeneous entity caused by at least different genes. in , tein et al. first described a defective activity of l- -hydroxyacyl-coa dehydrogenase in a -year old patient with hypoketotic hypoglycemic encephalopathy. biochemical markers of l- -hydroxyacyl-coa dehydrogenase deficiency (schad) are high -oh-glutarate excretion in urine and c -oh-carnitine in plasma. the clinical presentation is very heterogeneous with regard to age of onset, severity of symptoms as well as response to medical treatment and leucine-sensitivity. in some patients even a near total pancreatectomy was performed. schad dependent hyperinsulinism (hhf ) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder that is caused by mutations in the gene hadh. here we describe patients from unrelated families out of a cohort of chi patients mainly from central europe. patients and are siblings from unrelated parents. the older brother manifested with hypoglycemic convulsions at the age of weeks. a subtotal pancreatectomy was performed in an outside academic hospital. in further course he developed epilepsy and has been treated with diazoxide and anticonvulsants. the nd child was born with hypoketotic hypoglycemia and chi was diagnosed in first days of life. diazoxide treatment stabilized blood glucose and both children were referred to our pediatric endocrinology at the age of years and months, respectively. mutational analysis revealed the homozygous variant c. - c>g within the region of the splice acceptor site in intron of the hadh gene in both affected children. this change is neither registered in exac nor described in the mutation databases hgmd or in the literature and was predicted to disrupt proper splicing. we then completed mutational analysis in unidentified patients of our chi cohort with diazoxide responsiveness and known or suspected consanguinity. patient was born to consanguineous parents and chi manifested in the girl at neonatal age with hypoketotic hypoglycemia. she was successfully treated with diaxozide. later, she developed convulsions and statomotoric developmental delay. the homozygous splice mutation c. + g>t in intron of hadh was detected in the child. the parents were identified as heterozygous carriers. in patient , a girl born to consanguineous turkish parents, chi manifested at the age of months with hypoglycemic seizures. she responded well to diazoxide treatment. a homozygous missense mutation (c. a>g; p.lys glu) in exon of hadh was detected in the patient and her parents were heterozygous carriers. hadh mutations in case and have been previously described in probands of turkish descent and appear to be founder mutations in the turkish population. in conclusion, we recommend hadh mutation analysis to be considered in chi children with unknown cause and known consanguineous pedigrees or originating from populations with higher prevalence of consanguinity. homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in cecr (cat eye syndrome chromosome region, candidate ) have recently been identified to causing deficiency of adenosine deaminase (ada ; dada ) with childhood polyarteritis nodosa (pan) (omim # ). this inflammatory vasculitis affects the skin, and inner organs (predominantly kidneys and gastrointestinal tract) and also shows a high risk of ischemic stroke, brain hemorrhage as well as peripheral neuropathy. using whole-exome sequencing it was also found that the six adult patients (aged - ) described by sneddon in (sneddon syndrome, omim # ) likewise carried compound heterozygous cecr mutations. sneddon syndrome is characterized by a combination of dermatologic features (livedo racemosa) and ischemic brain infarctions. recently, clinical and genetic data of more than sixty ada patients have been reviewed and underlined the wide clinical variability in age at onset, clinical findings, outcome of neurological involvement, and additional hematological symptoms. typically, stroke has been reported to follow systemic inflammatory disease and predominantly affects posterior and central brain areas. here we describe one of the rare patients in whom acute mesencephalic stroke preceded systemic inflammation and presented as initial clinical symptom. symp- triploidy is a recurrent finding in prenatal diagnostics. in a small number of individuals, correction of triploidy has been suggested based on the finding of (mosaic) genome-wide uniparental disomy (upd). we here investigated uncultured und cultured amniotic cells (ac) and placental tissue from a fetus, in which ultrasound examination in the + th week of gestation revealed growth retardation, left diaphragmatic hernia with parts of stomach and bowel localized in the chest, dextrocardia, short nasal bone and single umbilical artery. these findings were confirmed at the + th week when the pregnancy was terminated. the pregnancy was conceived spontaneously by a -year-old mother and a -year-old father, both healthy and with uneventful family history. the parents were non-consanguineous and carry a normal karyotype. microsatellite analyses of uncultured ac obtained at initial presentation showed for chromosomes , and a pattern suggesting triploidy with only biallelic presentation. while y-chromosomal sequences were lacking the x-chromosome showed, unexpectedly a rather disomic pattern. metaphase yield on cultured ac was low but showed a mosaic karyotype ,xxx-,+ [ ]/ ,xxx[ ], which was confirmed for several chromosomes by interphase fish. remarkably, a triploid clone was cytogenetically not detected. thus, we performed further analyses using microsatellite markers, oncoscan technology and fish. these studies unraveled in uncultured ac a pattern suggestive of triploidy with the supernumerary chromosomal complement derived from a maternal isodisomy with the notable exception of the x chromosome. in cultured ac and placental tissue for all chromosomes, except x and , a diploid pattern was observed with alleles from both parents identical to those in the uncultured ac. trisomy x was confirmed in both tissues with the supernumerary chromosome x being of paternal isodisomic origin. the trisomy was seen only in cultured ac, and likely represents a pseudomosaic which nevertheless could not be proven due to insufficient yield of mitoses from the parallel cultures. finally, retrospective interphase fish on remnant uncultured ac showed two diploid clones, one disomic (approximately % of nuclei) and one trisomic ( %) for the x chromosome. the most likely explanation for the findings is a mosaicism for one diploid clone with genome-wide maternal isodisomy and a second diploid but bi-parental cell line with paternal trisomy x. given the identity of the (maternal) alleles in both clones our findings suggest that originally a triploid clone due to a maternal division error/inclusion of a polar body ii existed which underwent (erroneous) triploidy rescue resulting in one diploid biparental clone and one haploid clone of maternal origin that underwent haploid rescue resulting in genome-wide maternal isodisomy. the biparental clone with trisomy x either resulted from a sperm with two x-chromosomes or an erroneous x-duplication during trisomy rescue. since the introduction of non-invasive prenatal diagnosis (nipd, e. g. har-mony® test) in , this test is frequently demanded and routinely applied in prenatal centers and medical practices. mostly, nipd is intended to detect autosomal trisomies ( , , ), but also offers the possibility to analyze sex chromosomes. therefore, also sex chromosome aneuploidies (sca) (e. g. monosomy x (turner syndrome), triple x, xxy (klinefelter syndrome), xyy) are incidentally found. so far, in our prenatal center sca were detected in pregnancies by har-mony® test, consisting of three pregnancies with monosomy x (turner syndrome) and two pregnancies with klinefelter syndrome (xxy). triple x and xyy were detected one time each. of the three cases with suspected monosomy x, the diagnosis of turner syndrome could only be confirmed in one case. this fetus also had a hydrops at week + . for the other two fetuses, the chromosomal analysis of amniotic fluid revealed normal female karyotypes ( ,xx). in both cases with suspected klinefelter syndrome, this diagnosis could be disproved by amniocentesis (karyotype ,xy). in the pregnancies with assumed triple x and xyy, the true fetal karyotype was not further determined yet. from our experience, the rate of false positive results concerning the sex chromosome aneuploidies is noticeably higher than reported in two studies of nicolaides and hooks . this has to be strongly considered in the counselling of patients who wish to know the fetal sex by nipd. congenital myopathies and congenital muscular dystrophies: will genetic testing replace muscle biopsy in the near future? congenital myopathies and muscular dystrophies are a group of inherited neuromuscular diseases with early onset and broad genetic and histopathological overlap. the diagnostic approach has considerably changed with next generation sequencing methods available. here, we describe the diagnostic value of genetic and histological methods in a cohort of index patients and hence the efficacy of diagnostic procedures. of patients had a muscle biopsy as a first-tier approach. in of patients muscle biopsy was informative, leading to a classification in subgroups of cm or cmd. however, in only a few of these cases biopsy led to a specific diagnosis (e. g. merosin deficiency). in of patients genetic testing (candidate gene sequencing or ngs) was performed additionally to muscle biopsy as a second-tier diagnostic step, while patients of the whole cohort received genetic testing only. in almost two-thirds of these patients genetic testing identified known pathogenic or most likely pathogenic variations. these findings illustrate that genetic testing is superior to muscle biopsy in accurately diagnosing cm or cmd. in conclusion, we suggest that invasive muscle biopsy should be replaced by genetic testing as first-tier diagnostic procedure in patients with clinical signs of cm or cmd. nmd inhibition increases the amount of gaa-rna in patient's lymphocytes as well as in the cells of his parents. the residual function of the resulting protein has to be investigated. discussion and conclusion: rna analysis in lymphocytes with and without nmd inhibition is a simple method for analysing splice defects in all monogenic disorders with expression of the disease causing gene in lymphocytes. a further advantage for the patient is the use of blood cells instead of fibroblasts, because a skin biopsy can be avoided and analysis times are reduced. the exact characterization of pathogenic variants is an important aspect of diagnosis, prediction of disease severity and genetic counselling. in vitro nmd inhibition in lymphocytes of affected patients allows the characterization of splice defects. in the future successful inhibition of nmd in vitro might help to identify patients, who may profit from a therapeutic intervention with nmd inhibitors. even expression of a partial protein with low or no activity reduces the risk for the patient to develop antibodies hampering enzyme/protein replacement therapy. p-cling- q microdeletion syndrome: a family with short stature and silver-russel (srs)-like phenotype. introduction: the silver-russel syndrome (mim ), first described independently by silver and russell in , is a condition with intrauterine growth retardation, postnatal growth failure and other characteristic features, including relative macrocephaly (defined as a head circumference at birth ≥ . sd score (sds) above birth weight and/or length sds), prominent forehead, body asymmetry and feeding difficulties as recently defined in an international consensus statement. patients and methods: we report here on first degree relatives with a silver-russel syndrome phenotype who presented with prenatal-and postnatal growth retardation, feeding difficulties, a prominent forehead and a failure to thrive. additional features such as dysmorphic facial features, periodically increased sweating, and scoliosis were present in one of the family members only, whereas learning problems and cardiac arrhythmia were present in one other. none of the patients had relative macrocephaly. high resolution array-cgh was performed to screen for cncs and mlpa to confirm the array-cgh result. results: no hypo-methylation of the imprinting center on p nor uniparental disomy of chromosome and were found in the index-patients. high-resolution array-cgh identified a q . microdeletion of . mb (arr[grch q . ( , , , )× ). the heterozygous loss was confirmed by mlpa in the index patient and the other two affected family members (i. e. her brother and mother). the deletion includes the genes hmga , llph, tmbim , irak , helb, grip , and the pseudogene rpsap . conclusion: to the best of our knowledge this is the first report on familial presentation of a silver-russel syndrome due to a microdeletion in q . . none of the patients had relative macrocephaly. supporting the hypothesis by takenouchi et al. that the causative gene for relative macrocephaly resides centromeric to hmga , the region centromeric of hmga is not included in the deletion in our family. spastic ataxia of charlevoix-saguenay (sacs) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder and is caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in the sacs gene. first symptoms of sacs are walking difficulties due to unsteady gait. further typical clinical features include spasticity, ataxia, pyramidal tract signs, nystagmus and dysarthria. here, we report on a -year-old female patient who initially presented with disturbances in motor abilities including frequent falls and high arched foot. cranial mrt was normal while nerve conduction velocity was significantly reduced. the patient's parents did not show any clinical features. since no pmp duplication was detected we performed a gene panel including genes that are associated with hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies (hmsn) and related disorders by using targeted next generation sequencing. we identified the two heterozygous stop mutations c. t>a (p.leu ter) and c. dupt (p.leu phefs* ), located at the same position in the sacs gene. sanger sequencing did not enable us to properly display that there is a transversion and a duplication of the same nucleotide at two different alleles. this exemplifies that, in contrast to sanger sequencing, ngs can illustrate both alleles separately. to conclude, this case was only resolvable by ngs which makes this method appropriate for the detection of compound heterozygous mutations, especially in the rare event when two mutations occur at the same position. background: the precise identification and characterization of genetic variants in monogenic diseases has a wide influence on diagnosis and therapy. about % of pathogenic variants are splicing variants. due to the complex mechanism of splicing regulation it is difficult to predict the effects of variants on mrna splicing. possible consequences are exon skipping, intron retention, generation of novel splice sites or the utilization of a cryptic splice site. common consequences are a frame-shift and the generation of premature termination codon. this leads to rna degradation via the nonsense mediated decay (nmd) pathway. in a patient with the clinical symptoms of non-classical infantile pompe disease and a confirmed acid alpha-glucosidase (gaa) deficiency, we detected two novel, exonic variants in the gaa gene. both base pair exchanges suggested either an amino acid exchange or a splice defect as consequences. however, conventional investigation of the leucocyte mrna of the patient and his parents was inconclusive. degradation of the respective mutated rna by nmd was suspected. we developed an approach in order to characterize novel splicing mutations in a simple and non-invasive manner. material and method: isolated blood lymphocytes from patient and his parents were cultured in standard leucocyte medium supplemented with different concentrations of the nmd inhibitors ocadaic acid, anisomycin, and wortmannin for h. cells were harvested and rna was isolated. the reverse transcribed cdna was amplified in allele specific pcrs and qpcr assays. results: compared to the non-stimulated lymphocyte controls nonsense mediated rna decay was inhibited by anisomycin. the consequences of aberrant rna splicing were detectable: the maternal mutation results in exon skipping, the paternal mutation in intron retention. furthermore vascular ehlers-danlos syndrome (type iv) is considered to be an autosomal dominant disorder caused by heterozygous mutations in col a , which are missense or splice site variants in about % of cases. we here report on a three-year-old female of non-consanguineous parents born with bilateral clubfoot as well as dysmorphic facial features, joint laxity, and mild contractures of finger joints. developmental delay became evident. after trauma at years of age she developed brain haemorrhage. mri diagnosis at this age revealed an additional frontal aneurism as well as frontoparietal polymicrogyria. we identified novel compound heterozygous col a mutations: the nonsense mutation c. c>t (p.arg *) and the c. delc (p.pro leufs* ) frameshift mutation leading to a premature stop codon. further studies showed that the mutations were inherited from each parent who had no features for ehlers-danlos syndrome type iv. only two other families have been reported so far with recessive mutations of this gene and a severe vascular phenotype and polymicrogyria. biallelic mutations of col a seem to be accompanied with a significantly worse outcome compared with heterozygous mutations and polymicrogyria is an additional phenotypic feature. here we describe five patients with epidermolytic epidermal nevi in different degrees of severity with the mosaic mutation c. c>t (p.arg cys) in krt gene. the same mutation has previously been described in patients with ei (bygum et al. ) . we analyzed dna from peripheral blood and/or skin biopsies from affected and unaffected skin with next generation sequencing (ngs) and sanger sequencing methods. using ngs we found this mutation in blood in mosaic states ranging from % to %. the mosaic could only be confirmed by sanger sequencing in the patient with the highest mosaic frequency of %. in four of our patients we investigated skin biopsies from affected and unaffected skin. it is noteworthy, that only one of four patients showed the mutation in heterozygous state of % in the affected skin, whereas the other patients presented a mosaic state also in the affected skin. to exclude a recurrent sequencing artefact at this position, we examined control patients for this mosaic mutation using ngs. in none of these patients we found the same dna change. patients with epidermolytic epidermal nevi have a higher risk to have children with a full-blown ei phenotype. our results show the importance of ngs as the method of choice to explore the molecular genetic basis of epidermolytic epidermal nevi. strikingly, all our patients carry the same mosaic mutation c. c>t in krt . we suggest that this position is a hotspot for postzygotic mutations in krt . non-syndromic hearing loss (nshl), with presently around associated genes, is one of the most genetically heterogeneous disorders constituting nearly % of genetic deafness with a predominantly recessive inheritance pattern. thirty percent of hearing loss (hl) can be connected as a part of over distinct syndromes. next generation sequencing (ngs) technologies have revolutionized pathogenic variant identification. different strategies enhance pathogenic variant detection supporting detailed hl investigation to overcome the many ambiguities associated with clinical heterogeneity. detection of the disease causing variant in correlation with the phenotype can be challenging in small families, in situations with ambiguous clinical histories and allelic heterogeneity. using a clinical and whole exome sequencing approach, we tested over probands as part of a multicentre iranian and german genetics of hl study that included probands primarily with sporadic or dominant hl in a parent-child or parent-sibling trio context. the majority of these probands were pre-screened for defects in gjb and strc. libraries were prepared using trusight one and nextera rapid capture exome enrichment and sequenced using the miseq and nextseq desktop sequencers (illumina). analysis was performed using gensearchngs and an inhouse exome analysis pipeline. around % of cases were resolved from phenotype matching and segregation analysis. interestingly, the fraction of resolved cases was much higher in our iranian cohort (> %) compared to our german cohort (> %) which may be attributed in part to increased consanguinity in the iranian families. we observed likely disease causing variants in syndrome-associated genes including eya causing branchio-oto-renal syndrome, a phenotype that was retrospectively confirmed by acquisition of additional clinical information. with few exceptions, we observed a diverse collection of affected genes in probands from our german collected cohort. contrastingly, the iranian cohort revealed frequent mutations in myo a and otof. furthermore, co-segregation of variants in myo and tecta, with expected dominant hl phenotype, was a hindrance overcome by extensive segregation testing. familial locus heterogeneity was also observed by mutations in cib and slc a segregating in different branches of the same extended pedigree. success in the identification of disease causing variants in known hl genes is contingent upon analysis strategy, clinical information and opportunity for segregation testing. the ability to retrospectively connect an already apparent syndromic phenotype to a syndrome-associated gene without prior knowledge is a powerful application of comprehensive analysis that is not restricted to nshl genes. this work provides an improved understanding of population-specific genetic epidemiology of hereditary hl and highlights the challenges in defining genetic causes in a highly heterogeneous disorder such as hl. vere disproportionate microcephaly (- , sd), corneal clouding, myopia, teeth abnormalities and dysmorphism. panel diagnostic by next generation sequencing for primary microcephaly, including all known genes for seckel syndrome, was unremarkable. microarray analysis (affymetrix® cy-toscan hd) revealed a heterozygous kb deletion, spanning the plk gene. this deletion was confirmed by mlpa (multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification) analysis. subsequent sequence analysis of the plk gene showed a variant of unknown significance on the second allele. in silico analysis of this variant indicated a significant decrease of the relative splice efficiency at the splice donor site. rt-pcr analysis confirmed altered splicing, resulting in a predominant loss of exon of the transcript and predicting truncation of the plk protein. interestingly, a residual wild-type transcript was also detectable in patient rna, implying that this variant effects splicing only partially. by analysis of the parents, the splice variant and the large deletion were proven to be compound heterozygous. discussion: up to now, only a few patients with plk mutations have been described in the literature. the phenotype comprises primary microcephaly, primordial dwarfism and chorioretinopathy (mccrp ). to our knowledge, we describe the first case of a plk heterozygous whole gene deletion and at least partial biallelic inactivation of the gene, therefore expanding the genetic background of this disorder. furthermore, we give a detailed phenotypic description of a further individual with plk alterations. the girl does not show retinopathy so far. while generalised retinopathy was discussed to be one of the most prominent distinctive features between mccrp and primary microcephaly/seckel syndrome, we consider plk rather to be a further candidate gene pointing towards seckel syndrome. additional investigations on centriole function in patient-derived cells are in progress. pathogenic variants of mitochondrial dna cause a wide range of severe congenital disorders with maternal inheritance and a high transmission risk for female carriers. we report on eight families with an index case presenting with the common pathogenic variant m. t>g (p.leu arg) in the mt-atp gene in virtually homoplasmic form. in five families the mutation was detectable in peripheral blood from the mother in heteroplasmic form. in three families with a sporadic case of leigh syndrome the mutation was not detectable in peripheral blood (or urinary or buccal cells) from the mother, possibly indicating a de novo event. furthermore, one family presented with a de novo nonsense mutation in the gene mt-atp , which was present in peripheral blood of the index case in about % and was not detectable in the mother or the unaffected sister. two female carriers with a heteroplasmy level of % asked for prenatal testing. both pregnancies showed an apparently homoplasmic load of the mutation. mutations in lztfl (bbs ) may be associated with a severe renal phenotype huntington's disease (hd) is a rare autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder caused by expanded cag repeats as diagnosed via direct dna analysis. for asymptomatic individuals, predictive testing (pt) can facilitate life planning and diminish uncertainty, but it is also associated with substantial social and psychological challenges. we present a prospective case series of counselees seeking predictive hd testing at the huntington centre north-rhine westphalia (bochum, germany) between and . the international protocol including several pre-test sessions was followed throughout. the aim of this study was to prospectively follow the decision-making process of individuals at risk in our centre and explore their experiences following the decision as well as the impacts of mutation test results by means of standardized questionnaires and a semi-standardized telephone interview one year after the initial counselling session. individuals participated in at least one of the three phases of the survey, including individuals for the telephone interview. in our cohort, almost all interviewees reported a balanced emotional state one year after initial counselling, regardless of the decision for or against the test. the most important motivations for a decision in favor of pt were the ability to plan private life and to eliminate uncertainty. the most important motivations against pt were the fear of an increasing risk for others (e. g. offspring) and the fear to obtain an unfavorable htt mutation result, followed by the considered, willful decision for "wanting to not know". furthermore, we identified evidence for gender-specific aspects in decision-making in line with and expanding our previous observations. this study represents one of the few comprehensive prospective evaluations regarding decision-making and coping strategies related to predictive testing for huntington's disease. we submit that gender-related aspects should be heeded in genetic counselling during the predictive testing and counselling processes. our findings could serve as a basis for more extended prospective evaluations with higher numbers of participants and longer follow-up intervals. institute of human genetics, heidelberg, germany, department of conservative dentistry, heidelberg, germany, cegat gmbh, center for genomics and transcriptomics, tübingen, germany background: plk (polo-like kinase ) has been designated as "master regulator" of centriole assembly. complete loss of plk is lethal in mice, whereas biallelic plk mutations with some retained function have been described in a few patients with microcephaly, growth failure and retinopathy (mccrp , omim # ). this is a heterogeneous entity overlapping with mcph (primary microcephaly) and seckel syndrome. during the last years several new genes have been discovered associated with this spectrum. clinical report and genetic findings: we report on a year old female patient with intellectual disability, primordial dwarfism (- , sd), most se-abstracts linked to rare autosomal recessive diseases with poor prognosis. we then compared couples and filtered for variants present in genes overlapping in both partners. putative pathogenic variants were tested for co-segregation in affected fetuses where material was available and in unaffected siblings. out of eleven couples of mediterranean and arabian ancestry (c: , nc: ) and two non-consanguineous couples of european ancestry, we found five cases ( / , %, c: , nc: ) with both parents being heterozygous carriers of rare potentially deleterious variants in one or more overlapping genes. in four of these couples the underlying genetic cause for pre-or early postnatal child death could be established, in two of the families the diagnosis was confirmed by homozygous detection of the parental variant in the available dna of the affected child. in a consanguineous couple with pathogenic variants for a severe autosomal recessive disorder identified in both parents, the molecular diagnosis for their child that had died at months of age could not be established. out of couples in whom no causative diagnosis could be achieved consented to undergo further wes analysis. identified variants are now used for preimplantation and prenatal diagnostics in all four families in which a causative diagnosis was established. our data show that ngs based gene panel sequencing of selected genes involved in lethal autosomal recessive disorders is an effective tool for carrier screening in parents and for the identification of recessive gene defects in families that have experienced early child death and/or multiple miscarriages. k. komlósi , s. diederich , d. l. fend-guella , u. zechner , s. schweiger , o. bartsch recently an x-linked syndrome with maternally inherited or de novo mutations in taf was described with global developmental delay, intellectual disability (id), delayed speech, characteristic facial dysmorphology, generalized hypotonia and variable neurologic features (mrxs , mim: # , xlr). there have been only three publications of unrelated families, with single-nucleotide changes and with gene duplications including taf (kaya et al., ; o'rawe et al., ; hu et al., ) . we identified a german family in which two brothers ( and years) showed severe intellectual disability, absent speech and understanding, and hypotonia but different neurologic and behavioral phenotypes. besides severe id the older brother also had postnatal short stature (- sd), a severe lennox-gastaut epilepsy and a neurodegenerative course. the younger brother showed autistic behavior and lost his very limited skills at age to . years. both showed mild dysmorphic features (prominent supraorbital ridges, sagging cheeks, long philtrum, long face, thin upper lip, and high-arched palate), oropharyngeal dysphagia and generalized hypotonia. a gluteal crease with a sacral caudal remnant described as a characteristic feature was not seen in our case, and hearing impairment, microcephaly, dystonic movements or tremor were not observed either. the family history was highly suggestive of x-linked inheritance with an affected maternal uncle, a maternal aunt with multiple miscarriages, and two aunts with learning disability. since a previous analysis of known x-linked mental retardation genes had not revealed the cause in the older brother, we used a targeted ngs approach (mpimg -test: > brain related genes) for the analysis of the younger brother. following enrichment a bp paired end sequencing was carried out on an illumina miseq system with > % of target covered > -fold (hu et al, ) . only taf fitted the x-linked model and the phenotype. the unreported hemizygous sequence variant c. g>a (p.asp asn) in exon of taf was deemed pathogenic. it affected a highly conserved residue in the central "duf " domain, where / previously described mutations had clustered. segregation analysis confirmed hemizygosity in the older brother and heterozygosity in the mother with completely skewed x-inactivation ( : ). gonadism and learning disabilities. because of the delayed onset of symptoms, the diagnosis is often established during late childhood. however, in some cases renal morphological changes detected by ultrasound may resemble those usually seen in autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (arpkd). however, histologically bbs-kidneys differ distinctly from other polycystic disorders by cystic orientation, localisation, extension, structure and size. bbs genes have been identified to date. mutations in bbs , bbs , bbs and bbs have been found to cause an antenatal presentation of bbs that may in some aspects mimic meckel gruber syndrome (mks). there is increasing evidence that bbs, at least in some families, shows an oligogenic mode of inheritance with three mutations at two bbs loci. yet, only three patients in two families with bbs caused by mutations in lztfl (bbs ) have been reported. their diagnosis was established in childhood and all patients had mesoaxial polydactyly as a distinct manifestation. in contrast to previous lztfl cases, in our family the diagnosis of arpkd was suspected sonographically at weeks gestation (wg). pregnancy was terminated at wg. autopsy revealed postaxial polydactyly of both hands, enlarged spongy kidneys, hemivertebra t and some features of potter's sequence. histological examination of the kidneys showed multiple, not radially oriented thin walled cysts, internally lined by thickened pas-positive basement membranes and microcystic dilatation of collecting ducts. cystic changes were accentuated in the renal medulla. corticomedullar differentiation was mainly preserved. the tentative diagnosis was bbs. fetal dna was investigated using a next generation sequencing panel which included known bbs causing genes. hereby a heterozygous nonsense variant (np_ . : p.glu *) inherited from the mother and a heterozygous missense variant (p.glu lys) inherited from the father of the lztfl gene were identified. furthermore a maternally inherited heterozygous missense variant of unknown clinical significance in bbs was detected (np_ : p.pro ala). our case shows for the first time that mutations in lztfl can lead to a severe prenatal presentation of bbs due to profound renal manifestations with a kidney histology that is not considerably milder but distinct from that observed in mks. it is not clear to which extent the bbs variant may act as a disease modifier. this may challenge genetic counselling and prenatal diagnosis in a further pregnancy. furthermore our case shows that mesoaxial polydactyly is not always present in bbs patients with lztfl mutations and further studies are necessary to establish the frequency of mesoaxial polydactyly and other genotype phenotype correlations for bbs patients with lztfl mutations. p-cling- *** targeted next-generation sequencing analysis in couples at increased risk for autosomal recessive disorders k. komlósi, s. diederich, d. l. fend-guella, j. winter, o. bartsch, u. zechner, s. schweiger genetic childhood disorders leading to prenatal, neonatal or early childhood death are genetically heterogeneous. many follow autosomal recessive or x-linked modes of inheritance and bear specific challenges for genetic counselling and prenatal diagnostics. parents are carriers but unaffected and diseases are typically very rare but with recurrence risks of % in the same family. often, affected children (or fetuses) die before a genetic diagnosis can be established, post-mortem analysis and phenotype descriptions are insufficient and dna material of affected fetuses or children is not available for later analysis. a genetic diagnosis showing biallelic mutations or mutations on the x-chromosome in male fetuses or children is, however, the requirement for targeted carrier testing in parents, risk calculations, and prenatal and preimplantation diagnostics in further pregnancies. we employed targeted next-generation sequencing (ngs) for carrier screening of autosomal recessive lethal disorders in consanguineous (c) and non-consanguineous (nc) couples with one or more affected children. we searched for heterozygous variants (non-synonymous coding or splice variants as well as cnvs) in parents' dnas in a set of genes r. kropatsch , , j. preine , , jt. epplen , department of human genetics, ruhr university, bochum, germany, charcot-marie-tooth disease (cmt), also commonly called as hereditary motor sensory neuropathy, is the most common monogenetic disease of the peripheral nervous system with significant clinical and genetic heterogeneity. the main clinical manifestations of cmt include progressive distal muscle weakness and atrophy, impaired distal sensation, depressed tendon reflexes and high-arched feet. based upon electrophysiological and histopathological features cmt can be divided into predominantly demyelinating or axonal forms. an intermediate form also exists characterized by evidence of both, demyelinating and axonal, impairments. genetically cmt can be caused by mutations in over genes, including the dnm gene encoding dynamin protein, a large gtpase primarily involved in receptor-mediated endocytosis and membrane trafficking. only a small number of mutations in dnm causing cmt have been described so far. we report the case of a -year-old man presenting with backache, ataxic gait and distal muscle weakness of the lower limb considered to be a consequence of the pre-diagnosed disc prolapse years ago. over the past months bilateral progressive weakness of ankle dorsiflexion, foot drop and tingling paresthesia in stocking distribution have occurred. neurological examination disclosed depressed tendon reflexes of the upper and lower limbs. neurophysiologic investigations revealed an axonal sensible polyneuropathy with normal distal motor latencies and nerve conduction velocities. the sural nerve biopsy indicated single unmyelinated or thinly myelinated axons, loss of myelinated nerve fibers, numerous clusters of regenerating fibers without onion bulb formations suggesting an intermediate form of cmt. by using next generation sequencing (ngs) and a multi-gene panel, consisting of inherited neurological disease-associated genes, we identified a heterozygous missense mutation c. g>a, p.asp asn (rs ) in the dnm gene. this particular mutation is located in a highly conserved nucleotide region encoding the catalytic n-terminal gtpase domain. this evidence suggests a pathogenic phenotype caused by the described mutation, which is being underlined by the following facts: public genome database covering harmless variants of the human genome does not report it. additionally, the exac browser with exome sequencing data of > , unrelated individuals, lists the mutation and shows a low allele frequency of . , corresponding to one known heterozygous mutation carrier. other online prediction tools like the mutation taster, polyphen, sift and provean categorize it as pathogenic. in conclusion, the novel dnm mutation is responsible with high probability for the late-onset form of intermediate cmt of the investigated patient. heterozygous mutations in pcdh cause an x-linked female-limited form of an early infantile epilepsy (juberg-hellman syndrome). the phenotype of this syndrome is variable, ranging from benign focal epilepsy to severe, serial seizures, repeating up to more than times a day for several consecutive days. the intellectual outcome of affected patients ranges from normal to severe intellectual disability. psychiatric disturbances are frequent and manifest as autism, schizophrenia or aggressive behavior. neurological features such as ataxia may also be present. women with triple x syndrome usually show a normal physical development. cognitive deficits in vivo functional modeling of taf has already provided evidence for an effect on a neuronal phenotype. the phenotype in patients can be reminiscent of rett syndrome, but with milder regression and normal movements lacking a specific stereotypic pattern (no hand wringing). while severe neurodegeneration has been described in duplications, the present probands clearly showed developmental regression associated with a missense mutation. the analysis of further family members is pending. our case adds to the phenotypic spectrum of x-linked syndromic mental retardation type . targeted enrichment sequencing was successfully applied to identify greenberg dysplasia as cause of fatal anomalies in one fetus of a dizygotic twin pregnancy. p. m. kroisel , , b. csapo , , m. häusler , , l. michelitsch , , s. verheyen , , p. klaritsch , , k. wagner , institute of human genetics, medical university of graz, graz, austria, department of obstetrics and gynecology, gynecologist and obstetrician, weiz, austria in the first pregnancy of a year old kosovarian woman and her year old husband during the th week of gestation one of her dizygotic twins showed a severe skeletal dysplasia with all long bones extremely shortened and partially bended. the thorax was short and narrow. in addition a ventriculomegaly of the brain and an increased nuchal translucency was noticed. a very bad prognosis was expected and an achondrogenesis was suspected clinically. the other twin appeared to be normal. an amniocentesis was performed to potentially identify the genetic basis of the disorder. qf-pcr to rule out common trisomy's and cytogenetics revealed normal results and following a normal agilent k array cgh analysis as a next diagnostic step next generation sequencing by using the trusight one gene panel focusing on three genes including slc a , trip and col a was performed. since no pathogenic mutation was found by this approach, a more extended bioinformatics study was initiated. by filtering out common variants in the more than genes of the panel in our own database or in the exac-and genome databases our search was extended to genes with rare homozygous or compound heterozygous variants. by this strategy it was possible to reduce the potentially causative gene mutations dramatically and among those remaining genes for known very severe skeletal phenotypes just in the lbr gene the homozygous missense mutation c. a>g, p.asn asp was identified in our fetus. since this particular mutation is already known to be pathogenic leading to the lethal greenberg dysplasia (clayton et al., nucleus. ) the diagnosis could be achieved in the affected fetus of the pregnancy of our patient still before completion of the rd week of gestation. both parents were found to be heterozygous for this mutation in the lbr gene. recently it was shown that different mutations of the very same gene can also lead to less severe forms of bone dysplasia. the couple was informed about our results and possible consequences were discussed and offered. the couple however came to the decision not to draw any consequences. both fetuses especially the affected one were well documented sonographically including in a series of d images. in the th gestational week during a sonographic investigation the affected fetus did not show cardiac function and an oligohydramnios was found. since development of the second non affected fetus was still within the normal range, we hope the now single pregnancy will carry on normal until birth. from our finding we would propose that our chosen strategy is straightforward and can be applied in a wide range of pregnancies to identify various up to severe and fatal single gene disorders associated with sonographic anomalies within a few weeks which should provide substantial benefits for these families. after the working diagnosis ps had been established, molecular analyses regarding the recurrent akt mutation (p.glu lys) were performed by sanger sequencing in available affected tissue specimen of all three individuals. this revealed a high level of mosaic state for the akt mutation c. g>a, (p.glu lys) in affected tissues from bone and in meningiomas. re-evaluation of the ngs data from blood (individual i) confirmed the absence of that mutation in all reads, and no mutation was detected by sanger sequencing in dna from blood in individuals ii and iii. thus, a somatic mosaicism leading to a mild proteus phenotype could be confirmed as the underlying genetic cause in all three affected individuals. in conclusion, mild forms of proteus syndrome caused by the recurrent akt mutation in patients with limited regional involvement may be particularly difficult to diagnose and might be underdiagnosed. distal gne-myopathy: rare differential diagnosis of polyneuropathy here, we report a case of a -year-old patient with presumed polyneuropathy and elevated creatine kinase levels ( - u/l). clinical features included atrophic and bilateral paresis of lower legs of the frontal and rear compartment without high arched foot, while sensibility was not affected. additionally, a myopathic emg in m. tibialis anterior and a slight axonal damage in the motor neurography was detected. due to this overlapping neuromyological phenotype we performed a gene panel including genes associated with neuromuscular diseases using targeted next generation sequencing. gene panel analysis revealed the homozygous mutation c. c>t (p.arg trp) in the gne gene. this mutation is described in the literature as cause of a distal gne-myopathy and was also detected in an affected brother (ck u/l), having consanguineous parents. the current case emphasizes that a large gene panel analysis is recommended in case of an overlapping neuropathological and myopathological phenotype. c. landgraf, g. schmidt, s. morlot, b. schlegelberger, b. auber institute of human genetics, hannover medical school, hanover, germany ehlers-danlos syndrome (eds) is a heterogeneous group of connective tissue disorders. according to the villefranche classification, eds comprises six major types as well as some rare specific entities. one of these has been referred to as "eds, musculocontractural type" (mc-eds), "adducted thumb-clubfoot syndrome" or "eds, kosho type". first described in as an eds vi subtype, it recently was identified to be caused by biallelic changes in either the chst or dse genes, resulting in a loss of dermatan sulfate (ds) biosynthesis. characteristic symptoms are multiple congenital malformations such as contractures (club feet, adducted thumbs), visceral and ocular anomalies, generalized joint laxity, scoliosis, muscular hypotonia, fragile, hyperextensible and bruisable skin, as well as a typical craniofacial appearance. distinctive features include hypertelorism, down-slanting palpebral fissures, bluish sclerae, micro-corneae, short nose with hypoplastic columella and long philtrum, thin upper lip vermillion, small mouth, retrognathia, low-set and posteriorly-rotated ears. the psychomotor development is delayed. (chst ) and (dse) patients have been reported as yet. the patient, a -year-old woman using a wheelchair, had club feet, surgically corrected asd ii, muscular hypotonia, the characteristic face and hyperextensible skin with atrophic scars; particularly visible were those and learning disabilities are more common than in the general population and compared to siblings. their motor skills are likely to be somewhat impaired and coordination problems are frequent. in some patients psychological problems were described. furthermore, eeg abnormalities are occasionally observed, with clinical seizures present in up to % of patients. here we report on a -year-old girl with a ,xxx karyotype and early infantile, intractable epileptic seizures, beginning at the age of months. about three years later, she developed severe, serial seizures often related to febrile infectious diseases. in adolescence, the epileptic symptoms became less intense. she additionally showed autistic features, mental deficiencies, hypermobility of the joints and ataxia. array-cgh, fragile x-analysis as well as sanger sequencing and mlpa of the scn a and mecp genes revealed no additional abnormalities, besides the xxx karyotype. in the pcdh gene the heterozygous missense mutation c. a>g (p.asn ser) was identified, whereby the mutated allele seemed to appear in a : ratio compared to the wild type allele. this mutation has been previously described as disease causing. furthermore, three in silico prediction programs (sift, polyphen- , mutationtaster) classified the mutation as pathogenic. the patient's asymptomatic mother had a normal ,xx karyotype and was not a carrier of the pcdh mutation. pcdh -related epilepsy exhibits an unusual mode of inheritance in which only heterozygous females are affected and hemizygous males are asymptomatic carriers. random x-inactivation in the brain of females with pcdh mutations causes a cellular mosaicism, which likely accounts for the pathogenesis by altering the cell-cell-interactions ("cellular interference"). however, the precise mechanism is still unknown. hypothetically, the wide range of phenotypic expressions may be explained by partially skewed x-inactivation and thereby limitation of the cellular interference. hence, an unequal ratio of mutated to wild type cells should give a milder phenotype compared to the fifty-fifty situation. in contrast to this hypothesis, the phenotype in our patient was rather severe. nevertheless, we cannot exclude that the triple x status contributes additionally to the observed phenotypic expression. proteus syndrome (ps, omim ) is a highly variable disorder with asymmetric and disproportionate overgrowth of the body, connective tissue nevi, epidermal nevi, dysregulated adipose tissue, and vascular malformations, caused by a somatic activating akt mutation. we report on three unrelated individuals (two adults and one year old boy) who showed similar clinical findings that not fulfilled the rigorous clinical criteria for ps (biesecker, ) . beside an asymmetric hyperostosis of the skull or facial bones, all three had an ocular dermoid. two individuals developed alveolar hyperostoses and intracranial calcifying meningiomas. only one individual showed skin changes. all three had normal feet and no vascular lesions. molecular analyses in individual i performed in blood revealed normal results for array karyotyping and no relevant variant in whole exome sequencing (trio approach). introduction: incontinentia pigmenti (ip) is a rare x-linked male lethal genodermatosis that affects the neuroectodermal tissue and is always associated with a bullous rash of the skin along blashko lines in female neonates. it is caused by mutations in ikbkg which encodes the regulatory subunit of the ikb kinase complex required for nf-kb activation. ikbkg has a pseudogene (ikpkgp) with identical exons to . the most frequent ip mutation is a recurrent exon _ deletion due to non-allelic homologous recombination with the pseudogene. here, we report a novel deletion of exons and in the ikbkg transcript recognized by rna analysis. patient: we investigated a yr old girl with typical erythematous rash after birth which resolved within - m. apart from a small hyperpigmented area around the right mammilla there were no skin alterations. she had few conically shaped teeth, normal nail and hair structure, no neurological manifestation and normal intelligence. only clinical sign were repeated vitreous hemorrhage of the left eye from age m. family history was negative. methods: analyses on genomic dna extracted from blood included testing for the common ikbkg exon _ deletion by long range pcr and mlpa (p -a , mrc holland), x inactivation analysis in the androgen receptor gene as described, and massively parallel sequencing (mpseq) of the ikbkg gene (trusightone, nextseq, illumina®; data analysis with nextgene/geneticist assistant [softgenetics®] and seqnext [jsi®]; reference sequence grch , hg ). rna was extracted from cultured blood lymphocytes, and the entire ikbkg transcript (nm_ . , exons) was sanger sequenced on cdna level (the a of the start codon is in exon ); the results were analyzed with sequencepilot (jsi). result: genomic dna analyses including mlpa of ikbkg and ikbkgp specific probes in our patient did not reveal a putative mutation. there was a completely skewed x-inactivation pattern. cdna sequencing of ikbkg demonstrated skipping of exon and (r. _ del) which is predicted to cause a frame shift starting from codon p.gln , a premature stop codon amino acids downstream (p.gln glyfs* ) and complete loss of protein function. the loss of exons and is most likely due to an intronic splice variant in intron ; investigations regarding the origin of this deletion are ongoing. conclusion: the presence of the high homologous pseudogene makes sequence analysis of ikbkg challenging. we report a deletion of exons and in the ikbkg transcript that required rna analysis for its identification. due to the skewed x-inactivation and typical clinical picture causality of the detected deletion is certain. the exact genomic cause of this alteration remains to be clarified. also in the era of mpseq, rna analysis may be necessary for detection of deep intronic mutations or the study of genes with homologous pseudogenes, as shown here in the case of ikbkg. primary congenital glaucoma (pcg) and early onset glaucomas are one of the major causes of of blindness in children and young adults' worldwide. both autosomal recessive and dominant inheritance have been described resulting from bowel surgeries due to colon perforation. her older sister who died aged following an acute abdomen had club feet and the typical facial appearance, while three healthy sisters seem to be unaffected. her parents are first cousins of turkish origin and do not show eds symptoms either. the two affected sisters had been diagnosed with a syndromic disorder that could represent a rare form of eds. however, neither a confirmation of the suspected diagnosis nor a classification had yet been achieved. due to the distinctive symptom complex and the presumed autosomal recessive inheritance pattern, we strongly suspected this to be a case of mc-eds. sequencing of the chst gene (reference sequence: lrg_ ) revealed a formerly undescribed homozygous variant (c. c>t; p.pro- leu). the variant changes the highly conserved pro residue which is located in the critical '-phospho- '-adenylyl sulfate binding site and can be classified as likely pathogenic (acmg standards and guidelines, richards et al., genetics in medicine ) . the parents are heterozygous carriers of this variant, respectively. this case represents a unique entity within the umbrella term eds and illustrates the importance of clinical assessment leading to a diagnosis confirmed by genetic analysis. the underlying genetic defect in patients with mitochondrial peo is either a primary mutation of the mitochondrial genome (single, large-scale mtdna deletion or mtdna point mutation) or recessively and dominantly-inherited mutations in nuclear genes involved in mtdna maintenance leading to clonally-expanded multiple mtdna deletions in muscle. the nuclear disease genes are largely implicated in the replication and stability of mtdna, and as such a pathogenic mutation leads to secondary instability of the mitochondrial genome. causal mtdna deletions can be found in a heteroplasmic (mixture of mutated and wild type mtdna) state. however, each tissue/cell has its own biochemical threshold of mutant mtdna load which needs to be exceeded before focal respiratory chain deficiency becomes evident. to investigate this, muscle biopsies of patients with genetically-and clinically-characterized mitochondrial disease of nuclear origin ( polg, twnk, rrm b and slc a (ant )) and healthy controls were analysed using quadruple oxphos immunohistochemistry, quantifying the biochemical phenotype in individual muscle fibres of patient muscle biopsies. this technique is based on quadruple immunofluorescence to detect structural components of complexes i (ndufb ) and iv (coxi), as well as porin (a marker of mitochondrial mass) and laminin (a cell membrane marker to define the boundaries of muscle fibres). further studies on / patients ( polg, rrm b, twnk, slc a (ant )) included the correlation of the biochemical deficiency with the mtdna abnormality in individual cells, following laser microcapture and determination of the size and level of clonally-expanded mtdna deletion within fibres by real-time pcr. our preliminary data from quadruple immunocytochemical studies show that the muscle biochemical phenotype is different in patients with multiple mtdna deletions compared to other mtdna mutations; work is continuing to determine the exact size and level of clonally-expanded mtdna deletion in individual muscle fibres and correlate this with the observed biochemical defects and disease thresholds. abstracts these families, and functional studies, together with phenotype descriptions in the literature, are essential for pathogenic grading. however, several difficulties remain, such as the huge size of the ttn gene (> kb) impeding functional studies, the wide spectrum of phenotypes and variants, the still small patient cohort, and often unspecific immunohistochemical abnormalities in muscle biopsies. the clinical evaluation of ttn variants thus presents a great challenge to the field of human genetics diagnostics. compound heterozygous variants in the qars gene (omim ) have been identified in only four patients with autosomal recessive progressive microcephaly with seizures and cerebral and cerebellar atrophy (mscca), to date. these patients showed severe developmental delay, progressive primary microcephaly, intractable seizures, hypomyelination or delayed myelination, thin corpus callosum, and small cerebellar vermis on brain imaging. here we report on two unrelated girls with progressive primary microcephaly, epilepsy and brain anomalies. trio exome analysis in each of the families revealed two different combinations of compound heterozygous variants in qars. all four variants are highly conserved throughout vertebrates, not reported in any database, yet, and in silico analysis predicted the variants as possibly damaging or deleterious. the first patient was born to non-consanguineous german parents. at birth, she was too short (− . sd) and mildly microcephalic (− . sd). she developed intractable seizures within the first hour of life. her growth continued to be mildly retarded (− . sd at age years) but microcephaly was progressive (− . sd at age years). she did not achieve any of the motor or cognitive developmental milestones, she did not have eye contact. the only interaction with her surrounding was a diffuse reaction to being touched. cranial mri showed no myelination of the supratentorial region, corpus callosum agenesis, simplified gyral pattern of frontal lobes, enlarged cerebral ventricles, and normal brain stem and cerebellum. trio-exome sequencing revealed the compound heterozygous qars variants c. c>t, p.(arg- cys) and c. c>t, p.(arg *). segregation analysis by sanger sequencing confirmed the heterozygous variants in the parents and two non affected sibling of the index patient. the second patient was initially evaluated at days of age when she exhibited myoclonic seizures, intrauterine growth retardation, microcephaly, and elevated lactic acid. at birth, she was microcephalic (hc cm) and microcephaly was progressive (− . sd at age months). cranial mri suggested undersulcation. she has required a gastrostomy feeding tube. trio-exome sequencing revealed the compound heterozygous qars variants c. g>a, p.(gly ser) and c. c>t, p.(arg trp). segregation was confirmed by sanger sequencing analysis. together with the four previously described patients we conclude that compound heterozygous variants in qars are associated with a primary and progressive microcephaly, early onset of intractable seizures and severe developmental delay. brain imaging in the neonate can show simplified gyral pattern as an early characteristic feature. overlapping phenotypes are seen in patients with epileptic encephalopathy, lissencephaly and primary microcephaly. application of ngs panels or exome technology will allow for early diagnosis and further collection of patients for better delineation of the phenotype. with involvement of several genes including cyp b , foxc , pitx , myoc and pax . however, mutations in these genes explain only a small fraction of cases suggesting the presence of further candidate genes. to elucidate further genetic causes of these conditions we performed whole exome sequencing in a patient with pcg and retinal detachment and identified compound heterozygous variants in col a (p.met leu; p.ala- thr). targeted col a screening of additional patients detected three further heterozygous variants (p.arg *, p.gly ser and p.gly- val) in three distinct subjects: two of them were diagnosed with early onset glaucoma and mild form of osteogenesis imperfecta (oi), one patient had a diagnosis of pcg at age years. all five variants affected evolutionary, highly conserved amino acids indicating important functional restrictions. molecular modeling predicted that the heterozygous variants are dominant in effect and affect protein stability and thus the amount of available protein, while the compound heterozygous variants act as recessive alleles and impair binding affinity to two main col a binding proteins: hsp and fibronectin. dominantly inherited mutations in col a are known causes of connective tissues disorders such as oi. these disorders are also associated with different ocular abnormalities, although the common pathology for both features is seldom recognized. our findings expand the role of col a mutations in different forms of early-onset glaucoma with and without signs of oi. thus, we suggest including col a mutation screening in the genetic work-up of glaucoma cases and detailed ophthalmic examinations with fundus analysis in patients with oi. the gene ttn encodes the largest known protein, titin, which plays a key role in structural, mechanical, developmental and regulatory functions of cardiac and skeletal muscles. accordingly, titinopathies are characterized by great clinical and genetic heterogeneity. the clinical spectrum ranges from severe phenotypes with cardiac involvement to pure myopathies at the milder end, including autosomal recessive and dominant inheritance patterns (chauveau et al. , hum mutat; : ) . next generation sequencing analysis identifies a large number of variants of unknown clinical significance; the potential clinical relevance of these variants cannot be assessed with certainty without further studies. three case reports highlight the difficulties in human genetics diagnostics concerning ttn. the first case is of a year-old woman with proximal muscle weakness, slightly elevated ck, scoliosis, and no family history. a heterozygous known pathogenic variant was identified in mex , associated with autosomal recessive congenital core myopathy combined with primary heart disease. additionally, an unknown variant was detected. both variants could be clinically relevant with regard to the patient's phenotype, but this can be neither confirmed nor excluded at this time. the second case is of a month-old finnish girl who presented with severe muscle hypotonia at birth and mental alertness with normal brain mri and eeg. congenital fiber-type disproportion was suspected. a homozygous frame-shift mutation in mex was identified which to our knowledge has not yet been described in the literature. this variant is likely of clinical relevance with regard to the patient's phenotype, but this can be neither confirmed nor excluded at this time. the third case is that of a year-old woman with suspected myofibrillar myopathy. a known pathogenic homozygous frame-shift mutation in mex was detected which is associated with autosomal recessive congenital myopathy with central nuclei. segregation analysis revealed that the healthy parents are heterozygous carriers of this variant. the clinical diagnosis of a ttn-associated disease could therefore be confirmed. ttn variants need to be assessed in combination with detailed clinical and muscle biopsy data. segregation analysis is necessary but not sufficient for the clinical grading of variants. identification of a variant in several independent families, segregation of the variant with disease phenotype in gous pathogenic smad variant c. dupt;p.(ala fs) (ncbi reference sequence nm_ . ). gastric as well as colonic cancer and polyposis was present in the paternal family history. conclusions: ts and other imprinting disorders are likely underdiagnosed, as the main clinical features (e. g. growth retardation, hypotonia) are distinct but unspecific. as exome sequencing becomes a more frequent diagnostic procedure, imprinting disorders caused by mutations in imprinting centers will presumably be diagnosed more often. methylation defects, however, will remain underdiagnosed, without a specific clinical differential diagnosis, which would guide to appropriate analysis of the methylation status. a bowel invagination in early childhood due to a single polyp can be a symptom of jps, especially in the context of a paternal history of polyposis and intestinal cancer; thus, family history should be carefully obtained. in the outpatient clinic, child psychiatrists as well as neurologists thoroughly work up phelan-mcdermid patients according to a standardized protocol by taking medical history, performing physical examination, and, if needed, organizing further supplementary examinations. in addition, a genetic analysis and hair/tissue sampling is performed. since its foundation, a steadily increasing number of so far patients from all over germany has been seen and treated. the outpatient clinic aims at facilitating and accelerating the diagnosis of phelan-mcdermid syndrome, improving medical support for affected patients of all ages, and, last but not least, fostering a better understanding of the causes and pathomechanisms leading to the symptoms of the disease. t. m. neuhann, l. neuhann, c. rapp, a. laner, a. benet-pages, e. holinski-feder medizinisch genetisches zentrum, münchen, germany congenital eye malformations, such as the microphthalmia-anophthalmia-coloboma (mac) spectrum, congenital cataracts, anterior segment dysgenesis (asd), and congenital glaucoma, affect more than : . newborns. the phenotypic spectrum of the aforementioned entities is highly variable and partially overlapping. eye malfomations are very heterogeneous; to date causative mutations have been described in more than next-generation-sequencing (ngs) technology has revolutionized genomic research and has transformed clinical diagnostics. ngs offers enormous potential for providing accurate diagnoses to individuals with previously unresolved syndromes. in the pediatric endocrine clinic, clinicians are often faced with the task of making a diagnosis in children with syndromic short stature. as there may be considerable clinical overlap between short stature syndromes, deriving a clinical diagnosis may prove challenging. furthermore, even if a clinical differential diagnosis is established, often several genes would need to be tested before a molecular diagnosis is made. as access to genetic testing is limited in algeria, we conducted a pilot study on algerian patients with syndromic short stature using a combination of two different ngs modalities, namely whole-exome-sequencing (wes) and mendeliome sequencing (trusight one sequencing panel). a molecular diagnosis could be established in / patients, making the diagnostic rate in this initial cohort %. as patients had novel mutations we could expand the mutational spectra of several genes, namely cul , npr , sos , vps b, and znf . we could thus substantiate the clinical utility of wes and the mendeliome in patients with a diverse array of syndromic short stature syndromes. chromosome harbours an imprinted locus at q . maternal uniparental disomy of chromosome , paternal deletions and paternal loss of methylation at the intergenic differentially methylated region (ig-dmr) and the somatic dmr within meg are associated with temple syndrome (ts , mim ). the phenotype of ts consists of pre-and postnatal growth retardation, early feeding problems and muscular hypotonia, joint laxity, motor developmental delay, premature puberty, and truncal obesity. juvenile polyposis syndrome (jps, mim ) is characterized by predisposition to hamartomatous polyps in the gastrointestinal (gi) tract, specifically in the stomach, small intestine, colon, and rectum, including the risk for gastrointestinal cancer. pathogenic variants in the bmpr a and smad gene are identified in about - % of affected families. we report on a family with two female children. the index patient, an -year-old girl, was diagnosed to have ts due to hypomethylation at the somatic dmr within meg with clinical features reminiscent of prader-willi syndrome in early childhood and milder clinical signs at further age (i. e. mild global development delay, muscular hypotonia, suspected central obesity, no prominent facial dysmorphisms). snp array-cgh analysis was unsuspicious and no deletion of the imprinting center was observed. thus, ts is caused by a sporadic imprinting defect in our patient. her -year-old sister was diagnosed with smad -associated jps after an episode of intestinal invagination due to a polyp, histologically diagnosed as peutz-jeghers polyp, in early infancy. sequencing identified a heterozy-abstracts coding vmat have only very recently been described as causal for brain dopamine-serotonin vesicular transport disease in two families with multiple affected children (rilstone et al., n engl j med , , - ; jacobsen et al., j inherit metab dis , , - ) . the index case presented here is a -year-old girl with severe mental retardation and a dystonic movement disorder. she is the tenth child of a consanguineous arabic couple and was initially referred to neuropaediatric examination at the age of four months due to recurrent oculogyric crises and muscular hypotonia. blood metabolic testing and cerebrospinal fluid (csf) analyses were inconclusive. notably, biogenic amines were within their normal ranges and the differential diagnosis of aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase (aadc) deficiency could not be confirmed. conventional cytogenetics, subtelomeric screening, array-cgh and different ngs panel analyses did not identify a causative mutation. both parents and all eight living siblings are obviously unaffected. a brother with a known hypotonic movement disorder died at the age of three years due to prolonged seizures with hyperthermia and cerebral edema. by utilizing whole-exome sequencing, we identified a homozygous substitution in the slc a gene of the index case causing an amino acid change (c. c>a; p.pro his) in a conserved transmembrane domain of vesicular monoamine transporter (vmat ). homozygosity for this missense change could also be verified in a dna sample of her deceased brother. an obvious reduction in frequency of oculogyric crises was observed in our index case under therapy with pramipexole already within weeks after start of treatment. furthermore the patient shows less dystonic movements under therapy. the case presented here highlights the importance of considering brain dopamine-serotonin vesicular transport disease as differential diagnosis for early-onset extrapyramidal movement disorders combined with mental retardation even if neurotransmitters in csf are normal. for a large number of individuals with intellectual disability (id), the molecular basis of the disorder is still unknown. however, whole exome sequencing (wes) is providing more and more insights into the genetic landscape of id. in the present study, we performed trio-based wes in patients with unsolved id and additional clinical features, and identified homozygous cplx mutations in three patients with id from two unrelated families. all displayed marked developmental delay and migrating myoclonic epilepsy, and one showed a cerebellar cleft in addition. the encoded protein, complexin , is crucially involved in neuronal synaptic regulation, and homozygous cplx knockout mice have the earliest known onset of ataxia seen in a mouse model. recently, a homozygous truncating mutation in cplx was suggested to be causative for migrating epilepsy and structural brain abnormalities. id was not reported. the currently limited knowledge on cplx suggests that complete loss of complexin function may lead to a complex but variable clinical phenotype, and our findings encourage further investigations of cplx in patients with id, developmental delay and myoclonic epilepsy to unravel the phenotypic spectrum of carriers of biallelic cplx mutations. genes. due their heterogeneity, diagnostic testing for congenital eye malformations was limited in the pre-ngs era. we performed exome analysis in patients with congenital eye malformation (mac spectrum, asd, congenital cataract, congenital glaucoma). primarily, a gene panel comprising genes associated with eye malformations was evaluated. additionally the exome data was evaluated in selected patients as a second step. the panel analysis revealed pathogenic sequence variants in patients and genes (mab l , bcor, nhs, prss , cyp b , foxc , pitx , gcnt ). putatively causative sequence variants were identified additional patients. the diagnostic yield of the panel was highest in patients with non-syndromic microphthalmia/coloboma and congenital cataracts, and lowest in patients with syndromic mac spectrum (i. e. additional systemic features/malformations). ngs based panel testing is a strong diagnostic tool to determine the underlying causes of non-syndromic congenital eye malformations. due to the partially overlapping phenotypes and high heterogeneity it is more sensible to perform large gene panel analysis, as opposed to smaller single phenotype based panels. superactivity of phosphoribosyl¬pyrophosphate synthetase i (prpps) is a rare inborn error of purine metabolism that is characterized by increased levels of uric acid in blood and urine (omim ). the disorder is caused by gain-of-function mutations in the x-chromosomal gene prps . in male patients, disease manifestation is in early childhood. additional clinical characteristics include intellectual disability, hypotonia, ataxia and hearing loss. heterozygous female mutation carriers have a later age of onset and a less severe clinical course. only seven families with prps gainof-function mutations have been reported to date. we report on a -year-old boy with congenital hyperuricemia, urolithiasis, developmental delay, short stature, hypospadias and facial dysmorphisms. his mother also had hyperuricemia that was diagnosed at age years but was otherwise healthy. a novel prps missense mutation (c. g>c, p. leu phe) was detected in the proband and his mother. enzyme activity analyses confirmed superactivity of prpp synthetase. the family reported here broadens the clinical spectrum of prpps superactivity and indicates that this rare metabolic disorder is associated with a recognizable facial gestalt. homozygous and compound heterozygous mutations of the rnu at-ac gene are associated with mopd and roifman syndrome. mopd is characterized by severe microcephaly with brain malformations including abnormal gyral pattern, corpus callosum agenesis or hypoplasia, vermis hypoplasia and intracranial cysts, psychomotor retardation, short stature, skeletal dysplasia, dry skin, sparse hair, flexion contractures, round face with beaked nose and protruding eyes, and premature death with a majority of the patients who die before the age of months for unknown reasons. roifman syndrome was first described as a novel association of antibody deficiency, spondyloepiphyseal chondro-osseus dysplasia, retinal dystrophy, poor pre-and postnatal growth, cognitive delay and facial dysmorphism including long eyelashes, downslanting palpebral fissures, a long philtrum and a thin upper lip. all patients with roifman syndrome reported so far lack brain malformations. the rnu atac gene encodes a small nuclear rna (snrna), which is essential for minor intron splicing. homozygous (g. g>a, g. g>a) and compound heterozygous mutations (g. g>a;g. g>a, g. g>a;g g>a and g. c>t;g. g>a) have been described in mopd . all mutations involve the ' or ' stem loop of the u atac snrna. in contrast, all cases with roifman syndrome investigated so far showed compound heterozygous rnu atac mutations with one allele harboring a mutation in the mopd associated ' stem loop and the other allele showing a mutation in the stem ii site of the u atac snrna, which has not been involved in mopd , so far. thus, the different pattern of the mutations observed in mopd and roifman syndrome may contribute to the distinct features of both syndromes. however, our patient shows, that features of mopd , i. e., brain malformations, may also be present in patients who show roifman syndrome associated rnu atac mutations. this indicates that both syndromes may represent overlapping features of the clinical spectrum of rnu atac mutations. h. roth, h. stöhr, b. h. f. weber institute of human genetics, university of regensburg, germany introduction: inherited retinal degenerations comprise a genetically heterogeneous group of eye diseases with overlapping clinical presentations. up to now, more than genes have been associated with different forms of retinal dystrophies (rd) such as retinitis pigmentosa (rp) or cone-rod-dystrophies (crd) with mutations in and causative genes, respectively. here, we present the results from three patients with remarkable findings and discuss their implications for risk prediction and genetic counseling. methods: targeted next-generation sequencing (ngs) technology based on agilent custom designed gene panels (sureselect) has been established in our diagnostics department to identify causative mutations in a large patient cohort with approximately rd patients. high-throughput sequencing data are routinely analyzed with the clc biomedical workbench. classification of variants was based on bioinformatic analyses using alamut visual software, mutationtaster, sift and polyphen- prediction programs, allele frequencies, amino acid conservation and literature. results. ngs analysis revealed two patients with rp and one patient with crd, each of whom carry putative causative mutations in several rd genes. first, a male patient with a family history of crd, is a carrier of a nonsense mutation p.(arg ter) in rims and two likely pathogenic missense mutations in aipl (p.(tyr phe)) and guca a (p.(pro- leu)), each in a heterozygous situation. mutations in all three genes can cause adcrd. in addition, the patient carried a hemizygous nonsense mutation p.(glu *) in the x-chromosomal rpgr gene. secondly, a female patient with simplex rp was found to be homozygous for a frameshift-causing deletion p.(ser leufs* ) in the impg gene causing arrp. she also carried three heterozygous, likely pathogenic missense mutations in crx (p.(tyr cys)) causing adrp, in the x-chromosomal rpgr (p.(ala val)) and in ush a (p.(ile val)) associated m. s. reuter , a. riess , u. moog , t. a. briggs , , k. e. chandler background: disruptions of the foxp gene, encoding a forkhead transcription factor, are the first known monogenic cause of a speech and language disorder. so far, mainly chromosomal rearrangements such as translocations or larger deletions affecting foxp have been reported. intragenic deletions or convincingly pathogenic point mutations in foxp have up to date only been reported in three families. we thus aimed at a further characterization of the mutational and clinical spectrum. methods: chromosomal microarray testing, trio exome sequencing, multi gene panel sequencing and targeted sequencing of foxp were performed in individuals with variable developmental disorders, and speech and language deficits. results: we identified four different truncating mutations, two novel missense mutations within the forkhead domain and an intragenic deletion in foxp in fourteen individuals from eight unrelated families. mutations occurred de novo in four families and were inherited from an affected parent in the other four. all index patients presented with various manifestations of language and speech impairment. apart from two individuals with normal onset of speech, age of first words was between and years. articulation difficulties such as slurred speech, dyspraxia, stuttering or poor pronunciation were frequently noted. motor development was normal or only mildly delayed. mild cognitive impairment was reported for most individuals. conclusion: by identifying intragenic deletions or mutations in fourteen individuals from eight unrelated families with variable developmental delay/cognitive impairment and speech and language deficits, we considerably broaden the mutational and clinical spectrum associated with aberrations in foxp . h. rieder, f. beleggia, d. wieczorek we report on a -year-old boy with microcephaly, arachnoidal cysts, pachygyria, microgyria, and severe intellectual disability. he also had short stature including shortening and deformation of the femora, brachydactyly, and short ribs with costochondral dysplasia. he showed facial dysmorphism with narrow palpebral fissures, a short nose with a depressed nasal bridge, and a broad mouth with full lips. clinical laboratory investigations demonstrated persistently slightly elevated liver enzymes. exome sequencing revealed compound heterozygous mutations of the rnu at-ac gene, g. g>a;g. g>a, which has been described in an individual with roifman syndrome. we report on a seven-year-old girl, first child of non-consanguineous italian parents, with developmental delay, muscular hypotonia and distinctive craniofacial features (epicanthus inversus, ptosis, broad nasal bridge, mild retrognathia, low-set posteriorly rotated ears and malpositioned teeth in the mandible). because of the tentative diagnosis of blepharophimosis-ptosis-epicanthus inversus syndrome (bpes), conventional cytogenetic analysis, sanger sequencing and mlpa (multiplex ligation-dependent amplification) of foxl were initiated and showed unremarkable results. microarray-cgh revealed a kb microduplication of genetic material on q . : arr[hg ] q . ( _ )x encompassing the genes tubgcp , cyfip , nipa and nipa of maternal origin. patients with q . microduplication have been described to be affected by developmental delay, motor and/or expressive language delay, epilepsy, learning disabilities and/or behavioral problems. however, genotype phenotype correlation is complicated by incomplete penetrance. healthy and mildly affected carriers are reported in the literature. we speculate that the microduplication might contribute but does not fully explain the phenotype of our patient, in particular concerning the craniofacial features. subsequent trio whole-exome sequencing identified a de novo heterozygous mutation in setbp (c. t>a/ p.tyr *) leading to a premature stop codon and most probably resulting in a truncated and functionally impaired protein. mutations in the set binding protein gene (setbp ) on q . have been identified to cause schinzel-giedion syndrome (sgs, omim ), a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by postnatal growth failure, severe developmental delay, seizures, facial dysmorphism, genitourinary, skeletal, neurological, and cardiac defects. chromosomal deletions in q including setbp have been reported to cause a milder phenotype known as "autosomal dominant mental retardation- " (mrd , omim ). these observations suggest that the severe sgs phenotype might be the consequence of a gain-of-function or dominant-negative effect of the mutations and that setbp haploinsufficiency results in a different, milder phenotype. so far, the function of the set-bp protein is unknown. the presented case adds up to the yet small number of reported cases of mrd and thereby contributes to the clinical spectrum of setbp haploinsufficiency. this work was supported by "förderstiftung des uksh" (project number: _ ). the demand for genetic counseling had been constant, in germany, over many years. from to around . cases per year on the average and with minor fluctuations were reimbursed by the german sickness funds (public health insurance system; pabst and schmidtke, gendiagnostik in deutschland, bbaw, p. - , ) . in connection with the "genbin "-project, a new nationwide survey was initiated regarding with arrp. finally, in another female rp patient with no family history of rd, we detected a nonsense mutation p.(trp ter) and a likely pathogenic splice site change (c. + a>g) in the arrp gene eys, assuming compound heterozygosity. in this patient we also identified two heterozygous, likely pathogenic missense mutations in hmcn (p.(pro thr)) and cep (p.(arg cys)) underlying dominant and recessive forms of rd. in all three cases, specific mutation(s) could not be uniquely identified as causative. conclusion. results in the three rd cases emphasize that ngs can generate unexpected results that are difficult to interpret, particularly in the absence of segregation analysis and functional data on pathogenicity. the implications for genetic counselling and predictive testing will be discussed. smart qnipt study -detection of fetal trisomy based on methylation-specific quantitative real-time pcr m. sachse, s. werler, j. bonnet, u. neder, h. sperling, s. busche, s. grömminger, w. hofmann lifecodexx ag, konstanz, germany objectives: current non-invasive prenatal testing (nipt) methods for the detection of fetal trisomy (t ) are primarily based on next generation sequencing (ngs) strategies which are quite costly in clinical application and hence are limited to patients who can afford the testing. here, we describe the results of a blinded study with respect to the test accuracy of a newly developed nipt assay based on quantitative real-time pcr (qpcr) for prenatal testing of fetal trisomy (qnipt). methods: in the study maternal plasma samples were collected from , pregnant women and blinded by an independent contract research organization. after extraction of cell-free dna using qiasymphony instrument and methylation-specific digestion of dna samples a multiplex qpcr was performed. the primary qpcr data were finally evaluated with our ce marked data analysis software. results from this analysis and from confirmatory ngs testing were compared with nipt results using ngs. the study results of successfully analysed maternal plasma samples (n = ) demonstrated a positive percentage agreement (ppa; equates to sensitivity) of % (lower -sided % confidence interval of . %; n = / ) and a negative percentage agreement (npa; equates to specificity; n = / ) of % compared to ngs-based results. the negative predictive value (npv) for the novel qnipt and confirmatory ngs testing was % (lower -sided % confidence interval of . %). the average fetal fraction of the examined blood samples was . %. the qnipt assay provided reliable test results in blood samples with a fetal fraction below % and as low as . %. conclusion: our results suggest that the proprietary qnipt assay is a very reliable and robust method suitable for clinical routine in accordance with international medical associations. the assay represents a more cost-efficient solution over ngs testing and will also be able to provide results in the shortest possible time. while current nipt methods require a minimum fetal fraction of % in blood samples from singleton pregnancies, we could demonstrate in the study that our smart qnipt assay can be employed on blood samples with a fetal fraction of as low as . %. in summary, the application of smart qnipt could have the potential to become a nipt solution on a global scale for pregnant women of all ages and risk groups. further studies which aim to include the determination of trisomy and trisomy are currently underway. with respect to the developmental delay of our index patient, chromosome analysis and array-cgh were performed. a microduplication in p . (app. kb) of unknown significance and a microduplication in xq . (app. kb), which comprises the fmr -gene, were identified and shown to be of maternal origin (arr[hg ] p . ( , , , )x , xq . ( , , , )x ). fmr is associated with fragile x syndrome, which is one of the most common causes for x-linked mental retardation. cgg-trinucleotide repeat expansions in the ' untranslated region (> repeats) lead to aberrant hypermethylation of the fmr -promotor and silencing of fmr expression. in contrast, premutations ( - repeats) lead to a higher expression of fmr and cause a clinical syndrome that is characterised by late progressive cerebellar ataxia (fxtas). in line with this gain-of-function mechanism, we hypothesize that the xq . duplication, which could lead to an increased gene dosage of fmr , causes a fra(x)-/fxtas-like syndrome and explain the clinical findings in our family. vengoechea et al. described a patient with a similar duplication, who was affected by developmental retardation, epilepsy and hyperactivity. they discussed the microduplication, which arose de novo in their patient, as the cause for the boy's symptoms (vengoechea j. et al., eur j hum genet., nov; ( ): - ) . in conclusion, we assume a fmr -duplication syndrome in our family with variable expressivity and a different impact on male and female patients. to further prove this hypothesis, we are planning to perform a segregation-analysis within the whole family. background: congenital myasthenic syndromes (cms) are a genetically heterogenous group of disorders leading to weakness of skeletal muscles -especially ocular, bulbar and limb muscles -with onset mostly at birth or in early childhood. the severity of cms can vary significantly ranging from death in early childhood due to respiratory insufficiency to only mild muscle weakness in adulthood. more than genes that are highly expressed in the neuromuscular junctions are associated with cms. mutations in the chrne gene on chromosome p . are responsible for about one half of genetically solved cms cases. they can cause different subtypes of cms with either autosomal dominant or autosomal recessive inheritance. results: here, we report a -year-old boy who was born with bilateral eyelid ptosis and congenital vertical talus of the right foot that needed surgical correction. the boy displayed muscular hypotonia with a myopathic facial expression and delayed motor development. ophthalmologic examination revealed external ophthalmoplegia. a next generation sequencing based gene panel for congenital myopathies detected the homozygous frameshift mutation c. _ dup (p.leu profs* ) in the chrne gene in the boy. gene dosage analysis did not show an exonic deletion in the chrne gene. sanger sequencing confirmed the mutation in a heterozygous state in the boy's father. however, his mother did not carry the mutation in the chrne gene. conclusions: these results suggest the rare event of a (partial) paternal uniparental isodisomy of chromosome as cause of the homozygous c. _ dup (p.leu profs* ) in the chrne gene in the boy. further experiments are currently undertaken to confirm this hypothesis. the annual reimbursement frequencies of the relevant entries in the ebm fee schedule, , , and , for which only specialists in human genetics and subspecialists in medical genetics can account, from until . contrary to the findings in the earlier period the demand for genetic counseling has risen sharply: , (of a total of , ) cases in ; , ( , ) in ; , ( , ) in ; , ( , ) in ; , ( , ) in ; and , ( , ) in . we speculate that the temporal correlation of the rise of genetic counseling demand with the enactment of the german act on testing (february , ) is not coincidental. further factors that might contribute to the increase in demand are the ensuing guidelines of the german commission on genetic testing and cme activities related to attaining a qualification for genetic counseling for specialties other than human genetics. in the course of these activities the awareness for the importance of genetic counseling delivered by specialists in human genetics and subspecialists in medical genetics may have risen. acknowledgements: the "genbin "-project supported by the robert koch-institute through funding from the german federal ministry of health. we gratefully acknowledge the collaboration with dr. michael erhart, zentralinstitut der kassenärztlichen bundesvereinigung (zi-kbv), berlin, germany it is well known that duplications of down syndrome critical region (dscr) on chromosome q can cause down syndrome whereby the distinct phenotype is associated with the involved genes and the size of duplication. however, in literature are hardly any cases with mosaic duplications of dscr described. here we report on a year old boy with some clinical features of down syndrome including distinctive craniofacial dysmorphism, simian crease and sandal gap as well as delayed motor and speech development. no other organ abnormalities are known. conventional chromosome analysis showed no numerical or structural aberration whereas interphase fish analysis revealed three signals for dscr in approx. % of lymphocytes and in approx. % of buccal mucosa cells. array-cgh analysis on dna from peripheral blood confirmed a , mb duplication of chromosome q . q . . the duplication involves among others the gene dyrk a which is reported as a candidate gene for down syndrome. this case presents one of the smallest known duplications within dscr which causes even in a mosaic state a mild phenotype of down syndrome. -year-old boy was referred to our outpatient clinic due to global developmental delay mainly affecting his speech and his fine motor development. in addition, muscular hypotonia and an abnormal gait were reported by the referring paediatrician. his mother, his maternal grandmother, and numerous relatives are affected by gait ataxia. no causative mutation was detected in the maternal grandmother by means of a multi-gene panel for spinocerebellar ataxia encompassing genes. genetic testing for friedreich ataxia was also without pathological findings. cer, but the patient mother's grandfather had a cancer of unknown origin and died at the age of years. because of the suspicion of having a lynch syndrome an immunohistochemistry and microsatellite analysis have been performed on the tissue of the colorectal cancer and the hepatic metastasis. all four mmr proteins were properly expressed in immunohistochemistry in colorectal cancer. just the expression of mlh protein in the hepatic metastasis was focally weakened and inhomogeneous. the microsatellite markers bat , bat , d s (apc), d s and d s (mfd) were all stable, a a t-kras mutation was found. after performing a multi-gene panel (ngs, next-generation sequencing), a gross heterozygous deletion of exon in msh gene has been found in the cnv analysis of the ngs data. this mutation was confirmed with a mlpa and quantitative real time pcr analyses. furthermore, rna expression of msh was reduced to % in blood lymphocytes in comparison to control samples pointing to a potential role of msh loss in the patient's tumor development. we are observing more and more patients with probably pathogenic and pathogenic mutations in one of the mmr genes with normal immunohistochemistry and microsatellite analysis. therefore, we propose that the criteria for performing a molecular genetic analysis of hnpcc/lynch syndrome should be revised. exome sequencing reveals gata mutation in a patient with partial delta-storage pool deficiency and mild thrombocytopenia objectives: we report about a -year-old male patient of russian background with severe and frequent epistaxis and hematoma since infancy. he presented with mild thrombocytopenia and increased mean platelet volume. von willebrand's disease and subhemophilia had been excluded. previously, he was diagnosed with immune thrombocytopenic purpura. he never underwent elective surgery. his parents were asymptomatic. however, his -year-old daughter also suffers from severe bleeding symptoms (multiple, light red hematoma in consequence of minimal trauma). methods: whole exome sequencing (wes) was carried out for the patient, his asymptomatic wife, his symptomatic daughter and her asymptomatic -year-old brother. platelet function was assessed by light transmission-, lumi-aggregometry and flow cytometry. lysates of gel-filtered platelets were analyzed for total granule p-selectin, cd and von willebrand factor (vwf) content by western blotting and for serotonin levels by elisa, respectively. results. platelet function and characterization of the patients granula suggested a delta-storage pool disease (spd). in most cases delta-spd occurs as part of a syndrome, e. g. combined with albinism, immunodeficiency or a thalassemic-like blood disorder. as the patient and his daughter did not show any conclusive phenotype, their dna was subjected to wes. exome sequencing revealed a not yet described gata -mutation close to two zinc finger domains (znf and znf ) in a highly conserved region of the gata gene in the -year old daughter (c. a>c, p.t p, heterozygous) and her father (c. a>c, p.t p, hemizygous). this mutation was absent in wildtype-controls but could also be demonstrated in the indexpatients' asymptomatic mother. only a few mutations are known to be located in this c-terminal region to date. mutations in gata may lead to different clinical presentations, depending on their location within gata (e. g. diamond-blakfan anemia (exon ), x-linked thrombocytopenia (znf ), transient myeloproliferative disorder (intron , exon , exon ) and acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (intron , exon , exon ) in case of down-syndrome). significantly increased hbf-levels (reference level: ≤ , %) in the affected family members of , % ( -year-old daugh- our proposita is a years old woman, who was transferred to our genetic counselling department for the suspicion of m. osler (hereditary hemorrhagic teleangiectasia, hht). during routine check up an anemia was diagnosed. a tumor search was initiated and unexpectedly the ct of the abdomen showed a suspect coin lesion of about . cm in diameter localized in the basal part of the right lung. further investigations revealed a pulmonary arterio-venous malformation which was hemodynamically relevant and already led to chronic right heart overload. a coil embolization was performed. retrospectively, medical history of the patient included episodes of severe epistaxis in childhood and a neurosurgical intervention for intracerebral bleeding at the age of years without permanent neurological deficits. during genetic counselling our proposita mentioned that her years old daughter also suffered from anemia due to multiple polyps of the colon. after polypectomy her hemoglobin values normalized. although histologically the polyps appeared as juvenile ones a mutation search in the apc-gene was initiated by the gastroenterologists without identifying a pathogenic mutation. combining the two pieces of information, we offered a mutation search in the smad gene and a pathogenic mutation c. c>t (p.arg cys) was found in both patients in heterozygosity. colonoscopy in the mother did not show juvenile polyps or gastrointestinal vascular malformations. vice versa, no cerebral or pulmonary arteriovenous malformations could be detected in the daughter. our family illustrates, that the same mutation within a family may phenotypically appear as different diseases. a careful taking of medical history and the knowledge of all relevant diagnostic findings (in this case e. g. the histology of the polyps) can enable the geneticist to offer a precise differential diagnosis leading to a well-directed molecular testing. to our opinion this is still relevant even in the era of ngs-based panels because the more precise the clinical diagnosis and the choice of the genes to analyse the less problems with unclassified variants will arise. the hereditary non-polyposis colon cancer (hnpcc, lynch syndrome) is caused by pathogenic germline mutations in mismatch repair genes (mlh , msh , msh and pms ) causing microsatellite instability (msi) and decreased or lost expression of the appropriate mismatch repair protein (mmr) in the immunohistochemistry (ihc) on tumor material. thus, ihc and msi testing help to identify the mmr gene, which most likely harbors a germline pathogenic variant. msi and ihc testing prior to germline analysis are specified in the s guidelines of hnpcc and if negative normally preclude further genetic analyses. here, we present a year old patient with a synchronous colonic (ceacum) and renal cancer at the age of years. at the time of the diagnosis hepatic metastases of the caecal adenocarcinoma have already been present. histologically, the colonic tumor was a poorly differentiated adenocarcinoma (pt pn) with lymphangiosis and haemangiosis carcinomatosa. the renal cancer showed histology of a moderately differentiated clear cell renal carcinoma. in the family history the year old sister and the parents are healthy. the twin sister of the patient's mother had a collateral breast cancer at the age of years and died two years later. the mother's grandparents had no canmedizinische genetik · p-cling- pitfalls in molecular genetic diagnostics a. tibelius, e. fey, k. hinderhofer institute of human genetics, heidelberg, germany probably every clinical laboratory geneticist may look back on at least one case in his career which has caused him quite a headache. this means those cases with completely unexpected and at a first glance implausible results which could be interpreted correctly only after intensive enquiry and additional testing. here, we report on three of such pitfall cases from our routine diagnostics. case : a -year-old woman, pregnant with monozygotic twins, was referred to prenatal cystic fibrosis diagnosis. she and her partner were carriers of mutations in the cftr gene ( + g>t and g x, respectively). prenatal molecular diagnosis demonstrated that both fetus had inherited only the paternal mutation. routinely, we performed maternal cell contamination analysis by comparing polymorphic microsatellite loci between the maternal and fetal dna. surprisingly, of tested microsatellite loci revealed a discrepancy between the maternal and fetal genotypes, meaning neither of both maternal alleles was present in fetal dnas. a potential confusion of samples was excluded. moreover, the presence of paternal mutation in fetal dnas indicated a correct genetic relationship between awaited children and the partner of pregnant woman. the only one plausible interpretation of the obtained result was a pregnancy by egg donation. afterwards, this suspicion was confirmed by the couple. case : we present a -year-old man with infertility resulting from azoospermia. conventional chromosomal analysis and an additional fish analysis using y probes indicated a ,xx karyotype with no detectable sry. in parallel, a molecular azf (azoospermia factors) diagnostic was performed by a standard multiplex pcr. by this method the absence of sry region and a deletion of regions azfb and azfc, was identified, explaining the observed azoospermia. interestingly, the pcr showed that the azfa region was still present in patient chromosomes, contradicting cytogenetic and fish results. thus, a complementary fish analysis was performed in order to reveal a low-grade y-mosaicism and sry material was detected in % of the cells (a result under the threshold level). based on this observation, pcr conditions for the azf diagnostic were modified and a very weak sry-specific pcr product detected. case : a molecular diagnostics for frax (fragile x syndrome) was requested for a -year-old boy with a slight delay in speech development. his brother was already molecular-genetically diagnosed as having frax. the analysis by southern blot hybridisation in the patient revealed a smear of methylated fragments characteristic for an expanded allele in the full mutation range. surprisingly, two fragments of normal length, methylated and non-methylated, could also be detected in patient's dna. a subsequent aneuploidy mlpa confirmed a supernumerary x-chromosome in the patient consistent with a klinefelter syndrome. these results were verified by an independent cytogenetic analysis. the syndrome of congenital symmetric circumferential skin creases (cscsc and cscsc ) replaces the old term michelin-tire-baby syndrome (mim ) and is characterized by congenital circumferential skin folds, primarily of the limbs, facial dysmorphism, cleft palate and intellectual disability. mutations in the β-tubulin encoding gene tubb or in the microtubule end binding family member mapre are the underlying genetic cause. ter) and , % ( -year-old indexpatient) suggested dyserythropoiesis, although thalassemic features of the blood count were lacking. conclusion: we describe a gata mutation as the cause of a delta-storage pool disorder. imbalanced x-chromosome inactivation might explain the different phenotypes of the gata mutation carriers and will be investigated through allele-quantification based on rna isolated from whole blood and from platelet rich plasma in case of the index patient and different family members. we saw three siblings (aged , , ; two female, one male) with variable signs of retinal disease. all three developed night blindness till the rd decade, furthermore near-sightedness and deterioration of the visual acuity to a various degree at age - . the clinical diagnosis was given as stargardt's disease, fundus flavimaculatus or unspecified retinal degeneration respectively. two more siblings (aged and ) and the mother (died age ) were clinically unaffected. the father (died age ) was reported to have had bad eyesight beginning in the th decade, his father similarly (no further information available). the three affected siblings have a total of five children (age - ), none of them showing clear signs of retinal disease up to now. considering the clinical diagnosis stargardt's disease we analysed the genes abca , elovl , prom and cngb by sanger sequencing. no pathogenic mutation could be detected. afterwards we performed next generation sequencing of several genes associated with retinal dystrophies and found a novel splice site mutation in the prph gene (mim # ). the mutation was confirmed in all three affected siblings by sanger sequencing. considering that mutation pathogenic we could re-diagnose our patients with patterned macular dystrophy type (mim # ). that disease is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion, corresponding to the pattern of inheritance evident in our family. the etiology of epileptic encephalopathies, characterized by severe, early-onset seizures accompanied by developmental delay or regression, is highly heterogeneous. in recent years, next-generation sequencing approaches have led to the discovery of numerous causative genes; however the spectrum of associated phenotypes still needs to be further explored for many of these genes. we performed multi-gene panel analysis in a little boy of german non-consanguineous parents who showed severe early-onset infantile epileptic encephalopathy and almost absent neurological development. in this patient we identified a novel heterozygous missense mutation in the gabrg gene which was absent in the parents. in silico analyses strongly suggested a pathogenic relevance of this sequence variation which resides within a highly conserved region. so far, gabrg mutations have mainly been associated with milder types of epilepsy such as febrile seizures and childhood absence epilepsy. therefore, our findings extend the phenotypic spectrum associated with mutations in this gene at the severe end. referring on a case report by al marzouqi et al. ( ) , who reported on a girl with bilateral amastia in the context of skewed x-inactivation, we want to underline the importance of mlpa analyses in the case of negative sequencing of the eda gene, as whole exon duplication can be the cause of hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia. to our knowledge, the report of al marzouqi et al. has been the only case about this genetic alteration in the literature so far. novel pogz mutation in a patient with intellectual disability, microcephaly, strabismus and sensorineural hearing loss we report on a -year-old male patient with severe intellectual disability, microcephaly, sensorineural hearing loss, ocular abnormalities (strabismus and hyperopia), congenital heart defect (atrial septum defect and pulmonary stenosis) and minor facial abnormalities (thin upper lip, frontal upsweep). next-generation sequencing analysis revealed a novel heterozygous de novo mutation in pogz: c. _ del, p.(thr serfs* ) . the clinical problems of this patient are in accordance with the findings in the previously reported pogz mutation carriers. reports of additional patients with pogz mutations will be needed to establish detailed phenotype-genotype correlations of this novel and probably underdiagnosed syndrome. novel clinical and molecular aspects in two patients with kleefstra syndrome d. wand, b. seebauer, k. heinimann, i. filges medical genetics, university hospital, basel, schweiz the phenotype of kleefstra syndrome is clinically variable but characterized by facial dysmorphism, intellectual disability, childhood hypotonia and variably associated other malformations. haploinsufficiency of ehmt , caused by either heterozygous microdeletions in q . or sequence mutations in ehmt , has been identified to be the underlying causal mechanism. here we present two girls from two unrelated families with clinical signs of kleefstra syndrome. besides the main features such as facial dysmorphism, intellectual disability/developmental delay and childhood hypotonia, the years old girl presented with additional accelerated growth whereas the other girl, years old, showed failure to thrive. both children have no heart defect, renal or urogenital anomalies or severe respiratory infections. we identified two rare variants likely to be causal: a novel heterozygous splice site ehmt variant and a heterozygous microdeletion in chromosome q . , including exons an of the ehmt -gene . these patients broaden the spectrum of kleefstra -associated ehtm causes, contribute to novel aspects of genotype-phenotype correlations and a better understanding of the clinical variability of the disorder. here, we present two girls from two non-consanguines families showing clinical aspects of the syndrome of congenital symmetric circumferential skin creases. additional features are present in both girls. patient is the first child of healthy parents. she was born at + weeks of gestation with a weight of g, a length of cm and a head circumferences of cm. respiratory distress, a cleft palate, a heart defect (atrial septum defect), an anogenital malformation and facial dysmorphism were diagnosed after delivery, additionally to the skin creases phenotype. conventional karyotyping performed on blood lymphocyte cultures and cgh-array analysis showing normal results. patient is the second child of unrelated healthy parents. her older sister is healthy as well. because of an intrauterine growth retardation an amniocentesis with chromosomal analysis was performed, showing a normal karyotype of ,xx. patient was born at + weeks of gestation by caesarean section. the birth weight was g, the birth length was cm and the head circumferences was cm and the apgar score was / / . due to respiratory distress and hypoxia a tracheotomy was initiated. she also presented with cleft palate, feeding difficulties, a heart defect (atrial and ventricular septum defect), asplenia and facial dysmorphism. the skin phenotype was remarkably similar to that of patient with a prominent neck fold and skin creases mainly on the back part, but also at the limbs. in both children the skin folds gradually diminish over the time without any intervention like it was described for michelin-tire-baby syndrome/ cscsc and cscsc patients. for these reason, a disease-causing mutation in the genes mapre and tubb were excluded in both children. to identify a genetic cause, we performed a trio whole-exom sequencing, including the healthy parents and the affected child, in both families. a de novo stop mutation was detected in patient , while no promising results could be detected in patient . further studies, especially functional in vivo studies and analysis of further patients with a similar clinical presentation will answer the question if the above described phenotype is an expanded variant of the congenital symmetric circumferential skin creases or a unique new syndrome. clinical findings in a family with x-linked hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia due to a duplication of exon in the eda gene -a case report we want to summarize the phenotypic spectrum in one affected three generation family with x-linked hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia. we report on one strongly affected male and slightly affected female carriers, carrying a duplication of exon in the eda gene. reason for genetic assessment was the request of a female for evaluation of a possible risk for occurrence of the familial disorder in a further planned pregnancy. the woman reported an inability to breastfeed and she and her daughter showed conical teeth, a dry skin and sparse hair. the affected male showed absent deciduous teeth, hypodontia of permanent teeth, missing regulation of the temperature due to a lack of sweat glands, bilateral nipple hypoplasia, a dry and wrinkled skin, missing eye lashes, eyebrows and scalp hair and sparse body hair. the fingernails were inconspicuous, whereas the nails of the toes, particularly the nails of the hallux were yellowish and thickened. the affected male had an operation due to a gallstone and cysts were found in one kidney. there was no increased predisposition to infections. the suspected diagnosis of x-linked hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia was confirmed by genetic analysis of the eda gene (sequencing and mlpa analysis). a duplication of exon was detected in the affected male patient and was confirmed in the two mildly affected female relatives by realtime-pcr. terminator sequencing mix v . on an abi xl genetic analyzer (applied biosystems) and detected an insertion of bp between the exons and . we located the insertion's sequence in intron of the dmd gene and sequenced flanking sequences of gdna to find the underlying mutation causing the insertion. two hemizygous single nucleotide variants (snvs) surrounding the inserted fragment could be identified. the first variant (c. - a>c) is a common polymorphism (maf according to genomes project: . %) at the position of an existing acceptor splice site. the second variant (c. - a>g) is novel and creates a new cryptic donor splice site with high probability. these two cryptic splice sites create the formation of a bp pseudoexon which produces a frameshift and a premature stop codon (p.asp alafs*) in the dmd gene. in summary, we could genetically confirm the clinical diagnosis of a dystrophinopathy by two divs in dmd. although the insertion of the pseudoexon creates a premature stop codon the patient's clinical phenotype indicates a milder type of becker muscular dystrophy. this contradiction could be explained by the remaining existence of dmd wild type mrna most likely due to a not constantly active cryptic splice site. most interesting about the present case is the fact that a common snv facilitates the creation of a pseudoexon. this makes the region a potential hotspot for divs in the dmd gene which would be worthwhile further investigations. with more than % of all humans preferring to use their right hand, handedness is the most noticeable functional expression of cerebral lateralization in humans. however, the precise molecular mechanisms that regulate handedness and other related forms of cerebral lateralization remain largely elusive. therefore, the question which genetic, epigenetic and environmental factors contribute to human handedness is one of the central questions in research on lateral asymmetries. handedness is a complex, heritable trait, for which polygenic inheritance is assumed, meaning that a large number of genetic factors with a small additive effect contribute to the observed variance in hand preference. to date, genetic association studies have implicated only a few specific genes influencing handedness. particularly interesting is the association between the human androgen receptor (ar) gene and different aspects of handedness, since the interrelationships constitute a conceptual bridge between the theories that invoke testosterone as a factor in the development of cerebral asymmetries with theories proposing that the x chromosome contains a locus that influences the direction of hand preference. in an initial large association study in samples of healthy adults we already demonstrated that handedness in both sexes is associated with the ar cag-repeat length, with longer repeats being related to a higher incidence of non-right-handedness. in addition, we have performed a second association study in an independently collected healthy cohort of more than test persons with comprehensive data on the handedness phenotype. we were able to replicate the association with longer cag repeats being related to a higher incidence of non-right-handedness, especially in females. since longer cag-repeat blocks have been linked to less efficient ar function, these results implicate that differences in ar signaling in the developing brain might be one of the factors that determine individual differences in brain lateralization. dej. waschk, ac. tewes, p. wieacker, s. ledig institute of human genetics, münster, germany the mammalian female and male reproductive tracts develop from the paramesonephric ducts (müllerian ducts, md) and mesonephric ducts (wolffian ducts, wd), respectively. in the absence of testicular differentiation and anti-müllerian hormone, the wd regress and the md give rise to the fallopian tubes, uterus, cervix and the upper part of the vagina. disorders of normal md development in females can manifest as fusion anomalies of the uterus such as septate uterus, bicornuate uterus, unicornuate uterus and uterus didelphys, or more complex malformation patterns like mayer-rokitansky-küster-hauser syndrome (mrkh) or herlyn-werner-wunderlich syndrome. mrkh is characterized by congenital absence of the uterus and the upper two-thirds of the vagina in individuals with a normal female karyotype, most of whom show normal ovarian function. mrkh can further be associated with additional malformations e. g. of the kidneys and the skeletal system. herlyn-werner-wunderlich syndrome is characterized by uterus didelphys, obstructed hemivagina and ipsilateral renal agenesis. despite anomalies of the md occur quite frequently, the etiology of most cases with these disorders remains unknown. the homeodomain transcription factor emx (empty spiracles homeobox ) was found to be critical for urogenital and central nervous system development. previous studies showed that in emx mutant mice, the kidneys, ureters, gonads and genital tracts were completely missing. in order to elucidate whether mutations in emx are causative for md anomalies in humans, we performed sequence analyses of emx (genbank nm_ . ) in our study group of female patients with clinically characterized disorders of the md including patients with mrkh and cases with herlyn-werner-wunderlich syndrome. we found the heterozygous intronic mutation c. - c>a twice in this cohort. this variant has been described earlier (rs ) and is listed in the exome aggregation consortium exac variant with a minor allele frequency of . %. in silico analysis revealed no significant changes for the correct splicing of emx . we therefore consider this variant to be a benign polymorphism. we conclude that mutations in emx are not causative for disorders of the md in our cohort. a. zaum, w. kreß, a. gehrig, s. rost institute of human genetics, würzburg, germany dystrophinopathies are x-linked muscle diseases caused by mutations in the dmd gene (omim: ). due to the huge size of this gene, the detection of mutations is sometimes challenging. despite multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (mlpa) and sequencing of all exons, about % of patients do not show any mutations in coding regions and therefore remain without molecular diagnosis. we assume that the majority of these patients have deep intronic variations (div) which are not detectable by standard diagnostic techniques. the index patient analysed is a twelve-year-old boy who was by chance diagnosed with elevated ck levels (up to , iu/i) at eight weeks of age. today he is still able to walk without walking aids but needs assistance when climbing stairs. in , a muscle biopsy revealed complete absence of dystrophin which established the diagnosis of dmd. for the molecular diagnosis, standard diagnostics ascertained no causative mutation. therefore we decided to search for deep intronic mutations. we isolated mrna from muscle tissue of the patient and amplified overlapping cdna fragments using rt-pcr. the fragments were analysed by gel electrophoresis for size differences compared to an unaffected control. the cdna product comprising exons - revealed an augmented fragment size compared to the control and the expected product size (about bp instead of the expected bp). we sequenced the altered cdna product using bigdye recent research in psoriasis has identified pustular psoriatic manifestations as either mendelian traits or as major genetic risk factors in contrast to the numerous associated snps in classical plaque psoriasis vulgaris. autosomal recessive mutations in il rn have been identified in ~ - % of patients with generalized pustular psoriasis (gpp), a rare, severe pustular variant of psoriasis. in addition, heterozygous missense variants in card and ap s have been associated to pustular psoriasis as well and shown to be functionally relevant. in order discover how relevant those genes were in our large gpp cohort of patients recruited all over germany, we screened them for coding variants in il rn, card and ap s by sanger sequencing and for quantitative aberrations by mlpa. we identified homozygous or compound heterozygous il rn mutations in of gpp patients ( %) and single heterozygous mutations in patients ( %). the most common mutations were c. >c>t/ p.ser leu and c. c>t/ p.pro leu, present on %/ % of mutated alleles, respectively. we also identified three so far unreported mutations: c. c>a/ p.ser x, c. - delacct-tc/ p.thr _phe del and c. g>a/ p.val met. according to molecular modeling, c. c>a/ p.ser x resulted in a shortened, de-stabilized protein analogous to c. g>t/ p.glu x. the other two mutations were also predicted to result in destabilized, likely disease-relevant, loss-of-function proteins. heterozygous ap s mutations were detected in two gpp patients, both of whom carried additional homozygous or compound-heterozygous il- rn mutations. gpp patients were heterozygous carriers of rare missense variants in card ( %); of note, two of these patients carried additional mutations in il rn. our genotype-phenotype correlation revealed a similar gender distribution in carriers of il rn mutations and wildtype carriers, but a strong association between bi-allelic mutations in il rn and early age of manifestation (p = . x* - ). as in other autosomal recessively inherited mutations, the frequency of parental consanguinity was significantly higher in patients with two il rn mutations compared to non-carriers. overall, our genetic studies suggest a lower impact of variants in ap s and card in pustular psoriasis than of those in il rn. interestingly, the combination of il rn mutations with either ap s or card congenital prosopagnosia (cp), also known as developmental prosopagnosia or face blindness, describes the inability to recognize faces. cognitive functions such as intelligence as well as the sensory visual capabilities are usually not impaired but people with prosopagnosia are negatively affected in their social life because individuals with the disorder have difficulty in recognizing family members, close friends or colleagues. although the prevalence of cp is estimated at . % and it appears to run in families, the contexts, which genetic, epigenetic and environmental factors contribute to this trait, are largely unknown. therefore we started to establish a large, well-characterized cp cohort for genetic studies. we hypothesize that rare highly penetrant non-synonymous genetic variants could explain some cases of cp. as part of a larger genetic study of patients with cp, we performed family based whole-exome sequencing and targeted re-analysing on four individuals from two families with multiple affected members. by obtaining samples from affected and unaffected members of the same family, we hope to effectively identify de novo and inherited variations. variations are considered on the basis of allele frequency, mutation type, literature and mutation prediction tools, thus generating a list of candidate variations/genes for each patient that is amenable to interpretation and further analyses in the extended cohort. through this approach, we hope to identify causal variations/genes in families and isolated patients with cp. erythrokeratodermia variabilis (ekv) is a rare, autosomal dominant genetic skin disorder with a highly heterogeneous phenotype. to date, three causative genes (gjb , gjb and gja ) are described but further genetic heterogeneity is expected. card mutations are only described for psoriasis vulgaris, generalized pustular psoriasis and pityriasis rubra pilaris. for the first time, we present disease causing card mutations in patients with an "ekv-like" phenotype. it refers to one familial case with two affected individuals, with an autosomal dominant transmission from the mother to the daughter and one independent sporadic case. all patients present typical ekv symptoms. a rash of well-demarcated erythematous and scaly plaques interspersed with distinct islands of uninvolved skin or small reddish papules coalescing into large reticulated scaly plaques and palmoplantar keratoderma. to confirm the suspected diagnosis of ekv, we analyzed a custom designed multi-gene panel by next generation sequencing with genes associated to hereditary skin diseases (agilent haloplex technology). the sequencing results did not reveal any mutation in the genes gjb , gjb and gja , but we found two pathogenic mutations in card . in the familial case c. t>c p.leu pro (rs , enst . ) was detected, while the sporadic case carries c. t>c p.leu pro. we hypothesize that different genetic and environmental factors are involved in the evolution of the phenotype in patients with card mutations. our cases show that classification of unusual skin phenotypes can be challenging without genetic testing. therefore, gene panel sequencing is a cost-efficient and time-saving solution for solving difficult cases with sometimes unexpected genetic background. bipolar disorder (bd) is a complex psychiatric disorder affecting more than % of the world's population. the highly heritable disease is characterized by recurrent episodes of manic and depressive symptoms. as the cumulative impact of common alleles with small effect may only explain around % of the phenotypic variance for bd, rare variants of high penetrance have been suggested to contribute to bd susceptibility. in the present study we investigated individuals of large multiply affected families of european origin using whole exome sequencing (wes). in each family, two to five affected individuals with bd or recurrent major depression were selected for sequencing. wes was performed on the illumina hiseq platform and the varbank pipeline of the cologne center for genomics was used for data analysis. all identified variants shared within each family were filtered for a minor allele frequency < . % and potentially damaging effects predicted by at least four of five different bioinformatics tools. we identified a total of rare, segregating and functional variants implicating different genes, of which were brain expressed. subsequently, we applied the residual variation intolerance scores (rvis, petrovski et al., ) and identified genes that were ranked among the % most "intolerant" genes in the genome. gene enrichment analysis of these genes showed a significant enrichment for a total of pathways (p < . ) including neuron projection, axon development and cell adhesion. for follow up analyses, we prioritized genes that were either found in at least two unrelated families in the present study or that were previously reported in next generation sequencing or gwas studies of bd. in addition, we enclosed the genes that were predominantly driving the significant pathways in the above mentioned gene enrichment analysis. the different approaches of prioritization yielded candidate genes that are currently being followed up by resequencing in cohorts of about independent bd cases and controls of european ancestry. the candidate genes include cdh that encodes a calcium-dependent cell adhesion protein that may play an important role in the morphogenesis of neural cells during the development and maintenance of the brain. for resequencing we use the single molecule molecular inversion probes (smmips) technology that enables multiplex targeted resequencing in large cohorts. the smmips sequences were designed with an empirically variants in several patients indicated an oligogenic inheritance rather than a purely monogenic one. moreover, the oligogenic basis of this group of inflammatory diseases might currently be underestimated, as our study suggests that genetic risk factors other than il rn mutations remain to be identified in the majority of gpp patients. exome sequencing of multiply affected schizophrenia families provides new insights into the pathogenesis of the disorder schizophrenia (scz) is a multifactorial psychiatric disorder with a lifetime risk of ~ % and a heritability of about - %. analysing multiply affected families using whole exome sequencing (wes) is a very promising approach to identify new scz risk factors. in these families, individuals are affected with scz over several generations. it is likely, that in multiply affected families genetic variations with particularly strong effect co-segregate with the disorder and contribute to the development of the psychiatric symptoms. to our knowledge, the present study is the largest study analysing multiply affected scz families using wes worldwide so far. we included families with at least affected members each. from each family, - individuals were exome sequenced on an illumina hiseq and analysed using the varbank pipeline of the cologne center for genomics (http://varbank.ccg.uni-koeln.de) and the clc bio biomedical genomics workbench. we included rare (allele frequency ≤ . % in the exome aggregation consortium dataset) variants that were predicted to be pathogenic (combined annotation dependent depletion score ≥ ; cadd.gs.washington.edu), confirmed by sanger sequencing and co-segregating with the disorder. in total we identified potentially pathogenic mutations in ~ genes. a substantial proportion of these will not contribute to the pathogenesis of scz. in order to further tease out the most promising candidate genes we applied multiple strategies: (i) screening our mutations in independent patient and control cohorts through international cooperations (access to more than , scz patients), (ii) gene-based tests, (iii) pathway-and network-analyses, (iv) gene expression analyses and (v) sequencing of the candidate genes in , scz patients and , controls. analyses are ongoing and will be presented at the upcoming conference. abstracts and our evolution, we know very little about the different mutagenic processes in our germline. of particular interest are a handful of highly recurrent dnm associated with congenital disorders and/or rasopathies, that have been described as driver mutations expanding in the male germline. the mutation itself causes a change in the tyrosine kinase receptor/ras/ mapk pathway, which in turn confers the spermatogonial stem cell a proliferative advantage. selfish or driver mutations are quite common in cancer, but we still know very little about the selfish expansion in the male germline. the reason might be that mutations in the human germline are very rare, and it is rather difficulty to directly measure such rare events. most of our knowledge on germline mutagenesis comes from indirect sequence comparisons or whole genome sequencing of pedigree families, but it renders little information about individual mutagenic events. for this reason, we have adapted an ultrasensitive, next generation sequencing (uss) technology for the measurement of rare mutations to study the expansion of selfish genes in the male germline. as a proof-of-principle, we have sequenced at an extremely high coverage exon and of the fgfr gene in young and old sperm donors. we found an increased mutation frequency for the loci associated with achondroplasia and thanatophoric dysplasia ii in sperm of older donors. our results also show that we can distinguish ultra-rare mutations occurring at a frequency of one in hundred thousand wild type; thus, making this method ideal to discover potential driver dnm that might be expanding with paternal age. s. sivalingam , , a. j. forstner , , , s. herms , , , a. maaser , , c. s. reinbold , , t. andlauer , j. frank , h. dukal , d. schendel , , p. hoffmann , , , t. kircher , u. dannlowski , , a. krug , a. cichon , , , s. witt , m. rietschel , m. m. nöthen , introduction: affective disorders such as major depressive disorder (mdd) and bipolar disorder (bd) are genetically complex and heterogeneous disorders. both genetic and environmental risk factors contribute to the etiology of the diseases. however, the neurobiological correlates by which these risk factors influence the disease development are hardly understood. increasing evidence suggests that epigenetic modifications such as dna methylation have important implications on the development of psychiatric disorders including mdd and bd. several studies revealed that alterations in the dna methylation can modulate gene expression in response to the environment. to investigate this, genome-wide dna methylation analysis of female individuals from three extreme groups (genetic-, environmental risk and healthy controls) was performed. methods: for the genome-wide dna methylation analysis we selected: (i) individuals with genetic risk (at least one st degree relative with a life-time diagnosis of mdd or bd), (ii) individuals with environmental risk (maltreatment in the childhood trauma questionaire) and (iii) matched healthy controls. all individuals were of european origin. processing was done according to the manufacturer's protocol using the infinium methylationepic beadchip (illumina, san diego, ca, usa) covering more than . methylation sites at the life & brain center (bonn, germany). state-of-the-art data processing protocols, including correction for blood cell type heterogeneity, color correction, eliminating probes containing snps and cross reactive probes were used. after quality control trained design algorithm mipgen (boyle et al., ) and sequencing is currently performed on the illumina hiseq platform. our preliminary results strongly suggest that rare and highly-penetrant variants in neuronal and cell adhesion genes contribute to bd etiology. the results of resequencing of a large case/control sample will provide further evidence for an involvement of particular pathways. the use of zebrafish as model system to quantitatively assess the impact of risk variants in non-coding regions in vivo s. l. mehrem , , b. nagarajan , n. ishorst , , a. c. böhmer , , e. mangold , b. odermatt , k. u. ludwig , department of genomics, life & brain center, university of bonn, bonn, germany, institute of human genetics, university of bonn, bonn, germany, institute of anatomy, university of bonn, bonn, germany most human malformations occur early in embryonic development and are present immediately after birth. one common human birth defect is nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (nscl/p), affecting about in , newborns. nscl/p has a multifactorial background with a strong genetic component. recent genome-wide association studies identified several loci as risk factors for nscl/ p. notably, most of them map to non-coding regions and are expected to have a functional impact through regulatory mechanisms. given the early developmental time point of facial development and the resulting lack of accessible human tissue, follow-up analyses of risk variants are challenging. we are hypothesizing here that we might be able to quantitatively detect differences in regulatory activity between wildtype and risk variants located in predicted enhancers by using the zebrafish as model organism. the advantages of using the zebrafish are ( ) ex utero development, ( ) transparency of the fish, ( ) easy manipulation and ( ) relatively short generation times. we applied a dual-luciferase assay plasmid system which is based on a sequential measurement of two luciferases (firefly and sea pansy luciferase) in fish lysates upon injection of a single plasmid. this plasmid, which contains a minimal promoter (minp) and the enhancer region of interest, is microinjected into zebrafish eggs of one-cell stage. after three days, fish are collected, lysed and luciferase activity is measured using a luminometer. for our proof-of-principle analysis we analyzed an nscl/p risk locus on chromosome q (ludwig et al. ) . through database research one enhancer was predicted that contained two strongly associated risk variants. in vivo fluorescence analysis using egfp in zebrafish embryos revealed this enhancer to be active in craniofacial development, but qualitative differences in activity were not observed by eye. upon cloning of the enhancer in the dual-luciferase system, our injection results in vivo indicate that the system is working in principle. however, a high standard deviation between single replicate measurements was observed, probably due to variability in transfection efficiency. we therefore are planning to adapt the protocol in order to screen for positively injected fish embryos. we are currently investigating the functionality of these screening constructs in zebrafish embryos. results will be presented at the meeting. once successful, our approach represents a practical method to quantify the activity of regulatory elements in real time in vivo. this will be of particular importance in the functional follow-up of genetic findings in non-coding regions for the majority of birth defects. previously genome-wide association methods in patients with classic bladder exstrophy (cbe) found association with isl , a master control gene expressed in pericloacal mesenchyme. this study sought to further explore the genetics in a larger set of patients following-up on the most promising genomic regions previously reported. genotypes of markers obtained from cbe patients of australian, british, german ital-and normalization , cpg-sites were tested for genome-wide dna methylation by a linear regression model while accounting for biological as well technical covariates. results: the genome-wide dna methylation analysis of the three extreme groups revealed cpg sites (p < × - ) in the subgroup analysis "environmental risk vs. controls" and cpg sites (p < × - ) in the analysis "genetic risk vs. controls". in addition, we identified cpg sites (p < × - ) in the comparative analysis of "genetic risk vs. environmental risk". none of these cpgs showed significant differential dna methylation after correction for multiple testing. however the hierarchical clustering of the differentially methylated sites provided some evidence for differentially methylated patterns between the subgroups. discussion: our genome-wide dna methylation analysis of the extreme groups provided some evidence for differentially methylated cpg sites which unfortunately did not withstand correction for multiple testing. this may reflect at least in part that the sample size of the present study was too small to detect differentially methylated cpgs at the genome-wide level. a. tafazzoli , , t. vaitsiakhovich , l. pethukova , , , s. redler , , r. kruse , b. blaumeiser , m. böhm , g. lutz , h. wolff , , am. christiano , p. kokordelis , mm. nöthen , , rc. betz , alopecia areata (aa) is a common hair loss disorder that occurs in both sexes and all age groups. aa is thought to be a tissue-specific autoimmune disease directed against the hair follicle. both, gene-based and genome-wide association studies have identified more than susceptibility loci for aa; however, a large percentage of the overall heritable risk still awaits identification. to provide further insight into the immune related nature of aa, we and our us collaborators had each performed an immunochip-based analysis. we recently performed a meta-analysis, combining the data from both studies, and are now aiming to follow-up the best results in an additional german cohort by use of a sequenom assay to identify novel susceptibility loci. we conducted the meta-analysis by using data from the above mentioned two studies on illumina beadchip arrays including a total of , cases and , controls of central european origin. method of synthesis of regression slopes (msrs) was used for the analyses which are implemented in metainer software package. for follow-up step, we chose the most promising candidate snps. these will be examined with the sequenom massarray iplex platform in an independent aa sample comprising , cases and controls. by use of the meta-analysis combining data from the us and our sample, we identified novel loci with a suggestive p-value of pbecker-wu ≤ - (phet ≥ . ). among them, nfkb is the most significant locus (pbecker-wu = . × - ). in order to achieve genome-wide significance, we plan to follow-up the most promising snps in an independent german sample. we considered the most significant loci (lower p-becke-wu value) for the replication step. the experiments are ongoing and results will be presented at the meeting. despite the recent identification of susceptibility loci for aa, our understanding of the genetics of aa is incomplete. identification of new loci may provide novel insights into biological pathways and a better elucidation of disease pathophysiology. q . encompassing only one gene: kcnj . the duplication segregates with the phenotype in the family. kcnj belongs to the same subfamily of potassium channels as the known disease gene for cooks syndrome kcnj and both share several biological functions. recent data show that gain of function mutations in another potassium channel kcnh cause zimmermann-laband syndrome, a congenital malformation syndrome also associated with hypoplasia or aplasia of nails and terminal phalanges. therefore we propose that duplications of kcnj may also cause tissue specific misregulation resulting in digit and nail defects. taken together we show in a three generation pedigree that cooks syndrome is associated with a duplication of kcnj . our data further highlight the emerging role of potassium channels in congenital digit and limb anomalies. case report: deletion of the terminal short arm of chromosome (chromosome p deletion syndrome) without q-duplication with a familial history of a large pericentric inversion of chromosome b. gläser, n. hirt, e. botzenhart, j. fischer, m. leipoldt institut für humangenetik, universitätsklinikum freiburg, freiburg, germany we report on a male patient referred as a newborn with typical clinical features of chromosome p deletion syndrome. conventional karyotyping of lymphocyte cultures confirmed a deletion of the terminal short arm of chromosome with breakpoint in p . the size of the deletion ( mb) could be refined by microarray analysis and assigned to pos : - . parental cytogenetic investigations showed a normal karyotype in the mother whereas the father was revealed to be carrier of a large pericentric inversion of one chromosome . odd crossing-over in the inverted segment of a pericentric inversion in a parent can lead to unbalanced offspring caused by gametes with a terminal deletion of the p-arm together with a duplication of the q-arm or gametes with a duplication of the p-arm together with a deletion of the q-arm. in order to find out, whether the p-deletion in the child is the result of an independent event or if it is related to the structural chromosomal aberration of the father a microsatellite analysis is going to be performed p-cytog- a small supernumerary marker chromosome of the pericentric region of chromosome in a child with intellectual disability: case report and literature review b. hoffmann, g. gillessen-kaesbach, i. hüning institut für humangenetik, universität zu lübeck, lübeck, germany small supernumerary marker chromosomes (ssmc) are reported in . % of newborn infants. we report on a girl, which was born preterm at weeks of gestation via cesarean section due to pathological ctg. the pregnancy was complicated by gestational diabetes. she presented with muscular hypotonia, multiple hemangiomas, dysmorphic features and feeding problems. the body measurements were in normal range. the feeding problems made a tube feeding necessary until the age of four months. facial features consisted in epicanthus, high palate, broad nasal tip and broad nasal root. a brain mri showed periventricular leukomalacia and hypoplasia of corpus callosum. drug-resistant seizures with hypsarrhythmia started at the age of ten months. the affected girl was the only child of healthy non-consanguineous parents. the father also presented with a few small hemangiomas in the face. there was no history of intellectual diasability in the extended family. karyotyping showed ssmc in mosaicism. molecular characterization by array-cgh showed that the ssmc consists of pericentric chromosomal material derived from chromosome (arr [ h g ] p . p . ( , , - , , ) x ~ , q . q . ( , , - , , ) x ~ dn (grch /hg ). ian, spanish and swedish origin and , ethnically matched controls and from cbe case-parent trios from north america were analysed. only marker rs at the isl locus showed association (p = . × - ). a meta-analysis of rs of our previous and present study showed a p value of . × - . developmental biology models were used to clarify the location of isl activity in the forming urinary tract. genetic lineage analysis of isl -expressing cells by the lineage tracer mouse model showed isl -expressing cells in the urinary tract of mouse embryos at e . and distributed in the bladder at e . . expression of isl in zebrafish larvae staged hpf to hpf was detected in the developing pronephros region. our study supports isl as a major susceptibility gene for cbe and as a regulator of urinary tract development. to date, seven patients with interstitial deletions at chromosome q . -q . have been described in the literature. all patients reported had moderate to severe intellectual disability and a characteristic facial phenotype including blepharophimosis, telecanthus, epicanthus, flat malar region, and a thin upper lip vermillion. six of the seven patients had epileptic seizures. by analyzing the deletion's overlaps, two distinct critical regions have been suggested for the facial phenotype as well as for intellectual disability and seizures. here we present another patient with a de novo . mb deletion in q . -q . . the patient shows moderate mental retardation. he has an abnormal eeg, however, only one episode of clinical seizures has been observed so far. the facial gestalt resembles the typical dysmorphic features of the patients with q . -q . deletions reported previously. minor anomalies were short fingers and toes, and a single palmar crease. our report supports the assumption that deletions in q . -q . cause a distinctive and clinical recognizable microdeletion syndrome with characteristic facial features and intellectual disability. since the patient's deletion overlaps with most of the critical region for the dysmorphic phenotype but only with parts of the intellectual disability critical region, the molecular data presented here further narrow down the critical region for the intellectual disability seen in patients with q . -q . microdeletions. p-cytog- *** cooks syndrome is associated with a duplication of the potassium channel kcnj mundlos , , , d. horn , m. spielmann , , institute for medical genetics and human genetics, charité universitätsmedizin berlin, berlin, germany, max planck institute for molecular genetics, berlin, germany, northern ireland regional genetics service, belfast city hospital, belfast, ireland, berlin-brandenburg school for regenerative therapies -bsrt, berlin, germany cooks syndrome (mim ) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder classically characterized by onychodystrophy, and anonychia, with absence or hypoplasia of the distal phalanges of the hands and feet. large duplications including kcnj were shown to be causative for cooks syndrome. recently mouse studies revealed that tissue specific misregulation of kcnj , a potassium channel of the subfamily j, cause hypoplasia of nail beds and abnormal distal phalanges, thus resembling the cooks phenotype. here we report on a three generation pedigree with typical features of cooks syndrome that was negative for kcnj testing. we performed high resolution array-cgh and identified kb duplication on chromosome p-cytog- chromosome q . -q . deletion syndrome -an additional case with sensorineural hearing loss. s. leubner, c. hennig, a. junge mitteldeutscher praxisverbund humangenetik, dresden, germany the chromosome q . -q . deletion syndrome (mim # ) is a contiguous gene syndrome caused by a deletion encompassing the chromosome region q . -q . . initially, it has been described by ballif et al. ( ) . up to now, only a few cases with a microdeletion q . q . have been reported. most of them carry a microdeletion with recurrent breakpoints and similar size of about . mb. the common clinical features of cases with the chromosome q . -q . deletion syndrome comprise mild-to-moderate developmental delay, microcephaly, postnatal growth retardation, heart defects, limb anomalies, and hearing loss. we present an additional male patient with a . mb deletion of chromosome q . -q . , detected by array cgh (cytochip isca × k v . , illumina). our index patient shows typical symptoms of the chromosome q . -q . deletion syndrome like developmental retardation (in particular speech delay), a head circumference at the rd centile, postnatal growth retardation with a body height at the th centile, heart anomalies (right-sided aortic arch, patent ductus arteriosus), and sensorineural hearing loss on both sides. our data improve the characterization of the typical phenotype caused by a chromosome q . -q . deletion and reinforce the suspicion that this region might be associated with sensorineural hearing loss. partial, homozygous deletions of ahi gene causes joubert syndrome type d. meier, a. behnecke, jwg. janssen, u. moog, k. hinderhofer institute of human genetics, university hospital heidelberg, heidelberg, germany we describe a patient who is second child of consanguineous healthy parents from turkey. he was born after weeks of gestation with normal birth parameters ( g, cm, ofc cm). at the age of three months atypical eye movements became apparent. psychomotor development was delayed from the beginning, he presented with hypotonia and later developed ataxia. an abnormal breathing pattern was not noticed. an abnormal mri with hypoplasia of the cerebella vermis at the age of months and the clinical signs described above led to a clinical diagnosis of joubert syndrome. at that time no diagnostic testing was available. he returned to the outpatient clinic of the institute of human genetics at the age of years having developed retinopathy in the meantime. his height was below average (~ cm,
t (p.arg *, adnp), resulting in the introduction of a stop codon in exon / and truncation of the corresponding protein. both of the parents did not carry this mutation. adnp is part of the atp-dependent baf chromatin-remodeling p-monog- the challenge to insert costello syndrome causing hras mutations into human keratinocytes using the crispr/cas editing technology. l. brandenstein, k. kutsche, g. rosenberger university medical center hamburg-eppendorf, hamburg, germany germline missense mutations in the hras gene cause costello syndrome, a rare developmental disorder characterized by a typical facial gestalt, postnatal growth deficiency, intellectual disability, and predisposition to malignancies as well as skeletal, cardiac and dermatological abnormalities. the molecular pathophysiology caused by heterozygous hras gain of function mutations has been analysed in various tissues and cell types, however, up to date the molecular basis for cutaneous manifestations in costello syndrome is largely unknown. to address this question in an appropriate model system, permanent human keratinocyte (hacat) cells carrying costello syndrome-associated mutations in the endogenous hras gene should be generated by using the crispr/cas technology. double strand breaks induced by cas can be repaired in two ways: the error-prone non-homologous end-joining pathway for the generation of knockout models or the homology directed repair pathway, which allows precise editing. the latter enables the introduction of specific point mutations into a cell line by using a single stranded dna (ssdna) as repair template. however, we found that this is a very rare event and its efficiency depends on various factors including used cell line, selected guide rna, length and amount of ssdna and also cas variant. nonetheless, by using cas wildtype, we could insert the disease-associated c. g>t (p.g v) mutation into genomic hras both in hacat cells ( positive clones out of ) and hek cells ( positive clones out of ). in contrast, using the cas nickase protein variant that prevents off target effects, did not result in positive clones. taken together, in months of working with crispr/ cas we gradually gained experience with many problems and pitfalls of this technology and, finally, now we are able to introduce point mutations in cell lines. next, we will use the mutant hacat cell line to gain deeper insight into the function of hras for epidermal homeostasis and its deregulation in costello syndrome. ccdc could also play a role in prenatal development of the mouse retina and brain. embryonic stages of interest comprise t, p.s l (maf = . , rs , enst . ) in the phospholipase c delta (plcd ) gene within the tricy locus. furthermore, all five individuals present a second variant c. a>g, p.p p (maf = . , rs ) in the same gene. plcd is a member of the phospholipase c family. the enzyme is involved in calcium-dependent intracellular signal transduction and catalyzes the hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol , -bisphosphate into the second messenger diacylglycerol and inositol triphosphate. homozygous knockout-mice have hair defects and show aberrant skin development with increased progression of skin tumors and intradermal hair-follicle derived cysts. in humans, plcd is highly expressed in the hair follicle but so far only nonsense mutations have been described causing hereditary leukonychia totalis without any skin or hair abnormalities. a segregation analysis of plcd in a tunisian family cohort and one german family ( families, individuals, affected) showed that all affected individuals contain the same two sequence variants. based on these results, we propose that plcd is responsible for the cyst phenotype. cdna sequencing from three different cysts revealed additional acquired somatic sequence variants in plcd . we found c. c>t p.s l in two cysts and the two variants c. c>t, p.s f and c. c>t p.s f in the third one. all three somatic variants are not described in the exac database and the genomes project. allele-specific rt-pcrs were performed with cyst cdna and we could show that the somatic variants are on the same allele as the inherited variants. the acquired somatic cyst sequence variants lie within or respectively near the c domain of the plcd protein. the c domain is involved in the calcium-dependent binding to membrane-integrated phospholipids. depletion of the domain leads to decreased membrane association and protein activity. we assume that the allele with the variants c. c>t and c. a>g is a risk factor for hereditary trichilemmal cysts and that additional acquired rare sequence variants are the genetic trigger for the development of the cysts. and patients. discordant results for variants proposed a higher specificity of the rtpcr-seq. thus, we established a simple amplicon based deep sequencing approach for standard rtpcr fragments to ascertain the effects of specific splice site variants. this technique has proven to be highly scalable, fast and efficient to analyze splice-site variants. p-monog- eif s mutations associated with severe x -linked intellectual disability syndrome mehmo mehmo (mim % ), is a rare x-linked syndrome characterized by profound intellectual disability, epileptic seizures, hypogonadism, hypogenitalism, microcephaly, and obesity. in steinmüller and colleagues described a large family with mehmo syndrome with five affected males in two generations and assigned the disease locus to the short arm of chromosome x (xp . - . ). we took advantage of massively parallel sequencing in four families with mehmo syndrome, including the family reported by steinmüller et al. to identify the underlying genetic cause if this severe disorder. we here show mehmo syndrome is associated with mutations in the x chromosome gene eif s . in three families we identified a c-terminal frameshift mutation (p.ile serfs) and in an unrelated boy who is less severely affected, we identified a novel maternally inherited missense mutation (p.ser arg) in eif s . eif s encodes the gamma subunit of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor (eif ). eif is essential for eukaryotic translation initiation and regulation of the integrated stress response (isr). subsequent studies in patient fibroblasts (p.ile serfs) showed increased isr activation due to the mutation and functional assays in yeast demonstrated that the p.ile serfs mutation impairs eif gamma function to a greater extent than tested missense mutations, consistent with the more severe clinical phenotype of the affected males with ile serfs mutation. our results suggest that more severe mutations in eif s cause the full mehmo syndrome, while less deleterious mutations are associated with a milder form of the syndrome with only a subset of the symptoms. introduction: larger structural genomic duplications or deletions (copy number variations = cnvs) are routinely detected by array comparative genomic hybridization (acgh). while acgh has been established as a robust and effective approach for cnv screening, it remains expensive and is limited by resolution. in addition, commercial mlpa testing today allows the identification of exon deletions or duplications for a limited number of core genes. more recently, massive parallel sequencing of multi gene panels (mgps) has been introduced as a fast and cost-effective tool in routine genetic diagnostic testing to identify causal intragenic sequence alterations not only in core genes but also in those with small contribution to the respective phenotypes. the obtained mgps data may also be bioinformatically assessed to detect exon deletions or duplications within the analyzed genes panels and thus can be expected to further improve the diagnostic yield. methods: more than patients were sequenced with phenotype specific gene panels on a miseq platform (illumina) and analyzed with our bioinformatic diagnostic workflow including a quantitative data assessment using our in house java based bioinformatic script to search for gene or exon deletions. detected deletions were confirmed by an independent method (e. g. mlpa, pcr amplification of the junction fragment or linkage analysis), if available. results: we here report details for six suspected deletions in seven patients detected by our in house bioinformatic workflow: heterozygous gene deletions of pafah b , spastin or arfgef , respectively; two heterozygous cftr deletions of exon and , one homozygous partial sftpb deletion and a homozygous ispd exon deletion. the complete gene deletions of pa-fah b and spastin as well as the cftr deletion of exon and could be confirmed by mlpa. for the partial sftpb deletion both breakpoints could be precisely located within the readout, allowing determining correct deletion size and design of primers to amplify the junction fragment. the homozygous deletion of exon in the ispd gene could be confirmed by pcr and linkage analysis. discussion: diagnostic multi gene panel sequencing after nextera enrichment allows sufficient homogeneity of the obtained patient and control data per target to quantitatively search for constitutional deletions covering two or more adjacent targets. combined data assessment considering the individual clinical data will not only further increase the diagnostic yield but can also be expected to further delineate the mutational spectrum for specific phenotypes by the simultaneous detection of clinically relevant sequence variants as well as cnvs. mgps sequence assessment may also allow to gain new insights into the genomic architecture and origin of target regions and haplotypes, involved in common structural variations. c. niemietz, v. sauer, l. fleischhauer, s. guttmann, s. reinartz groba, a. zibert, h. schmidt universitätsklinikum münster, klinik für transplantationsmedizin, münster, germany various types of somatic cells have been reprogrammed to induced pluripotent stem cells (ipsc) followed by differentiation into hepatocyte-like cells (hlc). recently, cells that shed from the renal epithelial system were shown to be a suitable and convenient source for ipsc generation. in the current study, urine-derived cells (ucs) were isolated from urine donations of patients having familial amyloid polyneuropathy (fap), a neurodegenerative disease caused by mutation of the transthyretin (ttr) gene and wilson disease (wd), a genetic disorder of atp b causing copper accumulation, predominantly in liver and brain. patient-specific hlcs were differentiated in order to study disease-specific mechanisms and to investigate the efficacy of novel compounds. for isolation of renal epithelial cells, urine of fap and wd patients was processed. ucs were reprogramed into ipscs using plasmids resulting in transient expression of factors sox , oct / , klf , and c-myc. after characterization of ipsc that expressed high levels of pluripotency markers, like oct and nanog, a -step hepatocyte differentiation protocol was performed. ipscs were subjected to a treatment with growth factors (activin a, wnt a, fgf , hgf) for days. the hepatic, patient-specific character of differentiated hlcs was assessed by functional analysis, gene expression profiling, genotype analysis, and immunostainings. therapeutic oligonucleotide efficacy targeting ttr was determined by immunocytochemistry, qrt-pcr and western blot analysis. ttr-stabilizing activity of tafamidis was investigated by means of thermal shift assay and western blot analysis. copper chelation by methanobactin was determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy. reprogramming of ucs resulted in stable ipsc lines with characteristic pluripotent marker expression. differentiated hlcs showed high similarity to human hepatocytes in terms of genetic profile and functional activity. small-interfering rnas (sirnas), antisense oligonucleotides (aso) (niemietz et al. , plosone ( ) :e ), and the ttr stabilizing compound tafamidis that are currently assessed in clinical studies were studied in hlcs derived from fap patients. a novel chelator was used to determine intracellular copper accumulation in hlcs derived from wd patients (lichtmannegger et al. , jci ( ): - ). fap-specific hlcs revealed differently expression of key regulators of the protein quality control (pqc) system. our results demonstrate that ipsc derived from urine are excellently suited to study hereditary liver diseases. hlcs could be investigated in the patient-specific genetic background. the efficacy of novel compounds was assessed and individual responses were monitored. involved in gene regulation. by parent-patient trio whole-exome sequencing, we were able to characterize the unterlying genetic cause in the patient, who has undergone multiple diangostic test before without receiving a diagnosis. discussion: although for many congenital syndromic diseases the disease-associated genes are known it remains difficult for physicians to interpret the highly variable phenotypes as well as their variable nomenclature in order to request the appropriate molecular analysis. here we present one of more than cases that will help to establish a database connecting specific phenotypes, using the human phenotype ontology terms, with the each corresponding disease-causing genes (midas). novel compound heterozygous nalcn variants in two brothers with muscular hypotonia and global development delay l. segebrecht , c. weiß , m. jäger , , t. zemojtel , , , d. horn , n. ehmke , institute of medical and human genetics, charité -universitätsmedizin berlin, berlin, germany, spz dpt. pediatric neurology, charité -universitätsmedizin berlin, berlin, germany, berlin-brandenburg center for regenerative therapies -bcrt, charité -universitätsmedizin berlin, berlin, germany, institute of bioorganic chemistry, polish academy of sciences, poznań, poland, labor berlin -charité vivantes gmbh, berlin, germany, berlin institute of health, berlin, germany we report on two brothers aged two and three years, with muscular hypotonia, global development delay, abnormal respiratory rhythm, mild facial dysmorphism, recurrent respiratory infections, and failure to thrive. sequencing of disease related genes identified compound heterozygosity for two novel mutations in nalcn: c. c>a (p.phe leu) and c. + t>c. nalcn encodes a voltage-independent, non-selective cation channel, which is involved in regulation of neuronal excitability. the missense variant c. c>a affects the highly conserved amino acid position phe which is located in segment s of domain iv in the pore-forming unit of nalcn. the variant c. + t>c alters the donor splice site in intron and is predicted to cause skipping of exon , resulting in loss of function of nalcn. biallelic mutations of nalcn are associated with infantile hypotonia, psychomotor retardation and characteristic facies (ihprf ), whereas heterozygous de novo mutations cause congenital contractures of the limbs and face, muscular hypotonia, and global developmental delay. the clinical features of our patients resemble mild ihprf , caused by a biallelic missense mutation in segment s of domain iv. it has been suggested that variants in or close to s and s of the pore-forming domains lead to the above mentioned autosomal dominant condition whereas variants in other regions or loss of function mutations result in autosomal recessive inheritance. this is the first report of a mutation in a s segment, inherited in autosomal recessive manner. our findings indicate that phenotype-genotype correlations in nalcn are more complex than suggested so far. phenotype: in a young undiagnosed patient with developmental delay, intellectual disability and craniofacial dysmorphic anomalies, whole-exome sequencing (wes) identified a de novo insertion in the gene arid b, known to cause the rare congenital coffin-siris syndrome and nicolaides-baraitser syndrome, respectively. methods: as part of the midas genotype-phenotype-correlation project, we sequenced the index patient and his healthy parents on a next-seq platform (illumina, san diego, ca, usa) and performed a trio analysis. for library preparation we used an enzymatic fragmentation approach. exome capture was performed using the sureselect human all exon kit v (agilent, santa clara, ca, usa) to target most of the over . genes. the libraries were sequenced to approximately -fold mean coverage as bp paired end reads. % of the target region was covered -fold or higher. data analysis and variant evaluation was performed using the clc genomic workbench . (qiagen, hilden, germany) and annotations from commercial as well as public databases (dbsnp, hgmd, clinvar, exac). results: we identified a de novo bp insertion in the arid b gene, causing a frameshift mutation that leads to the truncated protein. arid b is part of the atp-dependent chromatin remodeling baf-complex, which is abstracts tient affected by psoriasis carried the surrogate marker snp rs -a for the psors risk variant hla-cw haplotype homozygously; and the same snp was found heterozygous in his prp-affected father. neither the pathogenic variant in card , nor the risk variants for psoriasis described above were found in the healthy mother. whole exome sequencing revealed genetic variants, predicted to have serious consequences in further genes involved in the nf-κb as well as the notch pathway. these variants either segregate with prp or are present in the psoriasis affected individual only. the presence of an individual carrying the same card mutation as his prp-affected relatives but suffering from psoriasis instead strengthens the relation between prp and psoriasis, which has been repeatedly suggested in literature. we propose a balance between familial prp and psoriasis in the family investigated in this study and present genetic variants, which might influence this balance in addition to variants in card . wilson's disease (wd) is an autosomal recessive disease resulting from copper (cu) excess due to mutations in the atp b gene coding for a cu-transporting atpase. wd pathogenesis, however, can not only be explained by gene coding mutations since phenotypes exhibit strong variations despite the same exonic dna makeup in the gene. also in several patients with clinical wd symptoms no gene coding variants are detectable. our former studies revealed decreased liver atp b mrna expression in some wd patients. this decrease was not only observed in patients with nonsense atp b mutations leading to rapid mrna decay, but also in patients with missense mutations and also in some patients with suspected wd without atp b mutations. patients with low atp b expression presented with a more fulminant disease progression. however, we could not detect mutations in the atp b promoter region (c.- to atg) in those patients. there are possibly other deregulating mechanisms responsible for decreased atp b mrna expression. up to now, atp b transcriptional regulation is only poorly characterized. it is known, that four metal responsive elements (mre a, c, d and e) are located within the atp b promoter. gene regulation through mres is often metal-dependent. liver atp b mrna expression revealed also to increase under cu addition in several species by an unknown mechanism. up to now, only one atp b transcription factor (tf), the mrea binding ku protein, is known. the aim of our work was to further analyze the regulation of the atp b gene, especially through mres. to screen for tf-mre interactions and to narrow down the binding site of tf, we performed electrophoretic mobility shift assays (emsa) by incubating nuclear extracts of the liver cell line hle with probes corresponding to atp b mrec, d and e. to identify mre-binding tf matinspector analysis was performed. identified candidate tf were coexpressed with atp b promoter-driven reporter gene to evaluate their impact on reporter gene expression. one in the reporter assay positively tested tf was validated by different emsa experiments. further it was overexpressed with and without addition of metal ions in hle to investigate the impact on endogenous atp b expression. we showed that tf mtf is able to bind to mree within the atp b promoter and significantly increases atp b promoter driven reporter gene expression. mtf binding was primarily mediated by the first three bases of the mre consensus sequence. also for mrec and mred specific protein interaction could be shown and the protein binding site was narrowed down by emsa with protein identification still pending. fur-polyglutamine diseases is the formation of the so called neuronal intranuclear inclusion bodies (nii). as ataxin- is predominantly located in the cytoplasm, the formation of protein aggregates in the nucleus require a nucleocytoplasmic shuttling of ataxin- . we already demonstrated in vivo using transgenic mouse models that the toxicity of expanded ataxin- depends on its intracellular localization: while nuclear ataxin- gave rise to a strong phenotype with a high number of protein aggregates, purely cytoplasmic ataxin , however, even with a highly expanded polyglutamine repeat ( glutamines), was not able to induce a phenotype and even did not aggregate. we further identified and characterized intracellular transport signals (two nuclear export signals, nes, and one nuclear localization signal, nls) within the coding sequence of ataxin- . therefore, it is evident that proteins involved in the nucleocytoplasmic transport machinery recognize these localization signals, control the intracellular localization of ataxin- , thereby influence the toxicity and aggregation of ataxin- and, thus, the pathogenesis of sca . we now screened a library of transport proteins in order to identify the transport protein which is critically involved in the nucleocytoplasmic shuttling of ataxin- . we indeed identified a transport protein which modifies both the formation of aggregates and the intracellular localization of ataxin . while the overexpression of this protein moved ataxin- into the nucleus, its downregulation kept it out of the nucleus. we replicated this correlation in vivo in drosophila and observed in addition to this again a clear link between the intracellular localization of ataxin- and its toxicity i. e. its ability of induce neurodegeneration and a behavioral phenotype. likewise we even confirmed in a mouse model of sca the importance of the identified transport protein as its knockout largely prevented ataxin- from aggregating and alleviated behavioral and movement deficits. understanding the mechanisms behind the intracellular transport of ataxin- could give us clues into the pathogenic functions of expanded ataxin- and ways to mediate the progression of neuronal degeneration in sca . evidence for genetic factors outside card influencing the phenotype of a family with familial pityriasis rubra pilaris and psoriasis familial pityriasis rubra pilaris (prp) is an erythematous inflammatory skin disease caused by heterozygous activating mutations in card , a known activator of the nf-κb pathway. different genetic variants within card have been associated with psoriasis. the purpose of our study was to clinically and genetically investigate affected as well as unaffected members of a family with prp in order to determine the mutation responsible for this severe skin disease in the three affected family members. a father, three of his adult children as well as the mother of one child affected by prp were investigated clinically. in addition we extracted genomic dna from the blood of each individual and performed whole exome sequencing as well as direct sequencing of single genes. clinical investigation confirmed that the father and two of his children were affected by familial prp, with the skin showing the characteristic pattern of prp, early onset and chronic course. a third child was unaffected by prp, suffered however from psoriasis. the mother of one child affected by prp showed no sign of skin disease. genetic investigation revealed a heterozygous missense mutation in exon of card , c.[ c>t], p. present in all investigated individuals with prp or psoriasis. the same mutation has been described before as being pathogenic in a different family with prp. regarding genetic variants associated with psoriasis, we found the risk alleles of three coding variants in card : rs , c. short stature is a common condition of great concern to patients and their families. in most cases it is genetic in origin but the underlying cause often remains elusive due to clinical and genetic heterogeneity. in an unbiased approach we carefully phenotyped patients and randomly selected for whole exome sequencing. sequence variants were analyzed for pathogenicity and the affected genes characterized regarding their functional relevance for growth. all patients received extensive clinical and endocrinological examinations, careful clinical genetic phenotypic evaluation followed by targeted diagnostic assessment for suspected diagnoses. we identified a known disease-cause in only % of patients, the most common causes being cnvs found in %, followed by syndromic monogenic causes in % and turner syndrome in %. whole exome sequencing identified additional mutations in known short stature associated genes ( ) in % of patients who manifested only part of the symptomatology precluding an early clinical diagnosis. here, heterozygous carriers of recessive skeletal dysplasia alleles (acan, npr ) were a surprisingly frequent cause of idiopathic short stature found in . % of cases. we next selected known short stature genes with mutations for pathway analyses of the affected proteins and found that % are involved in the main functional categories cartilage formation, chromatin modification and ras-mapk signaling. in addition we identified further strong candidate genes, of which seven had deleterious mutations in at least two families. interestingly, % of these candidate genes are involved in the main functional categories already identified for the known short stature associated genes further supporting their pathogenicity. finally, in % of the sequenced individuals our findings were of significant clinical relevance regarding preventive measures, symptomatic or even targeted treatment. besides evaluation for orthopedic or developmental issues especially screening for neoplasias (trim , ptpn , nf ), symptomatic treatment for chronic kidney disease (clcn ) and targeted treatment for severe hypertension (pde a) were of clinical relevance for the affected individuals. these results demonstrated that deep phenotyping combined with targeted genetic testing and whole exome sequencing is able to increase the diagnostic yield in short stature up to % with concomitant improvement in treatment and prevention. rigorous variant analysis considering phenotypic data further led us to the identification of further probable novel candidate genes. thermore, we found the endogenous atp b mrna expression to be significantly increased in hle after cu treatment or cu treatment and concurrent mtf overexpression. sole mtf overexpression did not alter atp b expression. we newly identified mtf to bind mree within the atp b promoter. its in vivo role in the pathogenesis of wd needs to be further elucidated. modifying genes have been identified for lung function in cystic fibrosis [ ] , disease severity [ ] and several comorbidities [ ] . within the european cf twin and sibling study, we focus on genes that modify the basic defect, assessed as defective chloride conductance in cftr-expressing epithelia, which we could describe by an association study on patient cohorts selected for informative endophenotypes among f del-cftr homozygous patients [ , , ] . as a first example, rs in fas modifies fas gene expression (p = . , data from intestinal biopsies [ ] ), cf disease phenotype (praw = . , comparing concordant mildly affected f del homozygous sib pairs and concordant severely affected sib pairs; praw = . , comparing unrelated f del homozygous index cases without residual chloride secretion by nasal potential difference measurement (npd) to patients with cftr-mediated chloride secretion; [ ] ) and alters binding affinity for the transcription factors nf-kbp , nf-kbp and hif a [ ] which govern the cellular response to infection and hypoxia. as a second example, the transcription factor ehf, derived as a positional candidate from a north american genome wide scan [ ] , is associated with npd-defined phenotypes (praw = . , comparing index cases with high response to amiloride in npd to index cases with low response to amiloride in npd; praw = . , comparing index cases without chloride secretion in intestinal current measurement (icm) to index cases with cftr-mediated residual chloride secretion in icm [ ] ) and affects the transcriptome of cf patients' intestinal biopsies in favor of a better processing of f del-cftr [ ] which we could confirm in epithelial cell lines as sirna provided against ehf results in a downregulation of mgat and mgat , both of which are key enzymes for the complex glycosylation of proteins such as cftr. these examples indicate that small, albeit carefully selected subpopulations facilitate the identification of genetic variants by an association study that can be validated in functional assays. furthermore, we suggest that while the selection of subsamples within a population with a rare disease such as cystic fibrosis results in a loss of power, findings obtained for more than one endophenotype are indicative for a true-positive finding of a modifying gene. finally, transcriptional regulation influences the cf basic defect. interference with these pathways may results in better f del-cftr maturation, leading to better cftr function in patient's tissue and thereby promoting health in cystic fibrosis. funding by: deutsches zentrum für lungenforschung dzl; mukoviszidose institut ggmbh abstracts at presentation at age years her head circumference was on the th centile, her height below the rd centile, and her weight on the rd centile. she showed a disproportional short stature and mild skeletal signs like clinodactyly of the ths fingers. minor facial dysmorphisms included an oval face, epicanthic folds, upslanting palpebral fissures and a bulbous nose. karyotype was normal and copy number variants were excluded by high-resolution cma. as no aetiological diagnosis could be made clinically we performed whole exome sequencing (wes) and detected a homozygous splice site mutation (c. + g>t) in pik c a (phosphatidylinositol- -phosphate -kinase catalytic subunit type alpha) (nm_ ). sequencing of rt-pcr products from cdna of patient's fibroblasts showed in-frame skipping of exon and , equally affecting all known isoforms. phosphatidylinositol -kinases (pi ks) are lipid kinases involved in a large set of biological processes, including membrane receptor signaling, cytoskeletal organization, and endocytic trafficking. pi kc a is ubiquitously expressed and has been proposed to play an important role in clathrin-mediated endocytosis and regulation of phosphatidylinositol -phosphate (ptdins p) levels. furthermore pik c a has been implicated in the biology of the primary cilium. the patient's distinct phenotype resembles the previously described phenotype in pik c a hypomorphic mice with pre-and postnatal growth retardation and a broad spectrum of renal abnormalities. the complete knockout of mouse pik c a showed embryonic lethality. ongoing studies on the exact consequences of the splicing defect will determine if and how much residual wild-type transcript is retained and if this is a hypomorphic variant. this case is to our knowledge the first description of a pik c a human phenotype. adaption of the crispr/cas genome editing system as a platform for the mutation of nipal as a representative of arci-associated genes in hela cells n. ballin, m-a. rauschendorf, j. fischer institute of human genetics, freiburg, germany autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis (arci) is a rare genetic disorder with known disease-causing mutations in genes. functional implementations of identified mutations are in most cases still unknown, which is amongst others due to the limited amount of skin biopsies of arci-patients. thus, suitable cell culture models for the investigation of keratinocyte differentiation are highly needed. during the last years the prokaryotic clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (crispr)/crispr-associated (cas) system has been turned into a potent tool in the field of genome engineering. the cas endonuclease is directed by a short guide rna (grna) to its target sequence, where it generates a dna double strand break (dsb). as cellular repair mechanisms often fail in reconstituting the original sequence, insertion/ deletion (indel) mutations occur potentially leading to a complete gene knock-out (ko). consequently, the crispr/cas system offers a simple rna-programmable tool for in vitro mutation of arci-associated genes. hence, this system was applied in hela cells to target nipa like domain containing (nipal ), the second most frequently mutated gene in arci patients. in this context, functional studies were used to validate nipal as suitable target in hela cells. successful application of the crispr/cas system lead to the generation of a new clonal hela cell line carrying a one basepair insertion in nipal exon (c. insg (ccds . ) ). this mutation was further characterized and potentially results in a complete ko of nipal . this system can now be used as a basis for targeting further arci-associated genes and for transferring the system into keratinocytes, which are the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (als) is a late-onset progressive, neurodegenerative syndrome. most als cases are sporadic (≈ %). in familial forms, mutations in several different genes have been identified with a repeat expansion in c orf and mutations in sod being the most prevalent. no non-genetic cause of als has been identified. since there are no overt clinical or pathoanatomical differences between sporadic or familial cases, de novo mutations have been suggests in disease pathogenesis and two previous studies provided some evidence for this hypothesis. we present data of patient-parents trios from an international collaborative study. by whole exome sequencing we identified non-synonymous de novo mutations in the patients, however all of them occurred in different genes. there was no concordance between the mutated genes found in our trio set and the two earlier smaller trio studies. in silico analyses suggest that none of the here identified mutations are part of any of the previously postulated molecular pathways. also, gene-gene-interaction analyses failed to find an enrichment of interacting genes. lastly, we demonstrate that the de novo mutations in als patients in this and the two earlier studies are located in genes prone for de novo mutations in general. our results thus indicate that, in contrast to previous reports, de novo mutations do not seem to be a major contributor for als. disproportioned short stature and multiple anomalies in a patient with a homozygous pik c a mutation -a new ciliopathy? we present a year old female with disproportional growth retardation, eye and renal anomalies. she was born small for gestational age as the first child of healthy, consanguineous tunisian parents at weeks after an uneventful pregnancy ( g, cm). during her first year of life, there were severe feeding problems with regurgitation and she developed postnatal growth retardation. developmental milestones were normal. during the second year the girl developed strabismus in both eyes. later on, a cataracta polaris anterior, anomalies of the cornea, hyperopia and progressive retinal degeneration led to profound visual impairment. furthermore, a right kidney agenesis and a complex tubulopathy, as well as increased echogenicity of the single left kidney were diagnosed. r. brumm, m. schmuck, y. dinçer, s. schulz, s. wilson, i. rost, hg. klein, sh. eck center for human genetics and laboratory diagnostics dr. klein, dr. rost and colleagues, martinsried, germany next-generation sequencing may lead to a significant improvement in diagnostic yield for rare, heterogeneous disorders through the ability to simultaneously sequence all genes contributing to a certain indication at a cost and speed that is superior to traditional sequencing approaches. on the other hand, the practical implementation of ngs in a clinical diagnostic setting involves a variety of new challenges which need to be overcome. among these are the generation, analysis and storage of unprecedented amounts of data, strict control of sequencing performance, validation of results, interpretation of detected variants and reporting. especially the variant interpretation emerges as current bottleneck of the diagnostic workflow. here we present midas (multiple integration of data annotation software), a central software system for data integration in a diagnostic laboratory. the goal of midas is to construct a modular software system to integrate data from laboratory information management system (lims), data from the routine sanger sequencing workflow as well as ngs sequencing results and correlate the identified variants with the patients' phenotypical features to aid in variant interpretation and accelerate reporting. the phenotype is systematically recorded using the human phenotype ontology standard nomenclature. in particular, genotype-phenotype correlations identified in one patient are made available for all other cases, to aid the interpretation and build a comprehensive knowledge base. the midas software may thus serve as central information system all diagnostic patient data. midas is implemented in java using direct database access via jdbc, and javafx as graphical user interface. its architecture is designed modular including a dynamic module loader, a user management with ldab connection and basic search functionality. according to available modules the user management and search form are adjusted; granting access for module specific views. as an advantage of this architecture, other molecular diagnostic data, such as arraycgh or mlpa results can easily be integrated by implementing new modules. midas aims to aid molecular diagnostics by simplifying and accelerating data analysis and interpretation, improving patient care. midas is being developed as part of a prospective multicentric study including clinical, diagnostic and software development partners. a grant by the bavarian ministry of economy, media, energy and technology is used to fund this effort. institute of human genetics -medical faculty -rwth aachen university, aachen, germany, izkf aachen -rwth aachen university, aachen, germany with the implementation of next generation sequencing (ngs) based assays as key tool in dna-sequencing, conventional sanger-sequencing has become a standard method to verify single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) of interest. however, designing specific pcr-and sanger-sequencing primers has always been a rather time consuming task in terms of searching the right genomic sequence, considering known snps that could result in allele-specific amplification, and converting selected primer-sequences to upload them to web-based services. to circumvent this, we developed optimus primer, a python script, that automatically designs respective primers. the script uses the database of the ucsc genome browser to download positional information of genomic sequence (refseq gene: hg ) and common snps (snp common: hg ) in the region of interest. the genomic sequence is downloaded via the ucsc primarily affected cell type in the skin of arci patients. furthermore, it is only a small step to expand the system from generating gene ko to gene editing allowing the introduction of patient-specific mutations in non-patient derived keratinocyte cells. hence, setting-up the crispr/cas system to target an arci-associated gene is an important starting point for future studies to investigate pathogenic effects of arci-causing mutations and to understand arci pathogenesis on a molecular level. in this context, the transfer of the established protocol into keratinocytes offers the possibility to generate d cell culture models of mutations in arci-associated genes and allows in vitro investigation of their implications on the differentiation process. this system would further represent an organotypic model of arci-disease with potential application in screening and identification of chemical compounds for the complementation of existing clinical therapies. background: telomeres cap and protect chromosome ends from degradation and fusion, and are therefore essential for maintaining chromosome stability and genomic integrity. they have a length of to kb (depending on age, sex and cell populations). due to the end-replication problem there is a continuous telomere loss of to bp/cell cycle and thus throughout lifetime. in laboratory practice different methods of telomere length measurement are used to identify patients with bone marrow failure syndromes (e. g. dyskeratosis congenita, aplastic anemia), hematological diseases, or other telomeropathies. each telomere length measurement method has its advantages and disadvantages regarding material required the complexity and feasibility of the method and other parameters. methods: in this study we compared and validated four different methods for telomere length measurement, i. e. southern blot analysis, quantitative pcr (qpcr), quantitative fluorescence in situ hybridization (t/ c-fish) and flow cytometry-fish (flowfish). whenever possible, edta and/or heparin blood samples were collected from a population of healthy individuals of different age groups (newborn - years). depending on the method dna (southern blot and qpcr), metaphases (t/ c-fish) or rather vital cells (flowfish) were analyzed. results: comparison and validation of the telomere length measurement methods allowed us to calculate percentiles for all age groups. percentile curves could be used in diagnostic to identify patients with short telomeres. all methods showed acceptable accuracy, but equally imply the necessity of validation and appropriate controls in each experiment. here, flowfish was the most precise, accurate and reproducible method compared to the other methods. discussion: our study emphasizes the influence of expertise and experience that is required in order to produce robust and reliable telomere length analyses. here, we provide advice on how to choose the appropriate method in general and for individual cases to safely discriminate between natural variability and pathological telomere shortening in individual cases. in the next generation sequencing age, the strongest challenges have shifted from genotyping to handling the myriad of variants detected. whole exome sequencing yields tens of thousands of coding and non-coding variants, a number increased to millions if the whole genome is sequenced. to master this mountain of data, computer-based identification of potential disease mutations is absolutely indispensable. however, current computational strategies are usually generated by computer scientists without integrating human geneticists into software development. this often leads to tools which fulfil their main purpose but are not ideally suited to the needs of human geneticists. to assess the relevance of a suggested disease mutation, geneticists need detailed information about the effect on the protein and about the gene or protein itself. to close this gap, we have developed mutationdistiller, a web-based tool for user-driven variant prioritisation based on biological disease properties. its analysis includes the potential role of a mutated gene in pathogenesis as well as the estimated effect of a variant on gene/protein function. thus, mu-tationdistiller allows human geneticists to use every piece of information they consider relevant. unlike similar tools, its input goes beyond the human phenotype ontology and can include complete diagnoses, biological pathways, gene expression, and gene function. potentially harmful variants are identified by mutationtaster, which provides a deleteriousness score together with data on the actual effect of the variants. mutationdistiller is not restricted to non-synonymous variants but can also handle intragenic non-coding or synonymus variants. moreover, the program incorporates the known modes of inheritance of disease genes and the genotype of the queried variants (including compound heterozygosity). the output page provides all information on one site: the core component is a concise overview table of the most likely disease genes and variants. here, the most crucial information such as the variants' effect on the protein, frequencies in polymorphism databases and known diseases caused by mutations within this gene and their mode of inheritance are listed. more detailed gene and disease information and hyperlinks to external data are provided below, hence offering a comprehensive overview of the available knowledge. this allows geneticists to draw their own conclusions without any tedious collection of relevant information from the internet. a beta-version of the program is freely available at http://www.mutationtaster.org. m. jäger , , m. schubach , t. zemojtel , k. reinert , d. m. church , p. n. robinson , , institute for medical and human genetics, charité, berlin, germany, bcrt, berlin, germany, institute for bioinformatics, department of mathematics and computer science, freie universität, berlin, germany, x genomics, pleasanton ca, united states, department of mathematics and computer science, freie universität, berlin, germany, the jackson laboratory, farmington ct, united states with the grch human genome release in the genome resource consortium extended the previous linear, "golden-path" paradigm of the human genome and introduced a more graph-like model in the sense of regions with alternate loci, representing common alterations in sequence and structure. in whole-genome sequencing (wgs) these stretches of sequence are largely but not entirely identical between the primary assembly and an its corresponding alternate locus can result in multiple variant calls against regions of the primary assembly. this results in characteristic and recognizable patterns of variant calls at positions that we term alignable scaffold-discrepant positions (asdps). we developed an algorithm (asdpex) that analyzes these patterns in the structurally variable regions of the current grch genome assembly. a heuristical approach then infers whether the pattern of variant calls of a sample contains sequences from the primary assembly, an alternative locus, or their heterozygous combination at each of these regions. api and common snps are annotated. in the following step primers are picked using primer (whitehead-institute). the target sequence is either the snp-containing exon in case of exons smaller than bp, or, the genomic region flanking the snp of interest. the positional information of the snp is gathered using the mutalyzer api (lumc). the last two bases of each primer are checked for all snps in the ' end (snp : hg ). the script will be integrated into a website for free easy access and usability (www.optimus-primer.com). the only information needed is the refseq id, the exon, and the cdna position (eg: nm_ . . :c. t>g). the script optimus primer will provide the user with primers in the widely used primer format. the users are also able to download the source from our website, and to run it on a local unix system as a command line tool. mutationtaster : moving towards a comprehensive evaluation of disease causing mutations o. ebner, jm. schwarz, d. hombach, m. schuelke, d. seelow charitè universitätsmedizin, berlin, germany mutationtaster is a free and user-oriented application for comprehensible evaluation of non-synonymous and synonymous as well as non-coding dna sequence variants. as + citations show, the software has been strongly embraced by the clinical and research community. however, its capacities for assessing the functional consequences of non-coding variants are still limited. while mutationtaster is able to predict the variant's effect on major intragenic regulatory features such as splice sites or polyadenylation signals, many other potential effects of intronic or utr variants are not covered by the software yet. variants in the non-coding region of the genome are frequent and thought to cause a substantial part of yet unsolved mendelian diseases. these variants can occur either in extragenic regulatory regions (see abstract on regulationspotter) or in the untranslated regions, including introns, of a gene. unfortunately, their effects are much harder to predict than those of non-synonymous variants. therefore, only few disease mutations outside the coding sequence have hitherto been found and experimentally confirmed. to close this gap, we are advancing the current version of mutationtaster to improve the analysis of intragenic non-coding variants. we do so by implementing additional tests for variants in the ' and 'utr to determine their effect on au-rich elements, microrna binding sites and the influence of secondary structure on gene expression. moreover, we plan to shift from the analysis of exclusively monogenic to complex diseases with cancer being the first disease model to be integrated into mutationtaster . already implemented enhancements of mutationtaster comprise the improved splice site analysis using maxentscan and the integration of mitochondrial polymorphisms from the human mitochondrial genome database. the addition of links to the integrative genomics viewer and the lof-metrics of the exac browser (exome aggregation consortium) streamline the usage of the mutationtaster results and enable researchers to get a detailed view of the relevant variants and associated genomic sequences. taken together, mutationtaster will offer much better capabilities to predict the disease-causing potential of intragenic variants than its predecessor. the software is freely available at http://www.mutationtaster.org neurocure exzellenzcluster, berlin, germany, neuropädiatrie charité-universitätsmedizin, berlin, germany, medizinische genetik charité-universitätsklinikum, berlin, germany, berliner institut für gesundheitsforschung bih, berlin, germany ifications, or genome-wide interactions. all variants which have the potential to influence one or several candidate genes are presented in a graphical interface and ranked according to their predicted effect on the target gene(s). instead of giving scores, we present the potentially affected regulatory features in an intuitive graphical matrix. the software can freely be used at http://www.mutationtaster.org p-techno- genecascade -a one-stop shop for finding disease mutations d. seelow , in the last years, our genecascade software suite for the elucidation of rare diseases has seen some major extensions, mainly for the discovery of non-coding mutations. the website contains a number of tools focusing on the different steps in studying genetic disorders. all applications are web-based, have easy-to-use interfaces and are aimed directly at human geneticists, without any need to install software, use the command line or to try to explain clinical features to it specialists. we think that software should adapt to the user -not the other way around. and, unlike other web shops, its use is completely free. homozygositymapper finds disease-linked regions in consanguineous families. users can upload genotypes from snp chips as well as wes and even wgs data. we display likely disease loci in intuitive graphical interfaces. the results can also be used in our 'downstream' applications such as genedistiller, mutationtaster, or mutationdistiller to identify the actual disease mutation. genedistiller provides a user-driven way to find the best candidate gene for a genetic disorder. users can specify various aspects of the patients' phenotypes and the results are presented in a comprehensive way without the need to manually query other internet resources to collect further information relevant to asses the disease potential. mutationtaster evaluates the disease potential of non-synonymous as well as of non-coding and synonymous dna variants within genes. it does not only display a prediction but also detailed information on the variants' likely effect on mrna and protein. it can either analyse single variants as found by sanger sequencing or complete vcf files from wes or wgs projects. regulationspotter lists information about potentially regulatory dna variants outside of genes. variants are ranked according to their predicted effect on gene regulation. in addition to a score, we provide a user-friendly summary of the functional effects a variant may have. mutationdistiller combines genedistiller and mutationtaster in a single application for convenient variant and gene prioritisation. it offers human geneticists much more freedom to enter the phenotype than similar applications and provides deeper information about the variant and the gene. cnvinspector is aimed at the study of copy number variants. users can upload their patients' (or cohorts') cnvs and compare them with their own healthy controls or public data stored in our database. we include deci-pher to indicate known diseases caused by cnvs at the same position. epossum examines the effect of dna variants on transcription factor binding. as tf binding site prediction is notoriously unreliable, we also give an indication of the statistical relevance of a result. the genecascade website can be accessed at http://www.mutationtaster.org. we investigate in-house wgs datasets and found that on average . ± . of the regions correspond to an alternate locus rather than the primary assembly sequence. filtering these genomes with our algorithm identified around variant calls per genome that colocalized with asdps. our findings suggest the potential of fully incorporating the resources of graph-like genome assemblies into variant calling. our algorithm already uses the information contained in the structurally variable regions of the grch genome assembly to avoid spurious variant calls in cases where samples contain an alternate locus rather than the corresponding segment of the primary assembly. the human phenotype ontology project provides three resources, the ontology of clinical features, disease-phenotype associations and algorithms that enable analysis of data that is described using hpo. this resource is being used for computational deep phenotyping and precision medicine. it enables clinical data integration for translational research. the hpo is being increasingly adopted in software, research projects and companies world-wide. we will discuss the progress and recent developments that the hpo project has made since . this will include the expansion of hpo for common (complex) diseases, novel algorithms for phenotype-driven analysis of genomic variation, cross-species mapping of phenotype data, translation of hpo into several languages and also the addition of a more patient-friendly terminology for hpo terms. millions of patients worldwide suffer from a rare genetic disease. to date, the omim database lists more than diseases with proven or suspected mendelian basis, but the molecular cause is known for less than %. although next generation sequencing has drastically facilitated the discovery of disease mutations, a substantial fraction of whole exome sequencing (wes) projects fail to identify the causal variant. this may be due to the fact that disease-causing mutations are not always located within the coding sequence. whole genome sequencing (wgs) could solve this problem, but we are not yet readily prepared to handle the vast amount of variants which are generated by this technique, as intuitive and reliable software solutions for variant evaluation are missing. the currently existing approaches are not well-suited for a diagnostic setting, because they output a battery of different scores whose interpretation is left to the users. however, human geneticists are specialists for the assessment of symptoms of genetic diseases -not for the analysis of numerical scores indicating different likelihoods of the occurrence of regulatory elements. this is especially true when it comes to the hundreds of thousands of extragenic variants found by wgs, for which effect predictions always face a high level of uncertainty. we consider it crucial to provide geneticists with the information they need to determine the significance of a variant, not to flood them with scores whose meanings are difficult to grasp. to facilitate the interpretation of extragenic variants, we are developing regulationspotter. in contrast to other approaches such as genomiser or cadd, we integrate as much knowledge as possible in a user-friendly fashion to pinpoint the variants which are most likely to disturb the expression of candidate genes. regulationspotter includes different data on regulatory dna elements such as dna methylation, transcription factor binding sites, histone mod-the human exon in the ' end of the murine huntingtin gene. by using a novel object recognition test with a h interval between sample and test phase we have found a profound deficiency of hippocampus dependent long-term memory in heterozygous transgenics. this phenotype was detected as early as weeks of age and is complementary to deficits that we have identified in the hdhcag mouse model previously. motor deficits as well as intranuclear aggregates are described at much later stages in both of these models. we have shown previously that in hd patients, mediated through mtor signaling, translation of mrna carrying expanded cag repeats is elevated (krauss et al., ) . we have also seen that the biguanid metformin antagonizes mtor signaling in neurons in-vitro and in-vivo (kickstein et al., ) . we show here that metformin, by interfering with the mtor kinase and its opposing phosphatase, pp a, regulates local protein synthesis in the brain and is able to suppress the production of disease making protein in early hd. furthermore metformin leads to a significant improvement of movement abilities in a c-elegans model for hd and to a rescue of early cognitive symptoms in the hdhcag animal model. these data suggest that metformin is a very promising candidate for early phase treatment of hd patients. allele-specific suppression of dominant-negative bestrophin mutations a. milenkovic, lm. braun, f. grassmann, b. h. f. weber institute of human genetics, regensburg, germany purpose: retinal pigment epithelium (rpe) differentiated from human induced pluripotent stem cells (hipsc) demonstrated degradation and mislocalization of mutant bestrophin (best ) protein in autosomal dominant best disease (bd). importantly, mutated alleles revealed a dominant-negative effect leading to an impairment of volume-regulated chloride transport, the basic function of the homo-pentameric best channel. here, our study aimed for a proof-of-concept to treat bd by selectively eliminating best mutant transcripts in patient-derived hipscs prior to rpe differentiation via the crispr/cas genome editing technology. methods: adult human dermal fibroblast were obtained from skin biopsies of bd patients and reprogrammed into hipscs. single guide rna sequences (sgrna) targeting best mutations were selected by the "optimised crispr design tool" (zhang lab, mit ) . editing efficiency and specificity of designed sgrnas were tested in hek cells using an established fluorescence-based assay. after transfection of hipscs the percentage of indel formation of on-and off-targets was determined by a pcr-based crispr/cas cleavage detection kit. cas -treated stem cell populations were analyzed for pluripotency and selected for full genome sequencing before differentiation to rpe cells. results: computational design of disease-causing best variants (n k, v m, s r, q r, a v, and i del) offered at least one sgrna with predicted high quality per mutant allele. the guide sequences were cloned into the cas -expressing plasmid px and co-transfected with pcag-egxxfp plasmids containing genomic fragments of ~ bp of either the mutated or wildtype sequence to the corresponding sgrna. as targeted cas cleavage results in reconstitution of the egfp expression cassette by homology dependent repair, the efficiency and specificity of cas cleavage was evaluated on a plate reader by quantifying egfp fluorescence after h of transfection. as a result, out of the sgrnas tested showed high allele-specificity and are now used for targeted genome editing in hipscs. conclusion: so far, there is no treatment for bd although the molecular pathology of best has recently been established. our proof-of-concept study aims to determine whether haploinsufficiency of normal best protein is sufficient to fully or partly restore cellular function in cells of primary bd pathology, namely the rpe. to this end, we will determine the degree of rescue (i. e. reconstitution of volume-regulated chloride conductance) by whole-cell patch-clamp analysis. if successful, our crispr/ cas -driven approach will be useful to treat other diseases with dominant negative effects of the mutated allele. p-therap- *** metformin rescues early cognitive symptoms in the hdhcag mouse model and is therefore a promising candidate for treatment of hd patients. huntington's disease (hd) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder that is caused by an unstable glutamine (cag) trinucleotide repeat expansion within exon of the huntingtin gene and leads to cognitive decline and affects motor abilities. in the prodromal phase of the disease patients develop mood swings, personality changes and subtle cognitive impairment. close understanding of clinical signs and molecular mechanisms behind this early stage of hd is an important step for the development of a causal therapy. we have analysed a knock-in mouse model that carries cag repeats and single molecule molecular inversion probes for targeted, high-accuracy detection of low-frequency variation age-related clonal hematopoiesis associated with adverse outcomes clonal hematopoiesis and bloodcancer risk inferred from blood dna sequence age-related mutations associated with clonal hematopoietic expansion and malignancies cancer spectrum in dna mismatch repair gene mutation carriers: results from a hospital based lynch syndrome registry update on kleefstra syndrome characterization of a novel transcript of the ehmt gene reveals important diagnostic implications for kleefstra syndrome national institute of child health and human development abstracts p-monog- novel mutation in hoxc expand the mutation spectrum of pure hair and nail ectodermal dysplasia abstracts in conclusion, targeted sequencing represents an effective, fast, cost-efficient and flexible method, since new candidate genes can be added easily to the panel, for the sequential analysis in chh patients. furthermore, panel sequencing alleviates the uncovering of oligogenic inheritance in genetic traits like chh abstracts p-monog- neurodegeneration in the olfactory bulb and olfactory impairment in the ccdc -/-mouse model for retinal degeneration s. schreiber , e. petrasch-parwez one hallmark of sca and other mechanisms that govern ccdc -deficient degeneration, a detailed evaluation is performed in order to reveal processes that contribute to retinal degeneration during early postnatal development and adulthood. methods: the functional role of ccdc deficiency is investigated by two independent approaches: ) gene expression profiles at p and p are analyzed in retinal tissue of cccdc -/-and wildtype mice (genechip mouse gene . st array, affymetrix) followed by quantitative real-time pcr (qrt-pcr) and ) potential retinal interaction partners of ccdc protein are identified by yeast-two hybrid screening in the wildtype mouse and further analyzed by immunohistochemistry. results: using two screening methods (rna-expression profiles and protein interaction partners), our results indicate that ) the ccdc deficient mouse model reveals early changes in retinal rna gene expression already at p and the highest number of genes differential expressed at p . most expression differences were related to genes associated with the extracellular matrix. further genes are involved in retinal degeneration, angiogenesis, transcription factors and proteolysis. ) the ccdc protein interacts with the proteins eps (epidermal growth factor receptor kinase substrate ) and mpdz (multiple pdz-domain protein). both proteins are expressed in several retinal layers of the retina, confirmed by immunohistochemistry. moreover, mutations in the mpdz gene were already identified in patients with retinitis pigmentosa/leber congenital amaurosis. conclusion: expression profiles reveal expression changes at an early time point of retinal degeneration in the ccdc -/-mouse model enabling further studies on the role of genes and processes involved in early retinal degeneration. in addition, the interaction partners of ccdc , eps and mpdz, are the basis for further studies examining the pathways of retinal degeneration in the mammalian retina including man -and possibly contribute to future studies in man and human disease. ccdc null mutation causes retinal degeneration and dysfunction of medical and molecular genetics and skeletal dysplasia multidisciplinary unit hospital unit of genetics of neurodegenerative and metabolic diseases sel- , ws - , p-compl- ws - p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , ws - , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-monog- p-cancg- p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , ws - , p-cling- ws - , p-cling- p-cancg- , p-cancg- , p-cling- ws - medizinische genetik · ws - , p-cling- ws - , p-cling- ddd study . p-cling- ws - , ws - , p-cling- , p-compl- ws - , p-cling- , p-cling- distelmaier f. ws - ws - , p-basepi- , p-cancg- ws - , ws - , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-cling- , p-monog- ws - ekici ab. ws - , p-monog- sel- p-cancg- , p-techno- plen , ws - golla a dfg-workshop göpfert mc sel- , sel- haferlach c. ws - haferlach t. ws - ws - , ws - , p-compl- , p-compl- p-cancg- , p-cancg- , p-cancg- gilissen c. ws - ws - , p-basepi- , p-cling- , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-compl- p-monog- medizinische genetik · ws - hüffmeier u. ws - ws - , p-cling- seq consortium ws - ws - , ws - , p-compl- p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-cancg- ws - , ws - , ws - , p-compl- p-cancg- , p-cancg- ws - ws - , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cytog- ws - , ws - , p-compl- , p-compl- , p-compl- ws - , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-cancg- ws - , p-cling- ws - , ws - , p-cancg- khor cc. ws - sel- , ws - ws - medizinische genetik · p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-compl- , p-compl- ws - , p-cancg- ws - , p-cling- meggendorfer m. ws - ws - , p-cancg- p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-cancg- ws - , ws - , p-monog- ws - ws - ws - , p-cling- pasutto f. ws - nanda i. ws - nöthen mm. ws - , ws - , ws - , ws - , ws - ws - ws - , ws - , ws - , ws - , p-cling- , p-compl- , p-compl- sel- medizinische genetik · p-cancg- schnapp l. ws - ws - , p-cancg- , p-cancg- , p-cling- ws - , p-basepi- , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- p-cancg- , p-cling- salaverria i. ws - ws - , p-compl- ws - , ws - , ws - , p-cancg- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cytog- , p-monog- , p-monog- p-cancg- , p-cancg- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - sel- , ws - , p-compl- the international gamos consortium e ws - , ws - , ws - , p-cancg- , p-monog- , p-monog- sel- , ws - ws - , p-cytog- p-cancg- , p-cling- , p-cling- p-cancg- , p-cancg- , p-cling- stengel a. ws - p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , ws - , ws - , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- p-cancg- , p-cling- ws - ws - , p-cling- ws - witsch-baumgartner m. p-cling- p-cancg- p-cancg- wunderle m. ws - zechner u. ws - , ws - , p-basepi- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- ws - , p-cancg- , p-cling- edu , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- p-cling- , p-cling- , p-cling- wiesener a. ws - , p-monog- ws - , ws - , p-cancg- , p-cling- , p-compl- , p-monog- ws - ws - , p-cancg- autorenverzeichnis zenker m. ws - , ws - , p-cling- , p-cling- dialog mit shg, p-cling- ws - , ws - , p-cling- , p-monog- ac. koller , , j. strohmaier , ku. ludwig , , fc. degenhardt , m. wulff , , d. breuer , , l. winkler , , f. neukirch , , a. maaser , , a. forstner , , s. sivalingam , , a. reif , a. ramirez , w. maier , d. rujescu , i. giegling , h. thiele , p. nürnberg , , a. fischer congenital hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (chh) is a rare and clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorder. chh is characterized by incomplete or absent puberty caused by the lack or deficient number of hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone (gnrh) neurons, disturbed secretion or action of gnrh, or both. chh is often associated with anosmia and is then termed kallmann syndrome (ks), as well as with other phenotypes like unilateral kidney agenesis, skeletal abnormalities, midline malformations, and hearing loss. x-linked, autosomal-dominant, and autosomal-recessive, as well as di-and oligogenic inheritance has been described for chh. in the meantime a multitude of genes has been reported to be associated with chh. actually, in fewer than % of the chh cases the underlying genetic cause can be identified. we analyzed a total of patients with chh ( female/ male) by using targeted sequencing of chh-associated genes kal , chd , fgf , fgfr , fshb, gnrh , gnrhr, hs st , kiss , kiss r, nsmf, prok , prokr , spry , tac and tacr and identified pathogenic mutations in chh patients of our cohort. mutations were detected in kal ( patients), tacr ( patients), prokr ( patient), hs st ( patient) and gnrhr ( patient). furthermore, we found in two patients with described pathogenic mutations (one patient with prokr mutation and the other with kal mutation, respectively) additional mutations in nsmf gene and tacr gene, respectively, suggesting digenic inheritance in these cases. pain is necessary to alert us to actual or potential tissue damage. specialized nerve cells in the body periphery, so called nociceptors, are fundamental to mediate pain perception and humans without pain perception are at permanent risk for injuries, burns and mutilations. pain insensitivity can be caused by sensory neurodegeneration which is a hallmark of hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies (hsan). although mutations in several genes were previously associated with sensory neurodegeneration, the etiology of many cases remains unknown. using next generation sequencing in patients with congenital loss of pain perception, we here identify bi-allelic mutations in the flvcr (feline leukemia virus subgroup c receptor ) gene, which encodes a broadly expressed heme exporter. different flvcr isoforms control the size of the cytosolic heme pool required to sustain metabolic activity of different cell types. mutations institute of human genetics, bonn, germany, the rild institute, wonford, exeter, uk introduction: ectodermal dysplasias (eds) are a large group of heterogeneous genetic disorders characterized by abnormal development in ectoderm-derived tissues and organs including skin, hair, and nails. among the eds, pure hair and nail ectodermal dysplasia (phned) is a rare genodermatosis characterized by nail dystrophy and sparse or absent hair on the scalp. materials and methods: a family of iranian origin was enrolled in this study. two children from a consanguineous marriage are affected from phned. in addition, the father has alopecia areata (aa) but does not show any nail dysplasia. the mother is unaffected. the paternal and maternal grandfathers had nail dysplasia almost similar to the siblings but did not manifest any hair loss or aa. homozygosity mapping and genedistiller analysis were performed to identify candidate genes. sanger sequencing was used to localize the mutations. results: in total, we identified homozygous regions with almost candidate genes. among these genes were also krt and hoxc , already known to be related to the phenotype of our patients. therefore, we focused our additional analyses on krt and hoxc . sanger sequencing showed a so far unknown homozygous insertion of bp in exon of hoxc . conclusion: we identified an unknown mutation for phned which expands the spectrum of mutations for phned. the hair loss of the father seems rather be due to a distinct type of hair loss, namely aa, which is quite common in the general population. however, the nail dysplasia from both grandfathers is unclear and cannot be examined anymore. it still remains unclear if the nail dysplasia in the grandfathers was due to the same mutation in hoxc or is based on a different mutation. generation of a cell culture model for epidermodysplasia verruciformis by knock-out of ev , a novel gene involved in this genodermatosis e. imahorn , m. aushev , sj. de jong , e. jouanguy , , , jl. casanova , , , ph. itin , , j. reichelt , epidermodysplasia verruciformis (ev) is a rare hereditary skin disease leading susceptibility to certain types of cutaneous human papilloma viruses, mainly β-hpv, and a high risk for development of cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma. homozygous or compound heterozygous loss of function mutations either in tmc or in tmc have been described in several ev patients, but more than / of affected families do not have mutations in one of them. a third gene (ev ) has recently been identified to be mutated in ev patients without tmc or tmc mutation. investigations on the function of this gene may elucidate pathomechanisms of ev. we aim to generate an ev deficient model cell line to study the effects of ev despite the scarcity of patient material. detection of deletions during diagnostic massive parallel ngs gene panel sequencing neuronal differentiation at a later time point. a novel mutation c. a>g, pser gly in des gene in a family with catecholamine polymorphic ventricular tachycardia s. komatsuzaki, p. villavicencio lorini, k. hoffmann institute for human genetics, university hospital halle, germany background: myofibrillar myopathy (omim ) is a heterogeneous neuromuscular disease characterized by progressive muscle weakness, partially with cardiomyopathy and/or arrhythmia. pathohistological examinations show desmin-positive protein aggregations. the mutations in des, cryab, bag , myot, ldb , flnc, fhl , and dnajb have been identified in patients with myofibrillar myopathy. desmin is a intermediate filaments and composed of non-helical n-and terminal head domain and a central a-helical rod domain. till now more than mutations myofibrillar myopathy were identified in patients with and a genotype-phenotype was reported: mutations in rod domain tend to cause neuromuscular symptoms, and mutations in head domain is associated with cardiac symptoms. the head-domain is a serine rich domain and phosphorylated by protein kinase c. almost all reported mutations in head-domain in des are at serine residues (e. g. s i, s f, s f, s f, s y, s t). these findings suggested that the serine residues in head-domain could play an important role in biological function of desmin. here we report a novel mutation c. a>g, ps g in des in a family with catecholamine polymorphic ventricular tachycardia. case: a years old patient developed a syncope in a cold winter. the cardiological investigations revealed a diagnosis of catecholamine polymorphic ventricular tachycardia and the implantation of permanent pacemaker was indicated. his older brother, father and paternal uncle suffered from arrhythmia and all of them received a permanent pacemaker implantation at around years of age. his cousin was died at age of years due to sudden cardiac arrest. we performed a genetic analysis for ryanodin-rezeptor -gen and lamin a gene and no mutation in these gene was identified. next, we performed an exome sequencing. here a novel heterozygous mutation c. a>g, ps g in des was identified. this mutation was also identified in uncle of index patient. the c. a>g, ps g in des was not reported neither in human genome project, nor in exome aggregation consortium. a mutation at serine (p.s i) was previously reported in patients with myofibrillar myopathy with cardiac symptoms. based on these findings, it was strongly supposed that the p.s g in des gene is a causative mutation for myofibrillar myopathy with arrhythmia in our patients. discussion: recent studies suggest that the mutations in des influence not only on muscle stability and myocardial force generation, but also impaired ubiquitin proteasome system, which could be caused by aggregated desmine. generally, phosphorylation of serin and threonine in head-domain of desmin is related to disassembly of filaments. therefore the p.ser- gly mutation in des could cause altered phosphorylation of desmin. the functional abnormalities caused by pser gly in des gene need to be studied. gene dosage manipulation of the chromatin organizer ctcf in the nervous system of drosophila melanogaster results in neurological and morphological phenotypes e. konrad, a. gregor, m. brech, c. zweier institute of human genetics, fau-erlangen-nürnberg, erlangen, germanythree-dimensional organization of eukaryotic genomes is crucial for temporal and spatial regulation of gene expression. architectural proteins, like the ccctc-binding factor ctcf are responsible for establishing and maintaining this organization. ctcf is involved in virtually all chromatin regulating processes including enhancer function, insulation, alterna-for this purpose we used the crispr/cas system to delete the ev coding sequence in an immortalized keratinocyte line. after isolation by facs, single cell clones have been expanded. we screened clones for deletion of the whole gene as well as for the expression of ev . three clones showed no detectable gdna sequence or expression of the ev gene. we found only one wildtype clone without deletion of ev or alterations near the cas cut sites. all clones have been characterized by a snp-array as well as sequencing of the knockout site and the most probable offsite targets. these ev deficient keratinocyte lines are the first cell culture model for ev. it will be a valuable tool to identify cellular pathomechanisms of the disease and allow insight into the control of β-hpv in the general population. hemizygous loss of function of single x-chromosomal genes is the most frequent cause for genetic intellectual disability (id). while a long list of gene mutations have so far been described to be responsible for the disease phenotype, little is known about the underlying neuronal mechanisms. reprogramming of somatic cells into stem cells (ipscs) followed by differentiation into neuronal precursors (npcs) is an important tool for translating research allowing an understanding of network dysfunction in id patients. opitz bbb/g syndrome (os) is characterized by a number of ventral midline defects combined with learning disability, developmental delay and intellectual disability. it is caused by mutations in the x-linked mid gene, which, as we have shown previously, regulates mtor dependent local protein synthesis. in a mouse model, loss of mid function leads to significant disturbance of axonal outgrowth. we have generated ips cells from several patients with os and from one mother that carries a loss of function mutation in the mid gene. by sorting cell clones after reprogramming we have established ips cell clones from this female carrier of a bp deletion in the mid gene (c. _ delctcc) either expressing from the mutated x-chromosome or the non-mutated x-chromosome and have shown that indeed the generated ipsc-clones express either % of the mutated or % of the wildtype mid . we determined this directly using an allele-specific mid -rt-pcr and indirectly by comparing the methylation of humara-alleles. comparison of mutation expressing ipsc-clones with non-mutation expressing ipsc-clones showed that the mid mutation results in significantly smaller cells with reduced s phosphorylation supporting aberrations in the mtor/pp a signaling cascade. when differentiating ipscs into neuronal precursor cells, significantly bigger embryoid bodies (ebs) can be detected in the mutation expressing clones, while the total eb number is higher for the non-mutated mid expressing clones. when further differentiated, ebs from all ipsc-clones form neuronal rosette structures expressing beta-iii-tubulin, with a lower rosette structure count in the mutated mid expressing cells. these data clearly hint a defect in neurogenesis in cells with hemizygous mid mutations. interestingly, while ipscs stably kept the x-incativation pattern of the original fibroblast, during differentiation x-inactivation was lost leading to biallelic expression from both x-chromosomes in the npcs pointing towards an as yet unknown reactivation mechanism of the inactive x-chromosome. we are currently analyzing x-inactivation throughout the differ- mutations in the aminoacyl-trna-synthetase genes sars and wars are associated with autosomal recessive intellectual disability l intellectual disability (id) is the common feature of a very heterogeneous group of disorders, which comprises a broad variety of syndromic and non-syndromic phenotypes. here we present mutations in two aminoacyl-trna synthetases that are associated with id in two independent iranian families. in the first family, we found a missense mutation (c. g>a, p.d n) in the cytoplasmic seryl-trna synthetase (sars) gene that affects the enzymatic core domain of the protein and impairs its enzymatic activity. this probably leads to reduced trnaser concentrations in the cytoplasm. in silico analyses predicted the mutant protein to be unstable. this prediction could be experimentally substantiated by results obtained through studies with ectopic mutant sars in transfected hek t cells. in the second family, we identified a compound heterozygous genotype of the mitochondrial tryptophanyl-trna synthetase (wars ) gene, consisting of a nonsense mutation (c. dela, p.ser alafs* ), which very likely leads to nonsense-mediated mrna decay, in combination with a missense mutation (c. t>g, p.w g). the p.w g mutation affects the mitochondrial localization signal of wars , leading to mislocalization of the mutant protein. thus, when taking aimp into account, which we have recently implicated in the aetiology of id as well, there are now three genes with a role in trna-aminoacylation that are associated with this condition. hence we propose that the functional integrity of t-rnas in general is an important constituent in the development and maintenance of human cognitive functions. dravet syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant genetic disorder with early-onset epileptic encephalopathy is mainly caused by different de novo mutations of the scn a gene encoding the type subunit of voltage-gated sodium channel. whole exome sequencing(wes) enables scanning a large number of genes which not only can confirm the diagnosis but also helpful in understading for possible relationship between clinical manifestations and mutaion. the authors investigate wes in a months term boy with hypotonia and convulsion of normal and relative parent. she had uncontrolled sizure without fever, and developmental delay from months.in treatment protocol anti covulsants changes to valorate, clonazepam and stiripentol as well. a deleterious novel heterozygous splice site mutation in scn a tive splicing, imprinting, v(d)j recombination, chromatin loop formation and defining topologically associated domains (tads). recently, we identified de novo mutations in ctcf in patients with a surprisingly mild phenotype of variable developmental delay or intellectual disability, mild short stature and microcephaly, and behavioural anomalies. apart from observing brain malformations and early lethality or learning deficits in two conditional knockout mouse models, little is known about the role of ctcf in neuronal development and preservation so far. therefore, we utilized the model organism drosophila melanogaster to further explore the role of ctcf in cns development and function. similar to observations in knockout mice, complete knockout or ubiquitous knockdown of ctcf is embryonic lethal in drosophila. we therefore utilized the uas/gal system to induce tissue specific knockdown or overexpression of ctcf in the fly nervous system. we first investigated development and morphology of the larval neuromuscular junctions (nmjs), an established model for synaptic development. while pan-neuronal overexpression of ctcf showed no morphological nmj alterations, pan-neuronal knockdown resulted in fewer nmj branches than in a specific control. additionally, we observed a reduced number of active zones in a hypomorphic mutant line compared to a wildtype control. using the negative gravitaxis assay to examine gross neurological function, we found a highly significant impairment of geotaxis behavior in flies with ctcf knockdown in neurons, motoneurons and muscle and in flies with overexpression of ctcf in glia cells, muscle and motoneurons. currently we are testing learning and memory behavior with the courtship conditioning paradigm. our findings of various neurological and morphological anomalies upon manipulation of ctcf dosage in the fly nervous system emphasize the role of ctcf in nervous system development and function and provide a basis to further study the molecular mechanisms underlying cognitive dysfunction caused by ctcf-deficiency. congenital or early-onset nystagmus (cn) is characterized by involuntary eye movements and shows enormous clinical and genetic heterogeneity. cn may be an ambiguous sign of many different diseases, including retinal dysfunction/degeneration, ocular/oculocutaneous albinism, and severe central nervous system disorders, such as pelizaeus-merzbacher or pelizaeus-merzbacher-like diseases (pmld). due to enormous heterogeneity found among the diseases leading to cn, whole exome sequencing (wes) and panel-based bioinformatics was considered as an approach to rapidly identify disease-associated genetic sequence variants. we have analyzed families with cn-affected patients. herein, we present three clinically different patients who were initially affected with cn, but developed further clinical symptoms of various severities. one of these patients showed features of retinal dysfunction, including night blindness and myopia, while two other patients developed severe phenotypes including mental retardation or pmld. wes identified four genetic variants in genes associated with cn. the first patient showed a hemizygous splice-donor variant (c. + g>a) in the calcium channel voltage-dependent alpha- f subunit (cacna f) gene, the second patient carried a hemizygous variant (c. g>a, p.r h) in the ferm domain-containing protein (frmd ) gene, and the third patient showed two heterozygous variants (c. c>g, p.y * and c. t>c, p.v a) in the gap junction protein gamma- (gjc ) gene. sanger sequencing confirmed the identified variants in the index patients and verified co-segregation in several family members. our results suggest a beneficial role of wes to identify the molecular causes of cn and to rapidly confirm an initially unclear clinical diagnosis. especially, patients with rare and severe disorders (e. g. pmld) will benefit from a wes analysis performed in the early stage of the disease. the ccdc -deficient (ccdc -/-) mouse model exhibits slow retinal degeneration similar to a human retinitis pigmentosa (rp) phenotype (gerding et al., hum mol genet., ) . in order to determine whether ccdc gene expression might also play a role outside the retina, this study aimed at characterizing ccdc protein expression during early postnatal development of the mouse brain. furthermore, morphological and behavioral impact of ccdc deficiency in the mouse brain was analyzed. methods: ccdc protein expression was determined by sds page and western blot in whole brain homogenates and in selected brain regions of interest (olfactory bulb, hippocampus, cortex, striatum, cerebellum, brain stem) during early postnatal development and in adult wildtype (wt) mice. in addition, cryosections of the ccdc -/-olfactory epithelium and bulb (during postnatal development) and the rostral migratory stream (in adult) were analyzed for ccdc reporter gene expression by x-gal staining. selected brain regions were additionally analyzed by electron microscopy. in order to correlate anatomical with behavioral data, olfactory performance was studied in aged ccdc -/-mice compared to ccdc +/+ controls by an olfactory habituation/dishabituation test (yang and crawley, curr protoc neurosci., ) , where olfactory exploration-time during the presentation of neutral and social odors is examined. results: ccdc protein was detected throughout the early postnatal development of the wt mouse brain, decreasing after birth. amongst analyzed brain regions, highest expression of ccdc protein was detected in the olfactory bulb exhibiting similar ccdc levels to retinal expression. accordingly, ccdc reporter gene expression was demonstrated in the mature olfactory bulb glomeruli, the adjacent olfactory epithelium and along the rostral migratory stream in the ccdc -/-mouse brain. interestingly, strong ccdc reporter gene expression in glomeruli of the ccdc -/-olfactory bulb was correlated with signs of degeneration in the ccdc -/-mouse, but not in controls. the degeneration was also reflected by olfactory impairment in ccdc -/-mice, which spent significantly less time for sniffing at initial presentation of unknown, neutral odors and barely responded to social odors. conclusion: besides the retina, ccdc protein plays a crucial role in the olfactory system as shown by its expression there as well as by ccdc deficiency resulting in neurodegeneration and alteration of olfaction-related behavior in the ccdc -/-mice. as impairment of the olfactory sense in multiple neurodegenerative disorders is a common finding, the ccdc -/mouse model is not only restricted to study retinal degeneration but possibly also degeneration of the central nervous system. background: the ccdc -deficient (ccdc -/-) mouse model exhibits slow retinal degeneration similar to a human retinitis pigmentosa (rp) phenotype (gerding et al. ) . in order to gain insights into the molecular disruptions in cilia structure or function lead to a class of human disorders called ciliopathies. joubert syndrome is characterized by a wide spectrum of symptoms, including a variable degree of intellectual disability, ataxia, and ocular abnormalities. here we report a novel homozygous missense variant (c. g>a; p.g r) in the arl b gene, which we identified by whole exome sequencing of a trio from a consanguineous family with multiple affected individuals suffering from intellectual disability, ataxia, ocular defects, and epilepsy. the same variant was also identified in a second family. we saw a striking difference in the severity of ataxia between affected male and female individuals in both families. functional analysis demonstrated that dihydrotestosterone treatment of sh-sy y cells induced a down regulation of arl b expression. both arl b and arl b-p.g r expression rescued the cilia length and shh defects displayed by arl bhennin (null) cells, indicating that the mutation did not disrupt either arl b function. in contrast, arl b-p.g r displayed a marked loss of arl guanine nucleotide-exchange factor activity, despite retention of its gtpase activities, highlighting the correlation between its loss of function as an arl guanine nucleotide-exchange factor and joubert syndrome. s. renner, a. busch, t. bierhals, j. butter, v. kolbe, g. rosenberger institute of human genetics, university medical center hamburg-eppendorf, hamburg, germany taad (thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection) is a heterogeneous disease that often remains silent until a life-threatening complication occurs. it belongs to the connective tissue disorders and causes % of death in industrial countries. several disease genes have been already identified; however, about % of patients with taad-associated syndromes do not show a mutation in these genes. thus, further heterogeneity is obvious. since individual risk stratification and therapeutic options highly depend on the individually mutated gene, it is very important to identify more disease genes which are aimed to be found by whole exome sequencing (wes). many of the known disease genes encode for proteins that are important for the structure and stabilization of the extracellular matrix as well as for the contraction of vascular smooth muscle cells. one central pathway is the tgf-beta signaling which functions among other proteins via the tgf-beta receptor, its ligand and its downstream target smad / . our project plan includes (i) exome sequencing both in affected individuals within families as well as in sporadic patients, (ii) filtering of raw data and prioritization of sequence variants by using a bioinformatic in house pipeline, (iii) verification of novel putative disease genes in a cohort of mutation-negative patients with taad spectrum disease and (iv) functional analyses to gain deeper insight into the pathobiology of taad. in a first round of wes analysis and variant prioritization, we identified a highly conspicuous sequence variant in three family members with taad. screening of the respective gene in a large cohort of mutation negative patients revealed another variant in two siblings with taad. structural and functional considerations strongly support deleterious effects for both identified putative pathogenic missense variants that affect a novel cell cycle-and/or apoptosis regulating protein. functional analyses did not show an involvement of this protein in tgf-beta signaling. in ongoing experiments, we focus on mutation-induced consequences on cell proliferation, cell cycle progression and apoptosis. indeed, we found inhibitory effects of the missense variants on proliferation by affecting the cell cycle key protein cdkn a. we hypothesize that dysregulation of proliferation and/ or apoptosis of specific cells, e. g. smooth muscle cells, underlies taad.abstracts for screening. positively tested compounds were reanalyzed by whole-cell patch clamp recordings and cell volume measurements. results: the halide assay revealed reproducible halide permeability across wells and, as a control, reliably detected mdckii cells overexpressing wild type best by a decrease of yfp fluorescence to % following seconds iodide stimulation. cells harboring mutant best showed % of default yfp fluorescence after the same time interval. conclusion: the current study established an assay appropriate for high and small-scale compound screening targeting best localization and function. this assay will be used to screen for compounds in mutant cells lines best -t p and best -y n for their ability to improve trafficking to the pm or correcting protein folding to enhance ion permeability. background: neuropeptide y-y receptor (y receptor), an auto-receptor of neuropeptide y (npy) and attractive guanine nucleotide (g) protein-coupled receptor target, has been implicated as a potential therapeutic target for many clinical conditions, including epileptic seizure, depression, pain, and alcoholism. in huntington's disease (hd) patients and animal models of hd, npy-expressing striatal interneurons are selective preserved and increased with advancing disease. however, the potential role of y receptor in hd pathology remains under-explored. aims: to investigate whether activation of y receptor using npy and selective y r ligands could ameliorate behavioral deficits and neuropathology in r / mouse model of hd. methods/techniques: npy and selective y receptor agonist npy - were intranasally administered to r / mice, five days in a week, beginning from weeks of age until weeks of age. in the second study, r / mice received daily intraperitoneal administration of selective non-peptide y receptor antagonist (sf- ) to selectively block y receptor. results/outcome: intranasal application of npy showed significant increase in rotarod performance compared to the saline and sf- treated r / mice (*p < . and **p < . at and weeks of age respectively, n = ). however, treatment with npy - showed a clear trend towards increased rotarod performance at weeks of age compared to the saline and sf- treated r / mice but the difference did not reach significance. also, treatment with npy and npy - showed no significant effect on body weight loss in r / mice, contrasting with previous data obtained with single intracerebroventricular (icv) injection of npy in r / mice. furthermore, intranasal application npy or npy - led to decrease in mutant huntingtin (htt) aggregation and mediated increase in dopamine-and camp regulated phosphoprotein (darpp- ) and brain derived neurotrophic factor (bdnf) levels. additionally, we found that npy and npy - attenuate microglial activation, inducible nitric oxide synthase (inos) expression, and proinflammatory cytokines production in r / mice compared to the saline and sf- treated r / mice. conclusion: taken together, our findings suggest that targeting npy-y receptor might be a potential neuroprotective therapy for hd and other neurodegenerative diseases. best of both world's: a novel, rapid capture protocol that overcomes drawbacks associated with dna fragmentation in established methods j. seggewiß, c. ruckert, p. wieacker institute of human genetics, westfaelian wilhelms-university of muenster, muenster, germany rapid capture protocols are an attractive proposition for clinical sequencing labs, as they enable quicker sample-to-sequencing turnaround times. the fragmentation of input dna for the construction of pre-capture libraries is a bottleneck in established protocols. mechanical shearing is the gold standard, but is laborious using single-tube covaris instruments; and higher-throughput instrumentation is cost-prohibitive to many smaller labs. "tagmentation"-based methods (e. g. the nextera rapid capture system from lllumina, or agilent's sureselect qxt system) employ transposases for fast ond simple library construction. however, these protocols are associated with significant sequence bias, especially with low-quality ffpe samples and are extremely sensitive to dna input -thus requiring meticulous quantification of viscous, high-molecular weight dna. here we describe a newly-developed rapid capture protocol that combines the kapa hyperplus kit (kapa biosystems) with integrated, low-bios enzymatic fragmentation, and agilent's proven sureselect xt target enrichment technology. the streamlined method follows for the preparation of high-quality, sequencing-ready libraries in one working day. the novel enzymatic fragmentation reagent does not require careful quantification of input dna, yielding reproducible fragmentation profiles optimal for capture over the fold range-tested ( - ng) the single-tube kapa hyperplus protocol results in very efficient conversion of input dna to precapture library thereby decreasing duplication rates and increasing the complexity of the library going into the modified, min sureselect fast xt hybridization protocol. our protocol represents a significant improvement for fast routine diagnostics, where robust and reproducible pipelines ore needed to support timely treatment decisions. lmj. braun, a. milenkovic, bhf. weber institute of human genetics, regensburg, germany purpose: human bestrophin- (best ) is a chloride channel controlled by ca + and cell volume and is localized at the basolateral membrane of the retinal pigment epithelium (rpe). so far, there is no therapy for the best -associated diseases, of which the most common is best vitelliforme macular dystrophies (bvmd). in this study, we developed an assay applicable for high and small-scale compound screening targeting best localization and function. methods: to assess best channel function we developed a halide assay. briefly, mdckii cell lines were established, stably expressing wildtype best or bvmd-associated best mutants together with a yellow fluorescent protein (yfp)-based halide sensor. in polarized mdckii cells, wildtype best and best -r c localize regularly at the basolateral plasma membrane (pm) while best -l m and best -y n appear significantly reduced in quantity and grossly mislocalized to cytosolic compartments. cells were stimulated with extracellular addition of iodide known to pass the pm through anion cannels and, as a consequence, intracellularly quench yfp fluorescence. variations in yfp fluorescence levels as a marker for best function were recorded in well plates by a plate reader setup. a small-scale , compound library, commercially available as spectrum collection (microsource discovery systems, gaylordsville, usa) was used key: cord- - p ektzv authors: bai, hao; he, yanghua; ding, yi; carrillo, josé a.; selvaraj, ramesh k.; zhang, huanmin; chen, jilan; song, jiuzhou title: allele-specific expression of cd (+) t cells in response to marek’s disease virus infection date: - - journal: genes (basel) doi: . /genes sha: doc_id: cord_uid: p ektzv marek’s disease (md) is a t cell lymphoma disease induced by marek’s disease virus (mdv), a highly oncogenic α herpesvirus primarily affecting chickens. md is a chronic infectious disease that threatens the poultry industry. however, the mechanisms of genetic resistance for md are complex and not completely understood. in this study, to identify high-confidence candidate genes of md genetic resistance, high throughput sequencing (rna-seq) was used to obtain transcriptomic data of cd (+) t cells isolated from mdv-infected and non-infected groups of two reciprocal crosses of individuals mating by two highly inbred chicken lines ( ( ) md-resistant and ( ) md-susceptible). after rna-seq analysis with two biological replicates in each group, we identified and single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) (false discovery rate (fdr) < . ) annotated in and genes in intercrosses ( ) × ( ) and ( ) × ( ), respectively, which exhibited allele-specific expression (ase) in response to mdv infection. similarly, we identified and snps annotated in and genes in infected and non-infected groups, respectively. we identified and differentially expressed genes (degs) (fdr < . ) related to mdv infection in intercrosses ( ) × ( ) and ( ) × ( ), respectively. we also identified and degs in infected and non-infected groups, respectively. the qrt-pcr using seven degs further verified our results of rna-seq analysis. the qrt-pcr of important ase genes was performed for gene functional validation in cd (+) t cells and tumors. combining the analyses, six genes (mcl , slc a , pde b, adam , blb , and dmb ), especially mcl , were highlighted as the candidate genes with the potential to be involved in mdv infection. gene-set enrichment analysis revealed that many ase genes are linked to t cell activation, t cell receptor (tcr), b cell receptor (bcr), erk/mapk, and pi k/akt-mtor signaling pathways, which play potentially important roles in mdv infection. our approach underlines the importance of comprehensive functional studies for gaining valuable biological insight into the genetic factors behind md and other complex traits, and our findings provide additional insights into the mechanisms of md and disease resistance breeding in poultry. marek's disease (md) is a t cell lymphoma and a strictly cell-associated disease induced by the highly oncogenic α-herpesvirus ii disease virus [ ] , which has a complex life with four main phases [ , ] : an early cytolytic phase at - days post infection (dpi), a latent phase around - dpi, a late cytolytic phase with the presence of tumors that is triggered between and dpi, and a final proliferation phase after dpi. during the first cytolytic phase, marek's disease virus (mdv) first uses b cells as targets for its replication before targeting activated cd + t cells to enable a persistent latent infection [ ] [ ] [ ] . mdv then uses t cells as the main target during the later phase, especially cd + t cells [ ] during the cytolytic phase with tumors at dpi, which were used in this study. cd is a co-receptor that facilitates t cell receptor (tcr) communication with an antigen-presenting cell. md is a commercially important neoplastic disease in chickens and also the main chronic infectious disease threatening the poultry industry. enhancing genetic resistance to md in poultry is an important long-term goal in controlling md. to optimally implement this control strategy through marker assisted selection (mas) and to understand the etiology and mechanisms of md, it is necessary to identify more specific alleles and genes with respect to md latency, although alleles at the well-studied major histocompatibility complex (mhc) locus are already known to be involved in genetic resistance to md. the comprehensive identification of genes underlying phenotypic variation of complex traits, especially disease resistance, remains one of the greatest challenges in biology, despite having genome sequences and powerful tools. screening for allele-specific expression (ase) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] is an effective approach to identifying regulatory variation responsible for differences in transcript abundance in genes. ase refers to unequal expression of multiple alleles of a gene, and the extreme case of ase is monoallelic expression, where only one of the alleles is expressed while the other is completely inactive. the genes with single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) exhibiting ase will provide a strong foundation for investigating the genetic mechanisms of complex traits, such as mdv infection. cheng et al. [ ] found that snps in ase genes account for more than % of the additive genetic variation of genetic resistance to md, demonstrating that most of the genes exhibiting ase are strong candidates for studying md resistance. maceachern et al. [ ] suggested that ase can be used to identify genes with cis-regulatory elements that respond to mdv infection. perumbakkam et al. [ ] considered that the tlr and jak/stat signaling pathways may be responding to mdv infection through the genes exhibiting ase. in the present study, transcriptomic data in cd + t cells isolated from mdv-infected and non-infected groups of two reciprocal crosses were analyzed by high throughput sequencing (rna-seq) to identify candidate genes of md genetic resistance. two f reciprocal crosses were used to compare the differences, not only between infected and non-infected individuals, but also between two reciprocal crosses. key snps, genes, and pathways related to md resistance or md susceptibility were identified by ase and differential expression (de) analyses. we used both cd + t cells and tumors for the validation of genes exhibiting ase. all of the chickens were kept in a pathogen-free facility at the avian disease and oncology laboratory (adol, east lansing, mi, usa). all animals were approved by the united states department of agriculture (usda), agricultural research service, and adol animal care and use committee. their guidelines (revised april , approval number: - - - -d) were followed, along with the guide for the care and use of laboratory animals published by institute for laboratory animal research (ilar guide) in (http://www.nap.edu/openbook.php?record_id= ) and university of maryland (r- - ). all efforts were made to minimize discomfort and suffering. two reciprocal crosses were obtained-the f progeny from intermating and lines (usda-ars adol, east lansing, mi, usa) [ ] , two highly inbred chicken lines that are md-resistant and md-susceptible, respectively. for each reciprocal cross, the chickens were divided into two groups, with two birds infected with mdv and two non-infected controls. a very virulent plus (vv+) strain of mdv- a passage [ ] was injected intra-abdominally at day after hatching with a viral dosage of plaque-forming units (pfu) per chick. the viral challenge experiment was conducted in the bsl- facility at adol. at dpi, cd + t cells were isolated from blood using a cd + t cell isolation kit (miltenyi biotec, auburn, ca, usa) with anti-biotin microbeads (miltenyi biotec, auburn, ca, usa) and mouse anti-chicken cd antibody (southernbiotech, birmingham, al, usa). the number and purities of enriched cells were determined by flow cytometry using the macsquant ® analyzer (miltenyi biotec, auburn, ca, usa) and stored in rnalater solution (qiagen, valencia, ca, usa) immediately at − • c until rna extraction. total rna was isolated from cd + t cells using trizol (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa) and examined using the rneasy mini kit (qiagen, valencia, ca, usa) according to the manufacturer's instructions. rna concentration was assessed using a nanodrop nd- spectrophotometer (thermo scientific, madison, wi, usa) and rna quality was determined using the bioanalyzer (agilent, pal alto, ca, usa). only samples with rin scores over could be submitted for sequencing. then, mrna was used to synthesize the first-and second-strand cdna using superscripttm iii reverse transcriptase (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa) and oligo (dt) - primers (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa). after purification, the double-strand cdna (dscdna) was fragmented into~ base pairs (bp). the library was subsequently constructed as follows. end repair of the fragmented dscdna was performed and then ' poly-a was added to the end-repaired dscdna using dna polymerase i, large (klenow) fragment. a pair of solexa adaptors was ligated to the repaired ends using t ligase, then - bp of fragments were selected using the invitrogen ® % e-gel (carlsbad, ca, usa). specific dscdna fragments were amplified by pcr and the libraries were then quantified and pooled. finally, clusters were generated and sequencing was analyzed using illumina hiseq (single end, base read length; san diego, ca, usa). the sequencing data were submitted to the sequence read archive (sra) of national center for biotechnology information (ncbi), and are accessible through the accession number prjna . chicken genome assembly (galgal ) was downloaded from ucsc genome browser website (http://hgdownload.soe.ucsc.edu/goldenpath/galgal /bigzips/) [ ] . to minimize the mapping errors, quality control was performed by fastqc [ ] and low quality reads were removed with the help of the fastx toolkit [ ] and trimmomatic [ ] with default parameters. the resulting fastq files of mapping reads of each sample were individually aligned with the reference genome using bowtie (version . . ) [ , ] , with mainly default parameters. samtools (version . ) [ ] was then used to convert the alignment results (sam format) to bam format for calling snps (for ase analysis) and counting reads number (for de analysis). snp calling was performed for each chromosome on all samples simultaneously, using samtools and bcftools (version . ) [ ] with basic command lines. the snps were then filtered using the bcftools to exclude the following variants: ( ) snps with a mapping quality covering reads < ; and ( ) snps with a total read depth < or > . read counts per allele were calculated by the genome analysis toolkit (gatk, version . ) [ ] asereadcounter with default parameters. the read counts of each allele were used for further ase snp detection. all of the indels were subsequently removed and the variant calling format (vcf) files derived from non-infected and infected birds were merged using vcftools (version . . ) [ ] . an in-house r script was used for allelic imbalance determined by a chi-square test with two variables: ( ) the read counts (allele a (reference) and b (alternative)) of each snp and ( ) two different groups (four comparison groups were divided into × infected (i) vs × non-infected (n), × i vs × n, × i vs × i, and × n vs × n). snps with a . level of significance (false discovery rate (fdr) < . ) were chosen for further investigation. variant effect predictor (vep) [ ] based on the ensembl website (http://useast.ensembl.org/gallus_gallus/tools/vep) was used to functionally annotate the putative snps to the genes within bp. each snp was classified based on its position in the reference chicken genome as exonic, intronic, intergenic, ' untranslated region (utr), ' utr, splicing site, and upstream or downstream. the alignments obtained above were counted by htseq count based on python [ ] and analyzed using edger [ ] , a bioconductor package for de analysis within r. the resulting data of htseq from all of the individual samples were converted and merged to text files imported into r and then analyzed. a portion of the reads ( . and . million reads on average for intercross × and × , and . and . million reads on average in infected and non-infected groups, respectively) were assigned as "no feature". to evaluate the reliability of our data analysis, we randomly selected seven genes for quantitative real-time pcr (qrt-pcr) validation in cd + t cells. simultaneously, overlapped genes between ase and de analysis were selected for gene functional validation in both cd + t cells and tumors. the protocols followed for mrna extraction and dsdna synthesis were the same as those mentioned above. gene-specific primers were designed to span over exons from the chicken genome reference unigene sequences available in genbank for conventional pcr amplification using primer (http:// fokker.wi.mit.edu/primer /input.htm) and confirmed by oligo . (tables s and s ). the housekeeping gene gapdh and β-actin were used as the endogenous control. the qrt-pcr using sybr green pcr kit was performed in triplicate based on icycler iq pcr system (bio-rad, hercules, ca, usa). the qrt-pcr reaction program was run as follows: pre-incubation ( • c for min), cycles of amplification ( • c for s, • c for s, and • c for s), melting curves using a heat ramp, and cool down. cycle threshold values (ct values) were obtained from icycler iq pcr software (bio-rad, hercules, ca, usa). the expressions of genes were normalized against gapdh or β-actin cdna in the corresponding samples. the relative fold enrichment of each treatment group was calculated by comparing the enrichment value to gapdh or β-actin. two methods were used for go and pathway enrichment analysis here. the ase significant genes (fdr < . ) list was firstly submitted to david (version . ) (https://david-d.ncifcrf.gov/) [ ] . the analysis classification stringency was set to the highest level with suitable controls. the resulting clustering was then limited to an enrichment score of > . and fdr for multiple testing was performed following the benjamin and hochberg method. kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) pathway analysis was also performed using david. simultaneously, gene functions were annotated using the ingenuity pathway analysis (ipa) tool (http://www.ingenuity.com/products/ipa). the program inquires the ipa knowledge database for information and direct relationships of genes and endogenous chemicals. this creates algorithmically generated networks and data clustered into biological functions and diseases that are overrepresented in the scrutinized data. the program determines the high representation of signaling and biological pathways. the method employs the fisher's exact test, determining the proportion of genes mapped to a function or pathway in the sample and then compares it to the ratio in the reference set. the result included functional networks, disease and disorders, molecular and cellular functions, physiological system development and function, top canonical pathways, upstream regulators, and top toxicity lists. in the present study, we sequenced rna samples from two infected and two non-infected birds for each reciprocal cross ( figure ). the average number of raw reads was approximately . , . , . , and . million for intercross × , × , infected, and non-infected datasets, respectively (table ). after quality control (qc) procedures, all of the raw data were sufficient, with no further trimming processes required. the mapping levels of the samples were adequate and similar, ranging from . % to . % for all individuals. these high quality alignments were appropriate for subsequent analysis, with few false positives. the number on an arrow indicates the remaining genes after the previous step. with the criteria described above, around , - , snps were left after filtering, and about one-third of heterozygous snps were left ( table ). all of the vcf files were then merged and divided all of the snps were called within alignments using samtools and bcftools, and read counts per allele were calculated with the help of gatk asereadcounter (broad institute, cambridge, ma, usa). the average number of snps finally called was in the approximate range of , to , . with the criteria described above, around , - , snps were left after filtering, and about one-third of heterozygous snps were left ( table ). all of the vcf files were then merged and divided into four comparison groups (infection in contrast to non-infection in × and × intercross; infection comparison and non-infection comparison groups between two intercrosses) using vcftools and consensus snps (the missing snps that were not present in all of the individuals involved in one comparison group were removed and the overlapped snps were retained) were ultimately selected for ase snp identification (table ) . an r script was used for each snp determined by a chi-square test examining each allele (read counts of alleles a and b) and two different statuses in birds-infected and non-infected. a total number of and snps exhibiting ase in response to mdv infection were identified in intercrosses × and × , respectively (fdr < . , table ). the significant snps for both reciprocal crosses were distributed on each chromosome of the chicken genome ( figure a ). to locate these snps on the chicken genome with respect to genes and classify them based on function, vep was then used to functionally annotate the putative snps to the genes within bp. in intercross × , significant snps were located in genes; the majority of snps were classified as exonic, intronic, and intergenic. similarly, in intercross × , snps were located in genes; the majority of snps were classified as intronic, downstream, and exonic (table ). for example, two alleles with t-a and a-g on chromosome are located on the intron of mcl . three alleles with c-a, a-t, and t-c on chromosome are located on the intron of pde b. seven genes were matched between the two reciprocal crosses, including mcl , ptbp , slc a , st gal , pde b, runx , and adam . the detailed lists of ase snps and genes responding to mdv infection are provided in table s . non-infected groups, respectively (table s ). the classification of ase snps is detailed in table . therefore, ase genes were identified before mdv infection and were identified after infection, similarly, a chi-square test was used to examine each allele and two different statuses in infected birds of intercross × compared with those of × and in non-infected birds. a total of and snps exhibiting ase were identified in infected and non-infected birds, respectively (fdr < . , table ). the significant snps were distributed on each chromosome of the chicken genome ( figure b) . a total of significant snps were located in genes and snps in genes in infected and non-infected groups, respectively (table s ). the classification of ase snps is detailed in table . therefore, ase genes were identified before mdv infection and were identified after infection, with overlapped genes in total (mcl , vav , ptprc, rab b, atp a , rab , chd , cd , nrk, rhoh, and ensgalg (novel gene)), including mcl . interestingly, the same alleles located on the intron of mcl were also identified. the common genes were both identified before and after mdv infection, so they may not only be associated with mdv but also be related to reciprocal crosses in both the virus-and host-related genes. we identified unique genes before infection and unique genes after infection, which should be in response to mdv infection with different statuses before and after infection. the same aligned datasets were used for the de analysis. de was estimated by obtaining the count data from each biological sample using the htseq script [ ] . biological replicates were closed to each other ( figure ) to verify the reliability of our datasets. a total of , chicken genes from galgal and edger, based on r package, were then used to estimate de. we also divided the samples into four comparison groups the same as for ase analysis. a total of and degs related to mdv infection were identified in intercrosses × and × , respectively (fdr < . ; table , figure a ,b). for intercross × , the expression of ( . %) degs were higher and ( . %) were lower after infection. for intercross × , ( . %) and ( . %) degs were up-and down-regulated after infection, respectively. similarly, for and degs, up-regulated and down-regulated genes were identified in infected groups, and up-regulated and down-regulated genes were identified in non-infected groups (fdr < . ; table , figure c ,d), respectively. the detailed lists of degs are provided in table s . compared with the ase genes, and overlapped genes responding to mdv infection were identified in intercrosses × and × , respectively. similarly, and overlapped genes were identified in infected groups and non-infected groups, respectively (table ) . these common genes, including mcl , slc a , pde b, and adam , which were mentioned above, could be selected as candidate md-resistant or md-susceptible genes. the detailed information of these genes is provided in table s . to verify the rna-seq analysis, seven genes (gzma, gzmk, litaf, ddx , avd, cyp b , and ensgalg (novel gene)) were examined by qrt-pcr using the rna of cd + t cells derived from infected and non-infected birds. the results ( figure ) showed good agreement with the de analysis pattern, indicating the reliability of the latter. to verify the rna-seq analysis, seven genes (gzma, gzmk, litaf, ddx , avd, cyp b , and ensgalg (novel gene)) were examined by qrt-pcr using the rna of cd + t cells derived from infected and non-infected birds. the results ( figure ) showed good agreement with the de analysis pattern, indicating the reliability of the latter. as described above, the overlapped genes between ase and de analyses may be much more as described above, the overlapped genes between ase and de analyses may be much more important. thus, we selected overlapped genes based on their existing gene functions and the position of their ase snps for the functional validation in both cd + t cells and tumors using qrt-pcr to confirm whether they are critical genes in the response to mdv infection. the results ( figure ) revealed that some of these genes, including mcl , slc a , pde b, adam , ppfia , cd , b galt , and cblb, showed significant differences (|fold change (fc)| > . or |log fc| > . ) in both cd + t cells and tumors of the comparison groups, and the same trend was observed with the rna-seq results. (table s ). using functional annotation clustering, clusters were formed at the highest classification stringency. however, only seven clusters were chosen after using an enrichment cutoff > . (table s ) table s ) and pathways (p < . , table ), including the immune-related pathway, t cell activation ( figure s ). the ase gene set was also submitted for ipa analysis. we obtained pathways (p < . , table s ). the preeminent canonical pathways are comprised of t cell receptor (tcr), pi k/akt, b cell receptor (bcr), interleukin- (il- ), and erk/mapk signaling pathways (figures s -s ) . the corresponding p-values and ratios are listed in table . the top diseases and disorder clusters, including inflammatory response, immunological disease, hematological disease, cancer, and to identify potential go terms and pathways, a list of significant ase genes (fdr < . ) was firstly submitted to david (version . ) for biological processing and pathway enrichment. according to the ase analysis results, ase genes related to mdv infection were finally obtained as initial input genes (table s ). using functional annotation clustering, clusters were formed at the highest classification stringency. however, only seven clusters were chosen after using an enrichment cutoff > . (table s ) . go terms and pathways analysis invoked in david yielded ( terms of cellular component, terms of molecular function, and terms of biological processes) functional terms (p < . , table s ) and pathways (p < . , table ), including the immune-related pathway, t cell activation ( figure s ). the ase gene set was also submitted for ipa analysis. we obtained pathways (p < . , table s ). the preeminent canonical pathways are comprised of t cell receptor (tcr), pi k/akt, b cell receptor (bcr), interleukin- (il- ), and erk/mapk signaling pathways ( figures s -s ) . the corresponding p-values and ratios are listed in table . the top diseases and disorder clusters, including inflammatory response, immunological disease, hematological disease, cancer, and organismal injury and abnormalities, were considered relevant to mdv infection. additional information about the top networks, top lists, and top molecules were also obtained from the ipa analysis (table s ). md, a complicated tumor disease, has been used as a model to study human tumors [ ] . the genetic mechanism underlying md resistance and md susceptibility is likely to be complex and remains incompletely understood. thus, understanding the genetic basis of md resistance or md susceptibility for poultry is important to provide crucial clues for human diseases. in the present study, based on the high throughput sequencing platform, some bioinformatics analyses, such as ase, de, go, and pathway analysis, were used to identify snps, genes, and enriched pathways from infected and non-infected birds. six genes exhibiting ase and six pathways were selected as the likely candidate factors that induce md resistance. to minimize transcriptional variations and take full advantage of identical genetic backgrounds in inbred lines, we paired birds by reciprocal crossing and mdv infection and tested the differences. we not only identified genes most likely related to md resistance, but also revealed the effects of mdv infection on the host. ase is a powerful technique used to measure the expression of each allele through studying snp within an rna sample [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the f data used here are an ideal test case for our approach. in this study, we hypothesized that a gene with allelic inequality or imbalance is the key genetic factor causing mdv susceptibility. since variation in gene expression is thought to be a major factor affecting phenotypic variation, genes with ase snps provide candidates and markers that may account for the complex trait of interest. although the ase snps identified here could not be considered to explain much more additive genetic variation of the genetic resistance to md because fewer ase snps and genes were obtained from rna-seq data, our findings are still of interest in view of the strict experimental design and analysis methods. in this experiment, we successfully aligned rna-seq reads to the reference chicken genome and identified high quality snps in infected and non-infected chickens. the significant snps exhibiting ase in response to mdv infection were distributed on autosomes to and z and w chromosomes of the chicken genome, with the number of snps for each chromosome roughly proportional to the size of each chromosome in the chicken genome assembly. to locate these snps on the chicken genome with respect to genes and classify them based on function, vep was used. in the × i_n group, the most snps (n = , . %) were classified as exonic; however, the largest number of snps (n = , . %) was classified as intronic in the × i_n group. the largest number of snps was classified as intronic (n = , . %) and located downstream of a gene (n = , . %) in infected and non-infected groups, respectively. interestingly, for both ase and de results, more snps and degs were identified in the × i_n group than in the × i_n group, which may be because of the different md incidences (%) of both reciprocal crosses. seven overlapped ase genes were identified in intercrosses × and × in response to mdv infection. we also identified overlapped ase genes in infected and non-infected groups, and these common genes are likely induced by md viral infection in the host. mcl was the only gene identified in both overlapped groups, which could be firstly selected as a key gene in the response to mdv infection. other ase genes, including cd , cd , cd , tcf , and irf- , are also important genes related to t cells, viruses, and tumors. de is another powerful technique that could further explain the results of ase. many more overlapped genes were identified in de than in ase analysis in response to mdv infection, including mcl . we compared the results of the degs to the ase gene analysis to identify four overlapped genes: mcl , slc a , pde b, and adam . as a tumor disease, gene functional validation was conducted not only in cd + t cells but also in tumor tissues, which could provide powerful evidence of key genes responding to mdv resistance. eight genes exhibiting ase, including these four genes, showed significant differences in both cd + t cells and tumors of the comparison groups, and were completely consistent with the rna-seq results. therefore, these four genes could be selected as potential candidate genes to study md resistance or md susceptibility, of which mcl , as a member of the bcl family, plays a role in cell proliferation, differentiation, tumorigenesis, and apoptosis [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . it is also associated with tumor, cancer, and cd + and cd + t cells [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in this study, we found an ase snp in this mcl gene, and the expression of this gene is significantly higher in infected birds and tumors. thus, this snp may increase the gene expression of mcl after mdv infection. this gene was identified both as a virus-related gene and a host-related gene, so it could be a critical gene connecting mdv to the host. chicken mhc plays an important role in the determination of resistance to mdv [ ] . the gga contains three loci, the b locus, y (or rfp-y) locus, and nucleolar-organizing region (nor), and only one ase snp was found to be associated with a gene that encodes for the class i alpha chain of the rfp-y loci [ ] . in this study, no snps in the related loci were identified, and this could be attributed to the incomplete sequence information available for the gga loci in the chicken genome. however, in the de analysis, two mhc class ii (mhcii)-associated genes, blb [ ] [ ] [ ] and dmb [ ] [ ] [ ] , were found to be significantly different between infected and non-infected birds, which are related to t cell immune responses, and their expressions are altered in cancers and tumors. due to the complexity of md, it may not be a single-gene-controlled trait. thus, we subsequently performed pathway analyses to investigate the specific gene sets involved in signaling cascades. david analysis is usually a simple and useful method that is widely used for many gene set enrichment analyses. ipa is a powerful and useful commercial gene set enrichment analysis tool. in this study, based on the david and ipa results, we focused on several important pathways that may be related to mdv infection. t cell activation [ ] was identified by david from the panther pathway dataset. activation of cd + t cells occurs through the simultaneous engagement of the t cell receptor and a co-stimulatory molecule on the t cell via the mhcii peptide and co-stimulatory molecules on the antigen-presenting cell (apc). this signaling pathway downstream from co-stimulatory molecules engages the pi k/akt molecules, which was identified in both david and ipa analysis. the pi k/akt-mtor signaling pathway is one of the three major signaling pathways critical in tumor progression. this classic route consists of two signaling pathways, pi k/akt and mtor, which are important in regulating the cell cycle and directly related to cellular proliferation, tumors, and cancer. akt is activated downstream of pi k and then activates mtor [ ] . in many cancers, this pathway is overactive, thus reducing apoptosis and allowing proliferation. this pathway is related to the t cell activation pathway mentioned above and the key md-related gene mcl , identified in this study, is also involved in this pathway. this pathway may play a role in md resistance or md susceptibility. the tcr signaling pathway was the top canonical pathway identified by ipa. tcr is a molecule found on the surfaces of t cells or t lymphocytes, and is responsible for recognizing fragments of antigens as peptides bound to mhc molecules. when the tcr engages with an antigenic peptide and mhc (peptide/mhc), the t lymphocyte is activated through signal transduction, which is a series of biochemical events mediated by associated enzymes, co-receptors (like cd ), specialized adaptor molecules, and activated or released transcription factors [ ] . mdv first uses b cells as targets for its replication before targeting activated cd + t cells. thus, the bcr signaling pathway is critical for mdv infection. bcr is a transmembrane receptor protein located on the outer surface of b cells that has two crucial functions: signal transduction, involving changes in receptor oligomerization, and mediating internalization for subsequent processing of the antigen and presentation of peptides to helper t cells. bcr functions are required for normal antibody production, so defects in bcr signal transduction may lead to immunodeficiency [ ] . the erk/mapk signaling pathway is a chain of proteins in the cell that communicates a signal from a receptor on the surface of the cell to the dna in the nucleus of the cell. it consists of many proteins, including mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk), which is necessary for the development of cancers [ ] . this pathway is one of the most extensively studied pathways involved in tumorigenesis [ ] and has been found to be critical in previous md studies by yan et al. [ ] and subramaniam et al. [ , ] . overall, our analyses indicate that the genes and pathways described here are worthy of further studies on md. in summary, we successfully identified snps associated with ase and revealed genes and pathways that may be involved in genetic resistance to md. combining ase, de, and pathway analyses, and due to the complexity of md, we ultimately found with high confidence that candidate genes (including mcl , slc a , pde b, adam , blb , and dmb , and especially mcl ) and several immune-or disease-related pathways (such as t cell activation, tcr, bcr, erk/mapk, and pi k/akt-mtor signaling pathways) play potentially important roles in mdv infection. overall, our approach underlines the importance of comprehensive functional studies in gaining valuable biological insight into the genetic factors behind md and other complex traits. our findings provide additional insights into the mechanisms of md and disease resistance breeding in poultry. the following are available online at http://www.mdpi.com/ - / / / /s . figure s . t cell activation pathway. figure s . t cell receptor signaling pathway. genes in red are the significant genes identified in this study. figure s . pi k/akt signaling pathway. genes in red are the significant genes identified in this study. figure s . mtor signaling pathway. genes in red are the significant genes identified in this study. figure s . b cell receptor signaling pathway. genes in red are the significant genes identified in this study. figure s . erk/mapk signaling pathway. genes in red are the significant genes identified in this study. table s . gene-specific primers of the genes for the validation of rna-seq results. table s . gene-specific primers of the overlapped genes for gene functional validation. table s . the detailed lists of ase snps and genes. table s . the detailed list of degs. table s . the detailed list of overlapped genes between ase and de analyses. table s . the list of ase initial input genes for go and pathway analyses. table s . the detailed list of clusters with enrichment scores > . from david. table s . the detailed list of go terms (p < . ) from david. table s . the detailed list of ingenuity canonical pathways (p < . ) from the ipa analysis. table s . the detailed information of the top canonical pathways, top upstream regulators, top diseases, top networks, and top tox lists from the ipa analysis. a review of the development of chicken lines to resolve genes determining resistance to diseases pathogenesis of marek's disease virus infection marek's disease-a model for herpesvirus oncology characterization of marek's disease virus-infected lymphocytes: discrimination between cytolytically and latently infected cells further characterization of marek's disease virus-infected lymphocytes. i. in vivo infection further characterization of marek's disease virus-infected lymphocytes. ii transformation of t-lymphocyte subsets by marek's disease herpesvirus allele-specific expression assays using solexa advances in the identification and analysis of allele-specific expression snp-specific array-based allele-specific expression analysis genome-wide analysis of allelic expression imbalance in human primary cells by high-throughput transcriptome resequencing fine mapping of qtl and genomic prediction using allele-specific expression snps demonstrates that the complex trait of genetic resistance to marek's disease is predominantly determined by transcriptional regulation genome-wide identification and quantification of cis-and trans-regulated genes responding to marek's disease virus infection via analysis of allele-specific expression. front comparison and contrast of genes and biological pathways responding to marek's disease virus infection using allele-specific expression and differential expression in broiler and layer chickens use of highly inbred chickens in research: agricultural research service; us department of agriculture classification of marek's disease viruses according to pathotype: philosophy and methodology the ucsc genome browser database: extensions and updates quality control and preprocessing of metagenomic datasets fastx-toolkit. fastq/a short-reads preprocessing tools trimmomatic: a flexible trimmer for illumina sequence data fast gapped-read alignment with bowtie performance of genetic programming optimised bowtie on genome comparison and analytic testing (gcat) benchmarks the sequence alignment/map format and samtools impact of stocking density and feeding regimen on broilers: performance, carcass traits and bone mineralisation the genome analysis toolkit: a mapreduce framework for analyzing next-generation dna sequencing data the variant call format and vcftools deriving the consequences of genomic variants with the ensembl api and snp effect predictor htseq-a python framework to work with high-throughput sequencing data a bioconductor package for differential expression analysis of digital gene expression data systematic integrative analysis of large gene lists using david bioinformatics resources marek's disease virus: from miasma to model allele-specific expression and eqtl analysis in mouse adipose tissue differential allelic expression in the human genome: a robust approach to identify genetic and epigenetic cis-acting mechanisms regulating gene expression analysis of allelic differential expression in human white blood cells effect of read-mapping biases on detecting allele-specific expression from rna-sequencing data mcl provides a window on the role of the bcl family in cell proliferation, differentiation and tumorigenesis programmed myeloid cell differentiation, has sequence similarity to bcl . proc. natl. acad. sci role of nr in regulation of programmed cell death in the bursa of fabricius up-regulation of mcl and bak by coronavirus infection of human, avian and animal cells modulates apoptosis and viral replication programming cancer cells for high expression levels of mcl immunohistochemical analysis of bcl- , bcl-x, mcl- , and bax in tumors of central and peripheral nervous system origin overexpression of mcl in anaplastic large cell lymphoma cell lines and tumors mcl antagonizes bax/bak to promote effector cd + and cd + t-cell responses chicken mhc class i and ii gene effects on antibody response kinetics in adult chickens characterization of genetic polymorphism of novel mhc b-lb ii alleles in chinese indigenous chickens the major and a minor class ii β-chain (b-lb) gene flank the tapasin gene in the bf/bl region of the chicken major histocompatibility complex forced expression of hla-dm at the surface of dendritic cells increases loading of synthetic peptides on mhc class ii molecules and modulates t cell responses hla-dm negatively regulates hla-dr -restricted collagen pathogenic peptide presentation and t cell recognition bed'hom, b. organisation and diversity of the class ii dm region of the chicken mhc energy metabolism in adult neural stem cell fate b-cell receptor signalling and its crosstalk with other pathways in normal and malignant cells computational modelling of the receptor-tyrosine-kinase-activated mapk pathway map kinase signalling pathways in cancer genome-wide identification of copy number variations between two chicken lines that differ in genetic resistance to marek's disease. bmc genom integrated analyses of genome-wide dna occupancy and expression profiling identify key genes and pathways involved in cellular transformation by a marek's disease virus oncoprotein transcriptional profiling of meq-dependent genes in marek's disease resistant and susceptible inbred chicken lines we are deeply grateful to all donors who participated in this program. we thank all contributors to the present study. we also thank china scholarship council for their support of this study. the authors declare no conflict of interest. key: cord- -hr smx authors: van kampen, antoine h. c.; moerland, perry d. title: taking bioinformatics to systems medicine date: - - journal: systems medicine doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: hr smx systems medicine promotes a range of approaches and strategies to study human health and disease at a systems level with the aim of improving the overall well-being of (healthy) individuals, and preventing, diagnosing, or curing disease. in this chapter we discuss how bioinformatics critically contributes to systems medicine. first, we explain the role of bioinformatics in the management and analysis of data. in particular we show the importance of publicly available biological and clinical repositories to support systems medicine studies. second, we discuss how the integration and analysis of multiple types of omics data through integrative bioinformatics may facilitate the determination of more predictive and robust disease signatures, lead to a better understanding of (patho)physiological molecular mechanisms, and facilitate personalized medicine. third, we focus on network analysis and discuss how gene networks can be constructed from omics data and how these networks can be decomposed into smaller modules. we discuss how the resulting modules can be used to generate experimentally testable hypotheses, provide insight into disease mechanisms, and lead to predictive models. throughout, we provide several examples demonstrating how bioinformatics contributes to systems medicine and discuss future challenges in bioinformatics that need to be addressed to enable the advancement of systems medicine. systems medicine fi nds its roots in systems biology, the scientifi c discipline that aims at a systems-level understanding of, for example, biological networks, cells, organs, organisms, and populations. it generally involves a combination of wet-lab experiments and computational (bioinformatics) approaches. systems medicine extends systems biology by focusing on the application of systems-based approaches to clinically relevant applications in order to improve patient health or the overall well-being of (healthy) individuals [ ] . systems medicine is expected to change health care practice in the coming years. it will contribute to new therapeutics through the identifi cation of novel disease genes that provide drug candidates less likely to fail in clinical studies [ , ] . it is also expected to contribute to fundamental insights into networks perturbed by disease, improved prediction of disease progression, stratifi cation of disease subtypes, personalized treatment selection, and prevention of disease. to enable systems medicine it is necessary to characterize the patient at various levels and, consequently, to collect, integrate, and analyze various types of data including not only clinical (phenotype) and molecular data, but also information about cells (e.g., disease-related alterations in organelle morphology), organs (e.g., lung impedance when studying respiratory disorders such as asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), and even social networks. the full realization of systems medicine therefore requires the integration and analysis of environmental, genetic, physiological, and molecular factors at different temporal and spatial scales, which currently is very challenging. it will require large efforts from various research communities to overcome current experimental, computational, and information management related barriers. in this chapter we show how bioinformatics is an essential part of systems medicine and discuss some of the future challenges that need to be solved. to understand the contribution of bioinformatics to systems medicine, it is helpful to consider the traditional role of bioinformatics in biomedical research, which involves basic and applied (translational) research to augment our understanding of (molecular) processes in health and disease. the term "bioinformatics" was fi rst coined by the dutch theoretical biologist paulien hogeweg in to refer to the study of information processes in biotic systems [ ] . soon, the fi eld of bioinformatics expanded and bioinformatics efforts accelerated and matured as the fi rst (whole) genome and protein sequences became available. the signifi cance of bioinformatics further increased with the development of highthroughput experimental technologies that allowed wet-lab researchers to perform large-scale measurements. these include determining whole-genome sequences (and gene variants) and genome-wide gene expression with next-generation sequencing technologies (ngs; see table for abbreviations and web links) [ ] , measuring gene expression with dna microarrays [ ] , identifying and quantifying proteins and metabolites with nmr or (lc/ gc-) ms [ ] , measuring epigenetic changes such as methylation and histone modifi cations [ ] , and so on. these, "omics" technologies, are capable of measuring the many molecular building blocks that determine our (patho)physiology. genome-wide measurements have not only signifi cantly advanced our fundamental understanding of the molecular biology of health and disease but table abbreviations and websites have also contributed to new (commercial) diagnostic and prognostic tests [ , ] and the selection and development of (personalized) treatment [ ] . nowadays, bioinformatics is therefore defi ned as "advancing the scientifi c understanding of living systems through computation" (iscb), or more inclusively as "conceptualizing biology in terms of molecules and applying 'informatics techniques' (derived from disciplines such as applied mathematics, computer science and statistics) to understand and organize the information associated with these molecules, on a large scale" [ ] . it is worth noting that solely measuring many molecular components of a biological system does not necessarily result in a deeper understanding of such a system. understanding biological function does indeed require detailed insight into the precise function of these components but, more importantly, it requires a thorough understanding of their static, temporal, and spatial interactions. these interaction networks underlie all (patho)physiological processes, and elucidation of these networks is a major task for bioinformatics and systems medicine . the developments in experimental technologies have led to challenges that require additional expertise and new skills for biomedical researchers: • information management. modern biomedical research projects typically produce large and complex omics data sets , sometimes in the order of hundreds of gigabytes to terabytes of which a large part has become available through public databases [ , ] sometimes even prior to publication (e.g., gtex, icgc, tcga). this not only contributes to knowledge dissemination but also facilitates reanalysis and metaanalysis of data, evaluation of hypotheses that were not considered by the original research group, and development and evaluation of new bioinformatics methods. the use of existing data can in some cases even make new (expensive) experiments superfl uous. alternatively, one can integrate publicly available data with data generated in-house for more comprehensive analyses, or to validate results [ ] . in addition, the obligation of making raw data available may prevent fraud and selective reporting. the management (transfer, storage, annotation, and integration) of data and associated meta-data is one of the main and increasing challenges in bioinformatics that needs attention to safeguard the progression of systems medicine. • data analysis and interpretation . bioinformatics data analysis and interpretation of omics data have become increasingly complex, not only due to the vast volumes and complexity of the data but also as a result of more challenging research ques- tions. bioinformatics covers many types of analyses including nucleotide and protein sequence analysis, elucidation of tertiary protein structures, quality control, pre-processing and statistical analysis of omics data, determination of genotypephenotype relationships, biomarker identifi cation, evolutionary analysis, analysis of gene regulation, reconstruction of biological networks, text mining of literature and electronic patient records, and analysis of imaging data. in addition, bioinformatics has developed approaches to improve experimental design of omics experiments to ensure that the maximum amount of information can be extracted from the data. many of the methods developed in these areas are of direct relevance for systems medicine as exemplifi ed in this chapter. clearly, new experimental technologies have to a large extent turned biomedical research in a data-and compute-intensive endeavor. it has been argued that production of omics data has nowadays become the "easy" part of biomedical research, whereas the real challenges currently comprise information management and bioinformatics analysis. consequently, next to the wet-lab, the computer has become one of the main tools of the biomedical researcher . bioinformatics enables and advances the management and analysis of large omics-based datasets, thereby directly and indirectly contributing to systems medicine in several ways ( fig. . quality control and pre-processing of omics data. preprocessing typically involves data cleaning (e.g., removal of failed assays) and other steps to obtain quantitative measurements that can be used in downstream data analysis. . (statistical) data analysis methods of large and complex omicsbased datasets. this includes methods for the integrative analysis of multiple omics data types (subheading ), and for the elucidation and analysis of biological networks (top-down systems medicine; subheading ). systems medicine comprises top-down and bottom-up approaches. the former represents a specifi c branch of bioinformatics, which distinguishes itself from bottom-up approaches in several ways [ , , ] . top-down approaches use omics data to obtain a holistic view of the components of a biological system and, in general, aim to construct system-wide static functional or physical interaction networks such as gene co-expression networks and protein-protein interaction networks. in contrast, bottom-up approaches aim to develop detailed mechanistic and quantitative mathematical models for sub-systems. these models describe the dynamic and nonlinear behavior of interactions between known components to understand and predict their behavior upon perturbation. however, in contrast to omics-based top-down approaches, these mechanistic models require information about chemical/physical parameters and reaction stoichiometry, which may not be available and require further (experimental) efforts. both the top-down and bottom-up approaches result in testable hypotheses and new wet-lab or in silico experiments that may lead to clinically relevant fi ndings. biomedical research and, consequently, systems medicine are increasingly confronted with the management of continuously growing volumes of molecular and clinical data, results of data analyses and in silico experiments, and mathematical models. due fig. the contribution of bioinformatics ( dark grey boxes ) to systems medicine ( black box ). (omics) experiments, patients, and public repositories provide a wide range of data that is used in bioinformatics and systems medicine studies to policies of scientifi c journals and funding agencies, omics data is often made available to the research community via public databases. in addition, a wide range of databases have been developed, of which more than are currently listed in the molecular biology database collection [ ] providing a rich source of biomedical information. biological repositories do not merely archive data and models but also serve a range of purposes in systems medicine as illustrated below from a few selected examples. the main repositories are hosted and maintained by the major bioinformatics institutes including ebi, ncbi, and sib that make a major part of the raw experimental omics data available through a number of primary databases including genbank [ ] , geo [ ] , pride [ ] , and metabolights [ ] for sequence, gene expression, ms-based proteomics, and ms-based metabolomics data, respectively. in addition, many secondary databases provide information derived from the processing of primary data, for example pathway databases (e.g., reactome [ ] , kegg [ ] ), protein sequence databases (e.g., uniprotkb [ ] ), and many others. pathway databases provide an important resource to construct mathematical models used to study and further refi ne biological systems [ , ] . other efforts focus on establishing repositories integrating information from multiple public databases. the integration of pathway databases [ - ] , and genome browsers that integrate genetic, omics, and other data with whole-genome sequences [ , ] are two examples of this. joint initiatives of the bioinformatics and systems biology communities resulted in repositories such as biomodels, which contains mathematical models of biochemical and cellular systems [ ] , recon that provides a communitydriven, consensus " metabolic reconstruction " of human metabolism suitable for computational modelling [ ] , and seek, which provides a platform designed for the management and exchange of systems biology data and models [ ] . another example of a database that may prove to be of value for systems medicine studies is malacards , an integrated and annotated compendium of about , human diseases [ ] . malacards integrates disease sources into disease cards and establishes gene-disease associations through integration with the well-known genecards databases [ , ] . integration with genecards and cross-references within malacards enables the construction of networks of related diseases revealing previously unknown interconnections among diseases, which may be used to identify drugs for off-label use. another class of repositories are (expert-curated) knowledge bases containing domain knowledge and data, which aim to provide a single point of entry for a specifi c domain. contents of these knowledge bases are often based on information extracted (either manually or by text mining) from literature or provided by domain experts [ - ] . finally, databases are used routinely in the analysis, interpretation, and validation of experimental data. for example, the gene ontology (go) provides a controlled vocabulary of terms for describing gene products, and is often used in gene set analysis to evaluate expression patterns of groups of genes instead of those of individual genes [ ] and has, for example, been applied to investigate hiv-related cognitive disorders [ ] and polycystic kidney disease [ ] . several repositories such as mir disease [ ] , peroxisomedb [ ] , and mouse genome informatics (mgi) [ ] include associations between genes and disorders, but only provide very limited phenotypic information. phenotype databases are of particular interest to systems medicine. one well-known phenotype repository is the omim database, which primarily describes single-gene (mendelian) disorders [ ] . clinvar is another example and provides an archive of reports and evidence of the relationships among medically important human variations found in patient samples and phenotypes [ ] . clinvar complements dbsnp (for singlenucleotide polymorphisms) [ ] and dbvar (for structural variations) [ ] , which both provide only minimal phenotypic information. the integration of these phenotype repositories with genetic and other molecular information will be a major aim for bioinformatics in the coming decade enabling, for example, the identifi cation of comorbidities, determination of associations between gene (mutations) and disease, and improvement of disease classifi cations [ ] . it will also advance the defi nition of the "human phenome," i.e., the set of phenotypes resulting from genetic variation in the human genome. to increase the quality and (clinical) utility of the phenotype and variant databases as an essential step towards reducing the burden of human genetic disease, the human variome project coordinates efforts in standardization, system development, and (training) infrastructure for the worldwide collection and sharing of genetic variations that affect human health [ , ] . to implement and advance systems medicine to the benefi t of patients' health, it is crucial to integrate and analyze molecular data together with de-identifi ed individual-level clinical data complementing general phenotype descriptions. patient clinical data refers to a wide variety of data including basic patient information (e.g., age, sex, ethnicity), outcomes of physical examinations, patient history, medical diagnoses, treatments, laboratory tests, pathology reports, medical images, and other clinical outcomes. inclusion of clinical data allows the stratifi cation of patient groups into more homogeneous clinical subgroups. availability of clinical data will increase the power of downstream data analysis and modeling to elucidate molecular mechanisms, and to identify molecular biomarkers that predict disease onset or progression, or which guide treatment selection. in biomedical studies clinical information is generally used as part of patient and sample selection, but some omics studies also use clinical data as part of the bioinformatics analysis (e.g., [ , ] ). however, in general, clinical data is unavailable from public resources or only provided on an aggregated level. although good reasons exist for making clinical data available (subheading . ), ethical and legal issues comprising patient and commercial confi dentiality, and technical issues are the most immediate challenges [ , ] . this potentially hampers the development of systems medicine approaches in a clinical setting since sharing and integration of clinical and nonclinical data is considered a basic requirement [ ] . biobanks [ ] such as bbmri [ ] provide a potential source of biological material and associated (clinical) data but these are, generally, not publicly accessible, although permission to access data may be requested from the biobank provider. clinical trials provide another source of clinical data for systems medicine studies, but these are generally owned by a research group or sponsor and not freely available [ ] although ongoing discussions may change this in the future ( [ ] and references therein). although clinical data is not yet available on a large scale, the bioinformatics and medical informatics communities have been very active in establishing repositories that provide clinical data. one example is the database of genotypes and phenotypes (dbgap) [ ] developed by the ncbi. study metadata, summarylevel (phenotype) data, and documents related to studies are publicly available. access to de-identifi ed individual-level (clinical) data is only granted after approval by an nih data access committee. another example is the cancer genome atlas (tcga) , which also provides individual-level molecular and clinical data through its own portal and the cancer genomics hub (cghub). clinical data from tcga is available without any restrictions but part of the lower level sequencing and microarray data can only be obtained through a formal request managed by dbgap. medical patient records provide an even richer source of phenotypic information , and has already been used to stratify patient groups, discover disease relations and comorbidity, and integrate these records with molecular data to obtain a systems-level view of phenotypes (for a review see [ ] ). on the one hand, this integration facilitates refi nement and analysis of the human phenome to, for example, identify diseases that are clinically uniform but have different underlying molecular mechanisms, or which share a pathogenetic mechanism but with different genetic cause [ ] . on the other hand, using the same data, a phenome-wide association study ( phewas ) [ ] would allow the identifi cation of unrelated phenotypes associated with specifi c shared genetic variant(s), an effect referred to as pleiotropy. moreover, it makes use of information from medical records generated in routine clinical practice and, consequently, has the potential to strengthen the link between biomedical research and clinical practice [ ] . the power of phenome analysis was demonstrated in a study involving . million patient records, not including genotype information, comprising disorders. in this study it was shown that disease phenotypes form a highly connected network suggesting a shared genetic basis [ ] . indeed, later studies that incorporated genetic data resulted in similar fi ndings and confi rmed a shared genetic basis for a number of different phenotypes. for example, a recent study identifi ed potentially pleiotropic associations through the analysis of snps that had previously been implicated by genome-wide association studies ( gwas) as mediators of human traits, and phenotypes derived from patient records of , individuals [ ] . this demonstrates that phenotypic information extracted manually or through text mining from patient records can help to more precisely defi ne (relations between) diseases. another example comprises the text mining of psychiatric patient records to discover disease correlations [ ] . here, mapping of disease genes from the omim database to information from medical records resulted in protein networks suspected to be involved in psychiatric diseases. integrative bioinformatics comprises the integrative (statistical) analysis of multiple omics data types. many studies demonstrated that using a single omics technology to measure a specifi c molecular level (e.g., dna variation, expression of genes and proteins, metabolite concentrations, epigenetic modifi cations) already provides a wealth of information that can be used for unraveling molecular mechanisms underlying disease. moreover, single-omics disease signatures which combine multiple (e.g., gene expression) markers have been constructed to differentiate between disease subtypes to support diagnosis and prognosis. however, no single technology can reveal the full complexity and details of molecular networks observed in health and disease due to the many interactions across these levels. a systems medicine strategy should ideally aim to understand the functioning of the different levels as a whole by integrating different types of omics data. this is expected to lead to biomarkers with higher predictive value, and novel disease insights that may help to prevent disease and to develop new therapeutic approaches. integrative bioinformatics can also facilitate the prioritization and characterization of genetic variants associated with complex human diseases and traits identifi ed by gwas in which hundreds of thousands to over a million snps are assayed in a large number of individuals. although such studies lack the statistical power to identify all disease-associated loci [ ] , they have been instrumental in identifying loci for many common diseases. however, it remains diffi cult to prioritize the identifi ed variants and to elucidate their effect on downstream pathways ultimately leading to disease [ ] . consequently, methods have been developed to prioritize candidate snps based on integration with other (omics) data such as gene expression, dnase hypersensitive sites, histone modifi cations, and transcription factor-binding sites [ ] . the integration of multiple omics data types is far from trivial and various approaches have been proposed [ - ] . one approach is to link different types of omics measurements through common database identifi ers. although this may seem straightforward, in practice this is complicated as a result of technical and standardization issues as well as a lack of biological consensus [ , - ] . moreover, the integration of data at the level of the central dogma of molecular biology and, for example, metabolite data is even more challenging due to the indirect relationships between genes, transcripts, and proteins on the one hand and metabolites on the other hand, precluding direct links between the database identifi ers of these molecules. statistical data integration [ ] is a second commonly applied strategy, and various approaches have been applied for the joint analysis of multiple data types (e.g., [ , ] ). one example of statistical data integration is provided by a tcga study that measured various types of omics data to characterize breast cancer [ ] . in this study breast cancer samples were subjected to whole-genome and -exome sequencing, and snp arrays to obtain information about somatic mutations, copy number variations, and chromosomal rearrangements. microarrays and rna-seq were used to determine mrna and microrna expression levels, respectively. reverse-phase protein arrays (rppa) and dna methylation arrays were used to obtain data on protein expression levels and dna methylation, respectively. simultaneous statistical analysis of different data types via a "cluster-of-clusters" approach using consensus clustering on a multi-omics data matrix revealed that four major breast cancer subtypes could be identifi ed. this showed that the intrinsic subtypes (basal, luminal a and b, her ) that had previously been determined using gene expression data only could be largely confi rmed in an integrated analysis of a large number of breast tumors. single-level omics data has extensively been used to identify disease-associated biomarkers such as genes, proteins, and metabolites. in fact, these studies led to more than , papers documenting thousands of claimed biomarkers, however, it is estimated that fewer than of these are currently used for routine clinical practice [ ] . integration of multiple omics data types is expected to result in more robust and predictive disease profi les since these better refl ect disease biology [ ] . further improvement of these profi les may be obtained through the explicit incorporation of interrelationships between various types of measurements such as microrna-mrna target, or gene methylation-microrna (based on a common target gene). this was demonstrated for the prediction of short-term and long-term survival from serous cystadenocarcinoma tcga data [ ] . according to the recent casym roadmap : "human disease can be perceived as perturbations of complex, integrated genetic, molecular and cellular networks and such complexity necessitates a new approach." [ ] . in this section we discuss how (approximations) to these networks can be constructed from omics data and how these networks can be decomposed in smaller modules. then we discuss how the resulting modules can be used to generate experimentally testable hypotheses, provide insight into disease mechanisms, lead to predictive diagnostic and prognostic models, and help to further subclassify diseases [ , ] (fig. ) network-based approaches will provide medical doctors with molecular level support to make personalized treatment decisions. in a top-down approach the aim of network reconstruction is to infer the connections between the molecules that constitute a biological network. network models can be created using a variety of mathematical and statistical techniques and data types. early approaches for network inference (also called reverse engineering ) used only gene expression data to reconstruct gene networks. here, we discern three types of gene network inference algorithms using methods based on ( ) correlation-based approaches, ( ) information-theoretic approaches, and ( ) bayesian networks [ ] . co-expression networks are an extension of commonly used clustering techniques , in which genes are connected by edges in a network if the amount of correlation of their gene expression profi les exceeds a certain value. co-expression networks have been shown to connect functionally related genes [ ] . note that connections in a co-expression network correspond to either direct (e.g., transcription factor-gene and protein-protein) or indirect (e.g., proteins participating in the same pathway) interactions. in one of the earliest examples of this approach, pair-wise correlations were calculated between gene expression profi les and the level of growth inhibition caused by thousands of tested anticancer agents, for cancer cell lines [ ] . removal of associations weaker than a certain threshold value resulted in networks consisting of highly correlated genes and agents, called relevance networks, which led to targeted hypotheses for potential single-gene determinants of chemotherapeutic susceptibility. information-theoretic approaches have been proposed in order to capture nonlinear dependencies assumed to be present in most biological systems and that cannot be captured by correlation-based distance measures . these approaches often use the concept of mutual information, a generalization of the correlation coeffi cient which quantifi es the degree of statistical (in)dependence. an example of a network inference method that is based on mutual information is aracne, which has been used to reconstruct the human b-cell gene network from a large compendium of human b-cell gene expression profi les [ ] . in order to discover regulatory interactions, aracne removes the majority of putative indirect interactions from the initial mutual information-based gene network using a theorem from information theory, the data processing inequality. this led to the identifi cation of myc as a major hub in the b-cell gene network and a number of novel myc target genes, which were experimentally validated. whether informationtheoretic approaches are more powerful in general than correlationbased approaches is still subject of debate [ ] . bayesian networks allow the description of statistical dependencies between variables in a generic way [ , ] . bayesian networks are directed acyclic networks in which the edges of the network represent conditional dependencies; that is, nodes that are not connected represent variables that are conditionally independent of each other. a major bottleneck in the reconstruction of bayesian networks is their computational complexity. moreover, bayesian networks are acyclic and cannot capture feedback loops that characterize many biological networks. when time-series rather than steady-state data is available, dynamic bayesian networks provide a richer framework in which cyclic networks can be reconstructed [ ] . gene (co-)expression data only offers a partial view on the full complexity of cellular networks. consequently, networks have also been constructed from other types of high-throughput data. for example, physical protein-protein interactions have been measured on a large scale in different organisms including human, using affi nity capture-mass spectrometry or yeast two-hybrid screens, and have been made available in public databases such as biogrid [ ] . regulatory interactions have been probed using chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (chip-seq) experiments, for example by the encode consortium [ ] . using probabilistic techniques , heterogeneous types of experimental evidence and prior knowledge have been integrated to construct functional association networks for human [ ] , mouse [ ] , and, most comprehensively, more than organisms in the string database [ ] . functional association networks can help predict novel pathway components, generate hypotheses for biological functions for a protein of interest, or identify disease-related genes [ ] . prior knowledge required for these approaches is, for example, available in curated biological pathway databases, and via protein associations predicted using text mining based on their cooccurrence in abstracts or even full-text articles. many more integrative network inference methods have been proposed; for a review see [ ] . the integration of gene expression data with chip data [ ] or transcription factor-binding motif data [ ] has shown to be particularly fruitful for inferring transcriptional regulatory networks. recently, li et al. [ ] described the results from a regression-based model that predicts gene expression using encode (chip-seq) and tcga data (mrna expression data complemented with copy number variation, dna methylation, and microrna expression data). this model infers the regulatory activities of expression regulators and their target genes in acute myeloid leukemia samples. eighteen key regulators were identifi ed, whose activities clustered consistently with cytogenetic risk groups. bayesian networks have also been used to integrate multiomics data. the combination of genotypic and gene expression data is particularly powerful, since dna variations represent naturally occurring perturbations that affect gene expression detected as expression quantitative trait loci ( eqtl ). cis -acting eqtls can then be used as constraints in the construction of directed bayesian networks to infer causal relationships between nodes in the network [ ] . large multi-omics datasets consisting of hundreds or sometimes even thousands of samples are available for many commonly occurring human diseases, such as most tumor types (tcga), alzheimer's disease [ ] , and obesity [ ] . however, a major bottleneck for the construction of accurate gene networks is that the number of gene networks that are compatible with the experimental data is several orders of magnitude larger still. in other words, top-down network inference is an underdetermined problem with many possible solutions that explain the data equally well and individual gene-gene interactions are characterized by a high false-positive rate [ ] . most network inference methods therefore try to constrain the number of possible solutions by making certain assumptions about the structure of the network. perhaps the most commonly used strategy to harness the complexity of the gene network inference problem is to analyze experimental data in terms of biological modules, that is, sets of genes that have strong interactions and a common function [ ] . there is considerable evidence that many biological networks are modular [ ] . module-based approaches effectively constrain the number of parameters to estimate and are in general also more robust to the noise that characterizes high-throughput omics measurements. a detailed review of module-based techniques is outside the scope of this chapter (see, for example [ ] ), but we would like to mention a few examples of successful and commonly used modular approaches. weighted gene co-expression network analysis ( wgcna) decomposes a co-expression network into modules using clustering techniques [ ] . modules can be summarized by their module eigengene, a weighted average expression profi le of all gene member of a given module. eigengenes can then be correlated with external sample traits to identify modules that are related with these traits. parikshak et al. [ ] used wgcna to extract modules from a co-expression network constructed using fetal and early postnatal brain development expression data. next, they established that several of these modules were enriched for genes and rare de novo variants implicated in autism spectrum disorder (asd). moreover, the asd-associated modules are also linked at the transcriptional level and transcription factors were found acting as putative co-regulators of asd-associated gene modules during neocortical development. wgcna can also be used when multiple omics data types are available. one example of such an approach involved the integration of transcriptomic and proteomic data from a study investigating the response to sars-cov infection in mice [ ] . in this study wgcna-based gene and protein co-expression modules were constructed and integrated to obtain module-based disease signatures. interestingly, the authors found several cases of identifi er-matched transcripts and proteins that correlated well with the phenotype, but which showed poor or anticorrelation across these two data types. moreover, the highest correlating transcripts and peptides were not the most central ones in the co-expression modules. vice versa , the transcripts and proteins that defi ned the modules were not those with the highest correlation to the phenotype. at the very least this shows that integration of omics data affects the nature of the disease signatures. identifi cation of active modules is another important integrative modular technique . here, experimental data in the form of molecular profi les is projected onto a biological network, for example a protein-protein interaction network. active modules are those subnetworks that show the largest change in expression for a subset of conditions and are likely to contain key drivers or regulators of those processes perturbed in the experiment. active modules have, for example, been used to fi nd a subnetwork that is overexpressed in a particularly aggressive lymphoma subtype [ ] and to detect signifi cantly mutated pathways [ ] . some active module approaches integrate various types of omics data. one example of such an approach is paradigm [ ] , which translates pathways into factor graphs, a class of models that belongs to the same family of models as bayesian networks, and determines sample-specifi c pathway activity from multiple functional genomic datasets. paradigm has been used in several tcga projects, for example, in the integrated analysis of urothelial bladder carcinomas [ ] . paradigm-based analysis of copy number variations and rna-seq gene expression in combination with a propagation-based network analysis algorithm revealed novel associations between mutations and gene expression levels, which subsequently resulted in the identifi cation of pathways altered in bladder cancer. the identifi cation of activating or inhibiting gene mutations in these pathways suggested new targets for treatment. moreover, this effort clearly showed the benefi ts of screening patients for the presence of specifi c mutations to enable personalized treatment strategies. often, published disease signatures cannot be replicated [ ] or provide hardly additional biological insight. also here (modular) network-based approaches have been proposed to alleviate these problems. a common characteristic of most methods is that the molecular activity of a set of genes is summarized on a per sample basis. summarized gene set scores are then used as features in prognostic and predictive models. relevant gene sets can be based on prior knowledge and correspond to canonical pathways, gene ontology categories, or sets of genes sharing common motifs in their promoter regions [ ] . gene set scores can also be determined by projecting molecular data onto a biological network and summarizing scores at the level of subnetworks for each individual sample [ ] . while promising in principle, it is still subject of debate whether gene set-based models outperform gene-based one s [ ] . the comparative analysis of networks across different species is another commonly used approach to constrain the solution space. patterns conserved across species have been shown to be more likely to be true functional interactions [ ] and to harbor useful candidates for human disease genes [ ] . many network alignment methods have been developed in the past decade to identify commonalities between networks. these methods in general combine sequence-based and topological constraints to determine the optimal alignment of two (or more) biological networks. network alignment has, for example, been applied to detect conserved patterns of protein interaction in multiple species [ , ] and to analyze the evolution of co-expression networks between humans and mice [ , ] . network alignment can also be applied to detect diverged patterns [ ] and may thus lead to a better understanding of similarities and differences between animal models and human in health and disease. information from model organisms has also been fruitfully used to identify more robust disease signatures [ - ] . sweet-cordero and co-workers [ ] used a gene signature identifi ed in a mouse model of lung adenocarcinoma to uncover an orthologous signature in human lung adenocarcinoma that was not otherwise apparent. bild et al. [ ] defi ned gene expression signatures characterizing several oncogenic pathways of human mammary epithelial cells. they showed that these signatures predicted pathway activity in mouse and human tumors. predictions of pathway activity correlated well with the sensitivity to drugs targeting those pathways and could thus serve as a guide to targeted therapies. a generic approach, pathprint, for the integration of gene expression data across different platforms and species at the level of pathways, networks, and transcriptionally regulated targets was recently described [ ] . the authors used their method to identify four stem cell-related pathways conserved between human and mouse in acute myeloid leukemia, with good prognostic value in four independent clinical studies. we reviewed a wide array of different approaches showing how networks can be used to elucidate integrated genetic, molecular, and cellular networks. however, in general no single approach will be suffi cient and combining different approaches in more complex analysis pipelines will be required. this is fi ttingly illustrated by the diggit (driver-gene inference by genetical-genomics and information theory) algorithm [ ] . in brief, diggit identities candidate master regulators from an aracne gene co-expression network integrated with copy number variations that affect gene expression. this method combines several previously developed computational approaches and was used to identify causal genetic drivers of human disease in general and glioblastoma, breast cancer, and alzheimer's disease in particular. this enabled identifi cation of klhl deletions as upstream activators of two previously established master regulators in a specifi c subtype of glioblastoma. systems medicine is one of the steps necessary to make improvements in the prevention and treatment of disease through systems approaches that will (a) elucidate (patho)physiologic mechanisms in much greater detail than currently possible, (b) produce more robust and predictive disease signatures, and (c) enable personalized treatment. in this context, we have shown that bioinformatics has a major role to play. bioinformatics will continue its role in the development, curation, integration, and maintenance of (public) biological and clinical databases to support biomedical research and systems medicine. the bioinformatics community will strengthen its activities in various standardization and curation efforts that already resulted in minimum reporting guidelines [ ] , data capture approaches [ ] , data exchange formats [ ] , and terminology standards for annotation [ ] . one challenge for the future is to remove errors and inconsistencies in data and annotation from databases and prevent new ones from being introduced [ , , - ]. an equally important challenge is to establish, improve, and integrate resources containing phenotype and clinical information. to achieve this objective it seems reasonable that bioinformatics and health informatics professionals team up [ - ] . traditionally health informatics professionals have focused on hospital information systems (e.g., patient records, pathology reports, medical images) and data exchange standards (e.g., hl ), medical terminology standards (e.g., international classifi cation of disease (icd), snomed), medical image analysis, analysis of clinical data, clinical decision support systems, and so on. while, on the other hand, bioinformatics mainly focused on molecular data, it shares many approaches and methods with health informatics. integration of these disciplines is therefore expected to benefi t systems medicine in various ways [ ] . integrative bioinformatics approaches clearly have added value for systems medicine as they provide a better understanding of biological systems, result in more robust disease markers, and prevent (biological) bias that would possibly occur from using single-omics measurements. however, such studies, and the scientifi c community in general, would benefi t from improved strategies to disseminate and share data which typically will be produced at multiple research centers (e.g., https://www.synapse.org ; [ ] ). integrative studies are expected to increasingly facilitate personalized medicine approaches such as demonstrated by chen and coworkers [ ] . in their study they presented a -month "integrative personal omics profi le" (ipop) for a single individual comprising genomic, transcriptomic, proteomic, metabolomic, and autoantibody data. from the whole-genome sequence data an elevated risk for type diabetes (t d) was detected, and subsequent monitoring of hba c and glucose levels revealed the onset of t d, despite the fact that the individual lacked many of the known non-genetic risk factors. subsequent treatment resulted in a gradual return to the normal phenotype. this shows that the genome sequence can be used to determine disease risk in a healthy individual and allows selecting and monitoring specifi c markers that provide information about the actual disease status. network-based approaches will increasingly be used to determine the genetic causes of human diseases. since the effect of a genetic variation is often tissue or cell-type specifi c, a large effort is needed in constructing cell-type-specifi c networks both in health and disease. this can be done using data already available, an approach taken by guan et al. [ ] . the authors proposed tissue-specifi c networks in mouse via their generic approach for constructing functional association networks using lowthroughput, highly reliable tissue-specifi c gene expression information as a constraint. one could also generate new datasets to facilitate the construction of tissue-specifi c networks. examples of such approaches are tcga and the genotype-tissue expression (gtex) project. the aim of gtex is to create a data resource for the systematic study of genetic variation and its effect on gene expression in more than human tissues [ ] . regardless of the way how networks are constructed, it will become more and more important to offer a centralized repository where networks from different cell types and diseases can be stored and accessed. nowadays, these networks are diffi cult to retrieve and are scattered in supplementary fi les with the original papers, links to accompanying web pages, or even not available at all. a resource similar to what the systems biology community has created with the biomodels database would be a great leap forward. there have been some initial attempts in building databases of network models, for example the cellcircuits database [ ] ( http://www.cellcircuits.org ) and the causal biological networks (cbn) database of networks related to lung disease [ ] ( http://causalbionet.com ). however, these are only small-scale initiatives and a much larger and coordinated effort is required. another main bottleneck for the successful application of network inference methods is their validation. most network inference methods to date have been applied to one or a few isolated datasets and were validated using some limited follow-up experiments, for example via gene knockdowns, using prior knowledge from databases and literature as a gold standard, or by generating simulated data from a mathematical model of the underlying network [ , ] . however, strengths and weaknesses of network inference methods across cell types, diseases, and species have hardly been assessed. notable exceptions are collaborative competitions such as the dialogue on reverse engineering assessment and methods (dream) [ ] and industrial methodology for process verifi cation (improver) [ ] . these centralized initiatives propose challenges in which individual research groups can participate and to which they can submit their predictions, which can then be independently validated by the challenge organizers. several dream challenges in the area of network inference have been organized, leading to a better insight into the strengths and weaknesses of individual methods [ ] . another important contribution of dream is that a crowd-based approach integrating predictions from multiple network inference methods was shown to give good and robust performance across diverse data sets [ ] . also in the area of systems medicine challenge-based competitions may offer a framework for independent verifi cation of model predictions. systems medicine promises a more personalized medicine that effectively exploits the growing amount of molecular and clinical data available for individual patients. solid bioinformatics approaches are of crucial importance for the success of systems medicine. however, really delivering the promises of systems medicine will require an overall change of research approach that transcends the current reductionist approach and results in a tighter integration of clinical, wet-lab laboratory, and computational groups adopting a systems-based approach. past, current, and future success of systems medicine will accelerate this change. the road from systems biology to systems medicine participatory medicine: a driving force for revolutionizing healthcare understanding drugs and diseases by systems biology the roots of bioinformatics in theoretical biology sequencing technologies -the next generation exploring the new world of the genome with dna microarrays spectroscopic and statistical techniques for information recovery in metabonomics and metabolomics next-generation technologies and data analytical approaches for epigenomics gene expression profi ling predicts clinical outcome of breast cancer diagnostic tests based on gene expression profi le in breast cancer: from background to clinical use a multigene assay to predict recurrence of tamoxifentreated, node-negative breast cancer what is bioinformatics? a proposed defi nition and overview of the fi eld the importance of biological databases in biological discovery the nucleic acids research database issue and an updated nar online molecular biology database collection reuse of public genome-wide gene expression data experimental design for gene expression microarrays learning from our gwas mistakes: from experimental design to scientifi c method effi cient experimental design and analysis strategies for the detection of differential expression using rna-sequencing impact of yeast systems biology on industrial biotechnology the nature of systems biology gene expression omnibus: microarray data storage, submission, retrieval, and analysis the proteomics identifi cations (pride) database and associated tools: status in metabolights--an open-access generalpurpose repository for metabolomics studies and associated meta-data the reactome pathway knowledgebase data, information, knowledge and principle: back to metabolism in kegg activities at the universal protein resource (uniprot) path models: large-scale generation of computational models from biochemical pathway maps precise generation of systems biology models from kegg pathways pathguide: a pathway resource list pathway commons, a web resource for biological pathway data consensus and confl ict cards for metabolic pathway databases the ucsc genome browser database: update biomodels database: a repository of mathematical models of biological processes a community-driven global reconstruction of human metabolism the seek: a platform for 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archive of relationships among sequence variation and human phenotype searching ncbi's dbsnp database dbvar and dgva: public archives for genomic structural variation using electronic patient records to discover disease correlations and stratify patient cohorts on not reinventing the wheel beyond the genomics blueprint: the th human variome project meeting comprehensive molecular characterization of urothelial bladder carcinoma open clinical trial data for all? a view from regulators clinical trial data as a public good biobanking for europe whose data set is it anyway? sharing raw data from randomized trials sharing individual participant data from clinical trials: an opinion survey regarding the establishment of a central repository ncbi's database of genotypes and phenotypes: dbgap mining electronic health records: towards better research applications and clinical care phenome connections phewas: demonstrating the feasibility of a phenome-wide scan to discover genedisease associations mining the ultimate phenome repository probing genetic overlap among complex human phenotypes systematic comparison of phenomewide association study of electronic medical record data and genome-wide association study data finding the missing heritability of complex diseases systems genetics: from gwas to disease pathways a review of post-gwas prioritization approaches when one and one gives more than two: challenges and opportunities of integrative omics the model organism as a system: integrating 'omics' data sets principles and methods of integrative genomic analyses in cancer toward interoperable bioscience data critical assessment of human metabolic pathway databases: a stepping stone for future integration the bridgedb framework: standardized access to gene, protein and metabolite identifi er mapping services integration of transcriptomics and metabonomics: improving diagnostics, biomarker identifi cation and phenotyping in ulcerative colitis a multivariate approach 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techniques. adaptive computation and machine learning inferring gene networks from time series microarray data using dynamic bayesian networks the biogrid interaction database: update architecture of the human regulatory network derived from encode data reconstruction of a functional human gene network, with an application for prioritizing positional candidate genes a genomewide functional network for the laboratory mouse string v . : protein-protein interaction networks, with increased coverage and integration advantages and limitations of current network inference methods computational discovery of gene modules and regulatory networks a semisupervised method for predicting transcription factor-gene interactions in escherichia coli regression analysis of combined gene expression regulation in acute myeloid leukemia integrating large-scale functional genomic data to dissect the complexity of yeast regulatory networks integrated systems approach identifi es genetic nodes and networks in late-onset alzheimer's disease a survey of the genetics of stomach, liver, and adipose gene expression from a morbidly obese cohort an introduction to systems biology: design principles of biological circuits from signatures to models: understanding cancer using microarrays integrative approaches for fi nding modular structure in biological networks weighted gene coexpression network analysis: state of the art integrative functional genomic analyses implicate specifi c molecular pathways and circuits in autism multi-omic network signatures of disease identifying functional modules in protein-protein interaction networks: an integrated exact approach algorithms for detecting signifi cantly mutated pathways in cancer inference of patient-specifi c pathway activities from multi-dimensional cancer genomics data using paradigm pathway-based personalized analysis of cancer network-based classifi cation of breast cancer metastasis current composite-feature classifi cation methods do not 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investigations: the mibbi project data standards for omics data: the basis of data sharing and reuse biomedical ontologies: a functional perspective pdb improvement starts with data deposition what we do not know about sequence analysis and sequence databases annotation error in public databases: misannotation of molecular function in enzyme superfamilies improving the description of metabolic networks: the tca cycle as example more than , problems with protein domain databases: transmembrane regions, signal peptides and the issue of sequence homology biomedical and health informatics in translational medicine amia board white paper: defi nition of biomedical informatics and specifi cation of core competencies for graduate education in the discipline synergy between medical informatics and bioinformatics: facilitating genomic medicine for future health care elixir: a distributed infrastructure for european biological data enabling transparent and collaborative computational analysis of tumor types within the cancer genome atlas personal omics profi ling reveals dynamic molecular and medical phenotypes tissue-specifi c functional networks for prioritizing phenotype and disease genes the genotype-tissue expression (gtex) project on crowd-verifi cation of biological networks inference and validation of predictive gene networks from biomedical literature and gene expression data verifi cation of systems biology research in the age of collaborative competition dialogue on reverse-engineering assessment and methods: the dream of highthroughput pathway inference revealing strengths and weaknesses of methods for gene network inference wisdom of crowds for robust gene network inference we would like to thank dr. aldo jongejan for his comments that improved the text. key: cord- -it wach authors: jiao, long r.; havlik, roman; nicholls, joanna; jensen, steen lindkaer; habib, nagy a. title: suicide gene therapy in liver tumors date: journal: suicide gene therapy doi: . / - - - : sha: doc_id: cord_uid: it wach charaterization of a variety of genomic defects in malignant cells ( ) has led to attempts to treat cancer by gene therapy. gene therapy is a therapeutic approach in which therapeutic nucleic acids are transferred into the affected organs. although the ideal concept would be the replacement of the abnormal gene by a copy of the functional gene, currently there have not been reliable and safe techniques to allow the site-specific integration of dna into the human genome ( ). thus, almost all gene therapies are developed by simply transferring the therapeutic gene into somatic cells without replacing the abnormal gene. the goal is to identify and correct genetic abnormalities interfering with the cell cycle and to correct them in all cells. technically, there are two methods amenable for gene transfer: reintroduction of in vitro transferred gene into the body and direct transfer of gene into the target cells in vivo. charaterization of a variety of genomic defects in malignant cells ( ) has led to attempts to treat cancer by gene therapy. gene therapy is a therapeutic approach in which therapeutic nucleic acids are transferred into the affected organs. although the ideal concept would be the replacement of the abnormal gene by a copy of the functional gene, currently there have not been reliable and safe techniques to allow the site-specific integration of dna into the human genome ( ). thus, almost all gene therapies are developed by simply transferring the therapeutic gene into somatic cells without replacing the abnormal gene. the goal is to identify and correct genetic abnormalities interfering with the cell cycle and to correct them in all cells. technically, there are two methods amenable for gene transfer: reintroduction of in vitro transferred gene into the body and direct transfer of gene into the target cells in vivo. cancer is a genetic disease characterized by failure to maintain the fidelity of dna because of germ-line and/or somatic gene changes ( ). genes involved in carcinogenesis are often usefully categorized as either oncogenes contributing to the development of cancer or tumor suppressor genes suppressing the development and maintenance of the cancer phenotype. therefore, gene therapy is developed by targeting these two genes. current strategies undergoing development for gene therapy involve in restoring tumor suppressor gene function, downregulating oncogeneic expression, stimulating immune response, introducing genes that either increase drug sensitivity or confer multidrug resistance, and modulating tumor angiogenesis genetically ( - ). in this chapter, principles and methods of suicide gene therapy are reviewed together with the results of its clinical trials. protocols required for application of human study are discussed in details by using ad-tk gene therapy for liver tumors as an example. suicide gene therapy consists of the intracellular delivery of a gene encoded for an enzyme that can transform a nontoxic prodrug into a toxic substance ( ) . these suicide genes are not present in human cells, so an elective delivery of these genes into cancer cells followed by the administration of a prodrug can lead to a conversion of the drug into cytotoxic substances in the transduced cells. the delivery and transcription of a tumor-specific suicide gene in vivo are crucial for suicide gene therapy to be effective. currently, two strategies are being investigated to selectively transduce tumor cells: tumor-specific vectors and control of suicide gene transcription in tissues or tumors with a tumor-specific promoter. promoters such as carcinoembryonic antigen (cea), or α-fetoprotein (afp) for liver tumors, limit gene expression to cea-or afp-positive cells only. the most commonly used suicide genes are cytosine deaminase (cd) and the herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (hsv-tk). acyclovir and ganciclovir are used for the treatment of herpes simplex virus (hsv) infections. these drugs are phosphorylated to the active form by the enzyme thymidine kinase (tk) encoded for part of the hsv genome. the hsv-tk gene is expressed after herpetic viral tk transcription, leading to activation of the drug and cell death. to achieve expression of hsv-tk, which is specific only to hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) cells, an afp promoter has been constructed. the promoter ensures that only cells expressing afp are able to transcribe and express the hsv-tk gene. the first hsv-tk suicide gene system was introduced by moolten ( , ) . under the control of an afp promoter, an adenoviral vector was used to bring the hsv-tk gene into various hcc cell lines ( ). following ganciclovir (gcv) administration, cell death occurred in hepatoma cells producing afp, leaving non-afp-producing cell lines unaffected. phosphorylated gcv is thought to cause cell death by the inhibition of dna polymerase and by causing chain termination during dna synthesis in dividing cells, which then leads to apoptosis ( ). a bystander effect has been described, both in vitro and in vivo, where neighboring hsv-tk-negative cells have died when in contact with hsv-tk-positive cells after gcv treatment ( ). this increases the effectiveness of suicide gene therapy, and only a part of a tumor mass needs to be transfected by a suicide gene for tumor destruction. a glucocorticoidresponsive element exists upstream of the afp gene in hepatoma cells, which explains the increase in afp observed after the addition of dexamethasone into the culture medium of such cells ( ). it is possible that the potency of the tk/gcv suicide system could be enhanced by the addition of dexamethasone to a hepg cell line ( ) . a retrovirus vector (lnaf . tk) carrying the hsv-tk gene regulated only by a human afp promoter has also been reported to provide gcv-mediated cytotoxicity in high-afp-producing human hepatoma cells, but not in low-afp-producing cells. the retrovirus has been further improved so that the hsv-tk gene expression is under the control of a human afp enhancer directly linked to its promoter [lnaf . (e+)tk]. the vector also sensitized both low-and intermediate-afp-producing hepatoma cells to gcv treatment, and did not affect cell growth in nonhepatoma cells ( ) . in animal models, gcv treatment has led to more pronounced growth inhibition in the lnaf . (e+)tk infected cells than in the lnaf . tk infected cells ( ) . these results indicate that an afp enhancer directly linked to its promoter can further enhance tumoricidal activity in gene therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma. most in vivo studies have used subcutaneously grown human hcc tumor xenografts in mice followed by transfection with an afp-hsv-tk gene in an adenoviral vector. tumor selectivity was confirmed by the regression of huh- established tumors in athymic mice, whereas normal tissues remained unaffected ( ). the bystander effect enabled tumor regression even when only % of the tumor mass expressed hsv-tk ( ). a similar therapeutic response has been seen in rats with colorectal liver metastases, where following direct intratumoral injections of hsv-tk-producing packaging cells, a -fold reduction in tumor mass was noted following gcv treatment when compared with controls ( ). kuriyama et al. described cancer gene therapy with the gcv-hsv-tk system that induced efficient antitumor effects and protective immunity in immunocompetent mice, but not in nude mice. this indicates that a t-cell-mediated immune response may be a critical factor for hsv-tk gene therapy to be successful ( ) . unfortunately, severe hepatic dysfunction has been described following adenovirus-mediated transfer of the hsv-tk gene and gcv administration in a rat model of colorectal liver metastases ( ). hepatic expression of hsv-tk was demonstrated, both in tumor-bearing and in tumor-free liver tissue. the hepatic hsv-tk expression provoked severe liver dysfunction and mortality upon gcv administration, and, in addition, normal, nonmitotic tissues were affected by the adenovirus-mediated hsv-tk transfer and subsequent gcv administration ( ). cytosine deaminase is a nontoxic gene present in some fungi and bacteria. the gene plays a role in the conversion of cytosine to uracil. cells containing this gene can convert -fluorocytosine ( -fc) into the cytotoxic chemotherapeutic reagent -fluorouracil ( -fu). the escherichia coli cd gene is currently being used as a suicide gene so that genetically modified cells "commit suicide" in the presence of -fc. the cd gene has been used with an afp promoter to kill afp-positive hcc cell lines in the presence of -fc ( ). a bystander effect occurred irrespective of cell-tocell contact with transduced cells. on cell lysis, -fu is released into the medium and is thus likely to be responsible for the bystander effect, and, indeed, the -fu levels in the medium correlated well with the degree of cytotoxicity ( ). afp-positive hcc tumors that have been established subcutaneously in vivo have been shown to regress significantly after adenoviral-mediated insertion of the cd gene (with an afp promoter) and subsequent -fc administration, and in one study, nontumor tissue was unaffected ( ). block sung et al. have recently published the result of a phase i clinical trial using intratumoral injection of escalating doses of adenovirus-mediated suicide gene followed by intravenous gcv at a fixed dose in patients with colorectal liver metastases ( ). the aim was to assess the safety and maximal tolerated dosage of adv.rsv-tk. the vector was infected into a metastatic tumor in the liver under local anaethesia and ultrasound guidance. a total of patients were entered into the trial who received five dose-level cohorts of adv.rsv-tk, from . × to . × virus particles per patient. the response rate was assessed by world health organization (who) criteria with follow-up imaging studies. the assessment of toxicity was carried out according to common toxicity criteria v. . from the national cancer institute (bethesda, md). one patient was withdrawn from the study because of clinical deterioration from disease and died. stable disease (defined as < % change in the size of the tumor measured on computed tomography [ct] or magnetic resonance imaging [mri]) was seen in patients. one patient had a biopsy of the injected tumor at wk following treatment that revealed extensive necrosis of the tumor on histology, whereas five others had a biopsy taken at the later date but showed no evidence of necrosis. adv.rsv-tk dna was not detected in any of these six biopsed specimen. low transient toxicities were present in patients including grade elevations in serum aminotransferase in three patients, grade - fevers in five patients, grade thrombocytopenia in one patient, and grade leucopenia in three patients. one patient is alive at . mo, but the remaining died between . and . mo (median: . mo). the authors concluded that adv.rsv-tk could be safely administered by percutaneous intratumoral injection in patients with hepatic metastases at doses up to . × virus particles per patient and could provide the basis for future clinical trials. however, the trial did not demonstrate any tumor reponse following intratumoural injection of adv.rsv-tk. a phase i clinical trial using a replication-deficient adenovirus to deliver the cd gene to metastatic colonic cancer of the liver has been initiated ( ). the patients are being treated with a direct intratumoral injection of the cd vector in combination with oral -fu. to safeguard the development of human gene therapy for clinical application, various countries have now established regulatory bodies for gene therapy to ensure safety and benefit for humankind. in the united states, federal guidelines for research involving recombinant dna molecules were issued in . the guidelines require that institutions establish an institutional biosafety committee to monitor the use of recombinant dna in the laboratory, in micro-organisms, in animals, and in humans. there are a number of approvals that are required for a proposed human clinical gene therapy trial to be approved and allow patient accrual. in the united kingdom, the gene therapy advisory committee (gtac) together with the medicines control agency (mca) are established to evaluate proposals for human gene therapy. the creation of the european medicines evaluation agency (emea) has standardized approaches across european countires. in the united states, guidelines have been drawn up by the recombinant dna advisory committee (rac) of the national institutes of health to facilitate documentation, review, and discussion on human gene therapy. in addition, each of the vector delivery systems used in human gene transfer trials is considered a biologic and requires the filing of an investigation new drug application for each specific vector. . to assess the safety of direct intratumoural injection of ad-tk followed by gcv administration . to assess the efficacy of intratumoral injection of ad-tk followed by gcv administration, and to compare this treatment with standard treatment of percutaneous ethanol injection alone in groups of patients with irresectable hepatocellular carcinoma. . to study the biological efficacy, including the efficiency and stability of gene transfer by analysis of tumor tissue following therapy. the clinical evidence of antitumor efficacy will also be noted. . to seek to identify dose level by injecting ad-tk at differing dose levels in successive cohorts of patients. live, wild-type (nonrecombinant) adenoviruses have been used clinically as vaccines for the prophylaxis of adenoviral upper respiratory infections, a disease of low morbidity but high incidence. these vaccines, which were at one time given routinely to military recruits, are well tolerated and are considered nononcogenic. recombinant versions of the adenovirus have entered clinical trials both as injections and as oral vaccines ( ). thus far, they appear to be without significant toxicity. recently, clinical trials using recombinant, replication-defective adenoviral vectors for gene therapy have been initiated. in these studies, recombinant adenoviral vectors carrying the gene for cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (cftr) are given via intraairway administration to patients with cystic fibrosis. tursz at the gustave roussy institut, paris, initiated a phase i study to evaluate the feasibility, safety, and clinical effects of the intratumor administration of a recombinant-deficient adenovirus containing the marker gene encoding the e. coli enzyme βgalactosidase (ad-β-gal) in untreated patients with advanced lung cancer ( ). the first dose level was , the second was , and the third was pfu (plaque-forming units) (three patients per dose level). all patients received concomitant chemotherapy. β-gal express (x-gal) staining was observed in three out of six tumor biopsies. the microbiological and immunological follow-up of patients who were carriers of wildtype adenovirus before injection. only viral cultures of bronchoalveolar (bal) specimens taken immediately after ad-β-gal injection were positive in all patients. all body-fluid specimens were positive at polymerase chain reaction (pcr) analysis within the first d after injection, as were blood samples drawn min after injection in three patients at the second dose level. bal samples remained positive at mo in two patients and at mo in one patient after ad-β-gal injection. no antibody (ab) response to β-gal was noted in patients, but four had a significant rise in their antiadenovirus ab titers. all samples (throat and stools) taken by the medical staff before and after injection of patients were negative for wild-type adenovirus and ad-β-gal. sera tests (cf) in staff were also negative for antiadenovirus ab titers. this study shows that a marker gene can be safely transferred into human tumor cells with a recombinant adenoviral vector. the study seeks to determine the safety, biological efficacy, and effect of the ad-tk-gcv dose in the locoregional gene therapy of primary malignant tumors of the liver. the study design consists of an open-label, nonrandomized, dose-escalation phase i/ii trial. the ad-tk will be administered by direct intratumoral injection under ct scan or ultrasound control. the study will include sampling on one occasion of normal and malignant tissue from the livers of patients following ad-tk-gcv treatment. this will greatly facilitate assessments of clinical safety and biological efficacy, including efficiency and stability of gene transfer. furthermore, sampling of treated tissues will require minimal additional morbidity for study patients. the replication-deficient adenovirus encoding for hsv-tk (ad-tk) will be administered in cm of normal ( . %) saline directly into the tumor under ultrasound or ct guidance. dose escalation will occur until the maximum tolerated level or dose level × pfu is achieved. thereafter, a further patients will receive the maximum tolerated level. the gcv will be administered intravenously at mg/kg/d, twice a day for d. the first dose will be given d after ad-tk administration. this procedure will be used only in patients over the age of yr in whom conventional treatments have failed or are inapplicable. the risks to the patients are the nforeseen effects of expression of the vector within the tumor, the transmission of other biologically active products with the vector construct, and the clinical risks associated with the percutaneous biopsy of a tumor. the risks seem to be negligible, as patients were treated in the united states with -pfu doses ( times more than the maximum proposed dose in this study) and showed no serious side effects. the only abnormalities observed at the -pfu dose level were low-grade fevers and transient elevation in liver function tests. recently, however, a death was reported in a -yrold man in pennsylvania (usa), following the administration of pfu adenovirus. the cause of death was reported to be the result of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards). to the best of our knowledge, the risk appears to be negligible for doses of adenovirus up to pfu. the risk of bleeding after percutaneous biopsy of the tumor is less than %. a generally accepted mortality rate in standard textbooks is between . % and . % ( , ) . patients must fulfill all of the following criteria in order to be eligible for study admission: histological diagnosis of primary liver tumor; at least yr and less than yr of age( women of childbearing potential may be included, but must use a reliable and appropriate contraceptive method, not including abstinence, for at least mo before study start, for the duration of the study, and for three mo afterward. results of a negative pregnancy test at study start must be available. postmenopausal women must be amenorrheal for at least mo before the study start. men of childbearing potential should practice a barrier method of contraception for the duration of the study, have a life expectancy of at least mo, and have adequate performance status (karnofsky score ≥ %). the required values for initial laboratory data are as follows: patients with any of the following will be excluded from study admission: pregnant or lactating women; women with either a positive pregnancy test at screen or baseline, or who have not had a pregnancy test; women of childbearing potential who are not using a reliable and appropriate contraceptive method; postmenopausal women who have been amenorrheal for less than mo; uncontrolled serious bacterial, viral, fungal, or parasitic infection; patients who are human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) positive; systemic corticosteroid therapy or other immunosuppressive therapy administered within the last mo; karnofsky score less than %; participation in another investigation therapy study within the last wk; any underlying medical condition that in the principal investigators' opinion, will make participation in the study hazardous or obscure the interpretation of adverse events. the following must be performed within wk prior to study admission: complete medical history; physical examination; toxicity evaluation; performance status; height and weight and body surface area; laboratory screening (*eligibility criteria) for full blood count with differential, platelet count*, serum electrolytes (sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate), urea, creatinine*, glucose, uric acid, albumin, liver function tests, including total protein, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, aspartate transaminase (ast*), alanine transaminase (alt*), total bilirubin*, alkaline phosphatase, lactate dehydrogenase (ldh), pt*, partial thomboplastin time (ptt*); urinalysis; α-fetoprotein; electrocardiogram ( -lead); chest x-ray (pa and lateral views); abdomen and pelvis ct or mri scan. this should contain a title like "gene therapy of tumors of the liver using ad-tk intratumourally followed by ganciclovir administration: a phase i/ii study. " include the following sections and text in the leaflet. you are being invited to take part in a research study because the cancer in your liver, unfortunately, cannot be removed surgically or treated in any other way. the purpose of the study is to find out which of two treatments may be better for treating your type of liver cancer. the first is a gene therapy treatment that comprises two different drugs, ad-tk (a gene therapy product) that will be given by direct injection into the tumor and ganciclovir (a drug that kills certain types of viruses) that will be injected into a vein in your arm. the second treatment is a treatment that is used commonly for liver cancer, which is the injection of ethanol (a type of alcohol) directly into the tumor. this is a randomized study and so you will only receive one of the treatments described above. before you decide whether or not to take part in this study it is important for you to understand why the research is being done and what it will involve. please take time to read the following information carefully and discuss it with friends and relatives if you wish. ask us if there is anything that is not clear or you would like more information. take time to decide whether or not you wish to take part. thank you for reading this. two weeks before you have one of the treatments, the following procedures will need to be undertaken: . you will have various blood samples taken from a vein in your arm. . you will have a physical examination. . you will be asked about your medical history. . you will have a chest x-ray and an electrocardiogram (ecg) of your heart. . you will have a special scan of your liver to show the doctors where the tumor is in your liver and so they can measure its size. if you agree to take part in the study, you will be allocated to one of two treatment groups: group : treatment of your liver tumor with gene therapy (ad-tk) followed by a -wk course of ganciclovir group : treatment of your liver tumor with ethanol injection ad-tk will be given by injecting it directly into the tumor under ultrasound or ct scan control in the x-ray department. one week after the ad-tk injection, you will be given ganciclovir into a vein in our arm, twice a day, for wk. afterward, you will have to rest for a few hours before going home. you will also have one liver biopsy performed during the period of the study to see if the drugs have affected the cancer. blood samples will be taken on each occasion you come to the clinic. on day (month ) of your treatment schedule, you will undergo a ct scan or a mri scan to measure the size of your tumor. this will help to tell us whether the treatment has been effective. you will be given an injection of ethanol directly into the tumor in the liver under ultrasound or ct guidance in the x ray department. afterwards you will have to rest for a few hours before going home. blood samples will be taken on each occasion you come to the clinic. on day (month ) of your treatment schedule you will undergo a ct scan or a mri scan to measure the size of your tumour. this will help to tell us whether the treatment has been effective. if you decide to take part in this study, your doctor would like to see you every months in the clinic to follow your progress. your doctor would like to track your progress after the study has finished and would also like to keep you informed of any new treatment information about the drugs you had while participating in this study. in order for this to happen, you must tell your doctor if you move. if the treatment has made a difference to the tumor, you will be invited to participate in a further study to receive a further course of treatment. this study will last for about days ( months), but the doctors would like to continue to see you every months thereafter. there is a small risk of bleeding from the injection site in the liver after treatment with either the gene therapy drug or the ethanol. also, a small bruise and some sore-ness may be left for a short time at the spot where the doctors inject the drug through the skin. there is a small chance that the liver may bleed after the liver biopsy. if this happens, you will have to stay in hospital until the bleeding settles. normally, there may be slight pain in your arm when blood is taken. a small bruise may be left for a short time at the spot where the blood was taken. as this is a new treatment, the risks associated with it are largely unknown. however, experiments suggest that the likelihood of serious side effect is extremely small. if you decide to participate and you experience a reaction to the drug, the doctors will provide you with every medical support. we do ask that you or your partner take reliable and appropriate contraceptive precautions for month prior to the treatment and for months afterward to prevent a pregnancy. this is because we do not know the effect the drug might have on an unborn child. it is important for you to know that recently a death occurred in the united states following an adenovirus injection given in the same way in which you will receive it. the patient was suffering from metabolic liver disease and was given a dose far higher than any that you will receive in this study. your doctor may take you out of the study if your disease becomes worse, if new relevant scientific developments occur, for administrative reasons, or if your doctor feels that taking part in this study is no longer in your best interest. you may, of course, wish to withdraw yourself from the study. it is not possible to tell if there will be any personal benefit from taking part in this study. the information obtained may be used scientifically and might be helpful to others. sometimes during the course of a research project, new information becomes available. if this happens, your doctor will tell you or your legally accepted representative about it and discuss with you whether you want to continue in the study. if you decide to withdraw, your care will not be affected. if you decide to continue, you may be asked to sign an updated consent form. also, on receiving new information, your doctor might consider it to be in your best interests to withdraw you from the study. the reasons will be explained to you and your care will continue. if you consent to take part in the research, your medical records may be inspected for the purposes of analyzing the results. your name, however, will not be disclosed outside of the hospital. any information that leaves the hospital will have your name and address removed so that you cannot be recognized from it. you will not be identified in any report or publication that arises from this study. you may choose not to take part in this study. you may choose to have no further tests and receive supportive care only. you doctor will discuss these choices with you. if you have any questions about taking part in this study or your future participation please contact dr. on . thank you for considering helping us with this important trial. "gene therapy of tumours of the liver using ad-tk intratumourally followed by ganciclovir administration: a phase i/ii study" name of researcher: please initial box i confirm that i have read and understand the information sheet ᮀ for the above study and have had the opportunity to ask questions. i understand that my participation is voluntary and that i am free to withdraw at any time without giving any reason without my medical care or legal rights being affected. i understand that sections of any of my medical notes may be ᮀ looked at by responsible individuals or by individuals from regulatory authorities where it is relevant. i give ᮀ permission for these individuals to have access to my records. i agree to take part in the above study. the ad-tk will be given intratumorally under ultrasound or ct scan guidance. gcv will be then administered intravenously twice per day for d, starting at d after ad-tk injection. dosages will be calculated based on functional units of ad-tk. the dose of ganciclovir will be mg/kg/d. the first three patients enrolled in the study will receive ad-tk at dose level . if no dose-limiting toxicity (dlt) is observed after a period of at least d of posttreatment monitoring, the next three patients will receive ad-tk at dose level , and so on. if dlt is observed, the appropriate dose escalation decision rule will be followed. the dose level will be escalated to the next level according to the following rules. dose escalation decision rule out of enter next three patients at the next dose level. out of enter up to three additional patients at current dose level. if none or one out of the three of the second group experiences dlt, then enter three patients at the next dose level. as soon as two of the second group experience dlt, then the mtd has been reached at the previous (lower) level and dose escalation will stop. out of enter up to three additional patients at current dose level. if none experience dlt, then enter three patients at the next dose level. as soon as any patient of the second group experi ences dlt, the mtd has been reached at the previous (lower) level and dose escalation will stop. out of the mtd has been reached at the previous (lower) level and dose escalation will stop. patients randomized for ethanol injection will be given cm of ethanol intratumorally under an ultrasound or ct scan guidance. once a patient has been enrolled in the study she/he will be randomized to receive either ad-tk-gcv or ethanol. patients will be treated in the radiology department or the clinic on an outpatient basis. immediately following ad-tk application, vital signs (body temperature, respiratory rate, heart rate, blood pressure) will be performed every min during the first hour after the injection. these evaluations will be performed on d , , , and and will include clinical evaluations (complete history, physical examination, toxicity evaluation, performance status, height and weight, body surface area), as well as blood tests (cbc with differential, platelet count, serum electrolytes [sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate], bun, creatinine, glucose, uric acid, albumin, total protein, calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium, ast, alt, total bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, ldh, pt, ptt), and urinalysis. other studies will also be undertaken that will include pharmacokinetics and immune responses. serum will be stored in case of future investigations. patients will undergo percutaneous tru-cut liver biopsy of the liver tumor and normal liver as guided by ultrasound or ct scan. patients will be considered to be actively on study from the time of study admission until poststudy evaluation on d . patients will be considered associated with the study after poststudy evaluation and will undergo regular follow-up evaluations thereafter. the following evaluations will be performed on an outpatient basis on day (poststudy evaluation), then every mo for yr, then annually. these evaluations will be the same as in subheading . . . abdomen and pelvis ct or mri scan will be performed on d . if tumor response is noted, the abdominal scan will be repeated. one of the main objectives of this study is to assess the biological efficacy of ad-tk, including efficiency and stability. the molecular and cellular effects of ad-tk treatment on malignant tissue will be assayed. malignant tissue from the ad-tk-treated liver will be obtained with tru-cut biopsy. toxicity will be assessed using the national cancer institute criteria. toxicity will be formally evaluated on d , , , and then every mo for yr, then annually. all toxic events will be managed with full and optimal supportive care, including transfer to the intensive care unit (icu) if appropriate. the terms "adverse event," "adverse experience," and "adverse reaction" include any adverse event whether or not it is considered to be drug related. this includes any side effect, injury, toxicity, or sensitivity reaction. an adverse event is considered serious if any of the following occur: it is fatal or life-threatening; it is severely or permanently disabling; it requires new or prolonged inpatient hospitalization; it involves the exacerbation of a congenital anomaly or the development of cancer; it results in an overdose. an adverse event is considered unexpected if it is not identified in nature, severity, or frequency in the current investigator brochure. patients will be instructed to report any adverse event to the investigators. all adverse events occurring during participation in the study will be documented. all adverse events will be reported to both the local ethical committee and the gtac, with a description of the severity, duration, and outcome of the event, and the investigator's opinion regarding the relationship, if any, between the event and the study treatment. the tumor response to either treatment regimen is one of the primary objectives of this study. observations of antitumor activity will be collected and analyzed. standard criteria will be formally employed to classify the antitumor responses observed in patients with measurable disease in the liver. measurable disease will consist of bidimensionally measurable liver lesions with perpendicular diameters of ≥ cm × ≥ cm. patients may withdraw or be removed from the study for any of the following reasons: • patient's request to withdraw • patient unwilling or unable to comply with study requirements • clinical need for concomitant or ancillary therapy not permitted in the study • any unacceptable treatment-related toxicity precluding further participation in the study • unrelated intercurrent illness that, in the judgment of the principal investigator, will affect assessments of clinical status to a significant degree a patient removed from the study prior to any of the scheduled response evaluations will not be considered inevaluable for response. the study will explore the relationships among pharmacokinetic parameters, toxicity, and biological efficacy. the study will explore the relationship between dose of ad-tk and efficiency of transduction (gene transfer). evaluation of clinical efficacy is one of the primary objectives of this study. treatment effect will be estimated as the proportion of patients with an objective response (complete or partial) following ad-tk-gcv as compared with objective response to alcohol therapy. chi-square tests and logistic regression will be used to analyze which variables are significant predictors of response. the kaplan-meier method will be used to estimate progression-free survival. it is expected that the construct will not spread to other persons. tursz et al. studied patients treated with recombinant adenoviral vectors in lung cancer patients and found no cross-contamination to the medical and nursing staff ( ). in the french study, there was no shedding of the virus beyond the third day, and we intend to keep the patients overnight in separate rooms with barrier nursing. we will analyze the urine and sputum of the medical and nursing staff during this period. in order to minimize the risk of cross-infection to offspring, only patients above the age of will be included. it is unlikely that cancer patients above this age will remain reproductively active. nevertheless, patients will be warned of the risk and will be advised to take contraceptive measures. for this type of anticancer therapy, viruses need to be rigidly tumor-cell-specific. dl originally produced by barker and berk in ( ) has the ability to target and destroy tumor cells only and led to it being termed the "smart bomb" cancer virus ( ). after viral internalization, intracellular adenoviral replication augments an administered dose to the level required to kill the tumor host cells only, leaving neighboring normal tissues intact. dl is an adenovirus hybrid of serotypes and with a genome deletion in the e b region, causing loss of expression of viral -kda protein (e b k). e b k has been shown to bind to the mammalian tumor cell suppressor protein p and block p -mediated transcriptional activation ( ). p has many functions including arrest of the g phase of cell proliferation via the cyclindependent kinase inhibitor p /waf /cip , or apoptosis through induction of genes such as bax ( ) . studies have shown that dl appears to replicate independently of p status in many tumor cell lines ( - ) . phase i trials of direct intratumoral injection of dl in more than patients with recurrent head and neck cancer with p mutations have already shown necrosis in a significant number of tumors, without evidence of damage to normal tissue ( ). habib et al. ( ) have reported the results of a phase i and a phase ii clinical study, in which patients with primary and secondary liver tumors were treated with e b -kda deleted dl . the adenovirus was given via three different routes: intratumoral, intra-arterial, and intravenous. the study has confirmed that dl was well tolerated when given as either monotherapy or in combination with chemotherapy. furthermore, ultrastructural examination of tissue showed the presence of adenovirus in cell cytoplasm around the nucleus and revealed two dissimilar end points of cell death after virus infection: a preapoptotic sequence and necrosis ( ). reid et al. have recently published their results of a phase i study in patients with colorectal liver metastases by using intra-arterial administration of a replication-selective adenovirus (dl ) ( ) . in this study, dl was infused into the hepatic artery at doses of × to × particles for two cycles (d and ) with subsequent cycles of dl administered in combination with intravenous -fu and leucovorin. they have successfully demonstrated intravascular administration of dl virus and have shown that hepatic artery infusion of the attenuated adenovirus dl was well tolerated at doses resulting in infection, replication, and chemotherapy-associated antitumoral activity. the molecular genetics of cancer ideal gene therapy: approaches and horizons tissue-specific growth suppression and chemosensitivity promotion in human hepatocellular carcinoma cells by tetroviral-mediated transfer of the wild-type p gene gene therapy for alpha-fetoprotein-producing human hepatoma cells by adenovirus-mediated transfer of the herpes simplex virus in vivo gene therapy for alpha-fetoprotein producing hepatocellular carcinoma by adenovirus-mediated transfer of cytosine deaminase gene retro-virus-mediated gene therapy for human hepatocellular carcinoma transplanted in athymic mice regional versus systemic delivery of recombinant vaccinia virus as suicide gene therapy for murine liver metastases wild-type p induces apoptosis in hep b through up-regulation of bax expression preliminary report: the short-term effects of direct p dna injection in primary hepatocellular carcinomas e b-deleted adenovirus (dl ) gene therapy for patients with primary and secondary liver tumours phase i study of direct administration of a replication deficient adenovirus vector containing e. coli cytosine deaminase gene to metastatic colon carcinoma of the liver in association with the oral administration of the pro-drug -fluorocytosine intratumoral adenovirus-mediated suicide gene transfer for hepatic metastases from colorectal adenocarcinoma:results of a phase i clinical trial retroviral-mediated gene therapy for the treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma: an innovative approach for cancer therapy tumour chemosensitivity conferred by inserted herpes thymidine kinase genes: paradigm for a prospective cancer control strategy curability of tumours bearing herpes thymidine kinase genes transferred by retroviral vectors the "bystander effect"; tumour regression when a fraction of the tumour mass is genetically modified transcriptional regulation of alphafetoprotein expression by dexamethsone in human hepatoma cells gene therapy for hepatoma cells using a retrovirus vector carrying herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene under the control of human alpha-fetoprotein gene promoter retrovirus-mediated gene therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma:selective and enhanced suicide gene expression regulated by human alpha-fetoprotein enhancer directly linked to its promoter regression of established macroscopic liver metastases after in situ transduction of a suicide gene cancer gene therapy with hsv-tk/ gcv system depends on t cell mediated immune responses and causes apoptotic death of tumour cells in vivo severe hepatic dysfunction after adenovirus-mediated transfer of the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene and ganciclovir administration bystander effect caused by cytosine deaminase gene and -fluorocytosine in vitro is substantially mediated by generated -fluorouracil gene therapy of metastatic comon carcinoma: regression of multiple hepatic metastases by adenoviral expression of bacterial cytosine deaminase a controlled study of adenoviral-vector-mediated gene transfer in the nasal epithelium of patients with cystic fibrosis phase i study of a recombinant adenovirus-mediated gene transfer ilung cancer patients complications following percutaneous liver biopsy liver biopsy: complications in inpatients and outpatients adenovirus proteins from both e b reading frames are required for the transformation of rodent cells by viral infection and dna transfection progress of the smart bomb cancer virus replication of onyx- , a potential anticancer adenovirus, is independent of p status in tumour cells status does not determine outcome of e b -kilodalton mutant adenovirus lytic infection -independent and -dependent requirments for e b- k in adenovirus type replication selective and nonselective replication of an e b-deleted adenovirus in hepatocellular carcinoma onyx- , an e b geneattenuated adenovirus, causes tumour-specific cytolysis and antitumoural efficacy that can be augmented by standard chemotherapeutic agents phase ii trial of intratumoural infection with an e b deleted adenovirus in patients with recurrent refractory head and neck cancer intra-arterial administration of a replication-selective adenovirus (dl ) in patients with colorectal carcinoma metastatic to the liver: a phase i trial we are grateful to the pedersen family charitable foundation for supporting our research endeavors. key: cord- - a w h authors: thomas, neal j.; dahmer, mary k.; quasney, michael w. title: genetic predisposition to critical illness in the pediatric intensive care unit date: - - journal: pediatric critical care study guide doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: a w h much progress has been made in the past decade in the understanding of the genetic contribution to the development of human disease in general, and critical care illness specifically. with the mapping of the human genome and on-going mapping of genetic polymorphisms and haplotypes in humans, the field of critical care is now in prime position to study the impact of genetics on common illnesses that affect children who require critical care, to examine how differences of the host defense response lead to variable outcomes in outwardly appearing similar disease states, and to study how genetic differences in response to therapy will help practitioners tailor therapeutic interventions to an individual child’s genetic composition. while we are still years away from true individualized medicine, we are now closer than ever to understanding why two might children respond to the same environmental insult in vastly different ways. much progress has been made in the past decade in the understanding of the genetic contribution to the development of human disease in general, and critical care illness specifi cally. with the mapping of the human genome and on-going mapping of genetic polymorphisms and haplotypes in humans, the fi eld of critical care is now in prime position to study the impact of genetics on common illnesses that affect children who require critical care, to examine how differences of the host defense response lead to variable outcomes in outwardly appearing similar disease states, and to study how genetic differences in response to therapy will help practitioners tailor therapeutic interventions to an individual child's genetic composition. while we are still years away from true individualized medicine, we are now closer than ever to understanding why two might children respond to the same environmental insult in vastly different ways. neal j. thomas , mary k. dahmer, and michael w. quasney before being able to appreciate the advances in research that have been accomplished in relation to the genetic impact on critical illness in children in recent years, it is important to understand the basics of human genetics, and become familiar with the terminology that is utilized to discuss these remarkable advances. once the genetic basics are clear, discussion can then proceed to genetic associations that have been determined in critical illness in children. the nucleus of all cells holds chromosomes that contain deoxyribonucleic acid (dna), the genetic material that is inherited from parents. dna is responsible for determining the structure of the cell, the function and activity of the cell in response to various stimuli, and the interaction the cell has with other cells and the extracellular environment. the dna molecule consists of two chains of deoxyribonucleotides held together by complementary base pairs. the deoxyribonucleotides contain the four nucleotide bases, adenine (a), thymine (t), guanine (g), and cytosine (c) that are covalently bound together by phosphodiesterase bonds linking the ¢ carbon of one deoxyribose group to the ¢ carbon of the next group. the two chains of deoxyribonucleotides are linked by hydrogen bonds between the a's of one strand and the t's of the other. likewise, the g's of one strand are linked by hydrogen bonds to the c's of the complementary strand. these two complementary strands form the dna double helix ( fig. - ) , with one strand running in the ¢ to ¢ direction while the other strand runs in the ¢ to ¢ direction. the order of nucleotides bases is termed the sequence and is read in the ¢ to ¢ direction. the genetic information of an individual is encoded by the precise positioning and order of these base pairs. the order of nucleotide bases is termed the sequence and is read in the ¢ to ¢ direction. the four nucleotides of the dna double helix (from national human genome research institute's talking glossary of genetics ( http://www.genome.gov/ glossary.cfm#s )) the entire dna content of an organism is their genome . every cell of an organism contains two copies of the dna, with the exception of red blood cells which lack a nucleus and dna and sperm and egg cells which contain one copy of the dna. overall, humans have chromosomes, including pairs of autosomal chromosomes and one pair of sex chromosomes. each chromosome is made up of a centromere and two telomeres (ends) (fig. - ). the two arms of the chromosome are the short arm (p) and long arm (q). the parts of the genome that contain nucleotide sequences that code for proteins are the genes and it is estimated that the human genome contains about , - , genes. the structure of genes is very complex and highly variable. genes are made up of a variable number of exons , which contain the actual coding sequence for the proteins, and introns , which are noncoding regions which separate the exons. while the function of the introns is unclear, some disease processes have been found to be associated with certain nucleotide variations located in these intron regions ( fig. - ). genes also have regulatory regions, including promoter sequences that generally reside at the ¢ end of the gene (referred to as upstream) and regions at the ¢ end associated with stability of the mrna. genetic recombination , which is the re-shuffl ing of genes from generation to generation, is the basis of genetic diversity in sexually reproducing organisms. the analysis of genetic recombination is a useful method of mapping genes in the genome. genetic recombination results in an exchange of genetic material between homologous chromosome pairs. this results in segments of dna being exchanged with the other chromosome of the pair, thereby shuffl ing the genetic material. the basic principal of linkage analysis , a method used to fi nd disease causing genes, relies on the genetic recombination frequency between two loci on a single chromosome. this allows the estimation of the relative distance between them, and is crucial for the mapping of genes in the genome. recombination frequencies can be measured by genotyping individuals in a family pedigree. the closer together two loci are on a chromosome, the lower the likelihood of recombination to occur between them. if loci are very close, they are said to be linked. the reliability of genetic linkage between loci is determined using the lod score , which is an estimate of whether two loci are likely to lie near each other on a chromosome and are therefore likely to be inherited together. a lod score of or more, which represents odds of : or greater in favor of linkage, is used to indicate statistically signifi cant linkage, and therefore concludes that the two loci of interest are close. the development of genetic maps has been very useful in fi nding genes which may cause human disease. genes may be mapped to a particular location in the genome based on being inherited with respect to a marker of known map location, and with the assumption of no the entire dna content of an organism is their genome. genes are made up of a variable number of exons, which contain the actual coding sequence for the proteins, and introns, which are noncoding regions which separate the exons. nucleus telomere telomere centromere the structure of a chromosome (from national human genome research institute's talking glossary of genetics ( http://www. genome.gov/glossary.cfm#s )) genetic recombination. there are a number of polymorphic markers which may be utilized for genetic map construction, including minisatellites, microsatellites, and single nucleotide polymorphism (snps). linkage disequilibrium (ld), often referred to as allelic association, is a measure of physical association between two alleles and occurs when closely linked alleles are inherited together during many generations. no signifi cant degree of genetic recombination occurs between them, and they continue to be passed along together throughout generations. therefore, knowledge of one marker can be used to study the other. there are many potential benefi ts of identifying genes/gene variants involved in disease. these include, but are not limited to, an improved understanding of the disease etiology, insight into the mechanisms of disease pathogenesis, an ability to develop an early disease risk assessment, the potential to discover novel therapeutic drug targets, the ability to estimate the therapeutic response to specifi c pharmacologic therapies, the possibility of targeted disease prevention strategies to be utilized in high-risk populations based on genetic predisposition, and the movement from the classic symptoms-based disease defi nition towards a true molecular defi nition of complex disease processes. genetic mutations are changes that occur in the sequence of dna. mutations can be classifi ed as somatic mutations, which occur in somatic cells and are not commonly passed on to offspring, and germ-line mutations which occur in the reproductive cells and are passed on linkage disequilibrium (ld), often referred to as allelic association, is a measure of physical association between two alleles and occurs when closely linked alleles are inherited together during many generations. the structure of a gene, including the exons (coding sequence) and introns (noncoding sequence) (from national human genome research institute's talking glossary of genetics ( http://www. genome.gov/glossary.cfm#s )) to offspring. there are several different types of mutations. translocations are large-scale mutations comprised of switching of chromosomal regions between one chromosome and another chromosome. mutations can also consist of single changes in the nucleotide bases and include substitution, deletion, or insertion of nucleotides. insertions and deletions can also involve hundreds of nucleotides. mutations that occur in the coding regions can have several consequences: they can change the amino acid of the protein at a single site, they can cause a premature stop codon resulting in early termination of translation, and, consequently, lead to a truncated protein, or they may have no effect at all if the mutation leads to a nucleotide substitution that does not alter the amino acid. likewise, mutations in noncoding regulatory regions (such as promoters) may also affect the expression of the gene by altering the quantity of mrna transcribed and, hence, the level of the protein. mutations in the intron/ exon boundary region may also lead to incorrectly spliced mrnas and result in signifi cantly different proteins or differences in levels of protein products. the sequencing of the human genome has revealed that most genes are polymorphic; that is, there are small differences in the nucleotide sequences. there are estimates that the human genome may contain over million of these types of variations. these differences in the nucleotide sequence are what give rise to our genetic variability; they account for inherited differences in our physical traits and the way we respond to environmental stimuli and medications. while the majority of these nucleotide variations do not cause a disease, some genetic variations may infl uence the development of certain diseases. the mutations discussed in the preceding paragraph are variations that occur in less than % of the population and are, thereby, rare. on the other hand, variations that occur at a frequency greater than % in the population are referred to as polymorphisms . if the polymorphism is a change in a single nucleotide, it is referred to as a single nucleotide polymorphism (snp) . these more common genetic variations, whether snps or small insertions or deletions of nucleotides, are the ones currently being examined in many studies for associations with susceptibility to and outcome from diseases seen in the intensive care unit setting. copy number variations (cnvs) are stretches of dna of greater than kb that show differences in the expected number of copies of the dna in greater than % of the human population. very recently it has become clear that cnvs are also common in human genomes and contribute significantly to human genetic variation. another important concept in genetics is a locus, which refers to the location in the genome of a specifi c gene or variant. keeping in mind the above discussion of genetic variations, a locus may contain two slightly different sequences for a specifi c gene. these alternative forms of a gene are termed alleles , or variants . the alleles for a specifi c individual at a genetic locus is that person's genotype . an example is the surfactant protein b (sp-b) + site. an individual's genotype at that site may either be tt, ct, or cc. individuals are heterozygous if they possess two different alleles at the locus of interest and homozygous if they possess two identical alleles at that locus. but we obviously do not contain only one genetic variation in our genome. a haplotype represents a combination of polymorphic alleles on a single chromosome delineating a pattern that is inherited together and transmitted from parent to offspring. haplotype analysis is a useful tool for analysis of disease gene discovery, as investigators may capitalize on the fact that many of the polymorphisms of interest are not transmitted independently of each other, and the presence of one gene variant can tag the presence of another polymorphism from the same chromosome. in some cases, haplotype assessment can provide a higher level of specifi city, sensitivity, and accuracy in "true" associations with disease risk or severity. by focusing on haplotypes as well as snps, researchers are now able to more accurately study genetic predisposition to various diseases of interest. with the recent report of the international hapmap consortium, and the identifi cation and cataloging of haplotypes now available, the utility of this type of study is brought into focus as an important tool to guide genetic association studies on complex human diseases. genetic polymorphisms, like the rarer mutations, may also infl uence the quantity of the mrna made if present in a regulatory region, or they may also infl uence the functional activity of the protein product. there has been an explosion of studies attempting to determine if these genetic polymorphisms may account for some of the clinical variability we as clinicians observe at the bedside in the picu. for example, can the difference in disease genetic mutations are rare changes that occur in the sequence of dna that occur in less than % of the population. polymorphisms are variations that occur at a frequency greater than % in the population; if the polymorphism is a change in a single nucleotide, it is referred to as a single nucleotide polymorphism (snp). a haplotype represents a combination of polymorphic alleles on a single chromosome delineating a pattern that is inherited together and transmitted from parent to offspring. c hapter • g en etic pr edis pos ition to c r itical i lln ess severity between two children with pneumonia be associated with variations in their genes coding for one of the surfactant proteins? gene expression is the process by which the information contained within genes is used to make proteins ( fig. - ) . this occurs by a combination of two distinct processes: transcription and translation. transcription is the process by which the genetic information in dna is transcribed into messenger ribonucleic acid (mrna). mrna differs from dna in that it is singlestranded, has a modifi ed sugar backbone, and contains uracil (u) instead of t. the process of transcription involves the unwinding of the two complementary strands of dna, the enzyme rna polymerase binding to the promoter region of a gene on a single strand of dna, and synthesizing the mrna molecule by adding ribonucleotides in an order that is complementary to the dna strand. the transcribed mrna thus contains all the genetic information between the transcriptional start and stop sites on the dna including exons and introns. the non-coding intron sequences are removed by a process referred to as splicing which connects all the exons together to form the fi nal mrna product. this mrna represents the coding dna sequences for a single gene. (it should be noted that splicing variations have been identifi ed that infl uence disease processes that impact the fi nal protein product by altering the mrna sequences that are spliced together.) the mrna is then transported to the cytoplasm, and translation occurs, in which the genetic information from mrna is utilized to guide the synthesis of proteins. proteins are composed of amino acids. there are different amino acids in humans, and each is encoded by a set of nucleotides in the mrna. these three nucleotides are called triplets or codons . the corresponding anticodon on the transfer rna (trna) links with a codon, presenting its unique amino acid in the process of translational protein synthesis. gene expression is the process by which the information contained within genes is used to make proteins. transcription is the process by which the genetic information in dna is transcribed into messenger ribonucleic acid (mrna). translation is the process by which the genetic information from mrna is utilized to guide the synthesis of proteins. since all cells that contain a nucleus carry the full set of genetic information, it is necessary for gene expression to be selective and tightly controlled, in a way that guarantees specifi c proteins are expressed in specifi c cells under appropriate conditions. this differential expression of genes ensures that cells develop correctly, can differentiate and function as specialized cells, and can mount various responses to external stimuli. in certain disease states, expression of specifi c genes may change, thereby providing a clue as to which genes may be important in that disease process. recent advances in technology have provided a valuable tool to evaluate the expression of genes during various diseases, including sepsis. these technologies include dna microarrays, in which the basic approach is as follows: small strands of dna probes representing the genes of interest, for example, tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnf-a ), are attached to a solid substrate such as a glass slide or silicon chip (in reality, thousands of probes are applied to the same micorarray chip). mrna is then isolated from, for example, a patient without acute lung injury (ali) and one with ali. these two samples are then separately converted to complementary dna (cdna) in a manner which incorporates different fl uorophores in the two samples of cdna (e.g., red into all the cdnas from the patient with ali which would also include cdna made from the mrna coding for tnf-a , and green into all the cdnas from the patient without ali including the cdna made from the mrna coding for tnf-a ). the cdnas from the two patients are then mixed and hybridized to the chip containing the dna probes. thus, if tnf-a is up-regulated in ali and there is signifi cantly more cdna in the ali sample than the non-ali sample, then more red fl uorophore -labeled cdna would be present. when the mixture of cdnas is hybridized to the chip containing the probes, the probe for tnf-a would light up red and represent increased expression of the tnf-a gene in ali. if tnf-a is expressed at a lower concentration in the patient with ali then when the samples are mixed, more green fl uorophore-labeled cdna would be present than red fl uorophore-labeled cdna, and the probe for tnf-a on the microarray chip would light up green indicating decreased expression of tnf-a gene in ali. finally, if there is no change in the expression of the tnf-a gene, the amounts of red and green fl uorophorelabeled cdnas would be equal, and the probe for the tnf-a gene would light up yellow. in this fashion, one can identify specifi c genes that are expressed in the development of ali. several examples of the use of this technology in the critically ill patient have been published which have aided our understanding of the pathophysiology of certain icu specifi c diseases. up to this point, we have discussed the structure of dna and the process of getting from the code in the dna to protein. it is the functional aspects of these proteins that give rise to the observed traits, whether it be the color of one's eyes, the rate of metabolism of a drug, or the effi ciency with which a protein receptor on a cell surface recognizes a pathogen. the observable characteristics of an individual defi ne that individual's phenotype . this may include common physical and biochemical characteristics, but can also describe a person's disease status (such as in cystic fi brosis). phenotypes caused by mutations in a single gene may show mendelian inheritance patterns . these patterns can be autosomal dominant (where a single copy of the gene causes the phenotype), autosomal recessive (where both copies of the gene are necessary for the phenotype), or sex linked (where the mutation occurs on the x chromosome). it is crucial to note that mendelian inheritance patterns are only seen for single gene disorders. critical care diseases and syndromes, such as sepsis and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), are complex disorders whose genetic predisposition to the development of the disease is due to multiple genes and other factors, such as environmental exposures. the multifaceted gene-gene and gene-environment interactions make the study of these diseases extremely complex. there are many common complex disorders that display obvious familial aggregation of cases, but have no clear mendelian inheritance patterns. the most commonly studied in medicine are cancer, diabetes, hypertension, and obesity, among others. the disease aggregation may be due to complex genetic factors, the interaction of multiple genes on the development the observable characteristics of an individual defi ne that individual's phenotype. c hapter • g en etic pr edis pos ition to c r itical i lln ess of the disease of interest, a host of environmental factors which place the individual at risk for the disease, or, most commonly, a combination of all of the above factors ( fig. - ). in other words, a person's genetic background may make them prone to a specifi c disease; this is called susceptibility gene variants or susceptibility genes. due to their inherited genetic make-up, the individual is at a higher inborn risk for developing the disease of interest, but only if they are exposed to the environmental stressor that is known to associate with the disease. the susceptibility gene variant will not directly lead to the disease, but will put that person at a higher risk if they are exposed to the environmental risk. for example, individuals may possess a susceptibility gene variant for the development of lung cancer, but this will only lead to the development of cancer if they are subject to a known environmental risk factor, such as smoking. alternatively, a newborn may possess one or more susceptibility gene variants for the development of bronchopulmonary dysplasia, but if they are not born prematurely and do not require mechanical ventilation in the newborn period (and therefore are not subject to the environmental stressors known to impact the development of this lung disease), they will never develop this disease despite being genetically susceptible. gene variants can also decrease the susceptibility, or increase the resistance against a disease. these are protective gene variants . to give an example, there are individuals who smoke their entire adult lives and yet never develop chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. it is likely that these individuals possess protective gene variants against the development of this disease, even in the face of a strong environmental insult. a person may possess both susceptibility and protective genetic variants for the same disease, and the mix of these variants will impact together the overall genetic risk of that person to the disease of interest. this resultant genetic risk also interacts with the environmental risk of the individual, leading to the overall risk of that person developing the disease. in critical care, it is unlikely that one gene will cause the diseases that are treated in the intensive care unit; it is more likely that multiple genes will interact with multiple environmental insults to predispose individuals to diseases processes resulting in an overall risk for an individual patient to develop a certain disease of interest. interestingly, certain populations seem to be immune to certain complex diseases. examples include the australian aborigines and inuits from greenland, in which both populations appear to be resistant to the development of type diabetes. it is plausible that the disease resistance observed in these populations is due to absence of susceptibility gene variants or presence of protective gene variants in the group's gene pool. when it is determined that a complex disease has familial aggregation, it is important to take into account that families may also share environmental or social factors that predispose to the disease of interest, and therefore the entire impact may not be genetic. one example would be radon gas present in a neighborhood leading to an increased incidence of lung cancer in families living in close proximity. while it may be assumed that the genetic impact is responsible for the development of the disease, environmental exposure is the likely source. twin studies and adoption studies are utilized to attempt to determine the relative weight of genetics and environment in the development of a certain disease. genomic medicine and the concept that an individual's genetic makeup may infl uence not only the severity of and outcome from their critical illness, but also their response to the therapies, has begun to makes it's way into the intensive care unit. this section will highlight disease aggregation may be due to complex genetic factors, the interaction of multiple genes on the development of the disease of interest, a host of environmental factors which place the individual at risk for the disease, or, most commonly, a combination of all of the above factors. the complex interactions that can occur between genes that may impact a disease process (gene-gene interaction) as well as between the genes of interest and environmental factors (gene-environment interaction) studies involving analysis of gene expression and genetic association studies in patients with critical illness. while it may appear that advances have been made in the fi eld, it is important to understand that we are not yet in the age of personalized medicine and much work needs to be done. the expression of specifi c genes in many cases represents the body's specifi c and complex response to environmental stimuli, such as in the case of a severe infection, trauma, or cardiopulmonary bypass. examining gene expression may, therefore, provide a clue as to which genes are important in a specifi c critical illness. many studies have examined gene expression in critically ill patients, but most examine the expression of only a few genes. with the advent of the dna microarray technology discussed above investigators have begun to explore gene expression patterns in thousands of genes in children with septic shock using mrna isolated from whole blood representing the gene expression response in circulating white blood cells. these studies have compared gene expression from blood samples obtained within day of admission to the picu with that observed in blood of healthy controls, examined longitudinal changes in gene expression in children with septic shock (days and ) and compared expression in patients with septic shock to expression in children with sepsis or systemic infl ammatory response syndrome (sirs). genes that were up-regulated, down-regulated, or unchanged between the groups were examined. the genes that were up-regulated when the septic shock group was compared to healthy controls included genes related to immunity and infl ammation as would be expected. unexpectedly the study demonstrated that many genes related to zinc biology and zinc homeostasis were down-regulated. the signifi cance of this fi nding was supported by the observation that children who did not survive septic shock had lower serum levels of zinc and the demonstration in a murine model that zinc depletion leads to increased mortality from sepsis. in addition, genes involved in t-cell receptor signaling and antigen presentation appeared decreased suggesting that septic shock may be associated with depression of the adaptive immune system. interestingly expression studies of adults with sepsis and septic shock did not identify a down-regulation of genes related to zinc biology although upregulation of genes related to immunity and infl ammation and down-regulation of genes related to the adaptive immune system was observed. the longitudinal study in children with septic shock demonstrated that in general the observed changes in up-regulated and down-regulated gene expression persisted over time. in addition, the study comparing expression in children with shock to those with sepsis or sirs indicated that while there were patterns of expression that were similar in all three groups (such as genes involved in innate immunity that were up-regulated) there were genes that were unique to the septic shock group with relation to the degree, and duration, of the response. examples include the fi nding that up-regulated genes that were involved in the il- signaling pathway had a greater signal which persisted for longer in the septic shock patients and down-regulation of genes for zinc biology and the adaptive immune system was greater and lasted longer than that seen in the other two groups. in addition to providing insight into the pathophysiology of sepsis and identifying potentially important proteins in early sepsis, the use of this technology may also provide physicians with a unique diagnostic tool. if the gene expression profi le of a patient who is in the early stages of sepsis is different from a patient who exhibits sirs but does not develop sepsis, then earlier therapies could be initiated before full blown sepsis is clinically evident. there is also some evidence that various subclasses of sepsis and septic shock may be able to be identifi ed using this technique. dna microarrays have also been used to investigate the expression profi le in adults with ali. mrna for pre-b-cell colony enhancing factor (pbef), a cytokine that is involved in the maturation of b-cell precursors, inhibition of neutrophil apoptosis, and perhaps regulation of endothelial cell calcium-dependent cytoskeletal arrangement was noted to be signifi cantly increased in adults with ali, a fi nding that was also consistent in both a canine and mouse model of ali. in addition to the elevated mrna levels, pbef protein in bronchoalveolar lavage fl uid was also elevated in adults with ali. it is also worth mentioning an important with the advent of the dna microarray technology, gene expression patterns in thousands of genes can lead to insight into disease pathogenesis, treatment, and outcome. c hapter • g en etic pr edis pos ition to c r itical i lln ess study in a canine model of lung injury to highlight the value of gene expression arrays. the use of mechanical ventilation is invariably needed to treat patients with ali though the use of positive pressure ventilation itself may exacerbate the lung injury. gene expression arrays in a canine model of ventilator associated lung injury have identifi ed a number of genes that are regulated during ali. many of the genes can be grouped into biological processes known to important in the pathophysiology of ali; these include infl ammation (e.g., il- b, il- , il- ra, mmif), coagulation (tissue factor, pai- ), and chemotaxis/cell motility (myosin light chain kinase, cell chemokine receptor ). several other genes also appeared to be expressed including pbef, heat shock protein (hsp ), and vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf). thus, the use of expression arrays has identifi ed a number of candidate genes that may play important roles in the development of ali. as will be discussed below, genetic variations that infl uence the activity or level of the protein in several of these candidate genes have been examined in gene association studies in patients with ali. as described above, a large amount of genetic variability exists throughout our genome. whether these differences infl uence the susceptibility to or outcome from diseases in the critical care setting is an area receiving a great deal of interest. perhaps the greatest amount of focus of genetic association studies on critical illnesses is in sepsis and ali. the general approach has been to compare the frequencies of polymorphisms in specifi c candidate genes between a cohort of patients with sepsis or ali and an at-risk cohort without sepsis or ali. this section will review some of these studies. individual variability in the susceptibility to and outcome from sepsis and lung injury has long been observed in critically ill patients. why one child with pneumococcal pneumonia has little consequence of their infection and can be treated as an outpatient while another child develops refractory septic shock and respiratory failure has been attributed to a number of factors. these have included virulence of the pathogen, length of time between onset of symptoms and appropriate treatment, and comorbid conditions. while all these certainly contribute to the severity of disease, a growing body of evidence suggests that genetic variations in the individual patient may also contribute to the severity of and outcome from critical disease. these genetic polymorphisms may not be of any consequence during normal healthy periods but their importance may only become evident during a severe stressor such as an infection, trauma, cardiopulmonary bypass, or other scenarios seen in the intensive care unit (table . ). a strong genetic infl uence on the outcome from infections was indicated by a family based study of adoptees. adoptees with a biological parent who died due to infection before the age of had a relative risk of death due to infection of . (ci = . - . ); a higher relative risk than that seen when risk related to early death of a biologic parent due to cardiovascular and cerebrovascular disease ( . ; . - . ) or cancer ( . ; . - . ) was examined. thus, an individual's genetic makeup may infl uence the severity of disease in infection and sepsis. given the tens of thousands of genes in the human genome and the millions of genetic polymorphisms, on which polymorphisms and in which genes should investigators focus? one approach in choosing the candidate gene is to examine the pathways by which pathogens lead to the clinical symptoms of sepsis. the body's response to infections involves recognition of pathogen-associated products followed by an infl ammatory response that involves a large number of cellular proteins. genetic variations that lead to alterations in the amount or functional activity of any of these proteins involved in the recognition of or response to pathogen-associated products may infl uence the individual's response. examples of the infl uence of genetic variations in proteins involved in recognition of pathogens on the severity of infections include polymorphisms in the genes coding for mannose binding individual variability in the susceptibility to and outcome from critical care diseases has long been observed, and advances in genomic medicine now gives an opportunity to understand these differences. the body's response to infections involves recognition of pathogenassociated products followed by an infl ammatory response that involves a large number of cellular proteins. genetic variations that lead to alterations in the amount or functional activity of any of the proteins involved in the recognition of or response to pathogenassociated products may infl uence the individual's response. lectin (mbl) , the receptor for fc g , and toll-like receptor (tlr) . the heterotrimeric mbl is involved in binding bacterial surface carbohydrates and the opsonization of bacteria. a helical domain in the tertiary structure of the protein is crucial for formation of the active heterotrimer. three genetic polymorphisms in the gene coding for mbl result in amino acid changes in the helical tails of the protein and result in increased degradation and decreased serum levels of mbl. genetic association studies have demonstrated associations between variant b, c, d variants associated with decreased levels and activity and increased risk of infection fc g riia h r r associated with decreased affi nity to igg and opsonization and increased risk of infection and septic shock tlr asp gly/thr ile gly/ile associated with decreased expression, increased risk of sepsis and mortality cd- − c/t t allele associated with increased levels and susceptibility to sepsis and sepsis-related mortality in adults md- − c/g − g allele associated with higher risk of sepsis and multiple organ dysfunction score in chinese adults tnfa − g/a, − g/a, lta + g/a a alleles for each polymorphism are associated with increased tnfa levels, increased mortality in sepsis and meningococcal disease, increased sepsis in adults with pneumonia, and increased mortality in bacteremia and sepsis il- − g/c g associated with increased il- levels in patients but c associated with increased levels in monocytes from neonates, sepsis in neonates but not adults, and severe sepsis and organ dysfunction in children il- ra variable -bp repeat a associated with increased levels of il- ra and variable results of association studies examining risk of sepsis and mortality il- − g/a, − c/t, − c/a gcc haplotype associated with increased levels and sepsis but not mortality irak- + t/c c associated with increased nf-kb translocation and presence of shock and higher -day mortality in adults with sepsis hsp a b − c/t + g/a − c/+ a associated with decreased hspa b and tnf a and + a associated with septic shock in adults with cap ace bp i/d dd associated with increased serum and tissue levels and more severe meningococcal disease in children; no association with sepsis related mortality in neonates or adults pai- g/ g g associated with increased levels and septic shock in meningococcal disease protein c − a/g and − c/t ac haplotype associated with increased mortality and organ dysfunction in adults with sepsis and with decreased protein c serum level; gc haplotype associated with more severe sepsis in children less than year of age with meningococcemia fibrinogenbeta − g/a, − g/a, + g/a gaa haplotype associated with higher levels of fi brinogen, lower day mortality and less severe organ dysfunction mbl mannose-binding lectin, ig immunoglobulin, tlr toll-like receptor, rsv respiratory syncytial virus, md myeloid differentiation, tnf tumor necrosis factor, lt lymphotoxin, il- ra interleukin receptor antagonist, il- interleukin- , irak- interleukin receptor-associated kinase , hsp heat shock protein, cap community acquired pneumonia, ace angiotensin converting enzyme, pai plasminogen activator inhibitor a terminology used for the various polymorphisms are the ones most commonly used in the literature and may refer to the nucleotide position, amino acid position, or name of the allele. this table is representative of polymorphisms examined in sepsis but does not include all such polymorphisms the mbl genetic polymorphisms and increased susceptibility to infections, hospitalizations due to infections, number of acute respiratory infections, and risk of meningococcal infections in children, and pneumonia and sepsis in neonates. in adults these polymorphisms have been associated with recurrent respiratory infections, invasive pneumococcal infections and viral coinfections with pneumococcal pneumonia. the family of leukocyte fc g receptors is also involved in the recognition of bacteria such as streptococcus pneumoniae , haemophilus infl uenzae type b, and neisseria meningitides. fc g receptors bind the fc portion of igg bound to bacteria, thereby facilitating phagocytosis and inducing the infl ammatory response. several polymorphisms have been described in the genes coding for the various fc g receptors that alter their binding affi nity to the various subclasses of igg. two such polymorphisms have been described in the genes coding for the fc g riiib receptor and the fc g riia receptor . in the case of the fc g riiib receptor, the genetic polymorphism results in a four amino acid substitution (allotypes fc g riiib-na or -na ) in the receptor that alters the opsonization effi ciency. in the case of the fc g riia receptor, the genetic polymorphism results in replacing a histidine for an arginine in the extracellular domain of the receptor at amino acid position . the variant fc g riia receptor containing the histidine binds the fc region of igg with a lower affi nity and results in reduced phagocytocytosis in vitro compared with the more common fc g riia receptor containing the arginine. in association studies, a higher frequency of individuals homozygous for the na allotype of the fc g riiib receptor or an arginine at position in the fc g riia receptor was found in patients with severe meningococcal disease or fulminant meningococcal sepsis. the fi nal examples of genetic variation in genes coding for pathogen recognition products infl uencing the severity of sepsis are the polymorphisms in the gene coding for the tlr receptor . this receptor is a component of a complex that includes cd- and myeloid differentiation (md)- that binds lipopolysaccharide (lps), one of the major cell wall components of gram negative bacteria. in addition, tlr recognizes the f protein of the respiratory syncytial virus (rsv). two genetic polymorphisms have been identifi ed in the gene coding for tlr that result in the change of a threonine for a glycine at amino acid position and a threonine for a isoleucine at amino acid position . the gly ile variant form of the receptor appears to be expressed on the cell surface in lower amounts and result in a lower systemic cytokine response to lps and rsv. genetic association studies have demonstrated an association between the tlr gly ile variant and gram negative bacterial infections and septic shock as well as mortality in patients with systemic infl ammatory response syndrome. however, a number of studies have also shown confl icting results. these tlr variants have also been reported to be associated with susceptibility to and severity of respiratory syncytial virus infections in children. future studies with more participants will be required to determine whether variations in the tlr gene are involved in infection and/ or severity of disease. thus far, the focus has been on genetic variations in genes coding for proteins involved in pathogen recognition, and in each case, the variation results in an inferior host response resulting in more severe disease. currently it is thought that severe sepsis and septic shock may be the result of an imbalance in the infl ammatory response. the mechanism by which this imbalance occurs is thought to be multi-factorial. one possibility that has attracted much interest is that the host may harbor genetic variations in the regulatory regions of genes involved in the response to noxious stimuli resulting in an imbalance between pro-and anti-infl ammatory cytokines. these variations can result in an over-expression of pro-infl ammatory cytokines, such as tnf-a and interleukin (il)- , or an under-expression of anti-infl ammatory cytokines, such as il- . in either case, the normal infl ammatory response is dysregulated. one of the pro-infl ammatory genes in which genetic polymorphisms infl uence expression is tnf-a . as a key pro-infl ammatory cytokine, tnf-a is responsible for the activation of the infl ammatory response and by itself can produce many of the clinical manifestations of sepsis such as capillary leak, hypotension, and multiple organ dysfunction syndrome. the regulatory region of the gene coding for tnf-a has several polymorphisms that alter transcription of tnf-a , thereby infl uencing the amount of tnf-a produced. several of these polymorphisms alter nucleotides which make up the recognition sequences of some of the genetic variation of toll-like receptor may be an important contributor to difference in the host response to infectious illness observed in children. transcription factors that regulate transcription. two of these polymorphisms in particular have been studied. the rarer a allele (tnf-a - ) at a location base pairs upstream from the transcriptional start site results in greater transcription than the more common g allele. a second rare a allele (tnf-a - ) at a location base pairs upstream from the transcriptional start site results in lower transcription than the g allele. in addition, another site located ~ , base pairs upstream from the transcriptional start site of the tnf-a gene and located in the gene coding for another gene, lymphotoxin (lt)-a , (also referred to as the tnfb allele, tnf-b + , and lt-a + ) also appears to regulate transcription of the tnf-a gene. in genetic association studies, the frequency of the tnf-a - a allele has been shown to be higher in children who died from meningococcal infections and adults who died with septic shock compared with controls. genetic association studies examining the infl uence of the polymorphic lt-a + site has shown a higher frequency of the a allele in adults with pneumonia presenting with the clinical symptoms of sepsis, in adults in post-operative and trauma intensive care units who develop sepsis and who have a higher mortality, and in bacteremic children who exhibit higher serum tnf-a levels and have a higher mortality. however other genetic association studies examining the tnf-a gene have reported confl icting results. recently a well designed, prospective study examining a number of polymorphisms in the gene for tnf-a (including those described above) in adults with trauma admitted to the icu demonstrated that the a allele of tnf-a - was associated with elevated tnf, sepsis syndrome and death in trauma patients both in their initial cohort and a replication cohort. the gene for il- (another pro-infl ammatory cytokine) also contains variations which multiple studies suggest are associated with the susceptibility to or outcome from sepsis. as mentioned above, the progression to severe sepsis is believed to be an imbalance in the pro-and anti-infl ammatory mediators. in addition to polymorphisms that result in increased levels of pro-infl ammatory cytokines, examples of polymorphisms that result in lower levels of anti-infl ammatory cytokines also exist. il- receptor antagonist (il- ra) is one of the body's mechanisms for keeping the infl ammatory reaction in check by binding to the il- receptor without activating the signal transduction pathway. the gene coding for il- ra contains a polymorphic region consisting of a variable number of base-pair tandem repeats. these different il- ra alleles have been associated with variable circulating levels of both il -ra and il- b (the two genes are located close to one another on chromosome ), and several association studies have suggested an infl uence of this variation on a variety of diseases in which infl ammation plays an important role, including the susceptibility to sepsis. il- is another anti-infl ammatory cytokine for which genetic polymorphisms appear to alter transcription levels. a number of studies have demonstrated an association between an increased susceptibility to sepsis and certain il- polymorphisms although confl icting results have also been reported. it is important to remember that the cytokines and their receptors mentioned above activate a complex signal transduction pathway composed of dozens of proteins with the end result of a well coordinated cellular response to the noxious stimulus. genetic variation in any of the proteins in the pathway may also infl uence the fi nal response. recent studies have begun to analyze components of various pathways involved in the development of sepsis. one example is il- receptor-associated kinase- (irak- ) that plays an important role in the signal transduction pathway initiated by the activation of the il- receptor. activation of irak- results in increased transcription of a variety of pro-infl ammatory genes modulated by nf-k b, a key transcription factor in the infl ammatory response. genetic variations in the gene coding for irak- have been shown to be associated with elevated nuclear levels of nf-k b as well as the presence of shock and a higher -day mortality in patients with sepsis. the association of a variant in irak-i with severity of septic shock has been independently replicated in a large multi-centered cohort of adult patients with septic shock. interestingly, this study also indicated that age might modify the relationship as this association was stronger for younger patients. many other proteins involved in these complex signaling pathways have yet to be investigated for the infl uence of genetic variations on critical illnesses. many of the genes discussed thus far have a role in infl ammation, a key component in the pathophysiology of sepsis. loss of homeostatic mechanisms regulating the coagulation/ fi brinolytic system also plays an important role in sepsis. plasminogen activator inhibitor the regulatory region of the gene coding for tumor necrosis factora (tnfa ) has several polymorphisms that alter transcription of tnfa , thereby infl uencing the amount of tnfa produced. il- receptor antagonist (il- ra) is a key mechanism for keeping the infl ammatory reaction in check by binding to the il- receptor without activating the signal transduction pathway. together with il- , another anti-infl ammatory cytokine, genetic polymorphisms appear to alter transcription levels of these proteins. (pai- ) inhibits fi brinolysis thereby favoring the formation of microthrombi in the capillaries. the pathophysiology of multiple organ dysfunction syndrome in patients with sepsis is thought to involve, in part, intravascular fi brin deposition. thus, elevated pai- activity could contribute to organ failure in sepsis and elevated plasma concentrations have been observed in patients with sepsis. a genetic variation in the gene coding for pai- consisting of either the presence of guanines or guanines at a specifi c location appears to infl uence the amount of pai- produced. individuals homozygous for the g genotype ( g/ g) produce more pai- than individuals homozygous for the g genotype ( g/ g) or individuals that are heterozygous ( g/ g). association studies have demonstrated that children with meningococcal disease who were g/ g at this site had an increased risk of death compared to children who were g/ g or g/ g. more recent studies in both children and adults have demonstrated higher mortality in individuals homozygous for the g allele in a number of infectious diseases. since fi brin deposition is thought to play a role in the multiple organ system failure in patients with sepsis, genetic variations that infl uence the production of fi brin might also infl uence the severity of disease in patients with sepsis. the production of fi brinogen, the precursor to fi brin, is dependent on the transcription of fi brinogen-beta . several polymorphisms in the promoter region have been associated with higher plasma levels of fi brinogen, and higher levels of fi brinogen have been associated with improved outcomes in sepsis. association studies have demonstrated that the gaa haplotype, consisting of the genotypes at the − , − , and + sites, is associated with higher levels of fi brinogen and with decreased mortality and less organ dysfunction. protein c has anticoagulant activity as well as anti-infl ammatory and anti-apoptotic effects suggesting that diminished activity of protein c may lead to increased fi brin deposition, infl ammation, and apoptosis. genetic polymorphisms located in the promoter region of the gene coding for protein c result in decreased levels. association studies in caucasian and han chinese adults have demonstrated increased mortality and organ dysfunction in adults with sepsis who carry the a allele at the − site and the c allele at the − site. this haplotype has also been reported to be associated with decreased protein c concentration. interestingly, an increased risk of more severe sepsis has been observed in children less than year of age with meningococcal disease who carry the g allele at the − site along with the c allele at the − site. this haplotype was not associated with severe sepsis in older children suggesting a potential developmental difference in these variations on the severity of sepsis. severe lung injury in both adults and children can be precipitated by a diverse array of causes and are classifi ed as either direct injury when the insult is from the alveolar side of the alveolar/capillary membrane or indirect injury when the insult is from the capillary side. major causes of direct lung injury include pneumonia, aspiration, pulmonary contusion, and inhalation while major causes of indirect injury include sepsis, trauma without pulmonary contusion, cardiopulmonary bypass, and multiple transfusions. despite these various causes, the central pathogenesis of ali involves derangements in multiple biological processes. these include activation of infl ammation, loss of coagulation and fi brinolytic homeostasis, disruption of vascular permeability, epithelial and endothelial cell apoptosis as well as proliferation, and derangements in surfactant. some of these processes, notably infl ammation and coagulation, play key roles in the pathophysiology of sepsis as well as ali. thus, it is not surprising to fi nd that the candidate genes examined in genetic association studies for ali are in many cases the same as those examined in sepsis (table . ). this section will review some of the genetic association studies examining the infl uence of genetic variations on the development of ali. pulmonary surfactant is synthesized by the type ii alveolar epithelial cells and is required for normal lung function. one of surfactant's primary functions is to lower the surface tension at the alveolar air-liquid interface. surfactant is composed of phospholipids and four proteins, surfactant protein (sp)-a, sp-b, sp-c, and sp-d. knockout models in mice have demonstrated that of these four proteins, only sp-b is absolutely required for post-natal genetic polymorphisms located in the promoter region of the gene coding for protein c result in decreased levels, and possibly an impact on mortality with sepsis. defi ciency in, or impaired activity of surfactant protein-b appears responsible for a number of interstitial pulmonary diseases in humans including ards. survival. defi ciency in, or impaired activity of sp-b appears responsible for a number of interstitial pulmonary diseases in humans including ards. several genetic variations exist in the genes coding for the surfactant proteins and two will be discussed here; the sp-b + t/c polymorphism and insertion/deletion polymorphism consisting of dinucleotide (ca) tandem repeats in intron . several studies have demonstrated an association between these polymorphisms and the need for mechanical ventilation in children (sp-b + t/c) and mechanical ventilation and ards in adults (sp-b + t/c polymorphism and insertion/ deletion of dinucleotide (ca) tandem repeats). the consequences of these variations are not fully known. the sp-b + t/c polymorphism results in an amino acid change in exon in a region of the amino terminal propeptide which is thought to play a role in targeting of sp-b to lamellar bodies. the resulting amino acid change alters glycosylation of sp-b and may affect the level of sp-b by altering its processing or stability. aberrant proteolytic processing of the sp-b product encoded by the c allele is supported by a recent report demonstrating that the c allele is associated with absence of a specifi c pro-sp-b cleavage product in neonates. the intron dinucleotide repeat length variation polymorphism is associated with incompletely spliced sp-b mrna. interestingly, in caucasians this length variation polymorphism in intron is in linkage disequilibrium with the sp-b + t/c polymorphism; the c allele of rs is associated with the deletion variants at the intron polymorphic site. further work is needed to not only defi ne the consequence of these genetic variations on surfactant function but also to further evaluate whether these genetic variations infl uence the development of ali. another study of interest involves the susceptibility to pneumonia, the leading cause of ali and ards in both children and adults. as discussed above, the g/ g genotype in the gene coding for pai- is associated with higher levels of pai- expression. in a large cohort of adults, those individuals with the g allele demonstrated a signifi cantly higher susceptibility to pneumonia. while pai- activity inhibits fi brinolysis leading to formation of microthrombi, it also demonstrates anti-infl ammatory activity, and in this fashion, may increase the susceptibility to infection. in patients with ali, plasma levels of pai- levels are elevated and protein c levels are diminished. in addition, alveolar levels of pai- are elevated suggesting a possible local activation of the fi brinolytic system. recent studies have demonstrated that the g allele of pai- is associated with increased mortality in patients with severe pneumonia and patients with ards. to date there are no reports indicating association of specifi c protein c variants with ali. infl ammation is one of the hallmarks of ali and as with sepsis, it is thought that one of the central components of ali is an imbalance between pro-and anti-infl ammatory cytokines in the lung. the infl uence of genetic variation in several genes involved with infl ammation on the development of ali has been examined. the tnf-a - a allele appears to be associated with increased mortality in adults with ards but not with the susceptibility to ards when compared with adults who were at-risk for the development of ards. the lt-a + polymorphism that appears to be associated with more severe sepsis did not infl uence the severity of ards. macrophage migration inhibitory factor (mif) plays a central role in regulating the infl ammatory response by directly increasing tnf-a and il- and countering the antiinfl ammatory actions of glucocorticoids. mif mrna has been demonstrated in cells from bronchoalveolar lavage of patients with ali and mif concentrations in serum are elevated in patients with ali compared with controls. haplotypes composed of polymorphisms in the ' end of the gene coding for mif are associated with the development of ali in both caucasian and african american populations. a number of studies have demonstrated association of specifi c haplotypes in another gene involved in the regulation of infl ammation, the gene for il- , with the development of ali. whether these haplotypes are associated with elevated levels of il- is still unclear. association studies have also been performed examining the genetic variants discussed earlier in the promoter region of the anti-infl ammatory cytokine il- . the − gg genotype results in higher levels of il- and is associated with the development of ards in younger adults. furthermore, the adults with ards who carried the gg genotype at this site demonstrated lower mortality and organ failure. the genetic variants in the gene coding for mbl have also been examined for their infl uence on ali. one of the variants described previously that results in decreased serum levels of mbl, variant b, is associated with the susceptibility to ards and a greater degree of organ dysfunction and higher mortality in patients with ards. while no reports have described the tlr polymorphisms specifi cally in ali or ards, the gly ile variant form of the receptor is associated with an increased risk of severe rsv bronchiolitis and increased risk for hospitalization for rsv in previously healthy infants suggesting a potential role for tlr in infl uencing the severity of lung injury. signal transduction pathways activated after stimulation of a variety of immune receptors including the tlrs and members of the family of il- and tnf receptors result in the upregulation of specifi c genes involved in the innate and adaptive immune responses. several transcription factors are involved in this process and genetic variation in any of these factors may infl uence the level of transcription. one such factor is nuclear factor k b (nf-k b) which under non-stimulated conditions is inhibited by the cytoplasmic inhibitor nf k bia . upon activation of cytokine-mediated signal transduction pathways, nf k bia is degraded allowing nf-k b to translocate to the nucleus. a number of polymorphisms located in the macrophage migration inhibitory factor (mif) plays a central role in regulating the infl ammatory response by directly increasing tnfa and il- and countering the anti-infl ammatory actions of glucocorticoids. haplotypes composed of polymorphisms in the ¢ end of the gene coding for mif may be associated with the development of ali. promoter region of the gene coding for nf k bia have been described but their functional consequence is unknown. when individual nf k bia promoter polymorphisms were examined to determine if they are associated with the development of ali, none by themselves demonstrated an association. however, the haplotype of − g/− t/− c was found in a higher frequency in adults who developed ards especially in males with direct lung injury. another transcription factor is nf-e related factor (nrf ) which, under nonstressed conditions, is located in the cytoplasm. under oxidative stress nrf translocates to the nucleus and results in transcription of several anti-oxidant enzymes. several polymorphisms within the promoter region of the gene coding for nrf have been identifi ed that reduce transcription. one such variant, − a allele, is associated with the development of ali in adult trauma patients. the role of angiotensin converting enzyme ( ace) in lung injury has recently attracted uch interest. ace is present in pulmonary endothelium and is responsible for converting ati to atii. ace levels are elevated in the bronchoalveolar lavage fl uid of adults with ards and higher levels are associated with mortality from ards. the key component is most likely atii, which has apoptotic effects on alveolar epithelial and endothelial cells in vitro . atii receptor antagonists block pneumocyte apoptosis in a model of meconium aspiration. another important component of this system is ace , a homologue of ace expressed in human lungs, which is a negative regulator of the renin-angiotensin system as well as the probable receptor for the sars virus in humans. lung injury models using knockout mice lacking the ace gene have higher atii levels and exaggerated lung injury compared to wild type mice. however, the lung injury is reversed if the ace gene is inactivated in the ace knockout mice. this suggests that ace induces lung injury through atii and that ace protects against lung injury. indeed, ace inhibitors and atii antagonists appear to decrease the severity of lung injury in animal models, the risk of aspiration pneumonia in some adult populations, and reduce the -day mortality in adults with pneumonia. several studies have demonstrated the d/d genotype appears associated with the susceptibility to and outcome from ards. as discussed previously, expression microarrays have been invaluable in identifying other potential mediators involved in the pathophysiology of lung injury. the expression of pre-b cell colony enhancing factor (pbef) was found to be signifi cantly elevated in both animal and human studies of ali using this approach. pbef is a lesser studied cytokine involved in the maturation of b-cells, inhibition of neutrophil apoptosis, and perhaps regulation of the endothelial cell calcium-dependent cytoskeletal arrangement. two genetic polymorphisms have been identifi ed in the promoter region, − t/g and − c/t which appear to infl uence the development of ali. carriers of the g allele at position − had a . -fold increased risk of ali and the g allele remained an independent risk factor after controlling for several other variables. the t allele at position − was found at a lower frequency in adults with ali. combining these two polymorphisms in a haplotype analysis demonstrated that adults with the − g/ − c haplotype had a higher risk of ali ( . fold). the consequence of these two polymorphisms remains to be elucidated though the − t allele may result in reduced expression. one fi nal gene to be discussed in this section is the myosin light chain kinase (mlck) gene. three isoforms of the protein exist, and one isoform is a key component in the cytoskeletal arrangement regulating vascular permeability, angiogenesis, endothelial cell apoptosis, and leukocyte diapedesis. several polymorphisms in the gene coding for mlck have recently been identifi ed. analysis was performed not only on the infl uence of single polymorphisms on the development of ali but also a number of haplotypes using a sliding window approach. several strong associations between various single nucleotide polymorphisms as well as haplotypes and the risk of ali and sepsis were identifi ed in adults. this included one haplotype, ggt, composed of markers mylk_ , mylk_ , and mylk_ spanning a region of base pairs between the ¢ untranslated region and the fi rst exon that appeared to be specifi cally associated with the risk of ali and not sepsis. the functional signifi cance of these haplotypes remains to be determined. specifi c variants in the mylk gene were also shown to be associated with trauma-induced ali, however association of specifi c genetic variants and lung injury were not observed in children or adults with pneumonia. two other areas should be mentioned in regards to the infl uence of genetic variations in the picu. the fi rst is in the area of coagulation. several examples of genetic polymorphisms in genes coding for proteins involved in coagulation and fi brinolysis were discussed above in relation to sepsis and ali. however, these and many other genetic variations that exist in other components of the coagulation cascade could also infl uence the development of thrombosis including deep venous thrombosis in critically ill patients. thrombosis of central venous catheters is a recurring problem in picus and while certain environmental factors play a role (eg, length of time catheter is in place, size of the patient and vessel), genetic polymorphisms in the patient favoring the formation of thrombi may also play a role. finally, the action of every drug that is used in the picu can potentially be infl uenced by genetic variation in the patient. whether it be inhaled b -agonists, or the array of intravenous vasoactive agents, sedatives, muscle relaxants, antibiotics, steroids, etc.; all bind to protein receptors and either activate or block specifi c signal transduction pathways, many bind protein carriers or transporters, and most are metabolized by various protein enzymes. every gene coding for each of these proteins has multiple genetic variations with the potential to infl uence the levels or activities of these proteins. the area of pharmacogenomics attempts to determine the infl uence of genetic variations in genes affecting these various aspects of drug action. however, while the list of genetic polymorphisms in genes affecting drug action is growing rapidly, there are few clinical examples of the degree of infl uence that these genetic variations have on the response to drugs in the picu. for example, warfarin is the most widely used oral anticoagulant for long-term prophylaxis and treatment of thromboembolic disorders and is used in many children and adults with mechanical valves. the metabolism of and response to warfarin involves several enzymes, two of which exhibit genetic variations that dramatically alter the levels of warfarin. for one of these genes, cyp c , the common allele is referred to as cyp c * and is consider the wildtype while cyp c * contains a c to t nucleotide change at position in exon and cyp c * contains an a to c nucleotide change in exon . cyp c * has approximately % of the metabolic activity of the wild type cyp c * while cyp c * contains only % of the wildtype activity. by also using genetic variation in a second gene, vitamin k epoxide reductase complex subunit or vkorc , one can account for more than % of the observed dosing variability. current practice in the use of warfarin usually involves starting at an age and weight specifi c dose and monitoring coagulation studies. however, because of the genetic variations in these two enzymes and perhaps others, different patients take different amounts of time to achieve the appropriate therapeutic dose. knowing the specifi c genotypes of patients prior to initiating warfarin may allow for more appropriate dose selection, less time to achieve therapeutic levels, and less risk of adverse events. recently, an algorithm using the patient's genotypes at these two sites has been developed that allows for more accurate dosing in some populations. although these algorithms are being developed and tested it should be kept in mind that they do not account for drug-drug interactions. the era of the study of the genetic impact on critical illness in children is present. clinicians must be prepared to deal with the growing body of literature related to genetic infl uence on critical disease development, treatment and outcome, and be able to critically review the literature in order to determine the impact on the patients they are caring for daily. for the results of these representative genetic association studies to take the leap into clinically impacting care, they must meet certain criteria. first and foremost, the phenotype must be well defi ned; that is, the enrolling patients with ali/ards or sepsis must meet strict and well accepted criteria. second, they must be high quality studies, utilizing highly sensitive and specifi c methods for genotyping. third, the studies must use a large sample size to assure that no type i or type ii errors are made based simply upon the number of individuals genetic polymorphisms in genes coding for proteins involved in coagulation and fi brinolysis may be very important in the risk of bleeding and thrombosis in critically ill children. the area of pharmacogenomics attempts to determine the infl uence of genetic variations in genes affecting the various aspects of drug action. ace i/d but not agt (− )a/g polymorphism is a risk factor for mortality in ards g g genotype of the plasminogen activator inhibitor- promoter polymorphism associates with disseminated intravascular coagulation in children with systemic meningococcemia mechanisms and regulation of the gene-expression response to sepsis comparison of two polymorphisms of the interleukin- gene family: interleukin- receptor antagonist polymorphism contributes to susceptibility to severe sepsis recent advances in genetic predisposition to clinical acute lung injury novel polymorphisms in the myosin light chain kinase gene confer risk for acute lung injury macrophage migration inhibitory factor in acute lung injury: expression, biomarker, and associations polymorphisms in the mannose binding lectin- gene and acute respiratory distress syndrome severity of meningococcal disease in children and the angiotensin-converting enzyme insertion/ deletion polymorphism polymorphisms of human sp-a, sp-b, and sp-d genes: association of sp-b thr ile with ards deletions within a ca-repeat-rich region of intron of the human sp-b gene affect mrna splicing lipopolysaccharide hyporesponsiveness as a risk factor for intensive care unit hospitalization in infants with respiratory syncitial virus bronchiolitis fibrinogen-beta gene haplotype is associated with mortality in sepsis sepsis syndrome and death in trauma patients are associated with variation in the gene encoding for tumor necrosis factor association of tnf , a tnf-alpha promoter polymorphism, with septic shock susceptibility and mortality: a multicenter study variation in the tumor necrosis factor-alpha gene promoter region may be associated with death from meningococcal disease association between surfactant protein b + polymorphism and the risk of respiratory failure in adults with community-acquired pneumonia genome-level longitudinal expression of signaling pathways and gene networks in pediatric septic shock microarray analysis of regional cellular responses to local mechanical stress in acute lung injury genetic and environmental infl uences on premature death in adult adoptees the national human genome research institute's talking glossary of genetic terms irak functional genetic variant affects severity of septic shock genome-level expression profi les in pediatric septic shock indicate a role for altered zinc homeostasis in poor outcome pre-b-cell colony-enhancing factor as a potential novel biomarker in acute lung injury disease phenotype, preferably by a different group of investigators. finally, the impact of the genetic variant on the protein product must possess biologic plausibility as impacting the development or the outcome of the disease of study. only after all of these criteria are met should clinicians be comfortable moving to the arena of tailoring therapy based on genetic variations. . you are caring for two brothers with acute lung injury secondary to smoke inhalation from an apartment fi re. these two infants were apparently sleeping in the same crib when they were rescued simultaneously by fi re fi ghters. the fi rst infant was extubated within h of intubation and is doing well with a minimal oxygen requirement. the second has experienced a much more severe lung insult and remains intubated on high frequency oscillatory ventilation. in attempting to understand the difference in their clinical response to the seemingly identical insult, you suspect that it may be related to a polymorphism in one of the genes that codes for surfactant protein b. in considering this possibility, which of the following is true? a. although plausible, it is unlikely to be associated with a polymorphism because polymorphisms are rare occurring in less than one percent of the population. b. it is not plausible because variances in the translation of such a complex protein require differences in an entire haplotype, and not simply a single nucleotide polymorphism. c. it is plausible because genetic polymorphisms may infl uence the quantity of mrna transcribed and/or the functional activity of the surfactant protein b. d. it is unlikely as there are no reports of associations between surfactant protein gene polymorphisms and outcomes from pulmonary disease. e. it is unlikely because dysfunctional surfactant protein b demonstrates an x-linked pattern of inheritance. key: cord- -pyb pt authors: newell-mcgloughlin, martina; re, edward title: the flowering of the age of biotechnology – date: journal: the evolution of biotechnology doi: . / - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: pyb pt nan the significance of developing genetic and physical maps of the genome, and the importance of comparing the human genome with those of other species. it also suggested a preliminary focus on improving current technology. at the request of the u.s. congress, the office of technology assessment (ota) also studied the issue, and issued a document in -within days of the nrc report -that was similarly supportive. the ota report discussed, in addition to scientific issues, social and ethical implications of a genome program together with problems of managing funding, negotiating policy and coordinating research efforts. prompted by advisers at a meeting in reston, virginia, james wyngaarden, then director of the national institutes of health (nih) , decided that the agency should be a major player in the hgp, effectively seizing the lead from doe. the start of the joint effort was in may (with an "official" start in october) when a -year plan detailing the goals of the u.s. human genome project was presented to members of congressional appropriations committees in mid-february. this document co-authored by doe and nih and titled "understanding our genetic inheritance, the u.s. human genome project: the first five years" examined the then current state of genome science. the plan also set forth complementary approaches of the two agencies for attaining scientific goals and presented plans for administering research agenda; it described collaboration between u.s. and international agencies and presented budget projections for the project. according to the document, "a centrally coordinated project, focused on specific objectives, is believed to be the most efficient and least expensive way" to obtain the -billion base pair map of the human genome. in the course of the project, especially in the early years, the plan stated that "much new technology will be developed that will facilitate biomedical and a broad range of biological research, bring down the cost of many experiments (mapping and sequencing), and finding applications in numerous other fields." the plan built upon the reports of the office of technology assessment and the national research council on mapping and sequencing the human genome. "in the intervening two years," the document said, "improvements in technology for almost every aspect of genomics research have taken place. as a result, more specific goals can now be set for the project." the document describes objectives in the following areas mapping and sequencing the human genome and the genomes of model organisms; data collection and distribution; ethical, legal, and social considerations; research training; technology development; and technology transfer. these goals were to be reviewed each year and updated as further advances occured in the underlying technologies. they identified the overall budget needs to be the same as those identified by ota and nrc, namely about $ million per year for approximately years. this came to $ billion over the entire period of the project. considering that in july , the dna databases contained only seven sequences greater than . mb this was a major leap of faith. this approach was a major departure from the single-investigator-based gene of interest focus that research took hitherto. this sparked much controversy both before and after its inception. critics questioned the usefulness of genomic sequencing, they objected to the high cost and suggested it might divert funds from other, more focused, basic research. the prime argument to support the latter position is that there appeared to be are far less genes than accounted for by the mass of dna which would suggest that the major part of the sequencing effort would be of long stretches of base pairs with no known function, the so-called "junk dna." and that was in the days when the number of genes was presumed to be - , . if, at that stage, the estimated number was guessed to be closer to the actual estimate of - , (later reduced to - , ) this would have made the task seem even more foolhardy and less worthwhile to some. however, the ever-powerful incentive of new diagnostics and treatments for human disease beyond what could be gleaned from the gene-by-gene approach and the rapidly evolving technologies, especially that of automated sequencing, made it both an attractive and plausible aim. charles cantor ( ) , a principal scientist for the department of energy's genome project contended that doe and nih were cooperating effectively to develop organizational structures and scientific priorities that would keep the project on schedule and within its budget. he noted that there would be small short-term costs to traditional biology, but that the long-term benefits would be immeasurable. genome projects were also discussed and developed in other countries and sequencing efforts began in japan, france, italy, the united kingdom, and canada. even as the soviet union collapsed, a genome project survived as part of the russian science program. the scale of the venture and the manageable prospect for pooling data via computer made sequencing the human genome a truly international initiative. in an effort to include developing countries in the project unesco assembled an advisory committee in to examine unesco's role in facilitating international dialogue and cooperation. a privately-funded human genome organization (hugo) had been founded in to coordinate international efforts and serve as a clearinghouse for data. in that same year the european commission (ec) introduced a proposal entitled the "predictive medicine programme." a few ec countries, notably germany and denmark, claimed the proposal lacked ethical sensitivity; objections to the possible eugenic implications of the program were especially strong in germany (dickson ) . the initial proposal was dropped but later modified and adopted in as the "human genome analysis programme" (dickman and aldhous ) . this program committed substantial resources to the study of ethical issues. the need for an organization to coordinate these multiple international efforts quickly became apparent. thus the human genome organization (hugo), which has been called the "u.n. for the human genome," was born in the spring of . composed of a founding council of scientists from seventeen countries, hugo's goal was to encourage international collaboration through coordination of research, exchange of data and research techniques, training, and debates on the implications of the projects (bodmer ) . in august nih began large-scale sequencing trials on four model organisms: the parasitic, cell-wall lacking pathogenic microbe mycoplasma capricolum, the prokaryotic microbial lab rat escherichia coli, the most simple animal caenorhabditis elegans, and the eukaryotic microbial lab rat saccharomyces cerevisiae. each research group agreed to sequence megabases (mb) at cents a base within years. a sub living organism was actually fully sequenced and the complete sequence of that genome, the human cytomegalovirus (hcmv) genome was . mb. that year also saw the casting of the first salvo in the protracted debate on "ownership" of genetic information beginning with the more tangible question of ownership of cells. and, as with the debates of the early eighties, which were to be revisited later in the nineties, the respondent was the university of california. moore v. regents of the university of california was the first case in the united states to address the issue of who owns the rights to an individual's cells. diagnosed with leukemia, john moore had blood and bone marrow withdrawn for medical tests. suspicious of repeated requests to give samples because he had already been cured, moore discovered that his doctors had patented a cell line derived from his cells and so he sued. the california supreme court found that moore's doctor did not obtain proper informed consent, but, however, they also found that moore cannot claim property rights over his body. the quest for the holy grail of the human genome was both inspired by the rapidly evolving technologies for mapping and sequencing and subsequently spurred on the development of ever more efficient tools and techniques. advances in analytical tools, automation, and chemistries as well as computational power and algorithms revolutionized the ability to generate and analyze immense amounts of dna sequence and genotype information. in addition to leading to the determination of the complete sequences of a variety of microorganisms and a rapidly increasing number of model organisms, these technologies have provided insights into the repertoire of genes that are required for life, and their allelic diversity as well as their organization in the genome. but back in many of these were still nascent technologies. the technologies required to achieve this end could be broadly divided into three categories: equipment, techniques, and computational analysis. these are not truly discrete divisions and there was much overlap in their influence on each other. as noted, lloyd smith, michael and tim hunkapiller, and leroy hood conceived the automated sequencer and applied biosystems inc. brought it to market in june . there is no much doubt that when applied biosystems inc. put it on the market that which had been a dream became decidedly closer to an achievable reality. in automating sangers chain termination sequencing system, hood modified both the chemistry and the data-gathering processes. in the sequencing reaction itself, he replaced radioactive labels, which were unstable, posed a health hazard, and required separate gels for each of the four bases. hood developed chemistry that used fluorescent dyes of different colors for each of the four dna bases. this system of "color-coding" eliminated the need to run several reactions in overlapping gels. the fluorescent labels addressed another issue which contributed to one of the major concerns of sequencing -data gathering. hood integrated laser and computer technology, eliminating the tedious process of information-gathering by hand. as the fragments of dna passed a laser beam on their way through the gel the fluorescent labels were stimulated to emit light. the emitted light was transmitted by a lens and the intensity and spectral characteristics of the fluorescence are measured by a photomultiplier tube and converted to a digital format that could be read directly into a computer. during the next thirteen years, the machine was constantly improved, and by a fully automated instrument could sequence up to , , base pairs per year. in three groups came up with a variation on this approach. they developed what is termed capillary electrophoresis, one team was led by lloyd smith (luckey, ) , the second by barry karger , and the third by norman dovichi. in molecular dynamics introduced the megabace, a capillary sequencing machine. and not to be outdone the following year in , the original of the species came up with the abi prism sequencing machine. the is also a capillary-based machine designed to run about eight sets of sequence reactions per day. on the biology side, one of the biggest challenges was the construction of a physical map to be compiled from many diverse sources and approaches in such a way as to insure continuity of physical mapping data over long stretches of dna. the development of dna sequence tagged sites (stss) to correlate diverse types of dna clones aided this standardization of the mapping component by providing mappers with a common language and a system of landmarks for all the libraries from such varied sources as cosmids, yeast artificial chromosomes (yacs) and other rdnas clones. this way each mapped element (individual clone, contig, or sequenced region) would be defined by a unique sts. a crude map of the entire genome, showing the order and spacing of stss, could then be constructed. the order and spacing of these unique identifier sequences composing an sts map was made possible by development of mullis' polymerase chain reaction (pcr), which allows rapid production of multiple copies of a specific dna fragment, for example, an sts fragment. sequence information generated in this way could be recalled easily and, once reported to a database, would be available to other investigators. with the sts sequence stored electronically, there would be no need to obtain a probe or any other reagents from the original investigator. no longer would it be necessary to exchange and store hundreds of thousands of clones for full-scale sequencing of the human genome-a significant saving of money, effort, and time. by providing a common language and landmarks for mapping, sts's allowed genetic and physical maps to be cross-referenced. with a refinement on this technique to go after actual genes, sydney brenner proposed sequencing human cdnas to provide rapid access to the genes stating that 'one obvious way of finding at least a large part of the important [fraction] of the human genome is to look at the sequences of the messenger rna's of expressed genes' (brenner, ) . the following year the man who was to play a pivotal role on the world stage that became the human genome project suggested a way to implement sydney's approach. that player, nih biologist j. craig venter announced a strategy to find expressed genes, using ests (expressed sequence tag) (adams, ) . these so called ests represent a unique stretch of dna within a coding region of a gene, which as sydney suggested would be useful for identifying full-length genes and as a landmark for mapping. so using this approach projects were begun to mark gene sites on chromosome maps as sites of mrna expression. to help with this a more efficient method of handling large chunks of sequences was needed and two approaches were developed. yeast artificial chromosomes, which were developed by david burke, maynard olson, and george carle, increased insert size -fold (david t. burke et al., ) . caltech's second major contribution to the genome project was developed by melvin simon, and hiroaki shizuya. their approach to handling large dna segments was to develop "bacterial artificial chromosomes" (bacs), which basically allow bacteria to replicate chunks greater than , base pairs in length. this efficient production of more stable, large-insert bacs made the latter an even more attractive option, as they had greater flexibility than yacs. in in a collaboration that presages the snp consortium, washington university, st louis mo, was funded by the pharmaceutical company merck and the national cancer institute to provide sequence from those ests. more than half a million ests were submitted during the project (murr l et al., ) . on the analysis side was the major challenge to manage and mine the vast amount of dna sequence data being generated. a rate-limiting step was the need to develop semi-intelligent algorithms to achieve this herculean task. this is where the discipline of bioinformatics came into play. it had been evolving as a discipline since margaret oakley dayhoff used her knowledge of chemistry, mathematics, biology and computer science to develop this entirely new field in the early sixties. she is in fact credited today as a founder of the field of bioinformatics in which biology, computer science, and information technology merge into a single discipline. the ultimate goal of the field is to enable the discovery of new biological insights as well as to create a global perspective from which unifying principles in biology can be discerned. there are three important sub-disciplines within bioinformatics: the development of new algorithms and statistics with which to assess relationships among members of large data sets; the analysis and interpretation of various types of data including nucleotide and amino acid sequences, protein domains, and protein structures; and the development and implementation of tools that enable efficient access and management of different types of information. paralleling the rapid and very public ascent of recombinant dna technology during the previous two decades, the analytic and management tools of the discipline that was to become bioinformatics evolved at a more subdued but equally impressive pace. some of the key developments included tools such as the needleman-wunsch algorithm for sequence comparison which appeared even before recombinant dna technology had been demonstrated as early as ; the smith-waterman algorithm for sequence alignment ( ); the fastp algorithm ( ) and the fasta algorithm for sequence comparison by pearson and lupman in and perl (practical extraction report language) released by larry wall in . on the data management side several databases with ever more effective storage and mining capabilities were developed over the same period. the first bioinformatic/biological databases were constructed a few years after the first protein sequences began to become available. the first protein sequence reported was that of bovine insulin in , consisting of residues. nearly a decade later, the first nucleic acid sequence was reported, that of yeast alanine trna with bases. just one year later, dayhoff gathered all the available sequence data to create the first bioinformatic database. one of the first dedicated databases was the brookhaven protein databank whose collection consisted of ten x-ray crystallographic protein structures (acta. cryst. b, ) . the year saw the creation of the genetics computer group (gcg) as a part of the university of wisconsin biotechnology center. the group's primary and much used product was the wisconsin suite of molecular biology tools. it was spun off as a private company in . the swiss-prot database made its debut in in europe at the department of medical biochemistry of the university of geneva and the european molecular biology laboratory (embl). the first dedicated "bioinformatics" company intelligenetics, inc. was founded in california in . their primary product was the intelligenetics suite of programs for dna and protein sequence analysis. the first unified federal effort, the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) was created at nih/nlm in and it was to play a crucial part in coordinating public databases, developing software tools for analyzing genome data, and disseminating information. and on the other side of the atlantic, oxford molecular group, ltd. (omg) was founded in oxford, uk by anthony marchington, david ricketts, james hiddleston, anthony rees, and w. graham richards. their primary focus was on rational drug design and their products such as anaconda, asp, and chameleon obviously reflected this as they were applied in molecular modeling, and protein design engineering. within two years ncbi were making their mark when david lipman, eugene myers, and colleagues at the ncbi published the basic local alignment search tool blast algorithm for aligning sequences (altschul et al., ) . it is used to compare a novel sequence with those contained in nucleotide and protein databases by aligning the novel sequence with previously characterized genes. the emphasis of this tool is to find regions of sequence similarity, which will yield functional and evolutionary clues about the structure and function of this novel sequence. regions of similarity detected via this type of alignment tool can be either local, where the region of similarity is based in one location, or global, where regions of similarity can be detected across otherwise unrelated genetic code. the fundamental unit of blast algorithm output is the high-scoring segment pair (hsp). an hsp consists of two sequence fragments of arbitrary but equal length whose alignment is locally maximal and for which the alignment score meets or exceeds a threshold or cutoff score. this system has been refined and modified over the years the two principal variants presently in use being the ncbi blast and wu-blast (wu signifying washington university). the same year that blast was launched two other bioinformatics companies were launched. one was informax in bethesda, md whose products addressed sequence analysis, database and data management, searching, publication graphics, clone construction, mapping and primer design. the second, molecular applications group in california, was to play a bigger part on the proteomics end (michael levitt and chris lee). their primary products were look and segmod which are used for molecular modeling and protein design. the following year in the human chromosome mapping data repository, genome data base (gdb) was established. on a more global level, the development of computational capabilities in general and the internet in specific was also to play a considerable part in the sharing of data and access to databases that rendered the rapidity of the forward momentum of the hgp possible. also in edward uberbacher of oak ridge national laboratory in tennessee developed grail, the first of many gene-finding programs. in the first two "genomics" companies made their appearance. incyte pharmaceuticals, a genomics company headquartered in palo alto, california, was formed and myriad genetics, inc. was founded in utah. incyte's stated goal was to lead in the discovery of major common human disease genes and their related pathways. the company discovered and sequenced, with its academic collaborators (originally synteni from pat brown's lab at stanford), a number of important genes including brca and brca , with mary claire king, epidemiologist at uc-berkeley, the genes linked to breast cancer in families with a high degree of incidence before age . by a low-resolution genetic linkage map of the entire human genome was published and u.s. and french teams completed genetic maps of both mouse and man. the mouse with an average marker spacing of . cm as determined by eric lander and colleagues at whitehead and the human, with an average marker spacing of cm by jean weissenbach and colleagues at ceph (centre d'etude du polymorphisme humaine). the latter institute was the subject of a rather scathing book by paul rabinow ( ) based on what they did with this genome map. in , an american biotechnology company, millennium pharmaceuticals, and the ceph, developed plans for a collaborative effort to discover diabetes genes. the results of this collaboration could have been medically significant and financially lucrative. the two parties had agreed that ceph would supply millennium with germplasm collected from a large coterie of french families, and millennium would supply funding and expertise in new technologies to accelerate the identification of the genes, terms to which the french government had agreed. but in early , just as the collaboration was to begin, the french government cried halt! the government explained that the ceph could not be permitted to give the americans that most precious of substances for which there was no precedent in law -french dna. rabinow's book discusses the tangled relations and conceptions such as, can a country be said to have its own genetic material, the first but hardly the last franco-american disavowal of détente (paul rabinow, ) . the latest facilities such as the joint genome institute (jgi), walnut creek, ca are now able to sequence up to mb per day which makes it possible to sequence whole microbial genomes within a day. technologies currently under development will probably increase this capacity yet further through massively parallel sequencing and/or microfluidic processing making it possible to sequence multiple genotypes from several species. nineteen ninety-two saw one of the first shakeups in the progress of the hgp. that was the year that the first major outsider entered the race when britain's wellcome trust plunked down $ million to join the hgp. this caused a mere ripple while the principal shake-ups occurred stateside. much of the debate and subsequently the direction all the way through the hgp process was shaped by the personalities involved. as noted the application of one of the innovative techniques, namely ests, to do an end run on patenting introduced one of those major players to the fray, craig venter. venter, the high school drop out who reached the age of majority in the killing fields of vietnam was to play a pivotal role in a more "civilized" but no less combative field of human endeavor. he came onto the world stage through his initial work on ests while at the national institute of neurological disorders and stroke (ninds) from to . he noted in an interview with the scientist magazine in , that there was a degree of ambiguity at ninds about his venturing into the field of genomics, while they liked the prestige of hosting one of the leaders and innovators in his newly emerging field, they were concerned about him moving outside the nind purview of the human brain and nervous system. ultimately, while he proclaimed to like the security and service infrastructure this institute afforded him, that same system became too restrictive for his interests and talent. he wanted the whole canvas of human-gene expression to be his universe, not just what was confined to the central nervous system. he was becoming more interested in taking a whole genome approach to understanding the overall structure of genomes and genome evolution, which was much broader than the mission of ninds. he noted, with some irony, in later years that the then current nih director harold varmus had wished in hindsight that nih had pushed to do a similar database in the public domain, clearly in venter's opinion varmus was in need of a refresher course in history! bernadine healy, nih director in , was one of the few in a leadership role who saw the technical and fiscal promise of venter's work and, like all good administrators, it also presented an opportunity to resolve a thorny "personnel" issue. she appointed him head of the ad hoc committee to have an intramural genome program at nih to give the head of the hgp (that other larger than life personality jim watson) notice that he was not the sole arbitrator of the direction for the human genome project. however venter very soon established himself as an equally non-conformist character and with the tacit consent of his erstwhile benefactor. he initially assumed the mantle of a non-conformist through guilt by association rather than direct actions when it was revealed that nih was filing patent applications on thousands of these partial genes based on his ests catalyzing the first hgp fight at a congressional hearing. nih's move was widely criticized by the scientific community because, at the time, the function of genes associated with the partial sequences was unknown. critics charged that patent protection for the gene segments would forestall future research on them. the patent office eventually rejected the patents, but the applications sparked an international controversy over patenting genes whose functions were still unknown. interestingly enough despite nih's reliance on the est/cdna technique, venter, who was now clearly venturing outside the ninds mandated rubric, could not obtain government funding to expand his research, prompting him to leave nih in . he moved on to become president and director of the institute for genomic research (tigr), a nonprofit research center based in gaithersburg, md. at the same time william haseltine formed a sister company, human genome sciences (hgs), to commercialize tigr products. venter continued est work at tigr, but also began thinking about sequencing entire genomes. again, he came up with a quicker and faster method: whole genome shotgun sequencing. he applied for an nih grant to use the method on hemophilus influenzae, but started the project before the funding decision was returned. when the genome was nearly complete, nih rejected his proposal saying the method would not work. in a triumphal flurry in late may and with a metaphorical nose-thumbing at his recently rejected "unworkable" grant venter announced that tigr and collaborators had fully sequenced the first free-living organism -haemophilus influenzae. in november , controversy surrounding venter's research escalated. access restrictions associated with a cdna database developed by tigr and its rockville, md.-based biotech associate, human genome sciences (hgs) inc. -including hgs's right to preview papers on resulting discoveries and for first options to license products -prompted merck and co. inc. to fund a rival database project. in that year also britain "officially" entered the hgp race when the wellcome trust trumped down $ million (as mentioned earlier). the following year hgs was involved in yet another patenting debacle forced by the rapid march of technology into uncharted patent law territory. on june , hgs applied for a patent on a gene that produces a "receptor" protein that is later called ccr . at that time hgs has no idea that ccr is an hiv receptor. in december , u.s. researcher robert gallo, the co-discoverer of hiv, and colleagues found three chemicals that inhibit the aids virus but they did not know how the chemicals work. in february , edward berger at the nih discovered that gallo's inhibitors work in late-stage aids by blocking a receptor on the surface of t-cells. in june of that year in a period of just days, five groups of scientists published papers saying ccr is the receptor for virtually all strains of hiv. in january , schering-plough researchers told a san francisco aids conference that they have discovered new inhibitors. they knew that merck researchers had made similar discoveries. as a significant valentine in the u.s. patent and trademark office (uspto) grants hgs a patent on the gene that makes ccr and on techniques for producing ccr artificially. the decision sent hgs stock flying and dismayed researchers. it also caused the uspto to revise its definition of a "patentable" drug target. in the meantime haseltine's partner in rewriting patenting history, venter turned his focus to the human genome. he left tigr and started the for-profit company celera, a division of pe biosystems, the company that at times, thanks to hood and hunkapillar, led the world in the production of sequencing machines. using these machines, and the world's largest civilian supercomputer, venter finished assembling the human genome in just three years. following the debacle with the then nih director bernine healy over patenting the partial genes that resulted from est analysis, another major personality-driven event in that same year occurred. watson strongly opposed the idea of patenting gene fragments fearing that it would discourage research, and commented that "the automated sequencing machines 'could be run by monkeys.' " (nature june , ) with this dismissal watson resigned his nih nchgr post in to devote his full-time effort to directing cold spring harbor laboratory. his replacement was of a rather more pragmatic, less flamboyant nature. while venter maybe was described as an idiosyncratic shogun of the shotgun, francis collins was once described as the king arthur of the holy grail that is the human genome project. collins became the director of the national human genome research institute in . he was considered the right man for the job following his success (along with lap-chee tsui) in identifying the gene for the cystic fibrosis transmembrane (cftr) chloride channel receptor that, when mutated, can lead to the onset of cystic fibrosis. although now indelibly connected with the topic non-plus tout in biology, like many great innovators in this field before him, francis collins had little interest in biology as he grew up on a farm in the shenandoah valley of virginia. from his childhood he seemed destined to be at the center of drama, his father was professor of dramatic arts at mary baldwin college and the early stage management of career was performed on a stage he built on the farm. while the physical and mathematical sciences held appeal for him, being possessed of a highly logical mind, collins found the format in which biology was taught in the high school of his day mind-numbingly boring, filled with dissections and rote memorization. he found the contemplation of the infinite outcomes of dividing by zero (done deliberately rather than by accident as in einstein's case) far more appealing than contemplating the innards of a frog. that biology could be gloriously logical only became clear to collins when, in , he entered yale with a degree in chemistry from the university of virginia and was first exposed to the nascent field of molecular biology. anecdotally it was the tome, the book of life, penned by the theoretical physicist father of molecular biology, edwin schrodinger, while exiled in trinity college dublin in that was the catalyst for his conversion. like schrodinger he wanted to do something more obviously meaningful (for less than hardcore physicists at least!) than theoretical physics, so he went to medical school at unc-chapel hill after completing his chemistry doctorate in yale, and returned to the site of his road to damascus for post-doctoral study in the application of his newfound interest in human genetics. during this sojourn at yale, collins began working on developing novel tools to search the genome for genes that cause human disease. he continued this work, which he dubbed "positional cloning," after moving to the university of michigan as a professor in . he placed himself on the genetic map when he succeeded in using this method to put the gene that causes cystic fibrosis on the physical map. while a less colorful-in-your-face character than venter he has his own personality quirks, for example, he pastes a new sticker onto the back of his motorcycle helmet every time he finds a new disease gene. one imagines that particular piece of really estate is getting rather crowded. interestingly it was not these four hundred pound us gorillas who proposed the eventually prescient timeline for a working draft but two from the old power base. in meetings in the us in , john sulston and bob waterston proposed to produce a 'draft' sequence of the human genome by , a full five years ahead of schedule. while agreed by most to be feasible it meant a rethinking of strategy and involved focusing resources on larger centers and emphasizing sequence acquisition. just as important, it asserts the value of draft quality sequence to biomedical research. discussion started with the british based wellcome trust as possible sponsors (marshall e. ) . by a rough draft of the human genome map was produced showing the locations of more than , genes. the map was produced using yeast artificial chromosomes and some chromosomes -notably the littlest -were mapped in finer detail. these maps marked an important step toward clone-based sequencing. the importance was illustrated in the devotion of an entire edition of the journal nature to the subject. (nature : - ) the duel between the public and private face of the hgp progressed at a pace over the next five years. following release of the mapping data some level of international agreement was decided on sequence data release and databases. they agreed on the release of sequence data, specifically, that primary genomic sequence should be in the public domain to encourage research and development to maximize its benefit to society. also that it be rapidly released on a daily basis with assemblies of greater than kb and that the finished annotated sequence should be submitted immediately to the public databases. in an international consortium completed the sequence of the genome of the workhorse yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae. data had been released as the individual chromosomes were completed. the saccharomyces genome database (sgd) was created to curate this information. the project collects information and maintains a database of the molecular biology of s. cerevisiae. this database includes a variety of genomic and biological information and is maintained and updated by sgd curators. the sgd also maintains the s. cerevisiae gene name registry, a complete list of all gene names used in s. cerevisiae. in a new more powerful diagnostic tool termed snps (single nucleotide polymorphisms) was developed. snps are changes in single letters in our dna code that can act as markers in the dna landscape. some snps are associated closely with susceptibility to genetic disease, our response to drugs or our ability to remove toxins. the snp consortium although designated a limited company is a nonprofit foundation organized for the purpose of providing public genomic data. it is a collaborative effort between pharmaceutical companies and the wellcome trust with the idea of making available widely accepted, high-quality, extensive, and publicly accessible snp map. its mission was to develop up to , snps distributed evenly throughout the human genome and to make the information related to these snps available to the public without intellectual property restrictions. the project started in april and was anticipated to continue until the end of . in the end, many more snps, about . million total, were discovered than was originally planned. by the complete genome sequence of mycobacterium tuberculosis was published by teams from the uk, france, us and denmark in june . the abi prism sequencing machine, a capillary-based machine designed to run about eight sets of sequence reactions per day also reached the market that year. that same year the genome sequence of the first multicellular organism, c. elegans was completed. c. elegans has a genome of about mb and, as noted, is a primitive animal model organism used in a range of biological disciplines. by november the human genome draft sequence reached mb and the first complete human chromosome was sequenced -this first was reached on the east side of the atlantic by the hgp team led by the sanger centre, producing a finished sequence for chromosome , which is about million base-pairs and includes at least genes. according to anecdotal evidence when visiting his namesake centre, sanger asked: "what does this machine do then?" "dideoxy sequencing" came the reply, to which fred retorted: "haven't they come up with anything better yet?" as will be elaborated in the final chapter the real highlight of was production of a 'working draft' sequence of the human genome, which was announced simultaneously in the us and the uk. in a joint event, celera genomics announced completion of their 'first assembly' of the genome. in a remarkable special issue, nature included a -page article by the human genome project partners, studies of mapping and variation, as well as analysis of the sequence by experts in different areas of biology. science published the article by celera on their assembly of hgp and celera data as well as analyses of the use of the sequence. however to demonstrate the sensitivity of the market place to presidential utterances the joint appearances by bill clinton and tony blair touting this major milestone turned into a major cold shower when clinton's reassurance of access of the people to their genetic information caused a precipitous drop in celera's share value overnight. clinton's assurance that, "the effort to decipher the human genome will be the scientific breakthrough of the century -perhaps of all time. we have a profound responsibility to ensure that the life-saving benefits of any cutting-edge research are available to all human beings." (president bill clinton, wednesday, march , ) stands in sharp contrast to the statement from venter's colleague that " any company that wants to be in the business of using genes, proteins, or antibodies as drugs has a very high probability of running afoul of our patents. from a commercial point of view, they are severely constrained -and far more than they realize." (william a. haseltine, chairman and ceo, human genome sciences). the huge sell-off in stocks ended weeks of biotech buying in which those same stocks soared to unprecedented highs. by the next day, however, the genomic company spin doctors began to recover ground in a brilliant move which turned the clinton announcement into a public relations coup. all major genomics companies issued press releases applauding president clinton's announcement. the real news they argued, was that "for the first time a president strongly affirmed the importance of gene based patents." and the same bill haseltine of human genome sciences positively gushed as he happily pointed out that he "could begin his next annual report with the [president's] monumental statement, and quote today as a monumental day." as distinguished harvard biologist richard lewontin notes: "no prominent molecular biologist of my acquaintance is without a financial stake in the biotechnology business. as a result, serious conflicts of interest have emerged in universities and in government service (lewontin, ) . away from the spin doctors perhaps eric lander may have best summed up the herculean effort when he opined that for him "the human genome project has been the ultimate fulfilment: the chance to share common purpose with hundreds of wonderful colleagues towards a goal larger than ourselves. in the long run, the human genome project's greatest impact might not be the three billion nucleotides of the human chromosomes, but its model of scientific community." (ridley, ) . gene therapy the year also marked the passing of another milestone that was intimately connected to one of the fundamental drivers of the hgp. the california hereditary disorders act came into force and with it one of the potential solutions for human hereditary disorders. w. french anderson in the usa reported the first successful application of gene therapy in humans. the first successful gene therapy for a human disease was successfully achieved for severe combined immune deficiency (scid) by introducing the missing gene, adenosine deaminase deficiency (ada) into the peripheral lymphocytes of a -year-old girl and returning modified lymphocytes to her. although the results are difficult to interpret because of the concurrent use of polyethylene glycol-conjugated ada commonly referred to as pegylated ada (pgla) in all patients, strong evidence for in vivo efficacy was demonstrated. ada-modified t cells persisted in vivo for up to three years and were associated with increases in t-cell number and ada enzyme levels, t cells derived from transduced pgla were progressively replaced by marrow-derived t cells, confirming successful gene transfer into long-lived progenitor cells. ashanthi desilva, the girl who received the first credible gene therapy, continues to do well more than a decade later. cynthia cutshall, the second child to receive gene therapy for the same disorder as desilva, also continues to do well. within years (by january ), more than gene therapy protocols had been approved in the us and worldwide, researchers launched more than clinical trials to test gene therapy against a wide array of illnesses. surprisingly, a disease not typically heading the charts of heritable disorders, cancer has dominated the research. in cancer patients were treated with the tumor necrosis factor gene, a natural tumor fighting protein which worked to a limited extent. even more surprisingly, after the initial flurry of success little has worked. gene therapy, the promising miracle of failed to deliver on its early promise over the decade. apart from those examples, there are many diseases whose molecular pathology is, or soon will be, well understood, but for which no satisfactory treatments have yet been developed. at the beginning of the nineties it appeared that gene therapy did offer new opportunities to treat these disorders both by restoring gene functions that have been lost through mutation and by introducing genes that can inhibit the replication of infectious agents, render cells resistant to cytotoxic drugs, or cause the elimination of aberrant cells. from this "genomic" viewpoint genes could be said to be viewed as medicines, and their development as therapeutics should embrace the issues facing the development of small-molecule and protein therapeutics such as bioavailability, specificity, toxicity, potency, and the ability to be manufactured at large scale in a cost-effective manner. of course for such a radical approach certain basal level criteria needed to be established for selecting disease candidates for human gene therapy. these include, such factors as the disease is an incurable, life-threatening disease; organ, tissue, and cell types affected by the disease have been identified; the normal counterpart of the defective gene has been isolated and cloned; either the normal gene can be introduced into a substantial subfraction of the cells from the affected tissue, or the introduction of the gene into the available target tissue, such as bone marrow, will somehow alter the disease process in the tissue affected by the disease; the gene can be expressed adequately (it will direct the production of enough normal protein to make a difference); and techniques are available to verify the safety of the procedure. an ideal gene therapeutic should, therefore, be stably formulated at room temperature and amenable to administration either as an injectable or aerosol or by oral delivery in liquid or capsule form. the therapeutic should also be suitable for repeat therapy, and when delivered, it should neither generate an immune response nor be destroyed by tissue-scavenging mechanisms. when delivered to the target cell, the therapeutic gene should then be transported to the nucleus, where it should be maintained as a stable plasmid or chromosomal integrant, and be expressed in a predictable, controlled fashion at the desired potency in a cell-specific or tissue-specific manner. in addition to the ada gene transfer in children with severe combined immunodeficiency syndrome, a gene-marking study of epstein-barr virus-specific cytotoxic t cells, and trials of gene-modified t cells expressing suicide or viral resistance genes in patients infected with hiv were studied in the early nineties. additional strategies for t-cell gene therapy which were pursued later in the decade involve the engineering of novel t-cell receptors that impart antigen specificity for virally infected or malignant cells. issues which still are not resolved include nuclear transport, integration, regulated gene expression and immune surveillance. this knowledge, when finally understood and applied to the design of delivery vehicles of either viral or non-viral origin, will assist in the realization of gene therapeutics as safe and beneficial medicines that are suited to the routine management of human health. scientists are also working on using gene therapy to generate antibodies directly inside cells to block the production of harmful viruses such as hiv or even cancer-inducing proteins. there is a specific connection with francis collins, as his motivation for pursuing the hgp was his pursuit of defective genes beginning with the cystic fibrosis gene. this gene, called the cf transmembrane conductance regulator, codes for an ion channel protein that regulates salts in the lung tissue. the faulty gene prevents cells from excreting salt properly causing a thick sticky mucus to build up and destroy lung tissue. scientists have spliced copies of the normal genes into disabled adeno viruses that target lung tissues and have used bronchioscopes to deliver them to the lungs. the procedure worked well in animal studies however clinical trials in humans were not an unmitigated success. because the cells lining the lungs are continuously being replaced the effect is not permanent and must be repeated. studies are underway to develop gene therapy techniques to replace other faulty genes. for example, to replace the genes responsible for factor viii and factor ix production whose malfunctioning causes hemophilia a and b respectively; and to alleviate the effects of the faulty gene in dopamine production that results in parkinson's disease. apart from technical challenges such a radical therapy also engenders ethical debate. many persons who voice concerns about somatic-cell gene therapy use a "slippery slope" argument. it sounds good in theory but where does one draw the line. there are many issues yet to be resolved in this field of thorny ethics "good" and "bad" uses of the gene modification, difficulty of following patients in long-term clinical research and such. many gene therapy candidates are children who are too young to understand the ramifications of this treatment: conflict of interest -pits individuals' reproductive liberties and privacy interests against the interests of insurance companies or society. one issue that is unlikely to ever gain acceptance is germline therapy, the removal of deleterious genes from the population. issues of justice and resource allocation also have been raised: in a time of strain on our health care system, can we afford such expensive therapy? who should receive gene therapy? if it is made available only to those who can afford it, then a number of civil rights groups claim that the distribution of desirable biological traits among different socioeconomic and ethnic groups would become badly skewed adding a new and disturbing layer of discriminatory behavior. indeed a major setback occurred before the end of the decade in . jesse gelsinger was the first person to die from gene therapy, on september , , and his death created another unprecedented situation when his family sued not only the research team involved in the experiment (u penn), the company genovo inc., but also the ethicist who offered moral advice on the controversial project. this inclusion of the ethicist as a defendant alongside the scientists and school was a surprising legal move that puts this specialty on notice, as will no doubt be the case with other evolving technologies such as stem cells and therapeutic cloning, that its members could be vulnerable to litigation over the philosophical guidance they provide to researchers. the penn group principal investigator james wilson approached ethicist arthur caplan about their plans to test the safety of a genetically engineered virus on babies with a deadly form of the liver disorder, ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. the disorder allows poisonous levels of ammonia to build up in the blood system. caplan steered the researchers away from sick infants, arguing that desperate parents could not provide true informed consent. he said it would be better to experiment on adults with a less lethal form of the disease who were relatively healthy. gelsinger fell into that category. although he had suffered serious bouts of ammonia buildup, he was doing well on a special drug and diet regimen. the decision to use relatively healthy adults was controversial because risky, unproven experimental protocols generally use very ill people who have exhausted more traditional treatments, so have little to lose. in this case, the virus used to deliver the genes was known to cause liver damage, so some scientists were concerned it might trigger an ammonia crisis in the adults. wilson underestimated the risk of the experiment, omitted the disclosure about possible liver damage in earlier volunteers in the experiment and failed to mention the deaths of monkeys given a similar treatment during pre-clinical studies. a food and drug administration investigation after gelsinger's death found numerous regulatory violations by wilson's team, including the failure to stop the experiment and inform the fda after four successive volunteers suffered serious liver damage prior to the teen's treatment. in addition, the fda said gelsinger did not qualify for the experiment, because his blood ammonia levels were too high just before he underwent the infusion of genetic material. the fda suspended all human gene experiments by wilson and the university of penn subsequently restricting him solely to animal studies. a follow-up fda investigation subsequently alleged he improperly tested the experimental treatment on animals. financial conflicts of interest also surrounded james wilson, who stood to personally profit from the experiment through genovo his biotechnology company. the lawsuit was settled out of court for undisclosed terms in november . the fda also suspended gene therapy trials at st. elizabeth's medical center in boston, a major teaching affiliate of tufts university school of medicine, which sought to use gene therapy to reverse heart disease, because scientists there failed to follow protocols and may have contributed to at least one patient death. in addition, the fda temporarily suspended two liver cancer studies sponsored by the schering-plough corporation because of technical similarities to the university of pennsylvania study. some research groups voluntarily suspended gene therapy studies, including two experiments sponsored by the cystic fibrosis foundation and studies at beth israel deaconess medical center in boston aimed at hemophilia. the scientists paused to make sure they learned from the mistakes. the nineties also saw the development of another "high-thoughput" breakthrough, a derivative of the other high tech revolution namely dna chips. in biochips were developed for commercial use under the guidance of affymetrix. dna chips or microarrays represent a "massively parallel" genomic technology. they facilitate high throughput analysis of thousands of genes simultaneously, and are thus potentially very powerful tools for gaining insight into the complexities of higher organisms including analysis of gene expression, detecting genetic variation, making new gene discoveries, fingerprinting strains and developing new diagnostic tools. these technologies permit scientists to conduct large scale surveys of gene expression in organisms, thus adding to our knowledge of how they develop over time or respond to various environmental stimuli. these techniques are especially useful in gaining an integrated view of how multiple genes are expressed in a coordinated manner. these dna chips have broad commercial applications and are now used in many areas of basic and clinical research including the detection of drug resistance mutations in infectious organisms, direct dna sequence comparison of large segments of the human genome, the monitoring of multiple human genes for disease associated mutations, the quantitative and parallel measurement of mrna expression for thousands of human genes, and the physical and genetic mapping of genomes. however the initial technologies, or more accurately the algorithms used to extract information, were far from robust and reproducible. the erstwhile serial entrepreneur, al zaffaroni (the rebel who in founded alza when syntex ignored his interest in developing new ways to deliver drugs) founded yet another company, affymetrix, under the stewardship of stephen fodor, which was subject to much abuse for providing final extracted data and not allowing access to raw data. as with other personalities of this high through put era, seattle-bred steve fodor was also somewhat of a polymath having contributed to two major technologies, microarrays and combinatorial chemistry, the former has delivered on it's, promise while the latter, like gene therapy, is still in a somewhat extended gestation. and despite the limitations of being an industrial scientist he has had a rather prolific portfolio of publications. his seminal manuscripts describing this work have been published in all the journals of note, science, nature and pnas and was recognized in by the aaas by receiving the newcomb-cleveland award for an outstanding paper published in science. fodor began his industrial career in yet another zaffaroni firm. in he was recruited to the affymax research institute in palo alto where he spearheaded the effort to develop high-density arrays of biological compounds. his initial interest was in the broad area of what came to be called combinatorial chemistry. of the techniques developed, one approach permitted high resolution chemical synthesis in a light-directed, spatially-defined format. in the days before positive selection vectors, a researcher might have screened thousands of clones by hand with an oligonucleotide probe just to find one elusive insert. fodor's (and his successors) dna array technology reverses that approach. instead of screening an array of unknowns with a defined probe -a cloned gene, pcr product, or synthetic oligonucleotide -each position or "probe cell" in the array is occupied by a defined dna fragment, and the array is probed with the unknown sample. fodor used his chemistry and biophysics background to develop very dense arrays of these biomolecules by combining photolithographic methods with traditional chemical techniques. the typical array may contain all possible combinations of all possible oligonucleotides ( -mers, for example) that occur as a "window" which is tracked along a dna sequence. it might contain longer oligonucleotides designed from all the open reading frames identified from a complete genome sequence. or it might contain cdnas -of known or unknown sequence -or pcr products. of course it is one thing to produce data it is quite another to extract it in a meaningful manner. fodor's group also developed techniques to read these arrays, employing fluorescent labeling methods and confocal laser scanning to measure each individual binding event on the surface of the chip with extraordinary sensitivity and precision. this general platform of microarray based analysis coupled to confocal laser scanning has become the standard in industry and academia for large-scale genomics studies. in , fodor co-founded affymetrix where the chip technology has been used to synthesize many varieties of high density oligonucleotide arrays containing hundreds of thousands of dna probes. in , steve fodor founded perlegen, inc., a new venture that applied the chip technology towards uncovering the basic patterns of human diversity. his company's stated goals are to analyze more than one million genetic variations in clinical trial participants to explain and predict the efficacy and adverse effect profiles of prescription drugs. in addition, perlegen also applies this expertise to discovering genetic variants associated with disease in order to pave the way for new therapeutics and diagnostics. fodor's former company diversified into plant applications by developing a chip of the archetypal model of plant systems arabidopsis and supplied pioneer hi bred with custom dna chips for monitoring maize gene expression. they (affymetrix) have established programs where academic scientists can use company facilities at a reduced price and set up 'user centers' at selected universities. a related but less complex technology called 'spotted' dna chips involves precisely spotting very small droplets of genomic or cdna clones or pcr samples on a microscope slide. the process uses a robotic device with a print head bearing fine "repeatograph" tips that work like fountain pens to draw up dna samples from a -well plate and spot tiny amounts on a slide. up to , individual clones can be spotted in a dense array within one square centimeter on a glass slide. after hybridization with a fluorescent target mrna, signals are detected by a custom scanner. this is the basis of the systems used by molecular dynamics and incyte (who acquired this technology when it took over synteni). in , incyte was looking to gather more data for its library and perform experiments for corporate subscribers. the company considered buying affymetrix genechips but opted instead to purchase the smaller synteni, which had sprung out of pat brown's stanford array effort. synteni's contact printing technology resulted in dense -and cheaper -arrays. though incyte used the chips only internally, affymetrix sued, claiming synteni/incyte was infringing on its chip density patents. the suit argued that dense biochips -regardless of whether they use photolithography -cannot be made without a license from affymetrix! and in a litigious congo line endemic of this hi-tech era incyte countersued and for good measure also filed against genetic database competitor gene logic for infringing incyte's patents on database building. meanwhile, hyseq sued affymetrix, claiming infringement of nucleotide hybridization patents obtained by its cso. affymetrix, in turn, filed a countersuit, claiming hyseq infringed the spotted array patents. hyseq then reached back and found an additional hybridization patent it claimed that affymetrix had infringed. and so on into the next millennium! in part to avoid all of this another california company nanogen, inc. took a different approach to single nucleotide polymorphism discrimination technology. in an article in the april edition of nature biotechnology, entitled "single nucleotide polymorphic discrimination by an electronic dot blot assay on semiconductor microchips," nanogen describes the use of microchips to identify variants of the mannose binding protein gene that differ from one another by only a single dna base. the mannose binding protein (mbp) is a key component of the innate immune system in children who have not yet developed immunity to a variety of pathogens. to date, four distinct variants (alleles) of this gene have been identified, all differing by only a single nucleotide of dna. mbp was selected for this study because of its potential clinical relevance and its genetic complexity. the samples were assembled at the nci laboratory in conjunction with the national institutes of health and transferred to nanogen for analysis. however, from a high throughput perspective there is a question mark over microarrays. mark benjamin, senior director of business development at rosetta inpharmatics (kirkland, wa), is skeptical about the long-term prospects for standard dna arrays in high-throughput screening as the first steps require exposing cells and then isolating rna, which is something that is very hard to do in a high-throughput format. another drawback is that most of the useful targets are likely to be unknown (particularly in the agricultural sciences where genome sequencing is still in its infancy), and dna arrays that are currently available test only for previously sequenced genes. indeed, some argue that current dna arrays may not be sufficiently sensitive to detect the low expression levels of genes encoding targets of particular interest. and the added complication of the companies' reluctance to provide "raw data" means that derived data sets may be created with less than optimum algorithims thereby irretrievably losing potentially valuable information from the starting material. reverse engineering is a possible approach but this is laborious and time consuming and being prohibited by many contracts may arouse the interest of the ever-vigilant corporate lawyers. over the course of the nineties, outgrowths of functional genomics have been termed proteomics and metabolomics, which are the global studies of gene expression at the protein and metabolite levels respectively. the study of the integration of information flow within an organism is emerging as the field of systems biology. in the area of proteomics, the methods for global analysis of protein profiles and cataloging protein-protein interactions on a genome-wide scale are technically more difficult but improving rapidly, especially for microbes. these approaches generate vast amounts of quantitative data. the amount of expression data becoming available in the public and private sectors is already increasing exponentially. gene and protein expression data rapidly dwarfed the dna sequence data and is considerably more difficult to manage and exploit. in microbes, the small sizes of the genomes and the ease of handling microbial cultures, will enable high throughput, targeted deletion of every gene in a genome, individually and in combinations. this is already available on a moderate throughput scale in model microbes such as e. coli and yeast. combining targeted gene deletions and modifications with genome-wide assay of mrna and protein levels will enable intricate inter-dependencies among genes to be unraveled. simultaneous measurement of many metabolites, particularly in microbes, is beginning to allow the comprehensive modeling and regulation of fluxes through interdependent pathways. metabolomics can be defined as the quantitative measurement of all low molecular weight metabolites in an organism's cells at a specified time under specific environmental conditions. combining information from metabolomics, proteomics and genomics will help us to obtain an integrated understanding of cell biology. the next hierarchical level of phenotype considers how the proteome within and among cells cooperates to produce the biochemistry and physiology of individual cells and organisms. several authors have tentatively offered "physiomics" as a descriptor for this approach. the final hierarchical levels of phenotype include anatomy and function for cells and whole organisms. the term "phenomics" has been applied to this level of study and unquestionably the more well known omics namely economics, has application across all those fields. and, coming slightly out of left field this time, the spectre of eugenics needless to say was raised in the omics era. in the year american and british scientists unveiled a technique which has come to be known as pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (pid) for testing embryos in vitro for genetic abnormalities such as cystic fibrosis, hemophilia, and down's syndrome (wald, ) . this might be seen by most as a step forward, but it led ethicist david s. king ( ) to decry pid as a technology that could exacerbate the eugenic features of prenatal testing and make possible an expanded form of free-market eugenics. he further argues that due to social pressures and eugenic attitudes held by clinical geneticists in most countries, it results in eugenic outcomes even though no state coercion is involved and that, as abortion is not involved, and multiple embryos are available, pid is radically more effective as a tool of genetic selection. the first regulatory approval of a recombinant dna technology in the u.s. food supply was not a plant but an industrial enzyme that has become the hallmark of food biotechnology success. enzymes were important agents in food production long before modern biotechnology was developed. they were used, for instance, in the clotting of milk to prepare cheese, the production of bread and the production of alcoholic beverages. nowadays, enzymes are indispensable to modern food processing technology and have a great variety of functions. they are used in almost all areas of food production including grain processing, milk products, beer, juices, wine, sugar and meat. chymosin, known also as rennin, is a proteolytic enzyme whose role in digestion is to curdle or coagulate milk in the stomach, efficiently converting liquid milk to a semisolid like cottage cheese, allowing it to be retained for longer periods in a neonate's stomach. the dairy industry takes advantage of this property to conduct the first step in cheese production. chy-max™, an artificially produced form of the chymosin enzyme for cheese-making, was approved in . in some instances they replace less acceptable "older" technology, for example the enzyme chymosin. unlike crops industrial enzymes have had relatively easy passage to acceptance for a number of reasons. as noted they are part of the processing system and theoretically do not appear in the final product. today about % of the hard cheese in the us and uk is made using chymosin from geneticallymodified microbes. it is easier to purify, more active ( % as compared to %) and less expensive to produce (microbes are more prolific, more productive and cheaper to keep than calves). like all enzymes it is required only in very small quantities and because it is a relatively unstable protein it breaks down as the cheese matures. indeed, if the enzyme remained active for too long it would adversely affect the development of the cheese, as it would degrade the milk proteins to too great a degree. such enzymes have gained the support of vegetarian organizations and of some religious authorities. for plants the nineties was the era of the first widespread commercialization of what came to be known in often deprecating and literally inaccurate terms as gmos (genetically modified organisms). when the nineties dawned dicotyledonous plants were relatively easily transformed with agrobacterium tumefaciens but many economically important plants, including the cereals, remained inaccessible for genetic manipulation because of lack of effective transformation techniques. in this changed with the technology that overcame this limitation. michael fromm, a molecular biologist at the plant gene expression center, reported the stable transformation of corn using a high-speed gene gun. the method known as biolistics uses a "particle gun" to shoot metal particles coated with dna into cells. initially a gunpowder charge subsequently replaced by helium gas was used to accelerate the particles in the gun. there is a minimal disruption of tissue and the success rate has been extremely high for applications in several plant species. the technology rights are now owned by dupont. in some of the first of the field trials of the crops that would dominate the second half of the nineties began, including bt corn (with the bacillus thuriengenesis cry protein discussed in chapter three). in the fda declared that genetically engineered foods are "not inherently dangerous" and do not require special regulation. since , researchers have pinpointed and cloned several of the genes that make selected plants resistant to certain bacterial and fungal infections; some of these genes have been successfully inserted into crop plants that lack them. many more infection-resistant crops are expected in the near future, as scientists find more plant genes in nature that make plants resistant to pests. plant genes, however, are just a portion of the arsenal; microorganisms other than bt also are being mined for genes that could help plants fend off invaders that cause crop damage. the major milestone of the decade in crop biotechnology was approval of the first bioengineered crop plant in . it represented a double first not just of the first approved food crop but also of the first commercial validation of a technology which was to be surpassed later in the decade. that technology, antisense technology works because nucleic acids have a natural affinity for each other. when a gene coding for the target in the genome is introduced in the opposite orientation, the reverse rna strand anneals and effectively blocks expression of the enzyme. this technology was patented by calgene for plant applications and was the technology behind the famous flavr savr tomatoes. the first success for antisense in medicine was in when the u.s. food and drug administration gave the go-ahead to the cytomegalovirus (cmv) inhibitor fomivirsen, a phosphorothionate antiviral for the aids-related condition cmv retinitis making it the first drug belonging to isis, and the first antisense drug ever, to be approved. another technology, although not apparent at the time was behind the second approval and also the first and only successful to date in a commercial tree fruit biotech application. the former was a virus resistant squash the second the papaya ringspot resistant papaya. both owed their existence as much to historic experience as modern technology. genetically engineered virus-resistant strains of squash and cantaloupe, for example, would never have made it to farmers' fields if plant breeders in the 's had not noticed that plants infected with a mild strain of a virus do not succumb to more destructive strains of the same virus. that finding led plant pathologist roger beachy, then at washington university in saint louis, to wonder exactly how such "cross-protection" worked -did part of the virus prompt it? in collaboration with researchers at monsanto, beachy used an a. tumefaciens vector to insert into tomato plants a gene that produces one of the proteins that makes up the protein coat of the tobacco mosaic virus. he then inoculated these plants with the virus and was pleased to discover, as reported in , that the vast majority of plants did not succumb to the virus. eight years later, in , virus-resistant squash seeds created with beachy's method reached the market, to be followed soon by bioengineered virus-resistant seeds for cantaloupes, potatoes, and papayas. (breeders had already created virusresistant tomato seeds by using traditional techniques.) and the method of protection still remained a mystery when the first approvals were given in and . gene silencing was perceived initially as an unpredictable and inconvenient side effect of introducing transgenes into plants. it now seems that it is the consequence of accidentally triggering the plant's adaptive defense mechanism against viruses and transposable elements. this recently discovered mechanism, although mechanistically different, has a number of parallels with the immune system of mammals. how this system worked was not elucidated until later in the decade by a researcher who was seeking a very different holy grail -the black rose! rick jorgensen, at that time at dna plant technologies in oakland, ca and subsequently of, of the university of california davis attempted to overexpress the chalcone synthase gene by introducing a modified copy under a strong promoter.surprisingly he obtained white flowers, and many strange variegated purple and white variations in between. this was the first demonstration of what has come to be known as post-transcriptional gene silencing (ptgs). while initially it was considered a strange phenomenon limited to petunias and a few other plant species, it is now one of the hottest topics in molecular biology. rna interference (rnai) in animals and basal eukaryotes, quelling in fungi, and ptgs in plants are examples of a broad family of phenomena collectively called rna silencing (hannon ; plasterk ) . in addition to its occurrence in these species it has roles in viral defense (as demonstrated by beachy) and transposon silencing mechanisms among other things. perhaps most exciting, however, is the emerging use of ptgs and, in particular, rnai -ptgs initiated by the introduction of double-stranded rna (dsrna) -as a tool to knock out expression of specific genes in a variety of organisms. nineteen ninety one also heralded yet another first. the february , issue of science reported the patenting of "molecular scissors": the nobel-prize winning discovery of enzymatic rna, or "ribozymes," by thomas czech of the university of colorado. it was noted that the u.s. patent and trademark office had awarded an "unusually broad" patent for ribozymes. the patent is u.s. patent no. , , , claim of which reads as follows: "an enzymatic rna molecule not naturally occurring in nature having an endonuclease activity independent of any protein, said endonuclease activity being specific for a nucleotide sequence defining a cleavage site comprising single-stranded rna in a separate rna molecule, and causing cleavage at said cleavage site by a transesterification reaction." although enzymes made of protein are the dominant form of biocatalyst in modern cells, there are at least eight natural rna enzymes, or ribozymes, that catalyze fundamental biological processes. one of which was yet another discovery by plant virologists, in this instance the hairpin ribozyme was discovered by george bruening at uc davis. the self-cleavage structure was originally called a paperclip, by the bruening laboratory which discovered the reactions. as mentioned in chapter , it is believed that these ribozymes might be the remnants of an ancient form of life that was guided entirely by rna. since a ribozyme is a catalytic rna molecule capable of cleaving itself and other target rnas it therefore can be useful as a control system for turning off genes or targeting viruses. the possibility of designing ribozymes to cleave any specific target rna has rendered them valuable tools in both basic research and therapeutic applications. in the therapeutics area, they have been exploited to target viral rnas in infectious diseases, dominant oncogenes in cancers and specific somatic mutations in genetic disorders. most notably, several ribozyme gene therapy protocols for hiv patients are already in phase trials. more recently, ribozymes have been used for transgenic animal research, gene target validation and pathway elucidation. however, targeting ribozymes to the cellular compartment containing their target rnas has proved a challenge. at the other bookend of the decade in , samarsky et al. reported that a family of small rnas in the nucleolus (snornas) can readily transport ribozymes into this subcellular organelle. in addition to the already extensive panoply of rna entities yet another has potential for mischief. viroids are small, single-stranded, circular rnas containing - nucleotides arranged in a rod-like secondary structure and are the smallest pathogenic agents yet described. the smallest viroid characterized to date is rice yellow mottle sobemovirus (rymv), at nucleotides. in comparison, the genome of the smallest known viruses capable of causing an infection by themselves, the single-stranded circular dna of circoviruses, is around kilobases in size. the first viroid to be identified was the potato spindle tuber viroid (pstvd). some species have been identified to date. unlike the many satellite or defective interfering rnas associated with plant viruses, viroids replicate autonomously on inoculation of a susceptible host. the absence of a protein capsid and of detectable messenger rna activity implies that the information necessary for replication and pathogenesis resides within the unusual structure of the viroid genome. the replication mechanism actually involves interaction with rna polymerase ii, an enzyme normally associated with synthesis of messenger rna, and "rolling circle" synthesis of new rna. some viroids have ribozyme activity which allow self-cleavage and ligation of unit-size genomes from larger replication intermediates. it has been proposed that viroids are "escaped introns". viroids are usually transmitted by seed or pollen. infected plants can show distorted growth. from its earliest years, biotechnology attracted interest outside scientific circles. initially the main focus of public interest was on the safety of recombinant dna technology, and of the possible risks of creating uncontrollable and harmful novel organisms (berg , ) . the debate on the deliberate release of genetically modified organisms, and on consumer products containing or comprising them, followed some years later (nas, ) . it is interesting to note that within the broad ethical tableau of potential issues within the science and products of biotechnology, the seemingly innocuous field of plant modification has been one of the major players of the 's. the success of agricultural biotechnology is heavily dependent on its acceptance by the public, and the regulatory framework in which the industry operates is also influenced by public opinion. as the focus for molecular biology research shifted from the basic pursuit of knowledge to the pursuit of lucrative applications, once again as in the previous two decades the specter of risk arose as the potential of new products and applications had to be evaluated outside the confines of a laboratory. however, the specter now became far more global as the implications of commercial applications brought not just worker safety into the loop but also, the environment, agricultural and industrial products and the safety and well being of all living things. beyond "deliberate" release, the rac guidelines were not designed to address these issues, so the matter moved into the realm of the federal agencies who had regulatory authority which could be interpreted to oversee biotechnology issues. this adaptation of oversight is very much a dynamic process as the various agencies wrestle with the task of applying existing regulations and developing new ones for oversight of this technology in transition. as the decade progressed focus shifted from basic biotic stress resistance to more complex modifications the next generation of plants will focus on value added traits in which valuable genes and metabolites will be identified and isolated, with some of the later compounds being produced in mass quantities for niche markets. two of the more promising markets are nutraceuticals or so-called "functional foods" and plants developed as bioreactors for the production of valuable proteins and compounds, a field known as plant molecular farming. developing plants with improved quality traits involves overcoming a variety of technical challenges inherent to metabolic engineering programs. both traditional plant breeding and biotechnology techniques are needed to produce plants carrying the desired quality traits. continuing improvements in molecular and genomic technologies are contributing to the acceleration of product development in this space. by the end of the decade in , applying nutritional genomics, della penna ( ) isolated a gene, which converts the lower activity precursors to the highest activity vitamin e compound, alpha-tocopherol. with this technology, the vitamin e content of arabidopsis seed oil has been increased nearly -fold and progress has been made to move the technology to crops such as soybean, maize, and canola. this has also been done for folates in rice. omega three fatty acids play a significant role in human health, eicosapentaenoic acid (epa) and docosahexaenoic acid (dha), which are present in the retina of the eye and cerebral cortex of the brain, respectively, are some of the most well documented from a clinical perspective. it is believed that epa and dha play an important role in the regulation of inflammatory immune reactions and blood pressure, treatment of conditions such as cardiovascular disease and cystic fibrosis, brain development in utero, and, in early postnatal life, the development of cognitive function. they are mainly found in fish oil and the supply is limited. by the end of the decade ursin ( ) had succeeded in engineering canola to produce these fatty acids. from a global perspective another value-added development had far greater impact both technologically and socio-economically. a team led by ingo potrykus ( ) engineered rice to produce pro-vitamin a, which is an essential micronutrient. widespread dietary deficiency of this vitamin in rice-eating asian countries, which predisposes children to diseases such as blindness and measles, has tragic consequences. improved vitamin a nutrition would alleviate serious health problems and, according to unicef, could also prevent up to two million infant deaths due to vitamin a deficiency. adoption of the next stage of gm crops may proceed more slowly, as the market confronts issues of how to determine price, share value, and adjust marketing and handling to accommodate specialized end-use characteristics. furthermore, competition from existing products will not evaporate. challenges that have accompanied gm crops with improved agronomic traits, such as the stalled regulatory processes in europe, will also affect adoption of nutritionally improved gm products. beyond all of this, credible scientific research is still needed to confirm the benefits of any particular food or component. for functional foods to deliver their potential public health benefits, consumers must have a clear understanding of, and a strong confidence level in, the scientific criteria that are used to document health effects and claims. because these decisions will require an understanding of plant biochemistry, mammalian physiology, and food chemistry, strong interdisciplinary collaborations will be needed among plant scientists, nutritionists, and food scientists to ensure a safe and healthful food supply. in addition to being a source of nutrition, plants have been a valuable wellspring of therapeutics for centuries. during the nineties, however, intensive research has focused on expanding this source through rdna biotechnology and essentially using plants and animals as living factories for the commercial production of vaccines, therapeutics and other valuable products such as industrial enzymes and biosynthetic feedstocks. possibilities in the medical field include a wide variety of compounds, ranging from edible vaccine antigens against hepatitis b and norwalk viruses (arntzen, ) and pseudomonas aeruginosa and staphylococcus aureus to vaccines against cancer and diabetes, enzymes, hormones, cytokines, interleukins, plasma proteins, and human alpha- -antitrypsin. thus, plant cells are capable of expressing a large variety of recombinant proteins and protein complexes. therapeutics produced in this way are termed plant made pharmaceuticals (pmps). and non-therapeutics are termed plant made industrial products (pmips) (newell-mcgloughlin, ) . the first reported results of successful human clinical trials with their transgenic plant-derived pharmaceuticals were published in . they were an edible vaccine against e. coli-induced diarrhea and a secretory monoclonal antibody directed against streptococcus mutans, for preventative immunotherapy to reduce incidence of dental caries. haq et al. ( ) reported the expression in potato plants of a vaccine against e. coli enterotoxin (etec) that provided an immune response against the toxin in mice. human clinical trials suggest that oral vaccination against either of the closely related enterotoxins of vibrio cholerae and e. coli induces production of antibodies that can neutralize the respective toxins by preventing them from binding to gut cells. similar results were found for norwalk virus oral vaccines in potatoes. for developing countries, the intention is to deliver them in bananas or tomatoes (newell-mcgloughlin, ) . plants are also faster, cheaper, more convenient and more efficient than the principal eukaryotic production system, namely chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells for the production of pharmaceuticals. hundreds of acres of protein-containing seeds could inexpensively double the production of a cho bioreactor factory. in addition, proteins can be expressed at the highest levels in the harvestable seed and plant-made proteins and enzymes formulated in seeds have been found to be extremely stable, reducing storage and shipping costs. pharming may also enable research on drugs that cannot currently be produced. for example, croptech in blacksburg, va., is investigating a protein that seems to be a very effective anticancer agent. the problem is that this protein is difficult to produce in mammalian cell culture systems as it inhibits cell growth. this should not be a problem in plants. furthermore, production size is flexible and easily adjustable to the needs of changing markets. making pharmaceuticals from plants is also a sustainable process, because the plants and crops used as raw materials are renewable. the system also has the potential to address problems associated with provision of vaccines to people in developing countries. products from these alternative sources do not require a so-called "cold chain" for refrigerated transport and storage. those being developed for oral delivery obviates the need for needles and aspectic conditions which often are a problem in those areas. apart from those specific applications where the plant system is optimum there are many other advantages to using plant production. many new pharmaceuticals based on recombinant proteins will receive regulatory approval from the united states food and drug administration (fda) in the next few years. as these therapeutics make their way through clinical trials and evaluation, the pharmaceutical industry faces a production capacity challenge. pharmaceutical discovery companies are exploring plant-based production to overcome capacity limitations, enable production of complex therapeutic proteins, and fully realize the commercial potential of their biopharmaceuticals (newell-mcgloughlin, ) . nineteen ninety also marked a major milestone in the animal biotech world when herman made his appearance on the world's stage. since the palmiter's mouse, transgenic technology has been applied to several species including agricultural species such as sheep, cattle, goats, pigs, rabbits, poultry, and fish. herman was the first transgenic bovine created by genpharm international, inc., in a laboratory in the netherlands at the early embryo stage. scientist's microinjected recently fertilized eggs with the gene coding for human lactoferrin. the scientists then cultured the cells in vitro to the embryo stage and transferred them to recipient cattle. lactoferrin, an iron-containing anti-bacterial protein is essential for infant growth. since cow's milk doesn't contain lactoferrin, infants must be fed from other sources that are rich in iron -formula or mother's milk (newell-mcgloughlin, ) . as herman was a boy he would be unable to provide the source, that would require the production of daughters which was not necessarily a straightforward process. the dutch parliments permission was required. in they finally approved a measure that permitted the world's first genetically engineered bull to reproduce. the leiden-based gene pharming proceeded to artificially inseminate cows with herman's sperm. with a promise that the protein, lactoferrin, would be the first in a new generation of inexpensive, high-tech drugs derived from cows' milk to treat complex diseases like aids and cancer. herman, became the father of at least eight female calves in , and each one inherited the gene for lactoferrin production. while their birth was initially greeted as a scientific advancement that could have far-reaching effects for children in developing nations, the levels of expression were too low to be commercially viable. by , herman, who likes to listen to rap music to relax, had sired calves and outlived them all. his offspring were all killed and destroyed after the end of the experiment, in line with dutch health legislation. herman was also slated for the abattoir, but the dutch public -proud of making history with herman -rose up in protest, especially after a television program screened footage showing the amiable bull licking a kitten. herman won a bill of clemency from parliament. however, instead of retirement on a comfortable bed of straw, listening to rap music, herman was pressed into service again. he now stars at a permanent biotech exhibit in naturalis, a natural history museum in the dutch city of leiden. after his death, he will be stuffed and remain in the museum in perpetuity (a fate similar to what awaited an even more famous mammalian first born later in the decade). the applications for transgenic animal research fall broadly into two distinct areas, namely medical and agricultural applications. the recent focus on developing animals as bioreactors to produce valuable proteins in their milk can be catalogued under both areas. underlying each of these, of course, is a more fundamental application, that is the use of those techniques as tools to ascertain the molecular and physiological bases of gene expression and animal development. this understanding can then lead to the creation of techniques to modify development pathways. in a european decision with rather more far-reaching implications than hermans sex life was made. the first european patent on a transgenic animal was issued for a transgenic mouse sensitive to carcinogens -harvard's "oncomouse". the oncomouse patent application was refused in europe in due primarily to an established ban on animal patenting. the application was revised to make narrower claims, and the patent was granted in . this has since been repeatedly challenged, primarily by groups objecting to the judgement that benefits to humans outweigh the suffering of the animal. currently, the patent applicant is awaiting protestors' responses to a series of possible modifications to the application. predictions are that agreement will not likely be forthcoming and that the legal wrangling will continue into the future. bringing animals into the field of controversy starting to swirl around gmos and preceding the latter's commercialization, was the approval by the fda of bovine somatotropin (bst) for increased milk production in dairy cows. the fda's center for veterinary medicine (cvm) regulates the manufacture and distribution of food additives and drugs that will be given to animals. biotechnology products are a growing proportion of the animal health products and feed components regulated by the cvm. the center requires that food products from treated animals must be shown to be safe for human consumption. applicants must show that the drug is effective and safe for the animal and that its manufacture will not affect the environment. they must also conduct geographically dispersed clinical trials under an investigational new animal drug application with the fda through which the agency controls the use of the unapproved compound in food animals. unlike within the eu, possible economic and social issues cannot be taken into consideration by the fda in the premarket drug approval process. under these considerations the safety and efficacy of rbst was determined. it was also determined that special labeling for milk derived from cows that had been treated with rbst is not required under fda food labeling laws because the use of rbst does not effect the quality or the composition of the milk. work with fish proceeded a pace throughout the decade. gene transfer techniques have been applied to a large number of aquatic organisms, both vertebrates and invertebrates. gene transfer experiments have targeted a wide variety of applications, including the study of gene structure and function, aquaculture production, and use in fisheries management programs. because fish have high fecundity, large eggs, and do not require reimplantation of embryos, transgenic fish prove attractive model systems in which to study gene expression. transgenic zebrafish have found utility in studies of embryogenesis, with expression of transgenes marking cell lineages or providing the basis for study of promoter or structural gene function. although not as widely used as zebrafish, transgenic medaka and goldfish have been used for studies of promoter function. this body of research indicates that transgenic fish provide useful models of gene expression, reliably modeling that in "higher" vertebrates. perhaps the largest number of gene transfer experiments address the goal of genetic improvement for aquaculture production purposes. the principal area of research has focused on growth performance, and initial transgenic growth hormone (gh) fish models have demonstrated accelerated and beneficial phenotypes. dna microinjection methods have propelled the many studies reported and have been most effective due to the relative ease of working with fish embryos. bob devlins' group in vancouver has demonstrated extraordinary growth rate in coho salmon which were transformed with a growth hormone from sockeye salmon. the transgenics achieve up to eleven times the size of their littermates within six months, reaching maturity in about half the time. interestingly this dramatic effect is only observed in feeding pins where the transgenics' ferocious appetites demands constant feeding. if the fish are left to their own devices and must forage for themselves, they appear to be out-competed by their smarter siblings. however most studies, such as those involving transgenic atlantic salmon and channel catfish, report growth rate enhancement on the order of - %. in addition to the species mentioned, gh genes also have been transferred into striped bass, tilapia, rainbow trout, gilthead sea bream, common carp, bluntnose bream, loach, and other fishes. shellfish also are subject to gene transfer toward the goal of intensifying aquaculture production. growth of abalone expressing an introduced gh gene is being evaluated; accelerated growth would prove a boon for culture of the slowgrowing mollusk. a marker gene was introduced successfully into giant prawn, demonstrating feasibility of gene transfer in crustaceans, and opening the possibility of work involving genes affecting economically important traits. in the ornamental fish sector of aquaculture, ongoing work addresses the development of fish with unique coloring or patterning. a number of companies have been founded to pursue commercialization of transgenics for aquaculture. as most aquaculture species mature at - years of age, most transgenic lines are still in development and have yet to be tested for performance under culture conditions. extending earlier research that identified methylfarnesoate (mf) as a juvenile hormone in crustaceans and determined its role in reproduction, researchers at the university of connecticut have developed technology to synchronize shrimp egg production and to increase the number and quality of eggs produced. females injected with mf are stimulated to produce eggs ready for fertilization. the procedure produces percent more eggs than the traditional crude method of removing the eyestalk gland. this will increase aquaculture efficiency. a number of experiments utilize gene transfer to develop genetic lines of potential utility in fisheries management. transfer of gh genes into northern pike, walleye, and largemouth bass are aimed at improving the growth rate of sport fishes. gene transfer has been posed as an option for reducing losses of rainbow trout to whirling disease, although suitable candidate genes have yet to be identified. richard winn of the university of georgia is developing transgenic killifish and medaka as biomonitors for environmental mutagens, which carry the bacteriophage phi x as a target for mutation detection. development of transgenic lines for fisheries management applications generally is at an early stage, often at the founder or f generation. broad application of transgenic aquatic organisms in aquaculture and fisheries management will depend on showing that particular gmos can be used in the environment both effectively and safely. although our base of knowledge for assessing ecological and genetic safety of aquatic gmos currently is limited, some early studies supported by the usda biotechnology risk assessment program have yielded results. data from outdoor pond-based studies on transgenic catfish reported by rex dunham of auburn university show that transgenic and non-transgenic individuals interbreed freely, that survival and growth of transgenics in unfed ponds was equal to or less than that of non-transgenics, and that predator avoidance is not affected by expression of the transgene. however, unquestionably the seminal event for animal biotech in the nineties was ian wilmut's landmark work using nuclear transfer technology to generate the lambs morag and megan reported in (from an embryonic cell nuclei) and the truly ground-breaking work of creating dolly from an adult somatic cell nucleus, reported in february, (wilmut, ) . wilmut and his colleagues at the roslin institute demonstrated for the first time with the birth of dolly the sheep that the nucleus of an adult somatic cell can be transferred to an enucleated egg to create cloned offspring. it had been assumed for some time that only embryonic cells could be used as the cellular source for nuclear transfer. this assumption was shattered with the birth of dolly. this example of cloning an animal using the nucleus of an adult cell was significant because it demonstrated the ability of egg cell cytoplasm to "reprogram" an adult nucleus. when cells differentiate, that is, evolve from primitive embryonic cells to functionally defined adult cells, they lose the ability to express most genes and can only express those genes necessary for the cell's differentiated function. for example, skin cells only express genes necessary for skin function, and brain cells only express genes necessary for brain function. the procedure that produced dolly demonstrated that egg cytoplasm is capable of reprogramming an adult differentiated cell (which is only expressing genes related to the function of that cell type). this reprogramming enables the differentiated cell nucleus to once again express all the genes required for the full embryonic development of the adult animal. since dolly was cloned, similar techniques have been used to clone a veritable zoo of vertebrates including mice, cattle, rabbitts, mules, horses, fish, cats and dogs from donor cells obtained from adult animals. these spectacular examples of cloning normal animals from fully differentiated adult cells demonstrate the universality of nuclear reprogramming although the next decade called some of these assumptions into question. this technology supports the production of genetically identical and genetically modified animals. thus, the successful "cloning" of dolly has captured the imagination of researchers around the world. this technological breakthrough should play a significant role in the development of new procedures for genetic engineering in a number of mammalian species. it should be noted that nuclear cloning, with nuclei obtained from either mammalian stem cells or differentiated "adult" cells, is an especially important development for transgenic animal research. as the decade reached its end the clones began arriving rapidly with specific advances made by a japanese group who used cumulus cells rather than fibroblasts to clone calves. they found that the percentage of cultured, reconstructed eggs that developed into blastocysts was % for cumulus cells and % for oviductal cells. these rates are higher than the % previously reported for transfer of nuclei from bovine fetal fibroblasts. following on the heels of dolly, polly and molly became the first genetically engineered transgenic sheep produced through nuclear transfer technology. polly and molly were engineered to produce human factor ix (for hemophiliacs) by transfer of nuclei from transfected fetal fibroblasts. until then germline competent transgenics had only been produced in mammalian species, other than mice, using dna microinjection. researchers at the university of massachusetts and advanced cell technology (worcester, ma) teamed up to produce genetically identical calves utilizing a strategy similar to that used to produce transgenic sheep. in contrast to the sheep cloning experiment, the bovine experiment involved the transfer of nuclei from an actively dividing population of cells. previous results from the sheep experiments suggested that induction of quiescence by serum starvation was required to reprogram the donor nuclei for successful nuclear transfer. the current bovine experiments indicate that this step may not be necessary. typically about embryos needed to be microinjected to obtain one transgenic cow, whereas nuclear transfer produced three transgenic calves from reconstructed embryos. this efficiency is comparable to the previous sheep research where six transgenic lambs were produced from reconstructed embryos. the ability to select for genetically modified cells in culture prior to nuclear transfer opens up the possibility of applying the powerful gene targeting techniques that have been developed for mice. one of the limitations of using primary cells, however, is their limited lifespan in culture. primary cell cultures such as the fetal fibroblasts can only undergo about population doublings before they senesce. this limited lifespan would preclude the ability to perform multiple rounds of selection. to overcome this problem of cell senescence, these researchers showed that fibroblast lifespan could be prolonged by nuclear transfer. a fetus, which was developed by nuclear transfer from genetically modified cells, could in turn be used to establish a second generation of fetal fibroblasts. these fetal cells would then be capable of undergoing another population doublings, which would provide sufficient time for selection of a second genetic modification. as noted, there is still some uncertainty over whether quiescent cells are required for successful nuclear transfer. induction into quiescence was originally thought to be necessary for successful nuclear reprogramming of the donor nucleus. however, cloned calves have been previously produced using non-quiescent fetal cells. furthermore, transfer of nuclei from sertoli and neuronal cells, which do not normally divide in adults, did not produce a liveborn mouse; whereas nuclei transferred from actively dividing cumulus cells did produce cloned mice. the fetuses used for establishing fetal cell lines in a tufts goat study were generated by mating nontransgenic females to a transgenic male containing a human antithrombin (at) iii transgene. this at transgene directs high level expression of human at into milk of lactating transgenic females. as expected, all three offspring derived from female fetal cells were females. one of these cloned goats was hormonally induced to lactate. this goat secreted . - . grams per liter of at in her milk. this level of at expression was comparable to that detected in the milk of transgenic goats from the same line obtained by natural breeding. the successful secretion of at in milk was a key result because it showed that a cloned animal could still synthesize and secrete a foreign protein at the expected level. it will be interesting to see if all three cloned goats secrete human at at the identical level. if so, then the goal of creating a herd identical transgenic animals, which secrete identical levels of an important pharmaceutical, would become a reality. no longer would variable production levels exist in subsequent generations due to genetically similar but not identical animals. this homogeneity would greatly aid in the production and processing of a uniform product. as nuclear transfer technology continues to be refined and applied to other species, it may eventually replace microinjection as the method of choice for generating transgenic livestock. nuclear transfer has a number of advantages: ) nuclear transfer is more efficient than microinjection at producing a transgenic animal, ) the fate of the integrated foreign dna can be examined prior to production of the transgenic animal, ) the sex of the transgenic animal can be predetermined, and ) the problem of mosaicism in first generation transgenic animals can be eliminated. dna microinjection has not been a very efficient mechanism to produce transgenic mammals. however, in november, , a team of wisconsin researchers reported a nearly % efficient method for generating transgenic cattle. the established method of cattle transgenes involves injecting dna into the pronuclei of a fertilized egg or zygote. in contrast, the wisconsin team injected a replication-defective retroviral vector into the perivitelline space of an unfertilized oocyte. the perivitelline space is the region between the oocyte membrane and the protective coating surrounding the oocyte known as the zona pellucida. in addition to es (embryonic stem) cells other sources of donor nuclei for nuclear transfer might be used such as embryonic cell lines, primordial germ cells, or spermatogonia to produce offspring. the utility of es cells or related methodologies to provide efficient and targeted in vivo genetic manipulations offer the prospects of profoundly useful animal models for biomedical, biological and agricultural applications. the road to such success has been most challenging, but recent developments in this field are extremely encouraging. with the may announcement of geron buying out ian wilmuts company roslin biomed, they declared it the dawn of an new era in biomedical research. geron's technologies for deriving transplantable cells from human pluripotent stem cells (hpscs) and extending their replicative capacity with telomerase was combined with the roslin institute nuclear transfer technology, the technology that produced dolly the cloned sheep. the goal was to produce transplantable, tissue-matched cells that provide extended therapeutic benefits without triggering immune rejection. such cells could be used to treat numerous major chronic degenerative diseases and conditions such as heart disease, stroke, parkinson's disease, alzheimer's disease, spinal cord injury, diabetes, osteoarthritis, bone marrow failure and burns. the stem cell is a unique and essential cell type found in animals. many kinds of stem cells are found in the body, with some more differentiated, or committed, to a particular function than others. in other words, when stem cells divide, some of the progeny mature into cells of a specific type (heart, muscle, blood, or brain cells), while others remain stem cells, ready to repair some of the everyday wear and tear undergone by our bodies. these stem cells are capable of continually reproducing themselves and serve to renew tissue throughout an individual's life. for example, they continually regenerate the lining of the gut, revitalize skin, and produce a whole range of blood cells. although the term "stem cell" commonly is used to refer to the cells within the adult organism that renew tissue (e.g., hematopoietic stem cells, a type of cell found in the blood), the most fundamental and extraordinary of the stem cells are found in the early-stage embryo. these embryonic stem (es) cells, unlike the more differentiated adult stem cells or other cell types, retain the special ability to develop into nearly any cell type. embryonic germ (eg) cells, which originate from the primordial reproductive cells of the developing fetus, have properties similar to es cells. it is the potentially unique versatility of the es and eg cells derived, respectively, from the early-stage embryo and cadaveric fetal tissue that presents such unusual scientific and therapeutic promise. indeed, scientists have long recognized the possibility of using such cells to generate more specialized cells or tissue, which could allow the generation of new cells to be used to treat injuries or diseases, such as alzheimer's disease, parkinson's disease, heart disease, and kidney failure. likewise, scientists regard these cells as an important -perhaps essential -means for understanding the earliest stages of human development and as an important tool in the development of life-saving drugs and cell-replacement therapies to treat disorders caused by early cell death or impairment. geron corporation and its collaborators at the university of wisconsin -madison (dr. james a. thomson) and johns hopkins university (dr. john d. gearhart) announced in november the first successful derivation of hpscs from two sources: (i) human embryonic stem (hes) cells derived from in vitro fertilized blastocysts (thomson ) and (ii) human embryonic germ (heg) cells derived from fetal material obtained from medically terminated pregnancies (shamblott et al. ) . although derived from different sources by different laboratory processes, these two cell types share certain characteristics but are referred to collectively as human pluripotent stem cells (hpscs). because hes cells have been more thoroughly studied, the characteristics of hpscs most closely describe the known properties of hes cells. stem cells represent a tremendous scientific advancement in two ways: first, as a tool to study developmental and cell biology; and second, as the starting point for therapies to develop medications to treat some of the most deadly diseases. the derivation of stem cells is fundamental to scientific research in understanding basic cellular and embryonic development. observing the development of stem cells as they differentiate into a number of cell types will enable scientists to better understand cellular processes and ways to repair cells when they malfunction. it also holds great potential to yield revolutionary treatments by transplanting new tissue to treat heart disease, atherosclerosis, blood disorders, diabetes, parkinson's, alzheimer's, stroke, spinal cord injuries, rheumatoid arthritis, and many other diseases. by using stem cells, scientists may be able to grow human skin cells to treat wounds and burns. and, it will aid the understanding of fertility disorders. many patient and scientific organizations recognize the vast potential of stem cell research. another possible therapeutic technique is the generation of "customized" stem cells. a researcher or doctor might need to develop a special cell line that contains the dna of a person living with a disease. by using a technique called "somatic cell nuclear transfer" the researcher can transfer a nucleus from the patient into an enucleated human egg cell. this reformed cell can then be activated to form a blastocyst from which customized stem cell lines can be derived to treat the individual from whom the nucleus was extracted. by using the individual's own dna, the stem cell line would be fully compatible and not be rejected by the person when the stem cells are transferred back to that person for the treatment. preliminary research is occurring on other approaches to produce pluripotent human es cells without the need to use human oocytes. human oocytes may not be available in quantities that would meet the needs of millions of potential patients. however, no peer-reviewed papers have yet appeared from which to judge whether animal oocytes could be used to manufacture "customized" human es cells and whether they can be developed on a realistic timescale. additional approaches under consideration include early experimental studies on the use of cytoplasmic-like media that might allow a viable approach in laboratory cultures. on a much longer timeline, it may be possible to use sophisticated genetic modification techniques to eliminate the major histocompatibility complexes and other cell-surface antigens from foreign cells to prepare master stem cell lines with less likelihood of rejection. this could lead to the development of a bank of universal donor cells or multiple types of compatible donor cells of invaluable benefit to treat all patients. however, the human immune system is sensitive to many minor histocompatibility complexes and immunosuppressive therapy carries life-threatening complications. stem cells also show great potential to aid research and development of new drugs and biologics. now, stem cells can serve as a source for normal human differentiated cells to be used for drug screening and testing, drug toxicology studies and to identify new drug targets. the ability to evaluate drug toxicity in human cell lines grown from stem cells could significantly reduce the need to test a drug's safety in animal models. there are other sources of stem cells, including stem cells that are found in blood. recent reports note the possible isolation of stem cells for the brain from the lining of the spinal cord. other reports indicate that some stem cells that were thought to have differentiated into one type of cell can also become other types of cells, in particular brain stem cells with the potential to become blood cells. however, since these reports reflect very early cellular research about which little is known, we should continue to pursue basic research on all types of stem cells. some religious leaders will advocate that researchers should only use certain types of stem cells. however, because human embryonic stem cells hold the potential to differentiate into any type of cell in the human body, no avenue of research should be foreclosed. rather, we must find ways to facilitate the pursuit of all research using stem cells while addressing the ethical concerns that may be raised. another seminal and intimately related event at the end of the nineties occurred in madison wisconsin. up until november of , isolating es cells in mammals other than mice proved elusive, but in a milestone paper in the november , issue of science, james a. thomson, ( ) a developmental biologist at uw-madison reported the first successful isolation, derivation and maintenance of a culture of human embryonic stem cells (hes cells). it is interesting to note that this leap was made from mouse to man. as thomson himself put it, these cells are different from all other human stem cells isolated to date and as the source of all cell types, they hold great promise for use in transplantation medicine, drug discovery and development, and the study of human developmental biology. the new century is rapidly exploiting this vision. when steve fodor was asked in "how do you really take the human genome sequence and transform it into knowledge?" he answered from affymetrix's perspective, it is a technology development task. he sees the colloquially named affychips being the equivalent of a cd-rom of the genome. they take information from the genome and write it down. the company has come a long way from the early days of venter's ests and less than robust algorithms as described earlier. one surprising fact unearthed by the newer more sophisticated generation of chips is that to percent of the non-repetitive dna is being expressed as accepted knowledge was that only . to percent of the genome would be expressed. since much of that sequence has no protein-coding capacity it is most likely coding for regulatory functions. in a parallel to astrophysics this is often referred to in common parlance as the "dark matter of the genome" and like dark matter for many it is the most exciting and challenging aspect of uncovering the occult genome. it could be, and most probably is, involved in regulatory functions, networks, or development. and like physical dark matter it may change our whole concept of what exactly a gene is or is not! since beadle and tatum's circumspect view of the protein world no longer holds true it adds a layer of complexity to organizing chip design. depending on which sequences are present in a particular transcript, you can, theoretically, design a set of probes to uniquely distinguish that variant. at the dna level itself there is much potential for looking at variants either expressed or not at a very basic level as a diagnostic system, but ultimately the real paydirt is the information that can be gained from looking at the consequence of non-coding sequence variation on the transcriptome itself. and fine tuning when this matters and when it is irrelevant as a predicative model is the auspices of the affymetrix spin-off perlegen. perlegen came into being in late to accelerate the development of high-resolution, whole genome scanning. and they have stuck to that purity of purpose. to paraphrase dragnet's sergeant joe friday, they focus on the facts of dna just the dna. perlegen owes its true genesis to the desire of one of its cofounders to use dna chips to help understand the dynamics underlying genetic diseases. brad margus' two sons have the rare disease "ataxia telangiectasia" (a-t). a-t is a progressive, neurodegenerative childhood disease that affects the brain and other body systems. the first signs of the disease, which include delayed development of motor skills, poor balance, and slurred speech, usually occur during the first decade of life. telangiectasias (tiny, red "spider" veins), which appear in the corners of the eyes or on the surface of the ears and cheeks, are characteristic of the disease, but are not always present. many individuals with a-t have a weakened immune system, making them susceptible to recurrent respiratory infections. about % of those with a-t develop cancer, most frequently acute lymphocytic leukemia or lymphoma suggesting that the sentinel competence of the immune system is compromised. having a focus so close to home is a powerful driver for any scientist. his co-founder david cox is a polymath pediatrician whose training in the latter informs his application of the former in the development of patient-centered tools. from that perspective, perlegen's stated mission is to collaborate with partners to rescue or improve drugs and to uncover the genetic bases of diseases. they have created a whole genome association approach that enables them to genotype millions of unique snps in thousands of cases and controls in a timeframe of months rather than years. as mentioned previously, snp (single nucleotide polymorphism) markers are preferred over microsatellite markers for association studies because of their abundance along the human genome, the low mutation rate, and accessibilities to high-throughput genotyping. since most diseases, and indeed responses to drug interventions, are the products of multiple genetic and environmental factors it is a challenge to develop discriminating diagnostics and, even more so, targetedtherapeutics. because mutations involved in complex diseases act probabilisticallythat is, the clinical outcome depends on many factors in addition to variation in the sequence of a single gene -the effect of any specific mutation is smaller. thus, such effects can only be revealed by searching for variants that differ in frequency among large numbers of patients and controls drawn from the general population. analysis of these snp patterns provides a powerful tool to help achieve this goal. although most bi-alleic snps are rare, it has been estimated that just over million common snps, each with a frequency of between and %, account for the bulk of the dna sequence difference between humans. such snps are present in the human genome once every base pairs or so. as is to be expected from linkage disequilibrium studies, alleles making up blocks of such snps in close physical proximity are often correlated, resulting in reduced genetic variability and defining a limited number of "snp haplotypes," each of which reflects descent from a single, ancient ancestral chromosome. in cox's group, using high level scanning with some old-fashioned somatic cell genetics, constructed the snp map of chromosome .the surprising findings were blocks of limited haplotype diversity in which more than % of a global human sample can typically be characterized by only three common haplotypes (interestingly enough the prevalence of each hapolytype in the examined population was in the ratio : : . ).from this the conclusion could be drawn that by comparing the frequency of genetic variants in unrelated cases and controls, genetic association studies could potentially identify specific haplotypes in the human genome that play important roles in disease, without need of knowledge of the history or source of the underlying sequence, which hypothesis they subsequently went on to prove. following cox et al. pioneering work on "blocking" chromosome into characteristic haplotypes, tien chen came to visit him from university of southern california and following the visit his group developed discriminating algorithms which took advantage of the fact that the haplotype block structure can be decomposed into large blocks with high linkage disequilibrium and relatively limited haplotype diversity, separated by short regions of low disequilibrium. one of the practical implications of this observation is as suggested by cox that only a small fraction of all the snps they refer to as "tag" snps can be chosen for mapping genes responsible for complex human diseases, which can significantly reduce genotyping effort, without much loss of power. they developed algorithms to partition haplotypes into blocks with the minimum number of tag snps for an entire chromosome. in they reported that they had developed an optimized suite of programs to analyze these block linkage disequilibrium patterns and to select the corresponding tag snps that will pick the minimum number of tags for the given criteria. in addition the updated suite allows haplotype data and genotype data from unrelated individuals and from general pedigrees to be analyzed. using an approach similar to richard michelmore's bulk segregant analysis in plants of more than a decade previously, perlegen subsequently made use of these snp haplotype and statistical probability tools to estimate total genetic variability of a particular complex trait coded for by many genes, with any single gene accounting for no more than a few percent of the overall variability of the trait. cox's group have determined that fewer than total individuals provide adequate power to identify genes accounting for only a few percent of the overall genetic variability of a complex trait, even using the very stringent significance levels required when testing large numbers of dna variants. from this it is possible to identify the set of major genetic risk factors contributing to the variability of a complex disease and/or treatment response. so, while a single genetic risk factor is not a good predictor of treatment outcome, the sum of a large fraction of risk factors contributing to a treatment response or common disease can be used to optimize personalized treatments without requiring knowledge of the underlying mechanisms of the disease.they feel that a saturating level of coverage is required to produce repeatable prediction of response to medication or predisposition to disease and that taking shortcuts will for the most part lead to incomplete, clinically-irrelevant results. in hinds et al. in science describe even more dramatic progresss. they describe a publicly available, genome-wide data set of . million common singlenucleotide polymorphisms (snps) that have been accurately genotyped in each of people from three population samples. a second public data set of more than million snps typed in each of people has been generated by the international haplotype map (hapmap) project. these two public data sets, combined with multiple new technologies for rapid and inexpensive snp genotyping, are paving the way for comprehensive association studies involving common human genetic variations. perlegen basically is taking to the next level fodor's stated reason for the creation of affymetrix, the belief that understanding the correlation between genetic variability and its role in health and disease would be the next step in the genomics revolution. the other interesting aspect of this level of coverage is, of course, the notion of discrete identifiable groups based on ethnicity, centers of origin and such breaks down and a spectrum of variation arises across all populations which makes the perlegen chip, at one level, a true unifier of humanity but at another adds a whole layer of complexity for hmos! at the turn of the century, this personalized chip approach to medicine received some validation at a simpler level in a closely related disease area to the one to which one fifth of a-t patients ultimately succumb when researchers at the whitehead institute used dna chips to distinguish different forms of leukemia based on patterns of gene expression in different populations of cells. moving cancer diagnosis away from visually based systems to such molecular based systems is a major goal of the national cancer institute. in the study, scientists used a dna chip to examine gene activity in bone marrow samples from patients with two different types of acute leukemia -acute myeloid leukemia (aml) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (all). then, using an algorithm, developed at the whitehead, they identified signature patterns that could distinguish the two types. when they cross-checked the diagnoses made by the chip against known differences in the two types of leukemia, they found that the chip method could automatically make the distinction between aml and all without previous knowledge of these classes. taking it to a level beyond where perlegen are initially aiming, eric lander, leader of the study said, mapping not only what is in the genome, but also what the things in the genome do, is the real secret to comprehending and ultimately curing cancer and other diseases. chips gained recognition on the world stage in when they played a key role in the search for the cause of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) and probably won a mcarthur genius award for their creator. ucsf assistant professor joseph derisi, already famous in the scientific community as the wunderkind originator of the online diy chip maker in pat brown's lab at stanford, built a gene microarray containing all known completely sequenced viruses ( , of them) and, using a robot arm that he also customized, in a three day period used it to classify a pathogen isolated from sars patients as a novel coronavirus. when a whole galaxy of dots lit up across the spectrum of known vertebrate cornoviruses derisis knew this was a new variant. interestingly the sequence had the hottest signal with avian infectious bronchitis virus. his work subsequently led epidemiologists to target the masked palm civet, a tree-dwelling animal with a weasel-like face and a catlike body as the probable primary host. the role that derisi's team at ucsf played in identifying a coronavirus as a suspected cause of sars came to the attention of the national media when cdc director dr. julie gerberding recognized joe in march , press conference and in when joe was honored with one of the coveted mcarthur genius awards. this and other tools arising from information gathered from the human genome sequence and complementary discoveries in cell and molecular biology, new tools such as gene-expression profiling, and proteomics analysis are converging to finally show that rapid robust diagnostics and "rational" drug design has a future in disease research. another virus that puts sars deaths in perspective benefitted from rational drug design at the turn of the century. influenza, or flu, is an acute respiratory infection caused by a variety of influenza viruses. each year, up to million americans develop the flu, with an average of about , being hospitalized and , to , people dying from influenza and its complications. the use of current influenza treatments has been limited due to a lack of activity against all influenza strains, adverse side effects, and rapid development of viral resistance. influenza costs the united states an annual $ . billion in physician visits, lost productivity and lost wages. and least we still dismiss it as a nuisance we are well to remember that the "spanish" influenza pandemic killed over million people in and , making it the worst infectious pandemic in history beating out even the more notorious black death of the middle ages. this fear has been rekindled as the dreaded h n (h for haemaglutenin and n for neuraminidase as described below) strain of bird flu has the potential to mutate and recognise homo sapiens as a desirable host. since rna viruses are notoriously faulty in their replication this accelerated evolutionary process gives then a distinct advantage when adapting to new environments and therefore finding more amenable hosts. although inactivated influenza vaccines are available, their efficacy is suboptimal partly because of their limited ability to elicit local iga and cytotoxic t cell responses. the choices of treatments and preventions for influenza hold much more promise in this millennium. clinical trials of cold-adapted live influenza vaccines now under way suggest that such vaccines are optimally attenuated, so that they will not cause influenza symptoms but will still induce protective immunity. aviron (mountain view, ca), biochem pharma (laval, quebec, canada), merck (whitehouse station, nj), chiron (emeryville, ca), and cortecs (london), all had influenza vaccines in the clinic at the turn of the century, with some of them given intra-nasally or orally. meanwhile, the team of gilead sciences (foster city, ca) and hoffmann-la roche (basel, switzerland) and also glaxowellcome (london) in put on the market neuraminidase inhibitors that block the replication of the influenza virus. gilead was one of the first biotechnology companies to come out with an anti-flu therapeutic. tamiflu™ (oseltamivir phosphate) was the first flu pill from this new class of drugs called neuraminidase inhibitors (ni) that are designed to be active against all common strains of the influenza virus. neuraminidase inhibitors block viral replication by targeting a site on one of the two main surface structures of the influenza virus, preventing the virus from infecting new cells. neuraminidase is found protruding from the surface of the two main types of influenza virus, type a and type b. it enables newly formed viral particles to travel from one cell to another in the body. tamiflu is designed to prevent all common strains of the influenza virus from replicating. the replication process is what contributes to the worsening of symptoms in a person infected with the influenza virus. by inactivating neuraminidase, viral replication is stopped, halting the influenza virus in its tracks. in marked contrast to the usual protracted process of clinical trials for new therapeutics, the road from conception to application for tamiflu was remarkably expeditious. in , gilead and hoffmann-la roche entered into a collaborative agreement to develop and market therapies that treat and prevent viral influenza. in , as gilead's worldwide development and marketing partner, roche led the final development of tamiflu, months after the first patient was dosed in clinical trials in april , roche and gilead announced the submission of a new drug application to the u.s. food and drug administration (fda) for the treatment of influenza. additionally, roche filed a marketing authorisation application (maa) in the european union under the centralized procedure in early may . six months later in october , gilead and roche announced that the fda approved tamiflu for the treatment of influenza a and b in adults. these accelerated efforts allowed tamiflu to reach the u.s. market in time for the - flu season. one of gilead's studies showed an increase in efficacy from % when the vaccine was used alone to % when the vaccine was used in conjunction with a neuraminidase inhibitor. outside of the u.s., tamiflu also has been approved for the treatment of influenza a and b in argentina, brazil, canada, mexico, peru and switzerland. regulatory review of the tamiflu maa by european authorities is ongoing. with the h n birdflu strain's relentless march (or rather flight) across asia, in through eastern europe to a french farmyard, an unwelcome stowaway on a winged migration, and no vaccine in sight, tamiflu, although untested for this species, seen as the last line of defense is now being horded and its patented production right's fought over like an alchemist's formula. tamiflu's main competitor, zanamivir marketed as relenza™ was one of a group of molecules developed by glaxowellcome and academic collaborators using structure-based drug design methods targeted, like tamiflu, at a region of the neuraminidase surface glycoprotein of influenza viruses that is highly conserved from strain to strain. glaxo filed for marketing approval for relenza in europe and canada. the food and drug administration's accelerated drug-approval timetable began to show results by , its evaluation of novartis's gleevec took just three months compared with the standard - months. another factor in improving biotherapeutic fortunes in the new century was the staggering profits of early successes. in , $ . billion of the $ . billion in revenue collected by genentech in south san francisco came from oncology products, mostly the monoclonal antibody-based drugs rituxan, used to treat non-hodgkin's lymphoma, and herceptin for breast cancer. in fact two of the first cancer drugs to use the new tools for 'rational' design herceptin and gleevec, a small-molecule chemotherapeutic for some forms of leukemia are proving successful, and others such as avastin (an anti-vascular endothelial growth factor) for colon cancer and erbitux are already following in their footsteps. gleevec led the way in exploiting signal-transduction pathways to treat cancer as it blocks a mutant form of tyrosine kinase (termed the philadelphia translocation recognized in 's) that can help to trigger out-of-control cell division. about % of biotech companies raising venture capital during the third quarter of listed cancer as their primary focus, according to online newsletter venturereporter. by according to the pharmaceutical research and manufacturers of america, medicines were in development for cancer up from in . another new avenue in cancer research is to combine drugs. wyeth's mylotarg, for instance, links an antibody to a chemotherapeutic, and homes in on cd receptors on acute myeloid leukemia cells. expertise in biochemistry, cell biology and immunology is required to develop such a drug. this trend has created some bright spots in cancer research and development, even though drug discovery in general has been adversely affected by mergers, a few high-profile failures and a shaky us economy in the early 's. as the millennium approached observers as diverse as microsoft's bill gates and president bill clinton predicted the st century wiould be the "biology century". by the many programs and initiatives underway at major research institutions and leading companies were already giving shape to this assertion. these initiatives have ushered in a new era of biological research anticipated to generate technological changes of the magnitude associated with the industrial revolution and the computerbased information revolution. complementary dna sequencing: expressed sequence tags and human genome project basic local alignment search tool high-tech herbal medicine: plant-based vaccines asilomar conference on recombinant dna molecules potential biohazards of recombinant dna molecules hugo: the human genome organization chimeric plant virus particles administered nasally or orally induce systemic and mucosal immune responses in mice the human genome: the nature of the enterprise orchestrating the human genome project separation and analysis of dna sequence reaction products by capillary gel electrophoresis nutritional genomics: manipulating plant micronutrients to improve human health helping europe compete in human genome research genome project gets rough ride in europe construction of a linkage map of the human genome, and its application to mapping genetic diseases separation of dna restriction fragments by high performance capillary electrophoresis with low and zero crosslinked polyacrylamide using continuous and pulsed electric fields preimplantation and the 'new' genetics a history human genome project it aint necessarily so: the dream of the human genome and other illusions high speed dna sequencing by capillary electrophoresis a strategy for sequencing the genome years early expression of norwalk virus capsid protein in transgenic tobacco and potato and its oral immunogenicity in mice rapid production of specific vaccines for lymphoma by expression of the tumor-derived single-chain fv epitopes in tobacco plants generation and analysis of , human expressed sequence tags national academy of sciences. introduction of recombinant dna-engineered organisms into the environment: key issues functional foods and biopharmaceuticals: the next generation of the gm revolution in let them eat precaution biotechnology: a review of technological developments, publishers forfas vitamin-a and iron-enriched rices may hold key to combating blindness and malnutrition: a biotechnology advance french dna: trouble in purgatory genome: the autobiography of a species in chapters harper collins derivation of pluripotent stem cells from cultured human primordial germ cells production of correctly processed human serum albumin in transgenic plants high-yield production of a human therapeutic protein in tobacco chloroplasts the common thread: a story of science, politics, ethics and the human genome capillary gel electrophoresis for dna sequencing. laser-induced fluorescence detection with the sheath flow cuvette production of functional human alpha -antitrypsin by plant cell culture genetic modification of oils for improved health benefits, presentation at conference, dietary fatty acids and cardiovascular health: dietary recommendations for fatty acids: is there ample evidence? stable accumulation of aspergillus niger phytase in transgenic tobacco leaves antenatal maternal serum screening for down's syndrome: results of a demonstration project viable offspring derived from fetal and adult mammalian cells key: cord- -f uvhstb authors: sintchenko, vitali title: informatics for infectious disease research and control date: - - journal: infectious disease informatics doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: f uvhstb the goal of infectious disease informatics is to optimize the clinical and public health management of infectious diseases through improvements in the development and use of antimicrobials, the design of more effective vaccines, the identification of biomarkers for life-threatening infections, a better understanding of host-pathogen interactions, and biosurveillance and clinical decision support. infectious disease informatics can lead to more targeted and effective approaches for the prevention, diagnosis and treatment of infections through a comprehensive review of the genetic repertoire and metabolic profiles of a pathogen. the developments in informatics have been critical in boosting the translational science and in supporting both reductionist and integrative research paradigms. "new age" infectious disease informatics rests on advances in microbial genomics, the sequencing and comparative study of the genomes of pathogens, and proteomics or the identification and characterization of their protein related properties and reconstruction of metabolic and regulatory pathways (bansal ) . the speed of microbial genome sequencing has been steadily accelerating since the introduction of modern dna sequencing methods more than thirty years ago (sanger et al. ) . the accumulation of sequenced genomes of bacteria shows a good fit to exponential functions with a doubling time of approximately months (koonin and wolf ) . despite the historical bias towards the "working horses" of bacterial genomics, such as commensals e. coli and b. subtilis (collado-vides et al. ) , the depth and breadth of the coverage of sequences belonging to different species of viral, bacterial, fungal and protozoan pathogens has been rapidly expanding. microbial genomes are thousands or millions of base pairs in length, requiring both a global view of the genome and the ability to zoom in on details for the purpose of analysis and annotation. annotation is the extraction of biological knowledge from raw nucleotide sequences (médigue and moszer ) . such decoding of the genomes allows the prediction of protein-coding genes and therefore, the proteins the organism is able to produce. desktop computer sequence editors such as chromas lite (http://chromas-lite.software.informer.com/), trace edit (http://www.ridom.de/traceedit/) or commercial products like lasergene (http://www.dnastar.com/products/lasergene.php) or sequencher (http://www. sequencher.com/) are helpful in the initial sequence assessment. the task of assembling of sequences from re-sequencing experiments, when a reference sequence is available, can be supported by tools like traceeditpro (http://www . ridom.de/traceeditpro/) or seqscape. different software pipelines have been developed to automate microbial genome annotation and assembly (table . ). the integrated microbial genome (img) system, hosted by the joint genome institute (jgi), and the rast (rapid annotation using subsystem technology) server are examples of open resources. major sequencing centers offer genome viewers and browsers through their websites (mcneil et al. ) . for example, manatee (j. craig venter institute (jcvi)) has been developed to view and to alter initial automatic annotations of prokaryotic genomes. the sanger institute's pathogen sequencing unit has been maintaining freeware for sequence analysis, viewing and annotation, such as artemis and the artemis comparison tool (act) (carver et al. ) . the alignment of genomes of three strains of staphylococcus aureus using act is shown in fig. . . alternatively, multiple genome alignments in the presence of large-scale evolutionary events, such as rearrangement and inversion, can be efficiently constructed and visualized using the mauve program (http://gel.ahabs.wisc.edu/mauve/download. php) (darling et al. ). these tools assist in the rapid identification of protein-coding informatics for infectious disease research and control genes, as well as other features like non-coding rna genes, repetitive sequences or recently acquired dna. web servers like integrated microbial genomes (joint genome institute; http:// img.jgi.doe.gov) or the bacterial annotation system (basys, http://wishart.biology. ualberta.ca/basys/cgi/submit.pl) also support comparative analysis and the automated annotation of bacterial genomic (chromosomal and plasmid) sequences (van domselaar et al. ) . they accept raw sequence data and gene identification information, and provide textual annotation and hyperlinked image output. strings of nucleotides are assembled into draft sequences that can be characterized by the following: ( ) > % of genome in contigs, ( ) average contig length > kb, ( ) > % of a set of conserved genes present, ( ) contig n length > kb, ( ) > % of bases > × read coverage, ( ) scaffold n length > kb. the information used to annotate genomes comes from three types of analysis: ( ) ab initio gene finding programs, which are run on the dna sequence to predict protein coding genes; ( ) s.aureus usa s.aureus col fig. . alignment of genomes of three strains of staphylococcus aureus. dna sequences that find a perfect match are connected with red lines or blocks. blue areas are inversions or transitions and white areas represent indels. the figure was produced using artemis software (the wellcome trust sanger institute, uk) informatics for infectious disease research and control evidence-based gene calling or translating alignments of the dna sequence to known proteins; and ( ) aligning cdnas from the same or related species. gene finding has progressed far beyond the simple identification of open reading frames. the programs aligning cdna and protein sequences to genomic dna can locate the protein coding regions by searching the publicly available databases or by applying machine learning algorithms such as hidden markov models (hmm). there is a long list of such programs including genemark, morfind, prodigal (prokaryotic dynamic programming genefinding algorithm), argon and glimmer (gene locator and interpolated markov modeller) (delcher et al. ; suzek et al. ; majoros ) . they differ in the time required for automated annotation as well as the quality of gene calling (guigo et al. ) . problems with the accuracy of current gene finders reflect not only the performance of their algorithms but also the quality of the primary resources and the abundance of non-coding dna regions in microbial genomes. genome assembly annotation methods and tools including new applications for rna genes, were reviewed in detail elsewhere (stothard and wishart ; médigue and moszer ; brent ; pop and salzberg ) . recent breakthroughs in high-throughput sequencing technologies have posed new challenges for genome assembly, annotation and analysis. these technologies make it feasible to sequence not only static genomes but also entire transcriptomes expressed under different conditions (shendure and ji ) . however, they can produce read lengths as short as - nucleotides, which cannot be analyzed with software developed for sanger data as they are often non-unique, lack neighborhood context and have a different distribution of errors. the task of linking such short-reads may be accomplished using a comparative assembly algorithm, in which new sequences are put together by mapping them onto close relatives or the "reference genomes." not surprisingly, the comparative assembly strategy works best when the two species are more than % identical. alternatively, when no "reference genome" is available, the new cohort of assembly algorithms based on de bruijn graphs -a way to transform sequence data into a network structure -has risen to the task (chaisson and pevzner ; maclean et al. ). strategies and systems that address these new challenges have recently been reviewed elsewhere (pop and salzberg ; maclean et al. ; ussery et al. the metagenomics or the sequencing of genomes of complex mixed communities has emerged at the interface of genomics, microbiology and information technology. this field examines the interplay of hundreds of microbial species present at specific sites of potential infections in space and time (hutchinson ; smarr et al. ). significantly, metagenomics has extended its focus from environmental microorganisms to microbial communities or "community whole genome sequences" of the human host (field et al. ; verberkmoes et al. ). most of the - trillion microorganisms in the human gastrointestinal tract live in the colon (turnbaigh et al. ). the genomes of these microbial symbionts have been collectively defined as the microbiome or ecosystem in which the number of microbial genes is estimated to be many folds higher than those present in the human genome. the human gut microbiome initiative, a logical conceptual extension of the human genome project, aims to discover genomes of at least new intestinal species. this approach has targeted the totality of genes involved in the gut biofilms, the mechanisms of horizontal gene transfer, and the role of the microbial pan-genome (field et al. ) . the microbiome project aims to address some of the most inspiring and fundamental scientific questions today in order to identify new ways to determine health and predisposition to diseases and define parameters in addition to conventional strings of nucleotides, large-scale sequencing can provide new types of data reflecting global genome architecture and the properties of pathogens. these data include the size of a genome and its nucleotide composition, the locations of genes and intergenic regions, gc percentage and gene density. microbial genomes are compared by the number of particular sets of genes, gene order (synteny) and the presence or absence of important genes. other metrics include gene set properties (the number of two component system regulatory genes) and nucleotide sequence-based measures (distance between paired twocomponent system genes and consensus sequence) (whitworth ; ussery et al. ). these metrics represent a global view of genomes but often have limited biological meaning. thus, "signature" sequences have been suggested as a means of identifying organisms or genes with sequence profiles correlating with the pathogen phenotype or disease outcomes. examples of genome characteristics that are more directly related to biologically important behavior are bacterial iq (a measure of the number of signal transduction proteins as a function of genome size) and extrovertedness (the proportion of signaling proteins predicted to sense external stimuli) (galperin ) . analyses of genomics data challenge the traditional taxonomy of microbial species. recent projects have focused on producing simple analytical diagnostic tools based on strong taxonomic knowledge collated in the dna reference libraries such as the dna barcode of life data system (bold; http://www.boldsystems. org). these types of data enable the acquisition, storage, analysis and publication of dna barcode results, and provide clues about the global distribution of species. their genetic diversity and structure is based on two postulates: first, that every species is represented by a unique dna barcode (indeed there are possible atgc combinations compared to an estimated million species remaining to be discovered (frézal and leblois ) ), and second, that the genetic variation between species exceeds the variation within species. dna barcoding requires a minimum sequence length of bp and more than three individual sequences per species. the initial barcode of life framework was based on the sequence of a single universal marker -the cytochrome c oxidase gene -but has evolved since then, giving rise to a flexible description of dna barcoding, a larger range of applications and the broader use of the term "barcode" (frézal and leblois ) . for example, the whole microbial genome's barcodes were defined as frequency distributions of periodic dna sequences or k-mers across the whole genome (zhou et al. ). it has been postulated that such barcode similarities are proportional to the genomes' phylogenetic closeness and could be utilized in metagenome analyses (zhou et al. ) . microbial species diversity can be also estimated by the average nucleotide identity (ani) using the list of orthologs and deriving the overall divergence of the core genome by averaging the percentages of identity at the nucleotide level (konstantinidis and tiedje ) . another approach to measure distances between genomes is based on estimating the proportion of common genes by calculating the ratio of orthologs to the total number of genes of the reference genome. more recently, similar methods such as dna content, blast distance phylogeny and the mum (maximal unique and exact matches) index have been suggested as more sensitive measures for intra-species comparisons (deloger et al. ). the true power of large-scale comparative genomic studies lies in their ability to identify and characterize biological trends and rules that explain particular phenomena (field et al. ). computational methods have become essential steps in formulating hypotheses about gene functions. the comparative approach has not only yielded fundamental insights into the function and evolution of microbial genomes, but has also led to practical results. comparative genomics has allowed the accurate estimation of the structure of genomes and the speed of gene movements, including the role of natural selection versus genetic drift, the origin of the pandemic strains, and the ecology of a pathogen in its natural reservoir yang et al. a) . computational studies identified unexpected relationships between genomic features and ecological niches, demonstrated diversity in the microbial world and helped to reconstruct evolutionary relationships among genomes (binnewies et al. ; field et al. ) . comparisons made between different genomes can also generate new hypotheses for testing, usually relating to the unexpected presence or absence of particular genes with respect to other genomes (whitworth ) . the studies of three main forces shaping genome evolution -gene loss, gain and change -have been especially fruitful in this respect (burrack et al. ; whitworth ) . discoveries of gene duplication in many bacterial pathogens, resulting in increased numbers of key gene clusters or the expansion of important protein families have led to the development of new diagnostic methods. for example, the gene clusters encode a secreted protein called the early secretory antigenic target or esat , which was identified as one of the key virulence factors in mycobacterium tuberculosis and was subsequently used in the interferon-gamma release assays for the diagnosis of tuberculosis (pallen and wren ; behr ) . comparative genomics has also revealed that pathogens undergo a process of genome decay or a reduction in the number of biosynthetic pathways, resulting in a dependence on the infected host for certain essential functions. the most surprising informatics for infectious disease research and control snapshots of genome decay have come from relatively recently emerged pathogens that have changed their lifestyles by adopting a simpler host-associated niche. for example, the genomes of yersinia pestis (parkhill et al. b) and salmonella enterica serovar typhi (parkhill et al. a ) contain hundreds of pseudogenes. these findings challenge the traditional view that bacterial genomes never contain "junk" dna and that every gene in a bacterial genome must have a function. instead, every genome should be viewed as a work in progress, burdened with some non-functional "baggage of history" (pallen and wren ) . as the smallest-scale variation in microbial genomes occurs at the level of singlenucleotide polymorphisms (snps), snp detection has been applied extensively to many pathogens (yao et al. ) . while snps are generally considered rare, at one per several thousand base pairs, two genomes of m.tuberculosis of mb each may have some , snps between two isolates (behr ) . whole-genome sequencing has been proven as an even more powerful tool to detect snps. it enabled the differentiation of escherichia coli strains that had diverged for as few as generations (shendure and ji ) and revealed genomic changes in pathogens in the process of human infection (chen et al. ; forst ; pallen and wren ). in the pre-informatics era, virulence factors were typically identified either by biochemical studies or through genetic screens. informatics has enabled innovative strategies for the recognition of virulence gene recognition through the analysis of genetic signatures (pallen and wren ) . despite the variety of microbial life styles and associated genomic and metabolic complexity, pathogen genomes share common architectural principles. as a result, computational techniques assist in exploring similarities between virulence factors and other genes with known functions. this association can then be tested using targeted genetic methods such as the inactivation of the putative virulence gene followed by the comparison of phenotypes of the original and modified microorganisms raskin et al. ) . a strategy that does not rely on sequence similarity for identifying potential genes is the detection of coding sequences, which is based the gene context "grammars" supplemented with machine learning models (garrido et al. ) . for example, functional gene recognition tools genemark and glimmer employ hidden markov models, in which the preceding nucleotide bases are used to predict the next base in a coding region, and the algorithm is trained on a trusted set of sequences. gene coding regions are then identified using probability estimates of the correct coding "grammar" in a region (dougherty et al. ) . different statistical and machine learning methods for gene prediction have been reviewed elsewhere (majoros ) . gene-gene interactions specifically associated with a phenotype or a particular disease can be explored with or without a prior biological knowledge. several techniques utilizing bayesian networks, pair-wise mutual information and graphical gaussian models have been proposed for this purpose. coupled with biological knowledge, the identification of such phenotype-specific interactions can shed light on the responsible pathways. the complexity of data handling and visualization has led to efforts to develop dedicated comparative genomics resources such as gendb (meyer et al. ) , cmr, act, (table . ) xbase and microbes online as well as data management systems such as seed (table . ) (chaudhuri et al. ). informatics has been instrumental in the change from static to a dynamic view of the microbial world. in contrast to the static view of genome annotations focused on the gene or protein prediction, the dynamic view places information obtained into a biological context to identify interactions between the genomic components and the reconstruction of regulatory networks (médigue and moszer ; sakata and winzeler ) . under the network vision of the microbial world, microbial chromosomes are not envisaged as strictly defined genotypes gradually changing in time but rather as islands of temporary, relative dynamic stability that form tightly connected (vertically and horizontally) areas of the network (koonin and wolf ) . the infection cycle should be considered as a whole and the links between growth, virulence, immune evasion and transmission should be assessed (restif ). biological interactions vary in their nature and are spatially and temporally heterogeneous. one can abstract the actions of proteins and metabolites by representing genes acting on other genes as a gene network or as genetic regulatory, transcription or expression networks. such networks can be constructed using computationally assigned functional linkages inferred by rosetta stone, operon or similar methods (rachman and kaufmann ; harrington et al. ) , and often point to highly connected and central proteins frequently referred to as "hubs" (wu et al. ) . biological interaction and communication networks share several commonalities: they are scale free (only a few nodes are highly connected) and are small world networks (highly clustered with short distances between any two nodes) (kann ) . increasingly, disease pathogenesis and the mechanisms of drug action are viewed from a biological systems perspective (wu et al. ) . from this perspective, a deeper understanding of infectious diseases may rely on an exhaustive characterization of all potential interactions occurring between proteins encoded by viruses and those expressed in infected cells. thus, the integration of all protein-protein interactions into an infected cellular network, or "infectome," offers a powerful framework for the virtual modeling and analysis of infections (navrati et al. ). the terms "interactome" and "phenomics" have been coined in this context (lussier and liu ) . numerous resources have been developed to explore host-pathogen interactions (phi) (table . ) . specifically, phi-base (winnenburg et al. ) , phidias (xiang et al. ), biohealthbase (squires et al. ) , pig (driscoll et al. ) virusmint (chatr-aryamontri et al. ) and virhostnet (navrati et al. ) have been virulence prediction lengauer et al. drug resistance prediction navrati et al. raman et al. effect of diseases on gene expression drug target identification reddy et al. squires et al. stavrinides et al. drug resistance prediction drug resistance prediction suggested to study and visualize pathogen-related pathways. for example, the virhostnet is a knowledge base for the management and analysis of proteome-wide virus-host interaction networks and a resource of manually curated interactions defined for a wide range of viral species (navrati et al. ). genomic and proteomic data is often informationally synergistic, allowing for the reconstruction of known pathways from the first principles. the combination of these forms of data have been used to identify libraries of recurring motifs, where the mixed semantics of the pattern promises to be more informative than any single data source taken in isolation in building biological networks (michael et al. ; stavrinides et al. ) . systems biology has arisen from various attempts to move away from the reductionist approach, which is hindered by the difficulty of breaking a system into separable and meaningful parts. it encompasses several high-throughput analytic technologies, including genomics, transcriptomics to measure gene expression and its regulation at the level of messenger rna and microrna production, proteomics to measure changes in protein production, and computational biology, which depends on analytic software packages for analyzing, organizing, and interpreting those data (sakata and winzeler ) . such an approach treats pathogens and their environments as a series of hierarchical levels or networks from gene products to whole organisms and integrates the time dimension in order to structure knowledge and to determine rules that would allow navigation between levels (lisacek et al. ). this approach demands new tools for data management, the integration of which offers the opportunity to correlate multiple lines of evidence and to reduce uncorrelated noise. the major difference between the pre-and post-genomics eras is that one can now potentially account for and keep track of all components at once. however, the gathering of a large collection of data does not guarantee that we can make sense of it or that new knowledge will emerge (collado-vides et al. ). the chance for enriching biomedical knowledge can be increased by mixing various streams of data and gaining robustness from the "cross-validation" of the knowledge sources (guyet et al. ). public websites like galaxy (http://galaxy.psu.edu) and interpro (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/interpro/) offer integration toolsets for genomics and proteomics analyses. as generating data remains a costly undertaking, computational models have a pivotal role to play in the integrative science. they help researchers to illuminate the underlying processes and identify the key questions that need to be addressed experimentally (restif ). compared to conventional, small-scale experimental approaches, they give a wider, often more relevant view of host responses to infections or other health insults. these computational models have the capacity to guide and direct wet lab experimental efforts complimenting traditional in vivo, in situ, and in vitro testing with the emerging in silico approach (lengauer et al. ; raman et al. ) . some impressive starts have been made on bacterial models in the form of simulation tools. for example, the reconstruction of metabolic networks gave birth to the first examples of in silico strains that can be utilized to explore alternative ways of identifying new drug targets (jamshidi and palsson ) . the end result of these simulations may be the genomic bioengineering of microorganisms based on knowledge of interacting systems and networks of genes and gene products. text mining tools are being created to query the pubmed literature database and to integrate the available genomic and proteomic information to map the genes and their interrelationship with particular networks of a disease (korbel et al. ; jelier et al. ; rzhetsky et al. ; zaremba et al. ). an unsupervised, systematic approach for associating genes and phenotypic characteristics (g p) that combines literature mining with comparative genome analysis has been successfully applied and has uncovered clusters of unsuspected g p associations (korbel et al. ). the phase of history in which biomedical science could be significantly advanced by individual researchers without data sharing has come to a close. the global, collaborative analyses of data and the exchange of the results across social, political and technological boundaries have created the demand for new cyber-infrastructures for research. there has been a major effort, in the form of e-science, to develop technologies to fulfill these demands (craddock et al. ). the chance of making a discovery or replicating the finding is greatly increased if there are effective mechanisms for different groups to share data and thereby enlarge the number of samples that are studied. this paradigm has been successful in both human genomics and infectious disease research (e.g., including the rapid discovery and identification of emerged pathogens such as the nipah virus and the novel coronavirus that caused the sars epidemic). post-genomic era solutions such as federated databases and other technologies that enhance connectivity and data retrieval have created a new knowledge environment (birkholtz et al. ; thorisson et al. ). the level of technical competence required of the users is being reduced by the provision of "off-the-shelf" solutions. for example, the gen phen project offers "database-in-a-box" installation packages, which include an open-source complete genetic association database system with the option for federation (thorisson et al. ). alternative infrastructures for e-science with significant advantages over conventional internet technologies are offered by grid and cloud computing and the semantic web (numann and prusak ; craddock et al. ) . first, grids provide unique access to high performance computing power, distributed applications and sources (see chap. for examples). second, grids increase data storage spaces, and allow data and tools to be shared by geographically dispersed users. however, developing and maintaining grid or cloud architectures remains a complex task and requires further advances in security and privacy models before they can be embraced by diagnostic laboratories (lisacek et al. ). tasks that require an e-science approach or global science that is performed in silico are typically computationally intensive and use heterogeneous resources that must be integrated across distributed networks (craddock et al. ) . increasingly, the genomic, proteomic and metabolomic data have to be integrated with traditional literature in a machine-readable way. typical sets of experimental data yield component lists with quantitative content data and a catalog of interactions and networks. this requires the establishment of a middleware to convert experimental data into a format suitable for manipulation and viewing by end-users. for example, the generic model organism database project (gmod; http://gmod.org) aims to link experimental data with corresponding contextual meta-data about experimental conditions and protocols in a multi-user, multi-center environment. it offers a collection of open source tools for creating and managing genome-scale biological databases ranging from a small database of genome annotations to a large web-accessible community database. another approach is to trade off the width of integration for more depth with regard to a particular analysis task, and to employ workflow systems such as inforsense (http://www.inforsense.com) or taverna (http://taverna.sf.net). these act as glue layers between various data sources and analysis packages and are also often referred to as pipelines, in silico protocols or e-experiments (turnbaigh et al. ) . "pipeline" is mostly used to describe executable workflows, while the other terms are dedicated to abstract workflows (lisacek et al. ) . many innovative solutions for the multi-dimensional integration of data produced by experimental laboratories have been introduced by bioinformatics resource centers for biodefense and emerging/re-emerging infectious diseases through regional biodefense centers of excellence (mcneal et al ; greene et al. ) . sets of task-and domain-specific online query and display tools are being developed to allow the end-user to view data in a number of different formats and to run informative comparisons of data with existing libraries (louie et al. ; glassner et al. ) . the most striking change in data collection and representation is expressed by the move from flat databases to atlases or collections of interconnected maps (lisacek et al. ). the uneven content and quality of data and the constant evolution of biomedical knowledge remain the main obstacles to data integration (lisacek et al. ). the quality of data is affected by a number of factors including the accuracy of the mapping algorithms and reference datasets, the standardization of data formats and the level of detail of the experiment description (stead et al. ). in addition, an increasing number of genomes are being released in "draft" form, before the finishing stage of a sequencing project, with high sequencing error rates (de keersmaesher et al. ; médigue and moszer ) . recent developments in databases and browsers for genomics have been summarized by schattner ( ) . there is an urgent need for data structures suitable for infectious disease space that can be applied to emerging "omics" data sets. the pathogen information markup language (piml) has also recently been introduced to enhance the interoperability of microbiology datasets for pathogens with epidemic potential (he et al. ) by capturing the data elements that describe determinants of pathogen profiles. however, the jury is still out on the question of which data integration architectures are best suited to assembling large scale and highly diverse genomic data. integrating high-throughput techniques with other analytic tools brings a new understanding of infectious processes and introduces an era of personalized strategies for managing infectious diseases. in this way, informatics becomes an irreplaceable platform for the constant cross-fertilization and interplay between focused and genome-wide studies. rapid and standardizable molecular identification systems have emerged during the last decade, with the development of sequence based species identification and sub-typing as the alternative to slow, labor-intensive and underpowered phenotypic techniques. molecular identification usually relies on the detection of a single gene or multiple gene targets, or requires the comparison of whole microbial genomes. for example, in the pragmatic world of diagnostic bacteriology, conserved housekeeping genes such as the s rrna gene, rpob gene and others have been accepted as reliable targets. they are found in all microorganisms and show enough sequence conservation for accurate alignment as well as enough variation for phylogenetic analyses (christen ) . furthermore, the s rrna gene based phylogeny is sufficiently congruent with those based on whole genome approaches. sequencing of six to eight genes or loci, as it typically done in multilocus sequence typing analysis, may constitute a reasonable compromise between single genebased and whole genome-based methods for species diversity studies. to streamline the process of the translation of sequencing-based identification into clinical practice, the concept of the pathogen profile has been introduced . a pathogen profile is a single, multivariate observation or set of observations, comprised of classes of specific attributes (e.g., genome, transcriptome, proteome or metabolome data), which are designed to allow the interrogation of existing or future databases, and the integration of genomics and post-genomics data with clinical observations and patient outcomes. the profile may indicate the probability that a specific marker is associated with a clinically relevant phenotype such as in vivo antimicrobial resistance or high transmissibility. this information allows the classification of strains into "risk groups" for treatment failure or a propensity to cause outbreaks of infections. it is often important to capture the quantitative information about a pathogen, in vivo, i.e. viral or bacterial loads and their units of measurement. in contrast to traditional subtyping, which is based on phenotypic characteristics such as serotype, biotype, phage type or antimicrobial susceptibility, genetic profiling describes the phenotypic potential in the nucleic acid sequence. a pathogen profile is a synthesis of various markers and clinical end-points, which can be extracted from medical charts that characterize an individual patient's clinical and public health outcomes. the profile may be heuristic, when only a single genetic marker is associated with a specific patient outcome, while more insights can be achieved when attributes from different levels of the biological hierarchy (i.e. gene detection, gene expression, metabolite profiles etc) corroborate and complement each other. machine learning algorithms, such as e-predict (urisman et al. ) , are being developed to identify viruses and bacteria present in clinical samples. these profiles are based on the microarray hybridization patterns or dna sequences of pathogens. many computerized evidence-based guidelines and decision support systems (dss) have been designed to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of antibiotic prescribing (samore et al. ; buising et al. ) . the most frequently utilized are electronic guidelines and protocols, especially for the empirical selection of antibiotics. the majority of dss result in improvement in clinical performance and, in at least half of the published trials, in improved patient outcomes (finch and low ; sintchenko et al. a) . the revival of interest in prescribing-decision-support reflects the recent change in emphasis from support for diagnostic decisions towards support for patient management, and the changing focus from systems targeting a broad range of clinical diagnoses to task-and condition-specific decision aids. despite reported successes of individual applications, the safety of electronic prescribing systems in routine practice has recently been identified as an issue of potential concern. bioinformatics assisted prescribing has become a new frontier in reducing the complexities of prescribing combinations of antimicrobials in the era of multidrug resistance. the great diversity of mutational patterns contributing to antimicrobial resistance complicates the choice of optimal therapies. a range of bioinformatics tools to predict drug resistance or response to therapy from a genotype, have been developed to support clinical decision-making (beerenwinkel et al. ; lengauer and singh ) . these tools use either a statistical approach, in which the inferred model and prediction are informatics for infectious disease research and control treated as regression problems, or machine learning algorithms, in which the model is addressed as a classification problem (sintchenko et al. a) . a statistical learning approach to the ranking of therapeutic choices often relies on a direct correlation between the baseline microbial profiles, the therapeutic decision and the patient's response to treatment (e.g., expected reduction in viral load resulting from anti-hiv combination therapy). for example, several susceptibility scores have been used for combination antiretroviral therapy. these take into account specific resistance mutations and add up the activities of individual drugs in the regimen (lengauer and singh ) . computer-assisted therapy depends on the availability of widely shared databases that can correlate quality-controlled data from genotypic resistance assays and treatment regimens with short-and long-term clinical outcomes. databases such ardb (liu and pop ) capture differences in antimicrobial sensitivities and reflect variation in the amino acid composition of resistant microbes, but simply counting mutations may not be enough to predict functional differences, which affect treatment outcomes. the molecular profiling of pathogens is based on the concept that various pathogens can be associated with different clinical outcomes. it brings together the pathogen and host factors as the pathogenesis and natural history of infection are determined by both the pathogen and human genetic susceptibility. the effectiveness of combining host and pathogen genetics in a single system or "genetics-squared" has been proven in studies of viral infections (persson and vance ) . investigations of the impact of host genetics on the susceptibility to hiv infection and the rate of disease progression have mainly used a candidate gene approach to reveal associations with a number of different genes. the genome-wide association studies look at the genetic variation across the human genome in order to uncover factors not previously suspected of influencing infection outcomes. for example, this strategy identified variants of the hiv virus associated with differences in the control of viral load at set points and in disease progression. however, unraveling the interaction between the host and microbial genetic factors requires large clinical trials, reinforcing the role of collaborative networks and data repositories. informatics methods have become critical for data mining to decipher links between genetic variation and disease pathogenesis in order to define markers of disease progression, to guide the optimum use of therapeutics and to refine the drug and vaccine development (mansmann ) . a better understanding of the function of genes and other parts of the genome has enabled the reverse engineering approach, which may lead to the characterization and discovery of potential drug targets, vaccine candidates and diagnostic or prognostic markers (davies and flower ; yang et al. b) . proteins with essential biological functions present in multiple pathogens could be the best drug targets. once the target genes essential for pathogen survival are identified, their susceptibility to specific compounds derived from large chemical libraries is examined in silico and in vitro (muzzi et al. ; biswas et al. ). increases in the use of electronic medical records and the availability of information technology tools have created opportunities for the automation of surveillance and facilitation of surveillance based on either syndromic or disease-specific signals (amadoz and gonzales-candelas ; m'ikanatha et al. ). the automation of data collection improves the time and completeness of surveillance and allows infection control professionals to focus on interventions (hota et al. ; young and stevenson ) . the comparison of chromosomal sequences allows the identification of the unique genomic signatures of pathogens for the purposes of infection control and "microbial forensics." molecular typing methodologies, in contrast to classical phenotypic methods, allow the discrimination of variations among strains within a species, the elucidation of the route of contamination, the identification of the source of infection as well as the analysis of epidemics. the identification of the natural reservoir and any possible intermediate hosts of pathogens is critical for understanding the transmission modes, designing a long-term disease control strategy, and preventing future reintroduction ). bioinformatics assisted biosurveillance addresses the inefficiencies of traditional surveillance, as well as the need for a more timely and comprehensive infectious disease monitoring and control. it leverages on recent breakthroughs in the rapid, high-throughput molecular profiling of microorganisms and text mining, as well as on the growing electronic body of knowledge about the molecular epidemiology of pathogens with epidemic potential. such a framework combines the genetic and geographic data of a pathogen to reconstruct its history and to identify the migration routes through which the strains spread regionally and internationally (cantón ; sintchenko et al. b) . computer-based geographic information systems (gis) have offered an efficient way to visualize the dynamics of the transmission of infections, especially in the setting of a community outbreak (mckee et al. ; schreiber et al. ) . another way to track infectious diseases of public health concern is to monitor health-seeking behavior in the form of queries to online search engines used by the general public or health professionals. epidemics of seasonal influenza in areas with a large population of internet users have been successfully detected using google search data and then correlated with visits to a doctor (ginsberg et al. ; brownstein et al. ). the advent of news aggregators has led to the development of new disease surveillance tools that can continuously mine, categorize, filter, and visualize multilingual online information about epidemics. the global public health intelligence network (gphin), developed almost a decade ago by health canada in collaboration with who, healthmap (http://www.healthmap.org/en) ( fig. . ) or geosentinel (http://www.istm.org/geosentinel/main.html) among many others are examples of such early warning systems. resources for infection prevention and control on the world wide web have been recently reviewed elsewhere (brownstein et al. ; johnson et al. ) the reductionist approach to biomedical research focusing on the study of cells and molecules has peaked with the sequencing of the human genome. however, it is becoming increasingly clear that "taking apart" analyses have reached their limit, and the time has perhaps come for integrative science (an and faeder ) . developments in informatics have been critical in supporting and engaging with both reductionist and integrative paradigms. on one hand, informatics has equipped comparative genomics with tools to scrutinize genes and explore genetic polymorphisms. on the other hand, informatics has enabled the generation of integrative and testable hypotheses through the discovery of knowledge in databases and through the study of gene-phenotype connections between a pathogen and its host environment. a variety of data sets can be integrated, including the patient's demographic and clinical presentation, the laboratory results, the pathogen's gene regulation and expression, and metabolic maps with different parameters reflecting the phenotypic behavior of a pathogen and host factors. in early years some skeptics saw informatics-assisted research as a distraction of effort and funding away from traditional hypothesis-driven inquiry. since then, infectious disease informatics has verified its status as a platform for hypothesis generation and testing ). new breakthroughs in infectious disease informatics (idi) are the result of cross-pollination between different disciplines that use technologies to gather and disseminate knowledge (fig. . ) . microbial genome sequence analysis and metagenomics have contributed intriguing new data types and data sources to idi. bioinformatics has brought to the idi a range of analytic tools, databases and data standards. conventional health informatics and computer science has provided high performance solutions for the data storage, sharing, analysis and visualization as well as clinical terminology libraries, data standards, decision support and technology evaluation frameworks. importantly, the infectious disease informatics community has fed the lessons learnt from the implementation of clinical and public health systems back to the broader audience. as the subsequent chapters of this volume testify, infectious disease informatics is set to lead to the more targeted and effective prevention, diagnosis and treatment of infections through a comprehensive review of the genetic repertoire and metabolic profiles of pathogens. the post-genomic era offers new opportunities for the efficient discovery of safe and efficacious subunit vaccines by shortcutting the enormous economic burden of the experimental process. our analytical capacity has already become the rate-limiting step in biomedical research. at the same time, it provides an opportunity to apply the engineering paradigm to biomedical research, thereby mandating the development of tools that can dynamically represent a body of current knowledge. however, the simplistic application of brute force computational power to massive reams of biomedical data is unlikely to result in meaningful mechanistic insight. it cannot be overstressed that informatics initiatives should compliment "wet laboratory" practices. an iterative loop of discovery and validation between the two methodologies remains the best way forward. epipath: an information system for the storage and management of molecular epidemiology data from infectious pathogens detailed qualitative dynamic knowledge representation using a bionet gen model of tlr- signaling and preconditioning bioinformatics in microbial biotechnology -a mini review geno pheno: estimating phenotypic drug resistance from hiv- genotypes mycobacterium du jour: what's on tomorrow's menu? microb infect ten years of bacterial genome sequencing: comparative-genomics-based discoveries integration and mining of malaria molecular, functional and pharamacological data: how far are we from a chemogenomic knowledge space? a bioinformatic approach to understanding antibiotic resistance in intracellular bacteria through whole genome analysis steady progress and recent breakthroughs in the accuracy of automated genome annotation digital disease detection -harnessing the web for public health surveillance improving antibiotic prescribing for adults with community acquired pneumonia: does a computerised decision support system achieve more than academic detailing alone?-a time series analysis genomic approaches to understanding bacterial virulence role of the microbiology laboratory in infectious disease surveillance, alert and response artemis and act: viewing, annotating and comparing sequences stored in a relational database short read fragment assembly of bacterial genomes virusmint: a viral protein interaction database xbase : a comprehensive resource for comparative bacterial genomics vfdb: a reference database for bacterial virulence factors identification of genes subject to positive selection in uropathogenic strains of escherichia coli: a comparative genomics approach identification of pathogens -a bioinformatic point of view bioinformatics resources for the study of gene regulation in bacteria e-science: relieving bottlenecks in largescale genome analyses mauve: multiple alignment of conserved genomic sequence with rearrangements harnessing bioinformatics to discover new vaccines integration of omics data: how well does it work for bacteria? improved microbial gene identification with glimmer a genomic distance based on mum indicates discontinuity between most bacterial species and genera microbial genomics and novel antibiotic discovery: new technology to search for new drugs pig -the pathogen interaction gateway how do we compare hundreds of bacterial genomes? a critical assessment of published guidelines and other decision-support systems for the antibiotic treatment of community-acquired respiratory tract infections host-pathogen systems biology four years of dna barcoding: current advances and prospects biosurveillance of emerging biothreats using scalable genotype clustering a census of membrane-bound and intracellular signal transduction proteins in bacteria: bacterial iq, extroverts and introverts evaluation of eight different bioinformatics tools to predict viral tropism in different human immunodeficiency virus type subtypes detecting influenza epidemics using search engine query data enteropathogen resource integration center (eric): bioinformatics support for research on biodefense-relevant enterobacteria national institute of allergy and infectious diseases bioinformatics resource centers: new assets for pathogen informatics egasp: the human encode genome annotation assessment project knowledge construction from time series data using a collaborative exploration system predicting biological networks from genomic data piml: the pathogen information markup language informatics and infectious diseases: what is the connection and efficacy of information technology tools for therapy and health care epidemiology dna sequencing: bench to bedside and beyond investigating the metabolic capabilities of mycobacterium tuberculosis h rv using the in silico strain inj and proposing alternative drug targets anni . : a multipurpose text-mining tool for the life sciences resources for infection prevention and control on the world wide web what would you do if you could sequence everything? protein interactions and disease: computational approaches to uncover the etiology of diseases analysis of mixed sequencing chromatograms and its application in direct s rrna gene sequencing of polymicrobial samples genomic insights that advance the species definition for prokaryotes genomics of bacteria and archaea: the emerging dynamic view of the prokaryotic world systematic association of genes to phenotypes by genome and literature mining mega: a biologist-centric software for evolutionary analysis of dna and protein sequences bioinformatics-assisted anti-hiv therapy bioinformatics prediction of hiv coreceptor usage proteome informatics ii: bioinformatics for comparative proteomics ardb -antibiotic resistance genes database data integration and genomic medicine computational approaches to phenotyping: high-througput phenomics infectious disease surveillance application of 'next-generation' sequencing technologies to microbial genetics methods for computational gene prediction genomic profiling: interplay between clinical epidemiology, bioinformatics and biostatistics application of a geographic information system to the tracking and control of an outbreak of shigellosis the national microbial pathogen database resource (nmpdr): a genomic platform based on subsystem annotation annotation, comparison and databases for hundreds of bacterial genomes gendb -an open source genome annotation system for prokaryote genomes building a knowledge base for system pathology the pan-genome: towards a knowledge-based iscovery of novel targets for vaccines and antibacterials virhostnet: a knowledge base for the management and the analysis of proteome-wide virus-host interaction networks knowledge networks in the age of the semantic web bacterial pathogenomics complete genome sequence of a multiple drug resistant salmonella enterica serovar typhi ct genome sequence of yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague genetics-squared: combining host and pathogen genetics in the analysis of innate immunity and bacterial virulence bioinformatics challenges of new sequencing technology exploring functional genomics for the development of novel intervention strategies against tuberculosis targettb: a target identification pipeline for mycobacterium tuberculosis through an interactome, reactome and genome-scale structural analysis bacterial genomics and pathogen evolution tb database: an integrated platform for tuberculosis research evolutionary epidemiology years on: challenges and prospects seeking a new biology through text mining genomics, system biology and drug development for infectious diseases clinical decision support and appropriateness of antimicrobial prescribing nucleotide sequence of bacteriophage x dna genomes, browsers and databases dengueinfo: a web portal to dengue information resources next-generation dna sequencing laboratory-guided detection of disease outbreaks: three generations of surveillance systems genomic profiling of pathogens for disease management and surveillance are we measuring the right thing? variables that affect the impact of computerized decision support on patient outcomes: a systematic review decision support systems for antibiotic prescribing towards bioinformatics assisted infectious disease control building an optiplante collaboratory to support microbial metagenomics biohealthbase: informatics support in the elucidation of influenza virus host-pathogen interactions and virulence host-pathogen interplay and the evolution of bacterial effectors information quality in proteomics automated bacterial genome analysis and annotation a probabilistic method for identifying start codons in bacterial genomes genome analysis of multiple pathogenic isolates of streptococcus agalactiae: implications for the microbial "pan-genome genotype-phenotype databases: challenges and solutions for the post-genomic era the human microbiome project e-predict: a computational strategy for species identification based on observed dna microarray hybridization patterns computing for comparative microbial genomics: bioinformatics for microbiologists shortgun metaproteomics of the human distal gut flora genomes and knowledge -a questionable relationship phi-base: a new database for pathogen host interactions discovery of virulence factors of pathogenic bacteria phidias: a pathogen-host interaction data integration and analysis system genomics, molecular imaging, bioinformatics, and bio-nano-info integration are synergistic components of translational medicine and personalized healthcare research infectious disease in the genomic era bioinformatics databases and tools in virology research: an overview primersnp: a web tool for whole-genome selection of allele-specific and common primers of phylogenetically-related bacterial genomic sequences real-time surveillance and decision support: optimizing infection control and antimicrobial choices at the point of care text-mining of pubmed abstracts by natural language processing to create a public knowledge base on molecular mechanisms of bacterial enteropathogens infectious disease informatics and outbreak detection key: cord- - ggaqf authors: nan title: abstracts of the papers presented in the xix national conference of indian virological society, “recent trends in viral disease problems and management”, on – march, , at s.v. university, tirupati, andhra pradesh date: - - journal: indian j virol doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ggaqf nan patients showed rashes on face, hand and foot. ev detection carried out in vesicular fluid, stool, serum and throat swab specimens by rt-pcr of ncr gene. serotyping was carried out by using rt-pcr of viral protein of vp / a junction region followed by sequencing and phylogenetic analysis using neighbor-joining-algorithm and kimura- parameter model of mega- software. overall ev positivity detected in hfmd patients from kerala, tamil nadu, west bengal and orissa states was found to be . %, . %, . % and . % respectively. typing of vp gene sequences indicated presence of ca- , ev- , echo- strains in kerala and ca- in west bengal, orissa and tamil nadu. phylogenetic analysis indicated ca- , ev- , echo- strains showed . - . % and - . % homology with japanese, australian and french strains. however, ca- strains were closer to malaysian strains with . - . % nucleotide homology. the present study documents the association of multiple types of ev's i.e., ca- , ev- , echo- and ca- strains contributing as prime viral pathogens in hfmd epidemics in the reported regions with new emergence of ca- circulating strain in kerala, india. tasgaon september . sera were collected from suspected hepatitis cases and there contacts and tested for anti hev igm/igg antibodies (elisa) and liver enzymes like alanine aminotransferase (alt). anti hev igm antibodies were detected in . % ( / ) of the suspected cases. the overall attack rate was . %. male to female ratio was : . majority ( . %) of the cases were in the age group - years and recovered without any clinical complications. weekly distribution of cases showed that the majority ( . %, / ) cases occurred between nd and rd week of june. dark urine ( . %), jaundice ( . %), fatigue ( . %), abdominal pain ( . %), anorexia ( . %), vomiting ( . %), fever ( . %), giddiness ( . %), diarrhoea ( . %) and arthalgia ( . %) were the prominent symptoms. sera collected from antenatal cases (ancs) showed anti hev igm antibody in . affected pregnant women had a normal outcome. a death of year, male hepatitis e case was reported during the outbreak period that had cirrhosis of liver with oesophageal varices. sanitary survey revealed that water pipelines were laid down in close proximity of sewerage system, and water posts were without tap. these are the likely sources of faecal contamination of water supplies. among water samples collected from various places, were found to be unfit for drinking based on the routine bacteriological tests conducted at state public health laboratory, pune. no case occurred after the pipelines were repaired. this typical outbreak of hepatitis e re-emphasizes need for proper water supply/sewage disposal pipelines and adequate maintenance measures. jayanthi shastri, nilima vaidya, sandhya sawant, umesh aigal department of molecular biology, kasturba hospital for infectious diseases, mumbai, india dengue and dengue haemorrhagic fever are amongst the most important challenges in tropical diseases due to their expanding geographic distribution, increasing outbreak frequency, hyperendemicity and evolution of virulence. the gobal prevalence of dengue has grown dramatically in recent decades. who estimates - million cases of dengue virus infections worldwide every year resulting in , to , cases of dhf and , deaths each year. public health laboratories require rapid diagnosis of dengue outbreaks for application of measures such as vector control. laboratory diagnosis of dengue virus infection can be made by the detection of specific virus, viral antigen, genomic sequence and/or antibodies. currently basic methods used by laboratories for diagnosis of dengue virus infection are virus isolation and characterisation, detection of genomic sequence by nucleic acid amplification technology assay and detection of dengue virus specific antibodies/antigen. molecular diagnosis based on reverse transcription (rt)-pcr s.a. one step or nested pcr, nucleic acid sequence based amplification (nasba), or real time rt-pcr, has gradually replaced the virus isolation method as the new standard for the detection of dengue virus in acute phase serum samples. several pcr protocols for detection have been described that vary in the extraction method, genomic location of primers, specificity, sensitivity and the methods to determine the products and the serotype. pcr-based dengue tests, due to the specificity of amplification, enable a definitive diagnosis and serotyping of the virus. in addition dna sequencing of the amplification product enables the virus to be genotyped, providing important information on the sources of infection. more recently tests have incorporated flurogenic probe, so called taq man technology for the specific real time detection of dengue - amplicons. product is detected by a specific oligodeoxy nucleotide probe that is labelled with carboxy-fluorescein (fam). this technology offers the advantage of being both rapid and potentially quantitative. second, the detection of product by hybridisation of flurochrome labelled probes increases specificity. third, as the product is detected without the need to open the reaction tube, the risk of contamination by product carry over is minimised. the advantages of speed, contamination minimisation and reduced turn around time justify application of this assay over the currently used nested pcr assay. during the period january to october , molecular laboratory received samples from patients presenting with acute onset fever for dengue . %) samples were tested positive by this method. the disease peaks in the monsoon season with a percentage of . %. rapid tests, igm and igg capture elisa are popularly used tests for diagnosis of dengue infection. its utility is limited for diagnosing dengue in convalescecce ( - days) . specificity is also compromised due to infections with flaviviruses: japanese encephalitis and chikungunya. dengue ns ag elisa with its cost effectiveness, specificity and sensitivity should be considered as the test of choice for diagnosing dengue in the acute phase of illness in the developing countries. molecular diagnosis enables confirmatory diagnosis of dengue in the acute phase of the illness and is suitable for further typing methods. assistant general manager and r&d coordinator, division of quality control and r&d, bharat immunologicals and biologicals corporation ltd., village chola, bulandshahr, up vaccine development in india, though slow to start, has progressed by leaps and bounds in the past years. it was dependent on imported vaccines but now it is not only self-sufficient in the production of vaccines conforming to international standards with major supplier of the same to unicef. the role of drug authorities is to enhance the public health by assuring the availability of safe and effective a indian j. virol. (september ) (suppl. ):a -a vaccines, allergenic extracts, and other related products. vaccine development is tightly regulated by a hierarchy of regulatory bodies. guidelines provided by the indian council of medical research (icmr) set the rules of conduct for clinical trials from phase i to iv studies as well as studies on combination vaccines. these guidelines address ethical issues that arise during a vaccine study. a network of adverse drug reaction (adr) monitoring centers along with the adverse events following immunization (aefi) monitoring program provide the machinery for vaccine pharmacovigilance. genetic modifications have been developed to develop effective and cheaper vaccines by the use of recombinant technology. to ensure safety of consumers, producers, experimental animals and environment, governments all over the world are following regulatory mechanisms and guidelines for genetically modified products. as with other industrializing countries undergoing rapid shifts, india clearly recognizes the need to restructure its regulatory system so that its biopharmaceutical industry can compete in international markets. genetic engineering approval council (geac), recombinant dna advisory committee (rdac), review committee on genetic manipulation (rcgm), institutional biosafety committees (ibsc) are responsible for development, commitment for parameters and commercialization of recombinant vaccines. to centralize and coordinate the whole system, government has taken to form two agencies to regulate the regulation laws to develop recombinant pharmaceuticals products including vaccines. the first is the creation of the national biotechnology regulatory authority (nbra), under the department of biotechnology (dbt), as part of india's long-term biotech sector development strategy. the second major initiative will affect the entire indian pharmaceutical industry. this is the replacement of most state, district, and central drug regulatory agencies with a single, central, fda-style agency, the central drug authority (cda). the cda is expected to have separate, semi-autonomous departments for regulation, enforcement, legal, and consumer affairs; biotechnology products; pharmacovigilance and drugs safety; medical devices and diagnostics; imports; quality control; and traditional indian medicines. it will set up offices throughout india and will be paid for inspection, registration, and license fees. its enforcement powers will be strengthened by a new law increasing the criminal penalties for illegal clinical trials. in the manufacturing area, though, the country has been tightening the rules and enforcement. an amendment to the regulations, ''schedule m'' of the drug and cosmetics act, now specifies the good manufacturing practice (gmp) requirements for factory premises and materials. these requirements were modeled after us fda regulations, to improve regulatory coordination between indian and us regulators. india has realized the importance of regulations in pharmaceutical specially in vaccine field but it will take several years to implementation of these. india has coordinated some of its regulatory functions with western organizations. the us pharmacopoeia established an office in hyderabad in . a representative of the indian pharmaceutical lobby also recently has expressed openness to an expansion of the fda's oversight of indian manufacturing. as india expands its global drug and biologicals production, us and europe, as the world's largest drug importers, will likely expand their regulatory support in the development of the country's regulatory systems. rapid diagnosis of japanese encephalitis virus (jev) infections is important for timely clinical management and epidemiological control in areas where multiple flaviviruses are endemic. however, the speed and accuracy of diagnosis must be balanced against test cost and availability, especially in developing countries. an antigen capture enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa) for detection of circulating jev specific nonstructural protein (ns ) was developed by using monoclonal antibodies (mabs) specific to recombinant (ns ). the applicability of this jev ns antigen capture elisa for early clinical diagnosis was evaluated with acute phase serum/ cerebrospinal fluid (csf) specimens collected from different epidemics during [ ] [ ] [ ] . jev ns antigen was detected in circulation from day to . the sensitivity and specificity of jev ns detection in serum/csf specimens with reference to reverse transcriptase pcr was %, and . % respectively. no crossreactions with any of the other closely related members of the genus flaviviruses (dengue, westnile, yellow fever and saint louis encephalitis (sle) viruses) were observed when tested with either clinical specimens or virus cultures. these findings suggested that the reported jev specific mab-based ns antigen capture elisa will be a rapid and reliable tool for early confirmatory diagnosis as well as surveillance of je infections in developing countries. manmohan parida the recent emergence of a novel human influenza a virus (h n ) poses a serious global health threat. the h n virus has caused a considerable number of deaths within a short duration since its emergence. a two-step single tube accelerated rapid real-time and quantitative swine flu virus specific h rtlamp assay is reported by targeting the h gene of the novel h n hybrid virus. the feasibility of swine flu h rtlamp for clinical diagnosis was validated with a panel of suspected throat wash samples comprising confirmed positive and confirmed negative cases of ongoing epidemic. the comparative evaluation of h specific rtlamp assay with real-time rt-pcr demonstrated exceptionally higher sensitivity by picking up all the h n positive and additional positive cases amongst the negatives that were sequence confirmed as h n . none of the real-time rtpcr positive samples were missed by rtlamp system. the comparative study revealed that rtlamp was -fold more sensitive than rtpcr with a detection limit of copy number. these findings suggested that rtlamp assay is a valuable tool for rapid, real-time detection as well as quantification of h n virus in acute phase throat swab samples without requiring any sophisticated equipments. because of its recurrent nature. despite considerable progress in understanding of the virus at cellular and molecular levels, the proper management of the disease in its different stages is still a dilemma particularly whether to use antiviral or steroids or both. the risk of using steroids with its attendant complications has to be weighed against the risk of progression of the disease if avoiding the use of steroids. this dilemma can be reduced to a considerable extent if basic principles of virology and pathogenesis are kept in mind. this article reviews current concepts of virological and clinical aspects of hsv keratitis to enable a broad understanding of the disease process. it is recognized several influential host factors including the fact that hsk is more common in men than women. it is observed that the ability of hsv to establish latent infection in sensory neurons and possibly cornea, but have as yet been unable to use this knowledge to prevent the disease limitations. acknowledging limitations may further stimulate application of laboratory knowledge in coping with hsk which constitutes to present major challenge in terms of management. mvo- study on effect of human bhsp in immunity of hcv core protein and hbv hbsag there are more than million individuals with hepatitis b and c in the world. in spite of vaccination in the different areas there are several reports about patients who got vaccine before. also there is not efficient vaccine against of hepatitis c and one of the important problems in vaccine project is development of effective and suitable adjuvant in human vaccines. at present research we applied human bhsp protein as adjuvant and chaperon. this protein injected to balbc mice as adjuvant together with recombinant proteins of hcv core and hbv hbsag. then humoral and cellular immune systems of the mice were studied. core and hbsag genes were cloned into petduet- vector and thermal vector of pgp - was used for human heat shock protein expressions. the different combination of these three proteins was injected to mice and we evaluated the total igg and igg a of mice serums after a week. two weeks after booster injection, we studied the proliferation and cytokine secretion of spleen, inguinal and popliteal lymph nodes lymphocytes in vitro and ex vivo conditions. so the core/hbsag + hsp and core + hbsag + hsp complexes induced total igg and igg a secretion. the spleen lymphocytes proliferation were increased equal to serum igg a level that was constant in second time bleeding with significant different to complexes with freund's adjuvant. at first il- and il- cytokines were increased and then decrease of il- meaned no hypersensitivity. the chaperon effect of hsp on structure of core and hbsag proteins was studied by cd and flourometer. it could fold the proteins after heating and unfolding. hepatitis b virus (hbv) infection is vaccine preventable global public health problem. all commercially available vaccines contain one or more of the recombinant hepatitis b envelope protein or surface antigen (hbsag). measurement of antigen responsible for immunogenicity of vaccine is central to quality assessment. the problems associated with the use of a polyclonal antibody in an assay with regard to its poorly defined nature and batch-to-batch variation has been mitigated by the use of mabs as described in this paper. the initial capture of hbsag by the mab could orientate it such that the same antibody could bind to it as a detection antibody after labeling with out steric hindrance. the development of an immuno-capture elisa (ic-elisa) to measure the hbsag content using a monoclonal antibody (mab) specific to determinant ''a'' of hbsag in the experimental vaccine formulations is being discussed. murine mabs developed against hbsag, subtype adw were found to cross-react with the other subtypes viz. ad and ay too. the mabs have been characterized following which, one mab hbs was chosen for developing ic-elisa format for the quantification of the hbsag in the final algel adsorbed vaccines. the unadsorbed hbsag was used to establish the standard curve of hbsag/a. the elisa had a sensitivity of ng/ml of hbsag. the recovery rate of hbsag/a was found to be around % in the vaccines treated to desorb the antigen from algel. twenty seven experimental batches of monovalent hepatitis b vaccines were analyzed for the hbsag content, both by ic-elisa and a commercial kit (axsym kit, abbott laboratories, usa). the statistical analysis of ic-elisa results indicated that an experimental equation f(x) = . (x) + . , could precisely estimate the amount of hbsag in the adsorbed vaccines. the amounts of hbsag recovered from the adsorbed vaccines as estimated by the ic-elisa format had a good correlation with the estimates derived from a commercial kit, which is being used by several vaccine manufacturers in india for the quality control of vaccine antigen. the varying amounts of vaccine antigens that could be recovered seemed to depend on the quality of the hbsag and the methods of hbsag adsorption to the alum gel during vaccine manufacture. epidemiology of the spread of h n virus. children of school going age have become victim of this deadly virus as evident from the reporting data generated in the past few weeks. the mortality rate has also been slightly increased. the disease spread in wave pattern and presently the world is passing through the second wave of pandemic with more severity in young and otherwise health people with a predilection for lungs leading to viral pneumonia and respiratory failure. now the pandemic gained hold in the developing world affecting more severely as millions of people live under deprived conditions having multiple health problems, with little access to basic health care. current data about the pandemic from developed counties need to be very closely watched in relation to shift in virus sub type, shift of the highest death rate to younger populations, successive pandemic waves, higher transmissibility than seasonal influenza, and demographic differences etc. presently the world appears to be better prepared. vaccine is available in market in many countries. even vaccine trials are actively going on in indian population. effective antivirals are available. although till now h n diagnostic centers worked with cdc/who recommended h n specific primer, probes with taqman chemistry by real time pcr, efforts on the development of indigenous diagnostics, vaccines and chemoprophylaxis is going on to have a better combat against this highly infectious virus. were positive for rotavirus infection by either page or elisa methods. the available data highlights the importance of rotavirus as a cause of diarrhea in children, which is severe enough to deserve specialized care. the observed proportion of . % of all diarrhea cases being associated with rotavirus falls within the range of values reported by other workers. the reported positivity varies from . to . %. in our study a complete concordance of elisa and page results were observed in ( %) of the tested specimens. this finding closely correlates with the findings of other authors who found a . - . % concordance results between elisa and page methods. some authors found rna-page method that is as sensitive and rapid as elisa for detecting rotavirus in stool samples of cases of diarrhea and some others proposed elisa is more sensitive than page method fond to be % specific. the remaining ( %) samples showed conflicting results. in a lone sample in which the od value of elisa test was . , this value was almost at the cutoff level, the possibility of this sample being positive by elisa test is doubtful. negative result of the same sample in page method is difficult to explain, the possibility of presence of lot of empty virus particles or due to low concentration of viral rna in the fecal specimen and insufficient extraction of viral rna could be possible. on the other hand, of the samples which gave positive results by page method were negative by elisa test. these samples had a typical - - - rna pattern. the reason for their being elisa negative thus remains unexplained, however blocking factors or the presence of inhibitory substance in stools might have been responsible. the samples containing predominantly complete particles can also give false negative results. since, the group antigen is not exposed. earlier studies have also reported page to be the most sensitive technique although some are of view that it is laborious procedure. how ever, the page system used in this study was very simple to perform and the results were available on the same day. the main requirement was of trained personnel and proper standardization of the technique. most reports states that the greatest advantage of page and silver stain method are its lack of ambiguity and the fact that it provides information about viral electropherotypes. the modified page system was thus found to be reliable, simple and rapid, no expensive reagents were required. locally available reagents from hi media were used. the cost of the chemical for page per specimen was rs. approximately as compared to rs. per test by confirmatory elisa. a locally produced slab gel electrophoresis system with power pack was the only equipment required. this method could be used for the routine diagnosis of rotavirus infection in the laboratory. vaccine, rapid diagnosis plays an important role in early management of patients. in this study a qc-rt-pcr assay was developed to quantify chikungunya virus rna by targeting the conserved region of e gene. a competitor molecule containing an internal insertion was generated, that provided a stringent control of the quantification process. the introduction of -fold serially diluted competitor in each reaction was further used to determine sensitivity. the applicability of this assay for quantification of chikungunya virus rna was evaluated with human clinical samples and the results were compared with real-time quantitative rt-pcr. the sensitivity of this assay was estimated to be rna copies per reaction with a dynamic detection range of to copies. specificity was confirmed using closely related alpha and flaviviruses. the comparison of qc-rt-pcr result with real-time rt-pcr revealed % concordance. these findings demonstrated that the reported assay is convenient, sensitive and accurate method and has the potential usefulness for clinical diagnosis due to simultaneous detection and quantification of chikungunya virus in acute-phase serum samples. in india, measles vaccine was introduced as part of expanded programme of immunization in . measles, mumps and rubella (mmr) vaccine is still not part of the national immunization schedule of india. the indian association of paediatrics (iap) recommends measles vaccine at months of age and mmr vaccine at - months. however, in a recent policy update, iap committee on immunisation opined that there is a need for a second dose of mmr vaccine for providing adequate immunity against mmr. the aim of the present study was to assess the extent of sero-protection against mmr at - years of age in children who have received one dose of mmr between and months of age. an attempt has also been made to assess the sero-response to the second dose of mmr vaccine in - years old children. a total of consecutive children between the ages of - years who had received mmr vaccine between and months of age and attending the immunization clinic of gtb hospital, delhi were enrolled. the vaccination status, anthropometry and physical examination findings were recorded. three ml of venous sample was again withdrawn for estimation of post vaccination antibody titre. it was observed that . %, . % and . % children were seroprotected for mmr respectively after . - . year of receiving first dose of mmr vaccine. seroprotection rose to . %, % and % for mmr respectively after - weeks of receiving second dose of mmr vaccine. geometric mean concentration of antibody also rose significantly in all three diseases. in view of low seroprevalence of mmr and hence high susceptibility to infection at - years of age, who have already received mmr vaccine, there is need to boost the immune responses against these three diseases by giving a second dose of mmr vaccine. baseline information on the epidemiology of viral agents causing stis and types of risk behaviour of affected persons are essential for any meaningful targeted intervention. the present study documents the pattern of viral stis in patients attending a tertiary care hospital, correlating the syndromic approach and the laboratory investigations to determine the aetiology. three hundred consecutive patients attending the sti clinic were diagnosed and categorized according to the syndromic approach of the who along with detailed history and demographic data. majority of the patients were men ( . %) with a mean age of years. men received education up to middle school. half of the female subjects were illiterate. sixty percent of the patients were married and among these, % were regular condom users. first sexual contact at or before years of age was more in men ( % vs. . % in women). promiscuity was more among male patients who had contact with csw. genital herpes was the commonest viral sti ( / ) followed by genital wart ( / ). concomitant infection with more than one virus was seen in % of patients. hiv was prevalent in . % of sti patients. hepatitis b, hepatitis c, herpes simplex type and molluscum contagiosum were the other viral agents seen in sti clinic attendees at our centre. this disease currently prevalent in more than countries world wide and annually - million people are infected with dengue virus among which . - lakhs cases were dengue hemorrhagic fever (dhf) and dengue shock syndrome (dss) which are serious forms of dengue virus infection and due to this condition , deaths might occur annually world wide and approximately million children were hospitalized for the fast decades. this disease is characterized by sudden onset of high fever with sever headache, pain in the back and limbs, lymphadenopathy macuolo-papulur rash over the skin and retro-bulbar pain. early diagnosis can be established with simple and rapid lgg/ gm antibodies detection in the blood samples of the patients based on the bi-directional immunoassay system for its management and control to reduce morbidity and mortality. details will be presented. myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy (dcm) are common causes of morbidity and mortality both in children and adults. the most common viruses involved in myocarditis are coxsackievirus b or adenovirus. recently, the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor (car), a common receptor for coxsackieviruses b , b and adenoviruses , has been identified. increased expression of car has been reported in patients with dcm suggesting utilization of car by these viruses for cell entry. the present study was designed to study the expression of car in myocardial tissue of patients with dcm. formalin fixed myocardial tissues were obtained from autopsy cases. a total of cases of dcm and cases of controls which included non-cardiac (group-a) and cardiac disease other than dcm (group-b) were included in the study. expression of car was studied by immunohistochemical staining of myocardial tissue using car specific rabbit polyclonal antibody and biotin conjugated secondary antibody. the tissue sections were considered positive when[ % of the cell showed brown color staining by immunohistochemistry (ihc). the car positivity in dcm cases was found to be % ( / ) as compared to % in control group a and % in control group b respectively. the car positivity was significantly higher in the test group as compared to both the control groups. further car positivity in all the cellular types (myocytes, endothelial cells and interstitial cells) was found significantly higher in test group as compared to both the control groups. the expression of car was significantly higher in myocytes as compared to both endothelial and interstitial cells in all the groups. however, no significant difference was observed in car positivity between endothelial and interstitial cells. the present study highlights the increased expression of car in dcm cases with further significance of car expression in myocytes and endothelial cells. this may help further in understanding the tropism of viruses or cellular susceptibility, which in turn will help in appropriate diagnostic and therapeutic approach in management of viral myocarditis and dcm cases. food security and safety vary widely around the world, and reaching these goals is one of the major challenges, raising public concern for the wellbeing of mankind, in particular. industrialized production and processing as well as improper environmental protection have clearly shown severe limitations such as worldwide contamination of the food chain and water. contaminated water and food during the processes of production, processing and handling are essentially responsible for food and water borne viral infections/diseases. the cases of viral food borne outbreaks are on the rise, creating a threat to human health. recent researches indicate that epidemiological studies are meager to focus the frequently contaminated foods and food borne viral diseases. current paper projects the etiology of select food borne viral diseases, probable reasons for non availability of appropriate methods to detect the viruses responsible for the diseases, routes of water and food borne transmission of enteric viral infections, currently available methods of detection of select viruses and bio safety measures to prevent food borne viral infections. dietary/nutritional management in food borne viral diseases is crucial to control weakness and gastro enteric intolerance due to disease condition and antibiotic therapy. it will principally improve food intake, resulting in better nutritional status leading to optimum immune response. food borne viruses are mainly belong to rotaviruses, enteropathogenic viruses, astroviruses, adenoviruses and caliciviruses, causes acute gastroenteritis (ag) which is an important health problem. the frequency of rotavirus as a cause of sporadic cases of ag ranges between . % and . %. astroviruses cause ag, with a frequency ranging between and %: outbreaks have been described in schools and kindergartens, but also in adults and the elderly. the frequency of identification of adenoviruses and as causes of sporadic ag in non-immuno suppressed children ranges between . % and . %, although there is probably underreporting because the sensitivity of conventional techniques is low. caliciviruses are separated phylogenetically into two genera: norovirus and sapovirus. norovirus is frequently associated with food-and water-borne outbreaks of ag. it is estimated that % of cases of ag due to norovirus are food borne. in sweden and some regions of the united states, norovirus is the first cause of outbreaks of food borne diseases. sapovirus outbreaks due to person-to-person and food borne transmission affecting both children and adults have recently been reported in countries such as canada and japan. it has been predicted that the importance of diarrhoeal disease, mainly due to contaminated food and water, as a cause of death will decline worldwide. evidence for such a downward trend is limited. this prediction presumes that improvements in the production and retail of microbiologically safe food will be sustained in the developed world and, moreover, will be rolled out to those countries of the developing world increasingly producing food for a global market. sustaining food safety standards will depend on constant vigilance maintained by monitoring and surveillance but, with the rising importance of other food-related issues, such as food security, obesity and climate change, competition for resources in the future to enable this may be fierce. in addition the pathogen populations relevant to food safety are not static. food is an excellent vehicle by which many pathogens (bacteria, viruses/prions and parasites) can reach an appropriate colonization site in a new host. although food production practices change, the well-recognized food-borne pathogens, such as salmonella spp. and escherichia coli, seem able to evolve to exploit novel opportunities, for example fresh produce and even generate new public health challenges, for example antimicrobial resistance. in addition, previously unknown food-borne pathogens, many of which are zoonotic, are constantly emerging. awareness and surveillance of viral food-borne pathogens is generally poor but emphasis is placed on norovirus, hepatitis a, rotaviruses and newly emerging viruses such as sars. it is clear that one overall challenge is the generation and maintenance of constructive dialogue and collaboration between public health, veterinary and food safety experts, bringing together multidisciplinary skills and multi-pathogen expertise. such collaboration is essential to monitor changing trends in the well-recognized diseases and detect emerging pathogens. it is also necessary to understand the multiple interactions between these pathogens and their environments during transmission along the food chain in order to develop effective prevention and control strategies. to analyse the effectiveness of these sirnas targeting rabies virus l gene, the bhk- cells expressing sirnas in shrna form were produced by transduction of cells with radv-l. the transduced bhk- cells expressing sirna were infected with rabies virus pv- strain. there was reduction in rabies virus multiplication as analysed by reduction in fluorescent foci forming unit (ffu) count by . % ( ffu in bhk- cells expressing sirna-l compared to ffu in bhk- cells expressing negative sirna). the expression of l gene mrna was reduced by . fold in rabies virus infected radv-l transduced cells compared to radv-neg transduced cells (negative control) as detected using real-time pcr. after analyzing the effectiveness of radv-l in vitro, its effectiveness was also evaluated in vivo in mice after virulent rabies challenge. the mice were inoculated with plaque forming units (pfu) of radv-l in masseter muscle (i/m route) and challenged with ld rabies virus challenge virus standard (cvs) strain. the results indicated % protection with improved median survival from to days compared with group of mice treated with radv-neg. the results of this study indicated that sirnas targeting rabies virus polymerase (l) gene delivered through adenoviral vector inhibited rabies virus multiplication in vitro and in vivo. and were successfully produced and purified from the infected spodoptera frugiperda (sf- ) cells using these recombinant baculovirus. the morphology of the vlps was validated by electron microscopy in comparison to the authentic bt virions. the vlps produced here were stable and were highly immunogenic with intact outer layer which is rapidly lost during normal infection of btv. these btv-vlps elicited long lasting protective immunity in vaccinated sheep against virulent virus challenge. with the use of btv-vlps it was also possible to differentiate the infected and vaccinated animals (diva). vlp-based btv vaccine has potential advantages with regard to controlling the spread of btv with multiple serotypes. it is possible to produce milligram quantities of correctly folded and processed protein complexes using this baculovirus expression system and hence it is a more promising system for producing new generation vaccines like vlp subunit vaccine against any viral diseases in large scale. peste des petits ruminants (ppr), goatpox and orf are oie notifiable diseases of small ruminants especially goat and sheep. these diseases are economically important, in enzootic countries like india and cause significant loss and are major constraints in the productivity. considering the geographical distribution of ppr, goat pox and orf infections and prevalence of mixed infection, in the present study, safety and potency of the experimental triple vaccine comprising attenuated strains of thermostable-ppr virus (pprv jhansi, p- ) grown at °c, high passaged goat poxvirus (gtpv uttarkashi, p ) and attenuated orf virus (orfv mukteswar, p ) was evaluated in sub-himalayan local hill goats. goats simultaneously immunized with ml of vaccine consisting of either tcid or tcid of each of pprv, gtpv and orfv were monitored for clinical and serological responses for a period of - weeks post-immunization (pi) and post challenge (pc). specific immune responses i.e., antibodies directed to pprv, gtpv and orfv could be demonstrated by ppr competitive elisa kit and capripox indirect elisa, snt, respectively following immunization. all the immunized animals resisted infections when challenged with virulent strains of either gtpv or pprv or orfv on day dpi, while in contact control animals developed characteristic signs of respective disease. further, ppr viral antigen could be detected by using ppr sandwich elisa kit in the excretions (nasal, ocular and oral swab materials) of unvaccinated control animals after challenge but not from any of the immunized goats. triple vaccine was found safe at dose as higher as tcid and induced protective immune response even at lower dose ( tcid ) in goats, which was evident from sero-conversion as well as challenge studies. the study indicated that these viruses are compatible and did not interfere with each other in eliciting immune response, paving the feasibility of use of this triple vaccine in combating these infections simultaneously. toll like receptors (tlrs), primary sensors of microbial origin, plays a crucial role in the innate immunity. till now mammalian tlrs have been identified, while there is no information available on tlrs of yak. this study is part of world bank funded-icar project. yak, named bos grunniens for its distinctive vocalization and relationship with cattle, is natural habitant of extremely cold environment. when these animals comes to a lower altitude grazing land, adjacent to villages, become susceptible to the diseases of cattle, buffalo etc. thus, present study was undertaken to with genetic characterization and evolutionary lineage analysis of yak tlrs. we worked on tlr gene, which plays an important role in recognition of ssrna viruses. total rna was extracted from mitogen stimulated pbmcs of yak. the rt-pcr conditions were standardized for full length amplification of tlr gene using specific self designed primers. the expected amplicon of bps was obtained. it was cloned in pgemt-easy vector followed by transformation in e. coli top strain. the recombinant clones were screened, picked up for plasmid isolation and release of tlr was confirmed by restriction digestion. the cloned tlr product was sequenced and analyzed for the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences, and d structure analysis. the results revealed that yak shows more than % sequence homology with other bos indicus breeds and bos taurus breeds. however, identity was less than % with other animal species (equine, murine, feline, canine etc.). the evolutionary lineage findings cluster yak more closely with bovine species. point mutations revealed changes at nucleotide positions with corresponding amino acid change at positions. smart analysis of yak protein domain architecture revealed toll-interleukin i receptor (tir), leucine rich repeats (lrr) and signal peptide region. the variations in yak mainly lie in the lrr region. homology modeling revealed horse shoe shaped structure with alpha helix. the additional alpha helix present in bos indicus was not detected in yak. the present study shows existence of genetic variability in tlr gene of yak, in particular the lrr region, which plays an important role in the pathogen recognition and the evolutionary lineage analyses shows its closeness with other bovine species. a.p. aquaculture and fisheries, tirupati in this new millennium, aquatic animal health management strategies in asia expanded and adjusted to the current disease problems faced by the aquaculture sector. this presentation will briefly discuss some of the most serious trans-boundary pathogens affecting asian aquaculture including a newly emerging disease and highlight recent regional and national efforts on responsible health management for mitigating the risks associated with aquatic animal movement. a regional approach is fundamental since many countries share common social, economic, industrial, environmental, biological and geographical characteristics. capacity and awareness building on aquatic animal epidemiology, science-based risk analysis for aquatic animal transfers, surveillance and disease reporting, disease zoning and establishment of aquatic animal health information systems to support development of national disease control programs and emergency response to disease outbreaks are needed. molecular diagnostics with emphasis towards standardization and harmonization, inter-calibration exercises and quality assurance in laboratories, accreditation program and utilization of regional resource centres on aquatic animal health will also be needed. whilst most of these strategies are directed in support of government policies, implementation will require pro-active involvement, effective cooperation and strategic networking between governments, farmers, researchers, scientists, development and aid agencies, and relevant private sector stakeholders at all levels. their contributions are essential to the health management process. generally, aquaculture plays an important role in economy as harvests from natural waters have declined or, at best, remained static in most countries. fish and shrimp, the main aquaculture product sources, have gained the most attention. many factors can cause losses in yields of fish products and infectious disease in fish and shrimp is the biggest threat to the fishery industry. shrimp and fish aquaculture has grown rapidly over several decades to become a major global industry that serves the increasing consumer demand for seafood and has contributed significantly to socio-economic development in many poor coastal communities. however, the ecological disturbances and changes in patterns of trade associated with the development of shrimp and fish farming have presented many of the pre-conditions for the emergence and spread of disease. shrimp and fish are displaced from their natural environments, provided artificial or alternative feeds, stocked in high density, exposed to stress through changes in water quality and are transported nationally and internationally, either live or as frozen product. these practices have provided opportunities for increased pathogenicity of existing infections, exposure to new pathogens, and the rapid transmission and trans boundary spread of disease. not surprisingly, a succession of new viral diseases has devastated the production and livelihoods of farmers and their sustaining communities. this review examines the major viral pathogens of farmed shrimp and fish, the likely reasons for their emergence and spread, and the consequences for the structure and operation of the shrimp farming industry. in addition, this review discusses the health management strategies that have been introduced to combat the major pathogens and the reasons that disease continues to have an impact, particularly on poor, smallholder farmers in asia. btv isolates from the same geographic region have been termed as 'topotypes' and initial observation on segment nucleotide sequences identified a correlation between topotypes and genetic information. later topotyping was proposed based on segment , on the premise that the encoding protein ns , which is involved in virus egress from insect cells, would lead to evolutionary fitness in parallel with the geographic distribution of the different culicoides species. further studies attempted to extend this to nucleotide sequence homology in segments and , but failed to identify clear cut correlations or any evidence for positive selection. for example, south african isolates were found not to cluster into separate african lineage. in this study, we carried out a more extensive analysis of segment sequences. our analysis showed no segregation of isolates into topographically distinct groups. instead we observed topological clustering of the clades, and we attribute this to genetic bottleneck resulting in genetic drift and founder effect leading to homogenous gene pool in a geographical area. we hypothesize that when a new virus enters a geographical area where local btv strains are already circulating, the new genes/segments would enter into a bigger gene pool. consequently, the newer incursions into a heavily endemic area tend to get diluted and disappear from the population because the rate of drift is inversely proportional to the population size, unless they are positively selected. use of live attenuated vaccine in israel, europe, south africa and usa also led to more homogenous population similar to the vaccine strains due to continuous infusion of the vaccine type genes into the gene pool. we conclude that restriction of specific strains to certain geographical areas could generate uniquely imprinted genotypes which would not only indicate origin but also predict movement of viral strains to new areas. vvo- viral diseases of zoonotic importance: indian context k. prabhudas pd-admas, ivri, campus, hebbal, bangalore zoonoses are generally defined as animal diseases that are transmissible to humans. they continue to represent an important health hazard in most parts of the world, where they cause considerable expenditure and losses for the health and agricultural sectors. the emergence of these zoonotic diseases are very distinct, hence their prevention and control will require unique strategies, apart from traditional approaches. such strategies require rebuilding a cadre of trained professionals of several medical and biologic sciences. the article discusses virus infections that have significant zoonotic implications for india. buffalopox is a contagious viral disease affecting milch buffaloes and rarely, cows, with a morbidity rate up to % in the affected herd. although the disease is not responsible for high mortality, it adversely affects the productivity of the animals, resulting in large economic losses. furthermore, the disease has zoonotic implications, as outbreaks are frequently associated with human infections, particularly in the milkers. the causative agent, buffalopox virus (bpxv), is closely related to vaccinia virus. the outbreaks of febrile rash illness among humans and buffaloes were investigated in the villages of districts solapur and kolhapur of western maharashtra. clinico-epidemiological investigations of humans and buffaloes were carried out and representative clinical samples were collected respectively. the samples include vesicular fluid, scab, and blood. laboratory investigations for buffalo-pox virus (bpxv) was done by pcr on blood samples, scabs and vesicular fluid. in vitro virus isolation attempts were carried out by using vero e- cells. negative staining electron microscopy was also employed for detection of virus particles. a total of human cases with pox lesions on hand and other body parts from village kasegaon, district-solapur and cases from different villages of kolhapur district were reported. besides pox lesions patients were having fever, malaise, pain at site of lesion and axillary and inguinal lymphadenopathy. in kasegaon village, attack rate in human cases was . % and in buffaloes . % ( / ). whereas in kolhapur area attack rate in buffaloes was . % ( / ). bpxv was confirmed in blood, vesicular fluid and scab specimens from human cases and scab specimen from buffalo by polymerase chain reaction (pcr) method. the bpxv was also isolated from different clinical specimens and further identified by pcr and electron microscopy. clinical manifestation of the disease in buffaloes from solapur district was as reported earlier like common pox lesions on teats and udders whereas the buffaloes from kolhapur district had lesions on hairless parts of ears and on the eyelids with purulent discharge. bpxv from human and buffalo cases showed similarity. vaccines have been made against several diseases and used for controlling the afflictions. however a few of them were not effective for successfully controlling the disease. the reasons for the failure are many, the major being, either the pathogen is not completely cleared from the vaccinated animal or it reemerges after changing its antigenic structure, thus making the vaccination programme less effective. in addition to this, emergences of newer diseases such as hiv the development of suitable vaccines have become a challenging task. this is especially true in the case of viral diseases. these challenges have warned the researchers ''that protection by vaccination is not that simple and strait forward approach'', and lot need to be understood in terms of host virus interaction and role of environment in perpetuating the disease. so the immediate step that was considered was the environmental safety by way using non infectious materials as vaccines. with the understanding that has been developed in molecular immunology and molecular biology and with the availability of molecular tools that have been developed through recombinant dna technology the field of vaccinology has changed dramatically to emerge as modern vaccinology. this presentation deals with the modern approaches that are being used to produce effective vaccines in the case of foot and mouth disease of cloven footed animals. the similar approach may be worked out for other viral diseases also. despite the availability of an inactivated vaccine that is noted to provide solid immunity against the disease over a short period of time, the search for an ideal vaccine, the criteria for which are; safety of the vaccine for environment, easy in its preparation, does not require a cold chain for its storage, provides longer lasting immunity, economically viable and may be able to clear the virus in case of persistent infection is on. the advent of recombinant dna technology together with the information available on the molecular biology of viruses has enabled to design the development of newer vaccines that can induce strong cellular and humoral responses. the underlying principal in the present vaccine development strategy world over is the virus antigen gene has to be expressed in the tissue and the vaccine backbone has to trigger the immune system for eliciting desired immune response. bangalore campus of ivri has been vigorously pursuing research to develop ideal vaccines for foot and mouth disease keeping above principal in mind to achieve the previously mentioned criteria. the approaches selected are to see that the virus antigen/s replicate transiently in the host. the self replicating vaccines that have been developed are pox virus vectored vaccines, alpha virus replicase based vaccines and fmdv vectored vaccines. the approach and the result obtained so far will be discussed. silkworm, bombyx mori is affected with various diseases caused by viruses viz., nuclearpolyhedrosis (bmnpv), densosnucleosis (bmdnv) and infectious flacherie (bmifv). silkworm viral diseases form major constraints for the silk cocoon production in all the sericultural countries. the losses due to silkworm diseases is estimated about - % and among them viral diseases are most common. in sericulture, prophylactic measures play a vital role in the management of silkworm diseases. these include disinfection of silkworm rearing house and appliances, rearing area, rearing surroundings, silkworm egg and body, and rearing bed disinfection associated with maintenance of general hygiene and personnel hygiene. all these activities are generally carried out as rituals by using general disinfectants often with partial success. recent trends in complete management of silkworm diseases include development of silkworm hybrids evolved from disease resistant/tolerant breeds, effective eco-and user-friendly disinfectants, anti-microbial feed-supplements and use of transgenic silkworms. biotechnological breakthrough in this regard is through rna interference (rnai) approach involving dsrna mediated nuclear polyhedrosis management and this is presently pursued by apssrdi, hindupur in collaboration with centre for dna fingerprinting and diagnostics (cdfd), hyderabad. nadu and karnataka. the disease appears to be more severe in rural flocks than organized farms. our investigations revealed the morbidity, mortality and case fatality rates among rural and organised farms as . %, . %, . % and . %, . %, . % respectively. higher morbidity and mortality in rural areas may be due to stress factors like poor nutrition, parasitic burden, fatigue due to long walks and non availability of veterinary aid. kulkarni et al. also reported the severe bt outbreaks in rural areas of maharashtra with overall morbidity, mortality and case fatality of %, % and % respectively. all the south indian sheep breeds were found to be susceptible and clinical farm of the disease is evident in all of them though saravanabava ( ) reported variations in susceptibility among the indigenous sheep. trichy black and ramnad white sheep were found to be more susceptible than the vambur and mecheri sheep of tamil nadu. prevalence of bluetongue in sheep, goat and cattle appears to be high in the region. serological surveys conducted in andhra pradesh during revealed the prevalence of btv antibodies in sheep ( . %) goats ( . %) cattle ( %) and buffaloe ( %). similar high prevalence of btv antibodies in sheep and goats were also reported from the other states in the region. clinical disease has not been recorded in kerala though btv antibodies were recorded in sheep ( . %) and goats ( . %) (ravi sankar ) . culicoides are the known biological vectors of btv. all the culicoides species are not capable of transmitting the btv. the occurrence of the disease is related to the presence of the competent vectors in the area. jain et al. ( ) established the involvement of the culicoides in transmitting the btv by isolating the virus from culicoides at haryana, the north indian state. c. imicola and c. oxystoma were found to be prevalent in andhra pradesh and tamil nadu. narladakar et al.( ) reported the presence of c. schultzei, c. perigrinus and c. octoni in marathwada region of maharastra. culicoid vectors are significantly affected by the climate and annual variations in the climate reflects the outcome of the disease. the monsoon season (june to dec) with the temperature ranging from . to . °c appears to be favourable period for the multiplication of culicoides. the maximum no of outbreaks were recorded during the north east monsoon period (oct-dec) followed by south west monsoon period (june to sep) in the region. however, details on the distribution of the competent vectors, feeding habits and their dynamics in the region is lacking multiple btv serotypes were found to be circulating in the region. (kulkarni and kulkarni ; janakiraman etal. ; mehrotra et al. ) a total of serotypes viz. - , , , , , and were identified based on the virus isolations. sreenivasulu et al. isolated btv serotype from an outbreak of bt in native sheep of andhra pradesh. btv serotype , and were also isolated from the outbreaks occurred in andhra pradesh. some of the isolates need to be serotyped. deshmukh and gujar ( ) isolated btv type from maharashtra. following is the summary of the distribution of btv serotypes in this region. clinical picture of bt in native sheep appears to be slightly different, the major difference being that swelling of lips and face was less conspicuous. mucocutaneous borders appeared to be very sensitive to touch and bleed easily upon handling. the classical signs of cyanosis of tongue and reddening of coronary band are not the common features of the disease in native sheep. the disease was also confirmed by the virus isolation and identification. clinical disease has not been reported in cattle, buffaloes and goats in spite of high seroprevalence. in conclusion bt is established in native sheep and causes severe economic losses to the farmers. the disease is concentrated in the southern peninsula of the country. the disease is seasonal and is associated with the rain fall. multiple serotypes appear to be circulating in this region. the btv serotypes were of virulent in nature as evident by severe outbreaks. s. janardana reddy*, d. c. reddy department of fishery science and aquaculture, sri venkateswara university, tirupati in less than three decades, the penaeid shrimp culture industries of the world developed from their experimental beginnings into major industries providing hundreds of thousands of jobs, billions of u.s. dollars in revenue, and augmentation of the world's food supply with a high value crop. concomitant with the growth of the shrimp culture industry has been the recognition of the ever increasing importance of disease, especially those caused by infectious agents. in india viral diseases have become an important limiting factor for growth of shrimp aquaculture industry. although more than different viral pathogens have been identified in different species of shrimp world wide, only a few viruses have identified which are causing disease problems in cultured tiger shrimps in india, east coast of andhra pradesh, in particular. diagnostic methods for these pathogens include the traditional methods of morphological pathology (direct light microscopy, histopathology, and transmission electron microscopy), enhancement and bioassay methods, traditional microbiology, and the application of serological methods. while tissue culture is considered to be a standard tool in medical and veterinary diagnostic labs, it has never been developed as a useable, routine diagnostic tool for shrimp pathogens. the need for rapid, sensitive diagnostic methods led to the application of modern biotechnology to penaeid shrimp disease. the industry now has modern diagnostic genomic probes with nonradioactive labels for viral pathogens like infectious hypodermal and hematopoietic necrosis (ihhnv), hepatopancreatic virus (hpv), taura syndrome virus (tsv), white spot syndrome virus (wssv), monodon baculo virus (mbv), and bp. highly sensitive detection methods for some pathogens that employ dna amplification methods based on the polymerase chain reaction (pcr) now exist, and more pcr methods are being developed for additional agents. these advanced molecular methods promise to provide badly needed diagnostic and research tools to an industry reeling from catastrophic epizootics and which must become poised to go on with the next phase of its development as an industry that must be better able to understand and manage disease. within this field, shrimp immunology is a key element in establishing strategies for the control of diseases in shrimp aquaculture. research needs to be directed towards the development of assays to evaluate and monitor the immune state of shrimp. the establishment of regular immune checkups will permit the detection of shrimp immunodeficiencies but also to help monitor and improve environment quality. for this, immune effectors must be first identified and characterised. in the end, however, the assumption may be made that the sustainability of aquaculture will depend on the selection of disease-resistant shrimp, i.e. to develop research in immunology and genetics at the same time. the development of strategies for prophylaxis and control of shrimp diseases could be aided by the establishment of a collaborative network to contribute to progress in basic knowledge of penaeid immunity. however, to improve efficiency, it appears essential also to open this network to complementary research areas related to shrimp pathology, physiology, genetics and environment. bluetongue is an important viral disease of sheep causing severe economic losses to the farmers. lack of effective vaccine is the major impediments in controlling the disease. multiple serotypes were found to be circulating in the state. attempts are being made to develop the vaccine employing the available serotypes to control the disease. hence, it is essential to identify the antigenic relationship among the serotypes to identify the candidate vaccine strains to be incorporated in the preparation of vaccine. reciprocal cross neutralization test was employed to find out the r% values between btv- , - and - which indicated the extent of antigenic relationship between the serotypes. r% value between btv- and btv- was recorded as . r% value of . and . were observed between btv- and - and btv- and - respectively. the r% values recorded in the present study revealed a weak antigenic relationship between the btv serotypes. the extent of antigenic relationship between the btv serotypes was also determined by multiple sequence alignment of the nucleotide and amino acid sequences of the reference btv serotypes , and . the sequence analysis of the vp gene revealed a homology of - % and - % at the nucleotide and amino acid levels respectively. r% values obtained using reciprocal cross neutralization test with the btv- , and serotypes isolated in native sheep of andhra pradesh and the genomic analysis of the reference serotypes of btv- , and revealed very weak antigenic relationship and were highly divergent. diseases especially those by viral pathogens cause greater economic losses in most horticultural crop species throughout the world as compared to agricultural crops. non-genetic methods of management of these diseases include quarantine measures, eradication of infected plants and weed hosts, crop rotation, use of certified virus-free seed or planting stock and use of pesticides to control insect vector populations implicated in transmission of viruses. however, none of these measures is likely to provide an enduring solution against these diseases especially those caused by viruses due sometimes to the huge expenditure involved, but mostly to the questionable effectiveness and reliability of those methods. as key control pesticides are getting increasingly abandoned, development of alternative methods to control diseases has been a felt-need in the recent past. though breeding for disease resistance generally provides a reliable security in a long run, introgression of host plant resistance did not materialise in most important crops. non-availability of an appropriate source of resistance in inter-fertile relatives, linkage to undesirable traits, or often times polygenic nature of such sources of resistance are the stumbling blocks in breeding programs. the limitations of conventional breeding and routine cultural practices prompted the need for the development of other approaches of virus control that could be fully incorporated into traditional methods. in this perspective, the concept of pathogen-derived resistance offers an attractive strategy to evolve newer methods of virus management, by transforming crop plants with nucleotide sequences derived from the pathogen's genome. an increasing number of molecular characterisation of plant virus genomes and the stable transformation of a number of horticultural crop species have in fact opened an avenue for molecular breeding against virus pathogens. successful field-testing of genetically modified crop cultivars renders proof of their supremacy over existing cultivars. it also contributes to demonstrate their capability with regard to environmental safety with a view to winning over public concern and scepticism. in general, the eventual commercialisation transgenic lines expressing virus resistance will rely upon a host of factors including their field performance, genetic stability, public acceptance and the resolution of environmental concerns and patent related issues. as such, elaborate field trials and allied studies are now required to adapt genetically engineered horticultural crops expressing virus resistance for their implementation into practical agriculture. a few examples from current research at tnau, in india or elsewhere will be discussed in this presentation. virology unit, division of plant pathology, iari, new delhi in recent times there has been greater emphasis on vegetatively propagated crops in india to help diversify the indian agriculture. fruit, flower, spice and plantation crops are important vegetatively propagated horticultural crops, which have become a driving force for economic development in several parts of india. however, most of the vegetatively propagated crops are threatened by biotic stress caused by plant pathogens in general and plant viruses in particular. plant viruses produce specific and non specific symptoms and in some cases no symptoms are produced. correct identification and diagnosis of viral diseases is first step in the management of any disease including viral diseases. there have been two major breakthroughs in virus diagnostics during last four decades. the first one was serological assay using monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies in enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (elisa) and the other one was the use of in vitro amplification of dna in polymerase chain reaction (pcr). a significant development in serological assays has been its simplification in form of user's friendly quick strip/dip stick method. the one-step lateral-flow (lf) tests have been developed for the on-site detection and identification of several plant viruses. rapid advancement in virus genome characterization has led to the development of novel approaches of nucleic acid based diagnostics which include conventional pcr, real time pcr, multiplex pcr, micro/macro arrays and biochips. pcr protocols already exist for many plant viruses of citrus, banana, apple, papaya, vegetables, ornamental and spice crops. a further advancement has led to development of realtime pcr assay which is relatively easy but requires training for diagnosticians. in real-time pcr assays, results can be available within min. the nucleic acid template preparation in pcr has been simplified. membrane based dna template protocol and co-isolation of nucleic acid template preparation are novel approaches in pcr detection of virus and virus like pathogens. since many of the horticultural crops are often infected by more than one virus, their individual detection by pcr is not only expensive but also time consuming. therefore, multiplex pcr has been developed where in genome of more than one virus could be amplified and detected in the same reaction mixture. development of nucleic acid based chip is now one of the fastest and recent growing areas in the field of pathogen detection. these nucleic acid based chips have been named as dna/rna chips, biochips, genechips, biosensors or dna arrays. when it comes to applications of microarray technology for plant viruses, it is not too difficult to see the value of a method that could potentially detect a whole range of viruses using a single test. however, microarrays are unlikely to become the only method in use in a diagnostic laboratory. processing of germplasm including transgenic planting material imported for research purposes into the country. during the last two decades, a total of , samples of wheat including transgenics were imported from cimmyt (mexico), icarda (syria) and many other countries. these were grown in post-entry quarantine nursery each year at nbpgr, new delhi and the transgenic samples were grown in national containment facility of level- (cl- ) since its inception to ensure that no viable biological material/pollen/pathogen enters or leaves the facility during quarantine processing of transgenics. in addition, post-entry quarantine inspections of the transgenic wheat grown by indenters are also undertaken by nbpgr quarantine scientists. virus-induced gene silencing (vigs) is a technique in which viral genomes are used, usually after appropriate modifications, for transient gene silencing in plants. the mechanism behind vigs is the phenomenon called rna-interference (rnai), which is widespread in many organisms and is believed to be form of inherent defence system against intracellular pathogens, such as viruses and transposons. double-stranded rna or rna containing strong secondary structures, commonly produced during viral infections, are believed to cause triggering of rnai, which employs a battery of proteins and nucleoprotein complexes to identify and degrade specific viral transcripts. in vigs, viral genomes not causing severe symptoms, but which can accumulate and spread efficiently in the host plant are used as vectors in which a host gene is cloned and introduced into the plant. upon replication, the viral vector triggers rnai response in the host plant, which also targets the host gene, leading to its silencing and subsequently, the silenced phenotype revealing gene function in vivo. vigs has been used extensively to study gene functions in dicot plants, such as tobacco, tomato, pea, soybean, etc., using vectors derived from reference genes are commonly used as an/the endogenous normalisation measure for the relative quantification of target genes. the expression (characteristics) of seven potential reference genes was evaluated in tissues of healthy, physiologically stressed and barley yellow dwarf virus (bydv) infected cereal plants. these genes were tested by rt-qpcr and ranked according to the stability of their expression (characteristics) using three different methods (two-way anova, genorm and normfinder tools). in most cases, the expression (characteristics) of all genes did not depend on the abiotic stress conditions or on the virus infections. all the genes showed significant differences in expression (characteristics) among plant species. glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh), beta-tubulin (tubb) and s ribosomal rna ( s rrna) always ranked as the three most stable genes. on the other hand, elongation factor- alpha (ef a), eukaryotic initiation factor a (eif a), and s ribosomal rna ( s rrna) for barley and oat samples; and beta-tubulin (tubb) for wheat samples were consistently ranked as the less reliable controls. the bydv titre was determined in two oat varieties by rt-qpcr by three different quantification approaches. statistically, there were no significant differences between the absolute and the relative quantification, or between quantification using gapdh + tubb + tuba + s rrna and ef a + eif a + s rrna. the geometric average of gapdh, s rrna, tuba and tubb is suitable for normalisation of bydv quantification in barley and oat tissues. for wheat samples, a combination of gapdh, s rrna, tubb, eif a and e fa is recommended. department of microbiology, yogi vemana university, vemanapuram, kadapa large scale production and import of propagative material poses potential risk of introducing several destructive pathogens particularly viruses and mycoplasma like organisms in our country. this demands adequate quarantine safe guards such as growing them under approved post entry quarantine facility for specific period so as to facilitate virus detection, thereby curtailing risk. when such facilities are coupled with propagation by tissue culture will ensure virus free propagative plant material. the requirement of nationwide network of post entry quarantine facility working in close collaboration with crop institutions are very much emphasized for considering import of high risk plant genera for agriculture development. present paper discusses about virus disease of quarantine importance affecting ornamental and fruit plants such as chrysanthimum, dahlia, dianthus, rosabengalensis, cattleya, cymbidium, dendrobium, lilium, citrus, vitis etc. the paper also discusses on immunodiagnostic methods of detection and methods of obtaining virus free propagative material. rice tungro occurs as epidemics in regular cycles and has been reported in the last years from all the major rice growing regions of india, especially prevalent in the southern and eastern states. development of the durable resistant varieties to tungro is crucial for the management of the disease. molecular breeding, involving the use of dna markers linked to the resistant gene(s) for selection, can overcome the difficulties encountered in conventional resistant breeding programs. for successful marker-assisted selection (mas), the identification of closely linked markers through the process of gene tagging and mapping is a prerequisite. attempts have been initiated for identification of tungro resistance genes through molecular mapping and their introgression into the target varieties using marker-assisted selection at drr, hyderabad. the inheritance of resistance to rice tungro virus disease was studied in seven resistant rice cultivars with field evaluation at hot spot locations. the microsatellite markers linked to rice tungro resistance in utri merah was studied and found that resistance genes were linked to rm on chromosome . through molecular mapping two qtl were identified controlling rtv resistance on chromosomes and in 'utri rajapan' explaining . % and . % of the phenotypic variance. in variety 'vikramarya', another two qtl for rtv resistance were detected on chromosomes and explaining . % and . % of the phenotypic variance. the closely linked markers identified in this study flanking the gene of interest through mapping will improve the efficiency and precision of introgression programs in marker assisted breeding for rtv resistance. functional characterization of these qtl for rtv resistance is under progress. there is only a limited pool of natural virus resistance in cassava against cassava mosaic geminiviruses and cassava brown streak ipomovirus hence the development of transgenic resistance in this significant crop might present an option. rna mediated resistance through the expression of inverted-repeat dsrna sequences derived from the virus genome and the modification of plant microrna to produce antiviral artificial microrna are strategies that have recently been proven very effective for induction of virus resistance (immunity) against a number of rna viruses. results from rna interference strategies against geminiviruses never resulted in immunity of transgenes. however, it suggest that viral mrna are targets of rna silencing and that the success of the strategy depends on the relevance of the target gene in the systemic spread of the virus. we have generated a number of rna silencing constructs to induce resistance against cbsv and the indian cassava mosaic viruses icmv and slcmv. due to the serious problems inherent with transformation of cassava and subsequent resistance screening, these constructs were tested for efficiency either by transient-or by transgenic expression in n. benthamiana. complete immunity was reached in transgenic n. benthamiana against cbsv using inverted repeat or amirna constructs. using different species of cbsv for resistance screening, immunity was broken, to show the minimum context for broad spectrum resistance. similarly, highly specific resistance was reached in expression of amirna. in contrast, virus resistance against icmv/ slcmv using single amirna constructs was not successful. results from the experiments to generate virus resistance against cbsv and icmv/slcmv will be shown; methods to evaluate efficiency of rnai gene constructs by transient gene expression in n. benthamiana and strategies to develop efficient resistance against rna and dna viruses in cassava will be discussed. bitter gourd (momordica charantia l.) which is also called bitter melon, balsam apple and balsam pear belongs to family cucurbitaceae. it is an important traditional vegetable of nutritive and medicinal value that is cultivated in tropical and sub-tropical asia, but is considered as a weed host reservoir for viruses in jamaica. viral disease-like symptoms were observed occurring naturally on the crops of bitter gourd grown in the fields of northern india during - . an incidence of . % of diseased plants was recorded which showed chlorotic spots and mosaic ranging from mild mottling to green blisters along with leaf smalling, leaf and fruit deformations, bud necrosis and stunted growth whereas . % plants exhibited leaf curling alone or in combination with mosaic-type disease. a reduction of . % in fruit yield was recorded in mosaic-like disease which could be attributed to lesser fruit setting due to bud necrosis, smaller fruit size and stunted plant growth. such plants produced deformed, notched, irregularly shaped fruits wherein pre-mature yellowing and necrosis on the anterior and posteriors ends made . % fruits unfit for marketability. the dwindling yield and production of unmarketable fruits posed a major constraint for profitable cultivation of this economically important crop, thus warranting for studies on etiology and management of these diseases. the mosaic-like disease was transmitted to healthy seedlings of bitter gourd at -leaves stage by sap inoculation as well as by aphid viz., myzus persicae sulz. and aphis gossypii glov. initially studies were carried out to optimize protocols for efficient plant regeneration and agrobacterium-mediated transformation for nagpur sweet orange, which is a popular and elite citrus cultivar in india. organogenesis was induced in etiolated epicotyl explants of one-month-old axenically raised polyembryonic seedlings by culturing them in mt medium supplemented with g/l sucrose with varying concentrations of plant hormones. it was found that bap at mg/l without auxin was best for efficient shoot regeneration in citrus using epicotyl explants. a % regeneration frequency was obtained and multiple shoot formation was obtained from both the cut ends of all the explants. an average of . well-differentiated shoots per explant were obtained, all of which rooted normally under the influence of mg/l iba. this improved regeneration protocol was utilized in standardizing agrobacterium-mediated transformation of citrus using a. tumefaciens strain eha , containing binary plasmid pcambia that harbors gus reporter gene and npt-ii plant selection marker gene. one-month-old epicotyl explants infected with over-night grown agrobacterium (a . - . ) for min and co-cultured for days were found to be optimum for transformation as assessed on the basis of pcr analysis and gus activity displayed by the stem and leaf sections of putative transgenics. overall transformation frequency ranged from to %. current study focuses on the generation of citrus transgenics for ctv resistance using a. tumefaciens strain eha containing binary plasmid pbinar harboring portion of coat protein gene of ctv and npt-ii gene employing the standardized protocols. several putative transgenic shoots were recovered on selection medium and they are being utilized for molecular analyses and resistance against ctv. work is also in progress on the generation of citrus transformants using rnai construct harboring ctv cp and p genes, singly and in conjunction. our lab was also involved in developing rice transgenics for resistance against rice tungro disease, which is one of the most important and widespread virus diseases of rice in south and southeast asia, causing an annual estimated loss in crop yield of economic losses worth millions of rupees are caused due to these diseases annually. virus diseases are frequently less conspicuous than those caused by other plant pathogens and last for much longer. this is especially true for perennial crops and those that are vegetatively propagated. one further problem with attending to assess losses due to various diseases on a global basis is that what most of the data are from small comparative trials rather than wide scale comprehensive surveys, even the small trials do not necessarily give data that can be used for more global estimates of losses. this is for several reasons, including: ( ) variation in losses by a particular crop from year to year; ( ) variation from region to region and climatic zone to climatic zone: ( ) differences in loss assessment methodologies; ( ) identification of the viral etiology of the disease; variation in the definition of the term 'losses' and ( ) chilli is the major vegetable and spice crop grown in thar desert areas of rajasthan. leaf curl disease (chlcd) is one of the major constrains in chilli cultivation faced by farmers and cause yield loss up to %. a survey was conducted in major chilli growing areas of thar desert; bikaner, nagur, jodhpur and jalore districts of rajasthan during november, to understand the present status of leaf curl disease in chilli. among the four district surveyed for chlcd, the disease incidence was recorded maximum (up to %) in jodhpur district followed by jolore district (up to %). no relation was found between the disease incidence and varieties. the major varieties grown in these area are; mehsana, rch (mandoria), haripur raipur, mathania and local cultivars. the number of whitefly was also counted in top, middle and bottom leaf of chilli grown in these areas. the average number of whitefly per plant ranged from . to . . more number of whitefly ( . ) was recorded in jodhpur district and lowest ( . ) in jalore district. total dna was extracted from three leaf curl infected samples from each district and tested for the presence of begomovirus using coat protein (cp) and dna-b specific primers. all the samples were positive for cp and dna-b amplifications by pcr. the cloning and sequencing of selected cp gene and dna-b fragments are in progress. the preliminary investigations shows that the leaf curl disease of chilli is widespread in the arid region of rajasthan and may be caused by begomovirus associated with satellite dna-b. bittergourd (momordica charantia) is an important vegetable crop of kerala. the crop is affected by several diseases of which mosaic is a prominent one. a field experiment was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of potentised resistance inducing substances (ris) viz., mosaic affected bittergourd plant tissue, ash of mosaic affected bittergourd plant tissue, plumbago and salicylic acid for control of bittergourd mosaic in march . ris were applied as drench and foliar spray at three potency levels twice, before flowering of the crop. the experimental crop was grown as per the package of practice recommendations in split plot design with five replications per treatment. the disease incidence, disease severity and yield of the crop were recorded. the result of the experiment shows that spraying was more effective than drenching of treatments for reducing mosaic incidence and severity. among treatments, infected plant extract at potency was the most effective one for reducing mosaic incidence and it showed the maximum incubation period and minimum disease severity. the spray application of treatments produced significantly higher yield than drenching. among the treatments, ash of infected plant at and potency and infected plant extract at potency were on par and produced comparatively higher yield. elephant foot yam (amoprhophallus paeoniifolius), colocasia (colocasia esculenta) and tannia (xanthosoma sagittifolium) are the major edible aroids cultivated in india. the elephant foot yam cultivation is gaining importance due to its high production potential, nutritional and medicinal values and good economic returns. all these aroids are vegetatively propagated and viral diseases are spreading through planting materials. ctcri has the mandate of producing healthy planting materials of these edible aroids. accurate diagnosis and identification of the virus is essential for production of healthy planting material and effective management of the disease. though occurrences of viral diseases on edible aroids in india were known in s, not much attention was given for detection and identification of the virus involved. in case of elephant foot yam - % mosaic incidence was observed with varying symptoms of mosaic, puckering, filiformy etc. in colocasia and tannia, - % incidence was noticed. rt-pcr amplification with potyvirus group specific primers and subsequent cloning and sequencing of the amplified product has confirmed the association of dasheen mosaic virus (dsmv) with all the three edible aroids cultivated in india. the complete full length coat protein gene of dsmv infecting elephant foot yam was cloned in pgem-t vector and sequenced. further sequence analysis revealed that the cp of dsmv consisted of nucleotides and the utr comprised of nucleotides. blast and phylogenetic analysis showed highest similarity of % with that of dsmv isolate af , reported from usa. the deduced amino acid sequence of cp had . - . % identity with other dsmv isolates. blast analysis of the partial cp gene sequences of colocasia and tannia also confirmed that the virus involved is dsmv. rt-pcr analysis of large number of samples from all the three crops confirmed that the potyvirus group specific primers (mj and mj ) are good for rapid detection of dsmv in these crops. dsmv specific biotinylated cdna and digoxigenin labelled crna probes were also prepared and dsmv in elephant foot yam was detected through nucleic acid spot hybridization. yellow leaf disease (yld) caused by sugarcane yellow leaf virus (scylv) is a recently recorded disease in india and is found wide spread throughout country. in popular varieties, the disease incidence varied from to . % and attained epidemic levels under field conditions. detailed studies on the impact of yld on sugarcane revealed that the virus infection significantly reduces various cane growth parameters, cane yield and juice quality. sequence comparisons of the coat protein (cp) and movement protein (mp) of scylv isolates from india and database sequences showed a significant variation between indian isolates and the database sequences both at nt and aa level in the cp/mp coding regions. the significant variation in our isolates with the database isolates, even in the least variable region of the scylv genome showed that the population existing in india is different from rest of the world. further, comparison of partial sequences encoding for orf and revealed that yld in sugarcane in india is caused at least by three genotypes viz., cub, ind and bra-per, of which a majority of the samples were found infected with cuban genotype (cub). the genotype ind was identified as a new genotype and this was found to have significant variation with the reported genotypes. we have identified specific primers from cp region of the virus and optimized rt-pcr conditions to diagnose the virus. this assay has been found efficient in detecting the virus in asymptomatic plants and tissue culture derived seedlings. elimination of the virus through meristem culture has been demonstrated to purify the virus from the infected planting materials and this technique needs to be adopted to supply disease-free planting materials for effective management of the disease. studies are also in progress to identify the yld-resistant sources in sugarcane germplasm to initiate breeding for yld-resistance in sugarcane. mycoviruses are viruses that infect fungi. they have been identified in all major fungal families. in the present scenario, mycoviruses are the important means of biocontrol of plant fungal pathogens. most identified fungal viruses have double stranded rna genomes, often with more than one dsrna present per virus particle, and have been spherical in shape. these viruses are mostly vesicle bound, as other viruses have protein coatings. to be a true mycovirus, they must demonstrate an ability to be transmitted-in other words be able to infect other healthy fungi through anastomosis and spores. mycoviruses lead 'secret lives', reduce the ability of their fungal hosts to cause disease in plants. this property, known as hypovirulence (hypovirulence is a term used to describe reduced virulence found in strains of pathogens), this phenomenon was first observed in cryphonectria (endothia) parasitica (chestnut blight fungus) on european castanea sativa in italy, where naturally occuring hypovirulent strains were able to reduce the effect of virulent ones. these slower growing hypovirulent strains of c. parasitica contain a single cytoplasmic element of double-stranded rna (ds rna) similar to that found in mycoviruses that was transmitted by anastomosis in compatible strains through natural virulent populations of c. parasitica. hypovirulence has also been reported in many other fungal plant pathogens, including rhizoctonia solani, gaeumannomyces gramini var. tritici, ophiostoma ulmi, sclerotinia homoeocarpa, diaporthe ambigua alternaria alternata, and fusarium sp. etc. hypovirulence has attracted attention owing to the importance of fungal diseases in agriculture and the limited strategies that are available for the control of these diseases. it reduces the use of toxic fungicides which also affect the plant growth. the symptoms resulted by the mycoviruses are reduction in growth, reduction in pigmentation and sporulation, excessive sectoring and aerial mycelial collapse. these are the consequences of alteration in complex physiological and biochemical processes involving interaction between host and virus. cassava (manihot esculenta crantz.) is the major tuber crop in peninsular india, it is grown in an area of . lakh hectares with the annual production of . million tonnes both for direct consumption and the starch grain (sago) producing industries, mainly in the southern states of tamil nadu, kerala and andhra pradesh (fao ) . in tamil nadu, cassava primarily produced for sago producing industries where it is considered as an industrial crop rather than food crop, so the resource rich farmers are cultivating the cassava as irrigated crop in their fertile land and the poor farmers are raising the crop under rainfed conditions. in south india in addition to cassava there is a practice of intercropping important vegetable crops like, tomato, brinjal, legumes and gourds in cassava fields since all the above mentioned crops are short duration and are money spinners for the farmers. unfortunately, the major production constraint in these vegetable crops including cassava is the geminiviruses belonging to the family of in recent years there has been growing concern regarding the standard of scientific researches in india. the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats (swot) analysis on indian scientific research reviewed the progress of science during the last six decades. although the 'strengths' were highlighted in good measure, it was the list of 'weaknesses' that called for attention to upgrade the standard of research and 'opportunities' that provide scope for overall scientific growth. a comparison between india and other countries in terms of research papers published revealed that india's contribution to science has come down enormously. what ails indian science? should we compare the growth of indian science with other developed countries? what criteria should be adopted to judge the quality and standard of scientific research? how to motivate the scientists to improve their scientific output? how do motivate the scientists to improve their scientific output? how do indian journals perform in maintaining quality? this paper analyses critically the scientific journals around the world, based on the scores allotted by the national academy of agriculture sciences (naas) in and for and journals respectively. in general, the indian journals performed poorly irrespective of the disciplines with only - % in the high standard. the paper dealt with the reasons for low impact factor, the anomalies in the allotment of scores to wide spectrum of the journals and the disadvantages the scientists face with the scoring system. a case study was presented of an institute with over scientists whose publications were analyzed to discuss the merits and demerits of the system. the performance of the journals published by prestigious academics, societies and councils was also projected. the paper concluded with the need for enhancing the image of the country through research publications in high standard journals and the role of various scientific bodies with shore and long term measures. poster session herpes simplex virus (hsv) keratitis is a leading cause of corneal blindness throughout the world. the infection can be diagnosed by clinical manifestations but in case of atypical ocular cases, laboratory diagnosis is more helpful in timely management of disease. collection of corneal scrapings in all cases of stromal and epithelial keratitis may not be possible, but collecting tear fluid is a convenient procedure causing less discomfort to the patients. therefore, the present study was intended to evaluate the suitability of tear specimens for detecting hsv by polymerase chain reaction (pcr) and immunofluorescence (ifa). tear fluid and corneal scrapings were collected from patients of suspected herpetic keratitis. hsv- antigen was detected by ifa using rabbit anti-hsv antibodies. pcr was performed to amplify bp region of thymidine kinase (tk) coding gene and bp region from dna polymerase coding gene of hsv. out of patients hsv antigen was detected in ( . %) of corneal scrapings and ( . %) of tear specimens and in ( . %) patients from both the specimens. hsv gene could be amplified in ( . %) of corneal scrapings and ( . %) of tear fluids and in ( . %) patients from both the specimens. although, corneal scraping seemed to be marginally superior material for detection of hsv, tear fluid may also serve as an appropriate alternative clinical specimen, due to ease of collection and least discomfort to the patients. in either cases pcr detected higher number of hsv cases than ifa. therefore if and when feasible, both ifa and pcr should be used simultaneously on each specimen to obtain best results. cytokines play a key role in the regulation of immune responses. in hepatitis c virus infection (hcv), the production of inappropriate cytokine levels appears to contribute to viral persistence and to affect response to therapy. il- is produced by a variety of cells including t cells, phagocytes and fibroblast. cytokine genes are polymorphic at specific sites, and certain mutations located within coding/regulatory regions have been shown to affect the overall expression and secretion of cytokines in patients with hcv infection. to correlate the serum levels and polymorphism of il- gene in chronic hepatitis c patients and healthy controls. forty patients positive for hcv rna attending the medicine out patient department and wards of lok nayak hospital, new delhi as well as forty healthy controls were enrolled for the study. the serum level of il- was detected by using elisa. genomic dna was extracted from whole blood of hcv infected patients and healthy controls by using accuprep genomic dna extraction kit according to manufacture's instruction. the genotyping of il- promoter (- variant) was carried out by pcr and direct sequencing using the method of patricia woo et al. . the serum level of il- was significantly down regulated in hcv infected chronic patients as compared to the healthy controls. genotyping of - promoter variant of il- was performed by pcr and direct sequencing. il- polymorphism in the g/g, g/c and c/c allele was non significant when compared to hcv patients and healthy controls. the il- serum levels were significant among hcv infected patients when compared to healthy controls. the polymorphism in the promoter region of il- (- ) was found nonsignificantly associated in hcv patients compared to healthy controls. in conclusion, the present study suggests that the host il- polymorphism alone may not play a significant role in the outcome of hcv infection. acute gastroenteritis (age) is a global health problem and has been associated with multiple etiological agents, which include bacteria, protozoa and viruses. viral gastroenteritis is considered as the second most common illness in children after upper respiratory tract infection. among enteric viruses, rota, noro, enteric adeno, astro and enterovirus are found to be associated with gastroenteritis. although, association of enteric viruses has been established in children hospitalized for age no such data is available from hospitalized children other than enteric infections. to determine the prevalence of enteric viruses circulating in hospitalized children. fecal samples, n = ( symptomatic and asymptomatic for age) were collected from children \ year of age from three different hospitals across the city of pune from june to feb. . detection of group a rotavirus was carried out by using antigen captured elisa. rt-pcr and pcr was carried out for the detection of norovirus, enterovirus, astrovirus and enteric adenovirus detection by using primers targeted to rdrp gene, ncr gene and consevered gene for serine protease and hexon gene respectively. out of fecal samples tested for enteric viruses in age cases, the prevalence of rota, entero, noro, enteric adeno and astrovirus were . % ( ), . % ( ), . % ( ), . % ( ) and . % ( ) respectively. however, the presence of these viruses in the asymptomatic cases (n = ) was detected at . % ( ), . % ( ), . % ( ), . % ( ) and . % ( ) levels respectively. mixed infections of enterovirus and rotavirus were found in both symptomatic . % ( ) and asymptomatic cases . % ( ). however, mixed infection of enterovirus with adenovirus were found only in asymptomatic cases . % ( ). no marked difference was observed in the seasonal pattern of all viruses in the patients with or without gastroenteritis. the findings of this study document highest circulation of rotaviruses in patients symptomatic and asymptomatic for age. the entero and noroviruses remain second most important enteric viruses in these patients. influenza in humans is a major public health concern and the understanding of its evolution in the light of its ''antigenic drift'' helps prediction of epidemics and update of yearly influenza vaccine. to antigenically characterize influenza a (h n ) isolates and study antigenic drift during to in pune city. patients with influenza like illness were identified using a strict case definition from dispensaries located in different areas in pune and clinical samples (ns/ts) were collected after obtaining informed consent. these clinical samples were processed in vivo (in fertile eggs) and in vitro ( overall, an additional ( . %) positive cases of dengue could be detected when ns antigen assay was also used in the study. highest ns antigen positivity was encountered among the samples collected on the rd day of fever whereas mac elisa for anti igm antibody was positive after th day and gradually there was an increase in the positivity towards the convalescent phase of the disease. the results of this study indicate that ns antigen based elisa test can be an useful tool to detect the dengue virus infection in patients during the early acute phase of disease since appearance of igm antibodies usually occur after fifth day of the infection. concurrent use of both diagnostic assays namely ns antigen as well as mac elisa will improve the overall detection of dengue infection. early detection of acute dengue virus infection is crucial to provide timely information for the management of patients. human parvovirus b , a member of the parvoviridae family, is a pathogen associated with a wide variety of diseases. most commonly, it causes childhood rash erythema infectiosum, but in some cases more serious symptoms such as persistent arthropathy, critical failures of red cell production causing transient aplastic crisis, this infection in pregnancy causes hydrops fetalis and myocarditis. traditional immunosuppressive therapy being unsuccessful, anti-viral therapy might be worthy of consideration. functional annotation would provide role of viral proteome in its survival and pathogenic mechanisms. svmprot functional family annotations of vp protein had deciphered its zincbinding, coat protein, outer membrane, chlorophyll biosynthesis, dna repair and calcium-binding nature. vp protein is having a key role in viral assembly of b virus and being non-homologous to human proteome, it was identified as an attractive molecular target for structure based drug discovery. the vp protein crystal structure was energy minimized using charmm. a structure based virtual screening method was applied using ligandfit to identify potential inhibitors of vp protein from chembank database and ten potential human parvovirus b vp inhibitors were proposed. prism genetic analyzer. the drafting of the sequences was performed using bioedit software and were submitted in genbank. for phylogenetic interpretation denv representing the full extent of genetic diversity in denv- , denv- and denv- were collected from genbank. neighbor joining algorithm was implemented with bootstrap value of , replicates for phylogenetic inference using mega . . . the genomic region to (c-prm gene junction) of denv were amplified directly from patient serum. twelve of samples were positive for dengue viral rna. of these were dengue type , was dengue type and were dengue type . for molecular epidemiological survey and genotyping of the sequences more than sequences from different geographical areas including sequences form previously reported north indian isolates were compared with our present data set. the critical analysis of the sequences revealed: dengue type sequences were clustered within sub-type of genotype iii and all the sequences of den- clustered along with genotype iii. thus, among the dengue types , and currently circulating in north india, dengue type , genotype iii, being the predominant one followed by, genotype iii of dengue type . although there is no specific treatment or vaccine available currently, the confirmative rapid diagnosis based on detection of viral nucleic acid or igm antibodies in serum, an indication of recent infection, helps in epidemiological monitoring, symptomatic treatment of patients and determining prognosis. serological detection of anti-cgv igm antibodies was performed using rapid immuno-chromatographic assay (rica) and igm-antibody capture enzyme linked immunosorbant assay (mac-elisa). eighty convalescent sera were tested by rica and of them were found positive for anti-cgv igm antibodies. twenty-five anti-cgv igm antibody rica positive sera were further assayed using mac-elisa. more sera from the patients are currently being tested to compare the sensitivity of these two serological assays in anti-cgv igm antibody based early serological diagnosis of cgv infection and the findings will be presented. thus the present study was designed to evaluate the utility of multiplex pcr (mpcr) for simultaneous and rapid detection of dengue and chikungunya viral infections. seventy-two acute phase blood samples from clinically suspected dengue cases were subjected for dengue and chikungunya uniplex pcr using dengue genus specific primers and e gene specific primers for chikungunya virus as well as multiplex pcr was developed for simultaneous detection of dengue and chikungunya infection. standard strains of dengue and chikungunya virus were used as controls. of the clinically suspected dengue samples were found to be positive for dengue viral rna by dengue uniplex pcr as well as dengue chikungunya mpcr whereas none of the samples were positive for chikungunya virus infection by both uniplex chikungunya pcr and dengue chikungunya mpcr. the result of dengue and chikungunya uniplex pcr was found to be % concordant with dengue chikungunya multiplex pcr. dengue chikungunya multiplex pcr was found to be a potential rapid test to detect dengue and chikungunya viral infections simultaneously in clinical samples. sheetal malhotra, neelam marwaha, karan saluja, ratti ram sharma department of transfusion medicine, pgimer, chandigarh transmission through blood and blood products can be reduced to a great extent by efficient and reliable testing of the blood. the newer fourth generation elisa assays simultaneously detect antibodies against hiv- and and the presence of p antigen and thus shorten the window period to about days, as compared to days with third generation elisa. to compare the hiv seroprevalance among blood donors using fourth generation elisa (antigen-antibody) versus third generation elisa (antibody) assay. this was a prospective study involving blood donors of which were voluntary donors ( being students and being non students) and were replacement donors. sex workers are one of the core group for transmission of sti/hiv and as a ''bridge group'' to the general population. accordingly, highest priority is given to this group in targeted intervention for prevention of hiv/aids. here we are describing one such female sex worker who was harbouring concomitant sti including viral sti. a year old female sex worker was brought to the sti clinic of a tertiary care hospital by ngo with complaint of genital discharge for days. on per speculum examination, cervix was slightly erythematous, tender with mucopurulent discharge. there was no vaginal discharge or ulcer in anogenital area. however, there was a wart at lateral wall of vagina. as per naco syndromic management guideline, treatment was given for n. gonorrhoeae, c. trachomatis and hpv. cervical swab was taken and subjected to various microbiological investigation for the detection of sti viz n. gonorrhoeae, c. trachomatis, t. pallidum, candida spp., t.vaginalis, hsv- , hsv- , hiv, hbv, hcv, hpv and m. contagiosum. saline wet mount showed pus cells, but no yeast cells or trophozoite of trichomonas vaginalis. gram stained smear showed more than four polymorphonuclear leucocytes in the absence of gramnegative intracellular diplococci and a presumptive diagnosis of non gonococcal urethritis was made. no organism was isolated on any culture media after appropriate incubation. cervical swab was negative for antigen of c. trachomatis. serum was tested positive for hbv, hcv, hsv- and t. pallidum though it was seronegative for hiv. in the present case, the female sex worker was harbouring four viral sti viz hsv- , hbv, hcv and hpv alongwith t. pallidum. however clinically she was diagnosed and treated accurately only for genital wart while cervical discharge due to hsv- was misdiagnosed. it is necessary to try to test alternative approaches such as periodic presumptive therapy of viral sti, because this will not only boost up the efforts of sti control in the target group but also help in hiv control. alternatively, regular clinical and laboratory screening for viral sti may be tried. densonucleosis viruses (dnv) belong to parvoviridae family. they are the etiological agents of insect's disease known as densonucleosis, which leads to death or loss of vital functions of the infected insect. densonucleosis virus of mosquitoes has generated lot of scientific interests because of its tremendous potential in biological control and its application as a transducing vector. earlier, we have reported the isolation and characterization of a dnv from aedes aegypti mosquitoes and its prevalence among different ae. aegypti populations from india. there are reports suggesting that when aedes albopictus mosquitoes co-infected with dengue- and dnv, the multiplication of den- is suppressed. the present study focus on the effect of coinfection of ae. aegypti mosquitoes with dnv and chikungunya virus (chik). the first instar mosquito larvae were infected with dnv and the emerging dnv infected females were then infected with chikv by oral feeding. thus obtained chik infected female mosquitoes were analyzed by real time pcr for both dnv and chikv on alternate days post-infection, up to the th day. the data showed no significant difference in the multiplication of either of the viruses after co-infection. results suggest that chikv neither stimulates the replication of dnv nor is its own replication suppressed due to co-infection. this study forms an initial step in understanding the role played by such endogenous viruses on the vector dynamics. chandipura virus pathogenesis is manifested as encephalitis in young children with a very high mortality rate. this damage could be due to direct replication of the virus in brain parenchymal tissue or immune system mediated. this study aims at elucidating the role of brain infiltrating lymphocytes in pathogenesis using mice as the model system. mice were inoculated intracerebrally with the virus and the perfused brain tissue was used to isolate the lymphocytes. control mice were inoculated with an equal amount of media. in order to standardize the procedure for isolation of lymphocytes from brain tissue, splenocytes were processed to isolate the lymphocytes using histopaque density gradient method. methods to isolate lymphocytes from brain tissue as described by earlier workers were tested for the ease and efficiency of procedure using known suspension of lymphocytes from spleen. percoll density gradient method provided optimum yield of lymphocytes with an ease of handling. in this, brain cell suspension used to prepare % percoll is layered over % percoll prepared using media in : ratio. density gradient centrifugation is carried out at g for min at °c to obtain lymphocyte layer at the interface. leishman staining was performed to analyze the morphological characteristics of isolated lymphocytes. normal lymphocytes showed dark blue stained nucleus. some bigger sized cells with diffused nucleus characteristic of atypical lymphocytes were observed and some of the cells were surrounded by hair like structures. phenotypic characterization was carried out using flow cytometry. the presence of cd + , cd + and cd + cells was observed. the percentages of cd + , cd + and cd + cells was found to be . %, . % and . % respectively in the lymphocytes isolated from infected animal and . %, . % and . % respectively from control animal. hence, cd + cells showed maximum infiltration after infection. (santosh et al. ; pradeep et al. ). in the present study chikv suspected blood samples were collected and the acute phase samples were subjected to rt-pcr for the presence of virus specific rna by using the primer pair dvrchk-f/dvrchk-r as described by us earlier (naresh kumar et al. ). the convalescent phase samples were screened for chikv specific antibodies by using sd bioline chikungunya igm rapid test. six sets of primers were designed to amplify the complete nsp and complete structural genes of chikungunya virus. the products were further gel purified, cloned in ptz r/t vector and the recombinant clones were sequenced and submitted to the genbank. the complete ns gene and structural genes were compared with other available sequences in the genbank. sequence analysis results will be presented. the present study discusses these aspects in detail. . some of these phages (viz. v , v ) showed plaques at °c but not at °c. thus they seem to be lysogenic. for propagating and increasing the titre of all the above isolates, various previously described methods were attempted, but none of these methods were satisfactory. but when siliconized glassware and plastic-ware were used, propagation was successful. we showed that siliconization of glassware and plastic-ware was essential for the propagation of our mycobacteriophage isolates v , v , v , v and v . also, phage dilution medium (pdm) as described by chaterjee et al. ( ) was found to be effective for picking out of the plaques made by the phages. in this way, the phage isolates were propagated up to p . the various passages of the phage isolates v , v , v , v and v (i.e. original, p , p and p ) were stored at - °c. the four major routes of transmission are unsafe sex, contaminated needles, transmission from an infected mother to her baby at birth (vertical transmission) and breast milk. screening of blood products for hiv has largely eliminated transmission through blood transfusions or infected blood products in the developed world. in , globally, about million people died of aids, . million were living with hiv and . million people were newly infected with the virus. hiv infections and aids deaths are unevenly distributed geographically and the nature of the epidemics vary by region. more than % of people with hiv are living in the developing world. there is growing recognition that the virus does not discriminate by age, race, gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic status-everyone is susceptible. however, certain groups are at particular risk of hiv, including men who have sex with men (msm), injecting drug users (idus), and commercial sex workers (csws). the present study indicates the prevalence of hiv infection among the people residing in the northern region of india predominantly among the foothills of the himalayas. the study was carried out on the patients visiting herbertpur christian hospital (a unit of emmanuel hospital association) under the integrated counselling and testing centre scheme at the respective hospital during the - . the study indicates the screening of people groups residing in the respective area through community health schemes. the diagnosis of the hiv infection is done by three types of assays namely. the tridot method which is the rapid method of diagnosis followed by the. hiv coombs test which involves the dot immunoassay principle. the third assay is the enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (elisa). the number of patients screened during the period of september to march is which include patients coming from four different states namely haryana uttarakhand uttarpradesh and himachal pradesh. the number of people who were tested positive are and the number of people who were tested negative are . the people tested positive are sent to the higher centre for other confirmatory tests such as pcr and western blot analysis. these patients are sent for treatment and prophylaxis at a respective recognised centre in dehradun. the present study determines a consistent community hiv screening and treatment approach through diagnostics counselling and awareness programmes. classical swine fever (csf) also known as hog cholera is a highly contagious and fatal disease of swine. csf became rapidly a major issue of pig industries. it still causes important economical losses worldwide. it is considered as a major health problem of swines in india. during the month of august to october there was an outbreak of classical swine fever in bihar. from three districts darbhanga, patna and supol, total numbers of different infected tissue samples like kidney, spleen and lymphnode were collected from the dead morbid/pigs. total rna was isolated from % homogenate of infected tissues in sterile pbs by tri-reagent (sigma, usa) according to the manufacturer's instructions and cdna was prepared by using commercial available kit. the cdna was stored frozen at - °c until used. for the molecular detection of classical swine fever virus specific nested pcr amplification of e and ntr was done along with ns b and e rns amplification. primarily these samples were found positive with these primers. further confirmation by sequencing was done by cloning of these pcr products in pgem-t easy vector. e and ntr sequences were considered for phylogentic analysis along with complete available sequences of csfv. nucleotide sequence alignments were carried out using the clustalw program (dnastar) and phylogenetic tree analysis (dnastar) showed that ntr have close proximity with taiwan strain (accession no. ay ) and e shows close proximity with chinese isolate csfv- (accession no. af ). peste des petits ruminants (ppr) and sheeppox are oie notifiable diseases of small ruminants especially sheep and goat. both the diseases are economically important, in enzootic countries like india and are major constraints in the productivity of animals. considering the geographical distribution of both ppr and sheep pox infections and prevalence of mixed infection, in the present study, safety and potency of the experimental duel vaccine comprising attenuated strains of thermostable-ppr virus (pprv-revati, p- ) grown at °c and attenuated sheep poxvirus (sppv-srinagar, p ) was evaluated in local non-descript sheep. experimental animals were grouped into four groups and each group was comprising six animals, received doses ( tcid ), dose ( tcid ) and / th dose of vaccines and normal saline as control in ml volume subcutaneously, respectively. serum samples were collected on , , , and th day post vaccination. sheep simultaneously immunized with ml of vaccine consisting of either or doses of each of pprv and sppv were monitored for clinical and serological responses for a period of - weeks post-immunization (pi) and post challenge (pc). specific immune responses i.e., antibodies directed to both pprv and sppv could be demonstrated by ppr competitive elisa kit and capripox indirect elisa, respectively following immunization. all the immunized animals' resisted infection when challenged with virulent strain of sppv (srinagar isolate at p- ) on day dpi, while in contact control animals developed characteristic signs of sheeppox. the challenge of the sheep against ppr was not carried out, however, the antibody titre after immunization determined by snt and elisa, indicated that protective titre, as per earlier report on the goats. dual vaccine was found safe at higher dose and induced protective immune response even at lower dose ( tcid ) in sheep, which was evident from sero-conversion as well as challenge study with sppv. the study indicated that both the viruses are compatible and did not interfere with each other in eliciting immune response, paving the feasibility of use of this dual vaccine in combating both infections simultaneously. goatpox is one of the highly contagious, oie notifiable and economically important viral diseases of goats. the disease is caused by goatpox virus (gtpv) is classified of the genus capripoxvirus in the family poxviridae. the disease incurs severe economic losses in terms of high morbidity in adults and heavy mortality in young kids and is a major constraint in goat farming in india. considering the enzotic nature and economic impact of the disease, it is all important to control the infection by developing an effective vaccine. recently, vero cell based a live attenuated goat pox vaccine; using gtpv uttarkashi isolate (p ) has been developed in authors' laboratory and evaluated in goats. the vaccine was found safe, potent and immunogenic experimentally and even at field trials. the vaccine has been evaluated at large-scale at different regions of the country and found suitable for mass vaccination. however, the longevity of potency was not evaluated. therefore, a long term potency trials were studied for a period of years with annual challenge by using virulent goatpox virus and sero-monitoring. a sufficient number of hill goats has been vaccinated with dose of vaccine ( . tcid /ml) and monitored for clinical and serological response. every year, significant number of vaccinated (n = ) and control animals (n = ) were used for challenge with virulent strain ( . srd /ml, gtpv mukteswar). sera of pre-and post-challenged ( dpc) animals including controls have been collected and monitored for serological response in the form of specific antibody production by snt and indirect elisa. all the vaccinated animals were protected on challenge, whereas, all unvaccinated controls developed infections. the same has been reflected in sero monitoring of collected sera. so the developed live attenuated goat pox vaccine was found safe, immunogenic and potent for a period of years of immunization and suitable for mass scale vaccination in control and eradication of goat pox along with a/are suitable diagnostic tool/s in goatpox enzootic country like india. rotavirus infection in avian species varies from subclinical infections to outbreaks of diarrhea. the economic significance of rotaviral enteritis to the poultry industry has not yet been defined, but by analogy to the situation in mammals, it is likely to be significant. unlike the extensive studies performed on rotavirus infection in humans and animals, limited studies have been carried out to determine the extent of exposure of poultry birds to rotaviruses. to determine the prevalence of avian rotavirus antibodies in commercial broiler chickens. a total of chicken serum samples were collected from the lairage of a poultry slaughter house where birds from four different broiler farms in and around pune city were supplied to. the serum samples were tested by an igg antibody capture elisa wherein purified chicken rotavirus ch was used as coating antigen. sera from specific pathogen free (spf) chick (n = ) served as negative control in the test. cut off was calculated as mean negative control ? sd (standard deviation). s/co (mean sample od /cut off) values above ( . - . ) in % ( / ) serum samples were indicating positivity to rotavirus antibodies. the result of the study indicates exposure of the birds to avian rotavirus or similar agent that is circulating in pune city. bluetongue has become established in south india causing regular outbreaks in sheep. btv serotypes , , and were isolated from native sheep of andhra pradesh. the other serotypes circulating in the state need to be identified. however the major constraint is the serotype identification. to overcome the difficulties of traditional serotyping methods (neutralization tests), nucleic acid based tests are being tried. rt-pcr for serotyping was standardized using primers specific to vp gene of btv- , and serotypes. rt-pcr resulted in bp product of btv- , bp product of btv- which was defined by specific primers. however non specific amplification at two different sites i.e. bp and bp was noticed for btv- . specificity of rt-pcr was evaluated. btv- and btv- specific primers could amplify only btv- and btv- respectively where as btv- type specific primers amplified not only btv- but also btv- and btv- . nucleic acid sequence data obtained from btv- pcr product and btv- cloned products were specific to vp gene of btv- and btv- respectively. however, and bp products of btv- were identical to vp gene of btv- , , , , and and vp gene of btv- , and respectively, indicating the non specific amplification of btv- . foot and mouth disease is the most contagions and highly economically impotent disease of cloven footed animals. the disease is controlled by regular vaccination using the vaccine produced from the virus grown in the cell culture. the vaccine strain used for vaccine production is selected from the field isolates based on the adaptability and growth kinetics in bhk cells and antigen coverage. however the field viruses need to be passaged several times to adapt in tissue culture. passage of field viruses in tissue culture may results in development of mutants whose genetic makeup may differ from the field samples also some of the field strains may fail to adapt or may grow poorly in the tissue culture, thus the efficiency of the vaccine gets affected. structural proteins of fmdv carry the sequences which determine the serotype specificity and immunogenicity. thus one may replace the gene coding for structural proteins from the full length cdna copy of the vaccine strain that has been adapted to the tissue culture with the poly-structural protein gene (pi) so that the chimeric virus gets the serotype specificity of the field strain besides retaining the other characteristics that are needed for a vaccine virus. we have made replication competent fmdv asia i full length genome and cloned under t and cmv promoter separately in plasmid vectors. bam h sites were created for inserting pi- a gene of other field strains. the p - a of type 'o' vaccine strain was amplified directly from the cattle tongue material, cloned in plasmid vector and studied the specificity by sequence analysis and gene expression. we have introduced 'o' p - a gene into the full length construct devoid of asia structural protein gene, p - a. the in vitro transcribed rna in case of t promotered construct and plasmid dna in case of cmv promotered construct were transfected into the bhk cells. after the passaging the virus obtained was studied for the speciality. this approach may be used not only for rapid selection of vaccine strain and also as a repository of the cdna copy of the virus. the p is composed of a, b, c and d (vp , vp , vp , and vp ) respectively of which the vp is the most immunogenic and subunit vaccine produced with vp alone was able to induce high level of neutralising antibodies. thus to control the disease in india polyvalent vaccine consisting of the inactivated virus of all the three serotypes are in use. however the conventional vaccines have several drawbacks which include safety and temperature sensitivity. hence alternatively sub-unit vaccines consisting of vp protein has been tried. however this showed limited success due to the antigenic variations occurring in the field viruses thus escaping the neutralization from the antibodies generated from single cloned protein. hence the present study was undertaken with an objective to include all the neutralizing epitopes present in the three serotypes by linking vp ( d) genes and produce a poly valent protein for using as poly subunit vaccine. in this study we have constructed a cassette by linking the genes of three serotypes 'o' ( bp), 'a' ( bp) and 'asia ' ( bp). these genes were cloned individually in commercially pbsk vector and confirmed by sequence analysis before linking in pc dna vector. the linked gene construct was sub-cloned in pet expression vector. the expression of the protein gene from the pet vector was induced with iptg and analysed by sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (sds-page). a fusion protein of size kda was observed in page gels. since the protein contains his residues from the vector at the n-terminal end, affinity purification was carried out using nickel nitrilo-tri-acetic-acid (ni-nta) agarose matrix. the immunoreactivity of the purified protein was assayed by western blot with the anti fmdv type 'o' and 'asia ' specific sera. the may be used as a subunit vaccine. silkworm diseases caused by viruses, bacteria, fungi and protozoans form major constraints for the silk cocoon production in all the sericultural countries and among these silkworm viral diseases viz., nuclear polyhedrosis and infectious flacherie caused by bmnpv and bmifv cause severe crop loss. the traditional disease management strategies include prophylactic measures and use of disease free silkworm eggs. the prophylactic measures such as disinfection of silkworm rearing house and appliances, egg surface, silkworm bed disinfection and rearing surroundings. the disinfectants used presently in sericulture are either formaldehyde or chlorine based products, but these chemicals are neither eco-nor user-friendly. the awareness about health hazards caused by formaldehyde and environmental pollution caused by cl necessitated the development of eco-and user-friendly disinfectant products for use in sericulture. these include alternative disinfectant products developed using biodegradable chemicals and plant based ingredients by apssrdi, hindupur and central silk board for the management of silkworm diseases in india. the ideal disinfectant for sericulture would be the one which can inactivate silkworm pathogens of diverse origin and economical for sericulture. the paper discusses on the disadvantages of hcho and cl based disinfectants and advantages of eco-and user-friendly disinfectant for the management of silkworm diseases especially the ones caused by viruses. the baculovirus expression vector system (bevs) is widely used for the production of high levels of properly post-translationally modified, biologically active and functional recombinant proteins and has facilitated basic biomedical research on protein structure, function, drug discovery and the roles of various proteins in disease. bevs is based on the introduction of a foreign gene into nonessential for viral replication genome region via of homologous recombination with a transfer vector containing target gene. the resulting recombinant baculovirus lacks one of nonessential gene (polh, v-cath, chia etc.) replaced with foreign gene encoding heterologous protein which can be expressed in cultured insect cells and insect larvae. insect cell-bev system is widely used to produce recombinant proteins. bevs also eliminates concerns regarding pathogens that could potentially be transmitted to humans as it is non-infectious to vertebral animals. these features make silkworm system an ideal expression and delivery package for producing proteins of medicinal importance. the efficiency, low cost and large-scale production of proteins using bevs represents breakthrough technology that is facilitating highthroughput proteomic studies. the bevs has become a core technology for cloning and expression of genes for study of protein structure, processing and function; production of biochemical reagents; study of regulation of gene expression; commercial exploration, development and production of vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics; drug discovery research; exploration and development of safer, more selective and environmentally compatible biopesticides. utilization of silkworm larvae and pupae as bioreactor with recombinant bmnpv producing foreign proteins extends the usages of silkworms. due to its large-size and high protein synthesis ability as well as the expediency in mass culture, silkworm is considered as good candidate for producing recombinant proteins. wssbv is the causative agent of a disease, which has recently caused high shrimp mortalities and severe damage to shrimp culture. wssbv has been found across different penaeid shrimp species. in order to develop a effective diagnostic tool, a wssbv genomic library was constructed by cloning wssbv genomic dna extracted from purified virions. in the present study wssv disease free (confirmed by pcr analysis) were collected from hatcheries from different areas of guntur and prakasam districts and analysed to study the effect of various physical parameters like temperature, p h , salinity and turbidity on the prevalence of above disease. the studies on the surface water temperature revealed fluctuations in the ponds ranging between to . °c in diseased ponds and . to . °c in healthy ponds. these results show definite influence of temperature on the prevalence of wssv. present day strategy in vaccine development is to include marker facility that helps in distinguishing antibody response due to vaccination vis-à-vis infection in vaccinated animals. such information becomes relevant for effective disease control programmes especially when using inactivated virus vaccines like foot and mouth disease (fmd). the antibodies generated in the animals, only through vaccination, is the measure of vaccine efficacy and safety. presently inactivated fmd virus (fmdv) vaccines are used to control the disease in the endemic countries like india. the quality assurance of the vaccine depends on the efficacy of the vaccine in generating protective antibody without causing subclinical disease due to improper inactivation. since protective antibody response in vaccinated animals can not be distinguished from that of infected animals one needs to assay the antibody response against non structural proteins (nsps) and the vaccine must be free of contaminated nsps. production of vaccine free of nsps requires the cumbersome method of virus purification which adds to the cost of the vaccine. alternatively one may develop a positive marker vaccine by including a foreign protein or epitope which is not expected to be present in the vaccine and the antibodies generated against which helps in detecting the vaccine related response. here we report a molecular approach by which we introduced a immuno-dominant epitope of green fluorescent protein (gfp) into the structural protein gene of foot and mouth disease virus vaccine strain asia ( / ). our laboratory has produced a mini-genome of fmdv asia that lacks structural protein gene (p - a) coding for all the structural proteins (vp - ) of fmdv asia as a vector (pcfl dasia ). the p - a of the asia vaccine strain was cloned separately into a plasmid vector and by successive pcr mutagenesis and cloning we have introduced nucleotide sequence corresponding to amino acid epitope of gfp into p - a gene. gfp epitope was inserted by replacement at n-terminal region of vp- which is not immunogenic. the modified p - a was expressed in e. coli and studied. the modified p - a gene with gfp epitope was inserted into the pcfl dasia to get full length replication competent cdna cloned under cmv promoter in pcdna (pcflasiagfp). this can be used to produce synthetic virus with gfp epitope that can generate antibodies not only against neutralizing epitopes but also against gfp epitope. presence of antibody against gfp epitope in the vaccinated animal will reveal vaccine efficacy. elisa against gfp can be used as a companion test not only for safety evaluation but also for quick evaluation of efficacy. further absence of nsp antibodies in the serum may reveal the quality of the vaccine in respect of safety. self replicating dna vaccines are developed to achieve robust immune response through enhanced antigen production and gamma interferon expression in vaccinated animals. since self replicating dna vaccines induce gamma interferon expression which helps in viral clearance such vaccines are expected to be useful to cure even the carrier and persistently infected animals. understanding the events that help in the elicitation of both the arms of immune response in vaccinated animals is necessary to understand the effectiveness of the vaccine. the work presented here deals with the immunological evaluation of a sindbis virus replicase based dna vaccine carrying linked fmdv vp genes in vaccinated guinea pigs. we have constructed self replicating dna vaccine vector and to the down stream of a sub genomic promoter we have inserted secretory signal followed by linked-vp genes of fmdv serotypes (o-a-asia ) with glycine and proline bridge in between. guinea pigs were vaccinated with the construct and the sera at days post vaccination were evaluated both for cellular response by studying the cd levels and by mtt and cytokine profiles by real time assays. the humoral response was evaluated by studying cd levels in the whole blood by facs analysis and serum antibody levels by snt and elisa. the animals were challenged with gp infective dose of fmdv type 'o' virus lesions were scored. further the replicative efficiency of the challenge virus was studied by ab elisa. the results showed that all the assays except antibodies against ab protein have positive correlation with the protection. as expected the titre of the antibodies against ab protein was lower indicating that the challenge virus replication was inhibited in the vaccinated animals. the limited studies conducted by us showed that self replicating vaccine has a potentiality to emerge as potent vaccine for fmd. ganjam virus (ganjv) belongs to the genus nairoviruses (family bunyaviridae). these viruses cause diseases in livestock. it has been isolated from different animal hosts and tick vectors from india. genus nairoviruses includes a total of tick-borne viruses, classified into serogroups. the important serogroups are crimean congo hemorrhagic fever (cchf) and the nairobi sheep disease (nsd). the main members of the nsd group are nsd and dubge viruses. their genome consists of three segments of single stranded rna, viz. s, m and l that encodes viral nucleocapsid protein, viral glycoprotein g and g and the viral polymerase respectively. ganjv is very closely related to (nsdv). nsdv is found in east and central africa, causes very high morbidity and mortality in livestock. the present study involves phylogenetic comparison of ganjv isolates from india with other nairoviruses based on complete n gene. it will help to understand the kind of nucleotide (nt) and amino acid (aa) changes that have occurred in ganjv strains from different geographical areas. eight strains of ganjv isolated at niv during - from different parts of india were used in this study. virus stocks were prepared in vero e cell line these were used as the source of viral rna. the n gene was amplified either as a complete gene in one reaction or in fragments whenever necessary. thus obtained sequences were analyzed; annotated to get a consensus sequence, aligned against the sequence of prototype strain of ganjv and other representative nairoviruses. the nt sequences were converted to aa sequences and analysis was done at both nucleotide and amino acid levels. based on what nt or aa phylogenetic tree was constructed and compared with other nairoviruses (cchf, dugv, hazv, kupv and nsdv) where complete s segment sequences were available gen-bank database (ncbi). the phylogenetic data at both the nt and aa levels showed that all the strains of ganjv form monophyletic lineage with the nsdv. cchfv and hazv together formed another clade, whereas dugv and kupv made a separate branch in the tree. the different ganjv strains showed - % difference with nsdv at the nucleotide level and - % difference at the amino acid level. hazv showed - % difference at the nt level and % difference at the aa level with ganjv as well as nsdv. the present data obtained suggests that ganjv and nsdv are minor variants of the same virus. diarrhoeal syndrome is one of the major concerns of the livestock industry. most of the diarrheic cases in animals go unnoticed and limited attention is paid on viral etiology. presence of large amount of fecal matter in animal shed acts as a source of infection for calves via drinking water, feed, or contaminated soil. keeping this in view, investigation was planned to detect the association of rotaviruses with diarrhea in dairy calves and to observe the genomic diversity among the circulating viruses in tarai area of uttarakhand. a total of diarrheic fecal samples collected from instructional dairy farm, nagla, pantnagar, uttarakhand were screened during the study. samples were collected from both cow calves and buffalo calves in - months of age. for the diagnosis of rotavirus, all the fecal samples were subjected to rna-electrophoresis after nucleic acid extraction. viral genome segments were visualized by silver staining. out of the total samples tested, seven were found positive in rna-page showing typical genome segments migration pattern of bovine rotavirus. in the given samples prevalence of bovine rotavirus was . % and % in cow and buffalo calves, respectively. on the basis of migration patterns of rotavirus in rna-page, group a were identified with typical : : : pattern. variation within movement of various genome segments among isolates of bovine rotaviruses was observed during the study that may be indicative of emergence of mutants in the circulating isolates. the vp gene based group a specific rt-pcr was standardized and all the isolates in this area were confirmed to be of group a type. work is in progress to genotype the bovine rotaviruses of this region based on vp and vp genes. this study emphasizes the need to explore the prevalence of bovine group a rotaviruses in different places of uttarakhand and their genetic characterization which could help in selection of control strategies for rotavirus infections. foot-and-mouth disease (fmd) is endemic in india causing enormous economic loss to the animal keepers and trade embargo with fmd free countries in livestock and animal products. rapid diagnosis of fmd is of immense importance in prevention and control of the disease. fmd is initially diagnosed clinically and confirmed by laboratory tests. virus isolation in cell culture and sandwich elisa for antigen detection are commonly practiced in laboratories. the virus isolation though is very sensitive but it can be slow and analytical sensitivity of the elisa is lower and can not be used with certain sample types. the use of molecular techniques in the diagnostic laboratory has greatly increased the speed, specificity and sensitivity of fmd diagnostic tests. molecular techniques like rt-pcr, pcr-elsa and dot hybridization can be used with more success for detecting carrier animals and animals harboring sub-clinical infection and can be applied in a wide range of clinical sample types. these techniques can be used as genus and serotype specific test including detection of particular lineage/genotypes with in the serotype. multiplex pcr has been used to differentiate serotypes of fmdv and the technique is sensitive, experimentally simpler, cost effective and less time consuming. the assay can be used for serotyping on elisa negative samples. the molecular techniques not only help in diagnosis but also useful for epidemiological studies. lineage differentiating rt-pcr has been useful in identifying different lineages of serotype asia (lineage b, c and d) before proceeding with sequencing of d region. similarly genotype differentiating rt-pcr has been developed and used in differentiating two different genotypes of serotype a (genotype vi and vii). these assays have the potential to be applied on clinical samples directly, thereby saving much time needed for sample processing and nucleotide sequencing. recent development of real time rt-pcr methodology has allowed the diagnostic potential of molecular assays to be realised. advancement in real time pcr technology made it possible to combine several assays within a single tube which is in the progress in our laboratory. integration of these assays onto automated high throughput platforms provides diagnostic laboratories with the capability to test large numbers of samples. microarray technology was provided greater screening capabilities for pathogen detection. the microarray allows the addition of large number of oligonucleotide probes for identification of mutant pathogen and also for subtype determination. the combined properties of high sensitivity and specificity, low contamination risk, and speed has made realtime pcr and microarray technology a highly attractive alternative to conventional methods in increasing percentage of outbreaks confirmed and analyzed and for tracing the origin of fmd virus responsible for outbreaks. dna vaccines are expected to elicit both humoral and cellular responses, cellular response being long lasting. however the approach has several limitations like poor stability of dna, poor expression and risk of integration. poor expression becomes the major limitation in the case of fmd as fmdv proteins are poor immunogens. also dna vaccine vectors carrying only eukaryotic promoters elicit strong cmi response and weak humoral response. the methodology to achieve humoral response involves the expression and secretion of the expressed protein so that the antigen presenting cells will be able to process the antigen and produce humoral response. in case of fmd humoral response is as important as cellular response. the present project aims at addressing these issues; achieving higher expression and getting the protein secreted out by constructing self replicating gene vaccines for fmd and studying their efficacy. the vector for humoral immune response contains eef promoter, sindbis virus polymerase gene and secretory and anchoring signals. the integrity of the vectors was confirmed by sequence analysis. the linked polyvalent protein genes of fmdv serotype a, o and asia were cloned into the vectors and the presence of the insert was confirmed by restriction enzyme digestion. the functionality of the constructed dna vaccine vector (pvac self rep ) was assayed by transfecting the dna into bhk cell monolayer and studying the s labeled proteins in immuno-precipitation assays. the studies showed high level of expression in case of constructed vector as compared to infected virus for the specific protein. the secretion of the expressed protein was assayed by immuno-fluorescence assay and found to be positive. encouraged with these studies the preliminary studies were conducted on vaccine efficacy studies in guinea pig model. the immunized guinea pigs showed high antibody titres by snt and elisa, as compared to conventional dna vaccines (pup cd) even at / th of the dose. this approach of constructing self replicating dna vaccine for humoral response is the first report. genetically engineered microorganisms are important sources of industrial and medicinal proteins. over the past decade, plant host system has been investigated as potential host system for expressing proteins of therapeutic and diagnostic use. however concerns regarding the stability and environmental safety need to be addressed. chloroplast engineering is expected to resolve some of these issues since, plastids/chloroplasts are inherited maternally and are not disseminated through pollen. this makes plastid transformation a valuable tool for transgenic creation besides offering biological containment. since foot and mouth disease (fmd) of cloven footed animals is a major concern in the world over. foot and mouth disease (fmd) is the most feared, viral disease of the cloven footed animals causing heavy losses to the live stock industry. the disease is enzootic in many parts of the world including asia. the conventional vaccines for fmd have several limitations which include safety, temperature sensitivity and duration of immunity. attempts have been made to overcome these limitations using recombinant dna technology. amongst the newer vaccines, edible vaccines are cost effective and easy to administer. since the stability of the gene of interest is the major concern in the case of plant transgenics, marker genes are used for regular selection. the detection methods based on the available marker proteins like b glucoronidase (gus) protein/antibiotic selection are cumbersome and cost intensive. however selection based on herbicide resistance is much simpler and easy. hence in the present study, the -enolpyruvylshikimate- -phosphate synthase (epsp) gene was used as a marker along with the immunogen gene of fmdv. epsp is the key enzyme in the shikimate biosynthesis pathway necessary for the aromatic amino acids production. in order to investigate the mechanism of long term immunity and the effect of protective immunity induced by cationic plg micro particle coated dna vaccination. we constructed the expression plasmid containing a foot-and-mouth disease virus (fmdv) id gene sero type a. intramuscular vaccination of guinea pigs with the micro particles coated plasmid dna induced a strong antibody response and neutralization antibodies, cellular mediated immune response which lasted year. we further analyzed the persistence and expression of id gene by polymerase chain reaction and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction and quantitative pcr. the results showed that id gene was present and expressed in the muscle cells up to year after days post vaccination. furthermore, guinea pigs vaccinated with micro particles coated plasmid dna were protected against a challenge with fmdv virus. therefore the micro particles coated plasmid dna vaccination dose induce a protective immunity and long term humoral, cellular immuno responses against fmdv, which could be maintained by persistent expression of id gene in muscle cells. foot and mouth disease virus (fmdv) causes a highly contagious viral disease of cloven hoofed animals, which has a considerable socioeconomic impact on the countries affected. interleukin- (il- ) enhances the il- driven th immune response that is important in immunity against intracellular pathogens. the multiple roles of il- in many physiological and pathological processes have generated a great deal of interest in recent years. antiviral effects of il- have been reported. we evaluated the effects interleukin- (il- ) on the replication of fmdv in vitro in bhk- cells. bovine il- mature protein coding sequence was amplified from the bovine pbmc cells and cloned into prokaryotic expression vector pet a. protein expressed was purified and specificity was confirmed by immunoblotting. bhk- cells were treated with purified expressed il- protein with ( lg/ml) h prior to fmd infection. cell culture supernatants were collected at h post infection were subjected for elisa and virus titration assay. rna extracted from the cells was subjected to real time pcr for viral rna quantification. log titer reduction was observed in the fmd virus titer in il- treated cells compared to the untreated cells where as virus antigen quantified by elisa has shown a reduction of -folds. -fold reduction in the fmd viral rna copy number was observed in the il- treated cell compared to the untreated measured by qpcr. current study demonstrated the potent anti viral activity of il- on fmdv by inhibiting the viral replication. these results further suggests that il- has the potential role of il- as molecular adjuvant in fmd vaccine development and development of therapeutic for fmd. foot and mouth disease is the most contagious viral disease of farm animals. control of the disease in animals is by vaccination and slaughtering of infected animals. conventional oil adjuvant vaccine has its own limitation. alternate to this genetic vaccines where the dna encoding viral antigen may be a promising approach. naked dna vaccine has limitations like poor uptake of dna by cells and more importantly by nucleus. as a result delivery of naked dna through calcium phosphate nanoparticle was attempted. calcium phosphate nanoparticle is a potential delivery agent which proved to enhance the immune response. fmdv p - cd ''o'' vaccine gene constructs in pcdna . ? entrapped by the nanoparticles was prepared by using different molarity of calcium chloride and disodium hydrogen orthophosphate. the nanoparticles entrapping fmdv p - cd ''o'' and naked dna were presented to the guinea pigs through intramuscular injection to study the mrna expression of antigen by rt-pcr. animals were sacrificed at defined time to collect different organs and total rna was extracted. each time blood was collected to analyse the fmdv specific serum antibodies. dna vaccines presented through calcium phosphate produced transcripts in the injected muscle up to days whereas naked dna up to days. serum antibody levels of naked dna vaccine showed antibody titre till days. whereas nanoparticle injected animals showed serum antibody till days. serum neutralization titres of . were observed in calcium phosphate dna vaccines at about - days, where as naked dna sn titers were observed for short period of - days. the study clearly showed calcium phosphate nanoparticle entrapping fmdv vaccine dna may be a better delivery system for dna vaccines as it confirms availability of the antigen and persistence of antibody for longer duration than naked dna. capripox is highly infectious, contagious, and oie notifiable disease of small ruminants, caused by sheeppox and goatpox viruses which are members of capripoxvirus genus of the family poxviridae. in the present study, we analyzed the partial gene sequences of p protein, an immunogenic envelope protein of capripox viruses (capv) to assess the genetic relationship among different sheep pox and goat pox virus isolates from different geographical areas of the country. product of this gene has been shown to be important in attachment of capv to host cell surface receptors during viral entry and host immune response. the following virus isolates have been used in the analysis: gtpv-uttarkashi, p , vaccine virus; gtpv mukteswar, p , challenge virus; gtpv (akola), gtpv bareilly/ , gtpv ladakh/ and gtpv sambalpur/ , field isolates and sppv srinagar, p ; sppv ranipet, p ; sppv-rf, p , vaccine viruses and sppv makdhoom/ , sppv cirg/ , sppv pune/ , sppv bareilly, sppv / and sppv / , field isolates. in this study, all virus isolates were confirmed by pcr amplification and analysed in pcr-restriction fragment length polymorphism (pcr-rflp) using ecori enzyme to confirm their specificity. further, the amplicons were cloned and sequenced commercially. nucleotide and the deduced amino acid (aa) sequences were compared with published sequences of the members of the genus capripox virus. sequence analysis of partial bp sequence has shown high sequence identity among all indian sppv and gtpv isolates at both nt and aa levels. it revealed a . - % and . for gtpv field isolates where as, % for sppv field isolates at both the nt and aa levels. in general, capv isolates in this study shown . - . and . % homology between gtpv and sppv at nt and aa levels as reported earlier. further, it revealed a unique change of g a in all gtpv isolates resulting in formation of drai site in place of ecori and possible development of restriction enzyme specific pcr-rflp for differentiation of sppv and gtpv from field isolates. orf or contagious ecthyma is considered as non-contagious, proliferative disease and is caused by orf virus of the genus parapox virus of the family poxviridae. it is reported most commonly in sheep and goats and also a zoonotic agent. camels are also infected by orf virus and reported in camel rearing countries as a mixed infection with camel pox, the later is caused by an orthopox virus. in india, there are few reports of the orf virus infection in camels and identified by clinical signs and pcr. in this study, we identified the presence of orf virus from clinical samples of suspected case of sporadic infection in camels by serological and molecular techniques. viral dna isolated from processed scabs used initially in nested polymerase chain reaction as diagnostic pcr which successfully amplified bp fragments and also sequenced to check the fidelity of the product. after confirming the infection by pcr, some of the structural and non-structural genes were amplified for sequence analysis. out of the five genes characterized, the major important one selected for sequence and phylogenetic analysis is b l gene which is homologous to a major envelope protein p k of vaccinia virus. full open reading frame of bp from orf b l was amplified by pcr, cloned and sequenced commercially. nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of b l were compared with other published sequences of the members of the genus papapox virus. sequence analysis shows a maximum percent identity of . and (indian orf virus isolates); . and . (other orf isolates); . and . (orf-camel/jodhpur/ ); and . (bovine popular stomatitis virus) and finally . and . (pseudo cowpox virus) respectively at nt and aa levels. phylogenetic analysis of the isolate was also performed using the neighbour joining method in mega program to know the phylogeny relatedness of the virus, which revealed that the isolate is well grouped with the jodhpur isolate and closely related to pseudo cowpox virus. it warrants further analysis of other potential genes to confirm the causative agent of the contagious ecthyma in camels as pseudo cowpox virus. chikungunya an arboviral disease is transmitted through the bite of an infected aedes mosquito. it causes a self limited febrile illness along with arthralgia and myalgia. in some cases neurological and severe hemorrhagic manifestations has been observed. chikv epidemic has been reported in africa, india, south east asian countries and during the current out break imported cases of chikv has been encountered in most of the european countries. the causative agent belongs to the genus alphavirus family togaviridae. human beings serve as the chikungunya virus reservoir host during epidemic periods. outside these periods the main reservoirs are monkeys, rodents, birds, and other unidentified vertebrates. antibodies to chikv have been detected in domestic animals. in the present study we surveyed madanapalli, palamaner, b. kotta kota and tirupati and collected a total of rodent samples, bovine samples; sheep samples and canine samples. total rna was isolated from all these samples and subjected to rt-pcr using a primer pair dvrchk-f/dvrchk-r which could amplify a bp e gene product specific to chikungunya virus (naresh kumar et al. ). all the serum samples were further screened for chikv specific igm antibodies using commercially available ctk biotech strips. none of the samples were found positive either for chikv specific rna or chikv specific igm antibodies. more number of samples from domestic animals as well as rodents are being screened to study their possible role if any in the maintenance of chikv in nature and during the inter epidemic periods. the present study discusses these aspects in detail. petunia hybrida is widely used as experimental host plant for begomovirus identification and its characterization. hitherto, natural infection of begomovirus on petunia has not been reported in india. recently, petunia hybrida grown in and around ludhiana were found to be depicting typical symptoms caused by begomovirus. the symptoms include severe reduction in leaf size, downward curling and distorted leaves. severely infected plant became bushy, stunted and produces no flower. total genomic dna was extracted from the plants showing symptoms of begomovirus, by ctab method. the presence of virus was confirmed by using degenerated primers, designed to identify all the begomovirus prevailing in the world. to identify the strain associated with the disease, the positive samples along with healthy control were tested against different strain specific primers of tomato leaf curl virus, so far reported in india i.e. tomato leaf curl new delhi virus, tomato leaf curl palampur virus, tomato leaf curl banglore virus, tomato leaf curl karnataka virus and tomato leaf curl gujarat virus. among these, only tomato leaf curl new delhi virus specific primer was able to give the desired amplicon of * bp. hence, it is confirmed that the leaf curl disease of petunia hybrida is associated with tomato leaf curl new delhi virus. this disease of petunia can become a sever production constraint in coming years. from last years ( and ) it was observed that some varieties of brinjal grown in rainy season, showed typical leaf curl type of symptoms. the symptoms include upward curling of the leaves, cupping, vein thickening, reduction in leaf size and distortion of leaves. the severely infected plant remains stunted and bushy, became unproductive or produces only few fruits. the disease was experimentally transmitted from naturally infected brinjal to healthy seedlings by whiteflies (bemisia tabaci) and grafting, but not by mechanical or aphid transmission. to detect the begomovirus associated, total genomic dna was extracted from the plants showing disease symptoms. the presence of virus was confirmed by using pcr based begomovirus geneus-specific primers designed by deng et al., wyatt and brown and rojas et al. these degenerated primers give the expected product size of * , * and * bp, respectively. core coat protein (cp) gene and dna-b was also amplified in the samples using specific primers. to identify the strain associated with leaf curl virus, dna was subjected against primers of different indian tomato leaf curl virus strain i.e. tomato leaf curl new delhi virus, tomato leaf curl palampur virus, tomato leaf curl banglore virus, tomato leaf curl karnataka virus and tomato leaf curl gujarat virus, using pcr. among these, only tomato leaf curl new delhi virus primer was able to show the desired product size of * bp. therefore, it was confirmed that leaf curl disease of brinjal is caused by tomato leaf curl new delhi virus in association with satellite b-dna. to identify the strain associated with the disease, all samples were further subjected to the specific primers, designed to amplify all the tomato leaf curl virus strains, so far reported from india i.e. tomato leaf curl new delhi virus, tomato leaf curl palampur virus, tomato leaf curl banglore virus, tomato leaf curl karnataka virus and tomato leaf curl gujarat virus, using pcr. among these, only tomato leaf curl palampur virus specific primer was able to give the expected product size of * bp. this shows the association of tomato leaf curl palampur virus with leaf curl disease of calendula and marigold. thus, calendula and marigold can act as a reservoir for the tomato leaf curl palampur virus and may cause severe constrain in the production of these important ornamental plants. groundnut bud necrosis virus (gbnv) belongs to serogroup iv of the genus tospovirus in bynayaviridae family and infects several economically important crops all over india. the nucleocapsid protein (np) encoded by the small rna of gbnv encapsidates the viral rnas. apart from this structural role, the np has also been implicated in the replication, transcription, maturation and cell to cell movement. with a view to study the structure and function, the np of gbnvtomato isolate from karnataka was over expressed in e. coli and purified by ni-nta chromatography. the purified np was present as ribonucleoprotein complex and as heterogeneous mixture containing monomers, tetramers and higher order multimers. in order to determine the regions involved in oligomerization and nucleic acid binding, mutational approach was taken. n-and c-terminal deletion clones were generated (n np, n np, c np and c np), over expressed in e. coli, and were purified by a procedure identical to that used for the wild type protein. initial studies on oligomeric status suggested that in addition to n-and c-terminal regions there may be additional regions or residues which contribute to multimerization of np. the amount of rna bound to the truncated proteins was reduced in case of n np, n np and c np. interestingly removal of amino acid residues (natively unfolded region) from the c terminus resulted in complete loss of nucleic acid binding suggesting that the rna binding domain was located in c-terminal region of np. further np was observed to get phosphorylated in in vitro kinase assays by a kinase present in the soluble fraction of tobacco plant sap. both atp and gtp were utilized as phosporyl donors and mn ? was the preferred metal ion which suggests that np might be phosphorylated by a ck -like protein kinase. phosphorylation studies with n-and c-terminal truncated proteins revealed that the site of phosphorylation lies within the amino acid residues - . by mass spectrometric analysis of the protein threonine- and serine- were identified as possible phosphorylation sites. a naturally occurring isolate of virus infecting gherkin (cucumis anguira l.) showing mosaic symptoms of mosaic, leaf distortion and dark green islands in the lamina was identified in the export cultivars of gherkin grown in commercial fields of kuppam rural, chittoor district, andhra pradesh. the virus infection was deadly prevalent among the field that caused a lot of economic damage to the crop that resulted in yield losses and reduced quality of fruits meant for export. symptoms of the infected fruit included blistering and malformation of the fruit. the virus infected leaf samples were collected and initial host range tests were conducted with different cucurbit species showed that the host range include propagation hosts like cucumis anguira (gherkin), cucumis sativus, cucurbita pepo, cucumis melo, langeneria vulgaris, momordica charantia and local assay host like chenopodium amaranticolor. the virus host range was only restricted to cucurbit species and chenopodium. the virus was maintained for further studies on cucurbita pepo by sap or mechanical inoculation. the virus induced mosaic, vein clearing symptoms on pumpkin. electron microscopy of the leaf dip preparations stained with % uranyl acetate from the pumpkin leaves showing symptoms revealed the presence of a long flexuous filamentous particle measuring nm. the virus positively reacted to the polyclonal antisera of papaya ringspot virus-w, potato virus y, tobacco etch virus and also strongly reacted with the polyclonal antiserum of zucchini yellow mosaic virus in direct antigen coated-enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (dac-elisa). because of very strong reaction to polyclonal antisera of zucchini yellow mosaic virus, we tried to amplify the partial nib and cp genes of the virus along with the utr by using two primers zy gctccatacatagctgag acagc and zy taggctttttgcaaacggagtcta at c . total rna from gherkin infected leaves was isolated using trizol ls reagent (sigma). rt-pcr was performed to obtain an amplicon of * . kbp, cloned into fermentas ptz r/t vector and sequenced at mwg biotech, bangalore. sequence analysis revealed that the virus was isolate of zucchini yellow mosaic virus and was showing % of homology to that of the zucchini yellow mosaic virus strain b genome ay and zucchini yellow mosaic virus nat genome ef which were strains reported from israel. the sequence of the present study was submitted to the genbank gq . the results state a suspicion that the virus could have been mobilized by some infected source brought by the commercial israeli based companies into india due to poor quarantine regulations as the gherkin cultivation in these regions is chiefly supported, purchased, exported and marketed by these private companies that are based from israel. this is the first report on molecular characterisation of zucchini yellow mosaic virus infecting cucumis anguira (gherkin) from india. they also exhibited synergism with other virus which was region specific. fifty percent of the total symptomatic plant population was found be positive only for carla while remaining showed mixed infection of carla with tospo in some regions while in others carla virus was found to be associated with cmv. presence of only carlavirus was up to - % incidence, without association of tospo, cmv, poty or tobamo viruses was also observed in some fields. avijit tarafdar, raju ghosh, k. k. biswas plant virology unit, division of plant pathology, indian agricultural research institute, new delhi citrus tristeza virus (ctv), a brown citrus aphid (toxoptera citricidus) transmitted closterovirus under family closteroviridae, is one of the major limiting factors in cultivation of citrus worldwide. ctv is a longest known plant virus having flexuous particle of nm in size. ctv genome is a positive sense ssrna of about kb nucleotide containing open reading frames (orfs) encoding proteins. several biological as well as genetic variants of ctv are reported in all the citrus growing countries in the world. ctv causes decline and death of millions of citrus trees in the world. in india, ctv is a century old problem, and has killed an estimated one million citrus trees till today. in molecular and genetic level, ctv isolates from india were not fully characterized. genetic diversity and sequence divergence in ctv isolates of india are not fully established. further, evidence of recombination and causes of evolution of ctv variants in india have not been studied till date. therefore, in the present study, effort has been made to characterize several indian ctv isolates in genetic level, examine their genetic diversity, identify recombination events and analyze evolution of divergent ctv. a total number of ctv isolates from different regions of india ( from darjeeling hills, five from bangalore, from delhi and from vidarbha) were under taken for genetic study. two genomic regions of ctv, i.e., entire cp gene (cpg) ( nt) and a gene fragment of orf a (orf a) ( nt) were amplified, cloned, sequenced and nucleotides were analyzed. based on cpg, indian isolates shared - % nucleotide identity, and based on orf a they shared - % identity, among them. incongruence of phylogenetic relationship was observed as on sequence analysis five phylogenetic clades based on cpg, and eight clades based on orf a, were generated suggesting the recombination events have been occurred between the sequences of indian ctv isolates. thus, to identify the potential recombination events, and determine the parental sequences in ctv isolates, six recombination detecting algorithms, namely, rdp, genconv, bootscan, maxchi, chimera and siscan were used. out of indian ctv, cpg of and orf a of isolates of ctv showed recombination events suggesting orf a was more prone and fragile to rna recombination as compared to cpg. this findings indicated that high degrees of genetic diversity and incongruent relationships of indian ctv isolates are due to genetic recombination occurred, which may be the important factors in driving evolution ctv variants in india, that was also supported by a splittree decomposition analysis. b. v. bhaskara reddy, y. sivaprasad, k. rekha rani, k. raja reddy department of plant pathology, regional agricultural research station, acharya n.g. ranga agricultural university, tirupati, andhra pradesh sunflower (helianthus annus l.) is one of the most important oil seed crops in the world which ranks third in area after soyabean and groundnut. the sunflower necrosis disease (snd) is characterized by necrosis of leaves, necrosis streaks on petioles, stem, floral parts and stunted growth. the causal agent of the disease has been identified as tobacco streak virus (tsv) which belongs to genus ilarvirus of the family bromoviridae. the suspected tsv infected sunflower samples collected from chittoor district in andhra pradesh were found positive for tsv-dac elisa. total rna was extracted from sunflower using rnaeasy isolation kit (qiagen). the tsv coat protein (cp) gene, movement protein (mp) gene and replicase (rep) gene were amplified by rt-pcr with specific primers, cloned in ptz r/t vector, sequenced and deposited in genbank (gu , gu and gu ). the size of cloned cp gene was bp and codes for amino acids. the cp gene sequence analysis revealed that the tsv-tpt infecting sunflower has - % homology at nucleotide level with soybean, tagietus-tpt and okra-tn isolates and - % homology at amino acid level. the movement protein gene was bp and codes for amino acids. the mp gene sequence analysis showed that it has - % homology at nucleotide level and - % at aminoacid level. chilli (capsicum annuum), the important commercial vegetable/spice of himachal pradesh, is affected by several viral diseases; of them cucumo, tospo, poty and gemini viruses are the most common genera. however, these viruses are not identified clearly and characterized fully, which are foremost needed to formulate the management strategy. therefore, in the present study, effort has been made to identify and characterize the important viruses causing diseases in chilli. in this study, several farms in major chilli growing areas of bilaspur and kangra districts in himachal pradesh were surveyed and infected plant samples were collected randomly. virus infection in these samples were detected by das-elisa using antisera to cucumber mosaic virus (cmv) and potyvirus (group specific) and through slot-blot hybridization (sbh) using cmv, iris severe mosaic poty virus (ismv), tomato spotted wilt tospo virus (tswv) and chilli leaf curl gemini virus (clcuv). based on das-elisa and sbh, the incidence of disease was estimated and ranged from . to . % by cmv and . to . % by potyvirus. to detect tospo and geminivirus in the infected chilli, sbh test was carried out. infected samples showed maximum virus titer in both das-elisa and sbh test were further confirmed by pcr using specific primers. desired sizes of amplicons; * bp, * bp, * bp and * bp of cmv, poty, gemini and tospo viruses, respectively, were obtained. as the present study clearly indicated that cmv appeared as a major one among the viruses infecting chilli in the hilly region of himachal pradesh, two isolates of cmv were characterized in genetic level. thus the amplified products (* bp) of cmv, palampur and palampur were cloned in pgemt cloning vector, sequenced and the sequences were submitted to ncbi database (palampur : acc-fm and palampur : acc-fm ). the sequences were then analyzed and compared with other sequences available in the data base. based on sequence analysis, it was found that present cmv isolates shared % nucleotide identity between them, are closely related with australian cmv isolate cmv-ly (acc-af ) by % nucleotide identity. in phylogenetic tree analysis, it was observed that indian cmv isolates formed same cluster along with cmv-ly. as it is known that cmv subgroup ii comprises cmv-ly, it is concluded that the cmvs of this hilly region of himachal pradesh belong to subgroup ii. chilli is essentially a crop of the tropics and grows better in hotter regions. chlii (capsicum annuum), a member of family solanaceae is an important vegetable and spice crop of immense commercial importance. the pungency in pepper is due to an alkaloid known as capsaicine and peppers are characterized as sweet, hot or mild depending on capsaicine content. the present investigation were conducted to find out the highly resistant cultivars of capsicum annuum against cmv and tylcv among ten cultivars of chilli in agroclimatic condition of aligarh. the highest ( and ) percentage of infection was observed in hc- and kalyanpur type- by showing the positive reaction to cmv by elisa test. no symptoms was recorded in case of bc- , lca- and jca- and showed negative reaction to cmv by elisa. bc- and lca- also showed negative reaction to tylcv by elisa and these were symptomless. maximum infection ( and ) was registered in hc- and c , cultivar. so, the bc- , lca- and jca- has proved highly resistant varieties against cmv and tylcv and these may be used in breeding programmes against viruses. cotton leaf curl virus belongs to the family geminiviridae, genus begomovirus. the members of this family contain circular single stranded dna molecules as their genomes. there are two kinds of begomoviruses-bipartite viruses with genomes consisting of two dna molecules designated dna-a and dna-b and the monopartite viruses which contain only dna-a but not dna-b. in monopartite viruses, the dna-a is accompanied by a small circular dna molecule called dna-b which is essential for the development of typical disease symptoms. cotton leaf curl virus is a monopartite virus and causes the cotton leaf curl disease which has emerged as a major disease of cotton in the indian subcontinent. the non-structural protein ac of cotton leaf curl kokhran virus-dabawali isolate (clcukv-dab) was cloned into pgex x vector and overexpressed in bl (de )plyss e. coli cells. the overexpressed gst-ac protein was purified by glutathione sepharose chromatography. the purified gst-ac protein was found to possess atpase activity. the optimum temperature and ph for the activity were °c and . respectively. the atpase activity was inhibited in presence of edta, showing that it is dependent on divalent metal ions. the activity was supported by magnesium, manganese and zinc ions but inhibited in presence of calcium ions. it was also inhibited by the non-hydrolyzable atp analogue adenosine-b, c-imido triphosphate and in the presence of other nucleotides like ctp and gtp. the k m and the v max of the reaction for atp as the substrate are . mm and . nmol/min/ mg of the protein respectively. the enzyme could also utilize gtp as the substrate. the fact that ac is specifically an ntpase and not a general phosphatase is revealed by the finding that it does not hydrolyze p-nitrophenyl phosphate to yield yellow colour while a similar reaction carried out in parallel with alkaline phosphatase readily yields the colour. it has been suggested earlier that ac may be involved in cell to cell movement of the virus (rojas et al. ) . it is possible that by its ability to hydrolyze atp, ac serves to power viral movement in the plant. thirteen sugarcane yellow leaf virus isolates causing yellow midrib and irregular yellow spot pattern from six states of india were characterized by rt-pcr assays. scylv- f and scylv- r primers were used as forward and reverse primer pairs and the amplified products were cloned and sequenced. comparative coat protein sequence analysis confirmed that all the scylv-indian isolates were clustered into two major groups confirming the existence of two strains of scylv affecting sugarcane crops of india. in a separate experiment, the member of both of the phylogenetic groups were found to be transmitted by the sugarcane aphid, melanaphis sacchari from infected to healthy sugarcane suggesting its secondary spread in nature. the symptoms produced by the virus causing cotton mosaic disease were little bit different in both sap inoculation and under natural field condition. in natural field condition it has shown clear chlorosis type of symptoms on major leaves of plants but in sap inoculated plants veinal chlorosis and mosaic type of symptoms are found to be common. in field conditions infected plants grows erect and have less boll formation. there is no effect found on seed shape or seed size. the initial symptoms produced on cotton leaves after inoculation were wonderful. local lesions observed in second week from inoculation and then they changes to chlorotic type of symptoms and some are necrotic symptoms also. the plants at early stage are found to be affected, has less lateral branch development and hence reduction in yield production. the naturally field infected plants showing good symptoms are also difficult to identify in lateral stage of plant. because they disappear with time. the virus is very easily sap transmissible. the virus is found to be transmitted by thrips palmi and thrips tobacci in persistent manner. no seed transmission is observed. virus showed same physical properties as it shows in stem necrosis of peanut or sunflower necrosis disease. the physical properties are found to be thermal inactivation point (tip) - °c, dilution end point (dep) - to - and longevity in vitro (liv) h, virus infecting nineteen different host plants are identified belonging to five different types of families viz. malvaceae, chenopodiaceae, compositae, leguminaceae and solanaceae. however they found to produce same types of symptoms as in most of the host that have been tested before. in elisa test report it is found that the virus showing positive test only with anti serum of tsv of a cowpea and cotton but negative reaction with pbnv of cowpea and cotton which clearly denied possibility of presence of pbnv in cotton producing these kinds of symptoms elisa report clearly shows that tsv antiserum of cowpea is showing positive results with clear chlorotic types of symptoms. a powerful approach to functional genomics, and an alternative to the massive generation of transgenic plants, is the use of the recently described virus induced gene silencing (vigs) process, which allows viral vectors to knock out the function of a gene-of-interest. vigs is based on a silencing mechanism that regulates gene expression by the specific degradation of rna. as a tool for reverse genetics, vigs has many advantages over other common ways to study gene function because of the ability of viruses to replicate and move systemically within a plant. vigs can generate a phenocopy of a mutant without all the troubles of traditional methods of mutagenesis. geminiviruses with their small dna genomes and ease of inoculation through agrobacterium, are excellent candidates for vigs vector development. as a first step, the geminivirus bhendi yellow vein mosaic virus, characterized in our lab (jose and usha, virology : [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ) has been chosen. the satellite b dna associated with this virus has a single open reading frame (bc ). bc is essential for symptom development but not for replication. therefore, bc has been replaced by a multiple cloning site harbouring sali, xbai, bamhi, bsrgi and xhoi, initially in a cloning vector and then in the binary vector containing the partial tandem repeat of the b dna. in the place of the bc orf, the plant phytoene desaturase gene has been cloned and the resulting construct was used for agroinfiltration along with the partial tandem repeat clone of the begomovirus (dna a component chilli (capsicum annuum l.) plants exhibiting prominent symptoms of begomovirus like: leaf curl, vein swelling, shortening of petioles, crowding of leaves and stunting of plants were collected from rorkee, uttarakhand and dhaulpur, rajasthan, india. total genomic dna was isolated from naturally infected chilli samples and pcr was carried out with coat protein (located in dna-a) gene specific primers. as expected to the primers, * bp dna fragments were amplified from the infected chilli samples. to know the bipartite nature of the virus isolates, nuclear shuttle protein (located in dna-b) gene specific primers were employed which also resulted in positive amplification of * bp dna bands with all the coat protein tested positive samples. to ascertain the association of dnab component with the virus isolates, a set of dna-b specific primers were used which resulted in positive amplification of full length (* . kb) dna bands in the chilli samples collected from rorkee, uttarakhand, however, multiple sizes bands were resulted with the samples collected from dhaulpur, rajasthan. these findings confirmed that both the virus isolates under study are bipartite begomovirus associated with dna-b satellite. the sequencing of the pcr products is under progress which analysis will be discussed. groundnut bud necrosis virus (gbnv) belonging to the genus tospovirus, which is a unique member of the family bunyaviridae, infects several economically important crops. the virus has three genomic ssrna segments namely s (ambisense), m (ambisense) and l (negative sense). the s rna codes for nucleoprotein (np) and non-structural protein (nss) from viral complimentary and viral strands respectively. many viral nonstructural proteins such as ns of hepatitis c virus, yellow fever virus, dengue virus, sv large t antigen and cytoplasmic inclusion protein of tamarillo mosaic potyvirus are known to exhibit rna/dna stimulated ntpase, dntpase and helicase activity. nss of gbnv does not have any sequence similarity with any of the above mentioned viral rna/dna helicases but has a ntp binding domain. however, it has been implicated as suppressor of gene silencing in vivo. with a view to elucidate the mechanism by which nss could act as a suppressor of gene silencing and examine the other potential roles of nss in the life cycle of the virus, the gbnv (to) nss was over-expressed in e. coli and purified by ni-nta chromatography. in vitro studies with the purified rnss suggest that it exhibits an rna stimulated ntpase activity. many of the proteins that possess the rna/ dna stimulated ntpase and datpase activity, are also shown to have atp dependent nucleic acid unwinding activity. it was therefore of interest to examine whether nss has the nucleic acid unwinding activity. the helicase assays revealed that nss has dna/rna helicase activity. helicase activity of nss was absolutely dependent on atp and mg ? ion. nss could unwind dsdna substrate with overhang, or overhang. mutation of the crucial lysine in walker motif a (k ) severely affected the unwinding activity where as mutation of aspartate residue in walker motif b (d ) resulted in only % loss of activity. in this regard, rnss is a unique enzyme which does not have the canonical helicase motifs but can catalyze dsdna/dsrna unwinding in an atp and mg ? dependent manner. the rnss might act as a suppressor of by unwinding the dsrna, the substrate for dicer. in addition to being a suppressor of ptgs, nss may also regulate the viral replication and transcription by modulating the secondary structure of the viral genome. this new research finding on nss might pave way for further studies on its role in viral replication and transcription. yellow vein mosaic disease of pumpkin (cucurbita moschata) poses a serious threat to the cultivation of this crop in india. the disease was found to be associated with whitefly-transmitted bipartite begomoviruses were detected in varanasi field using polymerase chain reaction (pcr) with primer design through coat protein conserved region of begomoviruses from ncbi database. all plant samples showing symptoms were infected with begomovirus. the virus species were provisionally identified by sequencing * bp of the viral coat protein gene (av ageratum conyzoides is commonly known as billygoat-weed, chick weed, goatweed and whiteweed. in india it is popularly known as bill goat weed. it is an annual herbaceous plant with a long history of traditional medicinal uses in several countries of the world and also reputed to possess varied medicinal properties including the treatment of wounds and burns. in cameroon and congo, it is used traditionally to treat fever, rheumatism, headache, and colic. during survey in and around gorakhpur in , ageratum plants were found affected with the symptoms of leaf curling, mosaic mottling and leaf yellows. the infected leaf samples were processed for virus identification and association with pcr assays. total dna was extracted and pcr were performed with begomovirus specific primers (tlcv-cp). a * bp band was consistently amplified on % agarose. the pcr products were directly sequenced and sequence was submitted in genbank with the accession no. gq . the blast search analysis showed highest similarity of % with the ageratum enation virus. vernonia cinerea leaves with yellow vein symptoms were collected around crop fields in madurai. a bp product amplified from total dna extracted from symptomatic leaves with degenerate primers designed to amplify a part of the av gene from begomoviral dna a component was cloned and sequenced. based on the above sequences, specific primers were designed and the full length dna a of nucleotides with typical genome organization of begomoviral dna a was obtained and was submitted to embl data base (acc no: am ). the sequence comparison with other begomoviruses revealed the closest identity ( %) with emilia yellow vein virus from china and less than % with all known begomoviruses. the international committee on taxonomy of viruses (ictv) has therefore recognized vernonia yellow vein virus (vyvv) as a distinct begomovirus species. conventional pcr could not amplify the dna b or dna b from the infected tissue. however, the b dna ( bp) associated with the disease was obtained (acc no: fn ) by the rolling circle amplification-restriction fragment length polymorphism method (rca-rflp) using phi dna polymerase. sequence analysis shows that dna b of vyvv has the highest identity ( %) with dna b of ageratum leaf curl disease and - % with the b dna associated with other begomoviruses. infectious clones of vyvv dna a and dna b as dimers were made using the products of rca-rflp. these infectious clones will be used for agroinfection of vernonia and the results will be discussed. this is the first report of the molecular characterization of vernonia yellow vein virus (vyvv) from vernonia cinerea in india. production of bulb and seed crop of onion (allium cepa l.) is hampered by onion yellow dwarf virus (oydv) and iris yellow spot virus (iysv) with an incidence of . % and . % in bulb crop and . % and . % in seed crop, respectively in the popularly grown cv. hisar- . four symptom-based variants of oydv designated as grade a, b, c and d produced varied types of symptoms in onion crop incurring heavy losses in bulb and seed production. iysv caused tiny hay coloured spots of different shapes and sizes on leaves and scapes which later coalesced and led to drying and lodging of scapes. the plant height, bulb weight and bulb size were . cm, . g and . cm in plants infected with oydv, . cm, . g and . cm in iysv infection, . cm, . g and . cm due to their combined infection, as compared to . cm, . g and . cm respectively, in healthy plants of bulb crop. in plants infected with oydv grade a the plant height was minimum ( . cm) whereas the number of umbels was maximum ( . umbels/pl.) but other yield parameters viz., weight/umbel ( . g), number of seeds/umbel ( ), seed weight/umbel ( . g) and seed yield/plant ( . g) were recorded to be the lowest. the minimum reduction in plant height ( . cm), weight/umbel ( . g), number of seeds/umbel ( ), seed weight/umbel ( . g) and seed yield/plant ( . g) were recorded in oydv grade d. the plant height was . cm with . umbels per plant, . g weight/umbel, seeds/umbel, . g seed weight/umbel and . g seed yield/plant in iysv infected plants. the plant height ( . cm), umbels/plant ( . ), weight/umbel ( . g), number of seeds/umbel ( ), seed weight/umbel ( . g) and seed yield/plant ( . g) were found to be the lowest in combined infection of oydv and iysv diseases in comparison to higher values in healthy controls ( . cm, . , . g, , . g, . g, respectively). a minimum reduction in the test weight, germination and seed vigour index were found ( . g, . % and ) due to oydv grade a infection, whereas these were . g, . % and in iysv disease infected plants and . g, . % and in combined infection of oydv and iysv diseases in comparison to . g, . % and in healthy plants. the maximum hampering of seed vigour parameters was recorded due to iysv infection. lodging of scapes caused by this disease was responsible for heavy losses in seed production and seed quality. cotton leaf curl disease is one of the major threats to cotton cultivation from northern india. survey conducted during , observed the disease incidence ranged from to % from bhatinda, abohar, fazilka, sri ganganagar, hanumanghar. in order to study genetic variability in the virus, twelve clcuv isolates were partially characterized ( bp common region, full length av gene and partial sequences of ac and av gene). full length characterization of representative isolates from bhatinda, abohar, fazilka, sri ganganagar, hanumanghar is under progress. partial sequence analysis of clcuv isolates revealed that, the virus isolates collected during cropping season are closely related to cotton leaf curl burewala virus from pakistan and results were discussed. pratibha singh, h. s. savithri department of biochemistry, indian institute of science, bangalore tospoviruses, belonging to the family bunyavirideae, infect economically important plants such as groundnut, tomato, watermelon etc. they have a tripartite genome, with l, m and s segments of rna, in pseudo circular (panhandle) form. the viral genomes encode four structural proteins (l, n, g and g ) in the antisense orientation, and two non structural proteins nss and nsm in the sense orientation. the nsm is the only protein unique to tospoviruseses that infect plants in the bunyaviridae family and hence is proposed to be important for cell to cell movement. ground nut bud necrosis virus (gbnv), a member of the tospovirus genus, is the most prevalent virus infecting several species of leguminosae and solanaceae plants in india. total rna was isolated from gbnv infected tomato leaves and rt-pcr was performed using appropriate primers to amplify the nsm gene. the pcr product was cloned in pgex x vector. the recombinant nsm clone was transformed into bl (de ) e. coli cells and over-expressed by induction with . mm iptg. sds-page analysis of induced and uninduced fraction revealed the presence of overexpressed protein of expected size. the soluble gst-nsm was purified by gsh sepharose affinity chromatography. purified gst-nsm was shown to interact with in vitro transcribed rna transcript by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. further nsm was shown to interact with viral encoded proteins np and nss using elisa and yeast two hybrid system. nsm was also shown to be phosphorylated in vitro by pellet fraction of plant sap. thus the recombinant gbnv nsm possesses the characteristic features of a movement protein such as nucleic acid binding, interaction with nucleocapsid protein, and ability to undergo posttranslational modification. solanum melongena, commonly called as egg plant is one of the most important vegetable crop in the world. it is cultivated widely in the tropical and sub tropical regions. several viruses such as cucumber mosaic cucumo virus (cmv), potato virus-y (pvy), potato virus-x (pvx) and tobacco ring spot virus (trsv) infect egg plant under natural conditions. in india major crop losses due to cmv infection in brinjal is % (fao stat- ) . in the present study the infected leaf samples were collected from local fields of ramapuram, chandamama palli, chandragiri, madanapalli, yadhamari, durgasamudram villages in and around tirupati, were tested for cmv infection by dac-elisa with cmv antisera. the resulting positive samples were further inoculated to the raised brinjal seedlings of selected varieties through mechanical sap inoculation. different varieties of brinjal like mullabadhine, ankhur, ravya, mattigulla, casper and easter egg were used for monitoring the susceptibility to cmv infection. the mosaic symptoms were observed after weeks of inoculation in all varities of brinjal except mullabadhina. among all these susceptible varities ankhur variety is selected to study induced biochemical changes such as chlorophylls, carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids and polyphenol oxidases in cmv infected brinjal leaves. in the infected leaves considerable reduction in chlorophyll and starch and increase in total proteins, sugars, rna and polyphenol oxidases was observed when compared to healthy leaves. the amount of total starch, protein and dna decreased to about , and lg/g respectively in infected leaves, where as sugars ( lg/g), rna content ( lg/g) and polyphenol oxidase activity was increased as compared to healthy leaves. the above results suggests that there is an altered concentrations of chlorophyll, proteins, nucleic acids, carbohydrates and polyphenol oxidase activity in the brinjal leaves due to the effect of cucumber mosaic cucumo virus infection. leaf analysis was found to be used as widely accepted diagnostic tool to assess the nutritional status of the vegetables. the present study deals with these aspects in detail. the total rna and dna was isolated from infected leaf samples. rt-pcr assays were performed using sugarcane yellow leaf virus (scylv) specific primers (scylv- f and scylv- r). the infection of scylv was detected in all the collected samples, which showed the expected size (* bp) amplicon during rt-pcr. in another experiment with nested pcr analysis, a phytoplasma characteristic . kb rdna pcr product were amplified from dnas of all infected samples but not in healthy sugarcane plants tested using phytoplasma universal primer pairs p /p and fu /ru . dna extracts from plants with yellow mid rib and leaf yellows produced products of bp, which gave typical phytoplasma profiles when digested with hae iii and hha i. no pcr amplifications were produced using dna from symptomless plants. our results suggest that the yellow mid rib and leaf yellows symptoms on sugarcane varieties in uttar pradesh and uttarakhand states of india exhibiting midrib yellowing and leaf yellows symptoms is mainly caused by mixed infection of scylv and scylp. the affected clumps showed reduction in stalk height as compared to healthy fields. thirty-one sugarcane mosaic isolates belonged to sugarcane mosaic virus (scmv) and sugarcane streak mosaic virus (scsmv were collected from china and india), confirmed in indirect elisa and rt-pcr amplification with scmv and scsmv-specific primers. the amplicons ( . kb) from the coding region of coat protein (cp) were cloned, sequenced and compared to each other as well as to the sequences of scmv isolates from sugarcane (australia, usa, china, brazil, mexico and south africa), maize (australia, china, iranian) and one scsmv isolate from sugarcane (india) in genbank. maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony analyses robustly supported two major monophyletic groups that were correlated with the host of origin: the scmv subgroup that included isolates from china and only isolates from india, and the scsmv subgroup that contained all isolates from india. maize dwarf mosaic virus (mdmv) and johnsongrass mosaic virus (jgmv) were not detected in any of the samples tested. a strong correlation was observed between the sugarcane groups and the geographical origin of the scmv isolates. the millable sugarcane samples from china contained a virus tentatively described as sorghum mosaic virus (srmv). three isolates from nine chewing canes in fujian, yunnan and guizhou provinces of china also contained srmv, and the other samples including five isolates from india was found infected with scmv. no srmv infection has been detected in sugarcane mosaic samples from india. sequence comparisons and phylogenetic analysis indicated that srmv can be considered as the most common and prevalent potyvirus infecting sugarcane in china, however in india sugarcane streak mosaic virus is dominant in causing mosaic symptoms on sugarcane. dig-labeled dna probe complementary to coat protein (cp) region of tobacco streak virus (tsv) sunflower isolate was designed for the sensitive and broad-spectrum detection of tsv isolates, the most devastating virus in india. dot-blot and tissue print hybridizations with the digoxigenin labeled probe were performed for the tsv detection at field levels. here, dot-blot hybridization was used to check a wide number of tsv isolates with a single probe and sensitivity with different sample extraction methods. the probe with cp conserved region prepared from sunflower pcr amplicon was hybridized with the tsv field isolates of gherkin, pumpkin, sunflower, marigold and globe amaranth samples because of highly conserved with little variability in cp region. the sensitivity limits were decreased from total nucleic acid to partially purified and crude extract preparations. in particular, tissue blot hybridization offers a simple, reliable procedure as dot-blot, but requires no sample processing. because there is minimal sample preparation, tissue-print hybridization could be an important component of tsv management programs. thus, the above non-radioactive labeled probe techniques can facilitate in screening the samples during tsv outbreaks and in quarantine services. savita patil, rupali sawant*, k. banerjee virology group, agharkar research institute, macs, g.g. agarkar road, pune two mycobacterium smegmatis strains (ari lab nos. v and v ) were employed for the isolation of mycobacteriophages from soil and sewage samples. mycobacteriophages were isolated from soil samples collected from an area surrounding the tuberculosis (tb) ward, naidu hospital, pune, against m. smegmatis strain v . these were numbered as v , v and v and were isolated by using washed-cell preparation method. the bacteriophages against the other m. smegmatis strain, i.e. v , were isolated from soil samples (collected from around tb ward, sassoon hospital, pune). some of these phages (viz.v , v ) showed plaques at °c but not at °c. thus they seem to be lysogenic. for propagating and increasing the titre of all the above isolates, various previously described methods were attempted, but none of these methods were satisfactory. but when siliconized glassware and plastic-ware were used, propagation was successful. we showed that siliconization of glassware and plastic-ware was essential for the propagation of our mycobacteriophage isolates v , v , v , v and v . also, phage dilution medium (pdm) as described by chaterjee et al. ( ) was found to be effective for picking out of the plaques made by the phages. in this way, the phage isolates were propagated up to p . the various passages of the phage isolates v , v , v , v and v (i.e. original, p , p and p ) were stored at - °c. pvp- effect on pigments due to geminivirus infection on cowpea (vigna unguiculata) shail pande*, naveen pandey, k. shukla mahatma gandhi p. g. college gorakhpur, d.d.u. gorakhpur university, gorakhpur geminiviruses are one of the most important group of viruses causing economic losses in tropics. the symptom produced are yellowing of leaves which directly affect the pigments of diseased plants it in turn affects productivity and yield of diseased plant. cowpea vigna unguiculata is one of the important crop cultivated throughout india for its green pods which are used as vegetables and seeds are used as pulse. cowpea is affected by many viruses amongst them geminiviruses are one of the important virus on the cowpea plant. in the present study total chlorophyll content was studied in leaf of cowpea of diseased and healthy plants using arnon's method. carotenoids were also studied using ikan's method. it was found that chlorophyll content in diseased plants were lower compared to healthy plant similar results were found with carotenoids so the geminivirruses infection lowers the chlorophyll and carotenoid content in diseased plants which reduces yield of diseased cowpea plant. shweta sharma , amrita banerjee , j. tarafdar , r. rabindran , indranil dasgupta * department of plant molecular biology, university of delhi, south campus, new delhi; bidhan chandra krishi vishwavidayalaya, kalyani, nadia, west bengal ; tamil nadu agricultural university, coimbatore, tamil nadu rice tungro disease is an important disease of rice, caused by a joint infection by two viruses: rice tungro spherical virus (rtsv) and rice tungro bacilliform virus (rtbv) in south and southeast asia. the complex of rtbv and rtsv is transmitted by an insect vector green leaf hopper (glh). previously we reported complete genomic sequences of two geographically distinct isolates of rtbv; rtbv-wb (west bengal) and rtbv-ap (andhra pradesh) collected from the field in mid- s. both the sequences showed high homology all along the genome but showed divergence from previously reported southeast asian isolate i.e. rtbv-phil (philippines). to check whether a time period of a decade has resulted into variability in the genomic sequence of different isolates of rtbv in india, we cloned and sequenced the complete genome of rtbv from two geographically distinct regions of india i.e. west bengal and kanyakumari collected from the field in . the complete nucleotide sequence of the dna fragments covering the whole genome of rtbv was determined using universal primers m f and m r and by primer walking, without any ambiguities remaining. the nucleotide sequences of overlapping clones were assembled and analyzed using the dna analysis software generunner and blastn program of ncbi. homology search at the nucleotide and amino acid level were performed using the blastn and blastp (respectively) programs of ncbi. multiple sequence alignments were performed using clus-tal-w software. sequence analysis results thus obtained showed that both the recently obtained complete genomic sequences of rtbv from two geographically distinct regions of india i.e. west bengal and kanyakumari showed very high homology (both at the nucleotide and amino acid levels) with the two previously reported rtbv isolates from india i.e. rtbv-wb (west bengal) and rtbv-ap (andhra pradesh) all along the genome. as observed earlier both the sequences diverged significantly from the southeast asian isolates. this suggests that even after the spatial and temporal difference (a time gap of approx years) between the two previously reported rtbv isolates and the recently reported one, there is very little sequence variability between them. this further strengthens the earlier reports that the rtbv genomes in india are highly conserved. homology search at the nucleotide level using blastn program with the previously existing rtbv isolates revealed a very high percentage identity of % with the rtbv west bengal isolate and % with the rtbv andhra pradesh isolate. this further strengthens the earlier reports that there is not much genetic variability in the rtbv genomes in indian subcontinent. complete genomic rna sequences of two geographically distinct isolates of rice tungro spherical virus (rtsv), a member of the genus waikavirus, family sequiviridae, were determined from india. out of the two previously reported sequences, the indian isolates were closer to the resistance breaking strain rtsv-[vt ] than rtsv- [phila] . between them, the indian sequences showed nucleotide as well as amino acid identities of %. a moderate homology was observed between the leader peptide and a putative helper component protein involved in insect transmission of the maize chlorotic dwarf virus, a closely related waikavirus, indicating its possible transmission-related function. unlike rice tungro bacilliform virus, which causes rice tungro disease jointly with rtsv, and is significantly different between isolates from india and philippines, rtsv genomes were observed to be much more conserved between isolates from the two countries. rice tungro bacilliform virus (rtbv) are believed to be the joint causative agents for the devastating tungro disease of rice prevalent in south and southeast asia [ ] . rice tungro disease has become the major cause of production losses in rice during last three decades in several rice growing states of india. here, we report, for the first time the complete sequence analysis of two geographically distinct indian isolates of rtsv. we analyze the deduced protein sequences and their phylogenetic relationship with the two complete rtsv sequences from philippines as well as with other members of sequiviridae family. we provide molecular evidence that the indian isolates of rtsv are closely related to those from the philippines. we had earlier reported that rtbv isolates between india and philippines differ significantly from each other [ ] . this study was undertaken in order to see whether rtsv isolates from india also show similar difference from those reported from the philippines. frequent outbreaks of tungro were reported near kanyakumari in the last - years. the present work was undertaken to clone and sequence the full-length rtbv and rtsv genomes from the infected rice plants collected from above region and to analyze the similarity of its genetic material with the existing indian isolates of rtbv and rtsv. a . kb dna fragment encoding the reverse transcriptase gene of rtbv genome was amplified and cloned in t/a vector and was sequenced commercially. homology search at the nucleotide level using blastn program with the previously existing rtbv isolates revealed a very high percentage identity of % with the rtbv west bengal isolate and % with the rtbv andhra pradesh isolate. this further strengthens the earlier reports that there is not much genetic variability in the rtbv genomes in indian subcontinent. similarly, the cp region of rtsv was amplified by rt-pcr and was cloned in t/a vector. recently, rice tungro disease has been reported from kanyakumari district of tamil nadu. it is important to determine the genetic nature of this isolate in order to develop resistance strategies. it is thus necessary to clone and characterize the viruses from kanyakumari and to determine the mechanism of virus resistance in transgenic lines. rice tungro disease is an important viral disease of rice. rice tungro is caused by infection by two viruses: rice tungro bacilliform virus (rtbv) and rice tungro spherical virus (rtsv). rtsv is a plant picornavirus with a kb single stranded rna genome. it belongs to genus waikavirus in the family sequiviridae and is necessary for transmission of the two viruses by the leafhopper vector nephotellix virescens. rtsv rna is translated to form a large polyprotein, which is then self cleaved to form the viral proteins, including the three coat proteins, replicase, protease. studies have been conducted on rtsv from philippines. correct information of sequence variability of viral isolates to check whether different geographical conditions like those present in india select for genotypically variable strain and to design for transgenic resistance strategy, information on rtsv from india is absolutely essential. the objective of this study was to clone rtsv isolates from india and compare the genetic diversity of indian isolates from other southeast asian isolates and amongst each other. also develop strategy to impair the attack of virus-complex on rice. the achieve this, complete genomes of two isolates from india were cloned by amplifying different genes by rt-pcr and subsequently cloned in ta vectors, followed by sequencing. subsequently constructs containing cp - , antisense replicase, sense replicase and double stranded replicase were cloned in plant transformation vector. these constructs were used to transform aromatic rice variety from indian-pusa basmati (pb ). pcr analysis of the above plants was done to check the stable insertion of insert in the transgenics. jatropha (jatropha curcas) of the family euphorbiaceae is being grown in india as a major commercial fuel (bio-diesel) crop. jatropha is cultivated in districts of potential states of india. unfortunately, the cultivation of jatropha is limited by the severe mosaic disease. recently, a severe mosaic disease with significant disease incidence was observed in - on j. curcas grown in experimental plots of nbri and j. gossypifolia, a weed growing road side around lucknow and kathaupahadi, madhya pradesh. the disease consisted of the symptoms of severe mosaic, blistering, leaf distortion and stunting of whole plant and no fruit/seed production in severely affected plants. symptomatology and whitefly population observed on them suggested the occurrence of begomovirus infection. to detect the begomovirus infection, the total dna from leaf samples of infected jatropha plants was extracted and polymerase chain reaction (pcr) were performed using three sets of begomovirus genus specific (cpit-i/cpit-t, paliv /paric and paliv /palic ) primers and the expected size * bp, . kb and . kb amplicons were obtained which confirmed the begomovirus infection. further to identify the begomovirus/es and investigate the genetic diversity among them exists if any, the * . kb amplicons were cloned and sequenced. the sequence data were deposited in the genbank database under accession nos.: gq and fj (from j. curcas) and eu and fj (from j. gossypifolia). during blast analysis gq and fj shared highest % sequence identity with each other and - %% with sri lankan cassava mosaic virus (aj , aj , aj , aj and aj ) and indian cassava mosaic virus from india (ay ) therefore, designated as two strains of jatropha mosaic india virus-lucknow. blast analysis of eu showed maximum % similarities with croton yellow vein mosaic virus (aj ), % with tomato leaf curl new delhi virus (dq ) and - % with papaya leaf curl virus (aj and y ), therefore, identified as strain of croton yellow vein mosaic virus. blast analysis of the virus isolate (fj ) showed highest % identities with tomato leaf curl virus-bangalore ii (tolcv-b ii-u ) and - % with tomato leaf curl karnataka virus (tol-ckv, ay , fj ), therefore, considered as new begomovirus species ''jatropha yellow mosaic india virus''. the phylogenetic analysis of gq and fj (from j. curcas) and eu and fj (from j. gossypifolia) was performed along with some selected isolates of begomovirus which showed [ % sequence identities during blast analysis. the isolate eu showed closest relationship with croton yellow vein mosaic virus while fj showed separate clustering of all the four begomovirus from jatropha species. during phylogenetic analysis these isolates formed three separate clusters, therefore, they were considered as three distinct begomoviruses. the above data clearly show that some genetic diversity exists among the begomoviruses infecting jatropha species in india. bitter gourd (momordica charantia l.) of the family cucurbitaceae, also known as bitter melon is extensively cultivated in north eastern region of uttar pradesh, india. it is regarded as one of the world's major vegetable crops and has great economic importance. a severe yellow mosaic disease on bitter gourd (momordica charantia) with a significant disease incidence was observed during the survey of different locations of eastern up, india in the year . the whitefly (bemisia tabaci) population was also observed in the vicinity. the characteristic disease symptoms and whitefly population indicated the possibility of begomovirus infection. total dna were isolated from infected as well as healthy leaf samples. two primer pair (tlcv-cp and roja's primer) were used to study, which resulted * bp with tlcv-cp in / samples and * . kb amplicons with roja's primer in / samples. for further identification of the begomovirus, the pcr amplicons were cloned and sequenced (genbank accession no. eu and eu , respectively). the blastn search analysis of eu indicated - % identity with several isolates of tomato leaf curl new delhi virus (tolcndv). the phylogenetic analysis also showed closest relationships of the isolate (eu ) with tolcndv isolates. based on highest sequence identity and closed relationships with tolcndv the virus isolated from bitter gourd was considered as an isolate of tomato leaf curl new delhi virus. while, blastn search analysis of eu isolate, shared highest - % identites with pepper leaf curl bangladesh virus (peplcbv) isolates. the phylogenetic analysis of the virus isolate with selected begomovirus isolates revealed a closest relationship with peplcbv. these results confirmed the association of peplcbv on bitter gourd. study revealed the variability of viruses on bitter gourd in eastern up, india. tobacco streak virus groundnut isolate was characterized biologically by taking six cultivars (jl , tmv , k , k , k ) and one pre-release culture (k ) using seedlings of - days old under glasshouse conditions. there were clear differences were observed among cultivars tested regarding incubation period, percent seedling wilt and time taken to death of seedlings. k- was least susceptible among all the cultivars tested and it supported least virus titer (a nm: . - . ). both localized (necrotic lesions on leaf, veinal necrosis, leaf yellowing, wilting) and systemic (petiole necrosis, necrotic lesions on young leaves, death of top growing buds not only on main stem but also on all primaries (side shoots), followed by stem necrosis, stunted growth, axillary shoot proliferation with small leaves having general chlorosis, peg necrosis, pod necrosis, pod size reduction, wilt of plants) symptom were observed in all cultivars tested. biological differentiation of tsv and gbnv was made by sap inoculation of both viruses separately using susceptible groundnut cultivar jl under glasshouse conditions. there were certain similarities and differences were observed between these viruses infecting groundnut. seed infection of tsv ranged from . to . % in seeds collected from naturally infected and sap inoculated groundnut cultivars/pre-releases (jl , tmv , k- , k- , k- and k- ) belonging to spanish and virginia types. tsv was detected both in pod shell and seed testa from pod samples produced by sap inoculation under glasshouse conditions. however, seed transmission of tsv was not observed in groundnut. coat protein (cp) gene of three groundnut tsv isolates (gn-ap- - ; gn-ap - ; gn-ap - ) were sequenced and all the three isolates contained a single open reading frame (orf) of bp nucleotide and could potentially code for amino acids (aa). cp gene of tsv isolates originating from different hosts shared high degree of sequence identity both at nucleotide ( . - %) and amino acid ( . - %) levels respectively. tones grown in an area of . . ha (fao stat ). in india papaya is grown in nearly , ha with an annual production of , , tones (fao stat ) and occupies fourth place in the world. the crop is severely affected by a number of viruses. papaya ring spot virus (prsv-p) is the most important virus. the detection of virus infection in plants has traditionally involved either bioassay on indexing plants and or immunological methods (hill , torrence and jones ) . use of nucleic acid probes has improved the detection and sensitivity of viruses. the most common non-radioactive probes are biotynilated probes, which are very specific and sensitive. papaya ring spot virus (prsv-p) is a positive sense ssrna virus belonging to the genus potyvirus family potyviridae and transmitted by aphids. prsv-p coat protein gene region was used as template cdna for probe preparation. dot-blot hybridization with the biotin labeled probe were performed for prsv-p detection. the clarified sap of healthy and infected plants were serially diluted and spotted onto the nitrocellulose membrane, hybridized to biotin labeled probe. biotin labeled rna's are employed as probes, with a subsequent detection based on streptavidin-alkaline phosphatase conjugates. the sensitivity for viral detection of the biotin labeled probe was found to be sensitive than enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (elisa). in recent years tospovirus is causing devastating damage to the yield of vegetables in india. it infects economically important crops viz., tomato, chilli, peppers, groundnut, watermelon and various legumes. now it is emerging as severe disease in brinjal also. in order to monitor the natural occurrence and distribution of tospovirus in vegetable, surveys were conducted in the predominant brinjal growing areas of gujarat, karnataka, maharashtra and andhra pradesh during - incidence ranging from to %, to %, to %, and to . % respectively. samples collected from different places of india were found positive to pbnv in direct antigen coating-enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (dac-elisa). pbnv infected brinjal plants showed mosaic mottling of leaves with leaf distortion, longitudinal streaks on the stem and necrotic rings on leaves and fruits. early infection led to severe stunting and abnormal fruiting. biological and molecular characterization of pbnv-brinjal isolates were compared with other isolates and results are discussed. for identification of virus causing mosaic symptoms on soybean various host plants were tested. plants species belonging to the different families viz. caricaceae, graminae, leguminosae, malvaceae and solanaceae were tested. the virus produced symptoms on diagnostic plant species like chenopodium album, c. quinoa, helianthus anus, phaseolus vulgaris and vigna ungiculata. among tested families the leguminosae that were the host of virus included arachis hypogea, the virus causing mosaic symptoms in soybean is inactivated between and °c and between dilution of - to - . all the inoculated plants of assay host showed the symptoms at °c but not at °c. similarly local lesions produced at - but not at - . the virus in crude sap was infectious up to h but not at h at room temperature. however, the percentage infectivity decreased progressively as the aging of the sap was increased at room temperature. on the basis of reactions on diagnostic hosts pvp- identification and characterization of potyvirus infected chilli (capsicul annum l the virus under study caused mild mosaic and severe mottling symptom in leaves of infected plants. the dilution end point (dep) of the virus was found to be - to - , longevity in vitro (liv) - days at room temperature ( °c), thermal inactivation point (tip) - °c. electron microscopy of purified virus preparation revealed the presence of flexuous particle of size nm long and nm in width with characteristic cytoplasmic inclusions: pinwheels and scrolls. the virus was transmitted by sap and by aphid myzus persicae. the host range study revealed that the host species were restricted to family chenopodiaceae and solanaceae. on the basis of above characteristic, the virus under study was identified as potyvirus associated with mild mosaic and severe mottling symptom in capsicum. phytoplasma causing grassy shoot disease and sugarcane yellow leaf viruses are important pathogens of sugarcane. these pathogens are causing severe losses in sugarcane productivity. with a view to producing virus and phytoplasma free planting material of sugarcane, experiments were undertaken using infected varieties of sugarcane growing at the farms of sugarcane research institute. apical meristems measuring about mm in length, were dissected out, surface sterilized and cultured on agar gelled murashige and skoog's (ms) medium containing growth regulators for shoot induction. the established shoot cultures were multiplied through repeated subcultures on fresh media at - days interval. elimination of gsd and scylv was confirmed through molecular analysis of regenerated plants using specific primers of scylv and gsd. results revealed that apical meristem culture technique is effective in eliminating the pathogens like scylv and phytoplasma (gsd) from the infected clones. this is probably the first report on elimination of grassy shoot disease in sugarcane through meristem culture. papaya ringspot virus (prsv), which causes the most widespread and devastating disease in papaya, isolates originating from different geographical regions in south india were collected and maintained on natural host papaya. the entire coat protein (cp) gene of papaya ringspot virus-p biotype (prsv-p) was amplified by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr). the amplicon was inserted into pgem-t vector by t-a cloning method, sequenced and sub cloned into a bacterial expression vector prset-a using directional cloning strategy. the prsv coat protein was over expressed as fusion protein in e. coli. sds-page gel revealed that cp expressed as a * kda protein. the recombinant coat protein (rcp) fused with his-tag was purified from e. coli using ni-nta resin. the antigenicity of the fusion protein was determined by western blot analysis using antibodies raised against purified prsv. the purified rcp was used as an antigen to produce high titer prsv specific polyclonal antiserum. the resulting antiserum was used to develop an immunocapture reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (ic-rt-pcr) assay and compared its sensitivity levels with elisa based assays for detection of prsv isolates. ic-rt-pcr was shown to be the most sensitive test followed by dot-blot immunobinding assay (dbia) and plate trapped elisa. key: cord- - m f eh authors: caspi, jonathan; amitai, gil; belenkiy, olga; pietrokovski, shmuel title: distribution of split dnae inteins in cyanobacteria date: - - journal: mol microbiol doi: . /j. - . . .x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: m f eh inteins are genetic elements found inside the coding regions of different host proteins and are translated in frame with them. the intein‐encoded protein region is removed by an autocatalytic protein‐splicing reaction that ligates the host protein flanks with a peptide bond. this reaction can also occur in trans with the intein and host protein split in two. after translation of the two genes, the two intein parts ligate their flanking protein parts to each other, producing the mature protein. naturally split inteins are only known in the dna polymerase iii alpha subunit (polc or dnae gene) of a few cyanobacteria. analysing the phylogenetic distribution and probable genetic propagation mode of these split inteins, we conclude that they are genetically fixed in several large cyanobacterial lineages. to test our hypothesis, we sequenced parts of the dnae genes from five diverse cyanobacteria and found all species to have the same type of split intein. our results suggest the occurrence of a genetic rearrangement in the ancestor of a large division of cyanobacteria. this event fixed the dnae gene in a unique two‐genes one‐protein configuration in the progenitor of many cyanobacteria. our hypothesis, findings and the cloning procedure that we established allow the identification and acquisition of many naturally split inteins. having a large and diverse repertoire of these unique inteins will enable studies of their distinct activity and enhance their use in biotechnology. inteins are genetic elements present in protein coding regions. all the element codes for a protein that is translated together with the coding region of its host gene. the intein protein is removed from the host protein by a pro-tein-splicing reaction that joins the intein flanks with a peptide bond. this reaction is autocatalytic, fully catalysed by the intein and the residue c-terminal to it, with no need for other proteins, atp or such molecules (paulus, ) . it is typically a cis intramolecular reaction but can also occur when the n-and c-terminal parts of the intein are split and encoded on separate protein chains, each with its own flank. a trans protein-splicing reaction then ligates the flanks of the two intein parts (shingledecker et al ., ; southworth et al ., ) . a split intein is naturally present in the dnae genes of a few cyanobacteria (gorbalenya, ; kaneko et al ., ; nakamura et al ., ) . inteins are active with various flanks, in heterologous organisms and in vitro . biochemical studies of the protein-splicing mechanism led to the use of typical and split inteins in diverse biotechnology applications (perler and adam, ; ozawa et al ., ; mootz and muir, ) . inteins are present in a variety of protein genes from diverse bacteria and archaea and in several eukaryotes. however, intein distribution is extremely sporadic. although inteins are widely distributed, present in the three domains of life, they are relatively rare, and about are currently known (perler, ) . moreover, their distribution is discontinuous and irregular, with even closely related species differing in intein presence at homologous integration sites (liu, ; pietrokovski, ) . consequently, intein presence is very difficult to predict. intein distribution is the result of two parallel processes. the primary process seems to be independent of gradual loss of intein elements from separate species during evolution (pietrokovski, ) . inteins are not known to contribute any advantage to their host genes or species and are believed to be selfish genetic elements (belfort et al ., ) . active selection against inteins seems to be relatively weak because of their apparent negligible disruption of their host genes, protein products and organisms. intein removal from the genome requires a precise dna excision event as they are inserted in highly conserved points of genes coding for essential proteins (derbyshire and belfort, ) . counteracting this slow extinction is horizontal transfer to specific integration points, e.g. homing (belfort and roberts, ) . most intein proteins include a homing endonuclease domain that can mediate insertion of their intein gene into homologous unoccupied intein integration points (gimble and thorner, ) . hence, homing activ-ity of inteins can reinsert their gene into integration sites that they were lost from. cyanobacteria are a large and diverse group of bacteria. they can be clustered by their s rrna sequences into seven monophyletic evolutionary groups (honda et al ., ) . although the exact relation between the groups is not fully certain, each group of species is highly likely to have diverged from a distinct species. the recent genome sequencing of various cyanobacteria prompted us to examine the distribution and origin of the cyanobacterial split dnae inteins. here, we show that split inteins of the dnae gene are common in several groups of cyanobacteria. this gene arrangement seems to be fixed in at least three large and probably related groups that include scores of known species. we cloned split inteins from five diverse species of these groups and thus show how to obtain split inteins from many different species. the distribution of these genes allows us to reconstruct their evolution. we discuss necessary steps in the transition from contiguous to split inteins and whether this transition is likely to be common. we first screened for the presence of split inteins by database searches. dna polymerase iii alpha subunit (polc or dnae protein) was found to be encoded on two genes in several cyanobacteria -synechocystis species pcc (ssp pcc ) (kaneko et al ., ) , synechococcus species pcc (ssp pcc ) (yu et al ., ) , nostoc species pcc (nsp pcc , previously called anabaena species pcc ) (kaneko et al ., ) , nostoc punctiforme (npu) (meeks et al ., ) , therrmosynechococcus elongatus bp- (tel) (nakamura et al ., ) and trichodesmium erythraeum (ter, http:// genome.jgi-psf.org/draft_microbes/trier/trier.home.html). the gene organization is identical in all cases. the dnae coding sequences are split in the same highly conserved point into two genes. the ¢ part of the dnae gene ( dnae ) is followed by a ¢ part of the split intein, and the dnae gene ¢ part ( dnae ) is preceded by a ¢ part of the split intein ( fig. ) . the ter dnae gene also includes other inteins and group ii introns (not shown). the mature dnae cyanobacterial dnae gene loci. each line shows the dnae gene locus or the loci of dnae and dnae split genes from one species, except for the top locus that is identical in all three listed species. gene protein-coding regions are shown as rectangles with an arrowhead at their ¢ ends. the dnae genes are shown in dark grey with the split intein parts in black. other homologous genes are indicated by similar patterns -there are only two such pairs, between nostoc species pcc and prochlorococcus marinus med , and nostoc species pcc and nostoc punctiforme . gene names or functions are indicated where known. the distance between the split dnae genes in each species is indicated where known. protein in each species is assumed to be ligated by the split intein in a trans protein-splicing reaction from the separately translated dnae and dnae proteins (wu et al ., ; perler, ) . dnae genes were also found in three other species of cyanobacteria, prochlorococcus marinus med (pma med ) and mit (pma mit ) (hess et al ., ) and synechococcus species wh (ssp wh , http://genome.jgi-psf.org/finished_microbes/ synw /synw .home.html). in all these species, the dnae genes are contiguous, having no inteins, and are flanked by the same genes. these genes thus appear in the same genomic context (fig. ) . corresponding parts of known split dnae genes are each flanked by different genes. thus, split dnae genes are in different genomic contexts (fig. ) . in addition to being integrated at the same point, the dnae split intein amino acid sequences are more similar to each other then to those of other inteins (fig. ) . the progenitor intein of all dnae split inteins was probably a typical, contiguous intein. at some time point, this intein and its dnae host gene were split by some genetic rearrangement event to form two genes (perler, ) . although all known split dnae genes underwent further genomic rearrangements, evidenced by their differing genomic contexts, they retained the split intein parts. this indicates the stability of the split intein organization in dynamic genomes. five of the six above-mentioned known split dnae genes are present in species from three of the seven distinct groups of cyanobacteria; thermosynechococcus elongatus bp- (previously named synechococcus elongatus toray) is not placed in any of the seven groups by s rrna analysis and is considered as part of an early diverged group of cyanobacteria (honda et al ., ) . cyanobacteria with known contiguous dnae genes are all from a fourth group, and there is no public data on cyanobacterial dnae genes from the other three defined groups ( fig. a) . split intein genes are extremely unlikely to be transferred by homing. not only do both intein genes need to be copied, but they have no endonuclease domains. thus, honda et al . ( ) . species with known dnae sequences are marked by filled bullets for dnae sequences split by inteins and by empty bullets for contiguous dnae sequences. underlined filled bullets denote split dnae inteins identified and sequenced in this work ( aphanizomenon , aphanothece , oscillatoria and thermosynechococcus vulcanus ). the relations shown between the groups are the most probable ones but are not as certain as the group definitions (honda et al ., ) . listed for each group are species with known dnae or dnae intein sequences or a representative species chosen from the groups of honda et al . ( ) . the listed aphanothece and oscillatoria species s rrna sequences were significantly most similar to each other ( / bootstrap value). they were closest to group species but could not be definitely clustered with it. centre. a dendogram calculated from conserved dnae polymerase protein regions spanning amino acids. the dendogram is rooted by the position of all cyanobacterial dnae protein regions within a larger dendogram of dnae proteins from various bacteria (not shown). right. a dendogram calculated from conserved split dnae intein sequences spanning amino acids (see fig. a ). the dendogram is rooted by the position of all split dnae inteins within a larger dendogram of various inteins (not shown). bootstrap confidence values for grouping of dnae proteins and split inteins (values at the root) are from the larger dendograms. bootstrap confidence values for dnae polymerase and intein dendograms calculated from trials. nodes below values of / were collapsed. therrmosynechococcus vulcanus sequences are not included in the analysis as only a small part upstream of its dnae intein was determined. nevertheless, the determined sequences of the intein and polymerase regions are very similar to t. elongatus bp- , and the two species are expected to cluster together. the distribution of known split dnae inteins is probably the result of regular vertical transmission. we hypothesized that, as split dnae inteins are present in species from three diverse cyanobacterial groups, they might be very common, or even invariably present, in other species from these groups and maybe also in other related groups ( fig. a) . to test our hypothesis, we set out to clone the dnae genes from diverse cyanobacteria. analysed species included aphanizomenon ovalisporum (aov), a freshwater cyanobacteria most similar by its s rrna sequence to nostoc species; microcystis species (vardi et al ., ) , a freshwater cyanobacteria belonging to group (related to ssp pcc and ssp pcc ); aphanothece halophytica (aha) and oscillatoria limnetica (oli), unicellular and filamentous, respectively, facultative anaerobic photoautotrophic cyanobacteria that are most similar by their s rrna sequences to group (not shown); and therrmosynechococcus vulcanus (tvu), a thermophilic cyanobacteria species closely related to t. elongatus bp- (nakamura et al ., ) . using sequential degenerate primer polymerase chain reaction (pcr) amplifications, we determined the sequences of conserved dnae gene regions flanking one side of the known split intein integration point. we then amplified the region of the insertion site by single primer linear amplification and terminal transferase tailing (rudi et al ., ) (fig. ) . the dnae genes of all five tested species were found to be split in two and have a split intein at the same point as the other known cyanobacterial split dnae inteins. we obtained complete sequences of the split inteins and the dnae flanks from four of the species (fig. a) . together with the previously publicly available sequences, there are now nine known complete split dnae intein sequences. the length of the n ¢ split intein parts is between and amino acids, with the longest being from ssp pcc and the shortest from aov. the length variability results from the c ¢ ends of these intein parts. in contrast, all eight known c ¢ split intein parts are or amino acids in length (fig. a) . the combined length of the aov split intein is amino acids, only three residues longer then the length of the shortest known intein, from the archaeon methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum (smith et al ., ) . none of the split inteins has an endonuclease domain, like % of known inteins (http://bioinfo.weizmann.ac.il/ ~ pietro/inteins). all nine split dnae inteins have the six conserved sequence motifs that define the intein proteinsplicing fold and active site (duan et al ., ; pietrokovski, ) . they are further conserved along their entire sequence, except for the c ¢ ends of the n ¢ parts, which differ from each other in sequence and length (fig. a) . the conserved minimal sequence regions of the n-and c-intein parts are those defined by computational and experimental analyses (pietrokovski, ; ghosh et al., ; mootz and muir, ) . split dnae inteins were found to be common in cyanobacteria. they are present in all examined dnae genes of species from three groups of cyanobacteria and an unassigned species (thermosynechococcus) and were probably fixed in them by one common event. we suggest that most, if not all, cyanobacteria originating from the last common ancestor of species with split dnae inteins also have this split intein. the apparent fixation of split dnae inteins in a subdivision of cyanobacteria contrasts with the discontinuous distribution of other inteins, including those present in cyanobacteria (table ) . split dnae intein presence is a taxonomic trait that could be used in classifying cyanobacteria. we suggest it to be an ancient, highly persistent and vertically transmitted trait that separates cyanobacteria into two separate fig. . split inteins primer-walking amplification strategy. sequence of a dnae , the dnae n¢ part, and its n¢ intein part are shown as boxes. amplification reactions are shown as lines beneath the sequence region amplified, with the primer regions shown as triangles. degenerate primers are shown as grey triangles, and specific primers are shown as black triangles. terminal transferase ¢ added tail is shown as a dotted line. the reaction order is from top to bottom. the first reaction amplified a region ¢ to the intein integration point using degenerate primers to two flanking conserved regions. the next reaction amplified the ¢ region of the previous reaction and a downstream region, using a specific ¢ primer and a degenerate ¢ primer. typically, two or three such reactions sufficed to determine the sequence up to the insertion site. to amplify the less conserved nintein region and its downstream ¢ untranslated region, a linear amplification using a single specific ¢ primer was followed by terminal transferase polycytosine tailing. products from this reaction were then reamplified by a specific internal ¢ primer and a polyguanosine primer. finally, the sequence was verified by amplifying from genomic dna the intein part with upstream and downstream regions using specific primers. the c-intein part of the dnae gene was cloned similarly with the amplification reactions proceeding in the reverse orientation -advancing from the dnae central region towards its ¢ end. clades. thermosynechococcus, classified by its s rrna gene as an early diverged genus of cyanobacteria (honda et al., ) , is found by the presence of a split dnae intein to be part of a larger assembly of cyanobacterial groups. this could be investigated further by analysing the now available complete genome of t. elongatus bp- (nakamura et al., ) . split cyanobacterial dnae genes are present in diverse loci, whereas all known cyanobacterial contiguous dnae genes appear in stable genomic positions. the original genomic rearrangement that split the dnae gene thus seems to have been followed by further genomic rearrangements. nostoc species pcc and related cyanobacteria undergo developmentally regulated genome rearrangements (golden et al., ; carrasco and golden, ) . these are species in which split dnae genes also occur. it is possible that some cyanobacteria are more tolerant to genome rearrangements. such events produce split genes that are reactivated by regulated rearrangements. one rearrangement may have split a. dnae (top) and dnae (bottom) intein parts. the start position of each intein is shown in their host proteins, except for the dnae sequences determined in this work where only the ¢ parts of the genes were determined. asterisks indicate stop codons. underlined regions are intein conserved sequence motifs (pietrokovski, ) . lower case sequence regions in the c¢ end of the dnae intein parts are not conserved in these sequences and should not be considered aligned. below the sequence alignment is a graphical representation of it (henikoff et al., ) a dnae gene in its intein region. however, the two dnae gene parts could reassemble at the protein level by their intein regions. there is no biological assay for intein activity. new intein genes can be identified by amplifying genes known to include inteins in some species from other related species (davis et al., ; fsihi et al., ; sander et al., ; saves et al., ; lazarevic, ) . however, all known inteins are randomly distributed, and only one case was found of closely related species with consistent intein distribution (sander et al., ) . usually only a few of the examined species were found to contain inteins. dnae split inteins seem to be an exception, being present in all cyanobacteria species that we examined that belong to certain well-defined groups. other species from these groups can thus serve as a reliable source of split inteins. the continuous distribution of dnae split inteins in cyanobacterial groups has theoretical and applied implications for intein studies. we can now obtain inteins that co-evolve with their host species. these inteins can be used to study the evolutionary change rate of inteins, for example to decide whether inteins are of ancient or recent origin (pietrokovski, ) . they could also be a valuable source in theoretical and experimental studies of proteinprotein interaction and intein catalytic activity (gorbalenya, ; martin et al., ) . from a practical aspect, our ability to obtain an apparently very large number of different dnae split inteins will be enhanced. for example, the pasteur culture collection of cyanobacteria (pcc) maintains about axenic strains, many belonging to the groups in which we believe dnae split inteins are fixed. of particular interest will be split inteins from species living in extreme conditions such as high temperature or salinity. the protein-splicing activity of these split inteins may depend on the conditions in which their host species are active. our hypothesis is that split inteins are very difficult to lose. this is based on the idea that split inteins cannot be lost by one, or even two, simple dna excision events. cyanobacterial dnae proteins are split by inteins in a highly conserved motif appearing in all known dnae proteins (fig. b ). this strongly suggests that the two split dnae host protein parts would have to be attached by a peptide bond at the intein integration point for the motif to adopt the fold, and have the activity, found in other dnae proteins. loss of one or both intein parts will leave the products of their gene flanks split with no mechanism to ligate. to lose the intein genes and retain a functional dnae gene requires parallel precise loss of the intein parts followed directly by precise fusion of their flanks into one gene; this is a highly unlikely event. an alternative method for removal of split intein genes is to acquire a surrogate gene to replace the product of the split genes. however, dnae is an essential and tightly regulated gene forming the core of the bacterial replicative dna polymerase. it interacts with four other protein subunits in the polymerase holoenzyme and with various cofactors during replication (kelman and o'donnell, ) . thus, a surrogate gene must be precisely adapted to the species to replace its dnae gene. there are more then known intein alleles, but only the cyanobacterial dnae intein allele is split. nevertheless, these split inteins are common in cyanobacteria. if split inteins are common, at least in one group of species, why is there only one known type (allele) of them? the rarity of split intein organization probably results from the difficulty in switching to a functional two genes and two prod- a. species include fully and almost fully sequenced cyanobacteria. +, intein is present; -, intein is absent; \, species does not have the orthologue of the intein host protein. ucts state from a single gene and a single product one. gene splitting would require acquiring a promoter and translation initiation signal for the downstream part of the split gene, adapting co-regulation for the two formed genes and evolving amino acid sequences to stabilize the two new ends of the intein parts. gene splitting of the intein might also require adaptation for trans-splicing and high-affinity interaction between the two intein parts. artificially created split inteins were found to have some affinity between their two parts and a low level of trans-splicing (shingledecker et al., ; southworth et al., ; mootz and muir, ) . thus, adapting the protein function of a newly split intein gene might be the minor difficulty compared with adapting proper transcription and translation control and protein stability. once all these adaptations were complete, the unidirectional ratchet nature of the intein-splitting process would ensure the evolutionary persistence of the gene organization. however, still unknown are what initial circumstances led to the selection of the individual cyanobacterium in which the intein splitting occurred. significant advantage/s likely to have accompanied this event to compensate for all necessary genetic adjustments are discussed above. analysed species sequence determination of the dnae split inteins was done in two steps for each part of the dnae gene. first, a conserved region flanking the n¢ or c¢ split intein part was amplified by degenerate primer pcrs. in some cases, a number of partially overlapping regions were amplified until the intein parts were approached. next, linear (single primer) amplifications were done towards each split intein part using specific primers, designed from the previously amplified regions. the ¢ (intein) ends of the single-stranded amplification products were tailed by a homo-oligomer using terminal transferase. the tailed products were then pcr amplified by a primer complementary to the homo-oligomer tail and a second specific primer, nested to the first specific primer (rudi et al., ) . this pcr amplification was repeated twice, and the products were cloned and sequenced or sequenced directly. to confirm the resulting sequence, the intein-containing region, together with its adjacent untranslated and dnae flanks, was amplified from genomic dna using specific primers and sequenced on both strands (fig. ) . pcr amplifications included ª ng of genomic dna, pmol of each specific primer and - pmol of each degenerate primer, nmol of dntp mix, . units of taq dna polymerase (sigma) and ml of ¥ taq polymerase buffer (sigma) in ml reaction volumes. linear amplifications were done in the same way except using ª ng of genomic dna and . pmol of one specific primer. amplification schedules and temperatures are detailed in supplementary material (table s ). primer sequences are listed in supplementary material (table s ) . the linear, single-stranded amplification products were purified using a pcr purification kit (qiagen), as recommended by the manufacturer. cytosine tailing was done in ml reactions with ml of the purified linear amplification products, pmol of dctp, units of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (tdt) (fermentas) and ml of ¥ tdt buffer (fermentas). reaction mixtures were incubated at ∞c for min and stopped by a min incubation at ∞c. pcr amplifications with the polyguanine primer (polyg) used ml of the tdt reaction products as template with all the other components as listed above. products were purified by a pcr purification kit (qiagen) and sent directly for sequencing. the confirmed sequence data have been submitted to the genbank database under accession numbers ay -ay and ay -ay . phylogenetic analysis was done using programs from the phylip package (felsenstein, ) , version . . trees were calculated using the seqboot, protdist and neighbor programs with bootstrap trials and default settings. homing endonucleases: keeping the house in order prokaryotic introns and inteins: a panoply of form and function two heterocystspecific dna rearrangements of nif operons in anabaena cylindrica and nostoc sp evidence of selection for protein introns in the recas of pathogenic mycobacteria lightning strikes twice -intron-intein coincidence crystal structure of pi-scei, a homing endonuclease with protein splicing activity phylip -phylogeny inference package, version . homing events in the gyra gene of some mycobacteria zinc inhibition of protein trans-splicing and identification of regions essential for splicing and association of a split intein homing of a dna endonuclease gene by meiotic gene conversion in saccharomyces cerevisiae different recombination site specificity of two developmentally regulated genome rearrangements non-canonical inteins automated construction and graphical presentation of protein blocks from unaligned sequences the photosynthetic apparatus of prochlorococcus: insights through comparative genomics detection of seven major evolutionary lineages in cyanobacteria based on the s rrna gene sequence analysis with new sequences of five marine synechococcus strains sequence analysis of the genome of the unicellular cyanobacterium synechocystis sp. strain pcc . ii. sequence determination of the entire genome and assignment of potential protein-coding regions complete genomic sequence of the filamentous nitrogen-fixing cyanobacterium anabaena sp. strain pcc dna polymerase iii holoenzyme: structure and function of a chromosomal replicating machine ribonucleotide reductase genes of bacillus prophages: a refuge to introns and intein coding sequences protein-splicing intein: genetic mobility, origin, and evolution characterization of a naturally occurring trans-splicing intein from synechocystis sp an overview of the genome of nostoc punctiforme, a multicellular, symbiotic cyanobacterium protein splicing triggered by a small molecule complete genome structure of the thermophilic cyanobacterium thermosynechococcus elongatus bp- split luciferase as an optical probe for detecting protein-protein interactions in mammalian cells based on protein splicing protein splicing and related forms of protein autoprocessing a natural example of protein transsplicing inbase: the intein database protein splicing and its applications modular organization of inteins and c-terminal autocatalytic domains intein spread and extinction in evolution restriction cutting independent method for cloning genomic dna segments outside the boundaries of known sequences inteins in mycobacterial gyra are a taxonomic character inteins invading mycobacterial reca proteins molecular dissection of the mycobacterium tuberculosis reca intein: design of a minimal intein and of a trans-splicing system involving two intein fragments complete genome sequence of methanobacterium thermoautotrophicum strain dh: functional analysis and comparative genomics control of protein splicing by intein fragment reassembly dinoflagellate-cyanobacterium communication may determine the composition of phytoplankton assemblage in a mesotrophic lake protein trans-splicing by a split intein encoded in a split dnae gene of synechocystis sp. pcc pgaas: a prokaryotic genome assembly assistant system we thank z. kelman the following material is available from http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/products/journals/ suppmat/mmi/mmi /mmi sm.htm table s . dna amplification conditions. table s . pcr primers. key: cord- -q sx dm authors: cacabelos, ramón title: pharmacogenomic biomarkers in neuropsychiatry: the path to personalized medicine in mental disorders date: journal: the handbook of neuropsychiatric biomarkers, endophenotypes and genes doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: q sx dm neuropsychiatric disorders and dementia represent a major cause of disability and high cost in developed societies. most disorders of the central nervous system (cns) share some common features, such as a genomic background in which hundreds of genes might be involved, genome-environment interactions, complex pathogenic pathways, poor therapeutic outcomes, and chronic disability. recent advances in genomic medicine can contribute to accelerate our understanding on the pathogenesis of cns disorders, improve diagnostic accuracy with the introduction of novel biomarkers, and personalize therapeutics with the incorporation of pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic procedures to drug development and clinical practice. the pharmacological treatment of cns disorders, in general, accounts for – % of direct costs, and less than – % of the patients are moderate responders to conventional drugs, some of which may cause important adverse drugs reactions (adrs). pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic factors may account for – % of drug variability in drug disposition and pharmacodynamics. approximately – % of cns drugs are metabolized via enzymes of the cyp gene superfamily; % of neuroleptics are major substrates of cyp a enzymes, % of cyp d , and % of cyp a ; % of antidepressants are major substrates of cyp a enzymes, % of cyp b , % of cyp c , % of cyp d , and % of cyp a ; % of benzodiazepines are major substrates of cyp c enzymes, % of cyp d , and % of cyp a . about – % of caucasians are carriers of defective cyp d polymorphic variants that alter the metabolism of many psychotropic agents. other genes participate in the efficacy and safety of psychotropic drugs. the incorporation of pharmacogenetic/ pharmacogenomic protocols to cns research and clinical practice can foster therapeutics optimization by helping to develop cost-effective pharmaceuticals and improving drug efficacy and safety. to achieve this goal several measures have to be taken, including: (a) educate physicians and the public on the use of genetic/ genomic screening in the daily clinical practice; (b) standardize genetic testing for major categories of drugs; (c) validate pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic procedures according to drug category and pathology; (d) regulate ethical, social, and economic issues; and (e) incorporate pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic procedures to both drugs in development and drugs in the market to optimize therapeutics. central nervous system (cns) disorders are the third problem of health in developed countries, representing - % of deaths, after cardiovascular disorders ( - %) and cancer ( - %) . approximately, million europeans suffer brain disorders. the total annual cost of brain disorders in europe is about € billion, with € billion of direct medical expenditures (€ billion, inpatients; € billion, outpatients; € billion, pharmacological treatment), € billion of indirect costs (lost workdays, productivity loss, permanent disability), and € billion of direct non-medical costs. mental disorders represent € billion ( % of the total cost, excluding dementia), followed by neurological diseases (€ billion, %). senile dementia is becoming a major problem of health in developed countries, and the primary cause of disability in the elderly. alzheimer's disease (ad) is the most frequent form of dementia ( - %), followed by vascular dementia ( - %) , and mixed dementia ( - %) . these prevalent forms of agerelated neurodegeneration affect more than million people at present, and probably more than million people will be at risk in the next - years worldwide. the prevalence of dementia increases exponentially from approximately % at - years of age to more than - % in people older than years. it is very likely that in those patients older than - years of age most cases of dementia are mixed in nature (degenerative + vascular), whereas pure ad cases are very rare after years of age. the average annual cost per person with dementia ranges from € , to , , depending upon disease stage and country, with a lifetime cost per patient of more than € , . in some countries, approximately % of the global costs of dementia (direct + indirect costs) are assumed by the patients and/or their families. about - % of the costs in dementia are attributed to pharmacological treatment, including anti-dementia drugs, psychotropics (antidepressants, neuroleptics, anxiolytics), and other drugs currently prescribed in the elderly (antiparkinsonians, anticonvulsants, vasoactive compounds, antiinfl ammatory drugs, etc). in addition, during the past years more than drugs have been partially or totally developed for ad, with the subsequent costs for the pharmaceutical industry, and only drugs with moderate-to-poor effi cacy and questionable cost-effectiveness have been approved in developed countries. [ ] [ ] [ ] the lack of accurate diagnostic markers for early prediction and an effective therapy of cns disorders are the two most important problems to effi ciently diagnose and halt disease progression. the pharmacological treatment of cns disorders, in general, accounts for - % of direct costs, and less than - % of the patients are moderate responders to conventional drugs, some of which may cause important adverse drugs reactions (adrs). in the case of dementia, less than % of the patients can benefi t from current drugs (donepezil, rivastigmine, galantamine, memantine), with doubtful cost-effectiveness. the pathogenic mechanisms of most cns disorders (e.g., psychosis, depression, anxiety, alzheimer's disease, parkinson's disease, huntington's disease, multiple sclerosis, etc) are poorly understood. this circumstance makes it diffi cult the implantation of a molecular intervention to neutralize causative factors. in fact, more than % of the , genes integrating the human genome are expressed in the cns at different periods of the life span, and only a few neurotransmitters (e.g., noradrenaline, dopamine, acetylcholine, gaba, histamine, and less than ten neuropeptides) are the actual targets of conventional psychopharmacology. common features in cns disorders include the following: (a) polygenic/ complex disorders in which genomic and environmental factors are involved; (b) deterioration of higher activities of the cns; (c) multifactorial dysfunctions in several brain circuits; and (d) accumulation of toxic proteins in the nervous tissue in cases of neurodegeneration. for instance, the neuropathological hallmark of alzheimer's disease (ad) (amyloid deposition in senile plaques, neurofi brillary tangle formation, and neuronal loss) is but the phenotypic expression of a pathogenic process in which more than genes and their products are potentially involved. drug metabolism, and the mechanisms underlying drug effi cacy and safety, are also genetically regulated complex traits in which hundreds of genes cooperatively participate. structural and functional genomics studies demonstrate that genomic factors, probably induced by environmental factors, cerebrovascular dysfunction, and epigenetic phenomena, might be responsible for pathogenic events leading to premature neuronal dysfunction and/or death. pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic factors may account for - % of drug variability in drug disposition and pharmacodynamics. about - % of caucasians are carriers of defective cyp d polymorphic variants that alter the metabolism of many psychotropic agents. the incorporation of pharmacogenetic/pharmacogenomic protocols to cns research and clinical practice can foster therapeutics optimization by helping to develop cost-effective pharmaceuticals and improving drug effi cacy and safety. [ ] [ ] [ ] extensive molecular genetics studies carried out in the past decades have demonstrated that most cns disorders are multifactorial, polygenic/complex disorders in which hundreds of genes distributed across the human genome might be involved (tables . - . ). , for example, genes have been associated with dementia (table . ), with schizophrenia (table . ), with depression (table . ), with anxiety, with stroke, with different types of ataxia, with epilepsiy, with meningioma, with glioblastoma, with astrocytoma, with parkinson's disease, and more than genes with cerebrovascular disorders. , many of these genetic associations could not be replicated in different settings and different populations due to many complex (methodological, technological) factors. , , furthermore, the same genomic defect can give rise to apparent diverse phenotypes, and different genomic defects can converge in an apparently common phenotype, this increasing the complexity of genomic studies (e.g., patient recruitment, pure controls, concomitant pathology, epigenetic factors, environmental factors). several candidate genes for schizophrenia may also be associated with bipolar disorder, including g , disc , nrg , rgs , ncam , dao, grm , grm , grin b, mlc , syngr , and slc a . genes associated with bipolar disorder include trpm ( q . ), gpr (xq ), citron ( q ), chp . ( p . ), gchi ( q - ), mlc ( q ), gabra ( q -q ), bcr ( q ), cux , flj ( q -q ), and napg ( p ). another paradigmatic example of heterogeneity and complexity is dementia, one of the most heterogeneous disorders of the cns. the genetic defects identifi ed in ad during the past years can be classifi ed into three main categories: (a) mendelian or mutational defects in genes directly linked to ad, including (i) mutations in the amyloid beta (aβ)(abp) precursor protein (app) gene ( q ); (ii) mutations in the presenilin (ps ) gene ( q . ); and (iii) mutations in the presenilin (ps ) gene ( q -q ) , , (table . ). (b) multiple polymorphic variants of risk characterized in more than different genes distributed across the human genome can increase neuronal vulnerability to premature death (table . ). among these genes of susceptibility, the apolipoprotein e (apoe) gene ( q . ) is the most prevalent as a risk factor for ad, especially in those subjects harbouring the apoe- allele, whereas carriers of the apoe- allele might be protected against dementia. apoe-related pathogenic mechanisms are also associated with brain aging and with the neuropathological hallmarks of ad. (c) diverse mutations located in mitochondrial dna (mtdna) through heteroplasmic transmission can infl uence aging and oxidative stress conditions, conferring phenotypic heterogeneity. , , it is also likely that defective functions of genes associated with longevity may infl uence premature neuronal survival, since neurons are potential pacemakers defi ning life span in mammals. all these genetic factors may interact in still unknown genetic networks leading to a cascade of pathogenic events characterized by abnormal protein processing and misfolding with subsequent accumulation of abnormal proteins (conformational changes), ubiquitin-proteasome system dysfunction, excitotoxic reactions, oxidative and nitrosative stress, mitochondrial injury, synaptic failure, altered metal homeostasis, dysfunction of axonal and dendritic transport, and chaperone misoperation , - ( fig. . ). these pathogenic events may exert an additive effect, converging in fi nal pathways leading to premature neuronal death. some of these mechanisms are common to several neurodegenerative disorders which differ depending upon the gene(s) affected and the involvement of specifi c genetic networks, together with cerebrovascular factors, epigenetic factors (dna methylation) and environmental conditions (nutrition, toxicity, social factors, etc). , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the higher the number of genes involved in ad pathogenesis, the earlier the onset of the disease, the faster its clinical course, and the poorer its therapeutic outcome. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] high throughput microarray gene expression profi ling is an effective approach for the identifi cation of candidate genes and associated molecular pathways implicated in a wide variety of biological processes or disease states. the cellular complexity of the cns (with different cell types) and synapses (with each of the neurons in the brain having around - synapses with a complex multiprotein structure integrated by different proteins) requires a very powerful technology for gene expression profi ling, which is still in the very early stages and is not devoid of technical obstacles and limitations. transcripts of , genes have been measured in different cns regions. each region possess its own unique transcriptome fi ngerprint that is independent of age, gender and energy intake. less than % of genes are affected by age, diet or gender, with most of these changes occurring between middle and old age. gender and energy restriction have robust infl uences on the hippocampal transcriptome of middle-aged animals. prominent functional groups of age-and energy-sensitive genes are those encoding proteins involved in dna damage responses, mitochondrial and proteasome functions, cell fate determination and synaptic vesicle traffi cking. the systematic transcriptome dataset provides a window into mechanisms of neuropathogenesis and cns vulnerability. with the advent of modern genomic technologies, new loci have been associated with different neuropsychiatric disorders, and novel pathogenic mechanisms have been postulated. cryptic chromosome imbalances are increasingly acknowledged as a cause for mental retardation and learning disability. with subtelomeric screening, nine chromosomal anomalies and submicroscopic deletions of pter, qter, pter, qter and qter have been identifi ed in patients with mental retardation. increased dna fragmentation was observed in non-gabaergic neurons in bipolar disorder, suggesting that non-gabaergic cell may be selectively vulnerable to oxidative stress and apoptosis in patients with bipolar disorder. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] with laser microdissection, rna amplifi cation, and array hybridization, expression of more than , genes was detected in ca and ca hippocampal neurons under normoxic conditions. the comparison of each region under normoxic and ischemic conditions revealed more than , ischemia-regulated genes for each individual cell type. microarray technology has helped to elucidate gene expression profi les and potential pathogenic mechanisms in many other cns disorders including schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, [ ] [ ] [ ] speech and language disorders, parkinson's disease, , huntington's disease, prion disease, drug addiction, , alcoholism, brain trauma, epilepsy, [ ] [ ] [ ] cockayne syndrome, rett syndrome, friedreich ataxia, neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, multiple sclerosis, amyotrophic lateral esclerosis, acute pneumococcal meningitis, and the role of lipids in brain injury, psychiatric disorders, and neurodegenerative diseases. [ ] [ ] [ ] interactions between genomic factors and environmental factors have been proposed as important contributors for brain neuropathology. in schizophrenia, neurodevelopmental disturbances, neurotoxins and perinatal infections, myelin-and olygodendrocytes abnormalities and synaptic dysfunctions have been suggested as pathophysiological factors. individual genotoxicants can induce distinct gene expression signatures. exposure of the brain to environmental agents during critical periods of neuronal development can alter neuronal viability and differentiation, global gene expression, stress and immune response, and signal transduction. the binomial genome-neurotoxicants effect can be documented in cases of drug abuse or alcohol dependence. functional gene expression differences between inbred alcohol-preferring and nonpreferring rats suggest the presence of powerful genomic infl uences on alcohol dependence. alcohol dependence and associated cognitive impairment may result from neuroadaptations to chronic alcohol consumption involving changes in expression of multiple genes. it has been suggested that cycles of alcohol intoxication/withdrawal, which may initially activate nuclear factor-kappa b (nf-κb), when repeated over years downregulate p (rela) mrna expression and nf-κb and p homodimer dna-binding. downregulation of the dominant p homodimer, a potent inhibitor of gene transcription apparently results in depression of κb regulated genes. alterations in expression of p homodimer/nf-κb regulated genes may contribute to neuroplastic adaptation underlying alcoholism. gene expression profi ling of the nucleus accumbens of cocaine abusers suggests a dysregulation of myelin. humans who abused cocaine, cannabis and/or phencyclidine share a decrease in transcription of calmodulin-related genes and increased transcription related to lipid/cholesterol and golgi/er function. another important issue in the pathogenesis and therapeutics of cns disorders is the role of micror-nas (mirnas). mirnas are small ( nucleotide), endogenous noncoding rna molecules that posttranscriptionally regulate expression of protein-coding genes. computational predictions estimate that the vertebrate genomes may contain up to , mirna genes. mirnas are generated from long primary transcripts that are processed in multiple steps to cytoplasmic nucleotide mature mirnas. the mature mirna is incorporated into the mirna-induced silencing complex (mirisc), which guides it to target sequences located in ′ utrs where by incomplete base-pairing induce mrna destabilization or translational repression of the target genes. an inventory of mirna expression profi les from regions of the mouse cns has been reported. this inventory of cns mirna profi les provides an important step toward further elucidation of mirna function and mirna-related gene regulatory networks in the mammalian cns. the introduction of novel procedures into an integral genomic medicine protocol for cns disorders is an imperative requirement in drug development and in the clinical practice to improve diagnostic accuracy and to optimize therapeutics. this kind of protocol should integrate the following components: (i) clinical history, (ii) laboratory tests, (iii) neuropsychological assessment, (iv) cardiovascular evaluation, (v) conventional x-ray technology, (vi) structural neuroimaging, (vii) functional neuroimaging, (viii) computerized brain electrophysiology, (ix) cerebrovascular evaluation, (x) structural genomics, (xi) functional genomics, (xii) pharmacogenetics, (xiii) pharmacogenomics, (ix) nutrigenetics, (x) nutrigenomics, (xi) bioinformatics for data management, and (xii) artifi cial intelligence procedures for diagnostic assignments and probabilistic therapeutic options (table . ). , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , all these procedures, under personalized strategies adapted to the complexity of each case, are essential to depict a clinical profi le based on specifi c biomarkers correlating with individual genomic profi les. functional genomics studies have demonstrated the infl uence of many genes on cns pathogenesis and phenotype expression (tables . - . ). taking ad as an example, it has been demonstrated that mutations in the app, ps , ps , and mapt genes give rise to wellcharacterized differential neuropathological and clinical phenotypes of dementia. the analysis of genotypephenotype correlations has also revealed that the presence of the apoe- allele in ad, in conjunction with other genes, infl uences disease onset, brain atrophy, cerebrovascular perfusion, blood pressure, β-amyloid deposition, apoe secretion, lipid metabolism, brain bioelectrical activity, cognition, apoptosis, and treatment outcome. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the characterization of phenotypic profi les according to age, cognitive performance (mmse and adas-cog score), serum apoe levels, serum lipid levels including cholesterol (cho), hdl-cho, ldl-cho, vldl-cho, and triglyceride (tg) levels, as well as serum nitric oxide (no), β-amyloid, and histamine levels, reveals sex-related differences in % of the biological parameters and almost no differences ( . %) when patients are classifi ed as apoe- (−) and apoe- (+) carriers, probably indicating that genderrelated factors may infl uence these parametric variables more powerfully than the presence or absence of the apoe- allele; in contrast, when patients are classifi ed according to their apoe genotype, dramatic differences emerge among apoe genotypes (> %), with a clear biological disadvantage in apoe- / carriers who exhibit (i) earlier age of onset, (ii) low apoe levels, (iii) high cho and ldl-cho levels, and (iv) low no, β-amyloid, and histamine levels in blood. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] these phenotypic differences are less pronounced when ad patients are classifi ed according to their ps ( . %) or ace genotypes ( . %), refl ecting a weak impact of ps -and ace-related genotypes on the phenotypic expression of biological markers in ad. ps related genotypes appear to infl uence age of onset, blood histamine levels and cerebrovascular hemodynamics, as refl ected by signifi cant changes in systolic (sv), diastolic (dv), and mean velocities (mv) in the left middle cerebral arteries (mca). ace-related phenotypes seem to be more infl uential than ps genotypes in defi ning biological phenotypes, such as age of onset, cognitive performance, hdl-cho levels, ace and no levels, and brain blood fl ow mv in mca. however, when apoe and ps genotypes are integrated in bigenic clusters and the resulting bigenic genotypes are differentiated according to their corresponding phenotypes, an almost logarithmic increased expression of differential phenotypes is observed ( . % variation), indicating the existence of a synergistic effect of the bigenic (apoe + ps ) cluster on the expression of biological markers, apparently unrelated to app/ps mutations, since none of the patients included in the sample were carriers of either app or ps mutations. , , these examples illustrate the potential additive effects of ad-related genes on the phenotypic expression of biological markers. furthermore, the analysis of genotype-phenotype correlations with a monogenic or bigenic approach documents a modest genotype-related variation in serum amyloid-β (abp) levels, suggesting that peripheral levels of abp are of relative value as predictors of disease-stage or as markers of disease progression and/ or treatment-related disease-modifying effects. , , the peripheral levels of abp in serum exhibit an apoe-dependent pattern according to which both apoe- (+) and apoe- (+) carriers tend to show higher abp levels than apoe- (−) or apoe- carriers , - ( fig. est concentration of serum histamine is systematically present in apoe- (+) and apoe- (+) carriers, and the highest levels of histamine are seen in apoe- (+) carriers ( fig. . ). central and peripheral histaminergic mechanisms may regulate cerebrovascular function in ad, which is signifi cantly altered in apoe- / carriers. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] these observations can lead to the conclusion that the simple quantifi cation of biochemical markers in fl uids or tissues of ad patients with the aim of identifying pathogenic mechanisms and/or monitoring therapeutic effects, when they are not accompanied by differential genotyping for sample homogenization, are of very poor value. differential patterns of apoe-, ps -, ps -, and trigenic (apoe + ps + ps ) cluster-related lymphocyte apoptosis have been detected in ad. fas receptor expression is signifi cantly increased in ad, especially in apoe- carriers where lymphocyte apoptosis is more relevant. , it has been demonstrated that brain activity slowing correlates with progressive gds staging in dementia , , [ ] [ ] [ ] (fig. . ). in the general population subjects harbouring the apoe- / genotype exhibit a premature slowing in brain mapping activity represented by increased slow delta and theta activities as compared with other apoe genotypes. in patients with ad, slow activity predominates in apoe- carriers with similar gds stage , , - ( fig. . ) . ad patients harbouring the apoe- / genotype also exhibit a dramatically different brain optical topography map refl ecting a genotype-specifi c differential pattern of neocortical oxygenation as well as a poorer activation of cortical neurons in response to somatosensory stimuli ( fig. . ). all these examples of genotype-phenotype correlations, as a gross approach to functional genomics, illustrate the importance of genotype-related differences in ad and their impact on phenotype expression. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , similar protocols are applied to schizophrenia, depression, anxiety and other neuropsychiatric disorders. most biological parameters, potentially modifi able by monogenic genotypes and/or polygenic cluster profi les, can be used in clinical trials for monitoring effi cacy outcomes. these parametric variables also show a genotypedependent profi le in different types of dementia (e.g., ad vs. vascular dementia). for instance, striking differences have been found between ad and vascular dementia in structural and functional genomics studies. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , our understanding of the pathophysiology of cns disorders has advanced dramatically in the last years, especially in terms of their molecular pathogenesis and genetics. drug treatment of cns disorders has also made remarkable strides, with the introduction of many new drugs for the treatment of schizophrenia, depression, anxiety, epilepsy, parkinson's disease, and alzheimer's disease, among many other quantitatively and qualita-tively important neuropsychiatric disorders. improvement in terms of clinical outcome, however, has fallen short of expectations, with up to one third of the patients continuing to experience clinical relapse or unacceptable medication-related side effects in spite of efforts to identify optimal treatment regimes with one or more drugs. potential reasons to explain this historical setback might be that: (a) the molecular pathology of most cns disorders is still poorly understood; (b) drug targets are inappropriate, not fi tting into the real etiology of the disease; (c) most treatments are symptomatic, but not anti-pathogenic; (d) the genetic component of most cns disorders is poorly defi ned; and (e) the understanding of genome-drug interactions is very limited. with the advent of recent knowledge on the human genome , and the identifi cation and characterization of many genes associated with cns disorders, , as well as novel data regarding cyp family genes and other genes whose enzymatic products are responsible for drug metabolism in the liver (e.g., nats, abcbs/ mdrs, tpmt), it has been convincingly postulated that the incorporation of pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic procedures ( fig. . ) in drug development might bring about substantial benefi ts in terms of therapeutics optimization in cns disorders and in many other complex disorders, assuming that genetic factors are determinant for both neuronal dysregulation (and/or neuronal death) , - and drug metabolism. [ ] [ ] [ ] fig. . effi cacy and safety issues associated with pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics (adapted from r. cacabelos , ) however, this fi eld is still in its infancy; and the incorporation of pharmacogenomic strategies to drug development and pharmacological screening in cns disorders is not an easy task. the natural course of technical events to achieve effi cient goals in pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics include the following steps: (a) genetic testing of mutant genes and/or polymorphic variants of risk; (b) genomic screening, and understanding of transcriptomic, proteomic, and metabolomic networks; (c) functional genomics studies and genotype-phenotype correlation analysis; and (d) pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics developments, addressing drug safety and effi cacy, respectively. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] with pharmacogenetics we can understand how genomic factors associated with genes encoding enzymes responsible for drug metabolism regulate pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics (mostly safety issues). [ ] [ ] [ ] with pharmacogenomics we can differentiate the specifi c disease-modifying effects of drugs (effi cacy issues) acting on pathogenic mechanisms directly linked to genes whose mutations determine the disease phenotype. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the capacity of drugs to reverse the effects of the activation of pathogenic cascades (phenotype expression) regulated by networking genes basically deals with effi cacy issues. at present, the terms pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics are often used interchangeably to refer to studies of the contribution of inheritance to variation in the drug response phenotype ; however, from historical and didactic reasons (until a more suitable and universal defi nition can be established) it would be preferable to maintain the term of pharmacogenetics for the discipline dealing with genetic factors associated with drug metabolism and safety issues, whereas pharmacogenomics would refer to the reciprocal infl uence of drugs and genomic factors on pathogenetic cascades and disease-associated gene expression (effi cacy issues). [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the application of these procedures to cns disorders is a very diffi cult task, since most neuropsychiatric diseases are complex disorders in which hundreds of genes might be involved , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] (tables . - . ). in addition, it is very unlikely that a single drug be able to reverse the multifactorial mechanisms associated with neuronal dysfunction in most cns processes with a complex phenotype affecting mood, personality, behaviour, cognition, and functioning. this heterogeneous clinical picture usually requires the utilization of different drugs administered simultaneously. this is particularly important in the elderly population. in fact, the average number of drugs taken by patients with dementia ranges from six to more than ten per day depending upon their physical and mental conditions. nursing home residents receive, on average, seven to eight medications each month, and more than % of residents have monthly drug regimes of nine or more medications, including (in descending order) analgesics, antipyretics, gastrointestinal agents, electrolytic and caloric preparations, central nervous system (cns) agents, anti-infective agents, and cardiovascular agents. in population-based studies more than % of patients older than years are moderate or chronic antidepressant users. polypharmacy, drug-drug interactions, adverse reactions, and non-compliance are substantial therapeutic problems in the pharmacological management of elderly patients, adding further complications and costs to the patients and their caregivers. in - , . - . % of elderly individuals received at least of potentially inappropriate medications in ten health maintenance organizations (hmos) of the usa. although drug effect is a complex phenotype that depends on many factors, it is estimated that genetics accounts for - % of variability in drug disposition and pharmacodynamics. under these circumstances, therapeutics optimization is a major goal in neuropsychiatric disorders and in the elderly population, and novel pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic procedures may help in this endeavour. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the pharmacogenomic outcome depends upon many different determinant factors including (i) genomic profi le (family history, ethnic background, disease-related genotype, pharmacogenetic genotype, pharmacogenomic genotype, nutrigenetic genotype, nutrigenomic genotype), (ii) disease phenotype (age at onset, disease severity, clinical symptoms), (iii) concomitant pathology, (iv) genotype-phenotype correlations, (v) nutritional conditions, (vi) age and gender, (vii) pharmacological profi le of the drugs, (viii) drug-drug interactions, (ix) gene expression profi le, (x) transcriptomic cascade, (xi) proteomic profi le, and (xii) metabolomic networking ( fig. . ) . the dissection and further integration of all these factors is of paramount importance for the assessment of the pharmacogenomic outcome in terms of safety and effi cacy (figs. . and . ). more than % of psychotropic drugs (table . ) are metabolized by enzymes known to be genetically variable, including: (a) esterases: butyrylcholinesterase, paraoxonase/arylesterase; (b) transferases: n-acetyltransferase, sulfotransferase, thiol methyltransferase, thiopurine methyltransferase, catechol-o-methyltransferase, glutathione-s-transferases, udp-glucuronosyltransferases, glucosyltransferase, histamine methyltransferase; (c) reductases: nadph: quinine oxidoreductase, glucose- -phosphate dehydrogenase; (d) oxidases: alcohol dehydrogenase, aldehydehydrogenase, monoamine oxidase b, catalase, superoxide dismutase, trimethylamine n-oxidase, dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase; and (e) cytochrome p enzymes, such as cyp a , cyp a , cyp c , cyp c , cyp c , cyp d , cyp e , cyp a (table . ) and many others. , polymorphic variants in these genes can induce alterations in drug metabolism modifying the effi cacy and safety of the prescribed drugs. drug metabolism includes phase i reactions (i.e., oxidation, reduction, hydrolysis) and phase ii conjugation reactions (i.e., acetylation, glucuronidation, sulfation, methylation). the principal enzymes with polymorphic variants involved in phase i reactions are the following: cyp a / / , cyp e , cyp d , cyp c , cyp c , cyp c , cyp b , cyp a , cyp b , cyp a / , epoxide hydrolase, esterases, nqo (nadph-quinone oxidoreductase), dpd (dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase), adh (alcohol dehydrogenase), and aldh (aldehyde dehydrogenase). major enzymes involved in phase ii reactions include the following: ugts (uridine ′-triphosphate glucuronosyl transferases), tpmt (thiopurine methyltransferase), comt (catechol-o-methyltransferase), hmt (histamine methyl-transferase), sts (sulfotransferases), gst-a (glutathion s-transferase a), gst-p, gst-t, gst-m, nat (n-acetyl transferase), nat , and others. polymorphisms in genes associated with phase ii metabolism enzymes, such as gstm , gstt , nat and tpmt are well understood, and information is also emerging on other gst polymorphisms and on polymorphisms in the udp-glucuronosyltransferases and sulfotransferases. the typical paradigm for the pharmacogenetics of phase i drug metabolism is represented by the cytochrome p- enzymes, a superfamily of microsomal nonsteroidal anti-infl ammatory drug drug-metabolizing enzymes. p enzymes comprise a superfamily of heme-thiolate proteins widely distributed in bacteria, fungi, plants and animals. the p enzymes are encoded in genes of the cyp superfamily (table . ) and act as terminal oxidases in multicomponent electron transfer chains which are called p containing monooxigenase systems. some of the enzymatic products of the cyp gene superfamily can share substrates, inhibitors and inducers whereas others are quite specifi c for their substrates and interacting drugs. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] there are more than p genes identifi ed in different species. saito et al provided a catalogue of variants among eight cyp genes, nine esterase genes, and two other genes in the japanese population. the microsomal, membrane-associated, p isoforms cyp a , cyp d , cyp c , cyp c , cyp e , and cyp a are responsible for the oxidative metabolism of more than % of marketed drugs. about - % of the psychotropic agents currently used for the treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders are metabolized via enzymes of the cyp family, especially cyp a , cyp b , cyp c / , cyp c , cyp d and cyp a (table . ). cyp a metabolizes more drug molecules than all other isoforms together. most of these polymorphisms exhibit geographic and ethnic differences. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] these differences infl uence drug metabolism in different ethnic groups in which drug dosage should be adjusted according to their enzymatic capacity, differentiating normal or extensive metabolizers (ems), poor metabolizers (pms) and ultrarapid metabolizers (ums). most drugs act as substrates, inhibitors or inducers of cyp enzymes. enzyme induction enables some xenobiotics to accelerate their own biotransformation (auto-induction) or the biotransformation and elimination of other drugs. a number of p enzymes in human liver are inducible. induction of the majority of p enzymes occurs by increase in the rate of gene transcription and involves ligand-activated transcription factors, aryl hydrocarbon receptor, constitutive androstane receptor (car), and pregnane x receptor (pxr). , in general, binding of the appropriate ligand to the receptor initiates the induction process that cascades through a dimerization of the receptors, their translocation to the nucleus and binding to specifi c regions in the promoters of cyps. cyps are also expressed in the cns, and a complete characterization of constitutive and induced cyps in brain is essential for understanding the role of these enzymes in neurobiological functions and in age-related and xenobiotic-induced neurotoxicity. assuming that the human genome contains about , - , genes, at the present time only . % of commercial drugs have been assigned to corresponding genes whose gene products might be involved in pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic activities of a given drug; and only % of the human genes have been assigned to a particular drug metabolic pathway. supposing a theoretical number of , chemicals in current use worldwide, and assuming that practically all human genes can interact with drugs taken by human beings, each gene in the human genome should be involved in the metabolism and/or biopharmacological effect of - drugs; however, assuming that most xenobiotic substances in contact with our organism can infl uence genomic function, it might be possible that for , , xenobiotics in daily contact with humans, an average of - xenobiotics have to be assigned to each one of the genes potentially involved in drug metabolism and/or xenobiotics processing. to fulfi l this task a single gene has to possess the capacity of metabolizing many different xenobiotic substances and at the same time many different genes have to cooperate in orchestrated networks to metabolize a particular drug or xenobiotic under sequential biotransformation steps (figs. . and . ). numerous chemicals increase the metabolic capability of organisms by their ability to activate genes encoding various xenochemical-metabolizing enzymes, such as cyps, transferases and transporters. many natural and artifi cial substances induce the hepatic cyp subfamilies in humans, and these inductions might lead to clinically important drug-drug interactions. some of the key cellular receptors that mediate such inductions have been recently identifi ed, including nuclear receptors, such as the constitutive androstane receptor (car, nr i ), the retinoid x receptor (rxr, nr b ), the pregnane x receptor (pxr, nr i ), and the vitamin d receptor (vdr, nr i ) and steroid receptors such as the glucocorticoid receptor (gr, nr c ). there is a wide promiscuity of these receptors in the induction of cyps in response to xenobiotics. indeed, this adaptive system acts as an effective network where receptors share partners, ligands, dna response elements and target genes, infl uencing their mutual relative expression. , the most important enzymes of the p cytochrome family in drug metabolism by decreasing order are cyp a , cyp d , cyp c , cyp c , and cyp a . [ ] [ ] [ ] , , the predominant allelic variants in the cyp a gene are cyp a * (leu his) and cyp a del. the cyp a * mutation inactivates the enzyme and is present in - % of caucasians. the cyp a del mutation results in no enzyme activity and is present in % of caucasians and % of asians. [ ] [ ] [ ] the most frequent mutations in the cyp c gene are cyp c * (arg cys), with reduced affi nity for p in - % of caucasians, and cyp c * (ile leu), with alterations in the specifi city for the substrate in - % of caucasians and - % of asians. [ ] [ ] [ ] the most prevalent polymorphic variants in the cyp c gene are cyp c * , with an aberrant splicing site resulting in enzyme inactivation in % of caucasians, - % of asians, % of africans, and - % of ethiopians and saoudians, and cyp c * , a premature stop codon resulting in an inactive enzyme present in - % of asians, and almost absent in caucasians. [ ] [ ] [ ] , the most important mutations in the cyp d gene are the following: cyp d * xn, cyp d * , cyp d * , cyp d * and cyp d * . [ ] [ ] [ ] , the cyp d * xn mutation gives rise to a gene duplication or multiplication resulting in an increased enzyme activity which appears in - % of the caucasian population, - % of asians, % of africans, and - % of ethiopians. the defective splicing caused by the cyp d * mutation inactivates the enzyme and is present in - % of caucasians. the deletion in cyp d * abolishes enzyme activity and shows a frequency of - % in caucasians, % in asians, % in africans, and - % in ethiopians. the polymorphism cyp d * causes pro ser and ser thr mutations with unstable enzyme activity in - % of caucasians, % of asians, % of africans, and - % of ethiopians. the cyp d * variant causes thr ile and arg cys substitutions which produce a reduced affi nity for substrates in % of asians, % of africans, and - % of ethiopians, and is practically absent in caucasians. [ ] [ ] [ ] , , the cyp d enzyme, encoded by a gene that maps on q . - . , catalyses the oxidative metabolism of more than clinically important and commonly prescribed drugs such as cholinesterase inhibitors, antidepressants, neuroleptics, opioids, some β-blockers, class i antiarrhythmics, analgesics and many other drug categories, acting as substrates, inhibitors or inducers with which most psychotropics may potentially interact (table . ), this leading to the outcome of adrs. [ ] [ ] [ ] , , the cyp d locus is highly polymorphic, with more than different cyp d alleles identifi ed in the general population showing defi cient (poor metabolizers, pm), normal (extensive metabolizers, em) or increased enzymatic activity (ultra-rapid metabolizers, um). , most individuals (> %) are ems; however, remarkable interethnic differences exist in the frequency of the pm and um phenotypes among different societies all over the world. [ ] [ ] [ ] , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] on the average, approximately . % of the world population belongs to the pm category. europeans ( . %), polynesians ( . %), and africans ( . %) exhibit the highest rate of pms, whereas orientals ( . %) show the lowest rate. the frequency of pms among middle eastern populations, asians, and americans is in the range of - %. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] cyp d gene duplications are relatively infrequent among northern europeans, but in east africa the frequency of alleles with duplication of cyp d is as high as %. the most frequent cyp d alleles in the european population are the following: cyp d * (wild-type) (normal), cyp d * ( c > t)(normal), cyp d * ( a > del)(inactive), cyp d * ( g > a)(inactive), cyp d * (gene deletion)(inactive), cyp d * ( t > del)(inactive), cyp d * ( a > c)(inac-tive), cyp d * ( g > t)(inactive), cyp d * ( - delaga)(partially active), cyp d * ( c > t)(partially active), cyp d * ( g > c) (inactive), cyp d * ( g > a)(inactive), cyp d * ( c > t)(partially active), and cyp d gene duplications (with increased or decreased enzymatic activity depending upon the alleles involved). [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] in the spanish population, where the mixture of ancestral cultures has occurred for centuries, the distribution of the cyp d genotypes differentiates major categories of cyp d -related metabolizer types: (i) extensive metabolizers (em)( * / * , * / * ); (ii) intermediate metabolizers (im)( * / * , * / * , * / * , * / * , * / * , * / * , * / * , * / * , * / * ); (iii) poor metabolizers (pm)( * / * , * / * ); and (iv) ultra-rapid metabolizers (um)( * xn/ * , * xn/ * , dupl). in this sample we have found . % ems, . % ims, . % pms, and . % ums. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the distribution of all major genotypes is the following: * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * / * , . %; * xn/ * , . %; * xn/ * , . %; and dupl, . %. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] in some instances, there is association of cyp d variants of risk with genes potentially involved in the pathogenesis of specifi c cns disorders. when comparing ad cases with controls, we observed that ems are more prevalent in ad ( * / * , . %; * / * , . %)(total ad-ems: . %) than in controls ( * / * , . %; * / * , %)(total c-ems: . %). in contrast, ims are more frequent in controls ( . %) than in ad ( . %), especially the * / * (c: . %; ad: . %) and * / * genotypes (c: . %; ad: . %). the frequency of pms was similar in ad ( . %) and controls ( . %), and ums were more frequent among ad cases ( . %) than in controls ( . %). , , , we have also investigated the association of cyp d genotypes with ad-related genes, such as app, mapt, apoe, ps , ps , a m, ace, agt, fos, and prnp variants. , , , no app or mapt mutations have been found in ad cases. homozygous apoe- / ( . %) and apoe- / ( . %) accumulate in ums, and apoe- / cases were also more frequent in pms ( . %) than in ems ( . %) or ims ( %). ps - / genotypes were more frequent in ems ( %), whereas ps- / genotypes were over-represented in ims ( . %) and ums ( %). the presence of the ps - / genotype was especially high in pms ( . %) and ums ( %). a mutation in the ps gene exon (ps e +) was markedly present in ums ( . %). about % of ums were a m-v i-a/a, and the a m-v i-g/g genotype was absent in pms and ums. the a m-i/i genotype was absent in ums, and % of ums were a m-i/d and ace-d/d. homozygous mutations in the fos gene (b/b) were only present in ums, as well. agt-t t cases were absent in pms, and the agt-m m genotype appeared in % of pms. likewise, the prnp-m m variant was present in % of pms and ums. , , , these association studies clearly show that in pms and ums there is an accumulation of ad-related polymorphic variants of risk which might be responsible for the defective therapeutic responses currently seen in these ad clusters. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] it appears that different cyp d variants, expressing ems, ims, pms, and ums, infl uence to some extent several biochemical parameters, liver function, and vascular hemodynamic parameters which might affect drug effi cacy and safety. blood glucose levels are found elevated in ems ( * / * vs. * / * , p < . ) and in some ims ( * / * vs. * xn/ * , p < . ), whereas other ims ( * / * vs. * / * , p < . ) tend to show lower levels of glucose compared with pms ( * / * ) or ums ( * xn/ * ) (table . ). the highest levels of total-cholesterol are detected in the ems with the cyp d * / * genotype (vs. * / * , * / * and * xn/ * , p < . ). the same pattern has been observed with regard to ldlcholesterol levels, which are signifi cantly higher in the em-* / * . in general, both total cholesterol levels and ldl-cholesterol levels are higher in ems (with a signifi cant difference between * / * and * / * ), intermediate levels are seen in ims, and much lower levels in pms and ums; and the opposite occurs with hdlcholesterol levels, which on average appear much lower in ems than in ims, pms, and ums, with the highest levels detected in * / * and * xn/ * (table . ). the levels of triglycerides are very variable among different cyp d polymorphisms, with the highest levels present in ims ( * / * vs. * / * and * xn/ * , p < . ). these data clearly indicate that lipid metabolism can be infl uenced by cyp d variants or that specifi c phenotypes determined by multiple lipid-related genomic clusters are necessary to confer the character of ems and ims. other possibility might be that some lipid metabolism genotypes interact with cyp d -related enzyme products leading to defi ne the pheno-genotype of pms and ums. no signifi cant changes in blood pressure values have been found among cyp d genotypes; however, important differences became apparent in brain cerebrovascular hemodynamics (table . ). in general terms, the best ( ) . ± . ( ) . ± . ( ldl-cholesterol levels, than in ims ( * / * , p < . ); and diastolic velocities (dv) also tend to be much lower in * / * and especially in pms ( * / * ) and ums ( * xn/ * ), whereas the best dv is measured in * / * ims. more striking are the results of both the pulsatility index (pi = (sv-dv)/mv) and resistance index (ri = (sv-dv)/sv), which are worse in ims and pms than in ems and ums (table . ). these data taken together seem to indicate that cyp d -related ad pms exhibit a poorer cerebrovascular function which might affect drug penetration in the brain with the consequent therapeutic implications. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] some conventional anti-dementia drugs (tacrine, donepezil, galantamine) are metabolized via cyp-related enzymes, especially cyp d , cyp a , and cyp a , and polymorphic variants of the cyp d gene can affect the liver metabolism, safety and effi cacy of some cholinesterase inhibitors. , in order to elucidate whether or not cyp d -related variants may infl uence transaminase activity, we have studied the association of got, gpt, and ggt activity with the most prevalent cyp d genotypes in ad (table . ). globally, ums and pms tend to show the highest got activity and ims the lowest. signifi cant differences appear among different im-related genotypes. the * / * genotype exhibited the lowest got activity with marked differences as compared to ums (p < . vs. * xn/ * ; p < . vs. * xn/ * ). gpt activity was signifi cantly higher in pms ( * / * ) than in ems ( * / * , p < . ) or ims ( * / * , * / * , p < . ). the lowest gpt activity was found in ems and ims. striking differences have been found in ggt activity between pms ( * / * ), which showed the highest levels, and ems ( * / * , p < . ; * / * , p < . ), ims ( * / * , p < . ), or ums ( * xn/ * , p < . ) ) ( table . ). interesting enough, the * / * genotype, with the lowest values of got and gpt, exhibited the second highest levels of ggt after * / * , probably indicating that cyp d -related enzymes differentially regulate drug metabolism and transaminase activity in the liver. these results are also clear in demonstrating the direct effect of cyp d variants on transaminase activity , , (table . ). ( ) . ± . ( ) . ± . ( ) intermediate metabolizers * / * . ± . ( , ) . ± . . ± . * / * . ± . ( , ) . ± . . ± . * / * . ± . ( , ) . ± . ( , ) . ± . ( no clinical trials have been performed to date to elucidate the infl uence of cyp d variants on the therapeutic outcome in ad in response to cholinesterase inhibitors or other anti-dementia drugs. to overcome this lack of pharmacogenetic information, we have performed the fi rst prospective study in ad patients who received a combination therapy with (a) an endogenous nucleotide and choline donor, cdp-choline ( mg/day), (b) a nootropic substance, piracetam ( , mg/day), (c) a vasoactive compound, , dimethyl β-( bromonicotinoyl-oxymethyl)- α-methoxyergoline (nicergoline) ( (fig. . ). among ems, ad patients harbouring the * / * genotype responded better than patients with the * / * genotype. the best responders among ims were the * / * , * / * and * / * genotypes, whereas the * / * , * / * , and * / * genotypes were poor responders. among pms and ums, the poorest responders were carriers of the * / * and * xn/ * genotypes, respectively. , , from all these data we can conclude the following: (i) the most frequent cyp d variants in the spanish population are the * / * ( . %), * / * ( . %), * / * ( . %), * / * ( . %) and * xn/ * ( . %), accounting for more than % of the population; (ii) the frequency of ems, ims, pms, and ums is about . %, . %, . %, and . %, respectively; (iii) ems are more prevalent in ad ( . %) than in controls ( . %); ims are more frequent in controls ( . %) fig. . cyp d -related therapeutic response to a multifactorial treatment in alzheimer's disease over a -year period (adapted from r. cacabelos , ).patients received a combina-tion therapy for year, and cognitive function (mmse score) was assessed at baseline (b) and after , , , , and months of treatment. than in ad ( . %), especially the * / * (c: . %; ad: . %) and * / * genotypes (c: . %; ad: . %); the frequency of pms is similar in ad ( . %) and controls ( . %); and ums are more frequent among ad cases ( . %) than in controls ( . %); (iv) there is an accumulation of ad-related genes of risk in pms and ums; (v) pms and ums tend to show higher transaminase activities than ems and ims; (vi) ems and ims are the best responders, and pms and ums are the worst responders to a combination therapy with cholinesterase inhibitors, neuroprotectants, and vasoactive substances; and (vii) the pharmacogenetic response in ad appears to be dependent upon the networking activity of genes involved in drug metabolism and genes involved in ad pathogenesis. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , taking into consideration the available data, it might be inferred that at least % of the ad population may exhibit an abnormal metabolism of cholinesterase inhibitors and/or other drugs which undergo oxidation via cyp d -related enzymes. approximately % of this population cluster would show an ultrarapid metabolism, requiring higher doses of cholinesterase inhibitors to reach a therapeutic threshold, whereas the other % of the cluster would exhibit a poor metabolism, displaying potential adverse events at low doses. if we take into account that approximately - % of therapeutic outcomes depend upon pharmacogenomic criteria (e.g., pathogenic mechanisms associated with ad-related genes), it can be postulated that pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic factors are responsible for - % of the therapeutic response (effi cacy) in ad patients treated with conventional drugs. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , of particular interest are the potential interactions of cholinesterase inhibitors with other drugs of current use in patients with ad, such as antidepressants, neuroleptics, antiarrhythmics, analgesics, and antiemetics which are metabolized by the cytochrome p cyp d enzyme. although most studies predict the safety of donepezil and galantamine, as the two principal cholinesterase inhibitors metabolized by cyp d -related enzymes, , no pharmacogenetic studies have been performed so far on an individual basis to personalize the treatment, and most studies reporting safety issues are the result of pooling together pharmacological and clinical information obtained with routine procedures. , [ ] [ ] [ ] in certain cases, genetic polymorphism in the expression of cyp d is not expected to affect the pharmacodynamics of some cholinesterase inhibitors because major meta-bolic pathways are glucuronidation, o-demethylation, n-demethylation, n-oxidation, and epimerization. however, excretion rates are substantially different in ems and pms. for instance, in ems, urinary metabolites resulting from o-demethylation of galantamine represent . % of the dose compared with . % in pms, which show correspondingly higher urinary excretion of unchanged galantamine and its n-oxide. therefore, still there are many unanswered questions regarding the metabolism of cholinesterase inhibitors and their interaction with other drugs (potentially leading to adrs) which require pharmacogenetic elucidation. it is also worth to mention that dose titration (a common practice in ad patients treated with cholinesterase inhibitors; e.g., tacrine, donepezil) is an unwise strategy, since approximately - % of drug failure or lack of therapeutic effi cacy (and/or adr manifestation) is not a matter of drug dosage but a problem of poor metabolizing capacity in pms. additionally, inappropriate drug use is one of the risk factors for adverse drug reactions (adrs) in the elderly. the prevalence of use of potentially inappropriate medications in patients older than years of age admitted to a general medical or geriatric ward ranges from % to %, and these numbers may double in ambulatory patients. overall, the most prevalent inappropriate drugs currently prescribed to the elderly are amiodarone, long-acting benzodiazepines and anticholinergic antispasmodics; however, the list of drugs with potential risk also include antidepressant, antihistaminics, nsaids, amphetamines, laxatives, clonidine, indomethacin, and several neuroleptics, most of which are processed via cyp d and cyp a enzymes. therefore, pre-treatment cyp screening might be of great help to rationalize and optimize therapeutics in the elderly, by avoiding medications of risk in pms and ums. there are substantial differences between individuals in the effects of psychotropic drugs in the treatment of neuropsychiatric disorders. pharmacogenetic studies of psychotropic drug response have focused on determining the relationship between variation in specifi c candidate genes and the positive and adverse effects of drug treatment. more than different genes are potentially involved in the metabolism of psychotropic drugs infl uencing pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics. of all genes affecting drug metabolism, effi cacy and safety, the cyp gene family is the most relevant since more than % of cns drugs are metabolized by cytochrome p enzymes. [ ] [ ] [ ] approximately, % of neuroleptics are major substrates of cyp a enzymes, % of cyp d , and % of cyp a ; % of antidepressants are major substrates of cyp a enzymes, % of cyp b , % of cyp c , % of cyp d , and % of cyp a ; % of benzodiazepines are major substrates of cyp c enzymes, % of cyp d , and % of cyp a (table . ). approximately, % of patients with resistant depression, % of patients non-responsive to neuroleptics, and - % of patients with paradoxical responses to benzodiazepines are carriers of mutant variants of the cyp d , cyp c and cyp a genes, falling within the categories of poor or ultra-rapid metabolizers. other genes infl uencing psychotropic drug activity include the following: abcb ( [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] (table . ) . historically, the vast majority of pharmacogenetic studies of cns disorders have been addressed to evaluate the impact of cytochrome p enzymes on drug metabolism. [ ] [ ] [ ] furthermore, conventional targets for psychotropic drugs were the neurotransmitters dopamine, serotonin, noradrenaline, gaba, ion channels, acetylcholine and their respective biosynthetic and catalyzing enzymes, receptors and transporters ; however, in the past few years many different genes have been associated with both pathogenesis and pharmacogenomics of neuropsychiatric disorders. some of these genes and their products constitute potential targets for future treatments. new developments in genomics, including whole genome genotyping approaches and comprehensive information on genomic variation across populations, coupled with large-scale clinical trials in which dna collection is routine, now provide the impetus for a next generation of pharmacogenetic studies and identifi cation of novel candidate drugs. [ ] [ ] [ ] cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (pdes) are a family of enzymes that degrade camp and cgmp. intracellular cyclic nucleotide levels increase in response to neurotransmitters and are down-regulated through hydrolysis catalyzed by pdes, which are therefore candidate therapeutic targets. camp is a second messenger involved in learning, memory, and mood, and cgmp modulates brain processes that are controlled by the nitric oxide (no)/cgmp pathway. the analysis of snps in genes of this superfamily revealed that polymorphisms in pde a and pde a are associated with major depressive disorder. in addition, remission on antidepressants was associated with polymorphisms in pde a and pde a. according to these results, it has been postulated that pde a (haplotype gaacc) has a role in the pathogenesis of major depression. another example is the purinergic receptor gene p rx( ), located in a major linkage hotspot for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder ( q - ), which has been associated with bipolar disorder, but nine functionally characterized variants of p rx( ) did not show association with schizophrenia. the possible role of a tag snp (the g/a polymorphism) of the gene encoding the cannabinoid receptor type (cnr ) has been investigated in schizophrenics treated with atypical antipsychotics. no difference in g/a polymorphism was observed between patients and control subjects, and no relation-ships were noted between this polymorphism and any clinical parameter considered as potential intermediate factor; however, the g allele was signifi cantly higher among non-responders vs. responsive patients, suggesting that the g allele of the cnr gene could be a pharmacogenetic rather than a vulnerability factor for schizophrenics. synaptic dysfunction is a potential pathogenic factor in schizophrenia. cholesterol is an essential component of myelin and has proved important for synapse formation and lipid raft function. it has been demonstrated that the antipsychotic drugs clozapine and haloperidol stimulate lipogenic gene expression in glioma cells in culture through activation of the sterol regulatory element-binding protein (srebp) transcription factors. recently, the action of chlorpromazine, haloperidol, clozapine, olanzapine, risperidone and ziprasidone on srebp and srebp-controlled gene expression (acetyl-coa acetyltransferase , acetoacetyl-coa thiolase, acat ; -hydroxy- -methylglutaryl-coa reductase, hmgcr; -hydroxy- -methylglutaryl-coa synthase , hmgcs ; fdps; sterol-c -desaturase like, sc dl; -dehydrocholesterol reductase, dhcr ; low density lipoprotein receptor, ldlr; fatty acid synthase; farsenyl diphosphate synthase, fasn; stearoyl-coa desaturase, delta- -desaturase, scd ) has been investigated in different cns human cell lines, demonstrating that antipsychotic-induced activation of lipogenesis is most prominent in glial cells and that this mechanism could be relevant for the therapeutic efficacy of some antipsychotic drugs. rgs (regulator of g-protein signaling ) modulates dopamine receptor signal transduction. functional variants of this gene (rgs -rs c/g) may infl uence susceptibility to extrapyramidal symptoms induced by antipsychotic drugs. this snp is located in the ′-regulatory region of the gene, and is known to infl uence rgs mrna levels and protein expression. furthermore, rgs (regulator of g protein signaling ) genotypes predict both the severity at baseline symptoms and relative responsiveness to antipsychotic medication. tardive dyskinesia is characterized by involuntary movements predominantly in the orofacial region and develops in approximately % of patients during long-term treatment with typical antipsychotics. polymorphic variants of cyp a , cyp d , and drd genes have been associated with tardive dyskinesia in schizophrenics. , in contrast, the haplotype t- b-glu of the endothelial nitric oxide synthase (nos ) gene (- t > c in the promoter region, -bp variable number of tandem repeats in intron , glu asp in exon ) might represent a protective haplotype against tardive dyskinesia after long-term antipsychotic treatment. the t c variant in the serotonin a receptor (htr a) and the ser gly variant in the dopamine d receptor (drd ) were associated with a risperidone response to exacerbated schizophrenia. the patients with t/t in the htr a gene show less clinical improvement than do those with t/c or c/c. the c allele is more frequent in responders. when combinations of both polymorphisms are considered, patients who have t/t in the htr a gene and encode ser/ser or ser/gly from drd gene have a higher propensity to non-responsiveness compared to other subjects, suggesting that the htr a t c variant could be a potential indicator of clinical improvement after risperidone treatment. there is a signifi cant relationship between a promoter region polymorphism in the serotonin transporter gene and antidepressant response, as well as for associations between candidate neurotransmitter receptor genes and second generation antipsychotic drug response. polymorphic variants of several serotonin receptor subtypes seem to be involved in the efficacy and symptomatic response of schizophrenic patients to atypical antipsychotics. for instance, the − c/g polymorphism of the htr a receptor gene is associated with negative symptom response to risperidone in schizophrenics. interaction between comt and notch genotypes may also predict the treatment response to typical neuroleptics in patients with schizophrenia. the effi cacy of iloperidone in patients with schizophrenia has been associated with the homozygous condition for the rs g/g genotype of the ciliary neurotrophic factor (cntf) gene. dopamine receptor interacting proteins (drips) are pivotally involved in regulating dopamine receptor signal transduction. two snps in the dopamine receptor interacting protein gene, nef , which encodes the drip, neurofi lament-medium (nf-m), were associated with early response (rs , rs ). a snp haplotype spanning nef was over-represented in early responders. since nef is primarily associated with dopamine d receptor function, it is likely that both genes cooperate in eliciting genotype-specifi c antipsychotic response. the improvement in the positive and negative syndrome scale (panss) positive subscore was found signifi cantly greater in patients homozygous for the a allele of the slc a (solute carrier family (noradrenaline transporter), member ) gene, and smaller in patients homozygous for the c- allele of the slc a gene, suggesting that these polymorphisms of the noradrenaline transporter gene are specifi cally involved in the variation of positive symptoms in schizophrenia. weight gain is a problem commonly found in patients treated with neuroleptics, tricyclic antidepressants, and some antiepileptics (e.g., valproic acid). the adipocyte-derived hormone, leptin, has been associated with body weight and energy homeostasis, and abnormal regulation of leptin could play a role in weight gain induced by antipsychotics. the leptin gene promoter variant g a was associated with clozapine-induced weight in chinese patients with chronic schizophrenia. likewise, studies in caucasians suggest that genetic vulnerability in the leptin gene (− g/a) and leptin receptor (q r) may predispose some individuals to excessive weight gain from increased exposure to olanzapine. , the development of selective type metabotropic glutamate receptor (mglu ) antagonists, such as -methyl- -(phenylethynyl)-pyridine (mpep) and -[( -methyl- , -thiazol- -yl)ethynyl]-pyridine (mtep), has demonstrated the potential involvement of these receptors in several cns disorders including depression, anxiety, epilepsy, parkinson's disease, drug addiction, and alcoholism. treatment with mpep and mtep can induce gene expression related to atp synthesis, hydrolase activity, and signaling pathways associated with mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk) in the frontal cortex, this constituting another potential therapeutic target in some neuropsychiatric disorders. a new marker (rs ) in the grik gene, which codes for the kainic acid-type glutamate receptor ka , has been associated with response to the antidepressant citalopram, suggesting that the glutamate system plays a role in modulating response to selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (ssris). glycogen synthase kinase- β (gsk b) activity is increased in the brain of patients with major depressive disorders. inhibition of gsk b is thought to be a key feature in the therapeutic mechanism of antidepressants. four polymorphisms of the gsk b gene [rs (− t > c); rs (ivs + a > g); rs (ivs + g > t); rs (ivs + t > a)] have been genotyped in chinese patients with major depression. gsk b tagt carriers showed poorer response to antidepressants. lithium has been used for over years as an effective prophylactic agent in bipolar disorder. response to lithium treatment seems to be, at least in part, genetically determined. it has been suggested that lithium exerts an effect on signal transduction pathways, such as the cyclic adenosine monophosphate (camp) pathway. association studies in patients with bipolar disorders revealed that creb - h snp (g/a change at q . -q ) and creb - h (t/c change) may be associated with bipolar disorder and lithium response. dna oligonucleotide microarrays have been used to evaluate gene expression in the substantia nigra of patients with parkinson's disease (pd). sporadic pd is characterized by progressive death of dopaminergic neurons within the substantia nigra, where cell death is not uniform. the lateral tier of the substantia nigra (snl) degenerates earlier and more severely than the more medial nigral component (snm). genes expressed more highly in the pd snl included the cell death gene, p effector related to pmp , the tnfr gene, tnfr superfamily, member , and the mitochondrial complex i gene, nadh dehydrogenase (ubiquinone) -beta subcomplex, , kda (ndufβ ). genes that were more highly expressed in pd snm included the dopamine cell signaling gene, cyclic adenosine monophosphate-regulated phosphoprotein, kda, the activated macrophage gene, stabilin , and two glutathione peroxidase (gpx) genes, gpx and gpx . this gene expression profi le reveals that there is increased expression of genes encoding pro-infl ammatory cytokines and subunits of the mitochondrial electron transport chain in glial cells, and that there is a decreased expression of several glutathione-related genes in the gnl, suggesting a molecular basis for pathoclisis. these fi ndings may contribute to open new therapeutic avenues in pd, where glial cells might represent potential targets to halt disease progression. pharmacological inhibition of cyclic-dependent kinase (cdk ) protects neurons under distinct stressful conditions. in ad and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis deregulation of cdk causes hyperphosphorylation of tau and neurofi lament proteins, respectively, leading to neuronal cell death. by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and matrix assisted laser desorption/ionisation-time of fl ight (maldi-tof)-mass spectrometry, several phosphoproteins that are modulated by cdk inhibitors have been identifi ed. these phosphoproteins include syndapin i which is involved in vesicle recycling, and dynein light intermediate chain which represents a regulatory subunit of the dynein protein complex, confi rming the role of cdk in synaptic signaling and axonal transport. other phosphoproteins detected are cofi lin and collapsing response mediator protein, involved in neuronal survival and/or neurite outgrowth. selective cdk inhibitors can also block mitochondrial translocation of pro-apoptotic cofi lin. phosphoproteome and transcriptome analysis of neurons indicate that cdk inhibitors promote both neuronal survival and neurite outgrowth. these compounds might represent novel therapeutic alternatives in neurodegenerative disorders. despite the promising results obtained with structural and functional genomic procedures to identify associations with disease pathogenesis and potential drug targets in cns disorders, it must be kept in mind that allelic mrna expression is affected by genetic and epigenetic events, both with the potential to modulate neurotransmitter tone in the cns. epigenetics is the study of how the environment can affect the genome of the individual during its development as well as the development of its descendants, all without changing the dna sequence, but inducing modifi cations in gene expression through dna methylation-demethylation or through modifi cation of histones by processes of methylation, deacetylation, and phosphorylation. cumulative experiences throughout life history interact with genetic predispositions to shape the individual's behaviour. epigenetic phenomena can not be neglected in the pathogenesis and pharmacogenomics of cns disorders. studies in cancer research have demonstrated the antineoplastic effects of the dna methylation inhibitor hydralazine and the histone deacetylase inhibitor valproic acid, of current use in epilepsy. novel effects of some pleiotropic drugs with activity on the cns have to be explored to understand in full their mechanisms of action and adjust their dosages for new indications. both hyper-and hypo-dna methylation changes of the regulatory regions play critical roles in defi ning the altered functionality of genes (mb-comt, maoa, dat , th, drd , drd , reln, bdnf) in major psychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. this complexity requires a multifactorial approach to overcome the hurdles that cns drug development faces at the present time. polymorphic variants in the apoe gene ( q . ) are associated with risk (apoe- allele) or protection (apoe- allele) for ad. , [ ] [ ] [ ] for many years, alterations in apoe and defects in the apoe gene have been associated with dysfunctions in lipid metabolism, cardiovascular disease, and atherosclerosis. during the past years an enormous amount of studies clearly documented the role of apoe- as a risk factor for ad, an the accumulation of the apoe- allele has been reported as a risk factor for other forms of dementia and cns disorders. , [ ] [ ] [ ] apoe- may infl uence ad pathology interacting with app metabolism and abp accumulation, enhancing hyperphosphorylation of tau protein and nft formation, reducing choline acetyltransferase activity, increasing oxidative processes, modifying infl ammation-related neuroimmunotrophic activity and glial activation, altering lipid metabolism, lipid transport and membrane biosynthesis in sprouting and synaptic remodelling, and inducing neuronal apoptosis. , [ ] [ ] [ ] different apoe genotypes confer specifi c phenotypic profi les to ad patients. some of these profi les may add risk or benefi t when the patients are treated with conventional drugs, and in many instances the clinical phenotype demands the administration of additional drugs which increase the complexity of therapeutic protocols. from studies designed to defi ne apoe-related ad phenotypes, , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , several confi rmed conclusions can be drawn: (i) the ageat-onset is - years earlier in approximately % of ad cases harbouring the apoe- / genotype; (ii) the serum levels of apoe are the lowest in apoe- / , intermediate in apoe- / and apoe- / , and highest in apoe- / and apoe- / ; (iii) serum cholesterol levels are higher in apoe- / than in the other genotypes; (iv) hdl-cholesterol levels tend to be lower in apoe- homozygotes than in apoe- allele carriers; (v) ldl-cholesterol levels are systematically higher in apoe- / than in any other genotype; (vi) triglyceride levels are signifi cantly lower in apoe- / ; (vii) nitric oxide levels are slightly lower in apoe- / ; (viii) serum abp levels do not differ between apoe- / and the other most frequent genotypes (apoe- / , apoe- / ); (ix) blood histamine levels are dramatically reduced in apoe- / as compared with the other genotypes; (x) brain atrophy is markedly increased in apoe- / > apoe- / > apoe- / ; (xi) brain mapping activity shows a signifi cant increase in slow wave activity in apoe- / from early stages of the disease (fig. . ) ; (xii) brain hemodynamics, as refl ected by reduced brain blood fl ow velocity and increase pulsatility and resistance indices, is signifi cantly worst in apoe- / (and in apoe- carriers, in general, as compared with apoe- carriers); (xiii) lymphocyte apoptosis is markedly enhanced in apoe- carriers; (xiv) cognitive deterioration is faster in apoe- / patients than in carriers of any other apoe genotype; (xv) occasionally, in approximately - % of the ad cases, the presence of some dementia-related metabolic dysfunctions (e.g., iron, folic acid, vitamin b defi ciencies) accumulate in apoe- carriers more than in apoe- carriers; (xvi) some behavioral disturbances (bizarre behaviors, psychotic symptoms), alterations in circadian rhythm patterns (e.g., sleep disorders), and mood disorders (anxiety, depression) are slightly more frequent in apoe- carriers; (xvii) aortic and systemic atherosclerosis is also more frequent in apoe- carriers; (xviii) liver metabolism and transaminase activity also differ in apoe- / with respect to other genotypes; (xix) blood pressure (hypertension) and other cardiovascular risk factors also accumulate in apoe- ; and (xx) apoe- / are the poorest responders to conventional drugs ( fig. . ). these major phenotypic features clearly illustrate the biological disadvantage of apoe- homozygotes and the potential consequences that these patients may experience when they receive pharmacological treatment. , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , fig. . apoe-related cognitive performance in patients with alzheimer's disease treated with a combination therapy for year (adapted from r. cacabelos , ). patients received a combination therapy for year, and cognitive function (mmse score) was assessed at baseline (b) and after , , , , and months of treatment. several studies indicate that the presence of the apoe- allele differentially affects the quality and size of drug responsiveness in ad patients treated with cholinergic enhancers, neuroprotective compounds or combination therapies; however, controversial results are frequently found due to methodological problems, study design, and patients recruitment in clinical trials. from these studies we can conclude the following: (i) multifactorial treatments combining neuroprotectants, endogenous nucleotides, nootropic agents, vasoactive substances, cholinesterase inhibitors, and nmda antagonists associated with metabolic supplementation on an individual basis adapted to the phenotype of the patient may be useful to improve cognition and slow-down disease progression in ad. (ii) in our personal experience the best results have been obtained combining (a) cdp-choline with piracetam and metabolic supplementation, (b) cdp-choline with piracetam and anapsos, (c) cdp-choline with piracetam and cholinesterase inhibitors (donepezil, rivastigmine), (d) cdp-choline with memantine, and (e) cdpcholine, piracetam and nicergoline. (iii) some of these combination therapies have proven to be effective, improving cognition during the fi rst months of treatment, and not showing apparent side-effects. (iv) the therapeutic response in ad seems to be genotypespecifi c under different pharmacogenomic conditions. (v) in monogenic-related studies, patients with the apoe- / and apoe- / genotypes are the best responders, and apoe- / carriers are the worst responders ( fig. . ). (vi) ps -and ps -related genotypes do not appear to infl uence the therapeutic response in ad as independent genomic entities; however, app, ps , and ps mutations may drastically modify the therapeutic response to conventional drugs. (vii) in trigenic-related studies the best responders are those patients carrying the -, -, -, and -genomic clusters. (viii) a genetic defect in the exon of the ps gene seems to exert a negative effect on cognition conferring ps + carriers in trigenic clusters the condition of poor responders to combination therapy. (ix) the worst responders in all genomic clusters are patients with the + genotype. (x) the apoe- / genotype seems to accelerate neurodegeneration anticipating the onset of the disease by - years; and, in general, apoe- / carriers show a faster disease progression and a poorer therapeutic response to all available treatments than any other polymorphic variant. (xi) pharmacogenomic studies using trigenic, tetragenic or polygenic clusters as a harmonization procedure to reduce genomic heterogeneity are very useful to widen the therapeutic scope of limited pharmacological resources. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , apoe infl uences liver function and cyp d -related enzymes probably via regulation of hepatic lipid metabolism. , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] it has been observed that apoe may infl uence liver function and drug metabolism by modifying hepatic steatosis and transaminase activity. there is a clear correlation between apoe-related tg levels and got, gpt, and ggt activities in ad. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] both plasma tg levels and transaminase activity are signifi cantly lower in ad patients harbouring the apoe- / genotype, probably indicating (a) that low tg levels protect against liver steatosis, and (b) that the presence of the apoe- allele infl uences tg levels, liver steatosis, and transaminase activity. consequently, it is very likely that apoe infl uences drug metabolism in the liver through different mechanisms, including interactions with enzymes such as transaminases and/ or cytochrome p -related enzymes encoded in genes of the cyp superfamily. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , when apoe and cyp d genotypes are integrated in bigenic clusters and the apoe + cyp d -related therapeutic response to a combination therapy is analyzed in ad patients after year of treatment, it becomes clear that the presence of the apoe- / genotype is able to convert pure cyp d * / * ems into full pms (fig. . ) , indicating the existence of a powerful infl uence of the apoe- homozygous genotype on the drug metabolizing capacity of pure cyp d -ems. , , , behavioral disturbances and mood disorders are intrinsic components of dementia associated with memory disorders. , [ ] [ ] [ ] the appearance of anxiety, depression, psychotic symptoms, verbal and physical aggressiveness, agitation, wandering and sleep disorders complicate the clinical picture of dementia and add important problems to the therapeutics of ad and the daily management of patients as well. under these conditions, psychotropic drugs (antidepressants, anxyolitics, hypnotics, and neuroleptics) are required, and most of these substances contribute to deteriorate cognition and psychomotor functions. apoe-related polymorphic variants have been associated with mood disorders , and panic disorder. gender, age, dementia severity, apoe- , and general medical health appear to infl uence the occurrence of individual neuropsychiatric symptoms in dementia, and medical comorbidity increases the risk of agitation, irritability, disinhibition, and aberrant motor behavior. a positive association between apoe- and neuropsychiatric symptoms and depressive symptoms in ad has been reported, especially in women. in other studies, no association of apoe- with behavioral dyscontrol (euphoria, disinhibition, aberrant motor behavior, and sleep and appetite disturbances), psychosis (delusions and hallucinations), mood (depression, anxiety, and apathy), and agitation (aggression and irritability) could be found. some authors did not fi nd association of apoe- with major depression in ad , or in patients with major depression in a community of older adults, but an apparent protective effect of apoe- on depressive symptoms was detected. others, in contrast, found that apoe- was associated with an earlier age-of-onset, but not cognitive functioning, in late-life depression. apoe−/− mice without human apoe or with apoe- , but not apoe- , show increased measures of anxiety. differences in anxiety-related behavior have been observed between apoe-defi cient c bl/ and wild type c bl/ mice, suggesting that apoe variants may affect emotional state. histamine h autoreceptor antagonists increase anxiety measures in wildtype, but not apoe−/−, mice, and apoe defi cient mice show higher sensitivity to the anxiety-reducing effects of the h receptor antagonist mepyramine than wildtype mice, suggesting a role of h -autoreceptormediated signaling in anxiety-like symptoms in this ad-related animal model. in humans, apoe- carriers with deep white matter hyperintensities in mri show association with depressive symptoms and vascular depression. . reduced caudate nucleus volumes and genetic determinants of homocysteine metabolism accumulate in patients with psychomotor slowing and cognitive defi cits, and older depressed subjects have persisting cognitive impairments associated with hippocampal volume reduction. , depressive symptoms are also associated with stroke and atherogenic lipid profi le. some multifactorial treatments addressing neuroprotection have shown to be effective in reducing anxiety progressively from the fi rst month to the month of treatment. the anxiety rate was declining from a baseline hrs-a score of . ± . to . ± . (p < . ) at month, . ± . (p < . ) at months, . ± . (p < . ) at months, . ± . (p < . ) at months, and . ± . (p < . ) at months of treatment (r = − . , a coef.: . , b coef.: − . ). similar striking results were found in depression, suggesting that improvement in mood conditions can contribute to stabilize cognitive function or that neuroprotection (with the consequent stabilization or improvement in mental performance) can enhance emotional equilibrium. , , , at baseline, all apoe variants showed similar anxiety and depression rates, except the apoe- / carriers who differed from the rest in a signifi cantly lower rates of anxiety and depression (figs. . and . ). remarkable changes in anxiety were found among different apoe genotypes (fig. . ) . practically, all apoe variants responded with a signifi cant diminution of anxiogenic symptoms, except patients with the apoe- / genotype who only showed a slight improvement. the best responders were apoe- / > apoe- / > apoe- / > apoe- / carriers (fig. . ) . the modest anxiolytic effect seen in apoe- / patients might be due to the very low anxiety rate observed at baseline. concerning depression, all apoe genotypes improved their depressive symptoms with treatment except those with the apoe- / genotype which worsen along the treatment period, especially after months (fig. . ). the best responders were patients with apoe- / > apoe- / > apoe- / > apoe- / , and the worst responders were patients harbouring the apoe- / genotype , , , (fig. . ) . the optimization of cns therapeutics requires the establishment of new postulates regarding (a) the costs of medicines, (b) the assessment of protocols for multifactorial treatment in chronic disorders, (c) the implementation of novel therapeutics addressing causative factors, and (d) the setting-up of pharmacogenetic/ pharmacogenomic strategies for drug development. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the cost of medicines is a very important issue in many countries because of (i) the growing of the aging population (> % disability), (ii) neuropsychiatric and demented patients (> % of the population) belong to an unproductive sector with low income, and (iii) the high cost of health care systems and new health technologies in developed countries. despite the effort of the pharmaceutical industry to demonstrate the benefi ts and cost-effectiveness of available drugs, the general impression in the medical community and in some governments is that some psychotropics and most anti-dementia drugs present in the market are not costeffective. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] conventional drugs for neuropsychi-atric disorders are relatively simple compounds with unreasonable prices. some new products are not superior to conventional antidepressants, neuroleptics, and anxiolytics. there is an urgent need to assess the costs of new trials with pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics strategies, and to implement pharmacogenetic procedures to predict drug-related adverse events. , , , cost-effectiveness analysis has been the most commonly applied framework for evaluating pharmacogenetics. pharmacogenetic testing is potentially relevant to large populations that incur in high costs. for instance, the most commonly drugs metabolized by cyp d account for million prescriptions and us$ . billion annually in expenditures in the us, which represent - % of total utilization and expenditures for outpatient prescription drugs. pharmacogenomics offer great potential to improve patients' health in a cost-effective manner; however, pharmacogenetics/pharmacogenomics will not be applied to all drugs available in the market, and careful evaluations should be done on a case-by-case basis prior to investing resources in r&d of pharmacogenomic-based therapeutics and making reimbursement decisions. in performing pharmacogenomic studies in cns disorders, it is necessary to rethink the therapeutic expectations of novel drugs, redesign the protocols for drug clinical trials, and incorporate biological markers as assessable parameters of effi cacy and prevention. in addition to the characterization of genomic profi les, phenotypic profi ling of responders and non-responders to conventional drugs is also important (and currently neglected). brain imaging techniques, computerized electrophysiology, and optical topography in combination with genotyping of polygenic clusters can help in the differentiation of responders and non-responders. the early identifi cation of predictive risks requires genomic screening and molecular diagnosis, and individualized preventive programs will only be achieved when pharmacogenomic/pharmacogenetic protocols are incorporated to the clinical armamentarium with powerful bioinformatics support. - , , . an important issue in ad therapeutics is that antidementia drugs should be effective in covering the clinical spectrum of dementia symptoms represented by memory defi cits, behavioural changes, and functional decline. it is diffi cult (or impossible) that a single drug be able to fulfi l this criteria. a potential solution to this problem is the implementation of cost-effective, multifactorial (combination) treatments integrating several drugs, taking into consideration that traditional neuroleptics and novel antipsychotics (and many other psychotropics) deteriorate both cognitive and psychomotor functions in the elderly and may also increase the risk of stroke. few studies with combination treatments have been reported and most of them are poorly designed. we have also to realize that the vast majority of dementia cases in people older than - % are of a mixed type, in which the cerebrovascular component associated with neurodegeneration can not be therapeutically neglected. in most cases of dementia, the multifactorial (combination) therapy appears to be the most effective strategy. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the combination of several drugs (neuroprotectants, vasoactive substances, acheis, metabolic supplementation) increases the direct costs (e.g., medication) by - %, but in turn, annual global costs are reduced by approximately - % and the average survival rate increases about % (from to years post-diagnosis). there are major concerns regarding the validity of clinical trials in patients with severe dementia. despite the questionable experience with memantine, simi-lar strategies have been used to demonstrate the utility of donepezil in severe ad. this kind of studies bears some important pitfalls, including (a) short duration (< year), (b) institutionalized patients, (c) patients receiving many different types of drugs, (d) non-evaluated drug-drug interactions, (e) side-effects (e.g., hallucinations, gastrointestinal disorders) that may require the administration of additional medication, (f) lack of biological parameters demonstrating actual benefi ts, and (e) no cost-effectiveness assessment, among many other possibilities of technical criticism. [ ] [ ] [ ] , some of these methodological (and costly) problems might be overcome with the introduction of pharmacogenetic/ pharmacogenomic strategies to identify good responders who might obtain some benefi t by taking expensive medications. major impact factors associated with drug effi cacy and safety include the following: (i) the mechanisms of action of drugs, (ii) drug-specifi c adverse reactions, (iii) drug-drug interactions, (iv) nutritional factors, (v) vascular factors, (vi) social factors, and (vii) genomic factors (nutrigenetics, nutrigenomics, pharmacogenetics, pharmacogenomics). among genomic factors, nutrigenetics/nutrigenomics and pharmacogenetics/pharmacogenomics account for more than % of effi cacy-safety outcomes in current therapeutics. [ ] [ ] [ ] , , , some authors consider that priority areas for pharmacogenetic research are to predict serious adverse reactions (adrs) and to establish variation in effi cacy. both requirements are necessary in cns disorders to cope with effi cacy and safety issues associated with either current cns drugs and new drugs. , since drug response is a complex trait, genome-wide approaches (oligonucleotide microarrays, proteomic profi ling) may provide new insights into drug metabolism and drug response. genome-wide family-based association studies, using single snps or haplotypes, can identify associations with genome-wide signifi cance. , to achieve a mature discipline of pharmacogenetics and pharmacogenomics in cns disorders and dementia it would be convenient to accelerate the following processes: (a) educate physicians and the public on the use of genetic/genomic screening in the daily clinical practice; (b) standardize genetic testing for major categories of drugs; (c) validate pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic procedures according to drug category and pathology; (d) regulate ethical, social, and economic issues; and (e) incorporate pharmacogenetic and pharmacogenomic procedures to both drugs in development and drugs in the market to optimize therapeutics. 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depressed subjects reduced hippocapal volumes and memory loss in patients with early-and late-onset depression vascular/risk and late-life depression in a korean community population measuring the value of pharmacogenomics assessing the cost-effectiveness of pharmacogenomics pharmacological treatment of neuropsychiatric symptoms of dementia. a review of the evidence memantine in moderate-to-severe alzheimer's disease donepezil in patients with severe alzheimer's disease: double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled study donepezil for severe alzheimer's disease priorities and standards in pharmacogenetic research genomic screening and replication using the same data set in familybased association testing pharm acogenomics and individualized drug therapy ethical considerations in the use of dna for the diagnosis of disease key: cord- - l mua authors: menotti-raymond, marilyn; o’brien, stephen j. title: the domestic cat, felis catus, as a model of hereditary and infectious disease date: journal: sourcebook of models for biomedical research doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: l mua the domestic cat, currently the most frequent of companion animals, has enjoyed a medical surveillance, as a nonprimate species, second only to the dog. with over hereditary disease pathologies reported in the cat, the clinical and physiological study of these feline hereditary diseases provides a strong comparative medicine opportunity for prevention, diagnostics, and treatment studies in a laboratory setting. causal mutations have been characterized in felid genes, with the largest representation from lysosomal storage enzyme disorders. corrective therapeutic strategies for several disorders have been proposed and examined in the cat, including enzyme replacement, heterologous bone marrow transplantation, and substrate reduction therapy. genomics tools developed in the cat, including the recent completion of the -fold whole genome sequence of the cat and genome browser, radiation hybrid map of integrated coding and microsatellite loci, a -cm genetic linkage map, arrayed bac libraries, and flow sorted chromosomes, are providing resources that are being utilized in mapping and characterization of genes of interest. a recent report of the mapping and characterization of a novel causative gene for feline spinal muscular atrophy marked the first identification of a disease gene purely from positional reasoning. with the development of genomic resources in the cat and the application of complementary comparative tools developed in other species, the domestic cat is emerging as a promising resource of phenotypically defined genetic variation of biomedical significance. additionally, the cat has provided several useful models for infectious disease. these include feline leukemia and feline sarcoma virus, feline coronavirus, and type c retroviruses that interact with cellular oncogenes to induce leukemia, lymphoma, and sarcoma. mankind has held a centuries-long fascination with the cat. the earliest arch eological records that have been linked to the domestication of felis catus date to approximately years ago from cyprus, with recent molecular genetic analyses in our laboratory suggesting a middle eastern origin for domestication (c. driscoll et al., unpublished observations) . currently the most numerous of companion animals, numbering close to million in households across the united states (http://www.appma.org/ press_industrytrends.asp), the cat enjoys a medical surveillance second only to the dog and humankind. in this chapter we review the promise of the cat as an important model for the advancement of human hereditary and infectious disease and the genomic tools that have been developed for the identification, and characterization of genes of interest. for many years we have sought to characterize genetic organization in the domestic cat and to develop genomic resources that establish f. catus as a useful animal model for human hereditary disease analogues, neoplasia, genetic factors associated with host response to infectious disease, and mammalian genome evolution. , to identify genes associated with inherited pathologies that mirror inherited human conditions and interesting pheno-types in the domestic cat, we have produced genetic maps of sufficient density to allow linkage or association-based mapping exercises. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the first genetic map of the cat, a physical map generated from a somatic-cell hybrid panel, demonstrated the cat's high level of conserved synteny with the human genome, which offered much promise for the future application of comparative genomic inference in felid mapping and association exercises. several radiation hybrid (rh) and genetic linkage (gl) maps have since been published. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , , although previous versions of the cat gene map, based on somatic cell hybrid and zoo fish analysis, , revealed considerable conservation of synteny with the human genome, these maps provided no knowledge of gene order or intrachromosomal genome rearrangement between the two species, information that is critical to applying comparative map inference to gene dis covery in gene-poor model systems. radiation hybrid (rh) mapping has emerged as a powerful tool for constructing moderate-to high-density gene maps in vertebrates by obviating the need to identify interspecific polymorphisms critical for the generation of genetic linkage maps. the most recent rh map of the cat includes markers: coding loci, selected markers derived from the cat x whole genome sequence targeted at breakpoints in conserved synteny between human and cat, and short tandem repeat (str) loci. the strategy used in developing the current rh map was to target gaps in the feline-human comparative map, and to provide more definition in breakpoints in regions of conserved synteny between cat and human. the markers cover the length of the feline autosomes and the x chromosome at an average spacing of one marker every . mb (megabase), with fairly uniform marker density. an enhanced comparative map demonstrates that the current map provides % and % comparative coverage of the human and canine genomes, respectively. ninety-six percent of the cat markers have identifi able orthologues in the canine and human genome sequences, providing a rich comparative tool, which is critical in linkage mapping exercises for the identification of genes controlling feline phenotypes. figure - presents a graphic display of each cat chromosome and blocks of conserved syntenic order with the human and canine genomes. one hundred and fifty-two cat-human and cat-dog homologous synteny blocks were identified. alignment of cat, dog, and human chromosomes demonstrated different patterns of chromosomal rearrangement with a marked increase in interchromosomal rearrangements relative to human in the canid lineage ( % of all rearrangements), as opposed to the more frequent intrachromosomal rearrangements in the felid lineage ( % of all rearrangements) since divergence from a common carnivore ancestor my ago. with an average spacing of marker every . mb in the feline euchromatic sequence, the map provided a solid framework for the chromosomal assignment of feline contigs and scaffolds during assembly of the cat genome assembly, and served as a comparative tool to aid in the identification of genes controlling feline phenotypes. as a complement to the rh map of the cat, a third generation linkage map of strs is currently nearing completion. the map has been generated in a large multigeneration domestic cat pedigree (n = informative meioses). previous first-and second-generation linkage maps of the cat were generated in a multigeneration interspecies pedigree generated between the domestic cat and the asian leopard cat, prionailurus bengalensis, to facilitate the mapping and integration of type i (coding) and type ii (polymorphic str) loci. the current map, which spans all autosomes with single linkage groups, has twice the str density of previous maps, providing a -cm resolution. there is also greatly expanded coverage of the x chromosome, with some str loci. marker order between the current generation rh and gl maps is highly concordant. approximately % of the strs are mapped in the most current rh map of the cat, which provides reference and integration with type i loci. whereas the third-generation linkage map is composed entirely of str loci, the sequence homology of extended genomic regions adjacent to the str loci in the cat x whole genome sequence, to the dog's homologous region, has enabled us to obtain identifiable orthologues in the canine and human genome sequences for over % of the strs. thus, practically every str acts as a "virtual" type locus, with both comparative anchoring and linkage map utility. combined with the cat rh map, these genomic tools provide us with the comparative reference to other mammalian genomes critical for linkage and association mapping. the domestic cat is one of mammalian species endorsed by the national human genome research institute (nhgri) human genome annotation committee for a "light" -fold whole genome sequence, largely to capture the pattern of genome variation and divergence that characterizes the mammalian radiations (http:// www.hgsc.bcm.tmc.edu/projects/bovine/, http://www.broad.mit. edu/mammals/). although light genome coverage provides limited sequence representation, (∼ %), one of the rationales for these light genome sequences included "enhancing opportunities for research on species providing human medical models." the -fold assembly of the domestic cat genome has recently been completed for a female abyssinian cat, "cinnamon," and a x whole genome sequencing effort is planned in the near future. a total of , , reads were assembled to , contigs, covering . gb with an n (i.e., half of the sequenced base pairs are in contigs ) as a reference set. for dna methylation sequencing, cells were collected at the first peak (t ) after synchronization. each clone included two replicates. dna was purified using a purelink genomic dna mini kit (invitrogen). libraries were made using the premium reduced representation bisulfite sequencing (rrbs) kit (diagenode) following the manufacturer's instruction. raw reads were tested for quality using fastqc and trimmed with trim galore. the trimmed reads were aligned to mm using bismark (krueger and andrews, ) . the cpg reports from bismark methylation extractor were then analyzed using methylkit (akalin et al., ) . we used default settings to discard bases that had coverage below x and/or more than . th percentile of coverage in each sample. differentially methylated regions (dmr) were identified using a tiling window of , bp and a step size of , bp comparing sp and lp group. clone# was excluded for dmr analysis because of the outlying clustering ( figure -figure supplement ). overdispersion correction with fisher's extract test was applied. p-value was adjusted with bh method. dmrs with fdr < . and methylation difference > % were considered as significant. genes with significant dmrs located either in the gene body or kb upstream of the transcription start site (tss) were considered as dmr-associated genes. principal component analysis (pca) was performed using methylkit. all sequencing was performed by the utsw mcdermott sequencing core facility. weighted gene co-expression network analysis was performed using wgcna package (langfelder and horvath, ) . only genes for which the maximum average rpkm value among six groups was greater than . rpkm were used. a soft-threshold power was automatically calculated to achieve approximate scale-free topology (r > . ). networks were constructed with blockwisemodules function with biweight midcorrelation (bicor). we used cortype = bicor, networktype = signed, tomtype = signed, tomdenom = mean, maxblocksize = , mergingthresh = . , mincorekme = . , minkmetostay = . , reassignthreshold = e- , deepsplit = , detectcutheight = . , minmodulesize = , power = . the modules were then determined using the dynamic tree-cutting algorithm. deep split of was used to split more aggressively the data and create more specific modules. spearman's rank correlation was used to compute module eigengene -covariates associations. gene set enrichment applied for module -period-correlated de genes was performed using a fisher's exact test in r with the following parameters: alternative = 'greater', conf.level = . . the ppi network was generated using string without textmining, and the minimum required interaction score was . (szklarczyk et al., ) . gene knockdown assay shrna sequences were cloned into plko. -trc vector (gift from david root, addgene plasmid # ) (moffat et al., ) . scramble shrna ( ' -cctaaggttaag tcgccctcg- ') was used as control. lentiviruses were produced using hek t cells as described previously (huang et al., ) . viruses were harvested twice after transfection, at and hr, to infect fibroblasts. forty-eight hours after first infection, cells were synchronized and loaded for lumi-cycle analysis. rna was extracted at the first peak after synchronization to check knockdown efficiency via qpcr. average of three reference genes (gapdh, hprt and ywhaz) served as internal control. see supplementary files and for shrna target sequences and primer sequences, respectively. the eif signaling pathway activator halofuginone (sigma-aldrich) was dissolved in dmso as mm stock and used at nm. tunicamycin (sigma-aldrich) was dissolved in dmso as mg/ml stock and used at mg/ml. cells were treated for hr and hr, respectively, before loading for lumicycle analysis. dnmt inhibitor sgi- (sigma-aldrich) was dissolved in dmso as mm stock and used at mm. zebularine (sigma-aldrich) was dissolved in water as mm stock and used at mm or mm. the parent culture was continuously treated for up to days and split when necessary. mefs and nih t cells were treated for days. methylkit: a comprehensive r package for the analysis of genome-wide dna methylation profiles effects of a novel dna methyltransferase inhibitor zebularine on human breast cancer cells the causes and consequences of genetic heterogeneity in cancer evolution advances in epigenetics link genetics to the environment and disease c-jun n-terminal kinase inhibitor sp modulates the period of mammalian circadian rhythms identification of diverse modulators of central and peripheral circadian clocks by high-throughput chemical screening a new class of quinoline-based dna hypomethylating agents reactivates tumor suppressor genes by blocking dna methyltransferase activity and inducing its degradation the diverse roles of dna methylation in mammalian development and disease a dna methylation reader complex that enhances gene transcription simple combinations of lineage-determining transcription factors prime cis-regulatory elements required for macrophage and b cell identities exploring expression data: identification and analysis of coexpressed genes crystal structure of the heterodimeric clock:bmal transcriptional activator complex biovenn -a web application for the comparison and visualization of biological lists using area-proportional venn diagrams epigenetic regulation of gene expression: how the genome integrates intrinsic and environmental signals functions of dna methylation: islands, start sites, gene bodies and beyond regulated dna methylation and the circadian clock: implications in cancer single-cell epigenomics: recording the past and predicting the future emergence of noise-induced oscillations in the central circadian pacemaker the circadian clock and pathology of the ageing brain bismark: a flexible aligner and methylation caller for bisulfite-seq applications wgcna: an r package for weighted correlation network analysis persistent cell-autonomous circadian oscillations in fibroblasts revealed by six-week single-cell imaging of per ::luc bioluminescence the sequence alignment/map format and samtools noise-driven cellular heterogeneity in circadian periodicity featurecounts: an efficient general purpose program for assigning sequence reads to genomic features cellular construction of a circadian clock: period determination in the suprachiasmatic nuclei multi-omic measurements of heterogeneity in hela cells across laboratories moderated estimation of fold change and dispersion for rna-seq data with deseq the dna methyltransferase family: a versatile toolkit for epigenetic regulation a lentiviral rnai library for human and mouse genes applied to an arrayed viral high-content screen central and peripheral circadian clocks in mammals circadian gene expression in individual fibroblasts: cell-autonomous and self-sustained oscillators pass time to daughter cells cytosine modifications exhibit circadian oscillations that are involved in epigenetic diversity and aging circadian oscillations of cytosine modification in humans contribute to epigenetic variability, aging, and complex disease the eif a kinase gcn modulates period and rhythmicity of the circadian clock by translational control of atf dna methylation of five core circadian genes jointly contributes to glucose metabolism: a gene-set analysis in monozygotic twins nature, nurture, or chance: stochastic gene expression and its consequences mtor signaling regulates central and peripheral circadian clock function noise in gene expression: origins, consequences, and control dnmt a and dnmt b associate with enhancers to regulate human epidermal stem cell homeostasis edger: a bioconductor package for differential expression analysis of digital gene expression data imagej : imagej for the next generation of scientific image data fiji: an open-source platform for biological-image analysis a central role for ubiquitination within a circadian clock protein modification code string v : protein-protein association networks with increased coverage, supporting functional discovery in genome-wide experimental datasets the genetics of mammalian circadian order and disorder: implications for physiology and disease chip-seq and rna-seq methods to study circadian control of transcription in mammals transcriptional architecture of the mammalian circadian clock trackmate: an open and extensible platform for single-particle tracking tophat: discovering splice junctions with rna-seq qqman: an r package for visualizing gwas results using q-q and manhattan plots dynamic dna methylation across diverse human cell lines and tissues individual neurons dissociated from rat suprachiasmatic nucleus express independently phased circadian firing rhythms bioluminescence imaging of individual fibroblasts reveals persistent, independently phased circadian rhythms of clock gene expression nrf regulates core and stabilizing circadian clock loops, coupling redox and timekeeping in mus musculus ggplot : elegant graphics for data analysis dplyr: a grammar of data manipulation dual specificity phosphotase , interacting with sapk, dephosphorylates sapk and inhibits sapk/jnk signal pathway in vivo tip regulates lipid metabolism in hepatocellular carcinoma by regulating srebp through the akt/mtor signaling pathway impact of cytosine methylation on dna binding specificities of human transcription factors period '-utr and microrna- regulate circadian rhythms by repressing period protein accumulation jnk regulates the photic response of the mammalian circadian clock zebularine inhibits the growth of hela cervical cancer cells via cell cycle arrest and caspase-dependent apoptosis this research was supported by the howard hughes medical institute. all bioinformatics analyses were carried out on stampede cluster of tacc at ut austin. the authors would like to thank all takahashi lab members, dr. carla b green, and dr. shin yamazaki for helpful discussions, and the mcdermott bioinformatics lab at ut southwestern medical center for their bioinformatics support. jst is an investigator in the howard hughes medical institute. immortalized mouse ear fibroblast cells from male mice carrying per ::lucsv bioluminescence reporter were maintained in dmem (corning) supplemented with % fetal bovine serum (fbs). to generate clonal cell lines, cells were diluted and seeded at a density of~ cells per -well plate with conditioned medium. each well was monitored on a daily basis to make sure only single colonies were picked. clonal cell lines were randomly selected and cultured continuously for generations ( days/generation) to verify stability of circadian period. primary mouse embryonic fibroblast (mef) cells carrying per ::lucsv bioluminescence reporter were isolated from . day mouse statistical analysis of single-cell imaging was performed with a python code as described previously (li et al., ) . student's t-test and two tailed f-test were performed in excel. p-values were adjusted using benjamini-hochberg (bh) method. two-way anova analysis with multiple comparisons via tukey test was performed using graphpad prism. heatmaps for single-cell imaging analysis and gene expression were generated using mev based on z-score. graphpad prism was used to generate heatmaps for t-test and f-test based on log transformed q-value. volcano plot was generated in r using ggplot (wickham, ) . venn diagrams were generated using biovenn (hulsen et al., ) . manhattan plots were generated in r using qqman (turner, ) . quadrant plots were generated using dplyr package in r. funding howard hughes medical institute the funders had no role in study design, data collection and interpretation, or the decision to submit the work for publication. key: cord- -zfh im authors: saxena, jyoti; rawat, shweta title: edible vaccines date: - - journal: advances in biotechnology doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zfh im in recent years edible vaccine emerged as a new concept developed by biotechnologists. edible vaccines are subunit vaccines where the selected genes are introduced into the plants and the transgenic plant is then induced to manufacture the encoded protein. foods under such application include potato, banana, lettuce, corn, soybean, rice, and legumes. they are easy to administer, easy to store and readily acceptable delivery system for different age group patients yet cost effective. edible vaccines present exciting possibilities for significantly reducing various diseases such as measles, hepatitis b, cholera, diarrhea, etc., mainly in developing countries. however, various technical and regulatory challenges need to overcome in the path of this emerging vaccine technology to make edible vaccine more efficient and applicable. this chapter attempts to discuss key aspects of edible vaccines like host plants, production, mechanism of action, advantages and limitations, applications, and different regulatory issues concerned to edible vaccines. vaccine is a biological preparation intended to produce immunity to a disease by stimulating the production of antibodies. dead or attenuated organisms or purified products derived from them are generally used to produce various vaccines. over the past decade, scientific advances in genetics, molecular biology, and plant biotechnology have improved the understanding of many infectious diseases and led to the development of vaccination programs. the most common method of administering vaccines is by injection but some are given by mouth or nasal spray. though immunization is the safest method to combat the diseases worldwide but there are many constraints regarding its mode of production, distribution, delivery, cost, and lack of enough research. hence it is desirable to look for an effectual and powerful yet cost effective, easy for storage and distribution yet safe method of immunization. it should also be readily acceptable to all sociocultural groups around the globe. research underway is dedicated to solving these problems by finding ways to produce edible vaccines in the form of transgenic plants which have been investigated as an alternative means to produce and deliver vaccine. edible vaccines are called by several alternative names such as food vaccines, oral vaccines, subunit vaccines, and green vaccines. they seem to be a viable alternative especially for the poor and developing countries. they have come up as great boon in medicinal science for which biotechnologists should be given all credit. the concept of edible vaccines lies in converting the edible food into potential vaccines to prevent infectious diseases. it involves introduction of selected desired genes into plants and then inducing these altered plants to manufacture the encoded proteins. it has also found application in prevention of autoimmune diseases, birth control, cancer therapy, etc. edible vaccines are currently being developed for a number of human and animal diseases. this new technology hopefully will contribute positively toward the global vaccine programs and have a dramatic impact on health care in developing countries. many people in developing countries do not have access to the vaccines they need, as the traditional vaccines are costly and require skilled medical people for administration and are less effective in inducing mucosal immune response. it was these needs which inspired hiatt et al. ( ) who attempted to produce antibodies in plants which could serve the purpose of passive immunization. the first report of edible vaccine (a surface protein from streptococcus) in tobacco, at . % of total leaf protein level, appeared in in the form of a patent application published under the international patent cooperation treaty. by conceiving the idea of edible vaccine dr. charles arntzen tried to realize it (arntzen ) . in , arntzen and coworkers introduced the concept of transgenic plants as a production and delivery system for subunit vaccines in which edible tissues of transgenic crop plants were used (mor et al. ) . they found that this concept could overcome the limitations of traditional vaccines, thereby triggering the research on edible vaccine. in s, streptococcus mutans surface protein antigen a was expressed for the first time in tobacco. the same group also pioneered the field with work on hepatitis b and heatlabile toxin, b subunit in tobacco plants and potato tubers. in the same year, the successful expression of hepatitis b surface antigen (hbsag) in tobacco plants was also achieved (mason et al. ) . to prove that plant-derived hbsag could stimulate mucosal immune responses via oral route, potato tubers were used as an expression system and were optimized to increase the accumulation of the protein in plant tubers (richter et al. ) . parallel to the evaluation of plant-derived hbsag, mason and arntzen explored plant expression of other vaccine candidates including the labile toxin b subunit (lt-b) of enterotoxigenic escherichia coli (etec) and the capsid protein of norwalk virus. the plant-derived proteins correctly assembled into functional oligomers that could elicit the expected immune responses when given orally to animals (mason et al. ). in a new era was opened in vaccine delivery when researchers supported by the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) have shown for the first time that an edible vaccine can safely generate significant immune responses in people. the report by collaborators from the university of maryland in baltimore, the boyce thompson institute for plant research in ithaca, n.y., and tulane university in new orleans appeared in the may issue of nature medicine. according to the then director of niaid ''edible vaccines offer exciting possibilities for significantly reducing the burden of diseases like hepatitis and diarrhea, particularly in the developing world where storing and administering vaccines are often major problems,'' mor et al. ( ) also discussed the rapid increase of research in the edible-vaccine field and pointed out that plants could be used to create multicomponent vaccines that can protect against several pathogens at once. this is an aspect of the edible-vaccine approach that further strengthens its impact. later, in sala and research group reported that proteins produced in these plants induced the mucosal immune response which was the main aim behind this concept. research into edible vaccine is still at a very early stage and scientists have a long way to go before it will become a major part of immunization program world wide. to date, many plant species have been used for vaccine production. the choice of the plant species is important. an edible, palatable plant is necessary if the vaccine is planned for raw consumption. in case of vaccine for animal use, the plant should preferentially be selected among those consumed as normal component of the animal's diet. some food vehicles are discussed below: the concept of edible vaccine got impetus after arntzen and coworkers expressed hbsag in tobacco. the first edible vaccine was produced in tobacco in in which . % recombinant protein (a surface protein from streptococcus) of the total soluble leaf proteins was found. it appeared in the form of a patent application published under the international patent cooperation treaty. transgenic tobacco is successfully engineered for the production of edible vaccines against hepatitis b antigen using 's' gene of hepatitis b virus (hbv). the optimum level of recombinant protein was obtained in leaves and seeds. since acute watery diarrhea is caused by enterotoxigenic e. coli and vibrio cholerae that colonize the small intestine and produce one or more enterotoxin, an attempt was made toward the production of edible vaccine by expressing heat-labile enterotoxin (lt-b) in tobacco. besides, antibodies against dental caries, expressed in tobacco, are already in preclinical human trials. italian researchers have now developed an immunologically active, cost-efficient vaccine against human papilloma viruses (hpv). hpv are the causative agents for cervical cancer, and are also involved in skin, head, and neck tumors. cervical cancer is one of the main causes of cancer-related deaths. genetically modified potatoes are also a viable option and seem to be the desired vector. many of the first edible vaccines were synthesized in potato plants. in serum antibodies at some point after immunization, and of the ( %) also showed fourfold mount in intestinal antibodies. the potatoes were well tolerated and no one experienced serious adverse side effects. vaccine development has successfully tested a potato-based vaccine to combat the norwalk virus, which is spread by contaminated food and water. the virus causes severe abdominal pain and diarrhea. a research team led by william langridge of the loma linda university in california has reported that transgenic potatoes engineered with a cholera antigen, ctb can effectively immunize mice. mice fed transgenic potatoes produce cholera-specific antibodies in their serum and intestine; iga and igg antibodies reach their highest levels after the fourth feeding. in yet another experiment genetically engineered potatoes containing a hepatitis b vaccine have successfully boosted immunity in their first human trials. attempts have also been made to boil the potatoes as raw potatoes are not very appetizing but unfortunately the cooking process breaks down about % of the proteins in the vaccine. while some proteins are more tolerant to heat, for most proteins it will be necessary to amplify the amount of protein in the engineered foods if they are to be cooked before consumption. tomatoes are an excellent candidate because they are easy to manipulate genetically and new crops can be grown quickly. moreover, they are palatable and can be eaten raw. while tomatoes do not grow well in the regions in which the edible vaccines are most needed, the engineered tomatoes can be dried or made into a paste to facilitate their delivery. the anti-malaria edible vaccines in different transgenic tomato plants expressing antigenic type(s) have been proposed by chowdhury and bagasara in . they hypothesized that immunizing individuals against - antigens and against each stage of the life cycle of the multistage parasites would be an efficient, inexpensive and safe way of vaccination. tomatoes with varying sizes, shapes, and colors carrying different antigens would make the vaccines easily identifiable by lay individuals. tomatoes serve as an ideal candidate for the hiv antigen because they unlike other transgenic plants that carry the protein, are edible and immune to any thermal process, which help to retain their healing capabilities. scientists have claimed that tomatoes could be used as a vaccine against alzheimer's disease. the work is in progress to genetically modify the fruit to create an edible vaccine that fires up the immune system to tackle the disease by attacking the toxic beta-amyloid protein that destroys vital connections between brain cells, causing alzheimer's. researchers have engineered tomato plants (lycopersicon esculentum mill var. uc b) to express a gene for the glycoprotein (g-protein), that coats the outer surface of the rabies virus. the recombinant constructs contained the gprotein gene from the era strain of rabies virus, including the signal peptide, under the control of the s promoter of cauliflower mosaic virus (camv). a common fruit-the banana-is currently being considered as a potential vehicle for vaccines against serious as well as too common diseases. the advantage of bananas is that they can be eaten raw as compared to potatoes or rice that need to be cooked and can also be consumed in a pure form. furthermore, children tend to like banana and the plants grow well in the tropical areas in which the vaccines are needed the most. hence, the research is leaning toward the use of banana as the vector since a large number of third-world countries, who would benefit the most from edible vaccines have tropical climates. on the negative side, a new crop of banana plants takes about months to bear fruit. after fruiting, the plants are cut down and a new crop of vaccine-bearing plants must be planted. researchers have also developed bananas that deliver a vaccine for hbv. the banana vaccine is expected to cost just cents a dose, as compared to the $ for the currently available injectable vaccine. maize has also been used as a vector for various edible vaccines. egyptian scientists have genetically engineered the maize plants to produce a protein known as hbsag which elicits an immune response against the hepatitis b virus and could be used as a vaccine. if human trials are successful more than billion people infected with hepatitis b, and about million of these at high risk of serious illness and death from liver damage and liver cancer would be benefited. researches are in offing at iowa state university with the aim to allow pigs and humans to get a flu vaccination simply by eating corn or corn products. it is quite likely that corn vaccine would work in humans when they eat corn or even corn flakes, corn chips, tortillas, or anything that contains corn. genetically modified maize could provide protection to chickens against a highly contagious and fatal viral disease affecting most species of birds. mexican researcher octavio guerrero-andrade and his colleagues at the centre for research and advanced studies in guanajuato, central mexico, genetically modified maize to create an edible vaccine against newcastle disease virus (ndv). they inserted a gene from the ndv, a major killer of poultry in developing countries, into the maize dna and found antibodies against the virus in chickens that ate the genetically modified maize. one pig vaccine has also been produced in corn successfully. efforts are being made by us company prodigene to genetically modify maize to contain a key protein found on the surface of the monkey form of hiv. according to us national institute of health this development brings an edible, more effective, hiv vaccine for people a step closer. transgenic maize expressing the rabies virus glycoprotein (g) of the vnukovo strain has also been produced using ubiquitin maize promoter fused to the whole coding region of the rabies virus g gene, and a constitutive promoter from camv. maize embryogenic callus were transformed with the above construct by biolistics. regenerated maize plants were recovered and grown in a greenhouse. the amount of g-protein detected in the grains was approximately % of the total soluble plant protein. rice is another potential crop which has been used for developing vaccines. it offers several advantages over traditional vaccines; it does not require refrigeration. in fact, the rice proved just as potent after months of storage at room temperature and the vaccine did not dissolve when exposed to stomach acids. in an attempt, predominant t cell epitope peptides, which were derived from japanese cedar pollen allergens, were specifically expressed in rice seeds and delivered to the mucosal immune system (mis); the development of an allergic immune response of the allergen-specific th cell was suppressed. furthermore, not only the specific ige production and release of histamine from mast cells were suppressed, but the inflammatory symptoms of pollinosis, such as sneezing, were also suppressed. these results suggest the feasibility of using an oral immunotherapy agent derived from transgenic plants that accumulate t cell epitope peptides of allergens for allergy treatment. the transfer of genetic material from the microbe responsible for producing cholera toxin into a rice plant has been achieved. the plants produced the toxin and when the rice grains were fed to mice they provoked immunity from the diarrhea-causing bacterium. genetically modified spinach has also been considered for the development of edible vaccine. spinach is being investigated as a plantderived, edible vehicle for anthrax vaccine, as well as a vehicle for the hiv- tat protein (a prospective vaccine candidate). in an experiment a fragment of protective antigen (pa) that represents most of the receptor-binding domain was expressed as a translational fusion with a capsid protein on the outer surface of tobacco mosaic virus, and spinach was inoculated with the recombinant virus. the plant-expressed pa is highly immunogenic in laboratory animals. among other food crops with potential to be developed as edible vaccine; sweet potato, peanuts, lettuce, watermelon, and carrots are on the top priority. the development of plant-based vaccines to protect against many other diseases, such as hiv- , hepatitis b, rabies, and non-hodgkin's lymphoma are ongoing throughout the globe using one of these edible plants. the advantages and disadvantages of various plant host systems are given in conventional subunit vaccines are expensive and technology-intensive, need purification, require refrigeration, and produce poor mucosal response. in contrast, edible vaccines would enhance compliance, especially in children, and because of oral administration would eliminate the need for trained medical personnel. their production is highly efficient and can be easily scaled up. for example, hepatitis b antigen required to vaccinate whole of china annually, could be grown on a -acre plot and all babies in the world each year on just acres of land. they are cheaper, sidestepping demands for purification (single dose of hepatitis b vaccine would cost approximately . cents), grown locally using standard methods and do not require capitalintensive pharmaceutical manufacturing facilities. mass-indefinite production would also decrease dependence on foreign supply. fear of contamination with animal viruses-like the mad cow disease, which is a threat in vaccines manufactured from cultured mammalian cells, is eliminated as plant viruses do not infect humans. edible vaccines activate both mucosal and systemic immunity, as they come in contact with the digestive tract lining which is not possible with subunit vaccines which provide poor mucosal response. this dual effect of edible vaccines provides first-line defense against pathogens invading through mucosa, such as mycobacterium tuberculosis and agents causing diarrhea, pneumonia, stds, hiv, etc. the specific advantages are stated below: . edible means of administration. . no need of medical personnel and syringes. . sterile injection conditions are no more required. . economical in mass production by breeding compared to an animal system. . easy for administration and transportation. . effective maintenance of vaccine activity by controlling the temperature in plant cultivation. . therapeutic proteins are free of pathogens and toxins. . storage near the site of use. . heat stable, thus eliminating the need of refrigeration. potential for outcrossing in field; deep root system problematic for cleaning field (mason et al. ) . antigen protection through bioencapsulation. . subunit vaccine (not attenuated vaccine) means improved safety. . seroconversion in the presence of maternal antibodies. . generation of systemic and mucosal immunity. . enhanced compliance (especially in children). . delivery of multiple antigens. . integration with other vaccine approaches. . plant-derived antigens assemble spontaneously into oligomers and into virus like particles. . no serious side effect problems have been noticed until now. . reduced risk of anaphylactic side effects from edible vaccine over injection system is one benefit reported by the bio-medicine.org. they reported that the edible vaccine carries only part of the allergen compared to injection methods which reduce anaphylactic risk. . administration of edible vaccines to mothers to immunize the fetus-in utero by transplacental transfer of maternal antibodies or the infant through breast milk. edible vaccines have a potential role in protecting infants against diseases like group-b streptococcus, respiratory syncytial virus (rsv), etc., which is under investigation. . edible vaccines would also be suitable against neglected/less common diseases like dengue, hookworm, rabies, etc. they may be integrated with other vaccine approaches and multiple antigens may also be delivered. with advancement come many hurdles and problems, so is true for edible vaccines. like, one could develop immunotolerance to the vaccine peptide or protein, though a little research has been done on it. one of the key goals of the edible-vaccine pioneers was to reduce immunization costs but later many limitations were reported as given below: . consistency of dosage from fruit to fruit, plant to plant, lot to lot, and generation to generation is not similar. . stability of vaccine in fruit is not known. . evaluation of dosage requirement is tedious. . selection of best plant is difficult. . certain foods like potatoes are generally not eaten raw and cooking the food might weaken the medicine present in it. . not convenient for infants as they might spit it, eat a part or eat it all, and throw it up later. concentrating the vaccine into a teaspoon of baby food may be more practical than administering it in a whole fruit. . there is always possibility of sideeffects due to the interaction between the vaccine and the vehicle. . people could ingest too much of the vaccine, which could be toxic, or too little, which could lead to disease outbreaks among populations believed to be immune. . a concern with oral vaccines is the degradation of protein components in the stomach due to low ph and gastric enzymes. however, the degradation can be compensated by repeating the exposure of the antigen until immunological tolerance is accomplished (mason et al. ) . . potential risk of spreading the disease by edible vaccine delivery is a concern of many. potential contamination of the oral delivery system is a possible danger. foreign proteins in plants accumulate in low amounts ( . - % of total protein) and are less immunogenic, therefore the oral dose far exceeds the intranasal/parenteral dose. for example oral hepatitis b dose is - times the parenteral dose and g potato expressing b subunit of labile toxin of etec (lt-b) is required in three different doses to be immunogenic. attempts at boosting the amount of antigens often lead to stunted growth of plants and reduced tuber/fruit formation as too much mrna from the transgene causes gene silencing in plant genome. techniques to overcome these limitations are given below: . optimization of coding sequence of bacterial/ viral genes for expression as plant nuclear genes . expression in plasmids . plant viruses expressing foreign genes . coat-protein fusions . viral-assisted expression in transgenic plants . promoter elements of bean yellow dwarf virus with reporter genes gus (b -glucuronidase) and green fluorescent protein (gfp), substituted later with target antigen genes. . antigen genes may be linked with regulatory elements which switch on the genes more readily or do so only at selected times (after the plant is nearly fully grown) or only in its edible regions. exposure to some outside activator molecule may also be tried. development of edible vaccines is a possible high-volume, low-cost delivery system for thirdworld countries to fight against fatal maladies like aids, hepatitis, and diarrhea. researches by the niaid and the university of maryland showed no significant side effects in a small study using genetically engineered potatoes to make toxin of the e. coli, a diarrhea-causing bacterium. volunteers reported no serious adverse reactions to genetically altered potatoes used to deliver edible vaccine toxin, according to the national institutes of health (nih). the nih reported that - volunteers who ate the raw potato bites developed four times the antibodies against e. coli without obvious side effects. long-term reactions to edible vaccines are yet to be determined and possible delayed reactions have not yet been discovered. an organized large scale study is required before edible vaccines are put into large scale production. creating edible vaccines involves the genetic engineering approach for the introduction of selected desired genes into plants and then inducing these altered plants to manufacture the encoded proteins. this process is known as ''transformation'' and the plants altered with new characteristics are called ''transgenic plants''. like conventional subunit vaccines, edible vaccines are composed of antigenic proteins and are devoid of genes responsible for pathogenicity. thus, they have no way of establishing infection, assuring its safety, especially in immune-compromised patients. the gene which codes the active antigenic protein is first isolated from the pathogen and is incorporated in a suitable ''gene vehicle''. this gene vehicle is integrated into the genome of the plant and is allowed to express the corresponding antigen. then these plant parts are fed to animals and humans to run their course. two main strategies are used for the production of candidate vaccine antigen in plant tissues (fig. . a, b) . . stable genomic integration: this is the most popular method used for the published edible vaccine clinical trials to date. under this method the genetic line is produced that can be propagated either by vegetative (stem cuttings) or sexual (seeds) reproduction methods. the stable expression strategy provides an opportunity to introduce more than one gene for possible multicomponent vaccine production. furthermore, the choice of genetic regulatory elements allows organ and tissue-specific expression of foreign antigens. stable transformation causes the desired gene to be incorporated either in nucleus or chloroplast. agrobacterium mediated gene transfer is used for transforming the plants in which the gene is integrated in nucleus. besides, direct delivery of dna into the tissue can also be applied, biolistic being the most popular method. however, chloroplast engineering has also got impetus in last decade due to its various advantages over nuclear engineering. gram-negative soil bacterium, which infects the wound sites in dicot plants causing the formation of the crown gall tumor. this bacterium is capable of transferring a particular dna segment (t-dna) of the tumor-inducing (ti) plasmid into the nucleus of infected cells where it is subsequently integrated into the host genome and transcribed. the t-dna usually contains cancer-causing oncogenic genes and genes that synthesize opines which are excreted by infected crown gall cells and are a food source for bacterium. during the genetic manipulation, the ti plasmid is engineered to carry the desired gene for vaccine and the virulent genes that cause tumor growth in plants are deleted. the transgene is integrated, expressed, and inherited in mendelian fashion. the whole plant can be then regenerated from individual transformed plant cell. it has been studied that genes are successfully expressed in experimental model plants and when given orally to animals, the extract of transgenic plant containing the antigen induced serum antibodies, thus can be used to produce the edible vaccine. the application of agrobacterium mediated transformation is at present possible to most species of agronomic interest, including members of family graminae and leguminosae. this opens interesting new aspect for the development of edible vaccines for both human and veterinary uses. the second approach for nuclear transformation is based on the microprojectile bombardment method, also known as the gene gun or biolistic method. this method is especially beneficial for those plants which can not be transformed by a. tumefaciens mediated gene transfer method. selected dna sequences are precipitated onto metal microparticles and bombarded with a particle gun at an accelerated speed in a partial vacuum against the plant tissue placed within the acceleration path. microparticles penetrate the walls and release the exogenous dna inside the cell where it will be integrated in the nuclear genome. thus, this method effectively introduces dna. the cells that take up the desired dna, are identified through the use of a marker gene (in plants the use of gus is most common), and then cultured to replicate the gene and possibly cloned. this method has various advantages including ( ) thousands of particles are accelerated at the same time causing multiple hits resulting in transferring of genes into many cells simultaneously, ( ) since intact cells can be used, the difficulties encountered with the use of protoplast are automatically circumvented, and ( ) the method is universal in its application so that cell type, size, and shape or the presence/absence of cell wall do not significantly alter its effectiveness. another important use of the gene gun involves the transformation of organelles such as chloroplasts, and yeast mitochondria. the biolistic particle delivery system ''shoots'' adequately processed dna particles, which penetrate into the chloroplast and integrate with its genome. the chloroplast's transformation is an interesting alternative to nuclear transformation which has come up in recent past. all plant cells have chloroplasts that capture light energy from the sun to produce free energy through a process called photosynthesis. in chloroplast genetic engineering, the recombinant dna plasmid is bound to small gold nanoparticles that are injected into the chloroplasts of the leaf using a gene gun as described above. this device uses high pressure to insert the plasmid coated particles into the cells. these plasmids contain multiple genes of importance such as the therapeutic gene, a marker gene (may or may not be for antibiotic resistance), a gene that enhances the translation of therapeutic gene and two targeting sequences that flank the foreign gene. the foreign genes are inserted through homologous recombination via flanking sequences at a precise and predetermined location in the organelle genome. the gene expression level in plastids is predominately determined by promoter and -untranslated regions ( -utr elements) (gruissem and tonkyn ) . therefore, suitable -utrs including a ribosomal binding site (rbs) are important elements of plastid expression vectors (eibl et al. ) . in order to obtain high-level protein accumulation from expression of the transgene, the first requirement is a strong promoter to ensure high levels of mrna. most laboratories use the strong plastid rrna operon (rrn) promoter (prrn). besides gene gun, peg mediated transformation and galistan expansion femto syringe microinjection techniques are also used for gene delivery in chloroplast. some of the advantages of chloroplast transformation technology are its low cost, natural gene containment, site specific insertion, very high level of stable expression, generation of production lines with a competitive timeline, elimination of gene silencing, and high accumulation of the recombinant protein. precise steps are given below: step : a heteroplasmic diploid plant cell (first round of selection) a homoplasmic diploid plant cell (second round of selection) step : multiple gene expression step : reproductive organs disintegration of paternal plastids step : maternal inheritance of transgenic traits. the most common entry point for pathogens is at mucosal epithelia lining the gastrointestinal, respiratory, and urino-reproductive tracts, which are collectively the largest immunologically active tissue in body. the mis is the first line of defense and the most effective site for vaccination against those pathogens; nasal, and oral vaccines being the most effective. the goal of oral vaccine is to stimulate both mucosal and humoral immunity against pathogens. edible vaccines have plant parts which are fed directly and the outer tough wall of plant cell acts to protect the antigens against attack by step : single gene step an antigen in a food vaccine is taken up by m cells in the intestine and passed to various immune system cells, which then start a defensive attack, as antigen is a true infectious agent, not just part of one. the response leaves longlasting ''memory cells'' able to promptly neutralize the real infectious agent. the whole procedure can be explained in two stages (fig. . a, b) antibodies and antibody fragments produced against specific antigens are given in table . . there are numerous therapeutic and diagnostic applications of edible vaccines which are summarized in table . . some of the diseases on which the work is going on are described below: malaria is a disease of humans transmitted by the bite of an infected mosquito. it remains one of the most significant causes of human morbidity and mortality worldwide. according to who's world malaria report there are more than million cases of malaria killing around , people. three antigens are currently being investigated for the development of a plant-based malaria vaccine, merozoite surface protein (msp) , msp from plasmodium falciparum and msp / from p. yoelli. wang et al. ( ) have demonstrated that oral immunization of mice with recombinant msp , msp / , and msp , co-administered with ctb as a mucosal adjuvant, induces antibody responses effective against blood stage parasite. measles is an infection of the respiratory system caused by a virus. in an experiment mice fed with tobacco expressing mv-h (measles virus haemagglutinin from edmonston strain) antibody titers five times the level considered protective for humans could be attained and secretory iga was found in their feces. prime boost strategy by combining parenteral and subsequent oral mv-h boosters could induce titers times the human protective levels. these titers were significantly greater than with either of the vaccine administered alone. mv-h edible vaccine does not cause atypical measles, which may be occasionally seen with the current vaccine. thus, it may prove better for achieving its eradication. the success in mice has prompted similar experiments in primates. transgenic rice, and lettuce, and baby food against measles are also being developed. when given with ctb (adjuvant), - g mv-h lettuce is enough; however, an increased dose would be required if given alone. rabies is a deadly viral infection that is transmitted to humans from animals. tomato plants expressing rabies antigens could induce antibodies in mice. alternatively, tmv may also be used. transformed tomato plants using camv with the glycoprotein (g-protein) gene of rabies virus (era strain) was shown to be immunogenic in animals. hepatitis b is a potentially life-threatening liver infection caused by the hepatitis b virus. it is estimated to have infected million people throughout the globe, making the virus one of the most common human pathogen. first human trials of a potato-based vaccine against hepatitis b have reported encouraging results. since immunization is the only known method to (das ) prevent the disease of the hepatitis b virus, any attempt to reduce its infection requires the availability of large quantities of vaccine hbsag. the amount of hbsag needed for one dose could be achieved in a single potato. levels of specific antibodies significantly exceeded the protective level of miu/ml in humans. when cloned into camv, the pcmv-s plasmid encoding the hbsag subtype ayw showed higher expression in roots as compared to leaf tissue of the transgenic potato. furthermore, expression of the antigen was found to be higher in roots of transgenic potato than in leaf tissues. however, the expression of hbsag in transgenic potatoes is not sufficient for using as oral vaccine. further studies are underway to increase the level of hbsag by using different promoters e.g., patatin promoter, and different transcription regulating elements. cholera is an infection of the small intestine that causes a large amount of watery diarrhea. it causes up to million deaths per year in the developing world, primarily among children. studies supported by who have demonstrated possibility of an effective vaccine for cholera, which provides cross protection against enterotoxic e. coli. to address this limitation, plants were transformed with the gene encoding b subunit of the e. coli heat liable enterotoxin (lt-b). transgenic potatoes expressing lt-b were found to induce both serum and secretory antibodies when fed to mice; these antibodies were protective in bacterial toxin assay in vitro. this is the first ''proof of concept'' for the edible vaccine. since people eat only cooked potatoes, the effect of boiling on the properties of ctb expressed in transgenic potatoes was examined. after boiling for min, over half of the vaccine protein survived in its biologically active form, providing evidence that cooking does not always inactivate edible vaccines. thus, the spectrum of plants for producing edible vaccines may be expanded beyond raw food plants such as fruits. co-expression of mutant cholera toxin subunit (mct-a) and lt-b in crop seeds has been shown to be effective by nasal administration and is extremely practical. the prevalence of diabetes is increasing globally and india is no exception. more than million people are affected with diabetes worldwide. type-i diabetes, also known as insulindependent diabetes mellitus (iddm) or juvenileonset diabetes, primarily affects children and young adults and accounts for - % of the diagnosed diabetes in north america. research by ma and hein ( ) at the university of western ontario showed that diabetes can be prevented in mice by feeding them with plants engineered to produce a diabetes related-protein. the idea is based on 'oral tolerance' where the autoimmune system is selectively turned off early by teaching the body to tolerate the ''antigenic proteins''. the pancreatic protein, glutamic acid decarboxylase (gad ) is linked to the onset of iddm, and when injected into mice it is known to prevent diabetes. the canadian group developed transgenic potato and tobacco plants with the gene for gad , fed them to nonobese diabetic mice, which developed insulin-dependent diabetes spontaneously. the results were intriguing, only % of the prediabetic mice fed with transgenic plants developed the diabetes, while % nontreated mice developed the disease. the treated mice also showed increased levels of ig , an antibody associated with cytokines, which suppresses harmful immune responses. thus, the antigen produced in plants appears to retain immunogenicity and prevent diabetes in an animal model. according to canadian scientists, this is the first proof of principle for the use of edible vaccines in the treatment of the autoimmune diseases. human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) is a retroviral that causes acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (aids), a condition in humans in which progressive failure of the immune system allows life-threatening opportunistic infections and cancer to thrive. in order to produce edible vaccine initial success in splicing hiv protein into cpmv has been achieved. two hiv protein genes and camv as promoter were successfully injected into tomatoes with a needle, and the expressed protein was demonstrable by polymerase chain reaction (pcr) in different parts of the plant, including the ripe fruit, as well as in the second generation plants. recently, spinach has been successfully inoculated for tat protein expression cloned into tmv. each gram of leaf tissue of spinach was shown to contain up to - lg of tat antigen. mice fed with this spinach followed by dna vaccinations resulted in higher antibody titers than the controls, with the levels peaking at weeks post-vaccination. it is still unclear whether the edible vaccines would be regulated under food, drugs. or agricultural products and what vaccine component would be licensed-antigen itself, genetically engineered fruit or transgenic seeds. they would be subjected to a very close scrutiny by the regulatory bodies in order to ensure that they never enter the food supply. this would include greenhouse segregation of medicinal plants from food crops to prevent outcrossing and would necessitate separate storage and processing facilities. although edible vaccines fall under ''genetically modified'' plants, it is hoped that these vaccines will avoid serious controversy, because they are intended to save lives. edible vaccines are future vaccines and some challenges are yet to be overcome before these can become a reality. like all products regulated by food and drug administration, edible vaccines undergo a rigorous review of laboratory, and clinical testing that are conducted to get information regarding safety, efficacy, purity, and potency of these products. these trials can take place only after satisfactory information has been collected on the quality of the nonclinical safety. successful expression of antigens in plants has been demonstrated in the past. the vaccines have also been checked for their efficacy in humans. results from the primary phase of the first-ever human clinical trial of an edible vaccine were published in the journal nature medicine in (blaine p. friedlander, boyce thomson institute of plant research), which indicated that consumption of servings of raw potatoes resulted in immunity to specific diseases. the human clinical study was conducted under the direction of dr. carol tacket at the center for vaccine development, university of maryland school of medicine in baltimore. in the first phase of human testing, the potatoes eaten by volunteers contained a vaccine against travelers' diarrhea, a common condition resulting from intestinal infection by the bacterium e. coli, which contaminates food or water supplies. the clinical trials were approved in advance by the food and drug administration. encouraged by the results of this study, scientists started exploring the use of this technique for administering other antigens. in thanavala's group has developed a potato vaccine booster for use in conjunction with injected hepatitis b vaccine. it is currently in phase ii clinical trial and phase i for patients who have previously been vaccinated. in , tacket and his team mates studied the human immune response to the norwalk virus capsid protein expressed in potatoes. overall, % ( out of volunteers) developed some kind of immune response, although the antibody increase in some cases was modest. in same year, pogrebnyak's lab developed an effective vaccine against the coronavirus which causes severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars). tomato and tobacco plants are used for high expression of the coronavirus spike protein (s ). first, lyophilized tomato fruit was fed to mice and then boosting occurred with s protein expressed in tobacco roots; high igg immune responses and significant igg a and igg b responses were observed in their sera. research is also going in the direction to engineer the plants to produce a variety of functional monoclonal antibody (ma et al. ) . in the first human study of transgenic plant vaccine designed to induce active immunity, adult volunteers were given either g of transgenic potato, g of transgenic potato or g of wild type potato, each transgenic potatoes containing from . to . lg/g of lt-b. the variable dose per gram of potato was due to the tissue specificity of the promoter, therefore, that lt-b was expressed to a different degree in the different tissues of the potatoes. the potatoes in this study were ingested raw; however, subsequent studies have shown that transgenic potatoes expressing the b subunit of cholera toxin could be boiled for min until the tissue becomes soft with loss of only about % of the ct-b pentameric gm binding form. serologic responses were also detected after vaccination. totally out of the volunteers ( %) who ingested transgenic potatoes developed igg anti-lt and in half of them responses occurred after the first dose. there are of the ( %) volunteers developed fourfold rise in serum iga anti-lt. researchers supported by the niaid have shown for the first time that an edible vaccine can safely trigger significant immune responses in people. the goal of the phase proof-ofconcept trial study was to demonstrate that an edible vaccine could stimulate an immune response in humans. volunteers ate bite-sized pieces of raw potato that had been genetically engineered to produce part of the toxin secreted by e. coli, which causes diarrhea. the trial enrolled healthy adults, were chosen at random to receive the genetically engineered potatoes and received pieces of ordinary potatoes. the investigator periodically collected blood and stool samples from the volunteers to evaluate the vaccine's ability to stimulate both systemic and intestinal immune responses. the potatoes were well tolerated and no one experienced serious adverse side effects. niaid supported scientists are exploring the use of this technique for administering other antigens. edible vaccines for other intestinal pathogens are already in the pipeline. potatoes and bananas that might protect against norwalk virus, a common cause of diarrhea, and potatoes and tomatoes that might protect against hepatitis b are being developed. thirty million children throughout the world do not receive even the most basic immunizations each year. as a result, at least three million of these children die from diseases that are fully vaccine-preventable. the solution to vaccinate these children might seem simple with the idea of large scale production of edible vaccines for various diseases. as a recent progress, the first human clinical trials for plant-based vaccine have been performed; it brings many challenges like optimization of expression levels, stabilization during post harvest storage, etc. long-term reactions to edible vaccines are yet to be determined. possible delayed reactions not yet discovered may be the point of consideration. in addition to that, edible vaccines can be further improved for their oral immunogenicity by the use of specific adjuvant which can be applied either as a fusion to the candidate gene or as an independent gene. some of the diseases to which edible vaccines have shown promising application may be elaborated in the veterinary as well as human spectrum. these studies conclude plant-derived vaccines as a new hope and promise for more immunogenic, more effective, and less expensive vaccination strategies against both respiratory as well as intestinal mucosal pathogens. research in the field of edible vaccines holds immense potential for the future and every advancement made in this direction is bringing the dream of edible vaccine one step closer. there is hope that in coming future edible vaccines will conquer all serious diseases and make the planet beautiful to live in. edible vaccines an edible vaccine for malaria using transgenic tomatoes of varying sizes, shapes and colors to carry different antigens plant derived edible vaccines in vivo analysis of plastid psba, rbcl and rpl utr elements by chloroplast transformation: tobacco plastid gene expression is controlled by modulation of transcript levels and translation efficiency control mechanisms of plastid gene expression production of antibodies in transgenic plants immunotherapeutic potential of antibodies produced in plants production of biologically active human interleukin- in transgenic tomato and potato transgenic plants as vaccine production systems expression of hepatitis b surface antigen in transgenic plants edible vaccine protects mice against escherichia coli heat-labile enterotoxin (lt): potatoes expressing a synthetic lt-b gene edible plant vaccines: applications for prophylactic and therapeutic molecular medicine edible vaccines: a concept comes of age plant biotechnology and in vitro biology in the st century production of hepatitis b surface antigen in transgenic plants for oral immunization human immune responses to a novel norwalk virus vaccine delivered in transgenic potatoes immunogenicity in humans of an edible vaccine for hepatitis b oral immunization with a combination of plasmodium yoelii merozoite surface protein and / enhances protection against lethal malarial challenge key: cord- -ofzm x a authors: nan title: theories of carcinogenesis date: journal: molecular mechanisms of cancer doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ofzm x a the oldest description of human cancer, referring to eight cases of tumors of the breast, was found in the egyptian edwin smith papyrus, written around – bc. the oldest specimens of human cancers were detected in the remains of a female skull dating back to the bronze age ( – bc), and in fossilized bones of ancient egypt. the mummified skeletal remains of peruvian incas, dating about , years ago, contained lesions suggestive of malignant melanoma. the term “cancer” goes back to hippocrates ( – bc), who named a group of diseases καρκινοσ and καρκινομα, the ancient greek word for crab. it is a metaphor for the hard center and spiny projections of the tumors he studied. cancer is the latin word for crab and its use has been traced back to galen (ad – ). a snapshot of theories of carcinogenesis, devised in the course of the last two centuries, reflects the progress of insight from the cellular level via biochemistry to an understanding of damaging influences and oncogenes, and to a more wholistic approach in the regulatory theory. it shows the relative success of reductionism as well as the current need to put the insights of various research endeavors into broader paradigmatic contexts. in , robert hooke described walled cavities in his microscopic examination of cork and called them cells. in , lorenz oken conceptualized a cell-based theory of life, arguing that plants and animals are assemblages of tiny living infusoria. this notion was later populated and refined by matthias schleiden and theodor schwann [schleiden ; schwann ; nurse ]. in , robert remak ( - described the phenomenon of cell division in chick embryos and in muscle development. between and , he extended these observations to embryonic development and proposed that tumor cells arose by cell formation from existing specific tissues [remak [remak , . like giovanni morgagni, who had performed the first autopsy in and had correlated illness to macroscopic pathology, rudolf virchow ( virchow ( - correlated illness to microscopic pathology. after initial skepticism, virchow acknowledged remak's evidence for cell division. in , he gave a series of lectures to a group of physicians at the institute of pathology in berlin, in which he summarized his experience in microscopic anatomy of tissues with special attention to those deviating from the healthy condition [virchow ]. according to virchow's dictum "omnis cellula e cellule" cells of diseased tissues are derived from normal tissues, implying that malfunction begets disease (significantly, virchow had been a student of müller's, who had demonstrated in that cancer is made up of cells, not lymph; but he was of the opinion that cancer cells arose from interstitial budding elements, blastema, not from normal cells). hence, tumors are derived from cells that divide faster than they should. the average human body experiences around cell divisions in a lifetime. with an individual's risk to contract cancer being about %, malignant transformation occurs in out of cell divisions [weinberg ]. the mechanistic underpinning for this process was defined by the identification of key regulators of the cell division cycle by leland h. hartwell, r. timothy hunt, and paul m. nurse. chapter the analysis of transformation has been guided substantially by the technical accomplishment to expand cells in culture. tissue culture was developed in the early years of the th century [harrison ; burrows ] . warren lewis cultured rodent cancers [lewis ] . in at the johns hopkins hospital, george gey established human cancer cell culture from the cervical adenocarcinoma of the -year-old, black henrietta lacks [gey et al. ] . although the resulting hela cells are among the cornerstones of cancer research, their high rate of proliferation caused a risk for cross-contamination of other cultures by them. this lead to the establishment of cell-typing techniques on the biochemical [gartler ] and genetic [nelson-rees et al. ] levels. generally, the human tumor cells that grow permanently in culture are a selected group of very aggressive cancers. almost all of the continuous cell lines are derived from high-grade, high-stage cancers. programmed cell death (apoptosis, greek: falling off of tree leaves) [kerr et al. ] may be invoked by many organisms as a control mechanism to prevent unrestricted growth. research during the s through s in the worm caenorhabditis elegans, identified ced- and ced- as essential genes for programmed cell death, while ced- was found to be a negative regulator of apoptosis. the , nobel prize in medicine and physiology was awarded for these observations to sydney brenner, h. robert horvitz, and john e. sulston. the first mammalian homolog for ced- was described as bcl- , a gene that is involved in b-cell lymphomata [negrini et al. ; vaux et al. ]. bcl- transfected b-lymphocytes are resistant to apoptosis, which is typically induced by interleukin- withdrawal. for the first time, it was demonstrated that the pathway to tumorigenesis depends not only on the ability to escape growth control but also on the ability to prevent cell death [hockenbery et al. ]. according to the biochemical theory of cancer, a key process that governs cell proliferation goes awry and causes transformation. various aspects of metabolism may be affected in a manner that could lead to cancer. consequently, before the discovery of oncogenes, a large variety of theories was debated, which incriminated the malfunction of diverse biochemical processes as causative for malignant transformation. during tumor progression, the enzymatic composition of the affected cells is simplified (described as the theory of convergence in cancer), so that various cancers resemble one another more than they resemble their tissue of origin [greenstein ]. as one possible underlying reason, the biochemist otto von warburg [von warburg ] had suggested that the oxidative metabolism in cancer cells is replaced by glycolysis and that the excessive proliferation of cancer cells reflects their ability to metabolize independently of oxygen. later, it was found that the limiting substrates for tumor growth are oxygen and glucose. hence, anaerobic glycolysis is not the cause, but the consequence of the accelerated growth, which cannot be satisfied by the reorganization of the micro-vasculature [vaupel et al. ]. however, in a remarkable reversal toward supporting the warburg model, a publication showed that in cells engineered to become cancerous glycolytic conversion started early and expanded as the cells became more malignant [ramanathan et al. ]. this rekindled the discussion of bioenergetics in cancer cells. others attributed the simplified enzyme patterns of cancerous cells to a regression of the tumor tissues to early embryonal stages of development. highly malignant cells tend to resemble fetal tissues more than their adult normal counterparts do. the idea of derepressive dedifferentiation in carcinogenesis found support in the occurrence of onco-fetal proteins during the disease. the expression of these genes should be repressed in differentiated tissues, but this repression is reversed in tumors. the description of tumor tissue in histopathologic analysis as dedifferentiated is derived from this concept. the alternative model of "oncogeny as partially blocked ontogeny" suggested that cancer is the result of a series of alterations in the genes and their gene expression, which prevent a stem cell from completing all the steps necessary for terminal differentiation, suggesting that the target cell for carcinogenesis is the pluripotent stem cell [potter ]. the protein deletion theory, an extension of the dedifferentiation theory, is an epigenetic model of cancer. based on the observation that a carcinogenic aminoazo dye covalently bound liver proteins in animals undergoing early carcinogenesis, whereas little or no dye binding occurred to the proteins of tumors induced by this dye, miller and miller [ ] proposed the deletion hypothesis. they suggested that carcinogenesis resulted from permanent alterations or loss of proteins that are essential for the control of growth. thus, carcinogens eliminate specific enzymes from the affected cells by binding covalently to water-soluble basic proteins (h proteins according to electrophoresis nomenclature). this causes the elimination (deletion) of these proteins from the cells. cancer originates because the water-soluble basic proteins contain several growth inhibitory components. therefore, the initial step in carcinogenesis is the inactivation of endogenous inhibition. transformation can be associated with refraction to exogenous inhibitors of cell cycle progression. potter [ ] suggested that the proteins lost during carcinogenesis may be involved in the feedback control of enzyme systems required for cell division, and he proposed the feedback deletion theory. in this model, repressors crucial to the regulation of genes involved in cell proliferation are lost or inactivated by the action of oncogenic agents on the cell, either by interacting with dna to block repressor gene transcription or by reacting directly with repressor proteins and inactivating them. it was thought that experimental evidence, in which the fusion of cancerous cells with nontransformed cells resulted in the absence of transformation, supported the epigenetic theory. later, this phenomenon was attributed to the functional dominance of tumor suppressor genes. the demonstration of the presence of an ordered biochemical imbalance, linked to transformation and progression, in cancer cells led to the molecular correlation concept. weber [ ] stated that the biochemical dysregulations underlying neoplasia could be identified by elucidating the pattern of gene expression as revealed in the activity, concentration, and isozyme aspects of key enzymes and their linking with neoplastic transformation and progression. key enzymes are involved in the regulation of rate and direction of the flux of competing synthetic and catabolic pathways and are most likely affected in the malignant process. a number of enzyme activities found to be altered in malignant cells are those involved in nucleic acid synthesis and catabolism. in general, the key enzymes in the de novo pathways and salvage pathways of purine and pyrimidine biosynthesis are increased and the opposing catabolic enzymes are decreased during malignant transformation and tumor progression. these findings and concepts were further developed by the analysis of gene expression profiles and identification of gene expression signatures in cancer cells some years later. the stigma that cancer equals death, originating in the experiences of hippocrates, galen, and celsus, was attached to the disease for centuries. it led to the long-respected dictum that doctors should not inform their patients of the diagnosis to avoid agony. in view of progress in surgery, which allowed the removal of some tumors, the american cancer society was formed in to educate the public about the warning symptoms of cancer and to reduce their fatalistic fears. the increased public health awareness was helpful whenever carcinogenic mechanisms were identified and the need for lifestyle changes was publicized. the insight that malignancy may be caused by the influence of damaging agents forms the basis of the noxious theory of carcinogenesis. among the influences that may cause cancer are chemicals, radiation, and viruses. chemical carcinogenesis. in , chemical carcinogenesis was observed by the english surgeon sir percival pott, who related the cause of scrotal skin cancer in a number of his patients to a common history of occupational exposure to large amounts of coal soot as chimney sweepers when they were boys. the connection between soot and cancer was confirmed in by the first controlled experimental induction of cancer in laboratory animals by katsusaburo yamagiwa. the experiment established chemical carcinogenesis, and specifically occupational exposure, as one possible cause for malignant growths. an unrelated form of occupational exposure was documented in the mid- th century in silver miners from st. joachimsthal, bohemia (today czech republic). silver had been extracted there since the mid- th century and was manufactured into the joachimsthaler silver coins that were predecessors of the german currency "thaler" and later the american currency "dollar." these miners had a high incidence of lung cancer, which was otherwise extremely rare at that time. the cause was traced to their occupational exposure (table . archeological evidence suggests that the mayans smoked tobacco leaves as early as the st century bc. only in , john hill published a treatise that warned of unusual tumors of the nose consecutive to sniffing tobacco. by , ernst wynder had conducted a survey of lung cancers, which indicated a substantially elevated risk in smokers compared to nonsmokers. it was followed months later by a similar analysis, authored by richard doll. about years after the publication by john hill, a connection between lifestyle choices and cancer risk was established. during the following years of the th century, chemical carcinogenesis by tobacco products became a major cause for an increasing incidence of lung cancers. (table . .b). in italy, bernardino ramazzini associated breast cancer with reproductive factors. he reported in the virtual absence of cervical cancer and relatively high incidence of breast cancer in nuns and suggested that this was in some way related to their celibate lifestyle. the key observations by pott, hill, and ramazzini laid the foundation for the field of cancer epidemiology. this area of research was given another foundation between and , when fisher, haldane, and wright established the principles of population genetics. in the united states, the first hospital registry for cancer was established in at yale-new haven hospital in connecticut. in and , the first central cancer registries were initiated in connecticut and california. in , the united states national cancer institute published a survey of chemical compounds, of which were found to be carcinogenic in animals. during the s, environmental movements became prominent in most of the western societies. rachel carson believed that the long-term ecological effects of synthetic chemical pesticides were not being researched adequately. her book "silent spring" pointed to the pathogenic potential of environmental toxins, and the concept of carcinogens entered popular consciousness. in , rachel carson succumbed to cancer at the age of . the national cancer act of (declared "war on cancer" by president richard nixon) mandated the collection, analysis, and dissemination of all data useful in the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of cancer. it resulted in the establishment of the national cancer program, under which the surveillance, epidemiology, and end results (seer) program was developed in . over the years, the susceptibility to various cancers has been associated with nutritional habits. in , doll and peto [ ] estimated that % of cancer deaths in the united states were attributable to dietary factors. the western european diet is rich in meat and correlates with a high incidence of colon cancer. nasopharyngeal cancer is among the most widespread tumors in southeast asia, possibly supported by the ingestion of salted fish. esophageal cancer typically occurs in conjunction with alcoholism. the growing health conscience in the late years of the th century, combined with insights into the potential carcinogenic properties of reactive oxygen intermediates prompted multiple studies into cancer preventive capacities of antioxidants as nutrition supplements. it was soon found that while theories of carcinogenesis table . .a. occupational cancers. certain occupations are associated with high levels of exposure to specific carcinogenic influences. these agents cause dna damage through physical or chemical effects. accordingly, the types of cancers induced by these carcinogens have a higher than normal incidence among exposed workers the intake of some foods can increase the risk for specific malignancies, others -such as retinoidscan act in a chemopreventive [sporn et al. ] fashion (figure . from their studies of oral cancer, slaughter, southwick, and smejkal derived the concept of carcinogenesis as a process of field cancerization (field carcinogenesis, condemned mucosa syndrome). the repeated exposure of a region's entire tissue area to carcinogenic insult increases the risk for developing multiple independent premalignant and malignant foci in that tissue [slaughter et al. ]. increasingly, molecular mechanisms have been identified to link certain toxins to specific cancers. in , bruce ames at the university of california in berkeley developed a test for the mutagenicity of chemical compounds, which was used to confirm that carcinogens are mutagens. further mechanistic insight was gained with the demonstration that aflatoxin causes the mutation g t in p , which is associated with hepatoma [bressac et al. ] . ultraviolet (uv) light induces pyrimidine dimers, which cause mutations in p that lead to skin cancer [brash et al. ; pierceall et al. ] . the double-edged sword of mutagens became evident when their possible benefit in the treatment of neoplasias was discovered. mustard gas had been used as a chemical warfare agent during world war i and was studied further in world war ii. in , krumbhaar, a captain in the us medical corps, noted the development of profound leukopenia in individuals who survived a gas attack for several days [krumbhaar ]. following up on this observation, a group of the us office of scientific research and development (osrd) at yale medical school secretly studied the effects of nitrogen mustard on lymphomata. there, lindskog successfully treated a radioresistant lymphosarcoma that compressed the patient's trachea with the injection of nitrogen mustard in december . none of this was made public until . during a military operation in world war ii, allied ships in bari harbor, italy, were sunk in an air assault ( december ). at the center of the destruction was the vessel john harvey, laden with ammunition, supplies, and , mustard gas bombs. a large number of military personnel were accidentally exposed to mustard gas and were later found to have abnormally low white blood cell counts. it was reasoned that an agent, which damaged the rapidly growing white blood cells, might have a similar effect on cancer. cornelius p. rhoads served as chief of the medical division of the us army's chemical warfare unit during world war ii. based on his experience in the bari incident, he investigated mustard gas as a tumor-killing agent. this presaged classical chemotherapy [rhoads ]. soon, the pharmacists louis goodman and alfred gilman, recruited by the us department of defense to investigate potential therapeutic applications of chemical warfare agents, observed that exposure to mustard gas caused profound lymphoid and myeloid suppression suggesting its utility for the treatment of lymphomata [goodman et al. ]. sidney farber of boston recognized that folic acid stimulated the proliferation of leukemia cells. in one of the first examples of rational drug design, he collaborated with lederle laboratories to devise folate analogs. he demonstrated that aminopterin produced remission in acute leukemia in children because it blocked a critical chemical reaction needed for dna reduplication [farber et al. ]. aminopterin was the predecessor of methotrexate (developed by lederle laboratories in ), which in became the first compound cure of metastatic cancer, when it was used by roy hertz and min chiu li to treat a case of choriocarcinoma. from , research by george hitchings and gertrude ellion at the burroughs wellcome corporation had corroborated that it was possible to treat cancer with chemical compounds. using one of them, -mercaptopurine, joseph n. burchenal achieved a high percentage of complete remissions in childhood leukemias. due to these early successes, the us congress created a national cancer chemotherapy service center (nccsc) at the national cancer institute in . in , cisplatin was discovered by barnett rosenberg, who explored the effects of electric fields on the growth of bacteria. he observed that the bacteria unexpectedly ceased to divide due to the exposure to an electrolysis product of the platinum electrodes. the discovery soon initiated studies into the effects of platinum compounds on cell division. this drug was later pivotal in the cure of testicular cancer. the often adverse effects of these agents were diminished when it was realized that they could be effectively used in combination [frei et al. ; frei et al. ]. this approach followed the strategy of antibiotic therapy for tuberculosis, which used combinations of drugs with different mechanisms of action. frei, freireich, and holland hypothesized that cancer cells would be less likely to mutate and develop drug resistance to the drug combination (table . .c). the coalescence of efforts to eliminate compounds with intrinsic mutagenic potential from cancer therapy with increasing insights into the molecular pathways associated with growth signals led to the development of small molecule inhibitors, including sti (gleevec) [druker and lydon ] and zd (iressa). röntgen , experimenting with electrical discharges in vacuum tubes (crookes tubes), identified penetrating radiation that also produced theories of carcinogenesis table . .c. categories of conventional anticancer drugs. chemotherapy is the use of chemical substances to treat cancer. the groups of classical anticancer agents comprises cytotoxic drugs that interfere with cell proliferation through various mechanisms fluorescence, and named it x-rays ("x" symbolizing the unknown). he died from leukemia after years of working with these newly discovered rays. in , henri becquerel observed that penetrating radiation was given off by uranium. marie curie (born maria sklodowska, - ) discovered the element radium, as well as methods for separating radium from radioactive residues in sufficient quantities to analyze its therapeutic properties. after a life time of research into radioactivity, marie curie succumbed to pre-leukemia. the hazards of exposure to ionizing radiation were soon recognized. acute skin reactions were observed in many individuals working with the recently invented x-ray generators. in the early years of the th century, these researchers were frequently affected by skin cancers and leukemias. by , a case of radiation-induced cancer was reported, arising in an ulcerated area of the skin. within a few years, a large number of such skin cancers had been observed, and the first report of leukemia in five radiation workers appeared in . the french physician jean bergonie developed the law of radiosensitivity. he died in from cancer caused by his research with x-rays. in , hermann j. müller recognized that ionizing radiation, already known to be carcinogenic, is also mutagenic [müller ]. x-rays break the sugar-phosphate backbone of dna. radiation damage may be exerted by directly and indirectly ionizing radiation. photons and neutrons are not charged and are indirectly ionizing. radiation of charged particles (α-rays, electron rays including β-rays, proton rays) bear a higher risk for cellular damage, including transforming events. the atomic bombs that exploded over hiroshima and nagasaki caused dramatic increases in the incidence of leukemias during the ensuing decades. by the s, researchers at the sloan-kettering institute in new york city became alarmed over thyroid cancers that were diagnosed in adolescents who had received radiation treatment of their thymus glands in childhood. later reports began to document that thyroid cancers could develop about years following childhood radiation therapy. nevertheless, the use of radiation to fight cancer was under study early on. the work by maude menton , simon flexner, and j.v. jobling at the rockefeller institute lead to the publication of the monograph "influence of radium bromide on a carcinomatous tumor of the white rat" in . tumor viruses were detected at the turn of the th century with the cell-free transmission of human warts [ciuffo ] and of chicken leukemia [ellermann and bang ] . in , peyton rous isolated a highly oncogenic retrovirus (rous sarcoma virus) from a chicken sarcoma [rous ]. in , shope and hurst demonstrated that papillomavirus had oncogenic activity in rabbits. in the early s, clarence cook little argued that viruses had caused breast cancer in a strain of laboratory mice. these groundbreaking results had been met with skepticism, because transmissibility in chickens and tumorigenesis in rabbits were not seen as applicable to human disease. the doubts were dispelled in the s, by the demonstration that a tumor induced by rous sarcoma virus (rsv) could produce infected tumor cells [rubin ]. in conjunction with the observation that murine leukemia viruses are transmissible to newborn animals [gross ], it initiated two decades of intense research into animal viruses, including many retroviruses with tumorigenic properties in animals. in , the epstein-barr virus (ebv) was observed by electron microscopy in cultured cells from burkitt lymphoma [epstein et al. ]. studies of rsv lead to the identification of the first oncogene, v-src, in the s [martin ; brugge and erikson ] and its subsequent sequencing [czernilofsky et al. ]. in general, the infection of cells with an oncogenic dna virus may result either in productive lytic infection with cell death and the release of newly formed virus particles or in cell transformation to the neoplastic state with little or no virus production, but with the integration of viral genetic information into the cell dna. the genomes of herpes viruses are doublestranded linear dna molecules with sizes in the range of - kb. the initiation of transformation by oncogenic herpes viruses appears to depend on specific genes, although no single t antigens (tumor antigens) have been identified. ebv was discovered in by epstein, achong, and barr in a biopsy from burkitt lymphoma. it is a γ- herpes virus infecting all human populations, with a prevalence of over % in adults. infection results in the establishment of a lifelong carrier state, characterized by the persistence of antibodies to several viral gene products and the secretion of infectious virus in the saliva, which is also the usual vehicle of transmission. the epstein-barr virus, which is the agent of infectious mononucleosis, is causative for burkitt lymphoma (described by english surgeon denis burkitt in uganda in ) in africa and sporadic cases elsewhere, for b-cell lymphomata in acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (aids), as well as for nasopharyngeal carcinoma with high prevalence in china. viral dna and various ebv antigens are detectable in the affected tumor cells. a herpes virus designated hhv type (kshv, kaposi sarcomarelated herpes virus) has been implicated in aids associated kaposi sarcoma [chang et al. ] , the most common malignant tumor in aids, and also in rare sporadic kaposi sarcomata unrelated to aids. the herpes simplex virus type (hsv- ) may be involved in the pathogenesis of cervical cancer. originally known as serum hepatitis, hepatitis b has only been recognized as such since . it has caused epidemics in parts of asia and africa. hepatitis b is recognized as endemic in china and various other parts of asia. hepatitis b viruses (hbv) specifically infect liver cells. chronic infection with hbv may have a causal role in primary hepatocellular carcinoma, which is one of the most common forms of cancer in asia. viral dna is integrated into the tumor cells in some of these cases. in , baruch blumberg and harvey alter reported the discovery of the hepatitis b surface antigen (aa, hbsag, australia antigen), and a specific antibody binding to it. in , dane visualized the hepatitis b virion. these discoveries paved the way for the development of a vaccine. the genomes of the papova family members polyomavirus and sv are double-stranded circular dna molecules with sizes of about kb. they contain two main groups of genes that are associated with early and late events in the replication cycle. the early genes are transcribed soon after infection of a cell and their encoded proteins participate in viral dna synthesis but are not structural components of the virions. the late genes encode proteins of the viral coat and capsid. in productive lytic infection, early proteins are formed transiently before the structural proteins are assembled into viral particles. when stable transformation takes place, viral dna is integrated into the cellular chromosomal dna and some of the early proteins are persistently synthesized, but viral particles are not produced. approximately - distinct types of human papilloma viruses (hpv) have been identified, which infect epithelial cells. while several forms cause benign tumors, such as warts, some types of sexually transmitted hpv are associated with precursor lesions to squamous carcinoma of the uterine cervix. in , harald zur hausen and colleagues isolated hpv from a human cervical cancer specimen. hpv types and ("high risk hpv"), followed by hpv types and , may cause invasive cervical carcinoma or anorectal cancers. hpv dna is extrachromosomal in the precursor lesions and infectious virus is produced. viral dna is frequently integrated into the cancer cells, but additional agents or factors may be involved at various stages of the progression to invasive carcinoma. cell transformation by hpv results from the expression of two early genes, e and e . e binds to p , while e binds to rb, in both cases resulting in the degradation of their targets in the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. acting together, e and e are sufficient to induce transformation in the absence of mutations in cell regulatory proteins. in , a vaccine against high risk hpv strains came on the market. while there is no evidence that sv can induce human tumors or that sv dna is present in human tumor cells, it has been a valuable model in cancer research. the early proteins found in tumors induced by polyomavirus and sv are termed t (tumor) antigens. polyomavirus produces large, middle, and small t antigens, of which the middle t antigen ( kd) is necessary for transformation. this early protein is bound to the plasma membrane of transformed cells and activates signal transduction pathways that promote cell cycle progression. the two early proteins, t (large t, kd) and t (small t, kd), are formed from the same reading frame by alternative splicing. the large t antigen is located in the nucleus of infected cells and maintains the transformed state. distinct domains of large t bind to p and rb, inhibiting their function. because large t inhibits both proteins, expression of only the sv large t protein is sufficient to induce the transformation of certain cells. most adenoviruses only cause acute upper respiratory tract infections. adenoviruses were discovered in adenomatous tissue in by rowe. their genomes are double-stranded linear dna molecules with sizes of about - kb. in cells transformed by oncogenic adenoviruses, a region of the genome encoding early gene products, including the e a and e b oncoproteins, is transcribed. these transforming proteins inactivate the rb and p tumor suppressors, with e a binding to rb and e b binding to p . oncogenic rna viruses. hübner and todaro postulated the existence of retroviral oncogenes [hübner and todaro ] . among the many families of rna viruses, only members of the retrovirus and flavivirus families are capable of transforming cells and inducing tumors. the genomes of retroviruses are single-stranded rna molecules with a size range of - kb. all retroviruses contain a reverse transcriptase [baltimore ; temin and mizutani ] , and their reduplication requires the synthesis of a double-stranded dna intermediate of the rna genome. some of the virally determined dna becomes integrated into the host dna as a provirus. typically, there are three retroviral genes that encode proteins necessary for viral reduplication, but do not contribute to transformation: -the gag gene encodes internal structural proteins of the virus. two unique types of human retroviruses, human t-cell leukemia viruses (htlv) types and take part in the etiology of leukemias [ruscetti et al. ; mier and gallo ; poiesz et al. ] . human t-cell leukemia virus type (htlv- ), the first human retrovirus to be isolated and characterized, may be the causative agent of a relatively rare form of t-cell lymphoma that occurs mainly in japan and the caribbean islands. htlv- can cause hairy t-cell leukemia [kalyanaraman et al. ] . all the known rna-containing tumor viruses are classified as retroviruses, with the exception of the hepatitis c virus (hcv), which resembles a flavivirus. in , daniel bradley provided chiron with non-a/non-b hepatitis serum from chimpanzees. there, michael houghton and colleagues discovered a single virus and changed the name to hcv. the virus was then cloned from infectious sera of patients with posttransfusion hepatitis. hepatitis c may lead to chronic liver disease and cirrhosis, which is a predisposing factor for liver cancer. the encounter with a family, in which many members developed breast or liver cancer, led pierre paul broca to hypothesize, in , that an inherited abnormality within the affected tissue caused the tumor development [broca theodor boveri ( boveri ( - then proposed that defects in chromosomes lead to malignancy [boveri ]. he hypothesized that malignant tumors might be the result of a certain abnormal condition of the chromosomes, which may arise from multipolar mitosis. the main concepts of boveri's theory are: -the problem of tumors is a cellular problem -typically, every tumor arises form a single cell -the primordial cells of tumors contain, as a result of an abnormal process, definite and wrongly combined chromatin contents -chromosome abnormalities are the cause to the tendency toward rapid cell proliferation, which is passed on to all decendents of the primordial cell. in the s, sajiro makino in japan, theodore hauschka in the united states, and albert levan in sweden observed that virtually all tumor cell lines have chromosomal aberrations. the discovery of the philadelphia chromosome in chronic myeloid leukemia [nowell and hungerford ] later provided experimental evidence for boveri's theories. it supported the hypothesis that damage to the chromosomes induced carcinogenesis. aneuploidy, typically with elevated dna content, is a frequent marker of cancerous cells. providing more functional insight, the first description of a translocation was reported in by janet d. rowley [rowley ]. although the philadelphia chromosome was among the first translocations to be discovered, the genes involved in the translocation that causes burkitt lymphoma were the first to be molecularly characterized. in , carlo croce and bob gallo showed that the myc proto-oncogene on chromosome is affected by the translocation. simultaneously, phil leder's group demonstrated that myc is translocated into the ′ region of the immunoglobulin heavy chain (igh) gene [dalla-favera et al. ; taub et al. ] . cancers represent a large category of somatic cell genetic diseases [mckusick ] . the term "somatic mutation" was first applied to cancer by ernest tyzzer, who observed that tumors sequentially transplanted into mice developed a continuous broadening of host specificity among recipients from various inbred strains [tyzzer ]. by the s, tyzzer's model had received a molecular underpinning and cancer was understood as a disease of genetic alterations. tumor initiation and progression occurs through the accumulation of changes that begin when a single normal cell sustains a permanent genetic damage. the resulting dysregulation of gene function is responsible for the clonal expansion of a population of somatic cells that ultimately becomes dominant. progress in the understanding of dna and genes has been a major determining factor for progress in cancer research. in , johann friedrich miescher had identified a weakly acidic substance of unknown function in the nuclei of human white blood cells, which later became known as deoxyribonucleic acid, or dna. the term gene (derived from the greek γενοσ = origin), attributed to johanssen, first appeared in as an abstract concept to explain the hereditary basis of traits. oswald avery, colin mcleod, and maclyn mccarthy showed in that dna constitutes the genetic material. in , james watson and francis crick deduced the double helical structure of dna from x-ray diffraction data, generated by rosalind franklin. in , sidney brenner and francis crick established that groups of three nucleotide bases, or codons, are used to specify individual amino acids. the genetic code of nucleotide triplets was worked out in final detail in , mainly through work by marshall nierenberg and heinrich matthaei. this paved the way for the molecular analysis of gene damage. one of the most important approaches for biotechnology is the cloning of genes inserted into plasmids. it was initiated through discussions between stanley cohen and herb boyer at a conference in hawaii, and by march the feasibility of their new method was demonstrated. pcr was invented by kary b. mullis in spring of . these techniques allowed for the large availability and easy manipulation of cancer related genes. in , frederick sanger at the medical research council in cambridge, uk and walter gilbert at harvard university in boston, usa independently devised methods for sequencing dna, which were further developed by leroy hood at the california institute of technology, who invented an automated dna sequencer in . in , the human genome project was launched to obtain the complete blueprint of human dna, planned for . in , the competition by a private enterprise, led by craig venter, accelerated the process, so that both groups presented a draft sequence of the genome by june . the genetic analysis of cancer experienced additional support from the technical accomplishment to manipulate individual genes in vivo. in , a team led by richard palmiter and ralph brinster generated the first transgenic mouse. this was achieved through pronuclear microinjection of genetic material into the nuclei of fertilized eggs. from through , teams led by martin evans, oliver smithies, and mario capecchi created knockout mice by selectively disabling a specific target gene in embryonic stem cells. rna tumor viruses can cause normal cells to adopt the characteristics of rapid uncontrolled growth that are typical of many tumors. the discovery of the human proto-oncogene src by dominique stéhelin, harold varmus, michael bishop, and peter vogt [stéhelin et al. ] confirmed that viral oncogenes are derived from related genes of host cells. their analysis implied that the cellular src sequence is involved in the normal regulation of growth. it also suggested that tumors could arise independently of viruses as a result of mutations in their related cellular genes. consecutively in , three publications in the journal nature independently of one another identified a point mutation in the proto-oncogene ras as a defect associated with bladder cancer [chang et al. ; parada et al. ; mcbride et al. ]. these discoveries revealed that a cellular transforming gene involved in human bladder and lung tumors was homologous to the transforming viral ras gene [parada et al. ; der et al. ] , and that an activating point mutation affected the identical codon in all cases. thus, it became apparent that the same cellular proto-oncogenes could be affected by viruses, by chemical carcinogens, or by nonviral somatic mutations, which brought together various previously independent lines of research. the observation that the growth of murine tumor cells in vivo could be suppressed by fusion of the tumor cells with nontransformed cells provided evidence that the ability of cells to form a tumor is a recessive trait [ephrussi et al. ]. knudson [knudson ] carried out an epidemiological study of retinoblastoma development in children. he postulated that "two hits" are required for the complete inactivation of a tumor suppressor gene. the gene p was discovered independently by linzer and levine [ ] and by lane and crawford [ ] as a cellular protein that binds to the viral oncoprotein of sv . initially suspected as a cellular oncogene, due to mutations that act as dominant negative forms, the identification of loss of heterozygozity and loss of function mutations of p confirmed its actual role as a tumor suppressor [baker et al. ]. after this clarification, p became known as the guardian of the genome, because it protects from the consequences of genetic damage by inhibiting cell division or inducing cell death. in , loss of heterozygosity analysis was used to map the tumor suppressor gene rb, which was then cloned in [friend et al. ]. oxidative metabolism inevitably leads to dna damage. this may occur by direct oxidation of bases, by induction of dna strand breaks, or by mediation of frameshift mutations in microsatellite dna. each cell (of estimated in the human body) loses more than bases (out of a total of × nucleotides) per day from the spontaneous breakdown of dna at body temperature, mostly through the damage by reactive oxygen species. a similar number of lesions is generated by spontaneous depurination, resulting in miscoding by the residual apurinic site [loeb ]. the deamination of -methylcytosine to thymine is among the most frequent causes for point mutations. it accounts for more than % of all base mutations that give rise to genetic disease [krawczak et al. ]. it has been estimated that -methylcytosine deaminates at a rate of . × − s − at each cpg site (cytosine and guanine separated by a phosphate) [shen et al. ] , which corresponds to about four residues per cell per day. mutation frequencies of the hypoxanthine phosphoribosyl transferase (hprt) gene, a commonly used marker for mutation frequency, in normal adult epithelial cells reach approximately . × − [martin et al. ]. the reduplication of dna during cell division introduces the possibility of errors at an estimated rate of . × − nucleotides/cell/division. loeb and colleagues [loeb et al. ] realized that it would be unlikely for tumor cells to acquire the number of mutations presumably needed for full transformation during the lifetime of the host and postulated the existence of mutator genes. much later, the study of hereditary non-polyposis coli led to the discovery of defective dna repair genes [ionov et al. ; thibodeau et al. ; parsons et al. ] . any mutation of cancer associated genes can be handed on to following generations and predispose the affected cells to malignant transformation in the case of additional dna damage. the formation of cancer has been termed "clonal evolution" to describe how certain mutations enable cells to copy their damaged dna and divide under conditions, which cause normal cells to stop replicating. the repetition of this process allows cells to accumulate cancerous mutations [cavenee and white ] . in , berenblum and shubik [ ] concluded that carcinogenesis is at least a two-stage process. five years later, armitage and doll [ ] inferred from their analysis of age and cancer incidence a - step process. in , newbold and overell observed that an activated ras gene failed to transform normal fibroblasts, unless they were first immortalized [newbold and overell ] . this led to the hypothesis that ras activation was only one step in a number of mutations necessary in the pathway to malignancy. the concept of multiple somatic mutations as underlying mechanism of carcinogenesis was further advanced by a multistep carcinogenesis model, conceived of by foulds [ ] and refined by fearon and vogelstein [ ] . it also gave rise to the recognition of chromosome instability and microsatellite instability as two distinct pathogenetic mechanisms of carcinogenesis. the technical achievements of differential display ], serial analysis of gene expression (sage) [velculescu et al. ; zhang et al. ] , and dna microarrays [schena et al. ; derisi et al. ] further advanced these concepts to the definition of transformation on the basis of aberrant gene expression profiles [kononen et al. ; golub et al. ]. in addition to chromosome integrity and dna sequence fidelity, the regulation of the chromatin structure is an important determinant in transformation. dna methylation is a covalent modification of the c position in cytosine. this methylation pattern is stably maintained at cpg dinucleotides by a family of dna methyl transferases that recognize hemi-methylated cpg dinucleotides after dna replication. dna hypo-methylation was identified as a characteristic of cancer cells in [feinberg and vogelstein ] . in , vincent allfrey had realized that histones were often chemically modified by acetylation, which caused them to relax their binding to dna [allfrey et al. ]. this implied the possibility of a role for histones in cancer [roth ]. in , robert kornberg proposed that chromatin was quite structured, consisting of repeated units of about base pairs of dna wrapped around - distinct histones (later called nucleosomes) [kornberg ; kornberg and thomas ] . the importance of acetylation for the regulation of gene expression and gene silencing was, however, realized only many years later. in , methylation and phosphorylation of histones were observed by several investigators to contribute similarly [bestor ]. today, various enzymes that modify histones are known to contribute to transformation [horiuchi et al. ]. beyond the development of cancer research from explanations on a cellular level to a molecular genetic level, there has been a development of dynamic models of carcinogenesis. winge introduced the concept of selective cellular proliferation, realizing that selection must operate on a genotypically mixed population of proliferating cells as inevitably as it acts on a genotypically mixed population of reproducing organisms [winge ]. macfarlane burnet conceptualized the clonal selection theory for immunity and applied it to cancer. it suggests that tumorigenesis represents the development of a clone of cells with the capacity to multiply excessively in the context of its relationships within the body [burnet ]. in the s, feedback control in biological systems was described by francois jacob and jacque monod. cellular metabolism and proliferation are regulated by spatiotemporal circuits of mutual feedback control. they include extracellular and intracellular signals, rate limiting steps, and checkpoint controls. cancer development has also been described with the algorithms of ecology [michelson et al. ; maley et al. ] and game theory [tomlinson ]. the regulatory theory contends that cancer is not a morphologic entity, but an aberrant regulatory process among individual cells, their microenvironment, and the entire host. genetically identical cells and organisms exhibit substantial diversity, even when they have identical histories of environmental exposure. variation in gene expression, based in part on the stochastic nature of biochemical reactions, may contribute to this phenotypic variability [raser and o'shea ] . genetic changes underlying growth control, senescence, invasion, and stromalparenchymal interactions are part of a continuum of carcinogenesis that affects interrelated pathways. in malignant cells, the normal balance between the number of cells completing the cell cycle and the number of cells dying is changed. likewise, the balance of adhesive versus migratory surface molecules on malignant cells is shifted in favor of the motility enhancing receptors. full transformation has two basic requirements: -genetic instability of the cell to drive tumor progression -selective advantage of the cell to allow for clonal expansion [cairns ; nowell ]. the genetic instability of tumor cells is reflected in the heterogeneity within individual tumors and among tumors of the same type. it is based either on chromosome instability, leading to aneuploidy, or on defective dna repair, leading to microsatellite instability and gene mutations. genomic destabilization is an early event in tumor development. the mean number of alterations in a cell that turns carcinomatous may amount to about , [stoler et al. ]. waves of clonal expansion give rise to daughter cells that have the growth advantage typical of cancer. clonal selection drives this process. tumors are clonal insofar as they are derived from the same stem cell precursor. genetic instability generates a collection of coexisting subclones, each with the potential for future changes in the face of selective pressures [cahill et al. ]. the relative importance of selective advantage versus genetic instability in tumor initiation and progression is still subject to debate. studies of cell senescence have led to a research focus on population dynamics, selection, and evolution. hayflick recognized that there is a finite number of possible population doublings by nontransformed differentiated cells [hayflick and moorehead ] . after a limited number of divisions, a state of crisis is reached, in which most cells die. a few cells may be altered in a fashion that conveys a selective advantage, which allows them to grow out and dominate the population. these cells are selected and form an expanding population with potentially precancerous characteristics. the demonstration that htlv- immortalizes normal t-lymphocytes [popovic et al. ] led to additional investigations, which confirmed that tumor viruses can frequently immortalize human host cells. the shortening of the chromosome ends, telomeres [szostak and blackburn ; moyzis et al. ] , is an integral part of replicative senescence. the enzyme telomerase [mckay and cooke ; chong et al. ] replenishes the chromosome ends and can prevent this shortening. its activity is present in most cancer cells, but not typically in nontransformed differentiated cells [hastie et al. ]. the first cancer hospital was founded in the th century in reims, france. french gynecologist joseph claude anthelme récamier ( - ) described the invasion of the bloodstream by cancer cells, coining the word "metastasis." in the s, pierre paul broca ( broca ( - and karl von rokitansky ( - , independently of each other, observed the venous spread of cancer. theories of metastasis formation have traditionally been based on concepts of population dynamics. in , english surgeon stephen paget ( paget ( - described the propensity of various types of cancer to form metastases in specific organs. he stated that "the distribution of the secondary growth is not a matter of chance" and proposed that these patterns were due to the dependence of the "seeds" (the cancer cells) on the "congenial soil" (the target organ for metastasis) [paget ]. this notion was challenged by american pathologist james ewing ( ewing ( - , who suggested that circulatory patterns between a primary tumor and specific secondary organs were sufficient to account for most of the targeted metastasis [ewing ]. this was relativized by leonard weiss, who demonstrated that the number of metastases in specific target organs, derived from certain tumors, could not be accounted for solely by blood flow patterns [weiss ]. the first evidence that metastasis formation depends on intrinsic characteristics of the tumor cells came from experiments by isaiah fidler [fidler ], who generated sublines with increasing invasive potential by serial passage of a melanoma cell line through mice. soon, somatic cell fusion and microcell mediated chromosomal transfer suggested that the ability to disseminate was under positive and negative genetic control [ramshaw et al. ; sidebottom and clark ; layton and franks ] . these observations placed ensuing research activities into metastasis on a deterministic footing. the secretion of proteases by tumor cells [turpeenniemi-hujanen et al. ; matrisian et al. ] was recognized as one factor causing invasiveness. homing receptors were identified on the cell surface, which are necessary and sufficient to mediate metastasis formation by specific tumors [günthert et al. ] . in conjunction with the finding of metastasis suppressor genes [steeg et al. ; alvarez et al. ], the detection of metastasis genes has corroborated the existence of genetic programs intrinsic in the tumor cells, which regulate invasiveness. these observations have led to the development of a genetic theory of metastasis formation, according to which metastasis genes are developmentally nonessential genes that physiologically contribute to inflammation, wound healing, and stress-induced angiogenesis. their dysregulation in cancer occurs on the level of aberrant expression and splicing [weber and ashkar ] . tissue-specific molecular markers (addressins) were identified in [streeter et al. ], which implied the possibility that circulating cells could recognize target organs. this was corroborated by the identification of the contribution by chemokines and their cognate receptors to tumor dissemination [mueller et al. ]. in the evolution of research progress from a reductionist to a comprehensive understanding of cancer, interactions between the host and the cancer cells have recently received increasing attention. mintz and illmensee [ ] had demonstrated that the injection of undifferentiated embryonal carcinoma cells into mouse blastocysts suppressed their inherent tumorigenicity and led to the contribution by these cells to a variety of functional tissues. around the same time, the michigan radiologist john wolfe recognized that women with dense breasts had an elevated risk of contracting breast cancer, implying a role for the stromal architecture. in , it was realized that the tissue environment had a dramatic effect on the potential by tumors to metastasize [nakajima et al. ]. tumorigenic prostatic stroma and nontumorigenic prostatic epithelium can interact to induce the development of carcinosarcoma [chung et al. ]. the concept that the stroma plays important roles in carcinogenesis has since been developed by mina bissell [bissell and radisky ] , judy campisi [krtolica et al. ] , and donald ingber [huang and ingber ] . early work in experimental carcinogenesis had shown vascularization and hyperemia around tumor transplants [ide et al. ; coman and sheldon ] and similarities were seen between the vascular reactions to tumors and to tissue damage [algire et al. ] . cancer researchers became interested in angiogenesis factors in , when the first hints emerged that tumors might release such substances to foster their own progression. two groups, one led by melvin greenblatt in california with phillipe shubik in chicago, and another by robert l. ehrmann and mogens knoth in boston, showed that burgeoning tumors can release a substance that induces existing blood vessels to grow into them [rijhsinghani et al. ; ehrmann and knoth ] . such vascularization promotes tumor growth because it ensures a sufficient supply of oxygen and nutrients. folkman [ ; folkman et al. ] recognized the important role of blood vessels in the growth of cancerous tumors. after more than a decade of research, mediators of angiogenesis that are secreted by some tumors were identified [senger et al. ; shing et al. ]. the inhibition of vegf (vascular endothelial growth factor)-induced angiogenesis was shown to suppress tumor growth [kim et al. ]. today, a monoclonal antibody to vegf is used in the treatments of some cancers. these investigations also led to the discovery of naturally secreted compounds that curtail the growth of new tumors [taylor and folkman ; o'reilly et al. ; o'reilly et al. ]. in the th and th centuries, some believed that cancer was contagious. in fact, the first cancer hospital in france was forced to move from the city in because of the fear that cancer could spread throughout the city. more than a century later, the potentially protective role of the immune system against transformed cells was recognized. in the s, new york surgeon william b. coley found a record of a young patient with round cell sarcoma on the neck, who had been listed as an utterly hopeless patient when he developed a severe infection of erysipelas. he survived the infection and his tumor went into remission. based on this case, coley devised a killed vaccine of streptococcus pyogenes (the cause of erysipelas) with serratia marcescens. after a few years of its use, he reported to have successfully treated some sarcoma patients with the application of his bacterial toxins (coley's toxin) [coley [coley , . after coley's death, his daughter helen coley nauts reviewed his records, published several reviews of his work, and founded the cancer research institute, which promotes immune therapies for cancer. in , paul ehrlich carried out immunizations in animals with tumor cells and suggested that tumors occur at high frequency in humans, but are kept under control by the immune system [ehrlich ]. further developments in tumor immunology have led to models of selection and evolution of cancer cells. macfarlane burnet coined the term immunosurveillance in [burnet ]. in this conceptual framework, the host immune system constantly screens cells for signs of transformation and eliminates those that pose a threat to the body's integrity. the growth of a tumor reflects an escape from immunosurveillance. cancer cells that can evade the immune system, be it by down-regulation of antigen presenting or co-stimulatory molecules, be it by expression of immunosuppressive cell surface molecules or cytokines, will grow out and form tumors. three distinct theories were developed to interpret the nature of the tumor recognition by the immune system. -lewis thomas described homograft rejection as a primary defense against neoplasia [thomas ]. -according to concepts by burnet, which are based on self/non-self discrimination, the immune system is active early in antitumor protection. the early surveillance mechanisms shape the tumor's immunological phenotype [burnet ]. this was supported by the description of tumor specific antigens [old and boyse ] . tumors mostly express self antigens, which may account for the incomplete protection from transformation by the immune system. -the alternative proposal of the danger theory [matzinger ] implies that the immune system is activated only at later stages of carcinogenesis. during the early stages, tumor cells appear immunologically as healthy growing cells that do not send out danger signals to activate the immune system because they express neither microbial immune recognition patterns nor release distress signals to alarm the innate immune system cells [fuchs and matzinger ] . in advanced growth, hypoxia and tissue damage induce stress responses, which activate the immune system. in the framework of the danger theory, the immune system is activated at later stages of tumor development, when tissue damage has occurred. the possibility to direct the immune system to fight cancer cells in virtually any location within the body with minimal side effects has attracted increasing research efforts. the high specificity and high binding affinity of antibodies made them attractive as potential anticancer agents. for a long time, however, they were difficult to isolate in large quantities. the fusion of antibody producing cells with myeloma cells into hybridomas, accomplished by cesar milstein and georges koehler in the early s, changed that. yet, biotechnology had to advance to accomplish humanizing such antibodies before they became successful in therapy. in , the us food and drug administration (fda) approved rituxan, a monoclonal antibody to cd (developed by idec pharmaceuticals) to treat non-hodgkin lymphoma [mclaughlin et al. ]. the process also led to the development of herceptin, spearheaded by dennis slamon, an antibody that targets the receptor erbb (her- /neu) that is overexpressed on the surface of about % of breast cancers. because antitumor immunity is predominantly cellular immunity, other research has been directed toward turning t-lymphocytes against tumors. steven a. rosenberg focused his efforts to generate antitumor vaccines on tumor associated antigens. in a similar approach, martin kast studied the development of peptide-based vaccines. glenn dranoff demonstrated the high effectiveness of irradiated tumor cells transfected with the cytokine gm-csf in inducing antitumor immunity [dranoff et al. ] . over time it became clear, on the other hand, that the immune system could also impact negatively on cancer risk in the context of chronic inflammation. in , robert koch and louis pasteur had shown independently of each other that microorganisms can cause disease. in the s, barry j. marshall and j. robin warren demonstrated that gastric ulcers were caused by bacteria they called helicobacter pylori. infection results in widespread inflammation that predisposes to stomach cancer. inflammation in the stomach mucosa is also a risk factor for malt (mucosaassociated lymphoid tissue) lymphoma, a lymphatic neoplasm in the stomach. over the decades, the roles of hormones in carcinogenesis have received increasing attention. the observation by bernardino ramazzini in of a virtual absence of cervical cancer and relatively high incidence of breast cancer in nuns was an important step toward identifying and understanding the importance of hormonal factors, such as those associated with pregnancy, in modifying cancer risk. in , thomas beatson discovered that the breasts of rabbits stopped producing milk after he removed the ovaries. he suggested to the edinburgh medico-chirurgical society in : "this fact (. . .) pointed to one organ holding control over the secretion of another and separate organ." beatson found that oophorectomy often resulted in the improvement of breast cancer patients and inferred the stimulating effect of a female ovarian hormone on breast cancer, before the hormone itself was discovered [beatson ]. allen and doisy [ ] identified an ovarian hormone they referred to as "estrus stimulating principle," later called estrogen. from the late s to the s elwood jensen demonstrated that such hormones do not undergo redox modifications to become activated. instead, they bind to a receptor protein within their target cells [jensen and jacobson ] . this hormone/receptor complex then travels to the cell nucleus, where it regulates gene expression. the first nonsteroidal antiestrogen to be reported in the literature, mer , was described by lerner and coworkers in [lerner et al. ] as an agent that had no other hormonal or antihormonal properties. the drug failed in clinical trial because the large doses required caused serious central nervous system side effects. tamoxifen, first discovered in , is a nonsteroidal antiestrogen that serves a dual role as breast cancer treatment and preventive. it was approved for the treatment of advanced breast cancer by the us fda in . awareness of the androgen dependence of prostate tissue can be traced back to the scottish surgeon john hunter, who observed in that castrated bulls had small prostates. in , charles brenton huggins ( - , a urologist at the university of chicago, with his students clarence v. hodges and william wallace scott, published three papers that demonstrated the relationship between the endocrine system and the normal functioning of the prostate gland. in the s, charles huggins also reported a dramatic regression of metastatic prostate cancer following removal of the testes [huggins and hodges ] . later, drugs that blocked male hormones were found to be effective treatments for prostate cancer. androgen ablation with gonadotropin releasing hormone agonists (gnrh-as) in prostate cancer patients was first reported in [tolis et al. ] . in , the androgen receptor was cloned ]. iatrogenic causes for cancer predisposition were incriminated by a study published in , which documented an association between clear-cell adenocarcinoma of the vagina and in utero exposure to diethylstilbestrol [herbst et al. ] (dodds and associates had characterized diethylstilbestrol as an extremely potent estrogen [dodds et al. ] ; it had been prescribed for close to years to prevent certain complications of pregnancy and as a treatment for advanced breast cancer in postmenopausal women). in july , the women's health initiative study was stopped after more breast cancers and heart problems occurred among women taking estrogen-progestin pills. in , multiple clinical studies showed that breast cancer rates in the united states dropped in , consecutive to a drastic reduction in the use of 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cancer comments on hematogenous metastatic patterns in humans as revealed by autopsy zytologische untersuchungen über die natur maligner tumoren. ii gene expression profiles in normal and cancer cells key: cord- -pgyzluwp authors: nan title: programmed cell death date: journal: experientia doi: . /bf sha: doc_id: cord_uid: pgyzluwp nan it is widely held that all developmental cell death is of a single type (apoptosis) and that neuronal death is primarily for adjusting the number of neurons in a population to the size of their target field through competition between equals for target-derived factors. we shall draw on our research and on that of others to criticize these views and replace them by the following. at least three types of neuronal death occur, only one of which resembles apoptosis; a neuron can choose between several self-destruct mechanisms depending on the cause of its death. the purpose of the death is to regulate connectivity, not neuron number. competitors for trophic factors are unequal, and many losers have made axonal targeting errors. a neuron's survival and differentiation depend on multiple anterograde and retrograde signals. activity affects retrograde signals and some but not all anterograde ones. the pattern of activity is more important than the overall amount. in rodents, the period of naturally occuring cell death of motoneurons is followed by a period of supersensitivity to axonal injury. thus, in newborn rodents lesion of the facial nerve leads to a rapid degeneration of the injured motoneurons. we have tested whether overexpression, in rive, of the bcl- proto-oncogene was capable of preventing death of axotomized motoneurons. to address this question we used transgenic mice whose motoneurons overexpress the bcl- protein. one of the two facial nerves of newborn mice was transected on the nd- rd post-natal day. seven days after the lesion, the morphology of the facial nuclei was analyzed. in control mice, and when compared to the intact nucleus, to % of axotomized motoneurons had disappeared. in contrast, in the transgenic animals, the number of motoneurons on the lesioned side remained unchanged when compared to the eontralateral nucleus. furthermore, their axons remained visible up to the distal lesion site. these experiments show that, in rive, motoneurons overexpressing the bcl- protein survive after axotomy, and suggest that, in rive, bcl- protect neurons from experimentally induced cell death and could be a target for treatment of motoneurons degenerative diseases. messmer s., mattenberger l., sager y., blatter-garin m-c., pometta d., kate a., james r.w. drpt de mrdeeine, drpt. de pharmacologie, div. de neurophysiologie clinique, facult de mrdecine, gen~ve. clusterin is a widely expressed glycoprotein, highly conserved across species. numerous functions have been postulated for this protein. the most important are roles in lipid transport, as elusterin is associated with apolipoprotein ai in hdl, complement regulation and tissue remodelling, in particular during cell death and differentiation. using cultures of rat spinal cord neurones ( % neurons and - % non-neuronal cells), we have studied the expression of clusterin and ape e in glutamate-induced neuronal cell death to examine potential roles in lipid management. up-regulation of the two proteins was observed. clusterin and ape e appear in the conditioned medium respectively h and . h after incubation with glutamate. control studies, in the presence of a noncompetitive nmda receptor agonist showed the secretion of clusterin and ape e to be diminished by > %. no up-regulation of either protein was observed in complementary studies with exclusively non-neuronal cell cultures. the cellular origin of the secreted proteins is presently under investigation. programmed cell death and tissue remodelling are consequences of hormonally induced restructuring of the rat ventral prostate after castration and the rat mammary gland after weaning. we used the "differential display"-method (liang and pardee, , science : ) to detect and isolate edna fragments whose corresponding rnas are regulated either coincidentally, or in an organ specific fashion during mammary gland involution and postcastrational prostate regression. partial sequencing of clones revealed high, but not absolute homology of fragments with sequences, previously characterized in different biological contexts. these five encode functions which could be anticipated to be important for cell growth and/or programmed cell death, we are presently investigating the functions of several of these transcripts in cell culture and in rive. antisense oligos are being employed in vivo to determine whether these genes contribute to the phenotype of programmed cell death. b epitopes derived from the envelope gp glycoprotein (ep ) or from the viral superantigen of mmtv have been incorporated into inert or live vaccines. the inert vaccine consists of purified chimeric proteins which contain the b epitopes alone or fused to multimeric promiscuous t helper epitopes from tetanus toxin. mice were immunized subcutaneously with these chimeric proteins. the live vaccine consists of an avirulent strain of salmonella typhimurium which expresses the mmtv epitopes in the form of chimeric proteins fused to the nucleocapsid protein of hepatitis b virus. this vaccine is given to mice in one oral dose. the level, duration and isotype of the immune response generated by each vaccine have been measured and compared. the level of protection has been investigated by systemically challenging immunized mice with the relzovims. a reduced binding of oxytocin (ot) occurs with aging in some, but not all, areas of the rat brain (arsenijevic et al., experientia , , a ) . the candate putamen showed the most impressive loss of ot receptors. two other regions, the hypothalamic ventromedial nucleus (vmh) and the islands of caueja (icj) had also an important deficit of ot binding sites. on the other hand, these two regions were known to be sensitive to sex steroids. in the present work, we treated from month old rats during one month with testosterone propionate ( #g/kg s.c., once every days) dissolved in oil. three rats of the same age injected with oil only served as controls. we labelled ot receptors throughout the brain of old rats using a i-labelled ligand specific for ot receptors. analysis of autoradiograms by an image analyzer revealed that the testosterone treatment increased ot binding sites in the vmh, in the icj, and, to a lesser extent, in the bed nucleus of the stria terminalis, a region also sensitive to sex steroids, by contrast, in the caudate putamen, the disappearance of ot receptors was not compensated. in conclusion, the decrease of ot receptors occurring in vmh and icj with aging can be reversed by administration of gonadal steroids. in contrast, the loss of ot receptors in the striatum appears to depend on another mecanism. vasopressin (avp) receptors are expressed transiently in the facial nucleus during development (tribollet et el., , dev. brain res., , - ) . avp may therefore play a role in the maturation of neuromuscular connexions in the neonate rat, and possibly in the restanration of these connexions after nerve lesion in the adult. in order to investigate the latter proposition, we have sectionned the facial nerve in adult rats and used quantitative autoradiography to look at avp binding sites in the facial nucleus at various postoperative times. we observed a massive and transient increase of avp binding sites on the operated side. the number of facial avp binding sites reaches a maximum about one week after nerve section, remains stable during - weeks, then begin to decrease towards control level. the induction of avp receptors is markedly delayed if the proximal stump of the nerve is ligated. to assess whether other motor nuclei would also react to axotomy by up-regulating the expression of avp receptors, we have sectionned the hypoglossal nerve and the sciatic nerve. in both cases, the binding of avp receptor ligand increases massively in the respective motor nuclei, with a time-course similar to that found in the facial nucleus. altogether, our data suggest that central avp could be involved in the process of nerve regeneration. cytotoxic t-cell mediated apoptosis schaerer,e, karapetian,o.,adrian,m. and tschopp,j. inst.de biochimie, univ.de lausanne, epalinges. an apoptotic cell death mechanism is used by cytolytic t cells (ctl) to lyse appropriate target cells. ctl harbor cytoplasmic storage compartments, containing the lytic protein perforin and serineproteases (granzymes), whose content is released upon target cell interaction. we show that these granules are multivesieular bodies and that degranulation releases these intragranular vesicles (igv) having granzymes, t-cell receptor and yet undefined proteins associated. isolated igvs and perforin induce dna breakdown in target cells within minutes. microscopic analysis demonstrates that igv specifically interact with target cell via the t-cell receptor and that their contents is taken up by the target cell. already min. after interaction, distinct igv proteins are found in the nucleus of the target cell.one of the molecules has been identified to be granzyme a, previously reported to be involved in apoptosis. we propose that lymphocytes transfer apoptosisinducing proteins to the nucleus of the target cells using vesicles as vehicles for delivery. cytotoxic t cells kill their targets by a mechanism involving membranolysis and dna degradation (apoptosis). recently, two sets of proteins have been proposed as dna breakdown-inducing molecules in t cells: granzyme a, b and tia-i. in this study, we cloned and further characterized the tia-i mouse homologue. aa sequence comparison with the human tia- showed an overall identity of %. devoid of a signal peptide, tia is yet localized to cytotoxic granules, probably targeted via a gly-tyr-motif. as tia-i, its mouse homolcgue contains three rnabinding domains. expression of tia during development shows a very strong signal in the brain and weaker signals in thymus, heart and other organs. during embryonic development several structures that contribute to organogenesis form transiently and are later eliminated by apoptosis. this pattern of tia expression could indicate its involvement in apoptosis. prostate involution occurs after castration in rats and is associated with the death by apoptosis of a large fraction of the epithelial cells. we have isolated several genes from a prostate involution bacteriophage lambda library using differential screening methods. among these clones, one d~monstrated an especially strong signal when used as a probe against northern blots of prostate mlhna obtained before, and at different times after castration. this gene is down-regulated after castration by -fold within days. intramuscular injection of a testosterone depot resulted in complete restoration of expression within hours. upon sequencing it became apparent that this clone has a high degree of homology to a known ndah dehydrogenase encoded in mitochondrial dna. the clone failed to hybridize to any transcripts from rat organs other than prostate. we are now in the process of isolating the htm~n hc~olog to this gene for use as a biomarker in study of benign hyperplasia and developing carcinoma. this gene is a possible indicator for testosterone-independent cell populations or of cells lacking ftl~ctional testosterone receptor. during the first three postnatal weeks the rat lung undergoes the last two developmental stages, the phase of alveolarization and the phase of microvascular maturation. the latter involves a decrease of the connective tissue mass in the alveolar septa and a merging of the two capillary layers to a single one. speculating that programmed cell death may play a role during this remodeling, we searched for the presence of apoptotie cells in rat lungs between days and . lung paraffin sections were treated with y-terminal transferase, digoxigenin-dutp, and anti-digoxigeninfluorescein-f(ab)-fragments, and the number of fluorescent nuclei was compared between sections at different days. while the number of apoptotie ceils was low until the end of the second week and at day , we observed an about eight fold increase of fluorescent nuclei towards the end of the third week. we conclude that programmed cell death is involved in the structural maturation of the lung. brunner, a., wallrapp, ch., pollack, i, twardzik, t. and schneuwly, s. lehrstuhl genetik, biozentrum universit~t w~rzburg, mutants in the giant lens (g/l) gene show a strong disturbance in ommatidial development. in the absence of any gene product, additional phetoreceptors, cone cells and pigment cells develop. opposite effects can be seen in flies in which the gene product of the giant lens gene can be ectopically expressed by heat shock. a second very typical phenotype is the disturbance of photoreceptor axon guidance. molecular analysis of gil shows that it encodes a secreted protein of aa containing three evolutionary conserved cystein-motives very similar to egf-like repeats. we propose that gil functions as a secreted signal, most likely a lateral inhibitor for the development of specific cell fates and that gil, either directly or indirectly, is involved in targeting photoreceptor axons into the brain. the decrease in cellularity during scar establishment is mediated through apoptosis desmouliere, a., redard, m., darby, i., and g. gabbiani department of pathology, cmu, rue michel server, gen~ve dudng the healing of an open wound, granulation tissue formation is characterized by replication and accumulation of fibroblastic cells, many of which acquire morphological and biochemical features of smooth muscle cells and have been named myofibroblasts (sch rch et el., histology for pathologists, t ). as the wound evolves into a scar, there is an important decrease in ceuuladty, including disappearance of myofibroblasts. the question adses as to which process is responsible for myofibroblast disappearance. during a previous investigation on the expression of (z-smooth muscle actin in myofibroblasts, we have obsewed that in late phases of wound healing, many of myofibroblasts show signs of apoptosis end suggested that this type of cell death is responsible for the disappearance of myofibroblasts (darby et al., lab. invest. : , ) . we have tested this hypothesis by means of electron microscopy and morphometry and by in situ end-labeling of fragmented dna (wijsman et al., j. histochem. cytochem. : , t ) . our results show that the number of apoptotic cells increases as the wound closes and suggest that this may be the mechanism for the disappearance of myofibroblasts as well as for the evolution of granulation tissue into a scar. (supported by the swiss national science foundation, grant n~ s - r. jaggl, a. marti and b. jehn. universit~t bern, akef, tiefenaustr. , bern at weaning the mammary gland undergoes a reductive remodelling process (involution) which is associated with the cessation of milk protein gene expression and apoptosis of milk-produclng epithelial cells. this process can be reversed by returning the pups to the mother within day. elevated nuclear protein kinase a (pka) activity was observed from one day post-lactation, paralleled by increased c-los, junb, ]und and to a lesser extent c-]un mrna levels. ap- dna binding activity was transiently induced and the ap- complex was shown to consist principally of cfos/jund. oct- dna binding activity and oct- protein were gradually lost from the gland over the first four days of involution, whereas oct- m_rna levels remained unchanged. comparing nuclear extracts from normal mammary glands with nuclear extracts from glands which had been cleared of all epithelial cells three weeks after birth revealed that pka activation, ap- induction and oct- inactivation are all dependent on the presence of the epithelial compartment. the increased fos/jtm expression and the inactivation of oct- may be consequences of the increased pka activity. when involution is reversed, both, pica activity and ap- dna binding activity (and fos andjun mrna levels) are reduced to basal levels. our data suggests a role for pka and ap- on progranlmed cell death of manlnmry epithelial ceils. bcl- ~ does not require membrane attachment for its survival activity c. borner*, i. martinout, c. mattmann*, m. irmler*, e. sch&rrer*, j.-c. martinou-j-, and j. tschopp*. * institute of biochemistry, university of lausanne, epalinges, institute of molecular biology, glaxo inc., plan los ouates. cl- (z is a mitochondrial or perinuclear-associated oncoprotein that prolongs the life span of a variety of cell types by interfering with programmed cell death. how it exerts this activity is unknown but it is believed that membrane attachment is required. to identify critical regions in bcl- o~ for subcellular localization and survival activity, we created by site-directed mutagenesis, various mutations in regions which are most conserved between the different bcl- species. we show here that membrane attachment is not required for the survival activity of bcl- o< a truncation mutant of bcl- (z lacking the last amino acids (t ) including the hydrophobic domain is soluble, yet fully active in blocking apoptosis of sympathetic neurons induced by ngf deprivation or l fibroblasts induced by tnfc~ treatment. we further provide evidence for a putative functional region in bcl- which lies in the conserved domains and upstream of the hydrophobic cooh terminal tail. the breakdown of nuclear dna is considered to be a hallmark of apoptosis. we previously identified the perinuclear membrane localized dnase i as the endonuclease involved in the formation of oligonucleosomal-sized fragments (dna ladder). it is not clear how the nuclease is activated and has access to the dna. we show that in thymocytes induced to undergo apoptosis, lamin breakdown preceded dna laddering. by transfeeting hela cells with a constitutively active cdc mutant, nuclear envelope breakdown and typical apoptotic features (ehromatin condensation) were observed. moreover, co-transfection with cdc mutant and dnase i led to dna degradation. we propose that apoptosis can be induced by wrongly timed and hence abortive mitosis leading to uncontrolled nuclear membrane disintegration. s - s - platelet-derived growth factor (pdgf) is thought to play an active role in fibrosing diseases. bronchiolitis obliterans-organizing pneumonia (boop) is a condition characterized by intraluminal proliferation of connective tissue inside distal air spaces. to evaluate pdgf expression in boop we performed immunohistoehemistry on lung biopsies from patients and controls free of fibrosis. sedal sections were stained with an antibody against either pdgf or the monoeyte/macrophage marker cd , in both groups the pdgf ~ cells were essentially tissue macrophages. using point counting to measure volume fraction (vv) , pdgf-pesitive cells represented . + . % (mean+sd) of the volume occupied by lung tissue in the boop cases, and , + . % in the controls (! < , ). similarily, . + . % of the lung tissue was occupied by cd e~ macrophages in the boop cases, compared to . :~ . % in the controls (p_ were inactive. the severity of the effect of oligo a.la su'ings seems to be dependent on the position of the repeat along the primary sequence (e.g. progressive decrease of the effects by moving toward more earboxy-position). we have also examined the effects of the oligo[ala] , , , , on gal chimeric factors and found that the inhibition by ala repeats is probably factor-specific. our results made us speculate that possible differences in post-translational modifications may be at the root of the negative effects by the ala repeats. we believe that these effects are due to transient association of the nascent gr[aia] mutant proteins with intraceuular membranes. these hypotheses are currently tested. the activation of steroidogenesls in calcium-clamped bovine glomerulosa cells and its modulation by angiotensin ii and camp, python cp, laban op, rossier mf, vallotton mb and capponi am division of endocrinology, university hospital, geneva, switzedand. the ca +-messenger system plays a crucial role in the regulation of steroid secretion in adrenal zona glomerulosa cells, as it is known to mediate the action of angiotensin ii and potassium ion. in the present study, we used intact isolated glomerulosa cells in which the cytosolic free ca + concentration ([ca +]c) was clamped at various levels with the ca +-ionophore, ionomycin, in order to locate the sites of action of ca +, to determine their sensitivity towards ca + and the modulation by other physiological factors. by measuring simultaneously steroid synthesis and [ca +]c, we show that ca +-clamping ( - nm) induced a concentration-dependent increase in the production of both pregnenolone ( ___ % of the basal level) and aldosterone ( + % of the basal level, ec = nm). by contrast, ca + did not influence the conversion of t-deoxycorticosterone into aldosterone at concentrations up to rim, although at higher concentrations we observed a modest but significant inhibition. in addition, ca +-clamping did not affect the formation of pregnenolone from a freely diffusible analogue of cholesterol, hydroxycholesterol, indicating that ca + acts at a step upstream of cholesterol side-chain cleavage. both angiotensin ii and a membrane-permeant surrogate of camp, dibutyryl cyclic amp, potentiated the steroidogenic response to increases in [ca +]c . in summary, these studies reveal an exquisite sensitivity of the glomerulosa cell steroidogenic pathway toward very small physiological changes in [ca +]c. radtke, rainer heuchel, oleg georgiev, gerlinde stark#, michel aguet# & walter schaffner institut fiir molekularbiologie , universilat ziirlch, z' rich # lnstitut rir molehdarbiologie i, universitiit ziirich, ztirich we have previously described and cloned a factor (mtf- ) that binds specifically to metal-responsive dna sequence elements in the enhancer/promoter region of metallothionein genes. mtf- is a protein of . kda that contains six zinc fingers and multiple domains for transcriptional activation. here we report the disruption of both alleles of the mtf- gene in mouse embryonic stem ceils by homologous recombination. the resulting null mutant cell line fails to produce detectable mounts of mtf- . moreover, due to the loss of mtf- the endogenous metalinthionein-i gene is silent, showing that mtf-i is required for both basal and metal-induced transcription. accordingly, reporter genes containing either synthetic or natural metal-reslxmsive promoters were not transcribed after transfection into the null mutant ceils. cotramsfection of the mtf-i expression vector rescued both basal and heavy metal-induced transcription. these results demonstrate that mtf- is essential for normal metallothionein gene regulation. rat pheochromocytoma cells (pc ) were differentiated with ngf for - days, a time sufficient for the formation of growth cones and elongation of neurites. addition of the phosphatase inhibitor calyculin a (cl-a) ( . . . nm) led to a concentrationdependent collapse of growth cones and retraction of the neurites within minutes. after the retraction, the cell bodies showed the appearance of a grape-like domain opposite to the cell nucleus. they recovered to normal shape within about - minutes if the inhibitor was washed out. the neurite retraction was further analysed using both low-light level fluorescence video-microscopy and fura- single cell microfluorimetry. the onset of retraction started in the central part of the growth cone prior to a complete collapse of filopodia. the basal intracellular free calcium concentration ([ca +] i) remained constant during neurite retraction. as a measure for the viability of cl-a-treated cells, agonist-isduced responses of [ca +] i were analysed. ca + entry across voltage-activated ca -~ channels was inhibited by % after minute treatment with cl-a, while the atp-induced ca + entry via ca *-permeable cation channels was not significantly reduced. however, the onset of the atp-induced rise in [ca +]i started at the grape-like domain. the speed of the ca + wave across the cell body was slower than in control cells. the addition of . gm okadaie acid, a different type of phosphatase inhibitor, caused no cell shape change or neurite retraction within hours. taken the specificity of the two phesphatase inhibiters into account, the observed effects seem to be induced by inhibition of a ppl-class phosphatase. myosin in nematocytes of hydra michel nakano & robert p. stidwill dept. zoology, university of ztirich, switzerland the functions of nonmuscle myosins during cell locomotion are not clear. several models have been presented reaching from very active participation of the molecules in different parts of cells to only minor or no roles at all. there is increasing evidence that the functions of myosin ii (capable of forming bipolar filaments) are quite distinct from the ones of myosin i and generally that the different members of the growing family of myosin-like proteins may not all have identieal functions. we have attempted to demonstrate the occurrence and determine pattern of myosins in tissue of hydra and especially in migrating nematoeytes mainly for two reasons. first, nematocytes are fairly rapidly moving cells which can be studied in vitro and, second, the question is of interest from a evolutionary point of view. we have utilized several antibodies against vertebrate and invertebrate myosins for immunofluoreseenee (confocal laser scanning microscopy) and western blotting studies. in addition to these results findings on the screening of a ~.zap c-dna library are presented. the jaki protein tyrosine kinase is a member of a family of intracellular kinases characterized by having two kinase catalytic domains: a bona fide tyrosine kinase domain and an amino terminally positioned kinase-related domain. recently it has been shown that jaki and the other members of this family (jak , tyk ) are intimately involved in cytokine and growth factor signalling. the presence of two putative nuclear localizing sequences in the amino terminus of the protein prompted us to examine the subcellular localization of this protein. immunohistochemical and biochemical analysis revealed that a part of jaki was localized to the nucleolus. metabolic labelling showed that (a) the jaki protein partitioned rapidly into the nucleus and (b) the nuclear jaki became smaller with time. the size difference was not due to either co-translational glycosylation or phospherylation. these results suggest that part of the jaki protein is rapidly translocated to the nucleoli where it becomes processed. revealed that this clone is expressed predominantly in spleen, mammary gland and thymus as two transcripts, a major species of approximately kb and a minor species of approximately kb. nucleotide sequence analysis revealed a % homology to the porcine syk gene. the syk gene is expressed as a major . kb transcript and has been reported to be lymphoid specific. due to the discrepancy of transcript size and number, we suggest that our cdna clone represents a novel member of this family of ptks. we are currently isolating a full length sequence from a mouse spleen cdna library. in addition, we want to characterize which cell(s) in the mammary gland are responsible for the observed expression. expression and function of g-protein isoforms were studied in differenflaring ( c ) and nondifferentiaflng (( ) subclones of red- rauscher murine erythroleukemia cells. erythroid differentiaflon induced by the combined action of erythropoietin (epo) and dmso was associated with a selective loss (> %) of immunoreactive gai . simultaneously, a iruncated form of g~ accumulated in the cytosol, while the membrane concentrations of gai , gets and gaq/ remained unchanged. nondifferenfiating ( cells contained sigrtificanfly higher levels of most get subunit isoforms that remained unchanged upon epo/dmso treamaent. changes in adenylyl cyclase activity and in intracellular ca ion levels ([ca]i) resulting from activation of g-protein-coupled receptors were monitored for differentiation-dependent effects on transmembrane signaling. adp-mediated changes of [ca]i in native and differenflaflng c cells were consistent with p t receptor coupling to gai . thrombin receptors seemed to couple preferentially to gai in g cells and to gaq in c cells. our results document substantial alterations in g-protein-mediated signaling during erythroid differentiation. to investigate the involvement of protein tyrosine kinases (ptks) in the growth control of the mammary gland, we have used pcr based cloning to identify ptks expressed during normal mammary gland development. this approach led to the isolation of three members of the eph-related family of receptor ptks: myk-;, a novel member expressed predominantly in lung, heart and mammary gland; m-eck, the murine homologue of the human eck gene and mek , the murine homologue of the chicken cek . all three ptks were expressed in a distinct and narrow window of mammary gland development: puberty and estrus cycle. no expression was found either in late pregnancy or in the end differentiated state of lactation. vet-expression was found in the undifferentiated and invasive tumors of transgenic mice expressing the h-ras oncogene. in contrast, no elevated expression of all three genes was detected in the well differentiated, non-invasive mammary tumors characteristic of c-myc expressing transgenic mice. these results suggest that members of this family of ptks are involved in the control of proliferation of the mammary gland but are incompatible with its differentiation. np-tcii is a lymphocyte specific transcription factor (lattion a.-l. et el., mol. cell. biol., , : - a nucleotide receptor that mediates phosphoinositide and phosphatidylcholine hydrolysis by phospholipases c and d, respectively. here we report that atp and utp potently stimulate mesangial cell proliferation. both nucleotides stimulate phosphorylation and activation of map kinase and the up-stream map kinase kinase. activation of map kinase by both nucleotides is dose-dependently attenuated by the p receptor antagonist suramin. stimulation of protein kinase c (pkc) by phorbol ester increased map kinase phosphorylation and activation, and downregulation of pkc partially inhibited atp-and utp-induced map-kinase activation. inhibitors of pkc which display a selectivity for the ca +-dependent isoenzymes (c~, [ , ) , as compared to the ca +-independent isoenzymes ( , e, ~, rl) such as staurosporine and the specific pkc inhibitor cgp did not inhibit nucleotide-stimulated map kinase phosphorylation, thus implicating the involvement of a ca +-independent pkc isoform. in conclusion, these data suggest, that atp and utp trigger the activation of the map kinase signalling cascade in mesangial cells and this may be responsible for the potent mitogenic acitivity of both nucleotides. subcellular ion-gradients in ca signaling p. lipp & e. niggli, department of physiology, univexsity of bern recent experimental evidence has indicated an important role for submicroscopic concentration gradients during ca-signaling in various cell types. in heart muscle cells influx of ca via l-type ca channels triggers ca release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum (sr) and links electrical excitation to mechanical contraction (ec-coupling). we used a ratiometric confocal method (fluo- and fura-red) to follow the intraceuular ca-concentration while ha-and ca-currents (inn, ica) were elicited in the whole cell mode of the patch-clamp technique. both, icand in, were able to trigger ca release from the sr. kinetic differences between ini and ic -induced ca-transients, li-substitution experiments and the existence of a residual inn-induced ca transient in the absence of sr function suggested that these ca signals were mediated by the ha-ca exchange running in the ca influx mode. control experiments showed that ins-induced ca transients did not result from spurious activation l-type ca channels. the significant increase of the na concentration required to activate the ha-ca exchange can only occur provided cytosolic diffusion of na is restricted in the vicinity of the exchangers. this limited diffusion results in significant ha-gradients in the subsarcolemmal space. in conclusion, i~iinduced ca influx may represent a safety factor for ec-coupling while ic, ensures sustained ca-release and is the source for refilling the sr with ca. supported by snf. the regenerative ca-induced ca release (cicr) mechanism is an important amplifier in cardiac signal transducilon. the cicr contributes to the ca transient responsible for mechanical activity, but also generates ca waves propagating within the cytosol. we investigated subcellular ca signals in neonatal rat and adult guinea-pig ventricular myocytes using ratiometric confocal microscopy with a mixture of two fluorescent ca indicators. individual resting myocytes exhibited spontaneous ca release events from the sarcoplasmic reticulurn (sr) that were attributable to three distinct patterns: i) local ca release events without propagation; ll) planar ca waves propagating across the cell; iii) spiral ca waves spinning around a nucleus or shifdng along a subcellular region without entering it. transitions between these patterns were frequently observed, suggesting that a particular release pattern is not the property of an individual cell but reflects the functional state of the sr. the existence of focal release and refractory zones within a single cell indicates that the sr is not uniform on the subcellular level. the sr seems to he a network of elements with distinct functional properties. a suhcellular variability in the positive feedback of the cicr mechanism can account for the observed features of ca signaling. the degree of positive feedback exhibited by a single sr element may depend on its ca content. to characterise the intracellular signalling and regulatory properties of the cloned parathyroid hormone (pth) receptor we have stably transfected two renal epithelial cell lines with cdna's encoding the pth receptor (provided by dr g. segre). the proximal tubular, porcine (llc pk [clone ]), and the distal tubular, madine darby canine (mdck) cell lines were transfected since the culture of either cell line on permeant filter supports leads to the development of polarised epithelial cell layers that mimic the epithelial organisation in vivo. transfection of the cloned pth receptor into each of these cell lines allowed us to examine, independently, the functional properties of the receptors expressed at the apical and/or the basolateral cell surface. while the basolateral application of pth produces a large increase in camp production in both cell lines, the relative efficacy of an apical application of pth differs between the cell types. the transfected llc pk cells exhibit a greater response to apical pth compared to the transfected mdck cells. pth-mediated regulation of intrinsic phosphate transport was also examined in polarised, transfected mdck cells. neither apical or basolateral application of pth affects intrinsic apical or basolateral ha-dependent or phosphate transport activities. similar experiments are being performed with the transfected llc pk cells. a. and preiss, a. biozentrum der universit&t basel, ch basel hairless, a recessive larval lethal mutation, causes dominant defects in sensory organs of adult drosophila flies.manifold genetic interactions indicate that hairless antagonizes neurogenic gene function suggesting an involvment also in neurogenesis. in order to gain insight into its function we have cloned the hairless gene which encodes an extremely basic, very serine rich protein of ii kd calculated molecular weight. no significant homologies to proteins of known function could be identified. therefore, we are concentrating by various means on a structure -function analysis of the hairless protein. firstly, we are testing a series of hairless deletion constructs for rescue capacity and generation of anti-hairless phenotypes after overexpression compared with the wild type gene. secondly, we are analysing hairless protein distribution throughout development, also at the subcellular level. heat induced hairless protein runs at ~ kd, possibly due to phosphorylation which might be intrinsic to hairless function, a hypothesis we are currently scrutinizing. thy- and cd surface glycoproteins are both capable of delivering proliferative signals to t cells upon cross-linking with appropriate antibodies. the tyrosine phosphatase cd is a key regulator of t cell proliferation as it controls the activity of src family kinases p /~k and p fy n. associations of thy- with cd , and of cd with cd have been reported after chemical cross-linking of intact cells and it is likely that such associations constitute part of the structural basis for the t-cell stimulating capacity of thy- and cd accessory molecules. we report that thy- , cd and cd can be specifically crosslinked at the cell-surface and isolated as multimolecular complexes containing a kda protein that is recognized by an anti-bip (grp ) antibody. in vitro kinase assays show the selective association of p ick and p fy n with thy- and cd contained in multimolecular complexes. the multimolecular structure we describe could representa transducing unit incorporating surface receptors and regulators of tyrosine phosphorylation that are stabilized through interaction with the bip protein in the plasma membrane. structure-function-analysis of hairless, a gene involved in drosophila nervous system development maier, d., functional coupling of ppars and trs ijpenberg, a., wahli, w., desvergne, b., institut de biologie animale, lausanne we are interested in a possible functional coupling of thyroid hormone (tr) and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors (pfar). to this end, we performed cotransfection experiments in nih t cells using cat reporter constructs containing the promoter of either the t responsive malic enzyme (me) gene, or the ppar regulated acyl coa oxidase (aco) gene. the me reporter construct showed very moderate response to the activated mouse ppar (mppar), whereas combination of try and unactivated mfpar potentialized the t induction. a putative ppar response element was identified within this promoter and will be further investigated. the aco reporter constructs were not responsive to trs. in constrast, a tr and t dependent inhibition of the fpar mediated activation was observed. the mechanism of functional coupling of these receptors, which may possibly involve the -cisretinoic acid receptor rxr, will be further investigated by molecular analysis. unliganded steroid receptors form a complex with hsp via their hormone binding domain (hbd). the receptor activation involves a hormone-induced release of hsp . we genetically addressed the role of hsp in budding yeast by analyzing three kinds of hsp (the essential yeast homologue of hsp ) mutants. these mutations affect either the quantity of the protein (low versus normal levels), its integrity (deletion analysis) or its nature (hsp homologues from other species). hsp mutant are examined for their ability to complement a hsp deletion mutant. moreover, they are tested for functional interaction with a hbd. interestingly, a viable deletion of a charged region, suspected to be involved in hsp -hbd interaction, only slightly interferes with hormonal activation of both estrogen or glucocorticoid receptors. furthermore, a short deletion in the last third of hsp leads to the production of a dominant negative mutant which prevents ceil growth at elevated temperature. the ability of various hsp homologues to palliate or not the absence of the yeast protein allows us to define, using chimeras, the regions of the protein which are necessary and sufficient to support cell life. zhang,h.,reynaud, s. and spohr,g. d~partement de biologie cellulaire, sciences iii, , quai ernest-ansermet, ch- gen&ve id cdnas expressed during early xenopus development have been isolated and sequenced. the encoded protein is homologous to the proteins described in higher vertebrates. northern blot analysis reveals that transcription starts soon after mid blastula and decreases to some extent after tailbud-stage. lower levels of transcription are detected also in adult frog tissues such as liver and heart. microinjection into oocytes of in vitro-synthesized myodor/and id-mrna, along with a cat reporter gene whose expression is under the controll of an a -actin promoter supplemented with four e-boxes shows that myo d function is repressed by id. to investigate the importance of negative regulatory sequences we have isolated and characterised the id promoter. as a strategy for identifying cis-regulatory elements, chimeric genes consisting of different ' elements of the promoter were attached to the cat coding sequences and microinjected into embryos. we are studying the tissue distribution of the rat peroxisome proliferators activated receptor (ppar~), a member of the nuclear hormone receptors superfamily, during development and in adults. high levels of ppar~ mrnas are detected in adult liver, kidney and heart. muscle, stomach, and intestine show moderate amounts of the ppar~, whereas brain, testis and lung present a very low expression. during postnatal development, we observe a continuous increase of the ppar~ expression in the kidney, in contrast to a steady level in the liver. anjard, c., groux, b ., gamboni, s. and reymond, c.d., institut d'histologie, unil, rue du bugnon , lausanne. the camp dependent protein kinase (capk) from dictyostelium is composed of a single catalytic (c) and a single regulatory (r) subunit. the c subunit we characterised, pkac is about twice the size of its mammalian counterpart. we showed that it possesses all properties of a catalytic subunit. it associates with the r subunit in absence of camp, it copurifies with capk activity and an increased activity is observed in cells over-expressing pkac. furthermore, we dissected its role during development and cell differentiation. overexpressing pkac under cell type specific promoters allowed to show the requirement for its activity during spore differentiation. pkac seems to play a more complex role in prestalk cells. we are now dissecting the functional regions of the pkac protein, making use of the known tertiary structure of the c subunits of mammalian enzymes. dna binding properties and stimulation of gene transcription of baculovirus expressed xppar~. hihi, a.k, mermod, n., medin, j., ozato, k. and wahli, w., inst. de biol. animale, uni lausanne, ch- lausanne. lab. of mol. growth reg., nih, bethesda, md, usa. the peroxisome proliferators activated receptors (ppars) are members of the steroid/thyroid nuclear receptor superfamily. so far, they have been found in amphibians, rodents and humans. in xenopus laevis, subtypes (xppara,~.y} have been isolated. in order to study the mode of activity of the ~ form, the xppar~ gene product was overexpressed using a baculovirus expression system. the nuclear protein obtained has the correct molecular weight of kd. gel shift assays showed that nuclear extracts containing the recombinant protein are able to specifically bind the 'ppar response element' which is a direct repeat of the core aggtca motif. this dna binding activity is potentiated by another nuclear receptor, the mouse rxr~ and is inhibited by phosphatase, suggesting a role for phosphorylation in ppar binding to dna. a functional approach, using an in vitro transcription system, was chosen to define ppar and rxr action on transcription stimulation, as well as the role of their respective activators. arachidonic acid ( . - ram) induces various patterns of ca +i signal in bronchial smooth muscle cells, as revealed by single cell dynamic video imaging of fura- loaded cells. most frequently, ca +i oscillations were observed, although other patterns (a single ca +i transient; a single peak followed by a sustained elevated level, or a sustained ca *i elevation solely) were occasionally seen. the amplitude of ca *i oscillations was related to the concentration of arachidonic acid. the frequency histogramm was noticeably shifted to higher frequencies by nordihydroguaiaretic acid (ndga, . rtm, a lipoxygenase inhibitor), whereas it was markedly shifted to lower frequencies by indomethacin ( pm, a cyclooxygenase inhibitor) and by , , , -eicosatetraynoic acid (etya, ~tm, a lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase inhibitor). these observations suggest that: ( ) arachidonic acid per se elicits ca + i oscillations in these ceils; ( ) cyelooxygenase activity products modulate the frequency of these oscillations. promoter analyses of a growth factor regulated gene t. triib, m. kalousek, r. kessler, and r. klemenz dept. of pathology, university hospital, ziirich stimulation of quiescent cells to enter the cell cycle results in altered gene expression. some of the first genes to be induced (immediate early (i.e.) genes) encode transcription factors which are thought to pass on the mitotic signal to the delayed early (d.e.) genes. we have analysed the promoter elements required for growth factor mediated induction of the d.e. mouse gene t which encodes a secreted glycoprotein of the immunoglobulin superfamily. a bp region located between . and . kb upstream of the transcription start site is sufficient for growth factor mediated inducibility. it contains an ap- binding site which is absolutely required for t gene expression. it is surrounded by e-boxes. at least of them are essential for efficient gene induction. thus the i.e. proteins encoded by the fos and jun gene family which form the ap- complex can activate the d.e. gene t in collaboration with helixloop-helix transcription factors binding to the e-boxes. the increase of radiolabelled inositol phosphates ([ h]ips) production in agonist-stimulated human airway smooth muscle cells (asmc) was determined by hplc. in order to observe the role of calcium, pkc and pla on plc activity during agonist stimulation, the effects of pharmacological agents (able to alter calcium, pkc and pla ) were tested on ip production elicited by a sec stimulation with histamine. the inhibitor of pkc staurosporine increased, while pma (an activator) decreased the histamine-stimulated production of [ hi , , -ip and of its degradation products. an inhibition was also observed with the two pla inhibitors, quinacrine and p-bromophenacyl bromide. in calciumfree buffer, no difference in the ip increase was shown, but an inhibition was observed when thapsigargin, an inhibitor of the ca +, mg +-atpasc of the sarcoplasmic reticulum, was added in the same conditions. the calcium ionophore ionomycin increased the lp production in presence of external calcium, whereas it completely blocked the stimulation in calcium-free buffer. the results suggest that plc activity, in human asmc, is modulated by a positive feedback of calcium and by a negative feedback of pkc and pla . regulation of hormone-stimulated calcium signals m. boolman, afrc, laboratory of molecular signalling, dept. zoology, cambridge, uk stimulation of cells with hormones that activate inositol , , -trisphosphate (insp~) formation, leads to an increase in the intracellular ca . concentration ([ca +]~). these hormone-stimulated [ca § signals have a complex temporal and spatial regulation, with the [ca *]~ increase often taking the form of a series of repetitive spikes or oscillations, arising from a steady basal level. the spatial counterpart of a [ca +]~ spike is a wave, where [ca § is first elevated in a localised region of a cell, and then spreads throughout the cell in a regenerative manner. the [ca~*]~ spike frequency is modulated by several environmental factors including hormone concentration, extracellular calcium and thiol reagents. current evidence suggests that a cell can interpret these complex [ca +]~ changes to regulate a diverse range of cellular activities. although many of the biochemical steps between hormonereceptor activation and the [ca § response are known, the precise mechanism generating these complex [ca +]~ signals is unclear. in order to understand this mechanism more clearly, we have investigated the regulation of insp~-mediated ca ~ § release from intracellular stores in intact cells. our current data suggests that under certain conditions, the insp -sensitive intracellular stores behave as functionally discrete units, and that during a ca § spike these stores become functionally coupled by the diffusion of ca z+ from one store to the next, triggering a regenerative ca + release. phenylarsenoxide as a tool for identifying proteins involved in the secretory process wiedemann. c., schaefer, t.,*gitler, c., burger, m. m. friedrich-miescher institut, p.o.box , ch- basel "department of membrane research and biophysics, weizmann institute of science, rehovot , israel phenylarsenoxide (pao) at btm blocks exocytosis in chromaffm cells of the bovine adrenal medulla. this inhibition can be reversed by small dithiois, such as dithiothrcitol or , ~limercaptopropanol. because trivalent arsenicals interact specifically with dithiol containing proteins, we conclude that dithiol-proteins do play an important role in regulated secretion in chromalym cells. to identify dithiol-proteins putatively involved in the secretory process, we compare pao-binding proteins from chromaffm and pci cells and from fibroblasts as well as from sulx:ellular fractions by -dimensional gelelectrophoresis. the proteins are identified by radioactive pao bound to the dithiol in a complex that witltslands sds-page. affinity chromatography on pao-scpharose with various protein fractions is used to purify the dithiol-proteins of interest. enzymatic activity, e.g. kinase or phosphatase activity, can be measured in the eluates of such a column to give further hints at the possible function of dithiol-proteins. rac-pks (~elated to pka_ and pkcc protein kinnses) represent a serine/threonine kinase family whose catalytic domain is closely related to those of protein kinases a and c. they contain a ph (pleckstrin homology) domain n-terminal to the catalytic domain. in addition, rac-pk~ was shown to be a proto-oncogene. in order to investigate the role of rac-pk in cellular signallimg we undertook genetic and biochemical analysis of the drosophila homolog (drac-pk). the drac-pk gene encodes multiple classes of transcripts. antisera raised against the drac-pk recombinant protein specifically recognize distinct molecular weight forms ( , and kda). all forms are expressed throughout development and are both maternally and zygotically regulated. the drac-pk gene is localized at b -i region of the third chromosome, betwee~ the pannie~ and the stubble genes. universit de lausanne, rue du bugnon , lausanne when spinal meninges homogenates were incubated with reduced glutathione (gsh), a cofactor of prostaglandin (pg) biosynthesis, [ c] arachidonate (aa) was bioconverted into a major and a minor product which comigrated on tlc with pge and pgd respectively. in absence of gsh: ) pgd could not be detected; ) the level of pge was dramatically reduced but surprisingly counterbalanced by accumulation of an unusual [i c] aa metabolite which exhibits particular traits of migration on tlc and of retention time on hplc. this aa metabolite: ) does not correspond to a degradation product of pge ; ) crossreacts with pge antibody; ) fits the conditions required for a hydroperoxy pge (chemical degradation into pge by hydroperoxyde reducing reagents such as snc or gsh-hemin). it is therefore inferred that depletion of gsh favours accumulation of hydroperoxyprostaglandins which would participate to oxidative injury. the ecdysteroid receptor (ecr) and ultraspiracle (usp) from both, chironomus tentans and drosoplu'la melanogaster, were expressed in e. coil as fusion proteins with glutathione-s-trsusferase. the identity of the expressed recombinant proteins was confirmed by western blot analysis. the drosophila ecr binds to its cognate hormone response element as a heterodimer with usp as a partner. we now want to compare the capabilities of the two receptor partners from both insect species in regard to dna binding and heterodimerization by means of gel mobility shift assays. the use of naturally occurring andartificial hormone response elements will allow to define a hormone response element consensus sequence for ecr-usp heterodimers and, if existing, for ecr and usp homodimers, respectively. for other members of this receptor family it was shown that the dna binding domain and adjacent sequences alone sufficiently defines response element specificity for both homo-and heterodimers. the dna binding domains of ecr and usp from the two species show a high similarity ( % and % identity, respectively). the corresponding sequences were selected for overexpression in e. coli. in combination with immtmoprecipimtion of receptor-dna complexes and pcr amplification steps, the expressed proteins will be used for the detection of naturally occurring hormone response elements within genomic dna. university of fribourg, ch- fribourg. various agonist-induced cell responses in neutrophils and fibroblasts, such as chemotaxis and cytoskeletal rearrangements, have been shown to parallel the synthesis of ptdins( , , )p . but the importance of this rise is not clear. we show here that wortmannin blocks pdgf-induced production of ptdins( , , )p in human foreskin fibroblasts with an ic of about nm. a similar inhibition was observed in in vitro assays (ics =lnm) with pi -kinase ii~nunoprecipitated by antibodies directed against the kd subunit (p ). on the other hand, wortmannin did not affect pdgf-mediated phosphorylation of p , indicating the correct interaction of p with the pdgf-~ receptor. the pl /p complex of the pi -kinase remained intact in the presence of ~m concentrations of wortmannln. these results are consistent with a direct, specific inhibition of pi kinase by wortmannin at concentrations relevant for its previously reported effects on cellular responses. when stimulated with pdgf, human foreskin fibroblasts form circular membrane ruffles rich in filamentous actin. the fact that wortmannin inhibits these pdgf-mediated aotin rearrangements suggests the need of pi -kinase activity as a signal for this cell response. caicineurin is a calcium/calmodulin-regulated protein phosphatase which is comprised of a catalytic subunit a and regulatory subunit b. although calcineurin was discovered in brain, the calmodulin stimulated protein phosphatase which has caicineurin like structure has been described in other tissues. the protein structure show that the calcineurin b is very conserved in different tissues and species, using anti-calcineurin b monocicnal antiserum, the tissue extracts from rat have been explored. immunoreactivity was obverved in all tissues, although its intensity was different. the highest intensity was found in brain. spleen, heart and thymus had an intermediate level intensity. the results were supported by the quantitative measurement of calcineurin. the caicineurin concentration was to fold higher in brain than that in other tissues. furthermore, the distribution of the calcineurin activity in rat tissue was studied using dephosphorylaticn assay of calctneurin. the highest caicineurin activity was found in brain too, but was only to fold more than that in other tissues. the specific activity of calcineurin was different in tissues. these results indicate the caicineudn activity might be regulated in tissue specific fashion. burst and cytoskeleton arcaro a. and wymann m.p., institute of biochemistry, university of fribourg, ch- fribourg chemoattractants like n-formyl-met-leu-phe (fmlp) stimulate in neutrophils a rapid and transient increase in the levels of ptdins( , , )p (pip ) which is due to the activation of ptdlns( )-kinase. pip has been proposed to be a second messenger molecule, but its cellular targets are presently unknown.here we report that pretreatment of human neutrophils with wortmannin inhibits the fmlp-etimulated production of pip in a dose-dependent manner (ic = nm). furthermore, ptdins( )-kinase activity immunoprecipitated from resting cells is totally abolished by i nm wortmannin (ic = nm). these results show a potent and direct effect of wortmannin on ptdins( )-kinase. wortmannin also inhibits the respiratory burst of neutrophils at nanomolar concentrations, which suggests that pip is involved in the signalling pathway controlling activation of the nadphoxidase.when pretreated with wortmannin and stimulated with fmlp, neutrophils display oscillatory changes in factin content that correlate with oscillations in cell ~hape. this, and the inhibition of ptdins( )-kinase, suggest a modulatory role for pip in cytoskeletal rearrangements.we are currently investigating the effects of pip on the functions of gelsolinl a protein that is proposed to mediate actin polymerization and can be regulated by polyphosphoinositides and ca +. matthias gstaiger, walter schaffner and christopher hovens institut f'tir molekularbiologie ill der universitat z'tirich, ch ziirich the octamer motif atgcaaat plays a central role in mediating the activity of a number of both lymphoid specific and ubiquitous promoters and in the immunoglubulin heavy chain intronic enhancer. the activity of thils motif in lymphoid cells is presumably mediated by the lymphoid cellspecific factor oct- a. when ectopically expressed in non-lymphoid ceils, oct- a is not sufficient to mediate enhancer activity of a multimerized bp enhancer core element derived from the immunoglobulin heavy chain intronie enhancer, a segment, which is however highly active in b-cells. this and other findings support the supposition that additional b-cell specific factor(s) can account for the specificity and extent of the octdependent transcription observed in lymphoid cells. to further our understanding of the molecular mechanisms involved in mediating lymphoid-specific expression, we have employed the yeast two hybrid system to identify human proteins capable of physically associating with human oet- a. to this end, a oct- a expressing yeast strain has been constructed which bears two integrated reporter genes, his and lacz under the control of the octamer motif. transformation of this strain with a cdna library has allowed us to isolate clones interacting with oct- a. we are currently analysing these candidates to determine the veracity of these interactions in higher enkaryotic cell background. in general, untransformed nuclear hormone receptors are predominantly confined to either the nucleus or the cytoplasm of a cell. receptors of the latter class are translocated to the nucleus upon interaction with ligand. our studies of the use of the ecdysteroid receptor complex from insects, consisting of a heterodimer formed between ecr and usp, as a tool for target gene activation in vertebrate cells have revealed a novel mechanism of nuclear translocation of ecr that does not depend on hormone action. after transient transfection of respective expression plasmids into hela or cv- cells, the subeellular distribution of the individual receptor types was analyzed by indirect immanofluorescence staining. while ecr alone was detected in both cellular compartments, nucleus and cytoplasm, usp was predominantly found in the nucleus of either host cell. cooxpression of both ecr and usp resulted in an efficient transloeation of ecr into the nucleus. usp appears to trap ecr in the nucleus, presumably by the formation of a heterodimeric complex. thus, heterodimer formation of ecr and usp not only appears to be required for high affinity binding to cognate hormone response dements (and subsequently for transactivation of an adjacent target gene) and for binding to ecdysteroid but in addition for an enhanced translocafion of ecr into the nucleus. activation of rodent macrophages with cytokines or bacteria is accompanied by the induction of a ca +-independent nitric oxide (no) synthase which plays a key role in antimicrobial and antitumoral activity. firm evidence for expression of a similar enzyme in other mammals or in man has been lacking. we now show that bovine bone marrow-derived macrophages produce nitrite in an l-arginine-dependent manner upon stimulation with heat-killed grampositive or gram-negative bacteria. homologous interferon- and tumor necrosis factor-~ induced little no -production, but primed macrophages for enhanced n -production induced by salmonella dublin or lps. this is one of the first demonstrations of no -production by nonrodent macrophages and encourages a search for an involvement of reactive nitrogen species in the killing of parasites or tumor cells by macrophages from mammals other than rodents. lectins are used in many analytical methods to study the carbohydrate structure of glycoproteins. we report here a technique which combines the high resolution of two-dimensional gel electrophoresis ( -dpage) to separate plasma proteins, the specificity of lectins to bind carbohydrates and the sensitivity of chemiluminescence. this method is compared with that of a commonly used colorimetrio reaction. since the reference plasma protein map obtained by -d page is available (i), the technique described here allows a quick and specific identification of plasma glycoproteins. therefore any ma j or glycosylation modification which may happen in some diseases can be detected. (i) electrophoresis ; : - . this work was supported in part by fcar (quebec, canada). in our laboratory we use genetic and biochemical approaches to study translation initiation, in particular the initiation factor eif- a in yeast. this factor from higher eukaryofic cells is known as an rna dependent atpase and functions as a rna helicase together with another initiation factor, elf- b. it belongs to a family of putative rna helicases, the d-e-a-d proteins. to find new genes involved in translation initiation, suppressors of a temperature sensitive eif- a mutant were isolated. one of the suppressors (stm ) is a single copy gene which encodes a protein resembling the human translation initiation factor eif- b. disruption of the gene is not lethal to the cell, but affects growth. polysome analysis of strains with a deleted stm gene have shown that this new gene is also involved in translation initiation. it carries six repeated sequences of amino acids of unknown function and has -like the human eif- b -a rna binding domain. the second suppressor (stm ) is also a novel gene. it encodes a large protein which shows no homology to other proteins present in the data libraries. it contains high portion of charged amino acids and is rich in glutamines and serines. its function in translation initiation is currently under investigation. tobacco translationini~ationfactore~ aisencoded by a large anddiverse genefamily karl brander, therese mandel, isabelle lutziger, george owttrim and cris kuhlemeier, institute of plant physiology, university of berne, altenbergrain , ch- berne using heterologous probes we isolated cdnas coding for translation initiation factor eif- a from tobacco, eif- a is encoded by a large multigene family of which at least nine members are expressed in leaves and most if not all other organs of the tobacco plant. while screening genomic libraries we found several additional genes. two of them code for genes highly homologous with eif- a throughout the coding region, but with changes in the gkt, ptrela and dead-box motifs. a third gene is expressed exclusively in the developing male gametophyte. this eif- a-related gene may have a role in the well-documented regulation of translation in pollen. in order to study the function of these genes we have begun altering their expression in transgenic tobacco plants. seauence reauirements for a non-aug protein initiaf~jon non-aug initiation codons are still infrequent and were initially observed in animal viruses, but a number of cellular examples have now also been reported. several years ago we reported the use of an acg in the p/c mrna of sendal virus (sen) to initiate the non-structurar c' protein. we recently described a c' protein in the human parainfluenza virus type (hpiv ), which is initiated from a gug. in both cases, the c' protein is an n-terminally ebngated form of the c protein which is initiated at the second aug, in the + reading frame relative to the first aug. this aug is used to initiate the p protein, an essential component of the viral rna polymerase. unlike the acg in sen, the gug in hplvt is clearly not a weak start codon since c' is the most abundant protein expressed from this mrna both in rive and in vitro. it appears that not any upstream gug in an optimal context will function as a start codon. for instance, the p gene of hpiv cannot express a c' protein (the orf is closed by stop codons) but it does contain a gug in an optimal context upstream of the p protein aug, which could encode a p' protein. nevertheless, we have been unable to demonstrate that this gug functions as a start cedon. with the use of chimeric mrnas between hpivl and , we have shown that positions + and + (the first g of the gug triplet being + ) are the major determinants of the efficiency of gug as an initiaton codon for protein synthesis. we are currently investigating the possibility that these nucleotides may increase the initiation rate of weak non-augs such as the acg of sen. biological activity of the heterodimeric subunit srp / of the signal recognition particle is retained in fusion proteins fabrice bovia & katharina strub, d partement de biologie cellulaire, universit de gen~ve, ch- gen~ve the targeting of secretory proteins to the membrane of the endoplasmie reticulum is mediated by a cytoplasmic ribonucleoparticle, the signal recognition particle. it is composed of proteins and f rna molecule (srp rna). the smallest proteins srp and srp are required for the translational control function of srp. it effects a specific arrest in the biosynthesis of er-targeted proteins. these polypeptides bind to the srp rna exclusively as a heterodimer (srp / ). we have constructed single-chain variants of this dimer using a short peptide linker of aa to connect the c-terminus of the kd subunit to the n-terminus of the kd subunit ( - ) and vice versa ( - ). we found that both proteins bind srp rna with a similar efficiency as the wild type protein. glutaraldehyde cross-linking experiments and sedimentation analysis indicate that the fusion proteins fold into a similar structure as srp / and bind srp rna as a monomer. furthermore, they can functionally replace srp / in the elongation arrest and translocation assay. since the fusion proteins are circular permutations of each other, we can conclude from this results that n-and c-termini of both proteins have no essential role in folding, rna-binding and in mediating their biological activity. furthermore, the possibility to express an oligomeric protein as a single polypeptide facilitates the analysis of its functions as well as its structure. a s - studer, r. and hunziker, p. e., iochemisches institut der universit~t z rich, ch- z rich metallothioneins (mts) are small cys-rich proteins which are inducible by a variety of agents such as bivalent transition-metal ions, tumor promoters, cytokines and hormones. the biological role of mts is still unclear. initially postulated to serve in the sequestration of the toxic heavy metals such as cadmium and mercury, they are now believed to play a major role in the cellular metabolism of essential metals such as zinc and copper. to explore this function further we have now established a method to quantify basal mt production in several human cell lines. thus, cellular isomt contents were monitored by h.pj.c, and the rate of synthesis was followed by the incorporation of ~ss-cysteine. the results show that maximum mt synthesis and accumulation occurs when the cells enter the exponential growth phase. with increasing celldensity the mt content decreases progressively until confluence is reached. in correlation with preliminary measurements our results suggest a close relationship between the mt content, the cell growth rate and the intracellular abundance of zinc. vincent bernard, adrian etter, heinz tobler and fritz mtiller. institute of zoology, university of fribourg, fribourg (switzerland). the nematode ascaris lumbricoides undergoes chromatin diminution which causes a loss of dna in all somatic ceils. we have identified a ribosomal protein (rp) gene (coding for alep = ascaris lumbrieoides eliminated protein ) which is located within the germqine specific material. alep shows strong homologies with the ribosomal protein s (rps ). the transcription of its gene takes place only in the germ-line. d-gel electrophoresis on germ-line and somatic purified ribosome fractions shows that the alep protein (rps ) is present only in the germ-line ribosome. does the alep germ-line specific protein have a homologue in the somatic ribosomes? we have cloned a homologue of alep from ascaris somatic tissue named rps ', we are currently studying the expression pattern of this rps '. these results indicate the existence of a developmentally regulated ribosome heterogeneity between the germ-line and somatic ceils. what is the function of rps ? since ascaris is not suitable for genetic analyses, we isolated rps from the nematode caenorhabditis elegans. the c. elegans rps cdna shows only % homology at the nucleic acid level. rps is located on the c. elegans chromosome iv. the identification of a rps mutant in c. elegans will indicate its function. favre, d, l, pavlovic, j and michel, m.r. t institute of medical microbiology, university of beme, ch- berne. institute for immunology and virology, ch- ziirich we have successfully purified the recombinant c (recc) protein from spodoptera frngiperda (sf ) insect cells which were infected with acnpv-c (a). the recc protein retained the biological activities of native c protein obtained from wild type sfv (b). our results suggest that the c protein is responsible for the cellular shut-off of host protein synthesis by inhibiting the initiation of translation. we are currently investigating the molecular mechanisms involved in this shut-off. tif is a new eukaryotic initiation factor which shows % identity with the sequence of mammalian translation initiation factor eif- b. the tif gene is not essential for growth; however, its disruption results in a slow growth and coldsensitive phenotype. in vitro translation of total yeast rna in an extract from a tif gene-disrupted strain is reduced as compared to a wild-type extract. the translational defect is more pronounced at lower temperatures and can be corrected by the addition of purified yeast tif ,or mammalian eif- b. in vivo translation of ~galactosidase reporter mrnas with varying degree of rna secondary structure in the ' leader region in a tif gene-disrupted strain show preferential inhibition of translation of mrna with more stable secondary structure. chloroplast protein synthesis requires the import of elongation factors ef-tu (tuf-gene) and ef-g (fusgene). it seems that the expression of both genes is light regulated. we recently cloned and sequenced a chloroplast specific nuclear fus gene in soybean (biochim.biophys acta : - , . further analysis revealed that a second very similar (sequence, anatomy) nuclear fus- gene exists which, however, shows strong sequence diversion in the 'trailer region. several cdna clones were partially sequenced but sofar only transcripts from the fusi gene were retrieved. we currently study the promoter regions of either gene to test possible differential expression of fus genes. comparative mapping and sequencing studies of the two genes in the "-region indicate that a major dna insertion occurred distal to the coding part of both fus genes what may also influence gene expression. the rna-binding domains in the kd and kd subunits of the signal recognition part~clehavea putative~-h~licalstructure. nazarena buiand katharina strub dpt de biologie cellulalre, science ill, universit gen~ve the signal recognition particle (sr ), a cytoplasmic ribonucleoprotein is important for targeting nascent secretory proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum. srp and srpl are constituents of srpandare, together with the alu sequences of srp rna, required for the elongation arrest activity of the particle. srp and srpi form a heterodimer in the absence of the rna and bind the rnaexclusively as a heterodimer. the primary sequence of srp and srpi revealed that both proteins are highly basic and lack structural similarities to other characterized rna-binding proteins. we have therefore been interested in characterizing the molecular nature of rna-protein interactions. the analysis of n-and c-terminal deletion mutants of the proteins have shown that both proteins contribute to the formation of an rnabinding pocket, the rna-binding and dimerization domains in both proteins, are found in regions that have a predicted ~~helical structure. in sp~pi , this u-helical region is located betwen aa and i at the c-terminus; it contains the rna binding and dimerization domains adjacent to each other. our results support the model that the hydrophobic face of the putative u-helix is implicatedinprotein-protein interactions and the positively charged face in rna-protein interaction. in sp~pg, the two rna-binding domains found n-and c~ terminally, also have a predicted amphipatic s-helical structure. it has been proposed that the decline in protein synthesis observed in aging organisms may result from a decrease in the protein synthesis elongation factor ef-la. john shepherd's finding that transgenic drosophila melanogaster carrying an additional copy of the ef-la gene have an extended lifespan further indicated that the ef-la gene may play an important role in determining longevity (shepherd et al., ) . in order to test this hypothesis, we have quantitated ef-la mrna, ef-la protein, as well as catalytic ef-la activity in john's flies. young and aging ef-hx transgenic (ef) and control lines (( ) were examined. because the the additional ef-lc~ copy is under the control of the hsp promoter, flies were aged either at ~ or at ~ the results show that transgenic ef flies do not express more ef-lct than the control flies, neither at the rna nor at the protein level. the question arises, whether the lransgene can be induced at all. this was tested by doing rnase protection assays. transgenlc message can be detected only in ef flies heat shocked at ~ but not in ef flies grown at ~ nor in control flies at ~ from this experiment we conclude that the transgene is indeed inducible, but is not expressed in detectable amounts at ~ we conclude that the difference in the lifespan does not result from the overexpression of the ef-la transgene. phenobarbital (pb) induces the expression of liver enzymes involved in the metabolism of drugs and other foreign compounds (xenobiotics). these enzymes include several cytochromes p , nadph:p reductase, aldeyde dehydrogenase, epoxide hydrolase, udp-glucoronyltransferases and glutathione-s-transferases. many other proteins not yet recognized may however be induced by pb. our first approach therefore is aimed at identifying gene products which respond to pb treatment. as model systems we are using either chicken embryos (induction in ovo) or primary cultures of chicken embryo hepatocytes (induction in culture) (althaus et al., jbc pp , . to differentially display mrna of induced vs non-induced cells we are using a rt-pcr technique with sets of random primers. electrophoretic separation of amplification products allows to identify mrna species which are induced (or decreased) following treatment. data obtained from these experiments and sequence information revealed from extracted pcr products indicate that pb treatment results in the transcriptional avtivation (or repression) of a variety of so far unknown genes. antithrombin -binding heparan sulfates from ovarian granulosa cells hosseini g., de agostini, a., clinique de st rilit , hcug, gen~ve. at the time of ovulation, several serine proteases of the plasminogen activator and coagulation cascades are activated in the ovary. these proteolytic activities are tightly controlled in time and space, and the heparin-activated serpins plaminogen-aetivator-inhibitor- , protease nexin- and antithrombin (at) are present in the follicular environment. we have observed that granulosa cells produce a subset of heparan sulfate proteoglycans that bind and activate at. these at-binding heparan sulfates (ahspgs) endow the vascular endothelium with antithrombotic properties. we are now examining the role of ahspgs in the extravascular compartment formed by the ovarian follicle. using i-at binding assays, we have detected ahspgs on granulosa cell surfaces and culture media, in amounts comparable to those found for endothelial ceils. after h of stimulation by the gonadotropin fsh ( - ng/ml) granulosa cells increased the amounts of ahspgs they released in culture media by - -fold, while keeping their cell surfaceassociated ahspgs constant. analysis of s-labelled hspgs revealed that heparan sulfates constitute about % of the surface-associated and % of the soluble granulosa cell glycosamineglyeans. finally, using i-at autoradiography on rat ovary cryosections, we have localized ahspgs on the granulosa cell layers of large antral follicles, while ahspgs could not be detected in smaller follicles. these data suggest that granulosa cell ahspgs could be critically located to modulate proteolytic activities in the changing environment of the growing follicle. division, cibabasel, switzerland. the development of chelators which can mobilise excess storage iron (fe) and permit its excretion is necessary in the treatment of fe overloaded diseases. although oral administration of such a pharmaceutical is highly desirable, no orally active fe chelator is so far in regular clinical use. searches for orally active and safe fe chelators require appropriate animal models of fe overload in order to evaluate the potential of these drugs. an animal model is particularly useful for testing the capacity of new fe chelating ce~oounds in enhancing the mobilisation of clinically relevant storage iron. iron loading in animals was achieved by dietary supplementation with carbonyl fe, fe fumarate and , , -trimethylhexanoyl ferrocene (tmh-ferrocene). liver fe concentrations were increased - times above normal levels. tmh-ferrocene was the most efficient compound to induce stable liver fe overload. the orally given con'pounds induced a predominantly hepatocellular iron distribution and was found distributed among reticuloendothelial cells only at a later stage. this pattern of liver fe storage is similar to that observed in the early stages of primazy ha ~ochromatosis and late stage of transfusional hae~ochromatosis. eeeently, we and ethers have cloned and characterized novel transcription factors called peroxisome proliferator-actirated receptors (ppak). they belong to the superfamily of nuclear hormone receptors as the steroid, thyroid and retinoid hormone receptors. ppars are activated, beside xenobiotic peroxisome proliferators, by natural fatty acids and induce, together with the receptor for -cis retinoic acld (rxr), the transcription of genes involved in the ~-and ~-oxidation of fatty acids. ppar and rxr bind as heterodimers to the ppar response element (ppre), consisting of a direct repeat of aggtca-iike sequences with one intervening nucleotide. now, we show by gel retardation analysis and transient transfection assays that ppar/rxr heteredimers also bind to and transactivate gene transcription through estrogen response elements (ere). the ere is a palindrome with aggtca half-sites separated by three nucleotides. the selectivity and specificity of the transactivation through an ere was demonstrated by the testing of various related palindromic and inverted palindromic repeats of aggtca sequences, which were all inactive. the possible activation of estrogen responsive genes by fatty acids via ppars in vivo is discussed especially with regard to a debated role of fatty acids in breast cancer. the purpose of this study was to evaluate whether intermittent doxorubicin (dox) treatment in vitro selects for multidrug resistance in rpmi myeloma cells and, if so, to determine the underlying mechanism(s). cells were exposed to constant doses of dox for days alternating with growth in dox-free medium for days. after > months of treatment, the cells developed an atypical mdr phenotype with -to -fold resistance to topo ii poisons. cross-resistance to vincristine and taxotere was < -fold, sensitivity to cisplatin and melphalan remained normal. efflux of mdr drugs was incresed with no effect of verapamit; subcellular dox distribution was normal. expression of topo ii a was found to be reduced by around and - % at the rna and protein level, respectively. minimum mdrt rna overexpression was detected when using rt-pcr; p-glycoprotein was not detectable. mrp rna expression was increased by - % relative to the wild type cells without detectable p . this data suggests that atypical mdr might play a role in acquired dox resistance in human myeloma. mucosal surfaces cover a vast area in the human body. they satisfy its need to communicate with its environment, e.g. in terms of nutrient uptake and sexual reproduction. however, at the same time they offer a vulnerable gate for invasion by pathogenic microorganisms. for immunoprotection of these regions, large amounts of iga antibodies are produced in the bloodstream and transported across the epithelial barrier to the lumen by means of polymeric ig receptor. there the receptor is cleaved, and its extracellular portion remains associated as secretory component (sc) to the secretory iga complex. in the context of a project aiming to mass production of secretory iga as a passive vaccine, we evaluated a series of eukaryotic expression systems for production of sc. the cdna encoding polymeric ig receptor was engineered in a way that only its extracellular domains corresponding to sc were expressed in yeast, in insect cells infected with recombinant baculovirus, and in mammalian cells infected with recombinant vaccinia virus. furthermore, a c-terminal poly-histidine tag was introduced for simple purification of the products. we will show optimization of expression levels for each of the systems as well as a quantitative and qualitative comparison of the products. recombinant vaccinia viruses (rvv) that express gone products from other organisms has become a popular and widely used laboratory expression system. our current interest is directed toward the production of secretory component (sc), a subunit of secretory iga antibody complex involved in mucosal immunity. toward this goal, we constructed rvv governing sc transcription under the control of two viral-based and the t bacteriophage promoters. expression of the protein was assessed in several mammalian cell lines, such as human tk-, human hela (grown in suspension or as a monolayer) and monkey cv-i. optimization of infection parameters and culture conditions were also performed. institut de biologic animale de runiversit~ de lausanne protection of mucosal surfaces is mediated by secretory iga ant/bodies (alga) constituted of dimeric iga and secretory component (sc) . toward the aim of reconstituting slga complexes in vitro and using them for passive oral immunization, sc has been produced in yeast, insect and mammalian expression systems. the gone encoding sc has been engineered so that a) the c-terminus of the protein carries a xhis tag and b) the newly synthesized polypeptide is released in the culture medium. culture conditions have been established to permit recovery of sc in serum-free medium. purification procedures based on nickel chelate and classical chromatographies have been optimized to yield sc under native conditions. finally, in vitro reassociation with purified dimeric igas obtained from hybddomas has been used to assess biological activity of recombinant sc. using a magnet-assisted subtraction-hybridisation technique (mast), cdna clones were isolated that are expressed in nqrm~l l~nq %issue but n__d_i expressed in the corresoondina nsclc tissue, ii of the edna clones are highly homologous to edna sequences for the following proteins: pulmonary surfactant proteins sp-a and sp-b; receptor for advanced glycosylated endproducts of proteins (rage); calmodulin-like protein; natural killer gone (nkg ); matrix gla protein (mgp); glutamine synthetase; ubiquitin; vascular smooth muscle alpha-actin; cytoskeletal beta-actin; vimentin. the remaining edna clones may represent parts of still unknown genes. the mast edna clones were derived from a patient who developed squamous adenocarcinoma. northern blot analysis of normal/tumour rna from three other nsclc patients showed that the lack of gone expression was independent of nsclc type and stage. enzymatic methylation of cytosines in mammalian dna is believed to play a fundamental role in basic gene regulation. methylation in the vertebrate genome is restricted to cpg dinucleotides at the c- position of cytosine. in vitro studies have shown that methylation can drastically influence the dna structure. cpg islands remain unmethylated in normal cells, whereas several immortalised, transformed cell lines contain partially methylated cpg islands. transcription of genes can be inhibited by methylation of cpg's. this modification contributes e.g. to the stable repression of genes on the inactivated x chromosome of females. the collagen vi genes show typical cpg islands in their promoter region and they were shown to be down regulated at the transcdptional level in src or myc transformed cells. given these facts we dee~ded to investigate the effects of methylation in the collagen vi gwene. e could demonstrate that the promoter activity of (x (vi) chicken collagen gone was strongly diminished by methylation in vitro. furthermore dna methylation completely prevented binding of a novel transcription factor to the promoter, whereas binding of sp was not affected. to show evidence of methylation in vivo, we are currently iocalising the exact positions of methylated cpg's in normal and transformed cells by genomic sequencing. alterations of putative tumour suppressor genes in human non-small cell lung carcinoma (nsclc). r. shipman and c.u. ludwig, molecular oncology, lab (zlf), basel, ch- chromosomal subregion llp displayed non-random allelic loss in nsclcs. llp contains the genetic loci for catalase (cat), the wilms' tumour gene (wti) and the follicle-stimulating hormone ~-chain (fsh~). % of the nsclcs were deleted at cat suggesting that loss of a gene(s) near cat may be involved in the progression of nsclc. yac clones containing the cat locus are being prepared for use in a direct selection procedure for cdnas encoded at this region. although % of the nsclcs were deleted at wti, no mutations were detected in the remaining wti allele. wti expression was subsequently demonstrated in fetal lung, fetal hematopoietic tissue, normal adult lung and nsclc. allelic deletion at p , immuno-histochemical and sequence analysis of the p gene were also examined in our nsclcs. these analyses support the contention that aberrant expression of the p gene is a pivotal event in the progression of nsclc. $ - recently, a number of advances have been made which enable the experimentalist to study the effects of low levels of ionizing radiation. the results suggest a threshold to radiation damage exists and that above a critical level, recovery mechanisms in the cell are induced and the biological response falls. thus low levels of radiation cause greater than expected levels of biological response. this has been demonstrated in studies of mutations, cell survival and cancer induction. because the low dose-rates and the low doses per fraction result in the total doses being small, the magnitude of the biological effects induced is insufficient to warrant alarm. identification of genes associated with the revertion of the malignant phenotype of a rhabdomyosarcoma cell line. michele genini, sabina solinas toldo*, ruedi fries* and beat w. schafer, dept. of pediatrics, university of ziirich, steinwiesstr. , ziirich, and *institut for nutztierwissenschaften, eth ztifich, ztirich. the human rhabdomyosarcoma cell line rd is tumorigenic and differentiates very poorly despite the expression of the myogenic factors myf and myf . therefore it can be regarded as natural mutant. to identify genes which are involved in suppression of tumorigenicity or enhance differentiation we applied two different approaches. since the development of human embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma has been associated with abnormalities of chromosome band p , in the first approach we transferred a normal human chromosome into rd ceils via microcell fusion. the microcell hybrids did not show a higher degree of differentiation. suppression of tumorigenicity was observed in one clone but is probably independent of chromosome , as it was shown by chromosome specific painting. ' in the second approach we applied a subtractive hybridization procedure between primary myoblasts and rd cells to find genes specific for the normal phenotype. these genes will be tested in vivo for induction of differentiation and/or tumorsuppression. deficient synthesis of the gpi anchor is the molecular basis of idiopathic paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria ("pnh") and a similar phenotype can accompany aplastie anemia cpnh-iike"). the population expressing cd , a gpi-anehored membrane glycoprotein, was quantified by flow cytometry in samples from patient p.g. (pnh) and patient m.m. (pnh-like) and amounted to % (p.g.) and % (m.m.), respectively. t lymphocytes from both patients were isolated, expanded and cloned. from both patients, clones expressing the cd marker (cd +) and cd deficient clones (cd -) were obtained. takeda et al. (cell , , - ) showed that in some (cd -) bcell clones, a deletion of the p g-a gene product is responsible for the expression of the pnh-phenotype. pcr analysis of t cell mrna from extracts of both cd + and cd -clones of patient m.m. (pnh-like) using pig-a specific primers revealed a band pattern from which can he concluded that no deletion is present in the pig-a gene product. this result suggests that cd -t lymphocytes of the pnh-like patient express a normal pig-a gene product; a disorder in regulation of pig-a expression or an unrelated biosynthetic defect may explain the cd phenotype in these t cells. further work is aimed at defining the differences in biosynthetic defects of pnh and pnh-like cd -t cell clones. supported by grant - - of the snsf to egb. w@ have recently employed an experimental approach to turn the function of "nuclear messengers" such as c-fos (and c-jun) on and off at will in polarized me/nmary epithelial cells. to this end we used constructs encoding the c-fos (and c-jun) genes fused to the hormone-binding domain of the human estrogen receptor, designated c-foser (and c-juner), we could show that short-term activation ( mins.) of c-foser by estradiole (e ) led to the disruption of epithelial cell polarity within hours, as characterized by the expression of apical and basolateral marker proteins. during the next - days, however, the cells fully regained their polarized phenotype. conversely, long-term activation ( - hours) caused the irreversible loss of epithelial cell polarity, leading ultimately to an epithelial-fibroblastoid cell transition. these cells underwent dramatic changes in gene expression including the complete loss or reduction of epithelial markers such as e-cadherin/uvomorulin, zo-i and cytokeratins, and the de novo expression of mesenchymal proteins like vimentin, type i collagen and fibronectin. expression of the v-ha-ras oncogene (acting upstream of c-fos) did not markedly influence epithelial cell organization when the cells were grown on plastic. however, when cultured within type i collagen gels in the presence of serum, or when injected into the mammary glands of nude mice, rapid cell growth and a clear epithelial-fibreblastoid cell transition was observed. growth properties determine the organ colonization ability of a metastatic murine melanoma cell line. the ability of metastatic tumor cells to specifically colonize distant organ sites strongly depends on the interaction of the metastatic cells with the local organ environment. we have selected a b routine melanoma cell fine (b -ls ) which has an increased ability to colonize the liver, and compared its behavior with either its parental (b -f ) or inng-specific (b -f ) cell line. we have found that adhesion in vitro and organ lodgement in vivo were not different for ls and f . in contrast, b -ls grew at slower rates than the other lines both in vitro and in vivo after subcutaneous or intra-foot-pad injection. analysis of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins indicated a higher phosphorylation activity in b -ls cells, which might suggest an altered regulation of some kinase(s) in this cell line. intercellular contact with hepatocytes in vitro, or the liver in vivo could restore an efficient growth of b -ls , enabling thus these cells to colonize this organ much better than others. hepatocytes or liver plasma membrane (p.m.) extracts conserved the growth stimulatory activity towards b -ls ceils. chromatographic fractionations of these extracts showed that a major growth sfimulatory protein in this fiver p.m. fraction turns out to be ttansferrin, which in the liver appears to exist in at least two different mature forms. protein import into mitochondria requires atp in two locations: outside the organelle, and in the matrix space. depletion of matrix atp arrests translocation of precursors across the inner membrane, but does not prevent precursors from crossing the outer membrane. as a result, proteins that reach the inner membrane or intermembrane space without passing through the matrix are often sorted normally in atp-depleted mitochondria. external atp is used to maintain precursors in a translocationcompetent state. however, some precursors can fold and still remain translocation-competent, and import of these precursors is independent of external atp. with the folded cytochrome b precursor, it is matrix atp rather than external atp that drives translocation across the outer membrane. thus matrix atp generates a pulling force that can drive both the translocation and the unfolding of precursor proteins. mitochondrial hsp probably functions as the atp-dependent import motor. arsenijcvic d, dulloo ag & girardicr l, dpt of physiology, cmu. geneva, ch. the relationship between body weight, daily energy expenditure (assessed by indirect calorimetry), and immune status (determined by lymphocyte proliferation tests) was investigated in swiss webster mice maintaining a stable body weight several weeks after infection with toxoplasma gondii(me ). following an initial period of weight loss (infection-induced cachexia), the surviving mice could be differentiated into two main groups: (i) those showing a partial regain in body weight (the infected gainers) and eventually stabilizing al a mean body weight % below a non-infected control group, and (if) those showing no weight regain (the infected non-gainers) and eventually stabilizing at % below control levels. immune function was found to be markedly suppressed in the infected non-gainers, whereas it was normal (and similar to control levels) in the group of infecled gainers. daily energy expenditure (and food intake), after normalisation for differences in body weight, was found to be the same in both infected gainers and non-gainers, but lower by % when compared to controls (p< . ); thereby indicating that the infected groups were able to increase their overall efficiency of food utilization in response to the low food inlake. in conclusion, this study conducted during a weight stable phase of chronic infection shows a clear-cut association between the inability to regain body weight and impaired immune function. in contrast, no relationship was found between metabolic rate and body weight nor between metabolic tale and immune function, but the chronically infected mice exhibited the same phenomenon of enhanced metabolic efficiency characteristic of chronic underfeeding per se. identification and functional analysis of chaperonin , the groes homolog of yeast mitochondria. biozentrum, university of basel, klingelbergstrasse , ch- basel, switzerland. phone ++ - - , fax ++ - - . the mitochondrial chaperonin system consists of chaperonin (cpn ; also termed hsp ), which is homologous to e. cull gruel, and chaperonin (cpnlo), which is homologous to e. coil groes. we have used a functional assay to identify cpnl of yeast mitochondria. when dimeric rubisco is denatured and allowed to bind to yeast cpn , subsequent refolding of the enzyme is strictly dependent upon yeast cpnl . in the presence of mgatp, yeast cpn and yeast epnl form a stable complex that can be isolated by gel filtration. the atpase activity of hsp is not inhibited by complex formation with cpnl . a different result is obtained with the e, coil system, where groes is able to completely inhibit the atpase activity of gruel ( ). to test the in vivo role of cpnl , we have cloned, sequenced and disrupted the corresponding nuclear gene cpnio. this gene encodes a protein of , da that is imported into the mitochondrial matrix without detectable cleavage. haploid cells lacking a functional copy of cpnio fail to grow at temperatures between ~ c and ~ c ( ). ( ) rospert, s. et al. ( ) proc. natl. acad. sci. , in press. ( ) rospert, s. et al. ( ) febs lett., in press. characterization of yeast mitochondrial heat shock protein , l. bolliger, b. s. glick and g. schatz, biocenter, university of basel, basel. mitochondrial hsp (mhsp ) is thought to use the energy of atp hydrolysis to pull precursor proteins across the mitochondrial membranes. to facilitate the purification of yeast mhsp , we used the cloned gene (a gift of dr. n. morishima) to modify mhsp with a six-histidine tag at its c-terminus. this construct supports growth of yeast cells lacking wild-type mhsp . we developed a purification procedure that allows us to recover this tagged protein with a purity of about %. experiments are in progress to characterize the nucleotidedependent interaction of purified mhsp with unfolded proteins. in addition, we are looking for partner proteins that may modulate the action of mhspt . we have copurified a protein of about kd together with mhsp . the kd protein could be released from mhsp by atp or adp. when tryptic fragments of this protein were subjected to microsequencing, one fragment showed strong homology to the grpe protein of e.coli. the transmembrane electrical potential of mitochondria (awmit) can be assessed in single hepatocytes by using epifluorescence microscopy. for this end the rhodamine fluorescence of a mitochondria-rich (fr) and a mitochondria-poor region (fp) are measured. the ratio of these signals depends on the awmit according to a modified nernst equation (reber b .f.x., somogyi r. & stucki j.w. ( ) , bba, , - ) . to calibrate this method the cell membrane was permeabifized for monovalent cations with nystatin and gramicidin. then the cytosolie k + was replaced by na + from a k+-free bath solution. subsequent addition of valinomycin made the mitochondrial membrane permeable for k + ions. by the addition of different k + concentrations to the bath, the awmit could be clamped to defined values. the relation between the ratio fr/fp and the awmit could be well fitted to our modified nernst equation. however, the calibration curve flattens out at potentials higher than about inv. therefore the detection limit of changes of a~mit within the physiological range is about - mv. maximal stimulation of the na+/k + atpase by addition of nystatin to the na + containing bath medium caused a drop of awmit of about inv. subsequent addition of ouabain resulted in an almost complete reversal of this drop. this shows that changes in atp consumption can be assessed via changes of audmit. schneiter ph., di vetta v., j quier e. and tappy l. institut de physiologie de l'universitg bugnon , lausanne. the metabolic effects of an exercise performed in the fasting or fed state were studied in subjects over a hour period in a respiratory chamber. a mixed meal containing c labeled carbohydrates was ingested at : am and an exercise session (walking at km/h rain, slope %) was performed at : am (fasting) or am (postprandial). net carbohydrate (net cho ox) and lipid oxidation (indirect calorimetry) and oxidation of exogenous carbohydrates (exo cho ox, breath co ) were measured. glycogen breakdown was calculated as net cho ox -cho exo ox, and glycogen synthesis as cho in -cho exo ox. energy expenditure over hours was similar but net cho ox was % lower, lipid ox % higher and exo cho ox % lower when exercise was performed in fasting vs fed state; moreover, glycogen synthesis was increased by % (p< . ), while glycogen breakdown was increased by % (p= . ). in conclusion, a min exercise in the fasting vs fed state a) increases utilization of endogenous lipids, b) enhances muscle glycogen turnover over a hour period. hormonal regulation of e-abl tyroslne kinase by fusion to a steroid binding domain t. mattioni, o. chini hooft van huijsduijnen, p.k. jackson and d. picard d partement de bielogie cellulaire, universit de geneve, ch- geneve the activities of a wide variety of proteins can be subjected to hormonal control by fusion to the hormone binding domain of steroid receptors. we show that this strategy can also be applied to a tyrosine kinase. in particular, transforming derivatives of c-abl become hormone-inducible oncogenes by fusion to a steroid binding domain. it is noteworthy that the hormone-inducible transformation of nih t cells is completely reversible upon removal of the specific ugand. reversion experiments reveal another facet of abl: its ability to inhibit cell proliferation. hours after hormone depletion, cells are not only morphologically reverted, but the cell cycle appears to be blocked in g . a cytostatic effect of abl overexpression has been reported by several groups but, until today, it could only be examined by comparing different abl derivatives or the same derivatives in different cellular contexts. in contrast, our hormone-regulable system has the advantage that the two distinct functions of abl (transformation versus growth inhibition) can be studied using the same derivative expresed in the same cell line. we are using the hormone inducible system to investigate the mechanisms regulating the transtorming and the cytostatic effects of abl in a variety of cell lines. jiewu yang and herbert zuber institute for molecularbiology and biophysic, eth, z'tirich enzymes from thermophilic organisms show higher thermostability and temperature optima than those of mesophilic organisms. it has been shown that these properties are based on a specific structure of the protein. the primary structure of thermophilic (b. stearothermophilus) and mesophilic(b, megaterium) triosephosphate isomerase(tim) have been determined by cloning and sequencing of the tim genes. comparison of the primary structures of the thermophilic and rnesophilic enzyme showed specific amino acid substitutions, particularly in the c~-helices of the tim barrel, which could play a critical role with respect to thermostability. we have consmacted mutants by exchanging (x-helices between tim of b. stearothermophilus and b. megaterium. helix h , h and h of tim from b. megaterium, corresponding to amino acid residues - , - . and - respectively, have been exchanged. the properties (thermostability and temperature optimum) of the hybrid-mutants were compared with the wild type enzymes. in a comparative investigation of structural and functional parameters related to the oxidative substrate metabolism in skeletal muscle cells of dogs and goats, a close relationship was found between intracellular lipid stores and mitochondria. as revealed in serial sections with subsequent em analysis, each lipid droplet was in direct contact to one or several mitochondria. quantitatively, % of the lipid droplet surface in goats and % in dogs were in direct contact to outer mitochondrial membranes or -in other terms - % of outer mitochondrial membranes in goats and % in dogs were in direct contact to lipid deposits. these findings were in good agreement with the physiological data showing a times higher oxidation rate of fatty acids drawn from intracellular stores for dogs than for goats. human muscle adapts to altered load with changes in the expression of enzymes involved in energy metabolism. endurance exercise in humans is known to increase the oxidative capacity of skeletal muscles (hoppeler, int. j. sports med. ( ), , ) . at the ultrastructurai level, a higher mitochondriai content contributes to the higher oxidative capacity of skeletal muscles. little is known about the molecular mechanisms that lead to such adaptations in humans. the expression of mitochondriai components involves complex regulation of both mitochondriai and nuclear encoded genes. we have developed a pcr approach to quantify dna and rna from human skeletal muscle cryostat sections and addressed the question, whether the structural adaptations in endurance trained athletes are accompanied by concomitant changes in respective rna steady state levels. preliminary data indicate a higher concentration of coxiv and coxl ( . and . times, respectively) in trained subjects. no differences were observed for mtdna, despite a two fold higher mitochonddal content. human skeletal muscle contains three main fiber types which are based on the myosin heavy chain composition of the individual fiber, the isoforms of other contractile proteins within a given fiber type can vary leading to a continuum of different phenotypes. we are studying the fiber type specific expression of the mrnas of myosin alkali light clmins (mlc) using in situ hybridization, especially the rarer slow form mlc lsa. differences were found between shoulder muscles and leg muscles: m. deltoideus yielded stronger signals for mlc lsa and mlc lsb in the least glycolytic type i fibers (ia), weak but detectable signals for mlc lsb and mlc lf/f mrna in more glycolytic type i fibers (ib) and strong signals for mlc lf/ f in type ii fibers. in m. vast. lat. mlc lsb was strongly expressed in type ia as well as ib fibers, mlc lsa mrna was only found in some ia fibers. mlc isa has been shown to be expressed at a particular time point during muscle development and regeneration. in a biopsy of a becker dystrophy patient, we found very strong signals in some small fibers displaying the morphology of regeneralmg fibers. thus this probe could be useful to dete~t regenerative processes in pathological muscle samples. the aim of this study was to validate the complementarity of two new non-invasive methods for the assessment of autonomic regulations. reactions to a moderale exercise ( w on a cycloergometer) were compared in cardiac transplant recipients (ctr) who modulate their heart rate (hr) by means of circulating calecholarnines, their heart being donervated, and in normal subjects where such exercise level doesn't stimulate the sympathetic system. the methods used were: ) the spectral analysis of hr variability where the high frequency component (hf, above . t z, related to the respiratory frequency) is a marker of the vagal activity, the low frequency component (lf; at about . hz) depends on both sympathetic and parasympathetic activities and the lf/rf ratio indicates changes in the sympatbo-vagal balance; and ) a pure sympathetic index obtained from the amplitude of the t-wave of the ecg (twa) which is decreased by adrenergic stimulation of the myocardium. our results indicate that in both groups hr was increased by the exercise. in ctr, a net decrease in twa (- _+ %, n= ) was measured. contrasting with this, in normal subjects, no change in twa (+ _+ %, n= ) but a decrease in beth hf (- _+ %, n= ) and lf (- _+ %, n= ) without change in lf/hf ratio (- +_. %, n= ) were observed. these results indicate that ctr subjects increase their hr by an adrenergic stimulation, whereas the normal subjects regulate their hr for such moderate exercise only by redudng their vagal tone. there was a significant relationship (r= . , p< . ) between ps and the ree. the slope of the regression line indicated a net cost of ps of . kcal/g. we conclude that obesity in children is associated with an absolute increase in whole-body protein turnover consistent with the increased ffm and ree. the "glucose paradox" in the anoxic and reoxygenated embryonic myocardium raddatz, e., tran, l., rochat, a.-c., kucera, p. and de ribaupierre, y. institut de physiologie de l'universitd, ch- lausanne. the hearts of -day-old chick embryos explanted in vitro react rapidly, reversibly and reproducibly to anoxia and reoxygenation. this work deals with the effects of exogenous glucose on the mechanical activity of the hearts submitted to strictly controlled normoxia-anoxia-normoxia transitions. the anoxic periods lasted from to seconds. instantaneous heart rate, amplitude of contraction, velocities of contraction and relaxation of the ventricle wall were determined optically. in presence of and mmol/ of glucose ) the arrest of cardiac activity under anoxia was delayed by and %, respectively, ) the duration of the postanoxic cardioplegia was reduced and ) recovery was faster. paradoxally, these concentrations of glucose induced arrhythmias both during anoxia and reoxygenation. the incidences of such arrhythmias increased with the duration of anoxia. the absence of glucose or blockade of glycolysis suppressed arrhythmias. image analysis showed that the observed myocardial dysfunctions originated in the atrium and were sometimes associated with disturbances of propagation. the microinjeetion of okadaie acid into incompetent oocytas leads to the release of the prophase block with entry into m-phase. these g /m-like alterations include chromatin condensation, germinal vesicle breakdown (gvbd), microtubules reorganization and formation of an abnormal (often multipolar) spindle of meiosis i, with chromosomes not aligned on the metaphase plate. the polar body is never extruded. moreover okadaic acid microiujection induces the emergence of phosphorylated cytolasmic foci as detected by the monoclonal antibody mpm- , known to react with mitotic phosphoproteins associated with centrosomes. the kinetics of gvbd following mieroinjection is extremdy retarded ( - hrs) when compared to spontaneous maturation ( ran-lhr) and depends on the oocyte diameter. interestingly, when inc~ompetent oocytes are cultured during hrs and then microinjeeted with okadaic acid meiosis resumes within a short delay ( -rhrs). mpm- epitopes are present on ecntrosomes only after okadaic acid injection. following gvbd one of the step depending on protein synthesis, the expression of tissue type plasminogen activator, is triggered. indeed oa-injected incompetent oocytes produce small amounts of this activator. altogether these results argue for an effect of okadaic acid favoring entry into mphase including microtubule organization, centrosomes phosphorylatiou and the recruitment of one of the masked mrnas (tpa). st~rillt~, ncb~, c~- l g~. ~t rs-inse~, monf~llier, france. meiotic reinitiation of the mouse oocyte is caracterized by a slow entry into metaphas~ i, b ~jinnin with germinal ve~ir break@own (gvbd) and ending with spindle formation. it is accompanied by a cascade of protein kinases and phosphatases increasir~g protein phosphorylation. the activation of histone hi kinase (maturation promoting factor, mpf) and of the hapk have been compared during spontaneous or okedalc acid (oa)-induced rhetoric reinitiation. in spontaneously maturing oocytes, hist ne hi kinase activity increases before gvbd ( x) and is a~sociated with the disappearance of the upper (tyrosine phosphorylated) migrating form of p cdc , following gvbd, histone hi klnase activity culminates ( x) in metaphase i. activation by phesphorylation of p mapk occurs after gvfld. in contrast, no increase of histone hi kinase is detec~cable in oocytes induced to reinitiate meiosis by a transient exposure %o oa, neither before gvbo nor during the following hours of culture. the upper migrating form of p cdc is present for houra. the activation of p mapk b~lins before gvbd. furthermore, when oa is applied on coclrces microinjected with p sucl, neither iocrease of histone hi kinase activity nor p cdc dephosphorylation are observed although gvbd is induced; p mapk is activated. altogether these results suggest that gvbd may or may not be associated with a detectable activation of histene hi kinase, depending on the experimental conditions. activation of ps cdc and p mapk are separable events. we propose that, in the mouse c~yte, oa might be able to aetivaf an alternative pathw~ leading to gvbd that is cdc -independent and that involves p mapk activation ensuing mpf-independent phosphorylations. s - urich, k., basel, switzerland transformation of cells by polyomavirus is mediated by middle-t antigen. this viral protein is able to form complexes with src family tyrosine kinases (e.g. c-src), phosphatidylinositol- -kinase (pi -k) and phosphatase a (pp a). c-src associated with middle-t is constitutively dephosphorylated at tyrosione , a site negatively regulating the activity of this enzyme. this results in high tyrosine kinase activity in interphase and mitotic polyoma-transformed cells. middle-t is transiently hyperphosphorylated during mitosis as reflected by an increase in the apparent lvl, on sds acrylamide gels. two putative phosphorylation sites for a cyclin-dependent kinase present in middle-t, threonine and threonine , are also phosphorylated by purified p ~a~ in vitro. we constructed mutant middle-t genes where individual phosphorylation sites were converted to alanine residues. mutants lacking threonine were still able to associate with all cellular enzymes described above yet defective for gell transformation. interestingly, the defect of this mutation could be compensated by additional changes in the middle-t protein sequence introduced further downstream in a domain suspected to play a role in the targeting of this protein to intracellular membranes. $ - schmidt, s., fa~khauser, c., and viesturs, s. isrec, epalin~es, switzerland little is understood of the mechanisms which regulate cytokinesis, or how it is integrated with mitosis. we have cloned a number of genes from the fission yeast s. po~be which are required for the initiation of septation and are characterising them. defects in the cdc and cdcll genes result in continued nuclear division without cytokinesis, while cdcl mutants undergo multiple rounds of septum formation without cell cleavage. our analysis suggests that phosphorylation will play an important role in the regulation of cytokinesis and its integration with mitosis. a functional cdcl product is required for maintenance of p r activity in mitosis and the primary sequence of the cdc protein indicates that it encodes a protein kinase. data concerning the role of the cdc , cdcll and cdcl genes will be presented. rfc was originally identified in human cell extracts as one of the cellular factors essential for the replication of sv origin-containing dna in vitro. it is a five subunit protein with one large subunit of -i kda and four small subunits of - kda. rfc binds specifically to primertemplate structures at the '-end of the primer. together with proliferating cell nuclear antigen (pcna) it serves as a primer recognition factor for dna polymerase ~ and ~. to show the invobement of rfc in cellular dna replication we are currently cloning s. cerevisiae rfc. the amino acid sequences of a number of tryptic peptides have been obtained. this information was used to amplify parts of the s. cerevisiae genes by per and to screen a genomic library with these probes. three genes were cloned so far. the large subunit, rfc , codes for a kda polypeptide that is % identical to the large subunit of human rfc (lirfc). the sequences for two of the small subunits were also obtained. rfc , coding for a kda polypeptide, is % identical to the hrfc kda subunit. rfc , coding for a kda polypeptide, is % identical to the hrfc kda subunit. there is also considerable similarity between the different subtmits. rfcj, rfc and rfc , as well as the hrfc subunits, have consensus sequences for a atp/gtp binding site. all three genes are essential in s. cerevisiae. p is a major tumor suppressor gene which spefically interferes with the onset of e phase. we have therefore cxa~ined the possibility that p modulates the normal functions of enzymes and proteins directly involved in dna replication. we have shown that human wtp protein binds physically to calf thymus single stranded dna binding protein a, rp-a, we have also found that p blocks dna helicases in a typical strand displacement assay. this may reflect the fact that p is able to reanneal complementary dna single strands. since both wt and some mutant forms of p share this function, they are unlikely to be related to the p tumor suppressor activity. to our surprise, among the helicases which were tested we determined that the p inhibition could be released by rp-a in the case of cellular but not in the case of viral dna helicases. additionally, we found that p can partially inhibit dna polymerase ~ and s holoenzymes on singly primed mi dna. this inhibition, however, was only evident when e. coli ssb was substituted for rp-a. our data thus show that p exerts an inhibitory effect on several enzymes involved in dna replication and dna repair. the p -rp-a interaction may function to protect replication enzymes from inhibition by p under certain physiological conditions. catalytic subunit showed that pol ~ is the most conserved replicative pol (cullmarm g., hindges r., berehtold m.w. and htibscher u., gene, in press). we synthesized pcr primers and cloned three fragments spanning the whole catalytic subunit. the resulting pcr products, called n-term, middle and c-term have a size of , and bp, respectively. the primer for the n-term and middle fragments contained a histidin tag in order to purify the recombinant proteins by using a ni-nta column. these fragments were cloned into the expression vector pgemex . because of the natural termination codon in the c-term fragment, the histidin tag was placed directly in the vector in front of the fusion protein, generating a new vector, prhh s. all three fragments were expressed in e.coli. the fusion proteins could be purified in a single step and were used to raise polyclonal antibodies. finally, the entire pol sequence was joined together and could be expressed. data on the characterisation of the antibodies and the proteins will be shown. hsp from calf thymus can influence dna polymerase under heat shock conditions. we have generated antibodies against dnak protein, the hap homolog from escherichia coil, and used them for detecting of hsp protein during its purification from calf thymus tissue. the apparently purified protein has a molecular weight of kda, and has been recognized by antibodies against dnak and eucaryotic hsp / , it possesses a very week atpase activity, which can be stimulated by different poly-and oligopeptide substrates. results will be presented showing the influence of hsp on dna polymerase r from calf thymus under heat shock conditions. identification of a vertebrate cdc mutant which is unable to complete the g /s transition. nicole sr and viestars simanis. chemin boveresses , epalinges,.isrec. s. pombe strains have been constructed which should permit the generic and molecular analysis of the events which occur in late gi when cells become committed to the mitotic cell division cycle and the initiation of dna synthesis. a number of mutants of the chicken cdc gene were eonsuueted during the course of analysis of phosphorylation sites some of which lead to the interesting phenotype of cold sensitivity when expressed in a cdc null background, when the only source of p cde is the chicken homologue of the gene, expressed from a muldcopy plasmid. in order to create a genetically tractable strain, the wild-type chicken cdc gone and one mutant into the s. pombe genome to create a strain in which cell cycle progression is dependent upon the chicken cdc gene. analysis of this strain indicates gnat the cells block predominantly before replication of dna. in order to determine whether the cells were arrested before or after the execution of the start control their ability to conjugate at the arrest point was assessed. consistent with a block before the traverse of start and contmim~ent to s-phase, cells were able to conjugate with high efficiency. further support for the view that this mutant is defective only for the g -s transition is provided by the observation that it is able to complement a cdc a l mutation in trans. this mutant is defective only for ( function and not traverse of start. tl~e double mutant is viable at the restrictive temperature of either of tile parents alld is no longer cold sensitive. further work will concentrate on cloning genes involved in the traverse of gi into s phase in fission yeast. (masson and kreis, , j. cell biol. : ) where it is localized on a subset of microtubulea. when caco- cells are grown to confluency and become polarized, e-map- expression levels increase concomitant with a higher microtubule stability. transfection of fibroblastic cells (veto), which do not contain any detectable e-map- , with cdna encoding this protein, results in stabilization of microtubules to nocodazole treatment. these data suggest that e-map- may be involved in the stabilization and reorganization of microtubules in polarizing epithelial cells. since e-map- is a stabilizing protein, its interaction with microtubulen should presumably be modified at the onset of mitosis to allow disassembly of the interphase microtubule network and formation of the mitotic spindle. indeed, immunolabeling for e-map-t varies during mitosis. in early prophase, no e-map- can be detected on the microtubules of the forming mitotic spindle. the protein is observed on the spindle microtubules of metaphase cells and staining becomes bright on the new interphase microtubules of telophase cells. analysis of the protein in cells blocked in mitosis by low concentrations of nocodazole indicates that e-map- is hyperphosphorylated. this hyperphosphorylated form of e-map- is no longer able to co-sediment with microtubules in in vitro microtubule-binding assays. phosphopeptide map and phosphoamino acid analysis show the existence of novel phosphorylation sites in e-map- during mitosis compared to the protein during interphase, we are currently characterizing the kinases involved in the modulation of e-map- activity. little is known about the specific functions of calcium-binding proteins in epithelial cells ~md in particular in tumoral cells of epithelial origin. calretinin (cr) and parvalbumin (pv) are supposed to be involved in cell proliferation. we observed the endogenous expression of cr in several cell lines from human colon adenoearcinomas, and we obtained stably transfected cells for pv in a human ovarian adenocarcinoma cell line. we studied the cell cycle in correlation with the endogenous or ectopic expression of cr and pv, respeetiveiy. g and mitotic celts are strongly labelled with the cr-antiserum , while pv immunoreactivity is dominant in interphasic, but not in mitotic cells. in cr expressing cells, the cell cycle seems to be normal and the rate of proliferation to be proportional to the percentage of positive cells. the cell cycle is inhibited at mitosis after the addition of cr antisense oligo nucleotides to the culture medium. the cell cycle is blocked in gi/s and g in the cells eetopically expressing pv. the results support the hypothesis that these two calcium.binding proteins, cr and pv, could intervene at different moments and probably with different mechanisms on the mechanism of the cell cycle in the tumoral cells studied. production of polyclonal antibodies against calretinin cr- k gander, j.-ch., gotzos, v., cello, m.r. and schwaller, . institute of histology and gen. embryol., university; -fribourg a mrna for an alternatively spliced form of calretinin, ealretinin- k (cr- k) was detected in widr cells (a cell line from a human adenocarcinoma). we therefore decided to produce antibodies specific for this protein. it is directed against the amino-acids localized at the c-terminus of the truncated protein which are unique for this protein and not present in full-length calretinin. two different approaches have been chosen to obtain a specific antiserum. we have produced a chimeric protein containing the cterminal region of cr- k and the (h) (nanp) polypeptide as carrier. the fusion protein was expressed in e. coil and purified on a nickel chelate column. as a second method, a synthetic peptide (corresponding to the last amino acids of cr- k) was crosslinked with the carrier protein klh (keyhole limpet hemocyanin). the antigens were used to immunize two rabbits. after the first boost, the sera were tested. we have observed that both antisera recognize besides the protein used for immunization also cr- k (expressed in e. coil) in a western blot specifically. no other protein bands of either e.coli extracts or from eytosolic extracts of widr cells crossreact with the antibodies. both antisera detected the protein cr- k in immunohistochemieal stainings of widr cells confirming the presence of cr- k in widr cells. the tctp (p ) is a growth related tumour protein which is expressed under translational control. homologous acidic proteins have been found in higher plants and in saccharomyces cerevisiae (ykl ) . the striking conservation of this polypeptide between these very divergent organisms suggests some important but still, unknown cellular function. to address this question, a null mutation was constructed in yeast, by deleting almost all the ykl structural gone. the deleted strain shows no detectable phenotype. therefore, we conclude that, in yeast, this gene is dispensable. the protein ykl has been overproduced in e. coil and injected to rabbits to raise antibodies. we are now characterizing the ykl expression at rna and protein level. ellenrieder,c., forrer,p., kosovsky,j., rischle, m., nueller, r. and jaussi, r., institut f~r medizinische radiobiologie, paul scherrer institut & universitgt zh, ch- villigen radiation therapy of tumors could be improved by influencing cellular radiation sensitivity. yeast strains with defective cell cycle checkpoint genes (e.g. radl, rad , radg) show increased radiation sensitivity. cross-hybridization of a probe from the tad gene on human mrna northern blots yielded a single prominent signal. experiments to clone the corresponding kb cdna are underway. we have cloned a hamster cdna encoding the homologue of human cdk . probably, this cdna encodes the p protein from hamster whose phosphorylation responds to radiation checkpoint signals and who does not bind to p sucl beads. treatment of cells with cdk antisense oligonucleotides is hoped to modulate the radiation sensitivity. proliferation of smooth muscle cells (smcs) is a major event in vascular development and atheromatous plaque formation. in order to characterize smc replicative potential, newborn rats have been injected with h-thymidine ( h-tdr) during their first week of life when most of smcs were proliferating; then, h-tdr labelling was evaluated in adult rats. depending on the number of mitosis that smcs had accomplished after the first week of life, four different smc subpopulations could be defined indicating that rat aortic smcs are heterogeneous in their replicative activity. -bromo- '-deoxyuridine (brdu) incorporation after balloon induced endothelial denudation of rat aorta in adult rats showed that smcs entering into the cell cycle were mainly devoid of h-tdr labelling, this category could derive from two distinct smc subpopulations: smcs which were arrested in their proliferation before or just after birth or smcs which had actively replicated during development. thus, one (or two) subpopulation(s) of rat aortic smcs, characterized by a particular replicative activity during development, is (are) selectively activated after balloon induced endothelial denudation. the situation in vivo of dermal fibroblasts embedded within the connective tissue can be emulated in vitro by growing the cells in collagen gels. we have investigated how fibroblasts cultivated within a matrix react upon wounding of this dermal equivalent. human skin-derived fibroblasts (kd-cells) growing within attached collagen matrices were monitored over a period of days. fluorescently labeled cytoskeletal elements (tubulin, vimentin, acfin) and fibronectin served as phenotypica/ markers. the d-arrangement of fibroblast microtubules, intermediate filaments and microfilaments, as well as of fibronectin was visualized by clsm and optical sectioning. cells at the wound margin, adjacent to the wound, and in non-wounded controls, up to a depth of about gm were analyzed. upon wounding, i.e. upon excision of a mm "punch biopsy" from the center of the collagen matrix, fibroblasts in the wound region oriented towards the matrix defect. layer-like structures of increased cell density evolved over time at the wound margin. the tissue defect was covered by fibroblasts, reminescent of the situation in vivo. global yeast genome expression analyzed by -d page after tctp homolog gene (ykl ) disruption. sanchez a translationally controlled tumor protein(tctp) was identified and microsequenced from a human liver sample. previous publications described the presence of a gene related to tctp in plants, mouse erythroleukemia and ascetic tumor, human mammary carcinoma and more recently in the yeast. tctp has no known function but its high degree of homology from plants to human underlines its probable crucial role in cell function. in order to study multifactorial chan~es in protein expression as a function of the ykl gene disruption m the yeast, we used high resolution two-dimensional gel electrophoresis combined with an efficient computer system (melanie). two groups of gels (ykl +(n= ) and ykl -(n=l )) were analyzed, compared and classified using correspondence analysis. there was no significant difference between the two populations of gels according to either qualitative and quantitative spots expression except for two spots which completely disappeared. the first one corresponded to ykl gsne product. the second one corresponded to a kda peptide with an isoelectric point of . . this ykl associated peptide still needs to be characterized and linked to the yeast genome. demyelinating and neurodegenerative diseases are associated with altered cellular responses including processes mediated by receptor protein tyrosine kinases. using a pcr cdna cloning approach we have identified a novel member of the eck/elk/eph genefamily in myelinating serum-free brain cell cultures. alternatively spliced cdnas encoding complete open reading frames for putative transmembrane proteins have been isolated from both rat and human brain. a recombinant protein derived from the rat cdna was demonstrated to have protein tyrosine kinase activity. an affinity purified antiserum to this protein was used to identify a glycoprotein of kd molecular weight in brain cultures, and developping and adult brain tissue. the protein expression is most prominent during embryonal development and during the first three weeks of postnatal life. by in-situ mrna hybridisation the transcripts were found predominantly in restricted neuronal populations. in order to investigate systematically the effects of geometrically defhied abrupt tissue expansion on the characteristics of impulse propagation, we constructed expanding cellular structures in vitro using patterned monolayer cultures of neonatal rat heart cells (photolithographically patterned substrates.) the preparations, which consisted of narrow cell strands ( - tim wide) inserting into large reetangular cell areas (side lengths > ~m), were stained with the voltage-sensitive dye di-g-anepps and were imaged onto a x photodiode matrix array (maximal spatial resolution .tin x am in the object plane). while impulse propagation was uniform in linear cell strands (average conduction velocity . m/s), a transient decrease in conduction velocity hi the transitional region was invariably observed in the suddenly expanded structures. this decrease was accompanied by marked distortions of the local action potential shapes due to bidirectional electrotonic interactions across the transition: upstream from the expansion, the repolarization phase was interrupted, a few ms after its inception, by a small secondary depolarization ("spike and dome" configuration), while, downstream, the action potential upstrokes were preceded by prominent prepotentials. in those cases where conduction failed at the tlansition, action potential durations upstream were dramatically abbreviated. these findings showed that phenomena similar to those recorded in intact purkinje-fiber-ventricular preparations can be observed in cell ensembles in vitro having comparable geometlins but consisting of cells with uniform active membrane properties. supported by swiss nsf grant a- (sr) and usphs grant ns ms). it is a noncollagenous glycoprotein with a molecular mass of kda consisting of three identical subunits. cmp is selectively extracted with edta-containing buffer what indicates a divalent cation dependent anchorage of the protein in cartilage matrix. electron microscopy revealed the presence of three compact globular subdomains and sequence analysis indicated the presence of a coiled-coil c~-helical assembly domain formed at the c-terminal end of each subunit. the trimeric structure was retained after complete reduction under native conditions which reveals that the subunit structure of cmp is not only stabilized by disulfide bridges but also by the coiled-coil assembly domain. tissue distribution studies in mouse revealed that cmp is selectively expressed in some but not all cartilages. adult rat cardiomyoeytes (arc) in culture degenerate the myofibrillar apparatus and after attachment to the substrate they grow and reassemble new rnyofibrils. the appearance of new, well organized rnyofibrils can be observerd in several distinct regions. they appear close to the membrane proximal to the culture substrate and in the perinuclear region close to the substrate. previous studies have shown that embryonic cultured cells assemble new myofibrils which insert in adherens junctions at sites of cell-cell contacts and in sub-sarcolemmal adhesions plaques (saps) at sites of cell-substrate contacts. this saps are thought to function as the nucleation sites for myofibril formation. we have investigated the formation of this saps in cultured adult rat cardiomyocytes. using confocal light microscopy we can show that the interaction between rnyofibrils and membrans occurs close to the membrane proxirnal to the substrate and that this saps are flanking both nascent myofibrils and sfls, the latter structures being believed to serve as scaffold for myofibrillogenesis, additionally we have used electron microscopy to investigate the formation of this structures at higher resolution. $ - muscle satellite cells (sc) are quiescent myoblasts, ready to be activated and to regenerate new muscle fibers in case of muscle damage. in vitro, single human muscle sc, cultivated as clones, give rise in proliferating conditions to two subpopttiations of cells, cells expressing both ~-striated muscle actin and desmin (c~-sr+dsm+), and cells expressing desmin alone (dsm+). in culture conditions promoting differentiation, a clone .typically gives rise to a fusing progeny, yielding c~-sr+dsm + myotubes, and to non fusing myoblasts (nfmb). the latter are dsm +, a phenotype similar to quiescent sc found in situ. in order to determine whether nfmb are the in vitro equivalent of in situ quiescent sc, this first generation of nfmb were selectively collected and subcultured. in proliferating conditions, nfmb were able to resume proliferation and to give rise to a progeny with both c~-sr+dsm + and dsm + cells. when cultured in differentiating conditions, nfmb formed ct-sr+dsm + myntubes, and a new generation of dsm + nfmb. when nfmb of the second generation were again selectively collected and subculture& they resumed proliferation and ~re again able to yield both myetubes and a third generation of nfmb. nfmb of the first generation were also cultivated as clones, and to % of them were able to resume extensive proliferation, yielding in their progeny both c~-sr+dsm + and dsm + cells, which differentiated into myotubes as well as nfmb. these results strongly suggest that sc have the stem cell property, of selfrenewal, yielding in their progeny both cells ready to differentiate into muscle and ceils similar to themselves. extra cellular matrix (ec~ regulates the expression of b-casein in cultured mouse mammary epithelial cells. we have developed a functional ~ epithelial cell strain, which expresses high level of milk proteins, forms alveolar-like structures when plated onto a reconstituted basement membrane and secretes casein unidirectior~lly into a it~aen. we have further shown that fflv~dependent regulation of b-casein occurs mainly at the transcriptional level and that ' sequences play an inloortant role in this regulation. we have located a bp transcriptional enhancer (bcei) within the ' flanking region of the b-casein gene. using functional assays, we show that bcei contains responsive elements for ~ and prolactin-dependent regulation. bcei placed upstream of a truncated inactive b-casein promoter reconstitutes a promoter even more potent than the intact prcmoter, which contains bcei in its natural context more than . kb upstream. this small fusion promoter reconstitutes the nonaal regulation pattern. we show that bcei mediates f/ dependent regulation even when linked to a het~rologous viral promoter. purified satellite cells (sc) were obtained from human skeletal muscle biopsies following cell sorting by flow eytometry. a chemiluminescent assay for acetylnholine (ach) revealed the presence of , nmoles/weu of . sc. in elonal cultures of proliferating sc, this intracellular level of ach was .l nmoles/well. when cells were cultured in the presence of an esterase inhibitor ( ixm phospholine), the ach amount was enhanced fold. conversely, cultivating the cells in presence of a potent inhibitor of choline acetyl transferase ( gm bromoach), gave a % decrease of ach content finally, the release of ach was detected in the supernatant of cultured sc, following a min incubation, and the measured level of ach was pmoles/well/min. the presence of an ach-like compound in myogenic cells in both freshly isolated and in proliferating sc suggests that sc may contain ach in situ. in additiou, the fact that ach was present in the extracellular medium suggests that ach can be released spontaneously by the cultured sc. type xii collagen is an extracellular matrix protein associated with collagen fibrils in vivo. as observed for several other extracellular matrix proteins, the synthesis of type xii collagen by chick fibroblasts cultured in . % fcs is stimulated by tgf-i~i. two splice variants of type xii collagen are known, with subunits of either kda or kda. by using antibodies specific for the large ( kda) form of type xii collagen, we could show a more restricted distribution of the large variant compared to the smaller form in the embryo. while only the large variant carries chondroitin sulfate, both variants are identical in their collagenous domain. it is thought that via this domain, type xii collagen binds to collagen type i fibrils. we demonstrate here that type xii collagen can bind to collagen i fibrils also in vitro. by neutralizing acid soluble collagen type i, we could coprecipitate type xii collagen together with newly formed collagen type i fibrils. this interaction occurs in physiological saline but is highly salt dependent. in further studies we investigated wether s-methionine labeled type xii collagen treated with chondroitinase abc, ct-chymotrypsin, or collagenase can still be precipitated together with type i fibrils. in addition, we found that type xii collagen also affects the rate of type i collagen fibril formation. h.u. keller department of pathology, university of bern, ch- bern locomoting blebbing cells colchicine ( -sm) can induce locomotion associated with blebbing in walker carcinosarcoma cells. blebs expand at a rate (about ~m/sec) which is much faster than known rates of actin elongation. this suggest that the membrane is directly pushed forward by forces other than actin elongation, possibly by hydrostatic pressure. this interpretation is suggested by the observation that there is significant f-actin staining all along the cell membrane but not with the cytoplasmatic content the blebs. blebbing is suppressed by . m sorbitol. the finding that cytochalasin d suppresses blebbing shows that actin polymerization is nevertheless indirectly instrumental in bleb formation, possibly by generating a high intracellular pressure. a tentative model explaining locomotion of blebbing cells is presented. osteopetrosis encompasses a family of diseases with different causes and the common phenotype of impaired bone resorption. the osteopetrotic mouse mutant oo/oo is deficient in csf- , the growth factor for the cells of the mononuclear phagocytic system. the phenotype of oo/ou mice is characterized by a low number of peritoneal macrophages and peripheral monocytes, and a virtual absence of osleoclasts, leading to the osteopetrotic phenotype. injections of csf- into op/oo mice reversed the osteopetrotic phenotype, proving the requirement for csf- during the process of osteoclastogenesis. by in situ hybridization, expression of csf- was demonstrated during bone development. osteoclast precursors and mature osteoclasts were identified as putative target cells for the growth factor, since these cells express csf- receptors, which is encoded by the proto-oncogene c-fm~. subsequently, specific binding of csf- to osteoclasts was shown. expression of c-fms parallels the expression of csf- in bone both in time and place, suggesting a local action of this growth factor in osteoclast formation, but also in the modulation of osteoclastic activity. different transcripts, raised by alternative splicing of a commmon nuclear rna precursor, have been found to encode a secreted and a membrane associated forms of csf-i. the secreted form can be modified by attachment of a glycosaminoglycan side chain, which serves as an anchor to integrate the peptide into the extracellular matrix. investigation of the role the different csf- forms play during recruitment of osteoclasts and regulation of their activity will provide further insights into the mechanisms governing these processes. comparative sequence alignments of known voltage-gated k + channels revealed two conserved cysteine residues in the putative transmembrane segments $ and $ . if the cysteines were connected by a disttifide bridge, it would put a structural consllaint on possible channel models by placing $ next to $ . we used site-directed mutagenesis to study systematically the potential roles of these invariant cysteines. fourteen of substitutions in $ (c ), and of substitutions in $ (c ) maintained channel function in xenopus oocytes microinjected with mutant crna. therefore, the conserved cysteines are not essential for k + channel expression in xenopus oocytes. however, electrophysiological characterization of the cysteine replacement mutants revealed distinct roles for the two cysteines. inactivation, deactivation, and ion permeation did not considerably change in $ mutants. in $ , in contrast, cysteine replacement by leucine, asparagine, glycine and valine accelerated inactivation and deactivation kinetics substantially, whereas serine and threonine showed opposite effects. furthermore, the voltage dependence of deactivation was differently affected. in summary, it appears that the side-chain at position in $ of kv . is involved in channel gating by participating in the transitions from the open to the closed and inactivated state of the channel. (supported by grants from the nih and mda to rhj, and from the snf and the swiss foundation for medical-biological grants to rdz.) the segment between $ and $ of voltage-gatedk + channels, called h or p region, has been implicated to form part of the ion conduction pathway. little is known about the conforroation of this region although various models have been proposed including a j barrel-like structure formed by four adjacent antiparanel j sheets. to gain insight into the secondary structure of this region, we used cysteine substitution mutagenesis and sulfhydryl-specific, membrane-impermeant reagents to probe the accessibility of amino acid side chains in and around the p region of kv . (drki). twemy-eighi positions from k to t were each mutated to a cysteine. after expression of mutant k + channels in xenopus oocytes, cysteine side chain accessibilities were probed by superfusion with ch so sch ch nme + (mtset), mtset can form a mixed disulfide with an accessible cysteine, and this may lead to current reduction if the covalently modified side chain is in or close to the ion conduction pathway. thus far, we have identified four mutations that showed k + current reduction after superfusion with mm mtset. the mutants p c, i c, y c, and k c showed %, %, %, and % reduction in current amplitude, respectively. in coutrast, mutants $ c, a c, t c behaved like wild type kv . with less than % current reduction. our results suggest that the side chains of p , , y , and k are directly accessible from the extracellular environment. taken together, these residues may, therefore, face the lumen of the ion channel pore. furthermore, the degrees of inhibition are in agreement with a model in which the ion conduction pathway narrows from residue k to y to i . (supported by grants from nih and mda to rhj, and from the snf and the swiss foundation for medical-biological grants to rdz.) motejlek k., h,,iuselmann r., and liig:her b.; pharmakologisches institut der universitiit ziirich, winterthmtr. , ch- zlirich comparison of ' flanking sequences of three gabaa-receptor subunit genes (atl, ~, ) revealed a novel conserved purine sequence dement with the consensus sequence gagaggggagaoga gagag(gg/aa)g. this element is present once each in the (zl and subunit gene promoters and in seven tandem copies in the gene promoter. a novel dna binding activity (bsf ) was identified that binds to various versions of this purine element. bsf was found ordy in brain but not in any other tissues tested. furthermore, the factor is distinct of beta, another brain-specific dna binding .protein with a purine-rich dna recognition sequence. the expression of bsf during differentiation of eerebeuar granule cells in vitro correlates with the expression of gabaa-receptor subunit genes. this correlation suggests a role for bsf as a transcriptional activator of neuronal genes. therefore, bsf may be important for cell ty~specific regulation of gabaa-receptor gone expression. we also found that bsf binds to wheat germ agglutinin, suggesting that this protein is glycosilated. taking advantage of this property, we are in the course of purifying bsf , the question, whether bsf is indeed a transcription factor is being investigated in vivo and in vitro. to produce a simple method of estimating the free magnesium concentration ([mgzq) in solution, we have manufactured dip cast mg + macroelectrodes using the neutral mg carrier eth .we have used the elecmides to measure the dissociation constant (k~) for mgatp in a background solutions mimicking the intracellniar milieu. for the mcasmement of the big atp dissociation constant, the background solution contained mmol/l n%atp. this solution was titrated with mgci and the changes in [mg ~] above . retool/ monitored with the maeroelectrode. during the titration the ph was maintained constant. fitting such titration curves with the standard hyperbolic binding equation, after correction for zero drift, gave the following mean+sd values for the ka (pmol/ at ~ ph . , . -+- , (n= ); ph , . :k- . (n= ) and ph . , .g~ . (n= ). elevation of the [naq to m~l/ and reducing the [kq to ( mmol/l was without effect at ph . (n= ). reducing the temperature to ~ increased the k a at . to . :k . (n= ). mg =+ macroelcctrodes provide an easy way of measuring [mg z § in solution. [mg ~] can also be measured in a background solution containing i mn~i/l ca, although the electrode response is reduced. interference by protein to date prevents their use in plasma. similarily to the block by zn + and ca +, protons only partially block the channel. the ability for all mutated channels to. conduct na + current, and the partial block induced hy zn +, ca + or h + indicate that y is not located deep in the pore but rather in the extracellular mouth of the channel. progesterone modulates the activity of glycine receptor expressed in colliculli neurons of neonatal rats. maury, k. & bertrand, d. dpt of physiology, cmu, geneva . steroids are potent narcotics and have been shown to act on ligand-gated channels activated by gaba or nicotine. however, little is known about their possible actions on other receptor types. for instance, while it was demonstrated that progesterone inhibits glycine receptors expressed by spinal cord neurons isolated from chick embryos, nothing has yet been reported for brain receptors. in this study, we have determined the properties of glycine channels expressed by brain neurons of neonatal rats using the whole-cell voltage-clamp technique. in inferior colliculi neurons, glycine elicited little-desensitizing inward currents which reversed around - mv. these currents were blocked by strychnine in the nanomolar range. surprisingly, however, we found that progesterone, in the micromolar range, potentiated the glycine evoked currents. these results, contrasting those obtained in chick spinal cord neurons, suggest that progesterone enhances or antagonizes glycine currents depending on the subtype of the receptor. the mammalian auditory organ (organ of corti) relies on two groups of sensory cell for its normal hearing: inner hair cell & outer hair cell. ihcs are mainly innervated by afferent fibers while the ohcs essentially receive efferent fibers. the ohcs possess unique electromofile properties which are thought to enhance the motion the basilar membrane and to refine the mapping of the sound frequency. we found, using whole ceil recordings, that - % of the fleshly dissociated ohcs displays fast inward currents. the magnitude of peak currents which can be as large as na vary from cell to cell. further experiments have revealed that this current is sensitive to ttx and strongly reduced when extracellular sodium is replaced by choline. its kinetic is relatively slow compared to that of sodium current of typelspiral ganglion cell, and has a more negative inactivation. other voltage activated currents and ligand-gated currents are under inverstigation. these results will provide further insights in the hearing transduction mechanism. the formation and the properties of homotypic and heterotypic gap junctions were studied using two types of insect cells, c / and sf . two single cells were pushed against each other and the subsequent de novo formation of gap junction channels was assessed by means of the dual voltage-clamp method (bukauskas and weingart: pfl~g. arch. : , it was symmetrical for homotypic junctions. the vj-sensitivity was less pronounced in sf cells. hence, the relationship for heterotypic junctions was asymmetrical. all pairs examined revealed a s-shaped relationship between gj(ss) and v, which was virtually superimposable (gj(ss) declined upon depolarization). each channel contains a vm-gate and two ~-gates. the vj-gates are operated independently. they close when their intracellular aspect is made positive. shaped curve compatible with a two-state boltzmann process. half maximal inactivation was reached at - mv and + mv, implying an asymmetrical gating behavior. in case of an asymmetrical protocol (~ and vewas stepped simultaneous, but in opposite direction), the q-dependent asymmetry disappeared (half maximal inactivation at - mv and + mv). the asymmetry in gj-gating, attributable to the pulse protocol, was also reflected in the time constants of ij inactivation (r cerebellar granule cell cultures were used to study the regulation of the nmda receptor expression. we have shown previously that chronic membrane depolarisation ( him k +) or treatment with nmda {i ~m) promotes the functional expression of nmda receptors, as assessed by nmda-evoked ca + influx. we have now developed a rnase protection procedure for the quantitative determination of the mrna levels of the nmda receptor subunits known so far (nr-i, a, b, c, d). the growth conditions mentioned above failed to alter the mrna levels of the different subunits. at the protein level, nmda receptors were evaluated quantitatively by the labeling pattern obtained by the new photoaffinity ligand i-cgp a. the intensity of the phctolabeled bands, thought to represent nr-i and nr- a subunits, was increased by treatment with high k + or nmda compared with control cultures. this result suggest an increase in receptor protein by high k + or nmda treatment. thus, posttranscriptional mechanisms seem to play an essential role in the modulation of the nmda receptor activity. the gene encoding the pore-forming subunit of the rat epithelial na + channel (~renac) was cloned recently and shown to belong to a novel gene family coding for cation channels (nature , p - ( ) . transport of na + ions through these channels is the rate-limiting step of na + absorption and thereby controls osmotic balance of body fluids and secretions. in order to study the implication of ~renac in regulating sodium balance, blood volume and blood pressure and therefore its involvement in hypertension, we expressed ~renac under the control of the human cmv promoter in transgenic mice. several lines of mice showing expression in different tissues were obtained. progress in the analysis of these mice will be discussed. activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors increases the excitability of neurones in the lateral septum of the rat. to elucidate the mechanism(s) of this action, we used whole-cell patch-clamp recordings from coronal brain slices of young animals. in voltageclamped cells, the selective agonlst (is, r)-acpd, at - /~m, had the following effects, a) it evoked a sustained inward current, which was resistant to ttx and to cadmi~am and which persisted in neurones loaded with bapta, a calcium chelator. this current displayed inward rectification and was reduced, or suppressed, when extracellular sodium was partially replaced with n-methyl-d-glucamine. b) it elicited a ttx-insensitive, voltage-dependent inward current, which activated at - /- mv and which reversed at aound mv. this current was suppressed in a low-calcium/high-magnesium perfusion solution and was undetectable in the presence of intracelhilar bapta. we suggest that acpd exerts a dual action on lateral septal neurones. it causes a steady depolarization by generating a sodium-dependent current and it triggers transient plateau potentials by inducing a calcium-dependent cationic current. interaction between these currents results in a powerful, self-reinforcing neuronal excitation. we have investigated the effects of protein kinase c (pkc) activators ( [~-pma, oag) and of phosphatase inhibitors (okadalc acid, calyculin a) on voltage-gated ca + and k + channels in ngf-differentiated pc ceils. whole-cell ba + and k + currents were recorded with the patch-clamp technique. by using specific ca + channel blockers (co-conotoxin (cgtx), isradipine) we found types of ba + currents (iba): a) a ~cgtx-sensitive iba; b) an isradipine-sensitive iba; and c) a t -cgtx plus isradipineresistant iba. [~-pma and oag specifically down-modulated the isradipine-sensitive iba. the inhibition of iba was prevented by staurosporine and pkc ( - ) ( pk inhibitors). the delayed rectifier k + current was unaffected by pkc activators. applied externally, okadaic acid and calyculin a inhibited the total iba by affecting several components of the ba + currents. however, the ~-cgtx plus isradipine-resistant iba was unaffected by okadaic acid. in conclusion, our results suggest a differential modulation of voltage-gated ca + and k + channels by the pkc signalling pathway in ngf-differentiated pc cells. agrin, a protein isolated from basal lamina extracts of the electric organ of the marine ray, is thought to mediate the motor neuron-induced aggregation of acetylcholine receptors (achrs) in muscle fibers at their neuromuscular junction. recent cloning in the marine ray, rat and chick has revealed that agrin can be alternatively spliced at two sites in its c-terminal half. site a encodes either or amino adds and site b encodes either , , or ( + ) amino acids. studies of agrin mrna expression indicate that early in synaptogenesis, chick motor neurons contain high levels of a b . in contrast, non-neuronal cells and muscle calls contain a b and aob mrna. in the adult ray, electric lobe motor neurons that innervate the electric organ contain a b , whereas agrin mrna in the electric organ again lacks both sites (mcmahan et al. ( ) , curr. up, cell biol. : - ). to investigate the functional properties of agrin isoforms in more detail, we have now compared their specific activity to aggregate achrs on cultured chick myotubes. heterologous expression of the c-terminal half in cos- and cells revealed that chick agrin isoforms a b and a b were highly active, while a bll was up to fold lower in activity. no activity could be detected for the a b and aob isoforms. in agreement with these findings the a b isoform of the marine ray also showed high achr-clustering activity. therefore, we conclude that motor neurons throughout development synthesize highly active agrin isoforms while the postsynaptic target ceils do not play a primary inductive role in the formation of synapses. we have used whole-cell patch-clamp recordings and hypothalamic slices in order to characterize the effect of n-methyl-d-aspartate (nmda) on suprachiasmatic neurones. in ceils clamped at or near their resting membrane potential, nmda ( - #m) generated an inward current of - pa, which was insensitive to ttx and which reversed at about inv. the nmda current-voltage (i-v) relation contained a region of negative slope conductance. the nmda current was reduced or suppressed by d(-)- -amino- -phosphonopentanoic acid (d-aps) or by mk- . it was potentiated by reducing the extracellular magnesium concentration from to . ram, or by adding glycine ( /~m) to the perfusion solution. in a majority of neurones, lowering the extracellular calcium concentration from to . mm caused a . to -fold enhancement of the nmda current. i-v relations indicate that in the low-calcium solution, the region of negative slope conductance was attenuated. this effect was due to extraceuular calcium, since it persisted in neurones loaded with the calcium chelator bapta. we conclude that nmda channels present in suprachiasmatic neurones may be modulated by extraeellular calcium. institut, and abt. pharmakologie*, biozentrum, basel. during innervation of skeletal muscle, the myonuclei underlying the synapse begin to express acetylcholine receptor (achr} ~-subunit gene and they remain activated after the nerve is removed. our experiments show that this is due to a factor in the synaptic portion of the muscle fibre basal lamina (bl). one candidate for this factor is agrin, which regulates ache clustering in the synaptic membrane: i) unlike in untreated muscle, the level of s at synapses was strongly reduced in cultured rat muscle fibres after proteolysis of synaptic bl. ) conversely, when rat myotubes were cultured on bl isolated from adult muscle, they preferentially expressed achr accumulations and ~-mrna at sites where they contacted the synaptic portions of the isolated bl. ) when various substrates were impregnated locally with agrin a big, an isoform expressed by motor neurones in fetal spinal cord, it locally induced in the myotubes the expression of s-mrna. art increase of functional nicotinic acetylcholine receptors precedes the fusion of cultured human muscle satellite cells. r. m. kranse, c.-r. bader and l. berrtheim. department of physiology and division of clinical neurophysiohigy, university medical center, geneva , switzerland nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nactlr) are expressed on embryonic myoblast and acb may play a role in mechanism of fusion. our study focuses on the appearance of functional nachr in freshly isolated and cultured satellite cells (sc) from normal human muscle biopsies. sc cart be conditioned to either proliferate or fuse to form myotubes depending upon culture media. presence of ach-activated current was investigated using the whole-cell and single.channel patch-clamp technique. in freshly isolated sc (whose properties should be close to the quiescent in vivo sc/no nachr were observed (n= ). in the proliferating state, % (n= ) of the satellite ceils (which are also called myoblasts) displayed a small ach-activated current ( pa/pf) and, as expected, after fusion of salellite cells into myotabes, % of the ceils displayed an ach-activated current (n= ; pa/pf). to examine, whether the increased expression of nachr precedes sc fusion, sc were cultured in a medium which promotes fusion, but were prevented from fusing by keeping them at a low density. in this culture condition, % of the sc (n= ) displayed an ach-activated current and, in addition, these cells expressed a times higher ach-current density. ( pa/pf) than the proliferating sc. we also observed that, in high density cultures, a small population of sc do not fuse even atter months in the medium promoting fusion. these non-fusing myoblasts (nfmb) had no nachr. our results suggest that the appearance of nachr may be related to the process of sc fusion as i) quiescent sc in vivo do not express nachll ii) nachr expression increases in conditions promoting fusion and iii) no nachr were observed in nfmb. the latter cells may be equivalent of quiescent sc in vivo. $ - we have investigated the sensitivity of neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nachrs) of known subunit composition to various cholinergic antagonists. neuronal nachrs were expressed in xenopus oocytes after injection of pairwise combinations of (x or c~ with either ~ or ~ crnas. the two-electrodes voltage-clamp technique was used to measure currents induced by rapid application of low concentrations of acetylcholine (ach) together with increasing concentrations of antagonists. the response of ct ~ neuronal nachrs to ach was halfmaximally inhibited by following antagonist concentrations (ic ): hexamethonium ( . i.tm), mecamylamine ( . p.m), pentolinium ( . i.tm) and trimetaphan ( . ~tm). with (x nachrs the ic s of the same antagonists were about times higher. finally, (+)-tubocurarine was a conventional competitive inhibitor of ach in ~ and t~ ~ nachrs. in contrast, low concentrations of (+)-tubocurarine increased the response to low ach concentrations in a ( and t~ ~ nachrs. these results further underline the importance of [l subunits in determining the functional properties of neuronal nachrs. supported by the hochschnlstiftung and nf grant . . to abc. previously, the role of the transglial tubular system was shown for the squid giant axon: in na + free (tris) solutions the series resistance increased in correlation with a decrease of the tubular opening density (tod). in the crayfish giant axon, which show similar tubules, we correlate the change in tod, measured in freeze-fracture preparations, witl] the conduction velocity. the control to'd was estimated to be per #ms. after and rain tris-inkubation the tod decreased to , and , , respectively. this reaction was reversible when these axons were reincubated in na~-c ntaining solution. after rain reincubatiou the tod was . per tam'z. to determine the influence of decreased tod on the impulse conduction velocity, the nerve was incubated for min in tris solution followed by reincubation. impulse propagation then recovered in two phases. during an initial fast phase with a short time constant of - rain na + diffused back into the periaxonai space and allowed impulses to occur with a low conduction velocity. in the second phase with a long time constant of min, conduction velocity recovered slowly to normal values. this time course was comparable to the recovery of tod, as estimated from recent freeze-fracture preparations after short reincubation. these results indicate that the normal tod is a necessary condition for the normal excitability of the axon and determines its conduction velocity. most spinal cord neurons respond to the inhibitory action of gaba and glycine, suggesting co-expression of gaba a-and glycine receptors n individual ceils. while glycine-receptors are exclusively found in post-synaptic densities, the cellular localization of gaba areceptors has not yet been characterized. in this study, the distribution of gabaa-receptors in the spinal cord was analyzed with an antiserum recognizing the (xl-subunit. double-and tripleimmunofluorescence staining were employed to identify synaptic receptors apposed to gabaergic terminals (immunoreactive for glutamic acid decarboxylase) and to assess their co-localization with glycine-receptors (visualized with an antibody to the kda protein gephyrin). staining for the gabaa-receptor ctl-subunit decorated the soma and dendrites of numerous neurons in laminae iii-viii and x, revealing their morphology in clear detail. by contrast, laminae i and ix contained little immunoreactivity for these gabaa-receptors. most gabaa-receptor-positive cells also exhibited a prominent glycine-receptor immunoreactivity. both types of receptors had very similar distribution patterns and were frequently co-localized in sites apposed to gabaergic boutons. these results indicate that gaba aand glycine-receptors may co-exist within single post-synaptic densities, suggesting a possible synergism between gaba and glycine neurotransmission in spinal cord neurons. prenatal benzodiazepine (bdz) exposure changes both behavioral and neuiochemical parameters of developing iats. these changes are not a consequence of remaining bdz in brain tissue, but rather indicate alterations in bdz receptol binding and function. since the bdz binding site is located on the gaba~ receptor complex, it is possible that prenatal bdz treatment influences the expression of gaba~ receptor subunits. to evaluate effects of pienatal bdz exposure on mrnas expression specific for several gaba~. receptor subunits (~i, ~ , ~ & y ), we treated plegnant rats with diazepam (l. mg/kg/d; s.c.) from gestational day to . we then analyzed specific mrna levels in offspring at four diffeient developmental stages (gd , pns, pni & adult) by in situ hybridization. pleliminary data flom optical density measurements indicate a deciease in expression of mrna in particular for ~-subunit of gab~ receptors in different brain reglons of plenatally diazepam-treated zats. processing of sensory information within the auditory system has been well characterized using histological and eleetrophysiologlcal techniques. however, relatively little is known about the neurotransmitters involved. the present study was performed to elucidate the possible role of excitatory (eaa] and inhibitory (i.e., gaba) amino acids in neurotransmission within the primary auditory cortex (all the main afferent to the ai, the ipsilatera} medial geniculate body (mgb), was electrically stimulated and evoked responses were recorded intracellularly in the ai region in halothane anesthetized cats. a seven-barrelled iontophoresis pipette glued alongside the recording electrode allowed localized application of eaaergic and gabaergic compounds onto the recorded neuron. in most ai neurons, mgb stimulation evoked a short latency, short duration epsp followed by a long-lasting ipsp. pattern, duration, and amplitude of synaptic potentia{s were highly variable and strongly dependent on stimulation intensity, reduction of gabaa receptor-mediated inhibition by iontophoretic application of either bicuculline or sr markedly enhanced mgb stimulation-evoked epsps. only the late component of this enhanced epsp was reversibly blocked by the competitive nmda receptor antagonistl ap at currents which selectively blocked neuronal excitation induced by iontophoretic application of nmda, our results demonstrate that in the eat ) nmda receptors in ai are activated following mgb stimulation and that ) a dominant gaba~ receptor mediated inhibition usually masks this nmda receptor activation under our experimental conditions, a highly purified and specific cell wall degrading endo-l, -u-l-arabinanase was isolated from an a. niger pectinase preparation by low and medium (fplc) pressure column chromatographic separation methods. the isolated enzyme was most active on linear , -~-l-arabinans (- i.u./mg), whereas branched arabinans from sugar beets were degraded to a lesser extent (- i.u./mg). the enzyme was shown to be electrophoretically pure after silver staining (sds-page) and its identity was confirmed through specific binding to an antiserum directed against endo-l, -~-l-arabinanase. the major physico-chemical characteristics of the enzyme were the following: mr ' , iep ~ . , ph optimum . , temperature optimum ~ ph stability . - . , temperature stability s oc, km = . mg/ml, vmax = . . - ~unol/min. zn and hg showed potent inhibitory effects. . ) is a specific enzyme of the glyoxylate cycle, which plays a key role in the initiation of gluconeogenesis in germination oilseeds, this pathway is localized in glyoxysomes, single membrane organelles which are converted into peroxisomes when lipid reserves are depleted. the glyoxylate cycle enzymes have been the subjects of numerous conflicting reports typically addressing the problems of their synthesis (on free or bound ribosomes), targetting and suborganelar localization (membrane bound or matrix proteins). recent biochemical studies have shown that ms from germinating soybean cotyledons is an interconvertible enzyme (membrane bound, aggregated or soluble fomls) which is significantly affected by its ionic environment (henry et al., , plant science : - ) . microscopy studies have now been carried out using immunofluorescence staining or immunogold-silver staining for light microscopy, and immunogold labelling for electron microscopy. all results consistently characterize ms as a glyoxysomal mawix enzyme. chorismate mutase (ec . . . ) catalyzes the first step in that branch of the shikimate pathway which leads to the aromatic amino acids phenylalanine and tyrosine. we have isolated a cdna for this enzyme from the higher plant arabidopsis thaliana by complementing a yeast strain (aro ) with a cdna library from a. this is the first chorismate mutase cdna isolated from a plant. the a. thaliana chorismate mutase expressed in yeast revealed allosteric control by the three aromatic amino acids as previously described for plastidic chorismate mutase isozymes. an attachment of rubisco to chloroplast membranes under cu++-stress has been described for wheat (mehta et al., j. biol. chem. , - . the displacement to the membranes has been discussed as a possible step in the degradation of this predominant stromal protein, e.g. during leaf senescence. in our recent experiments it became evident that such interactions are not restricted to rubisco. several other stroreal, and even a peroxisomal enzyme (glycolate oxidase), were also detected in the membrane fraction after to hours of oxidative stress induced in wheat seedlings by a treatment with mm cuso . the velocity and the degree of membrane attachment varied for different enzymes. based on these results it was interesting to check the solubility of rubiseo and its previously described kd fragment which accumulates during the incubation of bean leaf discs under oxygen deficiency (hildbrand and feller, experientia , a ) . neither rubisco nor the breakdown product were found to accumulate in the membrane fraction. thus, at present, the steps involved in rubiseo catabolism cannot be generalized. different mechanisms depending on the metabolic situation and on environmental conditions should be considered. overexpression of the four parsley phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (pal) isoenzymes in e. coli. characterization of the enzymes and kinetic analysis of the inhibition by -aminoindan- -phosphonic acid. christoph appert, j/irg schmid, jerzy zorn* and nikolaus amrhein institute of plant sciences, eth-z/jrich, zijrich. *technical university wroclaw, - wroclaw, poland. all four phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (ec . . . ) isoenzymes of parsley (petroselinum crispum nym.) were expressed as glutathione s-transferase fusion proteins in e. coil after affinity purification, the glutathione stransferase moieties were cleaved off with factor xa and the phenylalanine ammonia-lyases were characterized. the proteins form enzymatically active tetramers, even as fusion proteins. the four isoenzymes have comparable km values for l-phenylalanine ( gm to . /.tm), similar temperature ( ~ and ph optima ( . ). the aminooxy-and phosphonic-analogues of l-phenylalanine are competitive inhibitors of the enzymes. -aminoindan- -phosphonic acid (j. zo{a & n. amrhein, liebigs ann. chem. , ) was found to be a potent slow-binding inhibitor of these and other phenylalanine ammonnia-lyases, both in vivo and in vitro. chlorophyll a fluorescence has been used to compare the drought resistance of two varieties of solanum tuherosum (avr/i)c- st- and sibtema). fast fluorescence rise kinetics were measured during the first second of illumination with a time resolution of l ms and z bits in fluorescence intensity. the rise kinetics shows the typical steps called fo -j -i -p. with this values different indexes have been defind with the goal to compare the behaviour of these two varieties of potato. salicylic acid (sa) was proposed as a putative signalling molecule for the induction of systemic acquired resistance (sar) in infected plants. we studied its biosynthesis as follows. cotyledons of cucumber plants were injected with a solution containing pseudomonas lachr~ans and fed with radioactive sa precursors by injection of c-benzoic acid ( c-ba) or cphenylalanine ( c-phe). alternatively, leaf of cucumber plants were inoculated with tobacco necrosis virus (tnv) and leaf disks were then vacuum-infiltrated using c-ba or c-phe. free and bound c-phenolies were quantified by hplc. incorporation of c into sa was found in the two plant-pathogen systems. i~c-ba gave mostly c-sa and an unknown polar compound. c-phe gave also some c-sa, in addition to c-labelled lignin precursors like ferulic and p-coumaric acids. the biosynthetic pathway of sa from phe through cinnamic acid and ba will be discussed. after infection with a necrotizing pathogen, systemic acquired resistance (sar) is often observed in plants. in cucumber, salicylic acid (sa) increases in the lower infected leaf as well as in the upper uninfected leaves. sa was also found in the phloem sap of infected cucumber plants and was proposed as a signalling molecule for the induction of sar. we intend to clarify whether sa is translocated from the site of infection to the upper leaf, or wether it is made in the phloem tissue upon the action of a primary systemic signal. one cotyledon of cucumber plants was first infected with pseudomonas lachrymans and then fed with c-sa, c-benzoic acid (ba) or c-phenylalanine. after different times, cotyledons and first leaves were collected and the radioactive ~henolics were analyzed by hplc. in some cases, c-sa was found in the first leaf. in addition, two unknown radioactive compounds were detected in leaf after treatment with c-sa and c-ba respectively. we will discuss signalling processes for the induction of sar in cucumber. one modern approach of creating virus resistant grapevine plants is the introduction of resistance genes into existing grapevine varieties by genetic engineering. the goal of this work is to use the coat protein (cp) mediated strategy to induce resistance to nepovirus in vitis spp. as a first step, several chimeric nepovirus cp genes, were constructed by addition of various promoter regions upstream of the gflv and armv cp regions. their ability of conferring resistance to nepovirus infection in transgenic nicotiana benthamiana and n. tabacum plants will be presented. the best constructions will be used to transform several grapevine varieties in order to create nepovirus resistant grapevine plants. $ - the bctalains axe a class of natural pigments found only in plants of the order caryophyllales and in some fungi. the first step in betalain biosynthesis is the conversion of tyrosine to dopa. subsequently , dopa is transformed to betalamic acid, the bctalain chromophorr through the action of dopa- , -dioxygenase. we have purified and characterised a copper-containing enzyme of - kda from amanita muscaria pileus that catalyses the hydroxylation of tyrosine to dopa. considering that the enzymatic activity was restricted to the coloured parts of the mushroom, we postulate that it is involved in betalain biosynthesis. the enzyme featured a broad substrate specificity, and also oxidised the diphenols to their corresponding ortho-quinones, a reaction typical for tyrosinases. the implications of our findings on betalain biosynthesis axe discussed. chlorophyll a fluorescence was measured under steady state conditions of pea and tomato leaves adapted to low light intensity ( wm- s -i) at different temperatures (havaux and strasser, z. naturforsch. c, - , ). when leaves were exposed for a short period (i min) to heat ( to ~ in darkness, the level of variable fluorescence decreased. when the heat stress was imposed in presence of low light, the variable fluorescence was much less affected and virtually no effect of heat treatment was observed until ~ this protecting mechanism by low light was absent in algae and mostly absent in submerged water plants but fully present in free floating plants on the water surface. we conclude that a mechanism has been developed for higher land plants during evolution which protects the plants against heat damage on warmer days. caryophyllales, e.g. portulaca grandiflora, and in a few fungal species, e.g. amanita muscaria. we analysed the similarity of a key enzyme of the pathway, dopa- , -dioxygenase, in plants and fungi both at the protein and the dna level. antibodies against purified dopa- , -dioxygenase from the fungus a. muscaria crossreacted with protein from p. grandiflora petals and two cdna clones were obtained from this plant. their similarity with fungal sequences and with other dioxygenases is discussed. kinetics of prollne hydroxylauonj intrucellnlur transport and c-terminal processing of the tobacco vacuolar cbltlnase. ernst frcydl, thomas boiler and jean-marc neuhaus botenisehes instimt, abt. pflanzenphysiologie, hehoistxasse , ch- basel the vacuolar chitinase a of tobacco (nicotlana tabacum) is syndietlzed as a preproprotein with ma n-teaminal signal peptide which causes its synthesis in the er mad a c-termlnal extension, which has been idcmified as the vacuolar targeting peptide (vtp) ( ) and whleh is cleaved off from the maybe chitinase. it has recently been shown that mature chltin:~e a contains several hydi'oxyprolines within the short peptide spacer that links the n-terminal cysteine-rieh chitln-bindlng domain to the catalytic domain ( ). we received specific antibodies against mature chitinasr (a kind gift from dr. f.meins. f/vii) and raised antihodiea against a synthetic vtp. we performed pulse-chase experiments and cell [ractlonation with ) stably transformed tobacco plants expressing chitinase a or mutants lacking either the chitin-binding domain and spacer (chitah) or the vacuolar targeting poptid (chitavtp) and ) transient expression of the same conswacts in nicotiana plumbaginifolia protoplasts. in both systems, proline hydroxylatino in chltinase a was detectable after vain. and complete after - rain. the ehltinase intermediate forms were detected in the mlcrosomal and soluble fractions for up to - rain. the mature chitinase continuously accumulated only in the soluble fraction. in both systems chitah showed the same kinetics of intraceilular transport and processing. whereas the transport of cbitavtp seemed more rapid.these results indicate that in vivo cbitinase a is synthetized as a proprotein that is than modified by proline hydroxylation. this second intermedinte form is then transported to the oolgi apparatus and sorted to the vacuole. c-terminal processing occurs late in this pathway or in the vacuole. infection of bean roots with the soil-borne phytopathogenic fungus fusarium solani f.sp. phaseoli leads to a rapid increase of chitinase activity (~five-fold). part of this increase in enzyme activity is due to transcriptional activation of the basic class i chitinase isoenzymes. semi-native polyacrylamide gels stained for chitinase activity using the substrate glycol-chitin revealed the appearence of three additional chitinase isoenzymes that are absent from uninfected control roots. conventional protein purification techniques showed that fusarium solani infected bean roots contain two basic and two acidic chitinase isoenzyrnes. their physiochemical properties and possible biological function will be discussed. proteasomes are multicatalytic protease complexes that function as a major nonlysosomal proteolytic system. they exhibit multiple endopeptidase activities that promote the intracellular turnover of abnormal polypeptides and short-lived regulatory proteins. moss proteasome has been purified from protonemata by successive chromatography on macroprep q, bio-gel a- . , bio-gel a- and ha. the molecular mass was estimated to be , kd by gel filtration. gel electrophoresis of proteasome under nondenaturing condition gave a single band and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis identified the moss proteasome to be composed of different subunits with molecular weight in the range - kd. electron microscopy in aqueous solution showed that it is a cylindrical particle composed of four stacked rings with a diameter of nm and a height of rim. end-on projection established a -fold symmetry of the outer disks. substrate specificity of proteasome indicates that it contains endopeptidase activity against substrates bearing hydrophobic, basic, acidic and glycine residues immediately preceding the cleavage site. antibodies raised against moss proteasome reacted with proteasomes of other eukaryotes, including human. $ - hunger r.e., hess m.w., laissue j,a,, mueller c. the nod (non obese diabetic) mouse, a widely used animal model for insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, shows in addition to mononuclear cell infiltration of the islets of langerhans, massive cellular infiltrates of the submandibular and lacrimal glands with considerable tissue damage. several lines of evidence suggest that both insulitis and sialadenitis represent autoimmune disorders, to investigate a possible role of tumor necrosis faetor-a (tnf-c and activated cytotoxic cells (nk cells, t cells) in the inflammatory process, tissue sections of nod mice were hybridized with radiolabeled rna probes specific for the detection of mrna for tnf-r and the serine proteases granzyme a and b (gra and gr ) and perforin which are expressed in activated cytotoxic cells. tnf-e expressing cells were mainly located in infiltrates and are absent in non affected glands, whereas gra, grb and perforin expressing cells were distributed over the whole section with highest densities in the zones adjacent to parenchyma. the finding that activated cytotoxic cells are present in early stage of disease development indicates that cell mediated cytotoxicity may play a crucial role in initial tissue destruction. the role of tnf-a in autoimmune diseases is not known yet. the appearance, however, of cells expressing this gene in the infiltrate indicates a possible role of this cytokine in the progression of the inflammatory reaction, e.g. by increasing the lymphocyte traffic to this organ. we further demonstrated that the induction of inos was at the transcriptional level. in order to understand the underlying mechanisms we characterized the promoter region of the rat nos gene. a enomic rat library was screened using a cdna-fragment coding for the if-end of the inos cdna (nucleotides - ). a , kb hinc-ii fragment containing the "-flanking region of the inos gene was characterized by dna-sequencing. the transcriptional start site was determined by primer extension. sequencing analysis revealed a multitude of possible cis-acting elements homologues to consensus sequences for the binding of different transcription factors including ifn~' response element (ire), nuclear factor-kb (nf-~b), tumor necrosis factor response element (tnf-re), f-activated sites (gas) and one x-box. nf-kb, a transcription factor involved in signaling and immediate early gene activation during inflammatory processes was induced by treatment of mesangial cells with nm of il- . this was shown by the appearence in nuclear extracts of the dna binding activity of nf-~b using electrophoretic mobility shift assays (emsas) with a p-labeled ~r dna probe. pyrrolidinedithiocarbamate (pdtq), an inhibitor of nf-kb, suppressed the expression of inos mrna in mesangial cells without affecting the dibutyryl-camp-triggered increases in nos mrna levels. this data suggest that the il-i ~ signalling pathway responsible for nos expression requires nf-k activation and is definetly different from the signalling cascade directed by camp. recent findings indicate that the multifunctional cytokine il- , which plays a key role in irm-nune and inflammatory responses, also exerts specific effects in the central nervous system (cns). for example, il- promotes neuronal survival, induces differentiation and modulates neurotrophin production. using the very sensitive technique of reverse transcription combined with polymerase chain reaction the developmental profile of il- and its receptor mrnas was analyzed in various rat brain regions. our results indicate that both genes are expressed in a region-specific manner and are developmentally regulated. these findings support the hypothesis that il- is involved in differentiation and maintenance of neuronal subpopulation in the cns. interleuldn (il- ) expression is strictly dependent on a signal transmitted by the t cell receptor upon antigen stimulation. this signal can be mimicked in vitro with phorbol esters and calcium ionophores. we have found that stimulation with ca-ionophore alone induces expression of il- mrna, but does not induce secretion of il- . in polysome gradient fractionation of cells stimulated with phorbol esters and ionophore, the fractions containing il- rrtrna are found at the bottom of the gradient, bound to polysomes. however, in ionophorestimulated cells the fractions containing il- mrna are clearly shifted to the top of the gradient, and therefore are not lzanslated. this effect is specific for il- , as other mrna's like ~ -microglobulin are not regulated. this data suggests that il- gene is translationally regulated. in addition, in vitro experiments have shown that the lack of translation of il- mrna in ionophore-stimulated cells is due, most likely, to the presence of a translational regulator that specifically inhibits translation of il- mrna. assuming the presence of a translational regulator that specifically represses il- mrna translation, we can predict that, if the represser is in excess, even upon a second stimulus that is by itself able to induce secretion of il- , there will be no translation of il- mrna. the resuhs of such an experiment confirmed our prediction. polysome gradients showed that after ionophore stimulation, il- mrna gets "stacked" with one ribosome, and no further ribosome loading takes place. if malaria is highly endemic, every febrile child is a presumptive malaria case, and there is no differential diagnosis based on clinical, immunological or parasitological grounds. we evaluated the diagnostic usefulness of interleukin- receptor (il- r), tumor necrosis factor-receptors (tnf-r ) and (tnf-r ) . sera came from tanzanian pediatric fever patients and controls, all enrolled in the kilombero malaria project. we found that all receptors marked pediatric fever episodes, whereas stability of observed levels was highest for tnf-r and lowest for tnf-r . tnf-r levels reflected severity of the fever attack. regardless of the presence of a febrile illness, tnf-r levels were strongly associated with parasite density. immunological markers can be applied in rapid pre-and post-intervention morbidity assessments, validation of health interviews and monitoring of convalescence. we have recently shown that human eosinophils produce mrna for interlenkin (il)- when stimulated with calcium ionophom (eur. j. immunol. ( ), ). we now present evidence that human eosinophils contain preformed il- protein although they do not express mrna for il- as measured by rt-pcr. il- protein expression was determined using specific anti-human il- monoclonal antibodies by western blotting, facs analysis and immunohistochemistry. moreover, preformed il- was released into supernatant by % pure eosinophils after priming with gm-csf or il- and subsequent -min stimulation with paf, rantes, ionomycin or pma, however not with il- or il- , as measured by elisa. this observation implies that activation of protein kinase c and/or inwacellular calcium mobilization am necessary events for il- release in human eosinophils. the determined amounts of preformed il- protein was higher in patients with asthma compared to normal individuals suggesting a role for eosinophil derived il- in asthma. since the eosinophil is the predominant cell in the asthmatic airways, we determined l- concentrations in bronchoalveolar lavage (bal) fluids from normal individuals and asthmatic patients. indeed, il- concentrations in bals from both groups were similar to those seen in the supematants released by activated eosinophils. the role for i-,- in asthma remains to be determined. to study the effect of canthaxanthin in vitro, the hydrophobic compound was introduced in vivo into chick high density lipoproteins (hdl) by canthaxanthin feeding. the effects of hdl and hdl associated canthaxanthin on two types of cultures have been tested: flat sedimented cell cultures of embryonic chick neuronal retina, retinal figment epithelium (rpe), brain and meninges, and in reaggregate cell cultures of the neuronal retina. at high canthaxanthin concentrations the formation of colored, birefringent entities were induced in the neuronal retina in vitro. in line with human data, parameters of cellular function and cell differentiation remained unaffected by canthaxanthin at these concentrations. by contrast, fidl was found to induce various cell type dependent effects. proliferation of meninges cells was decreased at low hdl concentrations as concluded from.light microscopic examination and indicated by protein content, and lysosomal and mitochondrial activity of the cultures (ic : - mg hdl apoprotein/l medium). these parameters, however, were increased in brain cell cultures, while they remained unaffected in cell cultures of neuronal retina and rpe. concentrations above . g. hdl apoprotein/l caused a reduction of glial cell differentiation. $ - tnf-c~ had close-dependent antiproliferative activity on hormone-dependent human breast cancer cells that represent an early stage of the disease, whereas hormone-independent cells representing a late stage were not affected. however, in the presence of u/ml interferon ?(inf), high concentrations of tnf-c((lnm) were able to inhibit the growth of hormone-independent cells. using specific monoclonal antibodies in ftow cytometry, no significant changes of either the p or the p tnf receptors were observed upon inf treatment of hormone-independent cells. this indicates that the increased responsiveness of these cells for tnf-c~ is not due to a change in available tnf receptors. the affinity of the receptors for tnf-r are one order of magnitude different for the two cell types. inf treatment shifted the ecs of hormone-independent cells towards the ecs of hormone-dependent cells. thus, the basis for the increased tnf-sensitivity of hormone-independent cells in the presence of inf might be the interconversion of tnf receptors from low-to high-affinity. the adhesion of tumor cells to endothelium is the first step in the processus of metastasis, and is frequently dependent of cytokinemediated activation of endothelial cells. cytokines are also involved in nitric oxide (no) production by various cells. these experiments were designed to evaluate no production during tumor cell adhesion to endothelium. rat brain-derived endothelial and rat colon carcinoma cell lines were used during these experiments. no was evaluated with the griess reagent. activation of endothelial cells with cytokines (tnf-d, and ifn-~ ), only slightly increased ( - %) the adhesion of tumors cells to endothelium. activation of endothelial cells with tnf-ol and ifn-~, induced a - fold increase of no production. however, addition of tumor cells to the endothelial monolayer, either directly or in a semi-permeable membrane, decreased the cytokine-induced no production. these results indicate that no production is modulated during the proeessus of adhesion of tumor cells to endothelium. is induced in rat mesangial cells by inflammatory cytokines such as interleukin ] (il- ~) and requires bh as a cotactor. , -diamino- -hydroxypyrimidine (dahp), a selective inhibitor of gtp cyclohydrolase i, the rate-limiting enzyme for bh synthesis, potently suppressed il-i~induced nos activity, measured as nitrite production. inhibition of no synthesis by dahp was reversed by sepiapterin, which provides bh via a salvage pathway. sepiapterin dose-dependently augmented il- i],-stimulated no synthesis, indicating that availability of bh limits the production of no in cytokine-stimulated mesangial cells. n-acetylserotonin, an inhibitor of the bh synthetic enzyme sepiapterin reductase, completely abolished il-lj~-induced no formation whereas methotrexate, which inhibits the pterin salvage pathway, displayed only a moderate inhibitory effect, thus suggesting that mesangial cells predominantly synthesize bh tom gtp. in conclusion, these data demonstrate that bn synthesis is an absolute requirement for cytokine induction of nos in mesangial cells. inhibition of bh synthesis may provide new therapeutic approaches to the treatment of pathological conditions mediated by no. - [ ) can induce a macrophage-type of nitric oxide synthase (inos). northern-blot analyses of inos mrna-levels and nuclear run-on experiments of control and il- ~ stimulated mesangial ceils revealed that the induction of inos was at the transcripuonal level. here we demonstrate that platelet-derived growth factor bb (pdgf-bb) can suppress the il- dependent inducuon of the inos gene. nortllern-blot analyses of cellular rna isolated from mesangial ceils that were coincubated with il- [ ( nm) and pdgf-bb ( ng/ml, ng/ml and ng/ml) revealed a dosedependent suppression of inos mrna-levels. using run-on experiments with nuclei from mesangial ceils after stimulation with il-i~ ( nm) and pdgf-bb ( ng/ml) we demonstrate that the inhibition occurs at the transcriptional level. basic fibroblast growth factor (bfgf), on the other hand, potentiates the il- dependent stimulation of inos. coincubation of mesangial cells with il- ( nm) and bfgf ( ng/m[, ng/m[, ng/m[, ng/m dose-dependently superinduces inos mrna levels as shown by northern-blot analyses of total cellular rna form control and stimulated cells. run-on experiments with nuclei from mesangial cells stimulated with il- ( nm) and bfge ( ng/ml) revealed an enhanced transcriptional activity of the inos gene. thus, pdgf-bb and bfgf differentaity modulate the il-i~ dependent expression of the inos gene and are therefore an excellent model system to study the crosstalk between signal transductjon pathways. we report that ifnyr-/-mice have an increased resistance to lipopolysaccharide-induced toxicity (lps). lps-induced lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia and weight loss seen in wild type mice were attenuated in ifntr-/-mice. ifntr-/mice survived in the d-galactosamine-lps model when conditions were % lethal for wild type mice, correlating with serum tnf levels of up to fold higher in wild type mice. bone marrow and splenic macrophages from ifnyr-/-mice had a to fold decreased lpsbinding capacity, with serum from these mice lowering macrophage lpsbinding by a further %. thus, depressed tnf synthesis, diminished expression of lps receptors and low plasma lps-binding capacity in the mutant mice likely combine to manifest in the resistant phenotype of ifny r-/mice to endotoxin. in a complementary approach we have screened the ' portion (- . kb/+ . kb) of the gene for tissue specific and/or inducible dnasei hypersensitive sites. in chromatin from fibroblasts or kidney epithelial cells this segment of the il ra gene does not contain any dnasei hypersensitive sites. in contrast, in resting t-and b-lymphocytes, as well as in activated t cells, two sites (dhi, - . kb; dh , - . kb) were found. a third site (dh , - . kb) is detectable in t cells that have been activated with concanavalin a and il . this site maps to the same position as cisacting regulatory sequences that are required for the response of the il ra gene to signals from the il receptor. interleukin- (il- ) production in cultured human dermal fibroblasts can be stimulated by interleukin-i (il-i} added to the culture medium. absence of fetal calf serum and of growth factors (insulin, egf, t ) reduced the stimulation by more than %. egf and t and even more choleratoxin increased the il- production in absence of fetal calf serum. the effect was dose dependent. % human ab serum substituted for i % fetal calf serum. pretreatment of the cultures with serum or growth factors prior to stimulation with il had a stimulatory effect (serum, t , egf) or an inhibitory effect (hydrocortisone, choleratoxin). our results suggest that the il-i signal transduction to il- is modulated by serum components and growth factors as well as through c-amp produced by choleratoxin. interleukin- (il- ) is produced by a variety of cells and plays a central role in host defense mechanisms. its function include induction of il- and il- receptor expression, proliferation and differentiation in t-cells. in cocultures of human dermal fibroblasts and allogenic human t-cells a cell number dependent to fold increase of the il- production could be demonstrated after h and h. conditioned medium from tcells and from fibroblasts failed to induce il- secretion in fibroblast and t-cell cultures, respectively. no up-regulation of il- production was found in cocultures of fibroblasts with tcells killed by ethanol and in t-cell culture incubated with recombinant hll-lc~. after separation of the cells il- production in fibroblast and t-cells returned to precoculture levels. our results indicate that cell-cell contact more than soluble factors must be involved in the up-regulation of il- synthesis in cocultures of t-cells and fibroblast. using cocultures of autologes human t-cells and fibroblasts, we are currently investigating whether the cell contact essential for the il- production depend on immunolcical interactions of t-cells and fibroblasts. rapid growth of tumor often results in oxygen and nutritional deprivation leading to extensive necrosis, which is one of the characteristics of glinblastomas (gbl). neoplastic cells surrounding necrotic areas often present a peculiar arrangement of cells called "pseudo-palisading" -as a hallmark of this entity, together with abundant neovascularization. a special biological milieu is probably formed in these palisading areas by certain unknown cytokines and/or growth factors induced by the necrotic process. plate et al. ( ) reported the expression of vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) in the palisading cells. we previously demonstrated that gbl cells produce il- , which is known to be an angiogenic factor. the aim of this study is first to assess if il- is expressed in the palisading ceils, and second to determine if hypoxia can trigger il- gene expression. in rive observation using in siru hybridization and immunohistuchemistry showed that il- is highly expressed specifically in the palisading cells. we also demonstrated the mrna expression of il- receptor in the endothelial cells adjacent to necrotic area. to simulate the in vivo condition, two in-vitro models are currently developed to determine if il- is induced by hypoxic insult on cells. first, gbl cell lines are cultured in the absence of oxygen and il- expression is assessed by northern blot analysis. preliminary results have demonstrated the induction of il- by hypoxia. secondly gbl cells are grown in spheroids until development of central necrosis. the il- expression will be assessed by in situ hybridization combined with immunohistochemistry to determine if the ceils surrounding necrosis express il- . it has been proposed by taniguchi and his colleagues that activation of the interferon (ifn)-i gene by virus or double-stranded rna involves induction and modification of irf- . overexpression of irf- can induce expression of the ifn-b gene in certain cells. a role of irf- in the activation of ifn-a genes has also been proposed. furthermore, irf- has been claimed to play the role of a tumor suppressor gene. we have generated mice in which both irf- alleles were disrupted and found them to develop normally. no spontaneous tumors have been observed so far. injection of poly(i)-poly(c) resulted in the same levels oflfn in blood of wildtype and null mice, and equal ifn-ct mrna levels in spleen. induction of wild type and irf ~ embryo fibroblasts (mefs) with virus resulted in the same levels of ifn-a and ifn-i] mrna respectively. in the case of polyo)-poly(c) induction, the levels of both fn mrnas were higher in wild type than in mutant cells; this difference was abolished if the cells were first primed with type i ifn. we conclude that irf- does not play an essential role in the induction oflfn genes. mitsuhiro tada, annie-claire diserens, isabelle desbaillets, marie-france hamon, nicolas de tribolet, erwin van meir; chuv, lausanne there is increasing evidence that a variety of cytokines produced by glioblastoma (gbl) cells modulate the tumor growth by affecting the host's immune response and by stimulating neovascularization. cytokines such as il-i, il- , il- , mcp-i, il- and tgf- , affect each other's production and receptor system and seem to form a cytokine network. among them, il- may play a pivotal role, since il-i can induce or increase the production of other cytokines (il- ,il- ,mcp-i,tgf- ) and modulate their receptor expression. to test this hypothesis, we investigated co-expression of cytokines and their receptors in gbl cell lines and gbl tissues using rt-pcr, northern blot analysis, immunnhistnchemistry and elisa quantification. a majority of the gbl cell lines and gbl tissues expressed il-i~, il- , type i and type ii receptors, indicating the presence of an il- autocrine loop. il- stimulated growth of some of the cell lines. a positive correlation of il- and il- expressions with the presence of an il-i autocrine loop in the cell lines was found. immunohistochemical studies showed the in rive co-expression of the il-i family and the secondary cytokines (il- , il- ) in gbls. antisense oligonucleotide to il-lc~ and/or il- partly suppressed this secondary cytokine expression. these results demonstrate that the il- autocrine loop plays a central role in the formation of the cytokine network in gbls. double-stranded rna-dependent protein kinase (pkr) is induced by type i interferon (ifn) and is implicated in the establishment of the antiviral state. upon activation, pkr phosphorylates the eukaryotic initiation factor eif- , thereby throttling protein synthesis. it was suggested that pkr may be essential for the induction of ifn- gene expression by both virus and double-stranded rna and for the activation of at least some ifninducible genes. recently it was proposed that pkr is a tumor suppressor gene because t ceils overexpressing inactive human pkr gave rise to tumors in nude mice (koromilas et al., ; meurs et al., ) . we have produced homozygous pkr knockout (pkr ~ mice and found that they develop normally and have no striking phenotype. induction of ifn-c~ and ifn- gene transcription by virus was unimpaired in fibroblasts derived from pkr ~ mice, as was the induction of several ifn-stimulated genes. so far, no spontaneous tumor formation was observed. pkr o/o embryonal stem ceils showed no increased malignancy in nude mice as compared to their wild type counterparts. we conclude that pkr does not play an essential role in viral induction of the ifn genes and that its tumor suppressing effect, if any, is redundant. tgf- plays an important role as a negative regulator of hepatocyte proliferation in liver regeneration. exposure of rodents to nongenotoxic carcinogens like cyproterone acetate (cpa), thioacetamide (ta) and phenobarbital (pb) causes abnormal hepatocyte proliferation and liver tumors after long term treatment. this suggests that these chemicals have either a direct mitotic activity or impair the negative regulatory system for growth. therefore the inhibitory activity of tgf- on dna-synthesis induced whith cpa was investigated in cultured rat hepatocytes. after a h exposure to cpa, a dose dependent increase in dna synthesis ( h-tdr incorporation) was observed. the maximum effect was attained with pm cpa (up to . fold) which was stronger than with ng/ml egf (up to . fold). tgf- and tgf- inhibited this response dose dependently (idso = . ng/ml) and reduced it to control levels at ng/ml. these findings show that the tgf- mediated pathway for negative growth control in hepatocytes is still responding after cpa treatment. mouse mxl protein is an interferon (ifn) induced gtpase with intrinsic antiviral activity against influenza a viruses. it accumulates in the cell nucleus and inhibits the transcription of influenza virus genes, recently, we have shown that mxl exerts its inhibitory activity by interfering with the function of the viral polymerase subunit p . pb is responsible for recruiting " ends of cellular mrnas as primers and for the elongation of nascent viral transcripts. to elucidate which pb dependent step of viral mrna synthesis is the target of mxl action, we examined the activity of recombinant mxl protein in an in vitro transcription system of influenza virus. first, we expressed wildtype and mutant mxl proteins, carrying a hlstidinetag at their n-terminus, in e. coil and purified them under nondenaturing conditions by ni-chelate affinity chromatography. mxl efficiently inhibited viral transcription in vitro, while mutant mxl proteins, lacking antiviral activity in vivo ,were inactive. moreover, the use of capped synthetic rna primers revealed, that mxl almost completely abrogated the elongation of viral transcripts, whereas the the cap-binding and endonuclease activity of pb was not affected. a $ - neutralization rates of tnf-a from eight animal species by a monoclonal antibody against human tnf: implication for receptor action? we have recently developed a sensitive bioassay for measuring porcine tnf-a based on homologous pk( ) cells. this bioassay is -to -fold more sensitive than the widely used l bioassay, also, human tnf-a and human tnf- were detected with a slightly higher sensitivity in the new test compared to the l bioassay, we now show that also canine, ovine, bovine, equine and caprine tnf-a can be detected with the pk( ) bioassay. we tested a murine monoclonal anti-human tnf-a antibody for its capacity to neutralize tnf-a from eight different animal species. the action of this antibody revealed that neutralization of tnf bioactivity is a complex phenomenon, indicating species-specific differences in the interaction with tnf receptors. to study this differential neutralization, we are cloning the porcine tnf receptors for expression in a heterologous cell system. administration.of high dose r-tnf(~ in combination with ifn in isolation and perfusion of the limbs in melanoma patients has shown to be very promising with a response rate greater that %. this observation prompted us to investigate the possible expression of the tnf receptors in melanoma cells using the monoclonal antibodies utr- specific for the tnf type a ( kda) receptor and htr- specific for the tnf type b ( kda) receptor. flow cytometric analysis of cultured melanoma cells showed the presence at low level of the tnf type a and to a slightly higher level of the type b receptor. similar results were obtained in vivo by immunohistochemistry on fresh tumor raateriai, treatmem of melanoma cells in culture with the-amp induced up to a fold increase in the number of type a tnf receptors with only a minimal change in the number of type b receptors. this increased expression of tnf receptors is conflrmed by direct binding experiments using i-labeled tnftx. the number of cpm's bound on dbc amp treated cells was about . - fold higher than on untreated control calls, likewise incubation of melanoma cell lines with ifny increased the specific binding of subsequently added i-labeled tnfct. from flow cytometric analysis using the two anti-tnf receptor antibodies it became evident that flint was able to increase the expression of both type a and b receptors depending on the cell line used. characterization of a murine tumor necrosis factor (x-lacz reporter construct tumor necrosis factor ot (tnfcq is a prominent mediator of a variety of different pathologies such as endotoxic shock syndrom and rheumatoid arthritis. it also plays a crucial role in host defence against bacterial and viral infection. up to now, only few data about signal pathways leading to tnfo~ induction are available. an easy to handle tnfc~ -lacz reporter assay will represent a useful tool to study signal transduction on the one hand and provide data about compounds with potential tnfo~ inducible activity on the other hand. in order to develop a routine macrophage cell line capable to easily report tnfc~ induction, different tnfe-lacz reporter constructs were assembled. data about functionality of the different constructs in routine macrophages will be presented in the context of tnfot expression. cloning of a novel protein binding to lymphokine, fos and myc mrna with unexpected enzyme activity j. nakagawa, h-p. waldner, s. meyer-monard, and ch. moroni inst. medizinische mikrobiolegie, univ. basel an au-rich sequence in the ' untranslated region of lymphokines, c-los, and c-myc proto-oncogene mrna is responsible for their rapid decay. we have purified a kd protein by an auuua affinity column from human brain. partial amino acid sequence was obtained and the corresponding edna has been cloned. unexpectedly the edna sequence exhibited significant homology to enoyl coa hydratase and bacterially expressed recombinant protein indeed showed the activity. while rat hydratase did not show rna binding activity, the recombinant protein bound to cfos, c-myc, auuua cluster of il- mrna, and adeno virus iv, but not to mutated ad-iv, nor irrelvant transcript. the binding was competed out by poly u. interestingly the protein seems to be processed from a larger precursor. we suspect that the protein plays a role in mrna turnover and perhaps in oncogenesis. institute for medical microbiology, university of basel in t cells, the immunsuppressive agent cea is known to inhibit ca + dependent induction of lymphokine mrna transcription. in contrast, the immunsuppressive drug rapamycin inhibits the lymphokine induced proliferation. we have analysed the effect of these drugs on a v-h-ras induced autocrine mast cell tumor line which expresses il- constitutively. csa and rapa inhibited autocrine growth by different mechanisms,, because added il- could antagonize inhibition by csa, but not by rapa. whereas csa acted by downregulation of il- mrna expression, rapa blocked il- induced proliferation. cea also inhibited il- superinduction by ca-ionophore, whereas rapa did not. nuclear run on assay indicated that the mechanism is posttranscriptional. therefore, we have introduced il- transgenes with and without the au-rich region in the ' utr of the mrna into a tumor line. in contrast to the wild type, the expression of the mutant construct was insensitive to csa. since the mutant lacks sequences known to regulate rapid mrna decay, we suggest that csa affects the regulation of il- mrna stability. some non-hematopoietic cell lines produce both scf and its receptor, the c-kit protein (c-kit). testing the hypothesis that scf may be involved in secondary growth of nb bone marrow metastasis, we found and previously communicated (beck d. et al, proc aacr, , , ) a low or absent expression of c-kit in nb cells. the mrna and surface expressions of scf gene in nb cell lines grown in chemically-defined medium were evaluated by northern blot analysis and flow cytometry. the scf antigenic concentrations in culture supernatants were determined by elisa and growth-inhibition experiments performed by pre-incubating nb cells with anti-scf antibodies prior to h-thymldine uptake assay. the scf mrna was expressed in of tested lines but no membrane-bound antigen could be detected on those cells. detectable levels of scf in the supernatants were found in / lines (range : - pg/ml). blocking experiments resulted in a decrease of dna synthesis in i out of lines only. from these and previous results, we conclude that scf is synthesized and released by many nb cells in vitro but the functional ~ole of it remains undetermined since scf does not appear to be usually involved in autocrine or paracrine growth stimulation of nb cells (supported by swiss fnrs grant - ). expression of the v-h-ras oncogene in the il- dependent pb- c mast cells leads to the generation of two classes of il- autocrine tumors in vivo. autocrine il- expression in class- tumors results from increased il- mrna stability due to the loss of negative trans-acting posttranscriptional control. this defect can be corrected by somatic cell fusion to the nontumorigenic parental pb- c resulting in downregulation of oncogenic il- expression and concomitant tumor suppression. expression of the v-h-ras oncogene remains unaffected in class- hybrids. in contrast, class- tumors are characterized by transcriptional activation of the il- gene due to the insertion of an endogenous retroviral element (intracisternal a-particle) which cannot be overcome by ceil fusion (see hirsch et al, , j.exp.medicine , - ) . although v-h-ras is required for generation of either class of tumors, expression of anti-sense ras constructs inhibited only the proliferation of class-i tumor cells. experiments are underway to characterize the target and the nature of the class- alteration. nitric oxide (no) promotes vasorelaxatlon of renal vessels in vitro. the purpose of the present study was to assess the role of no in regulating renal hemodynamics in vivo. renal blood flow (rbf) and glomerular filtration rate (gfr) were studied in anesthetized mechanicallyventilated newborn rabbits both before and after the administration of a no synthesis inhibitor, ng-nitro-larginine methyl ester (l-name), at a dose of pg/kg followed by jzg/kg x rain. such a dose of l-name did not modify mean arterial pressure or pulse rate. by contrast, the renal vascular resistance increased by + % (p < . ) while rbf decreased by -+ % (p < . ). gfr and urine flow rate remained constant. the overall results suggest that in normal conditions no may play a role in decreasing the renal vascular resistance of the immature kidney, without altering systemic blood pressure. interleukin- (il- ) is a t-cell derived lymphokine which, in addition to its effects on the immune system, is also able to suppress the growth of certain tumor cells. il- reduced the growth rate of four human colon tumor cell lines up to % in a dose-dependent manner. three other cell lines showed no significant alteration of h-thymidine incorporation or colony formation in the presence of u/ml il- . responder and nonresponder tumors were immunopositive for il- receptor (il- r) expression in flowcytometric analysis, using monoclonal antibodies raised against recombinant il- r and bound biotinyated il- . responsive tumors expressed more receptors. - binds with high affinity to a kda transmembrane receptor (il- r), through which the extracellular signal has been shown to be transduced. coimmunoprecipitation and chemical crosslinking studies have enabled us to demonstrate il- r target proteins. tyrosine phosphorylation of various proteins between and kda appears to be initiated during il- mediated signaling events in colon tumor cells. the cloning of human il- r target proteins will contribute to the understanding of the il- signal transduction pathway at the initial stage. the renal effects of endothelin- were investigated in anesthetized and meehanleally-ventilated newborn rabbits. each animal acted as its own control. in newborn rabbits, a bolus injection of nmol.kg " of endothelin- caused an initial fall in mean blood pressure (mbp) followed by a gradual but significant increase in mbp that lasted for rain. the dramatic increase in renal vascular resistance (+ -+ %) induced by endothelin led to a fall in glomerular filtration rate (- -+ %) and renal blood flow (- _+ %). in spite of the reduction of gfr and rbf, urine flow and sodium excretion rates increased significantly (+ _+ % and + _+ %, respectively). in additional newborn rabbits, a bolus injection of lnmol.kgaof endothelin- -a dose that usually induces marked renal and systemic vasoconstriction in adult models -did not affect systemic or renal hemodynamics. in conclusion, endothelin induces renal and systemic vasoconstriction, and affects water and sodium homeostasis during the neonatal period. however, these effects occur under higher doses than those used in adult animals, possibly reflecting receptor immaturity and/or interference of high levels of counteracting hormones. ontogeny of the endocrine pancreas in xenopus laevis c, maake , w. hanke and m. reine~ke , institute of anatomy, university of z rich, switzerland and department of zoology ii, university of kaflsruhe, f.r.g. the pancreatic islets of anurans show insulin (ins), glucagon (gluc), somatostatin (som) and pancreatic potypeptide (pp) containing cells. since only limited information exists on the ontogeny and on the presence of insulin-like growth factor (igf- ), we studied the development of the gastro-entero-pancreatic (gep) system in xenopus laevis using immunohistochemical techniques. singular ins-immunoreactive (-ir) cells were observed in the pancreas as early as on stage . at stage , the first pp-ir cells were found in the gep system followed by som-ir and gluc-ir cells. the first pancreatic islets consisting of ins-ir and gluc-ir cells occurred around stage . between stage and , i.e. after the onset of metamorphosis, the endocrine cells decreased in number and the islets partly disintegrated. starting with stage , the islets reformed and the amount of endocrine cells increased reaching the adult status at stage . around stage , igf-l-immunoreactions appeared. igf- immunoreactivity was found in pp-ir and gluc-ir cells but not in ins-ir and som-ir cells. it is assumed that islet-derived igf- may p~ay an important role during metamorphosis in xenopus. t. cathomen and r. cattaneo, institut for molekularbiologie i, universit~t zorich, hfnggerberg, ch- zorich the signals used for synthesis of the measles virus fusion (f) protein are poorly understood: a long (> bases) untranslated region is followed by three in frame augs at codons , and . f is a type i transmembrane protein with a postulated signal sequence of amino acids. we confirmed that the aminoterminal residues contain a signal peptide by transfering them to another protein. with the other envelope protein hemagglutinin, f protein induces virus-cell and cell-cell fusion. mutagenesis of the three augs indicates that proteins initiated at codon , or are all functional, but show slightly different fusion efficiencies. forms translated from aug or appear larger in electrophoresis than forms initiated at aug , suggesting that two different signal peptide cleavage sites are used. we are currently investigating whether both f protein forms are incorporated in viral particles. the production of protein isoforms with staggered amino-termini is common in cytoplasmic and type ii transmembrane proteins, but signal sequences usually preclude a similar organization of type i transmembrane proteins. beguin p., beggah a.t., rossier b.c., jaisser f. and geering k. institut de pharmacologie et de toxicologie de l'universit , ch- lausanne recent experimental evidence suggests that na,k-atpase might be a candidate for regulatory phosphorylation by protein kinases a and c (pka and pkc). to verify this hypothesis, we have mutated several serine and threonine residues in consensus phosphorylation sequences of the ~subunit of bufo marinus na, k-atpase. the mutants were expressed in x~nopus ooeytes and phosphorylation was studied in oocyte homogenates upon stimulation of oocyte, pka and pkc. our results indicate that a unique phosphorylation site for pka is located at serine in the c-terminus of the ~-subunit but its phosphorylation can only be revealed in the presence of detergent. on the other hand, mutations of several serine and/or threonine residues located in consensus sequences for pkc phosphorylation did not or only partially abollsh phosphorylation by pkc. in particular, mutations close to the catalytic phosphorylation site of the ~-subunit influenced phosphorylation by pkc, suggesting that either this region contains a real phosphorylation site or is part of a conformational domain necessary for phosphorylation by pkc. the heat-stable antigen (hsa or mouse cd ) gene is differentially regulated but has a housekeeping promoter. roland h. wenger*, georges kshler and peter j. nielsen. max planck institut f(jr immunbiologie, st beweg , d- freiburg i. bsg. "present address: physiologisches institut der universit&t zi.)rich, winterthurerstrasse , ch- z rich, expression of the gpi-anchored murine glycoprotein heat-stable antigen (hsa) shows tissue-specific as well as developmental regulation. during the maturation of several hematopoietic lineages, hsa expression is generally high in immature precursor ceils and low or absent in terminally differentiated cells. we present evidence suggesting that this regulation of the hsa gene (cd a) occurs at the transcriptional level. in addition, sequence and methylation analysis of the cd a promoter revealed characteristics of both "housekeeping" and tissue-specific promoters, including a methylation-free, hpall tiny fragment (htf) island, multiple putative sp and ap- consensus binding sites and a tata box. functional analysis of a . kb dna fragment containing these elements fused to the cat reporter gone in transient transfection experiments showed activity in both hsa expressing and non-expressing cell lines with a strength similar to that of the hsv tk promoter. large fragments from the flanking region of the cd a promoter did not influence the ubiquitous nature of this promoter, finally, the cd a, cd b and cd c genes were mapped to mouse chromosomes , and respectively. we have cloned, sequenced and characterized the gone for the m__itochondriat nadh-cytochrome b reductase (mcri) of saccharomyces cerevisiae. surprisingly, this gone encodes two mitochondrial isoforms of the flavoenzyme: a kda integral protein exposed on the outer surface of outer mitochondrial membrane (mcrlp ), and a kda soluble protein of the intermembrane space (mcrlp ). the smaller intermembrane space isoform is generated from the larger form by the action of the inner membrane protease i (impi) on the outer surface of the inner membrane. this is the first demonstration that a single gone encodes proteins which are located in different compartments of the same organelle. with special interest in any with a mitochondrial localization. degenerate primers were designed on the basis of high homology between members of the abc family, and pcr was performed on yeast genomic dna. ten dna fragments bearing significant homology to the abc family were amplified, nine of which were previously unidentified. disruptions of five of the corresponding genes were performed. disruption of one gene led to markedly impaired growth on rich medium and cessation of growth on minimal medium. the gene was cloned and found to encode a protein of amino acids, a "half-transporter" which likely forms a dimer. ibi~tlnofluorescence on yeast expressing the gene cmyc-tagged at the c-terminus reveals co-localization of the protein with porin and with mitochondrial dna, visualized by dapi staining. nycodenz-purified mitochondria are enriched for the protein by immunoblotting. additionally,the c-myc epitope is protease-protected in mitoplasts, indicating an inner membrane sub-localization and a probable orientation with the c-terminus in the matrix. the gene, termed atmi for abc transporter of mitochondria, thus encodes the first member of the large abc transporter superfamily to be localized to this organelle. present work is aimed at revealing the substrate of this transporter. cycle in cardiac myocyte. the molecular study of this protein has been difficult even after its over-expression was made possible by the cloning of the corresponding cdna. the chief problem is the lack of convenient domains which could be used in the purification of the molecule. we have previously reported the efficient expression of the cardiac na+/ca + exchanger in mammalian cell lines using the t rna polymerase-hybrid vaccinia virus system. we have now constructed the recombinant virus for the exchanger with a xhis-tag at the c-terminal. this tag has enabled the purification of the protein through a ni-nta agarose column. the expressed tagged protein induced na-dependent ca uptake which was not different from that in intact cells, i.e., cells in which the exchanger did not have the tag, the most important aspects of the purification produced and those of the reconstitution of the expressed protein will be described. $ - the neural cell adhesion molecule l is involved in the formation and specification of cell contacts in the central and peripheral nervous system during development, and thus may also play a role in synaptic plasticity of the adult central nervous system, using extracellular recordings of evoked field potentials in the rat hippocampal slice, we found that locally applied polyclonal anti-l and fusion proteins containing the ig-domains i-vi of l specifically block the stabilization of ltp in the ca region. baseline synaptic transmission was not affected by the presence of the anti-l antibodies. the anti-ll-induced effect was dependent on the antibody concentration and anti-l antibodies had no effect on previously established ltp. ltp was also reduced by an antiserum against the recombinantly expressed ig-domains i-vi of l , whereas controt antibodies against liver cell membranes, which bind to neuronal membranes in the hippocampus, exhibited no effect on ltp. the contribution of l to stabilization of ltp within the ca synapses suggests that members of the ig-supertamily of cell adhesion molecules are involved in the structural modifications which are associated with synaptic plasticity in the mammalian central nervous system. an increasing number of surface proteins are described as being attached to the membrane by a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (gp ) anchor instead of the conventional transembranous hydropbobic domain. they are initially synthesized with a coohterminal polypeptide extension which is cleaved in the e.r. and replaced by the preformed glycolipid. this processing event is directed by a signal, located in the c-terminal region of the protein, which requires a group of three small amino acids positioned - residues upstream of an hydrophobic c terminal sequence. we previously transformed the transmembfanous glycoprotein d of herpes simplex type i into a gpi-anchored molecule by deleting its cytoplasmic domain and thus creating a molecule, gdww , which meets the requirements for anchoring via a gpi structure. we now demonstrate, using gpi-deficient cell lines and biochemical studies, that a hybrid protein consisting of the thy-i ectoplasmic domain and of the c-terminal region of gdww can be alternative[y expressed in a gpi-anchored or in a transmembranous form. service de p diatrie, chuv, ch- oll lausanne proteolipid protein (plp) is a major myelin protein in the central nervous system (cns). a number of x-linked dysmyelinating disorders have been identified as mutations in the pip gene. we have identified a novel plp mutation in paralytic tremor (it) rabbit, characterized by body tremor, spastic limb paresis and hypomyelination in the cns. reduced levels of plp protein and its mrnas were observed in the cns as well as in the pns. plp sequence analysis revealed a single nucleotide change in exon which results in the substitution of a histidine by a glutamine at position . histidine is localized on the boundary between the first transmembrane region and the intracellular part of the protein. therefore, its position can be crucial for the efficient plp interaction with other proteins and lipids, and correct incorporation of the plp molecule into the membrane. histidine is also part of a short fragment of ten amino acids which is conserved in all species studied. the same amino acid is altered in another hypomyelinated mutant, shaking pup, stressing its functional importance. furthermore, the pt mutation affects the plp "premyelin" functions, including oligodendrocyte maturation. equilibrium constants for octamer dissociation as well as dissociation rates in vitro increased in correlation to the number of charged residues eliminated, e.g. mutant - , in which all four charged residues in the n-terminal heptapeptide are substituted with uncharged amino acids, showed a -fold higher equilibrium constant for octamer dissociation and a -fold increased dissociation rate compared to wild type. this strongly suggests that the charged amino acids in the n-termlnal heptapeptide of mib-ck, and therefore an ionic interaction, play an important role in forming the oetameric molecule. gangliosides and neutral glycosphingolipids (gsls) cell surface molecules are involved in a variety of biological processes and are assumed to play an important role in the mechanisms of hiv entry into lymphoid and epithelial cells. the total lipid-bound sialic acid (lbsa) content and the composition of gangliosides and gsls were investigated on pbmn cells from hiv+ve and normal donors. lbsa level was quantified by a fluorimetric assay, while gangliosides and gsls were assayed with high performance thin layer chromatography (hf'tlc) after multistep lipid extraction of x g membrane fractions. in normal pbmn cells the lbsa content accounted for . /~g/ cells or nmol/mg protein whilst in pbmn cells from hiv+ donors the lbsa level decreased to . ,ug/ cells or nmol/mg protein. the qaantitation of neutral gsls and gangliosides was carried out by scanning spots revealed on hptlc plates and the integrated areas computed with a dedicated software. our findings showed that the most relevant ganglioside present in normal pbmnc was gm ( - % of total gangliosides) followed by small amounts of od ( - %) and other acidic glycosphingolipids. neutral gsls included gl , gl , gl and gl -hexosylceramide. hiv+ pbmn cells were characterized by a decrease of neutral glycosphingolipids as well as gm content which represented only % of the ganglioside fraction, indicating an alteration in the glycolipid composition in the plasma membrane of infected cells. the neuropeptide y (npy) is one of the most abundant peptides of the mammalian brain. upon stimulation of cell surface receptors, npy generates diverse physiologic responses. npy acts on the cardiovascular system. it is a vasoconstrictor by itself and in addition, it potentiates the action of vasoactive substances such as angiotensin ii or norepinephrine. npy also inhibits glucose induced insulin secretion and is a potent inducer of appetite. to facilitate the development of npy antagonists we are investigating the interaction of npy with its cell surface receptor.we first constructed a series of mutants in which negatively charged residues present in putative extracellular domains of the y receptor were systematically replaced by alanines. the mutant cdnas were transiently expressed in hela ceils using a vaccinia virus derived expression system and the abi}ity of the encoded proteins to bind npy was evaluated. the capacity of the mutant proteins to be recruited to the cell surface was assessed by confocal microscopy. we identified initially spacially clustered extracellular acidic residues of the human y npy receptor essential for npy binding. subsequently, we mutated additional residues. based on these data a detailed computer model of the interactions between npy and its receptor was built. functional activity to energy metabolism. l. pellerin and p.j. magistretti. institut de physiologie, universit de lausanne, switzerland. astrocytes play a central role in brain energy metabolism. for example glucose, the exclusive brain energy substrate, is avidly taken up by astrocytes (pnas : , ) . application of glutamate (glu), the main excitatory neurotransmitter, stimulates in a concentration-dependent manner h- -deoxyglucose ( - ( ) uptake by astrocytes in primary culture with an ec of ~ ~m. the effect is not receptor-mediated since it can not be reproduced by glutamatergic agonists such as (nmda, kainate, quisqualate, t-acpd) nor prevented by antagonists (apv, cnqx, ap ). instead, it involves glutamate uptake since the effect is blocked by dl-threo-j hydroxyaspartate, a potent inhibitor of the glu transporter. replacement of na + in the medium by choline also prevents the effect, suggesting a na+ driven process. finally ouabain, a selective inhibitor of the na+/k + atpase, completely prevented the effect of glu. these observations suggest that when glutamatergic synapses are active, glutamate, taken up by astrocytes, stimulates -dg uptake by astrocytes whose end-feet are known to surround capillaries, i.e. the source of glucose. they also provide a simple explanation for the mechanism linking functional activity to energy metabolism. cloning and molecular characterization of the mouse astrocyte glycogen synthase. g. pellegri, c. rossier, s. van berchem, p.j. magistre~i and j.-l. martin. institut de physiologie, universit de lausanne, switzerland. in the brain glycogen is predominantly localized in astrocytes, although its presence has been detected in certain large neurons, in ependymal and choroid plexus cells. glycogen is synthesized by the enzyme glycogen synthase (glys) from udp-glucose. out of the different glycogen synthase isozymes, only the muscle and the liver forms of glys have been cloned. we have isolated and characterized from a mouse astrocyte ~.zapii cdna library, a cdna clone encoding the mouse cerebral cortical astrocyte glys. the . kb clone isolated contains an open reading frame of bp encoding a protein of amino acids. the coding region of the mouse astrocyte glys cdna shares % and % identity with the nudeotide sequences of the human muscle and the rabbit muscle giys cdna respectively. the cellular distribution of the glys mrna studied by northern blot shows the presence of a single transcript of kb in cultures of astrocytes and, to a lesser degree, of neurons. the distribution of glycogen phosphorylase, which was also examined by northern blot shows the presence of a . kb transcript both in cultured astrocytes and neurons with however higher levels expressed in astrocytes. the functional molecular size of the vacuolar h+-pyrophosphatase (h +-ppase ec . . . ) from maize (zea mays l.) roots was estimated by radiation inactivation, both for substrate hydrolysis and for proton transport. light microsomal vesicles enriched in tonoplast membranes were prepared from young ( days) maize roots using sucrose step gradients. these vesicles were still competent for ppi-dependent proton transport after freeze-drying and rehydration of the membranes. frozen native or freeze-dried samples were irradiated with ~ for various periods of time. after thawing the samples, the activities of glucose- phosphate dehydrogenase (added as an internal standard) and h+-ppase (hydrolysis of pyrophosphate (ppi) and ppi-dependent proton transport) were tested. by applying target theory, the functional size for hydrolysis was found to be around mr when the native or freeze-dried samples were irradiated. no ppi-dependent proton transport activity was measurable after irradiation of the native samples. on the contrary, the freeze-dried membranes were still pumping protons after irradiation and a target size of around mr was measured for the transport activity. these experiments suggest that the native h+-ppase from maize roots may exist as a dimer (at least) of the mr catalytic subunit. $ - the na,k-pump moves na + out and k + ions into the cells. the domains of the protein involved in ion translocation have not been determined. we have studied the role of the n-terminal region in the na + translocation by measuring the kinetics of charge movements under na/na exchange conditions in wild type (wt) and two n-terminally truncated forms of the bufo ~ subunit with deletions of the (t ) and (t ) first amino acids expressed in xenopus oocytes. we have developped a new technique to perform fast (< i ms) voltage clamp on whole oocyte. the membrane on one side of the oocyte is permeabilized by digitonin allowing to measure current flowing across the other half. we observed presteady state ouabain-sensitive currents similar to that reported by other techniques (j.gen. physiol. : , ) . the estimated forward charge translocation rate was lower in both n-truncated mutants (wt • , t z , t z s-l). the midpoint potential of the charge translocation (best fit to boltzman equation) was - , - , and - mv in the wt, t and t groups, respectively. the highly charged nterminus of the q subunit has a significant role in the forward translocation of na + ions. deletion mutants of human small intestinal lactase-phlorizin hydrolase (lph) were constructed to determine the role of protein subdomains in the intracellular transport of lph. the mutant lph mact ( aa deletions), which contains the membrane anchor (ma) and the cytoplasmic tail (ct), was transported to the cell surface in a fashion similar to wild type lph. by contrast, lph lacking the transmembrane domain persisted as a mannose-rich polypeptidc. this suggests that the membrane anchor and/or cytoplasmic tail are implicated in the er-egress of lph. another mutant, lph mact ( aa deletions), was not efficiently transported to the golgi apparatus. epitope mapping with monoclonai antibodies as well as protease-sens{tivity assays provided an evidence that the tertiary structure of lph mact is very similar to that lph mact. in view of the variations in the proportions of the complex glycosylated molecules of the two mutants we conclude that the domain between lph mact and lphi mact may play an essential role along the secretory pathway of lph. containing tyrosine. hussein y. naim, and michael g. roth; dept, of biocherni~try, ut-southwestem medical center, at dallas, dallas,texas-usa we have investigated an artificial internalization signal created by site-directed mutagenesis of the short cytoplasmic sequence of the influenza virus hemagglutinin (ha). mutation of cysteine to tyrosine converted ha from a protein essentially excluded from coated pits to one that internalized at rate similar to some cellular endocytic receptors. to determine whether or not the ha-y signal is a degenerate form of the internalization signal found in proteins such as the transferrin receptor and the mannose- -phosphate/igfii receptor, we have mutated amino acid positions in the ha-y shown to be important for internalization of the two receptors. we have changed amino acids on either side of y to those that either fit, or break the pattern of aromatic and hydrophobic residues proposed as consensus sequence. our results indicate that the ha-y mutant contains a sub-optimum sequence for a tyrosine-based internalization signal similar to those found in the receptors for transferrin, ldl, and mannose- -phosphate/igfil. however, amino acids with side chains having different chemical properties functioned well in positions that are important for the internalization signal, indicating that the consensus sequence for this signal is more variable than previously proposed. n-linked glycesylation is an essential protein modification occuring in all eukaryotic cells. core-oligosaccharides are transferred by the enzyme n-oligosaccharyl-transferase frc~ the donor glc man gicnac -dolichol to selected asparagine . resldues of t~e nascent polypeptlde chazn. the donor is build up in a stepwise fashion at the er-membraneby the products of the alg-genes (asparagine-linked-~lycosylafion) mutants defective in this pathway are available, but often lack a phenotype suitable for isolation of the corresponding genes. we found that double mutants of alg or alg with a wbpl mutation (defective oligosaecharyl-transferase) are severely growth retarded at oc. the double mutant phenotype allowed the isolation of both alg and alg genes which have been refractory to cloning so far. both genes encode potential trarsmenbrane proteins and are able to complement the biochemical defects of the corresponding alg or alg mutants. the na,k-atpase produces the driving force for the regulated transport of na across epithelial ceils. it is composed of an c~-subunit which carries the catalytic and ouabain binding sites and a b-subunit. to test the role of the usubunit in transport regulation, we transfected a cells with the b. marinus al-subunit (txl-tbm). this subunit confers a -fold higher resistance to ouabain (k i = /~m) compared to the endogenous pump. taking advantage of this difference, stable transfectants were selected with ouabain. expression of the cd-tbm subunit was visualized by western blotting. approximately half of the positive cell lines showed a high electrical resistance similar to untransfected cells, when cultured on filters. na-transport activity, measured as isc, was lower even in the absence of ouabain, but the relative increase in response to aldosterone was maintained. functional pumps containing the exogenous or endogenous al-subunit were quantified by equilibrium ouabain binding. interestingly, cells cultured on plastic dishes had a large fraction of low affinity binding sites (txi-tbm), while most sites were of the high affinity type when the cells were grown on filters. we conclude that the ouabain-resistant na,k-atpase cd-subunit of b. marinus can be expressed in a cells and used as a selective marker. however, the results suggest that the expression of functional ouabain-resistant pumps containing the al-tbm subunit could be influenced by the degree of cellular differentiation. in infected cells fully functional na/pi-cotransport was found in a time dependent manner; up to a -fold stimulation of na/p;-cotransport compared to uninfected cells was observed aft r - days. transport of phosphate by infected cells was highly dependent on the presence of sodium, exhibited a kmtd~ of around . mm and was dependent on extraceuular i~h'. in agreement with expressed transport of phosphate, infected cells produced an immunoreactive polypeptide of kda that represents a non-glycosylated form of the to kda mature na/p;-cotransporter. we conclud$ that the protein napi- /rat when expressed in sf cells exhibits na/p-eotransport with similar kinetic characteristics as observdd in prox ma tubular apical na/pcotransport. therefore the napi- protein as expressed h sf cells can be used for further structural and functional studies. talin interacts in vitro with actin, vinculin, integrins and bilayers of acidic phospholipids, and nucleates actin filament growth at the bilayer surface. it is therefore believed to be a key protein mediating aetin-membrane linkage. we have analyzed functional properties of proteolytic fragments of purified platelet talin. using limited proteolysis two fragments of and kd were generated. preliminary results, obtained using viscometry and f-aetin-nucleating assays, suggest that the kd fragment contains the actin binding site. we also assessed the lipid-binding capacity of the fragments. when a mixture of the two fragments was centrifuged in the presence of large multilamellar liposomes containing phosphatidylserine, only the kd fragment, but not the kd domain, co-sedimented with the liposomes, suggesting the presence of a specific lipid-binding site in the kd domain. interestingly, this fragment contains the n-terminus of talin which shows homologies to the membrane-binding regions of protein . . we are now analyzing membrane-binding properties of talin domains in more detail using hydrophobic photolabelling. recent studies suggest a role of the neural cell adhesion molecules l and ncam in mechanisms of memory formation (doyle e, et al, j. neurochem. : - , scholey a.b. et al, neuroscience : - , ; lijthi a. et al. unpublished data and see usgeb ) . in the present study we analyzed the effect of chronic intraventricular infusion of polyclonal antibodies against l (anti-u) or ncam (anti-ncam) on the performance of male wistar rats during the acquisition and retention of a spatial learning task. briefly, rats had to remember the position of a submerged escape platform in a water tank (morris water-maze). when the escape platform was removed after acquisition training (= retention test), the performance of animals chronically injected with anti-l showed an impaired search pattern when compared with that of salineqnjected animals (p> . , mann-whitney). whereas control animals spent up to % of their time searching for the platform in the correct (= training) quadrant, the time anti-l animals swam in the correct quadrant was closer to chance level ( %). although monitoring penetration of antkncam into the hippocampus was almost as efficient as that of anti-l , the performance of the anti-ncam-group was highly variable and did not differ from the performance of controls. these results agree with recent findings on the involvement of neural cell adhesion molecules in other forms of learning. we have isolated cdnas from mouse and from xenopus encoding the ~-subunit of the gastric h,k-atpase, which is expressed in the parietal cells of the stomach mucosa. the gastric h,k-atpase transports h + into the stomach lumen with the counter transport of k +, all at the expense of atp hydrolysis. when xenopus oocytes are injected with crna encoding ~h,k from either species, as well as a gastric ~h,k subunit, the two subunit proteins are synthesized, assemble, and form functional pumps located in the plasma membrane as demonstrated by rb+ uptake. the sensitivity to the gastric h,k-atpase inhibitor sch was determined, with the ki for beth species found to be in the low ~m range. spodoptera frugiperda ceils are often used to overexpress eucaryotle proteins using baculovirus vectors. the atomic force microscope (afm) is a device which allows the observer to obtain high resolution images of biological samples immersed in a fluid medium; this instrument has therefore the potential to visualize overexpressed proteins on the surface of living cells. however, the interpretation of the images is sometimes difficult and requires a good knowledge of the specimen topography, i.e. the "normal" plasma membrane of the cell used for the overexpressisn. on our poster we present afm images of the plasma membrane of both fixed and living spodoptera frugiperda ceils. in additon, we discuss the possibility of achieving high resolution in the imaging of dynamic changes which affect /iving systems. the deduced protein sequence consists of amino acids with about % amino acid sequence identicy when compared to mammalian ~h,k-subunits. data from other species and from the structurally similar na,k-atpase has shown that the ~-subunit is necessary for the formation of a functional pump, which consists of an ~/~ heterodimer. following co-injection of xenopus oocytes with crna for both the ~-and ~subunits, we have observed by rb + uptake h,k-atpase activity in the plasma membrane. we are presently studying the role of the ~-subunit in the maturation and function of the h,k-atpase. the atomic force microscope (afm) is a new type of microscope which allows visualisation of inorganic and organic samples with a very high resolution. a sharp tip fixed at the end of a cantilever is used as a topographic sensor. by scanning the sample with this device, a computer records the minute deformations of the cantilever and computes the topography of the sample. the instrument allows also the measurement of the interaction between the tip and the sample as a function of the distance. the knowledge of these interactions allows us to compute several mechanical properties like indentation, elasticity and stiffness. on this poster we report the results of these measurements on cells (sfg, c ), bacteria (e. coli, b. subtilis) and proteins (actin). in addition we discuss the use of the afm as a sensor for probing the mechanical properties of biological systems at a nanometric scale. neonatal thymectomy of balb/c mice induces aig. we have cloned the ~-and ~subunits of the balb/c h,k-atpase and expressed the proton pump in crna injected oocytes. both and ~ proteins are made, form functional pumps, and are immunoprecipated using auto-immune sera. the ~-subunit can also be in~unoprecipated independent of the ~-subunit when oocytes are injected with ~ crna alone. balb/c mice will be immunized with oocyte membranes containing either the ~/~ or ~ antigens in order to study the role of each h,k-atpase subunit in triggering aig. the prion protein is expressed in both astrocytes and oligodendrocytes of the neonatal brain and is down-regulated in adulthood. m. moser, colello, r, , pott, u, and b. oesch institut for hirnforschung der universit~t zorich, august forel str. , zorich the infectious agent causing transmissible spongiform encephalopathies consists largely or entirely of prp sc, a modified isoform o| normal prp (prpc). prpc is most abundant in the brain. the development of the disease strictly depends on the presence of prpc. and incubation times are shortened by overexpression of prpc. the normal function of prpe is not known and its cellular iocalisation in the cns is poorly characterised, except for its evident presence in neurons. here we describe the expression of prp c mrna in both oligodendrocytes and astrocytes during neonatal development of hamster and rat. in adult animals, expression is down-regulated in gila but not in neurons. our findings provide a link to the previously described accumulation of prpsc in astrocytes and the apparently faster course of prion disease in neonatal hamster. our results argue for a major involvement of non-neuronal cell types in prion diseases. such structures we raised mab against membrane protein fractions. a ~lab against a vitronectin receptor containing fraction was found, which if applied in vitro to bi fi mouse melanoma cells, influenced growth, adhesion and morphology. ~tnen bi fi cells prior to tail vein injection were treated, different outcomes were observed. short treatment (lh) resulted in % inhibition of lung colonization whereas long-ter~ treatment ( weeks) resulted in - times more lung colonies. a candidate molecule likely involved in these observed effects could be identified as a kda cell surface protein. sequence information from peptides revealed in several cases % homology to mouse centrosomin a, i.e.a kda cytosolic protein involved in the organization of the spindle apparatus. these data suggest that we may have found a protein which may participate in a link between the extra-cellular space and the microtubular system. we are currently trying to clone this kda protein from a bi fi c-dna library. wahlberg, j.m., and spiess, m. dept.biochemistry,biozentrum, university of basel. signals for correct basolateral sorting of subunit hi of the human asialoglycoprotein receptor are located in the cytoplasmic tail, involving a tyrosine at position . removal of this residue results in nonpolarized transport of the protein to the surface in mdckii-celis. a deletion mutant of hi, lacking of the normal residues of the cytoplasmic tail, including the tyrosine, has been found not to be transported to the cell surface, but to be accumulated intracellularly. the mutant protein is complex glycosylated and sialylated, indicative of passage into or through the trans-golgi. immunofluorescence analyses show defined juxtanuclear, tubular structures, which do not colocalize with markers for er, early endosomes or lysosomes, but which show similar staining pattern as markers for late endosomes and tgn. to define the determinants responsible for the intracellular accumulation a series of deletions and fusions have been constructed. the results suggest that the length of the cytoplasmic domain is one important determinant for missorting of hi. salerr~ n., medilansld, j., pellegrinelli, n. and eder-colli, l. departement of pharmacology, cmu, geneva in chollnergic neurons the enzyme choline acetyltransferase (chat) exists as cytosolic( - %) and membrane-bound activity ( - %}. are these two activities encoded by a single mrna? is membranebound enzyme preferentially associated with a given cellular membrane? in order to investigate these questions we isolated a fulllength cdna ( . kb) encoding drosophila chat and used it to transfect xenopus oocytes, rat fibroblasts and human neuroblastoma cell lines. triton x- fractionation of transfected cells showed that hydrophilic and amphiphilic chat activity were produced. the sp act. of hydrophflic enzyme reached , . and . ~mol ach/h/rng protein respectively in oocytes, fibroblasts and neuroblastoma whereas the sp. act. of amphiphilic enzyme was . , . and . hinol ach/h/mg protein, respectively. amphiphilic chat was less sensitive to inhibition by the product acetylcholine and to heat denaturation than was hydrophilic enzyme. similar results were observed for the native drosophila chat. amphiphillc enzyme sedimentation was affected by the type of detergent present in linear density gradients of sucrose. transfected oocytes were subjected to subfractionation. besides a large amount of soluble chat activity, a significant proportion of enzyme was found associated with a fraction enriched in endoplasmic reticulum (er). preliminary results using transfected mammalian cells indicate that apart cytosolic chat, plasma mernbranes+golgi enriched fractions as well as er-enriched fraction contain chat activity. we have characterized a drosophila melanogaster gene encoding a very hydrophobic protein. the amino acid sequence shows considerable homology ( - % identity) to neurotransmitter transporters. the gene is, however, not expressed in neural tissue, but in the male germline. transcription and translation occurs in early spermatocytes. antibody staining data suggest the following pathway of the protein during spermatogenesis: the protein is synthesized in early spermatocytes and is transported into the nucleus during prophase of rt i. at meiosis it associates with the mitochondria and it stays associated while they fuse to the nebenkern. during individualization it is stripped off in the cystic bulge. inspection of the putative protein sequence shows that it possesses alle the necessary targeting signals to allow its transfer from the cytoplasm through the nucleus into the mitochondria: three nuclear targeting signals, a mitochondrial import signal and, moreover, two pest-sequences for rapid protein degradation are present. we shall present a, currently tested, working hypothesis. in hg-treated toad skins, water permeability is high or low depending on whether the major anion of the inner bathing medium is so~ or ci. we report here the results of experiments designed to determine if, in skins bathed with so -ringer, net water flow (j~,) could be diminished by agents added to the outer medium. toad skins were mounted inbetween glass chambers and exposed to a standard osmotic gradient of mosm. jw was continuously monitored by automatic, volumetric techniques. exposure to lmm hgclz or chzcihg (external side) led to the typical anion-induced j,, changes. re-exposure to hg caused a mild ( %), although significant (n= , p< . ), fall in jw. since cuso is a sh-reagent like hg, we looked at the effects of cuso (lmm). there was a % reduction of j, (n= , p< . ), an effect totally reversible by simple washing of the skins. likewise, addition of dithiothreitol (dtt, mm) in the presence of cu, caused a % reversal of the cu effect ; there was no change in jw if dtt was given before cu, or if both agents were added simultaneously. finally, in hg-treated, glutaraldehyde-fixed skins, lmm and ram cuso caused % and % jw decrements, respectively, that were totally reversible. in conclusion, cu causes a dtt-sensitive inhibition of jr, in hgtreated skins. further work is needed to establish if the cu effect is exerted on sh-groups of apical aquapories of toad skin. $ - the amino acid sequences of the pc- e-subunits and other cryptomonad biliprotein ~-subunits pose the most intriguing question about the phylogenetic origin of these unique chromopeptides. cryptomonad pc- ~-subunits seem not to be closely related to the known phycobiliproteins, linker polypeptides (lpps), bpe or any other light-harvesting chl polypeptides from the thylakoid. for most of them the number of identical amino acid residues was %- %. sequence alignment of c-pe associated lpps with t-subunits from cyanobacteria and red algae and the cryptophytan ~-subunits however show that the identity between c-pe associated lpps and cyanobacterial x-subunits is still significant, whereas it reaches the limit of significance between cyanobacteril and eucaryotic x-subunits. nevertheless it has to be assumed that x-subunit derive from cyanobacterial c-pe associated lpps as well as cryptomonad ~-subunits may derive from t-subunits. whereas the the phycobiliprotein ~-and subunits remained structurally conservative during evolution (e.g. - % identity between cyanobacterial and red algal pe-subunits) the lpps and t-subunits show drastical changes in their chromophore binding domains. $ - functional and evolutionary relationships of the components of the primary events in photosynthesis have been traced using amino acid sequence comparison. basically, the question was posed regarding the interrelationship of the apoproteins of different photosynthetic organisms which gather light and/or separate charges across membranes. do their protein-chemical structure and organisation decipher us certain clues and parts of the path by which they have been selected and derived from a possible primordial reaction centre polypeptide? within that context the light-harvesting-and energy transfer systems of purple bacteria offered as ideal model components. a data set of more than apoprotein sequences has pointed to some keystructural elements which have been partially verified as such by limited proteolysis and genetic engineering. a careful inspection of the determined bacterial antenna-structures revealed some remarkable similarities to eukaryotic antenna and reaction centre apoproteins indicating possible basic structural motifs for complexing pigment molecules, like chlorophylls or bacteriochlorophylls in very distant representatives of phototrophs. a number of glycoproteins of the nervous and/or immune system that are involved in cellular recognition and/or adhesion share the common lz/hnk- carbohydrate structure. in a large proportion of patients with peripheral demyelinating neuropathy associated with paraproteinemic gammopathy (ppn), monoclonal igm antibodies (m-igm) react with the lz/hnk- determinant of mag and p . we plan to test the hypothesis that anti-mag m-igm autoantibodies may alter the expression of hnk- bearing myelin proteins such as mag, p , mog, ncam or pmp . by using monoclonal antibodies to myelin proteins on tissue sections, preliminary results indicate that mbp protein content seems to be strongly downregulated, whereas galc and $ protein do not appear to be affected by the loss of myelin in ppn nerves. gfap protein expression appear to be upregulated in demyelinating biopsy specimens from ppn patients with anti-mag m-igm gammopathy. in conclusion, the expression of some l /hnk- negative proteins might be disregulated by the presence of circulating anti-mag m-igm in the serum of ppn patients. we have isolated a human liver na+-taurocholate cotransporting polypeptide (ntcp) by screening a human liver edna library with a rat edna probe derived from ntcp (pnas , , ) . the cdna codes for a protein of amino acids which shows % amino acid homology with the rat ntcp. expression of ntcp in x. laevis oocytes resulted in na+-dependent bile acid uptake which exhibited saturability with an apparent km for taurocholate of ~m. ntcp mediated taurocholate uptake into oocytes was inhibited by all major bile acid derivatives, bumetanide and bromosulphophthalein. southern blot analysis of genomic dna from a panel of human/hamster somatic cell hybrids mapped the human ntcp-gene to chromosome . in conclusion, these studies supplement the previously suggested selective mammalian distribution of the ntcp gene family and provide the possibility for direct molecular characterization of human bile acid transporter genes. diverse cell surface molecules of the nervous system play an important role in specifying ceil interactions during development. with the aid of a polyclonal antibody against l , a .skb edna clone closely related to l (ch-l ) was isolated from a ~. gtl library derived from poly(a)* l~qa of day mouse brain. using this edna as probe the remaining cdi'ia ' sequences were cloned out of a plasmid library constructed from postnatal day - mouse brain poly (a)+ p, na. two independent full length clones of . and . kb encompassing the entire coding region of chl] were isolated. these represent putative alternatively spliced mp, nas. the deduced primary structure of chl reveals that, like the cell adhesion molecules (cams) mouse l , chicken ng-cam, and nr-cam (bravo), chl is composed of six ig-like domains, a transmembrane domain, and a short cytoplasmatic region. in contrast to the other l family members, only four and a half instead of five fibronectin type hi-like repeals are found in chl . the fibronectin type [h-like repeats were expressed in e. col[ and the protein fragment was used for immunization. as observed for li, ng-cam, and nr-cam, chl is susceptible to proteolytic cleavage. bands of kd, kd, kd, and kd could be detected bywestern blot analysis. by in situ hybridization, a predominant expression by neurons was found in the adult mouse brain. western blot analysis showed expression of chl protein in brain and heart, but not lung, kidney and intestine. in liver, a kd immunoreactive band was found. the relationship of chl to molecules known to be involved in cell adhesion and neurite outgrowth, combined with its pattern of expression, suggests a role for this molecule in cell interactions dndng neural development. work from this laboratory revealed that in hg-treated, glutaraldehydefixed toad bladders, the water permeability coefficient (pf) is high in sod-ringer and low in ci-ringer ; in all these studies the osmolality of the serosal medium was mosm. as an attempt to determine the mechanism(s) underlying such pf changes, experiments were carried out with bladders whose serosal surface was exposed to [so-, hypo-or hyperosmotic media ; the outer surface was always exposed to a hyposmotic solution ( costa). net water flows were measured continuously with automatic, volumetric techniques. after exposure to mm chzcihg ( ', outer medium) followed by fixation with . % glutaraldehyde ( ', serosal medium), the bladders were thoroughly washed. in sod-ringer, pf (/~m/sec) was as follows (n= ) we wanted to determine the molecular weight (mw) of ntcp and its topology in the plasma membrane (pm) of rat liver. a rabbit antiserum generated against the c-terminus of ntcp was used to determine its mw on western blots and its subcellular distribution in liver and in hepatocytes by immunofluorescene (if). site directed mutagenesis and deletion experiments were used to determine the n-linked glycosylation sites. ntcp encodes a kd protein in rat liver pm vesicles. the basolateral localization of ntcp in liver was confirmed by if. ntop could only be immunostained in permeabilized hepatocytes suggesting an intracellular localization of the cterminus, cnda constructs showed the ntcp is glycosylated at positions and ii. the data show a selective basolateral expression of ntcp in rat liver and they suggest that the two ends of ntcp are located on opposite sides of the pm. zymogen granule membranes (zgm) are known to contain proteins with nucleoside phosphatase activity, but their exact nature and function are unknown. the activities require ca ++ and mg ++ and are sensitive to atpase inhibitors but not to inhibitors of na/k-atpase activity. the aim of this study was to isolate individual proteins of pig pancreatic zgm, to attribute enzymatic activity to individual proteins and to characterize them with various substrates (gtp, atp, amp etc.), inhibitors (amp-cp, amp-cpp, gtpgs etc.) and lectins (maa, dsa, gna etc.). we have subjected highly purified zgm solubilized in chaps to ief on immobiline dry strips | (pharmacia) with s ph range -- . (ist dim.). these strips were then electrophoresed in a polyacrylamide gradient gel containing . % chaps and tris/hci at ph . ( nd dim.). nucleoside phosphatase activity was detected histochemically in the d gel by incubation with substrate in the presence of lead nitrate. focussed strips were also subjected to sds-page for comparison. several proteins showed strong activity to gtp, atp and itp. the role of these phosphatases are discussed in the context of the role of gtp-binding proteins and the de-/phosphorylating events on the zgm in intracellular targeting and exocytosis. the disease-specific isoform of the priori protein (prp sc ) is an essential part of the infectious particle causing scrapie or bse. prp sc differs from prp of normal animals (prp c ) by its relative protease resistance. the physical nature of this difference is still unknown. here we analyzed the protease-resistance of prp sc quantitatively. prp sc was rendered completely protease-sensitive at alkaline ph or in guanidinium thiocyanate (> . m). denaturation in m guanidinium thiocxanate (gdnscn) completely abolished protease resistance of prp bc within min while denaturation in m urea showed a much slower time course. denaturation cuwes were used to calculate the gibbs free energy (as d ) in dependence of gdnscn or urea at different concentrations. the linear relationship between agd and the denaturant concentration is suggestive of a two state model involving the conformational change of a single protein domain. this is also reflected in the small number of side chains ( , ) additionally exposed to the solvent upon conversion of prp sc to its proteasesensitive isoform. our results suggest that minor rearrangements of the structure of prp sc are sufficient to abolish its protease resistance. of physiology, university of zurich, winterthursrstr. , ch- zt~rich in contrast to mammalian kidneys where inorganic phosphate (pi) is reabsorbed unidirectionally, flounder renal epithelial cells both re.absorb and secrete pi. in order to investigate on a molecular level the cellular pi handling we have cloned a re,absorptive nalp i transport system from flounder renal tubules. based on homology with the cloned na/p i cotransporter from rat we have isolated a edna clone (flounder napi-ii, bp) encoding for a protein of amino acids. in the eight transmembrane spanning domains the protein is % identical with the corresponding system from rat kidney, in the hydrophilic regions only %. expression of in vitro transcribed rna in xenopus oocytes specifically stimulated na-dependent pi transport. binding properties of na and pi as well as the ph-dependency were similar to the ones found in mammalian systems (rat, human, ok cells). by northern analysis three transcripts, . , . , and . kb in length, could be detected. rna from flounder renal tubules contained all of the transcripts, intestinal rna only the two lower bands, and non-epithelial tissue from kidney expressed only the . kb transcript. mammalian systems share only the . kb transcript but not the related species. the close functional relationship of flounder napi-ii with the known najp i transport systems and the pronounced differences in primary structure provide the basis for structure function analysis of na/p i cotransport. the amyloid /a protein precursor (app) is a transmembrane protein expressed in different isoforms throughout the organism. our work has consisted in a detailed study of the structure and biological function of app. specifically, we have shown that the secreted form (sapp) of app- is involved in the growth regulation offibroblast% and also stimulates neurite extension in b neurnblastoma cell line. functional mapping studies have shown that the domain responsible for both the growth-regulating and the neurotrophic activities of sapp- is the rerms site, arg- to ser- . the presence ofsapp binding sites on the surface of b ceils (through the active rerms site) indicate that the neurotrophic activity of sapp is mediated by a receptor, and the subsequent activation of a signal transduction mechanism. in addition, we have shown that the rerms site is also involved in the neuronal survival properties of sapp- . finally, we have initiated an in vivo study of app biological function, and shown that a peptide representing the neurotrophic domain ofsapp- can strengthen memory retention in rat through stabilization of synaptic structures in the frontal cortex. this work was supported by grants from the swiss national science foundation ( a- ), and nih (ag ). we previously showed that in smooth muscle cells, the (~i-ar is rapidly phosphorymted following exposure to agonist. to understand this biochemical event, we investigated the phosphorylation of the c( b adrenergic receptor stably expressed in rat fibroblasts ( . pmol/mg prot.). the =( b-ar was solubilized from p-labeled rat cells and immunoprecipitated with antibodies raised against the n-terminus part of the receptor. treatment of ceils with ~.m epinephrine showed a rapid and significant increase in receptor phosphorylation above basal. treatment of cells with a specific pkc inhibitor (ro- ) did not affect agonist.promoted phosphorylation while it completely abolished phorbol esterinduced receptor phosphorylation. this strongly suggests that pkc is not involved in agonist-induced c{ b-ar phosphorylation. the elb-ar contains several putative phosphorylation sites in both its third intracellular loop and c-terminus tail. to investigate the role of these domains, a trunoated receptor (lacking its last amino-acids) was constructed and stably expressed in rat cells ( . pmol/mg prot). this receptor mutant displayed similar ligand-binding properties and abirity to activate phospholipase c as compared to the wild-type receptor. phosphorylation experiments revealed that this mutant is not at all phosphorylated, neither by agonist nor by phorbol esters. agonistinduced decrease in cell surface receptors, measured by binding of the antagonist h-prazosin at ~ was however similar for both the wild-type and mutant receptor. this suggests that loss of phosphorylation sites does not affect receptor internalization. human intestinal lactase-phlorizin hydrolase (lph) is synthesized as a precursor molecule (pro-lph), which undergoes proteolytic processing during maturation. lph expressed in cos- cells was enzymatically active, the electrophoretic properties of lph-species synthesized by transfected cos- cells correspond to those in organ cultured human intestinal explants, in caco- ceils and in transfected mock ceils. they included the pro-lph and a proteolytically processed form, which had similar electrophoretic properties to the mature enzyme. the appearance of the putative mature form was inhibited by brefeldin a, ammonium chloride and chloroquine. in addition, only complex glycosylated pro-lph (pro-lphc) was inserted into the cell surface membrane. these data indicate that in cos- cells pro-lph is inserted into the cell membrane, is internalyzed and enters lysosomes where proteolytic events lead to the appearance of a mature-like enzyme. $ - assembly and transport of paba peptide hydrolase alpha and beta subunits in cos- cells eldedng, j.a., gr nberg, j. and sterchi, e., institut for biochemie und molekularbiologie, universit&t bern. paba peptide hydrolase (pph) (ec . . . ), a metalloendopeptidase from epithelial cells of human small intestinal mucosa, consists of two subunits, ~ and , which form homodimers and oligomers, cdna cloning has revealed homologies with developmentally important proteins from different species and has led to the definition of a new family of metalloendopeptidases, the astacin family (j. biol. chem. , , ) . here, we report on the expression of the cdnas of pphcz and pphj in cos- cells. when expressed on its own, pph(z is synthesized in a core glycosylated form only, suggesting that it is transport-incompetent and not able to exit the er. immune-fluorescence studies have confirmed that pph~ is not expressed on the surface of cos- cells. pphl , on the other hand, matures and is transported to the cell surface. when the two subunits are coexpressed, ppho~ can also be detected on the cell surface, suggesting that a heterooligomeric assembly is necessary for the surface expression of pphtz. truncated forms of both pphc~ and pphi~ could be detected in the medium of transfected cos- cells. in our previous work, we demonstrated by immunocytochemical reaction that sensory neurons expressed nuclear triindothyronin receptors (nt r) in embryonic as well as adult rats. in contrast, in sciatic nerve, schwann cells exhibited only transient nt r immunoreactivity from e to postnatal day . in the present work, we attempt to demonstrate by radioautography that the detected nt r are effectively the binding sites of [ i] labeled triiodothyronin. cryostat sections of dorsal root ganglia (drg) or sciatic nerve were incubated with . nm of l, , , '-[t i]triiodothyronin ci/m mol (nen), while the controls were incubated with a large excess (llxm) of unlabeled trfiodothyronin (t ). in aduit rat drg, radioautographs revealed that silver grains were exclusively restricted to neuronal cell bodies, while the schwann cells ensheathing the axons were free of significant label. in newborn rat sciatic nerve, silver grains accumulated over schwann cells; in contrast in adult rat sciatic nerve, schwann ceils were free of label. in control drg or sciatic nerve sections incubated in large exceas of unlabeled " " , all the radioautographs exhibited only scattered silver grains. in conclusion, our results show that sensory neurons and schwann cells are able to express functional nt r which bind thyroid hormones (snf - - ). characterization of the maturepreeursor glycophospholipid for glycosylphophatidylinositoi anchors of saccharomyces cerevisiae. many attempts to isolate the mature yeast precursor gpi glycophospholipid ready to be attached to newly translated proteins for gpi-anehoring have failed although such precursors were previously identified in mammalian cells and protozoa. here we show that metabolically labeled glycolipids of the expected structure can be observed if the incorporation, their accumulation and their extraction are optimized. two very polar, ( h)-mannose-labeled glyeolipids named cpi and cp were identified and purified. they were structurally characterized using phnspholipase treatments, partial deacylation with methanolie ammonia, hydrofluoric acid dephosphorylation, nitrous acid deamination, acetolysis, exoglycosidase treatments and combinations thereof to produce labeled fragments which could be analyzed by paper chromatography or thin layer chromatography. cp and cp both contain the identical core oligosaccharide mangl, (x->po - )manal, mamxl, (y->)mana-glcn-lansitol, x and y being hydrofluoric acid-sensitive substituents (most likely ethanolamine and phospheethanolamine, respectively). the inositol is acylated although no acyllaositol is present on protein-bound yeast gpi-anchors. cp and cp can also be observed after lableling with ( h)myo-inositol, the lipid moieties of cp and cp can be completely removed by mild alcaline hydrolysis altough the protein-bound gpi-anchors made by the pmi cells under identical labeling conditions are completely mild base resistant. this finding reinforces the notion that the ceramide moiety typically found on the majority of yeast gpi-proteins are added only after addition of the gpi precursor glycolipid to proteins. the distributions of the mannose- -phosphat e/igfll-recept or and a , slalyltransferase in hepg cells: no evidence for co-localization by confocal laser scanning microscopy. the organization of the trans golgi apparatus (ga) with respect to (recycling) man- -p/igfii receptor (mpr) and (resident) c~ , sialyltransferase (st) has been investigated by double immunofluorescence laser scanning confocal microscopy in hepg cells. they were chosen because biochemical evidence suggested sialylation of mpr upon recycling (duncan & kornfeld, j. cell biol. , , - ) implicating colocalization of both proteins. in the steady state st was confined to the ga whereas total (endogenous) mpr was localized to coarse vesicles without evidence for colocalization by confoeal microscopy. endocytosis of surface-labeled mpr was monitored in presence and absence of brefeldin a (bfa): without bfa, early endosomes ( ' of warming up) showed no, late endosomes ( ') little if any colocalization with st. in presence of bfa, the st-compartment disappeared whereas late endosomes persisted with some tubular emanations. under similar conditions, in "absence of bfa, endogenous mpr concentrated in the ga region suggesting colocalization with st. in presence of bfa the mpr compartment formed a redculum whereas the st compamnem disappeared. in conclusion, within the limits of the techniques used, exogenous mpr was not detectable in the st compartment whereas endogenons mpr concentrated in the ga region but obvious co-localization was exceptional. supported by grant - . of the snsf to egb. cultures of dissociated striatal neurons prepared from fetal rats were grown in the presence of neurotrophin- / (nt- / ) as well as the other known neurotrophins, ngf, bdnf and nt- . we found that acute administration of nt- / to seven days old cultures stimulates the hydrolysis of phosphatidyllnositol, an event involved in neurotrophin signal transduction. growth of stdatal cultures in presence of nt- / resulted in increased cell survival as indicated by elevations in total cell number, protein content and number of viable cells. nt- / exposure increased gaba uptake and staining intensity in gaba immunocytochemistry in these cultures indicating atrophic action on gabaergic neurons. to further identify responsive cell populations we analyzed for calretinin, a calcium binding protein known to colocalize with gaba in a number of neuronal cells. nt- / strongly increased the number of calretinin positive cells in cultures prepared from rats of embryonic day , as we]l as calretinin levels determined by western blot analysis. when cultures were prepared from embryonic day rats, nt- / very strongly increased the morphological differentiation of calretinin positive cells. while all effects produced by nt- / were mimicked by bdnf with similar potency, nt- was found to be only marginauy effective, our findings identify nt- / as a potent neurotrophie factor for striatal gabaergic neurons. fusion of cells and organelles is a general patho-biological phenomenon: muscle cells, transport vesicles, langhans cells and virus induced fusion from within (ffwi, during replication) and without (ffwo, by the particles). in vivo and after virus isolation only little fusion can be seen, only after cultivation fusing hsv can be detected; a selective pressure must be released. syn loci are known on the genome; the syn locus is located inside of the cell in the carboxy terminal part of glycoprotein b, all other fusion domains are outside the ceil. fusion inducing mutations are in aa , , , , and and were correlated to fusion from within and without as well as to selective cyclosporin a effects. a model is presented for the syn locus. -by recombination the fusion capacity could be transfected to fusion negative viruses. -hsv penetrates the cellmembrane by fusion by ligand-recepter interactions. ffwo+-strains penetrate at ~ cell/cell fusion was analysed and found to need also receptor-ligand interactions if induced by syn mutations. timing analysis of fusion events and by certain inhibitors allow further conclusions. quenching of lhcii isolated from dark-adapted (lhcii-d) or preilluminated (lhcii-l) rye leaves was similar in both preparations, but reversibility of this process within two hours of darkness was slower in lhcii-d. no differences in fluorescence quenching and full reversibility was observed for both lhcii preparations in reverse micellar solution. xanthophyll/chl concentrations in lhcii were consi-derably decreased under this conditions. excitation difference spectra (before and after illumination) of lhcii in asolectin liposomes showed typical changes of energy transfer between carotenoids and chl. a model is proposed according the xanthophyll cycle controls reversibility of light-driven excitation quenching as well as the xa~a~q~_x~tentof ~,,~nchi~g i/~ lhc~z. myelinogenesis is a complex, developmentally regulated process involving coordinate expression of myellnafion-related proteins. the myelin forming cells are the oligodendrocytes in the central nervous system (cns) and the schwann cells in the peripheral nervous system (pns). we differentially screened a rat postnatal day (p ) spinal cord edna library with probes derived from normal (plus probe) and from myelin-free (minus probe) p spinal cord mrnas. we succeded in the isolation of several novel edna clones whose corresponding mrnas were expressed either selectively by oligodendroeytes or by oligodendroeytes and sehwann cells. here we describe one of the edna clones (tentatively denominated ns ) whose mrna is specifically expressed by oligodandroeytes and schwann cells. the . kd transcript is expressed at highest level during myellnation and at much lower levels in the adult as it is known for other myelin-specific mrnas. sequence analysis of the full length edna sequence showed a % identity to the rat liver udpglucuronosyltransferase family, involved in the detoxificafion system. the amino acid open reading frame encodes a kd protein with a putative signal peptide and two transmembrane domains, whether this ns protein is involved in a detoxification reaction or in glycosilation of proteins and lipids with glueuronie acid is under investigation. neuroblastoma (n ) are sympathetic tumors of childhood characterized by mycn amplification in advanced stages. cd standard (cd s) and splice variants (cd v) represent a group of surface glycoproteins whose expression has been recently linked to metastasis. we analysed the expression of cd s and cd v on n tumors and cell lines by immunohistology and northern blot. results showed high levels of cd s on / nb, / n cell lines and / ganglioneuromas (mature, benign sympathetic tumors). lack of cd s staining was observed on stage iv, mycn amplified tumors only. in cell lines, expression was not detected on cells with a neuronal phenotype while high levels of cd s were expressed by cells with a glial differentiation, independently of mycn amplification. up-regulation of cd s was obtained with agents that induce a glial differentiation, while neuronal differentiation by retinoic acid was not accompanied by a change in cd s expression. no gd v were detected on tumors or cell lines. we conclude that cd s expression is down-regulated in a subset of nb ceils and tumors and that mycn product and additional mechanisms responsible for control of differentiation are involved in this regulation. the glycoprotein gc of herpesviruses is known to be non-essential for virus replication. non-essential herpesvirus proteins are suggested to perform "luxury functions" which may influence the outcome of an infection. we are aiming to analyse the function(s) of ibc specified by bovine herpesvirus (bhv ), bovine herpesvirus hv ) and caprine herpesvirus (caphv ). these viruses are closely related but differ in their pathogenic potential. in a first step we have cloned and sequenced the individual genes. the nucleotide and the deduced amino acid sequence homologies of two hv reference strains was found to be > %. the sequence homologies between bhv and bhv were > % and those between bhv and caphvl were > %. comparisons on the amino acid sequence level revealed that the differences were most prominent in the n-terminal parts, whereby the potential signal sequence region might be concerned. the putative glycosylation sites, however, were not affected, and the transmembrane sequences were similar in size and location. in order to characterize the significance of these differences, we are constructing gc-deletion mutants and recombinant viruses carrying a foreign gc gene. the in vitro and in vivo behaviour of these viruses will be compared to the wildtype virus. $ - o. moullet and j.-l. dreyer, instimt de biochimie, unlversit de fribeurg, ch- fribourg camp has been recently shown to promote a cell survival response by retarding apoptosis (berridge, m.v& el. ( ) exp. hematol. , - ) . on the other hand quinones are widely distributed substances of often potential toxicological significance. we have tested the effects of quinones on adenylate cyclase. the enzyme is rapidly inhibited by pbenzoquinone (ic = - ktm) or dicnlorophenol-indopbennl (/ ' = ilm), but -substituted quinones are inactive. the lc 's are decreased - times after membrane soinbilization but are not affected by gtp, gdp or analogues nor by cholera and pertussis toxins. the inhibition is not mediated by a g-protein or by the activation of a defined receptor. quinone inhibition stoichiometrically competes with forskolin activation of adenylate cyclase, equimolar concentrations of beth quinone and forskolin restoring the enzyme activity to its basal value. the cytotoxicity of benzoquinone, tested in vivo on hep-g , a human bepatocellular carcinoma cell line, could be prevented with forskolin. in plasma membranes quinones tightly bind to only one major and two minor proteins that were purified by page electrophoresis under native conditions. together these observations indicate that quinone action can be attributed to targetting to a limited number of proteins at tile plasma membrane in a highly selective way. by affecting adenylate eyclase, a modulation of the camp pool induces apoptosis as a result of the cytotoxicity via. t.congolense is an african,unicellular hemoflagellate, pathogenic for domestic animals such as cattle.within the host bloodstream,parasites adhere to the wall of the microvasculature,eausing severe organ damage.we have set up and characterized an in vitro assay in order to study the metabolic requirements,reeeptor-ligand interactions and the ultrastructure of this adhesion phenomenon.our findings suggest that adhesion is an active process requiring metabolic energy on part of the parasite, but is independent of the target cells.we also show that t.congolense possess a leetin-like domain localized at specific sites along the surface of the anterior end of the flagellum, which interacts with specific carbohydrate receptors, probably sialic acid and/or n-aeetylglueosamine residues,on the endothelial cell surface. this suggests that adhesion is likely to be mediated by a trypanosomal surface component distinct from the variable surface glycoproteins(vsgs). we also suggest that the cytoskeletal protein aetin is involved in this process. local immune response based upon intestinal parasitespecific t and b cells to giardia lamblia may be impomrant in parasite clearance. experimental infections qf mice (cr:nih:s) with g. lamblia (clone gem-h which e~presses a major kd antigen on its surface recognized b~ mab g / ) have demonstrated that the parasite undergoes surface antigenic variation in rive. experimental i~fection of immu/%odeficient mice (nu/nu mice and sci~d mice) and oontrol nu/+ littermates provided insights into associated immunological mechanisms: dominant surfade epitope-specific slga plays a major role in modulatin ] surface antigenic variation, and thymus-dependent t-lyn~phecytes in the induction of selfcure. athymio nu/nu mioe (zu. icr-strain) were reconstituted with immune peyer:~ patch lymphocytes obtained from self-healed littermat~ nu/+ mice. intestinal b-cells from these nu/+ mice @s well as from reconstituted athymic nude mice synthesized in vitro parasite-specific iga. this iga showed a predominant immunoblet reaction with the major surface antigen (a mr , polypep-tide) characterizing the giardia clone in question. nu/nu mice reconstituted wit~ immune cells acquired the potential to decrease significantly their intestinal parasite mass. thus the hypothesis on the causative role of intestinal iga in tl~ control of intestinal g. lamblia infection has found further experimental support. stephan jentsch, heinz tobler and fritz m er, institute of zoology, university of fribourg, p rolles, " fribourg the process of chromatin diminution in the parasitic nematode ascaris lumbricoides leads to the formation of somatic cells that contain less dna than the germ-line cells. during this process, which occurs between the third and the fifth embryonic cleavage divisions in five different blastomeres, the termini of the chromosomes are cut off and eventually degrade in the cytoplasm. to analyze this process at the molecular level we constructed a xzap somatic telomere library. the analysis of three cloned telomeres and their corresponding germ-line genomic regions revealed that chromosomal breakage takes always place within short specific chromosomal regions (cbrs) and is followed by the addition of the telomeric sequences (ttaggc)n to the breakage sites. the different cbrs do not crosshybridize to each other. a comparative nucleotide sequence analysis is now being performed to screen for the existence of conserved sequence motifs. in a parallel approach we analyze the chromatin structure of the cbrs and their flanking regions in developmental stages before and during the elimination process, putative recognition or regulation sequences important for the elimination process might be recognized as dnasel hypersensitive sites. once such sequences will be identified, it should be interesting to establish their role in the elimination process and to look for specific binding factors. chromatin diminution takes place in all presomatie ceils of the early embryo of ascaris lumbricoides and is followed by the addition of many repeats of the telomeric sequence ttaggc. chromosomal fragmentation is developmentally regulated and occurs within specific chromosomal regions (cbrs). one of these cbrs (cbr ) was analyzed in detail. agene located close to the cbr encodes a putative gtp-binding protein, whose promoter region is located within a distance of only kb from the telomeric ttaggc repeats of the corresponding somatic chromosome. a homologous gene was isolated from c. elegans. most interestingly, the c. elegans gtp-binding protein gene is also located at a telomeric position, namely at the end of chromosome v. in ascaris, transcripts of this gene are present in all developmental stages, though they seem to be stronger expressed in oocytes and early embryos than in later developmental stages and somatic tissues. a high degree of sequence conservation of these genes between the two nematode species and man (a corresponding partial cdna clone was identified in a human heart cdna library) suggests an important biological function. currently, we are using genetic methods to determine the possible function of this gene in c. elegans and to test whether its telomeric localization in both nematode species has any functional importance. it encodes a nuclear protein which is associated with she chromatin together with other probeins of the poiyoomb group. the mechanism of gene regulation caused by pelycomb seems to be similar to that of the modifier genes of the position variegation effect which also encode structural proteins of the heterochromatin. one of these proteins is hpi which shares with polycomb a region of similarity at the amino terminus called the ~omatin ~rganisation m~difier domain (chromo domain). the particular function of the chromo domain is not yet understood, but it seems to be important for the protein-protein interactions in chromatin associated complexes. furthermore, chromobox cdntai~ing genes were found in several species, suggesting that they are widespread in the animal and plant kingdoms. here we show chat ~. clemens contains at least one chromobox containing gene (cdna: cm h ). length and szrusture of the putative ~. elegs~ chromo domain protein are similar to those of the chromo domain containing prozeins of other species. the expression pattern of cm h is s:udied with antibodies raised against the putative chromo domain protein and by injecting a -ga! fusion construct inns the germ line of ~. eleman$. chromatin diminution in the parasitic nematode ascaris lumbricoides is a complex molecular mechanism, involving cleavage of the chromosomes at specific breakage regions, degradation of the eliminated chromatin and new telomere formation in all presomatic cells during the early embryonic development. the aim of the present project is to reproduce this dna elimination process in vitro, step by step or all in one, by using cell-free extracts of a. lumbricoides eggs. therefore, - cell extracts were established and their quality was assessed by the ability to transcribe s rrna genes (pol iii) and sl rna genes (pol li). faithful extracts were then tested for cleavage activity on dna substrates derived from different chromosomal breakage regions. finally, preliminary results revealed a possible non processiv rnase sensitive telomerase activity in the in vitro extracts, capable of adding specific nucleotide sequences to an oligonucleotide primer containing four repeats of the telomeric sequence traggc. as de novo synthesis of several kilobases of somatic telomere is likely to require a strong telomerase activity, we assume that this a. lumbricoides in vitro system is a good tool to isolate the telomerase protein and its corresponding gene or other implicated factors, s - university of berne, ch berne a common feature of all mycobacteria -whether pathogenic or not -is their richness and variety of lipids. among numerous lipids widely distributed, pathogenic mycobacteria exhibit a group of sulfated surface lipids thought to be determinants of virulence. therefore, we studied sulfolipid-bioslrnthesis in pathogenic and apathogenic (opportunistic) mycobacteria species by monitoring the kinetics of [ s]sulfate incorporation into cellular lipids, pathogenic mycobaeterla (two virulent m. tuberculosis strains) showed a marked sulfolipid-synthesis with highest rates during exponential growth, while apathogenic ones (an avirulent m. tuberculosis strain and an opportunistic species) manifested negligible incorporation of the label. the partial characterization of the [ s]-sulfated lipids of pathogenic mycobacteria by thin layer chromatographic separation, combined with autoradiographic detection, revealed the presence of several radiolabeled lipid components of different polarities and with altering expressionpatterns during growth. these results strengthen the hypothesis, that sulfolipids are involved in the pathogenesis of mycobacterial disease. maiada ( , ) . some features of human pf maiada are observed in mudne malaria, although the pattern of sequestration changes due to the different plasmodial species involved, in mice, we showed by immunohistocbemistry that the expression of vcam- and icam- is upregulated in brain, lung and heart of p/asmodium bergheiinfected baib/c and also in lps-pdmed cid mice. in $gid mice injected with labeled human erythrocytes (e), a higher rate of sequestration to brain was observed with pfe than with uninfected e. lps-pdming increased the retention of pfe in the brain and lungs significantly (t test), but decreased it in the spleen. we conclude that pfe express surface structures which allow them to adhere to the vasculature of the brain more efficiently than uninfected e. lps increases the number of adhesive molecules on the host endothelium. interestingly, sequestration in the cid mouse resembles that of pfe in man. f. roth, f. riniker, k. schopfer and t. burkart inst. med. microbiology, univ. of berne, ch berne it has recently been shown that bacterial lipids cancarry antigenic determinants. the study of antibody specificity to such lipid epitopes in vitro turns out to be difficult since hydrophobic antigens have to react with watersoluble molecules. we have developed a solide phase lipid antigen immunoassay (laia) that allows to quantify the antibody reactivities with an array of lipid antigens derived from mycobacterial cells. defined amounts of extracted lipids were immobilized as equidistant lines on a nitrocellulose sheet. small strips of nitrocellulose, each carrying the same sets of lipids were incubated with different human sera. bound antibodies were then reacted with [ -i]-iodine labelled antihuman antibodies and visualized by autoradiography. the reaction was quantified by densitometry. assay conditions were optimized for antigen and antibody concentrations and appropriate incubation times. in addition, the effects of different ingredients (salts, proteins, detergent) on antigen immobilization and epitope accessability were studied. the presented laia-system is rapid, sensitive and reproducible. it allows to compare the specificities of different bacterial lipid antigens and to quantify their reactivity with serumantibodies. the atomic force microscope is a very convenient tool for studying hard and flat samples with atomic resolution. biological objects, usually soft and rough, are sometimes difficult to image using this technique. in contrast bacteria, which are too small to be observed with high resolution using the optical microscope, are hard enough to be observed with an afm at a relative good level of magnification. this kind of microorganisms can be prepared for afm imaging using very rapid and simple techniques. this method could be a convenient tool to observe the effect of bioactive substances such antibiotics. we show in this poster an exemple with the action of penicillin on b. subtilis. within the family trypanosomatidae, leishmania is a protozoan pathogen producing a broad spectrum of human disease. its life cycle is divided in two stages. promastigote is the flagellated form which colonizes the gut of the sandfly vector, and amastigote is the non-flagellated form that is specialized for growth and survival in the vertebrate host macrophage. to understand gene regulation during the transition between the promasttgote and the amastigote stage, we were interested in the characterization of stageregulated genes. we isolated a gene, sw , from leishmania major whose mrna is more abundant in amastigote compared to promastigote. structural analysis of this gene showed that an additional polypeptide could be encoded by the opposite strand of sw . we confn'med the presence of an open reading frame on the opposite strand by in vitro translation of the sw antisense rna. in vivo, an amastigote sw antisense transcript and the corresponding polypeptide were also detected suggesting that the sw is transcribed in both directions and that stage specific transcripts and polypeptides could be produced. analysis of other gene segments tend to indicate that an intensive usage of the leishmania genome to produce various polypeptides could be a general phenomenon in trypanosomatidae. the four variants and / or posttranslational modifications of histone h of procyclic trypanosoma brucei brucei (protozoa, kinetoplastida) were purified by hplc reversed phase chromatograpy and characterized by their amino acid composition and partial amino acid sequence. differences in sequence of up to % as compared to histone h of higher eukaryotes exist. alkaline phospatase digestion and analysis of h by means of hpce was used to demonstrate the presence of phosphorylated modifications. the unique biochemical properties of h of t. b. brucei contribute to the structural differences seen in the chromatin of the parasite as compared to that of the higher eukaryote host. larvae of the parasitic wasp chelonus inanitus (braconidae, hymenoptera) develop inside embryonic and larval stages of the host spodoptera littoralis (noctuidae, lepidoptera). parasitism induces in the host a precocious onset of metamorphosis and developmental arrest in the precocious prepupa. the wasp injects, along with the egg, pdv and venom into the host egg. injection experiments with pdv and venom revealed that pdv play a crucial role in altering host development and in suppression of the host's immune system. the genome of the pdv of c. inanitus consists of at least i segments of double-stranded circular dna ranging in size from - kb. we analyzed the expression of viral genes in the course of parasitization with cdna made from mrna at various developmental stages of s.littoralis. we also investigated the localization of the expressed viral genes on the various segments. in addition, these bacteria were isolated and cultured from brain tissue. to identify the infectious agent we used, among other techniques, an atomic force microscope (afm). when the. isolation fluids derived from the cortex of three alzheimer's cases were examined with afm and scanning electron microscopes, we observed bacteria whose size and morphology fit to the order of spirochaetales. these images are presented and discussed on our poster. ~ottstein bruno, institute of parasitology, ch-berne. %lveolar echinococcosis ae is due to infection with the metacestode (larval stage) of echinococcus multilocularls. an immunodominant antigen em of e. multilocularis was characterized by mab-gii, respective studies revealed, that (a) antigen expression metacestode stage-sdeci-fic and (b} that expression was restricted to the laminated layer. the em -antigen i s a lectin-binding carbohydrate linked to a lipid residue. the "em positive" laminated layer proved to be a crucial factor in protecting the parasite from host immune-effector mechanisms: only e. multilocularis larval structures exp ressing em were able to induce secondary alveolar chinococcosis in rodents. subsequent experimental studies in resistant (c bl/ ) versus susceptible (c bl/ j and akr) mouse strains showed that resistance was as-sociated with synthesis of anti-em igg and igg i. sus-ceptibility of c bl/ j-mice was associated anti-em s and no igg . the parasite-specific in vitro lym-~hoproliferative i~une response remained stationary ~ith time after infection in c bl/ and decreased in r and aki< mice. day p.i. cd § -lymphoblast cells dominated in all meuse strains; day p.i. an in-creased nu/ ber of cd -/cd + and cd +/cd + cells were observed. only susceptible mice exhibited a significantly ~eereased response of lymph node cells to cona-stimula-~ien with time p.i. in conclusion, subtypes of parasitespecific cellular and humoral host immune responses seem leishmania species are protozoan parasites causing a spectrum of clinical manifestations in man ranging from cutaneous lesions to morbidity and death. the insect stage (promastigote) and intracellular stage (amastigote) differ in terms of morphology, physiology, antigenicity and gone expression. it is clear that the amastigote stage is uniquely adapted for survival within the inimical environment of the macrophage phagolysosome and that mechanisms regulating these adaptations must be called into play during the early stages of infection when the parasite undergoes transformation. in an effort to elucidate these regulatory mechanisms, we have constructed a "subtracted" cdna library which is specifically enriched for parasite transcripts expressed during the first hours of infection ("switch" genes). several clones have been characterized by sequence, northern, and southern analysis. three clones, sw , sw , and sw , are expressed at a several-fold greater level in the amastigote stage and potentially encode proteins which interact with nucleic acids. sw predicted protein is homologous with histone h proteins and sw and sw potentially encode ribosomal proteins. analyses of transcripts from this library are yielding clues not only to mechanisms underlying the regulation of parasite transformation, but also insights into post-transcriptional and translational control of gene expression in leishmania. $ - microbiology, university of geneva, medical school, c.m.u., avenue de champel, geneva . a viral rna representing the sequence of a defective interfering rna, naturally selected for efficient replication, i.e. only containing the replication promoter, was cloned under the control of the t rna polymerase promoter. the expressed transcript was then replicated in rive by supplying in trans the replication functions, equally expressed from plasmids. this system, completely accessible to genetic manipulations, allowed us to define a basic rule directing sendal virus replication, the "rule of six" (calain and roux, j.virol. : - , ig ). a second defective rna, representing a shorter version of the viral rna, in that it contains not only the replication but also the transcription promoters, was then cloned and replicated in the same system, although with lower efficiency. the replication of this "transcribing" viral rna was found to obey the "rule of six" as well. replicationitranscdpfion promoters were then achieved to define the cissequence requirements needed for efficient replication or for replication /transcdption. results obtained with these chimerical viral rnas will be presented and their contdbufion to the comprehension of the paramyxovirus replication and transcription processes bovine t-cells that become infected with the intracellular parasite theileria parva undergo lymphoblastoid transformation and acquire the ability to proliferate continuously. they cease to require specific antigenic stimulation, become independent of exogenous growth factors and cause tumors in nude mice. the il and il r genes are constitutively expressed and the transcriptional activator nfwd which regulates these two genes is continuously activated. these processes are all strictly dependent on the presence of the parasite in the host cell cytoplasm and cease upon the specific killing of the parasite by the theilericidal drug bw c. we have shown that the presence of the parasite results in the activation of the protein tyrosine kinases fyn and ick, which can participate in early t cell receptor signalling, suggesting that the parasite may use this signal transducti n pathway to induce continuous proliferation. cysteine proteinases of leishmania as targets for chemotherapy. jacques bouvier*t and judy sakanari*. *department of pathology, ucsf school of medicine, san francisco, ca, and tanimal health, ciba-geigy, ch st. aubin, switzerland. the overall goal of the study is to apply the structure-based approach to develop lead compounds and design novel enzyme inhibitors as potential therapeutic agents against leishmaniases. in this regard, we have identified and characterized the cysteine proteinases of leishmania major, and showed that they consist of excellent targets for drug design. we have purified a membrane-boand cysteine pmteinase not previously described in other trypanosomatids or protozoans and obtained amino acid sequence information from the purified enzyme. in addition, we have also characterized and purified the soluble cysteine proteinases of the parasite. consequently, we have isolated two genes encoding the soluble and membrane proteinases. the soluble cysteine proteinase gene occurs in multiple copies of . kb with flanking regions of . and . kb and is localized on one chromosome of approximately kb. the membranebound enzyme gene is . kb and occurs as a single copy on a chromosome of approximately kb. a three dimensional computer model of both genes wiu be generated and enable us to scan the vast chemical database for new lead componds. we akeady have identified several cysteine proteinase inhibitors that are effective compounds in killing both promastigote and amstigote stages of the parasite in the micromolar range in vitro without affecting the host cells. dollenn~ier, g., cassinotti, p. and weitz, m., institute for clinical microbiology and irananology, st .gallen/swit zerland hav is a ~r of the picornaviridae. its rna gencrne rf~y be divided into coding regions (pi, p and p ), qhe p region contains a protease cp ro that generates mature proteins by cis-cleavage of the initial polyprotein precursor. catalytic activity of cp r~ has been d ~aonstrated in a vacciniavirus/t ~qa-polymerase hybrid expression system. (balouter aided ali~ts of hav cp r~ sequence with that of other picornaviruses imply that amino acid residues his- and/or h) the complete hav open reading frame, hav specific expression products were identified by radioj_rmmnoprecipitation and lyy sds-page. the analysis with an antibody specific for putative nonstructural protein b revealed a , kda peptide. this is in contrast to its predicted size ( kda). however, analysis with anti-(putative) a antiserum confirmed an upstream location of the b n-terminus. the new bpeptide was also identified in lyeates of hav infected mrc- cells. hence, recombinantly expressed hav polyprotein underwent authentic processing and the predicted p organization has to be modified. we are interested in the development of animal models for one of the two major pathological changes found in the brains of patients with aizheirnar~s disease, the formation of fleuroitbrillary tangles, a main component of which is abnormally phosphorylaled tau-protaln. (tau itself is a protoin associated with mlcrotubuli.) two fundamental questions may be answered with our models: first of nit we woald like to reproduce the formation of tangles, and secondly we hope to answer the question, whether the formation of these pathological structures is sufficient for the bevalopment of senile dementia ot the alzheimer type (sdat). at present there are only a tow putative candidate genes known which may be in-voned in the hyperphosphor~lation ot tau in v/vo, one of which is the map-kinase erk . we have cloned this candidate kinase from rat txaln rna via an rt-pcr approach and expressed the cona under,the co.rat of tour different promoters in transgenis mice. these promoters were tested for maximal expression. a similar approach was chosen to express the human taut isofonn in the brain ot transganic mice. we have stated to analyze different tau an~ erk expressing lines, northern blot analysis has revealed high levels of expression for all transgenes (up to fnetoid {n comparison to endocjenous levels). the neuronal spectficry of the transgenio erk expression was c~nfirmsd by in situ hybridization analysis. ir~ addition several tauexpi'esalog tines were analyzed in wealernblots to determine the relative amount of htau= protein in the brain. sections of the brain were stained with tau-sp~c~c ardib~iies to identify the neurons expressing tau. from intemrosses of tau-with erk -expressing lines, we have already identified double-positive mice which we currer~y analyze by immunohistocbemistry and in western nots to examine the phosphorylaiton status of tau. we are well aware of the possibility that only animals trans~enic for both tau and erk might beveiop tang{es, whereas single transgenics mlsht not. pairs of individual neurons were recorded with sharp electrodes or in whole-cell configuratio~ in hippocampal slice cultures of rat. synaptic connections were studied between pre-and postsynaptie cells in ca and ca hippneampal fields by eliciting single aetinn potential in the presynaptic cell. monosynapfic excitatory connections were highly probable between ca and ca pyramidal ceils (p= . , n= ) with almost no feed-forward inhibition (p= . ). by contrast, disynaptic ipsps, blocked by cnqx or bieuculline were observed with a very high probability ( -- . ) between ca pyramidal cells. monosynaptic excitation was found ha % of cases between ca neurons (n= ) but only in % of cases (n=ll) between two ca cells. monosynaptie ipsps with very short lateneies ( ms) and are likely to correspond to a different mechanism of synchronization. these results support the hypothesis that snr cells receive common afferences of two different types and their fine temporally organized activity yields coordinated activity between the target structures. the neuronal microtubule-associated protein map binds to microtubules via a domain containing or repeats of an amino acid sequence. we have previously shown that when cultured nonneuronal cells are transfected with map their microtubules become stiffer and are then capable of supporting process outgrowth when their cortical actin cytoskeleton is depolymerised. we hypothesise that this stiffening effect of map is caused by the amino acid sequences binding to neighbouring tubulin subunits in the walls of the microtubules thus reducing their freedom of movement relative to one another. to investigate this further we have created map mutants in which or repeats of the tubulin-binding motif were deleted. these were tested by transfection and expression in cultured cells. the results confirm that the number of repeats affects the stability, stiffness and the cytoplasmic arrangement of cellular microtubules. we were previously able to demonstrate the presence ot kinin-like immunoreactive structures in the mouse brain. in order to characterize them, we have now performed a donble-immunofluorescence study using both polyclonai auti-srudykinin (bk) and mouse monocloual anti-neeron-specificenolase (nse) antibodies. the latter is considered to be a specific neuronal marker. after fixation with bonin-hollande solution, the brains were removed, embedded in paraffin and serially sectioned at am. the sections were incubated with the antibodies, which were visualized by an indirect immunofluorescence technique using fitc for nse and by an avidin-biotin technique using texas red for bk. double-immunofluorescent cells were found in the thalamus ventralis, in the nucleus cechleuris ventralis and in the nucleus mesencephaficns nervi trigemini (v). bk-positive cells in the nucleus principalis v were nse-negative ih spite of their typical neuronal aspect. the other bk-positive structures (pia, ependyma, hnic~es) also were alwa~ nse-negatlve. most of the nsepbsifive bk-negative cells were seen in the cortex. the neuronal nature of many kinin-like immunoreacfive structures in the mouse brain is thus ascertained. in contrast to the amphibian optic nerve (on), on of adult mammals is unable to regenerate after injury. astrocytes disappear from and macrophages accumulate at the lesioned site (blaugrund et al., j. neurocytol, , , ) , we have followed the distribution of astrocytes and microglial cells in xenopus tadpole ons over d after mechanical crush. astrocytes were stained for cytokeratin and vimentin, and microglial cells for griffonia isolectin b . soon after crush, immunoreactivity for intermediate filament proteins was strongly increased. astroeytic processes extended into the lesion from both proximal and distal stump. at , d, astrocytes had crossed the injured region. in the distal stump, some of them contained vacuoles indicating phagocytic activity. while in the normal on microglial cells were ramified and scarce, . d after crush they were roundish and vacuolized, and scarce within the lesion but numerous distal to it. at d, their number was decreased and most of them had reacquired ramifications. conclusively, in the tadpole on, astrocytes are virtually never absent from the lesion site but rather extend rapidly into it. astrocytes may thus provide a guiding support for outgrowing axons, microglial cells that are frequent in the distal stump, do not accumulate at the lesion. the behaviour of the two cell types differs profoundly from that in mammals and is likely to be one of the factors that may contribute to successful neuronal regeneration of the amphibian on. ci mence, j. f. , ranieri, j. p. , aebischer, p. , and sigrist, h. , institute of biochemistry, university of berne, ch- berne; division autonome de recherche chirurgicale, chuv, ch- lausanne. small peptidic sequences of laminin (yigsr, ikvav) are known to promote attachment and/or neurite outgrowth of various neuronal cell lines (pc , nb , ng - ). new and established heterobifunctional photo crosslinkers were used to immobilize these peptides in a topically defined fashion onto biocompatible surfaces such as hydroxylated fluorinated ethylene propylene (fep-oh) and pely(vinymlcohol) (pva) . n-[m[( -trifluoromethyl) diazirine- -yl]phenyl]- -maleimido-butyramide (mad) was thermochemically linked to the synthetic peptide cdpgyigsr via its n-terminal cysteine, leaving the bioactive part (yigsr) free for cell receptor interaction. mad-cdpgyigsr was radioactively labeled by reductive methylation and purified by reversed phase hplc. patterned ( and #m) peptide immobilization was attained by photocoupling onto pva and fep-oh and visualised by autoradiography. light-structured biomaterial surfaces with molecularly oriented nerve growth promoting peptides were investigated for spatially controlled neuronal cell attachment and differentiation. it is striking to observe that these inhibitory or stimulatory effects were corroborated by binduced decrease or increase in -deoxyglucose uptake, respectively. this gives b a putative role in the limbic regulation. the sheet-like processes of oligodendrocytes wrap themselves spirally around central axons, thus formtng the myelin sheath. a single oligodendrocyte may donate internodal segments of myelin to each of - or more adjacent axons. it is not known, if one oligodendrocyte picks out axons randomly or if it prefers axons with a certain diameter or with a certain chemical specificity. we have studied this last possibility by combining intracellular injection of a fiuorochrome, and immunohistological detection of calciumbinding proteins (cabp's), markers for the axons ef certain subpopulafions of nerve ceils. lucifer yellow was injected into oligodendrocytes of the optic nerve, of living rat brain slices. the oligodendrocytes were identified by their electrophysiologieal properties. slices containing the iniected cells were immunostained /or parvalbumin or calretinin using second antibodies labelled with texas red. using co.focal laser-scanning microscopy combined with a three*dimensional reconstruction programm, the relationship between oligodendrocyte processes and axons positive for one of the cabp's was determined. for ultrastructural confirmation, single, lucifer-yellow injected, oligodendrocytes were photoconverted, and the cabp's-positive axor~ were revealed by gold-labelled antibodies. the few oligodendrocytes injected show the classic morphology, that is of a small cell body and few processes running parallel to the course of the axons. the proximity between glial processes and positive axons can be easily appreciated in confocal laser-scanning images. a preferential assodation of oligodendrocyte processes with parvatbumin-positive axons has not as yet been found. thus, the confirmation of the hypothesis that oligodendrocytes choose their axonal targets according to chemical cues awaits further work including the injection of a lar~er number of these cells. to initiate a molecular genetic analysis of brain development in insects, we are characterizing the mechanisms of embryonic brain development in the fly drosophila. early in embryogenesis, a small number of molecularly diverse brain neuroblasts generates the neurons of the brain. subsequently, pioneering brain neurons initiate axonal outgrowth along glialbound brain compartments. these pioneering neurons establish the primary brain tracts. the pioneering brain axons express the cell-cell adhesion molecule fasciclin i dynamically during outgrowth and initial fasciculation; a subset of the pioneering axons expresses fasciclin ii. the axonal framework of the embryonic brain tracts is used for outgrowth and fasciculation by subsequently differentiating axons and, thus, prefigures the tracts of the mature brain. a comparison of early brain development in drosophila and in vertebrates reveals common mechanisms for brain development. supported by the swiss nsf. institute ot histology, university of fribourg, p~rolles, ch- fribourg calretinin (cr), an ef-hand ca +-binding protein, is expressed in cajai-retzlus cells during development of the rat cerebral cortex. these cells are located in the marginal zone and are the ear{iest cortical neurons to be generated. they have been consldered as unusual on account of their morphology and their fate during corticogenesis. the functional significance of cajai-retzius cells and their destiny in adulthood is still controversial. in order to approach these questions we have applied organotypic culturing methods. slices of neocortex from brains of - days-old rat pups were cultured for - days applying the interphase technique (stoppini etal, j. neurosci. methods , ) or the roller-tube technique (g&hwiler, j. neurosci. methods , i ) . the fixed cultures were immunolabe ed with an antibody against cr. the obtained results showed that cr positive structures develop in vitro like in vivo. however, in organotyp[c cultures their distribution corresponded to a more mature stage than the situation on the day of the explantations. many cr-positive cells were seen in layer l they were horizontally oriented or had a pyriform shape. based on their morphology these ceils were identified as cajai-retzius cells. orpositive cells were numerous in layer i -l[i and showed mostly a bipolar morphology. some muripo[ar cells could also be observed. a fine net of crpositive fibers and puncta was found in layers [ and iv. the demonstration that cajai-retzius celts are detectable in these cultures will allow us to follow the fate of these cells dynamically and [nte~ene in their function by applying exogenous factors. cervical primary afferent input to vestibule-spinal neurones projecting to the dorsal horn: a double labelling study in the rat. wheat germ agglutinin-horseradish peroxidase (wga-hrp) was injected by pressure into cervical spinal ganglia c or c . in the same experiments fluorogold (fg) was iontophorefically injected into the ipsilateral dorsal horn of different cervical spinal cord segments. anterogradely labelled fibers (wga-hrp) were present mainly in the external cuneate nucleus, but also to a lesser extent in the caudal part of the medial and descending vestibular nuclei (mvn, dvn) . the fg injections, restricted to the cervical dorsal horn, revealed retrogradely labelled cells in the central part of the caudal mvn. a double exposure (fluorescent and polarisadon optics) under the microscope showed primary afferent fibers surrounding like baskets retrogradely labelled fg cells. the projection from cervical ganglia cells to the mvn represents a pathway for direct afferent information from neck receptors (in particular muscles) to vestibular nuclei and supplies the mvn with afferent information which could enable the vestibulospinal nenrones, projecting to the dorsal horn, to influence the local information processing. in the sciatic nerve, all myelinated and non-myelinated axons were snap-ir. in peripheral tissues, all nerve endings were positive. the preterminal schwann cells of motor axons were also snap- -ir. after sciatic nerve section, many myelinating sehwann cells also expressed snap- -ir. in conclusion, snap- is expressed by neurons in the pns. it seems to be also expressed by preterminal schwann cells and by myelinating schwann cells during regeneration. $ - repair of completely transected spinal cord of neonatal opossum in culture h.a. vischer, dept. pharmacology, iocenter, uni. of basel, switzerland woodward et al. (j. exp. biol. , have shown that fibers grow rapidly and profusely across a lesion made by crushing the spinal cord of the neonatal opossum monodelphis domestica. in such experiments careful controls must be made to establish that fibers were in fact broken by the lesion. tests have now been made to determine whether similar repair can occur after a more drastic lesion involving complete transection of the cord. after dissection of the entire gns from animals aged - days, the cord was cut into two with scissors at the c -c level. the two-ends were glued together with matrigel on a sylgard mold, which encompassed and held the cns. the rostral end was labeled with the fluorescent carbocyanine dye dil in order to visualize growing fibers. in preparations fibers grew over the cut into the separated part of the spinal cord. such growth could extend to ixm. fibers grew straight, branched and multidirectionally, or in fascicles. in another set of experiments cords were combined from different animals of the same or different ages. again, fibers could grow across the cut but they did so less frequently. these results set the stage for investigating fiber growth after rotating the two ends at a defined angle and for analyzing factors that influence the direction of growth. map la is a microtubule associated protein of kd. in rat brain two monoclonal antibodies, a and bw , recognized map la in neurons and their axonal and dendritic processes. in mouse cerebellum, monoclonal a recognized purkinje ceils and granule cells uniformly, as already described for rat brain. in contrast, monoclonal bw stained selectively some dendrites of purkinje cells, forming bands in the molecular layer. we compared this striation with that obtained with a monoclonal antibody, anti-zebrin ii, which recognized aldolase c. in the mouse vermis, zebrin stained in a striated pattern, but complementary to bw . these results demonstrate that map la is present in forms which are differentially distributed in the mouse cerebellum. these observations may be explained either by differences in metabolic states of neurons, or by differences in their regional functions, or by differences in the regional stability of microtubules. this work was supported by grant no - . from the swiss national science foundation. serum free aggregating brain cell cultures prepared from day old fetal rat telencephalon are used as a model to study brain development. in these cultures it is possible to distinguish ontogenetic events such as cell proliferation, differentiation and myelination, in the present study we examined synaptogenesis by analyzing the expression of synaptic proteins such as synaptophysin, snap- , synapsin i, and brain spectrin. different developmental stages were analyzed by western blotting. immunoreactivity for synaptic proteins was detectable already at day in culture, suggesting that the first synapses are already present at this early stage. the expression of synaptic proteins strongly increased between day and day in culture, reflecting a period of intense synaptogenesis. treatment of the culture with an elevated concentration of kci ( mm) increased the expression of synaptic proteins, suggesting a stimulation of synaptogenesis. these findings demonstrate the utility of this approach to study brain synaptogenesis, and possibly synaptic plasticity. drenhaus, u.i gunten, a.v., rager, g. ; institute of anatomy, university of ch- freiburg the retina of tupaia comprises three types of ganglion cells (rgcs) analogous to x-, y-, and w-cells found in other mammals. these cells differ in size and in their distribution pattern: large rgcs are frequent in temporal, small rgcs in nasal retina. as the fiber diameter correlates with the size of its respective rgc, it can serve as a parameter for the topographic representation of rgcs in the nerve. to study this we analyzed the optic nerves of three tupaia. using the electron microscope we recorded the density, diameter, and the position of fibers in the nerves. we found, that fibers with the largest diameter are located dorso-temporally and close to the center of the nerve. they are surrounded by zones of smaller fibers. the diameter decreases gradually towards the periphery and is smallest in the ventro-nasal region of the nerve. since the fiber diameter distribution corresponds to that of the size of rgc-types in the retina, we assume that the topographic relationships in the nerve and the retina are similar. (supported by s - stoppini luc, s. duport, l. parisl, c. oropes~, departement of pharmacology, cmu, geneva the micro environment of the central nervous system is important for neuronal function. in this context, the blood-brain (bbb) provides and maintains the extracellular medium that is compatible with normal neuronal and synaptic activity. due to the difficulties inherent using whole animal as an experimental model to study permeability and metabolic processes at the cellular level, major efforts have been engaged in recent years, in order to bring up suitable /n vitro models. we are presently developping an in vitro bbb by interfacing a coculture of endothelial cells monolayem and nervous organotypic cultures. the main idea of this study is based on the premise that the complex intercellular interactions between the different cell types pertaining to the nervous tissue and the neighbeurlng endothelial cell is of fundamental importance to promote a realistic bbb system. we expect that erganotypic culture of nervous tissue, combined to endothelial cell monolayers, will initiate and maintain a bbb phenomena/n vilro. we will test more specifically the hypothesis that neuronal activities [spontaneous or elicited) will influence gila] cell response which will in turn modify endothelial properties. preliminary results clearely show a good nervous tissue and endothelial cell survival. tight junction llke structures could be identified using freezefracture or conventional transmission electron microscopic thechniques. {work supported by chemodyne gent~ve ). the process of myelination is a prerequisite for the proper function of the brain since it enables rapid saltatory conduction of axons. in the central nervous system (cns) myelination is performed by oligodendrocytes. a differential screening approach was used to isolate new rat cdna clones that are expressed in this glial cell type. here we report the further characterization of two of these novel cdnas which appear to be expressed specifically in oligodendrocytes. the two characterized cdna clones (tentatively called cns and cop- . ) share an approximately bp region of sequence identity which suggests that they are dedved from the same gene by alternative splicing, within this area a putative open reading frame is located. we demonstrated by northern blot analysis and in situ hybridization that the two mrnas of the novel gene are expressed exclusively in oligodendrocytes. however, the mrnas show a different specific spatial localization within the cell. we compared mrna expression of myelin basic protein (mbp) and proteolipid protein (plp), with that of cns and cop- . in brain and optic nerve during development. it appeared that the mrnas of the novel gene were delayed significantly as compared to mbp and plp mrnas. streit. phyaiologisches institut, btihlplatz , bern in organotypic slice cultures of the embryonic spinal cord, rhythmic spontaneous activity arises when the inhibitory synaptie transmission is blocked. the rhythmic activity consists of bursts of regular oscillations of activity at - hz. this study investigates the origin of the regular oscillations. when stimulated electrically at hz, the synaptic transmission in the cultures showed strong depression by about % on average. the synaptie depression was highly variable among individual connections and tended do be less pronounced in frequently used connections. when random depression ratios with an average of % at hz were implemented in a computer model consisting of randomly connected excitatory cells, regular oscillations of activity did not arise, even in the presence of synchronous pacemaker cells. however, when individual depression ratios were adapted according to the rate of activity of individual connections, regular oscillations at - hz arose in the presence of few unsynchronized pacemakers. this finding suggests that the regular oscillations in the cultures originate in a network formed by the plasticity of synaptic depression. maier a., schlumpf m., beer h.f., sehubiger p.a. and lichtensteiger w., inst. of pharmacology, univ. of zurich, the ontogeny of expression of dopamine d receptor mrna in the rat brain and binding to the receptor was studied at time points from gestational day (gd) to postnatal day (pn) by quantitative receptor autoradiography and in situ hybridization.long evans rat pups and fetuses of time pregnant rats were frozen and sectioned coronally and sagitally at i um. d recepto~o~inding , determined with the selective antagonist ~ji-sch was first noted on gd in the developing striatum, basal ganglia and the olfactory tubercle, reaching adult levels at around pn . the expression of d i receptor ~na was studied by using a mixture of -~js-labelled oligonu-specific cleotides. on gd messages were noted in the developing stiatum, olfactory tubercle and retina. this study shows a good regional correlation between the development of receptor binding and mrna, however, mrna precedes detectable binding to the receptor by several days. earlier work had shown that q~ replicase forms complexes with q~, plus strand rna via interactions at two internal binding sites, the s-and the m-site, while binding of the '-end is mediated by host factor. in contrast, the '-end of the minus strand appeared to be directly accessible by replicase. we have prepared a series of plus and minus strand variant rnas containing either internal deletions or terminal deletions extending from the '-end. the template activities of the variants were determined by single-round replication assays. for the plus strand we find that while deletion of the s-site remains without effect (as expected from previous results), deletion of the m-site reduces template activity to % or less compared to wild-type rna; the residual activity shows a decreased dependence on the presence of host factor. the results agree with an important role of the m-site interaction both with replicase and with host factor for the formation of productive initiation complexes. the template activity of the minus strand was unexpectedly found to be strongly dependent on the presence of a segment between nt and from the '-end. this shows that recognition of the minus strand by rep(icase does not only involve interactions near the '-end but requires a previously unknown structural feature near the '-end of this template. $ - karsten graning and angela kr&mer d~partement de biologie cellulaire, universite de gen~ve, , quai emest-ansermet, gen~ve splicing of nuclear pre-mrnas takes place within multicomponent complexes (spliceosomes) that are assembled by interactions between the pre-mrna, snrnps and protein splicing factors. we have purified two splicing factors that function in the formation of the pre-splicing complex. sf a consist of three subunits of , and kda and corresponds to three proteins present in the functional s but not in the s u snrnp. it binds to the s u snrnp only in the presence of sf b, suggesting a two step assembly pathway of s u snrnp: binding of sf b to the s u snrnp generates a s intermediate particle that is converted to the active s u snrnp by the subsequent association of sf a. comparison of proteins enriched in the sf b fraction with polypeptides found in the purified s u snrnp suggests that sf b comprises at least five of the other s u snrnp specific proteins and together with sf a promotes the u snrnp/pre-mrna interaction. by edna cloning, two of the subunits of sf a have been identified as homologs of well characterized yeast proteins that function at the same stage of spliceosome assembly in yeast. splicing factor sf , a heat-stable -kd protein, functions early during spliceosome assembly. tryptic peptides of sf were sequenced and cdna libraries were screened with degenerate oligonucleotides. the information obtained by comparing the sequences of three overlapping cdnas suggests the existence of at least three mrnas that could be derived from a common pre-mrna by alternative splicing. in agreement with this assumption mrnas of the expected sizes that are differentially expressed depending on cell line or tissue are detected by northern blotting. in theory, three polypeptides could be generated that differ by the presence or absence of internal amino acids and in their ctermini. the deduced amino acid sequence is rich in prolines and contains several possible phosphorylation sites and a putative leucine zipper. proline-rich domains, which are also present in splicing factors psf and sap , as well as leucine zippers have been found in transcription factors and could mediate protein/protein contacts, suggesting that sf could function during splicing by interaction with other spliceesomal proteins. pre-mrna splicing is catalyzed by a multicomponent complex (the spliceosome) that consists of small nuclear ribonucleoprotein particles (snrnps) and non-snrnp protein factors. the spliceosome is assembled in a stepwise fashion on the pre-mrna. chromatographic fractionation of hela cell nuclear extracts and subsequent reconstitution of splicing in vitro has allowed the separation and isolation of snrnps and several protein factors. sf triggers the transition between splicing complex b, which contains all spliceosomal snrnps but is not competent for catalysis, and complex c, the active spliceosome. this transition involves a conformational change that leads to altered base pairing interactions between snrnas and pre-mrna. the purification of sf has been impeded by its low abundance; however, a correlation between sf activity and a polypeptide of kd could be established in the most purified fractions. we are currently investigating whether this protein represents sf . interestingly an atp-dependent rna-helicase cofractionates with sf through several purification steps. whether or not this activity is relevant for the splicing process is under investigation. selection of iron-responsive element rnas with high affinity for iron regulatory factor henderson, b.r., menotti, e., bonnard, c. , and kith_n, l.c., isrec, ch-i epalinges iron regulatory factor (irf) post-transcriptionally regulates iron homeostasis via binding to mrna iron-responsive elements (ires). the ire loop sequence ( '-cagugn- ') and "bulge" cytosine are phylogenetically conserved. we prepared a pool of , ire molecules randomized at these nucleotide positions, and employed in vitro selection to identify optimal sequences which bind human irf. we define two major classes of high affinity rna ligand, the optimal loop sequences of each are '-cagugn- ' (wild-type) and '-uaguan- '. this novel finding predicts base-pairing within the loop between positions i and . all nucleotide substitutions in the "bulge" or at loop positions , and decreased binding by % to %. in addition, binding specificity of rat irf differed with that of the related rat ire-binding protein, irf b. in vitro analysis of ire-like stem-loops identified by computer search has not yet revealed any new ire-containing genes. a $ - ' processing of histone pre-mrnas: a phylogenetic comparison reto kohler, petra duda and daniel schiimperli. zoologisehes institut der universtit/it bern, abteihing fiir entwicldungsbiologie, baltzerstr. , ch- bern, switzerland. we are using a phylogenetic approach to study the biochemical reaction by which animal histone pm-mrnas are processed at their ' ends. in mammals, the efficiency and specificity of this reaction is known to depend absolutely on the u snrna which interacts with conserved spacer sequences downstream of the proc~sing site. a highly conserved hairpin element which precedes the cleavage site serves as a binding site for an additional processing factor, but its importanea for efficient processing varies greatly between different historic genes and between extracts of different mammalian cell lines. to determine whether the relative importance of the hairpin and spacer dements have been conserved during evolution, we analysed the processing of histone genes from three different animal phyla in vitro, i.e. vertebrates (mouse), arthropods (drosophila melanogaster) and nematodes (c. elegans). in the mouse system, processing was strongly dependent on the presence of a mouse spacer element. in nuclear extracts of drosophila ke cells, processing occurred exclusively when a drosophila spacer element was present in the rna. processing efficiency was not reduced by foreign (mouse, c. elegans) hairpins. in whole cell extracts of ascaris lumbricoides embryos, an inverted situation was observed. ' processing products were only produced by rnas that included an upstream segment derived from a c. elegans histone gene, irrespective of the spacer sequences present. these surprising results correlate with certain unique features in the c. elegans upstream element. we are currently in the process of cloning ascaris lumbricoides histone genes, which will allow us to verify our results in a homologous system. in xenopus laevls ooeytes, wild type mouse u rna gets assembled into functional u snrnps, both when transcr~ed from an injected gene or when injected as/n vitro synthesized rna. if the sm binding site of u rna is converted into the canonical sm sequence (u sm opt), the rna assembles into a particle which accumulates more efficiently in the nucleus but wbach is nonfunctional. this u sm off particle inhibits the function of preformed endogenous u snrnps, most likely by nonproductive binding to histone pre-mrnas, histone pre-mrna processing can be demonstrated in c/s if u rna is placed ' of hlstone pre-mrna and injected into oocytes. only u sm wt sequences are active in this c/s processing. three proteins can be photoaffinity cross]inked to u sm wt rna, the common snrnp proteins g and b/b' and a u -specific protein of kd ( kd in mouse). these crosstinks map to closely spaced positions within the sm binding site with the u -specific crosslink being located most '. u sm opt rna does not become crosslinked to the u specific protein and is also more tightly associated with sm proteins. we now investigate the in vitro assembly of u snrnps using these characterized u rnas and a preparation of highly enriched snrnp proteins. u sm wt and u sm opt rnas associate with common sm proteins in this system, but the interaction with the u -speciflc protein could not be demonstrated. the double-stranded (ds)rna modifying enzyme, which can convert adenine to inosine, was first identified in xenopus laevis, but has since then been detected in different species and in mammalian cells. the enzyme is a specific adenine deaminase which uses dsrna as substrate and recently, it has been postulated to be responsible for a specific mrna editing reaction. we have purified this enzyme to homogeneity, approximately , fold from calf thymus whole cell extracts. the protein was purified primarily by ion exchange chromatography over six columns, with the final step being chromatography on a dsrna affinity column. the purified protein has a molecular weight of kd and is the only protein present when enzymatically active fractions are visualized on an sds-polyacrylamide gel stained with silver. the dsrna modifying enzyme is a very low abundant protein. we are in the process of further characterizing the purified enzyme and of cloning cdnas coding for it. detailed mutational analysis of histone rna ' end formation carmen spycher, andr furger, adrian streit, daniel albrecht, d. schiimperli, zoologlsehes iustitut der universtit/it bern, abteilung thr entwicklungsbiologie. baltzerstr. , ch- bern, switzerland histone rna ' ends are formed by cndonucleolytic cleavage resulting in poly(a)" mrnas with a highly conserved '-terminal hairpin loop structure. for the mouse h - gene major and minor processing sites are located and nucleotides downstream of the hairpin, respectively. for the cleavage reaction, the u snrnp interacts with the spacer element of histone pre-mrna by base-pairing through the ' end of its rna moiety, u rna. we have observed that this base-pairing potential extends further than previously recognised in either direction. we have made site-directed rnutagenesis in fltis potential hybrid region and around the processing site. rna processing and complex formation with the u surnp were analysed by incubation in nuclear extract from mouse k cells. our results indicate that base-pairing with u rna both in the classical spacer element and downstream of it are very important for histone rna processing. in contrast, sequences upstream of the spacer element do not seem to be involved in base-pairing with u rna, but mutations in this region may affect processing by other mechanisms. systematic mutations of the highly conserved four nucleofides immediately following the hairpin show no qualitative or quantitative effects in the processing reaction. alteration of nucleotides to around the minor processing site, however, result in a dramatic decrease in processing efficiency and alter the specificity of the cleavage site. in further experiments we will introduce specific nuclcetidc modifications at the two processing sites, which should allow us to characterize potential cleavage factors by chemical crosslinking. evolution callaerts p., glardon s., j.,oosli f., quiring r. and gehring w. cell biology, biozentmm, basel. the pax genes encode a family of dna binding factors which share the paired-box and play an important role in the control of development. they can be subdivided into four different classes which differ in the presence or absence of other conserved sequence motifs coding for a paired type homeobox or an octapeptide. the pax- gene, which contains a paired-box and a homeobox, has been cloned from humans, mice, rats and zebra fish. recently, we have cloned the pax- homologue of drosophila melanogaster. the five genes share a very high degree of sequence identity both in the paired-domain and the homeodomain. similar to its mammalian counterparts, the drosophila gene is expressed in the eye primordia and the nervous system. in addition, mutations in pax- affect eye development: aniridia in humans, small eye in mouse and rat, and probably eyeless in drosophila. this would imply that the pax- homologues share a conserved function in eye morphogeuesis in both vertebrates and invertebrates. furthermore, this suggests that pax- may have been present in a common ancestor. therefore, we are now trying to isolate pax- homologues from other, more primitive organisms by means of the polymerase chain reaction, and to determine whether they are implicated in eye development. putative candidates have been identified from a number of species and are being characterized. their sequence similarity and some evolutionary implications will be discussed. keegan liam and gehrin~ walter j., biozentrum, university of basel, klingelbergstr. , ch- basel, switzerland using an enhancer map screen we have identified two genes that may be direct targets of antennapedia involved in forming the adult leg. spalt major is repressed in the leg imaginal disc and tea, shirt is activated by antennapedia. we wish to determine whether the control of these genes by antennapedia is direct, spalt major is expressed in a ring in the antennal disc and is repressed by antennapedia in the leg disc. the antennal ring is repressed by ectopie antennapedia expression that transforms the antenna to a leg. we are defining an enhancer at spalt major that is required for antennal ring expression and repression by antennapedia. we are using various approaches to show that antennapedia binds to the antennal ring enhancer at spalt major. these include polytene chromosome banding studies using antibodies to antennapedia as well as in vitro dna-binding and genetic experiments. in search for novel regulators potentially involved in myogenesis, we identified a homeobox of the paired type in human muscle. subsequent cdna cloning revealed that we had cloned the full length coding region of human pax . our human sequence extends the known mouse edna both on the ' and the ' end. as a first step in order to test for a functional role of pax in myogenesis, we analyzed its expression pattern during chicken development. transcripts are present in the neural tube and in the dermamyotome of the developing somites. therefore, the pattern of expression of pax is conserved between mouse and chicken. next, we assessed the expression of pax in different mouse and human cell lines. we found pax transcripts specifically in myogenic cells and not in any other cell types. interestingly, pax is already present at the myoblast stage. moreover, ti/ fibroblasts converted to myoblasts by either transfection of myod or treatment with -azacytidine expressed pax , whereas the parental cells did not. while myod was able to activate pax in t / cells, expression of pax was not sufficient to induce the myogenic phenotype. nevertheless, our expression data are consistent with a role of pax during the mesodermal commitment to the myogenic lineage. the segmental organization of the drosophila head is achieved by a flow of positional information from maternal gene products to the zygotic gap genes. recent genetic analysis has identified three new gap genes involved in head development. one of these genes is the empty spiracles (ems) gene. mutations in eras cause severe defects in the head and the filzk~rper at the posterior end are missing. the eros gene encodes a putative transcription factor with a homeodomain. the eros rna is expressed in two phases of embryonic development. first expression is seen at the blastoderm stage in a single anterior band, correlating with its function as an anterior gap gene. later during embryogenesis eros is expressed in the posterior spiracles as well as lateral regions of each segment where the tracheal pits form and lateral neuroblasts originate. using g-gal fusions we could identify at least five different regulatory elements in the eros promotor region responsible for tissue specific expression of the gene. a bp element responsible for the early expression which is dependent on the maternal gene bicoid, the key gene of the anterior system, and the terminal gene tailless was identified and studied in detail. this element contains two bicoid and two tailless binding sites. the effects of muations in these binding sites on eros expression will be discussed.this analysis should allow us to elucidate the molecular mechanisms by which the morphogen bicoid regulates subordinate target genes like ems in the drosophila embryo. the pax- gene of the mouse encodes a transcription factor with both a paired-and a homeodomain. pax- is affected by several allelic mutations in the small eye (sey) gene. sey mutations cause a reduction of the eyes in heterozygotes, and homozygotes lack both eyes and nasal openings and die as newborns. the corresponding mutation aniridia in humans affects eye and cranlofacial development in a similar manner. we have isolated a pax- homolog from drosophila (dpax- ), which shares more than % sequence identity in the paired-and the homeodomain with the mammalian genes. also outside of these domains we find considerable sequence conservation arguing for a true pax- orthologue. the drosophila gene spans ~ kb and is expressed in the brain and the ventral nervous system of the embryo, and in the eye imagjnal discs and the brain of the larva. the gene was mapped to the eyeless (ey) locus. mutations at the ey locus cause either the partial or complete absence of the compound eyes or embryonic lethality. in one ey allele we have identified a transposable element in the first intron of dpax- , which affects dpax- transcription in the eye discs, suggesting that dpax- is encoded by the ey gene. this implies that pax- (sey) in the mouse is homologous to ey in drosophila. thus, despite of the different modes of eye morphogenesis, the same gene seems to control eye development in insects and vertebrates. the drosophila homolog of the vertebrate serum response factor (srf) was isolated by low stringency-hybridization. nucleotide sequence analysis revealed that the drosophila srf homolog (dsrf) codes for a protein which displays % of sequence identity with human srf in the mads domain, the region required for dna binding, dimerization and interaction with accessory factors. the dsrf gene is expressed during several phases of embryonic development. both the rna and the protein are maternally provided to the egg and slowly decrease in their levels during gastrulation. after germ band retraction, high levels of zygotic expression were observed in a distinct subset of peripheral tracheal cells distributed throughout the embryo. many of these cells are at the tip of tracheal branches and are in direct contact with the target tissues these branches tracheate. the dsrf gene was mapped to position c on the second chromosome, and overlapping deficiencies which remove the gene were identified. analysis of tracheal development in embryos carrying these deletions revealed a degeneration of most of the major branches of the tracheal system. although the initial migration of tracheal cells was not affected in those deficiency embryos, many tracheal cells appeared not to maintain their formerly correct position and continued to migrate. thus, the dsrf gene might play a role in the proper formation and maintenance of the major branches of the trachea. s - our experiments would be expected to provide insight into such problems as the evolution and function of transcription factors with multiple dna binding domains. ideally, we would be able to mimic "gene splitting" which occurred during evolution. the poan gene plays an important role during drosophila neurogenesis. it is expressed in specific subsets of sensory mother ceils (smcs) and neuroblasts. the smcs that express poxn differentiate into polyinnervated external sense (p-es) organs. in the absence ofpoxn, smcs differentiate into mono-innervated rather than poly-innervated external sense organs. as the poxn gene contains a paired-box, it probably encodes a transcription factor. since the function ofpoxn in the central nervous system is not known and no po~n mutants are available, an ems mutagenesis screen was initiated to isolate such mutants. based on the assumption thatpoxn null alleles are lethal, we screened for lethals uncovered by the deficiency df( r)wmg, which includes poxn, but survive over the deficiencies df( r)xte- and df( r)kl- flankingpoxn. in a further test, such lethals are screened for the absence of embryonic p-es organs. ifpoxn mutants are not lethal, they will escape this screen. therefore, we are inducing local hopping of p-elements that have inserted in the vicinity of poxn. the offspring of flies that display an altered eye phenotype are screened for p-element insertion into poxn. we hope that these approaches will generate mutants that will be crucial for future studies ofpoxn function in neurogenesis. chromatin structures and transcription of rdna in yeast saccharomyces eerevisiae reinhard dammaun, renzo lucchini, thee keller and jest m. sogo; institute of cell biology, eth-honggerberg, ch- ziirich the chromatin structure of yeast ribosomal dna was analyzed in rive by cross-linking intact cells with psoralen. we found that in exponentially growing cultures the regions coding for the s rrna precursor fall into two distinct classes. one class was highly accessible to psoralen and associated with nascent rnas, characteristic for transcriptionally active rrna genes devoid of nucleosomes, whereas the other class showed a cross-linking pattern indistinguishable from that of bulk chromatin and was interpreted to represent the inactive rrna gene copies. by cross-linking the same strain growing in complex or minimal medium, we have shown that yeast ceils can modulate the proportion of active (non-nueleosomal) and inactive (nucleosomal) rrna gene copies in response to variations in environmental conditions which suggests that yeast can regulate rrna synthesis by varying the number of active gene copies, in contrast to the vertebrate ceils studied so far. whereas intergenie spacers flanking inactive rrna gene copies are packaged in a regular uucleosomal array, spacers flanking active genes show an unusual cross-linking pattern suggesting a complex interaction of regulatory factors and histories with dna. $ - r. felleisen & b. gottstein; institute of parasitology, university bern, bern, switzerland most patients suffering from alveolar echinococcosis (ae) respond to infection with a marked igg synthesis directed against e.multilocularis metacestode antigen ii/ , which represents a novel member of the family of cytovillin related proteins. although the respective gene basically is also present and expressed in e.granulosus, most of the cystic echinococcosis (ce) patients do not recognize the antigen. this phenomenon was tackled by generating cdna derived from full length ii/ genes from both echinococcus species, performed by rt-pcr. sequence analysis revealed a very high degree of conservation of the primary sequence ( . % homology), cdna fragments were expressed as recombinant proteins and were comparatively assessed in elisa respective to antibody-binding characteristics. sera from patients suffering from ce were showing no significant differences in reactivity with the antigens derived from both species. therefore, parameters others than minor differences in the primary sequence seem to be responsible for the lack of antigen recognition with respect to ce. $ - patrick rigoni, sandro rusconi, institut f molekularbiologie h der universitat zarich, winterthurerstr. , z~rich, switzerland. trinuclcotide repeats are often found in the coding sequence of transcriptional regulators in both mammals and yeast, however, their function is yet unclear and data collected in our laboratory on the gheocorticoid receptor even suggest that they may not have any, and that their presence is probably the result of a selfish replicative behavior. nonetheless, we believe that these motifs can be used as tags to identify flexible protein domains typical of modular proteins such as transcription factors. another kind or repeat (coding for a poly-glutamine/alanine) has been discovered in the yeast regulators gall and ssn . from northern blots, we know that such caggcn repeats are present also in higher eukaryotes and we want to isolate them by constructing an enriched edna library using a ' race protocol. so far, no mammalian protein bearing the motif glrdala has been characterized. among the positive clones we hope to find the homologous or paralogous of gall and ssn that have escaped so far conventional cloning techniques. meanwhile, we have been testing the effect of coexpressed yeast gall on different reporter-activator combinations in mammalian cells. preliminary results show that galll but not the mutant form galllp can inhibit the activation properties of some (not all) gal chimeras. we are also producing antibodies directed against oligo-ala and oligo-gln and oligo-gln/ala motifs in order to better characterize natural proteins containing these repeats. we are interested in the early development of c. elegans, particularly in the contribution of genes whose homologues in vertebrates and d. melanogaster mediate positional infolzzations during development. therefore, we are working on ceh- which belongs to a cluster of at least homeobox containing genes. this cluster is considered to be equivalent to the homeotie cluster of drosophila and to the hox clusters in vertebrates. by generating ~-galactosidase transgenie lines, we have observed that ceh- is expressed very early during embryogenesis, embryonic expression appears to be restricted to the posterior half of the embryo, which is rather surprising, since the ceh- hemologues in drosophila and vertebrates are anterior-specific. during larval stages, ceh- is expressed in neuronal cells. these results are now in the process of being confirmed by immunolocalization of the ceh- protein product with a polyclonal antiserum. in order to clarify the function of ceh- in the c. elegans development, we have isolated a ceh- mutant from a tcl insertion library, in collaboration with r. h. a. plasterk from amsterdam. from this worm, which looks wt, we are now trying to obtain a deletion derivative. previous studies have shown that bovine herpesvirus (shv- ) infected cell pratein (bicp) acts -depending on the promoter -as a strong transactivator or as a repressor in transient expression assays. the cp polypeptide contains a cysteine-rich zinc finger domain (c hc ) which is conserved in a number of viral and cellular regulatory proteins including the icp homologs icr of herpes simplex virus type and protein of varicella zoster virus. this type of zinc finger (the so-called ring tinge was shown to bind zinc ions but functional requirement for zinc has not yet been demonstrated, a gap which we aimed to fill with the present study. transient expression assays were performed in oocytes which had been microinjected with thionein to chelate and deplete the intracellular pool of zinc. cp -induced cat activity of a promoter-cat construct was -fold higher than the basal cat activity of the reporter plasmid, in the presence of thionein, bicp -induced transaotivatlon was reduced old. with a set of control experiments we excluded that thionein might affect transcription and protein synthesis in general, to our knowledge this is the first demonstration of zinc-dependence for a member of the ring finger family. we have identified by pcr and edna cloning five pou genes expressed during early embryogenesis of zebrafislx four of these genes show extended homology to the brn- class of pou genes. preliminary evidence suggests that the brn- like pou genes overlap with most of their expression domains.the gene studied in most detail so far (zp- ) is first expressed on the ventral side of the future fore-and midbrain. slightly later, expression is also found in rhombomeres and in the hindbraln. these rbombomeres were identified by the specific expression of the krox- marker using a novel in situ hybridization protocol which allows the simultaneous detection of two different transcripts using different color substrates. in the hours old embryo a complex expression pattern is found involving a variety of brain structures and the spinal cord. the distribution of the transcript suggests that zp- is mostly expressed in glia cells. another pou gene we have identified (gp- ) defines a novel class of pou proteins. as a maternal mp, na it is initially ubiquitously present. after gastrnlation its transcript is found most notably in the developing hindbrain in rhombomeres and for which so far no good molecular markers were known. we are investigating the roles the identified pou genes may have in zebrafish hindbrain segmentation. we are currently attempting to manipulate gene expression in developing embryos by injection of rna or by the production of transgenic fish. we are also screening the zebrafish genome for new developmental marker genes. progress about these experiments will be presented. $ - willimann, t. and trueb, b. to gain insight into the regulatory mechanisms of collagen vi synthesis we have characterized the cis-acting elements of the chicken ctl(vl) collagen promoter. footprinting experiments with nuclear extracts from chicken embryos revealed three distinct elements, designated a, b and c, that were protected from dnase i digestion. the nuclear proteins that interact with the three sites were identified by gel retardation assays in combination with the use of various oligonucleotide competitiors as well as specific antibodies raised against well-characterized transcription factors. site a was found to be a target for transcriptional activator apf, whereas sites b and c were shown to be recognized each by two distinct nuclear proteins which belong to the spl multigene family. to address the question whether the three sites alone are able to direct transcription, a minipromoter construct was created in which the sequences of sites a, b and c were placed in front of a reporter gene. after transfection into chicken fibroblasts, this construct exhibited a high relative promoter activity when compared to a large genomic fragment containing the basic ctl(vi) collagen promoter. thus, the three sites are sufficient to induce transcription of this gene. octamer transcription factors (oct or otf) are a subset of the pou family of transcription factors which regulate expression of cellular and viral genes by binding to the octamer sequence atgcaaat. neurons and astroglial cells harbour, in addition to the ubiquitous oct-i factor, brain specific factors termed n-oct , , and . in the present study we determined the chromosomal localization of the gene encoding the n-oct transcription factor and characterized the structure of isolated n-oct genomie clones. the chromosomal mapping was performed by analysis of somatic cell hybrid panels and radioactive and fluorescence in situ hybridization of human metaphase chromosomes. it is interesting that the ' end of the n-oct coding sequence contains repetitive cag and ggc residues. several disorders have been discovered to be related to expansion of trinucleotide repeats. we are presently investigating if the n-oct cag or ggc clusters are hot spots for such mutation mechanisms and if so, which diseases could be associated with it. two dna regions upstream of the distal glucocorticoid receptor binding site interact with nuclear proteins that are tissue-specific (region a) or ubiquitous (region c). the characteristics of the dna-protein interactions have been studied in vitro. these sequences, in different combinations with the natural mmtv promoter, were tested in transfection assays of fibrcblast or mammary cell lines. we show that they are able to modulate the level of glucocorticoid-stimulated transcription. the proximal region of the mmtv promoter has binding sites for the transcription factors ctf/nf-i and oct- . p~asmids with a deletion or mutations in the oct- site were tested in stable transfections, that are most representative of the state of proviral dna with respect to both number of integrated dna templates and chromatin organization. we show that the oct- site is important for the basal level of promoter activity. the data further indicate that the functional outcome may depend beth on the relative ratio of factors to dna templates and on the relative affinity of binding sites, as determined by oligonucleotide competition footprinting. besides the fact that telomeres represent specialised structures important for chromosome stability, the particular significance of cloned c. elegans telomeres is that they will contribute to the completion of the physical mapping of chromosomes and that they provide one set of elements for the construction of artificial c. elegans chromosomes. the cloning of c. elegans telomeres, however, is impeded by the fact that tandem repeats of the sequence ttaggc are not only located at the ends of the c. elegans chromosomes, but also at many internal chromosomal sites. therefore, we have developed a special protocol for the construction of a c. elegans endlibrary in ~ zap. the resulting telomeric library was screened for recombinants containing ttaggc repeats and yielded about positive clones. so far, were analysed by partial sequencing and twelve of them satisfy all criteria required for telomeric clones. their ttaggc tandem repeats are located at the expected position, namely just adjacent to the blunt end cloning site in the polylinker. furthermore, the g-rich strand of the repeats is oriented ' to ' towards the end of the fragment, thus corresponding exactly to the defined orientation of eukaryotic telomeric sequences. finally, hybridisation data with one of these putative telomeric clones show that a subtelomeric fragment hybridises to bal -sensitive fragments on a southern blot with c. elegans dna, indicating that this clone represents a c. elegans telomere. $ - to investigate whether chromatin structure or transcription can interfere with replication, derivatives of the yeast trp ars minichromosome were constructed that contain either the ded or pet promoter firing against the origin of replication ars . while the pet constructs transformed yeast at high frequencies and were maintained as high copy number minichromosomes, the ded constructs transformed at low frequency and the constructs were integrated in the genome suggesting that ars function was impaired. insertion of the h -ars, a second origin of replication, rescued a ded construct as a minichromosome (yrpdh ).the chromatin structure mapped at low and high resolution of the ars region in yrpdh was indistinguishable to that of the pet construct yrpft . ananlysis of rna showed that transcription was going through ars in yrpdh and in yrpft , but the levels of transcripts in yrpdh were much higher. we conclude that transcription through are interferes with replication and prevents extrachromosomal maintenance. dna sequence of a repeated dna segment on circular and linear plasmids of borrelia burgdorferi w.r. z%ckert and j. meyer, abt. pzmom, zahn&rztliches institut der universit~t basel a plasmid-associated repeated dna segment of b. burgdorferi strain b was cloned. at least two copies of this segment appear to be present on the kb circular plasmid, whereas one copy is carried on the kb linear plasntid of this strain. dna sequence analysis revealed a region containing a novel bp putative open reading frame (orfl) on the kb linear plasmid, orfl displayed extensive sequence homology ( %) to putative open reading frames present on the clones obtained from the kb circular plasmid. heterogeneity is mainly caused by rd-base-wobbllng. flanking sequences share - % homology, including the ' end of an additional putative open reading frame irmaediately downstream of orfl. whether orfl and/or the related sequences are being transcribed and yield, in the case of orfl, an approximately . kd, lysine-rich polypeptide, is yet unknown. the repeated sequence seems to be specific for b. burgdorferi sensu lato and therefore may be useful in nucleic acidbased diagnostics of lyme disease. $ - similar to type ib oculocutaneous albinism in humans, overall production of pigment is greatly reduced in dark eyed albino and only obvious in eyes. we have studied the molecular basis of the c h mutation and show that expression of the tyrosinese gene is not affected. after sequencing tyrosinase cdna isolated from c h/c h homozygotes we uncovered a single base alteration from wild type leading to a serine to isoleucine exchange. the importance of this mutation was demonstrated by generating transgenic mice containing a mutated tyrosinase minigene. this showed that the single base change is sufficient to severely depress pigment production in transgenic mice. we therefore conclude that the point mutation is responsible and sufficient to generate the dark eyed albino phenotype. members of the pou-family of transcription factors are involved in developmental and differentiation processes. using a pcr-based cloning strategy with degenerated oligonucleotides we identified several pougenes from the lactating and involuting mouse mammary gland. three of these cdna clones which contained as yet unknown sequences were chosen for further investigations: clone . which has a high homology to pit-l, clone . which is related to the brn- gene and clone . which belongs to the class iii of pou-proteins. the expression levels were analyzed in different mouse organs and in several developmental stages of the mammary gland, including the postlactational process of involution. because of the low abundance of the specific transcripts we used a semiquantitative, reverse transcriptase-mediated pcr assay to investigate the mrna levels of the three novel pou-family members. distinct and specific expression patterns for all three members were obtained in the different investigated organs. interestingly, the expression of the pit- related cdna clone , was elevated in all developmental stages of the lactogenic-hormone dependent mouse mammary gland and in sceletal muscle, whereas its expression was low in other organs. repetitive sequences in dna can allow ectopic (outof-register) homologous recombination, which is often undesirable and can even lead to disease in humans. to prevent this, long homologies should often be interrupted during evolution. accelerated mutation of repetitive sequences by so-called ripping may be one of the mechanisms used to accomplish this in fungi. we are investigating if introns in vertebrate genes have an undiscovered role as interrupters of homology within and/or between genes, in addition to their established role in exon shuffling. by inserting homology-poor introns in an otherwise homology-rich region the genome could prevent ectopic homologous recombination. such a mechanism could be especially useful where there is an advantage in encoding highly repetitive protein sequences. it appears that within the collagen gene family there is indeed a correlation between repetitiveness and intron density. the influence of prenatal diazepam exposume (i, mg/kg/d, s.c.) from gestational day to on the development of the ~-opioid binding sites in striaturn, nucleus accumbens and midbrain of pn , pn and week old male and female rats was studied. week old prenatally diazepam exposed male rats showed a significant decrease of k-opioid binding sites in the nucleus accumbens. a sex-dependent difference in k-opioid binding site densities could also be detected between pn prenatally diazepam exposed male and female rats. we now investigate by in situ hybridisation whether changes in the level of mrna encoding fo~ prodynorphin, the precttrsor for various endogenous ~-opioid agonists, could be responsible for the decrease of ~-opioid binding sites in the nucleus accumbens of week old prenatally diazepam exposed male ~ats. $ - distribution and morphology of nitric oxide-positive neurons in the marmoset cerebral cortex during pre-and postnatal development j.p. hornung* and j. schultz** *institute of anatomy, university of lausanne, lausanne, and **university of fdbourg, fribourg nitric oxide, synthesized by the enzyme nitdc oxide synthase (nos), is a neuroactive substance and a limited number of neurons were shown to express this enzyme either by histochemistry or by immunocytochemistry. both techniques were performed on brains of marmosets with ages ranging from weeks before birth to adult. the morphology and distribution of nos-positive neurons were analyzed in all lobes of the cerebral cortex. the same pattern was revealed by histochemistry or immunocytochemistry. three populations of nos-positive neurons were revealed. first, a transient population of neurons in the molecular layer of the embryonic cortex, many having the morphology of the retzjus-cajal cells. a second population was made of large multipolar neurons in the deep layers of the cortex and the underlying white matter, which persisted from embryonic to adult life. a third, permanent, population was made of small, weakly reactive neurons in the supragranular layers appearing postnatally, this study demonstrates that no can exert its actions in the cerebral cortex through several pathways at different developmental stages. trimethyltin (tmt), a well-known neurotoxicant, was used to study the sensitivity of the different brain cell types (i.e. neurons, astrocytes, oligodendrocytes and microglial cells) to a neurotoxic insult. aggregating brain cell cultures of fetal rat telencephalon were treated during days with tmt at different concentrations, ranging from - m to - m. microglia were found to be the most sensitive cell type, since already at - m of tmt an increased number and clustering of griffonia simplicifolia-positive ceils could be observed. at - m of tmt astrocytes showed increased staining for glial fibrillary acidic protein, characteristic of gliosis. neurons and oligodendrocytes appeared to be the least sensitive cells, since a decrease in the activity of cell type-specific enzymes was observed only at - m of tmt. these results show that microglial cells and astrocytes respond to a toxic insult before any neuronal changes could be detected, and that the microglial reaction may be the first target of tmt. this reaction could then trigger the astrocytic response. vif is widely distributed in brain with suggested functions related to development. vip expression was studied during rat brain development using hybridization histochemistry with a met probe. vip mrna was found in thalamic nuclei on el , later recognized as the ventrolateral and reticular nuclei after further maturation during prenatal period, vip mrna was found in hypothalamus, especially suprachiasmatic nucleus on el and its expression matured over the next days. few cortical neurons contained vip mrna on e , they continuously increased in number and signal intensity over the perinatal period. vip gradually matured in the first three postnatal weeks and adult-like patterns were found on p , when cerebral cortex, ventrolateral and reticular thalamic nuclei, hypothalamus, esp. suprachiasmatic nucleus, were the regions with most prominent vip expression. these results demonstrate the relatively late appearance of vip gene expression in the rat forebrain, as compared with peptides like srif and cck, not suggesting a major role in earlv brain maturation. in primary cultures of mouse cerebral cortical astrocytes, a rapid glycogenolysis followed by a massive glycogen resynthesis ( six-to ten-fold over basal levels after hr) are induced by vasoactive intestinal peptide (vip) or noradrenaline (na). both actions of these neurotransmitters are mediated by camp. since the induction of glycogen resynthesis triggered by vip or na is abolished by inhibition of transcription and translation, we applied the -d gel electrophoresis technique to search for astrocytic proteins induced by vip or na. the comparison of s-labeled proteins from primary astrocyte cultures treated or not with vip ~tm revealed two newly synthesized proteins: a kda protein (pi= ) and a / kda protein (pi= ). only the latter is visible on a silver stained -d gel, which is a prerequisite to consider its purification and microsequencing. induction of the / kda protein by vip was time-dependent with a maximum at - hr. preliminary results indicate a similar induction by na and isoproterenol. in humans, the central analgesic effect of tramadol (t) is only weakly reversed by the ~t opioid antagonist naloxone (nx) (br j clin pharmacol ; : p). t analgesia may thus result from an action on monoaminergic pathways as suggested by in vitro and animal data. we therefore investigated the effect of ct -adrenoeeptor antagonism by yohimbine (y) on t analgesia. according to a randomised double-blind crossover and placebo (p) controlled design, healthy volunteers (n= ) received t ( mg orally), followed (+ h) by y ( . mg/kg intravenously), and y + nx ( . mg intravenously). analgesia was assessed over h by subjective pain threshold (numerical scale -ns-) and objective pain threshold (rill nociceptive reflex -riii-) monitoring. peak analgesic effect was observed at ca. . h (riii + . +semi. ma and ns + . + . ) vs p (rih - . + . and ns + . + . , p< . ) and lasted ca. h. y reversed t analgesic effects during ca. h (r/ii - . + . , p< . and ns + . + . , p< . ), whereas y + nx abolished t effects thoughout the study period (rill - . - . and ns + . + . , p< . ), y alone tended to lower pain thresholds (rill - . + . and ns - . + . , p> . anova). yohimbine, an r antagonist, reverses tramadol effects, thus pointing to the major role of monoaminergic modulation in tramadol anfinociception. a monoclonal antibody (in-l)was raised against neurite growth inhibitory proteins present in rat cns myelin (caroniand schwab, neuron : , ) . in- neutralizes the inhibitory ettect of cns tissue in vitro and in vivo, thus permitting regeneration of certain lesioned cns fiber systems. we have used this antibody to immunostain cryostat sections of the nervous system of the rat. we found that in- stains white matter and myehnated fiber tracts in the cns. the staining pattern corresponds to that of the known myelin specific antigens mbp (myelin basic protein), mag (myelin associated glycoprotein) and mog (myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein). the staining of in- in the cns is found in regions of the adult nervous system which have been shown to be inhibitory for axonal growth. interestingly, the regions which show a high abundance of in- antigens are low in staining for gap- , a marker for growth and plasticity in the developing and adult brain. in contrast, gap- is strongly expressed in unmyelinated fiber tracts or nuclei. prevention of oligodendrocyte development in rat spinal cord resulted in suppression of in- expression and elevated gap- levels. this suggests that inhibitory myelin proteins may negatively influence plasticity in the rat cns. to date, the existence of anp and npy in the adrenal medulla has been shown only for a few mammalian and anuran species. thus the present immunohistochemical investigation attempts to localize anp-like and npy-like peptides n the adrena gland of representative mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibia and bony fish by the use of antisera specific for mammalian anp and npy. furthermore, the catecholamine-containing cells were characterized by antisera against enzymes of catecholamine synthesis. anp-and npy-immunoreactivies were detected in adrenal chromaffin cells of all vertebrates studied while no immunoreactivities were observed in the adrenal cortex or in its homolog, the interrenal. the representatives of the different vertebrate classes exhibited marked differences in the proportions of anp-immunoreactive and npy-immunoreactive cells, in the presence of anp-and npy-immunoreactivities in noradrenalineand/or adrenaline-containing cells and in the amount of of cells containing both anp-and npy-immunoreactivities. our results give evidence for a long phylogenetie history of adrenal anp-and npy-like peptides. thus, they stress the physiological impact of these peptides as adrenal paracrine and/or endocrine hormones. human neuronal growth inhibitory factor (gie) is involved in the regulation of neuronal growth and is deficient in the brains of alzheimer's disease victims. this brain-specific metalloprotein consists of amino acids out of which are cys and has been found to contain copper and zinc. proteins with similar primary structure were isolated from bovine and equine brain. the amino acid sequence of these proteins shows about % homology to those of mammalian metallothioneins (mt), with two conserved inserts of thr and a glutamic acid rich hexapeptide in the n-and c-terminal regions, respectively. in contrast to mts, which usually contain only zn(i ), the presence of cu(i) and zn(ii) ( - moles total) in all gif isolations suggests the functional importance of both metals ions. to spectroscopically probe the native zn-binding sites, the zn(ii) ions were replaced by cd(ii). both bovine and equine cd/cu-gif derivatives exhibit similar absorption and cd spectra with features characteristic of cd-thiolate clusters. the release of h-arachidonic acid evoked by glutamate was characterized in cerebral cortical neurons in primary culture grown under conditions that prevent glial cell proliferation. in these cultures, % of the total ceils are immunocytochemicauy characterized as being positive for specific neuronal markers such as neuron-specific enolase and neurofilament. specific markers for astrocytes, oligodendrocytes or microglia were not detected. glutamate induces a concentration-dependent release of h-arachidonic acid with a ec of pm. the pharmacological profile of this glutamate response shows the involvement of two receptor types: the nmda and the ampa ionotropic receptors. the glutamate-evoked release of h-arachidonic acid is phsensitive. when the incubation buffer is alkalinized from . to . , both basal and glutamate evoked release of h-arachidonic acid are enhanced. the glutamate response is also enhanced as intracellular ph is alkalinized by pharmacological treatments: such as inhibition of c -/hco -antiport by dids. these results further stress the role of intracellular ph in glutamate-mediated neurotransmission. $ - multiceli culture system for the study of drug kinetics wechsler d., *schittny j.c. and honegger u. e., depts. of pharmacology and *anatomy, university of bern, ch- bern a cell culture system was developed for the investigation of cellular drug kinetics in cultures with up to cell types. it was used for the study of uptake, competitive uptake, release and redistribution of drugs. individual cell types (human skin fibroblasts, rat astrocytoma cells (c ) and rat hybfidoma ceils (oligodendrocyte x astrocytoma, roc)) were separately grown to confluency on glass circle sectors. in the same petri dish sectors in various combinations were exposed to media containing radiolabelled chlorpromazine (cpz). single and repetitive uptake and release of cpz were measured in each cell type after individual exposure or exposure in any combination of cell types: in hour competitive uptake studies fibreblasts reached . and . times the concentrations of c -and roc-cells, :respectively. in redistribution experiments the exchange of cpz from preloaded to unloaded cells was tested. the exchange rate was dependent on cell type and loading period. it decreased with increasing time of exposure suggesting the formation of more stable cpz stores. we have previously demonstrated that certain neurotransmitters such as vip, noradrenaline (na) and adenosine promote glycogenolysis in mouse cerebral cortical astrocyte cultures (brain res. : - , ) . the question that we then addressed was the nature of the metabolic substrate released by astrocytes following glycogenolysis. we therefore determined the presence of various metabolic substrated released from astrocytes under static conditions and in the superfusate of a laminar flow system developed in our laboratory. neither glucose nor any intermediate of the tficarboxylic acid cycle could account for the decrease in glycogen stores; astrocytes however were shown to release great quantities of pyruvate and lactate at a rate of nmol/mg protein/minute. noradrenaline but not vip promotes a significant increase ( %) in lactate release. the effect of noradrenaline is mimicked by isoproterenol and inhibited by propranolol, suggesting a i~adrenergic mediation. when astrocytes are incubated in an isotonic solution containing no energy suhstrate, the glycogen stores are rapidly depleted and lactate, but not glucose, is released in the medium. in conclusion, lactate appears to play a major role in cerebral energy metabolism homeostasis, as substrate released by astrocytes to prey!de energy fuel for neurones and other neighboring cells. it is known so far that calcium-binding proteins (cabps: calbindin, pan, albumin and ca/retinin) are expressed in some cells of the pineal gland of laboratory mammals. the exact phenotype of these cells is unknown. nevertheless, according to recent studies, it seems that some of them are ganglion cells. therefore we studied the pineal gland of different species (gerbils, rats, goats, cows and humans) using calretiain (cr) antibody which is considered as marker for neurons (andressen & al, cell & tissue rss, t: , ) , the cr-expressing cells were found in all oar species: in gerbils, rats, cows and humans they were scattered throughout the parenchyrna, whereas in goats they lined mostly the pericapillary spaces. according to our findings, it seems that most of the reactive ceils are rather neuron-like elements since morphological criteria for true neurons (axosomatic synapses, nissl bodies, bundles of neurofilaments) are missing. however one cannot exclude that among these cells some are intrapineal ganglion cells, because of ranvier's nodes found along the processes of some crpositive cells. thus, it is possible that these cells are involved in the modulatory control mechanism of the pineal neurohumoral activity and/er by accumulation of intracellular calcium in the formation of pincal calcifications. besides the excitatory amino acid transmitter glutamate, its sulfur containing analogue homocystcic acid (hca) could play a role in excitatory processes in the central nervous system. hca is present in and released from nervous tissue and is a potent neuronal excitant, predominantly activating n-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (do et al., ) . these properties are suggestive of a classic synaptic neurotrausmitter role. on the other hand, hca seems to be localized not in neurones but in glial cells (grandes et al., ; tschopp et al. ) . the efflux of hca is temporally delayed following activation of specific pathways (klancnik et at., ) ; these latter observations are not in accordance with the classic concepts of synaptically-mediated neurotransmission. a laminar flow superfnsian system of monolayer cultures was developed and the released materials from mouse cortical astrocytes, previously preincubated with [ s]-methioulne, were investigated. during application of either noradrenaline or the b-adrenergie agonlst isoproterenol, the extracellalar level of [ s]-methianine was decreased and that of labelled hca was increased. this effect was not observed with the -adrenergic agonist methoxamine, and could be blocked by the ll-adrenergic antagonist propanolol these results, combined with the delayed hca release, the glial localisatian of hca and its neuroactivity, strongly suggest a potential role of hca as a gliotransmitter, modulated by noradrenaline inputs. vasoactive intestinal peptide (vip) induces long lasting metabolic effects in the mouse cns. we have investigated a shorter neuromodulatory action of vip on the synaptic responses in coronal slices of adult mouse cingulate cortex by means of intracelhilar current clamp recordings. electrical stimulation of the underlying white matter evoked a multiphasic synaptic potential consisting of early epsp~ early ipsp, late epsp and late ipsp mediated by non-nmda, nmda, gaba a and gaba b receptors, respectively. vip ( . ~d~l) superfused for rain. had no effect, whereas concentrations over . ixm selectively and reversibly depressed the nmda-medlated responses in / cells. in the presence of cnqx ( [tm) and biencuuine ( ~tm), the isolated nmda-mediated late epsp was still attenuated by . ~m vip in / cells (mean:- % al~er rain.). in other cells vip induced a spreading depression (sd) and a strong, reversals inhibition of the late epsp (mean:- % after min.).these results indicate that in the absence of gabaergic inhibition vip can induce two types of effects in the mouse cingulate cortex, a prolonged decrease of the nmdamediated syaaptic response and a striking sd. interaction between vip and glutamate on c-fos mrna expression. |.-l. martin, d. gasser and p.] . magistretti. institut de physiologie, universit de lausanne, lausanne, switzerland. the regulation of c-los mrna expression by vip and glutamate was examined in primary cultures of neurons originating from the mouse cerebral cortex. in primary cultures of cortical neurons, vip increases camp levels and stimulates c-los mrna expression. interestingly vip stimulation is completely blocked by mk- , an nmda receptor antagonist but not by cnqx or ap , which antagonize ampa/kainate and metabotropic receptors respectively, c-los expression stimulated by glutamate shares the same pharmacology. these results suggest an involvement of endogenously released glutamate in the stimulation of c-fos mrna expression evoked by vip. furthermore, when added together, vip and glutamate interact synergistically to increase cfos mrna levels. consistent with the pharmacology of vip and glutamate, the synergistic interaction between vii' and glutamate on c-fos mrna expression is also inhibited by mk- . interestingly, this synergism is completely inhibited by h- , a protein kinase a inhibitor, whereas staurosporin and kn- which block protein kinases c and ca++/calmodulin dependent respectively exhibit smaller inhibitory effects. presynaptic proteins involved in neurotransmitter release (i.e. synapsin, b- ) and some postsynaptie gaba a receptor subunits possess phosphorylation sites for camp-dependent protein kinase (pka) and/or protein kinase c (pkc). the functional consequences of phosphorylation by these kinases is not known. we have studied the action of specific activators of pkc and pka, phorbol ester (pdbu) and forskolin, respectively, on gabaergic synaptic transmission in area ca of hippocampal slice cultures. pdbu significantly enhanced the amplitude of evoked monosynaptic ipscs (in cnqx and ap ), and both pdbu and forskolin increased the frequency of spontaneous miniature ipscs (m[pscs) in the presence of cnqx, ap and ttx. this effect by pdbu was antagonized by staurosporin, a protein kinase inhibitor. pdbu and forskolin did not change the amplitude or decay of mipscs, suggesting that only presynaptic kinases are involved. furthermore, pdbu enhanced mlpsc frequency by a comparable amount in the presence of the ca + channel blocker cd +, indicating that pdbu did not enhance gaba release from presynaptic endings by facilitating ca + influx into axon terminals. valiunas, v., sc~ilinsky fluri, g. and weingart, r. arachidonic acid (aa) reversibly impairs the gap junction conductance (g~) in cardiac cells. now, we examined whether aaacts directly or via its catabolites. experiments were performed on pairs of neonatal rat myocytes using a dual voltage-clamp method. we used blockers which interfere with enzymes of various catabolic pathways. pretreatment with i ~mpoca (blocks carnitine acyltransferase i) did not prevent the decline in g by i ~m aa; i.e. intermediates of p-oxidation are not involved. similarly, preexposure to i ~m indomethacin (blocks the cyclooxygenase pathway) did not prevent aa from uncoupling; this rules out an involvement of prostaglandins and thromboxanes. exposure to ~mndga (blocks the - ipoxygenase pathway) per se produced a decrease in gj. likewise, exposure to i ~m etya (blocks the - ipoxygenase pathway) also impaired gj. these effects cannot result from accumulation of endogenous aa because preexposure to ~m bpb (blocks phospholipase a ) did not prevent ndga-or etya-induced uncoupling. exposure to ~m skf -a (blocks the epoxygenase pathway) also produced a decrease in gj. hence, ndga, etya and skf -a, compounds with different biochemical actions and of different chemical structure, act on g~ either directly or via an unknown mechanism. $ - potential changes associated with electrical activity in nonmyelinated nerve fibres a. robert and p. jirounek d~partement de pharmacologie, cmu, gen~ve simuheneous measurements of the extracellular concentration of k + ([k+]e), and of the concomitant changes in the membrane potential (era) were measured in the rabbit vagus nerve during and after a period of activity. during a hz stimulation there was a large increase in the [k+]e , accompagned by a change in era, which roughly followed the depolarization expected from the increase in [k+] e . at the end of the stimulation, although the [k+]e was still elevated, the nerve developed a posttetanic hyperpolarization (pth). the pth was generated by the electrogenicity of the na+-k + pump, but its amplitude and time-course were strongly affected by two depolarizing currents: (i) an inward ba +-sensitive current of k + and (ii) an outward current of ci-. we hypothesize that during activity and during the early phase of recovery there was a ba +-sensitive uptake of potassium by the schwann cells. the ci" current, by short-circuiting the na+-k § pump, contributes to the control of the e m, and by this way to the driving force for the inward k § current. overdose of ifosfamide has ooo/red in a canc~c patient ( g i.v. iy / hours with g as ~utectarfe). urir~ collece{on was obtaj/ ed in hour ~ fcr t~o days. c~ was measured ~ a gas liquid d~romatogr~ method of the u ~ ~ (s~@pl. v, pag. - g) ~sir~ a ~e~s ar~ ni~, sensitive ths~mi(~ ic d~. ~ u~s p~mt ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ m~/ h and r~/ h at day one ard day res~ec~vely. ~ _h=~=mmtly ~ has also bsm foa~ in mti~s ~ mgh e~e ~ ~ (~/o~e). w~n ~ ~s am/nist~ to rats (i~ m~/~ ~c m~f~ intraperit~neally), no ~ omild be detected in urine within ht~r~ after drug administl- (cicn. from these ~ data we conclude that c~ is extensi~_ly metabolized in rats and ~ mscbard_sm of ~ el ~mlnaticn in pati~rfc t=cj_ne m~cjlr[c reflect a flmicticrsl der~,~t of c~ m~t~ olisn in man to ifo~=~de ~tion. there are numerous reports of improved memory functions in rats following a dietary supplementation with choline. in some cases, this improvement can be related to enhanced cholinergic transmission (mack et al., behav neurosci., , - , ). but it is not clear whether there is a general improvement in memory or whether specific aspects of learning and memory are affected. this work was aimed at analysing the effects of perinatal cholinergic supplementation on the development of spatial abilities and upon adult performance. choline supplementation ( . g./l. in . m saccharine solution in tap water) was maintained during two weeks before birth. additional supplementation was maintained from the th to the oth week postnatal. spatial learning capacities were studied at the ages of , or days in a cimular swimming pool (morris place navigation task) and at the age of of months on a homing board. adult and aged rats were tested on a radial maze. selective aspects of the performance were markedly improved. this treatment had no specific effect upon spatial memory per se, but, instead, affected learning abilities by promoting efficient behavioural strategies hypothetically based on active representation and anticipation processes. the effects of the treatment remained evident up to months following the supplementation. barcelona, e- bellaterra females of both lines (n=b/grp) were injected sc daily between days - of pregnancy with vehicle (v), i(di) or (d ) mg/kg diazepam, or not(c). in these studies(a,b) their - mo old offspring were subjected to a -run session in a shuttlebox(a: males, females of each line/condition) or a min session in a hexagonal tunnel maze with strategically-placed barriers and a lit central arena(b_: - males of each line/condition). a: the freezing behavior of ld rats was reduced ~s lc, this behavior reverting more to escapes in males & avoidances in females, although v had an effect in the latter also. no within-line differences in inter-trial responses were seen, but pre-session activity was increased in female lvs and ldis, returning to lc levels for ld s. no differences existed among the h groups. b: whereas h maze activity exceeded that of l, no wtthin-line differences appeared. hd s entered the lit arena less than hcs or hvs, indicating an increased timidity after pnd, and a trend in the same direction existed for ldi/ld vs lv. two groups of abstinent female smokers, performing either a fixed rate or a subject paced version of a rapid information processing task were compared. both groups participated in two test sessions (in which the task was performed twice) to compare two different types of cigarettes which were smoked before and during the second task trial: a) the subject's habitual cigarette with a nicotine yield of at least . mg/cigarette and b) a nearly nicotine free test cigarette with a tar yield comparable to that of the habitual cigarette. reaction times to correct detections (series of three odd or even digits in a pseudorandom sequence of single digits) were longer with the subject paced version and not affected by the type of cigarette but shorter with the fixed rate version and even more decreased with the smoking of the habitual cigarette. on the other hand, the pre-to posttreatment increase in the subject paced processing rate was greater with the habitual than the test cigarette. it was concluded that the two task versions assess different cognitive functions. whereas the fixed rate version primarily assesses vigilance performance and seems to be more suitable to measure changes in reaction time, the subject paced version is more sensitive to changes in speed capabilities in rapid information processing. heart rate, physical activity, and cigarette consumption were continuously recorded under field conditions, whereas subjective craving was assessed six times per day and saliva cotinine was measured once daily. abstinence, habitual cigarettes (with a nicotine yield of at least . mg/cigarette), and nearly nicotine free test cigarettes but with a tar yield comparable to that of the habitual cigarettes were compare~) in a sample of twelve female smokers for two days each. whereas physical activity was similar for the three conditions, heart rate was highest with the habitual cigarettes, lowest on abstinence days and in between with the test cigarettes. cigarette consumption was similar for both types of cigarettes and subjective craving was higher on abstinence than on smoking days but no differentiation between the two cigarette types was obtained. saliva cotinine values were highest on the days with the habitual cigarettes but lower and similar with the test cigarettes and on abstinence days. it was concluded that heart rate and saliva cotinine depended only on the amount of nicotine absorbed, whereas subjective craving was reduced by smoking independently of the actual nicotine yield of the cigarette. (ptps) is the rate limiting enzyme in the synthesis of bh, in man, a cofactor for several hydroxylases involved in catecholamine and serotonin biosynthesis. the human and rat liver cdnas encoding the kda subunit of ptps were expressed and the recombinant enzymes purified to homogeneity. the apparent k~ for the substrate, pi and heat stability of the re-combinant enzymes were similar to the native enzymes. the rat enzyme was crystallized and the x-ray structure showed a hexameric native form arranged as a sandwich of two trimers. three histidine, a glutamic acid, and -also shown by site-directed mutagenesis -a cysteine residue characterize the active center of the enzyme thought to be mg +-dependent. according to the proposed ligands we replaced mg * by fe § or mn ~+ and observed an enhanced activity up to %. m. neerman-arbez, v. cirnlli and p. halban. laboratoires/eantet. centre m dical universitaire, gen~ve . pci( ) and pc , members of the mammalian family of pro-protein convertases homologous to the yeast kex , are both expressed in pancreatic islets of langerhans and are thought to be responsible for the conversion of proinsulin to insulin and c-peptide in beta cells. however, the insulin secreting beta ceils are not the only ceils present in these complex microorgans, prompting us to evaluate the expression of pc and pc in islet beta and non-beta cells. rat islet cells were sorted by autofluorescence activated flow cytometry to separate beta cells from non-beta ceils and conversion cndoprotease levels were analysed by western blotting. in beta cells, pc levels were higher than pc (pc /pc = . + . ) whereas the opposite was found for non-beta cells (pc /fc = . • confirming that pc is important for proinsulin conversion while suggesting a role for pc in the conversion of proglucagon, prosomatostatin and propancreatic polypeptide. transformed murine cell lines (insulin-producing beta-tc and glucagonproducing alpha-tc) were found to faithfully reflect the primary rat cells in terms of their pc /pc ratios. finally, post-translational modification of the convertases themselves was found to differ between cell-types, in particular, a precursor kd form of pc accumulated in beta cells whereas only the fully processed kd form was detected in the non-beta cells. the kringle ( + ) domains (k + ) were successfully expressed in e. coil a n-terminal hexahistidine tag was fused to insure the isolation of k + by affinity chromatography on a ni- +-ntaagarose-column. to be able to remove the hexahistidine tag a factor xa cleavage site was introduced between the histidine residues and the n-terminus of the kringle structures. the correct arrangement of the disulfid bonds was determined by amino acid-and sequence analysis. the lysine binding site was proven by affinity chromatography on iysine-bio-gel, as previously shown for k . the dissociation constant of k + was measured by intrinsic fluorescence titration with -aminohexanoic acid. a replication protein a copurifying dna helicsse from calf thymus anthl georgakl, narendra tuteja, blrglt sturzenegger and ulrich hobscher department of veterinary biochemistry university of z rich-lrchel winterthurerstrasse f ch- z rich, switzerland a dna helicase from calf thymus copurified with replication protein a through several steps of purification including deae-sephacel, hydroxyapatite and single stranded dna cellulose. it is finally separated from replication protein a on fplc mono q where the dna helicase elutes after replication protein a. we named this new calf thymus enzyme dna helicase f. characterization of the helicase f by affinity labeling with [a p]atp indicated that the enzyme has a catalytic subunit of kda. gel filtration experiments suggested that dna helicase f can exist both in a monomeric and an oligomedc form. the enzyme unwinds in the ' -> ' direction in relation to the dna strand it binds. all eight deoxyribonucleoside-and ribonucleosidetriphosphates could serve as an energy source. testing a variety of dnndna substrates indicated that the dna heitcase f preferentially unwinds very short substrates and is slightly stimulated by a single stranded '-tail replication protein a allowed the dna helicase f to unwind longer dna substrates up to bases suggesting that copurification of replication protein a with the dna helicase might be of functional relevance. , , , ', ', '-hexachlorobiphenyl ( -cb) shows limited elimination and extensive storage in adipose tissue in vivo (lipophilie unmetabolizable compound) while chlorpromazine (cpz) is known for its lysosomal storage. uptake and release of -cb and cpz were studied in t -preadipocytes (p) and t -adipocytes (a). t -cells were cultivated in dulbecco's minimal essential medium supplement with % fetal calf serum and grown to eonfluency. differentiation was stimulated by dexamethason and bezafibrate exposure for h. radiolabelled -cb ( ~tm) or cpz ( ~tm) was added to the medium. following a single dose - % of cpz were taken up within an hour into p and a. in contrast, -cb reached an intracellular plateau of - % of the dose after lh in p whereas dependent on the triglyceride content a accumulated up to % of the dose. -cb uptake into a was temperature dependent and not saturable with repetitive daily doses up to week. -cb uptake into p was fully reversible while the release from a was limited to % of the accumulated drug. in contrast, the release of cpz was higher from p than from a as a consequence of the different lysosomal activities of the respective cells. the use of t cells allowed to show a remarkable difference in cellular handling of neutral and basic lipophilic drugs and may be helpful to further elucidate basic mechanisms involved. chronic granulomatous disease: an attempt to reconstitute the function of the x-linked form of the disease. chronic granulomatous disease (cgd) is a group of congenital immunodeficiencies that predispose patients to recurrent severe bacterial and fungal infections. the cause of the disease is lack or impairment of -production in phagocytic cells due to mutations in any of the four components of the superoxide producing system. approximately % of all cgd patients suffer from an x-linked form of the disease where the phagocyte oxidase gp phox is affected. this project concentrates on the reconstitution of the deficient gene in phagocytic patient cells. expression of recombinant gp was assayed in vitro and in vivo. attempts to "tag" gp with a foreign epitope were unfortunately so far unsuccessful. the target cells for gene reconstitution are non-dividing monocytes. thus, we have chosen an adenovirus over other viral systems because of: a) its ability to infect nondividing cells, b) its genetic stability and, c) lack of human adenovirus related malignancies or side-effects. we constructed two recombinant adenoviruses: one recombinant expresses a lacz gene (control), another the gp lphox gene. we are trying the expression of recombinants adeno/lacz and adeno/gp in normal and patient-derived cells (for example ebvtransformed normal and patient b-cell lines), as well as the reconstitution of nadph oxidase function in peripheral blood monocytes of cgd patients. kinetics of molecular chaperone action schmid, d., gehring, h., *baici, a. and christen, p., biochemisches institut der universit&t z~rich, ch- zorich; *rheumaklinik, universit&tsspital, ch- z%rich molecular chaperones of the hsp type transiently sequester unfolded segments of proteins and promote their correct folding. target peptides labelled with an environmentally sensitive fluorophore allowed to follow their binding to the molecular chaperone dnak of escherichia coli in real-time. the two-step process is characterized by relaxation times z~ = s and z = s at ~m dnak and .i ~m ligand at ~ in the presence of atp, the formation of the complex is greatly accelerated and follows a single-exponential process with z : . s. the rate of dissociation of the complex was even more increased than that of association resulting in a decreased net affinity for ligands in the presence of atp. the binding-release cycle of dnak thus occurs in the time range of polypeptide chain elongation and folding and is too fast to be stoichiometrically coupled to the atpase activity of the chaperone (ko~ ~ = . min i at "c). supported by the olga mayenfisch stiftung, z%rich, and the hartmann m~ller-stiftung, z~rich. comparison of the activities of native bovine seminal ribonuclease and that secreted from e. coil schein, ch* (siat, technopark, pfingstweidstr. , ch ziirich) and haugg, m (lab. org. chemistry, e.tm., . seminal ribonuclease (bs-rnase) differs from the pancreatic rnase a in that it forms a cysteine-linked dimer and has a relatively higher specific activity in the cleavage of double-stranded (ds-) rna substrates. we expressed bs-rn in a secretion system similar to that described previously (biochem. j. : - , ) using the signal sequence of routine pancreatic ribonuelease. about i mg bs-rn was isolated per liter culture supernatant. human and bovine recombinant interfcron-~ (ifn-r) inhibit the degradation of ss-and ds-rna by bovine pancreatic rnase while they activate the activity of bs-rn on the same substrates (febs letters, : - , ) . recombinant bovine or routine pancreatic rnase (produced in our secretion system) are inhibited by ifn-y, while the recombinant bs-rn or a cysteine-linked dimer of rnase a is also activated by ifn-y. ifn-y activates bs-rn even in the presence of inhibitory concentrations ( . - ram) of mononueleotides. thus the mode of activation cannot be attributed to alleviation of product inhibition. kinetic studies using bp ds-rna as substrate suggest that ifn-~ interacts directly with the bs-rn to increase the rate of highmolecular weight producffsubstrate release, as the apparent ks increases proportionately to the increase in kcat. significantly smaller movements were observed in the simulation with the liganded enzyme. the structural differences between the protein in the crystal and the ensuing calculated structures might arise from the absence of lattice forces in solution. evolutionary relationships among pyridoxal- '-p-dependent amino acid decarboxylases sandmeier, e., hale, t.i. and christen, p. biochemisches institut der universit~t zgrich, z~rich. the pyridoxal- '-p (plp)-dependent amino acid decarboxylases (de) can be subdivided into four apparently unrelated groups. group i is represented by glycine dc, group ii comprises glutamate, histidine, tyrosine and aromatic-l-amino acid dc, group iii procaryotic ornithine and lysine dc as well as the procaryotic biodegradative type of arginine dc, group iv eucaryotic ornithine and arginine dc as well as the procaryotic biosynthetic type of arginine dc and diaminopimelate dc. (n-l) profile analysis, a more stringent application of profile analysis [gribskov et al. ( ) methods enzymol. , - ] established the homology among the enzymes of each group. a search with the profile of group ii indicated a distant relationship with aminotransferases and thus with the ~ family of plp-dependent enzymes. no evidence was obtained that groups i, iii and iv are related with other plp-dependent enzymes or any other protein in the database. apparently, the amino acid dc are of multiple evolutionary origin, in some cases even if they have the same substrate specificity. a. lo russo, a.c. passaquin, u.t. r~eg~, ecole de pharmacie, %hiv. lausanne, c~- lallsaraqe drug-induced local vasoccmstricticn appears to be respmnsible for the hypertensive side effect of the imn/nosti~pressant cyclosporin a (csa). we have therefore ex~rnir~ the [ca +] i increase caused by the vasoccr~trictor hormcme [ar~]vascpressin (avp) in vascular ameoth ~uscle cells (vsmc) treated with csa. [ca +] i levels were m~nitored either with a fluoresc~qce analyser using fura or by ca + efflux. pretreatment of v~mc with csa increased the avp induced rise in [ca +]i. a leftward and upwsxd shift of the ccncentraticm-respmnse curve of the avp-induced rise in ca + efflux was also observed after csa treatxr~%t. ilzg/cticn of csa dote~tiaticn w-as detectable after rain, took to h to become fully established and was reversed after washout. csa potentiaticm was cc~centraticn-deperdent with a threshold at - m. %]]is potentiating effect of csa may be the underlyin~ cause for csa-ind/ced hypert~ sicn. ) barja, f. and turian, g. i, ilab. gen. microbiology, dept. biochemistry, station exp. zoology, university of geneva, quai ernest-ansermet, geneva the actin has been found from the simplest forms of cell to the highly evolved ones. in higher organisms it is transcribed by multigene families but in yeast and several filamentous fungi there appears to be only one actin gene. it was therefore of interest to study the expression of actin gene in n. crassa in which three actin isoforms have been characterized (barja et al., , fems left. : - ) . after isolating genemic dna from wild type n. crassa a pcr was performed with primers corresponding to actin consensus sequences and an amplified fragment of the gene (verified by sequencing) was obtained. this fragment was 'used as a probe in a southern to assess the number of aetin gene(s). our results suggest that n. crassa has alsc only one actin gene. the blocking effect of the n-terminal decapeptide of msmooth muscle actin (sma) (ac.eeedstalvc) on the monoclonal antibody anti-asm- was compared with that of synthetic peptides modified by changing the n-terminal acetyl group or by substituting a single amino acid in position to . using immunofluorescence or immunoblotting techniques, anti-c~sm- activity was abolished after incubation with the native peptide and peptides modified in position (only when e~a) or . on immunoblots running bsa crosslinked peptides on denatured gels, only the natural peptide and peptides with substitution in position or were detected by the antibody. our results indicate that ac.(e)eed is the epifope for anti-c~sm-l. binding of anti-~sm- to sma increased actin polymedzation by decreasing the critical concentration. as control this action was not exerted on skeletal actin. this is the first example of the role of a precise n-terminal sequence in the polymerization of a single actin isoform. double immunofluorescence for msma and total actin on cultured aortic sm cells microinjected with the native peptide showed a selective disappearance of msma staining suggesting that this peptide traps a protein involved in msma polymerization. work is in progress to search for the putative actin-binding protein(s) physiologically interacting with the n-terminal sequence of o~-sma. ( within mitochondria, the mechanism of selective protein degradation is poorly understood. while the bulk of mitochondrial proteins are long-lived, some are degraded rapidly. the selective degradation of mitochondrial proteins is likely to be mediated by proteases similar to those found in bacteria; this is based on the hypothesis that mitochondria have evolved from bacterial endosymbionts, in conjunction with the finding that mammalian mitochondria contain an atp-dependent proteolytic activity similar to that in bacteria. one atp-dependent protease from bacteria, lon, is of particular interest because it is involved in regulated protein turnover. degenerate oligonucleotide primers corresponding to two regions of the bacterial lon gene were used to pcr amplify a kb fragment from yeast dna that encoded an open reading frame with striking similarity to the bacterial lon protease. by screening a yeast cdna library, we isolated a . kb clone potentially encoding a protein of amino acids. haploids bearing a disruptedlon gene were unable to respire or to grow on ethanol/glycerol. fractionation of rnjtochondrial matrix from wild-type cells revealed a peak of aip-dependent proteolytic activity which was absent in the disruptant. furthermore, we have identified matrix proteins that are degraded with a half-time of ~ min in intact wild-type ceils but are stable in the ion disruptants. electron microscopy of lon disruptants revealed the presence of many electron dense bodies in the mitochondrial matrix which are not found in lon + cells. hydrolysis of high molekular weight kin nogen by plasma kallikrein benner, s. and duffer, h., laboratory for organic chemistry, eth h nggerberg, ch- z/inch high molecular weight kininogen (hmwk) is cleaved by the serineprotease plasma kailikrein to generate the hypotensive peptide bradykinin in human blood. we established a measuring system for the time course of the hydrolysis of hmwk in its native and deglycosylated form and in the presence or absence of c~-inhibitor. analysis of the bradykinin release and the yielded protein fragments lead to the three following results: . the hydrolysis did not follow plane michaelis-menten kinetics due to a hmwk-fragment operating as a competitive inhibitor. . addition of the ci-inhibitor stopped the hmwk-hydrolysis immediately, which is in contrast to the physiological role of plasma kallikrein in blood. . so far we have no evidence that the high content of o-glycosylated side-chains of the hmwk-light chain has an effect on the kinin-liberation as proposed in literature. ( tetrahydrobiopterin (bh ) is the essential cofactor for the hepatic phenylalaoine hydroxylase, but also for tyrosine and tryptophan hydroxylases that are responsible for the production of nettrofransmitter precttrsors. furthermore, bh is required for the deavage of giyceryl ethers aztd is i~vo[ved in the biosynthesis of nitric oxide by the nitric oxide synthase. a vazia~t type of hyperphenylalani~emia is caused by a deficiency of bh . the most frequent form of this cofactor deficiency is due to lack of -pyruvoyl-tetrahydropterin synthase (ptps) activity. the human cdna for ptps was isolated, and the recombinant protein was found to be active when expressed in e. coil, thus allowing us to perform hmctional t e, ting of mutant proteins. primary skin fibroblasts derived from ~everal ptps deficient patieilts were investigated for the molecular nature of this autosomal recessive disorder. all fibroblasts had f "ps mrna expressed, and subsequent cdna sequence analysis revealed different mutatkons in the coding region of ptps (codon replacemenls, deletions, or nonseme codons) responsible for a lowered or no enzyme activity. in order to potentially correct ptps activity (and restore bi-i biosynthesis) we are establishing a recombhtant rel~oviral-mediated gene transfer system to efficiently introduce the wild-type human ptps-cdna in these fibroblasts. the thylakoid membrane (tm) contains i molecular species of phosphatidylglycerol (pg). the relative amount of these species depends on the plant species and growth conditions. using phospholipase a (pla ) at ~ to digest preferentially pg in the outer monolayer of spinach tm, we have shown previously that this monolayer was enriched in pg (ca ~). the purpose of this investigation was to determine the transmembrane distribution of each pg molecular species. to this aim, we have studied the hydrolysis kinetics of each species in the presence of pla in spinach and squash tm containing different relative proportion of molecular species. the hydrolysis rate and extent of the molecular species depended on the unsaturation degree of the fatty acid at the sn-i position as well as on the presence or absence of : ( t) at the sn- position. for instance, the hydrolysis rate of pg ig: / :l( t) was greater than that of pg : / : . these results will be discussed in terms of the thylakoid transmembrane distribution of each pg molecular species. (supported by the snsf - . ). from previous electrophysiological evidence, we concluded that metal ions (hgz+,cd +,ag +) at low concentrations (i - m) increase rapidly ( - s) cation (na + , k + ) conductance at the apical membrane of epithelial cells. we investigated here the effects of these metals on [ca +]i in mdck-i cultured cells, for a potential correlation between functional membrane changes and [ca +]i . metals ( - - - m) were added at the apical side of the epithelium, and [ca +]i was measured with fura- . hg + induced a rapid (peak - s) and marked increase in [ca +]i, whereas cd + entailed a slower (peak - min) and marked response. the time-course of effects for both metals was similar to the electrophysiological changes. in contrast, the pattern of effects of ag + on [ca +]i differed markedly from that on apical membrane conductance. thus, the effects of metals on [ca +]i are conspicuous but not tightly associated with changes in membrane conductance. c. bulliard and l-l. dreyer, institut de biochimie, universit de fribourg, ch- fribourg trans-plasma membrane oxydoreductases (pmo) play a significant role in energy transduction and post-receptor signal transmission, but the enzymes have not been characterized so far. we have achieved the purification of pmo from rat brain synaptic vesicles and from synaptic plasma membranes. the membrane enzymes were extracted by % lubrol xl tm, precipitated with ammonium sulfate (between and % saturation) and purified by means of hydrophobic chromatography on butyl-agarose and gel f'fltration on superose- , followed by page under native conditions. specific enzymatic staining of native page gels yields two homogenous diaphoraselike activities, pmo-i and pmo-ii . sds-page of the enzymes showed that pmo-i is made of two subunits of kda and kda whereas pmo-ii consists of a single sub-unit of kda. the ki)a subunits from pmo-i and pmo-[i are probably identical from their respective properties. partial n-terminal sequencing ( aa) of the kda subunit from pmo-i showed % homology with rat brain fructose-l, -bisphophate aldolase. these data indicate that pmo is closely associated with the glycolytic enzyme that co-purifies in all steps under suitable conditions. the biochemical functions of pmo's remain to be established. ferredoxin:thioredoxin reductase (ftr) is the key enzyme in the ferredoxin/thioredoxin system, the light-dependent regulatory system in oxygenic photosynthesis. it is a nucleus encoded ironsulfur protein, composed of two dissimilar subunits, one of which is the catalytic subunit containing a redox-active disulfide bridge functional in the reduction of thioredoxins and a fe- s cluster. using pcr we have isolated and characterized a cdna clone of bp from spinach and a clone of bp from corn coding for the catalytic subunits including the transit peptides. the first (spinach) resp. (corn) amino acids after the start exhibit typical features of chloroplast transit peptides. following the transit peptides are (spinach) or (corn) ami[~o acids representing the catalytic subunits. the primary structures are highly conserved between these two species with % similarity and % homology. seven of the eight cys residues found in the spinach subunit and important for the catalytic activity are at conserved positions. (snf - . and - . ) $ - r. zurbriggen and j.-l. dreyer, institut de biochimie. univarsit de fribourg, ch- fribourg most mammalian cells display transplasma membrane oxidoreductase activity (pmo). the enzymes use intracellniar reduced pyridine nucleoticle to reduce an unspecific extracellular electron accepter as substrate. in order to set up a methodology for purifying, characterizing and quantifying pmo's, the plasma membrane from a neuroblastoma cell line, nb a , has been biotinylated. subsequently the biotinylated proteins were purified by immanoprecipitation with avidin, antiavidin-antibodies and insoluble protein a. the protein recovery of an immunopurified membrane preparation was < . % of the protein content in the cell extract. specific pmo activity was increased to fold compared to the activity in whole cells. this approach demonstrates the presence o ' pmo within the cell plasma membrane. this activity accounts for about one third of the total cellular diaphorase activity and cannot be attributed to an increased perraeabilization of the plasma membrane induced upon biotinylation nor to intracelluiar activity from lysed cells. pmo also promotes cell growth at low substrate concentrations ( . -ll.tm). native gel electrophoresis of iarinobiotinylated and affinity purified plasma membrane extracts displays two diaphorase-positive bands, indicating that a homogeneous cell population may express several pmo activities at the plasma membrane. fluvastatin (fs) is a new hmg-coa reductase inhibitor. its affinity for major human drug metabolizing p monooxygenases (cyp c , cyp d and cyp a ) was determined in liver microsomes. fs showed low affinity (ki > ~tm) for cyp d and cyp a whereas cyp c was selectively and competitively inhibited (ki = . ~tm). the potential for in vivo fs interactions with cyp c substrates was therefore investigated in volunteers using dicinfenac (df) as a probe ( mg orally) on days , and . df and '-ho-df kinetics were determined by hplc/uv. df cmax increased over time ( . [sd . ], . [ . ] and . [ . ] mg/l on day , and , resp.). oral clearance was reduced on days and ( % and %, resp.). a time dependent decrease in urinary metabolic ratio ( '-ho-df/df) was noted ( . [ . ], . [ , ] and . [ . ] on day , and , resp. (p < . )) only over the first hours. fluvastatin therefore exhibits a two-phase interaction in vivo: an early transient and a late cumulative inhibition. the transient phase matches inhibition profiles predicted by quantitative models integrating in rive pharmacokinetics and in vitro inhibition data (q-dips). simple competitive inhibition by fs cannot explain the late phase. other mechanisms (i.e. fs or metabolite cumulation, mi complexation) are hypothesized. in some situations fs is expected to cause interactions with cyp c substrates, which are partially predicted by quantitative modeling of in vitro data (snsf project n o - . ). gen~ve, switzerland. previously, a parvalbumin mutant, pvf~ w, was constructed with a unique reporter trp in the middle of the hydrophobie center. in the present study three new parvalbumin mutants, derived from pvft~w and containing alterations essential for ca +-binding in either one, pv.c• and pv_m, or both, pv-co~, of the two ca +-binding sites, were analyzed in order to study the metal binding properties of individual ca~+-binding domains and their contributions to the structure and stability of the protein. both, pv_ct, and pv.~, bind i ca ~ § with affinity constants, kc,, of . , and . - m "~ in the absence of mg +. mg + shifts the ca~+-binding isotherms of pv.co to higher free [ca z+] according to the competition equation with km~ = m t. pv.m~ is much less effected by mg z* (kmg = m "t) and can be considered as possessing a ca +-specific site. nevertheless, in the absence of ca § both, pv.co and pv~, bind i mole of mg + with much higher affinity than predicted from the competition studies. pv_cd;~ binds neither ca . nor mg +. trp-fluorimetry and uv-difference spectroscopy revealed that the ca~*-loaded conformations of pv_co, pv.ef and pvr~o~w are similar, with the trp- deeply buried in the hydrophobie core. however, striking differences between the mutants are found in the metal-free and mg~+-loaded forms. the conformation of pv~t~;~ is not affected by ca ~ or mg z*. our results indicate that destroying the ca +-binding of the ef loop, but not of the cd loop, strongly destabilizes the protein in the absence of ca z § . biochemlsches institut der unlversitfit zfirich, switzerland, ch- . the sea urchin, strongylocentrotus purpuratus, metallothionein gene, mta, was constructed and expressed under the control of a heat shock promoter in a protease-deficient strain of e, coll. the nascent recombinant protein was stabilised by the addition of exogenous cd. the cd-containing protein was precipitated with ethanol and subsequently purified to homogeneity by gel permeation and ionexchange chromatography. the purified protein was identified as the desired gene product by tryptic peptide map analysis, sequence analysis and mass spectroscopy. typical yields of protein were mg per litre of culture. the presence of cd ions per molecule was confirmed by the sh/cd ratio and by the existence of h cd nmr resonances. the apparent association constants of sea urchin mt with cd, which has a charge of - , were found to be approximately times weaker than for rabbit mt, at ph . (mt) are small metalloproteins displaying as their main feature clusters of d i~ metal ions bound to the thiolate ligands of the abundantly occurring cysteine residues (cys). from a set of over sequences a general multialignment of class i mt has been obtained on the basis of the needleman & wunsch algorithm. all cys are conserved in the man%mals and over % of them in other vertebrates and invertebrates. on the basis of similarity/identity scores we can isolate groups of sequences. evolutionary relationships between species and groups have been calculated with the maximum parsimony method of felsenstein and with the distance matrix method of fitch and margoliash. the divergences observed among the mammalian mts indicate a partition into four distinct subforms which all may have arisen before the separation of the species in evolution and which in part may differ in function. $ - bourque, a., singh, a., dykeman, a., macmahon*, a., and foster*, w. atlantic veterinary college, charlottetown, canada, and *reproductive toxicology section, environmental health centre, tunney's pasture, ottawa, canada. hexachlorobenzene (hcb) is a known environmental pollutant that is produced as an industrial by-product of certain chemicals. when administered in high dosage, hcb induces alterations in the rhesus monkey ovary. a purpose of the study was to determine a no observable adverse effect level (noael) for the compound. twenty, cynomolgus monkeys, - years old were placed in five groups. hcb was given orally in concentrations of . , . , . , and mg/kg b.w. in gelatin capsules, daily, for weeks. one group of animals fed glucose only, served as the control. ovary specimens fixed in % buffered glutaraldehyde were prepared by conventional methods for transmission electron microscopy. ultrastructural alterations were revealed in the developing ova and follicular cells in all the ovaries from hcb-treated animals in a dose-related manner. clinical chemistry was unaffected by hcb. a noael for this reproductive toxicant is yet to be determined. a.b. was a recipient of the nserc undergraduate student award. an acidic haem-and zinc-containing protein has been isolated from bovine brain. native and sds-polyacrylamide-gel-electrophoresis reveal a monomeric protein with an apparent molecular weight of , kda. the absence of co-staining with tetramethylbenzidine implies that the haem group is non-covalently bound. the electronic absorption spectrum, with a soret-band absorption maximum at nm and c~-and i~-bands at and nm, respectively, is similar to that of fe(ll)-myoglobin, consistent with the presence of haemiron in the ferrous oxidation state. in air the protein was easily oxidized to the fe(lll) form with a subsequent shift of the soretband maximum to nm. atomic absorption measurements indicate approximately mole of zinc and mole of iron per mole of protein. the amino acid composition is similar to that of indoleamine- , -dioxygenase, although no such enzymic activity has been detected. in this study, we looked for this substance and its metabolites in young and old bovine lenses, because of their possible role in cataract formation. the substances were detected by hplc analysis. the kynurenine aminotransferase (kat) activity was determinated by the method of tobes (methods enzymol ~ : ) . the fluorescent substance formed from -hk was characterized by thin layer chromatography followed by reaction with rtinhydrin, uv and fluorescence spectrometry, and atom bombardment for molecular mass determination. -hk at concentrations of . -+ . , . _+ . , and _+ . btg/g of tissue was detected in iris/ciliary body, retina, and calf lens respectively. this substance is deaminated by kat. the activity of this enzyme was . _+ . , . _+ . , and . +_ ~tmol/g of tissue/hour in retina, iris/ciliary body, and lens respectively of old bovine eyes, but it was not found in calf eyes. the deamination of -hk resulted in the formation of a fluorescent substance which was identified as oxo-xanthurenic acid (oxa) with a molecular mass of daltons. the accumulation of oxa acid possibly interacting with lens proteins could induce cataract formation. snf - . , emdo, and hartmann-mtiller. the goal of covalent immobilization of oligonucleotide capture probes to solid supports has been accomplished by light-dependent, photolinker polymer mediated immobilization strategies. synthetic oligonucleotides were immobilized by facile layer coating procedures. the procedure does not require functionalization of the oligonucleotide probe or the matedal surface. oligonucleotides were linked to polystyrene with a biopolymer which was multiply substituted by photoactivatable diazirines. capture probe photoimmobilization ( nm irradiation) was strictly light and diazirine dependent. using radiolabeled oligonucleotides as capture probes and polystyrene as material surface, the light dependent coupling efficiency was %. nonspecific oligonucleotide binding was below %. photojmmobilized oligonucleotides retained the ability to form stable complexes with complementary dna strands, and target oligonueleotides of varying length were captured as well as dna fragments produced by pcr techniques. indoleamine , -dioxygenase (ido), a superoxide radical scavenger, is present in transparent human lenses and produces -hydroxykynurenine, a uv-b filter. the synthesis of -hydroxykynurenine by ido and its degradation by kynurenine aminotransferase (kat) were measured in transparent lenses and cataracts. post-mortem eyes of elderly persons between and years of age with transparent lenses were obtained from the eye-bank of the department. fresh cataracts were obtained from cataract surgery patients. ido activity was measured by the method of yamazaki et al (biochem j ; : ) adapted for hplc. kat activity was measured by the method of tobes (methods enzymol ; : ) . ido activity found in post-mortem transparent lenses (cortex and nucleus) was . _+ . nmol/mg protein/hour. in cataracts a low do activity of . _+ . nmol/mg protein/hour was found in the cortex but not in the nucleus. kat activity, found in the eight cataracts examined, was . _+ . nmol/mg protein/hour. inhibition of ido activity and induction of kat activity seems to be involved in human cataract formation snf - . , emdo, and hartmarm-m er photolinker polymer mediated covalent immobilization of antibodies and f(ab') fragments has been achieved by newly established lightdependent coupling procedures. anti alpha-l-fetoprotein monoclonal antibodies and f(ab') fragments derived from anti prostate specific antigen monoclonal antibodies were covalently linked to microplates. diazirine derivatized bovine serum albumin served as multifunctional light activatable linking agent. both immunoreagents, monoclonal antibodies and f(ab') fragments remained immunologically active after nm irradiation (irradiance . mw cm - for minutes). covalency of antibody binding was inferred from i) the photoreagent dependence, ii) the light dependence of the immobilization process, and iii) the reversibility of immunocomplexation after acid treatment. $ - two ~ of extracelluiar elecirical resistance in v~kwricular myocardil~ fleischhauer j.c., kl~ber a.g., dept. of physiol. bern in myocardial tissue, the electrical resistive properties of the extracellular space are important for local current flow during e~citation and therefore influence impulse conduction and the magnitude of the extracellular electrical field. to assess the r~tlti~t nature of the resistance of the extracellular space, electrical cable analysis was applied on an arterially perf~-sed rabbit papillary mascle. ~he resistivity of the intravascular space was changed ( to ~i~n) by variation of hematocrit frcrn to % in the perfusate. in order to change the voltm~ and hence the electrical resistance of the interstitial space, colloidosmotic pressure in the perfusate was varied by changing dextran {m r ) concentration (i to g/l). altering the interstitial space volume had a marked influence on the extracellular resistance (ro) , conduction velocity and the magnitude of the extracellular field. variations of the resistive properties of the intravascular space had no significant influence on ro, conduction velocity and the magnitude of the extraeellular electrical field. our results suggest that the microvascular tree is insulated from the interstitial space and local electrical current flow during excitation in heart muscle is confined to the narrow interstitial clefts. s - , s - s - , s - s - , s - bchini hooft van huijsduijnen s - s - s - s - s - , s - s - s - , $ - s - nook, ek s - , s - s - , s - s - , s - , s - s - , s - , $ - s - , $ - s - s - s - s - , s - , s - s - lrmler s - , s - s - , s - , s - s - lipp, p. s - so - s - , s - , $ - , $ - , $ - , $ - $ - ,$ - s - s - , s - s - , s - molar s - s - , s - e s - , s - s - , s - , s - e. s - s - , s - , s - s - s - s - s - , s - , s - , s - , $ - s - , s - s - , s - s - , s - stalder h. s - s - s - , s - , s - s - teheesen s - , s - , s - s - van dillewyn s - , s - , s - s - , s - s - , s - huber d., ojha m. and turian g. laboratory of general microbiology, university of geneva, sciences iii, quai ernest-ansermet, geneva , switzerland. ca +-dependent protease in allomyces is predominantly localized in the apical region of the exponentially growing hyphae (huber and ojha, submitted) . many cytoskeletal proteins like actin and tubulin are also mainly localized in this growing region (heath, l~ ). it is known that the ca +-dependent protease proteolyzes a number of cytoskele~ ton proteins in order to regulate the plasticity of the cell (mellgren, ) . we have studied the proteolysis of some cytoskeletal proteins by this protease purified from the aquatic fungus allomyces erbuscula. actin, tubulin and desmin, were found to be rapidly proteolyzed in vitro at a high substrate to enzyme ratio. immunofluorescence studies of proteolyais made in situ in exponentially growing hyphae showed modification of apieally localized cytoskeletal proteins. this colocalization of the ca +-dependent protease and cytoskeletal proteins in the same apical region is inferred in relation to hyphal elongation. jbiological databases grow exponentially. in order to provide access, as much data las needed and as little volume as possible shall be returned upon a query. the icurrentiy available dna and protein sequence databases are updated in a sophisticated network of procedures and expose a considerable amount of redundancy. research is performed on optimizing the creation of non-redundant data sets. the resulting data are disttibuted in switzerland, or made accessible to researchers who cannot utilize local resources. transparent access to the swiss resources, as well as paneuropean services, is provided with a job scheduling system which was developed in basel, the hierarchical access system for sequence libraries in europe ("hassle"), and various other computer programs which allow comprehensive browsing such as "gopher" and "www". training courses to use the resource effectively are running throughout the year. key: cord- -txfuuu d authors: lim, byeonghwi; kim, sangwook; lim, kyu-sang; jeong, chang-gi; kim, seung-chai; lee, sang-myeong; park, choi-kyu; te pas, marinus f. w.; gho, haesu; kim, tae-hun; lee, kyung-tai; kim, won-il; kim, jun-mo title: integrated time-serial transcriptome networks reveal common innate and tissue-specific adaptive immune responses to prrsv infection date: - - journal: vet res doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: txfuuu d porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv) infection is the most important viral disease causing severe economic losses in the swine industry. however, mechanisms underlying gene expression control in immunity-responsible tissues at different time points during prrsv infection are poorly understood. we constructed an integrated gene co-expression network and identified tissue- and time-dependent biological mechanisms of prrsv infection through bioinformatics analysis using three tissues (lungs, bronchial lymph nodes [blns], and tonsils) via rna-seq. three groups with specific expression patterns (i.e., the -dpi, lung, and bln groups) were discovered. the dpi-specific group showed antiviral and innate-immune signalling similar to the case for influenza a infection. moreover, we observed adaptive immune responses in the lung-specific group based on various cytokines, while the bln-specific group showed down-regulated ampk signalling related to viral replication. our study may provide comprehensive insights into prrsv infection, as well as useful information for vaccine development. porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrs) is one of the most important diseases affecting commercial pig productivity in the swine industry worldwide [ ] . prrs is caused by the prrs virus (prrsv), a single-stranded rna virus [ , ] , resulting in severe reproductive losses for breeding pigs and respiratory problems for growing pigs [ ] . vaccination-a solution for this problem-is still limited because of the high mutation rate in the viral proteins and the intrinsic characteristics of prrsv that impede innate immune responses [ ] [ ] [ ] . therefore, to date, several studies have been performed to identify host factors that confer resistance to prrsv infection. some mutations in the guanylate-binding protein and cluster of differentiation (cd ) genes were reported to be associated with prrsv susceptibility [ , ] , and also cd knockout was proved to show full resistance for prrsv infection [ ] . porcine alveolar macrophages (pams) represent the main cellular target for prrsv infection [ ] . prrsv replication is initiated in the cytosol in infected cells following receptor-mediated endocytosis and disassembly, and replication primarily occurs in the lung and lymphoid organs, but not the spleen [ ] . prrsv can modulate host immune responses by down-regulating interferon-β production and suppressing the activity of antigen-presenting cells [ , ] . in addition, serum viral loads have been found to increase for approximately week after infection and then gradually decrease over the course of a month [ ] . in contrast, viral loads in lymphoid organs are reported to reflect high viral replication for a few months [ ] . several recent studies have involved the use of rna sequencing (rna-seq) to identify the functional basis of host responses to prrsv infection. serial blood transcriptomes observed following prrsv infection in commercial pigs showed three main clusters related to immune signalling, dna repair, and cell signalling [ ] . additionally, the blood transcriptomes in prrsvinfected gilts indicated the development of innate immunity at days post infection (dpi) and t cell signalling at dpi [ ] . relatively few prrsv studies in tissues based on rna-seq have been conducted thus far. the lung transcriptomes of prrsv-infected pigs revealed genes that were potentially related to early innate immune responses [ ] . analysis of tracheobronchial-lymph node transcriptomic responses to highly pathogenic prrsv infection revealed that they were mainly associated with cell death [ ] , and the tonsil transcriptomes of pigs revealed that high viral levels activated polarisation of blood cell functions [ ] . however, in most studies, analysis was performed at one or two time points in a single tissue after prrsv infection. therefore, an examination of the dynamic regulatory changes in gene expression levels at serial time points in multiple tissues is needed to gain comprehensive insights into prrsv infection. in this study, we investigated the molecular mechanisms of prrsv infection by integrating the differences in the expression of various genes in tissues responsible for respiration (lungs) and immunity (bronchial lymph nodes [blns] , and tonsils) using rna-seq data at serial time points. differentially expressed genes (degs) were identified at each time point and in each tissue after prrsv infection. then, dynamic molecular networks were constructed to identify tissue-and time-dependent gene expression levels and patterns. marc- cells, which are highly permissive to prrsv infection, were used for virus propagation and functional assays. marc- cells were maintained in rpmi- medium (gibco ® rpmi- , life technologies, carlsbad, ca, usa) supplemented with heat-inactivated % foetal bovine serum (life technologies), mm l-glutamine, and antibiotic-antimycotic (anti-anti, life technologies) containing iu/ml penicillin, µg/ ml streptomycin, and . µg/ml amphotericin b in a humidified chamber at °c under % co conditions. the prrsv- strain ja (genbank: ay . ) was used in this study. weeks-old piglets (n = ) were obtained from a prrsv-negative farm and housed in animal rooms at our facility. after days of acclimation, pigs were intramuscularly challenged with ml of prrsv (ja strain; × tissue culture infectious dose (tcid) /ml), diluted in sterile pbs. all infected pigs were humanely euthanised at , , , , and dpi, respectively. the remaining pigs were humanely euthanised without virus infection as an uninfected control ( dpi) group. a schematic overview of the animal study is shown in figure a . blood was collected at , , , , , and dpi from the euthanised pigs, and serum was separated for viral load detection and serological assays. the lungs, blns, and tonsils were aseptically extracted after euthanasia. these tissues were collected in tubes, snap-frozen using liquid nitrogen, and stored immediately at − °c for rna extraction. all animal experiments were approved by the jeonbuk national university institutional animal care and use committee, republic of korea (approval number - ). viral rna was extracted from µl of each serum sample and g of each tissue sample, using a mag-max ™ viral rna isolation kit (ambion, applied biosystems, life technologies) and a total rna extraction kit (hybrid-rtm, geneall, seoul, republic of korea), respectively, per the manufacturers' instructions. serum and lung viral loads were measured using a prime-q pcv , prrsv detection kit (genet bio, inc., daejeon, republic of korea) with a fast real-time pcr system (applied biosystems, foster city, ca, usa). a standard curve was generated from known titres of prrsv and used to calculate the quantity of prrsv in each sample by converting each cycle threshold value to the tcid /ml-equivalent values. the prrsv titres in lung tissues were measured with marc- cells, using a microtitration-infectivity assay. briefly, tissue homogenates [ % (weight/ volume)] from the extracted lungs were prepared in dulbecco's modified eagle's medium with antibiotics, vortexed for - min, and centrifuged at ~ × g for h at ℃. after centrifugation, each collected supernatant was filtered through a sterile . μm syringe filter and incubated with marc- cells to measure the viral titre. prrsv titres were calculated at to dpi, based on the observed cytopathic effects, and were expressed as tcid /ml. prrsv-specific immunoglobulin g (igg)-type antibodies were detected in the serum using a commercially available elisa kit (bionote prrs ab . , hwaseong, republic of korea) based on the detection of the nucleocapsid protein, according to the manufacturer's instructions. the sample to positive (s/p) ratio of each serum sample was ≥ . , which was considered to be indicative of the presence of prrsv antibodies. total rna was extracted from the lung, bln, and tonsil tissues using the trizol reagent (invitrogen, life technologies) according to the manufacturer's recommendations. total rna concentrations were calculated using quant-it ribogreen (invitrogen, life technologies, carlsbad, ca, usa). to assess the rna-integrity number, samples were run on the tapestation rna screentape system (agilent technologies, santa clara, ca, usa) (additional file ). a cdna library was independently prepared with µg of total rna for each sample using the illumina truseq stranded mrna sample prep kit (illumina, inc., san diego, ca, usa). the first step in the workflow involved removing the rrna from the total rna, using the ribo-zero rrna removal kit (human/mouse/rat; illumina, inc.). subsequently, the figure overview of the study design and the measured phenotypes. a schematic representation of the experimental design in terms of the sample types, target tissues (lungs, blns, and tonsils), and time points ( dpi, dpi, dpi, dpi, dpi, and dpi) after prrsv infection. b serum and lung viral loads and serum antibody levels in prrsv-infected pigs. remaining mrna was fragmented into small pieces using divalent cations under elevated temperature conditions. the cleaved rna fragments were copied into first-strand cdna using superscript ii reverse transcriptase (invitrogen, life technologies) and random primers. this step was followed by second-strand cdna synthesis using dna polymerase i, rnase h, and dutps. the cdna fragments were subjected to an end-repair process, involving the addition of a single ' a' base, after which adapters were ligated. the products were then purified and enriched by pcr to create the final cdna library. the libraries were quantified using kapa library quantification kits for illumina sequencing platforms, according to the qpcr quantification protocol guide (roche, basel, switzerland), and the libraries were validated using the tapestation d screentape system (agilent technologies, santa clara, ca, usa). the indexed libraries were then analysed on an illumina hiseq instrument (illumina, inc.), and paired-end ( × base pair) sequencing was performed. all raw rna-seq data generated in this study were deposited in the ncbi sequence read archive database under the accession number prjna . to select the quality-filtering strategy, a quality check of raw read data was performed for each sample using the fastqc software v . . , and the reads were trimmed with adaptors using the trimmomatic software v . based on the quality results. then, the trimmed reads were re-checked with fastqc and mapped to the reference genome (sus scrofa . , gca_ . ) of the ensembl genome browser (https ://www.ensem bl.org/ sus_scrof a/) as the default option of the hisat v . . programme. raw counts corresponding to the genes in each library were calculated based on the exons in sus scrofa gtf v (ensembl) as the genomic-annotation reference file, using the featurecounts of subread package, v . . . all deg analyses for the obtained raw counts were performed using the edger software package v . . of bioconductor. to reduce statistical bias in the deg analyses, genes were excluded when all samples had raw counts of ≤ . normalisation of the raw counts was performed using the trimmed mean of m-value (tmm) method, and dispersion parameters were estimated and applied using the cox-reid profile-adjusted likelihood method in edger. degs were identified for each time point ( , , , , and dpi; versus gene expression at dpi) for each tissue (lungs, blns, and tonsils) using a negative binomial-generalised linear model, and p-values were corrected for multiple comparisons based on the false discovery rate (fdr). degs were determined based on an fdr of < . and an absolute log fold-change (fc) of ≥ . multidimensional scaling (mds) was performed using the limma function of the r package to identify the similarities among samples. gcn analysis was conducted by filtering out: (i) degs with no significant fdr (fdr < . ) observed at any of the time points in tissues and (ii) degs with a not stringent significant value (absolute log fc ≥ . ), in order to increase the efficiency of network construction. before gcn analysis, significant associations between the filtered genes were calculated using the partial correlation coefficient with information theory (pcit) algorithm [ ] . correlations were estimated to assess coexpression, and the network was constructed using genes with absolute co-expression correlations of ≥ . . gcn visualisation was performed using the cytoscape v . . software, and the resulting network consisted of genes (nodes) and connections (edges). clustering analysis was performed using the log fc values of genes in the constructed network. after determining the optimal number of clusters, the genes were analysed using the k-means clustering algorithm with iterations, using the multi experiment viewer (mev) software. the genes in the constructed gcn were classified as up-and down-regulated genes based on the time point for tissue that showed the maximum fc, and were annotated to the kyoto encyclopaedia of genes and genomes (kegg) using database for annotation, visualization and integrated discovery (david) v . . in addition, enrichment analyses were performed with bps, using gene ontology (go) terms and kegg pathways for the genes in each gcn. go annotations were filtered with the direct option and applied to enrichment analyses with the following cut-offs: p value < . and counts ≥ . next, treemaps for the enriched go terms were visualised using the revigo tool. kegg annotations were also enriched using the same cut-off criteria and are represented by the -log p value and fold enrichment. all data used in the enrichment analyses were annotated in sus scrofa. gsea for gcn group-specific genes were conducted using the gene-ranking method based on gene sets in the kegg database to determine the enrichment scores and statistically significant differences, using the gsea v . . software. all analyses were performed using the log -normalised tmm counts of the selected tissues and time points that showed the largest expression changes in each group. counts corresponding to: (i) dpi in all tissues were used for the dpi-specific group, (ii) dpi in lung tissues were used for the lung-specific group, and (iii) and dpi in bln tissues were used for the bln-specific group. gsea results were visualised as enrichment maps with significant pathways (fdr < . ) following the benjamini-hochberg correction using cytoscape, and their connections indicated the similarities between gene sets. additionally, the core enriched genes of pathways showing the highest normalised enrichment score (nes) were expressed as heatmaps. then, the modulations of responsible gene products (proteins) in the selected representative kegg pathways (determined through gcn and gsea) were confirmed using the clusterprofiler package in the r software. among the genes corresponding to each protein, genes showing the maximum changes were used as the representative values. the ppi network was investigated for the top interactions (identified in this study) with extremely high gene expression levels using the homo sapiens database of string v . . . the viral loads decreased markedly beyond dpi, and lung samples without detectable viral loads were observed during these time points. serum antibodies (igg) were first detected at dpi and their levels increased up to dpi, but slightly decreased at dpi. a total of . billion paired-end sequence reads were produced from tissue samples (from tissues of individuals), and the average of the number of reads produced per sample was . million (additional file ). the reads that passed the trimming process were mapped to pig reference genome . (~ . % identity), and the average unique mapping rate was . %, ranging from . to . %. transcriptome read data were produced using tissues (lungs, blns, and tonsils) at time points ( , , , , , and dpi), as shown in figure a . the transcriptomes produced under prrsv infection showed clear clustering for each tissue type, as determined by mds analysis (figure a ). degs were confirmed by comparing the gene expression levels at each time point ( , , , , and dpi), relative to those at dpi, and overlapping degs among tissues and different time points are shown in a venn diagram ( figure b ). we observed dynamic changes in the gene expression levels in lung and bln tissues at each time point. lung tissues demonstrated a large proportion of up-regulated genes at all time points ( dpi: %, dpi: %, dpi: %, dpi: %, and dpi: %) against dpi, whereas bln tissues mostly displayed a large proportion of down-regulated genes ( dpi: %, dpi: %, dpi: %, dpi: %, and dpi: %). interestingly, we observed a tendency towards gene up-regulation at dpi in all tissues. moreover, the numbers of degs in lung and bln tissues increased markedly at dpi, then sharply decreased, and slightly increased at dpi. tonsil tissues showed relatively subtle changes; therefore, we had difficulties in analysing them at all time points, except at dpi ( genes). gcn construction using genes and significant connections (selected using the pcit algorithm) was performed to integrate the transcriptomes for one respiratory and two immunity-related tissues at all time points (figure ). the locations of genes were marked close to one another when many common neighbours were found. the resulting network was precisely concentrated for three groups ( dpi, lung tissue, and bln tissue), and the groups were linked by some genes. five clusters were identified via clustering analysis using the log fc values of genes in the gcn and were specifically matched to each group. cluster , representing the dpi-specific group, was composed of genes that were up-regulated in all tissues with prrsv at dpi. clusters and , which represented the lung-specific group, contained down-regulated genes at dpi and up-regulated genes at - dpi in the lungs, respectively. the blnspecific group comprised two clusters of strongly downregulated genes ( genes in cluster and genes in cluster ) at and dpi in bln tissues. analysis of cluster showed that the genes were slightly up-regulated at and dpi in blns. additionally, the bln-specific group contained some genes that showed maximum changes in the tonsils. we selected representative up-and down-regulated genes at different time points in different tissues with relatively high absolute fc values in the constructed gcn and categorised them as follows: up-regulated genes and down-regulated genes; significant pathways were identified by performing kegg enrichment analyses using david ( figure a ). the bubble plot of the enriched biological pathways revealed up-regulated genes in kegg pathways that are mainly related to immune responses (i.e., cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction, influenza a, cytosolic dna-sensing pathway, and rig-i like receptor signalling pathways) and down-regulated genes in pathways mainly related to energy metabolism (i.e., nitrogen metabolism, ppar signalling pathway, and ampk signalling pathway). these pathways provided important insights into the specific immune responses of host cells to prrsv infection. functional-enrichment analyses based on the kegg ( figure b -d) and go ( figure e -g) databases were performed to investigate the biological processes (bps) associated with each group following prrsv infection. the kegg pathways of the dpi-specific group were enriched for terms related to viral infection, including influenza a, the rig-i-like receptor signalling pathway, herpes simplex infection, and the cytosolic dna-sensing pathway ( figure b ). in the lung-specific group, kegg terms associated with immune responses, such as cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction, rheumatoid arthritis, and the chemokine signalling pathway, were identified ( figure c) . interestingly, the bln-specific group showed kegg terms related to lipid metabolism such as the ampk signalling pathway, the ppar signalling pathway, glycerolipid metabolism, and the adipocytokine signalling pathway ( figure d ). the illustrated treemaps revealed bps for significant go terms such as defence response to virus and negative regulation of viral genome replication in the dpi-specific group (figure e ); immune response in the lung-specific group ( figure f ); and regulation of epithelial cell proliferation in the bln-specific group ( figure g ). the enrichment results were consistent between the kegg and go terms. to validate the results of specific groups, gsea based on the kegg database were performed using log -normalised tmm counts at each time point for each tissue to identify the maximum gene expression changes for each group, and the gsea results were consistent with the kegg enrichment analyses of degs. gsea using the -dpi data for all tissues revealed many significant pathways related to viral infection, among which influenza a showed the highest nes ( figure a ). the expression levels of core enriched genes in influenza a were visualised by generating a heatmap, and (rsad , ddx , cxcl , mx , rnasel, ifnb , ifih , oas , ifn-alphaomega, il figure b ). gsea using the -dpi data for lung tissues revealed many significant pathways related to immune responses, among which the cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction pathway showed the highest ness (figure a) . the expression levels of core enriched genes involved in cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions were visualised by generating a heatmap, and (tnfrsf , tnfrsf , tnfrsf b, ccl , cd , cxcr , il ra figure b ). the gsea results obtained with the -and -dpi data for the bln tissues could not be used to construct an enrichment map because only a few statistically significant pathways and low similarity were observed among the gene sets. in the ppi network, the top proteins (i.e., those with the strongest interactions with ifnb (ifnb ), and the largest differences in expression levels) were all immunerelated proteins (ifnar , irf , irf , ifnar , stat , irf , socs , irf , stat , irf , ifih , tyk , irf prrsv infection in pigs can cause a complicated disease when functioning as a primary respiratory infectious agent or as a cofactor in porcine respiratory disease complex (prdc), and prrsv was reported to be the most common virus associated with prdc [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in addition, prrsv was reported to inhibit the host immune defence system, which can lead to further infections (secondary/opportunistic pathogens), resulting in more serious and chronic diseases [ , ] . therefore, understanding the functional and regulatory mechanisms of respiratory and immunity-responsible tissues in the host during prrsv infection is essential for preventing and controlling diseases directly linked to animal productivity. in this study, we compared and integrated serial whole transcriptomes for three tissues (lungs, blns, and tonsils) during prrsv infection. interestingly, the lungs had lower viral loads than the serum ( figure b) , even though the lungs showed major symptoms during prrsv infection [ ] . based on mds analysis, a well-defined (see figure on next page.) ; b and e) , lung-specific network (clusters and ; c and f), and bln-specific network (clusters and ; d and g) were used for the analyses. kegg-enriched pathways for the whole gcn network (a) and each specific network (b-d) were visualised by generating bubble and bar plots. a bubble plot corresponding to the whole network was generated for each analysis for the up-regulated (red) and down-regulated genes (blue) (a). data information: significantly enriched pathways represented in the plots met the following cut-off criterion: − log p value > . . go treemaps were created based on the p values associated with the bp terms for each specific network (e-g). lim et al. vet res ( ) : trajectory of transcriptomes related to prrsv infection was identified in each tissue (figure a ). the number of degs increased until dpi, then decreased until dpi, and finally increased slightly at dpi ( figure b ). the drift curves for the degs were very similar to serum and lung viral load curves, confirming that the overall host responses according to prrsv infection may be most active at approximately dpi, although they were not comparable to the serum antibody levels ( figure b) . previous reports showed that viral loads were detectable in lymphoid organs (excluding the spleen) until immediately before viral extinction [ , ] , although no similarity prrsv can infect cells of the macrophage and monocyte lineages in pigs, and thus, it may affect many aspects of tissue remodelling, development, immunity, and pathology [ ] . prrsv can delay innate and adaptive immune responses by inhibiting the production of type-i interferons (ifns), especially ifn-α, which is important for intracellular signal transduction [ , ] . because the lungs are known as the main target of prrsv infection and lymphoid organs can serve as viral reservoirs [ ] , the observation of common degs probably indicates identical host responses among these tissues, whereas unique degs for each tissue may serve specific functions in the respective tissues during prrsv infection. weighted gcns, which indicate specific gene expression changes, have been used as a powerful approach for identifying specific molecular mechanisms at the system level [ ] . we integrated the transcriptomes of multiple tissues and time points by constructing a gcn with stringent degs and a pcit algorithm (figure ). the constructed network revealed a clear separation of one time point group ( dpi), one respiratory responsible tissue group (lungs), and one immunity-responsible tissue group (blns), and each group showed dynamic changes in the host-response system after prrsv infection. in addition, the genes included in the lung and bln groups showed specific differential expression in each tissue, whereas the genes included in the -dpi group were commonly expressed in all tissues. these features suggest that host responses to prrsv infection are mainly regulated through the expression of different genes in the lungs and lymphoid organs (blns and tonsils). furthermore, gene expression levels may be similarly regulated at dpi in three tissues. dynamic changes in these significant gene subsets at dpi may represent biological signals associated with general and early immunological mechanisms in response to virus infection. significant kegg terms related to viral infections and immune signalling were identified through kegg enrichment analyses performed for each up-and down-regulated genes ( and genes, respectively), based on the time point for each tissue with a maximum fc value in the gcn, which was constructed using serial degs ( figure a ). in particular, the enriched terms related to rna viral infection (influenza a, the rig-i-like receptor signalling pathway, measles, hepatitis c virus (hcv), and the toll-like receptor signalling pathway) and innate immune signalling (cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction, the jak-stat signalling pathway, haematopoietic cell lineage, and the chemokine signalling pathway) were found among the highly significant pathways in the dpi-specific group ( figure b ). in addition, gsea results based on the expression levels at dpi in all tissues revealed clustering with kegg terms related to viral infection, and influenza a showed the highest nes (figure a) . previous reports showed that rig-i-like receptors (rlrs), consisting of three proteins (rig-i, mda , and lgp ), are one type of pattern-recognition receptors (prrs) that activate innate immune-signalling pathways by detecting viral rna in the cytosol [ , ] . influenza a viruses are rna viruses that express non-structural protein (ns ), which is important for evading toxic innate immune responses. ns can suppress mrna processing and transport, which inhibits the binding of the viruses to double-stranded rna molecules and restrains rlr activation [ ] [ ] [ ] . these functions are known to interfere with, and delay, both the expression of the cytokine ifnα/β and the initiation of an ifn-induced antiviral state [ ] . it has been reported that both the structural and non-structural proteins of prrsv have polygenic toxicity in hosts [ ] , particularly, nsp tf and nsp n generated by a ribosomal frameshift mechanism affect the suppression of cellular innate immune responses [ ] . these features of prrsv can be very susceptible to ifn-α/β, although they do not exhibit typical innate immune-signalling activation, including type-i ifn responses [ ] . in addition, signalling associated with the rig-i-like receptor and jak-stat pathways, which play important roles in ifn production, can become disrupted by prrsv during acute infection [ ] . additionally, analysing the lung transcriptomes of prrsv (north american strain ch a)-infected pigs (landrace × yorkshire) showed degs associated with inflammatory signalling at dpi [ ] , which is similar to our results. thus, the enriched biological terms for the dpi-specific group found in this study suggest that both prrsv and influenza a virus, both of which cause respiratory illnesses, exhibit similar infection mechanisms, immune evasion, and innate immune signalling. additionally, the rig-i-like receptor is thought to function as the main prr for prrsv during early immune responses. kegg enrichment analysis of the lung-specific group (containing clusters and of the gcn) implicated cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions, cell-adhesion molecules, rheumatoid arthritis, and chemokine signalling pathways in prrsv infection, all of which are related to immune signalling ( figure c ). cluster included several genes related to immune responses, which were especially up-regulated at - dpi in the lungs (figure ). gsea at dpi revealed clustering of kegg terms related to immune signalling (which showed the largest changes in expression levels), among which cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions showed the highest nes ( figure a ). in contrast to the common early immune responses, terms in the lung-specific group were not enriched for innate immune signalling. moreover, lung viral loads were not detected after dpi, and the levels of anti-prrsv antibodies (igg) started to increase after approximately dpi ( figure b ). therefore, based on the viral loads and antibody levels found in this study, we proposed that the immune signalling pathway terms identified in the lung-specific group represent the adaptive immune-response mechanism occurring in the respiratory system. many studies regarding the adaptive immune responses that occur during prrsv were mainly focused on humoral responses associated with various cytokines and the development of cell-mediated immunity (cmi). with regard to humoral responses, it has been reported that non-neutralising antibodies against prrsv proteins (i.e., the n protein and non-structural proteins) are produced beginning at approximately dpi, whereas neutralising antibodies (nas) were detected later after approximately dpi [ , ] . although prrsv-specific t cells were previously observed early in lymphoid tissues (beginning at approximately dpi), the t cell responses did not last long and did not correlate with viral loads [ ] . in addition, another study showed that the activity of ifn-γ-secreting cd + t cells against prrsv was weak and delayed [ , ] . as previous studies have shown, nas (humoral responses) and cellular responses (cmi) involved in adaptive immune signalling against prrsv were detected at abnormally low levels and were delayed, which may reflect the sequential triggering of interference and delayed innate-immune signalling. lymphoid organs (blns and tonsils) were not highlighted in the lung-specific group due to weaker immune responses in these tissues compared to those in the lungs. significant go terms related to immune responses and apoptosis were identified in each tissue at - dpi in the bln in this study (additional file ), but the tonsils tissues were difficult to study in terms of associated mechanisms because of the small number of degs. in agreement with the results of this study, a previous study demonstrated that changes in the expression of proinflammatory cytokines (il- α, tnf-α, and il- ) at to dpi in prrsv (european strain )-infected lymphoid organs (retropharyngeal lymph nodes, mediastinal lymph nodes, and tonsils) were found only in the lymph nodes [ ] . consequently, we discovered that adaptive host immune signalling in response to prrsv infection was relatively active in the lungs, although such signalling was significantly lower in lymphoid organs (blns and tonsils). the bln-specific group contained clusters and (showing down-regulated genes) and was highly enriched for the ampk signalling pathway, the ppar signalling pathway, glycerolipid metabolism, and the adipocytokine signalling pathway, which are related to lipid metabolism ( figure d) . during viral infection, lipid metabolism can be regulated by viruses; it promotes membrane fusions during viral entry and efficient replication [ , ] . among these pathways, several viruses have been reported to inhibit ampk signalling, which plays a major role in cellular-energy homeostasis including lipid production. human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) is known to encode a trans-activating regulatory protein (tat), which has been reported to inhibit phosphorylation of the ampk α-subunit at thr and to concomitantly reduce the phosphorylation of the ampk substrate, acetyl-coa carboxylase [ ] . it was also reported that the hcv proteins ns b and ns a can activate protein kinase b (pkb/akt), which inhibits ampk by phosphorylating ser and thr [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . moreover, previous reports showed that hiv, hcv, and influenza a virus replication could be inhibited by -aminoimidazole- -carboxamide ribonucleotide (aicar), which is an ampk activator [ , , ] . marc- and porcine monocyte-derived dendritic cells (mdcs) infected with prrsv (north american strain p -gfp) showed significant suppression by ampk activators (sodium salicylate and u a) [ ] . recently, it was confirmed that ampk activity increased at up to . dpi in pk- cd cells, that pams were infected with prrsv (north american strain wuh ), that replication was inhibited through acetyl-coa carboxylase (acc ), and that fatty acid biosynthesis was reduced by the ampk activator a [ ] . in addition, proteins nsp , nsp , and nsp of prrsv are also well known to induce cell membrane rearrangement for efficient replication [ ] , and it may interact with lipid metabolism such as ampk signalling. in this study, we performed enrichment analyses for the bln-specific group in the gcn, which confirmed that genes related to ampk signalling were only downregulated in bln tissues (figure ) . these results suggest that prrsv regulates ampk signalling to create a suitable environment for viral replication in lymphoid tissues including blns, which function as a reservoir, thereby establishing persistent infection. we examined highly significant pathways including influenza a and cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions through enrichment analyses for each group in the gcn construction and gsea, based on all genes. we also intensively investigated the expression levels of significant genes identified through both analyses. firstly figure b ). all selected genes were associated with antiviral and immune signalling. in particular, rsad (viperin), ddx (rig-i), mx (mxa), and oas ( ′- ′oas and oas) were highly expressed in all tissues at dpi (log fc ≥ . ), and ifnb (ifnβ) and ifn-alphaomega (ifnα) were extremely highly expressed at dpi in the lymphoid organs (blns and tonsils) (log fc ≥ . ). rsad (viperin) encodes a cellular protein that was found to inhibit the replication of various dna and rna viruses, including influenza a [ ] . during influenza a infection, viperin decreased lipid raft formation by reducing the activity of farnesyl diphosphate synthase, which inhibited viral budding and release [ ] . in addition, viperin up-regulation in prrsv (north american strain bb )-infected marc- cells was reported to inhibit viral replication [ ] . rig-i, a prr responsible for type-i interferon responses, is an essential molecule for innate immune signalling that recognises virus-infected cells in mammals, including pigs [ ] . the human mxa protein has been shown to exert antiviral activity against a wide range of rna viruses (including influenza a) and some dna viruses [ ] . moreover, expression of the porcine mx protein was reported to increase at up to dpi in prrsv (american strain snuvr )-infected marc- cells [ ] . oas is known to encode a member of the - a synthetase family, which comprises essential proteins involved in the innate immune responses to viral infection; it promotes viral rna degradation and inhibition of viral replication [ ] . furthermore, it was reported that oas overexpression in pams inhibited prrsv (north american strain bj- ) replication [ ] . ifn-alphaomega encodes a unique isoform found only in a few species such as pigs and cows [ ] , and its antiviral activity against prrsv (north american strain sdsu- -p ) infection was found to differ depending on the target cell [ ] . in addition, ifnb , one of the representative signalling genes involved in antiviral innate immunity in mammals including pigs, showed high antiviral activity in pams, but not in marc- cells, indicating an opposite effect compared to that of ifn-alphaomega [ ] . in this study, we also focused on the top proteins showing high interactions with ifnb through the ppi network (figure ) , some of which (ifnar , ifnar , irf , irf , irf , stat , and stat ) were associated with ifn-mediated immune responses (autocrine and paracrine signalling) and promoted ifn secretion through intracellular pathogen recognition [ ] . generally, pathogens are recognised by prrs, and ifn expression can be induced in the nucleus through the activation and phosphorylation of irf and irf . ifns secreted from cells can bind to the receptors ifnar and ifnar , which initiates signal transduction pathways; subsequently, ifn-stimulated genes are expressed after the formation of the isgf complex (irf , p-stat , and p-stat ). collectively, these findings suggest that the host responses at dpi in all tissues were associated with up-regulated genes related to antiviral signalling that were common to the case of influenza a infection, and immune-related genes specifically expressed in lymphoid organs (blns and tonsils) were identified. in particular, the ifn-alphaomega and ifnb genes, which encode type-i interferons (which were expressed at extremely high levels in lymphoid organs), need to be further studied, so as to clarify their molecular functions in prrsv infection. secondly, cytokine-cytokine receptor interactions (confirmed by gcn-enrichment analysis and gsea) included up-regulated expression of tnfrsf (ox ), tnfrsf ( - bb), tnfrsf b (dcr ), ccl (ccl ), cd (cd ), cxcr (cxcr ), il ra (il ra), tnfsf (rankl), ccr (ccr ), ccl (ccl ), il (il ), and il rb (il rb), which include adaptive immune-related genes ( figure a ). tnfsf and tnfrsf are known to control innate and adaptive immune cells by regulating various mechanisms, inducing the costimulation or co-inhibition of immune responses [ ] . ox is a co-stimulatory receptor expressed in activated t cells after antigen recognition, and interaction with its ligand can promote t cell proliferation and survival, as well as cytokine production. - bb is an inducible co-stimulatory receptor that is mainly expressed in t cells, and interaction with its ligand is essential for t cell development, survival, proliferation, effector function, and memory t cell formation [ ] . rankl is a strongly up-regulated ligand in t cells after antigen receptor stimulation, and it affects bone homeostasis, lymphoid organ development, and t cell-dendritic cell interactions [ ] . in summary, we identified genes affecting t cell maturation, proliferation, and survival with respect to adaptive immune signalling at dpi; however, further studies should be performed to clarify the roles of these genes during prrsv infection. a possible concern regarding the generation of serial data for these respiratory and immune tissues is the use of tissue samples obtained from different animals at each time point. however, the trends observed for serum viral loads and antibody titres ( figure b ) corresponded with those of previous studies [ , , ] that used blood collected from genetically identical pigs from multiple time points, indicating that the pigs used in this study could have had similar responses to prrsv at any given time point. we performed deg profiling at six serial time points with one respiratory and two immunity-responsible tissues during prrsv infection, based on rna-seq data. additionally, three groups with specific expression patterns (i.e., the -dpi, lung, and bln groups) were discovered by integrating the data via gcn construction. our findings suggested the involvement of key signalling pathways through functional-enrichment analyses. at dpi, all three tissues showed antiviral and innateimmune signalling similar to the case for influenza a infection, with the lymphoid organs (blns and tonsils) showing relatively stronger expression levels in response to infection than the lungs. moreover, we observed the adaptive immune responses that were most active in the lung tissues, based on high expression levels of various cytokines, whereas the responses were relatively weak in the lymphoid organs. independently, ampk signalling appeared to be down-regulated specifically in bln tissues, 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and exposed to natural infection differential expression of proinflammatory cytokines in the lymphoid organs of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus-infected pigs lipids at the interface of virushost interactions multifaceted roles for lipids in viral infection sirt regulates tat-induced hiv- transactivation through activating amp-activated protein kinase the hepatitis c virus ns a protein activates a phosphoinositide -kinase-dependent survival signaling cascade hepatitis c virus nonstructural b protein modulates sterol regulatory element-binding protein signaling via the akt pathway insulin antagonizes ischemia-induced thr phosphorylation of amp-activated protein kinase α-subunits in heart via hierarchical phosphorylation of ser / enhanced hepatitis c virus genome replication and lipid accumulation mediated by inhibition of amp-activated protein kinase peroxisome proliferatoractivated receptor and amp-activated protein kinase agonists protect against lethal influenza virus challenge in mice the ancient drug salicylate directly activates amp-activated protein kinase fatty acids regulate porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus infection via the ampk-acc signaling pathway viperin, a key player in the antiviral response the interferon-inducible protein viperin inhibits influenza virus release by perturbing lipid rafts convenient online submission • thorough peer review by experienced researchers in your field • rapid publication on acceptance • support for research data, including large and complex data types • gold open access which fosters wider collaboration and increased citations maximum visibility for your research: over m website views per year ready to submit your research ? choose bmc and benefit from monkey viperin restricts porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus replication rig-i in rna virus recognition human mxa protein: an interferon-induced dynamin-like gtpase with broad antiviral activity expression of interferon-α and mx protein in pigs acutely infected with porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv) the oligoadenylate synthetase family: an ancient protein family with multiple antiviral activities porcine ′, ′-oligoadenylate synthetase inhibits porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus replication in vitro evolution of the class cytokines and receptors, and discovery of new friends and relatives differential expression and activity of the porcine type i interferon family differential regulation of type i and type iii interferon signaling the tnf family of ligands and receptors: communication modules in the immune system and beyond agedependent resistance to porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus replication in swine emergence of two different recombinant prrsv strains with low neutralizing antibody susceptibility in china publisher's note springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations not applicable. all data generated or analysed during this study are included in this published article. all animal experiments were approved by the jeonbuk national university institutional animal care and use committee, republic of korea (approval number - ). not applicable. the authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. key: cord- - eqdrd authors: aigner, achim title: delivery systems for the direct application of sirnas to induce rna interference (rnai) in vivo date: - - journal: j biomed biotechnol doi: . /jbb/ / sha: doc_id: cord_uid: eqdrd rna interference (rnai) is a powerful method for specific gene silencing which may also lead to promising novel therapeutic strategies. it is mediated through small interfering rnas (sirnas) which sequence-specifically trigger the cleavage and subsequent degradation of their target mrna. one critical factor is the ability to deliver intact sirnas into target cells/organs in vivo. this review highlights the mechanism of rnai and the guidelines for the design of optimal sirnas. it gives an overview of studies based on the systemic or local application of naked sirnas or the use of various nonviral sirna delivery systems. one promising avenue is the the complexation of sirnas with the polyethylenimine (pei), which efficiently stabilizes sirnas and, upon systemic administration, leads to the delivery of the intact sirnas into different organs. the antitumorigenic effects of pei/sirna-mediated in vivo gene-targeting of tumor-relevant proteins like in mouse tumor xenograft models are described. altered expression levels of certain genes play a pivotal role in several pathological conditions. for example, in many cancers the upregulation of certain growth factors or growth factor receptors, or the deregulation of intracellular signal transduction pathways, represents key elements in the process of malignant transformation and progression of normal cells towards tumor cells leading to uncontrolled proliferation and decreased apoptosis. since these processes may result in the direct, autocrine stimulation of the tumor cell itself as well as the paracrine stimulation of other cells, including the stimulation of tumor-angiogenesis, many novel therapeutic strategies focus on the reversal of this effect, that is, the inhibition of these proteins or the downregulation of their expression. likewise, several other diseases have been firmly linked to the (over-)expression of endogenous wildtype or mutated genes. taken together, in addition to strategies based on the inhibition of target proteins, for example, by low molecular weight inhibitors or inhibitory antibodies, this opens an avenue to gene-targeting approaches aiming at decreased expression of the respective gene. the first method to be introduced for the specific inhibition of gene expression was the use of antisense oligonucleotides in the late s [ , ] . upon their introduction into a cell, antisense odns are able to hybridize to their target rna leading to the degradation of the rna-dna hybrid double strands through rnaase h, to the inhibition of the translation of the target mrna due to a steric or conformational obstacle for protein translation and/or to the inhibition of correct splicing. in the early s, the discovery of ribozymes, that is, catalytically active rnas which are able to sequence-specifically cleave a target mrna, further expanded gene-targeting strategies [ ] [ ] [ ] . subsequently, both methods were extensively studied and further developed with regard to the optimization of targeting efficacies and antisense-odn/ribozyme delivery strategies in vitro and in vivo. most recently, another naturally occurring biological strategy for gene silencing has been discovered and termed rna interference (rnai). since rnai represents a particularly powerful method for specific gene silencing and is able to provide the relatively easy ablation of the expression of any given target gene, it is now commonly used as a tool in biological and biomedical research. this includes the rnaimediated targeting in vitro and in vivo for functional studies of various genes whose expression is known to be upregulated as well as the development of novel therapeutic approaches based on gene targeting. double-stranded rna molecules as described first in c elegans by fire et al [ ] who then introduced the name rna interference. these findings also explained earlier observations in petunias which turned white rather than purple upon the introduction of the "purple gene" in form of dsrna [ ] , and on gene silencing by antisense oligonucleotides as well as by sense oligonucleotides in c elegans [ ] . subsequent studies demonstrated that rnai, while described under different names (posttranscriptional gene silencing (ptgs), cosuppression, quelling), is present in most eukaryotic organisms with the response to dsrna, however, being more complicated in higher organisms. rnai relies on a multistep intracellular pathway which can be roughly divided into two phases, that is, the initiation phase and the effector phase. in the initiation phase, double-stranded rna molecules from endogenous or exogenous origin present in the cell are processed through the cleavage activity of a ribonuclease iii-type protein [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] into short - nucleotide fragments termed sirnas. these effector sirnas, which contain a symmetric nt overhang at the -end as well as a -phosphate and a hydroxy group, are then in the effector phase incorporated into a nuclease-containing multiprotein complex called risc (rna-induced silencing complex) [ ] . several structural and biochemical studies have shed light on the processing of double-stranded rna and the formation of the risc complex (see, eg, [ ] for a recent review). through unwinding of the sirna duplex by an rna helicase activity [ ] , this complex becomes activated with the single-stranded sirna guiding the risc complex to its complementary target rna. upon the binding of the sirna through hybridization to its target mrna, the risc complex catalyses the endonucleolytical cleavage of the mrna strand within the target site, which, due to the generation of unprotected rna ends, results in the rapid degradation of the mrna molecule. with the risc complex being recovered for further binding and cleavage cycles, the whole process translates into a net reduction of the specific mrna levels and hence into the decreased expression of the corresponding gene. for an overview of the rnai pathway, see figure . while from this mechanism it becomes obvious that sirna molecules complementary to the target mrna and thus being able to serve as a guide sequence for the risc complex play a pivotal role in this process, they need not be derived from long double-stranded precursor molecules. rather, omitting the initiation phase, they can be delivered directly into the target cell ( figure , upper right arrow). several studies have led to the development of guidelines for the generation of sirnas which are optimal in terms of efficacy and specificity [ , ] . this includes the initial definition of the preferable length ( - bp) combined with a low g/c content in the range between % and % and the requirement of symmetric nt overhangs at the -end [ ] [ ] [ ] . later studies on synthetic sirna molecules, however, revealed an up to -fold higher targeting efficacy in the case of even longer duplexes ( - nucleotides) which act as a substrate for dicer and which therefore allow the direct incorporation of the newly produced sirnas into the risc complex [ ] . as to be expected, intramolecular foldback structures which can result from internal repeats or palindrome sequences decrease the numbers of functional sirna molecules with silencing capability [ ] . additional silencing-enhancing criteria include an a in position and a g at position of the sense strand, the absence of a c or g at position and, most importantly, a u in position of the sense strand. since nucleotides - represent the site of the risc-mediated cleavage of the target mrna, this indicates that risc is comparable to most other endonucleases in preferentially cleaving of u rather than any other nucleotide [ , ] . furthermore, it was shown more generally that the thermodynamic flexibility of the positions - of the sense strand correlates with the silencing efficacy and that the presence of at least one a/u base pair in this region improves sirna-mediated silencing efficacy due to a decreased internal stability of its -end [ ] . still, different sirna sequences may display differing efficacies, which suggest additional still unknown criteria for optimal sirna selection and emphasize the influence of target mrna accessibility. in fact, several studies also correlate the sirna efficacy with the mrna secondary structure [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in conclusion, apart from the selection criteria defined above, the individual screening of different sirnas for highly efficient and specific duplexes, or the pooling of multiple sirnas, is the most effective approach to increase sirnamediated targeting efficacy. for the design of effective sirnas, several algorithms on publicly accessible web sites are available (see [ ] for review). to reduce the risk of nonspecific ("off-target") effects of the sirnas, a homology search of the targeting sequence against a gene database is necessary and already incorporated in some of these web sites. nevertheless, it has also been shown that sirnas may cross-react with targets of limited sequence similarity when regions of partial sequence identity between the target mrna and the sirna exist. in fact, in some cases regions comprising of only - contiguous nucleotides of sequence identity were sufficient to induce gene silencing [ ] . the prediction of these off-target activities is difficult so far. an additional mechanism that may lead to nonspecific effects in vivo relies on the interferon system [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] which is induced when double-stranded rna molecules enter a cell activating a multi-component signalling complex. this effect is particularly true for long dsrna molecules and essentially prevents them from being used as inducers of rna interference in mammalian systems. the development of synthetic sirnas [ , , , ] largely circumvents this problem since they seem to be too small. however, some synthetic sir-nas do induce components of the interferon system which seems to be dependent on their sequence [ , , ] as well as, in the case of in vitro transcribed sirnas, on the initiating triphosphate [ ] . thus, strategies to avoid as far as possible the unwanted interferon response upon application of sirnas in vivo will include a design of sirnas without known interferon-stimulating sequences, the use of the lowest possible sirna dose to still achieve the desired effect and optimized sirna delivery methods. based on the known mechanisms of antisense technology, ribozyme-targeting or rnai, small oligonucleotides or plasmid-based expression vectors can be used to specifically downregulate the expression of a given gene of interest or of pathological relevance in vitro. in principle, this also applies to the in vivo situation leading to novel, potentially relevant therapeutic approaches. for the delivery of therapeutic nucleic acids, viral vectors have been used which have the advantage of high transfection efficacy due to the inherent ability of viruses to transport genetic material into cells. on the other hand, however, viral systems show a limited loading capacity regarding that the genetic material are rather difficult to produce in a larger scale and, most importantly, pose severe safety risks due to their oncogenic potential and their inflammatory and immunogenic effects which prevent them from repeated administration [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in the light of these problems, concerns, and limitations, nonviral systems have emerged as a promising alternative for gene delivery. main requirements are the protection of their nucleic acid "load" as well as their efficient uptake into the target cells with subsequent release of the dna or rna molecules and, if necessary, their transfer into the nucleus. several strategies can be distinguished, mainly lipofection and polyfection relying on cationic lipids or polymers, respectively (see, eg, [ ] [ ] [ ] ). the efficient protection against enzymatic or nonenzymatic degradation is particularly important for rna molecules including sirnas. in fact, while the therapeutic potential of sirnas for the treatment of various diseases is in principle very promising, limitations of transfer vectors may turn out to be rate-limiting in the development of rnai-based therapeutic strategies. one approach to solve this problem is the use of dna expression plasmids which encode palindromic hairpin loops with the desired sequence. upon transcription and folding of the rna, the doublestranded short hairpin rnas (shrnas) are recognized by dicer and cleaved into the desired sirnas. additionally, an in vitro method has been described recently which is based on the expression of shrnas in e coli and their delivery via bacterial invasion [ ] . while all these different dnabased systems offer the advantage of sirna expression with a longer duration and a probably higher level of gene silencing, they still rely on (viral or nonviral) delivery of dna molecules and again raise safety issues in vivo. hence, the direct delivery of sirnas molecules, derived from in vitro transcription or chemically synthesized, offers advantages over dna-based strategies and may be preferable for in vivo therapeutic use. in the last years, a large body of studies has been published which describe different strategies for the systemic or local application of sirnas in vivo. tables - give an overview. the probably largest number of papers focuses the use of unmodified sirnas (table ) whose administration is often performed iv by hydrodynamic transfection (high pressure tail vein injection). while this method is widely used and in some cases led to efficient target gene inhibition in the liver and, to a lesser extent, in lung, spleen, pancreas, and kidney, it may suffer from certain technical and practical limitations at least in a therapeutical setting since it relies on the rapid iv injection of a comparably large volume (>= ml/mouse/injection, in theory equivalent to a ∼ l iv bolus injection in man). alternative strategies for the application of naked sirnas include various delivery routes which, however, often provide an only local administration or rely on an administration at least close to the target tissue or target organ, thus restricting the number of target organs which may not be relevant for certain diseases. it should also be noted that several studies described here and below use rather large amounts of sirnas and that upon intravenous injection of sirnas the liver is the primary site of sirna uptake. as an alternative approach for the application of sir-nas in vivo, their delivery by liposomes/cationic lipids has been described. for liposome-based sirna formulations, a wide variety of modes of application allowing local or systemic delivery has been used (table ) . finally, several other strategies for local or systemic sirna administration have been explored, including chemical modifications of sirna molecules, electropulsation, polyamine, or other basic complexes, atelocollagen, virosomes, and certain protein preparations (table ). an alternative approach relies on the complexation of unmodified sirna molecules with a cationic polymer, polyethylenimine (pei). polyethylenimines (peis) are synthetic polymers available in branched or linear forms (figure , upper panels) and in a broad range of molecular weights from < da to > kd. commercial pei preparations, although labelled with a defined molecular weight, consist of pei molecules with a broad molecular weight distribution [ ] [ ] [ ] . peis possess a high cationic charge density due to a protonable amino group in every third position [ , ] . since no quarternary amino groups are present, the cationic charges are generated by protonation of the amino groups and hence are dependent on the ph in the environment (eg, % at ph . , see [ ] for review). due to its ability to condense and compact the dna into complexes, which form small colloidal particles allowing efficient cellular uptake through endocytosis, pei has been introduced as a potent dna transfection reagent in a variety of cell lines and in animals for dna delivery (for review, see [ , ] and references therein). in fact, in several studies pei has been shown to be able to deliver large dna molecules such as . mb yeast artificial chromosomes (yacs) [ ] as well as plasmids or small oligonucleotides [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] into mammalian cells in vitro and in vivo. the n/p ratio, which indicates the ratio of the nitrogen atoms of pei to dna phosphates in the complex and thus describes the amount of pei used for complex formation independent of its molecular weight, influences the efficiency of dna delivery. a positive net charge of the complexes, resulting from high n/p ratios, inhibits due to electrostatic repulsion their aggregation and improves their solubility in aqueous solutions as well as their interaction with the negatively charged extracellular matrix components and thus their cellular uptake [ ] . additionally, the strong buffer capacity, described by the "proton sponge hypothesis" which postulates enhanced transgene delivery by cationic polymer-dna complexes (polyplexes) containing h + buffering polyamines due to enhanced endosomal cl − accumulation and osmotic swelling/lysis [ ] , seems to be responsible for the fact that pei-based delivery does not require endosome disruptive agents for lysosomal escape. this tight condensation of the dna molecules as well as the buffering capacity of pei in certain cellular compartments like endosomes and lysosomes also protects dna from degradation [ , , , ] . peis have been successfully used for nonviral gene delivery in vitro and in vivo. while initial publications showed increased transfection efficacies when using high molecular weight peis [ ] , more recent studies demonstrated the advantages of certain low molecular weight peis [ , , ] . the higher transfection efficacy of low molecular weight peis may be due to a more efficient uptake of the resulting pei/dna complexes, a better intracellular release of the dna and/or lower in vitro cytotoxicity as compared to high molecular weight pei [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in fact, a decrease in the molecular weight of the pei leads to an increase in complex size which may be favourable at least for in vitro use [ , ] . on the other hand, other peis with very low molecular weight (< kd) display little or no transfection efficacy even at very high n/p ratios which may be attributed to the fact that a decrease in the molecular weight of pei has been shown to translate into an increasingly lower ability to form small complexes [ ] . therefore, low molecular weight peis require higher n/p ratios for optimal transfection efficacies as compared to higher molecular weight peis since higher n/p ratios lead to an increase in compaction with reduced complex sizes and a reduced tendency of the complexes to aggregate due to hydrophobic interactions [ , , ] . nevertheless, while several parameters have been extensively studied, some precise determinants for transfection efficacy remain to be elucidated (see [ , ] for review). also, the mechanism of the cytotoxic effects of pei complexes is only poorly understood. it may rely on the formation of large aggregates in the range of up to μm which, when formed on the cell surface, impairs membrane functions finally leading to cell necrosis [ ] . clearly, there is a trend towards low molecular weight peis as rather nontoxic delivery reagents in vitro and in vivo, which combine high biocompatibility and reduced side-effects thus also allowing to employ larger pei/dna complex amounts without significant cytotoxicity. more recently, the use of polyethylenimines has been extended towards the complexation and delivery of rna molecules, especially small rna molecules like nt all-rna ribozymes [ ] [ ] [ ] and sirnas [ ] (figure ). while chemically unmodified rna molecules are very instable and prone to rapid degradation, the pei complexation has been shown to lead to an almost complete protection against enzymatic or nonenzymatic degradation. in fact, pei-complexed sir-nas, which are [ p]-labeled for better detection, remain intact in vitro for several hours even in the presence of rnase a or fetal calf serum at • c, while non-complexed sirnas are rapidly degraded (figure (a) ). this indicates that sirna molecules are efficiently condensed and thus fully covered and protected by pei. indeed, the analysis of pei/sirna complexes by atomic force microscopy showed the absence of free sirnas or sirna molecule ends and thus confirms these findings regarding an efficient complexation (grzelinski et al, submitted). however, while the complex stability seems to be sufficient for sirna protection with all peis tested (werth et al, in press; aigner et al, unpublished data), several of these complexes do not show any targeting efficacy at all. in fact, only when using certain polyethylenimines, pei/sirna complexes are efficiently delivered into target cells in vitro, where sirnas are released and display bioactivity (figures and ) . in general and as seen before for pei/dna complexes (see above), the transfection efficacy is dependent on the pei used, also indicating that the sirna targeting efficiency mainly depends on the endocytotic uptake of the complex and/or its intracellular decomposition rather than on the in vitro complex stability. good results were obtained with commercially available jetpei [ ] while the in vivo jetpei from the same supplier showed only poor sirna delivery efficacies [ ] . likewise, a novel low molecular weight pei based on the fractionation of a commercially available polyethylenimine demonstrates high sirna protection and delivery efficacies in vitro (werth et al, in press). under certain conditions, the pei/rna (sirna or ribozyme) complexes retain their physical stability and biological activity also after lyophilization ( [ ] and werth et al, in press). although the pei transfection is only transient, data from our lab show that pei/sirna effects are stable for at least days (urban-klein and aigner, unpublished results). finally, another study has explored the use of sirna nanoplexes comprising of pei that is pegylated with an rgd peptide ligand attached at the distal end of the pei. again, sirna nanoplexes protect sirnas against serum degradation and show in vitro activity [ ] . the ultimate goal is the application of sirnas in vivo which has been explored in some studies in different mouse models. ge et al showed that pei-complexed sirnas targeting conserved regions of influenza virus genes are able to prevent and treat influenza virus infection in mice. upon iv injection, pei promoted the delivery of sirnas into the lungs where, either given before or after virus infection, sirna reduced influenza virus production in the lungs [ ] . most biological effects of the systemic application of peicomplexed sirnas, however, have been determined in different mouse tumor models and by targeting different proteins which have been shown previously to be tumor-relevant. this includes the epidermal growth factor receptor her- (c-erbb- /neu), the growth factor pleiotrophin (ptn), and vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) and its receptor (vegf r ), and the fibroblast growth factor-binding protein fgf-bp. the in vivo administration of pei complexed, but not of naked sirnas, through ip or subcutaneous injection resulted in the detection of intact sirnas even hours after injection (figure (b) ). radiolabeled sirna molecules were found in several organs including subcutaneous tumors, muscle liver, kidney and, to a smaller extent, lung and brain. it is important to note that the sirnas were actually internalized by the tissues as indicated by the fact that blood was negative for sirnas ( figure (b) ). overexpression of the her- receptor has been observed in a wide variety of human cancers and cancer cell lines. since her- displays strong cell growth-stimulating and antiapoptotic effects especially through heterodimer formation with other members of the egfr family, its overexpression has been established as a negative prognostic factor and linked to a more aggressive malignant behaviour of tumors (eg, [ ] ). consequently, her- qualifies as an attractive target molecule for antitumoral treatment strategies including anti-her- antibodies, low molecular weight inhibitors, or her- -specific gene-targeting approaches. in fact, the relevance of her- (over-)expression in tumor growth has been established in several in vitro her- targeting studies including the use of ribozymes [ , , ] or sirnas [ , ] . proposed mechanism of pei-mediated sirna transfer. due to electrostatic interactions, pei is able to complex negatively charged sirnas leading to a compaction and the formation of small colloidal particles which are endocytosed. the "proton sponge effect" exhibited by pei complexes leads to osmotic swelling and ultimately to the disruption of the endosomes. sirnas are protected from degradation due to their tight condensation in the complex and the buffering capacity of pei. upon their release from the pei-based complex, intact sirnas are incorporated into the risc complex and induce rnai (see figure ). it was demonstrated that her- reduction in vitro leads, among others, to the inhibition of cell proliferation and increased apoptosis. the systemic treatment of athymic nude mice bearing subcutaneous skov- ovarian carcinoma tumor xenografts through ip injection of pei-complexed her- -specific sirnas led to marked antitumoral effects as seen by a significant reduction tumor growth (figure ) [ ] . peicomplexed nonspecific sirnas or her- -specific, naked sir-nas had no effects. this was paralleled by the detection of intact her- -specific sirnas in the tumors of the specific treatment group already min after administration and for at least h, and by the downregulation of her- on mrna and protein levels [ ] . another receptor, vegf r , was targeted in a study employing self-assembling nanoparticles based on sirnas complexed pei which is pegylated with an rgd peptide ligand attached at the distal end of peg. while the pegylation allows steric stabilization and reduces nonspecific interactions of the complexes, the rgd motif provided tumor selectivity due to their ability to target integrins expressed on activated endothelial cells in the tumor vasculature. upon iv administration into mice bearing subcutaneous n a neuroblastoma tumor xenografts, a selective tumor uptake and a vegf r downregulation were observed, resulting in decreased tumor growth and tumor angiogenesis [ ] . the receptor ligand, vegf, is a mitogenic and angiogenic growth factor stimulating tumor growth and angiogenesis in several tumors including prostate carcinoma. thus, it may represent attractive target molecule for rnai-based genetargeting strategies also bearing in mind the double antitumoral effect due to reduction of tumor cell proliferation as well as tumor angiogenesis. the subcutaneous or intraperitoneal injection of vegf-specific sirnas complexed with a novel pei obtained through fractionation of a commercially available pei (werth et al, in press) resulted in the reduction of tumor growth due to decreased vegf expression levels (höbel and aigner, unpublished results). the same was true for pei/sirna-mediated targeting of fgf-bp (dai and aigner, unpublished results), which has been established figure : protection and in vivo delivery of sirnas upon pei complexation. in [ ] (a) in vitro protection of sirnas against nucleolytic degradation. [ p] end-labeled sirnas, complexed (upper panel) or not complexed (lower panel) with pei, were subjected to treatment with % fetal calf serum at • c. at the time points indicated, the samples were analysed by agarose gel electrophoresis, blotting, and autoradiography. the bands represent full-length sirna molecules indicating that pei complexation leads to the efficient protection of sirnas while noncomplexed sirnas are rapidly degraded. (b,c) in vivo delivery of intact sirnas upon pei complexation. [ p]-labeled sirnas, complexed (+) or not complexed (−) with pei, were injected ip into mice bearing subcutaneous skov- ovarian carcinoma cell tumor xenografts, and after min (b) or h (b) total rna from various organ and tissue homogenates was prepared and subjected to agarose gel electrophoresis prior to blotting and autoradiography. the bands represent intact [ p]-labeled sirna molecules which for several hours are mainly found in tumor and muscle as well as in liver and, time-dependently, in kidney. only little sirna amounts are detected in the lung and traces in the brain. previously as "rate-limiting" for tumor growth and angiogenesis in several tumors ( [ , ] , see [ ] for review). finally, pei/sirna-mediated targeting of pleiotrophin (ptn) exerted strong antitumoral effects. ptn is a secreted growth factor which shows mitogenic, chemotactic, angiogenic and transforming activity [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and which is markedly upregulated in several human tumors including cancer of the breast, testis, prostate, pancreas, and lung as well as in melanomas, meningiomas, neuroblastomas, and glioblastomas. the in vivo treatment of nude mice through systemic subcutaneous or ip application of pei-complexed ptn sirnas led to the delivery of intact sirnas into subcutaneous tumor xenografts and a significant inhibition of tumor growth. likewise, in a clinically more relevant orthotopic mouse glioblastoma model with u cells growing intracranially, the injection of pei-complexed ptn sirnas into the cns exerted antitumoral effects. this establishes, also in a complex and relevant orthotopic tumor model, the potential of pei/sirna-mediated ptn gene targeting as a novel therapeutic option in gbm, and further extends the modes of delivery of pei/sirna complexes intrathecal strategies as employed in the therapy of glioblastomas with antisense oligonucleotides. only a few years after their discovery, sirnas are catching up with ribozymes and antisense oligonucleotides as efficient tools for gene targeting in vitro and, more recently, also in vivo. this includes the exploration of their potential as therapeutics which will lead to the development of sirna-based therapeutic strategies. their ultimate success, however, will figure : systemic treatment of mice with pei-complexed her- -specific sirnas leads to reduced growth of subcutaneous skov- tumor xenografts due to decreased her- expression. in [ ] athymic nude mice bearing subcutaneous tumor xenografts were injected ip with . nmoles her- -specific naked (open circles) or pei-complexed (closed circles) sirnas - times per week and tumor sizes were evaluated daily from the product of the perpendicular diameters of the tumors. mean +/-standard error of the mean (sem) is depicted and student's unpaired t test was used for comparisons between data sets ( * * p < . , * * * p < . ). differences in tumor growth reach significance at day indicating the antitumoral effects of the pei-complexed her- -specific sirnas. strongly depend on the development of powerful and feasible sirna delivery strategies which need to address several issues including the stability/stabilization of sirna molecules while preserving their efficacy and maintaining their genesilencing activity, an efficient delivery into the target organ(s) as well as a sufficiently long sirna half life in the organism and particularly in the target organ. thus, sirna delivery strategies must provide sirna protection and transfection efficacy, the absence of toxic and nonspecific effects, they must be efficacious also when using small amounts of sirnas and must be applicable in various treatment regimens and in various diseases even when this requires to overcome biological barriers after their administration to reach their target tissue or target organ. the research done on dna-based gene delivery, ribozyme-targeting, and antisense technology will facilitate this process since it already provides a basis of established technologies. this is also true for the complexation of sirnas with polyethylenimine, which may represent a promising avenue for sirna applications in vivo. this may eventually lead to novel therapeutic strategies. the work of a. aigner is supported by the deutsche forschungsgemeinschaft (ai / - ) and by the deutsche krebshilfe. the author would like to apologize to the authors whose primary works have not been cited due to length considerations. inhibition of rous sarcoma viral rna translation by a specific oligodeoxyribonucleotide inhibition of rous sarcoma virus replication and cell transformation by a specific oligodeoxynucleotide in vitro splicing of the ribosomal rna precursor of tetrahymena: involvement of a guanosine nucleotide in the excision of the intervening sequence self-splicing rna: autoexcision and autocyclization of the ribosomal rna intervening sequence of tetrahymena the rna moiety of ribonuclease p is the catalytic subunit of the enzyme potent 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vivo efficient delivery of small interfering rna to bone-metastatic tumors by using atelocollagen in vivo rad sirna delivered by hvj envelope vector enhances the anti-cancer effect of cisplatin antibody mediated in vivo delivery of small interfering rnas via cell-surface receptors silencing heat shock factor by small interfering rna abrogates heat shock-induced cardioprotection against ischemiareperfusion injury in mice reconstituted influenza virus envelopes as an efficient carrier system for cellular delivery of small-interfering rnas key: cord- -d gkfo s authors: perzel mandell, kira a.; price, amanda j.; wilton, richard; collado-torres, leonardo; tao, ran; eagles, nicholas j.; szalay, alexander s.; hyde, thomas m.; weinberger, daniel r.; kleinman, joel e.; jaffe, andrew e. title: characterizing the dynamic and functional dna methylation landscape in the developing human cortex date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / sha: doc_id: cord_uid: d gkfo s dna methylation (dnam) is a key epigenetic regulator of gene expression across development. the developing prenatal brain is a highly dynamic tissue, but our understanding of key drivers of epigenetic variability across development is limited. we therefore assessed genomic methylation at over million sites in the prenatal cortex using whole genome bisulfite sequencing and found loci and regions in which methylation levels are dynamic across development. we saw that dnam at these loci was associated with nearby gene expression and enriched for enhancer chromatin states in prenatal brain tissue. additionally, these loci were enriched for genes associated with psychiatric disorders and genes involved with neurogenesis. we also found autosomal differences in dnam between the sexes during prenatal development, though these have less clear functional consequences. we lastly confirmed that the dynamic methylation at this critical period is specifically cpg methylation, with very low levels of cph methylation. our findings provide detailed insight into prenatal brain development as well as clues to the pathogenesis of psychiatric traits seen later in life. sites change over time and these changes lead to adjustments in gene expression and splicing. these key regions have also been linked to neurodevelopmental disorders such as schizophrenia, in which early dysregulation plays a vital role , . dnam is an attractive epigenetic mechanism to study in post-mortem human brain tissue, because it represents an interaction between genetic and environmental effects. external factors such as changes in diet , exposure to cigarette smoking , and exposure to arsenic have been associated with both global and site-specific changes to dnam levels. in order to better understand the causes and consequences of deviant dnam patterns in psychiatric disease development, we must first understand the normal landscape. illuminating typical methylation changes in prenatal development will both provide insight into gene expression and molecular pathways active in the postnatal developing brain, and provide a baseline for identification of aberrant dnam in postnatal disease states, as the pathological changes that lead to symptoms of psychiatric disease may precede the onset of illness by several decades . the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlpfc) is a dynamic region of the brain throughout development, essential for motor planning, conceptual organization, and working memory, and is often functionally dysregulated in patients with schizophrenia . previous studies using microarrays to quantify dnam have revealed that there are many dnam changes in the dlpfc around the time of birth , but the dynamics of the prenatal brain are far less characterized. previous work assessing fetal brain dnam has largely used microarrays, and sampled whole brain rather than a specific region . most cells in the developing brain are neuronal , and it has been shown that neuronal dna methylation is especially dynamic in the earliest stages of postnatal life, making the dlpfc a potentially fruitful region for deeper interrogation in prenatal samples . in the present report, we describe the use of whole genome bisulfite sequencing (wgbs) to capture an unbiased map of the dnam landscape, and to characterize both cpg and cph methylation during prenatal brain development. dynamic regions of dnam even in the early developmental context are likely to be associated with psychiatric risk-associated genes, and connection to gene expression data can validate the importance of these genomic regions. these important regions will help point to pathways and mechanisms of normal brain development as well as psychiatric and neurodevelopmental conditions. study samples: brain tissue from these second-trimester prenatal samples was obtained via a material transfer agreement with the national institute of child health and human development brain and tissue bank. all specimens were flash-frozen, then brain ph was measured and postmortem interval (pmi, in hours) was calculated for every sample. postmortem tissue homogenates of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlpfc) were obtained from all subjects. samples were obtained from the developing prefrontal cortex from the dorsolateral convexity of the frontal lobe half-way between the frontal pole and temporal pole, mm lateral to the central sulcus. specimens extended from the surface of the brain to the ventricular zone. there were of each male and female subjects, and subjects were african american and were european ancestries (table s ). data generation: genomic dna was extracted from mg of pulverized dlpfc tissue with the phenol-chloroform method. dna was subjected to bisulfite conversion followed by sequencing library preparation using the truseq dna methylation kit from illumina. lambda dna was spiked in prior to bisulfite conversion to assess its rate, and we used % phix to better calibrate illumina base calling on these lower complexity libraries. resulting libraries were pooled and sequenced on an illumina hiseq x ten sequencer with paired end bp reads ( x bp), targeting gb per sample. this corresponds to x coverage of the human genome as extra reads were generated to account for the addition of phix. data processing: the raw wgbs data was processed using fastqc to control for quality of reads , trim galore to trim reads and remove adapter content , arioc for alignment to the grch .p genome (obtained from ftp://ftp.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genomes/all/gca/ / / /gca_ . _grch .p /gc a_ . _grch .p _assembly_structure/primary_assembly/assembled_chromoso mes/) , duplicate alignments were removed with samblaster , and the bismark methylation extractor to extract methylation data from the sequencing data . we then used the bsseq r/bioconductor package (v . ) to process and combine the dna methylation proportions across the samples for all further manipulation and analysis . after initial data metrics were calculated, the methylation data was smoothed using bsmooth for modelling. cpgs were filtered to those that had ≥ coverage in all samples, and cphs were filtered to those that had ≥ coverage and non-zero methylation in at least half (≥ ) of the samples. comparison to k: in order to compare wgbs methylation levels to k methylation levels, we used data from the same samples using the two methods, and compared their methylation levels at the same sites both graphically ( figure d ) and assessing the mean differences and root-mean-square deviation ( figure c ). we then validated our model's findings by applying the same model to the microarray data to overlapping sites and considered loci significant at fdr < . and validated if it's association had p < . in the validating set ( figure s ). gene set enrichment: we annotated our data using gencode v. on hg . we performed gene ontology and gene set enrichment using clusterprofiler (v . ) with a p-value cutoff of . and q-value cutoff of . . we used sfari . for an autism spectrum disorder gene set, and a set of clinical gene sets defined by birnbaum et al for other neuropsychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders . enrichment was calculated on a background of genes expressed in our samples, to avoid brain bias. we performed ld score regression as described by and with data from finucane et al . data analysis: cell composition of samples was deconvoluted using flow-sorted dlpfc microarray data from fluorescence-activated nuclear sorted neurons and non-neurons and r package minfi . linear regression modelling was performed accounting for sex, age, and embryonic stem cell content. sex-related cpgs and their surrounding sequence were re-aligned to the genome with bowtie to check for homology. association was tested using limma (v . ) , to create a linear regression model accounting for sex, age, and embryonic stem cell content. the homogenate rna-seq samples were also part of a larger study of rna-seq data from homogenate dlpfc tissue (brainseq consortium phase i) . we compared a site's methylation or mean methylation (for dmrs) to the expression level from rna-seq using a linear model adjusting for the strongest covariates, including sex, age, and estimated embryonic stem cell (esc) content. section : whole genome bisulfite sequencing in the prenatal human cortex we performed whole genome bisulfite sequencing (wgbs) to better characterize the shifting dnam landscape in the developing human dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlpfc) in prenatal samples during the second trimester in utero (table s ). after data processing and quality control (see methods), we analyzed , , cpg and , , cph (h=a, t, or c) sites across the epigenome. we first focused on cpg dnam and performed a series of quality control analyses. we quantified read coverage at every cpg, which after processing and alignment resulted in an average of . reads per cpg ( figure a ). most of these sites are methylated (> % dnam) and a minority are unmethylated (< % dnam) (table s ) . we then performed principal component analysis (pca) on the dnam levels across these high-coverage cpgs and found that the top principal components were most associated with sex and estimated fractions of embryonic stem cells (escs) via deconvolution ( figure b ; figure s ; see methods), in line with our previous work . we lastly compared the dnam levels from wgbs to levels from illumina k microarray measured on of the samples for the subset of cpgs in common to both technologies (n= ), and found that overall, cpg dnam methylation levels were highly concordant regardless of cpg read coverage ( figure c -d). these analyses together suggested that our dnam data was of high quality and available for subsequent differential methylation analysis. to understand the changes in the prenatal epigenetic landscape, we performed linear modeling across all cpg sites. we found that dnam changes were abundant even during this relatively restricted period in prenatal development, with , cpg sites differentially methylated across the ages of - post-conception weeks (pcw, at fdr < . , table s ). on average, each week of development was associated with a . % change in dnam (iqr: . % - . %) at a given cpg, with some sites changing as much as . % per week. these differentially methylated cpgs were not evenly distributed across the genome, with none on the y chromosome, and a small number on the x chromosome (table s ). there was also some unevenness on the autosomes, with some chromosomes having up to . x higher frequency of age-associated cpgs than others (table s ). , of these cpgs lie in previously annotated cpg islands, with , in shores, defined as kb from island ends. the vast majority ( %) of these cpgs lie within genes, and , lie within kb of a transcription start site and thus potentially in promoters. this leaves . % in intergenic space. sites were fairly evenly split in the direction of methylation change by age, with % increasing in methylation as the cortex develops. additionally, less than half of these cpg sites are significantly associated with the estimated esc proportion in the sample, suggesting that many of these cpg sites have true prenatal age changes in methylation rather than reflecting effects of maturing cell type composition. we further explored whether these sites could be organized into differentially methylated regions (dmrs), which have been shown to be more functionally relevant than individual cpgs. we therefore used a "bumphunting" technique adapted to wgbs data to identify regions of methylation with . % dnam changes per week (corresponding to . % changes across our developmental window) change in dnam levels across adjacent cpgs, and calculated statistical significance using bootstrap-based permutations . using a conservative cutoff (fwer < . ) there were dmrs across prenatal development, though a less conservative cutoff (p < . ) identified , dmrs (table s , figure s a for dmr plot). the dmrs are similarly unevenly distributed throughout the genome as the cpgs, being far less frequent on chrx and variable among the autosomes. the dmrs on average had a width of bp (iqr: - ), % overlap with annotated genes, and % overlap with annotated cpg islands. like the cpgs, the dmrs were split between hypo-and hypermethylation, where in % of the dmrs, methylation increased with age. we also found differentially methylated sites and regions between the sexes in these prenatal samples. there were , significantly differential cpgs by sex and as expected, the vast majority ( %) of these were on the sex chromosomes. there were still , significant autosomal cpgs (table s ) , and while of them were in regions homologous to the sex chromosomes, the majority ( %) had no homology to chrx or chry. among these, we found conservatively dmrs with a % methylation change between sexes (table s , figure s b for dmr plot). again we saw that these were not global, but regional changes in methylation, with equal numbers of dmrs being hypo-and hypermethylated in males and females. these data show that there are many differences in the dnam landscape throughout second trimester development, and between sexes prenatally. previously, many studies of brain dna methylation have used the illumina infinium® humanmethylation beadchip (" k") and more recent infinium methylationepic (" k") microarray technologies. while these platforms can sensitively measure dnam levels without the high coverage/sequencing requirements of wgbs, they assay a limited number of sites. to better identify the tradeoff between breadth (assaying more sites) and depth (assaying a given site more accurately), we compared our wgbs findings to analogous statistics calculated using these arrays on the same dna extractions. first, using the probe coordinates alone, the k array does not measure dnam levels at , ( %) of the significant age-correlated cpgs or , ( . %) of the significant sex-correlated cpgs we identified. the k dnam data validated ( %) out of the , age-correlated sites that were covered. performing the same age model on the k data, our wgbs data validated / ( %) of the significant results. the effects of age on methylation were generally directionally concordant between the two datasets ( figure s ). though dmrs have much wider spans, the k does not cover ( %) and ( %) of dmrs for age and sex, respectively. the newer k microarray had almost twice the number of probes, yet we found that it does not measure % of our significant sites for age and % of sites for sex. additionally, it still failed to capture % of age dmrs and % of sex dmrs. microarrays are potentially missing a great deal of significantly differential sites, suggesting wgbs is best for thorough analysis. section : functional characterization of differential sites while differential methylation analysis provides detailed information about changes in the methylation landscape across brain prenatal development and between the sexes, we wanted to better understand the molecular consequences of these changes. we performed gene set enrichment and gene ontology to better understand in which processes the genes containing significant cpgs are involved. the top biological processes associated with genes containing differentially methylated cpgs across age were related to axon development and guidance, and regulation of neuron projection ( figure s , table s ). these sites were also shown to be enriched for enhancers in fetal brain tissue as well as enriched for transcription start site regions in brain tissue from the epigenome roadmap project , implying that these areas are likely functional in prenatal brain ( figure a ). to better assess the putative functionality of the methylation at these cpgs and dmrs, we correlated these dnam associations with nearby expression levels using rna-seq data from the same cortical dissection. among the , age-related cpgs, % were within an rna-seq-measured gene (corresponding to , unique genes). , ( %) of these cpgs had methylation levels significantly correlated (p < . ) to expression of the gene they lie directly within ( unique genes, %, see methods, figure b -c). these expression-correlated cpgs did not have any differential gene ontology from the overall group of genes. these sites were mostly in weak transcription, enhancer, and quiescent chromatin states in fetal brain ( figure s ) . with an expanded window of kb around genes, , ( %) cpgs were accounted for, and , ( %) correlated to the nearest gene's expression. it is important to note that this only tested sites within actual genes, and only the effect on the same gene, so enhancer, upstream, and trans-acting effects were not accounted for. the correlation to expression was much lower for sex-related cpgs, at % and % significant correlation depending on inclusion or exclusion of sex chromosomes. the lack of correlation to expression here is unsurprising because there are almost no transcriptomic differences between the sexes in these samples. gene set enrichment on autosomal sex-related cpgs found genes involved with synaptic transmission and signaling, regulation of gtpase activity, and the glutamate receptor signaling pathway (table s ) . age-related dmrs were most enriched for genes related to stem cell proliferation and various cell fate specifications (table s ). among the dmrs across age, % were significantly correlated with gene expression. the genes represented by this are otx , ac . , cyp e , plekhh , and dux l . there was no enrichment for any gene category among the sex-related dmrs, but it is worth noting that many of these genes coded for lncrnas. % of sex-related dmrs were correlated to gene expression within their own gene and these genes were linc , linc , spatc l , and rfpl . correlation to gene expression overall was not different between differentially methylated regions and non-differentially methylated regions; the dmrs we found were not enriched for highly correlated regions. these results provide potential starting points for further understanding the dna methylation landscape of the developing brain, allowing us to understand which processes are active during normal and disordered development. while dna methylation occurs exclusively in the cpg context in most somatic cell types, neurons in the human brain uniquely have high levels of dna methylation in other cytosine contexts (predominantly cpa) . we therefore investigated the potential role of cph methylation across brain development. only . % (iqr: . - . ) of sites in a chg context and . % (iqr: . - . ) of sites in a chh context were methylated. for comparison, around % of cph sites are methylated in postnatal neurons, so it is likely as previously suggested that cph methylation accumulates beginning around the time of birth. this contrasted with cpg sites, which were predominantly methylated across the genome (table s ) . because there were so many more cph than cpg sites in the genome, this means that there are actually similar numbers of methylated cpg and cph sites, despite the different proportions. using the same linear model as was used for cpgs on , , cph sites, no cphs were significantly associated with age within this time period when accounting for the large multiple testing burden. however, autosomal cphs were significantly associated with sex (at fdr < . , table s ). additionally, there were associated cphs on the sex chromosomes, though most of these were on chry, overall very proportionally different from cpg methylation. there was no enrichment for any more specific trinucleotide context in these significant sites over the whole genome. these cphs were less likely to be in or near genes than the cpgs, but of the autosomal cphs that were in or near genes, only was significantly correlated (p < . ) with expression of the nearest gene within kb. it is notable that the majority of these cphs are relatively far from a gene. additionally, the effect size of the cph methylation at these significant sites is independent of the effect of cpgm in the surrounding area in most cases. five of the cphs' effect is reduced when accounting for the methylation of the nearest cpg ( figure s ) , showing that these few are dependent on the local cpg landscape, but most function independently. these loci are found both in and outside of genes and their surrounding regions. overall, cph methylation does not seem to be very dynamic or functional in prenatal second trimester development, though later in early postnatal life it is . section : links to neuropsychiatric conditions and their (genetic) risk. to understand the clinical implications of our findings, we tested the genes represented by prenatal age-associated cpgs and found that they were enriched for bipolar disorder-(p = . ), neurodevelopmental disorder-(p = . ), and schizophrenia-(p = . ) associated genes . age-differential cpgs with correlation to gene expression were not further enriched. the set of age-differential cpg genes was particularly enriched for autism-associated genes (p = x - , or = . ), with of our , genes being linked to autism spectrum disorder (asd) . sex-differential cpgs were also enriched for asd-associated genes (p = x - , or = . ), but not for genes associated with other psychiatric disorders. dmrs represented a greater portion of the genome than cpgs, and thus may have different functional effects. to further understand what phenotypes may be linked to our dmrs, we performed stratified ld score regression . our dmr sets represented a fairly small portion of the genome, but at . mb, the less stringent age-based dmrs were wide enough to detect enrichment of bmi-and subjective well-being-(swb) associated markers (table s ). these dmrs were also shown to be enriched for brain-linked traits overall, compared to non-brain-linked traits. additionally, the dmrs overlap with of schizophrenia loci from psychiatric genetics consortium . these results suggest that dynamic methylation states in prenatal development may play a role in many disease and non-disease phenotypes that manifest later in life. here we demonstrate that cpg methylation changes are associated with prenatal cortical development, are likely functionally relevant, and may play a role in developmental psychiatric disorders such as autism spectrum disorder (asd). the shifting dnam landscape during this restricted prenatal time period -the second trimesterlikely plays a role in neurogenesis of the developing human brain. following current dogma, changes in dnam at these critical sites presumably lead to altered gene expression which promotes the formation of new neural connections in the cortex. at this point in time, we see that it is cpgs that are the important sites in the dnam landscape, as opposed to cphs. this is in line with previous research which finds that most cphm is established around birth and postnatally , , later in neuron differentiation and development . we also see that much of this regulation is occuring in cis -within the site's own gene. we do not currently understand the trans effects of our developmentally dynamic sites, but they may explain the effects of the methylation that does not correlate to its nearest gene's expression. the fact that the age-associated cpg sites we identified are often in enhancer regions in prenatal brain is further evidence that these sites may be regulating from a distance. our findings are in line with previous findings based on a microarray platform , but using wgbs allows us to assess methylation at far more loci than the more commonly used illumina microarrays. we've shown that these microarrays do not even measure the majority of sites that are dynamic in neural development. despite potentially less precision, we also show that wgbs has enough coverage to assess dnam dynamics and that its findings were consistent with deeper-coverage assays. additionally, we present novel loci due to our narrower developmental age range, which means that we can detect more subtle changes in the second trimester but also means that we do not replicate all the findings of studies done across wider timespans. confining our samples to just cortex tissue rather than whole brain tissue also allows us to detect more regionally specific changes. most variation in our data likely comes from different cell types in the cortex, which we partially accounted for in our model by adjusting for esc estimated proportions. we believe that most of the cell types in this area at this time are neurons, but there is likely a range of maturities leading to variation in methylation . by accounting for esc fraction in our model, we believe that the age affects we find are truly a result of prenatal age. we also find that there are autosomal differences in dnam between the sexes, though by our assessment they seem less functionally significant. they may be acting more in trans which makes it more difficult to assess significance, but there are also just generally far fewer transcriptomic differences between sexes than between ages. sex-differential dnam later in life has been linked to psychiatric genes, which has been proposed as a mechanism for sex differences in psychiatric disorders , so perhaps the early changing dnam is laying the groundwork for future effects. like xia et al , we found that asd-associated genes are differentially methylated between the sexes, but this does not readily translate into transcriptomic differences. given the enrichment in our developmentally-associated sites for psychiatric-linked genes, these data support the notion of early neurodevelopmental components for disorders such as schizophrenia , , . genes implicated in bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, and asd are clearly dynamic at this time point in life, so dysregulation at this stage could lead to vulnerabilities to these disorders later in life. our data also implies that bmi and subjective well beingnon-disease traits -could be linked to neural development at this stage of life. as more data is generated, particularly through genome-scale methods like wgbs, we will be able to establish normal ranges of dnam at all ages, which will undoubtedly provide insight into molecular dynamics in this hard-to-study period and organ, as well as give clues to where deviation from the norm is important. unfortunately, wgbs still does not measure hydroxymethylation, another chemical modification thought to be epigenetically important. our findings are only the beginning of what may be found given the limited sample size of our study, but even here we reveal important processes. there is room for much more characterization of these epigenetic marks, but it is clear that they are worth understanding. dna methylation serves as an exciting potential avenue to understand neural development and psychiatric disorders. there are clear and functional changes in the neuronal dnam landscape over this important window of brain development and between sexes, and further investigation will help elucidate unknown mechanisms in the brain. supplemental data include figures and tables. divergent neuronal dna methylation patterns across human cortical development reveal critical periods and a unique role of cph methylation spatio-temporal transcriptome of the human brain epigenetic mechanisms in neurological disease persistent epigenetic differences associated with prenatal exposure to famine in humans tobacco-smoking-related differential dna methylation: k discovery and replication long term low-dose arsenic exposure induces loss of dna methylation genetic insights into the neurodevelopmental origins of schizophrenia complexity of prefrontal cortical dysfunction in schizophrenia: more than up or down mapping dna methylation across development, genotype and schizophrenia in the human frontal cortex methylomic trajectories across human fetal brain development a single-cell transcriptomic atlas of human neocortical development during mid-gestation a wrapper around cutadapt and fastqc to consistently apply adapter and quality trimming to fastq files, with extra functionality for rrbs data arioc: gpu-accelerated alignment of short bisulfite-treated reads samblaster: fast duplicate marking and structural variant read extraction bismark: a flexible aligner and methylation caller for bisulfite-seq applications bsmooth: from whole genome bisulfite sequencing reads to differentially methylated regions clusterprofiler: an r package for comparing biological themes among gene clusters sfari gene . : a community-driven knowledgebase for the autism spectrum disorders (asds) prenatal expression patterns of genes associated with neuropsychiatric disorders partitioning heritability by functional annotation using genome-wide association summary statistics flowsorted.dlpfc. k: illumina humanmethylation data on sorted frontal cortex cell populations (r: bioconductor) minfi: a flexible and comprehensive bioconductor package for the analysis of infinium dna methylation microarrays limma powers differential expression analyses for rna-sequencing and microarray studies robust hyperparameter estimation protects against hypervariable genes and improves power to detect differential expression developmental and genetic regulation of the human cortex transcriptome illuminate schizophrenia pathogenesis bump hunting to identify differentially methylated regions in epigenetic epidemiology studies integrative analysis of reference human epigenomes distribution, recognition and regulation of non-cpg methylation in the adult mammalian brain divergent neuronal dna methylation patterns across human cortical development reveal critical periods and a unique role of cph methylation biological insights from schizophrenia-associated genetic loci global epigenomic reconfiguration during mammalian brain development principles governing dna methylation during neuronal lineage and subtype specification sex-differential dna methylation and associated regulation networks in human brain implicated in the sex-biased risks of psychiatric disorders the neurodevelopmental hypothesis of schizophrenia, revisited implications of normal brain development for the pathogenesis of schizophrenia the authors thank the umb brain bank at the department of pediatrics in the university of maryland school of medicine for the tissue provided. this project was supported by the lieber institute for brain development and by nih grants r mh and r mh . finally, we are indebted to the generosity of the families of the decedents, who donated the brain tissue used in these studies. the authors declare no competing interests. raw and processed nucleic acid sequencing data generated to support the findings of this study are part of the psychencode consortium and the brainseq consortium data releases. specifically, wgbs data have been deposited at www.synapse.org along with the other psychencode data, under the accession code syn . the homogenate rna-seq samples were also part of a larger study of rna-seq data from homogenate dlpfc tissue (brainseq consortium phase i) , which was also deposited at www.synapse.org and summarized in http://eqtl.brainseq.org/phase . the processed, homogenate rna-seq data for this study have additionally been deposited via globus under the jhpce#brainepi-cellsorted collection at the following location: http://research.libd.org/globus/jhpce_brainepi-cellsorted/ . neun-sorted rna-seq data were originally published as part of phase ii of the brainseq consortium ( http://eqtl.brainseq.org/phase / ) and have also been deposited via globus under the jhpce#brainepi-polya collection at the following location: http://research.libd.org/globus/jhpce_brainepi-polya/ . publicly available data reprocessed in support of the conclusions in this work were downloaded from the gene expression omnibus under geo accession gse . key: cord- -wo j ps authors: nettelbeck, dirk m. title: bispecific antibodies and gene therapy date: - - journal: bispecific antibodies doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: wo j ps gene therapy is the transfer of therapeutic genes, via gene transfer vectors, into patients for therapeutic purposes. different gene therapy strategies are being pursued, including long-term gene correction of monogenetic diseases, eradication of tumor cells in cancer patients, or genetic vaccination for infectious diseases. bispecific antibodies and gene therapy are connected in two ways. first, bispecific antibodies are tools of interest for the development of targeted gene transfer vectors. different gene therapy strategies require different vectors, frequently replication-ablated viruses. similar to the role of antibody engineering in antibody therapy, the engineering of gene transfer vectors has become key to the implementation of genetic therapies. cytoablative cancer gene therapy and efficient genetic vaccination, for example, depend on vectors that are targeted to cancer cells and antigen-presenting cells, respectively, in order to avoid side effects and vector sequestration. to this end, bispecific antibodies have been engineered as adapters that link the vector to a specific molecule on the targeted cell and at the same time block the interaction with the native virus receptor. different formats of bispecific antibodies and related molecules have been developed and succeeded in re-directing vectors to target cells in vitro and in vivo. these adapters also improved gene therapies in animal models. second, gene transfer is a promising tool for delivery of bispecific antibodies to patients. therefore, vectors can be injected directly into patients for antibody gene transfer, or cells isolated from patients can be genetically modified in vitro and then re-injected for in vivo antibody production. genetic antibody delivery, compared with standard antibody injection, can be advantageous with respect to achieving persistent antibody titers or effective antibody biodistribution in patients. initial studies have shown antibody production and therapeutic activity in animal models, setting the stage for more widespread investigations. moreover, gene therapy can enable novel therapeutic applications for bispecific antibodies by facilitating the delivery of membrane associated or intracellular antibody formats. gene therapy is the transfer of genes into patients' cells for therapeutic purposes ( fig. . ). gene therapy was originally envisioned as a cure for inherited (monogenetic) diseases by gene correction, i.e., by replacing or complementing the causative mutated gene with a functional copy. in recent decades, however, gene therapy has been intensively investigated for treatment of many diseases by transfer of diverse classes of therapeutic genes from various species (table . ). examples are genes encoding pathogen antigens for prevention or treatment of infectious diseases (genetic vaccination); genes encoding agonists or antagonists of vascular growth factors for treatment of cardiovascular diseases; or genes that directly or indirectly mediate tumor cell killing for cancer treatment. gene therapy drugs consist of the therapeutic gene, which defines the mode of therapeutic action, and the gene transfer vector, which needs to facilitate appropriate stability, delivery, and expression of the therapeutic gene ( fig. . ). indeed, major efforts in gene therapy research focus on vector development, since the delivery of therapeutic genes is complex and critically determines treatment efficacy. since the s a multitude of gene therapy clinical trials have been performed with thousands of patients and therapeutic efficacy was demonstrated recently. examples are the restoration of immunity in scid patients, restoration of some degree of vision in childhood blindness or inhibition of neurodegeneration (kohn ; roy et al. ; cartier et al. ). however, most gene therapy approaches necessitate improved efficacy or selectivity of gene transfer in order to facilitate successful applications in patients. to ensure proper expression of the therapeutic gene in the patients' cells, a gene therapy vector contains a promoter and a transcription termination/polyadenylation signal ( fig. . ). further regulatory elements can be exploited, for example, to achieve enhanced (introns) or bicistronic (internal ribosome entry sites, ires) gene expression. importantly, regulatory elements can be exploited for spatial or temporal control of gene expression. examples are inducible or cell type-specific promoters or sequences differentially regulating mrna stability or translation efficiency (goverdhana et al. ; dorer and nettelbeck ; brown and naldini ) . to improve stability of the therapeutic dna, these eukaryotic expression for gene therapy, a therapeutic gene is delivered into the patient's cell, where the gene product is expressed and mediates therapeutic activity. examples are the complementation of the patient's genetic defects or the killing of cancer cells. for delivery and expression, the therapeutic gene is incorporated into a gene transfer vector containing regulatory sequences (e.g., for transcription start and termination). frequently, the vector is also a means for efficient gene delivery into the patient's cells (e.g., replication-deficient viruses). right panels: bispecific antibodies can be either a tool for targeting gene transfer vectors to specific cell types ( ) or gene transfer can be exploited as a tool for antibody therapy by antibody gene transfer and subsequent synthesis of the antibody in the patient ( ) singer and verma ( ) cassettes are inserted either into circular plasmids, which might be further packaged by non-viral vectors, or into genomes of replication-deficient viral vectors ( into hematopoietic stem cells for treatment of inherited immunodeficiencies (kohn ) . in contrast, transient gene transfer is usually sufficient for genetic vaccination or cytoablative cancer therapy. for the latter, however, efficient gene transfer is pivotal and thus vector choice is determined by transduction efficiency. in this regard, conditionally replication-competent viral vectors have been recently engineered allowing for vector spread in tumors and thus amplified gene transfer (parato et al. ; cody and douglas ). such replication-competent vectors also mediate tumor cell lysis by virus replication, termed oncolysis or virotherapy. hence, from the perspective of the virotherapist, insertion of therapeutic genes into the genome of oncolytic viruses is a strategy to complement oncolysis with gene therapy ("arming" of oncolytic viruses). many gene therapy applications require the restriction of gene transfer to specific cells. this is obvious for cytoablative gene therapy and for replication-competent vectors. also effective genetic vaccination can depend on gene transfer into appropriate immune cells, as antigen expression in the wrong cells can trigger tolerance rather than immunity. consequently, vector targeting is a major challenge for gene therapy research. targeted gene therapy (or viral replication) can be achieved by inserting cell-binding ligands into the gene transfer vector for targeted cell entry, or by post-entry regulation of therapeutic gene expression using appropriate regulatory sequences, as mentioned above. bispecific antibodies and gene therapy are connected in two ways. first, bispecific antibodies have been developed as promising tools for targeting cell entry of gene transfer vectors: as adapter molecules they link the vector to a marker molecule (specifically) expressed on the target cell surface ( fig. . ) . second, gene therapy can be an alternative means for delivery of therapeutic antibodies to patients, i.e., by antibody production in the patients' cells (genetic antibody therapy, fig. . ). besides genetic delivery of (established) soluble antibodies, such antibody gene transfer can also facilitate new applications for (bispecific) antibody therapy, for example by expression of membrane-bound or intracellular derivatives. certainly combination therapies of bispecific antibodies and gene therapy can also be envisioned. bispecific antibodies have been exploited in gene therapy as tools to direct viral gene transfer vectors to diseased cells. therefore, an antibody with specificity for a viral surface protein is linked to a second antibody that binds to a cell surface molecule of interest, thus implementing an adapter molecule that binds the gene transfer vector to the target cell (figs. . and . ). such modification of virus tropism is required when virus receptor expression is lacking on target cells, preventing gene transfer, or when widespread expression of the native virus receptor on healthy cells leads to adverse side effects and vector sequestration. for the latter, either the viral attachment proteins have been mutated without losing their affinity for the adapter, or the receptor-binding domain of the virus attachment protein is shielded by the adapter. the resulting loss of virus tropism for healthy cells is termed de-targeting. binding of and entry into target cells in both cases is mediated by the target of the cell-binding moiety of the adapter (re-targeting). important advantages of the adapter strategy are (a) it does not require modifications to the virus structure, which might well turn out to be detrimental for bispecific antibodies as tools for targeting gene therapy. bispecific adapters binding to the gene transfer vector via one specificity and to a cell surface molecule with the other are used for delivering therapeutic genes to specific cell types. this strategy is of interest to gene therapy in order to ensure targeted therapy and avoid side effects. these bispecific adapters might contain one antibody or antibody fragment (for either vector or cell binding). alternatively, they can be bispecific antibodies: chemical conjugate, diabody or tandem scfv vector assembly, stability, or activity; (b) it is flexible as vector binding to any target molecule, to which an antibody can be raised, is possible by exchange of the adapter's cell-binding moiety and (c) once an effective adapter for a specific vector has been generated, it can be used for transfer of any therapeutic gene by corresponding derivatives of this vector. bispecific antibodies as adapters for targeting gene transfer have been most intensively investigated with adenoviral vectors. adenoviruses (ads, mcconnell and imperiale ) possess a double-stranded linear dna genome covered by a protein capsid, but not a lipid envelope. the receptor-binding spike of the adenoviral capsid, made of the trimeric fiber protein, is responsible for attachment to host cells by binding to the virus receptor, which is the coxsackie-adenovirus receptor (car) for the mostly used human ad serotype (hadv- ). virus internalization into the host cell is then mediated by a secondary interaction of a different virus capsid protein, the penton base, with cellular integrins. by separating cell binding from entry, this two-step mechanism facilitates a high degree of flexibility for the nature of initial attachment of ad vectors to cells. after entry of the vector into the cell, the virus genome is transferred to the nucleus, where viral genes are expressed from the episomal genome. likewise, therapeutic genes are expressed after transfer of ad vector genomes into patients' cells. therefore, essential viral genes are replaced with the therapeutic gene, rendering the vector replication-deficient. more recently, therapeutic genes have been inserted into replication-competent ads (mcconnell and imperiale ). ads represent prominent gene therapy vectors, as they are stable, can be produced at high titers, possess an effective gene transfer machinery, and are only mildly pathogenic (hadv- causes common cold symptoms) (mcconnell and imperiale ). they have been the most frequently used viral vectors in clinical gene therapy trials (journal of gene medicine clinical trials database). these trials have revealed a favorable safety profile of ad vectors in patients. cancer gene therapy and genetic vaccination are the regimens where ad vectors are widely used. one therapeutic approach in cancer gene therapy is molecular chemotherapy, also termed gene-dependent enzyme prodrug therapy (gdept). this strategy is based on transfer of a gene encoding a prodrug-activating enzyme, which activates a harmless prodrug into an effective chemotherapeutic drug (portsmouth et al. ). the rationale for this strategy is that tumor-restricted prodrug activation should facilitate effective concentrations of the chemotherapeutic drug in the tumor, which cannot be achieved by conventional systemic infusion of the drug due to dose-limiting side effects. gdept and other cytoablative cancer gene therapies depend on tumor-selective gene transfer which is not provided by unmodified hadv- or other ad serotypes due to widespread expression of ad receptors also on healthy cells. ads are also frequently used as vectors for genetic vaccination, which is most efficient when the antigen gene is transduced into professional antigen-presenting cells (apcs), which provide the proper signals for activation of immune effector cells. dendritic cells (dcs) are the most effective apcs, but are difficult to transduce. though ads are the most effective gene transfer vectors for dcs, high vector titers are required for efficient dc transduction because of low expression of car. antibodies are attractive binding molecules for targeting gene transfer vectors based on their high affinity, specificity, and the opportunity to generate antibodies with specificity for virtually any cell surface target molecule. three strategies have been pursued for insertion of targeting ligands into viral gene transfer vectors: genetic fusion to viral capsid or envelope proteins, complexing with bispecific adapters, or chemical linkage. major drawbacks of the genetic and chemical strategies are that they are tedious and often interfere with viral functions. moreover, genetic insertion of antibodies into the adenoviral capsid is hampered by the incompatibility of biosynthesis of capsid and antibody molecules. ad capsid proteins are synthesized in the cytosol and transferred to the nucleus where viral particle assembly takes place, whereas antibodies are produced via the secretory pathway, which ensures their proper folding. consequently, genetic fusion of antibodies to ad capsid proteins has been inefficient and limited to a few cytosolically stable antibody fragments (hedley et al. ; vellinga et al. ; poulin et al. ) . in contrast, synthesis of adapter molecules can be separated from virus production. moreover, the insertion of cell-binding antibodies into adapter molecules is less tedious than the engineering of a complete new virus genome and resulting adapters can be linked to any ad vector, allowing for better flexibility. for production of adapters, antibody fragments binding to ad capsid proteins, mostly the fiber, and antibodies or antibody fragments binding to cell surface target molecules of interest have been used (fig. . ). they have been linked by chemical conjugation (see also: chap. ) or by genetic fusion, the latter generating tandem scfvs or scdbs (see also: chap. ). as an alternative to bispecific antibodies, adapters have been generated by linking virus-binding antibody fragments to cell-binding proteins or peptides, or by linking cell-binding antibody fragments to the soluble adenovirus receptor car. the adapter strategy for targeting cell entry of ad vectors has been pioneered by douglas and co-workers for targeting of folate receptor overexpressing tumor cells (douglas et al. ) . to this end, they chemically conjugated folate to the fab fragment of a neutralizing anti-ad fiber monoclonal antibody (mab). a fab fragment was used to avoid agglutination of ad vectors by bivalent antibodies. after complexation to the respective ad vector, the adapter mediated folatedependent transfer of a reporter gene or of cytoablative genetic prodrug activation to target cells. the fab fragment alone inhibited adenoviral transduction, which was expected as it was derived from a neutralizing antibody. thus the fab-folate adapter realized targeted gene transfer by both ablating virus binding to the native virus receptor and directing virus attachment to a novel cell surface molecule (fig. . ) . wickham et al. described a bispecific antibody for directing ad cell binding to integrins. this adapter consisted of the integrin-binding mab chemically linked to a second mab with specificity for a peptide tag, which was engineered into the ad penton base (wickham et al. ) . the conjugate mediated enhanced adenoviral transduction of human smooth muscle and endothelial cells, which were only modestly tranduced by unmodified hadv vectors. subsequently, various bispecific antibody conjugates were reported, that consist of a fiber-binding fab fragment covalently linked to a cell-binding antibody or antibody fragment. such bispecific antibody conjugates have been reported to re-direct ad gene transfer to various cell types via binding to different cell surface molecules, including cd , epcam, tag , cd , and ace (tillman et al. , de gruijl et al. ; brandao et al. ; miller et al. ; haisma et al. ; israel et al. ; reynolds et al. reynolds et al. , . these reports confirm the high flexibility of the adapter approach. for example, dcs, as professional antigen-presenting cells, represent targets of interest for gene transfer aiming at genetic vaccination for infectious or malignant diseases. conjugates of a-fiber fab and mabs binding to the dc surface molecule cd allowed for efficient ad gene transfer into mouse and human dcs (tillman et al. , . with this adapter, improved efficiency and selectivity of ad gene transfer to dcs was also achieved in situ using human skin explants (de gruijl et al. ) . in addition to targeting ad entry, the a-fiber fab/acd mab adapter triggered dc activation, as required for efficient induction of immune responses, via its cd -binding activity. accordingly, the adapter increased the efficiency of tumor vaccination with ad vector transduced dcs in an animal model (tillman et al. ) . adapter targeting of ad vectors to cancer cells was demonstrated in cell culture studies with an egfr-binding a-fiber fab/mab conjugate for squamous cell carcinoma, glioblastoma, and osteosarcoma (miller et al. ; blackwell et al. ; barnett et al. ) ; with an epcam-binding fab/fab conjugate for various adenocarcinomas (haisma et al. ; heideman et al. ) ; with a tag- -binding a-fiber fab/mab conjugate for ovarian cancer (kelly et al. ) ; and with a cd -binding a-fiber fab/mab conjugate for b cell lymphomas (israel et al. ) . as car-expression varies on cancer cells, adapters frequently mediated markedly enhanced transduction of cancer cells. yet another type of antibody-based adapter conjugate has been generated by linking a-fiber fab fragments to basic fibroblast growth factor for targeting of various cancer cells (fgf , goldman et al. ; rogers et al. ; rancourt et al. ) to a synthetic lung-homing peptide (trepel et al. ) , or to the hc-fragment of tetanus toxin for targeting neuronal cells (schneider et al. ) . recombinant bispecific adapter molecules possess attributes that are advantageous for application in vector targeting when compared with chemical conjugates. foremost, they can be produced by standardized procedures of prokaryotic or eukaryotic expression yielding well-defined molecules. both tandem single chain variable fragments (tandem scfvs, see also: chap. ) and single chain diabodies (scdbs, see also: chap. ) have been used for targeting ad gene transfer. haisma and co-workers demonstrated that ad transduction of glioblastoma and carcinoma cells can be increased by complexing the virus with a recombinant tandem a-fiber/a-egfr scfv (haisma et al. ) . our group reported in that a scdb with specificities for the ad fiber and endoglin, which is expressed on proliferative endothelium, facilitated targeted transduction of endothelial cells (nettelbeck et al. ) . in contrast to the tandem scfv, which was expressed in eukaryotic cells, the scdb was produced in bacteria. ad transduction was also targeted to gastric cancer cells with a tandem scfv adapter binding to epcam (heideman et al. ) , to dcs with a cd -binding tandem scfv adapter (brandao et al. ) , to melanoma cells using a scdb adapter binding the melanoma surface antigen hmwmaa ), or to breast cancer cells with either a tandem scfv or a scdb binding to cea (korn et al. ). for improved de-targeting, "receptor-blind" ad mutants were combined with tandem scfv or scdb adapters that were derived from a-fiber scfvs that retained binding to mutant fibers nettelbeck et al. ; carette et al. ). these ad vectors could not bind car, even when individual fiber molecules were not protected after complexation with adapters. in consequence, this strategy of combined genetic/immunological tropism-modification implements a further increase in selectivity of gene transfer. recombinant antibody-derived adapters for targeting adenoviral transduction were also obtained by fusion of a-fiber scfv to ligand proteins (egf or upar, watkins et al. ; harvey et al. ) or to ligand peptides (nicklin et al. ) . alternatively, cell-binding scfvs (a-c-erbb , a-cd or a-fcgri) were fused to monomeric or trimeric soluble car pereboev et al. ; kim et al. ; sapinoro et al. ). such scar-derived adapters offer the advantage of improving affinity to fiber by scar trimerization; however, they naturally cannot bind to "receptorblind" fiber-mutant viruses. these strategies also demonstrated that the adapter, besides targeting gene transfer, might also influence the outcome of gene therapy in different ways: adenoviral gene transfer to dcs by cd -binding adapters, but not by the fcgri-binding adapter resulted in dc activation, thus influencing the type of immune response (immunization versus tolerization, tillman et al. ; sapinoro et al. ). in vitro studies with adapter molecules, including various bispecific antibodies, have clearly proven that viral cell entry can be re-directed via novel cell surface receptors, thus reprogramming virus tropism. this has been demonstrated in established cell cultures, freshly purified normal and tumor cells and in tissue explants, as for the demonstration of dc-targeted gene transfer in skin explants (de gruijl et al. ) . what are possible applications of bispecific antibodies and other antibody-derived gene transfer adapters? first, due to their modular composition and the opportunity to rapidly (in comparison with genetically engineered viruses) produce new adapters by chemical or genetic means, they facilitate the analysis, comparison, and screening of cell surface molecules for their feasibility as targets for viral gene transfer. second, applications of adapters for ex vivo gene therapy are of interest. an example is genetic vaccination of cancer or infectious diseases by ex vivo gene transfer into dcs isolated from patients. gene therapy of inherited diseases by ex vivo gene transfer into hematopoietic (stem) cells is a further application. here, however, retroviral vectors are preferred over ad vectors, as they facilitate stable gene transfer and thus prolonged gene correction or replacement (table . ). of note, adaptertargeting of retroviral gene transfer has been demonstrated recently (see below). most gene therapy applications, however, require in vivo gene transfer. for establishing adapters for targeting gene transfer, in vivo extensive studies on the stability, efficiency, and selectivity of adapter-vector complexes after in vivo application are needed. whereas rigorous studies for the evaluation of pharmacologic and therapeutic parameters of adapter-targeted gene transfer are still to be done, initial studies have shown efficacy of adapter-targeting in vivo. in an effort to facilitate gene therapy of pulmonary vascular disease, reynolds and colleagues investigated a fab-mab conjugate adapter that binds angiotensinconverting enzyme (ace) for targeting of ad gene transfer to the lung endothelium in rats (reynolds et al. , . by systemic application of adapter-bound or uncomplexed ad vector, it was shown that this adapter increased gene transfer to the lung by more than -fold. importantly, gene transfer was directed to endothelial cells. moreover, gene transfer to the liver, the organ responsible for most adinduced side effects, was reduced more than %. hence, this study demonstrated both systemic stability of the adapter-vector complex and adapter-dependent vector de-and re-targeting in vivo. for the fab-fgf adapter, several studies in mice showed adapter-dependent reduction of liver transgene expression after systemic injection of ad vectors and reduced toxicity of ad-mediated genetic prodrug activation therapy. furthermore, this adapter increased therapeutic activity of ad-mediated genetic prodrug activation of peritoneal malignancies, when the ad vectors were injected intraperitoneally (rancourt et al. ; gu et al. ; printz et al. ) . in vivo stability of adaptor-vector complexes has also been demonstrated for recombinant proteins. trimeric, but not monomeric scar significantly blocked liver gene transfer by ads after systemic application of the scar-ad vector complex into mice (kim et al. ) . however, in a different study, a scar-scfv adapter targeting cea also reduced liver transduction by ad vectors after systemic injection of adapter-virus complexes into mice (li et al. ) . after systemic injection, this adapter also increased adenoviral transduction of ceapositive, but reduced transduction of cea-negative tumors that were grafted to mouse livers. furthermore, a trimeric derivative of the scar-cea adapter mediated improved targeting of adenoviral gene transfer in vitro and in vivo. in combination with transcriptional targeting using the cox- promoter, this trimeric adapter increased therapeutic activity and at the same time reduced liver toxicity of genetic prodrug activation therapy with hsv-tk/gcv (li et al. ). studies with scar-egf and trimeric scar-mcd l confirm the re-targeting properties of scar-derived adapters in vivo (liang et al. ; huang et al. ). in addition to facilitating selective gene transfer, targeting adenoviral cell binding and entry is of interest also for improving oncolytic ads. toward this end, adapter molecules are of interest to re-direct the injected virus to target tumors. to also allow for targeting of progeny viruses of oncolytic ads produced in patients' tumors, genes encoding recombinant bispecific adapters have been inserted into the genome of these viruses. using a tandem scfv with specificity for the ad fiber and egfr, van beusechem and co-workers demonstrated increased viral spread and oncolysis in two-and three-dimensional tumor cell cultures (van beusechem et al. ; carette et al. ). although most widely investigated for ad vectors, adapters have been also shown to facilitate targeted cell entry of other viruses. adeno-associated viruses (aav) are small non-enveloped viruses that are frequently used for diverse gene therapy applications (buning et al. ) . tropism-modification of aav vectors was achieved with a bispecific fab/fab antibody conjugate. the adapter with specificity for the virus capsid and for integrins facilitated gene transfer into megakaryocytes, which are not permissive to unmodified aav vectors (bartlett et al. ) . for non-human coronaviruses, enveloped rna viruses that naturally do not enter human cells, infectivity for human cancer cells was established with a bispecific tandem scfv with specificities for a coronavirus surface glycoprotein and egfr (wurdinger et al. a, b) . the idea of this approach was to selectively kill tumor cells by lytic virus infection rather than viral gene transfer. similar results were obtained using a recombinant adapter built of soluble coronavirus receptor fused to the egfr-binding scfv (wurdinger et al. a, b) . newcastle disease virus, which is in development for viral oncolysis and gene therapy, has been re-targeted using a recombinant adapter built of a virus-binding scfv and il- (bian et al. (bian et al. , . retroviruses are enveloped rna viruses, which insert their genome after reverse transcription into the chromosome of infected cells. therefore, retroviral vectors facilitate long-term gene transfer which is especially suitable for gene correction therapy of monogenetic diseases. adapter targeting of retrovirus cell entry was reported for recombinant proteins built of the virus receptor extracellular domain fused to egf, vegf, or an egfrspecific scfv (snitkovsky and young ; boerger et al. ; snitkovsky et al. snitkovsky et al. , . . gene transfer as a tool for antibody therapy: genetic antibody delivery gene therapy can be exploited for expressing antibodies in patients, which might be advantageous for achieving sustained and/or efficient antibody concentrations and/ or a favorable antibody biodistribution by local expression. thus, gene therapy is a tool of interest to overcome rapid antibody clearance or poor access to tumors as reported for antibodies that are injected as proteins. genetic antibody therapy can be implemented by in vivo or ex vivo gene transfer (fig. . ) , i.e., by direct injection of the gene transfer vector into patients or by gene transfer in cultures of previously isolated cells followed by injection of the resulting genetically engineered cells, respectively. dependent on the design of the gene transfer vector, genetic antibody application can be transient or permanent, constitutive or inducible, targeted or ubiquitous. for example, retroviral vectors allow for stable gene transfer, inducible promoters facilitate control of antibody expression, and targeted vectors can direct gene transfer to specific cell types (see sects. . . and . . ). therefore, gene therapy possesses high potential and flexibility for implementing improved antibody delivery for specific applications. however, this area of research is still in its infancy and more widespread investigations are warranted. with the advent of recombinant dna technology it became possible to establish novel strategies for antibody production and to engineer antibody properties (for example affinity maturation and humanization), formats (single chain fragments), and fusion proteins (immunotoxins). recombinant antibodies have been frequently produced in bacteria, but gene transfer into eukaryotic cells has also been utilized for in vitro production of immunoglobulins, antibody fragments or antibody fusion proteins. having established the engineering of recombinant gene constructs for eukaryotic antibody expression, also the in vivo production of antibodies became feasible. examples are the expression of functional recombinant mabs in mice after transfer of genetically engineered cells (noel et al. ) or after in vivo gene transfer with an adenoviral or aav vector (noel et al. ; jiang et al. ; watanabe et al. ; lewis et al. ; fang et al. fang et al. , skaricic et al. ; de et al. ; ho et al. ). toward this end, fang and coworkers optimized antibody production: they expressed the heavy and light chains of the mab at equal amounts from a single open reading frame using a "ribosomal skip" sequence. thereby, serum levels of > mg/ml antibody for extended time periods were obtained in mice after injection of a single dose of aav vector. in a subsequent study, the same group demonstrated that by using an inducible promoter, serum antibody levels after in vivo gene transfer can be repeatedly shut off and on (fang et al. ). this represents a promising strategy to increase safety and/or facilitate dose adaptation in potential future clinical applications of genetic fig. . gene therapy as a tool for antibody delivery: genetic antibody therapy. for genetic antibody delivery antibody genes, which can be engineered to match specific purposes, are incorporated into gene transfer vectors. these vectors are either directly injected into patients (in vivo gene therapy) or are used for gene transfer into cells previously purified from a patient followed by re-injection of the engineered cells into the patient (ex vivo gene therapy). the antibodies are produced in the patient from cells genetically modified by in vivo or ex vivo gene transfer. dependent on the vector design, antibody production can be transient or prolonged, constitutive or inducible and show local or systemic activity antibody delivery. de and co-workers combined genetic delivery of a mab gene by aav and ad vectors to achieve both rapid (ad) and persistent (aav) antibody production . functional expression in vivo was also demonstrated for recombinant antibody fragments or fusion proteins that contain such fragments after adenoviral gene transfer (whittington et al. ; arafat et al. ; afanasieva et al. ; kasuya et al. ; liu et al. ) . the expression of chimeric antigen receptors by t cells and subsequent adoptive t cell therapy is another important application of genetic antibody delivery. Á lvarez-vallina and team have developed genetic delivery of bispecific antibodies by engineered cells. in , they reported anti-tumor activity for a bispecific diabody expressed in vivo from irradiated, genetically engineered t cells (blanco et al. ) . they produced stably transfected t cells secreting a diabody with specificity for both cea and cd . a second cell line additionally secreted a bivalent cea-specific diabody fused to the extracellular domain of b - . after co-injection with cea-positive tumor cells into mice, these genetically engineered cells showed anti-tumor activity compared with co-injection of control t cells. subsequent to this proof-of-principle study, the same group engineered a lentiviral gene transfer vector encoding the cea-cd diabody (compte et al. ). this vector facilitated the transduction of different types of hematopoietic cells that showed prolonged secretion of active diabody in vitro and antitumor activity in vivo. in a follow-up study, the group demonstrated that also the implantation of lentivirally transduced endothelial cells into mice resulted in prolonged production of the cea/cd diabody with therapeutic activity (compte et al. ). this study aims at a therapeutic regimen that allows for the production of therapeutic antibodies from neovessels that have incorporated ex vivo engineered endothelial cells. genetic delivery of bispecific antibodies has also been reported for intracellular applications: cell surface localization of two membrane proteins, vegfr and tie- , could be blocked by expression of a corresponding bispecific, tetravalent antibody targeted to the endoplasmic reticulum (jendreyko et al. ) . this intracellular bispecific antibody showed anti-angiogenic activity in vitro, which was superior to monovalent control antibodies. a similar construct with specificity for vegfr and tie- mediated anti-angiogenic and anti-tumor activity in vivo after adenoviral gene transfer (jendreyko et al. ) . proof of principle has been demonstrated in several cell culture studies and animal models for both the utility of bispecific antibodies for targeting gene therapies and the feasibility of gene transfer for delivering recombinant bispecific antibodies. based on this fundamental work, bispecific antibody adapters and gene transfer technologies should now be considered for improving therapeutic regimens in gene therapy and antibody therapy, respectively. cooperation between antibody engineers and gene therapists are warranted to further develop bispecific antibodies and gene transfer vectors for this purpose. single-chain antibody and its derivatives directed against vascular endothelial growth factor: application for antiangiogenic gene therapy effective single chain antibody (scfv) concentrations in vivo via adenoviral vector mediated expression of secretory scfv dual targeting of adenoviral vectors at the levels of transduction and transcription enhances the specificity of gene expression in cancer cells targeted adeno-associated virus vector transduction of nonpermissive cells mediated by a bispecific f(ab'gamma) antibody retrovirus vectors: toward the plentivirus? selective gene transfer in vitro to tumor cells via recombinant newcastle disease virus in vivo efficacy of systemic tumor targeting of a viral rna vector with oncolytic properties using a bispecific adapter protein retargeting to egfr enhances adenovirus infection efficiency of squamous cell carcinoma induction of human t lymphocyte cytotoxicity and inhibition of tumor growth by tumor-specific diabody-based molecules secreted from gene-modified bystander cells retroviral vectors preloaded with a viral receptor-ligand bridge protein are targeted to specific cell types cd -targeted adenoviral gene transfer to dendritic cells through the use of a novel bispecific single-chain fv antibody enhances cytotoxic t cell activation targeted gene-delivery strategies for angiostatic cancer treatment exploiting and antagonizing microrna regulation for therapeutic and experimental applications recent developments in adeno-associated virus vector technology a conditionally replicating adenovirus with strict selectivity in killing cells expressing epidermal growth factor receptor hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy with a lentiviral vector in x-linked adrenoleukodystrophy armed replicating adenoviruses for cancer virotherapy inhibition of tumor growth in vivo by in situ secretion of bispecific anti-cea x anti-cd diabodies from lentivirally transduced human lymphocytes factory neovessels: engineered human blood vessels secreting therapeutic proteins as a new drug delivery system prolonged maturation and enhanced transduction of dendritic cells migrated from human skin explants after in situ delivery of cd -targeted adenoviral vectors rapid/sustained anti-anthrax passive immunity mediated by co-administration of ad/aav targeting cancer by transcriptional control in cancer gene therapy and viral oncolysis fifteen years of gene therapy based on chimeric antigen receptors: "are we nearly there yet? targeted gene delivery by tropism-modified adenoviral vectors stable antibody expression at therapeutic levels using the a peptide an antibody delivery system for regulated expression of therapeutic levels of monoclonal antibodies in vivo targeted gene delivery to kaposi's sarcoma cells via the fibroblast growth factor receptor regulatable gene expression systems for gene therapy applications: progress and future challenges trail gene therapy: from preclinical development to clinical application fibroblast growth factor retargeted adenovirus has redirected cellular tropism: evidence for reduced toxicity and enhanced antitumor activity in mice tumor-specific gene transfer via an adenoviral vector targeted to the pan-carcinoma antigen epcam targeting of adenoviral vectors through a bispecific single-chain antibody retargeted adenoviral cancer gene therapy for tumour cells overexpressing epidermal growth factor receptor or urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor an adenovirus vector with a chimeric fiber incorporating stabilized single chain antibody achieves targeted gene delivery selective gene delivery toward gastric and esophageal adenocarcinoma cells via epcam-targeted adenoviral vectors selective gene transfer into primary human gastric tumors using epithelial cell adhesion molecule-targeted adenoviral vectors with ablated native tropism growth inhibition of an established a xenograft tumor by a full-length anti-egfr antibody following gene delivery by aav enhancement of adenovirus vector entry into cd -positive b-cell lines by using a bispecific cd -adenovirus fiber antibody intradiabodies, bispecific, tetravalent antibodies for the simultaneous functional knockout of two cell surface receptors phenotypic knockout of vegf-r and tie- with an intradiabody reduces tumor growth and angiogenesis in vivo gene therapy using adenovirus-mediated full-length anti-her- antibody for her- overexpression cancers new aspects in vascular gene therapy adenovirus targeting to c-erbb- oncoprotein by single-chain antibody fused to trimeric form of adenovirus receptor ectodomain passive immunotherapy for anthrax toxin mediated by an adenovirus expressing an anti-protective antigen single-chain antibody selectivity of tag- -targeted adenovirus gene transfer to primary ovarian carcinoma cells versus autologous mesothelial cells in vitro targeting adenoviral vectors by using the extracellular domain of the coxsackie-adenovirus receptor: improved potency via trimerization update on gene therapy for immunodeficiencies recombinant bispecific antibodies for the targeting of adenoviruses to cea-expressing tumour cells: a comparative analysis of bacterially expressed single-chain diabody and tandem scfv generation of neutralizing activity against human immunodeficiency virus type in serum by antibody gene transfer adenovirus tumor targeting and hepatic untargeting by a coxsackie/adenovirus receptor ectodomain anticarcinoembryonic antigen bispecific adapter combined transductional untargeting/retargeting and transcriptional restriction enhances adenovirus gene targeting and therapy for hepatic colorectal cancer tumors noninvasive of adenovirus tumor retargeting in living subjects by a soluble adenovirus receptor-epidermal growth factor (scar-egf) fusion protein advances in viral-vector systemic cytokine gene therapy against cancer gene therapy in haemophilia -going for cure? biology of adenovirus and its use as a vector for gene therapy differential susceptibility of primary and established human glioma cells to adenovirus infection: targeting via the epidermal growth factor receptor achieves fiber receptor-independent gene transfer targeting of adenovirus to endothelial cells by a bispecific singlechain diabody directed against the adenovirus fiber knob domain and human endoglin (cd ) retargeting of adenoviral infection to melanoma: combining genetic ablation of native tropism with a recombinant bispecific single-chain diabody (scdb) adapter that binds to fiber knob and hmwmaa selective targeting of gene transfer to vascular endothelial cells by use of peptides isolated by phage display in vitro and in vivo secretion of cloned antibodies by genetically modified myogenic cells high in vivo production of a model monoclonal antibody on adenoviral gene transfer recent progress in the battle between oncolytic viruses and tumours coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor genetically fused to anti-human cd scfv enhances adenoviral transduction of dendritic cells suicide genes for cancer therapy retargeting of adenovirus vectors through genetic fusion of a single-chain or single-domain antibody to capsid protein ix fibroblast growth factor -retargeted adenoviral vectors exhibit a modified biolocalization pattern and display reduced toxicity relative to native adenoviral vectors basic fibroblast growth factor enhancement of adenovirusmediated delivery of the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene results in augmented therapeutic benefit in a murine model of ovarian cancer a targetable, injectable adenoviral vector for selective gene delivery to pulmonary endothelium in vivo combined transductional and transcriptional targeting improves the specificity of transgene expression in vivo dna vaccines: precision tools for activating effective immunity against cancer use of a novel cross-linking method to modify adenovirus tropism ocular gene therapy: an evaluation of recombinant adenoassociated virus-mediated gene therapy interventions for the treatment of ocular disease enhanced transduction of dendritic cells by fcgammari-targeted adenovirus vectors retargeting of adenoviral vectors to neurons using the hc fragment of tetanus toxin applications of lentiviral vectors for shrna delivery and transgenesis genetic delivery of an anti-rsv antibody to protect against pulmonary infection with rsv dendritic cell-based cancer gene therapy cell-specific viral targeting mediated by a soluble retroviral receptor-ligand fusion protein a tva-single-chain antibody fusion protein mediates specific targeting of a subgroup a avian leukosis virus vector to cells expressing a tumor-specific form of epidermal growth factor receptor targeting avian leukosis virus subgroup a vectors by using a tva-vegf bridge protein maturation of dendritic cells accompanies high-efficiency gene transfer by a cd -targeted adenoviral vector adenoviral vectors targeted to cd enhance the efficacy of dendritic cell-based vaccination against human papillomavirus -induced tumor cells in a murine model molecular adaptors for vasculartargeted adenoviral gene delivery efficient and selective gene transfer into primary human brain tumors by using single-chain antibody-targeted adenoviral vectors with native tropism abolished conditionally replicative adenovirus expressing a targeting adapter molecule exhibits enhanced oncolytic potency on car-deficient tumors efficient incorporation of a functional hyper-stable single-chain antibody fragment protein-ix fusion in the adenovirus capsid genetic delivery of bevacizumab to suppress vascular endothelial growth factor-induced high-permeability pulmonary edema aavrh. -mediated genetic delivery of bevacizumab to the pleura to provide local anti-vegf to suppress growth of metastatic lung tumors the 'adenobody' approach to viral targeting: specific and enhanced adenoviral gene delivery gene therapy progress and prospects: electroporation and other physical methods recombinant adenoviral delivery for in vivo expression of scfv antibody fusion proteins targeted adenovirus gene transfer to endothelial and smooth muscle cells by using bispecific antibodies breaking the bonds: non-viral vectors become chemically dynamic soluble receptor-mediated targeting of mouse hepatitis coronavirus to the human epidermal growth factor receptor targeting non-human coronaviruses to human cancer cells using a bispecific single-chain antibody key: cord- -kssjdn y authors: niemann, heiner; kues, wilfried; carnwath, joseph w. title: transgenic farm animals: current status and perspectives for agriculture and biomedicine date: journal: genetic engineering in livestock doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: kssjdn y the first transgenic livestock were produced in by microinjection of foreign dna into zygotic pronuclei. this was the method of choice for more than years, but more efficient protocols are now available, based on somatic cell nuclear transfer (scnt) which permits targeted genetic modifications. although the efficiency of transgenic animal production by microinjection technology is low, many animals with agriculturally important transgenic traits were produced. typical applications included improved carcass composition, lactational performance, and wool production as well as enhanced disease resistance and reduced environmental impact. transgenic animal production for biomedical applications has found broad acceptance. in the european medicines agency (emea) approved the commercialization of the first recombinant protein drug produced by transgenic animals. recombinant antithrombin iii, produced in the mammary gland of transgenic goats, was launched as atryn® for prophylactic treatment of patients with congenital antithrombin deficiency. pigs expressing human immunomodulatory genes have contributed to significant progress in xenotransplantation research with survival periods of non-human primates receiving transgenic porcine hearts or kidneys approaching six months. lentiviral vectors and small interfering ribonucleic acid (sirna) technology are also emerging as important tools for transgenesis. as the genome sequencing projects for various farm animal species progress, it has become increasingly practical to target the removal or modification of individual genes. we anticipate that this approach to animal breeding will be instrumental in meeting global challenges in agricultural production in the future and will open new horizons in biomedicine. the first transgenic livestock were produced in by microinjection of foreign dna into zygotic pronuclei. this was the method of choice for more than years, but more efficient protocols are now available, based on somatic cell nuclear transfer (scnt) which permits targeted genetic modifications. although the efficiency of transgenic animal production by microinjection technology is low, many animals with agriculturally important transgenic traits were produced. ty pical applications included improved carcass composition, lactational performance, and wool production as well as enhanced disease resistance and reduced environmental impact. transgenic animal production for biomedical applications has found broad acceptance. in the european medicines agency (emea) approved the commercialization of the first recombinant protein drug produced by transgenic animals. recombinant antithrombin iii, produced in the mammary gland of transgenic goats, was launched as atryn ® forp rophylactic treatment of patients with congenital antithrombin deficiency. pigs expressing human immunomodulatory genes have contributed to significant progress in xenotransplantation research with survival periods of non-human primates receiving transgenic porcine hearts or kidneys approaching six months. lentiviral vectors and small interfering ribonucleic acid (sirna) technology are also emerging as important tools for transgenesis. as the genome sequencing projects for various farm animal species progress, it has become increasingly practical to target the removal or modification of individual genes. we anticipate that this approach to animal breeding will be instrumental in meeting global challenges in agricultural production in the future and will open new horizons in biomedicine. the production of transgenic farm animals is extraordinarily labor and cost intensive and depends upon advanced techniques in molecular biology, this contribution is mainly based on the following reviews of the authors: niemann et al. ; cell culture, reproductive biology and biochemistry. the transfer of the foreign dna is only one step in this process. critical steps involved in the production of transgenic farm animals are: milestones (live offspring) in transgenesis and somatic cloning in farm animals. modified from niemann et al. . milestones trategyr eference first transgenic sheep and pigs microinjection of dna into one pronucleus of a zygote hammer et al. hammer et al. embryonic cloning of sheep nuclear transfer using embryonic cells as donor cells willadsen willadsen cloning of sheep with somatic donor cells nuclear transfer using adult somatic donor cells wilmut et al. wilmut et al. transgenic sheep produced by nuclear transfer random integration of the construct schnieke et al. schnieke et al. transgenic cattle produced from fetal fibroblasts and nuclear transfer random integration of the construct cibelli et al. cibelli et al. generation of transgenic cattle by mmlv injection infection of oocytes with helper viruses chan et al. gene targeting in sheepg ene replacement and nuclear transfer mccreath et al. mccreath et al. trans-chromosomal cattle artificial chromosome kuroiwa et al. kuroiwa et al. knockout in pigs heterozygous knock-out dai et al. ; lai et al. lai et al. homozygous gene knockout in pigs homozygous knock-out phelps et al. the first successful gene transfer method in animals (mouse) was based on the microinjection of foreign dna into zygotic pronuclei. this was used to produce the first transgenic livestock more than years ago (hammer et al. ) . despite the inherent inefficiency of microinjection technology, a broad spectrum of genetically modified large animals has been generated since then for applications in agriculture and biomedicine, with the use of transgenic livestock for 'gene pharming' already at the level of commercial exploitation . however, microinjection has several major shortcomings including low efficiency, random integration and variable expression patterns which mainly reflect the site of integration. research has focused on the development of alternate methodologies for improving the efficiency and reducing the cost of generating transgenic livestock. these include sperm mediated dna transfer (lavitrano et al. ; lavitrano et al. ; chang et al. ) , intracytoplasmic injection (icsi) of sperm heads carrying foreign dna (perry et al. ; perry et al. ) , injection or infection of oocytes and/or embryos by different types of viral vectors (haskell and bowen ; chan et al. ; hofmann et al. ) , rna interference technology (rnai) (clark and whitelaw ) and the use of somatic cell nuclear transfer (scnt) cibelli et al. ; baguisi et al. ; dai et al. ; lai et al. ; table ) . to date, somatic cell nuclear transfer, which has been successful in species, holds the greatest promise for significant improvements in the generation of transgenic livestock (figure ). the typical success rate (live births) of mammalian somatic nuclear transfer is low and usually is only - % of the transferred embryos. cattle seem to be an exception to this rule as levels of - % can be reached . recently, we have also obtained a significant improvement of porcine cloning efficiency by better selection and optimized treatment of the recipients, specifically by providing a h asynchrony between the pre-ovulatory oviducts of the recipients and the reconstructed embryos. presumably, this gives the embryos additional time to achieve the necessary level of nuclear reprogramming. the improved protocol has resulted in pregnancy rates of~ % and only a slightly reduced mean litter size ). these results show that the efficiency of scnt is likely to be improved in the near future with significant impact on transgenic animal production. further qualitative improvements may be derived from technologies that allow precise modifications of the genome including targeted chromosomal integration by site-specific dna recombinases, such as cre or flp, or methods that allow temporally and/or spatially controlled transgene expression (capecchi ; kilby et al. ) . the genomes of farm animals (cattle, chicken, horse, dog, bee) have been sequenced and annotated in http://www.ensembl.org and http://www.ncbi.org (both july ). they, thus, provide new opportunities for selective breeding and transgenic animal production. after , years of domestic animal selection (copley et al. ) based on the random mutations resulting from environmental factors such as radiation and oxidative injury, technology is now available to introduce or remove genes with known functions. here, we provide a comprehensive overview on the current status of transgenic animal production and look at future implications. we focus on large domestic species and do not cover recent developments in poultry breeding or in aquaculture. gene 'pharming' entails the producti on of recombinant pharmaceutically active human proteins in the mammary gland or blood of transgenic animals. this technology overcomes the limitations of conventional and recombinant dna based production systems rudolph ) and has advanced to the stage of commercial application (ziomek ; dyck et al. ; schnieke this proceedings and walsh this proceedings) . the mammary gland is the preferred production site mainly because of the quantities of protein that can be produced in this organ using mammary gland specific promoter elements and established methods for extraction and purification of the respective protein rudolph ) . guidelines developed by the food and drug administration (fda) of the usa require monitoring the animals' health in a specific pathogen free (spf) facility, sequence validation of the gene construct, characterization of the isolated recombinant protein, and monitoring the genetic stability of the transgenic animals over several generations. this has necessitated, for example, the use of animals from scrapie free countries (new zealand) and maintenance of production animals under strict hygienic conditions. several products derived from the mammary glands of transgenic goats and sheep have progressed to advanced clinical trials (echelard et al. ) . phase iii trials for antithrombin iii (atiii) (atryn ® from gtc-biotherapeutics, usa), produced in the mammary gland of transgenic goats, have been completed and the recombinant product was approved as drug by the european medicines agency (emea) in august . this protein is the first product from a transgenic farm animal to be accepted as a fully registered drug. atryn ® is registered for treatment of heparin resistant patients undergoing cardiopulmonary bypass procedures. gtc-biotherapeutics has also expressed at least eleven other transgenic proteins in the mammary gland of transgenic goats at concentrations of more than one gram per liter. the enzyme α-glucosidase (pharming bv) from the milk of transgenic rabbits has orphan drug status and has been successfully used for the treatment of pompe's disease (van den hout et al. ) . similarly, recombinant c inhibitor (pharming bv), produced in the milk of transgenic rabbits, has completed phase iii trials and is expected to receive registration in the near future. the overall global market for recombinant proteins from domestic animals is expected to exceed $ b illion in and to reach $ . billion in . an interesting new development is the production of recombinant proteins in the mammary gland of transgenic animals for use as antidotes against organophosphorus compounds used as insecticides in agriculture and chemical warfare. butyrylcholinesterase is a potent prophylactic agent against these compounds. recombinant butyrylcholinesterase has been produced at a concentration of g/liter in the mammary gland of transgenic mice and goats (huang et al. ). the recombinant product was biologically active and had a half life in vitro which was sufficient to provide protection against organophophorus intoxication. transgenic goats can produce sufficient butyrylcholinesterase to protect all humans at risk of organophosphorus poisoning. some gene constructs have failed to produce economically significant amounts of protein in the milk of transgenic animals indicating that the technology needs further refinement to insure consistent high-level expression. this is particularly true for genes having complex regulation, such as those coding for erythropoietin (epo) or human clotting factor viii (hfviii) (hyttinen et al. ; massoud et al. ; niemann et al. ) . with the advent of transgenic plants that also produce pharmacologically active proteins, there is now an array of recombinant technologies that will allow selection of an appropriate production system for each required protein . the use of somatic nuclear transfer will accelerate production of transgenic animals for mammary gland specific synthesis of recombinant proteins. numerous monoclonal antibodies are being produced in the mammary gland of transgenic goats ) and cloned transgenic cattle have been created which produce a recombinant bi-specific antibody in their blood (grosse-hovest et al. ). when purified from serum, this antibody is stable and mediates target-cell restricted t cell stimulation and tumor cell killing. an interesting new development is the generation of trans-chromosomal animals. a human artificial chromosome (hac), containing the complete sequences of the human immunoglobulin heavy and light chain loci, has been introduced into bovine fibroblasts, which were then used in nuclear transfer. trans-chromosomal bovine offspring were obtained that expressed human immunoglobulin in their blood. this system is a significant step forward in the production of therapeutic human polyclonal antibodies (kuroiwa et al. ) . follow-up studies showed that the hac was maintained in most animals for several years in first generation cattle (robl et al. ). how the hacs behave during meiotic cell divisions remains to be shown. functional human hemoglobin has been produced in transgenic swine. the transgenic protein could be purified from the porcine blood and showed oxygen bindingcharacteristics similartonatural humanhemoglobin. the main obstacle was that only a small proportion of porcine red blood cells contained the human form of hemoglobin (swanson ) . alternate approaches to produce human blood substitutes have focused on linking hemoglobin to the superoxide-dismutase system (d'a gnillo and chang ). today more than , people are alive only because of a successful human organ transplantation (allotransplantation). ironically, the success of organ transplantation technology has led to an acute shortage of appropriate organs, because cadaveric and live organ donation falls far short of meeting the demand in western societies. to close the growing gap between demand and availability of appropriate organs, transplant surgeons are now considering the use of xenografts from domesticated pigs (platt and lin ; kues and niemann ; yang and sykes ) . prerequisites for successful xenotransplantation are: (i) overcoming the immunological hurdles, (ii) preventing the transmission of pathogens from the donoranimal to the human recipient, and (iii) compatibility of donor organs with human physiology. with a discordant donor species such as the pig, it is necessary to overcome both hyperacute rejection (har) and acute vascular rejection (avr). the two strategies that have been successfully explored for long term suppression of the har of porcine xenografts are: i) transgenic synthesis of human proteins regulating complement activity (rcas) in the donor organ (cozzi and white ; bach ; platt and lin ) and ii) inactivation of the genes producing antigenic structures on the surface of the donor organ, e.g. the α-gal-epitope (dai et al. ; lai et al. ; phelps et al. ) . prolonged survival of xenotransplanted porcine organs where the , -α-galactosyltransferase (α-gal) gene has been knocked out has been demonstrated. survival rates of up to six months have been achieved with transplanted porcine hearts (kuwaki et al. ) and survival of up to three months has been obtained with kidneys transplanted from α-gal knockout pigs to baboons (yamada et al. ) . the current approach to increasing survival time beyond six months is to create donor pigs with multiple transgenes that block a range of additional immunological barriers. to this end, we have recently produced triple transgenic pigs expressing either human thrombomodulin (htm) or human heme oxygenase- (hho- ) on top of one or two rcas to suppress both har and the later stage coagulatory disorders observed in experimental porcine-to-primate xenotransplantation . reproducible survival of porcine xenografts for more than six months in non-human primate recipients is considered to be a necessary precondition to starting clinical trials with human patients. a particularly promising strategy for achieving long-term xenograft survival is to induce tolerance by creating permanent chimerism in the recipient by intraportal injection of embryonic stem cells (fändrich et al. ) or by co-transplantation of vascularized thymic tissue (yamada et al. ) . long term tolerance of hla-mismatched kidneys has recently been demonstrated in humans (kawai et al. ) . extensive research has revealed that the risk of porcine endogenous retrovirus (perv) transmission to human patients is low, opening the door for preclinical testing of xenografts (switzer et al. ; irgang et al. ) . rna interference (rnai) is a promising method for knocking down the already low level of perv expression in porcine somatic cells. using rnai mediated knockdown, perv expression has been further reduced in porcine somatic cells for - months, these cells were successfully used in scnt and gave normal piglets (dieckhoff et al. ; dieckhoff et al. ) . rnai mediated perv expression knockdown provides an additional level of safety for porcine-to-human xenotransplantation. although additional refinements will always be possible, it is expected that appropriatelines of transgenic pigs will be availableasorgan donors within thenextfivetoten years. transplantationofpancreaticisletsfrom (transgenic) pigs may take place even earlier. guidelines for the clinical application of porcine xenotransplants already exist in the usa and are currently being developed in other countries. the worldwide consensus is that thet echnologyi se thically acceptable provided that thei ndividual's well-being does not compromise public health (e.g., the risk of perv recombination).t he improvement in qualityo fl ifef or patients receivingc onventionala llotransplants is dramatic,b ut xenotransplantation is also economically attractive because thecostofmaintaining patients with severe kidney diseaseondialysisorlongtermtreatment of patients with chronich eart diseasec an be greater than thec osto fas uccessfult ransplantation.preliminary functional data on porcinekidneys andheartsin non-humanp rimatesi sp romising although thel ongt erme ffecto fp orcine organs on humanp hysiologyi st oag reat extent unexplored (ibrahim et al. ). the physiology, anatomy, and life span of mice differ significantly from humans, making the rodent model inappropriate for many human diseases farm animals, such as pigs, sheep or cattle, may be more appropriate models in which to study the treatment of human diseases such as artherosclerosis, non-insulin-dependent diabetes, cystic fibrosis, cancer and neuro-degenerative disorders, which require longer periods of observation than is possible with mice (theuringe ta l. ;p almarini and fan ; li and engelhardt ; hansen and khanna ) . cardiovascular disease is increasing in ageing western societies where coronary artery diseases already account for the majority of deaths. because genetically modified mice do not manifest myocardial infarction or stroke as ar esulto fa therosclerosis,n ew animal models, sucha sp igsthate xhibit similar pathologies, are needed to develop effective therapeutic strategies (rapacz and hasler-rapacz ; grunwald et al. ). an important porcine model has been developed for the rare human eye disease retinitis pigmentosa (pr) (pettersetal. ). patientswithp rsufferfromnight blindness earlyinlifedue to loss of photoreceptors.t ransgenicpigswith am utated rhodopsing eneh aveaphenotypeq uite similart othe human patients and effective treatments are being developed (mahmoud et al. ). an important aspect of scnt derived large animal models of human diseases (and the development of regenerative therapies using these models) is that somatic cloning per se does not necessarily result in shortened telomeres as once feared and thus does not necessarily lead to premature ageing (schätzlein and rudolph ) . telomeres are the repetitive dna sequences at the ends of the chromosomes and are crucial for their structural integrity and function and are thought to be related to lifespan. telomere shortening is correlated with severe limitation of the regenerative capacity of cells, the onset of cancer, ageing and chronic dis-ease with significant impact on human lifespan (schätzlein and rudolph ) . expression of telomerase, which is the enzyme primarily responsiblefor theformation andrebuildingoftelomeres,issuppressed in most somatic tissues postnatally. however, recent studies have revealed that telomerel engthi s( re-)establishede arly in preimplantationd evelopment at themorula-blastocyst transition duetotelomeraseactivity ( schätzlein et al. ). agricultural exploitation of transgenic animal technology lags behind applications in biomedicine . nevertheless, table gives an overview of work in the production of animals transgenic with improved agricultural traits. transgenic pigs bearing a hmt-pgh construct (human metallothionein promoter driving the porcine growth hormone gene) showed significant improvement in economically important traits including growth rate, feed conversion and body composition (muscle/fat ratio) without the pathological phenotype seen with earlier gh constructs nottle et al. ) . similarly, transgenic pigs carrying the human insulin-like growth factor-i gene (higf-i) had~ % larger loin mass,~ % more carcass lean tissue and~ % less total carcass fat (pursel et al. ) . unfortunately, commercialization of these pigs has been postponed due to the current lack of public acceptance of genetically modified foods. an important step towards the production of more healthful pork products was made by creating pigs with a desaturase gene, derived either from spinach or from caenorhabditis elegans, which increases the non-saturated fatty acid content in the skeletal muscles of these animals. the higher ratio of unsaturated to saturated fatty acids means more healthful pork, since it is well known that a diet rich in non-saturated fatty acids is associated with a reduced risk of stroke and coronary diseases in humans (niemann ; saeki et al. ; lai et al. ) . the physicochemical properties of milk are mainly due to the ratio of casein variants, making these a prime target for the improvement of milk composition. dairy production is an attractive field for targeted genetic modification (yom andb remel ; karatzas andt urner ) andi t is possible to produce milk with a modified lipid composition by modulation of the enzymes involved in lipid metabolism and to increase curd and cheese yield by enhancing expression of the casein gene family in the mammary gland. the bovine casein ratio has already been altered by the over-expression of beta-and kappa-casein, demonstrating the potential of transgenic technology for improving the economic value of bovine milk (brophye tal. ). it should also be possible to create 'hypoallergenic' milk by knocking out or knocking down the β-lactoglobulin gene. one could envision the production of enhanced 'infant milk' containingh uman lactoferrino rt he production of milk whichr esists bacterial contamination by expressing lysozyme, the antibacterial component of egg white and human tears. to generate lactose-free milk, a knockout or knockdown at the α-lactalbumin locus would suppress this key step in milk sugar synthesis. lactose reduced or lactose-free milk would render dairy products suitable forconsumption by thelarge proportion of theworld's adult population who do not produce an active intestinal lactase. lactose is themajor osmoticallyactivesubstance in milk andits absencemight be expected to interfere with milk secretion. however, a lactase construct has been tested in the mammary gland of transgenic mice and in hemizygous mice; this reduced lactose content by - % without altering milk secretion (jost et al. ). on the other hand, experimental transgenic mice with a homozygous knockout for α-lactalbumin could not nurse their offspring because of the high viscosity of their milk (stinnakre et al. ). in the pig, increased transgenic expression of a bovine lactalbumin construct in the mammary gland resulted in increased lactose content and increased milk production which resulted in improved survival and development of the piglets (wheeler et al. ) . increased survival of piglets at weaning would provide significant commercial benefits to the producer and improved animal welfare. these findings demonstrate the feasibility of producing significant alterations in milk composition by application of an appropriate transgenic strategy. transgenic sheep carrying a keratin-igf-i construct expressed in their skin produced . % more clear fleece than non-transgenic controls and no adverse effects on health or reproduction were observed (damak et al. a, b) . similar efforts to alter wool production by transgenic modification of the cystein pathway have met with more limited success, although it is known that cystein is the rate limiting biochemical factor for wool growth (ward ) . phytase transgenic pigs have been developed to address the problem of manure-related environmental pollution. these pigs carry a bacterial phytase gene under transcriptional control of a salivary gland specific promoter, which allows the pigs to digest plant phytate. without the bacterial enzyme, phytate passes through the animal undigested and pollutes the environment with phosphorus if uncontained. with the bacterial enzyme, fecal phosphorus output was reduced up to % (golovan et al. ) . these environmentally friendly pigs may be used for commercial production in canada within the next few years. in most cases, susceptibility to pathogens represent the interplay of numerous genes, i.e. the trait is polygenic in nature. however, some genetic loci are known to confer resistance against specific diseases. transgenic strategies to enhance disease resistance include the transfer of major histocompatibility-complex (mhc) genes, t cell receptor genes, immunoglobulin genes, genes that affect lymphokines, or specific disease resistance genes (müller and brem ) . a prominent example for a specific disease resistance gene is the murine mx-gene. production of the mx -protein is induced by interferon. this was discovered in inbred mouse strains that were resistant to influenza viruses (staeheli ) . microinjection of an interferonand virus-inducible mx-construct into porcine zygotes resulted in two transgenic pig lines which expressed the mx-mrna; but no mx protein was detected (müller et al. ). the bovine mxi gene was identified and shown to confer antiviral activity when transfected into in vero cells (baise et al. ). transgenic constructs bearing the immunoglobulin-a (iga) gene have been successfully introduced into pigs, sheep and mice in an attempt to increase resistance against infections (lo et al. ) . expression of the murine iga gene was successful in two transgenic pig lines but only the light chains could be detected and the iga-molecules showed only marginal binding to phosphorylcholine (lo et al. ). on the other hand, high levels of monoclonal murine antibodies with a high binding affinity for their specific antigen have been produced in transgenic pigs (weidle et al. ) . attempts to increase ovine resistance to visna virus infection by transgenic production of visna envelope protein have been reported (clements et al. ). the transgenic sheep developed normally and expressed the viral gene without pathological side effects. however, the transgene was not expressed in monocytes, the target cells of the viral infection, and antibodies were detected after artificial infection of the transgenic animals (clements et al. ) . passive immunity has been induced against an economically important porcine disease in a transgenic mouse model (castilla et al. ). these transgenic mice secrete a recombinant antibody in their milk that neutralized the corona virus responsible for transmissible gastroenteritis (tgev) and this conferred resistance to tgev. strong mammary gland specific expression was achieved over the entire period of lactation. extension of this work to pigs is promising. knockout of the prion protein is the only secure way to prevent infection and transmission of spongiform encephalopathies including scrapie and bse (weissmann et al. ) . it was possible to knock out the ovine prion locus; however, the cloned lambs carrying the knockout locus died shortly after birth (denning et al. ). on the other hand, cloned cattle with a knockout for the prion locus have been successfully produced and indeed show clear evidence of resistance to bse infection (richt et al. ). transgenic animals with modified prion genes will be an appropriate model for studying the development of spongiform encephalopathies in humans and are crucial for developing strategies for the elimination of prion carriers from the farm animal population. this work is a prerequisite for the future production of recombinant proteins for human medicine in the blood or the mammary glands of transgenic cattle. the level of anti-microbial peptides (lysozyme and lactoferrin) in human milk is many times higher than in bovine milk and transgenic expression of the human lysozyme gene in mice causes a significant reduction in bacterial contamination and a reduced frequency of mammary gland infections . lactoferrin has bactericidal and bacteriostatic effects in addition to being the main source of iron in milk. these properties make an increase in lactoferrin levels in the bovine mammary gland and are a practical way to improve milk quality. human lactoferrin has, in fact, been expressed at high levels in the milk of transgenic mice and cattle (krimpenfort et al. ; platenburg et al. ) and was associated with an increased resistance against mammary gland diseases (van berkel et al. ) . similarly, lysostaphin was shown to confer specific resistance against mastitis caused by staphylococcus aureus. mastitis resistant cows have been produced by expressing a lysostaphin gene construct in the mammary gland (wall et al. ) . as discussed above, most work in transgenic technology has focussed on livestock species either for biomedical or agricultural purposes. however, the methodology is becoming routine and recent applications include the development of new varieties of ornamental fish. for example, fluorescent green transgenic medaka (oryzias latipes, rice fish) have been produced and approved for sale in taiwan (chou et al. ) . the fluorescent medaka is currently marketed by the taiwanese company taikong. the "glofish ® " is a trademarked transgenic zebra fish (danio rerio) expressing red fluorescent protein from a sea anemone under the transcriptional control of a muscle-specific promoter (gong et al. ) . green and yellow fluores-cent proteins have also been introduced into the zebra fish to give different fluorescence colors. yorktown technologies (www.glofish.com, july ) initiated commercial sales of the transgenic zebrafish in the united states with retail prices of approximately $ , each. the glofish ® thus became the first transgenic animal freely distributed throughout the usa. a recent report of the fda contained no evidence that glofish ® represents a risk (us fda, ) . commercialization of fluorescent fish has gone forward in several countries other than the usa, including taiwan, malaysia, and hongkong, whereas marketing in australia, canada and european union is currently prohibited. transgenic applications will undoubtedly become more widespread if even more efficient gene transfer methods will be developed and specific genetic traits can be targeted. some of the emerging technologies are described below. lentiviruses have proven to be efficient vectors for the delivery of genes into oocytes and zygotes. for example, transgenic cattle have been produced by injecting lentiviral vectors into the perivitelline space of oocytes (hofmann et al. ) and injection of lentiviruses into the perivitelline space of porcine zygotes resulted in a high proportion of transgene expressing founder animals from which several lines of transgenic pigs were established (hofmann et al. ; whitelaw et al. ) . lentiviral mediated gene transfer in livestock has generated unprecedented high yields of transgenic animals due to multiple integration events. unfortunately, multiple integration brings the disadvantage that here is an increased probability of unwanted side effects caused by oncogene activation or insertional mutagenesis. additional problems which have been identified are gene silencing due to the presence of viral sequences (hofmann et al. ) and a high frequency of mosaicism in founder animals. transgenic mice and farm animals harbouring the first-generation of conditional promoter elements showed expression in response to heavy metals or steroid hormones but suffered from high basal expression levels and pleiotropic effects (lee et al. ; mayo et al. ; miller et al. ; pursel et al. ) . newer, binary expression systems based on prokaryotic control elements are responsive to exogenous iptg (isopropyl-β-dthiogalactopyranosid), ru- , ecdysone or tetracycline derivatives and give more tightly controlled expression (lewandowski ; corbel and rossi ) . the first tetracycline system that was successfully used in mice required two dna constructs. one was for doxycycline controlled expression of a transactivator and the other contained regulatory elements which conferred transactivator dependent expression of the target gene. these dna constructs were typically integrated into two different lines of transgenic mice. after crossbreeding the two lines of transgenic mice, their offspring expressed the target gene only after stimulation with doxycycline (furth et al. ) . unfortunately, the long generation intervals make this approach unfeasible in livestock species (niemann and kues ) . recently, we reported on a tetracycline-responsive bicistronic expression cassette (nta) in which expression was amplified by transactivator mediated positive feedback . this was used to produce the first tetracycline controlled transgenic expression in a farm animal. the auto-regulatory cassette was integrated at a single chromosomal site in the pig genome after pronuclear dna injection and was designed to give ubiquitous expression of a human regulator of complement activation (rca) independent of cellular transcription cofactors. expression from this construct could be inhibited reversibly by feeding the animals doxycycline (tet-off system). in ten transgenic pig lines in which only one copy of the nta cassette was integrated, the transgene was silenced in all tissues with the exception of skeletal muscle where expression was limited to a small number of discrete muscle fibers (niemann and kues ) . however, crossbreeding of lines to produce animals with two nta cassettes resulted in reactivation of the cassettes and strong, tissueindependent, tetracycline-sensitive rca expression. it seems that crossing the transgenic pig lines, which doubled the level of transactivator, was able to overcome epigenetic silencing. transgene expression in the double transgenic pigs was inversely correlated with the level of nta cassette dna methylation . this approach highlights the importance of understanding epigenetic (trans)-gene regulation in the pig. pluripotent embryonic stem (es) cells have the ability to participate in organ and even germ cell development following injection into blastocysts or aggregation with morulae (rossant ) . true es cells (i.e. those able to contribute to the germ line) are currently only available from inbred mouse strains (kues et al. a ). these murine es cells have become an important tool for gene knock-out and knock-in experiments and to study large chromosomal rearrangements (downing and battey ) . es-like cells and primordial germ cell cultures have been reported for several farm animal species, and es-like cells which can produce chimeric animals albeit without germ line contribution have been reported in swine (anderson ; shim et al. ; wheeler ) and cattle (cibelli et al. ) . recent data indicate that somatic stem cells have a much broader developmental potential than previously assumed kues et al. b ). whether these cells will improve the efficiency of chimera generation or somatic nuclear transfer in farm animals has yet to be shown conclusively (kues et al. b; hornen et al ) . pluripotent cells are a valuable tool for improved production of animals with targeted genetic modification. a revolutionary breakthrough in direct nuclear reprogramming of mouse somatic cells was recently reported (takahashi and yamanaka ; okita et al. ; wernig et al. ). cells transfected with constructs expressing oct , sox , myc and klf , carried in retroviral vectors, were reprogrammed to a totipotent state and were indistinguishable from es cells generated from fertilized embryos with regard to differentiation potential and morphology. these induced pluripotent stem cells (ips), derived from somatic cells, were able to populate the germ line upon injection into blastocysts and after transfer into recipient mice, clearly indicating complete reprogramming (okita et al. ; wernig et al. ; maherali et al. ). the same genes have recently been found to be effective in reprogramming human fibroblasts and other human somatic cells into cells with pluripotent properties (takahashi et al. ). this affords a new approach to the generation of pluripotent cells from farm animal species. transplantation of transgenic primordial germ cells into the testes is potentially an alternative approach to the generation of transgenic animals. initial experiments in mice showed that the depletion of endogenous spermatogonial stem cells by treatment with busulfan prior to transplantation is effective and permits re-colonization of the testes by donor cells. transmission of the donor haplotype to the next generation after germ-cell transplantation has been achieved in goats (honaramooz et al. ) . current major obstacles of this strategy are the lack of efficient in vitro culture methods for primordial germ/prospermatogonial cells and the lack of efficient gene transfer techniques for these cells. recently adeno-associated virus (aav ) was found to be suitable for delivering transgenes to infect a mal germ cell and germline tansmission was reported in goats and mice (honaramooz et al. ). the efficiency of this approach and putative silencing of the aav introduced transgenes requires further investigation. rna interference (rnai) is a conserved post-transcriptional gene regulatory process found in most biological systems including fungi, plants and animals. the common element is double stranded rna which is cleaved to form small interfering rna (sirna) molecules - base pairs in length. a single strand of these small rna molecules is incorporated in an rnainduced silencing complex (risc) which specifically binds to the complementary sequence of its target mrna causing endonuclease mediated degradation. the result is that no protein is produced from that mrna transcript (plasterk ) . natural rna interference is involved in gene regulation, specifically to suppress the translation of mrnas from endogenous and exogenous viral elements, so this can be exploited for therapeutic purposes (dallas and vlassow ) . for transient gene knockdown, synthetic sirnas can be transfected into cells or early embryos (clark and whitelaw ; iqbal et al. ) . for stable gene repression, the sirna sequences must be incorporated into a gene construct and constitutively expressed. the combination of sirna with lentiviral vector technology is now a highly effective tool in this respect. rnai knockdown of porcine endogenous retrovirus (perv) has been demonstrated in porcine primary cells (dieckhoff et al. ) and in cloned piglets (dieckhoff et al. ) . sirna mediated knockdown of the prion protein (prnp) gene has been accomplished in bovine embryos (golding et al. ) . the modification appears to be permanent as lentiviral delivered sirna has been shown to persist for three generations in rats (tenenhaus dann et al. ) . the combination of sirna and lentiviral vector technology provides a method for highly efficient targeted gene knockdown for functional genetic analysis in farm animals and could easily be integrated into existing breeding programs. concerns have been raised about the health of transgenic farm animals because it is known that insertional mutagenesis and other undesirable side effects can be caused by the integration and expression of recombinant gene constructs (van reenen et al. , van reenen this proceedings) . the health of all transgenic animals is closely monitored because of the time and money invested in their creation and because all work is basic research. a small number of studies have systematically investigated the health effects of transgenesis. a study of the effects of human growth hormone expression in pigs and sheep identified specific pathological phenotypes related to their accelerated growth rate. these problems were eliminated in subsequent transgenic animals by modifications to the gene constructs (nottle et al. ) . in pigs, transgenic for human daf and maintained under qualified pathogen free conditions, haematological parameters and blood chemistry were similar to non-transgenic controls (tucker et al. ) . with the exception of slightly accelerated growth rates, no deviations were found. a detailed pathomorphological examination of nine lines of hemizygous pigs expressing human rcas revealed no adverse effects related to transgene expression (deppenmeier et al. ) , providing clear evidence that transgenesis per se does not compromise animal health and welfare. investigation of animals carrying the nta bicistronic expression cassette, driving hcd and a tetracycline regulated transactivator revealed that multi-transgenic animals display a normal health status (deppenmeier et al. ) . the hemizygous lines were fertile and produced normal litter sizes. transgenesis based on scnt is increasingly used forf armanimals.i n cloned animals, both pre-and postnataldevelopment can be compromised and a proportion of scnt offspring in both ruminants and mice exhibit increased perinatal mortality. the list of developmental abnormalities includes: extended gestation length, oversized offspring, aberrant placental function, cardiovascular problems, respiratory defects, immunological deficiencies, problems with tendons, adult obesity, kidney or hepatic malfunctions, behavioral changesand higher susceptibilitytoneonataldiseases, all of which are aspects of what has been called the "large offspring syndrome" (los) (renard et al. ; tamashiro et al. ; ogonuki et al. ; rhind et al. ) . the incidence of los is stochastic and has not been linked to aberrant expression of any single genes or to any specific pathophysiology. the general assumption is that the underlying cause of los is faulty epigenetic reprogramming of the transferred somatic cell nucleus. despite these problems, critical surveys of the published literature have revealed that most cloned animals are healthy and develop normally (cibelli et al. ; panarace et al. ). this demonstrates that mammalian development can tolerate minor epigenetic aberrations and subtle variations in gene expression without affecting survival of cloned animals (humpherys et al. ) . six months old cloned cattle do not differ from age-matched controls with regard to biochemical blood and urine parameters (lanza et al. ; chavatte-palmer et al. ) , immune status (lanza et al. ) , body score (lanza et al. ) , somatotrophic axis (govoni et al. ) , reproductive parameters , or milk yield and composition (pace et al. ) . no differences were found in the meat or milk composition of bovine clones compared to age matched counterparts (tian et al. ; miller ) . similar findings were reported for cloned pigs archer et al. ) . regulatory agencies around the world have agreed that food derived from cloned animals is safe and there is no scientific basis for questioning this (c.f. national academy of sciences, committee on defining science-based concerns associated with products of animal biotechnology, (national academy of sciences ). expert committee from the japanese ministry of agriculture, forestry and fisheries (maff; kumugai ) , the fda (rudenko et al. ; food and drug administration ) and efsa (european food safety agency, ) . since somatic cloning has only been used since and the lifespan of domestic animals is relatively long, the specific effects of cloning on longevity and senescence have not yet been fully assessed; however, preliminary data indicate no cumulative pathology even after serial cloning of mice and cattle kubota et al. ). there are still insufficient numbers of transgenic farm animals produced by the newest technologies including viral vectors and spermatogonial transgenesis to reveal subtle effects on animal health and welfare. biological products from any animal source are unique and must be handled differently than chemically synthesized drugs to assure their safety, purity and potency. proteins are heat labile, subject to microbial contamination, can be damaged by shear forces and can be immunogenic and allergenic. in the united states, the fda has developed guidelines to assure safe commercial exploitation of recombinant biological products. a crucial consideration with animal derived products is the prevention of transmission of pathogens from animals to humans . this requires sensitive and reliable diagnostic and screening methods for various pathogenic organisms. furthermore, transgenic farm animal based applications require strict standards of quality control. maldi-tof-spectometry is an important tool in this context (hughes et al. ; templin et al. ) . meanwhile, improvements in rna isolation and in unbiased global amplification of picogram amounts of mrna enable researchers to analyse rna from single embryos (brambrink et al. ; ). one can now monitor the entire transcriptome of a transgenic organ or organism to ensure the absence of unwanted effects (hughes et al. ; templin et al. ) . detailed genomic information and new genetic engineering tools will accelerate and improve transgenic animal production in the future. genetic technology presents not only a major opportunity to improve agricultural production but also offers exciting prospects for medical research by exploiting large animals as models of human health and disease. progress in animal genomics has broadly followed the route pioneered by the human genome project in terms of the assembly, publication and utilization of the data. this is evident in the advanced drafts of the bovine, porcine, horse, canine, chicken, and honeybee genomic maps. the ability to engineer the genome is new and the advent of new molecular tools and breeding technologies is benefiting this field. however, full realization of this exciting potential is handicapped by our currently limited understanding of epigenetic controls and the role of natural sirna and microrna in regulating gene expression. the convergence of recent advances in reproductive technology with the tools of molecular biology opens a new dimension for animal breeding. major goals are the continued refinement of reproductive biotechnology and a rapid completion of the various genome sequencing and annotation projects. induced pluripotent stem cell (ips) (takahashi and yamanaka ) research will play a critical role in understanding epigenetic controls. despite continued efforts, no es-cell lines with germ line potential have been established from mammals other than the mouse although es-like cells have been reported in several species and have been maintained in culture from weeks to three years (gjorret and maddox-hyttel ) . true germ line competent es cell lines from farm animal species will permit exploitation of the full power of recombinant dna technology in animal breeding. this is critical for the development of sustainable and diversified animal production systems for the future. we anticipate that in the near future genetically modified animals will play a significant role in the biomedical field but that agricultural applications will develop more slowly due to the complexity of many economically important traits and to current resistance to the concept of engineered farm animals. embryonic stem cells in agricultural species hierarchical phenotype and epigenetic variation in cloned swine production of goats by somatic cell nuclear transfer conditional expression of type i interferon-induced bovine mx gt-pase in a stable transgenic vero cell line interferes with replication of vesicular stomatitis virus application of cdna arrays to monitor mrna profiles in single preimplantation mouse embryos cloned transgenic cattle produce milk with higher levels of b-casein and k-casein the new mouse genetics: altering the genome by gene targeting phenotyping of transgenic cloned pigs engineering passive immunity in transgenic mice secreting virus-neutralizing antibodies in milk transgenic cattle produced by reverse-transcribed gene transfer in oocytes effective generation of transgenic pigs and mice by linker based sperm-mediated gene transfer clinical, hormonal, and hematologic characteristics of bovine calves derived from nuclei from somatic cells uniform gfp-expression in transgenic medaka (oryzias latipes) at the f generation transgenic bovine chimeric offspring produced from somatic cell-derived stem like cells the health profile of cloned animals a future for transgenic livestock development of transgenic sheep that express the visna virus envelope gene direct chemical evidence for widespread dairying in prehistoric britain latest developments and in vivo use of the tet system: ex vivo and in vivo delivery of tetracycline-regulated genes the generation of transgenic pigs as potential organ donors for humans polyhemoglobin-superoxide dismutase-catalase as a blood substitute with antioxidant properties targeted disruption of the α , -galactosyltransferase gene in cloned pigs rnai: a novel antisense technology and its therapeutic potential improved wool production in transgenic sheep expressing insulin-like growth factor targeting gene expression to the wool follicle in transgenic sheep deletion of the alpha( , )galactosyltransferase (ggta ) and the prion protein (prp) gene in sheep health status of transgenic pig lines expressing human complement regulator protein cd inhibition of porcine endogenous retroviruses (perv) in primary porcine cells by rna interference using lentiviral vectors knockdown of porcine endogenous retrovirus (perv) expression by perv-specific shrna in transgenic pigs technical assessment of the first years of research using mouse embryonic stem cell lines making recombinant proteins in animals -different systems, different applications production of recombinant therapeutic proteins in the milk of transgenic animals reproductive characteristics of cloned heifers derived from adult somatic cells preimplantation-stage stem cells induce longterm allogeneic graft acceptance without supplementary host conditioning fda statement regarding glofish animal cloning: a risk assessment -final temporal control of gene expression in transgenic mice by a tetracycline-responsive promoter attemptstowards derivationand establishment of bovine embryonic stem cell-like cultures suppression of prion protein in livestock by rna interference pigs expressing salivary phytase produce lowphosphorus manure development of transgenic fish for ornamental and bioreactor by strong expression of fluorescent proteins in the skeletal muscle age-related changes of the somatotropic axis in cloned holstein calves cloned transgenic farm animals produce a bispecific antibody for t cell-mediated tumor cell killing identification of a novel arg->cys mutation in the ldl receptor that contributes to spontaneous hypercholesterolemia in pigs production of transgenic rabbits, sheep and pigs by microinjection spontaneous and genetically engineered animal models; use in preclinical cancer drug development efficient production of transgenic cattle by retroviral infection of early embryos efficient transgenesis in farm animals by lentiviral vectors generation of transgenic cattle by lentiviral gene transfer into oocytes epigenetic regulation of lentiviral transgene vectors in a large animal model fertility and germline transmission of donor haplotype following germ cell transplantation in immunocompetent goats adeno-associated virus (aav )-mediated transduction of male germ line stem cells results in transgene transmission after germ cell transplantation production of viable pigs from fetal somatic stem cells recombinant human butyrylcholinesterase from milk of transgenic animals to protect against organophosphate poisoning widespread aneuploidy revealed by dna microarray expression profiling epigenetic instability in es cells and cloned mice generation of transgenic dairy cattle from transgene-analyzed and sexed embryos produced in vitro selected physiologic compatibilities and incompatibilities between human and porcine organ systems parent-of-origin dependent gene-specific knock down in mouse embryos porcine endogenous retroviruses: no infection in patients treated with a bioreactor based on porcine liver cells pluripotency of mesenchymal stem cells derived from adult marrow production of low-lactose milk by ectopic expression of intestinal lactase in the mouse mammary gland toward altering milk composition by genetic manipulation: current status and challenges hla-mismatched renal transplantation without maintenance immunosuppression site-specific recombinases: tools for genome engineering generation of transgenic dairy cattle using in vitro embryo production serial bull cloning by somatic cell nuclear transfer the contribution of farm animals to human health from fibroblasts to stem cells: implications for cell therapies and somatic cloning isolation of murine and porcine fetal stem cells from somatic tissue epigenetic silencing and tissue independent expression of a novel tetracycline inducible system in doubletransgenic pigs safety of animal foods that utilize cloning technology cloned transchromosomic calves producing human immunoglobulin heart transplantation in baboons usion a , -glactosyltransferase knock out pigs as donors: initial experiments generation of cloned transgenic pigs rich in omega- fatty acids production of α , -galactosyltransferase knockout pigs by nuclear transfer cloning cloned cattle can be healthy and normal sperm cells as vectors for introducing foreign dna into eggs: genetic transformation of mice efficient production by sperm-mediated gene transfer of human decay accelerating factor (hdaf) transgenic pigs for xenotransplantation glucocorticoids regulate expression of dihydrofolate reductase cdna in mouse mammary tumour virus chimaeric plasmids conditional control of gene expression in the mouse progress toward generating a ferret model of cystic fibrosis by somatic cell nuclear transfer expression of mouse iga transgenic mice, pigs and sheep the production of recombinant pharmaceutical proteins in plants the effects of mammary gland expression of human lysozyme on the properties of milk from transgenic mice mammary gland expression of transgenes and the potential for altering the properties of milk directly reprogrammed fibroblasts show epigenetic remodeling and widespread tissue contribution lensectomy and vitrectomy decrease the rate of photoreceptor loss in rhodopsin p l transgenic pigs the deleterious effects of human erythropoietin gene driven by the rabbit whey acidic protein gene promoter in transgenic rabbits the mouse metallothionein-i gene is transcriptionally regulated by cadmium following transfection into human or mouse cells expression of recombinant proteins in the milk of transgenic animals food from cloned animals is part of our brave old world expression of human or bovine growth hormone gene with a mouse metallothionein- promoter in transgenic swine alters the secretion of porcine growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-i disease resistance in farm animals transgenic pigs carrying cdna copies encoding the murine mx protein which confers resistance to influenza virus infection safety of genetically engineered foods: approaches to assessing unintended health effects. sub-report on methods and mechanisms of genetic manipulation and cloning of animals. the national transgenic pigs expressing plant genes expression of human blood clotting factor viii in the mammary gland of transgenic sheep application of transgenesis in livestock for agriculture and biomedicine transgenic farm animals: present and future transgenic farm animals: an update application of dna array technology to mammalian embryos production and analysis of transgenic pigs containing a metallothionein porcine growth hormone gene construct early death of mice cloned from somatic cells generation of germline-competent induced pluripotent stem cells ontogeny of cloned cattle to lactation retrovirus-induced ovine pulmonary adenocarcinoma, an animal model for lung cancer how healthy are clones and their progeny: years of field experience mammalian transgenesis by intracytoplasmic sperm injection efficient metaphase ii transgenesis with different transgene archetypes preovulatory embryo transfer increases cloning efficiencies in pigs production of pigs transgenic for human hemeoxygenase-i by somatic nuclear transfer genetically engineered large animal model for studying cone photoreceptor survival and degeneration in retinitis pigmentosa production of alpha , -galactosyltransferasedeficient pigs rna silencing: the genomes immune system expression of human lactoferrin in milk of transgenic mice the future promises of xenotransplantation expression of insulin-like growth factor-i in skeletal muscle of transgenic pigs animal models: the pig hot topic: using a stearoyl-coa desaturase transgene to alter milk fatty acid composition lymphoid hypoplasia and somatic cloning cloned lambs--lessons from pathology production of cattle lacking prion protein transgenic animal production and animal biotechnology animal cloning and the fda: the risk assessment paradigm under public scrutiny stem cells from the mammalian blastocyst biopharmaceutical production in transgenic livestock functional expression of a delta fatty acid desaturase gene from spinach in transgenic pigs telomere length is reset during early mammalian embryogenesis telomere length regulation during cloning, embryogenesis and aging human factor ix transgenic sheep produced by transfer of nuclei from transfected fetal fibroblasts isolation of pluripotent stem cells from cultured porcine primordial germ cells intracellular immunization: a new strategy for producing diseaseresistant transgenic livestock? creation and phenotypic analysis of α-lactalbumin-deficient mice production of functional human hemoglobin in transgenic swine lack of cross-species transmission of porcine endogenous retrovirus infection to nonhuman primate recipients of porcine cells, tissues and organs induction of pluripotent stem cells from mouse embryonic and adult fibroblast cultures by defined factors induction of pluripotent stem cells from adult human fibroblasts by defined factors postnatal growth and behavioral development of mice cloned from adult cumulus cells protein microarray technology heritable and stable gene knockdown in rats transgenic animals as models of neurodegenerative disease in humans meat and milk compositions of bovine clones the production of transgenic pigs for potential use in clinical xenotransplantation: baseline clinical pathology and organ size studies large scale production of recombinant human lactoferrin in the mik of trangenic cows enzyme therapy for pompe disease with recombinant human α-glucosidase from rabbit milk transgenesis may affect farm animal welfare: a case for systemic risk assessment cloning of mice to six generations genetically enhanced cows resist intramammary staphylococcus aureus infection transgene-mediated modifications to animal biochemistry genes encoding a mouse monoclonal antibody are expressed in transgenic mice, rabbits and pigs transmission of prions in vitro reprogramming of fibroblasts into a pluripotent es-cell-like state development and validation of swine embryonic stem cells: a review transgenic alteration of sow milk to improve piglet growth and health efficient generation of transgenic pigs using equine infectious anaemia virus (eiav) derived vector nuclear transplantation in sheep embryos viable offspring derived from fetal and adult mammalian cells xenotransplantation: current status and a perspective on the future risk assessment of meat and milk from cloned animals marked prolongation of porcine renal xenograft survival in baboons through the use of α , -galactosyltransferase gene-knockout donors and the cotransplantation of vascularized thymic tissue genetic engineering of milk composition: modification of milk components in lactating transgenic animals commercialization of proteins produced in the mammary gland key: cord- - rqc cg authors: opal, s. m. title: the challenge of emerging infections and progressive antibiotic resistance date: journal: intensive care medicine in years doi: . / - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rqc cg nan our collective vulnerability to the threat of emerging microbial pathogens remains disturbingly evident as we enter the twenty-fi rst century. despite two centuries of knowledge about the germ theory of disease, breaking the genetic code, and sequencing the genomes of virtually every major bacterial and viral pathogen capable of causing disease in humankind, we still fi nd ourselves susceptible to infectious diseases. densely concentrated cities with interconnected human societies linked by international aviation put us at continued risk from future epidemics that will inevitably occur [ ] . the ever expanding population growth of our species will force environmental change as we venture into sparsely inhabited rainforests, populate remote ecosystems and cultivate natural habitats to support our voracious human appetite for goods and services. global warming, environmental degradation and land development along with human upheavals and natural calamities will create new outbreaks with novel pathogens and renew the spread of ancient scourges like cholera [ ] and plague [ ] . numerous examples of intercontinental spread of microbial pathogens within the last fi ve years alone give notice of the susceptibility of human populations to emerging infectious diseases (table ) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . this is perhaps best exemplifi ed by the tragic events set into motion in late when a previously unidentifi ed, obscure, animal coronavirus (now known as severe acute respiratory syndrome [sars]-cov) was fi rst introduced into an unsuspecting human population in southern china [ ] . current molecular evidence indicates that a food handler in an exotic food 'wet market' in guangdong province probably fi rst became infected by an animal coronavirus from a civet cat. this newly derived animal virus was adapt at infecting humans and was effi ciently spread person-to-person by infected aerosol [ ] . an ill chinese physician from the affected region traveled to hong kong to attend a wedding. while spending a single night in amoy garden hotel in the city, this infected individual appeared to spread the virus to at least other hotel guests. over the next several days these people returned to their homes in fi ve different countries incubating the sars-cov pathogen in their respiratory secretions. over the next - months, this newly acquired coronavirus spread to over countries worldwide and caused over cases of sars resulting in nearly deaths in early [ ] . through a global effort from a large number of very diligent public health offi cials and laboratory scientists, the outbreak ended within a year and has yet to be seen again, except for occasional laboratory-acquired accidents [ ] . a diverse array of pathogens has produced recent outbreaks and concerns for our vulnerability to pathogens within the global village we occupy and share with other fl ora, fauna and microorganisms ( table ). the spread of mosquito- avian infl uenza [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] infl uenza a (h n ) risk of pandemic infl uenza; sporadic human cases of avian fl u in asia -mortality rates> % severe acute sars associated coronavirus risk of spread of zoonotic respiratory syndrome viruses; outbreak from a (sars) [ ] [ ] [ ] southern china to worldwide epidemic in - cases and deaths monkey pox [ ] orthopox virus risk of exotic pet trade; outbreak in wild rodents and humans in mid-western usa from sale of gambian giant rats from africa west nile virus mosquito-borne fl avivirus risk of international spread; (wnv) [ , ] wnv from africa to new york in , thousands of cases and hundreds of deaths in north america over next years inhalational anthrax intentional release of vulnerability to [ , ] bacillus anthracis spores bioterrorism; cases, in usa mail system [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] oseltamivir-resistant infl uenza genes -community azole-resistant outbreaks now occur candida spp. borne west nile virus in north america [ , ] , prion-related food-borne variant creutzfeldt-jakob disease [ ] , and hemorrhagic fever viruses [ ] are a constant reminder of our susceptibility to pathogens that naturally reside in other animal species. the omnipresent fear of the next pandemic of infl uenza has been heightened by recent evolutionary changes in virulence and transmissibility of avian fl u viruses [ ] . standard chemotherapeutic regimens for infectious diseases may not reliably rescue persons with severe infections in the new millennium. community and nosocomial outbreaks of multidrug resistant pathogens as evidenced by methicillin and vancomycin resistance [ ] in staphylococcus aureus and resistance to the new anti-viral neuraminidase inhibitors [ , ] by recent infl uenza isolates are cause for real concern. the care of hospitalized, critically ill patients is likely to fundamentally change if current trends in the progressive emergence of antimicrobial resistance to commonly prescribed antibiotics are not signifi cantly altered in the near future. regrettably, there is little evidence that the situation is likely to change unless concerted efforts are taken on several fronts to reverse the current trajectory of increasing antibiotic resistance [ , ] . the fi tness of a microorganism is dependent upon its capacity to genetically adapt to rapidly changing environmental conditions. antimicrobial agents exert strong selective pressures on microbial populations, favoring those organisms that are capable of resisting them. genetic variability may occur by a variety of mechanisms. point mutations may occur in a nucleotide base pair, which is referred to as micro-evolutionary change [ ] . these mutations may alter the target site of an antimicrobial agent, altering with its inhibitory capacity. point mutations inside or adjacent to the active sites of existing beta-lactamase genes (e.g., genes for tem- , shv- ) have generated a remarkable array of newly recognized extended-spectrum beta-lactamases [ ] . beta-lactam antibiotics have been known for almost years and their widespread use has created selection pressures on bacterial pathogens to resist their inhibitory actions. at least different bacterial enzymes have now been characterized that hydrolyze beta-lactam antibiotics [ ] . the hydrolyzing enzymes exist in four basic molecular classes and are classifi ed as listed in table . the enzymes are either serine hydrolases (class a, c, and d) or zinc containing metalloenzymes with a zinc-binding thiol group its active site (class b enzymes). the microevolutionary events that account for the differential activities of this array of beta-lactamases have been carefully studied, and these bacterial enzymes now even have their own internet website devoted specifi cally to their molecular properties (http:// www.lahey.org/studies/webt.htm). beta-lactamase activity has become so ubiquitous among bacterial populations that it has prompted the development of specifi c beta-lactamase inhibitor compounds (clavulanate, tazobactam and sulbactam) in an effort to combat this common bacterial resistance mechanism. this has been countered by the generation of inhibitors of these beta-lactamase inhibitors by multidrug-resistant bacteria [ ] in the ongoing confl ict between pathogens and chemotherapeutic strategies to eradicate these microorganisms. recently it has been demonstrated that at least some bacterial populations have the capacity to increase their mutation rates during times of environmental stress such as exposure to an antibiotic. this stress response is known as the 'sos' response or transient hypermutation [ ] . it is highly advantageous for the organism to increase the rate of genetic variation at times of unfavorable environmental conditions. it is possible for bacteria to upregulate the pace of evolution in an attempt to develop a clone that can resist the action of an antibiotic. the dna polymerase in such organisms has reduced fi delity of replication and subsequently an increased rate in the mutational occurrences as a result of excess nucleotide mispairing. the recombination system of bacteria (the reca system) becomes less restrictive in the degree homology between dna sequences before a crossover event is permitted to occur. a fl urry of mutational events occur in stressed bacteria in a fi nal attempt to generate a resistant subpopulation of bacteria in the presence of an environmental challenge such as the presence of a new antibiotic. this process has even been phenotypically linked with alterations in growth rate and biofi lm formation in some strains of pseudomonas aeruginosa [ ] . a second level of genomic variability in bacteria is referred to as a macro-evolutionary change and results in whole-scale rearrangements of large segments of dna as a single event. such rearrangements may include inversions, duplica- tions, insertions, deletions, or transposition of large sequences of dna from one location of a bacterial chromosome or plasmid to another. these whole-scale rearrangements of large segments of the bacterial genome are frequently created by specialized genetic elements known as transposons or insertion sequences, which have the capacity to move independently as a unit from the rest of the bacterial genome [ ] . acquisition of foreign dna sequences from the extracellular environment may be taken up by naturally competent bacteria (e.g., some streptococci and neisserial organisms) by transformation. these sequences can then become integrated into the host genome into homologous sequences by the generalized recombination and dna repair system bacteria. inheritance of these foreign dna elements further contributes to the organism's ability to cope with selection pressures imposed upon them by antimicrobial agents [ ] . a third level of genetic variability in bacteria is created by the acquisition of foreign dna carried by plasmids and bacteriophages. these extrachromosomal dna elements provide ready access to disposable yet potentially highly advantageous genes including antibiotic resistance genes from plasmids or phage particles. these elements are autonomously self-replicating, and they can remain unattached in the cytoplasm of bacterial cells or integrate directly into the chromosome of the bacterial host. they have the capacity to replicate and move independently from the chromosome adding further variability to the entire bacterial genomic dna. evidence from whole genome sequencing projects indicates that these genomic rearrangements, bacteriophage sequences and insertion sequences are commonplace in bacterial chromosomes [ ] . these genetic variations provide bacteria with the seemingly limitless system to alter their genomes, rapidly evolve and develop resistance to virtually any antimicrobial agent. recent examples of vancomycin-resistance in enterococci [ ] , s. aureus [ ] , and extended spectrum beta-lactamases [ ] , carbapenemase production [ ] and transferable quinolone resistance in p. aeruginosa and enterobacteria [ ] attest to the capacity of microorganisms to adapt to environmental stresses induced by antibiotic exposure. viruses [ ] and fungi [ ] are also quite capable of rapid antimicrobial resistance development and these resistance capacities pose additional threats in the management of icu patients with serious infections from a variety of potential pathogens [ ] . antibiotic resistance genes probably arose from detoxifying enzymes or synthetic enzymes with altered substrate specifi city by critical mutations or recombination events resulting in the formation of mosaic genes with entirely new functions [ ] . altered penicillin binding proteins that mediate beta-lactam resistance in multiple bacterial genera (e.g., methicillin-resistant s. aureus [mrsa], penicillin-resistant streptococci and pneumococci, chromosomal resistance in gonococci) may have evolved from gene fusions for penicillin binding proteins involved in bacterial cell wall synthesis [ ] . another common resistance strategy is a change in the regulation of metabolic activity of an enzyme system that is affected by the antibiotic. increasing the rate of folate precursor synthesis, for example, can overcome the inhibitor effects of sulfa drugs and trimethoprim [ ] . many common antibiotic resistance genes were accidentally acquired ('stolen') from antibiotic producing bacteria. streptomyces and related soil bacteria are the source of many standard antimicrobial agents in use in clinical medicine today. these bacteria have co-evolved the capacity to synthesize antibiotics along with the necessary resistance genes to protect their own metabolic machinery from the very antibiotic they produce. the resistance genes from these antibiotic producing bacteria provide a ready genetic blueprint to resist the target antibiotic if susceptible bacteria can acquire these resistance genes. recent evidence confi rming that this does indeed occur was found by yokoyama and colleagues in japan during an investigation of a sudden outbreak of p. aeruginosa with high-level resistance to essentially all the clinically available aminoglycosides [ ] . these investigators discovered that the resistant strain had acquired a new methylase gene that blocked the binding site for inhibition by aminoglycosides on a specifi c sequence on s ribosomal rna. this identical mechanism and highly homologous gene is found in aminoglycoside-producing strains of streptomyces and related bacteria. at least seven distinctive mechanisms of antibiotic resistance have been described in bacteria and are summarized on table . detoxifying enzymes are used to degrade beta-lactams [ ] , and modify aminoglycosides so they no longer enter bacterial membranes and attach to their ribosomal target. there are over such enzymes identifi ed that can inhibit aminoglycosides by one of three general reactions: n-acetylation, o-nucleotidylation, and o-phosphorylation [ ] . detoxifying enzymes are also one of the resistance mechanisms against chloramphenicol, and are rarely utilized by certain bacterial strains to inactivate macrolides, lincosamides, tetracyclines and streptogramins. it was recognized early in the history of antibiotic development that penicillin is effective against gram-positive bacteria but not against gram-negative bacteria [ ] . this difference in susceptibility to penicillin is due in large part to the outer membrane, a lipid bilayer that acts as a barrier to the penetration of antibiotics into the cell. situated outside the peptidoglycan cell wall of gramnegative bacteria, this outer membrane is absent in gram-positive bacteria. the outer portion of this lipid bilayer is composed principally of lipopolysaccharide (lps) made up of tightly bound hydrocarbon molecules that impede the entry of hydrophobic antibiotics, such as penicillins or macrolides. the passage of hydrophilic antibiotics through this outer membrane is facilitated by the presence of porins, proteins that are arranged so as to form water-fi lled diffusion channels through which antibiotics may traverse [ ] . bacteria usually produce a large number of porins with differing physiochemical properties, permeability characteristics and size; approximately porin molecules/ cell for escherichia coli. bacteria are able to regulate the relative number of different porins in response to the osmolarity of their microenvironment. in hyperosmolar conditions, e. coli represses the synthesis of larger porins (ompf) while continuing to express smaller ones (ompc) [ ] . mutations resulting in the loss of specifi c porins can occur in clinical isolates and determine increased resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics. resistance to aminoglycosides and carbapenems emerging during therapy has also been associated with a lack of production of outer membrane proteins. in p. aeruginosa, resistance to imipenem appears to be due to an interaction between chromosomal beta-lactamase activity and a loss of a specifi c entry channel, the d porin [ ] . the rate of entry of aminoglycoside molecules into bacterial cells is a function of their binding to a usually non-saturable anionic transporter, whereupon they retain their positive charge and are subsequently 'pulled' across the cytoplasmic membrane by the internal negative charge of the cell. this process requires energy and a threshold level of internal negative charge before signifi cant transport occurs (proton motive force) [ ] . these aminoglycoside-resistant isolates with altered proton motive force may occur during long-term aminoglycoside therapy. these isolates usually have a 'small colony' phenotype due to their reduced rate of growth. im- gram-neg: gram-negative bacteria; tmp: trimethoprim; tcn: tetracycline; +++: most common mechanism; ++: common; +: less common, -: not reported (see reference [ ] ) active effl ux of antimicrobial agents is increasingly utilized by bacteria and fungi as a mechanism of antibiotic resistance. some strains of e. coli, shigella, and other enteric organisms express a membrane transporter system that leads to multidrug resistance by drug effl ux [ ] . specifi c effl ux pumps also exist that promote the egress of single classes of antimicrobial agents. effl ux mechanisms are the major mechanism of resistance to tetracyclines in gram-negative bacteria. some strains of s. pneumoniae, s. pyogenes, s. aureus, and s. epidermidis, use an active effl ux mechanism to resist macrolides, streptogramins, and azalides [ ] . this effl ux mechanism is mediated by the mef (for macrolide effl ux) genes in streptococci and msr (for macrolide streptogramin resistance) genes in staphylococci. a similar effl ux system, encoded by a gene referred to as mrea (for macrolide resistance effl ux), has been described in group b streptococci. this mechanism of resistance may be more prevalent in community-acquired infections than was generally appreciated. dissemination of these resistance genes among important bacterial pathogens constitutes a major threat to the continued usefulness of macrolide antibiotics [ ] . active effl ux mechanisms may also contribute to the full expression of betalactam resistance in p. aeruginosa. multidrug effl ux pumps in the inner and outer membrane of p. aeruginosa may combine with periplasmic beta-lactamases and membrane permeability components for full expression of antibiotic resistance [ ] . active effl ux of fl uoroquinolones by specifi c quinolone pumps or multidrug transporter pumps has also been detected in enteric bacteria and staphylococci [ ] . resistance to a wide variety of antimicrobial agents, including tetracyclines, macrolides, lincosamides, streptogramins and the aminoglycosides, may result from alteration of ribosomal binding sites. the mls b -determinant has the genes that produce enzymes to dimethylate adenine residues on the -s ribosomal rna of the -s subunit of the prokaryotic ribosome, disrupting the binding of these drugs to the ribosome. resistance to aminoglycosides may also be mediated at the ribosomal level. mutations of the s protein of the -s subunit have been shown to interfere with binding streptomycin to the ribosome. ribosomal resistance to streptomycin may be a signifi cant cause of streptomycin resistance among enterococcal isolates. ribosomal resistance to the -deoxystreptamine aminoglycosides (gentamicin, tobramycin, amikacin) appears to be uncommon and may require multiple mutations in that these aminoglycosides bind at several sites on both the s and s subunits of the ribosome [ ] . vancomycin and other glycopeptide antibiotics such as teicoplanin bind to dalanine-d-alanine, which is present at the termini of peptidoglycan precursors. the large glycopeptide molecules prevent the incorporation of the precursors into the cell wall. resistance of enterococci to vancomycin has been classifi ed as a-g based upon the genotype, type of target site modifi cation and level of resistance to vancomycin and teicoplanin [ ] . strains of e. faecium and e. faecalis with high-level resistance to both vancomycin and teicoplanin have class a resistance. class a resistance is mediated by the vana gene cluster found on an r plasmid. this protein synthesizes peptidoglycan precursors that have a depsipeptide terminus (d-alanine-d-lactate) instead of the usual d-alanine-d-alanine. the modified peptidoglycan binds glycopeptide antibiotics with reduced affi nity, thus conferring resistance to vancomycin and teicoplanin. the other classes of vancomycin resistance genes vary in level of resistance, species distribution and specifi c cell wall alterations [ , ] . vancomycin-intermediate strains of resistant s. aureus (visa) have been isolated with heterogeneous resistance patterns. visa strains express unusually thick peptidoglycan cell walls that are less completely cross-linked together. the cell wall in some strains of visa contains non-amidated glutamine precursors that provide an increased number of false binding sites to vancomycin [ ] . the vancomycin molecules are absorbed to these excess binding sites thereby reducing vancomycin concentrations at the growth point of peptidoglycan synthesis along the inner surface of the cell wall. the arrival of high level vancomycin resistance from vana expressing s. aureus [ ] has created a renewed sense of urgency in the need to develop novel strategies to combat multi-drug resistant bacterial pathogens. beta-lactam antibiotics inhibit bacteria by binding covalently to penicillinbinding proteins (pbps) in the cytoplasmic membrane. these target proteins catalyze the synthesis of the peptidoglycan that forms the cell wall of bacteria. in gram-positive bacteria, resistance to beta-lactam antibiotics may occur by a decrease in the affi nity of the pbp for the antibiotic or with a change in the amount of pbp produced by the bacterium [ ] . these low affi nity binding pbps may be inducible where their production is stimulated by exposure of the microorganism to the beta-lactam drug [ ] . the structural gene (meca) that determines the low-affi nity pbp of mrsa shares extensive sequence homology with a pbp of e. coli, and the genes that regulate the production of the low-affi nity pbp have considerable sequence homology with the genes that regulate the production of staphylococcal penicillinase [ ] . the pbps of beta-lactamase-negative penicillin-resistant strains of n. gonorrhoeae, n. meningitidis, and haemophilus infl uenzae have shown reduced penicillin-binding affi nity [ ] . their pbps appear to be encoded by hybrid genes containing segments of dna scavenged from resistant strains of related species, similar to penicillin-resistant pneumococci [ ] . dna gyrase (also known as bacterial topoisomerase ii) is necessary for the supercoiling of chromosomal dna in bacteria in order to have effi cient cell division [ ] . another related enzyme, topoisomerase iv is also required for segregation of bacterial genomes into two daughter cells during cell division. these enzymes consist of two a subunits encoded by the gyra gene and two b subunits encoded by the gyrb gene (or parc and pare for topoisomerase iv. although spontaneous mutation ot the a-subunit of the gyra locus is the most common cause of resistance to multiple fl uoroquinolones in enteric bacteria, b-subunit alterations may also affect resistance to these drugs. dna gyrase (topoisomerase ii) is the primary site of action in gram-negative bacteria whereas topoisomerase iv is the principal target of quinolones in gram-positive bacteria. mutations in a variety of chromosomal loci have been described that resulted in altered dna gyrases resistant to nalidixic acid and the newer fl uoroquinolones in enterobacteriaceae and p. aeruginosa. many of these mutations involve the substitution of single amino acids at key enzymatic sites (located between amino acids - in the gyrase a subunit) that are involved in the generation of the dna gyrase-bacterial dna complex [ ] . there are two common genes that mediate resistance to sulfa drugs in a wide variety of pathogenic bacteria. these are known as sul and sul . these genes give rise to altered forms of the target enzyme for sulfonamide, dihydropteroate synthase (dhps) [ ] . the altered dhps enzymes mediated by the sulfonamide resistance genes no longer bind to sulfa yet continue to synthesize dihydropteroate from para-aminobenzoic acid substrate. trimethoprim is a potent inhibitor of bacterial dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr). a large number of altered dhfr enzymes with loss of inhibition by trimethoprim have been described from genes found primarily on r plasmids. these altered dhfr genes are widespread in gram-negative bacteria and are also found in staphylococci (the dfra gene) [ ] . tetracycline resistance may be mediated by a mechanism that interferes with the ability of tetracycline to bind to the ribosome. the ubiquitous tetm resistance gene and related tetracycline resistance determinants protect the ribosome from tetracycline action. the tetm gene generates protein with elongation factor-like activity that may stabilize ribosomal transfer rna interactions in the presence of tetracycline molecules [ ] . sulfonamides compete with para-aminobenzoic acid to bind the enzyme dihydropteroate synthase, and thereby block folic acid synthesis necessary for nucleic acid synthesis. sulfonamide resistance may be mediated in some bacteria by the over production of the synthetic enzyme dihydropteroate synthase. the gene responsible for dhps is felp and strains of bacteria that produce excess dhps can overwhelm sulfa inhibition [ ] . trimethoprim resistance may also occur in a similar fashion, by making excess amounts of dihydrofolate reductase from the bacterial chromosomal gene fola [ ] . an unusual mechanism of resistance to specifi c antibiotics is by the development of auxotrophs, which have specifi c growth factor requirements not seen in wild-type strains. these mutants require substrates that normally are synthesized by the target enzymes, and thus if the substrates are present in the environment, the organisms are able to grow despite inhibition of the synthetic enzyme by an antibiotic. bacteria that lose the enzyme thymidylate synthetase are 'thymine dependent'. if they can acquire exogenous supplies of thymidine to synthesize thymidylate via salvage pathways from the host, they are highly resistant to sulfa drugs and trimethoprim [ ] . once an antibiotic resistance gene evolves, the resistance determinant can disseminate among bacterial populations by transformation, transduction, conjugation, or transposition. favored clones of bacteria then proliferate in the fl ora of patients who receive antibiotics. antibiotic-resistance genes were found among bacteria even in the pre-antibiotic therapy era [ ] . however, selection pressures placed upon microbial populations by a highly lethal antimicrobial compound create an environment in which individual clones that resist the antibiotic are markedly favored. these resistant populations then proliferate and rapidly replace other susceptible strains of bacteria. while some antibiotic resistance genes place a metabolic 'cost' on bacteria, many microorganisms have evolved strategies to limit this cost by limiting expression, alternate gene products or phase variation. these mechanisms allow favorable but sometimes 'costly' genes that mediate antibiotic resistance to persist in the absence of continued antibiotic selection pressure and yet be rapidly expressed upon re-exposure to antibiotics [ ] . plasmids are particularly well adapted to serve as agents of genetic evolution and r-gene dissemination. plasmids are extrachromosomal genetic elements that are made of circular double-stranded dna molecules that range from less than to greater than kilobase pairs and are extremely common in clinical isolates of bacterial pathogens. although multiple copies of a specifi c plasmid or multiple different plasmids, or both, may be found in a single bacterial cell, closely related plasmids often cannot coexist in the same cell. this observation has led to a classifi cation scheme of plasmids based upon incompatibility groups [ ] . plasmids may determine a wide range of functions besides antibiotic resistance, including virulence and metabolic capacities. plasmids are autonomous, self-replicating genetic elements that possess an origin for replication and genes that facilitate its stable maintenance in host bacteria. conjugative plasmids require additional genes that can initiate self-transfer. the transfer of plasmid dna between bacterial species is a complex process, and thus conjugative plasmids tend to be larger than non-conjugative ones. some small plasmids may be able to utilize the conjugation apparatus of a coresident conjugative plasmid. many plasmid-encoded functions enable bacterial strains to persist in the environment by resisting noxious agents, such as heavy metals. mercury released from dental fi llings may increase the number of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in the oral fl ora. hexachlorophene and other topical bacteriostatic agents in the environment may actually promote plasmid-mediated resistance to these agents and other antimicrobial agents [ ] . transposons are specialized sequences of dna that are mobile and can translocate as a unit from one area of the bacterial chromosome to another. they can also move back and forth between the chromosome and plasmid or bacteriophage dna. transposable genetic elements possess a specialized system of recombination that is independent of the generalized recombination system that permits recombination of largely homologous sequences of dna by crossover events (the reca system of bacteria). the reca-independent recombination system ('transposase') of transposable elements usually occurs in a random fashion between non-homologous dna sequences and results in whole-scale modifi cations of large sequences of dna as a single event [ ] . there are two types of transposable genetic elements, transposons and insertion sequences. these mobile sequences probably play an important physiologic role in genetic variation and evolution in prokaryotic organisms. transposons differ from insertion sequences in that they mediate a recognizable phenotypic marker such as an antibiotic-resistance trait. either element can translocate as an independent unit. both elements are fl anked on either end by short identical sequences of dna in reverse order (inverted repeats). these inverted-repeat dna termini are essential to the transposition process. transposons and insertion sequences must be physically integrated with chromosome, bacteriophage, or plasmid dna in order to be replicated and maintained in a bacterial population. some transposons have the capability to move from one bacterium to another without being transferred within a plasmid or bacteriophage. these conjugative transposons are found primarily in aerobic and anaerobic gram-positive organisms and can rapidly and effi ciently spread antibiotic resistance genes [ , ] . transposition, like point mutation, is a continuous and ongoing process in bacterial populations. transposons are also essential in the evolution of r plasmids that contain multiple antibiotic-resistance determinants [ ] . high-level vancomycin resistance (vana) in enterococci is mediated by a composite transposon that encodes a series of genes needed to express vancomycin resistance [ ] . single transposons may encode multiple antibiotic-resistance determinants within their inverted-repeat termini as well [ ] . genetic exchange of antibiotic-resistance genes occurs between bacteria of widely disparate species and different genera. identical aminoglycoside-resistance genes can spread between gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria and between aerobic and anaerobic bacteria [ ] . given the highly variable environmental selection pressures created by a wide variety of antibiotics and the plasticity of bacterial genomes, the ongoing evolution of multi-drug resistant bacterial organisms is probably inevitable [ ] . the structural genes that mediate antibiotic resistance are often closely linked and may exist in tandem along the bacterial chromosome or plasmid. genetic analysis of sequences of dna adjacent to resistance genes has identifi ed unique integration units near promoter sites [ ] . these integration regions are known as integrons, and they function as convenient recombinational 'hot spots' for site-specifi c recombination events between largely non-homologous sequences of dna. the integron provides its own integrase function [ ] with a common attachment and integration site for acquisition of foreign dna sequences. integrons are widespread in bacterial populations and provide a convenient site for insertion of multiple different resistance genes from foreign dna sources. there are four classes of integrons with type i integrons being the most common in pathogenic microorganisms [ ] . integrons also serve as effi cient expression cassettes for resistance genes. integrons possess a promoter site in close proximity to the 'end of the newly inserted dna sequence. numerous clusters of different resistance genes have been linked into integrons through specifi c insertion sites. integrons may have as many as fi ve resistance genes linked in sequence and fl anked between specifi c base-pair spacer units [ , ] . integron-mediated multiple resistance gene cassettes have been fl anked by transposons, mobilized to plasmids, and then transferred between bacterial species by conjugation. by these systems of genetic exchange, widespread dissemination of multiple antibiotic resistance genes is accomplished in a rapid and frighteningly effi cient manner [ ] . for some time concerned scientists have been warning about the possibility of widespread antibiotic resistance leading to the loss of effectiveness of antibiotics in clinical medicine [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . these warnings have largely been ignored as it was assumed that this human need and the profi t motive of free enterprise would stimulate pharmaceutical companies to continuously develop new antibiotics. if we could discover new targets for future antimicrobial drugs it may be possible to keep pace or even exceed the rate of antibiotic resistance gene development by microbial pathogens. for a number of disconcerting reasons, humans may be losing ground rather than gaining on pathogens in the st century. a recent survey of new pharmaceutical products in found only fi ve new antibiotics out of the new molecular entities in the research and development pipeline [ ] . the pace of new antibiotic discovery is turning into a trickle and drying up compared to what it was even years ago [ ] . the market reality is regrettably set against the development of new antibiotics in favor of more lucrative options with greater market profi t from drugs for chronic illnesses with less risk and longer revenue streams [ ] [ ] [ ] . the reimbursement and return on investments are unfavorable for antibiotics and the market system is not meeting the needs of society with respect to new antibiotic development. some far reaching and bold initiatives are desperately needed if a crisis in loss of antibi-otic effectiveness is to be avoided [ , ] . the disincentives for new antibiotic development and some proposed solutions are listed in table . bacterial strains contain complex aggregations of genes that may be linked together to combat the inhibitory effects of antibiotics. since prokaryotic organisms all contribute to a common 'gene pool', favorable genes mediating antibiotic resistance may disseminate among bacterial diverse microbial genera and species. increasing evidence of multiple antibiotic resistance mechanisms within the same bacterium against a single type of antibiotic, and cooperation between bacterial populations within biofi lms attest to the remarkably ingenuity and fl exibility of bacterial populations [ , , ] . thus the use of one antibiotic may select for the emergence of resistance to another. mobile genetic elements and rapidly evolving integron cassettes with multiple antibiotic resistance genes endow bacteria with a remarkable capacity to resist antibiotics [ ] . although the development of antibiotic resistance may be inevitable, the rate at which it develops can be reduced by the rational use of antibiotics. use of th century diagnostic methods employ real-time pcr, genomics, (culture and susceptibility tests) to treat proteomics to identify pathogens, and st century diseases encourages empiric resistance genes; target and treat specifi c broad-spectrum antibiotic drug use infections with narrow spectrum drugs pcr: polymerase chain reaction the wider accessibility to molecular techniques and computer technology to rapidly identify the specifi c microorganisms, their resistance potential, and track their spread between patients within the hospital and or the community will be of considerable benefi t in the control of antibiotic resistance. the need to utilize empiric, broad-spectrum antibiotics for days and even weeks while samples are being sent for culture and susceptibility testing needs to stop. we need specifi c information in real time to assure patients with specifi c infections are being treated with effective, narrow-spectrum drugs [ ] . the use of antibiotics for non-medical uses should be entirely banned. up to % of antibiotic use today is for non-medical use in agriculture, food preparation, and other industrial uses [ ] . this adds to environmental contamination with low levels of antibiotics. sub-inhibitory concentrations of antibiotics foster the development of resistant clones of bacteria that can cause infections in humans. the use of non-antibiotic approaches to the management of infectious diseases needs to be supported and developed. the use of plasma-based antibody therapies and anti-bacterial, anti-viral and anti-fungal vaccines should be encouraged in the future [ ] [ ] [ ] . the management of common invasive pathogens such as staphylococcal infections has become very complicated given the rapid spread of simultaneous beta-lactam, aminoglycoside, and quinolone-resistant isolates [ ] . recent reports of vancomycin-resistant s. aureus in japan and the united states suggest that common, invasive, microbial pathogens may become refractory to any chemotherapeutic agent in the future [ , , ] . new drug discoveries have allowed us to be one step ahead of the bacterial pathogens for the latter half of the twentieth century. it is unlikely we will continue this record of remarkable success against microbial pathogens in the new millennium. the rapid evolution of resistance has limited the duration of the effectiveness of antibiotics against certain pathogens. the best hope for the future is the continued development of new antibiotic strategies [ ] . in order to retain the antimicrobial activity of existing and new antibiotics, clinicians can assist through careful antibiotic stewardship and tightened infection control measures. antimicrobial agents have had a substantial impact in decreasing human morbidity and mortality rates and have 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nasopharyngeal carriage of a nonavalent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine antimicrobial resistance: the example of staphylococcus aureus key: cord- -rz id mt authors: braun, serge title: non-viral vector for muscle-mediated gene therapy date: - - journal: muscle gene therapy doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rz id mt non-viral gene delivery to skeletal muscle was one of the first applications of gene therapy that went into the clinic, mainly because skeletal muscle is an easily accessible tissue for local gene transfer and non-viral vectors have a relatively safe and low immunogenic track record. however, plasmid dna, naked or complexed to the various chemistries, turn out to be moderately efficient in humans when injected locally and very inefficient (and very toxic in some cases) when injected systemically. a number of clinical applications have been initiated however, based on transgenes that were adapted to good local impact and/or to a wide physiological outcome (i.e., strong humoral and cellular immune responses following the introduction of dna vaccines). neuromuscular diseases seem more challenging for non-viral vectors. nevertheless, the local production of therapeutic proteins that may act distantly from the injected site and/or the hydrodynamic perfusion of safe plasmids remains a viable basis for the non-viral gene therapy of muscle disorders, cachexia, as well as peripheral neuropathies. skeletal muscle can act as an effective platform for the long-term production (and secretion) of therapeutic proteins with systemic distribution and for the introduction of dna vaccines eliciting strong humoral and cellular immune responses (for review see [ , ] ). conversely, the treatment of hereditary neuromuscular diseases is particularly challenging for non-viral vectors. among issues are as follows: ( ) the size of the muscle tissue, which represents half of the total mass of the organism, ( ) the poor accessibility of profound muscles or peripheral nerves, and ( ) the progressive tissue remodeling along the natural history of some muscle diseases with active processes of necrosis/regeneration and fibrosis/lipidosis. s. braun (*) afm-telethon, evry cedex, france e-mail: sbraun@afm-telethon.fr on the other hand, non-viral vectors do bear interesting advantages over recombinant viruses. non-viral vectors are made of plasmid dna, naked or complexed to a variety of versatile molecules such as cationic lipids or polymers. they are ( ) well characterized, and their structure can be fine-tuned [ ] , and ( ) mostly nonimmunogenic provided, they are not carrying protein motifs. this allows repeated administrations for chronic diseases, ( ) comparatively easy to produce at a large scale [ ] , ( ) less limited by size constraints, leaving the potential to deliver widetype genetic material, as large as kb [ ] (this is far beyond the size of coding sequences such as the dystrophin cdna for duchenne muscular dystrophy), and non-viral vectors ( ) can remain functional for a long period of time in skeletal muscles [ ] . episomal plasmid dna can persist for life in rodents and for many years in larger animals if they are delivered into low turnover tissues, including the brain and spinal cord, heart, or muscle (for review see [ ] ). synthetic vectors have been constructed as substitutes to viral vectors for delivering therapeutic genes and many other drugs in humans [ ] . the principle is based on the self-assembly of supramolecular complexes, often through electrostatic interactions between the positively charged vectors and the dna negatively charged phosphate residues [ ] . in these complexes, dna is condensed and compacted and is less exposed to nuclease degradation. among these, cationic lipid-and polymerbased systems have been the most extensively studied [ ] [ ] [ ] . in early studies, dna was encapsulated in neutral or anionic liposomes without changing the structures of the liposomes [ , ] . the ratio between the cationic charge of the liposome and the negative charge of the dna usually controls the size of complexes [ ] , typically in the range of nm to μm quasi-spherical particles with an ordered (often multilamellar) organization. their positive total charge enables them of efficiently interacting with the negative residues of the cell membranes and internalizing into the cell, which occurs mainly through the endocytosis pathway [ , ]. systemic bio-distribution of non-viral vectors is dependent upon their capability of escaping from blood vessels in the target tissue. vectors must be small enough (less than nm) to cross through vascular endothelial cells and gain access to surrounding tissues [ ] . furthermore, they should also be designed so that they can be ignored in contrast to viral vectors, non-viral gene transfer is not elicited to a large extent by active intake processes. therefore, a sophisticated vector may be needed to facilitate the cellular uptake and appropriate intracellular processing of the transgene. significant developments in artificial complexes combined different functions for improved gene transfer. many cationic liposomes are normally accompanied by a neutral lipid such as dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (dope) or cholesterol. dope is frequently useful because it can fuse with other lipids when exposed to a low ph, as in endosomes, which triggers the release of the associated dna into the cytosol [ ] . other popular modifications use ligand binding to peg. various targeting approaches have been investigated, including incorporation of peptides, antibodies, and sugar into the lipid vesicles to facilitate tissue targeting (for review see [ ] ). however, the association of all of these components results in complex structures that require thorough formulation and galenic studies. after cell entry, intracellular barriers may impair successful gene delivery. vectors need to escape from the endosomal or lysosomal membrane to avoid degradation of the plasmid dna [ ] . endosomal release of dna by cationic polyplexbased vectors may be based on the physical disruption of the negatively charged endosomal membrane after direct interaction with the cationic complex [ ] , or a "proton-sponge" phenomenon [ ] resulting in osmotic swelling and endosomal membrane rupture, followed by the release of the polyplexes into the cytoplasm. addition of a fusogenic helper lipid such as dope facilitates the formation of a destabilizing hexagonal phase with the endosome membrane and enhances gene expression by promoting the release of dna from the endosomal compartment ( fig. . and [ ] ). it should be mentioned the majority of cytoplasmic plasmids fail to reach the nucleus due to cytoplasmic nucleases. in contrast to short nucleic acids (such as oligonucleotides) which diffuse freely, the plasmid dna imports to nucleus by an active transport process via the nuclear pore complex and receptor proteins that include importin α, β, and ran [ ] . nuclear localization signals or designed peptides can be linked to the plasmid dna to facilitate nuclear import (for review see [ , ] ). a number of therapeutic concepts have been explored in humans using more or less refined non-viral gene delivery systems in the view of therapies for genetic disorders and of immunologic disorders. as of today, despite a number of very sophisticated chemistries, non-viral vectors were not completely satisfactory in transferring genes to muscle tissues following systemic administration. many complexes show excellent transfection activity in cell culture, but most do not perform well in the presence of serum, and only a few are active in vivo [ ] . they remain at least logs of magnitude less effective than viral vectors. therapeutic doses require high concentrations of complexes. besides the relatively large size of many synthetic vectors (often above nm), the main obstacles in the use of synthetic complexes via systemic delivery are their aggregation, instability, toxicity, and , including negatively charged naked plasmid dna (or polynucleotides) delivered either directly or combined with physical methods (ultrasound, electroporation) or complexed with various chemical entities such as cationic lipids or polymers. (b) uptake pathways involve either fusion with the muscle cell membrane-, receptor-, clathrin-, caveolae-, or pinocytosis-dependent endocytosis. this is followed by endosome formation, escape from endosome, degradation, nuclear import of the plasmid dna/polynucleotide, and transgene expression propensity to be captured by the mononuclear phagocyte system, leading to their rapid clearance by phagocytic cells in the liver, spleen, lungs, and bone marrow. these particles readily aggregate as their concentration increases. toxicity is often linked to the colloidal instability of synthetic vectors resulting from interactions with molecules in biological fluids, leading to large aggregates. these aggregates, which are generally ineffective gene delivery agents, can be absorbed onto the surface of circulating red blood cells, or embolized in microvasculatures, preventing them from reaching the intended target cells. this opsonization process can also activate the complement system, one of the innate immune mechanisms against "foreign" particles within the bloodstream, which in turn activates the phagocytosis and initiates an inflammatory response [ , , ] . skeletal muscles possess poorly permeable, tight endothelial (maybe less in the case of chronically inflamed tissues) layers and a highly regulated microcirculation [ ] . the implication is that one would not expect particulate systems to be distributed easily from the blood circulation to skeletal muscles. thus, the prospects for non-viral particulate vector widespread distribution from the systemic circulation are limited at present. only one systemic delivery attempt was initiated in a neuromuscular disease indication. this was in hereditary inclusion body myopathy in a single patient intravenously perfused with a lipoplex in a compassionate trial. the patient showed signs of increase of sialic acid-related proteins and stabilization in the decline of muscle strength [ ] . the administration of vectors directly to the target tissue avoids most of the obstacles encountered by systemic delivery. however this approach remains hampered by the diffusion limitations and immune cell clearance in the interstitial region of the target organ. indeed, transgene expression following direct intramuscular needle delivery of complexes is often localized in regions that are close to the injection site. this implies that the dispersion of colloidal particles within muscle is a critical issue, and there is a need for basic studies of the effect of formulation on dispersion within solid tissues such as skeletal muscle. nevertheless this poor efficiency remains compatible with applications that require only low levels of the therapeutic proteins, such as genetic vaccines, cancer, or peripheral limb ischemia (table . ). interestingly, retrograde transport seemed to be obtained as some gene expression was found in the peripheral and central nervous system following intramuscular administration [ ] . delivery of therapeutic genes to peripheral neurons upon a peripheral and minimally invasive intramuscular administration of polymeric nanoparticles was shown to be feasible in animal models [ ] . naked dna can be manufactured in a very cost-effective manner and is a very stable material that can be stored at room temperature for long periods of time following lyophilization. it is composed of a bacterial plasmid that contains the cdna of the therapeutic gene under the transcriptional control of various eukaryotic [ ] (continued) regulatory elements and a bacterial origin of replication to allow production in bacteria. a strong promoter may be required for optimal expression in mammalian cells. for this, some promoters derived from viruses such as cytomegalovirus (cmv) or simian virus (sv ) have been used. however, virally derived promoters, such as the cmv promoter, may not be suitable for applications to chronic diseases, as illustrated by the negative impact of inflammatory cytokines (interferon-γ or tumor necrosis factor-α) [ ] . thus, muscle-specific alternatives to the cmv promoter have been proposed, such as the desmin promoter/enhancer, which controls expression of the cytoskeletal protein desmin [ ] or the creatine kinase promoter [ ] . even in vaccines, the vaccinating immune responses obtained were shown to be of a comparable magnitude to those in mice immunized with dna vaccines containing nonspecific promoters. for clinical efficacy and safety of chronic disease applications, it may be necessary to maintain appropriate levels of a gene product in order to prevent toxicity and to be able to modulate or resume transgene expression in response to disease evolution or immune problems. artificial systems for the control of genes are based on two elements: a chimeric transcription factor responding to a small inducer or even electric field and an artificial promoter composed of multiple binding sites for the transcription factor followed by a minimal promoter. inducible gene expression systems use endogenous elements that respond to exogenous signals or stress, such as cytokines, heat, metal ions, and hypoxia. however, neither muscle-specific nor inducible promoters in the absence of induction are devoid of leaky activity [ ] . if hypomethylated bacterial cpg sequences are maintained on the plasmid dna backbone or promoter elements, a t helper (th ) immune response (but only for a short period and with no induction of anti-dna antibodies) can be generated which may however be advantageous in view of genetic vaccination, alone or in priming-boost regimens with viral vectors [ ] . following the serendipitous demonstration of transgene expression in skeletal muscle injected with naked dna by wolff [ ] , plasmid dna has been used extensively in a variety of indications [ ] . uptake and expression of numerous transgenes have been demonstrated in various species following intramuscular administration of naked dna. expression peaks at around days, followed by a slow decrease and a prolonged steady state (years), in case of non-immunogenic transgene. the very long-term expression is probably linked to the postmitotic state of skeletal muscles and the persistence of administered genetic material as an extrachromosomal episomal elements [ ] . the efficiency of plasmid gene transfer into skeletal muscle (and other tissues) by direct injection is low (~ % of cell nuclei) and remains confined at the injection site (along the needle track) across species [ ] , and it further decreases with the plasmid size. nevertheless, naked plasmid dna administration was used in animal models to provide a systemic source of therapeutic protein, for genetic vaccination against pathogens and tumor cells or for therapeutic angiogenesis. in the later case, local gene delivery to focal lesions in the peripheral vasculature, for the production of highly active hormones, is ideally suited to the use of intramuscular or percutaneous vector delivery. in humans, intramuscular injections of naked plasmid encoding angiogenic factors (such as vegf or hgf) were used in small numbers of patients with critical limb ischemia and did demonstrate promising clinical efficacy for the treatment of peripheral arterial disease. ischemic pain and ischemic ulcers in the affected limb were relieved or markedly improved in further trials ( [ ] and table . ). importantly, all those plasmid-based preclinical and clinical trials resulted in a very good safety record ([ ] and table . ). a meta-analysis of clinical trials ( patients total) of local administration of pro-angiogenic growth factors (vegf, fgf, hgf, del- , hif- alpha) using plasmid or viral gene transfer by intra-arterial or intramuscular injections showed that, despite promising results in single studies, no clear benefit could be identified in peripheral artery disease patients, irrespective of disease severity [ ] . locally injected naked dna is being evaluated in muscle regeneration approaches such as myostatin propeptide gene gun delivery [ ] and for genetic motoneuron disorders. in the later case, smn induction in a mouse spinal muscular atrophy model was observed following intramuscular injection of a tetanus toxin c fragment plasmid [ ] . artificially or spontaneous regenerating muscle fibers display a higher, but still limited, efficiency of transfection [ ] . physical methods (electric or ultrasound pulses, ballistic gene gun), which either create transient pores in the cell membrane or increase passive diffusion, were shown to improve up to -fold gene transfer to skeletal muscles [ ] . the pulse parameters and the type of material used (i.e., needle versus externally applied plate electrodes) are of critical importance [ ] . selective electro-sonoporation in a defined area using microbubble contrast agents showed increased plasmid-vegf delivery in skeletal muscle allowing therapeutic angiogenesis in chronically ischemic skeletal muscles with undetectable tissue damage [ ]. a slightly higher risk of random integration of plasmid dna into genomic dna may also be seen [ ] . still limited penetration of the genetic material in the tissue is obtained (in the range of ~ cm). widespread delivery to large or deep muscles remains challenging. muscle damage and inflammation [ ] are induced by these methods which peak at around days and resolve at weeks postinjection with both th and th immune responses potentially occurring [ ] . therefore, this strategy may not be suitable in already inflamed tissue such as dmd muscles. high levels of gene expression in the limb and diaphragm muscles have been achieved by the rapid injection of naked dna in large volumes via locoregional hydrodynamic intravascular delivery with both blood inflow and outflow blocked surgically or using external tourniquets [ , ] . the endothelium in muscle is continuous and non-fenestrated, showing low permeability to macromolecules, including plasmid dna. the hydrodynamic pressure induces extravasation of the injected dna, probably by expanding the endothelium and thereby making pores accessible for dna entry. the mechanism of plasmid dna uptake by the muscle cells is still not clear and may involve both low-affinity receptor-mediated and nonspecific processes [ , ] . the procedure safety is supported by a large body of data collected in mice, rats, dogs, and nonhuman primates. the edema caused by the injected fluid is resolved within h and even the minimal signs of observed muscle toxicity clear within weeks postinjection [ , ] . the hind limb perfusion procedure is a rather quick and simple technique, which may be applied to chronic diseased muscles [ ] or other chronic diseases such as anemia [ ] . based on successful preclinical studies using the mdx mouse and golden retriever muscular dystrophy (grmd) dog models of duchenne muscular dystrophy, and the positive (expression -though very low-, and safety) outcome of a phase i trial of intramuscular injection of myodys ® , a full-length dystrophin plasmid, in duchenne patients (the first completed gene transfer clinical trial in neuromuscular diseases) [ ], the ground was set for a human clinical trial using myodys ® into the forearm of duchenne patients. a dose escalation study of single-limb perfusion with . % saline was carried out in nine adults with muscular dystrophies under intravenous analgesia. the study led by fan et al. demonstrated feasibility and safety up to % of limb volume in the upper extremities of the young adults with muscular dystrophy. perfusion at % limb volume was associated with short-lived physiological changes in peripheral nerves without clinical correlates in one subject [ ] . this study used lower cuff pressures than in our nonhuman primate studies ( - mm hg vs. - mm hg in nonhuman primates) [ , ] . from our studies in the mdx mouse and grmd dog models of duchenne dystrophy, and in nonhuman primates, the minimal volume needed for efficient naked dna limb perfusion is % of the limb volume [ ] . whereas arterial limb perfusion did not turn out to be safe in grmd dogs (personal data not shown), up to ten consecutive naked dna limb perfusions every other day appeared very safe in both dystrophic mice and dogs. even though head-to-head comparison would be necessary, our studies suggested that gene transfer was higher in diseased muscles than in wild-type animals. we also noticed that the highest transfection efficiencies were found in nonhuman primates; up to % of limb muscles expressed reporter genes following a single-limb perfusion [ ] . therefore, limb perfusion of a naked dna remains a valid approach to treat limb dystrophic muscles as an alternative to viral vectors in seropositive patients or in indications that require large transgenes with regional gene transfer [ ] . ex vivo approaches using gene-corrected stem cells with non-viral vectors are also being explored. human artificial chromosome (hac) vectors have the capacity to carry large genomic loci and to replicate and segregate autonomously without integration into the host genome. hac vectors containing the entire human dystrophin gene (dys-hac) with its native regulatory elements allow dystrophin expression at levels similar to native dystrophin isoform expression levels. since they can be stably maintained as episomal elements in host cells, the dys-hac could be introduced into several types of patient stem or progenitor cells for ex vivo therapy, e.g., induced pluripotent stem cells, mesoangioblasts, ac , and mesenchymal stem cells [ ] . one of the main issues, however, is the translatability of stem cell therapy in muscle disorders [ , ] . the development of successful non-viral gene delivery systems to skeletal muscle is highly dependent on the proportion of muscle (or their innervating motoneuron) cells that need to be transfected. more than years of research and testing in animal models and in human trials gear us toward two types of muscle-directed non-viral gene transfer applications: . direct injection. this represents a far simpler but poorly efficient approach. provided highly active gene products are used, non-viral gene therapy becomes increasingly amenable to infectious, cancerous, and peripheral ischemia diseases. vectors could be both naked dna and synthetic complexes. . intravascular delivery. simple intravenous perfusion of non-viral vectors is as of today far less practicable. regional hydrodynamic delivery of naked dna offers several advantages over viral vectors which hold potential for muscle diseases, including limb-girdle muscular dystrophies and peripheral neuropathies. nevertheless, muscle gene therapy using systemic administration of non-viral vectors retains major hurdles that need to be overcome before any human applications. disclosure author declares having no potential competing financial interests. the mechanism of naked dna uptake and expression non-viral gene delivery in skeletal 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after intramuscular gene transfer promotes collateral vessel development in patients with critical limb ischemia effect of fibroblast growth factor nv fgf on amputation and death: a randomised placebo-controlled trial of gene therapy in critical limb ischaemia naked plasmid dna encoding fibroblast growth factor type for the treatment of end-stage unreconstructible lower extremity ischemia: preliminary results of a phase i trial clinical safety and preliminary efficacy of plasmid pudk-hgf expressing human hepatocyte growth factor (hgf) in patients with critical limb ischemia plasma vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) levels after intramuscular and intramyocardial gene transfer of vegf- plasmid dna vascular endothelial growth factor-induced angiogenic gene therapy in patients with peripheral artery disease treatment with intramuscular vascular endothelial growth factor gene compared with placebo for patients with diabetes mellitus and critical limb ischemia: a double-blind randomized trial basic fibroblast growth factor in patients with intermittent claudication: results of a phase i trial results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled study to assess the safety of intramuscular injection of hepatocyte growth factor plasmid to improve limb perfusion in patients with critical limb ischemia non-viral vectors for gene therapy: clinical trials in cardiovascular disease intramuscular vascular endothelial growth factor gene therapy in patients with chronic critical leg ischemia results from a phase ii multicenter, double-blind placebo-controlled study of del- (vlts- ) for intermittent claudication in subjects with peripheral arterial disease design of the del- for therapeutic angiogenesis trial (delta- ), a phase ii multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of vlts- in subjects with intermittent claudication secondary to peripheral arterial disease treatment of thromboangiitis obliterans (buerger's disease) by intramuscular gene transfer of vascular endothelial growth factor: preliminary clinical results long-term follow-up evaluation of results from clinical trial using hepatocyte growth factor gene to treat severe peripheral arterial disease induction of antigen-specific tolerance in multiple sclerosis after immunization with dna encoding myelin basic protein in a randomized, placebo-controlled phase / trial double-blind, placebo-controlled study of hgf gene therapy in diabetic neuropathy vascular endothelial growth factor gene transfer for diabetic polyneuropathy: a randomized, double-blinded trial improvement in chronic ischemic neuropathy after intramuscular phvegf gene transfer in patients with critical limb ischemia key: cord- -h vjkufn authors: gontier, nathalie title: evolutionary epistemology and the origin and evolution of language: taking symbiogenesis seriously date: journal: evolutionary epistemology, language and culture doi: . / - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: h vjkufn symbiogenesis is a form of horizontal evolution that occurred billion years ago, with the evolution of eukaryotic cells. it will be argued that, just as we can develop universal selection theories based upon a general account of natural selection, we can also develop a universal symbiogenetic principle that can serve as a general framework to study the origin and evolution of language. ( ) horizontal evolution will be compared with and distinguished from vertical evolution. ( ) different examples of intra- and interspecific horizontal evolution will be given to show that horizontal evolution is quantitatively and qualitatively the most commonly occurring form of evolution throughout the history of life. ( ) finally, three examples are given of how a universal symbiogenesis principle can be implemented in the study of language origins and evolution, more specifically within: (a) the study of language variation, (b) language genes and (c) conceptual blending. the universal selectionist models (campbell, (campbell, , (campbell, , (campbell, , (campbell, , cziko, ; hull et al., ) , universal darwinism (dawkins, ) or philosophical darwinism (munz, ) developed by evolutionary epistemologists, are all based upon the evolution of genes by natural selection. these theories, although they are very useful to study the evolution of animals, are not adequate to study phenomena such as language or culture. language and culture do not follow rigid evolutionary schemes analogous to the evolution of genes, rather they have their own peculiarities that need to be studied in their own right. to begin with, it is difficult to pinpoint one unit and one level of selection, because languages and cultures can take on many forms. languages are the result of many different elements that are combined: speech, thinking, grammar, semantics, sensory-motor actions, memory, (co-verbal) gesturing, language rules and language games. and in the case of culture, there is the individual that adheres to different (sometimes contradictory) views, that are categorized by a brain; there is the interaction with significant others within a community; and there are cultural artefacts that need to be taken into consideration. these peculiarities, however, can also be formalized, analogous to different evolutionary theories, one of the most important being symbiogenesis. ruse ( ) already pointed out that we have to take darwin seriously, meaning, amongst other things, that our cognitive capacities such as language and culture need to be studied as a product of darwinian evolution. however, here it will be argued that we should also take symbiogenesis seriously. symbiogenesis is a form of horizontal evolution and it will be argued that horizontal evolution is quantitatively and qualitatively the most commonly occurring form of evolution throughout life's history. evolution by natural selection is a form of evolution that, during and within the evolution of life, only plays a minor role within the evolution of animals. given this minor role that natural selection plays within evolution, it is too short-sighted to only develop general normative frameworks based upon neo-darwinian theory to study all of life's phenomena. first of all, it is bad science because it neglects all other evolutionary theories that provide adequate and scientific explanations regarding certain phenomena. secondly, this unnecessarily narrows down the options of linguists and anthropologists, leading to today widely defended views that naturalistic approaches cannot adequately address culture or language, because the, on biology-based, theories of language and culture that are introduced by evolutionary epistemologists, supposedly cannot account for a diversity of research topics within language and culture (e.g. recursivity, creativity, religion, arbitrary rituals and so on). here a much more optimistic view is given. the above-mentioned criticisms should not be regarded as negative, but as positive. for where natural selection, or where ee(m)-models (gontier, this volume) based upon natural selection fail, it is not necessary to abandon a naturalistic approach altogether. we can turn to other evolutionary frameworks, such as symbiogenesis, that can deal with, and formalize, these phenomena. first, horizontal evolution is distinguished from vertical evolution. secondly, it is shown how both evolutionary concepts are being applied within the study of language. thirdly, symbiogenesis is universalized and it is shown how we can apply this normative framework to the study of phenomena such as language variation and evolution, language genes and conceptual blending. contrary to received wisdom, horizontal evolution processes occur quantitatively and qualitatively more often than vertical evolutionary processes. we will start off by defining our concepts. vertical evolution is evolution as we have all learned it at school: it is evolution by natural selection. neo-darwinian theory (ayala, ; mayr, mayr, , dawkins, dawkins, , dawkins, , dennett, ; gould, gould, , gould, , maynard smith, ) adheres to the view that only speciation leads to the evolution of new species. to give only one standard example of how this speciation takes place, let us look into 'allopatric speciation by peripheric isolation'. this catchy phrase refers to the following scenario. a subgroup of a population of a certain species gets isolated from the main group (by the eruption of a volcano that burns the ground, leading to the subgroup not crossing this land even if the ground is cooled of, because they do not recognize it as their territory or niche; or by another geographical barrier, such as water because of floods). given that this isolation takes a very long time, it is possible that one or several random mutations occur and spread within the subgroup. again, given enough time, should the subgroup and the main group meet again, it could be that these different groups cannot fertilize each other or cannot produce fertile offspring, while members of the same group can produce fertile offspring. if the latter is the case, then we have a new species. actual examples of allopatric speciation by peripheric isolation have only been reported a couple of times. processes like allopatric speciation by peripheric isolation, together with other such processes (for example species-mate-recognition patterns, see for instance schwartz, ) lead, randomly, to the evolution of new species by speciation: new species evolve out of and split off from older, sometimes still existing species. hence a family tree with a branching pattern is regarded as what is being argued here might seem trivial but it is not. most non-biologically schooled scholars think that evolutionary biology is simple, it is not. evolution in some cultures today is part of a way of life, of a philosophical understanding of the world, leading to the idea that everybody knows what evolution is about and that evolution is easily comprehensible. again, it is not. recognizing that someone belongs to the same species and that this organism is of the opposite sex and hence a potential mate. the most suitable way of iconizing vertical evolution ( figure ). this is what darwin talked about: species are not static entities; they evolve out of each other by speciation. neo-darwinian theory, more specifically ernst mayr, later on introduced the term allopatric speciation by peripheric isolation. neo-darwinian theory also added mendelian hereditary laws, genes, mutations and mathematics to this speciation concept (gontier, ) to answer the following question: what happens during vertical evolution? the answer to that question is: existing or new characteristics are retained by inheritance (genetically) and spread throughout the population across time, from generation to generation, sometimes leading to speciation or extinction. actually, today, we would not say that it is characteristics, but genes that are retained and inherited by recombination. this is because we do not quite know how genes encode for characteristics (all they seem to encode for are amino acids that form proteins that form tissue). the point is, however, that it is presumed that genes, in a yet to be explained manner, encode for certain characteristics of an animal, and that these genes need to be inherited from one generation to the next, in a vertical fashion. gould ( gould ( , already emphasized from within neodarwinian theory that this iconicity however is not suitable to explain evolution, because vertical evolution implies that there is one common point of departure (and beginning) and from there, the tree diversifies, the idea being that the maximal diversification lies at the end of the tree, comparable with a christmas tree turned upside down. however, he showed that the maximal diversity lies not at the end of the tree of life, but somewhere in the middle. after the cambrian explosion, there was a decimation of most phylogenetic branches. only the few phylogenetic branches that did survive this decimation show an enormous diversification within these different phylogenies. there are few branches (body designs), but lots of twigs on these branches (species with a certain body plan), a process that he characterizes as early experimentation and later standardization. again, we need to be more cautious with our definition: vertical evolution at the animal level implies that two members of the same species, of the opposite sexes, mate, and that during this mating process, one sex cell from each parent merges with the other to form a fertilized cell, from whereupon an embryo develops. so half of the genes of the mother and half of the genes of the father are recombined in a fertilized egg cell (as we shall see under section . . , this is not totally correct either). vertical here has two meanings: ( ) half of the genes of the parents are passed on to the next generation; ( ) only those characteristics that are somehow genetically encoded for in the individual can possibly get passed on to the next generation. if they are passed on, these genes and hence the characteristics are retained in the next generation. the more a gene is retained within the next generation through time, because the carrier is fit and hence able to reproduce, the more it is spread throughout the population in general and the more it can get fixed within a species. p gives the gene to offspring f , who mates with x, and passes the gene on to their offspring and these in turn have offspring with y and z and pass the gene on to their offspring. hence an existing gene will spread throughout a population, which does not necessarily lead to the evolution (by speciation) of a new species. sometimes a gene undergoes a random mutation. if this mutated gene is to be passed on to the next generation, a few conditions are given by neo-darwinian theory. the mutation can (possibly, not necessarily) only be passed on to the next generation, if the mutation occurs in one of the sex cells and if this sex cell (a sperm or an egg cell) is used during reproduction to form a zygote. this means that the organism with the mutation has to be able to reproduce itself. it can only reproduce itself if it is able to survive long enough to find a mate, and it can only find a mate if the two parents recognize each other as potential mates. hence we find the introduction of concepts such as adaptation (to the environment in order to survive long enough) and fitness (to be able to reproduce itself at a maximal rate), concepts that all too often are intertwined. so neo-darwinian theory basically studies two processes: ( ) the recombination of genetic material at the level of the sex cells (meiotic recombination); and ( ) the possible occurrence of genetic mutations at the level of these sex cells, because if advantageous to the individual and passed on to the next generation, the mutations possibly lead to new species (gontier, ) . vertical evolution though, is primarily a zoological concept that can only be applied to a certain degree to animal evolution. most neo-darwinians are zoologists as well. horizontal evolution (figure ) is evolution through symbiogenesis (section . . ) or hybridization (section . . ) but it can also occur at the inter-and intraspecific level of animal evolution (section . . ). two general definitions can be given: ( ) horizontal evolution is the coming together and merging of existing and independently evolved evolutionary lineages (we will return to this definition under sections . . - . . ). ( ) horizontal evolution happens when existing characteristics are retained and spread out geographically within members of a population (and across generations through time). the second general definition of what horizontal evolution is about resembles the definition of vertical evolution, but there is a difference: only existing characteristics are retained and spread throughout a population. neo-darwinians do not explain this phenomenon of horizontal evolution as a form of evolution, rather they regard the process of passing on already existing genes as part of variation. the more variation, the less genes are held in common within members of the same species; the less variation, the more genes are 'fixed' within a population and hence are regarded as (linked to) typical traits of that population. as mentioned above, the modern synthesis focuses on two steps: the sex cells, where genes possibly are passed on from one generation to the next, and possible random mutations that occur within these genes. hence the popular idea put forward by neo-darwinians that animals pass on their genes from one generation to the next (gontier, ) . this is not true: animals do not pass on their genes from one generation to the next, they pass on their sex cells (that contain genes) from one generation to the next, and here a horizontal element is involved: namely, two members of the same species, of the opposite sexes, mate and if all goes well a sperm cell penetrates an egg cell, resulting in the formation of a cell with diploid chromosomes. "zoologists, those who professionally study animals, have imposed a distinct concept of species, which they call the 'biological species concept'. coyotes and dogs in nature do not mate to produce fully fertile offspring. they are 'reproductively isolated'. the zoological definition of species refers to organisms that can hybridize-that can mate and produce fertile offspring. thus organisms that interbreed (like people, or like bulls and cows) belong to the same species. botanists, who study plants, also find this definition useful (margulis and sagan, : - , my emphasis) ." there is more to it than a mere definition process. this crucial horizontal step is taken for granted and even ignored by neo-darwinian theory, because of their focus on genes. every mating process, however, is a crucial horizontal (temporary merging) process of the parents, and every fertilization is a permanent merging and recombining of different cells that contain (mostly already existing) genes. since it mostly only involves the passing on or recombining of existing genes, i prefer to call this a form of horizontal evolution contrary to regarding this as part of the process of individual variation that occurs because of vertical genetic recombinations without there actually being vertical evolution (because no species evolves or goes extinct). vertical evolution carries connotations of speciation, mutations (the introduction of new genetic material) and branching, which leads to the idea that all animals that belong to the same species, carry the same genes and that these genes are the essential characteristics of that species. horizontal evolution emphasizes the coming together and spreading of already existing genetic material and involves a process worth studying on its own. only prokaryotes (bacteria, viruses) are able to pass on their genes, immediately and directly, within one generation or from one generation to the next. bacteria, who happen to bump into each other, can exchange and donate genetic material: they form a bridge (literally, made from proteins) and exchange genetic material in a direct way. a process that can be understood by the following analogy: imagine that in a coffee house you brush up against a guy with green hair. in so doing, you acquire that part of his genetic endowment, along with perhaps a few more novel items. not only can you now transmit the gene for green hair to your children, but you yourself leave the coffee shop with green hair. bacteria indulge in this sort of casual, quick gene acquisition all the time. bathing, they release their genes into the surrounding liquid. if the standard definition of species, a group of organisms that interbreed only among themselves, is applied to bacteria, then all bacteria belong worldwide to a single species. (margulis and sagan, : ) in contrast, all eukaryotic organisms (protists, plants, animals and fungi) pass on their sex cells (with genetic material) from one generation to the next. although darwin entitled his magnum opus on the origin of species, the appearance of new species is scarcely even discussed in his book. symbiosis [. . . ] is crucial to an understanding of evolutionary novelty and the origin of species. indeed, i believe the idea of species itself requires symbiosis. bacteria do not have species. no species existed before bacteria merged to form larger cells including ancestors to both plants and animals. [. . . ] [l]ong-standing symbiosis led first to the evolution of complex cells with nuclei and from there on to other organisms such as fungi, plants, and animals. (margulis, : ) as margulis ( ; margulis and sagan, , ) shows, all life can be divided into organisms with two basic cell types: prokaryotic organisms and eukaryotic organisms. prokaryotes are all (archae)bacteria (the first kingdom), quantitatively the most common form of life. typical of these bacteria is the fact that they carry genetic material in their cells and that these genes encode for the proteins present in these cells. however, this genetic material is not organized on chromosomes, nor is it encapsulated within a nucleus. as said, these bacteria can exchange genetic material freely in a horizontal fashion. eukaryotes are all organisms that are part of the other four kingdoms of life: protists, animals, plants and fungi (mushrooms and yeast). the cells that make up these eukaryotic organisms, all contain genetic material that is organized on chromosomes, and encapsulated in a protecting nucleus. animals, plants and fungi cells, beside their nucleus, also contain organelles, little bodies in the cell that are enclosed by their own membrane, and contain their own genetic material. what is interesting about this genetic material is that, when compared with the genetic material from the nucleus, it shows little to no resemblance to it. however, when the genetic material that is present in all organelles of eukaryotic cells is compared with the genetic material of today's independently existing bacteria (that is, prokaryotes) they show a very high resemblance, so high, that we have to conclude that the organelles that are part of all eukaryotic cells, used to be bacteria that lived independently. somehow, billion years ago, bacteria merged: instead of just exchanging genetic material, whole bodies fused together, they penetrated each other and literally started living in each other, as a form of permanent parasitism. these merged beings evolved into protists and multicellular organisms, ending with the evolution of the fungi, plant and animal kingdoms ( figure ). and, the types of bacteria that fused, still exist today, on their own, thereby excluding any deterministic process: the mergings that occurred, occurred randomly, otherwise we would not see members of these different types alive and on their own today. bacteria fused literally, by cannibalism or enforced parasitism. another interesting aspect of these organelles is that they are passed on from one generation to the next, in a non-mendelian fashion. only eggs contain mitochondria or chloroplasts, sperm cells lack these. so every eukaryotic organism, male or female, receives its organelles with their specific genetic paracocci thermoplasm spirochetes cyanobacteria protoctista animals plants fungi nucleic cells figure . the symbiotic mergers that took place between different prokaryotic organisms (all bacteria beneath the dotted line) that lead to the evolution of eukaryotic organisms (everything above the dotted line). important are the evolutionary lineages, that instead of forming a splitting pattern, merge (based on margulis, : ) . material, from the mother. it is hence not true that we receive half of our genetic material from our mother and half of our father. according to margulis' theory, we can only talk about 'species' at the level of eukaryotic organisms, where cell fusions are the driving forces of evolution, while bacteria can't be distinguished into species, rather they are classified into different types (that belong to one single species). mitosis and meiosis always occurs at the level of the cell or between cells. hence according to margulis' view, all eukaryotic evolution, even today, during the reproduction of organisms belonging to these four eukaryotic kingdoms, requires a certain form of symbiogenesis. therefore, this horizontal process needs to be distinguished from a vertical evolution process. plant hybridization is another form of horizontal symbiotic evolution and plants also by far outnumber animals. plant species that evolved independently from one another can cross-fertilize and produce fertile offspring. this is not a mere vertical process either because what we call incest is a rather common phenomena in hybridizing plants. p can be the result of the hybridization of two different plants species, and f hybrids can possibly cross-fertilize again with p . hybridization can also occur when for instance these f hybrids cross-fertilize with yet another plant species and their offspring, for the sake of argument, called f hybrids (although they are f hybrids of the crossings of f with yet another species) and these f hybrids can potentially cross-fertilize with p or f ( figure ). it is a common thing in plants and indeed these symbiotic mergers are also a form of symbiogenesis, because they always involve the fertilization of whole cells, not merely or solely the passing on of genes. bacteria today still donate genes regularly. that is why for instance certain infectious bacteria become immune to antibiotics. even if bacteria die from a certain antibiotic, suppose that they develop a resistant gene, bacteria that are alive can snap these genes from those dead bacteria. horizontal evolution however does not only occur at the prokaryotic level or within the evolution of eukaryotic plants. it can also occur at the intraand interspecific level within the evolution of eukaryotic life in general, also within the evolution of animals. sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome)-, hiv-and ebola-viruses for instance (kahn, ) are viruses that are passed on not only between members of the same species (intraspecifically) but also between members of different species (interspecifically). the recently evolved sars-virus is a virus that humans caught as a result of eating or being around the masked palm civet, a cat-sized animal. sars is a variant of a common corona-virus of these masked palm civets. once one human catches this virus, it can spread very rapidly within the human population at an intra-specific level. it can also be passed on from one generation to the next, not because the virus contaminates the sex cells. rather this occurs because when there is no external intervention like putting contaminated individuals in quarantine, the population as a whole 'carries' the virus. newborn babies can catch the disease because their grandparents have it, or grandparents can catch the disease because their grandchildren have it. the same goes for the hiv-virus which humans caught eating the brains of primates, and primates in turn got the virus eating monkey brains that were infected with the siv-virus. "hiv itself has been isolated from common chimpanzees, which are believed to be the original source of the aids pandemic after hunters killed and ate them. ironically, [. . . ] chimpanzees acquired their siv from monkeys they killed and eaten." (kahn, : ) . once the hiv-virus developed and was passed on interspecifically, it remains in a population, because it is passed on intraspecifically. and ebola for instance, is now killing great apes, while humans eating these apes, can again infect the human population with ebola. neo-darwinians do not explain these phenomena as evolution because most viruses do not infect the sex cells and as mentioned above, the researchers only understand two processes to be relevant for the study of evolution: the genes that get passed on sexually, and how these get passed on (mutated or not). however, ontogenetically, the hiv-virus can get passed on through the blood line (when for instance cutting the navel cord, or drinking the mother's milk). immunological processes of resistance against certain viruses, for instance, are also passed on through the mother's milk. infants who are breast-fed are more immune to the development of certain diseases that are caught by viruses or bacteria. this is because through the mother's milk, children receive antibodies (indeed again whole cells) that the mother already made when she, for example, caught this year's flu. so intraspecifically, there is a lot more going on than the mere transmission of genetic material from one generation to the next because of sexual recombination. viruses and bacteria which contain their own genetic material can also be passed on in a horizontal ontological fashion. neo-darwinian theory is not able to account for, or to formalize these sorts of evolution because of their excessive focus on the sex cells with the subsequent genetic variations and possible mutations. these forms of contamination as said, can happen at the inter-and intraspecific level, but horizontal evolution, by means of cross-fertilization can also happen at the level of animals. we of course all know the mule that is the result of cross-breeding with a donkey and a horse. however the mule is infertile and hence neo-darwinians define species as those individuals that, when mating with members of the opposite sex, can produce fertile offspring. however, the giant panda (o'brien and menotti-raymond, ) is also the result of cross-breeding between the brown bear and other bear species. their chromosomes reveal these crossings and most importantly, the giant panda is fertile. it is threatened with extinction (because of its vanishing niche but also perhaps because of this genetic load that the animal carries), but the giant panda is nevertheless up until this day, fertile. neo-darwinian theory cannot cope with these different, everyday phenomena. therefore, a horizontal evolutionary concept that can cope is absolutely necessary. that is not to say that neo-darwinian theory is wrong, far from it, all that is being said is that there are different phenomena going on within the evolution of life which can very optimistically be explained from within other evolutionary theories. within the study of language (its origin, evolution and use), both evolutionary concepts are explicitly or implicitly put to use. most especially a vertical evolution concept is used, explicitly within the study of language, while a horizontal evolution concept is used implicitly. a vertical evolutionary concept can be distinguished within the disciplines of historical and theoretical linguistics, structuralism and within the darwinization of language (croft, ) and today takes on the form of the 'languageas-species metaphor' (mufwene, ) . although historical and theoretical linguistics are separate disciplines today, both can be understood as part of, and the result of, the sociological systems theory movement described in gontier (this volume), for they adhere to the view that language needs to be studied synchronically, as a closed, self-explaining and self-encapsulating system. language is understood as a static, unevolving entity (croft, : - ) which leads to the entification and reification of language. this essentialism in turn implicitly subscribes to the idea that there is only one (ideal) language or one (grammatical) language structure understood as a platonic archetype which takes on different manifestations. so the idea arises that there is only one ideal language, that diversifies into different languages. essentialist thinking is always about distinguishing the accidental from the essential. de saussure for example developed his three laws. these state that the primary concern of linguistics is about coming to terms with the following three dichotomous relations within language: (a) the relation between lexicon and grammar; (b) the relation between form and meaning and (c) the relation between langue and parole. these dichotomous relations indeed are instruments to distinguish the accidental from the essential and hence are used to discover the core of 'the' language. this has four major consequences: ( ) although language can have different manifestations (there are different languages belonging to different language families, there are dialects, and even child language is different from adult language), all these languages belong to the same 'universal' language, because all share the essential properties. the goal of linguistics, according to these theoretical linguists, is hence to distinguish the accidental from the essential and thus to answer the what-is-language question, thereby introducing a functionalistic approach. ( ) since all languages are different manifestations of one language, all languages are uniform, meaning that there is no directionality to language change (newmeyer, : ) . if there were directionality, language(s) would evolve and there would be 'lesser' and 'more' languages, but the essential, reified, ideal, universal language is, once evolved, evolutionless. ( ) the principle of uniformity adhered to by theoretical and historical linguists, implicitly implies that, since all languages are essentially the same, but different because of contingent and arbitrary elements such as culture and so on, the essential properties of language transcend everyday language use, and indeed the individual itself, which again leads to an entification and reification of language outside an individual organism. this entified structure, which obeys laws of its own, and is not part of the individual members of the species, forms its own structures and behaves on its own. ( ) so when we want to understand language evolution, we need to study this structure on its own, using, for example, the internal reconstruction method and search for the point where this one language started to diversify and have different manifestations, in other words: we need to search for 'the' proto-language, because this will show the essential properties of language. this by no means implies that today historical linguists adhere to the idea that it is possible to reconstruct 'the' proto-language or that they believe that there was a proto-language from where all languages developed. newmeyer ( : ) gives credible evidence for the fact that we do not know whether there is one language from where all languages developed, but then again we cannot prove that two languages are unrelated either. and neither does this imply that these historical linguists themselves believe that their internal reconstruction or their use of the comparative method can shed light on the origin of language (newmeyer, : - ) . nevertheless, answering the questions whether all languages share a common descent and whether this gives clues as to how language evolved, used to be one of the goals of historical linguistics, and these goals are the ones under review in this article, for biologists have interpreted them in different ways which has given rise to the general academic climate which will be discussed in the next section of this paper (under sections . . and . ). structuralism evolved out of historical linguistics and here chomsky ( ) makes his entrée. chomsky's main goal was to criticize behaviourism which stated that language can be understood without entering the black box that our brain is. chomsky never denied that we need to understand language from within biology or cognition, on the contrary, this was his main goal. however, he denied that language needs to be studied diachronically, that is, amongst other disciplines making use of evolutionary biology. because language was uniquely human, the evolution of non-linguistic species in itself could not help the study of human language. basically, developing de saussure's ideas further, chomsky distinguished between competence and performance, arguing that only the competence part is relevant for linguistics. this linguistic competence of individuals was believed to be universal: all human beings have access to a universal grammar, a language organ in the brain called the language acquisition device (lad). because performance can vary greatly, competence is what needs attention. therefore, he stated that: "linguistic theory is concerned primarily with an ideal speaker-listener, in a completely homogenous speech-community, who knows its language perfectly." (chomsky in croft, : ) and hence here too the primary concern of linguists is to distinguish the accidental from the essential, that is, to search for the proper functions of language and to answer the what-question: "hence the logically prior task of elucidating precisely what evolved has taken research priority over elucidating how it evolved." (newmeyer, : ) . essentialistic thinking is always associated with asking the 'what-question' (gontier, ) . in a very real sense, it was chomsky who brought the 'whatquestion' into (biological) linguistics. according to plato, the archetypes which he talked about, were part of a transcendental reality. one of his students, aristotle, internalized these archetypes in human and other beings and elements, saying that the 'ideal form' that the platonic archetype is, is not part of a transcendental reality, but is potentially part of things. this potential needs to be actualized by a process of becoming. in exactly this way, did chomsky internalize language, saying that the ideal form is part of the brain and that this potential only needs actualization. the point however, is that the actualization process, is not a kind of evolutuion, it needs to be understood as a process of actualizing what was already inherently there (understood as an unfolding). the result of this thinking is of course that language again gets reified and entified, language in its idealized form (the universal grammar of the lad)-once evolved-does not evolve anymore and hence is essentially evolution-less. different from his predecessors, chomsky states that the ideal entified structure is not somewhere out there, rather it is part of the individual, for it forms an organ in the brain. universal grammar is supposed to be part of the brain, where presumably a module is formed, where these universal grammatical structures are somehow stored, hot-wired, without these being able to undergo change. since natural selection does not work in a manner where something this complex can evolve all at once, without evolutionary intermediates, chomsky denied any role to natural selection and assumed a qualitative emergent evolutionary step, leading, at one leap, to this language faculty. it is, however, one thing to assume that we can deduce ideal grammatical structures or rules from a language, and quite another to adhere to the view that these structures actually are somehow part of our brain. we have not yet been able to localize one grammatical rule within that big brain of ours. as we have seen, historical and theoretical linguists entified and reified language. problem then was to locate this reified structure. contrary to his predecessors, chomsky localized the entified structure in the human brain, calling it the lad that took on the form of a module. basically, chomsky hence internalized language and combined this view with the principle of uniformity: after all, the universal grammar present in all humans which forms the basis for the competence of these humans, is biologically the same. this in turn again implies that all languages share a 'common descent', for all language performances are manifestations of this ideal internal structure. when battling against behaviourism, the next logical step was to replace instructionist models (that evolved out of behaviourism and stressed the relation between the language structure out there (in a community) and the learning of that structure by individuals) with selectionist models (where natural selection is internalized (gontier, this volume)). the first problem to be tackled when interested in a biological, evolutionary study of language is to search for evidence of common descent (in the true sense of the words), that is, to search for commonalities between different languages, and to investigate whether these commonalities are the result of random events, or whether they can be explained in a homologue fashion. "a biologist interested in exploring the evolution of some structural property of some species will first of all avail himself or herself of the comparative method, which involves the identification of homologues to the relevant property in the same species." (newmeyer, : ) . what is common to all languages was already a problem posed by essentialist theoretical linguists, while what is homologous is a question studied by historical linguists. although the above mentioned scientists never intended to use these theories when tackling questions about language origins, they nevertheless were interpreted in this way by different biologists. pinker and bloom ( ) developed chomsky's ideas further, thereby emphasizing the need for diachronic study of language as well. their main objective is to synthesize neo-darwinian theory with modularity theory and the theory of generative grammar. their idea: "no single mutation or recombination could have led to an entire universal grammar, but it could have led a parent with an n-rule grammar to have an offspring with an n+ rule grammar, or a parent with an m-symbol rule to have an offspring with an m+ symbol rule." (pinker and bloom, : ) this of course is obviously problematic: ee is being applied to fictitious models developed within historical, theoretical and structural linguistics. first of all, there is still no evidence of the existence of a universal grammar that statically is part of our brain. this is still only a hypothesis for we can neither pinpoint a module nor some part or neuron in the brain that contains a grammatical or all universal grammatical rules. it is of course useful to develop this idea further and to look into possible evidence for this theory, but it is another thing altogether to speculate upon a speculation or to assume upon an assumption. the position taken by pinker and bloom is an evolutionary epistemological one: given that organisms evolved by natural selection, and given that certain organisms evolved language which is the result of brain activity and other elements, language itself probably evolved by natural selection and is to be understood as an algorithmic process. no problem up until now, what they take for granted, however, is that natural selection evolved a grammar module, as it evolved other modules (cosmides and tooby, ; sperber, ) and that these modules are encoded for by genes. this is problematic, for it combines modularity theory, but no module up until this day has been found within the brain; it assumes that there are genes, that encode for such modules, but no gene that encodes for a module has been found; and it takes universal grammar for granted, although we have not been able to locate this either. all these speculations are useful for the development of scientific theories, but speculations alone cannot form the basis of a theory. in the analysis above we fully see the merits of ee. ee is not a one-directional discipline that from within biology seeks to develop a normative framework that can be put to use to study other evolutionary phenomena. it is, at a minimum, a two-way process, because difficulties or problems that are obvious in one discipline (for example linguistics), can point to a less obvious but analogical problem within other disciplines where one uses or obtains the general framework from (biology). that a vertical evolution concept is being used by pinker and bloom is obvious, and it will be shown that historical linguists as well make use of such a concept. as hull ( : ) observes: "in the second half of the th century, some exchange took place between historical linguists and evolutionary biologists with respect to the methods that they used [. . . ] ." what is crucial is that both linguists and biologists use tree models to classify languages and species, and even more importantly: at the beginning these tree models were not used to portray historical sequences showing common descent, rather they were a-historical sequences of platonic (and hence essentialist) archetypes. "the transformation from archetypes to ancestors turned out to be much more complicated than anyone at the time expected. the transition is still far from complete. the linnaean hierarchy was devised for a-temporal, abstract relations, not historical sequences." (hull, : ) theoretical linguistics implicitly took over these observations and methods from historical linguistics, when they implemented sociological, synchronic methods to study language. the language-as-species metaphor is a direct result of essentialist thinking: languages are entified structures that are either part of the community, or part of the brain. they obey their own laws. turner (this volume) already showed that the biological species concept is still basically essentialist. hull ( : ) observes that "[. . . ] linguists can be found joining biologists to argue that languages are as much historical entities as are species [. . . ] . they come into being, split, merge, go extinct, etc." the definition of language given by chomsky equals the way biology looks at 'species'. some members of a species are regarded as ideal representatives of the gene-pool (in technical terms called the 'wild type'), and it is presumed that all organisms share essentially all important genes within a perfectly homogenous population. hence within biology this is an essentialist view of species (gontier, ; turner, this volume) and species are still distinguished from one another by dividing accidental from essentialist properties. the wild type is an abstract concept and an objective measure to discover what the essential properties of a species are. all other organisms that are part of that species are regarded as varieties of that wild type. the language-as-species metaphor (mufwene, ) makes exactly the same mistakes as biologists make: adhering to the view that there is one (abstract) ideal type of language that equals a brain structure that is common to all humans and lies at the basis of the competence, while all acts of performance are regarded as accidental variation, different manifestations from that ideal grammatical structure (the linguistic wild type). the family tree models used by historical linguists also emphasize speciation. these speciation models imply that at the origin of language, lies one language from wherein all other languages evolved. just as in biology where it is generally presumed that life arose from one urcell, called the last common ancestor (gontier, ) , so it is presumed that language evolved from one proto-language (bickerton, ) . here one can take two directions: (a) one can either, within historical linguistics, try to reconstruct this proto-language, which is regarded as an idealized language, using the comparative and internal reconstruction methods or; (b) one can assume that this proto-language really existed, as biologically inspired scientists like bickerton ( ) propose. this idea, again just as in biology, leads to the assumption that older organisms, or older languages, are less complex and hence more primitive than later developed organisms or languages. hence ideas like the ladder of cone, where organisms are portrayed as evolving towards ever increasing complexity which is obviously false. this in turn means that if older 'primitive' or 'first' languages are viewed as less evolved, than younger languages are less complex: therefore, pidgin and creole languages or child language (aitchison, ) for that matter are explained as a form of proto-language comparable with the first languages ever spoken by human beings. in other words, these ideas contradict the principle of uniformity which states that all human languages are equally complex. a way out of this is found when one assumes that proto-language differs from human language, because proto-language is not human-bound, rather it is presumed to be a characteristic of the homo habilis, erectus and neanderthalenis (mellars, ; bickerton, ) . an essentialist view of languages, or species for that matter, implies that one needs to distinguish essential from accidental properties, which in turn leads, for example, to de saussure who develops three laws to explain what is essential to language. languages and (as) species are thus regarded as static entities that cannot mix nor influence each other because they follow rigid evolutionary lines. language mixing or hybridization cannot be explained using speciation models the term 'manifestations' here is to be taken literally. although i cannot go into this argument any further, mutations, 'quasi-species', are always mutations from the wild type: because the wild type-the dominant genetic sequence in a population, and hence the most reproductive-accidentally mutates the most (just the law of great numbers here), mutations always resemble the wild type, and hence are different manifestation of that wild type (gontier, ) . alone, a point also mentioned by hull ( : ) : "the metaphor of a tree of life seems just right for both species and languages, but it can also be misleading. as trees are commonly depicted, they are totally a matter of splitting, splitting and more splitting. merger never takes place." hence species or languages 'die' when essential characteristics disappear, and are replaced: it is stated that these species or languages go extinct, rather than that they evolved into something new, with different properties. what evolved is regarded to be a totally new language or species. turning to the darwinization of linguistics, again we encounter problems. today neo-darwinian theory tends to reduce the evolutionary process to the process of adaptation. adaptation strictu sensu means: being able to survive in an environment long enough to reproduce. the emphasis here lies on the survival part. later on, with the development of the modern synthesis, adaptation was defined as being able to reproduce fertile offspring, which in turn was narrowed down to being able to reproduce at maximal speed (fitness). hence adaptation and fitness today are almost synonymous. more so, the 'being able to reproduce' part which still assumes organisms who reproduce today is being replaced with the idea that being adaptive is being able to pass on his/her genes to the next generation, or more abstractly in the gene pool, at a maximum rate (gontier, ) . popular biological scientists such as dawkins for instance, also introduce theological elements into evolutionary biology, although they claim to do the contrary. just as chomsky introduced functionalistic, aristotelian methodology into linguistics, dawkins introduces aristotelian thinking into biology. dawkins ( ) defends the idea that it is the task of every biologist to answer the question of why organisms show design. here it is presumed that there is such thing in nature as design: hands are for grasping, eyes are for seeing, legs are for walking, . . . . methodologically, when searching for design features, we need to answer the question of what a certain characteristic is for. the whole point, however, is that in aristotle's philosophy, the 'what'-question and the 'what for' question are related (gontier, ) . answering the 'what'-question is equal to distinguishing between the essential and the accidental and hence equal to defining the proper functions. since in aristotle's philosophy, every final form is potentially present-it just needs to be actualized by a working agent (related to the how question)-the 'what for'-question is related to the 'what'-question. the 'essence' of a thing or organism (what is it, what is the function) is the same as its 'final goal' (what is it for). so when introducing the what-for question, we need an answer to the what question, and when both question are combined, a teleological point of view is taken. given this, let us take dawkins' argument a bit further: are hands also made for colouring, for typing, are our mouths and vocal cord and tongue made for shouting (anti)-governmental slogans? obviously a category mistake is being made here. in evolutionary biology the 'how'-question is and should also be the most important question raised, instead of trying to give functionalistic accounts based upon concepts like adaptivity with respect to what language evolved for. needless to say, there are numerous accounts of maladaptive and neutral characteristics of animals (kimura, ; gould, ; gould and vrba, ) . since we do not know how most things evolved, how can we even begin to answer the question of why they evolved, particularly, in a scientific and non-speculative manner? neo-darwinians have worked long and hard as well as fruitfully to ban all kinds of theological/teleological thinking within biology. why on earth should we undo this job? pinker and bloom follow the same road pointed out by dawkins: language shows design and, therefore, it should have and must have evolved by natural selection, because somehow natural selection gets understood as the designer: the blind watchmaker (dawkins, ) . since natural selection works slowly, grammar (under which form exactly: a module, a gene, an inherited brain structure, is not clear in their work) evolved stepwise as well, leading to a child with an n + grammar rule, while his parents got stuck with an n rule grammar. how can this advanced and more complex child make itself comprehensible to his less complex parents? as mentioned in gontier (this volume), ee is about developing a normative framework, based upon evolutionary thinking that can explain all of phylogenetic evolution, but also all of ontogenetic evolution. ee studies the cognitive capacities of organisms from within evolutionary biology (bradie's and harms' ( ) eem programme) and it studies how theoretic evolutionary models can be put to use to study the products of these cognitive capacities such as language and culture (bradie's and harms' ( ) eet programme). in practice this means that ee gets reduced to finding mechanisms and universal frameworks analogous to neo-darwinian thinking. the blind-variationselective-retention scheme of campbell ( ) , the generate-test-regenerate scheme of plotkin ( ) , the replication-variation-environmental interaction scheme introduced by hull (see hull et al., , for the most up to date account), all base their universal schemes upon the evolution of genes by natural selection. blind variation refers to the random mutations genes can undergo which leads to variation; the selective retention phase is about the selection of the advantageous random mutations that are heritably retained and spread within the species through time. the same goes for plotkin's scheme: the genetic material that is generated in the next generation because of sexual reproduction (mutated or not) needs to be tested (by the environment) in order to see whether they are suited for that environment: if the organism carrying these genes is able to survive long enough to reproduce; through reproduction, the genes are regenerated. hull emphasizes that the level where natural selection acts is the environment which interacts with a phenotype, instead of a replicator (a selfish gene); plotkin emphasizes the randomness of the testing phase; and campbell emphasizes the need for retention. however, all these researchers base their models upon the evolution of genetic material by natural selection and extrapolate from hereon to processes like science, culture or language. so all of them take darwin seriously, or to be more precise: they take ruse ( ) seriously, who states that we should take darwin seriously, although darwin himself has little to do with neo-darwinian theory (gontier, ) . darwin talked about gemulles that can blend, while neo-darwinians talk about genes that are impenetrable. these frameworks surely have their merits, and have helped different disciplines within biology and also throughout the study of complex phenomena within the life sciences; there is no question about that. croft ( ) , for example, is the first one to actually use one of these normative frameworks introduced by evolutionary epistemologists. he develops a framework of language variation using hull's replication-variationenvironmental interaction scheme. the replicator (the unit of selection) is his view is the lingueme: grammatical structures that are replicated in the utterances of people. variation arises because of phonological and semantic differences that occur in these utterances; and the environmental interaction (the level of selection) refers to the population of utterances (analogous to the gene pool) of people which interact with other such utterances within a language community. the merit of croft is that he takes the individual organism as the actor: language is not part of some superorganic structure, it is not out there in the community: language is part of a human being who in his utterances produces grammatical structures. however, here arise two problems: although croft is a fearsome critic of chomskyan linguistics, he does not seem to be able to completely abandon chomsky's view on language: the universal grammatical rules are unchangeable, perfectly and idealistically part of a brain, and these structures are replicated in an imperfect way within the utterances of individuals. so here he is ambivalent, not using chomsky while he is using his ideas. another problem arises with respect to his idea of a lingueme pool that is analogous to a gene pool, an ambivalence that can also be read in the works of hull where croft obtains his evolutionary framework from: although the level of selection is the environment and the unit of selection is the entire organism, that through his genes that make up a phenotype interacts with that environment, ultimately genes or linguemes are all that counts. because of these extraordinary developments and the progress made within ee, the time has come to go one step further and to apply evolutionary thinking there where even natural selection, that has been so helpful, fails. natural selection cannot explain all of life's phenomena (if it were able to do this, then and only then it would be unscientific, for a theory that can explain everything, explains nothing). as said in gontier (this volume), it is difficult to apply these rigid schemes to language or culture, because it is difficult to pinpoint one unit or level of selection within the evolution of language and culture. therefore, it is proposed in this article that a symbiogenetic view can complement the study of language from within neo-darwinian theory. just as the above schemes are generalizations made form evolution by natural selection, so can we develop a general framework using symbiogenesis. freeman dyson ( ) was the first to develop a 'universal symbiogenesis theory' that he applied to the evolution of universes and stars, within cosmology. his definition, however, only needs a few adjustments (between brackets), to be useful for the purpose of this article: "universal symbiogenesis is the [re]attachment of two [or more] structures, after they have been detached from each other and have evolved along separate paths for a long time, so as to form a combined structure with behaviour not seen in the separate components. " (dyson, : ) symbiogenesis thus falls into place as a form of emergent evolution, known by the catchy phrase 'the whole is more than the sum of its parts'. within universal symbiogenesis, different elements (neither numbered in advance, nor defined in advance, not implying that these elements need to be replicated faithfully, or have longevity or fecundity) that evolved along separate lines (after they got split off from each other or even when they never showed signs of common descent) somehow are combined and this new combination (a structure, element) has new properties, that cannot be reduced to the parts that form the new structure. this universal symbiogenetic process can be implemented in the study of language evolution in at least three ways: in the study of language variation (section ); language genes (section ) and within the study of conceptual blending (section ). implicitly, sociolinguistics (also called socio-historical linguistics) and anthropological linguistics use a horizontal symbiogenetic concept of language evolution. sociolinguists and social anthropologists study language variation or language change within a community or a subpopulation of that community and most importantly, they focus on the performance level: they study language as it is actually used by real speakers (croft, ) . they broaden the linguistic synchronic view that states that language can only be understood from within language, and use diachronic studies as well. hence they contextualize language, using and searching for political, economical, social and cultural factors that influence, effect or even cause certain types of language behaviour. typical research topics include language contact, language borrowing, language mixing, language death, bi-and plurilingualism, personal and/or group attitudes towards certain forms of language use (see for instance crystal, ; nettle and romaine, ; thomason, ) and they find answers as to why these aspects are part of language. explanations are not reduced to linguistic structures (for example the relations between lexicon and grammar), rather these elements are regarded as being influenced by warfare, trade, colonialism, hegemonic cultural factors, cultural or social markers. pidgin and creole languages, in this view, are not comprehended as static manifestations of a proto-language, but as those languages that give us the best examples of how languages change and vary because of cultural, political, social and economic influences. these processes are already well and often described by sociolinguists but we should also be able to explain these phenomena in the long run, and form predictions. therefore, a normative framework is required and symbiogenesis can provide that framework. first of all, the processes of language variation and language contact resemble the processes involved in contaminations of viruses or bacteria, that are at work at the level of the population. as said: most viruses do not infect the sex cells, but nevertheless stay 'alive' within the population from one generation to the next. during colonial times for example thousands of natives were killed because they got the measles from their western colonizers. those who survived grew resistant to these infections and now the measles are childhood diseases just as they are in western countries. these are not the result of genetic adaptations towards the measles. viruses and bacteria do not form species, but are distinguishable into different types, so within this view there is no need for a language-as-species metaphor. because when one regards language as a species, one gets into trouble relating this species in itself with the human species. secondly, language variation and language mixing also resemble plant hybridization processes. croft, therefore, introduced the 'plantish approach' to language contact and language change: "the zoöcentric view of phylogeny corresponds to the family tree model of language families in linguistics." (croft, : ) "in biology there are very similar phenomena to language contact once one leaves the animal kingdom, moving no further than to the plant kingdom." (croft, : ) thirdly, as symbiogenesis can occur very rapidly (from one generation to the next: bacteria penetrated each other through cannibalism or enforced parasitism leading at once to eukaryotic beings), so language variation and language contact is something that can occur very rapidly within different members of the same population. the creolization of pidgin languages mostly happens very quickly, especially when children learn the pidgin language as their first language ( bickerton, ) ; but when we for instance look at certain dialects or different uses of language as a result of different ages, we too find that they adhere to rapid changes: as a teenager it is popular to use 'slang'. these teenagers also know how to use their language 'properly' and when they work on the weekend or go to school they use this proper form; while going out with their friends they use slang. new words get introduced very rapidly; who used the word computer before and who did not know this word after ? fourthly, neo-darwinian theory cannot cope with these different aspects of language variation or language change. that for instance [a] gets pronounced as [ae] by one subgroup and as [e] by another, would be comprehended as individual variation (as opposed to mutation that can introduce novelty: what would be translated to linguistics, the introduction of a whole new vowel). the mechanisms at the base of language variation, however, can get comprehended as a form of horizontal evolution: just as bacteria can exchange genetic material freely within one generation, so languages can exchange grammatical structures, vowels, phonological elements freely. languages, therefore, show more resemblance to bacterial types than to rigid species. we can leave a coffee shop saying we are going to a [pàrtee] instead of a party. freely of course has to be taken with a grain of salt: bacteria, even though they donate and receive genetic bacteria, cannot change from type (spirochetes will never become cyanobacteria). that is why it is important, not so much to study the potential, but the constraints of these organisms. the same goes for language: rather than applying an adaptationist, functionalistic approach to language (the what-for question that automatically and teleologically directs itself to the future), one should study the constraints language has and ask how and when-questions that direct the quest to the past, which is more appropriate when studying origins and evolutions. hurst et al. ( ) was the first to report on the ke-family, a british family where half of the family members suffer from a severe speech disorder (at that time diagnosed as articulatory dyspraxia) that affects their language skills. this pathology was later on diagnosed as specific language impairment (sli), because besides their overall orofacial an oromotor dyspraxia, the pathology of the affected ke-family members is also noticeable in nonverbal orofacial movements (vargha-khadem et al., ; alcock et al., ) , in their receptive language skills (vargha-khadem et al., watkins et al., ) and in their brain structures (vargha-khadem, ; liégeois, ) . in , lai et al. narrowed the search for the gene responsible down to a specific region on chromosome called the spch region and finally the gene presumed responsible was identified, called the fox p gene (forkhead box, p ). within the affected family members, this gene has undergone a point mutation (lai et al., ; lai et al., ) . the fox p gene is a regulatory gene that can be divided into two parts: one part contains a large polyglutamine tract; the other part contains a forkhead dna binding domain, meaning that part of the gene produces helix-turnhelix proteins that are able to (dis)activate other genes, thereby influencing and regulating development. enard's team ( ) showed that the human fox p protein has undergone two amino acid sequence substitutes that occurred solely within the human lineage and are fixed within the human population. this fixation converges with the emergence of anatomically modern humans (presumed , years old) (enard et al., : - ) . the fox p gene, however, is an old gene and is very well conserved throughout evolution: since the diversification between the lineages of the mouse and the lineage that would evolve humans, million years ago, there has been only one amino acid substitution, which makes the fox p gene one of the % most conserved genes in evolution. the fox p gene cannot, however, be called a specific language gene, because it is also activated during the development of the heart, the lungs and the gut, nor is it specifically human (given that language is uniquely human, one would assume that language genes would be as well). this, however, is typical for regulatory genes. regulatory genes differ from structural genes (genes that encode for proteins that make tissue that eventually leads to the formation of an organism) in that they produce proteins that return to the helix. these have the amazing property of being able to switch other genes on or off, thereby influencing development. regulatory genes were first discovered in by king and wilson ( ) . ten years ago, a homeobox of genes was found in our genome (robertis et al., ; melton, ; wolpert, wolpert, , mcginnis and kuziora, ; gehring, ; davidson, ) . we share with almost all eukaryotic organisms a homeobox of genes (called hox -genes) that regulates the development of our anatomical body plans. even more interesting is that the same regulatory genes contribute to the development of different species, because of the (dis)activation, elongation of these genes, during different times at different regions during development. the same gene that for instance lies at the basis of the development of a radial symmetrical body plan (such as a sea star), also lies at the basis of bilateral symmetrical animals, such as humans (schwartz, ; gontier, ) . fox -genes, which the fox p gene is part of, differ from hox -genes because they are spread throughout the genome, but they share the functional properties of hox -genes, when it comes to switching other genes on or off. these ontogenetic processes of gene activation or disactivation need to be comprehended from within a universal symbiotic and hence horizontal point of view, because different genes, after they have evolved in different ways, and were (dis)activated in different regions and periods during ontogeny and phylogeny, can start interacting in new ways, which can lead to the development of new structures and even new species. hence contextualization and emergentism is what matters (gontier, ) , because the newly developed features are not reducible to the mere elements that make them up. neo-darwinian theory, which tries to explain vertical evolution using mathematical algorithms (dennett, ) cannot explain these phenomena using merely these algorithms. an algorithm basically is a linear binary system combined with logic: if gene a is activated ( ), then amino acid (a) is formed; if gene a is not activated ( ) then amino acid (a) is not formed. eventually we an observation also made by adoutte in a somewhat different context: "the new molecular based phylogeny has several important implications. foremost among them is the disappearance of "intermediate" taxa [. . . ] we have lost the hope, so common in older evolutionary reasoning, of reconstructing the morphology [. . . ] through a scenario involving successive grades of increasing complexity based on the anatomy of extant "primitive" lineages. [. . . ] in this respect, the situation is not unlike the new perspective emerging on the phylogeny of eukaryotes as a whole, in which most of the formerly intermediate taxa have been pulled upwards." (adoutte et al., : , my emphasis) get a treelike top-down structure that tries to explain how genes encode for features. however, when we look at the activation or disactivation of different regulatory genes, a network develops, where, if some genes are activated during a certain period at a certain region within the individual, than other genes are switched on or off by proteins that are encoded for by these genes. how many proteins are produced depends upon the activation of certain genes, the locus and the time of development. regulatory genes are characterized by their pleiotropic effects (gehring, ) and these cannot get formalized using mere algorithms alone. at the very least, non-linear dynamics need to be interwoven with boolean operators. and even then it is difficult to formalize how genes encode for characteristics, because mostly a - correspondence between a gene and a trait is lacking. what we find is that genes act more like risk factors. schrödinger ( ) already pointed out years ago, that genes do not encode for characteristics or behaviours. it seems neither adequate nor possible to dissect into discrete 'properties' the pattern of an organism which is essentially a unity, a 'whole'. [...] what we locate in the chromosome is the seat of the difference. (we call it, in technical language, a 'locus', or, if we think of the hypothetical material structure underlying it, a 'gene'.) difference of property, to my view is really the fundamental concept rather than property itself, notwithstanding the apparent linguistical and logical contradiction of this statement. the differences of properties actually are discrete, [...] . (schrödinger, : - , my emphasis) these differences cannot be explained using only neo-darwinian theory, a symbiogenetic view, however, can take this emergentism into account. finally, universal symbiogenesis can incorporate theories such as conceptual blending, developed by fauconnier and turner ( ) . these scientists understand language as a singularity: there are no gradually evolved grammatical structures and there are no intermediate stages of language, not now, not ever. language emerged. emergentism, however, does not imply discontinuity. they point to two fallacies: the cause-effect isomorphism and the function-organ isomorphism (fauconnier and turner, : - ) . the cause-effect isomorphism is the fallacious idea, widely defended by scholars, that given that the effect is amazing (in this case language), the cause has to be something extraordinary as well. however, when we look at the development and evolution of regulatory genes, this need not be the case. far from it: the development of an eye for example is the result of one gene (the pax gene) that switches on other genes that make an eye. if this gene is not activated, eye development is not triggered (gehring, ) . the (dis)activation of this gene, however, is only a tiny step in the process. the second fallacy put forward by fauconnier and turner is the function-organ isomorphism: the idea that with the development of every new function, a new organ is involved. this idea dates back to aristotle, and is also subscribed to by chomsky, who presumes the existence of a language organ in the brain. however, nature gives numerous accounts of organs loosing functions or gaining new functions (gould and vrba, ) . hence fauconnier and turner ( : ) point out that: "language is not an organ. the brain is the organ, and language is just a function subserved by it, with the help of various other organs. language is the surface manifestation of a capacity." this capacity, according to their view, is conceptual blending (the use of metaphorical or analogical thinking) and language is regarded as just one of the products of this blending capacity. here again, we encounter a problem because they adhere to the view that there is a deeper lying, once evolved, unchangeable structure in the brain that has different manifestations, some of these structures emerging through blending. so fauconnier and turner too cannot seem to transcend a mere essentialist/potentialist view. however, conceptual blending can also be understood as a form of symbiogenesis, so therefore, i have redefined conceptual blending just to show how symbiotic this view really is: conceptual blending is the combining of two or more conceptual frames that results in a new conceptual frame with meaning not seen in the different components. it is important to note that in this definition, the components themselves are not static, unchangeable entities. universal symbiogenesis can be regarded as a complementation of neo-darwinian theory, because it can (at the least) integrate the following: ( ) horizontal evolution, as different from vertical evolution, can be put to use to explain language variation and language change, phenomena already well described by sociolinguistics. however, we also need to be able to explain these phenomena and, therefore, a normative framework is urgently needed. ( ) it can explain ontogenetic and phylogenetic processes concerning regulatory genes such as the fox p gene, by analogy, because the same genes, put in a different context and forming different interactions, lead to new emergent properties. ( ) it can explain cognitive evolutions such as conceptual blending crucial to language, because symbiogenesis can provide a framework to explain these emergent processes that are the result of blending of conceptual frameworks. the new animal phylogeny: reliability and implications chimps, children and creoles: the need for caution oral dyspraxia in inherited speech and language impairment and acquired dysphasia the mechanisms of evolution evolutionary epistemology the speciation of modern homo sapiens methodological suggestions from a comparative psychology of knowledge processes blind variation and selective retention in creative thought as in other knowledge processes evolutionary epistemology comment on 'the natural selection model of conceptual evolution selection theory and the sociology of scientific validity aspects of the theory of syntax beyond intuition and instinct blindness: toward an evolutionary rigorous cognitive science explaining language change: an evolutionary 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language disorder: comparison with acquired aphasia do we understand evolution? the evolution of cellular development key: cord- -vmtjc ct authors: georgiev, vassil st. title: genomic and postgenomic research date: journal: national institute of allergy and infectious diseases, nih doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vmtjc ct the word genomics was first coined by t. roderick from the jackson laboratories in as the name for the new field of science focused on the analysis and comparison of complete genome sequences of organisms and related high-throughput technologies. two basic computational methods are used for genome analysis: gene finding and whole genome comparison ( ) . gene finding. using a computational method that can scan the genome and analyze the statistical features of the sequence is a fast and remarkably accurate way to find the genes in the genome of prokaryotic organisms (bacteria, archaea, viruses) compared with the still difficult problem of finding genes in higher eukaryotes. by using modern bioinformatics software, finding the genes in a bacterial genome will result in a highly accurate, rich set of annotations that provide the basis for further research into the functions of those genes. the absence of introns-those portions of the dna that lie between two exons and are transcribed into a rna but will not appear in that rna after maturation and therefore are not expressed (as proteins) in the protein synthesis-will remove one of the major barriers to computational analysis of the genome sequence, allowing gene finding to identify more than % of the genes of most genomes without any human intervention. next, these gene predictions can be further refined by searching for nearby regulatory sites such as the ribosome-binding sites, as well as by aligning protein sequences to other species. these steps can be automated using freely available software and databases ( ) . gene finding in single-cell eukaryotes is of intermediate difficulty, with some organisms, such as trypanosoma brucei, having so few introns that a bacterial gene finder is sufficient to find their genes. other eukaryote organisms (e.g., plasmodium falciparum) have numerous introns and would require the use of special-purpose gene finder, such as glimmerm ( , ) . whole genome comparison. this computational method refers to the problem of aligning the entire deoxyribonucleic acid (dna) sequence of one organism to that of another, with the goal of detecting all similarities as well as rearrangements, insertions, deletions, and polymorphisms ( ) . with the increasing availability of complete genome sequences from multiple, closely related species, such comparisons are providing a powerful tool for genomic analysis. using suffix trees-data structures that contains all of the subsequences from a particular sequence and can be built and searched in linear time-this computational task can be accomplished in minimal time and space. because the suffix tree algorithm is both time and space efficient, it is able to align large eukaryotic chromosomes with only slightly greater requirements than those for bacterial genomes ( ) . bacterial genome annotation. the major goal of the bacterial genome annotation is to identify the functions of all genes in a genome as accurately and consistently as possible by using initially automated annotation methods for preliminary assignment of functions to genes, followed by a second stage of manual curation by teams of scientists. the family enterobacteriaceae encompasses a diverse group of bacteria including many of the most important human pathogens (salmonella, yersinia, klebsiella, shigella), as well as one of the most enduring laboratory research organisms, the nonpathogenic escherichia coli k . many of these pathogens have been subject to genome sequencing or are under study. genome comparisons among these organisms have revealed the presence of a core set of genes and functions along a generally collinear genomic backbone. however, there are also many regions and points of difference, such as large insertions and deletions (including pathogenicity islands), integrated bacteriophages, small insertions and deletions, point mutations, and chromosomal rearrangements ( ). the first genome sequence of escherichia coli k (reference strain mg ) was completed and published in ( ) . later, the genome sequence of two other genotypes of e. coli, the enterohemorrhagic e. coli o :h (ehec; strains edl and rimd -sakai) ( , ) and the uropathogenic e. coli (upec; strain cft ) ( ) , were sequenced and the information published. currently, it is accepted that shigellae are part of the e. coli species complex, and information on the genome of shigella flexneri strain a has been published ( ) . a comparison of all three pathogenic e. coli with the archetypal nonpathogenic e. coli k revealed that the genomes were essentially collinear, displaying both conservation in sequence and gene order ( ) . the genes that were predicted to be encoded within the conserved sequence displayed more than % sequence identity and have been termed the core genes. similar observations were made for the shigella flexneri genome, which also shares . mb of common sequence with e. coli ( ) . a comparison of the three e. coli genomes revealed that genes shared by all genomes amounted to , ( ) from a total of , , and about , and , predicted proteincoding sequences for e. coli k , ehec, and upec, respectively ( ) . the region encoding these core genes is known as the backbone sequence. it was also apparent from these comparisons that interdispersed throughout this backbone sequence were large regions unique to the different genotypes. moreover, several studies had shown that some of these unique loci were present in clinical disease-causing isolates but were apparently absent from their comparatively benign relatives ( ) . one such well-characterized region is the locus of enterocyte effacement (lee) in the enteropathogenic e. coli (epec). thus, an epec infection results in effacement of the intestinal microvilli and the intimate adherence of bacterial cells to enterocytes. furthermore, epec also subverts the structural integrity of the cell and forces the polymerization of actin, which accumulates below the adhered epec cells, forming cup-like pedestals ( ) . this is called an attachment and effacing (ae) lesion. subsequently, lee was found in all bacteria known to be able to elicit an ae lesion ( ). the presence of many regions in the backbone sequence similar to lee have been characterized in both gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria ( ) . this led to the concept of pathogenicity islands (pais) and the formulation of a definition to describe their features ( ) . typically, pais are inserted adjacent to stable rna genes and have an atypical g+c content. in addition to virulence-related functions, the pathogenicity islands often carry genes encoding transposase or integrase-like proteins and are unstable and self-mobilizable ( , ) . it was also noted that pais possess a high proportion of gene fragments or disrupted genes when compared with the backbone regions ( ) . it is generally accepted that the pathogenic e. coli genotypes have evolved from a much smaller nonpathogenic relative by the acquisition of foreign dna. this laterally acquired dna has been attributed with conferring on the different genotypes the ability to colonize alternative niches in the host and the ability to cause a range of different disease outcomes ( ) . although sharing some of the features of pais and considered to be parts of the pais, some genomic loci are unlikely to impinge on pathogenicity. to take account of this, the concept of pais has been extended to include islands or strainspecific loops, which represent discrete genetic loci that are lineage-specific but are as yet not known to be involved in virulence ( , ) . currently, there are more than , salmonella serovars in two species, s. enterica and s. bongori. all salmonellae are closely related, sharing a median dna identity for the reciprocal best match of between % and % ( , ) . despite their homogeneity, there are still significant differences in the pathogenesis and host range of the different salmonella serovars. thus, whereas s. enterica subspecies enterica serovar typhi (s. typhi) is only pathogenic to humans causing severe typhoid fever, s. typhimurium causes gastroenteritis in humans but also a systemic infection in mice and has a broad host range ( ) . like e. coli, the salmonellae are also known to possess pais, known as salmonella pathogenicity islands (spis). it is thought that spis have been acquired laterally. for example, the gene products encoded by spi- ( , ) and spi- ( , ) have been shown to play important roles in the different stages of the infection process. both of these islands possess type iii secretion systems and their associated secreted protein effectors. spi- is known to confer on all salmonellae the ability to invade epithelial cells. spi- is important in various aspects of the systemic infection, allowing salmonella to spread from the intestinal tissue into the blood and eventually to infect, and survive within, the macrophages of the liver and spleen ( ) . spi- , like lee and pai- of upec, is inserted alongside the selc trna gene and carries the gene mgtc, which is required for the intramacrophage survival and growth in the low-magnesium environment thought to be encountered in the phagosome ( ) . other salmonella spis encode type iii-secreted effector proteins, chaperone-usher fimbrial operons, vi antigen biosynthetic gene, a type ivb pilus operon, and many other determinants associated with the salmonellae enteropathogenicity ( ). although the mobile nature of pais is frequently discussed in the literature, there is little direct experimental evidence to support these observations. one possible explanation for this may be that on integration, the mobility genes of the pais subsequently become degraded, thereby fixing their position ( ) . certainly, there is evidence to support this hypothesis, as many proposed pais carry integrase or transposase pseudogenes or remnants. one excellent example of this is the high-pathogenicity island (hpi) first characterized in yersinia ( ) . the yersinia hpis can be split into two lineages based on the integrity of the phage integrase gene (int) carried in the island: (i) y. enterocolitica biotype b and (ii) y. pestis and y. pseudotuberculosis. the y. enterocolitica hpi int gene carries a point mutation, whereas the analogous gene is intact in the y. pestis and y. pseudotuberculosis hpis. the yersinia hpi is a -to -kb island that possesses genes for the production and uptake of the siderophore yersiniabactin, as well as genes, such as int, thought to be involved in the mobility of the island. hpi-like elements are widely distributed in enterobacteria, including e. coli, klebsiella, enterobacter, and citrobacter spp., and like many prophages, these hpis are found adjacent to asn-trna genes ( ) . trna genes are common sites for bacteriophage integration into the genome ( ) . integration at these sites typically involves site-specific recombination between short stretches of identical dna located on the phage (attp) and at the integration site on the bacterial genomes (attb). the trna genes represent common sites for the integration of many other pais and bacteriophages, with the secc trna locus being the most heavily used integration site in the enterics ( ). integrated bacteriophages, also known as prophages, are also commonly found in bacterial genomes ( ) . for example, in the s loops of the e. coli o :h strain edl (ehec) unique regions, nearly % were phage related. in addition to the prophage sequences detected in the genome of ehec strain sakai ( ) , the genomes of e. coli k , upec, and s. flexneri have all been shown to carry multiple prophage or prophage-like elements ( , , , ) . moreover, comparison of the genome sequences of ehec o :h strain edl and strain sakai revealed marked variations in the complement and integration sites of the prophages, as did internal regions within highly related phages ( , ) . in addition to genes essential for their own replication, phages often carry genes that, for example, prevent superinfection by other bacteriophages, such as old and tin ( , ) . however, other genes carried in prophages appear to be of nonphage origin and can encode determinants that enhance the virulence of the bacterial host by a process known as lysogenic conversion ( ) . in addition to the presence of the lee pai and the ability to elicit ae lesion, another defining characteristics of the enterohemorrhagic e. coli (ehec) is the production of shiga toxins (stx). the shiga toxins represent a family of potent cytotoxins that, on entry into the eukaryotic cell, will act as glycosylases by cleaving the s ribosomal rna (rrna) thereby inactivating the ribosome and consequently preventing the protein synthesis ( ) . other enteric pathogens such as s. typhi, s. typhimurium, and y. pestis are also known to possess significant numbers of prophages ( , , ) . thus, the principal virulence determinants of the salmonellae are the type iii secretion systems, carried by spi- and spi- , and their associated protein effectors ( , ) . a significant number of these type iii secreted effector proteins are present in the genomes of prophages and have a dramatic influence on the ability of their bacterial hosts to cause disease ( ). small insertions and deletions. even though the large pais play a major role in defining the phenotypes of different strains of the enteric bacteria, there are many other differences resulting from small insertions and deletions, which must be taken into account when considering the overall genomic picture of enterobacteriaceae ( ) . thus, the comparisons between e. coli k and e. coli o :h and between s. typhi and s. typhimurium have indicated the existence of many small differences that exist aside from the large pathogenicity islands. for example, the number of separate insertion and deletion events has shown that there are events of genes or fewer compared with events of genes or more for the s. typhi and s. typhimurium comparison. furthermore, comparison between s. typhi and e. coli revealed events of genes or fewer compared with just events of genes or more. even taking into account that the larger islands contain many more genes per insertion or deletion event, it becomes clear that nearly equivalent numbers of speciesspecific genes are attributable to insertion or deletion events involving genes or fewer as are due to events involving genes or more. these data should lend credence to the assertion that the acquisition and exchange of small islands is important in defining the overall phenotype of the organism ( ) . in the majority of cases studied to date, there is no evidence to suggest the presence of genes that may allow these small islands to be self-mobile. it is far more likely that small islands of this type are exchanged between members of a species and constitute part of the species gene pool. once acquired by one member of the species, they can be easily exchanged by generalized transduction mechanisms, followed by homologous recombination between the near identical flanking genes to allow integration into the chromosome ( ) . this sort of mechanism of genetic exchange would also make possible nonorthologous gene replacement, involving the exchange of related genes at identical regions in the backbone. a specific example to illustrate such a possibility is the observed capsular switching of neisseria meningitides ( ) and streptococcus pneumoniae ( , ) for which different sets of genes responsible for the biosynthesis of different capsular polysaccharides are found at identical regions in the chromosome and flanked by conserved genes. the implied mechanism for capsular switching involves replacement of the polysaccharide-specific gene sites by homologous recombination between the chromosome and exogenous dna in the flanking genes ( ) . point mutations and pseudogenes. one of the most surprising observations to come from enterobacterial genome research has been the discovery of a large number of pseudogenes. the pseudogenes appeared to be untranslatable due to the presence of stop codons, frameshifts, internal deletions, or insertion sequence (is) element insertions. the presence of pseudogenes seems to run contrary to the general assumption that the bacterial genome is a highly "streamlined" system that does not carry "junk dna" ( ). for example, salmonella typhi, the etiologic agent of typhoid fever, is host restricted and appears only capable of infecting a human host, whereas s. typhimurium, which causes a milder disease in humans, has a much broader host range. upon analysis, the genome of s. typhi contained more than pseudogenes ( ) , whereas it was predicted that the number of pseudogenes in the genome of s. typhimurium would be around ( ) . from this observation, it becomes clear that the pseudogenes in s. typhi were not randomly spread throughout its genome-in fact, they were overrepresented in genes that were unique to s. typhi when compared with e. coli, and many of the pseudogenes in s. typhi have intact counterparts in s. typhimurium that have been shown to be involved in aspects of virulence and host interaction. given this distribution of pseudogenes, it has been suggested that the host specificity of s. typhi may be the result of the loss of its ability to interact with a broader range of hosts caused by functional inactivation of the necessary genes ( ) . in contrast with other microorganisms containing multiple pseudogenes, such as mycobacterium leprae ( ) , most of the pseudogenes in s. typhi were caused by a single mutation, suggesting that they have been inactivated relatively recently. taken together, these observations suggest an evolutionary scenario in which the recent ancestor of s. typhi had changed its niche in a human host, evolving from an ancestor (similar to s. typhimurium) limited to localized infection and invasion around the gut epithelium into one capable of invading the deeper tissues of the human hosts ( ) . a similar evolutionary scenario has been suggested for another recently evolved enteric pathogen, yersinia pestis. this bacterium has also recently changed from a gut bacterium (y. pseudotuberculosis), transmitted via the fecal-oral route, to an organism capable of using a flea vector for systemic infection ( , ) . again, this change in niche was accompanied by pseudogene formation, and genes involved in virulence and host interaction are overrepresented in the set of genes inactivated ( ) . yet another example of such an evolutional scenario is shigella flexneri a, a member of the species e. coli (which is predicted to have more than pseudogenes), and is again restricted to the human body ( ) . all of these organisms demonstrate that the enterobacterial evolution has been a process that has involved both gene loss and gene gain, and that the remnants of the genes lost in the evolutionary process can be readily detected ( ). the focus in the postgenomic era is on functional genomics, in which proteomics plays an essential role. the living cell is a dynamic and complex system that cannot be predicted from the genome sequence. whereas genomes will disclose important information on the biological importance of the organism, it is still static and will not reveal information on the expression of a particular gene or of posttranslational modifications or on how a protein is regulated in a specific biological situation ( ) . thus, whereas the complete genome sequence provides the basis for experimental identification of expressed proteins at the cellular level, very little has been accomplished to identify all expressed and potentially modified proteins. direct investigation of the total content of proteins in a cell is the task of proteomics. proteomics is defined as the complete set of posttranslationally modified and processed proteins in a well-defined biological environment under specific circumstances, such as growth conditions and time of investigation ( , ) . proteomics can be studied by following two separate steps: separation of the proteins in a sample, followed by identification of the proteins. the common methodology used for separating proteins is two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis ( d page). the principal method for large-scale identification is mass spectroscopy (ms), but other identification methods, such as n-terminal sequencing, immunoblotting, overexpression, spot colocalization, and gene knockouts, can also be used. because of its high-resolution power, d page is currently the best methodology to achieve global visualization of the proteins of a microorganism. in the first dimension, isoelectric focusing is carried out to separate the proteins in a ph gradient according to their isoelectric point (pi). in the second dimension, the proteins are separated according to their molecular weight by sds-page (sodium dodecyl sulfate-page). the resulting gel image presents itself as a pattern of spots in which pi and the relative molecular weight (m r ) can be recognized as in a coordinate system ( ) . a critical step during the d page procedure is the sample preparation, as there is no single method that can be universally applied because different reagents are superior with respect to different samples. to this end, chaotropes such as urea, which act by changing the parameters of the solvent, are used in most d page procedures. major problems to overcome in d page sample preparation arise because of limited entry into the gel of high-molecular-weight proteins and the presence of highly hydrophobic and/or basic proteins ( , ) . for protein separation, the protein mixture is loaded onto an acrylamide gel strip in which a ph gradient is established. when a high voltage is applied over the strip, the proteins will focus at the ph at which they carry zero net charge. the ph gradient is established during the focusing using either carrier ampholytes in a slab gel ( ) or a precast polyacrylamide gel with an immobilized ph gradient (ipg) ( ) . the latter method is advantageous because of improved reproducibility. samples can be applied to ipg dry strips preferably by rehydration. rehydration of dried ipgs under application of a low voltage ( to v) has significantly improved the recovery especially of high-molecularweight proteins. mass spectrometry is the method of choice for identifying proteins in proteomics. the proteins are converted into gas phase ions that can be measured with an accuracy better than ppm ( ) . two widely used techniques for ionization are matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (maldi) ( ) and electrospray ionization ( ) . maldi is usually coupled with a tof (time of flight) device for measuring the masses. the ionized peptides are then accelerated by the application of accelerated field and the tof until they reach a detector to calculate their mass/charge ratio ( ) . in electrospray ionization, the peptides are sprayed into the spectrometer ( ) . ionization is achieved when the charged droplets evaporate. an alternative procedure for measuring masses is the ion trap ( ) , which selects ions with certain mass/charge ratios by keeping them in sinusoidal motion between two electrodes. in , the first microbe sequencing project, haemophilus influenzae (a bacterium causing upper respiratory infection), was completed with a speed that stunned scientists (http:// www .niaid.nih.gov/research/topics/pathogen/introduction. htm). encouraged by the success of that initial effort, researchers have continued to sequence an astonishing array of other medically important microorganisms. to this end, niaid has made significant investments in large-scale sequencing projects, including projects to sequence the complete genomes of many pathogens, such as the bacteria that cause tuberculosis, gonorrhea, chlamydia, and cholera, as well as organisms that are considered agents of bioterrorism. in addition, niaid is collaborating with other funding agencies to sequence larger genomes of protozoan pathogens such as the organism causing malaria. the availability of microbial and human dna sequences opens up new opportunities and allows scientists to perform functional analyses of genes and proteins in whole genomes and cells, as well as the host's immune response and an individual's genetic susceptibility to pathogens. when scientists identify microbial genes that play a role in disease, drugs can be designed to block the activities controlled by those genes. because most genes contain the instructions for making proteins, drugs can be designed to inhibit specific proteins or to use those proteins as candidates for vaccine testing. genetic variations can also be used to study the spread of a virulent or drug-resistant form of a pathogen. niaid has launched initiatives to provide comprehensive genomic, proteomic, and bioinformatic resources. these resources, listed below, are available to scientists conducting basic and applied research on a broad array of pathogenic microorganisms (http://www .niaid.nih.gov/research/topics/ pathogen/initiatives.htm): r niaid's microbial sequencing centers (nscs). the niaid's microbial sequencing centers are state-of-theart high-throughput dna sequencing centers that can sequence genomes of microbes and invertebrate vectors of infectious diseases. genomes that can be sequenced include microorganisms considered agents of bioterrorism and those responsible for emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. resource center is a centralized facility that provides scientists with the resources and reagents necessary to conduct functional genomics research on human pathogens and invertebrate vectors at no cost. the pfgrc provides scientists with genomic resources and reagents such as microarrays, protein expression clones, genotyping, and bioinformatics services. the pfgrc supports the training of scientists in the latest techniques in functional genomics and emerging genomic technologies. r niaid's proteomics centers. the primary goal of these centers is to characterize the pathogen and/or host cell proteome by identifying proteins associated with the biology of the microorganisms, mechanisms of microbial pathogenesis, innate and adaptive immune responses to infectious agents, and/or non-immune-mediated host responses that contribute to microbial pathogenesis. it is anticipated that the research programs will discover targets for potential candidates for the next generation of vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics. this will be accomplished by using existing proteomics technologies, augmenting existing technologies, and creating novel proteomics approaches as well as performing early-stage validation of these targets. r administrative resource for biodefense proteomic centers (arbpcs). the arbpcs consolidate data generated by each proteomics research center and make it available to the scientific community through a publicly accessible web site. this database (www.proteomicsresource.org) serves as a central information source for reagents and validated protein targets and has recently been populated with the first data released. r niaid's bioinformatics resource centers. the niaid's bioinformatics resource centers will design, develop, maintain, and continuously update multiorganism databases, especially those related to biodefense. organisms of particular interest are the niaid category a to c priority pathogens and those causing emerging and re-emerging diseases. the ultimate goal is to establish databases that will allow scientists to access a large amount of genomic and related data. this will facilitate the identification of potential targets for the development of vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics. each contract will include establishing and maintaining an analysis resource that will serve as a companion to the databases to provide, develop, and enhance standard and advanced analytical tools to help researchers access and analyze data. tb structural genomics consortium. a collaboration of scientists in six countries formed to determine and analyze the structures of about proteins from mycobacterium tuberculosis. the group seeks to optimize the technical and management aspects of highthroughput structure determination and will develop a database of structures and functions. niaid, which is co-funding this project with nigms, anticipates that this information will also lead to the design of new and improved drugs and vaccines for tuberculosis. structural genomics of pathogenic protozoa consortium. this consortium is aiming to develop new ways to solve protein structures from organisms known as protozoans, many species of which cause deadly diseases such as sleeping sickness, malaria, and chagas' disease. the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases is providing support to the microbial genome sequencing centers (mscs) at the j. craig venter institute [formerly, the institute for genomic research (tigr)], the broad institute at the massachusetts institute of technology (mit), and harvard university for a rapid and cost-efficient production of high-quality, microbial genome sequences and primary annotations. niaid's mscs (http://www.niaid.nih.gov/dmid/genomes/mscs/) are responding to the scientific community and national and federal agencies' priorities for genome sequencing, filling in sequence gaps, and therefore providing genome sequencing data for multiple uses including understanding the biology of microorganisms, forensic strain identification, and identifying targets for drugs, vaccines, and diagnostics. in addition, the niaid's mscs have developed web sites that provide descriptive information about the sequencing projects and their progress (http://www.broad.mit.edu/seq/msc/and http://msc.tigr.org/status.shtml). genomes to be sequenced include microorganisms considered to be potential agents of bioterrorism (niaid category a, b, and c), related organisms, clinical isolates, closely related species, and invertebrate vectors of infectious diseases and microorganisms responsible for emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. in addition, in response to a recommendation from a niaid-sponsored blue ribbon panel on bioterrorism and its implication for biomedical research to support genomic sequencing of microorganisms considered agents of bioterrorism and related organisms, the mscs will address the institute's need for additional sequencing of such microorganisms and invertebrate vectors of disease and/or those that are responsible for emerging and re-emerging diseases (http://www.niaid.nih.gov/dmid/ genomes/mscs/overview.htm). the panel's recommendation included careful selection of species, strains, and clinical isolates to generate genomic data for different uses such as identification of strains and targets for diagnostics, vaccines, antimicrobials, and other drug developments. the mscs have the capacity to rapidly and costeffectively sequence genomic dna and provide preliminary identification of open reading frames and annotation of gene function for a wide variety of microorganisms, including viruses, bacteria, protozoa, parasites, and fungi. sequencing projects will be considered for both complete, finished genome sequencing and other levels of sequence coverage. the choice and justification of complete versus draft sequence is likely to depend on the nature and scope of the proposed project. large-scale prepublication information on genome sequences is a unique research resource for the scientific community, and rapid and unrestricted sharing of microbial genome sequence data is essential for advancing research on infectious agents responsible for human disease. therefore, it is anticipated that prepublication data on genome sequences produced at the niaid microbial sequencing centers will be made freely and publicly available via an appropriate publicly searchable database as rapidly as possible. niaid-supported investigators have completed genome sequencing projects for bacteria, fungi, parasitic protozoa, invertebrate vectors of infectious diseases, and one plant (http://www.niaid.nih.gov/dmid/genomes/ mscs/req process.htm). in addition, niaid completed the sequence for , influenza genomes. in , genome sequencing projects were completed for pathogens as described in section . . . genome sequencing data is publicly available through web sites such as genbank, and data for the influenza genome sequences have been published in . furthermore, through the niaid's microbial sequencing centers, the niaid has funded the sequence, assembly, and annotation of three invertebrate vectors of infectious diseases. in , the final sequence, assembly, and the annotation of aedes aegyptii were released, as well as the preliminary sequence and assembly of the genomes for ixodes scapularis and culex pipiens; the final results for i. scapularis and c. pipiens will be released in . in , niaid supported nearly large-scale genome sequencing projects for additional strains of viruses, bacteria, fungi, parasites, viruses, and invertebrate vectors. new projects included additional strains of borrelia, clostridium, escherichia coli, salmonella, streptococcus pneumonia, ureaplasma, coccidioides, penicillium marneffei, talaromyces stipitatus, lacazia loboi, histoplasma capsulatum, blastomyces dermatitidis, cryptosporidium muris, and dengue viruses, as well as additional sequencing and annotation of aedes aegyptii. in , niaid launched the influenza genome sequencing project (igsp) (http://www.niaid.nih.gov/dmid/genomes/ mscs/influenza.htm), which has provided the scientific community with complete genome sequence data for thousands of human and animal influenza viruses. the influenza sequence data has been rapidly placed in the public domain, through genbank, an international searchable database, and the niaid-funded bioinformatics resource center with accompanying data analysis tools. all of the information will enable scientists to further study how influenza viruses evolve, spread, and cause disease and may ultimately lead to improved methods of treatment and prevention. this sequence information is now providing a larger and more representative sample of influenza than was previously publicly available. the influenza genome sequencing project has the capacity to sequence more than genomes per month and is a collaborative effort among niaid (including the niaid's division of intramural research), the national center for biotechnology niaid is continuing its support for the pathogen functional genomics resource center (pfgrc) (http://www. niaid.nih.gov/dmid/genomes/pfgrc/default.htm) at the institute for genomic research (tigr) (currently part of the j. craig venter institute). the pfgrc was established in to provide and distribute to the broader research community a wide range of genomic resources, reagents, data, and technologies for the functional analysis of microbial pathogens and invertebrate vectors of infectious diseases. in addition, the pfgrc was expanded to provide the research community with the resources and reagents needed to conduct both basic and applied research on microorganisms responsible for emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases and those considered agents of bioterrorism. one of the priorities for the pfgrc has been to provide the scientific community with access to the reagents and genomic and proteomic data that the pfgrc generated. a new software tool, called snp filtering tool, was developed for affymetrix resequencing arrays to analyze the single nucleotide polymorphism (snp) data. enhancements have been made to other tools for microarray data analysis, including a tool for analyzing slide images. a new layout for the tigr-pfgrc web site (http://pfgrc.tigr.org/) has been developed and launched and has the potential to be more user-friendly for the scientific community to access the pfgrc research and development projects, poster presentations, publications, reagents, and their descriptions and data. the number of organism-specific microarrays produced and distributed to the scientific community increased to pfgrc has continued to collaborate with the national institute of dental and craniofacial research (nidcr/nih) in producing and distributing five organism-specific microarrays, including arrays for actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, fusobacterium nucleatum, porphyromonas gingivalis, streptococcus mutans, and treponema denticola. pfgrc has also developed the methods and pipeline for generating organism-specific clones for protein expression. seven complete clone sets are now available for human severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov), bacillus anthracis, yersinia pestis, francisella tularensis, streptococcus pneumoniae, staphylococcus aureus, and mycobacterium tuberculosis. in addition, individual custom clone sets are available for more than organisms upon request. comparative genomics analysis using the available bacillus anthracis sequence data and the discovery of the snps were used to develop a new bacterial typing system for screening anthrax strains. this system allowed niaid-funded scientists to define detailed phylogenetic lineages of bacillus anthracis and to identify three major lineages (a, b, c) with the ancestral root located between the a+b and c branches. in addition, a genotyping genechip, which has been developed and validated for bacillus anthracis, will be used to genotype about different strains of bacillus anthracis. pfgrc has developed additional comparative genomic platforms for both facilitating the resequencing a bacterial genome on a chip to identify sequence variation among strains and to discover novel genes. a pilot project has been completed with streptococcus pneumoniae for sequencing different strains using resequencing chip technology. in collaboration with the department of homeland security (dhs), a resequencing chip has been developed and is now being used to screen a number of francisella tularensis strains to identify snps and genetic polymorphisms. sixteen francisella tularensis strains are being genotyped by using the newly developed resequencing chip. additional collaboration with dhs led to the development of a gene discovery platform aimed at discovering novel genes among different strains of yersinia pestis. to this end, nine strains are being analyzed using this platform to discover novel gene sets. pfgrc is developing proteomics technologies for protein arrays and comparative profiling of microbial proteins. a protein expression platform is under development, and a pilot comparative protein profiling project using staphylococcus aureus has already been completed and published. a protein profiling project using yersinia pestis to compare proteomes in different strains is now under way, complementing ongoing proteomics projects supported by niaid; numerous proteins are currently being identified that are differently abundant during different growth conditions. a new project was added in for comparative profiling of proteins on the proteomes of e. coli and shigella dysenteriae to provide the scientific community with reference data on differential protein expression in animal models versus cultured systems infected with the pathogen. in , niaid continued to support the population genetics analysis program: immunity to vaccines/infections. a joint project between niaid's division of allergy, immunity, and transplantation (dait) and the division of microbiology and infectious diseases (dmid), this program is aimed to identify associations between specific genetic variations or polymorphisms in immune response genes and the susceptibility to infection or response to vaccination, with a focus on one or more niaid category a to c pathogens and influenza. niaid awarded six centers to study the genetic basis for the variable human response to immunization (smallpox, typhoid fever, cholera, and anthrax) and susceptibility to disease (tuberculosis, influenza, encapsulated bacterial diseases, and west nile virus infection). the centers are comparing genetic variance in specific immune response genes as well as more generally associated genetic variance across the whole genome in affected and nonaffected individuals. the physiologic differences associated with these genome variations will also be studied. in , these centers focused on recruiting the samples needed for genotyping. for example, more than , smallpox-vaccinated individuals and controls were recruited and blood and peripheral blood mononuclear cell (pbmc) samples were obtained for whole genome association studies, which were conducted in . in another example, one of the centers used genome-wide linkage approaches to map, isolate, and validate human host genes that confer susceptibility to influenza infection. nearly , individuals with susceptibility to influenza and , control individuals were recruited using an iceland genealogy database. by late , the center had recruited more than individuals and had genotyped more than in this subproject of the study. during , niaid continued its support of the eight bioinformatics resource centers (brcs) (http://www. niaid.nih.gov/dmid/genomes/brc/default.htm) with the goal of providing the scientific community with a publicly accessible resource that allows easy access to genomic and related data for the niaid category a to c priority pathogens, invertebrate vectors of infectious diseases, and pathogens causing emerging and re-emerging infectious diseases. the brcs are supported by multidisciplinary teams of scientists to develop new and improved computational tools and interfaces that can facilitate the analysis and interpretation of the genomic-related data by the scientific community. in , each publicly accessible brc web site continued to be developed, the user interfaces were improved, and a variety of genomics data types were integrated, including gene expression and proteomics information, host/pathogen interactions, and signaling/metabolic pathways data. a public portal of information, data, and open-source software tools generated by all the brcs is available at http://www.brccentral.org/. in , many genomes of microbial species were sequenced by the niaid's microbial sequencing centers as well as by other national and international sequencing efforts, and the brcs provided either long-term maintenance of the genome sequence data and annotation or the initial annotation for a number of particular microbial genomes. for example, niaid's brc vectorbase collaborated with niaid's mscs to annotate the genome of aedes aegyptii with the scientific community and will continue the curation of this genome. in , niaid continued to support contracts for seven biodefense proteomics research centers (bprcs) to characterize the proteome of niaid category a to c bioweapon agents and to develop and enhance innovative proteomic technologies and apply them to the understanding of the pathogen and/or host cell proteome (http://www. niaid.nih.gov/dmid/genomes/prc/default.htm). these centers conducted a range of proteomics studies, including six category a pathogens, six category b pathogens, and one category c emerging disease organism. data, reagents, and protocols developed in the research centers are released to the niaid-funded administrative resource for biodefense proteomics research centers (www.proteomicsresource.org) web site within months of validation. the administrative resource web site was created to integrate the diverse data generated by the bprcs. in , more than potential targets for vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics were generated. examples of progress include: in , more than , potential new pathogen targets for vaccines, therapeutics, and diagnostics were identified, and more than , new corresponding host targets were generated. in addition: (i) two more sars-cov structures were solved. (ii) ninety-six percent of the orfs for b. anthracis were cloned with % sequence validated. (iii) a custom b. anthracis affymetrix genechip was developed. (iv) fifty-three polyclonal sera generated against novel toxoplasma gondii and cryptosporidium parvum proteins were characterized, and accurate time and mass tag databases were populated for salmonella typhi, monkeypox, and vaccinia virus. r niaid staff are participating in two related nih-wide genomic initiatives that focus on examining and identifying genetic variations across the human genome (genes) that may be linked or influence susceptibility or risk to a common human disease, such as asthma, autoimmunity, cancer, eye diseases, mental illness, and infectious diseases, or response to treatment as a vaccine. the approach is to conduct genome-wide association studies in which a dense set of snps across the human genome is genotyped in a large defined group of controls and diseases samples to identify genetic variations that may contribute to or have a role in the disease, with the hope of identifying an association between a genetic variant in a gene or group of genes and the disease. r niaid has continued to participate in a coordinated federal effort in biodefense genomics and is a major participant in the national inter-agency genomics sciences coordinating committee (nigscc), which includes many federal agencies. this committee was formed in to address the most serious gaps in the comprehensive genomic analysis of microorganisms considered agents of bioterrorism. a comprehensive list of microorganisms considered agents of bioterrorism was developed that identifies species, strains, and clinical and environmental isolates that have been sequenced, that are currently being sequenced, and that should be sequenced. in , the committee focused on category a agents and provided the cdc with new technological approaches for sequencing additional smallpox viral strains. affymetrixbased microarray technology for genome sequencing was established, as well as additional bioinformatics expertise for analyzing the genomic sequencing data. in , as a result of this continuing coordination of federal agencies in genome sequencing efforts for biodefense, niaid developed a formal interagency agreement with the department of homeland security (dhs) to perform comparative genomics analysis to characterize biothreat agents at the genetic level and to examine polymorphisms for identifying genetic variations and relatedness within and between species. r niaid continues to participate in the microbe project interagency working group (iwg), which has developed a coordinated, interagency, -year action plan on microbial genomics, including functional genomics and bioinformatics in (http://www.ostp. gov/html/microbial/start.htm). in , the microbe project interagency working group developed guidelines for sharing prepublication genomic sequencing data that serve as guiding principles, so that federal agencies have consistent policies for sharing sequencing data with the scientific community and can then implement their own detailed version of the data release plan. in , the microbe project iwg supported a workshop on "an experimental approach to genome annotation," which was coordinated by the american society for microbiology, and discussed issues faced in annotating microbial genome sequences that have been completed or will be completed in the next few years. in , the microbe project iwg developed a strategic plan and implementation steps as an updated action plan for coordinating microbial genomics among federal agencies, and the plan was finalized in . r niaid continues to participate with other federal agencies in coordinating medical diagnostics for biodefense and influenza across the federal government and in facilitating the development of a set of contracts to support advanced development toward the approval of new or improved point-of-care diagnostic tests for the influenza virus and early manufacturing and commercialization. r niaid continues to participate in the nih roadmap initiatives, including lead science officers for one of the national centers for biomedical computation and one of the national technology centers for networks and pathways. seven biomedical computing centers are developing a universal computing infrastructure and creating innovative software programs and other tools that would enable the biomedical community to integrate, analyze, model, simulate, and share data on human health and disease. five technology centers were created in and to cooperate in a u.s. national effort to develop new technologies for proteomics and the study of dynamic biological systems. r supramolecular architecture of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov). coronaviruses derive their name from their protruding oligomers of the spike glycoprotein (s), which forms a coronal ridge around the virion. the understanding of the virion and its organization has previously been limited to x-ray crystallography of homogenous symmetric virions, whereas coronaviruses are neither homogenous nor symmetric. in this study, a novel methodology of single-particle image analysis was applied to selected coronavirus features to obtain a detailed model of the oligomeric state and spatial relationships among viral structural proteins. the two-dimensional structures of s, m, and n structural proteins of sars-cov and two other coronaviruses were determined and refined to a resolution of approximately nm. these results demonstrated a higher level of supramolecular organization than was previously known for coronaviruses and provided the first detailed view of the coronavirus ultrastructure. understanding the architecture of the virion is a necessary first step to defining the assembly pathway of sars-cov and may aid in developing new or improved therapeutics ( ). r large-scale sequence analysis of avian influenza isolates. avian influenza is a significant global human health threat because of its potential to infect humans and result in a global influenza pandemic. however, very little sequence information for avian influenza virus (aiv) has been in the public domain. a more comprehensive collection of publicly available sequence data for aiv is necessary for research on influenza to understand how flu evolves, spreads, and causes disease, to shed light on the emergence of influenza epidemics and pandemics, and to uncover new targets for drugs, vaccines, and diagnostics. in this study, the investigators released genomic data from the first large-scale sequencing of aiv isolates, doubling the amount of aiv sequence data in the public domain. these sequence data include , aiv genes and complete genomes from a diverse sample of birds. the preliminary analysis of these sequences, along with other aiv data from the public domain, revealed new information about aiv, including the identification of a genome sequence that may be a determinant of virulence. this study provides valuable sequencing data to the scientific community and demonstrates how informative large-scale sequence analysis can be in identifying potential markers of disease ( ) . genome sequencing project. the analysis of the first full genome sequences from human influenza strains, deposited in genbank through the niaid influenza genome sequencing project, was published in ( ) . influenza isolates were chosen in a relatively unbiased manner, allowing a comprehensive look at the influenza virus population circulating within the same geographic region over several seasons, which provided a real picture of the dynamics of influenza virus mutation and evolution. analysis demonstrated that the circulating strains of influenza included alternative minor lineages that could provide genetic variation for the dominant strain. this may allow a novel strain to emerge within a human host and would explain the unexpected emergence of the fujian influenza strain in - that resulted in a vaccine mismatch. these findings demonstrate the usefulness of full genomic sequences for providing new information on influenza viruses and lend further support for the need for large-scale influenza sequencing and the availability of sequence data in the public domain. within the influenza community, public availability of influenza sequence data and sharing of strains has been an important issue. the niaid has been instrumental in promoting the sharing of influenza sequence information, notably by sequencing more than , complete influenza genome sequences and depositing the sequences in the public domain through gen-bank as soon as sequencing has been completed. history of microbial genomics tools for gene finding and whole genome comparison interpolated markov models for eukaryotic gene finding computational gene finding in plants the genomes of pathogenic enterobacteria the complete genome sequence of escherichia coli k- genome sequence of enterohemorrhagic escherichia coli o :h complete genome sequence of enterohemorrhagic escherichia coli o :h and genomic comparison with a laboratory strain k- extensive mosaic structure revealed by the complete genome sequence of uropathogenic escherichia coli genome sequence of shigella flexneri a: insights into pathogenicity through comparison with genomes of escherichia coli k and o large, unstable inserts in the chromosome affect virulence properties of uropathogenic escherichia coli o strain escherichia coli that cause diarrhea: enterotoxigenic, enteropathogenic, enteroinvasive, enterohemorrhagic, and enteroadherent pathogenicity islands of virulent bacteria: structure, function and impact on microbial evolution excision of large dna regions termed pathogenicity islands from trna-specific loci in the chromosome of an escherichia coli wild-type pathogen complete genome sequence of multiple drug resistant salmonella enterica serovar typhi ct complete genome sequence of salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium lt cloning and nucleotide sequence of the salmonella typhimurium lt gnd gene and its homology with the corresponding sequence of escherichia coli k a kb chromosomal fragment encoding salmonella typhimurium invasion genes is absent from the corresponding region of the escherichia coli k- chromosome molecular genetic bases of salmonella entry into host cells identification of a virulence locus encoding a second type iii secretion system in salmonella typhimurium identification of a pathogenicity island required for salmonella survival in host cells pathogenicity islands and host adaptation of salmonella serovars the salmonella selc locus contains a pathogenicity island mediating intramacrophage survival the -kb unstable region of yersinia pestis comprises a high-pathogenicity island linked to a pigmentation segment which undergoes internal rearrangement transfer rna genes frequently serve as integration sites for prokaryotic genetic elements complete nucleotide sequence of the prophage vt -sakai carrying the verotoxin genes of the enterohemorrhagic escherichia coli o :h derived from the sakai outbreak a novel mechanism of virus-virus interactions: bacteriophage p tin protein inhibits phage t dna synthesis by poisoning the t single-stranded dna binding protein, go the old exonuclease of bacteriophage p filamentous phages linked to virulence of vibrio cholerae shiga toxin: purification, structure, and function genome sequence of yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague salmonella pathogenicity islands encoding type iii secretion systems the salmonella pathogenicity island- type iii secretion system capsule switching of neisseria meningitides capsules and cassettes: genetic organization of the capsule locus of streptococcus pneumoniae genetic and molecular characterization of capsular polysaccharide biosynthesis in streptococcus pneumoniae type massive gene decay in the leprosy bacillus yersinia pestis -etiologic agent of plague yersinia pestis, the cause of plague, is a recently emerged clone of yersinia pseudotuberculosis microbial proteomics from proteins to proteomes: large scale protein identification by twodimensional electrophoresis and amino acid analysis membrane proteins and proteomics: un amour impossible? two-dimensional electrophoresis of membrane proteins: a current challenge for immobilized ph gradients new developments in isoelectric focusing isoelectric focusing in immobilized ph gradients: principle, methodology and some applications laser desorption ionization of proteins with molecular masses exceeding , daltons electrospray ionization for mass spectrometry of large biomolecules ion trap mass spectrometry supramolecular architecture of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus revealed by electron cryomicroscopy large-scale sequence analysis of avian influenza isolates large-scale sequencing of human influenza reveals the dynamic nature of viral genome evolution key: cord- -ximzvqbm authors: forsdyke, donald r. title: chargaff’s gc rule date: - - journal: evolutionary bioinformatics doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ximzvqbm evolutionary selective pressures sometimes act to preserve nucleic acid features at the expense of encoded proteins. that this might occur in the case of nucleic acid secondary structure was noted in chapter . that this might also apply to the species-dependent component of the base composition, (g+c)%, was shown by sueoka in [ ]. the amino acid composition of the proteins of bacteria is influenced, not only by the demands of the environment on the proteins, but also by the (g+c)% of the genome encoding those proteins. chargaffs "gc rule" is that the ratio of (g+c) to the total bases (a+g+c+t) tends to be constant in a particular species, but varies between species. sueoka further pointed out that for individual "strains" of tetrahymena (ciliated protozoans) the (g +c)% (re ferred to as "gc" ) tends to be uniform throughout the genome: " if one compares the distribution of dna molecules of tetrahymena strains of different mean gc contents, it is clear that the difference in mean values is due to a rather uniform difference of gc content in individual molecules. in other words, assuming that strains of tetrahym ena have a common phylogenetic origin, when the gc content of dna of a particular strain changes, all the molecules undergo increases or decreases of gc pairs in similar amounts. this result is consistent with the idea that the base composition is rather uniform not only among dna molecules of an organism, but also with respect to different parts of a given molecule." again, this observation has since been shown to apply to a wide variety of species, although many organisms have their genomes finely sectored into regions ("homostability regions" or " isochores") of low or high (g+c)% (see later). sueoka also noted a link between (g+c)% and reproductive isolation for strains of tetrahym ena: "dna base composition is a reflection of phylogenetic relationship. furthermore, it is evident that those strains which mate with one another (i.e. strains within the same 'variety ') have similar base compositions. thus strains of variety i ..., which are freely intercrossed, have similar mean gc content." it seems that, in identifying (g +c)% as the component of the base composition that varies between species, chargaff had uncovered what can now be recognized as the " ho ly grail " of speciation postulated by the victorian physiologist george romanes [ ] . romanes had drawn attention to the possibility of what we would now call non-genic variations (germ-line mutations that usually do not affect gene products). as manifest in the phenomenon of hybrid sterility, these would tend to isolate an individual reproductively from most members of the species to which its close ancestors had belonged, but not from individuals that had undergone the same non-genic variation . romanes held that, in the general case, this isolation was an essential precondi-tion for the preservation of the anatomical and physiological characteristics (genic characteri stics) that were distinctive of a new species. in the early dec ade s of the twentieth century william bateson als o postulated non-genic inherited vari ati ons that tend to remain relatively constant (vary only within narrow limits) with in a species, but would vary between species (i.e. a species member would not d iffer from its fellow species member s, but would differ from members of allied species). t he non-genic variation s, in whatever was responsible for carry ing hereditary information from generatio n to generation (not known at that time), would have the potential to lead to spec ies differentiation, so that variant individuals (con stituting a potential " not-self' incipient species) would end up not being able to reproduce with members of the main speci es ("sew' species). reproduction bein g unsu ccessful, the main species can be viewed as const ituting a "reproduct ive env ironment" that moulds the genome phenotype ("reprotype") by negatively se lect ing (by den ying reproducti ve success to) variant organisms that attempt (by mating and producing healthy, fertile , offspring) to recross the eme rging interspecies boundary. thu s, the main specie s positively selects itself by negati vely selecting variants. should these variants find compatible mates, then they might accumulate as a new species that, in turn , would positiv ely select itself by negatively selecting further variants. this is " spec ies se lection," a form of group se lection that many biologists have found hard to imagine. indeed, richard dawkins, hav ing sco rned the " argume nt from personal incredulity," was obliged to resort to it when confro nted with the possibility of species se lection: " it is hard to th ink of reasons why species survivabi lity should be decoupled from the s um o f the surv ivabilities of the individual members of the spec ies" [ ] . when the latter sentence is parsed its logic see ms imp eccabl e. hold tight , and we will see if we can work it out. "the spec ies" is the establi sh ed main species, members of which imp eril themselves onl y marginally, if at all , by mating with (denying reproductive success to) members of a small potentially incipient species . thu s, in reproductive interactions between a main and an incipient spec ies, survivability of the main spec ies is coupled negatively to the sum of the survivabilit ies of ind iv idua l members of the incipient specie s (i.e. it surv ive s when they do not survive), much more than it is coupled positively to the sum of the survivabilities of its own individual members (i .e. it s urv ives when they survive). in this sense, main spec ies survivability is coupled to the sum of the survivabilities of individual members of the incipient species, and decoupl ed from the sum of the survivabilities of its own individual members. of course, by individual survivabilities is meant, not just mer e survival, but survival permitting unimpeded production offertile offspring. survival of members of an incipient species occurs, not only when cla ssical darwinian phenotypic interactions are favourable (e.g. escape from a tiger), but also when reprotypic interactions are favourable (e .g. no attempted reproduction with members of the main species). tigers are a phenotypic threat. members of the main species are a reprotypic threat [ ] . individual members of a main species that are involved (when there is attempted crossing) in the denial of reproductive success to individual members of an incipient species, are like individual stones in the walls of a species fortress against which the reproductive arrows of an incipient species become blunted and fall to the ground . alternatively, the main species can be viewed as a gulliver who barely notices the individual lilliputian incipients brushed off or trampled in his evolutionary path. just as individual cells acting in collective phenotypic harmony constitute a gulliver, so individual members of a species acting in collective reprotypic harmony constitute a species. that harmony is threatened, not by its own members, but by deviants that, by definition, are no longer members of the main species (since a species is defined as consisting of individuals between which there is no reproductive isolation). these deviants constitute a potential inc ipient species that might one day pose a phenotypic threat to the main species (i.e. they will become part of the environment of the latter). it is true that a member of a main species that becomes irretrievably pairbonded with a member of an incipient species (e .g. pigeons) will leave fewer offspring, so that both members will suffer the same fate (have decreased survivability in terms of number offertile offspring). but, in the general case, one such infertile reproductive encounter with a member of an incipient species will be followed by many fertile reproductive encounters with fellow members of the main species. members of the main species are most likely to encounter other members of the main specieshence, there will be fertile offspring. members of an incipient species, being a minority, are also most likely to encounter members of the main species -hence, there will be infertile (sterile) offspring. much more rarely , a member of an incipient species will encounter a fellow incipient species member with which it can successfully reproduce -an essential precondition for species divergence. once branching (reproductive isolation) is initiated (fig. - ) , the natural selection of darwin should help the branches sprout (extend in length). natural selection would favour linear species differentiation by allowing the survival of organisms with advantageous genic variations, and disallowing the survival of organisms with disadvantageous genic variations. these genic variations would affect an organism's form and function (the classical phenotype). darwin thought that natural selection might itself suffice to bring about branching. indeed, it appears to do so in certain circumstances, as when segments of a species have become geographically isolated from each other. however, here the branching agency is whatever caused the geographical isolation , not natural selection. speciation requires isolation in some shape or form. the probl em of the ori gin of species is that of determining what form isolation takes in the general case . in his faith in the power of natural selection , darwin wa s like the early chemists who were s atisfied w ith atoms as the ultimate basi s of matter. but for some chemists phenomena such as swinging compass needles (magnetism) , falling apples (gravity), and (lat er) radioactivity, were manifestations of som ething more fundamental in chemistry than atom s. likewise, for some biologists the phenomenon of hybrid ste rility seemed to manifest something more fundamental in biology than natural selection [ ] . romanes referred to his holy grail (speciating factor) as an abstract " intrinsic peculiarity" of the reproductive system. bateson described his as an abstract " res id ue" with which genes were independ ently assoc iated. goldschmidt's was an ab stract chromosomal " patte rn" caused by "s ys temic mutations" that would not necessaril y affect genic function s (see chapter ). these are just what we might expect of (g +c)%. indeed, in bacteria, which when so inclined inte rmitte ntly tran sfer dna in a sex ual fashion [ ] , differences in (g +c)% appear early in the spec iation process [ ], in keeping with sueoka's above obs ervations in ciliates. as show n in chapter , where different levels of genetic information were considered , a metaphor for the role (g +c)% might play in keeping individuals reproductively isolated from each oth er, is their acc ent [ ] . a common language brings people together, and in this way is conducive to sexual reproduction . but languages can vary , first into diale cts and then into independent sub-lang uages . lin gu istic differen ces keep people apa rt, and this difference in the reproductive environment can militate against sexual reproduction . at the molecular level , we see similar force s acting at the level of meiosis -the dance of the chromosomes. in the gonad sim ilar paternal and maternal chromosomes (homologues) align . the early microscopists referr ed to this as "c onj ugation." if there is sufficient seq uence identity (i.e. the dna " accents" match), then the band plays on . the chromosomes continue their minuet, progressing through various check-points [ ] , and gametes are formed. if there is insufficient identity (i .e. the dna " accents" do not match) then the music stops. meiosis fails , gametes are not formed , and the child is ster ile -a " mule." thus, the parents of the child (their " hy brid") are reproductively isolatedfrom each other (i.e. unable to generate a line of descendents due to hybrid sterility), but not necessarily from other members of their species. at least one of the parents has the potential to be a founding member of a new spec ies, provided it can find a mate with the same dna " accent." differences in (g+c)% have the potential to initiate the speciation process creating first " incipient species" with partial reproductive isolation, and then " species" that, by definition , are fully reproductively isolated. to see how this might work, we consider the chemistry of chromosome alignment at meiosis [ ]. in muller suggested that the pairing of genes as parts of chromosomes undergoing meiotic synapsis in the gonad might provide clues to gene structure and replication [ ] : "it is evident that the very same forces which cause the genes to grow [duplicate] should also cause like genes to attract each other [pair] .... if the two phenomena are thus dependent on a common principle in the make-up of the gene, progress made in the study of one of them should help in the solution of the other." in he set his students an essay "how does the watson-crick model account for synapsis?" [ii] . the model had the two dna strands " inwardlooking" (i.e. the bases on one strand were paired with the bases on the other strand). crick took up the challenge in with his " unpairing postulate" by which the two strands of a dna duplex would unpair to expose free bases in single-stranded regions [ ] . this would allow a search for sequence similarity (homology) between two chromosomes (i.e. between two independent duplexes). others later proposed that the single-stranded regions would be extruded as stem-loops. the " outward-looking" bases in the loops would be available to initiate the pairing process [ ] [ ] [ ] . thus, for meiotic alignment, maternal and paternal chromosomal homologues should mutually explore each other and test for "self' dna complementarity, by the " kissing" mechan ism noted in chapter [ ] [ ] [ ] . under this model ( fig. - ), the sequences do not commit themselves, by incurring strand-breakage, until a degree of complementary has been recognized. the mechanism is essentially the same as that by which trna anticodon loops recognize codons in mrnas, except that the stem-loop structures first have to be extruded from dna molecules that would normally be in classical duplex form . in all dna molecules examined, base-order supports the formation of such secondary structures (see chapter ). if sufficient complementarity is found between the sequences of paternal and maternal chromosome homologues (i.e. the genomes are "reprotypically" compatible), then crossing over and recombination can occur (i.e. the " kissing" can be "consummated") . the main adaptive values of this would be the proper assortment of chromosomes among gametes, and the correction of errors in chromosome sequences (see below and chapter ). "kissing" turns out to be a powerful metaphor, since it implies an exploratory interaction that may have reproductive consequences . as negative supercoiling progressively increases, the strands of each duplex synchronously open to allow formation of equivalent stem-loop secondary structures so that "kissing" interactions between loops can progress to pairing. at the right, paternal and maternal duplexes differ slightly in (g+c)% (x, and x + ). the maternal duplex of higher (g+c)% opens less readily as negative supercoiling increases, so strand opening is not synchronous, "kissing" interactions fail, and there is no progress to pairing. in this model, chromosome pairing occurs before the strand breakage that accompanies recombination (not shown). even if strand breakage were to occur first (as required by some models), unless inhibited by single-stranded dna-binding proteins the free single strands so exposed would rapidly adopt stem-loop conformations . so the homology search could still involve kissing interactions between the tips of loops the model predicts that, for preventing recombination (i.e. creating reproductive isolation), a non-complementarity between the sequences of potentially pairing strands, in itself, might be less important than a noncomplementarity associated with sequence differences that change the pattern of stem-loops. this implies differences in the quantities of members of the watson-crick base pairs in single strands (i.e. a parity difference).this is because parity between these bases would be needed for optimum stem formation . parity differences should correlate with differences in stem formation, and hence, different stem-loop patterns, as will now be con sidered. what role does the (g+c)% "accent" play in meiotic pairing? from calculated dna secondary structures, it has been inferred that small fluctuations in (g +c)% have great potential to affect the extrusion of stem-loops from duplex dna molecules and , hence, to affect the pattern of loops which would then appear ( fig. - ) . a very small difference in (g+c)% (reprotypic difference) would mark as "not-self' a dna molecule that was attempting to pair meiotically with another dna ("self'). this would impair the kissing interaction with the dna [ , ] , and so would disrupt meiosis and allow divergence between the two parental lines , thus initiating a potential speciation event. the total stem-loop potential in a sequence window can be analysed quantitatively in terms of the relative contributions of base composition and base order, of which base composition plays a major role (see chapter ). of the various factors likely to contribute to the base composition-dependent component of the folding energy of an extruded single stranded dna sequence, the four simplest are the quantities of the four bases. two slightly more complex factors are the individual bases, from each potential watson-crick base pair, that are present in lowest amounts. for example, if the quantities of a, g , c and t in a nucleotide sequence window are , , and , respectively , then what may be referred to as "a t min " would be , and the corresponding "gc min " would be . these numbers would reflect the upper limit on the number of base pairs that could form stems, since the quantity of the watson-crick pairing partner that was least would placc a limit on the possible number of base pairs. this value might be expected to correlate positively with folding stability. conversely, the excess of bases without a potential pairing partner (in the above example a-t = and g-c = ) might provide an indication of the maximum number of bases available to form loops . since loops tend to destabilize stem-loop structures, these "chargaff difference" values might be expected to correlate negatively with folding stability. although the bases are held in linear order, a vibrating single-stranded dna molecule has the potential to adopt many structural conformations, with watson-crick interactions occurring between widely separated bases. accordingly, pairing can also be viewed as if the result of random interactions between free bases in solution. this suggests that the two products of the quantities of pairing bases could be important ( x , and x , in the above example). the products would be maximal when pairing bases were in equal proportions in accordance with chargaffs second parity rule . in an attempt to derive formulae permitting prediction of folding energy values directly from the proportions of the four bases , jih-h . chen [ ] examined the relative importance of e ight of the above ten factors in determining the base composition-dependent component of the folding energy (fors-m; see chapter ). these factors were a, g , c, t , at mi ." cg mi ,,, a x t, and g x c (where a, c , g, and t refer to the quantities of cach particular base in a sequence window). the products of the quantities of the watson-crick pairing bases (a x t, and g x c) were found to be of major importance, with the coefficients of g x c (the strongly interacting s bases), greatly exceeding those of ax t (the weakly interacting w bases). less important were at min and cg min , and the quantities of the four bases. all ten parameters were exam ined in an independent study, which confirmed the major role of the product of the quantities of the s bases in a segment ( of particular importance is that it is not just the absolute quantities of the s bases, but the product of the multiplication of these absolute quantities. this should amplify very small fluctuations in (g+c)%, and so should have a major impact on the folding energy of a segment and, hence, in the pattern of stem-loops extruded from the duplex dna in a chromosome engaging in a "kissing" homology search for a homologous chromosome segment. if stem-loops are of critical importance for the initiation of pairing between segments of nucleic acids at meiosis, then differences in (g +c)% could strongly influence the establishment of meiotic barriers, so leading to speciation . but barriers may be transient. having served its purpose, an initial barrier may be superseded later in the course of evolution by a more substantial barrier (see figure - ). in this circumstance evidence for the early transient barrier may be difficult to find. however, in the case of different, but related, virus species (allied species) that have the potential to co infect a common host cell , there is circumstantial evidence that the original (g+c)% barrier has been retained. modern retroviruses, such as those causing aids (hiv - ) and human t cell leukemia (htlv-i), probably evolved by divergence from a common ancestral retrovirus. branching phylogenetic trees linking the sequences of modern retroviruses to such a primitive retroviral " eve" are readily constructed, using either differences between entire sequences, or just (g +c)% differences [ ] . the fewer the differences, the closer are two species on such trees. unlike most other virus groups, retroviruses are diploid. as indicated in chapter , diploidy entails a considerable redundancy of information, a luxury that most viruses cannot afford. they need compact genomes that can be rapidly replicated, packaged and dispersed to new hosts. however, different virus groups have evolved different evolutionary strategies. the strategy of retroviruses is literally to mutate themselves to the threshold of oblivion ("mutational meltdown"), so constituting a constantly moving target that the immune system of the host cannot readily adapt to . to generate mutants, retroviruses replicate their nucleic acids with self-encoded enzymes (polymerases) that do not have the error-correcting ("proof-reading") function that is found in the corresponding enzymes of their hosts. indeed, this is the basis of aids therapy with azt (azidothymidine), which is an analogue of one of the nucleotide building blocks that are joined together (polymerized) to form linear nucleic acid molecules ("polymers;" see chapter ) . azt is recognized as foreign by host polymerases, which eject it. but retroviral polymerases cannot discriminate, and levels of mutation (in this case termination of the nucleic acid sequence) attain values above the obi iv-ion threshold ("hypermutation") from wh ich it is impossibl e to recover ("error catastrophy"). below the thre shold, there is a most effective mech ani sm to counter mutational damage. the retroviral counter-mutation strategy requires that two complete sing lestrand retroviral rna genomes be packaged in each viru s particl e (i .e. diploidy). each of these genomes will be seve rely mut ated but, since mutations occur randomly, there is a chance that each genome w ill have mutations at different sites. thus, in the next host cell there is the possibility of recombination (cutting and splicing) betw een the two genomes to gen erate a new genome with many less, or zero, mutations [ ] . the copackaging of the two genomes requires a proc ess analogous to meiotic pairing. on each genome a "d imer initiation" nucleotide sequenc e folds into a stem-loop struc ture. " kissing" interact ions between the loop s preced e the form ation of a short length of duplex rna , so that the two genomes form a dimer. this allows packaging and , in the next host , recomb ination can occur. wh at if two diploid viru ses both infected the same host ce ll, thu s releasin g four geno mes into an environment conducive to recombination? in many cas es th is would be a most favorable circumstance, sinc e there would now be four damaged genomes from which to regenerate, by repeated acts of recombination, an ideal ge nome . thus, it would seem maladaptive for a viru s with this particularly strate gy to evo lve mechanisms to prevent entry of anoth er virus ("sup erinfect ion") into a cell that it was occupying, at least in the early stage s of infection [ ] . this presupposes that a co-infec ting viru s will be of the same spec ies as the virus whi ch first gain ed entry . however, h v- and htlv -l are retroviruses of alli ed , but distin ct, species. th ey have a common host (humans) and common host cell (known as the cd t-iymphocyte). when in the cou rse of evo lution these two virus spec ies first began to diverge from a common ancestral retroviral species, a barrier to recombination had to develop as a cond ition of successful div ergence. yet, these two virus types needed to retain a common host cell in which they had to perform sim ilar tasks. thi s meant that they had to retain similar gen es. many simi lar gene-encoded function s are indeed found . similar genes implies similar sequences, and sim ilar sequences implies the possibility of recombination betw een the two genomes. thu s, coexisten ce in the same host cell could result in the viruses destroying each oth er, as distinct species members, by mutually recombining (shuffl ing their genomes tog ether). without a recombination barrier each virus was part of the selective environment of the other. this should have provided a pre ssure for genomic changes that, while not interfering with conventional phenotypic functions , would protect against recombination with the other type. if (g+c)% differences could create such a recombination barrier (while maintaining, through choice of appropriate codons, the abilities to encode similar amino acid sequences), then such differences would be selected for. when we examine the (g +c)% values of each of these species there is a remarkable difference. j- iv-i is one of the lowest (g+c)% species known (i.e. it is at-rich). j- tlv-i is one of the high est (g+c)% species known (i.e. it is gc-rich). this might be regarded as just a remarkable coincidence save for the fact that, in some other situations where two viruses from different but allied species occupy a common host cell , there are also wide differences in (g +c)% [ , ] . as set out above, th ese (g+c)% differences alone should suffice to prevent recombination. the plant which gives us tobacco, nicotiniana tabacum, is a tetraploid which emerged some six million years ago when the two diploid genomes of nicotin iana sylvestris and nicotiniana tomentosiform is appeared to fuse . nicotiniana tabacum is designated an allotetraploid (rather than an autotetraploid) since the two genomes were from different so urce species (greek : allos = other; autos = same). the two species are estimated to have diverged from a common ancestral species million years ago . as allied species they should have retained some sequence similarities; so within a common nucleus in the tetraploid there should have been ample opportunity for recombination between the two genomes. yet , the genomes have retain ed their separate identities. this can be shown by backcrossing to the parental types. half the chromosomes of the tetraploid pair at meiosis with chromosomes of one parent type. thus, recombination of the other chromosomes of the tetraploid with chromosomes of that parent type is in some way prohibited. in goldschm idt noted [ ]: "c lausen ... has come to the conclusion that n. tabacum is an allotetraploid hybrid, one of the genomes being derived from the species sylvestris, the other from tomentosa. by continuous backcrossing to sylvestris the chromosomes deriv ed from sylvestris can be tested because they form tetrads with the sylvestris- the surv ival of a duplicate copy of a gene depends on a var iety of factors , including (i) natural selection favouring organisms where a function encoded by the gene is either increased or changed (i.e . there is either concerted or divergent gene evolution), (ii) a recombination-depend ent proc ess known as gene conversion , and (iii) a recombination-dependent process that can lead to copy-loss (see fig. - ) . these intragenomic recombination s can occur when there is a successful search for similarity between dna strands . thi s is likely to be greatly influ enc ed by the (g+c)% environment of th e or iginal gene and the (g +c)% env iro nment wh ere the duplicate copy locates. once a (g +c)%-dependent speciation proc ess has begun, factors oth er than (g +c)% are likely to replace the original difference in (g +c)% as an intergenomic barrier to reproduction (i .e . a barri er to recombination between diverged paternal and maternal genomes within their hybrid, if such a " mule" can be generated; fig . - ) . in this circumstance, (g +c)% becomes free to adopt oth er roles, such as the prevention of recombination within a genome (intragenom ic recombination). this can invo lve the differentiation of regi ons of relatively uniform (g+c)%, that japane se physicists aki yo shi wada and ak ira suy ama referred to as having a " homosta bizing propensity" and g iorg io bernardi and his coworkers named " isoc hores" (greek : iso = sa me; choras = group) [ , ] . th ese hav e the potential to recombinatio nally isolate different part s of a genome. t hus, the attempted duplication of an ance stral g lobin gene to gen erate the a-globin and [ -globin gen es of mod ern primates might have fa iled sinc e sequ ence sim ilarity would favour recombination between the tw o gen es and incipi ent differences (early sequence divergence) co uld have been e liminated (" gene conversion;" fig. - ). how ever, the dup lication app ears to hav e involved relocation to a d ifferent isochore with a different (g +c)%, so the two genes became recombinationally isolated to the ext ent that initi ally the sequ ences flanking the genes d iffered in (g +c)% . later the new gene would have increased its recombinational isolation by mutating to acquire the (g+c)% of its host isochore. as a con sequence of the differences in (g+c)% the correspond ing mrnas today utilize different codons for correspond ing amino ac ids, even though both mrnas are tran slated in the same cell using the same ribosomes and same trna populations. so it is most unlikely that the primary pressure to differentiate codons aro se at the translational level. ig. - . model for possible outcomes of a gene duplication. the duplication from (a) can result in identical multicopy genes (b) that confer an ability to produce more of the gene product. if this is advantageous, then the multicopy state will tend to be favored by natural selection. if unmutated (white box in (b)) or only slightly mutated (light grey striped box in (c)) , there are not sufficient differences between the duplicates to prevent a successful homology search (d). this allows the mutation (c) to be reversed to (b) by the process known as gene conversion (see fig. - ). this maintains identical copies, so allowing concerted evolution of the multicopy genes to continue. however, the recombination necessary for gene conversion can also result in removal of a circular intermediate (e, f), and restoration of the single copy state (g). the risk of copy-loss due to recombination (d-g) can be decreased by further mutation (dark grey striped box in (h)). this will decrease the probability of a successful homology search. being protected against recombination (i.e. preserved), the duplicate is then free to differentiate further by mutation (black box in (i)). if the product of the new gene confers an advantage, then the duplicate will be further preserved by natural selection (divergent gene evolution). in the general case, mutation facilitating recombinational isolation (h) precedes mutation facilitating functional differentiation (ij under positive darwinian selection < atgctgcggctatcgcagcat s + m ' ---i t-a-g--g-a-g-g-g-g g i t a g-c--g+g-g-i=-a > ' '< ' atgctg~cag ca t (b) > ' ( ) e-e-e-~e-e-e-.t '----+--a-f"l-ffi-ih -fi---f;- '::-(.,; r=f-"f-'~re-fi-., ' in the alternative shown here, the status quo is restored to the top duplex (an a is mutated to t), but in the bottom duplex the t-t non-watson-crick basepair is replaced with an a-t watson-crick base-pair (i.e. a t is mutated to an a). thus, there has been conversion of the sequence of the original m allele to that of the p allele. there has been a loss of heterozygosity (as in (a)) and a gain of homozygosity (as in (d)). in this example, gene conversion involves copies of homologous genes (alleles) on different chromosomes. however, gene conversion can also involve homologous genes (non-allelic "paralogues") on the same chromosome (see fig. - ). note that, in chapter , sequence . (p above) is shown to form a stem-loop with the central bases being located in the loop (sequence . ). since the single base-pair difference between p and m versions is in this loop, then the m version has the potential to form a similar stem-loop. because the loops differ slightly, during the initial homology search loop-loop "kissing" interactions might fail and prohibit subsequent steps. however, cross-over points can migrate (e.g. (b) to (c)), so that if crossing over is prohibited in one region there is some possibility of a migration from a neighboring region that would reveal mismatches. thus, multiple incompatibilities (base differences) are most likely to inhibit the pairing of homologous chromosomes and the repairing of multiple mismatches each isochore would have arisen as a random fluctuation in the base composition of a genomic region such that a copy of a duplicated gene that had transposed to that region was able to survive without recombination with the original gene for a sufficient number of generations to allow differentiation between the copy and its original to occur. thi s would have provided not only greater recombinational isolation, but also an opportunity for functional differentiation. if the latter differentiation were advantageous, organisms with the copy would be favoured by natural selection. the regional base compositional fluctuation would then have "hitch-hiked" through the generations by virtue of its linkage to the successful duplicate (i.e. the copy would have been positively selected). by preserving the duplicate copy from re-combination with the original copy, the isochore would, in turn , have itself been preserved by virtue of its linkage to the duplicate copy. when functional differentiation of a duplicate is necessary for it to be selected (divergent evolution), there is the danger that, before natural selection can operate, recombination-mediated gene conversion will rev erse any incipient differentiation, or intragenic recombination between the copies (paralogues) will result in copy-loss. in the case of duplicate eukaryotic genes that have diverged in sequence, koichi matsuo and his colleagues noted that divergence was greatest at third codon positions, usually involving a change in (g+c)% [ - ]. thus, there was a codon bias in favour of the positions of least importance for the functional differentiation that would be necessary for the operation of natural selection. where amino acids had not changed, different gene copies used different synonymous codons. it wa s proposed that the (g+c)% change was an important "line of defence" against homologous recombination between the duplicates. thus, recornbinational isolation of the duplicate (largely involving third codon position differences in (g+c)%) would protect (preserve) the duplicate so allowing time for functional differentiation (largely involving first and second codon position differences), and hence, for natural selection to operate. in the general case, isolation would precede functional differentiation, not the converse. (g+c)% differentiation, largely involving third codon positions, would precede functional differentiation, largely involving first and second codon positions under positive darwinian selection . from all this it would be predicted that, if a gene from one isochore were transposed to an isochore of different (g+c)%, and its ability to recombine with its allele were advantageous, then the gene would preferentially accept mutations converting its (g+c)% to that of the new host isochore (i .e. organisms with those mutations would be genetically fitter and thus likely to leave more fertile offspring than organisms without the mutations). indeed, there is evidence supporting this. the sex chromosomes (x and y) tend not to recombine at meiosis except in a small region (the "pseudoautosomal" region; see chapter ). transfer of a gene from a non-recombining part of a sex chromosome to the pseudoautosomal region forces the gene rapidly to change its (g+c)% value [ ] . for various reasons (e.g. large demand for the gene product), certain genes are present in multiple identical copies. but, in the absence of some restraint, copies that are initially identical will inevitably diverge in sequence [ ]. so how can multicopy genes (e .g. rrna genes) preserve their similarity to each other? to prevent divergence through the generations (i.e . to allow "concerted evolution"), they should mutually correct each other to eliminate deviant copies. this is likely to occur by a recombination-dependent process -"gene conversion" (figs. - , - ; see chapter ). thus, multicopy genes should all be, either in the same isochore, or in isochores of very close (g+c)%, so that recombination can occur. before dna sequencing methods became available, " isochores" were described as dna segments that could be identified on the basis of their distinct densities in samples of duplex dna obtained from organisms whose cells had nuclei (eukaryotes). the method involved physically disrupting dna by hydrodynamic sheering to break it down to lengths of about kilobases. the fragments were then separated as bands of distinct densities by centrifugation in a salt density gradient. the densities could be related to the average (g+c)% values of the segments, since the greater these values, the greater the densities. this way of assessing the (g+c)% of a duplex dna segment distinguished one large segment from another, and largeness became a defining property of isochores. isochores, as so defined, were not identified in bacteria, which do not have distinct nuclear membranes (prokaryotes; see chapter ). since prokaryotes (e.g. bacteria) and eukaryotes (e.g. primates) are considered to have evolved from a common ancestor, does this mean that the ancestor had isochores that were subsequently lost by prokaryotes during or after their divergence from the eukaryote lineage (isochores-early)? or did the ancestor not have isochores, which were therefore freshly acquired by the eukaryotic lineage after its divergence from the prokaryotic lineage (isochores-late)? if prokaryotes could be shown to have isochores, then this would favour the isochores-early hypothesis. indeed, prior to modern sequencing technologies, physical methods demonstrated small segments of distinct (g+c)% in the genomes of prokaryotes and their viruses. the kb duplex genome of phage lambda (see chapter ) was extensively sheered to break it down to subgenome-sized fragments. these resolved into six distinct segments, each of relatively uniform (g+c)%, by the density method [ ] , and into thirty four "gene sized" segments by another, more sensitive, method (thermal denaturation spectrophotometry) [ ] . with the advent of sequencing technologies, in mervyn bibb and his colleagues were able to plot the average (g+c)% values of every third base for small windows in the sequences of various bacteria (fig. - ) [ ] . three plots were generated, the first beginning with the first base of the sequence (i.e. bases in frame i, , , etc.), the second beginning with the second base of the sequence (i.e. bases in frame , , , etc.), and the third beginning with the third base of the sequence (i.e. bases in frame , , , etc.) . in certain small regions (g+c)% values were relatively constant within each frame. these regions ofconstant (g+c)% corresponded to genes. note that the relative constancy of (g+c)% is most for the third codon position (mainly independent of the encoded amino acids), and least for the second codon position (most dependent on the encoded amino acids). the fluctuation in values at the second codon position is more apparent when a window size equivalent to codons is used (b) than when a window size equivalent to codons is used (a). this figure was redrawn from ref. [ ] thus, individual genes have a relatively uniform (g +c)% and each codon position makes a distinctive contribution to that uniformity . this is not confined to bacteria. wada and suyama noted that, whether prokaryotic or eukaryotic, "every base in a codon seems to work cooperatively towards realizing the gene's characteristic value of (g+c) content." this was a "homostabilizing propensity" allowing a gene to maintain a distinct (g+c)%, relatively uniform along its length , which would differentiate it from other genes in the same genome [ ) . thus, each gene constitutes a homostabilizing region in dna . stated another way , if large size is excluded as a defining property, many bacteria have isochores. when isochores are defined as dna segments of relatively uniform (g+c)% that are coinherited with specific sequences of bases, then bacteria have isochores. to contrast with the classical isochores of bernardi, these are termed "rnicroisochores," and their length is that of a gene, or small group of genes (see chapter ). thus, classical eukaryotic isochores ("macroisochores") can be viewed as constellations of microisochores of a particular (g +c)%. the proposed antirecombination role of (g+c)% would required that , unless they represent multicopy genes, microisochores sharing a common macroisochore (i.e. they have a common (g+c)%) have other sequence differences that are sufficient to prevent recombination between themselves [ ). within an organism, genes with similar (g+c)% values may sometimes locate to similar tissues, so that there is a tissue-specific codon usage tendency [ i). since both prokaryotic (e.g. bacterial) and eukaryotic (e.g. primate) lineages have some form of isochore, this appears most consistent with the isochores-early hypothesis. while not endorsing a particular role for (g+c)%, this underlines the fundamental importance of (g +c)% differences in biology . let metaphors multiply! a given segment of dna is coinherited with a "coat" of a particular (g+c)% "color." a given segment of dna "speaks" with a particular (g+c)% "accent," (and hence has a distinct potential vibrational frequency; see fig. - ) . a fundamental duality of information levels is again manifest. as will be further considered in chapter , it is likely that differences in (g+c)% serve to isolate recombinationally both genes within a genome, and genomes within a group of species (a taxonomic group). the power to recombine is fundamental to all life forms because, for a variety of reasons, it is advantageous (see chapter ). however, the same power threatens to homogenize (blend) genes within a genome, and to homogenize (blend) the genomes of members of allied species within a taxonomic group (i.e. genus). this would countermand evolution both within a species and between spe-cies. thus, f unctional differentiation. be it between genes in a genome. or between genomes in a taxonomic gro up (spec iation), must. in the general case, be preceded (or closely accompanied) by the establishment of recombinational barriers. species have long been defined in terms of recombinational barriers (see chapter ). in some cont exts, genes are defined sim ilarly. a species can be defined as a unit of recombination (or rather, of antirecombination with respect to other species). so can a gene . most definitions of the "gene" contain a loose or explic it refe renc e to function. thus, biologists talk of a gen e encod ing information for tallness in peas. biochemists ta lk of the gene encoding information for growth hormone (a prot ein), and relate this to a segment of dna (se e legend to fig . - ) . however, before it can function , information must be preserved. classical darwinian theory proposes that function , through natural selection, is itself the preserving agent. thus, function and preservation go hand-in-hand, but fun ction is more fundamental than preservation . in biol ogi st ge org e williams in the usa , an originator of the "se lfis h gen e" con cept, seem ed to argue the converse wh en arriving at a new definition. the function of any multipart entity, which needs more than one part for this function , is usually dependent on its parts not being se parated. preservation can be more fundamental than function . williams propo sed that a gen e should be defined entire ly by its property of remaining intact as it passes from generation to generation. he identified recombination as a major thr eat to that intactness. thus, for williams, "gene" meant any dna segment that has the potential to persist for enough generations to serve as a unit for natural selection; this requires that it not be easily disruptable by recombination . th e gene is a un it of reco mbination (or rather, of antirecombination with respect to other gen es) [ ] . " socrates' ge nes may be with us yet, but not his genotype, becau se meiosis and recombination destroy genotypes as surely as death. it is only the meiotically dissociated fragments of the genotype that are transmitted in sex ua l reproduction , and these fragments are further fragm ented by meio sis in the next generation . if there is an ultimate indivisible fragm ent it is, by definition, ' the gene ' that is treated in the abstract discussions of population genetics. various kind s of suppress ion of recomb ination may cause a major chromosomal segment or even a whole chromo some to be transmitted entire for many generations in certain lines of descent. in such cases the segment, or chromosome, behaves in a way that approximates the population genetics of a s ingle gene . . . . i use the term gene to mean ' that which segregates and recombines with appreciable frequency ' .... a gene is one of a multitude of meiotically dissociable units that make up the genotypic message." despite this, williams did not invoke any special chromosomal characteristic that might act to facilitate preservation . pointing to "the now discredited theories of the nineteenth century," and lamenting an opposition that " arises . . . not from what reason dictates, but from the limits of what the imagination can accept," his text adaptation and natural selection made what seemed a compelling case for "natural selection as the primary or exclusive creative force ." no other agency was required. this tendency, which can be infectious, to bolster the scientific with the ad hominem in otherwise rational discourse, will be considered in the epilogue.jn contrast, we have here considered intergenomic and intragenomic differences in (g+c)% as an agency, essentially independent of natural selection, which preserves the integrity of species and genes, respectively . within a species individual genes differ in their (g +c)%. relative positions of genes on the (g +c)% scale are usually preserved through speciation events. if, in an ancestral species, gene a was of higher (g+c)% than gene e, this relationship has been sustained in the modern species that resulted from divergences within that ancestral species. accordingly, when the (g+c)% values of the genes of one of the modern species are plotted against the corresponding (g+c)% values of similar (orthologous) genes in the other modern species, the points usually fit a close linear relationship (c.f. fig. - ) . species with intragenomic isochore differentiation can themselves further differentiate into new species. in this case, a further layer of intergenomic (g+c)% differentiation would be imposed upon the previous intragenomic differentiation . again, when a sufficient degree of reproductive isolation had been achieved this initial barrier between species would usually be replaced by other barriers, thus leaving (g+c)% free to continue differentiating in response to intragenomic demands. however, (g+c)% is never entirely free. it can itself be constrained by demands on gene function (i .e. natural selection) that primarily affect first and second codon positions. furthermore, as we shall see next , in extreme environments, natural selection can make direct demands on (g +c)%, which might then conflict with its role as a recombinational isolator. there are few environments on this planet where living organisms are not found . hot springs, oceanic thermal vents, and radioactive discharges of nuclear reactors, all contain living organisms ("extremophiles"). fortunately, since heat and radiation are convenient ways of achieving sterilization in hospitals, none of these organisms has been found (or genetically engineered to become) pathogenic (so far) . thermophiles are so-called because they thrive at high temperatures. proteins purified from thermoph iles may show high stability at normal temperatures, a feature that has attracted commercial interest (i.e. they have a long "shelf life"). hence, the full genomic sequences of many prokaryotic thermophiles (bacteria and archaea) are now available . some thennoph iles normally live at the temperature of boiling wat er. nucleic acid s in solution at this temperature soon degrade. so how do nucleic acid s survive in thermophil es? the secondary structure of nucleic acids with a high (g+c)% is more stable than that of nucl eic acids with a low (g+c)%. this is con sistent with watson-crick g-c bonds being strong, and a-tor a-u bonds being weak (see table - ). do thermophiles have high (g +c)% dna ? in the case of gen es corresponding to rnas whose structure is vital for rna function , namely rrnas and trnas, the answer is affirmative. free of cod ing con straints (i .e. they are not mrnas), yet required to form part of the precise structure of ribo somes where prot e in synthesis occurs, gen es corresponding to rrna s appear to have had the flexibility to accept mutation s that increase g +c (i.e. organisms that d id not accept such mut ations perished by natural selection, presumably acting again st organ isms w ith less effic ient prot ein synthesis at high temperatures). the g +c content of rrnas is directly proportional to the normal growth temperature, so that rrna s of thermophilic prokaryotes are highly enriched in g and c [ ] [ ] [ ] . yet, althou gh optimum growth temperature correlates positively with the g+c content of rrna (and hence of rrn a genes), optimum growth temperature does not correlate positively with the overall g+c content of genomic dna , and hence with that of the numerous mrna populations transcribed from the genes in that dna (fi g. - a). instead, optimum growth temperature correlates positi vely with a+g content (fi g. - b ; see chapter ) [ ] . the finding of no consistent trend tow ards a high genomic (g +c)% in thermophilic organi sm s has been interpreted as supporting the " neutralist" argument that vari at ions in genomic (g +c)% are the consequences of mutational biases and are , in themselves, of no adapti ve value, at least with respect to maintaining duplex stability [ , ] . however, the finding is also consistent w ith the argument that genomic (g +c)% is too important merely to follow the dictates of temperature, since its prim ary role is related to other more fundamental adaptations. the stability of duplex dna at h igh temperatures can be ach ieved in ways other than by an increase in g +c content. these include association with small basic peptides (polyam ines) and relaxation of tor sional strain (supercoiling) [ , ] . thus, there is ev ery reason to believe that , whatever their (g+c)% content, thermophiles are able , both to maintain their dna s in class ica l duplex stru ctures with watson-crick hydrogen-bonding between oppo-site stra nds, and to adopt any necessary extruded secondary structures involving intrastrand hydrogen-bonding (i .e. stem-loops). this will be further considered in chapter . reflect the fact that relatively few thermophiles have been sequenced at this time. note that, whereas in (a) only % of the variation between points can be explained by growth temperature (~= . ), in (b) % can be explained on this basis (r" = . ; see appendix ) darwin held that biological evolution reflected the accumulation of frequent very small variations, rather than few intermittent large variations. that nature did not work by means of large jumps was encapsulated in the latin phrase "natura non facit saltum ." however, huxley, while supporting most of darwin's teachings, considered it more likely that evolution had proceeded in jumps ("natura facit saltum"). according to the arguments of this chapter, both are correct. within some members of a species small variations in the genome phenotype (i .e. in (g+c)%) accumulate, so that these members become progressively more reproductively isolated from most other members of the species, initially without major changes in the conventional phenotype. as it accrues, reproductive isolation increasingly favors rapid change in the conventional phenotype, often under the influence of natural selection. so, when their appearance is viewed on a geological time scale, new species can seem to "jump" into existence. the rate increase reflects better preservation of frequent phenotypic micromutations rather than of infrequent phenotypic macromutations (i.e . of "hopeful monsters," to use goldschmidt 's unfortunately term). in other words, while there is continuity of variation at the genotype level , as far as speciation is concerned variants (mutant forms) seem to emerge discontinuously at the phenotype level. being infrequent, and hence unlikely to find a member of the opposite sex with the same change, organisms with macrornutations are not the stuff of evolution. single strands extruded from duplex dna have the potential to form stemloop structures that, through exploratory loop-loop "kissing" interactions, may be involved in the homology search preceding recombination. the total stem-loop potential in a sequence window can be analyzed quantitatively in terms of the relative contributions of base composition and base order, of which base composition, and particularly the product of the two s bases (g x c), plays a major role . thus, very small differences in (g +c)% should impair meiotic pairing, resulting in hybrid sterility and the reproductive isolation that can initiate speciation (i.e. because their hybrid is sterile, the parents are, in an evolutionary sense, "reproductively isolated" from each other). in chemical terms, chargaff's species-dependent component of base composition, (g+c)%, may be the "holy grail" responsible for reproductive isolation (non-genic) as postulated by romanes, bateson and goldschmidt. once a speciation process has initiated, other factors (often genic) may replace (g+c)% as a barrier to reproduction (preventing intergenomic recombination between species). this leaves (g+c)% free to assume other roles, such as defined as long segments of relatively uniform (g+c)% that are coinherited with specific sequences of bases. these may facilitate gene duplication. indeed, each gene has a " ho mostabilizing propensity" to maintain itself as a "microisochore" of relatively uniform (g+c)%. protection against inadvertent recombination afforded by differences in (g+c)% facilitates the duplication both of genes, and of genomes (speciation). george williams' definition of a gene as a unit of recombination rather than of function is now seen to have a chemical basis key: cord- - y m ea authors: hug, peter; sleight, richard g. title: chapter the advantages of liposome-based gene therapy: a comparison of viral versus liposome-based gene delivery date: - - journal: nan doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: y m ea viruses have evolved in such a way they are able to efficiently introduce and express exogenous genes in eukaryotic cells. most viruses need to maintain high-level expression of their proteins for only a short time and need not be concerned with the viability of the host cell after infection. attempts to modify a virus into a gene therapy vector can be hampered by this conflict. virus-based methods of gene therapy are likely to be most useful in applications that require a burst of high-level expression in many of the patient's cells, such as in cancer therapy. liposomal methods of gene therapy are flexible in that all the components of the system are controlled by designers. as these systems have become more sophisticated, they have begun to take on several characteristics of the viruses that they are intended to replace. the use of basic substances to condense dna has increased the efficiency of encapsulation. the addition of nucleophilic proteins raises the efficiency of transfection. by adding antibodies or other targeting molecules to the surface of liposomes, preferential binding of vesicles to a desired cell type has been increased. gene therapy as a treatment for human disease is in a stage of intensive development. already in limited use as an experimental therapy for cancer (oldfield et al., ; nabel et al., ) and inborn errors of metabolism (hoogerbrugge et al., ; morgan and anderson, ) , it will become a tool to treat diseases that are currently difficult to manage. there are many competing strategies being developed to introduce exogenous genes into a subset of cells of a patient. several of these are likely to proceed to clinical application. deciding which therapeutic strategy is best suited for a given disease will require an understanding of the underlying biology of the disease, as well as the therapy. in using this chapter to learn about liposomal methods of gene therapy, one should remember that the material presented here is only current as of january, . for more recent developments and greater detail, it will be necessary to consult the original literature. regardless of the specific disease being addressed by gene therapy, several factors must be considered before one treats patients. the first is that the method and the treatment itself must be commensurate with the severity of the disease. gene therapy will not be the preferred treatment for diseases such as phenylketonuria or galactosemia, both of which can be treated adequately by diet modification. a more widely recognized problem is that the treatment may, while curing the disease, create a new one in the process. the archetypal concern is the generation of insertional mutations by the integration of the curative gene into a cellular protooncogene, leading to cancer in the "cured" patient. once a method has been determined to be reasonably safe for the patient, it must be shown not to present a danger to others. this problem has hampered the widespread use of viral transfection vectors. substantial progress has been made in the construction of replication-defective retroviral and adenoviral vectors. however, the possibility remains that superinfection with wild-type adenovirus, or insertion of a wild-type retrovirus into an integrated defective retroviral genome, can generate new, infectious viral particles that could contain an oncogenic fragment of the therapeutic gene. these viral particles may have the ability to transfer genes between a patient's cells, and between individuals. in order for a method of gene therapy to be useful, it must significantly ameliorate the symptoms of the disease, and halt the progression of the disease state for a significant period of time. ideally, the disease would be cured permanently by one treatment. although periodic retreatments might be acceptable, every treatment brings with it the possibility of insertional mutagenesis or the generation of an immune response to the therapeutic vector. the final considerations involve ease of preparation and use. many candidate vectors, although potentially capable of introducing foreign genes into an organism, are so difficult to generate, or administer, that it is difficult to envision their widespread adoption. this aspect of vector design is often not considered until after the vector is developed. bearing in mind the above considerations, let us now consider the various approaches being developed to create vectors for gene therapy. in general, these can be divided into three groups: (i) active viruses, (ii) viral mimics that attempt to reproduce a subset of viral activities in a synthetic construct, and (iii) artificial delivery systems. given the amount of effort being expended on the development of these systems, and the highly varied nature of the intended target diseases and organs, it is likely that there will never be a single best choice of method. every disease will call for a tailored strategy that can be optimized to best fit the needs of the situation. table contains a summary and comparison of various gene therapy delivery vectors. ten years ago, it seemed a foregone conclusion that retroviruses were the only serious candidate for an eventual therapeutic vector. today, many different viral vectors are being considered for use in gene therapy. because different viruses target different cell types and have different modes of replication, each viral delivery system may be best suited for treatment of different diseases. the viral vectors under most active development are retroviruses, adenoviruses, adeno-associated virus, and herpesviruses. some general characteristics of the viruses currently being developed as gene therapy vectors are presented in table . wild-type retroviruses are contained within a lipid membrane and have two identical copies of an rna genome. after the viral particle's entry into the cell, the rna molecule is reverse-transcribed into a dna copy, which is then integrated into the host's genome, mrnas for the various viral proteins synthesized during the course of the infection are transcribed from this integrated dna. the integration of the retroviral dna genome into the host genome forms the basis for the use of retroviruses as vectors for the introduction of exogenous dna into eukaryotic cells (hoeben et al., ) . to convert a wild-type retrovirus into a retroviral gene therapy vector, two steps are necessary: first, the therapeutic gene must be added to the retroviral and, genome second, the potential of the retrovirus to remain infectious after integration into the target cell must be eliminated. presently, this is accomplished by inserting a therapeutic gene into a retroviral genome that has had most of the genes necessary for packaging the virus removed or mutated. deletion of the viral genes eliminates infectivity in the treated cells by preventing the newly integrated genome from making infectious copies of itself that could complete further rounds of infection. it also has the added benefit of increasing the maximum length of a therapeutic gene that can be delivered by a retrovirus. some advantages of retroviruses as gene delivery vectors include: (i) the efficient and stable integration of the introduced gene into the host genome, (ii) a wide host range, and (iii) the ability to infect large numbers of cells. potential problems associated with the use of viral vectors include: (i) the possibility of recombination events that could convert a replication-defective vector into an infectious agent, (ii) the possibility that superinfection with another retrovirus may allow unwanted transfer of the introduced gene between individuals, (iii) a - kb limit on the amount of dna that can be packaged, (iv) potential problems in targeting the virus to specific cells, and (v) difficulty in maintaining high-level expression of the exogenous gene. wild-type adenoviruses cause respiratory disease in humans. the adenovirus genome is a linear double-stranded dna molecule, about kb in length. although the virus does not have a lipid coat, it is taken up by cells via endocytosis and enters the cytoplasm in a manner analogous to the retrovirus. once inside the cell, the viral dna moves to the nucleus and begins its replication cycle without becoming part of the host cell's genome. adenoviruses that are being considered for use as gene therapy vectors have had substantial parts of their genome removed, rendering them unable to replicate except in specially developed cell lines (i.e., packaging cell lines) that express the removed proteins (kozarsky and wilson, ) . the therapeutic gene to be introduced is added to the adenoviral genome by homologous recombination with a plasmid containing the therapeutic gene flanked by adenoviral dna. although possible target organs for adenoviral gene therapy include liver, central nervous system, vascular endothelium, and muscle, the primary target organ is the lung. clinical trials of adenoviral gene therapy for treatment of ~l-antitrypsin deficiency and cystic fibrosis are underway (crystal, ) . advantages of adenovirus-based vectors include: (i) the ability to infect large numbers of cells, (ii) relative ease of constructing the vector and obtaining large amounts of virus, and (iii) absence of genomic integration, obviating the problem of insertional mutagenesis. some disadvantages are: (i) the necessity to periodically reinfect the patient, as the genome is lost from dividing cells; (ii) the concomitant development of an allergic response; and (iii) possible toxicity of high doses of virus. adeno-associated virus is a naturally occurring defective virus that infects human lungs. although it is unable to go through lytic infection of cells independently, it can do so in the presence of a separate infection by adenovirus or herpes simplex virus. in the absence of a helper infection by one of these viruses, the adeno-associated virus establishes a latent infection of the host cell by integrating itself into the host genome. about % of the integrations of the wild-type virus occur at a single site on chromosome (samulski et al., ) . because these integrations do not seem to be associated with any disease, this virus may eventually be used to add therapeutic genes to the human genome with a lower risk of insertional mutagenesis. to date, however, the targeted nature of the insertional events is not retained when the native viral genome is replaced by a therapeutic or marker gene. in addition, packaging constraints limit the size of any insert to . - kb of dna. the genomes of herpesviruses are very large and complex. this fact alone might argue against the use of herpes simplex virus i (hsv-i) as a gene therapy vector, since a complex genome will be more difficult to effectively "tame." however, hsv-i has an advantage that compensates for this problem, in that the virus can exist and mediate persistent expression of its genes in neurons and other postmitotic cells (geller, ) . in the normal course of an infection, hsv-i will enter neuronal cells and remain latent, sometimes for years, before reactivating and starting a lytic cycle that results in a small patch of endothelial cell death (e.g., a cold sore). during latency, the host cell transcribes some viral genes, producing what are termed latency associated transcripts (lats). hsv-i deletion mutants have been isolated that are incapable of reactivation, and that once inserted into a neuron will remain latent indefinitely. if therapeutic genes added to these vectors have lat promoter elements, they will be expressed even though the virus itself remains latent. these vectors are being developed for the introduction of genes into cells of the central nervous system (geller, ) . in summary, all viral methods of gene therapy share several strengths, as well as numerous weaknesses. it is relatively easy to produce the large amounts of virus necessary to treat patients. viruses efficiently infect a large fraction of the cells with which they come in contact. although this may be a drawback in some cases where expression of the therapeutic gene must be restricted to specific cells, it may be possible to limit unwanted expression of the inserted gene by the use of tissue-specific promoters. all viral vectors for human gene therapy are derived from organisms that cause human disease. the possibility of reactivation of the vectors' infectivity or pathogenicity is hard to dismiss. in the end, it may prove easier and safer to construct a gene therapy vector having the elements of a successful virus, but derived from completely synthetic components. one such strategy involves the use of liposomes. liposomes are small vesicles usually made from pure preparations of phospholipids. because they can be made from completely pure components, they have been used extensively to characterize and define the physical properties of membranes and membrane proteins. liposomes have also been used as a means of delivering substances to cells, both in vitro and in vivo, including dna (hug and sleight, ) . before discussing factors to be considered in preparing liposomes for gene therapy of a given disease, it is worthwhile to review some general aspects of liposome preparation and design. liposomes are generally classified by the number of bilayers (lamellae) they contain, by size, and by the composition of their membrane. the earliest liposomes were formed by hydration of a dried lipid film, followed by vortexing. this results in a cloudy solution of liposomes having many lamellar layers, resembling an onion. these are called multilamellar vesicles, or mlvs. although mlvs are effective for the packaging of lipophilic drugs, they have very little aqueous volume in their interiors, and are not efficient at entrapping water-soluble compounds or large dna fragments. because of these deficiencies, mlvs were quickly superseded by unilamellar vesicles, which have only a single lipid bilayer between the external fluid and the lumen. several methods are used to pre~pare unilamellar vesicles, each having its own advantages and disadvantages. because of space limitations, we will only briefly describe those methods of liposome preparation that are directly relevant to the construction of gene therapy vectors. table gives a direct comparison of these methods of preparation as related to transfection. cationic liposomes. liposomes made entirely or partially of a cationic lipid have a charge-based affinity for dna. when such liposomes are incubated in solution with dna, they form complexes that can transfect cells. several types of cationic lipid are available which in general have similar characteristics (leventis and silvius, ; ito et al., ; gao and huang, ; hazinski et al., ; farhood et al., ) . this technique was initially intended exclusively for in vitro use. however, in vivo transfections have been performed with several commercial preparations of cationic lipids. there are several reasons why cationic lipid-dna complexes have proved so popular for transfections: (i) they are very easy to prepare. the liposomes and the dna are incubated together, and then used without further preparation. (ii) the complexes are relatively non-toxic. (iii) transfections using this method are efficient with most cell types. and (iv) because the dna remains outside the liposome, questions of entrapment efficiency do not apply. in vivo transfections using cationic lipid-dna complexes are completely uncontrolled. that is, there are no targeting or specific binding agents present, and the complexes probably deliver dna to the first cell they contact. this occurs most often in the first capillary bed through which the injected complexes pass. when dna-lipid complexes are intravenously injected, the highest levels of gene expression are usually seen in the pulmonary vascular endothelium (brigham et al., ) . dna-lipid complexes introduced into the airway cause a generalized transfection of the lung. because the site of transfection is completely uncontrolled, expression of the inserted gene may need to be regulated by means of tissue-specific promoters (hazinski et al., ) . cell specific promoters are not available for all tissues, and those currently available are sometimes less specific than desired. while both cationic liposomes and retroviral gene delivery vectors lack the ability to target specific cells, the lack of length constraints makes tissue-specific expression easier to achieve using dna-lipid complexes as compared to retroviruses. ca +/edta chelation. in the presence of calcium, small unilamellar vesicles (suvs) composed of acidic phospholipids (typically phosphatidylserine) aggregate and fuse into large cochleate structures. when edta is added to chelate the calcium, these structures form large unilamellar vesicles (luvs) (papahadjopoulos et al., ) . in the process, the vesicles encapsulate a substantial fraction of the surrounding solvent and solutes. if dna is present, some of it becomes encapsulated in the vesicles. two advantages of this technique are: (i) the dna is not exposed to harsh conditions that would degrade it, and (ii) the entrapment is relatively efficient. however, the requirement for phosphatidylserine makes this technique impractical for most in vivo applications, with the exception of transfecting macrophages which have cell surface receptors for phosphatidylserine (ps). detergent dialysis (and virosomes). when membranes are mixed with detergents at concentrations above their critical mixed micellar concentration (cmmc), they combine with the membrane's phospholipids and proteins to form mixed micelles. because detergents are relatively water soluble, they can be removed from the mixed micelles by dialysis. when their concentration in the micelles falls below the cmmc, membrane bilayers regenerate and form liposomes. enveloped viruses have membrane proteins that promote the fusion of the viral membrane with cellular membranes. when an enveloped virus fuses to a cell, the nucleocapsid is released into the cytoplasm, and the infection proceeds. detergent solubilization of enveloped viruses produces a micellar mixture containing detergent, viral phospholipids, and viral membrane proteins. dialysis of these detergent mixtures results in the production of liposomes that are often called virosomes to indicate the presence of viral proteins. if the dialysis is performed properly, the fusion proteins of many viruses can be reconstituted in an active conformation (white et al., ) . viral fusion proteins having a variety of different characteristics have been identified. for example, some are only active at low ph and fuse with endosomal membranes, while others are active at physiological ph and fuse to the plasma membrane. some viral fusion proteins, such as the ha protein of influenza, bind to specific receptors before fusion. a few viral fusion proteins will only promote fusion to target membranes containing a specific mixture of phospholipids (cervin and anderson, ; nussbaum et al., ) . the major advantage of detergent dialysis is that it is very gentle since no sonication, vortexing, or organic solvent is used. this results in only a small amount of dna fragmentation during encapsulation. unfortunately, the efficiency of entrapment is very low, causing much of the dna to be wasted and resulting in a high fraction of empty liposomes being formed. loyter and co-workers have fused dna-containing liposomes with cells by making empty virosomes and dna-containing liposomes separately, and then fusing the two populations of vesicles in the presence of target cells (lapidot and loyter, ) . to date, this technique has not been used in vivo. reverse-phase evaporation. currently, the highest dna entrapment efficiencies can be achieved when vesicles (revs) are prepared by reverse-phase evaporation (fraley et al., ) . revs are prepared by bath sonication of a mixture of lipid, dna, ether, and buffered saline, followed by evaporation of the ether to form a paste of phospholipid inverted monolayers surrounding aqueous droplets. these are resolved into liposomes by vortexing the paste. encapsulation efficiency is high (up to or %) because there is only a small amount of aqueous buffer present in relation to the amount of lipid. presumably, dna molecules present in the buffer are forced to curl up in small aqueous droplets, a conformation that is easily entrapped (szelei and duda, ) . because the size distribution of the revs is heterogeneous and hard to control, they are often sized by extrusion through a filter before use. extrusion. multilamellar vesicles formed by vortexing a hydrated lipid film are repeatedly passed (extruded) through a filter under pressure. as the liposomes are forced through the pores of the filter, they are converted from multilamellar to unilamellar vesicles, and the buffer and anything present in it is trapped inside the liposomes (mayer et al., ) . to a certain extent, the size of the liposomes corresponds to the pore size of the filter used. advantages of this technique are: (i) nearly any lipid or lipid mixture can be used, (ii) liposome size from to nm in diameter can be controlled, and (iii) the encapsulation efficiency is excellent (up to %). the main disadvantage is that the high pressures used in the extrusion process can fragment the dna, and denature or dissociate dna-protein complexes. a central difficulty in using liposomes for gene therapy is the entrapment of the dna. the ideal encapsulation method would efficiently entrap but not degrade the dna. at the same time, the method would be sufficiently flexible with regard to size and vesicle composition to allow targeting of liposomes based on these properties. dna in solution has a linear conformation. in general, dna restriction fragments containing an entire gene are much longer than the diameter of com-monly used liposomes. it should not be surprising then that most methods of liposome formation entrap dna only at low efficiency, and that the efficiency is inversely related to the length of the dna (fraley et al., ) . two methods of increasing the entrapment efficiency of dna have been developed. in the first, the liposomes are formed in such a way that the aqueous phase, containing the dna, is broken into droplets small enough such that the dna is forced to curl in upon itself to remain within the droplet. this probably occurs during rev formation. the other method achieves the same result by complexing the dna with some substance in a tight and compact aggregate. to date, this has been done with spermine (tikchonenko et al., ) and basic proteins (jay and gilbert, ) . the efficiency of encapsulation can also be increased by compacting the dna in phage head particles (szelei and duda, ) before liposomal entrapment. the basis for successful transfections by liposomal vectors delivered intravenously lies in the maximization of the in vivo circulation time of the liposomes. most liposome formulations are cleared rapidly from the circulation by the reticuloendothelial system (res), with large amounts accumulating in macrophages (allen et al., ) . if the intended target of the gene therapy is the res, as in gaucher's disease, this is a benefit. in most cases, however, this fate will only serve to reduce the number of liposomes being exposed to their intended target cell population. while several different strategies have been explored to lengthen the circulation half-life of liposomes, they all have certain aspects in common (allen et al., ; gabizon and papahadjopoulos, ) . first, they seek to make the liposomes as small as possible. this seems to reduce their interaction with the res. second, they are designed to make the liposomal surface as much like the surface of a normal cell as possible. this can be accomplished by using lipid formulations containing a high fraction of cholesterol, high transition temperature phospholipids, and a substantial fraction of sphingomyelin or the ganglioside gm . a different approach has been to modify the liposomal phospholipids by addition of polyethylene glycol (peg) to the polar headgroup (lasic et al., ; blume and cevc, ) . peg-modified lipids have a higher hydrophilicity than native lipids, and appear to escape recognition by macrophages. a potential disadvantage of this approach is that targeting of liposomes with covalently attached antibodies (see below) is inhibited by the presence of peg-modified lipids (klibanov et al., ) . once a liposome formulation has been settled upon, attention must be paid to limiting the number of cells exposed to the dna delivered by the liposomes. this is necessary for several reasons. first, if the dna will be integrated into the host cell's genome, there is a chance that insertional mutagenesis will lead to activation of a proto-oncogene and the development of cancer by the host. by limiting the sites of dna delivery, the chance of insertional mutagenesis is lowered. second, limiting the number of cells that are transfected reduces the amount of dna, lipid, and other proteins needed to perform the gene therapy. this reduction can be substantial, and can reduce potential systemic toxicities, as well as cost. table compares some different methods of targeting liposomes to specific cell types. there are three general methods by which liposomes may be directed to a subset of cells within an organism. first, the liposomes may be introduced into a compartment of the body that is sequestered from the general circulation. one example of this is the addition of liposomes to the airway in a fluid or an aerosol (hazinski et al., ; stribling et al., ) . because liposomes cannot cross the lung epithelial barrier, entrance into the general circulation is prevented. therefore, it is anticipated that liposome vectors will transfect only those cells present on the epithelial surface. another site where this approach may be applicable is in the central nervous system (cns). in the cerebral vasculature, blood is separated from the cns by the blood-brain barrier, which would normally be completely impermeable to any liposomes. however, if the cerebral vasculature is isolated, and perfused with a hyperosmotic solution, the blood-brain barrier is damaged, leaving holes large enough to admit liposomes into the cns (johansson, ) . the blood-brain barrier reconstitutes itself shortly thereafter, leaving the liposomes trapped within the cns and unable to interact with any other cells. may not be specific enough second, the lipid composition of the vesicles can be adjusted to cause them to be taken up preferentially by some types of cells. for example, macrophages have a very high affinity for liposomes containing (ps) on their surface (lee et al., ) . consequently, liposomes containing a substantial fraction of ps are quickly cleared from the circulation by macrophages (allen et al., ) . a similar targeting strategy uses lactosylceramide as a membrane component. this lipid binds to the asialoglycoprotein receptors found on hepatocytes, causing these cells to be preferentially targeted by the vesicles (grosse et al., ) . the final method involves the addition of antibodies or other proteins to the surface of the liposome after it has been formed (loughrey et al., ) . these "proteoliposomes" are taken up by cells to which they can bind. table gives a representative list of proteins that have been used to target liposomes to cells. many proteins can be modified by the addition of phospholipid molecules or acyl chains and retain their native function. these modified proteins can be coupled to a preexisting bilayer, endowing the liposome with their binding properties. all three methods described above have been used successfully to direct the uptake of liposomes to specific cell types. the methods are not mutually exclusive and, in principle, it should be possible to combine them for more specific targeting. the central problem of any liposome-based gene therapy system is that dna must be introduced into the cytoplasm of the target cell. when dna-loaded liposomes are added to cells they are endocytosed, and most are carried to lysosomes where they are degraded by digestive enzymes. somehow, a small fraction of encapsulated dna escapes this pathway, enters the cytoplasm, and is expressed by the cells (straubinger et al., ) . several methods have been developed to increase the proportion of dna delivered to the cytosol. two general approaches that have been used successfully are: (i) bypassing the endocytic pathway completely, and (ii) using the initial stages of the endocytic pathway but escaping the pathway before delivery of the dna to lysosomes. the endocytic pathway of liposomal dna entry into the cell is bypassed when liposomes are fused directly to the plasma membrane of the cell. this has been accomplished using virosomes containing a constitutively active viral fusion protein (nakanishi et al., ) . as soon as the virosome binds to the cell surface, the fusion protein acts to fuse the virosomal membrane with that of the cell, causing the vesicle contents to be introduced directly into the cytoplasm. some liposome delivery systems use the initial stages of the endocytic pathway in the delivery process. this strategy takes advantage of the low ph of endosomes, which can be used to trigger fusion of liposomes with the endosomal membrane. ph-dependent fusion of liposomes with endosomes has been achieved using vesicles composed of phosphatidylethanolamine (pe) and substances such as dipalmitoylsuccinylglycerol that leave the membrane at low ph (liu and huang, ) . as the ph is lowered in the endosome, the effective concentration of pe rises. when the concentration rises above mole percent, the vesicle membrane can no longer remain as a bilayer. as it converts to the inverted hexagonal phase, it destabilizes the adjacent endosomal membrane, and releases the liposomal contents into the cytoplasm. similar results can be seen using virosomes containing ph-sensitive fusion proteins (gould-fogerite et al., ; lapidot and loyter, ) . once the dna has successfully been introduced into the cytoplasm of the target cell, the factors governing expression are much less well understood. however, proteins exist that are karyophilic, that is, they are actively transported into the nucleus. two such proteins are the semliki forest virus nucleocapsid protein (michel et al., ) and the non-histone high mobility group i chromosomal protein (hmg i) (kato et al., ; tomita et al., ) . if a gene is coencapsulated in a liposome with hmg i, expression increases as much as -fold over the levels seen without the protein. delivery of dna/protein complexes has the potential for greatly increasing transfection efficiency, and should prove to be compatible with most methods of liposomal preparation. one shortcoming that all present approaches to gene therapy share is their inability to maintain a high level expression of the transfected gene for long periods of time. for some applications, such as the activation of the immune system to fight a cancer, this will probably not be a problem. however, to effectively cure many genetic diseases, the gene will need to be expressed at near normal levels throughout the patient's life. successful transfection of cells with some currently available viral vectors may lead to expression of at least some viral proteins, resulting in the clearance of the cells by the host's immune system. this process may be partially responsible for the loss of expression seen in transfections with retroviral and adenoviral vectors. another possible cause of low levels of expression is that length constraints of viral vectors usually necessitate the use of cdna copies of genes. these constructs do not have introns, greatly reducing their length. there is some evidence from transgenic mouse experiments that expression of exogenous genes is higher when at least some of the introns are present (brinster et al., ; palmiter et al., ) . if this is true for genes inserted by viral or liposomal methods, then it may be necessary to include introns in the delivered dna to produce an adequate therapeutic effect. unfortunately, increasing the size of the therapeutic gene would prevent the use of most viral vectors. while all the methods of gene therapy have specific advantages, none is suitable for all applications. in an environment as complex as a living organism, it is futile to hope that a single method might be ideal in all situations. however, the availability of many methods greatly increases the number and types of diseases that can be treated. viruses have evolved such that they are able to efficiently introduce and express exogenous genes (i.e., viral genes) in eukaryotic cells. however, it is important to remember that viruses have been optimized by selective pressure to meet criteria that are not precisely those of gene therapy. in particular, most viruses need to maintain high-level expression of their proteins for only a short time, and need not be concerned with the viability of the host cell after infection. attempts to modify a virus into a gene therapy vector will be hampered by this conflict. virus-based methods of gene therapy are likely to be most useful in applications that require a burst of high-level expression in many of the patient's cells, such as in cancer therapy. cationic lipid-dna complexes will never be as selective as either virus-or conventional liposome-based gene therapy. however, they will remain much easier to prepare and use. the complexes will probably find their greatest use in in vitro and animal gene transfer. although they are currently more widely used in all areas of gene transfer than any other technique, their lack of control and cell-specificity will probably lead to their replacement by viral and liposomal methods of gene introduction in clinical areas. liposomal methods of gene therapy are flexible, in that all the components of the system are controlled by the designers. as these systems have become more sophisticated, they have begun to take on several characteristics of the viruses that they are intended to replace. the use of basic substances to condense the dna has increased the efficiency of encapsulation. the addition of nucleophilic proteins raises the efficiency of transfection. by adding antibodies or other targeting molecules to the surface of liposomes, preferential binding of vesicles to a desired cell type has been increased. the incorporation of viral fusion proteins into the membrane allows a greater fraction of liposomes binding to cells to deliver their contents into the cytoplasm. in short, many aspects of a virus from budding to delivery of the genetic material to the nucleus have been mimicked in liposomal vectors. current methods of liposome-based gene therapy may be improved by modifying the structure of the introduced gene. here, preliminary indications are that constructs resembling native genes, rather than cdnas, will provide the best long-term expression. not all these enhancements to the basic liposome have been used together, and not all of them are mutually compatible. however, it seems inevitable that the best liposome-based gene therapy vectors will eventually combine many of these enhancements. the resulting liposome, with a condensed dna-protein complex containing both histonelike proteins and nuclear targeting proteins, a membrane designed for long circulation within the blood, targeting molecules on the surface, and viral fusion proteins in the membrane, will in effect be a completely man-made nonreplicative virus. liposomes with prolonged circulation times: factors affecting uptake by reticuloendothelial and other tissues molecular mechanism of the lipid vesicle longevity in vivo expression of human growth hormone fusion genes in cultured lung endothelial cells and in the lungs of mice lntrons increase transcriptional efficiency in transgenic mice modulation of coronavirus-mediated cell fusion by homeostatic control of cholesterol and fatty acid metabolism gene therapy strategies for pulmonary disease q_' ) effect of cationic cho!e~terol derivatives on gene transfer and protein kinase c activity introduction of liposome-encapsulated sv dna into cells the role of surface charge and hydrophilic groups on liposome clearance in vivo a novel cationic liposome reagent for efficient transfection of mammalian cells herpesviruses: expression of genes in postmitotic brain cells chimerasome-mediated gene transfer in vitro and in vivo flow cytofluorometric investigation of the uptake by hepatocytes and spleen cells of targeted and untargeted liposomes injected intravenously into mice localization and induced expression of fusion genes in the rat lung gene therapy for human inherited disorders: techniques and status treatment of patients with severe combined immunodeficiency due to adenosine deaminase (ada) deficiency by autologous transplantation of genetically modified bone marrow cells liposome-mediated transformation of eukaryotic cells synthetic cationic amphiphiles for liposome-mediated dna transfection basic protein enhances the incorporation of dna into lipid vesicles: model for the formation of primordial cells experimental models of altering the blood-brain barrier direct injection of hepatitis b virus dna into liver induced hepatitis in adult rats activity of amphipathic poly(ethylene glycol) to prolong the circulation time of liposomes depends on the liposome size and is unfavorable for immunoliposome binding to target gene therapy: adenovirus vectors fusion-mediated microinjection of liposome-enclosed dna into cultured cells with the aid of influenza virus glycoproteins sterically stabilized liposomes: a hypothesis on the molecular origin of the extended circulation times recognition of liposomes by cells: in vitro binding and endocytosis mediated by specific lipid headgroups and surface charge density interactions of mammalian cells with lipid dispersions containing novel metabolizable cationic amphiphiles. b iochim. b iophys ph-sensitive, plasma-stable liposomes with relatively prolonged residence in circulation optimized procedures for the coupling of proteins to liposomes vesicles of variable sizes produced by a rapid extrusion procedure karyophilic properties of semliki forest virus nucleocapsid protein human gene therapy direct gene transfer with dna-liposome complexes in melanoma: expression, biologic activity, and lack of toxicity in humans the improved efficient method for introducing macromolecules into cells using hvj (sendai virus) liposomes with gangliosides fusion of influenza virus particles with liposomes: requirement for cholesterol and virus receptors to allow fusion with and lysis of neutral but not negatively charged liposomes gene therapy for the treatment of brain tumors using intra-tumoral transduction with the thymidine kinase gene and intravenous ganciclovir heterologous introns can enhance expression oftransgenes in mice cochleate lipid cylinders: formation by fusion of unilamellar lipid vesicles targeted integration of adeno-associated virus (aav) into human chromosome endocytosis and intracellular fate of liposomes using pyranine as probe aerosol gene delivery in vivo entrapment of high-molecular-mass dna molecules in liposomes for the genetic transformation of animal cells transfer of condensed viral dna into eukaryotic cells using proteoliposomes direct in vivo gene introduction into rat kidney membrane fusion proteins of enveloped animal viruses key: cord- -lh ergpm authors: strauss, james h.; strauss, ellen g. title: gene therapy date: - - journal: viruses and human disease doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: lh ergpm nan molecular genetic studies during the last decades have led to an enormous increase in our understanding of the molecular biology of the replication of viruses. the complete nucleotide sequences of many virus genomes have been determined. information on the origins required for the replication of these genomes, the promoters used to express the information within them, and the packaging signals required for packaging progeny genomes into virions have been established for many. the mechanisms by which viral mrnas are preferentially translated have been explored. together with methods for cloning and manipulating viral genomes, this information has made possible the use of viruses as vectors to express foreign genes. in principle, any virus can be used as a vector, and systems that use a very wide spectrum of virus vectors have been described. dna viruses were first developed as vectors, since it is possible to manipulate the entire genome in the case of smaller viruses, or to use homologous recombination to insert a gene of interest in the case of larger viruses. recent developments now make it possible to manipulate the entire genomes of even very large dna viruses as artificial chromosomes, which potentially makes the use of these large genomes for expression of foreign proteins even more appealing. when complete cdna clones of rna viruses were obtained, it became straightforward to rescue plusstrand viruses from clones because the viral rna itself is infectious, and many such viruses have been used to express proteins. the use of minus-strand rna viruses as vectors was delayed because the virion rna itself is not infectious, but recent developments has made it possible to rescue virus from cloned dna by using coexpression of the appropriate viral proteins in a transfected cell. as a consequence, minusstrand rna viruses have also joined the club of expression systems receiving intense study. retroviruses have also been widely used because of their capacity to integrate into a host chromosome and potentially express foreign proteins indefinitely. a sampling of expression systems and their uses is given here to illustrate the approaches that are being followed. every virus system has advantages and disadvantages as a vector, depending on its intended use. one of the more exciting uses has been the development of viruses as vectors for gene therapy, that is, to correct genetic defects in humans. in the most general sense, gene therapy involves transfer of genetic information into a cell, tissue, organ, or organism with the goal of improving the clinical outcome, either by curing a disease, or alleviating an underlying condition in a patient. although results have been disappointingly slow in coming, such systems offer great promise. this use represents an example of taking these infectious agents that have been the source of much human misery and developing them for the betterment of mankind. such expression systems have a wide variety of other potential uses, however. efforts to engineer viruses to kill cancer cells are also receiving attention. viruses that express foreign proteins have potential uses in the engineering of new vaccines against other pathogens. finally, viral expression systems have proved very useful in the expression of proteins in cell culture that can be used for various studies. a representative sampling of viruses that are being developed as vectors is described next in order to illustrate some of the strengths and weaknesses of the different systems. the viruses used in most clinical trials to date have been the poxviruses, the adenoviruses, and the retroviruses, and these are described here. several other virus systems that may be used in the future for treatment of humans, or that are useful for other purposes, are also described. vaccinia virus is a poxvirus with a large dsdna genome of kb (chapter ). until recently, this genome was too big to handle in one piece in a convenient fashion, and homologous recombination has been used to insert foreign genes into it. the large size of the viral genome, however, does mean that very large pieces of foreign dna can be inserted, while leaving the virus competent for independent replication and assembly. another advantage of the virus is that it has been used to vaccinate hundreds of millions of humans against smallpox. thus, there is much experience with the effects of the virus in humans. although the vaccine virus did cause serious side effects in a small fraction of vaccinees, highly attenuated strains of vaccinia have been developed for use in gene therapy by deleting specific genes associated with virulence. a new approach to the use of poxvirus vectors has been the development of nonhuman poxviruses, such as canarypox virus, as vectors. canarypox virus infection of mammals is abortive and essentially asymptomatic, but foreign genes incorporated into the canarypox virus genome are expressed in amounts that are sufficient to obtain an immunologic response. a variety of approaches have been used to obtain recombinant vaccinia viruses that express a gene of interest, but only the first such method to be used, and one that remains in wide use, is described here. this method is illustrated in fig. . . the thymidine kinase (tk) gene of vaccinia virus is nonessential for growth of the virus in tissue culture. furthermore, deletion of the tk gene results in attenuation of the virus in humans, which is a desirable trait. finally, the tk gene can be either positively or negatively selected gene therapy . construction of recombinant vaccinia virus expression vector. the foreign gene (red) is inserted into a bacterial plasmid adjacent to a vaccinia promoter (black arrow), flanked with sequences from the vaccinia thymidine kinase gene (turquoise). plasmid dna is transfected into cells infected with wild-type (tk + ) vaccinia virus. recombinant progeny from homologous recombination are all tk − , due to interruption of the tk gene, and can be selected by growth in bromodeoxyuridine (budr), since incorporation of budr into tk + vaccinia is lethal. these tk − vaccinia will infect normally and express the foreign gene under control of the vaccinia promoter. adapted from strauss and strauss ( ) figure . on p. . by using different media for propagation of the virus. the starting point is a plasmid clone that contains a copy of the tk gene that has a large internal deletion. in the region of the deletion a vaccinia virus promoter is inserted upstream of a polylinker. the gene of interest is inserted into the polylinker using standard cloning technology. thus, we have the foreign gene downstream of a vaccinia promoter, and the entire insert is flanked by sequences from the vaccinia tk gene. the plasmid containing the cloned tk gene with its foreign gene insert is transfected into cells that have been infected by wild-type vaccinia virus. homologous recombination between the tk gene in the virus and the tk-flanking sequences in the plasmid occurs with a sufficiently high frequency that a reasonable fraction of the progeny have the gene of interest incorporated. these viruses have an inactive tk gene (they are tk − ), because the tk gene has been replaced by the deleted version containing the inserted foreign gene. the next step, then, is to select for viruses that are tk − by growing virus in the presence of bromodeoxyuridine (budr). an active tk enzyme will phosphorylate budr to the monophosphate form, which can be further phosphorylated by cellular enzymes to the triphosphate and incorporated into the viral nucleic acid during replication. incorporation of budr is lethal under the appropriate conditions, and thus viruses that survive this treatment are those in which the tk gene has been inactivated. it is usually necessary to select among the surviving progeny for those that possess the gene of interest, because inactivation of the tk gene can occur spontaneously through deletion or mutation. selection can be accomplished by a plaque lift hybridization assay in which virus in plaques is transferred to filter paper. virus plaques on the filter paper are probed with radiolabeled hybridization probes specific for the inserted gene. virus in plaques that hybridize to the probe is recovered and further passaged. in this way a pure virus stock that will express the gene of interest can be isolated. the herpesviruses also have a large dna genome that is capable of accommodating large inserts of foreign dna. hsv- , in particular, has been studied as an expression vector. recombination has been used to insert foreign genes and to delete virus genes involved in lytic growth or toxicity. because hsv- is neurotropic, it has been considered as a possible vector for the control or eradication of neural cancers. the viral dna does not integrate, and the virus is capable of infecting nonreplicating neurons and being maintained in a latent state, properties that suggest it could be used for this purpose. it might also be used as an expression vector that could produce protein for long periods in neurons, and as such might be useful for the treatment of spinal nerve injury, for example, or for pain therapy. the baculoviruses are insect viruses that have a large dna genome capable of accommodating large dna inserts. foreign dna is inserted by recombination and selection of appropriate viruses. they have been widely used to express high levels of protein in eukaryotic cells (insect cells in this case) that can be used, for example, in crystallization trials to determine protein structure, or to produce protein for immunization of animals, and other uses. recent studies have suggested that baculoviruses might be useful for gene therapy in humans. the viruses will infect a number of human cells resulting in expression of proteins of interest, but the viruses are nonpathogenic in humans, suggesting a level of safety in their possible application. whether problems associated with these viruses, such as low levels of expression and the rejection of them by the immune system, can be overcome remains to be determined. adenovirus infections of humans are common and normally cause only mild symptoms. deletion of virulence genes from adenovirus vectors further attenuates these viruses. in addition, adenovirus vaccines have been used by the military for some years and, therefore, some experience has been gained in the experimental infection of humans by adenoviruses, although gene therapy trials use a different mode of delivery of adenovirus vectors. because of their apparent safety, adenoviruses have been developed for use as vectors in gene therapy trials or for vaccine purposes. two approaches have been used. in one, infectious adenoviruses have been produced that express a gene of interest. in the second approach, suicide vectors are produced that can infect a cell and express the gene of interest, but which are defective and cannot produce progeny virus. suicide vectors cannot spread to neighboring cells, and the infection is therefore limited in scope and in duration. the genome of adenoviruses is dsdna of kbp (chapter ). thus, the genome is smaller than that of poxviruses or other large dna viruses such as the herpesviruses and the baculoviruses and can accommodate correspondingly smaller inserts. however, inserts large enough for most applications can be accommodated. the genome is small enough that the virus can be reconstituted from dna clones. such an approach is inconvenient, however, and homologous recombination is often used to insert the gene of interest into the virus genome. the foreign gene is inserted into the region occupied by either the adenovirus e or e genes, one or both of which are deleted in the vector construct. virus lacking e cannot replicate, and such viruses form suicide vectors. for gene therapy, suicide vectors are normally used so as to prevent the spread of the infection. to prepare the stock of virus lacking e , the virus must be grown in a cell line that expresses e . an overview of this process is shown in fig. . . the complementing cell line, which produces e constitutively, supplies the e needed for replication of the defective adenovirus. the cells are transfected with the defective adenovirus dna and a full yield of progeny virions results. the progeny virus is defective and cannot replicate in normal cells, but it can be amplified by infection of the complementing cell line. on introduction of the virus into a human, the virus will infect cells and express the foreign gene, but the infection is abortive and no progeny virus is formed. the stock of defective virus must be tested to ensure that no replication-competent virus is present, since such virus can arise by recombination between the vector and the e gene in the complementing cell line. adenoviruses with only e deleted are often used to express proteins for vaccine purposes. these e -deleted viruses possess intact e and will replicate in cultured cells and in humans, but are attenuated. because the virus replicates, expression of the immunizing antigen persists for a long time and a good immune response usually results. the procedure for insertion of the gene of interest by homologous recombination resembles that used for the poxviruses. the gene is inserted into a plasmid containing flanking sequences from the e or e region, and transfected into cells infected with adenovirus. recombinant viruses containing the gene of interest are selected and stocks prepared. it is also possible to transfect cells with the e or e expression cassette together with dna clones encoding the rest of the adenovirus genome, in which case homologous recombination results in the production of virus. in the case of insertions into e , cells that express e must be used to produce the recombinant virus. adeno-associated viruses (aavs) have a single-stranded dna genome of . kb (chapter ). they normally require coinfection of a cell by a helper virus, usually an adenovirus or a herpesvirus. they are being developed as expression vectors because they are not pathogenic in humans and because they normally integrate into the host-cell genome in a specific region, thus minimizing the problems of insertional mutagenesis. the genome size is small enough to be readily manipulated as a dna clone, but the small size also limits the amount of dna that can be inserted and therefore the applicability of the virus for gene transfer experiments. a related problem is that for expression studies, the genome is normally deleted for the aav genes with only the ends that function as promoter sites retained. however, site-specific integration requires the activity of the rep protein. nonetheless, the system is sufficiently attractive that efforts to develop aav as a gene therapy vector continue and the virus has been used in a number of clinical trials, as described later. retrovirus-based expression systems offer great promise because the retroviral genome integrates into the host-cell chromosome during infection and, in the case of the simple retroviruses at least, remains there as a mendelian gene that is passed on to progeny cells on cell division. thus, there is the potential for permanent expression of the inserted gene of interest. the essential components of a retrovirus vector are the long terminal repeats (ltrs), the packaging sequences known as ψ, the primer-binding site, and the sequences required for jumping by the reverse transcriptase during reverse transcription to form the dsdna copy of the genome (chapter ). the process of creating and packaging a retrovirus-based expression cassette is illustrated in fig. . . a packaging cell line is created that expresses the retroviral gag, pol, and env genes, but whose mrnas do not contain the packaging signal and so cannot be packaged. the vector dna/ rna is created by modifying a dna clone of a retrovirus to contain the gene of interest in place of the gag-pol-env genes. in the process, all of the essential cis-acting signals required for packaging, reverse transcription, and integration are retained. the foreign gene can be under the control of the ltrs, or it can be under the control of another promoter positioned in the insert upstream of it. the resulting dna clone is transfected into the packaging cell line, and a producer cell line isolated that expresses the vector dna as well as the helper dna. vector rna transcribed from the vector dna is packaged into retroviral particles, using the proteins expressed from the helper dna. these particles are infectious and can be used to infect other cells or to transfer genes into a human. on infection of cells by the packaged vector, the vector rna is reverse transcribed into dna that integrates into the host-cell chromosome, where it can be expressed under the control of the promoters that it contains. the limitation on the size of the insert is about kb, the upper limit of rna size that can be packaged. although murine leukemia viruses are not known to cause disease in man, it has been found that these viruses will cause tumors in immunosuppressed subhuman primates. thus, it is thought to be essential that there be no replication-competent virus in stocks used to treat humans. replication-competent virus can arise during packaging of the vector by recombination between the vector and the retroviral sequences used to produce gag-pol-env. at the current time, preparations of packaged vectors are screened to ensure that replicationcompetent viruses are not present. efforts are being made to reduce the incidence of recombination during packaging in order to simplify the procedure. one approach is to develop vectors that have very little sequence in common with the helper sequences, in order to reduce the incidence of homologous recombination. a second approach is to separate the gag-pol sequences from the env sequences in the helper cell. in this case, recombination between three separate dna fragments in the producer cell (that encoding gag-pol, that encoding env, and sequences in the vector) are required in order to give rise to replication-competent retrovirus. in gene therapy trials that use retroviruses, it has been found that the expression of the foreign gene in humans is often downregulated after a period of months. attempts are being made to identify promoters that will not be downregulated. different promoters might be required for different uses, and promoters that target transcription to particular cell types would be useful. a major problem with retroviral vectors is that simple retroviruses will only infect dividing cells. although they enter cells and are reverse transcribed into dna, the dna copy of the genome can enter the nucleus only during cell division. in many gene therapy treatments, it is desirable to infect stem cells in order to maintain expression of the therapeutic gene indefinitely. because stem cells divide relatively infrequently, it is difficult to infect a high proportion of them by vectors used to date. attempts are being made to identify methods to stimulate stem cells to divide during ex vivo treatment, so that a larger fraction of them can be infected. a second approach is to develop lentivirus vectors. lentiviruses, which include hiv, can infect nonreplicating cells and could potentially infect nondividing stem cells during ex vivo treatment. lentivirus vectors could also be useful for therapy involving other nondividing cells, such as neurons. it would be of considerable utility to be able to target retroviruses to specific cells. one possible approach to this is to replace all or part of the external domains of the retroviral surface glycoprotein with a monoclonal antibody that is directed against an antigen expressed only on the target cells. in principle, this approach is feasible, but whether it can be developed into something practical is as yet an open question. if specific cells could be infected, it would allow protocols in which the therapeutic gene would be expressed only in cells where it would be most useful. it would also allow the specific killing of cells such as tumor cells or hivinfected cells. for example, the retrovirus could express a gene that rendered the cell sensitive to toxic drugs such as budr. a retrovirus vector that expressed such a gene could also be useful for conventional gene therapy, because it would allow the infected cells to be killed if the infection process threatened to get out of hand. the genomes of plus-strand rna viruses are selfreplicating molecules that replicate in the cytoplasm, and they can express very high levels of protein. these properties make them potentially valuable as expression vectors. the alphaviruses possess a genome of single-strand rna of about kb (chapter ). their genomes can be easily manipulated as cdna clones, and infectious rna can be transcribed from these clones by rna polymerases, either in vivo or in vitro. rna transcribed in vitro can be transfected into cells and give rise to a full yield of virus, whereas rna transcribed in vivo will begin to replicate and produce virus. the structural proteins are made from a subgenomic mrna, making it easy to insert a foreign gene under the control of the subgenomic promoter. two approaches that have been used are illustrated in fig. . . in one approach, a second subgenomic promoter is inserted into the genome downstream of the structural proteins, or between the structural proteins and the nonstructural proteins ( fig. . c). two subgenomic mrnas are transcribed, one for the structural proteins and the second for the gene of interest. the size of the insert must be relatively small, on the order of nucleotides or less, because longer rnas are not packaged efficiently. however, this system has the advantage that the resulting double subgenomic virus is an infectious virus that can be propagated and maintained without helpers. a second approach is to delete the viral structural proteins and replace them with the gene of interest. in this case, there is room for an insert of about kb that will still allow the resulting replicon to be packaged. the replicon is capable of independent replication, and transcription of a subgenomic messenger results in expression of the gene of interest. the replicon constitutes a suicide vector. it cannot be packaged unless the cells are coinfected with a helper to supply the structural proteins, or unless a packaging cell line that expresses the viral structural proteins is used. alphavirus replicons can be extremely efficient in expressing a foreign gene. in some cases as much as % of the protein of a cell can be converted to the foreign protein expressed by the replicon over a period of about hours. wild-type replicons are cytolytic in vertebrate cells, inducing apoptosis, and the infection dies out. however, replicons have been produced with mutations in the replicase proteins that are not cytolytic and will produce the protein of interest indefinitely. thus, a wide sprectrum of choices is available, and the system chosen can be adapted to the needs of a particular experiment or treatment. viral expression systems would be more useful if they could be directed to specific cell types. an approach that uses monoclonal antibodies to direct sindbis virus to specific cells has been described. protein a, produced by staphylococcus aureas, binds with high affinity to igg. it is an important component of the virulence of the bacterium because it interferes with the host immune system. the igg-binding domain of protein a has been inserted into one of the viral glycoproteins. virions containing this domain are unable to infect cells using the normal receptor. however, the virus will bind igg monoclonal antibodies. if an antibody directed against a cell surface component is bound, the virus will infect cells expressing this protein at the cell surface. thus, this system has the potential to direct the virus to a specific cell type. one of the advantages of this approach is that the virus, once made, can be used with many different antibodies and thus directed against a variety of cell types. this approach is potentially applicable to any enveloped virus, and perhaps to nonenveloped viruses as well. a modification of the alphavirus system is to use a dna construct containing the replicon downstream of a promoter for a cellular rna polymerase, rather than using packaged rna replicons. on transfection of a cell with the dna, the replicon rna is launched when it is transcribed from the dna by cellular enzymes. once produced, the rna replicates independently and produces the subgenomic mrna that is translated into the gene of interest. as described in chapter , naked dna can be used to transfect muscle cells and perhaps other cells. plus-strand viruses that do not produce subgenomic mrnas, such as the picornaviruses and flaviviruses, present different problems for development as vectors. the translated product from the gene of interest must either be incorporated into the polyprotein produced by the virus and provisions made for its excision, or tricks must be used to express the gene of interest independently. two approaches with poliovirus will be described as examples of how such viruses might be used as vectors. poliovirus replicons have been constructed by deleting the region encoding the structural proteins and replacing this sequence with that for a foreign gene. the foreign gene must be in phase with the remainder of the poliovirus polyprotein, and the cleavage site recognized by the viral a protease is used to excise the foreign protein from the polyprotein. because the poliovirus replicon lacks a full complement of the structural genes (it is a suicide vector), packaging to produce particles requires infection of a cell that expresses the polioviral structural proteins by some mechanism. a construct that uses this approach to express the cytokine tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnf-α) is illustrated in fig. sali i nonstructural proteins structural proteins exogeneous gene to be expressed vpg figure . generation of poliovirus replicons for expression of foreign genes in motor neurons. based on an earlier construct to express interleukin- via a poliovirus replicon, the gene for wild-type murine tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnf-α) was positioned between the vp and a proteins of poliovirus, replacing vp and vp . it was flanked on either side by sites for cleavage by the poliovirus a protease. these constructs were injected into transgenic mice expressing the poliovirus receptor, and expression of murine tnf-α was monitored. adapted from bledsoe et al. ( ) . clone" in which a dna copy of the viral genome is positioned downstream of a promoter for t rna polymerase is modified by replacing the genes for vp and vp with the gene for tnfα. recognition sites for the poliovirus a protease are positioned on both sides of the tnf-α gene. the tnf-α protein is produced as part of the poliovirus polyprotein, and cleaved from the polyprotein by the a protease. packaged replicons were used to infect transgenic mice that expressed the polio receptor (chapter ). one of the interests of this system is that poliovirus exhibits an extraordinary tropism for motor neurons in the central nervous system (cns) (chapter ). the packaged replicons, on introduction into the cns, infected only motor neurons, and therefore the foreign gene was expressed only in motor neurons. such replicons may be useful to treat cns diseases in which motor neurons are affected. a second approach to the use of poliovirus replicons is to use a second internal ribosome entry site (ires) (chapter ) to initiate the synthesis of the nonstructural proteins. if the foreign gene replaces the structural genes, it will be translated from the ′ end of the genome. if the poliovirus nonstructural genes are placed downstream of a second ires, internal initiation at this ires results in production of a polyprotein for the nonstructural proteins. this approach is similar to the approach shown in fig. . , where the structural proteins are replaced by a gene of interest. the coronaviruses have long been considered as potential candidates for experimental expression vectors or as candidate vaccines. the viruses have the largest nonsegmented rna viral genomes, up to kb (see also chapter ), which is both an advantage in that they could potentially accommodate a large amount of heterologous nucleic acid, and a disadvantage due to the difficulties of manipulating large rna molecules. the essential genes are arranged ′-replicase-s-e-m-n- ′, and are interspersed with a number of nonessential genes which are group specific. recent studies have revealed a number of characteristics which make them even more attractive as vector candidates. the first was that the deletion of the nonessential genes is sufficiently attenuating that no further mutations in the essential genes are required to produce an avirulent virus. second, as the precise domains on the s protein which interact with the species-dependent cellular receptors were determined, it was found that both species and tissue specificity could be altered by relatively minor changes in the sequence of s. third, it is possible to rearrange the linear order of the genes, and while this altered the relative amounts of the products, it reduces the possibility that the vector (vaccine) could undergo recombination with field strains. fourth, it is possible to insert heterologous genes anywhere in the genome by simply incorporating a cassette comprised of the gene of interest preceded by the specific intergenic sequence of the parental virus. the generation of a recombinant mhv (mouse hepatitis virus) encoding renilla luciferase is shown in figure . to illustrate the strategies employed. these include maintenance of a replication defective genome as a bacterial plasmid under the control of a t promoter, transcription of rna in vitro, electroporation of rna into feline cells previously infected with a murine coronavirus engineered to infect feline cells, in vivo recombination, and selection for recombinants on murine cells. due to the high frequency of recombination in coronaviruses, many recombinants are unstable and not suitable for use as vaccines. however, the location of the foreign gene within the genome, the particular coronavirus used, and the identity of the particular heterologous gene all have significant effects on stability, and coronaviruses may yet prove to be useful for targeted gene delivery. in minus-strand rna viruses, the genomic rna is not itself infectious. ribonucleoprotein containing the n, p, and l genes is required for replication of the viral rna, and thus for infectivity, and only recently have methods been devised to recover virus from cdna clones. a schematic diagram of how virus can be recovered from dna clones of the rhabdovirus vesicular stomatitis virus (vsv) (chapter ) is shown in fig. . . a cell is transfected with a set of cdna clones that together express n, p, and l as well as the genomic or antigenomic rna. the antigenomic rna usually works better, probably because it does not hybridize to the mrnas being produced from the plasmids. encapsidation of the antigenomic rna by n, p, and l to form nucleocapsids allows it to replicate and produce genomic rna that is also encapsidated. synthesis of mrnas from the genomic rna, together with continued replication, results in a complete virus replication cycle and production of infectious progeny virus that have as their genome the rna supplied as a cdna clone. the yield of infectious virus is small, but sufficient to isolate individual plaques and thus obtain viruses from the cdna clones. the ability to rescue virus from a cdna clone makes it possible to manipulate the viral genome. since the rhabdovirus genome is transcribed into multiple mrnas, one for each gene, and the transcription signals recognized by the enzyme are well understood, it is relatively simple to add or delete genes. a modified vsv that was produced by using dna clones is illustrated in fig. . . in this vsv, the surface glycoprotein present on the vsv particle, called g, has been deleted and replaced with cd , the cell surface protein that is used as a receptor by hiv. in addition a new gene has been inserted, the gene encoding the hiv coreceptor cxcr , so that the virus now contains six genes. the virions produced figure . construction of a coronavirus expression plasmid. an attenuated and nonreplicating plasmid from mhv is constructed in which the ′ end of the orf sequence is fused to the last codons of he. in addition, all of the accessory protein genes are deleted, and the gene for renilla luciferase (rl) inserted. rna is transcribed in vitro from this plasmid using t polymerase and the rna electroporated onto feline cells which have been infected with mhv virus in which the spike s protein has been mutated to recognize receptors on feline cells (fmhv). after hours these cells are plated out onto a monolayer of murine cells to select for coronaviruses that have undergone recombination between the plasmid and the helper virus. recombinants are plaque-purified and stocks grown. are unable to infect the cells normally infectable by vsv because they lack the g protein. however, because they contain the hiv receptor and coreceptor on their surface, they do infect cells that express the hiv glycoprotein on their surface, such as cells infected by hiv. since vsv is a lytic virus, the hiv-infected cells are killed. viruses have been widely used as vectors to express a variety of genes in cultured cells. this use is of long standing and has led to important results. of perhaps more interest are efforts to develop viruses as vectors for medical purposes. the manipulation of virus genomes to develop new vaccines is very promising. although no licensed human vaccines have been introduced using this technology, clinical trials are ongoing and it is to be expected that several such vaccines will be licensed in the near future. there is also expectation that viruses will be useful as vectors for gene therapy, and numerous clinical trials are taking place. the results to date have been disappointing, but the promise remains. figure . producing a mutant vsv targeted to kill hiv-infected cells. (a) genome of a rhabdovirus in which the glycoprotein g gene has been replaced with sequences encoding cd and cxcr , the hiv primary receptor and coreceptor, and a schematic of a cdna clone containing the genome sequence (cdna copy of vrna). (b) a susceptible cell is infected with vaccinia virus expressing the t rna polymerase, and four separate plasmids: the mutant genome plasmid from which full-length vc (plus strand) rna is transcribed, and three individual plasmids expressing vsv n protein, p protein, and l protein, all under the control of t promoters. (c) plus-strand mutant vcrna is transcribed and encapsidated with n, p, and l. the rnp then replicates and both viral proteins and cd and cxcr are expressed from individual mrnas transcribed from genome sense rnps. virions bud from the cell and (d) cannot infect a new susceptible cell as before in fig. . , but can infect an hiv-infected cell expressing hiv env proteins on its surface. infection with vsv is cytolytic and the hiv-infected cell dies. adapted from conzelmann and meyers ( ) . the genome by virus vectors, often by recombinant vaccinia virus. these studies have resulted in an understanding of the two viral proteases within the hcv genome, the processing pathway through which the polyprotein translated from the genome is processed, the function of the viral ires, and the function of the viral replicase, among other results. the use of virus vectors means that such studies on hcv can be conveniently conducted in mammalian cells under conditions that are related to the natural growth cycle of the virus. norwalk virus is another virus for which there is no cell culture system. the virus can be grown only in human volunteers, again limiting the range of studies that can be done. virus particles isolated from the stools of infected volunteers are often degraded and difficult to purify to homogeneity. thus, structural studies of infectious virus have been limited. expression of cdna copies of the structural proteins of the virus in baculovirus vectors has allowed the production of large amounts of viral structural proteins that spontaneously assemble into virus-like particles. these virus-like particles have been studied by cryoelectron microscopy, and detailed information on the structure of the virus has been obtained in this way. baculoviruses are also widely used to prepare large amounts of protein for crystallographic studies. such studies require mg or more of protein, and the baculovirus system can be used to prepare such quantities. an advantage of the system is that the protein is made in a eukaryotic cell, which can be important for obtaining the protein folded into its correct three-dimensional conformation. also of importance is the use of secretion sequences in the constructs that lead to the secretion of the protein from the infected cell, making it easier to purify the protein. even for viruses for which cell culture systems exist, the use of virus vectors that express to higher levels can be advantageous. there are cell culture systems in which rubella virus will grow and plaque, and there is a full-length cdna clone of rubella virus from which infectious rna can be recovered. however, the cell culture systems produce only low amounts of virus proteins, especially of the nonstructural proteins, and it has been difficult to study the expression and processing of the nonstructural polyprotein. expression of the nonstructural region of rubella virus in vaccinia virus vectors or in sindbis virus vectors has allowed the production of much larger quantities of the polyprotein precursor. this has been used to determine the processing pathways, the identification of the virus nonstructural protease, and the identification of the cleavage sites that are cleaved by this protease. as a final example, vaccinia virus vectors and sindbis virus vectors have been used to map t-cell epitopes for a number of viruses (chapter ). for this, defined regions of a viral protein are expressed in order to determine whether a particular t-cell epitope lies within that region. much effort is being put into the development of viruses as agents to immunize against other infectious agents, including other viruses. such an approach has a number of advantages. there is a large body of experience in the use of attenuated or avirulent viruses as vaccines. many of these, such as vaccinia virus or the yellow fever d virus, both of which have been used to immunize many millions of people, can be potentially developed as vectors to express other antigens, such as those of hcv or hiv. use of a live virus as a vector to express antigens of other pathogens has many of the advantages of live virus vaccines. this includes the fact that only low initial doses are required, and therefore the expense of vaccine production may be less; that subsequent virus replication leads to the expression of large amounts of the antigen over an extended period of time, and the antigen folds in a more or less native conformation; and that a full range of immunity, including production of ctls as well as of humoral immunity, usually develops. no human vaccines have been licensed that use such recombinant viruses, but there are ongoing clinical trials of several potential vaccines. several trials of candidate vaccines against hiv have been conducted that use vaccinia virus or retrovirus vectors to express the hiv surface glycoprotein. these trials have been moderately successful in the sense that immune responses to hiv glycoprotein were obtained, but these immune responses were not particularly vigorous and it is not known if the immune response is protective. hiv is able to persist in infected patients despite a vigorous immune response, and sterilizing immunity might be required. further, the hiv surface glycoprotein is highly glycosylated and neutralizing antibodies are difficult to obtain. studies in monkeys with related vaccines against simian immunodeficiency virus have given mixed results. in most such trials, immune responses were generated, but these were not fully protective. one recent trial did generate a protective response, however, giving hope that continued efforts in this direction will ultimately work out. recent studies with anti-hiv drugs given very soon after infection found that limiting the replication of the virus early appears to allow the generation of a protective immune response in at least some patients. although such studies remain preliminary, they do suggest that a nonsterilizing immune response that restricts virus replication early might prove to be protective. other clinical trials have also tested poxviruses as vectors. vaccinia virus has been used in an attempt to immunize against epstein-barr virus, and canarypox virus has been used as a vector for potential immunization against rabies virus. although no licensed human vaccines use poxvirus vectors, veterinary vaccines that are based on poxvirus vectors are in use. one such vaccine consists of vaccinia virus that expresses the rabies surface glycoprotein. this vaccine has been used to immunize wildlife. the recombinant vaccinia viruses are spread in baits that are eaten by wild animals that serve as reservoirs of the virus, such as skunks, raccoons, foxes, and coyotes. this approach has been useful in limiting the spread of rabies in wildlife populations. other poxvirus-based vaccines include vaccinia virus vectors to protect cattle against vesicular stomatitis virus and rinderpest virus, and to immunize chickens against influenza virus; pigeonpox virus vectors to immunize chickens against newcastle disease virus; fowlpox virus vectors to immunize chickens against influenza, newcastle disease, and infectious bursal disease viruses; a capripox virus vector to immunize pigs against pseudorabies virus; and a canarypox virus vector used to immunize dogs against canine distemper virus. thus, it should be possible to develop human vaccines based on poxvirus vectors. in a quite different approach, clinical trials of a novel vaccine against japanese encephalitis (je) virus have been conducted. je is a scourge in parts of asia, causing a large number of deaths and neurological sequelae in people that survive the encephalitis (chapter ). vaccines in widespread use are inactivated virus vaccines, and the difficulties in preparing the large amounts of material required and delivering it to large segments of the population are significant. an attenuated virus vaccine, sa - - , has been prepared in china by passing the virus in cultured cells and in rodent tissues. this vaccine is safe but overattenuated, so that the effectiveness is only % after a single dose. in contrast, the yellow fever virus (yf) d vaccine has an effectiveness of virtually % after a single dose, and immunity is long lasting, probably lifelong. a candidate je vaccine has been developed that consists of the d strain of yf virus in which the prm and e genes have been replaced with those of je, as illustrated in fig. . . four chimeric viruses were tested. the je structural proteins were taken from either the virulent nakayama strain or from the attenuated sa- - - strain. in both cases, chimeras containing all three structural proteins from je were tested infectious d yellow fever cdna clone japanese encephalitis (nakayama) cdna (virulent) japanese encephalitis (sa) cdna (human vaccine strain) figure . construction of yellow fever/japanese encephalitis chimeric viruses. starting with the full-length cdna clone for d yellow fever virus, a number of chimeric viruses were constructed in which the m and e proteins were replaced with those of different strains of japanese encephalitis virus. however, when c, m, and e of je were put into the yellow fever clone, no viable virus was obtained. both prme chimeras grew well in tissue culture, and were neutralized by anti-je antiserum. yf/je-s prm-e was attenuated, and did not kill adult mice by intracerebral inoculation, but yf/je-n prm-e was neurovirulent. prnt is the log reciprocal of the dilution yielding % plaque reduction neutralization, based on pfu on llv-mk cells, using either yf or je hyperimmune ascitic fluid. adapted from chambers et al. ( ) . as well as chimeras that contained only prm and e from je. chimeras containing c, prm, and e from je were not viable, whereas chimeras containing only prm and e from je were viable and grew well in culture (fig. . ). the viable chimeras were first tested in mice. the chimera containing the nakayama strain proteins caused lethal encephalitis in mice, as does the yf d virus (even though it is safe for use in humans). however, the chimera containing prm and e from the attenuated je strain was fully attenuated in mice and did not cause illness. the fully attenuated chimera was chosen for testing in monkeys, and was found to be safe and to protect monkeys against challenge with je virus. clinical trials of this candidate vaccine have taken place in humans. the vaccine appears to be safe and more effective than the je vaccines now in use. furthermore, this approach is applicable to other flaviviruses, such as the dengue viruses, for which no licensed vaccines exist, or west nile virus, which spread recently to the americas where it caused a number of fatal cases of human encephalitis. recombinant yf d expressing the prm and e proteins of all four serotypes of dengue viruses and recombinant viruses expressing prm and e of west nile virus are also in clinical trials with encouraging results. yet another possible approach to developing new generations of vaccines using the power of biotechnology is to attenuate a virus by making changes in the laboratory that are expected to cripple the virus. such an approach can be used with virtually any virus. a candidate vaccine strain of dengue virus has been constructed by making deletions in the ′ nontranslated region of the genome that attenuate the virus, and such viruses are being tested in early trials. a number of genetic diseases result from the failure to produce a specific protein, usually due to a single defective gene. one of the more exciting possible uses for virus vectors is for the expression of a missing protein as a cure for the genetic defect associated with its absence. some of these "monogenic diseases" that might be curable through the use of gene therapy are listed in table . . for successful treatment, expression of the missing protein must be long-term and preferably lifelong, the levels of protein produced must be sufficient to alleviate the symptoms of the disease, the protein must be expressed in or translocated to those cells that require the normal protein for function, and infection with the virus vector must be free of disease symptoms. because of the requirement for long-term expression, viruses whose dna integrates into the host chromosome, such as the simple retroviruses as well as the lentiviruses, and adeno-associated viruses, offer the most promising system for many diseases. to date, several hundred patients have been treated with vectors based on moloney murine leukemia virus in clinical trials. clinical trials have also been conducted that use adenovirus. adeno-associated virus, poxvirus, and herpesvirus vectors (fig. . ) . clinical trials in humans, which require extensive prior testing in animals, are divided into three phases. phase i involves relatively few, usually healthy individuals. the objective of phase i trials is to test the safety of a vaccine or treatment as well as the dosage that is tolerated, and the individuals are closely monitored during the trial. phase ii trials involve more individuals and test the efficacy of the treatment, and patients are again closely monitored. if a treatment passes both of these tests, phase iii trials can begin in which thousands of individuals are treated to test the efficacy of treatment. virtually all of the clinical trials in gene therapy conducted to date are phase i or phase ii; fewer than % of trials have progressed to phase iii (fig. . ) , and no gene therapy treatments have been licensed to date. in addition to the possible treatment of genetic defects, virus vectors may also be useful for the treatment of a number of acquired diseases. these include cancer, hiv infection, parkinson's disease, injuries to the spinal cord, and vascular diseases such as restenosis and arteriosclerosis. a partial listing of acquired diseases that have been suggested as candidates for gene therapy is given in table . , and the number of trials for a number of different conditions is shown in fig. . . despite the large efforts to use gene therapy in clinical settings, the progress has been disappointingly slow, and many of the trials have been aborted due to unforeseen adverse consequences. nevertheless, as infectious clones of viruses continue to be developed, a large body of research is being devoted to construction of vectors, especially now to second and third generation vectors, as the problems associated with the initial systems are becoming clear. a comparison of various virus systems that are being considered for gene therapy is shown in tables . and . . naked dna has also been used in a recent trial for coronary artery disease, and the properties of this system are included in table . . most of the modern vectors have had more and more of the dispensable viral genes deleted. deletion of these genes reduces pathogenicity, and prevents the production of immunogenic viral antigens. often only the gene of interest and the viral transcriptional regulatory elements are left, and to prepare the vectors for use in trials, all other functions must be supplied by a helper virus or a packaging cell line. another advantage of such stripped down vectors is the fact that it is improbable that the vector can recombine with wild-type viruses, either exogenous or endogenous, to cause disease. a partial listing of clinical trials that attempt to treat several different genetic defects by using virus vectors to deliver specific genes is given in table . . there have been few successes to date and the table is more of a compendium of the variety of genes and diseases, as well as the variety of delivery schemes, that are being examined. also included in the table is an impending trial for the vaccination of humans against hpiv- using a bovine virus. retroviruses have been used in a number of clinical trials to genetically tag cells. although this use does not fall within the narrow definition of gene therapy, it does provide background experience in the use of retrovirus vectors in humans. one such use has been in bone marrow transplantation for leukemia. severe forms of leukemia can sometimes be treated by ablation of the hematopoietic system with chemotherapy and/or x-rays in order to kill all tumor cells, followed by reconstitution of the system by transplantation of bone marrow from a compatible donor. although often successful, the leukemia sometimes recurs and it is desirable to know whether it recurs because of incomplete destruction of the patient's leukemic cells or whether the donor cells are the source of the leukemia. experiments in which the donor cells have been tagged using retroviruses that express a marker gene have been used to answer this question, which is important for the design of transplantation protocols. patients who lack the enzyme adenosine deaminase (ada) will die early in life unless treated. lack of ada results in the failure to clear adenosine from the body and, consequently, the accumulation of adenosine in cells throughout the body. adenosine is toxic at high concentrations, producing a variety of symptoms. the most serious symptom results from the extreme sensitivity of t cells to elevated adenosine concentrations. loss of t cells results in scid, severe combined immunodeficiency. both ctl responses (which are t-cell based) and humoral responses (which require t-helper cells) are impaired. people with scid syndrome are unable to mount an immunologic response to infectious agents, and scid is invariably fatal early in life unless treated in some way. ada deficiency accounts for about % of scid syndromes in humans. scid can be treated by bone marrow transplantation if a suitable donor can be found. in the case of scid due to ada deficiency, weekly or twice weekly injections of ada somia ( ), jolly ( ) , and bukreyev et al. ( ) . source: verma and weitzman ( ) , jolly ( ), boulaiz et al. ( ) , hu ( ) . mixed with polyethylene glycol (peg) have been used to successfully treat about patients in whom bone marrow transplantation cannot be used because of the lack of compatible donors. of these, about patients have also been treated with retroviral vectors that express ada. in these experiments, t cells were taken from the patient (or in the case of three newborns, umbilical cord cells were used), infected ex vivo with the retrovirus vector using a number of different cell culture and infection protocols, and the cells reinfused into the patient. many of the patients continue to produce ada from the vector several years after treatment. however, all of the patients continue to receive ada-peg injections, which is known to be an effective treatment. although some patients who have received retroviral therapy have been partially weaned from the supplementary ada-peg, it appears that some of these, and perhaps all, do not produce enough ada to be cured. thus, although no cures were effected in these early trials, the results were encouraging and suggested that future protocols might be more successful. two areas of retroviral therapy that needed improvement were to increase the efficiency with which stem cells are infected, and the need to prevent the retroviral promoter from being downregulated. a more recent trial involving two scid-ada patients in italy was more successful (table . ). two infants for whom no compatible donor existed and for whom no peg-ada treatment was available were treated with improved retroviral therapy. both patients developed functional immune systems and no adverse events have been reported. the improved results appear to arise from improved protocols as well as to selection in the patient for lymphoid progenitor cells that expressed adequate amounts of ada. scid disease can also be caused by a failure to produce the receptor for the cytokine interleukin- (chapter ). thirteen scid patients with this deficiency were treated in two different clinical trials with retroviruses that expressed the defective gene (table . ). the results illustrate the highs and the lows of gene therapy trials. all patients developed functional immune systems, and the trials at first appeared to be a complete success. however, three of the patients later developed t-cell leukemia and one has died of the leukemia. the leukemia was at first suspected to arise from insertional mutagenesis, a chronic worry with vectors that insert into the host dna, and many gene therapy trials that used retroviral vectors were suspended. recent studies indicate that the disease is not due to insertional mutagenesis, however, but rather due to the oncogenic potential of the il rg gene itself, as studies have shown that overexpression of this gene in mice results in leukemia. cystic fibrosis results from loss of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (cftr), which regulates epithelial transport of ions and water. although lack of this protein results in damage to the epithelium in many parts of the body, the most serious manifestation is lung disease accompanied by chronic bacterial infection of the airways. clinical trials using adenoviral vectors, which infect respiratory epithelium, to express cftr in the lungs have been conducted. the first such studies were encouraging, but a more recent trial that was carefully controlled found no relief of symptoms. inflammation produced by the high doses of adenovirus used in trials is also a problem. it is difficult to get efficient delivery to the lung, especially through the thick mucus that is a characteristic of cystic fibrosis. in addition, the expression needs to continue for the life of the patient, which means either a very stable (integrated?) gene being expressed, or a system of repeated administration of vector that can be tolerated without immunologic consequences. lentiviruses have been proposed as an attractive vector, but there have been concerns about probable pathogenesis due to the lentivirus itself. however, for this disease, the most promising mode of gene delivery so far developed has been dna compacted into nanoparticles with polycations, in particular peg-polylysine, nicknamed "polyplexes." a clinical trial in humans used cftr polyplexes, and the phase i trial showed no adverse effects. for this disease a nonviral approach may well be the best solution. porteus et al. ( ), foster et al. ( , bukreyev et al. ( ) . duchenne muscular dystrophy (dmd) is a severe muscle wasting disorder due to the lack of functional dystrophin protein. it occurs in / male births. there are a number of difficulties in attempting to cure dmd with gene therapy, including the size of the protein, which is encoded in a cdna of kb, and the need to deliver the vector to a large proportion of the body mass, that is to all of the striated muscles and cardiac muscle. several approaches have been tried, and the first human clinical phase i trial has just been completed (see table . ). in this study, a plasmid containing the entire gene under the control of a cmv promoter was injected intramuscularly. although only low levels of dystrophin expression were observed in out of patients, there was no evidence for adverse reactions and the trial was considered a success. a second approach has been to attempt to introduce the gene in an aav vector, especially in one of the many human isolates to which most of the population show no preexisting immunity, or into a nonhuman aav. however, here the size of the gene is a problem, but it has been shown that the dystrophin protein contains a large number of repeated elements ( fig. . ) and that "mini-dystrophin" and "microdystrophin" are functionally active in the mouse model for the disease, the mdx mouse. low-pressure intravenous injection of aav expressing micro-dystrophin into a mouse could transfect % of muscle, but high titers of the aav vector were required. a phase i/ii clinical trial has been initiated for delivery of micro-dystrophin in aav under the control of a cmv promoter into human patients, but there are no results as yet. a third approach attacks the specific nature of the genetic defect. it has been shown that % of dmd is caused by a frameshift mutation in one of the exons, such that no dystrophin is produced. since severely truncated dystrophin (like micro-dystrophin) can be functional (fig. . ), therapy to get rid of the exon causing the problem is being developed. modified antisense oligonucleotides (aos) can be used to alter the splicing pattern of the gene such that the exon in which the frameshift occurs is skipped, thereby restoring the reading frame. following success of an ao with a ′o-methyl-phosphorothiolate backbone ( ome aos) to restore function in the mdx mouse, two clinical phase i trials have been initiated, one in the netherlands using ome aos and one in great britain using morpholino aos. since both are targeting the exclusion of exon , it will be possible to directly compare the two chemically modified aos. rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic, progressive inflammatory disease of the joints. an estimated million people in the united states suffer from it. there is no cure. drug therapies are used that ameliorate the symptoms, but most of these drugs have side effects and cannot be taken indefinitely. if the disease progresses far enough, joint replacement may be required. the disease is associated with the release of inflammatory cytokines in the affected joints. clinical trials have started that use retroviruses to deliver the gene for an anti-arthritic cytokine gene to the joints. the gene encodes the interleukin (il)- receptor antagonist, which inhibits the biological actions of both il- α and il- β. it is hoped that such treatment might damp out the disease or at least keep it from progressing. (b) mini-dystrophin from a duchenne muscular dystrophy patient who was only mildly impaired. (c) micro-dystrophin engineered for delivery in aav vectors. adapted from figure in foster et al. ( ) . patients who have deficiencies in enzymes that participate in the urea cycle have increased concentrations of ammonia in the blood. high concentrations of ammonia result in various symptoms, which can include behavioral disturbances or coma. severe deficiencies in these enzymes result in early death, but moderate deficiencies can result in delayed appearance of symptoms and may be partially controlled by diet. one such enzyme is ornithine transcarbamylase (otc), which is found on the x chromosome. deficiencies in otc are therefore more common in males than in females. gene therapy trials that use virus vectors recently received a major setback when a relatively fit -year-old male with an inherited deficiency for otc died days after an adenovirus vector was injected into his liver. a high dose of adenovirus ( × ) that expressed otc was injected in an effort to achieve adequate levels of enzyme production. the virus unexpectedly spread widely and a systemic inflammatory response developed, inducing a fever of . °c. he went into a coma, his lungs filled with fluid, and he died of asphyxiation. this unfortunate result makes clear the possible drawbacks to experimental treatments and the difficulties in designing protocols that allow an adequate margin of safety while trying to achieve a clinically relevant result. a gene therapy trial in patients with heart disease gave very encouraging results. although this study did not involve virus vectors, a brief description will be given since it serves as an incentive for continuation of gene therapy trials. coronary artery disease is common in older people. angioplasty or bypass surgery is used to open clogged arteries, but in many patients the arteries close up again (a process called restenosis). thirteen patients with chronic chest pain who had failed angioplasty or bypass surgery or both were injected in the heart muscle with dna encoding vascular endothelial growth factor. this factor promotes the growth of blood vessels, a process called angiogenesis. two months after treatment, all patients exhibited an improvement in vascularization of damaged areas of the heart, as shown by imaging and mapping studies. all patients reported a decrease in disease symptoms, and all had an improved performance in treadmill tests. although the number of patients is small, the uniformly positive results are encouraging. a large number of clinical trials have examined the possibility of using viruses as anticancer agents. table . lists a number of trials that were active in the year , to give a flavor of what is being tried and the number of malignacies that are being considered as candidates for treatment using gene therapy approaches. these trials are all phase i or i/ii, but more than patients were participating in the trials listed in the table. as shown in fig. . , the development of gene therapy approaches for the control of cancers continues to attract much effort, such that the majority of clinical trails to date have been directed against cancers. although progress has been painfully slow and disappointing, the prospect remains that effective treatment may yet be obtained for at least some cancers using such approaches. in most of the trials in table . , viruses are used to express proteins that control the growth of tumors or that are toxic to tumor cells. a number of different cytokines are being tried as antitumor agents, such as ifn-γ, il- , tnf, and gm-csf. another approach is to try to repair the defective regulatory gene in the tumor cell, which is often p . many other gene products are also being tested. the viruses used to express these products include the retroviruses, the adenoviruses, or the poxviruses. more recent trials have used additional viruses as well, in particular the herpesviruses and the adeno-associated viruses. herpes simplex type would seem to be particularly appropriate for control of brain tumors, because the virus is neurotropic but sets up a latent infection in neurons. one idea would be to engineer herpes to express a protein that is only toxic in dividing cells but which would be nontoxic in mature, nondividing neurons. the table also lists a number of trials that use lipofection to introduce the gene of interest into target cells. further afield, thought is being given to the possibility of using viruses to express proteins that are overexpressed in tumor cells in an attempt to stimulate the immune system to respond by killing tumor cells. this is in essence an attempt to vaccinate a person against a tumor. for this approach to succeed, an antigen overproduced by a tumor cell, such as a melanoma cell, must be identified, inserted into a suitable vector, and the person with the tumor infected with the virus vector in an attempt to stimulate the immune system. in principle, this approach may be feasible, but only time will tell whether it is in fact practical. another approach is to try to direct the virus, more or less specifically, to infect the tumor cells, so that upon infection the cells are killed. cell death might result either because the virus itself is cytolytic or because the virus expresses a protein that renders the cell sensitive to a toxic agent such as budr. a number of the trials listed in table . use the tk gene for this, since cells that express tk are sensitive to budr. one possible approach is to engineer the virus so that its surface glycoprotein expresses a monoclonal antibody directed against an antigen expressed only on the tumor cell, while at the same time causing the virus to be unable to infect cells that do not express the antigen. experiments have established the possibility of this approach, at least in principle, with viruses such as the alphaviruses. another approach was illustrated by the experiments with vsv to design a virus that could infect only hiv-infected cells. the possible use of herpesviruses to control brain tumors, especially gliomal tumors, has been cited earlier. simple retroviruses are also being examined for this purpose. these viruses can only replicate in dividing cells. thus, they should be able to infect only tumor cells in the brain, since most neuronal cells are terminally differentiated and do not divide. if the retroviruses express a protein that renders the cells sensitive to a toxin, it might be possible to kill replicating cells and therefore only the tumor cells. infectious clones a abbreviations: ifnγ, interferon gamma; il- , interleukin ; tk, thymidine kinase (sometimes used with bromodeoxyuridine); hsv-tk, herpes simplex thymidine kinase, often coupled with gancyclovir treatment; brca- , breast cancer , early onset; psa, puromycin-sensitive aminopeptidase; cea, carcinoembryonic antigen; gm-csf, granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor; mdr- , multi-drug resistance protein (used to insert chemotherapy-resistance genes into the hematopoetic lineage); cd , protein involved in t-cell activation; cd, cytosine deaminase; tnf, tumor necrosis factor. b definitions of phases in a clinical trial: phase i usually fewer than healthy volunteers, primarily to gauge adverse reactions, and to determine optimal dose and best route of administration. phase ii are generally pilot efficacy studies usually involving - volunteers randomly assigned to control and study groups. phase ii will test for immunogenicity in the case of vaccines, and duration of expression and amelioration of symptoms for gene therapy. note that none of these trials have proceeded beyond phase ii, and most are in phase i. source: wiley journal of gene medicine/clinical trial database at: http://www.wiley.co.uk/genetherapy/clinical/. a stable fulllength yellow fever virus cdna clone and the role of conserved rna elements in flavivirus replication rescue of a segmented negativestrand rna virus entirely from cloned complementary dnas genetic engineering of animal rna viruses cloning the vaccinia virus genome as a bacterial artificial chromosome in escherichia coli and recovery of infectious virus in mammalian cells reverse genetics system for introduction of site-specific mutations into the double-stranded rna genome of infectious rotavirus reverse genetics systems for the generation of segmented negative-sense rna viruses entirely from cloned dna production of infectious rna transcripts from sindbis virus cdna clones: mapping of lethal mutations, rescue of a temperature sensitive marker, and in vitro mutagenesis to generate defined mutants infectious rabies viruses from cloned cdna infectious cdna clone of the epidemic west nile virus from new york city feline calicivirus: recovery of wildtype and recombinant viruses after transfection of crna or cdna constructs nonviral vectors for gene therapy non-viral and viral vectors for gene therapy dna vaccines as cancer treatment construction and characterization of encapsilated poliovirus replicons that express biologically active murine interleukin- cytokine production in motor neurons by poliovirus replicon vector gene delivery nonsegmented negative-strand viruses as vaccine vectors coronaviruses as vectors: stability of foreign gene expression development of bovine herpesvirus as an expression vector using bacterial artificial chromosome cloning vaccinia virus: a selectable eukaryotic cloning and expression vector chimeric yellow fever virus d-japanese encephalitis virus vaccine: dose-response effectiveness and extended safety testing in rhesus monkeys evaluation of attenuation, immunogenicity and efficacy of a bovine parainfluenza virus type (piv- ) vaccine and a recombinant chimeric bovine/human piv- vaccine vector in rhesus monkeys an alphavirus replicon particle chimera derived from venezuelan equine encephalitis and sindbis viruses is a potent gene-based vaccine delivery vector restricting expression prolongs expression of foreign genes introduced into animals by retroviruses recombinant measles viruses efficiently entering cells through targeted receptors virus vectors and their applications review: episomal vectors for gene expression in mammalian cells gene therapy vectors based on adeno-associated virus: characteristics and applications to acquired and inherited diseases transfer of genes to humans: early lessons and obstacles to success severe combined immunodeficiency: a model disease for molecular immunology and therapy gene therapy progress and prospects: duchenne muscular dystrophy baculovirus vectors for gene therapy enhanced functional recovery from spinal cord injury following intrathecal or intramuscular administration of poliovirus replicons encoding il- targeting sindbis virus-based vectors to fc receptor-positive cell types t lymphocytes with a normal ada gene accumulate after transplantation of transduced autologous umbilical cord blood cd + cells in ada-deficient scid neonates gene therapy progress and prospects-vectorology: design and production of expression cassettes in aav vectors functional lentiviral vectors for xeroderma pigmentosum gene therapy gene therapy in the cornea a look to future directions in gene therapy research for monogenic diseases update on adenovirus and its vectors herpes simplex virus (hsv- ) for cancer treatment virus vectors and their applications the use of oncolytic vaccinia viruses in the treatment of cancer: a new role for an old ally? curr gene therapy: twenty-first century medicine viral vectors for gene transfer: a review of their use in the treatment of human diseases gene therapy: therapeutic gene causing lymphoma current prospects for gene therapy of cystic fibrosis key: cord- -dlqs ay authors: nan title: sequences and topology date: - - journal: curr opin struct biol doi: . / - x( ) -t sha: doc_id: cord_uid: dlqs ay nan . garrell j, modolell j: the drmm~hila locus, am antagonist of proneural geors that, lilac these genes, ~.ncodes a helix-loop-helix protein. ce/ , : - in crystals of ~or-nib-glu(oz~)-leu-mb-ala-leu-an~alm-lys(z)-alb.ome. pro~ natl acx*d sci usa , : - cloning and expre~inn of two distinct high-afl~nlty p~eptot~ ~geat¢ting with acidic and b~ic ~last growth imctogs. embo j . emboj emboj , : emboj - . he~gst l~ lf~w~m~ t, g~lwr~ i~. the ryb l gene in the l~lmion ye~tt sd~m~acctm~ pombe lfalcodin a gtp-bindin s protein belated to rho and ypt: structot~, expfemflon and identificetion of its human homulogue. embo j ~ , : embo j ~ , : - serotouln receptor that activates adenyiate cyclase domain • of lutropin/choriogonadotropin receptor expressed in t~ cells binds choringonadotropin with ltlgh /tmnlty cllgol~o onlal orsanization of adrenergic receptor genes molecoiat chagactegization of a rat ~ n-adrenerl#c receptor identificatlon of rpo , a vaccinia virus rna polymerase gene with structut~ similarity to a eucaryotic transcription elon~ation factor nucleotide sequence analysis of the l g~ne of vesicular stomafltia virus (new jersey serotype) --identification of conserved domai~l~ in l proteins of nonsegmented negative-strand rna viruses a novel u,man immunodeflclency virus type- protein, try, shares ~'quences with tat, ent~ and rev proteins phosphoprotein and nucleo~psid protein evolution of vesicular stomatitis virus new jersey identification of a conserved region common to cadherius and hl~u~llzat s~ a hema~u!tinin~ sequence and evolutionary relationships of african swine fever vh*es thymidine kinase all unusual stnlctul~ of a putative t cell oncugene whlch allows production of similar proteh~ from distinct messengeg rnas ~ ldentilfication of a rd protein factor which binds to the rolls sarcoma virus ltr enhancer --po~lble homology with the serum response factor genetic variation and multigene fannllles in aj~rics~t swine fever virus sequence of the genome rna of rubella vh'us --evidence for genetic rearrangement du~n~ tosavirus evolution derse i~ equine infectious anemia virus tat--insights into the structure, function, and evolution of lentivtrus tran.~activator proteins a colrpoeison of the genome organization of capripoxvirns with that of the orthopo~ ~golutionary orlffln of human and s imian lmtmo~odeflciency vir~jes a new supe~mlly of putative ntp-bindin domaan,t encoded by genomes of small dna and rna viruses envelope gene sequence of htlv- isolate mr- and its comlmrlann with other htlv-i isolates evolutionary relationship between luteovtruses and other rna plant viruses based on sequence motifs in their putative rna pulymet-am~ and nucleic acid hellcases isolation and sequence analysis of caenothabd/~s br/~w~e repetitive elements related to the ~ dqana transposon tcl jmolevo selective clo~ sequence analysis of the hum l sequence* which t~ in the rehttively recent l~tt jowcs m& sequences related to the matte tra~acmable element acin the genum zea. j m / evo/ evulutiotmtv pattern of the hemas~utinin gene of inflmmza-b viru~s ~ulated in japan ~ cocir~lating linesses in the same epidemic semon the dna binding subuult of nf-kaplm-b is identical to factor kbfl and homologous to the rel oncogene product sequencins analyses and com~ of pmrainfluenza virus type- a and type- b np protein genes. virok>gie complete sequence of the gcnomic gna of o'nyon -nyong virus and its use in the constroctton of alphavir~ phylogenetic trecs molecular clouln s of the rinderpest virus matrix gene --comparative sequence analysis with other paramyxorirm~. vi~logy cautd~an p~ ancestry of a human endogenous retrovirus ~ determination of an epitope of the diffuse systemic sclerosis marker antisen dna topoisomerase-l: sequence $ mllagity with retroviral ~ protein suggests a possible cause for autoimmunity in systemic sclerosis. pro natlacad s i u& , : ~ . mcgeoch dj: pgotein sequence cota~lxs show that the 'psuedoprotesses' encoded by poxviruses and certain retrovirus~ belong to the deoxyoridine triphtmphate family ~sk life: ~es of comme//na yellow mottle vlrus's complete dna sequence, genomlc discontinuities and transcript su est that it is a pararetrovlnm i~l~titis c vllrll~ sborl~ amino acid sequence similarity with pe~tivirutu~ and flavivirus~ as well as members of two plant vlgus superggoupo mo~mann ti~ homology of cy~kine synthesis inhibitory factor (el- ) to the epstein-barr virus gene bcrfi nucleotlde sequence analysis of sa-omvv, a vlsna-related ovine lentivirus --phylo~-netic history of lentivirmms single copy seqoences in g~qgo dna retmmable a repetitive hnman aetrotrmmposon-llke family. y mo/e~/ , : re¢otnblnation resulting in unusual features in the polyomavlrus genome isolated from a murine tumor cell line sequence anal~is of rice dwarf elxytoreovirus genome sewments s , s , and s -comparison with the equivalent wound tumor virus segments ho~tu~ ~ s is a ehylngcueticellly distinct human endogenous reteovtgal rlement with structural mad sequence homology to simian sarcoma virus (ssv). vi~ologie identification of a novel -kl)a cell surface receptor common to pm~cee~flc polypeptide molybdenum hydroxylas~ ~ the amino acid seqoence of chicken hepatic solfite oxidase frequency of a]mloglnai h |lm~tn haemoglobins ~ by c ~ t trmmitions in cpg dlnucleotid~ evidence for conservation of ferritin sequences amon plants and animctbt and for a transit peptlde in soybean a -kda llpo~ortin from human mononuclear cells appears to be identical with the placental inhibitor of blood coagulation distinct fercedoxins from rhodobacter-capsulstus -complete amino acid sequences and molecular evolution n~ptide sequence analysis and molecular cloning reveal two calcium pump isoforms in the human erythrocyte membgane cloning and characterization of a novel member of the cytochrome-p subfamily iva in rat prostate a directiy repeated sequence in the ~-globin promoter resulates transcription in murine efythroleukemla cells isolation and chamcterizatinn of the alkane-inducibie nadph-cytochrome-p- olf, idoreductsse gene from candida-tropicalls -identification of invarlant residues wlthin slmilmr amino acid sequences of direr'sent flavoproteins protein klnase-c inhibitor proteins -purification from sheep brain and sequence similarity to lipocortins and - - mci~ aveml~ b& sequence homology between purple acid phosphatases and phusphoprotein pho*phatsses --are phesphoprotcin phosphatatms metalloproteins collt~|nln~ oil~-bridged dinuclcar metal centers negative regulation of the human ~-globin ca~ne by transcriptional interference: role of an mu repetitive ~lement amino acid sequence of chicken catisequestrin deduced from c dna -comp~rison of caisequestrin and aspartactin caisequestrin, an intesccilular calciumbinding protein of skeletal muscle sarcoplssmic reticulm, is homolokous to ~, a putstive latminin-binding protein of the exteac¢llular matr~ bovsm~ ]prote~ c inhihl.gog with structugll and fun~ hotdoio~ou~ ]~-.gtl~ to hum~zn plum~ protein c inhibitor sequence of silkworm hemolymph antitrypsin deduced from its cdna nucleoude sequence --~on of its homology with ~.rplus. l b~cbem (tokyo) human mm~t cell tryptm~e multiple cdnas and genes reveal • multigene serlne protemje lmmlly howam> jc: msc ore. n k#on encoding protehm iteleted to the multidtog ite~letance family of tra~membt'mne tratmpofters m~, a tks~me-speclfi¢ b•tmment membrane protein, is a ia.minin.like protein commrvation of a cytoplasmic ~xy-termitml domain of couexin , a gap junctional protein, in mammal heart and brain the a~lba//a~ plasma membrane h+-a~ multigene ~ -genomle sequence and expression of • rd lsoform, f b/ /owra op#n of calliphora peripheral l~otoreceptors r - --homology with d~ rhl and po~tmnsi~domd processing evolution of rhodopsin supergene family --independent divergence of visual pibments in vertebrates and insects and po~ibly in mollusks ct~tpl¢ the g~ne~ amino acid ~'~m~me gene of sac~baromy~wcet~-v/~ae --nucleotide seque~tce, protein similarity with the other i~kers yeast amino acid petmme~mes, and nitrogen cataboht~ repreulon the -kda peroxlsomal membrane protein is a member of the mdr (p-glycoprotein)-related atp-bindin~g protein superfamlly a new clam of lym~o-real/vacuolar protein sorelng signais. l b~/chem complete amino acid sequence and homologies of human erythrocyte membrane protein band . . proc natl acad scd us a the primary structure of a halorhodopsin from n pbaraom~--structural, functional and evolutionary impnoations for bacterial rhod~ and haloghodopslns soluble lactose. blndln~ vertelmue lectlns: a ~ family the a regulatory subunit of the mltochondrlal fi-atpa~ complex is a heat shock protein. identification of two highly conserved amino acid sequences amon~ the ~x-subunits and molecular ~ sequence of h ilmlfl ~ l~ieat~ • novel gene family of integral membrane proteoglycans a protein with homology to the c-termimml relationaxip~ between/m~-nylate cycla~ and n•+,k+-ati~se lit pat pancgtmti¢ islets human na+ ,k+-ati~¢ genes ~ beta~ubunit gene family conmina at lcest one gene and one ~ evolution of the mltc cles~l genes of a new world lh'imate from ancestral homologues of human non-clessical genes the cdna sequence of mouse pllp- arid homololgy to hntman cd c~ll s~e antitpm and promot#ycen core unk proteins ~tjott of cdna encodin~ a hnman sperm membr~e protein related to a amyloid protebm ptwlflcstlo~ c~mu'actet~muon, and con with memb~ne carbonic anhydrase from human kidney hypermumbility of cpg dinucleoudes in the propcptide-enced/ng sequence of the human alb~tmi~ gene dystt'ophhl in electric or~n of to, pedo-~ homologous to that in h,ml~ muscle botste~ i~ homolosy of a yeast acun-binding protein to signal trmmductlon proteins slid myosin- the complete sequence of drosophila alpha-spectrin --conservation of structurml domahm between alplm-~ and alpl~t cttnin •~ettaatflon of a lqbrilisr collqwn gene ~ spruces reveais the etdy evolutionary appearance of two collqwn gene fmmilk~ the predicted amino acid sequence of ct-lnternexin is that of a novel neuronal lntegmedla~ ~ent protein otsen bl~ type xil collm~n. a larbe multidomnln molecule with partial homology to type ix cousllem / b/d aera amyioid protein in i~mni~l amyloidmfls (plmnlah type) ks homolollotm to gd$oilmb an ac, tht-i~h,.da~g protein. b/~bera b/q b~ res commun key ji~ ~ of a proline-rich cell wall protein gene ~ of soybesn. a ~ ana/ysis. j b/o/~em chicken liver evolutionary rehttinnships and impflcations for the resulation of phoophohpsse-a from snake venom to human secreted forms identification of a locality in snake venom a-ncurotoxins with a slsnlficant comlm*itinmd similarity to marine smdl ct-conotoxins: implications for evolution and structure activity al~ph[biml~ albmtm|nm ~s members of the albumin, alpha-l~toprotein. vitamin-d-binding protein mul~ flmily ~ni~on of the hnm~n llpoprotein lllmse gene and evolution of the llpase gene family e~'t~ion of cloned human reticulocyte - ipoxygenase and immunological evidence that -hpoxygetmses of different cell types are related identification of a protein alt~ inttaspecific evolution of a gene family coding for urinary proteins conservation between yeast and man of a protein a~ociated with i small nuclear rlbonucleoprotein stl~ctute and partial amino acid sequence of calf thymus dna topobmmaertt~-ii -coml~on with other type-h emmyme~ ol~nudeotide correlations between infector and hem genomes hint at evolutiotmry relationships. nu /e~ scot/~ik p& carotenoid desmurases fi, om ~ ~and nmoowo~craua are stru~ and l~n~'tinnally comerved and eonmin domains homolosons to flavoprotein dimdflde oxldoreductm~ deininger pi stt'uc~uee and vsrisbihty of recently inserted alu family members a novel neutrolphfl chemmtttactant generated duan an ln~ammmtory reaction in the l~mt peritoneal cal~lt~ tt~ t~t~o -l~tl'~t~tloil~ ~ amino acid seque~tce and structural relmtmmhip to interkukin-& b~ffx~m j the multlfimctinna -methylmllcyllc acid syn~ ge~e of ~~ ~ its ge~e structmm ieimive to tl~t of other po~lyketide symhase~. f.urj b/odaem mammalkm ublquitin carrier prmmtmh but not i~:i~k, ame ltdated to the -kda yeast , rad . bk~chem b/qohys res commun chambers gk: sequence. structure and evolution of the c.ene codin b for ~t-gi~erol- -phe~plmte ~rdrotfm~ in om,qt~ the cotaplete sequence of bogu/ktmm nenrotoxin type-#, and com~ with other clostrldhtl neugoto~hm if: a pamlly of cxam~fltutive c/bbp-llkc dna blndln~ proteins attenuate the il-l~t induced, ni~b mediated trans-activation of the ansiotemflnogen gene acute-phase response element different fort~ of ultmhithomx proteim generated by alternative spttcim~ are functionally equivalent evolution of collagen-iv genes from a -batm pair faton --a role for lntrmm ht gem~ evolution evolution of the insulin superfamlly tcetins are structoraily related sertoli cell proteim who~ ~on is tightly coupled to the iprtsence of germ cells ivarie r~ a bovine homolo s to the human myolletti c determination factor myf~ sequence conservation and ' proce~ing of transcripts proteiu sertne threonine phoephatmes -an expanding family coppes zl divergence of duplicate genes in three sciaenid species (perciformes) from the south co~t of uruguay coasfaneda m: rrs~j~o~a (mu-~--a~) repetitive dna seqmmce l~vointion in ~hically mstinct isolates. cor~ bnz~n physiol repetitive seq~ce involvement in the duplication and divergence of mouse lysozyme genes the structure of a subtermlnal nut/e/ a /ds res schoofs i~ h~ between amino acid sequenc~ of ~ v~'lt~tm'stte peptide hormones and peptides ~mlated fi-on~ invertebrate sources. corn# bm&.n mg~ol bun'nng s, ~us r& lqatelet gtycoprotetn nb-ma protein antssonim from snake venoms ---evidence for s fumlly of p~telet-~sgqpttlon lnhll~tol~ hikher plant orilgins and the whylogeny of gt~en allpte simihtrity between the t~ ~ sindln s proteins abf how big is the univet~ of e~otm worklwide diffegences in the ~ncideace of type ! diabetes are ammciated with amino acid variation at pos/tion of the hi~-dq ~ chain yeast general trtnscelptimt l~ctor gf! --sequence requirements for binding to dna mad evointhmky commrvttion. nudeg m/ds res concerted ]rv~ution of primate mplm smelllte dna. e'~kmce foe tm an~mt~ sequence sbm'ed by goal~ md human x ~e alpha ~ttdllte the nuchl~m~ sequence of etve ribommaal protein genea from the o/anene. of ~~ impacattom concem~ the mtytosene~ relationship bet~-en cyanelles and chloropluts wmslanoer l~ a new member of a secretory protein gene family in the dipteran c~t~onomot~ tentaus ~ a variant repeat stracture the ~r sequence ~ --die.inn on the x-chromosome and y-chromosome of a large set of closely related sequence~, most of wmda are i~eudogene~ ba~ttmo~e l~ cloning of the pso dna binding subutdt of nf-kapi~-b -homolo~" to gel and dortml l-~te two-monooxr~muse from m~ --clon~ nucleotide sequence, and primary structu~ homology within an enzyme family genetic hot~o~n~ty ~ acute and chronic acute forms of spinal muscular atrophy genetic variants of bovine ~-lactogiobulin --a novel wild.type ~-lacto#obulin w and ~ts primary sequence. b/or (~rn h tt e sey/er l~ltogh~ dna evolution in the olmcm species subgroup of drooophll~ f mot evot lovell-badge l~ a gene mapldng to the sex-determining gegion of the mouse y chromommae ~ a member of a novel ~ of zmbryonk~ly genes ~titmte , -dioxy~mm~ from p~.udomotm~ pustfi~mtion, characterization, ~md compm'tson of the f.mtymes from psemffmmm~m ta~o~k-ron/and aaammms~ spec~clties of the peptidyl prolyl cis-tratm isomeric activities of cydophmn and fk- bindh~ protein --evidence for the existence of a family of distinct enzymes. b~x/aem/ary mltochondrl~ dna evolution in primates -tt-atmltion gate has been extremely low in the lemug homeobox containing genes in the nematode ~enorbabd/f~ elk.gamin nucleic ac shdic add fateesses of ~ • voluttomu.y origins have serine active sites f~entlal arginlne residues dewact-rrer l~ the ltilm omal rna ~-quence of the s~t anemone anemom~s ssdcmta and its evolutionary intuition amomqg other eukaryotes inferred b'om s~l,.m.~ comlmrttmas of a heat shock g~ae in two nematorl~ the l~'/o multtgene family of ok~hag of cdna ~ for the ~ omin of human complement component ca~bi~una protein, seqaenoe homolo~ with thc a c~t~:~a~h proc natl acad s¢t usa highly conserved core domain and unique n terminus with presumptive regulatory moti~ in a hmman tata factor (l'lql~) [letter] identification cimractertzaflon of a novel member of the nerve growth fmctor/besln.dertved neurotrophic factor family ~ bind to s~dlfmme [eal(~-so )l~l-lcer ] and has a sequence homology with other pt'otelns that bind sulfated glycoconjut~tes anllllo acid seqmmce of clnnamomin, a new member of the elicitin family, and its comparison to cryptogein and capsicetn soluble and mtmo[~tle~ioc~ta~l h~ low-ml~n|ty adenomne binding protein (adenotin) --properties and homology with mtmmall~la and avian stress protelus. b~-/~om/stry edolatlon of complementary dna$ f~lcoding a cerebellum-enriched nuclear factor-i family that activates tt'anscription from the mouse m~.lin basic protein promoter ye~mt mltochondrlal dna polymet'ase is related to the family a dna polymerases nudeotide and deduced amino add sequence of a human cdna (nqo ) corresponding to a second membeg of the nad(p)h --quinone oxldoreductase gene family --extensive polymorphism at the nqo gene locus on chgomo~ome- . b/oc.heraistry ult~ sltnlltt'leles a~llolltll enzyme pterin binding sites as demonstrated by a monoeinnal amiidiotypic antibody blundell tl molecular anatomy: phylogenetic relationship* derived from three~limenslonal structure~ of proteins subfamily structure and evolution of the hnmtn . family of repetitive scquence~. f mot evo selmt~te mltochondrlal dna sequences are contiguous in htlmsa~ genol~ic dna l~t~lit~ within mmmm~lla~ sogl~tol deh~ --the prlmm'y structure of the human liver enzyme heterogeneous modifications of the l /alo ltrote~a of ibtegleuldn-~t cells are concentrated in a/,ti~hly r~qg~.titlv ~ amino-t~ vaults.ell rebofmcleoprotein structures are msl~ conserved among higher and lower e~tes rnas le~d support to the monophyletic nature of the ~erla lmmunoloslcal ~lmllmtties ~etween cytosolic and partictdate tissue trans#utamilsc. febs lat mans~ti x#tope m~w~zed by a protective m~aodonm antibody is identical to the sta~e-specific embryonic antlgen-l. proc naa acad sa o~ the murg gene of t-brucei contains multiple dom.l.m of extensive editinil and is hofaoin~m~ to a subultit of nadh dehy~ neparm-bindl~ nenrotrophtc x~tor (hbnf) and mk, member's of z new i~mily of homolosous~ developmentally l~ted proteitm pugmattion and strucrmml ~on of pttcentel nad + .mtked -hydroxyproma#andm dehydtoffmase ~ the primary structure reveals the enzyme to belon to the short-alcohol l)ehydrogena~ l~mlly. b/ochemistry structores and homologies of carbohydrate ~pho~ system ep~l~[ln, a ~o~a-gmjoclated mudn, is generated by a polymorphlc gene encodin splice variants with alternative amino termini a new member of the leucine zipper class of proteins that binds to the hia drct promoter. sc/ence attalysi~ of cdna for human ~ ajudgyrin i~dicltes a repeated structure with homology to tissue-differentiation a~td cell-cycle control protein the b subunlt of a rat hetefomeric ocaat-binding transcription factor shoes a striking sequence identity with the yeast hap transcription factor homology to mouse s-if and sequence similarity to yeast pt~ stgucttu'e and evolution of the small nuclear rna multigene family in primates: gene amplification under nat-¢wal selectinn? ident~catinn of an additional member of the proteln.tyrushle-phosp~ family --l*vidence f~ alternative spliclog in the tyrmine phosphzmme domain a ~le am~o acid difference dis~ishes the human and the rat sequences of statlmaln, a ubiquitous intracehular pho~phoproteln ~ with cell item comp~ison of the seve~le~ gene* of drosop~ffa t~'ff~ end ma ~ muty, an adenine ~ active on g-a mislmirs, has homology to ~t evolution of largesubunit iutna structuge --the ~cation of imvetbe~t d dommin amon mmjor phyiolpmetic groups discrepancy in diveqlenoe of the mltodtondrlal and nuclear genomes of m sensor/and y~ j mot evot ~ adenylate deamll~t~. a mt~flige~e fam~ in p..m~,n, and rats isolmion and structure of ceerol#m, itna,~le hat~ peptmes, from the smm~m, ~ mo~ comp a~a rmm~ i~ vmotocin ge~ of the teleom f.,xott intro~ botany. ~ hot~ ot'l~mization. b~hemioy the adb gene areal share features of sequence structure and nudeast~protected sites. m /cell bto/ the amino-acid sequence of multip/e lectins of the #.corn barnacle m~us-lgo~ and its homology with .animal ]~'tllls. bioclx'm btqobys acta amino add ~.-quence of mtmkey erythrocyte glycophorba mk. its amino acid ~'qu~'~icc ]f][~ a stri~tl~ homology with that of human glycophorin a flsp~r p& drtmophila proliferating cell nuclear antigen. structural and functional homology with its mammalian coonterpart phylogeny of n|trogen*me s~queac~ in ][~mnkla and other nlteogen-fixing ml~m$ vertebrate prot~mlne c~ne evolution. . sequence alignments and gene structure florin l~ a major styl~ matrix polypeptid~ (sp ) is a member of the f~thogenesia-reiated proteins superciass complete amino acid sequence of rat kidney ornithine aminoteat~fet-~e --identity with ijver omithine aminotransferme. l bnxl;em (tokyo) rlbonuclease p --function and variation. j b/o/~bem the primary strum of glycoprotein-m from bovine adrenal medullary granules --sequence similarity with bnmmn serum protein- , and rat sertoli cell giycoprotein- compm'ative ~quence/umlysis of m~mmantan f'a~or ix protaotegs the amino acid sequence of the b nman l~ia polymet'a~-h -kda subunit hrpb is highly cotmerved among eukaryotes phylogenetic conservation of atylsulfatases --cdna cloturing and expre~ion of hnman aryisul~t~e-b. j b/o/cbem c.oll/l~'vlltion and diversity in fatnllies of coated vemcle adaptlns cllaracterizaflon of petel porcine bone sialoproteins, soca'~ted phosphopgotein ! (sppi, osteopontin), bone siaioprotein, and a .kda glycoprotetn ~ demonstration that the -kda glycoprotein is derived from the carboxyl terminus of sppi characterization of matteuccin, the . s storag~ prote~ of the ostcich fern -evolutionary iteiatinnshlp to angiosperm seed storage ~ a new mmber of the glutamine-rlch protein gene family is characterized by the absence of internal lgepe~ts and the androgen control of its expression in the subm*ndlbuiar gland of pad novel insect n~ with homology to peptides of the vea'te~ tachykinin family identircation of a novel platelet-derived neutrophli-chcmaotgctic po~ with structural homology to piatelet-factor- a novel repeated dna sequoncc located in the intergenic regions of ba~tceial chromosomes. nuc eic.,k:ids res the proianlin storage protellx¢ of cere~ seeds ~ structure and evolution functional analysis of the '-terminal part of the balbiani ring gene by hlterspecies sequence comparison dr= mammaban ~yl phosphate symhetase (cp*) --cdna sequence and evolution of the cl m domain of the syrian hamster multifunctional protein cad mammalian dihydroorotase --nudeotide sequence, peptide sequences, and evolution of the imhydroorotsse domain of the multifunctinnal protein cad a receptor for tumor necrosis factor defines an unusual family of cellular and viral proteins the control of flower morphogenesis in a~..ffd~um majusthe protein shows homoinff~ to transcription factors an element of symmetry in ytmst tata-box binding protein transcription factor-lid --consequence of an ancestra/ duplication? c-type natciuretic peptide (cnp): a new member of nateinretic peptide family identified in porcine brain evolution of antioxidant m~: ediol-dependent petoxidm~.s and thiol~ ~umong ptocaryotes towards the evolution of ribozymes alkyl hydroperoxide reductase from sa/mone/ta ~ur/um --sequence and homology to thinredoxin reductase and other fiavoprotein disuliide oxidoreducmses fc: nonuniform evolution of duplicated, developmentally controlled c~azrion genes in a sillumoth the fission yeast cutl + gene regulates spindle pole body duplication and has homolosy to the buddin structural homology b~ween the hnmmn fur gene product mad the sub---like protea~ encoded by ye~t/~x . nuc~ a¢/ds res nudeotide sequences and novel steuctut~ features of hnm=. and cimm~ lighter ~# primary stt~t~ and expression of a nuclear-coded subunit of complex-n n~ to protetm specified by the chtoropiast genome. b/ chera bnfhys r~ commun a novel gene member of the human giycophorin-a and glycophorin-b genc fatuily -molecular cloning and expression the x-chromosome of monotremes shares a highly conserved region with the eutherlan and marsupial x-o~romosomes despite the absence of x-chromosome ittactt~tion c~lract~tion and or~= nl~tion of dna sequences adjacent to the evidence for a new fmily of evolutionarily conserved homeobox genes elellatltlll and albolabrin purified peptides from viper venoms --homologies with the rgds domain of flbrinogen and yon willebrand pactor measurement of $~tiv~-site homology between potato and l~bbit muscle alpha-glum phosphoryiases through use of a iane~r free energy relationship white ~ weiss ~ the neuroflbromatosis typed gene encodes a protein related to gap the dna damage-inducible gcne-dinl of saocbarom q~ewcet~#.s/ae encodes a regulatory subunit of elbonucleotide reductase and is identical to gnr fhlgegprinting of ne~lr-homogeneous dna hgase-i and ligase-h from eh,m~n cells --similarity of their amp-binding domains control of m na st~mlity in • chnoc~qg.~um, by 'inverted ltepeats: effects of stem and loop mutations on degradation ofxtmba mlna/n vt~ nuc/e~ ac alternative messenger rna structures of the ciil-gene of bacteriophage ~. determine the rate of its tt'ansbttion initiation alternative mrna structures of the cm genc of bacta~ophage ~ detc:'mine the rate of its translation initiation. j mo/b~ / a model fog iina editing in klnetopiastid mltochondrla --guide rna molecules transcribed from max/circle dna provide the edited information elements and coding sequences. j mol bio , : - . chang c-y, ~ d-a, mohandas til chung b-c: stt~ctut~e, ~-quence, chromo~maal location, and evolution of the human fercedoxin gene family. dna cell b/o/ , : - key: cord- -j qcjbxg authors: markl, jürgen; sadava, david; hillis, david m.; heller, h. craig; hacker, sally d. title: genome date: - - journal: purves biologie doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: j qcjbxg canis lupus familiaris, der haushund, wurde vor rund . jahren von den menschen domestiziert. obwohl es viele verschiedene varianten von wölfen gibt, ähneln sich diese ziemlich stark, doch das trifft auf den „besten freund des menschen“ nicht zu. die fédération cynologique internationale (fci), weltweit größter dachverband der hundezüchter, erkennt über hunderassen an. genetiker gehen von rund echten hunderassen aus, der rest seien varietäten. hunderassen sehen nicht nur recht unterschiedlich aus, sondern sie unterscheiden sich auch stark in ihrer körpergröße. so wiegt beispielsweise ein durchschnittlicher chihuahua nur , kg, während ein schottischer jagdhund kg auf die waage bringt. kein anderes säugetier zeigt eine so starke phänotypische variabilität. außerdem gibt es hunderte von genetisch bedingten krankheiten bei hunden, und für viele davon findet sich auch ein gegenstück bei menschen. das hundegenomprojekt begann in den späten er-jahren, um herauszufinden, welche gene für die genetische variabilität verantwortlich sind und welche zusammenhänge zwischen genen und krankheiten bestehen. wie nicht anders zu erwarten, gründeten einige wissenschaftler firmen, um anhand der dna hunde auf genetische varianten zu testen und dadurch besorgten hundehaltern die "reinheit der rasse" bestätigen zu können. in ähnlicher weise wurde das genom von hauskatzen, wildkatzen und verschiedenen großkatzenarten sequenziert. vergleiche dieser tiergenome tragen dazu bei, die evolutionsgeschichte der verschiedenen säugerlinien zu ermitteln und auch gene zu identifizieren, die für krankheiten und merkmalsformen verantwortlich sind, wie sie bei den verschiedenen spezies der säuger vorkommen. solche untersuchungen beschränken sich natürlich nicht nur auf säuger, sondern es gibt genomprojekte quer durchs tierreich, und auch bei pflanzen, pilzen, vielen anderen eukaryoten sowie zahlreichen prokaryoten. welche erkenntnisse haben wir durch die sequenzierung der genome von tieren gewonnen? in "experiment: vergleichende analyse des tigergenoms" in abschn. . und in "faszination forschung" am ende dieses kapitels finden sie antworten auf diese frage. bei der genomsequenzierung wird die nucleotidsequenz des gesamten genoms eines lebewesens bestimmt. bei einem prokaryoten, der ein einziges chromosom besitzt, ist die genomsequenz eine durchgehende abfolge von basenpaaren (bp). bei einer diploiden, sich sexuell fortpflanzenden spezies mit mehreren autosomen und einem paar von geschlechtschromosomen ( abschn. . ) bezieht sich der begriff "sequenziertes genom" normalerweise auf die sequenz aller basen in einem haploiden autosomensatz und den beiden geschlechtschromosomen (beim menschen also c , beim hund c ). genome werden in form kurzer fragmente sequenziert, die mithilfe von Überlappungen einander zugeordnet werden. in der funktionellen genomik nutzt man die sequenzinformationen, um die funktionen der verschiedenen teile des genoms zu bestimmen. in der vergleichenden genomik werden die genomsequenzen verschiedener organismen verglichen. mit den technischen fortschritten bei der dna-sequenzierung kam es zu einer explosionsartigen zunahme an genetischer information, die wissenschaftler auf verschiedene weise nutzen können. man kann die genome verschiedener spezies vergleichen, um herauszufinden, wie sie sich auf dna-ebene unterscheiden. diese informationen können dann genutzt werden, um evolutionäre beziehungen nachzuvollziehen. man kann die sequenzen von individuen innerhalb einer spezies vergleichen, um mutationen zu ermitteln, die bestimmte phänotypen hervorrufen. mithilfe der sequenzinformationen lassen sich gene für bestimmte merkmalsformen identifizieren, etwa gene, die mit krankheiten zusammenhängen. man kann die dna-sequenz proteincodierender gene auffinden und daraus die aminosäuresequenz der betreffenden proteine ableiten, sofern diese noch unbekannt ist. die möglichkeit, das gesamte genom eines komplexen organismus zu sequenzieren, wurde vor gar nicht in betracht gezogen. der nobelpreisträger renato dulbecco und andere wissenschaftler schlugen damals jedoch vor, dass die wissenschaftliche gemeinschaft weltweit mobilisiert werden sollte, um die sequenzierung des gesamten menschlichen genoms in angriff zu nehmen. ein beweggrund war, dass man bei menschen, die die atombombenwürfe im zweiten weltkrieg in japan überlebt hatten und der strahlung ausgesetzt gewesen waren, etwaige dna-schäden untersuchen wollte. um aber veränderungen im menschlichen genom feststellen zu können, musste erst einmal dessen sequenz bekannt sein. so wurde das mit öffentlichen geldern finanzierte humangenomprojekt ins leben gerufen, ein gewaltiges vorhaben, das aber bereits erfolgreich abgeschlossen werden konnteerheblich früher als erwartet. diese bemühungen wurden von privat finanzierten gruppen unterstützt und ergänzt. das projekt profitierte von der entwicklung vieler neuer und bahnbrechender methoden, die zuerst bei der sequenzierung kleinerer genome angewendet wurden -von prokaryoten und einfach gebauten eukaryoten, etwa von den modellorganismen, denen sie in vorangegangenen kapiteln dieses buches bereits begegnet sind. viele dieser methoden sind heute weit verbreitet, darunter ganz neue methoden speziell für die genomsequenzierung. die methodischen entwicklungen auf diesem sektor gehen ständig weiter. diese verfahren werden ergänzt durch neuartige methoden, um die phänotypische vielfalt der proteine und der stoffwechselprodukte in einer zelle zu untersuchen. eine grundvoraussetzung war und ist die dramatische weiterentwicklung der computerhard-und -software, um die riesigen anfallenden datenmengen bewältigen zu können. viele prokaryoten besitzen ein einziges chromosom, während es bei eukaryoten viele chromosomen sind. aufgrund ihrer unterschiedlichen größe lassen sich die chromosomen einfach voneinander trennen. das direkteste verfahren scheint zu sein, bei der sequenzierung eines chromosoms an einem ende zu beginnen und einfach das gesamte dna-molekül nucleotid für nucleotid zu sequenzieren. die aufgabe wird dadurch etwas vereinfacht, dass nur einer der beiden stränge sequenziert werden muss, denn der andere ist dazu ja komplementär. betrachten sie die sequenz : : : aagctca: : : ; dann muss der andere strang so aussehen: : : : ttcgagt: : : : doch ist die sequenzierung eines dna-moleküls, das millionen von basenpaaren lang ist, von einem ende zum anderen, selbst mit den heutigen methoden nicht möglich und auch gar nicht erforderlich. mit dieser strategie können höchstens einige tausend basenpaare auf einmal sequenziert werden. um eine genomsequenz bestimmen zu können, muss der mehrere zentimeter lange dna-faden eines chromosoms in viele kurze dna-fragmente zerlegt werden, und dann sequenziert man tausende solcher fragmente gleichzeitig. in den er-jahren erfanden frederick sanger und seine mitarbeiter eine methode, mit der sich dna durch verwendung chemisch veränderter nucleotide sequenzieren lässt. diese nucleotide waren ursprünglich entwickelt worden, um die zellteilung bei krebszellen anzuhalten. dieses verfahren (beziehungsweise eine variante davon) diente dazu, die erste genomsequenz des menschen und mehrerer modellorganismen zu bestimmen. die methode ist jedoch nach heutigem maßstab relativ langsam, teuer und arbeitsintensiv. in der ersten dekade des neuen jahrtausends wurden schnellere und preisgünstigere methoden entwickelt, die man häufig unter dem begriff hochdurchsatzsequenzierung zusammenfasst. bei diesen verfahren nutzt man eine miniaturisierte technik, die ursprünglich für die elektronikindustrie entwickelt wurde, sowie die mechanismen der dna-replikation, häufig in kombination mit der polymerasekettenreaktion (pcr). die pcr lässt sich automatisieren; sie ist eine wichtige methode für die sequenzierung geringer dna-mengen. einzelheiten über die pcr finden sie in abschn. . . die methoden der hochdurchsatzsequenzierung, auch zusammengefasst unter dem begriff next-generation-sequencing (ngs), werden rasch immer weiter verbessert. eine der vielen herangehensweisen soll hier skizziert werden und ist in abb. . dargestellt. zuerst werden die dna-fragmente für die sequenzierung präpariert, indem man sie an einen festen träger bindet und die dna durch pcr amplifiziert ( abb. . a): universelle adaptersequenz immer schneller werden neue genomsequenzen veröffentlicht, was eine riesige menge an daten liefert. diese informationen werden in zwei verwandten forschungsgebieten genutzt, die sich beide mit der untersuchung von genomen beschäftigen. in der funktionellen genomik verwenden biologen sequenzinformationen, um die funktionen der verschiedenen teile eines genoms zu erkennen (etwa die bedeutsamen regionen, die mrnas oder trnas codieren, sowie regulatorische sequenzen, abschn. . ): offene leseraster, das heißt proteincodierende regionen der gene: bei proteincodierenden genen erkennt man diese bereiche an den start-und stoppcodons für die translation und an consensussequenzen, welche die positionen der introns anzeigen, ein wichtiges ziel der funktionellen genomik besteht darin, in allen genomen die funktion aller offenen leseraster zu bestimmen. originalliteratur: cho ys et al. ( ) nature commun : - panthera tigris (der tiger) ist der größte vertreter aller katzenartigen und gehört zu den bekanntesten gefährdeten tierarten. es gibt nur noch rund freilebende exemplare. vor über einem jahrhundert waren neun genetisch unterschiedliche unterarten bekannt, von denen vier bereits ausgestorben sind. zu den fünf verbliebenen unterarten gehören etwa der bengalische tiger (königstiger), der öfter in zoos zu sehen ist, und der sibirische tiger (amurtiger), der in den schneereichen regionen von russland, china und nordkorea lebt. die genome anderer katzenarten, beispielsweise von löwe, schneeleopard und hauskatze, waren bereits sequenziert worden, das des tigers allerdings noch nicht. durch die sequenzierung der genome von großkatzen lässt sich zeigen, dass die phänotypische variabilität, die bei katzen festzustellen ist, auf genetische varianten zurückzuführen ist. exon/intron-muster von genen, um etwas über die evolution und rolle der introns und modulartiger proteindomänen zu erfahren aminosäuresequenzen von proteinen, da sich diese durch anwendung des genetischen codes ( abb. . ) aus den dna-sequenzen von offenen leserastern herleiten lassen regulatorische sequenzen, zum beispiel promotoren, enhancer und terminatoren für die transkription: diese werden aufgrund ihrer nähe zu offenen leserastern identifiziert und auch weil sie erkennungssequenzen für die bindung spezifischer transkriptionsfaktoren enthalten. rna-gene, etwa für rrna, trna und kleine nucleäre rna (snrna) und mikrorna andere nichtcodierende sequenzen, die verschiedenen kategorien zugeordnet werden können, beispielsweise centromer-oder telomerregionen, transposons und weitere sequenzwiederholungen sequenzinformationen werden auch in der vergleichenden genomik genutzt, also für den vergleich eines neu sequenzierten genoms (oder von teilen daraus) mit den sequenzen von anderen organismen. das hundegenomprojekt, das in der einleitung zu diesem kapitel ( "faszination forschung: das hundegenomprojekt") beschrieben wird, hat beispielsweise nicht nur erkenntnisse über hunde geliefert, sondern auch darüber, inwieweit das hundegenom mit den genomen anderer tiere verwandt ist. durch genomvergleiche lassen sich zusätzliche informationen über die funktionen von sequenzen ableiten, und man kann insbesondere zwischen verschiedenen spezies evolutionäre beziehungen ableiten. jedes genom, das sequenziert wird, kann neue erkenntnisse liefern. in "experiment: vergleichende analyse des tigergenoms" ist die vor kurzem erfolgte sequenzierung des tigergenoms dargestellt und auch wie dieses genom mit dem genom anderer katzenarten und dem des menschen verwandt ist. bei der sequenzierung von genomen werden chromosomen in fragmente zerlegt, dann die fragmente sequenziert und schließlich in der richtigen reihenfolge zu durchgängigen sequenzen in vollständigen chromosomen angeordnet. die heutigen sequenzierverfahren sind automatisiert und erfordern leistungsfähige computer. bei diesen methoden verwendet man markierte nucleotide, die an den enden der wachsenden nucleinsäureketten nachgewiesen werden. wenn man die genome von prokaryoten und eukaryoten vergleicht, drängt sich eine interessante schlussfolgerung auf: bestimmte gene sind universell, also bei allen lebewesen vorhanden. es ist nicht erstaunlich, dass dies unter anderem gene betrifft, deren produkte an der replikation, der transkription und der proteinsynthese beteiligt sind. es gibt auch einige (fast) universelle gensegmente, die in vielen genen zahlreicher organismen vorkommen, beispielsweise die sequenz, die eine atp-bindungsstelle in einem protein codiert. diese befunde deuten darauf hin, dass es einen uralten minimalen satz von dna-sequenzen gibt, ein minimalgenom, das allen zellen gemeinsam ist. ein mögliches verfahren, um diese gene zu identifizieren, besteht darin, sie computergestützt durch eine vergleichende analyse sequenzierter genome zu suchen. bei einer anderen methode, das minimalgenom zu ermitteln, geht man von einem organismus mit einem möglichst einfachen genom aus, mutiert gezielt ein gen nach dem anderen und beobachtet jedes mal, was geschieht. mycoplasma genitalium besitzt eines der kleinsten genome -es enthält nur proteincodierende gene. selbst hier sind unter bestimmten voraussetzungen einige gene verzichtbar. wenn das bakterium beispielsweise gene für die metabolisierung von glucose und fructose besitzt, kann es im labor auch auf einem medium überleben, das nur einen dieser beiden zucker enthält. was ist mit den übrigen genen? mithilfe von transposons, die als mutagene dienen, hat eine arbeitsgruppe unter der leitung von craig venter experimentell versucht, diese frage zu beantworten. werden die transposons in dem bakterium aktiviert, fügen sie sich zufällig in gene ein und bewirken so eine mutation und inaktivierung des betroffenen gens ( "experiment: bestimmung des minimalgenoms durch mutagenese mithilfe von transposons"). die mutierten bakterien werden auf wachstum und Überlebensfähigkeit getestet. die dna von interessanten mutanten wird sequenziert, um herauszufinden, welche gene transposons enthalten. das erstaunliche ergebnis dieser untersuchungen zeigt, dass m. genitalium im labor mit einem minimalgenom von funktionsfähigen genen überleben kann. bei der hefe besteht das minimalgenom aus nur % der proteincodierenden gene, bei dem nematoden caenorhabditis elegans ist es ein ähnlicher anteil. ein ziel dieser untersuchungen besteht darin, für bestimmte anwendungen neue lebensformen zu entwickeln, beispielsweise bakterien, die eine Ölpest beseitigen. im nächsten kapitel lernen sie diese methodik, die man als synthetische genetik bezeichnet, genauer kennen. mithilfe der dna-sequenzierung kann man die genome von prokaryoten untersuchen, von denen viele für den menschen und bestimmte Ökosysteme von bedeutung sind. die funktionelle genomik bestimmt anhand der gensequenzen die funktionen der genprodukte. die vergleichende genomik vergleicht gensequenzen von verschiedenen organismen, um ihre funktionen und ihre evolutionären verwandtschaftsbeziehungen zu bestimmen. transponierbare elemente, zu denen auch zusammengesetzte transposons gehören, bewegen sich im genom von einer stelle zur anderen. untersuchungen des minimalgenoms könnten es ermöglichen, künstliche spezies zu erzeugen. sie sollten . . . die charakteristischen merkmale von prokaryotischen genomen beschreiben können. experimentelle ansätze entwickeln können, um fragen der metagenomik anzugehen. die mechanismen zusammenfassen können, durch die sich transponierbare elemente im genom bewegen können. originalliteratur: hutchison c et al. ( ) mycoplasma genitalium besitzt eines der kleinsten bekannten genome der prokaryoten. aber sind all dessen gene zum leben unentbehrlich? indem man gene nacheinander inaktiviert hat, ließ sich nun ermitteln, welche für das Überleben der zelle unbedingt notwendig sind. bei bakterien reicht für das Überleben der zelle ein essenzielles minimalgenom. die meisten erkenntnisse über eukaryotische genome hat man mithilfe von modellorganismen gewonnen, die umfassend untersucht wurden: die bierhefe saccharomyces cerevisiae, der nematode (fadenwurm) caenorhabditis elegans und die taufliege drosophila melanogaster, und repräsentativ für blütenpflanzen die ackerschmalwand arabidopsis thaliana. diese modellorganismen wurden ausgewählt, weil sie sich im labor relativ einfach vermehren und untersuchen lassen, ihre genetik gut bekannt ist und sie merkmale besitzen, die für eine größere gruppe von organismen repräsentativ ist. (als spezielle wirbeltiermodelle sind vor allem der zebrafisch danio rerio, der krallenfrosch xenopus laevis und die labormaus mus musculus in gebrauch, für die untersuchung von befruchtungsvorgängen auch noch der seeigel psammechinus miliaris.) die bierhefe: das eukaryotische grundmodell hefen sind einzellige eukaryoten und gehören zu den pilzen. typisch für eukaryoten besitzen sie membranumhüllte organellen wie den zellkern oder das endoplasmatische reticulum, und in ihrem zellzyklus wechseln haploide und diploide generationen einander ab ( abb. . ). deshalb ist es auch nicht verwunderlich, dass die einzellige hefe ein größeres genom mit mehr proteincodierenden genen besitzt als ein einzelliges bakterium ( tab. . ). untersuchungen zur geninaktivierung (ähnlich wie mit m. genitalium, abb. . ) haben ergeben, dass bei der hefe weniger als % der gene für das Überleben unverzichtbar sind. der auffälligste unterschied zwischen dem hefegenom und dem genom von e. coli betrifft jedoch die anzahl der gene, die für die zielgerichtete verteilung der proteine auf die organellen zuständig sind ( tab. . ). beide einzelligen organismen nutzen offenbar dieselbe anzahl von genen, um die grundfunktionen des Überlebens der zelle aufrechtzuerhalten. die meisten der zusätzlichen gene sind für die kompartimentierung der eukaryotischen hefezelle in organellen erforderlich. dieser befund spiegelt im genotyp wider, was im phänotyp offensichtlich ist: die eucyte ist weitaus komplexer als die procyte. zwischen den mitgliedern der genfamilie liegt nichtcodierende spacer-dna. chromosom abb. . die familie der globingene. die '-globinund "-globin-cluster der menschlichen globingenfamilie liegen auf verschiedenen chromosomen. die gene jedes clusters sind durch nichtcodierende spacer-dna getrennt. die funktionslosen pseudogene sind mit dem griechischen buchstaben psi ( §) gekennzeichnet. von den "-genen gibt es die beiden varianten a " und g " eukaryotische genome enthalten eine große zahl dna-sequenzwiederholungen, die keine proteine oder peptide codieren. sie befinden sich auch normalerweise nicht innerhalb von proteincodierenden genen, die nur einen geringen prozentsatz der gesamten dna ausmachen. sie umfassen hochrepetitive sequenzen, mäßig repetitive sequenzen und transposons. abb. . eine mäßig repetitive dna-sequenz codiert rrna. a dieses rrna-gen kommt einschließlich der nichttranskribierten spacer-region im menschlichen genom -mal vor, wobei sich auf fünf chromosomen cluster befinden. b diese elektronenmikroskopische aufnahme (tem) zeigt die transkription von multiplen rrna-genen mäßig repetitive sequenzen mäßig repetitive sequenzen wiederholen sich im eukaryotischen genom zehn-bis mal. zu diesen sequenzen gehören auch die gene, die für die produktion von trnas und rrnas transkribiert werden, die an der proteinsynthese beteiligt sind. die zelle synthetisiert ständig trnas und rrnas, aber selbst bei der maximalen transkriptionsrate würden einzelkopien der trna-und rrna-gene nicht ausreichen, um die von den meisten zellen benötigten großen mengen dieser moleküle zur verfügung zu stellen. deshalb enthält das genom mehrere bis viele kopien dieser gene. bei den säugern enthält das ribosom vier verschiedene rrna-moleküle: die s-, , s-, s-und s-rrna. (das s bedeutet svedberg-einheit oder sedimentationskoeffizient, ein in einer ultrazentrifuge ermitteltes größenmaß.) die s-, die , sund die s-rna werden gemeinsam als einzelnes rna-vorläufermolekül transkribiert ( abb. . ). in mehreren posttranskriptionellen schritten wird das vorläufermolekül in die drei endgültigen rrna-produkte geschnitten und die nichtcodierende spacer-rna wird entfernt (vom englischen spacer für "abstandhalter"). die dna-sequenz, die diese rrnas co-diert, ist beim menschen mäßig repetitiv: insgesamt liegen kopien der sequenz in clustern auf fünf verschiedenen chromosomen. frage zu abb. . : gibt es Ähnlichkeiten zwischen dem vorgang, der hier in der fotografie dargestellt ist, und dem vorgang der translation mit polysomen ( abb. . )? außer den rrna-genen handelt es sich bei den meisten mäßig repetitiven sequenzen um transposons, die sich wie die transposons der prokaryoten (siehe oben) durch das genom bewegen können. transposons machen etwa % des menschlichen genoms aus und etwa % des maisgenoms, wobei der anteil bei vielen anderen untersuchten eukaryoten mit - % deutlich kleiner ist. in tab. . sind die wichtigsten typen von transposons bei den eukaryoten zusammengestellt. die retrotransposons umfassen drei gruppen, entsprechend der art der repetitiven sequenzen, die sie enthalten: lange endständige wiederholun- die genome der eukaryoten enthalten deutlich mehr gene als die der prokaryoten. manche dieser "zusätzlichen" gene codieren funktionen, die mit der kompartimentierung der eukaryotischen zellen zusammenhängen, andere sind für die vielzelligkeit erforderlich. die genomsequenzen von modellorganismen wurden verglichen, um gemeinsame merkmale eukaryotischer genome zu finden, etwa die große menge an regulatorischen sequenzen, sequenzwiederholungen und nichtcodierender dna. einige gene der eukaryoten bilden genfamilien, zu denen auch gene gehören können, die mutiert und funktionslos sind. seit zu beginn des ersten jahrzehnts dieses jahrtausends die sequenzen des ersten menschlichen genoms vollständig ermittelt sind, wurden die genome vieler weiterer personen sequenziert teil v und veröffentlicht. aufgrund der schnellen entwicklung der methoden kann man, wie oben erwähnt, inzwischen ein menschliches genom für weniger als c sequenzieren lassen. am menschlichen genom und seinen genen werden die eigenschaften komplexer eukaryotischer genome deutlich. mithilfe der vergleiche von haplotypen bei personen, die von einer bestimmten genetisch bedingten krankheit betroffen oder nicht betroffen sind, lassen sich loci bestimmen, die mit der krankheit assoziiert sind. die pharmakogenomik untersucht, wie ein individuelles genom die reaktionen auf medikamente oder andere äußere faktoren beeinflusst. im folgenden sind einige interessante erkenntnisse aufgeführt, die man über das menschliche genom gewonnen hat: abb. . proteomik. ein einziges gen kann mehrere proteine codieren zur erinnerung: in abschn. . wurde besprochen, dass von einem gen durch alternatives spleißen verschiedene mrnas erzeugt werden können. dadurch entsteht aus einem einzigen gen eine familie verschiedener proteine mit unterschiedlichen funktionen. bekanntermaßen können proteine auch in posttranslationalen reaktionen modifiziert werden, etwa durch proteolyse, glykosylierung und phosphorylierung ( abschn. . , "experiment: testen der signalsequenz"). das proteom wird vor allem mithilfe der massenspektrometrie analysiert. bei diesem verfahren dienen elektromagnete dazu, zuvor mittels laser ionisierte proteine aufgrund ihrer masse (bzw. der massen ihrer proteolytisch erzeugten fragmente) zu identifizieren. ein anderes standardverfahren der proteomik ist die elektrophoretische auftrennung von proteinen in zweidimensionalen polyacrylamidgelen. das letztendliche ziel der proteomik ist mindestens so anspruchsvoll wie das der genomik. während die genomik dazu dient, genome und ihre expression zu beschreiben, will man mit der proteomik alle zu bestimmten zeitpunkten exprimierten proteine identifizieren und charakterisieren. wie vergleiche der proteome des menschen und anderer eukaryotischer organismen gezeigt haben, gibt es einen gemeinsamen satz proteine, die sich in verwandtschaftsgruppen mit ähnlichen aminosäuresequenzen und funktionen einteilen lassen. wenn man die organismen als ganzes betrachtet, stimmen % des hefeproteoms, % des fadenwurmproteoms und % des fliegenproteoms mit dem menschlichen proteom überein. laut funktionsanalysen ermöglicht dieser satz von proteinen die grundlegenden stoffwechselfunktionen einer eukaryotischen zelle, beispielsweise glykolyse, citratzyklus, membrantransport, proteinsynthese, dna-replikation synapsenfutter: wenden sie an, was sie gelernt haben aufgrund der nun bekannten wirkung von myostatin auf die muskelentwicklung hat man Überlegungen angestellt, ob sich beim menschen myostatin nicht künstlich beeinflussen lässt, um muskelschwunderkrankungen wie die muskeldystrophie zu behandeln. sie können sich sicher auch vorstellen, dass athleten, die gerne größere muskeln hätten, an diesem gen und seinem proteinprodukt sehr interessiert sind. nur wenige wissenschaftliche projekte haben so viel begeisterung und hoffnung geweckt wie die genomsequenzierung. zurzeit ist man sehr bestrebt, die genome von so vielen tumoren und bei so vielen menschen wie möglich zu sequenzieren, um sie nach mutationen zu durchsuchen. als man festgestellt hat, dass das brca -gen bei brustkrebs mutiert ist ( kap. key: cord- -n ewq pt authors: baranyi, lajos; dropulic, boro title: advances in lentiviral vector-based cell therapy with mesenchymal stem cells date: - - journal: mesenchymal stem cell therapy doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: n ewq pt the field of possible application of mesenchymal stem cells in medicine and research expanded tremendously with the advent of improved lentiviral-vectors capable of inserting stable copies of genes of interest and expressing proteins or biologically active rna species ad libitum, performing delicate gene editing or active gene silencing or serving as advanced drug delivery systems utilized in ex vivo cell therapy. the combination of these two fields has created a number of new areas of research in the landscape of modern medicine which are now extensively studied and discussed here. these areas include tissue engineering, tissue repair, wound healing and tissue implants, anticancer therapies, angiogenesis, myocardial infarction and repair as well as understanding and treating acute lung damage and injury. in addition, genetically modified, tagged mscs are being intensively deployed in research and therapeutic attempts of the various ailments of the central nervous system including parkinson’s disease, alzheimer’s disease, various phases of acute ischemia and trauma. the emergence of new and important data for type ii diabetes research is being followed with treatment suggestions and studies of senescence to find novel applications for genetically engineered mscs. we find in general that genetically modified mscs are at the cusp of breaking through from basic research into the next phase of clinical trials. stem cells, including the mesenchymal stem cells (mscs), are very close manifestations of plato's imagery of the shadows on the cave wall, since they are dif fi cult to study outside their intimate interactions with their microenvironment [ ] . our observation methods change their responses and characteristics [ , , , , , ] , as in quantum physics, when the observation changes the observed. with that caveat, we can admire the rapid development in stem cell research. alas, the dif fi culties in research are faithfully re fl ected in the confusion in the nomenclature used for describing and classifying stem cells, including the classes of stem cells of mesodermal origin. the recent de fi nition of mscs by dominici states that mscs are a stromal cell type, possessing the following characteristics and markers: plastic adherence in cell culture, speci fi c surface antigen expression of cd (+), cd (+), cd (+), cd (−), cd (−), cd b(−) or cd (−), cd (−) or cd a(−), hla-dr (−) and multi-lineage in vitro differentiation potential (osteogenic, chondrogenic, and adipogenic) [ ] . however, this de fi nition would neatly exclude cd + hematopoietic stem cells (hscs ), while one also could argue that the hematopoietic stem cells are just a specialized subclass of the mesenchymal progenitors [ ] . another subset of mscs that express hyaluronan (cd ), an adhesion molecule important for stem cell homing [ , , ] , would also be excluded, but their perivascular equivalents could be considered to be true mpcs [ ] . it becomes even more complicated if we include the results of (stem) cell reprogramming, when more or less differentiated cell types are regressed into less differentiated, pluripotent cell types [ , , , ] , providing us with a never ending stream of novel biomarkers, more often represented by whole proteome analysis [ , ] . time will tell, what are the biomarkers and criteria for properly characterizing the particular stem cell populations, but there is a functional de fi nition lingering around as a fi rm conceptual handle on the idea of cell plasticity of which stem cells are prominent representatives [ , ] . the plasticity indicates the ability of matured or not fully differentiated cells to differentiate into novel cell types, or more accurately, it describes the existence of cells specialized into becoming progenitors of differentiated cells while sustaining their own type and maturation level. combining this with the embryology and origins of cell lineages from the three primordial "dermata" (ecto-, endo-, and mesoderm) provides us with a useful and generalized de fi nition of mscs being the pluripotent, self-renewing stromal cells of mesenchymal origin and allowing us to determine the speci fi c biomarkers later, at our convenience, as the state of affairs in mesenchymal stem cell biology progresses and solidi fi es. there is no doubt that we will fi nd the appropriate placement for the specialized subtypes as well as the proper and practical placement of some of the induced pluripotent cells (ipcs) in the realm of mscs. regardless of the exactitude of the classi fi cation, the (omni-) presence of the mesenchymal cell lineages in all of the organs and tissues [ , , , , ] renders them good candidates not only for general stem cell therapy [ , , , ] , but even more promising is the potential use of mscs for gene therapy [ , , , ] , cell reprogramming [ , , ] , delivery of bioactive molecules [ , ] , and tissue engineering [ , , ] . in addition, a number of new issues are arising from the results describing the importance of stem cells in inducing and sustaining the malignant phenotype and the potential therapeutic targeting of a wide range of the elusive cancer stem cell types [ , , , ] . the genetic modi fi cation of mscs and associated cell types with lentiviral vectors opens their application beyond reliance upon the innate properties of the cells. expression of proteins that can modulate their biology or therapeutic properties enormously expands their utility for therapy. the lack of a crisp de fi nition of all the stem cell types affects targeting of lentiviral vectors to speci fi c subsets of stem cells. however, recent successful efforts in the pseudotyping of lentiviral vector is a step in the right direction. the use of the vsvg pseudotype expanded the tropism of the lentiviral vectors and, as a result, practically any cell type can be targeted and the narrowing of the tropisms by developing novel vector-pseudotypes will be addressed. the emergence of single chain antibodies as pseudotype indicates that we can expect a rapid expansion of this technology in the near future and will result in a precise tool for studying cell lineages. we focus and limit our review on the recent progress made in stem cell research using lentiviral vector-based gene delivery, a method that is emerging as the safest and most effective way to modify (stem) cells permanently or temporarily, if using non-integrating versions of the novel generations of lentiviral vectors, both of which have clear potential for a wide range of research application in preclinical studies as well as therapeutic applications. the most commonly used lentiviral vector framework is hiv- based although hiv , siv (simian immunode fi ciency virus ), fiv (feline immunode fi ciency virus) have been successfully tested ; see review by dropulic [ ] . the native hiv- is a human pathogen; but it had been modi fi ed to eliminate pathogenicity and increase safety before considering it as a broadly available tool for gene transfers. typically, lentiviral vector are generated by trans complementation , a process that separates the essential components of hiv (the genes encoding gag-pol , rev , and env ) into separate plasmids, which lack the packaging signal and , therefore, can never end up in a packaged vector unless they appear in a recombinant sequence [ ] . the components (tat , vif, etc.) responsible for pathogenicity by upregulation of transcription [ ] and export of genomic rna to the cytoplasm have been successively removed from the constructs. the potential for a recombination event is minimized, and for all practical purposes avoided, by carefully editing the genes and using codon degeneracy to reduce the chances of recombination with the wild-type virus. these separate plasmids are used to co-transfect a packaging cell, typically hek , along with a payload plasmid that carries the packaging signal necessary for starting the envelope formation and encapsidation of the mrna that carries the payload gene (s) as well as the ¢ and ¢ long terminal repeats (ltr s) necessary for integration into the transcriptionally active regions of the host chromosomes. packaging is a delicate process, which ensures that with the rna, appropriate trnalys, protease, integrase, and reverse transcriptase enzymes are carried by the vector with the packaging elements necessary for successful cell entry, reverse transcription of vector rna to dna, transport of that dna into the nucleus, and the permanent integration of the dna into host chromosome. the env gene encodes the protein gp that is cleaved into trimer-forming gp , which appears as spikes decorating the vector particle; and gp , that carries a transmembrane region and a carboxy terminal sub-domain that interacts with the nucleocapsid within the envelope. the n-terminal domain has a fusogenic domain that facilitates cell entry by fusing the outer membrane of the vector with the cell membrane. a region further down to from the amino terminal region also binds to gp which in turn binds to primary hiv- receptors on the target cd + of t lymphocytes. this property if left unmodi fi ed would signi fi cantly limit the usability of the lentiviral vector, as very few cells types can be directly infected by hiv- . pseudotyping overcomes this limitation and permits targeting to any mammalian cell. pseudotyping essentially replaces the original hiv env gene with a corresponding molecule from other viruses and carries over the cell-targeting speci fi city (i.e., the tropism of the virus) and obviates some of the safety concerns related to gp [ ] . the list of successful pseudotypes and cell tropism is rather lengthy [ , - , , ] and growing. the most successful pseudotype so far uses the env from vesicular stomatitis virus (vsvg) that successfully broadens the tropism to cells in the brain, kidney, and liver amongst other. it extends to mesenchymal (stem) cells, even those in nondividing (resting) state [ , , ] . filovirus env pseudotypes shift the tropism to a more limited set of cells, airway epithelial and endothelial cells [ , ] . baculovirus gp and hepatitis c virus e and e pseudotypes redirect the vectors toward liver cells targeting their respective receptor, cd (tetraspanin) [ ] . rabies virus env has been shown to ef fi ciently retarget the vectors to neuronal cells [ , ] . rd env pseudotyped lentiviral vector show preference for hematopoietic cellular compartment [ , , , , , ] . however, some applications require targeting a speci fi c cell type, which is not necessarily covered by the available pseudotypes listed above. in those cases, new targeting methods have been developed to further tighten the tropism of lentiviral vector by co-expressing cell-speci fi c coreceptors that recognize one of the cell-type speci fi c markers. the payload plasmid components providing the backbone for the transfer vector in the early hiv vectors were composed of a ¢ ltr, followed by a major splice donor site, a packaging signal site encompassing the packaging signal components of the ¢ region of gag (necessary for high ef fi ciency packaging and high vector titer) and a deletion of the rest of the gag gene. deletion of the u region from the ¢ ltr promoters became also possible by relaying on constructing genes with their own promoter(s). the latest generation of lentiviral vectors carry an additional safety element, the self-inactivating ltr (sin lentiviral vector , [ ] ) replacing the ltr with an hiv-independent promoter from cytomegalovirus (cmv). in these vectors the ltrs are modi fi ed in a way that upon integration they lose their intrinsic promoter ability reducing genotoxic potential. in addition the irreversible changes that occur during integration diminish the ability to mobilize after integration and to recombine with other elements to form a full-fl edged, replication capable virus [ , ] . the formal proof of increased safety is still lacking, ironically, because of the inability to create and detect rcl capable viruses from lentiviral vector-treated cells [ ] , indicating that this risk is mainly theoretical. the removal of rre and the associated splice donor and acceptor elements results in signi fi cant loss of transduction ef fi ciency of the vector [ ] , while adding a nucleotide central polypurine tract (central dna fl ap) restores the transduction ef fi ciency by improving the reverse transcription and nuclear transport ef fi ciency [ , ] . the woodchuck hepatitis virus transcriptional regulatory element (wpre ) is another widely used regulatory element added to the lentiviral vector backbone to stabilize the transcription transgene mrna levels and improve transgene expression [ ] . however, an open reading frame of the oncogenic whv-x element has been found within the native wpre sequence [ ] , so the sequence has been modi fi ed to remove the translation start site [ ] . further optimization continues to improve the safety of lentiviral vector, such as isolating the integrated vector dna to prevent translation beyond the vector boundaries by adding isolating elements. h owever, the insulators have themselves proven to be genotoxic in some instances, and no proof has emerged that such isolators are truly needed [ ] . gene switches such as tet -on and -off have been added to subsequent generations of lentiviral vector and proven to be highly functional, operating with very low leakage [ , ] . the cre-lox system has also been successfully implemented in the lentiviral context allowing high ef fi ciency engineering and sophisticated, site-speci fi c recombination techniques including the delivery and irreversible switching by small hairpin rna (shrna ) expression [ ] , a tool extensively used in gene function analysis [ , ] . a major concern regarding the safety of lentiviral vectors has been the potential genotoxicity resulting in oncogenesis, as observed previously during clinical trials for treating x-linked severe combined immunode fi ciency (x-scid) with transplanted hscs treated with murine oncoretroviral vectors carrying the gamma chain of il r genes [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the preferential insertion of oncoretroviral vectors in proximity of the lmo proto oncogene and the subsequent constitutive activation of the proto-oncogen driven by the enhancer element (ltr) in the vector resulted in uncontrolled cell proliferation. however, in a series of studies comparing oncoretroviruses and lentiviral vector, it has been shown that while the oncoretroviral vectors trigger a dose dependent acceleration of cancer onset in a mouse transplantation model sensitive to cancer-triggering genetic changes (cdkna −/−), lentiviral vectors lacked such activity [ , ] even though the vector integration rate was signi fi cantly higher. this important observation implying that a low level of insertional mutagenicity has been con fi rmed independently by several groups indicating a favorable safety pro fi le for lentiviral vectors while emphasizing the importance of vector design and avoidance of strong enhancers in the vectors [ , , ] . recent clinical trials have supported the good safety pro fi le of lentiviral vectors . there have been no oncogenic effects reported in any of trials using lentiviral vectors to date [ , , , , , , , ] . gene silencing by small interfering rna (rnai) is based on duplex formation between the mrna and a short complementary micro rna or small inhibitory rna, each having the ability to interfere with the protein synthesis and downregulate the expression levels of the targeted protein. a major problem with the inhibitory rna technologies is the short half-life and delivery of the rnai. this can be resolved using lentiviral vectors encoding arti fi cial genes with appropriate micro rna sequences that can be integrated into the host cell dna and ef fi ciently transcribed into primary micro rna that utilizes the natural intracellular processing by microprocessor complex formation with drosha to form small hairpin rna (shrna) in the nucleus. the exported mirna is subsequently cleaved by dicer and produces the complex forming inhibitory rnai. the process is rather complex, but ef fi cient to produce a signi fi cant blockade of protein expression that may be incomplete but readily achieves signi fi cant reduction, that is adequate for gaining insight into the function of the targeted protein and ef fi cient enough for phase i and ii clinical trials, though no therapeutic use has been approved by the fda. it is interesting to note that mscs are capable of secreting cholesterol-rich phospholipid microparticles encapsulating mirna, and therefore have the potential to facilitate intercellular communication and act as regulatory agents in their microenvironment [ ] . an hematopoietic or general pluripotent stem cells are often selected targets for rna interference-based interventions and one of the promising efforts deal with creating arti fi cial virus resistance genes and virus resistant somatic cells. preventing hiv infection by reconstituting the immune system with such stem cell-derived virus-resistant progeny has been used as model system with signi fi cant clinical relevance [ ] . the idea is that an ef fi cient hiv infection requires virus entry through the cd surface antigen and one or more virus co-receptors, among which ccr has been shown to play an essential role in the case of r tropic viral strains involved in primary hiv infection. clinical data indicate that ccr de fi ciency or certain mutations in this co-receptor protect the infected individuals from the onset of full blown aids, and the hope is that the arti fi cial knockdown of ccr using gene therapy and rnai will achieve similar protection [ , , , , ] . the relative inef fi ciency of the ccr suppression remains a signi fi cant issue, but major improvement and complete knockdown of ccr have been achieved with somewhat longer ( base instead of ) shrna [ ] . mesenchymal stem cell research is taking full advantage of the shrna techniques by characterizing the subtle, and not so subtle, changes induced by individual gene knockdowns. it is a long held view that mechanical stresses and mechanical characteristics of stem cells, as well as the microenvironment, can affect stem cell proliferation and differentiation. lentiviral vectors are excellent and ef fi cient targeting tools for these stem cells, even resting ones, and can deliver the shrna without causing major changes and stress that would otherwise change the stem cells on its own. chowdhury et al. studied the spreading response of mscs and showed that myosin ii , f-actin , src, or cdc were essential for cell spreading and changes in the mechanical characteristics ("softening") of the stem cells led directly to the downregulation of the oct / gene. this indicates the possibility that small mechanical events may affect the embryo and developing tissues and even transplanted stem cells [ ] . another area of ef fi cient use of lentiviral vectors and rnai technology in stem cell research is the production of transgenic embryos which carry knockdown genes. production of transgenic embryos is highly ef fi cient, and if the fertilized egg is transduced at a single cell stage, the entire germ line is affected, or partial chimerism can be achieved if multicellular embryos are treated with lentiviral vectors. an example of such a study is that by wang et al., in which they showed that the knockdown of runx in embryonal tissues and mscs by lentiviral vector-delivered interfering rna blocked chondrogenesis in limb buds [ ] . the technique has been shown to be very ef fi cient for transgenesis, as high as % average rate of germ-line transmission can be achieved [ ] , providing a new source of gene-modi fi ed mscs. a recent comprehensive review of the use of naturally occurring regulatory mirna technology in mesenchymal stem cell research has been written by guo et al. [ ] , indicating that stem cells have discrete and distinct expression pro fi les that can account for intrinsic stem cell properties such as self-renewal and pluripotency, a property that cannot longer be overlooked by experts dealing with mscs. the accumulating data indicate that the progenitors and terminally differentiated mesenchymal cells can be tracked and de fi ned by function-related mirnas in addition to the already established sets of surface markers. the mirnas already identi fi ed affect osteogenic differentiation, chondric differentiation, adipogenic differentiation, myogenic differentiation, neuronal differentiation, wound healing, and replicative senescence. these advances open a wide array of possibilities to direct the differentiation patterns of the stem cell population temporarily by using non-integrating lentiviral vectors that are automatically lost from dividing cell populations and lead to the natural disappearance of control signal after a few cell division but potentially giving a push to the original stem cell population to develop in a preferred direction. extensive progress has been made in regards to the elucidation of the hedgehog signaling pathway in mscs using rna interference delivered with lentiviral vectors. the data suggest that at least some of the elements indeed act through the regulatory mirna network, by downregulating the cellular mirna levels. the data, however, also suggest signi fi cant off-target effects of the interfering rna molecules and indicate that we are a long way from the potential clinical use of the elucidated networks [ ] . an ingenious method was devised by hu et al., to prepare the brain for traumatic interventions (surgery, extensive stem cell transplantations, etc.) by downregulating the cerebral matrix metalloproteinase (mmp ) using lentiviral vector and mmp- shrna weeks before the trauma. the knockdown of mmp- with the shrna proved to be an effective way to preserve the blood-brain barrier, and they achieved signi fi cant reduction of brain infarction volumes, reduction of brain water content and evans blue/igg extravasation (measure of edema formation) as well as a reduction in the neurobehavioral de fi cit in their rat brain trauma model [ ] implying a potential for improved protocols for traumatic brain interventions needed for more extensive type of intracranial stem cell implantations. as mentioned earlier, lentiviral vectors provide a very ef fi cient method for generating transgenic embryos, signi fi cantly reducing the need for the generation of a high number of embryos to establish new sources of gene-modi fi ed stem cell lines, embryonic, or other [ ] . the lentiviral technology is able to deliver a payload of - kb very ef fi ciently, but payloads of kb can be handled and delivery of - kb is possible, at a cost of lower ef fi ciency. this payload-carrying capacity allows the delivery of very large genes such as the gene encoding blood clothing factor viii, a , amino acid long protein together with its stabilizer, the von willebrand factor ( , amino acids in its native form) simultaneously or, one may need to use domain-engineered and shortened version of both; similarly it can be used to deliver all three chains of an igm molecule in a single, tri-cistronic complex. the implication is that the lentiviral vector system has suf fi cient payload capacity to deliver a number of relevant genes together with several supporting molecules envisioned for highly complex gene therapy scenarios currently outside the scope of monogenic gene therapy as practiced today. it may be used to target diseases with multi-gene disorders such as high blood pressure, arthritis, or diabetes in the future. zinc-fi nger nucleases (zfns) have the remarkable ability to (a) bind to a speci fi c location in the double-stranded dna; (b) break the double-stranded dna at that speci fi c location and, if an endogenous repair template is provided, (c) initiate homology-directed repair, restoring the integrity of the newly edited double-stranded dna. as their name implies, there is a speci fi c dna-binding part of this class of enzymes that consists of a tandem repeat of dna-binding zinc-fi nger motifs, hence the dna binding speci fi city and a catalytic domain, foki . for dna cleavage to occur, foki has to dimerize, one on the sense and the other on the antisense strand, while the zinc-fi nger domains attach to the right target half site and the left target half site. upon binding, a nick with a ¢ overhang is initiated by foki between the target sites and the homology-directed dna repair mechanism is activated. what makes this con fi guration useful is that the spacer between the two target half sites can be several hundreds or even thousands of base pairs long and by providing a template for the activated repair mechanism, a novel dna sequence of equal length can be introduced into the dna; see a recent reviews by caroll [ ] and others [ , , , , ] . fundamentally, two factors determine the ef fi cacy of the dna editing or repair that the technology allows. the fi rst is the speci fi city of the zinc-fi nger binding, which also determines the length of the spacer and the proper speci fi city and uniqueness of the binding site and allows the minimization of the off-target effects that may be introduced by similar sites far away from the desired and targeted locus [ ] . huge efforts are being made to tailor the zinc-fi nger nucleases for particular applications and improving the selectivity by successfully engineering the dna-binding speci fi city of the binding domain [ , , , , ] . the second factor is the ef fi cient delivery of the zfns and the template dna by vectors. while the early attempts relied on retroviral vectors, adeno and adeno-associated vectors, and even baculovirus vectors, the recent advances in the fi eld clearly indicate that the lentiviral delivery system is considered to be a safer and more ef fi cacious route. as high as % conversion rate can be achieved with lentiviral delivery in a variety of cell lines and human embryonic stem cells [ ] as compared with the earlier best rates of % with other methods in human and other species [ , , , , , , , ] . one of the many holy grails of medicine, the ability to replace diseased tissue or even entire organs, seems to be hovering at the not too distant horizon. there is rapid progress in a wide range of areas, but at the center of the solution is almost always biocompatible scaffolding that is populated with a wide variety of cells. the strategically positioned cells fi nd their place within the d structure, propagate, differentiate, and fi ll the available space, while producing a structure that can replace or enhance the damaged tissue in the form of various implants or prosthetics. as for scaffolding, the options are quite numerous, including those obtained from cadavers or live organs (animal or human origin), by removing the cells while preserving the fi brous tissue that maintains the basic morphology of the organ. alternatively, a scaffold can be printed with various d printers [ , , - , , , ] . processed cartilage can also result in scaffold and it can be used to rebuild and regrow an implantable ear, nose, or cartilage for trachea reconstruction [ ] . the culture, expansion, and differentiation of human mscs into arti fi cial tissues represent a very complex series of events and lentiviral vectors often serve as excellent research tools for marking, visualizing, and tracking the process [ ] , or modifying the gene or protein expression patterns [ ] . a number of tissue engineering attempts have reached the clinic and lentiviral vector have played various roles in the advancement of the technology. a very promising technology is the use of these scaffolded arti fi cial tissues employing mscs and lentiviral vectors for delivering biologics for prolonged times. van damme succinctly described the potential of these arti fi cal tissues built on scaffolds and providing arti fi cial implants for drug delivery. lentiviral vectors were used to transduce mesenchymal cells to express green fl uorescent protein (gfp) or fviii. expression was superior compared to oncoretroviral transduction, showing consistently higher transduction rates and expression remained high for several months post-transduction. the transduced cells retained their stem/progenitor cell properties, and they were still capable of differentiating along adipogenic and osteogenic lineages in vitro, while maintaining high gfp and fviii expression levels. implantation of lentiviral vector-transduced human bone marrow mesenchymal cells using collagen scaffolds into immunode fi cient mice resulted in ef fi cient engraftment of gene-engineered cells and provided sites for transgene-expression in vivo. in addition to the bone marrow-derived stem cells, adipose tissue-derived mesenchymal stem cells have been shown to be amenable to populate implantable scaffolds and retain the potential to differentiate into osteogenic cells. some of these scaffolds have been engineered for use in reconstructing craniofacial bone defects. lentiviral vector have been used to deliver fl uorescent proteins to track cells during manipulation such as osteogenic differentiation. the gfp-marked stem cells and their progeny remained fl uorescent over the weeks of the study period. the gfp-marked stem cells were successfully induced into osteogenic cells both in monolayers and threedimensional scaffolds. quanti fi cation showed no decrease in staining of the osteoinduced stem cells indicating the ef fi ciency and durability of the labeling [ ] . tissue engineered vascular grafts built on bilayered elastomeric poly (ester-urethane) urea scaffolds and seeded with pericytes have shown promise in the past. however, in vitro endothelialization is still an issue for the use of these types of grafts. doebis et al. reported in enhanced endothelialization using allogeneic endothelial cells or their precursors, expressing recombinant anti-alpha-mhc i single chain antibody to prevent rejection. the recombinant antibody was delivered ef fi ciently ex vivo using lentiviral vector, and has signi fi cantly reduced the mhc- expression levels as well as the killing of allogeneic cells by mhc- speci fi c cd* + t cells [ ] . the results suggest that these allogeneic cells may provide a suitable alternative supply for the lining of vascular prostheses. endothelial cells and their precursors are attractive targets for gene therapy, both for the treatment of cardiovascular disease and for the systemic delivery of recombinant gene products directly into the circulation. there have been a few reports which show lentiviral vector-mediated gene transfer ef fi ciency. sacoda and colleagues compared the effectiveness of lentiviral vector compared to adeno and oncoretroviral vectors. bovine aortic endothelial cells (baecs) were infected, in vitro, with these viral vectors. transduction ef fi ciency of beta-gal gene transfer in baecs by adenovirus, lentiviral vector, or retrovirus at a multiplicity of infection (moi) of (determined on hela cells) was ± , ± , or ± % respectively. at higher moi [ ] both adenovirus and lentiviral vectors achieved an almost % transduction rate. however, retroviral vectors showed only ± % at moi and no increase at moi . the percentage of beta-gal positive cells decreased rapidly at longer passage of cells after being transduced by adenovirus. in contrast, lentiviral vector and retrovirus vectors mediated transductions showed sustained higher percentage of positive cells. furthermore, the transductions by lentiviral vectors had no signi fi cant effect on viability of baecs suggesting that for long-term cell therapy the lentiviral vectors have overall the best features [ ] . expressing il in similar settings in the early, initiation phase, also inhibited and delayed the onset of the rejection process [ ] . one of such cases in which the performance of the endothelial cells may need to be boosted is to increase the resistance to ischemia-reperfusion injury of the vascularized transplants and implants or normal tissues undergoing prolonged surgery. this is a condition which occurs too frequently and is responsible for devastating tissue injury caused by systemic activation of the complement system. lentiviral vectors can be used to force the over-expression of the anti-apoptotic gene, bcl-xl and indeed, it has shown signi fi cant protection from early apoptotic loss of vascular endothelial cells [ ] . recently, tooth tissue engineering has attracted more and more attention. stem cellbased tissue engineering is thought to be a promising way to replace a missing tooth. the potential mscs for tooth regeneration mainly include stem cells from human exfoliated deciduous teeth (sheds), adult dental pulp stem cells (dpscs), stem cells from the apical part of the papilla (scaps), stem cells from the dental follicle (dfscs), periodontal ligament stem cells (pdlscs), and bone marrowderived mscs (bmscs). a recent review by peng et al. shows promising progress [ ] . however, in practice, tissues other than bone marrow can serve as stem cell donors, including adipose tissue, periodontal ligament, and pulp for oral tissue regeneration [ ] . the experimental data suggest that not only the stem cells ex vivo, but cells in the osteogenic tissue are amenable to direct transduction by lentiviral vector [ ] . this opens up the periodontal reconstruction interventions to the bene fi cial effects of gene therapy enhancing the wound healing and improving engraftment by expressing growth promoters at low and slowly decreasing concentrations. estrela published an excellent review on the potential of mscs in regeneration of dental tissues [ ] and rodrigues-loza reviewed the mesenchymal cell types recovered from dental tissues [ ] . other data clearly show that the primary osteogenic cells are ef fi ciently transduced by lentiviral vector, and that their infusion into the mandible is a feasible method for locally delivering dna to primary osteogenic and bone cells in rat models [ ] , indicating that future applications in vivo dental implant enhancement, using dental scaffolding, bone healing, and tooth regeneration may be feasible. recent efforts extend toward engineering dental repair by changing the expression of growth factors and bone morphogenic proteins leading to dentin formation, as discussed in a review by casagrande [ ] and which seem to be amenable to cell therapy efforts with nonintegrating lentiviral vector. one of the tissues that is often injured but that presents dif fi culties when it comes to healing and repairs is the tendon. enhancing the healing process by in situ overexpression of helper factors such as il could reduce recuperation time and perhaps improve the quality of the repair. richetti et al. reported promising results in a murine model of patellar tendon injury after direct injection of an il transgene using lentiviral vector. although the tendons showed no obvious histological difference, the il- -treated groups had superior mechanical characteristics by day [ ] . although the mechanism of wound healing in tendons is not yet understood, the involvement of mscs is suspected and delivery of additional factors that partake in healing process is discussed by meyerose and ashlan [ , ] . recent fi ndings by shamis and colleagues [ ] demonstrated that embryonic stem cells could be directed to speci fi ed and alternative mesenchymal cell fates whose function could be distinguished in engineered human skin equivalents. lentiviral shrna-mediated knockdown of hepatocyte growth factor (hgf) resulted in a dramatic decrease of hgf secretion from cell lines (edk cells) that led to a marked reduction in their ability to promote keratinocyte proliferation and reepithelialization of cutaneous wounds. in contrast, h -mscs demonstrated features of mscs but not those of dermal fi broblasts, as they underwent multilineage differentiation in monolayer culture, but were unable to support epithelial tissue development and repair and produced signi fi cantly lower levels of hgf. characterization of these induced mesenchymal cells in d, engineered human skin equivalents demonstrated the utility of this tissue platform to predict the functional properties of stem cell-derived fi broblasts before their therapeutic use in reconstructive skin transplantation and wound healing. inhibition of hyper-keratinization by expressing a mutant form of tcgf beta that has lost its binding site for latency-associated peptide, reduced the re-epithelialization density and fi broblast/myo fi broblast trans-differentiation within the wound area [ ] in a mouse skin wounding model. the expression of this mutated gene was achieved by injecting lentiviral vectors encoding the muttcgf beta , into the regenerating tissue and the changes induced by this intervention predict a signi fi cant decrease in keloid formation and provide a potential model for preventing the painful dis fi gurement that follows the abnormally strong skin remodeling and scar tissue formation that oftentimes accompanies wound healing. the data indicate that future stem cell therapy with carefully designed interventions for patients prone to scar tissue formation could fi nd wide spread application. one of the causes of erectile dysfunction is the damaged penile cavernous smooth muscle cells (smcs) and sinus endothelial cells. song reports that it may be feasible to restore these cells by applying mscs to penile cavernous ecs or smcs. for this purpose immortalized (via lentiviral vector encoding v-myc) human bone marrow mesenchymal stem cell line b cells were transplanted into the cavernosum of sprague-dawley rats and harvested weeks later. the expression of cd , von willebrand factor (vwf), smooth muscle cell actin (sma), calponin, and desmin was determined immunohistochemically in rat penile cavernosum. multipotency of b to adipogenic, osteogenic, or chondrogenic differentiation was found. expression of endothelial cell-speci fi c markers (cd or vwf protein) and expression of smooth muscle cell-speci fi c markers (calponin, sma, or desmin protein) were demonstrated in grafted b cells indicating that human mscs may be a good candidates in the treatment of penile cavernosum injury [ ] . angiogenesis requires the presence and active involvement of mscs and therefore mscs are ready to be recruited into the areas when there is a need for novel blood vessels: the in fl amed, hypoxic, tumor infested locations. gehmert et al. described an interesting model to study the migration of mscs. in their work, immunode fi cient mice were engrafted with human breast cancer cells ( t ) in the left mammary pad. a day later, the mice were injected ip with luciferase-labeled adipose tissue-derived mscs (using lentiviral vector technology). the mscs were found to rapidly migrate into the tumor, con fi rming the previous observations that mscs can be found within the tumor stroma and vasculature, even if the in fl ammation is not present, as the immunode fi cient mice lacked the in fl ammation signaling pathway. based on this result, it can be suggested that mscs can be attracted solely by the cytokines produced by the tumor. however, the power of in fl ammation has been clearly demonstrated in control animals, which received e. coli injections at contralateral locations and attracted all the mscs leaving the tumor implant msc-free [ ] . elucidating the migratory mechanisms of the mscs seems to be an important step toward fi nding a delivery system to in fl ammatory sites and fi nding the conditions for clear migration into established tumors. even the simple marking of tumor tissue with fl uorescent proteins (such as gfp) holds important promise for surgeons, as delineating a breast cancer in situ during surgery would be possible by applying uv light and tracing the contours of the tumor. the technique already allows sophisticated molecular imaging combined with stem cell therapy [ ] . wang and colleagues used the ability of mscs to differentiate into endothelial cells in vivo to establish whether the differentiated mscs persist in vivo and to determine if this potential persistence contributes to functional improvement after experimental myocardial infarction. they generated a lentiviral vector encoding two distinct reporter genes, one driven by a constitutive murine stem cell virus promoter and the other driven by an endothelial-speci fi c tie- promoter. the endothelial speci fi city of the lentiviral vector was validated by its expression in endothelial cells but not in undifferentiated stem cells. the lentivirus-transduced mscs were injected into peri-infarct are as of the hearts of severe combined immunede fi cient mice. persistence of injected cells was tracked by bioluminescence imaging (bli) and veri fi ed by immunohistochemical staining. the bli signal from the endothelial-speci fi c reporter revealed that the stem cells differentiated into endothelial cells h after injection. however, both the constitutive and endothelial-speci fi c signals disappeared by day . nonetheless, the improvement in left ventricle ejection fraction with therapy persisted for up to months. immunohistochemical staining showed that stem cell-derived endothelial cells integrated into endogenous cd + vessels. furthermore, stem cell-transplanted hearts had more cd + vessels and a lesser degree of cardiac fi brosis compared with the controls at months. increased angiogenesis and decreased fi brosis were associated with cardiac functional improvement. similarly mscs double-marked with gfp-lentiviral vector and superparamagnetic iron oxide could be followed by mri for up to months in a porcine model of infraction and revascularization [ ] . endothelial cells respond to mild injurious stimuli by upregulating anti-apoptotic gene expression to maintain endothelial integrity. ec dysfunction and apoptosis resulting from ischemia/reperfusion injury may contribute to chronic allograft rejection. under optimized conditions for lentiviral vector transduction of rat aortic endothelial cells (raec) the delivery of the anti-apoptotic gene, bcl-xl, via lentiviral vector, protects raec from apoptotic death. the authors con fi rmed the damaging effect of the reperfusion phase. endogenous bax expression increased with i/r injury, whereas endogenous bcl-xl remained constant. raec transduced with lentiviral vector expressing bcl-xl were protected from early apoptosis caused by i/r injury, correlating with reduced cytochrome c release into the cytosol. this protective effect may be attributed to altering the balance of pro-and anti-apoptotic proteins, resulting in sequestration of the harmful bax protein, and may open up new strategies for controlling chronic allograft rejection [ ] . inhibition of na+/h+ exchanger (nhe ) reduces cardiac ischemia-reperfusion (i/r) injury as well as cardiac hypertrophy and cardiac failure. although the mechanisms underlying these nhe -mediated effects suggest delay of mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mptp) opening, and reduction of mitochondrial-derived superoxide production, the possibility of nhe blockade targeting mitochondria has been incompletely explored. a short-hairpin rna sequence mediating speci fi c knock down of nhe expression was incorporated into a lentiviral vector (shrna-nhe ) and transduced into the rat myocardium. nhe expression of mitochondrial lysates revealed that shrna-nhe transductions reduced mitochondrial nhe (mnhe ) by approximately %, supporting the expression of nhe in mitochondria membranes. electron microscopy studies corroborate the presence of nhe in heart mitochondria. immunostaining of rat cardiomyocytes also suggests colocalization of nhe with the mitochondrial marker cytochrome c oxidase. to examine the functional role of mnhe , mitochondrial suspensions were exposed to increasing concentrations of cacl to induce mptp opening and consequently, rat heart mitochondrial swelling. shrna-nhe transduction reduced the cacl -induced mitochondrial swelling by ± %. whereas the nhe inhibitor hoe- ( m m) decreased mitochondrial ca + -induced swelling by only ± . because mitochondria from rats injected with shrna-nhe present a high threshold for mptp formation, the bene fi cial effects of nhe inhibition in i/r resulting from mitochondrial targeting should be considered as a future target for cell therapy [ ] oxidative stress is important in a number of pathologies, including cardiovascular diseases, such as atherosclerosis and cardiac ischemia-reperfusion injury. an important mechanism for adaptation to oxidative stress is the induction of genes through the antioxidant response element (are) which regulates the expression of antioxidant and cryoprotective genes via the transcription factor nrf (nuclear factor e -related factor ). as nrf -regulated genes are induced during oxidant stress, occurring for example in reperfusion after ischemia, hurttila et al. took a novel approach to exploit are for the development of oxidative stress-inducible gene therapy vectors. to this end, one, two, or three are-containing regions from human nad(p)h: quinone oxidoreductase- , glutamate-cysteine ligase modi fi er subunit and mouse heme oxygenase- were cloned into a vector expressing luciferase under a minimal sv promoter. the construct, which was the most responsive to areinducing agents, was chosen for further studies in which a lentiviral vector was produced for an ef fi cient transfer to endothelial cells. heme oxygenase- (ho- ), which has well-characterized anti-in fl ammatory properties, was used as the therapeutic transgene. in human endothelial cells, are-driven ho- overexpression inhibited nuclear factor-kappa b activation and subsequent vascular cell adhesion molecule- expression induced by tumor necrosis factor-alpha. they concluded that the are element is a promising alternative for the development of oxidative stressinducible gene therapy vectors [ ] . progenitor cell therapy is a potential new treatment option for ischemic conditions in the myocardium and skeletal muscles. however, it remains unclear whether umbilical cord blood (ucb)-derived progenitor cells can be therapeutic in ischemic muscles and if yes, whether the ex vivo gene transfer can be used for improving the effect. the use of lentiviral vector led to ef fi cient transduction of both ucb-derived hscs and mscs resulting in long-term transgene expression. moreover, it did not alter the differentiation potential of either hscs or mscs. in addition, the therapeutic potential of cd + and msc progenitor cells transduced ex vivo with lentiviral vector encoding the mature form of vascular endothelial growth factor d (vegf-d ) or the enhanced green fl uorescent protein (egfp) marker gene achieved permanent gene expression. the transplantation of the progenitor cells into nude mice serving as mouse model of skeletal muscle ischemia enhanced the regeneration of ischemic muscles, but notably, without a detectable long-term engraftment of either cd + or msc progenitor cells. the results show that rather than directly participating in angiogenesis or skeletal myogenesis, the ucb-derived progenitor cells indirectly enhance the regenerative capacity of skeletal muscle after acute ischemic injury. however, rather counter-intuitively, the vegf-d gene transfer into the progenitor cells did not improve the therapeutic effect in ischemic muscles [ ] . another cell type with improved adult stem cell functions has been discovered and cells have been isolated from the peripheral blood of young children. this clonally expandable, telomerase expressing progenitor cell type is distinct from hematopoietic or mesenchymal stromal cells and resembles that of embryonic multipotent mesoangioblasts. cell numbers and the proliferative capacity correlate with donor age, and express the pluripotency markers klf , c-myc , as well as low levels of oct / , but lack sox . overexpression of sox by lentiviral transduction of sox (sox-mabs) enhances pluripotency and facilitates differentiation to cardiovascular lineages. furthermore, the number of smooth muscle actin positive cells was higher in sox-mabs. in addition, pluripotency of sox-mabs was shown in a mouse model by demonstrating the generation of endodermal and ectodermal progenies and injection of sox-mabs into nude mice after acute myocardial infarction resulted in improved cardiac function compared to mice treated with control cells (cmabs). furthermore, cell therapy with sox-mabs resulted in an increased number of differentiated cardiomyocytes, endothelial cells, and smooth muscle cells in vivo [ ] . mesenchymal stem cell therapy emerges as a viable therapy in the context of acute lung injury /acute respiratory distress syndrome and chronic disorders, such as lung fi brosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. there is evidence for bene fi cial effects of mscs on lung development, repair, and remodeling. the engraftment in the injured lung does not occur easily, but several studies report that paracrine factors can be effective in reducing in fl ammation and promoting tissue repair. mscs release several growth factors and anti-in fl ammatory cytokines that regulate endothelial and epithelial permeability and reduce the severity of in fl ammation, as reviewed by arboreau et al. [ ] , suggesting that carefully controlled expression of these factors using transduced stem cells could enhance the bene fi cial effects of the mesenchymal stem cell therapy. this may be a risky proposal, however, since constitutive expression of tgf beta /tgf alpha in epithelial mscs generated breast cancer stem cells [ ] . acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) is a crippling disease with no effective therapy, and characterized by progressive lung damage followed by dyspnea. mscs have been proposed as a new therapeutic modality for ards because the stem cells can attenuate in fl ammation and repair the damaged tissue by differentiating into several cell types. the bene fi cial effect of the stem cells is still a minor mystery, as it is known that macrophages participate in the development of ards and that mscs can only weekly modulate macrophage function. the chemokine ccl is a potent inducer of macrophage recruitment and activation, and its expression is elevated in patients with ards. a set of mscs have been generated by transducing the cells with a lentiviral vector expressing nd, a dominant-negative inhibitor of ccl , expecting enhanced therapeutic function of the mscs if the hypothesis is valid. the transduction was effective, and the stem cells produced a large amount of nd. after inducing lung injury by bleomycin treatment, the iv-injected mscs readily migrated into the site of injury as con fi rmed by immunostaining h postinjection. this fi nding suggests that mscs could work as a drug delivery tool. mice treated with nd-expressing mscs showed signi fi cantly milder weight loss, suffered less severe lung injury, lower collagen content, lesser accumulation of in fl ammatory cells and in fl ammatory mediators, and ultimately showed signi fi cant gains in survival [ ] . no evidence of nd-mesencymal stem cell-induced toxicity was observed during or after treatment. thus, inhibiting the effects of macrophages may greatly enhance the ability of mscs to affect lung repair in ards. direct transduction of lung tissues for gene therapy has always been an attractive proposal. the reoccurring problem, however, is that the airways are far less accessible to vector particles than hoped for and the depth of penetration of inhaled substrate ends in the branches which are larger than m m in diameter [ , ] . an attractive alternative delivery of gene therapy components could be the intrapleural injection of mscs. to enable tracking, the cells were labeled with green fl uorescent protein (gfp) using a lentiviral vector, and were found readily attached to the pleura of sprague-dawley rats. the isolated and recovered cells preserved the typical mesenchymal stem cell phenotype and could differentiate into adipocytes, osteoblasts, and chondroblasts in vitro. the highest number of the labeled cells was found to be adhered to the mediastinal pleura, but no labeled cells were detected in the lung parenchyma or other tissues/organs, such as the liver, kidney, spleen, and mesenterium, a remarkable compartmentalization of a stem cell transplant [ ] . alzheimer's disease (ad) is one of the most devastating conditions and its prevalence is still rising paralleling the increase of average life expectancy. a hallmark of the disease is the accumulation of amyloid plaques and extensive neurodegeneration in the context of an intracerebral in fl ammation, leading to progressive dementia. over the years, a tripartite set of goals crystallized, when the potential treatments of ad were considered: (a) stop the progression of the disease by reducing/reversing the plaque formation; (b) stop the neurodegeneration that seems to be a consequence of both internal changes (neuro fi brillary tangle formation and related issues) and changes external to the cells, related to plaque formation and degeneration of the neuronal microenvironment; and (c) recover neurological function by replenishing the lost neuronal compartment [ , , , , , , ] . interestingly, mscs and stem cell therapy are increasingly considered a potentially important part of the toolset to achieve these goals. the symptoms that are collectively categorized as ad often have different backgrounds, some of which seem to have roots implying genetic causes, such as improper processing of beta amyloid peptide. consequently, a disease-modifying therapeutic approach in alzheimer's disease aims to reduce the accumulation of neurotoxic beta amyloid aggregation peptides. habish et al. report new fi ndings for a potential autologous stem cell-based strategy for delivery of enzymatic activities against beta amyloid formation in the brain. f-spondin and neprilysin (cd ), genes expressed in adult mscs, are known to be involved in the formation and degradation of beta amyloid peptides, respectively. coincubation of the converted mscs with hek- cells stably expressing amyloid precursor protein (app) lead to a signi fi cant cell dose-dependent decrease of amyloid peptide release and deposition, indicating that mscs might be useful for delivering antiamyloid activity to treat ad [ ] . this direction of research is gaining new momentum from the discovery of a new beta amyloid secretase and the tremendous progress gained in recent years in the fi eld of amyloid formation, its contribution to neurodegenerative diseases [ ] and allowing new gene therapies to be conceived and tested. one effort has utilized human umbilical cord blood-derived mscs (hucb-mscs) which were transplanted into amyloid precursor protein and presenilin double-transgenic mice. this experiment resulted in signi fi cantly improved spatial learning and a decrease in memory decline. furthermore, beta amyloid peptide deposition, beta-secretase (bace- ) levels, and the hyper-phosphorylation of the tau proteins were dramatically reduced in hucb-msc transplanted app/ps mice. interestingly, these effects were associated with reversal of disease-associated microglial neuroin fl ammation, as evidenced by decreased microglia-induced pro-in fl ammatory cytokines, reduction in the number of alternatively activated microglia , and decrease in anti-in fl ammatory cytokines. combining these fi ndings with the potential cell therapy targeting, these mscs are expected to produce a sustained neuroprotective effect by establishing a feed-forward loop engaging the alternative activation of microglia, thereby ameliorating disease pathophysiology and reversing the cognitive decline associated with amyloid deposition [ ] . peng and colleagues report additional details on the use of lentivirus-expressed sirna as a method to ameliorate alzheimer disease neuropathology in app transgenic mice by reducing the levels of beta-site app cleaving enzyme , or bace [ ] . a series of experiments demonstrated the potential of neural stem cells transduced by a multigenic lentiviral vector stably expressing recombinant human nerve growth factor in relevant amounts to exploit their ability for therapeutic applications. the multigenic lentiviral vector contained a tricistronic cassette to express simultaneously up to three independent genes: ( ) rhngf (beta subunit); ( ) egfp (enhanced green fl uorescent protein); and ( ) neo (r) (neomycin antibiotic resistance gene). lentiviral vectors were released in culture media and subsequently used to transduce mouse stem cells. remarkably, the subsequent test revealed that engineered nscs were all positive for egfp and after passages in vitro engineered cells maintained their multipotentiality to differentiate into neurons, astrocytes, and oligodendrocytes. furthermore, it was found that rhngf-stem cell-derived neurons expressed choline acetyltransferase and displayed an enhanced axonal growth. the stem cells showed an altered sphere forming frequency either in rhngf-nsc or in both groups of control nsc. lentivirus-mediated rhngf gene transfer into nsc was achieved without changes in the expression of neural differentiation markers, like microtubule-associated protein (map ) (a/b), glial fi brillary acidic protein (gfap) and chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan [ ] . secreted rhngf increased axonal sprouting by rhngf-nsc-derived neurons, which was associated with chat expression. rhngf-nscs may prospectively be a good candidate for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases. a protein that has been shown to promote app accumulation is beta-secretase (beta-site app cleaving enzyme , or bace ). typically, a marked increase in the level of bace is found in the cerebrospinal fl uid of those affected with alzheimer's disease. through in vivo studies using app transgenic mice, it has been demonstrated that decreasing the expression of bace via lentiviral vector delivery of bace sirna has the potential for signi fi cantly reducing the cleavage of app, the accumulation of these products, and the consequent neurodegeneration. as such, lentiviral-expressed sirna against bace is a therapeutic possibility in the treatment of ad. neprilysin has recently been implicated as a major extracellular beta amyloid degrading enzyme in the brain. a unilateral intracerebral injection of a lentiviral vector expressing human neprilysin (lenti-nep) was tested in transgenic mouse models of amyloidosis reduced amyloid-beta deposits by half relative to untreated mice, indicating that neprilysin may have a role in alzheimer's disease treatment. that said, a more ef fi cient delivery system is likely required, a property that a neprilysin expressing stem cell could potentially provide [ ] . gene transfer to the central nervous system provides a powerful methodology for the study of gene function and gene-environment interactions in vivo, in addition to a vehicle for the delivery of therapeutic transgenes for gene therapy. research has been signi fi cantly aided by successfully targeting speci fi c regions of brain, and for parkinson's disease, the substantia nigra. the key to success is the ease of pseudotyping lentiviral vectors, which makes it possible to change the patterns of tropism. cannon et al. used isogenic lentiviral vector particles encoding a gfp reporter and pseudotyped with envelope glycoproteins derived from vesicular stomatitis virus (vsv), mokola virus (mv), lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (lcmv), or moloney murine leukemia virus (mulv). adult, male lewis rats were injected unilaterally with stereotactic infusions of vector into the substantia nigra. three weeks later, patterns of viral transduction were determined by immunohistological detection of gfp. different pseudotypes gave rise to different sites of transgene expression. vsv and mv pseudotypes transduced midbrain neurons, including a subset of nigral dopaminergic neurons. in contrast, lcmv-and mulv-pseudotyped lentiviral vector resulted in transgene expression exclusively in astrocytes. the restricted transduction of astroglial cells was not explained by the cellular distribution of receptors previously shown to mediate entry of lcmv or mulv. the availability of neuronal and astrocyte-targeting vectors will allow dissociation of cell autonomous and cell nonautonomous functions of key gene products in vivo. similar tissue and cell-speci fi c patterns can be achieved in stem cells using cell/tissue-speci fi c promoters and mirna [ , , , , , , , , , , ] . multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells have raised great interest for brain cell therapy due to their ease of isolation from bone marrow, their immunomodulatory and tissue repair capacities, their ability to differentiate into neuronal-like cells, and for their ability to secrete a variety of growth factors and chemokines. a subpopulation of human mscs, the marrow-isolated adult multilineage inducible (miami) cells, when combined with pharmacologically active microcarriers (pams) have shown great promise in a rat model of parkinson's disease. pams are biodegradable and non-cytotoxic poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid) microspheres, coated by a biomimetic surface and releasing a therapeutic protein, which acts on the cells conveyed on their surface and on their microenvironment. in this study, pams were coated with laminin and designed to release neurotrophin , which stimulate the neuronal-like differentiation of miami cells and promotes neuronal survival. after adhesion of dopaminergic-induced (di)-miami cells to pams in vitro, the complexes were grafted in the partially dopaminergic-deafferented striatum of rats, which led to a strong reduction of the amphetamine-induced rotational behavior together with protection/repair of the nigrostriatal pathway. these effects were correlated with the increased survival of di-miami cells that secreted a wide range of growth factors and chemokines. moreover, the observed increased expression of tyrosine hydroxylase by cells transplanted with pams may contribute to this functional recovery [ ] and provide an excellent new delivery system for genetically modi fi ed/enhanced cells into substantia nigra. lewy body disease is a heterogeneous group of neurodegenerative disorders characterized by alpha-synuclein accumulation and includes gradually worsening dementia with lewy bodies (dlb) accumulating in neurons followed by advanced parkinson's disease (pd). recent evidence suggests that impairment of the lysosomal pathways (i.e., autophagy) involved in alpha-synuclein clearance might play an important role. for this reason, the expression levels of members of the autophagy pathway in brains of patients with dlb and alzheimer's disease and in alpha-synuclein transgenic mice were examined by immunoblot analysis. in dlb cases, the levels of mtor were elevated and atg were reduced compared to controls and ad. levels of other components of the autophagy pathway such as atg , atg , atg , and beclin- were not different in dlb compared to controls. in dlb brains, mtor was more abundant in neurons displaying alpha-synuclein accumulation. these neurons also showed abnormal expression of lysosomal markers such as lc , and ultrastructural analysis revealed the presence of malformed autophagosomes in abundance. similar alterations were observed in the brains of alpha-synuclein transgenic mice. intracerebral infusion of rapamycin, an inhibitor of mtor, or injection of a lentiviral vector expressing atg resulted in reduced accumulation of alphasynuclein in transgenic mice and amelioration of associated neurodegenerative alterations supporting the notion that defects in the autophagy pathway, and more speci fi cally in mtor and atg , are associated with neurodegeneration. this supports the possibility that modulators of the autophagy pathway might have potential therapeutic effects using genetically altered stem cells [ , ] . although the advances in parkinson's disease research to date are signi fi cant, the lack of clinical use of genetically modi fi ed cells is a bit surprising and may indicate an oversight and underuse of the advanced tools provided by the combination of stem cells and lentiviral vectors. lasting cerebral ischemia is a frequent (~ %) consequence of stroke and, as a result, most of the stroke research is focusing on ameliorating the devastating consequences of ischemic events: endothelial damage, neurodegeneration, and breakdown of the blood-brain barrier (bbb) leading to dif fi cult-to-treat cerebral edema [ ] . data indicate that transplantation of human umbilical cord stem cells helps to protect ischemic brain [ ] , and the protection is partially attributed to cytokines and protective factors produced by these stem cells [ , ] . another promising fi nding is that the mesenchymal and neuronal stem cells preserve their ability to differentiate into glial and neuronal cells [ , , , , , ] . various studies on focal cerebral ischemic models have implicated the direct activation and expression of matrix metalloproteinases (mmps), especially mmp- , as a key orchestrator of bbb disruption. moreover, studies have shown that mmp- sirna can protect the bbb from ischemia/reperfusion injury. one study investigated the neuroprotective role of a lentiviral vector-mediated mmp- shrna following focal cerebral ischemia [ ] , indicating that it is possible to deliver mmp- inhibitors by genetically enhanced stem cells. this study also showed the ability to deliver the target deeper into the affected area normally not accessible by direct lentiviral vector infusion. the forerunner of such interventions is a study testing the hypothesis that transplantation of human neurotrophin- (hnt- ) over-expressing neural stem cells into rat striatum after a severe focal ischemia would promote functional recovery. the rat neural stem cells were transduced with a flag-tagged hnt- gene in a lentiviral vector. the stem cells were transplanted into the striatum ipsilateral to the injury of adult rats days after h occlusion of the middle cerebral artery from days to weeks after transplantation. the modi fi ed cells (nscs-hnt , as de fi ned by flag immuno fl uorescence staining) that survived the transplantation procedures could secrete signi fi cantly higher levels of neurotrophin- protein in the graft sites than controls ( p < . ). furthermore, the rats that accepted nscs-hnt exhibited enhanced functional recovery on neurological and behavioral tests, compared with control animals transplanted with saline or untransduced stem cells, indicating that they might have value for enhancing functional recovery after stroke [ ] . recovery from ischemic events is slow and rather unpredictable. however, there seem to be new therapeutical opportunities that could enhance the process such as using vegf-induction therapy [ ] . there is accumulating evidence indicating that vegf has direct neuroprotective effects on various cultured neurons of the central nervous system. interestingly, in vivo vegf controls the correct migration of facial branchiomotor neurons in the developing hindbrain and stimulates the proliferation of neural stem cells in enriched environments and after cerebral ischemia. on the other hand, transgenic mice expressing reduced levels of vegf develop late-onset motor neuron degeneration, reminiscent of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (als). also, reduced levels of vegf have been implicated in a polyglutamine-induced model of motor neuron degeneration. intracerebroventricular delivery of recombinant vegf protein delays disease onset and prolongs survival of als rats, whereas intramuscular administration of a vegf-expressing lentiviral vector increases the life expectancy of als mice by as much as %. deciphering the precise role of vegf at the neurovascular interface promises to uncover new insights into the development and pathology of the nervous system and should be helpful to the design of novel strategies to treat (motor) neurodegenerative disorders [ ] . vegf-expressing mscs have also been found bene fi cial in parkinson's disease [ , ] . the development of lentiviral particles engineered for macrolide-responsive human vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf ) expression will bring closer the in vivo use of inducible growth factor cell therapies, expressing the factors only in ischemic conditions using hypoxia-inducible erythropoietin promoter [ ] . alternatively, the inducible vegf promoter system also compared favorably with isogenic streptogramin-and tetracycline-responsive con fi gurations and showed excellent growth-factor fi ne-tuning following transduction into a variety of mammalian cell lines and different human primary cells. chicken embryos transduced for macrolide-controlled vegf production can be fi ne-tuned to prime a dose-dependent neovascularization [ ] . expression of survivin (svv) using an sin lentiviral vector carrying vascular endothelial growth factor further improved the expression of vegf and basic fi broblast growth factor in male sprague-dawley rats under hypoxic conditions. the in vivo experiment that produced this observation consisted of three groups of rats, one receiving intravenous injection of m l of phosphate-buffered saline without cells (control group) and two groups administered the same volume solution with either three million gfp-mscs (group gfp) or svv/gfp-mscs (group svv). all animals were submitted to h middle cerebral artery occlusion followed by reperfusion. modi fi cation with svv further increased secretion of both factors. the survival of the transplanted cells in the svv group was . -fold higher at days after transplantation and . -fold higher at days after transplantation, respectively, when compared with group gfp and reduced the cerebral infarct volume by . % at days after stroke and improved post-stroke neurological function at days after transplantation. modi fi cation with svv could further enhance the therapeutic effects of mscs possibly through improving the mscs survival capacity and upregulating the expression of the protective cytokines in the ischemic tissue [ ] . the identi fi cation of the genes differentially regulated by ischemia will lead to an improved understanding of cell death pathways such as those involved in the neuronal loss observed following a stroke. furthermore, the characterization of such pathways could facilitate the identi fi cation of novel targets for stroke therapy. one such novel approach was the ampli fi cation of the differential gene expression patterns in a primary neuronal model of stroke, by employing a lentiviral vector system to speci fi cally bias the transcriptional activation of hypoxically regulated genes. over-expression of the hypoxia-induced transcription factor subunits hif - alpha and hif- alpha elevated hypoxia-mediated transcription of many known hif-regulated genes well above control levels. furthermore, many potentially novel hif-regulated genes were discovered that were not previously identi fi ed as hypoxically regulated. most of the identi fi ed novel genes were activated by a combination of hif- alpha over-expression and hypoxic insult. these included several genes with particular importance in cell survival pathways and of potential therapeutic value. hypoxic induction of hif- alpha may therefore be a critical factor in mediating protective responses against ischemic injury. further investigation of the genes identi fi ed in this study may provide increased understanding of the neuronal response to hypoxia and may uncover novel therapeutic targets for the treatment of cerebral ischemia [ ] and the genes need to be considered as useful targets in future mesenchymal stem cell therapies. however, the use of hypoxia-induced gene therapy has to be evaluated carefully in the light of recent provocative observations indicating that the hypoxic phenotype contributes to appearance of highly malignant cancer forms from the initial epithelial-mesenchymal transition to the ultimate organotropic colonization, and that can potentially be regulated by hypoxia, suggesting a master regulator role of hypoxia and hifs in metastasis [ , ] . furthermore, modulation of cancer stem cell self-renewal by hifs may also contribute to the hypoxia-regulated metastasis program. the hypoxia-induced metastatic phenotype may be one of the reasons for the modest ef fi cacy of anti-angiogenic therapies and may well explain the provocative fi ndings that anti-angiogenic therapy increased metastasis in preclinical models [ ] . the image of a wheelchair-bound superman exempli fi ed for all of us the tragedy that affects many of the victims of traumatic spinal cord injury and motivated research into protecting and restoring spinal-cord functionality beyond and above the usual efforts. the results are promising on many fronts [ ] . on one hand, the intervertebral disk , cartilage, and bone injuries that threaten the integrity of the spinal cord can be almost completely healed and the healing can be facilitated and enhanced by stem cell therapies in most of the experimental models. the treatment often includes stem cells engineered with lentiviral gene transfer for enhancing and promoting wound healing and tissue restoration [ , , , , ] . signi fi cant success has been achieved by expressing bone morphogenic proteins in the injured tissue [ ] and observations that mechanical stimulation has a multiplying effect in bone regeneration will hopefully carry the research into clinical trials [ ] sooner than later. probably, the fi rst trials will be done in well-designed spinal surgery, allowing even risky interventions, currently not practiced [ , , ] . the progress is signi fi cantly slower when it comes to restoring the functionality of severed spinal cord, but successful demonstration that mscs migrate into the site of injury and differentiate into proper cell types needed for the healing [ ] predicts potential breakthroughs. in this set of experiment, mesenchymal cells were labeled with green fl uorescent protein using lentiviral vector, were injected into the subarachnoid space, and their migration and differentiation was observed. cells were found on the surface of the injured spinal cord parenchyma, in deeper area of the perivascular spaces and some of them had been found deeply integrated into the parenchyma. immunostaining for nestin demonstrated that some gfp-positive cells differentiated into neural stem cells and mature neurons or glial cells in situ. lentiviral vectors pseudotyped with rabies env were successfully used to deliver genes into spinal cord and site of injury and showed successful retrograde transfer into deeper areas, indicating that gene therapy is possible and factors necessary for further differentiation of stem cells can be delivered [ , ] . further advances in pseudotyping with rabies virus glycoprotein has a promise for more ef fi cient motor neuro-speci fi c delivery of transgenes and restoration of neuronal functions. as the examples indicate above, mscs have been recognized as promising delivery vehicles for gene therapy in the cns. a particularly unmet need is delivery of compounds that could help patients suffering from a particularly aggressive form of cancer, gliomas. a glimpse into a possible future can be gained from experiments in which stem cells were used to evaluate the antitumor effect of cytosine deaminase (cd) in a rat c glioma model . lentiviral vectors expressing cd and enhanced green fl uorescent protein (egfp) were constructed and transduced into rat mscs which were intracranially injected alone or in combination with c glioma cells supported by unlabeled parental mscs. the presence and effect of the engineered stem cells were then correlated with the possible effects on tumor growth, tumor cell apoptosis, tumor size, and rat survival in the presence of -fl uorocytosine ( -fc). fei et al. found that the cd/egfp cells were largely localized at the junction of the tumor with normal tissue. the mean survival time of rats co-injected with c glioma cells and mscs-cd/egfp cells was signi fi cantly extended to . days with tumor size reduction when compared with rats injected with c glioma cells alone surviving an average of . days, or those co-injected with c glioma cells and parental cells surviving only for . days. in addition, data suggest that msc-cd/egfpmediated gene therapy promoted tumor cell apoptosis in rat c gliomas [ ] . without going into detail, hypoxia-induced genes seem to play an important role in the fate of mscs and require further studies, as modifying and preconditioning as well as changing their effects temporarily by gene therapy indicates a plethora of important insights into the potential use of this complicated class of stem cells in tumor therapy [ , , , , , ] , and we expect rapid progress in this area in the near future. the rational is that tumor cells have signi fi cantly altered metabolism with a shift toward the anaerobic pathway and changes in the respective gene expression patterns providing novel targets and delivery methods for cancer therapy. transplantation of hscs to correct a series of lysosomal storage diseases and peroxisomal disorders has almost years of history and involves over diseases [ ] . however, the success was limited to only a small subclass of diseases such as hurler syndrome, x-ald, and infantile krabbe disease. detailed studies are now available suggesting that hematopoietic stem cells are suitable only for a carefully selected cases, leaving open the fi eld for a more versatile mesenchymal stem cell therapy, especially those instances having neurological symptoms [ ] . bone marrow-derived mscs are another promising platform for cell-and gene-based treatment of inherited and acquired disorders including a whole range of lysosomal storage diseases. several animal models exist to run preclinical studies [ ] . human mscs distribute widely in a murine xenotransplantation model, and the human stem cells are amenable to lentiviral vector-mediated transduction to obtain expression of therapeutic levels of enzyme in xenotransplantation models of human disease (non-obese diabetic severe combined immunode fi cient mucopolysaccharidosis type vii [nod-scid mpsvii]) [ ] . transduced mscs persisted in the animals that underwent transplantation and comparable numbers of donor mscs were detected at and months after transplantation. the level of circulating enzymes were suf fi cient to normalize the secondary elevation of other lysosomal enzymes and reduce lysosomal distention in several tissues providing additional evidence that transduced human mscs retain their normal traf fi cking ability in vivo and persist for at least months, while able to deliver therapeutic levels of proteins in an authentic xenotransplantation model of human disease. similar results have been reported by muller and colleagues, who were able to restore aryl sulfatase and beta galactosidase levels in genetically de fi cient bone marrow mscs, and showed that untransduced cells from patients with metachromatic leukodystrophy , who are asa de fi cient, took up a substantial amount of asa that was released into the media from mscs [ ] , an important milestone for future attempts to try stem cell therapy of metachromatic leukodystrophy. gm ganglyosiosys was successfully treated with mscs in a mouse beta-galactosidase knockout model indicating that autologous transplantation may be feasible using lentiviral-transduced mscs [ ] . fabry disease affects an estimated in , - , males, and far less frequently females. it is an inherited lysosomal disorder caused by a de fi ciency of alpha-galactosidase a (alpha-gal a). the systemic accumulation of globotriaosylceramide (gb ) results in gradual tissue deterioration leading to organ failure. there is a limited mouse model of the disease showing gb accumulation in an alpha-gal a-de fi cient mouse model. however, most of the important clinical manifestations are absent and the lack of relevant large animal model hinders the development of proper cell therapy. when compared to the human alpha-gal a, the porcine alphagal a showed a high level of homology in the coding regions. cell lysate and supernatants from fabry patient-derived fi broblasts transduced with a lentiviral vector carrying the porcine alpha-gal a cdna (lv/porcine alpha-gal a) showed high levels of alpha-gal a activity, and its enzymological stability was similar to that of human alpha-gal a. even more importantly, uptake of secreted porcine alpha-gal a by non-transduced cells was observed. furthermore, gb accumulation was reduced in fabry patient-derived fi broblasts transduced with the lv/porcine alpha-gal a. the fi nding that the porcine version of the gene is also x-linked (x q) provides hope that a large animal (porcine) model of fabry disease can be constructed in the near future for use in testing a novel application of cell therapy using mscs [ ] . the success of such model and eventually the feasibility of the treatment depends on the "bystander phenomenon ," i.e., the transduced mesenchymal cells intended for delivering the enzyme secrete the enzyme in abundance, but the defective cells in their microenvironment also must be able to take up the enzyme and utilize it. to facilitate the uptake, a fusion protein between gb and hiv tat protein has been made [ ] . if successful, the range of enzyme replacement therapy approach could widen signi fi cantly. the data published by higuchi et al. indicate that indeed the tat's ability to penetrate the cell membrane was maintained in the recombinant fusion protein and it enhanced the enzyme uptake, as expected. since the different manifestations of the disease produce problems in different organs (brain, kidney, and heart), it seems to imply that mscs will be the best candidates for this enzyme replacement therapy as the earlier attempts to perform enzyme replacement therapy in mouse model showed insuf fi cient ef fi ciency [ ] . the enormity of the problems posed by diabetes is re fl ected by the statistics published on the nih website ( http://diabetes.niddk.nih.gov/dm/pubs/statistics/#dd ). by the age of , almost one in four americans suffers from diabetes. the at-risk population of prediabetics is % of the population older than years. the sheer number of patients indicates that restoring glucose metabolism by pancreas or pancreatic islet transplantation, even in the most severe cases, is just impractical if not impossible. the low engraftment rate makes the prospects of such treatment even worse, especially, as there never will be a suf fi cient number of donors. that leaves the stem cell technology as the major source of hope for solving the relevant issues in recovering regulated insulin production and glucose regulation functionality in diabetes. a large number of clinical trials using mscs are under way [ , , ] , and a rather confusing sets of stem cell markers are listed in these studies indicating that there is a plurality of stem cells residing in different tissues, all of which have the potential to help pancreatic tissue regeneration. not surprisingly, the most obvious source of these stem cells could be the pancreas itself, from which the resting stem cells can be isolated, reactivated, and expanded by variety of stimulants. the data are still being evaluated, and need further con fi rmation, reproduction, and lineage tracing. the currently available datasets could not fi rmly substantiate the claims when using different markers ( carbonic anhydrase ii vs. hepatocyte nuclear factor beta ) [ , , , ] . since then, neurogenin also was considered as a marker for endocrine type differentiation of proto beta cells [ ] , leaving the subject as to whether well-de fi ned adult beta islet cell progenitors truly exist in signi fi cant numbers rather murky. the phenomenon of in vitro trans-differentiation of the acinar cells into beta cells upon exposure to egf, lif, notch -inhibitors [ ] looks promising, and recently zhou and colleagues added a more extensive study on in vivo reprogramming of adult pancreatic exocrine cells into beta cells [ ] . however, the reported ef fi ciency was low and the progenitor cells remained elusive. this left the fi eld searching for other sources, including mscs from bone marrow, liver, intestine, and neural tissue (reviewed by efrat [ ] [ ] [ ] and jones [ ] ), that are capable of trans-differentiating into insulin-producing beta cells. with the available results, their ultimate hope was that these cells could be used to seed the pancreas with new sets of insulin producing islands. since lineage tracing was often omitted and the reproducibility of the results remained unsettled, the fi eld, despite its high importance, seems to be somewhat in shambles [ , ] , ready for deployment of the novel, lentiviral vector supported techniques. szabat et al. report a signi fi cant set of results on beta-cell maturation using lentiviral vector-based lineage-study examining a novel pdx /ins dual fl uorescent reporter vector. they con fi rmed that individual adult human and mouse beta-cells exist in at least two differentiation states, distinguishable by the activation of the ins promoter. they performed real-time imaging of the maturation of individual cultured beta-cells and followed the kinetics of the maturation process in primary human and mouse beta-cells and collected gene expression pro fi ling data as well. the gene expression pro fi ling of facs puri fi ed immature pdx + /ins (low) cells and mature pdx (high)/ins (high ) cells from cultures of human islets, mouse islets, and min cells revealed that pdx +/ins (low) cells are enriched for expression of multiple genes associated with beta-cell development/progenitor cells, proliferation, apoptosis, as well as genes coding for other islet cell hormones such as glucagon [ ] . it turns out that trans-differentiation can be successfully performed using mafa. mafa is a leucine zipper transcription factor from the maf family that can be activated by p map kinase. this protein is a known pancreatic transcriptional factor controlling the beta-cell-speci fi c transcription of the insulin gene [ ] . expressing it using lentiviral vectors in placenta-derived multipotent stem cells (pdmscs) that constitutively expressed oct- and nanog resulted in signi fi cantly upregulated expression of a series of pancreatic development-related genes (sox , foxa , pdx , and ngn ), similar to that of native pancreas and islet tissues. mafa increased the expression levels of the mrnas of nkx . , glut , insulin , glucagons, and somatostatin , and further facilitated the differentiation of pdmscs into insulin + cells. importantly, the expression of mafa in pdmscs xenotransplanted into immunocompromised mice improved the restoration of blood insulin levels to control values and greatly prolonged the survival of graft cells in immunocompromised mice with stz-induced diabetes [ ] . another successful lineage analysis and monitoring the induced trans-differentiation was reported by cheng et al., in which a relatively abundant epithelial cell source, fetal human pancreas, was used to assess the proliferation potential, changes in lineage markers during culture, and capacity for generating insulin-expressing beta cells from fetal epithelial cells. the fetal epithelial cells readily formed primary pancreatic progenitor cultures, although their replication capacity was rather limited. this was overcome by introduction and expression of htert (human telomerase reverse transcriptase) which greatly enhanced cellular replication in vitro. however, during culture the htert-modi fi ed pancreatic progenitor cells switched their phenotype gaining additional mesodermal properties. this phenotypic switching was inhibited when a pancreas-duodenal homeobox (pdx)- transgene was expressed with a lentiviral vector, along with inductive signaling through activin a and serum deprivation. this restored endocrine properties of htertmodi fi ed cells in vitro and were able to express insulin in vivo in immunode fi cient mouse model [ ] . the complexities of these result indicate that a sophisticated multi-gene cell therapies may be needed to solve the issues of proper modulation of transdifferentiation pathways. other strategies using a lentiviral vector-based approach to achieve beta-cell proliferation through the beta-cell-speci fi c activation of the hepatocyte growth factor (hgf)/cmet signaling pathway are also being explored. one of these methodologies is based on the beta-cell-speci fi c expression of a ligand-inducible, chimeric receptor (f vcmet ), under transcriptional control of the promoter from the human insulin gene, and its ability to induce hgf/cmet signaling in the presence of a synthetic ligand (ap ) and result in speci fi c proliferation of human pancreatic beta-cells [ ] . the selective, regulated beta-cell expansion may help to increase the availability of cells for transplantation in patients with advanced diabetes. these recent studies show that rapid progress may be achieved in this fi eld and lentiviral vectors may provide the necessary tools to analyze the issues. however, some of the notable efforts are made to avoid stem cell therapy altogether in certain types of diabetes. instead, choosing a more direct route, applying in vivo gene therapy for expressing insulin gene in cell types other than beta cells. ren et al. successfully restored near normal insulin levels for days by expressing insulin in resting liver cells transduced with lentiviral vector using a rat diabetes model [ ] . although monogenic disease appears to be the most obvious human diseases to treat with gene therapy, since they are caused by a single-gene defect, the progress in clinical studies has thus far been rather limited. explanations for the lack of success include inef fi ciency of transductions in vivo, dangers posed by vectors, the failure to permanently correct the gene defect in suf fi cient number of cells, or the rapid turnover of cells. alternative approaches therefore involve the search for and use of stem cell populations and depleting the active stem cell compartments ablation using cytostatic drugs to give chance if increased engraftment by transplanted stem cells. combining the versatility and availability of mscs, their ability to engraft, the use of autologous instead of allogeneic sources for safe transplantation, and the fact that the stem cell population can be expanded in vitro allows highly ef fi cient ex vivo gene therapy relying on latest generation of lentiviral vectors. cystic fi brosis (cf) is caused by a mutation in the gene for the cystic fi brosis transmembrane conductance regulator protein (cftr). the mutant form of the protein causes severe defect in mucus metabolism in the lungs and intestinal track that deteriorates into a life-long, deadly disease. cf is theoretically amenable to gene therapy. in spite of intensive research and a large number of clinical trials in the last years, little practical success can be shown for treating cystic fi brosis [ ] . the explanations include the fact that the deeper regions in the inner surface of the lung are not accessible to direct inhalation and direct treatment [ , ] . in light of this fi nding, stem cells remain the most promising delivery vehicles. castellani et al. reviewed the recent attempts to identify lung-or bone marrow-derived populations of stem cells or progenitor cells and application of such cells, allogenic or gene-corrected autologous cells, to colonize the airways, while differentiating into functional respiratory columnar epithelial cells [ ] . when the reporter gene expression was analyzed in trachea-lungs and bronchoalveolar lavage, . - . % of stem cells survived in injured airways, but no stem cells survived in control, healthy airway, or in the epithelial lining fl uid [ ] . the most successful approaches thus far appear to be obtained with bone marrow-derived mscs, although the trans-differentiation rate thus far has been limited to below - % [ ] . as an alternative, the proven multipotent nature of bronchoalveolar stem cells isolated from lung tissue may provide another promising approach for stem cell therapy. some additional improvement is expected from more ef fi cient targeting of lentiviral vectors. mitomo and colleagues built a sendai virus env-pseudotyped siv lentiviral vector that can be manufactured at high enough titer and is capable of transducing respiratory epithelium of the murine nose in vivo at levels that may be relevant for achieving clinical bene fi t to cystic fi brosis patients [ ] . availability of novel cystic fi brosis gene-carrying stem cell lines derived from placental mesenchymal cells certainly will help to speed up the research [ ] . however, much more needs to be known about the normal differentiation and functioning of the airway's basal cells and the differentiation and lineages of stem cells to have more ef fi cient treatment options both for gene therapy and for stem cell therapy [ ] . we expect that the intensity of research and push for clinical trials will remain high as the outline of directions will become clearer. also the methods to derive respiratory cell types from stem cells will remain a critical piece [ ] . this disease is an x-linked recessive disorder caused by a mutation in the dystrophin gene that destabilizes muscle cell membranes and causes muscle dystrophy in approximately of , boys. the musculoskeletal abnormalities deteriorate to a fatal level and the average life expectancy is no more than years, even with high quality care. the research is facilitated by the availability of dystrophin-de fi cient transgenic mice (mdx-mice ) and double knockout (utrophin/dystrophin-de fi cient mice) that can be used as experimental disease models [ , ] . human immortalized pluripotent cell lines expressing the mutant dystrophin gene are also available [ ] . the ability of mscs to differentiate into muscle cells places them on the top of the list of candidates that could be used to treat duchenne muscular dystrophy [ ] . lentiviral vectors have been used in this fi eld for conditional immortalization of human cells for basic biologic studies. cudre-maroux et al. demonstrated that the lentiviral vector-mediated transduction of immortalizing genes into human primary cells is an ef fi cient method for obtaining such cell lines. for duchenne muscular dystrophy, the muscle satellite cell model was used to examine the impact of the transduced genes on the genotypic and phenotypic characteristics of the immortalized cells. the most commonly used immortalizing gene, the sv large t antigen (t-ag), was extremely ef fi cient at inducing the continuous growth of primary myoblasts, but the resulting cells rapidly accumulated major chromosomal aberrations and exhibited profound phenotypic changes. in contrast, the constitutive expression of telomerase and bmi - in satellite cells from a control individual and from a patient suffering from duchenne's muscular dystrophy yielded cell lines that remained diploid and conserved their growth factor dependence for proliferation. however, despite the absence of detectable cytogenetic abnormalities, clones derived from satellite cells of a control individual exhibited a differentiation block in vitro. in contrast, a duchenne-derived cell line exhibited all the phenotypic characteristics of its primary parent, including an ability to differentiate fully into myotubes when placed in proper culture conditions. this cell line should constitute a useful reagent for a wide range of studies aimed at this disease [ ] . a realistic source of stem cells would be the adipose tissue-derived stem cells that can be enhanced for muscle repair. forced expression of myod using lentiviral vector in vitro strongly induced myogenic differentiation, while the adipogenic differentiation was inhibited. moreover, myod-expressing human multipotent adipose-derived stem cells had the capacity to fuse with dmd myoblasts and can restore dystrophin expression. importantly, transplantation of these modi fi ed human, multipotent, adipose-derived stem cells into injured muscles of immuno-depressed rag (−/−)gam-mac(−/−) mice resulted in a substantial increase in the number of human multipotent adipose-derived stem cell-derived fi bers [ ] . goncalves and colleagues went a step further and devised a technique to monitor the fusion events necessary for myoblast formation by using an elaborate bipartite genetic switch that relays on recombinaseinducible genetic switch that is activated after two cell types, one of which expresses cre and the other the rest of the elements with loxp sites, that switch on only upon fusion. this provides a sensitive tool to study the lineages and process of myocyte fusion in transgenic system [ ] . ikemoto et al. used high transduction-ef fi ciency lentiviral vector-mediated gene transfer into freshly isolated autologous satellite cells. freshly isolated cells have better myogenic capability than satellite cell-derived myoblasts, and expansion of the satellite cells does not affect their regenerative potential. the transduced cells successfully regenerated the targeted muscle groups in mdx mice [ ] . however, the vsvg pseudotyped lentiviral vector are inferior in transducing nondividing murine cells, and shunchang et al. demonstrated that by pseudotyping with feline immunode fi ciency virus env better transduction rates can be achieved [ ] . we include this disease because of the challenges researchers faced in attempts to use cell-based therapies. granulomatous disease is a rather rare x-linked immunode fi ciency disorder caused by mutations in the cybb gene encoding the phagocyte nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (nadph)-oxidase catalytic subunit gp (phox). earlier attempts to restore the gene function with oncoretroviral vectors failed due to (a) gene silencing common for retroviral inserts, (b) high risk of genotoxicity that these oncoretroviral vectors pose [ ] , and (c) low transduction ef fi ciency and inability to target appropriate cell lineage and practice differentiation-restricted gene expression [ ] . the solution for the compound problem seems to lie in using a safer and more ef fi ciently targeting lentiviral vector system [ , ] . it has been demonstrated and repeatedly con fi rmed that by using lentiviral vector it is possible to transduce hscs as well as differentiated neutrophiles from patients with x-linked chronic granulomatous disease (x-cgd) and correct the x-cgd-phenotype in the nod/scid model. the lentivector was a vsv-gpseudotyped, third-generation, self-inactivating (sin) lentivector encoding gp (phox). lentiviral vector ef fi ciently transduced cd + peripheral blood stem cells under ex vivo conditions nonpermissive for cell division and resulted in % of the cells expressing gp (phox). lentivector also achieved signi fi cant correction of differentiated human x-cgd neutrophils arising in vivo in nod/scid mice that underwent transplantation ( % and . %, respectively). thus, third-generation sin lentivector-gp (phox) performs well as assessed in human x-cgd neutrophils differentiating in vivo, and the studies suggest that the nod/scid model is generally applicable for in vivo study of therapies evaluated in human blood cells expressing a speci fi c disease phenotype [ , , ] . however, long-term solution can be expected from transducing hscs, and not the fully differentiated neutrophils that have only limited lifespan left and the lack of genotoxicity safety of the third-generation sin v lentiviral vector seem to address these requirements perfectly. wilson's disease is a genetic disease caused by a spectrum of mutations in the atp b gene , whose product is a liver transporter protein responsible for coordinated copper export into bile and blood. zhang and colleagues reported in an attempt to restore the normal phenotype by directed hepatocyte differentiation from human-induced pluripotent stem cells. the phenotype correction was achieved by chaperone drug curcumin that can reverse the functional defect in vitro in the case of the r l chinese hotspot mutation in the atp b gene. they propose this model system for correcting the gene using lentiviral technology [ ] . atp b gene seems to be relevant for the wider mesenchymal stem cell fi eld as over-expressing it protects mscs form copper toxicity . this in turn could be used as a selection advantage of transduced mscs over the non-transduced ones in copper-rich environment for enriching the transduced mesenchymal cell compartment before transplantation [ ] . the image of the "fountain of youth" represents a mirage deeply engraved in the human psyche and expresses our fear and resentment of one of the inevitabilities of life: if we are lucky, we will get old, decrepit, suffer a lot from series of painful, chronic diseases, and fi nally succumb. the irony is that those who we consider unlucky, die young, but are saved from the long lasting predicaments of aging. certainly, the intricacies of the factors leading to longevity, or the lack thereof, keep generations of stem cell researchers awake and busy and for good reasons. a model for aging has been found in the condition known as progeria , or more precisely the hutchinson-gilford progeria syndrome , a rare disease affecting children of both sexes and which is caused by a mutant prelaminin a gene, encoding the lamin a-processing enzyme. prelaminin a that retains a farnesyl group, subsequently expressing its abnormal form, progerin. progerin in turn is anchored to the nuclear membrane and destabilizes the nucleus, limiting the ability of cells to divide and leading to premature cell death. unlike other accelerated aging diseases affecting dna repair (werner's and cockayne's syndrome), progerin may play role in normal aging process [ ] and its production is slowly turned on in cells that have uncapped chromosomes, i.e., have truncated telomeres, resulting in premature depletion of stem cell compartments. see the popular ucsf website for details: http://www.ucsf.edu/news/ / / /aging-disease-children-sheds-lightnormal-aging . additional upregulation of multiple genes in major in fl ammatory pathways indicated an activated in fl ammatory response in progeria patients. this response has also been associated with normal aging, emphasizing the importance of studying progeria to increase the understanding of the normal aging process [ ] . the progressing disease shows a pattern of tissue and organ degeneration that correlates with the depletion of a variety of stem cell compartments, a correlation fi rst pointed out by favreau [ ] . the insight into the role of stem cell depletion in progeria accumulated rapidly in the last couple of years [ , , , ] . this leads to the establishment of an animal model by creating zmpste knockout mice [ ] in , which showed premature senescence and progeroid symptoms. with the role of stem cells in aging and in progeria, the doors opened for studying stem cell renewal via dedifferentiation. autologous or heterologous transfer of native or lentivector-enhanced cells [ , , , ] are being actively considered as a possible interventions to slow down progeria as well as natural aging [ ] . however, in both cases, the changes are systemic and murine gene therapy data indicate that the therapy in lysosomal storage disease models, affecting large segments of the body, is more ef fi cient if done at an earliest possible age [ , ] . this may have something to do with the limited availability of the microenvironment for the modi fi ed or transplanted stem cells. for this, the preexisting ones, even when "old" and malfunctioning, already occupy the microenvironment appropriate for stem cells. we already know that wound sites create new sites and attract mscs [ ] . also, it is possible that cancer growth is able to generate and maintain an appropriate microenvironment for cancer stem cells [ ] as well as mscs [ ] (potentially for use as anticancer agents) but the normal tissue, even in aging, seems to be resilient in accepting externally provided stem cells. experiments are under way to create arti fi cial microenvironments using nanotechnology to deliver stem cells that produce therapeutical factors [ ] , and d scaffolding mimicking bone marrow niches are being designed for similar purpose [ ] and lentiviral vector are often used to deliver the genes of interest [ , , , ] . virxsys pioneered the use of lentiviral vectors in phase i clinical trials to deliver antisense hiv genes as an antisense rna therapy for aids [ , ] . this established an initial safety pro fi le for the ex vivo use of lentiviral vectors (see http:// clinicatrials.gov : identi fi er vrx -usa- - ). this phase i trial demonstrated the safety and tolerability of a single dose of approximately ten billion autologous hiv infected cd + t cells transduced with the lentivector vrx carrying a -base antisense targeting the hiv envelope. these encouraging results have led to design of a phase ii clinical trial to evaluate the safety, tolerability, and biological activity of four or eight repeated infusions of fi ve to ten billion autologous vrx modi fi ed hiv+, cd + t cells. a major obstacle to completing this phase ii trial was manufacturing enough cells to administer multiple infusions in patients. for this study the safety issues were cleared successfully, opening the way for more extensive use of lentiviral vectors in clinical trials. currently, lentiviral clinical trials are listed at the clinicaltrials.gov website. all of these trials are in early stage, phase i or ii. three of these trials have not yet started and trials are still recruiting patients. most of the clinical trials are focused on hematopoietic stem cells, which are outside of the scope of this work. one trial targets netherton syndrome (clinicaltrials.gov: identi fi er: nct ) and attempts to restore lekti serine protease levels in an affected cm skin area, a proof of principle study that has the potential to utilize mesenchymal stem cells in the future. we witnessed a tremendous progress in characterizing and understanding stem cells, the factors needed for maintaining the stem cell phenotype as well as changing it in a predictable mode forcing the mesenchymal stem cells into various differentiation pathways. this progress provides a test bed for a higher level of bioengineering when the genetic buildup of the stem cells is changed to achieve well-de fi ned therapeutical goals. the overview of the recent literature presents a long list of "proof of concept experiments" in which tantalizing possibilities are validated as things that can be accomplished in a wide range of fi elds representing different pathologies: from the debilitating alzheimer's, parkinson's diseases; various traumatic neuronal injuries, diabetes, neuronal and cardiac ischemia; to agerelated tissue degeneration and tissue engineering or delivery of biologics for therapeutical purposes. in parallel, lentiviral vectors are becoming highly valued tools in this tedious work as they are highly ef fi cient vehicles for gene delivery to mark cells, express genes of interest, proteins, and various inhibitory rna species in stem cells. consequently these stem cells, especially the various forms of mscs, have been shown to be highly effective in delivering the targeted genes to dif fi cultto-reach tissues, including the cns. manipulating genes and gene expression, gene transfer has been made safe and ef fi cient by the recent progress in lentivector technology and merged successfully with the stem cell technology. this fi eld has reached an advanced stage, at which it has become feasible to use them safely in a clinical environment. more and more researchers as well as clinicians are becoming familiar with the power of these technologies both for ex vivo and in vivo cell therapy. it does not take a prophet to predict that advanced stem cell therapy has gaining a strong foothold, and even though a tremendous amount of work is needed to be done for it to become a everyday intervention, it is here to stay and will become a routine treatment for the next generation of patients. biological characteristics of stem cells from foetal, cord blood and extraembryonic tissues mechanisms of cellular therapy in respiratory diseases arti fi cial dna cutters for dna manipulation and genome engineering tissue engineering technologies: just a quick note about transplantation of bioengineered donor trachea and augmentation cystoplasty by de novo engineered bladder tissue wound microenvironment sequesters adipose-derived stem cells in a murine model of reconstructive surgery in the setting of concurrent distant malignancy neuroprotective effect of combined hypoxia-induced vegf and bone marrowderived mesenchymal stem cell treatment complete knockdown of ccr by lentiviral 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bone marrow-derived stem cell transplantation for the treatment of insulin-dependent diabetes a novel lentivector targets gene transfer into hhsc in marrow from patients with bm-failure-syndrome and in vivo in humanized mice advances in the fi eld of lentivector-based transduction of t and b lymphocytes for gene therapy measles virus glycoprotein-pseudotyped lentiviral vector-mediated gene transfer into quiescent lymphocytes requires binding to both slam and cd entry receptors strategies for targeting lentiviral vectors enhancement of posterolateral lumbar spine fusion using low-dose rhbmp- and cultured marrow stromal cells peptides for therapy and diagnosis of alzheimer's disease mesenchymal stem cells in cartilage repair: state of the art and methods to monitor cell growth, differentiation and cartilage regeneration development of lentiviral gene therapy for wiskott aldrich syndrome limitation of in vivo models investigating angiogenesis in breast cancer rd -pseudotyped retroviral vectors kill cancer cells by syncytium formation and enhance the cytotoxic effect of the tk/gcv gene therapy strategy tissue-speci fi c shrna delivery: a novel approach for gene therapy in cancer cervical motion preservation using mesenchymal progenitor cells and pentosan polysulfate, a novel chondrogenic agent: preliminary study in an ovine model potential applications for using stem cells in spine surgery cervical interbody fusion is enhanced by allogeneic mesenchymal precursor cells in an ovine model rapid and sensitive lentivirus vector-based conditional gene expression assay to monitor and quantify cell fusion activity methods for making induced pluripotent stem cells: reprogramming a la carte enhancement of myogenic and muscle repair capacities of human adipose-derived stem cells with forced expression of myod the role of micrornas in self-renewal and differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells strategies, development, and pitfalls of therapeutic options for alzheimer's disease ef 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through a wnt -dependent pathway gene transfer in humans using a conditionally replicating lentiviral vector improved motor function in dko mice by intravenous transplantation of bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stromal cells hypoxia and hypoxia inducible factors in cancer stem cell maintenance inhibition of hiv- infection by a unique short hairpin rna to chemokine receptor delivered into macrophages through hematopoietic progenitor cell transduction mesenchymal stromal cells expressing heme oxygenase- reverse pulmonary hypertension human fetal trachea-scid mouse xenografts: ef fi cacy of vesicular stomatitis virus-g pseudotyped lentiviral-mediated gene transfer human umbilical mesenchymal stem cells promote recovery after ischemic stroke hypoxia-inducible factor- alpha is essential for hypoxia-induced mesenchymal stem cell mobilization into the peripheral blood effects of transplantation with bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells modi fi ed by survivin on experimental stroke in 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and integration site selection in a mouse model of hsc gene therapy hematopoietic stem cell gene transfer in a tumor-prone mouse model uncovers low genotoxicity of lentiviral vector integration in vitro analysis of multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells as potential cellular therapeutics in neurometabolic diseases in pediatric patients in situ tissue engineering for tracheal reconstruction using a luminar remodeling type of arti fi cial trachea inserting optimism into gene therapy ex vivo gene transfer and correction for cell-based therapies a dual speci fi city promoter system combining cell cycle-regulated and tissue-speci fi c transcriptional control dedifferentiation rescues senescence of progeria cells but only while pluripotent in vitro pathological modelling using patient-speci fi c induced pluripotent stem cells: the case of progeria origin of hematopoietic progenitors during embryogenesis deriving respiratory cell types from stem cells regulated expansion of human pancreatic beta-cells targeting the perpetrator: breast cancer stem cell therapeutics ef fi ciency of lentiviral transduction during development in normal and rd mice reprogramming to pluripotency: stepwise resetting of the epigenetic landscape targeting of therapeutic gene expression to the liver by using liver-type pyruvate kinase proximal promoter and the sv viral enhancer active in multiple cell types disease-speci fi c induced pluripotent stem cells glial cells in (patho)physiology lentivirus-expressed sirna vectors against alzheimer disease mesenchymal stem cells and tooth engineering stem cell therapy for cystic fi brosis: current status and future prospects progress in understanding reprogramming to the induced pluripotent state conditional mutagenesis in mice: the cre/loxp recombination system lentiviral vectors encoding tetracycline-dependent repressors and transactivators for reversible knockdown of gene expression: a comparative study lentiviral vectors approach the clinic but fall back: national institutes of health recombinant dna advisory committee review of a fi rst clinical protocol for use of a lentiviral vector mesenchymal stem cells as therapeutics and vehicles for gene and drug delivery plant biotechnology: zinc fi ngers on target chimeric nucleases stimulate gene targeting in human cells identi fi cation of the sensory neuron speci fi c regulatory region for the mouse gene encoding the voltage-gated sodium channel nav . intrapleural delivery of mesenchymal stem cells: a novel potential treatment for pleural diseases zinc-fi nger nucleases for somatic gene therapy: the next frontier identi fi cation of potential stroke targets by lentiviral vector mediated overexpression of hif- alpha and hif- alpha in a primary neuronal model of hypoxia de fi ning pluripotent stem cells through quantitative proteomic analysis longterm correction of diabetes in rats after lentiviral hepatic insulin gene therapy effect of interleukin- overexpression on the properties of healing tendon in a murine patellar tendon model stem cell technologies for tissue regeneration in dentistry airway basal stem cells: a perspective on their roles in epithelial homeostasis and remodeling mesenchymal stem cells derived from dental tissues third-generation, self-inactivating gp (phox) lentivector corrects the oxidase defect in nod/scid mouse-repopulating peripheral blood-mobilized cd + cells from patients with x-linked chronic granulomatous disease current development of lentiviral-mediated gene transfer stem cell depletion in hutchinson-gilford progeria syndrome human-induced pluripotent stem cells produced under xeno-free conditions tissue speci fi city of enhancer and promoter activities of a herv-k(hml- ) ltr porous titanium scaffolds fabricated using a rapid prototyping and powder metallurgy technique collagen scaffolds reinforced with biomimetic composite nano-sized carbonate-substituted hydroxyapatite crystals and shaped by rapid prototyping to contain internal microchannels novel collagen scaffolds with prede fi ned internal morphology made by solid freeform fabrication gastric carcinogenesis and the cancer stem cell hypothesis mesenchymal stem cells stably transduced with a dominantnegative inhibitor of ccl greatly attenuate bleomycin-induced lung damage lentiviral vector-mediated gene transfer to endotherial cells compared with adenoviral and retroviral vectors engineering zinc fi nger nucleases for targeted mutagenesis of zebra fi sh lentiviral vectors pseudotyped with a modi fi ed rd envelope glycoprotein show increased stability in sera and augmented transduction of primary lymphocytes and cd + cells derived from human and nonhuman primates targeting retroviral and lentiviral vectors biochemical correction of x-cgd by a novel chimeric promoter regulating high levels of transgene expression in myeloid cells migration of mesenchymal stem cells through cerebrospinal fl uid into injured spinal cord tissue overexpressed atp b protects mesenchymal stem cells from toxic copper lentivirus-mediated gene transfer of gp phox corrects chronic granulomatous disease (cgd) phenotype in human x-cgd cells genotypic features of lentivirus transgenic mice intracerebral cell transplantation therapy for murine gm gangliosidosis indirect rapid prototyping of biphasic calcium phosphate scaffolds as bone substitutes: in fl uence of phase composition, macroporosity and pore geometry on mechanical properties fibroblasts derived from human embryonic stem cells direct development and repair of d human skin equivalents mesenchymal stem cell transplantation modulates neuroin fl ammation in focal cerebral ischemia: contribution of fractalkine and il- superior tissue-speci fi c expression from tyrosinase and prostate-speci fi c antigen promoters/enhancers in helper-dependent compared with fi rstgeneration adenoviral vectors a highly ef fi cient short hairpin rna potently down-regulates ccr expression in systemic lymphoid organs in the hu-blt 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in alzheimer's disease and other disorders woodchuck hepatitis virus posttranscriptional regulatory element enhances expression of transgenes delivered by retroviral vectors key: cord- -a datsoo authors: ambrogi, federico; coradini, danila; bassani, niccolò; boracchi, patrizia; biganzoli, elia m. title: bioinformatics and nanotechnologies: nanomedicine date: journal: springer handbook of bio-/neuroinformatics doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: a datsoo in this chapter we focus on the bioinformatics strategies for translating genome-wide expression analyses into clinically useful cancer markers with a specific focus on breast cancer with a perspective on new diagnostic device tools coming from the field of nanobiotechnology and the challenges related to high-throughput data integration, analysis, and assessment from multiple sources. great progress in the development of molecular biology techniques has been seen since the discovery of the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (dna) and the implementation of a polymerase chain reaction (pcr) method. this started a new era of research on the structure of nucleic acids molecules, the development of new analytical tools, and dna-based analyses that allowed the sequencing of the human genome, the completion of which has led to intensified efforts toward comprehensive analysis of mammalian cell struc ture and metabolism in order to better understand the mechanisms that regulate normal cell behavior and identify the gene alterations responsible for a broad spectrum of human diseases, such as cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, neurodegenerative disorders, and others. in this chapter we focus on the bioinformatics strategies for translating genome-wide expression analyses into clinically useful cancer markers with a specific focus on breast cancer with a perspective on new diagnostic device tools coming from the field of nanobiotechnology and the challenges related to high-throughput data integration, analysis, and assessment from multiple sources. great progress in the development of molecular biology techniques has been seen since the discovery of the structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (dna) and the implementation of a polymerase chain reaction (pcr) method. this started a new era of research on the structure of nucleic acids molecules, the development of new analytical tools, and dna-based analyses that allowed the sequencing of the human genome, the completion of which has led to intensified efforts toward comprehensive analysis of mammalian cell struc- ture and metabolism in order to better understand the mechanisms that regulate normal cell behavior and identify the gene alterations responsible for a broad spectrum of human diseases, such as cancer, diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, neurodegenerative disorders, and others. technical advances such as the development of molecular cloning, sanger sequencing, pcr, oligonucleotide microarrays and more recently the development of a variety of so-called next-generation sequencing (ngs) platforms has actually revolutionized translational research and in particular cancer research. now, scientists can obtain a genome-wide perspective of cancer gene expression useful to discover novel cancer biomarkers for more accurate diagnosis and prognosis, and monitoring of treatment effectiveness. thus, for instance, microrna expression signatures have been shown to provide a more accurate method of classifying cancer subtypes than transcriptome profiling and allow classification of different stages in tumor progression, actually opening the field of personalized medicine (in which disease detection, diagnosis, and therapy are tailored to each individual's molecular profile) and predictive medicine (in which genetic and molecular information is used to predict disease development, progression, and clinical outcome). however, since these novel tools generate a tremendous amount of data and since the number of laboratories generating microarray data is rapidly growing, new bioinformatics strategies that promote the maximum utilization of such data, as well as methods for integrating gene ontology annotations with microarray data to improve candidate biomarker selection are necessary. in particular, the management and analysis of ngs data requires the development of informatics tools able to assemble, map, and interpret huge quantities of relatively or extremely short nucleotide sequence data. as a paradigmatic example, a major pathology such as breast cancer can be considered. breast can-part f cer is the most common malignancy in women with a cumulative lifetime risk of developing the disease as high as one in every eight women [ . ]. several factors are associated with this cancer such as genetics, life style, menstrual and reproductive history, and long-term treatment with hormones. until now breast cancer has been hypothesized to develop, following a progression model similar to that described for colon cancer [ . , ], through a linear histological progression from adenosis, to ductal/lobular hyperplasia, to atypical ductal/lobular hyperplasia, to in situ carcinoma and finally to invasive cancer, corresponding to increasingly worse patient outcome. molecularly, it has been suggested that this process is accompanied by increasing alterations of the genes that encode for tumor suppressor proteins, nuclear transcription factors, cell cycle regulatory proteins, growth factors, and corresponding receptors, which provide a selective advantage for the outgrowth of mammary epithelial cell clones containing such mutations [ . ] . recent advances in genomic technology have improved our understanding of the genetic events that parallel breast cancer development. in particular, dna microarray-based technology, with the simultaneous evaluation of thousands of genes, has provided researchers with an opportunity to perform comprehensive molecular and genetic profiling of breast cancer able to classify it into some clinically relevant subtypes and in the attempt to predict the prognosis or the response to treatment [ . - ]. unfortunately, the initial enthusiasm for the application of such an approach was tempered by the publication of several studies reporting contradictory results on the analysis of the same samples analyzed on different microarray platforms that arose the skepticism regarding the reliability and the reproducibility of this technique [ . , ]. in fact, despite the great theoretical potential for improving breast cancer management, the actual performance of predictors, built using genes' expression, is not as good as initially published, and the lists of genes obtained from different studies are highly unstable, resulting in disparate signatures with little overlap in their constituent genes. in addition, the biological role of individual genes in a signature, the equivalence of several signatures, and their relation to conventional prognostic factors are still unclear [ . ]. even more incomplete and confusing is the information obtained when molecular genetics was applied to premalignant lesions; indeed, genome analysis revealed an unexpected morphological complexity of breast cancer, very far from the hypothesized multi-step linear process, but sug-gesting a series of stochastic genetic events leading to distinct and divergent pathways towards invasive breast cancer [ . ], the complexity of which limits the application of really effective strategies for prevention and early intervention. therefore, despite the great body of information about breast cancer biology, improving our knowledge about the puzzling bio-molecular features of neoplastic progression is of paramount importance to better identify the series of events that, in addition to genetic changes, are involved in breast tumor initiation and progression and that enable premalignant cells to reach the six biological endpoints that characterize malignant growth (self-sufficiency in growth signals, insensitivity to growth-inhibitory signals, evasion of programmed cell death, limitless replicative potential, sustained angiogenesis, and tissue invasion and metastasis). to do that, instead of studying the single aspects of tumor biology, such as gene mutation or gene expression profiling, we must apply an investigational approach aimed to integrate the different aspects (molecular, cellular, and supracellular) of breast tumorigenesis. at the molecular level, an increasing body of evidence suggests that gene expression alone is not sufficient to explain protein diversity and that epigenetic changes (i. e., heritable changes in gene expression that occur without changes in nucleotide sequences), such as alteration in dna methylation, chromatin structure changes, and dysregulation of microrna expression, may affect normal cells and predispose them to subsequent genetic changes with important repercussions in gene expression, protein synthesis, and ultimately cellular function [ . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . at the cellular level, evidence indicates that to really understand cell behavior, we must consider also the microenvironment in which cells grow; an environment that recent findings indicate to have a relevant role in promoting and sustaining abnormal cell growth and tumorigenesis [ . ] . this picture is further complicated by the concept that among the heterogeneous cell population that makes up the tumor, there exists an approximately % of cells, also known as tumor initiating cells that are more likely derived from normal epithelial precursors (stem/precursor cells), and share with them a number of key properties including the capacity of self-renewal and the ability to proliferate and differentiate [ . , ] . when altered in their response to abnormal inputs from the local microenvironment, these stem/precursor cells can give rise to preneoplastic lesions [ . ]. in fact, similarly to bone marrow-derived stem cells, tissue-specific stem cells show remarkable part f . plasticity within the microenvironment: they can enter a state of quiescence for decades (cell dormancy), but can become highly dynamic once activated by specific microenvironment stimuli from the surrounding stroma and are ultimately transformed in tumor initiating cells [ . ]. the stroma, in which the mammary gland is embedded, is composed of adipocytes, fibroblasts, blood vessels, and an extracellular matrix in which several cytokines and growth factors are present. while none of these cells are themselves malignant, they may acquire an abnormal phenotype and altered function due to their direct or indirect interaction with epithelial stem/precursor cells. acting as an oncogenic agent, the stroma could provoke tumorigenicity in adjacent epithelial cells leading to the acquisition of genomic changes, at which epigenetic alterations also concur, that can accumulate over time and provoke silencing of more than pivotal genes' encoding for proteins involved in tumor suppression, apoptosis, cell cycle regulation, dna repair, and signal transduction [ . ] . under these conditions, epithelial cells and the stroma co-evolve towards a transformed phenotype following a process that has not yet been worked out [ . , ]. many of the soluble factors present in the stroma, essential for the normal mammary gland development, have been found to be associated with cancer initiation. this is the case of hormone steroids (estradiol and progesterone), which are physiological regulators of breast development and whose dysregulation may result in preneoplastic and neoplastic lesions [ . - ]. in fact, through their respective receptors, in epithelial cells estrogens and progesterone may induce the syn-thesis of local factors that, on the one hand, trigger the activation of the stem/precursor cells and, on the other hand, exert a paracrine effect on endothelial cells, which in response to the vascular endothelial growth factor, trigger neoangiogenesis activation [ . ]. in addition, estrogens have been found implicated in the local modifications of tissue homeostasis associated to a chronic inflammation that may promote epithelial transformation due to the continued production of pro-inflammatory factors that favors generation of a pro-growth environment and fosters cancer development [ . ]; alternatively, transformed epithelial cells would enhance activation of fibroblasts through a vicious circle that supports the hypothesis according to which cancer should be considered as a never healing wound. last but not least, very recent findings in animal models have clearly indicated that an early event occurring in the activation of estrogen-induced mammary carcinogenesis is represented by the altered expression of some oncogenic micrornas (oncomir), suggesting a functional link between hormone exposure and epigenomic control [ . ]. concerning the forecasted role of new nanobiotechnology applications, disclosing the bio-molecular events contributing to tumor initiation is, therefore, of paramount importance and to achieve this goal a convergence of advanced biocomputing tools for cancer biomarker discovery and multiplexed nanoprobes for cancer biomarker profiling is crucial. this is the one of the major tasks currently ongoing in medical research, namely the interaction of nanodevices with cells and tissues in vivo and their delivery to disease sites. biomarkers refer to genes, rna, proteins, and mirna expressions that can be correlated with a biological condition or may be important for prognostic or predictive aims as far as regards the clinical outcome. the discovery of biomarkers has a long history in translational research. in more recent years, microarrays have generated a great deal of work, promising the discovery of prognostic and predictive biomarkers able to change medicine as was known until then. since the beginning, the importance of statistical methods in such a context was evident, starting from the seminal paper of golub, which showed the ability of gene expression to classify tumors [ . ]. although bioinformatics is the leading engine, referenced in biomolecular literature, providing in-formatics tool to handle massive omic data, the computational core is actually represented by biostatistics methodology aiming at extracting useful summary information. biostatistics cornerstones are represented by large sample and likelihood theories, hypothesis testing, experimental design, and exploratory multivariate techniques summarized in the genomic era according to class comparison, prediction, and discovery. actually, massive omic data and the idea of personalized medicine need to develop statistical theory according to new requirements. even in the case of multivariate techniques, the problems usually faced using statistical techniques accounted for orders of magnitude of less data than those encountered with high-throughput technologies. a situation that ngs techniques will easily exacerbate. in class comparison studies there is a predefined group which identifies samples and the interest is in evaluating if the groups express the transcripts of interest differently. such studies are generally performed using a transcript by transcript analysis, performing thousands of statistical tests then correcting p-values to account for the desired percentages of false positives and negatives. in fact, the multiple comparison problem is the first concern as traditionally methods for family-wise control are generally too restrictive when accounting for thousands of tests. the false discovery rate (fdr) was a major breakthrough in such a context. the general concepts underlying fdr are outlined later ( fig. . ) . another topic discussed regards the parametric assumptions underlying most of the statistical tests used. permutation tests were much developed to face this issue and are now one of the standard tools available to researchers. jeffery and colleagues [ . ] performed a systematic comparison of different methods for identifying genes differentially expressed across experimental groups, finding that different methods gave rise to very different lists of genes and that sample size and noise level strongly affected predictive performance of the methods chosen for evaluation. also, evaluation of the accuracy of fold-change compared to ordinary and moderated t statistics was performed by witten and tibshirani [ . ], which discusses the issues of reproducibility and accuracy of gene lists returned by different methods, claiming that a researcher's decision to use fold-change or a modified t-statistic should be based on biological, rather than statistical, considerations. in this sense, the classical limma-like approach [ . ] has become a de facto standard in the analysis of high-throughput data: gene expression and mirna microarrays, proteomics, and serial analysis of gene expression (sage) generate an incredible amount of data which is routinely analyzed element-wise, without considering the multivariate nature of the problem. akin to this, non-parametric multivariate analysis of variance (manova) techniques have also been suggested to identify differentially expressed genes in the context of microarrays and qpcr-rt [ . , ], with the advantage of not making any distributional assumption on expression data and of being able to circumvent the dimensionality issue related to omic data (n • of subjects n • of genes). a well-known example of class comparison study was that of van't veer and colleagues [ . ] in which a panel of genes, a signature, was claimed to be predictive of poor outcome at years for breast cancer patients. in this case a group of patients relapsing at years was compared in terms of gene expression to a group of patients not relapsing within years. in class discovery studies no predefined groups are available and the interest is in findings new groupings, usually called bioprofiles, using the available expression measures. the standard statistical method to perform class discovery is cluster analysis that received great expansion due to gene expression studies. it is worth saying that cluster analysis is a powerful yet tricky method that should be applied taking care of outliers, stability of results, number of suspected profiles, and so on. these aspects are very hard to face with thousands of transcript to be analyzed. even more subtle is the problem of the interpretation of the clusters obtained in terms of disease profiles and the definition of a rule to define the discovered profiles. alternatively, classical multivariate methods, such as principal components analysis (pca), are gaining relevance for visualization of high-dimensional data ( fig. the work of perou and colleagues [ . ] is an important example of class discovery by cluster analysis in a major pathology such as breast cancer. in their work, the authors found genes distinguished between estrogen positive cancer with luminal characteristics and estrogen negative cancers. among these two subgroups, one had a basal characterization and the other showed patterns of up-regulation for genes linked to oncogeneerb-b . repeated application of cluster anal-ysis in different case series resulted in very similar groupings. notwithstanding the above-mentioned issues connected to cluster analysis, one of the major breakthroughs of genomic studies was actually believed to be the definition of genomic signatures/profiles by the repeated application of cluster analysis to different case series without the definition of a formal rule for class assignment of new subjects. profiles may then be correlated with clinical outcome as was done for breast cancer by van't veer and colleagues [ . ]. now, more than years after this study, it is not yet clear which is the real contribution of microarray-based gene expression profiling to breast cancer prognosis. of all the so-called first-generation signatures, only oncotype dx [ . ], a qrt-pcr based analysis of genes, has reached level ii of evidence to support tumor prognosis and has been included in the national comprehensive cancer network guidelines, whereas the remaining signatures have only obtained level iii of evidence so far [ . ]. reasons for this are, among the others, a lack of stabil-part f . ity in terms of genes that the lists are composed of and strong time-dependence, i. e., reduced prognostic value after to years of follow-up. another, and more important, issue for prognostic/prediction studies is connected to the design of the study itself. in fact, a prognostic study should be planned by defining a cohort that will be followed during time while a case control study may be only suggestive of signatures to be considered class comparison in genomic-wide studies is one of the most common and challenging applications since the advent of microarray technology. the first study on predictive signatures in breast cancer in [ . ] was mainly a class comparison study. from the statistical viewpoint one of the first problems evidenced was the large number of statistical tests performed in such an analysis. in particular, the classical control for false positives, emphasizing the specificity of the screening appeared from the beginning to be too restrictive with the cost of false negatives too high. to understand such an issue, let us suppose to have to compare the gene expression in a group of tumor tissues with that of a group of normal tissues. for each gene a statistical test controlling the probability of saying that a gene is different when in fact it is not (false positive, fp), is performed. such an error is called type one error and its level is generally called α and fixed at a % level. the problem is that a test at α level is performed for each gene. therefore, if the probability of making a mistake (fp) is . , while the probability of not making a mistake is . (this is the probability of saying the gene is not differentially expressed when it is not, true negative), when performing, say, tests the probability of not making any mistake is . , which is practically . accordingly, the probability of at least one fp is practically . how can the specificity of the experiment be controlled? a large number of procedures is available, the most simple and known is the bonferroni correction. let us see how it works. in particular, if n tests are performed at α level, the probability of not having any false positive is ( − α) n , therefore the probability of making at least one false positive is − ( − α) n , which can be approximated as − nα (for small α). the bonferroni correction originates from this. in fact, if the tests are performed at level α b = α/n, then we can expect to have no false positive among the genes declared differentially expressed at α level. this is, in fact, at the cost of a large number of false positives. in genomic experiments, when thousands of tests are performed, the bonferroni significance level is so low that very few genes can easily pass the first screening probably paying too high costs in terms of genes declared not significantly differentially expressed when actually they have a differential expression. the balance between specificity and sensibility is a fairly old problem in screening problems, which is exacerbated with high-throughput data analysis. one of the most common approaches applied in such a context is the proposal of benjamini and hochberg [ . ] called the false discovery rate (fdr) trying to control the number of false positives among the genes declared significant. to better understand the novelty of fdr, let us suppose to have m genes to be considered in the highthroughput experiment, n of the m genes are truly differentially expressed while p are not. performing the appropriate statistical test ns of the m genes are declared not different between groups under comparison while s are significantly different (fig. . ) . the type one error rate α (fpr) controls the number of fp with respect to n, while using the bonferroni correction the probability that fp is greater than is controlled. the fdr changes perspective and considers the columns of the table instead of the rows. fdr controls the number of fp with respect to s. if, for example, genes are declared differentially expressed with an fdr of %, it is expected that be false positives. this may allow greater flexibility in the managing of the screening phase of the analysis (see fig. . for a graphical representation of results from a class comparison microarray study, with an application of fdr concepts). the problem first solved by benjamini and hochberg was basically how to estimate fdr and different proposals have appeared since then, for example the q-value of storey [ . ]. in general, omic and multiplexed diagnostic technologies with the ability to produce vast amounts of biomolecular data, have vastly outstripped our ability to sensibly deal with this data deluge and extract useful and meaningful information for decision making. the producers of novel biomarkers assume that an integrated bioinformatics and biostatistics infrastructure exists to support the development and evaluation of multiple assays and their translation to the clinic. actually, the best scientific practice for the use of high-throughput data is still to be developed. in this perspective, the existence of fig. . volcano plot of differential gene expression pattern between experimental groups. on the x-axis the least squares (ls) means (i. e., difference of mean expression on log scale between experimental groups) and on the yaxis -log transformed p-values corrected for multiplicity using the fdr method from benjamini et al. [ . ] are reported. the horizontal red line corresponds to a cut-off for the significance level α at . . points above this threshold represent genes which are actually differentially expressed between experimental groups, and that are to be further investigated advanced computational technologies for bioinformatics is irrelevant along the translational research process unless supporting biostatistical evaluation infrastructures exist to take advantage of developments in any technology. in this sense, a key problem is the fragmentation of quantitative research efforts. the analysis of high dimensional data is mainly conducted by researchers with limited biostatistical experience using standard software without the knowledge of the underlying statistical principles of the methodology then exposing the results to a wide uncertainty not only due to sample size limitations. moreover, so far, a large amount of biostatistical methods and software tools supporting bioinformatics analysis of genomic/proteomic data has been provided but reference standardized analysis procedures coping with suitable preprocessing and quality control approaches on raw data coming from omic and multiplex assays are still waiting for development. formal initiatives for the integration of biostatistical research groups with functional genomics and proteomics labs are one of the major challenges in this context. in fact, besides the development of innovative biostatistics and bioinformatics tools, a major key of success lies in the ability to integrate different competencies. such an integration cannot be simply demanded for the development of software, such as the arraytrack initiative, but needs to develop integrated skills assisted by a software platform able to outline the analysis plan. in such a context, different strategies can be adopted from open software, such as r and bioconductor, to commercial ones such as sas/jmp genomics. in a functional dynamic perspective, to the characterization of the bio-profiles of cancer affected patients, is added the complexity related to the prolonged followup of patients with the necessity of the registration of the event-history of possible adverse events (local recurrence and/or metastasis) before death, that may offer useful insight into disease dynamics to identify a subset of patients with worse prognosis and better response to the therapy. this makes it necessary to develop strategies for the integration of clinical and follow-up information with those deriving from genetic and molecular characterizations. the evaluation and benchmarking of new analytical processes for the discovery, development, and clinical validation of new diagnostic/prognostic biomarkers is an extremely important problem especially in a fast growing area such as translational research based on functional genomics/proteomics. in fact, the presentation of overoptimistic results based on the unsuited application of biostatistical procedures can mask the true performance of new biomarker/bioprofiles and create false expectations about its effectiveness. guidelines for omic and cross-omic studies should be defined through the integration of different competencies coming from clinical-translational, bioinformatics, and biostatistics research competencies. this integrated contribution from multidisciplinary research teams will have a major impact on the development of standard procedures that will standardize the results and make research more consistent and accurate according to relevant bioanalytical and clinical targets. . . microarray studies have provided insight on global gene expression in cells and tissues with the expectation of prognostic assessments improvement. the identification of genes whose expression levels are associated with recurrence might also help better discriminating those subjects who are likely to respond to the various tailored systemic treatments. however, microarray experiments raised several questions to the statistical community about the design of the experiments, data acquisition and normalization, supervised and unsupervised analysis. all these issues are burdened by the fact that typically the number of genes being investigated far exceeds the number of patients. it is well-recognized that too large a number of predictor variables affects the performance of classification models: bellman coined the term curse of dimensionality [ . ], referring to the fact that in the absence of simplifying assumptions, the sample size needed to estimate a function of several variables to a given degree of accuracy (i. e., to get a reasonably low-variance estimate) grows exponentially with the number of variables. to avoid this problem, feature selection and extraction issue play a crucial role in microarray analysis. this has led several researchers to find it judicious to filter out genes that do not change their expression level significantly, reducing the complexity of the data and improving the signal to noise ratio. however, the adopted measure of significance in filtering (the implicitly controlled error measure) is not often easy to interpret in terms of the simultaneous testing of thousands of genes. moreover, gene expressions are usually filtered on a per-gene basis and seldom taking into account the correlation between different gene expressions. this filtering approach is commonly used in most current high-throughput experiments whose main objective is to detect differentially expressed genes (active genes) and, therefore, to generate hypotheses rather than to confirm them. all these methods, based on a measure of significance, select genes from a supervised perspective, i. e., accounting for the outcome of interest (the subject status). however, an unsupervised approach might be useful in order to reveal the pattern of associations among different genes making it possible to single out redundant information. the figure shows the data analysis pipeline developed in many papers dealing with expressions from high throughput experiments integration and standardization of approaches for assessment of diagnostic and prognostic performance is a key issue. many of the clinical and translational research groups have chosen different approaches for biodata modeling, tailored to specific types of medical data. however, very few proper benchmarking studies of algorithm classes have been performed worldwide and fewer examples of best practice guidelines have been produced. similarly, few studies have closely examined the criteria under which medical decisions are made. the integrating aspects of this theme relates to methods and approaches for inference, diagnosis, prognosis, and general decision making in the presence of heterogeneous and uncertain data. a further priority is to ensure that research in biomarker analysis is designed and informed from the outset to integrate well with clinical practice (to facilitate widespread clinical acceptance) and that it exploits cross-over between methods and knowledge from different areas (to avoid duplication of efforts to facilitate rapid adoption of good practice in the development of this healthcare technology). reference problems are related to the assessment of improved diagnostic and prognostic tools in the clinical setting, resorting to observational and experimental clinical studies from phase i to phase iv and the integration with studies on therapy efficacy which would involve bioprofile and biopattern analysis. in this perspective, the integration of different omic data is a well-known issue that is receiving increasing attention in biomedical research [ . , ], and which questions the capability of researchers to make sense out of a huge amount of data with very different features. since this integration can not only be seen as an it problem, proper biostatistical approaches need to be taken into account that consider the multivariate nature of the problem in the light of exploiting the maximum prior information about the biological patterns underlying the clinical problem. a critical review of microarray studies was performed earlier in a paper by dupuy and simon [ . ], in which a thorough analysis of the major limitations and pitfalls of microarray studies published in concerning cancer outcome was done (see fig. . for a general pipeline for high-throughput experiments). integrated into this review was the attempt to write guidelines for statistical analysis and reporting of gene expression microarray studies. starting from this work, it will be possible to extend the outlined criticisms to a wider range of omic studies, in order to produce updated guidelines useful for biomolecular researchers. in the perspective of integrating omic data coming from different technologies, a comparison of microarray data with ngs platforms will be a relevant point [ . - ]. due to the lack of sufficiently stan-dardized procedures for processing and analyzing ngs data, much attention will be given to the process of data generation and of quality control evaluation. such an integration is crucial because, though capabilities of ngs platforms mostly outperform those of microarrays, protocols of management and data analysis are typically very time-consuming, thus making it impractical to be used for in-depth analysis of large samples. of note, one of the ultimate goals of biomedical research is to connect diseases to genes that specify their clinical features and to drugs capable of treating them. dna microarrays have been used for investigating genome-wide expression of common diseases producing a multitude of gene signatures predicting survival, whose accuracy, reproducibility, and clinical relevance has, however, been debated [ . , , , ]. moreover, the regulatory relationships between the signature genes have rarely been investigated, largely limiting their biological understanding. the genes, indeed, never act independently from each other. rather, they form functional connections that coordinate their activity. hence, it is fundamental that in each cell in every life stage, regulatory events take place in order to keep the healthy steady state. any perturbation of a gene network, in fact, has a dramatic effect on our life, leading to disease and even death. the prefix nano is from the greek world meaning dwarf. nanotechnology refers to the science of materials whose functional organization is on the nanometer scale, that is − m. starting from ideas originating in physics in the s and boosted by the need of miniaturization (i. e., speed) of the electronic industry the field has grown rapidly. today, nanotechnology is gaining an important place in the medicine of the future. in particular, by using the patho-physiological conditions of diseased and inflamed tissues it is possible to target nanoparticles and with them drugs, genes, and diagnostic tools. moreover, the spatial and/or temporal contiguity of data from ngs and nanobiotech diagnostic approaches imposes the adoption of methods related to signal analysis which are still to be introduced in standard software, being related to statistical functional data analysis methods. therefore, the extension of the multivariate statistical methodologies adopted so far is requested in a functional data context; a problem that has already been met in the analysis of mass spectrometry data from proteomic analyses. nanotechnology-based platforms for the highthroughput, multiplexed detection of proteins and nucleic acids actually promise to bring substantial advances in molecular diagnostics. forecasted applications of nano-diagnostic devices are related to the assessment of the dynamics of cell process for a deeper knowledge of the ongoing etio-pathological process at the organ, tissue, and even single cell level. ngs is a growing revolution in genomic nanobiotechnologies that parallelized the assay process, integrating reactions at the micro or nano scale on chip surfaces, producing thousands or millions of sequences at once. these technologies are intended to lower the costs of nucleic acid sequencing far beyond that possible with earlier methods. concerning cancer, a key issue is related to the improvement of early detection and prevention through the understanding of the cellular and molecular pathways part f . of carcinogenesis. in such a way it would be possible to identify the conditions that are precursors of cancer before the start of the pathological process, unraveling its molecular origins. this should represent the next frontiers of bioprofiling to allow the strict monitoring and possible reversal of the neoplastic transformation through personalized preventive strategies. advances in nanobiotechnology enables the visualization of changes in tissues and physiological process with a subcellular real-time spatial resolution. this is a revolution that can be compared to the daguerreotype pictures from current high-throughput multiplex approaches to the digital high resolution of next generation diagnostic devices. enormous challenges remain in managing and analyzing the large amounts of data produced. such evolution is expected to have a strong impact in terms of personalized medical prevention and treatment with considerable effects on society. therefore, the success will be strongly related to the capability of integrating data from multiple sources in a robust and sustainable research perspective, which could enhance the transfer of high-throughput molecular results to novel diagnostic and therapy application. the new framework of nanobiotechnology approaches in biomedical decision support according to improved clinical investigation and diagnostic tools is emerging. there is a general need for guidelines for biostatistics and bioinformatics practice in the clinical translation and evaluation of new biomarkers from cross-omic studies based on hybridization, ngs, and high-throughput multiplexed nanobiotechnology assays. specifically, the major topics concern: bioprofile discovery, outcome analysis in the presence of complex follow-up data, assessment of diagnostic, and prognostic values of new biomarkers/bioprofiles. current molecular diagnostic technologies are not conceived to manage biological heterogeneity in tissue samples, in part because they require homogeneous preparation, leading to a loss of valuable spatial information regarding the cellular environment and tissue morphology. the development of nanotechnology has provided new opportunities for integrating morphological and molecular information and for the study of the association between observed molecular and cellular changes with clinical-epidemiological data. concerning specific approaches, bioconjugated quantum dots (qds) [ . - ] have been used to quantify multiple biomarkers in intact cancer cells and tissue specimens, allowing the integration of traditional histopathology versus molecular profiles for the same tissue [ . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . current interest is focused on the development of nanoparticles with one or multiple functionalities. for example, binary nanoparticles with two functionalities have been developed for molecular imaging and targeted therapy. bioconjugated qds, which have both targeting and imaging functions, can be used for targeted tumor imaging and for molecular profiling applications. nanoparticle material properties can be exploited to elicit clinical advantage for many applications, such as for medical imaging and diagnostic procedures. iron oxide constructs and colloidal gold nanoparticles can provide enhanced contrast for magnetic resonance imaging (mri) and computed tomography (ct) imaging, respectively [ . , ]. qds provide a plausible solution to the problems of optical in vivo imaging due to the tunable emission spectra in the near-infrared region, where light can easily penetrate through the body without harm and their inherent ability to resist bleaching [ . ]. for ultrasound imaging, contrast relies on impedance mismatch presented by materials that are more rigid or flexible than the surrounding tissue, such as metals, ceramics, or microbubbles [ . ]. continued advancements of these nano-based contrast agents will allow clinicians to image the tumor environment with enhanced resolution for a deeper understanding of disease progression and tumor location. additional nanotechnologically-based detection and therapeutic devices have been made possible using photolithography and nucleic acid chemistry [ . highly sensitive biosensors that recognize genetic alterations or detect molecular biomarkers at extremely low concentration levels are crucial for the early detection of diseases and for early stage prognosis and therapy response. nanowires have been used to detect several biomolecular targets such as dna and proteins [ . , ]. the identification of dna alterations is crucial to better understand the mechanism of a disease such as cancer and to detect potential genomic markers for diagnosis and prognosis. other studies have reported the development of a three-dimensional gold nanowire platform for the detection of mrna with enhanced sensitivity from cellular and clinical samples. highly sensitive electrochemical sensing systems use peptide nucleic acid probes to directly detect specific mrna molecules without pcr amplification steps [ . cantilever nanosensors have also been used to detect minute amount of protein biomarkers. label-free resonant microcantilever systems have been developed to detect the ng/ml level of alpha-fetoprotein, a potential marker of hepatocarcinoma, providing an opportunity for early disease diagnosis and prognosis [ . ]. nanofabricated and functionalized devices such as nanowires and nanocantilevers are fast, multiplexed, and label-free methods that provide extraordinary potential for the future of personalized medicine. the combination of data from multiple imaging techniques offers many advantages over data collected from a single modality. potential advantages include: improved sensitivity and specificity of disease detection and monitoring, smarter therapy selection based on larger data sets, and faster assessment of treatment efficacy. the successful combination of imaging modalities, however, will be difficult to achieve with multiple contrast agents. multimodal contrast agents stand to fill this niche by providing spatial, temporal, and/or functional information that corresponds with anatomic features of interest. there is also great interest in the design of multifunctional nanoparticles, such as those that combine contrast and therapeutic agents. the integration of diagnostics and therapeutics, known as theranostics, is attractive because it allows the imaging of therapeutic delivery, as well as follow-up studies to assess treatment efficacy. finally, a key direction of research is the optimization of biomarker panels via principled biostatistics approaches for the quantitative analysis of molecular profiles for clinical outcome and treatment response prediction. the key issues that will need to be addressed are: (i) a panel of tumor markers will allow more accurate statistical modeling of the disease behavior than relying on single tumor markers; and (ii) the combination of tumor gene expression data and molecular information of the cancer microenvironment is necessary to define aggressive phenotypes of cancer, as well as for determining the response of early stage disease to treatment (chemotherapy, radiation, or surgery). currently, the major tasks in biomedical nanotechnology are (i) to understand how nanoparticles interact with blood, cells, and organs under in vivo physiological conditions and (ii) to overcome one of their inherent limitations, that is, their delivery to diseased sites or organs [ . - ]. another major challenge is to generate critical studies that can clearly link biomarkers with disease behaviors, such as the rate of tumor progression and different responses to surgery, radiation or drug therapy [ . ]. the current challenge is, therefore, related to the advancement of biostatistics and biocomputing techniques for the analysis of novel high-throughput biomarkers coming from nanotechnology applications. current applications involve high-throughput analysis of gene expression data and for multiplexed molecular profiling of intact cells and tissue specimens. the advent of fast and low cost high-throughput diagnostic devices based on ngs approaches appears to be of critical relevance for improving the technology transfer to disease prevention and clinical strategies. the development of nanomaterials and nanodevices offers new opportunities to improve molecular diagnosis, increasing our ability to discover and identify minute alterations in dna, rna, proteins, or other biomolecules. higher sensitivity and selectivity of nanotechnology-based detection methods will permit the recognition of trace amounts of biomarkers which will open extraordinary opportunities for systems biology analysis and integration to elicit effective early detection of diseases and improved therapeutic outcomes; hence paving the way to achieving individualized medicine. effective personalized medicine depends on the integration of biotechnology, nanotechnology, and informatics. bioinformatics and nanobioinformatics are cohesive forces that will bind these technologies together. nanobioinformatics represents the application of information science and technology for the purpose of research, design, modeling, simulation, communication, collaboration, and development of nano-enabled products for the benefit of mankind. within this framework a critical role is played by evaluation and benchmarking approaches according to a robust health technology assessment approach; moreover the development of enhanced data analysis approaches for the integration of multimodal molecular and clinical data should be based on up to date and validated biostatisical approaches. therefore, in the developing nanobiotechnology era, the role of biostatistical support to bioinformatics is definitely essential to prevent loss of money and suboptimal developments of biomarkers and diagnostic disease signature approaches of the past, which followed a limited assessment according to a strict business perspective rather than to social sustainability. concerning the relevance and impact for national health systems, it is forecasted that current omic approaches based on nanobiotechnology will contribute to the identification of next generation diagnostic tests which could be focused on primary to advanced disease prevention by early diagnosis of genetic risk patterns, or the start or natural history of the pathological process of multifactor chronic disease by the multiplexed assessment of both direct and indirect, inner genetic, or environment causal factors. a benefit of such a development would be finally related to the reduction of costs in the diagnostic process since nanobiotechological approaches seem best suited in the perspective of points-of-care poc diagnostic facilities which could be disseminated in large territories with a reduced number of excellence clinical facilities with reference diagnostic protocols. nanomaterials are providing the small, disposable lab-on-chip tests that are leading this new approach to healthcare. a variety of factors are provoking calls for changes in how diagnosis is managed. the lack of infrastructure in the developing world can be added to the inefficiency and cost of many diagnostic procedures done in central labs, rather than by a local doctor. for the developed world, an increasingly elderly population is going to exacerbate demand on healthcare and any time-saving solutions will help deal with this new trend. poc devices are looking to reduce the dependence on lab tests and make diagnosis easier, cheaper, and more accessible for countries lacking healthcare infrastructure. a key role in the overall framework will be played by data analysis under principled biostatistical approaches to develop suitable guidelines for data quality analysis, the following extraction of relevant information and communication of the results in an ethical and sustainable perspective for the individual and society. the proper, safe and secure management of personalized data in a robust and shared bioethical reference framework is, indeed, expected to reduce the social costs related to unsuited medicalization through renewed preventive strategies. a strong biostatistical based health technology assessment phase will be essential to avoid the forecasted drawbacks of the introduction of such a revolution in prevention and medicine. to be relevant for national health services, research on biostatistics and bioinformatics applied to nano-biotechnology should exploit its transversal role across multiple applied translational research projects on biomarker discovery, development, and clinical validation until their release for routine application for diagnostic/prognostic aims. objectives that would enable an accelerated framework for translational research since the involvement of quantitative support are listed here: • technological platforms for the developments in the fields of new diagnostic prevention and therapeutic tools. in the context of preventing and treating diseases, the objectives are to foster academic and industrial collaboration through technological platforms where multidisciplinary approaches using cutting edge technologies arising from genomic research may contribute to better healthcare and cost reduction through more precise diagnosis, individualized treatment, and more efficient development pathways for new drugs and therapies (such as the selection of new drug candidates), and other novel products of the new technologies. • patentable products: customized array and multiplex design with internal and external controls for optimized normalization. validation by double checked expression results for genes or protein in the customized array and multiplex assays. patenting of validated tailor-made cdna/proteomic arrays that encapsulate gene/protein signatures related to the response to the therapy with optimized cost/effectiveness properties. a robust, multidisciplinary quantitative assessment framework in translational research is a global need, which should characterize any specific laboratory and clinical translation project. however, the quantitative assessment phase is rarely based on an efficient cooperation between biologists, biotechnologists, and clinicians with biostatisticians, with relevant skills in this field. this represents a major limitation to the rapid transferability of basic research results to healthcare. such a condition is solved in the context of pharmacology in the research and development of new drugs to their assessment in clinical trials, whereas, for diagnostic/prognostic biomarkers, this framework is still to be fully defined. such a gap is wasting resources and is malpractice in the use of biomarkers and related bioprofiles for clinical decision making in critical phases of chronic and acute major diseases like cancer and cardiovascular pathologies. cancer statistics premalignant and in situ breast disease: biology and clinical implications genetic alteration during colorectal tumor development the hallmarks of cancer molecular portraits of human breast tumours bernards: a gene-expression signature as a predictor of survival in breast cancer foekens: gene expression profiles to predict distant metastasis of lymph-node-negative primary breast cancer maqc consortium: the microarray quality control (maqc) project shows inter-and intraplatform reproducibility of gene expression measurements critical review of published microarray studies for cancer outcome and guidelines on statistical analysis and reporting highthroughput genomic technology in research 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microcantilevers for early-stage diagnosis of heptocellular carcinoma transport of molecules, particles, and cells in solid tumors delivery of molecular and cellular medicine to solid tumors the next frontier in molecular medicine: delivery of therapeutics biomedical nanotechnology with bioinformatics -the promise and current progress key: cord- -bveks t authors: butnariu, monica; butu, alina title: plant nanobionics: application of nanobiosensors in plant biology date: - - journal: plant nanobionics doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: bveks t nanobiosensors (nbss) are a class of chemical sensors which are sensitive to a physical or chemical stimulus (heat, acidity, metabolism transformations) that conveys information about vital processes. nbss detect physiological signals and convert them into standardized signals, often electrical, to be quantified from analog to digital. nbss are classified according to the transducer element (electrochemical, piezoelectric, optical, and thermal) in accordance with biorecognition principle (enzyme recognition, affinity immunoassay, whole sensors, dna). nbss have varied forms, depending on the degree of interpretation of natural processes in plants. plant nanobionics uses mathematical models based on qualitative and less quantitative records. nbss can give information about endogenous concentrations or endogenous fluxes of signaling molecules (phytohormones). the properties of nbss are temporal and spatial resolution, the ability of being used without significantly interfering with the system. nbss with the best properties are the optically genetically coded nbss, but each nbs needs specific development efforts. nbs technologies using antibodies as a recognition domain are generic and tend to be more invasive, and there are examples of their use in plant nanobionics. through opportunities that develop along with technologies, we hope that more and more nbss will become available for plant nanobionics. the main advantages of nbss are short analysis time, low-cost tests and portability, real-time measurements, and remote control. plants are a fascinating research topic if we relate to environmental stress. because they are physically stuck in specific spots, the plants have to handle in that site, regardless of the environmental conditions. moving to another place is not an option. but what plants can do is to modify the internal "environment," and plants are "true masters" of manipulating their metabolism to deal with environmental disturbances. this feature is one of the reasons why plants are useful in various research; we can rely on them as "sensitive indicators" of environmental changes, even in completely new environments. in the absence of normal conditions, plants cannot use the classical pathways of metabolism, so they need to identify other solutions. this is what happens when plants adjust their metabolism for regulating gene activation, thus producing more or less proteins that are useful or not in the new environmental conditions. the different parts of the plant come with their own genetic regulation strategies. a number of genes that are involved in the creation and remodeling of cell walls are activated differently in growing plants. other genes with a role in identifying light, which are normally active on the leaves, are active at the root level. in leaves, many genes associated with transmission of hormonal information are suppressed, and genes associated with insect protection are more active. these trends are also seen in the (higher) number of proteins involved in message transmission, cell wall metabolism, and plant protection. these patterns of gene and protein functioning indicate that in unfavorable conditions, the plants respond by weakening the cell walls and creating new ways to understand the environment. it is possible to monitor changes in the genes in real time by labelling certain proteins with fluorescent elements. plants modified with fluorescent proteins can give useful information about how they respond to the environment. these modified plants act as biological sensors (nbss). specialized cameras and microscopes allow us to monitor how the plant uses these fluorescent proteins (hamers et al. ) . chemical or biological nbs functions on the principle of signal emission (voltage or electrical, photonic) in response to a chemical reaction involve a chemical or biological receptor, r (macrocyclic ligand, antibody enzyme), that binds to a specific target molecule of a sample to be studied, the analyte, a. signal transmission is achieved by coupling with a transducer t that interfaces nbs processes with the processing-transform unit in a measurable signal. analysis of signals in plant nanobionics aims at processing signals recorded by measurements in order to extract the maximum of useful information for diagnostics and these devices are mostly used in genetic engineering in agriculture, where it is necessary to know the mechanisms of reaction and the affinity of enzymes and microorganisms for different substrates of interest and signaling molecules. a biochip is a device that contains a structure of individual sensory elements (nbss) interconnected by functions and recognition specifications, integrated on a chip. the number of nbss on a chip may be of the order of units. in this degree of integration, a set of distinct tests can be performed extremely quickly and efficiently. in contrast to microchips, biochips are not electronic structures (they contain different electronic structures coupled to nanobiosensory elements). each nbs can be thought of as a "microreactor" that performs a specific chemical reaction with an analyte. nbss from biochips can be designed to detect a wide variety of analytes, including dna, antibodies, proteins, and biomolecules. the advantages are multiple: sensors can be produced in batches or sequences that can be assembled in parallel or serial, providing a high manufacturing yield; sensors can be assembled on very small areas with reduced distances between them; d structures can be generated providing high signals besides d structures; any type of biochemical reaction may be incorporated; nbss can be produced separately and subsequently assembled according to the specificity and nature of the application. the important features regardless of industry or technology are selectivity, sensitivity, and stability in the design of sensory systems integrated with structures and arrangements of sensory elements (wan salim et al. ) . one of the integrated systems including rotational aseptic sampling is a robotic fluid and reusable electrodes formed by ink-jet printing injection system. the system contains an enzyme electrode with immobilized gox in gel, and the detection of hydrogen peroxide is carried out on a rhodinised carbon electrode (rh coating). although the enzyme electrode has stability and efficiency characteristics, the problem of automated sample monitoring and sampling in an integrated system requires multiparameter optimization due to reciprocal interferences. there is a requirement on specific domains (environment and genetic engineering) of highly performing integrated systems that work in in vivo conditions, such as dialysis, the use of biointerfaces, evanescent techniques, and atomic force microscopy to grasp in the depth of the biological phenomena (identifying and understanding the interaction of proteins). the in vivo exploitation of detection systems for both glucose and lactate was confirmed by the efficacy of using phospholipid copolymers and improving hemocompatibility. immunosensors provide an example for the development of integrated systems where microseparations, chromatographic methods, and electrochemical couplings with optical detectors are incorporated, which ultimately lead to a miniaturized system. there are examples where the level of integration and miniaturization becomes more pronounced (dna-nanotube or biochips-biointerfaces). nbss are expected to be widely used in plant nanobionics where physiological/biochemical parameters should be identified. advanced ink-jet technology has developed methods for analyzing nanoliter fractions on a three-dimensional nbs surface at a speed of m/s. it is expected to produce one million nbss/cm areas using photolithography, contact fingerprinting or self-assembling techniques, and adsorption/desorption under the laser beam that allows "writing" proteins on the surface to be analyzed with great precision. laser techniques, maple (matrix assisted pulsed laser evaporation) or dw (direct writing) approached for immobilizing biological materials on substrates, are in the laboratory stage but have prospects for use as molecular imprinting methods (potocký et al. ). whether nbss are individuals, in integrated systems, or areas of nbss, all are characterized by unique parameters such as sensitivity and detection limit for a range of analytes. trace detection of various analytes (indicators, additives, contaminants) with sufficient sensitivity and safety is the basic criteria of an nbs to be used. the detection limit in the laboratory is pushed to an atom when the atomic force microscopy is used. thus, the enzymatic electrodes, studied and continuously perfected, use palliative such as concentrating the analyte of interest, which leads to major design and miniaturization difficulties. nbss for phenol vapors were identified, where the phenoloxidase was immobilized on a glycerol gel with a range of interdigitated electrodes. phenol vapors are directly partitioned into the gel and oxidized to quinone. signal amplification was improved by redox amplification of the quinone/catechol couple to obtain a reasonable sensitivity resulting in a detection limit of ppb phenol. this principle can be extended to other carbon compounds up to the ppt (parts per trillion) limits. dna structures have been studied as potential receptors. sandwich structures of liquid crystal dispersions and dna-polycation complexes have been studied with relatively good success in identifying different analytes. the polycation with the role to maintain structural integrity of dna and dna-protamine complexes allows detection of hydrolysis of the trypsin enzyme to the detection limit of − m. elimination of the polycation leads to an increase in the distance between the two dna strands resulting in the appearance of an intensive band in the circular dichroism spectrum due to the texture modification (espinoza et al. ). from a practical standpoint, the disadvantage is their inherent instability. different strategies have been approached to improve longevity and preserve the structure of biological receptors. immobilization in matrices by sol-gel technique for glucose nbss is one of the strategies; fluorescence indicators are used: hexahydrate chloride ( , ′-bipyridyl) ruthenium (ii) and -hydroxypyrene- , , trisulfonic acid. in addition to the optical property improvement of the gel, the stability of the gox enzyme has also improved. other examples are the case of monooxygenase used in hydrocarbon detection; detection of organic halides with metalloporphyrins; and detection of carbon tetrachloride, haloalkane (perchloroethylene), and insecticides (ddt) (kazakova et al. ). improving the selectivity of an nbs can be approached on two levels: through direct transducer-biological receiver interfacing to reduce interference and new receptors with improved affinity or new affinity capabilities. selectivity is a key parameter that requires the performance of an nbs. pyrroloquinoline is used as a mediator in a glucose oxidase enzyme electrode for the measurement of glucose in the raw or elaborated cavity. alternatively, the electrocatalytic detection of the reaction products resulting from the enzymatic reactions can be improved by chemically modified electrodes such as rhodinised electrodes or hexacyanoferrate modified carbon electrodes. prussian blue is used to modify the electrode surface at amperometric detection of oxygenated water at both oxidation and reduction potentials for the enzyme electrode in lactate and glucose detection. one solution is to identify redox centers of the enzyme via a molecular wire to perform the electron transfer to the electrode (enzymes linked by molecular wires), but the concerns have focused on immobilized mediators on different polymer chains. molecular wires are regarded as intermediates in long-range electron transfer, consisting of two pyridine groups linked by thiophenes with different lengths. such wires can be used in conjunction with self-assembly techniques to produce an isolated electrode that transfers electrons to predetermined molecular pathways (jones et al. ). an ideal nbs is a device that will detect an "analyte," the subject under analysis and which is present in a given sample. most samples also contain other analytes which may interfere with the nbs response. it must have a specific selectivity to identify the target analyte. it is necessary to design nbss with selectivity for an analyte with the ability to discriminate the interferences produced by the other components in the analyzed sample. specific identification and selectivity capacity are the key components of molecular recognition. molecular recognition is accomplished by the sensor component of a host molecule (host-chemoreceptor) that binds selectively to the "guest" target molecule/guest molecule that needs to be identified. for each "host-guest" system, there is a specific chemical reaction from the multitude of possible reaction channels. when the host-guest response was identified, the host molecule is immobilized/incorporated into nbss, typically on a transducer-contacting membrane/ contact electrode. finally, a way to signal that the bindings/recognition event has occurred (transducer to transducer) has to be found (rodríguez-sevilla et al. ). one of the requirements for molecular recognition is the existence of groups or centers with specific reactivity in the host molecule that can "close" or bind ions, atoms, molecules, and biomolecules. all living organisms use enzymes, which are proteins that contain "pockets," active centers, designed to recognize a specific analyte. this means that only a specific analyte is able to enter the enzyme pocket. enzymes can be used in nbss as host receptors with molecular recognition capability but are unstable. to design host molecules that can be used in an nbs, the following criteria are considered: the host molecule must be stable under the conditions in which it is to be used, must be able to selectively bind the analyte in the sample, must be able to be immobilized in a film/membrane that is in contact with the sample, must signal that a host-host binding response has occurred, and must ideally release the analyte after detection so the host is free to be reusable. biological receptors include antibodies, membrane receptors, signaling molecules, enzymes, ribosomes, lectins, phytohormones, etc. they bind analytes using "lock-and-key" molecular recognition mechanisms (key-lock, identification-immobilization). biological receptors are not practical solutions for many applications because the specificity, sensitivity, and stability cannot be optimized. artificial receivers are immobilization environments that can be optimized by molecular design for any type of application. synthetic receptor design and synthesis are based on tools developed by proteomics and genetic engineering, producing recognition components that can respond to the occurrence and identification of metabolic deficiencies in plant nanobionics. there are platforms and areas of artificial receptors based on combinatorial mathematical techniques, interface biology, and surface chemistry. they have induced the development of various artificial receptor environments with rapid and diversified selection for any target analyte. the current technique for producing synthetic receptors is called cara (combinatorial array of receptor analysis) (fang et al. ) . supramolecular chemistry has developed a wide range of synthetic macrocycles. the most common feature for macrocycle classes is that they contain cavities that act as host pockets for guest molecules. the selectivity of the hosts can be done in "read mode" by varying the size of the preformed cavities. -crown- has a small cavity ideal for the binding of small ions such as li + , while -crown- has a large cavity that fits better with larger ions such as k + . the size of the cavities is important for the selectivity of the host, but the question remains what attracts an ion or molecule into a preformed cavity and which factors stabilize the host-guest complex. in enzymes, weak noncovalent interactions (hydrogen bonding, electrostatics, dipole-dipole, van der waals, etc.) are used to link the guest into the enzyme pocket (interactions stabilize host-guest interaction). macrocycles contain polar functionalities, capable of interacting with guests via hydrogen bonding, electrostatic interactions, and dipole-dipole interactions. it is desirable that bonding in the cavity is not strong, because it is important that the analyte, the guest, is released from the host after it has been detected and measured. crown ethers and calixarene are ideal for bonding metal cations, based on the size of their cavity, but also on the high density of electrons present on the oxygen atoms in the cavity. the base compound selectively binds li + to other metallic cations; the modified version of the base macrocycle has a good selectivity for na + . by synthetic modification it is possible to increase the capacity of the host cavity, and new functionalities can be introduced that will favor the binding of specific molecules and ions (da silva et al. ) . other modified calixarenes, which demonstrate this principle, are the group of tetraphosphine oxide of the calix[ ]arene. by changing binding groups on the same template, calix[ ]arene from esters in phosphorus hydrogen oxides selectivity changes from na + to ca + . by increasing the number of repeatable units in esters and phosphorus hydrogen oxides at six, the cavity increases, and the selectivity changes in favor of the higher cs + and pb + cations, respectively. some host compounds have been developed for the selective detection of low molecular weight compounds. an example involves the use of the tetra (s-propanol) calix[ ]arena containing four lateral chiral halves for selective differentiation of the phenylalanyl enantiomers. other techniques of supramolecular chemistry may be involved in the synthesis of synthetic receptors that simulate the properties of enzymes. the basic structures that can be modified are porphyrins, semiconductor polymers of the tetrathiafulvalene (ttf) class, and ppvs. other patterns can be considered modified polysaccharides. a linear archetype is the polyanilines containing the two types of redox states (meyer et al. ). among the multiple nbs classifications, bioaffinity has a range of applications, and antigen-antibody interactions (ag-ab) play a role and are considered to be an instrument in the development of molecular recognition principles. in vivo ag-ab interactions are reversible. factors that condition the ag-ab interaction are the structural complementarity between the antigenic determinant and the antibody combining site; this is the exclusive factor of the specificity of the reaction; the structural complementarity involves the conformational adaptation of the two reacting groups and was conceived in structural terms on the key-lock principle; the chemical complementarity of the reaction groups is the consequence of structural complementarity and signifies the entry into action of intermolecular forces that stabilize and consolidate the interaction of the two groups. the formation of intermolecular bonds requires the existence of atomic groups sufficiently close to the two molecules. the distance between them is inversely proportional to the degree of complementarity. although structural complementarity is not strictly obligatory, higher spatial matching is more conducive to interaction. it is expressed by the congruent of contact surfaces that provide intermolecular attraction forces that stabilize the complex. the ag-ab interaction involves the following types of noncovalent bonds: h bonds, electrostatic forces, van der waals linkages, and hydrophobic bonds. all are nonspecific forces of low value and their nature makes the reaction reversible. h bonds form when two atoms share an atomic h nucleus (one proton). the common proton is found between two atoms of n or o or between n and o. the h nucleus is covalently bonded to one of the two atoms (n or o). the h bond has a binding energy of - kcal/mol. intermolecular forces are involved in ag-ab complex formation. the action of these forces requires close contact between the two reaction groups. the h bonds result from the formation of an h bridge between two nearby atoms. the electrostatic forces are due to the attraction of the ionic groups with opposite charges located at the periphery of the two protein chains. the van der waals forces result from the interaction between different electron clouds, represented in the form of oscillating dipoles. the van der waals relationships, the weakest interaction forces, are active at very small distances between the reaction groups. the binding energy is - kcal/mol. van der waals' links are not based on a permanent separation of electrical charges but on their fluctuations induced by the proximity of molecules. at intermolecular distance, instantaneous electric fields are formed, with a polarizing effect on neighboring molecules. between the nearby atoms, there is a mutual attraction force induced by fluctuating dipole load, which a dipole induces in the neighboring dipole (dispersion forces). their intensity depends on the distance between the groups involved and is inversely proportional to the seventh power of the distance. their value is optimal at - Å. hydrophobic bonds, which can contribute with half of the ag-ab binding force, are produced by the association of nonpolar and hydrophobic groups, whereby water molecules are excluded. the optimum distance between the reactive groups varies with the type of bond. the electrostatic forces (coulomb or ionic) are the result of the attraction between atoms or groups of atoms with the opposite electric charge located on the two reacting groups: between a cation (na + ) and an anion (cl − ) or between coo − and nh + (agrawal et al. ) . the binding energy of these forces is significant at very small (less than Å) distances from the reaction groups. exact juxtaposition of ions favors the action of these forces. the binding energy is kcal/mol and varies inversely with the square of the distance between the two reaction groups ( /d ). hydrophobic (or a polar) linkages occur between nonpolar (nonionized) groups in aqueous solutions and are the consequence of the tendency to exclude the ordered molecule of water molecules between the antigen and antibody molecules. these linkages are favored by amino acids with a polar group that tends to associate, reducing the number of water molecules in their vicinity. by removing the water molecules between the reaction groups, the distance between the active sites decreases much, and the value of the stabilizing forces increases. taken each one on their own, space complementarity or intermolecular forces are not sufficient to form stable relationships. for the stability of the ag-ab interaction, both conditions are required. the higher the binding energy of the reactants, the stable the ag-ab complexes. the interaction of the antigen-and antibody-reactive groups is defined by two parameters: the affinity and avidity of the antibodies. measurement of antibody affinity can be achieved by dialysis at equilibrium. the ag-ab interaction is reversible. within the dialysis bag, the hapten is partially free and partially bound to the antibodies, depending on the affinity of the antibodies. through the membrane of the dialysis bag, only the free hapten can be diffused, and its external concentration will equal the concentration of the free hapten inside the bag (kersten and feilner ) . measurement of the concentration of the hapten in the dialysis bag allows for the calculation of the amount of antibody-bound hapten. the constant renewal of the buffer results in total dissociation and loss of hapten in the dialysis bag, which indicates the reversible nature of ag-ab binding. affinity of antibodies measures the binding force between an antigenic determinant and the complementary binding site of a specific antibody. affinity is the result of attraction and rejection forces that mediate the interaction of the two reactants. the strength of these interactions is measured in the reaction between a monovalent antigen (hapten) and specific antibodies. a high affinity interaction requires perfect complementary structures, while the imperfect complementarity of the reaction groups causes a low affinity, since the attraction forces are active only at very small distances and are diminished by the rejection forces. complexes formed by antibodies with high affinity are rapidly eliminated from the circulation without adverse effects on renal function. the ag-ab interaction is permanently characterized by the formation and cancellation of various types of intermolecular bonds. in vivo, probably all ag-ab reactions are reversible, but secondary in vitro reactions (agglutination, precipitation) , under the conditions of reagent balance, are irreversible (sakamoto et al. ) . it is essential that the host-guest binding event (the receptor-analyte interaction, r-a) is detected. it is thus necessary to have a way of identifying and transducing the signal from the receptor-analyte interaction to the outside to be processed. it is generally defined as a transducer. the transducer must be in contact with the receiver or the diaphragm that immobilized the handset. electrode and interfacial interactions are determinant in capturing the signal from an r-a interaction and transforming it into an electrical or photonic signal. there are ways of identifying the r-a event, collecting the signal and transducing it as an external signal. the way of identifying the signals and their transduction defines the type of nbss. this means immobilizing the receiver on an electrochemical transducer that measures a current (amperometric method) or a voltage (potentiometric) between two electrodes. if r is immobilized on an optical component, then we will define optical nbss (optical fiber, fluorescence, absorption, surface plasmon resonance (spr)). for detection, at most electrochemical nbss, it is necessary for the membranes containing the host molecule to be placed on a surface of an electrode that leads to an electrochemical response to the binding of the guest. the approach works well when target analysts are loaded species such as metal cations. neutral molecules cannot be detected from the point of view of electrochemical transduction, so the optical detection methods have been successfully used. a chiral host in calixarene contains naphthyl, fluorescent units. upon binding to the guest, fluorescence is attenuated as a result of interaction between the naphthyl-phenyl groups in the host or analyte. the fluorescence attenuation is proportional to the concentration of the analyte. optical methods are used because they offer greater sensitivity than electrochemical techniques. in the absence of the guest analyte, this compound does not exhibit fluorescence because the pyrenyl substituent cannot come in contact with the adjacent nitrophenyl substituent (and the fluorescence attenuation occurs due to their interaction). however, in the presence of na + ions, fluorescence is observed, because the na + ion enters the cavity and binds to the oxygen in the phenoxy and carbonyl groups in the host. this binding induces a more rigid conformation by removing the nitrophenyl groups of pyrene to prevent fluorescence attenuation (gaggeri et al. ). nbs is a bioelectronic analysis system that combines a transducer with a biological component that is in a specific interdependence. nbss use biological systems with different levels of recognition of the substances to be determined. the first step in this interaction is the formation of the specific complex of the biologically active, immobilized substance r (the receptor, the substrate with the sensitive biological component) with the analyte a (often defined as the chemical signal). table . summarizes specific patterns of nbss in relation to the nature of the receptor and the chemical/biochemical signal. there are two general classes of nbss that are based on the bioaffinity response between r and a that alters the distribution of electrical charges that can be measured with specific transducers or consuming the substrate by a specific reaction. the biological constituent of the molecular recognition element (r) is represented by various active species that can be enzymes or enzymatic systems, antibodies (ab) or antigens (ag), receptors, populations of bacteria or eukaryotic cells, tissue fragments, and sometimes even signaling molecules. analytes or substances that can be analyzed (a) are glucose or other sugars, amino acids, alcohols, lipids, and nucleotides. they can be identified by their specific interaction, or their concentration can be measured by various methods. both r and a represent distinct molecular species with high macromolecular specialization (antibodies, antigens, enzymes, receptors, etc.) or are complex systems (cells, tissues, etc.) (kersten and feilner ) . after the active biological component, they can be grouped as follows: • enzymatic nbss: enzymes are energy proteins characterized by their catalytic function. modified substrate molecules lead to oxidation, reduction, and hydrolysis reactions that can be measured by enzymatic nbss. enzymatic nbss produce a linear response depending on the substrate concentration. • immunosensors: antibodies are glycoproteins produced by the immune system when an external substance, antigen, is involved. it is theoretically possible to produce antibodies without identifying an antigen. an immunosensor is a high sensitivity nbs. the principle of operation is based on the ag-ab interaction of molecular recognition. • nbss with receptors: the regularity of biological processes is ensured by high sensitivity molecular processes based on the specialization of structural proteins (receptors) capable of recognizing a number of physiological signals. this is the case for neurotransmitters, whose action is mediated through the presence of receptors in the plasma membrane, in sites or cell targets. activation of the bio- logically active site is via the ion channels. the acetylcholine receptor is the first known receptor in neurotransmitting phenomena. • nbss based on cells or tissues: measurement of molecular species is not limited to interaction with the compounds to be analyzed; the transformations that occur can be measured as resulting products. it is desirable to operate with cell populations whose major metabolic pathways are known. relevant is nbss' l-arginine, which associates populations of bacterial cells of streptococcus faecium in combination with an ammonia electrode. arginine is metabolized by microorganisms. it is difficult to obtain complex reactions outside the cellular structures. similar to the use of cell populations as sensitive elements, fragments or parts of plant tissues may be used. the advantage is greater because there is no extra effort to keep the cells viable in a natural arrangement. for adenosine nbss, a tissue biosensitive element has been proposed. for dopamine nbss, specialists have focused on the pulp of banana fruit, considering that it has remarkable biocatalytic properties. • nbss with redox proteins: the redox proteins are involved in biochemical processes such as cellular respiration and photosynthesis reaction (kersten and feilner ) . nbs catalysts use enzymes, microorganisms, or cells to catalyze a reaction with a target substance. nbss own an affinity on using antibodies, receptors, and nucleic acids that bind to a target substance. reactions are quantified by electrochemical, optical, evanescence transducers, etc. the main types of known redox proteins are cytochromes, containing iron in the prosthetic group, and cytochrome "c" is involved in the transfer of electrons into mitochondria; ferredoxins contain iron and sulfur ions in dimeric combinations of chloroplasts ( fe- s) ferredoxin and tetrameric combinations of bacterial ferredoxin ( fe- s) involved in photosynthesis and transfer of fixed nitrogen ions, respectively; blue proteins contain copper linked to the smallest cysteine residue involved in a tetrahedral structure such as plastocyanin and azurin that mediates electron transfer in photosynthesis and possibly in nitrite reduction; flavoproteins, containing a prosthetic group and an organic conjugate, are involved in the transfer of proteins such as flavotoxins (agrawal et al. ) . these proteins play a role in nature, due to the location on their surface of the redox centers. the subtle architecture of molecules offers selectivity and specificity to these molecules in their interaction with other proteins or enzymes, such as the cytochrome c structure. porphyrin iron (heme) is located at the center of the molecule and is well covered or hidden, being exposed to solvents in a small proportion of . % of the total molecular surface. from those presented above and from table . , we can see that nbss can be classified into two groups according to the biological component. the protein has a positive potential of + mv due to excess lysinic base debris. there is a debye dipole moment, which produces an imbalance in the spatial distribution of the acidic chain balance. a number of lysine residues are distributed around the solvent to which the center of the heme that interacts with the redox proteins is exposed (nelsen et al. ). nbss are classified in three generations. at the first-generation sensors, the biocatalyst is attached to the surface of the membrane, and then this arrangement is fixed to the surface of the transducer. the adsorption or covalent attachment of the biologically active component to the surface of the transducer allows the elimination of the semipermeable membrane, which is the second generation. the direct linking of the biocatalyst to the electronic device that translates and amplifies the signal, such as the compact transistor, is the basis of the third-generation nbs miniaturization. depending on the nature of the immobilization and the interaction between the three components, the a-r membrane contact with the electrodes to the transducer, and the processes in the nbss have evolved over a generation. first, the specificity and selectivity are dominated by the biological component and are directly related to its nature: enzymes, antibodies, and microorganisms. the specificity derives from the binding of the analyte to the biological component used as the receptor. at the base of this dominant sequence is the a-r biochemical reaction and the collision process between a and r. second, the transport of the analyte to and through the surface considered to r is also an important factor. this process is related to the transport of a physical size through typical diffusion, migration, and convection mechanisms. third, the nbs signal is dependent on the a-r reaction assumed to be at a constant speed. transient states and biochemical pseudo-equilibrium conditions are dominated by the reaction kinetics, the nature of the transport, which in turn is coupled with the immobilized a-r interface substrate reactions. even in the case of a real equilibrium, the reaction speed near the steady state will be important in determining the response time. the kinetics of these processes require additional conditions (agrawal et al. ) . the new types of nanoscale materials with different levels of biocompatibility, the new generation of biocompound cells based on a better understanding of metabolism, the manipulation of information stored at the molecular level all have led to a generation of nbss with a high level of integration. molecular information initially stored in the base molecular components can be expressed directly to a higher level called "supramolecular" where interactions between molecules are performed by preestablished algorithms, leading to adaptive, functional, and intelligent materials. materials are built on conceptional, supramolecular, and combinatorial principles. separation, storage, and detection techniques are developed using "biomimetic" membranes that function according to biological models or precise physicochemical principles ). electrochemical nbs with dna is the result of medical diagnosis requirements to quickly and accurately determine the segments of a dna sequence. results from genetics, molecular biology, and nanotechnology have led to one of the most accurate detection methods: electrochemical nbss with dna (combining the principle of nbs isfet with molecular wires from nanotubes). the operating principle consists of collecting the signal between two electrodes-one working electrode and another reference electrode. the auxiliary electrodes have a specified role in their turn. the sensing mechanism consists in modifying the i-v characteristic (current-voltage) in the presence of a target molecule. carbon nanotubes are exceptional for the work electrode with high electron transfer velocity and excellent spatial resolution. target in nbs dna is an unknown sequence of dna (or oligonucleotides) attached by functionalization to the carboxyl or amino cnt groups. researchers reported the developing plants' ability to capture % more energy by implanting carbon nanotubes into chloroplasts and plant organisms where photosynthesis takes place. they managed to modify plants so as to detect nitric oxide by implanting another type of carbon nanotubes. "the plants are suitable for the role of a technological platform. they heal themselves, they are durable, they resist the harsh environments and they have their own sources of energy and water." the transformation of plants to photon devices, with own energy, such as explosive detectors or chemical weapons, is expected (panchal and upadhyay ) . external or surface electrodes are metal electrodes that contact the nbss' bioactive component either directly (dry or solid electrodes) or through an electrolyte solution (liquid electrodes). solid or dry electrodes are made in silver, platinum, gold, and nickel. internal electrodes are made of thin wires made of durable metal: stainless steel, platinum, and tungsten. the active part of the electrode can be covered with a metallic conductor layer (gold, silver) and the inactive one with an insulating layer (polymer/thin film). nbss' active contact surfaces are large in size compared to cell sizes and are used for extracellular recordings. microelectrodes are internal electrodes, but they are built to measure potentials in direct contact with the receiver in nbss. the contact surface with r is micronized. microelectrodes can be solid, compounds which can be achieved by depositing a conductive layer (platinum, gold) on a glass support having a particularly thin peak, and another constructive variant consists of inserting a metallic or carbon fiber conductor into an epoxy resin support mixed with a conductive paste; they are used in cellular samples and consist of a glass pipette having a micronized tip filled with an electrolytic solution containing potassium chloride. in the electrolyte solution, a conducting wire is immersed to pick up the electrical potential (wu et al. ). it was thought that it is not possible to transfer electrons directly between the electrode and the proteins due to their distortion. several practical considerations have led to the conclusion that the active center of the heme is irreversibly adsorbed when resulting in protein denaturation in contact with the electrode. changing the surface of the gold electrode by surface adsorption of , ′-bipyridyl resulted in the modification of the electrode surface configuration for interaction with cytochrome "c." , ′ bipyridyl is not an electroactive substance in the potential region and therefore does not play a role as a mediator. this electrochemical addition was possible due to the quasireversible binding of cytochrome "c" to the modified gold electrode with . ′ bipyridyl, thereby resulting in the hydrogen linkages in the lysine residues to bound to the nitrogen of the pyridyl which modified the surface of the electrode. transmutation through complex protein electrode rapidly directs the transfer of electrons, which is accomplished by the following scheme: cytochrome diffusion "c" on the electrode, protein binding on the surface, electron transfer, and protein desorption. following this process, more than surface changes were possible for electrochemistry of proteins and the gold electrode. using a bifunctional reagent (x-y), wherein the x group is the n, p or s bonded electrode and the y group, which must be bonded "represent also examples of patterns developed" (agrawal et al. ). electrochemistry of proteins has been extended to the carbon electrode. pyrolytic carbon-graphite forms, vitreous carbon and mesocarbon, are structures in which graphene plans are arranged in ababa hexagonal mesh or disordered in different turbulent forms. the base graphene plan is hydrophobic, but existing or induced defects lead to free c-c bonds, and there is an increase in c-o linkages by oxidation. the direct electrochemistry of positively charged proteins can therefore be performed on the edges of the graphite plans of the carbon electrode. the direct transfer of electrons to negatively charged proteins, such as plastocyanin with graphite electrode (edges or plane edges), can be aided with mn, ca, cr complex cations complexed with amino compounds, cr (am ) + , used as promoters of reactions. in this context, the promoters are inactive redox species in solutions but allow the transfer of electrons to the redox proteins. microminiaturized electrodes have specific advantages among which we mention the improvement of polarization and contact with biological material at the active sites. specificity and selectivity depend on the nbs receptor biological component and its affinity for the analyte. affinity is a specific feature of enzymes, antibiotics, and receptors being used in functions in living organisms. affinity is based on the chemical coupling between a component and its complementary partner. in the case of high-affinity components, the diffusion process is rapid, leading to the formation of the ag-ab type of complex. the association reaction specific to molecular recognition will be characterized by the first-order response rate constant. in nbs measurements it is essential to consider the concentration of a constant component and other variables. the results of electrochemistry of proteins have been extended to amino acids and peptides (barroso et al. ) . the addition of enzymes to solutions containing substrate molecules is the essential condition in enzyme catalysis reactions. extracting the necessary information from the enzyme science to be applied to the development of nbss such as the enzyme electrode is an extremely difficult task. references will be used to outline some of the enzyme properties necessary to describe enzymatic nbss. consider a simple reaction, with a single substrate s, that combines with enzyme e to form the enzyme-substrate intermediate complex, es. this unstable complex undergoes a new reaction resulting in product p. the formation and consumption rates of the complex are equal. as soon as e and s enter the reaction, the system becomes unbalanced, the concentration of the complex will be zero, and the formation speed of the complex is much higher than the rate of its consumption. as the reaction unfolds, es increases and implicitly increases the rate of disappearance of the complex relative to its rate of formation. initially, the excess of the substrate determines the consumption of the enzyme, and during the course of the reaction, the enzyme's constant regeneration begins to reach its steady state. the analysis of these reactions results in two important conclusions: • at a low concentration of the substrate, the rate of the reaction is proportional to the substrate concentration and inversely proportional to the rate of the formation and extinction rate of the complex or the dissociation reaction rate in the initial reactants plus the decomposition reaction rate in products. • at a high concentration of the substrate, maximum speed is limited by enzyme concentration. thus, the two sequences correspond to the two processes that can control the overall reaction rate (stein et al. ). when the reaction takes place in homogeneous solutions at a uniform rate, the same in the entire environment, it is necessary to consider the change in the concentration of the components over time. three mechanisms of mass transport occur in solution: diffusion, convection, and migration. an electrochemical nbs is an autonomous, self-contained device capable of providing specific quantitative or semiquantitative analytical information using as a molecular recognition element, a biochemical receptor (biological identification element) that is in direct spatial contact with an electrochemical transducer. electrochemical nbss are distinguished only by the nature of the transducer regardless of the nature of the biological component according to the classification in table . . due to their ability to be calibrated in a repetitive manner, an electrochemical nbs is distinguished by a bioanalytical system requiring additional processing steps, such as the addition of reagent. nbss for a single type of measurement, or unable to continuously monitor concentration analysis or not to be rapidly and reproducibly regenerated, are defined as "disposable." nbss are classified according to their biological specificity-with reference to the mechanism or to the interpretation of the physical-chemical signal (the transducer) (barroso et al. ) . the biological recognition element is based on a catalyzed chemical reaction or an equilibrium reaction with macromolecules that have been previously isolated or synthesized in their original biological environment. in the case of reversible reactions, the steady state can be reached if there is no net consumption by the agent of in addition to quantitative determination of analytes, nbss are also used to detect and quantify microorganisms: the receptors are bacteria, yeasts, or oligonucleotides coupled with electrochemical, piezoelectric, optical, or calorimetric transducers the immobilized biocomplex and incorporated into the nbss. electrochemical nbss can be classified according to the analyses and reactions they monitor: direct monitoring of the concentration of the analytes or their production or consumption reactions and, alternatively, an indirect monitoring of the inhibitor or activator of the biological recognition element (the biochemical receptor). criteria include calibration characteristics (sensitivity, linearity, operational range of concentration, quantitative determination limits, and specific detection), selectivity, equilibrium state and response time, reproducibility, lifetime, and stability (fang et al. ) . the notion of recognition is used in nbss or in nanobiosensory systems by association with the sensory systems of the plants. sensations such as smell or taste are made up of systems that contain an identification receiver cell coupled with neurotransmitter signal-processing pathways. such phenomena also occur in biochemosensors but at a much-simplified level compared to the complexity of molecular recognition in living systems (barroso et al. ) . examples of single or multiple transfer signals, limited to the main biochemosensors, are shown in table . . for the receptor types shown in table . , different electrodes and measurement methods can be selected from table . to form an electrochemical nbs. nbss are classified by the recognition element (table . ) or by the transduction mode (table . ). nbss irrespective of the type of classification should be treated unitarily as a microsystem, the biological recognition element being in direct contact with the transducer element. an electrochemical nbs is an nbs with electrochemical transducer (table . ). it is considered to be a chemically modified electrode (cme), the electric conductor nbss may use several other types of non-electrochemical transducer: (a) piezoelectric nbss; (b) nbs-saw, measures surface acoustic waves in a resonance circuit (shear and surface acoustic wave); (c) thermometric nbss (the active element is coupled with a thermistor); (d) optical nbss, uses optical phenomena: planar wave guide, optical fiber, surface plasmon resonance) spr nbss use the immobilized analyte-receptor interaction on a metal film deposited on an optical prism measuring the variance of the refractive index due to changes induced in the metal's electrical charge that transmits the electrons from the interaction process to the outside in the electronic measuring system. the electrode may be a metal, a semiconductor, or an ionic conductive material coated with a biochemical or bioactive film. electrochemical nbs is an integrated transducer microsystem capable of providing selective, quantitative, or semiquantitative analytical information using a biological identification element. it can be used to monitor biological and nonbiological elements. chemical nbss that incorporate nonbiological components as receptors, although used to monitor biological processes (ph or nbss of oxygen), are not nbss. the clark electrode is of importance in the nbss' measuring range. similar physical nbss used in biological environments such as those measuring pressure, etc. are not considered nbss (jacoby et al. ) . electrochemical nbss according to the terminology set out in tables . and . can be classified according to their biological specificity, by mechanism or mode of signal transmission, or alternatively, the combination of two. they can be amperometric, potentiometric, field effect (fet), or nmss' conductometric (electrical conduction measurement) respectively impedance metrics. alternatively, they may be called enzymatic amperometric nbss to specify the nature of the receptor and the transducer. the first nbss that were studied are the enzymes and immunosensors (fang et al. ) . nbss are based on a catalyzed reaction of biomacromolecules present in the original biological medium that is preisolated or synthetically produced. the reaction is monitored by an integrated detector (transducer) that measures the stationary or transition states or the final reaction product via the immobilized biocidal product in nbss. types of commonly used biocatalysts are enzymes (simple or enzymatic complexes)-most commonly used as recognition systems, cells, microorganisms (bacteria, fungi, eukaryotic cells, or yeasts), cellular organs, or component (cell walls, mitochondria) sections of plant or animal tissues. nbss with biocatalyst recognition elements are the best known and studied since the beginning of their approach by clark and lyons. one or more analytes, commonly called s and s′ substrates, react in the presence of one or more enzymes, cells, etc., to produce the p and p′ products (fang et al. ) . there are four strategies whereby the associated transducer can monitor the consumption of s-analyte through the biocatalytic reaction: • detection of s′ cosubstrate consumption, oxygen depletion through the oxidaseinduced reaction chain, bacteria, or yeast. the measured signal is the decrease in cosubstrate consumption compared to the initial value. • recycling of the reaction product p such as peroxyhydrogen, h + , co , and nh , in oxidoreductase reduction schemes, hydrolysis, lysis, etc. the signal from the transducer will be amplified. • detection of active centers in the biocatalyst: redox, cofactors, prosthetic groups evolving in the presence of substrate s by using an immobilized mediator. it reacts quickly with the biocatalyst and is easily detected in the transduction chain. various ferrocene derivatives, such as tetrathiafulvalene, tetracyanochinodimetane (ttf + tcnq), organic salts, quinones, quinone dyes, ru, or os complexes in polymeric matrices, can be used as mediators. • direct electron transfer is made between the enzymatic redox reactive site and the electrochemical transducer. the third strategy eliminates, partially or totally, the dependence of the nbss' response on the cosubstrate concentration, s′, which decreases the influence of interference between species. the use of mediators leads to the decrease of the substrate concentration together with the reaction chains by using a suitable membrane, whose permeability favors the transport of the cosubstrate. when enzymes are immobilized within the same reaction chains, it can improve the performance and abilities of nbss. three possibilities are commonly used: • some enzymes facilitate biological identification by sequentially converting the products of the enzyme reaction series into an electroactive final form: this way allows for a wide range of nbs analysis. • the enzymatic complex, applied in series, can regenerate the cosubstrate of the first enzyme and amplify the nbs output signal by regenerating another cosubstrate of the first enzyme. • the parallel enzyme complex improves selectivity of nbss by lowering the local concentration of electrochemical interfering substrate: this sequence is an alternative to the use of a permselective membrane or a sequential method (e.g., interpretation of an output signal generated by an nbs and a reference nbs without biorecognition element). the operation of nbss is based on the interaction between the analyte and the macromolecules or organized molecular assemblies. upon reaching the balance, there is no consumption of analyte by the biocomplex agent immobilized in the substrate. the response to the biocomplex analyte-reagent reaction is monitored by an integrator detector. in some cases, the biocomplex reaction is self-monitored by a complementary biocatalytic reaction. the integrator detector monitors stationary or transient states. antibody-antigen interactions, the most relevant examples of nbss using biocomplex receptors, are based on immunochemical reactions, e.g., binding an antigen (ag) to the characteristic antibody (ab). complexes formed by ab-ag can be detected provided that other nonspecific reactions are minimized, for each determination of ag corresponds to a certain ab that must be isolated, purified, etc. some recent studies have analyzed direct monitoring of ag-ab formation using ion-selective field effect transistors (isfets). increasing the sensitivity of immunological nbss is achieved by adding specific enzymes to ag-ab couples, but this requires additional synthesis steps. as the binding strength or affinity constant varies widely, these systems operate irreversibly (disposable nbss) or are coupled to flow injection analysis (fia) systems; then ab can be regenerated from dissociation of the complex with agents such as glycine-hcl to ph . (kurien et al. ). recently, they have been used as molecular recognition systems in conductometric analysis, isfet, or optical nbss with receptors with ion channels, membranes, or protein structures. a transporting protein, lactose-permease (lp), can be incorporated into a liposomal bilayer that permits protonic carbohydrate transport with a stoichiometric ratio of : . this mechanism was identified through the ph-dependent fluorescence of a fluorophore immobilized in liposomes. liposomes with lp were incorporated into a lipid bilayer deposited on a ph-sensitive isfet. preliminary results show that this modified isfet is capable of irreversibly detecting lactose from an fia system. protein receptor nbss have been recently discovered. binding of analytes, here called agonists, to immobilized receptor proteins is monitored by changing the flow of ions through these channels. glutamate, as an agonist, can be determined in the presence of other agonists that can interfere with the determination of na + or ca + streams using conductometric method or ion-selective electrodes. due to the dependence of the ionic channel on the nature of the linkages, it produces an independence toward the enzyme nature in order to achieve the desired sensitivity. two methods have been approached. the first refers to oligonucleotide duplex interleaving during the formation of the double helix structure of the dna of a molecule that is electrically active. the second method is the direct detection of guanine which is electroactive. some of these nbss cannot operate through analytical-sensing membrane separation membranes. the sensitive layer often has to be in contact with the biological environment where the analytes are located (fang et al. ) . nbss have been developed for indirect monitoring of organic pesticides or inorganic compounds (heavy metals, fluorides, cyanides) that inhibit the biocatalytic properties of enzymes used in the construction of nbss (devices are irreversible). in immunosensors, the initial biological activity can only be regenerated by chemical treatment and therefore is not part of the reconditioned or reusable nbs class. their application potential is to warn and not to accurately monitor a specific analyte (considered as disposable). nbss with cyanide (i.g. inhibition of cytochrome c oxidase) that are used as inhibitor to cytochromoxidase are regenerated by washing with a phosphate buffer at ph . (armstrong and beckett ). with the development of enzymatic glucose nbss, an experiment in which glucose oxidase is immobilized between two membranes, literature has emerged about techniques for immobilizing biological receptors. enzymes, antibodies, cells, or tissues with high biological activity can be immobilized in a thin film on the surface of a transducer through a variety of methods. the following immobilization procedures of biological receptors are used: • immobilization on the membrane on the surface unexposed to the analyte: an enzymatic solution, a cell or tissue suspension, rests between the permeable membrane to the analyte and the measuring electrode (electrochemical detector). • retaining of biological receptors in a polymeric matrix, polyacrylonitrile, agar gel, polyurethane (pu) or polyvinyl alcohol (apv), redox hydrogels with redox centers such as [os (bpy) cl] +/ + . • retaining of biological receptors between self-assembled layers (sam) or in membranes from the double lipid layer (blm). • the covalent binding of membrane surface receptors through bifunctional groups: glutaraldehydes, carbodiimides, sams, avidin-biotin silanized. • modification of the entire electrode structure (modified carbon paste with enzymes or graphite in epoxy resins). receptors are modified either alone or mixed with other proteins, such as bovine serum albumin (bsa), either directly on the surface of the transducer or in the polymer membrane. reactivated membranes can be used directly to immobilize enzymes or antibodies without chemical modification. the covalent binding and cross-linking are more difficult than immobilization or the retaining of receptors on the membrane. in the case of microsensor structures where the membrane is directly deposited on the transducer, the covalent bonding is safer and more stable (muñoz et al. ). besides reactive layers or membranes with immobilized receptors, many nbss, those for clinical or biological applications, incorporate one or more internal or external separation auxiliary membranes with three important functions: the barrier, the outer diffusion barrier for the substrate, and the biocompatible surfaces. for any nbs built on the principle of molecular recognition, it is important to characterize it by its response, which is related to operating parameters and limiting reaction speeds. accuracy, precision, sensitivity, and reproducibility are basic criteria for estimating nbs performance. these parameters are in direct relation to the reaction mechanisms, the transport phenomena, and the kinetics of the processes in the volume at the interface. most criteria have been developed for enzymatic nbss, being the most studied in the literature. in the case of immunosensors, the key element is the ability to capture the surface, i.e., the number of surface molecules that is active. one method of checking this parameter is to measure the specific activity, meaning the ratio of the number of active molecules to the number of immobilized molecules. this estimation is dependent on the immobilization mode (molecular orientation, number of attachment points or active sites), and the ratio ranges between . and . , rarely reaching the unit. capture capability becomes important when the surface decreases as in microfluidic applications. a problem encountered in immunosensors is that of regenerating the surface without significant loss of activity. there was a lack of rigor in the performance criteria (affi et al. ) . the response signal is corrected for background noise, the reference concentration is usually estimated in mol/l although this high value is never used when measuring ranges refer to − mol/l, and currently sensitivities of the order nmol/l and pmol/l have been reached. transient response is important for dynamic assay analysis and sampling techniques but is less significant in continuous monitoring. the transient response is estimated by the slope (dr/dt) max after the addition of the analyte in the measuring cell. one evaluation method is to introduce nbss into an fia system for sequential sample analysis in a specified hydrodynamic regime. the sensitivity and linear range of measurement of stationary concentration are determined through graphical representation. this method is more concise than the current calibration curves used to plot the response corrected to the baseline based on its concentration or logarithm. parameters are estimated in the linear response range of nbss. any electrochemical nbs has a superior linearity of the response. this limit is directly related to the biocatalytic or biocomplex properties of the biochemical or biological receptor. more in the case of nbss with enzymes, this limit is significantly influenced by membranes and immobilized substrates where the diffusion barriers and secondary kinetics play a role. the local concentration of the analyte in the reaction layer may be two orders of magnitude smaller than the volume of the solution (michelini and roda ) . enzymatic kinetics are described by michaelis-menten mechanisms and expressed by km and vm parameters. for the kinetics of the enzyme in the solution phase, km is usually determined from the lineweaver-burk graphical representation. for any electrochemical nbss, the number of standards used and how the standard sample matrix can be simulated or duplicated should be set, being required to specify the procedures for each type of nbss related to its application. these are important for the disposable nbss' case using immunoaffinity or inhibition reactions. sensitivity is the slope of the curve and should not be confused with the quantified detection limit (lod) relative to the baseline or noise signals. the range of work concentrations is determined by lower or higher detection limits (fang et al. ) . selectivity and safety are determined as any kind of amperometric or potentiometric nbss. they depend on the choice of receiver and transducer. most enzymes are specific, but there are also nonselective enzyme classes, such as alcohol oxidases, the group of oxidases sugars, peroxidases, lactases, tyrosinases, ceruloplasmin, alcohol dehydrogenases, glucose dehydrogenases, nadh dehydrogenases, etc. they have been used to develop nbss to determine environmental phenols or to monitor food quality. on the other hand, oxygen electrodes, ph electrodes, and isfets have a pronounced selectivity, the same as metal electrodes that are sensitive to many substances. their selectivity may be changed when these transducers are associated with receptors. enfet is ph sensitive to the buffer and protonation but its selectivity is not altered. when the transducer interferes with other substances, known as ascorbate or urease, to glucose nbss based on hydrogen peroxide detection, these side effects may be restricted by the use of outer or inner permselective membranes. alternatively, nbss with and without biological receptors that work by differential nbss are designed. safety in operation of nbss depends on the selectivity and reproducibility and accuracy of the measurements (heyl et al. ). the clark construction principle studied electrochemically oxygen as a reducing gas and platinum as a metal electrode. platinum used for detecting electrochemical oxygen is known as the clark electrode. the electrode has an organic membrane covering the electrolyte layer and two metal electrodes. oxygen diffuses through the membrane and is electrochemically reduced to the cathode. between the cathode and the anode, a fixed voltage is applied, for which the oxygen reduction reaction takes place. temperature greatly influences reaction speed and solubility. this is a polarographic electrode used to measure the concentration of oxygen in body fluids or gases. the sample is in contact with a membrane (polypropylene or teflon) through which the oxygen diffuses into a measuring chamber containing % saturated potassium chloride solution. inside the room are two electrodes, one is reference, ag/agcl, and the other is platinum, coated in the glass. the electrical current at the polarization potential of - mv is proportional to the oxygen concentration in the solution. for reverse polarization at + mv, hydrogen measurements can be made. reactions are very sensitive to temperature and should be maintained at ± . °c. the electrode is calibrated using a mixture of the two gas-oxygen and hydrogen-known concentrations. oxygen electrode or clark electrode has proven to be an analyzer of raw gas or developed gas when performing chemistry analyses in the clinical laboratory and in the field of medical care, ambulatory, or intensive care (on the surface of the platinum electrode an enzyme reacts with oxygen). the enzymes are placed in a closed membrane to the surface, which can be recognized as the simplest model of nbss. the oxygen concentration curve was proportional to the glucose concentration. it was the first nbs built, which helped the progress of laboratory analyses a lot. oxygen diffuses through the membrane and is electrolytically reduced to the cathode. the higher the partial oxygen pressure, the more oxygen diffuses at a time. the temperature nbss attached to the sample allow the membrane to compensate for the diffusion and solubility rate. the measuring instruments record cathode current, sample temperature, membrane temperature, barometric pressure, and salinity. with this information one can calculate the oxygen contained in the sample, either in parts per million (ppm) or in percent of oxygen saturation. the geometric configuration of the clark electrode is of great importance. in particular, the thickness of the electrolytic layer between the cathode and the membrane must have a certain limit, to ensure linearity and decrease of the drift current. calibrating a polarographic system is a must. proportionality between current and oxygen concentration must be ensured, with errors below % (biological samples role and air parameters are essential). air, as a gas mixture that has a constant oxygen content of about . %, when in contact with water, the dissolved amount depends on several factors: the optimal time for oxygen dissolution, homogeneity of the water solution, water temperature, air pressure, salts contained in water, and other water-soluble substances that are oxygen-consuming. oxygen contained in water is determinant for biological and chemical processes, so measurement of dissolved oxygen in water is important to find the partial pressure of dissolved oxygen; it must be saturated in pure water at a certain temperature (wolfbeis ) . the enzymatic electrode (in some references known as the enzyme electrode) is a combination of an electrochemical probe of any type (amperometric, potentiometric, or conductometric) with a thin layer ( - microns) of immobilized enzyme. in these devices the function of the enzyme is to provide selectivity in virtue of its biological affinity for a substrate of molecules. an enzyme can catalyze a reaction of a given substrate for a specific isomer from a plurality of substrates with different isomers. typically, the degree of advancement of an enzymatic reaction (directly related to the concentration of the analyte) is monitored by the rate of product formation or the disappearance of a reagent. if the product or reagent is electrically active, then the response can be directly monitored by amperometry, i.e., the variation of the current for a given applied potential. the main considerations are: does the enzyme contain active redox groups? are the biochemical reaction products electroactive? is one of the substrates or cofactors electrically active? what is the speed and response time? what is the final application of nbss? if the enzyme does not contain redox groups, then nbss are limited to measuring the product or substrate consumption by their reaction to the transduction electrode. the electrical current is directly related to the analyte concentration. nbss are based on electrochemical response due to h o . most common enzymes used in the design of enzyme electrodes are those that contain redox groups that change their redox state during the biochemical reaction. redox enzymes are oxidases and dehydrogenases, pyrroloquinoline quinone (pqq). they act by oxidizing the substrate, accepting electrons during the process, and further transforming in a reduced state. these enzymes return to the oxidized active state by transferring electrons to the oxygen molecule resulting in hydrogen peroxide (h o ). both oxygen and peroxide being electrochemically active, they continue by reducing to cosubstrate (oxygen) or oxidation of peroxide (reaction product). the method based on the reduction of oxygen to the o electrode is one of the simplest methods but suffers from several disadvantages, namely, slow response, miniaturization difficulties, low accuracy, and reproducibility. measurements on peroxide oxidation overcome the above difficulties and are currently the most popular method. mediator systems-a major limitation of the above-described hydrogen permeation system is the high operating potential (about . v against the ag/ agcl reference electrode) required for oxidation of peroxide which leads to increased interference. the use of mediators (molecules that can carry electrons between the enzyme redox center and the electrode) can minimize this inconvenience. depending on the nature of the mediators, the potential applied may be reduced below the limit of interferences of species such as ascorbate, urate, and paracetamol. a large number of compounds are able to act as mediators in the enzyme electrode. of these, the most popular are the metallic complexes. representatives for organometallic complexes are ferrocenes and their derivatives because they have redox potentials and are independent of ph. bienzymatic systems' recent works have focused on the direct communication of electron transfer between enzymes and electrodes. successes in the field are the peroxidase enzyme hrp (horseradish peroxidase) that catalyzes the reduction of hydrogen peroxide for a number of organic compounds. when the enzyme is immobilized on the electrode, the need for the organic reducer is prevented by the electrode itself providing the reducing equivalences. the coupling of peroxidase with an enzyme oxidase allows for the construction of bienzymatic systems through which the peroxide produced by the oxidase is detected by the electrode-peroxidase system which operates at lower potentials relative to a simple platinum electrode. this is where the minimization of active species interferences results from (frederickson matika and loake ). optical fiber as a nanobiosensor can be placed in the surface or inside the plant to directly measure parameters. nbss with optical fiber are proposed to be used in many and rapid medical determinations, and its applications are continuously expanding. it can be attached inside a hollow-like tubular instrument, serving to dilate a hole or channel, and inserted into the tissue, performing a minimal monitoring where it is needed. nbss with optical fiber are nontoxic, chemically inert, and can be successfully used inside the plant. it can be associated with plant monitoring equipment. it's easy to handle with negligible weight. the evolution of fiber-optic nbss is based on multiple performance and biocompatibility. biocompatibility is the first step in the plant's comfort; nbss should not affect the physiological parameters of the plant, but its functionality must not be compromised by plant disassimilation products. fiber-optic nbss can be classified as extrinsic, fiber acts as a way for signal and intrinsic, interactions occur in the fiber itself. there are two types of fobs: minimally invasive nbss that are introduced into the cavities of the plants and invasive nbss that are introduced into the organs or in wood conductive tissue (liu et al. ) . in the last decade, optical fiber is a product that is widely used in all the cutting-edge fields of advanced science and technology. given the ease with which it can be manipulated, unlimited sterilization possibilities, and reduced costs, it can be estimated that this product will increasingly gain market. the following applications are known to have used fiber-optic nbss: in epidermis and vascular tissues, for analysis of raw sebaceous elements, saturation in oxygen, raw sewage gas analysis, sap ph; in plant breeding monitoring; easy ph determination with a microabsorbent indicator and ph-modulator, acid-alkaline; in vegetal tissues, when it is intended to monitor the temperature, or to diagnose small and very small injuries that are difficult to reach; in epidermis for can test the quality and integrity of the layers, so, small lesions can be detected, can be used to stimulate tissues, a fobs based on oxygen demand (bod) can be used; in the stem can identify very small injuries that are inappropriate. another possible application is to appreciate the color or integrity of the vascular tissues. optic-fiber nbss can now monitor electrolytes from raw or elaborated sap as well potassium, sodium, and calcium. it takes the form of a tubular instrument, able to expand an optic-fiber channel ( . mm diameter) that can be inserted into vascular tissues. it can measure the gas concentration and the ph of the raw or elaborated sap and oxygen saturation also. the materials that make up the chemical transducers are ionophores that can be reversibly attached to the electrolyte by a molecular separator (spacer) and fluorophore, respectively. the degree of fluorescence, through excitation with electroluminescent diodes in purple, is modulated by ionophores proportional to the analyte concentration. nbss are used either extracorporeally in the external raw or elaborated sap gas analysis circuit or intracorporeally for continuous blood gas monitoring in critical situations. the chemical parameter capable of monitoring cell state is ph because lactic acid, formed when cell tissue dies, produces a decrease in ph. any drop in the ph of the raw or elaborated sap from . indicates cell death (mclamore et al. ) . achievements in the domain are invasive ph nbss that determine the state of the cell. nbss are composed of a fluorescent dye encapsulated in a gel matrix (polyacrylamide) attached at the end of the optical fiber. the dye is characterized by the emission of the acidic form centered on nm and the alkaline form centered on nm. the two forms are ph sensitive. excitation occurs at nm for both forms. separation of emission is done directly through optical filters, and sensitivity is . ph units far below acceptable clinical standards ( . ph). a bacterial disorder is a multifactorial condition that is characterized by demineralization of the inorganic portion and an organic destruction of the substance. each bacterial perturbation has as an etiological agent as pathogenic species. the content of the raw or elaborated sap in terms of bacterial load is about /ml raw or elaborated sap. therefore, raw or elaborated sap can be considered as a selective medium for bacterial growth. a significant correlation has been demonstrated between the number of pathogens in the raw or elaborated sap and their prevalence in the problems. a simple method has been adapted for detecting and counting the pathogen; it is a device consisting of a special support made with an agar culture medium containing % sucrose. it is inoculated with raw or elaborated sap, and the density of growth of the pathogen is assessed after incubation for hours at °c. next comes the morphological identification of distinct colonies on selective and nonselective agar, on distinct cell form, visible in the light of the microscope. the technique also has some disadvantages that it takes time for bacterial growth and also requires additional laboratories. to monitor pathogen activity in the sap, a fobs was developed that monitors the pathogen-mediated sucrose reactions through a photosensitive indicator immobilized in a porous glass coating. the surface of the optical fiber core is treated or coated in a porous glass film using the sol-gel technique (kozan et al. ) . spectroscopic analysis showed that there are two phases in light absorption at nm over a duration of min: between - min and - min. the investigation shows the potential of nbss in monitoring plant activity. the sol-gel technique is used to immobilize the photosensitive indicator, and it is simpler than compared with the principle of selective medium which takes time and is laborious. criteria at the base of the experiment: pathogens are partially anaerobic with opti-mal growth at °c; glucosyltransferases and fructosyltransferases from pathogens catalyze the synthesis of water-insoluble glucan and fructanic polymers in sucrose to form lactic acid found in acidic sap; pathogenic agents in the sap synthesize both extracellular and intracellular polysaccharides from sucrose; extracellular polysaccharides help the adhesion of bacteria to the surface, while intracellular polysaccharides are stored for bacterial energy; polysaccharides, intracellularly, help the bacterium to continue fermentation even when there is no exogenous form of food. acid tolerance of pathogens causes their activity to continue even at a low ph; a ph indicator, photosensitive, produces a characteristic color, according to a color gradient, depending on the ph of the raw or elaborate sap and is used in the fobs construction (miranda et al. ) . on the basis of these considerations, an experimental assembly was designed and performed with a double beam uv spectrometer in which optical fiber was introduced instead of a cuvette. in the reference well, the blue bromophenol buffer solution was used for different ph values, from to . the initial experiment helped determine the wavelength and peak characteristic to the buffer indicator and for different ph values in the sap, induced by bacterial activity. uv spectroscopic analysis at a ph of and of the blue bromophenol solution showed slightly prominent at nm wavelength; peak intensity decreases from ph to . comparison with literature data showed a good concordance, observing that in the medium with sap, sucrose and bromophenol blue, the absorption was stable at nm wavelength for a time interval of min, min, h, and h. for each set of corroded and processed fibers set, it requires independent calibration due to the in homogeneities resulting from the optic-fiber preparation steps. fobs proves to be a rapid quantity measurement test of pathogen activity in raw or elaborated sap. this test can also be adapted to other plant nanobionics where bacterial activity is involved in cellular or tissue destruction. the method of forming a biosensor from an optical fiber for the observation and detection of the pathogen, the experiments of this study followed the phase of biochemical recognition of the signal and the phase of the spectroscopic analysis. the idea of nanobionic plants has evolved to create solar cells that heal themselves from plant cells. the next step was the desire to try to amplify photosynthesis in isolated chloroplasts in plants to be used in solar cells. chloroplasts host everything they need for two-step photosynthesis. in the first step, pigments such as chlorophyll absorb light, which generates the stimulation of electrons that circulate through the chloroplast tilacloids. the plant captures this electrical energy and uses it to fuel the second stage of photosynthesis, creating glucose. chloroplasts also have these reactions after they have been removed from the plants, but after a few hours, they break down because light and oxygen destroy their photosynthetic proteins. normally, unlike extracted chloroplasts, plants can repair this damaging process. to prolong chloroplast productivity, researchers have attached ceric oxide nanoparticles. these particles are, in fact, powerful antioxidants that remove oxygen radicals and other high reactivity molecules produced by light and oxygen, protecting the decomposition chloroplasts. the researchers introduced nanoparticles into chloroplasts using a new technique called leep (lipid exchange envelope penetration). by wrapping the particles into polyacrylic acid, a heavily charged molecule allowed the particles to penetrate the lipid hydrophobic membranes surrounding the chloroplasts. in these chloroplasts, the level of decomposition of molecules has decreased tremendously. using the same technique, the researchers introduced semiconductor carbon nanotubes embedded in negatively charged dna into chloroplasts. plants use only one tenth of the available sunlight, but carbon nanotubes have functioned as artificial antennas that have allowed chloroplasts to capture unusual light waves such as green, ultraviolet, and near infrared. when carbon nanotubes functioned as prosthetic photoabsorbents, photosynthesis, measured by the activity of electrons in tilacloids, was % more intense than in chloroplasts isolated without attached nanotubes. when cerium oxide was joined with carbon nanotubes, the chloroplasts remained active for the next few hours (nikolelis et al. ) . researchers went to live plants and used a technique called vascular infusion to attach nanoparticles to arabidopsis thaliana, a small flower plant. using the above method, the researchers applied a nanoparticle solution on the lower side of the leaf, penetrating the stomata that usually allow the carbon dioxide to get in and the oxygen out. in these plants, the nanotubes have penetrated into chloroplasts and have increased the photonic electron circuit by about %. it is also to be discovered how these percentages influence the sugar production of plants. scientists have been able to transform the arabidopsis thaliana plant into a chemical nbs by implanting nanotubes that detect nitric oxide, a pollutant produced by combustion (hines et al. ) . nbss have been created on the basis of carbon nanotubes for several chemicals, including hydrogen peroxide, trinitrotoluene, and sarin gas. when molecules attach to polymers encased in nanotubes, the fluorescence of these nanotubes is altered. carbon nanotubes can be used to create nbss that detect real-time particle free radicals or signal the presence of molecules with a very low level of concentration and too difficult to detect. this is a tremendous demonstration of how nanotechnology can be combined with synthetic biology to modify and enhance the functions of living organisms of plants. the way that nanoparticles arrange themselves can be used to enhance plant photosynthetic capacity, being used as nbss and stress reducers. by adapting nbss to targets, researchers hope to develop plants that could be used to monitor environmental pollution, pesticides, fungal infections, or exposure to bacterial toxins. attempts to incorporate electron nanomaterials into plants, such as graphene, are currently being made. researchers have long tried to find the best way to transmit information in a timely manner, focusing on electronics and mechanics of nbss for their tasks. nbss used for agricultural purposes are not new. recombinant dna technology now offers the possibility of obtaining new biological insecticides that preserve the benefits of "classic" biological control agents, plus some new features. these technologies are not accessible to all possible users, especially if they are poor, and furthermore, they have also generated a series of public debates about their usefulness and effects on organisms other than the target or the environment. obtaining pest-resistant plants is perhaps the most spectacular field of genetic engineering applied to plants, since it allowed the regeneration of plants containing genes of bacterial origin that provide protection against harmful insects. this ensures, on the one hand, the obtaining of richer harvests and, on the other hand, the reduction of farmers' costs for pesticides (lukács et al. ; prasad et al. prasad et al. , . a series of new genes for resistance to insect attack, transferable to plants (genes encoding δ-endotoxin production from b. thuringiensis) has been discovered; genes for the synthesis of enzymes or enzyme inhibitors; plant genes encoding the synthesis of specific lectins; genes that cause induction of synthesis of plant compounds such as phytoalexins. the development of cloning methodology was based on the observation that there is a group of gram-positive bacteria belonging to b. thuringiensis species that produce a toxin called δ-endotoxin or crystalline protein capable of killing a wide range of insects (coleoptera, lepidoptera, diptera), depending on the bacterial strain. of great interest is strain b. thuringiensis var. tenebrionis that synthesizes an effective δ-endotoxin against the colorado beetle. the genes involved in the synthesis of this protein are localized, on most bacterial strains, to large plasmids ( kb), the production of the toxin occurring during sporulation. it has been shown that crystalline protein (δ-endotoxin) is normally expressed as a large inactive protoxin, which undergoes proteolytic processing in the intestine of the sensitive insect, becoming an active toxin. it recognizes the specific receptors in the intestinal cells and blocks the functions of these cells, leading to the death of the insects. studies on genes that encode inhibitory proteins produced by b. thuringiensis led to their grouping into four types based on target species specificity and nucleotide sequence: type i cry genes, encode specific kda proteins for lepidopteran larvae; type ii cry genes, encode active kda proteins on dipterous and lepidopteran larvae; type iii cry genes, encode kda specific activity on coleopteran larvae; and type iv cry genes, encode inhibitory proteins for diptera larvae. the number of genes identified that are coding for δ-endotoxin-like proteins is high: genes specific for lepidopteran, coleopteran, and diphtheria (genfa et al. ) . it has been achieved to obtain crystalline protein genes from several strains of b. thuringiensis by genetic amplification (pcr). because the whole gene for the crystal protein was found to be very poor in the transformed plant cells, a modified gene was created, containing only the n-terminal portion of the protein (amino acids - ). to increase gene expression in plants, the natural sequence for amino acids - rich in at was replaced by a synthetic sequence, rich in gc, containing the preferred codons for plant cells. these recombinant genes were introduced into ti plasmid-derived vectors (binary vectors containing the duplicate camv promoter, which increases the transcriptional and fivefold transcription and selection marker genes for antibiotic resistance or phosphinothricin herbicide) transferred to cells by a. tumefaciens containing ti disarmed plasmids. the size of recombinant plasmids obtained ranges between and , pb, depending on the size of the bacterial gene and the promoter sequence integrated into the vector. recombinant bacterial strains were then used to infect test plants (potato, tobacco, cotton). selection was first performed according to vector-borne selection markers (antibiotic resistance, gus test, herbicide resistance, etc.), and finally regenerated plants were subjected to insect attack (takakusagi et al. ) . regenerated plants have shown resistance to attack by insect pests, the specific character being maintained and expressed in experiments in the field. the first transgenic plant that manages the insect attack resistance belongs to the nicotiana tabacum species, expressing the whole or truncated cry a gene, cloned under the control of a constitutive promoter, so that the inhibitory protein represents . % of the total plant protein (leaf). there were obtained cotton plants into which the modified cry a (c) gene, cloned under the control of the camv s promoter or under the control of a promoter and a sequence for a chloroplast transit peptide isolated from arabidopsis so that the expression level of the gene of interest led to a high level of toxin: . % of total protein, %, respectively. another variant of cloning the bacterial toxin gene was that of using genetic elements that ensure expression of the gene of interest exclusively in the green portions of the plant (the promoter derived from the gene for pepc) or pollen (by using a gene derived promoter for a calcium dependent protein kinase (cdpk). a similar methodology has been used to transform rice plants, and by cloning a synthetic cry iii gene, they have obtained tobacco and potato plants resistant to the attack of colorado beetle (vigneux et al. ) . a modified a (b) modified gene was used for cloning under the control of the camv promoter and obtained sugarcane plants with resistance to diatraea saccharalis larvae. given the practical significance of plant resistance to harmful insects, research has been extended to other plant species, producing eggplant plants resistant to the attack of coleoptera, broccoli with resistance to certain lepidopteran species, maize with resistance to b. fusca, etc., as well as a number of advances in leguminous plants. toxicity studies conducted on plants expressing the gene for δ-endotoxin have shown that the existence of the transgene does not alter the normal features of the plants, except resistance to insect attack. in addition to δ-endotoxin produced by b. thuringiensis strains, other bacterial species have also been identified that produce insecticidal proteins (liu et al. ) . this is the case for b. cereus strains producing two vip and vip proteins with effect on insects, their mode of action being similar to δ-endotoxin. expression by plants of enzymes such as chitinase, cholesterol oxidase, lipoxygenase, phenol oxidase, peroxidase, or isopentenyl transferase (ipt) could be an alternative to using the δ-endotoxin gene. of the enzymes that can provide plant protection against insect attack, a particular place is occupied by chitinases, enzymes that act on chitin, a basic component of insect coatings. tobacco plants expressing genes for chitinase isolated from insects or beans exhibit increased resistance to lepidopterans. it has been observed that by cloning the isolated chitinase gene from the s. marcescens bacterium, a synergistic effect of endocytinase produced by plants containing the endotoxin gene in addition to s. littoralis larvae has been revealed. another enzyme of bacterial origin that exhibits insecticidal action is cholesterol oxidase. the introduction and expression of cho a gene for cholesterol oxidase from streptomyces sp. in tobacco plants have led to increased plant resistance to a. grandis larvae. the use for cloning the gene for the enzyme bacterial isopentenyl transferase (ipt) (involved in cytokine biosynthesis) by fusion with the protease inhibitor ii (pi-iik) gene promoter determined the production of n. plumbaginifolia lepidopteran-resistant plants (m. sexta or m. persicae). another embodiment was that of introducing into the plant cells the cpt gene that encodes a trypsin inhibitory protein isolated from vicia faba. this protein has antimetabolic effect, protecting plants from the attack of pests. similarly, other genes encoding protease inhibitors (kunitz trypsin inhibitor, bowman-birk proteinase inhibitor) or lectins have been cloned into different hosts, and encoded proteins may be true "defense guns" for the plants that contain them. it is known that insects, such as lepidopterans, depend on serine proteases (trypsin, chymotrypsin, or elastase), these being the first enzymes to digest (alvarez-fernandez ). a series of genes encoding different inhibitors for serine proteases have been isolated from various sources (plants, microorganisms) and cloned into various plant species, such as m. sativa, tobacco, corn, etc.; the plants obtained showed increased resistance to various insect pests compared to normal non-gm plants. in some cases, it has been noted that the insertion of additional genes to plants for protease inhibitors to join endogenous genes causes an increased level of pathogen resistance of transformed plants. however, the use of protease inhibitors for controlling insect pests requires thorough studies of plant and insect interactions because it has been observed that for some inhibitors such as serine proteases, the insecticide effect also manifests on useful insects (e.g., on bees). insect carbohydrate metabolism is another target for inhibitory agents tested in numerous studies. genes for different α-amylase inhibitors (wheat and beans) were isolated and characterized; after cloning the isolated gene from wheat in tobacco plants, an increase in lepidopteran larval mortality of up to % was observed. in the case of cloning the α-amylase inhibitor gene from beans in pea plants under the control of the pha gene promoter, an increased expression of the foreign gene in the seeds was obtained, which resulted in a higher resistance to callosobruchus sp. (ramirez and spears ) . vegetable lectins are a special group of glycoproteins that have protective functions against a number of harmful organisms. studies on these glycoproteins have shown that they produce strong effects on the development of various types of insects. the first example of plants containing genes for nonspecific lectins that show toxicity to pests is tobacco plants in which the lectin genes from the pea have been cloned. however, many of the vegetable lectins also have a toxic effect on mammals, which limits their use as agents to increase pest resistance. special attention has been given by many specialists to lectin specific for mangosteen from guinea pigs and concanavalin a: the genes for these lectins have been cloned into different plant species (tobacco, tomato, potato, sugarcane, rice, wheat), and the heterologous proteins synthesized by them have determined a reduced sensitivity to the attack of harmful insects (lepidopteran, aphids, coleopteran larvae). the results suggest that the use of plants containing insecticide genes (such as for lecithin) together with integrated management represents promising possibilities for controlling pests from many plant species, including wheat or rice (richard et al. ). contrary to the remarkable results achieved so far, the genes used to transform crop plants are either too specific or only partially effective on the targets of insect pests. to use plants as true "weapons" for pest control, it would be necessary to have genes at their level to determine the synthesis of compounds with different actions on the same target. the researchers are relatively recent and aim mainly to combine genes for a b. thuringiensis δ-endotoxin with another inhibitory gene in the same host gene: for example, the gene for the v. faba trypsin inhibitor (cpti) or for serine proteases and the protein gene in the potato virus y coating. another interesting approach is that which introduced the cry a (c) gene into a p. fluorescens strain able to colonize the sugarcane by means of two plasmids, pder and pkt , in which the gene is found in and children, respectively. testing of recombinant bacterial strains on sugarcane-specific insect pests revealed greater resistance of plants treated with the respective bacteria than untreated. also, although pest-resistant plants have been obtained for several plant species, fewer results have been reported for cereals, vegetables, and oleaginous plants (ibrahim et al. ) . plant resistance to various diseases (microbial, viral, and nematode phytopathogens) has been a subject for long-term studies, identifying a relatively large number of resistance genes. although it was thought that endogenous resistance genes would provide a sustainable effect for the appropriate plants, this was true in very few cases. in the case of potato, the control program for certain diseases, such as the rot caused by phytophthora infestans, had to be abandoned because the resistance to this disease of potato plants obtained by transferring the resistance genes on the basis of crossbreeds with the solanum demissum species proved to be of short duration. identifying genes of resistance in the genome of different plant species and transferring them to other crop plants are extremely difficult and time-consuming if traditional methods (intra-and interspecific hybridizations) are used. the process is considerably accelerated by the use of molecular markers generated by restriction fragment length polymorphism (rflp) techniques, randomized amplified polymorphic dna (rapd), single sequence repeat (ssr), or single nucleotide polymorphism (snp). the application of molecular markers allowed the isolation of nearly resistance genes (r-genes) from genetically well-characterized plant species, proving that many of them are grouped into specific chromosomal regions (they form clusters). of these resistance genes, some have been transferred to other plant species than to their origin through molecular cloning techniques, with the help of specific vectors that ensure the transfer of large fragments, revealing that in this way, the r-genes act synergistically and provide lasting resistance to some diseases. as it has already been mentioned, few r-genes have been shown to provide a lasting control of plant diseases. this is the case for pepper bs genes and rice xa which provide resistance to different phytopathogenic strains of x. campestris or x. oryzae in the case of species in which the genes have been cloned (e.g., tomatoes). resistance to these genes is due to the recognition of proteins produced by bacteria or phytopathogenic fungi, resulting in the occurrence of a plant hypersensitivity phenomenon and necrosis of affected tissues. another example of the long-acting r-gene is the barley recessive mlo gene which provides the resistance of the plants containing it to all e. graminis strains, through the accumulation in plant cells of a phenolic antifungal compound named p-coumaroylhydroxyagmatine. it is expected that this gene will be used for suppressing the antisense technique of the dominant mlo gene from wheat or other plant species susceptible to erysiphe sp. in vitro processing of the r-genes and then introducing them into new hosts provide new possibilities for resistance. this is the case for the tomato avrpto gene which, after cloning under the control of a strong promoter such as s to camv, determines the resistance of transformed tomato plants to p. syringae pv. strains, tomato, and to unrelated pathogens such as x. campestris and c. fulvum. researchers' efforts to obtain resistance systems applicable to a larger number of plant species are not limited to r-genes but also include systemic acquired resistance mechanisms (sar). several genes involved in sar have been isolated and characterized, of which the npr gene encoding a transcriptional regulator is a key gene in this system. overexpression of this gene increases the resistance of arabidopsis thaliana or rice plants to a wide variety of pathogens (knecht et al. ). an interesting behavior has been observed in the myb gene which is induced by vmt infection of resistant tobacco plants and which causes the synthesis of a transcription factor that binds to the promoter of a gene involved in pathogenesis (the pr a gene). modifying the expression level of the myb gene in tobacco plants leads to increased resistance to viral infection (with vmt) as well as to r. solani pathogenic fungus (raymond et al. ) . along with this, another recently cloned gene, pad , isolated from arabidopsis thaliana, proves to be extremely interesting for the development of broad-spectrum resistance: overexpression of the gene in plants increases resistance to phytopathogens. numerous biotech companies and universities have begun to assess the performance of plants that express antifungal proteins through both "in vitro" and field experiments. both plants containing r-genes or genes involved in sars, as well as genes such as those which encode the glucosidase (ago) from aspergillus sp., defensins, h o -generating enzymes, glucanases or chitinases, have been examined. although at the laboratory level potato plants containing the fungal gene for glucose oxidase showed an increased resistance to phytopathogens, the results were inconclusive when they were put into the field. for other genes such as chitinase and intracellular α- , -glucanase, overexpression of these in tomato plants resulted in significant resistance to fusarium oxysporum (werner et al. ) . companies have created nbss that farmers can use to detect information such as air pollution, soil humidity, and so on. however, given that plants are really good nbss and that they can naturally react to external stimuli and changes, they can be used instead. this is the idea behind the latest nbss initiative called advanced plant technologies. the idea is that, through genetic manipulation, researchers will be able to create self-sustaining plants, which in turn enable them to act as a kind of nbs when it comes to detecting chemical substances, pathogens, etc. this is not the first time this idea with plants as nbss appears, but before that, resources that plants needed to survive were used, which in turn reduced their resistance. this new idea indicates that nbss can be sustained by themselves, which means they can work longer in isolated parts. in the future, plants could be used to detect when a biological attack will take place. in addition, because they are plants, it also means that they can be placed anywhere and nobody will think twice about their presence and that they might be some nbss. through such examples, nature teaches us to optimize by exploring diversity. in this context, integrated nanoscale systems (nbss), energy sources (biocombustible cells) that use plants metabolism, manipulators for nanoscale surgery, and drug reservoirs embedded in intelligent polymers are explored. all of these are virus-sized. the proliferation of these types of nbss leads to a large number of applications, and combinations of these in the future will lead to microminiaturization, versatility, and functionality. plant species present a great diversity of genetics, and wild ones constitute a large genetic reservoir, from which genes that are important from a practical point of view can be obtained. plant genetic engineering research has a great theoretical significance, facilitating the knowledge of how genes of these organisms act, the effects of phytohormones on plant development, genes inactivation mechanisms, etc. by applying molecular biology techniques, useful information can be obtained on the genome of plants used for amelioration, the localization of genes of interest, the degree of relationship between different species, etc. as far as practical applications are concerned, a number of significant results have been obtained so far, some of which have already been applied, such as virus-resistant plants, plants resistant to the attack of pests, herbicide-resistant plants, plants of horticultural interest (ornamental plants with new phenotypes, plants producing softening resistant fruits), plants capable of synthesizing secondary metabolites in increased amounts, and plants producing "edible" antibodies, and enumeration could continue. numerical modeling of the dynamic response of a bioluminescent bacterial biosensor rapid detection of cadmium-resistant plant growth promotory rhizobacteria: a perspective of elisa and qcm-based immunosensor patented applications of gene silencing in plants: manipulation of traits and phytopathogen resistance experimental and modelling data contradict the idea of respiratory down-regulation in plant tissues at an internal [o ] substantially above the critical oxygen pressure for cytochrome oxidase d-nanostructured au electrodes for the event-specific detection of mon transgenic maize development of biosensor for phenolic compounds containing ppo in β-cyclodextrin modified support and iridium nanoparticles detection of glycoalkaloids using disposable biosensors based on genetically modified enzymes proteomic dissection of plant responses to various pathogens redox regulation in plant immune function chiral flavanones from amygdalus lycioides spach: structural elucidation and identification of tnf alpha inhibitors by bioactivity-guided fractionation the screening and isolation of an effective anti-endotoxin monomer from radix paeoniae rubra using affinity biosensor technology development of fret biosensors for mammalian and plant systems application of genetically engineered microbial whole-cell biosensors for combined chemosensing properties, functions and evolution of cytokinin receptors tracking transience: a method for dynamic monitoring of biological events in arabidopsis thaliana biosensors the influence of different nutrient levels on insect-induced plant volatiles in bt and conventional oilseed rape plants assessment of respiration in isolated plant mitochondria using clark-type electrodes in vivo biochemistry: applications for small molecule biosensors in plant biology chemosensors and biosensors based on polyelectrolyte microcapsules containing fluorescent dyes and enzymes generation of plant protein microarrays and investigation of antigenantibody interactions expression of bvglp- encoding a germin-like protein from sugar beet in arabidopsis thaliana leads to resistance against phytopathogenic fungi biosensing hydrogen peroxide utilizing carbon paste electrodes containing peroxidases naturally immobilized on coconut (cocos nucifera l.) fibers heat-solubilized curry spice curcumin inhibits antibody-antigen interaction in in vitro studies: a possible therapy to alleviate autoimmune disorders plant growth enhancement and associated physiological responses are coregulated by ethylene and gibberellin in response to harpin protein hpa portable optical aptasensor for rapid detection of mycotoxin with a reversible ligand-grafted biosensing surface effect of bt broccoli and resistant genotype of plutella xylostella (lepidoptera: plutellidae) on development and host acceptance of the parasitoid diadegma insulare (hymenoptera: ichneumonidae) measurement of the optical parameters of purple membrane and plant light-harvesting complex films with optical waveguide lightmode spectroscopy self-referencing optrodes for measuring spatially resolved, real-time metabolic oxygen flux in plant systems redox-sensitive gfp in arabidopsis thaliana is a quantitative biosensor for the redox potential of the cellular glutathione redox buffer staying alive: new perspectives on cell immobilization for biosensing purposes colorimetric bacteria sensing using a supramolecular enzyme-nanoparticle biosensor versatile strategy for the synthesis of biotin-labelled glycans, their immobilization to establish a bioactive surface and interaction studies with a lectin on a biochip complex regulation of the immunoglobulin mu heavy-chain gene enhancer: microb, a new determinant of enhancer function development of an electrochemical biosensor for the rapid detection of naphthalene acetic acid in fruits by using air stable lipid films with incorporated auxin-binding protein receptor boron nitride nanotube-based biosensing of various bacterium/ viruses: continuum modelling-based simulation approach live-cell imaging of phosphatidic acid dynamics in pollen tubes visualized by spo p-derived biosensor nanotechnology in sustainable agriculture: recent developments, challenges, and perspectives. front microbiol : nanotechnology in sustainable agriculture: present concerns and future aspects stem nematode counteracts plant resistance of aphids in alfalfa, medicago sativa host plant and population determine the fitness costs of resistance to bacillus thuringiensis fine mapping of co-x, an anthracnose resistance gene to a highly virulent strain of colletotrichum lindemuthianum in common bean electrochemical quantification of the antioxidant capacity of medicinal plants using biosensors enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for the quantitative/qualitative analysis of plant secondary metabolites kinetic models for detection of toxicity in a microbial fuel cell based biosensor mapping a disordered portion of the brz -binding site on a plant monooxygenase, dwarf , using a quartz-crystal microbalance biosensor-based t phage display the xaxab genes encoding a new apoptotic toxin from the insect pathogen xenorhabdus nematophila are present in plant and human pathogens multi-analyte biochip (mab) based on allsolid-state ion-selective electrodes (assise) for physiological research belowground communication: impacts of volatile organic compounds (vocs) from soil fungi on other soil-inhabiting organisms luminescent sensing and imaging of oxygen: fierce competition to the clark electrode comparative quantification of oxygen release by wetland plants: electrode technique and oxygen consumption model key: cord- -ef svn f authors: saitou, naruya title: eukaryote genomes date: - - journal: introduction to evolutionary genomics doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ef svn f general overviews of eukaryote genomes are first discussed, including organelle genomes, introns, and junk dnas. we then discuss the evolutionary features of eukaryote genomes, such as genome duplication, c-value paradox, and the relationship between genome size and mutation rates. genomes of multicellular organisms, plants, fungi, and animals are then briefly discussed. duplications sometimes occur in eukaryotes, especially in plants and in vertebrates, but genome duplication is so far not known for prokaryotic genomes. because the gene number of typical eukaryotic genomes is much larger than that of prokaryotes, there are many genes shared among most of eukaryote genomes but nonexisting in prokaryote genomes. some examples are listed in table . . for example, myosin is located in animal muscle tissues, and its homologous protein exists in cytoskeleton of all eukaryotes, but not found in prokaryotes. recently, kryukov et al. ( ; [ ] ) constructed a new database on oligonucleotide sequence frequencies and conducted a series of statistical analyses. frequencies of all possible - oligonucleotides were counted for each genome, and these observed values were compared with expected values computed under observed oligonucleotide frequencies of length - . deviations from expected values were much larger for eukaryotes than prokaryotes, except for fungal genomes. figure . shows the distribution of the deviation for various organismal groups. the biological reason for this difference is not known. there are two major types of organella in eukaryotes: mitochondria and plastids. figure . shows schematic views of mitochondria and chloroplasts. these two organella has their independent genomes. this suggests that they were initially independent organisms which started intracellular symbiosis with primordial eukaryotic cells. because most eukaryotes have mitochondria, the ancestral eukaryotes, a lineage that emerged from archaea, most probably started intracellular symbiosis with mitochondrial ancestor. a parasitic rickettsia prowazekii is so far phylogenetically closest to mitochondria [ ] , and a rickettsia-like bacterium is the best candidate as the mitochondrial ancestor. however, there is an alternative "hydrogen hypothesis" [ ] . plastids include chloroplasts, leucoplasts, and chromoplasts and exist in land plants, green algae, red algae, glaucophyte algae, and some protists like euglenoids. mitochondrial genome sizes of some representative eukaryotes are listed in table . . most of animal mitochondrial genomes are less than kb, and sizes of protist and fungi mitochondrial genomes are somewhat larger. mitochondrial genome size of plants is much larger than those of other eukaryotic lineages, yet the size is mostly less than kb. an ancestral eukaryotic cell, probably an archaean lineage, hosted a bacterial cell, and intracellular symbiosis started. initially, archaea and bacteria shared genes responsible for basic metabolism, and the situation is a sort of gene duplication for many genes, though homologous genes are not identical but already diverged long time ago. in any case, division of labor followed, and only limited metabolic pathways were left in the bacterial system, which eventually became mitochondria. animal mitochondrial genomes contain very small number of genes; for peptide subunits, for trna, and for rrna [ ] . genome size (kb) animals homo sapiens (human) . takifugu rubripes (torafugu fi sh) representative animal species mitochondrial dna genomes. although most of vertebrate mitochondrial dna genomes have the same gene order as in human ( fig. . a ), gene order may vary from phylum to phylum. yet the gene content and the genome size are more or less constant among animals. it is not clear why animal mitochondrial genomes are so small. one possibility is that animal individuals are highly integrated compared to fungi and plants, and this might have infl uenced a drastic reduction of the mitochondrial genome size. another interesting feature of animal mitochondrial dna genomes is the heterogeneous rates of gene order change. for example, platyhelminthes exhibit great variability in mitochondrial gene order (sakai and sakaizumi, ; [ ] ). in contrast, plant mitochondrial genomes are much larger (see table . ). figure . shows the genome structure of tobacco mitochondrial genome (from sugiyama et al. ; [ ] ). horizontal gene transfers are also known to occur in plant mitochondrial dnas even between remotely related species [ ] . the melon ( cucumis melo ) mitochondrial genome size, ca. . mb, is exceptionally large, and recently its draft genome was determined [ ] . interestingly, melon mitochondrial genome looks like the vertebrate nuclear genome in its contents, in spite of its genome size being similar to that of bacteria. the protein coding gene region accounted for only . % of the genome, and about half of the genome is composed of repeats. the remaining part is mostly homologous to melon nuclear dna, and . % is homologous to melon chloroplast dna. most of the protein coding genes of melon mitochondrial dnas are highly similar to those of its congeneric species, which are watermelon and squash whose mitochondrial genome sizes are kb and kb, respectively. this indicates that the huge expansion of its genome size occurred only recently. interestingly, cucumber ( cucumis sativus ), another congeneric species, also has ~ . -mb mitochondrial genome with many repeat sequences [ ] . it will be interesting to study whether the increase of mitochondrial genomes of melon and cucumber is independent or not. chloroplasts exist only in plants, algae, and some protists. it may change to leucoplasts and chromoplasts. because of this, a generic name "plastids" may also be used. the origin of chloroplast seems to be a cyanobacterium that started intracellular symbiosis as in the case of mitochondria. a unique but common feature of chloroplast genome is the existence of inverted repeats [ ] , and they mainly contain rrna genes. chloroplast dna contents may [ ] . chloroplast genomes were determined for more than species as of december [ ] . their genome sizes range from kb ( rhizanthella gardneri ) to kb ( floydiella terrestris ). although the largest chloroplast genome is still much smaller than atypical bacterial genome, its average intergenic length is kb, much longer than that for bacterial genomes. fractions of mitochondrial dna may sometimes be inserted to nuclear genomes, and they are called "numts." an extensive analysis of the human genome found over numts [ ] . their sequence patterns are random in terms of mitochondrial genome locations. this suggests that mitochondrial dnas themselves were inserted, not via cdna reverse-transcribed from mitochondrial mrna. a possible source is sperm mitochondrial dna that were fragmented after fertilization [ ] . the reverse direction, from nucleus to mitochondria, was observed in melon, as discussed in subsection . . . intron is a dna region of a gene that is eliminated during splicing after transcription of a long premature mrna molecule. intron was discovered by phillip a. sharp and richard j. roberts in as "intervening sequence" [ ] , but the name "intron" coined by walter gilbert in [ ] is now widely used. it should be noted that some description on intron by kenmochi [ ] was used for writing this section. there are various types of introns, but they can be classifi ed into two: those requiring spliceosomes (spliceosome type) and self-splicing type. figure . shows the splicing mechanisms of these two major types. most of introns in nuclear genomes of eukaryotes are spliceosome type, and there are common gu-ag type and rare au-ac type, depending on the nucleotide sequences of the intron-exon boundaries [ ] . spliceosomes involving these two types differ [ ] . self-splicing introns are divided into three groups: groups i, ii, and iii. group i introns exist in organellar and nuclear rrna genes of eukaryotes and prokaryotic trna genes. group ii are found in organellar and some eubacterial genomes. cavalier-smith [ ] suggested that spliceosome-type introns originated from group ii introns because of their similarity in splicing mechanism and structural similarity between group ii introns and spliceosomal rna. group iii introns exist in organellar genomes, and its splicing system is similar with that of group ii intron, though they are smaller and have unique secondary structure. there is yet another type of introns which exist only in trnas of single-cell eukaryotes and archaea [ ] . these introns do not have self-splicing functions, but endonuclease and rna ligase are involved in splicing. the location of this type of introns is often at a certain position of the trna anticodon loop. after the discovery of introns, their probable functions and evolutionary origin have long been argued (e.g., [ , ] ). because self-splicing introns can occur at any time, even in the very early stage of origin of life, we consider only spliceosometype introns. for brevity, we hereafter call this type of introns as simply "intron." there are mainly two major hypotheses: introns early and introns late. the former claims that exon existed as a functional unit from the common ancestor of prokaryotes and eukaryotes, and "exon shuffl ing" was proposed for creating new protein functions [ ] . introns which separate exons should also be quite an ancient origin [ , ] . in contrast, introns are considered to emerge only in the eukaryotic lineage according to the introns-late hypothesis [ , ] . the protein "module" hypothesis proposed by go [ ] is related to be intronsearly hypothesis. pattern of intron appearance and loss has been estimated by various methods (e.g., [ , ] ). kenmochi and his colleagues analyzed introns of ribosomal proteins of mitochondrial genomes and eukaryotic nuclear genomes in details [ - ] . these studies supported the introns-late hypothesis, because introns in mitochondrial and cytosolic ribosomal proteins seem to be independent origins and introns seem to emerge in many ribosomal protein genes after eukaryotes appeared. introns do not code for amino acid sequences by defi nition. in this sense, most of introns may be classifi ed as junk dnas (see the next section). there are, however, evolutionarily conserved regions in introns, suggesting the existence of some functional roles in introns. ohno ( ; [ ] ) proclaimed that the most part of mammalian genomes are nonfunctional and coined the term "junk dna." with the advent of eukaryotic genome sequence data, it is now clear that he was right. there are in fact so much junk dnas in eukaryotic genomes. junk dnas or nonfunctional dnas can be divided into repeat sequences and unique sequences. repeat sequences are either dispersed type or tandem type. unique sequences include pseudogenes that keep homology with functional genes. prokaryote genomes sometimes contain insertion sequences; however, this kind of dispersed repeats constitutes the major portion of many eukaryotic genomes. these interspersed elements are divided into two major categories according to their lengths: short ones (sines) and long ones (lines). one well-known example of sine is alu elements in primate genomes. it is about -bp length, and originated from sl ribosomal rna gene. let us see the real alu element sequence from the human genome sequence. if we retrieve the ddbj/embl/genbank international sequence database accession number ap (a part of chromosome ), there are alu elements among the kb sequence. the density is . alu elements per kb. if we consider the whole human genome of ~ billion bp, alu repeats are expected to exist in ~ . million copies. one example of alu sequence is shown below from this entry coordinates from to : ggcgggagcg atggctcacg cctgtaatgc cagcactttg ggaggccgag gtgggtggat cacaaggtca ggagatagag accatcctgg ctaacacggt gaaacactgt ctctactaaa aacacaaaaa actagccagg cgtggtggcg ggtgcctgta atcccagcta ctcgggaggc tgaggcagga gaatggtgtg aacccaggaa gtggagcttg cagtgagctc agattgcgcc actgcactcc agcctgggtg acagagtgag actccatctc aaaaaaaata aaataaataa aaaaaa if we do blast homology search (see chap. ) using ddbj system ( http:// blast.ddbj.nig.ac.jp/blast/blastn ) targeted to nonhuman primate sequences (pri division of ddbj database), the best hit was obtained from chimpanzee chromosome , which is orthologous to human chromosome . i suggest interested readers to do this homology search practice. alu elements were fi rst classifi ed into j and s subfamilies [ ] . it is not clear about the reason of selection of two characters (j and s), but probably two authors (jurka and smith) used initials of their surnames. in any case, this division was based on the distance from alu consensus sequence; alu elements which are more close to the consensus were classifi ed as s and those not as j. later, a subset of the s subfamily were found to be highly similar with each other, and they were named as y after 'young," for they appeared relatively in young or recent age. rough estimates of the divergence time of alu elements are as follows: j subfamily appeared about million years ago, and s subfamily separated from j at million years ago, followed by further separation of y at million years ago [ ] . figure . shows the overall pattern of alu element evolution (based on [ ] ). tandemly repeated sequences are also abundant in eukaryotic genomes, and the representative ones are heterochromatin regions. heterochromatins are highly condensed nonfunctional regions in nuclear dna, in contrast to euchromatins, in which many genes are actively transcribed. heterochromatins usually reside at teromeres, terminal parts of chromosomes, and at centromeres, internal parts of chromosomes, that connect spindle fi bers during cell division. a more than -mb teromeric regions of arabidopsis thaliana were found to be tandem repeats of ca. -bp repeat unit [ , ] . the nucleotide sequence below is arabidopsis thaliana tandemly repeated sequence ar (international sequence database accession number x ): aagcttcttc ttgcttctca atgctttgtt ggtttagccg aagtccatat gagtctttgt ctttgtatct tctaacaagg aaacactact taggctttta ggataagatt gcggtttaag ttcttatact taatcataca catgccatca agtcatattc gtactccaaa acaataacc the human genome also has a similar but nonhomologous sequence in centromeres, called "alphoid dna" with the -bp repeat unit [ ] . the following is the sequence (international sequence database accession number m ): catcctcaga aacttctttg tgatgtgtgc attcaagtca cagagttgaa cattcccttt cgtacagcag tttttaaaca ctctttctgt agtatctgga agtgaacatt aggacagctt tcaggtctat ggtgagaaag gaaatatctt caaataaaaa ctagacagaa g if we do blast homology search (see chap. ) targeted to the human genome sequences of the ncbi database, there was no hit with this alphoid sequence. this clearly shows that the human genome sequences currently available are far from complete, for they do not include most of these tandem repeat sequences. telomores of the human genome are composed of hundreds of -bp repeats, ttaggg. if we search the human genome as -bp long tandem repeats of this -repeat units as query using the ncbi blast, many hits are obtained. as we already discussed in chap. , authentic pseudogenes have no function, and they are genuine members of junk dnas. when a gene duplication occurs, one of two copies often become a pseudogene. because gene duplication is prevalent in eukaryote genomes, pseudogenes are also abundant. pseudogenes are, by defi nition, homologous to functional genes. however, after a long evolutionary time, many selectively neutral mutations accumulate on pseudogenes, and eventually they will lose sequence homology with their functional counterpart. there are many unique sequences in eukaryote genomes, and majority of them may be this kind of homology-lost pseudogenes. a long rna is initially transcribed from a genomic region having an exon-intron structure, and then rnas corresponding to introns are spliced out. these leftover rnas may be called "junk" rnas, for they will soon be degraded by rnase. only a limited set of genes are transcribed in each tissue of multicellular organisms, but leaky expression of some genes may happen in tissues in which these genes should not be expressed. again these are "junk" rnas, and they are swiftly decomposed. a series of studies (e.g., [ , ] ) claimed that many noncoding dna regions are transcribed. however, van bakel et al. [ ] showed that most of them were found to be artifact of chip-chip technologies used in these studies. if nonsense or frameshift mutations occur in a protein coding sequences, that gene cannot make proteins. yet its mrna may be produced continuously until the promoter or its enhancer will become nonfunctional. in this case, this sort of mutated genes produces junk rnas. if only a small quantity of rnas are found from cells and when they are not evolutionarily conserved, they are probably some kind of junk rnas. as junk dnas and junk rnas exist, cells may also have "junk" proteins. if mature mrnas are not produced in the expected way, various aberrant mrna molecules will be produced, and ribosomes try to translate them to peptides based on these wrong mrna information. proteins produced in this way may be called "junk" proteins, for they often have no or little functions. even if one protein is correctly translated and is moved to its expected cellular location, it can still be considered as "junk" protein. one good example is the abcc transporter protein of dry-type cerumen (earwax), for one nonsynonymous substitution at this gene caused that protein to be essentially nonfunctional [ ] . there are various genomic features that are specifi c to eukaryotes other than existence of introns and junk dnas, such as genome duplication, rna editing, c-value paradox, and the relationship between genome size and mutation rates. we will briefl y discuss them in this section. the most dramatic and infl uential change of the genome structure is genome duplications. genome duplications are also called polyploidization, but this term is tightly linked to karyotypes or chromosome constellation. prokaryotes are so far not known to experience genome duplications, which are restricted to eukaryotes. interestingly, genome duplications are quite frequent in plants, while it is relatively rare in the other two multicellular eukaryotic lineages. an ancient genome duplication was found from the genome analysis of baker's yeast [ ] , and rhizopus oryzae , a basal lineage fungus, was also found to experience a genome duplication [ ] . among protists, paramecium tetraurelia is known to have experienced at least three genome duplications [ ] . because we human belongs to vertebrates and the two-round genome duplications occurred at the common ancestor of vertebrates (see chap. ), we may incline to think that genome duplications often happen in many animal species. it is not the case. so far, only vertebrates and some insects are known to experience genome duplications. the reason for this scattered distribution of genome duplication occurrences is not known. if we plot the number of synonymous substitutions between duplogs in one genome, it is possible to detect a relatively recent genome duplication. this is because all genes duplicate when a genome duplication occurs, while only a small number of genes duplicate in other modes of gene duplications (see chap. ). figure . shows the schematic view of two cases: with and without genome duplication. lynch and conery ( ; [ ] ) used this method to various genome sequences and found that the arabidopsis thaliana genome showed a clear peak indicative of relatively recent genome duplication, while the genome sequences of nematode caenorhabditis elegans and yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae showed the curves of exponential reduction. it is interesting to note that before the genome sequence was determined, the genome duplication was not known for arabidopsis thaliana, while the genome of saccharomyces cerevisiae was later shown to be duplicated long time ago [ ] . when genome duplications occurred in some ancient time, the number of synonymous substitutions may become saturated and cannot give appropriate result. in this case, the number of amino acid substitutions may be used, even if each protein may have varied rates of amino acid substitutions. in any case, accumulation of mutations will eventually cause two homologous genes to become not similar with each other. therefore, although the possibility of genome duplications in prokaryotes are so far rejected [ ] , it is not possible to infer the remote past events simply by searching sequence similarity. we should be careful to reach the fi nal conclusion. modifi cation of particular rna molecules after they are produced via transcription is called rna editing. all three major rna molecules (mrna, trna, and rrna) may experience editing [ ] . there are various patterns of rna editing; substitutions, in particular between c and u, and insertions and deletions, particularly u, are mainly found in eukaryote genomes. guide rna molecules exist in one of the main rna editing mechanisms, and they specify the location of editing, but there are some other mechanisms [ ] . it is not clear how the rna editing mechanism evolved. tillich et al. [ ] studied chloroplast rna editing and concluded that suddenly many nucleotide sites of chloroplast dna genome started to have rna editing, but later the sites experiencing rna editing constantly decreased via mutational changes. they claimed that there was no involvement of rna editing on gene expression. this result does not give rna editing a positive signifi cance. because there are many types of rna molecules inside a cell, there also exist many sorts of enzymes that modify rnas. it may be possible that some of them suddenly started to edit rnas via a particular mutation. rna editing which did not cause deleterious effects to the genome may have survived by chance at the initial phase. this view suggests the involvement of neutral evolutionary process in the evolution of rna editing. organisms with complex metabolic pathways have many genes. multicellular organisms are such examples. generally speaking, their genome sizes are expected to be large. in contrast, viruses whose genomes contain only a handful of genes have small genome sizes. therefore, their possibility of genome evolution is rather limited. even if amino acid sequences are rapidly changing because of high mutation rates, the protein function may not change. unless the gene number and genome size increase, viruses cannot evolve their genome structures. it is thus clear that the increase of the genome size is crucial to produce the diversity of organisms. however, genomes often contain dna regions which are not indispensable. organisms with large genome sizes have many such junk dna regions. because of their existence, the genome size and the gene number are not necessarily highly correlated. this phenomenon was historically called c-value paradox (e.g., [ ] ), after the constancy of the haploid dna amount for one species was found, yet their values were found to vary considerably among species at around (e.g., [ - ] ). "c-value" is the amount of haploid dna, and c probably stands as acronym of "constant" or "chromosomes." we now know that the majority of eukaryote genome dna is junk, and there is no longer a paradox in c-values among species. ]) found conserved noncoding dna sequences from insects, nematodes, and yeasts by comparing closely related species. we will discuss more on conserved noncoding sequences of vertebrates in chap. . as for plants, kaplinsky [ ] ) compared genome sequences of arabidopsis, grape rice, and brachypodium and found > times more abundant cnss from monocots than dicots. hettiarachchi and saitou; [ ] compared genome sequences of plant species and searched lineage-specifi c cnss. they found and cnss shared by all vascular plants and angiosperms, respectively, and also confi rmed that monocot cnss are much more abundant than those of dicots. what kind of the relationship exists between the genome size and mutation rates? if all the genetic information contained in the genome of one organism are necessary for survival of that organism, the individual will die even if only one gene of its genome lost its function by a mutation. an organism with a small genome size and hence with a small number of genes, such as viruses, can survive even if the mutation rate is high. in contrast, organisms with many genes may not be able to survive if highly deleterious mutations often happen. therefore, such organisms must reduce the mutation rate. however, when the nucleotide substitution type mutation rate per generation was compared with the whole-genome size, lynch ( ; [ ] ) found a positive correlation. more recently, lynch ( ; [ ] ) admitted that for organisms with small-sized genomes, these two values were in fact negatively correlated. however, when large-genome-sized eukaryotes are compared, now a positive correlation was observed. we have to be careful when we discuss these two contradictory reports. one considered the rate using unit as physical year, while the other used one generation as the unit. another difference is to use either only protein coding gene region dna sizes or the whole-genome sizes. the relationship between the mutation rate and genome size is not simple. drake et al. ( ; [ ] ) examined this problem and found that the mutation rate per genome per replication was approximately / for bacteria, while mutation rates of multicellular eukaryotes vary between . and per genome per sexual or individual generation. table . shows the list of the mutation rate and the genome size for various organisms. apparently there is no clear tendency. we will discuss genomes of three multicellular lineages of eukaryotes: plants, fungi, and animals in this section. unfortunately, there seems to be no common feature of genomes of multicellular organisms, so each lineage is discussed independently. arabidopsis thaliana was the fi rst plant species whose -mb genome was determined in [ ] . a. thaliana is a model organism for fl owering plants (angiosperms), with only -month generation time. in spite of its small genome size, only % of the human genome, it has , protein coding genes. the genome sequence of its closely related species, a. lyrata , was also recently determined [ ] . angiosperms are divided into monocots and dicots. a. thaliana is a dicot, and genome sequences of six more species were determined as of december (see table . ). rice, oryza sativa , is a monocot, and its genome size, ~ mb, is much smaller than that of the wheat genome. its japonica and indica subspecies genomes were determined [ ] and [ ] , and the origin of rice domestication is currently in great controversy, particularly in single or multiple domestication events (e.g., [ , ] ). the number of protein coding genes in the rice genome is , ~ , [ ] . wheat corresponds to genus triticum , and there are many species in this genus. the typical bread wheat is triticum aestivum , and it is a hexaploid with ( × ) chromosomes. its genome arrangement is conventionally written as aabbdd [ ] . because it is now behaving as diploid, genomic sequencing of chromosomes (a -a , b -b , and d -d ) is under way (see http://www.wheatgenome.org/ for the current status). the hexaploid genome structure emerged by hybridization of diploid (dd) cultivated species t. durum and tetraploid (aabb) wild species aegilops tauschii [ ] . a genome duplication followed hybridization. non-seedling land plants are ferns, lycophytes, and bryophytes, in the order of closeness to seed plants (e.g., [ ] ). a draft genome sequence of a moss, physcomitrella patens was reported in [ ] , followed by genome sequencing of a lycophyte, selaginella moellendorffi i, in [ ] . these genome sequences of different lineages of plants are deciphering stepwise evolution of land plants. the genome sequence of baker's yeast ( saccharomyces cerevisiae ) was determined in , as the fi rst eukaryotic organism [ ] . there are chromosomes in s . cerevisiae, and its genome size is about mb. there are a total of , genes in its genome: , orfs and , other genes. the genome-wide gc content is %, slightly lower than that of the human genome. the proportion of introns is very small compared to that of the human genome, and the average length of one intron is only bp, in contrast to the , -bp average length of exons [ ] . as we already discussed, the ancestral genome of baker's yeast experienced a genome-wide duplication [ ] . pseudogenes, which are common in vertebrate genomes, are rather rare in the genome of baker's yeast; they constitute only % of the protein coding genes [ ] . the baker's yeast is often considered as the model organisms for all eukaryotes; however, their genome may not be a typical eukaryote genome. as of december , genome sequences of more than fungi species are available (see ncbi genome list at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome/browse/ for the present situation). figure . shows the relationship between the genome size and gene numbers for genomes. there is a clear positive correlation between them. however, there are some outliers. the perigord black truffl e ( tuber melanosporum ), shown as a i n fig. . , has the largest genome size (~ mb) among the fungi species whose genome sequences were so far determined, yet the number of genes is only ~ , [ ] . three other outlier species are postia placenta , ajellomyces dermatitidis , and melampsora laricipopulina , shown as b, c, and d in fig. . , respectively. interestingly, these four outlier species are phylogenetically not clustered well; two are belonging to pezizomycotina of ascomycota and the other two are agaricomycotina and pucciniomycotina of basidiomycota. if we exclude these four outlier species, a good linear regression is obtained, as shown in fig. . . this straight line indicates that in average, one gene size corresponds to . kb in a typical fungi genome. if we apply this average gene size to the truffl e genome, its genome size should be ~ mb, but the real size is mb larger. this suggests that there is unusually large number of junk dna in this genome. in fact, % of its genome consists of transposable elements [ ] . the truffl e genome must still have % more junk dna region. gain and loss of genes in each branch of the phylogenetic tree for fungi species are shown in fig. . (based on [ ] ). it will be interesting to examine genome sizes of species related to the perigord black truffl e, so as to infer the evolutionary period when the genome size expansion occurred. the relationship between the genome size and gene numbers among fungi genomes system that is responsible for this is hox genes. we thus fi rst discuss this gene system in this subsection. the genome of c. elegans , fi rst determined genome among animals, will be discussed next, followed by genomes of insects and those of deuterostomes. because genomes of many vertebrate species were determined, we discuss them in chap. , and in particular, on the human genome in chap. . hox genes were initially found through studies of homeotic mutations that dramatically change segmental structure of drosophila by edward b. lewis [ ] . they code for transcription factors, and a dna-binding peptide, now called homeobox domain, was later found in almost all animal phyla [ ] . figure . shows the hox gene clusters found in animal groups. there are four hox clusters in mammalian and avian genomes, and they are most probably generated by the two-round genome duplication in the common ancestor of vertebrates (see chap. ). interestingly, the physical order of hox genes in chromosomes and the order of gene expression during the development are corresponding, called "collinearity" [ ] . this suggests that some sort of cis-regulation is operating in hox gene clusters, and in fact, many long transcripts are found, and some of their transcription start sites are highly conserved among vertebrates [ ] . figure . shows highly conserved the hox genes control expression of different groups of downstream genes, such as transcription factors, elements in signaling pathways, or genes with basic cellular functions. hox gene products interact with other proteins, in particular, on signaling pathways, and contribute to the modifi cation of homologous structures and creation of new morphological structures [ ] . there are other gene families that are thought to be involved in diverse animal body plan. one of them is the zic gene family [ ] . the zic gene family exists in many animal phyla with high amino acid sequence homology in a zinc-fi nger domain called zf, and members of this gene family are involved in neural and neural crest development, skeletal patterning, and left-right axis establishment. this gene family has two additional domains, zoc and zf-bc. interestingly, cnidaria, platyhelminthes, and urochordata lack the zoc domain, and their zf-bc domain sequences are quite diverged compared to arthropoda, mollusca, annelida, echinodermata, and chordata. this distribution suggests that the zic family genes with the entire set of the three conserved domains already existed in the common ancestor of bilateralian animals, and some of them may be lost in parallel in the platyhelminthes, nematodes, and urochordates [ ] . interestingly, phyla that lost zoc domains have quite distinct body plan although they are bilateralian. caenorhabditis elegans was the fi rst animal species whose -mb draft genome sequence was determined in [ ] . this organism belongs to the nematoda phylum which includes a vast number of species [ ] . brenner ( ; [ ] ) chose this species as model organism to study neuronal system, for its short generation time (~ days) and its size (~ mm). the following description of this section is based on the information given in online "wormbook" [ ] . there are , protein coding genes in c. elegans including , alternatively spliced forms, with % confi rmed to be transcribed at least partially. the number of trna genes is , and are located in x chromosome. the three kinds of rrna genes ( s, . s, and s) are located in chromosome i in - tandem repeats, while ~ s rrna genes are also in tandem form but located in chromosome v. the average protein coding gene length is kb, with the average of . coding exons per gene. in total, protein coding exons constitute . % of the whole genome. figure . shows the distribution of the protein coding genes, and fig. . the distribution of exon numbers per gene. both distributions have long tails. the median sizes of exons and introns are bp and bp, respectively. intron lengths of c. elegans are quite short compared to these of vertebrate genes (see chap. ). the distribution of protein coding genes varies depending on chromosomes, slightly more dense for fi ve autosomes than x chromosome and more dense in the central region than the edge of one chromosome. processed, i.e., intronless, pseudogenes are rare, and a total of pseudogenes were reported at the wormbase version ws . about half of them are homologous to functional chemoreceptor genes. genome sequences of four congeneric species of c. elegans ( c. brenneri , c. briggsae , c. japonica , and c. remanei ) were determined ( http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih. gov/genome/browse/ ). a fruit fl y drosophila melanogaster was used by thomas hunt morgan's group in the early twentieth century and has been used for many genetic studies. because of this importance, its genome sequence was determined at fi rst among arthropods in [ ] . heterochromatin regions of ~ mb were excluded from sequencing, [ ] . their genome sizes vary from to mb, and the number of genes is , - , . interestingly, d . melanogaster has the largest genome size and the smallest number of genes. a total of insect species other than drosophila species were sequenced by end of [ ] . as of december , their genome sizes are in the range of mb and mb, more than fi ve times difference, and the gene numbers are from , to , . deuterostomes contain fi ve phyla: echinodermata, hemichordata, chaetognatha, xenoturbellida, and chordata. the genome of sea urchin strongylocentrotus purpuratus [ ] was determined in . its genome size is mb with , genes. genomes of another sea urchins, lytechinus variegatus and patiria miniata , are also under sequencing, as well as hemicordate saccoglossus kowalevskii . chordata is classifi ed into urochordata (ascidians), cephalochordata (lancelets or amphioxus), and vertebrata (vertebrates). because we will discuss genomes of vertebrates in chap. , let us discuss genomes of ascidians and lancelets only. the genome of ascidian ciona intestinalis was determined in [ ] , and the genome sequence of its congeneric species, c. savignyi , was also determined three years later [ ] . the genome size of c. intestinalis is ~ mb with ~ , genes. interestingly it contains a group of cellulose synthesizing enzyme genes, which were probably introduced from some bacterial genomes via horizontal gene transfer [ , ] . the c. intestinalis genome also contains several genes that are considered to be important for heart development ( [ ] ), and this suggests that heart of ascidians and vertebrates may be homologous. through the superimposition of phylogenetic trees (see chapter a ) for fi ve genes coding muscle proteins, oota and saitou ([ ] ) estimated that vertebrate heart muscle was phylogenetically closer to vertebrate skeletal muscles. if both results are true, muscles used in heart might have been substituted in the vertebrate lineage. the genome sequences of an amphioxus (cephalochordate branchiostoma fl oridae ) was determined in by holland et al. ( ; [ ] ), and they provide good outgroup sequence data for vertebrates. eukaryotic viruses are relying most of metabolic pathways to their eukaryote host species. therefore, the number of genes in virus genomes is usually very small. for example, infl uenza a virus has rna fragments coding for protein genes, and the total genome size is ~ . kb. as in bacteriophages, there are both dna type and rna type genomes in eukaryotic viruses. table . shows one example of classifi cation of eukaryotic viruses based on their genome structure [ ] . genomes of double-strand dna genome viruses have four types: circular, simple linear, linear with proteins covalently attached to both ends, and linear but both ends were closed. genomes of single-strand dna genome viruses are either circular or linear. genomes of rna genomes are all linear in both single-and double-strand type. those of single-strand rna genomes are classifi ed into two types: plus strand and minus strand. a subset of single-plus strand rna genome type is experiencing [ ] . megavirus is phylogenetically close to mimivirus [ ] , a member of nucleoplasmic large dna viruses, including pox virus. recently, a larger genome size virus, pandoravirus, with more than . -mb genome, was discovered [ ] . the phylogenetic status of these large genome size dna viruses is unknown at this moment. analysis of the genome sequence of the fl owering plant arabidopsis thaliana the genome of the cucumber, cucumis sativu s l draft genome sequence of the oilseed species ricinus communis the genome of black cottonwood, populus trichocarpa the grapevine genome sequence suggests ancestral hexaploidization in major angiosperm phyla genome sequence of foxtail millet ( setaria italica ) provides insights into grass evolution and biofuel potential a new database (gcd) on genome composition for eukaryote and prokaryote genome sequences and their initial analyses the genome sequence of rickettsia prowazekii and the origin of mitochondria the hydrogen hypothesis for the fi rst eukaryote mitochondrial genome the complete mitochondrial genome of dugesia japonica (platyhelminthes; order tricladida) the complete nucleotide sequence of the tobacco mitochondrial genome: comparative analysis of mitochondrial genomes in higher plants and multipartite organization widespread horizontal transfer of mitochondrial genes in fl owering plants determination of the melon chloroplast and mitochondrial genome sequences reveals that the largest reported mitochondrial genome in plants contains a significant amount of dna having a nuclear origin small, repetitive dnas contribute signifi cantly to the expanded mitochondrial genome of cucumber the complete nucleotide sequence of the tobacco chloroplast genome: its gene organization and expression changes in the structure of dna molecules and the amount of dna per plastid during chloroplast development in maize pattern of organization of human mitochondrial pseudogenes in the nuclear genome why genes in pieces? introns. in encyclopedia of evolution . tokyo: kyoritsu shuppan comprehensive splice-site analysis using comparative genomics the ever-growing world of small nuclear ribonucleoproteins intron phylogeny: a new hypothesis trnomics: analysis of trna genes from genomes of eukarya, archaea, and bacteria reveals anticodon-sparing strategies and domain-specifi c features the origin of introns and their role in eukaryogenesis: a compromise solution to the introns-early versus introns-late debate? the evolution of spliceosomal introns: patterns, puzzles and progress genes in pieces: were they ever together? nuclear volume control by nucleoskeletal dna, selection for cell volume and cell growth rate, and the solution of the dna c-value paradox the recent origins of spliceosomal introns revisited correlation of dna exonic regions with protein structural units in haemoglobin remarkable interkingdom conservation of intron positions and massive, lineage-specifi c intron loss and gain in eukaryotic evolution new maximum likelihood estimators for eukaryotic intron evolution analysis of ribosomal protein gene structures: implications for intron evolution intron dynamics in ribosomal protein genes so much "junk" dna in our genome a fundamental division in the alu family of repeated sequences whole-genome analysis of alu repeat elements reveals complex evolutionary history characterization of highly repetitive sequences of arabidopsis thaliana centromeric repetitive sequences in arabidopsis thaliana sequence defi nition and organization of a human repeated dna empirical analysis of transcriptional activity in the arabidopsis genome identifi cation and analysis of functional elements in % of the human genome by the encode pilot project most "dark matter" transcripts are associated with known genes a snp in the abcc gene is the determinant of human earwax type molecular evidence for an ancient duplication of the entire yeast genome genomic analysis of the basal lineage fungus rhizopus oryzae reveals a whole-genome duplication global trends of whole-genome duplications revealed by the ciliate paramecium tetraurelia size of the protein-coding genome and rate of molecular evolution the evolutionary fate and consequences of duplicated genes comparative genomics in prokaryotes functions and mechanisms of rna editing the evolution of chloroplast rna editing chromosome structure and the c-value paradox la teneur du noyau cellulaire en acide désoxyribonucléique à travers les organes, les individus et les espèces animales (in french) nucleoprotein determination in cytological preparations the constancy of deoxyribose nucleic acid in plant nuclei conserved linkage between the puffer fi sh (fugu rubripes) and human genes for platelet-derived growth factor receptor and macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor conserved noncoding sequences are reliable guides to regulatory elements enrichment of regulatory signals in conserved non-coding genomic sequence evolution at two level: on genes and form evolutionarily conserved elements in vertebrate, insect, worm, and yeast genomes utility and distribution of conserved noncoding sequences in the grasses conserved noncoding sequences among cultivated cereal genomes identify candidate regulatory sequence elements and patterns of promoter evolution conserved noncoding sequences in the grasses arabidopsis intragenomic conserved noncoding sequence the banana ( musa acuminata ) genome and the evolution of monocotyledonous plants computational analysis and characterization of uce-like elements (ules) in plant genomes identifi cation and analysis of conserved noncoding sequences in plants viral mutation rates the origins of eukaryotic gene structure evolution of the mutation rate rates of spontaneous mutation analysis of the genome sequence of the fl owering plant arabidopsis thaliana the arabidopsis lyrata genome sequence and the basis of rapid genome size change a draft sequence of the rice genome ( oryza sativa l. ssp. japonica) a draft sequence of the rice genome phylogeography of asian wild rice, oryza rufi pogon , reveals multiple independent domestications of cultivated rice, oryza sativa independent domestication of asian rice followed by gene fl ow from japonica to indica curated genome annotation of oryza sativa ssp. japonica and comparative genome analysis with arabidopsis thaliana multigene phylogeny of land plants with special reference to bryophytes and the earliest land plants the physcomitrella genome reveals evolutionary insights into the conquest of land by plants the selaginella genome identifi es genetic changes associated with the evolution of vascular plants overview of the yeast genome origin of genome architecture perigord black truffl e genome uncovers evolutionary origins and mechanisms of symbiosis master control genes in development and evolution: the homeobox story from dna to diversity evolution of conserved non-coding sequences within the vertebrate hox clusters through the two-round whole genome duplications revealed by phylogenetic footprinting analysis wormbook -the online review of c. elegans biology function and specifi city of hox genes a wide-range phylogenetic analysis of zic proteins: implications for correlations between protein structure conservation and body plan complexity genome sequence of the nematode c. elegans : a platform for investigating biology an improved molecular phylogeny of the nematoda with special emphasis on marine taxa the genetics of caenorhabditis elegans the genome sequence of drosophila melanogaster evolution of genes and genomes on the drosophila phylogeny the genome of the sea urchin strongylocentrotus purpuratus the draft genome of ciona intestinalis : insights into chordate and vertebrate origins assembly of polymorphic genomes: algorithms and application to ciona savignyi a functional cellulose synthase from ascidian epidermis phylogenetic relationship of muscle tissues deduced from superimposition of gene trees genome science and microorganismal molecular genetics distant mimivirus relative with a larger genome highlights the fundamental features of megaviridae the . -megabase sequence of mimivirus ultraconserved elements in the human genome genomu shinkagaku nyumon (written in japanese, meaning 'introduction to evolutionary genomics') the amphioxus genome illuminates vertebrate origins and cephalochordate biology pandoraviruses: amoeba viruses with genomes up to . mb reaching that of parasitic eukaryotes key: cord- - hs pit authors: lai, wing-fu title: cyclodextrins in non-viral gene delivery date: - - journal: biomaterials doi: . /j.biomaterials. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: hs pit cyclodextrins (cds) are naturally occurring cyclic oligosaccharides. they consist of (α- , )-linked glucose units, and possess a basket-shaped topology with an “inner–outer” amphiphilic character. over the years, substantial efforts have been undertaken to investigate the possible use of cds in drug delivery and controlled drug release, yet the potential of cds in gene delivery has received comparatively less discussion in the literature. in this article, we will first discuss the properties of cds for gene delivery, followed by a synopsis of the use of cds in development and modification of non-viral gene carriers. finally, areas that are noteworthy in cd-based gene delivery will be highlighted for future research. due to the application prospects of cds, it is anticipated that cds will continue to emerge as an important tool for vector development, and will play significant roles in facilitating non-viral gene delivery in the forthcoming decades. cyclodextrins (cds) are cyclic (a- , )-linked oligosaccharides of a-d-glucopyranose [ ] . the earliest reference to them can be dated back to when villiers described a crystalline substance called "cellulosine", which was isolated from a bacterial digest of starch. that substance lacks reducing properties but is resistant to acid hydrolysis [ ] . it was later known as "cyclodextrin". the ring structures of cds were elucidated by freudenberg and colleagues in the late s [ , ] . somewhat later the basic physicochemical characteristics of cds (including reactivity, cavity size, chemical structure, solubility and the ability to form inclusion complexes with guest molecules) were described by cramer in his book "einschlussverbindungen" [ ] . over the years, cds have gained prominence in a multitude of pharmaceutical areas, ranging from chiral separation of basic drugs [ ] to controlled drug delivery [ e ]; however, their potential in gene delivery has received relatively less attention. in this article, we will first discuss the properties of cds for gene delivery, followed by an overview of the use of cds in development and modification of non-viral gene carriers. finally, areas that are noteworthy in cd-based gene delivery will be highlighted for future research. it is hoped that this article cannot only provide a synopsis of recent advances in the field, but can also offer practical insights for future development of cd-based technologies for gene delivery. the most common cds are a-, band g-cds, consisting of six, seven and eight a-d-glucopyranose units, respectively (fig. ). owing to the presence of extensive hydroxyl groups, cds are soluble in water (table ) . however, because of the relatively high crystal energy of cds [ ] , molecules in the crystal state are strongly bound. therefore, the aqueous solubilities of cds are generally lower than those of the comparable linear dextrins. in addition, compared to aand g-cds (whose aqueous solubilities at ambient conditions are . and . g/l, respectively), the aqueous solubility of b-cd is only . g/l [ ] . this is partially attributed to the formation of internal hydrogen bonds between secondary hydroxyl groups, thereby diminishing the capacity of b-cd molecules to form hydrogen bonds with surrounding water molecules [ ] . structurally, cds have both the hydrophilic cavity exteriors and the apolar cavity interiors. this provides a micro-environment for encapsulation and solubilization of hydrophobic "guest" molecules [ , ] , and enables cds to be exploited as excipients of chemical drugs. examples of drugs formulated with cds are listed in table . apart from being used in drug formulations, the prospects of cds in delivering genes and other nucleic acids have become more evident in recent years [ , ] . agrawal's team was one of the first to study the use of cds (and their analogs) in facilitating cellular uptake of oligonucleotides [ , ] and in modulating oligonucleotide-induced immune stimulation [ ] . later, abdou et al. examined the ability of various native and derivatized cds to enhance the action of an -mer phosphodiester oligodeoxynucleotide (od) (which is complementary to the initiation region e-mail address: rori @graduate.hku.hk. biomaterials j o u r n a l h o m e p a g e : w w w . e l s e v i e r . c o m / l o c a t e / b i o m a t e r i a l s of the mrna coding for the spike protein, and contains the intergenic consensus sequence of an enteric coronavirus) against viral growth in human adenocarcinoma cells [ ] . they discovered that compared to the naked od which resulted in only e % of viral inhibition in vitro, up to % of viral inhibition could be obtained when the od was complexed with an b-cd derivative, -deoxy- -s-b-d-galactopyranosyl- -thio-cyclomalto-heptaose, in a molar ratio of : [ e ] . this, along with other studies [ , ] , has paved the way for subsequent intense research on cd-mediated gene delivery. fig. . the structures and space-filling models of (i) a-cd, (ii) b-cd and (iii) g-cd. in the space-filling models, hydrogen, carbon and oxygen atoms are colored in black, white and gray, respectively. table physical properties of a-, band g-cd. a-cd b-cd g-cd cds can be appealing to gene delivery applications because not only of their binding affinity to nucleic acids [ , ] but also of their ability to attenuate the cytotoxicity of other gene carriers. the latter has been supported by a previous study [ ] , in which a series of linear cationic b-cd-based polymers (bcdps) were constructed via condensation of diamino-cd monomers with diimidate comonomers. compared with polyamidines lacking cds, the ic s of the bcdps to bhk- cells were remarkably higher [ ] . this showed that cd incorporation into the backbone of the cationic polymer substantially lowers the polymer cytotoxicity. in addition to the properties mentioned above, cds are effective absorption enhancers in therapeutics delivery. as illustrated in vitro by skin permeation studies [ ] , after complexation with b-cd, meglumine antimoniate (ma) led to a -fold increase in the antimony flux. a similar absorption-enhancing effect of cds was shown by using dimentylb-cd, which, at a concentration of % (w/v), elevated the permeability of the nasal mucosa to the intranasally administered neurotrophic peptide, org , and enhanced the absorption in rabbits to -fold from ae % (mean ae s.d.) for administration of the peptide alone to ae %, and in rats -fold from ae % to ae % [ ] . all these evidenced the absorption-enhancing property of cds, and it is this property that may also facilitate gene delivery. the latter has been substantiated by an earlier study, which successfully improved adenoviral-mediated gene transfer to the rat jejunum by using cds [ ] . the improvement has been ascribed to the cdmediated enhancement of viral binding and internalization into the host cells. in fact, cds have comparatively large molecular weights (> da) and low octanol/water partition coefficients. this, along with the presence of a plurality of hydrogen donors and acceptors on their molecules, has made cds unlikely to be directly permeable to lipophilic biological membranes such as skin and gastrointestinal mucosa [ e ]. it was hypothesized that cds enhance absorption mainly by increasing membrane permeability through complexation with membrane phospholipids and cholesterols [ ] . this hypothesis was supported by an earlier study, which depleted membrane cholesterol from porcine, bovine and human erythrocytes by incubating the cells in suspensions of lecithin liposomes [ ] . the study found that membrane permeability remained unaltered when the level of cholesterol removal was up to %, but upon more extensive cholesterol depletion, the transfer rates of nonelectrolytes and organic acids penetrating the membrane were considerably elevated [ ] . however, the biphasic response of cholesterol depletion on membrane permeability in erythrocytes appeared not to be reproducible in artificial lipid membranes [ ] . the effect of cholesterol depletion on membrane permeability is still obscure, and further study is required before the molecular basis of cd-mediated absorption enhancement can be fully elucidated. cds have practical potential in gene delivery, but due to their failure to form stable complexes with plasmid dna (pdna) [ ] , native cds have limited transfection efficiency. cds are, therefore, usually derivatized prior to their use in gene transfer. a good example of cd derivatives is polycationic amphiphilic cds (pacds) (which were constructed by the amendment of the facial anisotropy of the truncated-cone cd torus via instillation of cationic and table examples of drugs whose cd-containing formulations have been marketed. hydrophobic elements in the "skirt' or "jellyfish" architectures [ , ] ). by fine adjustment of the molecular parameters (e.g. charge density, hydrophilic-hydrophobic balance, nature of the functional groups, and spacer length), the dna complexation capacity and transfection efficiency of pacds can be modulated [ e ] . more examples of cd derivatives are shown in fig. . they were fabricated by modification of b-cd with a pyridylamino, alkylimidazole, methoxyethylamino or primary amine group at the position of the glucose units [ ] . studies with p-labeled pdna indicated that these derivatives promoted cellular uptake of the transgene much more efficiently than native cds [ ] . among these derivatives, those having unmodified -and -hydroxyls and possessing an amino, pyridylamino or butylimidazole group at the position were found to have the best performance in cos- cell transfection [ ] . these molecular constructs warrant further development as gene carriers. aside from being used directly for gene delivery after derivatization, cds have been used as linking agents or structural modifiers for development of gene carriers. by functioning as linking agents, cds are used to covalently link other polymers together to form larger molecular constructs as gene carriers. one example of polymers fabricated by this approach was synthesized by linking low molecular weight poly(ethylenimine) (pei), which is a cationic aziridine polymer exhibiting a high proton buffering capacity over a broad range of ph [ ] , with b-cd by using tosyl chloride to first generate amine-reactive tosyldeoxy-b-cd, which subsequently reacted with pei to generate the cd-pei conjugate (pei-b-cd) [ ] . in vitro studies showed that pei-b-cd was basically nontoxic to hek cells at the working concentration for pdna delivery. compared to unmodified pei, pei-b-cd induced nearly -fold higher luciferase expression [ ] . by anchoring human insulin (which was derivatized with a hydrophobic palmitate group) onto its polyplexes, the transfection efficiency obtained could even be over an order of magnitude higher than that provided by unmodified pei, either with or without the derivatized insulin [ ] . notwithstanding the prospects discussed above, it is worth noticing that the enhancing effect of cds on pei is valid only under the premise of proper optimization of the grafting ratio of cds. this was revealed by the observation that modification of %, % and % of the amine groups in pei with cds reduced the luciferase activity by , and orders of magnitude, respectively [ ] . this reduction was hypothesized to be due to the altered pk profile of the pei amines, resulting in a decrease in the efficiency of endosomal release. such a hypothesis was supported by the evidence that compared to unmodified pei, pei-b-cd exhibited a lower buffering capacity [ ] . another example of cd-linked polymers is linear bcdps, which were synthesized from difunctionalized cds and difunctionalized comonomers [ ] . similar to pei-b-cd, high efficiency of this type of polymer in gene delivery necessitates fine structural optimization. results of the luciferase activity assay in bhk- cells showed that the highest transfection efficiency was achieved by the linear bcdp with methylene units [ ] . the transfection efficiency of and % of that achieved by the one with methylene units, respectively [ ] . these results evidenced that different levels of cd incorporation can influence the transfection efficiency of the polymer [ ] . besides forming linear polymers, cds have been used to fabricate star-shaped vectors, in which cds function as the cores and other polymers as the arms. examples of vectors formed by this approach are listed in table [ e ]. these vectors can facilitate pdna delivery at different levels, and are worth further development for possible use in practical situations. apart from native cds, derivatives of cds have been used as linking agents. previously, huang et al. cross-linked pei by using ( hydroxypropyl)-b-cd ( -hy-b-cd) and ( -hydroxypropyl)-g-cd ( hy-g-cd) [ ] . the two resulting polymers exhibited lower cytotoxicity than pei kda, and had transfection efficiency in skov- cells approximately and times higher than that achieved by pei da and pei kda, respectively. more recently, b-cd has also been converted into the carboxymethyl-b-cd sodium salt, which has been combined with quaternized chitosan to form a dna carrier. the carrier could not only adsorb pdna perfectly at a polymer/ dna mass ratio of : , but could also reach % of the transfection efficiency attained by liposomes [ ] . however, all polymers discussed above have not been compared with those fabricated with native cds. how hydroxy-and carboxy-alkylation of cds affect the performance of the resulting polymers in gene delivery is still unknown. to further improve the performance of cd-linked polymers, one of the commonly adopted strategies is ligand conjugation. one example of ligands used is the cy peptide, which can facilitate fibroblast growth factor receptor (fgfr)-mediated endocytosis of polyplexes [ ] . compared to unmodified pei-b-cd, cy conjugated pei-b-cd showed higher transfection efficiency in cos- and hepg cells [ ] . this corroborates the applicability of the cy peptide to improve the efficiency and target specificity in gene delivery. another example is transferrin, an iron-binding and -transport protein which functions as a targeting moiety towards various cancer cell lines (including those of colon cancer, ovarian cancer and glioblastoma) [ ] . in a previous study, transferrin was conjugated to the poly(ethylene glycol) (peg)-adamantane (peg-ad) conjugate, which was subsequently incorporated into dna nanoparticles of the linear imidazole-conjugated bcdp [ ] . the transferrin-peg-ad conjugate could not only self-assemble with the nanoparticles via inclusion complex formation between adamantane and the cd moieties on the particle surface, but could also retain high receptor binding activities. luciferase activity assays in k leukemia cells found that the transfection efficiency of the nanoparticles surface-modified with transferrin-peg-ad conjugates was -fold higher than that of the unmodified counterparts [ ] . these results reveal the promise of ligand conjugation in enhancing the performance of polymeric vectors in gene transfer. aside from functioning as linking agents, cds can be used to structurally modify existing gene carriers. here cds are utilized in two ways. the first is as threading devices. this is exemplified by the works from li's group, which has fabricated a range of supramolecular polyrotaxanes consisting of cationic a-cd rings threaded and blocked on a poly[(ethylene oxide)-ran-(propylene oxide)] (p(eo-r-po)) random copolymer [ ] . approximately a-cd rings were found in each molecule of p(eo-r-po), with the rings being located selectively on eo segments of the copolymer. in hek cells, the polyrotaxanes fabricated showed higher transfection efficiency than pei kda [ ] , and deserve further evaluation as gene carriers for both in vitro and in vivo applications. the second way of utilizing cds is as pendants. an example of vectors developed by this approach is the polyamidoamine (pamam) dendrimer conjugates with a-, b-, and g-cds. the conjugates could condense table examples of cd-based polymers with a star-shaped architecture. description ref. a star-shaped polymer consisting of a b-cd core and polyamidoamine (pamam) dendron arms the polymer showed more than -fold higher transfection efficiency, but lower cytotoxicity, than the pamam control (g , with an ethylenediamine core) in human neuroblastoma sh-sy y cells. [ ] a star-shaped polymer consisting of a g-cd core and folate (fa)-modified oligoethylenimine (oei) arms the polymer exhibited low cytotoxicity, and demonstrated the ability to target and deliver dna to specific tumor cells which over-expressed folate receptors (frs). in addition, the polymer was reported to be able to recover and recycle frs onto cellular membranes. this can facilitate continuous fr-mediated endocytosis of the polyplexes. [ ] a cd derivative containing poly(l-lysine) (pll) dendrons the derivative was prepared by click conjugation of per- -azido-b-cd with the propargyl focal point pll dendron. it could not only load methotrexate drugs and show a sustained release behavior, but could also complex with pdna for transfection. [ ] a star-shaped polymer consisting of a b-cd core and poly( -(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate) (pdmaema) arms the polymer showed much lower cytotoxicity but higher transfection efficiency than high molecular weight pdmaema homopolymers. [ ] a star-shaped polymer consisting of a b-cd core and poly(poly(ethylene glycol)ethyl ether methacrylate)-modified pdmaema arms compared to the polymer consisting of a b-cd core and unmodified pdmaema arms, this polymer demonstrated higher transfection efficiency. [ ] a star-shaped polymer consisting of an a-cd core and oei arms at an n/p ratio of or higher, the polymer complexed with dna to form polyplexes with a diameter of e nm. it gave transfection efficiency comparable to, or even higher than, that of pei kda in hek and cos cells, but its cytotoxicity was significantly lower. [ ] pdna and protect it from dnase i-mediated degradation [ ] . in vitro studies showed that the a-cde conjugate (which is a dendrimer conjugate with a-cd) had higher transfection efficiency than conjugates with band g-cds [ ] . its transfection efficiency in nih t and raw . cells was superior to lipofectin, and was -fold higher than that of the unmodified dendrimer [ ] . to boost the efficiency of gene delivery, a-cde prepared from the g dendrimer was galactosylated with various degrees of substitution (ds). compared to the unmodified counterpart, the galactosylated conjugate with a ds value of exhibited higher transfection efficiency in hepg , nih t and a cells. such an increase in transfection efficiency upon galactosylation, however, was found to be insensitive not only to the presence of competitors (asialofetuin and galactose) during transfection but also to the availability of asialoglycoprotein receptors on the cells to be transfected [ ] . a similar phenomenon also happened in a-cde after mannosylation, which led to a receptor-independent increase in the efficiency of transfection [ ] . the mechanism underlying this transfection enhancement is still unclear, but is proposed to be partially caused by the interaction between the modified conjugates and the intracellular galactose-or mannose-binding lectins [ ] . such an interaction was thought to have increased the efficiency of intracellular trafficking and nuclear translocation of the polyplexes [ ] . in addition to ligand conjugation, the gene delivery efficiency of a-cde can be augmented by fine adjustment of structural parameters. for instance, compared to the a-cde conjugates synthesized from g and g dendrimers, the one constructed with the g dendrimer demonstrated higher transfection efficiency [ ] . furthermore, conjugates having different ds of a-cd not only displayed different membrane-disruptive abilities on calcein-encapsulated liposomes [ ] , but also showed different cytotoxic activities and gene delivery capacities. in comparison with those having ds values of . and . , the conjugate having a ds value of . showed higher transfection efficiency in nih t and hepg cells, and could deliver pdna more efficiently to spleen, liver and kidney after intravenous administration [ ] . these results point to the importance of structural optimization of the conjugate for transfection. more recently, folate (fa)-appended a-cdes (fa-a-cdes) with various ds of fa have been synthesized from the g dendrimer [ ] . as fa is known to have negligible toxicity, low immunogenicity and high affinity to frs (whose isoform fra is over-expressed frequently in malignancies but not in normal tissues) [ e ], it is expected that after fa incorporation into a-cde, the resulting conjugate will exhibit higher tumor cell specificity and transfection efficiency. however, owing to the low receptor-binding activities of the resulting conjugate, no significant difference in transfection efficiency has been observed before and after fa incorporation [ ] . table examples of polymers modified with cds for gene delivery. ref. a polypseudorotaxane of the peg-grafted a-cd/pamam dendrimer conjugate with either a-cd or g-cd the polypseudorotaxane allowed sustained release of pdna. upon intramuscular injection into mice, the transfection efficiency of the one with g-cd lasted for at least days. [ ] a polyrotaxane with b-cd and a-cd rings threaded onto ionene- , the polyrotaxane formed stable complexes with pdna and with a pdna/sirna mixture. it enhanced cellular uptake of the nucleic acid, and demonstrated low cytotoxicity. [ ] a pamam starburst dendrimer conjugate the transfection efficiency of the conjugate was significantly higher than that of the unmodified aand b-cde conjugates in a and raw . cells. it exhibited higher endosomal escape efficiency, and successfully delivered the transgene to the nucleus h after transfection in a cells. h after intravenous administration to mice, this conjugate provided higher gene transfer activity in the kidney than unmodified aand b-cde conjugates. [ , ] a pamam starburst dendrimer conjugate with lactose-bearing a-cd in hepg cells, the conjugate exhibited higher transfection efficiency than unmodified pamam, lactosylated pamam and a-cde. it also showed negligible cytotoxicity even up to a carrier/dna charge ratio of / . compared to jetpeiÔ-hepatocyte, the conjugate demonstrated higher transfection efficiency in hepatocytes h after intravenous administration to mice. [ ] b-cd-modified hyperbranched pamam the polymer was fabricated by michael addition copolymerization of n,n -methylene bisacrylamide with -( -aminoethyl)piperazine and mono- -deoxy- ethylenediamino-b-cd. it demonstrated an ability to condense and deliver dna. [ ] a polypseudorotaxane with g-cd rings threaded onto linear pei compared to unmodified linear pei, the polypseudorotaxane was more efficient in facilitating cellular uptake of pdna in nih/ t cells, and displayed much lower cytotoxicity. [ ] b-cd-conjugated poly(ε-lysine) in nih- t cells, the transfection efficiency of the polymer was four orders of magnitude higher than that of unmodified poly(ε-lysine), and was times higher than that of linear pei. [ ] to improve the fr-binding activity of fa-a-cde, peg has been used as a spacer between the dendrimer and fa, forming fa-peg-a-cde [ ] . among the three fa-peg-a-cdes (ds ¼ , or ) fabricated, the one having a ds value of performed the best in transfection, and demonstrated superior binding ability to both pdna and frs. h after intratumoral injection into mice, fa-peg-a-cde (ds ¼ ) exhibited remarkably higher pdna delivery efficiency than a-cde. these results implicate the potential of fa-peg-a-cde (ds ¼ ) as a carrier for tumor-targeted gene delivery. besides fa-peg-a-cde and other vectors that have been discussed in this section, there are many other polymers developed from modification of existing polymers using cds. some of them are listed in table [ e ]. these polymers have illustrated the potential of cds in enhancing the performance of polymeric systems in transfection. in the sections above, we have delineated some of the major approaches of employing cds for applications in gene delivery. these approaches are summarized in fig. . for future research, one area that deserves exploration is drug/gene co-delivery. as cds have an excellent drug loading capacity, along with their potential in gene transfer, cds are anticipated to emerge as attractive candidates for simultaneous transport of drugs and genes. such technical viability has been corroborated by hu et al., who conjugated tegafur to pei-b-cd to fabricate a prodrug of tegafur for drug/ gene co-delivery [ ] . they observed that at an n/p ratio of , the conjugate could condense pdna into complexes with a diameter of around nm. however, conjugation of tegafur reduced the number of primary amines on pei, thereby compromising the dna binding ability and buffering capacity of pei-b-cd. compared with unmodified pei-b-cd, the transfection efficiency of pei-b-cdtegafur in b f and cos cells was much inferior [ ] . in addition to pei-b-cd-tegafur, the fu-pei-b-cd (fpc) conjugate, which was synthesized from -fluoro- -deoxyuridine (fdurd) and pei-b-cd, has been reported as a bifunctional anticancer prodrug [ ] . compared to fdurd, fpc demonstrated stronger anti-proliferative and cytotoxic activities in glioma cells, and led to around -fold higher cellular uptake [ ] . however, before pei-b-cd-tegafur and fpc can be used as prodrugs practically, more stringent tests are required to confirm whether the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties of the drugs are the same after conjugation with pei-b-cd. recently, a hydrogen bonding strengthened hydrogel has been fabricated by radical copolymerization of peg methacrylated b-cd (peg-b-cd) with -vinyl- , -diamino- , , triazine (vdt) [ ] . experimentation showed that the hydrogel loaded ibuprofen (ibu) successfully and could control the rate of drug release. on top of that, the surface of the hydrogel anchored pdna through hydrogen bonding between diaminotriazine and the dna base pairs, and hence allowed reverse gene transfection in cos- cells cultured on the gel surface. such multifunctional potential has made the hydrogel possible to be further developed into a tissue engineering scaffold for drug/gene co-delivery. apart from drug/gene co-delivery, the prospects of stem cell transfection are also worth noting. such prospects have been illustrated by a recent study, in which a cell-penetrating peptide containing the protein transduction domain (ptd) of the hiv- tat protein has been conjugated to pei-b-cd, forming tat-pei-b-cd [ ] . at an n/p ratio of , the polymer displayed reasonable transfection efficiency in somatic cell lines ( e % in cho and hepg , and e % in t, u and u ). in placenta-derived mesenchymal stem cells (pmscs), the level of transgene expression achieved by tat-pei-b-cd was comparable to that obtained by fugene , and was approximately twice of that mediated by pei-b-cd after and h of post-transfection incubation (fig. a ). before and after transfection, the phenotypic profile of pmscs was examined. consistent expression profiles (including negativity for hla-dr, cd , cd and cd , and positivity for cd and cd ) were observed. this suggests the maintenance of the phenotypic profile of pmscs after tat-pei-b-cd-mediated transfection. moreover, mtt assays confirmed that the cytotoxicity of tat-pei-b-cd was negligible at the working concentration, with no appreciable loss of cell viability being observed in pmscs (fig. b) . as the therapeutic potential of stem cells relies considerably on the cells' homing ability and their capacity to synthesize and secret therapeutic proteins [ e ], developing an efficient yet non-toxic and non-immunogenic gene carrier for stem cells will be of immense practical importance. the last area that deserves future attention is small rna transfer. since advances in cd-mediated rna delivery have been surveyed elsewhere [ ] , here we will not dwell on them. but it is worth pointing out that though the focus of our discussion in this article has been restricted to gene delivery, the possibility of a gene vector to interact electrostatically with dna may imply that the same vector can complex with rna [ ] . this is confirmed by arima et al., whose fa-peg-a-cdes have not only been found to mediate gene delivery [ ] , but have also been able to deliver sirna to elicit rna interference (rnai) in tumor-bearing mice [ ] . detailed evaluation of the efficiency of each of the cd-based gene vectors will doubtless be needed if those systems are to be used for rna transfer. moreover, owing to the extra vulnerability of rna to enzymatic degradation, additional challenges will be encountered when rna rather the matrix was found to be able to transfect ccd fibroblast cells. [ ] than dna is to be delivered [ ] . but regarding the emergence of rnai and the bright prospects of rna technologies in diverse areas, ranging from therapeutic target validation [ , ] to longevity enhancement [ ] , if existing cd-based gene delivery technologies turn out to be applicable to rna transfer, not only can their medical applications be significantly broadened, but a vista of new opportunities will also be opened up for rna-mediated therapies. finally, owing to the issue of intellectual property, innovations documented in the patent literature sometimes may not have been reported in scientific journals. patent publications are thus a rich knowledge source complementary to the conventional scientific literature, and advances delineated in both scientific and patent publications should deserve the same amount of academic attention. the earliest patent on the pharmaceutical use of cds can be dated back to [ ] . besides documenting the basic properties of cds and disclosing a method to prepare cds in aqueous solution via precipitation, the patent delineates the ability of cds to improve the duration of activity, taste and chemical stability of bioactive compounds. the patent, however, has not been successfully put into industrial applications [ ] . this is partially due to the safety concerns raised by a review article published in [ ] , which referred to unpublished data stating that rats fed orally with b-cd died within a week. though the observed toxicity was later found to be more likely caused by impurities rather than the substance per se [ ] , the pharmaceutical applications and acceptance of cds were hampered for many years and only until the s the world first pharmaceutical formulation containing cds emerged [ ] . now more and more innovations on cds have appeared in the patent literature. though at this moment most of these patents are related either to production and structural modification of cds or to applications of cds as drug excipients, some efforts have already been directed to the use of cds in delivery of genes and other nucleic acids [ e ] ( table ) . regarding the increasing awareness of the potential of cds in gene delivery, it is expected that cdbased gene carriers will escalate in number in the patent literature in the forthcoming decades. gene delivery is an expanding area of biotechnological research, and has exhibited high potential in biomedical applications [ e ]. though viral vectors entered clinical trials in as early as the s and are still the most extensively studied gene delivery systems, the safety risks involved with using viruses warrant development of non-viral alternatives. over decades, copious polymers have been investigated as gene carriers [ e ], but the possible use of cds has rarely been seriously considered. this may pertain to the fact that native cds fail to form stable complexes with pdna [ ] , thereby showing much lower transfection efficiency in comparison with conventional polymeric vectors such as chitosan, poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (plga), pei and pll. however, judging from the evidence presented so far in this article, cds have favorable properties for their applications in gene transfer (e.g. having the ability to form inclusion complexes with chemical drugs for drug/gene co-delivery, being able to potentially function as an absorption enhancer in therapeutics transfer, and being capable of modulating the cytotoxicity of other polymers) and display great versatility in gene delivery, from functioning as linking agents for development of new vectors to modulating the performance of existing polymers in transfection. taking the promising potential of cds into account, there is no doubt that cds will continue to emerge as an important tool for vector development, and will play significant roles in facilitating non-viral gene delivery in the future. cyclodextrins and their uses: a review sur la fermentation de la fécule par l'action du ferment butyrique Über 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cyclodextrin copolymers method for preparing linear cyclodextrin copolymers cyclodextrin-based materials, compositions and uses related thereto nucleic acid delivery: roles in biogerontological interventions protein kinases as targets for interventive biogerontology: overview and perspectives nucleic acid therapy for lifespan prolongation: present and future delivery of therapeutics: current status and its relevance to regenerative innovations corneal gene delivery: chitosan oligomer as a carrier of cpg rich, cpg free or s/mar plasmid dna deliverydified pei protects against cytotoxic lymphocyte killing of a granzyme b inhibitor gene using carbamate-mannose mo gdnf gene delivery via a -(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate based cyclized knot polymer for neuronal cell applications dendrimer type bio-reducible polymer for efficient gene delivery in vivo nucleic acid delivery with pei and its derivatives: current status and perspectives synthesis and properties of chitosan-pei graft copolymers as vectors for nucleic acid delivery the author would like to thank the editor-in-chief, david f. williams, for offering the opportunity to proceed with this work. thanks are extended to ka-fai fung, yau-foon tsui, foon-lian lim and kenneth l. k. wu for support and help during the writing of this manuscript. key: cord- - z us v authors: allen, edward e.; farrell, john; harkey, alexandria f.; john, david j.; muday, gloria; norris, james l.; wu, bo title: time series adjustment enhancement of hierarchical modeling of arabidopsis thaliana gene interactions date: - - journal: algorithms for computational biology doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: z us v network models of gene interactions, using time course gene transcript abundance data, are computationally created using a genetic algorithm designed to incorporate hierarchical bayesian methods with time series adjustments. the posterior probabilities of interaction between pairs of genes are based on likelihoods of directed acyclic graphs. this algorithm is applied to transcript abundance data collected from arabidopsis thaliana genes. this study extends the underlying statistical and mathematical theory of the norris-patton likelihood by including time series adjustments. cell signaling is accomplished via networks of transcriptional changes that lead to synthesis of distinct sets of proteins, which cause changes in growth, development, or metabolism. treatments that elevate levels of hormones result in cascades of changes in gene expression driven by activation and synthesis of transcription factors which are required to turn on downstream genes. one approach to model these gene regulatory networks is to collect measurements of changes in abundance of gene transcripts across a time course. the expression of a gene encoding a transcriptional activator or repressor protein may signal to the next gene to either turn on or turn off downstream genes and their encoded proteins. thus, time course transcriptomic data sets contain important information about how genes drive these changes in biological networks. yet genome-wide transcript abundance assays examine tens of thousands of genes so identification of patterns or networks within these large data sets is difficult. it is also critical to filter the meaningful transcript changes in these data sets to remove genes whose responses are not above background or that are dissimilar due to biological or technical variation. yet even though the bioinformatics community has developed statistical methods to filter the data [ ] , additional approaches are needed to identify the networks and patterns in these large data sets. an important modern approach to statistical modeling includes bayesian techniques involving likelihoods and posterior probabilities. here, we extend our previous work on this problem by incorporating time series adjustments in the computation of bayesian likelihoods. we apply this method to time course data generated in response to treatments that elevate the levels of the hormone ethylene in arabidopsis thaliana. we take advantage of a previously published genome-wide transcriptional data set [ ] , subjected to rigorous filtering and from which all the genes predicted to encode transcription factors have been identified. the goal is to predict gene regulatory networks that control time-matched developmental changes. the results in this paper are novel for several reasons. first, the methods use the hierarchical nature of the data sets. for example, replicate data are not averaged. rather, the method constructs a model over all of the data that uses each replicate as a source of information. the assumption is that at each level of the hierarchy there are commonalities in the data and parameters. thus, the replicate data is not independent. second, the addition of time series adjustment to improve the independence of the model's residuals gives these techniques stronger statistical foundations. third, the combination of bayesian model averaging with a cutting edge genetic algorithm provides rigorous estimates of posterior probabilities for edges. these computational modeling algorithms are derived using rigorous mathematical and statistical techniques and are computationally efficient. the models produced are easily understandable. many different techniques for modeling non-hierarchical data using gene expression data have been proposed. an excellent recent survey on this subject was given by emily [ ] . there are many techniques for modeling gene and protein networks-with various different properties-available in the literature. our technique in this paper is a bayesian regression type method. variations of bayesian modeling can be found in [ , , ] . other methods that use types of regression include [ , ] which focus on logistic regression techniques, and [ , ] which use poisson regression. other approaches to modeling these types of problems include differential equations [ ] and boolean modeling [ ] . this bayesian likelihood computational algorithm incorporates additional important features from earlier versions. earlier variations included computing posterior probabilities for a single replicate [ ] and for multiple replicates with both hierarchical [ ] and independent [ ] structures. over the course of this research, the search procedure has changed from metropolis hastings to genetic algorithms. genetic algorithms' execution times are typically polynomial rather than the doubly exponential execution time, in terms of the numbers of time points and genes, of metropolis hastings. this variation also uses a bayesian version of the cross generational elitist selection, heterogeneous recombination, cataclysmic mutation algorithm (chc) [ ] . genetic algorithms are motivated by the operators of selection, crossover, and mutation. the chc variation does not allow the crossover of similar parents. once the population becomes too homogeneous, then a cataclysmic mutation event regenerates the population from the current most fit parents. the bayesian chc (bchc) implemented in this paper uses a hierarchical statistical construct (the norris-patton likelihood) as the fitness function. the hormone ethylene (acc) is known to activate root growth in arabidopsis thaliana [ ] . transcription factors (tfs) are cellular proteins that bind to dna to turn genes either on (activation) or off (repression). developmental changes are controlled by these genes. the data set used in this modeling process was the complete set of abundance levels of the twenty-six tfs believed/known to be involved in the activation of the growth of roots at eight time points after treatment with the ethylene precursor acc [ ] . here, constructing an appropriate network model has potential agricultural applications in that it should lead to more complex understandings of root development. three network modeling paradigms are generally considered in the literature: cotemporal, next state one step and next state one and two steps. a next state one step model predicts the transcript abundance relationships between genes at time j based on the transcript abundance at time j − . in this paper, we will only consider next state one step models; for simplicity, we will refer to next state one step as next state. the time series adjusted (tsa) next state models are an amalgamation of next state modeling with standard time series adjustments [ ] . the time series adjustment methodology makes the residuals (i.e., the estimated error terms) more independent. a directed graph g = (v, e) consists of a pair of collections: v a set of vertices (or nodes); and, e a collection of directed edges between pairs of vertices. a cycle is a sequence v , e directed acyclic graphs (dags) do not contain cycles. an example of a dag is given in fig. . in this modeling algorithm, dags form the mathematical foundation of our computational approach. the vertices of a dag represent genes and the directed edges are one-way relationships between pairs of vertices. when there is a directed edge from for any dag d with vertex set v = {v , v , · · · , v n }, the vertices can be topologically sorted. this gives a total order > on v such that if v i is an ancestor conditional probability gives that for any two events a and b, the probability similarly, the density function f for two continuous variables y and y is recursively, using the order < implied by topologically sorting the dags on the set of continuous variable specific for a particular dag d, let y be the gene that cannot have any parents. let y be the gene that can have at most parent y . similarly, let y h be the gene that can have parents from the collection {y , · · · , y h− }. therefore, if we let y i represent the data of child i for all of the r replicates, we have for d f (y , y , . . . , y n |d) =f (y |d)f (y |y , d)f (y |y , y , d) · · · f (y k |y , · · · y n− , d) statistical regression models of response (child) data from predictors (parents) data over time nearly always have correlated residuals over time. this is usually due to the remaining influence of the previous time's response data. in complicated modeling situations (e.g., like ours where we need to obtain closed form likelihoods of dags within a hierarchical structure in order to produce posterior probabilities of edges), it is common to derive results as if there were non-correlated residuals, as we have done in previous work. our previous work has shown utility both for simulated and biological data, but we now rigorously incorporate a time series adjustment into our model. this should result in substantially less correlated residuals and thus more accurate likelihoods for the dags. since these likelihoods are the foundations for the edges' estimated posterior probabilities, these estimates should also be improved. our time series adjustment is an integer autoregressive adjustment of order in the commonly used family of markov conditioning. it is a version of kedem's and fokianos' autoregressive model [ , page ]. in our setting, this simply adds the child's data at the previous time as an additional regressor for the child's data at the current time. thus, much of the child's data at the previous time's influence would be regressed out leaving less correlated, closer to independent, residuals from one time to the next. for each h, with ≤ h ≤ n, f (y h |y , y , . . . , y h− , d) gives the density of y h given y h 's parent's data for dag d. now, let i y c be the data vector of any given child c from the i th replicate. the vector i y c has dimension t, the number utilized time points in the child c data set for a given replicate i. the symbol i x c is the t × k c regressor matrix for i y c . for next state with time series adjustment, t is the number of time points per replicate minus one since at time , the child data has no last previous parent data nor last previous child (tsa) data-so, the utilized child data starts at time . the value of k c is the number of parents of c plus two since i x c has a separate column for each of its parent's data at the previous time, a column of 's for the intercept, and a column of the child's data at the previous time (the time series adjustment). a k c dimensional slope vector for child c's regressors is i β c . the common within replicate residual variance of child c is σ c . assumptions which detail the hierarchical structure include that for a given the proof of theorem uses the following lemmas whose computation can be found in [ ] (a thesis from our research group). we include the proof of lemma to show how the computation of the likelihood includes the slope parameters i β c of each of the replicates separately. proof. using integration, we have letting |m | denote the determinant of the matrix m , we have the following: extending lemma to the product of density functions used in lemma , we have: note that g, v and σ c are positive free parameters. in our modeling algorithm, we set g = v = σ c = . the use of the time series adjusted next state norris-patton likelihood, along with a tailor-made genetic algorithm and bayesian model averaging, allows for the rigorous estimation of posterior probabilities for all gene pair interactions. if indicator < then : p (t) cataclysm(p (t)) : indicator : end if : archive archive ∪ p (t) : end while : return archive : end procedure simply put, a genetic algorithm (ga) takes the current population and produces the next generation using the operations of selection, crossover, and mutation [ ] . individuals (i.e., dags) are automatically moved to the next generation with preference given to those with the higher likelihoods (the elitist strategy). the first population must be initialized. the genetic algorithm terminates after a specified number of iterations. the tbchc genetic algorithm is an extension of bch [ ] which was heavily influenced by the chc [ ] . the tbchc fitness function includes the next state time series adjustment. the tbchc operators of selection, crossover, mutation, and repair will be discussed in the following paragraphs. the population of each generation consists of a fixed number of dags. each dag represents gene relationships. the genetic algorithm's aim is to move from the current population of dags to a new generation where the overall quality improves (as measured by the norris-patton likelihood). the elitist strategy only moves the top % of dags from the current generation to the next and the balance is filled by crossover. as tbchc iterates, all distinct dags are archived. the final gene interaction model is produced from this archived collection. generally, the selection operator chooses which members of the current population can potentially contribute children to the next generation. in fig. selection is accomplished through a random pairing of all parents in the current population (lines - ). by assuming prior probabilities for the dag, the likelihood of a given dag d is proportional to the d's npl [ ] . thus, the fitness of a candidate d can be computed using the npl. the crossover operator (line ) exchanges genetic information (i.e., directed edges) between two parents producing two new offspring. the edges chosen to be exchanged are chosen randomly. there is one caveat: if the two parents are too similar-determined by the hamming distance between them then the two selected parent dags are not allowed to produce offspring (line ). in a simple genetic algorithm, all selected parents are allowed to produce offspring. this tbchc prohibition of mating by similar parents may result in fewer dags in the next population than in the current population. since the modeling process is based on dags, if the crossover operator introduces a cycle in the offspring, a repair operator is applied. selection and crossover are used exclusively in tbchc until the population becomes too similar. at that point, cataclysmic mutation (line ) is applied to reset the population by creating a new population of dags from the top % npl dags. there are no known techniques for assigning the optimum values to the genetic algorithm parameters. however, experience and the literature give general criterion for appropriate values. still, values are often determined on a case by case basis. the tbchc algorithm parameters include the following: parallel executions each with generations; the number of initial dags is ; the crossover probability is . ; and, the number of parents of any given node is limited to . cataclysmic mutation causes the population of dags to be replaced by dags generated by crossover and mutation on the top % of the population to restore the candidate class to . this tbchc algorithm is implemented in python . using the networkx [ ] and dispy packages [ ] . it is important to realize that each directed edge in the model is labeled by a number in the interval [ , ] indicating the posterior bayesian probability that the associated relationship exists in the biological network. using bayesian statistics, , which simply and appropriately weights each visited dag d according to its likelihood. this methodology requires equally likely priors since in such a situation the posterior for d is proportional its likelihood [ ] . in order for this estimate to reflect its true value, it is necessary that ar contain a large and varied collection of dags of high likelihood. using the transcript abundance data for arabidopsis thaliana genes stimulated by acc, gene interaction models for a next state with and without time series adjustment were computationally created, shown in fig. . each edge is labeled by its posterior probability. figure provides comparisons of three similar models to those given in fig. . figure (a) shows a stronger and tighter distribution of posterior probabilities than fig. (b) . there is significant agreement across the models for average posterior probabilities exceeding . and less than . . however, for average posterior probabilities with values greater than . and less than . there is a great deal of variance, which reflects the lack of a strong posterior probability over this range. a typical underlying assumption of statistical analysis is that the residuals are independent [ , page ]. it is well understood, however, that the residuals associated with time course data are not usually independent. by incorporating time series adjustments into the modeling process, the residuals' independence is much improved; thus, yielding a less approximated, more accurate likelihood function. the continuation of this research includes four tasks. first, the computational networks have been sent to the muday lab for biological investigation, confirmation and interpretation. second, in this paper, we investigated the enhancement of times series adjustment on a next state one step model. there are two other time paradigms, next state one and two steps and cotemporal, each of which has a time series adjustment analogue and a corresponding norris-patton likelihood. comparing and contrasting the computational results of these three distinct modeling methods-as well as their biological interpretations-are important in understanding the gene interaction models developed using this methodology. third, we will further consider higher order autoregressive adjustment to continue improving the independence of the residuals. fourth, effort is underway to implement nonuniform priors in the modeling techniques. this would permit construction of gene interaction models that reflect relationships found in the literature. modeling gene regulation networks using ordinary differential equations detecting gene-gene interactions that underlie human diseases probability and statistics, th edn a survey of statistical methods for gene-gene interaction in case-control genome-wide association studies the chc adaptive search algorithm: how to have safe search when engaging in nontraditional genetic recombination evolutionary computation -basic algorithms and operators using bayesian networks to analyze expression data exploring network structure, dynamics, and function using networkx identification of transcriptional and receptor networks that control root responses to ethylene bayesian model averaging: a tutorial continuous cotemporal probabilistic modeling of systems biology networks from sparse data regression models for time series analysis a bchc genetic algorithm model of cotemporal hierarchical arabidopsis thaliana gene interactions stochastic boolean networks: an efficient approach to modeling gene regulatory networks an introduction to genetic algorithms bayesian interaction and associated networks from multiple replicates of sparse time-course data bayesian probabilistic network modeling from multiple independent replicates hierarchical bayesian system network modeling of multiple related replicates bayesian network analysis of signaling networks: a primer dispy: distributed and parallel computing with/for python plink: a toolset for whole-genome association and populationbased linkage analysis boost: a fast approach to detecting gene-gene interactions in disease data gboost: a gpu-based tool for detecting gene-gene interactions in genome-wide case control studies acknowledgments. the authors thank the national science foundation for their support with a grant, nsf# . john farrell thanks wake forest university for support as a wake forest fellow for summer . key: cord- - adtbwp authors: hale, a. t.; zhou, d.; bastarache, l.; wang, l.; zinkel, s. s.; schiff, s. j.; ko, d. c.; gamazon, e. r. title: the genetic architecture of human infectious diseases and pathogen-induced cellular phenotypes date: - - journal: nan doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: adtbwp infectious diseases (id) represent a significant proportion of morbidity and mortality across the world. host genetic variation is likely to contribute to id risk and downstream clinical outcomes, but there is a need for a genetics-anchored framework to decipher molecular mechanisms of disease risk, infer causal effect on potential complications, and identify instruments for drug target discovery. here we perform transcriptome-wide association studies (twas) of clinical id traits in a cohort of , individuals, identifying gene-level associations with id traits. replication in two large-scale biobanks provides additional support for the identified associations. a phenome-scale scan of the gene-level associations across hematologic, respiratory, cardiovascular, and neurologic traits proposes a molecular basis for known complications of the id traits. using mendelian randomization, we then provide causal support for the effect of the id traits on adverse outcomes. the rich resource of genetic information linked to serologic tests and pathogen cultures from bronchoalveolar lavage, sputum, sinus/nasopharyngeal, tracheal, and blood samples (up to , positive pathogen cultures across unique genera) that we leverage provides a platform to interrogate the genetic basis of compartment-specific infection and colonization. to accelerate insights into cellular mechanisms, we develop a twas repository of gene-level associations in a broad collection of human tissues with pathogen-exposure induced cellular phenotypes as a discovery and replication platform. cellular phenotypes of infection by pathogens included pathogen invasion, intercellular spread, cytokine production, and pyroptosis. these rich datasets will facilitate mechanistic insights into the role of host genetic variation on id risk and pathophysiology, with important implications for our molecular understanding of potentially severe phenotypic outcomes. the genetic basis of infectious disease (id) risk and severity has been relatively a schematic diagram illustrating our study design and the reference resource we provide can be found in figure the id-associated genes tend to be less tissue-specific (i.e., more ubiquitously expressed) than the remaining genes ( figure s a , mann whitney u test on the statistic, p = . x - ), possibly reflecting the multi-tissue predixcan approach we implemented, which prioritizes genes with multi-tissue support to improve statistical power, but also the genes' pleiotropic potential. we hypothesized that tissue expression profiling of id-associated genes can provide additional insights into disease etiologies and mechanisms. for example, the intestinal infection associated gene ndufa is expressed in a broad set of tissues, including the alimentary canal, but displays relatively low expression in whole blood ( figure s b ). in addition, tor a, the most significant association with bacterial pneumonia (table ) table ). these data identify specific molecular mechanisms across id traits with critical regulatory roles (e.g., protein modifications) in host response among the id-associated genes. we tested the hypothesis that distinct infectious agents exploit common pathways to find a compatible intracellular niche in the host, potentially implicating shared genetic risk factors. notably, of the id-associated genes ( notably, we identified an enrichment (fdr = . x - ) for a highly conserved motif figure a ). in addition, we identified significantly more replicated snp our study provides a reference atlas of genetic variants and genetically-determined integrating predicted transcriptome from multiple tissues improves association detection. plos genet , e . human genomics. the genotype-tissue expression (gtex) pilot analysis: multitissue ojala the apoptotic v-cyclin-cdk complex phosphorylates and inactivates bcl- survival of tissue-resident memory t cells requires exogenous lipid uptake and metabolism conversion of p to p deregulates cdk activity and promotes neurodegeneration cdk deletion enhances the anti-inflammatory potential of gc-mediated gr activation during inflammation. frontiers in immunology the human papillomavirus type e gene encodes transactivation and transformation functions similar to those of adenovirus e a microbial genome-wide association studies: lessons from human gwas principal components analysis corrects for stratification in genome-wide association studies the ability to replicate in macrophages is conserved between yersinia pestis and yersinia pseudotuberculosis genome-wide methylation analysis and epigenetic unmasking identify tumor suppressor genes in hepatocellular carcinoma development of a large-scale de-identified dna biobank to enable personalized medicine atg a controls dsdna-driven dynamic translocation of sting and the innate immune response quantitative proteomics reveals metabolic and pathogenic properties of chlamydia trachomatis developmental forms human immune disorder arising from mutation of the alpha chain of the interleukin- receptor contrasting the genetic architecture of complex traits from summary association data analysis of genome-wide association data highlights candidates for drug repositioning in psychiatry phosphoproteomics to characterize host response during influenza a virus infection of human macrophages phosphoproteomic analyses reveal signaling pathways that facilitate lytic gammaherpesvirus replication gene set enrichment analysis: a knowledge-based approach for interpreting genome-wide expression profiles lactic acidosis in sepsis: it's not all anaerobic: implications for diagnosis and management diagnostic value of muc and epcam mrna as tumor markers in differentiating benign from malignant pleural effusion structure and regulation of the cdk -p (nck a) complex essential function for the nuclear protein akirin in b cell activation and humoral immune responses akirin is critical for inducing inflammatory genes by bridging ikappab-zeta and the swi/snf complex investigating the possible causal association of smoking with depression and anxiety using mendelian randomisation meta-analysis: the carta consortium subversion of the actin cytoskeleton during viral infection genome-wide association and hla region fine-mapping studies identify susceptibility loci for multiple common infections. nat commun , . known genetic associations and discovery of new genetic disorders pathogen culture and virology data linked to whole-genome genetic information the sd consists of a wide range of clinical microbiological data. for individuals with whole-genome genetic information, we analyzed pathogen (bacterial, mycobacterial, and fungal) culture data derived from the following positive cultures for the indicated clinical samples ) sputum (n = , ), ) sinus/nasopharyngeal (n = , ), ) bronchial- alveolar lavage (n = , ), and ) tracheal sampling (n = ). furthermore, we analyzed a respiratory panel containing viral strains from , individuals with whole-genome genetic information. viral strains included the following: ) adenovirus, ) bocavirus, ) bordetella parapertussis, ) bordetella pertussis, ) chlamydia pneumoniae, ) coronavirus coronavirus hku , ) coronavirus nl , ) coronavirus nos, ) coronavirus oc ) human metapneumovirus, ) influenza a, ) influenza a, h ) influenza a, h , ) influenza b, ) mycoplasma pneumoniae ) parainfluenza , ) parainfluenza , ) parainfluenza , ) parainfluenza , ) respiratory syncytial virus (rsv), ) rsv, a, ) rsv, b, and ) rhinovirus. the pathogen information for each individual in our study included: ) total number of cultures number of ambiguous cultures (i.e., normal upper respiratory bacteria or low level contamination); ) number of positive cultures (i.e., the number of cultures with growth consistent with clinical infection); ) genus or genera isolated (up to unique genera per sample site), which ranged from zero to per sample. methods details gwas of id traits (ivs) only biallelic non-palindromic variants were considered as ivs mr-egger regression generalizes the inverse-variance weighted method, where the intercept is assumed to be zero. we also used the weighted-median estimator high-throughput human in vitro susceptibility testing about/, and phenotype definitions and family-based gwas of the hi-host phenome project were previously described ) were obtained from the coriell institute. the lcls represented diverse populations, including esn (esan in nigeria lcls were cultured in rpmi media containing % fetal bovine serum, mm glutamine salmonella infection was performed using pmmb gfp (pujol and bliska, ), and sifa deletion was constructed using lambda red and validated using pcr correction for the total number of genes tested (n = , ) across phenotypes (i.e., p < . x - ). trait-specific significance was determined using bonferroni correction for the total number of genes tested (n = , , p < . x - ). genomic ancestry was quantified using key: cord- -zibwrv authors: nan title: genetics and biotechnology of bacilli: a.t. ganesan and j.a. hoch (eds.): (proceedings of the second international conference on the genetics and biotechnology of bacilli, stanford university, stanford, ca, july – , ) academic press inc., orlando, fl, , xviii + pp. ($ . ) isbn - - - date: - - journal: gene doi: . / - ( ) -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zibwrv nan [ authors; articles. role of retroviruses: in neoplasia, in nature. w.p. rowe memorial lecture: changing dogmas in retrovirology (j.a. levy). retroviruses and murine model system endogenous leukemia viruses, xenotropic retroviruses, computer age, mammary tumorigenesis, proviral genome of radiation leukemia virus, friend leukemia cells, envelope gene, mhc, mmtv, antiviral drugs. retroviruses and the vertebrate model system: oncogenes in rats, avian leukemia viruses, feline retroviruses, bovine leukemia virus, ultraviolet-induced retroviruses, susceptibilities to -deoxy-d-glucose, functional heterogeneity, rat sarcoma galliera. retroviruses and human pathology: htlv viruses, retroviral genes in human reproductive tissue, aids, t-cell leukemia, ltrs of leukemia viruses, lav proteins, lymphocyte immune functions, anti-,htlv-iii and anti t-cell antibodies, seroepidemiological study of lav by elisa in aids, antibodies to saids, retroviruses expressed during oocyte maturation, psoriasis, human milk rnase, slow infections. retroviruses and oncogenes: retroviruses with two oncogenes, ras oncogenes, raf oncogene, cell attachment, amplification of oncogenes, nucleotide sequence of erba, osteosarcoma oncogene, c-myc gene, fes oncogene, myc and myb oncogenes, detection of oncogene transcripts]. 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dehydrogenase in drosophila. dna methylation and globin gene expression; histone gene transcription; control of fl-globin transcription; transcriptional enhancement; introns in murine kappa light chain genes. in vivo gene transfer and development : drosophila ; sea urchin ; transgenic mouse; gene transfer into mice; surface receptors; nuclear transplantation; neuropeptide genes; homologous recombination in l cells. viral gene and oncogene systems: splicing of mrna; regulation of thymidine kinase expression; control of a genes of hsvl; early adenovirus transcription; mutational analysis of ad ela gene; adenovirus va rnatranslational enhancer; early sv transcription; transforming genes of chicken and human b cell lymphomas ; myc oncogene). biological regulation and development mueller); estrogens, brain cell functions, and behaviour (b.s. mceven); transmembrane-mediated communication (g.l. nicolson); hormonal control of nacl and water transport in epithelia (a. taylor and l.g. palmer); metabolism of cell surface receptors -possible roles in cell sensitivity and responses to activators development and characterization of chinese hamster cell lines (cho); genetic manipulation cho lines genetic systems developed in cho lines; intermediary metabolism; cell structure and behaviour; mechanism of genetic variation; lineages of cho lines the bacteria, a treatise on stxucture and function biology: taxonomy of the pseudomonas; control of pseudomonas pulida growth on agar surfaces; evolution of enzyme structure and function in pseudomonas; outer membrane permeability of pseudomonas aeruginosa; toxins and virulence factors of pseudomonas aenqinosa. ii. genetics: chromosome mobilization and genomic organization in pseudomonas degradative plasmids in pseudomonas; gene cloning and manipulation in pseudomonas; cloning of pseudomonas genes in escherichia coli. iii. biochemistry: biosynthetic and catabolic features of amino acid metabolism in pseudomonas; catabolic potential of pseudomonas cepacia ; terpenoid metabolism by pseudomonas; biochemistry of aromatic hydrocarbon degradation in pseudomonas genetics, developmat, and evolution. th evolution and morphogenesis, gene action and morphogenesis in plants, mobile elements in maize, mutation, apical meristems and developmental selection in plants, properties of mutable alleles recovered from mutator key: cord- - oh tlr authors: markl, jürgen; sadava, david; hillis, david m.; heller, h. craig; hacker, sally d. title: evolution von genen und genomen date: - - journal: purves biologie doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: oh tlr der erste weltkrieg endete im november . die zahl der todesfälle in den vier kriegsjahren wurde jedoch schon bald übertroffen von den opfern einer massiven grippeepidemie, an der weltweit über mio. menschen starben – und damit mehr als doppelt so viele wie in den schlachten des ersten weltkriegs. die pandemie von / war insofern bemerkenswert, als die sterberate unter jungen erwachsenen, die einer grippe gewöhnlich mit viel geringerer wahrscheinlichkeit zum opfer fallen als kinder und greise, um das -fache höher lag als bei den vorherigen und später folgenden grippeepidemien. warum erwies sich dieses grippevirus speziell unter den normalerweise widerstandsfähigsten menschen als so tödlich? der virusstamm von löste im menschlichen immunsystem eine besonders starke reaktion aus. infolge dieser Überreaktion waren menschen mit einem leistungsfähigen immunsystem tendenziell stärker betroffen. der erste weltkrieg endete im november . die zahl der todesfälle in den vier kriegsjahren wurde jedoch schon bald übertroffen von den opfern einer massiven grippeepidemie, an der weltweit über mio. menschen starben -und damit mehr als doppelt so viele wie in den schlachten des ersten weltkriegs. die pandemie von / war insofern bemerkenswert, als die sterberate unter jungen erwachsenen, die einer grippe gewöhnlich mit viel geringerer wahrscheinlichkeit zum opfer fallen als kinder und greise, um das -fache höher lag als bei den vorherigen und später folgenden grippeepidemien. warum erwies sich dieses grippevirus speziell unter den normalerweise widerstandsfähigsten menschen als so tödlich? der virusstamm von löste im menschlichen immunsystem eine besonders starke reaktion aus. infolge dieser Überreaktion waren menschen mit einem leistungsfähigen immunsystem tendenziell stärker betroffen. in der regel können wir uns im kampf gegen viren schon auf unser immunsystem verlassen. die immunreaktion bildet auch die grundlage der impfung. seit haben spezielle impfprogramme gegen grippeviren dazu beigetragen, die anzahl und schwere der grippefälle in grenzen zu halten. allerdings wirkt der impfstoff eines bestimmten jahres vermutlich nicht gegen die viren des folgenden jahres. der grund: es entwickeln sich ständig neue stämme von grippeviren und sorgen für genetische variabilität in der population. würden diese nicht evolvieren, könnten wir eine dauerhafte resistenz gegen sie aufbauen. das würde die jährliche grippeimpfung überflüssig machen. da die viren aber evolvieren, müssen pharmaunternehmen jedes jahr einen neuen, anderen grippeimpfstoff entwickeln und in ausreichender menge bereitstellen. die immunantwort von wirbeltieren wird ausgelöst, wenn das immunsystem proteine auf der virenoberfläche erkennt. demnach kann das virus durch veränderungen seiner oberflächenproteine der immunabwehr entkommen. je größer die anzahl der veränderungen der oberflächenproteine ist, desto eher werden die virenstämme vom immunsystem nicht erkannt, können ihre wirte infizieren und haben damit einen vorteil gegenüber anderen stämmen. biologen verfolgen, wie sich die oberflächenproteine der grippeviren von jahr zu jahr ändern. dadurch beobachten sie die evolution in aktion. mit diesen erkenntnissen können sie dann wirkungsvollere impfstoffe entwickeln. durch die erforschung von rasch evolvierenden organismen hat man sehr viel über die molekularen grundlagen der evolution gelernt. die ergebnisse molekularer evolutionsstudien finden wiederum anwendung in der praxis, etwa bei der entwicklung besserer strategien zur bekämpfung tödlicher krankheiten. in "experiment: warum war die grippepandemie von / so schlimm?" in abschn. . und in "faszination forschung" am ende dieses kapitels finden sie antworten auf diese frage. das genom eines organismus oder virus setzt sich zusammen aus der gesamtheit aller seiner gene sowie sämtlichen nichtcodierenden abschnitten der erbsubstanz. bei eukaryoten finden sich die meisten gene auf den chromosomen im zellkern, es gibt aber auch gene in den mitochondrien und chloroplasten. bei organismen mit sexueller fortpflanzung vererben sowohl die männlichen als auch die weiblichen individuen gene der nucleären dna, hingegen werden mitochondrien-und chloroplastengene in der regel nur über das cytoplasma der eizellen weitergegeben. durch sequenzalignments können biologen bei einzelnen individuen oder arten auftretende nucleotid-oder aminosäuresubstitutionen nachweisen. wird alleine die anzahl der nucleotidsubstitutionen oder aminosäureaustausche zwischen sequenzen ermittelt, führt dies häufig dazu, dass die tatsächliche zahl der zugrunde liegenden veränderungen unterschätzt wird. damit genome von eltern an die nachkommen weitergegeben werden können, müssen sie zunächst repliziert werden. die replikation der dna verläuft jedoch, wie sie bereits wissen, nicht ohne fehler. fehler bei der dna-replikation -mutationenliefern einen großteil des ausgangsmaterials für evolutionäre veränderungen. mutationen sind eine grundvoraussetzung für das langfristige Überleben von organismenpopulationen, denn sie bilden die eigentliche quelle für die genetische variabilität, die es populationen ermöglicht, als reaktion auf veränderungen ihrer umwelt zu evolvieren. ein bestimmtes allel eines gens kann erst dann an nachfolgende generationen weitergegeben werden, wenn ein individuum, das dieses allel besitzt, überlebt und sich fortpflanzt. das betreffende allel muss in kombination mit zahlreichen anderen genen des genoms funktionieren, sonst wird es von der selektion rasch ausgelesen. darüber hinaus werden das ausmaß und der zeitpunkt der expression eines gens streng reguliert. aus diesem grund kann man die gene eines einzelnen organismus als interagierende mitglieder einer gruppe betrachten, unter denen arbeitsteilung herrscht, aber auch starke wechselseitige abhängigkeiten bestehen. ein genom ist also nicht einfach eine willkürliche ansammlung von genen, die auf den chromosomen in zufälliger reihenfolge angeordnet sind. vielmehr handelt es sich dabei um eine komplexe zusammenstellung miteinander interagierender gene, regulationssequenzen und strukturelemente. dazwischen liegen abschnitte aus nichtcodierender dna, die vermutlich kaum eine direkte funktion erfüllen. die positionen der gene unterliegen genau wie ihre abfolge einem evolutionären wandel; das gleiche gilt für den umfang und die lage der nichtcodierenden dna-abschnitte. all diese veränderungen können sich auf den phänotyp eines organismus auswirken. mittlerweile haben biologen die genome einer großen zahl von organismen einschließlich des menschen vollständig sequenziert. die in diesen sequenzen enthaltenen informationen tragen dazu bei, dass wir heute besser verstehen, wie und warum sich organismen unterscheiden, wie sie funktionieren und wie sie sich im verlauf der evolution entwickelt haben. das fachgebiet der molekularen evolutionsforschung beschäftigt sich mit der erforschung der mechanismen und konsequenzen der evolution von makromolekülen, insbesondere von nucleinsäuren (dna und rna) und proteinen. i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i t v i i i l l l l i i i i i zahl der aminosäuren an dieser position i i t t t t t t i t t t t i t v t t t t t l e t e i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p p t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t t m m m m i i i i i i i i i i i i i v i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i i v i i i i i i v i i i i i i hoch konserviert die genome aller organismen evolvieren im laufe der zeit. evolutionäre veränderungen lassen sich durch einen vergleich der nucleotid-und aminosäuresequenzen verschiedener arten nachweisen. durch analyse der molekularen evolution im laborexperiment unter kontrollierten bedingungen können biologen viele evolutionsprozesse direkt erforschen. sie sollten . . . ein sequenzalignment durchführen und dazu eine matrix erstellen können, in der die Ähnlichkeiten und unterschiede der sequenzen miteinander vergleichend gegenübergestellt sind. zeigen können, warum anhand der ermittelten zahl der nucleotid-oder aminosäureunterschiede zwischen zwei sequenzen häufig unterschätzt wird, wie viele veränderungen tatsächlich zwischen den sequenzen stattgefunden haben. ? . führen sie ein sequenzalignment der folgenden sequenzen durch und erstellen dann eine distanzmatrix, in der die zahl der identischen nucleotide und der unterschiede (einschließlich insertions-und deletionsereignissen) verglichen werden. . erklären sie, warum durch einfaches zählen der abweichenden nucleotide zweier sequenzen die tatsächliche zahl der nucleotidsubstitutionen seit der auseinanderentwicklung der sequenzen häufig zu gering eingeschätzt wird. verwenden sie dazu als beispiel einen vergleich ihres sequenzalignments der sequenzen a und b aus aufgabe . wie sie gesehen haben, befasst sich die molekulare evolutionsforschung mit der evolution von genen und proteinen, vergleicht nucleotid-und aminosäuresequenzen verschiedener organismen miteinander und rekonstruiert, welche veränderungen während der stammesgeschichte stattgefunden haben. als nächstes werden sie erfahren, wie sich genome verändern, und einige der folgen dieser veränderungen näher betrachten. wie sie in abschn. . erfahren haben, versteht man unter einer mutation jegliche veränderung des genetischen materials. eine mutationsform, die sich in einer population etablieren kann, ist die punktmutation, der austausch eines einzelnen nucleotids. viele solcher nucleotidsubstitutionen in der dna haben keine auswirkung auf ein protein -selbst dann nicht, wenn die veränderung an einem proteincodierenden gen erfolgt, denn für die meisten aminosäuren gibt es mehr als ein codon ( abb. . ). eine substitution, die nicht zu einer anderen aminosäure führt, bezeichnet man als synonyme, neutrale oder stille substitution ( abb. . a). synonyme substitutionen wirken sich nicht auf die struktur und funktion eines proteins aus (können allerdings andere auswirkungen haben, wie in abschn. . beschrieben) und unterliegen daher wahrscheinlich weniger dem einfluss der natürlichen selektion als andere formen der substitution. eine neutrale evolution unterscheidet sich von einer negativen (reinigenden) und positiven selektion dadurch, dass sie sich nicht auf die Überlebensfähigkeit und fortpflanzung des betreffenden organismus auswirkt. die fixierungsrate neutraler nucleotidsubstitutionen innerhalb von populationen ist unabhängig von der populationsgröße. durch vergleiche der raten synonymer und nichtsynonymer substitutionen kann man eine positive und negative selektion in proteingenen erkennen. die genome von organismen zeichnen sich durch eine sehr unterschiedliche größe aus, dagegen ist die zahl der proteincodierenden gene deutlich weniger variabel. der genetische code legt fest, welches codon welche aminosäure codiert ( abb. . ). eine nucleotidsubstitution, die zu einer veränderung der von einem gen codierten aminosäuresequenz führt, bezeichnet man als nichtsynonyme substitution ( teil vi . die unterschiede in den aminosäuresequenzen wurden jeweils paarweise in eine tabelle eingetragen. anschließend wurden die aminosäureänderungen in den evolutionären stammbaum eingetragen und die zahl der konvergenten Ähnlichkeiten zwischen jedem der artenpaare ermittelt. die ergebnisse können dann als distanzmatrix dargestellt werden. die matrix zeigt oberhalb der diagonalen für jedes artenpaar die anzahl der aminosäureunterschiede und unterhalb die anzahl der konvergenten Ähnlichkeiten. an den lysozymsequenzen der beiden arten mit einer gärkammer zur verdauung lässt sich die mehrzahl der konvergenten Ähnlichkeiten zwischen den einzelnen artenpaaren nachweisen; dabei zeigt sich einhergehend mit der unabhängigen evolution einer gärkammer zur verdauung eine molekulare konvergenz. abb. . in der anzahl der gene pro genom gibt es enorme unterschiede. diese abbildung zeigt die zahl der gene einer auswahl von organismen, deren genome schon vollständig sequenziert wurden, angeordnet nach ihren bekannten evolutionären verwandtschaftsbeziehungen. bakterien und archaeen weisen im normalfall weniger gene auf als die meisten eukaryoten. unter den eukaryoten besitzen vielzellige organismen mit organisierten geweben (pflanzen und tiere; die dunkelgrünen und blauen zweige) mehr gene als einzellige organismen (türkisfarbene zweige) oder vielzellige lebewesen ohne eine auffällige organisation der gewebe (gelbe zweige) entstanden. obwohl also die hoatzins und die säugetiere mit gärkammer in den letzten paar hundert millionen jahren keinen gemeinsamen vorfahren hatten, haben sie ähnliche anpassungen ihres lysozyms entwickelt, die es ihnen ermöglichen, ihren der gärung dienenden bakterien nährstoffe zu entziehen. k l k e y d n q n v pavian i r l r q y n d q n v mensch v r m r r y n d q n v ratte t r m y q y n d k n v rind v k l k e w d n r d l pferd v a m g g w n e k d l ursprünglicher zustand v r m r q w n d k n v durch in der größe der genome gibt es bei verschiedenen organismen bekanntlich erhebliche unterschiede. betrachtet man die großen taxonomischen kategorien, so ist eine gewisse korrelation zwischen genomgröße und komplexität der organismen zu erkennen. das genom des winzigen bakteriums mycoplasma genitalium umfasst nur gene. aus genen besteht das genom des bakteriums rickettsia prowazekii, dem erreger des fleckfiebers. hingegen besitzt homo sapiens ungefähr . proteincodierende gene. abb. . zeigt die zahl der gene einer auswahl von organismen, deren genome bereits vollständig sequenziert wurden, angeordnet nach ihren bekann-ten evolutionären verwandtschaftsbeziehungen. wie ihnen die abbildung zeigt, bedeutet ein größeres genom nicht eine höhere komplexität des phänotyps. (vergleichen sie beispielsweise den reis mit den anderen pflanzen.) es überrascht nicht, dass für den bau und die aufrechterhaltung der funktionen eines großen, vielzelligen organismus mehr und komplexere genetische informationen erforderlich sind als bei einem kleinen, einzelligen bakterium. Überraschend ist jedoch, dass einige organismen, etwa lungenfische, manche schwanzlurche und lilien, rund -mal mehr dna im zellkern aufweisen als beispielsweise der mensch. natürlich ist ein lungenfisch oder eine lilie nicht -mal komplexer aufgebaut als ein mensch. warum variiert die genomgröße dann so stark? die unterschiede in der genomgröße sind nicht so groß, wenn man nur jenen anteil der dna betrachtet, der tatsächlich proteine codiert oder sequenzen anderer rnas als mrnas festlegt. die organismen mit der größten menge an kern-dna (einige farne und blütenpflanzen) weisen zwar . -mal so viel dna auf wie die bakterien mit den kleinsten genomen, aber keine der arten besitzt mehr als -mal so viele proteincodierende gene wie ein bakterium. daher beruhen die meisten wie im vorherigen abschnitt erwähnt, besitzen die meisten vielzelligen organismen sehr viel mehr gene als der größte teil der einzelligen arten. aber die vielzelligen lebewesen sind aus einzelligen vorfahren hervorgegangen. wie kam es zu der zunahme der anzahl der gene innerhalb des genoms von vielzelligen organismen im laufe der evolution? eine solche zunahme kann vor allem durch zwei mechanismen zustande kommen: es können gene von anderen arten übertragen oder innerhalb einer art dupliziert werden. bisweilen können gene zwischen entfernt miteinander verwandten zweigen am stammbaum des lebens ausgetauscht werden. die duplikation eines gens bietet gelegenheiten für die evolution neuer funktionen. manche gene liegen im genom in multiplen kopien vor; diese evolvieren im laufe der zeit häufig gemeinsam. in viele genduplikationen betreffen jeweils nur ein gen oder wenige gene, bei polyploiden organismen (darunter zahlreiche pflanzen) wurden jedoch komplette genome dupliziert. bei einer duplikation sämtlicher gene ergeben sich unzählige möglichkeiten, neue funktionen zu evolvieren. genau das ist offenbar bei der evolution der wirbeltiere passiert. das genom der gnathostomata (kiefermünder -das sind alle wirbeltiere mit einem beweglichem unterkiefer) scheint von vielen wichtigen genen vier diploide sätze aufzuweisen. aufgrund dieser erkenntnis gelangten biologen zu dem schluss, dass sich bei dem vorfahren dieser gruppe zwei duplikationen des gesamten genoms ereigneten. diese duplikationen ermöglichten eine beträchtliche spezialisierung einzelner wirbeltiergene, deren expression heute in hohem maße gewebespezifisch erfolgt. zwar haben sich die vertreter der globingenfamilie in ihrer form und funktion diversifiziert, die mitglieder vieler anderer die ziffern geben die geschätzte anzahl an Änderungen der dna-sequenz entlang des betreffenden astes im stammbaum an. durch ein duplikationsereignis entstanden die und -globingen-cluster. abb. . ein genstammbaum der globingenfamilie. eine analyse mittels der methode der molekularen uhr legt nahe, dass sich die 'und "-globingen-cluster (blau bzw. grün) vor ungefähr mio. jahren auseinanderentwickelt haben -also relativ bald nach der entstehung der wirbeltiere genfamilien evolvieren hingegen nicht unabhängig voneinander. so besitzen beispielsweise fast alle organismen zahlreiche kopien (bis zu mehrere tausend) der gene für ribosomale rna. ribosomale rna (rrna) bildet das hauptstrukturelement der ribosomen und erfüllt als solches eine wichtige rolle bei der proteinsynthese. sämtliche lebewesen müssen -oft in großen mengen -proteine synthetisieren (vor allem während ihrer frühen entwicklung). durch den besitz zahlreicher kopien der rrna-gene wird gewährleistet, dass die organismen rasch viele ribosomen produzieren und dadurch eine hohe proteinsyntheserate aufrechterhalten können. die gene für ribosomale rna evolvieren wie alle anderen teile des genoms, und so sammeln sich in den rrna-genen verschiedener arten mit der zeit unterschiede an. innerhalb einer art sind sich die zahlreichen kopien der rrna-gene hingegen sowohl strukturell als auch funktionell sehr ähnlich. diese Ähnlichkeit ist auch sinnvoll, denn im idealfall sollte jedes ribosom einer art auf die gleiche weise proteine synthetisieren. mit anderen worten, innerhalb einer spezies evolvieren die vielen kopien dieser rrna-gene gemeinsam. dieses phänomen bezeichnet man als konzertierte evolution. www.life e.com/a . wie kommt es zu einer solchen konzertierten evolution? offensichtlich liegen ihr zwei verschiedene mechanismen zugrunde. einer davon ist ungleiches crossing-over. während der replikation der dna eines diploiden organismus im zuge der meiose lagern sich die homologen chromosomenpaare aneinan-der, und es kommt zu einer rekombination durch crossing-over ( abschn. . ). im falle hochrepetitiver gene wie der rrna-gene passiert es jedoch leicht, dass diese bei der paarung der chromosomen gegeneinander versetzt werden, weil so viele kopien der gleichen gene auf den chromosomen vorhanden sind ( abb. . a). infolgedessen erhält das eine der beiden homologen chromosomen beim crossing-over zusätzliche kopien des rrna-gens, während das andere chromosom entsprechend weniger kopien abbekommt. erfolgt in einer der kopien eine punktmutation in form einer basensubstitution, kann diese durch das ungleiche crossing-over schrittweise vermehrt und damit allmählich fixiert werden. umgekehrt kann sie durch das ungleiche crossing-over auch schrittweise verringert und schließlich eliminiert werden. so oder so bleiben die vielen kopien des gens einander sehr ähnlich. den zweiten mechanismus, der zu einer konzertierten evolution führt, bezeichnet man als gerichtete genkonversion. dieser mechanismus erfolgt mit viel höherer geschwindigkeit als ein ungleiches crossing-over und hat sich als primärer mechanismus für die konzertierte evolution von rrna-genen erwiesen. in dna-strängen kommt es häufig zu brüchen, welche dann wieder repariert werden ( abschn. . ). die gene für die ribosomale rna liegen während des zellzyklus die meiste zeit eng beieinander. kommt es zu einer beschädigung eines der gene, kann eine kopie des rrna-gens des homologen chromosoms als matrize zur reparatur der beschädigten kopie dienen; dabei ersetzt die als matrize fungierende sequenz die originalsequenz ( abb. . b). in vielen fällen erfolgt diese reparatur offenbar insofern recht einseitig, als häufig bestimmte sequenzen als matrizen verwendet werden. dadurch kann sich teil vi eine solche bevorzugt verwendete sequenz rasch auf alle kopien des gens ausbreiten. auf diese weise kann es passieren, dass sich eine veränderung, die in einer einzelnen kopie auftritt, rasch auf alle anderen kopien ausbreitet. aber ganz gleich, welcher dieser mechanismen der konzertierten evolution im konkreten fall zugrunde liegt: durch sie evolvieren die kopien eines hochrepetitiven gens nicht unabhängig voneinander. zwar treten nach wie vor mutationen auf, aber wenn diese in einer einzelnen kopie erfolgen, dann breiten sie sich entweder rasch auf sämtliche kopien aus oder gehen vollständig aus dem genom verloren. dieser prozess ermöglicht es, dass jede kopie über die zeit bezüglich sequenz und funktion ähnlich bleibt. durch horizontalen gentransfer können bestimmte funktionen von genen auch zwischen entfernt verwandten arten übertragen werden. genduplikation kann zur evolution neuer funktionen führen. manche hochrepetitiven gene durchlaufen eine konzertierte evolution, wodurch ihre gleichförmige funktionalität erhalten bleibt. sie sollten . . . beschreiben können, wie es durch horizontalen gentransfer zur Übertragung von genen zwischen verschiedenen linien kommen kann, insbesondere zwischen bakterien. anhand eines genstammbaums einer genfamilie ableiten können, wann in der stammesgeschichte einer gruppe von arten genduplikationen stattgefunden haben. erläutern können, inwiefern ein dupliziertes gen gelegenheiten für die evolution neuer funktionen liefert. die beiden prozesse, die einer konzertierten evolution zugrunde liegen, grafisch darstellen und ihre unterschiede aufzeigen können. ? gentransfers für den organismus, der durch diesen mechanismus neue gene erhält. für die ergebnisse von untersuchungen der molekularen evolution gibt es in der gesamten biologie praktische anwendungsmöglichkeiten, etwa, um grundlegende aspekte biologischer funktionen besser zu verstehen, oder für forschungen zur menschlichen gesundheit. die evolutionsgeschichte von genen liefert informationen zur funktion von proteinen. zebrafisch en b zebrafisch en a huhn en maus en mensch en zebrafisch en b zebrafisch en a huhn en maus en mensch en en en seeigel en lanzettfischchen en bei wirbeltieren entstanden durch eine genduplikation die beiden paralogen engrailed-gene en und en . in der zu den zebrafischen führenden linie traten weitere genduplikationen auf. anstatt mit genstammbäumen arbeiten viele biologen je nach fragestellung auch mit proteinstammbäumen, zum beispiel um die verwandtschaftsbeziehungen oder den funktionswandel homologer proteine zu analysieren. entsprechend zu den genen unterscheidet man orthologe proteine (gleiche funktion in unterschiedlichen organismen) und paraloge proteine (unterschiedliche funktion im gleichen organismus). so sind die 'und die "-untereinheit des menschlichen hämoglobins paralog ( abb. . ), die "-untereinheiten von mensch und maus dagegen ortholog. weiter vorne in diesem kapitel haben sie erfahren, wie biologen genabschnitte identifizieren können, die einer positiven bei den verschiedenen duplizierten genen für natriumkanäle der vielen kugelfischarten sind mehrere unterschiedliche substitutionen erfolgt, die zu einer resistenz gegen ttx geführt haben. in diesen genen sind aber auch zahlreiche andere veränderungen aufgetreten, die nichts mit der evolution der ttx-resistenz zu tun haben. biologen, die sich mit der funktion von natriumkanälen befassen, können eine menge über die funktionsweise dieser kanäle lernen (und auch über neurologische krankheiten, die durch mutationen in den genen für natriumkanäle verursacht werden), indem sie in erfahrung bringen, welche veränderungen für eine ttx-resistenz selektiert wurden. dazu vergleichen sie die raten synonymer und nichtsynonymer substitutionen bei den genen der verschiedenen linien, in denen sich eine resistenz gegen ttx entwickelt hat. in ähnlicher weise versucht man mithilfe der prinzipien der molekularen evolution die funktion sowie die diversifizierung der funktion zahlreicher anderer proteine zu verstehen. bei ihren untersuchungen der zusammenhänge zwischen selektion, evolution und funktion von makromolekülen kamen biologen schon bald auf die idee, sich die molekulare evolution in einer kontrollierten laborumgebung zunutze zu machen, um neuartige makromoleküle mit nützlichen eigenschaften herzustellen. das war die geburtsstunde der anwendungen der in vitro-evolution ("evolution im reagenzglas"). anschließend können sie feststellen, welche der gegenwärtig kursierenden influenzastämme die größte zahl von veränderungen in diesen positiv selektierten codons aufweisen. diese influenzastämme werden nämlich am ehesten überleben, sich vermehren und zukünftig grippeepidemien verursachen -und bilden somit die logischen ziele für neue impfstoffe. diese praktische anwendung der prinzipien der evolutionstheorie führt dazu, dass wirkungsvollere impfstoffe gegen grippeviren entwickelt werden -und damit alljährlich weniger menschen an grippe erkranken oder gar daran sterben. synapsenfutter: wenden sie an, was sie gelernt haben als genom eines organismus bezeichnet man die gesamtheit seiner gene, regulatorischen sequenzen und strukturelemente einschließlich der nichtcodierenden dna. das gebiet der molekularen evolution befasst sich damit, welche zusammenhänge zwischen der struktur von genen und proteinen und der funktionsweise von organismen bestehen. mittels sequenzalignment von nucleinsäuren oder proteinen verschiedener organismen lassen sich diese vergleichen und homologe positionen identifizieren. siehe abb. . ; activity . key: cord- -mgsuwft authors: machado, roberto f.; garcia, joe g. n. title: genomics of acute lung injury and vascular barrier dysfunction date: - - journal: textbook of pulmonary vascular disease doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: mgsuwft acute lung injury (ali) is a devastating syndrome of diffuse alveolar damage that develops via a variety of local and systemic insults such as sepsis, trauma, pneumonia, and aspiration. it is interestingly to note that only a subset of individuals exposed to potential ali-inciting insults develop the disorder and the severity of the disease varies from complete resolution to death. in addition, ali susceptibility and severity are also affected by ethnicity as evidenced by the higher mortality rates observed in african-american ali patients compared with other ethnic groups in the usa. moreover, marked differences in strain-specific ali responses to inflammatory and injurious agents are observed in preclinical animal models. together, these observations strongly indicate genetic components to be involved in the pathogenesis of ali. the identification of genes contributing to ali would potentially provide a better understanding of ali pathobiology, yield novel biomarkers, identify individuals or populations at risk, and prove useful for the development of novel and individualized therapies. genome-wide searches in animal models have identified a number of quantitative trait loci that associate with ali susceptibility. in this chapter, we utilize a systems biology approach combining cellular signaling pathway analysis with population- based association studies to review established and suspected candidate genes that contribute to dysfunction of endothelial cell barrier integrity and ali susceptibility. acute lung injury (ali) is a devastating syndrome of diffuse alveolar damage that develops via a variety of local and systemic insults such as sepsis, trauma, pneumonia, and aspiration [ ] . deranged alveolar capillary permeability, profound inflammation, and extravasation of edematous fluids into the alveolar spaces are critical elements of ali, reflecting the substantial surface area of the pulmonary vasculature needed for alveolar gas exchange. ali, together with its severest form, acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), afflicts approximately , patients per year in the usa and has a mortality rate of - % [ , ] . it is interestingly to note, however, that only a subset of individuals exposed to potential ali-inciting insults develop the disorder and the severity of the disease varies from complete resolution to death. in addition, ali susceptibility and severity are also affected by ethnicity as evidenced by the higher mortality rates observed in african-american ali patients compared with other ethnic groups in the usa [ ] . moreover, marked differences in strain-specific ali responses to inflammatory and injurious agents are observed in preclinical animal models [ ] . together, these observations strongly indicate genetic components to be involved in the pathogenesis of ali. the role that genetics plays in determining ali risk or the subsequent severity of the outcome is one of the many unanswered questions regarding ali pathogenesis and epidemiology. the identification of genes contributing to ali would potentially provide a better understanding of the pathogenic mechanisms of ali, yield novel biomarkers, identify individuals or populations at risk, and prove useful for the development of novel and individualized therapies. however, a traditional genetic approach to studies using family linkage mapping is not feasible given the sporadic nature of ali and the necessity of an extreme environmental insult. further, genetic studies of ali are challenging owing to the substantial phenotypic variance in critically ill patients, diversity in the lung injury evoking stimuli, presence of varied comorbid illnesses common in the critically ill patient, complex gene-environment interactions, and potentially incomplete gene penetrance [ , ] . despite these inherent challenges, the unrivaled progress made in the post-human genome era combined with the utilization of sophisticated bioinformatics and high-throughput methods have allowed significant advances to be made. for example, these tools are now linked to escalating knowledge of the molecular mechanisms of lung endothelial permeability, a hallmark of ali and an attractive target for the design of novel therapies, to identify candidate genes whose variants are potentially involved in ali susceptibility. genome-wide searches in animal models have identified a number of quantitative trait loci that associate with ali susceptibility [ ] . in this chapter, we utilize a systems biology approach combining cellular signaling pathway analysis with population-based association studies to review established and suspected candidate genes that contribute to dysfunction of endothelial cell barrier integrity and ali susceptibility. the integration of high-throughput gene expression profiling in preclinical models of ali with bioinformatics has led to the identification of differentially expressed genes in response to ali whose variants are potentially involved in ali susceptibility and severity. this approach confirmed long-suspected ali-associated candidate genes, but more importantly, identified novel genes not previously implicated in ali. increasing knowledge of the molecular mechanisms of endothelial-barrier-regulatory pathways has also enhanced the ability to find novel ali candidate genes. the analysis of the molecular pathways involving the cytoskeletal scaffolding and the dynamic cytoskeletal changes driving cell shape alterations, a key feature of vascular permeability, has identified additional genes contributing to the development and severity of ali, thereby providing novel therapeutic targets in this devastating illness. genes encoding proinflammatory cytokines, growth factors and mediators, receptors for barrier-regulatory agonists, and mechanical-stress-sensitive genes expressed in endothelium which regulate inflammatory responses also serve as attractive ali candidate genes and are representative of the diverse but fertile areas of exploration for candidate snps affecting ali susceptibility and severity. angiotensin-converting enzyme (ace) is a member of the rennin-angiotensin system (ras), balancing the levels of angiotensin i and angiotensin ii, with significant expression in lung vascular endothelium as compared with other vascular beds [ ] . the ras is considered to be an important regulator of inflammation that contributes to ali by altering vascular permeability, vascular tone, fibroblast activation, and endothelial-epithelial cell survival [ ] [ ] [ ] . for example, angiotensin ii activates inflammatory processes by upregulating proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines via type i and type ii angiotensin ii receptors that subsequently activate the nuclear factor kb (nf-kb) pathway [ , ] . the ras is also involved in the fibrotic response to ali via induction of transforming growth factor expression [ ] . the most compelling evidence for ras involvement in ali has come from the effective attenuation of ali pathobiology by ace inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blocking drugs [ , ] and ace knockout mice in preclinical models of ali [ ] . an intronic insertion (i) or deletion (d) of a -bp alu repeat sequence in the human ace gene, located on chromosome q , has been associated with ace levels and activity in serum [ , ] . the d allele possesses a higher enzyme activity which parallels the higher gene expression in individuals with dd genotype [ ] . the initial association of the dd genotype in the ace gene with increased ali mortality provided the impetus for subsequent studies to more firmly establish a genetic basis of ali and to identify ali candidate genes [ ] . caucasian patients with ards show significantly higher frequencies of the dd genotype and the d allele as compared with ventilated intensive care unit (icu) patients without ards, patients after coronary artery bypass surgery, or healthy controls. moreover, ards patients with dd genotype show markedly higher mortality ( %) in comparison with the ii genotype ( %) or strike '' '' id genotype ( %) [ ] . the higher mortality rate in ards patients with dd or id genotype as compared with ii genotype was subsequently confirmed in han chinese patients in taiwan, although the frequency of the d allele is significantly lower in the chinese population as compared with western populations [ ] . compared with caucasians, a higher frequency of d allele has been reported among africans (nigerian and african-american populations) [ , ] , potentially contributing to the observed disparity in ali-associated higher mortality rates in african-americans [ ] . however, to date, no association study of ace polymorphisms and lung injury has been performed in african-americans. in contrast, mexican and amerindian populations have slightly lower allelic frequencies of the d allele [ ] . thus, ace represents a highly viable endothelial candidate gene and attractive target in acute inflammatory lung disease. tumor necrosis factor (tnf) a, an early mediator of ali development, is a potent proinflammatory cytokine which dramatically increases endothelial cell permeability, cytokine production, and a variety of cytotoxic and proinflammatory compounds which lead to subsequent vascular leakage and disturbed lung water balance. both tnfa and tnfb subtypes appear in the circulation, in bronchoalveolar lavage (bal) fluid and in pulmonary edema fluid during the onset of lung injury. as such, the elevated levels of tnf and its soluble receptors are commonly used as markers of inflammation and are associated with morbidity and mortality in ali patients [ ] . both the tnfa and tnfb genes lie in close proximity within the major histocompatibility complex, with several polymorphisms described in this region. the - g/a promoter polymorphism in the tnfa gene and the ncoi restriction fragment length polymorphism in the tnfb gene appear to influence the expression of tnfa. the carriers of the - a allele and homozygotes for the tnfb allele exhibit increased tnfa expression and have increased susceptibility and mortality to sepsis [ , ] . in patients with ards, the - a allele is also associated with increased -day mortality, with the strongest association found among younger individuals [ ] . however, in ards patients with direct or indirect pulmonary injury, these snps are associated with alterations in ali susceptibility (tnfa - g/a snp only in the direct pulmonary injury group, and tnfb ncoi only in the indirect pulmonary injury group). owing to the extent of linkage disequilibrium in the region, it remains unclear as to whether these are regulatory snps or if the tnf protein level is modulated by a third locus or a haplotype [ ] . promoter snps within the tnfa gene (- g/a, - c/t) have been associated with inflammatory bowel disease along with the - g/a snp [ ] . thus, the role of tnf variants in inflammatory disorders is apparent and indicates a need for further study of other tnf variants in association with ali. interleukin- (il- ) is an acute-phase response cytokine that plays a key role in the activation of b and t cells. inflammatory cytokines, including il- , are essential for the immune system homeostasis; however, when il- production is exaggerated as observed in inflammatory lung disorders including ali [ , ] , clearly detrimental outcomes are observed. ali-related increased levels of il- have been established in the bal fluid of critically ill patients with ards, sepsis, and trauma [ , ] in association with ali adverse outcome [ ] and development of multisystem organ failure [ ] . in prior reports, we observed significantly higher expression of il- and the il- receptor genes across multiple-species ali models and in human lung endothelium exposed to ventilator-induced mechanical stress as well as in differential region-specific expression in lungs of the canine ali model [ ] [ ] [ ] . on the basis of these data, the il- gene constitutes an excellent candidate gene to understand the genetic basis underlying ali. a functional polymorphism in the il- gene promoter region at the - position (g- c) has been associated with alterations in both gene expression and il- levels and lower circulating il- concentrations and lower mortality rates in patients with acute respiratory failure admitted to the icu [ ] . the contrasting correlation between g- c alleles and circulating il- levels has also been reported [ ] . the haplotype involving - g/c, c/g, and g/c is associated with higher mortality (and other secondary clinical outcomes) in a cohort of septic patients of european descent [ ] . we further evaluated il- gene tagging snps covering the entire gene for potential association in sepsis and ali patients of european descent [ ] . no single snp was identified as significantly associated with ali; however, a common haplotype (comprising - g/- g/- g/ a/ a/ c) with a frequency of % in cases and % in controls showed a significant association with ali susceptibility. in addition, homozygote carriers of the risk haplotype are twice as frequent in ali cases ( . %) than in controls ( . %), yielding a highly significantly increased odds ratio for developing ali (odds ratio . ; % confidence interval, . - . ; p = . ). this haplotype spans the entire il- gene including the g allele at position - , i.e. the risk allele for susceptibility to ali noted above. these data support the association of the il- gene with ali susceptibility and illustrate the value of haplotype analysis as a robust approach in association studies. vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) is an endothelialcell-specific mitogen that regulates angiogenesis, migration, and cell permeability [ ] . vegf plays an important role in several organs by directly regulating vascular permeability to water and proteins. lung overexpression of vegf induces increased pulmonary vascular permeability, resulting in marked pulmonary edema [ ] , and plasma vegf levels are significantly elevated in ali patients [ ] . several studies have reported the association of low levels of vegf with the severity of ards and elevated levels with the recovery from ards, indicating a role for vegf in the repair process of lung injury [ ] . several polymorphisms have been described in the vegf gene, primarily in association with cancer susceptibility and severity. the c/t snp at position of the ¢ untranslated region (utr) of the gene has been associated with higher vegf plasma levels in healthy subjects [ ] . recently, the c t snp in the vegf gene has been associated with ards susceptibility and severity (increased mortality) in subjects of european descent [ , ] . the haplotype tct at position c- t, c + g, and c + t was significantly associated with a higher rate of mortality in ards patients and higher plasma levels of vegf [ ] . these studies highlight the vegf gene as an attractive barrier-regulatory ali candidate gene and molecular target in ali therapeutic strategies. chemokine receptor (cxcr ) is an a-chemokine receptor specific for stromal-derived factor (sdf- ; also known as cxcl ) that plays an important role in cell migration, inflammation, b lymphocyte development, angiogenesis, and human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) infection (hiv coreceptor) [ ] [ ] [ ] . chemokine receptors are g-protein-coupled receptors, which trigger diverse signaling cascades including activation of g proteins and the phosphatidylinositol -kinase, janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription, rho-p rho kinase, and mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathways [ ] . the activation of these signaling pathways is often accompanied by the internalization of chemokine receptors and their trafficking back to the plasma membrane. this intracellular turnover determines the leukocyte responsiveness to chemokines [ ] . nonmuscle myosin ii a is a molecular motor that binds with the cytoplasmic tail of cxcr and ccr and participates in the sdf- -dependent endocytosis of cxcr via dynamic interaction with a-arrestin, a key component of the cxcr internalization pathway [ ] . the cxcr gene was identified as a novel candidate gene in ali as it survived two filtering strategies dedicated to identifying ali-susceptibility genes associated with elevated levels of mechanical stress as observed in mechanical ventilator-associated lung injury (vali). our orthologous gene approach determined ali-specific gene ontologies -coagulation, inflammation, chemotaxis/cell motility, and immune response [ ] -involving recognized genes likely to participate in ali pathogenesis [il- , aquaporin (aqp- ), plasminogen activator inhibitor type i (pai- )], as well as novel genes not previously known to be mechanistically involved in ali, including cxcr [ ] ( table ) . we subsequently utilized a consomic rodent approach with introgression of rat chromosomes , , , and , which contained the highest density of vali-responsive genes [ ] . introgression of the vali-sensitive brown norway (bn) rat chromosome , containing several genes, including cxcr- , into the vali-resistant dahl salt-sensitive (ss) rat resulted in conversion of the ss consomic rats to a valisensitive phenotype [ ] . surface expression of cxcr is downregulated by interleukin- , interleukin- , and granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and upregulated by interleukin- and transforming growth factor-b (tgfb) [ ] , suggesting that cxcr may also play a role in the fibrotic response to ali via tgfb signaling. polymorphisms in the cxcr gene have not yet been reported; however, a snp in the ¢ utr of the sdf- gene (g a), is associated with susceptibility to aids and type diabetes [ , ] . we are currently exploring cxcr as a potential ali-associated candidate gene as suggested by the density of pubmatrix citations relating cxcr to inflammation ( , published papers), endothelium ( published papers), ali ( published papers) and endothelial permeability (eleven published papers). pubmatrix is a web-based tool that allows simple text-based mining of the ncbi literature search service pubmed using any two lists of keywords terms, resulting in a frequency matrix of term co-occurrence. the advent of high-throughput gene sequencing and expression technologies, and complete genome sequencing of model organisms, now provides the tools to perform largescale analyses of the genome in complex disorders such as ali. whole genome scans, in silico approaches, utilization of consomic rats, and a candidate gene approach involving expression profiling and pathway analysis are proving exceptionally useful in identifying novel candidate genes and genetic variations (fig. ). high-throughput whole genome scanning technology has recently emerged as a powerful tool, particularly in detecting disease-susceptibility genes with modest effects. the haplotype mapping project [ ] , which identified blocks of snps associated with each other, has allowed selection of the most informative snps for further disease association studies [ ] . currently, the most commonly used high-throughput snp platforms involve assessment of over one million snps spanning the genome, i.e. genome-wide association studies (gwas). gwas platforms are effective and have been successfully used in diverse disorders such as agerelated macular degeneration [ ] , inflammatory bowel disease [ ] , type diabetes [ ] , and stroke [ ] . although this approach has yet to be employed in either sepsis or ali, the application of gwas to the disease is clearly imminent. another method to identify ali candidate genes is an orthologue gene in silico approach. the basis of this approach is the hypothesis that patients with ali and preclinical animal models of ali would exhibit commonality in expression of evolutionarily conserved genes across species. for example, profiling results from more than affymetrix microarray chips obtained from ventilator-associated ali models (human, rat, mouse, canine) identified , genes whose expression was altered across all four species in response to ventilator-associated high-throughput gene sequencing and expression technologies, and complete genome sequencing of model organisms, now provide the tools to perform large-scale analyses of the genome in complex disorders such as ali. genome-wide association study (gwas) platforms are effective and have been successfully used in diverse disorders, but although this approach has yet to be employed in either sepsis or ali, the application of gwas to the disease is clearly imminent. the differential gene expression between lung apex/base regions as well as between gravitationally dependent/nondependent regions of the lung base in a canine model of ventilator-associated lung injury (vali) identified aliimplicated lung genes in response to local mechanical stress within the lung. this approach identified the already established ali gene macrophage migration inhibitory factor and novel genes such as growth arrest dna damage inducible (gadd ) and pre-b cell colony enhancing factor (pbef). our multispecies orthologous gene approach in human (endothelial cells), rat, mouse, and canine models of vali exhibits expression of common ali-implicated evolutionarily conserved genes (orthologues) across the species. the genes with a unidirectional . -fold change (p > . ) are found to reside in high density on rat chromosomes and , the chromosomal loci used to develop the consomic rodent model. together, these approaches identified novel ali genes such as pbef, chemokine receptor (cxcr- ) gadd . interrogating the prospective pathways involved in endothelial permeability and correlation with these differentially expressed genes in vali models identified the most putative ali genes such as myosin light chain kinase (mylk), sphingosine -phosphate receptor , cmet, and vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) mechanical stress [ , ] . filtering these results for a unidirectional change in gene expression with greater than . fold change in expression refined the list to genes, reflecting specific ali-associated gene module/ontology categories: coagulation, inflammation, chemotaxis/cell motility, and immune response. this approach identified multiple genes already recognized as ali genes (such as il- , aqp- , and pai- ), but also identified several novel genes that were not previously known to be mechanistically involved in ali [ ] . complementing the in silico approach described above, a consomic rat approach can also be utilized to identify novel ali gene candidates. in an experimental study, two strains of inbred rodents were determined to have differing susceptibility to vali ( ml/kg, h): vali-sensitive bn rats and the valiresistant dahl ss rats. using microarray analysis and a bioinformatic-intense candidate gene approach, we identified differentially expressed potential vali genes with ontologies such as transcription, chemotaxis, and inflammation. because chromosomes , , , and were found to contain the highest number of vali-response genes, consomic ss rats containing substituted bn chromosome were exposed to vali mechanical stress, resulting in conversion of the resistant ss rat to vali sensitivity [ ] . extensive expression profiling across preclinical ali models can extend the identification of ali gene candidates to determination of allelic frequencies of gene polymorphisms (snps) that may confer ali risk or severity. this "candidate gene approach" has identified several candidates with hypothesized significant mechanistic roles in lung injury, inflammation, or repair in the setting of ali and vali [ ] . further, given the availability of sophisticated bioinformatic methods and increasing knowledge of the molecular and cellular mechanisms of lung injury, candidate genes can also be identified via analysis of cellular pathways involved in ali pathogenesis [ , ] . the application of the novel techniques described in the previous section is proving to be exceptionally useful in identifying novel candidate genes and genetic variations in the study of the pathobiology of ali. these novel gene and biomarkers are discussed in this section. myosin light chain kinase (mlck) is an enzyme that phosphorylates regulatory myosin light chains, which allows myosin cross-bridging interactions with f-actin. in endothelial cells, the contraction of the actomyosin complex generates a stronger centripetal force that overcomes the force keeping the adjacent endothelial cell tethered, leading to endothelial retraction, decreased intercellular adhesion, and increased vascular permeability [ , ] . this phenomenon is physiologically relevant as evidenced by nonmuscle mlck (nmmlck) isoform knockout mice [which retain the smooth muscle mlck (smmlck) isoform] that are less susceptible to lipopolysaccharide (lps)-and ventilator-induced ali [ , ] . further, treatment with a mlck inhibitor prior to lps exposure in the wild-type mice attenuates endothelial cell barrier dysfunction and inflammation [ ] . thus, the myosin light chain kinase gene (mylk), which encodes for mlck, is an excellent ali candidate gene. since initial cloning of the highly expressed nmmlck in endothelium in our laboratory [ ] , we have identified substantial roles of nmmlck in cytoskeleton rearrangement of endothelial cells regulating vascular barrier function [ , ] , angiogenesis, and leukocyte diapedesis [ ] , consistent with a potential mechanistic role for mlck in the genesis of ali. the human mylk gene is located on chromosome q and encodes three proteins, including nmmlck, smmlck, and telokin. we sequenced exons, exon-intron boundaries, and kb of the ¢ utr of mylk in healthy individuals, patients with sepsis alone, and patients with sepsis-associated ali, all of european and african-american descent [ ] , and identified snps (ten exonic, intronic, nine in the ¢ utr, and one in the noncoding exon ), of which were chosen for further linkage disequilibrium studies. five of the ten coding mylk snps confer an amino acid change (pro his, pro ser, val ala, ser pro, and arg gln) in mlck. subsequently, association analysis of both single snps and haplotypes demonstrated very strong associations in both ethnic groups [ ] . in european americans, the rs a/ mylk_ c haplotype was associated with more than a fivefold increase in the risk of developing ali and sepsis. in contrast, the haplotype mylk_ g/mylk_ g/ mylk_ t conferred specific risk for ali but not sepsis [ ] . the ¢ haplotype of the mylk gene also conferred alispecific risk in both european-and african-descent subjects; however, the ¢ region haplotype was associated with ali only in african-descent subjects. in african-americans, the haplotype hcv c/mylk_ a/rs g is substantially more prevalent in ali ( %) as compared with sepsis ( %). this cag haplotype is not found in european americans, suggesting a potential genetic contribution to the observed ethnicity-specific differences in ali/ards prevalence and susceptibility [ ] . we noted similar findings in association studies involving a cohort with trauma-induced ali [ ] . we have also evaluated the association of mylk genetic variants with severe asthma in both european american and african-american populations and identified a snp highly associated with severe asthma in african-americans [ ] consistent with data linking this chromosomal locus (mylk, q . ) to asthma and asthmarelated phenotypes [ ] . taken together, these data strongly implicate mylk genetic variants as risk variants in inflammatory lung disorders, such as ali and asthma. macrophage migration inhibitory factor (mif) is an ali candidate gene and recognized biomarker, initially discovered as a soluble product of activated t cells and named for its role in inhibiting random macrophage migration [ ] . mif is a proinflammatory cytokine which binds to cd and cd and is produced by many cell types, including monocytes/macrophages, pituitary cells, vascular endothelium, and respiratory epithelium [ , ] . mif may serve as a delicate regulator of the cytokine balance between immunity and inflammation as mif counterregulates the immunosuppressive effects of glucocorticoids [ ] . the role of mif as an endogenous prosurvival factor has been demonstrated in vitro. lps-mediated induction of flice-like inhibitory protein (flip) by mif confers resistance to lps-mediated endothelial cell death [ ] . suppression of mif by rna interference induces cell death and sensitivity to apoptotic stimuli [ ] . in addition, mif interacts with the multidimensional nmmlck [ ] isoform which regulates tnf-mediated apoptosis in addition to its potent effects on endothelial cell barrier dysfunction as discussed earlier [ , ] . together, these findings implicate the role of mif in regulation of nonmuscle cytoskeletal dynamics and vascular pathophysiology, which is evident from the enhanced mif levels in the serum, bal fluid, and alveolar endothelium of patients with ards as compared with other critically ill patients [ , , ] . we found significant increases in mif transcript and protein levels in murine and canine models of ventilator-induced lung injury (vili) (using high mechanical ventilation and endotoxin exposure, respectively) [ ] and in human lung endothelium cells exposed to h of cyclic stretch [ ] . mif deficiency or immunoneutralization appears to protect mice or rats from fatal endotoxic shock or other inflammatory diseases [ ] although these results are not without controversy [ ] and our own studies in - -week-old mice failed to demonstrate a vili/ali-related phenotype which was different from controls (data not shown). mif also upregulates the expression of aqp- , the water channels expressed in alveolar endothelial and epithelial cells, and a candidate gene we identified in models of vili-associated mechanical stress [ ] . mif may serve to modulate fluid movement into alveolar spaces, a cardinal feature of ali [ ] . to extend the likelihood that mif serves as a putative candidate gene in ali and sepsis, we studied the association of eight mif polymorphisms, including the most studied mif promoter g/c snp at position - , in a sepsis-induced ali cohort (n = ) of african-and european-descent cases [ ] . no individual snp showed a significant association with either ali or sepsis; however, the carriers of the cc genotype (rs ) and the carriers of the tt genotype (rs ) showed more than twofold increased risk of developing sepsis and ali, respectively. this association was lost, however, after age and gender adjustment in a logistic regression model. in contrast, mif haplotypes at the ¢ region of the gene display strong association with ali and sepsis, conferring both protection as well as susceptibility to ali, in european and african populations [ ] . furthermore, the haplotype at the ¢ promoter region of the gene involving a short tandem repeat at position - (catt) and the - g allele show significant association with both ali and trauma [ ] ; however, no association was found between promoter region haplotypes and mif levels. rheumatoid arthritis patients with the - c allele have higher levels of mif in the serum and synovial fluid than the carriers of the g allele and have a higher probability of developing idiopathic arthritis [ ] . thus, given these diverse mif functions, mif remains an attractive target in inflammatory diseases including the lung. the bioactive sphingolipid metabolite sphingosine -phosphate (s p) is an important lipid mediator that enhances endothelilal cell barrier function in vivo and in vitro by ligating s p receptor (s p ), which is encoded by an endothelial differentiation gene (edg or s p ) [ , ] . s p is a pertussis-toxin-sensitive, g i -coupled receptor which induces rac gtpase-dependent substantial increases in cortical actin polymerization critical to endothelial cell barrier enhancement [ , ] . s p activation enhances the organization and redistribution of vascular endothelial cadherin and b-catenin in junctional complexes in endothelium by phosphorylation of cadherin as well as p catenin and inducing the formation of cadherin/catenin/actin complexes [ ] . understanding the role of s p in enhancing endothelial cell barrier function underscores its importance as a therapeutic target in reversing loss of endothelial cell barrier integrity. in vivo administration of selective s p competitive antagonists induces a dose-dependent disruption of barrier integrity in pulmonary endothelium [ , ] , whereas s p agonists, sew and fty , promote vascular endothelial barrier function [ ] [ ] [ ] . a compelling argument for s p as an attractive ali candidate gene is not only its ability to transduce signals which restore barrier integrity but also that s p is the target for transactivation by receptors for other potent barrier-protective agonists. these include epcr (receptor for activated protein c) [ ] , c-met [receptor for hepatocyte growth factor (hgf)] [ ] , cd (receptor for high molecular weight hyaluronan) [ ] , and the atp receptor [ ] . we recently resequenced the s p gene ( african-americans and european americans) to search for common variations in the edg gene and identified snps in the edg gene, with several promoter snps associated with asthma, another inflammatory lung syndrome [ ] . receptor) the role of hgf and its tyrosine kinase receptor c-met has been investigated in lung development, inflammation, and repair [ ] as well as in neoplastic processes such as cellular transformation, neoplastic invasion, and metastasis [ , ] . snps causing underexpression of c-met have been associated with autism and c-met snps/mutations appear to be linked to lung cancer disparities in different ethnic groups. these include an n s mutation in the hgfbinding domain of c-met, an r c snp/mutation in the juxtamembrane domain, and an activating m t mutation in the tyrosine kinase domain (exon ), all linked to development of solid tumors such as lung cancer, renal cancer, gastric cancer, and hepatocellular carcinoma [ ] . hgf influences morphogenesis in epithelial cells from a variety of organs, including lungs, where hgf antisense oligonucleotides block alveolar and branching morphogenesis [ ] . hgf expression and activity increase after - h of lung injury with intratracheally administered hydrochloric acid, suggesting that hgf plays a role in reparative responses to lung injury [ ] . c-met expression on type ii pneumocytes is likely involved in increased type ii pneumocyte proliferation and restoration of an intact alveolar epithelium [ ] . c-met is composed of a -kda extracellular a subunit and a -kda transmembrane b subunit [ ] which contains tyrosine kinase domains, tyrosine phosphorylation sites, and tyrosine docking sites [ ] . we demonstrated that hgf-mediated c-met phosphorylation and c-met recruitment to caveolin-enriched microdomains (cems) protects against the lps-induced pulmonary vascular hyperpermeability that is regulated by high molecular weight hyaluronan (cd ligand) [ ] . our novel findings indicate that hgf/c-met-mediated, cd -regulated cem signaling promotes tiam (a rac exchange factor)/dynamin dependent rac activation, and peripheral recruitment of cortactin (an actin cytoskeletal regulator), processes essential for endothelial cell barrier integrity. understanding the mechanism(s) by which hgf/c-met promotes increased endothelial cell barrier function may lead to novel treatments for diseases involving vascular barrier disruption, including inflammation, tumor angiogenesis, atherosclerosis, and ali. however, on the contrary, the higher mortality rate in ali patients with increased levels of hgf in bal fluids [ ] and in pulmonary edematous fluids [ ] indicates severer injury and inflammation in response to increased hgf levels. it has now become increasingly clear that hgf plays an important role in normal and injured lung and may have a therapeutic potential in lung diseases. pre-b cell colony enhancing factor (pbef), was first identified by samal and colleagues in as a protein secreted by activated lymphocytes in bone marrow stromal cells that stimulate early stage b cell formation in conjugation with stem cell factor and interleukin- . a large body of work has now highlighted the power of a systems biology approach in the search for novel disease-susceptibility genes and potentially novel biomarkers, with pbef serving as an excellent example of this approach (fig. ) . we first identified marked upregulation of pbef via microarray analyses of murine and canine models of vili/ali with increased gene/ protein expression in bal fluid and serum samples from critically ill icu patients with ali and sepsis [ ] . with only a total of eight papers in pubmed at that time, we next directly sequenced the pbef gene in subjects with ali, sepsis, and healthy controls and conducted a pbef snp-based association study in ali subjects of european and african-american descent [ ] . we identified snps in the pbef gene with two promoter snps, t- g and c- t, associated with ali and sepsis. genotyping of pbef c- t and t- g snps revealed significant associations of sepsis and ali, with the strongest association found with the - c/- g haplotype. univariate analysis found carriers of the g allele (t g) to have . -fold higher risk of developing ali as compared with controls (p = . ) [ ] . these results were subsequently confirmed in a comparable but distinct replicate ali population [ ] . interestingly, the - g/- c haplotype was also associated with increased icu parient mortality, whereas the - t/- t haplotype was associated with fewer ventilator days and decreased icu patient mortality [ ] . a key challenge in genomic explorations is the ability to confirm the contribution of a snp to a dysfunctional-geneinvolved disease process. additional reports have highlighted the capacity for the pbef gene to have an influence far beyond any b-cell regulatory function, with a key role in regulating vascular permeability [ ] as well as inhibiting neutrophil apoptosis [ ] . to further explore mechanistic participation of pbef in ali and vili, we focused on the contribution of pbef to endothelial function. our prior immunohistochemical staining of canine-injured lung tissues localized pbef expression to vascular endothelial cells, in addition to infiltrating neutrophils and type alveolar epithelial cells [ ] . our in vitro studies showed that expression of pbef in pulmonary artery endothelial cells increases thrombin-mediated vascular permeability [ ] , suggesting that enhanced pbef expression may mediate the early increase in vascular permeability that is characteristic of ali. neutrophils harvested from the circulation of septic and ali patients show marked inhibition of the apoptotic process in association with evidence of enhanced respiratory burst capacity [ , ] , with both activities largely restored with administration of pbef antisense oligonucleotides. our initial in vitro studies further demonstrated recombinant human pbef (rhpbef) as a direct rat neutrophil chemotactic factor, with in vivo studies demonstrating marked increases in bal fluid leukocytes (polymorphonuclear leukocytes, pmns) following intratracheal injection in c bl/ j mice [ ] . these changes were accompanied by increased bal fluid levels of pmn chemoattractants (kc and mip ) and modest increases in lung vascular and alveolar permeability. we also noted synergism between rhpbef challenge and a model of limited vili and observed dramatic increases in bal fluid pmns, bal protein, and cytokine levels (il- , tnfa, kc) compared with either challenge alone. gene expression profiling identified induction of ali-and vili-associated gene modules (nf-kb, leukocyte extravasation, apoptosis, toll-receptor pathways). heterozygous pbef +/− mice were significantly protected (reduced bal fluid protein levels, bal fluid il- levels, peak inspiratory pressures) when exposed to a model of severe vili ( h, ml/kg tidal volume) and exhibited significantly reduced gene expression of vili-associated modules. finally, strategies to reduce pbef availability (neutralizing antibody) resulted in significant protection from vili [ ] . pbef is now recognized as associated with modestly increased risk of type diabetes and elevated levels of acute-phase proteins [ ] and a c- g snp has been associated with an increased diastolic blood pressure in obese children [ ] . these studies implicate pbef, now associated with a number of inflammatory disorders such as inflammatory bowel disease, multiple sclerosis, cystic fibrosis, and asthma [ ] [ ] [ ] , as a key inflammatory mediator intimately involved in both the development and the severity of ventilator-induced ali. growth arrest dna damage inducible a (gadd a), a member of an evolutionarily conserved gene family, is implicated as a stress sensor that modulates the response of mammalian cells to genotoxic or physiological stress [ , ] . gadd a is a small -kda predominantly nuclear protein that interacts with other proteins implicated in stress responses, including proliferating cell nuclear antigen, p , cdc /cyclin b , mekk , and p kinase [ , ] . gadd induces cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in most of cells as well as promoting dna repair functions and survival [ ] . growth arrest and dna damage gene (gadd ) also maintains genomic stability in a p -responsive manner [ ] . despite the multiple known functions of gadd , its role ali, endothelial/epithelial barrier dysfunction, or repair of injured lung is unknown [ ] . gadd exhibited differential expression in orthologous global gene expression profiling, in multispecies ali models [ ] , in region-specific lung tissue expression profiling [ ] , and was markedly upregulated in response to the vili [ ] . we explored the mechanistic involvement of gadd a in endotoxin (lps)and ventilator-induced inflammatory lung injury (vili) by comparing multiple biochemical and genomic parameters of inflammatory lung injury in wild-type c bl/ and gadd a −/− knockout mice exposed to high tidal volume ventilation (vili) or intratracheally administered lps [ ] . gadd a −/− mice were modestly susceptible to lpsinduced injury but were profoundly susceptible to vili, demonstrating increased inflammation and increased microvascular permeability. vili-exposed gadd a −/− mice manifested striking neutrophilic alveolitis with increased bal fluid levels of protein, igg, and inflammatory cytokines. expression profiling of lung homogenates revealed strong dysregulation in the b cell receptor signaling pathway in gadd a −/− mice, suggesting the involvement of phosphatidylinositol -kinase/akt signaling components. western blots confirmed a threefold reduction in akt protein and phosphorylated akt levels observed in gadd a −/− lungs. electrical resistance measurements across human lung endothelial cell monolayers transfected with small interfering rnas to reduce gadd a or akt expression revealed significant potentiation of lps-induced endothelial barrier dysfunction which was attenuated by overexpression of a constitutively active akt transgene. whereas other lung injury studies failed to demonstrate a role for gadd in hyperoxic lung injury [ , ] , our studies validate gadd a as a novel inflammatory lung injury candidate gene and a significant participant in vascular barrier regulation via effects on akt-mediated endothelial signaling [ ] . thus, both akt and gadd are extremely attractive ali candidate genes. the human gadd a gene contains validated snps (national center for biotechnology information snp database) whose role in ali pathogenesis is completely unknown [ ] . we are currently pursuing further characterization of the role of gadd a and its association of genetic variants with sepsis and ali. the identification of novel pathways involved in the pathobiology of ali also opens doors for the exploration of new therapeutic targets for the disease. as such, the use of agents that attenuate the endothelial barrier dysfunction and the inflammatory response characteristic of ali have shown promise in preclinical studies which will hopefully lead to their use in trials of human ali (fig. ). s p, an important lipid mediator generated by the phosphorylation of sphingosine by sphingosine kinase, decreases endothelial permeability to both water and solute via cytoskeletal reorganization and adherens junction assembly [ , ] . s p-induced barrier protective effects could serve to attenuate the increased pulmonary vascular permeability essential factor in the development of ali. the s p analogue fty ( . mg/kg),when administered to c bl/ mice with endotoxin-induced lung injury, decreases lung edema formation, solute transport across the alveolar capillary endothelium, and inflammatory cell infiltration into lung parenchyma [ ] . similarly, the prophylactic administration of s p attenuates both alveolar and vascular barrier dysfunction while significantly reducing shunt formation associated with lung injury in rodent and canine models of ali induced by combined intrabronchial endotoxin administration and hightidal-volume mechanical ventilation [ ] . in a recent study of a canine model of ali, we demonstrated that when bacterial endotoxin was instilled intratracheally followed in h by intravenous administration of s p ( mg/kg) or vehicle and h of high-tidal-volume mechanical ventilation [ ] , s p treatment attenuated the severity of ali-induced increases in shunt fraction and the presence of both protein and neutrophils in bal fluid compared with vehicle controls. interestingly, bal fluid cytokine production was not altered fig. mechanism-based novel therapies for ali. the identification of novel pathways involved in the pathobiology of ali also facilitates the exploration of new therapeutic targets. sphingosine -phosphate (s p ) attenuates the endothelial barrier dysfunction associated with ali, whereas blocking of pbef attenuates vali significantly by intravenous administration of s p and s p potentiated the endotoxin-induced systemic production of the inflammatory cytokines tnfa, c-x-c chemokine ligand- , and il- , without resulting in end-organ dysfunction. these data suggest that s p may represent a viable therapy for the prevention and treatment of ali. as previously described in this chapter, pbef appears to play a central role in the promotion of several pathogenetic aspects of ali and vali. therefore, interventions aimed at attenuating the effects of pbef could have a potential therapeutic effect in these disorders. to begin to address the potential for pbef to serve as a therapeutic target in ameliorating vili, we assessed the effect of pbef neutralizing antibody on rhpbef-stimulated lung inflammation [ ] . simultaneous instillation of rhpbef and pbef neutralizing antibody produced dramatic reductions in rhpbef-induced neutrophil recruitment. further, the intratracheal delivery of pbef neutralizing antibody ( min before high-tidal-volume mechanical ventilation) abolished vili-induced increases in total bal fluid cell counts and significantly decreased neutrophil influx into the alveolar space as well as vili-mediated increases in the level of lung tissue albumin. ali is a major cause of morbidity and mortality in critically ill patients. given the unacceptably high mortality rate observed in ali and the paucity of novel therapies and biomarkers, it is essential to recognize molecular targets associated with ali to identify individuals at risk and to develop novel therapeutic targets and biomarkers. it is clear that derangements in endothelial cell barrier regulation play a major role in the pathobiology of ali and genetic variants regulate endothelial cell barrier function, thereby determining ali risk or subsequent severity of outcome. high-throughput gene sequencing and expression technologies, and complete genome sequencing of model organisms, have allowed for the performance of large-scale analyses of the genome in ali. in this chapter, we have highlighted how global gene expression profiling in multispecies ali models served to broaden our net knowledge of ali-implicated genes and provide a basis for hope that increased insights and therapies may be forthcoming. as genotyping becomes more rapid and easily accessed, combining advanced bioinformatics techniques with high-throughput methods will be the future practice of personalizing treatment strategies. continued challenges will be the gene-gene and gene-environment interactions, which add complexity to our understanding of the genome. these novel genetic approaches may prove exceptionally useful in ushering in the era of personalized medicine for critically ill individuals. the acute respiratory distress syndrome genomics of acute lung injury clinical predictors of the adult respiratory distress syndrome race and gender differences in acute respiratory distress syndrome deaths in the united states: an analysis of multiple-cause mortality data ( - ) ozone-induced acute pulmonary injury in inbred mouse strains making genomics functional: deciphering the genetics of acute lung injury wading into the genomic pool to unravel acute lung injury genetics susceptibility to neoplastic and non-neoplastic pulmonary diseases in mice: genetic similarities fate of angiotensin i in the circulation angiotensin ii induces apoptosis of human endothelial cells. protective effect of nitric oxide haemodynamic and endocrine effects of type angiotensin ii receptor blockade in patients with hypoxaemic cor pulmonale angiotensin converting enzyme insertion/deletion polymorphism is associated with susceptibility and outcome in acute respiratory distress syndrome angiotensin ii, via at and at receptors and nf-kb pathway, regulates the inflammatory response in unilateral ureteral obstruction inflammation and angiotensin ii angiotensin ii and the fibroproliferative response to acute lung injury angiotensin ii induces apoptosis in human and rat alveolar epithelial cells abrogation of bleomycin-induced epithelial apoptosis and lung fibrosis by captopril or by a caspase inhibitor angiotensin-converting enzyme protects from severe acute lung failure an insertion/deletion polymorphism in the angiotensin i-converting enzyme gene accounting for half the variance of serum enzyme levels evidence, from combined segregation and linkage analysis, that a variant of the angiotensin i-converting enzyme (ace) gene controls plasma ace levels alhenc-gelas f ( ) angiotensin i-converting enzyme in human circulating mononuclear cells: genetic polymorphism of expression in t-lymphocytes genetic polymorphisms associated with susceptibility and outcome in ards polymorphism of the angiotensin-converting enzyme gene affects the outcome of acute respiratory distress syndrome differences in frequency of the deletion polymorphism of the angiotensinconverting enzyme gene in different ethnic groups angiotensin-converting enzyme gene (ace) insertion/deletion polymorphism in mexican populations elevated plasma levels of soluble tnf receptors are associated with morbidity and mortality in patients with acute lung injury high berylliumstimulated tnf-a is associated with the - tnf-a promoter polymorphism and with clinical severity in chronic beryllium disease tumor necrosis factor gene polymorphism and septic shock in surgical infection ga and tnfb polymorphisms in acute respiratory distress syndrome influence of tnfa gene polymorphisms on tnfa production and disease single nucleotide polymorphism in the tumor necrosis factor-alpha gene affects inflammatory bowel diseases risk il gene-wide haplotype is associated with susceptibility to acute lung injury cytokine balance in the lungs of patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome a prospective study of inflammation markers in patients at risk of indirect acute lung injury persistent elevation of inflammatory cytokines predicts a poor outcome in ards. plasma il- beta and il- levels are consistent and efficient predictors of outcome over time pressure-time curve predicts minimally injurious ventilatory strategy in an isolated rat lung model science review: searching for gene candidates in acute lung injury orthologous gene-expression profiling in multispecies models: search for candidate genes use of consomic rats for genomic insights into ventilator-associated lung injury the association of interleukin haplotype clades with mortality in critically ill adults vascular endothelial growth factor and related molecules in acute lung injury lung overexpression of the vascular endothelial growth factor gene induces pulmonary edema vascular endothelial growth factor may contribute to increased vascular permeability in acute respiratory distress syndrome decreased vegf concentration in lung tissue and vascular injury during ards a common c/t mutation in the gene for vascular endothelial growth factor is associated with vascular endothelial growth factor plasma levels vascular endothelial growth factor gene polymorphism and acute respiratory distress syndrome genotypes and haplotypes of the vegf gene are associated with higher mortality and lower vegf plasma levels in patients with ards chemokine receptors as hiv- coreceptors: roles in viral entry, tropism, and disease involvement of chemokine receptors in breast cancer metastasis myosin iia is involved in the endocytosis of cxcr induced by sdf- a the a-chemokine, stromal cell-derived factor- a, binds to the transmembrane g-protein-coupled cxcr- receptor and activates multiple signal transduction pathways rab -family interacting protein and myosin vb are required for cxcr recycling and receptor-mediated chemotaxis role of tyrosine phosphorylation in ligand-independent sequestration of cxcr in human primary monocytes-macrophages a common stromal cell-derived factor- chemokine gene variant is associated with the early onset of type diabetes genetic restriction of aids pathogenesis by an sdf- chemokine gene variant. alive study, hemophilia growth and development study (hgds) high-resolution haplotype structure in the human genome complement factor h polymorphism in age-related macular degeneration a genome-wide association study identifies il r as an inflammatory bowel disease gene a genome-wide association study identifies novel risk loci for type diabetes genomewide association studies of stroke microarray analysis of regional cellular responses to local mechanical stress in acute lung injury novel interaction of cortactin with endothelial cell myosin light chain kinase cytoskeletal regulation of pulmonary vascular permeability activated protein c mediates novel lung endothelial barrier enhancement: role of sphingosine -phosphate receptor transactivation novel polymorphisms in the myosin light chain kinase gene confer risk for acute lung injury transactivation of sphingosine -phosphate receptors is essential for vascular barrier regulation. novel role for hyaluronan and cd receptor family regulation of endothelial cell gap formation and barrier dysfunction: role of myosin light chain phosphorylation regulation of endothelial cell gap formation and paracellular permeability protein kinase involved in lung injury susceptibility: evidence from enzyme isoform genetic knockout and in vivo inhibitor treatment critical role of non-muscle mlck in ventilator-induced lung injury myosin light chain kinase in endothelium: molecular cloning and regulation adherent neutrophils activate endothelial myosin light chain kinase: role in transendothelial migration variation in the mylk gene is associated with development of acute lung injury after major trauma a variant of the myosin light chain kinase gene is associated with severe asthma in african americans macrophage migration inhibitory factor: a regulator of glucocorticoid activity with a critical role in inflammatory disease macrophage migration inhibitory factor role for macrophage migration inhibitory factor in acute respiratory distress syndrome mif as a glucocorticoid-induced modulator of cytokine production macrophage migration inhibitory factor governs endothelial cell sensitivity to lps-induced apoptosis intracellular interaction of myosin light chain kinase with macrophage migration inhibition factor (mif) in endothelium macrophage migration inhibitory factor in acute lung injury: expression, biomarker, and associations role of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (mif) in human and animal models of acute lung injury (ali) and sepsis: association of a promoter polymorphism and increased gene expression a novel dna vaccine-targeting macrophage migration inhibitory factor improves the survival of mice with sepsis role of macrophage migration inhibitory factor (mif) in allergic and endotoxininduced airway inflammation in mice aquaporin- : a candidate gene in sepsis and lung injury a novel ¢-flanking region polymorphism of macrophage migration inhibitory factor is associated with systemic-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis sphingosine -phosphate promotes endothelial cell barrier integrity by edg-dependent cytoskeletal rearrangement regulation of sphingosine -phosphate-induced endothelial cytoskeletal rearrangement and barrier enhancement by s p receptor, pi kinase, tiam /rac , and alpha-actinin regulation of the micromechanical properties of pulmonary endothelium by s p and thrombin: role of cortactin protective effects of high-molecular weight polyethylene glycol (peg) in human lung endothelial cell barrier regulation: role of actin cytoskeletal rearrangement synthesis and biological evaluation of g-aminophosphonates as potent, subtypeselective sphingosine -phosphate receptor agonists and antagonists enhancement of capillary leakage and restoration of lymphocyte egress by a chiral s p antagonist in vivo protective effects of sphingosine -phosphate in murine endotoxin-induced inflammatory lung injury tipping the gatekeeper: s p regulation of endothelial barrier function effect of s p receptor agonists on murine lung airway function differential regulation of sphingosine- -phosphate-and vegf-induced endothelial cell chemotaxis. involvement of g ia -linked rho kinase activity endothelial cell barrier enhancement by atp is mediated by the small gtpase rac and cortactin sphingosine- -phosphate receptor variant increases promoter activity and decreases susceptibility to human asthma hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor induces a variety of tissue-specific morphogenic programs in epithelial cells the biological role of hgf-met axis in tumor growth and development of metastasis ) c-met mutational analysis in small cell lung cancer: novel juxtamembrane domain mutations regulating cytoskeletal functions involvement of hepatocyte growth factor in formation of bronchoalveolar structures in embryonic rat lung in primary culture hepatocyte growth factor may act as a pulmotrophic factor on lung regeneration after acute lung injury intratracheal administration of hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor stimulates rat alveolar type ii cell proliferation in vivo met receptor dynamics and signalling c-met signalling: spatio-temporal decisions cd regulates hepatocyte growth factor-mediated vascular integrity. role of c-met, tiam /rac , dynamin , and cortactin keratinocyte growth factor and hepatocyte growth factor in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid in acute respiratory distress syndrome patients hepatocyte growth factor and keratinocyte growth factor in the pulmonary edema fluid of patients with acute lung injury. biologic and clinical significance pre-b-cell colonyenhancing factor as a potential novel biomarker in acute lung injury pre-b-cell colony-enhancing factor gene polymorphisms and risk of acute respiratory distress syndrome pre-b-cell-colonyenhancing factor is critically involved in thrombin-induced lung endothelial cell barrier dysregulation pre-b cell colony-enhancing factor inhibits neutrophil apoptosis in experimental inflammation and clinical sepsis dysregulated expression of neutrophil apoptosis in the systemic inflammatory response syndrome delayed neutrophil apoptosis in sepsis is associated with maintenance of mitochondrial transmembrane potential and reduced caspase- activity essential role of pre-b-cell colony enhancing factor in ventilator-induced lung injury a visfatin promoter polymorphism is associated with low-grade inflammation and type diabetes effects of genetic variation in the visfatin gene (pbef ) on obesity, glucose metabolism, and blood pressure in children genome-wide search for atopy susceptibility genes in dutch families with asthma two stage genome-wide search in inflammatory bowel disease provides evidence for susceptibility loci on chromosomes , and chromosome q - and multiple sclerosis: evidence for a genetic susceptibility effect in vicinity to the protachykinin- gene egad, more forms of gene regulation: the gadd a story gadd in the response of hematopoietic cells to genotoxic stress liebermann da genotoxic-stress-response genes and growth-arrest genes gadd, myd, and other genes induced by treatments eliciting growth arrest myeloid differentiation (myd)/growth arrest dna damage (gadd) genes in tumor suppression, immunity and inflammation genomic instability in gadd a −/− cells is coupled with s-phase checkpoint defects inhaled carbon monoxide confers antiinflammatory effects against ventilatorinduced lung injury gadd a is a novel candidate gene in inflammatory lung injury via influences on akt signaling -independent induction of gadd and gadd in mouse lungs exposed to hyperoxia loss of gadd a does not modify the pulmonary response to oxidative stress modulation of lipopolysaccharide-induced gene transcription and promotion of lung injury by mechanical ventilation sphingosine -phosphate reduces vascular leak in murine and canine models of acute lung injury sphingosine -phosphate rescues canine lps-induced acute lung injury and alters systemic inflammatory cytokine production in vivo key: cord- -kb fnbgy authors: nan title: oral presentations date: - - journal: clin microbiol infect doi: . /j. - . . .x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: kb fnbgy nan [ primary immunodeficiency diseases are a heterogeneous group of disorders, caused by inherited defects in the immune system, and characterised by wide spectrum of clinical manifestations, particularly an increased susceptibility to infections and a predisposition to autoimmune diseases and malignancies. recurrent infections or infection with unusual organisms are the most commonly presentation of primary immunodeficiency diseases. although recurrent respiratory tract infections and gastrointestinal manifestations are the most common features of these diseases, especially in predominantly antibody deficiencies and combined immunodeficiencies, other organs can be involved as well. recurrent cutaneous abscesses with unusual organisms or deep abscesses may represent infections with an association with immunodeficiencies, particularly in phagocytes defects. meningococcal infections could have an association with complement deficiencies. meanwhile other bacterial infections, mainly streptococcus pneumoniae and staphylococcus aureus, as well as infections with viruses, fungi and parasites are also common in several primary immunodeficiency diseases. autoimmune diseases such as idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, autoimmune haemolytic anaemia, systemic lupus erythematosus, juvenile arthritis, sclerosing cholangitis, and vasculitis are common in primary immunodeficiency diseases. whilst some syndromic immunodeficiencies (e.g., wiskott aldrich syndrome, di george syndrome) have a strong association with autoimmunity, there are a group of disorders (e.g., alps, apeced, ipex) that the autoimmune manifestations are typically the first and most significant findings. malignancies are also common in some primary immunodeficiency diseases (e.g., cvid, alps, xlp, and dna repair defects). other manifestations such as dysmorphic features, associated anomalies, skeletal dysplasia, and oculocutaneous hypopigmentation can be unique characteristics of some cases with primary immunodeficiency diseases. the clinical manifestations of these diseases are often helpful in guiding the appropriate evaluation of the patients. prompt and precise diagnostic laboratory evaluation should be performed in the patients with such features, whereas early diagnosis and successful management of these patients prevent irreparable organ system damage and improve the prognosis. immunodeficiency specialists from all over europe have composed a multistage diagnostic protocol that is based on their expert opinion, in order to increase the awareness of pid among doctors working in different fields. the protocol starts from the clinical presentation of the patient; immunological skills are not needed for its use. a list of relevant symptoms and signs from the history and physical examination that should alert any physician to potential pid is given. these are grouped together to form eight typical clinical presentations of pid: recurrent ent and airway infections; failure to thrive from early infancy; recurrent pyogenic infections; unusual infections or unusually severe course of infections; recurrent infections with the same type of pathogen; autoimmune or chronic inflammatory disease, or lymphoproliferation; characteristic combinations of clinical features in eponymous syndromes; and angioneurotic edema. these presentations lead the user towards different algorithms, which in fact represent the traditional division into antibody, complement, lymphocyte, and phagocyte deficiencies, respectively. the algorithms each are comprised of several steps. this multistage design allows cost-effective screening for pid within the large pool of potential cases in all hospitals in the early phases, while more expensive tests are reserved for definitive classification in collaboration with an immunologist at a later stage. g. schmid°(geneva, ch) in , articles suggesting that male circumcision (mc) decreased the risk of hiv infection appeared. over the next years, studies of two epidemiologic types − ecologic and observational − increasingly supported this contention. ecologic studies showed strong correlations between prevalences of mc and hiv, e.g., tribes with low prevalences of mc had high prevalences of hiv infection. observational cross-sectional studies showed that uncircumcised men had higher rates of hiv than circumcised men. observational cohort studies confirmed these weaker study design findings. a systematic review of observational studies in found a relative risk (rr) of . ( % ci, . − . ), a % protective effect. in and , results from three randomised controlled trials, all from sub-saharan africa, were reported. results were consistent, and the pooled rr of . ( % ci, . − . ) was identical to that of the observational studies. the protective effect in the three trials, found at about − months' follow-up, has been extended in one trial to a protective effect of % at months of follow-up. who and unaids have strongly endorsed mc as an effective hiv prevention strategy in generalised hiv epidemics where mc is uncommon. what about europe? mc is uncommon with an adult male prevalence of < %. hiv incidence is low enough that mc for hiv prevention purposes is unlikely to have much impact. no public health authority recommends routine neonatal circumcision. increasingly, however, data are showing benefits of mc in addition to hiv prevention. lessened risk of urinary tract infection in infants (rr . , % ci . − . ) and lifetime avoidance of phimosis and associated conditions occur when mc is performed neonatally. other benefits occur in males circumcised at any age. mc protects against acquiring sexually transmitted infections characterised by genital ulcers-syphilis, chancroid and herpes-and possibly trichomoniasis. circumcised men may be less likely to acquire hpv and are more likely to clear the infection. through the protective effect against hpv, mc halves risk of penile cancer (rr . , % ci . − . ) and partners of circumcised men are at lessened risk of cervical cancer. other issues must be considered in making public health decisions about mc. cultural objections may occur, but mc in the developing world is readily accepted in non-circumcising societies. studies of sexual pleasure and function have found no relationship to circumcision status. mc may be advised for subgroups, even if not for the entire population. and, surgical risk and cost must be considered. while many sub-saharan african countries are scaling up mc services to prevent hiv infection, public health agencies in many industrialised countries are reconsidering mc policies-the outcomes of both efforts are being followed with interest. acute otitis media (aom) is generally considered a bacterial infection that is treated with antibiotics. however, despite extensive use of broadspectrum antibiotics for this condition, the clinical response to the treatment is often poor. this fact, together with vast clinical experience connecting aom with viral respiratory infections, has prompted research into the role of viruses in aom. to date, ample evidence from studies ranging from animal experiments to large clinical trials supports a crucial role for respiratory viruses in the aetiology and pathogenesis of aom. in most cases, viral infection of the upper respiratory mucosa initiates the whole cascade of events that finally leads to the development of aom as a complication. the pathogenesis of aom involves a complex interplay between viruses, bacteria, and the host's inflammatory response. recent studies indicate that with sensitive techniques viruses can be found in the middle-ear fluid in most children with aom, either alone or together with bacteria. viruses appear to enhance the inflammatory process in the middle ear, and they may profoundly impair the resolution of otitis media. it is important to understand, however, that our increasing knowledge of the importance of viruses in the etiopathogenesis of aom does not diminish the central role of bacteria in aom. therefore, while viruses may explain many of the problems encountered in treating aom, the ultimate decision on whether or not to treat aom with antibiotics cannot be based solely on the degree of viral involvement in aom. the non-judicious use of antibiotics has lead to an epidemic in antimicrobial resistance. acute otitis media (aom) is the most common indication for use of antibiotics in children in the united states (us). despite available evidence that supports a wait and see approach, most us physicians immediately prescribe antibiotics for the treatment of aom. the american academy of pediatrics published a guideline in that addressed the diagnosis and treatment of aom. this guideline recommends the use of observation as a potential strategy for the treatment of aom. the key components of this published guideline will be discussed, as well as the evidence and rationale that supports the use of observation as an initial strategy to treat aom. otitis media (om) is the most common bacterial infection in children aged < years for which antibiotic treatment is prescribed worldwide. although most of the time this entity resolves spontaneously it is associated with morbidity, family dysfunction, antibiotic use and burden on the medical system. efforts to reduce the burden of om by vaccination have not been extremely rewarding, but some progress has been made. the first obvious step would be to reduce viral infections leading secondarily to om. in the modern era, the only viral vaccine with proven effect on aom is the influenza virus vaccine. both the inactivated and the live virus showed some effect, but since influenza virus has only a limited season yearly the effect on the overall om rate is far from being remarkable. haemophilus influenzae (hi) b vaccine did not reduce om since most hi causing om are nontypable (nthi) and not hib. the newly developed pneumococcal conjugate vaccines (pcvs) have all been shown to reduce > % of the om caused by the serotypes included in the vaccines, but some replacement with serotypes not included in the vaccines and non pneumococcal organisms was demonstrated to reduce the overall effect of pneumococcal vaccines. the effect of pcv on the reduction of recurrent om, om with effusion, the need for ventilation tubes and frequent visits for aom has been suggested, and the real impact is still being studied. aiming with pcv at those with established recurrent om has proved disappointing. pcvs can reduce om caused by antibiotic-resistant s. pneumoniae but the continued overuse of antibiotics is responsible for the increase in antibiotic resistance in non-vaccine serotypes. a newly developed pcv with an outer membrane protein for hi (pnpd) is suggested to reduce also om caused by hi, but confirmation studies are needed. the expansion of the serotypes included in the current licensed pcv to or more serotypes may add to the prevention of om in the near future. in the next decade, om will continue to be an important disease in children. however, we can expect it to be modified in terms of bacteriologic aetiologies, antibiotic resistance and hopefully short and long term consequences. v. korten°(istanbul, tr) infectious consequences of an earthquake mainly involve several types of communicable diseases and crush related infections. water-borne and food-borne illnesses often result from the disruption of the public water and sewage systems and contamination of water supply. overcrowding, poor hygiene and sanitation in temporary shelters also may be factors. the type of infectious diseases are associated with the epidemiology of communicable diseases in the area where the earthquake occurred. the most common outbreaks associated with earthquakes are gastroenteritis, infectious hepatitis and pulmonary infections. in unvaccinated populations, there are reports of increased measles. tetanus can be seen in populations where vaccination coverage levels are low. the risk for diarrhoeal disease outbreaks following earthquakes is higher in developing countries than in industrialised countries. an outbreak of acute watery diarrhoea involved > cases occurred in a camp after the earthquake in pakistan. acute respiratory infections, hepatitis e clusters and measles (> clinical cases in the months) also occurred among the displaced victims after the same earthquake. contamination of drinking water led to an outbreak of rotavirus after the earthquake in kashmir, india. an unusual outbreak of coccidiomycosis associated with exposure to increased levels of airborne dust occurred after the southern california earthquake. persons who have been trapped by rubble for several hours or days may develop compartment syndromes requiring fasciotomy or amputation. infectious complications were common in renal victims of the marmara earthquake in turkey and were associated with increased mortality when complicated by sepsis. of renal victims, ( . %) had infectious complications, mainly sepsis and wound infections. most of the infections were nosocomial in origin and caused by gram-negative aerobic bacteria and staphylococcus spp. multivariate analysis of the risk-factors for nosocomial infections revealed a significant association with fasciotomy and length of hospital stay in a back up university hospital. the most frequent pathogens isolated from pus and/or wounds culture in wenchuan earthquake survivors were s. aureus, e. coli, a. baumannii, e. cloacae, and p. aeruginosa. disaster-preparedness plans, focused on trauma and mass casualty management and also on health needs of the surviving affected populations may decrease the health impact of earthquakes. s infections in the disaster setting: famine. experience from darfour, sudan clinic malnutrition is a known risk factor for id worldwide. subsaharan africa and india is at higher risk due to vegetarian habits on absolute absence of animal meat proteins, resulting to depletion of micronutritients (zinc, iron, selenium), responsible for recovery of postmalarial anaemia. in addition, depletion of proteins results to immunoglobulinaemia and to delayed response to many bacterial pathogens causing id in topics (pneumococci, salmonella, etc.) . third problem is absence of vitamins dissolved in oil and fat, resulting to delayed phagocytic activity. therefore proteinocaloric malnutrition results to significant adverse outcome in hiv, tb (diarrhoea, pneumonia), the major killers of children under five. st. elizabeth university tropical programme runs antimalnutrition centres: in sudan, darfour and in kenya amaong upcountry refugees from major conflict areas (sudan − turrana border) and in uganda trying to rehabilitate malnourished children under and helping them to combat disease, responsible for . million deaths in children mean a year − malaria ( . mil), tb ( . mil), hiv ( . mil), pneumonia ( . mil) and diarrhoea ( . mil. children deaths approximately a year). h. giamarellou°(athens, gr) for the last six years greece has faced a large number of infections, mainly in the intensive care units (icu), due to carbapenemsresistant klebsiella pneumoniae. the proportion of imipenem-resistant k. pneumoniae has increased from less than % in , to % in isolates from hospital wards and to % in isolates from icus in . likewise, in , these strains were identified in only three hospitals, whereas now they are isolated in at least of the hospitals participating in the greek surveillance system. until this situation was due to the spread of the blavim- cassette among the rapidly evolving multiresistant plasmids and multiresistant or even panresistant strains of mainly k. pneumoniae and also other enterobacterial species. however, the fact that most strains display mic values below or near the clsi resistance breakpoint create diagnostic and therapeutic problems, and possibly obstruct the assessment of the real incidence of these strains. as of , the emergence of kpc-producing k. pneumoniae has been noted in icus of some greek hospitals and has now spread to most hospitals throughout the country creating a countywide outbreak in . in attikon university hospital we recently described the icu outbreak of kpc-producing k. pneumoniae. twenty-nine patients (admitted from february to december ) were colonised mainly in gi tract. fifteen patients were male ( %) and the median apache ii was . patients had already long hospital stays preceding icu admission with a median of ( − ) days. in twenty-two of these patients ( %) kpc-producing k. pneumoniae colonisation was definitely icuacquired while in ( %) acquisition in other wards or other hospitals was hypothesized. five of these patients are still hospitalised in the icu and, of the remaining , died (icu mortality %). ten of the colonised patients were clinically infected. fifteen infections were documented, mostly bsi ( / ), followed by vap ( / ) and ssi ( / ). only patient died from this infection ( / , . %). an evidence-based consensus on the therapeutic strategy for these infections has been reached by keelpno and the greek ministry of health which proposed the use of high dose meropenem ( − g/day) combined with an active aminoglycoside or colistin for strains with an mic mg/ml whereas for strains with a higher mic the use of carbapenems is contraindicated and active alternatives (monotherapy with tigecycline, colistin, or an aminoglycoside or aztreonam-based combinations) could be used. antibiotic stewardship is of great importance in such a dismal situation but stringent adherence to infection control measures is probably of even greater importance for the effective containment of these pandrugresistant strains. the presentation of clostridium difficile infection (cdi) varies from mild diarrhoea to a potentially fatal pseudomembranous colitis. the recent emergence of types and of c. difficile has been associated with increased virulence. c. difficile takes advantage of disruption of the normal intestinal flora as caused by antibiotic therapy. the antibiotical class and the antimicrobial resistance pattern of c. difficile influence the development of disease. in the netherlands, significantly more patients with cdi due to type used fluoroquinolones (or, . ; % ci, . − . ) compared with those who were infected with other pcr ribotypes. similar as type cdi, patients infected with type also more frequently received fluoroquinolones therapy (or, . ; . the risk to develop cdi due to type was particularly high in persons receiving a combination of cephalosporin and fluoroquinolone (or . , ). this association was also strongly dependent on the duration of therapy. the use of clindamycin was found as a protective factor. however, the recent detection of clindamycin-resistant c. difficile type strains in other european countries is an important and worrying development. since the association of cdi with fluoroquinolones has only been investigated at patient level, a study was performed to investigate the relationship between cdi incidence and the preceding use of different antibiotic classes at hospital level in the netherlands. comparisons were made between hospitals where type caused an epidemic, hospitals where only isolated cases of type were observed and hospitals where no outbreak of cdi or type were encountered. in the pre-epidemic period, the total use antibiotics was comparable between affected and unaffected hospitals. higher use of secondgeneration cephalosporins, macrolides and all other studied antibiotics were independently associated with a small increase in cdi incidence, but the effect was too small to predict which hospitals might be more prone to -associated outbreaks. despite the fact that the netherlands is known by its restrictive and conservative use of antibiotics, outbreaks of cdi due to new emerging types have been recognized. this is probably associated with the use of antibiotics at patient level and hospital department level rather than the use of antibiotics at the level of the healthcare institute. m. peiffer, j. bulitta, h.a. haeberle, m. kinzig-schippers, m. rodamer, v. jakob, b. nohé, f. sörgel, w.a. krueger°(trier, de; albany, us; tubingen, nuremberg, constance, de) piperacillin-tazobactam (pip-tazo) is a broad spectrum antibiotic, used for treatment of severe infections such as ventilator-associated pneumonia (vap). the effectiveness of betalactams is best predicted by the duration of free drug concentrations above the minimal inhibitory concentration (t > mic) of infecting pathogens [ ] . animal experiments suggest that more than % of t > mic should be reached. continuous infusion (ci) of pip-tazo may enhance the therapeutic performance, but there is little data on pharmacokinetic/-dynamic (pk/pd) parameters, when ci is used in critically ill patients. objectives: the aim of our study was to determine concentrations of pip-tazo in plasma and broncho-alveolar epithelial lining fluid (elf) at steady state during ci. based on these results, the penetration ratio (plasma/elf) and pk/pd parameters for pip-tazo are derived. methods: after approval by the ethics committee, mechanically ventilated critically ill patients were enrolled during treatment in intensive care units. each patient received a loading dose of g/ . g of pip-tazo, followed by ci of g/ . g over h. at steady state ( . + . h after loading dose), a total of blood samples were drawn and bronchoalveolar lavage (bal) was simultaneously performed in cases ( sample discarded for technical reasons). samples were stored at − ºc until analysis by liquid chromatography coupled with mass-spectrometry (lc-ms). elf-concentrations were calculated from bal-samples using the relation of ureaplasma:ureabal as dilution factor. results: plasma concentrations of pip and tazo (n = in pts.) amounted to . + . mg/ml, and . + . mg/ml, respectively. elflevels (n = ) were . + . mg/ml, and . + . mg/ml. elf-levels were + %, and + % of corresponding plasma levels (n = ) for pip and tazo, respectively. the ratio pip:tazo was . : in plasma, and . : in elf. conclusions: using advanced analytical techniques, elf concentrations were higher compared to traditional bolus administration [ ] . ci yielded steady state plasma concentrations in excess of mics of susceptible bacteria (< mg/ml, according to eucast) in . % of measurements, respectively, but elf levels exceeded mg/ml in all cases. taken together, our data provide further arguments for ci being the preferred mode of administration for pip-tazo in critically ill patients with suspected vap. [ objectives: staphylococcus aureus is a potential pathogenic microorganism and a causative agent of~ % of infections in intensive care patients. an optimal empiric choice for the treatment of these infections will result in a reduction in morbidity and mortality. therefore, it is essential to provide the clinician with resistance data of the bacterial population to be treated. to optimise the empiric choice and to monitor the emergence of microbial resistance, a national surveillance program of the swab was started in the netherlands in .this study describes the results of the resistance development of s. aureus from icu's of hospitals all over the netherlands over a ten year period. methods: in the first months of each year, the participating hospitals collected clinical isolates from among others blood and respiratory samples. in total isolates were collected: from hospitals in the north, from in the east, from five in the west and from four in the south. the antimicrobial susceptibility was determined as a micro broth dilution method according to the clsi guidelines. results: an increase in resistance to ciprofloxacin was observed from % until to % from in , which dropped again to % in . the resistance to moxifloxacin was rather constant over time, i.e. %, only in % resistance was found. resistance to clarithromycin increased to % in , but decreased in to % the level before . resistance to penicillin, clindamycin and tetracycline fluctuated over time at~ %, − % and − % respectively. during the study period seven methicillin resistant s. aureus were isolated, no resistance to vancomycin, teicoplanin and linezolid was observed. resistance to gentamicin and rifampicin was sporadicly found. regional differences were observed for ciprofloxacin, being the highest in the western and southern part and tetracycline being the lowest in the northern part. conclusion: during the year study period only an increase in resistance to ciprofloxacin was observed. the data presented justify the empiric choice of flucloxacillin, (with rifampicin or gentamicin depending on the indication) in case of an infection in icu patients probably caused by s. aureus. j.j. lu°, p.r. hsueh, s.y. lee (taichung, taipei, tw) objectives: to investigate the prevalence of visa in hospitalised patients with mrsa infections or colonisations at a teaching hospital in taiwan and to evaluate the possible clonal spread of visa in the hospital. methods: from september to august , consecutive mrsa isolates were collected from various clinical specimens of patients hospitalised at a teaching hospital in taiwan. minimum inhibitory concentrations (mics) of vancomycin for all mrsa isolates were determined by the broth microdilution method in accordance with clsi guidelines. molecular characteristics and antimicrobial susceptibilities of visa isolates were investigated and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis was used to evaluate the clonality of the isolates. results: among the mrsa isolates, ( . %) were visa. of the visa isolates, had vancomycin mics of microgram/ml and had vancomycin mics of microgram/ml. all isolates were inhibited by tigecycline at . microgram/ml, linezolid at microgram/ml, and ceftobiprole at microgram/ml. five ( . %) isolates had reduced susceptibility to daptomycin (mics of − microgram/ml). six of the visa isolates had decreased susceptibility to autolysis in . % triton x- . the visa isolates were recovered from patients; of these patients had received glycopeptide treatment prior to the isolation of visa. five ( . %) patients died despite vancomycin therapy. all visa isolates carried sccmec type iii and agr group i but were negative for pvl gene (luks-lukf). none of the enterococcal van genes were detected in the visa isolates. results of pfge analysis revealed that one major clone of visa isolates ( . %, clone a exhibiting sccmec type iii, agr group i, and absence of pvl gene) had disseminated in the hospital. conclusion: this retrospective study demonstrated that clonal dissemination of visa had occurred in the hospital. rapid and correct detection of visa and proper use of antibiotics are the most effective approaches for preventing its emergence and spread. x. zheng°, c. qi, a. o'leary, m. arrieta, s. shulman (chicago, us) objectives: vancomycin remains one of the major options for treating methicillin-resistant s. aureus (mrsa) related infections. some but not all studies have shown an increase in prevalence of mrsa isolates with elevated vancomycin mic values among recent clinical isolates, so called "mic creep". although still within the susceptible range, higher mics may be associated with increased chance of treatment failure. because of the conflicting reports and lack of published data from paediatric patients, we sought to assess possible mic change over time and to compare results generated by using different methodologies including etest, agar dilution, and broth microdilution (microscan) methods. methods: we studied mrsa isolates predominantly community acquired including all blood and normally sterile site isolates collected in our large children's hospital in / , , , and molecular bacteriology o genome sequence of a virulent, methicillin-sensitive staphylococcus aureus clinical isolate that encodes the panton-valentine leukocidin toxin l. faraj, l.a.s. snyder, n.j. loman, d.p. turner, m.j. pallen, d. ala'aldeen, r. james°(nottingham, birmingham, uk) objective: to determine the genome sequence of a virulent meticillinsensitive staphylococcus aureus (mssa) clinical isolate sanot . methods: roche sequencing determined the genome sequence of the clinical isolate at times coverage. newbler sequence assembly (roche) generated scaffolds that were annotated using gendb and compared with other s. aureus genome sequences. results: an -year-old asian girl presented with fever and a -week history of knee pain following a trivial fall. an mr scan revealed a large subperiosteal abscess around the upper tibia secondary to metaphyseal osteomyelitis. a pvl-positive, mssa was isolated from blood cultures and pus. the child deteriorated, required repeated debridement and developed septic shock. further investigation revealed aortic valve endocarditis with an aortic root abscess. whole genome sequencing revealed that sanot is the first sequence of an st s. aureus isolate to be determined. sanot is agr type iii and carries three coding regions that are not found in any other s. aureus genome sequences. amongst the unique genes present in these regions is a dihydrofolate reductase gene (dfrg) which is present in addition to the usual dfrb gene. downstream of the orfx gene, a . kb remnant of sccmec type ivc was found. this sequence has only previously been found in the mrsa genome sequence where it is located between the orfx and sccmec type ii sequences. mrsa is unique in sharing genome regions with s. aureus strain rf , a causative agent of contagious bovine mastitis. all but one of these genome regions are also present in sanot . conclusions: comparison of the genome sequence of sanot and the closely related mrsa ha-mrsa (emrsa- ) isolate reveals new insights in the evolution of both ca-mrsa and ha-mrsa isolates and the link to s. aureus rf . pvl-encoding mssa strains can be significant pathogens but are not currently under mandatory surveillance in uk. as the cost of whole genome sequencing falls further it will become feasible to use this technology to monitor the evolution of both mssa and mrsa in healthcare settings and reveal clinically relevant information that will help to improve patient outcomes. objectives: ca-mrsa often produce panton-valentine leukocidin (pvl), a leukocidin encoded by two co-transcribed genes located on lysogenised phages. five pvl-encoding phages have been described in s. aureus: phipvl, phi pvl, phislt, phisa mw and phisa . single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) in the pvl genes tend to vary with lineage and may have structural and functional implications. we examined a selection of pvl-positive ca-mrsa reported in our hospital to determine whether sequence variation and the pvl-encoding phage vary with lineage. methods: twenty-two pvl-positive isolates were chosen to reflect mlst clonal complexes identified in our hospital: cc , , , , , and . isolates were characterised by antimicrobial resistance profile, sccmec and spa type, pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (pfge) profile and multilocus sequence typing (mlst); an oligonuleotide array (clondiag arraytube) was used to detect a range of toxin and antimicrobial resistance genes. primers were designed to amplify and sequence the luksf-pv genes. the pvl-encoding phage was characterised using a recently described pcr-based assay (ma et al. j clin microbiol ; : − ) . results: snps were identified at seven positions in the luksf-pv genes and the snp profile varied with lineage. three of the snps were coding mutations, which may have structural and functional implications. cc and cc isolates were both found to carry phisa mw. the pvlencoding phage was not definitively identified in the other lineages, although the cc isolates carried a phisa -like phage and the cc , cc and cc isolates carried elongated head-type phages. one of the cc isolates had an unexpected snp pattern compared with other cc isolates; this isolate also carried a novel or variant phage. conclusion: pvl gene sequence and the pvl-encoding phage vary with lineage in pvl-positive ca-mrsa isolates. this suggests that certain lineages are susceptible to infection or lysogeny with certain phage types. although ca-mrsa commonly carry pvl genes, some strains do not; it is possible that some pvl-negative types are resistant to infection with pvl-encoding phage, perhaps via restriction modification systems. crucially, our findings suggest the pvl genes have co-evolved with their phage and are not freely transmitted between different phages. further work is required to characterise the pvl-encoding phage in other isolates and to investigate whether the pvl sequence variants result in biological differences. objectives: community-associated mrsa (ca-mrsa) of many different mlst clonal complexes (ccs) can harbour lysogenised bacteriophage dna (prophage) encoding panton-valentine leukocidin (pvl). five pvl phages (phipvl, phislt, phisa mw, phi pvl, and phisa ) have been reported to date. we sought to determine the distribution of chromosomally integrated copies of these lysogenised pvl-phages amongst dominant clones of pvl mrsa in england and wales. methods: seventy isolates of previously characterised pvl-mrsa were analysed by pcrs developed by ma et. al, (jcm, ) , to identify and discriminate between the five known pvl phages. to maximise any underlying diversity, representatives of each cc were selected based upon their spa, staphylococcal cassette chromosome mec (sccmec), toxin gene and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (pfge) profiles. these included isolates of internationally disseminated pvl-mrsa lineages ccs , and which resemble the usa , south west pacific (swp) and european clones, respectively. in addition we analysed pvl-mrsa from ccs , , , , and st . results: all seven cc isolates, which included representatives of the european clone, possessed an elongated-head-type phage and were positive by the pcr specific for the phisa mw phage. one of the cc isolates possessed a phi pvl phage, four swp representatives had elongated head type phages, whilst the remaining four cc isolates harboured an icosahedral-head-type phage. one cc was positive for both head shapes. the cc (including representatives of usa ), eight cc , six cc isolates and the st isolate were all positive for elongated-head-type phage. nine cc isolates were non-typeable for phage head shape and specific phage pcrs. three of four cc isolates, harboured a phisa -like phage of an unknown head type and the other cc isolate was non-typeable. all cc isolates possessed an icosahedral-head-type phage, were positive for the phipvl phage type and one possessed phi pvl type. we have determined the pvl phages present in a diverse panel of distinct pvl-mrsa clones and found considerable inter-lineage variation in the pvl prophage present. there was also evidence of intra lineage variation in some major ccs such as ccs , and . together with variation in mlst cc and sccmec, these data suggest pvl-mrsa have evolved on multiple occasions, sometimes within the same lineage. o transcriptional profiling of klebsiella pneumoniae genes controlled by the transcription factor, rama objectives: rama is an arac/xyls family transcriptional activator where over expression is associated with a multidrug resistance phenotype. in both multidrug resistant klebsiella and salmonella isolates, the rama gene has been associated with increase in expression of the acrab efflux pump. in salmonella it has been shown that a deletion of the rama locus prevents the emergence of multidrug resistant mutants. therefore in order to understand the role of this key regulator in the emergence and development of antibiotic resistance, transcriptomic analyses of its regulon were undertaken in k. pneumoniae. methods: rna was extracted from a combination of isogenic mutants and clinical isolates using the qiagen or ribopure kits. rna integrity was assessed using nanodrop and agilent nanochip systems. the rna was transcribed into double stranded cdna prior to labelling with cy . the cdna was hybridised to the nimblegen expression array platform designed from the k. pneumoniae mgh genome. results: approximately genes were found to be affected by rama expression, of which twenty (involved in metabolism, physiology, transcription, drug efflux, protection responses and the cell envelope) were confirmed by rt-pcr. the rama protein appears to affect drug efflux operons not previously shown to be associated with multidrug resistance and or affected by similar proteins such as mara. comparative transcriptome analyses of different k. pneumoniae clinical isolates overexpressing rama showed that variations exist in the levels of expression of the drug efflux genes. of note genes shown to be directly regulated by rama have a marbox-like sequence within the promoter sequences. conclusion: in this study, the transcriptome of the regulatory protein, rama, was determined in the pathogen k. pneumoniae. drug efflux proteins not previously associated with rama overexpression were found to be directly affected. the rama regulon overlaps with the mara and soxs regulons in e. coli and salmonella but is directly associated with regulating the expression of a subset of genes via a marbox sequence. interestingly, variations in the levels of the expression of the regulon genes were found in the different rama overexpressing strains. m. eshoo°, c. crowder, h. li, h. matthews, s. meng, s. sefers, r. sampath, c. stratton, d. ecker, y.w. tang (carlsbad, nashville, us) objectives: the potential for fatal outcome from tick-borne human infections such as ehrlichiosis emphasizes the need for rapid diagnosis. we developed and validated an ibis t assay (ibis biosciences, inc., carlsbad, ca) that can detect and identify a wide range of tick-borne pathogens from clinical samples. methods: a multi-locus assay was used that employs broadrange pcr primer pairs targeting all known bacterial tick-borne pathogen families. electrospray ionisation mass spectrometry of the pcr amplicons was used to determine their base composition. these base composition signatures were subsequently used to identify the organisms found in the samples. the assay was developed using field collected ticks and a wide range of clinical sample types and has been shown to be sensitive to the stochastic limits of pcr. results: whole blood ( ) , cerebrospinal fluid ( ) and plasma ( ) samples, which were originally submitted for ehrlichia species detection by a colorimetric microtiter plate pcr (pcr-eia), were collected consecutively from january to august , at vanderbilt university hospital. among the total specimens, pcr-eia detected ehrlichia species with a positive rate of . %. the ibis system detected ehrlichia in of the pcr-eia-positive samples and in of the pcr-eia-negative specimens, giving sensitivity and specificity of . % and . %, respectively. the ibis system further characterised the ehrlichia-dual positive specimens to the species level (e. cheffeensis, ; e. ewingii, ) with a % agreement to that identified by pcr-eia using additional species-specific probes. in addition we demonstrated the detection of borrelia burgdorferi from the blood and skin of a patient with lyme disease. conclusions: we demonstrate broad-range detection of tick-borne pathogens in a single assay using skin, whole blood, plasma, skin and csf. in addition to ehrlichia, the ibis system detected rickettsia rickettsii positive specimens, which were confirmed by serology and clinical findings. the ibis t system, which can be completed within five hours from specimen processing to result reporting, provides rapid and accurate detection and identification of a broad range of pathogens causing tick-borne human infections. r. sampath°, l. blyn, r. ranken, c. massire, t. hall, m. eshoo, r. lovari, h. matthews, d. toleno, r. housley, s. hofstadler, d. ecker (carlsbad, us) objective: to investigate the use of a novel platform-based approach for rapid characterisation of hai organisms. pathogens that cause healthcare-associated infections (hais) pose an ongoing and increasing challenge to hospitals, both in the clinical treatment and in the prevention of the cross-transmission of these problematic pathogens. here we describe the utility of a pcr electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (pcr/esi-ms) detection platform as an innovative, rapid approach for detection and complete characterisation of important hai pathogens. methods: we have developed pcr/esi-ms based methods to rapidly identify and characterise mrsa, vre, c. difficile (nap- strain), p. aeruginosa and a. baumannii. each target organism can be analyzed using an independent -well assay that can be run on the same platform and can provide species and strain id, virulence factors, antibiotic resistance and genotyping as appropriate. validation studies were performed using - retrospective, well-characterised clinical isolates for each organism. this was followed by a prospective study for one of the organisms, mrsa, that included screening of clinical specimens (nares swab) from patients who were admitted to a medical unit with a high prevalence of mrsa clinical infections. results: for each of the five hai organisms, pcr/esi-ms species identifications were compared to gold standard testing results from the clinical microbiology laboratory and showed % concordance. for s. aureus, p. aeruginosa and a. baumannii, molecular genotyping by pcr/esi-ms was compared to pulse field gel electrophoresis (pfge) clusters and showed > % concordance. characterisation of virulence and/or drug resistance was performed for mrsa, vre and c. difficile and showed − % correct detection compared to existing testing methods. analysis of clinical specimens for mrsa showed that of the swabs, ( %) contained mrsa, either singly or as a dual infection with cons, ( %) were mssa and ( %) contained meca+ coagulase negative staphylococcus (mr-cons). comparison to gold standard analysis showed % sensitivity for mrsa detection with . % specificity, % ppv and %npv. the pcr/esi-ms technology is a high throughput assay system useful for infection control and for epidemiological studies. it is capable of simultaneous identification of hai organisms while detecting presence of key phenotypic markers and genotypic strain characterisation. m. reijans°, j. ossel, j. keijdener, g. simons (maastricht, nl) objective: molecular diagnostics play an increasingly important role in the detection of infectious agents in cerebrospinal fluids. however, the growing list of targets and the relatively small sample volumes are challenges that demand an improved molecular diagnostic approach. the meningofinder is a multifinder assay allowing the simultaneous detection of viruses and internal control in reaction. until now, the analysis of multifinder assays was based on size-fractionation, identifying each multifinder probe due to its specific length. here we present an alternative approach allowing realtime detection of eight meningofinder probes in a single tube. the realtime detection enables a faster analysis, less handling and lowers the risk of contamination. method: the meningofinder assay is a multifinder assay which detects herpes simplex virus and (hsv − ), human parechovirus (hpev), cytomegalovirus (cmv), epstein-barr virus (ebv), enterovirus (ev) and varicella-zoster virus (vzv) plus an internal control in a single reaction. each meningofinder probe can be distinguished based upon the specific length of each probe by size-fractionation using gel or capillary electrophoresis. we developed an alternative detection method using fluorescently labelled probes which allow specific identification of multifinder probes in a realtime pcr machine. results: a large number of qcmd samples (n = ), several enterovirus types (n = ) and characterised clinical samples (n = ) were analyzed using the meningofinder. all meningofinder reactions were analyzed by capillary electrophoresis and by fluorescently labelled probes in a realtime pcr machine. the results of the meningofinder showed a very good correlation with the expected results (> %). furthermore, the results of both meningofinder analyses showed a high degree of correlation. the realtime detection of the meningofinder probes decreases the analysis time and post pcr handling dramatically. we developed a new assay for the realtime detection of meningofinder probes. the realtime analysis showed a very good correlation with the conventional capillary electrophoresis analysis. in addition, the realtime detection reduced contamination risk and patient results became available more quickly. the combination of multifinder technology combined with realtime detection shows great potential in fast and easy multiparameter screening of clinical samples for infectious pathogens. in-house naats were applied to nucleic acid extracts obtained by own in-house methodology in each centre. results: sensitivities for the detection of the respiratory viruses were % for commercial mx naat, % for in-house mw naat, and % for mono in-house naat. the viral load was low each time false-negative results were obtained. false positive results were obtained by all methods used, resulting in specificities ranging from %- %. for the atypical bacteria, the multiplex naats failed to detect low l. pneumophila positive samples and low m. pneumoniae positive sample resulting in sensitivities of % and % compared to % in the inhouse mono naats. the commercial mx naat also failed to detect strong positive samples. no false positive results were obtained for the atypical bacteria. revisiting phage therapy against problematic pathogens s how the past feeds the future: from d'herelle to modern phagotherapy the increasing antibiotic resistance problem boosts the interest in alternative treatments for infections. a prominent example for this is the so-called phagotherapy. it makes use of bacterial viruses − bacteriophages − as drugs against bacterial agents. these bacteriophages are isolated from nature, characterised and then tested against the bacterial strains that are targeted. in theory, this approach has several advantages. for instance, bacteriophages infect, as a rule, their bacterial prey very specifically. therefore, they do not harm the commensal bacteria of the patient. additionally, if a bacterial strain becomes resistant against a certain bacteriophage strain, evolution will provide for new and active bacteriophage strains. in practice, phagotherapy has been used for a long time. already one of the two discoverers of bacteriophages, félix d'herelle, was an ardent advocate of this method. in fact, he was the first to use bacteriophages against infections − against bacterial diarrhoea (shigella spp.). after that, phagotherapy has been used to quite some extent in europe, the us and other parts of the world until penicillin entered the market in the s. in some parts of the former soviet union and the eastern bloc, the method has been utilised until today. now, several companies and university researchers are developing bacteriophages for therapeutical purposes again. historical documents related to phagotherapy and oral history reveal a fascinating past. bacteriophages have been employed against a wide variety of bacterial diseases in a time in which there were virtually no other anti-infectives. for example, in india, millions of cholera patients were treated with bacteriophages in the s. anti-cholera phages were also poured into drinking wells as prophylactics. bacterial viruses have also been utilised by the german and soviet armies in the second world war. the history of phagotherapy makes for more than an exciting story, however. analysis of the old literature helps identify important factors for success and failure. this is especially relevant for a field which holds promise but which has had limited funds at its disposal in the past few years − and which, therefore, has been making rather slow progress. additionally, examination of the strategy used for phagotherapy in the soviet union and poland also contributes to a better application of this method today. the discovery of bacteriophages, particularly their ability to replicate and lyse pathogenic bacteria may have been among the most important milestones in the history of biomedical sciences. in the pre-antibiotic era of the early th century, phage therapy was becoming a powerful weapon against infectious diseases of bacterial aetiology. unfortunately, phage treatment and research was largely forgotten in the western world as antibiotics became widely available. nowadays, the rapid propagation of multi-drug resistant bacterial strains is leading to renewed interest in phage therapy. in contrast to its decline in the west, phage therapy remained a standard part of the healthcare systems in eastern europe and the ussr during the second half of the th century. phage preparations were used for diagnostic, therapeutic and prophylactic purposes to combat various bacterial infections. the eliava institute of bacteriophages, microbiology and virology (tbilisi, georgia) is perhaps the most famous institution in the world focused on the study of bacteriophages, particularly the isolation and selection of phages active against various bacterial pathogens. phages have been isolated against bacterial strains received from all over the former ussr and socialist east european countries; consequently, a huge collection of phages and pathogenic bacterial strains has been constructed at the institute. thousands of people were treated with individual phages and phage mixtures during the soviet era. the preparations developed in tbilisi have been studied through extensive preclinical and clinical trials. however, little of this information has ever been published and even when details are available, the trial reports do not meet internationally approved regulations and standards. bacteriophages have a number of advantages in comparison to antibiotics. phage therapy as an alternative approach for treatment of infections has become an evident and promising remedy. today, many people from various parts of the world express their willingness to take phage treatment against different infections, including those that are caused by antibiotic-resistant bacterial pathogens. the eliava institute has elaborated new, phage-based products and technological schemes for their production. strong collaboration with the medical community in the design of clinical trials according to international standards is absolutely critical to supporting the broader implementation of phage therapy. an australian male aged years died from an intracerebral haemorrhage ten days after he returned from a trip to rural yugoslavia. his kidneys and liver were donated to three female recipients aged years (kidney), years (kidney), and years (liver). four to five weeks after the organ donation, all three recipients died. all had febrile illnesses with altered mental status. subsequent testing of post-mortem tissues from the recipients identified a novel arenavirus, which was related to lymphocyctic choriomeningitis virus (lcmv). this viral detection process involved the use of high-throughput sequencing techniques to identify novel microbial rna sequences. confirmatory testing was performed using the techniques of reverse transcriptasepolymerase chain reaction, immunohistochemical analysis for arenavirus antigens, and immunofluorescent testing for igg and igm antibodies. the clinical features in these four patients as well as other similar problems with transplant-related illness from classic lcmv will be discussed, as well as details of the laboratory identification of this new virus, and implications for organ transplantation protocols in future. successful management of invasive fungal infections depends on timely and correct treatment. over the last decades a number of new tests have become available which have improved the diagnostic options. in contrast to the scenario for bacterial infections, acquired resistance in fungi is rare and thus species identification is a valuable tool guiding choice of treatment. therefore, microscopy & culture is still a corner stone in diagnosis, but culture and identification are time consuming (app. − and − days, respectively). the sensitivity and speed of microscopy have been improved by the use of fluorescent brighteners such as calcofluor white or blankophor. but only with the recent development of pna probes specific for a number of the candida spp. has species identification become possible directly from a positive blood culture before subculture on agar media. chromogenic agars allow a presumptive identification of several candida spp. and facilitate the recognition of yeast isolates in samples containing several yeasts or yeast and bacteria in combination. the use of such plates has been shown to lead to a better identification of mixed cultures in a recent nordic eqa scheme including more than laboratories. rapid species identification of the most important candida spp. is possible in the routine laboratory using easy commercially available kits. thus, a species identification of c. albicans, c. dubliniensis and c. krusei can be obtained within minutes using latex agglutination kits (bichro-dubli, krusei-color; fumouze diagnostics) and c. glabrata can be rapidly identified due to its high amounts of preformed intracellular trehalase enzyme (glabrata rtt; fumouze diagnostics). finally, pna probes and fluorescence microscopy can also be used for a same day identification of a range of the clinically relevant candida spp. (advandx). susceptibility testing is possible using etest and the results are comparable with those obtained by reference methodologies in head to head comparisons. however, recent data from eqa distributions suggest that detection of isolates with acquired resistance causes many laboratories difficulties. this illustrates that a critical number of isolates should be tested per technician per week and quality control strains should be included on a regular basis. in conclusion, a number of new diagnostic tests have become available over the last decade and the diagnostic laboratories are encouraged to take advantage of these new options. th eccmid, oral presentations since the introduction of newer antifungals with different in vitro spectra, the aetiology of invasive fungal infections (ifi) has become a major diagnostic issue as a prerequisite for a guided antifungal therapy. while molecular methods, such as pcr and sequencing for the diagnosis of ifi have been evaluated from specimens such as blood and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid for some years, they have been less studied for biopsies. characteristics inherent to these molecular methods, e.g. sensitivity, specificity and short turnaround time makes them promising as adjuncts to conventional diagnostic tests, e.g. culture and histopathology from organ biopsies. studies using tissue from animal models of mould infections suggest that pcr might be more sensitive than culture and allows for a better species identification than histopathology. however, most of these studies used assays detecting only a small range of agents or even single organisms. while this may increase the sensitivity of the assays and reduces the likelihood of contaminations it limits the usefulness in the clinical setting, given the broad range of potential fungal pathogens. studies using fresh clinical samples suggest that the detection and identification of a wide range of fungi is possible using broad range assays in combination with sequencing or by combining more specific pcr assays. further studies are needed to optimise dna extraction, define the best molecular targets and the best method for amplicon detection. the prevention of contaminations due to ubiquitous fungi and unspecific amplifications are a major problem, especially when using broad range assays. in contrast, fish probes may potentially be more specific than pcr due to the visualisation of fungal elements in tissue. in contrast to pcr, they appear to work well with formalin fixed specimens. species identification might be more challenging than by pcr and sequencing. direct comparisons between fish and pcr are needed to characterise the pros and cons of each method in determining the aetiology of ifi. molecular tissue diagnosis has the potential to evolve into a useful method to describe the aetiology of ifi even in culture negative samples. results might be obtained fast enough to guide the antifungal therapy in patients with ifi progressive to empiric antifungal therapy. in these patients, the risk associated with invasive tissue sampling might be outweighed by potential benefits of a guided antifungal therapy. the two groups of carbapenemases (serine carbapenemases and metallobeta-lactamases (mbls)) can be encoded by genes that can be carried on plasmids. the serine carbapenemases are distinctly either class a or oxa (class d); the latter being mainly associated with acinetobacter spp. the dominant mbl subgroups, vim and imp have genes that are reportedly carried on plasmids and chromosomes. recent evidence has shown that the majority of blavim- , even those initially reported, are indeed plasmid mediated and probably accounts for their rapid dissemination. blavim- genes have been recently shown to be carried on incn and incw plasmids. the "brazilian" mbl gene, blaspm- , is exclusively chromosomally encoded. the mbls sim- and aim- are both chromosomally encoded whereas gim- is encoded from a plasmid of approx. kb. the recently described blakmh- gene is also carried on a plasmid ( kb). hitherto, only two mbl-positive plasmid sequences are available thus far -those carrying blaimp- and blavim- . the former carries other resistance genes and are approx. kb (inchi ), whereas the latter is a small plasmid ( kb) and shows similarities with incp plasmids. oxa carbapenemase genes have been shown to be both plasmid and chromosomally mediated. thus far, the blaoxa- and blaoxa- / clusters can be both plasmid and chromosomal and have mainly been found in acinetobacter spp. the blaoxa- and blaoxa- clusters have been found in k. pneumoniae and acinetobacter spp., respectively, and both are plasmid mediated. blaoxa- and blaoxa- have been shown to be carried on kb and - kb plasmids, respectively. a blaoxa- plasmid has been recently sequenced and shown to carry two different replicases. the class a carbapenemase genes, blakpc, blaimi- and blages are all carried on plasmids. blakpc is found mainly in k. pneumoniae and carried on plasmids that vary in size − kb and mostly possessing the origin of replication incn. however, kpc- has recently described in a pseudomonas as being chromosomally mediated. blaimi- is exclusive to the usa and carried on a kb plasmid although blaimi- is chromosomal. the blages genes have been found in p. aeruginosa and enterobacteriaceae of which ges- , , and have been shown to be plasmid mediated although little else in known. this lecture will provide a synopsis, discuss the evolution of resistance due to plasmids and briefly predict what we may face in the c with respect to carbapenemase resistance. nosocomial infections caused by multidrug-resistant pathogens, especially gram-negative bacilli, have become a serious clinical concern in every healthcare setting worldwide. as well as carpapenemhydrolysing metallo-b-lactamases, ctx-m-type b-lactamases, and qunolone-resistance genetic determinants such as qnr, aac( )-ib-cr, and qepa, plasmid-mediated novel molecular mechanisms such as rmta, rmtb, rmtc, rmtd, arma, and npma responsible for pan-resistance to aminoglycosides have recently been identified in pseudomonas aeruginosa, acinetobacter spp., serratia marcescens, esherichia coli, klebsiella pneumoniae, proteus mirabilis etc. since , and these enzymes have indeed methylation activity of g or a at the a-site of the bacterial s rrna as found in aminoglycoside-producing actinomycetes. these plasmid-mediated s rrna methylases are speculated to be originated from some nonpathogenic environmental microbes that produce aminoglycosides or some similar compounds, so it is quite natural that several new enzymes would be further identified hereafter in both clinical and livestock farming environments. rmtb and arma have widely spread in asia, europe, america and australia via various pathogenic gram-negative bacilli, we should pay special attention to the further spread of such hazardous microbes. in my talk, i would like to give an outline of newly identified molecular mechanisms that confer pan-resistance to aminoglycosides in pathogenic microbes isolated from both human and veterinary environments. [ acquired resistance to quinolones mainly results from chromosomal mutations responsible for modification(s) of dna gyrase and topoisomerase iv, and for a decrease of drug accumulation into bacteria due to decreased permeability and/or overexpression of efflux systems. plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance (pmqr) was first reported in from the usa, and two other mechanisms have been identified to date. the first pmqr determinants, qnr proteins, belong to the family of pentapeptide repeat proteins. five determinants have been identified: qnra, qnrb, qnrc, qnrd, and qnrs with , , , , and different variants, respectively. they may act by binding directly to both dna gyrase and topoisomerase iv leading to protect them from quinolone inhibition. they confer resistance to nalidixic acid and reduced susceptibility to fluoroquinolones (fqs), but may facilitate recovery of mutants with higher level of resistance. the overall prevalence of qnra, qnrb, and qnrs determinants generally ranges from to %, and they have been identified worldwide mostly in esbl-producing enterobacterial isolates. the origin of the qnra and qnrs genes were identified as shewanella algae and vibrio splendidus, respectively. the second type of pmqr determinant, aac( )-ib-cr, is a variant of the aminoglycoside acetyltransferase aac( )-ib which confers resistance to kanamycin, tobramycin and amikacin. this variant possesses two substitutions (trp arg and asp tyr) that are sufficient to acetylation of ciprofloxacin and norfloxacin with a -to- -fold mic increase. the overall prevalence of aac( )-ib-cr may range from . to up to %, and it has been reported mainly in escherichia coli and klebsiella pneumoniae. the third type of pmqr determinant, qepa, has been identified in two e. coli clinical isolates from japan and belgium. the qepa gene encodes a -transmembrane-segment putative efflux pump belonging to the major facilitator superfamily. this protein confers decreased susceptibility to hydrophilic fqs (e.g. norfloxacin, ciprofloxacin and enrofloxacin) with an -to- -fold mic increase. the two epidemiological surveys for qepa may indicate its low prevalence (< %). the natural reservoir of qepa remains unknown but might be an actinomycetal species. discovering of three main mechanisms of pmqr within the last ten years is peculiar. it may reflect the emergence of novel mechanisms of resistance but also a deeper investigation of resistance mechanisms in clinical isolates. emerging infections: can we cope with them? a. kühn°, c. schulze, h. ranisch, p. kutzer, h. nattermann, r. grunow (berlin, frankfurt-oder, de) objective: little is known about the prevalence of francisella tularensis in humans and animals in germany. interestingly, the pathogen emerged recently when several marmosets (callithrix jacchus) died from tularaemia and a group of hunters became infected in the areas of western germany. to find out more about the distribution of the pathogen also in eastern germany we investigated the seroprevalence of tularaemia under foxes (vulpes vulpes) and raccoon dogs (nyctereutes procyonoides) in the area of brandenburg (around berlin). methods: sera of animals (n = and n = , respectively) from the years and were tested for f. tularensis − lps antibodies in an indirect elisa and suspicious samples were confirmed by western blot for lps ladder recognition using protein g − pod conjugate. furthermore we investigated the serum samples by a competitive elisa using a peroxidase-conjugated anti − lps monoclonal antibody. results: from the serum collection, we tested ( . %) foxes and raccoon dogs ( . %) positive for specific f. tularensis antibodies. the geographical distribution showed hot spots in the area of the investigated region. our results indicate for a higher seroprevalence in wildlife for tularaemia in eastern regions of germany than assumed. since the reported human cases for the last decade seem to be underestimated, the real prevalence of the pathogen is unknown. the high number of tularaemia antibody positive foxes and raccoon dogs indicates that this zoonose is present in wildlife in eastern germany. however, the impact of transmission of zoonotic pathogens from wildlife to domestic animals and humans is not yet well studied. in conclusion, the obtained data will contribute for creating of up-to-date strategy for more efficient control of the two rickettsial zoonoses. objective: helicobacter pylori is established as the primary cause of gastritis and peptic ulceration in humans. in a minority of patients with upper gastrointestinal symptoms long tightly coiled spiral bacteria, clearly distinct from h. pylori, and provisionally named as "h. heilmannii", can be observed in gastric biopsies. our objective was to isolate and identify the spiral organism, resembling "h. heilmannii" from the gastric mucosa of a finnish patient presenting with severe dyspeptic symptoms. methods: we used two different selective media for the isolation of the bacteria from gastric biopsy samples before and after treatment of the patient with a -day course with lansoprazole, tetracycline and metronidazole. the isolates were characterised by testing for urease and catalase activity, light and electron microscopy, and sequencing the partial s rrna and ureab genes. single enzyme aflp was used to analyse the genetic diversity among the isolates. results: growth of long spiral organisms was obtained from out of antrum and all corpus biopsies before and all three antrum biopsies after treatment of the patient. the partial s rrna gene sequence showed high sequence similarities with other gastric helicobacter species. the partial ureab gene showed high sequence similarity with h. bizzozeronii and was clearly distinct from other gastric helicobacter species. aflp indicated that the isolates belonged to the same clone however some minor genetic diversity was observed among the isolates. results: b. pseudomallei was primarily found in close proximity to streams and in grass-rich areas but was also correlated with environmentally disturbed soil such as caused by the presence of animals, farming or irrigation. prediction maps are currently being verified by sampling predicted b. pseudomallei "hot-" and "cold-spots". see in figure a prediction map for rural darwin with red areas indicating high probability for presence of b. pseudomallei. this study contributes to the elucidation of the environmental distribution of b. pseudomallei in endemic tropical australia and to the clarification of environmental factors influencing its occurrence. it also raises concerns that b. pseudomallei are spreading due to changes in land management. o concurrent multi-serotypic dengue infections in various body fluids w. kulwichit°, s. krajiw, d. chansinghakul, g. suwanpimolkul, o. prommalikit, p. suandork, j. pupaibool, k. arunyingmongkol, c. pancharoen, u. thisyakorn (bangkok, th) objectives: dengue virus infection is one of the rapidly-spreading emerging diseases worldwide. the virus is divided into distinct serotypes with limited cross-protective immunity; therefore, one can be reinfected with different serotypes. while each episode is usually caused by a single serotype, an individual can occasionally be infected by concurrent multiple ones. our group has previously detected dengue virus from urine and oral specimens of some patients. in this study, we sought to determine the characteristics of multi-serotype infections when analysing beyond the patients' blood compartments. methods: during during - and adult patients suspected of dengue infections were enrolled. plasma, peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmc), urine pellets, buccal brushes, and saliva were collected during and after the febrile episode. only specimens from patients with both positive dengue serology and pan-dengue-specific rt-pcr were included. serotype-specific rt-pcr was then performed on the aforementioned various specimens of each patient. results: patients met the above criteria. serotyping was successful in patients. den- was the most common serotype, accounting for half of the cases. of these ( . %) demonstrated multiserotypic infections when combining data from all specimen types in each individual. serotyping using single, conventional serum/plasma specimens, however, would detect only half of the cases. the phenomenon of concurrent multi-serotypic infections was present in all examined specimen types, including urine pellets, buccal brushes, and saliva. the most frequent combinations were den- + den- and den- + den- ( cases each). two patients were simultaneously infected by serotypes , , and and one by serotypes , , and . there was no demonstrable significant difference in clinical severity between single-and multi-serotypic infections. conclusion: in a dengue-hyperendemic country with simultaneous circulation of all four serotypes, the phenomenon of concurrent multiserotypic infections are more common than previously demonstrated by traditional serotyping on single serum/plasma specimens. this may be explained by the sensitivity limitation of the detection method or by biological behaviour of the virus. our findings have an implication for potentially more accurate epidemiologic studies in the future, and for further exploratory investigations regarding dengue virus in various secretions and excretions. o emerging concepts about the evolutionary history of hantaviruses h.j. kang, s.n. bennett, l. sumibcay, s. arai, a.g. hope, j.a. cook, j.w. song, r. yanagihara°(honolulu, albuquerque, us; tokyo, jp; seoul, kr) objective: recent discovery of genetically distinct hantaviruses in shrews (family soricidae), captured in widely separated geographic regions, challenges the conventional view that rodents are the principal and progenitor reservoir hosts of hantaviruses, and raises the possibility that other soricomorphs, notably moles (family talpidae), harbour hantaviruses. methods: using oligonucleotide primers based on conserved genomic regions of rodent-and soricid-borne hantaviruses, rna extracts from tissues of the japanese shrew mole (urotrichus talpoides), american shrew mole (neurotrichus gibbsii) and european common mole (talpa europaea) were analyzed for hantavirus sequences by rt-pcr. newfound s-, m-and l-segment sequences were aligned using clustal w and were analyzed phylogenetically by the maximum-likelihood and markov chain monte carlo tree-sampling methods, with the gtr+i+g model of evolution. results: novel hantavirus genomes, designated asama virus (asav), oxbow virus (oxbv) and nova virus (nvav), were detected in tissues of urotrichus talpoides, neurotrichus gibbsii and talpa europaea, respectively. sequence and phylogenetic analyses indicated that asav and oxbv were related to hantaviruses harboured by soricine shrews in eurasia and north america, respectively. by contrast, phylogenetic analyses of full-length s-and l-segment sequences showed that nvav formed a unique clade, clearly distinct and evolutionarily distant from all other hantaviruses. despite the high degree of sequence divergence at the nucleotide and amino acid levels, the secondary structures of the nucleocapsid proteins, as well as the l-segment motifs, of the moleassociated hantaviruses were well conserved. conclusions: while cross-species transmission has influenced the course of hantavirus evolution, such host-switching events alone do not satisfactorily explain the co-existence and distribution of genetically distinct hantaviruses among species in two taxonomic orders of small mammals spanning four continents. when viewed within the context of molecular phylogeny and zoogeography, the close association between distinct hantavirus clades and specific subfamilies of rodents, shrews and moles is likely the result of alternating and variable periodic codivergence at certain taxonomic levels through evolutionary time. thus, the primeval hantavirus might have arisen from an insect-borne virus, with ancestral soricomorphs, rather than rodents, serving as the original mammalian hosts. from south-eastern france m. kaba, b. davoust, j.l. marié, m. barthet, m. henry, c. tamalet, j.m. rolain, d. raoult, p. colson°(marseille, toulon, fr) objectives: autochthonous hepatitis e is currently considered as an emerging disease in industrialised countries and several studies suggest that hepatitis e is a zoonosis, especially in pigs, boars and deer. we aimed to study whether hepatitis e virus (hev) is commonly present in domestic pigs in southern france, and to determine the relationship between hev sequences detected from pigs and those described in human hepatitis e cases. methods: serum and stools samples were collected from three or six-month-old pigs from different regions of southern france. sixmonth-old pigs were from a slaughterhouse, and three-month-old pigs were from a pig farm. swine igg anti-hev antibodies testing was performed using a commercial elisa kit for clinical diagnosis with minor modifications. swine hev rna detection was conducted by realtime pcr and amplification/sequencing assays using in house protocols targeting the orf region of the hev genome. results: % of pigs were seropositive, and % of three-monthold pigs were hev rna-positive, whereas none of the six-monthold pigs were hev rna-positive. hev rna was significantly more frequently detected from stools than from serum ( % versus %; p < . ). phylogenetic analysis showed that swine hev sequences belong to genotype f or e and formed two clusters within which sequences showed high nucleotide homology (> %). these clusters were correlated with the geographical origin of pigs as well as with their repartition into pens and buildings in the pig farm where samples were collected. swine hev sequences from the present study were genetically close to hev sequences found from humans or swine in europe, although no strong phylogenetic link could be observed neither with these latter sequences nor with those from human hepatitis e cases diagnosed in the laboratory. conclusion: our data indicate that three-month-old farm pigs from southern france might represent a potential source of contamination to humans, and they underscore the great potential of hev to cause epizootic infections in populations of farm pigs. o clostridium difficile: changing epidemiology trends, - objectives: clostridium difficile infection (cdi) has become a growing concern world-wide with an increased reported incidence and an increase in the associated financial burden. our aim therefore was to review trends in cdi occurring from - inclusive. methods: all patients admitted to lothian university hospitals division (luhd) tested for c. difficile toxins a+b by eia were included. retrospective analysis of prospectively collected data was performed. the number of occupied bed days was provided by nhs-lothian statistics department. the most recent published costs associated with cdi were used to estimate potential costs to lothian nhs trust. results: , faecal samples were tested for c. difficile toxins from - inclusive; of these samples were positive. overall cdi was identified in . cases/ patient days and . cases/ inpatient hospital admissions. the incidence of identified cdi rose from . cases/ patient days in to . cases/ patient days in . incidence also increased with age from . cases/ patient days in the − years age group to . cases/ patient days in the − years age group. renal medicine and intensive care had the highest incidences of identified cdi with greater than cases/ patient days each followed by infectious diseases and gastrointestinal medicine whose rates were . and . cases/ patient days respectively. medicine of the elderly in comparison had an incidence of . cases/ patient days. of note % of all patients were transferred through a minimum of two specialties during the period in which they remained positive for c. difficile toxins. estimated costs over the study period for toxin testing alone were in the region of £ , and the minimal potential hospitalisation costs of patients with cdi was in the region of £ , , . conclusion: the incidence of patients identified with cdi has risen markedly and not surprisingly the incidence has also been noted to increase with age. medicine of the elderly however had a much lower incidence than several other specialties and therefore risk assessment of cdi development and containment should now also be targeted within other specialties. with % of identified cdi patients transferred through different specialties and the significant financial burden cdi imposes on healthcare institutions judicious application of infection control measures remains an important factor to prevent cdi spread. isolates of this strain were pvl negative, but positive for enterotoxin a (sea) and, in most cases, also for seb, sek and seq. a fifth strain was the "taiwan clone", st / -mrsa-v (wa mrsa- and - ) which also comprised two closely related sequence types. this strain carried a sccmec element of type v(t) or vii as well as pvl and, usually, seb, sek and seq. it was the most common cc strain in wa. the sixth strain differed from the "taiwan clone" in the presence of a sccmec type v element and in the absence of pvl. the differentiation of this clonal complex into various different strains indicates a rapid evolution and spread of sccmec elements, and the diagnostic microarray technology allows one to distinguish beyond mlst level and hence to accurately trace outbreaks and spread of these strains. a sample taker has daily contact with poultry and is excluded from analysis. b sample taker reported no contact with livestock elsewhere than in this study at that moment (spa-types of sample taker and farm are not corresponding). c sample taker tested mrsa-negative in following tests. d sample taker was not tested again. complete data sets (samples taken before, directly after and hours after a visit) were collected on visits by sample takers visiting farms. on farms mrsa was collected from pigs or stabledust ( %). these farms were visited times by different sample takers. one sample taker (# ) was positive for mrsa before visiting a farm, he was removed from the following analysis. fifteen of the ( %) visits to mrsa-positive farms resulted in acquisition of mrsa and / ( %) sample takers acquired mrsa at least once after visiting a positive farm. of these positive sample takers acquired mrsa twice and sample taker acquired mrsa three times after separate visits. of the acquisitions of mrsa, were negative after hours. the spa-types of mrsa isolates found on the farms and sample takers were grossly comparable. on the negative farms, none of the visits resulted in mrsa acquisition. for further information see the table. discussion: mrsa-cc was acquired by % of the sample takers after occupational exposure in this study. however, in of the cases the strain was not recovered the next day, therefore acquisition was of short duration, posing a limited treat to human health. some persons seemed to be more vulnerable to acquire mrsa during their work. the sample size of this study was too small to draw final conclusions concerning this inter-personal variation. this requires a more extensive study. [ objectives: community-associated mrsa is an increasing problem and an association with food animal contact has been made in some regions. this has led to concerns about the potential role of food in mrsa transmission. the objective of this study was to evaluate the prevalence of mrsa colonisation of retail pork in canada. methods: pork chops, ground pork and pork shoulders were purchased at retail outlets in four canadian provinces in conjunction with the canadian integrated program for antimicrobial resistance surveillance. both direct inoculation of meat into enrichment broth and rinsing of meat in broth were performed for pork chops and shoulders, followed by inoculation onto chromogenic agar. ground pork was tested only using the direct method. mrsa isolates were typed by pfge and spa typing. real time pcr was used to detect panton-valentine leukocidin genes. results: mrsa was isolated from / ( . %, % ci . − . %) of samples. there was a significant difference between provinces (p < . ) but no difference between different products, with mrsa isolated from / ( . %) pork chops, / ( . %) ground pork and / ( . %) pork shoulders (p = . ). / ( . %) samples were positive using direct culture while mrsa was isolated from / ( . %) of samples testing using the rinse method. nine samples were positive on direct culture but negative using the rinse method, while others were positive only with the rinse method and only were positive with both methods. seven samples (ground pork) that were positive on direct culture were not tested using the rinse method. main clones were present. the most common ( % of isolates) was a group of related spa types (t , t and new related type) were classified as canadian epidemic mrsa- by pfge, an st human epidemic clone that has been associated with horses. pfge-non-typable spa t were not surprisingly common, accounting for % of isolates. the rd main group was related spa types (t , t and new type) that were cmrsa- (usa ), an st clone that is common in humans in canada, that also accounted for % of isolates. the clinical relevance of mrsa contamination of pork is currently unclear. it is possible that contact with contaminated food could be a mode of mrsa transmission in the community, although further study of the prevalence of contamination, amount of mrsa in contaminated samples, sources of contamination and implications on human health are required. o prevalence of the novel trimethoprim resistance gene dfrk among german staphylococcal isolates of the bft-germvet monitoring study k. kadlec°, s. schwarz (neustadt-mariensee, de) objectives: very recently a novel trimethoprim resistance gene, dfrk, was identified on a tet(l)-harbouring plasmid in a porcine mrsa isolate from the bft-germvet monitoring study. this study included in total independent coagulase-positive and coagulase-variable staphylococci collected between and all over germany: isolates from infections of the urinary-genital tract of pigs, isolates from skin infections of pigs, isolates from respiratory tract infections of dogs/cats, and isolates from infections of skin/ear/mouth of dogs/cats. in this study, we investigated the prevalence and the plasmid location of the dfrk gene among these isolates. methods: pcr primers were designed and a pcr with subsequent restriction analysis of the pcr product was established to detect dfrk. isolates with positive results were tested for a plasmid location of dfrk by transfer experiments and dfrk-carrying plasmids were further analysed. the trimethoprim resistance gene dfrk was detected in another isolates. all isolates were from pigs: from skin infections and the remaining from a urinary-genital tract infection. six staphylococcus hyicus subsp. hyicus isolates, s. aureus isolates ( mrsa and mssa) and s. pseudintermedius. all these isolates harboured plasmids. in isolates ( s. hyicus, mrsa and the single s. pseudintermedius), the plasmid location of dfrk was confirmed by protoplast transformation with subsequent susceptibility testing and pcr analysis of the transformants. in all cases, the plasmids harbouring dfrk also carried a tet(l) tetracycline resistance gene. the results of a combined pcr assay with primers from tet(l) and dfrk confirmed that the dfrk gene was always located immediately downstream of the tet(l) gene. further analysis of these dfrk-and tet(l)-harbouring plasmids showed that they varied in size between and kb and that similar sized plasmids differed in their ecorv and hindiii restriction patterns. the novel trimethoprim resistance gene dfrk occurred in ( . %) of the porcine staphylococcal isolates from the bft-germvet study. in ( . %) of the isolates, it was located on structurally diverse plasmids, however, always in close proximity to a tet(l) gene. the linkage of the dfrk and tet(l) genes allows the maintenance and coselection of such plasmids under selective pressure by either tetracyclines or trimethoprim, both of which are widely used in veterinary medicine. (table) . the isolates were resistant to ciprofloxacin, clindamycin, erythromycin, gentamicin but susceptible to vancomycin. only one se was methicillin-susceptible and two isolates were quinupristin/dalfopristin non-susceptible. all strains were clonally related and clustered into three subtypes (a, a and a ). cfr gene was detected in a linezolid non-susceptible strain (mic, mg/l), which was recovered from a y/o male who underwent liver transplantation. plasmid analysis identified six plasmid bands ranging from c.a. . -to -kb in the cfrcarrying strain. hybridisation signals were observed from the -kb plasmid band as well as from a chromosomal band after i-ceui digestion. mutations at the s rrna, l or l were not detected. the cfr increased the linezolid mic value between -and -fold. this report highlights the ability of se to acquire linezolid resistances. the potential mobility of cfr combined with the clonal tendency for dissemination among staphylococcus spp., represent a serious threat to several potent gram-positive-active agents, including oxazolidinones. active surveillance combined with effective infection control and molecular studies seem prudent to minimise the spread of these resistance mechanisms. the objective is to get a glimpse of the potential impact of infectious diseases on music, as regards to the composer's or performing musician's own disease, living conditions or other relevant elements which might have affected the end result, the music we enjoy today. as music is an art of senses, full of drama, despair, realities of life − or just the opposite, blissful ignorance of those realities, full of romance, beauty, and delicacy − various forms of music was researched paying special attention to infections which potentially have played a significant role in the birth of that particular piece or performance. the entire research process was subjective, biased, and emotional, but done wholeheartedly. it aimed at to taking into account, not only the personal life of a composer or performing musician, but also the historical context in which the music was born. musical examples, served to the audience along with the essential background data, will show the extent to which infections have impacted music. regarding the aetiology of those infections, bacterial, viral and parasitic agents are well represented. in addition, many epochs in history have played their role. sometimes, the connections are surprising, even dramatic. if listened to with a tender ear, music quite often turns out to be affected also by infectious diseases. as physicians we should realise the strength with which some people are driven by this demonic, divine − but altogether beautiful force: music. the prevalence of antibiotic resistance has been increasing in asian countries in recent years. this problem has most likely arisen due to a combination of inadequate infection control practices particularly in hospital settings and the widespread misuse of antibiotics in hospital and community settings. factors that lead to antibiotic misuse include inappropriate antibiotic prescription due to a lack of clinical, microbiological and/or imaging data in many clinical settings in the asian region. a lack of separation of prescribing and dispensing by medical practitioners as practised in many countries in asia as well as the easy availability of over the counter medications also contribute to antibiotic misuse. optimal control of antibiotic use can only be achieved through a multipronged approach that includes better education of the public and medical practitioners on rational use of antibiotic, a review of the health system structure, as well as better control of over the counter sales of antibiotics. upgrading of microbiology and other laboratories and radiological facilities that will enhance the accuracy of clinical diagnosis is also urgently needed in most developing countries to keep pace with the complexities of managing patients in this new era to minimise the widespread practise of inappropriate antibiotic use. examination of the csf for microorganisms, wbc and differential counts, and concentrations of glucose and protein is the primary investigation to diagnose meningitis. however, this csf examination may not always be conclusive, and it can be difficult to distinguish bacterial from viral meningitis. therefore, improvement in diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of bacterial meningitis and development of rapid test for a bacterial aetiology are still needed. this presentation gives a review of the strength and weakness of several analyses and methods to reveal the microbiological agent (i.e. csf microscopy and culture, antigen or antibody detection, molecular methods to detect dna or rna) and the use of several mediators of the host immune response for diagnostic and prognostic purposes. bacterial meningitis is a medical emergency that requires a multidisciplinary approach. a diagnosis of bacterial meningitis is often considered, but the disease can be difficult to recognize. recommendations for antimicrobial therapy are changing as a result of the emergence of antimicrobial resistance. in this lecture, current concepts of the initial approach to the treatment of adults with bacterial meningitis will be summarised. the management of the critically ill patient with bacterial meningitis poses important dilemmas. controversial areas (i.e., prehospital admission antibiotics) will be reviewed and relevant literature will be discussed in the framework of current treatment guidelines, highlighting new developments in adjunctive dexamethasone therapy. acute bacterial meningitis (abm), especifically when caused by infection with streptococcus pneumoniae, still has an unacceptably poor prognosis with a mortality of − %. bacterial infection of the meninges causes one of the most powerful inflammatory reactions known in medicine. yet years ago, this inflammatory reaction was suggested to contribute substantially to brain damage. this concept underlies the use of anti-inflammatory agents as adjunctive therapy in abm. of all adjunctive treatments in abm, only corticosteroids have been properly evaluated in clinical trials. these trials recommend corticosteroids in patients with haemophilus influenzae type b and pneumococcal meningitis (pm). however, adjunctive corticosteroid therapy has several weaknesses such as a narrow treatment window and borderline effects on neurologic sequelae. thus, there is still the need for additional or alternate adjuvants in the therapy of abm. experimental studies using animal models (predominantly of pm) have provided insight into the pathogenic mechanisms underlying brain injury in abm. it is now clear that the autodestructive inflammatory reaction is initiated by the interaction of bacterial components with host pattern recognition receptors (prr) like toll-like receptors (tlr). prr signaling results in the activation of transcription factors like nf-kb which up-regulate the production of proinflammatory cytokines. cytokines like il- b are also potent triggers of nf-kb activation and therefore can exaggerate the inflammatory reaction (via positive feedback loops). as a consequence, great numbers of neutrophils are recruited to the meninges. activated neutrophils release many potentially cytotoxic agents including oxidants and matrix metalloproteinases that can cause collateral damage to brain tissue. additionally to the inflammatory response, direct bacterial cytotoxicty has been identified as a contributor to tissue damage in abm. thus, experimental studies point at four different targets of adjunctive therapy, namely interference with (i) the induction of inflammation (e.g., tlr blockade), (ii) the exaggeration of inflammation (e.g., il- antagonism), and (iii+iv) the generation of cytotoxic factors (either of host or bacterial origin, e.g., scavenging of oxidants). this presentation will give an overview of the pathophysiology of abm (with special emphasis on pm) and highlight promising targets for adjunctive therapy in abm, as deduced from experimental studies. a clinician's approach to managing difficult infections s acute post-surgical prosthetic joint infection optimal management of prosthetic joint infections (pji) remains undefined. important issues such us when the implant can be retained (conservative strategy), optimal duration of antimicrobial therapy (at) or the role of rifampin are yet matter of controversy. in spite of a number of reports, literature appears confusing. among the limitations of the literature we must emphasize: ) different criteria to classify pji; ) different criteria to select for conservative strategy (cs); ) no description of the initial population from which patients were selected for cs; ) very different at (from weeks to chronic suppressive therapy); ) low numbers of patients or short follow-up; ) absence of clinical trials. it is not so surprising that the rates of cs success have varied from to almost %. the most useful classification to approach pji was proposed by tsukayama ( ) . in his series out of patients with early pji managed by a cs (debridement, exchange of polyethylen and implant retention) were cured after weeks of at. the spanish group for the study of pji was constituted in within the spanish network for the study of infectious pathology (reipi), a public funded initiative. data from consecutive cases of early pji attended in hospitals were recorded in an online database. cases managed with cs could be analysed (mean followup of years). sixty-seven patients ( . %) were cured after a mean of days of at. in ( . %) the infection was not controlled (or relapsed) after a mean of days of at, and the implant had to be removed. in other patients ( . %) the implant was not removed, but suppressive at was given because of suspected ongoing infection. results were significantly worse in one hospital. no other factors resulted statistically significant, but there was a trend of worse results for mrsa produced infections (p = . ). time from the symptoms appearance to debridement was shorter in successfully treated cases (median, days) than in failures (median, days); p = . . good functional results were obtained in patients with successfully cs. in summary, a substantial proportion of early pji can be managed with cs strategy and a definite (non suppressive) at. it is difficult to identify patients at higher risk for failure, although mrsa aetiology and longer time until debridement seem to predict failures. different outcomes in some centres suggest that surgical technique could be an important factor for failure. more than million cardiac pacing systems are implanted worldwide and the estimated rate of infections after implantation of permanent endocardial leads is % to %, but varies between . to %. pacemaker infections correspond to different clinical situations including localised infection in the device pocket, pacemaker leads to systemic infection associated with bacteraemia and lead-associated endocarditis. this latter represents to % of all cases of pacemaker infections. the severity of pacemaker related infective endocarditis is sustained by a mortality range between to %. risk factors related to infections of implanted pacemakers are correlated with fever before h before implantation, temporary pacing before implantation and early re-interventions (haematoma, lead dislodgment). in contrast, an inverse correlation is observed between development of infection and antibiotic prophylaxis and implantation of a new system. data to guide therapy in patients with pacemaker infection are limited and the most appropriate management remains to be determined. according to different series, staphylococci accounted for to > % of the responsible organisms. coagulase-negative staphylococci (cns) are reported as predominant pathogens following by staphylocococcus aureus. the biofilm production, responsible for bacterial survival, and the emergence of methicillin-resistant in s. aureus and cns have complicated the management of pacemaker infections. this implies that empiric treatment of suspected pacemaker infection should coverage for staphylococci including methicillin-resistant strains. streptococci, corynebacterium spp, propionibacterium acnes, gram-negative bacilli and candida spp can cause occasional infections. the optimal therapy combines complete device extraction (percutaneous ablation or surgical removal during extracorporeal circulation) and prolonged course of antibiotics, in particular in case of multiresistant bacteria. leaving the device intact is associated with increased mortality and risk of relapsing or persistent infections. in absence of prospective studies, the duration of antibiotic treatment remains to be determined but month has been shown not to be associated with an increased incidence of relapse. shortest course of treatment ( weeks) has been proposed in case of vegetations strictly localised to leads without affecting cardiac valves. antibiotic therapy working alone should be reserved for highly selected patients. infection remains the most critical complication of ventriculoperitoneal shunt placement with an incidence of . − %. factors as the age of patient, aetiology of hydrocephalus, the type of shunt implanted, and the surgeon's experience are determined to be associated with increased risk of infection. children are more likely than adults to acquire shunt infection. the possible reasons are longer hospital stay, higher skin bacterial concentrations, immature immune systems, or more adherent strains of bacteria. staphylococci, as skin commensals, are the main causative organisms. nevertheless, in recent years a change in the epidemiology of microorganisms was observed with an increase of gram-negative bacteria. appropriate systemic antibiotics according to the antimicrobial susceptibility testing and surgical removal of the shunt with temporary external cerebrospinal fluid drainage and shunt replacement following the eradication of the infection are the cornerstone of the treatment of cerebrospinal fluid shunt infections. good compliance with infection control practices, inserion of the catheter under aseptic techniques and short-term perioperative antimicrobial prophylaxis in order to prevent the emergence of drug-resistant subpopulations are important steps in the prevention of shunt infections. o influenza in adults admitted to canadian hospitals: data from two seasons a. mcgeer, d. gravel, g. taylor°, c. weir, c. frenette, j. vayalumkal, a. wong, d. moore, s. michaud, b. amihod (toronto, ottawa, edmonton, montreal, saskatoon, sherbrooke, ca) objective: seasonal influenza (flu) remains a cause of substantial morbidity and mortality. antiviral treatment should be considered for all hospitalised patients with influenza. to better understand the epidemiology and burden of illness within the hospital sector in canada and the current use of antiviral therapy, we carried out a multihospital survey of virologically confirmed flu in hospitalised adults. methods: cnisp is a network of largely teaching hospitals across canada that collaborates to collect data on infections in hospitalised patients. during two consecutive years ( / and / ) hospitals within cnisp identified inpatients > years who had virologically confirmed flu. case patient charts were reviewed to capture demographic and clinical data and to determine whether flu was community (ca) or hospital acquired (ha). cases were reviewed at days to determine outcomes. deaths at days were reviewed to determine whether flu was a main or contributing cause. results: fifteen ( / ) and ( / ) hospitals were recruited from the cnisp network. virologically confirmed cases of flu were found, in / ( % flu a) and in / ( % flu a). mean patient age was years, % were male. there was documentation of patient vaccination that season in %. incidence of ca flu was / , admissions in / (range by hospital − ) and in / ( − ). admitting diagnoses in ca cases were: pneumonia or influenza %, exacerbation of copd %, sepsis or fever not otherwise specified %, cardiac diagnoses %, other diagnoses %. % of cases were ha, range by hospital . − . / , patient days. % of patients were managed with droplet and contact isolation practices, an n- mask was used in %. % of ca cases but % of ha cases received antiviral therapy p < . , almost entirely oseltamivir. % of cases were admitted to an icu; -day mortality was % with . % attributed to influenza. conclusion: there is considerable season-season and hospital-hospital variation in flu in patients in canadian hospitals. hospitalised patients ca flu present with a wide spectrum of clinical diagnoses; nearly a quarter of all cases were ha. few ca cases but most ha cases were treated with antiviral drugs. attributable day mortality was . %. v. papastamopoulos, e. kakalou°, t. panagiotopoulos, j. baraboutis, m. samarkos, a. skoutelis (athens, gr) objectives: our study sought to describe influenza vaccination coverage among adults in greece for the season / . methods: we conducted a random-sampling, telephone based household survey among adult individuals in greece. for this purpose a sample of adults representative of the basic demographic, social and geographical characteristics of the overall greek population according to the latest national survey, was used. two target groups were determined for analysis: persons > years of age and persons with chronic conditions such as respiratory and heart conditions (other than hypertension), diabetes mellitus and other conditions. results: the influenza vaccination rate for the season / among the adult population in greece was: % for the overall adult population ( . % for men, . % for women), . % for people > years of age, % for persons with chronic illness ( . % for persons with respiratory illness, . for persons with heart conditions, % for persons with diabetes mellitus). a high rate of % of the overall population reaching % among persons with chronic conditions report having had any type of contact with the national health system or a private physician within the last three years. among them only . % had been recommended to get vaccinated. among the ones recommended any vaccination, . % of persons with respiratory illness, % of persons with diabetes mellitus and . % of persons with heart conditions had been recommended to get the influenza vaccine. conclusions: available data show unacceptably low levels of influenza vaccination coverage among vulnerable groups such as the population over years of age and people living with chronic illness. influenza vaccination is the only preventive measure reducing influenza morbidity and mortality and its use has proven cost-effective among high risk groups. it is also the main vaccine recommended by physicians. however the overall rate of physicians recommendation of vaccination is very low. dynamic efforts are thus needed to design and implement strategies and policies that have demonstrated their rigorous effectiveness in enhancing influenza vaccination coverage rates. conclusions: nasopharyngeal sampling with flocked swabs is well tolerated and suitable to be used in an outpatient setting. implementation of real-time mono and multiplex naats results in a significant improvement of the rate in diagnosing lrti. hrv account for the majority of viral lrti in primary care followed by influenza and coronaviruses but also rsv and hmpv are prevalent in an adult population. in this study, polyomaviruses were detected of which were involved in a double infection. methods: observational analysis of a prospective cohort of nonseverely immunosuppressed adults with pp requiring hospitalisation ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . of them, were diagnosed by urinary antigen and/or were diagnosed by culture. overall, % of pneumococcal strains were available for serotyping (quellung) and % for pfge (smal) and or mlst. the diagnosis of septic shock was based on a systolic blood pressure < mmhg and peripheral hypoperfusion with clinical or bacteriologic evidence of uncontrolled infection. results: a total of ( %) patients with pp had septic shock at presentation. patients with shock were younger ( vs yrs; p = . ), were more frequently current smokers ( % vs %; p = . ), had received more commonly corticosteroid therapy ( % vs %; p = . ), and were more frequently classified into high-risk psi classes ( % vs %; p < . ) than those who did not have this complication. they were also less likely to have received prior influenza vaccine ( % vs %; p = . ) and had more frequently bacteraemia ( % vs %; p = . ). no significant differences were found in rates of penicillin-( % vs %) and erythromycin-resistance ( % vs %). serotype was more commonly associated with shock ( % vs %; p = . ), whereas serotype was rarely associated with this complication ( % vs %; p = . ). no significant differences were found regarding genotypes: st ( % vs %), netherlands-ser -st ( % vs %), netherlands-ser -st ( % vs %), spain-ser v-st ( % vs %). patients with shock required more frequently mechanical ventilation ( % vs %; p < . ), and had longer los ( vs days; p < . ). early ( % vs %; p < . ) and overall case-fatality rates ( % vs %; p < . ) were higher in patients with shock. conclusions: pp presenting with septic shock is still associated with a poor outcome. it occurs mainly in current smokers, patients receiving corticosteroids, and in those infections caused by serotype . prior influenza vaccination and pp caused by serotype are associated with a lower risk of shock. o high long-term mortality rate after initial recovery from severe community-acquired pneumonia background: despite the presence of antibiotics and vaccination strategies against pneumocci, community-acquired pneumonia (cap) is still a major cause for mortality in developed countries. however, it is unclear how an episode of cap influences long-term survival after initial recovery. therefore, we determined mortality up to years after discharge in patients hospitalised because of an episode of severe cap in a non-intensive care setting. methods: in hospitals in the netherlands, patients (pts) with severe cap (psi class iv and v without need for treatment in icu) were prospectively followed for days and mortality up to years after discharge was determined using the dutch municipal public records database. we used cox regression analysis to examine predictors for mortality. results: compared to strategy , strategy resulted in slightly higher costs (chf , vs. , ) but fewer infections (. vs. . ) during patients' mean length-of-stay, producing an incremental costeffectiveness ratio (icer) of chf , per mrsa infection avoided. strategy was dominated by strategies and (both more costly and less effective). sensitivity analyses suggest that prevalence of colonisation on admission is a stronger predictor of cost-effectiveness than the costs of infection or rapid screening, the probability of cross-transmission, or the incremental costs of isolation and contact precautions. increasing the relatively low on-admission prevalence at our centre by % lowers the icer to chf , per infection avoided. in contrast, increasing the cost of each infection, the cost of rapid screening, or the risk of cross-transmission by % only marginally affects the icer. conclusion: this analysis suggests that compared to risk factor identification and pre-emptive isolation, universal rapid screening upon surgical admission is not strongly cost-effective at our centre. however, local epidemiology plays an important role. in particular, settings with higher prevalence of colonisation on admission may find universal rapid screening more cost-effective. of note, no screening is undesirable, as costs and infections would be higher. results: admission and weekly screening coupled with patient isolation was found to dramatically reduce the number of mrsa acquisitions. the largest reductions were obtained with pcr technology, followed by chromogenic agar. the differences, however, were surprisingly small, and all screening technologies achieved reductions in mrsa acquisition of close to % compared with the no-intervention scenario. nonetheless, chromogenic and pcr-based systems were able to decrease the number of unisolated mrsa-bed-days by approximately and % respectively. conclusions: the small differences in the ability of the screening technologies to reduce mrsa acquisition reflect both a relatively low estimated isolation efficacy and the observed highly skewed distribution of icu-stays, and may provide some important insights into the reasons for recent disappointing trial results. in particular, the skewed length of stay distribution means that most mrsa-bed days are accounted for by relatively long-stay patients for whom rapid detection will make the least difference. key sources of uncertainty were found to be isolation effectiveness and attributable mortality due to mrsa infections, both of which are difficult to accurately estimate with currently available data. the model results allow us to quantify the expected value of reducing these key uncertainties, and help to provide a rational basis for setting future research priorities. objectives: we have shown that there is substantial colonisation of mrsa among nursing home residents and staff with our recently conducted point prevalence study in nursing homes which revealed an overall prevalence rate of % in residents and . % in staff. the aim of this study was, therefore, to test the effectiveness of an intervention in nursing homes which sought to improve standards of infection control as a means of reducing mrsa prevalence. methods: a cluster randomised controlled trial (crct) involving nursing homes, with each home representing the unit of analysis, was performed. the study ran for months with data collected at baseline, , and months. nasal swabs were taken at baseline from consenting residents and staff in all homes prior to randomisation with an audit of infection control procedures also undertaken. following collection of these baseline data, nursing homes were allocated to the intervention or control arm ( : ). intervention home staff were trained in infection control, specifically hand hygiene, catheter care, barrier approaches such as use of gloves, aprons and masks, and decontamination of equipment and the environment with usual practice continuing in control homes. after each data collection timepoint, feedback was given to the intervention homes in terms of their performance and further education and training provided as required. the primary outcome was the prevalence of mrsa in intervention homes compared to control sites. results: preliminary analysis of the data has revealed no significant change in the prevalence of mrsa in the intervention and control homes, taking account of the clustering, over the one-year intervention period [risk ratio . ; % confidence intervals (ci) . − . ]. however, there was an improvement in infection control audit scores in the intervention homes, with a mean score in control homes at months of . % compared with . % in the intervention sites; these scores were significantly different (paired t-test, p < . ). the results suggest that infection control education and training as implemented in this study was not sufficient to affect mrsa prevalence. therefore, a more detailed education and training package either alone or in combination with mrsa decolonisation of staff and residents, may be required to reduce mrsa prevalence within this unique environment. [ objectives: in a response to the rapid global increase in the nosocomial prevalence of multi-resistant micro-organisms, infection control measures, such as patient isolation, are increasingly used. it is unknown how these measures influence the quality of life (qol) of patients during short-term isolation, and this was determined in a prospective matched cohort study. methods: all adult patients needing isolation in a single-patient room between / and / in the umc utrecht were eligible and included − hours after start of isolation (after giving informed consent and being able to fulfil study requirements). for each index patient we identified two control patients, admitted to the same wards at the same time, yet not subjected to any isolation measure. anxiety and depression and qol were assessed using the hospital anxiety and depression scale (hads) and visual analogue scale (eq- d-vas) in all patients. opinions on and experiences with isolation were measured in isolated patients by means of a self-developed 'isolation evaluation questionnaire'. results: isolated patients and controls were included, with comparable baseline characteristics (age, sex, nationality, level of education, length of hospital stay and severity of underlying disease and co-morbidity (using the cumulative illness rating scale)). reasons for isolation were clostridium difficile-associated disease (n = , %), high risk for mrsa carriage (n = , %), or resistant gram-negative bacteria (n = , %). mean scores of questionnaires are presented in table . isin univariate analysis only duration of isolation of hours (compared to hours) was associated with a reduced quality of life (vas . compared to . , p . ). on a visual analogue score of opposite terms isolation measures were rated with means of . , . and . for safety, usefulness and quietness, respectively. conclusion: short-term isolation (up to hours) is not associated with anxiousness or depression, but with positive feelings about safety, usefulness and quietness. index patients (n = ), mean (sd) . ( . ) . ( . ) . ( . ) . ( . ) control patients (n = ), mean (sd) . ( . ) . ( . ) . ( . objectives: there is a lack of data about the impact of healthcare associated infection (hai) on the experience of individual patients. this information is essential to empower health organisations to understand, prioritise, develop and implement solutions that will minimise risks to patients. this study explored comparable narratives from patients who had experienced a staphylococcus aureus blood stream infection with patients who had not. we conducted qualitative semi-structured interviews with eighteen adults who had previously been an in-patient in an acute teaching hospital in scotland. nine patients had had a laboratory diagnosed staphylococcus aureus blood stream infection and nine had no blood stream infection. all patients were interviewed for − minutes. the interviewer asked patients about their thoughts around hai, what concerns they had or still do, what measures they took to safeguard themselves from hai and how their experience impacted on their confidence of the nhs. probing questions were then asked depending on the responses given to the initial questions. all interviews were recorded, transcribed and analysed thematically. results: analysis of transcribed interviews is ongoing. preliminary analysis showed that all patients had positive and negative comments about infection prevention and control practice in the hospital. specific concerns included poor communication, poor cleanliness, awareness of patient boarding, lack of facilities, staff shortages and multi-tasking. some patients who had experienced bacteraemia said they had not been informed about the infection. those who had been informed were not given clear information about treatment or subsequent results. most patients were not specifically told what they or their family should do to safeguard them from infection and little or no written information about hai was provided. most patients are worried about hai on future admissions. the concerns of patients were not fundamentally different if they did or did not experience blood stream infection. the patient's reported experiences show that they have a broad awareness of systems issues that may increase risk of infection. consequently we need to involve patients in the design and evaluation of systems change and information that will improve patient experience. improving the safety and reliability of the system will have direct benefits for all patients in the hospital, not just the ones at risk of hai. analysis of surgical specialties separately revealed a significant reduction of mortality in cardiothoracic surgery who had been treated with mup-chx ( . % ( / ) vs. . % ( / ), p = . , figure) . in other surgical specialties no significant difference was found. conclusion: peri-operative application of mup-chx in nasal carriers of s. aureus undergoing cardiothoracic surgery results in a threefold reduction of mortality after one year. o a lot done, more to do − a survey of teaching about healthcare-associated infections in uk and irish medical schools h. humphreys°, d. o'brien, j. richards, k. walton, g. phillips (dublin, ie; norwich, newcastle-upon-tyne, dundee, uk) objectives: patient safety and the prevention of healthcare-associated infections (hcai) are increasingly important health issues. medical doctors have traditionally been poor in complying with preventative measures to minimise hcai such as hand hygiene compliance. we surveyed medical schools in the uk and ireland to assess what is being taught and assessed in this area. methods: a questionnaire was drafted, piloted and then subsequently forwarded to the heads of medical schools as well as to known contact professionals with an interest in hcai in medical schools. the questionnaire surveyed topics covered in the curricula, the modalities used to assess knowledge and practice, the usefulness of various teaching methods and materials, e.g. lectures, and what education resources were available. results: replies were received from ( %) medical schools; two supplied data on their undergraduate and postgraduate courses. only ( %) covered hcai as a quality and safety issue but over % covered prevalence, recognised risk factors, transmission, and preventative measures. ( %) medical schools assessed competence in undertaking aseptic techniques and the disposal of sharps and mcqs were the most common ( %) means of assessment. case scenarios, resource materials and clinical skills stations were used in educating students in ( %), ( %) and ( %) medicals schools respectively. ( %) medical schools would be willing to share educational resources on hcai with other medical schools. conclusions: medical schools in the uk and ireland include hcai in their curricula but its importance as a safety and quality issue needs to be further emphasized. there is potential for agreeing a core curriculum on hcai and for sharing teaching resources such as videos and e-learning material. objectives: noroviruses are most common cause of outbreaks of gastroenteritis in uk national health service hospitals, leading to ward closure costing as much as £ million per annum. using a detailed data set on norovirus outbreaks from three hospital systems in the south west of england, we estimated ( ) the relative importance of introduction of norovirus from the community and within the hospital and ( ) the cost effectiveness of ward closure at different time points during an outbreak. methods: using regression models we examined the association between number of new outbreaks in a hospital and community levels of activity and number of outbreaks currently occurring in other wards within the hospital. we examined the effect of different ward types (admission, general and long stay units) and whether the ward was open or closed to new admissions on a given day. we then undertook as analysis of cost (-effectiveness) of unit closure by developing a dynamic transmission model taking into account that ward closure may reduce norovirus transmission within and between wards. the stochastic simulation model was based on the actual characteristics of an acute hospital and the norovirus transmission parameters quantified in the statistical analysis. we measured the costs and benefits of closing affected wards at , and days after the onset of symptoms in the first case. results: community level of norovirus infection had a significant effect on the occurrence of new outbreaks as did outbreaks in admission and general medical units. the cost of closing wards to new admissions varied between £ . million to £ . million depending on the assumed effectiveness of closure in curtailing transmission. cost of bed day loss − compared with staff illness -accounted for around % of the total cost of closure. although the total number of cases tends to fall with rapid ward closure (by around % compared with no closure), the actual cost of control is similar regardless of when the closure is performed. we have developed a modelling framework to assess the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of strategies to control norovirus outbreaks in hospital settings. ward closure is effective at preventing cases but since closure itself is an expensive intervention, it may not always be cost-effective. . other prevalent ribotypes were ( %) and ( %). % of the isolates originated from hospitals located in healthboard areas. the remaining isolates of ribotype originated from hospitals across scotland. in vitro % of isolates were resistant to clindamycin with a mic range of − mg/l, mic of mg/l and mic of mg/l. furthermore % of the isolates were highly resistant to erythromycin (mic mg/l, mic mg/l), and to levofloxacin and moxifloxacin (mic mg/l, mic mg/l for both), while % of these isolates were resistant to cefotaxime (mic = mg/l, mic = mg/l). all isolates were susceptible to metronidazole, vancomycin, meropenem and piperacillin-tazobactam. high frequencies of clindamycin, erythromycin, levofloxacin, moxifloxacin and cefotaxime resistance were also found among isolates of ribotype ( − %) and ( - %). conclusion: until c. difficile ribotype was only reported infrequently in scotland. in , reports of ribotype became more frequent and clusters were detected in hospitals. the majority ( %) of ribotype isolates were resistant to clindamycin. three other european countries have previously reported clindamycin resistance in pcr ribotype , albeit with a higher mic of > mg/l. objectives: to analyze trends in mortality due to clostridium difficile enterocolitis and to describe the most affected groups in order to better understand current clostridium difficile changing epidemiology. methods: we reviewed mortality data from the flanders and brussels regions in belgium (about million inhabitants). we selected those records in which icd- code a . (enterocolitis due to clostridium difficile) appeared as underlying cause of death within the death certificate. age-and sex-specific mortality rates were calculated for the period - . direct standardisation was performed using the european standard population and % confidence intervals were calculated. stata ® and excel ® were used as statistical software. objectives: toxigenic clostridium difficile is an enteric pathogen typical in the hospital environment but also community-acquired cases have been reported. however, relatively few attempts have been made to clarify the role of soil or water as a source of c. difficile infection. in november-december , the drinking water distribution system in the town of nokia, finland was massively contaminated with treated sewage effluent resulting in a large gastroenteritis outbreak. the aim of the present study was to evaluate if contaminated water in this outbreak was also a potential source of c. difficile infection. a sample from the contaminated tap water and a treated sewage effluent sample were collected as soon as possible after the massive faecal contamination of the drinking water distribution system had occurred. c. difficile was isolated from heat-treated water samples by filtrating of ml, ml and ml volumes of water and placing the membranes on selective ccey agar plates, which were anaerobically incubated for d. stool samples from the patients fallen ill during the epidemic were examined for enteric pathogens, including c. difficile. all potential c. difficile colonies were subcultured on ccfa agar plates and toxin-positive isolates were identified by pcr. pcr ribotyping was performed according to the protocol of the anaerobe reference unit in cardiff, uk, using the cardiff-ecdc culture collection as a set of reference strains. after gel electrophoresis, the band patterns were analyzed using the bionumerics software. results: altogether c. difficile isolates were found in water samples. twelve isolates were toxin-positive; isolates were from contaminated tap water and isolates from treated sewage effluent, the latter being the contamination source. among the tap water and sewage effluent isolates, and distinct pcr ribotype profiles were identified, respectively. the human faecal c. difficile isolates detected were divided into distinct pcr ribotype profiles. none of the profiles were identical with that of the hypervirulent pcr ribotype . two isolates, one from tap water and another from a patient, had an indistinguishable pcr ribotype profile. conclusion: our observation implies that c. difficile contamination of a tap water distribution system had occurred. waterborne transmission of toxigenic c. difficile and subsequent c. difficile infection seems possible. objectives: an accurate and rapid method is needed for typing of toxigenic clostridium difficile. a commercial automated repetitive pcr system (rep-pcr; diversilab ® , biomérieux inc., st louis, usa) utilises amplification and subsequent automated electrophoretic separation of the repetitive extragenic palindromic sequences of c. difficile. our aim was to evaluate the performance of this rep-pcr method for genotyping of c. difficile isolates and to compare it to pcr ribotyping. in addition, the correlation between the rep-pcr and the virulence gene profiles of c. difficile strains was studied. methods: a total of toxin-positive c. difficile isolates were studied. we included consecutive isolates from two laboratories in finland, containing also strains of the hypervirulent c. difficile ribotype . in addition, selected c. difficile strains with > bp deletions in their tcdc genes were analyzed. the dna was extracted and the rep-pcr performed according to the manufacturer's instructions. the amplification products of rep-pcr were detected and analyzed using the diversilab system. further analysis was performed with the web-based software accompanying the system. the usefulness of the library construction option of the diverslab system for isolate comparison was tested. the virulence genes (tcda, tcdb, cdta, cdtb and tcdc) were analyzed by conventional pcr and the whole gene sequencing of tcdc was performed from isolates with deletions > bp. pcr ribotyping was performed using the protocol of the anaerobe reference unit in cardiff, uk. the correlation between the rep-pcr profile and the ribotype was excellent. all major ribotype groups were clustered in their own rep-pcr groups. interestingly, subgroups could be found with rep-pcr within two most prevalent ribotypes and . the automated rep-pcr proved to be reproducible; the results from separate dna isolations and pcr-runs/microfluid electrophoresis as well as the results performed by different individuals of laboratory personnel were comparable. the rep-pcr profiles and pcr ribotypes correlated also with the virulence gene profiles. conclusion: this automated rep-pcr represents an effective and reproducible method for the genetic characterisation of c. difficile strains in clinical laboratories with molecular biology facilities. the constructed c. difficile library allows comparing the relatedness of c. difficile strains and their fingerprints over time. objectives: clostridium difficile infection (cdi) is a serious diarrhoeal illness associated with high morbidity and mortality. currently available treatments (oral vancomycin or metronidazole) usually produce good resolution of diarrhoea but are associated with a % to % incidence of recurrence. opt- , the first in a new class of macrocyclic antibiotics, is bactericidal via unique inhibition of rna polymerase. this phase , non-inferiority clinical trial was conducted in more than sites in north america and compared the efficacy and safety of opt- and vancomycin in treating cdi. methods: eligible patients were adults with acute cdi symptoms and a positive stool toxin test. patients received oral opt- ( mg twice daily) or oral vancomycin ( mg times daily) for days. primary end point was clinical cure (resolution of symptoms and no further need for cdi therapy days after stopping study drug). secondary end point was cdi recurrence (diarrhoea and positive stool toxin test within weeks after treatment). global cure was defined as a clinical cure with no recurrence. results: patients were enrolled and % were evaluable. in the per protocol (pp) population (n = ), mean age was . ± . years and . % of patients were male. equivalent rates of clinical cure were observed with opt- ( %) and vancomycin ( %) in the pp analysis; similar outcomes were observed in a modified intent-to-treat (mitt) analysis. significantly fewer patients treated with opt- ( %) than vancomycin ( %) experienced recurrence in the pp analysis (p = . ) and in the mitt analysis ( % vs %; p = . ). significantly more opt- -treated patients achieved global cure ( %) than vancomycintreated patients in the pp analysis ( %; p = . ) and in the mitt analysis ( % vs %; p = . ). opt- was well tolerated with an adverse event profile similar to that of vancomycin. in this study -the largest comparative trial of a new antimicrobial agent versus vancomycin for the treatment of cdi -clinical cure rates after treatment with opt- or vancomycin were equivalent. however, opt- was associated with a significantly lower recurrence rate and a higher global cure rate than vancomycin. opt- is an oral, non-absorbed agent that has a convenient (twice daily) dosing schedule and low risk of adverse events. opt- represents a potential new treatment option for cdi that is associated with a lower recurrence rate than currently available treatments. results: sequence analysis (sa) revealed that locus a is absent in type and that some mismatches are present in the primer annealing sites for loci b, c and g. lowering the annealing temperature and increasing the magnesium chloride concentration for loci b, c and g resolved the low yield of pcr products. applying the mlva on type strains revealed that ( %) strains, encompassing isolates from human (n = ) and porcine (n = ) origin, are genetically related with a summed tandem repeat differences (strd) ). three clonal complexes (cc, defined by strd ) were recognized; one cc contained both human (n = ) and porcine (n = ) strains. the optimised mlva identified genetically related clusters and cc among the isolates from e and ni. ccs contain isolates from more than one hospital and indeed for several clusters isolates from both e and ni. isolates obtained from ni years earlier were part of one large cc. the optimised mlva can distinguish and/or group type strains from distinct settings. type strains from human and animal origin are genetically related. the clustering of some isolates from distinct settings is consistent with community sources for type . the last observations suggest zoonotic transmission. objectives: this paper updates our assessment of the contribution that community-associated clostridium difficile infection (cdi), as reported to the english mandatory surveillance scheme since , makes to both the acute and community sectors of the national health service (nhs) in england. methods: nhs acute trusts (hospital groups) in england are required to report all c. difficile toxin positive diarrhoeal specimens processed by their laboratories whether the patients were in hospital or the community at the time of onset of the illness or when the specimen was taken via a web enabled reporting system. positive specimens from the same patient within days are not reported. reported cases in patients under years of age were omitted from this analysis. enhanced surveillance data (including information on date of admission, patient location prior to testing, sex, age and patient category) on cdi have been collected through a web-enabled reporting system since april . risk factor information is completed on a voluntary basis. results: more than , cases of cdi in patients aged > years were reported, % of these cases were taken in non-acute settings of which % were taken by a general practitioner. a further % of specimens were taken on presentation or < days of admission into an acute trust. approximately % of all cases had at least one risk factor field completed, > , cases reported risk factor information on episode category; % of these cases were community associated and % were hospital acquired. the information reported suggests that only % of the community associated cases were from patients with continued infection or relapsed episodes of cdi, this is compared to % of the hospital acquired cases who had continued infection or relapsed episodes of cdi. conclusions: % of the c. difficile specimens reported by acute trusts were diagnosed in a community setting. published studies suggest that − % of these might be expected to have been acquired during a hospital stay within the previous month (i.e. were community onset hospital acquired cases). future work is required to investigate whether there are differences in the epidemiology, risk factors e.g. antibiotic exposure and outcome of patients with community onset disease. o clostridium difficile-associated disease: a newly notifiable disease in ireland m. skally, f. roche, d. o'flanagan, p. mckeown, f. fitzpatrick°( dublin, ie) new cases of clostridium difficile-associated disease (cdad) became notifiable in ireland on th may . the main objective of this new notification process was to provide a national overview of the epidemiology and burden of cdad. this paper review the first six months of preliminary data notified. methods: the interim case definitions for new and recurrent cdad cases proposed by the european society for clinical microbiology and infectious diseases (escmid) study group for c. difficile were employed. this report reviews the weekly events of cdad extracted from the computerised infectious disease reporting (cidr) system in january . census of population figures were used as denominator data in the calculation of incidence rates. results presented represent weeks of data submitted. results: there were new cdad cases notified on cidr between the th may and th december , representing a crude incidence rate (cir) of . cases/ population (estimated annual cir is . cases/ , ). all cases were laboratory confirmed. there was a higher occurrence of cases in females. the male:female ratio for the period was : . . in . % of cases the sex was unknown. . % of cases were in the greater than years age category. the preliminary data submitted on cidr indicate that . % of cases were hospital inpatients and . % of cases were either gp patients or outpatients. the origin of . % of samples is unknown. there was large variation between the public health regions (table ) . the incidence of cdad in ireland is prominent in older age groups and in healthcare settings. what is more remarkable is the regional variation of cases reported. this varies from . per , in the north east to . per , in the west. the seasonal trend is indistinguishable at present due to late and batch notifications from institutions. o clostridium difficile-associated diarrhoea in immunosuppressed patients with cancer objective: to assess the epidemiology, clinical features and outcome of clostridium difficile (cd) associated diarrhoea in immunosuppressed patients with cancer. methods: review of all episodes of cd associated diarrhoea documented in adults with cancer and haematopoietic stem cell recipients ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . microbiologic diagnosis included cd isolation from stool samples, direct detection of cd toxin, and testing for cytotoxin production by the isolated strain. we documented a significant increase of cd associated diarrhoea, from . / admissions in to . / admissions in (p < . ). there were episodes in patients. thirty-one patients were male ( %) with a mean age of years (± ). forty three ( %) patients had an haematological underlying disease and had solid tumour; ( %) had received previous chemotherapy, ( %) were stem cell transplant recipients ( presenting with gvhd) and ( %) were neutropenic (< ). in the previous month patients ( %) had received one or more antibiotics (cephalosporins . %, glycopeptides %, carbapenems . %, betalactam + betalactam inhibitors %, quinolones %). fever > ºc ( %) and abdominal pain ( %) were the most frequent manifestations, and the diarrhoea was hemorrhagic in % of the cases. most patients ( %) were treated with metronidazole (median days), and the antibiotic therapy was discontinued in %. in patients who had recovered from neutropenia, the diarrhoea resolved just by discontinuing the antibiotic therapy. no patient developed toxic megacolon or needed surgery. three patients ( . %) had relapses. overall mortality (< days) was % ( patients). the incidence of cd associated diarrhoea in cancer patients has increased significantly in recent years. it is related with important morbidity and mortality. better strategies to improve its prevention and treatment are needed. s linking research to the clinic: how laboratory findings relate to management of invasive candida infections the role of the research laboratory in the management of invasive candida infections goes beyond routinely available tests for identification of candida species and susceptibility testing of antifungal agents. cutting-edge molecular epidemiology technologies have been used to type isolates of candida species based on their dna sequences. multilocus sequence typing schemes have been designed for c. albicans, c. dubliniensis, c. glabrata, c. krusei and c. tropicalis. multi-locus sequence typing can be used to investigate possible hospital outbreaks of infection (finding widely different strain types within a unit indicates no outbreak, although the converse is not true). for c. albicans, typing multiple isolates from the same patient has shown that people tend to harbour as commensals a mixture of closely related but different strain types, which may provide for selection of the most appropriate type for invasion of a particular tissue or in response to antifungal treatment. strains in c. albicans clade , the largest group of related strain types, have a higher proportion of isolates resistant to flucytosine than other clades, and they all share a common resistance mechanism. research on mechanisms of resistance of candida species to many types of antifungal has progressed to the point that some investigators are looking to design dna chips that could be used both for identification and for susceptibility testing of a candida isolate. much research effort goes into detailed study of host-fungus crosstalk in experimental candida infections. animal models of infection have been greatly refined and the latest research shows how early release of chemokines that attract neutrophils into infected tissues contributes to the immunopathology of candida infection. this rapid, innate immune response also emphasizes the need for antifungal intervention at the earliest possible stage to provide the best chance for successful treatment of a disseminated candida infection − a finding now supported by clinical data as well as experimental models. translation of the latest research advances into practical diagnostic tests and new therapeutic approaches for candida infections always takes a long time − typically years − and not all research results find clinical applications. however, the level of effort invested in basic candida research ensures support for steady progress in diagnosis and management. the echinocandins are semi-synthetic lipopeptides that are increasingly used for the prevention and treatment of invasive fungal infections. understanding the pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic (pk/pd) characteristics of these compounds is critical for their optimal clinical use. the echinocandins have potent in vitro activity against candida spp., although c. parapsilosis is less susceptible than other candida species. the molecular mechanisms of resistance in candida species, which relate to amino acid substitutions in 'hot spots' within the fks gene, are becoming well characterised. susceptibility breakpoints for all three clinically available compounds have been determined recently by the clinical laboratory standards institute, with a 'susceptible-only' breakpoint of > mg/l suggested. the pk/pd of the echinocandins have been determined in experimental models of disseminated candidiasis, and of both disseminated and pulmonary invasive aspergillosis. these studies suggest that the echinocandins: ( ) display concentration-dependent antifungal killing (or effect); ( ) are extensively distributed into peripheral tissues, where they exhibit prolonged mean residence times at the site of infection; ( ) are fungicidal against candida spp. and induce dose-dependent morphological changes in aspergillus spp.; and ( ) result in a diminished propensity for angioinvasion by aspergillus spp. recent evidence also suggests that the echinocandins have important immunomodulatory properties, which may contribute significantly to their observed antifungal effect. pk/pd modelling and laboratory animal-to-human bridging techniques have been used to identify safe and effective dosages for the echinocandins for relatively uncommon clinical syndromes such as neonatal haematogenous candida meningoencephalitis. these techniques are an efficient method of identifying effective regimens for humans that can be expedited for study in clinical trials. pk/pd modelling techniques can and should be used to address outstanding clinical queries in relation to these compounds, including optimal dosages, decision-support analysis for the setting of in vitro antifungal susceptibility breakpoints and the clinical relevance of inherent or acquired reduced antifungal susceptibility. s invasive candidiasis: which antifungal treatment for which patient? management of patients with invasive candidiasis represents a complex issue owing to the heterogeneity of patients in whom these infections occur. established risk factors for invasive candidiasis, which include total parenteral nutrition, multiple organ failure and candida colonisation, are common to many types of patients that are treated within the critical care setting. furthermore, the severity of the underlying condition in these patients necessitates swift antifungal treatment to ensure optimal outcomes. an additional factor for consideration when treating candida infections is the changing epidemiology of candida species; potentially fluconazole-resistant species such as c. glabrata and c. krusei are becoming more common, particularly in patients with prior fluconazole exposure. a range of antifungal agents is available with in vitro activity against candida species. however, not all of these agents are suitable options for the clinical management of invasive candidiasis because of the overall complexity of both infection and underlying condition. for example, the position of the polyenes, particularly amphotericin b deoxycholate, is becoming less tenable as the risk of renal complications is increasingly regarded as unacceptable in patients that are likely to have or be at risk of multiple organ failure. furthermore, because of the increasing prevalence of fluconazole-resistant species, recent guidelines no longer recommend the use of azoles as first-line treatment for invasive candidiasis except in special cases, focusing instead on the echinocandin agents. there is now a wealth of clinical data available for the echinocandins. micafungin, for example, has been assessed in invasive candidiasis in clinical trials that included a wide variety of underlying conditions and patterns of infection, including neutropenic patients and those with deep infections such as peritonitis. furthermore, micafungin is the most extensively evaluated of the echinocandins in paediatric patients, having been tested both in children up to the age of years and in premature infants and neonates. optimal management of patients with invasive candidiasis depends on a strategy that takes into account the complex nature of the disease. judicious selection of antifungal treatment should be accompanied by consideration of non-drug-related factors that improve survival, such as careful assessment of intravenous catheters and their potential involvement in candida infections. patients with invasive candidiasis often have underlying conditions that are severe illnesses in themselves. these range from neutropenia during cancer chemotherapy to the multi-organ failure of intensive care unit patients. against this background of severe underlying illness, it can be difficult to appreciate the success or otherwise of treatment strategies for candida infections. in the last decade, major advances have been made in antifungal therapy with the introduction of . echinocandins; . extended-spectrum azoles; and . lipid formulations of amphotericin b. robust clinical studies for their successful use in candidaemia have been published. however, it is important to translate these studies into practical strategies for the care of individual patients. in this presentation, individual cases will be used to provide insights into the successes and failures of these antifungal classes for the management of invasive candidiasis. specific interest will be focused on the use of fluconazole versus the echinocandins. these micafungin-based cases will be supported by insights from the evidence-based literature combined with practical experiences at the bedside. the factors to be considered are: . spectrum of activity; . drug toxicity; . drug interactions; . drug resistance; . pharmacology; . diagnosis; . site of infection; . use of biomarkers/cultures in treatment strategies; and . costs. it is important to realise that large clinical trials exclude many patients with invasive candidiasis. therefore, with the use of individual cases, it is possible to provide further insights into the clinical use of these outstanding antifungal agents. patient management: the era of rapid diagnostic results (symposium organised by cepheid) s will community mrsa and clostridium difficile change infection control in hospitals? infections caused by methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (mrsa), vancomycin-resistant enterococci, and clostridium difficile are inter-related in healthcare institutions. the emergence of epidemic mrsa and c. difficile strains has placed a greater burden on infection control systems in healthcare facilities, which often must increase surveillance and change disinfection strategies to halt the transmission of these pathogens in hospitals. ironically, the usa mrsa strain arose in the community but now is being transmitted frequently in healthcare settings, while the epidemic nap /bi/ c. difficile strain was originally a healthcare-associated pathogen, which now is causing considerable morbidity in community settings. to successfully slow the spread of these pathogens, infection control must work closely with both the laboratory and pharmacy services to ensure that these organisms are detected rapidly and that the selective pressure to maintain the organisms in the institution are reduced. clearly, bundles of interventions, rather than single approaches, are necessary to contain the spread of these organisms in hospitals. the continued influx of patients with communityacquired mrsa and c. difficile infections into healthcare institutions is a challenge for infection control practitioners that will clearly increase in the future. the food borne pathogen l. monocytogenes discovered by murray in is responsible for a severe infection with various clinical features (gastroenteritis, meningitis, meningoencephalitis and materno foetal infections) and a high mortality rate ( %). the disease is due to the ability of listeria to cross three host barriers during infection: the intestinal barrier, the placental barrier and the blood brain barrier. it is also due to listeria capacity to survive in macrophages and to enter into non phagocytic cells, such epithelial cells. recovery from infection and protection against reinfection are due to a t-cell response, explaining why listeria has since many years has become a model in immunology. nearly three decades of molecular biology and cell biology approaches coupled to genetic and post-genomic studies have promoted listeria among the best models in infection biology. in depth studies of the mechanism of entry into cells has help unraveling how listeria crosses the intestinal and placental barrier. unsuspected concepts in cell biology were discovered. post-genomic studies have recently allowed to unveil the listeria transcriptional landscape during switch from saprophytism to virulence. the talk will give an overview highlighting recent results in the frame work of well established data. the last several decades of research in medical mycology have offered great insights into fungal cell biology, epidemiology, phylogenetics and the cells and molecules involved in the pathogenesis of fungal disease. a legitimate question is to ask to what extent our extensive advances in comprehension of the biology of fungal pathogens have contributed to improvements in diagnosis and treatment. to what extent do patients benefit from translation of basic research into tools for clinical management? and the equally valid question: to what extent does biological science benefit from study of fungi that are opportunistic pathogens? the speaker will examine some of these questions from the perspective of long experience in the field and the curmudgeonly attitude that develops with age. objectives: the incidence of invasive meningococcal disease (imd) has been reported in the czech republic since . in response to the emergence of a new hypervirulent clonal complex, cc , nationwide enhanced surveillance of invasive meningococcal disease was implemented by the national reference laboratory for meningococcal infections (nrl) in . the case definition is consistent with the ecdc guidelines. culture and pcr are used for confirmation of cases. notification is compulsory and is performed by local epidemiologists. strains of neisseria meningitidis isolated from imd cases are referred by the field laboratories to the nrl to be characterised by serogrouping, pora and feta sequencing (http://neisseria.org/nm/typing/) and multilocus sequence typing (mlst) (http://pubmlst.org/neisseria/). in the nrl, the epidemiological database is matched against that of strains to avoid duplicate reporting in the final enhanced surveillance database. results: despite the stable trend in imd incidence ( . / ) since , the case fatality rate was high ( . %) in . the disease was caused mainly by serogroup b meningococci ( . %) in , followed by serogroups c ( . %) and y ( . %). the most frequent clonal complexes were cc , cc / and cc (typical for serogroup b) and cc (typical for serogroup c). the highest age-specific morbidity rates were observed in the lowest age groups, i.e. − months and − years ( . / and . / , respectively), and were associated with high prevalence of serogroup b. the case fatality rate was the highest in infants under year of age ( . %). the incidence of imd caused by serogroup c is currently low and there is no indication for mass vaccination with menc conjugate vaccine. menb vaccine is needed for infants, but the sero/subtype coverage by the currently developed porin-based vaccines is low for czech meningococcal isolates (maximum . % for nine-valent meningococcal pora vaccine). methods:the vaccination programme incorporates dedicated vaccine clinic with a multi-disciplinary team including a nurse, data manager, a pharmacist specifically appointed to the unit. additional interventions to improve vaccine uptake and outcome have included use of sms texting to announce availability of influenza annually and improve adherence to completion of hepatitis b vaccination, educational programmes changes in guidelines e.g. varicella vaccination and creation of a vaccine passport. we reviewed vaccination clinic activity in the cohort of , hiv positive patients since introduction of a dedicated vaccine service. results:there has been a large increase in the uptake of vaccinations since introduction of this service. the varicella vaccination uptake increased from ( ) to ( ) due to targeted vaccine programme.(see graphic, legend reads left to right) conclusion: strategies implemented increased the uptake of recommended vaccinations in our hiv population. these included appointment of a dedicated health professional team, use of it supports, education of staff and patients and development of a vaccine passport. we developed the vaccine passport to help with patient education and awareness and it will serve as a record of vaccine administration for physicians off site. in the latter year, post guideline change, we have targeted our varicella non immune population. the next intervention planned is to assess all late entrants to our healthcare system to determine need for catch up vaccines, including mmr. results: column purified recombinant protein sspb was found to be a good antigen for both groups of animals used for immunisation. antibodies against the recombinant sspb tested by opsonophagocytosis were found to enhance phagocytosis of gbs strains belonging to different serotypes at the average . times relatively to control. affect against gas strains was less pronounced ( . times) but still statistically significant. antibodies were also capable to interfere with adherence of gbs strains carrying sspb relatively to the strain without the protein. adherence of the strain with sspb towards different cell lines was dramatically higher which proves the function of the protein as adhesin. in passive protection test carried out with mice challenged with virulent gbs or gas strains introduced intranasaly were eliminated from the lungs of the animals times faster in case of the usage of anti sspb serum relatively the control. in the experiments with active protection sspb immunised animals were found be significantly better protected against gbs and gas infection. (table ) . similar results were obtained in the analysis of factors associated with -day mortality. conclusion: these data suggest that outcomes of both community-onset and nosocomial bloodstream infections due to s. aureus may be improved by an expert consultation service. the factors most critical for better outcomes and modifiable in time by id specialist consultation remain to be determined and may be explored as process of care quality indicators. objective: worldwide, the present tuberculosis epidemic is characterised by an alarming emergence in drug resistance. given the limited therapeutic options in mdr (and especially xdr) tuberculosis, there is a need to define the resistance levels and mechanisms present in clinical isolates categorised as drug resistant on the basis of critical concentration testing, so as to facilitate rapid therapeutic decisions. methods: we determined quantitative resistance levels of drug resistant isolates of mycobacterium tuberculosis sampled in switzerland over the past years. resistance-conferring genetic alterations were identified by probe assays and pcr-mediated gene sequencing. results: rifampicin resistant isolates unanimously showed a high-level resistant phenotype (> mg/l) associated with mutations in rpob. in contrast, a significant fraction of clinical tb isolates categorised as isoniazid resistant on the basis of critical concentration testing showed a low-level resistant phenotype (mostly mutations in inha); heterogeneous phenotypic resistance levels were associated with mutations in katg. one third of streptomycin resistant clinical isolates had a low-level resistance phenotype (< mg/l). ethambutol resistance occurred mostly in mdr strains and was linked to alterations in embb, but resistance never exceeded mg/l. our data indicate that some first line agents may be considered as therapeutic treatment option despite in vitro resistance at the critical concentration. diagnostic mycobacteriology would benefit from standardised measures of quantitative drug susceptibility testing in particular for those drugs were significant variations in phenotypic resistance levels are found in clinical isolates, e.g. isoniazid, ethambutol and streptomycin. introduction recent advances in the diagnostics of varicella zoster virus (vzv) infections have changed the perception of this virus as a cns pathogen. a real-time pcr method amplifying a nt segment of the vzv gb region gave . log improved sensitivity over conventional pcr and was employed for routine diagnosis of vzv dna in samples of cerebrospinal fluid (csf). in addition, a new elisa method for detection of antibodies in the csf to glycoprotein e was developed, using a mammalian cell expression system for optimal glycosylation of the antigen. these methods were utilised for studies of vzv-induced cns infections. in a retrospective study, almost all patients had a reactivated vzv infection, but only % showed skin lesions. the following diagnoses were made: acute aseptic meningitis (aam), n = ; encephalitis, n= ; meningoencephalitis, n = ; cranial nerve affections, n = ; encephalopathy, n = ; and cerebrovascular disease, n = . in patients in whom vzv dna levels were determined, significantly higher viral loads were found in those with aam and encephalitis compared to patients with cranial nerve affection (including ramsay hunt syndrome). of the % (n = ) who had a follow-up, % (n = ) had neurological complications after months. sixty-two percent had a ct/mri scan of the brain performed and % of these had pathological findings. vzv encephalitis showed a more broad disease spectrum as compared with herpes simplex encephalitis (hse), as will be presented. detection of intrathecal synthesis of vzv ge antibodies was positive in the vzv encephalitis patients, as well as in some of the hse patients, arguing for a previous suggested role for vzv as a co-pathogen at least in some cases of the latter disease. vzv vasculitis was a more common finding ( % of all cases) than expected from the literature of case reports. mr findings showed that middle and posterior cerebral arteries were targeted. surprisingly, despite substantial vzv dna loads in the csf of these patients, investigated serum samples were pcr negative. thus, vzv might be suggested to be neuronally transported to the arterial walls rather than haematogenously spread. conclusions: vzv is a serious and underestimated cause of cns infection. a substantial number of the patients presented with serious neurological symptoms and sequela, and pathological findings on ct/mri of the brain were abundant, especially in patients with encephalitis and vasculitis. pk/pd controversies for the clinician s pk/pd and azoles the triazoles have revolutionised the treatment of invasive and allergic fungal diseases. fluconazole, itraconazole, voriconazole and posaconazole are available for clinical use. isavuconazole and ravuconazole are in development. the triazoles have broad spectrum antifungal activity. the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics (pk-pd) of the triazoles have been extensively investigated in murine models of disseminated candidiasis. the pd parameter that optimally links drug exposure with the observed antifungal effect is the ratio of the area under the concentration-time curve (auc) to mic (auc:mic). there is increasing information on the magnitude of the auc:mic that is required for optimal antifungal effect. pk-pd principles have been used to define in vitro susceptibility breakpoints. the triazoles are fungistatic against candida spp. their mode of action against aspergillus spp. is less well defined, although they clearly exhibit dose-dependant decrement in fungal burden in laboratory animal models of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis. the triazoles accumulate in tissues and this is important for an understanding of their antifungal effect. in humans, the triazoles are characterised by complicated pharmacokinetic properties. both itraconazole and voriconazole exhibit nonlinear pharmacokinetics. the triazoles all exhibit clinically relevant exposureresponse relationships. recent work from our laboratory suggests that itraconazole exhibits clinically relevant concentration-toxicity relationships. higher concentrations of voriconazole are associated with a progressively higher probability of hepatotoxicity, photopsia and central nervous system toxicity. because of the significant pharmacokinetic variability and clinically relevant drug exposure-response relationships, therapeutic drug monitoring (tdm) is frequently used. a strong argument can be made for the routine monitoring of itraconazole and voriconazole. there may also be grounds to consider monitoring posaconazole levels. tdm should be considered for all patients receiving triazoles who have refractory disease. furthermore, tdm should be considered when compliance, drug interactions and variable pharmacokinetics result in uncertainty about resultant drug exposures. an understanding of the pk-pd relationships of the triazoles has been instrumental in optimising their clinical efficacy. innate immunity s the inflammasomes: danger sensing complexes triggering innate immunity the nod-like receptors (nlr) are a family of intracellular sensors of microbial motifs and 'danger signals' that have emerged as being crucial components of the innate immune responses and inflammation. several nlrs (nalps and ipaf) form a caspase- -activating multiprotein complex, termed inflammasome, that processes proinflammatory cytokines including il- beta. amongst the various inflammasomes, the nalp inflammasome is particularly qualified to sense a plethora of diverse molecules, ranging from bacterial muramyldipeptide to monosodium urate crystals. the important role of the nalp inflammasome is emphasized by the identification of mutations in the nalp gene that are associated with a susceptibility to inflammatory disorders. these and other issues related to the inflammasome will be presented. it is now years since charles janeway hypothesized the existence of clonally derived pattern recognition receptors and pointed to the importance of these in initial responses to bacterial and viral infections. janeway's hypothesis has been validated by the discovery of three groups of prrs. first, are the toll-like receptors which detect microbial lipids and non-self nucleic acids at the cell surface an in intracellular compartments. in addition cytoplasmic sensors of bacteria (nods) and of viral nucleic acids (rigs) have also been characterised. as well as being critical for responses to infections, these prrs also underlie a large burden of autoimmune and inflammatory disease in the human population and are thus important targets for therapy. in my talk i will describe the molecular mechanisms by which these conserved pathogen associated moecules are recognized by the tlrs with particular reference to lipo polysaccharide and single stranded viral rnas. i will also present new results which show how receptor activation is coupled to downstream signal transduction and in particular the role played by oligomeric signaling platforms assembled form adaptors and other signaling molecules involved in the pathway. i will discuss the potential for structural analysis to be used in the rational design of new drugs. this session proposes a critical review of the most salient recently published papers in the field with a special focus on control of multi drug-resistant organisms, prevention of infections in the intensive care unit, surgery etc. and highlights the need for validity/scope assessment. it emphasizes also the importance to prioritise information published in the abundant literature available so as to be able to summarise and understand the potential changes in clinical practice, and identify unresolved issues and areas of possible future clinical research. tourism is europe's face to the world. it is also a major source of revenue, employment and productivity. each year over million arrivals are recorded into the continent, and of those, approximately million are from latin america. returning travelers are even more numerous and more often associated with disease transmission into europe. within countries of the european continent, imported cases of environmental and zoonotic illnesses such as cholera, dengue, malaria, viral haemorrhagic fevers and west nile virus infections are a rare but established fact. diseases imported from latin america with the potential for autochthonous transmission (chikungunya, malaria, yellow fever) and or high infectivity (viral haemorrhagic fevers) will be described in detail and the possibility of european outbreaks from latin american countries will be discussed. cutaneous leishmaniasis (cl) is a worldwide disease, endemic in countries, that has shown an increasing incidence over the last two decades. so far, pentavalent antimony compounds have been considered the treatment of choice, with rates of curing close to %. however, the high efficacy of these drugs is counteracted by their adverse events. recently, in vitro and in vivo studies have shown that no plays a key role in the eradication of the leishmania parasite objective: to determine whether a no donor patch (developed by electrospinning technique) is as effective as meglumine antimoniate in the treatment of cl while causing less adverse events methods: a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled clinical trial was conducted with patients diagnosed with cl in santander, colombia, south-america. the patients were randomly assigned to two groups. during days group received simultaneously meglumine antimoniate and placebo of nitric oxide patches while group received active nitric oxide patches and placebo of meglumine antimoniate. biochemical determinations (aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, creatinine and pancreatic amilase) were measured at he beginning and at the end of the treatment. a follow up was realised , and days after the beginning of the treatment results: the study included ( . %) women and ( . %) men. the average age in group was . ± . years; while in group it was . ± . years. clinical and demographic data were similar in the two groups. after the follow up period, the complete clinical healing of group was . % versus . % for group (p= . ). treatment with no patches generated both, a lower frequency of non-serious adverse events (fever, anorexia, myalgia, arthralgia, headache), and a reduced variation in biochemistry determinations (asat the treatment with no patches resulted in a lower percentage of complete clinical response compared with meglumine antimoniate. despite its inferior effectiveness, the safety, the lower frequency of adverse events, the facility of administration (topical) and the low cost of the patches justifies its evaluation in further poblational studies, especially in populations as the colombian ones, where the serious adverse events due to glucantime have increased dramatically. objectives: trichinellosis is a zoonotic disease which has never been reported in taiwan and is rarely linked to consumption of reptiles. we investigated the first documented outbreak of trichinellosis in taiwan consisting of patients who became acutely ill after eating at the same restaurant in may . we conducted a retrospective cohort study by interviewing the patients and persons who ate together with them. a case was defined as illness in an attendee who had fever (> . ºc) or myalgia weeks after the festivals and was seropositive to trichinella antigen using an enzymelinked immunoassay and immunohistochemical staining. environmental study of the soft-shelled turtle farm was performed. results: of the attendees, persons met the case definition (attack rate = %). the most common presenting symptoms were myalgia ( %), fever ( %), and periorbital swelling ( %). all patients sought medical care; five were hospitalised. of the patients who underwent blood test, all had moderate eosinophilia. all patients' serum samples were strongly reactive to trichinella excretory-secretory antigen. the only food item significantly associated with illness was the raw softshelled turtle meat (relative risk undefined; p = . ). traced back to the farm, histological examination of soft-shelled turtles was negative for trichinella species. the most likely cause of this outbreak was consumption of raw soft-shelled turtle served in the festivals. this investigation indicates taiwan is not free of trichinellosis. prevention and control programs of trichinellosis should be established. the public should be aware of the risk of acquiring trichinellosis from consumption of raw soft-shelled turtle. objective: to develop and evaluate a modified, rapid giemsa staining procedure for detection of malaria parasites in blood smears. disadvantage of the rapid commercially available staining methods is that they require highly experienced technicians for interpretation of results because the interpretation can be difficult. for this reason, many laboratories use the giemsa stain. shorter giemsa staining times have been reported previously, however, to our knowledge, the effect of and minute staining in different giemsa dilutions have not been evaluated. the stock solution of giemsa stain (merck, darmstadt, germany) was used in different dilutions ( : and : ) and incubated for different lengths of time ( min and min). the staining effect was compared to our standard giemsa stain ( : , min). sensitivity was determined by examining smears of p. falciparum from fresh and edta blood. the level of parasitaemia was followed in two patients admitted to our hospital with p. falciparum parasitaemia's of . % and . % (see table; patient a and b) by examination of blood smears taken at different time points after initiation of therapy. these samples were used to evaluate the different giemsa dilutions and staining times. smears were read by three independent observers (a clinical microbiologist, a laboratory technician specialised in parasitology, and a resident in clinical microbiology). in the table results of the three staining methods on blood from two patients from ghana with high parasitaemia's on admission and during follow-up are shown. all smears were equally easy to read and yielded parasite counts within internationally accepted ranges of variation (see united kingdom national external quality assessment service). conclusion: staining blood smears for detection of plasmodium falciparum parasites with a : dilution of giemsa stain for five minutes provides easy to read slides and results comparable to those obtained with the standard giemsa staining. advantage of the rapid method is the shorter turnaround time, disadvantage is the larger amount of stain used. objectives: diarrhoeal diseases are common in developed and developing countries and are major causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. the need to differentially diagnose protozoan parasites versus other gastrointestinal (gi) aetiologies is well recognized. the most common gi protozoan parasites infecting humans worldwide are considered to be entamoeba histolytica, giardia lamblia, blastocystis hominis, dientamoeba fragilis and cryptosporidium spp. laboratory detection of these parasites is relying on microscopic analysis of stool samples and water concentrates, as well as enzyme immunoassay (eia) tests. utilising the microscopic examination usually results in underdetection of gi parasites, while usage of eia is often not cost-effective. methods: savyon diagnostics is currently engaged with developing an approach aiming to address the unmet needs and the current limitations in this field. this approach includes major aspects: ( ) the ability to detect a panel of all the above organisms in one test kit, ( ) the possibility to perform the diagnosis in two steps − first, simultaneous detection of these organisms without distinguishing between the different species for screening of large number of specimens, and second, distinctive detection of the specific aetiology in the positively-found specimens, and ( ) the ability to apply eia diagnosis in formalin-preserved specimens for all the mentioned parasites. results: polyclonal antibodies were produced in-house based on native antigen extracts, recombinant antigens and synthetic peptides. the resulted inventory of antibodies enabled finding the optimal combination that provided the desired performance parameters for separate detection of each of the parasites in fresh, frozen or formalin preserved faeces specimens. the analytical limit of detection and the performance in characterised clinical specimens were comparable to microscopy or to reference eia, when available. the results show unique detection of e. histolytica in formalin-preserved specimens, which is comparable to detection in fresh specimens. furthermore, we demonstrate simultaneous detection of the parasites without compromising performance characteristics in fresh or preserved specimens. the presented work is a paradigm of an innovative approach, expected to advance the diagnosis of protozoan parasites in gi patients, thus, enabling appropriate and cost-effective diagnosis and treatment. objectives: systemic administration of certain facultative anaerob bacteria to mice bearing solid tumours leads to accumulation in tumours compared to normal target organs, like spleen and liver, and to retardation of tumour growth. salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium (s. typhimurium) as well as escherichia coli nissle (ecn) are such bacteria. preliminary experiments showed that such bacteria that exhibit the ability to form biofilms in vitro might also do so in tumours. in the present study this was systematically investigated. methods: biofilm formation of bacteria were detected on low-salt biofilm plates. additionally, salmonella-or e. coli-infected ct tumours of balb/c mice that were left untreated or were treated with anti-gr to deplete neutrophilic granulocytes were removed two days post infection, fixed and prepared for electron microscope analysis. the expression of different genes which are probably involved in the biofilm formation were tested via real-time pcr. results: when examined after colonising tumours s. typhimurium sl and sl as well as ecn are almost exclusively found extracellular although they are able to invade the ct cells in vitro. interestingly, like in vitro all three bacteria form biofilms to various extend when residing in the tumours. this was followed in more detail for s. typhimurium sl . biofilms were not formed by sl when neutrophils had been removed by antibodies. in addition, when arda a central switch for biofilm formation in the salmonellla had been deleted no biofilms could be found. importantly, now bacteria could be found intracellularly most likely in neutrophilic granulocytes. conclusion: the formation of biofilms by facultative anaerobic bacteria when residing in solid tumours is a novel and surprising finding. when neutrophils were removed, no biofilms are formed, while uptake into neutrophils is allowed when the ability of the bacteria to form biofilms was blocked. hence, it appears that the bacteria use biofilm formation as a defence system against the immune system of the host. objectives: rama is an arac/xyls family transcriptional activator found in klebsiella pneumoniae, salmonella spp. and enterobacter spp., the overexpression of which is associated with an mdr phenotype. recently a tetr-like gene that lies upstream of rama, known as ramr, has been identified as a repressor of rama. k. pneumoniae kp is a diazotrophic endophyte strain which has been reported to exhibit notable resistance to antibiotics. despite its mdr phenotype kp has been shown to exhibit attenuated pathogenicity in mouse models in comparison to clinical k. pneumoniae strains. the aims of this study were to: determine the levels of rama expression and establish its role in kp 's mdr phenotype; determine the effect of ramr complementation on rama expression and antibiotic susceptibility. methods: genome and sequence analysis performed in k. pneumoniae strain kp demonstrated a bp deletion within the ramr gene. cloning and complementation with full size wild type ramr was performed in kp (hereby known as kp /ramr). rt-pcr was used to assess levels of gene expression which were subsequently quantified using bio-rad quantity one software. mic testing was performed against chloramphenicol (cm), norfloxacin (nor) and tetracycline (tet) according to bsac guidelines. biofilm formation was measured using a modified protocol of o'toole and kolter. results: kp containing the mutated ramr gene ( bp deletion) was shown to overexpress rama and the putative outer membrane protein roma. complementation of the ramr gene resulted in the repression of both rama and roma transcription by − fold. interestingly, the ramr complemented strain demonstrated increased biofilm formation (up to -fold increase) over a hour period in both lb and m medium after static growth at ºc. mics of the tested antibiotics were reduced up to -fold in kp /ramr compared to the ramr mutated kp . conclusions: this result demonstrates that ramr acts as a repressor of both rama and putative outer membrane protein roma thereby increasing its susceptibility to antibiotics. however the restoration of a functional ramr in kp also increases biofilm formation significantly, suggesting that ramr plays a role in the regulation of biofilm formation genes and possibly bacterial virulence. rifampicin showed the highest activity on biofilm matrix and bacteria in sa and pa biofilms. results also indicated that biofilm viable mass was more susceptible to treatment than the biofilm matrix, which is mainly responsible for biofilm persistence. further research should specifically focus on compounds destroying matrix and which can be used as an adjunct to antibiotic therapy. [ objectives: staphylococcus epidermidis is a common cause of foreignbody infections (fbi) because of its ability to form biofilms. biofilms are very resistant to antibiotics. active and passive immunisation against biofilm-associated bacterial antigens may be an alternative. we studied the effect of immunisation against the lpxtg protein sesc in s. epidermidis biofilms in vitro and in vivo. we previously reported that sesc is present in all s. epidermidis strains tested. sesc is mainly expressed during the early and late fbi and at a higher level in sessile cells than in planktonic cells. methods: we used rabbit polyclonal anti-sesc-iggs ( mg/ml) to study biofilm inhibition in vitro and in vivo in our rat model ( mg igg per rat) on -day old biofilms. we also vaccinated rats twice with sesc according to standard protocols. serum samples taken at day and weeks after the st and nd immunisation were tested by elisa and showed an increase in anti-sesc antibody levels. s. epidermidis strains b and are biofilm forming strains and have been described before. for in vitro experiments, s. epidermidis b or were mixed with anti-sesc-iggs and incubated for hours at ºc. subsequently cells were added to each well. after h at ºc biofilms were washed and stained with crystal violet and od was measured. for in vivo experiments, catheter fragments were pre-incubated with s. epidermidis b and implanted subcutaneously in each rat. after explantation, the average number of cfu was determined after hrs. results: our data show that rabbit anti-sesc-iggs inhibit in vitro biofilm formation by s. epidermidis strains b and by % and %, respectively (n = ). in the in vivo rat model, rabbit anti-sesc-iggs reduced the bacteria in a -day old biofilm -fold (n = ). active immunisation with recombinant sesc led to a -fold reduction of cfu compared to control rats in day-old biofilms (n = ). after days, the reduction in biofilm-associated bacteria in the immunised rats was -fold (n = ) (fig .) . conclusion: sesc represents a promising target for prevention of s. epidermidis biofilm formation. the higher effect of passive immunisation compared with active immunisation is probably due to the subcutaneous injection of anti-sesc-iggs at the place of catheter insertion. objectives: staphylococcus epidermidis has emerged as a pathogen associated with infections of implanted medical devices impeding their long-term use. characteristics of s. epidermidis that allow persistence of infection are the ability of bacteria to adhere to surfaces in multilayered cell clusters, followed by the production of a mucoid substance more commonly known as slime, encoded by the ica operon. the adherent bacteria and slime are collectively known as biofilm. the coupled effects of specific chemical terminal surface groups and flow conditions on slime production and biofilm formation by s. epidermidis were investigated in correlation to the expression of two genes of the ica operon. methods: reference control strains (atcc , slime-positive and atcc , slime-negative), and two clinical strains isolated from different hospitalised patients, (one ica-positive/slime-positive and one ica-positive/slime-negative) were tested. bacteria grown in bhi medium were suspended in physiological saline at a concentration of~ × cells/ml. hydroxyl (oh)-terminated (hydrophilic) and methyl (ch )terminated (hydrophobic) glass surfaces were used as substrates in a parallel plate flow chamber. bacterial adhesion was examined under two flow rates: ml/min and ml/min for two and four hours. total rna from both planktonic (p) and adherent (a) bacteria, after detachment with trypsin, was isolated by the trizol method. reverse transcription followed by relative real-time pcr (rrt-pcr) towards a bp part of s rrna gene, allowed the detection of expression levels of icaa and icad. adherent bacteria were investigated with scanning electron and confocal laser microscopes. results: higher expression levels of both icaa and icad genes onto glass and especially methyl-terminated glass surfaces were calculated by rrt-pcr, under higher flow rate in two hours by the reference and the clinical slime-positive strains. these results correlate well with adherent bacterial cell counts and images taken by both microscopes. the icapositive slime-negative clinical strain showed lower expression levels of ica genes, less adherent ability and pia production on glass surfaces, as observed by microscopes. higher flow rate enhances the expression level of both ica genes, with a peak in two hours. hydrophobic biomaterial surfaces seem to play a crucial role to initial adherence, increasing ica gene expression and pia synthesis. consenting men and women with dfi (predefined by clinical signs and symptoms) caused by mrsa were potentially eligible including those associated with bacteraemia. patients with initial osteomyelitis were excluded. patients could receive l mg bid either iv or po. primary end point were cure or improvement rates (c+i) and microbiologic eradication (me) at days after the beginning of l. secondary end points were c+i on days and after the beginning of treatment and hospital discharge day, need of amputation, duration of therapy and mortality rates. all the adverse events were collected. results: patients were enrolled. relation men:women was . .the age of patients was . ± years and the average period from the diagnosis of diabetes was . ± . years. associated bacteraemia was present in . % of patients included. primary end points: c+i days after the beginning of l was achieved in . % of patients and me was obtained in . % of patients. secondary end points: c+i on day , hospital discharge day and day after the beginning of treatment and were; %; . % and . % respectively. only patients needed a minor amputation. the primary and secondary end points in the subgroup of bacteraemic episodes were not statistically different of those previously described. the mean duration of therapy was . ± . days. global mortality was . %. only one episode of polineuropathy was reported. neither thrombocytopenia nor lactic acidosis was found. conclusions: l achieved excellent c+i even at first evaluation visit in documented dfi caused by mrsa. l also showed high me rates. although patients received prolonged periods of treatment, l was a safe drug. objectives: azithromycin microspheres formulation (azm) was developed to enable a higher dosage of g to be administered as a single oral dose without decreasing the safety profile. this study compared azm with moxifloxacin (mox) aimed at confirming the efficacy and safety of azm in acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis (aecb). methods: this prospective, multicentre, randomised, double-blind, double dummy study compared azm g single dose with mox mg once daily for days, enrolled aecb patients years old and above, with anthonisen type exacerbations, and with at least exacerbations of aecb in the past months. subjects were to have a history of smoking of at least pack-years and documented forced expiratory volume in second (fev ) less than % of predicted. they were followed up for up to months. results: a total of patients were treated ( in each of the treatment groups) the distribution of the age, and mean fev were similar for the treatment groups. pathogens were isolated from . % of the patients ( . % of patients on azm and . % of patients on mox). the clinical success (signs and symptoms related to the acute infection had returned to the subject's normal baseline level, or clinical improvement was such that no additional antibiotics were deemed necessary) rate for the per protocol population at test of cure (toc) at day − was . % for azm and . % for mox group ( % ci − . , . ). bacterial eradication rate (bacteriologic pre protocol population) at toc was . % for azm group and . % for mox group ( % ci − . , . ). although the study population had history of at least exacerbation in the past months, less than half of the subjects experienced a recurrence during the follow-up, and there was no statistically significant treatment difference in time taken to first occurrence of aecb. both treatments were well tolerated. the incidence of treatment related adverse events was low, being reported by % of subjects receiving azm and % of subjects receiving mox. most aes were mild or moderate in severity. the most common aes were gastrointestinal disorders, being reported by % of subjects receiving azm and % of subjects receiving mox. conclusions: a single oral dose of azm was as effective as a -day course of mox in the treatment of aecb and was well tolerated. objectives: optimal duration of gentamicin containing regimen for therapy of human brucellosis is not clearly determined. methods: this randomised clinical study was conducted to compare the efficacy of gentamicin mg/day for days plus doxycycline mg twice daily for eight weeks (gd group) versus streptomycin gr im for weeks plus the same dose of doxycycline for days (sd group). all cases were followed for one year after cessation of therapy. efficacy of both regimens (failure of therapy or relapse) were compared. results: seventy-nine patients with the mean age of ± . years and cases with the mean age of . ± . years were treated with regimen of gd or sd, respectively. the clinical manifestations in these two treated groups were similar. failure of therapy was seen in one patient in gd group and in cases in sd group ( objectives: to study the efficacy of telavancin (tlv), an investigational bactericidal lipoglycopeptide, for the treatment of complicated skin and soft tissue infections (cssti) caused by presumed or confirmed grampositive organisms. methods: atlas and atlas were methodologically identical, double-blind, randomised, multinational, phase studies. adult men and women presenting with cssti including major abscess were randomised : to tlv mg/kg intravenous (iv) q h or vancomycin (van) g iv q h for to days. test-of-cure (toc) visit was conducted to days after end of study treatment. the all-treated population (at) included patients with confirmed diagnosis of cssti who received dose of study medication. this analysis examined the baseline characteristics and cure rates at toc for patients with major abscess in the combined atlas at population. results: in the pooled at population of atlas, patients presented with major abscess. more than % of these patients required hospitalisation. the baseline lesion surface area exceeded cm in % of the cases, while % of the patients presented with lesions exceeding cm (table ) . elevated white blood cell counts were found in more than % of the cases (table ) . nearly all patients required surgical drainage, with approximately / performed prior to the first dose of study medication. very few patients required a surgical procedure more than days after the start of study medication. clinical cure rates at toc are presented in table . overall, adverse events in the at population were similar between the treatment groups with regard to type and severity. conclusion: telavancin administered once daily was non-inferior to vancomycin for the treatment of major abscess. objectives: b. fragilis and related species, members of the normal bowel flora, are the most widely isolated anaerobic bacteria from different infections. to follow the development and spread of the resistance among these strains is difficult, as antibiotic susceptibility testing of clinically relevant anaerobes in different routine laboratories in europe is less and less frequently carried out due to the fact, that clinicians treat many presumed anaerobic infections empirically. to follow the changes in the antibiotic resistance of bacteroides strains three europe-wide studies were organised during the past twenty years. the evaluation of the results of these studies may show changes in the resistance to different antianaerobic drugs. only clinical isolates and no normal flora members of bacteroides strains belonging to different species were collected from different countries throughout europe during these studies. agar dilution method was used for the antibiotic susceptibility determination. actual breakpoints accepted by nccls (clsi) and eucast were used. molecular genetic investigations were carried out to detect resistance mechanisms. since the first study the chromosomally mediated beta-lactamase production and tetracyclin resistance is the most prevalent among bacteroides strains in europe. clindamycin resistance in bacteroides is mediated by a macrolide-lincomycin-streptogramin (mls) mechanism and its frequency differs in different countries in europe. resistance to beta-lactam-beta-lactamase inhibitor combinations was studied using amoxicillin-clavulanic acid and/or piperacillintazobactam. increase in resistance was observed to both combinations throughout the years. the same is true for cefoxitine and in the third study several hetero-resistant isolates were found. the occurrence and spread of resistance to imipenem and metronidazole among bacteroides strains merit special clinical importance. the presence of the cfia gene is much more prevalent than the expression of the imipenem resistance; however the spread of the cfia gene among species other than b. fragilis is still very rare. the molecular genetic methods looking for the resistance genes among strains with elevated mics against these antibiotics prove that resistance breakpoints should be reconsidered. the resistance to moxifloxacin shows great differences in different countries. the lowest resistance rate was observed in the case of tigecyclin. many factors may affect the response to treatment such as site of infection, surgical procedures, severity of the illness, patient status, presence of other pathogens (mixed infection), pk/pd parameters of the antibacterial drugs. thus, correlation between treatment failure and antibiotic resistance among anaerobes remains difficult to assess. the main discrepancies came from intra-abdominal infections and a worrisome disjunction between surgeon and microbiologist opinions emerged in the 's. but, patients in whom primary therapy failed had more resistant strains compared with patients in whom therapy succeeded. in contrast many failures may be due to the lack of isolation of anaerobes from clinical samples! during anaerobic bacteraemia, salonen et al. demonstrated that mortality increased dramatically from % for initially effective treatment to % when an ineffective treatment was started. facing new mechanisms of resistance and global increase resistance to many antibiotics among anaerobes may lead nowadays to a different answer. clindamycin vs. penicillin studies for the treatment of lung infections pointed out the failure due to b-lactamase production among gram-negative anaerobes. we found many reports of failure after clindamycin treatment in osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, brain abscess in presence of clindamycin-resistant anaerobes (bacteroides fragilis group and prevotella), probably because when resistance occurs, clindamycin mic's are high. similarly, the lack of coverage of an undetected resistant anaerobe allows the selection of an anaerobic strain resistant to the treatment chosen against the associated aerobes such as imipenemresistant eghertella lenta or metronidazole-resistant strains of prevotella or bacteroides fragilis. the later failures may give opportunity to set up a new metronidazole breakpoint for resistance (mic > mg/l). the main problem is related to the difficulty to detect some heterogeneous resistant strains, that needs prolonged incubation period on agar medium. this kind of situation is probably the most suitable to correlate the bacterial antibiotic resistance with the failure of the antibiotic treatment. methicillin-resistant s. aureus isolates causing community-acquired infections (ca-mrsa) in children is a major problem in several areas around the world. ca-mrsa are associated with both skin and soft tissue infections and invasive infections. recurrent soft tissue infections and infections within the family caused by ca-mrsa isolates are common. ca-mrsa s. aureus isolates containing gene coding for pvl have been associated with serious staphylococcal pneumonia as well as osteomyelitis complicated by subperiosteal abscesses or venous thromboses. in addition to vancomycin, ca-mrsa generally are susceptible to clindamycin and trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole. treatment of superficial skin and soft tissue infections involves surgical drainage of abscesses followed by an oral agent such as tmp-smx or clindamycin. minocycline or doxycycline is a consideration for children > years old. empiric vancomycin is typically administered for more serious and invasive infections such as osteomyelitis, septic arthritis, serious head and neck infections or suspected staphylococcal pneumonia. clindamycin is efficacious in treating invasive ca-mrsa infections caused by susceptible organisms. linezolid or daptomycin is another option in selected circumstances. mri is the optimal imaging modality for assessing children with ca-mrsa osteomyelitis. aggressive surgical drainage of subperiosteal abscesses or sites of pyomyositis is recommended. venous thombosis is increasingly recognized as a complication of ca-mrsa osteomyelitis. anti-coagulation until the thrombus has resolved is recommended. the optimal approach to prevention of recurrent ca-mrsa infections is unclear but a strategy that includes emphasizing personal hygiene, plus/minus antimicrobial soaps, mupirocin to the nose or "bleach baths" is frequently suggested. s understanding the pathogenesis of group a streptococcal disease: the bedside-to-bench approach invasive group a streptococcal (gas) infection presents itself in a range of guises, most notoriously necrotising fasciitis and the streptococcal toxic shock syndrome. as a human pathogen, gas pathogenesis research should ideally be shaped by clinical questions arising from either epidemiological or case-based investigation of human disease. in the mid s, large epidemiological studies pointed to a central role for specific t cell-stimulating superantigens in the aetiology of streptococcal toxic shock. this sparked a series of clinical and laboratory investigations that demonstrated production of superantigens during infection which were indeed capable of triggering massive t cell activation in patients but were unlikely, alone, to account for all the features observed in toxic shock. genomic, clinical and laboratory-based investigations have identified novel and highly potent superantigens that appear to directly contribute to sepsis pathogenesis and, together, may constitute targets for adjunctive treatments in invasive disease. epidemiological, clinical, and laboratory studies have highlighted a role for blunt trauma in the aetiology of at least a quarter of cases of gas necrotising fasciitis. one of the most striking findings on examination of tissues from patients suffering with necrotising fasciitis is the failure of neutrophils to migrate to the focus of infection. investigation of patients with invasive gas infection led to the discovery that gas produces an enzyme that can cleave and inactivate human chemokines and study of patients with bacteraemia has highlighted a likely role for the causal enzyme spycep in disease pathogenesis; this bacterial surface enzyme has also shown promise as a potential vaccine antigen. notwithstanding a potential role for individual virulence factors in disease causation, clinical studies have demonstrated that gas bacteria may persist at the site of infection despite high concentrations of bactericidal antibiotics, and this has been borne out by experimental studies; the reasons behind such persistence are unclear but may include internalisation of gas by immune cells, formation of biofilm, and antibiotic penetration of necrotic tissues. the persistence of viable bacteria in such cases is not widely recognized and deserves focused consideration in the research laboratory. genome-wide analysis of microbial pathogens and molecular pathogenesis processes has become an area of considerable activity in the last years. these studies have been made possible by several advances, including completion of the human genome sequence, publication of genome sequences for many human pathogens, development of microarray technology and high-throughput proteomics, and maturation of bioinformatics. despite these advances, relatively little effort has been expended in the bacterial pathogenesis arena to develop and use integrated research platforms in a systems biology approach to enhance our understanding of disease processes. we have exploited an integrated genome-wide research platform to gain new knowledge about how the human bacterial pathogen group a streptococcus causes disease. results of these studies have provided many new avenues for basic pathogenesis research and translational research focused on development of an efficacious human vaccine and novel therapeutics. new data stemming from use of a systems biology approach to provide new data about group a streptococcus pathogenesis will be presented. streptococcal toxic shock syndrome and necrotising fasciitis caused by group a streptococcus are rapidly progressive invasive diseases that are associated with significant morbidity and mortality, ranging from − % despite prompt antibiotic therapy and surgical debridement. s. pyogenes is known to primarily cause disease by activating and modulating host immune responses. the exotoxins with superantigenic activities have been demonstrated to be crucial triggers of excessive inflammatory responses and consequently systemic toxicity, organ dysfunction, tissue necrosis and shock. another important virulence determinant is the m-protein, which is classically known for its antiphagocytic properties, and lately, was shown to trigger pro-inflammatory responses as well as induction of vascular leakage and shock. this likely represents important mechanisms contributing to the rapid development of shock and systemic toxicity in patients with severe invasive group a streptococcal infections. the understanding of these infections as hyperinflammatory diseases highlighted the potential of immunotherapy to improve outcome. one such strategy includes the administration of intravenous polyspecific immunoglobulin (ivig) as adjunctive therapy. the mechanistic actions of ivig in this setting are believed to include opsonisation of the bacteria, neutralisation of the superantigens and suppression of the pro-inflammatory responses. there is growing evidence to support the use of ivig in patients with streptococcal toxic shock syndrome. these studies include one observational cohort study based on canadian patients identified through active surveillance of invasive group a streptococcal infections, and one european multicentre placebo-controlled trial. however, the question remains whether ivig is efficacious also for the severe streptococcal deep tissue infections. an observational study of seven patients with severe streptococcal deep tissue infections suggested that the use of high-dose ivig in patients with severe gas soft tissue infections may allow an initial non-operative or minimally invasive approach, which can limit the need to perform immediate wide debridements and amputations in unstable patients. the fact that seven patients with severe group a streptococcal infections survived with this approach definitely warrants further studies to be conducted on the use of ivig in these severe infections. hepatitis o prevalence and outcome of pregnancy in chronic hepatitis c virus infection i. julkunen°, a. sariola, m. sillanpää, k. melen, p. koskela, p. finne, a.l. järvenpää, s. riikonen, h.m. surcel (helsinki, oulu, fi) objectives: in the western countries the incidence of hepatitis c virus (hcv) infection has steadily been increasing especially among young adults. it is thus likely that an increasing prevalence of hcv infection is also found in pregnant women. methods: to assess the frequency of hcv infection in the metropolitan area of helsinki selected anti-hcv antibody testing was carried out for pregnant women during the years - . in addition, hcv prevalence was analysed in serum specimens collected from pregnant maters during the years of - . results: altogether mothers were identified among mothers. the frequency of anti-hcv positivity rose from . % in to . − . in - . in early 's only % of mothers knew about their seropositivity, whereas by the end of the follow-up period almost % of mothers knew about their hcv infection already before the pregnancy. intravenous drug abuse was the major risk factor ( % of cases) for contracting the disease. in % of the mothers chronic hcv infection was well under control and in this population the mean serum alanine aminotransferase (alt) values decreased towards the end of the pregnancy. however, % of anti-hcv ab positive mothers developed intrahepatic cholestasis (odds ratio . ) as characterised by itching and elevated serum bile acid levels. the correspondig value in the control pregnancies was only . %. anti-hcv ab positive mothers were younger, delivered earlier and gave birth to babies with smaller birth weight as compared to control deliveries. to have a more comprehensive view of the problem of hcv infection during pregnancy randomly selected serum specimens from the finnish maternity cohort were tested. - serum specimens were tested in selected cohorts ( , , , and ) . in the nationwide prevalence was . % and it steadily role to . % in . in the metropolitan area of helsinki the prevalence was higher being . % and . in and , respectively. conclusion: our study indicates that there is an increasing problem of hcv infection in pregnant women in finland. although most women cope well with their disease during pregnancy there is a subpopulation of mothers who develop cholestasis and their liver status should thus be followed-up carefully. testing of all mothers for serum anti-hcv antibodies is recommended. objectives: the viral genome of hepatitis c virus constitutes a . kb single-stranded positive-sense rna which encodes altogether viral proteins. in order to study the humoral immune responses against different hcv proteins in patients suffering from chronic hcv infection, we produced three structural (c, e and e ) and six nonstructural proteins (ns , ns , ns a, ns b, ns a and ns b) in sf insect cells by using the baculovirus expression system. the recombinant hcv proteins were purified and used in western blot analysis to determine antibody responses against individual hcv protein in hcv rna and antibody positive human sera that were obtained from patients suffering from genotype , , or infection. results: these sera were also analysed with inno-lia score test for hcv antibodies against core, ns , ns ab and ns a, and the results were similar to our western blot method. based on our western blot analyses we found that the major viral antigens were the core, ns b, ns and ns a proteins and they were recognized in %, %, % and % of patient sera, respectively. there were no major genotype specific differences in antibody responses to individual hcv proteins. a common feature within the studied sera was that all except two sera recognized the core protein in high titers, whereas none of the sera recognized ns protein and only three sera (from genotype ) recognised ns b. the data shows significant variation in the specificity in humoral immunity in chronic hcv patients. anti-hcv antibody pattern also remains very stable within one individual. alt and ast levels were tested in all subjects. the presence of hbv-dna was determined quantitatively in plasma samples of hd patients with anti-hbc alone (hbsag negative, anti-hbs negative and anti-hbc positive) by real-time pcr using the artus hbv rg pcr kit on the rotor-gene real-time thermal cycler. results: of patients enrolled in this study, subjects ( . %, % ci, . %- . %) had anti-hbc alone. hbv-dna was detectable in of hd patients ( %, % ci, %- %) with anti-hbc alone. plasma hbv-dna load was less than iu/ml in all of these patients. our study showed that detection of anti-hbc alone could reflect unrecognized occult hbv infection in hd patients. the majority of these infections are associated with low viral loads. were included in the study. all the subjects had never been exposed to antiretroviral therapy. genotypic resistance testing was performed at the time of diagnosis with a sequence-based assay (trugene hiv- genotyping test) targeted at the protease region (codons to ) and rt region (codon to ) of the hiv-l genome. results: of patients ( . %) harboured a virus with at least one mutation associated with phenotypic resistance; / with mutations associated with resistance to nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (nrtis), / to non-nucleoside reverse-transcriptase inhibitors (nnrtis) and / to protease inhibitors (pi). resistance to nrtis was associated with the key mutation m v, while resistance to nnrtis was associated with y c and k n mutations. among mutations to pi, major resistance mutations l m and d n were found in three patients, whereas there was a high prevalence of accessory pi resistance mutations at positions , , and . conclusion: our data estimate the prevalence of primary resistance and mutations patterns among naive hiv patients, underlining the importance of genotypic resistance testing in hiv patients before starting treatment, especially when nnrtis would be included in the initial antiretroviral therapy. objectives: few data are available on the genetic mechanisms of protease inhibitor (pi) resistance in non-b hiv- , and pi resistanceassociated mutations (rams) are commonly observed in pi-naive patients with subtype a/e infection. this study aimed to compare pi-rams between pi-naive and -experienced patients. methods: genotypic resistance testing was conducted among a cohort of hiv- infected patients who had virologic failure. patients were categorised into groups: pi-naive and pi-experienced. we focused on pi-rams previously described by ias-usa . results: we studied patients (mean age, . years; % male). median cd cell count and hiv- rna at virologic failure were cells/cu.mm. and copies/ml, respectively. % of patients were infected with subtype a/e; the others had subtype b ( %), ab ( %), and c ( %). there were patients in pi-naive group and patients in pi-experienced group. the clinical characteristics between groups were similar (p > . ) except for the duration of antiretroviral therapy which was shorter in pi-naive group ( . vs. . months, p = . ). percentage of patients who had primary pi-rams was % in pinaive and % in pi-experienced groups (p = . ). the most common primary pi-rams in the latter group were v a ( %) and i v ( %). percentage of patients with secondary pi-rams in the corresponding groups was % and %, respectively (p = . ). median number of secondary pi-rams was also similar between groups (p = . ). the most common secondary pi-rams in both groups were m i ( %), h k ( %), l m ( %), i v ( %), l p ( %), l i we also defined a "silent score" (ss) and a "resistance score" (rs) as the number of synonymous mutations and of resistance mutations (in the second sequence in comparison with the first one) divided by number of days between the two tests, respectively. ( ); pts with drms in non-b-st (%) were ( . ), ( ), ( ) and ( . ). a significant increase of non-b-st (p = . ) and a significant decrease in drms (p < . ) were observed. crf _ag was the prevalent non-b st ( %). . % of non-b st pts were italians. among b-st, drms predicted a reduced susceptibility to one drug class in , , and cases in the different periods; to two drug classes in , , and ; to three classes in , , and . in non-b-st, a reduced susceptibility to one drug class was found in , , and cases; to two drug classes in , , and ; to three drug classes in , , and , respectively. among pts with one or two classes of resistance, a decrease of percentage of protease inhibitors related drms, and a persistence of non nucleoside rt inhibitors involving drms, mainly n and a, were observed. methods: from hiv+ persons with a history of, or an acute episode of opc, oral fungal burden was evaluated bi-weekly and buccal mucosa tissue was collected bimonthly for a period of one year. tissue was evaluated for the presence of cd + t cells and e-cadherin by immunohistochemistry or flow cytometry. objectives: to define the secular trends in the epidemiology of candidaemia in queensland, australia (population, . million) over a -year period. methods: all episodes of candidaemia within queensland public hospitals from - were identified from laboratory information systems. data on species identification, antifungal susceptibility, demographics, and hospital ward of diagnosis, and denominator data (hospital admissions, accrued patient-days (pt-days) and fluconazole usage) were collected. results: over the -year period, unique episodes ( % case ascertainment) were identified from healthcare facilities ( tertiary, paediatric, secondary and smaller hospitals). the median patient age was . years. the overall incidence-density was . / ptdays, highest in paediatric ( . / pt-days) and tertiary hospitals ( . / pt-days). over the years, the incidence-density increased . -fold in tertiary hospitals and . -fold in secondary hospitals (both p < . for trend), but not in paediatric or smaller hospitals. the incidence-density in icus ( . / pt-days) was -fold higher than in non-icu wards, but did not significantly increase over the study period. the relative proportion of episodes occurring in adult general medical/surgical (ie non-oncology/non-icu) wards significantly increased (p < . ), accounting for % of episodes at the end of the -year period, whereas that occurring in paediatric and adult oncology wards decreased (p < . and p = . respectively). overall, c. albicans accounted for %, c. parapsilosis % and c. glabrata %. although the incidence-density of all species increased over the study period, the relative proportion caused by c. albicans decreased (p = . ) and c. parapsilosis increased (p = . ). despite significantly increased fluconazole usage (from . to . ddd/ pt-days, p < . ), the relative proportion caused by c. glabrata/c. krusei did not change (p = . ). the overall incidence of candidaemia has increased almost % in queensland public hospitals over the last years. the relative proportion of episodes occurring among general medical/surgical patients and caused by c. parapsilosis has increased. candidaemia is an increasing problem the epidemiology of which continues to evolve. it is increasingly affecting patients outside traditional risk groups. conclusions: this surveillance study and pharmaco-economic modelling has proved immensely beneficial in setting up inhouse processing, improved tat, reduced costs of outsourcing and subsequent use of expensive antifungals. reduction in mortality has been noted but is not statistically significant. c. albicans was the commonest isolate; fluconazole resistance is minimal and associated mortality is lower than reported from europe. many pts received systemic prophylaxis ( %); itraconazole and fluconazole were used in and pts respectively. no differences emerged between empirical vs pre-emptive therapy and none of the drugs resulted to significantly influence outcome. in % of pts initial empirical/pre-emptive drug remained unchanged after ia diagnosis, while in % clinicians shifted to a combined treatment. conclusion: this study allows as to analyzed multiple factors as potentially influencing outcome. we confirmed that aml phase and neutropenia influence ia outcome. present data confirm the perception that during last years the application of a correct and timely diagnostic work-up and the availability of more efficacious and less toxic drugs (i.e. voriconazole, liposomal amphotericin b, caspofungin) have modified the course of ia. however none of the new drugs emerged as the most efficacious in our series. even combined treatment did not confer any advantage in survival analysis. (< % each). the first line therapy was monotherapy with voriconazole ( %), caspofungin ( %), lipid formulations of amb ( %) or used antifungal drugs combination ( %). the mortality rate at day was % when first line therapy included voriconazole compared to % when it did not (p < . ). conclusion: comprehensive collections of cases based on systematic reporting and description of cases using a dedicated network of hospitals in selected regions and stringent definition criteria applied by trained clinicians and microbiologists are useful to describe ia, to assess its burden and secular trends, and to identify potential changes in diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. this network will expand to other regions in the near future, and data will help assessing the impact of new management strategies such as prophylaxis with posaconazole, the impact of modification of new diagnostic criteria as recently proposed (clin infect dis, ), and identifying new populations at risk for ia. nosocomial aspergillosis represents a serious threat for severely immunocompromised patients and outbreaks have been attributed to airborne sources. the role of hospital-independent fungal spread sources e.g. the private homes or business suites are not known. we investigated the relationship between fungal exposure prior hospitalisation and the ensuing onset of invasive mould infections (imi) in patients at risk. patients admitted to the department of haematology and oncology or to the department of transplant surgery of the innsbruck medical university received a structured questionnaire regarding their fungal exposure prior hospitalisation. questions inquired heavy fungal exposures up to five days prior hospitalisation. patients were enrolled in this study and % were smokers, % suffered from an airborne allergy, % lived in old buildings, % were ruralists, % and % were exposed to any outdoor or indoor fungus sources. poor housing conditions and other fungus exposures were associated with the onset of community-acquired imi only in patients with acute myelogenous leukaemia (p < . ). aml patients being more at risk for imi when smoking cigarettes (p < . ), living on the country site (p < . ), having two or more fungus exposures (p < . ) and suffering from allergy to dust, pollen and/or moulds (p < . ). a similar trend was for lung transplant recipients receiving extensive immunosuppressive agents to treat allograft rejection. overall, % of imi were community-acquired cases. hospital-independent fungal sources highlight risk-factors for imi in severe immunocompromised patients and the rate of communityacquired imi does increase. an analysis of an individual patient's risk factors for fungal infection and the type of fungus to which they are most susceptible, indicates the preventative strategies that are likely to be successful. to the icu-mhs with aspergillus spp detected in significant amounts in clinical samples. the underlying conditions of the patients were heart transplantation (n = ), major heart surgery (n = ), and other (n = ). eight ( . %) patients developed proven/probable ia ( with lung infection, with mediastinitis, with disseminated ia, and with prostate involvement). the mortality of patients with ia was . %. the icu-mhs is divided into areas, one of which is equipped with hepa filters. only case of ia occurred in the protected area. we measured the fungal conidia levels in the air of each of the areas ( samples analyzed) monthly. a total of strains of a. fumigatus ( clinical strains from patients and environmental strains) were genotyped using microsatellites (de valk et al, jcm ) . the mean airborne conidia levels ( months) before and after the outbreak were, respectively, . ( − ) cfu/m and . ( − ) cfu/m . no cases of ia occurred during these periods. however, all cases of ia were linked to peaks of abnormally high airborne conidia levels ( , , and cfu/m ). a. fumigatus was involved in cases of ia; patient was infected by non-fumigatus aspergillus (not further genotyped). in patients ( mediastinitis, pulmonary ia and colonisation), we demonstrated similar genotypes in the air and in clinical samples. patient was located in the protected area and had a unique genotype. patient had two different clusters of genotypes: one cluster was similar to that of patient and the other was also found in patient and in the air. the genotype present in patients and was also detected in the air during a -month period. conclusions: epidemiologic and molecular typing suggests that there is a causal relationship between aspergillus causing ia and those present in the air. our finding also supports the need for hepa filtration in icu-mhs. j. guinea is contracted by fis (cm / ). sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (ppv) and negative predictive value (npv) were calculated in reference to proven and probable cases of ia. reasons for performing bronchoscopy on patients were also recorded. the protocol received approval by the local ethic committee. results: from the samples studied, ( . %) were classified as proven, ( . %) as probable, and ( . %) as possible cases of aspergillosis. twelve samples ( . %) represented colonisation, and bal samples were obtained during routine surveillance. pulmonary aspergillosis was the main clinical presentation of ia ( . %). using roc analysis, the best cut-off for galactomannan testing in bal was defined as . (sensitivity . %, specificity . %, ppv % and npv . %). median bal gm index for the group of patients with proven/probable aspergillosis and for 'negative cases' were . and . , respectively (p < . ). overall mortality was % (n = ). the odds for death for patients diagnosed with ia were . , in comparison to patients who did not have this infection ( % ci . − . ). conclusion: gm testing in the bal added to the diagnosis of ia in lung transplant recipients. in order to avoid false-positive results, a higher test cut-off should be applied to bal samples, in comparison to sera. increasing the cut-off to . resulted in a very high npv, with an associated sensitivity of > %. objectives: ) determine the performance characteristics of the galactomannan (gm) assay in broncho-alveolar lavage (bal) in haematology-oncology patients; ) evaluate the prognostic value of the gm assay in this particular population. methods: the platelia gm eia assay (bio-rad) was performed on all bal specimens obtained from haematology-oncology patients at our institution between march and april , in addition to routine laboratory stains and cultures. all results were reported to physicians. we conducted chart reviews to classify cases as proven, probable, possible or without invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (ipa) according to the revised definitions of invasive fungal disease from the eortc/msg consensus group. for performance characteristics, proven and probable cases were considered as ipa; possible cases were considered as without ipa. the result of bal gm was not considered as a criterium to classify cases in order to avoid incorporation bias. in patients with > positive (gm index > . ) specimen, only the first one was considered for the analysis. mortality was calculated at days following the first bal procurement. data were analyzed with stata . . results: there were bal samples from patients, including haematopoietic stem cell transplant (hsct) recipients. we found proven, probable and possible cases of ipa (total of ipa cases; . %). gm on bal was positive in ( . %) specimens. the sensitivity and specificity of the gm assay in bal were % and . % respectively. positive predictive and negative predictive values were . % and %, respectively. false-positive results were found in patients without ipa and in with possible ipa. an index value . was significantly associated with a -day mortality risk ( / patients with a positive gm died within days after bal compared to / with a negative gm (or = . , %ci . − . ; p = . ). this association was even stronger when restricted to hsc recipients (or = . , %ci . − . ; p = . ). the clinical utility of gm assay in bal mainly lies in its negative predictive value, identifying patients at low risk of ipa. this test also carries a prognostic value in predicting patients at higher risk of mortality. (see table below) . not significant differences have been found among pneumocystis colonisation and copd status evaluated by fev- %. as well as no significant differences respect to age, sex or lymphocytes and leucocytes blood count were found. background: infliximab, a monoclonal antibody targeting tumour necrosis factor alpha (tnf-a), is indicated for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (ra) and other autoimmune diseases. however, its use has been associated with opportunistic infections, including pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia (pcp). moreover, p. jirovecii has been observed colonising to humans with several disorders. objectives: to obtain information about p. jirovecii colonisation among patients with rheumatologic disease treated with infliximab. this information could be useful for assessing new strategies in the prevention of pcp in patients at risk. methods: consecutive patients treated with infliximab for rheumatic disorders were included in the study. oropharyngeal washes (ow) samples were collected for p. jirovecii detection. clinical and demographic data were collected (sex, age, rheumatologic diagnosis, duration of infliximab use, concomitant use of other drugs for rheumatologic treatment, use of any other anti-tnf-a agent, use of anti-pc drugs in the last six months, smoking, and diagnosis of chronic pulmonary respiratory disease). p. jirovecii colonisation was identify in ow samples by pcr at mtlsu-rrna gene, with primers paz -x and paz -y. we adapted a method previously described to a real-time pcr setting, using a lightcycler . (roche, germany). individuals in whom the presence of p. jirovecii was detected at two independent assay in the absence of respiratory symptoms or radiological findings suggestive of pcp were considered to be colonised. results: clinical and demographic data for patients treated with infliximab are presented in table objectives: most research with human bocavirus, a recently found respiratory pathogen, has been done by molecular biology (polymerase chain reaction, pcr). the results have been ambiguous because the virus has often been found in co-infection with other viruses, and also in clinically healthy subjects. it has been proposed that, for bocavirus, antigen detection could better indicate the aetiology than qualitative nucleic acid detection. we have developed a rapid antigen detection test for the virus. the one-step test for bocavirus vp antigen is based on a separation-free two-photon excitation fluorometry (arcdia tpx assay technique). the assay protocol is simple; the swab sample is dissolved in sample buffer, and the solution is dispensed ( ml) onto a -well microtitre plate (containing the reagents in dry form) for incubation and automated quantitative measurement. the immunoassay applies microspheres as solid-phase carriers of purified bocavirus-specific polyclonal antibodies. the virus antigens concentrate onto the solid-phase which is probed in real-time with fluorescently labelled antibody reagents. strong positive samples are reportable in minutes, while low positive and negative samples are reported in hours. the performance of the method was studied with recombinant human bocavirus-like particles (vp ), and purified respiratory pathogens (group a streptococci, streptococcus pneumoniae, and influenza a and b, respiratory syncytial, metapneumo, adeno, and parainfluenza − viruses). results: analytical detection sensitivity of the method (lowest limit of detection, -control + sds) was ng/ml, dynamic concentration range was three orders of magnitude, and intra-assay imprecision was − %. cross-reactions with the other respiratory pathogens were not found. the new method enables rapid detection of bocavirus antigens. the new test is very easy to perform in comparison to standard elisas. the analytical sensitivity of the method is expected to allow analysis of clinical samples. the sensitivity of the antigen detection test could be significantly increased by the use of monoclonal antibodies ( - fold). our future objectives include increasing the detection sensitivity, and analysis of clinical samples in order to study the correlation of antigen detection and the clinical aetiology. life-year for patients who survived. all analyses were performed using treeage software ( ). results: the overall mortality rates for empiric vancomycin (v) and semi-synthetic-penicillin (ssp) was % and %, respectively, as apposed to % for those receiving the rapid mrsa pcr testing. these mortality rates were similar in both the eu and us subsets. furthermore, the number needed to test in order to save one life was and for empiric v and ssp, respectively. using sensitivity analysis the prevalence of mrsa was varied from % to % and yielded an absolute mortality difference favouring the pcr testing group of % and %, respectively as compared to empiric v and % and % compared to empiric ssp. in eu the c/e for empiric v and ssp treated patients was € and € , respectively as compared to € for rapid pcr testing. in the us the c/e for empiric v was $ , as compared to $ for rapid pcr testing. using sensitivity analysis the prevalence of mrsa was varied from % to % and yielded favourable c/e in both the eu and us for rapid pcr testing regardless of the empiric treatment regimen. conclusion: rapid mrsa pcr testing using the xpert mrsa/sa blood culture pcr assay appears to improve mortality rates and is cost effective in the eu and us across a wide range of mrsa prevalence rates. background: rapid detection of gastro-intestinal carriage of glycopeptide-resistant enterococci (gre) from screening cultures is crucial for an efficient control of their spread. we assessed media − chromogenic, chromid, (biomérieux), and chromagar (chromagar microbiology), and selective, vre selective (oxoid) and eccv (bd) − for their ability to detect gre using well-characterised isolates and stool samples from hospitalised patients at high risk of gre colonisation. methods: twenty-five isolates consisting of gre. faecalis/faecium carrying various van genes and non-vre at concentrations of - cfu/ml and cfu/ml, respectively, and stool samples were randomised and spiral plated on all media and scored by blinded investigators for characteristic colonies after hrs incubation. standard confirmatory tests were done on putative gre colony or on characteristically coloured colony each for e. faecalis/faecium from the selective and chromogenic media, respectively. detection of van genes, and ddl or soda based speciation was done on pcr-sequencing. mean sensitivity (sen) and specificity (spec), and confidence intervals (cis) were estimated for each medium by a logistic regression model using a penalised likelihood approach based on the reader response for the stool samples and isolates, and additionally on confirmation test results for the stool samples, both at the aggregated (gre detected) and penalised level (correct species-colony colour correlation). results: chromagar showed the highest sen based on reader response at the aggregated and penalised level for both stool samples and isolates (table) . using confirmation test results at the aggregated level, sen for eccv was highest while the two chromogenic media showed a decrease in sen by at least % in comparison to the values obtained based on reader response. sens for the chromogenic media were even lower (< %) based on confirmation test results at the penalised level. eccv and chromid showed the highest specs with both reader response (stool samples) and confirmation test results at the aggregated level, and chromid also at the penalised level, with narrow cis indicating a high precision of this parameter estimate. for isolates, specs were highest for chromagar at both levels. conclusions: chromagar showed the best overall performance considering both sen and spec estimates. eccv performed well as a selective medium for gre detection from stool samples. objectives: metallo-beta-lactamases (mbls) expressed from pseudomonas are able to confer resistance to all beta-lactams with the exception of aztreonam. however, enterobacteriaceae possessing mbls exhibit moderate cephalosporin and low carbapenem mics and thus are often underestimated. herein, we describe data from new etest prototypes specifically designed to detect this problematic resistance mechanism. methods: mbl-positive (vim or imp derivatives) enterobacteriaceae clinical isolates from countries and randomly selected enterobacteriaceae negative controls (including the atcc type strains) were tested against the different etest mbl prototypes. beta-lactam substrates used were imipenem (ip), meropenem (mp), ceftazidime (tz) and cefotaxime (ct) with or without the inhibitors dipicolinic acid (dpa) and edta. the etest standard procedure for gram negative aerobes was used and a reduction of beta-lactam mic by equal to or greater than dilutions by edta or dpa was interpreted as positive for mbl. presence of esbls was tested using the etest ct/ctl, tz/tzl and cefepime (pm)/pml strips. ampc production was detected using the etest cefoxitin (fx)/fxi and cefotetan (cn)/cni strips. of the select specimens that were negative for gbs, grew turquoise-blue colonies, but the majority that required further work to rule out gbs grew after hours. two strains of gbs that were missed grew as white colonies on select, and even at h, did not exhibit the characteristic turquoise-blue colour. conclusion: ssb enrichment followed by select subculture was extremely sensitive ( . %) and superior to cna/ssb for detection of gbs from genital specimens. however, non-gbs organisms can produce turquoise-blue colonies on select and further work must be performed to rule out the presence of gbs. objectives: screening for chlamydia trachomatis (ct) specific antibodies is valuable in investigating recurrent cause of miscarriage, pelvic inflammatory disease and tubal damage following repeated episodes of pelvic inflammatory disease. immunofluorescence (if) is considered the gold standard for detection of ct antibodies. the present study aims to compare the performance of other commercial tests for the detection of serum igg antibodies specific for ct: two ct igg pelisa both using major outer membrane protein (momp; ["momp-medac", ct-igg-pelisa; medac, wedel, germany and "momp-ruwag", ct pelisa; ruwag, bettlach, switzerland), one ct hsp- igg pelisa ("hsp -medac", chsp -igg-pelisa; medac, wedel, germany), and a new automated epifluorescence immunoassay ("inodiag", "must chlamydiae; inodiag, signes, france). methods: a total of patients with (n = ) and without (n = ) miscarriages were tested by all serological tests described above. sensitivity and specificity were calculated using if as gold standard. a second standard, defining true positive or negative samples as sera respectively positive and negative in all others tests, was also used (see table) . objectives: participation in diagnostic microbiology internal and external quality control (qc) processes is good laboratory practice, an essential component of a quality management system and compulsory in some european countries. currently, there is no qc scheme for diagnostic oral microbiology. the aim of this study was to collate information on current qc needs, and processes undertaken in diagnostic oral microbiology laboratories. method: an on-line questionnaire was devised to ascertain interest in participating in an oral microbiology qc scheme and sent to oral microbiology diagnostic laboratories. the laboratories were identified from participants attending the european oral microbiology workshop in helsinki, . following this, a pilot round of qc samples was distributed to all interested laboratories. results: we identified individuals that worked in diagnostic oral microbiology laboratories and received ( %) positive responses. of these laboratories (representing european countries) % did not participate in either internal or external qc. each laboratory processed on average a total of samples annually. % of participants were in favour of a european-wide oral microbiology qc scheme. the preferred frequency for receiving external qc specimen was once in − months. the most preferred specimen types were periodontal pocket and oral pus specimens (both %), followed by oral mucosal swabs and caries activity tests. all participating laboratories were willing to share and harmonise their specimen processing and interpretation standard operating procedures. the pilot round specimen was a periodontal pocket sample. six laboratories reported their findings in the specified time. the predominant pathogens (aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans, porphyromonas gingivalis) were identified by of laboratories. in addition to conventional culture, one laboratory used pcr. laboratories performed antibacterial sensitivity testing primarily by disc diffusion. conclusions: this is the first attempt to a standardised europeanwide approach to diagnostic oral microbiology. the findings from this feasibility study have indicated that a qc scheme for oral microbiology is of interest and have raised a number a pointers for subsequent rounds of specimens. further work to improve the quality, to standardise the methodology and the interpretation of diagnostic oral microbiology at the european level is on-going. objectives: since severe sepsis with acute organ dysfunction can be fatal within hours, it is customary to start empirical broad-spectrum antimicrobial therapy in all patients hospitalised for a suspicion of systemic inflammatory response syndrome. however, increased use of broad-spectrum antimicrobials over the years has contributed to the emergence of drug resistant strains of bacteria. especially, drug resistance among gram-positive bacteria, the leading cause of sepsis, is now a serious problem. the objective of this preliminary study was to develop a method for distinguishing between gram− and gram+ bacterial infection. methods: in this prospective study, leukocyte and neutrophil counts, crp, esr, and quantitative flow cytometric analysis of neutrophil complement receptors (cr /cd ) and (cr /cd b), were obtained from hospitalised febrile patients, of which had bacterial and viral infection. the patient data were compared to healthy controls. results: it was noticed that in gram− infection (n = ) the average amount of cd b on neutrophils was significantly higher than in gram+ infection (n = ). on the contrary, serum crp level was significantly higher in gram+ than in gram− infection. other measured parameters did not differ significantly between gram+ and gram− infections. we derived a crp/cd b ratio dividing the serum crp value by amount of cd b on neutrophils. in thirteen ( %) out of patients with gram+ sepsis had crp/cd b ratio cutoff value of . (figure ). of these patients, ( %) were diagnosed with streptococcus pneumoniae, with staphylococcus aureus, with enterococcus faecalis, and with both streptococcus intermedius and streptococcus oralis. corresponding percentages in patients with local gram+ infection, gram− infection, clinical pneumonia, other clinical infection, and viral infection were %, %, %, %, and %, respectively. conclusion: the detection of gram+ sepsis is possible after combination of neutrophil cd b data and serum crp level. crp/cd b ratio viral infections of the central nervous system s displayed % sensitivity and % specificity for detection of gram+ sepsis. the proposed crp/cd b ratio test could, for its part, assist physicians to decide appropriate antibiotic treatment in patients with severe bacterial infection. a bacterial biofilm is a structured consortium of bacteria cells surrounded by a self-produced polymer matrix. biofilms may be monospecies or polyspecies biofilms. biofilm growing bacteria give rise to chronic infections, which persist in spite of therapy and in spite of the host's immune-and inflammatory responses. biofilm infections are characterised by persisting pathology and immune response (in contrast to colonisation). bacterial biofilms use both biofilm specific (b) and conventional (planktonic) resistance mechanisms (p) when they are exposed to antibiotics. the following resistance mechanisms have been described in bacterial biofilms: . stationary phase physiology (b), low oxygen tension (b) and slow growth (b) especially inside biofilms whereas the surface of biofilms is more similar to planktonic growth. . penetration barriers (b), binding to the polymer matrix (b). . mutations, hypermutators (b, p). . chromosomal betalactamase is upregulated (b, p). . antibiotic tolerance/adaptive resistance (b). . efflux pumps (b, p). . alginate production (b). . high cell density and quorum sensing (b, p). . pbp − sos response ? (b). the knowledge of these resistance mechanisms can, however, be used to design new therapeutica approaches especially as regards quorum sensing inhibitors. we consider two factors that contribute to treatment failure in the absence of inherited resistance, the density of the population being treated and the physiological state of the bacteria. we also explore how these factors might contribute to the evolution of inherited resistance during the course of treatment. we conclude with a computer-and chemostat-assisted consideration of the potential clinical implication of these density and physiology effects and make suggestions for treatment protocols to deal with them. using in vitro cultures of staphylococcus aureus atcc or the clinical isolate ps and antibiotics of six different classes we determined the functional relationship between the inoculum density and the efficacy of the antibiotics. as measured by the rates and extent of kill and/or the minimum inhibitory concentration (mic), the efficacy of all of these antibiotics declined with increases in the density of bacteria, albeit to different extents. for daptomycin and vancomycin, much of this density effect can be attributed to bacteria-associated declines in the effective concentration of the antibiotic in the medium. for gentamicin, vancomycin, ciprofloxacin and oxacillin, our bioassays failed to reveal significant reductions in their effective concentration in the medium. the effects of the physiological state of s. aureus on the efficacy of these antibiotics were examined for bacteria from cultures in "stationary phase" for different times and from chemostats run at different generation times. these experiments are currently under way but by the time of the symposium we will have the full (and true) story. it is, however, clear that the efficacy of all of these antibiotics declines with the time in stationary phase (its "age"). and, even slowly dividing cultures from chemostats are more susceptible to antibiotic-mediated killing that early stationary phase batch cultures. the efficacy in killing non-growing bacteria varies among the bactericidal antibiotics examined. to ascertain the potential clinical implications of these density and physiological effects, we use both computer and in vitro simulations of antibiotic treatment. the results of these simulations provide compelling support for the proposition that antibiotic treatment regimes, including those designed to prevent the ascent of resistance, should take into account the anticipated density and physiological state of the target population of susceptible bacteria. there have been an increasing number of neurotrophic viral infections playing an important role in the world over the last decade. the list includes west nile virus, nipah and hendra virus (both paramyxoviruses), as well as chikungunya virus which suddenly emerged. furthermore, the relation between jc virus in progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy (pml) in patients with multiple sclerosis treated with a new immunosuppressive drug, has triggered our attention. the development and implementation of molecular based amplification method has assisted us to detect these viruses more efficiently. these technologies have been used now routinely in a large number of laboratories to enable the detection of more commonly known neurotrophic viruses, like hsv, vzv and the neurotrophic picornaviruses like enterovirus and parechovirus. the pitfalls of these molecular methods have been generally solved by implementing regular quality control testing schemes, like organised by qcmd (quality control of molecular diagnostics) and the introduction of internal controls during the whole diagnostic process. finally, with the ability to quantify the amount of nucleic acid present in csf, more information on the pathogenesis of these viral infections, as well as significant tool to monitor the antiviral effect of treatment options for these viruses, has become available. to as a rare disease in europe restricted to some endemic foci. however, current data suggest that the incidence of ae has significantly increased, and the disease is spreading to the north, west, and east. ae has become an emerging disease in the baltic countries. thus, human infections with e. multilocularis have arrived in the "centre" of europe. ae is a lifethreatening disease, and is characterised by a tumour-like lesion in the liver. the larva can infiltrate the surrounding tissues and metastasize to distant organs. in an attempt to classify the large variety of anatomical findings in ae, the pnm-classification system was developed and serves as a benchmark for standardised evaluation of diagnostic and therapeutic measures. modern imaging techniques, such as ultrasound, ct or mri and pet/ct contributed not only to a much better description of the lesions, but also to a judgment upon the activity of the metacestode. the differential diagnosis of ae varies from haemangioma-like lesion of the liver or cancer. the diagnostic skills are limited, and are the reason for frequent misdiagnosis in geographic areas where ae is rather unknown. continuous treatment with benzimidazoles is the backbone of a lifelong management of ae. however, radical resection is the procedure of choice and should always be strived for. ae is still a rare disease in europe, but where it occurs, it is often diagnosed too late. patients are misdiagnosed for months and years, before receiving the correct treatment. at that late stage the disease has progressed, and radical cure of the liver lesion(s) is not anymore possible. recent reports provided hints for an accelerated larval growth of echinococcus spp. in the immunodeficient host. a careful monitoring of patients receiving immune-modifying drugs is warranted. the modern clinical management and long-term parasitostatic treatment with benzimidazoles are highly effective. thus, a higher alertness for the "tumours from the centre" would increase the prognosis of this hepatic disease resembling liver cancer. the percutaneous treatment of liver hydatid cysts were considered to be contraindicated due to two main potential risks: anaphylactic shock and abdominal dissemination of the disease. since the first case percutaneously treated was published, several series of successful percutaneous treatment of the liver and the other abdominal organs, peritoneum, thorax, soft tissue and orbital cavity hydatid cysts have appeared in the literature. percutaneous treatment of hydatid liver disease is an effective and safe procedure with its unique advantages (e.g., shorter hospital stay, low complication rate). today, the percutaneous approach has an important role in treatment of hydatid cysts not only in the liver but also in the other organs and tissue. therefore it must be first treatment option whenever it is indicated. in europe, dirofilaria immitis and dirofilaria repens are responsible of autochthonous filariases in dogs. adults of d. immitis kills the dogs with an heart location and d. repens is often found in subcutaneous nodules in dogs and cats. the microfilariae are present in the blood of these animals. dirofilariasis is due to the transmission of microfilariae by some mosquito bites (aedes, culex, anopheles, mansonia, psorophora and taeniorhynchus). usually non pathogenic to humans, these parasites are particularly present around the mediterranean basin. d. immitis is very rare in humans in europe, sometimes found in a pulmonary nodule and the heart location is not described. d. repens is more frequent and emerging in humans. usually, only one larva develops, producing an immature adult worm inside a subcutaneous nodule. ultrasound examination may suggest the parasitic origin of the lesion before an extraction and a parasitological diagnosis of the worm. more often, a fortuitous diagnosis is made on histological examination. very rarely, an adult worm may mature and produce systemic diffusion of microfilariae. dirofilariasis due to d. repens can present problems in diagnosis and treatment. an ocular and subconjunctival location of the worm and a subcutaneous nodule enclosing an immature adult are the commonest clinical forms. exceptional pulmonary locations are described. the subcutaneous locations described are: skull, cheek, breast, inguinal area, buttocks, arms and legs. cases of testicular location with painful symptoms have been observed. blood hypereosinophilia was exceptionally observed in human. it is treated surgically, by excision, without chemotherapy. while the majority of esbls, isolated in clinically-relevant gram negative bacteria (gnb) (mostly enterobacteriaceae, p. aeruginosa, a. baumannii) are tem-, shv-or ctx-m-types, a few others have been reported (sfo, bes, bel, tla, ges, bel, per, veb-types, and some oxa-esbls). laboratory detection of esbl-producers is important to avoid clinical failure due to inappropriate antimicrobial therapy and to prevent nosocomial outbreaks. selective culture media (macconkey and drigalski agar supplemented with cefotaxime and/or ceftazidime) have been proposed for detection of gnb resistant to expanded-spectrum cephalosporins (esc). media using chromogenic based substrates and selective antibiotics have been developed recently for the detection and presumptive identification of esbl-producing enterobacteriaceae directly from clinical specimens. detection of esbls based only on susceptibility testing is not easy due to the variety of b-lactamases and their variable expression of blactam resistance. commercially available esbl detection methods yield at most % accurate esbl identification, since some esbl-producers may appear susceptible to some escs. therefore, any organism showing reduced susceptibility to esc should be investigated using esbl confirmatory tests. these tests should be able to discriminate between esbl-producers and those with other mechanisms conferring esc resistance. these phenotypic tests (double-disk synergy test, esbl etest, and the combination disk method) are based on clavulanate inhibition and esc susceptibility testing. they often need slight changes by either reducing the distance between the disks of esc and clavulanate, the use of cefepime (not hydrolysed by ampcs), the use of cloxacillincontaining plates (that inhibits ampc), or by double inhibition by edta and clavulanate (masking metallo-enzymes). enzymatic tests have also been proposed for identification of esbl-producers. several pcr-based techniques (end-point or real time) have been developed on clinical samples or on colonies. several esbl genes have been detected using pcr coupled to either pyrosequencing, inverse hybridisation, to dhplc, or to fluorescent probes. these techniques even though more specific require technical knowledge, special equipment, are costly and detect only known genes, regardless of their expression. detection of esbl-producer remains a challenge for the microbiology laboratory and one shall be aware that esbl screening media are now available. resistance to antimicrobial agents has become common in many bacterial species, particularly those that cause human infections. the rapid detection of resistant organisms directly in clinical samples by real-time pcr coupled with molecular beacons, or of potentially resistant bacteria and yeast in blood culture bottles by peptide nucleic acid-fluorescence in situ hybridisation (pna-fish) is already having a positive impact on antimicrobial therapy. the direct detection of mycobacterium tuberculosis in sputum in approximately hours with concomitant detection of mutations in rpob indicating rifampin resistance (as a surrogate for multidrug resistance) in the near future will likely improve the outcomes for tuberculosis patients in many developing and developed countries. several molecular technologies, including microarrays, bacterial tag encoded flx amplicon pyrosequencing (btefap), and ultra deep sequencing, have not yet transitioned to clinical laboratories but will likely provide even greater information about antimicrobial resistance not in just a single species, but in a whole community of microorganisms. complex wounds, like diabetic foot ulcers, containing multiple resistance genotypes are amenable to analysis by btefap. the implementation of these technologies in the clinical laboratory will be expensive but the potential to dramatically improve therapeutic outcomes especially for life-threatening diseases is unprecedented. objective: to determine the appropriateness of antimicrobial therapy (amt) in dutch hospitals. method: data were obtained from a prevalence survey performed within the dutch surveillance network for nosocomial infections (prezies). amt administrated on the day of the survey was registered. antiviral and antifungal drugs, tuberculostatics, cements containing amt and prophylaxis administrated in the operation-theatre were excluded. the appropriateness of amt was assessed according to a standardised algorithm based on the local antimicrobial prescription guidelines. per patient a classification in appropriate use, inappropriate use and insufficient information was made. figure: relative risk of ia use of amt against largest hospital (hospital c). results: a total of , patients were included of which , ( %, range per centre (rpc): − %) received amt. in the latter group, amt was considered appropriate in % (rpc: − %), inappropriate in % (rpc: − %) and was not judged because of insufficient information in % (rpc: − %). there was considerable variation in inappropriate use among the participating centres (figure). in univariate analysis older age, the use of quinolones, being on the urology ward and presence of a suprapubical catheter were associated significantly with inappropriate use. admission on the icu and presence of an intravascular catheter were associated significantly with appropriate use. in a multivariate analyses the presence of suprapubical catheter, being on the urology ward and the use of quinolones were determinants for inappropriate use. this study showed large differences in overall use and appropriateness of use of amt between hospitals. based on these results it is possible to define targets for intervention to improve the prudent use of amt. the high fraction of patients with insufficient information in several centres may have influenced the analyses and should be addressed in future studies. m. struelens°, s. metz-gercek, r. mechtler, f. buyle, a. lechner, h. mittermayer, f. allerberger, w. kern objectives: the eu-project antibiotic strategy international (abs) qi team developed process qis for auditing the performance of key treatment and prophylactic practices. an international network of pilot hospitals tested these tools for feasibility, reliability and sensitivity to improvement. methods: qis included: . surgical prophylaxis (indication, drug choice, timing and duration of administration); . management of community-acquired pneumonia (cap) (blood culture and legionella antigen tests and drug choice for empirical treatment); . management of s. aureus bacteraemia (echocardiography, iv catheter removal and duration of therapy); and . iv-po switch for bio-available antibiotics. a minimum of consecutive cases per centre and qi were retrospectively reviewed from clinical, laboratory and administrative records and assessed for data availability, inter-observer reliability, data collection workload and performance score. results: a total of patients were evaluated in acute care hospitals from countries, with a range of to cases and to centres per indicator. seven centres had already implemented antibiotic quality improvement and audit programmes. availability of data was > % of cases and ranged between % (catheter removal in s. aureus bacteraemia) and % (diagnostic tests for cap). / indicators were found to be reliable with kappa . (good to excellent agreement). the workload per case ranged from a median time of (cap) to min (iv-po switch). the intention to treat qi scores showed high levels of adherence to the surgical prophylaxis qi bundle, with median values of to % for hip prosthesis and to % for colo-rectal surgery. for cap management, diagnostic testing appeared sub-optimal (< % compliance with idsa guidelines). for s. aureus bacteraemia management, indicator results ranged from to %. for use of bio available antibiotics, a median of % iv administrations were avoidable. there were marked differences of scores between centres for all qis. conclusions: the abs qis are reliable and broadly applicable tools for auditing antibiotic treatment and prophylactic practices. inter-hospital variation in adherence to recommended practice indicates substantial potential for improvement with different local priorities. these qis can be recommended for assessing the effect of quality of care interventions at either local or multi-centre level. d.j. noimark°, e. charani, s. smith, b. cooper, i. balakrishnan, s.p. stone (london, uk) introduction: reduction of clostridium difficile infection (cdi), which often follows use of third generation cephalosporins, is a national priority. over a three year period, antibiotic policies were reviewed and changed in an elderly medicine department according to local sensitivities of common pathogens and levels of cdi. a laminated pocket-sized card describing antibiotic policies was given to all doctors in the department on induction with instructions not to depart from these without microbiologists' approval. this prospective controlled interrupted time series examines whether this intervention increased compliance with antibiotic policy and decreased cdi incidence. methods: the department's "narrow-spectrum, no cephalosporin" antibiotic policy was changed on st august to replace trimethoprim with cephradine ( st generation cephalopsporin) as empiric treatment for urinary tract infection, reflecting local escheriscia coli sensitivities. in october , all cephalosporins and quinolones were removed from the policy as cdi levels had increased. notional day antibiotic usage was calculated from prospective pharmacy generated data with aspirin, calcium, bisphosphonate & laxative prescription use as a non-antibiotic control, and analysed by segmented regression with a robust variance estimator. cdi rates were prospectively collected separately & analysed by a poisson regression model. results: an immediate response to change in antibiotic guidelines was observed (figure) . from august -sep there was a highly significant increase in cephalosporins ( - % of which was cephradine alone) (p < . ), a significant fall in trimethoprim (p < . ) and a significant increasing trend in cdi ( no tools existed to assess the readiness of public hospitals to receive this technology, and therefore guide resource allocation to facilitate implementation. aim: to assess the readiness of victorian public hospitals to introduce electronic antimicrobial stewardship. method: literature on readiness for change, organisational culture and information technology acceptance were reviewed. group interviews with project teams at site initiation meetings, one on one interviews with project officers at subsequent meetings, and observation where appropriate were all used to determine potential barriers and enablers. this information was recorded using a 'readiness assessment tool' and analysed to identify a number of key domains. to triangulate the data, questionnaires were distributed to project officers asking them to assess their sites' readiness to implement the system. results: a novel 'readiness assessment tool' was developed. it covered the domains of technical readiness, skills readiness, process readiness, administrative support readiness, resource readiness and hospital organisational characteristics. assessments at several hospitals highlighted a variety of issues at different sites and allowed early efforts to address these. a formative readiness assessment can be used to identify systematic problems that might facilitate or hinder uptake of electronic antimicrobial stewardship and to inform the adopters of potential resources required. [ ] buising, k, thursky, k, robertson, m, black, j, street, a, richards, m & brown, g ( ) . electronic antibiotic stewardship-reduced consumption of broad-spectrum antibiotics using a computerised antimicrobial approval system in a hospital setting. j antimicrob chemother. w.v. kern°, m. steib-bauert, a. pritzkow, g. peyerl-hoffmann, h. von baum, u. frank, m. dettenkofer, c. schneider, k. de with, h. bertz (freiburg, ulm, de) objectives: fluoroquinolone prophylaxis (fqpx) may reduce morbidity and mortality in cancer patients (pts) with neutropenia, but the development of fluoroquinolone resistance (fqr) in escherichia coli and other target organisms limits its usefulness. we evaluated changes in the incidence density of gram-negative bloodstream infection (gnb) and in the in vitro fqr rates after the introduction of fqpx (with levofloxacin) as a standard of care for pts with high risk neutropenia in a university hospital. methods: we collected individual data for pts admitted during baseline and during the first months following the intervention to assess clinical outcomes. individual pt data were compared with aggregate data ( -month periods). aggregate data analysis (unit-wide antibiotic consumption, gnb and numbers of in vitro fqr bloodstream isolates) was continued for a total of eight -month periods for both the haematology-oncology service and for general internal medicine. the new policy was introduced in the second half of the year when unit-wide baseline fqr of e. coli and of coagulase-negative staphylococcal (cons) bloodstream isolates had been % and % in the haematology-oncology unit, and % and % in general internal medicine, respectively. the individual pt data analysis revealed that pts not given fqpx had a much higher incidence of gnb than those given fqpx ( - ) . the monthly use of iv and oral quin was calculated based on data from the pharmacy department. statistical analyses were performed using segmented linear regression analysis. bayesian model averaging was used to account for model uncertainty. results: before the interventions the use of quin (both iv and total) was stable. the best fitting models indicated that the first intervention was associated with a stepwise reduction in iv use of prescribed daily doses (pdd) ( % ci: , (p < . )). there was also an indication of smaller reduction in iv use associated with intervention , but only the intervention effect was robust to model uncertainty. the overall use of quin was also significantly reduced (figure) with a large stepwise reduction of pdd ( % ci: , ) associated with intervention . this study showed that the hospital-wide use of quin can be significantly improved (and decreased) by an active policy consisting of multiple interventions. marwick°, j. broomhall, c. mccowan, s. gonzalez-mcquire, k. akhras, s. merchant, p. davey (dundee, high wycombe, uk; raritan, us) aim and objectives: to describe the antibiotic treatment and outcomes stratified by severity in a representative sample of adult patients aged or older who were treated in hospital for skin and soft tissue infections. inadequate. we also judged that % of patients received unnecessarily broad spectrum therapy. conclusions: ssti is common and is associated with significant mortality. however, choice of empirical therapy is not evidence based, with significant under treatment of high risk patients. ab were mostly ( / ) prescribed by gps and delivered by public (n = ) or hospital pharmacies (n = ). surveillance of ab use in nhs was organised in only ms. in countries a nh specific pharmaceutical formulary was available. prescription profiles by prescriber were available in countries. other quality improvement initiatives in nhs such as regular training of prescribers, promoting microbiological sampling, collection of antimicrobial resistance profiles or pharmacist advice on ab prescription were scarce. guidelines for ab treatment of most frequent infections were available in many countries but were focussing on ambulatory care and did not consider the specific nh situation. only in country the presence of an infection control practitioner was compulsory and partnership with hospital infection control teams was legally imposed in ms. conclusion: important structural, functional and regulatory nh differences exist between eu countries. specific tools to improve infection prevention and ab therapy in nhs should take into account these differences. a european nh network was created in the framework of the esac nh subproject, which will organise point prevalence surveys on ab use in . c. escherichia coli in south-western finland j. jalava°, o. meurman, h. marttila, a. hakanen, m. lindgren, k. rantakokko-jalava (turku, fi) objectives: extended-spectrum betalactamases (esbls), especially enzymes of the ctx-m group, are spreading rapidly in europe. enterobacteriaceae with reduced susceptibility to third generation cephalosporins and a positive esbl confirmatory test are also increasing in southwest finland. the purpose of this work was to study the resistance genetics of these esbl-positive enterobacteriaceae. methods: the study comprises a total of clinical enterobacteriaceae strains isolated from both inpatient and outpatient specimens. all enterobacteriaceae strains that were esbl confirmatory test positive between january and december were included in this study ( escherichia coli, klebsiella pneumoniae, one isolate per patient). of these strains, ( %) were urine isolates. resistance determinations were done using disk diffusion method (clsi) or vitek and esbl confirmations by the double disk method using cefotaxime and ceftatzidime with and without clavulanate. thus far, strains (those collected by end of june ) have been analysed for the presence of the most important esbl genes (tem, shv and ctx-m) using pcr and pyrosequencing as described before (haanpera et al. aac, : ; ) . results: in only esbl-positive strains were found. all of them harboured a ctx-m type esbl gene. since then, the number esblproducing enterobacteriaceae strains has increased significantly being tenfold in compared to year (figure) . a high majority, ( %) of the strains analysed thus far had a ctx-m-type esbl gene. most of those ( %) belonged to the ctx-m- group according to the pyrosequencing results. ctx-m- group was the next common, with % of the ctx-m genes belonging to this group. only two strains with ctx-m group enzyme were found. conclusions: enterobacteriaceae strains which produce esbl are increasing rapidly in southwest finland. this is especially true with e. coli strains isolated from urine. towards the end of the study period, the esbl enzymes were almost exclusively ctx-m, ctx-m- group being the most common. further research is needed to characterise genetic elements that carry these esbl genes. esbl strains and the proportion of ctx-m genes in - . ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) in france (n = ), spain (n = ), portugal (n = ), uk (n = ), kuwait (n = ), canada (n = ) and china (n = ), including hong kong (n = ) were studied. clonality was established by pfge and phylogenetic groups of ec and kp were determined as reported. susceptibility testing (clsi), blactx-m- transferability and location (i-ceu-i/s nuclease) were investigated. plasmid analysis included determination of inc group (pcr-replicon typing, hybridisation, sequencing) and comparison of rflp patterns. association of blactx-m- with isecp , isecp -is or iscr was established by pcr and sequencing. we identified pfge types among isolates: / ec, / kp and / cf. distribution among phylogroups were as follows: i) ec: a (n = ), b (n = ), b (n = ) and d (n = ), and ii) kp: kpi (n = ) and kpii (n = ). resistance to tetracycline ( %), nalidixic ( %), streptomycin ( %), sulfonamides ( %), ciprofloxacin ( %) and trimetroprim ( %) was common. were spreading horizontally in our hospitals and, here, we characterised the plasmids responsible in the major k. pneumoniae strains identified during the survey. methods: plasmids from representative k. pneumoniae strains with ctx-m- enzyme were extracted by alkaline lysis and compared by apai, psti and ecori restriction analysis. they were transferred into e. coli dh a by electroporation. transformants were selected on cefotaxime-containing agar and were screened by pcr for beta-lactamase genes, the aminoglycoside resistance genes aac( )-ib and aac -iib, and the plasmid-mediated quinolone resistance genes qnra/b/s. results: twelve isolates were characterised, representing major strains (a-d, and f) found in the most-affected hospitals. restriction analysis divided their plasmids into several groups. representatives of strain a (n = ) had essentially the same plasmid (group ), as did the two representatives of strain d (group a). one strain f isolate had a plasmid (group b) very similar to plasmid a from strain d, indicating possible horizontal transfer. plasmids of group were retrieved from representatives of strains b and c, again indicating probable transfer. plasmids from three other strains differed substantially from each other and from plasmids , a, b and . nevertheless, on all plasmids, blactx-m genes were linked to an upstream isecp element, known to be involved in their mobilisation. all encoded multi-resistance: all but one group and one ungrouped plasmid carried aac( )-ib; blaoxa- and aac( )-iia were detected on all except group plasmids; blatem was found on group , b, one group and two ungrouped plasmids. blashv and qnra/b/s genes were not detected. the considerable diversity of plasmids encoding ctx-m- enzyme in major slovenian k. pneumoniae strains suggested only limited transfer, even when multiple strains were present in the same hospital. evidence of plasmid transfer was between strains b and c, and possibly between strains d and f, although these plasmids were not strictly identical. analysis of resistance genes encoded by the plasmids revealed diversity, with groupings coinciding largely with those based on restriction profiles. a. ingold, g. borthagaray, a.k. merkier, d. centrón, h. bello, c.m. márquez°(montevideo, uy; buenos aires, ar; concepción, cl) objectives: to examine the genetic context of class integron harbouring blactx-m- in fifteen nosocomial k. pneumoniae isolates from south america in order to enhance the understanding of the antibiotic resistance spread among the region. methods: dna was extracted with the use of axypreptm bacterial genomic dna miniprep kit. the analysis of the cassette array was carried out with the use of primers hs /hs targeting adjacent conserved regions. the examination of the surroundings were performed using two pcr primer pairs, hs /hs and hs /hs , to amplify the initial(iri) and the terminal(irt), inverted repeat boundary, respectively. the primer pair hs /hs was used whenever a negative result was obtained with hs /hs . all pcr products were purified and sequenced and the data was analyzed with ncbi blast tool. the sequence obtained with primers hs /hs revealed the presence of three different transposons backbones at the iri end. the tn -like module and the tn -like module were present in isolates, the tn -like module was present in isolates. no amplicons were obtained with the use of primers hs /hs that amplify a tn -like insertion. two uruguayan isolates with a tn boundary at the iri end were tested with hs /hs that target a tn -like backbone and one generated a product consistent with a tn -like mer region. uruguayan isolates carried a single aada cassette ( / ) and the other one contained a dfra -aada array, while the four argentinian isolates carried the combination aaca -aada -orfd. chilean isolates arrays are in process. conclusions: among the extended-spectrum beta-lactamases, the cefotaximases constitute a rapidly growing cluster of enzymes that have disseminated geographically. there is a high frequency of isolation of ctx-m- producing k. pneumoniae associated with a class integron in the region. despite being common the presence of iscr linked to blactx-m- in k. pneumoniae isolates, this study provides new and relevant information in the sequence context at the iri. here we report about the cassette array diversity and the diversity of elements in which the class integron are embedded. different integron/transposons carrying the blactx-m- gene seem to be circulating and different regional patterns could be emerging, this study highlights the ability of different genetic elements to act cooperatively to spread and rearrange antibiotic resistance. l. vinué, a. garcía-fernández, d. fortini, p. poeta, m.a. moreno, c. torres, a. carattoli°(logroño, es; rome, it; vila real, pt; madrid, es) objectives: ctx-m enzymes are frequently detected in europe. in particular, ctx-m- and ctx-m- -producing strains have been recovered from both humans and farm animals in spain, italy, greece, and portugal, suggesting the existence of community reservoirs for these enzymes. the aim of this study was to compare escherichia coli strains and plasmids harbouring blactx-m- and blactx-m- genes isolated from human and animals. methods: four e. coli ctx-m- and eight ctx-m- epidemiologically unrelated producers from sick or healthy animals (pig, dog, cow and chickens) and from humans (urine, blood and faecal samples) were analysed by xbai-pfge, plasmid transferability, pcr-based replicon typing, plasmid restriction analysis and southern blot hybridisation. all isolates were from spain but the dog isolate was from portugal. the genetic context of the blactx-m genes was previously investigated for all the strains. results: three ctx-m- strains (one from healthy chicken and two from hospitalised patients) showed the same pfge pattern. a chromosomal localisation of the blactx-m- gene was suspected in these strains. the five remaining ctx-m- producers showed the blactx-m- gene on plasmids belonging to the incn ( strains) or untypable groups ( strain). two incn plasmids showed identical pvuiirestriction patterns: one was identified in a strain from a healthy chicken and one was from a hospitalised human patient; these two strains were isolated in and , respectively and showed different pfge patterns. ctx-m- producers (three from animal strains and one a healthy human) did not show clonality by pfge and the blactx-m- gene was always located on plasmids, three belonging to the incn and one to the inci groups. two of the incn plasmids carrying the blactx-m- gene showed highly related restriction patterns: one was from a healthy dog and one from a healthy human. conclusion: this study demonstrated the presence of clonal e. coli ctx-m- producers in animal and human sources and also detected epidemic incn plasmids disseminating among unrelated isolates from humans and animals, clearly suggesting a potential animal reservoir for the blactx-m- / genes. o characterisation of bladim- , a novel integron-located metallo-beta-lactamase gene from a pseudomonas stutzeri clinical isolate in the netherlands l. poirel°, j. rodriguez-martinez, n. al naiemi, y. debets-ossenkopp, p. nordmann (k.-bicetre, fr; amsterdam, nl) objectives: characterisation of the mechanism involved in the uncommon resistance to carbapenems observed from a pseudomonas stutzeri isolate recovered from a patient hospitalised in the netherlands with a chronic tibia osteomyelitis. that strain was resistant to ticarcillin, piperacillin-tazobactam, imipenem and meropenem, of intermediate susceptibility to ceftazidime and cefepime, and susceptible to aztreonam. methods: screening for metallo-beta-lactamase (mbl) production was performed using the e-test method with a strip combining imipenem and edta. shotgun cloning was performed with xbai-digested dna of p. stutzeri and pbk-cmv cloning vector. selection was performed on amoxicillin and kanamycin-containing plates. results: e. coli top (pdim- ) recombinant strains were obtained, displaying resistance to penicillins and ceftazidime, reduced susceptibility to cefepime, imipenem and meropenem, and full susceptibility to aztreonam. sequence analysis identified a novel ambler class b betalactamase dim- for "dutch imipenemase" (pi . ) weakly related to all other mbls. dim- shared % amino acid identity with the most closely related mbl gim- , and and % identity with the imp and vim subgroups, respectively. dim- hydrolyzes very efficiently imipenem and meropenem, expanded-spectrum cephalosporins, but spares aztreonam. the bladim- gene was as a form of a gene cassette located at the first position in a class integron, but the be of that gene cassette was truncated giving rise to a fusion with an aadb gene cassette encoding an aminoglycoside adenylyltransferase. the third and last gene cassette corresponded to the qach cassette encoding resistance to disinfectants. conclusion: a novel mbl gene was identified in p. stutzeri further underlining (i) the diversity of acquired mbl genes, especially among non-fermenters, (ii) that pseudomonas sp. may be a reservoir of these genes and (iii) the possibility of spread of important resistance determinants in northern part of europe. isolates in greece p. giakkoupi, o. pappa, m. polemis, a. bakosi, a. vatopoulos°( athens, gr) objectives: metallo-beta-lactamases of the vim family are the main mechanism of carbapenem resistance in p. aeruginosa in greece. in this preliminary report we attempted to survey the subtypes of vim betalactamase currently prevailing in p. aeruginosa clinical isolates in greek hospitals, the genetic relatedness of the respective isolates, as well as the genetic environment of the blavim gene. methods: fifteen mbl producing and epidemiologically unrelated p. aeruginosa clinical isolates were collected in september from fifteen different hospitals around greece. mbl production was initially identified by an edta synergy test. identification of blavim gene, as well as mapping of the blavim cassette carrying integrons were performed by pcr and sequencing of the products. the o serotypes of the isolates were determined by a slide agglutination test using p. aeruginosa antisera (biorad). molecular typing was performed by pulse-field gel electrophoresis of spei-restricted genomic dna. results: blavim- gene was detected in nine isolates, blavim- in five and blavim- in only one isolate. the blavim- cassette of all nine isolates was located on the bp variable region of a class i integron, preceded by aaca gene cassette. blavim- cassette of all five isolates was the first cassette of the bp variable region of a class i integron, followed by the aaca and blapse- gene cassettes. blavim- was the unique cassette of a class i integron. vim- producers belonged to o , o and o serotypes, whereas four isolates were non-typeable. vim- producers belonged to the same three serotypes, whereas only one was non-typeable. the vim- producer belonged to o serotype. the nine vim- producing p. aeruginosa isolates revealed a great degree of variability in pfge molecular typing, belonging to seven types. contrary, the five vim- producing p. aeruginosa isolates displayed higher genetic similarity and fell into one major type with % homology, which also included the vim- producing isolate. there was no correlation between the results of serotyping and molecular typing. conclusions: mbl production in p. aeruginosa in greece seems to be mainly due to specific class i integrons harbouring either blavim- or blavim- genes. genetic variability was higher among bacteria carrying vim- beta-lactamase, a fact indicating wider intraclonar spread of the respective integron. j.m. rodriguez-martinez, l. poirel°, p. nordmann (k.-bicetre, fr) objectives: extended-spectrum beta-lactamases of ampc-type (esacs) contributing to reduced susceptibility to imipenem have been recently reported from enterobacteriaceae. the aim of the study was to evaluate the putative role of natural ampc-type beta-lactamases of p. aeruginosa in a similar resistance profile. methods: thirty-two non-repetitive p. aeruginosa clinical isolates recovered in our hospital in were included. they were selected on the basis of criteria of intermediate susceptibility or resistance to ceftazidime and intermediate susceptibility or resistance to imipenem. mics were determined by agar dilution and e-test techniques. the level of expression of the ampc beta-lactamases was evaluated by measuring specific activities. pcr, sequencing, and cloning allowed to characterise the different bla(ampc) genes. identified esacs were purified and their km and kcat values for beta-lactams determined by spectrophotometry. results: using cloxacillin-containing (an ampc beta-lactamase inhibitor) plates, the susceptibility to ceftazidime was restored for out of isolates, suggesting overproduction of the ampc. in addition, in presence of cloxacillin, reduced mic values were also observed with ceftazidime, cefepime and imipenem for out of those isolates. cloning and sequencing identified distinct ampc b-lactamase variants among the isolates. recombinant plasmids expressing the ampcs were transformed into reference p. aeruginosa strain and reduced susceptibility to cefepime and imipenem was observed only with recombinant p. aeruginosa strains expressing ampc beta-lactamases that had an arginine residue at position . the catalytic efficiencies (kcat/km) of the ampc variants possessing this arginine residue were increased against oxyiminocephalosporins and imipenem. in addition, in-vitro assays demonstrated that those ampc variants constituted a favourable background for selection of additional degree of carbapenem resistance. conclusions: some ampcs of p. aeruginosa possessing extended activity torward carbapenems may contribute to carbapenem resistance. background: most oxa-type esbls are oxa- , oxa- or oxa- derivatives. they display a very low homology, the percentage of which is between % and %. oxa-type esbls are divided into five groups according to the different homology by frederic bert, etc. group includes oxa- , oxa- , oxa- and its derivants;group includes oxa- , oxa- , oxa- and oxa- ;group includes oxa- , oxa- , oxa- and oxa- ; group is named after oxa- ; group only includes a single enzyme called lcr- . oxa-type esbls has been reported widespread in the world since the first report in , such as turkey, france, england and so on. but there is few report about it in china. objective: to investigate the prevalence and genotype distribution of oxa-type extended-spectrum beta-lactamases (esbls) in clinical pseudomonas aeruginosa strains isolated from xiangya hospital of central south university in changsha city, hunan province, china. methods: ninety-seven non-repetitive clinical isolates of p. aeruginosa were collected between october and january from the hospital. they were screened for oxa-type esbls production by polymerase chain reaction pcr with five pairs of primes specific for blaoxa genes, respectively. then amplification of oxa-type esbls production was performed by pcr with specific primers. the purified and amplified products were sequenced to confirm the genotype of the oxa-type esbls. results: the sequences of the three oxa-type esbls pcr products were then compared in genbank database and there were no the completely same ribonucleotide and amino acid sequence with them. they were two novel oxa-type esbls, named as blaoxa- and blaoxa- , which have been registered in genbank database under accession numbers eu and eu , respectively. conclusions: there have occurred infections caused by p. aeruginosa producing oxa-type esbls in xiangya hospital of central south university. two novel oxa-type esbls in p. aeruginosa strains have been discovered in our study, which are named blaoxa- and blaoxa- , respectively. pneumonia is one of the most common nosocomial infections and is associated with high mortality. in the last years, gram-positive bacterial pathogens have risen in prevalence as a cause of hospitalacquired pneumonia (hap), including that occurring during mechanical ventilation (ventilator-associated pneumonia; vap). in particular, staphylococcus aureus is a major cause of hap, including vap. the rise of multidrug-resistant infections is a source of concern, with methicillinresistant s. aureus (mrsa) accounting for > % of s. aureus isolates in some european hospitals. this symposium will take the format of a question-and-answer roundtable session in which experts will answer questions and initiate discussion surrounding emerging concerns and appropriate therapeutic strategies in nosocomial pneumonia, including that caused by multidrug-resistant gram-positive pathogens. recently, shifts in the susceptibility of s. aureus to established therapeutic agents for nosocomial pneumonia have added to the challenge of selecting appropriate empiric therapy. in patients with suspected multidrug-resistant infections or those who are mechanically ventilated, prompt initiation of therapy, often before the pathogen has been confirmed, is critical. vancomycin is the gold-standard treatment for multidrug-resistant infections and resistance has been remarkably slow to emerge. however, clinical reports in europe of 'mic creep' and the emergence of vancomycin-intermediate s. aureus (visa), hvisa and linezolid-resistant mrsa have presented new clinical dilemmas. elevated vancomycin mics are linked to treatment failure and increased mortality. hence, while vancomycin remains a useful therapeutic tool, treatment decisions present an increasing challenge, especially in groups of patients in whom rapid eradication of infection with appropriate agents is critical. telavancin is a novel lipoglycopeptide under investigation for treatment of nosocomial pneumonia. a number of key features suggest telavancin as a potentially attractive option for nosocomial pneumonia. telavancin has a unique dual mechanism of action that disrupts both bacterial cell wall biosynthesis and cell membrane integrity. the agent is rapidly bactericidal against a broad range of clinically relevant grampositive bacteria, including mrsa. two pivotal phase iii studies have demonstrated telavancin efficacy equivalent to vancomycin in hap, including vap, including in seriously ill patient subgroups and in that caused by mrsa. hantaviruses are enveloped rna viruses, each carried primarily by rodents or insectivores of specific host species. they have coevolved with the hosts in which they cause almost asymptomatic and persistent infections. in humans some hantaviruses cause disease: haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (hfrs) in eurasia. in europe puumala (puuv) from bank voles and saaremaa (saav) from field mice cause mild hfrs and dobrava (dobv) from yellow-necked mice severe hfrs. in asia hfrs is caused mainly by hantaan and seoul viruses. in americas some viruses cause hantavirus cardiopulmonary syndrome: sin nombre, andes and other viruses carried by sigmodontine rodents, not found in eurasia. in addition, in europe the common vole carries tula and rats seoul virus. however, they have not been definitely associated with disease in europe, although both can infect humans. we discuss the epidemiology, molecular genetics, detection of infection in carrier hosts and humans (including rt-pcr and -min serological tests), functions of hantaviral proteins, risk factors for humans to catch hantavirus infection (including smoking) and disease (including risk and protective hla haplotypes), role and mapping of epitopes of cytotoxic t-cells, mechanisms of hantavirus-induced apoptosis, newly discovered clinical features (including hypophyseal haemorrhages in puuv infection), and long-term consequences and pathogenesis of hfrs (endothelial permeability, thrombocytopenia, tnf-alpha and il- ). puuv occurs widely in europe except in the far north and mediterranean regions, saav in northern, eastern and central europe and dobv mainly in the balkans. the epidemiological patterns differ: in western and central europe hfrs epidemics follow mast years with increased oak and beech seed production promoting rodent breeding. in the north, hantavirus infections and hfrs epidemics occur in − year cycles, driven by prey-predator interactions. the infections and hfrs are on the increase in europe, partly because of better diagnostics and partly perhaps due to environmental changes. in several european countries hantavirus infections are notifiable and in some countries (e.g. belgium, finland, france, germany, scandinavian countries, slovenia) their epidemiology is relatively well studied. in large areas of europe, however, hantavirus infections and hfrs have not been studied systematically and they are still heavily under-diagnosed. mrsa screening − will we ever agree? s mrsa: universal screening! the successful control of any outbreak or epidemic relies on detection of those harbouring the pathogen (infected and colonised persons) combined with eliminating spread to new individuals. the approach to containment and reduction of the global mrsa pandemic is now being discussed. a challenge for this infection is that most persons harbouring mrsa do not exhibit signs of disease and thus in order to detect all potential spreaders of this organism some surveillance must be done. the required level of detection (surveillance through screening) is not known and likely varies with the prevalence of colonisation and disease. for a given mrsa prevalence, the factor that seems most crucial in reducing spread is the percentage of potential isolation days captured. the operational processes that highly influence this are ) the sensitivity of screening detection (including sites tested and laboratory methods used), ) the speed at which results of newly detected positive patients are reported from the laboratory (assuming pre-emptive isolation is not employed), and ) the selection of patient populations who are to undergo screening. laboratory testing has a major impact on detecting mrsa colonised patients with real-time pcr having a sensitivity of % and a possible hour reporting time compared to direct chromogenic agar cultures with a sensitivity of % and > hour reporting and enriched chromogenic agar testing with a sensitivity of % and > hour reporting (am j clin pathol, ); both reduced sensitivity and prolonged reporting time negatively impacting the success of mrsa timely isolation. we have shown that capturing % of mrsa isolation days in a modest mrsa prevalence setting ( infections/ , patient days) with a high sensitivity test having a > hour result reporting time did not reduce hospital-wide mrsa disease (ann int med : , ) . others have demonstrated that surveillance in an icu with similar mrsa prevalence, again with a high sensitivity test having day result reporting, did not reduce icu disease until preemptive isolation was initiated (crit care : r , ) . finally, we demonstrated that universal admission surveillance and decolonisation capturing % of possible mrsa isolation days had a dramatic impact by reducing % of all in-hospital infections from mrsa. future research in this area should focus on better defining those patients that benefit from mrsa screening and the role of decolonisation in these programs. clostridium difficile infection (cdi) is a toxin-mediated intestinal disease and extraintestinal manifestations are exceptional. clinical outcomes can range from asymptomatic colonisation to mild diarrhoea and more severe disease characterised by inflammatory lesions and pseudomembranes in the colon, toxic megacolon or bowel perforation, sepsis, shock, and death. the main clinical symptoms, secretory diarrhoea and inflammation of colonic mucosa, can be in great part explained by the actions of two large protein toxins, toxin a (tcda) and toxin b (tcdb). both toxins are cytotoxic, destroy the intestinal epithelium and decrease colonic barrier function by disruption of the actin cytoskeleton and tight junctions resulting in a decreased transepithelial resistance allowing fluid accumulation. in addition, c. difficile toxins also cause release of various inflammatory mediators which affect enteric nerves, sensory neurons and promote inflammatory cells, adding to the fluid secretion, inflammation and transmigration of neutrophils. some experimental evidence points also to possible extraintestinal action of c. difficile toxin b. in zebrafish embryos tcdb caused damage and edema in cardiac tissue and in hamsters the same toxin caused lung damage. only recently efficient systems have been developed to genetically manipulate c. difficile. comparison of knock-out mutants producing only one of both toxins have shown that tcdb-positive-only mutants retain the ability to kill hamsters, whereas tcda-positive-only mutants were not virulent for hamsters. these results are in concordance with epidemiological findings that naturally occurring a-b+ strains still cause the entire spectrum of cdi, but are not in concordance with effects observed after intragastric challenge of hamsters with purified toxins tcda and tcdb. the role of the third toxin produced by c. difficile, binary toxin cdt in the development of human disease is not well understood. cdt was shown to have enterotoxic effect in rabbit ileal loop assay, but natural strains producing cdt but neither tcda nor tcdb colonised animals but were not lethal in hamsters. comparative genomic analysis will most likely reveal additional factors involved in pathogenesis and in increased virulence (including cell surface layer proteins, sporulation characteristics and antibiotic resistance). additionally, the role of the host immune response in cdi has just started to be better understood. since , there has been an escalation in rates of clostridium difficile infection (cdi) with epidemic c. difficile (pcr ribotype /north american pulsed-field type [nap ]) responsible for outbreaks of severe infection in north america and europe. while fluoroqinolone resistance and over-use are thought to be driving the epidemic, the ageing population and improved case ascertainment are contributing to the dramatic increase in cases. other factors may also be important, such as the increase in prescription of proton pump inhibitors. in the netherlands, since , there has been an increase in prevalence of human cdi with ribotype strains usually found in animals. these infections were in a younger population and more frequently community acquired. there was alarm when it was reported that % of retail beef samples in canada contained c. difficile. the figure is higher in the usa where more than % of packaged meats (beef, pork and turkey) from arizona stores contained c. difficile. most animal isolates of c. difficile produce binary toxin, and both pigs and cattle harbour pcr ribotype a strain that, like ribotype , also produces more toxins a and b, and binary toxin. in the eastern part of the netherlands where > % of pig farms are located, > % of human isolates are now ribotype , and human and pig strains of c. difficile are highly genetically related. it has been suggested that the overlap between the location of pig farms in the netherlands and the occurrence of human ribotype infections involves a common source. that source is likely to be the environment. the upsurge in cdi has prompted diagnostic companies to try to either improve current tests or develop new ones. laboratory diagnostic methods can be divided into groups; traditional faecal cytotoxin detection (with or without culture), enzyme immunoassays (eias) and molecular methods. faecal cytotoxin detection is specific but lacks sensitivity, culture is sensitive but lacks specificity. new eias should find a niche in medium sized laboratories. current in-house pcr methods have the potential for great sensitivity and specificity but have been available only in larger laboratories. new commerciallyavailable platforms will make this methodology more accessible to smaller laboratories. whatever method is chosen, it is necessary for the laboratory to have as fast a turn-around-time as possible, particularly in an outbreak situation. d. lévy-bruhl°(saint-maurice, fr) in , the advisory board on immunisation (abi) has been asked to make recommendations to the ministry of health regarding the inclusion or not in the french immunisation schedule of the soon to be licensed first hpv vaccine. the main elements considered in the establishment of the benefit-risk balance of routine hpv vaccination were: on the benefit side: -the very significant potentially preventable burden of diseases; -the very high efficacy of the vaccine against persistent hpv / infections in naive subjects; -the expected additional impact on other hpv / related lesions and cancers; -the fact that vaccination, by preventing the pre-cancerous lesions, has the advantage over screening to reduce the cost and anxiety related to their detection and management; -the available data in favour of a satisfactory safety profile; -the benefit of vaccination for the women not covered by the opportunistic screening program. on the "risk" side: -the high cost of vaccination; -the unknown duration of protection; -the need for continuation of screening, even for vaccinated women; -the fact that the majority of residual cervical cancers could be prevented by the organisation of the screening program; -the risk of a decrease in compliance to screening for vaccinated women; -the low benefit if vaccinated and screened women were the same. a cost effectiveness analysis, carried out on a multi cohort markov model, showed that, over a years period, the impact of vaccinating % of years old girls or of organising the screening were comparable (reduction of cancer deaths close to %). however, the cost-effectiveness ratio of the vaccination was higher than that of the screening organisation, resp. , and , € per life year saved (at a % discount rate). on the basis of the economical analysis, the screening organisation was therefore the first priority. however, if both interventions were implemented, the overall reduction in cervical cancer deaths was estimated at %. the cost-effectiveness of the addition of vaccination on the top of the organisation of the screening appeared acceptable ( , € per life year saved). based on those results, the abi issued in march a recommendation to include the hpv vaccination in the immunisation schedule for years old girls, together with a catch up for to years old women not having started their sexual life more than one year ago. the vaccine cost has been reimbursed since july . clinical microbiology − is outsourcing the way to go? s the (r)evolution of clinical microbiology in europe − is it good or bad? laboratory medicine in general and clinical microbiology in particular is presently subject to rapid (r)evolution. are we aware? are we in command? do we know where we are going? should we oppose or cooperate? do we have a choice? do we recognise a driving force other than money? is it good, bad or just plain necessary? and are we gaining or losing? it is not one evolutionary process -it is several parallel processes with varying emphasis in different areas. there are at least four distinctive major trends over the last years; the gradual formation of bigger and bigger units (concentration), the amalgamation of many different laboratory services into one (laboratory medicine), accreditation and an explosion of professional proficiencies and backgrounds of staff in microbiological laboratories. personally i have withstood the first two, with pleasure succumbed to the latter. a recent th trend, outsourcing microbiology services to large private consortiums, is splitting clinical microbiology into a purely analytical high-throughput money-saving activity, often leaving the consultative, clinical part of microbiology and health care infection control adrift. what is driving the evolution? not only cost-saving but also our inability to recruit medically trained microbiologists, the need to broaden the knowledge base of microbiology laboratories, automation, the development of new techniques and apparatus common to many laboratory disciplines, computerised medicine, political trendiness, power struggles, and much more. there is much to be gained by both concentration and amalgamation but much to be lost as well and many consider the heart and soul of clinical microbiology at risk. over a period of years, rational high-throughput production has won over consultation and personalised microbiology. that may be fine for the production of negative hiv-antibody/antigen analysis as for the screening of blood-donors but certainly not for the bacteriological cultures taken in conjunction with a hip replacement. or when it comes to understand and advise on the intricacies of antimicrobial resistance development. in other cases "outsourcing" and/or "amalgamation" mean that blood cultures are sent to x-town, cmv-antibodies to y-town and everything else to z-ville. when that happens clinical microbiology is lost. there are several instances where concentration, amalgamation and/or outsourcing of clinical microbiological services, alone or with other services, have meant that the tie between clinical microbiology and infection control has been severed and that many, both small and large hospitals have lost the personalised service so necessary to control outbreaks of multi-resistant bacteria and other health care related infections. a good service requires a strong knowledgeable and enthusiastic champion. a service which encompasses too many branches of laboratory medicine cannot be expected to champion each and every one with equal strength and fervour. and when outsourced to "big companies", there is no "clinical", only "microbiology". in "medical microbiology" broke out from "laboratory medicine" in uems. we are now striving towards a strong "medical microbiology" service in europe. it will have many facets, much strength, some weakness, great opportunities, but many threats. escmid certainly intends to help shape microbiology in europe. the optimal organisation of microbiology laboratories in european metropolis is an evolutionary task, driven by the evolution in laboratory tasks, laboratory technologies, communication technologies, regulations and financial issues. in the past five-ten years, medical and societal query for a more rapid and refined detection and identification of pathogens and antimicrobial resistance determinants coincided with the expansion of internet-based and remote tools for communication, an unprecedented revolution in laboratory technologies and new financial constraints. the concentration of laboratory workforces into one unique laboratory is one way to address these apparently contradictory issues. the tertiary medical school hospital system in marseille, a -million metropolitan area in france, comprises four hospitals for a total of , beds. the system had once four microbiology laboratories which have been progressively embedded into a unique, , acts per year, laboratory which deals with bacteriology, virology and environmental microbiology and hygiene. the medical staff comprises of , the ingenior staff of , technical staff of and support staff of persons for a total of persons. this organisation allowed reducing labour time for routine microbiology, to develop prospective and sophisticated time-consuming diagnostic methods and to develop advanced diagnostic methods such as molecular methods (real-time pcr-based tests, sequencing, and mass spectrometry identification) and new generation serology. new, sophisticated technologies such as automated serology and mass spectrometry were corner-stones on which to base the constant diminution of routine labour time and the development of time-consuming tasks such as fastidious organisms' isolation. these evolutions paralleled the exponential increase in the ratio of ingeniors in the laboratory. this paradigm allowed for the constitution of large collections of biological specimens for retrospective analyses, the specialisation of every medical senior in one particular field of internationally recognized expertise and the increase in knowledge output in terms of peer-reviewed papers, patents and grants. implantation of point-of-care in the emergency department, in permanent internetbased connection with the central laboratory, was the last, but not least, evolution of this system. when tuberculosis epidemiology is seen in a global perspective, and the millennium development goals are considered, it is clear that two regions of the world, africa and europe, are severely behind in the control of the disease. in africa, especially sub-saharan africa, the tb problem is closely related to the endemic hiv/aids situation. in europe, especially the eastern part and in parts of the former soviet union, the main obstacle to an effective tb control is related to drug resistant forms of m. tuberculosis. the prevalence of the most severe forms of resistance, mdr-and xdr-tb, is so high that it makes control efforts both extremely complicated and very expensive. unfortunately, increasing levels of drug resistant tb are today also seen in many african countries, and hiv infection is spreading in eastern europe. during the last ten-year period new tools, based on molecular fingerprinting of m. tuberculosis strains, have been increasingly adapted to study tb transmission. with such molecular methods to characterise clinical isolates of m. tuberculosis it is now possible to study the spread of individual strains of the bacteria in detail. the laboratory tools used, rflp, miru/vntr, spoligotyping and others, will be presented and their use exemplified. how molecular epidemiology contributed to the detection and characterisation of a major outbreak of drug resistant tb in the stockholm area will be discussed. molecular characterisation of clinical isolates from different parts of the world has led to an increased recognition of the differences between different families of m. tuberculosis strains. to further describe and understand the role of these differences in the clinical field as well as for tb epidemiology is an ongoing and interesting field of research. an increased understanding of how tb is transmitted will hopefully help in the efforts to control this global health threat both on the local level and in a global perspective. living in the era of increasing tuberculosis drug resistance, the importance of making an early and accurate diagnosis with drug sensitivities has never been greater. the epidemiology of tuberculosis defines the extent of latent disease and the proportion which becomes active. accurate diagnosis is vital if patients are to be treated in a timely manner and to reduce the amount of time infectious individuals go untreated in the community disseminating disease. in many areas of the world, dots programmes are at the forefront of tuberculosis control. however, as a diagnostic this currently relies on sputum smear microscopy which is known to miss % of cases of tuberculosis and provides no data on drug sensitivity. the second major issue around tb is the lack of worldwide diagnostic facilities. there is a need for a simple, low cost, easily implemented diagnostic test. this talk will briefly consider the issues around the diagnosis of latent and active disease which are quite distinct. the focus will be on the diagnosis of active infection. in particular, the use of mods (microscopic observation drug-susceptibility) assay in diagnosis of tuberculosis will be discussed. the potential for using this in resource poor countries will be reviewed as well as the way sophisticated technology maybe harnessed to improve reporting and allow translation to all parts of the world. the important issue of how to distinguish patients with latent and active disease will also be considered. key issues and principles in diagnosis both now and in the future will be reviewed. in terms of treatment, there are main issues. the first is that even short-course therapy is prolonged being a minimum of months leading to issue of compliance. this may result in drug resistance. the massive rise of multi-drug resistant tuberculosis to approximately , cases world-wide with around countries reporting extensively drug-resistant disease means that the need for new approaches to therapy are urgent. the second part of this talk will review different approaches to using current anti-mycobacterial drugs, the emergence of a small number of new drugs such as the diarylquinolones and entirely novel approaches to control and treat tuberculosis. there has been great success and also many threats in the field of infectious diseases during the previous year. the antimicrobial resistance, especially increasing carbapenem resistance among aerobic gram-negative rods and xdr mycobacterial tuberculosis strains are already big threats in some countries and they will probably spread to many other areas all over the world in the future and we will need new drugs for these indications but unfortunately very few new promising drugs seem to be in the pipeline at the moment for these purposes. the virulent clostridium difficile strain spreads rapidly to many new countries and e.g. in finland it killed many times more people compared with mrsa and esbl strains in . however, it is possible to stop its spreading but it needs new thinking in antibiotic use policy and infection control policy in hospitals. clostridium difficile infection has a high relapse rate after metronidazole or vancomycin therapy, but an experimental "stool exchange treatment" is a promising therapy although controlled studies are needed to prove this assumption. an interesting research area during the last years has been the role of infections in the etiopathogenesis of chronic diseases like cancer, atherosclerosis, cardiovascular diseases and many autoimmune diseases. we can fight against many cancers like liver cancer and cervix cancer with virus vaccines and gastric cancer with antimicrobial drugs. also the high incidence of malignant tumours seems to decrease during haart treatment in hiv patients. the role of infections in the etiopathogenesis of cardiovascular diseases and atherosclerosis is complex. it is obvious that infections play a role in the etiopathogenesis of atherosclerosis, stroke and myocardial infarction but the undirected routine antimicrobial treatment is not recommended for these patients but there seems to be subgroups in patients with various cardiovascular diseases which may benefit from antimicrobial treatment. recent studies seem to suggest that there are hla types which protect or make people susceptible for coronary heart disease. the hla type hla-b* seems to be a risk factor for coronary heart disease but it is also a risk factor for chronic chlamydia pneumoniae infection. the feared pandemia due to h n influenza a did not appear during the recent year and the world is now much more prepared to meet the next pandemia which, however, hopefully does not come during the next year. Ø. samuelsen°, c. giske, u. naseer, s. tofteland, d.h. skutlaberg, a. onken, r. hjetland, a. sundsfjord (tromsø, no; stockholm, se; kristiansand, bergen, oslo, førde, no) objectives: the worldwide dissemination of kpc-producing multidrugresistant enterobacteriaceae is worrisome. the first kpc-producing klebsiella pneumoniae in norway was isolated late from a patient after hospitalisation in greece. throughout the following year seven additional kpc-producing k. pneumoniae isolates have been detected in clinical samples from six new patients. the aim of this study was to perform molecular characterisation of the strains and examine their epidemiological relatedness. materials and methods: antimicrobial susceptibility was examined by etest. molecular characterisation was performed by mlst, pfge and sequencing of the blakpc genetic structure. plasmid analysis was carried out by pfge of s nuclease-digested total dna and southern blot hybridisation using a blakpc probe. relevant epidemiological data were collected retrospectively. results: eight kpc-producing clinical isolates of k. pneumoniae have been identified from seven patients in two different regions of norway from the following specimens: blood culture (n = ), urine (n = ), expectorate (n = ), perineal swab (n = ) and wound secretion (n = ). two blood culture isolates with clonally related but different pfgeprofiles were observed in one patient. the detection of kpc-producing k. pneumoniae isolates in norwegian patients was associated with import in four cases after hospitalisation in greece. two patients had been hospitalised at the same hospital in greece. isolation of a kpc-producing isolate in a fifth patient was epidemiologically linked to one of these imported cases and was a case of nosocomial transmission in norway. for the latter two cases no risk factors were identified with respect to recent hospitalisation or travel abroad. molecular analysis of six isolates has shown genetically related pfge-patterns and a common sequence type (st ). st has been associated with dissemination of ctx-m- in hungary. the blakpc gene was localised in tn on a~ kb plasmid. the two most recent isolates are currently undergoing similar analysis. conclusion: the first seven cases of kpc-producing k. pneumoniae in norway are associated with hospitalisation abroad, nosocomial transmission in norway, or urinary tract infections in outpatients without obvious risk factors. the clonal relationship between isolates underlines the existence a biological fit genetic lineage of kpcproducing k. pneumoniae with an epidemic potential. objectives: two recent publications have reported the isolation of kpc producing k. pneumoniae from infections in two patients, one in france and one in sweden, who originally had been hospitalised in greece. since this resistant mechanism had not been identified before in this country, the purpose of this report was to confirm the presence of blakpc producing k. pneumoniae in greece, to assess the extent of its spread and to study the genetic relatedness of the respective bacterial strains and the transferability of the blakpc harbouring plasmids. methods: for a three month period (february to april ) hospitals participating in the greek system for surveillance of antibiotic resistance (www.mednet.gr/whonet) were asked to seek for possible kpc producers among k pneumoniae isolates displaying reduced susceptibility to imipenem (equal or higher than mg/l), a positive hodge test for the presence of carbapenemase and a negative edta synergy test for the presence of metalloenzymes. the presence of blakpc gene in these strains was confirmed by pcr and sequencing. mics to carbapenems were determined by etest. conjugation experiments were carried out both in broth and on agar. the possible absence of ompk porin was detected by pcr. molecular typing was performed by pulse-field gel electrophoresis of xbai-restricted genomic dna. results: ninety two k. pneumoniae clinical isolates (one per patient) from hospitals all over greece were found to harbour blakpc- gene. although colonies present in the inhibition zone made the exact determination of imipenem mic difficult, the absence of ompk porin was always associated with mic of imipenem higher than mg/l. all isolates exhibited resistance to all other drug classes except colistin, tetracycline and tigecycline. pfge analysis revealed that isolates from hospitals displayed more than % similarity and were classified into one pulsotype, whereas the remaining seven isolates belonged into four different pulsotypes. blakpc- gene could not be transferred by conjugation from strains belonging to the main pulsotype. however, it was transferred from strains belonging to three out of the four remaining pulsotypes. conclusion: production of kpc- betalactamase seems to be a new emerging resistance mechanism in klebsiella pneumoniae in greece. blakpc- gene's possible clonal spread imposes the urgent need of implication of infection control practices in the affected hospitals. i. galani, m. souli, e. papadomichelakis, f. panayea, n. mitchell, a. antoniadou, g. poulakou, f. kontopidou, h. giamarellou°(athens, gr) background: until now, carbapenem resistance among klebsiella pneumoniae (kp) clinical isolates in greek hospitals has been attributed to the dissemination of vim- metallo-beta-lactamase. we describe the first outbreak of kpc-producing kp in greece; the first to occur outside the usa or israel. setting: -bed icu of attikon university hospital, athens. methods: kp isolates with an imipenem mic > mg/l and a negative edta-imipenem disk synergy test were submitted to boronic acid disk test, to pcr for a kpc gene with specific primers and sequencing. records from patients colonised or infected with a kpc-producing kp were retrospectively reviewed for clinical and epidemiological data. environmental cultures for kpc-producers were performed. clinical isolates were submitted to molecular typing using pfge. results: from february to november , kp were isolated from patients, ( . %) of which were boronic acid positive and produced kpc- . most of them ( / , . %) were isolated since august. a total of patients were identified as colonised or infected by a kpc producer which in of them belonged to the same genetic clone. the source was faeces ( ), bronchial secretions ( ), blood ( ), cvc tip ( ), urine ( ), pus ( ) and throat ( ). among patients whose medical records were available, median age was , apache ii score; , length of preceding hospital stay; days, total length of stay; days, immunosuppresion was identified in one and crude mortality was %. the kpc-producing kp was more frequently icu acquired whereas in a minority of patients it was already present on icu admission. seventy percent of the patients had previously received a carbapenem for a median of days. environmental colonisation was not identified. ten ( . %) of the kpcproducers from ( . %) patients were identified as the cause of an infection: bacteraemia ( ), ventilator-associated pneumonia ( ) and surgical site infection ( ) and exhibited mic (mg/l) for imipenem, > ; meropenem, > ; gentamicin, ; ciprofloxacin, > ; fosfomycin, > ; colistin, . and tigecycline, . most patients were successfully treated with a colistin-containing combination mostly with a beta-lactam. there was no attributed mortality. isolates from the same bacterial species were typed by pfge or automated ribotyping. kpc-encoding gene was fully sequenced. plasmid preparations and i-ceu digestion of total dna were resolved in agarose gels, blotted and hybridised with a blakpc probe. the blakpc-carrying element (tn ) was amplified with various primer pairs, digested with eag i and sequenced. results: strains each carried kpc- and kpc- . one e. cloacae carried kpc- . k. oxytoca were kpc- -producers and s. marcescens harboured blakpc- , all from usa. great genetic diversity was observed among the isolates ( different types). one clone of e. cloacae was detected in new york state ( ) ( ) . small clusters of and strains were detected among e. coli, e. cloacae, k. oxytoca. plasmids were present in all but isolates. persistence of clones throughout the years was not observed. in isolates the kpc-encoding gene was located in high molecular weight plasmids (> kb). blakpc was located in the chromosome of strains (e. cloacae, e. coli and k. oxytoca) and the location of this gene could not be determined in strains. small plasmids were present in several strains, but did not harbour blakpc. tn carried blakpc in isolates, and the transposon element was conserved. this structure was not detected in strains. conclusions: kpc-encoding genes were most often located in tn among several enterobacteriaceae species collected in usa and israel. this blakpc-carrying element was located in plasmids and on the chromosome. this study highlights the importance of tn in the dissemination of blakpc genes in several genetically diverse bacterial species. blakpc was not associated with tn in only of strains. these strains are under further investigation. objective: to evaluate the carbapenem resistance mechanism in a raoultella planticola bacteraemia isolate recovered from a patient hospitalised in ohio, usa. methods: species identification was performed by vitek and confirmed by s rrna sequencing. susceptibility testing used clsi broth microdilution method. blakpc was amplified and sequenced. the blakpc genetic element (tn ) was amplified and sequenced. plasmid extractions and conjugation experiments were carried out and the isolate was screened for esbl-encoding genes, qnr and qepa. a year old female patient was admitted to a hospital located in akron with a diagnosis of cap in may/ . sputum, paracentesis and blood cultures were negative. urine culture grew e. coli and patient received courses of moxifloxacin, ceftriaxone, azithromycin and meropenem. the patient was discharged and returned after three weeks with respiratory problems. tracheal aspirate grew a multidrug resistant a. baumannii and the blood culture grew the enteric-like gramnegative bacillus. the isolate was identified as r. planticola by the vitek , which was confirmed by s sequencing. r. planticola strain demonstrated resistance against most b-lactams, including carbapenems. screening for kpc-encoding genes was positive and this strain carried blakpc- . fluoroquinolone and aminoglycoside mic values were elevated. kpc- -encoding gene was located in tn , but conjugation experiments failed. esbl and qnr/qepa genes were not detected. conclusions: kpc serine-carbapenemases have been detected in several gram-negative species commonly isolated from clinical specimens. kpc genes are embedded in transposon-like structure usually harboured in conjugative plasmids carrying multiple antimicrobial resistance mechanisms. this is the first report of kpc-producing r. planticola that is an environmental organism related to klebsiella spp. the similarity between these organisms could facilitate the transfer of genetic material. kpc-producing isolates appear to be prevalent among different enterobacteriaceae species in usa hospitals and was detected in an isolates of apparent environmental origin. objectives: it is long known that not all individuals with a specific disease present with the same clinical manifestations, nor do they have identical prognoses or responses to treatments. it has become clear that variations in the human genome are likely to have an impact on these aspects. tank-binding kinase (tbk ) is a central molecule in the induction of a.o. the type i interferon response to pathogens. our goals for this study were ) to investigate the frequency of single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) in the promoter and coding region of tbk in a dutch caucasian population and ) to search for potential associations between these snps and bloodstream infections. methods: whole blood samples or samples of positive blood cultures were collected and after genomic dna was isolated, pcr and sequencing were performed for snp identification. functional studies included promoter activity measurements using a luciferase assay as well as electrophoretic mobility shift assays (emsa) to study binding of the transcription factor usf to the wt and mutant promoter. snp incidences were studied in a case control study. results: in samples from dutch caucasian healthy volunteers, snps were found with allele frequencies higher than % whereas other known snps had frequencies lower than % in our cohort. two snps (rs and rs ) located in the promoter region were studied in a larger cohort of anonymised patients from the maastricht university medical center with either gram-positive or gram-negative blood cultures. we found that the prevalence of rs was significantly increased in patients with positive blood cultures in comparison with those with negative blood cultures or healthy volunteers. further investigation of this snp showed that it is located just outside a usf -binding site. measuring the promoter activity using luciferase assays, the mutant promoter exhibited a decreased activity of < %. this observation was confirmed by emsa which showed that recombinant usf protein had a reduced binding affinity to the mutant promoter. conclusions: snp rs in the promoter region of tbk has a significant association with gram-positive infections. our results demonstrate that this is likely due to a decreased expression of tbk due to reduced binding of the transcription factor usf to the mutant promoter. our results support recent findings that tbk plays also an important role in the host response to gram-positive infections. objective: lymphocyte apoptosis has been recognized as an important factor contributing to both the onset of sepsis post infection and to the progression into septic shock. animal data suggest that prevention of lymphocyte apoptosis by caspase inhibition stabilises the immune system, improves bacterial clearance and decreases mortality in experimental sepsis. the present study evaluated the potential of vx- , a novel broad caspase inhibitor, as a therapy for sepsis. methods and results: initial characterisation of vx- in a number of enzymatic and cellular assays clearly demonstrated that the compound is a broad caspase inhibitor with potent anti-apoptotic activity in vitro. in vivo, vx- was tested in a murine model of endotoxic shock and a clinically relevant model of peritonitis. in the endotoxic shock model, male cd- mice (n = per group) were administered lps ( mg/kg iv) and survival was monitored for h. vx- administered by repeat iv bolus ( , , and h post-lps) significantly improved survival in a dose-dependent fashion (p < . ). in the rat peritonitis model, adult male sprague-dawley rats (n = per group) underwent caecal ligation and puncture (clp) and survival was monitored over d. continuous administration of vx- by mini-osmotic pump ( . mg/kg/h) immediately following surgery significantly improved survival (p < . ) from % in the control group to % in the compound-treated group. mode of action studies in the rat clp model confirmed that vx- reduced thymic atrophy and lymphocyte apoptosis (p < . ), supporting the anti-apoptotic activity of the compound in vivo. in addition, vx- reduced plasma endotoxin levels (p < . ), strongly suggesting an improved clearance of bacteria from the bloodstream. most importantly, we demonstrated that vx- fully retained its efficacy when dosed hours after insult (p < . ) by improving survival to % versus % in control animals, further highlighting the potential of anti-apoptotic therapy in sepsis. overall these data demonstrate that vx- inhibits lymphocyte apoptosis, improves the clearance of bacterial endotoxin and improves survival in experimental sepsis. importantly vx- improves survival in the clp model when dosed post insult, and therefore represents significant progress in the development of therapeutically viable broad caspase inhibitors for the treatment of this disease. v. vankerckhoven°, s. van voorden, n. hens, h. goossens, g. molenberghs, e. wiertz (wilrijk, be; leiden, nl; hasselt, be) objectives: toll-like receptors function as key regulators of both innate and adaptive immunity. lactobacilli modulate the immune system in different ways. the aim of this study was to examine toll-like receptor (tlr , tlr / and tlr ) signalling induced by clinical and probiotic lactobacillus strains. methods: a total of lactobacillus strains ( l. paracasei and l. rhamnosus) of different origin ( probiotic, faecal, and clinical) were tested for tlr , tlr in combination with tlr , and tlr . tlr signalling was measured as relative il- promotor activation in transfected human embryonic kidney (hek) cells. il- concentrations were measured using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. heat-killed listeria monocytogenes (hklm) was used as positive control in all assays, whereas pam , pam , and lps were used as positive controls for, respectively, tlr , tlr / , and tlr . all assays were performed at least in duplicate. linear mixed model analyses and stepwise model selection were used to identify the statistically significant effects. random effects were used to account for heterogeneity across and homogeneity within isolates. p < . was considered statistically significant. results: hek-tlr and hek-tlr / , but not hek-tlr , cells released il- upon stimulation with uv-inactivated lactobacilli, which was enhanced by co-transfection with cd- . interestingly, the production of il- was shown to be variable for the different lactobacillus isolates. although similar results were seen for all isolates for tlr and tlr / , il- production was significantly higher for tlr ( . log pg/ml) compared to tlr / ( . log pg/ml) (p < . ). no significant differences in il- production were seen between clinical and probiotic isolates. however, l. rhamnosus isolates induced a significantly higher il- production compared to l. paracasei isolates in both cell lines, . and . log pg/ml, respectively (p = . ). intra-isolate correlation was found significant (p < . ). conclusions: our study shows that lactobacilli activate both tlr and tlr in combination with tlr . our results also indicate that heterodimerisation of tlr with tlr does not lead to an improved recognition of lactobacilli. furthermore, taking intra-isolate correlation into consideration proved to be important. finally, our results suggest that differences in immunomodulation by lactobacilli may be related to differential signalling through tlrs, including tlr and tlr / . m.c. gagliardi, v. sargentini, r. teloni, m.e. remoli, g. federico, m. videtta, g. de libero, e. coccia, r. nisini°(rome, it; basel, ch) objective: to gain insights into the mechanisms used by mycobacterium tuberculosis and bacillus calmette guérin to cause human monocytes differentiation into cd negative dendritic cells (my-modc), unable to present lipid antigens to specific t cells. methods: human monocytes infected or not with mycobacteria were induced to differentiate into dc with gm-csf and il- in the presence or absence of p or erk specific inhibitors. kinases activation was detected by western blot using antibodies specific for phosphorylated and non phosphorylated isoforms. differentiation of monocytes into dc and the cd a, cd b and cd c expression was evaluated by flow cytometry and by real time pcr at different time points from infection. functional expression of cd molecules was assessed by recognition of lipid antigens by cd restricted t cell clones. results: we show that mycobacteria trigger phosphorylation of erk and p mitogen-activated protein kinase in human monocytes as well as of activating transcription factor (atf)- . mycobacteria-infected monocytes treated with a specific p inhibitor, but not with a specific erk inhibitor become insensitive to mycobacterial subversion and differentiate into cd positive my-modc, which are fully capable of presenting lipid antigens. data indicate that phosphorylation of p is directly involved in cd inhibition. conclusions: we propose p signaling as a pathway exploited by mycobacteria to affect cd expression, thus representing a novel target of possible pharmacological intervention in the treatment of mycobacterial infections. s. ebert°, s. ribes, r. nau, u. michel (gottingen, de) objective: activin a (act a) is a multifunctional cytokine with roles in the immune system and the inflammatory response. act a levels are elevated in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients with meningitis. microglial cells, the major constituents of innate immunity within the brain, express toll-like receptors (tlrs) recognising exogenous and endogenous ligands. upon stimulation with tlr agonists, primary mouse microglial cells become activated and release nitric oxide (no), cytokines, and also act a, suggesting that they are a source of elevated conclusions: pre-treatment with act a enhances no release from microglial cells activated by agonists of the principal tlrs involved in the recognition of bacteria. these findings provide further evidence for a role of act a in the innate immune response and suggest that act a acts as an pro-inflammatory modulator during infection and inflammatory processes in the cns. insertion sequences (is) are genetic tools that can mediate expression of previously silent genes or be responsible for the overexpression of certain genes (in each case by providing promoter sequences). in addition to be involved in gene transcription levels, is elements also play a very important role for gene acquisition/mobilisation. an is is usually made of of two inverted-repeat sequences (irs) bracketing a gene encoding the transposase which activity enables this entity to replicate and target another sequence. the is-related mechanisms at the origin of antibiotic resistance gene acquisition are diverse, including composite-transposition, rolling-circle transposition, one-ended transposition. is elements may be also involved in gene acquisition by mediating co-integration processes, or recombination events as hypothetized for is in relation with blashv extendedspectrum b-lactamase (esbl) genes originating from the chromosome of klebsiella pneumoniae. the blactx-m esbl genes known to be extremely widespread worldwide are encoded on plasmids, and have been found in association with isecp (acting by one-ended transposition) or iscr (acting by rolling-circle transposition). in that case, iss have played a role in the mobilisation from the chromosome of kluyvera spp. being the blactx-m progenitors and then in their expression. also, genes encoding acquired ampc b-lactamases, being of the blaacc, bladha, and blacmy-types, are mostly found in association with iscr or isecp . sometimes antibiotic resistance genes are mobilised by composite transposons which are made of two copies of a given is bracketing the mobilised fragment. in acinetobacter baumannii, the worldwide disseminated blaoxa- carbapenemase gene is part of a composite transposon structure made of two copies of isaba , forming transposon tn which had mobilised a chromosomal fragment from acinetobacter radioresistens that actually corresponds to the progenitor of blaoxa- . another possibility can be the forming of composite transposon structure bracketed by two different is (sharing similar irs) as observed with the blaper- esbl gene in pseudomonas aeruginosa. this diversity of iss elements at the origin of mobilisation/acquisition of antibiotic resistance genes is therefore responsible for the very efficient dissemination of many of them. s resistance islands − their role in the accumulation and spread of antimicrobial resistance genes historically, multi-antibiotic resistance in many bacterial species was largely attributed to the acquisition of resistance (r)-plasmids encoding one or more resistance determinants. however, over the last decade the r-plasmid paradigm has begun to be challenged. 'resistance islands' comprising large, chromosomally-integrated spans of alien dna harbouring multiple antibiotic resistance genes have been identified in the major hospital pathogens methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (mrsa) and multi-resistant acinetobacter baumannii, and the foodand water-borne diarrhoeal pathogens shigella, salmonella and vibrio cholerae. in addition, comparative genomics analysis of the archetypal haemophilus influenzae conjugative resistance element that had spread worldwide revealed that it belonged to a large syntenic family of integrative islands, members of which could be found in at least other b-and g-proteobacteria. with the exception of the a. baumannii island, these elements can be described as classic self-excising, -circularising and -integrative elements. all three functions are mediated by short island-flanking direct repeats and cognate integrase proteins encoded by the islands. in fournier et al. described an kb a. baumannii island (abar ) which harboured resistance genes packaged within a highly mosaic, integron-rich element that had almost certainly evolved via recombination, transposition and integron-mediated cassette capture from an 'empty' ancestral prototype. abar probably represents a new class of resistance island as it exhibits several features reminiscent of complex nested transposons, suggesting a distinct functional natute. however, despite the widespread distribution of resistance and genomic islands only a minority are known to code for part or all of the conjugative machinery necessary for their dissemination; others have been mobilised by helper plasmids or bacteriophages. regardless, data on the mechanisms of mobilisation of the vast majority of similar nonresistance islands remain sparse. importantly, resistance islands may not consists merely of packages of resistance genes. on the contrary, these diverse and frequently hybrid entities could potentially confer upon their hosts other advantageous traits relating to host-pathogen interaction, virulence, survival in the environment and/or transmissibility, truly justifying the label 'selfish islands' and further explaining their evolutionary success. due to the availability of new techniques, genome sequencing of bacteria has become fast and inexpensive. furthermore, recent methods using paired-end reads located several kb apart in the genome eases the assembling process, even though no reference sequence is available. in a reasonably close future, it should be possible to obtain the fully assembled sequence of a bacterial isolate overnight. the new sequencing techniques generate enormous amounts of genomic data and, thereby, a need for new tools. these should able to quickly analyze genomes and point to zones of interest, prompting further analysis on a reduced number of regions or genes, such as genomic islands. pathogenicity islands, a subset of genomic islands, carry genes such as toxins or resistance genes and have the particularity to be mobile, i.e. they may transfer to other species or strains. thereby, they confer their new hosts a more resistant or infectious phenotype, making this phenomenon particularly important to study. nucleotide composition of genomes is fairly homogeneous inside bacterial genomes. in general, horizontally transferred regions can be spotted due to their particular nucleotide content, because they tend to retain the composition of their original host and don't share the one of their new hosts. to do an analogy with languages, genomes speak dialects, and as one would easily spot a paragraph in finnish in an english text while not knowing finnish, one can spot genomic and pathogenicity islands transfers in a given genome. several techniques relying on various compositional aspects and on different algorithmic methods have been recently developed to detect pathogenicity islands in bacterial genomes. even very simple measures of the genome composition, such as the variation in t vs. a bias (ta skew) can lead to the identification of all known prophages in streptococcus pyogenes. it can even trigger the discovery of a putative ancient genomic island carrying a large number of genes related to pathogenicity in all strains of that species. in conclusion, with the rise of fast and inexpensive genome sequencing, new quick and simple methods are being developed. they take the advantage of the homogeneous nucleotide composition of bacterial genomes to uncover mobile genetic elements carrying genes involved in pathogenicity. in the past years, significant progress has been achieved in the management of chronic hepatitis b with the successive development of six potent antiviral medications (lamivudine, adefovir dipivoxil, pegylated interferon alpha, entecavir, telbivudine and tenofovir). however, the clinical results of antiviral therapy have been limited by the emergence of antiviral drug resistance especially with the first generation of nucleoside analogs (lamivudine, adefovir and telbivudine). furthermore, the unique mechanism of viral genome replication and persistence within infected cells is responsible for viral persistence even after prolonged therapy with the newer antivirals (entecavir and tenofovir). this is the major reason why life-long treatment is envisaged in the majority of patients, which may expose them to long-term risk of developing resistance. the use of in vitro phenotypic assays has been crucial for the characterisation of newly identified resistant mutants and determine their cross-resistance profile. results allowed to understand the different mechanism of viral resistance to lamivudine and adefovir, the mechanism of primary failure to adefovir therapy, the unique mechanism of entecavir resistance, and to characterise the emergence of multi-drug-resistant strains in patients receiving sequential antiviral therapy. the crossresistance profile for the main resistant mutants was determined which allowed to provide recommendation to clinicians for treatment adaptation based on molecular virology data. the understanding of the development of hbv drug resistance has allowed to significantly improve the management of antiviral resistance and to design better treatment strategies to prevent resistance. the current standard of care relies on treatment initiation with antivirals combining a strong antiviral potency and a high barrier to resistance. a precise virologic monitoring is required to measure antiviral efficacy, and to diagnose partial response or viral breathrough at an early stage. this allows to adapt antiviral treatment preferrably using an add-on strategy with a drug having a complementary cross-resistance profile. this strategy has been shown to be efficient in controling viral replication and preventing liver disease progression in the majority of patients. treatment of chronic hepatitis b virus (hbv) infection is aimed at suppressing viral replication to the lowest possible level. in many prospective clinical trials it has been shown that a sustained hbv dna response was correlated with serologic, histologic, or biochemical responses. despite the recent progress in hepatitis b antiviral treatment, it is shown that antiviral drug resistance is inevitable against many of the nucleoside analogs. the emergence of antiviral-resistant strains of hbv leads to viral and subsequently biochemical breakthrough and may lead to disease progression and increased death. most of the data on the clinical impact of antiviral resistant hbv came from the data derived from studies of lamivudine therapy. there is limited data on other hbv antiviral drugs like adefovir. it is shown in several studies that treatment of hbeag-negative chronic hepatitis b with lamivudine effectively suppresses hbv replication and results in biochemical remission and histologic improvement in more than two thirds of patients. however, relapse has occurred in the majority of hbeag-negative patients after the cessation of therapy. there are several studies to support the occurrence of severe hepatic flares, and liver failure after the emergence of lamivudine resistance. several studies, where liver biopsies were taken, demonstrated that histological improvement was reduced in those patients experiencing lamivudine resistance. the clinical outcome for patients with antiviral resistance is related to their age, the severity of the underlying liver disease and the severity of the hepatic flares. on the other hand in a different study it was found that long-term lamuvidine treatment was associated with a reduced chance of developing cirrhosis and hcc in patients without advanced disease but, although resistant mutants reduced the benefits from lamivudine therapy, the outcome of these patients was still better than untreated patients. results of several clinical trials have shown that the addition or substitution of newer antiviral agents can restore suppression of viral replication, normalisation of liver function and reverse histological progression in patients with antiviral resistance. consequently, well-tolerated, potent therapies that offer a strong genetic barrier against the development of resistance are desirable, since antiviral resistance and poor adherence are key risk factors for treatment failure and subsequent reversal of clinical improvement. resistance of enteric fever-causing and non-typhoid salmonella serovars to agents traditionally used to treat these infections in the past shows extensive geographical variation. decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin is rapidly increasing all over the world with target alteration and increased efflux being the most important mechanisms behind. infections with such strains often result in extended hospitalisation or even in therapeutic failures. furthermore, it is likely that moderately increased mic values facilitate the development of strains with higher level of resistance, i.e. a pattern described at various locations. screening methods based on quinolone sensitivity testing may fail to indentify decreased fluoroquinolone susceptibility both in typhoid, as well as in non-typhoid salmonella. plasmid mediated quinolone resistance genes are detected increasingly all around the world although neither the frequency nor the variety of genes identified has approached that seen in some other members of enterobacteriaceae. treatment with gatifloxacin or azithromycin are alternative options for invasive and systemic infections caused by strains with decreased susceptibility to ciprofloxacin. at some parts of the world resistance to extended spectrum cephalosporins reached such incidence that may have therapeutic implications particularly when initial, empiric treatment of invasive infections is concerned. resistance is due to plasmid coded ampc type beta lactamases (particularly to cmy- ), and most often to esbls of which usually some of ctx-m types are the frequently encountered ones. carbapenem resistance is still rare, albeit does occur, among salmonella isolates. the recent description of a non-typhoid salmonella strain with the blaimp- gene co-located on a class- integron with several other resistance determinants on a conjugative plasmid is of particular concern. campylobacters exhibit natural resistance to a variety of antimicrobials. the drugs of choice used to be fluoroqunolones or macrolides. however, the current incidence of ciprofloxacin resistance made the former drugs already obsolete or seriously limited their use at several parts of the world. with the exception of few locations the incidence of macrolide resistance is still relatively low and is seen more frequently in c. coli than in c. jejuni. however, strains exhibiting resistance against both groups of drugs have been emerging, particularly in south-east asia. neisseria meningitidis, the meningococcus, is a major cause of meningitis and septicaemia worldwide while neisseria gonorrhoeae, the gonococcus, is responsible for one of the most widespread sexually trasmitted disease. the behaviour of these two species towards antibiotics is very different: resistance in n. gonorrhoeae is now widespread occuring as both chromosomally and plasmid mediated to a variety of drugs, whereas, besides resistance to sulphonamides, n. meningitidis remains largely susceptible to antibiotics used both for therapy and prophylaxis. however, as in the gonococcus, the resistance to antibiotics of n. meningitidis is also evolving, as documented by the ever higher frequency of strains with intermediate resistance to penicillin in many countries. transformation has apparently provided both species with a mechanism by which they can increase resistance to penicillin by replacing part of their pena gene, which encodes pbp , with part of the pena gene of related species that fortuitously produces forms of pbp less susceptible to the antibiotic. n. meningitidis is still at this step, whereas n. gonorrhoeae has acquired also mutation in the pona gene that encodes pbp , mutation in porin ib, increased expression of efflux pump and the tem- b-lactamase plasmid. the emergence and the spread of gonococci fully resistant to penicillin since the second half of the s years led to the recommended use of fluoroquinolones as primary therapy. however, this class of antibiotics became rapidly unefficacious, mainly in asia, due to the emergence of mutations in gyra and parc which are able to block the activity of the quinolones on gyrase and topoisomerase iv. since , cdc no longer recommends their use for treatment of gonococcal diseases. fortunately, the occurrence of quinolone resistant meningococci, due to mutations in gyra, is still rare but even if cases are still few they are of great concern for the epidemic potential of this pathogen and the required prophylaxis of contacts. also for the other antibiotic, frequently used to this aim, rifampicin, some meningococci have showed to be resistant, again for the presence of mutations, in this case in the rpob gene coding for the b-subunit of the meningococcal rna polymerase. the molecular epidemiological identification of clonal clusters for both neisseria species with distinct resistance profiles is required to monitor ongoing trends that may pose problems both in therapy and prophylaxis. l. brookes-howell°, c. butler, k. hood, l. cooper, h. goossens (cardiff, uk; antwerp, be) introduction: grace is a european network of excellence established to focus on antibiotic use for community-acquired lower respiratory tract infection (lrti) and antimicrobial resistance across europe. grace- , the second study to begin within grace, is a large qualitative study that explores the attitudes of clinicians and patients to antibiotic use for lrti and antibiotic resistance. aims: this presentation will focus on clinicians' accounts of the factors that contribute to variation in management of lrti and patient views on when antibiotics are necessary. methods: semi-structured interviews with clinicians and patients were conducted in primary care networks in nine european countries. interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed and, where necessary, translated into english for analysis. themes were identified, organised and compared using a framework approach. results: analysis of clinician interviews shows that, beside clinical findings, factors which influence the management decision for patients can be divided into two main areas. firstly, within each european network there is a group of country specific factors imposed by the system in which consultations take place. these factors include: near patient test usage, self-medication, patients' finances and lack of consistent, local prescribing guidelines. secondly, there is a group of factors, similar across all networks, that relate to personal characteristics of certain groups of clinicians. these include clinicians' professional ethos, self-belief in decision making and attitude towards the doctorpatient relationship. analysis of patient interviews shows that beliefs about antibiotic use tend to draw on clinical factors, namely the severity of specific symptoms (fever and/or coughing). many patients also implied a period of waiting or alternative action required before antibiotics are used − to identify whether the immune system would fight the infection or whether nonantibiotic management was effective before turning to antibiotics. discussion and conclusion: with a greater understanding of the factors that contribute to the decision to prescribe, we discuss ideas to enhance appropriate prescribing. this analysis highlights the need for interventions to be sensitive to factors relating to the systems in which different european networks operate, to target the individual characteristics of specific groups of clinicians and to build on the clinical beliefs already held by patients. o pre-treatment with low-dose endotoxin prolongs survival from experimental lethal endotoxic shock k. kopanakis, i. tzepi, e.j. giamarellos-bourboulis°, a. macheras (athens, gr) objective: clinical trials of immunointervention with anti-endotoxin antibodies in patients with severe sepsis have failed to disclose survival benefit. these failures led us to the assumption that the opposite approach with a low endotoxin stimulus may result to low level immunoaralysis and subsequent survival benefit. this approach was tested in an experimental setting. methods: a total of male c b mice were studied divided into two groups: group a stimulated with the ip injection of sodium saline followed after one day by the ip injection of mg/kg of lipopolysaccharide (lps) of escherichia coli o :h ; and group b stimulated with the ip injection of mg/kg of lps of the same isolate followed after one day by the ip injection of mg/kg lps. lps was diluted in sodium saline and the volume of each injection was . ml. survival was recorded at six hour time intervals. results: survival of group b was considerable prolonged compared with group a (log-rank: . , p: . ) as shown in figure . thirteen mice of group a died ( . %) compared with seven mice of group b ( . %, p: . between group). conclusions: administration of low doses of lps prolongs survival after lethal endotoxic shock. this approach opens a promising novel pathway for immunointervention in sepsis. fragilis isolates with an mxf mic of mg/ml (n = ), mg/ml (n = ) and mg/ml (n = ), which were virulent in the mgp model, were used to determine the efficacy of mxf. for the mgp model, pouches were created by injecting ml of air and . ml of . % croton oil in olive oil under the skin of the back. on day , the air was withdrawn and replaced by ml soft agar. on day , a bacterial suspension was injected into the pouch. infected mice (n = mice/group) were treated with mxf mg/kg iv, b.i.d. for days. this dose simulates the auc of the human mg once-daily mxf iv dosage. efficacy was assessed by the reduction in colony forming units (cfus) in pouch exudates hours post-infection compared with the untreated infection control. results: in the mgp model, mxf, mg/kg b.i.d., displayed good efficacy in term of cfu reduction against all used strains in this study. there were no non-responders in terms of cfu reductions. conclusion: the loss of atle had no impact on the mics of cloxacillin and vancomycin. conversely, the mutant atle(−) strain was less susceptible to bactericidal activity of both antibiotics, supporting the implication of atle in the tolerance of s. epidermidis to cell wall active antibiotics. the loss of atle did not alter the virulence of s. epidermidis in the mouse peritonitis model, whereas it decreased virulence in previously published experiments using an intravenous catheter infection model. therefore, the mouse peritonitis model was suited to compare antibiotics efficacy against atle(+) and atle(−) strains. our results showed that the loss of atle did not alter significantly the activity of cloxacillin and vancomycin in the mouse peritonitis model. this study shows that the loss of atle results in decreased susceptibility to bactericidal activity of cell wall active antibiotics, with no apparent impact on the activity of these antibiotics in the mouse peritonitis model. in infant rat pneumococcal meningitis, ceftriaxone plus daptomycin versus ceftriaxone attenuates brain damage and hearing loss while ceftriaxone plus rifampicin versus ceftriaxone does not d. grandgirard, m. burri, k. oberson, a. bühlmann, f. simon, s.l. leib°(berne, ch) objectives: lytic antibiotics for therapy of bacterial meningitis (bm) increase the release of pro-inflammatory bacterial compounds which, in turns, induce inflammation. exacerbation of the inflammatory response in cerebrospinal fluid (csf) contributes to the development of neurological sequelae in survivors of bm. daptomycin, a nonlytic antibiotic acting on gram-positive bacteria has been shown to decrease inflammation and brain injury vs. ceftriaxone in experimental pneumococcal meningitis. with a view on the clinical application for empiric therapy of paediatric bacterial meningitis we investigated, whether therapies combining daptomycin or rifampicin with ceftriaxone are beneficial when compared to ceftriaxone monotherapy in infant rat pneumococcal meningitis. methods: eleven day old wistar rats were infected by intracisternal injection of s. pneumoniae and animals were treated with daptomycin ( mg/kg, s.c., daily) plus ceftriaxone ( mg/kg, s.c., bid), rifampicin ( mg/kg, i.p., bid) plus ceftriaxone or ceftriaxone alone. csf was sampled at h and h after the initiation of therapy and assessed for concentrations of chemo-and cytokines (mcp- , mip- a, il- b, il- , il- ; il- and tnf-a). a subset of animals was sacrificed h post infection (h pi) and brain damage quantified by histomorphometry. the remaining animals were treated for d and were tested for hearing loss, by assessing the auditory brainstem response (abr) at weeks after infection. results: compared to ceftriaxone alone, daptomycin plus ceftriaxone significantly (p < . ) lowered csf concentrations of mcp- , mip- alpha and il- at h and mip- a and il- b at h after initiation of therapy, led to significantly (p < . ) less apoptosis assessed at h pi, and significantly (p < . ) improved hearing capacity. while rifampicin plus ceftriaxone also led to lower csf inflammation (p < . for il- at h), apoptosis and hearing loss were not significantly different from the ceftriaxone group. conclusion: compared to ceftriaxone monotherapy, daptomycin plus ceftriaxone lowers the level of pro-inflammatory mediators in the csf and reduces hippocampal apoptosis and hearing loss in infant rat pneumococcal meningitis. d. croisier-bertin°, l. piroth, p.e. charles, d. biek, y. ge, p. chavanet (dijon, fr; alameda, us) objectives: ceftaroline (cpt) is a novel, parenteral, broad-spectrum cephalosporin exhibiting bactericidal activity against gram-positive organisms, including methicillin-resistant s. aureus (mrsa) and multidrug-resistant s. pneumoniae, as well as common gram-negative pathogens. the efficacy of simulated human dosing with cpt or ceftriaxone (cro) was evaluated in a rabbit model of penicillin-resistant pneumococcal pneumonia. methods: s. pneumoniae strains were used to induce pneumonia in rabbits: pssp, pisp, and prsp. mics (mg/l) were . / . , / . , and / . for cro and cpt, respectively. the animals were randomised to no treatment (controls), intravenous (iv) cpt human equivalent (he) dosage ( mg/ h), iv cro he dosage ( g/ h), or intramuscular (im) cpt ( or mg/kg) for prsp-infected rabbits. serum levels were measured by microbiological assay and pk data were obtained. evaluation of efficacy was based on bacterial counts in lungs and spleen (per gram tissue). results: − animals/group were tested. for iv cpt/iv cro, mean auc − was / mg.h/l, cmax was / mg/l and cmin was . / mg/l, respectively. bacterial counts in target tissues are listed in the iv cpt and iv cro were highly efficacious against pssp and pisp. iv and im cpt were superior to iv cro against prsp with a quasi sterilisation of lungs and spleen. combined results from the iv and im studies indicated that %t > mic for cpt of % and % were associated with % and % bacterial count reductions, respectively. in this rabbit model of penicillin-resistant pneumococcal pneumonia, cpt administered iv (with he dosing) or by im administration was more effective against prsp than iv cro. r. endermann°, d. hoepker, k. merfort, m. glenschek-sieberth (wuppertal, de) objective: moxifloxacin (mxf) is approved in the usa and other countries for the treatment of complicated intra-abdominal infections (ciais). we compared the efficacy of mxf with piperacillin/tazobactam (pip/taz), a commonly used treatment for ciais, in three different models: ( . c. clp model: survival over days was significantly higher in the mxf group than in the pip/taz group (p < . ). conclusions: using humanised dosages, mxf had greater antimicrobial activity and provided higher survival rates that pip/taz in three different models for ciai. m. nairz, i. theurl, a. schroll, m. theurl, s. mair, t. sonnweber, g. fritsche, r. bellmann-weiler, g. weiss°(innsbruck, at) mutations in hfe predispose to hereditary haemochromatosis type i, a frequent genetic disorder characterised by progressive parenchymal iron deposition and eventual organ failure. since hfe mutations are associated with reduced iron levels within mononuclear phagocytes, we hypothesized that hfe deficiency may be beneficial in infections with intramacrophage pathogens. using hfe+/+, hfe+/− and hfe−/− mice in a model of typhoid fever, we found that animals lacking one or both hfe alleles are protected from systemic infection with salmonella typhimurium, displaying prolonged survival and improved bacterial control. this increased resistance can be referred to an enhanced production of the siderophore-binding peptide lipocalin and the reduced availability of iron for salmonella engulfed by hfe deficient macrophages. this effect is mediated via stimulation of lipocalin -dependent iron export from infected cells since hfe−/− macrophages concurrently knocked out for lipocalin are unable to efficiently control the infection or to withhold iron from intracellular salmonella. correspondingly, infection of hfe+/+ and hfe−/− mice with siderophore deficient salmonella abolishes the protection conferred by the hfe defect. thus, by inducing the formation of the iron-capturing peptide lipocalin , the hfe mutation harbours a genetically determined immunological advantage towards infections with intracellular pathogens such as salmonella. i. koutelidakis, a. kotsaki, p.d. carrer, k. louis, a. savva, e.j. giamarellos-bourboulis°(thessaloniki, athens, gr) objective: the majority of clinical trials of immunointervention in severe sepsis have failed to disclose survival benefit. a likely explanation may be administration of therapy when immunoparalysis of the septic host supervenes. in an attempt to reverse immunoparalysis, injection of mononuclear cells was attempted in experimental sepsis by multidrugresistant pseudomonas aeruginosa (mdrpa). methods: peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) diluted in rpmi were isolated from five healthy human volunteers after gradient centrifugation over ficoll. × /kg of one mdrpa live or heat-killed isolate from one patient with severe sepsis was injected intraperitoneally for bacterial challenge. a total of male c b mice were studied divided into four groups: group a (n = ) pre-treated with rpmi and challenged after one hour with live isolate; group b (n = ) pretreated with × pbmcs/kg and challenged after one hour with live isolate; group c (n = ) pre-treated with rpmi and challenged after one hour with heat-killed isolate; group d (n = ) pre-treated with × pbmcs/kg and challenged after one hour with heat-killed isolate. survival was recorded for mice of groups a and b and for all mice of groups c and d. six mice of groups a and b were sacrificed six hours after challenge. blood was collected from the lower vena cava and tnfalpha and il- were estimated in serum by an enzyme immunoassay. bacterial growth of liver and lung at the same time was assessed. results: median survival of group a was hours and of group b hours (log-rank: . , p: . ). nineteen animals of group a died ( %) compared with eight animals of group b ( %, p: . ). four animals of group c died ( %) compared with nil animals of group d ( %, log-rank: . , p: . ). median serum tnf-a of groups a and b at sacrifice was and pg/ml respectively (p: . ). respective values for il- were and pg/ml (pns); for liver bacterial cells . and . log cfu/g (pns); and for lung bacterial cells . and . log cfu/g (pns). conclusions: allogeneic transplantation with pbmcs prolonged survival in experimental sepsis by mdrpa. its mechanism of action was related with a) blockade of cell wall structures as shown by survival experiments with heat killed isolate; and b) reversal of immunoparalysis as evidenced by increase of serum tnf-a. this approach creates a promising novel perspective for immunointervention in sepsis. a. marangoni°, c. nanni, m. donati, r. aldini, d. di pierro, s. trespidi, s. accardo, s. fanti, r. cevenini (bologna, it) objectives: chlamydia trachomatis is one of the world's major causes of sexually transmitted diseases of the cervix and urethra and it is a major agent of pelvic inflammatory disease. genital tract infection of female mice with chlamydia muridarum closely mimics acute genital tract infection in women. aim of this study was to assess the predictivity of ga-chloride small animal positron emission tomography ( o inadequate statistical power of published comparative cohort studies on ventilator-associated pneumonia to detect mortality differences between the compared groups m. falagas°, v. kouranos, a. michalopoulos, s. rodopoulou, a. athanasoulia, d. karageorgopoulos (athens, gr) objective: comparative cohort studies are often conducted to identify novel therapeutic strategies or prognostic factors for ventilator-associated pneumonia (vap). we aimed to evaluate the statistical power of such studies to provide statistically and clinically significant conclusions. methods: we searched in pubmed and scopus for comparative cohort studies evaluating the mortality of patients with vap. we calculated for each of the included studies the statistical power to detect the observed difference in mortality between the compared groups (observed power), as well as expected, clinically relevant, effect sizes (expected power). we identified ( prospective) comparative cohort studies on vap as eligible for inclusion in this analysis. the median observed power of these studies was . % [interquartile range (iqr), . − . %]. the median expected power was . % (iqr, . − . %) for a risk ratio for mortality of . between the compared groups; . % (iqr, . − . %) for a risk ratio of . ; and . % (iqr, . − . %) for a reduction in mortality from % to %. all expected power measures were significantly lower than the observed power. the statistical power of most cohort studies to detect the observed difference in mortality between compared groups of patients with vap is low. the power is even lower when expected, clinically relevant, differences in mortality are considered. for a wiser utilisation of resources allocated to research, we favour the conduction of cohort studies with larger sample size so that potential differences between the compared groups are more likely to be shown. objective: to clarify issues regarding the frequency, prevention, outcome, and treatment of patients with ventilator-associated tracheobronchitis (vat), which is a lower respiratory tract infection involving the tracheobronchial tree, while sparing the lung parenchyma. methods: we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis of relevant available data, gathered though searches of pubmed, scopus, and reference lists, without time restrictions. a conservative random effects model was used to calculate pooled odds ratios (or) and % confidence intervals (ci). results: out of the initially retrieved articles, papers were included. frequency of vat was . %. selective digestive decontamination was proved an effective preventive strategy against vat. presence, as opposed to the absence, of vat was not associated with higher mortality (or: . , % ci . − . ). administration of systemic antimicrobials (with or without inhaled ones), as opposed to placebo or no treatment, in patients with vat was not associated with lower mortality (or: . , % ci . − . ). most of the studies providing relevant data noted that administration of antimicrobial agents, as opposed to placebo or no treatment, in patients with vat was associated with more ventilator-free days and lower frequency of subsequent pneumonia, but without shorter length of intensive care unit stay or shorter duration of mechanical ventilation. conclusions: approximately one tenth of mechanically ventilated patients suffer from vat; an infection potentially prevented by the implementation of selective digestive decontamination. antimicrobial treatment of patients with vat may protect against the development of subsequent ventilator-associated pneumonia. degranulation. subsequently, allergen specific ige to chlorhexidine was demonstrated and skin prick/intradermal testing was positive to chlorhexidine, confirming the diagnosis of chlorhexidine-precipitated anaphylaxis in each patient. a detailed review of the case-notes revealed that each patient had manifest evidence of minor cutaneous reactions to pre-operative chlorhexidine use that had not been ascribed to chlorhexidine at the time. discussion: fda issued a public health notice [ ] following st description of anaphylaxis to chlorhexidine coated central venous catheter. a recent case cluster has also been reported from another cardiac centre in the uk [ -cases over a -month period]. references to be presented. it is interesting that these reports of chlorhexidine anaphylaxis have all occurred in patients undergoing cardiac surgery. these patients receive multiple exposures to chlorhexidine during their pre-operative investigations and preparation. this has increased recently as a result of the drive to reduce the incidence of hospital-acquired infections. we wish to postulate that these patients have been sensitised by repeated topical exposure to chlorhexidine and have exhibited anaphylaxis when this allergen was presented to the patient in the form of the chlorhexidine coated central venous catheter. type i strains of helicobacter pylori possess the cag pathogenicity island to deliver virulence factors. cag is a specialised type iv secretion machinery that is activated during infection and comprises genes originated from a distant event of horizontal transfer. after translocation the effector protein caga is phosphorylated on tyrosine residues restricted to a previously identified repeated sequence called d . this sequence is located in the c-terminal half of the protein and contains the five amino acid motif epiya, which is amplified by duplications in a large fraction of clinical isolates. tyrosine-phosphorylation of caga is essential for the activation process that leads to dramatic changes in the morphology of cells growing in culture. in addition, we observed that two members of the src kinases family, c-src and lyn, account for most of the caga-specific kinase activity in ags cell lysates. translocated caga interacts with the zo- and jam host-cell proteins causing disruption of the apical junctional complex. transfection of the caga gene into polarised epithelial cells induces disruption of cell-to-cell contacts and altered morphology. strikingly caga-expressing cells become migratory and invasive penetrating into collagen gel. the study of different portions of the molecule revealed the presence of two distinct functional domains and both are necessary to induce abnormal cell differentiation through interactions with host cell morphogens. cell polarity and invasion have been suggested to contribute to both early and late stages of cancer formation. these results suggest a mechanism by which caga may acts at the early stage of tumorigenic progression causing loss of cell polarity, increased cell motility and invasiveness of epithelial cells. after a period of years of silence, a disease with an unpronouncable name, "chikungunya" (chik), has recently become a medical reality and reached the public throughout the world. conclusion: low mhla-dr expression after septic shock independently predicts ni. this promising biomarker may be of major interest in identifying patients at increased ni risk who could benefit from targeted and tailored therapy aimed at restoring immune functions. pneumonia, the leading infectious cause of death in the us, kills more people annually than aids, tuberculosis, meningitis and endocarditis combined. from a wide range of observational studies of communityacquired pneumonia (cap), only half of the cases had an aetiologic agent identified. streptococcus pneumoniae was consistently the predominant bacterial aetiology. this lecture will primarily focus on the innate immune response to pneumococcal pneumonia. toll-like receptors (tlrs) are key molecules that recognize pathogen associated molecular patterns (pamps) and induce an inflammatory response. pneumolysin, an intracellular toxin found in all s. pneumoniae clinical isolates, is an important virulence factor of the pneumococcus that is recognized by tlr . although tlr is considered the most important receptor for gram-positive bacteria, tlr does not play a decisive role in host defence against s. pneumoniae pneumonia; likely, pneumolysin-induced tlr signalling can compensate for tlr deficiency during respiratory tract infection with s. pneumoniae. besides tlr and tlr , tlr contributes to an effective host defence against s. pneumoniae in the airways. the importance of tlr signaling for host defence against pneumococcal pneumonia is illustrated by the fact that mice lacking the common tlr adaptor protein myd are highly susceptible to this infection. activation of tlrs results in the production of proinflammatory cytokines. there is ample evidence that underlines the importance of tumour necrosis factor (tnf) and interleukin (il)- in host defence in bacterial pneumonia: in a murine s. pneumoniae pneumonia model, treatment with a neutralising anti-tnf mab strongly impaired antibacterial defence. in addition, il- a receptor type i deficient mice infected with s. pneumoniae displayed an increased bacterial outgrowth. of considerable interest, treating il- receptor deficient mice with a neutralising anti-tnf antibody made them extremely susceptible to pneumococcal pneumonia. infection of the lower airways by s. pneumoniae is associated with complex interaction between the pathogen (e.g. cell wall components, pneumolysin) and the host (e.g. tlrs, cytokines). these interactions play a crucial role in the outcome of this clinically important infection. severe bacterial pneumonia remains uncommon unless specific conditions exist that tip the balance between the host and pathogen in favour of the microorganism. such conditions include: persons at the extremes of age; exposure to especially virulent organisms; patients with concomitant illness impairing pulmonary clearance mechanisms; and immunocompromised hosts. pathogens overcome an array of innate and acquired host defences to successfully invade the host. the known virulence traits of three common respiratory pathogens (streptococcus pneumoniae, staphylococcus aureus, and pseudomonas aeruginosa) will be briefly reviewed. the capsular polysaccharide of pneumococci is the major anti-phagocytic virulence trait but many other factors contribute to disease pathogenesis including the critically important exotoxin known as pneumolysin, bacteriocins, adherence factors, choline binding proteins, lipoteichoic acid, iron, manganese and magnesium transporters, pili, competence and biofilm capacity, and virulence genes that promote invasion and impair clearance once the organism has entered the blood stream. s. aureus is notorious for the numerous a/b type toxins, cytotoxins, and superantigens it generates during the course of invasion. staphylococci deploy a complex series of quorum sensing signals that coordinate adhesin and invasion genes within biofilms or between planktonic organisms and likely contribute to the success of this pathogen. p. aeruginosa produces an array of extracellular exotoxins and cytotoxins delivered by type iii secretion systems. these include elastase, phospholipases c, a series of apoptotic and anti-phagocytic exotoxins, along with an alginate capsule and an unusual and variable lps structure that participate in microbial invasion. the pathogen expresses at least three interacting, quorum sensing systems to coordinate virulence and biofilm formation. a detailed understanding of these virulence factors is now providing therapeutic options to control these respiratory pathogens. surface expressed and extracellular toxins of pneumococci have been selected as new vaccine targets. inhibitory peptides and small molecule inhibitors of quorum sensing and biofilm formation are under investigation for staphylococcal and p. aeruginosa infections. these innovative and non-antibiotic treatment strategies are gaining greater importance as progressive antibiotic resistance threatens the management of these severe bacterial infections in the future. brucellosis, possibly the commonest zoonotic infection worldwide, has troubled humans since antiquity. recent years have seen the expansion of the animal reservoir of the disease to a wide spectrum of wildlife species, extending to marine mammals, and the recognition of novel brucella species. furthermore, animal and human disease has re-emerged in numerous countries which were brucellosis-free, and currently the most important endemic foci include near east and central asia. complex socioeconomic and political factors may be incriminated for these alterations in endemicity. the complex mechanisms by which brucella evades immune response and survives intracellularly are progressively clarified. novel diagnostic techniques as real time pcr may shed light in the life cycle of brucella inside the human host; preliminary studies have indicated that the pathogen may persist in latent form for years after apparent clinical cure, in asymptomatic individuals. treatment principles have not evolved significantly. the expert guidelines issued recently under the name of "ioannina recommendations" support the need for a six-week combined treatment that includes traditional antibacterials and is modified accordingly in serious complications as spondylitis and central nervous system involvement. the road to the development of a vaccine for humans seems long though. anthrax is ancient diseases and relatively a forgotten disease in western world until when spores were mailed in usa causing five deaths. currently, human anthrax is seen most commonly in agricultural regions of the world where anthrax in animals is prevalent, in which countries of middle east, in africa, central asia and south america. it is also an endemic disease in turkey. human cases may occur in an agricultural or an industrial environment. the infection is an occupational hazard of workers who process hides, hair, bone and bone products, and wool and of veterinarians and agricultural workers who handle infected animals. the main route of transmission is contact with or ingestion of contaminated meal with or inhalation of bacillus anthracis spores. leptospirosis is a very old disease that has been known for more than a hundred years and possibly even longer since the time of hippocrates. it remains a major cause of illness in many tropical and subtropical countries and thus in travellers. it has also been identified as a zoonosis in europe and north america. it is a disease that can surprise us because the clinical presentations are not always typical. in recent years, pulmonary and other atypical presentations have been more widely recognised. there is no effective vaccine but chemoprophylaxis is effective in selected populations. prompt recognition and early institution of appropriate treatment as with most other infectious diseases appear to be critical in ensuring a good outcome for our patients. there are interesting new developments in diagnostics and molecular epidemiology but clearly there are many challenges remaining in this field. objectives: the spread of carbapenemase genes within gram negative bacteria is of great cause for concern. in , the first report of a blaoxa- gene outwith acinetobacter baumannii was reported in acinetobacter genospecies . we had also identified a genospecies isolate encoding a blaoxa- -like gene, and the aim of this study was to examine the genetic environment of the gene to investigate the mobilisation between species. methods: restriction analysis of rrna was used to confirm identity to the species level. susceptibility to imipenem and meropenem was determined through the plate doubling dilution method. screening by pcr for blaoxa- -like, blaoxa- -like, blaoxa- -like and blaoxa- -like genes was carried out. analysis of the genetic environment surrounding the blaoxa- -like gene was conducted by sequencing inverse pcr products and gene-walking fragments. the structure of the surrounding sequence was confirmed using internal primers, which were also used to screen other blaoxa- -like positive isolates in our collection. results: restriction analysis confirmed the isolate belonged to acinetobacter genospecies . the isolate showed reduced susceptibility to imipenem and meropenem with mics of mg/l for both antibiotics. the isolate was negative for a blaoxa- -like, blaoxa- -like or blaoxa- -like gene, but positive for a blaoxa- -like gene. analysis of the genetic environment of the blaoxa- -like gene revealed the gene was within a novel genetic structure. upstream of the blaoxa- -like gene was the left-hand end of an isaba element, interrupted by an isaba element. the elements contained putative promoter sequences. downstream was an arac and a lyse gene, followed by a sequence similar to the re element described previously. following this was a complex region containing the right-hand end of an isaba tnpa gene, interrupted by an incomplete tnpa gene with % similarity to isaba , itself interrupted by an isaba sequence. this region was followed by a second blaoxa- -like gene. all other blaoxa- -like positive isolates in our collection were negative for isaba upstream of blaoxa- . this study is the first to report multiple copies of a blaoxa- -like gene in an acinetobacter genospecies isolate, and has identified a novel structure containing two blaoxa- -like genes and two isaba sequences. the isaba elements may be responsible for the duplication of the blaoxa- -like gene. objective: acinetobacter baumannii is an important nosocomial pathogen with wide intrinsic resistance. however, due to the dissemination of the acquired resistance mechanisms; such as extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (esbl) and metallo betalactamase (mbl) production, multidrug resistant strains have been isolated more often. per- was first detected in turkey and was found to be widespread among acinetobacter spp. and p. aeruginosa. since then, per- has been discovered in other countries, and most recently found in northern italy and in korea. in this study, the presence of per- type esbl was investigated in caftazidime resistant a. baumannii strains isolated from bloodstream infections by pcr and also the clonal relatedness of the isolates were investigated by random amplified polymorphic dna (rapd) and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (pfge) in all per- producing a. baumannii strains. methods: a. baumannii strains isolated from bloodstream infections was included in this study. the isolates were identified as a. baumannii by conventional methods and phoenix bd automated system system (becton dickinson diagnostic systems, sparks). ceftazidime resistance was determined by e-test. per- genes were screened by these clusters encode: (i) resistance genes and transporters plausibly involved in drug efflux ( transporters of the mfs, dmt, abc, rnd, mop and acr families were unique of drug resistant strains and absent in the susceptible sdf strain); (ii) pili and fimbriae systems related to biofilm formation and motility; (iii) haemolysin-and haemagglutininrelated proteins differently distributed among the four genomes, (iv) iron uptake and other metabolic genes. conclusion: genome comparison identified unique features of a. baumannii epidemic clones and provided novel insights into the genetic basis of multidrug resistance and pathogenesis in this species. this study may contribute to understand the concept of infection, invasiveness and colonisation in the emergent pathogen a. baumannii. hard to swallow − emerging and re-emerging issues in food-borne infection (symposium arranged with efwisg) s mrsa in food products: cause for concern or case for complacency? in first, a switch from intravenous-to oral medication ( - ); second, education programs for interns/residents and physicians and the release of a new antimicrobial formulary ( - ); third, a restriction note was printed on all laboratory rapports ( - ) and fourth, active monitoring and giving feedback on prescriptions ( - ). susceptibility patterns for e. coli including ciprofloxacin, cefuroxim, ceftazidim, co-trimoxazole and tobramycin from hospitalised patients were analyzed starting in . statistical analyses were performed using segmented poisson regression models to look at effect of interventions on resistance (both sudden stepwise changes and changes in trends). bayesian model averaging was used to account for model uncertainty. results: before the start of the interventions the resistance rate was increasing by an average of . % per year. the interventions resulted in a significant reduction of quin use from on average prescribed daily doses to pdd per month. in the best fitting poisson model for the resistance data, a significant stepwise decrease was found to be associated with interventions and . however, there was substantial uncertainty in the model choice, and after accounting for this there was no conclusive evidence in support of any particular intervention, although there was evidence that at least one of the interventions was associated with the observed reduction in resistance. there were no stepwise decreases or decreasing trends in resistance rates to other antimicrobials during the study period. conclusion: many mds prescribe antibiotics often and believe their practice may have an effect on antibiotic resistance. results indicate that mds value information, interventions and surveillance in order to support responsible use of antibiotics. there is an ongoing effort in germany to address these findings at the national level e.g. by establishing a surveillance system for antibiotic resistance and antibiotic usage. table) . . ir for pn, er and tt were always higher in children (ch) than in adults (ad). significant differences were found for pn ( ), er ( er ( , er ( , er ( , er ( , , tt ( tt ( , . generally, cp-ir was higher in ad than in ch. ir was lower in the north (n) than in the south (s). significant differences: pn ( pn ( , , er ( er ( , er ( , , tt ( ) . both n and s knew a deceasing ir tendency: pn= n ( . − . ), s ( . − . ); cp= n ( . − . ), s ( . − . ); tt= n ( . − . ), s ( . − . ). er increased in the n ( . − . ). total outpatient antibiotic use (did) decreased from . ( ) to . ( ) and increased to . ( ) . did for pn and fq increased, mls stabilised and tt decreased. conclusions: since - an ir decrease was noted for pn, cp and tt. er-ir increased further over the years. the decrease paralleled the start of public campaigns on antibiotic use. ir rates remain higher in ch than in ad. the n/s difference became less marked. objectives: parachlamydia acanthamoebae is a new recognized member of the order chlamydiales. growing evidences suggest that this bacteria may have a pathogenic role in humans causing respiratory diseases. it has also been recently identified as an agent of bovine abortion and may be a cause of miscarriage in women. in contrast, little is known about the pathogenic role of rhabdochlamydia crassificans, another related chlamydiales. molecular diagnostic tools are useful to detect these obligate intracellular bacteria because of their inability to grow on conventional culture media. the aim of this work was (i) to develop a real-time pcr for the diagnosis of rhabdochlamydia infection and (ii) to study respiratory secretions of newborns for the presence of parachlamydia and rhabdochlamydia dna. methods: a new quantitative real-time taqman pcr (q-pcr) to be used on abi prism was developed. the q-pcr was then blindly applied to consecutive respiratory samples (endotracheal or nasopharyngeal secretions) taken from critically-ill newborns admitted in the neonatology ward of our university hospital. these samples were also tested using a previously developed parachlamydiaspecific pcr. results: most newborns ( / ) were premature (median gestational age: . weeks; range: . − . ). initial respiratory distress syndrome was present in % of them. positive pcr results were obtained in / ( %) patients ( parachlamydia, rhabdochlamydia, both species) at a median of . days (range: - ) after birth. when compared to the control group ( patients with negative pcr), these newborns had a significantly worse primary adaptation and a higher incidence of resuscitation maneuvers at birth (table) . duration of noninvasive mechanical ventilation and stay in neonatology ward were also significantly longer. a fatal issue was observed in infected cases, as compared to no death in controls (p = . ). gestational age at birth as well as the incidence of pulmonary or systemic infections did not differ between cases and controls. conclusion: a high prevalence of parachlamydia and rhabdochlamydia dna was observed in respiratory secretions of premature critically-ill newborns. the presence of dna of these microorganisms was associated with a worse primary adaptation, a more severe respiratory distress syndrome and a trend towards a higher mortality. their pathogenic role should be further investigated. the genus kingella consists of species, k. kingae, k. oralis and k. denitrificans. all are gram negative, sometimes difficult to stain, rod shaped bacteria that are normal respiratory and genitourinary flora. they are slow-growing and fastidious. although improved recovery was shown when using fan or peds-f blood culture bottles, the majority of these infections remain undetected, especially in pre-treated patients. we report the use of real time polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr) assays for detection of k. kingae and s. aureus in paediatric osteoarticular infections. methods: synovial fluid samples from patients, month and years of age, were collected over months ( / to / ). the samples were from knees, hips, ankles, elbows, shoulders, wrists and femur abscesses. after automated dna/rna extraction, specimens were subjected to hour pathogen-specific rt-pcr. samples were inoculated onto sheep blood and chocolate agar as well as a peds-f bottle. final species identification and antimicrobial susceptibilities were determined by phoenix (tm). results: patients ( specimens) had positive culture and/or rt-pcr, resulting in an overall positivity rate of %. s. aureus was the predominant pathogen accounting for specimens of patients ( mrsa, mssa) and. % of positive specimens ( patients) were due to k. kingae (n = ). among children − years (n = ), k. kingae was the predominant pathogen accounting for positive patients ( %), followed by mssa in patients ( %). the positivity rate for this age group was %. only children > years ( and years) were positive for k. kingae. mrsa was the predominant pathogen in − year olds, and mssa was evenly distributed among children − years old. culture detected only of specimens positive for k. kingae and of s. aureus. other pathogens were detected by culture only. the use of these molecular assays enhances detection of organisms, especially for k. kingae ( % vs. % for culture). additionally, faster identification (tat hrs) allows for rapid targeted therapy. this improvement in tat could lead to shorter hospital stays in about % of cases. results: genotyping revealed a high degree of diversity, indicative of a panmictic bacterial population. further, there was no association between genotype and colonisation frequency, or year of isolation. pcr screening for virulence genes revealed an incidence of % for uspa , % for hag, % for uspa and % for uspa h. no significant difference was observed in the prevalence of virulence-associated genes between isolates originating from children who were colonised only once or children colonised on all occasions (p = ). pcr-rflp analysis of uspa , hag and uspa showed many gene variants, with no association between pcr-rflp patterns and colonisation frequency, or year of isolation. conclusion: even in relatively localised geographical settings, the genotypic diversity of m. catarrhalis isolates colonising children is large, with no yearly pattern of genotype predominance. children serially colonised with m. catarrhalis isolates appear to clear a particular genotype only to become subsequently colonised with a different genotype. the incidence of virulence genes in this relatively localised study group is remarkably similar to that reported in global m. catarrhalis isolates, possibly indicating that similar selection pressure exists for m. catarrhalis at both the local and global level. virulence gene variation appears to be high, even in this relatively restricted geographical group. these results could have consequences for vaccines designed against virulence genes. a. naessens°, i. foulon, a. casteels, w. foulon (brussels, be) objectives: to evaluate the epidemiology of cytomegalovirus in pregnancy and to evaluate the risk for delivering a child with congenital cmv (ccmv). methods: between - , unselected mother-infant pairs were included. in the mother a serological screening was performed consisting in the detection of cmv igg and igm antibodies at the first prenatal visit and at birth. in the neonate cmv urine culture was performed to diagnose congenital infection. when a pregnant woman was found to have a second trimester spontaneous abortion or a death in utero, an investigation for possible congenital cmv infection was carried out. results: serological screening at the first prenatal visit showed no immunity in women, evidence of past infection (igg positive igm negative) in women ( . %) and in women ( . %) both igg and igm antibodies were detected. after investigation of stored and follow up samples from these patients, could be classified as having a primary cmv infection during pregnancy, patients had previous immunity before the current pregnancy and from patients the type of the maternal cmv infection could not be determined. follow-up serology of the women without immunity revealed a seroconversion in of them ( . %). a total of ( . %) congenital infections (ccmv) were diagnosed. the incidence of the ccmv among the different groups of women are summarised in the table. conclusion: ccmv infection occurs in . % of our population of pregnant women. ccmv was considered to be due to a primary maternal cmv infection in % of the infants; % due to a recurrent maternal cmv infection and in % the type of maternal infection could not be determined. the risk for a seronegative pregnant woman of acquiring cmv during pregnancy is . %. the transmission risk after a maternal primary infection is %. women with prior immunity have a very low risk ( . %) for ccmv, this risk increases to % when igm are find in women with know prior immunity. the risk for women with undetermined infectious status in early pregnancy to give birth to a congenitally infected neonate is . %. this report provides the first data on rotavirus epidemiology and disease burden in norway. further studies are needed to assess the economic impact of rotavirus disease and the cost-effectiveness of vaccination to inform decisions on introduction of rotavirus vaccines into the national program of childhood immunisation. pseudomonas aeruginosa may colonise the lungs of cystic fibrosis patients over years but may also cause acute infections in mechanically ventilated patients and immuno-compromised hosts within a matter of days. despite aggressive antibiotic treatments the organism is rarely eradicated. instead p. aeruginosa adapts to its host environment by developing resistance mechanisms and changing its lifestyle and virulence properties. focusing on mechanically ventilated patients, we will detail the dynamics of resistance emergence and persistence of p. aeruginosa lung populations during antibiotic therapy. we further discuss how p. aeruginosa populations evolve naturally in the absence of any antimicrobial treatment within the lungs of intubated patients by changing their virulence properties. the relevance of these findings both with respect to concepts of social evolution and the development of novel anti-infective strategies will be highlighted. the genome of p. aeruginosa encodes many potential efflux systems. however, only a few of them appear to play a significant role in antibiotic resistance. in this respect, the mex (for multiple efflux) systems are of particular interest because of their ability to extrude a wide range of antimicrobials. these polyspecific machineries result from the assembly of (i) a drug/proton antiporter, (ii) a periplasmic adaptor protein, and (iii) an outer membrane gated channel. it is now well established that the constitutive expression of the tripartite pump mexab-oprm provides p. aeruginosa with a relatively high intrinsic resistance to quinolones, blactams (except imipenem), tetracyclines, macrolides, chloramphenicol, trimethoprim, and novobiocin. this protective mechanism is potentiated by the poor permeability of the outer membrane and activity of another pump, mexxy/oprm, whose expression is induced by substrates targeting the ribosome (e.g., tetracyclines, macrolides, aminoglycosides). accumulating reports indicate that multidrug resistant mutants upregulating one or both of these systems are quite common in the clinical setting. such mutants, which are readily selected by sub-optimal treatments with fluoroquinolones, b-lactams or aminoglycosides, tend to accumulate various resistance mechanisms without loosing the wildtype pathogenicity of p. aeruginosa. whether the low resistance levels (mic x -to -fold) conferred by efflux may promote second-step mutants with altered drug targets (gyra, gyrb, parc) or derepressed ampc b-lactamase has not been confirmed in vitro. in the specific context of cystic fibrosis (cf), a recent study from our laboratory showed that the mexxy/oprm pump can be responsible for much higher resistance levels to aminoglycosides ( -to -fold). this increased efficacy of the system partially results from adaptive mutations in the mexy gene. in contrast, subpopulations deficient in mexab-oprm tend to emerge during long-term colonisation of cf airways. while easily selected in vitro on selective media, mutants overexpressing other mex systems (mexcd-oprj, mexef-oprn, mexghi-opmd, mexjk/oprm, mexvw/oprm) have been rarely described in cf and non-cf patients. some data support the notion that up-regulation of mexcd-oprj or mexef-oprn might be detrimental to the virulence of p. aeruginosa. in conclusion, therapeutic strategies based on efflux inhibitors should target the mexab-oprm and the mexxy/oprm systems in priority. european aspects of malaria s rapid diagnostic tests for malaria: twenty years to convince . . . prompt diagnosis and treatment of malaria are critical factors in reducing morbidity and mortality. microscopy has long been the gold standard for malaria diagnosis, but the newer rapid diagnostic tests (rdts) now offer considerable advantages, especially so in endemic countries. after close to twenty years of development and operational research, the diagnostic performance of rdts is now established in all settings. meta-analyses have clearly demonstrated equivalence of rdts over expert microscopy to detect parasites, and clear superiority over routine microscopy. actually, one of the major reasons that have delayed successful implementation of rdt in endemic areas was the use of poor quality microscopy that has impeded reliable measurement of sensitivity and specificity and undermined confidence of health workers in rdts. other factors were poor product performance, inadequate methods to determine the quality of products and a lack of emphasis and capacity to deal with these issues. for the potential of rdts to be realised, it is crucial that high-quality products that perform reliably and accurately under field conditions are made available and that quality insurance is performed on all steps of the procedure. in achieving this goal, the shift from symptom-based diagnosis to parasite-based management of malaria can bring significant improvement for the management of fever in endemic areas. for travelers returning in temperate climates with fever, rdts have also the potential to improve diagnostic procedures, especially so in hospitals where reliable microscopy is not available out of hours. in patients with no danger sign or significant thrombopenia, a negative rdt is sufficient to exclude malaria and allows waiting − hours for performing or reading the microscopy slide. rdts should be repeated every − hours for three consecutive days if fever persists and in the absence of alternative diagnosis. rdts represent a revolution in the fight against malaria and will tremendously help to manage appropriately patients with fever, especially so when malaria is declining and hence other causes of fever increasing. the ambitious deployment that is foreseen in the coming years in africa through large grants from the global fund should contribute to achieving the millennium goals. fever is the key symptom of malaria among returning travellers ( %). headache, chills, myalgia, sweating and lack of a focus are frequently recorded, but non-specific. nausea and vomiting are often seen in children. the differential diagnosis of other infections, mainly of viral origin, is further difficult because (dry) cough and (mild) diarrhoea are often present. laboratory findings (thrombocytopenia, low or normal leucocyte count) can be helpful in the assessment of mild to moderate malaria. clinical signs and symptoms, e.g. fever, may be mitigated in semiimmune patients (visiting friends and relatives, foreign visitors) seen in non-endemic countries who represent the majority of cases diagnosed in industrialised countries. caution is warranted in assessing such patients as many of them may no longer be exposed to malaria in their countries of origin, thus no longer partially protected and also at risk of suffering from severe complications. up to % of all imported malaria cases may be severe, presenting with jaundice, impaired consciousness to coma, acute renal failure, and, in the course of events, acute respiratory failure. delay in diagnosis and start of treatment is partly responsible for fatality rates of % and more in some countries. if you don't look for them, you won't find them: anaerobes revisited s anaerobic microbiota of the mouth − friend or foe? anaerobes form a major part of the commensal microbiota in the digestive tract where they constitute an integral component of the function on mucosal surfaces. in the mouth, teeth create a unique, non-shedding environment for bacteria to attach and to form biofilms. there is an age-related succession order of species in bacterial colonisation of the mouth, and once established, individual anaerobic species tend to remain as members of the oral microbiota. the agerelated pattern of the colonisation of anaerobic bacteria is partly connected with the development (or loss) of the dentition. interactions between different bacteria residing in the same microenvironment influence the composition of the microbiota − or the development of pathologic conditions. although commensal bacteria are regarded beneficial to the host, some anaerobic members of the oral microbiota contain characteristics potentially detrimental for the health status of an individual. molecular means of characterisation have resulted in increased knowledge about the "normal" microbiota of the mouth and in detection of new species and genera as well as phylotypes, which can be associated with infectious situations in the mouth. oral infections are multifactorial and polymicrobial in nature, and their aetiologic organisms originate mainly from the oral resident microbiota. the involvement of anaerobes is most obvious in infections of root canals, periodontal tissues, and tissues surrounding erupting wisdom teeth where typical anaerobic findings are gram-negative rods. in addition, gram-positive anaerobic cocci and non-spore-forming gram-positive anaerobic rods are common in odontogenic infections. on some occasions, anaerobes of localised dentoalveolar infections can spread to adjacent tissues and even to the bloodstream, resulting in severe complications in extraoral sites. interestingly, a relatively limited number of anaerobic species are involved in clinically severe infections, however, microbial findings seem to vary depending on geography. concomitant with the increase in the number of immunosuppressed patients, the number of opportunistic infections caused by commensal anaerobes may increase. identification to the species level will help to establish associations between individual anaerobic species and specific disease states. studies on the bacteriology of diabetic foot infections (dfi) have yielded varied and often contradictory results. the role of anaerobes is particularly unclear, often because the type and severity of the infection is poorly defined, recent antibiotic therapy is unknown, and specimen collection and culture techniques are inadequate. when optimal collection, transport, and culture techniques are used, multiple organisms including aerobes and anaerobes are usually recovered from severe dfi. interactions within these polymicrobial soups lead to production of virulence factors, such as haemolysins, proteases, collagenases, and short chain fatty acids, which promote inflammation, impede healing and contribute to the chronicity of the infection. to better define the bacteriology of diabetic foot infections, we analyzed our data from a large prospective u.s. multicentre trial of patients with moderate to severe infection that required initial parenteral antibiotic therapy and used optimal post-debridement sample collection, transport and culture procedures. of the culture-positive specimens (of total), only . % were pure cultures while . % yielded or more organisms. a total of anaerobes (range − , average . , per specimen) were recovered from % of patients, with gram-positive cocci (gpc) accounting for . % of all anaerobic strains. s is culture still the gold standard, really? tremendous technological advances are made in culture-independent methods of detection and identification of human bacterial pathogens, such as pcr or hybridisation of their genomic dna. yet, time honoured pastorian bacterial culture in liquid and solid nutritive media still remains the gold standard for the laboratory diagnosis of a majority of bacterial infections. this unusual robustness of a th century technology stems from its unmatched operational characteristics: . broad range of detected agents, depending on adequate combination of media/incubation conditions; . unlimited source of clonal population for individual isolate, allowing versatile characterisation of antibiotic susceptibility and/or pathogenic factor production and/or epidemiological subtyping; . possibility of storage/bio-banking of cells for complementary clinical testing, research and diseases surveillance collections; . proof of pathogenic role of agent at the time of viable cell isolation from the site of infection, in contrast to false-positive results with molecular tests (tissue translocation or persistence of bacterial dna, soluble antigen,. . . ). major drawbacks of bacteriological culture include long turn-around time, cost and labour/skill intensity. these are partly alleviated by new technologies, including automated processing, physical/chemical growth detection and rapid molecular fingerprinting (maldi-tof, raman spectrometry, s rdna snp detection). it is likely that the next decade will see a complete redefinition of the place of direct detection methods and culture-based confirmation methods in clinical bacteriology, enabling a rejuvenation rather than elimination of culture as a daily diagnostic tool. the advent of real-time pcr revealed instrumental to the successful implementation of molecular methods in routine clinical microbiology laboratories. automated nucleic extraction platforms can now be coupled to robotic handling for large-scale detection and quantification purposes, mostly in virology. i will review here the attempts of implementing home-brew and commercial nucleic-acid based detection methods directly from blood samples and highlight hopes and pitfalls. i will then expand on two promising nucleic acid amplification methods: lamp (loop mediated isothermal amplification) and a protein-free method called dnazyme. these isothermal amplification methods share several strengths: robustness across highly diversified physico-chemical conditions, versatility in assay development and minimal requirements (if any) for sample preparation. they will definitely compete against current real-time pcr assays and might become a novel standard, due to lower costs and improved performances. the ribosomal rna (rrna) approach to microbial evolution and ecology has become an integral part of microbiology. rapidly growing databases exist that encompass besides the s rrna sequences of almost all validly described bacteria and archaea also numerous s rrna sequences of so far uncultivated microbes, directly retrieved from the environment by pcr or metagenomics. based on the patchy evolutionary conservation of rrna genes oligonucleotide probes can be designed in a directed way with specificities ranging from species up to large evolutionary entities like phyla or even domains. when such probes are labeled with fluorescent dyes or the enzyme horseradish peroxidase they can be used to identify single microbial cells by fluorescence in situ hybridisation (fish) directly in complex environmental samples. an update on recent applications and methodological improvements will be given which includes the identification of small bacterial cells by catalyzed reporter deposition (card)-fish. with optimised methods and proper controls fish yields exact cell numbers and spatial distributions for defined bacterial populations also in highly complex mixed microbial communities. r. amann & b.m. fuchs ( ) nature reviews microbiology : - . quick and reliable species identification of microorganisms is of great importance in medical microbiology. several bacterial and fungal species can be identified only using laborious and time-consuming methods. furthermore, in many cases misidentification occurs due to e.g. limited biochemical reactivity, different morphotypes or limited information in reference panels. in this talk, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time-of-flight (maldi-tof) mass spectrometry will be presented as a method for species identification. this technology applies protein pattern matching based on mass spectrometry. during the identification process, a mass pattern is generated for each organism. the subsequent comparison of this pattern with a database comprising reference patterns derived from well-characterised reference strains leads to species identification. as examples, the identification of various nonfermenting bacterial strains isolated from clinical specimens in comparison to partial s rdna sequencing will be shown. moreover, speed, accuracy in comparison to other methods, and inter-and intra-laboratory reproducibility of maldi-tof ms-based species identification will be discussed. o trends in invasive streptococcus pneumoniae serogroup sequence types in belgium t. goegebuer, k. van pelt, j. verhaegen, j. van eldere°(leuven, be) objectives: s. pneumoniae serogroup (sg ) isolates frequently cause invasive pneumococcal disease, particularly in children. from onwards a marked increase in sg isolates was observed; overall prevalence increased from . % ( - ) to . % ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . we determined the sequence types (st) in sg isolates in order to better understand trends in sg resistance and spread. methods: as national reference centre, we receive all invasive isolates from more than of laboratories in belgium. randomly chosen sg isolates from all ages from to were analysed via multi-locus sequence typing (mlst) as described by enright & spratt (microbiol. ; : − ) . we also included data on strain characteristics and patient characteristics. results: different sequence types (st) were identified: st (n = ), st (n = ), st (n = ), st (n = ), st (n = ), st (n = ), st (n = ), st (n = ), and st (n = mutations usually increase the mic slightly, but enhance the probability of further mutations. efflux pumps like pmra reduce antibiotic concentrations in the bacterial cell, enabling longer survival. we hypothesised that efflux positive bacteria are more likely to develop resistance than efflux negative bacteria. the following questions were addressed: . do the efflux pump inhibitors reserpine and verapamil reduce the mutation frequency? . do fluoroquinolone-susceptible efflux positive pneumococci exhibit higher parc or gyra qrdr mutation frequencies than efflux negative isolates? . does efflux phenotype impose a fitness cost? methods: matched efflux positive and negative pneumococcal isolates with identical or similar genotype according to multi-locus sequence typing collected by the german community acquired pneumonia network capnetz were analysed (n = ). strains tigr and r were included as efflux negative controls. ciprofloxacin (cip) mics and efflux phenotype were measured by agar dilution method, for efflux detection reserpine ( mg/l) was added and a fourfold decrease in mic was considered as efflux positive. mutation frequencies were determined by plating bacterial suspensions onto agar with and without cip. after incubation colonies were counted and the ratio of cfu/ml yielded the mutation frequency. equally, the mutation frequency was determined adding different concentrations of verapamil ( , , , , mg/l) or reserpine ( . , . , , , mg/l). biological fitness was calculated as the maximum slope of growth curves recorded in a microtitre plate reader. results: ) even at low concentrations, reserpine clearly reduced the mutation frequency of efflux positive and, to a lesser extent, efflux negative pneumococci when exposed to cip (figure ); verapamil exhibited this effect merely at high concentrations. ) efflux positive isolates produced more frequently mutants ( / ) than efflux negative isolates ( / ) (p = . , fisher's exact test). ) efflux phenotype had no measurable impact on the biological fitness. conclusion: a positive efflux phenotype increases the qrdr mutation frequencies in the presence of fluoroquinolones and this effect can be inhibited by very low concentrations of reserpine. as a matter of concern, efflux is not associated with decreased biological fitness. background: use of fluoroquinolone (fq) has been associated with increasing fq resistance in s. pneumoniae. because respiratory fqs (levofloxacin (levo) and moxifloxacin (moxi)) are first line therapy for serious respiratory infections, increasing fq resistance (fqr) in sp is a concern. levo targets parc, and moxi targets gyra, which may permit differentiation of degree of selective pressure. we examined fq use, and changes in the prevalence of fqr and qrdr mutations in canadian isolates of sp. methods: cbsn is a canadian collaborative network of microbiology laboratories that has performed surveillance for antibiotic resistance in sp since . antimicrobial resistance is performed in a central lab to clsi standards. we sequenced qrdr regions of all fqr isolates and a stratified sample of fq susceptible isolates. population fq use was obtained from ims canada. results: from to , fq use increased from to rx/ pop/yr; levo use from to rx/ pop/yr, and moxi use from to rx/ pop/yr. isolates were available for testing. levo r rates increased from in to . % in then remained stable until ( . % in ). moxi r rates increased to . % in , then stabilised ( . % in ). the prevalence of parc only mutations has not increased significantly in the last decade (see table) . the prevalence of isolates with both parc and gyra mutations increased until , but has decreased in . the first gyra only mutant was detected in ; the prevalence of gyra only mutants since then has increased, but remains very low ( / , . % in ) . conclusion: despite increasing use of respiratory fqs, fqr in pneumococci is very low and not increasing in canada. the prevalence of isolates with parc mutations is decreasing. isolates with mutations in gyra alone remain extremely rare, suggesting that moxi exerts minimal selective pressure for resistance. in streptococci, two well characterised macrolide resistance have been described: target modification and active drug efflux. target site modification is mediated by the erm genes -erm(b), erm(a), erm(c)which confers the mlsb phenotype. target modification by mutations in s rrna as well as mutation in l and l ribosomal proteins have also been reported. expression of mef(a) genes activate an efflux mechanism responsible for m-type resistance we characterised a clinical isolate of s. agalactiae mb gbs exhibiting the mlsb phenotype and tetracycline resistance. in this study, we determined the resistance genes, their association, and their localisation and mobility by conjugation. methods: the macrolide and tetracycline resistance genes were confirmed by pcr. the association between macrolide and tetracycline genes was investigated by long-pcr and sequencing. conjugation experiments were performed by filter matings. the genetic localisation of resistance genes was determined by endonuclease i ceui -followed by pfge and southern blot. the hybridisation study was performed using three specific probes for the s and s rrna genes, for erm(b) and tet(o) genes. results: s. agalactiae mb gbs carried erm(b) and tet(o) genes on the same amplicon of kb in size. the nucleotide sequence analysis of the entire product was identical to the peoc of kb from pediococcus acidilactici that contains four orfs, of which orf and orf encode a putative resolvase and topoisomerase type i, respectively. the endonuclease i ceui method, that easily distinguishes between plasmid and chromosomal localisations as i-ceui only cuts chromosomal dna, revealed the localisation of resistance genes on the plasmid. all attempts to transfer erm(b)-tet(o) structure by conjugation from s. agalactiae mb gbs to og ss e. faecalis as recipient failed. conclusion: our results show the first case of the association between erm(b) and tet(o) genes on the unique mosaic structure in s. agalactiae, probably on the plasmid, as demonstrated by the i ceui-assay. further studies are on going to characterise the entire genetic element carrying resistance genes. o improving influenza pre-analytic collection systems: alternative collection systems to inactivate, preserve, or extract influenza for rapid testing s. castriciano°, k. luinstra, m. ackerman, a. petrich, m. smieja (brescia, it; hamilton, ca) objectives: in this study, alternative influenza sample collection systems were evaluated for potential use in a pandemic situation. the objectives were to develop: ) a non-temperature dependent swab collection and transport system, that inactivates influenza virus infectivity but preserves cell morphology and nucleic acid (na) for the detection of suspected influenza infections and/or ) a system compatible with direct na testing without the need for purification prior to detection by a rapid real-time rt-pcr. methods: flocked nasopharyngeal swabs (nps) collected in utm (u) were compared to nps collected in a cymol (c), m-swab (m) or dry (d) flocked swab collection system (copan, italia). cymol is an alcoholbased medium that preserves cells for dfa testing. the m-swab contains ul of medium and ul of glass beads, and requires no na purification step. shell vial culture was used to assess influenza virus inactivation after minutes exposure to the collection media. a mockinfected influenza a virus sample was absorbed to duplicate swabs then placed into the collection systems. the infected collection media were held at rt for minutes and then inoculated in duplicate into shell vial culture and stained after hours. influenza a stability and na recovery after mock infection of each collection system was assessed after , , and days (d) at ºc, − ºc, room temperature (rt) and ºc. aliquots of infected collection media were extracted by easymag and ul of purified na tested by a quantitative influenza a rt-pcr on the roche lightcycler. m-swab collected samples were also tested directly or after boiling, without na purification. results: shell vial culture found that influenza a virus was inactivated after minutes exposure to the c medium but not when exposed to the u and m media. influenza a was detected by dfa from the u and c cell smears. quantitation of influenza a rna was constant after , and d in u, c, m and d collection systems at − , ºc and rt. the quantity of rna recovered declined significantly after d at ºc in all collection systems. m with boiling yielded data comparable to the easymag extraction. the copan cymol medium inactivates influenza infectivity, preserves cells and stabilises rna up to days at − , ºc and rt. cymol medium is a potential alternative for safe sample collection during a pandemic influenza situation. the m-swab presents a rapid testing alternative. luminex respiratory viral panel in respiratory specimens from children r. selvarangan°, s. selvaraju, d. baker, k. estes, l. hays, d. abel, s. hiraki (kansas city, us) objective: luminex respiratory viral panel (rvp) is a multiplex pcr capable of detecting and differentiating twelve different respiratory viruses and their subtypes; influenza a (flu a) (subtypes h and h ), influenza b (flu b), respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) (subtypes a and b), adenovirus (adv), parainfluenza (piv ), parainfluenza (piv ), parainfluenza (piv ), human metapneumovirus (hmpv) and rhinovirus (rhv). the aim of this study was to evaluate the analytical performance characteristics of rvp assay and to evaluate its ability to detect respiratory viruses from nasopharyngeal aspirates obtained from children. method: analytical sensitivity, specificity, accuracy and precision of the luminex rvp assay were determined using control viral stocks and respiratory specimens previously tested by rmix shell vial culture. result: luminex rvp assay reliably detected atcc viral stocks of flu a, flu b, rsvb, rhv and piv in the range of e- to e- tcid /ml. no cross reactivity was noted with cmv, hsv, hhv , ebv, vzv, piv , cornoavirus e and oc . among respiratory specimens previously characterised by culture specimens were accurately detected with overall accuracy of %. the median coefficient of variation in mean fluorescent index values of signals from replicate analyses of influenza a, b and rsv was % ( % to %). the clinical specimens tested by rvp assay included culture positive and culture negative specimens. respiratory viruses isolated from the culture positive specimens include the following; adv, flu a, flu b, rsv, piv , piv , piv , hmpv and rhv. rvp assay detected all of the respiratory viruses except one each of rsv, piv and piv virus with overall sensitivity ranging from % to % for the different respiratory viral groups. among the culture negative specimens respiratory viruses were detected by rvp of which were subsequently confirmed by repeat analyses. conclusion: luminex rvp assay is a highly sensitive and specific test useful in the detection of commonly encountered respiratory viruses in respiratory specimens. the addition of rvp assay to the viral testing algorithm of respiratory infections in children provides rapid results, improves diagnostic yield and may result in decreased antibiotic usage, reduced diagnostic testing and reduced hospital stay. m. savvala, i. daniil, i. berberidou, a. koutsibiri, a. stambolidi, m. papachristodoulou, n. spanakis, d. petropoulou°, a. tsakris (athens, gr) objective: in developed countries, viruses, particularly noroviruses, are recognized as the leading cause of acute gastroenteritis. we determined the aetiology, prevalence and seasonal distribution of viral gastrointestinal infections in hospitalised patients with acute diarrhoea. methods: during one-year period (november -november ), a total of faecal specimens were collected from children, premature neonates and adults who were hospitalised with symptoms and signs of acute gastroenteritis. stool samples were tested for the presence of rotavirus, adenovirus, astrovirus and norovirus. rotavirus, adenovirus and astrovirus antigen detection was performed by chromatographic immunoassays (rotavirus and adenovirus, vikia ® -biomerieux, france; h&r astrovirus-vegal farmaceutica, spain). noroviruses were detected by an enzyme immunoassay (ridascreen ® rbiopharm, germany) and confirmed by reverse transcription-pcr. data were analyzed for seasonality of infection and possible transmission mode. the overall incidence of viral identification in acute diarrhoeal stool was % ( of patients). fifty one viral antigens were detected one patient with positive antigen detection is suffering from a disease of unclear aetiology. so, an association of replication of cihhv- with the disease might be considered. in contrast, the other patient did not show any symptoms at the time of antigen detection. this patient shows a special mode of acquisition of cihhv- (by bmt) possibly resulting in differences in the immunological priming and response. in addition, in the latter patient cihhv- is restricted to blood cells. two other patients did not show antigen expression. so, it is unclear how the transcription and translation of viral genes is influenced? furthermore, is there a pathophysiological impact of viral replication in individuals with cihhv- ? objectives: several case studies have reported on meningo-encephalitis caused by a primary epstein-barr virus (ebv) infection. we aimed to investigate the viral loads, and the inflammatory characteristics of this thus far poorly defined disease entity. we evaluated all cases from - , in which an ebv polymerase chain reaction test (pcr) was requested on a cerebro spinal fluid (csf) sample. primary infection was defined as a clinical presentation with sore throat/pharyngitis/malaise in combination with lymphocytosis, and detectable heterophile antibodies or positive ebv igm antibodies. patients with proven neuroborreliosis served as control group. leukocyte response and ebv viral loads in csf, and serum were compared between primary ebv and neuroborreliosis cases. results: we identified six cases with a primary ebv infection (median age: , male: ) with neurological symptoms ranging from meningeal signs to encephalitis. these were compared to patients with neuroborreliosis (median age: , male: ). in four out of six patients with a primary ebv infection with neurological symptoms ebv dna was detected in csf and in serum, whereas all neuroborreliosis cases were ebv pcr negative in both compartments. viral loads were lower in csf as compared to serum. in blood, leukocytes, lymphocyte, and monocyte counts were significantly increased as compared to the neuroborreliosis cases (see table ). specific for vp and vp genes, using pools of g and p type specific primers. all strains (niv/brv/ , niv/brv/ , and niv/brv/ ) were not typeable for the vp and vp genes. after purification by "qiaquick gel extraction kit" (qiagen, germany), the vp , vp , vp , and nsp first amplicons of the borv-a strains were subjected to sequence analysis with automated sequencer abi xl dna analyzer (applied biosystems, usa). phylogenetic analysis was performed using mega version . . objectives: dengue is a flavivirus and is among the most widely-spread viral diseases. our previous report demonstrates existence of live dengue virus in blood and urine even in the convalescent postfebrile period. in some cases, excretion in the patient's urine can be detected as late as days after the onset of illness. this goes along with the model of west nile virus, another type of flavivirus, which can be excreted in the urine for months after acute infection in both animal studies and human case report. here we report a pilot study to address a magnitude of such findings. methods: between april and october , paediatric and adult febrile patients suspected of dengue infection were enrolled. diagnosis of dengue was based on standard specific serology on paired sera. patients with negative serology served as controls. blood and urine specimens were collected at several time points. whole blood was separated into plasma and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmc). these have been aliquoted and used for earlier studies and some stored in freezers. available plasma, pbmc, and urine were processed and inoculated into aedes aegypti. surviving mosquitoes at days after inoculation were employed for viral detection by dengue-specific rt-pcr. indirect fluorescence antibody (ifa) staining of mosquito heads was performed on all positive rt-pcr specimens, except for the one from pbmc (awaiting ifa result). results: and cases of primary and secondary infections, respectively, and negative controls were included. these translated into and early and late dengue specimens, and and early and late negative-control counterparts, respectively. dengue virus were isolated in some blood and urine specimens as late as days after the onset of illness. no virus was isolated from control specimens. all but positive rt-pcr specimens also demonstrated positive ifa. out of negatives were from early-phase specimens. conclusion: our study demonstrates prolonged survival of dengue virus after clinical recovery. this finding has pathologic and epidemiologic significance, adding a potential role of urine in the transmission of the disease. spread of the virus to humans might occur through infectious urine with help from arthropod vectors. this research could provide new insights into our understanding of the pathogenesis of denv infection. isolation of dengue virus from blood and urine specimens during early (days − after onset of illness) and late (days − ) phases of infection (specimens with dengue isolated/total specimens for mosquito inoculation) early phase late phase plasma / ( %) / ( %) pbmc not performed / ( %) urine / ( %) / ( %) all specimens / ( %) / ( %) dna copies) (< - ) † ; n = % for all three antibiotics (p < . in each case). cft resistant isolates in rectal samples mainly included enterobacteriaceae not being escherichia coli and klebsiella spp, whereas tob and cip resistant isolates mainly included e. coli. conclusion: sod and sdd have marked effects on the bacterial ecology in an icu with a rapid and persistent increase in resistance after intervention. antibiotic resistance remains a major concern associated with these infection control measures. o throwing caution to the winds? three cases of anaphylaxis to chlorhexidine coated central venous catheters from a regional cardiac centre in northwestern england this blaoxa- -producing clone showed resistance to several b-lactams (including imipemem), susceptibility to ceftazidime, netilmicin and minocycline, and variable susceptibility to meropenem, cefepime, and aztreonam. mics for colistin and tigecycline ranged from > mg/l and from . − mg/l, respectively. all oxa- -producing isolates presented the isaba downstream of the blaoxa- gene. hybridisation assays revealed a plasmidic location for the blaoxa- gene with ca kb. plasmid sequencing showed an isaba -like truncated at the end upstream of the blaoxa- gene, a fact that may explain the observed negative carbapenemase-production bioassay. conclusion: blaoxa- -carrying a. baumannii is, apparently, more ancient than initially imagined. although undetected from onwards, the fact that it possessed a non-expressible gene, due to alterations in the promoter region, suggests that this information might have been incorporated from a still unidentified source. twenty-seven ( %) were male. isolates were recovered from respiratory secretions ( isolates, . %), blood ( , . %), urine ( , . %), catheter ( , . %) and other secretions ( , . %). only ( . %) of patients received appropriate antimicrobial therapy either with polymyxin b ( . %), ampicillin-sulbactam ( . %) or tigecycline ( . %). overall -day mortality of patients with crab was %. mortality rates were . per -patient/day. these rates were significantly higher among patients who have not received appropriate therapy ( . per -patient/day) compared with those who have received it ( . per -patient/day; p = . ; figure ). in the cox regression model only receiving appropriate treatment (hazard ratio [hr] . ; % confidence interval [ci] . − . ); p = . ) was independently associated with -mortality. positive blood culture for crab remained in the final model (hr . ; % ci . − . ; p = . ). all isolates submitted to pcr were positive for blaoxa- . all these isolates were susceptible to polymyxin b and tigecycline. conclusion: high -day mortality occurred in this icu outbreak. many patients did not receive appropriate therapy, which significantly increased mortality. other clinical risk factors for mortality in this outbreak are currently under investigation. acinetobacter baumannii in norwegian strain collections reveal major discrepancies to phenotypic identification and the presence of carbapenemase-producing clonal lineages baumannii isolates the per- gene was identified in ( %). the similarity of the bands were calculated according to "dice smilarity coefficients" and all per- positive isolates were found as clonally related. conclusion: in our study the prevalence of per- was lower than the previous studies. but the presence of high ceftazidime resistance rates among these isolates may indicate the presence of other beta-lactamases. dna analysis by pfge and rapd revealed an outbreak caused by a unique clone. detection of clonal related isolates among different services may be because of the treatment of these patients at the same services before and this may explain the spread of per- positive strains.o resistance genomic islands related to abar are common in acinetobacter baumannii strains belonging to european clone i l. krizova°, m. maixnerova, l. dijkshoorn, a. nemec (prague, cz; leiden, nl) objective: acinetobacter baumannii strains belonging to european (eu) clone i are commonly resistant to multiple antimicrobial agents. a number of resistance genes were recently detected on an -kb genomic resistance island (abar ) inserted in the atpase gene of eu clone i strain aye. the aim of this study was to assess the presence of abar related structures in epidemiologically unrelated strains of eu clone i. methods: the study set included multi-drug resistant (mdr) strains of eu clone i collected in european countries in - and genotypically unique, fully susceptible strains. using pcr, all strains were investigated for the presence of the atpase gene and for nine genes found to be associated with abar . furthermore, the strains were tested for the disruption of the atpase gene using pcr primers directed against the and ends of this gene. strains with the disrupted gene were investigated for the presence and structure of the atpase gene-abar connecting regions using pcr mapping and rflp. pcr primers were derived from the known sequence of strain aye. results: all strains were positive for the atpase gene. the susceptible strains had an intact atpase gene whereas all mdr strains failed to produce the expected amplicon in the atpase disruption test. all eu clone i strains yielded positive results for the atpase gene-abar connecting regions, the structure of which corresponded to those of aye. these findings suggest the presence of atpase integrated elements in clone i strains, the integration of which had invariably taken place at the same locus site. none of the abar -associated resistance genes were found in any of the susceptible strains. in contrast, the mdr strains harboured the following abar -associated genes (% positive strains): aacc ( ), aada ( ), aadb ( ), apha ( ) stra ( ), mera ( ), teta ( ), cat ( ), the gene encoding heavy metal detoxification protein ( ). individual mdr strains carried from one to nine abar -associated genes in different combinations. there was a good correlation between the content of resistance genes and resistance phenotypes. conclusion: genetic structures related to abar are common in strains belonging to eu clone i. the heterogeneity of resistance patterns in this clone is likely to result from the variations in the content of abar related structures. supported by grant / / of the grant agency of the czech republic. objectives: to study the differences in mutation frequency and evaluate the possible correlations between drug resistance development and mutation rate in acinetobacter baumannii (ab). the mutation frequency (mf) of rifampicin (rif) resistance was used as a surrogate measure of differences in mutation rate and for detection of the presence of mutator phenotype. -and -fold higher when larvae were infected with atcc and sdf, respectively. thus, the sdf genome was used as reference genome to identify functions acquired by pathogenic strains with a possible role in antibiotic resistance and pathogenicity. sixty-two clusters, corresponding to almost cdss, were identified in the acicu and aye genomes (and partially in atcc ) that were absent in sdf. this study found that targeted interventions that reduce the use of quin were associated with a decrease of the quin resistance rate in e. coli. e. velasco°, w. espelage, i. noll, a. barger, t. eckmanns (berlin, de) objectives: growing populations of older and immunocompromised patients, changes in epidemiology and unchecked use of antibiotics can led to a rise in consumption as well as resistance to certain treatments. medical doctors (mds) often have an important role alongside contributing factors. we conducted a national survey of mds in germany on their behaviours and expectations for intervention. we aimed to assess md behaviours with and influences on antibiotic prescribing and the potential for related interventions that address antibiotic resistance.methods: a representative sample comprised , mds with differing practice specialties, from both stationary and ambulatory settings (respectively: % and % internists, % and % general practitioners, % and % surgery, % and % ear/nose/throat, % and % paediatrics, % and % urology, % and % gynaecology, % and % dermatology, % and < % other) in federal states. we developed study questions to capture baseline information on mds and their practice with antibiotics. questions also focused on selected influences that may affect behaviour in practice. other questions solicited opinions about interventions that may improve practice. mailed questionnaires were distributed to participants via state medical associations. results: among survey respondents (n = , ; response rate = %), % reported that they prescribe antibiotics daily, and % indicated they do so at least weekly. of all surveyed mds, % reported that they think their own prescribing practice has an influence on antibiotic resistance in their region. of all mds, % found it "important" to continually improve use of antibiotics through industry independent experts providing consultation, audits and feedback. of all mds, % found it "important" to have provision of regional coverage of antibiotic resistance with appropriate feedback for practicing mds, and % found it "important" to have provision of antibiotic regulations of prescriptions with appropriate feedback for practicing mds. (results in table .) -a not all results shown and remaining percentages are as follows: a closed three category scale was used for options "yes", "no", "do not know". a closed four category scale was used with options "very important", "important", "less important" and "not important". a closed five category scale was used for options "daily", "weekly", "monthly", "seldom" and "never". a closed five category scale was used for options "strongly agree", "agree", "neutral", "disagree" and "strongly disagree". objectives: to investigate the mlsb and tetracycline resistance and the emm gene distribution among the invasive streptococcus pyogenes (gas) strains. methods: between january and december , a total of strains responsible for invasive infections for adult patients were sent to the french national reference center for streptococci to be studied. antibiotic susceptibility testing was done by disk diffusion method according to the ca-sfm guidelines. mics were determined by e-test method. streptococcal emm sequence was done according to the cdc protocol. detection of macrolide and tetracycline resistance genes: erm(b), erm(tr), mef(a), tet(m), tet(o), tet(k), and tet(l) was performed by pcr. results: among the streptococcus pyogenes invasive strains; more than ten different emm-types were identified. the most frequent emm sequence types were emm , emm and emm . a total of strains ( %) were resistant to erythromycin. erythromycin resistance prevalence had decreased during the three years period ( . %- , . %- , . %- ) . had an mlsb constitutive ( strains) or inducible ( strains) phenotype due to erm(b) or erm(tr) resistance gene. with the m phenotype and mef(a) gene were susceptible to clindamycin. among the ( . %) tetracycline resistant isolates tet(m), tet(o) and tet(l) genes were detected in , and strains, respectively. tetracycline resistance prevalence had also decreased during the three years period ( . %- , %- , . %- ) . conclusion: most of the invasive french gas isolates remained erythromycin and tetracycline susceptiple during three years. nontheless, the resistance rates have had the tendency to decrease slightly. taking into account the resistance trends helps to guide the therapy for penicillin-allergic patients. objectives: during a survey on antimicrobial susceptibility in betahaemolytic group c and g streptococci (gcgs) from portugal, a macrolide resistance rate higher than previously reported in other european countries was found ( %) among s. dysgalactiae subsp. equisimilis isolates. to gain further insights into the resistance mechanisms involved and the clonal structure of the resistant population, we undertook the phenotypic and molecular characterisation of macrolide resistant s. dysgalactiae subsp. equisimilis isolates and compared it with the susceptible population. methods: antimicrobial susceptibility testing and macrolide resistance phenotype were determined by disk diffusion. all the macrolideresistant isolates were further characterised by mic testing and genotype determination by pcr. a combination of emm typing and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (pfge) was used to type the population and the simpson's index of diversity (sid) with % confidence intervals was calculated as previously described.results: a total of isolates were resistant to erythromycin (mic range, to > ug/ml). the vast majority of isolates presented a mlsb phenotype (n = ) and carried the erm(a) gene (n = ), while the mefencoded m-phenotype was expressed by only isolates. among resistant isolates, distinct emm types were found distributed by pfge clusters that overlapped with the main clusters detected in the susceptible population. the emm types stg , stg , stg and stg accounted for approximately two thirds of the resistant isolates. pfge did not always separate neither macrolide-resistant from susceptible isolates nor erm(b) and mef(a) from the prevailing erm(a) isolates. the sids of emm and pfge calculated for resistant isolates were not statistical different from the overall population. the two most prominent mls resistant lineages were one with stg /erm(a) isolates (n = ) and stg /mef(a) (n = ), and another including stg /erm(a) (n = ).conclusion: although most of the resistant isolates presented a mlsb phenotype and carried an erm(a) gene, molecular typing revealed extensive diversity in both emm types and pfge clones. macrolide resistance had a polyclonal origin, with resistance emerging among most susceptible clones. monitoring of macrolide resistance patterns in s. dysgalactiae subsp. equisimilis is essential as this pathogen is increasingly recognised as an important human pathogen. a.s. simões°, r. sá-leão, s. nunes, n. frazão, a. tavares, h. de lencastre (oeiras, pt) while performing pneumococcal nasopharyngeal colonisation surveillance studies among children attending day care centres (dcc) in portugal, we observed that the rate of strains with penicillin mic ug/ml more than tripled from . % in to % in (p = . ). the aim of this study was to characterise the isolates recovered in which had a mic to penicillin ug/ml. methods: pneumococci were isolated and identified on the basis of selective growth on gentamycin blood agar plates, optochin susceptibility, colony morphology, and alfa-haemolysis. susceptibility to antimicrobials agents was performed according to the clsi recommendations and definitions. strains were serotyped by the quellung reaction and/or multiplex pcr using specific primers for each serotype. pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (pfge), after restriction of the total dna with smai, was performed to compare genetic backgrounds. results: sixteen of the isolates belonged to serotype , three were serotype a and one was of serotype a. strains of serotype were also resistant to sulfamethoxazole-trimethoprim and belonged to a single pfge cluster identified as clone spain v st . the penicillin resistant serotype strains were isolated in two dcc, from nine children vaccinated with the -valent pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (pcv ), four non-vaccinated children and three children with unknown vaccination status. five of these carriers had received antibiotics recently. in these two dcc the overall proportion of children vaccinated with pcv was %; % of the children had received antibiotics within the previous month and % had received three or more courses of antibiotics in the last six months. since the introduction of the pcv in portugal, in june , the proportion of penicillin resistant pneumococci recovered from colonisation has been stable (c.a. %). the sudden increase in the levels of penicillin resistance observed in the surveillance study was found to be largely due to the dissemination of clone spain v st serotype variant in two dcc with high consumption of antibiotics. the observations suggest a combination of high antibiotic selective pressure and transmission rates resulting in an outbreak-like situation with a penicillin resistant vaccine type clone being disseminated among children in day care despite use of pcv . background: beside target mutation, active efflux is another common resistance mechanism to fluoroquinolones (fq) in s. pneumoniae. two main efflux systems have been described so far, namely pmra (member of the mfs superfamily) and the two abc transporters pata/patb. we have studied the inducibility of pmra, pata and patb genes expression when bacteria are exposed to subinhibitory concentrations of fq. we used a wild-type sensitive strain (atcc ), two clinical strains resistant to fq (sp and sp ), and two efflux mutants (sp and sp ; selected in vitro after exposure to ciprofloxacin [jac , : - ] ). mic were determined according to clsi. induction was obtained by growing bacteria in todd-hewitt broth added by half the mic of each fq (cip, nor, lvx, mxf, gmf) for h at ºc in % co atmosphere. expression levels of pmra, pata and patb genes were determined by real-time pcr. reversibility of induction was tested by re-cultivating bacteria for h in drug-free medium. results: antimicrobial susceptibilities for cip and mxf and gene expression at basal level and after exposure to these fq are shown in the in women with single infection, the most common hpv types were hpv- and hpv- , followed by hpv- , hpv- , hpv- and hpv- , whereas in women with multiple infections hpv- was the most commonly detected type, followed by hpv- , hpv- , hpv- and hpv- . a different distribution of hpv types and a higher rate of multiple infections were observed in young vs. older women, suggesting the existence of a natural selection of hpvs which preserve a better fitness. high-risk hpvs were detected in all high-grade cervical intraepithelial lesions, with hpv- , hpv- , hpv- , and hpv- as the most frequent types. however, hr-hpv types were detected also in a high rate of women with a negative pap test as well as in women with a negative cervical biopsy, suggesting the need to improve the accuracy of available cervical cancer screening tests. the results of this study, which provide information on the epidemiology of hpv infection and type distribution in women from south italy, should be taken into consideration in the implementation of local vaccination programs. objectives: chromosomal integration of the hhv- genome (cihhv- ) into the human genome occurs in − % of healthy individuals and leads to persistently high levels of hhv- pcr copy numbers in blood and tissue. consequently, this may be interpreted as persistent active hhv- infection. although hhv- mrna has been detected in a few individuals with cihhv- , there is no evidence of replication of viral particles up to now. viral cultures have shown negative results. so, cihhv- is thought not to be linked to any disease. methods: we performed hhv- antigen detection in pbmcs of individuals with fish proven cihhv- by means of antibodies directed against hhv- variant a and b (indirect immunoperoxidase staining). results: in unrelated female adolescents (both with cihhv- variant a) we detected hhv- antigen. one patient is suffering from recurrent parotitis since years and from hypoimmunoglobulinaemia. the other patient ( a) was treated with allogeneic bone marrow transplantation (bmt) for acute myeloid leukaemia (aml) and acquired cihhv- from the healthy donor. so, cihhv- is only found in blood cells. in the latter patient only symptoms attributable to the post bmt course have been observed (prolonged mixed haematological chimerism, protracted mucositis, transient hypertension and transient neuropathy). at the time of antigen detection years after bmt the patient was clinically well. in individuals (a girl after fatal myocarditis and her healthy father − both with variant b) no hhv- antigen has been detected. discussion: up to now cihhv- is considered not to cause any disease. for the first time we show the expression of hhv- antigen, which indicates the replication of viral particles. this might have a pathophysiological impact. sixty-seven % of cases with ebv meningo-encephalitis have detectable viral dna amounts in csf and serum, whereas neuroborreliosis patients do not. cases with primary ebv meningoencephalitis have increased systemic leukocytosis, with higher lymphocyte, and monocyte levels compared to neuroborreliosis patients.o incidence of post-herpetic neuralgia in treated and untreated patients with herpes zoster followed for year in an italian prospective cohort: preliminary results g. parruti°, f. sozio, c. rebuzzi, m. tontodonati, e. polilli, a. agostinone, a. manna, f. di masi, a. consorte, g. congedo, l. cosentino, d. d'antonio, l. pippa, l. manzoli, c. granchelli (pescara, chieti, it) objectives: a large prospective cohort of patients with herpes zoster (hz) was enrolled between may and june in pescara, italy, with a planned -year follow-up after clinically and/or molecularly assessed diagnosis. aim of the study was to evaluate predictors of prolonged acute course and/or incidence of post-herpetic nevralgia (phn). methods: data from all enrolled patients were collected by a network of general practitioners. suspected cases and patients with intense acute pain were referred to our institution for immediate evaluation. clinical and demographic information was mandatory at baseline, as photographs of enrolled patients. for uncertain cases, varicella-zoster virus (vzv) antibodies and vzv dna pcr on plasma and/or vesicular eluates (whenever available) were performed. follow-up data were collected at outpatient control visits or by phone calls at , , and months after onset of hz. phn was diagnosed when pain persisted or relapsed at least one month after complete clearing of dermatomeric lesions. adverse events other than pain were classified according to who grading scale and reported if . all statistical calculations were performed by stata . software package. results: patients were enrolled, ( . %) females, with a mean age of . years, -year follow-up data being now available for . hz was localised at thorax in . % and head in . %; pain in the acute phase was reported as intense or very intense by ( . %) patients; ( . %) patients were referred for molecular diagnosis as clinically uncertain, ( . %) being confirmed as vzv-related cases. forty eight ( . %) patients were not prescribed any antiviral drug at diagnosis by referring physicians, in spite of extensive support in the study plan. during follow-up, ( . %) patients reported any type of adverse event (at a mean of . ± . days), including ( . %) patients reporting phn. phn was significantly more frequent in untreated vs treated patients ( . % vs . %, p = . ), as were total adverse events ( . % vs . %, p = . ). untreated patients did not significantly differ from those treated by age ( . % vs . %, p = . ) and sex (females vs males . % vs . %, p = . ), whereas they complained for more intense pain ( . % vs . %, p = . ) at presentation. conclusion: our study confirms the importance of early diagnosis and prompt antiviral treatment at the onset of hz in order to minimise the risk of phn. methods: faecal specimens (n = ) from apparently healthy and diarrheic calves (aged < year) were collected per-rectally and investigated for detection of group a rotavirus by antigen capture elisa (generic assay, germany). elisa positive specimens (n = ) were investigated further for molecular characterisation. genotyping of borv-a strains was carried out on dsrna extracted from % pbs faecal suspensions by a nested and/or heminested rt-pcr key: cord- - udhvl n authors: schierding, william; horsfield, julia; o’sullivan, justin title: low tolerance for transcriptional variation at cohesin genes is accompanied by functional links to disease-relevant pathways date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: udhvl n variants in dna regulatory elements can alter the regulation of distant genes through spatial-regulatory connections. in humans, these spatial-regulatory connections are largely set during early development, when the cohesin complex plays an essential role in genome organisation and cell division. a full complement of the cohesin complex and its regulators is important for normal development, since heterozygous mutations in genes encoding these components are often sufficient to produce a disease phenotype. the implication that genes encoding the cohesin complex and cohesin regulators must be tightly controlled and resistant to variability in expression has not yet been formally tested. here, we identify spatial-regulatory connections with potential to regulate expression of cohesin loci, including linking their expression to that of other genes. connections that centre on the cohesin ring subunits (mitotic: smc a, smc , stag , stag , rad /rad -as; meiotic: smc b, stag , rec , rad l ), cohesin-ring support genes (nipbl, mau , wapl, pds a and pds b), and ctcf provide evidence of coordinated regulation that has little tolerance for perturbation. we identified transcriptional changes across a set of genes co-regulated with the cohesin loci that include biological pathways such as extracellular matrix production and proteasome-mediated protein degradation. remarkably, many of the genes that are co-regulated with cohesin loci are themselves intolerant to loss-of-function. the results highlight the importance of robust regulation of cohesin genes, indicating novel pathways that may be important in the human cohesinopathy disorders. the cohesin complex has multiple essential roles during cell division in mitosis and meiosis, genome organisation, dna damage repair, and gene expression . mutations in genes that encode members of the cohesin complex, or its regulators, cause developmental diseases known as the 'cohesinopathies' when present in the germline ; or contribute to the development of cancer in somatic cells [ ] [ ] [ ] . remarkably, cohesin mutations are almost always heterozygous, and result in depletion of the amount of functional cohesin without eliminating it altogether. complete loss of cohesin is not tolerated in healthy individuals . thus, cohesin is haploinsufficient such that normal tissue development and homeostasis requires that the concentrations of cohesin and its regulatory factors remain tightly regulated. the human mitotic cohesin ring contains four integral subunits: two structural maintenance proteins (smc a, smc ), one stromalin heat-repeat domain subunit (stag or stag ), and one kleisin subunit (rad ) . mutation of stag has been linked to at least four tumour types (e.g. ewing sarcoma, glioblastoma and melanoma , and bladder carcinomas) . strikingly, mutations in cohesin components are especially prevalent in acute myeloid leukaemia [ ] [ ] [ ] . in meiotic cohesin, smc a is replaced by smc b; stag / by stag ; and rad by rec or rad l . mutations in meiotic cohesin subunits are associated with infertility in men , chromosome segregation errors and primary ovarian insufficiency in women . cohesin is loaded onto dna by the scc /scc complex (encoded by the nipbl and mau genes, respectively) . mutations in the cohesin loading factor nipbl are associated with > % cases of cornelia de lange syndrome (cdls). remarkably, features associated with cdls are observed with less than % depletion in nipbl protein levels . the release of cohesin from dna is achieved by wapl, which opens up the interface connecting the smc and rad subunits. the pds a/pds b cohesin associated subunits affect this process by contacting cohesin to either maintain (with stag and stag ) or remove (with wapl) the ring from dna . spatial organization and compaction of chromosomes in the nucleus involves non-random folding of dna on different scales. the genome is segregated into active a compartments and inactive b compartments , inside which further organisation occurs into topologically associating domains (tads) interspersed with genomic regions with fewer interactions . cohesin participates in genome organisation by mediating 'loop extrusion' of dna to form loops that anchor tad boundaries. at tad boundaries, cohesin colocalizes with the ccctc binding factor (ctcf) to form chromatin loops between convergent ctcf binding sites. fine-scale genomic interactions include chromatin loops that mediate promoter-enhancer contacts. notably, the time-and tissue-specific formation of the fine-scale loops also requires cohesin. the spatial organization of the genome is particularly dynamic and susceptible to disruption during development. for example, changes to tad boundaries are associated with developmental disorders . furthermore, disruption of tad boundaries by cohesin knockdown can lead to ectopic enhancer-promoter interactions that result in changes in gene expression . rewiring of the patterns of course and fine-scale chromatin interactions also contributes to cancer development , , including the generation of oncogenic chromosomal translocations , . disease-associated gwas variants in non-coding dna likely act through spatially organized hubs of regulatory control elements, each component of which contributes a small amount to the observed phenotype(s), as predicted by the omnigenic hypothesis , . non-coding mutations at cohesin and cohesin-associated factors were found by genome wide association studies (gwas-attributed variants) to track with multiple phenotypes . however, the impact of genetic variants located within cohesin and its associated genes has not yet been investigated with respect to phenotype development. we hypothesised that cohesin-associated pathologies can be affected by subtle, combinatorial changes in the regulation of cohesin genes caused by common genetic variants within control elements. here, we link the d structure of the genome with eqtl data to determine if gwas variants attributed to cohesin genes affect their transcription. we test cohesin gene-associated gwas variants for regulatory connections beyond the cohesin genes (gene enrichment and regulatory hubs). we also identify all variants within each gene locus that had a previously determined cis-eqtl (gtex catalog) to the cohesin gene (eqtl-attributed variant list). as with the gwas variants, we tested these variants for the presence of spatial-regulatory relationships involving genes outside of the locus. only a few of these eqtl-attributed variants are currently implicated in disease pathways, but their regulatory relationships with cohesin suggest that they may be significant for cohesinopathy disorders. results genetic variants with regulatory potential are associated with cohesin loci mitotic cohesin genes (smc a, smc , stag , stag , and rad ), meiotic cohesin genes (smc b, stag , rec , and rad l ), cohesin support genes (wapl, nipbl, pds a, pds b, and mau ) and ctcf were investigated to determine if they contain non-coding genetic variants (snps) that make contact in d with genes and therefore could directly affect gene expression (gwas-attributed and eqtl-attributed; table , table s ). a total of gwas-attributed genetic variants associated with disease were identified (methods) that mapped to a cohesin gene ( gwas; snps) or cohesin-associated ( gwas; snps) gene (table s ). twelve snps (blue , table s ) are not listed in the current gtex snp dictionary (gtex v ), while fourteen snps have virtually no variation in the gtex per-tissue analysis (i.e. minor allele frequency [maf] < . ; green, table s ) and so were discarded. snps passed all filters and were subsequently analysed using codes d (gwas-attributed list; table ). within the gtex catalogue, eqtl-attributed variants associate with regulation of the cohesin gene set (table s ). these variants associate with modified expression levels of cohesin genes in otherwise healthy individuals. fifty-five of these variants had a maf< . (green , table s ) and were filtered out of the eqtl-attributed set prior to codes d analysis ( variants passed maf filter; eqtl-attributed; table ). only three variants were shared between the gwas-attributed and eqtlattributed variant lists, resulting in a total of cohesin-associated variants (gwas-and eqtl-attributed combined; table ), but only variants pass all filters (gwas-and eqtl-attributed combined; black, table s ). codes d integrates data on the -dimensional organisation of the genome (captured by hi-c) and transcriptome (eqtl) associations across multiple tissue types (table s and s ). we used the codes d algorithm to assign the variants to hubs of regulatory/functional impacts by examining their potential to regulate other genes. of the variants, four had zero significant eqtls, leaving variants with significant eqtls ( eqtl-attributed, gwas-attributed, and overlaps; table s and s ). however, many of the variants were not attributed the gwas-or eqtl-attributed cohesin gene in the locus. of the variants with eqtls, / ( . %) eqtl-attributed variants and / ( . %) gwas-attributed variants had a physical (hi-c detected) connection and significant eqtl with their attributed cohesin gene ( total, overlaps; table ). strikingly, most of the variants attributed by gwas studies to cohesin genes were not confirmed by spatial connection, with only % being cis-eqtls for the attributed cohesin gene ( of , . %). after the codes d analysis, six of the cohesin genes have no gwas-attributed snps with a regulatory connection (stag , nipbl, ctcf, smc , rec , and rad -as ). therefore, the majority of gwas variants tested in proximity to cohesin loci have regulatory effects elsewhere in the genome. remarkably, despite five snps being attributed to nipbl by gwas, none of these were attributed to regulation of nipbl by our spatial eqtl analysis. of the cohesin or cohesin-associated genes with any gwas-attributed variants with cis-eqtls (rad , rad l , smc a, smc b, stag , stag , mau , pds a, pds b, and wapl), only the stag , mau , and pds b loci contain more than two variants with confirmed cis-eqtls. therefore, even those loci with confirmed variant-gene gwas attributions have very few variants with evidence of cis-eqtls. to further characterize the potential for the cohesin-associated variants to alter gene regulation, we analysed histone marks, dnase accessibility, and protein binding motifs (haploreg v . ) at each location (table s ) . most variants reside within accessible chromatin (dnase: . %) and almost all ( . %) have at least one of three histone marks that are consistent with putative regulatory activity (promoter, . %; enhancer, . %; protein binding sites, . %). intriguingly, haploreg motif prediction identified of the variants ( different loci: mau , pds b, rec , smc b, stag , rad l , stag ) as residing within protein binding domains associated with cohesin-related dna interactions (i.e. rad , smc , and ctcf). therefore, most of the variants like in regions associated with chromatin marks that highlight putative regulatory capabilities. codes d predicted out of variants to have significant regulatory activity. we compared this to alternative functional variant prediction methods. the deepsea algorithm, which predicts the chromatin effects of sequence alterations by analysing the epigenetic state of a sequence, identified of the variants as having functional significance (< . , table s ). predictsnp , which estimates noncoding variant classification (deleterious or neutral) from five separate prediction tools (cadd, dann, fat, fun, gwava tools), identified of variants as deleterious (table s ) . therefore, only / variants have putative functional significance predicted by these tools ( deepsea, predictsnp, overlaps). therefore, these variants have support from multiple methods, suggesting a potential for higher regulatory effects, and that the contrast with the haploreg chromatin marks and gtex measured eqtls possibly indicates a heavy weighting against false positives in these prediction methods. in summary, gwas-attributed snps are enriched for chromatin marks (regulatory potential). however, fewer than half the snps in proximity to the cohesin and cohesin-associated genes physically connected with the cohesin genes they are predicted to regulate, suggesting that cohesin genes are not the direct targets of these regulatory variants. pathway enrichment implicates coordinated regulation of cohesin with essential cell cycle genes codes d identified variants as being physically connected to, and associated with the expression levels of genes ( genes from eqtl-attributed variants, from gwas-attributed variants, and overlap) across , significant tissue-specific regulatory connections (fdr p< . ). physical connections comprised , fine-scale connections (cis, < mb from the variant), coarsescale connections (trans-intrachromosomal, > mb), and connections on a different chromosome (trans-interchromosomal) (fig ; tables s , s ). of note, there is one cohesin-tocohesin regulatory connection: rs , a gwas-associated variant (bipolar disorder) located within the mau locus has a significant trans-interchromosomal eqtl with rec . the gene overlaps between the gwas-and eqtl-attributed analyses are also intriguing. for example, variants in the gwas-attributed and eqtl-attributed lists, each from a different chromosomal location (rec and pds b), modify tcf l expression. as tcf l is part of the wnt pathway and is highly expressed in ovaries in the gtex catalogue, it is notable that this gene is regulated from variants in the rec locus (meiosis-specific cohesin). their co-regulatory relationships exemplify the systems of genomeregulatory hubs, with a total genes overlapping the gwas-and eqtl-attributed analyses. the significant variants highlighted by the deepsea and predictsnp analyses functionally connected to ( . %) of the genes identified by codes d. thus, while deepsea and predictsnp assigned functionality to just / snps ( . %), these variants represent . % of the codes dpredicted modulatory connections. therefore, deepsea and predictsnp successfully selected for variants with highly enriched regulatory functions. we used g:profiler to assess the functional enrichment of the gwas-and eqtl-attributed genes ( table s ). the genes are enriched for pathways that support cohesin function, as we currently understand it, within the nucleus. for example, functional enrichment in sister chromatid gene ontology categories includes five non-cohesin genes from our analysis: ctnnb , ppp r a, chmp a, cul , and dis l . moreover, cohesin's meiosis-specific role (smc b, stag , rec ) is enriched by two trans connections revealing regulation of meiosis-related genes (itpr , ppp r a; kegg pathway hsa ). collectively, these results suggest that expression of cohesin genes is coordinated with other genes that are involved in cell cycle control. meiosis-specific cohesin genes are functionally connected to kif and a germ cell pathway there are genes functionally connected to variants within the meiosis-specific cohesin loci smc b, stag , rec , and rad l (table s a) . we identified significant enrichment terms using g:profiler (table s b) , including the gene ontology "male germ cell nucleus" pathway. the gene ontology "male germ cell nucleus" pathway contains kif , stag , and rec (trans-interchromosomal connection from stag locus to kif ). within gtex, kif is highly expressed in brain and testis. the kif gene region was previously identified as significantly associated with a gwas of hypospadias, a birth defect presenting with a urethral opening located on the ventral side of the penis instead of at the tip of the glans. of particular relevance to the cohesinopathies, in which affected individuals present with cognitive defects, a mutation in human kif caused neurodevelopmental defects and intellectual disability . variation in kif expression has been associated with epilepsy , another notable cohesinopathy phenotype . it has also been proposed that kif is a conserved regulator of neurological development . previous findings of an association between kif and heart disease are not supported by gtex (kif is lowly expressed in gtex heart tissue) and kif knockout mice have no heart phenotype , suggesting that the heart-associated kif variants might somehow affect the expression or function of other genes. we also identified an enrichment for e f transcription factor binding sites within our genes ( table s b ). the e f transcription factor modulates embryonic development and cell cycle , , with a role in cancer development . of note, the e f gene is loss-of-function intolerant (pli=. ), consistent with its crucial role in the cell cycle and development. collectively, our results suggest that the genes are enriched for cell cycle-regulated genes, including e f targets, and that these genes might be indirect targets of cancer drug treatments modifying e f transcription factor activity. the cohesin gene regulatory network is intolerant to loss-of-function mutations a subset of human genes, whose activity is crucial to survival, are intolerant to loss-of-function (lofintolerant) mutations . the gnomad catalog lists , genes: , lof-intolerant, , loftolerant, and undetermined ( . % lof-intolerance, defined as pli ≥ . ) . all cohesin and cohesin-associated genes (except the meiosis-only rad l , smc b, stag , and rec ) are lofintolerant (table ) . we hypothesized that genes functionally connecting to variants in cohesin genes would also be enriched for loss-of-function intolerance. consistent with our hypothesis, of the genes ( . %) we identified are lof-intolerant ( are lof tolerant and have undetermined pli; table s ). stratification of the eqtl genes based on the distance between the variant and gene (cis versus trans-acting eqtl gene lists) identified a marked increase in lof-intolerance for genes regulated by trans-acting eqtls (fig ; fig s ) .this was especially pronounced for regulatory interactions that occurred between chromosomes (fig ; fig s ) . there was a significant correlation between distance and pli on the same chromosome (r=- . , p< . ). as the cohesin genes are intolerant to even small perturbations in gene expression, we hypothesized that the lof-intolerant genes that were regulated by elements within the cohesin genes would similarly only be tolerant to small allelic fold changes in gene expression. therefore, we tested for a correlation between pli and the allelic fold change (log afc) associated with the eqtl. we observed that pli is significantly correlated with afc (r=- . , p< . ; fig ) . ignoring the direction of the change in expression, by using the absolute value of log afc, we identified an even stronger negative correlation between pli and |afc| (r=- . , p< . ; fig ) . collectively, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that long distance (especially inter-chromosomal) regulatory connections exhibit greater tissue specificity and disease associations , because they are enriched for lof-intolerant gene sets. thus, the inter-chromosomal regulatory connections potentially highlight novel disease pathways associated with the known cohesinopathies. pathway analysis identifies cohesin gene connections with extracellular matrix production and the proteasome we hypothesized that genes connected to regulatory variants within the cohesin loci might be contributing to disease-related phenotypes. a g:profiler transfac analysis identified significant enrichment for target sequences for the egr transcription factor (table s ) . egr transcription is regulated by stress and growth factor pathways; its binding to dna is modulated by redox state, and its transcriptional targets include genes involved in extracellular matrix production . g:profiler enrichment also identified genes as part of the ubiquitin mediated proteolysis pathway (birc , birc , cul , ube f, ube k, ube b, ubr , cul , xiap; tables s [red] and s ). the proteasome pathway tags unwanted proteins to be degraded and defects in proteolysis have a causal role in a variety of cancers. notably, of the ( . %) genes identified in the ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis pathway are lof-intolerant. we hypothesized that the genes we identified would have pharmacokinetic interactions with cancer treatments. notably, we identified cyp a as being regulated by a cis interaction with a variant , bp away (intronic, cnpy ). cyp a encodes a protein within the cytochrome p family. defects in p are known to alter cancer treatment outcomes (drug metabolism, kegg hsa ). additionally, we identified a g:profiler enrichment for the e f transcription factor within our egenes. e f is up-regulated in response to treatment with doxorubicin or etoposide, topoisomerase blockers . indeed, many of the genes from the codes d analysis are targeted by drugs (table s ) . by contrast, for the cohesin genes, the drug-gene interaction database only lists known drug interactions for stag and stag . notably, consistent with our earlier observations, the drug-gene targets we identified include two genes targeted by topoisomerase blockers (e.g. papola, and xiap) , both of which are lof-intolerant genes. through the use of the "contextualize developmental snps using d information" (codes d) algorithm , we have leveraged physical proximity (hi-c) and gene regulatory changes (eqtls) to reveal how variation in putative enhancers can alter the regulation of cohesin genes and modifier genes. our analysis has identified eqtls that link genes associated with the mitotic cohesin ring genes (smc a, smc , stag , stag , and rad /rad -as), meiosis-specific cohesin ring genes (smc b, stag , rec , and rad l ), cohesin-associated support proteins (wapl, nipbl, pds a, pds b, and mau ) and ctcf. collectively, these results form an atlas of functional connections from cohesin genes to proximal and distal genes, some of which reside on different chromosomes to the regulatory elements. these results agrees with previous findings that spatial eqtls mark hubs of activity across a multi-morbidity atlas . only % of variant-gene mappings in the gwas catalogue were supported by spatial cis-eqtls. therefore, although several gwas-associated disease snps have been linked with cohesin, only a minority have supporting evidence that these variants actually regulate the cohesin genes. as such, our results call into question the validity of many of the previous associations between non-coding genetic variants and the cohesin genes that have been made in the gwas catalogue. previous reports have suggested that cis-eqtl gene sets are depleted of lof-intolerance genes when compared to similarly sized sets of non-eqtl genes . similarly, our findings show that the genes regulated by variants in cohesin loci are also enriched for lof-intolerant genes is notable. the apparent bias in existing studies can be explained by eqtl studies being predominantly focused on nearby (cis) variant-gene transcriptional connections and hi-c studies focusing on local changes in tad structure, due to technical limitations in the current analysis pipelines. we revealed that the greater the distance separating the eqtl and target gene, the more likely the target gene was to be lof-intolerant (i.e. over % of trans-interchromosomal interactions involved lof-intolerant genes). this finding is consistent with studies that show that long distance connections exhibit greater disease-and tissue-specificity , , . the demonstration that the cohesion genes are also lof-intolerant agrees with their recognised haploinsufficiency in human developmental disease , . notably, the genes that were enriched within pathways of pathological importance (e.g. of the genes in the ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis pathway gene set) were more likely to be lof-intolerant. this is consistent with previous findings that eqtl-identified genes are enriched for genome-wide disease heritability, and the subset of eqtl genes with lofintolerance are even larger enrichments for genome-wide disease heritability . the codes d method identified eqtl links between cohesin genes and other loci not related to cohesin. two pathways emerged from this analysis. firstly, spatial eqtl connections with cohesin genes identified an enrichment for genes that are regulated by zinc finger transcription factors including egr and znf . egr positively regulates extracellular matrix (ecm) production. interestingly, we recently observed widespread dysregulation of extracellular matrix genes upon deletion of cohesin genes in leukaemia cell lines . this supports the idea that regulation of the cohesin complex is tightly associated with ecm production. additional support for this is derived from the observation that cohesin subunit smc exists in the form of an extracellular chondroitin sulfate proteoglycan known as bamacan . additionally, in asthma, smc upregulation significantly affected ecm components . the ecm facet of cohesin biology is relatively under-explored and is worthy of further investigation. secondly, spatial eqtl connections with cohesin genes identified an enrichment for genes that encode effectors of the proteasome pathway. the stability of many cohesin proteins are regulated by the proteasome pathway , , , but aside from this, genetic interactions between cohesin genes and proteasome pathway genes remain unexplored. in conclusion, many studies of mutations focus on the impact of coding-region variation, relying on natural knockouts (especially missense and loss of function variants) to identify gene function. our analysis highlights what those studies might be missing: sets of co-ordinated genes important to disease but largely intolerant to lof mutation in healthy individuals. we identified a novel set of genes which are regulated by elements within the cohesin genes. we found that many of the pathways and transcription factor binding sites enriched within these genes were relevant to disease pathways relevant to development and cancer. moreover, drug-gene interactions further reinforce the importance of these connections to cancer drug treatments and in particular topoisomerasetargeting drugs. as such, our results support recent reports of the importance of long-distance regulation as a key driver of phenotype development . methods a large number of gwas studies have mapped phenotypic variation to cohesin ring gene loci we searched the gwas catalogue for snps mapped or attributed to mitotic cohesin ring genes (smc a, smc , stag , stag , and rad /rad -as), meiosis-specific cohesin ring genes (smc b, stag , rec , and rad l ), cohesin-associated support proteins (wapl, nipbl, pds a, pds b, and mau ), and ctcf from gwas studies covering a large assortment of altered phenotypes and pathologies across most tissues in the body (gwas-attributed). genomic positions of snps were obtained from dbsnp for human reference hg . beyond variants with association to disease, we searched the gtex catalogue for cis-regulatory variants (variants within mb) that modify the expression of either cohesin ring genes (smc a, smc b, smc , stag , stag , stag , rad , rec , and rad l ), cohesin support genes (wapl, nipbl, pds a, pds b, and mau ), or ctcf in one or more of tissues across the human body (eqtl-attributed). unlike gwas variants, these variants have no inherent association to a phenotype (except the overlaps), as gtex contains individuals that were relatively healthy prior to mortality. thus, these variants explain variation in gene expression in a normal, mostly older cohort. genomic positions of snps were obtained from dbsnp for human reference hg . for all gwas-attributed and eqtl-attributed variants, spatial regulatory connections were identified through genes whose transcript levels depend on the identity of the snp through both spatial interaction (hi-c data) plus expression data (expression quantitative trail locus [eqtl]; gtex v ) using the codes d algorithm (https://github.com/genome d/codes d-v ) , . spatial-eqtl association p-values were adjusted using the benjamini-hochberg procedure, and associations with adjusted p-values < . were deemed spatial eqtl-egene pairs. variants not found in the gtex catalogue or variants with a minor allele frequency below % were filtered out due to the sample size of gtex at each tissue. to identify snp locations in the hi-c data, reference libraries of all possible hi-c fragment locations were identified through digital digestion of the hg human reference genome with the same restriction enzyme employed in preparing the hi-c libraries (i.e. mboi, hindiii). digestion files contained all possible fragments, from which a snp library was created, containing all genome fragments containing a snp. next, all snp-containing fragments were queried against the hi-c databases to find distal fragments of dna which spatially connect to the snp-fragment. if the distal fragment contained the coding region of a gene, a snp-gene spatial connection was confirmed. there was no binning or padding around restriction fragments to obtain gene overlap. to limit technological challenges, gene transcripts for both the spatial and eqtl analyses used the gencode transcript model. spatial connections were identified from previously generated hi-c libraries of various origins (supp table ): ) cell lines gm , hmec, huvec, imr , k , kbm , hela, nhek, and hesc (geo accession numbers gse , gse , and gse ); ) tissue-specific data from encode sourced from the adrenal gland, bladder, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, lung, ovary, pancreas, psoas muscle, right ventricle, small bowel, and spleen (gse ); and ) tissues of neural origin from the cortical and germinal plate neurons (gse ), cerebellar astrocytes, brain vascular pericytes, brain microvascular endothelial cells, sk-n-mc, and spinal cord astrocytes (gse , gse , gse , gse , gse ), and neuronal progenitor cells (gse ). the human transcriptome consists of genes with varying levels of redundancy and critical function, resulting in some genes being intolerant to loss-of-function (lof-intolerant) mutation. this subset of the human transcriptome are posited to also be more intolerant to regulatory perturbation. the gnomad catalog lists , genes and their likelihood of being intolerant to loss-of-function mutations (pli), resulting in , lof-intolerant, , lof-tolerant, and undetermined ( . % lof-intolerance, defined as pli ≥ . ) . we tested all cohesin, cohesin-associated genes, and those from our analysis (gwas-and eqtl-attributed) for lof-intolerance, comparing our cis and transacting eqtl gene lists for enrichment for lof-intolerance. as pli is bimodal and non-normally distributed, we tested both pli raw values as well as pli grouping (tolerant vs intolerant) for correlation between eqtl effect size (log allelic fold change, afc) and intolerance to disruption (pli). we considered both afc and its absolute value (direction of effect ignored), as it has been suggested that the eqtl effect direction is determined by how you define the minor allele within the population, not the actual molecular impact of the eqtl on the cohesin connection. this analysis highlights the significance of long-distance gene regulation on otherwise mutationally-constrained (lof-intolerant) genes. all genes from the gwas-attributed and eqtl-attributed analyses were then annotated for significant biological and functional enrichment using g:profiler , which includes the kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) pathway database (https://www.kegg.jp/kegg/pathway.html) for pathways and transfac for transcription factor binding enrichment. finally, we identified drugs that target the genes and related mechanisms through the drug gene interaction database (dgidb) . to predict the most phenotypically causal variants within the variant set, we compared variants from the codes d analysis with several tools which leverage deep learning-based algorithmic frameworks to classify functional relevance from dna markers including identified chromatin marks (enhancer marks, etc). we used deepsea to predict the chromatin effects of variants to prioritize regulatory variants and predictsnp to summarise estimates of noncoding variants for classification (deleterious or neutral). deepsea predicts the chromatin effects of sequence alterations by analysing the epigenetic state of a sequence (transcription factors binding, dnase i sensitivities, and histone marks) across multiple cell types. predictsnp predictions are a consensus score from across five separate prediction tools for variant prioritization: cadd . tables table the eqtl-attributed variant list consists of variants, but after filtering results in variants with significant spatial eqtls. the gwas-attributed variant list consists of variants, but after filtering results in variants with significant spatial eqtls. overall, the attributed variants results in variants with significant spatial eqtls. table . pli of cohesin genes shows largely mutation intolerance the main set of genes comprising cohesin and cohesin-support are all loss-of-function intolerant (pli > . ). however, the subset of cohesin genes specific to only meiosis are not loss-of-function intolerant. the eqtl-attributed variant list consists of variants, but after filtering results in variants with significant spatial eqtls. the gwas-attributed variant list consists of variants, but after filtering results in variants with significant spatial eqtls. overall, the attributed variants results in variants with significant spatial eqtls. red: variants overlapping each set; green: variants filtered from codes d for minor allele frequency (maf) < . ; blue: variants not in the gtex variant dictionary (no variant in gtex). codes d scans the gwas-attributed variant list ( variants) for variants with physical proximity to genes that is supported by allele-specific gene expression changes (eqtls). this analysis found variant-gene-tissues connections, involving gwas-attributed variants. codes d scans the eqtl-attributed variant list ( variants) for variants with physical proximity to genes that is supported by allele-specific gene expression changes (eqtls). this analysis found variant-gene-tissues connections, involving eqtl-attributed variants. we analysed the genetic variants we identified for patterns of histone marks, dnase accessibility, and protein binding motifs in haploreg v . . most of the variants have marks of accessible chromatin (dnase: . %). in addition, almost all of the variants ( . %) have at least one of the three: promoter histone marks ( . %), enhancer histone marks ( . %), proteins binding site ( . %). additionally, of the variants modify protein binding or motif predictions in rad ( ), smc ( ), and/or ctcf ( ). green: protein or motif lists including a cohesin gene. supplementary table . 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transcriptional activity chromatin interactions and expression quantitative trait loci reveal genetic drivers of multimorbidities trans effects on gene expression can drive omnigenic inheritance the nhgri gwas catalog, a curated resource of snp-trait associations haploreg: a resource for exploring chromatin states, conservation, and regulatory motif alterations within sets of genetically linked variants mutations in kinesin family member reveal specific role in ependymal cell ciliogenesis and human neurological development genetic variants in incident sudep cases from a community-based prospective cohort with epilepsy epilepsy in patients with cornelia de lange syndrome: a clinical series no evidence for cardiac dysfunction in kif mutant mice atypical e f repressors and activators coordinate placental development synergistic function of e f and e f is essential for cell survival and embryonic development e f , a novel target, is upregulated by p and mediates dna damage-dependent transcriptional repression variation across , human exomes and genomes reveals the spectrum of loss-of-function intolerance across human protein-coding genes systematic identification of trans eqtls as putative drivers of known disease associations egr transcription factor is a multifaceted regulator of matrix production in tendons and other connective tissues dgidb . : a redesign and expansion of the drug-gene interaction database genetic control of expression and splicing in developing human brain informs disease mechanisms dissecting the genetics of the human transcriptome identifies novel traitrelated trans-eqtls and corroborates the regulatory relevance of non-protein coding loci † leveraging molecular quantitative trait loci to understand the genetic architecture of diseases and complex traits bet inhibition prevents aberrant runx and erg transcription in stag mutant leukaemia cells the cohesin smc is a target the for β-catenin/tcf transactivation pathway smc may play an important role in atopic asthma development degradation of the separase-cleaved rec , a meiotic cohesin subunit, by the nend rule pathway pds prevents the polysumo-dependent separation of sister chromatids genomic atlas of the human plasma proteome genetic effects on gene expression across human tissues gwas on prolonged gestation (post-term birth): analysis of successive finnish birth cohorts profiler: a web server for functional enrichment analysis and conversions of gene lists ( update) predicting effects of noncoding variants with deep learningbased sequence model predictsnp : a unified platform for accurately evaluating snp effects by exploiting the different characteristics of variants in distinct genomic regions this work was supported by a royal society of new zealand marsden grant to jh and jos ( -uoo- ), and ws was supported by the same grant.the drug-gene interaction database only lists known drug interactions for stag and stag , and only for cancer treatments. however, dgidb identifies a large number of drug-gene interactions with the genes identified by codes d. notably, the drug-gene interaction analysis identifies two topoisomerase targets: camptothecin (stag interaction, a topoisomerase-i inhibitor used in cancer treatments) and etoposide (papola and xiap interactions, which inhibits the topoisomerase ii enzyme).supplementary table . hi-c datasets used in this study spatial connections were identified from previously generated hi-c libraries of various origins: ) cell lines gm , hmec, huvec, imr , k , kbm , hela, nhek, and hesc (geo accession numbers gse , gse , and gse ); ) tissue-specific data from encode sourced from the adrenal gland, bladder, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, hippocampus, lung, ovary, pancreas, psoas muscle, right ventricle, small bowel, and spleen (gse ); and ) tissues of neural origin from the cortical and germinal plate neurons (gse ), cerebellar astrocytes, brain vascular pericytes, brain microvascular endothelial cells, sk-n-mc, and spinal cord astrocytes (gse , gse , gse , gse , gse ), and neuronal progenitor cells (gse ). the genes identified by codes d were searched for enrichment in various biological processes through g:profiler, identifying significantly enriched processes. when removing the cohesin genes from the enrichment analysis, processes remain significant (red), including ubiquitin gene ontologies.supplementary table . gene list and g:profiler enrichment for meiosis-specific cohesin genes (rad l , rec , smc b, stag ; g:profiler ) (a) there are genes functionally connected to variants within the meiosis-specific cohesin loci smc b, stag , rec , and rad l . (b) we identified significantly enriched processes, including the gene ontology "male germ cell nucleus" pathway and for transfac targets for the e f transcription factor, which link to meiosis-and cell-cycle specific mechanisms. the gnomad database identified lof-intolerant genes (intolerance defined as pli ≥ . ). here we show the pli for the genes identified by spatial eqtls in our gwas-and eqtl-attributed variant analysis. overall, are lof tolerant, of the genes ( . %) are lof-intolerant, and lack pli. supplementary table . highlights of genes identified within the ubiquitin mediated kegg pathway within the g:profiler analysis, two ubiquitin-mediated kegg pathways were significant even when removing cohesin from the analysis.. here we highlight the pathways and their associated genes, eqtl distance, variant-attributed locus, and source of variant-attribution. the kegg disease pathways identified above are largely identifying lof-intolerant genes ( of [ . %] kegg ubiquitin-mediated proteolysis genes).supplementary table . drug-gene interactions with eqtl-attributed and gwasattributed eqtl genes (dgidb v . ) key: cord- -e q e v authors: mishra, shreya; srivastava, divyanshu; kumar, vibhor title: improving gene-network inference with graph-wavelets and making insights about ageing associated regulatory changes in lungs date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: e q e v using gene-regulatory-networks based approach for single-cell expression profiles can reveal un-precedented details about the effects of external and internal factors. however, noise and batch effect in sparse single-cell expression profiles can hamper correct estimation of dependencies among genes and regulatory changes. here we devise a conceptually different method using graph-wavelet filters for improving gene-network (gwnet) based analysis of the transcriptome. our approach improved the performance of several gene-network inference methods. most importantly, gwnet improved consistency in the prediction of generegulatory-network using single-cell transcriptome even in presence of batch effect. consistency of predicted gene-network enabled reliable estimates of changes in the influence of genes not highlighted by differential-expression analysis. applying gwnet on the single-cell transcriptome profile of lung cells, revealed biologically-relevant changes in the influence of pathways and master-regulators due to ageing. surprisingly, the regulatory influence of ageing on pneumocytes type ii cells showed noticeable similarity with patterns due to effect of novel coronavirus infection in human lung. inferring gene-regulatory-networks and using them for system-level modelling is being widely used for understanding the regulatory mechanism involved in disease and development. the interdependencies among variables in the network is often represented as weighted edges between pairs of nodes, where edge weights could represent regulatory interactions among genes. gene-networks can be used for inferring causal models [ ] , designing and understanding perturbation experiments, comparative analysis [ ] and drug discovery [ ] . due to wide applicability of network inference, many methods have been proposed to estimate interdependencies among nodes. most of the methods are based on pairwise correlation, mutual information or other similarity metrics among gene expression values, provided in a different condition or time point. however, resulting edges are often influenced by indirect dependencies owing to low but effective background similarity in patterns. in many cases, even if there is some true interaction among a pair of nodes, its effect and strength is not estimated properly due to noise, background-pattern similarity and other indirect dependencies. hence recent methods have started using alternative approaches to infer more confident interactions. such alternative approach could be based on partial correlations [ ] or aracne's method of statistical threshold of mutual information [ ] . single-cell expression profiles often show heterogeneity in expression values even in a homogeneous cell population. such heterogeneity can be exploited to infer regulatory networks among genes and identify dominant pathways in a celltype. however, due to the sparsity and ambiguity about the distribution of gene expression from single-cell rna-seq profiles, the optimal measures of gene-gene interaction remain unclear. hence recently, sknnider et al. [ ] evaluated measures of association to infer gene co-expression based network. in their analysis, they found two measures of association, namely phi and rho as having the best performance in predicting co-expression based gene-gene interaction using scrna-seq profiles. in another study, chen et al. [ ] performed independent evaluation of a few methods proposed for genenetwork inference using scrna-seq profiles such as scenic [ ] , scode [ ] , pidc [ ] . chen et al. found that for single-cell transcriptome profiles either generated from experiments or simulations, these methods had a poor performance in reconstructing the network. performance of such methods can be improved if gene-expression profiles are denoised. thus the major challenge of handling noise and dropout in scrna-seq profile is an open problem. the noise in single-cell expression profiles could be due to biological and technical reasons. the biological source of noise could include thermal fluctuations and a few stochastic processes involved in transcription and translation such as allele specific expression [ ] and irregular binding of transcription factors to dna. whereas technical noise could be due to amplification bias and stochastic detection due to low amount of rna. raser and o'shea [ ] used the term noise in gene expression as measured level of its variation among cells supposed to be identical. raser and o'shea categorised potential sources of variation in geneexpression in four types : (i) the inherent stochasticity of biochemical processes due to small numbers of molecules; (ii) heterogeneity among cells due to cell-cycle progression or a random process such as partitioning of mitochondria (iii) subtle micro-environmental differences within a tissue (iv) genetic mutation. overall noise in gene-expression profiles hinders in achieving reliable inference about regulation of gene activity in a cell-type. thus, there is demand for pre-processing methods which can handle noise and sparsity in scrna-seq profiles such that inference of regulation can be reliable. the predicted gene-network can be analyzed further to infer salient regulatory mechanisms in a celltype using methods borrowed from graph theory. calculating gene-importance in term of centrality, finding communities and modules of genes are common downstream analysis procedures [ ] . just like gene-expression profile, inferred gene network could also be used to find differences in two groups of cells(sample) [ ] to reveal changes in the regulatory pattern caused due to disease, environmental exposure or ageing. in particular, a comparison of regulatory changes due to ageing has gained attention recently due to a high incidence of metabolic disorder and infection based mortality in the older population. especially in the current situation of pandemics due to novel coronavirus (sars-cov- ), when older individuals have a higher risk of mortality, a question is haunting researchers. that question is: why old lung cells have a higher risk of developing severity due to sars-cov- infection. however, understanding regulatory changes due to ageing using gene-network inference with noisy single-cell scrna-seq profiles of lung cells is not trivial. thus there is a need of a noise and batch effect suppression method for investigation of the scrna-seq profile of ageing lung cells [ ] using a network biology approach. here we have developed a method to handle noise in gene-expression profiles for improving genenetwork inference. our method is based on graphwavelet based filtering of gene-expression. our approach is not meant to overlap or compete with existing network inference methods but its purpose is to improve their performance. hence, we compared other output of network inference methods with and without graph-wavelet based pre-processing. we have evaluated our approach using several bulk sample and single-cell expression profiles. we further investigated how our denoising approach influences the estimation of graph-theoretic properties of gene-network. we also asked a crucial question: how the gene regulatory-network differs between young and old individual lung cells. further, we compared the pattern in changes in the influence of genes due to ageing with differential expression in covid infected lung. our method uses a logic that cells (samples) which are similar to each other, would have a more similar expression profile for a gene. hence, we first make a network such that two cells are connected by an edge if one of them is among the top k nearest neighbours (knn) of the other. after building knn-based network among cells (samples), we use graph-wavelet based approach to filter expression of one gene at a time (see fig. ). for a gene, we use its expression as a signal on the nodes of the graph of cells. we apply a graph-wavelet transform to perform spectral decomposition of graph-signal. after graph-wavelet transformation, we choose the threshold for wavelet coefficients using sureshrink and bayesshrink or a default percentile value determined after thorough testing on multiple data-sets. we use the retained values of the coefficient for inverse graph-wavelet transformation to reconstruct a filtered expression matrix of the gene. the filtered gene-expression is used for gene-network inference and other down-stream process of analysis of regulatory differences. for evaluation purpose, we have calculated inter-dependencies among genes using different co-expression measurements, namely pearson and spearman correlations, φ and ρ scores and aracne. the biological and technical noise can both exist in a bulk sample expression profile ( [ ] ). in order to test the hypothesis that graph-based denoising could improve gene-network inference, we first evaluated the performance of our method on bulk expression data-set. we used data-sets made available by dream challenge consortium [ ] . three data-sets were based on the original expression profile of bacterium escherichia coli and the single-celled eukaryotes saccharomyces cerevisiae and s aureus. while the fourth data-set was simulated using in silico network with the help of genenetweaver, which models molecular noise in transcription and translation using chemical langevin equation [ ] . the true positive interactions for all the four data-sets are also available. we compared graph fourier based low passfiltering with graph-wavelet based denoising using three different approaches to threshold the waveletcoefficients. we achieved - % improvement in score over raw data based on dream criteria [ ] with correlation, aracne and rho based network prediction. with φ s based gene-network prediction, there was an improvement in out of dream data-sets ( fig. a) . all the network inference methods showed improvement after graphwavelet based denoising of simulated data (in silico) from dream consortium ( fig. a) . moreover, graph-wavelet based filtering had better performance than chebyshev filter-based low pass filtering in graph fourier domain. it highlights the fact that even bulk sample data of gene-expression can have noise and denoising it with graph-wavelet after making knn based graph among samples has the potential to improve gene-network inference. moreover, it also highlights another fact, well known in the signal processing field, that wavelet-based filtering is more adaptive than low pass-filtering. in comparison to bulk samples, there is a higher level of noise and dropout in single-cell expression profiles. dropouts are caused by non-detection of true expression due to technical issues. using low-pass filtering after graph-fourier transform seems to be an obvious choice as it fills in a background signal at missing values and suppresses high-frequency outlier-signal [ ] . however, in the absence of information about cell-type and cellstates, a blind smoothing of a signal may not prove to be fruitful. hence we applied graph-wavelet based filtering for processing gene-expression dataset from the scrna-seq profile. we first used scrna-seq data-set of mouse embryonic stem cells (mescs) [ ] . in order to evaluate network inference in an unbiased manner, we used gene regulatory interactions compiled by another research group [ ] . our approach of graph-wavelet based pre-processing of mesc scrna-seq data-set improved the performance of gene-network inference methods by - percentage (fig. b) . however, most often, the gold-set of interaction used for evaluation of gene-network inference is incomplete, which hinders the true assessment of improvement. figure : the flowchart of gwnet pipeline. first, a knn based network is made between samples/cell. a filter for graph wavelet is learned for the knn based network of samples/cells. gene-expression of one gene at a time is filtered using graph-wavelet transform. filtered gene-expression data is used for network inference. the inferred network is used to calculate centrality and differential centrality among groups of cells. figure : improvement in gene-network inference by graph-wavelet based denoising of gene-expression (a) performance of network inference methods using bulk gene-expression data-sets of dream challenge. three different ways of shrinkage of graph-wavelet coefficients were compared to graph-fourier based low pass filtering. the y-axis shows fold change in area under curve(auc) for receiver operating characteristic curve (roc) for overlap of predicted network with golden-set of interactions. for hard threshold, the default value of % percentile was used. (b) performance evaluation using single-cell rna-seq (scrna-seq) of mouse embryonic stem cells (mescs) based network inference after filtering the gene-expression. the gold-set of interactions was adapted from [ ] (c) comparison of graph wavelet-based denoising with other related smoothing and imputing methods in terms of consistency in the prediction of the gene-interaction network. here, phi (φ s ) score was used to predict network among genes. for results based on other types of scores see supplementary figure s . predicted networks from two scrna-seq profile of mesc were compared to check robustness towards the batch effect. hence we also used another approach to validate our method. for this purpose, we used a measure of overlap among network inferred from two scrna-seq data-sets of the same cell-type but having different technical biases and batch effects. if the inferred networks from both data-sets are closer to true gene-interaction model, they will show high overlap. for this purpose, we used two scrnaseq data-set of mesc generated using two different protocols(smartseq and drop-seq). for comparison of consistency and performance, we also used a few other imputation and denoising methods proposed to filter and predict the missing expression values in scrna-seq profiles. we evaluated other such methods; graph-fourier based filtering [ ] , magic [ ] , scimpute [ ] , dca [ ] , saver [ ] , randomly [ ] , knn-impute [ ] . graphwavelet based denoising provided better improvement in auc for overlap of predicted network with known interaction than other methods meant for imputing and filtering scrna-seq profiles (supplementary figure s a ). similarly in comparison to graph-wavelet based denoising, the other methods did not provided substantial improvement in auc for overlap among gene-network inferred by two data-sets of mesc (fig. c , supplementary figure s b ). however, graph wavelet-based filtering improved the overlap between networks inferred from different batches of scrna-seq profile of mesc even if they were denoised separately (fig. c , supplementary figure s b ). with φ s based edge scores the overlap among predicted gene-network increased by % due to graph-wavelet based denoising (fig. c ). the improvement in overlap among networks inferred from two batches hints that graph-wavelet denoising is different from imputation methods and has the potential to substantially improve gene-network inference using their expression profiles. improved gene-network inference from single-cell profile reveal agebased regulatory differences improvement in overlap among inferred genenetworks from two expression data-set for a cell type also hints that after denoising predicted networks are closer to true gene-interaction profiles. hence using our denoising approach before estimat-ing the difference in inferred gene-networks due to age or external stimuli could reflect true changes in the regulatory pattern. such a notion inspired us to compare gene-networks inferred for young and old pancreatic cells using their scrna-seq profile filtered by our tool [ ] . martin et al. defined three age groups, namely juvenile ( month- years), young adult ( - years) and aged ( - years) [ ] . we applied graph-wavelet based denoising of pancreatic cells from three different groups separately. in other words, we did not mix cells from different age groups while denoising. graph-wavelet based denoising of a singlecell profile of pancreatic cells caused better performance in terms of overlap with protein-protein interaction (ppi) (fig. a , supplementary figure s a ). even though like chen et al. [ ] we have used ppi to measure improvement in genenetwork inference, it may not be reflective of all gene-interactions. hence we also used the criteria of increase in overlap among predicted networks for same cell-types to evaluate our method for scrnaseq profiles of pancreatic cells. denoising scrnaseq profiles also increased overlap between inferred gene-network among pancreatic cells of the old and young individuals (fig. b , supplementary figure s b ). we performed quantile normalization of original and denoised expression matrix taking all age groups together to bring them on the same scale to calculate the variance of expression across cells of every gene. the old and young pancreatic alpha cells had a higher level of median variance of expression of genes than juvenile. however, after graph-wavelet based denoising, the variance level of genes across all the age groups became almost equal and had similar median value (fig. c ). notice that, it is not trivial to estimate the fraction of variances due to transcriptional or technical noise. nonetheless, graph-wavelet based denoising seemed to have reduced the noise level in single-cell expression profiles of old and young adults. differential centrality in the co-expression network has been used to study changes in the influence of genes. however, noise in single-cell expression profiles can cause spurious differences in centrality. hence we visualized the differential degree of genes in network inferred using young and old cells scrna-seq profiles. the networks inferred from non-filtered expression had a much higher number of non-zero differential degree values in comparison to the de-noised version (fig. d, supplementary figure s c ). thus denoising seems to reduce differences among centrality, which could be due to randomness of noise. next, we analyzed the properties of genes whose variance dropped most due to graphwavelet based denoising. surprisingly, we found that top genes with the highest drop in variance due to denoising in old pancreatic beta cells were significantly associated with diabetes mellitus and hyperinsulinism. whereas, top genes with the highest drop in variance in young pancreatic beta cells had no or insignificant association with diabetes (fig. e) . a similar trend was observed with pancreatic alpha cells (supplementary figure s d ) . such a result hint that ageing causes increase in stochasticity of the expression level of genes associated with pancreas function and denoising could help in properly elucidating their dependencies with other genes. improvement in gene-network inference for studying regulatory differences among young and old lung cells. studying cell-type-specific changes in regulatory networks due to ageing has the potential to provide better insight about predisposition for disease in the older population. hence we inferred genenetwork for different cell-types using scrna-seq profiles of young and old mouse lung cells published by kimmel et al. [ ] .the lower lung epithelia where a few viruses seem to have the most deteriorating effect consists of multiple types of cells such as bronchial epithelial and alveolar epithelial cells, fibroblast, alveolar macrophages, endothelial and other immune cells. the alveolar epithelial cells, also called as pneumocytes are of two major types. the type alveolar (at ) epithelial cells for major gas exchange surface of lung alveolus has an important role in the permeability barrier function of the alveolar membrane. type alveolar cells (at ) are the progenitors of type cells and has the crucial role of surfactant production. at cells ( or pneumocytes type ii) cells are a prime target of many viruses; hence it is important to understand the regulatory patterns in at cells, especially in the context of ageing. we applied our method of denoising on scrnaseq profiles of cells derived from old and young mice lung [ ] . graph wavelet based denoising lead to an increase in consistency among inferred genenetwork for young and old mice lung for multiple cell-types (fig. a) . graph-wavelet based denoising also lead to an increase in consistency in predicted gene-network from data-sets published by two different groups (fig. b) . the increase in overlap of gene-networks predicted for old and young cells scrna-seq profile, despite being denoised separately, hints about a higher likelihood of predicting true interactions. hence the chances of finding gene-network based differences among old and young cells were less likely to be dominated by noise. we studied ageing-related changes in pagerank centrality of nodes(genes). since pagerank centrality provides a measure of "popularity" of nodes, studying its change has the potential to highlight the change in the influence of genes. first, we calculated differential pagerank of genes among young and old at cells (supporting file- ) and performed gene-set enrichment analysis using enrichr [ ] . the top genes with higher pagerank in young at cells had enriched terms related to integrin signalling, ht type receptor mediated signalling, h histamine receptor-mediated signalling pathway, vegf, cytoskeleton regulation by rho gtpase and thyrotropin activating receptor signalling (fig. c) . we ignored oxytocin and thyrotropin-activating hormone-receptor mediated signalling pathways as an artefact as the expression of oxytocin and trh receptors in at cells was low. moreover, genes appearing for the terms "oxytocin receptor-mediated signalling" and "thyrotropin activating hormone-mediated signalling" were also present in gene-set for ht type receptormediated signalling pathway. we found literature support for activity in at cells for most of the enriched pathways. however, there were very few studies which showed their differential importance in old and young cells, such as bayer et al. demonstrated mrna expression of several -htr including -ht , ht and ht in alveolar epithelial cells type ii (at ) cells and their role in calcium ion mobilization. similarly, chen et al. [ ] showed that histamine receptor antagonist reduced pulmonary surfactant secretion from adult rat alveolar at cells in primary culture. vegf pathway is active in at cells, and it is known that ageing has an effect on vegf mediated angiogenesis in lung. moreover, vegf based angiogenesis is for comparing two networks it is important to reduce differences due to noise. hence the plot here shows similarity of predicted networks before and after graph-wavelet based denoising. the result shown here are for correlation-based co-expression network, while similar results are shown using ρ score in supplementary figure s . (c) variances of expression of genes across single-cells before and after denoising (filtering) is shown here. variances of genes in a cell-type was calculated separately for different stages of ageing (young, adult and old). the variance (estimate of noise) is higher in older alpha and beta cells compared to young. however, after denoising variance of genes in all ageing stage becomes equal (d) effect of noise in estimated differential centrality is shown is here. the difference in the degree of genes in network estimated for old and young pancreatic beta cells is shown here. the number of non-zero differential-degree estimated using denoised expression is lower than unfiltered expression based networks.(e) enriched panther pathway terms for top genes with the highest drop in variance after denoising in old and young pancreatic beta cells. known to decline with age [ ] . we further performed gene-set enrichment analysis for genes with increased pagerank in older mice at cells. for top genes with higher pagerank in old at cells, the terms which appeared among most enriched in both kimmel et al. and angelids et al. data-sets were t cell activation, b cell activation, cholesterol biosynthesis and fgf signaling pathway, angiogenesis and cytoskeletal regulation by rho gtpase (fig. d) . thus, there was % overlap in results from kimmel et al. and angelids et al. data-sets in terms of enrichment of pathway terms for genes with higher pagerank in older at cells (supplementary figure s a , supporting file- , supporting file- ). overall in our analysis, inflammatory response genes showed higher importance in older at cells. the increase in the importance of cholesterol biosynthesis genes hand in hand with higher inflammatory response points towards the influence of ageing on the quality of pulmonary surfactants released by at . al saedy et al. recently showed that high level of cholesterol amplifies defects in surface activity caused by oxidation of pulmonary surfactant [ ] . we also performed enrichr based analysis of differentially expressed genes in old at cells (supporting file- ). for genes up-regulated in old at cells compared to young, terms which reappeared were cholesterol biosynthesis, t cell and b cell activation pathways, angiogenesis and inflammation mediated by chemokine and cytokine signalling. whereas few terms like ras pathway, jak/stat signalling and cytoskeletal signalling by rho gt-pase did not appear as enriched for genes upregulated in old at cells ( figure b , supporting file- ). however previously, it has been shown that the increase in age changes the balance of pulmonary renin-angiotensin system (ras), which is correlated with aggravated inflammation and more lung injury [ ] . jak/stat pathway is known to be involved in the oxidative-stress induced decrease in the expression of surfactant protein genes in at cells [ ] . overall, these results indicate that even though the expression of genes involved in relevant pathways may not show significant differences due to ageing, but their regulatory influence could be changing substantially. in order to further gain insight, we analyzed the changes in the importance of transcription factors in ageing at cells. among top genes with higher pagerank in old at cells, we found several relevant tfs. however, to make a stringent list, we considered only those tfs which had nonzero value for change in degree among gene-network for old and young at cells. overall, with kimmel at el. data-set, we found tfs with a change in pagerank and degree (supplementary table- ) due to ageing for at cells (fig. e) . the changes in centrality (pagerank and degree) of tfs with ageing was coherent with pathway enrichment results. such as etv which has higher degree and pagerank in older cells, is known to be stabilized by ras signalling in at cells [ ] . in the absence of etv at cell differentiate to at cells [ ] . another tf jun (c-jun) having stronger influence in old at cells, is known to regulate inflammation lung alveolar cells [ ] . we also found jun to be having co-expression with jund and etv in old at cell (supplementary figure s ) . jund whose influence seems to increase in aged at cells is known to be involved in cytokine-mediated inflammation. among the tfs stat - which are involved in jak/stat signalling, stat showed higher degree and pagerank in old at . androgen receptor(ar) also seem to have a higher influence in older at cells (fig. e ). androgen receptor has been shown to be expressed in at cells [ ] . we further performed a similar analysis for the scrna-seq profile of interstitial macrophages(ims) in lungs and found literature support for the activity of enriched pathways (supporting file- ). whereas gene-set enrichment output for important genes in older ims had some similarity with results from at cells as both seem to have higher pro-inflammatory response pathway such as t cell activation and jak/stat signalling. however, unlike at cells, ageing in ims seem to cause an increase in glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway. higher glycolysis and pentose phosphate pathway activity levels have been previously reported to be involved in the pro-inflammatory response in macrophages by viola et al. [ ] . in our results, ras pathway was not enriched significantly for genes with a higher importance in older macrophages. such results show that the pro-inflammatory pathways activated due to aging could vary among different cell-types in lung. for the same type of cells, the predicted networks for old and young cells seem to have higher overlap after graph-wavelet based filtering. the label "raw" here means that, both networks (for old and young) were inferred using unfiltered scrna-seq profiles. wheres the same result from denoised scrna-seq profile is shown as filtered. networks were inferred using correlation-based co-expression. in current pandemic due to sars-cov- , a trend has emerged that older individuals have a higher risk of developing severity and lung fibrosis than the younger population. since our analysis revealed changes in the influence of genes in lung cells due to ageing, we compared our results with expression profiles of lung infected with sars-cov- published by blanco-melo et al. [ ] . recently it has been shown that at cells predominantly express ace , the host cell surface receptor for sars-cov- attachment and infection [ ] . thus covid infection could have most of the dominant effect on at cells. we found that genes with significant upregulation in sars-cov- infected lung also had higher pagerank in gene-network inferred for older at cells (fig. a) . we also repeated the process of network inference and calculating differential centrality among old and young using all types of cells in the lung together (supporting file- ). we performed gene-set enrichment for genes up-regulated in sars-cov- infected lung. majority of the panther pathway terms enriched for genes up-regulated in sars-cov- infected lung also had enrichment for genes with higher pagerank in old lung cells (combined). total out of significantly enriched panther pathways for genes up-regulated in covid- infected lung, were also enriched for genes with higher pagerank in older at cells in either of the two data-sets used here ( in angelids et al., in kimmel et al. data-based results). among the top enriched wikipathway terms for genes up-regulated in covid infected lung, has significant enrichment for genes with higher pagerank in old at cells (supporting file- ). however, the term type-ii interferon signalling did not have significant enrichment for genes with higher pagerank in old at cells. we further investigated enriched motifs of transcription factors in promoters of genes up-regulated in covid infected lungs (supplementary methods). for promoters of genes up-regulated in covid infected lung top two enriched motifs belonged to irf (interferon regulatory factor) and ets family tfs. notice that etv belong to sub-family of ets groups of tfs. further analysis also revealed that most of the genes whose expression is positively cor-related with etv in old at cells is up-regulated in covid infected lung. in contrast, genes with negative correlation with etv in old at cells were mostly down-regulated in covid infected lung. a similar trend was found for stat gene. however, for erg gene with higher pagerank in young at cell, the trend was the opposite. in comparison to genes with negative correlation, positively correlated genes with erg in old at cell, had more downregulation in covid infected lung. such trend shows that a few tfs like etv , stat with higher pagerank in old at cells could be having a role in poising or activation of genes which gain higher expression level on covid infection. inferring regulatory changes in pure primary cells due to ageing and other conditions, using singlecell expression profiles has tremendous potential for various applications. such applications could be understanding the cause of development of a disorder or revealing signalling pathways and master regulators as potential drug targets. hence to support such studies, we developed gwnet to assist biologists in work-flow for graph-theory based analysis of single-cell transcriptome. gwnet improves inference of regulatory interaction among genes using graph-wavelet based approach to reduce noise due to technical issues or cellular biochemical stochasticity in gene-expression profiles. we demonstrated the improvement in gene-network inference using our filtering approach with benchmark data-sets from dream consortium and several single-cell expression profiles. using different ways for inferring network, we showed how our approach for filtering gene-expression can help genenetwork inference methods. our results of comparison with other imputation, smoothing methods and graph-fourier based filtering showed that graph-wavelet is more adaptive to changes in the expression level of genes with changing neighborhood of cells. thus graph-wavelet based denoising is a conceptually different approach for preprocessing of gene-expression profiles. there is a huge body of literature on inferring gene-networks from bulk gene-expression profile and utilizing it to find differences among two groups of samples. however, applying classical procedures on single- shown for erg, which have higher pagerank in young at cells. most of the genes which had a positive correlation with etv and stat expression in old murine at cells were up-regulated in covid infected lung. whereas for erg the trend is the opposite. genes positively correlated with erg genes in old at had more down-regulation than genes with negative correlation. such results hint that tfs whose influence (pagerank) increase during ageing could be involved activating or poising the genes up-regulated in covid infection. cell transcriptome profiles has not proved to be effective. our method seems to resolve this issue by increasing consistency and overlap among gene-networks inferred using an expression from different sources (batches) for the same cell-type even if each data-sets was filtered independently. such an increase in overlap among predicted network from independently processed data-sets from different sources hint that estimated dependencies among genes reach closer to true values after graphwavelet based denoising of expression profiles. having network prediction closer to true values increases the reliability of comparison of a regulatory pattern among two groups of cells. moreover, recently chow and chen [ ] have shown that age-associated genes identified using bulk expression profiles of the lung are enriched among those induced or suppressed by sars-cov- infection. however, they did not perform analysis with systems-level approach. our analysis highlighted ras and jak/stat pathways to be enriched for genes with stronger influence in old at cells and genes up-regulated in covid infected lung. ras/mapk signalling is considered essential for self-renewal of at cell [ ] . similarly, jak/stat pathway is known to be activated in the lung during injury [ ] and influence surfactant quality [ ] . we have used murine aging-lung scrna-seq profiles however our analysis provides an important insight that regulatory patterns and master-regulators in old at cells are in such a configuration that they could be predisposing it for a higher level of ras and jak/stat signalling. androgen receptor (ar) which has been implicated in male pattern baldness and increased risk of males towards covid infection [ ] had higher pagerank and degree in old at cells. however, further investigation is needed to associate ar with severity on covid infection due to ageing. on the other hand, in young at cells, we find a high influence of genes involved in histamine h receptor-mediated signalling, which is known to regulate allergic reactions in lungs [ ] . another benefit of our approach of analysis is that it can highlight a few specific targets of further study for therapeutics. such as a kinase that binds and phosphorylates c-jun called as jnk is being tested in clinical trials for pulmonary fibrosis [ ] . androgen deprivation therapy has shown to provide partial protection against sars-cov- infection [ ] . on the same trend, our analysis hints that etv could also be considered as drug-target to reduce the effect of ageing induced ras pathway activity in the lung. we used the term noise in gene-expression according to its definition by several researchers such as raser and o'shea [ ] ; as the measured level of variation in gene-expression among cells supposed to be identical. hence we first made a base-graph (networks) where supposedly identical cells are connected by edges. for every gene we use this basegraph and apply graph-wavelet transform to get an estimate of variation of its expression in every sample (cells) with respect to other connected samples at different levels of graph-spectral resolution. for this purpose, we first calculated distances among samples (cells). to get a better estimate of distances among samples (cells) one can perform dimension reduction of the expression matrix using tsne [ ] or principal component analysis. we considered every sample (cell) as a node in the graph and connected two nodes with an edge only when one of them was among k-nearest neighbors of the other. here we decide the value of k in the range of - , based on the number of samples(cells) in the expression data-sets. thus we calculated the preliminary adjacency matrix using k-nearest neighbours (knn) based on euclidean distance metric between samples of the expression matrix. we used this adjacency matrix to build a base-graph. thus each vertex in the base-graph corresponds to each sample and edge weights to the euclidean distance between them. the weighted graph g built using knn based adjacency matrix comprises of a finite set of vertices v which corresponds to cells (samples), a set of edges e denoting connection between samples (if exist) and a weight function which gives nonnegative weighted connections between cells (samples). this weighted matrix can also be defined as a n xn (n being number of cells) weighted adjacency matrix a where a ij is if there is no edge between cells i and j , otherwise a ij = weight(i, j) if there exist an edge between i, j. the degree of a cell in the graph is the sum of weights of edges incident on that cell. also, diagonal degree matrix d of this graph comprises of degree d(i) if i = j, otherwise. a non-normalized graph laplacian operator l for a graph is defined as l = d − a. the normalized form of graph laplacian operator is defined as : both laplacian operators produce different eigenvectors [ ] . however, we have used a normalized form of laplacian operator for the graph between cells. the graph laplacian is further used for graph fourier transformation of signals on nodes (see supplementary methods) ([ ] [ ] ). for filtering in the fourier domain, we used chebyshev-filter for gene expression profile. we took the expression of each gene at a time considering it as a signal and projected it onto the raw graph (where each vertex corresponds to each sample) object [ ] . we took forward fourier transform of signal and filtered the signal using chebyshev filter in the fourier domain and then inverse transformed the signal to calculate filtered expression. this same procedure was repeated for every gene. this would finally give us filtered gene expression. spectral graph wavelet entails choosing a nonnegative real-valued kernel function which can behave as a bandpass filter and is similar to fourier transform. the re-scaled kernel function of graph laplacian gives wavelet operator which eventually produce graph wavelet coefficients at each scale. however, using continuous functional calculus one can define a function of self adjoint operator on the basis of spectral representation of graph. although for a graph with finite dimensional laplacian, this can be achieved by eigenvalues and eigenvectors of laplacian l [ ] . the wavelet operator is given by t g = g(l). t g f gives wavelet coefficients for a signal f at scale = . this operator operates on eigenvectors u l as t g u l = g(λ l )u l . hence, for any graph signal, operator t g operates on the signal by adjusting each graph fourier coefficient as and inverse fourier transform given as the wavelet operator at every scale s is given as t s g = g(sl). these wavelet operators are localized to obtain individual wavelets by applying them to δ n , with δ n being a signal with on vertex n and zero otherwise [ ] . thus considering coefficients at every scale, the inverse transform can be obtained as here, in spite of filtering in fourier domain, we took wavelet coefficients of each gene expression signal at different scales. thresholding was applied on each scale to filter wavelet coefficients. we applied both hard and soft thresholding on wavelet coefficients. for soft thresholding, we implemented well-known methods sure shrink and bayes shrink. finding an optimal threshold for wavelet coefficients for denoising linear-signals and images has remained a subject of intensive research. we evaluated both soft and hard thresholding approaches and tested an information-theoretic criterion known as the minimum description length principle (mdl). using our tool gwnet, user can choose from multiple options of finding threshold such as visushrink, sureshrink and mdl. here, we have used hard-thresholding for most the data-sets as proper soft-thresholding of graph-wavelet coefficient is itself a topic of intensive research and may need further fine-tuning. one can also use hardthreshold value based on the best overlap among predicted gene-network and protein-protein interaction (ppi). while applying it on multiple datasets we realized that threshold cutoffs estimated by mdl criteria and best overlap of predicted network with known interaction and ppi, were in the range of - percentile. for comparing predicted network from multiple data-sets, we needed uniform percentile cutoff to threshold graph-wavelet coefficients. hence for uniform analysis of several datasets, we have set the default threshold value of percentile. hence in default mode, wavelet coefficient with absolute value less than percentile was made equal to zero. gwnet tool is flexible, and any network inferences method can be plugged in it for making regulatory inferences using a graph-theoretic approach. here, for single-cell rna-seq data, we have used gene-expression values in the form of fpkm (fragments per kilobase of exon model per million reads mapped). we pre-processed single-cell gene expression by quantile normalization and log transformation. to start with, we used spearman and pearson correlation to achieve a simple estimate of the measure of inter-dependencies among genes. we also used aracne ( algorithm for the reconstruction of accurate cellular networks) to infer network among genes. aracne first computes mutual information for each gene-pair. then it considers all possible triplet of genes and applies the data processing inequality (dpi) to remove indirect interactions. according to dpi, if gene i and gene j do not interact directly with each other but show dependency via gene k, the following inequality hold where i(g i , g j ) represents mutual information between gene i and gene j. aracne also removes interaction with mutual information less than a particular threshold eps. we have used eps value to recently skinnider et al., [ ] showed superiority of two measures of proportionality rho(ρ) and phi(φ s ) [ ] for estimating gene-coexpression network using single-cell transcriptome profile. hence we also evaluated the benefit of graph-wavelet based denoising of gene-expression with measures of proportionality ρ and φ s . the measures of proportionality φ can be defined as φ(g i , g j ) = var(g i − g j ) var(g i ) where g i is the vector containing log values of expression of a gene i across multiple samples (cells) and var() represents variance function. the symmetric version of φ can be written as whereas rho can be defined as to estimate both measures of proportionality, ρ and φ, we used 'propr' package . [ ] . the networks inferred from filtered and unfiltered gene-expression were compared to the ground truth. ground truth for dream challenge dataset was already available while for single-cell expression, we assembled the ground truth from hip-pie (human integrated protein-protein interaction reference) database [ ] . we considered all edges possible in network, sorted them based on the significance of edge weights. we calculated the area under the receiver operator curve for both raw and filtered networks by comparing against edges in the ground truth. receiver operator is a standard performance evaluation metrics from the field of machine learning, which has been used in the dream evaluation method with some modifications. the modification for receiver operating curve here is that for x-axis instead of false-positive rate, we used a number of edges sorted according to their weights. for evaluation all possible edges sorted based on their weights in network are taken from the gene-network inferred from filtered and raw graphs. we calculated improvement by measuring fold change between raw and filtered scores. we compared the results of our approach of graphwavelet based denoising with other methods meant for imputation or reducing noise in scrna-seq profiles. for comparison we used graph-fourier based filtering [ ] , magic [ ] , scimpute [ ] , dca [ ] , saver [ ] , randomly [ ] , knn-impute [ ] . brief descriptions and corresponding parameters used for other methods are written in supplementary method. the bulk gene-expression data used here evaluation was download from dream portal (http://dreamchallenges.org/project/dream- network-inference-challenge/). the single-cell expression profile of mesc generated using different protocols [ ] was downloaded for geo database (geo id: gse ). single-cell expression profile of pancreatic cells from individuals with different age groups was downloaded from geo database (geo id:gse ). the scrna-seq profile of murine aging lung published by kimmel et al. [ ] is available with geo id : gse . while aging lung scrna-seq data published by angelids et al. [ ] is available with geo id: gse . the code for graph-wavelet based filtering of gene-expression is available at http://reggen. iiitd.edu.in: /graphwavelet/index.html. the codes are present at https://github. com/reggenlab/gwnet/ and supporting files are present at https://github.com/reggenlab/ gwnet/tree/master/supporting$_$files. an integrative approach for causal gene identification and gene regulatory pathway inference singlecell transcriptomics unveils gene regulatory network plasticity chemogenomic profiling of plasmodium falciparum as a tool to aid antimalarial drug discovery supervised, semi-supervised and unsupervised inference of gene regulatory networks reverse engineering cellular networks evaluating measures of association for single-cell transcriptomics evaluating methods of inferring gene regulatory networks highlights their lack of performance for single cell gene expression data scenic: single-cell regulatory network inference and clustering scode: an efficient regulatory network inference algorithm from single-cell rna-seq during differentiation gene regulatory network inference from single-cell data using multivariate information measures characterizing noise structure in single-cell rna-seq distinguishes genuine from technical stochastic allelic expression noise in gene expression: origins, consequences, and control, science comparative assessment of differential network analysis methods murine single-cell rna-seq reveals cellidentity-and tissue-specific trajectories of aging wisdom of crowds for robust gene network inference genenetweaver: in silico benchmark generation and performance profiling of network inference methods enhancing experimental signals in single-cell rna-sequencing data using graph signal processing comparative analysis of single-cell rna sequencing methods a gene regulatory network in mouse embryonic stem cells recovering gene interactions from single-cell data using data diffusion an accurate and robust imputation 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transcription factor etv is essential for the maintenance of alveolar type ii cells, proceedings of the national academy of sciences of the united states of targeted deletion of jun/ap- in alveolar epithelial cells causes progressive emphysema and worsens cigarette smoke-induced lung inflammation androgen receptor and androgen-dependent gene expression in lung the metabolic signature of macrophage responses imbalanced host response to sars-cov- drives development of covid- single cell rna sequencing of human tissues identify cell types and receptors of human coronaviruses the aging transcriptome and cellular landscape of the human lung in relation to sars-cov- jak-stat pathway activation in copd, the european androgen hazards with covid- the h histamine receptor regulates allergic lung responses late breaking abstract -evaluation of the jnk inhibitor, cc- , in a phase b pulmonary fibrosis trial androgen-deprivation therapies for prostate cancer and risk of infection by sars-cov- : a population-based study (n = ) visualizing data using t-sne discrete signal processing on graphs: frequency analysis wavelets on graphs via spectral graph theory how should we measure proportionality on relative gene expression data? propr: an r-package for identifying proportionally abundant features using compositional data analysis hippie v . : enhancing meaningfulness and reliability of protein-protein interaction networks an atlas of the aging lung mapped by single cell transcriptomics and deep tissue proteomics we thank dr gaurav ahuja for providing us valuable advice on analysis of single-cell expression profile of ageing cells. none declared.vibhor kumar is an assistant professor at iiit delhi, india. he is also an adjunct scientist at genome institute of singapore. his interest include genomics and signal processing.divyanshu srivastava completed his thesis on graph signal processing for masters degree at computational biology department in iiit delhi, india. he has applied graph signal processing on protein structures and gene-expression data-sets.shreya mishra is a phd student at computational biology department in iiit delhi, india. her interest include data sciences and genomics. • we found that graph-wavelet based denoising of gene-expression profiles of bulk samples and singlecells can substantially improve gene-regulatory network inference.• more consistent prediction of gene-network due to denoising lead to reliable comparison of predicted networks from old and young cells to study the effect of ageing using single-cell transcriptome.• our analysis revealed biologically relevant changes in regulation due to aging in lung pneumocyte type ii cells, which had similarity with effects of covid infection in human lung.• our analysis highlighted influential pathways and master regulators which could be topic of further study for reducing severity due to ageing. key: cord- -b q gbd authors: mickael, alexandra; klimovich, pavel; henckel, patrick; kubick, norwin; mickael, michel e title: asip (agouti-signaling protein) aggression gene regulate auditory processing genes in mice date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: b q gbd covid- strategy of lockdown has affected the lives of millions. the strict actions to enclose the epidemic have exposed many households to inner tensions. domestic violence has been reported to increase during the lockdown. however, the reasons for this phenomenon have not been thoroughly investigated. melanocortin gpcrs family contribution to aggression is well documented. asip (nonagouti) gene plays a vital role in regulating the melanocortin gpcrs family function, and it is responsible for regulating aggression in mice. we conducted a selection analysis of asip. we found that it negatively purified from shark to humans. in order to better asses the effect of this gene in mammals, we performed rna-seq analysis of a knockout of an asip crisper-cas mouse model. we found that asip ko in mice upregulates several genes controlling auditory function, including phox b, mpk , fat , neurod , slc a , gon l gbx , slc a (dat ) aldh a tyrp and lbx . interestingly, we found that slc a , and lamp as well as il , which are associated with startle disease, are also upregulated in response to knocking out asip. these findings are indicative of a direct autoimmune effect between aggression-associated genes and startle disease. furthermore, in order to validate the link between aggression and auditory inputs processing. we conducted psychological tests of persons who experienced lockdown. we found that aggression has risen by % during the lockdown. furthermore, % of the subjects interviewed reported a change in their hearing abilities. our data shed light on the importance of the auditory input in aggression and open perceptions to interpret how hearing and aggression interact at the molecular neural circuit level. the link between social lockdown and aggression is well established. aggression can be categorized as a beneficial evolutionary trait as it might indicate survival when individuals are competing for resources. conversely, aggressiveness might also impede social cohesion. social lockdown can lead to psychological problems, including anxiety, depression, antisocial, and violence-related behaviors. for example, orca confinement in closed places exhibits aggressive behaviors [ ] . in humans, release from mandatory confinement indoors was correlated with decreases in both verbal and physical aggression [ , ] . during covid- lockdown, . % of participants of a study investigating the effect of lockdown reported worsened sleep, increased levels of irritation, anger, and aggression compared to pre-pandemic times [ ] . furthermore, % of all participants reported experiencing interpersonal violence (ipv) [ ] . however, the factors causing aggression are not yet well investigated. melanocortin system plays an important role in regulating aggression. it is widely documented that the peptide hormone pro-opiomelanocortin (pomc) acts as a precursor for various (neuro)peptides including α -melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-msh), adreno-corticotrophin (acth) and β -endorphin.the function of melanocortins is regulated by the activation of a family of melanocortin receptor subtypes. α -msh binds to mcrs in the brain, where it regulates social behavior, appetite and stress physiology. α -msh acts as a neurotransmitter in the brain where it can modulate behavior mainly via central mc r and mc r in a variety of ways including regulating the dopaminergic reward system. melanocortin- receptor deficiency reduces a pheromone signal for aggression in male mice [ ] . interestingly, agouti signaling peptide (asip) and agouti-related peptide (agrp) have diverse functional roles in feeding, pigmentation and background adaptation mechanisms. interestingly, asip serves as anof the mc r and the mc r receptors. it seems melancortin system diverged from adenosine receptors around the time of divergence of hydra vulgaris [ ] . serotonin receptors that are known to play a distinctive role in aggression seemed to have evolved as they have been found in trichoplax adhereans [ ] . while dopamine receptors diverged afterwards around the time of emergence of ciona intestinalis [ ] . however, the inter-regulation mechanism between these four families is still not clear. hearing as a sensory modality in the context of aggressive behavior has been shown to play a major role in controlling behavior [ ] . precise integration and processing of sensory inputs are crucial to evoke a suitable behavioral response [ ] . in crickets, aggression songs are associated with cricket fights [ ] . mice lacking asic show reduced anxiety like behavior on the elevated plus maze and reduced aggression [ ] . asic was also shown to affect hearing [ ] . these reports indicate that aggression and hearing are possibly interlinked. previous reports have shown various sensory modalities in mediating of aggressive behavior in drosophila melanogaster including olfactory, gustatory, as well as visual neural networks [ ] . furthermore it was found that, neuronal silencing and targeted knockdown of hearing genes such as d trpl (transient receptor potential-like) and the ca + signaling-related genes arr and inad in the fly's auditory organ elicit abnormal aggression [ ] . these observation indicates that hearing could regulating aggression behavior. however if aggression controls hearing is not yet known. interestingly, melanocytes present in the cochlea have an essential function in inner ear physiology. they protect against various types of hearing loss, including age-related hearing loss (arhl) and noise-related hearing loss (nihl), by means of calcium buffering, heavy metal scavenging, and antioxidant activities [ ] . however if aggressiveness is directly affecting hearing abilities is still not known. furthermore there has no been earlier reports of asip investigations that have shown a direct link between asip and hearing. in this study, we have investigated the role of asip in linking aggression and the hearing system. in order to confirm that our mice model study would be representative of aggression hearing link, we conducted an evolutionary study that revealed that asip is negatively selected between mice and humans. we analyzed an rna-seq data in which asip was knocked out from japanese wild-derived msm/ms strain using crispr/cas genome editing. we found that numerous hearing associated genes were upregulated in the ko mouse model including those linked to startle disease. in order to validate our results we conducted behavioral tests, to investigate whether the rise in aggression during the covid- period has affected hearing patterns, we found that there % individuals interviewed experience a change in their hearing abilities while engaging in arguments during lockdown. phylogenetic investigation was done in three stages. first, asip family amino acid sequences were aligned using mafft via the iterative refinement method (fft-ns-i).next, we employed prottest to conclude the best amino acid replacement model [ ] . prottest results based on the akaike information criterion (aic) suggested that the best substitution model is lg+i+g+f., lg is the substitution model supplemented by a fraction of invariable amino acids ('+i') with each site assigned a probability of belonging to given rate categories ('+g') and observed amino acid frequencies ('+f'). the third stage involved employing the protein alignment and the resulting substitution model, in applying two different phylogenetic methods to construct the tree, namely, ( ) maximum likelihood and ( ) bayesian inference. we performed the maximum likelihood analysis using phyml [ ] implemented in seaview with random starting trees [ ] . we applied bayesian inference analysis using mrbayes where we implemented a markov chain monte carlo analysis with , generations to approximate the posterior probability and a standard deviation of split frequencies < . to indicate convergence as previously described. we used the coding dna alignment and our final tree to investigate the ratio of non-synonymous (dn) to synonymous (ds) amino acid substitutions using the paml program. likelihood ratio tests (lrt) were constructed to compare the p-values of χ square tests for selective pressure models against neutral models. one level of analysis was investigated. this level calculates the global ω for the tree using the one-ratio model m [ ] where ω = dn/ds, with trees under purifying selection ( ). the overall design of the rna experiment was as follows: the mid brain section was isolated from japanese wild-derived msm/ms japanese mice ( control and ko) [ ] . total rna was purified from dissected midbrain using trizol (thermo fisher scientific). purified total rna was amplified and labeled with cy using low-input quickamp labeling kit (agilent technologies). cy -labeled rnas were hybridized to sureprint g mouse gene expression v x k microarray kit (agilent technologies) at °c for h. the scanned images were processed with feature extraction software (agilent technologies) to extract signal intensities of each probe. the extracted signal data were imported into the gene spring gx . . software (agilent technologies) and normalized using the default settings. rnaseq analysis was then performed in r using limma [ ] . briefly, we employed the limma rna-seq differential gene expression method to compute the non-parametric approximations of mean-variance relationships. this allowed us to calculate the weights for a linear model analysis of log-transformed counts in conjunction with the empirical bayes shrinkage of variance parameters. differential expression analysis was performed to determine the differences in gene expression between +lps cells and nontreated samples by fitting a linear model to compute the variability in the data with lmfit [ , ]. pathway enrichment was done using the library fgsea[ ]. the network between chosen genes was calculated using the glasso module utilizing the webserver geneck [ ] with default settings. data were downloaded from http://www.proteinatlas.org [ ] . for a protein to be a candidate biomarker it should be medium or high expressed in normal brain .we arbitrarily set our selection criteria for candidate genes that were found to be upregulated in the rna-seq study. the present study included participants who reported no prior aggression, or depression diagnosis. the sample size was determined by the g power analysis. the participants reported age ranged between to years. the education level of participants varied from uneducated to master's degree. informed written consent was taken from the participants after explaining them the purpose of research. exclusion criteria; participants with some serious general medical condition were also not selected. aggression was measured buss-perry aggression questionnaire [ ] . this scale consists of four subscales of physical aggression verbal aggression, anger and hostility the participants were asked to evaluate each item on a -point likert scale ranging from (not true) to (true). the consistency for each category was confirmed in with cronbach alphas ranging from . to . [ ] . in this study, the alphas for the subscales were . for physical aggression, . for verbal aggression, . for anger, and . for hostility, respectively. the descriptive scores of the four subscales were considered by averaging the item scores. we examined whether aggression behavior could be caused by social stress. we employed the bergen social relationship scale (bsrs) which measures the interpersonal relationship problems [ ] . it is a six element self-report quantity. the answers were on four points scale using the notions of "describe me well ( )" to "do not describe me at all". the scores system was divided from to , where a higher score signifies higher interpersonal conflicts. cronbach's alpha for the bsrs was reported to be . . the testretest correlation was reported to be . . the construct validity of the bsrs was ranged from . to . , all statistically significant at p < . . our results indicate that aggression-inducing gene the conserved aggression genes asip is responsible for down regulating several genes responsible for hearing and acoustic processing in mice. our results also shows that this gene is strongly conserved between mice and humans. when we analyzed rna-seq for asip ko mouse model we found that several genes controlling hearing were upregulated in the ko samples. specifically, phox b, mpk , fat , neurod , slc a , gon l gbx , slc a aldh a tyrp and lbx genes were down regulated in asip (ko). interestingly, we found that slc a , and lamp as well as il , which are associated with startle disease, are also upregulated in response to knocking out asip. these results imply that asip is playing a fundamental role in startle disease and that the startle disease pathology is connected to the patient's response to aggression. we found the link between hearing abilities and aggression mirrored in human samples where people whose experienced aggression behavior lockdown, also reported hearing abilities change. our results shed more light on the link between aggression and processing acoustic signals in humans. agouti evolution was under negative selection. our results extend what has been reported by saeed et al. we were able to locate human asip gene homologs in chimps, orangutan, mice, and chicken (figure x) . we found two homologs of the gene in zebrafish as well as in elephant shark (faa . , and faa . ). interestingly, we were only able to find a single copy of the gene in the reed fish erpetoichthys calabaricus (xp_ . ), suggesting that reed fish lost one homolog. we were not able to locate any asip genes in lampreys. however, we were able to locate several melanocortin receptors (e.g. xp_ . , serotonin, xp_ . , adenosine (xp_ . ) and dopamine receptors xp_ . . suggesting that lampreys have evolved its unique pathways for regulation of aggression. we were not able to locate asip in hagfish hyperotreti, ciona intestinalis, hydra vulgaris, drosophila melanogaster, trichoplax adhaerens or caenorhabditis elegans. these observations indicate that asip first emerged during the divergence of gnathostomata and hyperoartia (lampreys). identity and similarity analysis indicated that asip is highly conserved. for example, the similarity between humans chimp for asip was . %, while with the mouse, it was ( . %) (figure) . furthermore, w ds/dn showed a value of . , confirming that the genes evolved under negative selection (figure x) . we analyzed the geo dataset gse . in this dataset, crispr/cas -mediated genome editing in wild-derived mice was performed to generate tamed wild-derived strains by mutation of the a (nonagouti) gene. these tamed mice show non aggressive behavior when tested through the () test. we found genes related to hearing and acoustic signals processing upregulated in the ko mice. we also found that serotonin level was directly down regulated by knocking out agouti gene (figure ). other aggressiveness related genes that were down regulated include () . however interestingly we found serveal genes that are associated with aggressive behavior have not been affected such as cfos, and…. notably, we did not see any change in the inflammatory pathway in this particular model. however, using the geo data set () that uses (), we found that cd pathway was affected (figure ) as well as () patwhay. (figure ). ( figure =ihc ) to investigate the role of asip in the auditory sensory mechanisms, we analyzed the public microarray of cochlear sensory epithelia versus embryonic stem cells. we found that asip is upregulated in cochlear sensory epithelia but not in embryonic stem cells (fold change . ). interestingly mcr was not upregulated ( . ) indicative of asip a regulatory role of melanocortin receptors under homeostasis. fat , slc a , gon l, dat , aldh a were also not upregulated confirming our hypothesis of a regulatory effect of asip on these hearing related genes. to investigate the role of asip in the cochlear sensory epithelia, we analyzed the public microarray of cochlear sensory epithelia treated with lpl. we found that asip is upregulated in cochlear sensory epithelia but not in embryonic stem cells (fold change . ). interestingly il known to perform regulation of inflammatory pathway was not upregulated. interestingly mcr was not upregulated ( . ) indicative of asip a regulatory role of melanocortin receptors under homeostasis. fat , slc a , gon l, dat , aldh a were also not upregulated confirming our hypothesis of a regulatory effect of asip on these hearing related genes. our studies suggest a direct link between acoustic processing and aggression. we have investigated the relationship between aggression induced by lockdown and hearing. we found that % of individuals who answered the questionnaire reported some difference in their hearing ability. this includes both and negative abilities. we found these results reflected in the molecular pathway of melanocortin receptors and , where their knocking out their negative agonist; asip resulted in upregulating various hearing associated genes such as fat among others. we also noticed that of the genes associated with hearing affected by knocking out of asip is slc a and il , which showed upregulation; both these genes were associated with startle disease. we investigated asip further and we found that it is expressed in cochlear sensory epithelial cells. from an evolutionary point of view, asip is more recent than melanocortin receptors. taken together, our results suggest that asip divergence represent the evolution of new mechanism linking hearing and aggression in higher animals. our analysis has shown that the asip gene diverged around mya ago. ingo et al,( pmid: ) have shown that agouti exist in teleost. we have found it in elasmobranchs, proving it was more ancient than previously thought. the endocrine related genes that play an important role in aggression include, serotonin, with low levels of serotonin associated with violent behavior and suicidal thoughts. serotonin perform its role in aggression through a network of genes including maoa and maob, (which play a role in the metabolism of biogenic amines), slc a , (which acts as serotonin transporter) and tryptophan hydroxylase enzyme (tph ) (which catalyzes the rate-limiting step in the synthesis of serotonin). it has been shown that polymorphism of metabolic enzymes, carrier proteins, and receptors on the serotonergic system are associated with an increased aggressive behavior pattern. interestingly, serotonin receptors diverged during the time of trichoplax adhaerens. in human studies, a positive relationship between aggressiveness -methoxy- -hydroxyphenylglycol (mhpg) (norepherinrine product) and has been established. noradrenaline transporter (slc a ), − t allele is more dominate in adhd in americans of european descent, thus proving a questionable link with aggression. interestingly, β -type noradrenergic receptor blocker have been shown to reduce aggressive behavior in some but not all patients tested, suggesting that aggression is controlled by a host of gene networks. adrenergic receptors also evolved during the time of evolution of trichoplax adhaerens. it seems the melanocortin system diverged from adenosine receptors during the divergence of hydra vulgaris (pmid: ). conversely, arginine vasopressin levels are positively correlated with life history of aggression have evolved ruing the emergence of ciona intestinalis. another important endocrine mechanism is the dopamine reward system, for example, the gene dbh is a key enzyme in the synthesis of norepinephrine which is associated with conduct disorder. however, dopamine receptors first appeared during the emergence of ciona intestinalis. acetylcholine receptors also implicated in aggression behavior diverged during danio rerio emergence. we could not find asip in ciona intestinalis. we have noticed that knocking out asip increased acetylcholine receptor slc a ( . fold increase). interestingly, knocking out asip did not affect dopaminergic or serotonergic receptors expression. since its emergence asip has been subjected to a tight negative selection (w= . ). this indicates that from a chronological point of view, serotonin, adrenergic, are responsible for regulating the basic mechanism controlling behavior in lower organisms, melanocortin and dopamine emerged as the need for a better control of aggression appeared in hydra and ciona, while acetylcholine receptors play a role in higher animals. finally, asip emerged to play a role of regulator in higher invertebrates and vertebrates. asip is controlling melanocortin role in hearing. effect on asip on genes associated with auditory signal processing. asip is downregulating genes responsible for sound processing and regulation. phox b, mpk , fat , neurod , slc a , gon l gbx , slc a (dat ) aldh a tyrp and lbx . phox b is expressed in the brain stem, mutation in this gene have been associated with brainstem dysfunction and brainstem auditory evoked potentials in % of the congenital central hypoventilation syndrome (cchs) patients investigated ( ). phox b is involved in the development of several major noradrenergic neuron populations, including the locus coeruleus the pons of the brainstem which is known to play a major role in aggression behavior ( ). fat plays an important role in hair cell regeneration in zerbra fish ( ). it was demonstrated that the lateral and basolateral amygdala nuclei fail to form in neurod null mice and neurod heterozygotes have fewer neurons in this region. neurod heterozygous mice show profound deficits in emotional learning as assessed by fear conditioning ( ). human neurod can induce neurogenic differentiation in non-neuronal cells in xenopus embryos, and is thought to play a role in the determination and maintenance of neuronal cell fates. gbx is required for the morphogenesis of the mouse inner ear. in particular, absence of the endolymphatic duct and swelling of the membranous labyrinth are common features in gbx -/-inner ears. more severe mutant phenotypes include absence of the anterior and posterior semicircular canals, and a malformed saccule and cochlear duct( ). in slc a :egfp larvae, it was found that egfppositive dopaminergic fibers were located within the supporting cell layer and not within the hair cell layer. it was demonstrated that dopamine receptors are present in sensory hair cells at synaptic sites that are required for signaling to the brain. when nearby neurons release dopamine, activation of the dopamine receptors increases the activity of these mechanosensitive cells. a mutation in aldh a has been suggested to contribute in the meniere disease (md), an inner ear disorder characterized by tinnitus, vertigo, and hearing loss (lynch et al., ) . acoustic overstimulation upregulate tyrp in rats ( ). lbx acts as a selector gene in the fate determination of somatosensory and viscerosensory relay neurons in the hindbrain. interestingly we found that asip is upregulated in the the perception of sound involves the cochlear sensory epithelium (cse), which contains hair cells and supporting cells. hair cells are the transducers of auditory stimuli into neural signals, and are surrounded by supporting cells (pmid: ). taken together that these reports indicate that asip a key regulator of several genes at different regions of the brain that play various role in developing and maintaining acoustic pathways. our results indicate a direct link between hereditary hyperekplexia and aggression. startle disease is characterized by an exaggerated startle response, evoked by tactile or auditory stimuli, leading to hypertonia and apnea episodes. missense, nonsense, frameshift, splice site mutations, and large deletions in the human glycine receptor α subunit gene (glra ) are the major known cause of this disorder. however, mutations are also found in the genes encoding the glycine receptor β subunit (glrb) and the presynaptic na+/cl−-dependent glycine transporter glyt (slc a ). in this study, systematic dna sequencing of slc a in new unrelated human hyperekplexia patients revealed sequence variants in index cases presenting with homozygous or compound heterozygous recessive inheritance. five apparently unrelated cases had the truncating mutation r x. genotype-phenotype analysis revealed a high rate of neonatal apneas and learning difficulties associated with slc a mutations. from the slc a sequence variants, we investigated glycine uptake for novel mutations, confirming that all were defective in glycine transport. although the most common mechanism of disrupting glyt function is protein truncation, new pathogenic mechanisms included splice site mutations and missense mutations affecting residues implicated in cl− binding, conformational changes mediated by extracellular loop , and cation-π interactions. detailed electrophysiology of mutation a t revealed that this substitution results in a voltage-sensitive decrease in glycine transport caused by lower na+ affinity. this study firmly establishes the combination of missense, nonsense, frameshift, and splice site mutations in the glyt gene as the second major cause of startle disease. lamp lamp plays a pivotal role in sensorimotor processing in the brainstem and spinal cord. it is highly expressed in several brainstem nuclei involved with auditory processing including the cochlear nuclei, the superior olivary complex, nuclei of the lateral lemniscus and grey matter in the spinal cord. it was localized exclusively in inhibitory synaptic terminals, as has been reported in the forebrain. lamp knockout mice showed an increased startle response to auditory and tactile stimuli. in addition, lamp deficiency led to a larger intensity-dependent increase of wave i, ii and v peak amplitude of auditory brainstem response. (pmid: ). we also found that il −/− animals had deficits in acoustic startle response, a sensorimotor reflex mediated by motor neurons in the brainstem and spinal cord (fig. j , k; ( )). auditory acuity and gross motor performance were normal (fig. s i-j) . taken together, these data demonstrate that il- is required for normal synapse numbers and circuit function in the thalamus and spinal cord (pmid: ). important (pmid: ) a number of controlled experiments and clinical investigations have demonstrated roles for glucocorticoids in auditory function and protection. as early as the s, clinical studies revealed that patients with adrenocorticosteroid deficiency presented with greater auditory sensitivity compared to normal volunteers (henkin et al., ) . moreover, treatment with prednisone brought hearing thresholds up to normal levels, demonstrating that the observed hypersensitivity was related to levels of circulating corticosteroids. similarly other studies revealed that patients with meniere's disease, an inner ear disorder affecting both cochlear and vestibular function, exhibited low levels of circulating corticosteroids. administration of adrenal cortex extract improved auditory function in these patients (powers, ) orca behavior and subsequent aggression associated with oceanarium confinement. animals (basel) confined to barracks: the effects of indoor confinement on aggressive behavior among inpatients of an acute psychogeriatric unit the german covid- survey on mental health: primary results melanocortin- receptor deficiency reduces a pheromonal signal for aggression in male mice an optimised phylogenetic method sheds more light on the main branching events of rhodopsin-like superfamily hearing regulates drosophila aggression emotional responses to multisensory environmental stimuli. sage open aggressive behavior in the antennectomized male cricket gryllus bimaculatus mice lacking asic show reduced anxiety-like behavior on the elevated plus maze and reduced aggression asic (-/-) female mice with hearing deficit affects social development of pups progressive hearing loss in vitamin a-deficient mice which may be protected by the activation of cochlear melanocyte prottest : fast selection of best-fit models of protein evolution new algorithms and methods to estimate maximum-likelihood phylogenies: assessing the performance of phyml . . syst biol seaview version : a multiplatform graphical user interface for sequence alignment and phylogenetic tree building paml : phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood crispr/cas -mediated genome editing in wild-derived mice: generation of tamed wild-derived strains by mutation of the a (nonagouti) gene. sci rep limma powers differential expression analyses for rna-sequencing and microarray studies geneck: a web server for gene network construction and visualization the human protein atlas: a spatial map of the human proteome the generalizability of the buss-perry aggression questionnaire a review on sample size determination for cronbach's alpha test: a simple guide for researchers measuring interpersonal stress with the bergen social relationships scale we would like to acknowledge professor macrious abraham for his ideas and advice. key: cord- -gfx cq authors: bieniossek, christoph; imasaki, tsuyoshi; takagi, yuichiro; berger, imre title: multibac: expanding the research toolbox for multiprotein complexes date: - - journal: trends biochem sci doi: . /j.tibs. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: gfx cq protein complexes composed of many subunits carry out most essential processes in cells and, therefore, have become the focus of intense research. however, deciphering the structure and function of these multiprotein assemblies imposes the challenging task of producing them in sufficient quality and quantity. to overcome this bottleneck, powerful recombinant expression technologies are being developed. in this review, we describe the use of one of these technologies, multibac, a baculovirus expression vector system that is particularly tailored for the production of eukaryotic multiprotein complexes. among other applications, multibac has been used to produce many important proteins and their complexes for their structural characterization, revealing fundamental cellular mechanisms. protein complexes composed of many subunits carry out most essential processes in cells and, therefore, have become the focus of intense research. however, deciphering the structure and function of these multiprotein assemblies imposes the challenging task of producing them in sufficient quality and quantity. to overcome this bottleneck, powerful recombinant expression technologies are being developed. in this review, we describe the use of one of these technologies, multibac, a baculovirus expression vector system that is particularly tailored for the production of eukaryotic multiprotein complexes. among other applications, multibac has been used to produce many important proteins and their complexes for their structural characterization, revealing fundamental cellular mechanisms. multiprotein complexes catalyze cellular function our understanding of cellular function has remarkably expanded in recent years, brought about by technological advances in dna and protein analysis [ ] . the sequencing of complete genomes, such as the human genome, has set the stage to address proteome-wide interaction studies, which have revealed that proteins do not typically exist as isolated entities [ ] [ ] [ ] . rather, they are assembled in complex molecular machines consisting of numerous proteins and, often, other biomolecules (such as nucleic acids, sugars, lipids and small molecules), arranged into functional modules that catalyze essential cellular processes. this molecular organization has been recently termed 'protein sociology' [ ] . understanding cellular processes requires detailed knowledge of the d structure of the molecules involved, and the parameters and architectural features that dictate their interaction. structural genomics efforts strive to analyze comprehensively single proteins and protein domain structures on a whole-genome scale, and have provided atomic structures of thousands of protein structures and folds. furthermore, the architectures of essential macromolecular complexes, such as ribosomes, nucleosomes and rna polymerases, have been revealed at near atomic resolution, providing a wealth of structural detail and crucial insight into the functions of these multicomponent machines [ ] [ ] [ ] . integrated approaches combining structural, functional and computational data are emerging, and provide views of protein organization in space and time in entire organisms [ , ] . notwithstanding, our molecular understanding of the very large number of protein complexes in the cell remains limited to a handful of examples for which detailed nearatomic structures are known. this is mostly because of the difficulty in obtaining samples in sufficient quality and quantity for molecular studies. many essential complexes remain intractable because they exist in very low amounts in their endogenous host, which hinders their purification review glossary cre recombinase: enzyme that recognizes, binds to, cuts and religates specific dna sequences (called loxp sequences). four copies of cre recombinase bind to two loxp dna sequences, and then cre recombinase exchanges one strand each from the two loxp sequences. if the two loxp sequences are present on two different dna molecules, then these will be conjoined as a result, resulting in one dna molecule with two loxp sites. homing endonucleases: restriction enzymes with particularly long ( - base pairs) recognition sequences. after cutting the dna, they often leave fournucleotide overhangs that can be compatible with overhangs generated by another restriction enzyme, bstxi; then, dnas processed with homing endonucleases can be efficiently ligated to dnas tailored by bstxi. both recognition sequences are destroyed in the process, and the ligation product cannot be cut by either enzyme. ligation independent cloning (lic): a method for inserting dna sequences (i.e. genes) into a plasmid dna molecule without using dna ligase. dnas to be conjoined are treated by exonucleases that trim back one strand of the dna double helix, exposing the complementary strand as a long sticky end. if two dna molecules have complementary sticky ends, they can be conjoined simply by mixing. lic methods have become popular in recent years because they do not require preselected dna sequences that serve as recognition sites for restriction enzymes. a version of lic that is entirely independent of any dna sequence is called slic (sequence and ligation independent cloning). loxp sequence: short imperfect inverted repeat of base pairs which serves as a recognition site, cleavage site and religation site for cre recombinase. the loxp sequence is not symmetric, therefore, the conjoining of two loxp sequences by cre recombinase is directional. nuclear polyhedrosis virus (npv): npv attacks caterpillars, such as the larvae of the alfalfa looper or the silkworm. npvs are highly specific for their host and thus useful as pest control agents. polyprotein: long polypeptide which contains several individual proteins that are connected by linker amino acids which either are capable of self-cleavage, or are recognition and cleavage sites of highly specific proteases. tn transposon: originally discovered as a large ( kb) dna segment from tn phage, which can insert into a specific location in the e. coli genome. the transposon encodes the tn transposase, a four-subunit protein complex that carries out this insertion reaction. three dna elements are minimally required for this reaction: the tn l and tn r dna sequences which flank the dna to be transposed, and a sequence called tn attachment site (atttn ) into which the transposed dna is inserted. this insertion mechanism can be efficiently exploited to conjoin recombinant dna by providing the tn l and tn r sequences on a plasmid at each end of a dna sequence of interest, and the atttn sequence on another dna which will serve as recipient. the reaction is started by addition of the transposase to these dnas. corresponding author: berger, i. (iberger@embl.fr). from native source material. recombinant overproduction can resolve this bottleneck, and numerous expression systems, mostly for heterologous protein expression in escherichia coli, have been developed and refined over the past few decades. more recently, e. coli expression systems have been designed for coexpression of several proteins by using polycistronic mrna transcripts, or two or more plasmids that coexist in the same cell [ , ] (box ). however, many eukaryotic protein complexes cannot be produced efficiently in e. coli. they may contain subunits that are too large for the e. coli transcription and translation machinery, or may require either specific chaperone systems for proper folding or protein modifications (such as phosphorylation or acetylation) that e. coli cannot provide. thus, the successful overproduction of these complexes, which is required to decipher their structure and function, depends on the availability of powerful eukaryotic expression technologies. in this review, we describe multibac, a box . coexpression toolbox for production of protein complexes expression systems for production of protein complexes in e. coli frequently make use of polycistronic expression cassettes with several genes of interest, spaced apart by ribosome binding sites (shine-dalgarno sequences), placed under the control of a single promoter, and typically followed by a sequence for efficient termination of mrna transcription [ , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] (figure ia) . in eukaryotic hosts, an analogous design can involve internal ribosomal entry sites (iress), which are inserted between gene coding regions under control of a single promoter [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] (figure ib ). iress exist in the untranslated regions of many viral and cellular mrnas [ ] , and facilitate cap-independent translation by recruiting ribosomes for efficient protein production. ires sequences differ greatly and exhibit species specificity [ ] . for example, ires elements from encephalomyocarditis virus (emcv) work well in mammalian cells, whereas iress from perina nuda virus (phv) and rhopalosiphum padi virus (rhpv) have been successfully used for protein complex production in insect cells [ ] . polyproteins are long polypeptides containing individual proteins spaced by specific proteolytic cleavage sites. certain viruses, such as coronavirus, produce their entire proteome by proteolytic processing of polyproteins encoded by a few open reading frames. polyprotein approaches have proven to be particularly powerful for balancing the stoichiometry of coexpressed proteins [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] (figure ic) . polyprotein constructions can involve self-cleaving peptides found in picornavirus (called p a peptides) or variants thereof [ , ] . alternatively, constructions can be used that mimic open reading frames in positive-sense single-stranded rna viruses and provide a highly specific protease gene together with genes of interest arranged in a single large open reading frame [ , ] . individual proteins are then liberated from the encoded polyprotein by the protease, which cleaves the proteolytic sites placed between the protein subunits ( figure ic) . the elucidation of protein-protein interactions in complexes is of crucial importance for many applications including structural biology. a novel approach, coesprit, utilizes library-based construct screening for the identification and expression of soluble protein complexes in e. coli [ ] . in coesprit, a subunit of a (putative) protein complex is provided as bait. the interacting partner is provided in the form of a random incremental library generated by exonuclease digestion of the full-length gene. prior input from bioinformatics analyses such as homology alignments or domain identification is not required for this approach. coexpression of the library with the bait protein allows identification of soluble complexes by immunofluorescence-assisted colony screening using labeled antibody markers against affinity tags present on the proteins screened. production of protein complex from high-expressor colonies thus identified can then be scaled up to milligram amounts for high-resolution studies by nmr or x-ray crystallography [ ] . trends in biochemical sciences february , vol. , no. recent eukaryotic expression system that is specifically designed to tackle and overcome this crucial production bottleneck [ , ] . we summarize the technology concepts underlying multibac and review its wide range of applications. the multibac system yeast, mammalian cells and insect cells have been successfully used for recombinant production of eukaryotic proteins [ ] . in particular, the use of insect cell cultures infected by a recombinant baculovirus, carrying the eukaryotic gene of interest, was first demonstrated many years ago [ ] . the exciting evolution of baculovirus from a pest control agent to a powerful recombinant protein production tool has recently been reviewed [ ] , and baculovirus expression systems have become increasingly popular for many applications [ ] [ ] [ ] . multibac is a baculovirus expression system particularly designed for the production of eukaryotic multiprotein complexes with many subunits (figure ). it consists of an array of small synthetic dna plasmids, an engineered baculovirus genome derived from the autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (acnpv; see glossary) that is used to infect cells of the caterpillar spodoptera frugiperda, and a set of protocols detailing every step from gene insertion into the plasmids to production of protein complexes in cultured insect cells [ , ] . the presence of many subunits in a protein complex requires the assembly of many encoding genes and their integration into the baculovirus in a multicomponent co-production experiment. this process is laborious and technically challenging using conventional methods that typically involve serial insertion of genes into increasingly large and difficult-to-handle dna plasmids. multibac applies a different concept for multigene assembly that relies on recombination of small, custom-designed, synthetic dna plasmid molecules (< kb) that are called 'acceptors' and 'donors' (figure a ). acceptors and donors can be easily loaded with one or several genes each, and recombined in a single-step reaction into a multigene construct. acceptors contain an origin of replication that allows propagation in standard cloning strains of e. coli, whereas donors harbor a conditional origin of replication (derived from phage r kg) that requires the presence of a specific protein (known as p) for replication. this protein is expressed from the pir gene inserted into the chromosome of specifically tailored e. coli strains that are used to propagate donor plasmids [ , ] . donors and acceptors contain a resistance marker, a short imperfect inverted repeat (loxp), an expression cassette consisting of a baculoviral promoter (p or polh), a dna segment for inserting heterologous genes, and an efficient signal for eukaryotic polyadenylation (figure a ). the expression cassettes are flanked by a homing endonuclease site and a compatible bstxi site, which allow for iterative assembly of several expression cassettes on each plasmid [ ] . importantly, donors can survive in a pir-negative background only if they are conjoined with an acceptor that provides a nonconditional origin of replication, and this is the central feature that enables flexible and efficient generation of multigene constructs. these are achieved in vitro multibac consists of an array of small ( kb), synthetic dna plasmids called acceptors and donors. acceptors have a regular origin of replication (ori cole ), whereas donors have a conditional origin derived from r kg phage (ori r kg ) that requires special bacterial strains for their propagation. donors and acceptors contain expression cassettes controlled by late baculoviral promoters (polh or p ) as well as strong eukaryotic polyadenylation signals (from sv or hsvtk). all plasmids contain the loxp sequence (circles filled in red) for fusing donors to an acceptor by the cre recombinase. each plasmid has a different resistant marker: gentamycin resistance (gn r ) for acceptors, and either chloramphenicol (cm r ), kanamycin (kn r ) or spectinomycin (sp r ) resistance for donors. in addition, a 'multiplication' module is present to facilitate the assembly of several expression cassettes on a donor or acceptor based on specifically designed restriction sites (e.g. homing endonucleases and bstxi restriction endonuclease, shown as blue boxes flanking promoter and terminator, respectively) [ , , ] . acceptors contain the dna sequences (tn l and tn r) required for transposition by the tn transposase. (b) the assembly of a composite multibac baculoviral genome for multigene expression. genes are inserted into donors and acceptors by using either restriction endonucleases and ligase, or sequence-independent and ligation-independent cloning methods (bottom). cre-mediated fusion produces a multigene construction that is inserted into the baculoviral genome by tn transposition in specifically tailored e. coli cells that contain the viral dna (also known as a bacmid). the dna located between the tn r and tn l sequences in the multigene fusion construct is inserted by the transposase enzyme into the tn attachment site (mini-atttn ). the multibac baculovirus was engineered for improved protein production and delayed host cell lysis by deleting specific genes [ ] . the combination of sequence and ligation independent cloning (slic) for gene insertion and cre-loxp fusion for multigene construct generation is called tandem recombineering and can be performed in a parallelized mode on microtiter plates, optionally on a robot [ ] . further heterologous genes can be inserted into an additional loxp site present on the bacmid. composite baculoviral dna is then purified from the bacteria and used to transfect insect cells. virus is expanded by infecting small-volume ( - ml) insect cell cultures and harvesting the budded virus particles released into the culture media. this virus is then used for protein complex expression in larger (typically one to several liters) insect cell cultures [ , ] . trends in biochemical sciences february , vol. , no. by cre recombinase, which fuses one or several donors (each with one or several inserted genes) to a single acceptor in a one-step reaction by conjoining via the loxp sites; this results in plasmid dimers, trimers and tetramers. the resulting multigene expression constructs are characterized by the precise combinations of resistance markers present on the fusions, and this can be exploited for combinatorial assembly strategies based on multiple antibiotic selection [ ] . the process of inserting genes into acceptors and donors, which can be optionally done by ligation independent methods followed by cre-loxp fusion, is termed 'tandem recombineering' [ ] . gene insertions into the multibac genome take place in bacterial strains that contain the multibac viral genome as an artificial chromosome together with a plasmid encoding the tn transposon enzyme complex. multigene acceptordonor fusion constructs are transformed into these bacterial cells, and the tn transposon enzyme inserts the collection of expression cassettes present on the acceptor-donor fusion in a single-step reaction into the tn attachment site engineered into the baculoviral genome ( figure b) . productive transposition disrupts a laczaencoding gene, which enables blue/white screening of colonies. the multibac baculoviral genome has been engineered for improved protein complex production by removing genes encoding viral protease and apoptotic activities, thereby reducing proteolytic breakdown of the heterologous gene products and delaying lysis of the infected cells [ , ] . as a second site of entry in addition to the tn attachment site, the multibac genome contains also a distal loxp site for adding further functionalities. for example, a gene encoding l-phosphatase was inserted into this site to remove phosphates from a coexpressed protein complex [ ] . the composite multibac virus is then purified and used to transfect insect cells for protein production in petri dishes containing cell monolayers or, for larger volumes, shaker flasks containing suspension cultures [ , , ] . multibac resolves several challenges encountered in protein complex production. these include constraints on handling many and often very large encoding dnas and the necessity to revise expression experiments rapidly and flexibly if a subunit or purification tag needs to be altered or exchanged, by replacing the respective donor or acceptor with a modified version in the tandem recombineering pipeline. in addition to multibac, a growing number of technologies are currently being used for expressing protein complexes (box ). examples of these approaches are the use of internal ribosome entry sites (iress) for multigene expression, and the use of polyprotein constructions involving self-cleaving peptide sequences or proteolytic processing of large precursor polypeptides by specific proteases [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . particularly promising for structural biology, where often a large number of constructs need to be scrutinized in parallel, are new methods coupling gene libraries to coexpression (box ) [ ] . these approaches are compatible with the multibac technology concept; for example, the polyprotein approach has been successfully used to produce a human transcription factor core complex by multibac, with improved production efficiency and yield [ ] . multibac expression of protein complexes for structural studies the multibac system, originally designed by x-ray crystallographers interested in studying multiprotein complexes [ ] , has been well received and put to good use by the structural biology community (figure , box ) . many proteins and their complexes have been produced by multi-bac, often for the first time, for structure elucidation, providing important insight into their biological function ( figure ). in some cases, for example for producing intact full-length protein kinase cbii, an existing transfer plasmid was combined with the optimized multibac baculovirus genome for protein production [ ] . the modular concept of gene assembly by tandem recombineering has turned out to be instrumental for accelerating the process of obtaining high-quality samples for structural biology of numerous complexes [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . two outstanding examples of the utility of multibac are the elegant production of the entire anaphase promoting complex, apc/ca large ( . mda) -subunit multiprotein assembly that regulates defined cell cycle transitions [ ] and the recent crystal structure elucidation of the mediator head modulea transcription factor complex that is essential for the expression of class ii genes in eukaryotes [ ] . the gene assembly encoding the complete apc/c was inserted into two multibac baculoviruses, encoding eight and five subunits, respectively. co-infection of insect cells with the two viruses allowed the purification of the entire . -mda complex and its structural determination by electron microscopy (em), revealing the structural basis for subunit assembly (figure ) [ ] . the production of the mediator head module from yeast (seven subunits, ti bs figure . multibac expression for structural biology. the multibac system has been successfully used to produce many proteins and their complexes in highquality for structural analysis. the structures of lkb -strada-mo a (pdb wtk) [ ] , a tumor suppressor kinase complex, the pkcbii kinase (pdb pfq) [ ] , and the rad -rad -hus complex, a dna damage checkpoint complex (pdb g ) [ ] , were determined by x-ray crystallography providing crucial insight into the function of these important proteins. the crystal structure of the n-terminal domain (ntd) of the chromatin remodeler mot bound to the tata-box binding protein (tbp) showed a molecular bottle-opener for tbp (pdb g ) [ , ] . in a hybrid approach involving em and x-ray crystallography, a structure of a different chromatin remodeling enzyme, isw (lacking the atpase domain), bound to a nucleosomal template was elucidated (pdb y z and emd- ) [ ] . strikingly, the entire subunit yeast apc/c, an e ubiquitin ligase essential for the cell cycle, was assembled by multibac (box ) as well as two multisubunit apc/c subcomplexes (tpr and sc ), leading to structures revealing many details of apc/c assembly by em (emd- , and ) [ ] . molecular illustrations were prepared with pymol (http://www.pymol.org/). trends in biochemical sciences february , vol. , no. kda), a paradigmatic case study for the successful application of the multibac system, is detailed in box [ ] . clearly, multibac is only one of many tools that bring such studies to fruition. nonetheless, quality sample preparation is a crucial component of the structural determination pipeline. the studies already available exemplify the aptitude of the system, and hint at recurring challenges encountered when using multibac in multiprotein complex research (box ). the list of illuminating structures of complexes produced by using multibac can be expected to grow rapidly in the future. complexes come in many forms: the coatomer proteins and their complexes in their native tissue can exist as several isoforms, which may complicate their biochemical and structural characterization when extracted and purified from endogenous source material by immunoprecipitation or classical biochemical approaches. an example is the coatomer, the central protein component that covers certain vesicles, known as coat protein i (copi)-coated vesicles, which are thought to play an important role in the early secretory pathway. coatomer consists of seven subunits and exists in four isoforms of different subunit composition. the four isoforms co-purify when extracted from animal tissue, which hampers their structural analysis and impedes attempts to understand the potentially different functions of the individual isoforms. for example, it remains unclear whether or not copi-coated vesicles are uniformly coated with individual isoforms, although these have been found to be unequally distributed in the golgi stack [ ] . recently, all four coatomer isoforms have been successfully produced using multibac, setting the stage to individually address their structure and function [ ] . this has been achieved by integrating the genes encoding the five subunits that are common to all isoforms into the tn attachment site of the multibac viral genome. the genes for the other two subunits, which are variable and define the four isoforms, were inserted by using a donor plasmid into the loxp site that is distal to the tn attachment site on the multibac viral genome. coatomer complex isoforms can then be purified successfully from insect cell cultures infected with the respective multibac virus [ ] . silkworms, the larvae of the moth bombyx mori, have been used for thousands of years to produce silk for textile production, but they have gained a new role as protein production bioreactors after the successful expression of human a-interferon in these insects. a growing number of proteins, including interleukins and antibodies, have since been produced using this system [ , ] . interestingly, it seems that silkworms can sometimes produce much higher yields of recombinant proteins than can be obtained from liquid cell cultures. for example, the activity of interleukin- produced in silkworms is -fold higher than that produced in cultures of immortalized african green monkey kidney (cos) cells, and -fold higher than that produced in insect cell suspension culture. notably, mg of purified human macrophage colony-stimulating factor can be extracted from silkworms [ ] . mediator is a large multiprotein complex that is central to gene expression in eukaryotes and is organized into three modules termed head, middle or arm, and tail [ ] . the size and complexity of mediator has long posed a major challenge for structural studies. mediator head (seven subunits, kda) was first successfully produced recombinantly by infecting insect cells with single baculoviruses, each encoding one subunit, opening the door for structural studies [ ] . however, this procedure required lengthy optimization to indentify suitable, highly producing recombinant baculoviruses by repeated rounds of laborious screeninga process of weeks or longer for each baculovirus. the demanding procedures constrained logistics and severely compromised attempts at structure determination of mediator head by x-ray crystallography, which typically necessitates flexible, stream-lined and efficient production protocols for generating many variants of the protein specimen studied. the multibac system elegantly resolved this fundamental impediment [ ] . all genes encoding the subunits of the mediator head module were inserted into a single multibac baculovirus by using tandem recombineering [ , ] . combinatorial assembly of the genes lead to a series of multibac baculoviruses encoding either full mediator head (med , med , med , med , med , med and med ) or subcomplexes including core head (med , med , med , med and med ) and mini head (med , med and med ). investigation of these complexes by em allowed initial assignment of subunit positions [ ] . modification of med and med by eliminating flexible regions was crucial to obtain diffraction-quality head module crystals, and this was easily accomplished by simply exchanging the respective unmodified genes in the original multibac baculovirus expressing the full head [ ] . the modular acceptor-donor construction principle of multibac is crucial to facilitate this alteration, alleviating a need to assemble the entire multigene construct every time again de novo. the recombinant head module has been purified and crystallized, and the architecture of this -kda complex has been determined by x-ray crystallography ( figure i) . the crystal structure of the mediator head reveals how this essential complex is built from its components to provide stability as well as flexibility for transcription regulation, resulting in a platform for other transcription factors [ ] . notably, a portion of the head named 'neck domain' confers stability and integrity of the complex by forming a striking, novel multihelical bundle, engaging five of the seven subunits of mediator head. these impressive results have prompted the development of a version of the multibac system adjusted for protein complex production in a silkworm bioreactor [ ] . in this system, the original baculovirus genome was replaced with that of a b. mori nuclear polyhedrosis virus (bmnpv), likewise provided as an artificial chromosome in bacterial cells. a tn attachment site was introduced into this bmnpv genome, and a plasmid expressing the tn transposon complex was co-transformed. thus, the silkworm multibac system retains the ability to accept multigene vector constructions prepared by tandem recombineering or by conventional restriction and ligation cloning. a distinct feature of the b. mori multibac system is the method of infecting the silkworms, which occurs via injection of virus solution with a needle. protein complexes are then purified from the hemolymph of infected silkworms after several days. recombinant human dna polymerase d has been produced using silkworm multibac [ ] . although the enzyme is thought to contain four subunits, the extraction from animal tissue usually leads to loss of two subunits during purification. four milligrams of active enzyme containing all four subunits can be purified from silkworms infected with a silkworm multibac virus carrying four genes, providing a simple, fast, reliable and economic platform to produce human dna polymerase d. therefore, the silkworm multibac system might be useful for the production of other protein complexes, especially if an economic option for protein production is required. extending the concept to mammalian cells the concept of multigene delivery of fused acceptor and donor plasmids, each carrying one or several genes, is not restricted to baculovirus expression systems. originally, tandem recombineering was developed for generating multiexpression plasmids for production of protein complexes in e. coli to alleviate imbalances in expression levels observed with multiplasmid co-transformation [ ] . expression of protein complexes in mammalian cells can be achieved by transfection with multiple plasmids, in analogy to multiplasmid co-transformation in e. coli. however, this approach can lead to imbalanced production from the plasmids and to heterogeneous cell populations with differences in the ratio of plasmids incorporated. this impediment can be efficiently resolved by using a single plasmid that contains all the heterologous genes. this multigene plasmid can be conveniently generated by tandem recombineering of properly modified acceptors and donors, in which the baculoviral promoters are exchanged for mammalian promoters [ , ] . the resulting multigene plasmid is introduced into mammalian cells by using a transfection reagent [ ] . the efficacy of this approach was demonstrated in a study where an assortment of proteins, systematically tagged with fluorescent markers, was expressed transiently or stably in animal tissue cells [ ] . this multibacderived system, called multilabel, can be used for simultaneously visualizing proteins and their actions in homogeneous cell populations by tracking the fluorescent signals. importantly, the ratio of the heterologous proteins is constant at the single-cell level. multilabel has been recently implemented to dissect the interactions of epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr), rab gtpases and phosphoinositol phosphates, which are components of membrane trafficking processes [ , ] . gene therapy for obesity? gene therapy involves either the targeted delivery of one or several wild-type genes that replace or substitute in for disease-causing genes (which bear aberrant mutations) and produce the desired gene products. or the delivery of genes encoding therapeutic proteins that prevent, modulate or correct the disease [ ] . baculoviruses have been intensively studied as potential delivery vectors for gene therapy because they transduce mammalian cells efficiently, do not seem to be toxic, and are nonhazardous (for the target cells and for those carrying out the experiment) as they do not replicate in mammalian cells [ , , ] . further advantages are the ease of producing baculoviruses and the large tolerance for heterologous gene insertions into the viral genome without compromising virion integrity. however, there are formidable obstacles to overcome, such as the observed inactivation of baculoviruses by the human complement system and the lack of specificity with respect to cell types transduced. these problems have not box . multibac debugged: challenges and solutions a multitude of factors can compromise the production of multiprotein complexes. among the major impediments are: insufficient knowledge of the composition of the complex. recombinant production of such a complex by coexpression will invariably fail if a subunit crucial for complex integrity has not been properly identified in original preparations. although proteomics and genomics technologies increasingly contribute to improve and validate the data available (reviewed in [ ] ), protein complex coexpression can already reveal important information about interacting partners even if the (presumed) complete complex cannot be obtained. post-translational modifications (ptms). ptms such as phosphorylation and acetylation can be essential for proper assembly of a complex or for its activity. thus, the modification activity needs to be either coexpressed or supplied during purification. an additional problem is that insect cells may decorate proteins with nonphysiological ptms (frequently phosphorylation), which compromise complex formation or activity. therefore, mutations that abolish the modification activity must be introduced in the host genome, or enzymes (such as l-phosphatase) that remove the modification have to be coexpressed or supplied [ ] . alternatively, inhibitors of the particular modifying enzyme (if known) can be added to the growth media if compatible with cell growth and protein production. complex instability. coexpression of an entire complex from a single virus may not be the ultimate solution. for example, a complex may dissociate during purification in a salt gradient. it may be worth identifying exactly what components dissociate during purification; stable subcomplexes may then be produced separately to reconstitute the complex in vitro by choosing proper conditions. effort required to place all subunit genes on a single baculovirus. for very large complexes, this may be challenging, and applying coinfection with a small number (two or three) of multigene viruses instead may be a viable option. virus instability. this is a drawback of every baculovirus expression system, because baculoviruses deteriorate during amplification and passaging. gene deletions, notably affecting heterologous dna inserts, can potentially abolish complex production. to minimize such deleterious events, specific protocols have been delineated [ , ] , and new approaches to overcome viral in stability by genome engineering are being developed [ ] . satisfactorily been resolved, therefore, baculoviruses have not yet played a major role as gene therapy vectors. by contrast, recombinant adeno-associated virus (raav) does not have the drawbacks of baculovirus and is currently the best choice for efficient gene delivery for gene therapy [ ] . however, clinical grade production of raavs, which are necessarily rendered replication incompetent, remains a major impediment for the field. a highly efficient scale-up protocol for raav production utilizes recombinant baculoviruses to produce gene-therapy-competent raav particles in insect cell cultures [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . this protocol involves three recombinant baculoviruses that carry genes encoding different components of raav and the transgene to be delivered (figure ). co-transfection of insect cells with the three baculoviruses results in the assembly of intact raav particles, which can be further processed and purified to achieve clinical grade. a particularly noteworthy recent study has involved the production of raav particles for gene therapy of obesity in laboratory rodents (figure ) [ ] . the raav administered to laboratory rats fed on a high-fat diet contained leptin cdna as the transgene, introduced into the multibac baculoviral genome via cre-loxp fusion of a donor containing the leptin gene under control of a promoter that is active in mammalian cells (figure ). in this review, we have presented approaches, notably the multibac technology, for producing important eukaryotic protein complexes that were hitherto not amenable to structural and functional analysis. molecules as complex as the apc/c have been successfully produced using multi-bac, enabling structure determination and architectural dissection. more recently, the technology concepts underlying multibac have been extended to mammalian gene delivery and even gene therapy, and we anticipate that many more applications will benefit from this approach. in addition, optimized multigene expression technologies that involve polyproteins and library approaches have become available, and the polyprotein technology has been integrated into multibac, increasing the prowess of the system. a beneficial next step could be to incorporate also library approaches such as coesprit [ ] (box ). this could conceivably accelerate the discovery of protein-protein interactions for complexes that rely on a eukaryotic expression host. protein-protein interactions are intensively studied in the pharmaceutical industry, with the aim to identify intermolecular surfaces that can be targeted for drug design [ ] . it will be interesting to see whether this field of discovery will also benefit from the multibac technology in the future. considerable effort has been devoted to generating custom-designed insect and mammalian host cells, which provide specialized functionalities such as humanized glycosylation [ ] . a logical extension of the multibac system will be to make use of these host cells, for example to produce antibodies with a close-to-human glycosylation pattern for therapeutic applications. the multibac system continues to catalyze progress in many fields of research. an entirely open question is where the limits of the multibac production technology may be. for instance, the transcriptional machinery producing eukaryotic mrnas contains, in addition to the genetic dna template, a stunning proteins organized in multisubunit complexes. it may seem frivolous to set out with multibac to address this complexity structurally and functionally in a defined, fully recombinant setup. nonetheless, the first glimpses of the molecular architectures involved are emerging: the mediator head, produced by multibac, has been crystallized and the structure resolved. the stage is set. exciting times are ahead of us. the authors declare no competing financial interest. bac-vp chicken β-actin promoter loxp donor ti bs figure . application of the multibac system in gene therapy. raav particles are produced by co-infection with three different baculoviruses [ , ] . bac-rep harbors two expression cassettes that contain genes for the major aav replication enzyme, rep , and an n-terminal truncation of rep , rep d. raav-bac contains aav inverted terminal repeat (itr) elements that are required for rescue, replication and packaging of transgene sequences, together with rat leptin cdna under the control of a chicken b-actin promoter, which is inserted into the raav-bac baculoviral genome by cre-loxp-mediated fusion of a specifically tailored donor plasmid [ ] . leptin is a hormone that acts in the brain to reduce food intake and stimulate energy expenditure. bac-vp produces the aav virion coat proteins. complete raav virions containing the leptin gene are produced in triply co-infected insect cells and purified [ , ] , and then administered to dietinduced obese rats. an obese rat is shown compared to a normal rat for illustration (bottom). diet-induced obesity renders laboratory rats (and presumably other species) resistant to leptin treatment. therefore, it is close to impossible to curtail diet-induced weight gain. this could be overcome by circumventing leptin resistance or restoring leptin actions in obese animals. the surprising outcome of the study involving baculovirus-produced leptin raav as a gene therapy vector was that exercise, in this study wheel-running, was required to prevent completely weight gain when combined with the leptin gene therapy intervention, leading to the conclusion that work-out, in tandem with leptin gene delivery, may actually develop into a potential antiobesity treatment [ ] . the baculovirus schematic drawing is adapted from an image kindly supplied by k. j. airenne (university of kuopio, finland). the raav particles shown are based on pdb entry lp [ ] . getting a grip on complexes the tandem affinity purification (tap) method: a general procedure of protein complex purification functional organization of the yeast proteome by systematic analysis of protein complexes proteome survey reveals modularity of the yeast cell machinery the molecular sociology of the cell the ribosome in focus: new structures bring new insights nucleosome structural studies structure of eukaryotic rna polymerases proteome organization in a genome-reduced bacterium expression of protein complexes using multiple escherichia coli protein co-expression systems: a benchmarking study deciphering correct strategies for multiprotein complex assembly by co-expression: application to complexes as large as the histone octamer baculovirus expression system for heterologous multiprotein complexes protein complex expression by using multigene baculoviral vectors recent advances in the production of proteins in insect and mammalian cells for structural biology production of human beta interferon in insect cells infected with a baculovirus expression vector milestones leading to the genetic engineering of baculoviruses as expression vector systems and viral pesticides baculovirus as versatile vectors for protein expression in insect and mammalian cells baculovirus gene delivery: a flexible assay development tool new baculovirus expression tools for recombinant protein complex production multibac: multigene baculovirus-based eukaryotic protein complex production automated unrestricted multigene recombineering for multiprotein complex production robots, pipelines, polyproteins: enabling multiprotein expression in prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells multiprotein expression strategy for structural biology of eukaryotic complexes viral ires rna structures and ribosome interactions cellular ires-mediated translation ires mediated pathways to polysomes: nuclear versus cytoplasmic routes development of a prokaryotic-like polycistronic baculovirus expression vector by the linkage of two internal ribosome entry sites correction of multi-gene deficiency in vivo using a single 'self-cleaving' a peptide-based retroviral vector high cleavage efficiency of a a peptide derived from porcine teschovirus- in human cell lines, zebrafish and mice tev protease-facilitated stoichiometric delivery of multiple genes using a single expression vector coesprit: a library-based construct screening method for identification and expression of soluble protein complexes crystal structure and allosteric activation of protein kinase c bii structure and mechanism of the chromatin remodelling factor isw a structural basis for the subunit assembly of the anaphase-promoting complex architecture of the mediator head module head module control of mediator interactions differential localization of coatomer complex isoforms within the golgi apparatus recombinant heptameric coatomer complexes: novel tools to study isoform-specific functions silkworm expression system as a platform technology in life science baculovirus-mediated production of the human growth hormone in larvae of the silkworm, bombyx mori production of recombinant human dna polymerase delta in a bombyx mori bioreactor a plasmid-based multigene expression system for mammalian cells neuropilin- promotes vegfr- trafficking through rab vesicles thereby specifying signal output the future of gene therapy potential cancer gene therapy by baculoviral transduction baculoviruses as gene therapy vectors for human prostate cancer therapeutic in vivo gene transfer for genetic disease using aav: progress and challenges scalable generation of high-titer recombinant adeno-associated virus type in insect cells successful production of pseudotyped raav vectors using a modified baculovirus expression system a simplified baculovirus-aav expression vector system coupled with one-step affinity purification yields hightiter raav stocks from insect cells an inducible system for highly efficient production of recombinant adeno-associated virus (raav) vectors in insect sf cells synergy between leptin therapy and a seemingly negligible amount of voluntary wheel running prevents progression of dietary obesity in leptin-resistant rats making protein interactions druggable: targeting pdz domains protein n-glycosylation in the baculovirus-insect cell system structure of the lkb -strad-mo complex reveals an allosteric mechanism of kinase activation crystal structure of the rad -rad -hus dna damage checkpoint complex-implications for clamp loading and regulation structure and mechanism of the swi /snf remodeller mot in complex with its substrate tbp a bottle opener for tbp the atomic structure of adeno-associated virus (aav- ), a vector for human gene therapy strategies for protein coexpression in escherichia coli the pst polycistronic expression system for producing protein complexes in escherichia coli co-expression of protein complexes in prokaryotic and eukaryotic hosts: experimental procedures, database tracking and case studies structure of eukaryotic mediator complexes mediator head module structure and functional interactions stabilized baculovirus vector expressing a heterologous gene and gp from a single bicistronic transcript we thank christiane schaffitzel, darren hart, sergei zolotukhin, francisco asturias and all members of our laboratories for helpful discussions, and tim richmond and roger kornberg for support. cb is recipient of a swiss national science foundation (snsf) advanced researcher grant. ti is a fellow of the human frontier of science program (hsfp). yt is supported by the us national science foundation (grant mcb ) and the american heart association (grant n). ib acknowledges support from the snsf, the agence nationale de la recherche (anr), the centre national de la recherche scientifique (cnrs), the embl and the european commission (ec) through the joint eipod program, and the ec projects spine -complexes and d-repertoire (framework program (fp )), as well as instruct, pcube, biostruct-x and complexinc (ec fp ). key: cord- -yzxy ogf authors: jain, pradeep kumar; bhattacharya, ramcharan; kohli, deshika; aminedi, raghavendra; agrawal, pawan kumar title: rnai for resistance against biotic stresses in crop plants date: - - journal: biotechnologies of crop improvement, volume doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: yzxy ogf rna interference (rnai)-based gene silencing has become one of the most successful strategies in not only identifying gene function but also in improving agronomical traits of crops by silencing genes of different pathogens/pests and also plant genes for improvement of desired trait. the conserved nature of rnai pathway across different organisms increases its applicability in various basic and applied fields. here we attempt to summarize the knowledge generated on the fundamental mechanisms of rnai over the years, with emphasis on insects and plant-parasitic nematodes (ppns). this chapter also reviews the rich history of rnai research, gene regulation by small rnas across different organisms, and application potential of rnai for generating transgenic plants resistant to major pests(.) but, there are some limitations too which restrict wider applications of this technology to its full potential. further refinement of this technology in terms of resolving these shortcomings constitutes one of the thrust areas in present rnai research. nevertheless, its application especially in breeding agricultural crops resistant against biotic stresses will certainly offer the possible solutions for some of the breeding objectives which are otherwise unattainable. rna interference (rnai) is an invaluable technology for unraveling gene function in the area of functional genomics. it has been utilized in basic research ranging from functional studies to gene knockdown in plants and vertebrates and to suppression of cancer and viral diseases in medicine. moreover, from application point of view, it is being used extensively for trait modification by selective inhibition of gene expression universally across the organisms. in agriculture, rnai has been extensively employed particularly for imparting resistance against biotic stresses including insects, bacteria, nematodes, fungal infection, and viruses (tan and yin ; yanagihara et al. ; good and stach ; banerjee et al. ; majumdar et al. ; zhang et al. ). this chapter focuses on how rnai has been extensively used in managing various biotic stresses which constitute serious impediments to crop productivity. damage due to insects, fungus, parasitic weeds, and plant-parasitic nematodes is a major biotic constraint causing significant yield losses in agriculture year-round. the basic concept involves a double-stranded rna (dsrna) molecule which potentially silences the gene with complementary sequences post-transcriptionally. rnai phenomenon was first discovered in a free-living nematode, caenorhabditis elegans (fire et al. ). they coined the term "rnai" for describing effective silencing of gene expression by exogenously supplied sense and antisense rnas in the model nematode, caenorhabditis elegans. this phenomenon, conserved among eukaryotes, was described as post-transcriptional gene silencing (ptgs) (carthew and sontheimer ; berezikov ) . historically the roots of this exciting development can be traced back to when chsa gene was overexpressed in transgenic petunia plants and the silencing of endogenous as well as transgene of chalcone synthase in the transgenic plants was observed (napoli et al. ). loss of endogenous as well as transgene-derived mrnas was described as co-suppression, a term formulated by napoli. soon, importance of this technology was well understood by the scientific community, and since then, phenomenal growth in this technology has taken place. in fungi, this mechanism of ptgs is known as quelling (agrawal et al. ) . in nature, viruses mediate ptgs in plants, and the effect is amplified in cytoplasm or in the nucleus. the major small noncoding rnas (ncrnas) include micrornas (mirnas), small interfering rnas (sirnas), and piwi-interacting rnas (pirnas) which are all involved in downregulation of gene expression (aalto and pasquinelli ) . each class of small rna is unique in its biogenesis and mechanism of action, but there are a few similarities too. both mirnas and sirnas are processed from larger dsrnas through cleavage by dicer (a ribonuclease iii enzyme). both are associated with argonaute proteins (ago) (ketting ) forming rna-induced silencing complex (risc). risc basically is an argonaute protein bound to a single strand of noncoding rna. varied ribonucleoprotein complexes arise due to several ncrnas and argonautes involved in formation of risc (darrington et al. ) . the rnai-mediated gene silencing occurs basically in three stages (siomi and siomi ). first one involves processing of long dsrna into small dsrna by ribonuclease iii; in the second stage, unwinding of these small rnas leads to formation of one guide strand, which is loaded into the risc, whereas the other strand known as passenger strand gets degraded. finally, the risc, directed by the guide strand, locates mrnas containing sequences complementary to the guide, binds to these sequences, and either degrades the mrna or blocks its translation (winter et al. ). the mechanism of rnai is emerging with all its complexity, but with clarity, as more and more players involved in the interference are getting identified and characterized. the involvement of sirna molecules as important intermediates of the rnai process became evident through independent investigations carried out by researchers around the world. the first report of accumulation of sirnas was confirmed by hamilton and baulcombe ( ) while studying tomato lines transformed with -aminocyclopropane- -carboxyl oxidase (aco) and later in drosophila syncytial blastoderm embryo (tuschl et al. ) . two other independent studies experimentally exhibited the - nucleotide small rnas as intermediates for degradation of mrna (zamore et al. ; elbashir et al. ) . but how these small rna molecules are excised from their precursor was yet to be discovered. as the role of rnase iii enzymes had been recognized as dsrna nucleases already, the rnase iii domain-containing proteins were searched as one of the factors in sirna biogenesis. recently only, different experimental studies revealed the involvement of rnaprocessing enzymes in chopping off the dsrnas into sirna molecules. one of the crucial enzymes, dicer, was identified in drosophila, by browsing its genome for the proteins dedicated for functioning like rnase iii endonuclease activity . in another study, dicer protein in c. elegans (a bidentate nuclease) was characterized revealing its functional role in small rna regulatory pathways (ketting et al. ) . it was also deduced to be the ortholog of drosophila dcr- protein. ketting et al. ( ) in this study also showed the requirement of atp for regulating the rate of sirna synthesis. in yet another experiment reduction in atp levels by -fold in drosophila revealed a decrease in the rate of sirna production (nykanen et al. ) . it is now believed that dicer acts as a complex of proteins with domains for dsrna binding at its c terminus which are separable from motifs like helicase and paz. it was experimentally found to co-localize with an endoplasmic reticulum protein, calreticulin (caudy et al. ) . however, the role of atp in the biogenesis of sirna is abstruse due to its varied functions among different dicer proteins in different organisms. an imperative involvement of atpase in sirna production was exhibited by drosophila dicer- and c. elegans dcr- (tomari and zamore ) in contrast to human dicer wherein an atpase-defective mutant showed regular processing (carthew and sontheimer ) . a comprehensive biochemical, molecular, genetic, and structural study revealed the presence of two main domains, namely, paz and rnaseiii, performing a crucial role in excising the sirnas (zhang et al. ; macrae et al. ) . once dicer cuts off the dsrna, synthesized sirnas then enter the risc complex. the double-stranded sirnas act as a template for the risc to recognize the complementary mrna aided by argonaute proteins. agronaute proteins are required for the risc assembly and have been biochemically characterized in drosophila. amplification of sirnas has been reported in nematodes, fungus, plants and amoeba (dykxhoorn et al. ) . rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp) is proposed to be involved in augmenting the sirna molecules on the basis of biochemical studies (lipardi et al. ; sijen et al. ). sijen demonstrated the fundamental role of rrf gene having sequence homology to rdrp for the production of secondary sirnas in c. elegans. in this study, the concept of transitive rnai pathway induced by secondary sirnas came into the picture. thus, catalytic nature of rnai was proposed. the direct loss in crop productivity due to damage by insect pest and the input-cost accrued in agrochemical based protection amount to billions of dollars every year worldwide. in spite of alarming environmental hazard directly due to residual toxicity of insecticides in food chain, the consumption of insecticides has been ever incremental. this is primarily due to resistance development in insect-pest population and lack of awareness among the farming community. the worldwide consumption of insecticide increases by almost % in every years. therefore, insect-pest management, preferably through an integrative approach and without indiscriminate use of insecticide, has become a most sought-after area in research planning worldwide. millions of dollars were granted for researching on sustainable and low-cost alternate avenues of pest control strategies in five most important agricultural crops. development of resistant cultivars in crops seems to be the most acclaimed alternative for minimizing the application of insecticides. unfortunately, for most of the major crop-insect damage, either such resistant cultivars are not available or the resistance has been broken down. further insight into such examples reveals that lack of resistance source maneuverable either through classical breeding or through transgenesis has been the major constraint. accessing unrelated gene pool through development of transgenics has emerged as the most potential avenue for overcoming this bottleneck. success of bacillus thuringiensis (bt) toxin-mediated protection of a large number of crops has been celebrated widely and in fact demonstrated for the first time the potential of biotechnological means in developing genetic resistance. however, applicability of bt-mediated protection is limited as many of the insect pests are not affected by bt toxin, and also this technology has faced second-generation challenge of some major insect species developing resistance to bt (tabashnik ; tabashnik et al. ) . it has been realized that lack of useful insecticidal transgenes is the major limitation in transgenic-based engineering of genetic resistance. in contrary, through rnai, any important gene can be precisely targeted to elicit lethality in the insect species. use of rnai has rapidly progressed for gene function analysis in various insect orders, including diptera (lum et al. ; dietzl et al. ), lepidoptera (tian et al. ; terenius et al. ) , coleoptera (baum et al. ; zhu et al. ; bolognesi et al. ) , and hymenoptera (nunes and simoes ; meer and choi ; zhao and chen ) . like in plants, rnai is primarily involved in antiviral defense mechanisms of insects as a part of its innate immunity. however, a number of studies indicate several branches of rnai involved in endogenous gene regulation in addition to silencing of genetic elements of pathogen invaders and transposons (van rij and berezikov ). gene silencing through rnai is systemic and transitive as originally described in c. elegans. a host-derived rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp) amplifies the rnai post-elicitation by dsrna. in contrast to nematodes, in insects, there is no definite proof of the presence of rdrp. in the absence of rdrp-mediated amplification of dsrna in insects, the silencing is expected to be more localized. therefore, elicitation of an effective silencing will require delivery of the dsrna directly to the target cells and tissues in a continuous manner. the administered dsrna enters the insect cells via sirna pathway in which a complex consisting of the rnaase iii enzyme (dicer- ) and trbp cuts the dsrna into small - bpsirnas. the risc bound to ago recognizes the guide strands of the sirnas. this complex then binds to complementary sequences of target rnas which are eventually degraded. two types of rnai pathway are known to occur in insects: cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous rnai. cell-autonomous rnai is limited to the cells in which the dsrna is administered or delivered. in contrary, when the silencing occurs in cells different from the cells delivered with or producing the dsrna, it is called non-cell-autonomous rnai. depending on how the dsrna is acquired by the cell, non-cell-autonomous rnai can be grouped in two kinds: environmental rnai and systemic rnai. in environmental rnai, dsrna is absorbed by a cell from the surrounding environment. therefore, this is seen in unicellular organisms or any cell lines when administered with dsrna. environmental rnai does not necessarily result into systemic spread of the response. in multicellular organisms, silencing signal is transported from one cell to another by systemic rnai. in case of transgenic host-mediated delivery of dsrna, the dsrna is delivered into the gut lumen of insects. for eliciting effective rnai, dsrna must be taken up by gut cells from the gut lumen which is known as environmental rnai. if the transcripts of target genes are prevalently expressed in tissues outside the gut cells, the systemic rnai has to occur for spreading of silencing signal. however, there is no definite study on assessing systemic rnai in insects. plant-parasitic nematodes (ppns) are grouped on the basis of different type of lifestyles, i.e., sedentary, including root-knot nematode (rkn) and cyst nematodes, and migratory, including root-lesion nematodes. sedentary endoparasites interact with the host through secretions which are vital cues for plant-nematode interactions. these secretory proteins are thus of major interest as targets for modulating the interaction. rnai has been extensively used in functional genomics performed on c. elegans and opened up the possibility of deciphering the function of uncharacterized genes in other parasitic nematodes. recent discoveries focused on unraveling the role of different components of rnai in parasitic nematodes has eventually led to increasing our understanding of rnai mechanism. there are overwhelming reports on managing ppns using rnai. in nematodes, systemic rnai can be observed resulting in a gene knockout that spreads throughout the organism. this is because rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp) is present in nematodes which interact with risc and leads to production of new dsrnas which are acted upon by dicer enzymes and further produces new sirnas (secondary sirnas) in a well-coordinated amplification reaction. therefore, the effect of dsrna persists over development and also can be exported to neighboring cells thereby leading to silencing effect all over the organism (daniel and john ) . c. elegans displays systemic rnai wherein the dsrna/sirnas entering from the environment can spread from one cell to another. studies on identification of effectors of systemic rnai revealed presence of protein sid- in c. elegans (winston et al. ; feinberg and hunter ) . interestingly, m. incognita and m. hapla, along with other parasitic nematodes, despite exhibiting successful rnai, were found deficient in sid- and other related proteins having a key role in dsrna uptake and its spread. several detailed comparative studies have postulated the presence of rnai components in different ppns and animal parasitic nematodes that were reported in c. elegans (lendner et al. ; dalzell et al. ; haegeman et al. ) . all these studies found rare proteins taking part in rnai pathway. seventy-seven orthologous effectors in c. elegans were searched in nematode species, ancylostoma caninum, oesophagostomum dentatum, ascaris suum, brugia malayi, c. brenneri, c. briggsae, c. japonica, c. remanei, haemonchus contortus, meloidogyne hapla, m. incognita, pristionchus pacificus, and trichinella spiralis, using reciprocal blast followed by domain structure verification (maule et al. ) . it was concluded that effector deficiencies cannot, in any way, be associated with reduced susceptibility in parasitic nematodes. surprisingly, minimum diversity was observed among these parasitic nematodes in most of the orthologous genes belonging to different functional groups (table . ). thus it was evident that all the species possess varied proteins from across the rnai spectrum each with alternative proteins which are yet to be fully identified and characterized. the efficacy of gene silencing substantially depends on the method of dsrna uptake. in absence of systemic rnai, gene silencing shall be limited to the cells that take up the dsrna. therefore, appropriate delivery system is pivotal (terenius et al. ) . different delivery methods of dsrna that have been used for successful rnai in insects and nematodes include microinjection, feeding on either artificial diet (table . ), and/or host-mediated delivery through transgenic plants (fig. . ) . each of these methods has its own advantages and limitations. microinjection involves injection of dsrna or sirna directly into the body of an organism and has been demonstrated as one of the most successful delivery methods for rnai to validate gene functions (ober and jockusch ) . in this method, dsrna is produced by in vitro transcription using t or sp promoter sequences. it has been employed successfully for suppressing genes in both insects and nematodes. in d. melanogaster, microinjection has been successfully used for delivering dsr-nas for two genes, viz., frizzled and frizzled , into embryos. the silencing resulted in defects in embryonic patterning that was similar to loss of wingless (wg) function. this was the first study proving the function of frizzle through dsrna microinjection in an insect (kennerdell and carthew ) . since then, microinjection-based delivery has been used in several insect species. a comprehensive list of hemipteran insects subjected to microinjection for studying rnai is presented in table . . direct injection of dsrna into the insect body leads to higher efficiency of gene expression attenuation compared to other methods. nevertheless, there are several limitations in microinjection delivery method. in vitro synthesis of dsrna is skill intensive and costly. additionally, recovery of the insects, especially smaller insects, from aftershock of microinjection, is relatively low. the significant aftershock is due to damage of cuticle leading to adverse immune responses in the insect (roxstrom-lindquist et al. ) . therefore, microinjection is rarely used in functional analysis of large number of genes from the point of view of insect-pest control. it is evident from table . that in the microinjection, mediated delivery has been carried out mostly in the case of hemipteran insects. after injecting dsrnas into the worms, progeny is counted and recorded for the mutant phenotypes. usually after h of injection, good rnai effect is observed (fire et al. ). in c. elegans, dsrnas of genes like unc- , unc- , fem , and hlh- were injected into the adult hermaphrodites, and the interference effect was observed. it was also proposed that in an antisense mechanism, interference of endogenous gene is due to the hybridization between the injected rna and endogenous mrna (fire et al. ). it is a classical technique, and different target mrnas can be used for injection simultaneously. however, microinjection has not been very successful in plant-parasitic nematodes in general and particularly in m. incognita. this is because of the small size of the infective stages and their inability to ingest fluid without host plant infection (banerjee et al. ) . in this process, although the range of dsrna concentrations can be used, the success rate relies upon ample uptake or absorption by the worms (hull and timmons ) . dsrna delivery through artificial diet has been the most popular method for delivering dsrna into the insect gut especially for relatively smaller insects such as hemipterans, which are sap-sucking. several insect species of different taxa were studied for rnai by the administration of dsrna through artificial diet as presented in table . . araujo et al. ( ) fed the blood-sucking rhodnius prolixus with an artificial diet containing dsrna of the nitrophorin (np ) gene and found that the saliva of control r. prolixus prolonged plasma coagulation by approximately fourfold compared with the saliva of np -knockdown r. prolixus. feeding a. pisum with an artificial diet supplemented with dsrna of the a. pisum aquaporin (apaqp ) gene caused attenuated expression of the target gene, which resulted in an increased osmotic pressure of the hemolymph in this insect (shakesby et al. ). in a nematode, feeding involves ingestion of bacteria expressing dsrna of the target gene against which rnai is employed. timmons et al. ( ) developed engineered bacteria deficient for rnaseiii producing high levels of dsrna segments of a specific gene. c. elegans feeding on these engineered bacteria showed rnai effect leading to loss-of-function phenotypes for the target genes. one of the advantages of this method is that it can be conducted for stage-specific rnai experiments as worms of any stage can be fed with dsrna (kamath et al. ; ahringer ). the feeding method has some major advantages over other methods of delivering dsrna. these are as follows: (i) it is easy to perform; (ii) feeding dsrna is less traumatic to the nymphs and juveniles than doing so via injections, the nymphs and juveniles remain healthier, and their mortality is comparatively lower (shakesby et al. ); and (iii) perhaps most significantly, delivering dsrnas in early stages of insects and nematodes is convenient by this method as compared to microinjection which needs special equipment and often causes high rate of mortality due to art effect. however, there are some challenges, viz., low efficiency of this method and requirement of large quantities of dsrna, which need to be addressed. moreover, a detailed study in understanding the mechanism of dsrna delivery by ingestion for inhibiting gene expression is yet to be carried out. this method involves soaking of nematodes in concentrated dsrna solution and subsequently scoring of worms or their progeny for phenotypes. rnai by soaking is useful for treating a moderately large number of animals (e.g., - ). rnai through soaking method was first employed in c. elegans as a tool for converting its genome sequence information into functional information (tabara et al. ) . apart from c. elegans, silencing of genes in plant-parasitic nematodes (ppn) through soaking technique has been popularly used but with minor modifications. other techniques like feeding and microinjection possess some limitations with respect to ppns. in microinjection, successful recovery of injected juveniles is difficult and ppn juveniles do not take up dsrna orally easily from the solutions. this was overcome by urwin et al. ( ) by inducing oral uptake of dsrna using octopamine, a neuroactive compound by cyst nematodes heterodera glycines and globodera pallida. this marked a revolution in imparting rnai-mediated resistance in cyst and root-knot parasitic nematodes. since then many reports on successfully governing the nematode growth utilizing rnai approach came into the picture. in later studies, compounds like resorcinol and serotonin were used for successful uptake of dsrna in m. incognita (rosso et al. ; huang et al. ) . apart from neuroactive compounds, fluorescein isothiocyanate (fitc) as a marker for observing dsrna uptake and as a mean of selecting affected individuals was used in many studies (urwin et al. ; rosso et al. ) . intestinal gene cysteine proteinase was suppressed through the soaking method in g. pallida, h. glycines, and m. incognita (nakai and horton ; schmidt et al. ) . gene silencing by rnai soaking has led to various abnormalities in processes like nematode hatching and molting and even resulted in reduced reproduction rates. many genes, namely, chitin synthase, neuropeptides, msp, c-type lectin, and aminopeptidases, were targeted (kennerdell and carthew ; schmidt et al. ; dernburg and karpen ; ischizuka et al. ) . but the efficiency and duration of the silencing effect were assessed for m. incognita calreticulin (mi-crt) and polygalacturonase (mi-pg- ) (rosso et al. ) . other genes targeted by this approach are cellulases, pectate lyase, chorismate mutase, and glutathione-s transferase (anandalakshmi et al. ; cogoni and macino ; hammond et al. ; matzke et al. ; carmell et al. ) . however, the silencing acquired by soaking in dsrna solutions is often transient as duration of soaking and the concentration of dsrnas affect the rnai mechanism (banerjee et al. ). another alternative method of dsrna delivery is through host-delivered rnai (hd-rnai) where gene is silenced in target organism by the host plant. since there is no synthesis of any gene product in hd-rnai, it is likely to address the biosafety concerns more favorably. genetic transformations of crop plants for expressing dsrna homologous to important insect gene entail several advantages. it delivers the dsrna to the target insect pest in a continuous fashion that leads to elicitation of rnai throughout the life cycle of the insects. host-mediated delivery of dsrna was first demonstrated against two important agricultural pests, cotton bollworm, helicoverpa armigera, and western corn rootworm, diabrotica virgifera (baum et al. ; mao et al. ). transgenic rice was developed by delivering dsrna targeting hexose transporter gene niht , carboxypeptidase gene nicar, and the trypsin-like serine protease gene nitry of nilaparvata lugens. the study revealed reduced transcript levels of these three targeted genes in the insects that fed on these transgenic rice plants. however, insect lethality was not reported (zha et al. ). subsequently, several attempts have been made for attenuating key genes of the insects through transgenic host-mediated delivery of dsrna as presented in table . . the gene construct for expression of the dsrna essentially consists of - nucleotide tandem repeats of the target gene sequence under the control of a constitutive promoter. such strategy also offers the scope of tissue specific expression of the dsrna. for example, for targeting the phloem-feeding insect pests, phloem-specific expression of the dsrna and their transport in phloem sieve elements would be more desirable. however, several attempts in this direction clearly indicated the effective level of protection would depend on targeting suitable target genes in addition to desired level of expression and delivery of intact dsrna to the infesting insect pests (price and gatehouse ) . further understanding of the uptake process and elicitation of rnai by dsrna in insects will facilitate tailoring the gene expression cassette of dsrna in order to achieve effective protection. mao et al. ( ) used rnai-mediated approach to reduce insect's ability to cope up when exposed to xenobiotic compounds, for example, gossypol. transgenic cotton plants expressing a hairpin dsrna targeting gossypol-inducible (mao et al. ), but were not lethal to the larvae. interestingly, when a cysteine proteinase which is supposed to damage larval peritrophic matrix leading to higher accumulation of gossypol in the midgut was co-delivered, the tolerance was further enhanced (mao et al. ). the similar strategy may be applicable for restoring insecticide sensitivity among resistant insect species (bautista et al. ; tanget al. ; figueira-mansur et al. ). the host-mediated rnai for controlling insect pest has been considered to be particularly important for phloem-sucking hemipteran insect pests, viz., aphids. in green peach aphid, plant-mediated rnai of several target insect-specific genes such as salivary proteins mpc , mppinto , and mppinto and the gut-specific gene rack- showed reduced fecundity (table . ). in a similar study, stronger aphicidal activity of a hairpin rna targeting v-atpase e or the tubulin folding cofactor d (tbcd) was demonstrated (guo et al. ). rnai-mediated expression attenuation of a serine protease gene mysp in the green peach aphid, myzus persicae, led to a remarkable decrease in their fecundity and parthenogeneticity (bhatia et al. ). these studies on host-mediated delivery of dsrna and elicitation of rnai in infesting aphids demonstrated potential of rnai approach for developing genetic resistance against aphids. mao and zeng ( ) reported reduced attack by aphids on transgenic tobacco plants expressing dsrna against the gap gene hunchback, and reproduction rate of aphids was also retarded. interestingly, aphid nymphs parthenogenetically born from mothers reared on transgenic plants expressing dsrna continued to show downregulation of the target gene even when transferred on normal plants. an assessment of rnai effect over three generations of m. persicae revealed % reduction in aphid reproduction levels in transgenic arabidopsis plants expressing dsmpc compared to % decline on transgenics expressing dsrack and dsmppinto . such transgenerational rnai was found to last over seven generations in sitobion avenae reared on transgenic barley plants expressing shp-dsrna (abdellatef et al. ) . such parental transmission of rnai effect adds to potential of the strategy. rnai mechanism partly occurs in the host itself and partly in nematodes feeding on the transgenic host plant expressing dsrna for the target gene. the plant rnai machinery produces sirnas which are ingested by nematodes feeding upon these plants through stylet (li et al. ) . by far hd-rnai is the most successful methodology for developing resistance against nematodes in important crops. this technique exploits the capability of ppns of ingesting macromolecules from the host plants. specifically, the method involves producing dsrna construct and developing transformed plants by agrobacterium-mediated transformation. for generating dsrna, a part of the target gene is cloned in sense and antisense orientation separated by an intron or spacer region and expressed under a constitutive or tissue-specific promoter. majority of researchers have adopted this time-consuming methodology and have successfully developed transgenics resistant against nematodes. another new approach with rapid screening system has been developed involving hairy root method for transformation of crops like soybean, tomato, and sugar beet. genes involved in various vital processes are mostly targeted by this approach being categorized into effector genes (most targeted), house-keeping genes, developmental genes, and genes associated with mrna metabolism. two genes encoding integrase and splicing factor were suppressed in m. incognita using host-delivered rnai. it was the first report eliciting rnai in m. incognita by developing transgenic tobacco lines (yadav et al. ). the lethality of these genes as rnai targets was further reconfirmed by kumar et al. ( ) in arabidopsis by utilizing this approach against m. incognita. effective silencing of d effector genes leads to - % reduction in the infectivity of m. incognita in arabidopsis (huang et al. ). since d is highly conserved in meloidogyne species, resistance against three other major species was also developed (li et al. ) . m. chitwoodi also showed a reduction in the number of nematodes and eggs on silencing d l gene via hd-rnai approach in transgenic arabidopsis and potato plants (dinh et al. a, b) . cyst nematodes also exhibited gene suppression by this technique successfully. the suppression of four parasitism genes, ubiquitin-like ( g ), cellulose-binding protein ( b ), skp -like ( h ), and zinc finger protein ( a ), in heterodera schachtii resulted in the reduction of females in rnai transgenic arabidopsis lines (sindhu et al. ). silencing of esophageal proteins in h. glycines leads to the reduction in reproduction (bakhetia et al. ). in another study, successful suppression of major sperm protein of h. glycines resulted in % decrease in eggs per gram root tissue when infected on transgenic soybean plants (steeves et al. ) . transgenic tobacco lines expressing dsrnas of two neuropeptides, flp- and flp- , showed - % decline in the infection of m. incognita (papolu et al. ) . other genes silenced using this methodology are mj-tisll, rpn , tyrosine phosphotase, mitochondria stress protein precursor and neuropepetides against meloidogyne spp(s) (hamann et al. ; lindbo et al. ; depicker and montagu ; pasquinelli ; lim et al. ; valdes et al. ) . host-mediated rnai strategy is more successful in root-knot (rkn) nematodes as compared to cyst nematodes (cn) owing to factors like more rnai sensitivity and larger size exclusion limit of rkns than in cns (li et al. ) . host-delivered rnai appears to be the most successful technique in controlling nematode infection. identification of appropriate target genes based on preliminary diet-based bioassay and ensuring adequate in planta expression of the dsrna in the transgenic host are pivotal requirements for effective host-mediated rnai. however, further understanding of the mechanisms on dsrna uptake by insect and nematodes will facilitate the tailoring of dsrna expression in hd-rnai. the dsrna uptake mechanism in insects is known to be achieved by either of the two pathways, viz., a protein-mediated pathway and via endocytic pathway. the major component of protein-mediated pathway is a multi-pass transmembrane protein known as systemic rna interference deficient- (sid- ) which exports the small interfering rnas across neighboring cells (bansal and michel ) . the second pathway is receptor-mediated pathway. in case of c. elegans, the endocytic pathway involves a sid- gene localized in intestinal cells. it encodes a membrane protein and is thought to import dsrna from the intestinal lumen which are then exported to other cells with the help of sid- channels (winston et al. ; mcewan et al. ) . hence, sid- and sid- proteins must work in conjunction to achieve environmental rnai. sid- genes have been reported to be evolutionarily conserved among insects orders, but sid- gene is absent in insects. tribolium is considered as the model insect for studying systemic rnai with presence of sid- like proteins. however, the sid- gene of tribolium was found orthologous to tag- gene of c. elegans and not ce-sid- gene interestingly, where tag- has not been reported to be associated with systemic rnai in nematodes (tomoyasu et al. ) . the presence of sid- -like channel proteins varies among different orders of insects. the involvement of sid- -like channel proteins in dsrna uptake has been reported in brown plant hopper [bph, nilaparvata lugens (xu et al. ) ], the colorado potato beetle [cpb, leptinotarsa decemlineata (cappelle et al. )] , and the red flour beetle tribolium castaneum (tomoyasu et al. ) . in , genes involved in rnai pathway in insects were identified and classified. the study reveals absence of sid- /tag- orthologs in diptera order (dowling et al. ) . it was suggested that in drosophila melanogaster, dsrna uptake is mediated via endocytic pathway along with pattern recognition receptors (prrs) based on a study by ulvila et al. ( ) . this study reports more than % reduction in the uptake of double-stranded rna on silencing of these two receptors by rnai technology. most of the studies examining dsrna uptake so far focused on either the endocytic pathway or sid- like dependent system. however, a clear understanding of the roles of these pathways on dsrna uptake across the insect species is still lacking. nevertheless, insects belonging to another order have been reported to have both the sid- -like channel proteins and receptor-mediated endocytosis pathways playing a role in dsrna uptake (cappelle et al. ) . however, the dsrna uptake mechanism in worms is quite different. the components involved in dsrna uptake have been well studied in c. elegans, and presence of sid- and sid- genes along with other components like rsd- , rsd- , and rsd- has been well documented in the c. elegans genome. but surprisingly in a study, it was found these proteins were not evolutionary conserved . the dataset recognizes sid- orthologs in two parasitic nematodes, viz., in haemonchus contortus and oesophagostomum dentatum only. the sid- protein was not found to be present in other nematode species. intriguingly, the plant-parasitic nematodes such as meloidogyne and globodera spp. despite the absence of sid- and sid- genes exhibit systemic rnai when subjected to silencing technology indicating a presence of similar receptor-mediated endocytic process for dsrna uptake as reported in insects ). though lot of information has been generated over past few years, a clear understanding on dsrna uptake mechanism(s) in worms is still elusive other than insects and nematodes, there are agricultural pests belonging to phylum arthropoda that affect the crop productivity worldwide, and rnai-based strategy to control these pests has shown some success. these pests are fire ants, mites, locusts (order orthoptera), and many more. systemic rnai has already been demonstrated in these pests via microinjection. on feeding the worker ants, solenopsis invicta, with ppm dsrna targeting pban/pyrokinin gene, increased mortality rate of the fourth instar larvae. direct toxic effect was also observed even when the dsrna concentration was reduced to ppm (zhao and chen ) . in spider mite, gene silencing and increased mortality rate was observed when ppm of dsrna, targeting several genes, was employed via permeated leaf disc assay (kwon et al. ) . in another mite, varroa destructor, an ectoparasite of the honey bee, apis mellifera, both the delivery methods of dsrna, i.e., by immersing mites in a dsrna solution or by host-mediated rnai, wherein dsrna was fed to the honey bees and eventually delivered to mites, were found to attenuate the target gene expression through environmental rnai (campbell et al. ; garbian et al. ) . interestingly, locust species displayed systemic rnai response but were refractory to environmental rnai. even a considerate concentration of pg of dsrna per mg body mass (~ ng/insect) was enough to silence a gene in the desert locust, schistocerca gregaria (wynant et al. ) . in case of tribolium castaneum, the systemic response continued to increase over time in a dose-dependent manner and furthermore led to mortality days postinjection. a similar dose-dependent response was also exhibited by the migratory locust, locusta migratoria, leading to target gene suppression and lethality, but was unresponsive to environmental rnai (luo et al. ). fungi are classified as a separate eukaryotic kingdom from plants and animals. the vital rnai components (rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp), dicer, and argonaute) have been found in different fungi indicating the presence of functional rnai pathway (dang et al. ) . the rnai phenomenon is termed as "quelling" in fungi which was first demonstrated in ascomycete neurospora crassa (romano and macino ) . silencing of fungal genes by rnai has shown to be desirable for many fungal species like ascomycota, basidiomycota, zygomycota, and phytophthora species (nunes and dean ) . several studies have been published reporting the successful use of host-induced gene silencing (higs) to control fungal diseases (table . ) (koch and kogel ) . suppression of gus transcripts in a gus-expressing strain of fusarium verticillioides (phytopathogenic filamentous fungi) while colonizing transgenic tobacco plants expressing gus gene-interfering cassette was reported (tinoco et al. ) . in vitro feeding of dsrna complementary to three genes involved in ergosterol biosynthetic pathway, viz., cyp a, cyp b, and cyp c, showed reduced growth of fusarium graminearum (koch et al. ) . in wheat, mycotoxin-specific genes were silenced in f. graminearum and resulted in inhibition of virulence (mcdonald et al. ) . fungal pathogenicity genes have shown to be an appropriate target for controlling fungal infection. a complete loss of pathogenicity was reported on targeting two of the host-selective act-toxin koch et al. ( ) genes in the fungus alternaria alternata (miyamoto et al. ; ajiro et al. ) . similar reports on silencing of pathogenicity gene or avirulent gene proved successful in inhibiting the fungal growth and development. in magnaporthe oryzae, silencing of genes involved in calcium signaling process adversely affected hyphal growth, sporulation, and pathogenicity (nunes and dean ) . higs-mediated silencing of effector gene avra showed a reduction in the number of haustoria in powdery mildew-susceptible barley cultivar (koch and kogel ) . to date, there are several successful reports of gene silencing in fungi with varied silencing efficiency. for instance, in moniliophthora perniciosa, the silencing efficiency varied depending upon the targeted gene with reduction rates ranging from % to % in case of hydrophobin transcripts and % to % in peroxiredoxin transcripts (santos et al. ), while when rna hairpin precursor used to transform the ascomycota ophiostoma novo-ulmi, the expression of %, %, and % relative to the wild type was reported (carneiro et al. ) in three transformants. although usage of rnai for managing fungus growth is nowadays a favored approach by researchers, rnai silencing also leads to some off-target effects as observed by lacroix and spanu ( ) on silencing various genes in c. fulvum. these off-targets can be avoided by using specific silencing trigger sequence in rnai vector, by tissue-specific and inducible silencing (senthil-kumar and mysore ). the potential of rnai technology for controlling various pests has been well documented over the past decade. however, there are many limitations which need to be taken care of for successful deployment of rnai technology. there are several factors which need to be carefully looked into while designing rnai experiments, including the off-target effects, dsrna design, length and concentration of dsrna, and many more. therefore, to ensure a successful and effective rnai-based silencing, these factors need to be balanced optimally. in case of insects, persistency of rnai is a major problem due to which an optimum amount of dsrna needs to be determined for an effective silencing. interestingly, it is not true for every order of insect which is to be managed. for instance, about % (or lower) of gene knockdown was reported in certain recalcitrant insect species, while in coleopterans, % knockdown of gene was successfully achieved ensuing a long-lasting hereditary (baum et al. ; huvenne and smagghe ; zhu et al. ; bolognesi et al. ; rangasamy and siegfried ; li et al. ) . not only in insects but in nematodes also barriers like off-target effects have been reported while performing rnai technology based management approaches. designing an effective sirna sequence is a major limitation in rnai technology-based silencing. the following are some major barriers. off-target effects result from the knockdown of unintended genes other than the target gene. therefore, one of the most important aspects is avoidance of nonspecific target effects. it is the sequence used that determines possible off-target effects in the target organism and also in other species. other than sequence, off-target effects can arise due to wide range of sirnas being produced from a single dsrna which increases the chance of nontarget effects. there are many reports of off-target effects, for instance, in triatomid bug r. prolixus, two homologous nitroprin genes were silenced other than the targeted gene (araujo et al. ) . thus, selecting a sequence for synthesizing dsrna is a crucial and limiting step in rnai technology. selection of target gene is the first step in decision-making process for successful induction of rnai in an organism. the gene selected should have a crucial role in the concerned organism, and genes involved in parasitism or development are likely candidate genes fulfilling all such requirements. moreover, it should be highly specific and not conserved across different genera (danchin et al. ) especially in pollinators. next stage is to choose a suitable target site from the selected target gene. it is necessary to ensure the designing of a species-specific dsrna. for identifying potential target sites for eliciting effective rnai, bioinformatic tools are available online. specificity of the dsrnas could be conferred by either targeting conserved domain or variable region depending on the candidate gene with the aim to minimize possibility of affecting any unintended genes or organisms. this is particularly important to ensure that dsrnas targeting agricultural pests should not possess any overlapping similarity to the genes of beneficial pollinators. by targeting the utr regions, even closely related homologous genes can be selectively silenced through rnai as demonstrated in d. melanogaster, t. castaneum, a. pisum, and tobacco hornworms, manduca sexta, with respect to vatpase gene (whyard et al. ).the concept of dsrnas being used as tailor-made pesticides is emerging wherein highly specific dsrnas are employed against havoc-creating pests and are also eco-friendly to the environment. in general, longer rna molecules tend to have longer half-life and therefore may be considered desirable while designing dsrnas. however, size of the dsrna molecule could be a limiting factor toward efficient uptake by the organisms. in nematodes, - kda dsrna could be efficiently ingested by meloidogyne species (urwin et al. ; li et al. ; zhang et al. ) , though the limit is not known for other pests. in red flour beetle, the length and concentration of dsrna had profound effect on efficiency as well as persistence of the rnai effect, for example, -and -bp dsrnas induced and % of gene knockdown, respectively (miller et al. ). in the same study, it has been also shown that multiple dsrnas, when injected together, led to competitive inhibition influencing the effectiveness of rnai. in contrary, dsrna longer than nucleotides and likely to generate multiple sirnas contribute efficient rnai response (andrade and hunter ) . multiple sirnas will help in overcoming the target resistance that may arise due to polymorphism in the target. however, more studies are warranted to understand unambiguously the effect of length and concentration of dsrnas on the initial efficiency and persistence of the rnai effect. for realizing rnai-mediated gene silencing as an applicable strategy of pest control in agriculture, it remains imperative to achieve significant mortality or growth arrest of the pest population. therefore, any attenuation of the target gene must be indispensible for the pest organism. this in turn underlines the importance of identifying appropriate target gene for the target pest. though most of the studies have used limited set of target genes reported earlier, more emphasis should be given on identification of novel candidate genes (pitino et al. ; zhu et al. ). the upcoming genomics and bioinformatics tools, like genome search (bai et al. ), cdna library (mao et al. ; baum et al. ), rna-seq and digital gene expression tag profile (dge-tag) , and rit-seq (alsford et al. ) , have been used for identification of new target genes. the persistence of silencing signal determines the effectiveness of rnai. studies on low persistence of silencing effect have been reported in a. pisum wherein silencing effect on aquaporin persisted for days of delivery before subsiding (shakesby et al. ) indicating transient nature of rnai effect. thus, continuous supply of dsrna seems to be essential for effective rnai. it lends support for the transgenic host-mediated expression of the dsrna for persistent and effective silencing. persistent rnai will also be useful in manifesting desired effect on the target organism even in case of inefficient and partial downregulation of the target gene. selecting a life stage for larger silencing effects is species dependent that is to be targeted. in most cases, younger stage is preferred despite the efficient handling of older stages. in plant-parasitic nematodes, selecting the pre-parasitic juvenile stage for delivering dsrnas shows better silencing effect. similar observation was reported in insects, for example, in case of r. prolixus, no silencing effect was observed after treating its fourth instars compared to % silencing when using second instars (araujo et al. ). various methods of dsrna delivery have been used across the organisms. such methods include microinjection, feeding with bacteria expressing dsrna, feeding through diet supplementation, and host-mediated ingestion. the efficiency of rnai varies significantly among different organisms and when using different delivery methods. in insects, either microinjection or diet supplementation has been the method of choice, though the aftershock effect of microinjection remains a concern in many species. microinjection-mediated direct delivery bypasses the exposure of the dsrna molecule to the nucleases present in the digestive tract. however, for realizing true efficacy of the dsrna, it is desired to deliver through oral delivery that mimics the host-mediated delivery through ingestion. limited success in rnai in some of the insects has been attributed to rapid degradation of dsrna by saliva of the insects. the saliva of lygus lineolaris was found to contain rnases which interact with plant material prior to ingestion (allen and walker ) . presence of nucleases in the saliva and viruses in the hemolymph of insects also limits the silencing efficiency by degrading dsrnas (thompson et al. ; christensen et al. ). an ample number of studies in insect orders of coleoptera, diptera, lepidoptera, hemiptera, and others comprising of several insect pests have shown that rnai targeting insect genes can affect growth and development of insects, often leading to insect death (tables . and . ). the kind of genes for which a relatively high rnai efficiency could be achieved included genes encoding detoxification enzymes, metabolism and cytoskeleton structure, cell synthesis, nutrition, etc. alternative pathways of many of these genes in insects as well as relative importance of a particular pathway in an insect species are not known with certainty. therefore, use of rnai as a strategy for pest control will require an essential step of target selection. if an indispensible gene has to be identified for an insect species, it will involve large throughput screening rather than going for homologous genes, effective for other insect species. chitin covers the exoskeleton of insect body, and the insect midgut lined by peritrophic membrane (pm) constitutes the major channel for absorption of nutrients as well as orally administered dsrna. therefore genes expressed and functioning in the insect midgut have been screened by many researchers (wang and granados ) . for example, a chitinase gene (oncht) and a chitin synthase gene (onchs ) were identified from gut-specific est of european corn borer (ostrinia nubilalis) (khajuria et al. ) . chitin content of the pm is regulated by oncht as demonstrated in feeding experiment with dsrna-and rnai-based suppression which led to reduced growth and development of european corn borer larvae (khajuria et al. ) . in a similar study, mao et al. ( ) identified several gossypol inducible genes, including a putative p monooxygenase, cyp ae , from a midgutspecific cdna library from fifth-instar larvae exposed to gossypol. similarly, for screening targets for rnai in coleopteran insects, a large number of cdnas from the cdna libraries of western corn rootworm (diabrotica virgifera virgifera) were in vitro transcribed and used in feeding-based bioassays (baum et al. ) . a rapid method of cdna screening was demonstrated by wang et al. ( ) by combining illumina's rna-seq and digital gene expression tag profile (dge-tag) in asian corn borer (acb) (ostrinia furnacalis). in addition to being a rapid and costeffective method, this method allows monitoring expression of the genes throughout the insect body and thus broadening the base of target selection. using illumina parallel sequencing technology, abundance of > , transcripts from trypanosome libraries was scored before and after induction of rnai. the results led to constitution of non-redundant set of protein-coding sequences (cds) comprising ∼ genes (alsford et al. ( ) . thus these methods can derive core set of essential gene loci if genome sequence of the organism is known. rnai-mediated attenuation of these core loci is most likely to significantly retard survival and fitness of the insect pests. in recent years, several modifications and methods for effective delivery and uptake of dsrna have been proposed. such methods include chemical modifications of sirna duplex delivery through nanoparticles and liposomes, sprayable rnai-based products, root absorption and trunk injection, and bacteria-or virusbased delivery. a few of them with much potentiality have been described below. synthetic, nontoxic nanoparticles could be generated from natural as well as synthetic polymers. nanoparticles offer ease of surface modifications and biodegradability in addition to more penetration ability, thus an effective vehicle for delivery of dsrna (vauthier et al. ; herrero-vanrell et al. ) . in mosquito dsrna encapsulated in polymer, chitosan was used to achieve rnai . the encapsulation process used the electrostatic forces between the negative charges of the rna backbone and positive charges of the amino groups of chitosan. zhang et al. ( a, b) demonstrated effective knockdown of agchs and agchs in a. gambiae and a. aegypti (sema a) during larval development by using chitosan nanoparticles. he et al. ( ) fed lepidopteran pest, asian corn borer (ostrinia furnacalis), with diet containing the mixture of fluorescent nanoparticle (fnp) and cht -dsrna, naked cht -dsrna, fnp and gfp-dsrna, and gfp-dsrna. rnai-mediated gene silencing occurred only in the larvae fed on the diet containing the mixture of fnp and cht -dsrna leading to retarded growth and eventually death of the larvae. liposome vesicles composed of nontoxic natural lipids are already being used in drug delivery. liposomes can cross the cell membrane effectively and deliver the exogenous molecules. whyard et al. ( ) used cationic liposomes for encapsulating and delivering dsrna targeting ′-utr of the g-tubulin gene in four different species of drosophila (d. melanogaster, d. sechellia, d. yakuba, and d. pseudoobscura) and demonstrated mortality of the insects only in case of encapsulated dsrna. in drosophila, presence of sid homologues has never been confirmed, and the uptake of dsrna is likely to be by receptor-mediated endocytosis (ulvila et al. ) . higher efficiency of rnai in case of liposome-mediated delivery in certain cases could be attributed to the fact that it bypasses the gut nucleases which reduces the efficacy of orally delivered dsrna. chemical modifications are known to increase the stability of rna molecules. in case of sirna also such modifications have been proposed to improve half-life and pharmacokinetic properties of the sirna duplexes, target-binding affinity, and delivery (kurreck ; manoharan ; dorsett and tuschl ) . interestingly a couple of examples have demonstrated that such modifications may increase the specificity of dsrna. for example, methylation at ′-position of the ribosyl ring of the second base of the sirna could decrease off-target effects (jackson et al. ) , sirna duplex with ′-overhangs at each end was more effective in gene silencing compared to blunt-ended duplex (elbashir et al. ) , and addition of ′-tt overhangs (the "tuschl design") on both strands of duplex sirna has been preferred in many cases. a few other designs, for instance, sirnas without ′-overhangs and single ′-overhang structures in the guide strand, have been active in gene silencing (czauderna et al. ; lorenz et al. ). despite few limitations, the applicability of rnai in improving crop resistance especially against biotic stresses is expected to be the most reliable and significant approach in the future as evident from a plethora of studies. certain products based on rnai-mediated resistance such as monsanto's smartstax pro, for control of western corn earworm, and dupont pioneer's plenish high oleic acid soybean (majumdar et al. ) are likely to be commercialized soon. however, efficacy of these plants remains to be proven in actual field situations. diverse classes of biotic factors, affecting crop production worldwide, have shown varied levels of susceptibility toward rnai, which warrants need for modified and improved versions of dsrna delivery methods. the better understanding of host-pest interaction and the genetic basis of parasitism are likely to generate more potential target genes for effective hd-rnai. crispr/cas system has come up as a powerful technique in creating knockout mutants to unravel complex mechanism of parasitism and thus paves the way for identification of the key pest genes. transplastomic expression of dsrna in the plants would be a further improvement for achieving higher expression. applying dsrna through methods with low environmental risks, for instance, irrigation water, root drench, or trunk injection, would obviate the need for genetic transformation. these methods result in localized application along with rapid breakdown of dsrna and therefore likely to be more acceptable from a biosafety point of view (joga et al. ) . successful demonstration of using layered double hydroxide clay nanosheets for topical application of dsrna against viruses (mitter et al. ) opens up possibilities of applying dsrna like any other protective agrochemicals. to conclude, rnai has emerged as one of the most potential control mechanisms for pests like insects, nematodes, fungus, etc. although still a lot remains to be explored and understood about the molecular process of rnai in plants and their pests, the present available knowledge and the studies reviewed in this chapter have proved rnai technology as an important tool in identifying gene functions and targeting vital genes for controlling pest development. rnai-mediated loss-offunction phenotypes not only determine functions of unknown genes but also lead to identification of new specific targets for managing pest or improving agricultural traits. but understanding rnai mechanism is of utmost importance as rnai machinery varies from genus to genus. there are several shortcomings that need to be addressed, for instance, persistence of silencing effects, off-target effects of silencing, etc. not only this, the biosafety, risk assessment, and government regulations related to commercialization of rnai-based transgenics still have to be developed. the revelation of rnai technology has revolutionized the area of research in biotechnology. not only in pest management, the wide range of rnai application includes modification of agronomic traits, eliminating mycotoxin contamination, improving nutritional value of crops, etc. it is also proving its worth in rnai-based therapeutics research for human welfare. in toto, this technology is a potential boon in the arsenal of the scientific community to address the challenges associated with climatic changes, burgeoning population, and sustainability of human race. small non-coding rnas mount a silent revolution in gene expression silencing the expression of the salivary sheath protein causes transgenerational feeding suppression in the aphid sitobion avenae rna interference: biology, mechanism and applications the c elegans research community role of the host-selective act-toxin synthesis gene actts encoding an enoylreductase in pathogenicity of the tangerine pathotype of alternaria alternata saliva of lygus lineolaris digests double stranded ribonucleic acids high-throughput phenotyping using parallel sequencing of rna interference targets in the african trypanosome a viral suppressor of gene silencing in plants rna interference-natural gene-based technology for highly specific pest control (hispec) knocking-down meloidogyne incognita proteases by plant-delivered dsrna has negative pleiotropic effect on nematode vigor rna interference of the salivary gland nitrophorin in the triatomine bug rhodnius prolixus (hemiptera: reduviidae) by dsrna ingestion or injection culture of drosophila primary cells dissociated from gastrula embryos and their use in rnai screening rna interference of dual oxidase in the plant nematode meloidogyne incognita qpcr analysis and rnai define pharyngeal gland cell-expressed genes of heterodera glycines required for initial interactions with the host rna interference: a novel source of resistance to combat plant parasitic nematodes core rnai machinery and sid , a component for systemic rnai, in the hemipteran insect, aphis glycines control of coleopteran insect pests through rna interference rna interference-mediated knockdown of a cytochrome p , cyp bg , from the diamondback moth, plutella xylostella , reduces larval resistance to permethrin evolution of microrna diversity and regulation in animals role for a bidentate ribonuclease in the initiation step of rna interference host generated sirnas attenuate expression of serine protease gene in myzus persicae characterizing the mechanism of action of double-stranded rna activity against western corn rootworm (diabrotica virgifera virgifera leconte) delivery of intrahemocoelic peptides for insect pest management gene-knockdown in the honey bee mite varroa destructor by a non-invasive approach: studies on a glutathione s-transferase the involvement of clathrin-mediated endocytosis and two sid- -like transmembrane proteins in double-stranded rna uptake in the colorado potato beetle midgut the argonaute family: tentacles that reach into rnai, developmental control, stem cell maintenance, and tumorigenesis suppression of polygalacturonase gene expression in the phytopathogenic fungus ophiostoma novo-ulmi by rna interference origins and mechanisms of mirnas and sirnas fragile x-related protein and vig associate with rna interference machinery functional analysis of pathogenicity proteins of the potato cyst nematode globodera rostochiensis using rnai feeding based rna interference of a trehalose phosphate synthase gene in the brown plant hopper, nilaparvata lugens engineering resistance against root-knot nematode, meloidogyne incognita, by host delivered rnai metabolism studies of unformulated internally [ h]-labeled short interfering rnas in mice dsrna degradation in the pea aphid(acyrthosiphon pisum) associated with lack of response in rnai feeding and injection assay post-transcriptional gene silencing across kingdoms persistence and transgenerational effect of plant-mediated rnai in aphids gene silencing in adult aedes aegypti mosquitoes through oral delivery of double-stranded rna structural variations and stabilizing modifications of synthetic sirnas in mammalian cells rnai effector diversity in nematodes identification of novel target genes for safer and more specific control of root-knot nematodes from a pan-genome mining rna interference in fungi: pathways, functions, and applications rnai-mediated crop protection against insects implementing the sterile insect technique with rna interference -a review influence of catalase gene silencing on the survivability of sitobion avenae post-transcriptional gene silencing in plants a genome-wide transgenic rnai library for conditional gene inactivation in drosophila rna interference of effector gene mc d l confers resistance against meloidogyne chitwoodi in arabidopsis and potato plant mediated rna interference of effector gene mc d l confers resistance against meloidogyne chitwoodi in diverse genetic backgrounds of potato and reduces pathogenicity of nematode offspring sirnas: applications in functional genomics and potential as therapeutics phylogenetic origin and diversification of rnai pathway genes in insects tomato transgenic plants expressing hairpin construct of a nematode protease gene conferred enhanced resistance to root-knot nematodes killing the messenger: short rnas that silence gene expression rna interference is mediated by -and -nucleotide rnas host-delivered rnai: an effective strategy to silence genes in plant parasitic nematodes resistance to ditylenchus destructor infection in sweet potato by the expression of small interfering rnas targeting unc- , a movement-related gene orco mediates olfactory behaviors and winged morph differentiation induced by alarm pheromone in the grain aphid, sitobion avenae analysis of chitin synthase function in a plant parasitic nematode, meloidogyne artiellia, using rnai transport of dsrna into cells by the transmembrane protein sid- silencing of p-glycoprotein increases mortality in temephos-treated aedes aegypti larvae potent and specific genetic interference by doublestranded rna in c. elegans bidirectional transfer of rnai between honey bee and varroa destructor: varroa gene silencing reduces varroa population silencing of rieske iron-sulfur protein using chemically synthesized sirna as a potential biopesticide against plutella xylostella oral delivery mediated rna interference of a carboxylesterase gene results in reduced resistance to organophosphorus insecticides in the cotton aphid synthetic rna silencing in bacteria antimicrobial discovery and resistance breaking rna interference with the allato regulating neuropeptide genes from the fall armyworm spodoptera frugiperda and its effects on the jh titer in the hemolymph plant-generated artificial small rnas mediated aphid resistance analysis of the transcriptome of the root lesion nematode pratylenchus coffeae generated by sequencing technology consecutive inactivation of both alleles of the gb gene has no effect on the proliferation and differentiation of mouse embryonic stem cells a species of small antisense rna in posttranscriptional gene silencing in plants post-transcriptional gene silencing by doublestranded rna fluorescent nanoparticle delivered dsrna toward genetic control of insect pests self-assembled particles of an elastin-like polymer as vehicles for controlled drug release black shank resistant tobacco by silencing of glutathione s-transferase engineering broad root-knot resistance in transgenic plants by rnai silencing of a conserved and essential root-knot nematode parasitism gene methods for delivery of double-stranded rna into caenorhabditis elegans mechanisms of dsrna uptake in insects and potential of rnai for pest control: a review a drosophila fragile x protein interacts with components of rnai and ribosomal proteins expression profiling reveals off-target gene regulation by rnai rnai efficiency, systemic properties, and novel delivery methods for pest insect control: what we know so far effectiveness of specific rna-mediated interference through ingested double-stranded rna in caenorhabditis elegans use of dsrna-mediated genetic interference to demonstrate that frizzled and frizzled act in the wingless pathway dicer functions in rna interference and in synthesis of small rna involved in developmental timing in c. elegans the many faces of rnai a gut-specific chitinase gene essential for regulation of chitin content of peritrophic matrix and growth of ostrinia nubilalis larvae a correlation between host-mediated expression of parasite genes as tandem inverted repeats and abrogation of development of female heterodera glycines cyst formation during infection of glycine max new wind in the sails: improving the agronomic value of crop plants through rnai-mediated gene silencing host-induced gene silencing of cytochrome p lanosterol c α-demethylase-encoding genes confers strong resistance to fusarium species functional characterization of a juvenile hormone esterase related gene in the moth sesamia nonagrioides through rna interference silencing of acetyl cholinesterase gene of helicoverpa armigera by sirna affects larval growth and its life cycle development of an rnai based microalgal larvicide to control mosquitoes host-delivered rnai-mediated root-knot nematode resistance in arabidopsis by targeting splicing factor and integrase genes antisense technologies: improvement through novel chemical modifications screening of lethal genes for feeding rnai by leaf discmediated systematic delivery of dsrna in tetranychus urticae silencing of six hydrophobins in cladosporium fulvum: complexities of simultaneously targeting multiple genes attempts to establish rna interference in the parasitic nematode heligmosomoides polygyrus host-derived suppression of nematode reproductive and fitness genes decreases fecundity of heterodera glycines ichinohe rapid in planta evaluation of root expressed transgenes in chimeric soybean plants rna interference in nilaparvata lugens (homoptera, delphacidae) based on dsrna ingestion rna interference of four genes in adult bactrocera dorsalis by feeding their dsrnas biotechnological application of functional genomics towards plant parasitic nematode control advances in the use of the rna interference technique in hemiptera resistance to root-knot nematode in tomato roots expressing a nematicidal bacillus thuringiensis crystal protein cathepsin b cysteine proteinase is essential for the development and pathogenesis of the plant parasitic nematode radopholus similis cloning and characterisation of a heterodera glycines aminopeptidase cdna vertebrate micro-rna genes induction of a highly specific antiviral state in transgenic plants: implications for regulation of gene expression and virus resistance rnai as random degradation pcr: sirna primers convert mrna into dsrna that are degraded to generate new sirnas steroid and lipid conjugates of sirnas to enhance cellular uptake and gene silencing in liver cells knockdown of heat-shock protein and isocitrate lyase gene expression reduced root-knot nematode reproduction identification of hedgehog pathway components by rnai in drosophila cultured cells differential responses of migratory locusts to systemic rna interference via double-stranded rna injection and feeding structural basis for double-stranded rna processing by dicer rna interference (rnai) as a potential tool for control of mycotoxin contamination in crop plants: concepts and considerations rna interference and chemically modified sirnas feeding-based rna interference of a gap gene is lethal to the pea aphid, acyrthosiphon pisum plant-mediated rnai of a gap gene-enhanced tobacco tolerance against the myzus persicae silencing a cotton bollworm p monooxygenase gene by plant-mediated rnai impairs larval tolerance of gossypol cotton plants expressing cyp ae double-stranded rna show enhanced resistance to bollworms cysteine protease enhances plant-mediated bollworm rna interference rna: guiding gene silencing an eye on rnai in nematode parasites rna silencing of mycotoxin production in aspergillus and fusarium species uptake of extracellular double-stranded rna by sid- formicidae (ant) control using double-stranded rna constructs rna interference suggests sulfakinins as satiety effectors in the cricket gryllus bimaculatus dissecting systemic rna interference in the red flour beetle tribolium castaneum: parameters affecting the efficiency of rnai clay nanosheets for topical delivery of rnai for sustained protection against plant viruses functional analysis of a multicopy host-selective act-toxin biosynthesis gene in the tangerine pathotype of alternaria alternata using rna silencing rnai knockdown of a salivary transcript leading to lethality in the pea aphid, acyrthosiphon pisum a secreted mif cytokine enables aphid feeding and represses plant immune responses psort: a program for detecting sorting signals in proteins and predicting their subcellular localization introduction of a chimeric chalcone synthase gene into petunia results in reversible cosuppression of homologous genes in trans rnai silencing of the meloidogyne incognita rpn gene reduces nematode parasitic success msp effector of root-knot nematode manipulates plant immunity to facilitate parasitism higs: host-induced gene silencing in the obligate biotrophic fungal pathogen blumeria graminis host-induced gene silencing: a tool for understanding fungal host interaction and for developing novel disease control strategies a non-invasive method for silencing gene transcription in honeybees maintained under natural conditions atp requirement and small interfering rna structure in the rna interference pathway the roles of wingless and decapentaplegic in axis and appendage development in the red flour beetle, tribolium castaneum host-induced gene silencing of wheat leaf rust fungus puccinia triticina pathogenicity genes mediated by the barley stripe mosaic virus utility of host delivered rnai of two fmrf amide like peptides, flp- and flp- , for the management of root knot nematode, meloidogyne incognita micrornas: deviants no longer over-expression of cyp a is associated with spirotetramat resistance and cross-resistance in the resistant strain of aphis gossypii glover aphid protein effectors promote aphid colonization in a plant species-specific manner silencing of aphid genes by dsrna feeding from plants. plosone :e gene knockdown by rnai in the pea aphid acyrthosiphon pisum rnai-mediated crop protection against insects silencing of midgut aminopeptidase n of spodoptera litura by double-stranded rna establishes its role as bacillus thuringiensis toxin receptor validation of rna interference in western corn rootworm diabrotica virgifera virgifera leconte (coleoptera, chrysomelidae) adults rna interference of odorant-binding protein (obp ) of the cotton aphid, aphis gossypii (glover), resulted in altered electrophysiological responses establishment of broad-spectrum resistance against blumeria graminis f. sp. tritici in triticum aestivum by rnai-mediated knock-down of mlo rnai-mediated knockdown of a spodoptera frugiperda trypsin-like serine-protease gene reduces susceptibility to a bacillus thuringiensis cry ca protoxin quelling: transient inactivation of gene expression in neurospora crassa by transformation with homologous sequences application of rna interference to root-knot nematode genes encoding esophageal gland proteins parasite-specific immune response in adult drosophila melanogaster: a genomic study dsrna induced gene silencing in moniliophthora perniciosa, the causal agent of witches' broom disease of cacao new insight into the rna interference response against cathepsin-l gene in the pea aphid, acyrthosiphon pisum: molting or gut phenotypes specifically induced by injection or feeding treatments genetic and molecular characterization of sting, a gene involved in crystal formation and meiotic drive in the male germ line of drosophila melanogaster hv et al ( ) a water-specific aquaporin involved in aphid osmoregulation host-induced silencing of two pharyngeal gland genes conferred transcriptional alteration of cell wall-modifying enzymes of meloidogyne incognita vis-à-vis perturbed nematode infectivity in eggplant on the role of rna amplification in dsrna-triggered gene silencing effective and specific in planta rnai in cyst nematodes: expression interference of four parasitism genes reduces parasitic success oral delivery of double-stranded rna in larvae of the yellow fever mosquito, aedes aegypti: implications for pest mosquito control on the road to reading the rna-interference code transgenic soybeans expressing sirnas specific to a major sperm protein gene suppress heterodera glycines reproduction rna interference of β integrin subunit impairs development and immune responses of the beet armyworm, spodoptera exigua rnai in c. elegans: soaking in the genome sequence delaying insect resistance to transgenic crops insect resistance to bt crops: evidence versus theory rnai, a new therapeutic strategy against viral infection rna interference in lepidoptera: an overview of successful and unsuccessful studies and implications for experimental design toxicological and pharmacokinetic properties of chemically modified sirnas targeting p rna following intravenous administration developmental control of a lepidopteran pest spodoptera exigua by ingestion of bacteria expressing dsrna of a non-midgut gene ingestion of bacterially expressed dsrnas can produce specific and potent genetic interference in caenorhabditis elegans in vivo trans-specific gene silencing in fungal cells by in planta expression of a double-stranded rna microrna biogenesis: drosha can't cut it without a partner exploring systemic rna interference in insects: a genome-wide survey for rnai genes in tribolium rna interference in the light brown apple moth, epiphyas postvittana walker induced by double-stranded rna feeding targeted mrna degradation by double-stranded rna in vitro rna interference against gut osmoregulatory genes in phloemfeeding insects double-stranded rna is internalized by scavenger receptor-mediated endocytosis in drosophila s cells rna interference for the control of whiteflies (bemisia tabaci) by oral route ingestion of double-stranded rna by pre-parasitic juvenile cyst nematodes leads to rna interference resistance to both cyst-and root-knot nematodes conferred by transgenic arabidopsis expressing a modified plant cystatin with double stranded rna to prevent in vitro and in vivo viral infections by recombinant baculovirus small rnas and the control of transposons and viruses in drosophila drug delivery to resistant tumors: the potential of poly (alkyl cyanoacrylate) nanoparticles the pratylenchus penetrans transcriptome as a source for the development of alternative control strategies: mining for putative genes involved in parasitism and evaluation of in planta rnai stacking resistance to crown gall and nematodes in walnut rootstocks prolonged gene knockdown in the tsetse fly glossina by feeding double stranded rna molecular structure of the peritrophic membrane (pm): identification of potential pm target sites for insect control second-generation sequencing supply an effective way to screen rnai targets in large scale for potential application in pest insect control angiotensin-converting enzymes modulate aphid-plant interactions ingested double-stranded rnas can act as species-specific insecticides the structural sheath protein of aphids is required for phloem feeding systemic rnai in c. elegans requires the putative transmembrane protein sid- caenorhabditis elegans sid- is required for environmental rna interference many roads to maturity: microrna biogenesis pathways and their regulation oral delivery of double-stranded rnas and sirnas induces rnai effects in the potato/tomato psyllid tissue-dependence and sensitivity of the systemic rna interference response in the desert locust, schistocerca gregaria gene silencing of two acetylcholinesterases reveals their cholinergic and non-cholinergic functions in rhopalosiphum padi and sitobion avenae silencing the hahr gene by transgenic plant-mediated rnai to disrupt helicoverpa armigera development genome-wide screening for components of small interfering rna (sirna) and micro-rna (mirna) pathways in the brown planthopper, nilaparvata lugens (hemiptera: delphacidae) silencing of an aphid carboxylesterase gene by use of plantmediated rnai impairs sitobion avenae tolerance of phoxim insecticides the d parasitism gene of meloidogyne incognita is required for successful infection of host roots host generated double stranded rna induces rnai in plant parasitic nematodes and protects the host from infection effects of short interfering rna against methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus coagulase in vitro and in vivo efficiency of different methods for dsrna delivery in cotton bollworm (helicoverpa armigera) development of rnai methods for peregrinus maidis, the corn planthopper development of a host-induced rnai system in the wheat stripe rust fungus puccinia striiformis f. sp. tritici rnai: double-stranded rna directs the atp-dependent cleavage of mrna at -to -nucleotide intervals knockdown of midgut genes by dsrna-transgenic plantmediated rna interference in the hemipteran insect nilaparvata lugens peroxiredoxin protects the pea aphid acyrthosiphon pisum from oxidative stress induced by micrococcus luteus infection single processing center models for human dicer and bacterial rnase iii chitosan/double-stranded rna nanoparticle-mediated rna interference to silence chitin synthase genes through larval feeding in the african malaria mosquito (anopheles gambiae) production of dsrna sequences in the host plant is not sufficient to initiate gene silencing in the colonizing oomycete pathogen phytophthora parasitica silencing of molt-regulating transcription factor gene, cihr , affects growth and development of sugarcane stem borer, chilo infuscatellus feasibility, limitation and possible solutions of rnai-based technology for insect pest control silencing of cytochrome p cyp b gene of cotton bollworm (helicoverpa armigera) by rnai full crop protection from an insect pest by expression of long double-stranded rnas in plastids chitosan/interfering rna nanoparticle mediated gene silencing in disease vector mosquito larvae next-generation insect-resistant plants: rnai-mediated crop protection double stranded rna constructs to control ants. us patent application publication no phyllotreta striolata (coleoptera, chrysomelidae): arginine kinase cloning and rnai-based pest control rna interference in the termite reticulitermes flavipes through ingestion of double-stranded rna ingested rna interference for managing the populations of the colorado potato beetle, leptinotarsa decemlineata improvement of pest resistance in transgenic tobacco plants expressing dsrna of an insect-associated gene ecr a novel meloidogyne enterolobii effector metctp promotes parasitism by suppressing programmed cell death in host plants key: cord- -cx elpb authors: hassani-pak, keywan; singh, ajit; brandizi, marco; hearnshaw, joseph; amberkar, sandeep; phillips, andrew l.; doonan, john h.; rawlings, chris title: knetminer: a comprehensive approach for supporting evidence-based gene discovery and complex trait analysis across species date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: cx elpb generating new ideas and scientific hypotheses is often the result of extensive literature and database reviews, overlaid with scientists’ own novel data and a creative process of making connections that were not made before. we have developed a comprehensive approach to guide this technically challenging data integration task and to make knowledge discovery and hypotheses generation easier for plant and crop researchers. knetminer can digest large volumes of scientific literature and biological research to find and visualise links between the genetic and biological properties of complex traits and diseases. here we report the main design principles behind knetminer and provide use cases for mining public datasets to identify unknown links between traits such grain colour and pre-harvest sprouting in triticum aestivum, as well as, an evidence-based approach to identify candidate genes under an arabidopsis thaliana petal size qtl. we have developed knetminer knowledge graphs and applications for a range of species including plants, crops and pathogens. knetminer is the first open-source gene discovery platform that can leverage genome-scale knowledge graphs, generate evidence-based biological networks and be deployed for any species with a sequenced genome. knetminer is available at http://knetminer.org. which is prone to information being overlooked and subjective biases being introduced. even when the task of gathering information is complete, it is demanding to assemble a coherent view of how each piece of evidence might come together to "tell a story" about the biology that can explain how multiple genes might be implicated in a complex trait or disease. new tools are needed to provide scientists with a more fine-grained and connected view of the scientific literature and databases, rather than the conventional information retrieval tools currently at their disposal. scientists are not alone with these challenges. search systems form a core part of the duties of many professions. studies have highlighted the need for search systems that give confidence to the professional searcher and therefore trust, explainability, and accountability remain a significant knetminer provides search term suggestions and real-time query feedback. from a search, a user is presented with the following views: gene view is a ranked list of candidate genes along with a summary of related evidence types. map view is a chromosome based display of qtl, gwas peaks and genes related to the search terms. evidence view is a ranked list of query related evidence terms and enrichment scores along with linked genes. by selecting one or multiple elements in these three views, the user can get to the network view to explore a gene-centric or evidence-centric knowledge network related to their query and the subsequent selection. (nilsson-ehle, ) and that the red pigmentation of wheat grain is controlled by r genes on the long arms of chromosomes a, b, and d (sears, figure a ). this network is displayed in the network view which provides interactive features to hide or add specific evidence types from the network. nodes are displayed in a defined set of shapes, colors and sizes to distinguish different types of evidence. a shadow effect on nodes indicates that more information is available but has been hidden. the auto-generated network, however, is not yet telling a story that is specific to our traits of interest and is limited to evidence that is phenotypic in nature. to further refine and extend the search for evidence that links tt to grain color and phs, we can provide additional keywords relevant to the traits of interest. seed germination and dormancy are the underlying developmental processes that activate or prevent pre-harvest sprouting in many grains and other seeds. the colour of the grain is known to be determined through accumulation of proanthocyanidin, an intermediate in the flavonoid pathway, found in the seed coat. these terms and phrases can be combined using boolean operators (and, or, not) and used in conjunction with a list of genes. thus, we search for traescs d g (tt ) and the keywords: "seed germination" or "seed dormancy" or color or flavonoid or proanthocyanidin. this time, knetminer filters the extracted tt knowledge network ( nodes) down to a smaller subgraph of nodes and relations in which every path from tt to another node corresponds to a line of evidence to phenotype or molecular characteristics based on our keywords of interest ( figure b ). overall the exploratory link analysis has generated a potential link between grain color and phs due to tt -mft interaction and suggested a new hypothesis between two traits (phs and root hair density) that were not part of the initial investigation and previously thought to be unrelated. furthermore, it raises the possibility that tt mutants might lead to increased root hairs and to higher nutrient and water absorption, and therefore cause early germination of the grain. more data and experiments will be needed to address this hypothesis and close the knowledge gap. biologists would generally agree to be informative when studying the function of a gene. searching a kg for such patterns is akin to searching for relevant sentences containing evidence that supports a particular point of view within a book. such evidence paths can be short e.g. gene a was knocked out and phenotype x was observed; or alternatively the evidence path can be longer, e.g. gene a in species x has an ortholog in species y, which was shown to regulate the expression of a disease related gene (with a link to the paper). in the first example, the relationship between gene and disease is directly evident and experimentally proven, while in the second example the relationship is indirect and less certain but still biologically meaningful. there are many evidence types that should be considered for evaluating the relevance of a gene to a trait. in a kg context, a gene is considered to be, for example, related to 'early flowering' if any of its biologically plausible graph patterns contain nodes related to 'early flowering'. in this context, the word 'related' doesn't necessarily mean that the gene in question will have an effect on 'flowering shown to a user; let alone if combining gcss for tens to hundreds of genes. there is therefore a need to filter and visualise the subset of information in the gcss that is most interesting to a specific user. however, the interestingness of information is subjective and will depend on the biological question or the hypothesis that needs to be tested. a scientist with an interest in disease biology is likely to be interested in links to publications, pathways, and annotations related to diseases, while someone studying the biological process of grain filling is likely more interested in links to physiological or anatomical traits. to reduce information overload and visualise the most interesting pieces of information, we have devised two strategies. ) in the case of a combined gene and keyword search, we use the keywords as a filter to show only paths in the gcs that connect genes with keyword related nodes, i.e. nodes that contain the given keywords in one of their node properties. in the special case where too many publications remain even after keyword filtering, we select the most recent n publications (default n= ). nodes not matching the keyword are hidden but not removed from the gcs. ) in the case of a simple gene query (without additional keywords), we initially show all paths between the gene and nodes of type phenotype/trait, i.e. any semantic motif that ends with a trait/phenotype, as this is considered the most important relationship to many knetminer users. gene ranking we have developed a simple and fast algorithm to rank genes and their gcs for their importance. we give every node in the kg a weight composed of three components, referred to as sdr, standing for the specificity to the gene, distance to the gene and relevance to the search terms. specificity reflects how specific a node is to a gene in question. for example, a publication that is cited (linked) by hundreds of genes receives a smaller weight than a publication which is linked to one or two genes only. we define the specificity of a node x as: where n is the frequency of the node occurring in all n gcs. d i s t a n c e assumes information which is associated more closely to a gene can generally be considered more certain, versus one that's further away, e.g. inferred through homology and other interactions increases the uncertainty of annotation propagation. a short semantic motif is therefore given a stronger weight, whereas a long motif receives a weaker weight. thus, we define the second weight as the inverse shortest path distance of a gene g and a node x: both weights s and d are not influenced by the search terms and can therefore be pre-computed for every node in the kg. relevance reflects the relevance or importance of a node to user-provided search terms using the well-established measure of inverse document frequency (idf) and term frequency (tf) (salton & yang, we define the knetscore of a gene as: the sum considers only gcs nodes that contain the search terms. in the absence of search terms, we sum over all nodes of the gcs with r= for each node. the computation of the knetscore biologists, such as tables and chromosome views, allowing them to explore the data, make choices as to which gene to view, or refine the query if needed. these initial views help users to reach a certain level of confidence with the selection of potential candidate genes. however, they do not tell the biological story that links candidate genes to traits and diseases. in a second step, to enable the stories and their evidence to be investigated in full detail, the network view visualises highly complex information in a concise and connected format, helping facilitate biologically meaningful conclusions. consistent graphical symbols are used for representing evidence types throughout the different views, so that users develop a certain level of familiarity, before being exposed to networks with complex interactions and rich content. scientists spend a considerable amount of time searching for new clues and ideas by synthesizing many different sources of information and using their expertise to generate hypotheses. knetminer is a user-friendly platform for biological knowledge discovery and exploratory data mining. it allows humans and machines to effectively connect the dots in life science data and literature, search the connected data in an innovative way, and then return the results in an accessible, explorable, yet concise format that can be easily interrogated to generate new insights. we discovering protein drug targets using the monarch initiative: an integrative data and analytic platform connecting phenotypes to genotypes across species a wheat homolog of mother of ft and tfl acts in the regulation of germination zur kenntnis der mit der keimungsphysiologie des weizens in zusammenhang stehenden inneren faktoren bioinformatics meets user-centred design: a perspective meta-analysis of the heritability of human traits based on fifty years of twin studies information retrieval in the workplace: a comparison of professional search practices progress in biomedical knowledge discovery: a -year on the specification of term values in automatic indexing cytogenetic studies with polyploid species of wheat knowledge graphs and knowledge networks: the story in brief knetmaps: a biojs component to visualize biological knowledge networks identification of loci governing eight agronomic traits using a gbs-gwas approach and validation by qtl mapping in soya bean big data: astronomical or genomical? sensitivity to "sunk costs" in mice, rats, and humans iwgsc whole-genome assembly principal investigators whole-genome sequencing and assembly shifting the limits in wheat research and breeding using a fully annotated reference genome trend analysis of knowledge graphs for crop pest and diseases mother of ft and tfl regulates seed germination through a negative feedback loop modulating aba signaling in arabidopsis use of graph database for the integration allelic variation and transcriptional isoforms of wheat tamyc gene regulating anthocyanin synthesis in pericarp the authors declare that they have no competing interests. key: cord- -vsa y ip authors: warner, emily f.; bohálová, natália; brázda, václav; waller, zoë a. e.; bidula, stefan title: cross kingdom analysis of putative quadruplex-forming sequences in fungal genomes: novel antifungal targets to ameliorate fungal pathogenicity? date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vsa y ip fungi contribute to upwards of . million human deaths annually, are involved in the spoilage of up to a third of food crops, and have a devastating effect on plant and animal biodiversity. moreover, this already significant issue is exacerbated by a rise in antifungal resistance and a critical requirement for novel drug targets. quadruplexes are four-stranded secondary structures in nucleic acids which can regulate processes such as transcription, translation, replication, and recombination. they are also found in genes linked to virulence in microbes, and quadruplex-binding ligands have been demonstrated to eliminate drug resistant pathogens. using a computational approach, we identified putative quadruplex-forming sequences (pqs) in genomes across the fungal kingdom and explored their potential involvement in virulence, drug resistance, and pathogenicity. here we present the largest analysis of pqs in fungi and identified significant heterogeneity of these sequences throughout phyla, genera, and species. moreover, pqs were genetically conserved. notably, loss of pqs in cryptococci and aspergilli was associated with pathogenicity. pqs in the clinically important pathogens aspergillus fumigatus, cryptococcus neoformans, and candida albicans were located within genes (particularly coding regions), mrna, repeat regions, mobile elements, trna, ncrna, rrna, and the centromere. genes containing pqs in these organisms were found to be primarily associated with metabolism, nucleic acid binding, transporter activity, and protein modification. finally, pqs were found in over genes associated with virulence, drug resistance, or key biological processes in these pathogenic fungi and were found in genes which were highly upregulated during germination, hypoxia, oxidative stress, iron limitation, and in biofilms. taken together, quadruplexes in fungi could present interesting novel targets to ameliorate fungal virulence and overcome drug resistance. fungi contribute to upwards of . million human deaths annually, are involved in the spoilage of up to a third of food crops, and have a devastating effect on plant and animal biodiversity. moreover, this already significant issue is exacerbated by a rise in antifungal resistance and a critical requirement for novel drug targets. quadruplexes are four-stranded secondary structures in nucleic acids which can regulate processes such as transcription, translation, replication, and recombination. they are also found in genes linked to virulence in microbes, and quadruplex-binding ligands have been demonstrated to eliminate drug resistant pathogens. using a computational approach, we identified putative quadruplex-forming sequences (pqs) in genomes across the fungal kingdom and explored their potential involvement in virulence, drug resistance, and pathogenicity. here we present the largest analysis of pqs in fungi and identified significant heterogeneity of these sequences throughout phyla, genera, and species. moreover, pqs were genetically conserved. notably, loss of pqs in cryptococci and aspergilli was associated with pathogenicity. pqs in the clinically important pathogens aspergillus fumigatus, cryptococcus neoformans, and candida albicans were located within genes (particularly coding regions), mrna, repeat regions, introduction sequence nucleotides and can form intramolecular or intermolecular associations [ , ] . this structure is further stabilised by the presence of monovalent cations, especially potassium [ ] . moreover, the ʹ-to ʹ-directionality of the strands, glycosidic bonding in the g-tetrads, the cation present, and number of stacked g-tetrads contribute to the wide variation of observed g structures and topologies [ ] . conversely, ims form within cytosine-rich regions there has been increased interest in the therapeutic potential of targeting quadruplexes following the implication of these secondary structures in disease, especially cancer, due to their prevalence in oncogene promoters [ ] . however, there is also now a growing number of pathogens in which g s respectively; figure a and e). the basidiomycota and zoopagomycota had high pqs frequencies relative to genome size ( . and . pqs/kbp, respectively; figure b and f). the mucoromycota and basidiomycota displayed high pqs frequencies relative to gc content ( and pqs/gc%, respectively; figure c and g). fungi within the basidiomycota had the highest average gc content ( . %; figure d and h). the microsporidia and cryptomycota scored lowest for total number of pqs ( and , respectively), pqs/kbp ( . and . , respectively) and pqs/gc% ( and , respectively; figure ). moreover, they also had low gc content ( . % and . %, respectively). considering g s and ims form in guanine or cytosine rich regions, respectively, one would expect fungi with a higher genome gc content to have a higher pqs frequency by chance. to investigate this further, the frequency of pqs/kbp relative to the gc content in all fungi and their divisions were plotted. as expected, there was a positive correlation between gc content and pqs frequency amongst all the fungal species analysed (r= . ; p< . ; figure a ). and mucoromycota (r= . , r= . , and r= . and r= . , respectively; all p< . ; figure b -d). however, there was not a significant correlation observed within the kickxellomycotina (n= species) were . , . , and . , respectively ( figure a ). the average pqs/kbp for each subphylum was . , . , and . , respectively ( figure b). the average pqs/gc% for each subphylum was . , . , and . , respectively ( figure c ). finally, the average gc% for each subphylum was . %, . %, and . %, respectively ( figure d) . figure c ). finally, the average gc% were . % and . %, respectively ( figure d ). finally, we also highlighted the frequency of pqs in fungal genera which contained important human and plant pathogens. we found that there was also large heterogeneity in the frequency of pqs between species within genera containing human pathogens (e.g. aspergillus spp., candida spp., cryptococcus spp., blastomyces spp.) and plant pathogens (e.g. verticillium spp., and fusarium spp.; figure ). this variation was particularly wide within aspergillus spp., and cryptococcus spp. evolutionary conservation of genetic motifs within the genome are a hallmark of their fundamental importance to how that organism functions. therefore, we endeavoured to explore whether there was evolutionary conservation of pqs within fungal genomes. we chose to explore this relationship in aspergillus spp., due to the robustness and accuracy of the phylogenetic tree available [ ] . notably, we found that the frequency of pqs/kbp appeared to be intrinsically linked to how closely related species were, with species within the same section displaying similar pqs frequencies ( figure ). aspergilli in this tree were divided into sections (range of pqs/kbp the ascomycota and basidiomycota contain many of the most prevalent fungal pathogens of both plants and humans, including the genera aspergillus spp., candida spp., and cryptococcus spp., which contain fungal species that account for most fungal-related deaths in humans. although, not all species within these genera are potential pathogens and we found high variation in their pqs frequency. therefore, we compared the pqs frequency between pathogenic and non-pathogenic species to explore whether there was a link with pathogenicity. similarly, comparing species of cryptococcus ( pathogenic, non-pathogenic) we also found that pathogenic species had a significantly lower frequency of pqs/kbp ( . vs. when only total pqs were considered, the largest number of pqs in all three fungal species could be found within the coding regions (cds), genes, and mrna, with few pqs found in other genomic features ( figure a , b, and c). however, this was not the same when considering the frequency of pqs/kbp of the genomic features. in a. fumigatus, the greatest frequency of pqs could be found in the repeat regions ( figure d ). the lowest frequency could be found within the trna. in c. neoformans, the highest pqs frequencies were still in the cds, genes, and mrna, with a very low frequency found within the trna ( figure e ). in c. albicans, the highest frequency of pqs could be found in the rrna, followed by repeat regions and ncrna ( figure f ). there were no pqs found in the trna and low frequencies were again found in the mobile elements. the total number and frequency of pqs bp before and after the annotated genomic features appeared to be evenly distributed (figure ) . pqs are found in genes encoding proteins involved in metabolism, nucleic acid binding, cell transport, and protein modification as we knew the genomic location of the pqs, we could then identify the number and identity of the genes which contained these sequences. this further enabled us to identify the classes of proteins associated with pqs-containing genes. in a. fumigatus, . % of genes contained at least one pqs. in c. neoformans, this number was almost double, with . % of genes containing pqs. conversely, pqs were only found in . % of genes in c. albicans. despite the discrepancies in the number of genes where pqs can found between the organisms, in all cases, pqs were primarily located in genes which encoded proteins involved in metabolism, nucleic acid binding, cell transport, and protein modification (figure ). they were least likely to be found in genes encoding for calcium-binding proteins, extracellular matrix proteins, cell adhesion molecules, and defense/immunity proteins (figure ) . in all organisms, pqs could be found in the highest frequency in genes associated with metabolite interconversion enzymes. in a. fumigatus, the number of genes associated with metabolite interconversion enzymes was . -fold higher than the next represented protein class ( genes vs. genes for nucleic acid binding proteins and transporters; figure a) . in c. neoformans the number of genes associated with these enzymes was . -fold higher compared to nucleic acid binding proteins ( genes vs. genes, respectively; figure b) . in c. albicans, the difference in the number of pqs-containing genes associated with metabolite interconversion enzymes and nucleic acid binding proteins was much lower ( genes vs. genes, respectively; . -fold; figure c ). surprisingly, when categorising genes based on gene ontology terms, there was an almost identical distribution of genes involved in im in the promoter of the hiv- pro-viral genome has also been recently been described [ ] . thus, whether pqs could be found in genes associated with virulence/drug resistance in a. fumigatus, c. neoformans, and c. albicans was explored. although the list is not exhaustive (there are many proteins still yet to be characterised), there were many interesting candidates that arose from the analysis. in total, pqs were found in over genes associated with the virulence, drug resistance, or key biological processes of a. fumigatus ( genes), c. neoformans ( genes), and c. albicans ( ; tables - ) . in a. fumigatus, pqs could be found in notable genes, including the -α sterol demethylases (cyp a and cyp b), the , -β-glucan synthase catalytic subunit fks , and abc drug exporter atrf, which are involved in drug resistance. in addition to genes involved in virulence, including transcription factors stua, hapx, and pacc, genes involved in pigment biosynthesis (pksp, arp , abr , abr , and ayg ), a master regulator of secondary metabolism laea, and glin and glip which are involved in the synthesis of gliotoxin (table ) . as pqs could be found in almost two-thirds of c. neoformans genes, it was not surprising that pqs could be found in those associated with virulence. these included the abc transporter afr (which is associated with fluconazole resistance), the protein kinases fsk and hog , the calcineurin-associated genes crz and cna , pacc/rim like in a. fumigatus, and numerous capsule-associated genes (the main virulence factor of cryptococcus) including cap , cap , cap , cap , cap , cap , cas , cas , and cxt (table ) . there were very few genes in c. albicans that contained sequences likely to form quadruplexes, and thus, quadruplexes might be less important in this organism. notable genes included the iron permeases ftr and ftr , and a gene associated with flucytosine resistance (rrp ; table ) . the highest scoring potential quadruplex-forming sequences for each of these genes were then re-analysed in an alternative pqs predictive algorithm called qgrs mapper. in this instance, the scores of known quadruplex-forming sequences were compared to scores of the pqs in fungi. this was conducted to provide further insight into whether these sequences were likely to form quadruplex structures. figure b ). in all cases, the average pqs frequencies in the upregulated genes were higher than the average pqs observed throughout the entire genome ( figure. b ). the average pqs frequencies in upregulated pqs-containing genes were . pqs/kbp (germinating conidia), . pqs/kbp (oxidative stress), and . pqs/kbp (biofilms; figure b ). although, there were a range of pqs frequencies observed between the genes from . to . pqs/kbp. the genes containing the highest pqs frequencies for each condition were afua_ g in germinating conidia and hyphae ( . pqs/kbp), afua_ g in hypoxic fungi ( . pqs/kbp), afua_ g during iron limitation ( . pqs/kbp), afua_ g during oxidative stress ( . pqs/kbp), and afua_ g in biofilms ( . pqs/kbp). interestingly, each of these genes were upregulated in at least out the conditions investigated. in this study, the number of potential quadruplex-forming sequences within the genomes of fungi were computationally predicted and their potential involvement in pathogenicity was discussed. several important observations were made. this was the first study to identify the heterogeneity of pqs amongst genetically distinct fungal species. moreover, we highlighted that pathogenic aspergillus and cryptococcus species contained fewer pqs compared to their non-pathogenic counterparts and these could be found throughout known genomic features, including genes, mrna, repeat regions, trna, ncrna, and rrna. genes containing pqs were associated with metabolism, nucleic acid-binding proteins, protein modifying enzymes, and transporters. notably, pqs likely to form quadruplexes were identified in genes linked with fungal virulence or drug resistance, such as cyp a, and could be found in genes upregulated during fungal growth and in response to stress. the frequency of pqs throughout genomes is highly variable; for example, human genomes were shown to contain around . pqs/kbp, whereas the genomes of escherichia coli contain around . pqs/kbp [ ] . in this study we also found significant differences in the interestingly, loss of pqs has recently also been observed in pathogenic coronaviridae [ ] . it has also been reported that host nucleolin (an rna-binding protein) can bind and stabilise quadruplexes in the ltr promoter of hiv- , which can silence viral transcription [ ] . therefore, in this situation, loss of quadruplexes would be beneficial for immune evasion. (pacc/rim ). the most notable virulence factor of c. neoformans is its polysaccharide capsule and pqs could be found in numerous capsule-associated genes (cas , cap , cap , cap , cap , cap , cas , cap , and cxt ) [ ]. in c. albicans pqs could be found in genes such as the iron permeases ftr and ftr [ ] . notably, many of these genes contained pqs which have previously been shown to be capable of forming bona fide quadruplexes, such as the sequence ggaggaggagg [ ] . it is also interesting to highlight that these organisms contained many more g + l - compared to g + l - pqs sequences, which is a characteristic shared with s. cerevisiae [ ] . there are now an ever-increasing number of g s identified within genes linked to microbial pathogenicity. g -forming motifs located in the hsds, recd, and pmra genes of s. the pearson correlation coefficient was used to determine the association between pqs and gc content. p< . was considered statistically significant. stop neglecting fungi. nat microbiol strategies for engineering natural product biosynthesis in fungi the regulation and functions of dna and rna g-quadruplexes i-motif dna: structural features and significance to cell biology whole genome experimental maps of dna g-quadruplexes in multiple species quadruplex dna: sequence, topology and structure an intramolecular g-quadruplex structure with mixed parallel/antiparallel mycocosm portal: gearing up for fungal genomes g hunter web application: a web server for g-quadruplex prediction panther version : more genomes, a new panther go-slim and improvements in enrichment analysis tools applications for protein sequence-function evolution data: mrna/protein expression analysis and coding snp scoring tools comparative transcriptome analysis revealing dormant conidia and germination associated genes in aspergillus species: an essential role for atfa in conidial dormancy additional oxidative stress reroutes the global response of aspergillus fumigatus to iron depletion global transcriptome changes underlying colony growth in the opportunistic human pathogen aspergillus fumigatus a robust phylogenomic time tree for biotechnologically and medically important fungi in the genera aspergillus and penicillium. mbio g-quadruplex-induced instability during leading-strand replication rna g-quadruplexes are globally unfolded in eukaryotic cells and depleted in bacteria nucleolin stabilizes g-quadruplex structures folded by the ltr promoter and silences hiv- viral transcription aspergillus fumigatus conidia survive and germinate in acidic organelles of a epithelial cells genomic distribution and functional analyses of potential g- quadruplex-forming sequences in saccharomyces cerevisiae divergent distributions of inverted repeats and g-quadruplex forming sequences in saccharomyces cerevisiae genome-wide prediction of g dna as regulatory motifs: role in metabolism impacts upon candida immunogenicity and pathogenicity at multiple levels metabolism in fungal pathogenesis. cold spring harb perspect med antifungal resistance, metabolic routes as drug targets, and new antifungal agents: an overview about endemic dimorphic fungi secondary metabolite arsenal of an opportunistic pathogenic fungus candidalysin is a fungal peptide toxin critical for mucosal infection the fungal cyp s: their functions, structures identification of aspergillus fumigatus multidrug transporter genes and their potential involvement in antifungal resistance laea, a regulator of morphogenetic fungal virulence factors recognition of dhn-melanin by a c-type lectin receptor is required for immunity to aspergillus aspergillus fumigatus virulence through the lens of transcription factors role of afr , an abc transporter-encoding gene, in the in vivo response to fluconazole and virulence of cryptococcus neoformans distinct stress responses of two functional laccases in cryptococcus neoformans are revealed in the absence of the thiol-specific antioxidant the capsule of the fungal pathogen cryptococcus neoformans functional characterization of the ferroxidase, permease high-affinity iron transport complex from candida albicans characterization of highly conserved g-quadruplex motifs as potential drug targets in streptococcus pneumoniae g-quadruplex dna motifs in the malaria parasite plasmodium falciparum and their potential as novel antimalarial drug targets characterization of g-quadruplex motifs in espb genes of mycobacterium tuberculosis as potential drug targets berberine antifungal activity in fluconazole-resistant pathogenic yeasts: action mechanism evaluated by flow cytometry and biofilm growth inhibition in candida spp key: cord- - rib pe authors: nan title: cumulative author index for date: - - journal: virus res doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rib pe nan dettori, g., see medici, m.c. 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dynamic changes in the cd t-cell transcriptome with disease severity during primary respiratory syncytial virus infection in young infants date: - - journal: the journal of infectious diseases doi: . /infdis/jix sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nj mv background: nearly all children are infected with respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) within the first years of life, with a minority developing severe disease ( %– % hospitalized). we hypothesized that an assessment of the adaptive immune system, using cd (+) t-lymphocyte transcriptomics, would identify gene expression correlates of disease severity. methods: infants infected with rsv representing extremes of clinical severity were studied. mild illness (n = ) was defined as a respiratory rate (rr) < and room air oxygen saturation (sao( )) ≥ %, and severe illness (n = ) was defined as rr ≥ and sao ≤ %. rna from fresh, sort-purified cd (+) t cells was assessed by rna sequencing. results: gestational age, age at illness onset, exposure to environmental tobacco smoke, bacterial colonization, and breastfeeding were associated (adjusted p < . ) with disease severity. rna sequencing analysis reliably measured approximately % of the genome. severity of rsv illness had the greatest effect size upon cd t-cell gene expression. pathway analysis identified correlates of severity, including jak/stat, prolactin, and interleukin signaling. we also identified genes and pathways associated with timing of symptoms and rsv group (a/b). conclusions: these data suggest fundamental changes in adaptive immune cell phenotypes may be associated with rsv clinical severity. respiratory syncytial virus (rsv), the most important cause of respiratory tract illness in infants and young children, infects %- % of infants during the first year of life [ ] . although most infections are relatively mild, %- % of infected infants require hospitalization, accounting for - admissions of infants aged < year annually in the united states [ , ] . additionally, rsv-related emergency department visits for infants aged ≤ year of age range from to per , and rsv-related office visits are times as many [ ] . although many risk factors for severe disease are recognized, such as prematurity, congenital heart disease, pulmonary disease, and neurologic and immunosuppressive conditions, the majority of infants brought to medical attention are healthy full-term infants. host and environmental factors also associated with more severe disease, although less overt, are male sex, lack of breastfeeding, tobacco smoke exposure, and low levels of maternally derived protective antibody [ ] . host immune responses are also thought to influence disease manifestations, including severity [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . experimental animal models of rsv infection suggest that th cd immune-dominant responses, as well as diminished or impaired anti-inflammatory t-regulatory (treg) cell function and increased th responses, contribute to increased lung pathology [ , , ] . data from infant studies are less compelling, with some supporting and others refuting that a t -dominant response is responsible for severe disease [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . recently gene expression analysis of whole blood collected during infection has been used to assess the immune response to rsv [ ] [ ] [ ] . one study noted increased expression of interferon signaling and neutrophil gene pathways and diminished t-and b-cell gene pathways [ ] . because cd t cells are critical in the development of adaptive immunity following infection and also influence the degree of inflammation, we sought to investigate gene expression patterns using high-throughput rna sequencing (rna-seq) of isolated cd t cells in healthy full-term infants aged < months at the time of primary rsv infection by comparing infants with mild and severe clinical disease. we identified unique gene expression patterns, implicating biological pathways associated with disease severity, which provide novel insight into pathogenesis of rsv infection in this population. the research subject review boards of the university of rochester medical center (urmc) and rochester general hospital approved the study, and a parent provided written informed consent. respiratory syncytial virus-infected infants were selected for this analysis from cohorts as part of the aspires study of rsv pathogenesis. a birth cohort, enrolled between august and december of both and , were followed by a combination of passive and active surveillance for development of rsv infection during the subsequent winter. infants with respiratory symptoms were evaluated at home for rsv infection using an rsv group-specific reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr) assay [ ] . a second cohort was enrolled when seen for acute respiratory symptoms in pediatric offices or emergency rooms and tested for rsv by antigen detection (quidel, san diego, ca) and/ or rt-pcr. the third cohort consisted of infants hospitalized with rsv at urmc's golisano children's hospital. eligible subjects were full-term (> wk gestation) healthy infants born after the previous may and aged < months at rsv infection to ensure primary infection. the hospitalized infants were seen daily until discharged, and charts were reviewed for signs of respiratory illness and lowest room air oxygen saturation (sao ). infants were evaluated by members of the study team (a physician and a project nurse). demographic data, illness symptoms, findings on physical examination, and results of standard laboratory and chest radiograph results, when available, were recorded and defined as visit (acute). illness onset was determined by physician interview of parent(s) during evaluation. following evaluation, a nasal swab using an infant-sized flocked swab (floqswabs catalog no. cs , copan, murrieta, ca) was placed in ml of sterile ultraviolet-inactivated water and - ml of heparinized blood collected. a second blood sample was collected during a second visit (convalescent) - days after illness onset. the nasal swab was used for detection of other respiratory virus coinfection, streptococcus pneumoniae, and haemophilus influenzae using a taqman multiplex assay and separately for moraxella catarrhalis according to published methods [ ] . heparinized blood was maintained at room temperature for up to hours, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells were isolated by ficoll-hypaque gradient, flow-sorted into subsets including cd + cd + cd − lymphocytes, and stored in rna lysis buffer at − °c [ ] . rna sequencing was performed as previously described, starting with ng of rna and using the smarter ultra low amplification kit (clontech, mountain view, ca) [ ] . libraries were constructed using the nexteraxt library kit (illumina, san diego, ca) and sequenced on the illumina hiseq to generate approximately million -bp single end-reads per sample. preanalysis data processing was as previously described [ ] . for categorical variables, we used samseq to identify genes with significant differences in mean expression (q < . ). both pearson and spearman correlation tests, with benjamini-hochberg correction to control false discovery rate at a . level, were used to select genes with significant correlation with continuous variables. we also conducted a multivariate linear mixed-effects regression analysis to study the linear association between the expression of individual genes (response variables) and various important demographic, clinical, and environment variables (see supplementary methods). differentially expressed genes were used for canonical pathway identification and upstream regulator analysis using ingenuity pathway analysis (qiagen, redwood city, ca). to assess t-cell transcription factor activity, we interpreted cd gene expression patterns associated with severity using bayesian estimation of transcription factor activity [ , ] . quantitative polymerase chain reaction was performed on selected genes for confirmation of the gene expression as described [ ] . a p value < . was considered statistically significant. for continuous clinical variables, we performed -sample welch t tests to check the equality of mean values between patient groups defined by disease severity. for binary variables, fisher's exact test was used. breastfeeding was modeled as a categorical variable (none < some < exclusive) and tested using spearman's rank correlation. of rsv-infected infants enrolled in the study, we selected representing the extreme ends of the severity spectrum: with mild disease (n = birth cohort, n = second cohort), defined as maximum respiratory rate (rrmax) < per minute and sao ≥ %; and with severe disease (all from the hospitalized cohort), defined as rrmax ≥ and sao ≤ %. subjects with more severe illness were significantly younger ( . vs . months; p < . ), more likely to be exposed to environmental tobacco smoke ( % vs %; p = . ), and less likely to be breastfed ( % vs %; p = . ) ( table ) . viral coinfection was similar between groups. the groups were equally colonized with moraxella catarrhalis, but the more severely ill group was significantly more likely to be colonized with s. pneumoniae and/or h. influenzae ( % vs %; p = . ). although all infants were considered full term, those with severe clinical symptoms were born at slightly lower gestational age. the cd + /cd + /cd − (cd + ) t cells from this group of infants were sorted and subjected to rna-seq analysis. a total of samples from subjects (n = in each group) passed quality control (qc), and the remaining samples were removed from analysis. the raw reads, mapping rate, and gene detection rates are shown in figure . samples averaged approximately m reads with > % mapping rate, and our filtered analytical data set included expression values for genes. interestingly cd + t cells appeared to express approximately % of the genome, consistent with prior data on sorted lymphocytes [ ] . an assessment of cell type−specific markers (eg, cd , cd , cd , cd , mpo) confirmed the purity of the sorted cells (supplementary figure ) . univariate analysis was used to identify gene expression patterns associated with each clinical or demographic variable ( table ). our analysis demonstrated that clinical severity was associated with the greatest effect size upon gene expression (n = genes). the effect size for clinical severity was much greater than that for sex (n = genes), rsv group (a/b; n = genes), or days since onset of clinical symptoms (n = genes). interestingly, we found that bacterial cocolonization seems to have a greater effect (n = genes) than viral coinfection (n = genes). appreciating the potential of confounding variables to influence identification of significant gene expression patterns, we constructed a multivariate linear mixed-effects regression model that included the variables with greatest marginal effects. numbers of significant genes identified by this more conservative analysis are summarized in table . details for genes identified, including their relationships to individual variables, are provided in supplementary table . in this multivariate model, severity of illness continued to have the strongest association with gene expression (n = genes), albeit now only slightly greater than sex (n = genes). the multivariate model again showed significant gene expression associated with days since onset of clinical symptoms (n = genes), rsv group (n = genes), and gestationl age (n = genes). in addition, the multivariate model also identified a substantial number of genes significantly associated with viral coinfection/bacterial colonization status (n = genes) and found that pathogenic bacteria colonization alone is significantly associated with gene expression (n = genes). a heat map of the genes associated with disease severity identified by multivariate analysis and stratified by time since onset of clinical symptoms is shown in figure a . these data demonstrated population-level heterogeneity (particularly in the severely affected subjects) and suggested greater differences in gene expression in the acute phase than in the convalescent phase. gene-set analysis was used to interpret the expression pattern of genes associated with severity, in both the more liberal univariate analysis (n = genes) and the more conservative multivariate analysis (n = genes), identifying a number of signaling pathways and intercellular signaling molecules that may be associated with clinical responses in rsv-infected infants ( figure b and supplementary figure ). although there was limited confirmation of significance at the individual gene level, with only of multivariate genes also identified in univariate analysis, there was a high degree of confirmation for canonical pathway discovery ( figure b ). these observations are consistent with the robustness of a pathway-based approach to analysis of transcriptomics data. genes associated with severity predicted activation of jak/ stat, prolactin, gα , interleukin , inos, igf , and phosphatidylinositol -kinase (pi k)/akt signaling pathways were noted in severely affected subjects. interleukin (il- ) pathway signaling was also predicted to be altered, but it was unclear whether this pathway was activated or inhibited. identification of these pathways was predominantly driven by genes demonstrating ) . b, pathways associated with severe phenotype. ingenuity pathway analysis (ipa) was used to identify canonical pathways represented by genes associated with severity in cd lymphocytes from respiratory syncytial virus-infected subjects. the variables used to generate gene sets for ipa were multivariate severity phenotype (a; n = ) and univariate severity phenotype (b; n = ). thirteen pathways are shown where fisher's exact test p values were <. for at least variable. orange and blue circles indicate predicted increased or decreased pathway activation (activation z score), respectively. genes included in each pathway are listed and are colored red if increased in severe subjects or green if decreased in severe subjects. genes with > . -fold increases are bold. regulation was associated with cd + t-cell gene expression in severely ill infants, implicating shifts in arachidonate metabolism. activation of nrf (nfe l ), the major antioxidant pathway, was also associated with cd + t-cell gene expression in severely ill infants. this analysis also suggested activation of a number of regulators of mitogenesis, including myc, kras, kip (cdkn b), and p (tp ). together these data support the conclusion that broad changes in cd t-cell activity and survival are associated with clinical severity in rsv-infected infants. in fact, some observed gene expression changes specifically implicated responses associated with cd t-cell subtype, such as regulation of il- signaling ( figure b ). also noted were increased activation of jak and increased expression of suppressor of cytokine signaling (socs) genes in cd t cells from severe subjects, particularly socs , which antagonizes the other socs proteins, and together with jak regulates early th /th differentiation [ ] [ ] [ ] . in an effort to directly test whether severity-associated changes in gene expression were consistent with alterations in t-cell subtype, we implemented bayesian estimation of transcription factor activity to predict transcription factor activity based upon cd gene expression patterns associated with severity [ ] . we found changes in gata activity were predicted to be significantly associated with severity as defined by the univariate model (p = . e- ), whereas rora was marginally significant (p = . ) and stat / / and smads were not significant (p > . ). gata is a transcriptional activator that is required for t-helper (th ) differentiation. it also plays a role in differentiation of th cells. these data support the interpretation that changes in cd t-cell subtype differentiation are associated with severity in rsv infection. we explored biological interpretations of genes associated with the time since onset of clinical symptoms (figure ). for this analysis, we focused on the set of genes significantly associated with the stage of visit-acute versus convalescent. as anticipated, activation of interferon signaling was noted early in the clinical course, based on the assessment of canonical pathway gene expression ( figure a ) and upstream regulator prediction ( figure b ). interestingly, both type i (ifna/b), type ii (ifng), and type iii (ifnl) interferon responses were implicated, which was confirmed by significant enrichment of stat -stat and irf target genes (p = . e- and . , respectively). this was associated with downstream changes in inflammasome activation, as implicated by predictions of mavs and il rn as upstream regulators ( figure b ). changes in viral pattern recognition signaling, potentially driven predominantly by increases in tlr / / -associated genes, were also identified. interestingly, decreases in proliferative activity in cd t cells, as indicated by reductions in cnot and mapk , were also observed. the rsv group (a/b) was not associated with clinical disease severity independently but was associated with significant differences in cd t-cell transcriptome status (table ) . pathwaybased interpretation of these gene expression responses identified signaling pathways that may be differentially affected by infection with these rsv groups ( figure a ). based upon canonical pathway analysis, adenine/adenosine salvage, ppar, and sapk/jnk signaling were all predicted to be differentially regulated by rsv subgroup infection. interestingly, upstream regulator analysis ( figure b ) suggested rictor (mtor related), clock, and nfe l (nrf ) may play a significant role in these responses. we attempted to validate expression estimates for genes (cd , cd , fkbp , oas , rsad , socs ) selected based upon rna-seq detection levels and biological interest ( figure and supplementary table ). expression of of these genes (cd , fkbp , oas , rsad , socs ) demonstrated significant concordance with rna-seq data (all p < . ). cd expression levels were low, which is likely the source of failure to validate expression estimates. among these genes, quantitative polymerase chain reaction expression estimates confirmed socs expression was significantly associated with severity ( figure a and supplementary table ), whereas cd , oas , and rsad were all significantly associated with time since onset of clinical symptoms ( figure b and supplementary table ). a full understanding of the cellular immune mechanisms underlying disease severity during rsv infection in infants has been elusive, especially in normal, full-term, healthy infants, the population that comprises the majority of infants brought to medical attention. most studies investigating rsv disease pathogenesis have measured the presence and levels of various inflammatory proteins, such as cytokines and chemokines in blood or respiratory secretions, or their in vitro production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells, often with disparate results [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . recently, analysis of gene expression in whole-blood samples using microarray from rsv-infected infants was reported from centers [ ] [ ] [ ] . a study of rsv-infected infants showed extensive activation of innate immune responses, specifically of the interferon signaling network, but could not identify differences according to disease severity [ ] . in a much larger study involving rsv-infected infants with mild and severe rsv disease, mejias and colleagues reported overexpression of neutrophil, inflammation, and interferon genes and suppression of t-and b-cell genes [ ] . in this study, severe illness was associated with greater expression of neutrophil and inflammation genes than in mildly ill subjects, whereas mildly ill subjects showed overexpression of innate immunity genes. because cd t cells are important in the early adaptive immune response to rsv and are associated with the degree of inflammation during infection, we chose to investigate gene expression patterns in isolated cd t cells from infants with primary rsv infection of differing severity during their first year of life. to optimize identification of differentially expressed genes, we selected infants at the extremes of disease severity. interrogation of cd t-cell gene expression in these subjects identified a number of pathways of interest, including prolactin signaling, jak/stat signaling, pi k/akt signaling, and il- signaling. our data indicated severely ill rsv-infected infants displayed greater activation of prolactin signaling in cd t cells. prolactin, a polypeptide hormone originating from the pituitary gland, has been shown to bind to the prolactin receptor expressed on cd t cells and to have a variety of effects on cd t cells [ , ] . prolactin induction of t-bet transcription through phosphorylation of stat and stat is inversely dose dependent, and it has been suggested that exposure of cd t cells to high levels of prolactin might reduce th function [ ] . another study found that treg cells express prolactin receptor and exposure to prolactin inhibited their suppressive effect on th cells in vitro [ ] . interestingly, it has been reported that infants with severe rsv disease admitted to the intensive care unit had significantly higher serum prolactin levels than moderately ill infants [ ] . the jak cytokine and jak/stat signaling pathways are integral to the production of the innate type i interferons ifnα and ifnβ, and thus it is not surprising that these pathways are differentially expressed according to disease severity. confirming that such an effect is detectable in circulating, purified cd t cells is novel. it is known that the rsv ns and ns proteins block type i effectively via degradation of the transcription activator stat [ ] . the socs genes are included in the jak/stat pathways, and the socs , socs , and socs genes were all overexpressed in the severely ill subjects. it has been reported that socs is expressed during th immune responses and in vitro experiments after exposure of murine respiratory epithelial cells to rsv [ ] . both stats and socs are key regulators of t-cell differentiation, maturation, and function [ ] . similar to stats, socs may cross-regulate one another, and the proteins are differentially expressed in th cell lineage [ ] . socs and socs favor th and th differentiation, and socs favors the differentiation of th by the compensation of th differentiation [ ] [ ] [ ] . it also was not surprising to find that the pi k/akt pathway activation was increased in severe rsv disease. pi k signaling is thought to have an important role in cd t-cell differentiation and function, including tregs [ ] . respiratory syncytial virus has been shown to rapidly activate this pathway, which is associated with inhibition of cellular apoptosis as well as increased inflammatory cytokine production [ ] . interleukin , a th cytokine produced by cd t cells, eosinophils, and neutrophils, has been found in the upper and lower airway secretions of infants with rsv bronchiolitis at relatively high levels but has not been previously correlated with disease severity [ , ] . in a murine model of rsv infection, depletion of il- enhanced clearance of virus from the lungs, and the authors concluded that il- promoted a th -type inflammatory response [ ] . together, our data are supportive of a model where shifts in cd t-cell subtype toward a th phenotype are associated with severity of illness in rsv-infected infants. further studies, particularly in larger and more heterogeneous populations, will be required to confirm this observation and to determine whether these changes are mechanistic or are purely a result of the illness itself. the exclusion of infants with well-known risk factors for severe disease allowed us to remove these influences from our analysis. although we did not use a formal severity scoring system to define disease severity in our population, we believe that the clinical criteria selected provided a valid separation of mild and severe disease. the use of sorted cd t cells, rather than whole blood, and rna-seq are unique aspects of this study and add to the existing gene expression literature. a potential limitation of this method is that some of the findings might have been affected by manipulation of the cd t cells during purification and sorting. however, and critically, identical procedures were used for processing samples from all subjects, regardless of disease severity. all blood samples were collected between and am, kept at room temperature, and processed immediately. therefore, any impact of sample processing should be applicable to all subjects and result mostly in limitations of sensitivity. in summary, we were able to identify a number of differentially expressed genes and gene pathways involved in primary rsv infection in full-term healthy infants that are associated with increased disease severity. the results may help to ultimately identify potential biomarkers of severe disease and provide putative intermediate, molecular phenotypes of disease that can be assayed using experimental in vitro or in vivo infection models of rsv. supplementary materials are available at the journal of infectious diseases online. consisting of data provided by the authors to benefit the reader, the posted materials are not copyedited and are the sole responsibility of the authors, so questions or comments should be addressed to the corresponding author. respiratory syncytial virus and parainfluenza virus respiratory syncytial virus-associated hospitalizations among children less than months of age hospitalizations associated with influenza and respiratory syncytial virus in the united states the burden of respiratory syncytial virus infection in young children viral bronchiolitis in children respiratory syncytial virus: 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protein functions prolactin can modulate cd + t-cell response through receptor-mediated alterations in the expression of t-bet prolactin levels correlate with abnormal b cell maturation in mrl and mrl/lpr mouse models of systemic lupus erythematosus-like disease the neuroendocrine stress response and severity of acute respiratory syncytial virus bronchiolitis in infancy bovine respiratory syncytial virus nonstructural proteins ns and ns cooperatively antagonize alpha/beta interferon-induced antiviral response respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) attachment and nonstructural proteins modify the type i interferon response associated with suppressor of cytokine signaling (socs) proteins and ifn-stimulated gene- (isg ) suppressors of cytokine signaling (socs) in t cell differentiation, maturation, and function suppressors of cytokine signaling proteins are differentially expressed in th and th cells: implications for th cell lineage commitment and maintenance loss of suppressor of cytokine signaling in helper t cells leads to defective th differentiation by enhancing antagonistic effects of ifn-gamma on stat and smads functional cross-modulation between socs proteins can stimulate cytokine signaling socs- regulates onset and maintenance of t(h) -mediated allergic responses the role of the pi k signaling pathway in cd (+) t cell differentiation and function respiratory syncytial virus inhibits apoptosis and induces nf-kappa b activity through a phosphatidylinositol -kinase-dependent pathway interleukin production in the lungs of infants with severe respiratory syncytial virus bronchiolitis severe respiratory syncytial virus bronchiolitis in infants is associated with reduced airway interferon gamma and substance p il- regulates pathology during primary and memory responses to respiratory syncytial virus infection we would like to thank the following individuals whose efforts were instrumental in facilitating the key: cord- - ir authors: smith, steven b.; dampier, william; tozeren, aydin; brown, james r.; magid-slav, michal title: identification of common biological pathways and drug targets across multiple respiratory viruses based on human host gene expression analysis date: - - journal: plos one doi: . /journal.pone. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ir background: pandemic and seasonal respiratory viruses are a major global health concern. given the genetic diversity of respiratory viruses and the emergence of drug resistant strains, the targeted disruption of human host-virus interactions is a potential therapeutic strategy for treating multi-viral infections. the availability of large-scale genomic datasets focused on host-pathogen interactions can be used to discover novel drug targets as well as potential opportunities for drug repositioning. methods/results: in this study, we performed a large-scale analysis of microarray datasets involving host response to infections by influenza a virus, respiratory syncytial virus, rhinovirus, sars-coronavirus, metapneumonia virus, coxsackievirus and cytomegalovirus. common genes and pathways were found through a rigorous, iterative analysis pipeline where relevant host mrna expression datasets were identified, analyzed for quality and gene differential expression, then mapped to pathways for enrichment analysis. possible repurposed drugs targets were found through database and literature searches. a total of common biological pathways were identified among the seven different respiratory viruses analyzed, representing fifteen laboratories, nine different cell types, and seven different array platforms. a large overlap in the general immune response was observed among the top twenty of these pathways, adding validation to our analysis strategy. of the top five pathways, we found differentially expressed genes affected by at least five of the seven viruses. we suggest five new therapeutic indications for existing small molecules or biological agents targeting proteins encoded by the genes f , il b, tnf, casp and mmp . pathway enrichment analysis also identified a potential novel host response, the parkin-ubiquitin proteasomal system (parkin-ups) pathway, which is known to be involved in the progression of neurodegenerative parkinson's disease. conclusions: our study suggests that multiple and diverse respiratory viruses invoke several common host response pathways. further analysis of these pathways suggests potential opportunities for therapeutic intervention. respiratory viruses account for seasonal colds, bronchiolitis, acute otitis, sinusitis, croup, community-acquired pneumonia, and exacerbation of both chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma [ ] . the prevalence of pandemic orthomyxoviridae influenza a virus (flu) from april to was estimated to be approximately million cases, , hospitalizations, and , deaths [ ] . paramyxoviridae respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) infection results in nearly two million children requiring medical care with about , children younger than five years hospitalized annually [ ] . in one survey, rsv was the most prevalent pathogen in children under five years with an acute respiratory infection, followed by adenoviridae adenovirus (adeno), and picornaviridae human rhinovirus (hrv) [ ] . while initially effective, pathogen gene targeted treatments exert evolutionary selection on the infectious species often leading to the emergence of drug resistant strains. as a result, there are increasing clinical reports of resistance against many drugs that directly act on viral proteins or their dna [ , ] . in particular, resistance to different classes of antiviral drugs is becoming more clinically prevalent in respiratory virus infections as seen with rsv and flu treated with the antiviral drugs palivizumab [ ] , and oseltamivir [ ] , respectively. pathogens elucidate two broad types of biochemical responses in the host. first is the activation of the host immune system. while the immune response is critical in combating pathogen infections, its over-activation often exacerbates tissue damage initiated by viral invasion [ , ] . the second response is the up-regulation of host genes, such as protein biosynthetic pathways, that are crucial for sustaining pathogen invasion, replication and evasion [ ] . interestingly, genetically distinct respiratory viruses often modulate common host proteins and biological pathways during infection [ ] . for example, many respiratory viruses trigger similar general airway inflammatory responses such as the expression of cytokines interleukin- (hugo gene name il ), interleukin- (il ) and interleukin- (il ), and granulocyte macrophage-colony stimulating factor (csf ). these inflammatory responses in turn initiate iga production, b cell differentiation and t cell stimulation [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . as a consequence, diagnosis for specific viral infections is difficult since diverse respiratory viruses cause similar, often indistinguishable patient symptoms [ ] . however, because distinct respiratory viruses converge on similar immune responses, opportunities also exist for targeting host proteins and pathways which will potentially affect multiple viral pathogens [ ] . moreover, human targets might be less susceptible to the evolution of drug resistance due to constraints on the virus to find alternative host pathways for its proliferation. individuals may experience a co-infection or sequential infections of multiple viruses or bacteria which can complicate both disease diagnosis and drug prescription decisions. furthermore, patients infected by multiple pathogens may have further complications due to drug-drug interactions, cumulative drug toxicities and immune system suppression, as observed during hiv and mycobacterium tuberculosis co-infections [ , ] . indeed, a study in children under five years showed pervasive clinical occurrences of co-infections involving combinations of rsv, hrv, paramyxoviridae parainfluenza virus, flu, coronaviridae sars-coronavirus (coron), paramyxoviridae metapneumonia virus (mpneu), parvoviridae human bocavirus and adeno [ ] . therefore, in addition to minimizing drug resistance, there is a need for new therapeutic approaches to safely and effectively treat co-infections by multiple viral and/or bacterial pathogens, particularly where strain-specific diagnostics or treatments are unavailable. the development of new antiviral therapeutics requires a greater understanding of the global host response when challenged by different types of viruses. such knowledge may lead to the identification of novel human genome targets that are shared across multiple viral infections as well as opportunities for repositioning existing drugs for the treatment of infectious diseases [ ] . several recent studies have generated multiple mrna microarray gene expression datasets derived from experiments involving the infection of human cell-lines or animal models with one or more of the major respiratory viruses [ ] [ ] [ ] . through a systematic analysis of these respiratory virus-human host gene expression datasets, we determined common sets of genes and pathways involved in host responses to viral infections. among the most significant pathways, we identified several potential new opportunities for repurposing existing drugs for the treatment of respiratory viral infections. we performed a large-scale analysis of published mrna microarray datasets from studies involving a wide range of respiratory viruses in human host infection models. we focused on human mrna array datasets in order to avoid complications inherent in cross-species comparisons. in order to ensure consistency in experimental conditions and reduce biases due to noisy or poor quality datasets, we instituted an iterative process of database querying, data filtering, and common pathway analysis across all published human mrna datasets for twelve relevant respiratory viruses. these viruses initially included the double stranded dna viruses herpesviridae human cytomegalovirus (cmv) and adeno; the positive sense single stranded rna viruses coron, picornaviridae coxsackievirus (cox), hrv, picornaviridae echovirus (echo), and picornaviridae enterovirus (entero); and the negative sense single stranded rna viruses flu, mpenu, rsv, bunyaviridae hantavirus (hant) and sin nombre virus (snv). this list was later narrowed to include only the subset listed in table based on filtering processes outlined in the materials and methods and shown in figure . a total of seven different respiratory viruses were analyzed, represented by fifteen unique gene expression omnibus (geo) datasets (indicated by geo series or gse accession numbers), nine different human cell types, and seven different array platforms for a total of unique comparisons. note that one dataset (gse ) contained two different viruses (flu and rsv) that were analyzed. after querying the geo database and prescreening for obvious non-candidate datasets such as those not associated with human array platforms, there were at least datasets associated with at least one of the twelve respiratory viruses. however, after considering all conditions for geo dataset candidacy, at least four of these datasets were excluded. in one case, an adeno dataset (gse [pmid unpublished]) had less than three samples per treatment group, as did a cox (gse [pmid unpublished]) and a cmv (gse [ ] ) dataset. as another example, a cmv dataset (gse [ ] ) lacked a healthy/control treatment group. additionally, at least four datasets had some comparison groups that did not fit the filters for inclusion. for instance, an hrv (gse ) dataset's original study design was to observe differences in hrv infectivity between asthmatic and non-asthmatic patients. the asthmatic comparison group data were eliminated from the analysis because of potential difficulties in distinguishing between host inflammatory responses due to viral infections from those associated with chronic asthma. similarly, a combined flu, hrv and rsv dataset (gse ) contained two main patient groups. one group was classified as developing symptoms after exposure to a single virus under study, while the other group did not develop any symptoms after exposure. only the group that developed symptoms for each of the three viruses was considered for further analysis and the asymptomatic group was omitted. in total, geo datasets, representing unique comparisons (different time points and/or virus strains) were analyzed for quality because they met the four requirements for dataset candidacy. no single dataset exhibited overall poor quality control (qc), and therefore, all datasets representing comparison groups were analyzed for differential expression. however, qc analysis across all candidate datasets revealed two outliers in gse (samples gsm and gsm ), two in gse (samples gsm and gsm ), and one outlier each in dataset gse [ ] (sample gsm ), gse (sample gsm ), and gse (sample gsm ) for a total of seven samples removed from five different datasets. an illustration of the kernel density and principle component analysis (pca) plots generated during the qc analysis is shown in figure for gse 's rsv treatment (median of hours post infection) and rsv control (baseline) groups. additional qc analysis results including median of absolute deviation (mad) score plots and pair-wise correlation maps are shown in figure s . initially, all samples except gsm showed acceptable kernel density (figure a) , pca (figure c ), mad score ( figure s a ) and pair-wise correlation ( figure s c ) plots. the sample gsm was removed because: a) it did not conform to the kernel density of the other samples; b) it fell outside of the hotelling t alpha threshold of . (represented by the superimposed elliptical on the pca plot), and; c) it was an outlier in both the mad score and pair-wise correlation plots. a second qc round was performed, which resulted in a further non-conforming sample, gsm , being discarded. subsequent qc analysis generated acceptable results in kernel density (figure b ), pca (figure d ), mad score ( figure s b ), and pair-wise correlation ( figure s d ), thus this dataset passed our criteria for inclusion in the analysis. all datasets exhibiting acceptable quality were analyzed for probe differential expression. an example volcano plot is shown in figure s for rsv treatment group at peak symptoms versus control group (data originating from gse ). cutoff levels of . -fold increase or decrease in probe expression levels, respectively, and p-values , . were used throughout (represented by red lines in figure s ). all comparison groups had at least some differentially expressed probes, although the number varied greatly indicating potential falsely discovered probes (for example, a comparison group within gse had differentially expressed probes while a comparison group within gse had differentially expressed probes). however, the conservative pathway enrichment approach we employed tends to attenuate falsely discovered genes. there were three comparison groups that did not meet the least square mean (lsm) threshold requirement and were excluded from the differentially expressed probe list: two of the for each comparison group, the differentially expressed probes were mapped to their corresponding genes, and then a p-value was assigned for each pathway map using the software genego (accessed june ). next, the comparison group's significant pathway lists were combined to find the union of all significant pathways (that is, the combined pathway list where all treatment groups have at least one significant pathway). a total of out of the approximately pathway maps available in metabase were determined to be significant. comparison groups having , % significant pathways of the total significant pathways (that is, comparison groups containing less than significant pathways) lead to the exclusion of eleven comparison groups from the union list. excluded groups were: hrv at hours (eliminating one comparison group from gse ), hrv at hours (eliminating one comparison group from gse ), both strains of flu at hour and hours each and another strain at hours (eliminating three comparison groups from gse ), rsv at hours (eliminating all comparison groups from gse ), cmv at and hours (eliminating all comparison groups from gse [ ] ), and flu at hours (eliminating all comparison groups from gse [ ] ). at the end of the final step in our filtering process, a total of datasets, or comparison groups remained (tables , s and s ). there were enriched pathways in which all seven respiratory viruses were represented by at least one comparison group (table s ). the list is ranked first by the viral frequency, followed by the sum of the normalized viral expression (nve) for each pathway. also shown are the differentially expressed as well as the total number of network objects across all comparisons. the top enriched pathways are listed in table along with the percentage and names of the differentially expressed genes with a viral frequency of at least five in each pathway. of these, the top five pathways were chosen for further analysis and mapping. these pathways are epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) signaling, cd signaling, interferon-gamma (ifng) signaling, histamine receptor h (hrh ) signaling, and interleukin- (il ) signaling (figures s . s , s , s , s ; table s ). additionally, the parkin-ubiquitin proteasomal system (parkin-ups) pathway was chosen for further analysis because it has not been previously associated with the innate immunity and might be an interesting new mechanism of host response to respiratory viral infection ( figure ). the nves for differentially expressed genes with frequencies of at least six viruses are shown in table along with their associated pathways. the list is ranked by the greatest viral frequency, and then by number of pathways in which the gene is differentially expressed. the nve values for all genes, along with associated pathways, ranked by the greatest viral frequency, followed by the number of pathways in which the gene is differentially expressed are in table s . we ensured that the nve was not bias toward any particular comparison group, and indeed no single dataset contributed to the overall nve for any single virus (table s ) . hierarchical clustering on the quantile normalized fold change values for all genes having expression values in at least out of comparisons (at least % comparisons) and significant in at least seven comparisons ( figure s ) as well as for genes with nve of at least six viruses ( figure s ) did not reveal any dominant clustering by gse or virus type. the most consistently up-regulated genes (up-regulated in at least six viruses and down-regulated no more than one virus) are: nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in b-cells inhibitor alpha (nfkbia), tumor necrosis factor alpha-induced protein (tnfaip ), chemokine c-c motif ligand (ccl ), interferon regulatory factor (irf ), prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase (ptgs ), chemokine c-c motif ligand (ccl ), dual specificity phosphatase (dusp ), eukaryotic translation initiation factor -alpha kinase (ei-f ak ), tnf receptor superfamily member (fas), suppressor of cytokine signaling (socs ), tnf receptor-associated factor (traf ), and ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme e l (ube l ). there were no consistently down-regulated mrnas (downregulated in at least six viruses and up-regulated in no more than one virus). we sought drug repurposing candidate targets from the top five enriched pathways and the parkin-ups pathway by searching the drugbank database, version . (http://www.drugbank.ca/ accessed august ) [ ] [ ] [ ] , for drugs targeting any of the differentially expressed genes with a viral frequency of at least five (table s ). of these, thirteen genes, or almost % of the original genes, were associated with at least one approved small molecule or protein therapy. there genes were: prostaglandinendoperoxide synthase (ptgs ), tnf, matrix metallopeptidase (mmp ), jun proto-oncogene (jun), interleukin beta (il b), ccl , cd , coagulation factor iii (f ), phosphoinositide- kinase regulatory subunit (pik r ), intercellular adhesion molecule (icam ), nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide gene enhancer in b-cells (nfkb ), caspase (casp ), and tubulin beta (tubb ). a selection of these genes, along with other characteristics to evaluate their potential as drug targets such as involvement in immune response [ ] [ ] [ ] , jackson laboratory knock-in/knock-out mouse (jax) phenotype [ ] , approved or marketed small molecule drug or protein therapy, and current indications for that drug, are listed in table . note that the current indication may not be for the gene target listed. mimosine (gene target: ccl ) and glucosamine (gene targets: nfkb and mmp ) did not have a current indication, while the interactions of natalizumab (gene target: icam ) and gallium nitrate (gene target: ilb ) with their gene targets were unclear. additionally, therapies associated with ptgs are cyclooxygenase (cox- ) inhibitors which have known side-effect issues thus were not explored further. therefore, nfkb , icam and ptgs were excluded from table , leaving ten genes for potential drug repurposing. the potential cases for drug repurposing are discussed more in-depth for four targets; f , il b, tnf and casp . our study used a systematic process to minimize potential technical noise that could have arisen from our comparative analysis of fifteen unique datasets from nine different cell types, and seven different array platforms. these measures included candidate dataset filtering followed by qc, differential gene expression and pathway enrichment analyses. a total of out of , about one third of the total comparisons, were removed as a result of this filtering process, which is indicative of our conservative analysis approach. we had previously used largescale and merged-sam analyses in integrating large-scale microarray datasets involving cancer tissues from multiple laboratories [ , ] . however, the small sample size datasets used in the present study required a more rigorous methodology to identify data outliers. to our knowledge the qc analysis performed with each geo dataset is unique to this study. although no dataset was completely disregarded after qc analysis, some samples were clear outliers, thus potentially skewing the data. kauffmann and huber have demonstrated improvements in signal-to-noise ratios after performing post normalization qc analysis to remove array outliers within an experiment [ ] . those authors used ma-plot and boxplots of the log-ratios to determine outliers instead of mad scores, pca and pair-wise correlations employed in this study. fundamentally, the concept of data improvement after outlier removal applies regardless of the qc analysis approach. signaling jun, myc, nfkbia, stat , fos, jak , hbegf, dusp , dusp , ptk , gsk b, mmp , nfkb , pik r , prkca, sos , tgfa cd signaling il , jun, nfkbia, tnfaip , ccl , fas, il , irf , jak , ptgs , traf , ccnd , cd , icam , lyn, map k , map k , mapk , nfkb , pik r , tp , traf ifng signaling myc, stat , cdkn a, eif ak , irf , jak , socs , stat , camk g, cebpb, icam , mapk , pik r , prkca, ptpn hrh signaling il , jun, nfkbia, fos, il , tnf, csf , f , gnaq, gnb , gng , icam despite the diverse nature of the microarray data analyzed here, we found a large overlap between comparison groups in significant pathways, especially the immune system. of the top twenty enriched pathways, eighteen are associated with immune response ( table ) . for example, egfr signaling is known to be activated during infection by respiratory viruses flu [ ] and entero [ , ] . cd signaling is associated with coron [ ] , rsv [ ] , and the general immune response [ ] . interferon gamma (ifng) signaling is initiated by flu [ ] and rsv [ ] , while interleukin signaling is stimulated by flu [ ] . as components of the general immune response, interferon and interleukin pathways are activated by infectious agents such as hepatitis c virus (hcv), hiv and tuberculosis as well as chronic diseases like crohn's disease, diabetes, and metastatic melanoma [ , ] . the overall relationships between the transitory host immunity response launched by pathogenic infections versus that seen in chronic autoimmune and neurodegenerative diseases are complex and an intense area of investigation [ ] . in addition, there are considerations about subtle shifts in gene function roles in different cell tissue types amongst the various diseases. thus, we are cautious about any linkages between pathways involved in infections and those of chronic diseases as implied by our analysis without further validation studies. parkin (park ) is an e -ubiqutin ligase associated with the progression of the neurodegenerative disorder parkinson's disease. [ ] . as a central hub protein in the parkin-ups pathway, park ubiquinates proteins encoded by septin (sept ) [ ] , tubulin alpha and beta [ ] , and the glycosylated form of synuclein, alpha (snca) [ ] for degradation by the s proteasome. park also ubiquinates synuclein, alpha interacting protein (sncaip) for regulation of snca [ ] , interacts with stip homology and u-box containing protein e ubiquitin protein ligase (stub ) to enhance ubiquitination of g proteincoupled receptor (gpr ), [ ] (which associates with f-box and wd repeat domain containing (fbxw )), and cullin (cul ) to ubiquitinate cyclin e [ ] . park is deactivated by protolytic cleavage by casp and caspase (casp ) [ ] and can be activated by either heat shock protein kd (hspa ) or stub [ ] . the parkin-ups pathway is not commonly associated with general immune response to viral infection. however, other ubiquitylation proteins, such as isg , are known to play roles in host defense [ , ] . associations between influenza infection and neuroinflammation in early onset autosomal recessive parkinson's disease have been recently suggested [ ] [ ] [ ] . at least one factor in the progression of parkinson's disease is the formation of neuotoxic lewy bodies due to increases in snca. increases in snca are believed to be the result of loss-of-function mutations in park which cause disruptions in the protein's localization and solubility [ ] [ ] [ ] . polymorphisms in the gene park have also been associated with susceptibility to infectious diseases such as leprosy, typhoid fever and paratyphoid fever, although the exact mechanism is still unclear [ , ] . jang et al. observed activation of snca in mouse nervous tissue long after pathogenic h n flu infection where the increased levels of snca mirror those found in parkinson's disease [ ] . similarly, recent findings from rohn and catlin indicate flu as a potential causative factor for parkinson's disease [ ] . indeed, links between flu and other neurodegenerative diseases have been suggested, and these include seizures, transverse myelitis, expressive aphasia, syncope, encephalitis, neuromyelitis optica, and central nervous system disease in general [ ] [ ] [ ] . park itself has a low signal at the mrna level which might be due to its significant regulation by post-translation processes [ , ] . further studies are needed to determine the mechanism our analysis suggests several potential repurposing opportunities for launched drugs against host-viral targets (table ). this assumption is based on the occurrence of genes that are differentially expressed in infection models for at least five of the seven respiratory viruses, have involvement in a number of relevant pathways related to host immune response, and encode for known drug targets. the drugs associated with this gene list do not have current indications as anti-viral therapies, although pranlukast and clenbuterol are prescribed for relief of lung disorders such as bronchospasm after allergic reactions and asthma bronchoconstriction during asthma attacks, respectively. also, minocycline, sometimes called minocin, is a broad-spectrum tetracycline antibiotic as well as a caspase (casp ) inhibitor while chloroquine is a well-known anti-malaria drug [ ] [ ] [ ] . in fact, eight of the ten drug repurposing gene targets are involved in activation of the innate immune response, while the remaining two have some evidence of virus modulation. potential drug repurposing opportunities for f , il b, tnf, and mmp , as well as the parkin-ups pathway gene product casp , are discussed below. coagulation factor iii (f ). f normally binds to the native cofactor vii or viia to induce the blood coagulation cascade. treatment with recombinant coagulation factor viia promotes blood coagulation in hemophiliacs [ ] [ ] [ ] . esmon et al. [ ] suggest that coagulation could be used therapeutically to modulate inflammation responses and vice versa, but also caution about the danger of increased incidence of thrombosis. the consistent upregulation of f across five viruses suggests that the immunecoagulation axis is already initiated and supplemental f activation may cause thrombosis complications. further study is needed to develop therapeutics that could balance between innate immune response triggered by coagulation factor viia therapy and stabilization of the antithrombotic state. interleukin beta (il b). il b is a cytokine involved in inflammatory response, cell proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. il b is specifically cleaved into its active form by the protease casp after which it activates the nlrp inflammasome [ ] [ ] [ ] ] . indeed, il b is consistently up regulated across cmv, flu, hrv, mpenu and rsv which likely correlates with inflammasome activation. however, overexpression of il b causes multiple inflammatory disorders [ ] . antagonists or neutralizers of il b, such as canakinumab, could potentially reduce inflammation damage associated with viral infection. tumor necrosis factor (tnf). tnf has a wide range of biological functions including modulation of immune response to pathogen assault. mouse tnf knock-out phenotypes include abnormal immune system physiology, increased susceptibility to viral infection, and both increased and decreased susceptibility to bacterial infection [ ] [ ] [ ] . in our study, tnf is mostly up regulated in infections by cmv, coron, cox, and flu but directionally ambiguous for mpneu and not expressed under rsv. while total disruption of tnf function would be deleterious to the host, there are instances where partial tnf inhibition provides a clinical benefit in patients with viral complications [ , ] . pranlukast is a cysteinyl leukotriene receptor- antagonist that reduces bronchospasm caused by an allergic reaction, usually with asthmatic individuals. this drug inhibits tnf-alpha by blocking macrophage cysteinyl leukotriene (cysltc , d ) receptors [ ] or suppression of nf-kappa b activation [ ] . pranlukast has been recently shown to be beneficial not only in cases of respiratory syncytial virus postbronchiolitis, but also in a wide variety of other diseases with strong inflammatory complications such as cystic fibrosis, cancer, atherosclerosis, eosinophils cystitis, otitis media, capsular contracture, and eosinophilic gastrointestinal disorders [ ] . amrinone is a type pyridine phosphodiesterase inhibitor used in the treatment of congestive heart failure and is an inhibitor of tnf [ ] . phosphodiesterase inhibitors have been shown to alter immune response [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and, in one case, specifically through tnf [ ] . amrinone is known to modulate pro-and antiinflammatory factors in endotoxin-stimulated cells [ ] . type phosphodiesterase inhibitors have been used to treat rsv-induced airway hyper-responsiveness and lung eosinophilia [ ] . therefore, indirect evidence suggests that armirone may be beneficial in respiratory viral infection situations by inhibiting tnf via type phosphodiesterase, although this has yet to be seen in clinical studies. matrix metallopeptidase (mmp ). mmp encodes a matrix metallopeptidase that degrades type iv and v collagens, and is implicated in arthritis and metastasis [ ] [ ] [ ] . we can only speculate on the role mmp plays in infection. our analysis finds the gene to be up-regulated for three viruses while down-regulated for two different viruses. in other studies, mmp has been observed to be up-regulated after exposure to double stranded rna and is important to airway injury [ ] , specifically by rsv [ ] . mmp expression is induced by il b [ ] which, as mentioned above, is an activator of the nlrp inflammasome [ ] . mmp inhibitors such as marimastat, minocycline or captopril, could be beneficial assuming that the protein is coopted by the infecting virus for tissue remodeling. blocking mmp may also reduce inflammatory damage by down-regulating the inflammasome. caspase (casp ). in the case of the parkin-ups pathway, inhibiting tubulin-beta formation may reduce viral proliferation given that flu utilize acetylated tubulin for protein trafficking [ ] and increases in neuronal class iii tubb occur after cox infection [ ] . a casp inhibitor such as minocycline could be used to increase park ubiquitinase activity, in turn decreasing the tuba or tubb availability. as mentioned above, casp is a component of the nlrp inflammasome, activating the precursor to il b [ ] . therefore, a casp inhibitor would have an antagonist relationship with il b, hence the inflammasome. further, casp inhibitors would be agonists for park , thereby reducing accumulation of snca. in this regard, casp inhibitors may not only prevent unnecessary nlrp inflammasome activation via ilb , but may also reduce accumulation of neurotoxic lewy bodies through activation of park . however, caspases are not specific to the parkin-ups pathway and inhibition in this regard may result in toxicity or other complications [ ] . additionally, mouse jax phenotypes for casp show both increased and decreased susceptibility to bacterial infection, as well as decreased inflammatory response. while casp inhibition may prove beneficial in terms of increasing inflammatory responses, it is ambiguous in terms of benefit for bacterial infections. in our analysis, the expression of casp and tubb is also somewhat variable across virus types. therefore, more study is needed specifically on the role of caspase and tubulin in host response to respiratory virus infection. modulation of any human host pathway for the treatment of viral infections has potential drawbacks with respect to toxicity and other side-effects. for example, although interferon is widely used to help combat viral pathogens, the treatment is known to cause an array of side-effects related to toxicity including confusion, lethargy, impaired mental status, numbness, tingling, fevers, chills, headaches, anorexia and sepsis [ , ] . another caveat is that some proteins are beneficial if up-regulated during initial viral infection but have detrimental effects if over-activated for prolonged periods. thus determining the desired mechanism and direction of therapeutic intervention requires careful study. although targeting host-pathogen interactions is a challenging therapeutic approach, there are considerable upside benefits with respect to overcoming pathogen-mediated drug resistance and the capability of treating multiple, co-infecting pathogens. our study suggests several potential human-host proteins that could be targets of future therapeutics as well as some possible drug candidates for further investigations of repurposing against respiratory virus infections. the national center for biotechnology information's geo database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/ (accessed between january and july ) was searched for human mrna datasets for twelve respiratory viruses. (figure ) reduced the number of viruses with suitable datasets to seven species (table ) . all analyzed geo datasets contain at least one ''treatment group'' and ''control group''. ''treatment'' was the experimental variable under study, usually a virus type, strain, or time point. ''group'' was a collection of individual ''samples'', or replicates, each of which originates from their own microarray chip. ''comparison group'' was the treatment group compared to a control group. a particular dataset may have more than one comparison group. all criteria for dataset inclusion in the final analysis were chosen prior to the analysis. dataset candidacy filtering consisted of four criteria: ) the dataset must contain at least samples per treatment or control group because a sample size any less would mean a loss in statistical power for subsequent analysis; ) the microarray platform must be supported by either affymetrix, agilent or illumina due to probe mapping abilities of the software used in subsequent analysis; ) each gene expression profile had to be derived from human cells and probed using a human-based genome microarray platform and not other species; and ) the dataset must contain at least one wild-type infection treatment group (i.e., unmodified virus strain or infectivity mechanism) and at least one healthy control group (i.e., no genetic or media modifications such as gene knock outs or inhibitors, respectively). prior to quality control (qc) analysis, we pre-screened and preprocessed each dataset. normalized raw data and the study design table were imported from the geo databases (the data was assumed to be normalized by robust multi-array average, but in some cases the published study used an alternative normalization method). where appropriate, the intensity values were log transformation. various experimental parameters such as time point, virus strain and number of replicates were extracted from the study design tables. samples irrelevant to the main study design were marked for segregation or exclusion from our downstream analysis, but not excluded from quality assessment. these were classified as ''failing to meet treatment specification'' at the candidate filtering step. studies that had a large number of missing intensity values (over %) were annotated and flagged. the qc analysis assessed each sample in the dataset for kernel density, pca, mad, and pair-wise pearson correlation such that: ) the kernel density was normally distributed; ) after pca values were within the hotelling t alpha level threshold of . [ ] [ ] [ ] ; ) mad score scores were in the range of + to with no outliers [ ] ; and ) inner-treatment group pair wise correlations for samples derived from a single cell were $ . or $ . if taken from individual donors [ ] . figures were created using array studio software, version . . (omicsoft corporation, research triangle park, nc, usa [ ] ). during subsequent analysis, each comparison group was treated separately, regardless of dataset origination, in order to gain a wider, less bias view of representative genes and pathways. once a comparison group passed the qc analysis filters, lsm values were calculated for each probe using array studio in order to reduce the number of false positives due to low probe intensity values. probes within each of the filtered datasets were tested for biological and statistical relevance using the array studio implementation of fold change and statistical models, respectively. specifically, to determine a probe's fold change expression when compared to control, the geometric mean of each probe's log transformed intensity value within a treatment was generated, and then normalized to the corresponding control group's geometric mean. the treatment versus control data were fitted to a general linear model, and associated p-values for each probe were calculated using a modified t-test [ ] . thus, to be considered differentially expressed, each probe within a comparison group must have a p-value , . after general linear model test and a fold change in either direction of . . to visualize a comparison group's significance and fold change, volcano plots were generated using array studio of a probe's log(p-value) versus its transformed fold change (fc) value according to the following piece-wise function: the differentially expressed probes were mapped to their corresponding genes using metacore/metabase (genego), a software/database package that creates biological pathways and networks from gene lists (database accessed june ) [ , ] . if more than one probe mapped to a gene, the probe with the highest magnitude fold change value was used for that gene. thus, the mapped differentially expressed probe list became the differentially expressed gene list for each comparison group. the differentially expressed gene lists from each comparison group were analyzed for enriched pathways using genego. a pvalue for each of the pathway maps in the metabase were generated for each comparison group using a hypergeometric test [ ] . in order for a pathway to be considered enriched, each comparison group must contain pathways that have a p-value , . and occur in . % of the total studies. the enriched pathway list was ranked by its viral frequency, which is defined by the number of viruses represented by at least one comparison group, and then by the sum of normalized viral expression or nve for each enriched pathway. the nve for each pathway was calculated using the number of comparisons containing significant pathways within a virus type relative to the number of comparisons within that virus type. for example, if one out of four flu comparisons for pathway a were significant, the nve for flu would be / . ranking the pathways in this fashion resulted in a clearer determination of pathways shared across multiple viruses, irrespective of time, strain type, or number of comparison groups. after examining the ranked pathway list described above, the top five significant pathways and an additional pathway representing a unique mechanism were further analyzed. with each map, the proteins were labeled according to the number of viruses in which the transcript was differentially expressed thus yielding the viral frequency for that protein. in cases where a protein complex was made up of subunits, the greatest magnitude fold change value for any subunit was chosen to represent the entire complex. genego was used for the visualization of this pathway map. similar to the pathway nve, the nve for each gene within these six chosen pathways was calculated using the number of comparisons containing either up or down regulated genes for each protein within a virus type relative to the number of comparisons within that virus type. for example, if two out of three rsv comparisons for gene x were up-regulated, gene x's nve for rsv would be / . we performed complete linkage and correlation distance hierarchical clustering using arraystudio on quantile normalized fold change values to determine the separation qualities of the analyzed data [ ] . clustering was performed on genes that had expression values for at least % of the total number of comparisons. we used the matlab function 'knnimpute' to impute missing fold change values using k-nearest neighbors estimation (matlab version . (r b), mathworks, cambridge ma, ) [ , ] . approved or marketed small molecule and protein therapeutics for each of the differentially expressed proteins modulated by or more respiratory viruses were obtained from the drugbank database, version . (http://www.drugbank.ca/ accessed august ) [ ] [ ] [ ] . we only considered those drugs that were launched products with experimental and clinical evidence of direct interaction with gene product in question. the therapy's interaction with the target and approved indication were identified using a combination of drugbank, the drug manufacturer's information page, and the national center for biotechnology information's pubchem (http://pubchem.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ accessed september ) [ ] and gene (http://www.ncbi.nlm. nih.gov/gene/ accessed september ) databases. supplemental evidence of mechanism of action was obtained from immune or infection-related jackson laboratory knock-in/knock-out mouse (jax) phenotype (http://www.jax.org/ accessed september ) [ ] . (table ). the horizontal axis contains each of the different comparisons labeled by virus, gse and time point. the vertical axis shows the clustering of genes from the top five and parkin-ups pathways that have an nve of at least and have an expression value in at least comparisons. for genes present in more than one of the five pathways, the number of participating pathways is indicated by the count of ''*'' before the gene name. color scheme is as described for figure s . (tif) figure s epidermal growth factor receptor signaling pathway with viral frequency. viral frequencies superimposed for each of most frequently differentially expressed proteins, where red circles are differential expression of genes by viruses, orange circles are differential expression of genes by at least viruses, and blue circles are differential expression of genes by viruses. see metacore website at http://www.genego.com/pdf/ mc_legend.pdf for figure legend and table s for pathway map gene products' corresponding hugo gene names. (tif) figure s cd signaling pathway with viral frequency. viral frequencies superimposed for each of most frequently differentially expressed proteins, where red circles are differential expression of genes by viruses, orange circles are differential expression of genes by at least viruses, and blue circles are differential expression of genes by viruses. see metacore website at http://www.genego.com/pdf/mc_legend.pdf for figure legend and table s for pathway map gene products' corresponding hugo gene names. (tif) figure s interferon-gamma signaling pathway with viral frequency. viral frequencies superimposed for each of most frequently differentially expressed proteins, where red circles are differential expression of genes by viruses, orange circles are differential expression of genes by at least viruses, and blue circles are differential expression of genes by viruses. see metacore website at http://www.genego.com/pdf/mc_legend. pdf for figure legend and table s for pathway map gene products' corresponding hugo gene names. (tif) figure s histamine receptor h signaling pathway with viral frequency. viral frequencies superimposed for each of most frequently differentially expressed proteins, where red circles are differential expression of genes by viruses, orange circles are differential expression of genes by at least viruses, and blue circles are differential expression of genes by viruses. see metacore website at http://www.genego.com/pdf/mc_legend. pdf for figure legend and table s for pathway map gene products' corresponding hugo gene names. (tif) figure s interleukin- signaling pathway with viral frequency. viral frequencies superimposed for each of most frequently differentially expressed proteins, where red circles are differential expression of genes by viruses, orange circles are differential expression of genes by at least viruses, and blue circles are differential expression of genes by viruses. see metacore website at http://www.genego.com/pdf/mc_legend. pdf for figure legend and table s for pathway map gene products' corresponding hugo gene names. 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influenza viruses in primary human macrophages gene expression profiles during in vivo human rhinovirus infection: insights into the host response rhinovirus-induced modulation of gene expression in bronchial epithelial cells from subjects with asthma identification of human metapneumovirus-induced gene networks in airway epithelial cells by microarray analysis differential recognition of tlr-dependent microbial ligands in human bronchial epithelial cells identification of gene biomarkers for respiratory syncytial virus infection in a bronchial epithelial cell line we thank vinod kumar for his assistance in computational analysis. key: cord- -bb h w authors: brann, david h.; tsukahara, tatsuya; weinreb, caleb; lipovsek, marcela; van den berge, koen; gong, boying; chance, rebecca; macaulay, iain c.; chou, hsin-jung; fletcher, russell; das, diya; street, kelly; de bezieux, hector roux; choi, yoon-gi; risso, davide; dudoit, sandrine; purdom, elizabeth; mill, jonathan s.; hachem, ralph abi; matsunami, hiroaki; logan, darren w.; goldstein, bradley j.; grubb, matthew s.; ngai, john; datta, sandeep robert title: non-neuronal expression of sars-cov- entry genes in the olfactory system suggests mechanisms underlying covid- -associated anosmia date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: bb h w altered olfactory function is a common symptom of covid- , but its etiology is unknown. a key question is whether sars-cov- (cov- ) – the causal agent in covid- – affects olfaction directly by infecting olfactory sensory neurons or their targets in the olfactory bulb, or indirectly, through perturbation of supporting cells. here we identify cell types in the olfactory epithelium and olfactory bulb that express sars-cov- cell entry molecules. bulk sequencing revealed that mouse, non-human primate and human olfactory mucosa expresses two key genes involved in cov- entry, ace and tmprss . however, single cell sequencing and immunostaining demonstrated ace expression in support cells, stem cells, and perivascular cells; in contrast, neurons in both the olfactory epithelium and bulb did not express ace message or protein. these findings suggest that cov- infection of non-neuronal cell types leads to anosmia and related disturbances in odor perception in covid- patients. sars-cov- (cov- ) is a pandemic coronavirus that causes the covid- syndrome, which can include upper respiratory infection (uri) symptoms, severe respiratory distress, acute cardiac injury and death ( - ). cov- is closely related to other beta-coronaviruses, including the causal agents in pandemic sars and mers (sars-cov and mers-cov, respectively) and endemic viruses typically associated with mild uri syndromes (hcov-oc and hcov- e) ( ) ( ) ( ) . clinical reports suggest that infection with cov- is associated with high rates of disturbances in smell and taste perception, including anosmia ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . while many viruses (including coronaviruses) induce transient changes in odor perception due to inflammatory responses, in at least some cases covid-related anosmia has been reported to occur in the absence of significant nasal inflammation or coryzal symptoms ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) . this observation suggests that cov- might directly target odor processing mechanisms, although the specific means through which cov- alters odor perception remains unknown. cov- -like sars-cov -infects cells through interactions between its spike (s) protein and the ace protein on target cells. this interaction requires cleavage of the s protein, likely by the cell surface protease tmprss , although other proteases (such as cathepsin b and l, ctsb/ctsl) may also be involved ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . other coronaviruses use different cell surface receptors and proteases to facilitate cellular entry, including dpp , furin and hspa for mers-cov, anpep for hcov- e, tmprss d for sars-cov (in addition to ace and tmprss ), and st gal and st gal for hcov-oc and hcov-hku ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) . we hypothesized that identifying the specific olfactory cell types susceptible to direct cov- infection (due to e.g., ace and tmprss expression) would provide insight into possible mechanisms through which covid- causes altered smell perception. the nasal epithelium is divided into a respiratory epithelium (re) and olfactory epithelium (oe), whose functions and cell types differ. the nasal re is continuous with the epithelium that lines much of the respiratory tract and is thought to humidify air as it enters the nose; main cell types include basal cells, ciliated cells, secretory cells (including goblet cells), and brush/microvillar cells ( , ) (figure ). the oe, in contrast, is responsible for odor detection, as it houses mature olfactory sensory neurons (osns) that interact with odors via receptors localized on their dendritic cilia. osns are supported by sustentacular cells, which act to structurally support sensory neurons, phagocytose and/or detoxify potentially damaging agents, and maintain local salt and water balance ( ) ( ) ( ) ; microvillar cells and mucus-secreting bowman's gland cells also play important roles in maintaining oe homeostasis and function ( , ) (figure ). in addition, the oe contains globose basal cells (gbcs), which are primarily responsible for regenerating osns during normal epithelial turnover, and horizontal basal cells (hbcs), which act as reserve stem cells activated upon tissue damage ( ) ( ) ( ) . osns elaborate axons that puncture the cribriform plate at the base of the skull and terminate in the olfactory bulb, whose local circuits process olfactory information before sending it to higher brain centers (figure ). it has recently been demonstrated through single cell rna sequencing analysis (referred to herein as scseq) that cells from the human upper airway -including nasal re goblet, basal and ciliated cells -express high levels of ace and tmprss , suggesting that these re cell types may serve as a viral reservoir during cov- infection ( ) . however, analyzed samples in that dataset did not include any osns or sustentacular cells, indicating that tissue sampling in these experiments did not include the oe ( , ) . here we query both new and previously published bulk rna-seq and scseq datasets from the olfactory system for expression of ace , tmrpss and other genes implicated in coronavirus entry. we find that non-neuronal cells in the oe and olfactory bulb, including support, stem and perivascular cells, express cov- entryassociated transcripts and their associated proteins, suggesting that infection of these non-neuronal cell types contributes to anosmia in covid- patients. schematic of a sagittal view of the human nasal cavity, in which respiratory and olfactory epithelium are colored (left). for each type of epithelium, a schematic of the anatomy and known major cell types are shown (right). in the olfactory bulb in the brain (tan) the axons from olfactory sensory neurons coalesce into glomeruli, and mitral/tufted cells innervate these glomeruli and send olfactory projections to downstream olfactory areas. glomeruli are also innervated by juxtaglomerular cells, a subset of which are dopaminergic. to determine whether genes relevant to cov- entry are expressed in osns or other cell types in the human oe, we queried previously published bulk rna-seq data derived from the whole olfactory mucosa (wom) of macaque, marmoset and human ( ) , and found expression of almost all cov-entry-related genes in all wom samples ( figure s a ). to identify the specific cell types in human oe that express ace , we quantified gene expression in scseq derived from four human nasal biopsy samples recently reported by durante et al ( ) . neither ace nor tmprss were detected in mature osns, whereas these genes were detected in both sustentacular cells and hbcs (figures a-e) . in contrast, genes relevant to cell entry of other covs were expressed in osns, as well as in other oe cell types. we confirmed the expression of ace proteins via immunostaining of human olfactory epithelium biopsy tissue, which revealed expression in sustentacular and basal cells, and an absence of ace protein in osns ( figures f and s e ). together, these results demonstrate that sustentacular and olfactory stem cells, but not mature osns, are potentially direct targets of cov- in the human oe. given that the nasopharynx is a major site of infection for cov- ( ), we compared the frequency of ace and tmprss expression among the cell types in the human re and oe ( ) . sustentacular cells exhibited the highest frequency of ace expression in the oe ( . % of cells) although this frequency was slightly lower than that observed in respiratory ciliated and secretory cells ( . % and . %, respectively). while all hbc subtypes expressed ace , the frequency of expression of ace was lower in olfactory hbcs ( . % of cells) compared to respiratory hbcs ( . % of cells) ( figure b ). in addition, all other re cell subtypes showed higher frequencies of ace and tmprss expression than was apparent in oe cells. these results demonstrate the presence of key cov- entry-related genes in specific cell types in the oe, but at lower levels of expression than in re isolated from the nasal mucosa. we wondered whether these lower levels of expression might nonetheless be sufficient for infection of cov- . it was recently reported that nasal re has higher expression of cov- entry genes than re of the trachea or lungs ( ) , and we therefore asked where the oe fell within this previously established spectrum of expression. to address this question, we developed a two step alignment procedure in which we first sought to identify cell types that were common across the oe and re, and then leveraged gene expression patterns in these common cell types to normalize gene expression levels across all cell types in the oe and re ( figure s ). this approach revealed a correspondences between goblet cells in the re and bowman's gland cells in the oe ( % mapping probability, see methods), and between pulmonary ionocytes in the re and a subset of microvillar cells in the oe ( % mapping probability, see methods); after alignment, human oe sustentacular cells were found to express ace and tmprss at levels similar to those observed in the remainder of the non-nasal respiratory tract ( figure g) ( ) . these results are consistent with the possibility that specific cell types in the human olfactory epithelium express ace at a level that is permissive for direct infection. ( ) . each dot represents an individual cell, colored by cell type (hbc = horizontal basal cell, osn = olfactory sensory neuron, sus = sustentacular cell, mv: microvillar cell, resp.: respiratory, oec = olfactory ensheathing cell, smc=smooth muscle cell). (b) percent of cells expressing ace and tmprss . ace was not detected in any osns, but was observed in sus cells and hbcs, among other olfactory and respiratory epithelial cell types. olfactory and respiratory cell types are shown separately. ace and tmprss were also co-expressed above chance levels (odds ratio . , p-value . e- , fisher's exact test). (c) umap representations of detected immature (gng ) and mature (gng ) osns. neither ace nor tmprss are detected in either population of osns. the color represents the normalized expression level for each gene (number of umis for a given gene divided by the total number of umis for each cell). (d) umap representations of all cells, depicting the normalized expression of cov- related genes ace and tmprss , as well as several cell type markers. ace and tmprss are expressed in respiratory and olfactory cell types, but not in osns. ace and tmprss are detected in hbc (krt ) and sustentacular (cyp a ) cells, as well as other respiratory epithelial cell types, including respiratory ciliated (foxj ) cells. (e) various cov related genes including ace and tmprss , are expressed in respiratory and olfactory cell types, but not in osns. gene expression for ace and tmprss as well as marker genes for olfactory and respiratory epithelial cell types are shown normalized by their maximum expression across cell types. mhv, mouse hepatitis virus. (f) ace immunostaining of human olfactory mucosal biopsy samples. ace protein (green) is detected in sustentacular cells and krt -positive basal cells (red; white arrowhead). nuclei were stained with dapi (blue). bar = µm. the ace and krt channels from the box on the left are shown individually on the right (g) gene expression across cell types and tissues in durante figure s ). the tissues correspond to progressive positions along the airway from nasal to distal lung. ace expression in olfactory hbc and sustentacular cells is comparable to that observed in other cell types in the respiratory tract. to further explore the distribution of cov- cell entry genes in the olfactory system we turned to the mouse, which enables interrogative experiments not possible in humans. to evaluate whether that expression patterns observed in the mouse correspond to those observed in the human oe, we examined published datasets in which rna-seq was independently performed on mouse wom and on purified populations of mature osns ( ) ( ) ( ) . the cov- receptor ace and the protease tmprss were expressed in wom, as were the cathepsins ctsb and ctsl (figures a and s a) ( ) . however, expression of these genes (with the exception of ctsb) was much lower and ace expression was nearly absent in purified osn samples (figures a and s a, see legend for counts). genes used for cell entry by other covs (except st gal ) were also expressed in wom, and de-enriched in purified osns. the deenrichment of ace and tmprss in osns relative to wom was also observed in two other mouse rna-seq datasets ( , ) ( figure s b ). these data demonstrate that, as in humans, ace and other cov- entry-related genes are expressed in the mouse olfactory epithelium. the presence of ace and tmprss transcripts in mouse wom and their (near total) absence in purified osns suggest that the molecular components that enable cov- entry into cells are expressed in non-neuronal cell types in the mouse nasal epithelium. to identify the specific cell types that express ace and tmprss , we performed scseq (via drop-seq, see methods) on mouse wom ( figure b ). these results were consistent with observations made in the human epithelium: ace and tmprss were expressed in a fraction of sustentacular and bowman's gland cells, and a very small fraction of stem cells, but not in osns (zero of , identified mature osns, figures c and s c-d) . of note, only dorsally-located sustentacular cells, which express the markers sult c and acsm , were positive for ace ( figures d and s d-e) . indeed, reanalysis of the ace + subset of human sustentacular cells revealed that all positive cells expressed genetic markers associated with the dorsal epithelium ( figure s d ). an independent mouse scseq data set (obtained using the x chromium platform, see methods) revealed that olfactory sensory neurons did not express ace ( of mature osns were positive for ace ), while expression was observed in a fraction of bowman's gland cells and hbcs ( figure s , see methods). expression in sustentacular cells was not observed in this dataset, which included relatively few dorsal sustentacular cells (a possible consequence of the specific cell isolation procedure associated with the x platform, which distinguishes it from drop-seq; compare figures s c and d) . staining of the mouse wom with anti-ace antibodies confirmed that ace protein is expressed in sustentacular cells and is specifically localized to the sustentacular cell microvilli ( figure e -k). ace + sustentacular cells were identified exclusively within the dorsal subregion of the oe; critically, within that region many (and possibly all) sustentacular cells expressed ace ( figure f -g). this observation is consistent with the possibility that ace protein can be broadly expressed in cell populations that exhibit sparse expression when characterized by scseq. staining was also observed in bowman's gland cells but not in osns ( figure h -j). taken together, these data demonstrate that ace is expressed by sustentacular cells that specifically reside in the dorsal epithelium in both mouse and human. considered positive if any transcripts (umis) were expressed for a given gene. sustentacular cells (sus) from dorsal and ventral zones are quantified separately. ace is detected in dorsal sustentacular, bowman's gland, hbcs, as well as respiratory cell types. (d) umap representation of sustentacular cells, with expression of cov- related genes ace and tmprss , as well as marker genes for sus (both pan-sus marker cbr and dorsal specific marker sult c ) indicated. each point represents an individual sustentacular cell, and the color represents the normalized expression level for each gene (number of umis for a given gene divided by the total number of umis for each cell; in this plot ace expression is binarized for visualization purposes). ace -positive sustentacular cells are found within the dorsal sult c positive subset. umap plots for other cell types are shown in figure s . (e) ace immunostaining of mouse main olfactory epithelium. as shown in this epithelial hemisection, ace protein is detected in the dorsal zone and respiratory epithelium. note that the punctate ace staining beneath the epithelial layer is likely associated with vasculature (see figure f ). bar = µm. arrowheads depict the edges of ace expression, corresponding to the presumptive dorsal zone (confirmed in g). viral injury can lead to broad changes in oe physiology that are accompanied by recruitment of stem cell populations tasked with regenerating the epithelium ( , ) . to characterize the distribution of ace expression under similar circumstances, we injured the oe by treating mice with methimazole (which specifically ablates osns), and then employed a previously established lineage tracing protocol to perform scseq on hbcs and their descendants during subsequent regeneration (see methods) ( ) . this analysis revealed that after injury ace and tmprss are expressed in subsets of sustentacular cells and hbcs, as well as in the activated hbcs that serve to regenerate the epithelium (figures a-c and s ; note that activated hbcs express ace at higher levels than resting hbcs). analysis of the ace + sustentacular cell population revealed expression of dorsal epithelial markers ( figure d ). to validate these results, we re-analyzed a similar lineage tracing dataset in which identified hbcs and their progeny were subject to smart-seq -based deep sequencing, which is more sensitive than scseq ( ) . in this dataset, ace was detected in more than . % of gbcs, nearly % of activated hbcs and nearly % of sustentacular cells but was not detected in osns ( figures s b) . furthermore, larger percentages of hbcs, gbcs and sustentacular cells expressed tmprss . immunostaining with anti-ace antibodies confirmed that ace protein was present in activated stem cells under these regeneration conditions ( figure e ). these results demonstrate that activated stem cells recruited during injury express ace , and do so at higher levels than those in resting stem cells. given the potential for the re and oe in the nasal cavity to be directly infected with cov- , we assessed the expression of ace and other cov entry genes in the mouse olfactory bulb (ob), which is directly connected to osns via cranial nerve i (cn i); in principle, alterations in bulb function could cause anosmia independently of functional changes in the oe. to do so, we performed scseq (using drop-seq, see methods) on the mouse ob, and merged these data with a previously published ob scseq analysis, yielding a dataset with nearly , single cells (see methods) ( ) . this analysis revealed that ace expression was absent from ob neurons and instead was observed only in vascular cells, predominantly in pericytes, which are involved in blood pressure regulation, maintenance of the blood-brain barrier, and inflammatory responses (figures a-d and s - ) ( ) . although other potential cov proteases were expressed in the ob, tmprss was not expressed. we also performed smart-seq -based deep sequencing of single ob dopaminergic juxtaglomerular neurons, a population of local interneurons in the ob glomerular layer that (like tufted cells) can receive direct monosynaptic input from nose osns (figures e and s , see methods); these experiments confirmed the absence of ace and tmprss expression in this cell type. immunostaining in the ob revealed that blood vessels expressed high levels of ace protein, particularly in pericytes; consistent with the scseq results, staining was not observed in any neuronal cell type ( figure f ). these observations may also hold true for other brain regions, as re-analysis of deeply sequenced scseq datasets from different regions of the nervous system demonstrated that ace and tmprss expression is absent from neurons, consistent with prior immunostaining results ( figure s ) ( ) . given the extensive similarities detailed above in expression patterns for ace and tmprss in the mouse and human, these findings (performed in mouse) suggest that ob neurons are likely not a primary site of infection, but that vascular pericytes may be sensitive to cov- infection in the ob. here we show that subsets of oe sustentacular cells, hbcs, and bowman's gland cells in both mouse and human samples express the cov- receptor ace and the spike protein protease tmprss . human oe sustentacular cells express these genes at levels comparable to those observed in lung cells. in contrast, we failed to detect ace expression in mature osns at either the transcript or protein levels. these observations suggest that cov- does not directly enter osns, but instead may target oe support and stem cells. similarly, neurons in the ob do not express ace , whereas vascular pericytes do. thus primary infection of non-neuronal cell types -rather than sensory or bulb neurons -may be responsible for anosmia and related disturbances in odor perception in covid- patients. the identification of non-neuronal cell types in the oe and bulb susceptible to cov- infection suggests four possible, non-mutually-exclusive mechanisms for the acute loss of smell reported in covid- patients. first, local infection of support and vascular cells in the nose and bulb could cause significant inflammatory responses whose downstream effects could block effective odor conduction, or alter the function of osns or bulb neurons ( ) ( ). second, damage to support cells (which are responsible for local water and ion balance) could indirectly influence signaling from osns to the brain ( ) . third, damage to sustentacular cells and bowman's gland cells in mouse models can lead to diffuse architectural damage to the entire oe, which in turn could abrogate smell perception ( ) . finally, vascular damage could lead to hypoperfusion and inflammation leading to changes in ob function. immunostaining in the mouse suggests that ace protein is (nearly) ubiquitously expressed in sustentacular cells in the dorsal oe, despite sparse detection of ace transcripts using scseq. similarly, nearly all vascular cells positive for a pericyte marker also expressed ace protein, although only a fraction of ob pericytes were positive for ace message when assessed using scseq. although ace transcripts were more rarely detected than protein, there was a clear concordance at the cell type level: expression of ace mrna in a particular cell type accurately predicted the presence of ace protein, while ace transcript-negative cell types (including osns) did not express ace protein. if humans also exhibit a similar relationship between mrna and protein (a reasonable possibility given the precise match in olfactory cell types that express cov- cell entry genes between the two species), then ace protein is likely to be broadly expressed in human dorsal sustentacular cells. thus, in the there may be many sustentacular cells available for cov- infection in the human epithelium (which in turn could recruit a diffuse inflammatory process). that said, it remains possible that damage to the oe could be caused by more limited cell infection. for example, infection of subsets of sustentacular cells by the sdav coronavirus in rats ultimately leads to disruption of the global architecture of the oe, suggesting that focal coronavirus infection may be sufficient to cause diffuse epithelial damage ( ) . the natural history of cov -induced anosmia is only now being defined; while recovery of smell has been reported, it remains unclear whether in a subset of patients smell disturbances will be long-lasting or permanent ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ) . we observe that activated hbcs, which are recruited after injury, express ace at higher levels than those apparent in resting stem cells. while on its own it is likely that infection of stem cells would not cause acute smell deficits, in the context of infection the dual challenge of loss of sustentacular cells, together with the inability to effectively renew the oe over time, could result in persistent anosmia. many viruses, including coronaviruses, have been shown to propagate from the nasal epithelium past the cribriform plate to infect the ob; this form of central infection has been suggested to mediate olfactory deficits, even in the absence of lasting oe damage ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . the rodent coronavirus mhv passes from the nose to the bulb, even though rodent osns do not express ceacam , the main mhv receptor ( , ) ( figures s c, s e, s a) , suggesting that covs in the nasal mucosa can reach the brain through mechanisms independent of axonal transport by sensory nerves; interestingly, ob dopaminergic juxtaglomerular cells express ceacam ( figure e ), which likely supports the ability of mhv to target the bulb and change odor perception. one speculative possibility is that local seeding of the oe with cov- -infected cells can result in osn-independent transfer of virions from the nose to the bulb, perhaps via the vascular supply shared between the ob and the osn axons that comprise cn i. although cn i was not directly queried in our datasets, it is reasonable to infer that vascular pericytes in cn i also express ace , which suggests a possible route of entry for cov- from the nose into the brain. given the absence of ace in ob neurons, we speculate that any central olfactory dysfunction in covid- is the secondary consequence of pericyte-mediated vascular inflammation ( ) . we note several caveats that temper our conclusions. although current data suggest that ace is the most likely receptor for cov- in vivo, it is possible (although it has not yet been demonstrated) that other molecules such as bsg may enable cov- entry independently of ace ( figures e, s c , s e, s a) ( , ) . in addition, it has recently been reported that low level expression of ace can support cov- cell entry ( ); it is possible, therefore, that ace expression beneath the level of detection in our assays may yet enable cov- infection of apparently ace negative cell types. we also propose that damage to the olfactory system is either due to primary infection or secondary inflammation; it is possible (although has not yet been demonstrated) that cells infected with cov- can form syncytia with cells that do not express ace . such a mechanism could damage neurons adjacent to infected cells. any reasonable pathophysiological mechanism for covid- -associated anosmia must account for the high penetrance of smell disorders relative to endemic viruses, the apparent suddenness of smell loss (which can precede the development of other symptoms), and the transient nature of dysfunction in many patients ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) ; definitive identification of the disease mechanisms underlying covid- -mediated anosmia will require additional research. nonetheless, our identification of cells in the oe and ob expressing molecules known to be involved in cov- entry illuminates a path forward for future studies. human scseq data from durante et al. ( ) was downloaded from the geo at accession gse . x genomics mtx files were filtered to remove any cells with fewer than total counts. additional preprocessing was performed as described above, including total counts normalization and filtering for highly variable genes using the spring gene filtering function "filter_genes" with parameters ( , , ) . the resulting data were visualized in spring and partitioned using louvain clustering on the spring k-nearest-neighbor graph. four clusters were removed for quality control, including two with low total counts (likely background) and two with high mitochondrial counts (likely stressed or dying cells). putative doublets were also identified using scrublet and removed ( % of cells). the remaining cells were projected to dimensions using pca. pca-batch-correction was performed using patient as a reference, as previously described ( ) . the filtered data were then re-partitioned using louvain clustering on the spring graph and each cluster was annotated using known marker genes, as described in ( ) . for example, immature and mature osns were identified via their expression of gng and gng , respectively. hbcs were identified via the expression of krt and tp and olfactory hbcs were distinguished from respiratory hbcs via the expression of cxcl and meg . identification of sus cells (cyp a , cyp j ), bowman's gland (sox , gpx ), and mv ionocytes-like cells (ascl , cftr, foxi ) was also performed using known marker genes. for visualization, the top principal components were reduced to two dimensions using umap with parameters (n_neighbors= , min_dist= . ). the filtered human scseq dataset contained cells. each of the samples contained cells from both the olfactory and respiratory epithelium, although the frequency of osns and respiratory cells varied across patients, as previously described ( ) . cells expressed ace and cells expressed tmprss . of the identified osns, including both immature and mature cells, none of the cells express ace and only ( . %) expressed tmprss . in contrast, ace was reliably detected in at least % and tmprss was expressed in close to % of multiple respiratory epithelial subtypes. the expression of both known cell type markers and known cov-related genes was also examined across respiratory and olfactory epithelial cell types. for these gene sets, the mean expression in each cell type was calculated and normalized by the maximum across cell types. data from deprez et al. ( ) were downloaded from the human cell atlas website (https://www.genomique.eu/cellbrowser/hca/; "single-cell atlas of the airway epithelium (grch human genome)"). a subset of these data was combined with a subset of the durante data for mapping between cell types. for the deprez data, the subset consisted of samples from the nasal re that belonged to a cell type with > cells, including basal, cycling basal, suprabasal, secretory, mucous multiciliated cells, multiciliated, sms goblet and ionocyte. we observed two distinct subpopulations of basal cells, with one of the two populations distinguished by expression of cxcl . the cells in this population were manually identified using spring and defined for downstream analysis as a separate cell type annotation called "basal (cxcl +)". for the durante data, the subset consisted of cells from cell types that had some putative similarity to cells in the deprez dataset, including olfactory hbc, cycling respiratory hbc, respiratory hbc, early respiratory secretory cells, respiratory secretory cells, sustentacular cells, bowman's gland, olfactory microvillar cells. to establish a cell type mapping: ) durante ( ) and deprez ( ) data were combined and gene expression values were linearly scaled so that all cells across datasets had the same total counts. pca was then performed using highly variable genes (n= genes) and pcabatch-correction ( ) with the durante data as a reference set. ) the table of votes t was z-scored against a null distribution, generated by repeating the procedure above times with shuffled cell type labels. the resulting z-scores were similar between the two possible mapping directions (durante -> deprez vs. deprez -> durante; r= . pearson correlation of mapping zscores). the mapping z-scores were also highly robust upon varying the number of votes-cast per cell (r> . correlation of mapping z-scores upon changing the vote numbers to or as opposed to ). only cell-type correspondences with a high zscore in both mapping directions (z-score > ) were used for downstream analysis. to establish a common scale of gene expression between datasets, we restricted to cell type correspondences that were supported both by bioinformatic mapping and shared a nominal cell type designation based on marker genes. these included: basal/suprabasal cells = "respiratory hbcs" from durante et al., and "basal" and "suprabasal" cells from deprez we next sought a transformation of the durante data so that it would agree with the deprez data within the corresponding cell types identified above to account for differing normalization strategies applied to each dataset prior to download (log normalization and rescaling with cell-specific factors for deprez et al. but not for durante et al.), we used the following ansatz for the transformation, where the pseudocount p is a global latent parameter and the rescaling factors ! are fit to each gene separately. in the equation below, t denotes the transformation and !" represents a gene expression value for cell i and gene j in the durante data: the parameter p was fit by maximizing the correlation of average gene expression across all genes between each of the cell type correspondences listed above. the rescaling factors ! were then fitted separately for each gene by taking the quotient of average gene expression between the deprez data and the log-transformed durante data, again across the cell type correspondences above. normalized gene expression tables were obtained from previous published datasets ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) . for the mouse data sets, the means of the replicates from wom or osn were used to calculate log fold changes. for the mouse data from saraiva et al. and the primate data sets ( , ) , the normalized counts of the genes of interest from individual replicates were plotted. below is a table with detailed sample information. sample information for the bulk rna-seq data analyzed in this study a new dataset of whole olfactory mucosa scseq was generated from adult male mice ( - weeks-old). all mouse husbandry and experiments were performed following institutional and federal guidelines and approved by harvard medical school's institutional animal care and use committee (iacuc). briefly, dissected main olfactory epithelium were cleaned up in µl of ebss (worthington) and epithelium tissues were isolated in µl of papain ( u/ml in ebss) and µl of dnase i ( u/ml). tissue pieces were transferred to a ml round-bottom tube (bd) and . ml of papain and µl of dnase i were added. after - . hour incubation with rocking at °c, the suspension was triturated with a ml pipette times and passed through µm cell strainer (bd) and strainer was washed with ml of dmem + % fbs (invitrogen). the cell suspension was centrifuged at g for min. cells were resuspended with ml of dmem + % fbs and centrifuged at g for min. cells were suspended with pbs + . % bsa and concentration was measured by hemocytometer. drop-seq experiments were performed as previously described ( ) . microfluidics devices were obtained from flowjem and barcode beads were obtained from chemgenes. of min drop-seq runs were collected in total, which were obtained from mice. replicates of drop-seq samples were sequenced across runs on an illumina nextseq platform. paired end reads from the fastq files were trimmed, aligned, and tagged via the drop-seq tools (v . ) pipeline, using star (v . . a) with genomic indices from ensembl release . the digital gene expression matrix was generated for , cells for _ , , cells for , _ , _ds , _ds , _ds , , cells for _ds , and , cells for . processing of the wom drop-seq samples was performed in seurat (v . . ). cells with less than umis or more than , umis, or higher than % mitochondrial genes were removed. potential doublets were removed using scrublet. cells were initially preprocessed using the seurat pipeline. variable genes "findvariablegenes" (y.cutoff = . ) were scaled (regressing out effects due to numi, the percent of mitochondrial genes, and replicate ids) and the data was clustered using pcs with the louvain algorithm (resolution= . ). in a fraction of sustentacular cells, we observed co-expression of markers for sustentacular cells and other cell types (e.g. osns). re-clustering of sustentacular cells alone separately out these presumed doublets from the rest of the sustentacular cells, and the presumed doublets were removed for the analyses described below. the filtered cells from the preprocessing steps were reanalyzed in python using scanpy and spring. in brief, the raw gene counts in each cell were total counts normalized and variable genes were identified using the spring gene filtering function "filter_genes" with parameters ( , , ); mitochondrial and olfactory receptor genes were excluded from the variable gene lists. the resulting variable genes were zscored and the dimensionality of the data was reduced to via principal component analysis. the k-nearest neighbor graph (n_neighbors= ) of these pcs was clustered using the leiden algorithm (resolution= . ) and was reduced to two dimensions for visualization via the umap method (min_dist= . ). clusters were manually annotated on the basis of known marker genes and those sharing markers (e.g. olfactory sensory neurons) were merged. the mouse wom drop-seq dataset contained cells that passed the above filtering. each of the clusters identified contained cells from all replicates in roughly equal proportions. of the mature osns and the immature osns, none of the cells express ace . in contrast, in the olfactory epithelial cells, ace expression was observed in the bowman's gland, olfactory hbcs, dorsal sustentacular cells. mice were sacrificed with a lethal dose of xylazine and nasal epithelium with attached olfactory bulbs were dissected and fixed in % paraformaldehyde (electron microscope sciences, ) in phosphate-buffered saline (pbs) for overnight at °c or for hours at room temperature. tissues were washed in pbs for times ( min each) and incubated in . m edta in pbs overnight at °c. the following day, tissues were rinsed by pbs and incubated in % sucrose in pbs for at least min, transferred to tissue freezing medium (vwr, - ) for at least min and frozen on crushed dry ice and stored at - °c until sectioning. tissue sections ( µm thick for the olfactory bulb and µm thick for nasal epithelium) were collected on superfrost plus glass slides (vwr, ) and stored at - °c until immunostaining. for methimazole treated samples, adult c bl/ j mice ( - weeks old, jax stock no. ) were given intraperitoneal injections with methimazole (sigma m ) at µg/g body weight and sacrificed at , , and -hour timepoints. sections were permeabilized with . % triton x- in pbs for min then rinsed times in pbs. sections were then incubated for - min in blocking solution that consisted of pbs containing % bovine serum albumin (jackson immunoresearch, - - ) and % donkey serum (jackson immunoresearch, - - ) at room temperature, followed by overnight incubation at °c with primary antibodies diluted in the same blocking solution. primary antibodies used are as follows. after secondary antibody incubation, sections were washed twice for - min in pbs, incubated with nm dapi in pbs for min and then rinsed with pbs. slides were mounted with glass coverslips using vectashield mounting medium (vector laboratories, h- ) or prolong diamond antifade mountant (invitrogen, p ). for co-staining of ace and nqo , slides were first stained with ace primary antibody and donkey anti-goat igg alexa secondary. after washes of secondary antibody, tissues were incubated with unconjugated donkey anti-goat igg fab fragments (jackson immunoresearch, - - ) at µg/ml diluted in blocking solution for hour at room temperature. tissues were washed twice with pbs, once in blocking solution, and incubated in blocking solution for - min at room temperature, followed by a second round of staining with the nqo primary antibody and donkey anti-goat igg alexa secondary antibody. confocal images were acquired using a leica spe microscope (harvard medical school neurobiology imaging facility) with nm, nm, nm, and nm laser lines. multi-slice z-stack images were acquired, and their maximal intensity projections are shown. for figure e , tiled images were acquired and stitched by the leica las x software. images were processed using fiji imagej software ( ) , and noisy images were median-smoothed using the remove outliers function built into fiji. sult c rna was detected by fluorescent rnascope assay (advanced cell diagnostics, kit ) using probe -c , following the manufacturer's protocol (rnascope fluorescent multiplex kit user manual, -um date ) for paraformaldehyde-fixed tissue. prior to initiating the hybridization protocol, the tissue was pre-treated with two successive incubations (first min, then min long) in rnascope protease iii (advanced cell diagnostics, ) at °c, then washed in distilled water. at the end of protocol, the tissue was washed in pbs and subjected to the -day immunostaining protocol described above. human olfactory mucosa biopsies were obtained via irb-approved protocol at duke university school of medicine, from nasal septum or superior turbinate during endoscopic sinus surgery. tissue was fixed with % paraformaldehyde and cryosectioned at µm and sections were processed for immunostaining, as previously described ( ) . sections from a female nasal septum biopsy were stained for ace ( figure f ) using the same goat anti-ace (thermo fisher, pa - , : ) and the protocol described above for mouse tissue. the human sections were co-stained with rabbit antikeratin (abcam, ab ; ab_ , : ) and were detected with alexafluor donkey anti-goat (jackson immunoresearch, - - ) and alexafluor donkey anti-rabbit (jackson immunoresearch, - - ) secondary antibodies ( : ). as further validation of ace expression and to confirm the lack of ace expression in human olfactory sensory neurons ( figure s e ), sections were stained with a rabbit anti-ace (abcam, ab ; rrid:ab_ , used at : ) antibody immunogenized against human ace and a mouse tuj antibody against neuronspecific tubulin (biolegend, ; rrid:ab_ ). anti-ace was raised against a c-terminal synthetic peptide for human ace and was validated by the manufacturer to not cross-react with ace for immunohistochemical labeling of ace in fruit bat nasal tissue as well as in human lower airway. recombinant human ace abolished labeling with this antibody in a previous study in human tissue, further demonstrating its specificity ( ) . the tuj antibody was validated, as previously described ( ) . biotinylated secondary antibodies (vector labs), avidin-biotinylated horseradish peroxidase kit (vector) followed by fluorescein tyramide signal amplification (perkin elmer) were applied per manufacturer's instructions. for dual staining, tuj was visualized using alexafluor goat anti-mouse (jackson immunoresearch, - - ; rrid: ab_ ). human sections were counterstained with ', -diamidino- -phenylindole (dapi) and coverslips were mounted using prolong gold (invitrogen) for imaging, using a leica dmi microscope system. images were processed using fiji imagej software (nih). scale bars were applied directly from the leica acquisition software metadata in imagej tools. unsharp mask was applied in imagej, and brightness/contrast was adjusted globally. month-old and month-old wild type c bl/ j mice were obtained from the national institute on aging aged rodent colony and used for the wom experiments; each experimental condition consisted of one male and one female mouse to aid doublet detection. mice containing the transgenic krt -creer(t ) driver ( ) and rosa -yfp reporter allele ( ) were used for the hbc lineage tracing dataset. all mice were assumed to be of normal immune status. animals were maintained and treated according to federal guidelines under iacuc oversight at the university of california, berkeley. the olfactory epithelium was surgically removed, and the dorsal, sensory portion was dissected and dissociated, as previously described ( ) . for wom experiments, dissociated cells were subjected to fluorescence-activated cell sorting (facs) using propidium iodide to identify and select against dead or dying cells; , cells/sample were collected in % fbs. for the hbc lineage tracing experiments krt -creer; rosa yfp/yfp mice were injected once with tamoxifen ( . mg tamoxifen/g body weight) at p - days of age and sacrificed at hours, hours, hours, days and days post-injury, as previously described ( , ) . for each experimental time point, yfp+ cells were isolated by facs based on yfp expression and negative for propidium iodide, a vital dye. cells isolated by facs were subjected to single-cell rna-seq. three replicates (defined here as a facs collection run) per age were analyzed for the wom experiment; at least two biological replicates were collected for each experimental condition for the hbc lineage tracing experiment. single cell cdna libraries from the isolated cells were prepared using the chromium single cell ' system according to the manufacturer's instructions. the wom preparation employed v chemistry with the following modification: the cell suspension was directly added to the reverse transcription master mix, along with the appropriate volume of water to achieve the approximate cell capture target. the hbc lineage tracing experiments were performed using v chemistry. the . % weight/volume bsa washing step was omitted to minimize cell loss. completed libraries were sequenced on illumina hiseq to produce paired-end nt reads. sequence data were processed with the x genomics cell ranger pipeline ( . . for v chemistry), resulting in the initial starting number before filtering of , wom cells and , hbc lineage traced cells. the scone r/bioconductor package ( ) was used to filter out lowly-expressed genes (fewer than umi's in fewer than cells) and low-quality libraries (using the metric_sample_filter function with arguments hard_nreads = , zcut = ). cells with co-expression of male (ddx y, eif s y, kdm d, and uty) and female marker genes (xist) were removed as potential doublets from the wom dataset. for both datasets, doublet cell detection was performed per sample using doubletfinder ( ) and scrublet ( ) . genes with at least umis in at least cells were used for downstream clustering and cell type identification. for the hbc lineage tracing dataset, the bioconductor package scone was used to pick the top normalization ("none,fq,ruv_k= ,no_bio,batch"), corresponding to full quantile normalization, batch correction and removing one factor of unwanted variation using ruv ( ) . a range of cluster labels were created by clustering using the partitioning around medoids (pam) algorithm and hierarchical clustering in the clusterexperiment bioconductor package ( ) , with parameters k s= ( , , , , , ) and alpha=(na, . , . , . ). clusters that did not show differential expression were merged (using the function mergeclusters with arguments mergemethod = 'adjp', cutoff = . , and demethod = 'limma' for the lineagetraced dataset). initial clustering identified one macrophage (msr +) cluster consisting of cells; upon its removal and restarting from the normalization step a subsequent set of clusters was obtained. these clusters were used to filter out cells for which no stable clustering could be found (i.e., 'unassigned' cells), and four clusters respectively consisting of , and and cells. doublets were identified using doubletfinder and putative doublets were removed. inspection of the data in a three-dimensional umap embedding identified two groups of cells whose experimentally sampled timepoint did not match their position along the hbc differentiation trajectory, and these additional cells were also removed from subsequent analyses. analysis of wom scseq data were performed in python using the open-source scanpy software starting from the raw umi count matrix of the cells passing the initial filtering and qc criteria described above. umis were total-count normalized and scaled by , (tpt, tag per ten-thousands) and then log-normalized. for each gene, the residuals from linear regression models using the total number of umis per cell as predictors were then scaled via z-scoring. pca was then performed on a set of highlyvariable genes (excluding or genes) calculated using the "highly_variable_genes" function with parameters: min_mean= . , max_mean= , min_disp= . . a batch corrected neighborhood graph was constructed by the "bbknn" function with pcs with the parameters: local_connectivity= . , and embedding two-dimensions using the umap function with default parameters (min_dist = . ). cells were clustered using the neighborhood graph via the leiden algorithm (resolution = . ). identified clusters were manually merged and annotated based on known marker gene expression. we the filtered hbc lineage dataset containing cells was analyzing in python and processed for visualization using pipelines in spring and scanpy ( , ) . in brief, total counts were normalized to the median total counts for each cell and highly variable genes were selected using the spring gene filtering function ("filter_genes") using parameters ( , , ) . the dimensionality of the data was reduced to using principal components analysis (pca) and visualized in two-dimensions using the umap method with parameters (n_neighbors= , min_dist= . ). clustering was performed using the leiden algorithm (resolution= . ) and clusters were merged manually using known marker genes. expression of candidate cov- -related genes was defined if at least one transcript (umi) was detected in that cell, and the percent of cells expressing candidate genes was calculated for each cell type. in the wom dataset ace was only detected in out of , mature osns ( . %), and in the hbc lineage dataset, ace was not detected in any osns. furthermore, ace was not detected in immature sensory neurons (gbcs, inps, or iosns) in either dataset. single-cell rna-seq data from hbc-derived cells from fletcher et al. and gadye et al ( , ) , labeled via krt -creer driver mice, were downloaded from geo at accession gse using the file "gse _oehbcdiff_cufflinks_eset_counts_table.txt.gz". processing was performed as described above, including total counts normalization and filtering for highly variable genes using the spring gene filtering function "filter_genes" with parameters ( , , ) . the resulting data were visualized in spring and a subset of cells were removed for quality control, including a cluster of cells with low total counts and another with predominantly reads from ercc spike-in controls. putative doublets were also identified using scrublet and removed ( % of cells) ( ) . the resulting data were visualized in spring and partitioned using louvain clustering on the spring k-nearest-neighbor graph using the top principal components. cell type annotation was performed manually using the same set of markers genes listed above. three clusters were removed for quality control, including one with low total counts and one with predominantly reads from ercc spike-in controls (likely background), and one with high mitochondrial counts (likely stressed cells). for visualization, and clustering the remaining cells were projected to dimensions using pca and visualized with umap with parameters (n_neighbors= , min_dist= . , alpha= . , maxiter= ). clustering was performed using the leiden algorithm (resolution= . ) and cell types were manually annotated using known marker genes. the filtered dataset of mouse hbc-derived cells contained cells. the percent of cells expressing each marker gene was calculated as described above. of the osns identified, none of them expressed ace , and only out of inps and iosns expressed ace . in contrast, ace and tmprss were both detected in hbcs and sus cells. single-cell rnaseq data from whole mouse olfactory bulb ( ) were downloaded from mousebrain.org/loomfiles_level_l .html in loom format (l olfactory.loom) and converted to a seurat object. samples were obtained from juvenile mice (age postnatal day [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . this dataset comprises cells passing cell quality filters, excluding cells identified as potential doublets. a new dataset of whole olfactory bulb scseq was generated from adult male mice ( - weeks-old). all mouse husbandry and experiments were performed following institutional and federal guidelines and approved by harvard medical school's institutional animal care and use committee (iacuc). briefly, dissected olfactory bulbs (including the accessory olfactory bulb and fractions of the anterior olfactory nucleus) were dissociated in µl of dissociation media (dm: hbss containing mm hepes, mm mgcl , mm d-glucose) with u/ml papain and u/ml dnase i (worthington). minced tissue pieces were transferred to a ml round-bottom tube (bd). dm was added to a final volume of . ml and the tissue was mechanically triturated times with a p pipette tip. after -hour incubation with rocking at °c, the suspension was triturated with a ml pipette times and . ml was passed through µm cell strainer (bd). the suspension was then mechanically triturated with a p pipette tip times and µl were filtered on the same strainer. the cell suspension was further triturated with a p pipette tip times and filtered. ml of quench buffer ( ml of dm, . ml of protease inhibitor prepared by resuspending vial of protease inhibitor with ml of dm, and u of dnase i) was added to the suspension and centrifuged at g for min. cells were resuspended with ml of quench buffer and overlaid gently on top of ml of protease inhibitor, then spun down at g for min. the pellet was resuspended using dm supplemented with . % bsa and spun down at g for min. cells were suspended in µl of dm with . % bsa. drop-seq experiments were performed as previously described ( ) . microfluidics devices were obtained from flowjem and barcode beads were obtained from chemgenes. two min drop-seq runs were collected from a single dissociation preparation obtained from mice. two such dissociations were performed, giving total replicates. replicates of drop-seq samples were pooled and sequenced across runs on an illumina nextseq platform. paired end reads from the fastq files were trimmed, aligned, and tagged via the drop-seq tools ( - . ) pipeline, using star ( . . a) with genomic indices from ensembl release . the digital gene expression matrix was generated for , cells per replicate. cells with low numbers of genes ( ), low numbers of umis ( ) or high numbers of umis (> ) were removed ( % of cells). potential doublets were identified via scrublet and removed ( . % of cells). overall, this new dataset comprised cells. raw umi counts from juvenile and adult whole olfactory bulb samples were integrated in seurat ( ) . integrating the datasets ensured that clusters with rare cell types could be identified and that corresponding cell types could be accurately matched. as described below (see figure s ), although some cell types were observed with different frequencies, the integration procedure yielded stable clusters with cells from both datasets. briefly, raw counts were log-normalised separately and the most variable genes identified by variance stabilizing transformation for each dataset. the variable genes present in both datasets and the first principal components (pcs) were used as features for identifying the integration anchors. the integrated expression matrix was scaled and dimensionality reduced using pca. based on their percentage of explained variance, the first pcs were chosen for umap visualisation and clustering. graph-based clustering was performed using the louvain algorithm following the standard seurat workflow. cluster stability was analysed with clustree on a range of resolution values ( . to . ), with . yielding the most stable set of clusters ( ) . overall, clusters were identified, the smallest of which contained only cells with gene expression patterns consistent with blood cells, which were excluded from further visualisation plots. clustering the two datasets separately yielded similar results. moreover, the distribution of cells from each dataset across clusters was homogenous ( figure s ) and the clusters corresponded previous cell class and subtype annotations ( ) . as previously reported, a small cluster of excitatory neurons (cluster ) contained neurons from the anterior olfactory nucleus. umap visualisations of expression level for cell class and cell type markers, and for genes coding for coronavirus entry proteins, depict log-normalized umi counts. the heatmap in figure b shows the mean expression level for each cell class, normalised to the maximum mean value. the percentage of cells per cell class expressing ace was defined as the percentage of cells with at least one umi. in cells from both datasets, ace was enriched in pericytes but was not detected in neurons. acute olfactory bulb µm slices were obtained from dat-cre/flox-tdtomato (b .sjl-slc a tm . (cre) bkmn/j , jax stock / b .cg-gt(rosa) sor tm (cag-tdtomato)hze , jax stock ) p mice as previously described ( ) . as part of a wider study, at p these mice had undergone brief h unilateral naris occlusion via a plastic plug insert (n = mice) or were subjected to a sham control manipulation (n = mice); all observed effects here were independent of these treatment groups. single cell suspensions were generated using the neural tissue dissociation kit -postnatal neurons (miltenyi biotec. cat no. - - ), following manufacturer's instructions for manual dissociation, using fired-polished pasteur pipettes of progressively smaller diameter. after enzymatic and mechanical dissociations, cells were filtered through a µm cell strainer, centrifuged for minutes at ° c, resuspended in µl of acsf (in mm: nacl, . kcl, . nah po , hepes, glucose, mgcl , cacl ) with channel blockers ( . µm ttx, µm cnqx, µm d-apv) and kept on ice to minimise excitotoxicity and cell death. for manual sorting of fluorescently labelled dopaminergic neurons we adapted a previously described protocol ( ) . µl of single cell suspension was dispersed on . mm petri dishes (with a sylgard-covered base) containing ml of acsf + channel blockers. dishes were left undisturbed for minutes to allow the cells to sink and settle. throughout, dishes were kept on a metal plate on top of ice. tdtomato-positive cells were identified by their red fluorescence under a stereoscope. using a pulled glass capillary pipette attached to a mouthpiece, individual cells were aspirated and transferred to a clean, empty dish containing ml acsf + channel blockers. the same cell was then transferred to a third clean plate, changing pipettes for every plate change. finally, each individual cell was transferred to a . ml pcr tube containing µl of lysis buffer (rlt plus -qiagen). the tube was immediately placed on a metal plate sitting on top of dry ice for flash-freezing. collected cells were stored at - c until further processing. positive (more than cells) and negative (sample collection procedure without picking a cell) controls were collected for each sorting session. in total, we collected samples from . hours elapsed between mouse sacrifice and collection of the last cell in any session. samples were processing using a modified version of the smart-seq protocol ( ) . briefly, µl of a : , , dilution of ercc spike-ins (invitrogen. cat. no. ) was added to each sample and mrna was captured using modified oligo-dt biotinylated beads (dynabeads, invitrogen). pcr amplification was performed for cycles. amplified cdna was cleaned with a . : ratio of ampure-xp beads (beckman coulter). cdnas were quantified on qubit using hs dna reagents (invitrogen) and selected samples were run on a bioanalyzer hs dna chip (agilent) to evaluate size distribution. for generating the sequencing libraries, individual cdna samples were normalised to . ng/µl and µl was used for one-quarter standard-sized nextera xt (illumina) tagmentation reactions, with amplification cycles. sample indexing was performed using index sets a and d (illumina). at this point, individual samples were pooled according to their index set. pooled libraries were cleaned using a . : ratio of ampure beads and quantified on qubit using hs dna reagents and with the kapa library quantification kits for illumina (roche). samples were sequenced on two separate rapid-runs on hiseq (illumina), generating bp paired-end reads. an additional samples were sequenced on miseq (illumina). paired-end read fastq files were demultiplexed, quality controlled using fastqc (https://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc/) and trimmed using trim galore (https://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/trim_galore/). reads were pseudoaligned and quantified using kallisto ( ) against a reference transcriptome from ensembl release (gencode release m grcm .p ) with sequences corresponding to the ercc spike-ins and the cre recombinase and tdt genes added to the index. transcripts were collapsed into genes using the sumacrossfeatures function in scater. cell level quality control and cell filtering was performed in scater ( ) . cells with < genes, < , reads, > % reads mapping to ercc spike-ins, > % reads mapping to mitochondrial genes or low library complexity were discarded ( % samples). the population of olfactory bulb cells labelled in dat-tdtomato mice is known to include a minor non-dopaminergic calretinin-positive subgroup ( ) , so calretininexpressing cells were excluded from all analyses. the sctransform function in seurat was used to remove technical batch effects. an analysis of single-cell gene expression data from studies was performed to investigate the expression of genes coding for coronavirus entry proteins in neurons from a range of brain regions and sensory systems. processed gene expression data tables were obtained from scseq studies that evaluated gene expression in retina (gse ) ( ) inner ear sensory epithelium (gse ) ( , ) and spiral ganglion (gse ) ( ) , ventral midbrain (gse ) ( ) , hippocampus (gse ) ( ), cortex (gse ) ( ), hypothalamus (gse ) ( ), visceral motor neurons (gse ) ( ) , dorsal root ganglia (gse ) ( ) and spinal cord dorsal horn (gse ) ( ) . smart-seq sequencing data from vsx -gfp positive cells was used from the retina dataset. a subset of the expression matrix that corresponds to day (i.e. control, undisturbed neurons) was used from the layer vi somatosensory cortex dataset. a subset of the data containing neurons from untreated (control) mice was used from the hypothalamic neuron dataset. from the ventral midbrain dopaminergic neuron dataset, a subset comprising dat-cre/tdtomato positive neurons from p mice was used. a subset comprising type i neurons from wild type mice was used from the spiral ganglion dataset. the "unclassified" neurons were excluded from the visceral motor neuron dataset. a subset containing neurons that were collected at room temperature was used from the dorsal root ganglia dataset. expression data from dorsal horn neurons obtained from c /bl wild type mice, vgat-cre-tdtomato and vglut -egfp mouse lines was used from the spinal cord dataset. inspection of all datasets for batch effects was performed using the scater package (version . . ) ( ) . publicly available raw count expression matrices were used for the retina, hippocampus, hypothalamus, midbrain, visceral motor neurons and spinal cord datasets, whereas the normalized expression data was used from the inner ear hair cell datasets. for datasets containing raw counts, normalization was performed for each dataset separately by computing pool-based size factors that are subsequently deconvolved to obtain cell-based size factors using the scran package (version . . ) ( ). violin plots were generated in scater. ( ) . normalized counts for each gene in the whole olfactory mucosa (wom) and olfactory sensory neurons (osns) are shown. each circle represents a biological replicate and each color indicates the category of the gene shown on the right (cov- and other covs: genes involved in the entry of these viruses, other categories: marker genes for specific cell types such fig. a for three bulk rna-sequencing datasets. mhv, mouse hepatitis virus. left plot is same as fig. a except for the addition of ceacam . (c) gene expression for cov-related genes including ace and tmprss as well as marker genes for olfactory and re subtypes are shown normalized by their maximum expression across cell types. ace and tmprss are expressed in wom respiratory and non-neuronal olfactory cell types, but not in osns. (d) umap representations of gene expression in the wom dataset for cov- related genes ace and tmprss , as well as marker genes for each cell type. each point represents an individual cell, and the color represents the normalized expression level for each gene (number of umis for a given gene divided by the total number of umis for each cell). (e) fluorescent in situ hybridization of an identified dorsal sustentacular cell marker, sult c (in yellow), combined with immunostaining for the known dorsal osn marker nqo (white). note that sult c rna fills the apical cytoplasm; given that sustentacular cells are ubiquitous in the epithelium, this is apparent as broad antisense signal for sult c in a pattern that is characteristic of the apical anatomy of sustentacular cells. sult c rna is detected in sustentacular cells in the nqo -positive dorsal olfactory epithelium. nuclei were stained with dapi (blue). bar = µm. granule cells ( ) granule cells ( ) immature neurons ( ) granule cells ( ) calretinin neurons ( ) astrocytes ( ) olfactory ensheathing cells ( ) immature neurons ( ) interneurons ( ) microglia ( ) oligodendrocytes ( ) dopaminergic neurons ( ) interneurons ( ) mitral/tufted cells -aon ( ) astrocytes ( ) vascular ( ) oligo precursor cells ( ) pericytes ( ) external tufted cells ( ) mitral/tufted cells ( ) perivascular 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site of cns entry for mouse hepatitis virus, strain jhm intranasal inoculation with the olfactory bulb line variant of mouse hepatitis virus causes extensive destruction of the olfactory bulb and accelerated turnover of neurons in the olfactory epithelium of mice ceacam a-/-mice are completely resistant to infection by murine coronavirus mouse hepatitis virus a function of hab g/cd in invasion of host cells by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus sars-cov- invades host cells via a novel route: cd -spike protein sars-cov- productively infects human gut enterocytes lineage tracing on transcriptional landscapes links state to fate during differentiation highly parallel genome-wide expression profiling of individual cells using nanoliter droplets fiji: an open-source platform for biological-image analysis angiotensinconverting enzyme is reduced in alzheimer's disease in association with increasing amyloid-β and tau pathology temporally-controlled site-specific mutagenesis in the 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data clustering trees: a visualization for evaluating clusterings at multiple resolutions embryonic and postnatal neurogenesis produce functionally distinct subclasses of dopaminergic neuron a manual method for the purification of fluorescently labeled neurons from the mammalian brain separation and parallel sequencing of the genomes and transcriptomes of single cells using g&t-seq near-optimal probabilistic rnaseq quantification scater: pre-processing, quality control, normalization and visualization of single-cell rna-seq data in r the transcription factor pax regulates survival of dopaminergic olfactory bulb neurons via crystallin αa comprehensive classification of retinal bipolar neurons by single-cell transcriptomics single-cell rna-seq resolves cellular complexity in sensory organs from the neonatal inner ear characterization of spatial and temporal development of type i and type ii hair cells in the mouse utricle using new celltype-specific markers sensory neuron diversity in the inner ear is shaped by activity sensory neuron diversity molecular diversity of midbrain development in resource molecular diversity of midbrain development in mouse, human and stem cells dissociable structural and functional hippocampal outputs via distinct subiculum cell classes variation in activity state, axonal projection, and position define the transcriptional identity of individual neocortical projection neurons molecular interrogation of hypothalamic organization reveals distinct dopamine neuronal subtypes visceral motor neuron diversity delineates a cellular basis for nipple-and pilo-erection muscle control unbiased classification of sensory neuron types by large-scale single-cell rna sequencing neuronal atlas of the dorsal horn defines its architecture and links sensory input to transcriptional cell types pooling across cells to normalize single-cell rna sequencing data with many zero counts we thank members of the datta lab, james schwob, bernardo sabatini, andreas schaefer, kevin franks, michael greenberg and vanessa ruta for helpful comments on the manuscript. we thank james lipscombe and andres crespo for technical support. data and materials availability: reanalyzed datasets are obtained from the urls listed in supplementary materials. all data is currently being deposited and will be made publicly accessible from the ncbi geo at accession gse . normalized expression * * * olfactory ensheathing cells (oec) and respiratory cells. (e) gene expression for cov-related genes including ace and tmprss as well as marker genes for olfactory and re subtypes are shown normalized by their maximum expression across cell types. ace and tmprss are expressed in wom respiratory and olfactory cell types, but not in osns. (f) cov- related genes ace and tmprss , as well as marker genes for cell types in fig. c ., in umap representation of wom dataset with normalized expression. gfap-positive oecs (olfactory ensheathing cells) and muc b-positive secretory cells are indicated by asterisks. key: cord- -qxp gfp authors: meager, anthony title: interferons alpha, beta, and omega date: - - journal: cytokines doi: . /b - - / - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qxp gfp interferon alpha (ifn-α) is a mixture of closely related proteins, termed “subtypes,” expressed from distinct chromosomal genes. interferon β (ifn-β) is a single protein species and is molecularly related to ifn-α subtypes, although it is antigenically distinct from them. ifn omega (ifn-ω) is antigenically distinct from ifn-α and ifn-β but is molecularly related to both. the genes of three ifn subtypes are tandemly arranged on the short arm of chromosome . they are transiently expressed following induction by various exogenous stimuli, including viruses. they are synthesized from their respective mrnas for relatively short periods following gene activation and are secreted to act, via specific cell surface receptors, on other cells. ifn-α subtypes are secreted proteins and as such are transcribed from mrnas as precursor proteins, pre-ifn-α, containing n-terminal signal polypeptides of hydrophobic amino acids (aa) mainly. pre-ifn-β contains aa, of which comprise the n-terminal signal polypeptide and comprise the mature ifn-β protein. ifn-ω contains aa—the n-terminal comprising the signal sequence and the remaining , the mature ifn-ω protein. at the c-terminus, the aa sequence of ifn-ω is six residues longer than that of ifn-α or ifn-β proteins. ifn-α, as a mixture of subtypes, and ifn-ω may be produced together following viral infection of null lymphocytes or monocytes/macrophages. the biological activities of ifns are mostly dependent upon protein synthesis with selective subsets of proteins mediating individual activities. ifns can also stimulate indirect antiviral and antitumor mechanisms, depending upon cellular differentiation and the induction of cytotoxic activity. the phenomenon of viral interference was first described nearly years ago when hoskins ( ) described the protective action of a neurotropic yellow fever virus against a viserotropic strain of the same virus in monkeys. although viral interference was further investigated in the s and s, the underlying mechanism was not discovered until when isaacs and lindemann, working at the national institute for medical research (london, uk), isolated a biologically active substance from virally-infected chicken cell cultures that, on transfer to fresh chicken cell cultures, produced a protective antiviral effect (isaacs and lindemann, ) . the word interferon (ifn) was coined for this substance. its discovery aroused considerable scientific and medical interest since by antibiotics were widely available to control bacterial infections, but, in stark contrast, viral diseases such as influenza, measles, polio, and smallpox were virtually untreatable. interest was further heightened by many subsequent studies that demonstrated that ifn could be produced by human cells and was active against a broad spectrum of viruses (see schlesinger, , for an early review). at that time, ifn was being hailed by the media as a wonder drug, but it soon became clear that ifn was being produced naturally in too small quantifies for that extravagant claim to be immediately confirmed. in fact, the low production of ifn was to bedevil attempts both to characterize it molecularly and evaluate it clinically for many years following its discovery. although the protein nature of ifn was recognized at an early stage in its development (see fantes, , for an early review), it was only following the introduction of large-scale production methods in the s (cantell and hirvonen, ) and the simultaneous development of efficient purification procedures (knight, ; rubinstein et al., ) that sufficient amounts of partially pure ifn protein became available for characterization and clinical use. gradually, it became apparent that ifn was not a single protein and that there were likely to be different types of ifn molecules. however, despite progress in the area of purification and in initial characterization by sequencing n-terminal polypeptides, ifn proteins all but defied full characterization until the advent of recombinant dna (rdna) technology in the late s. this technology, spurred on by the pharmaceutical industry's desire to produce pharmacologically active proteins cheaply, revealed that one type of human ifn, now designated ifn-cx, was a mixture of several closely related proteins, termed subtypes, expressed from distinct chromosomal genes . second and third types of ifn, designated ifn-i and ifn-y respectively, have subsequently been "cloned" (taniguchi et al., ; gray et al., ) but, unlike ifn- q are single protein species. ifn- is molecularly related to ifn-~ subtypes but is antigenically distinct from them, whereas ifn-y is both molecularly and antigenically distinct from either ifn-cx subtypes or ifn-i . (for this reason, ifn-y is considered separately elsewhere in this volume.) finally, a fourth type of ifn, antigenically distinct from ifn- ~ and ifn-i , but molecularly related to both, has more recently been cloned and characterized. rather untypically, this new ifn type has been designated ifn omega (ifn- ) (adolf, ) . the genes for ifn- ~ subtypes, ifn- and ifn- are tandemly arranged on the short arm of chromosome . they are only transiently expressed following induction by a variety of exogenous stimuli, including viruses. ifn- ~, ifn-i and ifn- proteins are synthesized from their respective mrnas for relatively short periods following gene activation and are secreted to act, via specific cell surface receptors, on other cells. early studies on the characterization of ifn receptors indicated that ifn- ~ and ifn-i were likely to share a common receptor, but it has only been comparatively recently that such receptors have been cloned (uz~ et al., ; novick et al., ) . ifn actions are initiated by activated receptors and cytoplasmic signal transduction pathways, which are now well characterized for the ifn-~/i receptor, and manifested following expression of a number of ifnspecific inducible genes. induction of the antiviral state, which is dependent on such protein synthesis, may now be viewed as just one of the many activities attributed to ifn in general; these activities include inhibition of cell proliferation and immunomodulation (see pestka et al., , for a review). in the s, two types of lfn were defined on the basis of the capacity of their antiviral activity to withstand acidification to ph . these were termed type i ifn for acid-stable ifn and type ii ifn for acid-labile ifn. type i ifn included ifn produced by virally infected leukocytes, alternatively known as leukocyte ifn, and ifn produced by virally infected human diploid fibroblasts, alternatively known as fibroblast ifn. type ii ifn, which was only produced by antigenically or mitogenically stimulated human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmc), has often been referred to as immune ifn (stewart, ) . antigenic differences were described for leukocyte and fibroblast ifn and these were put on a molecular basis when knowledge of their respective n-terminal amino acid sequences became available (allen and fantes, ; knight et al., ; levy et al., ; zoon et al., ) . at that time, an international nomenclature committee (stewart et al., ) reviewed the growing evidence for the existence of distinct molecular forms of ifn and introduced the greek alphabetical system to apply to the then known antigenically distinct types of ifn. leukocyte ifn was designated ifn-~, fibroblast ifn was designated ifn- , and immune ifn became ifn-y. however, complications immediately arose when it was revealed, following the cloning of several different leukocyte ifn complementary dnas (cdnas) brack et al., ; goeddel et al., ; streuli et al., ) , that leukocyte ifn was heterogeneous and contained many different, molecularly and antigenically related species, now commonly referred to as subtypes. the research group at hoffmann-la roche labeled the subtypes produced in e. coli ra, ~b, ~c, cd, etc. (evinger et al., ; rehberg et al., ) , distinguishing them from natural components of leukocyte ifn , while the biogen group labeled these recombinant subtypes ix , ~ , c , ~ , etc. , regrettably without an appropriate alphabeticalnumerical correspondence: for example, ~k -~ , cd - ~ . however, the numerical system now prevails. when an ifn preparation is a mixture of ifn-~ subtypes, e.g., leukocyte ifn, lymphoblastoid ifn, this is often designated ifn-o~n. the later cloning of cdnas encoding ifn- ~-like proteins (capon et al., ; hauptmann and swetly, ) initially led to the naming of this new ifn as ifn-o~ subclass ii, with all of the earlier-characterized ifn- ~ subtypes being reclassified as ifn-tx subclass i. this large, unwieldy nomenclature system has been superseded by the renaming of ifn-~ ii as ifn- ; this has been generally accepted with the finding that ifn- is antigenically distinct from ifn-~ and ifn-i] proteins and thus qualifies as a separate type of ifn (adolf, ) . fortunately, the nomenclature for ifn-i] has remained straightforward since there is only one protein species, at least in humans (derynck et al., taniguchi et al., ) . from the initial cloning of ifn-o~ cdnas, there has been a plethora of reports on the cloning of new, and sometimes distinct, genomic and edna clones, and fairly disparate nomenclatures have arisen. diaz and allen ( ) therefore undertook the considerable task of compiling the ifn genes and genomic and cdna clones from the literature and introduced an arabic-alphabetical system for naming ifn genes to enable their distinction from ifn proteins. thus, ifn-oc genes became ifna genes with the addition of a numeral to denote subtype, i.e., ifna , ifna , etc. (table . ). the ifn-~ gene became ifnb and, since there is only one gene in humans, it is referred to as ifnb . for ifn- genes, w has been used; hence ifnw (table . ). besides genes that are capable of being expressed and translated into ifn proteins, there are a number of pseudogenes which are unable to give rise to ifn proteins, and which in this new nomenclature system are designated by a p, e.g., ifnap , ifnwp , or simply ifnp where pseudogenes are clearly ifn-like but cannot be definitely included in any one of the ifna, ifnb or ifnw gene families (table . ). the ifn genomic and edna clones have been designated in a variety of ways, as illustrated in table . . pseudogenic or non-translatable clones are normally prefixed with a greek ~. for the purposes of this chapter, and to reduce the complexity of naming ifn clones and proteins, the nomenclature system adopted by weissmann and colleagues will be adhered to: ifn- q, %, {x , o~, etc. . numbers, structure, and localization in humans, there are nonallelic ifna genes, one of which, ifnap , is a pseudogene (table . ). in addition, there are a further four nonallelic pseudogenes that possibly also belong to the ifna gene family. probable allelic variants of certain ifna genes, e.g., ifna , are also known to exist goeddel et al., ; dworkin-rastl et al., ; emanuel and pestka, ) . this extensive family of ifna genes are tandemly arranged on the short-arm of chromosome ( p ) and span a region of approximately kb (owerbach et al., ; shows et al., ; slate et al., ; ullrich et al., ) . the ifnb gene and the ifnw gene/pseudogene family are also located in the same region of chromosome (meager et al., a,b; owerbach et al., ; henry et al., ; capon etal., ) . there is a high degree of homology among the ifna genes, but these show much less homology to either ifnb or ifnw genes. nevertheless, all of these ifn genes share the common feature of being intron-less (taniguchi et al., ; goeddel et al., ; houghton et al., ; capon et al., ) , suggesting a very ancient origin of their common ancestral gene. it has been proposed that the primordial ifn gene arose some million years ago, with the first split occurring around million years ago to yield the first ifna and ifnb genes (wilson et al., ) . since then the ifna gene has evolved and duplicated many times to give rise to the multiple ifna genes found in present-day animals and man (mij~ita and hayashida, ; gillespie and carter, ) . around million years ago, an ifna gene appears to have diverged sufficiently from the main group to give rise to the ifnw gene family, which is present in most mammals except mice and dogs (himmler et al., ; roberts et al., ) . it is not clear what characteristic of ifna and ifnw genes enabled the numerous reduplication events to occur in comparison to the nonexistent or more limited (some mammals have more than one ifnb gene, e.g., bovines (wilson et al., ) ) reduplication of the ifnb gene (ohlsson et al., ) . it is apparent that gene conversion, as a result of mismatch repair and unequal crossover, contributed significantly to the creation of distinct, but highly homologous, nonallelic ifna (and ifnw) genes (de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . in most cases, both coding and noncoding regions have diverged, but in the case of ifna the coding region has remained identical to that of ifna , although its ' and ' flanking regions have diverged (todokoro et al., ) . the structures of ifna, ifnb, and ifnw genes are similar. each gene has a ' regulatory promoter region upstream from the transcriptional start (cap) site, a ifna ifna ifna ifnals ifna~ ifna ifnap~ ifn-oq ifn-o h, lelf-d ifn-oq (d) ;~a , ifn-a ifn adapted and modified from diaz and allen ( ) and allen and diaz ( ) , which see for specific references for genomic clones and cdnas. reproduced with permission of mary ann liebert, inc., new york, usa. coding region containing a nucleotide sequence encoding a signal polypeptide of - mainly hydrophobic amino acids, which is typical for secreted proteins, and consecutively the sequence encoding the mature ifn protein, followed by the ' flanking noncoding region, which can vary in length up to base pairs (bp) (figure . ) (derynck etal., (derynck etal., , nagata et al., ; streuli et al., ; taniguchi et al., ; degrave etal., ; goeddel etal., ; gross et al., ; lawn et al., a,b; gren et al., ; capon et al., ; henco et al., ) . the ' flanking region contains a tata or hogness box, which delineates the boundary of the upstream promoter, approximately bp from the cap site. farther upstream are found a number ofhexameric repeat sequences gaaann, where n can be any base, which in their dimeric or multimeric forms act as binding sites for nuclear transcription factors and repressor molecules (fujita et al., ; ryals et al., ) . (this area is covered in more detail in section . , inducers and transcriptional control). the ' flanking regions vary in length and contain several polyadenylation sites and thus can give rise to mrnas of different lengths (mantei and weissmann, ; henco et al., ) . they contain above-average numbers of the sequence motifs atta or ttatttat. such sequences are common, however, in many other cytokine genes and other genes, such as protooncogenes, that are inducibly and transiently expressed. it has been proposed that these sequences contribute to the relative instability and short half-lives of ifn and cytokine mrnas (caput et al., ; shaw and kamen, ). all ifn genes are normally silent and thus require some sort of stimulus to induce expression. a wide range of inducers, including viruses, bacteria, mycoplasma, endotoxins, double-stranded polynucleotides or rna (dsrna), and some cytokines, have been shown to efficiently activate transcription of ifn genes (stewart, ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ). such inducers have in general the potential to induce expression of all ifna, ifnb, and ifnw genes; however, there appears to be cell-and inducer-specific selectivity that governs the type and numbers of ifn genes expressed. for instance, virally induced human diploid fibroblasts produce mainly ifn- and only a minor amount of ifn-~ (havell et al., ) , whereas virally induced pbmc produce mainly ifn-a plus ifn-o and only a minor amount of ifn-~ (cantell and hirvonen, ; adolf et al., ) . this has to some extent been confirmed at the mrna level (shuttleworth et al., ; hiscott et al., ) . differences have also been reported in the proportions of individual ifn- ~ subtypes produced by different cell types (goren et al., ; finter, ; greenway et al., ) , suggesting that ifna genes may be differentially expressed. however, the way in which such differential expression is regulated is presently not understood. transcriptional control of ifna genes resides in their ' flanking region, upstream from the cap site. nucleotide deletions outside of position- from the cap site have little impact on transcriptional control, but deletions farther in eliminated induction, indicating that this region,- to- , contained promoter regulatory elements (ragg and weissmann, ; weidle and weissmann, ) . these have been further delineated as a purine-rich nucleotide tract between- and- , containing hexameric repeats of gaaann (gaaa g/c t/c), which appears to be necessary for inducible transcription and which has been termed the "virusregulating element" (vre) (ryals et al., ) . similar studies involving ' deletions have been carried out with the ifnb gene, and it has been found that ' sequences within- to - contain regulatory elements that are required for induction by viruses and dsrna. the minimum vre has been localized to- to- with respect to the cap site (goodbourn et al., ; goodbourn and maniatis, ) and contains two positive virus-inducible elements, termed positive regulatory domains (prdi,- to- ; prdii,- to - ), and a negative regulatory domain (nrd,- to - ) (figure . ) (fujita et al., ; fan and maniatis, ; whittemore and maniatis, ; nourbakhsh et al., ) . in addition, the hexameric repeat sequences gaaann (also present in ifna genes) spanning from - to- contain variants of the prdi sequence and two further regulatory elements, prdiii (- to- ) and prdw (- to- ) have been identified that are required for a functional vre in ifnb gene expression in mouse l cells (dinter and hauser, ; du and maniatis, ) . prdi and prdiii act as binding sites for a nuclear transcription factor, designated "interferon regulatory factor-l" (irf- ) , whose expression is transiently increased by virus infection and which appears to mediate the activation of transcription of the ifnb gene (fujita et al., ; harada et al., ; xanthoudakis et al., ) . a second virus-inducible factor, designated "interferon regulatory factor- " (irf- ), also binds to prdi but suppresses, rather than activates, transcription (harada et al., (harada et al., , . prdii is a binding site for the nuclear transcription factor nfra (clark and hay, ; fujita et al., a; hiscott et al., ; lenardo et al., ; visvanathan and goodbourn, ) , which interacts with the major groove of the dna (thanos and maniatis, ) . additionally, another protein, highmobility group y/l, also binds to prdii, interacting with the minor groove of the dna (thanos and maniatis, ) . both factors appear to be necessary for virus induction of the ifnb gene promoter. prdiv contains a binding site for a protein of the camp response element binding protein (atf/creb) family of transcription factors (du and maniatis, ) . viral induction of the ifnb gene is thought to occur following activation of pre-existing nftcb and by de novo synthesis of irf- ; these nuclear transcription factors bind to the tandemly arranged prdi and prdii and act cooperatively to initiate/activate transcription (leblanc et al., ; lenardo et al., ; visvanathan and goodbourn, ; fujita et al., b; watanabe et al., ) . reporter constructs containing prdi supported by a simian virus (sv ) enhancer, or (gaaagt) , which contains the functional equivalent of dimeric prdi (n~if et al., ) are activated not only by virus but also by overexpression of irf- macdonald et al., ) . however, in most cell lines, overexpression of irf- has led to poor induction of ifnb (and ifna) genes (harada et al., ; fujita et al., b) or none at all (macdonald et al., ; reis et al., ) . this has been attributed to the repressive effect of irf- , a homologue oflrf- , which also binds to prdi (harada et al., ) . in the undifferentiated murine embryonal carcinoma (stem) cell line p , which is refractory to viral induction oflfnb (and ifna) genes and which expresses neither irf- nor irf- , overexpression of an introduced irf- construct leads to activation of endogenous ifn genes and to activation of reporter plasmids with the ifnb promoter (harada et al., ) . in addition, cell lines permanently transformed with an antisense irf- expression plasmid exhibited strongly reduced ifnb gene inducibility that nevertheless could be restored by transient transformation with an irf-l-overproducing expression plasmid (reis et al., ) . however, the role oflrf- in virus-induced activation of the ifnb promoter remains controversial (whiteside et al., ; pine et al., ) and ruffner and colleagues ( ) have shown that in murine embryonal stem cells devoid of both irf- gene alleles (irf- ~ ) viral induction of ifnb was only slightly higher in control irf- /+ differentiated stem cells than that in irf- ~ differentiated cells. this suggests that while irf- at high levels may elicit or enhance induction of ifnb under certain circumstances, it is not essential for viral induction. in cultured mouse fibroblasts devoid of irf- , ifnb induction by the synthetic dsrna molecule poly(i):poly(c) was absent, whereas induction by newcastle disease virus (ndv) was normal (matsuyama et al., ) . however, ifn induction in vivo by either virus or dsrna has been found to be unimpaired in irf- ~ mice, indicating that irf- is not essential . it has also become clear recently that the prdi site can bind factors other than irf- and irf- , and these may be more important for regulating ifnb gene activation (whiteside et al., ; keller and maniatis, ) . in contrast, targeted disruption of the irf- gene to yield mouse fibroblasts deficient in the repressor irf- has been found to lead to upregulated induction of ifnb following ndv infection (matsuyama et al., ) . this suggests that irf- negatively regulates or represses ifnb gene induction. the induction of the ifna gene appears to be regulated differently from that of the ifnb gene. irf- is bound poorly by the equivalent prdi site in the ifna promoter and this promoter also lacks an nf~cb site ( figure . ) macdonald et al., ) . the ifna gene vre does contain a hexameric repeat nucleotide sequence (gaaatg) , designated a "tg-sequence" (macdonald et al., ), which appears to mediate virus inducibility when supported by an sv enhancer, but which does not respond to irf- (n~if et al., ) . it has, however, been reported that overexpression of irf- can induce ifna genes, at least under special circumstances (harada et al., ; au et al., ) . the ifnw gene, like ifna and ifnb genes, is virus inducible and has structural features in its ' promoter region similar to those in ifna/b promoters ( figure . ). in particular, hexameric repeat units are present, but are organized differently from those present in ifna/b genes (hansen et al., ; roberts et al., ) . however, the regulation of transcription of the ifnw gene has not been studied in detail. the ifn-(x subtypes are secreted proteins and as such are transcribed from mrnas as precursor proteins, pre-ifn-(x, containing n-terminal signal polypeptides of mainly hydrophobic amino acids (figure . ). the signal polypeptide is cleaved off before "mature" ifn-(x molecules are secreted from the cell. from their cerna sequences, mature ifn-(x subtypes have been predicted to contain amino acids (except ifn-%, amino acids) nagata et al., ; goeddel et al., ; lawn et al., a,b; gren et al., ) . the calculated molecular mass of recombinant ifn-(x subtypes is approximately . kda, although apparent molecular masses of leukocyte-derived ifn-(x subtypes in sodium dodecyl sulphate (sds)-polyacrylamide gels vary between and kda, possibly owing to variable processing of c-terminal amino acids (le w et al, ) and post-translational modifications. the amino acid sequences of ifn-(x subtypes are highly related, with complete identity at of the amino acid positions (langer and pestka, ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . this is illustrated in figure . , where the amino acid sequences of the subtypes are compared to an idealized consensus sequence. many of the positions where amino acids differ from subtype to subtype are conservative substitutions. interestingly, ifn-(x subtypes contain four cysteine residues whose positions ( , , , and ) are highly conserved (figure . ). these four cysteines form disulfide bridges ( - , - ) which induce folding of the ifn-(x molecule (figure . ) and whose integrity is essential for biological activity (morehead et al., ) . ifn-(x subtypes are predicted to contain a high proportion (- %) of (x-helical regions and are folded to form globular proteins (zoon and wetzel, ) . it has not yet proved possible to apply x-ray crystallographic techniques to ifn-(x subtypes, or to human ifn-~ , but the three-dimensional crystal structure of recombinant mouse ifn-[ , which is approximately % related in amino acid sequences to its human counterpart, has been solved (senda et al., ) . this has revealed that mouse ifn-[ has a structure which consists of five (x-helices folded into a compact (x-helical bundle ( figure . ). from comparative sequence analysis it is predicted that in all mammalian ifn-(x and ifn-] proteins these five (x-helical domains are conserved (korn et al, ; horisberger and di marco, ) and thus show similarities with many other cytokines, which also have (x-helical bundle structures (bazan, ) . with one exception, ifn-(x subtypes do not contain recognition sites (asn-x-ser/thr) for n-linked glycosylation (henco et al, ) ; only ifn-(x contains two of these sites (figure . ). nevertheless, o-linked glycosylation may be possible in other ifn-(x subtypes. for example, it has been found that natural ifn-%, purified from human leukocyte ifn, contains the disaccharide galactosyl-n-acetylgalactosamine in olinkage to thr- (adolf et al, a) . however, since ifn-% is the only ifn-(x subtype with a theonine at position , it may represent the only o-glycosylated ifn-(x protein (figure comprise the mature ifn-] protein (derynck et al., taniguchi et al., ; houghton et al., ) . although ifn-] is the same length as the majority of ifn-a subtypes, it shows only approximately % amino acid sequence relatedness with them ( figure . ) and is antigenically distinct. the ifn-~ protein lacks the n-terminal cys- residue present in ifn-a subtypes, but contains three other cysteines at positions , , and , the latter two corresponding to the disulfide bond pairing - in ifn-a subtypes. replacement of cys- by serine does not result in any loss of biological activity, whereas serine substitution of cys- does (mark et al., ; shepard et al., ) . as mentioned previously, on the basis of the threedimensional structure of recombinant mouse ifn-~ ( figure . ) , human ifn-[ is predicted to contain five a-helices and to fold up into an a-helical bundle structure (senda et al., ) . human ifn-[ has one potential n-glycosylation site at asn- (taniguchi et al., ) and n-linked oligosaccharides, primarily of the biantennary complextype, are known to be attached to this site in natural ifn- (hosoi et al, ) . however, these may vary considerably depending on the producer cell type (utsumi et al., ) . from cdna sequence data, it was predicted that pre-ifn-m contains amino acids, the n-terminal comprising the signal sequence and the remaining the mature ifn-m protein (capon et al., ; hauptmann and swetly, ) . the amino acid sequence of ifn-m is therefore six residues longer at the cterminus than ifn-r or ifn-[ proteins. however, it has been found that natural ifn-m is heterogeneous at the n-terminus owing to variable cleavage of pre-ifn-m; about % of mature ifn-m molecules carry two additional n-terminal amino acids (adolf, ; shirono et al., ) . it is approximately % related to ifn-cx subtype sequences, but only % related to that of ifn-[ ( figure . ), and is antigenically distinct from both ifn-~ and ifn-[ (adolf, ) . nevertheless, the four cysteines occur in the same notional positions, , , , and , as they do in ifn-~ subtypes and it is likely that ifn-m will have a similar cx-helical bundle structure to those predicted for both ifn-cx and ifn-[ proteins (senda et al., ) . ifn-m has one potential site at asn- for n-linked glycosylation and natural ifn-m has been demonstrated to be a glycoprotein with biantennary complex oligosaccharides (containing neuraminic acid) attached at this site (adolf, ; adolf et al., b) . type i ifns (ifn- t,-[ , and-m) are produced by a variety of normal cell types responding to extracellular or intracellular stimuli (stewart, ) . ifn-~, as a mixture of subtypes, and ifn-m may be produced together following viral infection of null lymphocytes or monocytes/macrophages (cantell and hirvonen, ; adolf, ) . the proportions of ifn- t subtypes may vary according to the type of virus used as inducer (hiscott, ; finter, ) . however, production of ifn-[ is usually restricted to double-stranded polynucleotide, e.g., poly-inosinic, poly-cytidylic acid, or it is well established that the biological activities of ifns are mostly dependent upon protein synthesis with selective subsets of proteins mediating individual activities. antiviral, antiproliferative and immunomodulatory activities have been ascribed to ifn-~/[ /c (reviewed in pestka et al., ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . the proteins and mechanisms involved in these activities are described below. virally-induced normal fibroblasts and other tissue cell types, e.g., epithelial cells (meager et al., ; stewart, ) . in all the above cases, the amount of ifn secreted is dependent on the dose of the inducer. besides normal cells, a range of transformed and tumor-derived cell lines are known ifn producers, e.g., mg human osteosarcoma cell line (meager et al., ) , and the namalwa b-lymphoblastoid cell line (phillips et al., ) . generally speaking, adherent fibroblastic cell lines produce mainly ifn-[ and only a minor quantity of ifn-~ (havell et al., ) , whereas nonadherent myeloid or lymphoid cell lines produce mainly ifn-c~ and only a small amount of ifn-i (cantell and hirvonen, ; shuttleworth et al., ; zoon et al., ) . actual production of ifns lasts only a matter of a few hours following induction. this is due to ifn mrna instability and the rapid shut-off of ifn gene transcription (caput et al., ; shaw and kamen, ) . under conditions where ifn mrna stability is increased, e.g., by blocking protein and rna synthesis following induction, ifn production has been shown to be "superinduced" once the block on protein synthesis is removed (meager et al., ; stewart, ) . despite there being vast numbers of viruses with different replication strategies, it appears that many viruses can be countered by relatively few ifn-inducible "antiviral" proteins (samuel, ) . one of the bestcharacterized of these is a family of enzymes collectively known as " - a synthetase" which, in the presence of dsrna (often an intermediate of viral rna synthesis) catalyses the formation of an unusual oligonucleotide, ppp (a 'p) na ( - a), which in turn activates an ifninduced latent endonuclease, rnase l (williams and kerr, ; wreschner et al., ; ghosh et al., ; hovanessian, ; lengyel, ; zhou et al., ) . when activated, the rnase l degrades viral (and cellular mrna) and therefore inhibits viral protein synthesis. small rna viruses (picornaviridae), e.g., mengo virus and murine encephalomyocarditis virus (emcv), whose replication is cytoplasmic are most inhibited by the induction of - a synthetase (lengyel, ; rice et al., ; chebath et al., ; kumar et al., ) . a further important ifn-induced "antiviral" protein is a dsrna-dependent protein kinase, now designated pkr, which in the active form phosphorylates the peptide initiation factor, eif , involved in polyribosomal translation of mrna (miyamoto and samuel, ; gupta et al., ; samuel, ) . phosphorylated eif is inactive and thus viral protein synthesis is inhibited. this inhibition has been associated with the loss of replicating capacity of reoviruses and rhabdoviruses such as vesicular stomatitis virus (vsv). the - a synthetase and pkr antiviral mechanisms are rather general and potentially could affect a wide range of viruses. however, ifn can induce certain proteins that inhibit specifically one class of virus. for example, the ifn-inducible mx proteins block the replication of influenza virus, probably by inhibiting the nuclear phase of viral transcription (mouse cells) or later cytoplasmic phases (human cells), without affecting the replication of many other viruses (staeheli, ; mel n et al., ; ronni et al., ) . in addition, since ifns can impair various steps of viral replication, including penetration, uncoating and assembly of progeny virions as well as transcription and translation, there are likely to be several other antiviral proteins and mechanisms (de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . for instance, some viruses, e.g., herpes virus and certain retroviruses, appear to be inhibited at the relatively late stage of virus particle maturation and budding (aboud and hassan, ) . in the course of evolution, many viruses have developed countermechanisms by which they can disrupt the antiviral mechanisms induced by ifn. such countermechanisms often point to the significance of particular "antiviral" proteins. one of the main "targets" for several different viruses is the ifn-inducible pkr. the action of this kinase is overcome in adenovirus or epstein-barr virus (a member of the herpes virus family) by the production of small viral rna molecules, vaiand eber-rnas, respectively, which bind to pkr and block its activation by dsrna (clarke et al., ; ghadge et al., ; mathews and shenk, ) . reoviruses and vaccinia virus (a member of the pox virus family) produce viral proteins (sigma and ski, respectively), that bind to dsrna and thus reduce activation of pkr (sen and lengyel, ) . interestingly, if ifn-treated vsv-infected cells are coinfected by vaccinia virus, vsv replication is rescued, presumably partly by the inhibitory effect of ski on pkr (whitaker-dowling and youngner, ) . vaccinia virus also produces a nonfunctional protein analog of elf which competes with the real eif for phosphorylation by pkr and thus dilutes out the antiviral effect of activated pkr (beattie et al., ) . other viruses, such as influenza, may activate latent cellular inhibitors of pkr activity, e.g., a kda protein (p ) (lee et al., ) . the - a synthetase-rnase l system can also be subverted. for example, emcv, a picornavirus, can inactivate rnase l in several cell lines, but this inactivation is usually blocked by ifn treatment (lengyel, ) . herpes viruses, in contrast, appear to inhibit rnase l activation by producing competing analogs of - a (cayley et al., ) . some viruses even .have the ability to block the transcription of ifn-inducible genes. the "early" ela regulatory proteins of adenoviruses prevent the activation of isgf by ifn, probably by inhibiting the transcription of the isgf subunit gutch and reich, ; kalvakolanu et at., ; nevins, ) . in the case of hepatitis b virus-infected cells, the so-called virus-specified "terminal protein" inhibits ifn-inducible gene expression . the antiviral mechanisms induced by ifn are mediated by enzymes, e.g., - a synthetase and picr, whose activities have broad implications for cell growth and proliferation. viral replication may be regarded as a form of pathological growth of a foreign, "cell-like", entity at the expense of a living cell. in the presence of ifn, enzymes are activated which curtail protein synthesis in general, but because viral protein synthesis is normally rapid, the inhibitory effect on viral replication appears more dramatic than on the slower and more complex cellular growth. possibly, the "ifn system" was evolved more as a part of a complex, interactive network of intercellular mediators of cell growth and proliferation than as one for antiviral mechanisms. recent investigations tend to support the role of ifns in regulating cell growth. for example, if a mutant form of pkr that is unable to phosphorylate eif is introduced into cells, they undergo neoplastic transformation (koromilas et al., ; lengyel, ; meurs et al., ) . this suggests that pkr normally acts as a "tumorsuppressor"' gene product. therefore, one of the mechanisms by which ifn inhibits cell proliferation could be through its capacity to induce enhanced expression/activity of pkr. ifn-~ has also been reported to inhibit cyclin-dependent cdk- kinase, which is responsible for phosphorylation of retinoblastoma (rb) protein, and this could contribute to antiproliferative activity (kumar and atlas, ; resnitzky et al., ; zhang and kumar, ) . the - a synthetase-rnase l system may also have antiproliferative and tumor suppressor activities. for instance, the levels of these two enzymes are high in growth-arrested cells: introduction of - a-like oligoadenylates into proliferating cells also causes growth impairment (sen and lengyel, ; lengyel, ; zhou et al., ) . the ifn-stimulated increases in synthesis of pkr and - a synthetase are dependent on ifn-inducible transcription factors, such as irf- (isgf ) pine et al., ; williams, ; reis et al., ) . the latter has a short half-life and thus transcription of ifn-inducible genes is rapidly repressed by the longer-lasting, inhibitory irf- (harada et al., ) . if irf- is overexpressed, cells become transformed as even low level constitutive production of pkr and - a synthetase, which can regulate normal cell growth, is abrogated. this transformation was reversed by overexpressing irf- (harada et al., ) , indicating that irf- can be viewed as a pivotal player in the growth, regulatory, and tumor suppressor machinery. a variety of other ifn-induced mechanisms, including suppression of oncogenes (contente et al., ) , depletion of essential metabolites (sekar et al., ) , and increased cell rigidity (e. wang et al., ) , could also contribute to its antiproliferative activity. the antiproliferative effects of ifns in different tumor cell lines cultured in vitro is highly variable. besides tumor cell lines, ifn- t/[ have antiproliferative activity in hematopoietic precursor cells, e.g., of the myeloid lineage (rigby et al., ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, , for review). they are also potent inhibitors of angiogenesis, the process whereby blood capillaries are formed to envasculate tissues (sidky and borden, ) . besides activating intracellular processes, ifns can also activate intercellular activities, especially within the immune system, which are an essential part of host defense against infectious and invasive diseases. thus, ifns can stimulate indirect antiviral and antitumor mechanisms, which in the main rest upon cellular differentiation and the induction of cytotoxic activity. for example, in the presence of antigen-specific antibodies, macrophages can effect cell-mediated cytotoxicity. such antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (adcc) is enhanced by ifn, possibly through an augmentation of immunoglobulin g (igg)-fc receptor (fcr) expression (hokland and berg, ; vogel et al., ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ). in addition, another category of leukocytes comprising large granular lymphocytes and known as natural killer (nk) cells are activated, by unknown mechanisms, to kill virally-infected or tumor cell targets independently of major histocompatibility complex (mhc) antigen expression (trinchieri and perussia, ; rager-zisman and bloom, ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . ifns can stimulate increased expression of class i mhc antigens, i.e., hla-a, -b, -c, which are crucial for recognition of foreign antigen by cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctl, cd +); recognition of virally infected cells by ctl depends on class i mhc antigen presentation of viral antigens at the cell membrane (heron et al., ; fellous et al., ) . ifn-(x/[ have sometimes been observed to increase class ii mhc antigen expression, which is necessary to trigger both humoral and cell-mediated immunity, but probably play a lesser role than ifn-y, which is the major class ii mhc antigen inducer (baldini et al., ; rhodes et al., ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ). all of the biological activities so far described (see above) for ifns have followed from in vitro experimentation. here it is possible to pick and choose conditions that favor particular outcomes, e.g., the antiviral response, by adjusting doses of ifn, times of incubation, levels of virus challenge, and so on. such experiments illustrate the range of biological activities of ifns but cannot define their physiological roles. that ifns have the potential for inducing antiviral and antitumor activity suggests their main role in vivo is to act as regulators of host defense mechanisms, and to prevent pathophysiological events occurring. investigations in experimental animals have supported this likelihood. for example, injection of mice with anti-ifn-~/] antibody has been shown to increase their susceptibility to a range of virus infections (virelizier and gresser, ; gresser, ) . the earliest evidence for an antitumor effect of ifn-tx/ came from inoculation of murine l cells into mice. l cells are sensitive to the antiproliferative action of ifn-~/ in vitro and in vivo, ifn~/[ prevented tumor growth by these cells. however, when a clone of l was isolated that was resistant to the antiproliferative action of lfn-~/[ , there occurred a similar retardation of tumor growth upon ifn-c~/] treatment to that observed with "sensitive" l cells, suggesting that ifn was acting indirectly in vivo by a host-mediated mechanism (gresser et al., (gresser et al., , . a similar conclusion was reached more recently using ifn-resistant b-cell lymphoma cells . in the intervening years, many studies have been conducted confirming that ifn can act directly (e.g., human ifn-a against a range of human tumor xenografts in nude mice where human ifn- ~ has no activity on the murine immune system) and indirectly (reviewed by balkwill, ) . although antitumor activity has been clearly demonstrated by the application of exogenous ifns, it is not certain that endogenously produced ifns are involved in countering tumor growth. however, some experimental evidence that endogenous ifn could play a role in host resistance to cancer or its spread has been obtained by treating mice with anti-ifn antibodies. under these conditions, the intraperitoneal transplantability of six different experimental murine tumors was observed (gresser, ) . ifn-a/~ can inhibit the growth of hematopoietic progenitor cells in vitro (rigby et al., ) and this is also likely to occur in vivo. such an occurrence is undesirable in most instances, but suppression of proliferation of bone marrow hematopoietic cell precursors has been turned to advantage in protecting tumor-bearing mice against the cytotoxicity of chemotherapeutic agents such as -fluorouracil ( -fu) (stolfi et al., ) . ifns exercise their actions in cells via ifn-specific cell surface receptors. these receptors bind ifns with high affinity (aguet, ) and transduce the signal occasioned by ligand (ifn) binding across the cell membrane into the cytoplasm. ifn-cq ifn-[ and ifn-co share the same binding sites (aguet et al., ; flores et al., ) , but ifn-y binds to different sites (branca and baglioni, ; aguet et al., ) . the binding of ifn-c~ and ifn-~ to lymphoid cells and fibroblasts has been studied extensively and has been reviewed (rubinstein and orchansky, ; branca, ; langer and pestka, ; grossberg et al., ) , and results have generally demonstrated the presence of up to a few thousand complex, high-affinity receptors per cell. chemical cross-linking studies with ~ si-labeled ifn-~ or ifn-[ to receptor-bearing cells have led to the identification of various ifn-receptor complexes, their molecular masses ranging from to kda (joshi et al., ; eid and mogensen, ; faltynek et al., ; raziuddin and gupta, ; thompson et al., ; hannigan et al., ; vanden broecke and pfeffer, ; colamonici et al., ) . such results have suggested that there are either multiple binding sites for ifn-cx, ifn-[ , and ifn-m or that there are complex multichain receptors (colamonici et al., ; hu et al., ) . although on human cells all the ifn-c~, ifn-~, and ifn-m proteins compete for common binding sites, individual ifn-c~ subtypes show different levels of activities on cells (streuli et al., ; week et al., ; rehberg et al., ) which appear to correlate with their binding behavior to the cell surface (uzd et al., ) . in particular, ifn-% shows a much lower binding for human membrane receptors than either "ifn- ~ or ifn-% (uz et al., ) . interestingly, this differential binding of human ifn-~ subtypes is not manifested in bovine cells, and all of the subtypes exhibit high specific activities (yonehara et al., ; shafferman et al., ) . ifn-i and ifn-m are also active in bovine cells (capon et al., ; adolf et al., ) , but this cross-reactivity does not extend to mouse cells, a feature that has provided experimental systems in which to characterize ifn-receptors. thus, somatic cell genetic studies with human • rodent hybrid cells containing various combinations of human chromosomes have provided evidence that the presence of human chromosome confers sensitivity of such hybrid "rodent" cells to human ifn-~, ifn-i and ifn-m (tan et al., ; slate et al., ; epstein et al., ; raziuddin et al., ) . further, it was demonstrated that antibodies raised against human chromosome encoded cell surface proteins were able to block the binding and action of human ifn-~ to human cells, indicating that this chromosome contained a gene(s) specifying the human ifn cell surface receptor . the elucidation of the full complement of components of the ifn-~/[ /m receptor has long been sought. one methodology used to isolate receptor cdnas involves transfecting mouse cells with total human dna and then selecting for cells sensitive to human ifn-cz. after several attempts, this approach led successfully to the isolation of a . kb edna from a library constructed from human lymphoblastoid (daudi) cells, which encoded an ifn-cz binding protein (uzd et al., ) containing amino acids (molecular mass da) including a signal sequence of mainly hydrophobic amino acids. this protein has a structure typical of a transmembrane glycoprotein: a large n-terminal extracellular domain, which potentially could be highly glycosylated owing to a preponderance of n-linked glycosylation sites, a short hydrophobic transmembrane domain, and an intracellular or cytoplasmic tail (figure . ) . its amino acid sequence shows little homology with any currently available sequences of proteins, including the sequence of the human ifn- receptor (aguet et al., ) ; however, the extracellular domain has been predicted to show structural similarities with the latter receptor and to a lesser extent with the so-called hematopoietin receptor supergroup (bazan, a,b) . the gene coding for this putative ifn-cz receptor has been mapped to chromosome .q , in confirmation of the earlier rodent x human hybrid cell data (tan et al., ; slate et al., ; epstein et m., ; raziuddin et al., ) . although the cloned "ifn-cz receptor" could be shown to confer sensitivity to human ifn-% in transfected mouse cells (uzd et al., ) , such cells were relatively insensitive to human ifn-% and human ifn-[ . these findings, together with those from anti-ifn-cz receptor antibody blocking studies (colamonici et al., ; revel et al., ; uz~ et al., ) and affinity cross-linking studies with ifn-% (colamonici et al., ) , have suggested that a second ifn-cz receptor exists or another component is required besides the cloned ifn-cz binding protein, to complete the receptor complex. this hypothesis is further supported by a study in which introduction of a yeast artificial chromosome (yac) containing a segment of human chromosome into chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells conferred a greatly increased response to both ifn- ~ and ifn- ~ , as well as an increased response to ifn-i and ifn-m, whereas the expression of the ifn-~ binding protein alone did not confer sensitivity (revel et al., ) . however, these increased responses can be "knocked out" by disruption of the ifn-~ binding protein gene in the yac, and then reconstituted by expression of the cdna encoding the ifn-% binding protein (cleary et al., ) , suggesting that cell surface expression of this protein is required for a fully functional receptor (see also hertzog et al., ; constantinescu et al., ) . a second human ifn-~/i receptor, which is probably the additional component of the receptor complex referred to above, has been cloned (novick et al., ) . the . kb cdna encodes a -amino-acid protein, including a signal sequence, which has the predicted structure of a transmembrane glycoprotein. the nterminal ectodomain ( amino acids) corresponds in sequence to a soluble kda ifn-(x/[ binding protein, p , isolated from urine. this domain is linked to a transmembrane segment ( amino acids) and a relatively small cytoplasmic domain of amino acids ( figure . )i overall, the primary sequence shows little ifn-a/] binding protein bind ifn-a but are insensitive to its effects, suggesting that an accessory protein, possibly the cloned ifn-c~ binding protein, is required for signaling (novick et al., ; constantinescu et al., ) . the findings that anti-p antiserum and a particular monoclonal antibody to the ifn-cx binding protein (benoit et al., ) both block the biological activity of ifn- q co indicate that the ifnhomology with that of the previously cloned ifn-a . c~/ and ifn-a binding proteins are in close proximity, binding protein (uzd et al., ) , but when the extracellular domains are compared, . % relatedness is found (novick et al., ) , suggesting that both of these ifn binding proteins belong to the same so-called class ii cytokine receptor family (uz et al., ) . two classes of cytokine receptor (class i and class ii) have been proposed by bazan ( a,b) , these being distinguished by the positions of cysteine pairs in the extracellular domain. the latter is comprised of fibronectin type iii-like units containing around amino acids and designated d (uzd et al., ) . a schematic drawing of both ifn-a/[ receptor chains is shown in figure . . subsequently, it has been found that alternative splicing of the ifn-a/ receptor gene can produce a transcript encoding a long form of the receptor protein containing a larger cytoplasmic domain of amino acids . mouse cells transfected with the cdna encoding the and thus probably interact to form a high-affinity ifna/] /co receptor complex. the most likely scenario on present evidence is for a two-chain ifn-c~/ /co receptor, comprising the cloned ifn-c~ binding protein (uz et al., ) and the long form of the ifn-c~/[ binding protein lutfalla et al., ) , each of which binds to some extent particular ifn types or ifn-(x subtypes but which together more strongly bind all ifn-~, - , and -co species and function to transmit signals across the cell membrane. however, it is not completely ruled out that other cell surface components, e.g., membrane glycosphingolipids, are required for fully functional receptors (colamonici et al., ; platanias et al., ; ghislain et al., ; uz et al., ) or, possibly, that there are alternative ifn receptors, e.g., the epstein-barr virus/complement c d receptor as an ifn-c~ receptor on b-lymphocytes (delcayre et al., ) . vaccinia virus and other orthopoxviruses contain a gene b r encoding a soluble type i ifn receptor which, unlike the class ii cytokine type receptors, belongs to the immunoglobulin superfamily (symons et al., ; colamonici et al., ) . . the intracellular domains of the two cloned ifn-binding proteins are unrelated to the tyrosine kinase class of receptors, e.g., epidermal growth factor receptor (egf-r) and platelet-derived growth factor-receptor (pdgf-r), and are not predicted to have kinase activity of any sort (uzd et al., ; novick et al., ) . however, it appears that the cytoplasmic domain of the ifn- ~ and a/ binding proteins associate with nonreceptor tyrosine kinases tyk and janus kinase (jak ), respectively, known to be involved in the signal transduction pathway of ifn-a/[ and other cytokines (novick et al., ; ghislain et al., ; ihle, ; ihle and kerr, ; velasquez et al., ) . the current understanding of this pathway is as follows. after binding of ifn-a/[ /c to their cognate receptors, the intracellular domains are phosphorylated by tyk and jak . these phosphorylated domains act as docking sites for the cytoplasmic stat (signal transducers and activators of transcrilstion ) proteins p /p (statla/b) and p (stat ) (ihle, ) . the latter undergo tyrosine phosphorylation mediated by receptor-associated tyk /jak , dimerize, translocate to the nucleus, and combine with a dna binding protein, p , to form the ifn-stimulated gene factor- (isgf ) transcription factor complex (schindler et al., ; velasquez et al., ; mtiller et al., ; platanias et al., ; shuai et al., ; gupta et al., ; yan et al., ) . both tyk and jak need to be reciprocally activated for signal transduction to occur, since cell mutants lacking either tyk or jak are unresponsive to ifn- ~ (ihle, ; ihle and kerr, ) . isgf binds to cis-acting ifn-stimulated response elements (isre), present in the promoter regions of ifn-inducible genes, to initiate their transcription (williams, ) . targeted disruption of the stat gene in mice has shown that stat has an obligatory role in ifn-cx and ifn-y signaling (durbin et al., ; meraz et al., ) . the jak /tyk -isgf pathway may not be the only "receptor-to-cell nucleus" signaling mechanism activated in ifn-stimulated cells. there has been some evidence to implicate protein kinase c (pkc) pathways as well (reich and pfeffer, ; pfeffer et al., ; c. wang et al., ) . however, this remains controversial owing to the lack of specificity of kinase inhibitors used (kessler and levy, ; james et al., ) . ifn-inducible genes have a common regulatory nucleotide sequence (g/a)ggaaan(n)gaaact in their ' flanking region and this type of sequence, which resembles the vre sequences (ryals et al., ; present in ifn genes, is designated interferonstimulated response element (isre) (williams, ) . the resemblance between isre and vre sequences probably accounts for the finding that many ifninducible genes are transcriptionally activated by virus infection or dsrna, which also activate the transcription of ifn genes (hug et al., ; wathelet et al., ) . as mentioned previously (see section . . ), ifn-receptor occupation activates cytoplasmic isgf- and this complex is translocated to the nucleus and binds to isre of ifninducible genes as a transcriptional activator. in addition, a second factor, isgf , forms complexes with isre in ifn-stimulated cells. isgf is a single, inducible phosphoprotein that has been shown to be identical to irf- pine et al., ; williams, ; reis et al., ) . the role of a third transcription factor, isgf , which is constitutively produced and requires only the central bp core of isre for binding, remains to be fully defined (kessler et al., ) . a number of other negative regulatory factors, including irf (harada et al., ) and the isgf (irf )/isgf yrelated "human interferon consensus sequence binding protein" (icsbp) (weisz et al., ; bovolenta et al., ) , which also bind to isre, are also probably involved in the regulation of transcription of ifn-inducible genes. it is clear that the regulation of expression of ifninducible genes is complex and that the mechanisms that control their selective expression are not fully understood (see taylor and grossberg, , for review) . ifninducible proteins, whose number probably exceeds , include both those proteins induced early after ifn stimulation and those proteins that may be produced at later times, often in response to the actions of "early" ifn-inducible proteins (sen and lengyel, ) . the full set of ifn-inducible proteins is probably not known, but several have been identified and characterized. table . shows an incomplete list of ifn-inducible proteins together with their likely functions. some of these proteins are not exclusively induced by ifn- ~/[ /c ; ifn-y and certain other cytokines, e.g., tumor necrosis factor-~ (tnf-~) often induce spectra of proteins that overlap with the set induced by ifn-~/ /~ (revel and chebath, ; rubin et al., ; wathelet et al., ) . it should be noted that ifn-inducible proteins tend also to be cell type-specific and thus not all proteins listed in table . will be expressed in all cell types. in some cases, ifn-inducible proteins are completely absent from a cell before ifn stimulation, but in other cases revel and chebath, ; sen and lengyel, ; samuel, ; staeheli, . revel and chebath, ; lengyel, . de maeyer and de maeyer guignard, ; heron et al, . schwemmle and staeheli, . ronni et al, . revel and chebath, . c. wang et al., . kumar and atlas, . loeb and haas, . aiidridge et al, . fellous et al, . sen and lengyel, . sen and lengyel, . bange et al., . chebath et al, . choubey and lengyel, . lawn et al, a constantoulakis et al, . porter and itzhaki, . hokland and berg, . thomas and linch, . revel and chebath, they are being constitutively produced, their synthesis augmented by ifn. the genes for mouse ifn-~ subtypes and mouse ifn-[ (no functional mouse ifn-c gene has been found) are located on mouse chromosome (dandoy et al., (dandoy et al., , de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, , for review) . these genes are, like their human counterparts, intronless and of comparable structure. twelve mouse ifn-~ genes or pseudogenes have been identified, of which the cdnas for different genes have been cloned and expressed (langer and pestka, ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . mouse ifn-~ subtype proteins contain or amino acids, or exceptionally (mouse ifn-~ ) , and the four cysteines at positions (langer and pestka, ) . there is only a single-copy mouse ifn-[ gene and this encodes the i-amino-acid mature mouse ifn-[ protein (higashi et al., ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . mouse ifn- contains only one cysteine and thus cannot form intramolecular disulfide bonds. it has three potential n-linked glycosylation sites and is heavily glycosylated when secreted from mouse fibroblasts; the molecular mass of the native glycoprotein is approximately kda compared to the predicted kda for the nonglycosylated counterpart (de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ). the amino acid sequence of mouse ifn-i is about : % related to that of human ifn-i . the threedimcnsional structure of mouse ifn-i has been solved (senda et al, ) (see section . . ) and the protein has been shown to comprise five s-helices folded into a compact s-helical bundle (figure . ) . induction of transcription of mouse ifn- ~ subtype genes and the mouse ifn-i gene is probably regulated by transcription factor-binding nucleotide sequences present in the ' noncoding promoter region, in a similar way to that of human ifn-~ and ifn-[ genes (see section . ). for. example, repeated gaaa-rich sequences are present in the ' flanking regions of most mouse ifn-cz subtype genes and these are likely to be important for virus-inducible transcription (shaw et m., ; zwarthoff et al., ) . inducers of mouse ifn-~ and ifn-i synthesis, which include a number of viruses and double-stranded polynucleotides, are similar to those which induce human ifn-c~, ifn-[ , and ifn- production (stewart, ; de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . similarly, the type of ifn produced follows the pattern found among different human cell types: fibroblastic and epithelial cell lines produce mainly ifn-~, whereas leukocytes produce mainly ifn- ~ subtypes (de maeyer and de maeyer-guignard, ) . the biological properties of mouse ifn- ~ and ifn-~ are similar to those of human ifn- ~, ifn-j and ifn- (see section ). since mouse and human ifn-~ subtypes are only % homologous, there is considerable species preference in biological activity, i.e., mouse ifn-cx is weakly active in human cells and vice versa. mouse ifn- is also not active in human cells (stewart, ) . rather less is known regarding receptors for mouse ifn-~ and ifn- , than for the human counterparts, but it is probable that they comprise two or more chains, as is the case for the human ifn-~/j / receptors (uzd et al., ) . the mouse equivalent receptor chain to the ifn- ~ binding protein (uzd et al., ) has been cloned (uz~ et al., ) . the gene for this mouse ifn-~/ receptor has been located to mouse chromosome (cheng et al., ) . the mouse ifn-~/ receptor is amino acids long and is divided into a large nterminal extracellular domain ( amino acids), a short hydrophobic transmembrane segment ( amino acids), and a cytoplasmic domain ( amino acids) (uz~ et al., ) . the extracellular domain contains eight potential n-linked glycosylation sites and is predicted to exhibit the two-d domain structure of the human ifn-~ binding protein extracellular domain (figure . ) (uzd et al., ) . further mouse ifn- ~/] rceptors or components thereof await identification and characterization. signal transduction via mouse ifn-~/] receptors is expected to involve the jak /tyk -isgf (stat / ) pathway as outlined for human ifn- ~/] / receptors (see section . ). in stat genedeleted mice there are no overt developmental abnormalities, but they display a complete lack of responsiveness to mouse ifn- ~ and ifn-~, (durbin et al., ; meraz et al., ) . as a consequence, stat -/-mice are highly susceptible to infection by viruses and microbial pathogens. stat is therefore an obligatory mediator in the signal transduction pathway triggered by ifns. targeted disruption of the cloned mouse ifn- ~/] receptor gave rise to a knockout with a similar phenotype (miiller et al., ) . such mice, lacking the ifn-cx/ receptor, developed normally but were unable to respond to mouse ifn- ~/] and thus unable to cope with viral infections. the potent antiviral activity of ifn-~/] /c together with their potential antitumor actions provided the impetus for large-scale manufacture of ifns for the purpose of clinical evaluation in a variety of viral and malignant diseases. in the early s, ifn production depended on pooled, human buffy coats (leukocytes) and thus only limited quantities could be made (cantell and hirvonen, ) . later in that decade, human lymphoblastoid cells (e.g., namalwa), which could be grown to large culture volumes, became available for ifn production. by the s, following the cloning of ifn-~ and ifn-j , these ifn species were massproduced by recombinant rdna technology, leading to abundant availability of certain ifn- ~ subtypes, e.g., ifn- ~ and "stabilized" ifn-] ser . there followed production of ifn- and ifn-c by this means. clinical usage of ifn-~ preparations far exceeds that of ifn-[ and ifn-c because of early production difficulties with the latter types, though these are now solved. at the beginning of the s there was tremendous enthusiasm, both from manufacturers of ifns and from clinicians, to evaluate the therapeutic potential of ifns. however, early clinical trials had been poorly devised, were not "blinded", and often yielded only anecdotal evidence of success. it was only after many controlled, randomized studies had been conducted that it became apparent that ifns in general, administered as a single agent, were not beneficial for the treatment of the majority of malignant diseases, including the major cancers (lung, breast, colon) of the developed world. the initial optimism all but vanished and was replaced in the mid-to-late s by a more sober and realistic appreciation of the potential therapeutic value ofifns. a number of general conclusions have been drawn, as follows. (i) ifn- ~ and ifn-] , and to a lesser extent ifn- ', have antitumor activity in a small number of cancers, particularly in those that are relatively slow-growing and well-differentiated. (ii) there is no indication that heterogeneous ifn-~ preparations containing mixtures of ifn- ~ subtypes (e.g., leukocyte ifn, lymphoblastoid ifn) have different clinical effects from those of homogenous, recombinant ifn- ~ subtype or ifn-] preparations. (iii) continuous or intermittent high dosing appears to be required for antitumor efficacy. (iv) ifns probably work best in patients with a minimal tumor burden (balkwill, ) . a major concern that has emerged from clinical studies is that ifns all generate a considerable number of undesirable, clinically observable, side-effects, including fever, chills, malaise, myalgia, headache, fatigue, and weight loss, and in certain cases these have been severe enough for treatment to be halted (bottomly and toy, ; rohatiner et al., ; goldstein and laszlo, ) . in addition, a variable proportion ( - %) of patients treated with ifn- ~ or ifn-] , especially recombinant ifn-~ and recombinant ifn-] ser , develop neutralizing antibodies to the ifn species used (rinehart et al., ; antonelli et al., ) , that in some instances have been associated with clinical "resistance" to ifn (steis et al., ; oberg et al., ; freund et al., ; fossa et al., ) . a further important, but generally unrecognized, side-effect of ifn-~ treatment is the possible induction of certain types of autoimmune disease (feldmann et al., ; gutterman, ) , probably mediated via ifn-induced upregulation of mhc antigen expression and generalized immunosuppression. the most responsive cancer to ifn-a therapy is a very rare form of b-cell leukemia, known as "hairy cell" leukemia (hcl), in which a response rate up to % has been reported (gutterman, ; baron et al., ; vedantham et al., ) . in hcl patients, the "hairy cells" invade the spleen and bone marrow and the disease takes an indolent course. it has been shown convincingly that ifn-~ therapy continued over several months leads to a clearance of "hairy cells" and in some patients a long-term remission is achieved. ifn-~ ser or ifn-y were less effective against hcl (saven and piro, ) . the ifn-~-induced mechanisms whereby clearance of "hairy cells" is achieved are not fully understood, but it is believed that a direct action of ifn-~ leading to differentiation of "hairy cells" to a nonproliferating phenotype is involved (vedantham et al., ; gutterman, ) . not all patients benefit greatly from ifn-~ treatment and some develop neutralizing antibodies, particularly when ifn- ~ is used (steis et al., ) . when such neutralizing antibodies cause resistance to further ifn-~ treatment, clinical responses can be "rescued" by switching to a heterogeneous ifn- ~ preparation, e.g., leukocyte ifn-c~ (von wussow et al., ) . however, on the whole, ifn-~ therapy of hcl appears at least as effective and durable as chemotherapy with the drug pentostatin ( -deoxycoformycin) (saven and piro, ) . ifn- ~ therapy has also been shown to slow down the progression of chronic myelogenous leukemia (cml) (baron et al., ; gutterman, ) . in this malignant disease, leukemic cells grow slowly in the initial chronic, but benign, phase and persist for - years, but there follows a dramatic "blast crisis" producing rapidly proliferating myeloid leukemia cells and a fatal outcome. cml patients treated with ifn-~ in the chronic phase often achieve durable remissions, associated with the elimination of leukemic cells bearing the so-called "philadephia chromosome", sometimes lasting up to years. other malignancies in which ifn-a therapy seems to work, although with generally a lower percentage of patients responding than in hcl and cml, include lowgrade non-hodgkin lymphoma, cutaneous t cell lymphoma, carcinoid tumors, renal cell carcinoma, squamous epithelial tumors of the head and neck, multiple myeloma, and malignant melanoma. in most of these cancers, complete responses are low compared to partial responses, but ifn-~ may help with maintenance therapy of diseases in some cases, e.g., multiple myeloma (mandelli et al., ; johnson and selby, ) . the neovascularization of primary tumors is a crucial step in their development and thus the anti-angiogenic activity of ifn-~/i (sidky and borden, ) may have therapeutic value in certain early malignancies, e.g., primary melanoma (gutterman, ) . kaposi sarcoma, often found in aids patients, has been regarded as an angiogenic tumor or angioproliferative disease, which may explain why ifn-c~ treatment can lead to regression of lesions in up to % of patients with this condition (de wit et al., ; groopman and scadden, ) . in preclinical systems, the combination oflfn therapy and conventional chemotherapy has appeared to offer greater chances of producing effective treatment of many cancers, but in clinical trials this strategy has produced mostly disappointing results (see wadler and schwartz, , for review) . this may be due to (i) the inability of preclinical models accurately to predict the clinical situation; (ii) the lack of understanding of the biochemical interactions and biological consequences of combining ifns and chemotoxic agents; (iii) a failure to incorporate information on dose, scheduling, and sequence of administration of ifns and chemotoxic agents into clinical trials. despite having proven antiviral activity in vitro, ifns have not proved the hoped-for panacea for most common viral infections in man. ifn- ~/~ prevent the replication of common cold viruses (rhinoviruses and coronaviruses) in the test tube and when administered to volunteers in the form of a nasal spray, but cannot "cure" colds once they are established (scott r al., ; r.m. douglas et al., ; turner et al., ) . ifn-ix is only partially effective in preventing influenza virus infections (treanor et al., ) . topical applications of ifn-~/~ in the form of creams or ointments to herpes virus lesions, e.g., in herpes zoster (chickenpox), and genital warts (condyloma acuminatum) caused by papilloma viruses have been investigated, but have given limited beneficial effects. however, when administered parenterally, i.e., by intramuscular or intravenous injection, greater beneficial effects of ifn-(x/ on virally caused lesions and warts have been found, although not to an extent that ifn therapy has become the treatment of choice (schneider et al., ; j.m. douglas et al., ; baron et al., ; gutterman, ) . another wart-like disease, juvenile laryngeal papilloma (jlp), which can severely obstruct the airways of young children, caused by the same papilloma virus types ( and ) as cause genital warts, has also been found to respond beneficially to ifn-~ therapy. disappointingly, ifn-cz therapy appears neither curative nor of substantial value as an adjunctive agent in the long-term management ofjlp (healy et al., ) . probably the most successful application of ifn-~ therapy to viral disease is in the treatment of chronic active hepatitis, caused by either hepatitis b or c viruses (baron et al., ; gutterman, ) . up to about % of chronic active hepatitis b patients respond to ifn-~ therapy; viral infectivity markers disappear and seroconversion and cure follow. it is interesting in the case of hepatitis b virus that viral activity is responsible for inhibiting the endogenous ifn system , and thus the administration of exogenous ifn-cz constitutes a replacement therapy. in hepatitis c virus infection, some serotypes of the virus are apparently more sensitive to ifn-~ therapy than others and prolonged treatment may be necessary (> months) to prevent relapses occurring (gutterman, ) . both ifn-~ and ifn-[ have been shown to inhibit human immunodeficiency virus- (hiv- ) replication in vitro (hartshorn et al., ) . however, in vivo, there is little evidence showing that ifn-c~ therapy has any longterm beneficial effect in asymptomatic hiv-l-positive individuals or mds patients (friedland et al., ; lane et al., ) , except for limited regressions in kaposi sarcoma lesions (de wit et al., ; groopman and scadden, ) . combination therapies for hiv- infected individuals involving ifn-~ and antiviral drugs such as zidovudine (azt) have also proved to be ineffective (berglund, ) . as mentioned earlier, ifn- ~/~ inhibits hematopoiesis and therefore induces leukopenia in patients. this effect has generally been thought to be undesirable and it can lead to immunosuppression; however, it has proved useful for the treatment of diseases in which there is uncontrolled leukocytosis, e.g., thrombocytosis (markedly elevated platelet numbers), associated with various myeloproliferative diseases (gisslinger et al., ) . resistance to ifn-~ therapy has occurred in such patients when neutralizing antibodies to ifn-~ have developed, but successful retreatment with a heterogeneous ifn-~ preparation, lymphoblastoid ifn (ifn- ~n ) has been reported (brand et al., ) . the findings that production of ifn-~ and ifn- was deficient in multiple sclerosis (ms) patients (neighbor and bloom, ) stimulated clinical trials to evaluate ifns in ms. rather unexpectedly, it has repeatedly been found that ifn-] , either natural fibroblast-derived or the later recombinant ifn-j ser (ifn-j - b), injected intrathecally, subcutaneously, or intramuscularly in patients with relapsing/remitting disease leads to a reduced rate of exacerbations of the disease and thus is possibly of clinical benefit in some patients (jacobs et al., (jacobs et al., , (jacobs et al., , the ifnb multiple sclerosis study group, ; paty et al., ) . the ifn-[ -induced mechanisms that contribute to this beneficial outcome are not known, but probably immunomodulatory actions are involved, e.g., suppression of growth and activity of autoreactive t lymphocytes in the central nervous system (goodkin, ) . it is unclear whether ifn-c~ would have a similar effect. however, the results with ifn-[ treatment have been encouraging so far, although more follow-up of patients will be necessary to monitor any effects on the clinical progression of ms (ebers, ) . accumulation and breakdown of rna-deficient intracellular virus particles in interferon-treated nih t cells chronically producing moloney murine leukaemia virus inhibition of the cellular response to interferons by products of the adenovirus type eia oncogene antigenic structure of human interferon ~ (interferon alpha ii): comparison with other human interferons monoclonal antibodies and enzyme immunoassays specific for human interferon (ifn) c : evidence that ifn-c is a component of human leukocyte ifn purification and characterisation of natural interferon c : two alternative cleavage sites for the signal peptidase natural human interferon-~ is o-glycosylated human interferon c : isolation of the gene, expression in chinese hamster ovary cells and characterization of the recombinant protein high affinity binding of si-labelled mouse interferon to a specific cell surface receptor various human interferon ~ subclasses cross-react with common receptors: their binding activities correlate with their specific biological activities molecular cloning and expression of the human interferon- receptor interferon [ increases expression of vimentin at the mrna and protein levels in differentiated embryonal carcinoma (psmb) cells nomenclature of the human interferon proteins a family of structural genes for human lymphoblastoid (leukocyte-type) interferon neutralizing antibodies to interferon-cx: relative frequency in patients treated with different interferon preparations distinct activation of murine interferon-~ promoter region by irf- /isgf- and virus infection human recombinant interferon c~- c enhances the expression of class ii hla antigens on hairy cells cytokines in cancer therapy ifp is an interferon-induced leucine zipper protein that undergoes interferon-regulated cellular redistribution the interferons: mechanisms of action and clinical applications shared architecture of the hormone binding domains in type i and ii interferon receptors haemopoietic receptors and helical cytokines vaccinia virus-encoded eif- alpha homolog abrogates the antiviral effect of interferon a monoclonal antibody to recombinant human ifn-c~ receptor inhibits biologic activity of several species of human ifn-c~, ifn-[ and ifn-m combined treatment of symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus type infection with native interferon c~ and zidovudine clinical side effects and toxicities of interferon molecular interactions between interferon consensus sequence binding protein and members of the interferon regulatory factor family molecular analysis of the human interferon-cx gene family the interferon receptors evidence that types i and ii interferons have different receptors successful retreatment of an anti-interferon resistant polycythaemic vera patient with lymphoblastoid interferon-czn and in vitro studies on the specificity of the antibodies preparation of human leukocyte interferon for clinical use two distinct families of human and bovine interferon-c, genes are coordinately expressed and encode functional polypeptides identification of a common nucleotide sequence in the '-untranslated region of mrna molecules specifying inflammatory mediators activation of the ppp(a 'p)na system in interferon-treated, herpes simplex virus-infected cells and evidence for novel inhibitors of the ppp(a 'p)na-dependent rnase interferon-induced , m r protein and its mrna in human cells: molecular cloning and partial sequence of the edna constitutive expression of ( '- ') oligo a synthetase confers resistance to picornavirus infection gart, son, ifnar, and crf- genes cluster on human chromosome and mouse chromosome interferon action: nucleolar and nucleoplasmic localization of the interferoninducible -kd protein that is encoded by the if: gene from the gene cluster sequence requirement for specific interaction of an enhancer binding protein (ebp ) with dna binding of epstein-barr virus small rna eber- to the double-stranded rna-activated protein kinase dai knockout and reconstitution of a functional human type i interferon receptor complex characterization of three monoclonal antibodies that recognize the ifna receptor multichain structure of the ifn-cx receptor on hematopoietic cells vaccinia virus b r gene encodes a type i interferon-binding protein that blocks interferon transmembrane signaling role of interferon cz/[ receptor chain in the structure and transmembrane signalling of the interferon ~/[ receptor complex inhibition of revmediated hiv- expression by an rna binding protein encoded by the interferon-inducible - gene expression of gene rrg is associated with reversion of nih t transformed by ltr-c-h-ras linkage analysis of the murine interferon- ~ locus on chromosome segregation of restriction fragment length polymorphism in an interspecies cross of laboratory and wild mice indicates tight linkage of the murine ifn-[ gene to the murine ifn-cx genes nucleotide sequence of the chromosomal gene for human fibroblast ( ) interferon and of the flanking regions epstein barr virus/complement c d receptor is an interferon c~ receptor interferons and other regulatory cytokines isolation and structure of a human fibroblast interferon gene isolation and characterisation of a human fibroblast interferon gene and its expression in escherichia coli clinical and virological effects of high-close recombinant interferon alpha in disseminated aids-related kaposi's sarcoma nomenclature of the human interferon genes cooperative interaction of multiple dna elements in the interferon-j promoter cloning and expression of a long form of the subunit of the interferon q receptor that is required for signalling a randomized trial of combination therapy with intralesional interferon alpha b and podophyuin versus podophyllin alone for the therapy of anogenital warts prophylactic efficacy of intranasal alpha- interferon against rhinovirus infections in the family setting an atf/creb binding site protein is required for virus induction of the human interferon ] gene targeted disruption of the mouse stat gene results in compromised innate immunity to viral disease molecular cloning of human alpha and beta genes from namalwa cells treatment of multiple sclerosis isolated interferon alpha-receptor complexes stabilised in vitro human interferon-~a, -~ and -~ (arg) genes in genomic dna direct evidence that the gene product of the human chromosome locus, ifrc, is the interferon-cx receptor recombinant human leukocyte interferon produced in bacteria has antiproliferative activity characterization of an interferon receptor on human lymphoblastoid cells two different virus-inducible elements are required for human ] -interferon gene regulation purification, concentration and physico-chemical properties of interferons enhanced expression of hla antigens and ~ -microglobulin on interferon-treated human lymphoid cells modulation of tubulin mrna levels by interferon in human lymphoblastoid cells why are there so many subtypes of alpha-interferons human interferon omega (co) binds to the ~/~ receptor recombinant interferon c~- a combined with prednisone in metastatic renal-cell carcinoma: treatment results, serum interferon levels and the development of antibodies expression of the terminal protein region of hepatitis b virus inhibits cellular responses to interferons c~ and ' and double-stranded rna recombinant human interferon (ifn) alpha- b in chronic myelogenous leukaemia: dose dependency of response and frequency of neutralizing anti-interferon antibodies a randomized placebo-controlled trial of recombinant human interferon alpha a in patients with aids delimitation and properties of dna sequences required for the regulated expression of human interferon evidence for a nuclear factor(s), irf- , mediating induction and silencing properties to human ifn-j] gene regulatory elements involvement of a cis-element that binds an h tf- /nf-~cb like factor(s) in virus-induced interferon-[ expression induction of the transcription factor irf- and interferon-j mrnas by cytokines and activators of second messenger pathways induction of endogenous ifn-~ and ifn-j genes by a regulatory transcription factor, irf- binding of the adenovirus vai rna to the interferon-induced -kda protein kinase correlates with function configuration of the interferon-cx/[ receptor complex determines the context of the biological response cloning, sequencing and expression of two murine '- '-oligoadenylate synthetases concerted evolution of human interferon ~ genes long-term interferon therapy for thrombocytosis in myeloproliferative diseases human leukocyte interferon produced by e. coli is biologically active the structure of eight distinct cloned human leukocyte cdnas interferon therapy in cancer: from imagination to interferon overlapping positive and negative regulatory domains of the human [ -interferon gene the human ~-interferon gene enhancer is under negative control interferon beta-lb human monocytes and lymphocytes produce different mixtures of s-interferon subtypes expression of human immune interferon edna in e. coli and monkey cells selective production of interferon-alpha subtypes by cultured peripheral blood mononuclear cells and lymphoblastoid cell lines novel human leukocyte interferon subtype and structural comparison of ~ interferon genes role of interferon in resistance to viral infection in vivo interferon and cell division. i. inhibition of the multiplication of mouse leukaemia l cells in vitro by interferon preparations mechanism of antitumour effect of interferon in mice injection of mice with antibody to interferon enhances the growth of transplantable murine tumours interferon therapy for kaposi's sarcoma associated with the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (aids) the structure of a thirty-six kilobase region of the human chromosome including the fibroblast interferon gene ifn-~ interferon receptors and their role in interferon action interferon action against reovirus: activation of interferon-induced protein kinase in mouse l cells upon reovirus infection the sh domains of stat and stat mediate multiple interactions in the transduction of ifn~ signals regression of the interferon signal transduction pathway by the adenovirus e a oncogene cytokine therapeutics: lessons from interferon ~. proc. natl acad. sci. usa differential human interferon alpha receptor expression on proliferating and non-proliferating cells the genes for the trophoblast interferons and the related interferon ~ii possess distinct '-promoter and '-flanking sequences structurally similar, but functionally distinct factors, irf- and irf- , bind to the same regulatory elements of ifn and ifn-inducible genes absence of type i ifn system in ec cells: transcriptional activator (irf- ) and repressor (irf- ) are developmentally regulated anti-oncogenic and oncogenic potentials of interferon regulatory factors and activity of interferons alpha, beta, and gamma against human immunodeficiency virus replication in vitro a novel class of human type i interferons synthesis of two distinct interferons by human fibroblasts treatment of recurrent respiratory papillomatosis with human leukocyte interferon structural relationship of human interferon-~ genes and pseudogenes the gene for human fibroblast interferon (ifb) maps to p enhanced expression of -microglobulin and hla antigens on human lymphoid cells by interferon a gene on human chromosome located in the region q . to q . encodes a factor necessary for signal transduction and antiviral response to type i interferons structure and expression of a cloned cdna for mouse interferon-[ structure and expression in escherichia coli of canine alpha-interferon genes differential expression of human interferon genes induction of human interferon gene expression is associated with a nuclear-factor that interacts with the nf~cb site of the human immunodeficiency virus enhancer interferon enhances the antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (adcc) of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes interferon-alpha hybrids a protective action of neurotropic against viserotropic yellow fever virus in macacus rhesus structural characterization of fibroblast human interferon-beta the absence of introns within a human fibroblast interferon gene interferon-induced and double-stranded rna-activated enzymes: a specific protein kinase and ', '-oligoadenylate synthetases evidence for multiple binding sites for several components of human lymphoblastoid interferon-cx interferon betal b is effective in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. i. clinical results of a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial cytokine receptor signalling stats: signal transducers and activators of transcription jaks and stats in signaling by the cytokine receptor superfamily virus interference. i. the interferon intrathecal interferon reduces exacerbations of multiple sclerosis intrathecally administered natural human fibroblast interferon reduces exacerbations of multiple sclerosis: results of a multicenter, double-blind study a phase iii trial of intramuscular recombinant beta interferon as treatment for multiple sclerosis: current status role of protein kinase c in induction of gene expression and inhibition of cell proliferation by interferon cx the treatment of multiple myelomaman important mrc trial interferon receptors. crosslinking of human leukocyte alpha- to its receptor on human cells inhibition of interferon-inducible gene expression by adenovirus e a proteins: block in transcriptional complex formation identification and characterisation of a novel repressor of interferon-~ expression protein kinase activity required for an early step in interferon-~ signalling two interferon-induced nuclear factors bind a single promoter element in interferon-stimulated genes interferon: purification and initial characterisation from diploid cells human fibroblast interferon: amino acid analysis and amino terminal amino acid sequence three-dimensional model of a human interferon alpha consensus sequence malignant transformation by a mutant of the ifn-inducible dsrna-dependent protein kinase studies on the role of the '- '-oligoadenylate synthetase-rnase l pathway in l-interferon-mediated inhibition of encephalomyocarditis virus replication interferon c~ induces the expression of retinoblastoma gene product in human burkitt lymphoma daudi cells: role in growth regulation interferon alpha in patients with asymptomatic human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) infection: a randomized, placebo-controlled trial structure of interferons interferon receptors dna sequence of two closely linked human leukocyte interferon genes dna sequence of a major human leukocyte interferon gene synergism between distinct enhanson domains in viral induction of human beta interferon gene characterization and regulation of the , -dalton cellular inhibition of the interferon-induced, dsrna-activated protein kinase the involvement of nf-~cb in -interferon gene regulation reveals its role as a widely inducible mediator of signal transducfion biochemistry of interferons and their actions tumor-suppressor genes: news about the interferon connection amino-terminal amino acid sequence of human leukocyte interferon amino acid sequence of a human leukocyte interferon molecular analysis of a human interferoninducible gene family the interferon-inducible -kda ubiquitin homolog conjugates to intracellular proteins the structure of the human interferon c~/[ receptor gene mutant u a cells are complemented by an interferon-a[ receptor subunit generated by alternative processing of a new member of a cytokine receptor gene cluster different pathways mediate virus inducibility of the human ifn-~i and ifn-~ genes maintenance treatment with recombinant interferon alpha b in patients with multiple myeloma responding to conventional induction chemotherapy controlled transcription of a human m-interferon gene introduced into mouse l-cells the nucleotide sequence of a cloned human leukocyte interferon cdna site-specific mutagenesis of the human fibroblast interferon gene adenovirus virus-associated rna and translational control targeted disruption of irf- or irf- results in abnormal type i ifn gene induction and aberrant lymphocyte development involvement of a gene on chromosome in interferon production interferon production: variation in yields from human cell lines somatic cell genetics of human interferon production in human-rodent cell lines the effect of hypertonic salt on interferon and interferon mrna synthesis in human mg cells interferon-induced mx proteins form oligomers and contain a putative leucine zipper targeted disruption of the stat gene in mice reveals unexpected physiologic specificity in the jak-stat signaling pathway tumor suppressor function of the interferon-induced double-stranded rna-activated protein kinase recent divergence from a common ancestor of human ifn-~ genes mechanism of interferon action. interferon mediated inhibition of reovirus mrna translation in the absence of detectable mrna degradation but in the presence of protein phosphorylation regulated expression of a gene encoding a nuclear factor, irf- , that specifically binds to ifn-[ gene regulatory elements roles of the - disulfide bond of subtype a of human interferon in its antiviral activity and conformational stability the protein tyrosine kinase jak complements defects in the ifn-a/[ and -~, signal transduction functional role of type i and type ii interferons in antiviral defense multimerization of aagtga and gaaagt generates sequences that mediate virus inducibility by mimicking an interferon promoter element the structure of one of the eight or more distinct chromosomal genes for human interferon-c~ absence of virus-induced lymphocyte suppression and interferon production in multiple sclerosis transcriptional activation by viral regulatory proteins interferon-j promoters contain a dna element that acts as a position-independent silencer on the nf-~cb site the human interferon ~/j receptor: characterisation and molecular cloning treatment of malignant carcinoid tumors with recombinant interferon alfa- b: development of neutralizing interferon antibodies and possible loss ofantitumor activity close linkage of ~ and ~ interferons and infrequent duplication of ] interferon in humans leukocyte and fibroblast interferon genes are located on human chromosome interferon beta-lb is effective in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. ii. mri analysis results of a multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial interferons and their actions transmembrane signalling by interferon ~ involves diacylglycerol production and activation of ~ isoform of protein kinase c in daudi cells large scale production of human interferon from lymphoblastoid cells purification and cloning of interferon-stimulated gene factor (isgf ): isgf (irf- ) can bind to the promoters of both beta interferon and interferon-stimulated genes, but is not a primary transcriptional activator of either tyrosine phosphorylation of the ~ and ~ subunits of the c~ and [ subunits of the type i interferon receptor gene targeting in human somatic cells: complete inactivation of an interferoninducible gene interferons and natural killer cells not more than base pairs of '-flanking sequence are required for inducible expression of a human ifn-~ gene receptors for human interferon-alpha: two forms of interferon-receptor complexes identified by chemical cross-linking receptors for human cx and [ interferon but not for interferon are specified by human chromosome specific molecular activities of recombinant and hybrid leukocyte interferons evidence for involvement of protein kinase c in the cellular response to interferon ~ a single dna response element can confer inducibility by both ~-and -interferons enhanced in vivo therapeutic response to interferon in mice with an in vitro interferon-resistant b-cell lymphoma mice devoid of interferon regulatory factor (irf- ) show normal expression of type i interferon genes critical role of a common transcription factor, irf- , in the regulation of ifn-~ and ifn-inducible genes interferons and interleukin- suppress phosphorylation of the retinoblastoma protein in growth-sensitive hematopoietic cells interferon-activated genes components of the human type antigen presentation by human monocytes: effects of modifying major histocompatibility complex class ii antigen expression and interleukin production by using recombinant interferons and corticosteroids double-stranded rna-dependent protein kinase and - a system are both activated in interferon-treated, encephalomyocarditis virus-infected hela cells the effect of recombinant-dna-derived interferons on the growth of myeloid progenitor cells phase i/ii trial of human recombinant ~-interferon serine in patients with renal cell carcinoma interferons as hormones of pregnancy central nervous system toxicity of interferons control of ifn-inducible mxa gene expression in human cells tumour necrosis factor and ifn induce a common set of proteins the interferon receptors human leukocyte interferon purified to homogeneity human leukocyte interferon: isolation and characterisation of several molecular forms induction of type i interferon genes and interferon-inducible genes in embryonal stem cells devoid of interferon regulatory factor i a -nucleotide promoter segment from an ifn-cx gene renders an unrelated promoter inducible by virus interferon induction of the antiviral state proteins induced by interferons and their possible roles in the antiviral mechanisms of action treatment of hairy cell leukaemia interferon-dependent tyrosine phosphorylation of a latent cytoplasmic transcription factor interference between animal viruses interferon treatment of human genital papilloma virus infection: importance of viral type the interferoninduced -kda guanylate-binding protein (hgbp ) is a gtpase that converts gtp to gmp prevention of rhinovirus colds by human interferon alpha- from e. coli inhibition of ornithine decarboxylase in human fibroblast cells by type i and type ii interferons the interferon system: a bird's eye view of the biochemistry three-dimensional crystal structure of recombinant murine interferon-[ specific residues within an amino-terminal domain of residues of interferon-~ are responsible for recognition of the human interferon-a cell receptor and for triggering biological effects structure and expression of cloned murine ifn-a genes a conserved au sequence from the ' untranslated region of gm-csf mrna mediators selective mrna-degradation a single amino acid change in ifn-[ abolishes its antiviral activity existence and unique n-terminal sequence of alpha ii (omega) interferon in natural leukocyte interferon preparation clustering of leukocyte and fibroblast genes on human chromosome interferon activation of the transcription factor star involves dimerization through sh -phosphotyrosyl peptide interactions antibodies to chromosome coded cell surface components block binding of human ~ interferon but not interferon to human cells expression of interferon-~ and interferon-j genes in human lymphoblastoid (namalwa) cells inhibition ofangiogenesis by interferons: effects on tumour-and lymphocyte-induced vascular responses presence of human chromosome alone is sufficient for hybrid cell sensitivity to human interferon chromosomal location of a human cx interferon gene family expression of a functional human type i interferon receptor in hamster cells: application of functional yeast artificial chromosome (yac) screening interferon-induced proteins and the antiviral state resistance to recombinant interferon alfa- a in hairy-cell leukaemia associated with neutralizing anti-interferon antibodies the interferon system interferon nomenclature modulation of -fluorouracil-induced toxicity in mice with interferon or with the interferon inducer, polyinosinic-polycytidylic acid at least three human type a interferons: structure of a target specificity of two species of human interferon-a produced in escherichia coli and of hybrid molecules derived from them vaccinia virus encodes a soluble type i interferon receptor of novel structure and broad species specificity the linkage of genes for the human interferon-induced antiviral protein and indophenol oxidase-b traits to chromosome g- human leukocyte and fibroblast interferons are structurally related recent progress in interferon research: molecular mechanisms of regulation, action, and virus circumvention the high mobility group protein hmgi (y) is required for nf-~cb-dependent virus induction of the human ifn- gene an intracellular kda fc~,-binding protein is induced in human cells by ~-ifn characterization of human beta-interferon-binding sites on human cells two non-allelic human interferon a genes with identical coding regions intranasally administered interferon as prophylaxis against experimentally induced influenza a virus infection in humans human natural killer cells: biologic and pathologic aspects prevention of experimental coronavirus colds with intranasal alpha- b interferon nucleotide sequence of a portion of human chromosome containing a leukocyte interferon gene cluster characterization of four different mammalian-cell-derived recombinant human interferon-[ s receptor dynamics of closely related ligands: "fast" and "slow" interferons electrostatic interactions in the cellular dynamics of the interferon-receptor complex genetic transfer of a functional human interferon ~ receptor into mouse cells: cloning and expression of its cdna murine tumor cells expressing the gene for the human interferon q receptor elicit antibodies in syngeneic mice to the active form of the receptor behaviour of a cloned murine interferon alpha beta receptor expressed in homospecific or heterospecific background ~ and ] interferons and their receptor and their friends and relations characterization of interferon-alpha binding sites on human cell lines mechanism of interferon action in hairy cell leukaemia: a model of effective cancer biotherapy a protein tyrosine kinase in the interferon a/j signalling pathway distinct domains of the protein tyrosine kinase tyk required for binding of interferon-a/j and for signal transduction role of interferon in the pathogenesis of viral diseases of mice as demonstrated by the use of anti-interferon serum. v. protective role in mouse hepatitis virus type infection of susceptible and resistant strains of mice double-stranded rna activates binding of nf-~cb to an inducible element in human [ -interferon promoter interferon-induced enhancement of macrophage fc receptor expression: [ -interferon treatment of c h/hej macrophages results in increased numbers and density of fc receptors effective natural interferon-~ therapy in recombinant interferon-m-resistant patients with hairy cell leukaemia antineoplastic activity of the combination of interferon and cytotoxic agents against experimental and human malignancies: a review interferon c~ induces a protein kinase c-e (pkc-e) gene expression and a . kb pkc- related transcript interferon increases the abundance of submembranous microfilaments in hela-s cells in suspension culture activation of ifn- element by irf- requires a translational event in addition to irf- synthesis regulation of two interferon-inducible human genes by interferon, poly(ri):poly(rc) and viruses regulation of gene expression by cytokines and virus in human cells lacking the type-i interferon locus antiviral activities of hybrids of two major human leukocyte interferons the '-flanking region of a human ifn-c~ gene mediates viral induction of transcription human interferon consensus sequence binding protein is a negative regulator of enhancer elements common to interferon-inducible genes vaccinia rescue of vsv from interferon-induced resistance: reversal of translation block and inhibition of protein kinase activity identification of novel factors that bind to the prd region of the human [ -interferon promoter postinduction repression of the -interferon gene is mediated through two positive regulatory domains treatment of malignant carcinoid tumors with recombinant interferon alfa- b: development of neutralizing interferon antibodies and possible loss of antitumour activity transcriptional regulation of interferon-stimulated genes inhibition of protein synthesis by '- ' linked adenine oligonucleotides in intact cells a comparison of vertebrate interferon gene families detected by hybridisation with human interferon dna ribosomal rna cleavage, nuclease activation and - a (ppp(a 'p)na) in interferon treated cells multiple protein-dna interactions with the human interferon-[ regulatory element phosphorylated interferon-~ receptor subunit (ifnar ) acts as a docking site for the latent form of the kda stat protein different binding of human interferon-c~l and-c~ to common receptors on human and bovine cells. studies with recombinant interferon produced in escherichia coli interferon- ~ inhibits cyclin eand cyclin dl-dependent cdk- kinase activity associated with rb protein and e f in daudi cells expressing cloning of - a-dependent rnaase: a uniquely regulated mediator of interferon action comparative structures of mammalian interferons amino-terminal sequence of the major component of human lymphoblastoid interferon purification and characterization of multiple components of human lymphoblastoid interferon-c~ organization, structure and expression of murine interferon c~ genes key: cord- -pw f asc authors: goyal, amit k.; rath, goutam; garg, tarun title: nanotechnological approaches for genetic immunization date: - - journal: dna and rna nanobiotechnologies in medicine: diagnosis and treatment of diseases doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: pw f asc genetic immunization is one of the important findings that provide multifaceted immunological response against infectious diseases. with the advent of r-dna technology, it is possible to construct vector with immunologically active genes against specific pathogens. nevertheless, site-specific delivery of constructed genetic material is an important contributory factor for eliciting specific cellular and humoral immune response. nanotechnology has demonstrated immense potential for the site-specific delivery of biomolecules. several polymeric and lipidic nanocarriers have been utilized for the delivery of genetic materials. these systems seem to have better compatibility, low toxicity, economical and capable to delivering biomolecules to intracellular site for the better expression of desired antigens. further, surface engineering of nanocarriers and targeting approaches have an ability to offer better presentation of antigenic material to immunological cells. this chapter gives an overview of existing and emerging nanotechnological approaches for the delivery of genetic materials. vaccine development offers an attractive and cost-effective preventive approach against deadly disease. new advances in immunology, molecular biology and biotechnology as low as for the development of unique, safe and effective against some dreadful diseases like hiv, cancer, hepatitis, tuberculosis, etc. (table ) . genetic immunization holds potential to discover new vaccines and may be an efficient vaccine delivery system. in the early s, dna vaccines burst into the scientific limelight. tang and johnston described the delivery of dna using a gene gun into the mice skin and felt that this could be a useful technique to generate antibody responses against specific transgene product (tang et al. ) . in , at the annual vaccine meeting at the cold spring harbor laboratory reported to drive both humoral and cellular immune responses against pathogens or tumor antigens in vivo by the use of dna vectors. merck pharmaceutical company reported that developed immune responses against influenza virus antigens in mice after injecting the naked plasmids intramuscularly (ulmer et al. ) . similarly, robinson proved the ability of dna plasmids against influenza virus antigens (fynan et al. ) . the capability of plasmids carrying hiv antigens or tumor antigens to generate immune responses and protection from tumor in mice has been described (wang et al. ). importantly, a dna vaccine affects humoral as well as cellular immunity. the use of the dna approach also promised to overcome the safety concerns associated with live vaccines-their reversion risks and their potential spread to unintended individuals, avoids the risks linked to the manufacture of killed vaccine (ruprecht ) . vaccines are generally composed of whole organism-either live and weakened or killed forms (first-generation vaccines). live, attenuated organisms such as smallpox and polio vaccines are able to induce killer t-cell (t c ) responses, helper t-cell (t h ) responses, and antibody immunity (fig. ) . first-generation vaccines providing maximum protection but associated with a risk that attenuated forms of a pathogen can revert to a dangerous form and may still be able to cause disease, especially in immune compromised vaccine recipients (e.g., aids patients). killed vaccines cannot generate specific killer t-cell responses and will be effective against limited diseases where cellular response is not essential (alarcon et al. ). these were the reasons which initiated the research for second-generation vaccines. second-generation vaccines were the subunit vaccines, consisting of defined protein antigens (such as tetanus or diphtheria toxoid), recombinant protein components (hepatitis b surface antigen), or surface proteins (influenza). these vaccines are able to generate th and antibody responses, but not killer t-cell responses. this reason again restricted the utility of these vaccines to limited number of diseases. today is the era of genetic immunization, which is nextgeneration vaccine (third generation), which seems to be highly effective till date. this strategy is based upon improved gene optimization, improved rna structural design, novel formulations and immune adjuvants, and more effective delivery approaches (alarcon et al. ; robinson and pertmer ) . at the cellular level, introduction of nanotechnology and the development of nanocarrier-based vaccines provide effective immunization through better targeting and by triggering antibody responses. in order to induce an effective protective immunity, these vaccines require boosting with agents called adjuvants. adjuvants and delivery vehicles have shown to protect antigens from degradation. the current trend toward many efforts to develop novel adjuvants and carrier have persistent on systems at the micro-and nanoscale. immunization by traditional vaccines requires the administration of live attenuated virus, killed organism, whereas dna vaccines can be constructed to encode specific antigenic determinants. dna vaccines are highly flexible, stable, easily stored, manufacture on large scale, encoding several types of genes including viral or bacterial antigens, and immunological and biological proteins (gengoux and leclerc ; kutzler and weiner ) . many potential advantages of dna vaccines are summarized in table . the gene of interest having the antigenic determinant is inserted into the recombinant vectors like multiple cloning region of plasmid by enzymatically, synthetically or by pcr and delivered to the inoculation site by one of several delivery methods like physical (gene gun, electroporation), viral (virosomes), or nonviral (liposomes, microspheres, nanospheres) to either skin (intradermally), subcutaneum, or muscle. the mechanisms by which dna vaccines produce antigen-specific immunity in vivo are under intense investigation, with an idealized model presented in fig. . figure represents the overview of the mechanisms of plasmid uptake and proteinaceous antigen expression by either somatic cells (e.g., myocytes, keratinocytes) at the site of injection or the resident antigen-presenting cells (apcs), the immature dendritic cells. the mechanisms include (a) direct targeting of dendritic cells (langerhans cells, i.e., skin dendritic cells) in gene gun administration of plasmid dna, which involves high-speed shooting of gold microbeads coated with plasmid dna into the upper layers of the skin or (b) "cross-priming," most likely in intramuscular injections or any parenteral injections where the somatic cells mentioned above primarily express the protein encoded by the the success of dna vaccines concerns improving their immunogenicity and safety. therefore, there is an urgent need for the development of potent and safe adjuvants and delivery systems that can be used with new generation of vaccines. as shown in fig. , there are several ways in which antigen expression and immunogenicity can be improved for the dna vaccine platform. there are lot of steps undertaken to modify immunogenicity and safety of dna vaccines (fig. ) . promoter is an important component of the plasmid that drives high levels of expression of the gene of interest. various promoters have been utilized to improve the expression of vaccine genes. the human cytomegalovirus (cmv) promoter has been extensively used for high levels of protein expression in mammalian cells (boshart et al. ) . however, there are some drawbacks associated with cmv promoters like chromatin condensation by histone deacetylase. recently, histone deacetylase inhibitors have been supplemented with cmv promoter-based plasmid that has shown increased expression of dna vaccine antigens (lai et al. immediate-early promoter one (ie ) have also demonstrated better gene expression in insect cells compared with cmv promoter (he et al. ). the porcine circovirus type capsid gene promoter has enhanced the antigen expression and immunogenicity in a hiv- plasmid vaccine (tanzer et al. ). regulation of transcriptional termination is a key element in control of gene expression within the framework of a single transcriptional promoter (barr et al. ) . so one of the most effective ways to increase protein production is through the use of codon optimization or by adopting species-specific codon changes (gustafsson et al. ) . plasmid backbone optimization has also been important contributory factor for dna vaccine. replacement of sv t polyadenylation and splicing signals of the paec plasmid vectors by synthetic intron and synthetic rabbit beta globin-based termination/polyadenylation sequences and cpg motif have enhanced the cell-mediated ifn-gamma-secreting activity. the rna polymerase ii dependent cytomegalovirus immediate early (cmv ie) enhancer/promoter and t promoter in psmcta and pshcta has been utilized to enhance the expression of antigenic substances (yu et al. ). viral vectors are a tool commonly used by molecular biologists to deliver genetic material into cells. viral vector vaccines use live viruses to carry dna into human cells. it consists of a non-replicating virus that contains some defined genetic fig. factors affecting the immunogenicity of dna vaccines material from the pathogen to which immunity is desired. viruses have evolved specialized molecular mechanisms to efficiently transport their genomes inside the cells they infect. viral vector vaccines carry dna into a host cell for production of antigenic proteins that can be tailored to stimulate a range of immune responses, including antibody, t helper cell (cd + t cell), and cytotoxic t lymphocyte (ctl, cd + t cell) mediated immunity (draper and heeney ) . retroviruses, parvoviruses, adenoviruses, lentiviruses, adeno-associated viruses, and the herpes simplex virus are being investigated for their ability to transfer dna. gene expression with high transfection efficiencies in tissues, such as kidney, heart, muscle, eye, and ovary, has been achieved by using viral vectors. advantages of viral-vectored vaccines include their ease of production, a good safety profile, ability to potentiate strong immune responses, infect a broad spectrum of cell types, triggering t-lymphocyte activation, potential for nasal or epicutaneous delivery and mucosal immunization (chamberlain ; galimi and verma ; lien and lai ; martin et al. ; mctaggart and al-rubeai ; wolf and jenkins ) . the recombinant retroviruses have the ability to integrate into the host genome in a stable fashion because it contains a reverse transcriptase that allows integration into the host genome. - kb is the typical maximum length of an allowable dna insert in a replication-defective viral vector. lentiviruses are a subclass of retroviruses. the unique feature of lentiviruses is to their ability to integrate into the genome of nondividing cells, whereas retroviruses can infect only dividing cells. when the virus enters the cell, the viral genome in the form of rna is reverse transcribed and produce dna, which is then inserted into the genome by the viral integrase (cattoglio et al. ). their primary applications are in gene therapy and vaccination but their limits use in basic research due to it does not integrate into the genome and is not replicated during cell division. respiratory, gastrointestinal and eye infections were commonly caused in humans after the contact with adenoviruses. adeno-associated virus (aav) is a small virus that infects both dividing and nondividing cells of humans and some other primate species and may incorporate its genome into that of the host cell with causes a very mild immune response. these features make aav a very attractive candidate for creating viral vectors for gene therapy (goff and berg ) . nowadays, incorporation of molecular adjuvants has been the main strategy for melioration of vaccines. co-injection of plasmids encoding cytokines, chemokines, or co-stimulatory molecules like death receptors, growth factors, adhesion molecules, toll-receptor ligands can be used individually or in combination to maximize substantial effect on the immune response in the clinic, in both prophylactic and therapeutic studies to plasmid-encoded antigen. for example, boost the humoral and cellular response when antigen co-administered with synthetic oligodeoxynucleotides containing unmethylated cpg motifs in mice (higgins et al. ) . recently, immunomodulation is based on targeting antigen-presenting cells (apc) "majorly macrophages" by using macrosialin promoter. the immune response of the constructed plasmids expressing jev envelope (e) protein under the control of aforesaid promoter and cytomegalovirus (cmv) immediate early promoter against jev have induces comparable immunity in comparison to ubiquitous promoter construct (ahsan and gore ) . nk group , member d (nkg d) is also reported as potent-activating receptor expressed by cells of the innate and adaptive immune systems. recombinant mouse cmv expressing the high-affinity nkg d ligand rae- γ has shown better expression and profound virus attenuation in vivo and could be a powerful to develop immunogenic hcmv vaccine (slavuljica et al. ) . in vivo dendritic cells (dc) targeting is an attractive approach with potential advantages in vaccine efficacy, cost, and availability. genetic targeting of the dc-specific cd c-driven active transcription factor xbp s to dc (xbp s/dc) has potentiated vaccine-induced prophylactic and therapeutic antitumor immunity in multiple tumor models (tian et al. ) . recently, heterodimeric antigen-presenting cells targeted multireceptor ligand approaches have been implemented to access the potential of more than one apc-specific targeting unit in the antigenic molecule. results revealed that heterodimeric barnase-barstar vaccine molecules were potent and provide a flexible platform for development of novel dna vaccines with increased potency (spang et al. ). some mechanisms of adjuvant action are discussed below: . vaccine adjuvants can increase the potency and immune response of small, antigenically weak synthetic or recombinant peptides in immunologically immature, immunosuppressed, or senescent individuals. . they can improve the immune response to stronger antigens in respect of speed, vigor, and persistence. for example, aluminum adjuvants adsorbed dtp elicit early and higher antibody response after primary immunization than do unadjuvanted preparations. . vaccine adjuvants can modulate antibody avidity, specificity, quantity, isotype, and subclass against epitopes on complex immunogens. . they target antigen to a cell-surface receptor on apcs by formation of multimolecular aggregates. . they can direct antigen presentations by direct peptide exchange on surface mhc molecules or by mhc class i or mhc class ii pathways by means of fusion or disruption of cell membranes (newman and powell ) . the most important characteristic of any adjuvanted vaccine is that it is more efficacious than the aqueous vaccine but unfortunately, the absolute safety of adjuvanted vaccines, or any vaccine, cannot be guaranteed. the real or theoretical risks of administering vaccine adjuvants are local acute or chronic inflammation, painful abscess, persistent nodules, ulcers, fever, hypersensitivity, anaphylaxis, chemical toxicity to tissues or organs, autoimmune arthritis, amyloidosis, anterior uveitis, glomerulonephritis or meningoencephalitis, immune suppression or oral tolerance, carcinogenesis, teratogenesis or abortogenesis and spread of a live vectored vaccine to the environment (edelman and tacket ; bussiere et al. ; goldenthal et al. ). . it must be safe, including freedom from side effects. . it should be affordable and stable. . it should be biodegradable or easily removed from the body after its adjuvant effect. . efficacy and immunogenicity should be achieved using fewer doses and/or lower concentrations of the antigen. . it should elicit a more vigorous protective or therapeutic immune response combined with the antigen than when the antigen is administered alone. . it must be defined chemically and biologically, so that there is no lot-to-lot variation in the manufactured product. freund's adjuvant is a solution of antigen emulsified in mineral oil and used as an immunopotentiator (booster). freund's complete adjuvant (fca) is composed of inactivated and dried mycobacteria whereas the incomplete form (fia) lacks the mycobacterial components. although, fca has been proved as a potent inducer of cell-mediated immunity and ability to boost the humoral immune response, but associated adverse side effects like sterile abscesses, granulomas, muscle indurations, plasma cell neoplasia, ascites and amyloidosis has limits its utility. a modified version of fca is known as freund's incomplete adjuvant (fia) in which antigen is administered in water-in-oil (w/o) emulsion but without mycobacterial components. it consists of a mixture of mineral oil (drakeol vr, bayol f, marcol ) ( % v/v) and emulsifier (mannide monooleate) ( % v/v) with an equal volume of aqueous solution of antigen. mechanism of the freund's adjuvants is allowing a gradual and continuous release of the antigen by establishment of a repository antigen-containing locus at the site of injection or interaction with mononuclear cells such as phagocytic cells, antigen presenting cells, etc. fia has been included in veterinary vaccines (rabies, hog cholera, canine hepatitis) (freund et al. ; fastier and hansen ; ott ) , as well as human vaccines (tetanus toxoid, influenza vaccines) (salk et al. ) . in general, both fia and fca are indeed very efficient in raising high antibody titers, induce cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctl) and used in priming immunizations. morozova et al. investigated that development of inflammatory response in the rat myocardium after immunization rats with single subcutaneous injection of cardiac myosin ( ug/kg) with incomplete freund's adjuvant (ifa) (gjessing et al. ). there are very limited studies that have been conducted which signify their utility of freund's adjuvant for dna vaccination. it has been demonstrated that plasmid pv- cpg suspended in ifa has significantly enhanced both type of cellular and humoral immune responses to hbsag (luo et al. ). aluminum compounds [aluminum phosphate (alpo ), aluminum hydroxide (al (oh) ), and alum] precipitated vaccines are currently the most commonly used adjuvants with human and veterinary vaccines owing to their good track record of safety, low cost, and adjuvanticity with a variety of antigens (gupta et al. ; gupta and siber ) . however, aluminum adjuvants have certain limitations such as local reactions at the site of injection, ige antibody responses augmentation, ineffectiveness for some antigens, and inability to supplement cell-mediated immune responses . two methods are used to prepare vaccines and toxoids with aluminum compounds-in situ precipitation of aluminum compounds in the presence of antigen and adsorption of antigen onto preformed aluminum gel (aprile and wardlaw ; holt et al. ; hem and white ; gupta ) . the mechanism of adjuvanticity of aluminum compounds includes formation of a depot, efficient uptake by antigen-presenting cells, stimulation of immune competent cells of the body through induction of eosinophilia, and activation of macrophages and complement. recently, adjuvanticity of alum has been reported due to cell death and the subsequent release of host cell dna, which acts as a potent endogenous immunostimulatory signal-mediating alum adjuvant activity (marichal et al. ) . gupta et al. ( ) showed that diphtheria toxoid adsorbed aluminum phosphate induced significant antibody levels in rabbits. previously, manam et al. reported that aluminum phosphate adjuvant had shown no effect on the tissue distribution and integration frequency of delivery genetic materials (manam et al. ) . similarly, liang et al. ( ) showed the similar results indicated that there was not increase in hbsag expression when plasmid pcdna . -s mixed aluminum phosphate. however, they demonstrated the better antibody titer after intramuscular immunization of balb/c mice with pcdna . -s mixing aluminum phosphate adjuvant. this study revealed that aluminum phosphate has a potential for dna vaccination (liang et al. ) . recently, yu et al. have demonstrated the role of aluminum adjuvant for dna vaccines against botulinum neurotoxin (bonts) and shown induced protective humoral immune responses (yu et al. ) . combined use of il- with alum adjuvants for dna immunization have also demonstrated the significant change in the survival rates of the vaccinated animals against toxoplasma gondii (khosroshahi et al. ) . cytokines are a group of secreted low-molecular weight proteins by the cells of the innate and adaptive immunity that have a major role in cell-to-cell communication. cytokines play an important role in induction of immune responses during the processing and presentation of antigens. numerous cytokines including interleukin- (il- ), granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (gm-csf), and interleukin- (il- ) have been shown to significantly modulate the inflammatory process when given systemically. the local administration of il- increases local expression of major histocompatibility (mhc) class ii antigens and enhances skin antigen reactivity, but high bolus doses of il- cause hypotension, exacerbation of underlying autoimmune disease, and induce vascular leak syndrome. this studies revealed that exogenous il- could be a valuable adjunct in the treatment of immunodeficiency virus (hiv) infected human by decreases the frequency of apoptotic peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pmbcs), which may contribute to the increase in circulating cd + t cells. il- also induces b-cell activation and antibody synthesis in vitro (cordiali fei et al. ). among various improvement strategies, the incorporation of cytokine-expressing plasmids as molecular adjuvants has been widely studied in the past years, yet still without significant clinical application. this chapter reviews recent progress in the co-application of cytokine-encoding genes used for enhancement and direction of immunogenicity, as well as discusses their therapeutic potential for future applications. coadministration of pro-inflammatory agents (such as various interleukins, tumor necrosis factor, and gm-csf) plus th -inducing cytokines increase antibody responses, whereas pro-inflammatory agents and th -inducing cytokines decrease humoral responses and increase cytotoxic responses (which is more important in viral protection, for example). co-stimulatory molecules like b - , b - and cd l are also sometimes used. mpl (monophosphoryl lipid), a immunostimulant, is derived from the lipopolysaccharide (lps) of salmonella minnesota, r . an important characteristic of mpl adjuvant activity is to enhance the generation of specific immunity without being directly associated with an antigen. the choice of an mpl adjuvant formulation will depend on several factors such as the nature of the antigen, desired immune response characteristics, and level of tolerable local reactogenicity. aqueous dispersions of mpl in isotonic buffers when admixed with soluble protein antigens can provide a strong adjuvant effect. an advantage of these mpl plus antigen is that they tend to be well tolerated and induce little or no local tissue reaction at the injection site (qureshi et al. ) . mpl-a has been used to enhance immunity induced by dna vaccination against human immunodeficiency virus type (hiv- ). results indicate that mpl performances as an effective adjuvant for immunogenic dna injection despite reduced expression of encoding protein in muscle (sasaki et al. ) . combination of mpl with antigen-encoded dna has shown the enhanced protective neutralizing antibody response against glycoprotein of the cvs rabies virus (lodmell et al. ) . lipid a has also been admixed with plasmid dna (pdna)-coated nanoparticles and studied for their immunological potential. immunological results revealed that plasmid dna with lipid a have shown significant higher immunological response, especially cellular response (cui and mumper a, b) . studies indicated that la is potential adjuvants to further enhance immune responses; however, limited studies have been utilized this adjuvant for dna vaccination. several established methods have utilized for transferring plasmid dna into cells, including calcium phosphate precipitation, electroporation, particle bombardment, liposomal delivery, polymeric delivery, viral-vector delivery, and receptormediated gene delivery. however, compared to viral vectors, nonviral vectors are easy to make and are less likely to produce immune reactions (edelman and tacket ). in addition, there is no replication reaction required. the engineered novel nano-construct may deliver immunogens safely, with the appropriate kinetics, to the appropriate location, and possibly together with the adequate recognition and maturation stimuli (fig. ) . the use of nonviral particulate carriers for dna-based vaccination could provide better and safe delivery of encapsulated genetic material, circumvent the need for muscle involvement and facilitate instead the uptake of the fig. schematic representation of immunological response greeted by novel dna-loaded nanocarrier dna by apcs. however, transfection of apcs with encapsulated dna into particulate carrier systems will be dependent upon choice of carrier surface charge, size, and lipid/polymer composition, or presence of other biological [e.g., interleukin and interferon-γ (ifn-γ)]. toxicity, transfection efficiency, nucleic acid (na) degradation and free na release are challenging problems for all of the current nonviral gene delivery systems, including lipid and polymers carrier systems (pouton et al. ; cui and mumper a, b) . one current trend in dna vaccine formulation is the use of biodegradable polymeric microparticles and liposomes delivery systems for dna vaccines are excellent formulations for delivery and enhanced immunogenicity in several different hosts like mice, nonhuman primates and humans (herrmann et al. ; kaur et al. ). as noted earlier, genetic materials attached to a particulate carrier are more likely to bring about a successful immunological reaction and some, such as chitosan particles, can act as adjuvants in their own right. natural polymers such as gelatin or albumin have been used as particulate drug delivery systems, although they are of uncertain purity and certainly have the potential for immunogenicity (pouton et al. ; cui and mumper a, b; xiang et al. ; pichichero ) . plasmid dna is trapped on the surface of the polymers like polylactice-coglycolide, chitosan, polyethyleneimine, amine-functionalized polymethacrylates, cationic poly(β-amino esters), poloxamers, and polyvinylpyrrolidone (densmore ) . polymer-trapped plasmid dna is delivered systemically or directly to mucosal surfaces (orally or via the respiratory tract), where the complex is taken up by dendritic cells (dcs) and results in upregulation of dc activation markers and further augments systemic and mucosal immune responses. liposomes offer considerable flexibility towards vaccine optimization due to its structural versatility, including vesicle surface charge (both cationic and anionic liposomes can be made), size, and lipid content. liposome with other suitable adjuvants can protect dna from degradation by serum proteins during transfer of dna across membranes and after the release of genetic material following fusion with endosome (gao and huang ; nakanishi and noguchi ) . among the different approaches to drug delivery, lipid vesicles for both hydrophobic and hydrophilic drugs have attracted much attention. lipid-based gene delivery is the focus of several specialized high-technology companies, of which vical (san diago, ca, usa), genzyme (farmington, ma, usa), genemedicine (the woodlands, tx, usa) and megabios (burlingame, ca, usa) have products in clinical trials. some of the engineered liposomal and non-liposomal versions like ph-sensitive cationic and anionic liposomes, ph-sensitive immunoliposomes, fusogenic liposomes; genosomes (dna-liposomes/lipid complexes), lipofection tm (lipid-dna complex) and recently cochleates are investigated as the major gene vectors (fig. ) . however, most of the commercially available nonviral gene vectors used for transfection is cationic liposome-dna complexes (fenske and cullis ). liposomes are self-assembling structures comprising concentric amphipathic lipid (e.g., phospholipid) bilayers separated by aqueous compartments (baca-estrada et al. ; saupe et al. ) . in , first humoral immune responses observed in mice after injection of liposome-entrapped diphtheria toxoid (allison and gregoriadis ; manesis et al. ) . liposomal vaccines that have been investigated inhuman trials include malaria, hiv, hepatitis a, influenza, prostate cancer and colorectal cancer (katre et al. ). in a liposome-based drug delivery system, genetic material is encapsulated in the liposome and then administered to the patient to be treated. advantage of the use of liposomal dna is that it may be taken up directly by apcs such as dendritic cells, which results in transfection and mhc classes i and ii expression, which stimulates the cd + and cd + t cells by antigenic peptide and induces ctl responses and also b cells to produce antibodies, whereas vaccination with naked plasmid dna, the plasmid is taken up by the myocytes, which are transfected. unfortunately, there are a number of problems associated with the use of conventional liposomes as genetic vaccine delivery vehicles. the relatively low transfectivity of liposomes, particularly evident with insufficient quantities of polynucleotide within liposomal formulations, can be overcome by adding positively charged amphipathic lipid moieties to liposomal formulations. several phospholipids may be used for the preparation of liposomes entrapped vaccines include phosphatidylcholine, phosphatidic acid, triolein, phosphatidylglycerol, phosphatidylserine, distearoyl phosphatidylcholine, dioleylphosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylethanolamine, polyethyleneglycol etc. overall, by modification, these systems may provide high membrane fluidity, flexibility, endocytosis and fusiogenic behavior, that is making this system far better than other particulate carriers (fig. ). cationic liposomes are widely explored nowadays for the delivery of dna into eukaryotes. they are formed by simple mixing of positively charged lipid bilayers with negatively charged naked dna. the resulting cationic liposomes-dna complexes (lipoplexes) are taken up via endocytosis, followed by their release from an early endosomal compartment (duzgunes et al. ) . cationic lipid-dna complexes have been used successfully to deliver plasmid dna to the lungs, brain, tumors and skin, by local administration, or to vascular endothelial cells after systemic, intravenous injection (brigham et al. ) . in addition to different cationic lipids (fig. have also shown an important role in membrane perturbation and fusion for intracellular delivery of genetic material. liu et al. have shown that lipoplexes showed much higher transfection in the liver than naked dna alone (liu et al. ). gregoriadis et al. for the first time showed that intramuscular immunization of mice with prc/cmv hbs (encoding the s region of hepatitis b antigen; hbsag) entrapped into positively charged (cationic) liposomes leads to greatly improved humoral and cell-mediated immunity (gregoriadis et al. ). these cationic liposome-entrapped dna vaccines generate titers of anti-hbsag igg antibody isotype in excess of -fold higher and increased levels of both ifn-γ and il- when compared with naked dna or dna complexed with preformed similar (cationic) liposomes. further, modification of liposomal surface with polymer offers potential for oral administration of plasmid dna and able to elicit markedly enhanced transgene-specific cytokine production following in vitro restimulation of splenocytes with recombinant antigen (somavarapu et al. ) . modification of lipid/dna complexes by the polymer poly(d,l-lactic acid) was found to be consistently and significantly more effective than either unmodified liposomal dna or naked dna in eliciting transgene-specific immune responses to plasmid-encoded antigen when administered by the s.c. route (bramwell et al. ) . surface-modified mannosylated cationic liposomes were developed for targeted delivery of pdna to apcs, and the results verified that man lipoplex induces significantly higher pub-m gene transfection into dendritic cells and macrophages than unmodified lipoplex and naked dna and it also strongly induces ctl activity against melanoma, inhibits its growth and prolongs the survival after tumor challenge compared with unmodified liposomes (lu et al. ). an anionic lipid formulation called fluid liposomes was capable of delivering fluorescently labeled oligonucleotides into bacterial cells. it was composed of dppc and , -dimyristoyl-sn-glycero- -[phospho-rac-( -glycerol)] (dmpg). lack of further progress of these systems may be attributed to the poor association between dna molecules and anionic lipids by electrostatic repulsion between these negatively charged species (perrie and gregoriadis ) . liposomes have been prepared from mixtures of anionic and zwitter ionic lipids, dopg and dope, respectively, at a molar ratio of : (dopg:dope). efficient and relatively safe dna transfection using anionic lipoplexes makes them an alternative for gene delivery (patil et al. ) . similarly, endosomolytic bacterial protein listeriolysin o (llo) incorporated in an anionic liposome-entrapped polycation-condensed dna delivery system (lpdii) has been developed that demonstrated better condensation of the dna with improved transfection efficiency due to endosomolytic properties of llo (lorenzi and lee ) . combination of cationic lipoplexes and pegylated anionic liposomes has also been used to prepare anionic pegylated lipoplexes. studies demonstrated that the gene expression of the developed formulation was similar for the cationic formulation taken as a control and the anionic formulations prepared (mignet et al. ) . overall, anionic lipoplex formulation shown promise as a nonviral vector with high-transfection efficiency and low cytotoxicity. a growing amount of literature describes the role of ph-sensitive liposomes for targeting and/or release encapsulated genetic material within cellular compartment. ph-sensitive liposomes are designed to release their contents in response to acidic ph within the endosomal system, while remaining stable in plasma thus improving the cytoplasmic delivery of biopharmaceuticals. they can be generated by the insertion of dope into acidic lipids liposomes such as cholesteryl hemisuccinate or oleic acid (venugopalan et al. ) . it is reported that detergent removal method is a superior method for preparing glycosaminoglycan-resistant and ph-sensitive lipid-coated dna complexes. this method is produced stable, but acid activatable, lipid-coated dna complexes (lehtinen et al. ) . at the neutral cellular ph , these lipids undergo protonation and collapse into a non-bilayer structure of endosomal compartmentalization which in turn helps in the rapid release of dna into the cytoplasm. recently, citraconyl-dope (a chemical derivative of dope), deliver dna-based therapeutics to cancer cells, in this manner combining the targeting and the rapid endosome release (reddy and low ) . addition of ph-sensitive fusogenic peptide, gala (peptide composed of repeating sequences of glu-ala-leu-ala) in lipidic preparation is also promising method to enhance the expression of the desired proteins. studies demonstrated that addition of . μm gala to the plasmid/liposome complex significantly increased the transfection efficiency, especially in the case of lipofectin, but higher concentration of gala decreased transfection efficiency (futaki et al. ; nakase et al. ) . similarly, ph-sensitive histidine-modified galactosylated cholesterol derivative (gal-his-c -chol) has also been synthesized that demonstrate much greater transfection activity than conventional liposomes in hepg hepatic cells (shigeta et al. ). further, ph-sensitive tat-modified pegylated liposomes are utilized for delivery of tumor-specific stimuli-sensitive drug and gene delivery systems (kale and torchilin ) . immunoliposomes are sophisticated gene delivery systems in which incorporation of functionalized antibodies attached to lipid bilayers used for cell targeting (maclean et al. ) . using immunoliposomes, tissue-specific gene delivery has been achieved in the brain, embryonic and breast cancer tissue. recently, immunoliposomes containing an antibody fragment were successfully used in targeted delivery of tumor-suppressing genes into tumors in vivo (xu et al. ) . chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (cat) gene-encoded plasmid was entrapped in ph-sensitive immunoliposomes comprising of h- kk antibody-coated liposomes with dope, cholesterol, and oleic acid. studies revealed that approximately % of the injected immunoliposomes were taken up by the target rdm- cells. uptake was much less when liposomes without antibody were used (wang and huang ) . similarly, these authors have also reported that compositions of liposomes have altered the distribution for targeted drugs. delivery was also dependent on the lipid composition of the liposome. the ph-sensitive lipid composition gave eightfold higher efficiency than the corresponding ph-insensitive composition (wang and huang ) . ligand-modified immunoliposomes has been used to efficiently deliver plasmid dna expressing ns -ns b (hcv-specific antigenic sequence) to antigen-presenting cells. results confirm that this is as a more efficient delivery system than direct intramuscular inoculations with naked dna (zubkova et al. ). overall, studies have shown that immunoliposomes are efficiently used for targeted delivery of genetic material, especially in treatment of genetic disorders; however, very limited work has been done for delivery of dna vaccines. stealth liposomes (polyethylene glycol(peg)-conjugated lipids) are sterically stabilized liposomal formulations. pegylation prevents the liposomal vesicles by opsonization and recognition from the reticuloendothelial system and conjunction with other polymeric delivery systems such as pll to achieve longer circulation half-lives (mannisto et al. ) . peg grafted liposomes carrying antigenic epitope of gp , a transmembrane protein of hiv- has shown higher immune response and prolonged persistence of antibodies than plain liposome-based antigenic formulations (singh and bisen ) . further, it is also reported that grafting of peg on cationic liposomes have resulted in enhanced lymphatic drainage, but there is no improvement in immune responses, when compared to non-pegylated liposomes (carstens et al. ) . similarly, immune cell-specific ligand anchored pegylated liposomes have been developed to provide selective uptake at immunological cell. ultrasound (us)-responsive and mannose-modified gene carriers, man-peg ( ) bubble lipoplexes, have been utilized for transfer of ovalbumin (ova)-expressing plasmid dna to selectively and efficiently into antigenpresenting cells. developed systems have demonstrated - -fold higher gene expressions in the antigen-presenting cells (apcs) selectively in vivo compared with the conventional lipofection method (un et al. ). virosomes are lipidic envelope devoid of genetic information, which retain the antigenic profile and fusogenic properties from their viral origin. reconstituted lipid vesicles equipped with viral glycoproteins seems to possess many ideal properties for delivery of immunogens such as no limitation of size of encapsulated immunogens, high efficiency for cytosolic delivery, simplicity in handling and brevity of incubation time (okamoto et al. ) . virosome-mediated delivery has low toxicity and high immunogenicity with various prospective applications for the treatment and prevention of cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, and infectious diseases. the use of immunopotentiating reconstituted influenza virosomes (iriv) as delivery system of dna appear to be a promising tool in vaccinology and gene therapy. irivs are spherical, unilamellar vesicles with a mean diameter of~ nm, short surface projections of - nm. irivs are prepared by a mixture of natural and synthetic phospholipids containing % egg yolk phosphatidylcholine (for enhancement of immune responses), % synthetic phosphatidylethanolamine (able to directly stimulate b cells to produce antibodies), and % envelope phospholipids originating from h n influenza virus. irivs were first utilized in the manufacture of hepatitis a vaccine. the adjuvant function of virosomes is based on their virus-like particle structure providing repetitive antigen presentation to b cells, partial protection from extracellular degradation, and a depot effect (gluck et al. ) . proteasomes this immunogenic delivery system generally uses a noncovalent interaction between the proteosomes and antigen to form the appropriate complexes for delivering apolar or amphiphilic antigens. in most cases, these trials have involved intranasal administration of the vaccine and qualified as safe and well-tolerated materials through various human clinical trials. proteasome-conjugated shigella flexneri a lps vaccine shows an immune response similar to that observed after immunization with the live pathogen (fries et al. ) . intranasal delivery of proteasome-based vaccines may be able to produce both systemic and mucosal immunity. another very similar category of vaccines is the conjugate vaccine. these vaccines consist of a relatively non-immunogenic (especially in infants) antigen linked to a more immunogenic carrier such as a protein or toxoid. the conjugate vaccines for h. influenzae type b (hib) were developed using hib polysaccharide conjugated to either diphtheria toxoid (prp-d), omp of neisseria meningitidis (prp-omp), mutant diphtheria toxoid crm (hboc) or tetanus toxoid (prp-t) to provide the hib antigen immunogenic (heath ). cochleates are phospholipid calcium precipitates with a unique structure consisting of a large continuous solid lipid bilayer sheet rolled up into a "jelly roll-like" structure (papahadjopoulos et al. ) . cochleate delivery vehicles composed of simple, natural materials (phosphatidylserine and calcium) are unique vaccine carrier and delivery formulations (mannino and gould-fogerite ) . they are nontoxic, noninflammatory, and biodegradable. cochleates are prepared through the calcium-induced fusion of negatively charged phospholipid liposomes to collapse into solid sheets that roll up or stack, excluding water. the entire cochleate structure is a series of solid layers, components within the interior of the cochleate structure remain intact provides protection from degradation when exposed to harmful environmental conditions or enzymes. the protection of encochleated materials and structural stability of the cochleate allows for efficient delivery of dna by various routes like mucosal (oral, intragastric, intranasal, and intraocular) and parenteral (intramuscular, subcutaneous, intraperitoneal, and intradermal). strong, long-lasting, mucosal and circulating, antibody and cell-mediated responses are generated. protection from challenge with live viruses following oral or intramuscular administration has been achieved (mannino et al. ) . cochleates efficiency can be improved by attachment of surface glycoproteins of enveloped viruses and can be integrated into the lipid bilayers. dna cochleates can be formed by trapping oligonucleotides or high molecular weight plasmids within or between the lipid bilayers (papahadjopoulos et al. ). virus-like particles (vlps) are small particles consisting of one or more viral coat proteins can act as an adjuvant by carrying peptide sequences inside the apc and feeding into the endogenous processing pathway (schirmbeck et al. ) . these are safe, highly immunogenic, no additional adjuvant is needed, well tolerated, noninfective, and can easily be handled in the laboratory. it uses nature's own mechanism and structural principles to trigger the immune system for protective effects by stimulating both cellular immunity by effectively stimulating cd proliferative responses and cytotoxic t lymphocyte (ctl) responses and humoral immunity by efficiently cross-linking the membrane-associated immunoglobulin molecules that constitute the b-cell receptor (chackerian ; jennings and bachmann ; buonaguro et al. ) . the immune-stimulating complex (iscom) is a highly versatile and effective particulate antigen delivery system that has been extensively studied as an adjuvant system for a range of viral, bacterial, parasite, and other antigens. iscoms are threedimensional "cage-like" structures, which have been shown to form upon detergent removal from mixtures of saponins, detergents, and cholesterol. the iscom (immunostimulating complex) is a complex consisting of protein antigen, cholesterol, phospholipid, and the saponin adjuvant quil a. a similar vaccine delivery vehicle and adjuvant has also been developed that uses the same material minus the antigen and is referred to as iscomatrix ® . the antigen can be added later to the iscomatrix ® during formulation of the vaccine. this material seems to work similarly to iscoms but provides for more general applications by removing the requirement for hydrophobic antigens (pearse and drane ) . iscoms potentiate both humoral and cellular immune responses to incorporated antigens (cox et al. ) . iscoms stimulate apcs to produce il- , il- , and il- and induce thelper cells of both th and th type and the cell-mediated immune response includes cd + class i restricted cytotoxic t cells in a variety of experimental animal models and have now progressed to phase i and ii human trials (claassen and osterhaus ; barr and mitchell ) . oral administration of iscom vaccines has been shown effectiveness and immune-potentiating effect, but this route requires the use of high and frequent dosing. a study in which iscom vaccines may be able to elicit strong mucosal immune responses when administered in the pelvic presacral space of sheep, which could be useful for immunization against viral infections of the female genital tract (thapar et al. ) . a quil a-containing iscom with modified cholera toxin a (cta -dd) used as a mucosal vaccine carrier system for the influenza virus pr antigen (helgeby et al. -ji et al. ) . nasal vaccinations with p dna vaccine and matrix-m (immunostimulatory complex adjuvant) have shown significant higher iga-producing cells in addition to th and th cytokine expression. this strategies may provide a new way for the induction of specific immunity at mucosal sites (kodama et al. ). archaeosomes are nanometric size liposomes made from the polar ether lipids of archaea found in eukaryotes and bacteria. polar ether lipids of archaeosomes are providing excellent physicochemical stability and self-adjuvanting properties for delivery of vaccine preparations. archaeosomes have demonstrated relatively higher stabilities to oxidative stress, high temperature, alkaline ph, action of phospholipases, bile salts, and serum proteins (patel and chen ; benvegnu et al. ). archaeosomes facilitated a strong antibody (th ) response to entrapped protein antigens. the antibody humoral response was superior to that obtained with conventional liposomes and was in some instances comparable to that obtained with the potent but toxic freund's adjuvant (patel and sprott ; patel and chen ) . sprott et al. have also been described the role of co-enzyme q into archaeosome-based antigen formulation. incorporation of coq into archaeosomes and conventional liposomes can enhance the phagocytosis of the resultant vesicles by macrophage cells that allow the alteration in targeting profiles to specific tissues when the vesicles are administered to an animal via different routes and further enhance the immune response to coadministered immunogens. recently, "cationic archaeosomes," based on mixtures of neutral/cationic bilayerforming lipids and archaeobacterial synthetic tetraether-type bipolar lipids, have shown better transfection efficiency and can be utilized for dna vaccination (rethore et al. ). among the variety of lipid delivery systems, polymeric delivery systems have emerged as a promising alternative because of their ease of preparation, purification and chemical modification as well as their enormous stability. polymeric nonviral carriers (polyplexs) are one of the effective means of delivering a therapeutic or other biologically active substance in controlled and sustained manner. polymeric particulate delivery system induces adjuvant effect on the incorporated antigen and reduces the frequency of vaccination required to establish long-term protection. both natural and synthetic polymers have been considered to encapsulate antigenic materials for vaccination (table ) . various polymeric delivery systems have been developed using these polymers like micellar systems, emulsions, polymerosomes, nanoparticles, microspheres, nanocapsules, dendrimers, and dendrosomes (fig. ) . however, there are several associated concerns for the use of polymers as vaccines delivery systems such as toxicity, irritancy, allergenicity, and biodegradability. the advantages of using natural polymers include their low cost, biocompatibility and aqueous solubility. however, the natural polymers may also be limited in their use due to the presence of extraneous contaminants, variability from lot to lot and low hydrophobicity. in contrast, synthetic polymers are more reproducible and can be prepared with desired degradation rate, molecular weight and copolymer composition. nevertheless, synthetic polymers may be disadvantageous due to their limited solubility, they are often soluble only in organic solvents and consequently may not release biologically active antigen (rice-ficht et al. ). polymeric vaccines may offer improved stability and activity of encapsulated antigen materials by avoiding exposure to organic solvents used during formulation and acidic ph conditions caused by degradation of the polymer (duncan et al. ) . effective application of a polymeric nanoparticulate delivery system is greatly dependent on the specific polymer used, as this will dictate the properties of the nanoparticle in vivo (hanson et al. ) . for example, polycationic polymers can interact with negatively charged dna, resulting in a improved intracellular dna delivery to occur. whereas noncondensing polymers are neutral or slightly negatively charged polymers that physically encapsulate materials and can be used to target apcs and m-cells in the mucosa (bhavsar and amiji ) . there are a number of factors that affects the physicochemical properties of polymeric delivery vehicles like molecular weight, degree of branching, cationic charge density buffer capacity, polyplex properties and the experimental conditions like the polyplex concentration, the presence or absence of serum during transfection, the incubation time and the transfection model chosen for the gene delivery experiment. to reduce its cytotoxicity and improve transfection efficiency, polyplexes have been modified by conjugating with polyethylene glycol (peg), histidine, and targeting ligands including polysaccharides, transferrin, and galactose. various biodegradable polymers like aliphatic polyesters such as poly(lactic acid) (pla), poly(glycolic acid) (pga), poly(e-caprolactone) (pcl), poly (hydroxybutyrate) (phb), and their copolymers being evaluated for their uses as vaccine adjuvants and delivery systems (panyam and labhasetwar ) . recently, poly(amino acid)s-based copolymers have also been employed for the delivery of protein, vaccine, and genetic materials such as poly-l-glutamic acid, poly-l-aspartic acid, poly-l-lysine, poly-l-arginine, poly-l-proline, poly-l-asparagine, and poly-lhistidine. polyamino acids have properties that mimic proteins, making them ideal for vaccines delivery. they provide better adjuvanticity, low toxicity, biodegradability and targeting into intracellular compartments (chiang and yeh ) . various type of polysaccharides, such as agarose, alginate, carrageenan, hyaluronic acid, dextran, chitosan, cyclodextrins, mannan, and pullulan, have been used for delivery of vaccines (table ) . at specific concentrations and temperatures, when amphiphilic molecules, or molecules containing hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions, are maintained, naturally form association colloids known as amphiphilic micelles as a result of hydrophobic interactions. poly (ethylene glycol) (peg) is commonly incorporated as the hydrophilic segment in both amphiphilic micelles (gaucher et al. ) . gelatin: a denatured protein obtained by acid and alkaline processing of collagen. insoluble in water to prepare hydrogel through chemical cross-linking, with water-soluble carbodiimides and glutaraldehyde lou et al. ( ) easy processability, good biodegradability poor mechanical properties, brittle capable of targeting fibronectinbearing surfaces associated with some tumors silk fibroin: silkworm bombyx mori produces silk to weave its cocoon, and its major components are fibroin and sericin. this is light weight, extremely strong and elastic and exhibits mechanical properties comparable to the best synthetic fibers produced by modern technology zhang et al. ( ) environmentally safe, biocompatibility, excellent mechanical properties less production, high brittleness model antigen enhance the stability, up to c over more than months fibrin: fibrin is a protein matrix produced from fibrinogen, providing an immune-compatible carrier for delivery of active biomolecules, antigens. fibrin naturally contains sites for cell binding and has been investigated as a substrate for cell linkage, distribution, relocation, and propagation khan et al. ( ) induce improved cellular interaction, used as a cell carrier as well as antigen carrier rapid degradation, instable, low mechanical stiffness elastin: elastin is synthesized by vascular smooth muscle cells and secreted as a tropo-elastin monomer that is soluble, hydrophobic and non-glycosylated. elastin is a potent regulator of vascular smooth muscle cells activity, regulations important for preventing fibro-cellular pathology gaudreau et al. ( ) conferring elasticity, precise molecular weight, low polydispersity become insoluble and aggregate at a critical temperature soybean: the most cultivated plant in the world is rich in proteins ( - %), carbohydrates ( - %),and lipids ( - %). it is a species of legume native that can be processed into protein-rich products moravec et al. ( ) abundant, renewable, inexpensive, environment friendly biodegradable application of soy-based polymers in this field is still very narrow iga, mucosal iga antibody response after administered orally to mice chitosan: fully/partially deacetylated form of chitin. degree of deacetylation of commercial chitosan is usually between and %, and the molecular weight between and , kda. chitosan exhibits a ph-sensitive behavior as a weak polybase due to the large quantities of amino groups on its chain verheul et al. ( ) enhanced immune response, mucoadhesive property poly(ester-amide)s: this polymer is made up of a soft peg segment, connected to a hard diester-diamide segment through an ether bond. it is a high performance thermoplastic elastomer. it is used to replace common elastomers-thermoplastic polyurethanes, polyester elastomers, and silicones-for these characteristics: lower density among tpe, superior mechanical and dynamic properties (flexibility, impact resistance, energy return, fatigue resistance) and keeping these properties at low temperature (lower than À c), and good resistance against a wide range of chemicals. it is sensitive to uv degradation li and hu ( ) enhanced cell mediated immunity, superior mechanical and thermal properties poly(lactide-co-glycolide)(plga): plga or poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) is copolymer, is synthesized by means of random ring-opening copolymerization of two different monomers, the cyclic dimers ( , -dioxane- , -diones) of glycolic acid and lactic acid. during polymerization, successive monomeric units (of glycolic or lactic acid) are linked together in plga by ester linkages, thus yielding a linear, aliphatic polyester as a product moore et al. ( ) degradation products are naturally occurring metabolites and readily absorbed by neighboring cells generate acidic environment and effect the stability yersinia pestis, hiv gp dominant th response block copolymer micelles are colloidal particles with a size around - nm, which are currently under investigation as carriers for delivery of biopharmaceuticals. in contrast to cationic polymeric systems, nonionic polymers enhance gene expression through mechanisms, which most likely do not involve dna condensation and facilitated transport within cells. adjuvant-active nonionic block copolymers that are flexible, linear structures, flanked on both ends by hydrophilic polyoxyethylene (poe) with a core of hydrophobic polyoxypropylene (pop) with variable ratios (newman et al. ) . the block copolymers are useful as general surfactants and display enhanced biological efficacy as vaccine adjuvants. osmolarity, ph and buffer salts mainly affected the size and morphology of the particles. molecular weight and formulation mainly affected titer and isotype of antibody. jain et al. evaluated a system of combined poly(lactic acid) (pla) and poly(ethylene glycol) (peg) for the delivery of a recombinant hepatitis b surface antigen (hbsag). pla forms the hydrophobic core in an aqueous medium, which controlling the release of the antigen as it degrades into lactic acid. an outer shell form by peg allows for prolonged release patterns and enhanced mucosal uptake to occur (jain et al. ). hunter et al. ( ) showed that the adjuvant activity of block copolymers varies with the lengths of the chains of polyoxypropylene (pop) and polyoxyethylene (poe). pluronic block copolymers have been used extensively in a variety of pharmaceutical formulations like low molecular mass drugs and polypeptides. kabanov et al. ( ) described that these molecules can modify the biological response during gene therapy in the skeletal muscle, resulting in an enhancement of the transgene expression and therapeutic effect of the transgene. block copolymers were recently used to promote gene delivery of plasmid encoding a food allergen, bovine beta-lactoglobulin. tetronic based block copolymers have decreased blg-specific ige concentrations and reduced local inflammatory response (adel-patient et al. ) . similarly, triblock copolymers consisting of three alternating hydrophobic and hydrophilic segments are also used to delivery genetic materials. biodegradable and nontoxic triblock copolymers of pla-peg-pla and plga-peg-plga were also utilized micellar carriers for delivery of encapsulated plasmid pcdna . (+)-ma against hcv. developed carrier system has provided long-term better adjuvant effect with no side effects (yang et al. ) . similarly, copolymers of a hydrophilic poly(ethylene glycol) block and a cationic poly(aminoethyl methacrylate) (paem) block have been used for dna vaccine delivery. synthesized polyplexes based carrier systems have induced a modest up-regulation of surface markers for dc maturation and better uptake by dcs in the draining lymph nodes (tang et al. ). further, cationic block copolymers poly(ethylene glycol) (peg) with a positively charged poly(dimethylamino)ethyl methacrylate have been synthesized and utilized for hiv- tat dna molecules. results indicated that synthesized cationic block copolymers was safe and ability to deliver genetic material for cell machinery and promising candidate for dna vaccination (caputo et al. ) . similar to cationic block polymers, nonionic block copolymers of poly(ethyleneoxide)-poly (propyleneoxide) (peo-ppo) have also been utilized dna vaccination using a beta-galactosidase (betagal) encoding plasmid (mcilroy et al. ). herpes simplex virus type- genes specifying glycoproteins gb and gd have been also delivered by nonionic block copolymers. plasmid-encapsulated block polymers have protected the mice against lethal hsv- challenge when immunization was performed via the i.m. route (baghian et al. ) . dendrimers are a unique class of polymeric nanoconstructs having highly branched, three-dimensional, nanoscale architecture with very low polydispersity and high functionality. first discovered in the early s by donald tomalia and coworkers, these hyperbranched molecules were called dendrimers. dendrimers are highly branched, synthetic spherical macromolecules with layered architectures that can be considered analogous to a globular protein. they have the potential for high loading capacities due to small diameters ( . - . nm) through mechanisms such as complexation or formation of chemical bonds at terminal branch points or other active sites (wiwattanapatapee et al. ) . in addition, the low polydispersity of dendrimers should provide reproducible pharmacokinetic behavior in contrast to that of some polymers containing fractions with vastly different molecular weight within a given sample (parekh ) . several dendrimer-based products have been approved by the fda and successfully commercialized for treatment and diagnosis of diseases, including vivagel™ (starpharma) designed as a topical microbicide, superfect ® , (qiagen pvt ltd.) used for gene transfection, and alert ticket™ (us army research lab) for anthrax detection (merdan et al. ) . in the past decade, research has increased on polyamidoamine, polyethylenimines, polylysine, polypropyleneimine, polyaryl ether, polyester, polyglycerol and their derivatives for the design and synthesis of biocompatible dendrimers. dendrimers form complexes by electrostatic interaction with all forms of nucleic acids such as dna, rna, and antisense oligonucleotides. the nature of the dendrimer-nucleic acid complexes ("dendriplexes") is dependent on the stoichiometry and concentration of the dna-phosphates, dendrimer amines, bulk solvent properties (e.g., ph, salt concentration, buffer strength), and even the dynamics of mixing. high ionic strength interferes with the binding process and affects the nature of complexes formed by the different generations, for example, highergeneration ppi dendrimers in higher concentrations form water-soluble dendriplexes, whereas the g and g ppi dendrimers lead to the formation of electroneutral complexes (tang and szoka ) . dendrimer-dna complex is formed by simply mixing the components in an aqueous solution. transfection property can be improved by the use of an excess of cationic dendrimer because the negatively charged phosphate groups on the dna neutralize the positively charged amine groups on the dendrimer through electrostatic interaction and an overall positively charged system is important in cell uptake (bielinska et al. ) . immunogenicity and efficacy of dna vaccines can be improved by physical conjugation of the pamam dendrimer to the mhc class ii-targeting peptide. therefore, dendrimers can be further explored for dna-based vaccine development against malaria parasite (pietersz et al. ). in a recent study, dendriplexes, complexes of dendrons and condensed plasmids containing the gene for protective antigen (pa) of bacillus anthracis, were encapsulated in polylactide-co-glycolide (plg) particles using the double emulsion method. studies indicated that the plg-dendriplex particles produced superior levels of anti-pa igg antibodies when compared to animals immunized with the plg particles (ribeiro et al. ). conjugation of fifth-generation polyamidoamine (g -pamam) dendrimers, a dna-loading surface, with mhc class ii-targeting peptides that can selectively deliver these dendrimers to apcs under conditions that enhance their immune stimulatory potency. dna conjugated with this platform efficiently transfected murine and human apcs in vitro. subcutaneous administration of dna-peptide-dendrimer complexes in vivo preferentially transfected dendritic cells (dc) in the draining lymph nodes, promoted generation of high affinity t cells, and elicited rejection of established tumors. taken together, our findings show how pamam-dendrimer complexes can be used for high transfection efficiency and effective targeting of apcs in vivo, conferring properties essential to generate effective dna vaccines. multiple antigenic peptide (map) dendrimer system is being used for vaccine and immunization purposes. map-based delivery can prepare by addition of multiple immune-functional components, like b/t-cell epitopes, cell-penetrating peptides, and lipophilic moieties or by controlled synthesis of nanomaterials like micelles, dendrimers, and nanoparticles (fujita and taguchi ) . a tetravalent multiple antigen peptide (map) dendrimer with four identical branches of a c-terminal peptide sequence of the rat gh-bp (gh-bp - ) was synthesized and used as an immunogen in rabbits. the tetravalent rat gh-bp - map dendrimer served as an effective immunogenic antigen in eliciting specific antibodies (aguilar et al. ). similar to map dendrimers, glycopeptide dendrimers containing both carbohydrates and peptides can be also used in delivery of vaccine components (niederhafner et al. ; sebestik et al. ) . the encapsulated dendrimer-nucleic acid complex within a lipophilic shell known as dendrosomes. these are novel vesicular, spherical, supramolecular entities and possess negligible hemolytic toxicity and higher transfection efficiency. dendrosome are reported to be completely nontoxic both in vitro as well as in vivo. poly (propyleneimine) dendrosome-based genetic immunization found to be highly effective against hepatitis b when compared to dendrimer-plasmid dna complex, and the results indicate that dendrosomes hold great potential in dna vaccination. in dendrosomes, the poly(propyleneimine) dendrimer-dna complex is largely protected by multilamelarity of the vesicles. it has been reported that polyamidoamine dendrimer-based dendrosomes are efficient systems for the delivery of s sirna targeting e /e oncogenes in cervical cancer (pourasgari et al. ). in vitro superior transfection efficiency displayed by pamam dendrosomes as comparison to other nonviral gene delivery vectors. nontoxic self-assembled dendritic spheroidal nanoparticles (den ) have been used for the delivery of pcmv-betv loaded dendritic spheroidal nanoparticles (den ) have shown low toxicity, enhanced transfection efficiency, and improved the immune response against birch pollen allergy (balenga et al. ) . similarly, efficiency of dendrosome (a gene porter) is assessed in transferring recombinant human rotavirus vp cdna. studies revealed that dendrosome has lower cytotoxicity and better transfectivity in a , a human lung cell line (pourasgari et al. ). dendrosome has been used to deliver the dna vaccines encoding hiv- p -gp gene. studies have proved the efficacy of this carrier for the delivery of recombinant plasmids construct (roodbari et al. ) . polymersomes are self-assembled polymeric colloidal vesicular systems containing aqueous inner core. polymersomes are made up from amphiphilic block copolymers that allow polymersomes to stably encapsulate or integrate a broad range of active molecules. the aqueous core can be utilized for the encapsulation of therapeutic hydrophilic molecules and the membrane can integrate hydrophobic drugs within its hydrophobic part. further, the brush-like surface properties of the polymersome can provide better biocompatibility and blood circulation times. these systems have better loading efficiency, stabilities and provide sustained, controlled release of encapsulated therapeutics. further, these systems have also been used to deliver biotherapeutics, especially peptides, proteins, and nucleic acids to site-specific cellular environment due to escape from endolysosomes (levine et al. ; christian et al. ). amphiphilic diblock copolymer of poly (oligoethylene glycol methacrylate)-block-poly( -(diisopropylamino)ethyl methacrylate in association with tannic acid forms dna-loaded polymersomes. developed systems have demonstrated better cytosolic release of encapsulated nucleic acid materials (lomas et al. ) . further, calcein-loaded polymersomes have also observed for their cytosolic delivery within dendritic cell (scott et al. ) . similarly, poly(g-benzyl-l-glutamate)-k (pblg -k) polymersomes have been used for delivery of influenza hemagglutinin antigen. the immunogenicity and adjuvanticity of developed polymerosomes was better for administered the influenza antigen. in future, this nanostructured polymeric vesicular system may have huge potential for delivery of protein and dna vaccines. emulsions can be manufactured as water-in-oil (w/o) or oil-in-water (o/w) particulate carrier systems. emulsion carrier systems are similar in size to pathogens and taken up by epithelial or m cells in the mucosal surfaces for successive delivery of the vaccine component to apcs and lymphoid tissue. a nanoemulsion formulation of intranasal hepatitis b vaccine showed improved vaccine efficacy, stability and ease of distribution (makidon et al. ) . multiple emulsion formulations can also be used as vaccine carrier systems due to its longer stability and high entrapment efficiency of protein antigens without damage during emulsification procedures. types of surfactants, processing methods and stabilizers is requisite for making stable multiple-emulsions (hanson et al. ) . the emulsion adjuvant mf immunostimulator has been shown to result in the recruitment of antigen-presenting cells (apcs) to the site of injection and to increased uptake of soluble antigen by the apcs. it has been formulated by a simple mixing of the antigen with the adjuvant and has shown excellent compatibility with a variety of subunit antigens. mf shows strong immunogenicity as comparison to other adjuvant is clearly seen in pre-clinical data published by ott et al. they reported that when immunized guinea pigs and goat with glycoprotein d of herpes simplex virus (hsv) type in the presence of mf showed a -fold and ninefold increases in antibody titers compared to aluminum hydroxide, respectively (ott et al. ). an oil-in-water (o/w) emulsion, syntex adjuvant formulation (saf) is an effective adjuvant composed of a muramyl dipeptide derivative (threonyl-mdp). threonyl-mdp demonstrated a lack of side effects (pyrogenicity, uveitis, adjuvant-induced arthritis) and increased adjuvant activity. saf adjuvant used with a variety of antigens, such as influenza and malaria, and showed both cellmediated and humoral immune responses. saf, or a suitable equivalent, provides an excellent tool for vaccine research (lidgate et al. ; lidgate et al. ) . there are several different types of montanide™, including isa v, , . isa and have been used in human's vaccine formulations, while isa and v have been used only in veterinary vaccine formulations. they are composed of metabolizable squalene-based oil with mannide monooleate emulsifier and permit antigens to be released more rapidly. the montanide emulsions induce high antibody titers and ctl responses due to the formation of a depot at the site of injection. these emulsions have been used as vaccines against malaria, hiv and various cancers and found to be safe and fairly well tolerated (lawrence et al. ; toledo et al. ). various physical delivery methods are being heavily investigated because of direct transfection of apcs with the dna vaccine (porgador et al. ). the transcutaneous microneedle has the ability to bypass the stratum corneum layer of the skin, thus reaching langerhans cells-the apcs of the skin. jet-injection mechanical devices deliver dna vaccines into the viable epidermis and increased efficacy in the prevention and/or therapy of infectious diseases, allergic disorders and cancer (chen et al. ; imoto and konishi ; roberts et al. ) . the tattooperforating needle device has been used to puncture the skin and transfer dna into skin-associated cells. the bundles of fine metal needles that oscillate at a constant high frequency have shown better expression of reporter genes in mice and induction of immune responses. electroporation has been extensively studied to deliver therapeutic genes that encode a variety of hormones, cytokines, enzymes or antigens in large animal species such as dogs, pigs, cattle and nonhuman primates. several different strategies of this technology are being pursued. however, too little is currently known about several of these devices and much additional research in this area is warranted (van drunen littel-van den hurk et al. ; roos et al. ; hirao et al. ). nanotechnology is the development of engineered devices due to their small size at the micromolecular level in the nanometer range and large surface area, which enhances their action for early diagnosis of cancer and infectious diseases. advances in nanotechnology have also proved to be beneficial in therapeutic fields such as drug discovery, drug delivery and gene/protein delivery. this concept has been found to be useful in developing nanovaccines using different routes of administration like oral, nasal and parenteral. the oral route is the most popular and convenient route of administration. oral delivery refers to absorption from the buccal through the rectal mucosa. several barriers associated with genetic vaccination through the oral are generally attributed to (a) low permeability across biological membranes, (b) harsh gastric environment, (c) hepatic first-pass metabolism, and (d) chemical instability. the major drawback with oral route of administration is a higher concentration and is required for the vaccine to be effective due to dilution during the transport of the vaccine through the gastrointestinal tract. to date, most gene delivery strategies have concentrated on the parenteral route of delivery and oral administration has been largely ignored. different nano-and microparticulate delivery systems using natural and synthetic lipid and polymers have been utilized to improve the stability and immunogenicity of oral dna vaccines (bhavsar and amiji ) . oral vaccination with dna-chitosan nanoparticles has appeared interesting because of their great stability and the ease of target accessibility, besides chitosan immunostimulatory properties. studies demonstrated that % of protection against parasite infection after delivery chitosan nanoparticles loaded with dna encoding rho -gtpase protein of schistosoma mansoni (oliveira et al. ) . similarly, chitosan nanoparticles are used for dna vaccine against vibrio anguillarum through oral route. studies revealed that chitosan-dna (pvaomp ) complex showed moderate protection against experimental v. anguillarum infection after oral vaccination in asian sea bass (rajesh kumar et al. ) . the orally administered tresylmonomethoxypolyethylene glycol (tmpeg) grafted liposome complexes with modified vaccinia virus ankara (mva(iiib/beta-gal) is also capable of delivering the transgenes to mucosal tissues and enhances the env-specific cellular and humoral immune responses after repeated oral immunization of balb/c mice (naito et al. ) . mannosylated niosomes loaded with hepatitis dna have shown humoral (both systemic and mucosal) and cellular immune response upon oral administration (jain et al. ) . chitosan-coated and polyplex-loaded liposomes (plls) containing plasmid prc/cmv-hbs are developed for oral delivery of vaccines specifically for targeting to peyer's patch. chitosan-coated pll demonstrated better uptake of encapsulated dna to the distal intestine and provide better stability from enzymatic degradation (channarong et al. ) . the nasal route has been chiefly employed for producing local action on the mucosa. this route has a number of advantages, such as the high permeability of the nasal epithelium, which allows a higher molecular mass cut-off for permeation of approximately , da, as well as the rapid drug absorption rate. accurate and repeated dispensing of vaccine, mucociliary clearance, presence of peptidases, proteases and nuclease enzymes in the mucus or associated with nasal membrane, variation in extent of absorption with the mucus secretion and mucus turnover and deposition of the formulated vaccine to all areas of the nasal mucosa (especially lymphoid tissues), potential of uptake of vaccine formulations by the primary olfactory nerves in the nasal cavity, local irritation and unpleasant taste from concentrated drug reaching the mouth are major challenges associated with intranasal delivery of vaccines (oliveira et al. ; sharma et al. ). these problems can be overcome by design of appropriate antigen carriers. nanocarriers for nasal vaccines are able to facilitate the transport of the associated antigen across the nasal epithelium, thus leading to efficient antigen presentation to the immune system and provide the protection and stability of encapsulated genetic materials (koping-hoggard et al. ) . further, use of mucoadhesive agents offers a strategy for the facilitation of increased residence time and increased vaccine efficacy (alpar et al. ) . polycarbophil (pc) or polyethylene oxide (peo)-based in-situ mucoadhesive polymers have demonstrated better nasal absorption of plasmid dna (park et al. ) . several studies have proven that wide applicability of chitosan nanoparticles for the nasal delivery of dna vaccines like severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) (raghuwanshi et al. ) , pneumococcal surface antigen a (psaa) (xu et al. ) , hepatitis b antigen-encoding plasmid (khatri et al. ) , and dna plasmid-expressing epitopes of respiratory syncytial virus (iqbal et al. ) . further, several modification on the chitosan polymers have also been made to improve the potential of chitosan nanoparticles for nasal administration of dna vaccines like preparation of low molecular weight chitosan, development of water soluble chitosan (n-trimethyl chitosan), etc. blends of poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid) (plga) and polyethylene oxide (peo) have exhibited the capacity to associate and release plasmid dna in a controlled manner. results showed that dna-loaded nanoparticles elicit significantly pronounced immune response compared to the naked plasmid dna for up to weeks (csaba et al. ) . dry-powder influenza virosomes-based vaccines have also been advantageous for mucosal immunization (de jonge et al. ). needle-free nasal immunization, using nanoemulsion is made of soya bean oil, alcohol, water and detergents emulsified into droplets of nm, has been reported to be a safe and effective hepatitis b vaccine (makidon et al. ) . the release of liquid or particles into the airflow enters one nostril via a sealing nozzle and exits through the other nostril and minimizes the risk and problems related to deposition of particles in the lung, which occurs during conventional inhalation from a nebulizer and increases the delivery of particles to the posterior part of the nasal mucosa. encapsulation of the antigen into bioactive nanoparticles is a promising approach to nasal vaccine delivery (slutter et al. ) . the ocular route holds immense potential for peptides/proteins intended for pathological ophthalmologic conditions. the eye mucosa is a possible route for mucosal vaccine because it is an important entry point for environmental antigens and infectious materials occupying most of the external ocular surface (streilein et al. ) . lymphoid follicles are found in close association with the epithelium of the conjunctival mucosa in humans, rabbits, guinea pigs, dogs, pigs, and many other mammals (chodosh et al. (seo et al. ) . ocular mucosal delivery of peptide epitopes of herpes simplex virus (hsv- ) glycoprotein d (gd) has mixed with oligodeoxy nucleotides containing unmethylated cpg motifs (cpg ). results suggested enhanced local and systemic immune response after multi-instillation of gd peptide epitopes with cpg adjuvants (nesburn et al. ) . ocular mucosal administration of iron nanoparticles with glutamic acid containing dna vaccine herpes stromal keratitis (prsc-gd-il- ) have confers protection against mucosal challenge with herpes simplex virus type in mice (hu et al. ) . vaginal mucosa is a portal of entry to many viral and bacterial pathogens. vaginal route serves as a potential site of drug administration for local and systemic absorption of therapeutically important molecules, proteins, peptides, small interfering rnas, oligonucleotides, antigens, vaccines and hormones (hussain and ahsan ) . it is one of alternative site for the systemic delivery of protein drugs because of the relatively high permeability of the vaginal epithelium, by passage of the hepatic first-pass metabolism, large surface area and rich blood supply (gupta et al. (gordon et al. ) . thermo-sensitive mucoadhesive vaginal vaccine delivery systems have also been tested for the local and systemic antibody responses to hpv l virus-like particles (park et al. ) . vaginal delivery of vaccines which is associated with vaginal infection could be better alternative to induce an immune response in the genital mucosa capable of controlling the entry of the pathogen. noninvasive gene delivery approaches could be able to deliver and express naked plasmid dna to tissue-specific localized delivery to skin. there are several advantages of needle-free noninvasive gene administration such as limited toxicity, potential cell receptor-independent uptake, minimal dna size restrictions, and the potential for multiple treatments via a relatively uncomplicated administration modality, thus improving patient compliance. topically applied formulation, especially nanosystems have been shown to enter skin, accumulate in hair follicles, diffuse via dendritic cells to draining lymph nodes, and elicit antigen-specific humoral and cell-mediated immunity (nasir ). a number of methods have been developed to perform noninvasive topical gene delivery, which includes passive diffusion of genetic materials between a skin patch and skin, as well as active processes such as iontophoresis, sonophoresis, electroporation, and chemically enhanced diffusion (mehier-humbert and guy ). topical vaccination has been achieved using topical application of naked dna with or without tape stripping and dna/lipid-based complex such as liposomes, niosomes, transfersomes, or microemulsion (cui and sloat ) . ethanol-in-fluorocarbonbased microemulsion has been for topically delivery of anthrax protective antigen (pa) protein-encoding dna vaccine (pgpa). pgpa-loaded microemulsion has significantly enhanced the anti-pa antibody responses (cui and sloat ) . similarly, dna delivery by novel lipid-based biphasic delivery system has significant deliver plasmid dna into the "viable" layers of skin (foldvari et al. ) . plasmid dna-encoding hepatitis b surface antigen (hbsag)-loaded cationic transfersomes are also utilized for topical immunization. results revealed that dna-loaded cationic transfersomes elicited significantly higher anti-hbsag antibody titer and cytokines level as compared to naked dna. it was also observed that topical application of dna-loaded cationic transfersomes elicited a comparable serum antibody titer and endogenous cytokines levels as produced after intramuscular recombinant hbsag administration (mahor et al. ) . -or -nm sized polystyrene nanoparticles have been studied to target active compounds to the hair follicle and may result in a better penetration and higher efficiency of compound uptake by skin resident cells. studies demonstrated that and nm nps and modified vaccinia ankara (mva) expressing the green-fluorescent protein penetrated deeply into hair follicles and uptake by apcs and transport to the draining lymph nodes (mahe et al. ). nanoengineered genetic vaccine formulation has been developed for topical immunization comprising of emulsifying wax (oil phase), ctab (cationic surfactant), mannan (dc ligand), dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine (endosomolytic agents), and cholesterol. all pdna-coated nanoparticles, especially the mannan-coated pdna-nanoparticles with dope, have shown significant immune response (igg titers; -fold over "naked" pdna alone) (cui and mumper ) . diffusion patches and tape stripping techniques are used for delivery of small (< da) and large molecules, respectively. liquid jet injector is an approach in which dna vaccine is delivered around the langerhans cells by a high-speed injector. (chen et al. ) reported that particle-mediated gene-gun dna immunization use similar mechanical devices to deliver dna vaccines into viable epidermis (chen et al. ) . microneedle arrays is a set of needles of microscale length with their nanoscale tips coated with dna and can accurately, efficiently and safely deliver biomolecules to the viable cells of the epidermis. recently, tran et al. ( ) developed a unique nanoliposomal ultrasound-mediated device for delivering small interfering rna (sirna) specifically targeting melanocytic tumors present in the skin and they observed that decrease early melanocytic lesion development in the skin and prevent the spread of cutaneous metastases of melanoma (tran et al. ) . these results suggested that skin may provide an appealing, noninvasive route of delivery for dna vaccines and other therapeutic genes. table represents positive and negative aspects of various routes of administration, which are very helpful for selection of particular route. novel vaccine carriers, adjuvant, vehicles, and particle-based delivery strategies are being evaluated in a variety of vaccines, including those against diseases such as cancer, malaria, aids, hepatitis, etc., in which a cellular and/or mucosal immune response is desired. various immunity responses were generated by different adjuvant like mf and mpl ® generated th responses, vlps, virosomes, nondegradable nanoparticles, and liposomes generated cellular immune responses in humans. viral vectors, iscoms and montanide™ isa , and various nanoparticulate immunopotentiators and antigen delivery vehicles have shown ctl responses. the desirable responses can be achieved by using combination of various adjuvants. systemic antibodies produced in humans when viral-vectored vaccines as well as proteasomes given in. the clinical trials required for vaccine approval are often very long and difficult. furthermore, since many vaccines are often administered to healthy individuals, and frequently to infants, it is critical that they are proven safe and well tolerated in nonhuman primates before entering human trials. while the development of novel vaccine delivery systems and adjuvant has been aided by nanotechnology, it must be necessary to perceived potential problems such as their high surface area and reactivity, the ability to cross biological membranes, slow biodegradability of some materials, its safety and tolerability before its approval. many challenges must be met before new classes of vaccines become available like ability to stimulate humoral, cellular and mucosal immune responses, longer duration response, easily metabolized of vaccine components in body, cost-effective production, and lesser risk and less invasive approaches for the administration of vaccinations. as these challenges are met, the prevention and therapy of many previously untreatable diseases should become increasingly possible. block copolymers have differing adjuvant effects on the primary immune response elicited by genetic immunization and on further induced allergy map dendrimer elicits antibodies for detecting rat and mouse gh-binding proteins comparison of immune response generated against japanese encephalitis virus envelope protein expressed by dna vaccines under macrophage associated versus ubiquitous expression promoters dna vaccines: technology and application as antiparasite and anti-microbial agents liposomes as immunological adjuvants yersinia enterocolitica as a vehicle for a naked dna vaccine encoding brucella abortus bacterioferritin or p antigen biodegradable mucoadhesive particulates for nasal and pulmonary antigen and dna delivery aluminium compounds as adjuvants for vaccines and toxoids in man: a review vaccine delivery: lipid-based delivery systems carbohydrate biopolymers enhance antibody responses to mucosally delivered vaccine antigens protective immunity against lethal hsv- challenge in mice by nucleic acid-based immunisation with herpes simplex virus type- genes specifying glycoproteins gb and gd protective efficiency of dendrosomes as novel nano-sized adjuvants for dna vaccination against birch pollen allergy iscoms (immunostimulating complexes): the first decade transcriptional control of the rna-dependent rna polymerase of vesicular stomatitis virus preparation, characterization, cytotoxicity and transfection efficiency of poly(dl-lactide-co-glycolide) and poly(dl-lactic acid) cationic nanoparticles for controlled delivery of plasmid dna new generation of liposomes called archaeosomes based on natural or synthetic archaeal lipids as innovative formulations for drug delivery polymeric nano-and microparticle technologies for oral gene delivery dna complexing with polyamidoamine dendrimers: implications for transfection alginate coated chitosan nanoparticles are an effective subcutaneous adjuvant for hepatitis b surface antigen a very strong enhancer is located upstream of an immediate early gene of human cytomegalovirus liposome/dna complexes coated with biodegradable pla improve immune responses to plasmid encoding hepatitis b surface antigen in vivo transfection of murine lungs with a functioning prokaryotic gene using a liposome vehicle virus-like particles as particulate vaccines preclinical safety assessment considerations in vaccine development micellar-type complexes of tailor-made synthetic block copolymers containing the hiv- tat dna for vaccine application effect of vesicle size on tissue localization and immunogenicity of liposomal dna vaccines hot spots of retroviral integration in human cd + hematopoietic cells virus-like particles: flexible platforms for vaccine development gene therapy of muscular dystrophy development and evaluation of chitosan-coated liposomes for oral dna vaccine: the improvement of peyer's patch targeting using a polyplex-loaded liposomes needle-free epidermal powder immunization contribution of poly(amino acids) to advances in pharmaceutical biotechnology comparative anatomy of mammalian conjunctival lymphoid tissue: a putative mucosal immune site enhancement of t helper type immune responses against hepatitis b virus core antigen by plga nanoparticle vaccine delivery polymersome carriers: from self-assembly to sirna and protein therapeutics the iscom structure as an immune-enhancing moiety: experience with viral systems apoptosis in hiv infection: protective role of il- iscoms and other saponin based adjuvants plga:poloxamer and plga:poloxamine blend nanostructures as carriers for nasal gene delivery topical immunization using nanoengineered genetic vaccines the effect of co-administration of adjuvants with a nanoparticle-based genetic vaccine delivery system on the resulting immune responses microparticles and nanoparticles as delivery systems for dna vaccines topical immunization onto mouse skin using a microemulsion incorporated with an anthrax protective antigen protein-encoding plasmid inulin sugar glasses preserve the structural integrity and biological activity of influenza virosomes during freeze-drying and storage delivery of messenger rna using poly(ethylene imine)-poly(ethylene glycol)-copolymer blends for polyplex formation: biophysical characterization and in vitro transfection properties polyethyleneimine-based gene therapy by inhalation priming with chlamydia trachomatis major outer membrane protein (momp) dna followed by momp iscom boosting enhances protection and is associated with increased immunoglobulin a and th cellular immune responses viruses as vaccine vectors for infectious diseases and cancer dendrimer biocompatibility and toxicity cationic liposomes for gene delivery: novel cationic lipids and enhancement by proteins and peptides encapsulation of antigenic extracts of salmonella enterica serovar. abortusovis into polymeric systems and efficacy as vaccines in mice an adjuvant vaccine against infectious canine hepatitis liposomal nanomedicines gene delivery into human skin in vitro using biphasic lipid vesicles immune response to rabies vaccine in water-in-oil emulsion safety and immunogenicity of a proteosome-shigella flexneri a lipopolysaccharide vaccine administered intranasally to healthy adults current status of multiple antigen-presenting peptide vaccine systems: application of organic and inorganic nanoparticles cellulose acetate butyrate-ph/ thermosensitive polymer microcapsules containing aminated poly(vinyl alcohol) microspheres for oral administration of dna unique features of a ph-sensitive fusogenic peptide that improves the transfection efficiency of cationic liposomes dna vaccines: protective immunizations by parenteral, mucosal, and gene-gun inoculations opportunities for the use of lentiviral vectors in human gene therapy cationic liposome-mediated gene transfer scaffold: a novel carrier for cell and drug delivery block copolymer micelles: preparation, characterization and application in drug delivery protective immune responses to a multi-gene dna vaccine against staphylococcus aureus in vivo induction of cd + t cell responses by antigens covalently linked to synthetic microspheres does not require adjuvant long-term safety analysis of preventive hiv- vaccines evaluated in aids vaccine evaluation group niaid-sponsored phase i and ii clinical trials a sequential study of incomplete freund's adjuvantinduced peritonitis in atlantic cod immunopotentiating reconstituted influenza virus virosome vaccine delivery system for immunization against hepatitis a construction of hybrid viruses containing sv and lambda phage dna segments and their propagation in cultured monkey cells preventive hiv type vaccine clinical trials: a regulatory perspective targeting the vaginal mucosa with human papillomavirus pseudovirion vaccines delivering simian immunodeficiency virus dna liposome-mediated dna vaccination aluminum compounds as vaccine adjuvants adjuvants for human vaccines -current status, problems and future prospects adjuvants -a balance between toxicity and adjuvanticity adjuvant properties of aluminum and calcium compounds adjuvant properties of non-phospholipid liposomes (novasomes) in experimental animals for human vaccine antigens exploring novel approaches to vaginal drug delivery codon bias and heterologous protein expression nanoscale double emulsions stabilized by singlecomponent block copolypeptides wssv ie promoter is more efficient than cmv promoter to express h hemagglutinin from influenza virus in baculovirus as a chicken vaccine haemophilus influenzae type b conjugate vaccines: a review of efficacy data the combined cta -dd/iscom adjuvant vector promotes priming of mucosal and systemic immunity to incorporated antigens by specific targeting of b cells structure and properties of aluminum-containing adjuvants immune responses and protection obtained by oral immunization with rotavirus vp and vp dna vaccines encapsulated in microparticles immunostimulatory dna as a vaccine adjuvant intradermal/subcutaneous immunization by electroporation improves plasmid vaccine delivery and potency in pigs and rhesus macaques origin and steady-state turnover of class ii mhcbearing dendritic cells in the epithelium of the conducting airways an ocular mucosal administration of nanoparticles containing dna vaccine prsc-gd-il- confers protection against mucosal challenge with herpes simplex virus type in mice adjuvant activity of non-ionic block copolymers. iv. effect of molecular weight and formulation on titre and isotype of antibody the vagina as a route for systemic drug delivery needle-free jet injection of a mixture of japanese encephalitis dna and protein vaccines: a strategy to effectively enhance immunogenicity of the dna vaccine in a murine model nasal delivery of chitosan-dna plasmid expressing epitopes of respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) induces protective ctl responses in balb/c mice release characteristics of a model plasmid dna encapsulated in biodegradable poly(ethylene glycol fumarate)/acrylamide hydrogel microspheres mannosylated niosomes as adjuvant-carrier system for oral genetic immunization against hepatitis b synthesis, characterization and evaluation of novel triblock copolymer based nanoparticles for vaccine delivery against hepatitis b the coming of age of virus-like particle vaccines pluronic block copolymers as novel polymer therapeutics for drug and gene delivery enhanced transfection of tumor cells in vivo using "smart" phsensitive tat-modified pegylated liposomes pluronic f enhances the effect as an adjuvant of chitosan microspheres in the intranasal delivery of bordetella bronchiseptica antigens containing dermonecrotoxin multivesicular liposome (depofoam) technology for the sustained delivery of insulin-like growth factor-i (igf-i) immunogenicity in mice of a cationic microparticle-adsorbed plasmid dna encoding japanese encephalitis virus envelope protein vaccine potential of cytosolic proteins loaded fibrin microspheres of cryptococcus neoformans in balb/c mice plasmid dna loaded chitosan nanoparticles for nasal mucosal immunization against hepatitis b comparing the effect of il- genetic adjuvant and alum non-genetic adjuvant on the efficiency of the cocktail dna vaccine containing plasmids encoding sag- and rop- of toxoplasma gondii nasal immunization with plasmid dna encoding p protein and immunostimulatory complexes elicits nontypeable haemophilus influenzaespecific long-term mucosal immune responses in the nasopharynx nanoparticles as carriers for nasal vaccine delivery dna vaccines: ready for prime time? an hdac inhibitor enhances the antitumor activity of a cmv promoter-driven dna vaccine parenteral nutrition in the malnourished: dialysis, cancer, obese, and hyperemesis gravidarum patients effect of vaccination with recombinant asexualstage malaria antigens on initial growth rates of plasmodium falciparum in non-immune volunteers glycosaminoglycan-resistant and ph-sensitive lipid-coated dna complexes produced by detergent removal method polymersomes: a new multi-functional tool for cancer diagnosis and therapy assembly of electroactive layer-by-layer films of myoglobin and ionomer poly (ester sulfonic acid) enhancement of a hepatitis b dna vaccine potency using aluminum phosphate in mice formulation of vaccine adjuvant muramyldipeptides. . processing optimization, characterization, and bioactivity of an emulsion vehicle sterile filtration of a parenteral emulsion gene therapy for renal disorders: what are the benefits for the elderly? poly(cationic lipid)-mediated in vivo gene delivery to mouse liver dna immunization in combination with the immunostimulant monophosphoryl lipid a polymersome-loaded capsules for controlled release of dna enhanced plasmid dna delivery using anionic lpdii by listeriolysin o incorporation interaction between fibronectin-bearing surfaces and bacillus calmette-guerin (bcg) or gelatin microparticles pmma particle-mediated dna vaccine for cervical cancer development of an antigen-presenting cell-targeted dna vaccine against melanoma by mannosylated liposomes plasmid dna containing multiple cpg motifs triggers a strong immune response to hepatitis b surface antigen when combined with incomplete freund's adjuvant but not aluminum hydroxide immunoliposomes as targeted delivery vehicles for cancer therapeutics (review) nanoparticle-based targeting of vaccine compounds to skin antigen-presenting cells by hair follicles and their transport in mice cationic transfersomes based topical genetic vaccine against hepatitis b pre-clinical evaluation of a novel nanoemulsion-based hepatitis b mucosal vaccine plasmid dna vaccines: tissue distribution and effects of dna sequence, adjuvants and delivery method on integration into host dna incorporation of hepatitis-b surface antigen (hbsag) into liposomes lipid matrix-based vaccines for mucosal and systemic immunization targeting immune response induction with cochleate and liposome-based vaccines structure-activity relationships of poly(llysines): effects of pegylation and molecular shape on physicochemical and biological properties in gene delivery dna released from dying host cells mediates aluminum adjuvant activity gene delivery to the eye using adeno-associated viral vectors spotlight on quadrivalent human papillomavirus (types , , , ) recombinant vaccine(gardasil(r)) in the prevention of premalignant genital lesions, genital cancer, and genital warts in women dna/amphiphilic block copolymer nanospheres promote low-dose dna vaccination retroviral vectors for human gene delivery physical methods for gene transfer: improving the kinetics of gene delivery into cells prospects for cationic polymers in gene and oligonucleotide therapy against cancer anionic ph-sensitive pegylated lipoplexes to deliver dna to tumors immunization with a soluble recombinant hiv protein entrapped in biodegradable microparticles induces hiv-specific cd + cytotoxic t lymphocytes and cd + th cells production of escherichia coli heat labile toxin (lt) b subunit in soybean seed and analysis of its immunogenicity as an oral vaccine oral vaccination with modified vaccinia virus ankara attached covalently to tmpeg-modified cationic liposomes overcomes pre-existing poxvirus immunity from recombinant vaccinia immunization confocal and probe microscopy to study gene transfection mediated by cationic liposomes with a cationic cholesterol derivative application of a fusiogenic peptide gala for intracellular delivery nanotechnology in vaccine development: a step forward local and systemic b cell and th responses induced following ocular mucosal delivery of multiple epitopes of herpes simplex virus type glycoprotein d together with cytosine-phosphate-guanine adjuvant immunological and formulation design considerations for subunit vaccines use of nonionic block copolymers in vaccines and therapeutics glycopeptide dendrimers. part i polyhydroxyalkanoates: materials for delivery systems induction of antibody response to human tumor antigens by gene therapy using a fusigenic viral liposome vaccine intranasal vaccines for protection against respiratory and systemic bacterial infections oral vaccination based on dna-chitosan nanoparticles against schistosoma mansoni infection hamster cell culture rabies vaccine design and evaluation of a safe and potent adjuvant for human vaccines biodegradable nanoparticles for drug and gene delivery to cells and tissue cochleate lipid cylinders: formation by fusion of unilamellar lipid vesicles the advance of dendrimers -a versatile targeting platform for gene/drug delivery in situ gelling and mucoadhesive polymer vehicles for controlled intranasal delivery of plasmid dna enhanced mucosal and systemic immune responses following intravaginal immunization with human papillomavirus l virus-like particle vaccine in thermosensitive mucoadhesive delivery systems archaeosome immunostimulatory vaccine delivery system archaeobacterial ether lipid liposomes (archaeosomes) as novel vaccine and drug delivery systems anionic liposomal delivery system for dna transfection iscomatrix adjuvant for antigen delivery liposome-entrapped plasmid dna: characterisation studies improving vaccine delivery using novel adjuvant systems structure and design of polycationic carriers for gene delivery predominant role for directly transfected dendritic cells in antigen presentation to cd + t cells after gene gun immunization low cytotoxicity effect of dendrosome as an efficient carrier for rotavirus vp gene transferring into a human lung cell line: dendrosome, as a novel intranasally gene porter polycation-dna complexes for gene delivery: a comparison of the biopharmaceutical properties of cationic polypeptides and cationic lipids monophosphoryl lipid a obtained from lipopolysaccharides of salmonella minnesota r . purification of the dimethyl derivative by high performance liquid chromatography and complete structural determination dendritic cell targeted chitosan nanoparticles for nasal dna immunization against sars cov nucleocapsid protein potential use of chitosan nanoparticles for oral delivery of dna vaccine in asian sea bass (lates calcarifer) to protect from vibrio (listonella) anguillarum enhanced folate receptor mediated gene therapy using a novel phsensitive lipid formulation region specific and worldwide distribution of collagen-binding m proteins with parf motifs among human pathogenic streptococcal isolates archaeosomes based on synthetic tetraether-like lipids as novel versatile gene delivery systems plga-dendron nanoparticles enhance immunogenicity but not lethal antibody production of a dna vaccine against anthrax in mice polymeric particles in vaccine delivery clinical safety and efficacy of a powdered hepatitis b nucleic acid vaccine delivered to the epidermis by a commercial prototype device dna vaccines for viral infections: basic studies and applications immune responses against a new hiv- p -gp /pcaggs-il- dna vaccine in balb/c mice enhancement of cellular immune response to a prostate cancer dna vaccine by intradermal electroporation live attenuated aids viruses as vaccines: promise or peril? purification of human and avian influenza viruses using cellulose sulfate ester (cellufine sulfate) in the process of vaccine production the use of adjuvants in studies on influenza immunization. ii. increased antibody formation in human subjects inoculated with influenza virus vaccine in a water in-oil emulsion monophosphoryl lipid a enhances both humoral and cell-mediated immune responses to dna vaccination against human immunodeficiency virus type immunostimulatory colloidal delivery systems for cancer vaccines hepatitis b virus small surface antigen particles are processed in a novel endosomal pathway for major histocompatibility complex class irestricted epitope presentation dendritic cell activation and t cell priming with adjuvant-and antigen-loaded oxidation-sensitive polymersomes peptide and glycopeptide dendrimers and analogous dendrimeric structures and their biomedical applications eye mucosa: an efficient vaccine delivery route for inducing protective immunity pharmaceutical aspects of intranasal delivery of vaccines using particulate systems novel histidine-conjugated galactosylated cationic liposomes for efficient hepatocyte-selective gene transfer in human hepatoma hepg cells effects of various adjuvants on efficacy of a vaccine against streptococcus bovis and lactobacillus spp. in cattle adjuvanticity of stealth liposomes on the immunogenicity of synthetic gp epitope of hiv- recombinant mouse cytomegalovirus expressing a ligand for the nkg d receptor is attenuated and has improved vaccine properties rational design of nasal vaccines oral plasmid dna delivery systems for genetic immunisation heterodimeric barnase-barstar vaccine molecules: influence of one versus two targeting units specific for antigen presenting cells immune deviation in relation to ocular immune privilege immunogenic properties of the salmonella atypical fimbriae in balb/c mice the influence of polymer structure on the interactions of cationic polymers with dna and morphology of the resulting complexes genetic immunization is a simple method for eliciting an immune response well-defined block copolymers for gene delivery to dendritic cells: probing the effect of polycation chain-length the porcine circovirus type capsid gene promoter improves antigen expression and immunogenicity in a hiv- plasmid vaccine methylation-dependent t cell immunity to mycobacterium tuberculosis heparin-binding hemagglutinin secretory immune responses in the mouse vagina after parenteral or intravaginal immunization with an immunostimulating complex (iscom) genetic targeting of the active transcription factor xbp s to dendritic cells potentiates vaccine-induced prophylactic and therapeutic antitumor immunity a phase i clinical trial of a multi-epitope polypeptide tab combined with montanide isa adjuvant in non-hiv- infected human volunteers targeting v eb-raf and akt using nanoliposomal-small interfering rna inhibits cutaneous melanocytic lesion development thermoresponsive polymers as gene delivery vectors: cell viability, dna transport and transfection studies heterologous protection against influenza by injection of dna encoding a viral protein development of an ultrasound-responsive and mannosemodified gene carrier for dna vaccine therapy strategies for improved formulation and delivery of dna vaccines to veterinary target species ph-sensitive liposomes: mechanism of triggered release to drug and gene delivery prospects covalently stabilized trimethyl chitosan-hyaluronic acid nanoparticles for nasal and intradermal vaccination ph-sensitive immunoliposomes mediate target-cell-specific delivery and controlled expression of a foreign gene in mouse highly efficient dna delivery mediated by ph-sensitive immunoliposomes gene inoculation generates immune responses against human immunodeficiency virus type anionic pamam dendrimers rapidly cross adult rat intestine in vitro: a potential oral delivery system? gene therapy for ovarian cancer (review) pathogen recognition and development of particulate vaccines: does size matter? systemic tumor-targeted gene delivery by anti-transferrin receptor scfv-immunoliposomes intranasal vaccination with chitosan-dna nanoparticles expressing pneumococcal surface antigen a protects mice against nasopharyngeal colonization by streptococcus pneumoniae immunogenicity of multiple-epitope antigen gene of hcv carried by novel biodegradable polymers construction of dna and rna based on bifunctional replicon vector derived from semliki forest virus enhanced potency of individual and bivalent dna replicon vaccines or conventional dna vaccines by formulation with aluminum phosphate stabilization of vaccines and antibiotics in silk and eliminating the cold chain t-cell vaccines that elicit effective immune responses against hcv in chimpanzees may create greater immune pressure for viral mutation key: cord- -ntbvmssh authors: nan title: immunogenicity date: - - journal: j cell biochem doi: . /jcb. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ntbvmssh nan ia moyecules with respect to their roles as peptide receptors and target structures for tcr interaction. particular attention has been paid to distinguishing between local and distant effects of amino acid substitutions on ia function and to determining which residues interact with peptide antigen and which (if any) with the tcr. this ex erimental approach has led to the identification of several regions of the pofvorphic amino-terminal domains of the a and p chains as playing critical roles in chain-chain association and quaternary ia conformation. the a and p l putative helical regions have been found to have distinct degrees of structural lability, with the a helix showing much greater susceptibility to conformational change due to allelic variation in other re ions of the molecule. allelically polymor hic residues in the a and p domainstave been shown to play important roles in &e activity of the assembly/folding control regions, and hence, analysis of local binding roles of specific residues in ia molecules must take this additional effect of substitutions at these positions into account. by controlling for large scale conformational effects, individual residues in the p chain have been assigned to desetopic ( eptide interaction) and histotopic (tcr interaction) roles. in the cytochrome c molel, a putative peptide bindin "pocket" involvin residues from both the postulated p l a helix and also the p-stran% floor has been defined, residues controlling both the extent of binding and the orientation of the bound peptide have been identified, and at least one residue with tcr interaction potential without obvious peptide binding properties has been localized. combining these data with those of other investigators leads us to propose a general model of class i mhc structure-function relationships. we have shown previously that memory b cells transferred into k-allotype distinct congenic rats in the absence of any priming antigen are deleted from the adoptive host within a matter of weeks (half-life of - weeks). in contrast co-injection of antigen with the cells facilitates their survival and the maintenance of a donor response for periods in excess of one year. in the experiments reported here we ask if the persistence of t cell memory is also dependent on antigen. . carrier (klh) primed t cells were transferred in the presence or absence of antigen into irradiated, k-allotype distinct adoptive host. a t various times after transfer these rats were injected with x ' hapten-carrier (dnp-klh) primed b cells together with ig of soluble dnp-klh. this limiting number of b cells makes a secondary type response only if carrier-specific memory t cells survive in the adoptive host. we found that already at weeks following transfer without antigen, no memory t cell help was available for these b cells. in contrast t cells transferred together with ~g klh provided help for secondary type donor responses at and weeks after transfer. we conclude that longterm memory at both the t and b cell levels does not reside with small, very long-lived, resting cells but. with active clones that are maintained by small amounts of antigen that may persist for long periods. once antigen is lost from lymphoid tissues both t and b cell memory wanes within a relatively short time. t cells recognize antigen in the form of short peptides associated to class i or class i mhc molecules. each mhc molecule has the ability to bind a large number of peptides and peptides with unrelated sequences can compete for binding to the same mhc molecule, as well as in vitro. in vivo competition strictly correlates with the capacity of the competitor peptide to bind to the mhc molecule presenting the antigenic peptide and its extent dependes on the molar ratio between antigen and competitor. competition among different peptides derived by processing of hen egg-white lysozyme (hel) appears to exert a major influence on the immunodominance of antigenic determinants recognized by t cells. thus, the h l peptides - and - are both generated by hel processing and are both able to bind to the i-e molecule but only - becomes immunodominant because it has th ability to compete in vivq with other hel peptides, such as - , for the available sites on the i-e molecule. however, two immunodominant t cell epitopes, such as those in hel peptides - and - , both interacting with i-ak molecules, do not compete with each other when injected together at equimolar concentrations. such a coexistance is anticipated between peptides that bind with relatively high affinity to the presenting molecule and thus have both the chance to occupy a number of binding sites sufficient for t cell activation. r v s e iii xen ic tr lantation. in v i m lnvesti$ation uslng mocloml a n t m i e s r e e -t e x e y skin gracs-val on m i c e w a s significantl pr:lrd l g anti-antihdy trea-t but n o t a b anti-antibody: w i d e r the saue animals but a n t i c d antibody did prolong minor a n t w -d i allqrdts. in v i m studies r m that primary proliferation a n f z . prcdwtion & -f i cells in response to mmkey stimulators was weak conpared to allogeneic reqonses. secondary responses t o xenogeneic stinulation were strong after in v i m priming but required the presence of responder nc's. assays for c y g t s t cell effectors in m i c e which had rejected monkey skin revealed few such cells. zhese results est that widely d i a t e xencgeneic processing and presentation, since xenogeneic antigens require that such presentation be in association with the.= antigens of regponder apc's, the xenogeneic r a f t s have a functional similarity t o aff leted allografts. shoved t h a t f e t a l r e n a l and f e t a l and p o s t n a t a l testis a l l o g r a f t s survived longer than corresponding a d u l t t i s s u e i n non-immunosuppressed outbred r a t hosts. the c u r r e n t study a s k s v h e t h e r t h e d i f f e r e n c e i n s u r v i v a l betveen r e n a l and t e s t i c u l a r g r a f t s and between g r a f t s of d i f f e r e n t ages is r e l a t e d t o d i f f e r e n t i a l t i s s u e expression of class i and class i mrna t r a n s c r i p t s or s u r f a c e antigens. and i f t h e s e p a t t e r n s change w i t h t r a n s p l a n t a t i o n . congeneic mice w e found t h a t prolonged s u r v i v a l of c bl/ f e t a l r e n a l (n= ; p< . ) and f e t a l (n= ; ~( . ) and p o s t n a t a l (n= ; ~( . ) t e s t i s mouse a l l o g r a f t s t r a n s p l a n t e d beneath t h e r e n a l c a p s u l e of a d u l t r e c i p i e n t bio.a mice and t h i s s u r v i v a l c o r r e l a t e s i n v e r s e l y w i t h t h e expression of class i and class i mrna (northern a n a l y s i s ) and p r o t e i n s (immunohistochemistryy) and t h a t both p r o t e i n and mrna increased throughout ontogeny f o r both t h e testis and kidney. after t r a n s p l a n t a t i o n t h e r e vas a marked i n d u c t i o n of mhc mrna t r a n s c r i p t s f o r both testis (n= ) and kidney (n= ). implanted f e t a l kidney t i s s u e t h a t survives. however. f a i l e d t o express d e t e c t a b l e mhc p r o t e i n , i n d i c a t i n g t h a t some p o s t -t r a n s c r i p t i o n a l modification i n t h i s t i s s u e occurs. t o a f f o r d it p r o t e c t i o n from r e j e c t i o n . implanted testis shoved i n d u c t i o n of both mrna and p r o t e i n v e l l above i t s much lower baseline. i n d i c a t i n g t h a t i t s r e g u l a t i o n , i n c o n t r a s t t o t h e kidney may be t r a n s c r i p t i o n a l . thus t h e f e t u s may lower t h e mhc burden as a s t r a t e g y t o escape r e j e c t i o n e i t h e r by p o s t t r a n s c r i p t i o n a l modification of p r o t e i n expression a s i n t h e kidney or by t r a n s c r i p t i o n a l modification of mrna as i n t h e testis. culture of thymus tissue in -deoxyguanosine ( dgua) is thought to reduce tissue immunogenicity by selectively depleting highly immunogenic, thymic immigrants of bone marrow origin. in the mouse dgua treated thymus tissue survival is markedly enhanced compared to untreated tissue when transplanted under the kidney capsule of allogeneic recipients. these experiments were repeated in the rat. as expected, strain da neonatal thymus tissue was rejected when transplanted under the kidney capsule of normal allogeneic strain pvg rats. surprisingly. acute rejection occurred even when the tissue was cultured for days in mm pdgua ( x the effective dose in mice). by in vitro criteria this dose was very effective in destroying thymocytes. to test whether residual marrow derived cells that escaped pdgua treatment were responsible for inducing rejection we "parked" the dgua treated da tissue in t cell depleted pvg rats. our working hypothesis was that the few remaining donor derived cells of marrow origin would be overgrown by host type cells. when pdgua-treated da thymus tissue was transplanted into t cell depleted pvg recipients graft rejection did not occur. however da pdgua treated thymus tissue, parked for as long as days in t cell depleted pvg rats, was acutely rejected when retransplanted into normal pvg recipients. we interpret these results to suggest that rat thymic epithelium devoid of marrow derived cells is innately immunogenic. c corinne amiel, violaine gugrin, thierry may, philippe canton, gilbert c faure, laboratoire d'immunologie and maladies infectieuses, chu de nancy, facult de mgdecine, vandoeuvre les nancy, france. lfal is a dimeric membrane molecule composed of a specific alpha chain (cdlla) and a beta chain (cd ) common to three members of the lfa family. lfal is physiologically expressed on all white blood cells, while other molecules of the lfa family (with cdllb and cdllc alpha chains) are restricted to cells of myeloid lineage. a defective expression of lfal has been described in some congenital immune deficiency and in aids. we investigated the lfal defect on peripheral blood lymphocytes from hiv+ patients. three different monoclonal antibodies were used, respectively directed to chain-specific epitopes of cdlla (spvl , sanbio) and cd (iot , immunotech) and to a conformational epitope involving both chains (iot , immunotech). cell suspensions were stained in indirect immunofluorescence and a flow cytometer (epics profile, coultronics) was used to assess the percentages of stained cell, the fluorescence intensity and the shape of fluorescent peaks. our data suggest that lfal expression is impaired in hiv+ patients both through the quantitative expression of each chain and through conformational alterations. the adhesion molecule lfa- is known to be important in antigen presentation. we have previously shown that both monocyte and t cell lfa- play a role in the interaction between these two cells (eji d; , ) . antibody to icam- (known to act as a ligand for lfa- ) also inhibits antigen presentation, although icam- is not thought to be expressed on resting t cells (eji : , ) . we have looked at the expression of icam- on t cells after incubation with cytokines and found that only il- consistently effects an increase in both the percentage of icam- positive cells and in the level of expression. in addition we have found that a proportion of resting t cells express very low levels of icam- . double labelling experiments have shown that these cells are part of the memory t cell population as defined by antibodies to uchli, lfa- and lfa- , and furthermore that icam- negative cells are unable to respond to to antigens such as ppd and flu but are able to respond to pha. this suggests that icam- represents an additional marker on the memory t cell population which more precisely defines the subset able to respond to recall antigens icam- expression on t cells, anne-marie buckle and nancy hogg, macrophage lab. icrf, lincolns inn fields, london, wc a px, u.k. immunization, francis r. carbone and michael j. bevan, department of immunology, research institute of scripps clinic, la jolla, ca . ctl recognize peptide forms of processed, foreign antigens in association with class i molecules of the mhc and are usually directed against endogenously synthesized "cellular antigens" such as those expressed by virusinfected cells. in vifro studies have shown that small exogenous peptides can directly associate with class i molecules on the cell surface and mimic the target complex derived by intracellular processing and presentation. we have recently generated ova-specific, h- kb-restricted ctl by immunizing c bl/ mice with a syngeneic tumor line transfected with the ova cdna. the ctl recognize the ova transfectant eg -ova and the synthetic peptide ova but fail to recognize the native protein. we reasoned that given the potential for direct peptide/class ?'&$%ation observed in vifro, ova s,- ra may induce ctl after in vivo priming. however, we found that this is not the case. ova,,,-,,, and peptides of increasing lengths up to which are all able to form the target complex in vitro, are inefficient at priming ~% -%~~ specific ?h%sponses following intravenous injection. this is also true for both native and denatured ova. in contrast to these results, the synthetic peptide ova g:z corresponding to a peptide in a partial tryptic digestion of ova can efficiently prime c bl/ mice in vrvo following intravenous injection. this peptide elicits ctl which appear identical to those derived from animals immunized with syngeneic cells producing ova endogenously. it is now well established that human t lymphocytes can be activated via the t cell specific cd antigen. in order to determine if a factor@) other than the single cd polypeptide is involved in cd mediated signal transduction, we have stamy transfected murine l cells with the human cd cdna. we report that such transfectants expressed hah levels of cd at the cell surface. formed sheep erythrocyte rosettes and expressed the three cd epitqm previously defined on human t lymphocytes, including the "activation associated' t i epitope. the latter observation unequivocally demonstrating that expression of the ti epitope, in contrast to a previous report, is entirely independent of t cell specific factors. combinations of cd mabs that are potent stimulators of human t cells. however, failed to elicit either an increase in the concentration of intracellular free calcium or augment [ h]-thymidine inmrporatbn in the transfectants. these results provide both formal identification of the cd cdna and dearly demonstrate that the single cd polypeptide expressed in an heterokgous cell system devoid of t cell specific factors, cannot alone transduce intracellular signals in response to stimulatory combinations of cd mabs. the results are therefore consistent with the notion. that the functional cd antigen expressed in human t lymphocytes, requlres the association of another, as yet, undefined factor@). this conclusion was based on several lines of evid nce incl ding the observation that mabs specific for the class i a domain of either h-zl or l d b interfered with t e generation of cd -dependent (low substitution at position in the a domain are not lysed by cd -dependent primary ctl but are lysed by secondary cd -independent (high affinity) ctl generated in the presence of antibody to the a domain. populations of ctl. we have isolated and characterized a c d w , cd -da-specific cpl line. this line is cd -independent and is capable of lysing the addition, we are currently generating clones from primary $-specific ctl cultures to obtain cd -dependent (low affinity) ctl. directed rnutagenesis are being tested with the cd -dependent and cd -independent clones to define additional residues important for cd recognition. the comparison of ctl clones with different cd dependencies will allow us to more precisely define the role of cd in t cell recognition. percolle from the buffy coat of one unit ot blood. these cells (= x ) are introduced into a curame elutriation centrifuge (rotor speed of rpm; loading flow of ml/min). nine fractions can be obtained. the first three containing > % lymphocytes; fraction ( rpm- ml/min) and fraction ( rpm- ml/min! contain both lymphocytes and monocytes and the next three fractions contain > % monocytes; the finat fraction (rotor off) contains monocytes + granulocytes. cells from each fraction ( x /well) are incubatee for five days with tetanus toxoid ( . lf/well) and an enriched population of t cells ( x /well). quadriplicate samples are then pulsed for hours with 'h methyl thymidine. maximum apc activity is found in fractions and representing to % of the mononuclear cells. apc activity for these two fractions can be further purified by selective absorption of the cells onto gelatin coated surfaces that have been preincubated with plasma. the non adherent lymphocytes are rgmoved after two hours. after overnight incubation spontaneously released cells ( - x ) can be harvested which have a higher apc activity than cells rotated by elutriation alone. these methods are now highly reproducible in our laboratory, so we can now begin to characterize and study these cells. the male s p e c i f i c h-y a n t i g e n h a s been shown t o behave as a minor histocompatibility a n t i g e n in man and mouse. i n t r a n s p l a n t a t i o n , male t i s s u e may t r i g g e r t h e c l o n a l expansion of h-y reactive hhc r e s t r i c t e d effector cells of female o r i g i n . although male epidermal cells (ec) can induce an anti-h-y t cell response in female mice, so far in v i t r o techniques have f a i l e d t o i d e n t i f y t h e cell-defined h-y a n t i g e n on murine ec ( ). here w e developed a cr release assay t o use human c u l t u r e d k e r a t i n o c y t e s (k) as t a r g e t cells for hla-a specific and ma-a r e s t r i c t e d h-y s p e c i f i c t cell clones. hla-a + but n o t h l a -a t k were l y s e d by anti-ma-a ctls i n a dose dependent manner. low but d e t e c t a b l e l e v e l s of anti-h-y k i l l i n g were found a g a i n s t ma-a + male k b u t n o t a g a i n s t h l a -a t male or hla-a + female k. both l e v e l s of a l l o r e a c t i v e and h-y s p e c i f i c l y s i s were d r a m a t i c a l l y enhanced after exposure of k t o ifn gamma. these r e s u l t s s t r o n g l y suggest t h a t h m a n male s k i n cells are d i r e c t l y s u s c e p t i b l e for h-y d i r e c t e d t c e l l k i l l i n g through t h e expression of f u n c t i o n a l h-y/hla complexes on t h e i r cell s u r f a c e . i n view of t h e s e f i n d i n g s , t o g e t h e r w i t h our r e c e n t s t u d i e s on t h e expression of h-y ctl determinants on h m a n hematopoietic p r o g e n i t o r c e l l s ( , t h e r o l e of h-y a s a t a r g e t s t r u c t u r e f o r c e l l mediated immunity i n o l i n i c a l t r a n s p l a n t a t i o n should be s e r i o u s l y taken i n t o account. . steinmuller d. and burlingham w.j. t r a n s p l a n t a t i o n @ , , , . . voogt p.j., goulmy e., fibbe w.e., e t a l . j . clin. invest. sept. . c diphteria toxoid (dt) presentation by hla dr transfected murine fibroblasts bismuth, laboratory of c e l l u l a r and t i s s u l a r immunology, chu p i t i e s a l p b t r i b r e , p a r i s , france and veterans medical c e n t e r , iowa c i t y , usa. l t r a n s f e c t a n t s e x p r e s s i n g s i n g l e type of human mhc c l a s s i molecules produced by dna conjugate formation has been studied with cloned t cell lines and a b cell hybridoma and with t cells and b cells from normal mice. resting t cells and b cells do not form appreciable numbers of conjugates but conjugates are formed between t cells stimulated with alloantigen for four days and b cells activated by hour culture with lps. irrelevant lymphocytes do not affect the rate of specific conjugate formation in suspensions of cells agitated by gentle rocking but impair conjugate formation when cells are allowed to settle in round bottom tubes. in further experiments, it was shown that the conditions for the induction of lymphokine secretion by the t cell were not indentical to the conditions for conjugate formation.the significance of these and other observations for the interaction of t cells and b cells in vivo will be discussed. of the primary mixed leukocyte reaction (mlr) and that this reaction occurs in multicellular dendritic cell-cd + t cell clusters [cellular immunology , - ( ) dendritic cells are able to contact, cluster, and retain allogeneic t cells and induce these alloreactive cells to proliferate and divide. tions labeled with a vital flvorescent dye, we show that only dendritic cells efficiently form stable clusters. labeled monocytes and b cells do not form clusters with t cells. when labeled monocytes and unlabeled dendritic cells are used to stimulate t cells, unlabeled clusters form. labeled monocytes do not move into the clusters until the third day of the mlr. significant levels of il- and a-ifn appear in the culture supernatant by the first or second day. blast transformation by the second day of the mlr as demonstrated by giemsa staining of cluster cytopreps. also been studied by immunoperoxidase staining. it is known that human peripheral blood dendritic cells are potent stimulators using purified dendritic cell popula- the distribution of certain adhesion molecules within clusters has c m microbiology and immunology, emory university, atlanta, ga . immunization of sjl/j mice with myelin basic protein (mbp) induces the t cell-mediated autoimmune central nervous system disease, experimental allergic encephalomyelitis. response against a dominant epitope (residues - ) leads to disease. lymph node t cells from mbp-immune mice react against several epitopes in addition to - indicating that the i-as molecule is able to form immunogenic complexes with several mbp peptides. the question asked in these studies was whether subdominant epitopes from the same molecule would compete with the dominant epitope for binding sites on the i-as molecule. to address this question two t cell clones, one specific for - (sp . ) and a second specific for a second epitope present in peptide - (sp . ) were tested for responsiveness when cultured with the dominant epitope alone or with mixtures of peptides containing dominant and subdominant epitopes. reactivity of sp . against peptide - was inhibited by peptides - and - . reactivity of sp . against peptide - was not inhibited by peptide - although peptides - and - were inhibitory. controls indicated that inhibitory reactivity was not due to toxicity at high concentrations of peptides. these findings imply that subdominant epitopes are able to compete with dominant epitopes of mbp for binding sites on i-as molecules. linda r. gooding, frances c . rawle, david i . kusher, w i l l i a m s . m. wold+ and barbara knowles*. department of microbiology and immunology, emory university school of medicine, atlanta, ga , 'institute f o r molecular virology, s t . louis university school of medicine, s t . louis, mo and *the wistar i n s t i t u t e , philadelphia, pa . i n several v i r u s systems e a r l y non-structural proteins localized predominantly i n the nucleus of infected cells are major t a r g e t antigens f o r cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctl). whether early synthesis o r nuclear l o c a l i z a t i o n are important factors i n immunodominance is not known. w e have recently developed a system f o r studying the ctl response t o human group c adenoviruses i n mice. by us ng both transfected t a r g e t s and virus deletion mutants w e have shown t h a t , response t o wild type ad . there are two e a t r a n s c r i p t s , s and s . which both encode major e a r l y nuclear antigens d i f f e r i n g by a amino a c i d insertion: both antigens are recognized equally w e l l by ctl. the e encoded k glycoprotein (gpl k) of ad binds t o mhc c l a s s i antigens i n the endoplasmic reticulum preventing t h e i r translocation t o the c e l l surface and strongly inhibiting l y s i s by ad specific ctl. however, the presence of gpl k i n the priming v i r u s does not a f f e c t the s p e c i f i c i t y of the ctl generated f o r e l a , so the immunodominance of t h i s protein cannot be due t o the fact t h a t i t is the only major protein synthesized before gpl k i n the course of infection. using virus deletion mutants we are investigating whether ctl s p e c i f i c f o r other ad antigens can be induced i n the absence of ela, and whether e a is also the dominant antigen recognized i n mice of other mhc haplotypes. respond to antigens present on non-replicative virions. in contrast, we have obtained balc/c i-erestricted t hybridomas specific for the neuraminidase (na) glycoprotein of a/pr influenza which recognize infectious, but not non-replicative virus, closely resembling recognition requirements observed for most class i mhc-restricted responses to influenza. recognition correlated with the rte nova synthesis of viral na within antigen-presenting cells, but did not depend strictly upon the amount of na present in cultures, since high na concentrations could be achieved by addition of non-replicative virus without being stimulatory for na-specific t cells. recognition of a neo-antigen was ruled out, since, in high concentration, na isolated from purified virions, even if reduced and alkylated, was recognized by the t hybridoma clone. isolated na was recognized when added to pre-fixed apc, suggesting that this form of antigen was able to bypass the usual processing pathway of exogenous proteins. this suggests that endogenously-synthesized antigen may use different pathways to achieve class -associated presentation. t lymphocyte activation is a complex event which is influenced by a variety of distinct cell surface molecules. in order to determine the role of individual molecules in the activation process, we have developed an efficient methodology for generating cell variants in which expression of molecules is selectively inhibited by expression of anti-sense rna from an epstein-barr virus episomal replicon. in a previous study, we reported that marked inhibition of cd cell surface expression could be achieved in a human t cell clone using this approach. we have now extended this strategy to another t cell surface molecule, cd , as a first ste towards ascertaining its role in t cell activation. to this end, we s nthesized a &-mer oli onucleotide corresponding to a sequence in. the : end of the c d i n g re ion of human cd'i and inserted it in an anti-sense orientation into this replicon. this a-c% /rep construct was electroporated into jurkat cells. analysis of stable a-cd irep transfectants by immunofluorescence staining and flow cytometry demonstrated complete and selective inhibition of cd expression. in contrast to the nontransfected arent, this cd -variant demonstrated a partial loss in its ability to form conjugates a n to secrete interleukin when stimulated with anti-cd monoclonal antibodies. however, stimulation of the cd -variant with a and pma did result in interleukin secretion. several observations suggest that cd functions not only as an adhesion molecule recognising mhc class i on the adjacent cells but also potentiate the transducting capacity of the tcr/cdg complex. comparison of the mouse ly protein sequence with the homolog rat ox and human t sequences revealed most highly conserved regions in the membrane and cytoplasmic part of the molecule. the conservation of the transmembrane and cytoplasmic sequences in different species may be significant for the function of the cd molecule. in order to initiate the functional dissection of the cd -molecule we constructed mutations in different parts of the molecule. by transfecting the a and b chain genes donated by a cd dependent cytotoxic t cell clone(kb c ) into the mhc class i restricted agd cd t cell hybridoma do- . we were able to reconstitute the ability to respond to k only if the transfer was done with the ly molecules (gabert et al., . cell, . - ) . in this system surface expression of mutated and non mutated ly- molecules were checked by facs-analysis and the molecuar size of the proteins were analysed by immunoprecipitation with the anti-ly- monoclonal antibody /lj . finally functional effects of the mutations were investigated in response towards the k alloantigen. we have simulated graft versus host and host versus graft reactivity in vitro by studying primary anti-minor h responses in a limiting dilution culture system. the ability of bmm and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbm) to stimulate and respond in this system were compared by estimating the number of proliferating cells. in gvh-direction the combination of donor-bmm (d-beim) and host-pbm (h-pbm) was to times more effective in stimulating proliferation than any other combination; the same applied to the combination h-pbm/d-bmm in hvg-direction.-using these combinations the median frequency of proliferating cells in gvh-direction was / (range / c- / ) in pairs, in hvg-direction ( pairs) / (range / - / ). % of the proliferating cells had the phenotype of mature t-cells.-using the same combination of responder/stimulator cells we have also estimated the number of cytotoxic cells specific for the hla-identical target cell. in gvh-direction the median estimate (n= ) was / (range / o- / ), in hvg-direction (n= ) / (range / - / ). by split well analysis similar or higher frequencies of cytotoxic cells with specificity for nk-targets were detected (gvhr: / , hvgr: / ). it was however possible to identify a significant number of minor h-specific clones by segregation analysis; their specificity could be confirmed after clonal expansion. the clones had the phenotype of typical cytotoxic t-cells.-the relevance of the two cytotoxic subpopulations described above to clinical events such as gvhd, graft rejection and relapse needs to be clarified.- molecular cloning of murine icah- , k.j. horley, b. baker, and f. takei, terry pathology, university of british columbia, vancouver, b.c., canada. we have previously reported a novel cell surface antigen expressed on activated and proliferating murine lymphocytes. the antigen, termed hala- , is absent or present at low densities on thymocytes, lymph node cells, and fibroblast cell lines, indicating it is not a universal proliferation antigen. some cells of the spleen and bone marrow express mala- at a high density possibly representing in vivo proliferation in these tissues. apparent molecular weight of - kd under both reducing and nonreducing conditions, and is susceptible to endo f digestion. the monoclonal antibody yn / . that reacts with this antigen, profoundly inhibits mlr. a xgtlo cdna library was constructed from ns- cells that express a high level of mala- , and screened with synthetic oligonucleotides resulting in the isolation of a full length cdna clone (- . kb). the cdna sequence has high homology with the human icau- sequence, indicating that hala- may be the murine homologue of this characterized protein. hines, trudeau i n s t i t u t e , inc., p.o. box , saranac lake, ny a tumor c e l l l i n e , et- , has been derived from an apparent fibrosarcoma t h a t arose i n a c bl/ male mouse. antigens. mice t h a t have r e j e c t e d et- become imnune t o these minor h antigens, judged by accelerated s k i n g r a f t r e j e c t i o n , and t h i s imnunity can be t r a n s f e r r e d t o imnunod e f i c i e n t mice w i t h lymphoid c e l l s . however, spleen c e l l s from mice t h a t have r e j e c t e d according to the widely accepted view, cd (t , sheep erythrocyte receptor) is the first t cell-specific antigen to appear on differentiating thymocytes during ontogeny. it follows that cd should be expressed on all immature and mature t cells. using two-color cytofluorometry i have here identified subsets of cd -cd + t cells both in fetal human thymus or spleen and in adult peripheral blood. cd -cd + t cells constitute - % of fetal thymocytes and . - . % of peripheral blood t cells. il- -dependent longterm clones of cdi-cdj+ cells do not react with a panel of monoclonal antibodies (mab) directed against the t ll, tlll or t epitopes of cd and do not transcribe cd mrna. fetal tissue-derived clones react with the tigammaa mab and thus express a functional tcr gamma chain, while cd -cd + clones from peripheral blood are bha + and express a full-length . kb tcr c s .ria. the clones established here are currently being characterized with respect to functional capacities. i conclude that expression of cd is not an absolute prerequisite for the expression of the cd /tcr molecular complex on human t cells. if they are added after hours. these interactions are bidirectional. since both cdlla and cd . and t h e i r ligand i-cam . are expressed on the presenting c e l l s as well as the t cells. however, a l l such e a r l y adhesion related events are not bidirectional since anti-cdz and anti-lfa- . which are expressed d i f f e r e n t i a l l y on t c e l l s and presenting c e l l s respectively are also effective as inhibitors. antibodies, a n t i cd and a n t i cd antibodies do not i n h i b i t clustering but do i n h i b i t p r o l i f e r a t i o n , and t h i s i s seen irrespective o f when the antibodies are added i n t o the assay. our findings suggest t h a t there are two mechanisms involved i n dendritic c e l l -t c e l l interaction, f i r s t l y an inrnediate cell-cell adhesion step and l a t e r a secondary signal transduction process possibly mediated v i a cytokines. the q u a l i t a t i v e d i fferences between dendritic c e l l and b c e l l induced i m n o g e n l c i t y may thus l i e i n e i t h e r o f these two steps. king, department o f eathology, the bland-sutton i n s t i t u t e . university college and middlesex school i n contrast, a n t i class i m c lmmunogenicity c cultvred tissue is capable of stimulating an rggwwse when l " s p l m l e d ~e n e i c w y , robert j. ketchum and orion d. hegre, dept. of cell biology and neumanatoay, university of uinnesota, minneapolis hn . neonatal rat islets derived by culture-isolation have teen shown to k free of mlc class + cells, and are immunologically silent when transplanted to either syngeneic or allogeneic hosts. allogeneic transplantation of cultured neonatal non-islet pancreatic tissue, which is known to contain class + cells, results in rapid allograft rejection. unexpectedly, m i c transplantation of cultured non-islet ductal tissue also resulted in lononuclear lm,me cell (hnc) infiltration of the graft in % of grafts examined. highly purified syngeneic islets and ductal elements grafted syngeneically at remote sites display an i u n e response in the ductal element graft, while the islet graft is free of any imnme cell infiltrate. this syngeneic imune response does not result from the use of xenogeneic serum in the medium, since cultures carried out using syngeneic rat serum supplemented medium yielded identical results. uncultured neonatal pancreatic tissue grafted syngeneically does not result in iqk: infiltrate, thi i.rmne response to a syngeneic stimulus correlates with the presence of class + (antigen presenting) cells. in grafts free of class + cells (culture-isolated islet grafts) no i.rmne responrrc to syngeneic stimulus was observed, while a response was present when syngeneic ductal elements, known to include class + cells, were grafted. this indicates a need for cells capable of antigen presentation to stimulate this syngeneic rerrponne, and suggests that either a modified self antigen or a nomally sequestered antigen is being presented. this syngeneic imune response demonstrates many of the same characteristics of, and may be analagous to, the in vitro syngeneic, or autologous, mixed lymphocyte reactions. indicating this response is not to developnental antigen. c the presence of "self" mhc class i (ma-dr) antigens determines whether blood transfusions ihmunise or suppress. el lagaaij, a termijtelen. e goulmy, & jj van rood, leiden university hospital, the netherlands. blood transfusions can immunise the recipient, as well as induce prolonged allograft survival. it is not known what makes that some transfusions inrrmnise the recipient whereas others induce immune suppression. we investigated if certain mhc compatibilities or differences between recipient and transfusion donor and organ donor are required to induce the beneficial "transfusion effect" in man. we studied graft survival and blood transfusion induced changes in cellular and humoral immunity in different patient groups. the patients received a single blood transfusion of a randomly choosen donor. we found in all groups that to induce a beneficial "transfusion effect" compatibility for at least hla-dr antigen between recipient and transfusion donor is required. if the transfusion and recipient are mismatched for both ma-dr antigens, the recipient is immunised, resulting in an increased antibody production (p=o.ool), an increased cytoxicity (cml) (p=o.oos), an increased mixed lymfocyte reaction (mlr) (p=o.oos) and a decreased graft survival (p- . ). after a beneficial (ma-dr sharing) transfusion. the in vitro test remain unchanged or decrease. graft survival increases with the number of shared antigens between transfusion donor and organ donor (p=o.o ), suggesting that a donor specific suppression is induced. recent experiments have revealed a direct interaction between the cd molecule and hla-dr antigen. to address the nature of this interaction we have used a xenogeneic system in which a human cd cdna was expressed in the murine cd -and cd -negative hybridoma dt . . . the tcr of d . . recognizes the murine class i molecule od. a class i expressing dd-positive cell line was obtained by cotransfection of the human class i cdnas together with the murine od gene int. the murine fibroblast line dap . coculture of dt . . and dap expressing dp-dd resulted in a fold increase in il- production and in rosette formation only when both cd and dp were present on the responding t hybridoma and the presenting cell, respectively. we are using this system to map regions of the cd molecule that interact with the class i mhc ag. the cd molecule has also been shown to be the receptor for the human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) via the gp molecule. since gp and class i both interact kith cd , we have used our functional assay to verify if gp exerts an inhibitory function on cd class i interaction. recombinant gp inhibits the functional interaction and rosette formation in a concentration dependent fashion with maximal inhibition at about pg/ml.. this inhibition is specific since it can be reversed by recombinant soluble cd . the fact that recombinant. gp can inhibit the functional interaction between cd and its physiological ligand (class i ags) suggests that the use of gp on a vaccine against hiv infection could alter the immune response of such individuals. this work was supported by src, mrc and nci. t lymphocytes discern self from non-self molecules through the interaction of their antigen-specific receptors and proteins encoded by the mhc. although the nature of this association is not well-defined, a model has been proposed whereby the v-segments of the t cell receptor interact with residues along the alpha helices of the class i antigen (davis et al.; : , ) . we have recently shown that ctl generated against the class i molecule qiod crossreact on several unrelated murine class i antigens containing the shared qiod residues at amino acid positions , , and (mann et al.; j x : , ) . these residues contributed by the a- domain occur in the alpha helical portion of the class i molecule and amino acids and could interact directly with the t cell receptor. to further characterize the role of these amino acids, we are in the process of determining whether insertion of these residues by site-directed mutagenesis into a human class i molecule will allow for the antigen's recognition by anti- ctl. here the t cell repertoire becomes restricted, so that foreign antigen can be recognized only when associated with the mhc products of the host, and mature t cells are tolerized to self antigens, a process which also seems to be mhc-restricted. thus, t cells should be non-reactive to self antigens when they are associated with mhc products present on the tolerance-inducing thymic cells, whereas they may still react to the same self antigens when associated with different mhc products. to examine mhcrestricted tolerance in vivo, a model system must have: a) self antigen in the context of one mhc haplotype. and b) tolerance to both that and a second mhc haplotype. chimeras were prepared by aggregation of preimplantation embryos of two strains of mice, c bl/ (b ) and balb/c. the thymus of such chimeras should be composed of two distinct and completely intermixed populations of cells, one from each parental strain (isozyme analysis indicates no detectable fusion of cells). thus, t cells maturing in the chimeric thymus should be exposed to and tolerized to minor histocompatibility antigens (mhas) of one parental strain only in association with the mhc of that strain. for example, mice might be expected to express b mhas only with h- b (the mhc). however, our chimeras were fully tolerant to f skin grafts, which have "hybrid" combinations of mhas and mhc (e.g., b mhas with h- d). these results are most consistent with either, a) "wholesale" antigen processing and presentation of all mhas by the tolerizing thymic cells, and/or, b) functional sharing of mhc products between the parental thymic cell populations. many of the events critical to the maturation of t lymphocytes occur in the thymus. in the case of t-cell responses against viruses such response defects are associated with a marked increase in disease susceptibility as illustrated by class i mhc controlled susceptibility to lethal pneumonia induction by sendai virus. certain class i or class i mhc determined tc response defects (four out of six tested by us) can be restored by imunization in vivo and/or restimulation in vitro with dc. dc are the most effective apc. their superior apc capacity is due to ) a very high absolute number of class i and class i mhc molecules, and ) a low degree of sialylation of mhc and other surface molecules, reducing negative charge and facilitating access of the t-cell receptor to the mhc groove presenting the antigenic peptide and/or improved clustering with t cells. the more effective antigen presentation by dc allows a more prominent role for a cd + q cell independent pathway of cd + tc activation. it is postulated that the more effective direct triggering of cd + tc precursors lowers the threshold for il- production by cd + cells, reducing the requirement for il- production by the cd + cells. failure of dc to overcome certain mhc-linked specific tc response defects probably reflects complete failure of any foreign peptide derived from the processed antigen to interact efficiently with the mhc or a true tc repertoire defect. donald pious, department of pediatrics, university of washington, seattle, w mhc class i molecules bind inmunogenic peptides derivsd fro soluble antigen and the complex is recognized by specific t cells. ue have isolated eight independent mutant b -l u clones which are altered in their ability to present antigen. in standard proliferation assays using four different soluble protein antigens, the mutants are unable to stimulate the majority of t cell clones restricted to hlfl dr or dp. cllthough unable to present *hole hepatitis b surface antigen (hbdg), they effcctively present a hbdg peptide to a dprestricted t cell clone. the fact that both dr and dp restricted antigen presentation is abnormal in these mutants made it likely that the class i structurual genes are unaltered. this hypothesis is supported by the finding that dno sequences from the dr genes of one mutant are norml. however, two observations indicate that the uture class i di-expmsccd by the mutants are structurally altered. binding to the mutants with tuo polymorphic anti-dr antibodies and one anti-dp antibody is reduced, although the level of cell surface class i expression is normal. second, the class i diners from the mutants dissociate into no-rs under in vitro conditions (sds-pwe) which preserve dimers in the progenitor line. together, these functional and structural data suggest that the mutants are defective in a molecule that either associates with or post-translationally modifies class i molecules and is required for the physiologic formation of an twc/antigen complex. they do not function as restriction elements presenting foreign antigens to t-cells. to investigate the nature of this functional defect we have constructed different recombinant class i genes using dna segments from the b q (qa- ) or h- db genes. structural protein encoded by the recombinant genes is derived entirely from the q gene whereas the cis-acting transcriptional regulatory elements or the dna segment encoding the membrane anchoring domain is derived from the h- db gene. into fertilised cba/ca embryos by microinjection and transgenic lines were established. to date we have established transgenic lines. we have shown that the q (qa- ) antigen encoded by the recombinant genes behaves as a major transplantation antigen in skin grafts and provokes strong secondary cytotoxic t-cell responses in grafted animals irrespective of the tissue distribution or mode of membrane anchorage of the q antigen. at present, we are investigating whether the q antigens encoded by the recombinant genes are able to present influenza virus or mouse minor histocompatibility antigens to t-cells during immune responses and hence whether they can function as restriction elements. is a distinctive system because it permits an analysis of the activation requirements for antigen specific, resting t cells. been isolated following culture with anti-ig-sepharose and compared to dendritic cells as stimulators of cd ' t cells in the mix. i mhc products and independently stimulated the ' mlr and the production of several t derived lymphokines, including il- and - . however, the relative potencies of dendritic cells and anti-ig blasts as 'mir stimulators varied in a strain dependent fashion. times more active in stimulating hls-mismatched. mhc-matched t cells, relative to syngeneic t cells. anti-ig blasts when stimulating acroas an mhc barrier and were likewise more effective in binding iqic-disparate t cells to form the clusters in which the mix was generated. dendritic cell-t cell clustering was resistant to anti-lfa- mab, while b blast-t cell clustering was totally blocked. thus, anti-ig b lymphoblasts and dendritic cells, two cell types which differ markedly in phenotype, also differ in efficiency and mechanism for initiating responses in allogeneic t cells. only anti-ig blasts could stimulate across an mls barrier, being at least in contrast, dendritic cells were - times more potent than the as the lymphocyte f u n c t i o n antigen (lfa- ) and the i n t r a c e l l u l a r adhesion molecule (icam). we i n t e r p r e t t h i s as an increase i n the membrane expression o f these s t r u c t u r e s f o l l o w i n g incubation. the increase i s blocked by the t r a n s l a t i o n i n h i b i t o r , cycloheximide, implying t h a t p r o t e i n synthesis i s involved. helper t cell responses to soluble globular proteins require processing of the protein by ia-expressing antigen presenting cells (apc). antigen is internalized into acidic vesicles, proteolyzed, and peptides containing t ceu antigenic determinants are transported to the apc surface where they are recognized by the antigen-specific t cell in conjunction with ia. most ia-"pressing cells are competent apc, however, only b cells have antigen-specilic receptors on their surface auowing bound antigen to be processed and presented at /lw the antigen concentration required by nonspecific apc little is known about b cell antigen processing function during differentiation, or if ig-mediated apc function is altered at different maturational stages, thus allowing regulation of b cell-helper t cell interactions. neonatal acquisition of apc function was examined in mice ages day to day . splenic cells from d l to d mice process and present pigeon qochrome $, pg at - % of adult levels. by d neonatal spleen cells acquire the ability to process and present soluble pg at of adult levels. the ability to internalize antigen through ig rwptors was determined using an antigen-antibody conjugate, p$-&(ab')z. neonatal spleen cells acquire the ability to process antigen through ig simultaneously with the ability to process soluble antigen. lack of prowsing by neonatal spleen cells prior to d is not attributable to insufficient levels of surface ia. since d neonate spleen cells are able to activate t cell hybrids to % of adult levels when provided with p$ - , containing the t cell determinant. dlod neonate presentation of p@ - is indistinguishable from adult levels. b cell maturation into memory b cells was identified by the loss of the jlld differentiation marker. splenic jlld'o b cells increase from % following immunization and return to nonimmune levels after weeks. during antigen-induced b cell maturation, jllb b cells are indistinguishable from splenic b cells in the ability to present antigen introduced into the processing pathway either pinocytotically or via surface ig. p p antibody conjugates specific for mouse f(ab')z i n , igd, or igg are presented equally well by both splenic and jll@ b cells. thus, acquisition of b cell processing function appears to be developmentally regulated and may play an important role in b cell tolerance meshanisms. once b cells have acquired the ability to process antigen this function is maintained and is not regulated during maturation into memory b cells. we are currently investigating the role of ig isotype during neonatal acquisition of antigen processing. (supponed by nih grants ai- , ai- , and ai- ) as the preliminary studies suggested that carrier sc (apc) for ts vs. tcs activation might be distinct, studies were done to directly address this possibility by assessing tha ability of s coupled to various cell populations to activate ts and tcs. the results indicated that ts activation required that s be coupled to plastic adherent cells which bear both i-a and i-j determinants. these cells are nonadberent to anti-ig and nonfunctional in cyclophosphamide (cy) treated mice. i n contrast activation of tcs required coupling of s to plastic non-adherent and anti-ig adherent cells. these cells are functional in cy treated mice and bear the b cell markers jlld and i-a but not - . thus s -specific ts are activated by i-a+ i-j+ adherent cells (presumably macrophages) whereas tcs are activated when antigen is presented by b cells. (nih grant ca .) interleukin- activated killer (iak) lymphocytes (also known as lak cells) which destroy a broader spectrum of tumors invitro than nk cells have been used sucessfully in an adoptive immuno-therapy protocol for the treatment of patients with a variety of advanced cancers. the cell suface molecule(s) on tumor cells that a r e involved in specific binding to iak cells and in programming iak cells for cytolysis (iak acceptor molecules) have not been characterized. inorder to identify such acceptor molecules a crude membrane digest of the lung carcinoma cell line a was biotinylated and adsorbed to iak cells or to unstimulated human peripheral blood lymphocytes (upbl) (each from the same person). proteins from the washed solubilized cells were separated by page, western blotted and probed with streptavidin-alkaline phosphatase. several experiments demonstrated that different tumor membrane proteins bound to iak cells compared to upbl. the unstimulated cells bound one tumor membrance protein (about kd) not found on the iak-adsorded blot. the iak cells bound three tumor proteins (approximately , & kd) not found on the upbl-adsorded blot. three other proteins (about , & kd) were found to adhere equally well t o iak cells and upbl. utilizing a streptavidin affinity column, solubilized tumor membrane proteins that bound to iak cells could be separated from solubilized iak membrane proteins. the isolated tumor membrane proteins that adsorded to iak cells inhibited iak mediated lysis of a tumor cells by > %. these studies suggest that specific cellular adsorption techniques may be useful in isolating and characterizing tumor membrane proteins involved in interactions unique to cytolytic lymphocyte-tumor cell target binding and lysis. activation of human t lymphocytes occurs via the t cell receptor-cd complex but can also be induced through the non-antigen-specific cd molecule. selected combinations of mabs or the soluble cd ligand, namely lfa- and a unique anti-cdz mab (cd . ) induce human t cell activatlon. cd is an accessory molecule implicated in t h e activation of human t lymphocytes. this molecule may exert this function by increasing intercellular avidity through binding to mhc class i molecules and/or by transmitting intracellular signals. we have investigated the action of mabs directed against different epitopes on the cd molecules in the activation of human t cells via the cdz pathway. we show that anti-cd mabs inhibit cd induced t cell proliferation in an epitope-depe dent fashion. this inhibition does not appear to be linked to the lower cd mediated [ c a ' + ] response induced by anti-cd mabs, since [ca"] response is equally affected by anti-cd mabs whether or not they inhibi ed t cell proliferation. in conclusion, the partial inhibition of the cd induced [cb'] response of t cells by various anti-cd mabs suggest that : ) this inhibition does not totally account for the inhibitory effect of anti-cd mabs, ) and the proliferation induced by anti-cdz mabs may not be completely ascribed to the [ca +] response of t cells. rosenberg. and alfred singer, experimental immunology branch, nci, nih, bethesda, md . we have devised a model to study the in vivo generation of suppressor cells by using mice congenic at qa- , a class i-like molecule encoded to the right of h- d. disparate tail skin grafts (tsg) unless a second graft with additional helper determinants was also present. without any source of additional help, failed to reject their qa- graft, and were unable to reject them even upon the subsequent addition of exogenous help. thus, exposure to qa- disparate grafts, in the absence of additional help, either led to qa- specific tolerance or suppression. mice failing to reject qa- allografts revealed the presence of qa- specific suppressor cells that inhibited the in vivo activation of antigen specific effector cells capable of rejecting qa- bearing allografts. experiments using t cell subpopulations should allow for further characterization of these qa- specific suppressor cells. we found that b mice did not reject qa- however, animals engrafted with a qa- graft alone, in the thymus, the t-cell receptor genes are rearranged, the t cells learn to recognize their own major histoconpatibilitp complex "hc). and they learn to respond to foreing hec. these events seem to be linked to the interaction between t-cell precursors and the stromal cells of the thyms. thus increasing evidence points to an essential role for the thymus epithelial cells (te cells) in development of at least hec class i recognition by the t cells. to be able to study the importance of te cells in t cell maturation. we have developed a method for growing murine t cells in serum-free pediun with well defined constituents. the m d i u a allows far growth of te cells without concomitant growth of bone marrow derived cells as macrophages and fibroblasts. data obtained by en and lmmunocytochenistry showing the epithelial nature of the cultured cells, as well as autoradiographic data on the growth pattern, and characterization of tb cell supernatants will be provided in addition to results obtained from co-culture of te cells and t-cell precursors (cm-cds-thymytes). lmmunogenicity c branch, national cancer institute, bethesda, md the effector limb mediating skin allograft rejection is highly antigen specific, rejecting cells that express allogeneic mhc antigens while sparing those which fail to express allogeneic mhc determinants. disparate skin grafts are completely rejected in spite of the fact that only a small percentage of the cells within the graft express ia antigens. thus, it is possible that mhc class i disparate grafts are rejected by a mechanism that does not assess the expression of mhc determinants on each cell. we assessed the specificity of the rejection of ia disparate grafts by using allophenic skin grafts in an adoptive transfer system and concluded that skin grift rejection across an mhc class i disparity required recognition of allo-ia determinants expressed by every cell in the graft. therefore, we reasoned that mhc class i antigens must be induced on these ia negative populations. indeed, injection of mice with gamma interferon dramatically induced ia antigens on previously negative keratinocytes. we next tested whether the induction of allogeneic ia determinants on keratinocytes was necessary for graft rejection by engrafting parental strain mice with skin from f >parent bone marrow chimeras. such grafts failed to be rejected, in spite of the speciic rejection of the allogeneic langerhans cells, indicating that the failure of keratinocytes to express allogeneic class i determinants leads to graft preservation. conclusion, mhc class i disparate skin allografts are rejected in a highly antigen specific fashion, secondary to the induction of mhc class i antigens on skin cells that fail to constitutively express them. to address whether the extensive polymorphism characteristic of class i molecules influences cd binding, we have screened a panel of transfectants expressing individual class i mhc alleles. of alleles tested, only aw . did not bind. all other molecules dld bind, including a . and aw , which differ by and amino acids respectively from aw . . position in the alpha domain was identified by sitedirected mutagenesls as the critical residue differing between a . and aw . which determines binding. a mutant aw . molecule containin alanine at position bound cd , while a mutant of a . with valine at did not. alanine is found at position of all human and murine class i molecules sequenced to date except aw . and aw . , which have valine at that position. bulk cultures of a -allospecific ctl were also sensitive to this substitution, and preferenhally recognized both molecules with alanine at . this study shows that aw . differs from other class i molecules in its capacity to bind cd , and raises the possibility that aw . may not function as a restriction element as effectively as other class i alleles. t cell hybridomas derived from h-zd lnc recognked s and pres antigens in a i-ad restricted way, while t cell hybridmas from h- k lnc manifested a specificity for either pres in association w i t h i-ak or for s in association with i-!& the activation of lhese hybridomas by antigen and antigen presenting cells (af'c), as measured by il- secretion, was found to be sensitive to prostaglandines and could be completely inhibited by anti-lfa- moncclonal antihxlies. different aft populations were tested for their capacity to present spresz particles to these t cell hybridomas. various macmphage like populations such as resident, con a induced, thiiglycolate induced peritoneal exudate cells as well as splenic adherent cells were found to present efficiently the spres antigen. in conhast b cells and la+ b cell lines (ta , m . ) could not function as accessory cells in the spresz specific stimulation of these t cell hybridomas. the inability of these cells to present this antigen was not due t o inhibitory effects since these cells did not inhibit the presentation capacity of other potent apc's. funhcnnore addition of apc's of a different haplotype could not complement for the defective presentatiw of spresz by b cells and b ceu lines indicating that mhc independent accessory factors are not implicated in this process. hence it is clear that maaophage-like apc's and b cells d i f f a in their capacity to process and present spdz antigens. since spresz is a very stable particle composed of lipids and proteins it is conceivable that such antigen quires a smng degradation and swh plocessing might occur in cenain -phage-like apc's but not in b cells. recombinant human insulin biosynthetically labeled with k n d " s at several amino acids was used as an antigen and was exposed for varyillg lengths of time to ta mouse b cell apc. subcellular fractionation and hplc chromatography permitted several of the processed peptides distributed throughout the insulin molecule to be monitored. many insulin peptides localized to both the extracellular ( peptides) and intracellular ( peptides) compartments of ta cells were detected. membrane-associated peptides is in progress. many of the peptides processed by ta apc in situ co-elute with those obtained upon digestion i n vitro by the insulin-specific insulin degrading enzylg (ide). f o r the processing of -labelled human insulin suggest that insulin may be processed in b cell apc into immunogenic peptides by an enzyme(s) present on the plasma-membrane, intracellularly and extracellularly. (supported by mrc and cda) . we investigated the pathway of antigen processing itu in cell apc. hurine ctl clones specific for hia-a were generatef with the human cell line jy. four of five ctl clones were found to lyse a k transfected murine cells more effectively than a transfectants. anti-cd specific mab inhibited t lysis by these four clones, and this inhibition was more pronouncgd for a k one clone, which lysed a and a k transfectants equivalently, was shown to be insensitive to anti-cd antibody inhibition. these findings indicate that a -specific t r i n e ctl clones possess greater avidity for murine target cells expressing the a k hybrid molecule relative to those expressing the a molecule. this implies that a cd interaction with the same molecule seen by the t cell receptor is important for target cell recognition. hla class i antigens are highly polymorphic cell surface proteins involved in initiation and regulation of the immune response. allelic sequence variation primarily affects the structure of the first external domains of the a and j component chains. here we provide evidence for other types of allelic polymorphism for these genes. the sequences of two cdna clones corresponding to the hla-dqp mrnas from an hla homozygous cell line exhibit both alternative splicing and readthrough of polyadenylation. furthermore, the alternative splicing event is associated with only a subset of hla-dqb alleles, while the polyadenylation site readthrough is found in a larger subset. this suggests that polymorphic & acting elements within the hla-dqp gene control both processing steps. proteins, presumably encoded by the alternatively spliced mrnas lacking transmembrane exons, are immunoprecipitated with a monomorphic monoclonal antibody directed against hla-dq. these proteins are found in supernatants of cultured cell lines for which secretion is predicted, but not in those of cell lines which do not contain the alternatively spliced mrnas. such secretion class of i allelic products could profoundly affect interactions between effector and target cells in an immune response. departments of biology and chemistry and the cancer center, q- , university of california at san diego, la jolla, ca . we are studying the murine icam- gene and the effects of icam- on antigen recognition. using the human icam-i cdna, we have isolated cdna and genomic clones encoding the murine homologue. the murine icam- gene is a single-copy gene that consists of multiple exom spanning kb of dna and encodes a . kb mrna that is expressed at high levels in a wide variety of different cell types. sequence analysis indicates that murine icam- is % and homologous to human icam- on the protein and dna levels, respectively, and is a member of the immunoglobulin gene superfamily, consisting of several v-like domains linked tanddy. we are also studying the effects of icam- on antigen recognition. the t-cell clone d m s f ). this response is blocked with the anti lfa- antibody fd . when antigen is presented by blo.a( r) spleen cells but not when antigen is presented by dcek, a fibroblast transfected with i-ek. we are currently aansfecting the murine icam- cdna into dcek in order to determine if we can enhance the d response and to determine if the enhancement is lfa- dependent. wth an alp a beta tcr that recognizes moth the t cell differentiation anti en, cd , is expressed by mhc class i restricted t lymphocytes. mhc class i products. the association between cd expression and restriction by mhc class i rfioducts has led to the hypothesis that cd may interact with monomorphic determinants of a large body of experimental evidence suggests that cd interaction with mhc class i molecules leads to an increase in the binding avidity of t cell-stimulator cell interactions. a direct test for a functional cd -mhc class i interaction in t cell activation requires a separate evaluation of cd -ia interactions from tcr-a /ia recognition. however, a separate evaluation proves difficult since the t cell receptor and cb may interact with the same mhc class i molecule. in this report, we use a t cell activation protocol, where tcr-ag/ia recognition is replaced by tcr complex-antlcd antibodies interactions. using this activation protocol, we pave analyzed the effects of monoclonal anti-mhc class i antibodies on the activation o$a cd hybridoma in the absence of its tcr restr$tinj mhc class i molecule (ie ) but in the presence of unrelated mhc class i molecules (ie ,ia ). the data obtained clearly indicate a functional role for cd -mhc class i interactions in t cell triggering. we have targeted hen egg lysozyme (hel) to murine b cells using heterocrosslinked antibodies which specifically bind to surface igd or different mhc molecules. occurred more quickly with targeting to igd than to mhc structures as assessed by fixation and pronase stripping experiments. hel was internalized quickly into acidic compartments when targeted to igd but was detected much later when targeted to mhc molecules, as assessed by shifts of fluorescent signal of internalized fitc-hel. however, the data indicate that not all endocytosed hel entered low ph (< . ) compartments. degraded hel was released from b cells following endocytosis of -i-hel. this release was detected earlier with targeting to igd than to mhc structures. interestingly, the total amount of internal -i-hel decreased with time after endocytosis via igd, but the internal -i-hel was almost entirely whole undegraded hel at all times following endocytosis. these data and those of chloroquine and leupeptin inhibition studies indicate differences in the fate of antigen entering b cells via igd or mhc structures, and support the notion of a neutral ph storage compartment for antigen endocytosed via surface igd on normal splenic b cells. internalization and presentation of hel to hybridoma t cells laboratories, department of surgery, university o f iowa, iowa city, ia target cell lysis by cd ' ctl is a highly specific phenomenon in vitro, as we have confirmed repeatedly in reverse labelling tests by showing that admixed "third party" target cells are not lysed in the presence of specific ctl-mediated cytolysis. however, when mixtures of ctl and their specific targets are inoculated into the skin of hosts syngeneic to the ctl, host cells at the site of inoculation are destroyed, often to an extent that results in grossly observable, full -thickness necrotic lesions. we have evoked these "innocent bystander" reactions in mice with ctl directed against single and multiple non-h- antigens and tnphapten and influenza a virus-specific antigens. thus, the ability to trigger bystander tissue destruction appears to be a general characteristic of ctl-target cell interaction in vivo. our current evidence suggests that host inflamatory cells recruited and activated by factors stimulated by ctl-target cell recognition actually mediate the tissue destruction. these ctl-initiated bystander reactions may be the basis of the non-specific tissue destruction that contributes to allograft rejection and that is observed in many serious virus infections and in intense dth reactions and contact dermatitis. rong h a lin. baael i n s t i t u t e f o r i u m l o g y , baael, snitzerland. w e have investigated the b a d e for i n u n i t y or tolerance t o a m a e aezw proteinthe f i f t h caponent of c o l p l a c n t (a). i n c deficient nice t h i s protein is absent from s e r m and as a cnrwquence they are not tolerized t o cs. c deficient dca generate uy bearing t c e l l s which recognize c i n the c m t e x t of clasa . i n contrast, c s u f f i c i e n t mice i n which c protein is continuously probced d m t mtmt t c e l l reaponsea againmt u. we have tested i f t h i s self protein i s proceseed and presented with clase i i n n o m l mice and can be recognized by c specific t c e l l s i n the absence of exogenewsly added antigen. a l l clasa i bearing c e l l s fm c s u f f i c i e n t l i c e activated c specific t c e l l clonea without additional antigen. presentation was mt a cansaquence o f c secretion by macrophages i n culture but was a h t o be derived prom endqlenewaly generated cs/cl.ss i caplexea. thus t h i s self protein is e f f i c i e n t l y preaented ,inin and available f o r tolerance in&xtion. although c deficient dca cannot secrete c they s t i l l synthesize a precursor mlecule, pro-c , i n accumulating evidence from a number of models suggests that unique subsets of antigenpresenting cells a r e responsible for the induction of specific t cell-mediated responses. w e have previously described an age-dependent maturational defect in the ability of the sjl strain of mice to activate dth-inducer t cells to a wide variety of antigenic stimuli. none of the other strains tested exhibited a similar defect and all other accessory cell dependent responses were unaffected in the dth unresponsive sjl. w e have also shown that the adoptive transfer a macrophage from older dth responsive sjl or other dth responsive las strains can overcome this defect in dth responsiveness. w e have recently found that a subpopulation with the mac-i+, mac- ' and mac- -surface phenotype a r e able to transfer responsiveness. facs analysis indicate that the mac- phenotype is expressed on less than % of macrophages. titrations of the mac- ' cells isolated by facs indicate that adoptive transfer of o ly mac- ' cells can overcome the defect in dth responsiveness. by contrast, transfer of mac -or mac ' cells were unable to overcome the defect. our data suggest that the induction of cd ' antigen specific cells dth-inducer t cells is mediated by a phenotypically unique small subset of macrophage accessory cells. in our studies, we have examined the effect of administering fab' fragments of anti-l t moab (fabl-gk . ) on the inhibition of humoral immunity. treatment of klh-primed mice with . mg fabl-gk . depleted l t ' cells from lymph node tissue while leaving other lymphocyte subpopulations intact. after injection of klh in complete freund's adjuvant, these t,depleted mice were unable to produce anti-klh antibodies. long-lasting unresponsiveness against klh ( weeks) was observed despite the apparent regeneration of the t, population of the lymph node. the results obtained using either fab' or intact gk . antibody were comparable and suggest that a transient depletion of t, does not account entirely for the long-term humoral unresponsiveness. the aim of this study was to gain a more detailed insight into the molecular aspects of antigen processing during the imune response. as a first approach, endosomal vesicles were isolated from bovine alveolar macrophages and their proteolytic activity with respect to a model protein antigen, sperm whale myoglobin (mb), was characterized. during the first stage of digestion of mb by the endosomes, a limited number of fragments were preferentially released from the antigen. we have isolated and identified these fragments. the digestion of myoglobin is completely prevented by pepstatin, a specific inhibitor of aspartic proteinases, and only marginally by other proteinase inhibitors. when mb fragments preferentially released upon digestion with purified bovine cathepsin d, an aspartic proteinase abundant in macrophages, were identified, almost all coincided with the fragments released by the endosomes. to define in more detail the selectivity of cathepsin d under the mild conditions applied, other protein antigens were similarly treated with the enzyme and the peptides released were identified. the location of the preferential cleavage siteswhen related to known t-cell epitopessuggests a dominant role for cathepsin d in the processing of protein antigens to yield fragments for presentation to t-cells. possibly, the observed selectivity of the enzyme may account for the structural similarities among t-cell epitopes, noted by others. actively acquired tolerance in mice to the antigens of the mhc (h- ) is induced by exposure of the animals to allogeneic lymphocytes within hours of birth. actively acquired tolerance to the mhc in humans (hla) cannot be studied in the same way. however, we have evidence for the existence of actively acquired tolerance in humans in a study of highly sensitized patients waiting for a renal allograft. they had developed complement dependent antibodies to the hla antigens of almost all unrelated caucasoid donors. the sera of these highly sensitized patients were tested against a panel of lymphocytes that were mismatched for only one hla class i antigen. we found for these patients hla class i antigens that, although different from those present in the recipient, did not lead to a positive crossmatch. we called such antigens "permissible mismatches" and show that they often included those hla antigens of the patient's mother that the patient had not inherited (noninherited maternal antigens; nima). in of the patients, the permissible class i mismatches included the nimaa. the noninherited paternal antigens (nipas) were analyzed as a control; only two of the nipas tested were acceptable mismatches, which emphasized the preferential nonresponsiveness to nima. recent experiments indicate that what holds true for antibody formation also holds true for t cell activation. of hla class i and hia class i allospecific cd -positive ctl clones. monoclonal antibodies (mcab) directed against the cd structure were only found to inhibit antigen-specific cytotoxicity of a series of class i allospecific cd -positive ctl clones and not of a class i allospecific cd -positive ctl clone. however cytotoxicity induced by cd mcab (used at suboptimal concentrations) or cd mcabs in both types of ctl clone was blocked by cd mcabs. the absence of cd mcab blocking of antigen-specific cytotoxicity of the class- -specific cd positive ctl clone may be explained by assuming that it results from a triggering signal which is to strong to be overcome by the down-regulatory signal of the cd antigen. these combined findings clearly suggest a functional involvement of cd not only in tcr/cd activation, but also in tcr/cd controlled alternative activation routes, such as the cd activation pathway. moreover it shows that even an hla class i allospecific cd -positive ctl clone expresses a functional active cd antigen. the absence of hia class i expression on the target cells (daudi cells) used in the experiments described indicate that the cd antigens not act solely in an adhesion-like fashion, but exhibit also a more general regulatory function in t-cell activation. this regulatory role of cd may be explained by assuming the induction of a threshold for activation, which is triggered after binding of cd mcab or binding to its natural ligand, hla class i. in our view, cde-mediated regulation of t-cell activation could therefore prevent non-specific triggering of cytotoxicity by interactions of insufficient affinity. *this study was supported by a grant from the dutch kidney foundation. the cd t-cell surface antigen s felt to have the dual functlon of stabilizlng the interaction of the t-lymphocyte with the antigen presenting cell (apc) a s well as transduclng an independent signal that can potentiate the actlvatlon related alteratlons generated through the t-cell receptor. we have found that upon antibody-mediated cross-linklng of the cd molecules of cloned murlne t-lymphocytes there is a time and temperature dependent decrease in the abundance of the lymphocyte-speciflc tyroslne klnase p lok. this co-modulation is speclflc for cd and p lck slnce cross-linking of other t-cell surface antlgens (cd . t , thyl. ) does not result in detectable alteratlons in the abundance of the lck protein and slnce cd cross-llnklng does not induce any alteratlon in the abundance of p *.. another srcrelated tyrosine klnase highly expressed in t-cells. such data suggest that cd and the internal membrane lck protein are in close proximity within the cell. further analysls has revealed that slgnlflcant amounts of lck can be immunopreclpitated by antl-cd antibodies. in addltlon. cd can be speciflcally preclpltated by anti-lck antibodies. our data imply that cd and p ok are physically associated in cd + t-lymphocytes. the flndlngs that cd is msoclated to the lck proteln in either murlne or human t-cells and that cd is also complexed to p lck ln cd * t-cells suggest that the lck tyroslne klnase is involved in the functlon of the cd and cd accessory molecules. these apc do not appear to present processed klsa determinants. in light of these findings, of apparent interest is the issue of which cells types are responsible for hlsa-specific t cell tolerance induction. studies in mice treated from birth with anti-p antibodies suggest an important but perhaps not exclusive role for b cells in this process. we are currently pursuing the identity of other cell types which may be involved. in addition, lmmunogenlclty c university of texas southwestern medical center at dallas, dallas, texas qlo is a soluble class i-like major histocompatibility antigen produced specifically by the liver. previously, it has been shown that mice possessing soluble qlo can generate anti-q cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctl), suggesting that this soluble molecule does not function as a tolerogen. we have recently constructed c h transgenic animals which express an exon shuffled q (al, p )/ld ( , tm) molecule. this qio/ld molecule is expressed specifically in the liver on hepatocytes but not on nonparenchymal liver cells, spleen, thymus, kidney or brain. the expression of qio/ld in the transgenic hepatocytes is equivalent to la expression on balb/c hepatocytes, suggesting the animals are expressing physiologic levels of the transgene. the presence of membrane bound qio/ld in c h animals has not caused anti- ctl precursors to be deleted, however, because primary in vitro ctl assays show these transgenic animals can specifically lyse qio/ld targets. histopathologic examination of the livers of these animals does not show extensive lymphocytic infiltration or inflammation. in addition, serum levels of alanine aminotransferase. aspartate aminotransferase, and alkaline phosphatase are also normal, confirming that these animals do not show overt signs of liver rejection. results are ampatable with a t least two different pathways of antigen hardling, a pathway for degradaticm of antigen, and a "pmcessiq" pathway for antigen presenbtim. my+ l monocytcq enes appear t o i n t e r f e r e with t h e processing pathway, either by i n h i b i t i n g production of antigenic material t h a t can associate with ia o r by i n h i b i t i n g putative intracellular event@) imr lvb-q the binding of ia to processed antigen and tmnsprt of annplexes to the cell surface the immunogenicity and antigenicity of synthetic peptides (sp) derived from the sequences of a streptococcal antigen were investigated in macaque monkeys. immunization with the free peptides of and residues failed to elicit serum antibodies or t cell responses. however, both serum antibodies and lymphocyte responses were elicited by immunization with the sp linked to tetanus toxoid (t) as a carrier. indeed, spl -lt and sp -tt elicited serum antibodies and proliferative responses of lymphocytes, not only to the sp but also to the native strtptococcal antigen. recall of sp -tt or sp - t immunized monkeys w i t h suboptimal doses of the native srreptococcal antigen resulted in a significant increase in antibodies, both to the sp and native antigen, confirming that the two sp share antigenic epitopes with the native antigen. the b and t cell epitopes were then determined and the b cell epitopes resides in residue - , whereas the t cell epitope overlaps and consists of residue - . the t cell epitope has an amino-terminal leucine and carboxy-terminal glycine and alanine added to residue - of the b cell epitope. in spite of the b and t cell epitopes being expressed in sp (residues - ), the monomer failed to induce serum antibodies without a carrier. however, immunization with dimers of peptide-linked or disulphide-linked residues - , without a canier, elicited both serum antibodies and proliferative responses of lymphocytes. the results suggest that the monomeric sp is not immunogenic, whereas the dimeric peptide elicits both antibodies and t cell responses. the minimal t cell-b cell structure required for immunogenicity is now being determined. lmmunogenlclty section a departments of immunology and rheumatology, mayo clinic, rochester, pin . susceptibility to collagen induced arthritis (cia) in mice maps to the i-a loci in h- mice. however, swr (h- ) mice are cia resistant, suggesting a role of non-mhc genes. we have recently shown gene complementation between h- from swr and tcr v genes from several non-susceptible strains. cia has been induced in b , c h.a and a fackcrosses with swr with similar high incidences; , and % respectively. c l shares a similar background with b and is h- b, but has the same v tcr mutation as swr. backcrosses showed a very low incidence ( %) of cia, and tte arthritis observed was of a much milder and transient nature. the invariant chain associated with hla class i molecules is a - kd glycoprotein implicated in antigen processing and assembly and intracellular transport of class i molecules. class i molecules and invariant chain are expressed primarily by b lymphocytes and antigen-presenting cells such as macrophages and can be induced by interferon-y in a variety of cell types. to define sequences involved in the human invariant chain gene regulation, bp ' to the initiation of transcription were subcloned upstream of the cat gene. transfection into invariant chain-producing cell lines and non-producing cell lines demonstrated that this ' region displayed tissue specificity and responsiveness to interferon-y. deletion mutants were constructed to ascertain the functional properties of specific regions of the invariant chain upstream regulatory regions. these deletion mutants have led to the identification of putative regulatory regions: to , to , and to bp ' to the cap site of the invariant chain gene. deletion of any one of these regions results in decreased cat activity. protein-dna interactions of these sequences have been characterized by mobility gel shift assay and dnase i footprinting. two regions have been identified that exhibit cell type dependent binding of nuclear proteins. two color flow cytometry was used to characterize the surface phenotypes of human bronchoalveolar lymphocytes (n= ). the cd /cd ratio was highly variable ( . - . , mean- . ). a high proportion of the t cells expressed hla-dr ( - %, mean= l%) indicative of t cell activation. however, detectable levels of the i+- receptor were expressed on < % of the cells. cd r was absent from cd cells in most preparations ( - % mean= %) suggesting that the cells are inducers of ig synthesis. uchl , a marker of memory cells was present on - % of lung t cells. uchll+ cd r-lung lymphocytes responded poorly to pha and cona but did respond to il- in the presence of accessory cells. together these data suggest that lung lymphocytes are recently activated memory cells. il- induced lung t cell lines were also characterized for antigen expression and w ( activity. high lak activity was obtained in preparations containing a high proportion of cd cells. these cultures appeared to be suicidal. in contrast, lines with a high proportion of cd + had low or absent lak activity but proliferated in the presence of il- for at least months expressing a cd cd r-phenotype. this abstract is a proposed presentation and does not necessarily reflect epa policy. the polymorphic second exons of the hla-dp, and dpd genes have been specifically amplified in vitro by the polymerase chain reaction (pcr) method, using the thermostable dna polymerase of aauaticus. sequence analysis of mi clones containing the amplified dp sequences from a panel of thirty-four df typed cell lines revealed only the two previously characterized alleles for dp, . fourteen allelic variants were defined for dpw eight of these are associated with the t-celldefined dpwl- types; two subtypes were found for both dpw and dpw . six additional dp alleles which were previously typed in the t cell assay as blanks were also idenlfied. based on this sequence information, non-isotopic sequence specific oligonucleotide probes have been developed and used to type a margarita betz, dominic dordai, brian e. lacy, and barbara s. fox. department of medicine, university of maryland school of medicine, baltimore md . murine type helper t cells (th ) secrete interleukin (il ) in response to antigen. despite the likely importance of these cells, little is known about their priming and expansion in vivo. we have demonstrated il production in response to a cytochrome p peptide following t cell expansion in vitro. this antigen has not previously been shown to induce th cells. bio.a mice were primed with a peptide fragment of pigeon cytochrome c in cfa. lymph node cells were restimulated in vitro with antigen for - days, ficolled and rested for days without antigen. cells were then tested by limiting dilution for the presence of antigen-specific il producing cells. il was detected using the il sensitive cell line ct s (provided by dr. w. e. paul, nih). the specificity of the response was confirmed by blocking with the anti-ll antibody b . following in vitro restimulation of the primed lymphocytes with antigen, il production was detectable from as few as cells per well. il secretion was antigen dependent and required both in vivo priming and restimulation in order to be detected. it is not clear why primed lymph node cells, placed in limiting dilution culture directly after removal from the animal, failed to secrete detectable amounts of il in response to antigen. suppression is an unlikely mechanism as fresh primed lymph node cells were unable to inhibit il production by restimulated cells. we are now investigating the factors that may regulate the development of il producing t cells. mark r. boothby, ellen gravallese, hsiou-chi liou. and laurie h. glimcher, department o f cancer biology, harvard school o f public health, boston, ma . regulated pattern, and normally expression is limited to certain cell types such as cells and macrophages. cells is accompanied by the loss o f class i mhc expression. these genes also respond to external stimuli such as the cytokine il- , which increases b cell ia. a region o f the aa mhc gene activated expression of a cat reporter gene in a b lymphoma cell line but not in a myeloma cell line. a nuclear protein that bound to two sites within this region was found. this binding activity was present in spleeiis that lack t cells and in b cell lines, but it was absent from all three myeloma cell lines tested. il- treatment of normal and athymic mouse spleen cells greatly increased the binding of this nuclear protein to its a a target sites, concomitant with increased aa transcription; "thus, cells contain a sequence-specific binding activity regulated both by il- and by differentiation. the differentiation o f b cells to plasma lmmunogenicity c peter van den elsen . ldepartment of immunology, the netherlands cancer institute, amsterdam, zdepartment of immunology, erasmus university, rotterdam, department of immunohaematology, academic hospital, leiden, the netherlands. human tcr y occurs in disulphide-linked (type ) or non-disulphide-linked (type ) forms, dependent on the use of the cyl or cy gene segment. the cyz gene segment can contain a duplication or triplication of exon , which gives rise to different protein forms (types bc or zabc). it is not known whether functional differences exist between these receptor types. protein chemical analysis of type and type bc receptors on functional human t cell clones derived from peripheral blood (pb) has indicated that not only the y chains, but also the chains have a molecular mass and charge which set apart type and q p e bc receptors. two sets of fifteen clones were randomly generated from pb of two normal donors after selection with the anti-tcr y - mab, which recognizes all receptor types. dna rearrangement and mrna expression analysis of y and genes allowed us to map the specificity of the anti-tcr y mabs tcs- and tiya to the v l and vy gene segments respectively. subsequently it could be concluded from the analysis of random clones that the majority of type receptors use vy , while this preference seems absent in type receptors. the great majority of type receptors do not use v l. while the majority of type receptors do. this was confirmed by fluorescence analysis of pbl of a large panel of normal donors. we conclude that vy and v gene segments in functional tcr y in pb are used in non random combination and that their expression is correlated with rearrangement of the y gene to cyl or cy . we have previously shown that polymorphic residues in the nh -tenninal half of the p domain (amino acids - ; hypervariable regions and [phvl and ) determine with which allelic or isotypic a chain a particular b chain can achieve efficient cell surface beterodimer expression. this result might be understood in terms of the current model for ia smcture which predicts that w v l would lie adjacent to region. therefore, to examine the role of ahvl residues in conmlling hetcroduncr expression. a mutant a d cdna was created in which the codon for amino acid was mutated to code for the auk residue at this position. in addition, recombinant a d and a& cdnas, in which the segments encoding the three a hypervariable regions were exchanged between the two alleles, were used to study the connibutions of other a chain polymorphisms to this process. interestingly, the polymorphic residues in ahv are predicted to lie in a region of the a a chain a-helix which is adjacent to the phv region of the p chain a-helix. allelic substitutions in this latter region of ad have been shown to similarly affect surface ia h e t e r o d i i expression. taken together, these results suggest that there are at least two spatially separate areas in which the a and p chains interact and that these interactions are affected by polymorphic rtsidues in both areas, conmbuting to the efficiency of heteroditner expression and, most likely, ia quartcmary conformation. the aim of this project is to identify contact residues of the t cell receptor (tcr) with antigen and/or mhc class i molecules. as a model system, a vp -containing tcr has been chosen since the majority of vb ' t cell hybrids react with ie molecules of the k,s,d, and b haplotype. t cell hybrids have been made which have a dual reactivity: they are vp + and recognize ie molecules but also show reactivity towards a known antigen, namely chicken ovalbumin (ova). one such hybrid has been mutagenized with ethyl methane sulfonate (ems). mutants were selected on the basis of their survival after stimulation by either antigen or ie. it was expected that mutations in all different kind of genes involved in t cell recognition and t cell activation would be found. mutants obtained fall into two major groups: ) loss variants of tcr a or fl chains,t or l t : ) mutants with point mutations in one of these genes. we are currently analyzing the mutants biochemically and functionally in order to identify the particular gene affected. point mutations in the a and p genes of tcr mutants will be localized using the polymerase chain reaction in combination with dideoxy sequencing. activation of t lymphocytes requires the intracellular fragmentation of foreign antigens and their presentation by class i or class i major histocompatibility complex glycoproteins. the direct binding of peptides to class i molecules has been shown in a number of experimental systems and its specificity compared to that of t cell activation. in contrast, direct binding of peptides to class i molecules has been difficult to detect; although peptide sensitization experiments and the crystallographic structure of hla-a persuasively argue for its occurence and importance. in this study, we demonstrate specific binding to hla-a of an influenza matrix peptide (flu-m residues - ) that has previously been shown to act as a target for certain hla-a restricted influenza-specific cytotoxic t lymphocytes. we estimate that less than . % of the purified hla-a molecules were able to bind the added peptide. we and others have shown that allorecognition by cytolytic t lymphocytes (ctl) is analogous to t cell recognition of foreign antigens in that both can occur via presentation of antigenic peptides by products of the major histocompatibility complex. we have used peptides corresponding to the alphal helix of selected hla molecules to analyze t cell recognition of this polymorphic region. the alpha alpha helix of hla-b and -b are identical, and show a high degree oh homology with those of hla-bw , -b , and -b . peripheral blood lymphocytes from normal donors were stimulated in vitro with targets expressing hla-b to derive allospecific ctl lines and clones. in some individuals, the allospecific response was almost totally directed against the alphal helix. the ability of peptides corresponding to the alphal helix of these hla molecules to inhibit and induce lysis as well as to modify other assays of t cell activation will be discussed. diseases and *national institute of child health and human development, d bethesda, md . classical transplantation antigens are constitutively expressed on cells of all tissues exce t brain. transaiption is regulated by the interaction of nuclear factors with ' flanking regions tiat include the class i re latory element (cre). previously, the cre has been divided mto re om on the basis of nuclear t%or blndin . several studies have implicated the nuclear protein (ri) wfich binds to the inverted repeat geggattcccca) of re 'on i as necessary for gene transai tion although region i is identicarin all se uencedouse $d and l enes, it is not conservefin qa r y genes. a comparison of the c& from h- ld with that of , a qa region gene expressed o y in the liver and fetal olk sac, shows that there are two changes within the inverted r eat se uence (tgaggactcc$a). these differences disru t the dyad symmetry. another nugotide diierence between h- l and qlo falls within re 'on ifof the cre. however, qlo can bind to the nuclear factor (rii) that binds to region ii of the fit ld cre, whereas qlo region i can not bind to the nuclear factor (ri) that binds to the region i inverted re at. to test whether the differences m region i contribute to the restricted tissue e ression of q l r w e have used site-directed in vitro mutagenesis to make the inverted repeat of]cglo region i like that of the classical class i genes. a change at either base enhances transcription as measured in a transient transfection system. either change also allows binding of the nuclear factor that binds to the classical r alterations in the cre regon i contribute to the limited tissue expression of . the presence of disrupted cre region i in other region genes likely contributes to their tissue restricted expression. on i sequence. thus, molecular analysis of t cell receptor structure/function in sperm whale myoglobin specific t cell clones. jayne s.danska, alexandra m. livingstone, toshi isihara and c. garrison fathman, stanford university medical school, stanford, ca. we have undertaken structural characterization of the t cell receptors (tcr) utilized by a well defined panel of murine dba/ t cell clones that recognize epitopes within the - peptide of sperm whale myoglobin (sp wmb) presented by i-ad or i e . only of independent clones show alloreactivity for whc haplotypes. using the polymerase chain reaction (pcr) and dna sequencing of the tcr a and fc chains from matched sets of clones bearing either whc restriction or epitope specificity in common, we are addressing structural relationship between tcr and mhc/antigen for this model system. among i-ed restricted t cell clones reactive with spwmb - , all have highly homologous tcr chains associated with a minimum of three different tcr a chains, some of which are derived from novel v gene families. to further characterized the specificity of these clones we are generating substituted peptides to identify residues within the epitope important for interaction with tcr or restricting mhc molecule. functional verification of the relationship between given tcr primary sequences, and recognition capability will be addressed by transfer of the a and/or chafns cdnas created by pcr amplification into t-cell hybridomas expressing endogenous tcr genes of known sequence and specificity. with mhc fine specificity. the differential impact of substitutions with the n-terminal and c-terminal portions of the apl domain is consistent with models of auap structure in which the n-terminus interacts with peptide while the c-terminus interacts with both peptide and the tcr. or aauapu-resmcted t cell clones. the antigens tested were l-tymsine-p-lmmunogenicity c expression of the q p gene, patricia m. day, katherine e. lapan and jeffrey a. frelinger, department of microbiology and lmmunolog university of north carolina at chapel hill, chapel hill, nc . generally, the transcription of class i genes tom the q a a region is limited to tissues of hematopoietic origin. previous work in our lab demonstrated widespread transcription of the q gene in the .p mouse, with high levels of mrna found in liver, lung, lymph node, spleen, testes and thymus. less rna was present in muscle and brain tissues. however,,it is not known whch individual cell types within these tissues are responsible for the transcription of the q gene. we raised polyclonal antisera against a synthetic peptide, derived from the predicted amino acid sequence of the q p transmembrane region. we selected this region since it is the most locus specific. this antisera immunoprecipitates a class lsized protein. a monoclonal antibody, directed against the same peptide, has also been produced. sv -transformed h- p fibroblasts show an abundance of q message. suprisingly, indirect immunoluorescent staining with the monoclonal antibody reveals a cytoplasmic localization of the protein with a perinuclear concentration. different patterns have been observed in examination of the h- b em onal carcinoma cell lines ax and pcc . qgspecific antibodies allow us to identify the cell ty es which express the gene product. the application of in situ hybridization techniques will correlate the cellular site ofmrna synthesis and protein detected by antibodies. understanding the paltern of expressim of the q gene is the first step in determining the so far elusive function of these mhc genes. and il r mrna a f t e r mitogenic stimulation. antibodies against cd r, but not against c common determinants, synergise with suboptimal doses o f mitogen t o induce il and il r mrna expression, suggesting t h a t cd r molecules are operative i n transmembrane s i g n a l l i n g i n immature thymocytes. there i s also an i n d i c a t i o n from northerns using cd probes t h a t cd p mrna i s not induced i n activated cd -thymocytes as i t i s i n mature t c e l l s . these r e s u l t s support the idea t h a t cd r+ molecules are essential f o r generating signals required f o r c e l l survival w i t h i n the productive intrathymic lineage. we examined a panel of thl and th t cell clones for the ability to induce antibody synthesis in a mishell-dutton culture system under cognate b-t cell conditions: our findings indicate that both thl and th t cells are heterogeneous, i.e., some but not all thl and some but not all th clones have the capacity to induce antibody under these conditions. we examined the effect of -irradiation or rnitomycin-c pretreatment of our thl and th clones on their ability induce antibody synthesis. asano et al. (j. immunol : ) have reported that th clones are exceedingly sensitive to -irradiation, with doses as low as rads abrogating the ability of th clones to induce antibody synthesis. we found that while the helper activity of th clones was very radiation sensitive, helper activity in thl clones was very radiation resistant. thl clones given rads of irradiation were as effective as unirradiated clones in inducing anti-tnp plaque forming cells (pfc). moreover, when used at higher t cell/b cell ratios in culture, irradiated thl clones were more effective than unirradiated clones in inducing antibody synthesis. the effect of irradiation on th clones was not simply due to inhibition of proliferation, since mitomycin-c pretreatment of the clones had little effect on helper activity. conservation, alexander l. dent, pamela j. fink and ste hen m. hedrick, department of biology, university of california, san diego, a . the p chain gene of the murine t cell receptor has been shown previously to have an alternative spliced form of message. this message contains a novel exon, termed c& which is inserted between the vdj and constant region exons. we have studi d expression of the cpo exon at the mrna level by rnase protection. we have found that about % or less of of p messages in normal t cell clones contain the cgo exon, whereas p m e s a es. in the thymus contain the exon at - fold higher levels. to address t i e importance of the c exon in the immune ,system, we have undertaken a phylogenetic approach. \y cloning and sequencin the rat analogue of cpo, we have found that while the rat exon is very simifar to the mouse exon, both donor and acceptor rna splice signals are defective in the rat cpo gene. this implies that rat cpo cannot be spliced into rat p m e s a s. furthermore, we have sequenced the analo ous region to mouse cpo in e human p chain locus, and have found no stretct of sequence remotel homolo ous to cpo. because cpo is not conserved evolutionarily, we beieve that ! he cpo gene element does not sewe an important function to the immune system of most vertebrates. ) . we found that one arrdno acid substitution at a vdjp juntional region position found to be highly conserved in pigcon cytochrome c-specific tcr's results in a change in antigen fine specificity, while an* change abolishes all detectable responses characteristic of the d tcr. we will present the results of mutagenesismansfection analyses of two other pigeon cytochrome c-specific tcr's. the murine ctl response to human class i molecules is - orders of magnitude lower than the response to murine alloantigens, due to structural differences between human and murine homologs. we investigated whether this discrepancy could be overcome by exposure of developing t cells to human class i molecules in transgenic c bl/ mice expressing hla-a . . ! c zhe bdixujiar basis of - . lbve digiustn ard ed p d l u b r , div- of s ch mice expressed hla-a .i in spleen, bone marrow and thymus at levels similar to those of endogenous h- molecules. however, the frequency of ctl specific for other human alloantigens remained similar to that of normal mice. the frequency of hla-a . restricted influenza specific ctl was - orders of magnitude less than the frequency of h- restricted ctl. these results indicate that the poor response of murine ctl to human class i antigens is not determined by selection in the thymus, but by species-specific constraints on the interaction of mhc antigens with t-cell recognition structures. while the mice are tolerant to hla-a .i expressed on murine cells, they still respond to hla-a . expressed on human cells. the epitopes defined by such clones are present on hla-a . positive human cells derived from several different tissues. such epitopej are not dependent upon the species of p m associated with the class i molecule, nor upon the structure of the attached carbohydrate. the results suggest that one or more highly conserved normal human proteins contribute to the formation of such epitopes, and provide an explanation for the failure of ctl raised against class i molecules on human cells to recognize the same molecules expressed on murine transfectants. this suggests that normal endogenously expressed molecules may also be important in the formation of epitopes on class i antigens recognized by allospecific ctl. we previously demonstrated t h a t several subclones derived from a c +, cd -/cd -t-cel i l i n e have undergone secondary rearrangements a t t h e t-cell receptor (tcr) a locus w h i l e maint a i n i n g i t s o r i g i n a l tcrb and igh d-j rearrangements (marolleau e t . al., i n press). these secondary rearrangements r e s u l t i n t h e j o i n i n g of germline va and j a gene segments which replace the p r e -e x i s t i n g va-jacmplexes of t h e parental t-cell line. i n an e f f o r t t o examine t h e molecular mechanism responsible f o r these va-ja gene replacements, t h e s t r u c t u r e s o f tcra cdnas prepared from both t h e parental and subcloned t-cell l i n e s were determined. i n addition, northern b l o t and southern b l o t analyses were performed on both t h e parental and subcloned t-cell l i n e s using a panel o f va and j a probes. our r e s u l t s i n d i c a t e t h a t : ) secondary rearrangements r e s u l t i n both productive and non-productive va-ja j o i n s , ) the mechanism whereby secondary rearrangements occur i s a d e l e t i o n event t h a t involves germline va genes ' t o t h e p r e -e x i s t i n g va-ja complex j o i n i n g t o j a the class ii major histocompatibility complex (mhc) antigens are a family of integral membrane proteins whose expression is tissue-specific and developmentally regulated. a pair of consensus sequences, x and y, separated by an interspace element, is found upstream to all class ii genes. deletion of each of these sequences eliminates expression of class ii genes in vitro or in transgenic mice ( - ). furthermore, the absence of a specific binding protein for the hla dr a x box in patients with severe combined immunodeficiency disease whose cells lack class ii suggests a critical role for these proteins in class ii gene transcription ( ). report the cloning of a agtll cdna encoding a dna binding protein (human x-box binding protein, hxbp- ) which, like the proteins in whole nuclear extract, recognizes both the x box and interspace elements of the human dra and murine aa genes. the hxbp- cdna hybridizes to two rna species, . kb and . kb in human, that are expressed in both class ii positive and class ii negative cells. hxbp- does not cross-hybridize to two murine aa x box binding cdnas recently isolated in our laboratory which also recognize the dra and a ax boxes. these observations provide evidence for the existence of multiple x box binding proteins which recognize a common or overlapping motif. chromosome mapping studies demonstrate that hxbp- arises from a multi-gene family two of whose members map to human chromosomes and . taken together, these data suggest a high degree of complexity in the transcriptional control of the class ii gene family. france . in an attempt to analyze positive or negative in vivo regulation of clonal expansion of cytolytic t lymphocytes (ctl), we immunized blo.br mice with the kb specific ctl clone kbs-cu). and we tested whether t cells obtained from such mice would influence the in vitro development of the ctl clone kbs-c?o. a clone-specific helper effect has k e n observed, which is mediated by cd + splenic cells from immunized mice. control immunizations of b o.br mice with ti negative variants of suggest that this growth regulation involves the recognition of the ti of kbsc . the precise nature of the antigen recognized on the ctl clone, the possible involvement of ti determinants with or without mhc products u e now under investigation. we have shown that thy-]+ dendritic cells present in the epidermis of mice (dec) express cd associated v and v gene products. we have produced a monoclonal antibody directed against v and found that a wave of cells appearing at the earliest stages of fetal thymic development express v . phenotypic and functional analysis of v + cells in the early fetal thymus indicates that they have characteristics in common with the v + dec. both populations express high levels of ly- and are ly- c+. neither express cd or cd . interestingly, the v + fetal cells express elevated levels of il- receptor, indicating that they may have been activated. functional analysis demonstrated that, unlike other fetal thymocytes, the v + cells can be stimulated to produce lymphokines and lyse a panel of target cells which are also lysed by the adult thy-l+ dec. these results raise the intriguing possibility that the first receptor-bearing component of the t cell system to appear in ontogeny might give rise to the thy-]+ dec. ( ritical to an understanding of the function of cells bearing the gamma-delta t cell receptor will be an understanding of when and where such cells function. in order to investigate this, we have used a variety of techniques (in situ hybridisation, cdna cloning, and pcr) to examine m a s of tcr gamma delta gene expression. one conspicuous site of expression is the intestinal epithelium, which is by contrast almost devoid of tcr alpha beta expression. interestingly, the v gene segment usage in this location is quite specific and is different to the specifcity that we have found in the spleen and in the thymus, and that others have found in the skin. this specificity suggests in turn that expression of the resmcting elements recognised by gamma delta may also be spatially nxticted. extensive analysis of junctional diversity can pmvide infomation on the diversity of antigen nxogniscd by gamma delta. the basis for selective expnssion of v gene segments may in part lie in different requkments of the v-gannna gene pmoters. to examine this, the wnscriptional capabilities of the various gamma gene promoters in t cells murine tcr gamma genes: distinct spatial restriction of v-gene segment usage, adrian thyday*, susan kyes*, simon carding#, charles a. janevay, being compared by linkage to the chloramphenicol acetyl transferase gene. biochemistry, university of wisconsin-madison, madison, . murine strain a sublines a/j and a/wysnj have a genetic polymorphism that regulates serum immunoglobulin responses to several protein antigens. strain a/j secondary igg responses to bovinv gamma globulin, oralbumin, hemocyanin and galactosidase l-ere -, l o -, i -and -fold greater, respectively, than a/wysnj responses. subline a/hej is a low responding strain like .l/wysnj. analysis of h- class and class i molecules provided no evidence for a breeding error to account for the genetic polymorphism. instead, an important immune response gene outside h- may hare been heterozygous when the sublines diverged, and the polymorphism resulted from sezregation and differential allele fixation. a mutation subsequent to subline divergence is also a possible source of the polymorphism, but is less likely. the high responder phenotype inheritance pattern in (a/wysnj x a/j)fl, f , and backcross mice was consistent with segregation of a single, recessive gene. we named this locus l a for the strain a sublines that define it; strain a/j represents the k a h allele and strains a/yysnj and a/hej represent the allele. hayes, keith d. hanson, faye nashold, and david j . miller, department of the secondary iggza responses were also affected. several different proteolytic digests of denatured seb have been tested for their ability to stimulate t cell hybrids to produce il- . a tryptic digest that retains activity has been fractionated by hplc and the stimulatory component is being analyzed. examination of the amino acid sequence of seb and the proteolytic cleavage sites has led us to synthesize several peptides for analysis. these peptides, and their analogues, will be tested for their function in vivo and in vitro. to understand the interactions involved in the famation of peptide-mhc complexes, an assay has been developed to detect dr specific binding of peptide analogues of t e l l determinants to cell surfaces. ebv msformcd b cell lines (bcls) w m incubated with biotinylated peptide followed by fltc conjugated streptavidin, and then anaiysed by flow cytomctg. a panel of bcls homoygous for diffmnt dr types bound analogues of peptide - from influenza virus haemagglutinin (previously shown to be a helper t cell determinant restricted through dr ) to varying degrees, w h m no binding was observed to the dr-bcl rj . binding could be specifically inhibited by the natural unbiotinylated t cell determinant or other drl restricted determinants. competition by a range of peptides revealed quantitative diffmnces in their ability to bind drl. the assay is currently being used to generate a detailed model of the complex formed betweenha - anddrl. and trp for leul . and hla-a . differs from hla-a .i by the substitutions of thr for ala glu fo??a and trp for zeu . residues and in the -sheet of the molecule, and residues , , and in the a-helix are thought to interact with bound peptide or the tcr. to evaluate the role of these residues on ctl-defined epitopes, two genes were constructed that encoded novel molecules which differ from hla-a . only at residues , , and , or at residue . the effect of a-helix substitutions on serologic and ctl-defined epitopes that varied between hla-a .i and hla-a . were evaluated by constructing genes that encoded the individual differences at residues , , and , as well as additional non-naturally occuring substitutions at these same positions. hla-a . specific ctl were found that were: ( ) insensitive to substitutions at either residues , , and , or residue , but were lost when all four positions were changed; ( ) dependent upon the residues , , , but not residue ; ( ) dependent upon residue , but not residues . , and ; and ( ) dependent upon residues , , , and residue . further epitope mapping with the a-helix mutants demonstrated that a substitution at residue often destroys an epitope not affected by substitution at residue . even conservative substitutions at position were more disruptive than nonconservative changes at residue . residue , while important in defining an mab epitope, had no effect on any ctl epitopes. these results indicate that spatially separate residues in the a-helix and -sheet of the molecule can contribute to the epitope recognized by a given ctl. furthermore, considerable complexity must exist in the spectrum of t cell receptors utilized to recognize hla-az, as ctl clones exhibited distinct fine specificity patterns. to follow the evolution of these class i types, to discern the chief selective pressures on its members and thus indicate the probable functional properties of the antigens. a cosmid library was screened for class i genes. clones were mapped and could be grouped into clusters of contiguous dna spanning , kb. by hybridisation studies, class i genes/ gene fragments could be distinguished. transfection analysis revealed that genes could be expressed as cell surface antigens: two genes, in a block of duplicated dna encoded serologically defined rt .c products, the other genes gave rise to novel class i antigens detected by the xeno-antibody x . using region specific probes, we could detect clear rat homologues of the mouse qa and h- genes, however there were only two rat genes with limited homology to the mouse tla genes. the analysis showed extensive remodelling of the class i region in the evolutionary gap between rat and mouse. while the immunological role of t cells bearing the ap t cell receptor (tcr) has been well characterized, much less is known about the function of t cells bearing the $ tcr. we investigated the role of tcr $cells in the immune response to complete freund's adjuvant (cfa). after immunizing mice with cfa, we observed a greater than -fold increase in the number of tcr $ cells present in lymph nodes draining the sites of immunization, compared to a - -fold increase in the number of tcr ap cells. there were at least three different species of tcr's expressed on these cells in the draining lymph nodes, including two protein products derived from the rearrangements of cyl and cp, and one product derived from cy . % of tcr ys cells from immunized lymph nodes expressed the il- receptor in vivo. and these cells constituted roughly % of the proliferative response of total lymph node t cells to - . tse, et al. (j.lmmun..vol.l , p. . ) have demonstrated that at least three cell types are involved in the t cell proliferative response to antigen, including an antigen specific-t cell, an antigen-presenting cell, and a t cell that is found in unprimed lymph nodes or spleen, which has been termed the recruitable cell. we have utilized their approach of analyzing the slope of log cell number-log response curves to examine whether tcr @ cells can function as "recruitable" cells. we found that tcr ys cells as well as tcr ap cells can function as recruitable cells in this system. these data suggest that tcr $ cells can participate in the immune response without being specific for the antigen. analysis of the membrane associated phosphoprotein profiles of b cells harvested from cultures of resting cells exposed to il- for - hrs reveals the presence of phosphoprotein with an mr in the range - , . destroy the autoradiographic signal from this phosphoprotein suggesting that it is phosphorylated upon tyrosine residues. appearance of this molecule, and lps also apparently fails to result in the presence of a kd structure in the phosphoprotein profiles. anti-il- antibody. , in the cultures prevents the appearance of the kd phosphoprotein. the genes for t n f -a and tnf-p are tandemly arranged on mouse chromosome , with only . kb separating the ' end of the tnf-p mrna from the ' end of the tnf-a mrna. yet, the two genes are independently regulated. in vitro transcription and nuclear run-on experiments indicate that the two genes are transcribed from independent promoters. in macrophages, which express tnf-a but not tnf-p, only the tnf-a promoter is active. in t lymphocytes, which can synthesize both proteins, both promoters are active. activation of either cell type results in a moderate (up to -fold) increase in the level of transcription, while mrna levels increase more than wfoid under the same conditions. interestingly, the tnf-p gene is aanscribed -fold less than the tnf-a gene in t lymphocytes, although the corresponding mrna is more abundant. these results indicate that the accumulation of both tnf-a and tnf-p mrna after cell activation and their relative steady state levels are controlled mostly at a post-transcriptional step. acanomycin d chase experiments reveal that tnf-a mrna stability in macrophages is not significantly altered after activation by lf's, and therefore that stabilization done cannot account for the observed accumulation of tnf-a mrna. in order to examine more closely which elements are required for the regulation of tnf-a and tnf-p mrna abundance, we constructed hybrid genes combining putative control regions of tnf-a and tnf-p with known constitutive control elements. results obtained from the transfection of these hybrid genes into various cell types indicate that elements located both ' and ' of the coding sequence are required for the proper regulation of tnf-a and tnf-p mrna abundance. celiac disease is characterized by small intestinal mucosal injury and malabsorption. disease is activated when a genetically susceptible host ingests wheat gliadin or similar proteins (i.e., prolamins) in rye and barley. d region specif icities -dr and -dqw . class i d-region haplotype associated with celiac disease is extended and also includes genes in the hla-dp subregion. chain gene with those encoding dr and dqw may indicate that the hla haplotype associated with celiac disease exhibits an unusual degree of linkage disequilibrium or, alternatively, that disease susceptibility involves the gene products of more than one hla locus. to characterize possible hla structural variants unique to celiac disease, the polymorphic second exons of the expressed dr, dq and dp genes were amplified from genomic dna of celiac disease patients, and their nucleotide sequences determined. our studies indicate the presence of a unique constellation of d region genes associated with the celiac haplotype, and exclude the presence of a disease specific dr, eq or dp structural gene variant in this disease. disease susceptibility is strongly associated with the hla class i we recently determined that the hla this same population of t cells contains a high frequency % ) of cells which will respond to a given allogeneic mhc protein, or to differences at two other genetic loci termed mls, in conjunction with mhc. we have transfered the a and b chain genes from a pigeon cytochrome c/el specific, alloreactive. and mis' specific murine t cell clone into an unrelated host t cell. we demonstrate that the genes encoding a single a b receptor chain pair can transfer the recogntion of self mhc molecules c m p l e x e d with fragments of antigen, allogeneic mhc molecules. and an m sc (hls- ) encoded determinant. in this case the transfer of antigen specificity and alloreactivity requires a specific a receptor chain combination, whereas mlsc reactivity can be transfered with the chain alone into a recipient expressing a randomly selected a chain. site directed mutagenesis of the ja region has also been performed in an attempt to identify sites involved in the alloreactivity of this t cell clone. in addition. we demonstrate that a single amino acid change in the v-j junction of the a b receptor can alter mhc restriction a s well a s antigen fine specificity. department of genetics, washington university school of medicine, st. louis, i( . the s tumor sublines are variants isolated from a sing parent balb/c tumor which demonstrate locus-specific shut-off of their kd, dd and l genes. four phenotypically different sublines were characterized at the dna and rna level. southern blot analysis indicated that no major chromosomal deletions have occurred, and treatment of the sublines with -azacytidine had no effect on class i expression. between loci are unlikely. none of the repressed class i antigens could be induced with interferon even though the expressed antigens were fully inducible. northern blot analysis revealed message only for the expressed antigens, showing that the repression mechanism is acting at the transcriptional level. rnase protection analysis confirmed this result and demonstrated that the transcriptional repression is exquisitely specific for the kd, dd and ld genes as other "class i-like'' messages are present in. all the cell lines. expressing class i antigens from both fusion partners, but the negative class i antigens originating from the s partner were not expressed. lymphokine gene expression was examined in a panel of short-term murine t lymphocyte clones derived by single-cell micromanipulation from allogeneic mixed leukocyte cultures. about % of clonable t cells, including both cd +cd -and cd -cdw cells, could be expanded for assay at an average of days after cloning. following stimulation with concanavalin a or anti-cd antibody, all clones secreted detectable granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (gi(-csf), interleukin- (il- ) and il- , but cd + clones on average secreted higher 'levels of each lymphokine than cd + clones. clones ( %- %) expressed detectable gm-csf, interferon-y and il- mrna and % expressed il- mrna. when the frequencies of co-expression of any pair of lymphokine mrnas vere determined, all were found to correspond to the values predicted for random assortment of the individual frequencies. for example, among il- -positive clones, also transcribed interferon-y, giving the frequency of double-positive clones expected for random association ( . % . %). expression of the four lymphokine genes therefore segregated independently among the clones and did not allow the division of t cells into subsets vith distinct patterns of lymphokine synthesis. greater than -fold in the adult liver cell line, to fold in the macrophage cell line and just slightly in l-cells. we have subcloned the region ' to the li gene which contains sequences that may be important to regulating expression of the li gene. this region includes a -mer (cctagaaacaagtga) which occurs ' to many ifn?i regulated genes. current research has been directed towards identifying and comparing proteins from nuclear extracts prepared from control and ifn- treated cells which bind to this region (- to - ). this data indicates the li molecule may be expressed in cells not known to be directly involved in the immune response. although there has been considerable interest in the recently identified gamma, delta t cell receptor, relatively little is known as to its function. during our studies of the human immune response to autologous b cell lymphomas, we generated cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctl) specific for tumor idiotype. these ctl lysed only autologous tumor cells and none of a large panel of other autologous and allogeneic cells. inhibitable by anti-idiotypic and anti-immunoglobulin antibodies but not by a panel of classical anti-mhc antibodies. phenotypic analyses showed that these ctl were cd +, cd -, cd -, and express the delta, and presumably gamma! t cell receptor. such ctl can be used to gain new insights into the function of the gamma, delta t cell receptor and t cell recognition of immunoglobulin, and may prove clinically useful in adoptive immunotherapy. tumor lysis was for ebv-induced antigens. furthermore, lcl variant . , which does not express any hla -a, -b. or -c determinants. is killed by cultures primed to lcl-. . antibody blocking experiments suggested that this killing was mediated by t cells, and was not restricted by known class i antigens. depletion of leu positive cells from the effector population did not eliminate cytotoxicity on lcl-. . cold-target blocking studies further suggested that the class -nonexpressing lcl-. and the class i-nonexpressing lcl , share residual deterninant(s) other than hla class i or class i that can restrict cytotoxic t cell responses to ebv-induced antigens. national jewish center for immunology and respiratory medicine, denver, co it is uncertain to what extent lymphokines can be differentially produced by activated primary t cell populations. to determine if il and ifnr were differentially regulated in uncloned human t cells from adults (ad) and neonates (nt), these mrnas vere measured by in situ hybridization after maximal stimulation by ionoaycin and pma. il mrna was detected in . % of total (tl), . % of cd ', % of cd ' cd r-, and . % of cdb' ad t cells, but in none of the tl, cd +, or cd ' nt t cell populations (virtually all nt t cells were cd r'). in contrast, ipnr mrna was found in . % of tl, . % of c d ' , % of cd ' cd r-, and % of cd + ad t cells, but only . % of tl, % of c d ' , and % of cd ' nt t cells. these results agreed with other estimates of il and ifnr production based on ria of cell culture supernatants, rna blotting, and gene transcription assays. in contrast to il and ipnr, il was expressed in similar amounts by ad and nt t cell fractions, as well as the ad cd ' cd r' and cd r' subsets. thus, the capacity for increased il and ifnr production by ad t cells appears attributable, in large part, to the postnatal acquisition of the cd r' subset (putative memory t cell population). aowever, additional mechanisms exist which act transcriptionally to limit il production by both neonatal and adult t cells. such selective expression may be important for restricting the potentially pleiotropic effects of certain lymphokines t o appropriate responder cells. we observed significant inhibition (> % at ng/ml) of the presentation of wova and of ova - by the anti-ap - peptide mab's. exhibited significant inhibition. peptide mab's. after incubation with antigen +/-mab, indicate that the inhibition occurs at the level of antigen presentation. dg , was also observed for the anti-p chain peptide mab's and to a lesser extent by the anti-a chain peptide mab's. peptide sequences are capable of interfering with antigen presentation, in vitro. supported by nih grant, ai- . the ovalbumin (ova) i-ad restricted t cell hybridoma, do l. was used to the anti-i-ad mab, mkd , also much less inhibition was observed with the anti-% -experiments with glutaraldehyde fixation of the b d.p cells before or inhibition of i-ad allorecognition by the t cell hybridoma. these results indicate that mab's generated against class i rijllinghoff, institute for clinical microbiology, university of erlangen-nurnberg, erlangen, f.r.g. and the *institute for clinical immunology and rheumatology, university of erlangen-niirnberg, erlangen. f.r.g. recently we have shown that cloned l . major-specific l / t-helper cells of type (th cells), when stimulated with antigen, are able to induce polyclonal b-cell proliferation ( ). we here present evidence demonstrating that this process is dependent on a direct cellcell interaction between t-and b-cells. which in the effector phase, i.e. during stimulation of the b-cells by activated t-cells, can be mediated by a mechanism other than cognate interaction. this conclusion is derived from experiments, in which highly purified resting b-cells were polyclonally stimulated by l / t-cells triggered by an anti-t monoclonal antibody, in the absence of antigen. the triggering process was independent of the presence of the fc part of the antibody and occurred in cultures devoid of macrophages. thus, the well established cognate recognition does not appear to be the only way of b-cell induction by t-helper cells of type . studies show that a proportion of the peripheral blood cd ' t lymphocytes do not express cd or cd and are called double negative t cells. they normally have a tcr. however, another population of double negative t cells exists that expresses the a@ heterodimer. w e have purified and expanded such a population isolated from the peripheral blood of a healthy individual and studied i t s phenotypical and functional characteristics. the c e l l s are cd ' cd -cd -, positive for wt and negative for the nk markers. they express a and p mrna b u t lack ymrna. from surface iodinated cells were precipitated w i t h monoclonal pf two closely running bands ( & kd) . functional studies demonstrate that they proliferate to anticd and pha, t h i s response was blocked by cyclosporin a. there was no nk lysis b u t anticd induced l y s i s of target cells. the cells responded t o il- and il- as previously shown for other t c e l l s , b u t also t o il- , a lymphokine thought t o affect mainly stem cells and not previously shown t o stiaulate growth of mature cells. long term growth of these c e l l s was also maintained by these cytokines . roberto biassoni , silvano ferrini , rafck p. sekaly , and eric . long , laboratory of immunogenetics, national institute f allergy and infectious diseases, nih, beth-md , and istituto nazionale per la ricerca sul cancro , genova, italy. cd -cells grown in vim in the presence of il- acquire the ability to l~s e a wide variety of tumor cells in an mhc-unrestricted manner. we have previously shown that cd - clones expressed the cd epsilon gene but no functional transcript from cd gamma, cd delta, tcr alpha, tcr beta and tcr gamma genes. this result suggested that these cd - ' cells represented an early stage in t cell differentiation. to test for expression of the tcr delta gene in these cells, rna from a panel of cd - ' clones and from three highly enriched populations was hybridized with several dna fragments of the delta locus. abundant transcripts were detected with a c delta probe and a j delta probe in out of clones and in all three populations. at least four different transcripts were present with sizes similar to those found in cd ' tcr gamma-delta' cells. however, the tcr delta transcripts in cd - ' cells are most likely derived from unrearranged genes because no rearrangement could be detected in dna from an enriched population using a j delta probe, and because these aanscripts hybridized to a dna fragment corresponding to the unrearranged genomic sequence '-upstream of j delta . expression of unrearranged tcr delta genes in cd -cells provides further evidence that these cells belong to the t cell lineage. functional capabilities and by differential release of either il or il upon activation. we have produced a new monoclonal antibody to cd which has allowed us to separate normal murine cd + cells into two populations based on the density of expression of cd epitope. the separated populations seem to be analogous of subsets found in cloned t cell lines. cd + t cells with high density of cell surface cd after polyclonal activation produce il and mrna encoding ifw and il . it does not produce il or il mrna. cd low density population on the other hand transcribes mrna for il and secretes il protein. data will be presented to demonstrate that the two subsets of normal cd + cells also differ in their proliferative response to mitogenic stimuli and to exogenously added growth factors. the substitution of v to l at was the only change that could be discriminated by of allospecific ctl lines. suggesting that those ctl lines recognize a . plus a peptide whose presentation andlor binding is affected by the v to l substitution in the floor of the peptide binding site. in contrast, the l to w substitution at (but not the other substitutions) abolished the ability of the a molecule to present the viral peptide to out of peptide-specific a . -restricted ctl lines, suggesting that this substitution alters the presentation of the influenza matrix peptide but does not inhibit the ability of the peptide to bind to the a molecule. although y tcr.s have a great potential for diversity, it remains to be determined whether this potential is realized in terms of expressed y tcrs. preliminary studies in several laboratories have indicated that y tcrs expressed in earlg t h r c y t e s and adult epithelial tissues are more restricted in diversity com ared to adult tc expressin thymocytes. we have derived a panel of cloned dendritic epigrmal t cells (jetc, lines and ybridomas that express at least three types of y receptors -c , cy and c n . immunoprecipitation, northern and southern blot analyses, and sequence anazses of l gt cloned cdna or olymerase chain reaction ( k r ) amplified cdna segments have been used to anal ze in detail &e extent of diversit in the expressed y and chains and whether restricted airin o?y and chains occurs. our resu& indicate that for this panel of cloned cell lines and ! irkg is nonrandom and that variability in certain types of receptors appears to be restricted. %owever, we have observed significant chain diversity in these cells that is obtained by the use of multiple v-regions, and n-region and junctional diversity. we are investigating whether the observed y and chain pairing, and pattern of chain diversity are present in other $tcr bearing cells or whether they are only characteristic of detc. activation of ctl precursors from murine unprimed spleen cells with ril- or ril- results in distinct lytic spectra, depending on which lymphokine is present. we have used allo-stimulation in limiting dilution analysis with subsequent testing on an allo-specific target (a ) and an mhcdeficient, non-specific target (rle). in the presence of ril- exclusively allo-specific ctl are generated, while ril- supports a proximately equal numbers of precursors that k~ll a and rie targets. dose response analysis of ril- -supported killing activity indicates that the lytic spectrum is independent of the amount of ril- used, and therefore this il- effect is intrinsic in its activity on unprimed spleen cells. mixing experiments indicate that ril- can partially override the effect of il- on the generation of non-specific killer cells. split well analysis and cold target inhibition experiments are in rogress to ascertain the actual proportion of specific killer cells which can be generated with ril- . be. are also testing the ability of cofactors, such as il- and il- , to optimize the response of il- generated ctl. we conclude that il- , not il- , must be used when ctl are generated from unprimed spleen cells in mice. t r a n s c r i p t s i n y/ tcr populations. i n t e r e s t i n g l y , these same v genes, as well as a further+crosshybridizing v gene previously designated va . , are expressed by peripheral a& tcr c e l l s as . kb tcra transcripts. these data suggest t h a t b a -dn th represent a developmentally unique subset i n which both v and vg segments are non-randomly expressed. furthermore they i n d i c a t e t h a t there i s considerable overlap between the v a and v gene repertoires . indianapolis, in in order to detect the small amounts of lymphokines generated in vivo following antigen stimulation, we developed a co-culture system which allows for detection of il- / , il- /csf and tnf from ln cells stimulated in vivo with picryl chloride (pcl). utilizing thb system in combination with facs analysis and receptor binding studies, we examined the production of these lymphokines in primary and secondary immune responses. during a primary immune response, the production of il- was not readily detectable on dl, peaked on d and was gone by d . at no time were we able to demonstrate the presence of il- . alternatively, the presence of il- /csf and tnf was w i l y detected on dl, but olso peaked on d . in comparison to primary responses, secondary immunization lead to at least two alteraticns. (i) peak production of all lymphoki es shifted towards dl. ( ) although most lymphokines did not demonstrate increasea in the amount produced/lo cells, the amount of lymphokine generated/ln was vastly increased due to an increased number of cells. utilizing single and dual color facs analysis we also examined the ln cells for alterations in t cell subpopulations. during the course of the primary response: (i) the percentage of thy i+ and l t + cells decreased until d and then began to recover, ( ) the percentage of thy-i+, t -,t -cells peaked at the time of greatest lymphokine production (i.e.-d ) and ( ) the il- receptor was expressed solely on thy-i+ cells, was detected on both t + and t + subsets and peaked on d . most of these alterations also occurred during the secondary response, but their timecoune was shifted so that maximal effects occurred earlier (e.g., dl). finally. the maximal binding of radiolabeled il- by the ln cells following both primary and secondary sensitization correlated with the expression of the il-zr as detected by facs analysis. in addition, binding of radiolabeled il- demonstrated similar patterns except for the detection of significant binding on dl. these results demonstrate that (i) an ordered timecourse of lymphokine production occurs in vivo following exposure to antigen and ( ) the secondary immune response to pcl is characterrd by an accelerated tempo of lymphokine production, rather than an increased level of lymphokine production/lo cells. activation as direct g-protein activation by a f pi-hydrolysis using phorbol diester stimulation of pkc restores the inhibi$$ble phenotype and the ability to upregulate c-fos. even more interesting, sig-linked ca responses by vs . -c . are equivalent to those observed in the wildtype wehi- . resul$g suggest that contrary to current thought, sig-generated signals may not be coupled to ca fluxes via inositol phospholipid hydrolysis. thus, vs . -c . is a new and powerful tool with which to analyze signalling through sig at the molecular level. unlike the wildtype, crosslinking of sigm on vs . -c . did the signaling defect in vs . -cl. -appears to be proximal to phospholipase c triggers pi-hydrolysis and bypassing these latter lmmunogenicity c analysis of t cell receptor chains from adult cd -,cd -thymocytes mark w. moore, i. nicholas crispe and michael j. bevan, department of immunology, research institute of scripps clinic, la jolla, ca . the role of tcr genes in t cell development has not been determined. to extend out understanding of the repertoire of tcr expression, we prepared a cdna library from cd -,cd -adult balb/c thymocytes and cloned and sequenced tcrq genes from this cdna library. we found that clones were transcripts of the unrearranged c , gene and that clones terminated in the j , region. nine of the remaining clones were v , -j c genes and five of these were in frame. only one clone corresponded to c and was v -jy c jofned'in frame. sds-page analysis of the -chain proteins from the surface of both balb/c anzcdbl) adult cd -,cd -thymocytes did not detect the , mw vy c protein, but did detect the , mw v c protein. these results suggest that despite the abundanc$%f pull-length, functionally joined, v c transchpts in the thymocyte subset, the protein product is not expressed on the cell surface as the prehfcted , mw protein. finally, our analysis of the v-j jointing of the genes reveals both flexibility at the v-j junction and extensive n-region nucleotide addition that lead to diversity of the predicted protein sequence. il in response to the same stimuli. e identification of these two subsets of cd ' helper cells is mostly based on studies performed with long-term cultured t cell lines and it is not clear whether these two subsets exist in vivo and represent distinct lineages of t cells. in particular, the frequency, tissue distribution and ontogeny of cells capable of secreting il in vivo is not known. these studies have been hampered by the fact that freshly isolated t cells from unprimed animals failed to secrete detectable amounts of ila and il when stimulated in vitro by lectins or alloantigens, whereas iu is readily detectable in these same cultures. data presented here indicate that freshly isolated t cells from unprimed animals can be induced to produce il in a receptor-de endent, antigen-independent manner upon stimulation by anti-cd antibodies. our results also stow that only cd ' and not cdst cells can be induced to secrete il and that cross-linking of the receptor is required for o timal activity. we believe that this approach will be useful in identifying in vivo cells recomittefto the th pathway and study their ontogeny, activation requirements and tissue distriiution. hlb, brussels, belgium. we have studied the murine tcr repertoire against the c-terminus of cytochrome c in association with certain alleles of the mhc class i molecule, eakepk (iek) and eakepb (ieb). for mice possessing these alleles, the majority of responsive t cells utilize one member of the variable val gene family in conjunction with a limited set of vp genes. as an extension of these studies, we have examined ie specific, alloreactive hybridomas derived from ie non-expressing (eab) cytochrome c non-responder mice to determine their usage of va and vp genes. tion assay showed that fourteen utilized the same val gene segment used by the majority of cytochrome c specific, ie restricted t cells and eight utilized a closely related val gene that also is associated with this antigen response. element most commonly used by cytochrome c-specific t cells was not found among the alloreactive hybridomas tested, @ genes less frequently used in the cytochrome response were expressed by seven of the alloreactive hybridomas whose va segments were defined by rnase protection. determining recognition of ie molecules both in mhc-restricted, antigen specific immune responses and in alloreactive responses. the t-helper cells of seven mouse strains, representing class i haplotypes (ias, ia , iab, iakiek, iadied) were responsive to immunization and restimulation with parent peptide. the ied determinant was shown to be a presenting element by monoclonal antibody blocking and by use of l-cell-transfectants as af'cs to purified t cells and to t cell hybridomas. a series of overlapping synthetic peptides identified two minimal t-cell sites within the parent peptide: mice expressing ia and ie responded to a fragment at the n-terminus of the parent peptide (site ) while mice expressing only ia responded to a distinct but overlapping fragment at the c-terminus (site ) . these minimal sites identified in vitro could be used to immunize mice in vivo in an mhc-restricted manner. the human tcr locus is strategically located within the atcr complex between the cluster of va/v region and the ja segments. which can be spliced to ca in pre t cells, separates from the ja segments. pulse field gel mapping as we as molecular cloning link diversity (ds), j g , c, and tea within kb. considerable tcr diversity is generated despite the predominant use of one v and j segment. d and d are and bp long, are frequently recombine as d, /d ? and reveal exonucleolytic trimning with extensive "n" segment addition. specialized ' and ' deleting elements, rec and p j a , separate the locus from the a locus. cells with rec/$b ja recombinations comprise most deletion events although rec recombines with other major acceptor sites in fetal and post-neonatal thymic dna. the ' deleting element ( rec) is evolutionarily conserved in the mouse and functional comparisons are underway. delete the locus may prove to be the pivotal event establishing separate y and ae lineages. to study the mechanism of t-cell tolerance, transgenic mice were generated that expressed the mlsa reactive t-cell receptor (tcr) o-chain vb on - % of peripheral t-cells. in transgenic mice bearing mlsd, the numbers of high tcr expressing thymocytes and of thy . + peripheral t-cells were reduced. the cd /cd ratio of peripheral t-cells was decreased fourfold compared to negative littermates. both mlsa and mlsb tcr &transgenic mice were able to mount a t-cell dependent antibody response against viral antigens whereas the capacity to generate alloreactive and virusspecific cytotoxic t-cells was impaired in tcr &transgenic mlsa, but not in transgenic mlsb mice. rna analysis and immunof luorescence with tcr vb-specific mab further revealed, that the expression of endogenous tcr -genes in these mice was suppressed. tolerogen-reactive lymphocytes, as measured in the mlr, in spite of their long-term acceptance of a skin graft bearing the tolerated antigens. lymphokine production by mlr+ tolerant lymphocytes is different from that of syngeneic normal lymphocytes. normal lymphocytes produce only il- in primary response to tolerogen, while tolerant lymphocytes produce il- and il- . using limiting dilution analysis, we have to estimated the frequencies of pil- and pil- (precursor) cells in these cultures. after primary k vitro stimulation, normal responders have a low but measurable frequency of pil- cells, while tolerant responders have a much higher pil- frequency. however, following subsequent & restimulations, the pil- frequency of normal responders rises and begins to approach that of the tolerant responders, such that the two populations are indistinguishable based on pil- frequencies following the third round of in vitro stimulation. these data suggest that the high frequency of il- producers (presumably t,, cells) among the tolerant lymphocytes resembles unexpectedly a "primed" state, rather than "unprimed"as in nontolerant responders (where th , dominate the early response). the existence of "primed" t cells in phenotypically tolerant animals raises the possibility that precocious activation of tr (by neonatal exposure to tolerogen?) suppresses the later emergence of t,,, which would be expected to contain the cells responsible for graft rejection. a large number of cd + t-cell clones, obtained from peripheral blood t lymphocytes by direct limiting dilution, allowed us to address the question whether functional heterogeneity exists within the human cd + t-cell subset. six out of cd + clones were able to lyse daudi or p cells in the presence of anti-cd antibodies. the remaining cd + tcell clones tested did not acquire this cytotoxic capacity during a culture period of weeks. in the absence of anti-cd mab, no lytic activity against daudi. p and k target cells was observed under normal culture conditions. these two types of cd + t cells showed high reactivity with anti-cdw ( b ) mab and no reactivity with anti-cd r ( ) mab. the cd + clones without anti-cd mediated cytotoxic activities (th ) consistently showed a higher expression level of cd antigens. th cd + clones did produce il- , ifngamma and tnf-alpha.beta. whereas the th t-cell clones produced minimal amounts of il- . ifn-gamma and tnp-alpha. beta in response to anti-cd mab and pma. not all cd + clones did release il- , but there was no correlation with cytotoxic activity. moreover, as compared to the th cd + clones, tr cd + clones proliferated moderately in response to anti-cd mab. however, anti-cd mab induced proliferation of only the th cd + t-cell clones was enhanced by anti-cd mab. both cd + subsets provided help for polyclonal b-cell activation with anti-cd mab. our data suggest that the human cd + subset, in analogy to the murine system, comprises two functionally distinct t-cell subpopulations. in the mouse, when la antigens are isolated immunochemically, the predominant species isolated are the isotypic matched pairs, aaap and eaep. however, when la ap dimer expression is studied using an l cell transfection model, it is found that the isotype-mismatched dimer apdea is readily expressed at the cell surface. these results suggest that differences in assembly andl or transport of different la pairs may be most readily visualized in a competitive environment where multiple distinct la chains are available. to investigate this possibility, the relative efficiency of inter-and intra-isotypic dimer formation and expression was evaluated using a sequential l cell transfection system. l cells already expressing an ap dimer on the cell surface (apdea or apdaad) were supertransfected with a third la gene (aad or ea, respectively). synthesis of this second a or p protein led to competition for the unique partner chain. individual clones were scored for cell surface expression of the distinct dimers (e.g., apdea vs epdea or apdaad vs apdea) using facs analysis with chain specific monoclonal antibodies. in addition, each species of mrna was quantitated by northern blot hybridization using bcus specific probes. our results indicate that in the h- d haplotype. isotype-matched dimers are expressed with - x the efficiency of isotype-mismatched dimers. this result suggests that, regardless of the cell type studied, if each of the four murine la genes is expressed at equivalent levels, intraisotypic dimers will be expressed to the virtual exclusion of the interisotypic dimers. however, if chain synthesis asymmetry occurs, the isotype mismatched pairs may be expressed at immunologically relevant levels. differential we have identified a series of discrete stages among the cd -double negatives which seem to form a sequence, with tcr gene rearrangement and rna expression gradually progressing, but with potential for expansion and repopulation of irradiated thymuses diminishing along the series. on this pathway cd must be expressed late or after the acquisition of cd and cd . cell cycle analysis shows the highest rates of cell division to be among the rsa+ il- r-pgp- -population which probably precedes the transition to cd +cd + and tcr expression. thus it seems unlikely that tcr/antigen interactions play a role in cellular events occurring among the double negative cells which lead on to mainstream t-cell development. egr-l is a murine early growth factor inducible gene which encodes a protein with zinc fingers. its expression was investigated in murine b-lymphocytes stimulated through their antigen receptor (sig) with anti-recptor antibodies (anti-ig) . rapid (by minutes) upregulatlon of egr-l mrna expression was observed at doses of anti-ig sufficient to drive the majority of go cells into cell cycle. agonists and inhibitors of protein kinase c (pkc) showed that expression was coupled to the pkc component of receptor immunoglobulin transmembrane signalling. interestingly, signalling through sig on the murine b lymphoma wehi- did not upregulate egr-l expression even though similar signalling pathways are associated with this receptor in these cells. southern analysis showed that egr-l is not deleted or translocated in this cell line. importantly, cell growth and proliferation of wehi- is inhibited by anti-ig stimulation suggesting a relationship for egr-l expression and differential processing of receptor ig signals. this notion is further supported by the finding that murine b lymphomas whose proliferation is not inhibited by anti-ig showed receptor immunoglobulin coupled egr-l expression. reeulation of exdression of a class wc transeene. dinah s . the expression of the transgene product. the patterns of expression of the transgene parallels that observed in situ, indicating that regulatory elements necessary for normal patterns of expression are contained within the injected kb dna segment, and that trans acting factors involved in its regulation function between species. included among these elements are those specifying preferential expression in b cells relative to t cells. in vivo treatment of transgenic mice with a/@-interferon results in increased expression of the transgene in a number of tissues. the response parallels that observed for the endogenous h-zkb, but differs markedly from qa- . analysis of the chromatin structure of the transgene reveals a single constitutive dnase i hypersensitive site present in both spleen and thymus, which is not altered by interferon. both a novel negative and positive regulatory elements have been identified in the 'flanking region of the transgene. the negative regulatory element reduced the activity of both the homologous class i promoter and a heterologous viral promoter. in vivo competition experiments indicated that the functions of the positive and negative elements are mediated by distinct cellular trans-acting factors. the negative regulatory element requires the presence of a positive regulatory element to function. this interaction between elements represents a novel mechanism for regulating gene expression. mcdevitt. department of microbiology and immunology, stanford university school of medicine, stanford, ca . published data show that encephalitogenic h-zu murine t cell clones with specificity for the n-terminal eleven amino acid peptide of myelin basic protein display a restricted fine specificity when tested on substituted analogs of the native peptide. for example, substitution of alanine at certain positions in the peptide totally abolishes the response of each clone (acha-orbea et al.. . cell : ) . recent experiments also have shown that the ability of some peptide analogs to bind to h-zu i-a gene products does not always correlate with their ability to stimulate the t cell clones (see accompanying abstract by david c. wraith and hugh . mcdevitt). this suggests that h- u mice may lack a t cell repertoire capable of recognizing these peptides complexed to h- u i-a gene products. to test this possibility, h- u mice were immunized with a panel of peptide analogs, as well as the native peptide. the in vitro t cell proliferative response to each of the peptides then was measured. the results show that in vivo immunogenicity of the peptide analogs also does not strictly correlate with their capacity to stimulate the t cell clones. in this way, the polyclonal t cell repertotre of h-zu mice for the myelin basic protein peptide analogs was examined, and could be compared with the i-a binding characteristics of the peptides. terms of antigen and mhc recognition. this response involves a limited repertoire of t cells which crossreact on species variants of the antigen. in addition, t cells specific for the antigen in association with syngeneic mhc can recognize antigen on similar allogeneic mhc molecules. the groupin of clones by functional phenotypes defined by these crossreactivities allowed us to corrcfate tcr gene usage with either antigen or mhc recognition. some of the pigeon cytochrome c-specific clones within one functional phenotype use receptors that differ by as few as two amino acid residues. other clones e y s s very different tcrs but exhibit similarities in antigen/mhc reco nition. the efect of these tcr differences on recognition was assessed using a pane? of anti en analogs with single amino acid substitutions presented on different mhc molecufes. each clone exhibited a unique pattern of res onse to the antigen analog panel, even clones with very similar receptors. also, eace residue in the antigenic region of the peptide was critical for interaction with at least one t cell receptor. therefore, the antigen must either be a linear molecule with each residue available to interact with the tcr or be able to assume several conformations to interact with mhc and the tcr. lmmunogenicity c thy- + cd + ly- (b )+ cd -cd -tcrx- ' helper cells. anne i. we have found that these cells can be preferentially stimulated to proliferate when cocultured with the b lymphoma, ch . one to % of nylon wool non-adherent, ia-, jlld-, and cd -lymph node cells from normal unimmunized mice have the phenotype thy-l', cd ', cd -. and cd -. these cells proliferate when co-cultured with a syngeneic surface ig' lymphoma, ch , even in the absence of any added antigen, mitogen, or fetal calf serum. prior to stimulation we find that approximately % of thy . ' cd ' cd -cd -express the marker ly- (b ), however after culture with ch the majority of cells with this phenotype express the marker ly- (b ). after ch dependent proliferation the ly- (b )' t cells are able to provide help for secretion of ig by fresh ch b cells. surface labelling and precipitation of t cell receptor molecules reveals that most of the thy- ' cd ' ly- (b )* cd -cd -cells express tcr(r- ). furthermore, cd precipitation shows that as many as four different - heterodimers are utilized within the entire responding population. this suggests that a heterogeneous population of double negative tcri- cells are involved in the response to ch . college of kedicine at east tennessee state university, johnson city, tn interferon-producing (t ) and interleukin (il ) producing (t ) clones were assayed for their ability to diregtly induce cytostatic activity in macro:hages generated from splenic myeloid precursors (m -c). in the presence, but not in the absence, of antigen, t clones activated the m -c to inhibit the growth of p tumor cells in vitro. th cjlones were not able to activate such effector activity in the i -c. effectively present antigen to the t clones as evidenced by the proliferation of t cells cultured with antigen in the pfesence, but not in the absence, of m -c. thereyore, although both t and t were activated by cognate interaction with antigen presenting (ba) or nippostrongylus brasiliensis (nb). spleen cells from these mice were cloned at limiting dilution with alloantigen stimulation, and every two weeks, lk production in response to con a was measured. clones derived from, and stimulated with, cells from unimmunized mice initially tended to secrete low lk levels, with few clearly defined th or th clones. by days after cloning, some clones had acquired th or th patterns. cfa, ba and nb-imnunized mice gave rise to clones that were mostly th or th even at early times. cfa and ba immunizations induced almost exclusively th clones, whereas nb induced more th clones. these results are consistent with a model in which resting, previously unstimulated t cells produce low amounts of lks, and progress through stage(s) where they secrete both th and th lks before finally differentiating into th and th cells. the results with cfa, ba and nb-primed mice suggest that this process occurs in vivo as well as in vitro. strains as carriers of melioidosis antigens to the immune system, deja tanphaichitra, mahidol university, p.o. box - , bangkok , thailand the attenuated gale mutant, salmonella typhi strain, tyzla, served as the recipient in a conjugal dna transfer experiment. conjugal dna transfer was obtained by the mating procedure on an appropriate blood agar medium. were examined serologically. one selected strain was found to have the serological characteristics of the recipient s . typhi, tyfla strain and also expressed the pseudomonas the donor strain was a pseudomonas pseudomallei mu . the resulting antigen clones were repurified by restreaking on the medium and pseudomallei antigen. the s. typhi transconjugant strain is due to the presence of the pseudomonas pseudomallei plasmid. a group of subjects when received four doses of this bivalent vaccine strain in this study it appears that pseudomonas pseudomallei synthesis in developed antibodies against pseudomonas pseudomallei up to %. pseudomallei, an intracellular pathogen, produces a characteristic antigen probably to be plasmid coded, we considered that the gale salmonella typhi tyzla oral vaccine strain, highly effective against typhoid fever, might be modified so as to be protective also against melioidosis due to pseudomonas pseudomallei. terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (tdt) is a lymphoid-specific nuclear enzyme present in early lymphocytes. to investigate the regulation of tdt gene expression, pre-b and pre-t cells were treated with phorbol -myristate -acetate (pma) o r three analogs, and tdt steady-state mrna levels were determined by northern blot analysis. treatment of early lymphocytes with pma results in a rapid and reversible decline in steady-state tdt mrna levels within six hours. this rapid decline can be blocked by pretreatment of the cells with a protein kinase c inhibitor, implicating protein kinase c activation in the decline of tdt mrna. nuclear run-off studies demonstrate that tdt transcription is rapidly down-regulated within minutes after pma treatment, indicating that this regulation occurs mainly at the level of transcription. furthermore, cycloheximide blocks the decline in tdt in rna showing that new protein synthesis is required for transcriptional inactivation. the nucleoprotein gene from the influenza virus a/nt/ / was stably cloned into the attenuated aroa-strain of salmonella typhimurium sl . nucleoprotein purified from pnp - was tested for the ability to generate virus-specific immunity. immunization with recombinant derived nucleoprotein induged immunity to all type a influenza tested but not against type b viruses. cd helper t cells were primed but no evidence was found for priming of class i restricted ctc. mice immunized with recombinant nucleoprotein were protected against a subsequent challenge of influenza virus. the information obtained from the study of the immunity and protection generated by the purified recombinant protein was then used to design experiments to investigate the possibility of using the attenuated salmonella vector to deliver the nucleoprotein molecule to the immune system by the parenteral or enteral routes. we characterized the extrachrom- circular i n i s in -day-fetal and -week-old m u r i n e thpmcytes and -week-old m u r i n e splenocytes. f popllation of circular chias was clone into the kgtll phase vector. we screened ca. tna cl-by plaque hybridizations with all far kirds of tcr gene probes derived from jal , val , db , db , jyl , j and loci. cut of , cna cl-from fetal and -week-ld thymocytes, hybridized with tcr aprobes and hybridized with tcr &probes. positive cl-with tcr yand probes were to in fetal thymocyte erived library, but few in -week-old thymocyte. of fetal tcr clcnes analyzed, cl-had dd or vd reciprocal joints and clcne had vd ar dd d i n g joint. relative frequencies of circular dna clones for four different tcr genes are consistent with the order of the expression of the genes the t cell developnent. of , tna cl- signalling could be studied. llzmambxane signalling was maasured by ability to t?z nslocate fkc frcrm the cytcplasa to the nw leus after surface i-a was banrl by a or p dxdn specific monoclcnal antibody. i(pmwing either or amino rids fmn the a chain cvtoplasnic (cy) damin did not affect the ability of tkse i-a r m l d e s to trarslocate pkc to the nucleus. normal splenic b c e l l s were rendered non-responsive t o subsequent challenge w i t h lps, as measured by a decreased a b i l i t y t o generate antibody forming c e l l s (afc), by incubation overnight ( - hours) w i t h ug/ml a n t i -i g . both i n t a c t and f(ab)', a n t i -i g , as well as monoclonal anti-igm (bet and b- - ) , were able t o induce c e l l non-responsiveness t o subsequent lps challenge, suggesting t h a t sig/fcr i n t e r a c t i o n s are not necessary i n the induction o f lps non-responsiveness. i n contrast, induction o f nonresponsiveness t o subsequent challenge w i t h fitc-prucella abortus required i n t a c t a n t i -i g . the a b i l i t y o f mitogenic a n t i -i g (rab f(ab)', o r - - northern blot analysis and bioassay data were used to analyze separate lymphokines as well as the il- receptor (murine tac). northern blot comparison of fresh and primedt enriched rna revealed that primed t cells produced -fold more lymphokine than the fresh t cells. the only lymphokine that showed equal amounts of mrna for both fresh and primed t cells was il- . a time course of fresh and primed t + cell lymphokine production was also analyzed. the primed cells produced a short burst of lymphokine mrna that peaked between . and hr after con a stimulation and declined after hr. the fresh t cells produced a longer burst of lymphokine mrna that peaked - hr after stimulation. the il- receptor @- r) mrna time course from activated primed cells showed different kinetics than lymphokine mrna. this suggested that molecular regulation of the il- r might be different than lymphokine regulation. to further examine molecular regulation in the primed t cells polysome profiles were evaluated for lymphokines, l r , and other cellular genes. the recently developed method of gene amplification by the polymerase chain reaction (pcr) has proven to be particularly suited for the analysis of t cell receptor (tcr) genes. we adopted existing methods for the preparation of cytoplasmic rna from as little as cells and used this material as template for first strand c-dna synthesis. pcr amplification of this c-dna, using v-and c-specific oligonucleotide primers yielded enough material to produce single-stranded dna in a second pcr which could then be sequenced without cloning. in case of unknown v-usage, the pcr was employed for screening for v-beta elements by sequential reactions with different v-beta specific primers. we have used this method to reinvestigate the h- b restricted cytotoxic t cell response to tnp in c b mice. beta chain sequences of ctl clones obtained by direct cloning of immune spleen cells were compared to sequences of clones obtained by cloning of individual short-term in vitro ctl lines. it was found that a) in vitro bulk-stimulations reduced the heterogeneity of the beta-chain responses to tnp, b) similarities between different tcr-beta-chains concentrated on the usage of certain jb-elements ( jb . , . , . ) rather than v-region or nid-region sequences, and c) the majority of jb . containing beta-chains was associated with alpha-chains expressing v-segments of the val family. these expression of genes which encode the t cell antigen receptor is cenval to the generation of the t cell repemire. our labomtory has been investigating genes for both the alpha and beta chains of this receptor in inbred strains of runus norvqicus (the laboratory rat), a species in which several autoimmune disease models have been developed. and which is used extensively in transplantation studies. using genomic southern blots and mouse probes specific for five different v a subfamilies, we have estimated the size of the v a repertoire in ten inbred strains of rat. results show a significant increase in the size of one subfamily and suggest increases in two others in all ten strains. the rat v a l subfamily has about twice as many members as the mouse, while the va and vu subfamilies, depending upon the enzyme used, show a similiar duplication. the va and va subfamilies have a comparable number of members in both species. these data are most easily explained by a single duplication event in the rat invoking at least one and perhaps three subfamilies, but not encompassing the entire v a locus. this implies that the val subfamily (perhaps together with va and va subfamilies) is regionally clustered and not interspersed with either the va or va subfamily. based on restriction fragment length polymorphisms, we find evidence for six distinct v a haplotypes in the ren strains tested. we have also cloned eight unique germline v a l gene segments. one of these has been sequenced. and has a coding region % identical to the most closely related mouse v a l sequence. this degree of relatedness is similiar to ra#nouse vg homologues. which share % nucleotide sequence similarity. we are using these clones to generate angle copy probes from flankiig regions to further map the v a l locus. current approaches to mhc-peptide binding studies require either large quantities of highly purified mhc protein and/or the use of sophisticated detection apparatus. i n order to simplify detection of peptide-mhc interactions we have investigated the use of photosensitive-crosslinkers. two reagents have been successfully tested. a benzophenone derivative of peptide - from rat myelin basic protein (rmbp) was only effective after the introduction of a glycine spacer residue between peptide and crosslinker. an azido-nitro-benzoyl derivative of peptide . , a heteroclitic analog of rmbp - ( ). had a high affinity and bound specifically to the peptide binding site. the . photoaffinity probe has been used to test the binding properties of other analogues of rmbp - and is currently being used to define (a) the kinetics, (b) ph and (c) temperature dependence of the binding event. this particular photoaffinity conjugate retains both the mhc binding and biological properties of the original peptide and is helping us to define the roles of "determinant" versus "t cell repertoire" selection in the mhc linked autoimmune response to mbp the antigen-specific t cell repertoire is diverse in its ability to recognize a wide universe of foreign antigens. this t cell repertoire is composed of a set of clones each of which is specific for a given foreign antigen. therefore the precursor frequency of t cells specific for any give foreign antigen is extremely low. however, two prominent exceptions to this general rule exist, and these are the t cells present at high precursor frequency which are specific for foreign hhc products or for the products of the minor lymphocyte stimulatory (mls) genes in the mouse. the present studies were undertaken in order to examine factors involved in t cell repertoire formation by assessing the relationship between t cell repertoire for conventional foreign antigens and for mls products. studies indicate a striking degree of overlap between the set of t cells specific for pigeon cytochrome c and the set of t cells specific for mlsc gene products. demonstrate that the basis for this overlap lies in the predominant expression of one tcr vp gene, vbs, by those t cells which recognize mlsc. involvement of specific tcr afl dimers in recognition of mlsc and further suggest that t cell reactivity to these gene products may play an important role in establishing the t cell repertoire for foreign antigens. conclude that, rather than destruction of some essential apc structure, ecdi fixation prevents the apc from actively responding during the encounter with the t cell. this results in a failure to express new structures (probably located on the apc plasma membrane) that appear to be essential for stimulating t cell proliferation. these structures are distinct from ia or il . the induction of these structures during t-apc interaction occurs in six hours, requires protein synthesis, and can be elicited by il , il or lps, but not ifn-gamma. in the absence of these induced structures, the apc stimulates a partial t cell response, il release, but the t cells fail to proliferate. these induced structures on the apc may be either adhesion molecules that stabilize the t-apc interaction, or they may provide additional stimuli to the t cell. were not c m n t o the three s t r a i n s o f mice (balb/c, regions , , , and ; c h/he, regions , , , , ', and '; and c bl/ , regions , , , and ). immunisation with type i collagen (cii) leads to development of arthritis in mice with certain mhc haplotypes and is associated with an immune response against cii. we have been studying the t-cell response in the arthritis susceptible strain dbm (h- q) . analysing the proliferative response in cultures of lymph node cells from immunised mice a s well as t-cell lines and clones established from such cultures it was found t h a t li the t-cell response after immunisation with heterologous cii was preferentially directed against foreign determinants on the cii molecule with little o r no crossreactivity against autologous cii. ' both the primary response and the reactivity of established lines and clones were directed against the cbll fragment of the cii molecule, using c b l l fragments prepared from chick, bovine or rat cii. / pepsin present in cii preparations after using pepsin digestion for solubilisation of the collagen is strongly immunogenic even in very small amounts and it was therefore necessary to use cii prepared from lathyritic cartilage without pepsin digestion for immunisation. in contrast to the pattern in lymph node cultures from immunised mice we found that when culturing spleen cells from unimmunised mice there was a t-cell response against collagen that was preferentially directed against autologus cii. since we earlier have found that autologus cii may induce an immune response and also arthritis in dbn mice we conclude that there exist t-cells capable of reacting with autologus collagen and inducing an immune response as well as arthritis but that these cells are under regulation so that they not readily can be activated into proliferation but may be induced to perform certain effector functions. tested. the characterization of these two cd rdsas will be presented. analysis of hla polymorphism using sequence specific oligonucleotide probe hybridization to amplified dna, lee ann baxter-lowe, jay b . hunter, and jack gorski, the blood center of southeastern wisconsin, milwaukee, wisconsin . hla polymorphism plays a key role in antigen:mhc interaction. the polymorphism of the first domain encoding exon of the hla-dr p chain has been studied by in vitro dna amplification and use of sequence specific oligonucleotide probe hybridization (ssoph) to detect polymorphic sequences. a bp segment of genomic dna was amplified and hybridized with synthetic oligonucleotide probes ( - bases) under conditions that detect single base pair mismatches. identification of these mismatches can be used to predict micropolymorphism in the protein products, including single amino acid changes. haplotype specific patterns of oligonucleotide probe hybridization were defined for a panel of homozygous typing cells. analysis of family data demonstrated the expected inheritance patterns. most known serological specificities are encoded by multiple allelic forms of dr p chains and ssoph can identify these differences. this was exemplified by detection of unique ssoph profiles for subtypes of dr , drw and drw alleles. this procedure was also used for analysis of hla-dr polymorphism in large numbers of heterozygous individuals, including an hla-deficient scid patient. the ssoph data were correlated with serological specificities and will be useful for delineation of hla restriction in alloand autoimmunity. different cell membrane receptors have been shown to be involved in human t lymphocyte activation induced by either monoclonal antibodies or mitogenic lectins. these t cell surface molecules can be divided into two categories : a) the t cell antigen receptor (tcr) associated with the non-polymorphic cd antigen b) t cell differentiation molecules not linked to cd /ti such as cd (t ) and tp ( . ). monoclonal antibodies directed against these t cell surface structures triggered different t lymphocytes functions : mitogenesis, il- receptor expression, il- secretion. our knowledge about early events involved in t cell membrane activation is not complete, especially involving the transduction mechanism mediated by gtp-binding proteins ; nevertheless, numerous authors have demonstrated that cd /ti complex triggering induces the activation of phospholipase c, leading to the phosphoinositide cascade associated with an increase of free cytoplasmic calcium ions. in the present report, we show that different activating cell molecules (con a , pha and pma) can trigger oxygen free radical liberation when incubated with the human jurkat tumor t cell line. since membrane oxidative metabolism has been shown to be related to the stimulation of the phospholipase a , and to be the final consequence of a membrane nadphoxidase : this could represent a previously undescribed pathway of t lymphocyte activation. high affinity monoclonal antibodies (mab), specific for staphylococcal nuclease (nase), were produced and characterized. competitive inhibition assays were conducted resulting in a series of complementation groups that define eight overlapping epitopes. it is estimated that these epitopes account for % or more of the accessible surface of nase. mutagenesis of the coding sequences for nase was carried out to produce a series of variant molecules (each differing from wild-type. nase and from each other by a single amino acid) that will enable mapping of nase epitopes, determination of residues involved in antibody binding, and the contribution of various physical and chemical factors to affinity and fine specificity. screening some of these mutants with the panel of mab enabled us to map several nonoverlapping epitopes and further subdivided some of the mab complementation groups. oligonucleotide-directed mismatch mutagenesis has been done on codons encoding the original amino acid residue and other surface residues in its immediate vicinity. determination of enzyme activity and structural analysis by cd spectropolarimetry of several of the mutant proteins suggests that any structural changes that may occur are local and not global. supported by grants ai , l ca and s rr from the national institutes of health. activation of t cell proliferation is believed to occur via the hydrolysis of inositol phos holipids, which, through the second messengers inositol- , , -tris hosphate and diacylglycerof(dag), promotes the elevation of intracellular calcium levels anjactivation of protein kinase c (pkc), respectively. the role of pkc in t cell activation was investigated by comparing the effects of stimulation by - -tetradecanoyl phorbol acetate (tpa), and the dag, oleoylacetyl glycerol (oag), on a > % pure population of t cells cultured in rpmi medium containing % autologous serum. treatment with either tpa or oag caused down-regulation of the t cell rece tor, a consequence of its hosphorylation, but only tpa, in syner leuiin receptor (il -r), expression and, sgsequently, proliferation. immunohistochemical staining with antisera specific for the pkc subspecies a, pi, pii and shows that restin t cells express a, pi and pii pkc subspecies which are diffusely distributed throughout the celt. after minutes treatment with either oag or tpa all three subspecies are redistributed to a focal area within the cell. the redistribution is transient in oag stimulated cells, where the pkc distribution is similar to that in untreated cells after hour of treatment. in tpa stimulated cells, however, the pkc redistribution is prolonged, becoming more marked until mitosis occurs after - hours of treatment. these results suggest that transient intracellular redistribution ofpkc causes phosphorylation and down-regulation of the t cell receptor, but that prolonged redistribution is required or t cell proliferation. sm is a nucleoprotein complex associated with small rna molecules in eukaryotic cells. the spontaneous generation of anti-sm antibodies is specific for patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (sle) and develops in % of mrl mice. the response has been shown to be t-cell dependent in mrl/lpr mice. t-cells specific for sm are found only in mrl (h- k) mice and mice bearing h- s and h- f haplotypes (which do not develop anti-sm antibodies). we are currently working to define the variable regions of the t-cell receptor genes used in the sm response. a series of t cell hybridomas from mrl mice has been generated and are being screened for sm positivity. a technique has been designed to amplify specific alpha and beta chain tcr genes using the polymerase chain reaction allowing for a more rapid sequence analysis. it is also our intention to locate the sm specific epitopes of the t-cell hybridomas. d. bloom, p.l. cohen, and s.h. clarke, department medical institute and experimental immunology branch, nci. nih, bethesda. md . to determine whether prior activation history affects t cell receptor mediated activation of t cell clones, the murine type i helper clone ae was maintained in tissue culture by stimulation every ten days with either ( ) antigen (cytochrome c), irradiated h-zk spleen cells. and il- or ( ) il- alone. ae cells grown with antigen and antigen presenting cells (ae -ag) proliferated and produced t cell growth factor activity (tcgf) in its culture supernatants following stimulation with immobilized anti-t antibody. the tcgf activity was shown by bioassay using indicator cell lines and specific blocking antibodies to be almost entirely due to gm-csf with little or no il- activity detectable. detectable il- mrna levels. (ae -ilz) displayed substantially greater anti-t induced proliferation than did ae -ag cells. in contrast to ae -ag cells, ae -il cells produced large quantities of il- in response to anti-t stimulation. furthermore. one cycle of stimulation of clone ae -ag with il- in the absence of antigen and irradiated spleen cells was sufficient to cause this clone to produce substantial amounts of il- upon subsequent anti-t stimulation. these data suggest that t cell receptor mediated stimulation of t cell clones by specific antigen and antigen presenting cells inhibits subsequent anti-t induced il- production. t cell proliferative responses and sera antibody levels of myasthenic patients to several synthetic peptides representing different epitopes of the human achr were examined. we detected significant differences in the humoral and cellular responses of mg patients compared to healthy controls to peptides of the human achr alpha-subunit with sequences p - , p - and ~ - . proliferative responses of lymphocytes from myasthenic patients to p - and to p - correlated significantly with hla-dr and with hla-dr , respectively. in order t o investigate further the immune responsiveness to selected sequences of the human achr, t cell lines and clones specific for peptides p - and p - were established from lymph nodes of c h.sw mice. the recognition specificities of these lines were tested by examining crossreactivity to a series of shortened and/or extended peptides of the above sequences. deletions of amino acids in positions and ( =p, =l) resulted in a decrease of the peptides' stimulatory activity on the ~ - specific t cell line, whereas deletion up to position on the n-terminal end had no effect on the triggering potential of the peptides. similar results were obtained when deleting residues and ( =v, =p) in stimulation assays of the p - specific t cell line. help in determining important t cell epitopes on the human achr. the role of guanine nucleotide binding regulatory proteins (g proteins) in the regulation of phosphorylation of the y subunit of the cd antigen has been examined. cd y chain phosphorylation in isolated t cell microsomes or permeablised t cells was stimulated by the g protein activator, guanosine '- thiotriphosphate (gtpys), but other nucleotides such as camp or gdpbs were ineffective. dependent. these data are consistent with the involvement of a g protein in the signalling mechanisms that regulate the phosphorylation of the cd y chain. the regulatory effects of calcium and gtpys were compared in normal peripheral blood derived t cells and jurkat cells. there were differences regarding g protein regulation of cd y chain phosphorylation in normal t cell and jurkat cells and current models explaining these differences will be described. expression of the gamma-delta t cell receptor has been thought to first occur in a population of thymocytes shortly after their precursors populate the thymus between and days of gestation. in the course of our studies investigating the ontogeny of t cell receptor expression in the mouse embryo we have identified an extrathymic site of gammadelta expression in a population of cells present at distinct times of gestation. evidence will be presented demonstrating two periods of activity of the murine gamma locus in the developing embryo. are colonizing the thymus from the liver and the gene segment useage detected is different to that first expressed in cells of the developing thymus. around the time of birth) involves the functional rearrangement and expression of a gamma gene segment corresponding to the initial functional rearrangements detected earlier in gestation in the thymus, which can occur independently of thymic influence. demonstrate a new site of gamma-delta receptor expression in the liver of newborn mice that can occur in the absence of any thymic influence. the primary (in vivo) response of cs bl/ animals to the class i antigen qa- is a helper (th) dependent event as indicated by the requirement for copriming with a distinct antigen capable of activating helper cells. in contrast, the secondary (in vitro) response to qa- demonstrates no need for costimulation with the helper antigen. in attempts to more closely examine the helper requirements for activation of primed ctlp, we have observed that depletion of l t cells from spleens of qa- primed mice abrogates the in vitro generation of anti-qa- effectors. the response is restored by the addition of concanavalin a induced supernatant (cas) or by the addition of syngeneic but not qa- allogeneic l t cells. indeed, even in the presence of cas, l t cells expressing the qa- alloantigen specifically suppress the activation of anti-qa- ctl in a manner reminiscent of that seen with lyt- veto cells. although the mechanism whereby l t cells exert suppression is unclear, we have determined that ctlp are susceptible to veto only within approximately the first hours of culture, after which they resist suppression. results from further studies of the nature of suppression and the l t veto cell will be presented. group i proteins induce ige ab responses in - % of mite allergic patients. murine mab and human igg and ige ab. unrelated. crossreactive epitopes on gpi and gpii allergens from different mite species. in contrast, igg ab in balb/c mice immunized with loug specific" epitopes and < % was a n t i -u i (a gpi homologue, with - % amino acid sequence homology to i). four non-over lapping epitopes were defined by mab, with one species specific immunodominant site on each gpi allergen. cross-reactive gpi epitope and this mab could inhibit human ige ab binding by - %. specificity of the murine anti-gpi response was not h- restricted, but could be altered by immunizing balb/c mice with lower ag doses (lug) in alum or . dertussis. using these regimes, up to % of the murine igg ab responses was gpi cross-reactive. responses to gpii allergens appear to be strain dependant. unresponsive to gpii. however, balb/b, a/j, cba, c h c b all produce gpii cross reactive igg ab. anitgenic sites on gpi allergens are conformational, whereas those on gpii may be sequential. known to affect ige expression in mice may also affect the epitope specificity of igg ab. we have compared the b cell epitopes on these allergens using panels of however, ag binding ria on sera showed that human igg and ige ab recognize the gpi and gpii allergens are antigenically i in cfa was directed against "species murine ab balb/c are completely thermal denaturation and reduction and alkylation expts suggest that the results with the gpi allergens suggest that immunization regimes which are c this report demonstrates for the the exclusive recovery of - -specific t cell clones c further molecular analysis should identify and characterize achr reactive autoimmune clones and/or suppressor cells. cohplex, mogens h. claesson, p e t e r bkams a n d s t e e n d i s s i n g , l a b . e x p . h e m a t . immunol., d e p t . med. anatomy a, a n d d e p t . g e n e r a l p h y s the ly- alloantigens represent a family of phosphatidylinositol anchored proteins that function as accessory molecules in the process of t lymphocyte activation. the expression of these alloantigens is often induced on t and b lymphocytes after activation by mitogens or antigens. previous studies have shown that the induction of ly- alloantigens in t cells is at least in part due to the action of ifn-a/b or ifn- . in the present study, we have demonstrated that ifn- also induced ly- molecules on b lymphocytes and bone marrow cells. furthermore, we now show that tnf also participates in the induction of at least one of the ly- proteins, ly- a/e. tnf was found to synergize with ifn- to induce ly- a/e expression in thymocytes, t lymphocytes, and bone marrow cells, but not b cells. for t lymphocytes, the synergistic induction of ly- a/e by tnf was restricted to cells from the ly- . haplotype whereas ifn- was sufficient to fully induce ly- a/e expression in cells from the ly- . haplotype. this result is consistent with the notion that there is more complex regulation of the ly- afe molecules in t cells obtained from the ly- . haplotype. for t cells from balb/c (ly- . ) mice, ly- a/e, but not ly-cc, molecules were induced by ifn- and tnf. furthermore, when compared to ly- a/e, the regulation of mhc class molecules in these t cells by tnf was minimal. the induction of ly- afe molecules on balbfc t cells resulted in an enhanced capacity to activate these cells through the ly- t cell activation pathway. one transformed t cell line, . . . was also identified whose ly- a /e molecules were synergistically induced by ifn- and tnf. optimal expression of ly- a/e molecules on . . cells required continuous culture of this cell line with these two cytokines and resulted in the detection of optimal levels of cytoplasmic ly- afe mrna by northern blot analysis. this latter result suggests that ifn- and tnf regulate ly- a /e at the level of transcription and/or mrna stabilization. ut southwestern medical center, dallas, texas . an igm antlcd mab ( . ) was found to modulate cell surface cd on highly purified human t cells within hours in the absence of a secondary antibody or accessory cells. inhibition could be overcome with accessory cells or il . the inhibitory effects of . could be mimicked by briefly pulsing cells with the calcium ionophore, ionomycin. . or ionomycin pulsed cells were inhibited in their subsequent capacity to resp nd to pha even when exposures were carried out in the presence of egta to prevent increases in [cap*]. from extracellular sources. inhibition was not the result of an inability to respond to pha 'by increasing [ca +] .. moreover the newly expressed cd molecules were capable of generating increases in [ca *].' after reacting the cells with anti-cd + a cross-linking secondary antibody. these studies dem'onstrate that a state of nonresponsiveness in resting t cells can be induced by modylating cd with an anti-cd mab in the absence of co-stimulatory signals. a brief increase in [ca ' . resulting from the mobilization of intracellular calcium stores appears to be sufficient to induce'this state of t cell nonresponsiveness. cd . laurie s. davis, mary c. wacholtz, and peter e. lipsky, dept. of internal medicine, lmmunogenicity c a central lab.blood transf.service, lab. of exp. and clin.immunology of the univ. of amsterdam, amsterdam. the netherlands monoclonal antibodies (mab) directed against the human cd molecular complex induce a strong proliferation of t cells, when immobilized on microtiter wells. this activation system, that was shown to be independent of accessory cells, accessory-cell derived factors or lfa- mediated intercellular adhesion ( ). allows one to study the requirements for t-cell proliferation and differentiation in a well defined manner. il- and ifn-gamma but no il- could be detected i n culture supernatants of coated anti-cd stimulated t cells. the addition of ril- or ril- had only a moderate effect on t-cell proliferation, vhereas helper activity for ig production was strongly enhanced in the presence of these factors. in this system differentiation of precursors to cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctl), as measured in anti-cd mediated cytotoxicity, could be demonstrated within days after initiation of the activation. allospecificity of the induced effector ctl was demonstrated using a panel of hla class-i p -transfectants. in this system the regulatory role of the cd molecule in tcell activation and differentiation was studied. addition of anti-cdz mab to t cells stimulated with coated anti-cd mab enhanced il- production, proliferation as well as ig production. interestingly, pctl differentiation was also enhanced by anti-cd mab. this system seems valuable for the analysis of requirements for differentiation of human t cells subsets. . van noesel et al., nature , - , analysis of the requirements for human t-cell differentiation, rolien de jong. vivienne rebel, g i j s van seventer. miranda brouwer, frank miedema, rene' van lier, the newly described t cell receptor (tcr) locus is located inside the tcr a locus between va and ja . despite this unique situation, a highly efficient regulatory mechanism results in the complete independence of these two loci. we have recently described, in humans, a site specific recombination which joins a ' deleting element (srec) to the send of the ja's (yja) resulting in the deletion of the tcr- locus in t lymphocytes expressing the a/b tcr. rearrangements of the tcr as well as immunoglobulin genes are mediated by a unique recombination machinery and therefore, the specificity of these rearrangements is thought to be the result of a differential accessibility of the dna involved in the recombination process. as a consequence (and/or cause) of the opening of a segment of dna, the region involved is fxst transcribed as a sterile transcript prior to the rearrangement. in that regard, we have found that the kb of dna u p s a u~n of yja are actively transcribed ('t early a" transcript, tea) early during fetal development. the presence of the tea transcript presumably reflects the opening of the tea sequence prior to the tcr- deletional rearrangement. in order to better understand the mechanisms involved in the dna accessibility model, we started to look for dna-binding proteins which might play a putative role in the opening or blocking of the tea sequence. by the technique of "gel shift assay" we found such a negative regulatory protein in the nuclear extract from a non-lymphoid cell. the binding activity appeared to be specific as it was competed out by an excess of unlabeled autologous dna and not by an excess of irrelevant dna. further studies are now in progress to determine first wether the presence of this binding activity can be correlated with a "closed" configuration of the tea region and second to determine the precise location of the dna binding region. cohen, laboratory of chemical biology, niddk, national institutes of health, bethesda, md . mabs retard lymphoproliferation as well as autoimmunity. interesting, so does the adminisuation of a mab to l t , thus suggesting that the t helper subset, which is not part of the unusual expanding population, is required for initiating the pathology in these animals. as a means of characterizing the expanding population of abnormal cells as well as the phenotypically mature (l t +) cells that may be associated with them, i have generated a series of t cell hybridomas from the enlarged lymph nodes and spleen of m p r mice. in parallel, i have derived a series of control (non-lprflpr) hybridomas from mrulpr x balb/c f animals (which show no sign of pathology), and a series from mrl, mice (which have a delayed onset of autoimmunity without lymphadenopathy). very few hybridomas ( - ) were obtained in the non-lpr derived fusions. when i con a stimulated the lymphocytes from non-lpr mice prior to fusion however, many more hybridomas were obtained(l - ). this is in contrast to the fusion efficiency obtained from lprnpr mice which did not require in viuo lymphocyte stimulation to obtain a comparable number of hybrids. this result suggests that the m u p r lymphocytes are activated in situ. in addition, while less than % of the lymphoid mass is comprised of t helper (l t +) cells , over % of the hybrids are l t +. the fact that a dispropomonate number of t helper cells are rescued by fusion suggests that the cells activated in situ may be autoreactive t helper cells. currently i am characterizing these t helper cells for their lymphokine production, t cell receptor gene usage and auto-specificity and will compare them to the hybridomas obtained from non-diseased animals. goodnow, s. gilfillan, h-j. garchon, j. erikson and m. davis. stanford university, stanford, ca . we have made transgenic mice bearing gene constructs encoding the t cell receptor a and p chains from a cytochrome c-reactive t cell hybridoma. despite a lack of tissue-specificity in mrna expression, cell surface expression of uansgene-encoded protein was limited to t cells, presumably because both chains require cd proteins in order to assemble on the cell surface. in mice carrying only the a chain consuuct, the transgene was expressed in the thymus as early as day of fetal life, - days before endogenous a chain mrna. the first detectable cell surface expression of a transgene was on % of day fetal thymocytes. this vast increase in up-bearing cells in fetal thymus was due to pairing of transgenic a chains with endogenous p chains, of which a substantial number are. normally rearranged by day of fetal liie. the balance between ap-expressing t cell supopulations was grossly disturbed in these mice, the most marked abnormality being an increase in the number of l tnyt- -cells both in thymus and in peripheral lymphoid organs. it therefore appears that premature expression of surface ap t cell receptor may disturb t cell differentiation pathways by allowing t cells to leave the thymus without expressing l t or lyt- . mice carrying the p construct showed no increase in surface expression of t cell receptor in fetal life, since endogenous a chain rearrangement was limiting. in mice carrying either the a or p chain mansgenes, the number and surface phenotype of t cells expressing y& t cell receptors was unaffected in early fetal liie. suggesting that the a p and y t cell lineages diverge before thc rearrangement and expression of the appropriate subset of t cell receptor genes. department of microbiology and immunology, institute and the university of pennsylvania, philadelphia, pa. .the thymic stroma plays a major role in initiating the colonization, organization and differentiation of precursor stem cells into functionally mature t cells. a variety of cell types including thymic nurse cells, cortical and medullary epithelial cells, nonepithelial dendritic cells, and macrophages, combine to form the thymic stroma. the differential role of such cells in thymic development is unclear. we have isolated a number of morphologically distinct stromal cell lines from the thymuses of sv transgenic mice. several of the cell lines are of epithelial origin, while others have features consistent with non-epithelial "dendritic" cells. we have focused on one of these cell lines, bearing the phenotype of a cortical epithelial cell, for its ability to support the growth and differentiation of stem cells from the fetal liver and fetal thymus, and cloned pre-t cells obtained from adult mice. the cortical epithelial cell line produces factors that induce the dramatic proliferation of fetal liver and thymic stem cells . in addition, fetal liver cells cocultured with this cell line are induced to rearrange and express their t cell receptor (tcr) genes. a cloned pre-t cell line is also induced to rearrange its tcr oenes in resoonse to sianals mediated bv this cell line. gugrin, marie c. b n , corinne amiel, nadia coniglio, jacques leclsre, laboratoire d'immunologie and clinique endocrinologique, chu de nancy and facult de mgdecine, vandoeuvre les nancy, france. the lfal molecule, an adhesin of the lfa family involved in cell-cell interactions, is physiologically expressed on all white blood cells. it is absent in some congenital immune deficiencies ((id), and is expressed on a decreased number of peripheral blood lymphocytes (pbl) in aids. we investigated its presence on pbl from patients with auto-immune disorders of the thyroid. a monoclonal antibody (iot , immunotech) directed to a conformational epitope involving both chains of lfal was used in indirect immmunofluorescence on pbl from blood drawn at a similar time in all patients. a calibrated flow cytometer (epics profile, coultronics) was used to measure the percentage and numbers of positive cells, as well as the mean fluorescence (mf) and shape of the fluorescent peak. data were correlated with clinical information,therapeutic, and other pbl features such as the cd icdb ratio. the percentage of lfa + cells was significantly decreased in patients with graves' disease, hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism. the mf was lower and the shape of the fluorescent peak seldom displayed the bimodal characteristic noted in controls. these data suggest the participation of the altered expression of lfal in the pathogenesis or evolution of auto-immune diseases. pt=ciilat.pd that excess hla r l a s s tt expression, ciinmonly found i n a i t i v e human nutoinimiine tlisrases maintdin:? the *rctivatinn of dutnreactivr t c e l l s which in turn prnducr mediators which maintain r.la:;s i t expression. this hypothesis has been tested i n many ways i n t h y r o i d i t i s . crj t i c a l l y autoreactive t cell:? are €nilrid i n thyroid autoinnline tissues which a r e rrstimnlatrd hy thyroid f o l l j c u l a r r r l l s . more rrcently we have been exploring the s p e c i f i c i t y of the autoantigen reactive t c e l l s in hashinoto's t h y r o i d i t i s where thyroy-lobulin s p e c i f i c clones have been found, i n contrast t o graves' disease, where thyrocyte recognizing clones do not react wi.th tliyroglnhulin. tn rheumatoid a r t h r i t i s , collagen type i clones have been found, persistently in the activated (il- r') t c r l l pmil over several years i n t.he same p a t i e n t . to verify t h a t antigen present,ation is involved i n rhrumatoid art.hritis ( r a ) a disease i n which, unlike thyroi.dj t i s the nature of the major antigen presenting c e l l (apc) is unknown, thc e f f e c t of ,~nticl.ass i dntibodies a t -oncentration which block *ari;j vation of t r-el is mi the synthesis n € rla-dr mrna wa:j waluat.rd. the inhibitory effect supports d i.rifira role nf an d s yet iiriknown apc i n maintaining the i:hronj.ci t y o f r a conversely, all the clones were unable to respond to a substitution at (tyr to asp). nase mutant proteins were constructed with the same single amino acid substitution and t cell responses to peptides and mutants were compared. preliminary evidence suggests that the mutant proteins like the peptides, substituted at residue and , will not induce t cell clone responsiveness. these data suggest that the overall structure of the protein will not compensate for the lose of a particular amino acid which is necessary for t cell recognition. medicine, baltimore, md . to explore the variables important in t cell priming, an adjuvantfree immunization regimen was developed. bio.a mice were primed subcutaneously with syngeneic spleen cells that had been pulsed with high concentrations ( pm) of the peptide - , a cnbr cleavage fragment of pigeon cytochrome e. the t cell response was assessed using a sensitive limiting dilution assay that measures lymphokine production with the ctl-l cell line. the precursor frequency of antigen-specific cells in the draining lymph nodes of mice primed with antigen-pulsed spleen (aps) was in , indistinguishable from the frequency of in found in mice primed in the footpads with nmol of - in complete freund's adjuvant (cfa) (data are given as geometric means, n= , s.e.m = x/t . and . , respectively). despite the apparent similarity in the t cell compartment of mice primed using these different regimens, antibody induction was strikingly different. mice primed with - in cfa developed serum igm and igg responses against the peptide, with antibody detectable in an ellsa assay at a : dilution. mice primed with - owaps, however, produced no detectable anti-peptide antibodies. maximal t cell clonal expansion therefore appears to be possible in the absence of antigenspecific b cells. these data argue against the hypothesis that antigen-specific b cells play an obligate role in t cell proliferation in vivo. the reasons for the lack of antibody induction are currently under investigation. cell receptor (tcr) complex of jurkat cells. the coprecipitation of these peptides with tcr requires treatment with monoclonal antibodies (mabs) directed against tcr (c or r ) prior to cell lysis and immunoprecipitation. treatment of jurkat cells with mabs directed against cd ( - or . ) or hla (w ) does not not induce the association of these peptides with tcr. the signal-transduction mutant cell lines, j.cam and j.cam , have previously been described ( ,z). these cell lines, derived from jurkat, fail to activate the inositol-phopholipid second-messenger pathway in response to anti-tcr mabs. treatment with mab c induces the association of the and kd peptides with tcr in j.cam cells but not in j.cam . j.cam modulates tcr normally in response to anti-tcr mab treatment ( ). hence, these observations suggest that the two peptides are involved in the signal-transduction pathway of the t cell receptor complex rather than receptor internalization. sle is an autoimmune disorder associated with several different hla class i antigens. we studied a large sle patient population by sequencing of the pcr amplified first domain of the dqb and dqa chains and by sequence specific oligonucleotide probes to further define these associations. shared dqb sequences at amino acid positions = eu, =tyr, and fasp may predispose some individuals with hla dr , , , or to develop sle. a novel dqb sequence found in two drw dqwl sle patients shares these amino acids in the dqb hypervariable regions. the association of the drz dqwl.azh gene was greatly increased in the sle patients with lupus renal disease. the hla association may be directly due to structural aspects of the hla genes. when parent -+ f chimeras are prepared with supralethal irradiation ( rad + rad), the donor-derived cd + cells differentiating in the chimeras show partial tolerance to host-type h- determinants, despite the apparent absence of host-type apc. donor-derived cd + cells give only low proliferative responses to host-type apc in primary mixedlymphocyte reactions (mlr); furthermore, in i-e-+ i-e+ combinations, the donor cd + cells show molecules. this finding implies that tolerance is induced intrathymically, presumably through contact with a non-marrow-derived component of the thymus, e.g. epithelial cells. in support of this possibility, thymectomized & + ( a x b)f chimeras given strain j? marrow cells and a strain thymus graft (irradiated) show no detectable tolerance to host-type strain b determinants: the strain & cd + cells differentiating in these chimeras give strong mlr to strain b and do not show deletion of v + cells. = % deletion of cd + cells expressing i-e-reactive v t cell receptor b measured by these two parameters applies not only to lymph node (ln) cd + also to cd + cells recovered from the thymus. interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein) is a glycoprotein of residues (bovine) which localizes in the retina and pineal gland and induces inflammatory changes in these organs (eau and eap, respectively) in immunized animals. the experimental disease is considered a model for certain uveitic condiiions in man. we have recently shown that irbpderived synthetic peptides can also induce eau/eap in lewis rats. the present study compared two such peptides, "r " (residues - ) and "r " ( - ). peptide r was found to be immunodominant, shown by its being recognized by lymph node cells (lnc) or line cells sensitized against whole irbp. in contrast, peptide r was not recognized by the whole irbp-specific lymphocytes and is considered nondominant. in addition, lnc sensitized to r , but not to r , responded to intact irbp. r was superior to r in producing eau/eap and cellular immunity (minimal doses: . vs pg/rat). on the other hand, the two peptides were comparable in their capacity to stimulate presensitized lymphocytes. moreover, lnc sensitized against r were similar to those sensitized against r in their capacity to adoptively transfer eau/eap to naive recipients. this study thus provides a unique system in which both immunodominant and nondominant peptides produce autoimmune disease and can be compared for their immunological features. the age-related diminution in immune responsiveness has been shown to result from increased regulatory mechanisms and not from a paucity of immunobgical recruitment (aging: immunology and infectious disease , , ). we present evidence based on "libraries" of monoclonal antibodies (mabs) omained from young and aged donors that there occurs with aging an increase in autoimmunity which is possibly the result of the accumulation of liielong "original antigenic sins". the resultant increased connectivity of the immune system is represented by mabs obtained from aged donors which are multiply anti-self cross-reactive. furthermore increased connectivii is supported by the evidence that anti- . , -trinitrophenyl mabs are ad positive, d positive as determined by i n h b i i n studies using mabs anti-idiitypic reagents. analysis of the vh and vk region genes utilized by these mabs indicate a nonrandom gene usage. life bng stochastic immunological events lead to a pattern of cross-reactiities and non-random usage of vh genes. these immnological events lead to the emergence of the patterns which are partially elucidated by the data presented. these patterns mimick those seen early in ontogeny, but indicate a possible convergence to an ever-increasing connectance of the idiitypic repertoire expression. in other words, life-long immunological experiences contribute to a down-regulation resulting in both paucity of drimaw immune reswnses and an increase in autoimrmnity which are both the earmarks of immunity in aging. (supported by usphs grants ag- to eag and al to cab) lmmunogenicity c stimulation of these cell lines in suspension with saturating levels of mab okt produces total and fractional inositol phosphate accumulation linearly related to receptor number, (r > . ). this technique also allows an approximation of the minimal number of reccptors which must be engaged for second messenger generation in this system, which we estimate as . ~ receptors per cell. or terminate t cell activation. since this molecule plays an important role in human t cell development we sought to identify the murine homologue of cd in order to determine its expression on murine t cell and its role in activation. we have used a human cd cdna clone to isolate a full length cdna encoding the murine equivalent of cd from an el t cell lymphoma library. this clone shows similar domain organization and a high degree of homology to the human cd molecule. the murine cdna clone has been used to examine mrna expression of cd in normal and activated murine t cells, and in various t cell tumors. peptides generated from the translated sequence will be used to produce antisera to correlate the surface expression of cd with mrna expression, and to biochemically and functionally characterize this molecule. pat happ and ed palmer, basic sciences division, dept. of pediatrics, national jewish center for immunology and respiratory medicine, denver, co . we have attempted to determine the frequency of rearrangement and expression of the individual a and g chain v gene segments that make up an unselected, untolerized t cell repertoire. in order to do this we generated over t cell hybridomas from freshly-isolated thymocytes of newborn c blllo mice and subjected rna from these hybrids to northern dot blot analysis using va, vp. cy and c probes. comparison of the expressed repertoire of vp gene segments in this newborn thymocyle population with similar data previously generated from an adult peripheral t cell population reveals two vg genes, vp and vpl , whose expression is decreased in the periphery, possibly due to the effects of tolerance. two additional vp gene segments were expressed more frequently in the peripheral population than in the newborn thymus, vp ( . times higher in the periphery) and val ( times higher). it is possible that these represent ewo instances of positive selection of t cells which is determined primarily by the receptor's vg gene segment. va gene segments were expressed in only % of newborn thymocyte hybridomas (compared to % expressing vp) and determination of va rearrangement frequencies was complicated by the unexpectedly large number ( %) of hybrids expressing cs mrna. further examination revealed that several va gene probes were actually detecting rearrangements to cs. the most notable of these was va , which accounted for approximately % of the expressed va repertoire but was rearranged exclusively to cs. barbara bergman, brenda bradley, kevin lafferty and mary portas. barbara davis center for childhood diabetes, u. colo. health sci. ctr., denver, co . we have produced a panel of islet-specific t cell clones by culturing lymphoid cells obtained from non-obese diabetic (nod) mice in the presence of nod islet cell antigen and antigen-presenting cells (apc). these clones were selected to the panel on the basis of (a) their antigen-specific reactivity to islet cells and apc in an in vitro proliferation assay and (b) their ability to mediate islet graft rejection in vivo in a tissue-specific manner. we have further characterized these lines for cell surface phenotype, - production, and proliferative response to non-nod islet antigen. all of the clones tested to date are of the cd phenotype and make il- in response to islet antigen and nod apc. nearly all of the clones we have tested also make good proliferative responses to islet cell antigen obtained from mouse strains other than the nod or to a mouse beta cell tumor line. preliminary results indicate that at least one of these clones can lead to islet cell damage in a disease transfer experiment in which the cloned t cells are injected into a non-diabetic nod f recipient. we are currently carrying out tests to further characterize lymphokine production by these cloned cell lines, to analyze differences in antigen recognition and mhc restriction requirements among the clones, and to determine their effectiveness in mediating the disease process in nondiabetic animals. in an attempt to identify the epitopes on class i mo ecules recognized by alloreactive cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctl) we have examined k -specific ctl for tpir recognition of synthetic peptides with sequences derived from the native k molecule. co secutive overlapping peptides molecule were tested for their capacity to inh&bit k -specific ctl clones in their recognition of cells expressing the native k molecule. in these studies inhib ion by peptide was found to be an extremely rare event, although one peptide (k - ) did inhibit recognition by a particular ctl clone (clone ). in a separate set of experiment it was observed that clone could recopize kblll- when presented by h- class i molecules. as clone was of h- origin, this finding led to conclude that inhibition may be due to class i-restricted recognition of the k pegtide on the surface of the ctl clone, peptide and native kb for the t cell receptor. we present evidence in favor of this conclusion. the pepscan method is used for the systematic identification of sequential b cell epitopes i n protein molecules (geysen, meloen, barteling. pnas : ; ) . it was designed for the synthesis and subsequent testing for antibody binding of large numbers of overlapping peptides directly on their solid supports. the mhc dependent presentation required for t cell recognition seemed prohibitive for the use of pepscan to identify t cell epitopes. however we now have shown that by a novel modification the peptides can be recovered from their solid supports and used in t cell assays. holmdahl, department of medical and physiological chemistry, box uppsala university. s- uppsala, sweden. both autoreactive t cells and autoantibodies play an important role in the pathogenesis of type i collagen (cii) induced arthritis in mice. we have earlier reported that only strains with h- q , h- w , h- w and h -r were responders to autologous mouse cii and only these strains developed arthritis after immunization with autologous or heterologous cii. however, heterologous cii induced a more acute and severe disease and a more pronounced autoantibody response. this findings indicate that ) the ability to mount an immune response against autologous cii is a prerequisite for the susceptibility to collagen arthritis and ) that a crossreactive autoantibody response after immunization with heterologous cii may further enhance development of arthritis. we have now studied activation of autoreactive b cells after primary immunization of den mice with rat cii. in hybridoma collections, obtained - days after immunization, . % of the hybridomas produced igg reactive with autologous cii, - % produced multispecific igm and a significant number produced igg rheumatoid factors. the anti-cii antibodies recognized at least different epitopes on the cii molecule and originated from many different vh and v kappa gene families. furthermore, none out of investigated anti-cii hybridoma expressed cd rna message. we therefore suggest that the primary anti-cii autoantibody response involves activation of memory b-cells. these memory b cells have most likely been earlier activated by cii autoreactive t cells. in these aspects the origin of the anti-cii autoantibody response is principally different from the origin of "natural" autoantibodies. t cell receptors (tcr) recognize antigen in association with self mhc molecules, usually following processing to smaller peptides. the t cell repertoire to an antigen, therefore, reflects not only the ability of a given mhc molecule to interact with antigen, but also the affects of initial repertoire selection by self mc. we have t#tn analyzing the tcr repertoire specific for beef insulin ( ) in balb/c mice (h- ), which are high responders to the antigy. these studies revealed that vp. is dominantly used in the tcr's specific for bi/a and our preliminary data suggests that the vgb. chain may be involved in mhc restriction. we have now obtained several t cell hybridmas specific for bi from (balb/cxa/j) f , animals. a/j mice (h- a) are low responders to bi while the f m ce a e high responders. most of the balb/cxa/j hybridmas were restricted to the hin the balb/c hybridmas. interestingly, the analysis of v gene usage demonstrated that vg . was not used in the balb/cxa/j hydridonas. the relevance of these results to the development of the tcr repertoire in different mouse strains will be discussed. this work was supported by the mrc of canada. ctl specific for the q k molecule were generated from normal splenocytes by & vitro culture with a k bearing stimulators. these ctl have been shown to lyse transfected targets expressing hla-a regardless of their murine haplotype, and they specifically kill a bearing human target cells. furthermore. the effector function of these ctl can be inhibited with an hla-a specific monoclonal antibody. thus, the transgene product functions correctly as a tolerogen and is recognized directly as a class i antigen. although transgenic mice have been shown to be tolerant to a k expressed by murine cells, transgenic ctl specific for hla-a on the surface of human cells have been generated. these the major virulence factor of m.pneumoniae was shown t o be a kda protein which is located in the tip structure membranes of these cells. beside the adhesin function this protein is also involved in first massive humoral and cellular responses of the human host during the acute phase of upper respiratory tract infections and interstitiel pneumonia. intranasal inoculation of guinea pigs with the isolated kda protein led to lympho-histiocyte infiltrations around bronchi and small vessels of the lungs which are characteristic infiltrations after an infection with live m.pneumoniae cells. furthermore one peptide ( amino acids long) which was synthesized according to the amino acid sequence of the adhesin, showed a proliferative activity to in vitro cultivated t-cells of bronchial washings, whereas synthetic peptides with th e sequences of the direct neighbourhood showed no in vitro activity. most interestingly this t-cell proliferative activity is located on a surface loop of this protein which is also responsible for the adhesin f uction. christopher a. smith, gwyn t. williams, rosetta kingston and john j.t. owen. department of anatomy, university of birmingham, medical school, vincent drive, birmingham tj, uk. rearrangement of t-cell receptor a and b chain gene segments during t-cell development results in a diverse array of receptor specificities. to avoid auto-immune responses, cells that have generated self reactive receptors are thought to be eliminated or inactivated, to produce self tolerance. recent studies have provided compelling evidence that clonal deletion of immature receptor bearing cells within the thymus makes an important contribution to this process, although the mechanisms involved are not uderstood. of immature mouse thymocytes with anti-cd antibodies added to thymus organ cultures, induces dna degradation and cell death through the endogenous pathway of apoptosis. is in marked contrast to the activation of mature t-cells by the same anti cd preparation and is specific to the extent that apoptosis is not induced by either anti-cd- or anti-thy- . to organ cultures suggesting a role for changes in intra-cellular c a w levels in the signalling pathway leading to the induction of apoptosis in immature cells binding. thus activation of the process of apoptosis in immature cells binding self antigens may be the mechanism responsible for the selective deletion of cells that could generate an auto-reactive response if allowed to mature. we have now obtained evidence that engaging the cd /t-cell receptor complex this in addition, calcium ionophore (ionomycin) also causes apoptosis when added anderson cancer center. houston, tx immunization of patients with bcg and irradiated tumor cells induces specific delayed-type hypersensitivity (dth) to tumor cells and not to normal colon cells. since igg antibodies may require t-cell help, we wished to characterize the igg-defined tumor-associated autoantigens (taaa) of human crc so as to define a subset of the t-cell repertoire for crc. western blots of detergent extracts of primary and metastatic human colorectal carcinomas and paired normal tissues were probed with autologous igg. nine taaa were recognized by % or more of the sera: , , , , , , , . and kda. these taaa may be normal colon differentiation antigens, since they were present in extracts of normal colon. autoantibodies are more frequently present to the kda antigen in patients with metastases ( %) than in primary tumors ( %. prl- p p l a t i o n . m t s indicate that antigen receptolg on hath inmature and mature -itive t cells tmnsdwe signals via calcium mobilization, h-er the maqnitu e of fnflux of e&acellular q'+ wfiich follckfi birding of antireceptor a n t q d i f f e r s tetmen these pqulaticns. specifically, imnature cells shcw a m& reduced q influx espcnse carpared to mature cells. we dmw here that dligation of ~~n p has different amepexe w i t h regard to q'+ nnbilization in mature and inmnture cells, no sucfi difference is seen f o l l a d r q ligaticm of the receptnr's transducer, a. ihe zpsults suggest that the signall* cascade leading to the influx of extracellular is intact hen c d~ is ligated, but is inccnplete w i e i i m p , the physiological liw, is ligated. in addition, ligation of cw or cd on bmdture t cells i n a~~ influx of extracellular a ' + canparable to that sem i n mature t cells. a clonal population has been isolated frcm inmnture thymocytes whir has the characteristic signal tramdmtion pxqerties of the tulk of inmnture thymdcytes. 'ihese f i r d h p suggest that "signal" transfer frcm xpnp to may be inefficient in cd + + cells. struchual analysis of the xpnp/cd canplex in hnature and mtum t cells is in progress. flood and alan friedman, dept. of pathology, yale university school of medicine, new haven, ct, . protective immunity to the ultraviolet (w) light-induced sarcoma -re is directed toward a single tumor-specific transplantation antigen expressed by the -re tumor cells. termed the a antigen. a progressive variant line of -re, termed -pro , lacks only the expression of this a antigen. immunization of mice with -re tumor cells haptenated with trinitrophenyl (tnp- -re) leads to the subsequent rejection of tnp-haptenated progressive tumors and to increased delayed-type hypersensitivity and ctl responses to tnp in normal, immunocompetent syngeneic mice. however, little or no humoral immunity to tnp is seen in animals injected with tnp- -re tumor cells. pro did not exhibit tnp-specific tumor protective or cell-mediated immunity, but rather exhibited tolerance to subsequent immunizations with more immunogenic forms of tnp. biochemical and molecular genetic studies have revealed the a antigen to exist on the cell surface as a complex of class i mhc-like molecules. transfection studies with dna encoding each of these molecules into -pro reveals that the expression of one, and only one, of these three molecules mediates this increased immunity. these experiments suggest that an mhc-like antigen expressed on the -re sarcoma acts as a natural adjuvant to increase cellmediated but not humoral immunity to linked antigens. the mechanism of this increased immunity is discussed. efforts to immunize cattle against economically important gastrointestinal nematodes showed that inrmunity is manifested by: ) a response that reduces the fecundity of established and subsequently acquired worms. and/or ) a reduction in the number of worms developing upon challenge infection. however. the ability of individuals to mount such immunity is highly variable. extending these studies to naturally infected populations indicate that there is a great difference in the number of eggs excreted by individual young calves on pasture. to delineate whether these differences were the result of host genetics and to begin to elucidate the mechanisms of resistance to parasite infection, a genetically defined cattle herd was assessed for parasite levels by determining fecal eggs per gram. three years of sampling of the calves during their first grazing season indicates that: ) certain individuals in the herd will consistently excrete high or l o w numbers of parasite eggs, ) the high or low phenotype is significantly controlled by the genetic make-up of the calf, and ) the high or low phenotype is highly heritable (heritability - ). susceptibility is currently under investigation. calves have been determined and mhc class i typing is currently in progress. information is being used to assess the role of the bovine mhc in controlling immunoresponsiveness to parasite antigens. we have been studying the differential effects of il + il versus il on the growth and differentiation of cd -, cd -thymocytes. culture of highly purified cd -, cd -thymocytes with il ( u/ml) + il ( u/ml) resulted in marked proliferation and increased cell size without change from the cd -, cd -phenotype. culture with il or il alone did not cause proliferation. a substantial contribution to the proliferation was secondary il release: addition of anti-il ( b ) blocking antibody inhibited proliferation induced by culture with il + il . il mrna was demonstrated by northern blot analyses after and hours of culture with il + il whereas none was detected at culture initiation and very little was present at hours. effects of il + il on il transcription rate will also be reported. despite a marked inhibition of proliferation with anti-il , there was no affect on expansion of cd + cells following culture with il + il (increase from % to % in hours). thus, in this system, il enhances proliferation of progenitor thymocytes but does not contribute to induction of t cell receptor. carplex. lhese cwplexes can be used to inmmize mice in the absence of protein carriers or adjuvants, thus facilitating the study of the inmum to a sml ckmically defined antigen. use of this tecfinology has allawed us to identify two t helper cell epitopes in cclllserved regions of hn gp not previcusly identified by computer algorithims, defined by amino acids - and - . inummization with these peptides in pptide-@nqhlipid cwplexes results in the prpauction i* and i* antibodies, which cioss react with cloned fragmnts of the w l e protein. us& this &logy we have begun to characterize the innume response to individual peptide antigens. ?he reqonse of h -k mice to amino acids - of p of hiv, has been analyzed. lhe optimal dose of a peptide containing both b and t cell epitopes was found to be - ug, depending on the route of administration. im d z a t i o n requir& less antigen for opthum antibody resporrsf, than did ip. ment for an ant-response. additional variables, as phosfholipid carpasition and method of cross-linking have been studied anl will be . webelievethattheuseof this peptide-phospholipid canplex tehmlogy will be significant both for studying the innwe response to single epitcpes and for vaccine develolment. based on assays in which t cell proliferation was induced via oxidative mitogenesis and exposure to mhc alloantigens, it has been reported that langerhans cells (lc) isolated from normal mouse skin aquire maximum capacity to activate t cells only after hours of culture. we have studied lc from balb/c mouse skins for their capacity to present ovalbumin (ova) and ia doantigens to unprimed t cells and to antigen-specific t cell hybridomas. the data reveal that both fresh and cultured lc presented ova and alloantigens with equal efficiency to previously primed responders (and with fold greater efficiency than spleen cells or the b cell lymphoma a . - ). by contrast g& cultured lc displayed the capacity to present antigen to ynorimed t cells. we propose that the antigen presenting potential of freshly prepared and cultured langerhans cells, respectively, reflect the in vivo functional properties of intraepidermal lc and of lc that have picked-up antigen in the epidermis and migrated via dermis to the regional lymph node. if so, these data suggest that resident epidermal lc are fully prepared to present cutaneous antigens to memory/effector t cells (efferent limb), whereas resident lc must leave the influence of the epidermis in order to develop the capacity to meet the more stringent conditions required for antigen presentation to porimed t cells (afferent limb). we have investigated the structural restrictions placed on residues contained within a minimal t cell determinant, using the balb/c class i restricted t cell response to the site determinant of the influenza hemagglutinin molecule as a model system. to delineate which of the residues comprising the site determinant are involved in interaction with the t cell receptor, we have determinaed the response of a large panel of site specific t cell hybridomas to a collection of peptide analogs differing by single conservative or non-conservative substitutions at positions. the fine specificity patterns of the t cell panel is extremely diverse; t cells varied in both the location and number of residues within the antigenic peptide that effected recognition. our results implicate at least out of residues within the antigenic pepetide as being involved in interaction with the t cell receptor. this result suggest that peptides comprising the site determinant do not form alpha helical structures when in association with mhc molecules. rubella-specific isotype and igg subclass responses were evaluated using elisa techniques in rubella ha seronegative adult females undergoing rubella immunization (ra / strain). responses were evaluated prior to immunization and at , , , , , , and wks post-immunization. pre-immunization sera showed detectable levels of rubella-specific antibody in the igg class ( / ); iga class ( ) and in one or more of igg subclasses ( / ). post-immunization, i subjects failed to develop igm class responses by the ha (sdg) technique while / developed igm antibody by elisa techniques. iga responses were detected at low levels in all vaccinees beginning at - wks and declining by wks post-immunization. antibody in iggl and igg subclasses by - wks post-vaccine with sustained iggl levels but significant decline in igg levels noted between and wks post-immunization. no seroconversion was noted in the igg subclass although individuals had detectable pre-immunization iggz rubella antibody present. igg levels were detected in all vaccinees post-vaccine with a delayed and progressive rise over the study period. subsequent correlation was then performed between rubella-specific antibody responses and the presence or absence of adverse joint reactions occurring in association with rubella vaccine administration. all individuals produced detectable c t lymphocyte responses to varicella zoster virus. anthony hayward, abbas vafai, roger giller & eileen villanueba. departments of pediatrics and microbiology, university of colorado school of medicine, denver co university of iowa school of medicine, iowa city i the proliferative response of blood lymphocytes from varicella zoster virus (v v)-immune donors to live vzv, extracted vzv antigens or purified glycoproteins is predominantly by cd +, hla-d restricted t cells but little is known of the specificies of the responder cells. we restimulated t cells cloned by limiting dilution from vzv-stimulated cultures with purified vzv glycoproteins gpi, gpii and gpiii and found that t cell clones with specificity for each of these mediated both help for antibody responses and hla-dr restricted vzv-specific cytotoxicity. polypeptides of to amino acids length corresponding to predicted amphipathic sequences in the primary structures of g p i, gp i and gp iv were synthesised. proliferative responses were observed to of these peptips (one from each glycoprotein) with responder cell frequencies in the :lo blood t cells range. the gp i peptide additionally defined an epitope recognised by serum antibody. an immunomodulatory approach to treating hsv- corneal disease, hendricks rl, departments of ophthalmology, and microbiology/immunology, university of illinois school of medicine, chicago, il herpes simplex virus type i (hsv- ) corneal infections are a leading cause of blindness worldwide. we and others have demonstrated that the cellular immune response to hsv- contributes to the elimination of virus from the cornea, but in doing so causes the tissue destruction that is responsible for the blinding complications of the disease. we have demonstrated that specifically suppressing the cytotoxic t lymphocyte (ctl) response to hsv- renders mice resistant to corneal disease following topical corneal hsv- infection. in agreement with this observation was our recent finding that in vivo depletion of wt ' (t helper/inducer, and most dth effector cells) neither reduced susceptibility to corneal disease, nor increased susceptibility to disseminated disease. the corneal lesions in wt depleted mice contained numerous lyt- (t suppressor/cytotoxic) cells, and no l t cells. the wt depleted mice exhibited normal hsv-specific ctl precursor frequencies. experiments designed to determine the effect of in vivo lyt- depletion on susceptibility to corneal disease are in progress. our goal is to identify cellular immune responses to hsv- that maximize protection, while minimizing immunopathology in the cornea, and identify hsv- epitopes that preferentially activate those responses. supported we found that affinity purified antibodies to bsa, klh and diptheria toxoid all contain a substantial amount of specific anti-idiotypic activity. against bsa react with mouse anti-bsa antibodies, which suggests that we are dealing with internal image antibodies. mrl-lpr/lpr mice develop spontaneous autoimmunity. we found that these mice make anti-anti-(self h- ) antibodies prior to making appreciable amounts of pathological autoantibodies such as anti-dna, anti-rnp.sm, and rheumatoid factor. the anti-anti-self antibodies are detected using an inhibition of antibody mediated cytotoxicity assay, that also detects anti-anti-(self h- ) in ordinary allogeneic anti-sera. the antibodies are not rheumatoid factors, although the animals do make rheumatoid factors later in the development of the disease. anti-self activity is fully developed at months, when the other autoantibodies are typically barely detectable. important role in the etiology of the disease. the anti-we conclude that anti-anti-self antibodies could play an c feedback regulation of - synthesis in monccytes by t cell products: dual effect of - . mikko hurme, tessa palkama and marja sihvola, department of bacteriology and immunology, university of helsinki, sf- , helsinki, finland. il-i production of human monocytehnacrophages is regulated by several cytokines some of which are themselves able to activate the il- production (e.g. tnf and il- ) while others (e.g. ifn-y) modulate the production activated by other signals. we have now examined the effect of - on the - synthesis. - alone did not induce any - bioactivity or il-la or - mrna expression in freshly isolated peripheral blood adherent cells. in contrast, il- effectively suppressed the lps induced - production. this suppression took place without any decrease in the steady-state levels of il-la and il-i mrna, suggesting that this downregulative effects is posttranscriptional. monocytehnacrophages are known to rapidly loose their ability to produce il-i when cultivated in vitro. if ifn-yis present in the culture fluid, the cells remain capable of producing - . as ifn-yand have been reported to have similar "priming" effects on macrophages (e.g. increasing the tumoricidal capacity and mhc class ii antigen expression) we cultivated monocytes for h in the presence of either ifn-y or - , and after washing the cells they were stimulated with lps. il- activity could be detected both in the ifnyand il- preincubated cultures (but not in the cultures preincubated with medium alone). these data suggest that il- can also display a similar upregulatory function in il-i production as ifn-y. gahreston, tx development of immunity to members of the spotted fever group of rickettsiae is a t-cell dependent response. we have used t-cell hybridomas and cloned t-cell lines from immune animals and convalescent humans to identify the rickettsial antigens that induce antigen-responsive t-cells. in these studies we found that the kda antigen of rickettsia tickettsii. the causative agent of rocky mountain spotted fever, is one of the immunodominant tcell antigens. t-cells from immune animals and humans were responded in culture to a recombinant kda antigen. both sources of t-cells were of the t-helper type (l t * and ' respectively) and produced l- and interferon. it was found that soluble antigenic material of b. rlckettsii obtained by extraction with hypotonic buffer maximally stimulated the t-cell lines. this material was enriched far the high molecular weight polypeptides of s kda and kda. also. ethirwwi ' will induce a long-lived immunity against infection with r. rickettsii. infected guinea pigs develop a minimally cross-reactive antibody response to b. nckettsii. in contrast. a strong cross-reactive t-cell proliferative response is produced. studies are in progress to determine the nature of the common protective antigen of r. humans infected with the parasitic nematode ascaris lumbricoides vary considerably in antibody responsiveness to a kda component of the parasite. this molecule is secreted by the parasite, and is also abundant internally. this heterogeneous reactivity has been modelled in laboratory rodents, and the antibody response to it is h- -and rt -restricted in mice and rats, respectively. using inbred and congenic animals, only mice of h- ' and rats of rtiu were, so far, found to be responders, and this restriction only operated in the context of infection. the specificity of the ige response in these animals was assayed by passive cutaneous anaphylaxis, and in an ige-specific elisa assay. the data show that the above mhc restriction also applied to the specificity of the reaginic antibody response, although animals of all mhc haplotypes responded to other ascaris allergens. amino acid analysis of the kda equates it to a previously identified "allergen a" of the parasite, and we now have its sequence available. these findings have implications for the genetic control of allergic responses in general, and, in particular, to the hypersensitivity responses which are such a feature of infections with parasitic nematodes. there are also implications for the generation of hypersensitivity responses by recombinant vaccines involving certain parasite antigens. the cns. immunohistochemial analysis of both frozen sections prepared from the brains of animals immunized in this manner and of highly enriched glial cell subpopulation cultures for viral gp expression indicated that oligodndrocytes and possibly a subset of astrocytes were the targets of this infection. further, microscopic analysis of frozen sections failed to reveal any overt signs of gross pathologic changes associated with the viral infection. we have been able to demonstrate the presence of virus specific antibody in the serum of these mice as well as virus specific cytolytic t cells in the peripheral lymphoid organs. ments are currently underway to determine whether the lack of pathology associated with wb infection in light of the previously shown virus specific immune responses in these mice is due to a failure of antigen presentation within the cns or some other form of immunoregulatory phenomena. the t lymphocyte proliferative response to pigeon cytochrome in bio.a mice is restricted to the egk:e,k ia molecule and specific for the c-terminal determinant comprised of residues - . blo.a( r) and blo.a(sr) mice are nonresponders to pigeon cytochrome nonetheless, the t cell repertoire of blo.a( r) or ( r) contains some t cell clones capable of recognizing and proliferating to pigeon cytochrome c w h e n presented by bio.a antigen-presenting cells (aft). therefore, one would expect to stimulate such clones in allogeneic bone marrow chimeras of the type bio.a +blo.a( r) or ( r) b o.a apcs and a blo.a( r) or ( r) t cell reperto ! ~.~espectively. ,en(isea c rzave were primed with pigeon cytochrome cytochrome , they showed a good antigen specific proliferative response in vitro. surprisingly, however, if pigeon cytochrome was used for priming, no response was detected, even at priming doses as high as nmol per mouse. - could only be achieved by treating the allochimeras with an anti-cdb monoclonal antibody in vivo during the priming step. clones specific for purified protein derivative (ppd) in the same chimera. thus the regulation which involves cd positive cells is antigen specific. transfer of pigeon cytochrome - primed lymph node cells from the chimera into naive bio.a mice prevented priming of the recipient for a t cell proliferative response to pigeon - , but not priming to the moth synthetic fragment. chimeras of an antigen-specific suppression mechanism involving cd positive cells. faculty of medicine, kyoto university, kyoto , and department of oncology, nagasaki university school of medicine, nagasaki , japan. sera from b mice immunized with a syngeneic ctl specific for fbl- tumor of b origin blocked the cytotoxic activity of only the immunizing ctl clone. therefore, a monoclonal antibody (mab) n - was produced by fusion of the b spleen cells immune to a syngeneic fbl- -specific ctl clone (no. ). the specificity of the mab n - was confirmed by immunoprecipitation, blocking of cytolytic activity, stimulation of proliferation, and induction of tcr-mediated nonspecific cytolysis of the ctl clone no. . in some b mice, - % of the anti-fbl- mltc cells were positive for this n - -defined idiotype, and formed a well demarcated population upon examination by flow cytomehy. even in mice in which no such population was observed some ctl clones established by limiting dilution culture were also positive for this idiotype ( out of clones from mice). the cytotoxic activities of these ctl clones were blocked by n - , which in turn induced the nonspecific cytolysis in redirected assay. however, no positive cells were detected in non-cultured normal or fbg -immune spleen and lymph node cells. this indicates the presence of cross-reactive (dominant) idiotype in the b anti-fbl- cytotoxic t cell responses and may provide a potent tool for analyzing the idiotype-mediated regulation of the anti-tumor immune responses. slade andsylvie gillard, max-planck-institut fur immunbiologie, d- freiburg, federal republic of germany t cells play a n essential role in t h e protective immune response to malaria and a r e associated with s o m e of t h e pathological consequences of t h e disease. however, t h e n a t u r e of their responses and t h e antigens t o which they respond a r e not well defined. w e have developed a limiting dilution assay system in which specific t cell responses to malaria antigens c a n be monitored a t t h e clonal level. i t is possible to determine t h e nature of t h e responding t cell by t h e growth f a c t o r s they s e c r e t e and by their ability to a c t as helper cells for t h e antibody response to malaria antigens. our d a t a suggest t h a t t h e t cell response changes during t h e primary infection and in hyperimmupe animals. o n e to t w o weeks a f t e r initiation of a blood s t a g e infection t h e major cd + t cell which proliferates in response t o parasite antigens s e c r e t e s il- and ifn-y but is not a n efficient helper cell for antibody responses. in c o n t r a s t l a t e r in infection and in immune animals t h e r e is an e f f e c t i v e helper cell response and many of t h e s e cells a r e distinct from those secreting ifn-y and il- . we a r e currently investigating whether these cells retain these phenotypes when grown in long-term in vitro culture and whether defined antigens of t h e erythrocytic parasite elicit different t cell responses. we have localized linear neutralization epitopes on the coronaviruses ibv, mhv, fipv and tgev. the results can be summarized as follows: . linear epitopes of the spike proteins ( - residues) could be mapped to a resolution of a single residue by expression of gene fragments in the prokaryotic pex plasmids and/or pepscan peptide synthesis. . the length the epitopes varied from to at least amino acid residues. we present evidence that the larger epitopes, although conformation-independent according to operational criteria, are nevertheless discontinuous. . in ibv, we localized several overlapping but different epitopes within an immunodominant region of residues. this region is recognized by all polyclonal antisera tested. we propose that its immunodominancy is a consequence of its structure and function and does not depend on antigen presentation or idiotypic networks. an immune response against the mouse testis-specific antigen ldh-c reduces fertility by percent in female baboons. an immune reaction to human ldh-c would be expected to be more effective in primates. since the human testis enzyme is not readily available in large quantities, recombinant dna technologies were uscd to create a source of human ldh-c . antibodies to mouse ldh-c were used to screen a xgtll human testis cdna expression library. a full length human ldh-c clone was identified, sequenced, and the ldh-c cdna was engineered for expression in e.coli. the ' and ' untranslated sequences were removed by restriction enzyme digestion, and synthetic linkers were added adjacent to the start and stop codons of translation. the modified cdna was subcloned into the prokaryotic expression vector pkk - and introduced into w l a c iq cells. cells were grown to mid-log phase, and induced with iptg for positive regulation of the strong hybrid tac promoter. induced cells overexpressed the kd subunit which spontaneously formed the enzymatically active kd tetramer. human ldh-c was purified -fold from liter cultures of cells by two step affinity chromatography to a specific activity of i.u./mg. the n-terminal amino acids sequenced were identical to those predicted from the nucleic acid sequence. antibodies to synthetic peptide epitopes of human ldh-c cross-reacted with the enzyme produced in e.coli. two mg human ldh-c were expressed per liter of bacterial cells. the purified protein is now available for innunogenicity and fertility studies. it is now generally accepted that the principal effector mechanism in the host's defence against leishrnaniasis is gamma-interferon (ifn-y) which activates infected-macrophage to eliminate intracellular parasites. mice by prior sublethal whole body irradiation or treatment with anti-igm or anti-cd antibody. protection can also be induced by repeated intravenous or intraperitoneal immunisation with killed parasites or purified antigens. ly immunised mice produce little or no il- or il- but substantially elevated levels of ifn-y when stimulated with leishmania antigens in vitro. lymphoid cells from balb/c mice with progressive disease can inhibit the maf (macrophage activating factor) and leishmanicidal activities of the culture supernatant of lymphoid cells from mice recovered from l. major infection. maf appears to be ifn-y, whereas the maf inhibiting factors are il- and il- . system can be reproduced with recombinant ifn-y, il- and il- and the maf inhibiting activity of the suppressive supernatant can be reversed by specific anti-il- and anti-il- antibodies. the disease by influencing the ability of macrophage to kill the intracellular parasite. the development of efficacious vaccines against malaria requires an understanding of the mechanisms involved in protective immunity. f'revious studies with plasmodium berghei demonstrated that sporozoite immunity is dependent upon antibody responses specific for the repeat region of the circumsporozoite (cs) protein and cell mediated mechanisms involving cd + t cells. in this study we analyzed the splenic t cell repertoire directed against epitopes on the cs protein of p. berghei and determined whether sporozoite-immune cd + and cd + t cells respond to shared or distinct epitopes. sporozoite-immune spleen cells, cd + and cd + enriched t cell populations of balb/c (h-m), c h @i-%), and c bv (h- b) mouse strains were cultured in the presence of irradiated sporozoites or synthetic peptides representing % of the complete cs protein. surprisingly, none of the cultures proliferated to any of the peptides tested, although proliferative responses to sporozoites were observed in unfractionated spleens and cd + t cell populations. cd + t cells did not respond to any of the antigens tested, even in the presence of exogenously added - . titration of cd + cells into proliferating cd + cell cultures did not suppress the anti-sporozoite response. the lack of anti-peptide reactivity contrasts with uniform responses to sporozoites and may be the result of the context in which cs antigens are presented to t cells. functional analysis of accessory splenic b cells and macrophages revealed that while the anti-sporozoite proliferative responses were not affected by the removal of macrophages, sporozoite-primed b cells were essential for the responses. these data suggest that the cs protein on sporozoites is not processed extensively by macrophages to yield many potential t cell epitopes, but instead is presented by immuncdominant b cells that resmct responses to a limited number of t cell clones. of the primary infection and is also required for optimum protection against reinfection. current studies have demonstrated that relatively few of the viral antigens tested to date ( viral envelope glycoproteins or nonsmctural nuclear proteins) are recognized by hsv- immune ctl populations generated in several different strains of mice (h haplotypes h b, h d. or h k). this failure of hsv specific ciz to recognize the cloned gene products in in v i m assays was demonstrable at the clonal level and could not be attributed to a peculiarity of the recombinant vaccinia conshucts used because studies with adenovims vectors or tranfected l cell constucts yielded the same results. surprisingly, despite their inability to be recognized by hsv specific ciz in vim, when used to immunize mice several of the vaccinia virus constructs would induce memory ciz populations capable of lysing hsv- infected autologous cells. for example, hsv- glycoprotein c (gc) was recognized by h b restricted but not h k restricted hsv specific ctl. however, immunization of either haplotype of mice with a vaccinia gc recombinant induced ctl populations which upon in v i m restimulation with hsv- would lyse histocompatible cells infected with hsv- . this demonstrates that despite the presence of suitable epitopes (intrinsic factors) the context of the immunogen (extrinsic factors) will also influence it's ability to induce ctl. the results of further studies into the nature of these extrinsic factors will be presented and discussed with relevance to future sub-unit vaccine design. w d ~upponrd by public ~~l t h service g~mu, ai md ai fran the ti-^ ~n,litu= md lnrcniour d ,~~~~~~. infection of mice with hsv- induces a brisk ciz response which is necessary for the subsequent resolution we have investigated the structural basis for antigen mimicry by anti-idiotypic internal image antibodies. two mouse monoclonal antibodies (mabs) that bear internal images of a well-defined protein epitope, i.e., the rabbit immunoglobulin (ig) a allotype, were produced and the variable region sequences were determined by rna primer extension sequencing. the results showed that the mab light chains did not contain any allotype-related residues; however, both heavy chain v regions contained a unique sequence homologous to the nominal antigen but in opposite orientation. this reversed sequence was expressed within cdr of both mabs. synthetic peptides corresponding to the putative antigenic regions of rabbit ig and the mab internal images, respectively, were tested for the ability to mimic the al-like determinant. although the homologous residues were presented in opposite orientations, both peptides completely inhibited at similar concentrations the binding of rabbit ig to anti-a antibody. a paired thr and clu was necessary for expression of the a epitope as revealed by conservative substitutions in the peptide sequence. computer-generated, energy-minimized models of rabbit ig and the mabs revealed that the critical a residue side chain placements could be almost superimposable in either context. thus, it appears that an antigenic epitope can be determined solely by md . proliferation of murine type i cd + t cell clones quires simultaneous occupancy of the t cell antigen receptor and delivery of an accessory cell-duived costitnulamy signal in contrast, isolated t cell receptor occupancy induces the cell into a state of reduced proliferative responsiveness to antigen. based on the observation that pkc-activating phorbl esters can at times substitute for the p s e n c e of accessory cells in t cell proliferative response. to mitogens or anti-cd mnodonal antibodies, we investigated the requkment for accessory cells in the antigen-and con a-induced hydrolysis of p m and activation of pkc. the presence of normal accessory cells was found to be unnecessary for the development of pkc-dependent phosphorylations and the addition of normal accessory cells had no effect on the activity of pkc. cell il- synthesis and proliferation presents a paradox. we have studied the effects of ueatment with a calcium ionophore and p h h l ester on t cells and find that increased [ca +]i and pkc activation are in fact insufficient biochemid second messengers in the induction of proliferation. while pliferation was induced at high t cell density in response. to these stimuli, incubation of t cells at decrrased cell density drmonsuated markedly reduced proliferation, and single t cells failed to divide. this suggested that cellular interactions were. q u i r e d in the response. additions of either il or normal accessory cells allowed p l i f d o n at low density, consistent with a requirement for an accessory cell-derived costimulatoq signal in the induction of i l synthesis, even in the plifcrative response to ionomycin and pma. this result underscons the importance of an accessory cell-duived costimulatory signal, acting independently of t cell receptor-mediated increases in [caz+] i and pkc activation, in the induction of t cell proliferation. we describe experiments designed to determine the molecular requirements for recognition by fluorescein-specific ctlps and ctls derived both from n a i v e and from immunized mice. we the production of prostaglandin e, a major immunesuppressor secreted by the macrophages was inhibited by the addition of . m indomethacin to the cultures of monocytes harvested from patients suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis and those from equal number of normal controls. the il-i activity was estimated i n the supernatants of these cultures by their ability to proliferate mice thymocytes. it was found that the supernatants from cultures with indomethacin showed a greater il-i activity than the ones without it( % p . ). this indicates the possibility of pge offering a negative feedback control over il-i production. the defective cell mediated immunity i n patients with pulmonary tuberculosis may be explained through the inhibition on il-i production by pge whose enhanced production is reported i n our earlier studies. the results and our hypothesis on the autoregulation of il-i production w i l l be presented and discussed. in variant viruses which differ from the parental virus (gv) at specific epitopes recognized by monoclonal antibodies directed against the env gene product, gp . biological clones isolated from gv express the gv phenotype suggesting that the loss of specific epitopes is the result of selective de novo processes in the immunocompetent host. additionally, inoculation of adult mice with a biological clone expressing the gv phenotype also results in similar variant viruses. however, inoculation of gv into neonatal or nonlethally irradiated mice results in a population of viruses expressing only the gv phenotype suggesting that the emergence of antigenic variants may be influenced by neutralizing antibodies and/or cellular host res sds-page analysis of immunoprecipitates of sg~s~~,elled lysates of fibroblasts infected with clones expressing gv or variant pehnotypes shows a size difference of the gp precursor. additionally, the recognition of a neutralizing epitope (e- ) associated with gp by mab is dependent on the appropriate native conformation of the epitope which appears to require glycosylation for expression. experiments are in progress to further examine the immunogenetic basis for the generation of these variants and to determine the molecular changes in the virus genome responsible for changes in epitope expression. investigated the capacity of murine splenict cells depleted of acceso cells ( ac ) t o proliferate in response t o stimulation by con a, @ cd ab and activated t cells. the zepletion procedures consisted of carbonyl iron treatment, x "panning " on anti-ig coated flasks, x anti-la cytotoxic treatments and percoll gradient purification of small resting t la-cells. the appropiate concentration of con a ( ng/ml ) and plastic-bound (pb) @cd lg or its f (ab)' fra ments induce proliferation, r expression and (but not secretion in t la-cellscultured for % at x cells/well . responsiveness of tlacells t o con a and dcd in low density cultures ( x cells/well) is restored by the addition of irradiated th cloned cells but not thl ,splenic cellsor r l l l + rll + r . likewise, responsiveness t o non activating doses of con a (lnglml) or soluble @cd is restored by the addition of irradiatedth costimulatory cells . these experiments demonstrate that the ability of t cells t o proliferate in the absence of ac is critically dependent on t-t interactions. t cell subsets prepared by either negative (l t -and ly 'cells) or positive selection proliferate in response t o pb @cd lg . although the proliferative responses of both l t -and ly -cells are maximal at h, the l t -cells require l o x more pb @cd lg for maximal stimulation and their res onses decline much faster than those of ly cells. in addition, l t -cells are not stimulated by pb &cd f(ab)' fra ments and their responses t o @cd i are inhibitable by anti fcr as well as anti-lfa abs . re onsesof%oth l t -and ly -cells are !nhibita%le by @i and @i r abs but not by @l t , @ly or b l l . these experimentsdocument interesting differences in the triggering requirements of l t -and ly 'cells. supported by nih grants po ca , t m- and gm . the k glycoprotein encoded in the e region of ad and ad (gpl k) binds to class i mhc antigens in the endoplasmic reticulum and prevents their translocation to the cell surface. this has been proposed as a mechanism by which virus infected cells can avoid recognition by the host cytotoxic t lymphocyte (ctl) response. we have shown that gpl k can inhibit target cell lysis by adenovirus specific ctl, but the effectiveness of this inhibition varies greatly between different mouse strains. this is due in part to differences in the affinity of gpl k for different mhc class i molecules, but this cannot account for a l l the variation observed. i t has been shown that cd + + immature thymocytes fail to secrete il- or express il- receptors in response to activation signals. furthermore. they cannot induce il- gene transcription. several tumor lines have now been characterized which have a cd + + phenotype and fail to secrete i l - or express il- receptors in response to stimulation with ionomycin plus pma. these cells also do not express il- mrna after stimulation, as determined by northern blotting and rnase protection. to determine the molecular mechanism for this lack of transcriptional activity, nuclear extracts were analysed for the presence of the d n a binding factor nfat-i. this nuclear factor i s present only in ac- we have undertaken an mhc analysis using the polymerase chain-reaction (pcr) and dot blot analysis of the amplified lyme arthritis patients dna with allele specific oligonucleotide (aso) probes. genomic dna for the first domain of the dq beta chain and of the dr/pi from patients with lyme arthritis has been amplified and we are analyzing the distribution of dridrr and w a l l e l e s in this population to test the hypothesis that the mhc class i genes might be involved in presentation of selected spirochete epitopes whose recognition by t lymphocytes leads to lyme arthritis. most inbred strains of mice do not respond to porc insulin (pins). experiments were conducted to elucidate the mechanism of the non-responsiveness in h-zk mice: ) purification of cd- ' t c e l l s from pins-immune b o.mbr mice revealed pins-specific t helper (th) cells, ) these pins specific th cells could be activated by i-ak and i-ek expressing l -fibroblasts. therefore, both i-ak and i-ek molecules can present pins in an immunogenic manner and activate pins-specific th cells. by means of different cell-fractionation procedures, it was found that antigen-specific t suppressor (ts) cells regulated the pins immune response. these ts cells were of the fcr-, cd- -, cd- '. thy- ' phenotype, and they were present in normal mice. we believe that these experiments indicate that antigen-specific ts cells exist and are important regulators of immune and autoimmune responses. the possibility of functional inactivation of cd + clones by ts-cells was investigated. m leprae-responsive cd + clones were preincubated with ts cd + clones, apc and antigen for ; hours. after which the cd + cells were removed from culture. the cd + clones were then restimulated with e. leprae and apc. cd + clones incubated with cd + cells and antigen were unresponsive to restimulation by antigen, although they were not killed and could respond well to il- . addition of il- in the preor post-incubation culture neither prevented the induction of unresponsiveness nor reversed it. earlier models of tolerance have suggested that receptor occupancy in the absence of second signals induces tolerance in b-and t-cells. we would suggest that in the presence of ts-cells. a second signal may be negated leading to th-cell unresponsiveness. university of texas southwestern medical school, dallas, tx graft versus host disease (gvhd) poses a serious threat to the survival of patients with bone marrow transplants. the state of immunosuppression established in gvhd results in a variety of immunological abnormalities at the humoral and/or cellular level. we have developed a murine model of chronic gvhd across a minor histocompatibility (mh) barrier. in this model, immunosuppression develops. spleen cells from mice undergoing this type of gvhd are unable to respond to the polyclonal activators lipopolysaccharide and concanavalin a . however, the response against the b cell leukemia bcll remains intact. the protective immune response against bcll is directed towards the mh antigen h- and is mediated by cytotoxic t lymphocytes. thus, the specific t cell response against a mh antigen can occur in the presence of chronic gvhd despite the absence of a polyclonal b and t cell response lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (lcmv), a member of the arenavirus family, has a biseqmented rna genome which encodes at least three polypeptides. the smaller rna segment encodes two virus structural proteins, the slycoprotein (gp) and the nucleoprotein (np). upon infection of mice with lcmv a cytotoxic t cell immune response directed against these proteins is measurable in vitro and in vivo. it can be demonstrated that depending on the haplotype of the mice, one or the other protein may play a major part in the immune response. in order to define the immunogenic epitope(s) of the nucleoprotein which are recognized specifically by the t cell receptors of cytotoxic t cells, stepwise ' truncated qene fraaments encodina the nucleoprotein were cloned and expressed in vaccinia virus. with these recombinant vaccinia viruses, protection experiments in mice aqainst lcmv infection were performed in parallel with in vitro studies, namely specific recoonition of target cells expressing truncated fragments of the nucleoprotein by lcmv primed spleen cells. cdna clones encoding the mouse and human t cell il- receptors have been isolated and expressed in mammalian cells. the recombinant receptor binds il- indistinguishably from the natural il- receptor, and is functional in signal transduction. deletion of the cytoplasmic portion of the receptor abolishes its signal transduction abilities. sequence and secondary structure analysis suggest that the cytoplasmic segment of the il- receptor binds a nucleotide. experiments designed to test this hypothesis and to examine the mode of signal transduction will be presented. also to be discussed are the mechanism of triggering of the receptor by il-i. and the nature of il- receptors expressed in other cell types such as b cells. it became evident that these subsets reflect different stages of helper t cell maturation before and after activation. therefore, these t cell subsets have been designated as naive t cells (cd r/ h +, cdw [ b ]-) and memory t cells (cd r/ h -, cdw [ b ]+). we analysed the expression of these antigens in dermal lymphohistiocytic infiltrates from different benign skin diseases and cutaneous t cell lymphomas (chronic contact dermatitis (n= ), parapsoriasis en plaques (n= ), lymphomatoid papulosis (n= ), mycosis fungoides (n= ), sezary's syndrome (n- ), pleomorphic t cell lymphoma (n= ) and high grade t cell lymphomas (~ )). in almost all cutaneous t cell infiltrates memory t cells were preferentially found whereas in the peripheral blood both subsets are equally distributed. this implicates, that t cells infiltrating the skin already have had contact with their respective antigen. where the switch from naive to memory t cells takes place can not be answerded by our findings, as we have investigated rather longstanding skin diseases. however, these memory t cells, which can be activated more easily, make diseased skin more e f f e c t i v e in the nmdlification of an immune resnonse. organs and after several days of stimulation with antigen or mitogen and lymphokines. we find that fresh th synthesize and secerte -iu,ifng,il and gmcsf but very little il or il. within - hours. this pattern resembles the pattern of lymphokines secreted by thl cell lines. the th responsible for this secretion are cd positive t cells which are long-lived since they disappear very slowly following adult thymectomy. they are also sensitive to the in vivo administration of ats(antithyrn cyte serum) and they express high levels of pgp- . the kinetics of lymphokine secretion and the phenotype of the cells suppon the hypothesis that lymphokine secretion from fresh lymphoid cells comes from a population of memory cells. in contrast we fmd that we can also stimulate a separate, ats-resistant population to become lymphokine-secreting cells after four days of in v i m priming.these primed cultures rapidly synthesize an secrete large amounts of i u and il in addition to ifng , il and gmcsf( a phenotype which could be combination of both thl and th helpers), when they are restimulated with ag or mitogen. the cells whic are responsible are cd positive and have a shorter liespan since they decline considerably after adult thymectomy. we suggest that the lymphokine secreting cells detected after priming come from a population(s) of helper t cell precufiofi which have differentiated to become effectors. this generation : effectors requires lymphokines, especially e- andlor ilz and apcs. thus the development of helper th appears to follow a similar pathway as that of cells of the b cell lineage developing into ab-secreting cells and cd positive t cells which develop into cytotoxic effectors from precursors. we have studied the secretion of lymphokines by helper t cells freshly obtained from lymphoid interleukin- production by t cells has been shown to be required for both humoral as well as cell-mediated imune responses. thus, il- production was measured in syphilitic rabbits as a function of their imune response. maximal il- production induced by con a at - days post-infection was only l/ that observed for uninfected rabbits and this correlated well with a decrease in t cell proliferation ( < % that of normal rabbits) upon stimulation with con a . this decrease in il- production in infected rabbits was restored upon removal of most of the adherent cells. furthermore, the il- production by - day infected spleens was restored above normal levels upon addition of indomethacin. this decrease in il- levels was not due to an increase in the ability of infected spleen cells to adsorb il- . finally, studies assessing il- production at various times postinfection indicated that at days post-infection il- levels were higher than normal, however as early as - days after infection il- levels decreased below normal levels and continued to be depressed as late as days post-infection. these results may explain why all organisms are not eliminated during primary infection w i t h ' . pallidum and why secondary and tertiary phases of the disease may develop. has been shown that especially the antigenic presentation of the fusion protein is important for eliciting a functional immune response. to study the immunolo ic properties of the f protein, we expressed the f gene in e.coli as a $galactosidase-f-fusion protein after insertion in a pex vector. we constructed deletion mutants with fragments generated with restriction enzymes and with the polymerase chain reaction method. using a panel of monoclonal antibodies a rough epitope mapping has been performed. two arears were found on the protein, with one area two monoclonal antibodies react and with an other area four monoclonal antibodies react. both area's were found in f , the c-terminal part of the protein. the pepscan method was used to fine map the epitopes of the monoclonal antibodies reacting with the second area on the primary sequence. in at least one viral system, cd + effector cells can be induced in animals lacking cd + t cells. since cd + effector cells are important in immunity to malaria sporozoites, we wished to know if they,too, could be generated without help from cd + cells. we depleted balb/c mice of their cd + t cells by injection of an anti-cd monoclonal antibody, and then tried to immunize them with irradiated plasmodium yoelii sporozoites. when challenged with infectious sporozoites, these mice were not protected against malaria infection. although they did not make antibodies to sporozoites, passive transfer of hyperimmune serum into these animals still did not protect them against a sporozoite infections. cd + t cells from these animals functioned normally in in vitro assays against tnp labelled targets. it appears that, unlike viral systems, the generation of cd + effectors in malaria requires cd + helper cells. thus both cd and cd epitopes should be included in any synthetic vaccine against malaria sporozoites. univ. pennsylvania, philadelphia, pa migrate from fetal liver or bone marrow. rearrange t cell receptor (tcr) genes, express tcr. undergo thymic selection and finally emerge as mature single positive t lymphocytes. most studies of thymic t cell development have been performed by using polyclonal populations of t lymphocytes, which have made the interpretation of the results complicated. cells ( clone) from nude mice by culturing nylon wool non-adherent cd -cd -spleen and lymph node cells in the presence of wehi supernatant and con a supernatant. clone was thy- -cd -cd -cd -il r(il receptor)-and they have been maintained more than months without changing phenotype. when the c clone was stimulated with il . ili/il . illnl . gm-csf, the cells were induced lo express thy-i, tcr and il r proteins. however, culture of the cells with gm-csffll did not induce the expression of these molecules. southern blotting of the dna isolakd from gm-csffll culture suggested that they have undergone partial db -jp rearrangement. the cultured cells were then recloned twice by limiting dilution. the cloned cells were again shown to induce expression of cd complex by the stimulation of il enriched medium. therefore. we have established a system in which to induce differentiation of cloned pre t cell line into tcr+ cells in vitro. the human lymphocyte differentiation antigen cd is encoded by a single gene which gives rise to a kda glycoprotein expressed on the cell surface as a dimer, and in higher molecular weight forms. we demonstrate that the mrna is alternatively spliced such that an exon encoding a transmembrane domain is deleted. that is secreted and exists primarily as a monomer. messenger rna corresponding to both forms is present in peripheral blood lymphocytes,(pbl), con a activated pbl and three cd + t cell lines with the membrane form being the major species. ratio of mrna for membrane cd (mcd ) and secreted cd (scd ) exist. in addition, the splicing pattern we observe differs from the pattern found for the mouse cd gene. this mrna is also alternatively spliced, but an exon encoding a cytoplasmic region is deleted giving rise to a cell surface molecule which differs in its cytoplasmic tail from the protein encoded by the longer mrna. neither protein i s secreted. this is one of the first examples of a different splicing pattern between two homologous mouse and human genes giving rise to very different proteins. this represents one mechanism of generating diversity during speciation. cd ' t cells in the rat can be divided into two non-overlapping subsets by theii reactivity with the monoclonal antibody mrc ox- which binds some of the high molecular weight forms of the cd antigen. recent work, to be described has shown that the two subsets represent different stages of t cell maturation, with distinct t cell functions. the lymphokine repertoire of the memory t cell pool will be discussed with reference to the antigenic environment fmm which the cells are obtained. pancreatic islet allografts, gill, ronald g. and lafterty, kevin j., barbara davis center for childhood diabetes i univ. colo. health sciences center, e. th ave, box b- , denver, co. we studied the cellular interactions requkd for the rejeaion of cultured mhc class i-dispiuate islet allografts. this model was suitable for studying t-t collaboration in that islet allograft immunity is cd dependent but rejection of the cultured islet graft is mediated by the cd cell. recipient c by (b ) mice were grafted with mhc class idisparate b .c-h- bml (bml) islets beneath the mal capsule. islet grafts wen preaated for days in % oxygen culture to reduce immunogenicity. thirty days after grafting, recipient mice wen immunized with oe live spleen cells from the strains indicated below. rejection of the established graft was not trig-by challenge with donortype bml spleen cells, indicating that the mhc class i stimulus was insufficient to initiate all@ immunity. further, immunization with a mixture of m bml and oe mhc class ii-disparate b .c-h- bm (bml ) spleen cells failed to trigger host immunity. however, challenge with loe (bml x bml )fl spleen cells t r i g g d acute rejection of the established bml islet grafts. the requirement for l i i presmtatidrecognition of class i and class all* antigens to trigger allograft immunity indicates that the antigen-presenting (apc) plays an essential role for t-t collaboration in vivo. uature hla-dr complexes are purported to spontaneously internalize from and recycle to the plasma membrane of b but not t lymphocytes. using a neuraminidase protection assay, we have radiolabeled surface class i antigens on intact cells and cultured these cells under conditions which permit or prevent endocytosis; subsequently, surface glycoproteins on viable cells were desialylated and class i molecules were analyzed by iamunoprecipitation and two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. a panel of buman b lymphoblastoid cell lines and activated tonsillar b cell blasts failed to exhibit any internalization of class i complexes; control transferrin receptor molecules were endocytosed as ascertained by insensitivity to neuraminidase digestion. class ii+ pba blasts and sezary cells of the t lineage were also deficient in detectable hla-dr internalization. results did not vary regardless of the time allowed for efficient endocytosis ( ok ~saethionine). or the addition of anti-class i monoclonal antibody during the chase period for endocytosis. therefore. within the limits of sensitivity of this assay, class complexes do not appear to be internalized, either spontaneously or uben crosslinked by antibody. recycling represent a dynamic pathvay for regulating surface expression of class i antigens or a means of associating with and presenting foreign antigenic peptides. supported in part by usphs grants # t cao - and # eo a - . in previous studies of antigen-specific t cell responses in two distinct models of autoimmune tubulointerstitial nephritis (tin), viiia villosa lectin binding (vv+) t cells have been shown to be necessary for effector t cell expression and mediation of tin. in anti-tubular basement membrane disease, antigen-specifi vv+ t cells direct the phenotypic selection of cd + nephritogenic t cells in susceptible mouse strains (j. immunol. , nov. , ) . this function is mediated by an antigen-binding, i-js+ soluble protein factor. current studies investigate the role of the t cell glycoprotein which binds vv lectin in mediating w+ t cell function. using the previously described effector t cell induction assay, we found that n-acetyl-d-galactosamine (galnac) (at mm but not . mm) inhibits vv+ t cell function and cd + effector t cell selection. when cd + effector t cell differentiation occurs in the presence of soluble factors derived from antigen-primed vv+ t cells, galnac is not inhibitory. these studies suggested that soluble gal nac may competitively bind to a soluble protein which stimulates vv+ t cells, in part by binding to the w lectin receptor, to synthesize andlor secrete their biologically active soluble factor. as an additional test of this hypothesis, we prepared detergent solubilized membranes from vv+ t cells and purified vv lectin binding proteins by affinity chromatography. like galnac. these membrane derived lectin binding proteins also inhibit vv+ t cell function and cd + effector t cell selection. inhibition by soluble 'lectin receptors' is dose dependent and is demonstrable with lectin binding glycoproteins derived from - x lo cells, in an assay utilizing x vv+ cells. we are now further characterizing the lectin receptor and its endogenous ligand. elementary bodies and outer membranes of chlamydia trachomatis produce a high-titered igg response in rabbits and mice as measured by elisa and microscopic immunofluorescence assays. western blot analysis of total elementary body protein identifies a kd major outer membrane protein (momp) as the predominant antigen. to identify the cbmical structure of the epitope, purified momp was subjected to chemical and enzymatic fragmentation and the resulting peptides were purified by hplc and assayed for immunoreactivity. an immunoreactive kd cyanogen bromide peptide was amino-terminal sequenced and a series of overlapping synthetic peptides were synthesized and assayed for immunoreactivity. sequential single amino acid deletions at both the nhz and cooh termini allowed us to identify the precise epitope as a amino acid peptide spanning residues - of momp. two amino acid substitutions at positions (phe-gly) and (pro-gly) completely eliminated antibody binding. the -amino acid synthetic peptide is a potent immunogen producing high-titered antibody responses that are specific for the momp molecule. analysis of an independently derived mutant harboring the same defect has shorn that this trans-acting gene is not required for transport of class i molecules. class i heavy chain is synthesized in this cell line and associates with b m. transport of the class i appears to be blocked in the er or cis olgi as the majority of the class i glycoproteins are not processed to the endo b resistant form. the ability of the cell to significantly increase expression of surface class i when the incubation temperature is lowered from oc to oc suggests that this gene may function to stabilize a particular conformation of the protein. consistent with this is the increased sensitivity of class i molecules in the mutant as compared to the parent to degradation when cell lysates are incubated at elevated temperatures. the inability to immunoprecipitate class i antigens in the mutant is possibly due to the action of endogenous proteases present in these lysates. two complementing approaches are being employed to isolate this gene and further analyze its role in class i biosynthesis. the first involves inactivation of the trans-acting gene by insertion of a retroviral vector and subsequent pcr amplification of regions flanking the vector. in another approach a cdna library will be introduced into the mutant cell line and the cdna will be reisolated from cells reexpressing surface class i. houston. tx. we have induced a panel of highly immunogenic (imm+) vanants of the murine fibrosarcoma mca-f using i-methyl- niml-niuasoguanidine (mnng). -aza- '-deoxycytidine ( -azacdr). and uv radiation. these tumors grew m immunosuppressed mice. but were complelely rejecled by normal syngeneic hosts. mice thac had rejected large numbers of imm+ also developed a smng, tumor. specific immunity to the parental mor. lmmunizalion with low numbers of lmm+ engendered only variant-specific immunity. the frequency of imm+ variant g e n e d o n was similar for the three induction different protocols ( % to %), suggesling lhat generauon of imm+ was more closely relalcd to the cell line used than to the inducing agent however, the swngth of the imm+ phenaypc was related lo ihe agent used, since mnng induced clones had the m g e s t immunogeniciues and uv-b ihe weakest the smng neoantigens expressed by mnng induced imm+ were varunt-sppifc. while uv and s -d d r induced clones displayed significant cross-reactivilies not attributable to the parental t u n a antigen. increased or inappropriate expression of class-l mhc antigens did not correlate with the imm+ phenotype. we investigated the phenotypes of the spleen cells medrating tumor rejccuon using the local adopllve lransfer a s a y (lata). variant-specific immunity w mnng, -azacdr and uv induced imm+ were all m d a t c d by thy . +. l t +. lyc . -t cells. afrw immunization with high numbers of imm+ w engender both anti-lmm+ and anu-parental immunity. both cd + and cdw effectors rejecled the imm+ in lata, while only ihe c w + t cells could wnsfer resistance w the parent immunity the parenlal tumor anugen engendered by the imm+ suggeslcd associative recognition of the parental and neoantigem wgelher on ihe cell surface. this hypochfsis was supported by failure of lmm+ u) pmlect againu an antigenically disunct tumor (mca-d) admixed with it, either at the lime of immunization or at challenge. fusion of ihe h m * vanant with mca-d yielded a unique, hybrid parental umor antigen that was associatively recognized with rhc original imm+ neoanugen, demomirating the importance of antigen cocxpression. grant rr- - . w e have recently demonstrated and reported that substitution of anionic side chain carboxylic groups with aminoethylamide groups on protein antigens exhibits a pattern of enhanced immunogenicity both in vivo and in vitro. this enhanced immunogenicity was also observed in low responder strains of mice and we investigated the mechanism by which it is achieved. we examined antigen processing and presentation of native (nbsa) and modified bsa (mbsa) to t helper c e h isolated from c /bl low responder mice. a greatly reduced amount of mbsa than nbsa was required to activate both nbsa and mbsa primed th. proliferation of nbsa and mbsa primed t cells increased in proportion to the amount of time of exposure of the antigen presenting cells (apc) to nbsa, peaking at h. conversely, apc required less than min exposure to mbsa to achieve optimal activation, indicating rapid uptake of mbsa. paraformaldehyde fixed apc recognized mbsa without a lag phase processing, indicating that this event also occurred quite rapidly. apc processed nbsa w a s presented to primed t cells more effectively than the soluble antigen m shown by the increased rate of t cell proliferation. in contrast, mbsa was equally well presented to th cells by apc m in soluble unprocessed form. our data demonstrate that the reduced response in low responders is greatly enhanced by a modified antigen which is rapidly taken up and processed by apc. b cells which bear surface innunoglobulin (sig) receptors specific for a particular antigen are abile t o present fragments of that antigen very efficiently t o t cells. this i s due. in part, t o the high affinity of the receptor, which facilitates antigen binding at low concentrations. using tnp-abc and specific antigen, we have demonstrated that the tnp-abc process antigen very effectively. w e have compared specific antigen with i t s polyclonal analog, anti-ig, and demonstrated differences in the kinetics of degradation of anti-ig and tnp-antigens by tnp-aex. both antigen and anti-ig bound by tnp-abc are degraded into small fragments which are released into the supernatant. however, the following differences have been found: ) the rate of release of small fragments of tnp-antigen parallels the rate at which these cells become able to directly conjugate with t cells (a lneasure of antigen presentation), reaching a plateau between and hours. in contrast, the degradation of anti-ig and release of fragnents continues for hours. ) analysis of initial kinetics demonstrated that release of fragments of tnp-antigen begins minutes after binding; there i s no significant release of anti-ig fragrnents u n t i l about minutes. ) in contrast to anti-ig where there i s significant accumulation of degradation intermediates within the cells, there i s very l i t t l e intracellular accumulation of intennediate-size fragments of tnp-antigen. thus, we propose that the processing of antigen bound via specific sig may involve a specific intracellular pathway and that intracellular routing may be determined either by the degree of cross-linking of sig induced by antigen vs anti-ig or the mode of interaction of the various ligands with sig. alt*, departments of biochemistry (*) and medicine (+), college of physicians and surgeons of columbia univerity, new york, new york . we have recently analysed the structure of the / t cell receptor (tcr) expressed by the normal human thymocyte clone cii. cii expresses a c ' constant region that is a polymorphic form lacking a copy of an izternal exon; the sequence of this constant region accounts for the size of the chain and noncovalent linkage of and chains in the cii tcr. in order to elucidate its role, this / tcr will be reconstituted in immortalized t-cell lines. in addition, the productively rearranged human / receptor will be transgenically introduced into mice in order to assess the effect of the complete receptor on the development of t cells. the humoral immune response to human immunodeficiency virus has been shown to contain antibodies which act to mediate the uptake of virus through fc receptor mediated mechanisms. it is therefore possible that vaccination with the entire envelope polypeptide may present immunologic determinants that enhance infection. one means by which to generate an immune response to hiv that shall possess neutralizing activity in the absence of infection enhancing activity is to generate anti-idiotypic abs that bear the internal image of neutralizing human antibodies directed against hiv. we affinity purified human antibodies from hiv+ patients on a viral lysate column. we have produced monoclonal anti-idiotypic antibodies directed against these abi's. two of these monoclonals were shown to he ag inhibitable by their ability to inhibit the binding of p o l y e l o n a l human antisera to hiv viral lysate on ortho hiv ab t,est, wells. one monoclonal, b , when coupled t.o klh and used to immunize mice, produced an abs that. bound to viral lysate in an elisa assay. an affinity column containing rbs was used to purify an abi that was shown to bind to p and p hy western blot analysis. these data suggest that br may be a potential vaccine candidate. we have recently described a transgenic mouse model which co-expresses the tcr u and fl chains from the c cell line (recognized by the b anti-clonotype). t celh bearing the transgenic clonotype are positively selected by elements of the h-zb mhc for expression on cd ' cells. thus in the periphery of h-zb animals - % of the t cells are bz /cd *. the same peripheral expression is observed when the transgenes are expressed in f animals bearing a "neutral" mhc haplotype (eg. h-zb'*). however, when the transgene hi expressed in f animals which also express the h- ld gene product, negative selection occurs by clonal deletion. however, this deletion is functional rather than structural as the b clonotype is present on - % of peripheral t cells. these cells are unusual in that they express neither of the characteristic peripheral molecules cd or cd . the absence of cd expression on the b * cells appears to allow these potentially self-reactive clones to exist without evidence of autoimmunity. the original clone as well as b +/cd + cells from h- b animals are strongly inhibited by anti-cd reagents. in an effort to understand the process of negative selection and self-tolerance we have examined the capacity of these cells to be activated directly by the anti-clonotype rather than antigen (h- ld). the results demonstrate that the clonotype is fully functional on these double negative cells, indicating a normal maturation in the thymus. further examination of their surface phenotype also supports the conclusion that these are fully mature cells which are phenotypically distinct from double negative cells which exist in the thymus of h- b animals. of imunohematology. azl, leiden, the netherlands; praxis biologics, rochester, new york, usa and 'university of southampton, uk. immunity to disease caused by neisseria menineitidis is associated with the presence of bactericidal and opsonic antibodies to the capsular polysaccharide (cps), lipopolysaccharide and to outer membrane proteins (omps). the cps of group a and c meningococci are proven efficacious vaccines, although the immunogenicity in infants is poor and the immunity is of short duration. the combination with t-helper epitopes will certainly improve the immunogenic properties of these t-independent (ti,) antigens. the group b cps is poorly immunogenic in humans probably because of tolerance due to structural similarity to host glycopeptides and/or glycolipids. we have focused our research onto the class omps which show limited heterogeneity amongst meningococci. murine monoclonal antibodies to these proteins are highly bactericidal in vitro and will be used to map b-cell epitopes. t-epitopes have been identified by theoretical prediction of immunodominant sites by analysis of the amino acid sequence of the omp followed by their solid phase synthesis and subsequent testing for polyclonal activation of t-lymphocytes obtained from hl -typed volunteers immunized with the omp. in addition human t-cell clones are generated with omps and maintained with antigen, ebv-transformed b-cells, fresh feeders and ril . the clones are tested for antigen specificity, io vitro helper function, mhc restriction element, expression of surface markers and recognition of common meningococcal t-cell epitopes. c demonstration o f p-azobenzene-arsonate-l-tyrosine (aba-tyr) speclfic t cells in low responder h- mice by il- supported t cell proliferatlon previous studies have shown that h-zb mice immunized with aba-tyr fail to produce aba specific delayed-type hypersensitivity and show little or no t cell proliferation in vitro to aba-tyr. these observations suggest that h-zb mice are deficient in th cells that respond to aba-tyr. by contrast, immunization of h- b mice with tnp conjugates of aba-tyr revealed good cognate help, suggesting that these mice do possess aba-tyr specific th cells and that such cells are not revealed in conventional lymphoproliferative assays. because such assays are widely used to evaluate ir gene control and to map t cell epitopes, the databases generated from such studies may seriously under represent the total number of responder phenotypes and t cell epitopes. because of this concern, we established culture conditions that wlii support aba-tyr specific t cell proliferation in h- b mice. in these studies, c bu .l mice were immunized s.c. with aba-tyr and to days later the draining lymph nodes were cultured with varying doses of aba-tyr or with varying doses of aba-tyr and varying doses of recombinant il- alpha (rll-la), a known costimulator of th cells. culture with aba-tyr alone produced no proliferation. by contrast, culture with aba-tyr and rll-la revealed t cell proliferation that titrated with the dose of aba-tyr and the dose of rll-la specific for conalbumin presented on ryngeneic antigen presenting cells and dependent on il- for its proliferation, was used a s an indicator cell for the ability of neonatal murine spleen cells to present antigen and produce il- and il- .the antigen presenting capacity of neonatal spleen cells is low. during antigen presentation there is an augmentation of il- and il- production by the antigen presenting spleen cell population. however, neonatal spleen cells do not respond as well a s adult cells. the low levels o f il- can not be attributed t o a low potential for producing il- since neonatal cells produce high levels of il- after induction by a crude il- inducer factor (il- -if).the this impairment leads t o a decreased stimulus of the -helper cell to produce inducer factors which leads t o low levels of il- and il- production by the neonatal cells during antigen presentation. no suppressor mechanisms responsible for the l o w interleukin production were detected. human or murine class i genomic dna was transfected into a b-lymphohlastoid x t-lymphoblastoid hybrid cell line. this fusion hybrid has lost both t cell derived copies of chromosome six and contains deletions spanning the class i region on both copies of chromosome six derived from the b-cell parent. previous data have described a transacting factor within this region that is responsible for class i antigen expression. hla-bw and b glycoproteins, although synthesized, were not transported to the plasma membrane in the hybrid. were surface expressed. these data suggest a fundamental difference between human and mouse histocompatibility antigens in their requirements for intracellular transport. the role of glycans in this transport dicotomy is currently under investigation. in addition, hybrid human-murine genes are being used to identify regions of the class i molecules involved in this transport phenomenon. we probed t h e means by which t h e a n t l g e n p r e s e n t l n g c e l l (apc) handles t h e a n t i g e n produce p e p t i d e s t h a t bind t o mhc-molecules. we propose t h e e x i s t a n c e o f a new type o f i n t e r n a l image i n which immunoglobulin v-region peptides. formed by processing, imitate peptides from conventional a n t i g e n s . w e r e f e r t o such denatured i n t e r n a l images as r e s i d u e internal images, since t h e y a r e a s s o c i a t e d w i t h t h e r e s i d u e of p e p t i d e s remaining a f t e r processing. in some cases, r e s i d u e internal images may be actual sequence images, i . e . , the v-region sequence m y be i d e n t i c a l t o the conventional a n t i g e n sequence.to be class i h- ka-restricted cytolytic t lymphocytes (ctl) are directed against two immunodominant sites on the a/jap/ / influenza hemagglutinin (ha) that can be mimicked by synthetic oligopeptides spanning residues - in the ha and - in the hydrophobic, transmembrane region. analysis of the fine specificity of hal-specific ctl clones demonstrated that these ctl clones can be subdivided into at least two group based on their patterns of recognition of closely related influenza h n field strains and a monoclonal antibody derived variant of a/guiyang/ / . using a series of nested synthetic peptides spanning the - region, the minimal amino acid residues necessary for recognition by the two groups of ctl clones were defined and found to consist of two separate but overlapping sites. sequence comparison of the ha of the a/jap/ / , the influenza field isolates and the monoclonal antibody derived variant has identified two amino acids, asn at position and gly at position , that are critical for t cell recognition. thus, animo acid substitutions induced either by antigenic drift or by monoclonal antibody selection can affect class i ctl recognition. pretreatment with a n t m e s reactive with class mhc anti-has previously been reported to be successful in exov~~kj a n t i g e n -w i r q dendritic cells (m) fran rodent tissue grafts. we have extended these exper-to inta? whole organ grafts. ilia pnmxses also demcnstrated a prolonged survival ( f days) ccapared to controls ( t days) (p < . ) tihen v l a n t e d into streprozatocin treat& da recipients. antigenic variation in the haemagglutinin (ha) of influenza a viruses frequently introduces new oligosacchekide attachment sites ( aan-x-serlthreo) and carbohydrate addition prevents antibody recognition by steric hindrance. acid substitution in mutant viruses of the h n subtype (ha asp+asn), that introduces an n-glycosylation site (hn gcys &thr ), abrogates antibody and cd + t recognition. infected with x virus recognise a synthetic peptide corresponding to antigenic site e, ha - , and are sensitive to a single substitution (ha asp-basn) in mutant viruses. virus infected target cells, thereby confirming that carbohydrate addition prevents cd ' t cell recognition. here ve show that an amino cell i-ad restricted, ha specific t cell clones f r m balblc mice-reviously recognition of mutant viruses is restored however by tunicamycin-treatment of key: cord- -z uecyl authors: pavesi, angelo title: asymmetric evolution in viral overlapping genes is a source of selective protein adaptation date: - - journal: virology doi: . /j.virol. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: z uecyl overlapping genes represent an intriguing puzzle, as they encode two proteins whose ability to evolve is constrained by each other. overlapping genes can undergo “symmetric evolution” (similar selection pressures on the two proteins) or “asymmetric evolution” (significantly different selection pressures on the two proteins). by sequence analysis of pairs of homologous viral overlapping genes, i evaluated their accordance with one or the other model. analysis of nucleotide and amino acid sequences revealed that half of overlaps undergo asymmetric evolution, as the protein from one frame shows a number of substitutions significantly higher than that of the protein from the other frame. interestingly, the most variable protein (often known to interact with the host proteins) appeared to be encoded by the de novo frame in all cases examined. these findings suggest that overlapping genes, besides to increase the coding ability of viruses, are also a source of selective protein adaptation. many viruses produce novel genes inside pre-existing genes by overprinting of a de novo frame onto an ancestral frame (atkins et al., ; keese and gibbs, ; rancurel et al., ; sabath et al., ) . the high prevalence of overlapping genes in viruses has been attributed to the advantage of maximizing the gene information content of small viral genomes (miyata and yasunaga, ; lamb and orvath, ; pavesi et al., ) . in detail, the gene-compression hypothesis states that the size of the viral capsid imposes a biophysical limit on the size of the viral genome, thus making overprinting the most adequate strategy to gain new function (chirico et al., ) . in alternative, the gene novelty hypothesis argues that the birth of overlapping genes is driven by selection pressures favoring evolutionary innovation (brandes and linial, ) . this hypothesis is supported by the finding that overlaps, thought for a long time to be restricted to viruses, also occur in the large genomes of prokaryotic (delaye et al., ; fellner et al., ) and eukaryotic organisms (szklarczyk et al., ; bergeron et al., ; vanderperre et al., ) . a particularly interesting feature of overlapping genes is that they represent an intriguing example of adaptive conflict. indeed, they simultaneously encode two proteins whose freedom to change is constrained by each other (sander and schulz, ; krakauer, ; peleg et al., ; allison et al., ) , which would be expected to reduce the adaptive ability of the virus (simon-loriere et al., ) . we would expect, in principle, that overlapping genes are subjected to strong evolutionary constraints, as a single nucleotide substitution can impair two proteins (see the codon position " " in fig. ) . a typical example of "constrained evolution" is that occurring in hepatitis b virus (hbv), whose short genome ( . kb) contains a high percentage ( %) of overlapping coding regions (mizokami et al., ; zhang et al., ) . however, overlapping genes can also show a less conservative pattern of change, because of a high rate of non-synonymous substitutions in one frame (positive adaptive selection) with concurrent dominance of synonymous substitutions in the other (negative purifying selection). examples of positive selection concern the overlapping genes that encode the tat and vpr proteins of simian immunodeficiency virus (hughes et al., ) , the p and p proteins of the tombusvirus family of plant viruses (allison et al., ) , and the orf and orf proteins of trichodysplasia spinulosa-associated polyomavirus (kazem et al., ) . we can hypothesize for overlapping genes a first evolutionary model in which the two proteins they encode are subjected to similar selection pressures. when selection is strong both proteins (or protein regions) are highly conserved (e.g. the rnase domain of polymerase and the amino-terminal half of the x protein in hbv; see fig. in mizokami et al., ) . when selection is not too strong both proteins can vary considerably (e.g. the spacer domain of polymerase and the pres /s domain of the surface protein in hbv; see fig. in mizokami et al., ) . this model is named "symmetric evolution", because the number of amino acid substitutions of one protein is expected to be not significantly different from that of the other. it corresponds to the "shared model" by fernandes et al. ( ) . in alternative, we can hypothesize for overlapping genes an evolutionary model in which the two proteins they encode are subjected to significantly different selection pressures. support for this model, which implies adaptive selection on one frame and purifying selection on the other, was provided both by viral (hughes et al., ; fujii et al., ; guyader and ducray, ; stamenković et al., ) and mammalian overlapping genes (szklarczyk et al., ) . this model is named "asymmetric evolution", because the number of amino acid substitutions of one protein is expected to be significantly different from that of the other. it corresponds to the "segregated model" by fernandes et al. ( ) . we recently assembled a dataset of viral overlapping genes whose expression is experimentally proven (pavesi et al., ) , with the aim to provide a useful benchmark for systematic studies. a first analysis of the dataset revealed that overlapping genes differ significantly from non-overlapping genes in their nucleotide and amino acid composition (pavesi et al., ) . we also found that the vast majority of the overlaps of the dataset have one or more homologs, suggesting further comparative studies. in the present study, i investigated the evolution of viral overlapping genes by sequence analysis of pairs of homologs. the first aim of the study was to determine which of the two evolutionary models described above is the prevailing one. the second aim was to identify the type of nucleotide substitution that significantly affects the pattern of symmetric/asymmetric evolution. finally, the third aim was to assess whether the most variable protein (in the case of asymmetric evolution) is that encoded by the ancestral or the de novo frame. . . selection criteria for homologous overlapping genes i first extracted from the dataset of overlapping genes experimentally proven (s dataset from pavesi et al., ) the amino acid sequence of the two proteins encoded by each overlap. for each protein, i searched for homologs against the non-redundant protein sequences ncbi database using blastp (altschul et al., ) . when blastp did not detect any homolog i used tblastn, which compared the protein query sequence against the nucleotide collection ncbi database translated in all reading frames. i used tblastn because the amino acid sequence of the protein encoded by one of the two overlapping frames (usually that discovered more recently) may not be reported in many viral genomes present in the ncbi database (pavesi et al., ) . the selection of homologous overlapping genes was based on three criteria. the first was an equal length of the homolog. it was met in the great majority of cases ( out of ). in the remaining cases, the homolog was only slightly shorter than the query sequence. the exception was the overlap capsid protein/assembly activating protein (aap) of adeno-associated virus- , whose homolog encodes an aap amino acids shorter in the amino-terminal region and amino acids shorter in the carboxy-terminal region. the second criterion was a homolog yielding, for both the encoded proteins, an alignment with no insertion/deletion (indel) or with a minimal number of indels. in the latter case, i imposed the rule that indel(s) must be located at the same amino acid position in the alignments of the two pairs of proteins (see for example the overlap polymerase/ b protein of spinach latent virus, which is the first overlap in supplementary file s ). by imposing this rule, i could align the two homologous nucleotide sequences in full accordance with the corresponding protein sequences. the alignment of protein sequences was carried out with clustal omega (sievers and higgins, ) . the third criterion concerned the cases in which i found multiple homologs meeting the two criteria described above. in these cases, i selected the most distantly related homolog, with the aim to cover the largest evolutionary space. the choice to select only one homolog for each overlapping gene was due to the fact that collection of a larger sample of homologs is limited to a few overlaps, mainly those occurring in virus species that are human pathogens (e.g. influenza and hepatitis viruses or sars and ebola viruses). the search for homologs yielded a dataset of pairs of homologous overlapping genes (supplementary file s ). thirty-seven homologs came from a different virus species, in accordance with the ictv taxonomy (king et al., ) (https://talk.ictvonline.org/taxonomy/). the mean nucleotide identity between overlaps and homologs was . %, with a standard deviation (sd) of . %. the remaining homologs came from isolates belonging to the same virus species. in this case, the mean nucleotide identity between overlaps and homologs was . % (sd = . %). for each pair of homologous overlapping genes, the supplementary file s contains the following information: i) the nucleotide sequence of the upstream frame and that of the homolog; ii) the amino acid sequence of the protein encoded by the upstream frame (up ) and that of the protein encoded by the homolog (up ); iii) the nucleotide sequence of the downstream frame (shifted of one nucleotide ' with respect to the upstream frame) and that of the homolog; iv) the amino acid sequence of the protein encoded by the downstream frame (down ) and that of the protein encoded by the homolog (down ); v) the alignment of up with up and the percent amino acid identity; vi) the alignment of down with down and the percent amino acid identity; vii) the chisquare analysis, which compared by a x contingency-table the number of the amino acid identities and differences in the up -up alignment with that in the down -down alignment (cut-off of significance = . ; degree of freedom; p < . ). . . half of overlapping genes evolve in accordance with the asymmetric model i carried out a preliminary analysis using the t-student test for paired data. for each pairs of homologous overlaps, i counted the number of amino acid identities between up and up and that between down and down . i then calculated the absolute value of the difference between them. the null hypothesis was a mean difference orientation of overlapping genes, with the downstream frame having a shift of one nucleotide ′ with respect to the upstream frame. there are types of codon position (cp): cp (bold character), in which the first position of the upstream frame overlaps the third position of the downstream frame; cp (underlined character), in which the second position of the upstream frame overlaps the first position of the downstream frame; cp (italic character), in which the third position of the upstream frame overlaps the second position of the downstream frame. based on the genetic code, a nucleotide substitution at first codon position causes an amino acid change in . % of cases, at second codon position in % of cases, and at third codon position in . % of cases. thus, nucleotide substitutions at the codon positions " " and " " are usually non-synonymous in one frame and synonymous in the other. nucleotide substitutions at the codon position " " are almost all non-synonymous in both frames. virology ( ) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] between paired observations close to zero, indicating that overlapping genes evolve in accordance with the symmetric model. the null hypothesis was rejected (t-student = . ; degrees of freedom; p = − ), indicating that overlapping genes can also evolve in accordance with the alternative asymmetric model. in order to identify which and how many overlapping genes undergo symmetric or asymmetric evolution, i then compared the amino acid diversity between up and up to that between down and down . i used the contingency-table chi-square test (snedecor and cochran, ) with a cut-off value of . for degree of freedom (p < . ). i classified a pair of homologous overlaps as a case of symmetric evolution, if the number of amino acid substitutions in the up -up alignment did not significantly differ from that in the down -down alignment (chi-square < . ). an example is given by the overlap ns protein/ns protein from dendrolimus punctatus densovirus. for the ns protein, i found identities and differences when compared to the homolog from hordeum marinum itera-like densovirus. for the ns protein, i found identities and differences, yielding a chi-square value ( . ) largely below the cut-off of significance. in alternative, i classified a pair of homologous overlaps as a case of asymmetric evolution, if the number of amino acid substitutions in the up -up alignment was significantly different from that in the down -down alignment (chi-square > . ). an example is given by the overlap movement protein/replicase from turnip yellow mosaic virus. for the movement protein, i found identities and differences when compared to the homolog from watercress white vein virus. for replicase, i found identities and differences, yielding a chisquare value ( . ) largely above the cut-off of significance. the chi-square test was highly sensitive. for example, i found that the overlap capsid protein/p protein from maize chlorotic mottle virus undergoes asymmetric evolution, in spite of a nucleotide identity with the homolog extremely high ( . %). indeed, the number of amino acid differences between p and homolog ( out of sites) was significantly higher than that between capsid and homolog ( out of sites) (chi-square = . ; p = . ). based on this finding, i set the upper limit of sensitivity of the chi-square test to a nucleotide identity between overlap and homolog of %. this filter limited the analysis to (out of ) pairs of homologous overlaps. overall, i found that overlapping genes evolve in accordance with the asymmetric model (significantly different selection pressures on the two proteins). the highest chi-square value ( . ) concerned the overlap from apple stem grooving virus, which encodes the kd movement protein and the polyprotein linker-domain. indeed, the amino acid diversity between linker-domain and homolog ( %; differences and identities) was ten-fold higher than that between movement protein and homolog ( %; differences and identities). i found that the remaining overlapping genes evolve in accordance with the symmetric model (similar selection pressures on the two proteins). the occurrence of similar selection pressures can yield two highly conserved proteins. for example, analysis of the overlap a protein/ b protein from human sars coronavirus revealed that the amino acid diversity between a and homolog is remarkably low ( . %; differences and identities), as well as that between b and homolog ( . %; differences and identities). however, the occurrence of similar selection pressure can also yield two proteins with a remarkably less conserved pattern of change. this is the case of the overlap from spinach latent virus, which encodes the zincfinger domain of polymerase and the b protein. sequence analysis revealed that the amino acid diversity between zinc-finger domain and homolog is considerably high ( %; differences and identities), as well as that between b and homolog ( %; differences and identities). the analysis of amino acid diversity in the pairs of homologous overlapping genes is summarized in fig. . it shows, for each overlap, the percent amino acid (aa) identity of the two encoded proteins with those encoded by the homolog. the subset of the overlapping genes under symmetric evolution ( fig. a) contains overlaps in which both proteins have high conservation (aa identity > %), overlaps in which both proteins have poor conservation (aa identity < %) and overlap with a protein having an aa identity above % and the other below %. the subset of the overlapping genes under asymmetric evolution (fig. b ) contains overlaps in which both proteins have high conservation (aa identity > %), overlap in which both proteins have poor conservation (aa identity < %) and overlaps with a protein having an aa identity above % and the other below %. finally, a list of the overlapping genes, classified in accordance with the symmetric or asymmetric model ( and cases, respectively), is given in supplementary table s . . . validation of the model of symmetric/asymmetric evolution by analysis of the pattern of nucleotide substitutions in homologous overlapping genes in accordance with wei and zhang ( ) , i first classified the nucleotide sites of each overlapping gene into four categories depending on the impact of potential mutations on the two encoded proteins. the four categories are referred as nn, sn, ns, and ss sites, respectively, where n stands for non-synonymous change and s stands for synonymous change. that is, if all potential mutations at a site cause nonsynonymous change in both proteins, it is a nn site, and so on. i then classified the nucleotide substitutions occurring in the homolog into four categories: nn, sn, ns, and ss. using the contingency-table chisquare test, i compared the number of sn and ns sites in each overlapping gene with the number of sn and ns substitutions in the homolog. under symmetric evolution, i would expect a chi-square value below the cut-off of significance ( . ; degree of freedom), that is a full concordance between the number of sn and ns sites and that of sn and ns substitutions. for example, in the overlap orf /orf from barley yellow striate mosaic virus i counted sn sites and ns sites. in the homolog from maize yellow striate virus, i classified nucleotide substitutions into the sn category and substitutions into the ns category. the chi-square test yielded a value ( . ) largely below the cut-off of significance. under asymmetric evolution, i would expect a chi-square above the cut-off of significance, that is a significant discordance between the number of sn and ns sites and that of sn and ns substitutions. for example, the overlap capsid protein/ns protein from bluetongue virus (serotype ) has sn sites and ns sites. the homolog from bluetongue virus (serotype ) has nucleotide substitutions belonging to the sn category and substitutions to the ns category. the chisquare test yielded a value ( . ) largely above the cut-off of significance. the analysis of the pattern of nucleotide substitutions in the pairs of homologous overlaps revealed and cases of symmetric and asymmetric evolution, respectively (supplementary table s ). this result was in accordance with that obtained previously (from analysis of the amino acid diversity, see supplementary table s ) in the % of cases ( out of ). overall, i found a total of overlaps under symmetric evolution (they are marked with a single asterisk in supplementary tables s a) and a total of overlaps under asymmetric evolution (they are marked with a double asterisk in supplementary table s b ). a list of the overlapping genes under asymmetric evolution is given in table . these findings were not affected by the fact that some homologs came from a different virus species, while others from an isolate within the same virus species. under symmetric evolution, i found and overlaps with the homolog within and between species, respectively. under asymmetric evolution, i found and overlaps with the homolog within and between species, respectively. finally, a further validation of the model of symmetric/asymmetric a. pavesi virology ( ) - evolution was provided by a correlation test between the chi-square value from analysis of amino acid substitutions and the distribution of nucleotide substitutions at the codon positions " " and " " (fig. ) . given the orientation of overlapping genes in our dataset (fig. ) , a substitution at the codon position " " (cp ) is usually synonymous in the upstream frame and always non-synonymous in the downstream frame, while a substitution at the codon position " " is almost always non-synonymous in the upstream frame and usually synonymous in the downstream frame. under symmetric evolution, the number of substitutions at the codon position " " is expected to be close to that at the codon position " ", yielding a similar distribution of the amino acid substitutions in the two pairs of homologous proteins. under asymmetric evolution, the number of substitutions at the codon position " " is expected to be significantly higher (or lower) than that at the codon position " ", yielding a different distribution of the amino acid substitutions in the two pairs of homologous proteins. by comparing the upstream frame of each overlap with that of the homolog, i calculated the absolute value (abs) of the difference between the percent frequency (%f) of substitutions at the codon position " " (%f.cp ) and that at the codon position " " (%f.cp ). i then carried out a correlation test between abs (%f.cp -%f.cp ) and the chi-square value from analysis of amino acid substitutions. as the chisquare test depends on the extent of the sample (here the length of the protein encoded by the overlap), i normalized the chi-square value in accordance with the cohen's rule (cohen, ) . normalization was the square root of the ratio between the chi-square value and the overall length of the two proteins encoded by the overlap (e.g. the highest chisquare value, . , was converted into the highest normalized chi-square value, . ). i found a significantly positive correlation between abs (%f.cp -%f.cp ) and the normalized chi-square value (r = . ; t-student = . ; one tailed p < . ; degrees of freedom) (fig. ) . as expected, this result indicates that asymmetric evolution is significantly affected by an unbalanced distribution of the nucleotide substitutions at the codon positions " " and " ". to answer the question, i investigated the genealogy of the overlapping genes under asymmetric evolution. identifying which gene is ancestral and which one is de novo (the genealogy of the overlap) can be done by examining their phylogenetic distribution, under the assumption that the gene with the most restricted distribution is the de novo one (rancurel et al., ) . this approach yielded a set of overlapping genes with a reliably predicted genealogy (see table in sabath et al., and table in pavesi et al., ) . this set included out of the overlaps under asymmetric evolution. another approach to infer the genealogy of overlapping genes is the codon-usage method. it is based on the assumption that the ancestral gene, which has co-evolved over a long period of time with the other viral genes, has a distribution of synonymous codons significantly closer to that of the viral genome than the de novo gene (keese and gibbs, ; sabath et al., ; pavesi et al., ; willis and masel, ) . due to the shortness of most overlapping genes, the method has been improved, with the aim to evaluate the correlation between the codon-usage patterns of overlapping and non-overlapping genes with a fig. . analysis of the amino acid diversity in the pairs of homologous overlapping genes. each pair of columns shows: i) the percent amino acid identity between the protein encoded by the upstream frame of the overlap and that encoded by the homolog (dark column); ii) the percent amino acid identity between the protein encoded by the downstream frame of the overlap (shifted of one nucleotide ′ with respect to the upstream frame) and that encoded by the homolog (gray column). the horizontal line separates well-conserved homologous pairs (aa identity > %) from not well-conserved homologous pairs (aa identity < %). (a) subset of the overlapping genes under symmetric evolution. (b) subset of the overlapping genes under asymmetric evolution. the numbering of overlapping genes is in accordance with that given in supplementary table s . the underlined numbers indicate the overlaps in which the pattern of symmetric evolution ( cases out of ) or that of asymmetric evolution ( cases out of ) was not confirmed by chi-square analysis of the nucleotide diversity. virology ( ) - table list of the overlapping genes evolving in accordance with the asymmetric model. minimal loss of information (pavesi, ) . using the improved version of the codon-usage method (pavesi, ) , i could predict the genealogy of out of the overlapping genes under asymmetric evolution. in cases, the prediction by codon-usage was concordant with that established by the phylogenetic method. in the remaining cases, the prediction was provided only by the codon-usage method (supplementary table s ). the overlap p /p of providence virus is notable, as the ancestral frame p was acquired from another viral genome by distant horizontal gene transfer (pavesi et al., ) , which makes the codon usage an unreliable predictor of the genealogy. the prediction yielded by phylogenetics is supported by the finding that p , unlike p , has a wide phylogenetic distribution (pavesi et al., ) . overall, i collected a set of overlapping genes, all under asymmetric evolution and with known genealogy ( overlaps with a shift of the de novo frame of one nucleotide ′ with respect to the ancestral frame and overlaps with a shift of two nucleotides '). interestingly, i found that in all cases the most variable protein is that encoded by the de novo gene (table ) . . . symmetric and asymmetric evolution in the same overlap: the case of the overlap polymerase/large envelope protein of hepatitis b virus (hbv) chi-square analysis indicated that the overlap polymerase/large envelope protein of hbv evolves in accordance with the symmetric model (supplementary tables s and s ). on the other hand, theoretical and experimental studies (pavesi, ; lauber et al., ) demonstrated that this long overlap ( nt) is subjected to modular evolution, as the spacer domain of polymerase and the s domain of the large envelope protein originated de novo by overprinting. thus, the overlap can be subdivided into two regions: a ′ region ( nt), in which the spacer domain of polymerase (de novo gene product) overlaps the pre-s domain of envelope (ancestral gene product), and a ' region ( nt), in which the reverse transcriptase domain of polymerase (ancestral gene product) overlaps the s domain of envelope (de novo gene product). i carried out a chi-square analysis of the regions of the overlap independently, under the hypothesis that they may have been subject to different evolutionary pressures. this analysis revealed that the ' region of the overlap undergoes asymmetric evolution, because the amino acid diversity of the spacer domain ( . %; differences and identities) is significantly higher than that of the pre-s domain ( . %; differences and identities) (chi-square = . ; p = . ). asymmetric evolution was confirmed by analysis of the pattern of nucleotide substitutions (chi-square = . ; p = . ). in addition, chi-square analysis revealed that the ' region of the overlap undergoes symmetric evolution, as the amino acid diversity of the reverse transcriptase domain ( . %; differences and identities) does not significantly differ from that of the s domain ( . %; differences and identities) (chi-square = . ; p = . ). symmetric evolution was confirmed by analysis of the pattern of nucleotide substitutions (chi-square = . ; p = . ). with the aim to further validate these findings, i carried out a further analysis using, as homolog, the most distantly related overlap of woolly monkey hbv ( . % of nucleotide identity). again, chi-square analysis of the amino acid and nucleotide diversity revealed asymmetric evolution in the ′ region and symmetric evolution in the ' region. details of both analyses are reported in the supplementary file s . finally, the finding that the spacer domain of polymerase (de novo gene product) is significantly more variable than the pre-s domain (ancestral gene product) confirms that the most variable protein, under asymmetric evolution, is usually that encoded by the de novo gene. several researchers have developed methods for estimating the strength of selection pressure on overlapping genes (pedersen and jensen, ; sabath et al., ; de groot et al., ; mir and schober, ; wei and zhang, ) . all methods evaluate, in both overlapping frames, the ratio of non-synonymous nucleotide substitutions to synonymous nucleotide substitutions (dn/ds) by correctly taking into account the problem of the interdependence between sequences imposed by the overlap. the aim is to assess if there is neutral evolution or positive selection in one frame (dn/ds higher than ) and purifying selection (strong constraints) in the other frame (dn/ds lower than ). however, the only method having an accessible implementation is that by sabath et al. ( ) . yet, the method has some limitations, as it restricts the analysis to the homologous overlaps in which the two encoded proteins have both an amino acid diversity smaller than % or greater than %. in the dataset examined here (see the first pairs of homologous overlaps in supplementary file s ), these limitations would have considerably reduced the size of the sample from to pairs of homologous overlaps. i thus chose an approach focused, at first instance, on the evaluation of the amino acid diversity of homologous overlapping proteins, which is the final result of the complex pattern of the interdependent nucleotide substitutions that occur in dual-coding regions. unlike previous studies, limited to a few virus species (sabath et al., ; zaaijer et al., ; liang et al., ; shukla and hilgenfeld, ; brayne et al., ) , i examined a large dataset of overlaps from virus species. a possible limitation of the study concerns the selection criteria for homologous overlapping genes. in particular, the first two stringent criteria (an equal length of the homolog and an alignment with a minimal number of indels) led to exclusion, for some overlaps, of highly divergent homologs. an example is given by the overlap p n-pipo/ polyprotein of turnip mosaic virus, in which the length of the p n-pipo protein is quite variable among the different potyvirus species, ranging from to amino acids (hillung et al., ) . thus, the dataset used in this study likely underestimates the sequence diversity of overlapping genes, as it was created mainly to ensure a high quality in the homologous relationship. the finding that out of overlapping genes (table ) undergo asymmetric evolution is striking, as well as that the most variable protein is encoded by the de novo gene in all cases examined (table ). in particular, i would point out the overlap orf /orf from tobacco bushy top virus, which encodes two proteins entirely nested within each other. this peculiar arrangement is similar to that of the overlap p / p from tomato bushy stunt virus, in which the de novo p protein fig. . correlation between the normalized chi-square value (from analysis of amino acid substitutions) and the absolute value (abs) of the difference between the percent frequency (%f) of nucleotide substitutions at the codon position " " (%f.cp ) and that at the codon position " " (%f.cp ). empty circles indicate the overlapping genes under symmetric evolution. black circles indicate the overlapping genes under asymmetric evolution. virology ( ) - table list of the overlapping genes with known genealogy and evolving in accordance with the asymmetric model. shows a previously unknown structural fold an a previously unknown mechanism of binding to small interfering rnas (vargason et al., ; baulcombe and molnár, ; scholthof, ) . i believe that structural or functional studies on the de novo orf protein from tobacco bushy top virus could reveal new interesting features. in addition, i would point out the overlap polymerase (pb subunit)/pb -f protein of human influenza a virus. it shows, when compared to the homolog from duck, a sixteen-fold increase of substitutions at the codon position " " ( . %) with respect to the codon position " " ( . %). this yields only amino acid differences between the two pb subunits and as many as differences between the two pb -f proteins. interestingly, the de novo pb -f protein has been shown to largely contribute to viral pathogenicity by a pleiotropic effect (chen et al., ; varga et al., ; yoshizumi et al., ) . several other de novo proteins under asymmetric evolution are known to play a role in viral pathogenicity. eight de novo proteins (arfp, vp , l*, x, vf , pb -f , p , and nss) act as suppressor or antagonist of the interferon response by the host (park et al., ; lauksund et al., ; sorgeelos et al., ; wensman et al., ; mcfadden et al., ; varga et al., ; garcía-rosado et al., ; jääskeläinen et al., ) . four de novo proteins (p , p , ac , and movement protein) act as suppressor of rna silencing (silhavy et al., ; chen et al., ; chellappan et al., ; yaegashi et al., ) . two de novo proteins (apoptin and pb -f ) act as apoptosis factor (noteborn et al., ; chen et al., ) . finally, the de novo protein pa-x has the ability to selectively degrade the host rna-polymerase ii transcripts (khaperskyy et al., ) . however, another possible limitation of the study depends on the fact that the subset of overlapping genes evolving asymmetrically and with known genealogy ( overlaps) is too small to conclude that the de novo protein is always the preferred target of selection. furthermore, overlapping genes are subjected to a variety of selection pressures that are independent of the orientation of the overlapping frames relative to one another. thus, it is hypothetically possible that an ancestral protein may be significantly more variable than a de novo protein under peculiar selective constraints. despite this limitation, our findings suggest that the birth of new overlapping genes, besides to increase the coding ability of small viral genomes (chirico et al., ) , is also a valuable source of selective protein adaptation. none. positive selection or free to vary? assessing the functional significance of sequence change using molecular dynamics gapped blast and psi-blast: a new generation of protein database search programs binding of mammalian ribosomes to ms phage rna reveals an overlapping gene encoding a lysis function crystal structure of p -a universal suppressor of rna silencing an out-of-frame overlapping reading frame in the ataxi- coding sequence encodes a novel ataxin- interacting protein gene overlapping and size constraints in the viral world genotype specific evolution of hepatitis e virus microrna-binding viral protein interferes with arabidopsis development a novel influenza a virus mitochondrial protein that induces cell death viral virulence protein suppresses rna silencing-mediated defense but upregulates the role of microma in host gene expression why genes overlap in viruses statistical power and analysis for the behavioral sciences investigating selection in viruses: a statistical alignment approach the origin of a novel gene through overprinting in escherichia coli evidence for the recent origin of a bacterial protein-coding, overlapping orphan gene by evolutionary overprinting functional segregation of overlapping genes in hiv conserved and non-conserved regions in the sendai virus genome: evolution of a gene possessing overlapping reading frames molecular and functional characterization of two infectious salmon anaemia virus (isav) proteins with type i interferon antagonizing activity sequence analysis of potato leafroll virus isolates reveals genetic stability, major evolutionary events and differential selection pressure between overlapping reading frame products intra-specific variability and biological relevance of p n-pipo protein length in potyviruses 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antagonize ifna promoter activation while vp induces ifna selection characterization on overlapping reading frame of multiple-protein-encoding p gene in newcastle disease virus norovirus regulation of the innate immune response and apoptosis occurs via the product of the alternative open reading frame selection pressure in alternative reading frames evolution of overlapping genes constrained evolution with respect to gene overlap of hepatitis b virus a single chicken anemia virus protein induces apoptosis hepatitis c virus frameshift/ alternate reading frame protein suppresses interferon responses mediated by pattern recognition receptor retinoic-acid-inducible gene-i on the informational content of overlapping genes in prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses viral proteins originated de novo by overprinting can be identified by codon usage: application to the "gene nursery" of deltaretroviruses different patterns of codon usage in the overlapping polymerase and surface genes of hepatitis b virus suggest a de novo origin by modular evolution overlapping genes and the proteins they encode differ significantly in their sequence composition from non-overlapping genes a dependent-rates model and an mcmc-based methodology for the maximum-likelihood analysis of sequences with overlapping reading frames overlapping messages and survivability overlapping genes produce proteins with unusual sequence properties and offer insight into de novo protein creation a method for the simultaneous estimation of selection intensities in overlapping genes evolution of viral proteins originated de novo by overprinting degeneracy of the information contained in amino acid sequences: evidence from overlaid genes the tombusvirus-encoded p : from irrelevance to elegance acquisition of new protein domains by coronaviruses: analysis of overlapping genes coding for proteins n and b in sars coronavirus clustal omega, accurate alignment of very large numbers of sequences a viral protein suppresses rna silencing and binds silencing-generated, -to -nucleotide double-stranded rnas the effect of gene overlapping on the rate of rna virus evolution statistical methods. iowa state university press evasion of antiviral innate immunity by theiler's virus l* protein through direct inhibition of rnase l substitution rate and natural selection in parvovirus b rapid asymmetric evolution of a dual-coding tumor suppressor ink a/arf locus contradicts its function direct detection of alternative open reading frames translation products in human significantly expands the proteome the influenza virus protein pb -f inhibits the induction of type i interferon at the level of the mavs adaptor protein size selective recognition of sirna by an rna silencing suppressor a simple method for estimating the strength of natural selection on overlapping genes the x proteins of bornaviruses interfere with type i interferon signalling gene birth contributes to structural disorder encoded by overlapping genes inhibition of long-distance movement of rna silencing signals in nicotiana benthamiana by apple chlorotic leaf spot virus kda movement protein influenza a virus protein pb -f translocates into mitochondria via tom channels and impairs innate immunity independent evolution of overlapping polymerase and surface protein genes of hepatitis b virus evolutionary selection associated with the multi-function of overlapping genes in the hepatitis b virus the author is grateful to alessio peracchi (university of parma) and alberto vianelli (university of insubria) for helpful suggestions. special thanks to xinzhu wei (university of michigan) for valuable comments and suggestions and to gianmarco del vecchio for preparing the figures. the author thanks the anonymous referees and the editor alexander e. gorbalenya for their helpful feedback and suggestions. the study was financed by the miur (ministero dell'università e della ricerca). supplementary data to this article can be found online at https:// doi.org/ . /j.virol. . . . key: cord- -vovas d authors: yokobayashi, yohei title: aptamer-based and aptazyme-based riboswitches in mammalian cells date: - - journal: curr opin chem biol doi: . /j.cbpa. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vovas d molecular recognition by rna aptamers has been exploited to control gene expression in response to small molecules in mammalian cells. these mammalian synthetic riboswitches offer attractive features such as small genetic size and lower risk of immunological complications compared to protein-based transcriptional gene switches. the diversity of gene regulatory mechanisms that involve rna has also inspired the development of mammalian riboswitches that harness various regulatory mechanisms. in this report, recent advances in synthetic riboswitches that function in mammalian cells are reviewed focusing on the regulatory mechanisms they exploit such as mrna degradation, microrna processing, and programmed ribosomal frameshifting. molecular recognition by rna aptamers has been exploited to control gene expression in response to small molecules in mammalian cells. these mammalian synthetic riboswitches offer attractive features such as small genetic size and lower risk of immunological complications compared to proteinbased transcriptional gene switches. the diversity of gene regulatory mechanisms that involve rna has also inspired the development of mammalian riboswitches that harness various regulatory mechanisms. in this report, recent advances in synthetic riboswitches that function in mammalian cells are reviewed focusing on the regulatory mechanisms they exploit such as mrna degradation, microrna processing, and programmed ribosomal frameshifting. envisioned practical applications of mammalian synthetic biology frequently require gene switches that recognize endogenous or exogenous chemical signals and turn on or turn off expression of proteins, which in turn regulate synthetic genetic circuits inside the cell. these chemical gene switches need to be flexible enough to be tailored to diverse chemical species, engineered to function as on-switch or off-switch, fine-tuned to adjust the sensitivity, and have a minimal genetic and metabolic footprint. protein-based engineered transcription factors (tfs), such as tet-on and tet-off systems derived from a bacterial tf, are among the most widely used tools to control mammalian gene expression in response to small molecule triggers [ ] . however, there are a number of drawbacks of tf-based gene switches as generally applicable switches for mammalian and biomedical applications [ ] [ ] [ ] : (i) adapting an engineered tf to respond to a new compound is challenging, (ii) expression of engineered tfs can trigger immunogenicity, (iii) genetic size and expression of an engineered tf can burden the host cell or the vector, and (iv) switch performance can be influenced by the expression level of the tf; therefore, optimization may be required. rna aptamers for desired ligands can be obtained relatively easily by in vitro selection (selex) [ , ] ; therefore, riboswitches can potentially be engineered to respond to a variety of compounds more readily than engineered tfs. moreover, aptamers are typically small ( to nt). even with the additional nucleotides necessary to regulate gene expression, genetic footprints of riboswitches (few hundred nt) are small enough to satisfy vectors that have limited capacity (e.g. adeno associated virus). furthermore, the lack of any translated proteins is expected to result in lower immunogenicity and metabolic burden on the host cell. in , werstuck and green [ ] demonstrated that insertion of an rna aptamer selected to bind the hoechst dye h in the untranslated region of mrna allows repression of gene expression in response to the ligand in cho cells, presumably by blocking ribosome binding or scanning. it should be noted that this work predated the discovery of natural bacterial riboswitches [ , ] , demonstrating that small molecules can directly and specifically affect gene expression in the absence of mediator proteins. importantly, rna aptamer-based regulation of gene expression allows bioengineers to harness the rich diversity of gene regulatory mechanisms that involve rna, for example, translation initiation, rna interference and micrornas, and rna splicing. for each rna mediated gene regulatory mechanism, there are multiple ways to couple its outcome with aptamer-ligand interaction, further enriching the potential diversity of synthetic riboregulators. an excellent review on rna-based gene switches in mammalian cells was recently published by ausländer and fussenegger [ ] . therefore, this article reviews more recent developments in synthetic mammalian riboswitches with a focus on the diversity of the regulatory mechanisms harnessed by the riboswitches. in , yen et al. demonstrated chemical regulation of gene expression in mammalian cells by embedding a hammerhead ribozyme in the untranslated regions (utrs) of an mrna [ ] . as the and utrs are indispensable for translation of eukaryotic mrnas, self-cleavage within the mrna was expected to suppress gene expression. addition of toyocamycin to the cell culture medium resulted in nonspecific incorporation of the antiviral nucleotide analog into the mrna and statistical inactivation of the ribozyme activity [ ] . while the ribozyme was not specifically regulated by a small molecule via an aptamer, this work paved the way for the subsequent riboswitches that employ allosterically regulated ribozymes (aptazymes) embedded in the and/or utr to chemically regulate gene expression in mammalian cells (figure a ) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . this strategy continues to be popular, and the recent advances highlight new approaches to design and optimize aptazymes. earlier aptazyme-based riboswitches in mammalian cells were designed via trial-and-error, or based on mediumthroughput or high-throughput screening in bacteria or yeast systems. however, it has been reported that ribozyme activity in living cells are not highly correlated among different cell types (bacteria, yeast, or mammalian cells) which is understandable considering the differences in translational mechanism, intracellular environment (rna binding proteins, ribonucleases, etc.), and mode of gene regulation by ribozymes in different cell types [ ] . because high-throughput screening of riboswitches directly in mammalian cells is technically challenging, alternative design strategies focusing on aptazymes that function in mammalian cells are desirable. the farzan group demonstrated an intriguing strategy that combines empirical experimental data with quantitative modeling [ ] . they first synthesized a panel of aptazymes and measured their riboswitch performance in cultured mammalian cells, and attempted to correlate the experimental results with various design parameters such as calculated annealing energy and the number of hydrogen bonds in the communication module. the researchers concluded that the proximity of base pairing (or lack thereof) within the communication module to the ribozyme affects the ribozyme activity, and devised 'weighted hydrogen bond score (whbs)' as a calculable parameter that correlates with the ribozyme performance. they used whbs as a guide to design aptazyme-based riboswitches using three aptamers with good switching characteristics [ ] . it remains to be seen if the strategy can be extrapolated to different aptamers, ribozymes, and aptazyme architectures. dohno et al. addressed the aptazyme design problem with a unique approach [ ] . instead of starting from an existing aptamer, they started with a rationally designed molecule targeted to mismatched dna/rna sequences. the naphthyridine carbamate tetramer with z-stilbene mammalian riboswitches yokobayashi linker (z-ncts) designed by the group is known to bind xgg/xgg mismatches in dna and rna through watson-crick type hydrogen bonding between the naphthyridine moieties with the unpaired guanines [ ] . they used this ligand as a 'molecular glue' to induce a tertiary contact between loops i and ii of a hammerhead ribozyme that is critical for ribozyme activity (figure b) . the tertiary contact between the two loops was disrupted by introducing an agg/ugg mismatch that is recognized by z-ncts. the engineered ribozyme was inserted into the utr of an mrna encoding firefly luciferase whose expression was reduced by -fold upon addition of z-ncts ( . mm) in hela cells. while it is notable that the switching was observed with a low ligand concentration, z-ncts exhibited cellular toxicity (lc = . mm) probably due to nonspecific interactions with cellular rnas. in contrast to these rational or semi-rational design efforts, high-throughput screening of aptazymes has mostly been executed in escherichia coli or saccharomyces cerevisiae. however, screening is generally labor and cost intensive while yielding sequence information for a handful of 'hits'. screening also yields limited sequence--function information that can be exploited for further optimization or library design. to address the lack of comprehensive sequence-function relationship data for ribozymes, we developed an in vitro high-throughput ribozyme assay method using deep sequencing (figure ) [ , , ] . a library of ribozyme or aptazyme mutants are transcribed in vitro in a single tube as a mixture, and the resulting ribozymes (cleaved or uncleaved) are converted to dna templates for deep sequencing. the number of cleaved and uncleaved reads for each ribozyme variant are then counted to calculate cleavage efficiency under the reaction condition. this strategy yields a complete sequence-function relationship for all members of the ribozyme library up to variants or more [ ] , depending on library preparation and sequencing output. this method can unambiguously identify functional aptazymes if they exist, and provide a broader view of the sequence-function relationship that can be used to synthetic biology schematic illustration of in vitro aptazyme assay strategy based on deep sequencing. an aptazyme library is prepared as a dna mixture which is transcribed into rna in vitro by t rna polymerase. the aptazyme pool is then converted to dna sequencing templates by reverse transcription and pcr. deep sequencing yields read counts of the cleaved and uncleaved fragments for every mutant in the library from which cleavage efficiency (% cleaved) is calculated. plotting cleavage efficiency of the mutants in the presence and absence of the ligand reveals aptazyme candidates which are subsequently evaluated as riboswitches. build a mechanistic model and/or to further optimize the aptazyme design. we used deep sequencing to identify guanine-activated ribozymes based on an hdv-like ribozyme which were subsequently used to control gene expression in hek cells [ ] . use of a low mg + concentration during in vitro transcription may have contributed to the positive correlation of the ribozyme activity in vitro and in mammalian cells. similar methods were also used to fine tune mammalian gene expression levels [ ] and to screen for active ribozymes (but not aptazymes) directly in mammalian cells [ ] . programmed - ribosomal frameshifting (- prf) [ ] can result in translation of an alternative polypeptide from an mrna by shifting the translation reading frame by - nucleotide. a canonical - prf element consists of a -nt slippery sequence x xxy yyz (trinucleotides xxy and yyz representing the original frame and xxx yyy representing the - frameshift) followed by a stable secondary structure such as a pseudoknot or a stem-loop. the chang group first controlled - prf in mammalian cells (figure a ) by incorporating theophylline and s-adenosyl-l-homocysteine (sah) aptamers [ ] . an on/off ratio of was reported but the frameshifting efficiency (fe) remained low. the same group used another - prf stimulating pseudoknot from sars coronavirus to engineer theophylline inducible - prf switches with up to fivefold activation of gene expression [ ] . more recently, matsumoto et al. used the analogs of naphthyridine carbamate tetramers described above to control the formation of a pseudoknot, thereby chemically inducing - prf (figure a , top) [ ] . although up to -fold activation was observed in hela cells, the maximum fe was low ( . %) in the presence of the pseudoknot inducing ligand. it is possible that the toxicity of the ligand prevented observation of higher fes in hela cells, as an fe as high as % was observed in rabbit reticulocyte lysate. besides controlling translation via an aptamer embedded in the targeted mrna, another strategy aims to control the microrna (mirna) processing pathway by an rna aptamer. the mirna product subsequently targets one or more mrnas in trans. an et al. first demonstrated that an aptamer incorporated in a mirna precursor allows chemical regulation of rna interference (rnai), in this case, by modulating the dicer mediated cleavage of a short-hairpin rna (shrna) [ ] . the smolke group has developed an alternative strategy that controls the drosha mediated processing of primary mirna substrates by embedding an rna aptamer in the vicinity of the drosha cleavage site [ ] . binding of the ligand to the aptamer inhibits drosha cleavage and upregulates the expression of the gene targeted by the mirna. recently, the group adapted an aptamer that they selected for ( r)-folinic acid (fa) to control a synthetic mirna precursor targeting il- receptors (figure b ) [ ] . although the modulation of the targeted gene expression by the ligand was rather modest (up to % activation), it was sufficient to observe a robust regulation of cell proliferation. the suess group reported a new strategy to control the dicer processing by inserting an aptamer that binds to tetr protein [ ] near the cleavage site blocking the reaction in the presence of tetr [ ] . they showed that addition of the tetr ligand doxycycline dissociates tetr from the mirna precursor and increases the formation of the mature mirna (figure c ). doxycycline was able to tightly control the mature mirna level ( %- % relative to unmodified mirna precursor), although the on/off ratio of the targeted reporter gene was more moderate ( ). although this system requires an exogenous protein factor, it allows the use of doxycycline which has been used extensively in mammalian cells and animals. the pei group adapted another drosha modulation strategy originally reported by our group [ , ] to control endogenous gene expression in cancer cell lines to induce apoptosis. a theophylline activated aptazyme was inserted between an inhibitory strand that blocks the single-stranded region of the pri-mirna, thereby preventing the rna from being processed by drosha (figure d ). the researchers targeted map k in hepg cells [ ] and bcl- in mcf- cells [ ] , and observed fourfold to fivefold increase in apoptosis. vogel et al. showed that exon skipping can be controlled by a tetracycline rna aptamer inserted near the splice site along with a suicide exon (figure e ) [ ] . tetracycline induces exon skipping resulting in -fold activation of gene expression. in combination with an aptazyme device, the dynamic range increased to -fold in hek cells. an mrna can be targeted by an endogenous mirna by inserting one or more mirna target sequences in the utr, a strategy sometimes used to achieve cell type-dependent gene expression. mou et al. controlled the accessibility of the mirna target sequence by an aptamer embedded near the target site in the mrna [ ] . addition of tetracycline occluded the mirna target site resulting in upregulation of gene expression (figure f ). the performance of the switch, as expected, was dependent on the mirnas and cell types used, but they observed tight regulation of gene expression with up to -fold activation in hela cells with a mir- target site. the diversity of gene regulatory mechanisms that involve rna has and will continue to inspire synthetic rnabased gene switches in mammalian cells. it can be anticipated that riboswitches based on different regulatory mechanisms have advantages for different applications. for example, mirna-based riboswitches are more convenient for controlling endogenous gene expression because they operate in trans as opposed to the utr embedded aptazymes that function in cis. however, the existing mammalian riboswitches still exhibit poor and variable dynamic range and ligand sensitivity compared to the conventional tf-based gene switches. with further optimization and increasing availability of new aptamers and ligands for cellular applications, synthetic riboswitches should emerge as useful tools in synthetic biology of mammalian cells. controlling mammalian gene expression with small molecules generation of cells expressing improved doxycycline-regulated reverse transcriptional transactivator rtta s-m selecting the optimal tet-on system for doxycycline-inducible gene expression in transiently transfected and stably transduced mammalian cells tet-on systems for doxycycline-inducible gene expression systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment: rna ligands to bacteriophage t dna polymerase in vitro selection of rna molecules that bind specific ligands controlling gene expression in living cells through small molecule-rna interactions sensing small molecules by nascent rna: a mechanism to control transcription in bacteria thiamine derivatives bind messenger rnas directly to regulate bacterial gene expression synthetic rna-based switches for mammalian gene expression control exogenous control of mammalian gene expression through modulation of rna self-cleavage identification of inhibitors of ribozyme self-cleavage in mammalian cells via high-throughput screening of chemical libraries controlling mammalian gene expression by allosteric hepatitis delta virus ribozymes genetic control of mammalian t-cell proliferation with synthetic rna regulatory systems conditional control of mammalian gene expression by tetracycline-dependent hammerhead ribozymes a ligand-dependent hammerhead ribozyme switch for controlling mammalian gene expression highly motif-and organism-dependent effects of naturally occurring hammerhead ribozyme sequences on gene expression this work surveyed a panel of ribozymes in various cellular and genetic contexts and showed that ribozyme activity is highly context dependent. the results imply that care must be taken when translating screening results obtained in nonmammalian systems to mammalian cells rational design of aptazyme riboswitches for efficient control of gene expression in mammalian cells restoration of ribozyme tertiary contact and function by using a molecular glue for rna the authors used a 'molecular glue' to restore a tertiary contact in a hammerhead ribozyme, presenting an alternative to canonical aptamers for controlling gene expression in mammalian cells naphthyridine tetramer with a pre-organized structure for : binding to a cgg/cgg sequence high-throughput assay and engineering of self-cleaving ribozymes by sequencing deep sequencing was used to exhaustively assay aptazyme mutants without screening or selection in vitro. the aptazymes were then shown to function as riboswitches in mammalian cells high-throughput mutational analysis of a twister ribozyme applications of high-throughput sequencing to analyze and engineer ribozymes deep sequencing analysis of aptazyme variants based on a pistol ribozyme analyzing and tuning ribozyme activity by deep sequencing to modulate gene expression level in mammalian cells direct screening for ribozyme activity in mammalian cells changed in translation: mrna recoding by - programmed ribosomal frameshifting synergetic regulation of translational reading-frame switch by ligand-responsive rnas in mammalian cells rational design of a synthetic mammalian riboswitch as a ligand-responsive - ribosomal frame-shifting stimulator small synthetic molecule-stabilized rna pseudoknot as an activator for - ribosomal frameshifting artificial control of gene expression in mammalian cells by modulating rna interference through aptamer-small molecule interaction design of small molecule-responsive micrornas based on structural requirements for drosha processing regulation of t cell proliferation with drug-responsive microrna switches an rna aptamer that induces transcription although this system includes a protein component (tetr), tight control of natural microrna maturation was demonstrated using a widely used small molecule (doxycycline) in mammalian cells modulating endogenous gene expression of mammalian cells via rna-small molecule interaction conditional rna interference mediated by allosteric ribozyme regulation of map k gene expression by rna interference through an engineered theophyllinedependent hepatitis delta virus ribozyme switch inducible bcl- gene rna interference mediated by aptamer-integrated hdv ribozyme switch a small, portable rna device for the control of exon skipping in mammalian cells conditional regulation of gene expression by ligand-induced occlusion of a microrna target sequence a new mode of engineered rna-based gene regulation in mammalian cells was demonstrated by controlling the accessibility of a mirna target site by aptamer-ligand interaction nothing declared. work in the author's laboratory mentioned in the article was financially supported by okinawa institute of science and technology graduate university. papers of particular interest, published within the period of review, have been highlighted as: of special interest of outstanding interest key: cord- - vd mdu authors: nan title: abstracts from the th european society for animal cell technology meeting: cell technologies for innovative therapies: lausanne, switzerland. - may date: - - journal: bmc proc doi: . /s - - -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vd mdu nan . a schematic representation of crispr based synthetic transcription factor technology. b mrna expression levels of protein transport related genes (napg, rab a and arpc b). background an increasing number of biologics are entering the development pipelines of pharmaceutical companies [ ] . today, the preferred production host for therapeutic proteins is the cho cell line. however one of the major hurdles, especially for the production of non-antibody glycoproteins, is host cell-related proteolytic degradation which can drastically impact developability and timelines of pipeline projects. material and methods spike-in: cho cells were cultivated in a chemically defined culture medium at . °c/ % co in shake-flasks. when the cells reached their maximum viable density, they were removed by centrifugation and the conditioned medium was collected. a model mab was spiked into the conditioned medium and incubated at °c ± protease inhibitors. the amount of proteolytic degradation was analysed by western blot and lc-ms. transcriptomics: total rna was extracted after days of cell cultivation. rna sequencing libraries were constructed and processed on the hiseq platform from illumina. generation of matriptase knockout: cho-k cells were transfected with mrna encoding "transcription activator-like effector nucleases" or "zinc finger nucleases" targeting matriptase exon . the transfected cells were subsequently sorted into single cells and analysed for frameshift mutations in both alleles via sanger sequencing. cell cultivation: fed batch cultivation was performed in -ml miniaturized bioreactors (ambr ). approximately proteases are known in rodents. to reduce the number of candidate proteases we showed first that a model mab (prone to proteolytic degradation) incubated in conditioned medium of cho-k cells resulted in clipping of the mab, demonstrating the involvement of secreted/shedded proteases (fig. a) . broad spectrum inhibitors of the different protease classes revealed that only serine protease inhibitors prevented clipping. serine protease inhibitors of higher specificity highlighted the group of "s a trypsin-like proteases" (fig. a) . comparison of the proteolytic degradation profile of several therapeutic proteins between cho-k with another cho cell line (cho-a) revealed less degradation in cho-a. therefore expression of the involved protease(s) is likely lower in cho-a. gene expression profile analysis of both cell lines showed five secreted/shedded "s a trypsin-like serine proteases" more than . fold lower expressed in cho-cho-a versus cho-k (fig. b) . surprisingly, sirna knockdown experiments of these five candidates identified "matriptase" as the major protease involved in degradation of recombinant proteins expressed in cho-k cells ( fig. c upper panel) . next, we generated a cho-k matriptase knockout (ko) cell line. no proteolytic degradation product was detected when the model mab was spiked into conditioned medium of the ko cell line (fig. c lower panel) . also, stable expression of the model mab in the ko cell line resulted in no/significantly less clipping (fig. e) . the protein titer and the cell growth behaviour of the matriptase ko cells were similar to the corresponding wildtype (wt) cells (fig. d) as shown by comparative cultivation in ambr system. conclusions one major challenge for the production of recombinant proteins is cho host cell mediated proteolytic degradation which can negatively impact or even result in termination of projects [ ; ] . using a variety of techniques such as applying protease inhibitors, transcriptomics and sirna mediated knock-down we were able to identify "matriptase" as the major protease involved in degradation of recombinant proteins expressed in cho-k cells. subsequently we generated a matriptase deficient cho cell line. protein candidates of diverse formats, severely degraded in wt cho-k cell line, were not or significantly less cleaved in the matriptase ko cell line. furthermore cell growth, viability and productivity levels were comparable between the wt and the matriptase ko cell line. in summary, we have generated a superior platform-compatible cho production host cell line with the same favourable productivity properties as the parental host cell line [ ; ] , allowing expression of complex glycoproteins prone to clipping. background cho cell lines are common hosts for the production of biopharmaceutical proteins. so far, considerable progress has been made increasing productivity of cell culture to meet the rapidly growing demand for antibody biopharmaceuticals through increased cell densities and longer culture times. the downside is the increase of the process related impurities, bringing new challenges for process and harvest development. among the process related impurities such as host cell proteins (hcps) or dna the potential impact of lipids production and release during cell culture is still poorly understood due to the complex nature and diversity of this class of molecules. thanks to recent advances in analytical tools especially mass spectrometry, the advent of lipidomics offers now the feasibility to study several thousands of lipid species thus unraveling the possibility to understand and potentially control the interactions between high performance bioreactor processes, harvest conditions and purification. in order to analyze and quantify lipids, we developed a three steps method. in a first step, lipids were extracted with methyl tert-butyl ether (mtbe) according to matyash method [ ] . lipids were then separated by liquid chromatography using either hilic of reverse phase column prior to detection and quantification by mass spectrometry. all lipid classes were detected by esi-ms/ms excepted cholesterol (apci-ms/ms). finally we applied this method to analyze the lipid content of different cell lines each expressing a different recombinant protein, during a days fed batch process. lipid from cho cells were successfully extracted with a yield between % and % depending on the different lipid classes. stable isotope labeled lipids were used as internal standard in order to have comparable results between batches. the obtained results (fig. ) show that for a given cell line, lipid distribution is changing over the process. moreover, this distribution may vary significantly depending on the cell line: cl- and in a lower extend, cl- , show an accumulation of triglycerides from day to the end of the process, while cl- doesn't seems to follow this trend. conclusion interestingly, in some cell lines/experimental conditions, we highlighted an overproduction of triglycerides and cholesterol leading to the accumulation of lipid droplets known as energy storage sink. at the metabolic level, these findings suggest a relative overflow of the carbon metabolism. from a process development perspective these findings can be considered on the one hand as a resource waste since the stored energy is not used for protein/biomass biosynthesis and on the second hand as the root cause of additional process challenges especially during the harvest and the first capture steps given the hydrophobic nature of these molecules. implementation of lipidomics analysis enables us to highlight a new type of process variability and to anticipate potential problems for the downstream steps. the application of this methodology on our platform has helped us to design tailor made solutions (pretreatment selection, filter selection,…) at the clarification step which are now implemented in our harvest development platform approach. . matriptase knock-out in cho cells prevents clipping of recombinant proteins. a serine protease inhibitors protect model mab from proteolytic degradation in cho-k cell derived conditioned medium. the model mab was incubated in conditioned medium for h or h at °c, subsequently samples were analyzed by western blot. broad spectrum serine protease inhibitors (aprotinin, leupetin) were added during incubation. aprotinin and leupetin are inhibiting proteolytic degradation. the intact mab (upper band) and the clipped mab (lower band) are indicated by arrows. b gene expression profiling of cho-k versus cho-a by ngs. shown is the gene expression profile of "secreted/shedded members of the s a trypsin-like serine protease family" for cho-k and cho-a cell lines using next generation sequencing. the gene expression analysis highlights that five proteases were more than . fold higher expressed in cho-k cells (labelled with a red asterix). the y-axis shows the transcript abundance as rpkm (reads per kilobase of exon model per million mapped reads). c sirna knock-down identifies matriptase as major clipping protease and cho matriptase ko clone shows no detectable clipping activity. upper figure: sirnas directed against the five protease genes and scrambled (scr.) sirna were transfected and conditioned medium was collected three days after transfection. the model mab was incubated in fresh medium as control (first lane) and conditioned medium from the sirna transfected cells. samples were analyzed by western blot. only sirna targeting matriptase (st ) showed reduced proteolytic degradation. the intact mab (upper band) and the clipped mab (lower band) are indicated by arrows. lower figure: the model mab was incubated for h in conditioned medium collected from wt cho-k as well as the matriptase knockout clone. samples were analyzed by western blot. the intact mab (upper band) and the clipped mab (lower band) are indicated by arrows. no proteolytic degradation could be detected in the samples originating from the matriptase ko clone. d cell growth, viability and productivity in ambr (fed batch with temperature shift). cell growth, viability and volumetric productivity profiles of wt cho-k (red circles, n= ) and matriptase ko clone (blue squares, n= ) cultivated in -ml ambr. no significant differences were seen between wt and matriptase ko clone regarding cell growth and viability. comparable or slightly higher productivity was detected for the matriptase ko clone compared to the wt. e significant reduced proteolytic clipping applying matriptase ko clone. the model mab was stable expressed in cho-k (wt) as well as the cho-k matriptase ko clone. samples were analyzed by western blot. the intact mab (upper band) and the clipped mab (lower band) are indicated by arrows. significant reduced proteolytic degradation could be detected in the samples originating from the matriptase ko clone ( samples each is shown for wt and ko cells) the glycosylation of therapeutic proteins is a critical quality attribute (cqa) and needs to be analyzed during cell line and bioprocess development. the current methods for analyzing glycosylation are mainly based on the enzymatic release of glycans. they are tedious and offer only limited throughput, which makes them unsuitable for cell line development work. in this study we evaluated a novel paia assay for measuring intact glycoproteins with capture beads and fluorescence labeled plant lectins to analyze glycans in a high throughput -well plate format. material and methods analytes: erbitux © , mabthera © , arzerra © and avastin © . two glycoengineered variants of one igg were kindly provided by merck (vevey, switzerland). all analytes were spiked into cho-k cell culture supernatant or buffer, diluted : with a denaturation solution and incubated at or °c for minutes to expose the fc glycans. erbitux samples were analyzed under denaturing conditions to detect fab-and fc-glycosylation and in native conditions for fab glycosylation only. μl of pretreated sample was added to each well of the special -well paiaplate, containing labeled lectin and capture beads. the microplate was incubated for minutes at rpm on an orbital shaker at room temperature and spun down at xg. the read-out was done on a fluorescence microscope (synentec, elmshorn, germany) in less than five minutes. results figure a : lectin binding profiles of different iggs. the analysis of different igg results in lectin binding profiles which show the different degrees in glycosylation. high abundance of sugars leads to high binding rates of the lectin for the respective sugar. avastin has a very low degree of galactosylation and high mannose species compared to mabthera and arzerra (fig. a) . only arzerra is carrying glycans with - linked sialic acids. these findings are in line with results from literature [ ] . figure b : distinction between fc and fab glycosylation in erbitux. without denaturation only the fab glycans are detectable in erbitux. denaturation leads to additional exposure of the fc glycans and thus higher lectin binding rates compared to native erbitux. gna and npl only bind to denatured erbitux indicating that the high mannose glycans are only present on the fc part. the equal sna binding rates for both conditions confirm that the - linked sialic acids are almost exclusively found on the fab part. this is in agreement with published data [ ] . figure c : lectin binding rates correlate with the levels of galactosylation and fucosylation. increasing degrees of glycosylation in the mixtures of the glycan variants from merck lead to higher lectin binding rates for all galactose and fucose markers proving that quantitative analysis can be performed with these assays. the cona lectin which binds to the common core mannose glycan motive remains at the same level, suggesting that the fc glycans were similarly exposed in all samples. the results demonstrate that paia assays are capable of quickly detecting differences in glycan patterns of different antibodies. in addition it was shown that glycan variants of the same igg can be analyzed quantitatively. and finally we could confirm the differences in fab and fc glycosylation in erbitux. we believe that bead-based assays with lectins have a great potential for monitoring product quality early in the development process. background gene-and cell therapy-based medicines are experiencing resurgence due to the introduction of "next generation" transfer viral vectors, which have demonstrated improved safety and efficacy. adeno associated viruses (aav) and lentiviruses are very commonly used in therapeutics and often produced by transient gene expression, using pei-mediated transient transfection in hek- or hek- t cells [ ] . the critical raw materials needed for cgmp vector production must be sourced from approved suppliers and should have gone through a rigorous testing program to reduce the risk of introducing adventitious agents into the production process. correspondingly, the pei transfection reagent must also be sourced from a qualified supplier, and have gone through rigorous testing to ensure reliable transfection efficiencies, and hence reproducible virus production yields. here, we present peipro® and peipro®-hq, the unique pei-based transfection reagents suitable for use in process development and in cgmp biomanufacturing, respectively. unlike commercially available peis, peipro® benefits from extensive research and development in polymer chemistry and formulation for mammalian cell transfection. we further demonstrate that peipro® and peipro®-hq are the reagents of choice for virus production runs in most cell culture systems, hence facilitating the transition from initial optimization during process development up to large-scale therapeutic viral vector production in adherent or suspension cells. manufacturing process of peipro® and peipro®-hq reagents. peipro® and peipro®-hq are fully synthetic reagents, free of any animal-origin components. in comparison to peipro®, a more extensive number of quality controls are performed on peipro®-hq to enable its use as a qualified raw material in gmp processes for the manufacturing of clinical batches of therapeutic products. lentivirus and aav production. irrespective of the cell culture vessel type, transfection using peipro® was performed following our recommandations. as an example, hek- t (lentivirus) and hek- (aav) cells were thawed directly into each medium and passaged every to days before going into a liter benchtop bioreactor. cells were resuspended and cultured for days before transfection with peipro®. hek- t cells were transfected with a third-generation system (four plasmids) for lentivirus production. hek- cells were co-transfected with three plasmids for aav production. lentiviral and aav titers were measured and hours post-transfection (data kindly provided by généthon). peipro® is the reagent of choice for virus production runs in most adherent and suspension cell culture systems from process development up to large scale clinical-grade virus production. irrespective of the cell culture-based system and production scale, peipro® and peipro®-hq have led to efficient viral vector yields in standard laboratory cell systems, such as in flasks, cell factories, and roller bottles, as well as in multilayers flasks or fixed-bed culture systems that take into account time and space concerns for the scaling-up process (table ) . for example, high viral vector yields superior to ig/ml and - vg/ml were obtained respectively for lentiviruses and aavs in suspension hek- t and hek- cells cultured in one of the commercially available synthetic cell culture medium balancd® hek (irvine scientific®). conclusion peipro® and its higher quality grade peipro®-hq are the unique pei suitable for efficient and reproducible production of therapeutic viral vectors. efficient viral vector production yields can be achieved in most cell culture systems, irrespective of the production scale. with appropriate and advanced quality controls, the highest quality grade peipro®-hq is commercially available to accompany academics and biopharmaceutical companies in terms of qualified raw material for their gmp-grade viral vector production needs. b distinction between fc and fab glycosylation in erbitux. erbitux was diluted to a concentration of μg/ml in tris buffer and measured in native and denatured conditions to distinguish fab glycosylation (native erbitux) from fab and fc glycosylation (denatured erbitux). it could be confirmed that sialic acids are almost exclusively present on the fab part of erbitux and that the high mannose glycans are only found in the fc part. c lectin binding rates correlate with the levels of galactosylation and fucosylation. two glycan variants samples of the same igg from merck were mixed in different ratios to yield glycosylation rates of to % in terminal β-galactose and to % in core-fucose, based on data from -ab uplc analysis. the mixtures all contained . μg igg per well. the measured lectin binding rates for all galactose and fucose markers correlate very well with the respective degree of glycosylation in the mixtures. all measurements were performed in triplicates (irvine scientific®) . hek- t (lentivirus) and hek- (aav) cells were thawed directly into each medium and passaged every to days before going into a liter benchtop bioreactor. cells were seeded and cultured for days before being transfected by peipro® (polyplus). for transfection, four plasmids were used for lentivirus and three plasmids were used for aav. lentiviral and aav titer were measured and hours post transfection (data kindly provided by généthon) table (abstract p- ). peipro®, the reagent of choice for virus production runs in most cell culture systems in both adherent and suspension cells. irrespective of the cell culture-based system and production scale, peipro® and peipro®-hq have led to efficient viral vector yields superior to ig/ml and vg/ml, respectively for lentiviruses and aavs background continuous perfusion process is making a comeback as a competing upstream manufacturing technology for the production of biopharmaceuticals compared to the standard fed batch processes. this is primarily because of cost advantages such as reduced capital cost and increased product yield. the change in status of perfusion process from older perfusion to the new-age perfusion is due to availability of better cell retention devices leading to more efficient processes, improved cell lines, cell culture medium capable of supporting high cell densities and better bioreactor control strategies. in this work, we present the advantages, limitations and challenges of fed batch and perfusion type of processes through case studies. table results the perfusion run yielded -fold higher titer compared to fed batch run (fig. a) . considering the number of runs that could be executed in a manufacturing facility within the same calendar days, about fold increase in product output can be achieved with the perfusion process (fig. a) . this difference is attributed to higher ivcc, higher pcd and longevity of cells because of decreased level of toxic metabolite concentrations such as lactate and ammonia. case : understanding product retention in perfusion process the new-age perfusion processes utilize hollow fiber filters. this has been observed to cause retention of product within the bioreactor especially towards the end of the production run. two types of experiments were conducted to study the factors contributing to product retention: -spiking studies: -role of product titer: product was spiked into chemically defined media -role of different cell viability: different broths with varying viability spiked with same product titer -evaluation of different hollow fiber membrane (m , m and m ) on product retention. from spiking studies, it was evident that cell debris and poor quality cell broth (lower viability) were the major factors contributing to product retention (fig. c) . from the different membranes experiments, it was identified that at pilot scale, m showed much higher retention from the first perfusion cycle itself and it increased to more than % towards the end of the batch. however, with m membrane, product retention started only late (after % of batch duration) and it remained low (~ - %). on the contrary, this difference was not observed at l scale due to the usage of membranes with larger filter area ( - folds higher compared to pilot scale). when the filter area per unit volume of perfusate was decreased by half (m _batch ) for the pilot scale, even m showed retention profile similar to m (fig. d ). we presented data to show that perfusion process has -fold increase in product yield on a per-batch basis and a -fold increase when facility throughput is considered. product retention is a technical challenge that requires optimization (perfusion rates and filter membrane types). we believe it is imperative that labs that develop processes for biologics can now consider both perfusion and fedbatch based processes as both these technologies can now closely compete with each other. the choice of the process format going forward should now solely be dependent on the requirement for the biologic rather than the earlier perception that fed-batch is the preferred choice because of its simplicity. background chinese hamster ovary (cho) cell culture has been widely used for production of monoclonal antibodies in the pharmaceutical industry. previous studies have shown that the cell specific productivity in cho cells can be increased by glucose limitation [ ] . introducing a productivity enhancing effect it is possible that this also affects the quality of the product such as glycosylation or other posttranslational modifications. in this work, we are focusing on the impact of glucose limitation and increased productivity on the product quality of a monoclonal antibody produced in a fed-batch cultivation of cho cells. materials and methods cho cells were cultivated both under limiting and non-limiting nutrient conditions in fed-batch. for fed-batch cultivation the reduced range for glucose concentration was chosen between . and . g/ l. reference cultivation was performed between . and . g/l. both cultures were fed with similar volumes of a complex nutrient supplement. all cultivations were performed in chemically-defined, animalcomponent free cho growth media (xell ag). viable cell density and viability were determined using the automated cell counting system cedex (roche diagnostics), glucose and lactate concentrations were detected via ysi (ysi life sciences). amino acid were quantified using hplc-fld, vitamins were quantified using reversed phase chromatography coupled to a triple quadrupol mass spectrometer (varian , selected reaction monitoring). amounts of igg were quantified via protein a hplc, mab purified from another cho cell clone was used as a standard. the analysis of product quality was performed by intact mass analysis using reversed phase chromatography coupled to a microotof-q ii mass spectrometer (bruker daltonik). the cho cell culture cultivated under low nutrient conditions reached a % higher viable cell density than the reference culture (fig. a) . the product titer was even increased by % (fig. b) . the spent media analysis shows that some amino acids and vitamins were present at presumably limiting concentrations after day / , mostly in the low nutrient level culture (down to to μm for tyr, gln, arg, and asn, below μm for pyridoxine, data not shown). the product quality showed significant changes for the changed feeding strategy ( fig. c and d) . as expected, the glycation level decreased from % to % compared to the reference culture. the truncation level of c-terminal lysine at the heavy chain of the mab increased from % to %. the glycosylation was also significantly influenced by the low nutrient level (fig. e) : the nonfucosylated variants increased from % to % (fig. f) , the degree of galactosylation increased from % to % (fig. g) . cultivation under low nutrient level led to % higher viable cell density and a product titer increased by % when compared to reference culture grown under non-limiting nutrient conditions. the analysis of product quality reveals % less glycation of light chain for cho cells grown under low nutrient conditions ( . % vs . % in reference culture). the truncation of c-terminal lysine decreased by % (from % to %), the degree of galactosylation increased by % (from % to %, also observed by takuma et al. [ ] ) and non-fucosylated glycans increased by % (from . % to . %) under low nutrient conditions. the product quality analysis by intact mass proved to be highly robust (average cv for four replicates = %). in summary, cultivation with alternative feed led to higher igg product titer and better product quality (glycation unwanted, higher amount of non-fucosylated glycans leads to higher antibody-dependent cellmediated cytotoxicity (adcc), higher amount of galactosylation to higher complement-dependent cytotoxicity (cdc) and adcc [ , ] ). background we developed an automated, multiwell plate (mwp) based screening system for suspension cell cultures (fig. a) which is now routinely used in cell culture process development. it is characterized by a fully automated workflow with integrated analytical instrumentation. it uses shaken - well plates as bioreactors which can be run in batch and fed-batch mode with a capacity of up to reactors in parallel [ ] [ ] [ ] . a wide ranging analytical portfolio to monitor cell culture processes and also a cooperation with internal high throughput (ht) analytic groups to characterize product quality are available. in addition the use and the benefits of spectroscopic methods for cell culture automation were shown in the past [ , ] . automated cell culture systems enable broader screening within a shorter time frame for many applications in upstream process development. the higher degree of parallelization and automation helps to screen for most promising parameters in a shorter time. the use of broad doe screening design allows in addition the identification of parameters that support high titers while keeping high product quality (multiple factors at the same time). the illustration (fig. b) shows an example how this combination can speed up process development steps. main applications of the cell culture automation are for example the identification of product quality levers and media or feed optimization. the application of the cell culture automation is shown for two examples. the goal in the first application was to identify levers to reduce trisulfides. by a screening of conditions in parallel (in -fold replication, wells in sum) the reduction of trisulfides by . % (normalized to start level) was possible. in addition the levers for trisulfide reduction were identified. the best and start conditions were verified in bioreactor scale (fig. c) . the goal in the second application was to increase product concentration without an impact on product quality. by a screening of conditions in parallel (in -fold replication, wells in sum) the increase of titer from . g/l to . g/l (> factor ) was possible by media platform change and media optimization. an impact on product quality could not been shown. the best conditions were also verified in bioreactor scale (fig. d) . the benefits of using cell culture automation in late stage process development were shown based on two examples of current applications. for this purpose the experimental results of the development work of two late state projects using the in-house developed automated cell culture system were shown. the first example shows the capability of the automated cell culture system by reducing trisulfides significantly in just one experiment. for the other project the final product concentration could be increased by factor . by a media screening and changing to the in-house media platform. these two examples show the potential of cell culture automation as a routine tool in process development. the cell line development process has become faster and is simultaneously generating more clone-and product-related analytical data. in order to select the best producer cell line, extremely heterogeneous data types need to be systematically compared. the timely availability of all data needed to decide which cell line to pursue has become a bottleneck in the cell line development workflow. to ensure sound decision making, new integrated workflow support and data analysis methods are needed. we have developed a new end-to-end platform for bioprocess development, which includes a cell line development workflow system supporting seeding, selection, passaging, analyzing, cryo-conservation, and processing in (micro-) bioreactors. this platform, genedata bioprocess™, enables partially or fully automated cell line selection and assessment processes, and it increases process efficiency and quality. the system tracks the full history of all clones -from initial transfection all the way to their evaluation in bioreactor runs -and combines this information with analytics data on molecules, clones, and product quality. it can directly integrate with all instruments, such as pipetting robots, bioreactors, and bioanalyzers. the system is designed for a wide range of . a schematic illustration of the automated cell culture system. only the core system is shown with a robotic plate handler as key device connecting cultivation, processing and analytical parts. b illustration of an example how cell culture automation can speed up process development steps. c application in the identification of product quality levers. d application in titer optimization biologic molecules, including antibodies (iggs, novel formats) and other therapeutic proteins (e.g., fusion proteins). highlighted use cases describe the identification of top producer cell lines, decision making support, bioreactor data management, and full clone history report documentation (fig. ). genedata bioprocess, which was developed in collaboration with top pharmaceutical companies, can flexibly support various (non-linear) workflows and structure the collected information in a way that fosters collaboration across an organization. while increasing throughput is crucial to ensure the timely availability of optimal producer cell lines, high-throughput is only possible when automated processes in the laboratory and the resulting data collection and aggregation can be streamlined. genedata bioprocess helps to establish more productive processes by offering support and integration for automation stations and measurement devices. thanks to the comprehensive workflow support and the possibility to integrate results from cell line stability experiments, product quality assessment, and bioreactor suitability tests, genedata bioprocess provides a unique way to evaluate cell lines. comprehensive analysis of all data collected in the process helps to ensure the highest possible quality and minimize the time and resources needed for data analysis and management. integration of bioreactor data analysis and visualization with other parameters measured in cell line development, streamlines clone evaluation in micro-bioreactors and supports highthroughput operations. genedata bioprocess comprehensively tracks the full clone history from the origin of the host cell line to the generation of the validated monoclonal producer cell line. for promising clones, the clone history report can be generated with one click. besides supporting cell line development, genedata bioprocess is a comprehensive platform capable of tracking the complete bioprocess development process. in , . million people suffered from cancer [ ] making it to a major concern of our society. since common cancer treatment is limited and not effective for late stage carcinoma, alternative methods are needed to reduce the high mortality rate of cancer patients. one alternative approach is the application of the oncolytic measles virus (omv), because omv has a natural affinity against cancer cells. the major drawbacks of omv is to produce the extremely high amount of at least tcid ( % tissue culture infective dose) per dose [ ] which is needed. to solve this problem, a high titer process must be established including an efficient downstream processing (dsp). we developed an appropriate upstream processing and are able to produce - tcid ml - in a bioreactor with . l working volume [ ] . now, we focus on the dsp part. the following study tested the application of charged depth filters for the omv clarification. in contrast to common dsp schemes, a depletion of virus particles or a loss of infectivity is not desired. the aim is a reduction of protein content and dna with minimal loss of infective omv. further, we investigated the influence of the cell culture medium on the depth filtration process. to explore the influence of the surrounding cell culture medium on the depth filtration performance, omv was either produced in serum-free medium (vp-sfm) or serum-containing medium (dmem + % fcs). the production was done in a str with a working volume of . l as described in [ ] . cells and carriers were separated with an opticap xl -module (polygard-cr; μm; merck). for the depth filtration millistak+ ce filters (merck) were used. the filter material was autoclaved and rinsed with ml of mm tris-hcl (ph= . ). the virus suspension was filtered with a load of l m - using a peristaltic pump (ism c; ismatec) applying a flux of l m - h - (fig. ). samples were collected at the beginning and end of a filtration run. the omv titer (tcid ml - ) of the samples was determined according to kärber and reed [ , ] . protein content was measured with the pierce bca protein assay kit (thermofisher scientific) according to the manufacturer's instructions. dna was measured by a microtiter assay using quant-it picogreen dsdna reagent (thermofisher scientific) according to the manufacturer's instructions. we found that positively charged depth filters were suitable to clarify omv suspensions. the cell culture medium, in which the omv was produced, influenced the outcome of the depth filtration. a log reduction value (lrv) of . was determined for omv present in serum-containing medium (scm), whereas the titer of omv in serumfree medium (sfm) was reduced . log levels. this indicates that without serum in the surrounding liquid, omv will adsorb to the filter material. however, we must evaluate if the missing serum or other components present in sfm are responsible for this effect. total protein was not relevantly reduced by the clarification using charged depth filters. for omv present in scm, the residual protein content was slightly less compared to omv present in sfm (table ). in contrast, host cell dna (hcdna) was bound to the filter material. we achieved a % reduction of hcdna for an omv suspension in sfm. after clarifying an omv suspension in sfm, the remaining hcdna content was even lower being only %. conclusions charged depth filters are suitable for the first clarification step of omv downstream processing. residual protein could pass the depth scheme of the complete cell line development workflow support in genedata bioprocess. showcasing integration of data from diverse measurement instruments, data visualization for decision making support as well as, tracking of full clone history filter almost unhindered, whereas the hcdna content was already reduced to % at maximum. however, the omv titer was also reduced by the depth filtration. this undesired effect was stronger for the omv present in sfm. because the agencies require avoiding serum in clinical-grade production processes, this is disadvantageous. nonetheless, because sfm will be soon standard for omv production, further experiments have to be done preventing the omv reduction during clarification. one option can be to reduce the adsorption strength of the virus to the filter material by the addition of salt. moreover, it is important to establish a standardized protocol for the upstream processing. we determined batch-to-batch variations within the clarification indicating a strong impact of upstream processing (usp) on the outcome of the dsp. therefore, further studies must investigate the influence of usp parameter e.g. time of harvest and ph of the harvest solution on the omv. fed-batch culture is commonly employed to maximize cell and product concentrations in upstream mammalian cell culture processes. typical standard platform processes rely on fixed-volume bolus feeding of concentrated feed supplements at regular intervals. however, such static approaches might result in over-or underfeeding. to mimic more closely the dynamics of a fed-batch culture, we developed a dynamic feeding strategy responsive to the actual nutrient needs of a mab-producing recombinant cho cell line. results and discussion improvements made at different steps during fed-batch development are shown in fig. . at step , all eight cell boost supplements were added to cdm ns according to a doe approach, and batch cultures were performed. this evaluation allowed us to select only those cell boost supplements that were beneficial to the overall culture performance. non-performing cell boost supplements were removed and not considered further. at step , the selected cell boost supplements were added daily to the cultures at different ratios according to a doe approach, and fedbatch cultures were conducted. as expected, daily feed additions to replenish consumed nutrients substantially improved mab and peak cell concentrations as well as viable cumulative cell days (vccd) compared to batch cultivation. further, the results enabled us to fine-tune the feed ratio of selected cell boost supplements. at step , we further optimized the best performing feed ratio by investigation of static and dynamic feed protocols. most fed-batch protocols rely on constant feed additions on distinct days. however, these approaches often lead to substantial over-or underfeeding during bioprocessing. to improve such "static" protocols, we investigated three different "dynamic" approaches as shown in table by applying the selected cell boost supplements with the optimized feed ratio. this investigation allowed us to further improve the bioprocess performance. the best performing approaches, constant and retrospective feed, were further investigated in fully automated bioreactors under controlled conditions. in general, constant cultivation parameters in the bioreactor slightly enhanced mab titers compared to shake flask cultivation. the retrospective feed strategy yielded % higher titers than the constant strategy. overall, the established methodology for fed-batch development allowed us to obtain . × higher mab titers (batch mean: . g/l vs. fed-batch . g/l) in a short time and three simple steps. in addition, the product quality was investigated. compared to the legacy fedbatch process, fed-batches that were conducted with the newly selected basal and feed media altered the distribution of charge and glycan variants. the amount of aggregated product was not altered. the established methodology for fed-batch development is a rapid protocol to select well-performing feed supplements and optimize their ratio to the culture requirements. in three steps, mab titers were boosted . x from . g/l to . g/l. product glycosylation and charge variants could be influenced by the newly selected basal and feed media compared to a legacy fed-batch process. the amount of aggregated product was not altered. the present study investigates the beneficial effect of spiking hyclone™ actipro™ basal medium with hyclone cell boost™ a and cell boost b feed supplements on growth and productivity of a recombinant cho cell line. to evaluate the impact of feed-spiking compared with cultivation in basal medium only, the cell line was grown in bioreactors under controlled conditions to determine cellspecific metabolic rates, nutrient consumption, and byproduct accumulation over the process time. transcriptome analysis of the cultivated cells, using microarrays on four consecutive days to investigate differential gene expression, revealed the beneficial effect of feed-spiking compared with cells grown in basal medium. model cell line was a mab-expressing cho dg (licensed from cellca gmbh) cultivated either in actipro basal medium only (ge healthcare) or in actipro basal medium feed-spiked with additional supplementation with % cell boost a and . % cell boost b (ge healthcare). both cultures were grown in batch mode using dasgip™ cellferm-pro™ stirred-tank bioreactors (eppendorf). the beneficial effect of feed-spiking was analysed by transcriptome analysis using microarray technology ( × k design, agilent). both basal and feed-spiked processes lasted for seven days with viabilities above % until day . on day seven, a sharp decline in viability indicated the end of the batch process (fig. a) . in feed-spiked medium, cells initially grew slower but reached almost twice as high peak cell concentrations ( . × c/ml) than in basal medium only ( . × c/ml). remarkably, the integral of the viable cell concentration over the total process time (viable cumulative cell days [vccd] ) was similar between both process strategies (fig. c) . while mab production plateaued after day in basal medium only (final titer . g/l), a continuous increase to three-fold higher final titers ( . g/l) was observed in feed-spiked medium (fig. b) . the higher titers could be attributed to generally higher cell-specific productivities (qp), which remained rather constant (~ pg/cell/day) in feedspiked cultures. in basal medium, the qp continuously dropped by % (day to ), % (day ), and > % (day to ) from to pg/cell/day in basal medium cultures. in average, the qp was % higher in feed-spiked cultures (fig. d ). transcriptome analysis of differentially expressed genes between cells grown in basal medium or feed-spiked medium were used to identify relevant go terms that indicated a more active proliferative state for feed-spiked cultures (data not shown). the top go terms significantly related to cell cycle and primary metabolism, cellular division, as well as nucleobase formation or regulation. furthermore, gsea revealed several significantly enriched set of genes related to gene transcription, dna replication and repair, cell growth and proliferation, as well as inhibition of apoptosis in feed-spiked cultures. thus, feed-spiking increased the proliferative activity of cultivated cells. several of the identified genes appear as promising targets for cell line engineering, but have not yet been described in relation to high-producing recombinant cell lines and will need to be evaluated in future studies. feed-spiking of basal medium is a convenient and easy way to considerably increase product concentrations in a simple batch culture. differential gene expression revealed genes that appear important for high cell-specific production rates, and this knowledge can be leveraged into cell line engineering approaches or the design of high producing cho cell media. in the latter case, a maximized supply of high biosimilarity must be demonstrated by physicochemical and functional characterization for approval requirements of phase i and phase iii studies in terms of efficacy, safety and immunogenicity. in this study, rounds of upstream and downstream processes were run to reach the cqa limits of the originator molecule. after conducting many different development strategies, the mirror plot images of the intact deconvoluted mass were found to be identical corresponding to similar levels of glycoforms. the uv chromatogram of reversed phase ultraperformance liquid chromatography (rp-uplc) of tryptic peptide mapping demonstrated that the primary structure of tur is identical to the originator as shown in fig. a . post-translational modifications (ptms) such as oxidation, deamidation, n-terminal pyroglutamic acid, c-terminal lysine truncation levels were also comparable for two products. the glycosylation site (hc-asn ) was confirmed by peptide mapping analysis and % glycan site occupancy was proven for tur and originator. the glycosylation pattern for two products were highly similar in terms of major glycans (g f, g f, g f-gn and etc.). man level was lower in tur compared to the originator product which may not have any clinical effect on the molecule. the secondary structure was determined by atr-ftir spectroscopy. absorption bands (amide i and amide ii) were overlapped completely and amounts of α-helix and β-sheet structures were comparable. furthermore; size-exclusion chromatography (sec) analysis revealed that both products have the same level of purity (> %) and aggregate (< %) levels. the level of impurities were determined as below % by ce-sds. the capillary isoelectric focusing (cief) experiments showed that the charge variant profiles of two products are indistinguishable and the isoelectric point of main peak is observed at . for both products. the association/dissociation rate constants and binding affinity for both tur and originator were highly similar and similarity score was calculated greater than %, as shown in fig. b . in this study, state-of-art analytical techniques were used to assess the biosimilarity of tur to the originator adalimumab. head-tohead comparison data clearly demonstrated that tur is highly similar to the originator adalimumab in terms of physicochemical and functional characteristics. based on the analytical similarities, we . process performance of basal medium (black) and feed-spiked (red) bioreactor batch cultures: a cell concentrations and viability, b viable cumulative cell days and specific growth rate, and c antibody concentrations and cell-specific productivity. error bars indicate standard deviation from three independent experiments. the black arrows on day indicate the beginning of decreasing cell-specific productivities and lower cell-specific growth rates in basal medium cultures believe that tur will have comparable pk/pd, potency, and efficacy results to the originator adalimumab. the expanded interest in intensified continuous bioprocessing has highlighted the need to develop a small scale model for perfusion cell culture. the direction in the industry has been to increase target cell densities to ≥ x vc/ml and decrease perfusion rates to ≤ vvd. in order to increase the throughput of our perfusion media development capabilities we sought to develop a small scale model of perfusion using the ambr® instrument (sartorius, germany). we used a modified cell settling model from the previously published by kreye et. al. to achieve the cell retention necessary to reach perfusion relevant viable cell concentrations [ ] . in this work, we will show the application of this small scale model for: ( ) identification of specific productivity performance over a steady-state for tested media, ( ) identification of cspr min for a specific cell line and medium combination, and ( ) confirmation of consistent product quality profiles between the small scale model and benchtop perfusion (data not shown). a chozn® cell line producing an igg was evaluated in several proprietary chemically defined media prototypes generated during the development of the catalog excell® advanced hd perfusion medium: "fed batch medium", "early prototype", "mid prototype", "intermediate prototype" and "late prototype" [ ] . small scale simulation of perfusion experiments were run in ambr® . media exchange was performed times per day in equal amounts. agitation, gassing, and liquid handling were stopped for an optimized period of time to allow cells to settle to the bottom. spent media was removed in an amount proportional to / rd daily exchange volume. agitation, gassing, and liquid handling were resumed and fresh media was added back to the vessels. for benchtop perfusion, cells were inoculated in l applikon bioreactors (applikon, netherlands). at a concentration of~ . x vc/ml, perfusion was initiated using the atf (repligen, massachusetts). perfusion rate was limited at . vvd during steady-state. using the cell settling method described above we have been able to achieve ≥ % cell retention efficiency. all media tested in this work were able to reach and maintain the x vc/ml target cell density at vvd (fig. ) . performance of each media formulation was ranked based on specific productivity (table ) . using "intermediate prototype", minimum steady-state cspr was determined to be . pl/c/d for this cell line. n-glycan analysis of ambr® and bioreactor samples via intact mass spectrometry displayed only slight differences in product quality profile (data not shown). our work has shown a clear distinction between various prototype perfusion media and demonstrated a % increase in specific productivity over "fed batch medium" used in perfusion. additionally, we have shown the application to further characterize the process using this model to determine cspr min for a given medium and cell line. the transient process has been successfully operated at l in a sartorius biostat single use bioreactor (sub), yielding . kg of crude product from a two-week expression culture (table ) . successful scale up of the process to l creates the potential to supply transiently expressed products to support toxicology studies or even early gmp clinical supply, enabling accelerated biopharmaceutical development project timelines. the scale up from rocking bioreactors (rbr) to sub scale identified some scalability issues. lower specific productivity due to increased cell growth and decreased titres were observed in the sub ( fig. iii & iv). to improve the predictability of scale up, a new process was developed and evaluated in the sub vessels utilising a modified transfection method, which resulted in comparable expression levels and specific productivity between rbr and sub scales. two sets of expression vectors comprising heavy chain and light chain plasmids expressing a human igg kappa mab, as previously described [ , ] were used in the process optimisation study. the cell line used for transient expression and the pei mediated transfection method has been described previously [ ] . transfected cultures were run under fed batch conditions for days in l ge healthcare wave bioreactors (rbr), hyclone sub using l and l hyclone bioreactor bags (thermo scientific). the transfection process was modified to address the reduced titres and higher viable cell density (vcd) seen in the sub cultures. shake flask cultures were used to assess the standard (a) and modified transfection processes (b and c) (fig. , i & ii). process c was identified as the process to be studied at sub scale, offering the potential to mitigate the high viable cell densities (vcd) observed. scaling up process c to l and l sub resulted in cultures producing titres exceeding g/l with desired cell growth profiles. scale up of process a into sub vessels resulted in decreased productivity compared to the rbr scale. after optimisation, the sub process c yielded increased specific productivities and expression titres comparable to those seen at rbr scale (table ) . medimmune has successfully completed the first known successful cho transient culture at l scale producing > mg/l of mab at harvest. process optimisation has subsequently demonstrated reproducible titres at l to l scale exceeding g/l with comparable glycosylation profiles between sub and rbr cultures across scales. comprehensive analysis of the impact of trace elements in media on clone dependent process performance and product quality background state-of-the-art biopharmaceutical processes are accounting concomitantly for process performance and product quality. even though high yielding, robust processes are the cornerstones of any process development, product quality parameters such as structural integrity, charge variances and post-translational modifications are progressively becoming the focus of the developmental work. in conjunction with host cell line selection and process performance parameters, media components are crucial for the continued progress in rational modulation of product quality attributes affecting biological activity, immunogenicity, half-life or stability. among media components, trace elements (te) are of particular interest as they play a pivotal role in various cell metabolism pathways. based on a comprehensive doe approach, extensive process performance-and product quality evaluation combined with metabolic flux analysis, the impact of several trace elements on the biopharmaceutical process is assessed. in a comprehensive i-optimal doe approach ( fig. ) , the effect of six te in various concentration levels and combinations in serum-free media was studied for four different cho-k cells lines in an ambr® setup. a scrutiny of the process performance parameters such as cellular growth, productivity, amino acids and vitamins consumptions rates for each of the conditions was performed. the process performance evaluation was accompanied by extensive product quality analysis including size and charge variants, glycosylation patterns, oxidation and methylation. furthermore, a metabolic flux analysis was performed based on the nitrogen balance. based on extensive analytical data, the obtained response surface model provides a clear insight into the impact of particular te and their combinations on process performance and product quality. the high model quality enables discriminations between clone dependent and clone independent effects. with an elevation in titer up to % in the best condition of the cell lines clearly show, that even state-of-the-art media can be outperformed by trace element rebalancing. analyzing specific rates in combination with metabolic flux analysis improves the understanding of metabolic restructuring of the cell lines under distinct te levels and combinations. modulation of trace elements levels had a tremendous effect on the charge heterogeneity and glycosylation structure of the different proteins. this provides a toolbox for the fine tuning and control of product quality parameters. taken together, the data further paves the way to the rational fine tuning of process performance and product quality attributes. background due to regulatory concerns and economic impact, ensuring product quality and consistency is now one of the main challenge faced by the biopharmaceutical industry. for monoclonal antibodies (mab), glycosylation is one of the most important quality attributes as it impacts on mab structure integrity, and ultimately on both clinical efficacy and safety. many factors affect mab glycosylation and its inherent heterogeneity, including the host cell, the culture medium, the mode of operation and the operating conditions. in this context, the capacity to monitor and control on-line the antibody glycosylation, from early-to late-stage process development, would be of salient interest to reduce the time and cost to market. in order to address this unmet need, we have designed an improved spr biosensor assay to measure the kinetics of interaction between a mab and the extracellular domain of the fcγriiia receptor bound at the biosensor surface [ , ] . of salient interest, we also demonstrated that various binding kinetic signatures, especially different dissociation kinetics could be correlated with distinct mab glycosylation patterns and with therapeutic efficacies, as deduced from mass spectrometry and a surrogate adcc assay, respectively. in parallel, we have also harnessed a spr biosensor directly to a bioreactor, which permitted the at-line determination of the concentration of antibodies by hybridoma cells during a bioreactor culture. we now plan on combining both approaches to determine on-line the glycosylation profile of the produced mabs. our ultimate goal is to design a unique and highly innovative bioprocess control tool that can be readily applied in an industrial bio-manufacturing setting. reducing timelines and costs are key factors for bio-pharmaceutical industries to accelerate process development and drug delivery to patients. enhancing throughput of bioprocess development has become increasingly important for the screening and optimization of cell culture processes. this challenge requires high throughput tools. in a previous study [ ] , we showed that ambr® , a robotically driven mini-bioreactor system developed by tap-sartorius, could be advantageous to accelerate process development. the use of ambr® system allows us to test a large number of experimental conditions in a single experiment. therefore, the large amount of production samples to be characterized for product quality attributes (pqa) increases as well: the bottleneck has moved from the generation of samples at the production bioreactor step to in-process analysis. for product quality attribute analysis at lab scale, protein purification is generally carried out on > ml columns which is incompatible with the size of ambr® bioreactors. moreover, the applied methods are relatively low throughput. the development of a high binding capacity resin (up to mg/ml) [ ] , combined with high performing new cell lines which are able to produce up to g/l of recombinant monoclonal antibodies, allow require the development of an efficient and high throughput (hts) purification method robot. the use of robotic equipment for small scale purification purposes is a great opportunity for us to tackle this bottleneck, by enabling highthroughput sample purification at smaller scale ( μl). recombinant monoclonal antibodies were produced by a genetically engineered dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr)-/-dg chinese hamster ovary (cho) cell line. clarified cell culture fluid (cccf) was obtained from and k liter bioreactors after three filtration steps. minipurifications were performed on tecan freedom evo® robot with predictor robocol-umns® containing μl mabselect sure® resin. larger scale purification were executed using an aktaxpress using hitrap column prota. to assess monoclonal antibody purification at small scale, we first tested the repeatability of the minipurification, purifying the samples times on the same columns and using different columns, focusing on the yield of the purification and the impact on product quality attributes, especially the hmws. then, we compared those results to those obtained with the aktaxpress at larger scale purification, comparing the yield of the purification and the pqa of the protein-a eluates obtained with both purification systems. finally, we assessed the capability of the robot to perform hts of buffer and purification conditions, evaluating three different buffers at different concentrations and ph values, and also testing different loading column capacities. in this study we established that the tecan can be used as a robust platform for purification at small scale. we observed similar purification yields, intra and inter run. the analysis of the pqa a level showed there is also very high reproducibility. and the ph of the eluate showed as well strong comparability as well. table shows the coefficient of variation (cv) of the yield, hmws and eluate ph are low, demonstrating the good reproducibility of the purification. the strong reproducibility obtained between the different purifications showed that the tecan and the aktaxpress are similar in terms of purification performance and pqa (fig. a, b) . the tecan is a versatile automated liquid handler allowing the screening of huge purification conditions (fig. c) , the possibility to purify large quantities of samples, while the samples amount is limited. the tecan has the potential to purify more than samples/day, reducing timelines and allowing us to deliver faster to the patients. viable cell density monitoring in bioreactor with lensless imaging geoffrey monitoring cell density and viability of mammalian cell culture bioreactors is a necessary task that presents today a number of remaining challenges. the traditional measurement for bioreactor cell count and viability rely on using the trypan blue exclusion method once a day. while automatic cell counters have reduced the statistical manual error, sampling the bioreactor remains a contamination risk and is prohibiting process control as the sampled volume becomes siginficant. lensless imaging technology is a new method for accurately determining cell concentration and viability without staining. this technique directly acquires the light diffraction properties of each individual cells through their holograms images without any objective, lens or focus settings. living and dead cells have significant holographic patterns that can be distinguished and precisely counted. lensless imaging technique directly acquires the light diffraction properties of each individual cells through their holograms images without any objective, lens or focus settings. living and dead cells have significant holographic patterns that can be distinguished and precisely counted. we compare cell counts and viability between the reference method and our lensless imaging device, the cytonote counter. measures are performed once a day on samples from bioreactors, from the inoculation to the end of the culture. we also assessed the repeatability of our method. another lensless imaging prototype is setup as a measurement chamber directly connected to a perfusion bioreactor, for continuously receiving the bioreactor broth, and therefore reproducing an in situ measure. with a concentration range up to x cells/ml ( fig. ) and viability range at - %, we obtained a correlation factor of . between the two compared methods. the large field of view allows the analyze of several thousand cells within a single image, keeping the statistical variability of the measure as low as %. our measurement chamber prototype has demonstarted its capability for continuous viable cell density and viability monitoring. we are now working at designing a steam strerilizable probe, and we envision lensless imaging to become the future method of choice for on-line monitoring of suspension cells cultures. lensless imaging technology is capable of accurately and precisely monitoring viable cell density and viability with a combination of significant advantages starting from low sample volume use, label free detection, quick measure, simple device, to high number of cell analyzed which let us think that it is a good candidate for very small- comparison between both purification systems and the ability of the system to be used as a high throughput tools for buffers screening. a purification yield (%). b pqa .a (normalized). c impact of the ph and buffer concentration on the pqa .a scale bioreactor and high-throughput measures. its high repeatability is also a key parameters in the effort to narrow batch to batch deviations. in addition we demonstrate that this technique is potentially powerful for in-line and continuous monitoring of a lab bioreactor. we envision lensless imaging to become the future method of choice for on-line and in-situ monitoring of suspension cells and a perfect tool for process control in fed-batch or perfusion mode in single-use bioreactors or traditional steam sterilized vessels. it can certainly become the first vcd measurement technique to work from cell line engineering, to process development, pilot scale, and up to manufacturing scale. time-dependent product heterogeneity in mammalian cell fermentation processes background a consistent product quality is a major goal in the production of biotherapeutics, especially recombinant glycoproteins. whereas it is unlikely that the polypeptide chain changes during a production process, posttranslational modifications and protein folding are sensitive to fluctuations in parameters and conditions. here we focus on protein glycosylation as one important indication for product quality [ ] . during a batch process conditions change continuously. at the beginning, the supply situation for the cell is excellent, but the secreted material stays a long time in the culture fluid. later during cultivation substrate provision decreases, whereas the exposition time of the protein to the culture fluid is much shorter. altogether this leads to product heterogeneity of the secreted protein during a batch culture. four different cell lines, two of human origin and two cho clones, producing four different recombinant glycoproteins were investigated in this study. together with their respective parental cell line the clones were cultured in three replicates in shakers. supernatant from the cultures were harvested at four time points. the removed culture volume was replaced by culture supernatant of the identically cultured corresponding parental cell line. the product was isolated from the supernatant and the glycans were released. one part of the released glycans was labeled with -ab and separated by hilic-fld. the other part of the glycans was permethylated and analyzed by maldi-tof mass spectrometry (fig. a) . the investigated proteins were antibody, antithrombin iii from cho clones and α -antitrypsin, c -inhibitor from human clones. the antennarity of the glycans is quite stable in all production phases. the degree of core fucosylation is very high in all products. a low fucosylation degree of antibodies may be favorable for a higher adcc performance [ ] . some of the products showed an antennary fucosylation, which seemed to change not very much in different cultivation phases. nevertheless, this might be an issue due to an antigenic impact in the patient. the antennary galactosylation changes noticeable for the antibody and α -antitrypsin. in both cases the degree is highest in the first phase. an incomplete galactosylation leads to truncated glycans. this leads inevitable to undersialylated antennas to be seen for α -antitrypsin. the sialylation is the highest in the early phases and decreases during cultivation time. sialylation of a therapeutical protein is important for the half-life in the patient. therefore highly sialylated products are desired [ ] . in further studies the consistency of the galactosylation and the sialylation will investigated for fed batch and long term continuous cultures in comparison to batch cultures. due to the feed solution or the fresh media being present during such processes, the supply situation should be excellent for the whole cultivation time. the differences between the maldi-tof and hilic-fld data originate from complex and unresolved chromatograms (fig. b , chromatograms not shown). for that reason coupling of hilic-fld and ms is very much recommended. background novel biologics are often selected from a large library of lead candidates in the initial stage of preclinical and clinical developments. for this selection, there is a demand for high-throughput production of recombinant proteins of high quality and in sufficient quantity. transient gene expression offers a rapid approach to the production of numerous recombinant proteins for the initial-stage developments of biologics. mammalian cells are major host cells for transient gene expression, but they have the disadvantages of complicated operations and high cost of culture. insect cells are easy to handle and can be grown to a high cell density in suspension with a serum-free medium. insect cells can also produce large amount of recombinant proteins through post-translational processing and modifications of higher eukaryotes. hence, insect cells have been recognized as an excellent platform for the production of functional recombinant proteins [ , ] . in the present study, the production of an antibody fab fragment through transient gene expression in lepidopteran insect cells was examined. the dna fragments encoding the heavy chain (hc) and light chain (lc) genes of an fab fragment of mouse anti-bovine rnasea [ ] were respectively cloned into the plasmid vector pihaneo, which contained the bombyx mori actin promoter downstream of the b. mori nucleopolyhedrovirus (bmnpv) ie- transactivator and the bmnpv hr enhancer for high-level expression [ ] . trichoplusia ni bti-tn- b - (high five) cells were co-transfected with the resultant plasmid vectors using linear polyethyleneimine (pei; mw , ). before transfection, the plasmids and pei were prepared in mm nacl, ph . and incubated at room temperature for min. when the transfection efficiency was checked, a plasmid vector encoding the enhanced green fluorescent protein (egfp) gene was also co-transfected. transfected cells were incubated with a serum-free medium in a static or shake-flask culture. culture supernatants were analysed by western blotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa). the numbers of green fluorescent cells and total cells in culture broth was determined using a flow cytometer. western blot analysis and elisa of culture supernatants showed that transfected high five cells secreted the fab fragment with antigenbinding activity. in static cultures, transfection and culture conditions, such as hc:lc gene ratio, a serum-free medium, dna:pei ratio, and dna amount per cell, were successfully optimized by flow cytometry of egfp expression in transfected cells and the yield of the secreted fab fragment measured by elisa. the effects of culture temperature and initial cell density were also examined by comparing the cell growth and the production of fab fragments in shake-flask cultures. under optimal conditions (medium, psfm-j (wako pure chemical industries, japan); hc:lc gene ratio, : ; dna, μg/( cells); pei, μg/( cells); initial cell density, x cells/cm ; temperature, °c), the yield of more than mg/l of fab fragment was achieved in days in a shake-flask culture ( fig. ) . transfection did not significantly affect the growth of high five cells as compared with untransfected cells. transient gene expression using insect cells may offer a promising approach to high-throughput production of candidate proteins for the development of biologics. the increasing demand for biopharmaceuticals produced in mammalian cells has led industries to increase volumetric productivity of bioprocesses through different strategies [ , , ] . in this context, fedbatch and perfusion cultures have attracted more interest than conventional batch processes. the efficient application of such alternative processes requires the availability of reliable on-line measuring tools for cell density and cell metabolic activity estimation [ ] . the comparison of different culture strategies for hek cell line producing ifn-γ are presented below: batch, fortified batch and fed-batch. in this context, a new robust feeding strategy based on the monitoring of alkali buffer addition was applied for the estimation of nutrient requirements. this method allows to increase cell density and product titer compared with the other strategies assessed. three different culture strategies were carried out in -litre biostat b-dcu ii bioreactor. first, a reference batch and a batch using fortified medium (nutrient enriched medium) were run and assessed in terms of viable cell density (vcd) and product titer, and set as initial references. then, a fed-batch was performed applying a feeding strategy based on the nutrient requirements estimation by monitoring the alkali buffer addition used for the control of ph. results vcd and product titer achieved for the different culture strategies assessed (batch, fortified-batch and fed-batch) are presented in table . in fortified batch an increase in vcd of % and also % in product titer were obtained compared with batch. in the fed-batch culture carried out (fig. ) , we observed that alkali buffer addition profile matched the vcd evolution trend. thus, the monitoring of alkali buffer addition was used for estimating the nutrients requirements (i.e. the volume of feeding medium) at any time during the fed batch phase. the feeding strategy based on alkali buffer addition enabled to maintain glucose concentration set point therein a narrow range during fed-batch phase (around mm). as a result, higher vcd ( . · cells/ml) was obtained when compared with both batch references: vcd was enhanced to % and % and an increase up to % and % in product titer in respect to batch and fortified batch respectively. the results prove that fed-batch strategy based on the alkali buffer addition is a robust on-line monitoring method that enables to optimize the feeding strategy in a fed-batch cultures. three different culture strategies have been tested in bioreactor with a hek cell line producing ifn-γ. results show as the higher vcd is reached, the higher product concentration is achieved. therefore, from bioprocess development point of view, it is very interesting to implement strategies with higher vcd outcome, such as fed-batch operation mode. in this context, a new robust method for vcd estimation in fed-batch was applied. the alkali buffer addition necessary for maintaining the ph set-point is an on-line reliable and easy measuring variable that provides information about by-products formation (mainly lactic acid). the monitoring of this variable can provide information about the cell concentration, activity and metabolism, to detect changes in culture. besides that, a relationship between alkali buffer addition and vcd can be established since the first is strongly correlated with cell growth and metabolites consumption/formation. the application of alkali buffer addition measure to implement an optimal feeding strategy in fed-batch permits to enhance vcd and product titer when comparing with batch strategies. a novel approach to high throughput screening for perfusion background perfusion systems for suspended mammalian cells raise growing interest in the biomanufacturing industry. continuous manufacturing is growing in the field and is encouraged by health authorities [ , , ] . this work addresses scale down limitations inherent to continuous media exchange and cell retention by using a semi-continuous system. data was generated with a set of different clones that were previously studied in fed-batch mode [ ] . materials and methods cho-k cell lines expressing the same monoclonal antibody (mab) and issued from the same transfection were used as models. . l bioreactors (sartorius) were used for fed-batch and perfusion production runs. the perfusion bioreactors were run using an alternating tangential flow filtration device (repligen, xcell™ atf system). the cell biomass was controlled by removing cells through a bleed line and was controlled using a biocapacitance probe (hamilton, incyte). the perfusion rate (d) was fixed to one vessel volume a day (vvd - ). the semi-continuous runs were made in ml shake tube (tpp, tubespin® bioreactor ). once a day, the tubes were centrifuged ( min, g), the supernatant removed (to mimic a perfusion rate of vvd - ), replaced with fresh media and cells were re-suspended. the clone's growth potential were preserved across the systems (fig. ). clone # always reached the highest viable cell density (vcd), followed by clone # . clone # and # showed similar growth characteristics. it is interesting to note that in the perfusion bioreactor different patterns in terms of vcd were observed although the cell biomass signals were similar for all runs. this reflects the fact that the capacitance measures the biomass and not the absolute cell count [ ] . to estimate the minimum cell specific perfusion rate (cspr min ) in the semi-continuous experiment, the perfusion rate was divided by the maximum viable cell density (vcd max ). this value was compared to the cspr obtained during the th set-point (sp ) of the perfusion runs. as expected, the bleed fraction decreased when the capacitance set-point was increased and went down to % or less of the total perfusion rate (data not shown). since the bleed removes the excess biomass, it is an indication of how close to a limitation the system is. therefore, the cspr calculated at sp was considered as the minimum cspr. the cspr min obtained in both systems were very close ( table ). the semi-continuous system can therefore be used to identify the cspr min before running a continuous bioreactor, it therefore facilitates the decision making early in the development (to define the target cell density for a defined perfusion rate). the specific productivity (q p ) of the clones was quantified at the maximum vcd (semi-continuous) or at sp (perfusion). absolute values are not representative since the cell environment is so different in both systems. nevertheless, a relative ranking proved to be indicative of the respective performances ( table ). the maximum cell growth in fed-batch, semi-continuous and perfusion were also compared, their ranking was always preserved. both indications can be used to assess a performance ranking for different clones. the performance of clones was studied in different cultivation systems: fed-batch/perfusion bioreactors and semi-continuous shake tube. the semi-continuous system was able to precisely predict the cspr min , an important process parameter for perfusion. specific productivity and maximum cell density ranking was preserved across the systems, therefore the scale down experiment can be used to assess a performance ranking for perfusion clone screening. modulating antibody galactosylation through cell culture medium for improved function and product quality jenny y. bang, james-kevin y. tan the production of therapeutic antibodies (abs) requires high titers and excellent product quality to ensure efficient manufacturing and potent drug efficacy. glycosylation, or the attachment of sugars to organic molecules, is a critical quality aspect that can significantly alter ab binding, function, and therapeutic effect [ ] . galactose is a key sugar of interest due to its significant impact on ab function and the ability to control galactosylation through cell culture medium. herein, irvine scientific assessed the ability of media components to modulate galactose levels on a model therapeutic ab. various media compositions were able to modulate galactosylation levels without compromising cell growth and ab titers. in addition, an in vitro assay was utilized to evaluate the functional ability of abs to bind and activate complement-dependent cytotoxicity (cdc). differences in galactosylation significantly altered the abs' ability to induce cell cytotoxicity. furthermore, design of experiment analysis determined the optimal ratio of supplements to maximize galactosylation. this "optimized supplement" was verified and evaluated against other suppliers' galactosylation supplements in terms of growth, titer, glycan analysis, and ab function. the optimized supplement outperformed all other suppliers' supplements and resulted in the best overall cell growth, titer, galactosylation, and ab function. ab against cd were grown in balancd® cho growth a and were fed with balancd® cho feed on days - of the cultures. viable cell density and cell viability were assessed by a beckman coulter vi-cell xr, ab titer was assessed by a pall fortébio qk e , and glycan analysis was assessed by a perkinelmer labchip gxii. for the functional cdc assay, abs were incubated with daudi b lymphoblast cells and normal human complement serum. cell cytotoxicity was assessed with a promega cytotox-glo kit. various supplements were evaluated in fed-batch cultures and resulted in - % ab galactosylation without compromising cell growth and ab titers. design of experiment analysis determined an optimal composition, deemed "optimized supplement," which was evaluated against a panel of galactose-modulating supplements from other suppliers. the optimized supplement resulted in a similar viable cell density (vcd) and cell viability compared to the fed-batch culture control which had no supplements (fig. a) . supplements from supplier resulted in similar to half the vcd of the control while supplements from supplier resulted in very low vcd and percent viability. all of the supplements except those from supplier resulted in ab titers similar to the control (fig. b) . due to the poor growth and subsequently low titer from supplier 's supplement, supplier was not further evaluated. the glycan profiles were analyzed and are presented in (fig. c ). all the evaluated supplements were able to raise galactosylation; however, only the optimized supplement and the x supplier supplement resulted in over % galactosylation. the function of the abs was further evaluated in a cdc assay (fig. d) . abs from the optimized supplement were more effective than the control abs and had a significantly lower half-maximal effective concentration (ec , . μg/ml) than the control ( . μg/ml). abs from the x supplier supplement had a similar ec to the control which may be due to the higher man % of the abs. an optimized supplement was produced through fed-batch evaluation and design of experiment analysis. the optimized supplement outperformed all other supplenments from other suppliers and resulted in the best overall cell growth, glycan profile, and functional ab activity (table ) . industry practice for mammalian cell culture media and feed development typically employs a high-throughput screening (hts) platform along with large sets of experiments [ ] . modern hts systems often include robotic liquid handlers to replace labor intensive steps. to align with advancements in the field, a semi-automated hts platform was developed to facilitate in-house media and feed development for early stage biologics projects. selecting appropriate instruments and integrating them into a seamless system are the keys to a hts platform. the developed hts platform uses deep well plates (dwps) for culture vessels, the liquid handler of the advance microscale bioreactor (ambr ) for media/ feed formulation preparation in an aseptic environment, nyone cell imager for viability and cell growth analysis, tecan freedom evo's liquid handler for activity assay sample preparation, and cedex bioht for high-throughput metabolite analysis. dwps offer comparable cell growth to shake flasks and compatible layout to ambr , which makes the dwp an ideal candidate for the platform. in addition, the user friendly design of experiments (does) interface and liquid handler function of the ambr expediates the formulation preparation of varying doe conditions [ ] . a macro program was written and developed in excel to enable the easy import of does design from major statistics software packages, such as jmp and simca, into ambr . performance qualification of each component were performed prior to implementing the hts platform. comparable cell growth profile and productivity were achived between shake flasks and dwps (fig. a ), indicating compatable cell culture environment for the cells. cell counts using nyone gave identical cell growth ranking as the traditional count from vi-cell xr (fig. b) . freedom evo's liquid handler was optimized to produce comparable activity results to manual operation while expediting the sample preparation with improved consistency (fig. c) . finally, implementing the liquid handler function of ambr to support media and feed formulation significantly reduced the labor for each experiment. summary of the capability comparison between the hts platform and the traditional method are listed in table . a case study of a complex feed screening with definitive screening design was completed using the semi-automatic hts platform. this experiment, containing more than feed formulations in duplicates, was handled by one operator and delivered a % improvement in productivity within a week period (data not shown). in addition, implementing the hts platform for this study also resulted into~ % reduction in labor while improving the traceability of formulation preparation. a semi-automated hts platform was developed to support media and feeds screening and development for early stage biologics projects. the platform utilizes dwps, nyone cell imager, ambr , freedom evo liquid handler system, and bioht metabolic analyzer to accelerate the screening process. this screening platform not only improves process throughput, operational precision, and traceability of formulation preparation, but also reduces the labor for the media and feed formulation preparation. background a perfusion medium requires high concentrations of specific nutrients while balancing other components to support intensified perfusion processes. using a combination of design of experiment (doe), multivariate analysis (mva), and spent media analysis, we developed a catalog "de novo" perfusion medium by working with multiple cho cell lines and proteins. the optimization of the medium in bioreactors using alternating tangential flow (atf) cell retention devices reduced the minimum cspr from over pl/cell/d to under pl/cell/d for most cell lines while increasing specific productivity during day steady states with stable growth rates, viability, volumetric productivity and product quality. high throughput screening (hts) was performed with seven cell lines, while four were used in bioreactors: cho-s, dg , and two chozn® gs lines, each producing different monoclonal antibodies and include a fusion protein. for hts experiments, cells were inoculated at . x vc/ml with a ml working volume in ml tpp® tubes and cultured for days in a multitron shaken at rpm, °c, % rh, and % co . for benchtop perfusion, cells were inoculated at . - . x vc/ml in l applikon bioreactors (applikon, netherlands) with a l working volume. bioreactors were operated at rpm, °c, % do, and a ph of . or . ± . depending on the cell line. oxygen was supplied through an l-sparger or microsparger as needed, and excell® antifoam (milliporesigma, germany) was added at a maximum rate of . % v/v to control foam. at a cell concentration of~ . x vc/ml, perfusion was initiated using the atf (repligen, massachusetts), with a bleed set to maintain cell concentrations at or * vc/ml. two "de novo" prototype media were developed using doe and mva in hts with tpps and an ambr® [ ] and one was chosen for further development after comparing to a basal medium enriched with feed in bioreactors. eleven components were identified as significant effectors of critical parameters for perfusion processes across evaluated cell lines. doe central composite experiments were run and component concentrations were optimized in the selected prototype. in parallel, amino acid specific consumption rates were calculated from bioreactor spent media samples and used to adjust the concentration of amino acids to target a reduced cspr. increasing specific amino acids concentrations resulted in a significant reduction of the minimum cspr across all tested cell lines -for example the cspr of cho-s was reduced from to pl/cell/day (table ). however, even at the lower cspr, spent media analysis revealed excess concentration of some amino acids, so specific accumulating amino acids were reduced and components were streamlined for the final medium: excell® advanced hd perfusion medium. using this medium, a cho-s and a chozn® gs cell line producing a fusion protein were cultured at a cspr of less than pl/cell/day with a vcd of * vc/ml. metabolic profile, productivity, and product quality were constant over the day steady state. the chozn® gs cell line was also tested at * vc/ml with a cspr of pl/cell/day (fig. ). we have developed a catalog perfusion medium from first principles, ensuring broadness of application by using seven cell lines in scaleddown systems and four in perfusion bioreactors. the final catalog medium showed significant improvements in productivity across all cell lines, with reduced csprs when compared to enriched fed-batch medium or initial prototypes (table ) . there is a rising demand for accelerated process development, increased efficiency and economics for biopharmaceutical production processes. furthermore, increased process understanding have evolved from the process analytical tool initiative (pat) and the quality by design (qbd) methodology. in contrast to one-factor-at-atime methods, statistical design of experiment (doe) methods are widely used to develop biopharmaceutical processes. even if highthroughput systems can handle these numbers of experiments in parallel, the heuristic restriction of boundaries and the high number of factors results in stepwise iterations with multiple runs. therefore, the combination of model-based simulations with doe methods (mdoe) for the development of sophisticated cell culture processes is a novel tool for process development [ ] . it is used to reduce the number of experiments during doe and the time needed for the development of more knowledge-based cell culture processes. this concept was applied to the optimization of the initial glutamine and glucose concentrations of a cho batch process. a mechanistic model was adapted and modified from [ ] and used to describe the dynamics of cell metabolism and antibody production of an il- antibody producing cho cell line (see abbreviation of fig. for cultivation details). experiments were simulated and compared to a fully experimental doe. as can be seen from table , user defined constraints were chosen to get a stable and reproducible process with the aim of maximizing the cell density but decreased lactate and ammonia production. at first, the experimental space was estimated by simulating the responses for broad concentration ranges and calculating the multiple response desirability function (fig. a) . this results in a small area (turquoise) suggested as experimental space. experiments were planned within these boundaries and responses were either simulated ( fig. b, cultivations for fitting the model) or compared with the purely experimental responses (fig. c, cultivations). optimal concentrations for glutamine and glucose with respect to the constraints are in the lower right corner and similar for both methods (red frame, fig. ). compared with the fully experimental design, mdoe results in a reduction of % in the number of experiments ( experiments for modelling vs. experiments in experimental doe). the method is intended to optimize cultivation strategies for mammalian cell lines and evaluated these before experiments have to be performed in laboratory scale. this results in a significant time and cost reduction during process development and process establishment. the strategy is especially intended for the use in multi-single-use-devices to speed up process development. . at a target cell density of * vc/ml, volumetric productivity was stable for a day steady state with excell® advanced hd perfusion medium. shorter steady states were tested at * vc/ml background for the large-scale production of therapeutic glycoproteins, fedbatch culture has been widely used for its operational simplicity and high titer. however, repeated feeding of medium concentrates and/ or addition of a base to maintain optimal ph during fed-batch culture lead to increase in osmolality. the hyperosmolality affects glycosylation in a protein-specific manner. however, the mechanism behind such osmolality-dependent variations in glycosylation in recombinant chinese hamster ovary (rcho) cells remains unclear. in this study, to better understand the effect of hyperosmolality on the glycosylation of a protein produced from rcho cells, we investigated n-glycosylation-related gene expression and n-linked glycan structure in fc-fusion protein-producing rcho cells exposed to hyperosmotic conditions. furthermore, to validate the effect of hyperosmolality on protein glycosylation, we performed hyperosmotic culture supplemented with betaine, an osmoprotectant, and then analyzed the n-linked glycan structure and mrna levels of n-glycan branching/antennary genes. after three days of hyperosmotic culture, nine genes (ugp, slc a , slc d , gcs , manea, mgat , mgat b, b galt , and b galt ) were differentially expressed over . -fold of the control, and all these genes were down-regulated. n-linked glycan analysis by anion exchange and hydrophilic interaction hplc showed that the proportion of highly sialylated (di-, tri-, tetra-) and tetra-antennary n-linked glycans was significantly decreased upon hyperosmotic culture. addition of betaine, an osmoprotectant, to the hyperosmotic culture significantly increased the proportion of highly sialylated and tetra-antennary n-linked glycans (p ≤ . ), while it increased the expression of the n-glycan branching/antennary genes (mgat and mgat b). thus, decreased expression of the genes with roles in the n-glycan biosynthesis pathway correlated with reduced sialic acid content of fc-fusion protein caused by hyperosmolar conditions. conclusions taken together, the results obtained in this study provide a better understanding of the detrimental effects of hyperosmolality on n-glycosylation, especially sialylation, in rcho cells. the identified genes, particularly mgat and mgat b, are potential targets for engineering in cho cells to overcome the impact of hyperosmolality on glycoprotein sialylation. disruptive cost-effective antibody manufacturing platform based on cutting-edge purification process v. medvedev, m. duyck, t. albano, j. castillo univercells sa, gosselies, belgium correspondence: v. medvedev (v.medvedev@univercells.com) bmc proceedings , (suppl ):p- background demand for high-quality monoclonal antibodies is growing exponentially, calling for new production capacities. overcoming current limitations of conventional manufacturing strategies, namely the high capital investment and production cost, can only be achieved through innovative process designs based on the latest technologies. this study presents a process design combining batch-fed technology with continuous multi-column capture. an advanced cell culture clarification method was introduced to simplify downstream operations and increase overall cost-effectiveness of the process, for an optimized production of recombinant proteins. this study was performed with cho cells expressing a monoclonal antibody targeted against the coronoavirus responsible for the middle east respiratory syndrome (mers), developed by organic vaccines tm and the nih, kindly provided to univercells. upstream process: -fed-batch, days culture at l scale with cd-cho chemically defined media and feeds. harvest treatment: -precipitation of impurities in the production bioreactor using organic compounds (< % v/v) and flocculation by electropositive organics (< . % w/v). -acidic ph and physiological conductivity. upstream processing and harvest treatment: culture reached . g/ l ( x cells/ml; % viability), harvest treatment was found to be very effective in terms of impurities clearance. capture: capture strategies were evaluated from the point of view of simplification of downstream operations, with hcp impurities content monitored as a key performance indicator. -protein a affinity chromatography: advanced harvest clarification enabled major improvements in affinity capture, in terms of eluate purity and reduction of host cell impurities (< ppm in all conditions tested). (fig. ). -cation exchange chromatography: cex allows higher capacities (> g/l) than protein a, whilst being more affordable (from -to -fold cheaper). low residual hcp (< ppm) was observed with all cex resins tested. without harvest treatment and clarification preceding the capture studies (either affinity or cex), results showed a lower binding capacity of the resin, a higher content of hcp in the eluate (up to ppm), a higher content of hmw species in the elution fraction (up to -fold higher) and a significant turbidity of the neutralized eluate. -continuous multicolumn chromatography: further options to increase cost efficiency include using a continuous multicolumn setup (table ) . two models were assessed based on two different static binding capacities (sbc), demonstrating that to columns of ml were able to process a l production in less than h. this method provides a great opportunity for designing simplified and low footprint mabs dsp processes, while maintaining similar or achieving superior quality profile compared to standard approaches: -harvests treatments followed by depth filtration proved to be a cost-efficient way to obtain pretreated feed and minimize the burden on downstream operations. -protein a resins exhibited advantages of extracting key contaminants during harvest treatment, while caex confirmed to be a competitive capture strategy. -switching from batch to continuous multicolumn mode allowed to process a complete batch in less than hours, requiring lower media and resins volumes. followed by a single polishing step, such process set-up strongly supports the reduction of operations required to deliver a high-quality product. analyses of product quality of complex polymeric igm produced by cho cells background immunoglobulin m (igm) antibodies are secreted by b cells as the first defense against invading pathogens during primary immune response. some igm antibodies already gained the orphan drug status, which shows their unique capability in therapy of rare diseases. potential fields for applications are discovered with increasing knowledge about these molecules. it seems that the most active forms are pentameric and hexameric igms. unfortunately, recombinant production of igms is rather difficult as secretion and correct polymer formation results in low expression yields and mixtures of polymers. we established stable producing chinese hamster ovary (cho) dg cell lines to analyze cellular and extracellular factors that influence quantity and quality of the produced recombinant polymeric igm in future studies [ ] . one quality parameter is polymer distribution, which can be measured directly in cell culture supernatant using densitometric analyses [ ] . additionally, we developed a very efficient single-step-affinity purification strategy using the poros captureselect igm affinity matrix to analyze pure igms. for more precise measurements of the igm isoform distribution we separated the purified polymers by high performance liquid size exclusion chromatography (sec hplc). our cho dg cell lines grow to peak cell concentration of . x cells/ml in erlenmeyer flasks and . x cells/ml in bioreactors. similar productivity of approximately mg/l was observed for cells cultivated in both cultivation vessels in a nonoptimized batch culture using chemically defined media. analysing how cultivation conditions affect the fraction of polymers may offer clues about the assembly of polymers and the challenges of igm production. we quantified polymeric distribution of igm directly in the supernatant using a densitometric method [ ] . cultivated under standard conditions ( °c, ph ) igm is produced as % pentamers, whereas igm _gl only consists of approximately % pentamers. the purified igm _gl was analysed with sec-hplc and contained % pentamer and % dimer, which is comparable to the results achieved with densitometry. the purification of the igm antibodies was quite challenging as the manufacturer recommend acidic elution, which led to aggregation and inefficient elution of our model igms. therefore, we screened for different elution buffers that prevent denaturation and aggregation. by combining high salt concentrations with moderate ph reduction we optimized elution conditions to - % igm recovery, which corresponded to a five to six fold improvement compared to the manufacturers' conditions. sds-page analysis and sec-hplc showed that our elution strategy resulted in a very pure product after a single chromatographic step. the purification strategy was verified with the igm , igm and igm . our model igms were produced in a ratio of approximately : pentameric to dimeric igm, measured concordantly with both analytical methods. process development on igm purification using the poros capture select human igm affinity matrix enabled the recovery of highly pure fractions. through optimization, by combining mild ph and high salt concentrations, the relatively low elution yields were increased by a factor of - . applying densitometry and sec-hplc we will investigate how culture conditions influence polymer formation in future. currently, no small scale (< . l) cell culture system is commercially available for high cell density perfusion cultivations to use in high throughput screening studies. to increase throughput for process characterization activities at janssen vaccines and prevention, a shaker flask-based scale down model was developed. though, the control possibilities of shaker flask cultures are technically very limited and different compared to a bioreactor controlled process. in addition, the sensitivity of the shaker flask model should allow the detection of the effects of process parameters on critical quality attributes (cqas) of the vaccine produced at large scale. iterative experiments were performed in shake flasks to evaluate the influence of cultivation parameters such as shaking speed, working volume, co % in the incubator and daily base additions on cultivation parameters (as cell growth, ph and do). in addition, a medium exchange was tested to mimic the perfusion mode used in the bioreactor process. the presens shake flask reader was implemented to allow for ph and do monitoring. the conditions for which the performance as reflected in specific virus titer showed the best fit were selected. at these conditions, a series of parallel shaker flask infections were conducted to demonstrate statistical equivalence of performance parameter and cqas (as cell specific iu titer and vp/iu ratio) between the production scale and reduced scale processes and thus to qualify the shake flask as a scale-down model. a daily medium exchange by centrifugation was implemented and cultivation parameters for shake flasks were identified. based on performance parameter (cell specific vp titer) and the cqas of the vaccine (cell specific iu titer and vp/iu ratio), equivalence between the production-scale and scale down systems was confirmed. the scale down model data fall into the % prediction intervals calculated on manufacturing data whereas scale down model data from batch mode experiments (using non optimized cultivation conditions) do not. the shaker flask as a scale down model for the l bioreactor perfusion process was qualified. this model is a tool to screen a subset of process parameters at a higher throughput, thereby reducing process characterization timelines. background until today, the market for therapeutic proteins, especially monoclonal antibodies, is gaining more and more importance in the pharmaceutical field. to meet the increasing demand for these products, the industry made tremendous efforts to generate highly efficient production systems. one of the pharmaceutical industry's research focuses is the improvement of the secretion process in eukaryotic cells. in mammalian cells, the efficiency of protein transportation strongly depends on the translocation of a nascent protein into the er, which is mostly conducted by the signal peptide (sp) coupled to the nterminus. through the interchangeability of signal peptides between products and even species, a large variety can be used to enhance protein expression in already existing production systems materials and methods at first the influence of four different natural sps (sp ( ), ( ), ( ) and ( )) was compared on the secreted amount of an igg model antibody (product a) in fed batches using a cho dg host cell line. in the second part, one promising sp-candidate showing improved secretion (sp ( )) was identified and the influence of this sp on four additional antibody products, which varied in their expressability from good to mid/bad, was investigated. in both approaches, the standard sp was implemented for comparative reasons. in the first approach, four signal peptides sp ( ), sp( ), sp( ) and sp( ) were screened for their potential to improve the product secretion of cho dg cells expressing a model antibody (product a). the results revealed a . -fold increase in average final fed-batch antibody titer of sp( ) when compared to the standard sp approach (standard sp = . g/l; sp( ) = . g/l). in the second approach, the enhancing capacity of sp( ) on secretion of four other igg products (named product b to e, table ) was further evaluated. an improved performance was observed for all products when comparing sp( ) and the standard sp in a fed batch process (fig. ) . with an increase in average final fed-batch titers ranging from to % and up to % in cell-specific productivities. taken together, with a positive influence on the final concentrations of all tested products, the results obtained with sp( ) contribute to -signal peptide sp( ) was identified as a promising candidate with an average . -fold titer increase during screening of four signal peptides. -sp( ) was able to improve production titers up to % compared to standard sp. -sp( ) was able to improve cell-specific productivities up to % compared to standard sp. -future usage of sp ( ) contributes to the further optimization of sartorius stedim cellca's standard cell line development process. new platform for the integrated analysis of bioreactor online and offline data lukasz gricman , milan ganguly , amanda fitzgerald , hans peter more and more experiments are used to assess bioreactor suitability and stability of clones, to evaluate media composition and other process parameters, and to start upscaling campaigns. this has resulted in a major bottleneck due to the increase in data capturing, processing, aggregation, visualization, and statistical analysis. in addition, the association of the data with the experimental context (e.g., fermentation protocols, media recipes, bioreactor control parameters) is not easily accomplished in high throughput. the data generated in the process must not only be analyzed, but also managed and stored to enable easy tracking and relating to historical records. furthermore, the processes are often developed by global teams interacting in complex enterprise it ecosystems. therefore, new and high performing systems for data capture, processing, and analysis need to be integrated in order to enable storage and correlation of experimental context information and various types of time course analytics data. we have developed genedata bioprocess™, a new enterprise platform for bioprocess development. the platform enables automatic capture and visualization of all online and offline data (e.g., ph, o , metabolic data), auto-calculations and aggregations (e.g., ivcd, qp, consumption rates) and multi-parametric assessment of any type of time-series bioreactor data in the context of experimental protocol data (e.g., process parameters, feeds). genedata bioprocess comes with dedicated interfaces for integrating with relevant laboratory instruments, control systems, statistical analysis software packages and custom enterprise solutions. it enables the modeling and tracking of complex nonlinear workflows and supports decision making in bioprocess development. the data can be analyzed in the context of upstream process development, and also be correlated to other unit operations. automation support assists the ever increasing throughput of bioprocess development operations, and the analysis of experimental data and process parameters across unit operations or even different projects. this overall integration enhances process development workflows. highlighted use cases describe the selection of the best producer clones (fig. a) , the identification of optimized media feeding strategies (fig. b) , and the comparison of clone performance across different fermentation scales (fig. c) . a special focus is on the analysis of data from micro-and bench-top bioreactors (such as the ambr ™ and dasgip™ systems) operated in parallel. these bioreactors allow for increased throughput of clone selection and process optimization studies, which in turn leads to an increase in data generation. genedata bioprocess supports integration with such systems and enables a comparison of data regardless of the instrument provider or scale. automated bioreactor data analysis allows development groups to take advantage of even richer datasets and, as data management is built-in to the system, the data can be easily tracked and associated to historical records. another focus is on cross-reactor scale comparisons. data coming from different bioreactor scales can be easily imported into the platform and analyzed to establish the best conditions for upscaling. genedata bioprocess enables the correlation of process parameters (e.g., fermentation protocols, media recipes, bioreactor control parameters), with key performance indicators of the processes (e.g., titer, qp) and the product quality attributes (e.g., aggregation, glycosylation profiles). finally, bioreactor time course data can be tracked together with clone analytics and product quality parameters, which makes the platform uniquely able to support end-to-end biopharma development. upstream bioprocesses are at particular risk of contamination from adventitious agents. the typical . μm filters used at this step protect bioreactors from bacteria and mycoplasma but offer no protection from viral contaminations. a new polyethersulfone (pes) upstream virus filter, viresolve® barrier, has demonstrated high levels of microorganism retention -full retention for bacteria and mycoplasma (> . lrv -log reduction value) and~ lrv for small viruses, such as parvoviruses. it also has improved flow and capacity as compared to virus removal filters designed for monoclonal antibody purification. given the small pore size of virus retentive filters, implementing a virus filter upstream of the bioreactor raises the question of whether critical cell culture media components are removed. therefore, it is important to evaluate the cell culture performance and protein quality attributes using virus-filtered media to ensure that filtration does not negatively impact the process. materials and methods ex-cell® cho media and corresponding feeds were processed through either viresolve® barrier filters or . μm filters (control). media composition post-filtration was evaluated by high performance liquid chromatography (hplc), inductively coupled plasma/ optical emission spectrometry (icp-oes), and nuclear magnetic resonance (nmr). recombinant cho cells were cultured in fed batch culture. cell density and viability were measured by vi-cell tm cell viability analyzer while metabolites were analyzed by bioprofile® flex analyzer. shake flasks and bioreactors were utilized to verify that surfactants, such as poloxamer, (which are essential for shear protection in stirred tank bioreactors and can be difficult to filter) have not been removed during filtration. monoclonal antibody titer was quantitated by protein a hplc. characterization of the antibody product quality was assessed via weak cation-exchange chromatography (charge heterogeneity), size exclusion chromatography (aggregate profile), and -ab fluorescent labeling with np-uplc (glycan species). media and feed compositions were unaffected by filtration through the virus barrier filter. no significant differences in concentrations were observed with icp-oes (trace metals) or hplc (amino acids and water soluble vitamins). nmr showed no change in the organic composition of the media including poloxamer. the aromatic region with vitamin and amino acid signals is shown (fig. a) . cell cultures showed no differences in cell growth or titer, in either shake flasks or bioreactors (fig. b) . cell viability was unaffected, metabolite levels were within limits, and titer was consistent. the protein quality of the secreted antibodies showed no differences in the glycosylation pattern (fig. c) , amount of aggregates or charge variants. the risk of virus contamination in the bioreactor remains a concern for biotherapeutic manufacturers as there is no universal technology that provides a reliable, cost effective solution for virus removal that can be applied to all components of cell culture media. this study evaluated the viresolve® barrier filter that provides an efficient and easy way to protect bioprocesses from adventitious virus contamination. study results demonstrated that media and feed compositions, cell culture performance, and product quality were unaffected by filtration through the viresolve® barrier filter. implementation of vire-solve® barrier filters provides efficient filtration performance, high virus retention, and minimal cell culture impact and offers a viable option to improve the overall virus risk mitigation strategy for the manufacture of biotherapeutics. b tracking of process conditions together with online and offline performance analytics. the system allows to flexibly define tracked parameters and select optimal process conditions. c comparison of process performance across different reactor scales. the open architecture makes genedata bioprocess a provider agnostic system which allows to aggregate and compare data regardless of provider background bi-and multi-specific antibodies, antibody-cytokine fusion proteins, nonimmunoglobulin scaffolds, chimeric antigen receptors (cars), engineered t-cell receptors (tcrs) and tcr-based bispecific constructs can provide significant advantages for use in cancer immunotherapy. however, as highly engineered molecules they pose new challenges in design, engineering, cloning, expression, purification, and analytics. we have thus implemented an infrastructure that addresses these challenges and enables the industrialization of these various novel therapeutic platforms. in close collaboration with leading biopharmaceutical companies, we implemented a workflow, data management and analysis support system, genedata biologics™, enabling the automated design, screening, and expression of large panels of therapeutic candidates using these novel technologies. we have also built tools for developability and manufacturability assessments of these complex molecules. we have ensured that there is a seamless integration of all data generated and that functionalities such as bulk protein and vector generation using our in silico cloning engine, configurable library of template vectors and cloning strategies, fully annotated in silico protein molecules and dna constructs, and dna synthesis verification support, can be used for the newest protein formats and molecule topologies. we implemented data structures and data handling systems, which mirror how these complex next-generation biologics molecules and cell lines are being designed, screened, and analyzed. the result successfully addresses workflows for tcr optimization and engineering. we exemplified this with the generation and evaluation of a panel of engineered tcrs with an alpha chain cdr randomization and successfully supported the analysis and selection of beneficial mutations. the system also successfully supported workflows for the design and generation of a panel of tcr-based bispecifics (tcr coupled with anti-cd ) using automated molecule registration and in silico cloning tools and subsequent capture of expression, purification, and functional and analytical characterization data. on the car-t cell front, the system is able to provide traceability of the work from antibody generation, optimization, car engineering (e.g., attachment to the scfv with cd -zeta and co-stimulatory domains to mimic the natural tcr complex) to the engineering of the t-cell. the genedata biologics platform successfully enabled automation, increased data integrity and traceability during research and development work, and will contribute towards the industrialization of these very exciting novel approaches for cancer immunotherapy. optimal selection of therapeutic antibodies and production cell lines by assessment of critical quality attributes and developability background the increasing cost of bringing a new drug to the market has put significant pressure on biopharma organizations. to increase efficiency in r&d processes and reduce costs, organizations need to evaluate potential drug candidates earlier in the r&d process, eliminate those with undesirable characteristics, and focus on the most promising candidates. after designing and thorough testing of successful candidates, efficient production of new biological entities in mammalian cell lines is necessary. the main goal here is to find a suitable cell line and optimal upstream and downstream processing conditions that not only lead to a satisfactory product yield, but also to a product with the desired biochemical properties. the evaluation of production cell lines, processes, and product quality attributes is performed earlier and in higher throughput for an increasing number of drug candidates. in addition, new methods in molecular and cell biology (e.g., novel genome engineering approaches such as crispr/cas ), in analytics [e.g., process analytical techniques (pats)], in process miniaturization, and in automation promise to make process development more efficient. however, the management and analysis of the increasing amount of experimental data during candidate selection and cell line and process development has become a bottleneck. in addition, quality-compromising steps in biopharma organizations can negatively impact the cost of goods and substantially prolong the drug candidate's time to market. therefore, systems for integrated management and analysis of wellstructured and curated data that comprehensively integrate molecule and sample information, manufacturing process parameters, and process and product quality attributes are needed. critical quality attribute (cqa) assessment should be enabled along the whole bioprocess development workflow, including cell line development, upstream and downstream process development, as well as analytical and formulation development. we have developed a comprehensive platform, genedata bioprocess™, which supports drug candidate developability and manufacturability assessment and bioprocess development. the platform captures and structures the cell line and process parameters together with analytical data for cell lines, processes, and protein products. the protein analytical data being tracked include biological data (such as bioactivity, immunogenicity), and physicochemical properties. these properties include glycosylation, chemical liabilities (such as deamidation and oxidation), aggregation, stability under different conditions (low ph, low and high temperature), solubility, and impurities. genedata bioprocess™ simplifies and streamlines laborious, manual process and supports tools for molecule, clone and process selection. furthermore, the platform allows for seamless integration with laboratory instruments, statistical software packages, and custom solutions. here, we present use cases showing how to identify and annotate liability sites prone to chemical modifications (fig. a) and how to monitor cqas of molecules allowing to assess developability more efficiently. we show how the analytical data generated in the course of a developability assessment are compiled to select the best drug candidate (fig. b) . implemented traffic-light systems indicate where molecules harbor issues such as in case of the antibody tpp- , which is compromised by low temperature and repeated freeze-thaw operations. the same assessment views can also be applied on batches and cell lines. the underlying data can be visualized graphically. as an example, we show glycan types of products obtained from different cell line clones generated in a cell line development campaign for the molecule tpp- (fig. c) . even though the selected clone cli- meets the glycosylation criteria (e. g., < % afucosylation, < % galactosylation, < % sialylation), the produced next-generation biologics molecules are composed from a number of specific subdomains. each type of molecule is composed of a specific set of domains, which must be mirrored in the registration and further research and development workflow. molecule registration and hit-selection using data from a number of assays is shown here using the example of car-t cells. the image is a screenshot from the genedata biologics™ software molecule harbors some stability issues as mentioned above. therefore, more attempts would be needed either in formulation or in reengineering of the complimentarity determining regions (cdrs) in order to provide a developable ttp- -like drug candidate. background environmental process variables are often used as tools to optimize the performance of mammalian cell cultures to achieve higher cell densities and high productivities of r-proteins (q p ). the manipulation of culture temperature in the range of mild hypothermia (mh) ( - °c) [ , ] , as well as different glucose availability scenarios [ , ] , has been shown to improve productivity in different cell lines. however, the manipulation of these variables individually or together has a concomitant effect on the rate at which cells grow, masking the net response exhibited by the cells. in order to identify the effects of these variables, we have taken advantage of the use of the chemostat culture. chemostat cultures were performed at two dilution rate (d)( . or . (h- )), two temperatures ( or °c) and three feed glucose concentrations ( , or mm). the response was analysed considering r-protein production, cell growth and key metabolites. r-tpa protein concentration was determined by immunoassay (trinilize tpa kit); cells were counted using a hemocytometer and cell viability was determined by the method of exclusion using trypan blue (t , sigma, usa); glucose, lactate and glutamate were determined by enzymatic assay using a biochemical analyser ysi (yellow spring instruments). statistical analysis of the results was performed by anova (design-expert for windows). a decrease in cell density was observed in response to an increase of glucose feeding concentration, regardless of temperature or specific growth rate (in this case μ=d) evaluated. the maximum cell densities were reached at mm, achieving . and . x cells/ml at / °c and . (h - ); and . and . x cells/ml at / °c and . (h - ) respectively (fig. a) . the increase in glucose concentration from to mm resulted in an q p increase of and . fold at °c/ . (h - ) and °c/ . (h - ) respectively. a lower increase of . and . fold was reached at °c/ . (h - ) and °c/ . (h - ) respectively (fig. b) . the highest q p s were reached at °c and . (h - ). however, a positive effect of mh was not observed, in contrast to that observed in batch culture [ , , ] . this behaviour suggests that low μ is a main factor on increased r-protein production in batch cultures exposed at mh condition. the specific consumption rate of glucose was significantly increased by the glucose increase from to mm and reduced by mh (fig. c) . at . (h - ) the specific production rate of lactate (q lac ) was increased by glucose increase, independent of the culture temperature used. while at °c/ . (h - ) the q lac decreased with increasing glucose concentration and at °c/ . (h - ) a maximum consumption was observed at mm glucose (fig. d) . the lactate-glucose yield ( fig. e ) not showed relevant changes at . (h - ), while at . (h - ) this yield showed a more efficient utilization of glucose, as glucose concentration was increased. however, this last behaviour was not reflected in an increase of r-protein production. the concentration of glucose has the greatest impact on the behaviour of the culture, and its increase affects positively the protein productivity. the mh did not improve proteins productivity of cho cells producing tpa under the different conditions evaluated; low dilution rate and at high glucose concentration impact positively the protein productivity and the metabolism exhibited by the cells. background mammalian cell cultures are the most commonly used bioprocess for the production of therapeutic recombinant proteins such as monoclonal antibodies (mabs). facing to the increasing demand of these biopharmaceuticals, the fda has initiated the process analytical technology (pat) framework in order to encourage pharmaceutical industries to use innovative technologies to monitor in real time the critical process parameters (cpps), and to ensure the final product quality [ ] . one of the most important cpps for cell culture bioprocesses is the specific growth rate (μ), which is a direct indicator of cellular physiological state. indeed, μ is sensible to culture conditions and its value decreases when cells are in the unfavourable environment for growth [ ] , which may greatly influence mab production and quality. however, until this day, the online monitoring of μ remains a great challenge for mammalian cell culture bioprocesses. igg-producing cho cells were cultured in l stirred bioreactors equipped with an in situ dielectric spectroscopy (hamilton). operating conditions were fixed at rpm, % of air saturation, ph . and °c. permittivity of cell culture was measured every min, which allowed to calculate in real time the vcd by using a previously established linear correlation. then, a model of online estimation of μ was developed based on vcd prediction and cell mass balance equations. several signal noise filters and various calculation methods were evaluated to reach better model stability. cell cultures were performed in both batch and feed-harvest modes. feed-harvest cultures consisted of sequential renewals of / volume of the culture medium by following different strategies. this study proposed an innovative methodology based on dielectric spectroscopy to monitor in real time the cellular physiological state, by online estimating the specific growth rate (μ) of cells. model of online estimation of μ was developed from cultures in batch mode, and was validated by comparing online estimated μ with the experimental ones calculated at the end of the culture. with this model, the moment when μ started to decrease significantly, which indicated that cells were no longer in the exponential growth phase, was identified as the critical moment. to demonstrate the interest of online estimation of μ, the developed model was applied to a feedharvest culture, where the medium renewals were performed at the critical moments indicated by the model. this culture was then compared with the traditional feed-harvest culture where medium renewals were performed by following offline measurements of glucose and glutamine. we found that the online strategy allowed to maintain the value of μ by renewing the medium at the right time, while the values of μ varied a lot when using offline strategy. moreover, by using the online estimation of μ, the glycosylation of igg was kept at a high level (about %) throughout the whole culture. however, for the culture using offline strategy, the glycosylation level decreased progressively and was only about % at the end of the culture (fig. ) . model of online estimation of μ was developed by using dielectric spectroscopy, which allowed to monitor the physiological state of cells in cell culture bioprocesses. implementation of this model in feed-harvest cell culture led to better mab glycosylation, which demonstrates clearly the potential of this methodology in mab production bioprocesses. background monoclonal antibodies are normally synthesised from transfected mammalian cells as heterogeneous mixtures of glycoforms [ ] . however, clinical efficacy may depend upon single glycoforms which have been difficult to isolate [ ] . we have now developed an efficient method for generating single glycoforms by solid phase re-modelling which is superior to previous methods because it allows a sequential series of enzymatic changes without the need for intermediate purification of the antibody. solidphase binding exposes the antibody glycans to enable easier access of the transforming glycosylation enzyme. the antibodies subjected to modification were a chimeric human/ camelid monoclonal antibody (eg ), a humanized monoclonal antibody (il ), a full size chimeric antibody (cetuximab) and polyclonal antibodies obtained from pooled human serum. the antibodies were bound to a protein a column using conditions typical of mab purification (fig. ). after washing out non-bound impurities by a neutral ph buffer, each antibody was subjected to enzymatic modification directed to a targeted glycan profile ( table ). the antibodies were then eluted with a low ph buffer and neutralized. the glycan profiles were analysed following glycan removal with pngase f, labelling with -aminobenzamide and separation on a hilic-hplc column [ ] . prior to enzymatic modification glycan analysis of all antibodies showed variable galactosylation and sialylation typical of human abs. this included a distribution of fg , fg , fg , fs and fs with galactosylation indices ranging from . for il to . for eg . there was minimal sialylation in il but up to % in eg . glycan modifications were made as each antibody was held on a protein a column in accordance with procedures shown in table . agalactosylated glycans were enriched by treatment with the single addition of galactosidase and neuraminidase. this resulted in - % of agalactosylated structures in the mabs and % in the polyclonal antibody. galactosylated antibodies (> % yield) were produced by a single stage reaction involving sialidase and by galactosyltransferase with udp-gal. breakdown of the glycans to a trimannosyl core was accomplished by treatment of the agalactosylated structures with hexosaminidase. this produced a yield of - % of the fm structure with a small remainder of fa . sialylated antibodies (> %) were produced by a stage reaction involving sialidase, galactosyltransferase and finally treatment with , sialyltransferase in the presence of cmp-nana. the latter reaction produced equimolar quantities of monosialylated and disialylated cetuximab and polyclonal antibodies. the results suggest that for human antibodies ( kda) there may be a limitation for sialylation given the steric constraints between the two ch domains of the dimeric structure. the ability to sialylate the smaller camelid antibody ( kda) was greater resulting in a high (> %) level of disialylated glycans. this suggests that the steric constraints for glycosylation may be lower. these sialylated antibodies have significant potential clinical importance for their ant-inflammatory activities. we have modified the glycans of antibodies following immobilization on an affinity ligand column. this allows enzymatic transformation in a solid state that has a distinct advantage over the equivalent transformation in solution because the enzymes and buffers can be washed out on completion of the modification leaving the antibody still attached to the affinity ligand. this enables repeated rounds of an enzymatic reaction or sequential reaction steps without the need for intermediate antibody purification. the antibody can be removed eventually from the column by application of an elution buffer once all desired glycan modification have been made. since affinity ligand purification of antibodies is performed routinely as an initial step of purification after cell culture, the glycan modification can easily be incorporated into this process. the enrichment of the resulting antibody for a targeted glycoform can enhance the potential therapeutic efficacy as it is known that specific glycoforms are required for certain biological effects. [ , ] . this is mainly because microvesicles can be enriched/deprived for specific proteins, based on their functional purpose and their cellular origin. recently, microvesicles purified from the supernatant of t bladder cancer cells were reported to be enriched for bcl- and cyclin d (anti-apoptotic proteins), but deprived for bax and caspase- proteins (pro-apoptotic proteins) contributing towards immunity against programmed cell-death [ ] . however, impact of microvesicles on cho-based bioprocess has not been evaluated yet. therefore, in this investigation, we aimed to evaluate their impact on cell growth and recombinant protein production from cho cells. materials and methods cho-k cells were grown in chemically-defined protein-free culture medium (life technologies- ) in shake flask (gx- p). the different fractions of spent-media (microvesicles and microvesicle-free spent media) were collected using ultracentrifugation method [ , ] . quality of different fractions was ensured using western blotting for exosomal marker, cd (sc- ) and coomassie stained gel for loading control (fig. a) . to evaluate impact on cell growth, cells were seeded with microvesicles and microvesicle-free fraction collected from log-phase of culture and cell counts were performed by vicell using trypan-blue dye exclusion method. for impact on productivity, cell-free supernatant, collected from microvesicle-treated human igg secreting cho culture from stationary-phase of culture with respective control, was evaluated using elisa (ab ). microvesicles collected from % of media (by volume) from routine maintenance cultures compared to working volume for microvesiclesupplementation were used in each experiment. the growth of microvesicle-supplemented cultures had shorter lag-phase and achieved . fold higher maximum cell density ( . x viable cells/ml) compared to untreated standard culture ( . x viable cells/ml) and maintained higher for the remaining period of batch culture (fig. b) . however, microvesicle-free fraction did not had significant impact on growth. the viability of microvesicle-supplemented cultures, similar to microvesicle-free media supplemented, was also higher compared to standard culture suggesting potential use of microvesicles for regulating cho growth in production cultures. this could be possibily because microvesicles have already been reported to be enriched with cell growth/death-regulating proteins and hence facilitating cell growth [ , ] . we have also observed abundance of cell cycle regulators including cyclin d in microvesicle-fraction compared to microvesicle-free spent-media in our laboratory (data not shown); however, further investigation are required to prove the hypothesis. the overall productivity of human igg secreting cho cells was also observed to increase bỹ fold following supplementation of microvesicles to the culture without significantly affecting per-cell productivity. since microvesicle-supplementation facilitates cell growth, increased number of viable producer cells in the culture could be expected to be the basis of observed increase in the overall productivity of the culture [ , ] . the further work is ongoing to in-depth explore the potential of microvesicles for improving recombinant protein production from cho cells. the data indicate that microvesicles secreted from cho cells can improve cell growth and hence recombinat protein production in culture. therefore, strategies need to be developed for sterile isolation of cho microvesicles from routine maintenance cultures and their supplementation into the production culture for improving the performance of cho-based production process. the glycosylation profile of a recombinant protein is one of the most important attributes when defining product quality. producing a protein with desired characteristics requires the ability to modify and target specific glycosylation profiles. traditionally the approach to modify the glycosylation profile of a protein involves supplementing a culture with components that can improve galactosylation. experimentation using this supplemental approach resulted in a dramatic increase in terminal galactosylation, but lacked the ability to easily and repeatedly target specific glycosylation profiles. using novel and proprietary technology, we have developed a feed (glycantune™) and a unique feeding process that will maximize growth and titer while being able to modulate glycan profiles. this new feed can be added as a standalone process that can result in a significant shift from g f to g f and g f (maximum galactosylation). using a unique fed-batch process, glycantune can also be used with a standard feed to dial in targeted glycosylation profiles. through process development, we created a method where a transition point is used to switch from a standard feed to a glycan modulating feed. the timing of the transition point will determine the specificity of the glycan profile. ) . n-linked glycans were digested with pngase f and quantified using pmole maltohexose/maltopentose internal standards labeled with -aminopyrene- , , -trisulfonic acid (atps) as described by laroy et al [ ] or the user guide for the glycan labeling and analysis kit (glycanassure™ user guide, thermo fisher scientific). all ce separations were performed using the applied biosystems™ xl. the timing of transition from efc+ to gtc+ made it possible to target specific glycosylation profiles. modulating g f from % down to %, while increasing g f and increasing g f (fig. ) . transitioning to gtc+ early in culture resulted in a greater shift from g f to g f and g f. transitioning midway or late in culture resulted in a greater proportion of g f compared to g f and g f. supplementation based approaches using glycosylation modulating media components to modify and target specific glycosylation profiles proved to be difficult. these approaches were able to increase terminal galactosylation (g f and g f), but lacked the ability to fine tune glycan profiles. this could result in numerous rounds of titration experiments to target specific glycan profiles that would likely remain inconsistent between cell lines, culture media and feeds, and process scale. the development of a unique process made it possible to predictably target specific glycosylation profiles. transition from standard feeding to glycantune allowed for precise targeting of glycan profiles. transition to glycantune early in culture resulted in an increased shift from g f to g f and g f. a transition late in culture resulted in increased g f and decreased g f and g f. growth performance during precultures and batch curves in plain shaking flasks did not show any differences among tested surfactants or lots thereof, and cell densities reached - · cells/ ml ( fig. a and b) . experiments with hek -f cells at elevated power input in baffled shaking flasks revealed distinct differences between pluronic® f- , f- and kolliphor® p , with f- showing the best performance. peak viable cell densities reached with lots a and b of pluronic® f- and f- were comparable to those in plain shaking flasks, while those for kolliphor® p and lots c and d of pluronic® f- were significantly lower. peak viale cell densities were of - · cells/ml (fig. c) . similar transient transfection efficiency and mean fluorescence of transfected cells independent of applied surfactant and lot thereof indicated no major impact of respective poloxamer (fig. d) . interestingly, experiments using fluorescein-labelled pluronic® showed a time-dependent uptake into hek cells. visual tracking revealed an endocytic uptake of poloxamers by the cells (> fold increase in signal after h) and its co-localisation with cell membrane and lysosomes. sec (fig. e) analyses showed differences between the tested poloxamers. especially tested lots of pluronic® f- revealed notable deviations in the low molecular weight fraction (peak , fig. e ), compared to the other poloxamers. cultures subjected to varying levels of shear stress showed distinct growth differences depending on used poloxamer. while experiments in plain shake flasks did not show any differences in growth, cultivations under elevated shear stress in baffled shake flasks resulted in lower peak viable cell densities with kolliphor® p and some pluronic® f- lots. it remaines unclear whether this can be explained by different membrane protective activities alone, or if other mechanisms, occuring during and after cellular uptake, contribute to this effect. especially for the tested lots of pluronic® f- , sec of surfactants showed differences in the low molecular weight fraction. this fraction mainly represents polyethylen oxide (peo) (revealed by nmr), which is likely to be a remnant from synthesis. these observations indicate that the use of different poloxamers and lots thereof should be carefully evaluated, especially under elevated shear stress. further experiments will focus on investigating distinct sec fractions of poloxamers. overcoming (fig. ) . aurintricarboxylic acid (endonuclease inhibitor; enhancer used in e.g. salivary gland transfection) and polyvinylpyrrolidone (polymer; beneficial in electroporation) were both found to negatively impact peimediated transfection of cho cells, while another tested polymer enhanced growth as well as transfection efficiency. the use of a strong chelator led to a high transfection efficiency, but impaired cell growth. based on the results of the independent substance testings, the medium formulation was modified by the addition of a weak chelator and further components including vitamins. different osmolalities between mosmol/kg and mosmol/kg were tested for the final formulation, but no major impact was seen neither on transfection efficiency nor on viability days post-transfection. the final cho tf medium formulation supported high cell growth of finally tested cho cell lines and with peak viable cell densities above ⋅ cells/ml in batch cultivations with an overall cultivation time of - days (fig. ) . further improvements of the process might be achieved by adapting the protocol, as the results shown are based on a simple precomplexing of dna-pei. moreover, product yields could potentially be increased by using feeds, temperature shifts or commonly used enhancers (e.g. valproic acids). scaling of a cell culture process is an essential part in its development. in a typical approach scaling [ ] is performed by keeping a (critical) process parameter constant throughout the complete bioreactor range. this can lead to non-beneficial results either on the high or the low end of the range. for instance, the specific power input [p/v] of w/m might result in a good agitation in production scale whereas it leads to a nonturbulent mixing behavior in process development scale. to overcome this issue a new approach for an easy scaling procedure was developed. this "utility function" approach for agitation scaling is based on individual functions with a value-based mapping independent of bioreactor scale. process insight information (established either from doe process investigation or existing experience with a process platform) is directly formalized into a set of mappings which transform bioprocess values into perceived benefits ( to ). at each bioreactor scale, parameters (e.g. stirring and gassing) are then chosen to maximize the product of resultant utility functions. the model cho fed-batch process in this trial comprised a cho dg cell line that was transfected to produce a humanized antibody igg . a chemically defined media system was used. the process, including cell line, medium and feeding strategy was designed and developed by sartorius stedim cellca. the aim of the gassing scale-up was to achieve similar cell densities when the addition of pure oxygen starts. for all flexsafe str® bags oxygen was sparged via the micro sparger part of the combi sparger. all other systems used a ring sparger with holes face up. the initial air flow rate was set to an oxygen transfer rate (k l a) of /h at the corresponding agitation rate and volume. all process engineering characterization parameters were determined according to dechema guidelines [ ] . with the use of the utility functions the discrete agitation rate was determined (table ) . the utility functions led to discrete agitation rates where not only homogeneous mixing but also a turbulent flow pattern and a suitable specific power input was guaranteed. the initial gassing rate of air supplied enough oxygen for x cells/ml in all bioreactors. due to the used scaling methods the growth patterns in all bioreactor scales were comparable. peak viable cell densities (vcd) of - x cells/ml were achieved and viability at the point of harvest was above % in all scales. the final product concentration was in an acceptable range of . - . g/l. product quality attributes show comparability over the complete bioreactor range (fig. ) . the harvest criteria of days gave a combination of viability and product concentration that made it easy to process the cell broth during cell removal and other downstream steps. the process implementation of the cho production system -expressing mab was successfully performed with the use of utility functions. cell growth, productivity and product quality is comparable over the complete bioreactor range. background endoplasmic reticulum (er), the central part of the secretory pathways in eukaryotic cells, is responsible for controlling the quality of secreted and resident proteins through the regulation of protein translocation, protein folding, and early post-translational modifications [ ] . a number of physiological conditions such as oxidative stress, hypoglycemia, acidosis, and thermal instability can disturb the er functions, which triggers er stress [ ] . prolonged er stress induces apoptotic cell death [ ] . oxidative stress that naturally accumulates in the er as a result of mitochondrial energy metabolism and protein synthesis can disturb the er function [ ] . because er has a responsibility on the protein synthesis and quality control of the secreted proteins, er homeostasis has to be well maintained. when h o , an oxidative stress inducer, was added to recombinant chinese hamster ovary (rcho) cell cultures, it reduced cell growth, monoclonal antibody (mab) production, and galactosylated form of mab in a dose-dependent manner. antioxidants can reduce the oxidative stress level and suppress the apoptotic cell death by scavenging oxygen free radicals, inhibiting chain reaction of oxidation, and detoxifying peroxide [ ] . however, despite the importance of mass production of mabs, studies on the effect of antioxidants on the production and quality of mabs in rcho cell cultures have not been fully substantiated. to find a more effective antioxidant in rcho cell cultures, six different antioxidants including baicalein, which have used widely in mammalian cell cultures, were evaluated as chemical supplements with two different rcho cell lines producing the same mab in -well plates. then, batch and fed-batch cultures were performed in shake flasks with the supplementation of baicalein, which showed the best effect on culture performance among the antioxidants. the reactive oxygen species (ros) and er stress levels were measured to study the effect of baicalein on mab production and quality. among these antioxidants, baicalein showed the best mab production performance. addition of baicalein significantly reduced the expression level of bip and chop along with reduced ros level, suggesting oxidative stress accumulated in the cells can be relieved using baicalein. as a result, addition of baicalein in batch cultures resulted in . - . -fold increase in the maximum mab concentration (mmc), while maintaining the galactosylation of mab ( fig. and table ). likewise, addition of baicalein in fed-batch culture resulted in . -fold increase in the mmc while maintaining the galactosylation of mab. oxidative stress negatively affected the production and galactosylation of mab in rcho cell cultures. among the various antioxidants tested in this study, baicalein showed the best mab production performance in both batch and fed-batch cultures of rcho cells. baicalein addition significantly enhanced mab production while maintaining galactosylated forms of mab. thus, baicalein is an effective antioxidant for use in rcho cell cultures for improved mab production. background the production of many biopharmaceuticals (e.g. antibodies & proteins for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes) requires the cultivation of mammalian cell lines, which is demanding with respect to various aspects such as complex cell metabolism, variabilities in cell behavior, scale dependencies, influences of changes in cultivation conditions, medium composition etc. although an increasing number of measurement parameters is available, only a part of them is routinely utilized in industrial cell culture processes and their corresponding seed trains. nevertheless, the data base grows, statistical investigation of data gains importance and process data are more easily accessible in the context of industry . . cell cultivation has to consider these complex requirements, e.g. for fed-batch control and seed train design. furthermore, cultivation strategies have to be adapted to new products, cell lines and clones as well as to different production plants when transferring processes. one approach to encounter the variabilities and to include actual information from the process and from data analysis is adaptive model-assisted control [ ] . two software tools enabling adaptive model-assisted control applying unstructured, unsegregated models have been developed and implemented using matlab © , winers and fortran, one tool for fedbatch control and another one for seed train simulation and optimization. one key element of adaptive model-assisted control is the underlying process model. in order to provide an adaptive character, model parameters should be easily identifiable from routine cultivation data, which is available during seed train and fed-batch without additional sophisticated measurements. therefore, the usage of unstructured, unsegregated models is recommended. a) example of an unstructured, unsegregated cell culture model (for adaptive model-assisted control) one example, describing cell growth, cell death, uptake of substrates and production of metabolites via a first order system of ordinary differential equations and monod-type kinetics, is shown in table . this mathematical model includes cell specific model parameters [ ] . ii) b) open-loop control sequence for seed train simulation and optimization [ ] : using model, a priori identified model parameters and starting concentration values, the temporal concentration courses can be predicted for the first scale. subsequently, points in time for passaging and starting values for the next scale can be computed by adding a passaging strategy, seed train conditions and medium concentrations. prediction for the following scales can be obtained iteratively. integrating feedback from the process in terms of cultivation data enables increasing prediction accuracy and responding to possible changes in cell behaviour. process design and optimization, e.g. regarding seed train and fed-batch, is realized by adaptive model-assisted software tools using unstructured, unsegregated models. they enable feedback from the process via routine cultivation data and allow adaptation to diverse circumstances such as different cell lines, products, cultivation conditions, plant configurations etc. ) in polyelectrolyte capsules. significant advantages, such as great mechanical stability, good biocompatibility and good mass transfer properties characterized these capsules based on sodium cellulose sulfate/poly(diallyldimethyl) ammonium chloride (scs/pdadmac) [ , ] . here, we present the possibility to cultivate human t cells, freshly isolated from blood, to high densities in similar semipermeable polyelectrolyte microcapsules within less than days. cells were encapsulated in semipermeable scs/pdadmac polyelectrolyte microcapsules or confined in . % alginate/poly-l-lysine (pll) beads, a standard approach for cell immobilization. the permeability of the microcapsules was estimated using dextran-based molecular weight standards ( and kda) and vitamin b ( . kda). gentle digestion with endocellulase allows an easy release of the cells out of the capsules. cell growth, cytokines production and phenotype were measured in non-encapsulated and encapsulated cells grown under standard culture conditions. moreover, we analyzed the interplay between the secreted cytokines and the scs within the capsules and its putative influence on cell growth. cells mixed in the cellulose sulfate solution under physiological conditions can be safely trapped within a liquid core during capsule formation. encapsulated cells can reached cell densities ≤ x cells ml capsule - , whereas cells confined in alginate/pll beads and non-encapsulated ones reached . x cells ml bead - and . x cells ml, respectively. one major advantage of these polyelectrolyte microcapsules (< mm) is the low mwco (< kda) (fig. a-b) . this restricted permeability allows for a conditioning of the capsule core by autocrine factors, which in turn permits the use of basal cell culture medium instead of expensive t cell specialized media, hence does not necessitate high amounts of rhil- and reduces the cultivation costs. moreover, co-encapsulation of rhil- had a beneficial effect on the growth kinetics in most cases (fig. c) . some evidence is presented that the scs used to form the polyelectrolyte microcapsules, specifically adsorbs il- (table ) -a cytokine which provides an essential signal for t-cell proliferation and differentiation [ ] . therefore, we postulate that the scs used for encapsulation has biomimetic properties, creating an artificial extracellular matrix mimicking heparin sulfate which in turn positively affect t cell proliferation via trans-presentation of il- (fig. d) [ ] . primary t lymphocytes can be expanded under appropriate conditions outside the body. in the latter, t cells grow/expand in specific environments where the cells are tightly packed, leading to multiple cell-cell contacts and manifold interactions with the extracellular matrix. ex vivo suspension cultures of diluted cells cannot provide such a microenvironment. in the microcapsulesbased cultivation system presented, the cells are suspended in a viscous scs-solution. the low molecular weight cut off of the surrounding polyelectrolyte membrane assures that typical signaling molecules produced by the cells are retained thus facilitates the "conditioning" of the cellular microenvironment, while nutrients and metabolites can pass. expensive additives, such as interleukin- (il- ), can be co-encapsulated. expansion then no longer requires specialized t-cell media. moreover, the scs seems to have biomimetic properties, representing an artificial extracellular matrix mimicking heparin sulfate. we consider that the described method may be an appropriate alternative to expand t cells while creating a local microenvironment mimicking in vivo conditions. - ) . equations of balances and kinetics of an employed process model including x v viable cell density, x t total cell density, μ cell-specific growth rate, μ d cell-specific death rate, t time, k s and k monod kinetic constant and monod constant for uptake, k lys cell lysis constant, q cell-specific uptake rate or production rate, respectively, y kinetic production constant, c concentration, glc glucose, gln glutamine, lac lactate, amm ammonia, f feed rate, v volume balances with fed-batch terms kinetics ;uptake if c glc ≥ . mm : q lac,uptake = if c glc < . mm : q lac,uptake = q lac,uptake,max q amm = y amm/gln • q gln background digital manufacturing (dm) is heightening the productivity and robustness of existing processes and facilities. it also enables the efficient development of previously unmanageable products or processes and provided the basis for a wave of innovations. dm is a resident and on-line source of continuous optimization of process performance. it relies upon the comprehensive, real-time interfacing of both human and machine sourced information through one centralized system. more than legacy distributed control system (dcs) and supervisory control and data acquisition (scada), it is an integral interconnection of real-time access to divergent sources of information. as such, it can promise deep analysis and predictions leading to shortened product cycle and advanced process control. this comprehensive analysis is extending beyond operations performance data from the production floor to data driving such activities as raw materials security of supply (sos) and business continuity management systems (bcms). digital biomanufacturing (db) can be viewed as yet another, larger, embodiment of digital biotechnology. db is similar to digital manufacturing in that it promotes innovations in the manufacturing of biologicals by using such things as computer aided design, manufacture, verification and deep process analysis using software sensors (fig. ) . however, the fact that there are living components (cells) involved in the processes puts a distinctly different flavor to the systems employed. it is desirable to use a distinct term here to distinguish it because, as in the terms bioproduction and biopharmacology, db addresses many unique aspects of biologically-based activities. the reasons why the biotech and biopharma industry lags behind other sectors such as the automotive regarding the transformation to digital manufacturing are (i) the complexity and dissipative nature of biological systems, (ii) distributed heterogeneous data and (iii) limited at-line or on-line data sources. however, the costs of genomic sequencing, omics data generation, and computing resources are decreasing rapidly, and at the same time process analytical technologies, computational power and predictive modeling as well as data management infrastructures are greatly improving (table ) . by removing roadblocks that used to limit approaches, these changes have paved the way to transforming the bioeconomy into an industry that is based on digital knowledge. such new and optimized manufacturing technologies as continuous biomanufacturing and d bioprinting can actually demand the interfacing of many sources of information, deep data prior to elisa, the various proteins were incubated at °c in scs prepared as for encapsulation. as control, the scs was replaced by pbs. shown are mean values ± sd, n = analysis including software sensors for metabolic fluxes, and model-based predictions of digital biomanufacturing. the application of predictive models for bioprocess optimization greatly improves established platforms and finally leads to a massively increased mechanistic process understanding. four essential benefits result from the increased bioprocess understanding, development, and control of db. first, personnel are relieved of many manual and repetitive tasks. second, strategic planning and operational efficiency are improved. third, we see real-time optimization of end-to-end manufacturing based on such high-value criteria as projected product quality and profitability. fourth, it enables previously unmanageable operations and creates innovative solutions. monitoring between-batch behavior of real-time adjusted cellculture parameters xavier lories, jean-françois michiels arlenda, mont-saint-guibert, , belgium correspondence: xavier lories (xavier.lories@arlenda.com) bmc proceedings , (suppl ):p- background cell-culture parameters (ccp), such as ph, may be continuously measured online and subject to real-time automated adjustment (e.g. automated addition of a base to prevent the ph to drop too low). this is an efficient method to maintain the parameter within specified limits. this type of control constraint the variability within the predefined limits and does not provide any information on the between-batch variability of the process. online measurements of ccp provide time-dependent curves presenting one or more transitions. different types of transition can be observed: -the process can shift from a state in which adjustment is needed to keep the ccp in range to a state in which it is not. typically, the ccp drifts away from a limit. -the process shifts from a state in which adjustment is not needed to one in which it is. for instance, a drifting ccp reaches the lower or upper limit of the accepted range. the timepoints at which those transitions take place are here called changepoints. those are aspects of the process and, as such, should be controlled. in the multiple changepoints cases, the approach allows the early termination of runs showing very early or very late first changepoint. the identification of the changepoints position is based on simple rules rather than complex statistical modeling to keep the identification methodology simple. once the changepoint are identified, a multivariate bayesian model is adjusted on the appropriately transformed data. prediction regions are obtained and used as control limits [ ] . results obtained for a -changepoint case are shown on fig. . points on the right-hand graph represent new batches. the red triangle represents a failed batch. it appears that the control strategy fails to identify the failed batch. two reasons can be considered: -the limits of the prediction region have been established based on points, such a small sample size is likely to be insufficient for the definition of such a control chart. -the tested batches were produced out of set point. a control chart should be used on a stable process, ran in the same conditions, in order to be really relevant. this work was based on available historical data, which is never an ideal situation. the suggested strategy offers a simple approach to the monitoring of between-batch behavior for cell-culture. once the limits have been defined, the approach is quite straightforward and usable by nonstatistician. however, such strategy, as any other of this type, must be based on a sufficient number of batches for the definition of the control limits in order to have a good estimation of the batch-to batch variability. fig. (abstract p- ) . intelligent software applications support digital biomanufacturing process development and control. • databases using data collected online, at-line, and offline from bioprocesses operating worldwide. • process data are used to generate metabolic network models that represent a specific host cell line in a bioprocess. • modelbased computational simulations improve process understanding and reduce experimental efforts for media design, clone selection, and metabolic engineering. • automated data import and processing allow for a streamlined and standardized metabolic process analysis. • identification of critical metabolic parameters is used for proactive steering and control of production processes background rabies is a zoonotic viral disease with a mortality close to % [ ] . as there is not an efficacious treatment available, post-exposure vaccination is recommended for individuals in contact with the virus. on the other hand, the most common source of virus transmission is saliva of infected animals, mostly dogs, whereby mass vaccination of pets is the most cost-effective way to reduce human infections. in this context, availability of both human and veterinary vaccines is critical [ , ] . our group had previously developed an effective vlp-based rabies vaccine candidate produced in high density hek cell cultures with serum free medium (sfm) [ , ] . one of the aims in vaccine production process is the achievement of a good productivity with a low cost per dose, mainly in the case of vaccines for animal use in which case the sfm is one of the principal expenses. in this work, we show the adaptation of the producer clone to a non-expensive in-house developed culture medium, in order to reduce the global cost of the process and therefore the price per dose. experimental approach first, we compared a direct and a sequential adaptation protocol of our hek rv-vlps producer clone, from % of the commercial sfm (ex-cell , safc) to a new formulation with only % of the sfm and a minimum essential medium (p g), developed in our laboratory specifically for rv-vlps production. this new formulation was called rvpm (rabies vaccine production medium). the specific productivity of rv-vlps in culture supernatants was measured by sandwich elisa, using the th international standard for rabies vaccine that quantify the glycoprotein content (nibsc, expressed in elisa units per ml). further, we evaluated both media for the production of the rabies vaccine, using stirred tank bioreactors operated in continuous mode (biostat qplus, sartorius). the production of the rv-vlps was daily evaluated by elisa and the obtained harvests analysed by the nih potency test for rabies vaccine. after the adaptation process, suspension cultures without aggregates or clumps were obtained, with the same specific growth rate. a lower maximum cell density with the rvpm was reached, achieving x cells.ml - , compared with the sfm that reach cell densities between and x cells.ml - in batch mode. the specific rv-vlps productivity per cell was maintained, obtaining values of . and . eu. cells - .day - for the clone being cultured in sfm and rvpm, respectively. taking into account that this producer clone can be changed directly from one medium to the other without lag phase or cell damage, and that in rvpm the maximum cell density reached was lower, this medium was proposed to be analysed in high cell density in perfusion mode for a continuous culture in bioreactor. therefore, we performed two cultures in parallel to compare the efficacy of each media formulation in perfusion. as shown in fig. , we obtained very similar culture performances in both bioreactors; . eu.ml - and . eu.ml - of rv-vlps for the commercial sfm and rvpm, respectively. after that, the harvests were evaluated by the nih potency test obtaining a rabies vaccine potency of . iu.ml - for both cultures (being iu.ml - the minimum potency required for animal vaccine). thus, the results obtained represent an interesting advance in the optimization of this vaccine production process since the use of this new medium formulation represents a reduction of % of the total cost which will be reflected in a considerable reduction of the price of the vaccine dose. background vaccines are one of the most powerful and effective health inventions ever developedproviding tremendous economic and societal value; yet several factors hinder comprehensive immunization coverage. traditional methods of biologics production, based on stainless steel bioreactors, allow pharmaceutical companies to achieve economy of scale, but are limited by high capital expenditures. such approaches stifle manufacturing innovation and lack long-term cost-effectiveness and sustainability. current innovations can cut biologics' production costs to revolutionize the mainstream use of biologic treatments, focusing on developing fast, potent and cost-effective vaccine production. univercells' mission to make biologics affordable to all initiated a paradigm shift, targeting an innovative single-use manufacturing platform incorporating bioprocess into continuous operations. univercells employs process intensification, using high volumetric productivity bioreactors; and unit steps integration, coupling usp and dsp into continuous operations. the objective is a down-scaled high-productivity process for a cost-effective manufacturing solution. the resulting micro-facilities are easily-deployable in developing countries, breaking entry barriers to biomanufacturing (fig. ) . manufacturing and distribution advancements, from centralized to distributed, foresee affordable treatments' obtainability via supplying local populations with local production units. -bench-scale fixed-bed bioreactor; -carriers made of % pure non-woven hydrophilized pet fibers; -vero cells grown in serum-free and serum containing media; -attenuated polio strains; -cell nuclei on carriers counted by the crystal violet method; -polio virus production estimated by elisa assay (d-antigen content). cultivation of vero cells in medium with serum and in serum-free medium, was carried out in bench-scale compact fixed-bed bioreactors, to determine which culture conditions result in the highest growth rate, the highest cell biomass by carriers and virus production. cells were inoculated at . x cells/cm and infected during the mid-exponential phase, following a complete media exchange. viral infection took place in serum-free media. in-line clarification and purification is targeted to be performed in only a few steps (maximum one of two) without intermediary diafiltration. in such configuration, we measured that vero cells can reach a cell density of - x cells/cm with pdl/day of . - . in serum-containing media. this new facility is expected to manufacture any type of viral vaccine at a very low cost and could be deployed at the site of the manufacturer in emerging countries, killing the two birds of cost of manufacturing and distribution with one stone. the presentation will feature the description of the engineering development, but also the preliminary results of cell growth, infections, and product quality, as well as a description of the cogs calculation. univercells developed a disruptive polio vaccine manufacturing technology exceeding expectations when compared to traditional methodsachieving a superior result via its all-in-one solution of a simple, scalable, and fully-disposable vaccine production platform resulting in long-term cost-effectiveness, flexibility and sustainability: -all upstream, downstream and inactivation steps take place within a closed system with all the equipment contained in a low footprint isolatorcreating a confined area for polio virus handling that facilitates the deployment of micro-facilities. -this leads to a dramatic reduction in capital investment, time required for development and increases production capacity. -in conclusion, this is a simple and elegant solution for the industrial production of human vaccines at a low cost in micro-facilities, making polio vaccines available to all. comparison of media formulations for the vaccine production in l stirred tank bioreactors operated in continuous mode. both cultures were performed in parallel using the corresponding medium for the perfusion. a feeding was performed with the commercial sfm. b the first two days of perfusion feeding was performed with sfm until the cell density reach cells.ml - and, after that, the bioreactor was fed using the rvpm formulation. (↓) on day number , % of the reactor volume was punctually bled maintaining the working volume background vectored vaccines based on modified vaccinia virus ankara (mva) are reported to stably maintain large transgenes, and to be safe, immunogenic and tolerant to pre-existing immunity. mva is usually produced on primary chicken embryo fibroblasts but continuous cell lines are being investigated as more versatile substrates. we have previously reported development of a continuous suspension cell line (cr.pix) derived from the muscovy duck and efficient production process for mva in chemically defined media [ , ] . this process allowed isolation of an hitherto undescribed genotype (mva-cr ) that induced fewer syncytia in adherent cultures and replicated to higher infectious titers in the extracellular volume of suspension cultures [ ] . replication of mva-cr remained restricted predominantely to avian cells, an important property of mva vectors. homologous recombination in cr.pix cells was used to generate viruses with various expression cassettes in deletion site iii [ ] and combinations of the differentiating point mutations of mva-cr in a backbone of wildtype virus. all recombinant viruses were plaquepurified. successful introduction of the mutations was confirmed by sequencing and specifically designed restriction fragment length polymorphisms (rflps). viruses were analyzed by serial passaging, diagnostic pcrs accross deletion sites [ ] , replication kinetics, plaque phenotype and electron microscopy. the genome was further investigated by anchored pcr and long pcr. efficiency of spread of recombinant viruses (fig. a) could be mapped to a point mutation in one of the genes, a r. however, although mva-cr carries mutations in three structural proteins we detected no obvious differences to wildtype by electron microscopy (fig. b) . the replacement of the left viral telomere by the right counterpart was the most surprising result of our new study (fig. c) . this extensive rearrangement affects % of the viral genome and has also increased the area of complementarity between the two telomeres. the recombination site was precisely located and shown via analysis of earlier and subsequent passages to be a stable property of mva-cr . various viruses, including those with larger dual (dsred and gfp) expression cassettes, were serially passaged at least -fold. although the genotype of mva-cr is advantageous for replication, all genomic and genetic markers of wildtype and mva-cr were stably maintained in all passages of the recombinant viruses, independent of wildtype or mva-cr backbone. we confirmed our previous results that suggested that mva-cr replicates efficiently in single-cell suspensions and were able to connect this property with the d y mutation in a , a structural protein on the surface of the virions. mva-cr was also found to differ from wildtype mva by a recombination between left and right viral telomere. due to this event, several genes encoded at the left terminus have been deleted whereas the gene dosis of those originally encoded only at the right terminus may have increased. we do not currently know how much the various point mutations and changes in genomic structure combine to explain the improved replication of mva-cr . as several of the affected genes have been reported in the literature to impact interaction of mva with the host we would expect that in vivo studies may reveal additional novel properties of mva-cr . an extremely important distinction between our earlier study [ ] and this one concerns the source of the viruses. here, we investigated plaque-purified viruses and confirm the high genetic and genomic stability of mva. different expression cassettes inserted into deletion site iii, all diagnostic rflps and pcrs over various sites of the genome and within the viral telomeres remained unchanged throughout at least serial passages -independent of whether recombinant viruses with wildtype or cr -derived backbones were characterized. fig. (abstract p- ) . a one hallmark of mva-cr is a significantly reduced tendency to induce syncytia and an increased dispersion of plaques in cr.pix cell monolayers. this property appears to be supported by the mutation in a r. b electron microscopy reveals no obvious differences between novel genotype and wildtype. background transient gene expression systems using polyethylenimine (pei) are considered to be fast, flexible and cost-efficient for recombinant protein production [ ] . transfection efficiency depends on different factors; one of them is the type of media. production media support cell growth and protein production but not high transfection efficiency (te) mediated by pei [ ] . therefore, media were selected for transfection followed by feeding of production media [ ] to improve te and protein production. two different transfection strategies are compared: conventional transfection by preparing polyplex of a plasmid (pdna) and pei interaction before transfection and insitu transfection by direct addition both of them to the cell suspension and the polyplex formed spontaneously [ ] . cells were seeded hr in chomacs cd media before transfection. at transfection time point an equal amount of cells were resuspended in each media type. transfection was applied either insitu or conventional (polyplex prepared in μl of mm nacl and incubated for min.), media addition was performed hours post-transfection (hpt). media type and transfection condition were illustrated in table . media screen result exhibits the highest transfection efficiency of around % transfected cells by opti-mem medium coming along with low cell growth and viability. to improve the transfection efficiency, basic parameters including cell density, pdna, and pei concentrations were varied and higher transfection efficiency was reached by reducing media or accordingly increasing cell density, pei and pdna concentration for transfection. further optimization results show that the transfection of cho-k cells in opti-mem (transfection medium) for hours followed by addition of cho-macs cd (production medium) for further enhancing the transfection, cell count, and cell viability. the transfection efficiency (te) increased up to ± . % coincide with increases in viable cell concentration (vcc) in comparsion to transfection and cultivation in opti-mem media alone fig. a . both conventional and insitu methods are successfully transfected cho-k to the same similar high te as shown in fluorescence microscope images of fig. b . insitu transfection shows super-priority for suspension cell transfection concerning the reduction of handling steps (one step) compared to the conventional way (two steps). the insitu transfection avoiding the optimization step required for the incubation period to prepare transfection polyplex but require a higher amount of pdna and pei than conventional way as shown in table . in order to deal with the growing demand of large quantities of therapeutic proteins in a timely fashion, expression systems are being optimized to reduce the time of generation of stable clones as well as to increase the levels of protein secretion. this can be achieved by a combination of expression cassette optimization, cell engineering and selection process. we have previously developed the cumate gene-switch, which is a very efficient expression system for protein production [ ] . we have shown that the cumate-inducible promoter (cr ) was the strongest promoter we had tested so far in chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells. with this promoter, we were able to generate stable cho pools capable of producing high levels of a fc fusion protein ( mg/l), outperforming by to fold those generated with cmv and hybrid ef α-htlv constitutive promoters. besides the strength of the cr promoter, we demonstrated that the ability to control both the time and the level of expression during pool generation and maintenance gave a real advantage to the inducible expression system. indeed, we observed that keeping the expression off during selection enabled the generation of pools with superior productivity compared with the pools whose expression was maintained on. moreover, preliminary results suggest that keeping recombinant protein expression down increases the frequency of high producer clones [ ] . knowing that one of the main bottlenecks of the successful bioprocessing of recombinant proteins using cho cells is the rapid isolation of a high producer, our data suggest that the cumate gene-switch system could be a valuable platform for the generation of stable clones. the main regulatory authorities and organizations demand proof of monoclonality for biotechnological producer cells. with increasing pressure to shorten timelines and to improve drug safety, technologically advanced methods have to be established to ensure that production cell lines are derived from a single progenitor cell. sartorius stedim cellca's single cell cloning approach is based on one round of fluorescence-activated cell sorting (facs) using becton dickinson (bd) facsariatm fusion cell sorter combined with photodocumentation by synentec cellavista microscopic imaging system. for the approach, critical process parameters such as different cell lines, viability and cell aggregation levels were investigated separately to assess their contribution to the probability of monoclonality. immediately after single cell cloning into -well plates ( cell/ well) the plates were centrifuged followed by imaging using the cellavista (day ). further cellavista images are taken on day , day and on one day between day and . outgrowth was defined at day . cell lines expressing different recombinant products were investigated to calculate probability of having ≥ cells/well after facs sorting p(d), the apparent probability p(i) of having ghostcells (cells that are out-of-focus and, thus, are not visible during initial microscopic imaging), and the apparent probability p(k) of having ghostcells that outgrow the -well stage (fig. ). using these results, the probability of obtaining a monoclonal cell by using sartorius stedim cellca's single cell cloning approach was determined (table ) by conservative examination: p(monoclonal, conservative) = -(p(d) x p(i)) realistic examination: p(monoclonal, realistic) = -(p(d) x p(k)) cell pools with low viability can theoretically impact the probability of monoclonality by e.g. diminishing microscopic imaging quality (cell debris). therefore, pool cell line with very low viability (≥ %) was used to demonstrate, that the probability of monoclonality is still . % in case of low viability on day of sorting: p(monoclonal, conservative) = p(d) x p(i) = . % p(monoclonal, realistic) = p(d) x p(k) = . % furthermore, cell pools with high aggregation levels can theoretically impact the probability of monoclonality by sticking together during facs sorting and therefore increase the probability p(d) of having ≥ cells/droplet. therefore, pool cell line with high aggregation levels (≥ . %) was used to demonstrate, that the probability of monoclonality is still ≥ . % in case of highly aggregated cell pools on day of sorting: p(monoclonal, conservative) = p(d) x p(i) = > . % p(monoclonal, realistic) = p(d) x p(k) = > . % conclusions in summary, there is no obvious correlation between protein product type and the determined probabilities for monoclonality. furthermore, pools with a viability as low as % and pools with an aggregation level as high as . % can be used for scc resulting in acceptable probabilities of monoclonality. background ich guidance [ ] requires that any cell line used to produce biopharmaceuticals originates from a single progenitor cell. recently, there has been increased scrutiny of the method(s) used to achieve this requirement. here, we review the suitability of the legacy capillary aided cell cloning (cacc) method in light of this changing landscape of expectations. the cacc method is based on the 'spotting' technique [ ] and relies on independent visual conformation by two scientists of the presence of a single cell in a μl droplet. this method achieves a high probability of monoclonality in one cloning round. although the method has since been replaced by facs single cell deposition for routine use, it remains a viable cloning method. -performed by trained scientists -dilute culture to ± cells/ml with ≤ % doublets -draw cell suspension into pipette tip by capillary action; tap tip against the centre of the base of each well of a well plate. -size of resulting droplet =~ μl (fig. a ) -two scientists independently view all wells using a microscope (initially use x magnification with the entire rim of the droplet visible within the field-of-view. next, examine particles using x or x magnification to confirm they are cells) and individually record the number of cells present in each well's droplet (fig. b to d) . -exclude droplet from further analysis if full visualisation is hindered (fig. e to h) . -add growth medium, and incubate plates. record all wells containing colonies; only progress colonies from wells that both scientists agree contains only one cell. -data analysis: -each scientist's observations categorised as: cells, cell or > cell -observed outcome for each well: growth or no growth -probability of monoclonality estimated from data using a statistical model cloning (ldc) increased accuracy of p(monoclonality) with cacc -ldc weakness: no visualisation after seeding (to check both well seeding and subsequent growth of colonies is well described by the poisson distribution), potentially overestimating p(monoclonality) -addressed by cacc: visual examination with colonies arising from wells seeded with cell distinguished from those seeded with > cell -visualisation step further strengthened by: using controls for exclusion of wells; measuring errors based on the presence or absence of colonies in wells where two scientists independently reported cells; and formally analysing the data using a suitable statistical model decreased time and resource requirements with cacc -high p(monoclonality) possible in single round as each well examined individually with only those containing a single cell progressed, and because the error rate for incorrect scoring is considered to be low two scientists miss a cell one cell sitting on top of another and the two thus appearing as one an experiment was performed to estimate error frequency [ ] . conclusion -scientists miss a cell infrequently (in the range . % to . %, [ ] ) -error frequency does not invalidate use of direct observation methods for cell cloning -single cell seen by both scientists is highly likely to be monoclonal -during method development, strategies established to control potential sources of error ( table ) use of a contemporaneous visualisation approach, a strict control strategy, and a suitable statistical model (which takes into account potential errors) results in: -the cacc method being at least as robust as the ldc method -the cacc method being a reliable, single-step method for cloning to achieve a high p(monoclonality) background vector design is a key step in cell line development for the expression of therapeutic biologics. it is essential that the vector design results in high, stable expression of the encoded protein. other considerations include ease of cloning, stability for propagation in e. coli as well as in the mammalian host cell line, and ease of sequence amplification for verification of vector construction and for detection of insertion site and copy number in stably expressing cells. for these reasons, use of the same promoters and polya tails in dual cassette vectors, as is common for expression of the heavy and light chains of monoclonal antibodies, can be problematic. in order to minimize sequence similarities between the two expression cassettes, we have modified the promoters, introns, and polya tails of the light chain and heavy chain expression cassettes in the dual expression vector commonly used for the expression of therapeutic antibodies in the chozn® gs -/cell line development platform. gene synthesis and vector construction of igg and fluorophore-expressing vectors was done by atum. vectors were transfected into chozn® gs -/cells via electroporation. analysis of gfp and rfp expression was achieved using a macsquant instrument. selection and generation of stable pools and single cell clones from transfections with igg -encoding vectors was performed as described in the chozn® platform technical bulletin. titer analysis was performed in static ( well plate), in a day tpp assay and in a day fed batch assay using a qk fortebio. initial screening experiments identified a lead vector, # , and a vector, # , which produced very low titers and relatively few minipools expressing detectable levels of igg . analysis of gfp and rfp expression from the modified vectors indicated relatively high expression from the rfp/hc expression cassette of vector # . a stronger promoter resulting in overabundance of hc, known to be toxic to cells, provides a possible explanation for the poor results with this vector. interestingly, swapping the positions of the lc and hc in # resulted in a vector, # , that outperformed the initially identified lead vector (fig. ). this same change was made to vector # without any resulting improvement in titers (vector # , fig. ). interestingly, vector # had a smaller difference in relative promoter strengths, based on mean channel fluorescence ratio of gfp to rfp, suggesting that overabundance of hc was not an impediment to igg expression from # . poor titers were also seen with a modified version of vector # (vector # , fig. ) in which the glutamine synthethase selection cassette was in the reverse orientation. this second screen identified vector # as the lead vector design (fig. ) . a full comparative study of vector # and the control vector was performed, cumulating in the generation and comparison of single-cell clones from each. these studies have demonstrated the equivalence of these vectors in terms of igg titer. this work has resulted in the identification and characterization of a dual expression vector with minimized similarity between the two expression cassettes, easing the cloning, propagation and analysis of vector integration in stable cell lines while maintaining the high, stable expression of the encoded protein of the original vector design. background traditional cell line engineering strategies mainly include an antibiotics resistance selection. in this process, cells are transfected with the goi (gene of interest) together with an antibiotics resistance gene and those cells are selected that survive treatment with the respective antibiotic [ ] . although the gene responsible for the survival of the cell is transfected together with the goi, resistance is not necessarily linked to high goi expression. thus, a significant proportion of resistant cells may not express the goi at all, necessitating the search for alternative, more closely linked selection systems. sirnas (silencing inducing rnas) are short, noncoding rnas that can bind to complementary mrna and inhibit their translation. this function has been used in many approaches to silence the expression of certain genes [ ] . with their short length, sirnas can be hidden in introns (non-translating regions) of genes, making it possible to couple the expression of a sirna to a gene. this way a cell produces a correlating amount of sirna when transcribing the gene, without adding any further translational burden on the cell. the co-expression of the sirna can be used as a selective marker by one of the following methods: ( ) knock-down of a suicide gene to enable a cell's survival after suicide gene mrna transfection, ( ) down-regulation of a surface marker which is used in macs (magnetic cell separation) to filter out wanted or unwanted cells, and ( ) inhibition of a fluorophore marker for selection using facs without product specific antibodies. for sirna based cell selection systems, sirnas replace the commonly used antibiotics resistance as a marker. cells that produce goi will also produce the sirna that protects the cell from a suicide gene. the selection protein (suicide genes, fluorophores, surface markers, etc.) is transfected as mrna and is only expressed during selection. the general process is outlined in fig. . (a) the traditional antibiotics resistance marker is replaced by an sirna, which is cotranscribed with the goi. unlike in antibiotic resistance, the marker here is not a protein, reducing the translational burden and providing more resources for goi production [ ] . transfection with the suicide gene proved to be % lethal within days, with no outgrowth over two weeks. protection by expression of the sirna was shown to be efficient. currently a comparison of stable cell line development programs based on sirna selection and neomycin selection is ongoing. conclusions the novel selection system should speed up cell line development, as the system kills rapidly and directly selects for cells transcribing the product gene on a high level. we expect to see more high producers earlier in the process, which will allow for an easier and faster selection in the following steps. sirna based selection offers great opportunities. by directly selecting based on goi transcription and not a proxy marker, we expect more relevant cells on a pool level. in addition, the elimination of an antibiotics resistance allows more cellular resources for goi production. the system offers multiple ways of application, either by enriching wanted, or depleting unwanted cells. background single-cell cloning is an essential step used in the upstream development of transformed cell lines for therapeutic protein production. while single-cell clones are typically used to ensure product consistency, such low cell density cultures present a survival challenge; cells grow more slowly or may even not survive at low densities in protein-free media, costing the industry time and money and limiting the pool of candidate colonies for choice of production clones [ , ] . to address this problem, we aimed to develop a highly efficient serum-free medium suitable for optimising single-cell cloning efficiency by studying a range of conditioned media (cm) samples isolated from different chinese hamster ovary (cho) cell lines. materials and methods cho-s, dg and cho-k were adapted to cho-s sfm-ii (gibco) medium for a minimum of three passages. conditioned media was then collected when the cultures reached a cell density of x cells/ml (typically day -day depending on the growth profiles of each cell line and whether they grew in suspension or attached conditions). samples were then centrifuged twice to remove cell pellet/debris and stored at - °c. the ability of conditioned media to support cho colony formation was then assayed using -well plates, seeding the cells at low cell density ( - cells/well) by diluting down cho cultures in media/conditioned media. after incubation at °c for days, cloning efficiency was assayed using a standard xtt assay. initial screening of the nine cm samples was performed using cho-k cells due to their widespread use in industrial antibody production. successful media candidates were subsequently screened using additional cho cell lines. table ) . the k -sfmii-cm product improved cell cloning efficiency for dg cells (avg. increase> . -fold) and cho-s cells (avg. increase> -fold) ( fig. ) and also the adherent cho-k cell line growing in atcc + %fbs. the ability of conditioned media to support cho growth in limiting-dilution conditions ( , and cells/ml) was investigated. from a range of nine conditioned media samples; four compelling products have been identified which improve low-cell density growth of cho-k cells, compared to sfm-ii control media. we feel that these early-stage conditioned media products may increase cloning efficiencies during upstream cho cell line development, resulting in financial savings for industry and increasing the possibilities of identifying particularly highperforming transformed clones. ( ): - . the main rate-limiting step in the upstream stages of protein biomanufacture is the isolation of stable, high producing cell clones. ubiquitous chromatin opening elements (ucoe®s) consist of at least one promoter region with associated methylation-free cpg island from housekeeping genes; they possess a dominant chromatin opening capability and thus confer stable transgene expression. ucoe®-viral promoter (e.g. cmv) based plasmid vectors markedly reduce the time it takes to isolate high, stably producing cell clones. although some ucoe®-viral promoter combinations have been tested, they have not been thoroughly evaluated in chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells. plasmid vectors containing combinations of either the human hnrpa b -cbx ucoe® (a ucoe®) or murine rps ucoe® linked to different viral promoters (hcmv, gpcmv, sffv) driving expression of an egfp reporter gene were functionally analysed by stable transfection into cho-k cells and expression analysed by flow cytometry and qpcr to determine vector copy number. the results at days post-transfection and selection clearly indicate that the rps ucoe®-gpcmv and -hcmv combinations give the highest transgene expression as shown in fig. . the a ucoe®-hcmv/gpcmv constructs were the next efficacious but -fold lower than the rps ucoe® vectors. the sffv promoter linked with either of the two ucoe®s was the least effective with expression levels -fold lower than the rps -cmv constructs. the rps ucoe®-gpcmv/hcmv constructs are now being further modified to include elements that will provide optimal post-transcriptional pre-mrna processing (splicing, polyadenylation, transcription termination, mrna stability) thereby maximising stable cytoplasmic transgene mrna levels and protein production. in the last years, growing number of innovator biologics and biosimilars have formed a competitive environment, where speed and efficiency of generating robust and highly productive cell lines needs to be improved continuously. through various advances, especially in media development and process optimization, product titers as high as g/l were achieved in the pharmaceutical industry (kim et al., ) for standard products such as monoclonal antibodies. nevertheless, other proteins e.g. bispecific antibodies, fc-fusion proteins or fab-related products are difficult-to-express (dte) in chinese hamster ovary (cho) and may result in delays or even in termination of the cell line development process. we developed a new robust pool generation approach (cld . ) addressing both, easy-and difficult-to-express molecules, while reducing timelines down to months (cld standard = months), improving reliability of cell line development as well as clearly increasing obtained titers. in order to create stable cell lines, we transfected our cho dg host cells by electroporation. cells processed using the standard approach were cultivated in selective medium or medium containing additional . nm methotrexate (mtx) for three weeks. after an amplification step with nm mtx for three weeks, stable individual cell pools were expanded and clones were generated by facs-sorting. clones were analyzed for growth performance and product concentration in fed-batch studies. in our new cld . approach, we increased mtx concentrations ( . nm, nm and nm mtx) during the first selection phase of three weeks. afterwards we omitted the nm mtx amplification step. thereby, pool generation finished four weeks earlier than in the standard approach. to evaluate the stability of cell clones derived from mini pools (mps) generated according to the cld . approach, stability studies were performed for eight weeks, including stability fed batches at t= weeks and t= weeks. altogether three different proteins of interest with six cell clones each were tested. we adapted our cell line development process by increasing the initial selection during the first selection phase, thereby allowing the omission of the nm mtx amplification step. we observed that the capacity of amplifiability varied for different products. cell lines with a protein titer ranging from > g/l to . g/l (dte) in shake flask fed-batch showed to be more susceptible to increased initial mtx levels and were thus not amplifiable with nm mtx. in contrast, cell lines with high protein titer > . g/l were observed to adapt to nm mtx easily and were amplifiable. finale shake flask fed-batch data with cld . clones of highexpressing products showed comparable titers to clones from the standard approach. cld . clone titers for dte proteins revealed in average a . -fold increase compared to clones generated in the standard approach. titers of top producing clones were in a range of . g/l to to . g/l (fig. ) . furthermore, stability data of cld . cell clones from different dte products showed a stable specific productivity in a range of +/- % over eight weeks cultivation. fed-batch titer from t= weeks and t= weeks were in a normal range of +/- % of the standard nm projects. our results demonstrate that cld . is a robust and reliable process for standard products (mab) and dte proteins. with our new process, we were able to increase titer of difficult-to-express proteins up to %. by omitting the amplification step ( nm mtx) % of generated clones were stable over eight weeks cultivation time. additionally using the cld . approach, the time line from dna to rcb was reduced to months. background cho cells have become the most popular platform for production of therapeutic proteins [ ] . however, the generation of high-producer cells is a time-consuming and labor-intensive process that requires the screening of large amount of cells to get a clone of high titer and stability. since the expression titer and stability of clone is highly dependent on the site of integration, we demonstrated a new cell line development strategy by using ngs to identify the integration site and using crispr/cas to generate the target integrated high producing cell lines [ , ] . to identify the high expression sites in the cho cells, we employed ngs to analyze the integration sites of a high producing cell line (titer > g/l). the pair-end reads with one read mapped to the vector and the other read mapped to the cho reference genome are extracted to identify the integration sites. to test the expression activity of the integration sites, we employed crispr/cas to specifically integrate the antibody gene into cho genome for expression. our data showed integration sites are in the high producing cell line. among the integration site, is integration site was tested by crispr/ cas for target integration of antibody gene for expression. the is target integrated cell pool present higher expression titer than cell pool generated by target integration into other integration sites (fig. a) . the single cell clones derived from is -target integrated cell pool had low copy number of goi (fig. b) . after normalization with copy numbers, the single cell clones derived from is -target integrated cell pool showed high titer per copy ( ~ mg/l/copy) (fig. c) . this study demonstrated the generation of high-producing cell lines by crispr/cas mediated target integration. this approach will cost less time and labor than traditional method. the active integration site will serve as a platform like a cassette player for therapeutic antibody production. background cho, hek and sp / are the dominant host cells for biologics drug production. achieving high level of recombinant protein production by these cell lines still remains a challenge. in order to understand the potential roles of lipids in protein production, secretion, vesicular transport and energy metabolism, we coupled high-throughput transcriptomics and lipidomics technologies. quantitative lipidomics is an emerging 'omics technology which can help us understand the physiological limitations of each cell line. the two types of major lipid groups in cells are non-polar and polar lipids. polar lipids such as glycerophospholipids (pls) include phosphatidylethanolamine (pe), phosphatidylcholine (pc), phosphatidylinositol (pi), phosphatidylserine (ps), phosphatidylglycerol (pg), and phosphatidic acid (pa). in this study; we integrated two dimensional high performance thin layer chromatography ( d-hptlc) and mass spectrometry (ms) lipid analysis of sp / , cho, and hek cell lines to understand the major differences in the lipid content of these hosts. bligh-dyer method was used to extract the lipids and extracts were analyzed by hp-tlc and ms. the polar lipids were separated into different categories by -d hp-tlc using a chcl -meoh-h o ( : : . , v/v/v) solvent system in the first dimension and a chcl -meoh-acetic acid-h o ( : : : , v/v/v/v) solvent system in the second dimension. non-polar lipids were separated by -d hptlc using hexane-diethyl ether-acetic acid. , -dichlorofluorescein dye was used to visualize both polar and non-polar lipids. further detailed analysis was performed on a qqq mass spectrometer (thermo tsq vantage, san jose, ca) using negative-ion and positive-ion esi modes as well as negative-ion esi mode in the presence of lithium hydroxide. in this study, quantitative lipidomics was coupled with transcriptomics to further understand the physiological pathways of hek, cho-m and sp / cells. initial hp-tlc analysis indicated that major lipids in these industrial cell lines were pe and pc. other polar lipids such as pi, ps, pg, pa, and sm were lower compared to pc and pe in exponential and stationary phases of each cell line. figure represents d hp-tlc results of hek with the relative quantitation of polar lipids. in order to investigate the lipid subgroups, shotgun ms analysis was conducted for both exponential and stationary growth phases of the three cell lines. ms analysis indicated that lysophosphatidylethanolamine (lpe) and lyso-phosphatidylcholine (lpc) amounts were - fold and - fold higher in hek cells compared to sp / and cho cell lines. sphingomyelin (sm) was another lipid subgroup that was shown to have a major difference between sp / and other mammalian cell lines. sm was - fold lower in sp / cell line compared to cho and hek. to understand these metabolic differences, transcriptomics analysis using illumina highseq and gene expression omnibus was conducted on these mammalian cells. the kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) database was used to map the transcriptomics data to the lipid synthetic pathways. transcriptomics data mapping to kegg pathways demonstrated that differences in lpe and lpc pathways correlate with the expression profiles of secretory phospholipase a (spla ), lysophospholipid acyltransferase (lpeat), lysophosphatidylcholine acyltransferase (lpcat), and lysophospholipase (lypla) [ ] . the hp-tlc and lc/ms findings demonstrated that high levels of lpe and lpc existed in the hek cell line and low levels of sm were observed in the sp / cell line. coupling lipidomics with transcriptomics provides us with an improved understanding of the physiological differences across sp / , cho, and hek cell lines that could be used to guide cell engineering efforts with the goal of increasing the recombinant protein expression capabilities of these three cell lines. biopharmaceuticals are a class of biological macromolecules that include antibodies and antibody derivatives, generally produced from cultured mammalian cell lines via secretion directly into the media. manufacturing at medimmune requires the generation of chinese hamster ovary (cho) clonal cell lines capable of producing the biopharmaceutical product at commercially relevant quantities with optimal product quality. the isolation of cell clones based on random single cell deposition via fluorescence activated cell sorting (facs) provides a heterogeneous panel of expressers. we hypothesize that the application of facs to provide an additional sorting step based on desirable cell attributes that correlate with productivity, product quality or cell growth attributes could lead to the isolation of higher producing cell lines with enhanced product quality attributes. a panel of cell lines expressing a model recombinant monoclonal antibody were characterised in terms of growth, productivity, intracellular recombinant protein and mrna amounts. assays were also developed to investigate cell attributes using the commercially available imagestream instrument, an imaging flow cytometer, which enables the investigation of cellular characteristics that correlate with cell productivity at the single cell level. characterisation revealed the cell lines exhibited a range of values for productivity, growth, and intracellular (ic) antibody mrna and protein expression, ideal for further imagestream characterisation. western blot and qrt-pcr analysis demonstrated that final titre correlated with both ic heavy chain (hc) protein and mrna amounts (pearson correlation coefficient (pcc) = . and pcc = . , respectively). to assess productivity at the single cell level, assays multiplexing ic hc protein and mrna with cell attributes were therefore developed. initial assay development focusing on hc mrna and protein amounts has revealed interesting results; four cell lines displayed two distinct populations, one producing the antibody and another nonexpressing population. the ratio of these populations varied amongst the cell lines. images obtained from the imagestream have shown the cellular localization and expression of hc and lc message and protein (fig. ) . for both message and protein, hc and lc colocalize in the cell. whether there is any relationship between ic hc protein and cell attributes at the single cell level was then also investigated, as well as correlations with cell culture parameters at the population level. at the population level, correlations were found between titre and ic hc protein and mrna (pcc = . and pcc = . , respectively) confirming the data obtained by western blot and qrt-pcr analysis. a panel of cell lines has been characterised at the population level and show a wide range of antibody expression profiles at both the mrna and protein level. in parallel, assays have been developed for the imagestream to measure hc and lc message and protein amounts at the single cell level. protein and message quantification with the imagestream are consistent with more traditional approaches, such as western blots and qrt-pcr, that operate at the population level. the developed assays are now being used to investigate single cell productivity attributes and for the isolation of more productive clones. background productivity and stability are key factors for the selection of cell line in protein drugs production. large amount of target gene integrated in cell genome could lead to the instability of production. therefore, cells with low copies of target gene integrated in high yield sites could be an ideal production cells for manufacturing. it has been known that the transposon system can control the integrated copy number of target gene and can generate high yield producing cells, it could be a great approach to generate stable high yield producing cell lines carrying low copies of target gene through transposon system. we intended to develop a platform to generate high yield producing cell lines carrying - copy of the integrated target gene using transposon system. two cho cell lines, cho-s cells and dxb cells, have been applied. cells were co-transfected with transposon and target gene expression plasmids. after drug selection, the cell pool with highest productivity per target gene copy was applied to single cell cloning. the productivity and copy number of cell clones were determined, and the stability of cell clones was analysed after culture of about generations. in the stable pools of cho-s and dxb cells, the productivities per integrated target gene copy were about - mg/l/copy and - mg/l/copy in a batch culture, respectively. after single cell cloning, the integrated copy numbers in most cell clones were less than three copies per cell. in cho-s and dxb cell clones, the productivities per integrated target gene copy were - mg/l/copy and - mg/l/copy in a batch culture, respectively. the productivity per integrated target gene in cell clones developed by the transposon system was much higher than that in cell clones developed by random integration (fig. a and b) . to evaluate the productivity stability of cell clones developed by the transposon system, ten cell clones at generation , , , and were applied in the analysis. of interest, about % of cell clones were stable at generation , but lost the productivity at generation (fig. c) , implying the most cell clones could maintain the stability within months. using the optimized conditions of the transposon system to develop the stable gene expression cells, the productivity per integrated target gene was higher than random integration. these results suggested that our platform is capable to develop high yield producing cells with - copy of integrated target antibody gene and can be applied to identify high yield integration sites. background mammalian cells show an inefficient metabolism characterized by high glucose uptake and the production of high amounts of lactate, a widely known growth inhibition by-product [ ] . recently, we have observed a different glucose-lactate metabolism in some cell lines. while some cell lines are unable to metabolize lactate, others can co-metabolize simultaneously glucose and lactate under certain culture conditions, even during the exponential growth phase [ ] . these metabolic differences between different mammalian cell lines (cho, hek and hybridoma) have been studied by means of flux balance analysis (fba). three different cell lines were cultured in a -liter bioreactor: cho-s, hek sf and hybridoma kb- . . for the fba, two adapted genome-scale metabolic models were used: a reconstruction of mus musculus for cho and hybridoma [ ] , and a reconstruction of human metabolic model (recon ) for hek [ ] . in cultures where ph was not controlled, two different metabolic phases were observed for cho and hek cells. during the first phase both cell lines produced large amounts of lactate as a consequence of the high glucose consumption rates. interestingly, when ph dropped below . , due to acid lactic secretion and accumulation, a second metabolic phase was identified, in which concomitant consumption of glucose and lactate was observed even during the exponential growth phase. conversely, hybridoma cells were unable to co-consume lactate and glucose simultaneously even under noncontrolled ph conditions. therefore, the hybridoma physiological data used for the fba corresponded to only phase of phcontrolled cultures. a summary of the main cell growth and metabolic parameters obtained from the different experiments performed is presented in table . fba shows ( fig. for hek cell culture) that lactate is produced in phase because pyruvate has to be converted to lactate to fulfill the nadh regeneration in the cytoplasm and only a small amount of pyruvate can be transported into tca through acetyl-coa. cell metabolism in phase is highly inefficient, as the majority of the carbon source is not used for the generation of energy nor biomass. in phase , in which mitochondrial ldh was considered, tca fluxes could be maintained as in phase at the maximal rate encountered; hence, the energy available for cells to grow was similar in both phases, obtaining similar growth rate. two different glucose and lactate metabolism behaviors have been observed in cho and hek cultures depending on the culture conditions: phase ) glucose consumption and lactate production, and phase ) glucose and lactate simultaneous consumption. in contrast, only phase was observed in hybridoma cultures even when ph was non-controlled. fba showed that tca fluxes in phase and phase were similar, obtaining similar cell growth rate, but glucose uptake rate was much lower in phase due to the lactate co-consumption. some authors hypothesize that cells metabolize extracellular lactate as a strategy for ph detoxification [ ] . glucose and lactate co-metabolization resulted in a better-balanced cell metabolism, as can be seen from the metabolic fluxes calculated, with minor effects on cell growth. the observation of glucose and lactate co-consumption metabolic behavior and its deeper study and characterization could open the door of novel culturing strategies with the aim of increasing bioprocesses productivity. background transient protein expression in mammalian cell lines has gained increasing relevance as it enables fast and flexible production of high-quality eukaryotic protein. considerable efforts have thus been made to overcome existing limiting aspects of transient gene expression systems, in terms of cell lines, cell culture-based systems, and protein production in a cost-effective manner. milligram amounts of protein per liter can be produced within several days, allowing a significant shortening of the bioproduction process in comparison to protein production from stable clones. to ensure the robustness of the process, it is essential to have a reliable and easy-to-use transfection method. to palliate for the need of a reliable transfection reagent, we developed peipro®, the only commercially available pei optimised for mid to large-scale transient protein production during process development. peipro® is a non-polydiperse and fully-characterised polymer that has become the gold pei standard due to its reliability, reproducibility in high dna delivery efficiency and in ensuing high protein production yields. here, we present experimental data showing the benefits of using peipro® for protein production in comparison to other peis. we further demonstrate compatibility of using peipro® for recombinant protein production in most commonly used chemicallydefined media. materiel and methods suspension hek- and cho cells were cultured in shaker flasks in various synthetic media, as listed in table . hek- and cho cells were resuspended at × cells/ml of serum-free medium, on the day before transfection. cells were transfected with . - mg of plasmid dna encoding for the luciferase gene reporter using peipro®, pei "max" and l-pei kda (polysciences, warrington, pa) resuspended at mg/ml according to the manufacturer's recommendation. protein expression of the luciferase reporter gene was assayed hours post-transfection by affinity chromatography using protein g (hplc). comparison of peipro® to other commercially available peis was achieved by transfecting suspension hek- and cho cells with plasmid dna encoding for the luciferase gene reporter. luciferase production yields obtained in hek- and cho cells were at least respectively -fold and -fold higher when using a similar amount of peipro in comparison to the other peis (fig. ) . furthermore, peipro® was the only pei that led to similar luciferase production yields when decreasing the amount of plasmid dna per liter of cell culture. conversely, at least mg of plasmid dna and -fold more of pei "max" and l-pei kda were needed to obtain a similar luciferase expression range in both hek- and cho cells. we further assessed the compatibility and versatility of peipro® by measuring protein production yields obtained in most commonly used animal-free synthetic media. as shown in fig. , peipro® leads to high protein production yieds in several commercially avaialble media formulations for hek- anc cho cell lines. peipro® is the only fully characterised pei transfection reagent that is suitable for reliable and reproducible recombinant protein production, irrespective of the scale of production and of the type of adherent and suspension cell culture system. fig. (abstract p- ) . peipro® requires less reagent and similar to lower dna amount compared to other peis. suspension hek- and cho cells were seeded at × cells/ml in serum free medium and transfected with peipro®, pei "max" and l-pei kda (polysciences, warrington, pa) resuspended at mg/ml. luciferase expression was assayed h after transfection using a conventional luciferase assay fig. (abstract p- ) . peipro® is optimized for transfection of hek- and cho cells in several specific synthetic culture media. suspension hek- and cho cells were seeded following the recommended protocol in serum-free media and transfected with peipro® using the standard conditions. igg -fc production was assayed h after transfection using protein g affinity quantification (hplc) monoclonal antibodies (mabs), which are widely used in anticancer therapies, are mainly produced by mammalian cell lines. mab conjugation to biological molecules for enhancing their antitumor activity offers a new powerful tool for anticancer therapies. we have assessed the production of commercially approved anti-her therapeutic antibody trastuzumab (tzmb) [ ] and also its fusion with interferon-α b (ifnα b). two cloning strategies consisting in transfecting cho-s and hek cell lines with two bicistronic or with a single tricistronic plasmids have been assessed. the in vitro efficacy of both antibodies has been tested and compared side by side. tzmb heavy and light chains were cloned in two bicistronic plasmids (pirespuro and piresneo , clontech) and in a tricistronic plasmid derived from pirespuro . ifnα b was spliced to tzmb heavy chain by overlap extension pcr and the resulting tzmb-ifnα b fusion protein was also cloned in the expression vectors in the same way than non-modified tzmb. selected cell pools were cultured in ml shake flasks containing sfmtransfx supplemented with % v/v of cell boost (hyclone), mm of glutamax (gibco) and μg/ml of puromycin and also with μg/ml neomycin in the case of the cells transfected with pires-neo . cells were cultivated in the same conditions as described elsewhere [ ] . purified products (using protein a chromatography (hitrap mabselect sure, Äkta avant )) were quantified by both elisa and sds-page. antigen binding test was performed in sk-br- breast cancer cell line by means of flow cytometry analysis. the biological activity of the different candidates was tested with mtt assay. both tzmb and the fusion protein tzmb-ifnα b have been successfully expressed in cho-s and hek , which use for heterologous protein expression have previously been optimized in prior works [ ] . the tricistronic strategy resulted in the most efficient, showing a . fold increase in terms of productivity with respect to the bicistronic double-transfection for tzmb in cho-s cells and a -fold increase in hek cells (fig. a) . in the case of tzmb-ifnα b, the tricistronic strategy also allowed to achieve higher productivities than the bicistronic one (fig. b) . regarding the differences of specific productivity between both cell lines tested, hek emerged as the best production host candidate, for the two tested strategies (tricistronic and bicistronic) and for the two produced proteins, showing a . -fold increase in terms of productivity with respect to cho-s cells for tzmb using the tricistronic strategy. tzmb and tzmb-ifnα b were analysed in terms of their antigen binding capacity, and both were find to efficiently bind to her + skbr- cells (fig. c) . thus, the antibody affinity to her antigen has not been affected when fused to inf-α b. finally, antiproliferative activity of tzmb and tzmb-ifnα b were assessed on the same sk-br- cells. at a concentration of nm of tzmb, and after a -hour incubation, sk-br- cells presented a % growth with respect to the untreated control. however, no antiproliferative effect was observed for tzmb-ifnα b (fig. d) . the tricistronic strategy provides higher productivity yields in hek and cho-s cell lines for both recombinant proteins (trastuzumab and tzmb-ifnα b). regarding which cell line is the best production host candidate, hek achieved higher productivity than cho-s cells for the two proteins tested. all constructions performed preserved the binding affinity to its antigen, trastuzumab and tzmb-ifnα b bind efficiently to the her antigen present in skbr- cells. finally, tzmb-ifnα b does not present an improved antiproliferative effect with respect to trastuzumab when compared by means of an in vitro assay. the genetic engineering of patient-specific t cells with lentiviral vectors (lvv) expressing chimeric antigen receptors (car) for late phase clinical trials requires the large-scale manufacture of high-titer vector stocks. the state-of-the-art production of lvv is based on -to layer cell factories transiently transfected in the presence of serum. this manufacturing process is extremely limited by its labor intensity, open-system handling operations, its requirements for significant incubator space plus costs and patience risk due to presence of serum. to circumvent these limitations, this study aims to develop a stable and serum-free process to produce lvv with pei-mediated transfection. in addition, this study also focuses on the development of a a c b d fig. (abstract p- ) . expression of trastuzumab (a) and trastuzumab-ifnα b (b) from bicistronic strategy (bc) and tricistronic strategy (tri) with cho-s and hek cells. relative specific productivity units are used for comparing the different strategies. c antigen binding analysis of trastuzumab and trastuzumab-ifnα b. d antiproliferative activity of trastuzumab and trastuzumab-ifnα b on sk-br- cells production system not only using a gfp marker but also a therapeutically relevant transgene (cd -car) [ ] . therefore, three different cell lines (hek , t, ft) were investigated concerning their productivity of lvv and their growing behavior in the in-house serum-free medium transmacs. as part of this, design of experiment was used to investigate the optimal conditions for pei/ dna-transfection. furthermore, this statistical approach was used focusing an ideal ratio between the rd generation plasmids (transfer plasmid cd -car or gfp, envelope plasmid, packaging plasmids). in addition, different enhancers (sodium butyrate, lithium acetate, caffeine, trichostatin a, cholesterol, hydroxyurea, valproic acid) were investigated concerning their effects on productivity comparing hek cultures producing lvv encoding for gfp-marker or cd -car. concerning productivity and growing behavior, hek t was the favored cell line for our serum-free lv manufacturing process. in addition, an additive screen revealed that sodium butyrate alone had the most promising effect on both gfp-lvv and cd -car-lvv production. after pei/dna titration, we finally could increase lvv productivity by lowering pei/dna amount at higher cell densities referred to our standard transfection protocol. furthermore, the titration for the optimal plasmid ration revealed, that for large transfer constructs higher amounts of transfer plasmid are required than for smaller constructs to achieve a high productivity (fig. ) . the outcome of these experiments enabled the development of a robust hek t based process to produce clinical relevant lvv under serumfree conditions. furthermore, it provides an insight how therapeutic genes and the expression of its transgene can influence cell productivity. led to a vast increase in productivity, cho cells yield less than other expression systems like yeast or bacteria [ ] . to improve yields and find beneficial bioprocess phenotypes, genetic engineering plays an essential role in recent research. the mir- cluster with its genomic paralogues (mir- a and mir- b) was first identified as differentially expressed during temperature shift, suggesting its role in proliferation and productivity [ ] . the common approach to deplete mirnas is the use of a sponge decoy which, requires the introduction of reporter genes. as an alternative this work aims to knockdown mirna expression using the recently developed crispr/cas system which does not require a reporter transcript. this system consists of two main components: the single guide rna (sgrna) and an endonuclease (cas ) which induces double strand breaks (dsbs). these dsbs can result in insertion or deletion (indels) of base pairs which can disrupt mirna function and processing [ ] . a cho-k cell line stably expressing an igg was used for knockdown experiments. sgrnas were designed to target the seed region of each mirna member and stable mixed populations were generated (fig. a) . total rna form each mixed population was reverse transcribed into cdna using mirna specific stemloop primers. the expression was quantified by rt-qpcr. to further analyse the range of indels the mir- a and mir- b clusters were amplified by a standard high-fidelity pcr. amplicons were cloned into pcr tm -topo® vector and positive clones were analysed by sanger sequencing. cell growth was monitored using viacount tm viability stain on a guava tm benchtop flow cytometer. productivity was assessed by elisa. students t-test was used for statistical analysis. it was shown that mirna expression was significantly reduced in mixed populations. a knockdown up to % was achieved for mir- a, mir- b and mir- . the knockdown in mir- a and mir- b expression was considerably less -between - % (n= , * p ≤ . , ** p ≤ . , *** p ≤ . ) (fig. b) . furthermore, it was shown that various sizes of indels were generated by targeting the seed region. smaller indels (+ / + /- /- bps) seemed to be more common but larger deletions were detected as well (fig. c) . mir- a, mir- b and mir- b showed increased viability in late stages of the culture. depletion of mir- a reduced growth significantly whereas knockdown of mir- showed increased proliferation as well as boosting igg titers (table ) . in this work, we have shown that crispr/cas can be successfully applied as a tool to knockdown mirna expression in cho cells. the data was generated using mixed pools and it remains to be established if both alleles can be successfully targeted e.g. using nextgeneration sequencing of individual clones. background chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells are the most widely used host cell line for the production of therapeutic antibodies. pre-and posttranslational modifications and optimization of culture methods contributed to increase the productivity, resulting in a very high titre [ , ] . however, it has been pointed out that the intracellular secretion process is a bottleneck in the production of therapeutic antibodies [ ] . in addition, the details of the process of secretion of humanized recombinant antibodies from cho cells have not been well investigated. in this study, we thus analysed the detailed process of secretion of therapeutic antibodies using cho cell lines, which have already been established as high producers, with the aim of obtaining information for the more rational and efficient establishment of high-producer cells. we performed ) chase assay, ) immunofluorescent microscopy observation, and ) size exclusion chromatography (sec) analysis to investigate the duration of secretion, bottleneck position, and formation of recombinant igg, respectively. high-producer cho cells expressing humanized igg [ ] and igg were used. for the chase assay, cells were cultivated in shake flasks with serum-free medium containing μg/ml cycloheximide (chx) to stop nascent peptide synthesis. the amounts of igg both remaining in the cell and secreted into the medium at each time point were measured by quantitative western blotting. for immunofluorescent microscopy observation, cells were cultivated on coverslips with chx for h. immunofluorescent staining against the recombinant igg, endoplasmic reticulum (er), and golgi apparatus was performed after chemical fixation. for sec, cells cultured with chx were re-suspended in a buffer containing tritonx- and injected into a column. the amount of igg in each fraction was measured by quantitative western blotting. the amount of igg in the supernatant increased until - h after the inhibition of protein synthesis by chx; however, it hardly changed thereafter (fig. , upper panel) . at this point in time, however, around % of igg still remained in the cells (fig. , lower panel) , meaning that all of the synthesized igg could not be secreted into the medium and remained in the cells for several hours. this result was almost the same as that of studies using igg -expressing cells [ , ] . the localization of igg in the cells was checked before and after the addition of chx, with the results showing that igg remained in the er and was hardly seen in the golgi apparatus [ ] [ ] [ ] ; igg did not seem to be efficiently transported to the golgi apparatus. the sec experiment showed that most of the igg remaining in the cell seemed to form full-sized antibodies [ , ] , but it could not be secreted despite this. the high-producer cells could not secrete all of the synthesized igg, and around % of igg remained in the cells for several hours. this incomplete secretion is a common phenomenon among cho cells producing different types of recombinant igg. the igg could not be transported from the er to the golgi despite its formation of fullsized antibodies. solving this bottleneck in the transportation of igg from the er to the golgi and/or achieving more efficient glycosylation of igg after the formation of full-sized antibodies might be the next target to improve productivity. background humanized monoclonal antibodies (mabs) are among the most promising drugs, but defined strategies for their modification are still not available. our work deals with humanization of murine mab / h . the superhumanization approach leads to a loss of binding affinity which was partially restored by a single human-to-mouse backmutation (t hr). [ ] this residue was selected by synergistic combination of sequence analyses of antibody framework regions and structural information using novel in silico simulations. for structural stabilization, a conglomeration of tyrosine residues surrounding t hr was identified, the so called "tyrosine cage". [ ] analysis of the "tyrosine cage" was done by alanine scanning mutations with a double mutation variant t hr + y ha (bm ) and a triple mutation variant t hr + y ha + y ha (bm ). in a recent series of experiments we tried to enhance binding affinity by three new variants with backmutations in the variable light chain (vl). originating from t hr, residues in the vl were selected based on their spatial proximity to the cdr loop of the variable heavy chain. affinity improvement of t hr was evaluated by vl-double backmutation variants t hr + f ll (su ) and t hr + q ls (su ) and a triple backmutation variant t hr + f ll + q ls (su ). all five variants were expressed transiently in hek - e cells and binding affinities were investigated in two individual settings with bio-layer interferometry. in the first approach concentrated cell culture supernatants were directly applied and mabs were captured on protein a tips, blocked with d scfv-fc and the association and dissociation of f igg was measured. for the second approach, the culture supernatants were purified and the affinity was determined with streptavidin biosensors. first, biotinylated f igg was bound and then the association/dissociation of the purified h variants was measured. affinity evaluation of concentrated culture supernatants with protein a sensor tips showed a decrease of binding affinity of bm and a loss of binding of bm . the protein a measurement showed an increased binding strength of su , su and su compared to su h and bm . su and su result in a higher binding affinity compared to su . these results can be confirmed with purified variants by the streptavidin bio-assay (fig. ) . alanine scanning of the tyrosine cage demonstrated a reduction of binding affinity (bm ) and a severe loss of binding (bm ), concluding that the tyrosine cage plays an important role for supporting a correct cdr loop conformation. further affinity improvement of the single mutation variant t hr could have been reached via mutations in the vl. it demonstrates the underestimated role of the vl for the interaction with its binding partner. although cho cells are a major expression system for production of recombinant biopharmaceuticals, the molecular and cellular background characterizing a high producer is largely unknown. it has been observed that in producer cell lines important signaling pathways like the akt-signaling are altered in characteristical ways. thus analyzing according signaling events should lead to identification of key elements characterizing high producer cells. to investigate this, our emphasis lies on the phosphorylation status of involved proteins as reversible switches in all signaling pathways. we aimed to establish a workflow for cho-specific phosphoproteomics and focused on igf signaling, as cell culture media often are supplemented with this growth factor. two producer cell lines and the according parental cells were cultivated in a stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture (silac) experiment, followed by quantitative ms phosphoproteomic analysis including chospecific data evaluation. the chosen cho cell lines were cultivated in triplicates in silac media containing isotopically-labeled lysine/arginine (hlys/harg) and in parallel in identical standard media (llys/larg, tcx d, xell). cell density, viability, metabolism and cell cycle distribution were monitored during ml batch culture for - days. at day . igf was added into hlys/harg cultures. min later a part of the cells was harvested. for ms analysis igf-treated (hlys/harg cultures) and control cultures (llys/larg cultures) were combined. the following ms sample preparation workflow included digestion of whole protein lysate and phosphopeptide enrichment via tio beads. nanolc-esi-orbitrap ms (q exactive plus, thermo fisher scientific) of phosphopeptides was excecuted with subsequent identification and quantification in maxquant [ ] . in addition to silac quantification of h/l ratios for investigation of igf effects, aquired data was also used to perform label-free quantification (lfq) in maxquant [ ] for comparison of cell lines. statistical significance was calculated via t-test (p< . ) or anova (permutation-based fdr< . ) in perseus [ ] . results igf effects on growth and production the igf treatment resulted in a prolonged viability for all cell lines. however, an increased vcd was only observed for producer cell line , yielding in an enhanced integral of vcd (ivcd). for the parental cells growth was inhibited by igf, although s-phase cells were enriched at least temporary (fig. a) . regarding antibody production igf led to a decreased qp and product titer, concomitantly with an increase in s-phase cells (fig. a) . this inverse correlation of proliferation and cell specific productivity is known from different productivity enhancing molecules, like butyrate [ ] . ms investigation of signaling events the phosphoproteomic experiment resulted in the identification of . class i-phosphorylation sites. statistical evaluation of phosphopeptide abundances in perseus showed up significant differences between the cell lines and led to producer vs. parental classifications (fig. b) . the quantitative evaluation via silac yielded in about . quantifiable phosphosites in at least biological replicates. rapid phosphorylation changes after growth factor treatment indicated signaling towards protein synthesis, cell cycle and regulation of actin cytoskeleton amongst others. for phosphosites significantly different h/l ratios were calculated between the two groups parental vs. producer, four of them are listed (table ) . the workflow to study phosphorylation states revealed differences in the related cell lines and gave insights into signal transduction as a response on igf. on the one hand, igf-treatment resulted in a fast and widespread upregulation of phosphorylation sites within aktand mapk-signaling. on the other hand, a different phosphorylation status for producer compared to parental cell lines uncovered distinctions in biological processes like rna-and dna-binding and regulation of cytoskeleton. in sum, our sucessfully established phosphoproteomic approach allows to detect important signaling key players in cho cells that subsequently can be targeted through cell engineering or small molecule treatment. to improve antibody production in the cho cell expression system, it seems to be useful to up-or downregulate gene expression including antibody folding, secretion, and cell metabolism. many cell engineering approaches, including gene introduction, knockout and knockdown, have been employed to enhance recombinant antibody production [ ] . however, identifying production enhancer genes is the rate-limiting step for cho cell engineering, because the conventional method requires a series of experiments including genomic integration of the tested genes, selection of stable cell clones and cell culture experiments of several clones. in this study, we propose an approach for rapid evaluation of production enhancer genes based on an episomal expression system. plasmid vector carrying the epstein-barr virus (ebv) encoded nuclear antigen (ebna ) was transfected into cho cell line producing igg antibody. after g selection and single colony isolation, ebna expression was checked with capillary electrophoresis system wes (proteinsimple). ebv ebna -antibody ( eb ) was used for detection as the primary antibody. the expression vector for the gene of interest was prepared by inserting bp of an orip dna sequence into a plasmid vector carrying cag promoter, resulting in the potc vector. pei max (polysciences, inc.) and balancd transfectory cho (irvine scientific) were used for the transfection. the number of viable cells and gfp-positive cells were counted using countess ii fl automated cell counter (thermo fisher scientific). the transfected cells were cultured in cellstar cellreactor tubes. the tubes were incubated in a climo-shaker isf -x (kuhner). antibody production was measured using biolayer interferometry with an octet qk system (fortebio). we constructed four cho cell lines stably expressing ebna , termed igg -eb to eb . in capillary electrophoresis analysis, we observed a clear peak corresponding to the ebna expression in all four cell lines. we tested the transfection efficiency by potc-gfp plasmids. in the best transfection condition, pei/dna ratio of / , igg -eb cell showed the highest gfp-positive cell number ( . × cell/ml) and transfection efficiency ( %) among the four cell lines. therefore, igg -eb cell lines were selected for further study. after the transfection, the number of gfp-positive cells continued to increase even after the passage (fig. ) , suggesting that the potc-gfp plasmid was stably retained and replicated by ebna /orip system in igg -eb cell lines. in preliminary experiments, we introduced three genes, mdh , gss and gclm, into igg -eb cell lines. cotransfection of these three genes led to an increase in igg production from ± mg/l (control) to ± mg/l at day (p< . , t-test, n= ). this result suggests that these three genes work as production enhancer genes. conventional methods based on stable cells take up to months to determine whether the gene of interest is beneficial for recombinant igg production. in contrast, identification of production enhancer genes is achievable within days by our proposed method based on ebna /orip system. the proposed method makes it possible to evaluate production enhancer genes in a rapid manner. the proposed method is a promising approach to identify genes enhancing recombinant antibody production. background g unic™ ( gun) technology comprises a set of protected genetic elements that improve protein production by acting on transcription as well as on translation. the elements can either be inserted into existing (platform) vectors or be provided as complete ready-to-use vectors. the technology can be used in stable and in transient transfection to boost protein production for product development and is being applied in cld for pharmaceutical proteins. in combination with antibiotic selection or dhfr selection, gun technology routinely results in - fold increase in expression of client antibodies or fusion proteins, both in pools and after clonal selection. previously, we have successfully combined gun technology with glutamine synthetase (gs) selection and the cho gs null cells of horizon discovery, resulting in clonal cell lines producing > g/l of a biosimilar mab in fed-batch assay. here we present data on the successful application of the gun technology for the enhanced expression of a large (> kda) human heterotrimeric glycoprotein, a renowned difficult-to-express (dte) protein. all expression vectors comprised a hcmv promoter and bgh polyadenylation sequence in the expression cassettes for the gene of interest, and a selection marker gene with sv promoter and sv polyadenylation sequence. g unic™ vectors also contained genetic elements ( g unic™ technology, proteonic). cho gs null cells (horizon discovery) were transfected in duplicate with reference or gun expression vectors and selected in media lacking glutamine and containing the appropriate antibiotics. the bulk pools were seeded at equal viable cell density after obtaining maximum viability and cultured for days without feeding (batch). expression of the target protein in cell culture supernatants of stable bulk pools was measured by elisa. the three protein subunit genes were expressed from vectors with different selection markers. in the reference constructs (without gun), the α, β, and γ chains were expressed from vectors with marker genes for zeocin, blasticidin, and gs, respectively. a similar vector combination was also generated with gun elements integrated in each vector. in addition, vectors with subunits (γ-α and α-γ), each with a separate gun element, promoter and polyadenylation signal, were generated with a gs marker gene. cho gs -/cells were transfected with the appropriate vector combinations in equimolar ratios and selected in bulk in medium lacking glutamine and or antibiotics. the -vector transfected cell pools recovered first, due to the presence of only antibiotic in the medium (fig. a) . the pools transfected with three gun vectors recovered to maximum viability just a few days after the -vector gun pools. recovery of the reference pools took up to a week longer than the gun pools. production of each pool was assessed in a batch production run in shaker flasks. all -vector gun pools which recovered first produced titers around . g/l, which is almost -fold higher as compared to the production by reference pools (fig. b) . the highest titers of . g/l were obtained in the -vector gun pools. these data show that the g unic™ genetic elements can be successfully used to obtain a significant increase in the titer of difficult-to-express proteins. similar results have been obtained with other dte proteins, including fc-fusion proteins and bi-specific antibodies (not shown). the expression of a large, glycosylated multimeric difficult to express protein can be increased more than ten-fold in cho gs pools by application of g unic™ genetic elements. the highest expression of is obtained using a separate vector for each subunit. characterization of antibody-producing cho cells with chromosome aneuploidy noriko yamano , , sho tanaka background chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells are commonly used as host cells to produce biopharmaceuticals. however, the number of chromosomes in cho cells varies. previously, dg -sc and dg -sc cell lines with modal chromosome numbers of and were isolated from parental cho-dg cells, from which igg -expressing cell lines named igg -sc and igg -sc were established, respectively. the igg -sc cell pool showed a higher specific igg production rate than the igg -sc cell pool [ ] . even though all of the igg -sc clones and half of the igg -sc clones contained the same number of vector integration sites (single integration site), igg-sc cell clones produced more igg following the culture of single-cell clones than any of the igg -sc clones [ ] . in this study, we performed transcriptome analysis to investigate the characteristics of high-producer cells with chromosome aneuploidy. transcriptome analyses using amplified fragment length polymorphism (aflp)-based high-coverage expression profiling (hicep) and de novo mrna-seq were performed on dg -sc , dg -sc , igg -sc and igg -sc . to compare cell lines with different numbers of chromosomes, transcriptome data from mrna-seq were adjusted for cell number using rna reference materials (nmij crm -a; national institute of advanced industrial science and technology) mixed at equal amounts per cell. pathways related to differentially expressed genes were searched using keymolnet (km data). high-chromosome-number cho cells showed larger cell diameters, as determined by vi-cell (beckman coulter) measurement. the predicted volume ratios, based on these diameters, are . (dg -sc :dg -sc ) and . (igg -sc :igg -sc ). the levels of β-actin and the products of most other genes that were detected by mrna-seq differed by approximately % in the comparison between sc and sc (sc > sc ). based on the analysis of gene expression levels per cell volume, approximately % of detected genes showed lower expression in both dg -sc and igg -sc compared with the levels in dg -sc and igg -sc , respectively. in addition, the number of genes whose expression level was decreased in igg -sc compared with that in dg -sc was larger than those showing the opposite pattern. the results of the comparisons between igg -sc and igg -sc indicate that differentially expressed genes were mainly related to cell growth (e.g. myc, smad), apoptosis (e.g. caspase), lipid metabolism (e.g. srebp, pparγ) and epigenetic histone modification (e.g. brca, hat) pathways. the mrna levels of myc, smad, caspase, brca and hat related genes were lower in igg -sc , while those of srebp and pparγ related genes were higher in igg -sc . the effects of these pathways on antibody production should be examined in future. in this study, we found that high-chromosome-number cho cells have lower amounts of mrna relative to their volume. a reduction per unit volume in the expression of genes that are required for survival might generate additional energy for recombinant protein production in high-chromosome-number cells. from an evolutionary perspective, an increased set of chromosomes underlies rapid evolutionary adaptation. although there are issues to be considered, such as stability, there may also be advantages to using high-chromosome-number aneuploid cho cells as a production host cells of recombinant proteins. background human growth factors have an enormous therapeutic potential. among them, the bone morphogenetic protein- (bmp- ) can induce de novo bone formation endowing the protein a high therapeutic potential. however, finding a suitable recombinant production system for such a protein still remains a challenge. recombinant expression of hbmp was investigated in transiently transfected hek- cells and in stable clones established in cho-k cells cultivated in excell and pro-cho medium, respectively. protein stability and interaction of the hbmp with the producer cells were investigated in vitro using commercially available rhbmp . in addition, we investigated a cell-free protein synthesis system harboring translocationally active microsomal structures, hence having the potential to perform post-translational modifications, as an alternative production method. we showed that growth rates and viabilities of the rhbmp producing cells were similar to those of the parent cell line, while entry into the death phase was delayed in case of the recombinant cells. the maximum rhbmp concentration detected in the culture supernatant was low for stable clones but can be greatly improved combining the hek- cells transient expression system and batch reactor cultivation which reflects a better compatibility of the codon usage in the human cells (table ) . hbmp protein is sensitive to slightly acidic ph and to a lesser extend to proteases (fig. a ) and binds to both producers cell lines (fig. b) -all this could incidentally contribute to the low product titers. cell-free protein synthesis has been proposed as alternative for "difficult-to-express" proteins. since native hbmp is glycosylated, a cell-free system based on eukaryotic cell lysates is required for its production. cho cell lysates were chosen, since they had previously been established as the most productive eukaryotic system in our hands [ ] , while concomitantly enabling a direct comparison to the production of hbmp in stable clones established in cho-k . the ability to perform post-translational modifications is a major advantage of eukaryotic systems. the cho lysates prepared by the protocol used here have previously been shown to contain significant amounts of endogenous microsomes derived from the endoplasmatic reticulum during lysis [ ] . to enforce translocation of the target protein into the microsomal structures, a melittin signal peptide was fused to the hbmp cdna. the glycosylation of the protein was assessed by enzymatic treatment (pngase, endoh) and confirmed using c-mannose for the de novo protein synthesis. upon cell-free protein synthesis, the hbmp yield was -fold higher than the best one in the hek- cells. the difference becomes even more dramatic, when productivities are considered (table ) , i.e. the fact that maximum product titers are reached within h in the cellfree system compared to h in the cell-based ones. this demonstrates that the cell-free expression system is most suitable compared to mammalian cell expression method for the production of glycosylated human bmp (table ) [ ] . human growth factors are complex molecules, which make their production in mammalian cells desirable. however, low product titers caused by a variety of both cell and process related effects may hinder the development of highly productive processes. in such cases, cell-free protein production using cho cell lysates containing endogenous microsomes for posttranslational processing, may eventually present an attractive alternative. in particular since these lysates can be used under tightly controlled conditions assuring a higher degree of reproducibility, than, e.g. transient transfection systems. cell-free systems are known to circumvent typical bottlenecks of cellbased ones, e.g. metabolic regulation and cell maintenance mechanisms. in consequence, the production of a recombinant protein is neither inhibited by its accumulation nor by any interaction with the cells, e.g. through the activation of inhibitory signaling pathways. core. preliminary studies showed that the corresponding polyplexes, but also some of the cells that came into contact with them, became magnetic and were manageable by magnetic fields [ ] [ ] [ ] . here, we present a characterization of the influence of structure and composition on the function of these polymers using a library of highly homogeneous, paramagnetic nano-stars with varied arm lengths and densities [ ] . the paramagnetic nano-stars library was synthesized by coating maghemite nanoparticles (γ-fe o ) with a thin silica-shell functionalized with an atomic transfer radical polymerization (atrp) initiator. pdmaema arms were grown from the core particles via atrp. in one case, the pdmaema arms was end-capped with pdegma blocks produced during a second atrp step. all nanostars were characterized by size exclusion chromatography and thermogravimetry to calculate number and length of the pdmaema arms. the core diameter was determined by transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering (dls). the different variants (table ) were analyzed for their ability to complex pdna (pegfp-n ) using various physicochemical methods (dls, zeta sizer). transfection efficiency/cytotoxicity in cho-k cells were determined by flow cytometry. transfected cells were placed in a magnetic field and the influence of the polymer architecture on the magnetic separation was investigated. nonparametric spearman analysis was used to correlate between arm length/arm densities, magnetic properties of the cells and transfection efficiency. based on the hydrodynamic radii of the polyplexes, the investigated nano-stars could be divided into three subgroups (table ) . middle, but also high arm density nano-stars formed smaller polyplexes with hydrodynamic radii ≤ nm, a size that is considered suitable for endocytosis and transfection. transfection efficiencies and cytotoxicities varied systematically with the nano-stars architecture, with viability showing a more pronounced dependency on the characteristics of the transfection agent than the transfection efficiency itself. the arm density was particularly important, with values of approximately . arms/ nm yielding the best results (fig. a) . the end-capping the polycation arms with pdegma significantly improved the serum compatibility (fig. b) . the gene delivery potential of a given nano-star and its ability to render the cells magnetic did not correlate. although, compared to the non-separated cells, egfp-expressing cells were consistently more frequent in the magnetic cell fraction, while the non-magnetic fraction was slightly depleted. when the egfp-expressing cells were further divided into low, middle and high producers, a statistically significant shift towards the high producers was observed in the magnetic cell fraction (fig. c) . a nonparametric spearman correlation analysis was used to statistically evaluate possible links between the molecular characteristics of the nano-stars, the physicochemical properties of the corresponding polyplexes, the transfection conditions, and the cellular reactions. the resulting correlogram is shown in fig. d . transfection agents with magnetic properties enlarge the toolbox for studying non-viral gene delivery, since cellular magnetism is added as a new parameter. this allows, inter alia, a distinction between mere cellular interaction and actual uptake, which is otherwise difficult. viability showed a much more pronounced dependency on the characteristics of the transfection agent/polyplex than the transfection efficiency itself, which should be taken into account during method optimization. end-capping the polycationic pdmaema-arms with pdegma-blocks improved the compatibility of the polycationic nano-stars with serum components. in future optimized, blood-compatible, nano-stars, which can be retained/directed by magnetic fields, could become options for non-viral gene delivery in vivo. the increasing demand for monoclonal antibodies has necessitated the need to increase the productivity of current industrial cell lines. in our earlier study [ ] , we had shown that treatment with er-stress inducer, tunicamycin significantly increased the titers and productivity in recombinant cho cell lines with a simultaneous upregulation of many genes from the unfolded protein response pathway (upr). however the loss in cell viability prevented a sustained increase in titers. in the current study we explore the effect of varying concentrations of tunicamycin and treatment times, such as to modulate the increase in protein folding capacity while preventing induction of apoptosis. anti-rhesus igg-secreting cho cells [ ] were cultured in sf-cdm in ml shake flasks. the cells were treated with varying concentrations ( - ng/ml) of tunicamycin in a batch culture. further, the effect of treatment with tunicamycin for short periods of time ( hrs) was also evaluated. igg titers and mrna expression levels were quantified using elisa and qrt-pcr (illumina), respectively. results cho cells were treated with different concentrations of tunicamycin and cultured in a batch for days (referred as continuous treatment/cte). figure a presents the maximum vcd and % drop in viability under treatment. a dose-dependent inhibitory effect is observed on growth and viability of cells in cte-cultures, with minimal inhibition as lower concentrations. contrastingly, igg titers (fig. b) were higher in treated cultures w.r.t. control in initial phase of the cultures at all the concentrations of tunicamycin. the per-cell productivity (fig. c) also showed a significant increase w.r.t control at all the concentrations of tunicamycin. however, the increased productivity due to tunicamycin was not sustained and levels become similar to control after day (data not shown). to prevent loss of viability due to tunicamycin, the effect of short-term treatment (ste) with tunicamycin was explored. cells treated with tunicamycin for hours were harvested (corresponding to day of cte cultures) and inoculated in fresh media. the ste-cultures showed improved viability and higher maximum vcd as compared to cte-cultures (fig. a) . the fold increase in igg titers was not sustained beyond day - in stecultures ( fig. d ) but significant increase in productivity was seen in the initial phase (fig. e) . further, the cells were adapted over continuous generations under ng/ml tunicamycin. the adapted cells had overall . -fold higher productivity, as compared to control (fig. f) , in a batch culture. to understand the molecular basis of increase in productivity, mrna expression level of key genes was determined. xbp s is a transcription factor involved in activation of chaperones (like grp , calreticulin) and apoptotic genes (such as chop). significant increase in the levels of calreticulin was seen on treatment with tunicamycin (fig. g) . both xbp s and grp were marginally induced when treated with ng/ml of tunicamycin in both cte-and ste-cultures (fig. h) , and significantly up-regulated when treated with ng/ml of tunicamycin. the chop mrna levels also increase with increasing tunicamycin concentrations, with levels in ste-cultures lower than cte-cultures (fig. h) . the results suggest that upr induction may be important to increase productivity in these cte/ste-cultures. note that, tunicamycin had no effect on the expression levels of igg heavy-chain, thus eliminating the involvement of igghc-mrna in increasing productivity (fig. i) . tunicamycin induced er-stress increased productivity in the initial phase of the culture and enhanced upr-mediated folding capacity can be attributed as one of the reasons for it. at lower concentrations of tunicamycin, a fine balance between optimum upr induction and apoptosis can be achieved, as seen in ng/ml tunicamycin ste-cultures. in summary, this study demonstrates an alternate approach to enhance productivity of current industrial cell lines. background chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells have been widely used for the large-scale production of biopharmaceuticals [ ] . to construct antibody-producing cho cells, exogenous genes encoding antibodies are usually integrated into unspecified regions of chromosomes (random integration). however, the chromatin structure differs depending on the location of the chromosomal region, which affects the expression level of the gene of interest [ ] . recently, gene-targeting methods that enable site-specific integration of expression vectors have been developed. however, the regions that are most efficient for exogenous gene expression have not been clarified. we previously constructed a cho genomic bacterial artificial chromosome (bac) library generated from the recombinant cho-dg cell line. it was expected to cover the entire cho genome five times. the chromosomes in cho-dg cells were aligned in decreasing order of size and assigned letters from a to t [ ] . three hundred and four bac clones were mapped to every chromosome of cho-dg . among the karyotypes of cho-dg , cho-k and primary chinese hamster cells, chromosomes a and b are considered as the sole paired chromosomes corresponding to chromosome in primary chinese hamster cells. hence, chromosomes a and b are considered to be stable [ ] . in this study, we constructed antibody-producing cells by using a gene-targeting method, which focused on the stable chromosomes. a gene map of chromosome was constructed by combining the bac-fluorescence in situ hybridization (fish)-based chromosome physical map and sequence data of mapped bac clones. the sequences of bac clones were searched by blast with ncbi and chogenome.org databases. three different regions on chromosomes a and b were selected based on cho genomic bac library sequences as target sites. cho-k cells were stably transfected by lipofection. the target sequences were broken using the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (crispr)/crispr-associated protein (cas ) system and humanized igg genes were integrated by non-homologous end joining recombination. transfection without using the crispr/ cas system was also performed. these cell pools were cultivated for six days with serum-supplemented medium, and their levels of antibody productivity were evaluated by elisa. copy number analysis was also performed using real-time pcr. results and discussion construction of gene map of chromosome : eighty-three bac clones were mapped onto chromosomes a and b (each clone contained - kb of the cho genome sequence). as a result of annotations of bac clone sequences, genes were mapped on chromosome . investigation of the differences of productivity among antibodyproducing cells that were constructed by chromosome targeting and/or random integration: cell growth was not affected by the gene targeting site. the specific production rates of antibodyproducing cell pools constructed by gene targeting of chromosome were higher than those of the cell pool constructed by random integration. all cell pools constructed by gene targeting showed lower copy numbers of heavy chain and light chain in genomic dna than those in the cell pool constructed by random integration, despite showing high productivity. our results indicate that high productivity of the cells constructed by gene targeting of chromosome does not depend on the increase of the antibody copy number, and that the environments around these target regions are suitable for exogenous gene expression. the approach of using gene targeting to chromosome may be promising for constructing antibodyproducing cells. retroviral vectors have been widely used as gene delivery tools in various biotechnology fields. however, the random integration feature of retroviral vectors seems to cause problems such as insertional mutagenesis and gene silencing. we previously demonstrated cre-mediated retroviral transgene insertion into a pre-determined site of the founder cells using integrasedefective retroviral vectors (idrvs), where a cre expression plasmid was transfected into the cells prior to retroviral transduction [ ] . recently, we reported novel hybrid idrvs (cre-idrvs) incorporating bioactive cre recombinase protein, and validated site-specific gene integration of an scfv-fc antibody expression unit into the chinese hamster ovary (cho) cell genome [ ] . we also developed an accumulative site-specific gene integration system, which enables repeated integration of multiple transgenes into a pre-determined locus of the cell genome [ ] . here, we attempted repeated integration of transgenes using cre-idrvs. a viral vector plasmid (pqmscv/hd[scfv-fc]) encoding reporter genes and an scfv-fc expression unit flanked with wild-type and mutant loxps was constructed for the production of idrvs. cre-idrvs were produced described previously [ ] . results and discussion figure a shows a schematic drawing of each round of targeted transgene integration using cre-idrvs harboring an scfv-fc expression unit. (fig. b) . genomic dna extracted from the cells were subjected to pcr using specific primer pairs α and β, and γ and δ to confirm site-specific integration. dna fragments with expected sizes were amplified in each cell clone (fig. c) . these results indicate that site-specific repeated integration was achieved using cre-idrvs. in contrast, scfv-fc productivity in cho/hd[scfv-fc]× cells was slightly decreased compared with that of cho/ne[scfv-fc]× (data not shown). although the reason remains unclear, repeat-induced gene silencing might occur due to tandem repeat structure of expression units. we reported improved recombinant antibody production using a production enhancer element [ ] . such a cis-regulatory element might be a feasible approach to enhance the productivity. we demonstrated site-specific repeated transgene integration into a pre-determined chromosomal locus using cre-idrvs for the production of an scfv-fc antibody. if lipids role in the cell have been reduced for a long time to cell membrane formation, it is now understood that lipids plays also a role into energy metabolism, vesicular transport, membrane structure, dynamics and signaling. however, the exact mechanism of how compositional complexity affects cell homeostasis remains unclear. thanks to recent advances in mass spectrometry, it is now possible to study a wide range of lipids, providing a better understanding of lipid homeostasis in high performance cell culture processes. the purpose of this work was to develop a robust lipidomics method applied to mammalian cell cultures in a three step method: extraction, separation and detection (fig. ). both matyash [ ] and folch [ ] extraction method were performed on our cells to reach the highest yield. two separation techniques were also tested: hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (hilic) and reverse phase chromatography. finally lipid classes' identification was achieved by tandem mass spectrometry analysis thanks to structure-specific fragmentation ions. the yield obtained with matyash extraction method was higher than with folch method for each lipid class tested. besides, matyash method presents also the advantage to be less toxic and suitable for high throughput analysis since the organic layer is above the aqueous layer. lipids separation by hilic is based on their polar head. since lipid classes are defined by polar head, the lipids are eluted class by class, making their identification easier. the separation of lipids by reverse phase was correct but the method is longer and we observed a massive carryover of triglycerides on the column. finally each lipid class was screened in ms/ms parent ion mode. target daughter ion was set according to the lipid class structure and fragmentation pattern. this detection technique enabled the identification of different lipids. to ensure the absolute quantification of the detected lipids and to guarantee comparable results between batches labeled internal standard were added prior to extraction. this method was optimized in a stepwise process to ensure a sensitive and selective measurement of the lipids. lipids were extracted by matyash method, separated by hilic and detected by tandem mass spectrometry. this method is suitable for both in process sample lipid analysis providing information on the cell lipid content, and for harvest samples, enabling to follow the lipid release during the different harvest steps. this non-targeted lipidomic quantitation method will enable us to better control lipid synthesis during biopharmaceutical fed batch production through clone selection, metabolomics studies and harvest development. background human mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (hmsc) can easily be isolated from e.g. bone marrow, fat tissue or umbilical cord blood and are therefore a central player in regenerative medicine, gene therapy and cell therapy [ ] [ ] [ ] . the necessary gene shuttle is mainly provided by viruses associated with diseases, like retrovirus or adenovirus [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . these possible pathogen viruses demand for high safety standards. also, they are prone to genomic alterations and there is the possibility of virus inactivation, triggered due to pre-existing immunity in the patient [ ] [ ] [ ] . in this context, the autographa californica multicapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (acmnpv) is a safe alternative. the virus replication is hostspecific for insects [ ] , but it is known since the mid- s, that a temporary transduction of mammalian cells is possible [ ] . some modifications of the virus increased the applicability in stem cells. pseudotyping the virus with the vesicular stomatitis glycoprotein (vsv-g) led to an expansion of the transducable cell [ , ] and the integration of the woodchuck hepatitis virus post-transcriptional regulatory element (wpre) prolonged the recombinant protein expression [ , ] . for achieving a baculovirus-induced differentiation of hmscs, the promotor and the expression strength of the recombinant protein are crucial factors. still, there are still few comparative promotor studies [ , ] . however, a successful virus uptake is the prerequisite for a successful protein expression. we therefore investigated factors significantly influencing the transduction process by applying design of experiments (s. fig. a ). the experimental design comprises a two level factorial screening, set-up using design expert v .for the transduction , c/cm were seeded in -well plates with dmem + % fcs and incubated overnight at °c, % co and humidified atmosphere. the recombinant baculovirus using an integrated ef α promoter to control gfp expression, described elsewhere [ ] , was diluted to the respective concentrations in the different surrounding fluids. after discarding the cultivation medium of the hmsc-tert, ml of virus containing solution was added to the cells. the following incubation was varied in duration before replacing the virus solution with growth medium and an incubation overnight. h post transduction (hpt) the cells were washed with pbs, trypsinized with μl trypsin/edta and incubated for min at °c. trypsination was then stopped applying μl soybean trypsin inhibitor and the cells were analyzed using flow cytometry. as shown in fig. a , the virus concentration and incubation time exert the highest influence on the transduction efficiency. obviously, a higher concentration of viral particles and longer incubation of cells with virus increases the probability for hits between cells and virus particles. additionally, the surrounding fluid can have a negative impact on the transduction. this is due to the interaction of medium components with the baculovirus. therefore, pbs containing ca + & mg + is recommended as surrounding fluid for transduction experiments. in fig. b , the transduction conditions resulting in the highest percentage of gfp+ cells are displayed: virus particles per cell (ppc) and an incubation time of h with hmsc-tert. the experiments show, that especially the virus concentration and the incubation time of cells with virus influence the transduction efficiency. based on the results of the screening, further optimization of the transduction conditions will be done using a face centered central composite design with pbs containing ca + & mg + as surrounding fluid and at an incubation temperature of °c. background breast cancer is the second main cause of cancer related deaths for women worldwide and among them the triple negative subtype (tnbc) represents a clinical challenge by being associated with high mortality and having no effective therapies against it [ ] , [ ] . accordingly, there is an urgent need to design new and more effective drugs to treat breast cancer. notch signaling is an evolutionary conserved cell-to-cell communication pathway crucial during embryonic and breast development and tissue homeostasis. this pathway is often hyper-activated by overexpression of notch receptors and/or its ligands in several types of cancers, such as breast cancer (tnbc included), where it contributes to its development, progression and drug resistance [ ] , [ ] , [ ] . our aim is to generate a function blocking antibody against the notch delta-like- (dll ) ligand with therapeutic efficacy against breast cancer. materials and methods dna of human dll full length extracellular domain (dll -ecd) and a truncated version, containing the minimal binding region to the notch receptor (dll -egf ), were cloned into pfuse-fc -igg , and expressed in hek e cells. recombinant proteins were purified from culture media by protein-a affinity and size exclusion chromatography. the human scfv phage display tomlinson i+j library was used to select specific scfv against peptides targeting dll binding regions to notch. the binding ability and specificity of the selected scfv clones was evaluated by scfv-on-phage elisa. our strategy allowed us to obtain mg of pure (> %) and stable dll -ecd-fc as confirmed by sds page and thermofluor assay. dll -egf -fc yield was very low and buffer screenings are ongoing to optimize protein stability. functional studies performed in human breast cancer mcf cells showed that both ligands are biologically active as they increased the expression of the notch-dependent genes hes- , hey-l and hey- . recombinant dll and peptides were used to select for monoclonal antibodies by phage display. after three rounds of panning with dll peptides we identified scfv positive clones, of which presented high affinity to dll -ecd-fc. currently we are performing more phage display selections to increase the number of positive clones. scfv with higher affinities will be reformatted into iggs and their ability to inhibit the notch pathway will be evaluated. the anti-oncogenic effects of anti-dll iggs will be assessed in breast cancer cells in viability/apoptosis, proliferation, migration, and invasion assays. an anti-dll igg with therapeutic efficacy against breast cancer will demonstrate that targeting dll could be one of the key factors for successfully targeting breast cancer. recombinant adeno-associated virus (raav) approaches have an outstanding reputation in gene therapy and are evaluated for cancer therapy [ ] . advantages include long-term gene expression, targeting of dividing and non-dividing cells, and low immunogenicity. established raav production utilizes triple transfection of adherent hek cells, which hardly meets product yield requirements for clinical applications. we transferred the aav production system to hek -f suspension cells. this process is scalable and uses serum-free media streamlining downstream procedures. after optimization of transfection efficiencies and shaker cultivations, we produced titers of × viral genomes per cell in a l bioreactor. the suspension adapted hek-freestyle -f cell line was used for the experiments in chemically defined animal component free media (hek-tf, hek-gm (xell ag), freestyle f (thermo fisher scientific)). samples for viable cell density and viabilities were taken daily and analyzed using an automated cell counting system (cedex, roche diagnostics). transient transfection of × cells/ml was carried out with polyethylenimine max in a : dna-pei ratio (w/w) with μg dna. three plasmids (pgoi, prepcap, phelper) were applied in a molar : : ratio (fig. a) . pretests were performed in orbital shaking tube spin bioreactors. for scale-up, batch processes were carried out in ml shake flasks as well as in l stirred bioreactors at % air saturation and ph . . transfection efficiencies and raav production were quantified by flow cytometry using a goi coding for a fluorescent protein and qpcr of genomic copies, respectively. by optimizing the dna amount for transfection of -f cells more than % of the cells were reproducibly transfected. batch cultivations in shaker flasks revealed that raav were produced in the first - h after transfection. figure b shows viable cell densities and viabilities in relation to the genomic titer. genomic titers were determined from raw cell extracts and up to copies/ml were repetitively achievable. a decrease in viability marked the decline in genomic copies per ml showing that a prolongation of the process e.g. by addition of a feed would probably not increase yield. in a first scale-up, the raav production was transferred to a l bioreactor (fig. c) . transfection efficiencies in bioreactors of up to % were comparable to that obtained in a simultaneous shaker flask experiment. transfection efficiencies were lower compared to prior experiments due to controlled conditions in the bioreactor. nonetheless the titer with up to × genomic copies per cell was elevated compared to that of shaker flasks. first experiments with -f cells in hek tf medium showed promising results of transferring raav production from the adherent system to suspension. after improvement of transfections by the adjustment of dna amounts in small scale experiments, aav production was analyzed in shaker flasks. the batch process showed an expected increase in cell density with low variability between biological replicates (fig. b) . the genomic titer increased according to the viable cell density until day four where a sudden drop started. this observation was made for aav productions in hek-tf, hek-gm and freestyle f medium. for optimal yields, we assume that a slight decrease in viability marks the point in time for harvest. from optimized protocols, a batch process in a l bioreactor was carried out. interestingly the bioreactor cultivation resulted in lower overall viable cell densities but in higher genomic copies per cell compared to shaker flasks (fig. c) . these results are comparable to already published data for suspension cells [ ] . subsequent optimization of the bioreactor protocol will lead to further increase in raav yield. genethon and pall have collaborated to assess pall's single-use icellis fixed-bed bioreactor for viral vector production. clinical use of gene therapies to treat formerly incurable genetic diseases is advancing rapidly. viral vectors are an important tool for introducing genes into target cells. many gene therapies have been developed using adherent cells in -dimensional flatware or roller bottles but using these technologies to reach commercial-scale production represents a significant challenge. the icellis bioreactor enables large-scale viral vector production by providing a -dimensional matrix for cell growth in a compact configuration (fig. ). up to m of surface area is available in a compact bioreactor measuring mm in diameter in a total volume of l with ph, do and temperature control. a key feature of the icellis bioreactor is that it scales by increasing the diameter of the fixed-bed while keeping the height constant with no change in aspect ratios. the height of the fixed-bed can be varied ( , and cm) as well as density of carrier packing ( gm/l or gm/l). the icellis system comes in two formats, the icellis nano bioreactor ( . - . m ) and the icellis bioreactor ( - m ). processes developed in the bench top icellis nano bioreactor can be directly transferred to the corresponding icellis system. the icellis nano bioreactor enables an efficient platform for process optimization. the genethon raav- process was transferred to an icellis nano bioreactor . m ( cm bed height, gm/l density) bioreactor using freestyle media. the initial icellis nano process was established as ( ) seed on day , ( ) transfect at day , ( ) harvest at day and yielded < x vp/cm (n= ). media exchange, cell density at transfection, pdna/cell ratio, and lysis method were then changed to determine the effect on productivity. the modified process was then scaled from . m to . m ( cm bed height, gm/l density) icellis nano bioreactor. -media: a media exchange at hours post transfection with dmem substituted for freestyle medium resulted in an x increase in specific productivity. (abstract p- ) . a schematic overview of raav production in hek cells with triple-transfection system. b viable cell densities (vcd), viabilities and genomic copies per ml (gc) of a raav production with -f batch cultivations in shaker flasks. genomic copies per ml refer to the titer determined in ml culture volume. error bars represent biological and technical duplicate measurements of samples. c viable cell densities and genomic copies per cell of a raav production with -f batch cultivation in a l bioreactor. for reasons of comparability between shaker and bioreactor data genomic copies are given per cell. error bars represent technical duplicate measurements of samples -cell density at transfection: cells were seeded at , cells/cm and reached , cells/cm at day which was determined to be the optimal cell density for transfection. -pdna/cell ratio: reducing pdna by % had no significant effect on productivity. -lysis: use of trion x- at . % with mm nacl at ph resulted in > % virus recovery compared to sampled carriers. -scaling: specific productivity was maintained as the system was scaled from . m to . m . -overall, an average yield of x vg/m was achieved. the icellis technology is being adopted widely for viral vector production. transferring a process to the icellis nano bioreactor can be easily achieved and once in place can be optimized to provide significant productivity increases and cost savings such as reduced pdna. the icellis nano bioreactor is an efficient bench-top system the results of which can be readily scaled to the icellis system. background tissuse multi-organ-chip (moc) platform contributes to the ongoing advancement in systemic substance testing in vitro. current in vitro and animal tests for drug development are failing to emulate the systemic organ complexity of the human body and, therefore, often do not accurately predict drug toxicity. especially, cardiotoxicity is one of the main reasons why new compounds are failing in clinical trials. therefore, we aimed to establish an autologous dynamic multiorgan-device integrating cardiomyocytes for substance testing. generic d monolayer and d suspension ipsc derived cardiomyocytes differentiation protocols were established. beating cardiomyocytes were first seen on day in monolayer as well as in spheroid culture. cardiomyocytes show up to % cardiac troponin t positive cells and % myosin heavy chain positive cells by flow cytometry (fig. g, h) . myosin ii heavy chain, α-actinin, myosin / , myosin and caldesmon expression was shown by immunohistochemistry ( fig. a-d) . due to the exclusion of a lactate enrichment of cardiomyocytes, cardiac fibroblasts are also expressed in the spheroids shown by vimentin staining. those cardiac fibroblasts lead to a physiological heterologous cell population similar to the human heart. beating spheroids were cultivated for days under dynamic culture conditions in the multi-organ-chip. the integrated on-chip micropump provides physiological-like pulsatile circulation at a microliter scale and leads to better nutrition and oxygen supply. the next significant step is to combine multiple autologous d organ equivalents in our multi-organ-chip using ipsc differentiation technology. differentiating all cell types from one ipsc donor is crucial to overcome source and rejection problems. combining our multi-organ-chip platform with ipsc differentiation technology will eventually lead to a personalized system for drug and substance testing. lab as a service -automated cell-based assays lena schober, moriz walter, andrea traube laboratory automation and biomanufacturing engineering, fraunhofer ipa, stuttgart, germany correspondence: lena schober (lena.schober@ipa.fraunhofer.de) bmc proceedings , (suppl ):p- background the use of cell-based assays in pharmaceutical industry and academic research is a growing trend that is a driving force to reduce costs for drug development. academic research is gaining information about intracellular targets or functional mechanisms through the variety of different assays. these benefits can be used in preclinical studies and furthermore costly late-stage drug failures may be reduced by the use of cell-based assays. the use of automated systems is also in great demand and will change the testing of substances and research activities. nevertheless, there are a lot of barriers at the moment limiting the successful application of automated systems in this field. by the lack of flexibility and the demand for skilled computer scientists & engineers just the two main aspects stated by experts shall be mentioned. our strong background on automated cell culture technologies and expertise, gained in several projects, let us rethink the overall process chain and overcome established principles. a new service orientated platform for the execution of cell-based assays that are commonly used will be introduced. the main idea is to give access to automated infrastructure for academic research or spin-offs which cannot afford the special infrastructure. nowadays it is known that the development of inhibitory antibodies by hemophiliac patients is closely related with immunogenic epitopes present in the coagulation factors. these proteins are produced in hamsters cells [ - ] which insert a different posttranslational modification profile when compared with the human profile. patients with high-titer/high-responding inhibitors must be treated with bypassing agents that can achieve hemostasis. activated factor vii (fviia) is an attractive candidate for hemostasis, independent of fviii/fix, making this coagulation factor an alternative for hemophilia patients with inhibitory antibodies. however recombinant factor vii is produced in bhk- cells (baby hamster kidney cells) and as well as the others coagulation factors, it may contain immunogenic epitopes [ - ] . in this context, becomes extremely important to produce recombinant proteins with complex posttranslational modifications in a cell line not yet used [ - ] . we have been using the sk-hep- human cell line for the production of recombinant fvii. to generate the recombinant cell line we have used a bicistronic lentiviral vector, -gfp, containing a fvii gene and the gfp selection marker gene. a master cell bank and a work cell bank were generated in gmp conditions. the rfvii analyses were made by elisa assay, western blot, gene expression quantification and biological activity using the prothrombin time (pt) assay. rfvii purification by affinity chromatography using viiselect (ge) column. after purification the rfvii was formulated and dry froze to be used in in vivo experiments. in static conditions sk-hep- cells showed, for a period of months, a stable fvii production with an average of , iu/ml of fvii, % of cell viability and % of cells expressing the gfp gene. after purification with viiselect column it was possible observe a recover of % of the purified protein with % degree of purity (fig. ) . this recombinant purified fvii is being used in in vivo experiments to determine the pharmacokinetics parameters and to evaluate the posttranslation modifications profile. in conclusion, this study reports the use of sk-hep- cell line for high-level production of recombinant factor vii. these cells have proven to be effective in the production of recombinant protein and can be used as a new platform for the production of recombinant proteins. fig. (abstract p- ) . a determination of protein yield of egfr (epidermal growth factor receptor) synthesized in a cho cecf system. analysis of egfr protein yield obtained in a various batches of cecf formatted reaction. cecf synthesis was performed in the presence of c leucine for radio labeling of target proteins. radio labeled proteins were precipitated using tca followed by scintillation measurement. b detection of radio labeled egfr by autoradiography. a no template control (ntc) was prepared containing no egfr dna template background emergence of stem cell-based regenerative medicine recently leaded to the necessity to reach a sustained production of such cells [ ] . hence, new bioreactors and carriers were designed for cell expansion. however, to meet this increasing demand, improvement of both quality and quantity of stem cells remains necessary. soft biocompatible microcarriers mimicking extracellular matrix in term of structure and stiffness should be of valuable utility as substrate stiffness strongly influence in vitro stem cell fate and differentiation [ , ] . our expertise in the field of microbeads design using jetcutting technology [ ] enabled us to engineer +/- μm alginate beads of various g/m monomer ratio. we used jetcutter (genialab gmbh) with μm nozzle at max speed rpm. alginate solutions with concentrations % to % were gelifyed in % cacl etoh % solution. alginates with estimated viscosity (@ %) from to mpa were tested. a further surface treatment with gelatine ( , %, %) and poly-l-lysine ( , %) was carried out to reach an optimal cell anchoring of human adiposederived mesenchymal stem cells (atcc-psc- - ) in mesempro rs medium (gibco). jetcutter technology allowed us to obtain alginate microcarriers with a good homogeneity in size around μm and sphericity comparable to commercial carriers (table ) . best adhesion of human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells was obtained on , % gelatine coated alginate carriers (fig. ) . we observed limited apoptosis and human adipose-derived mesenchymal cells stemness was conserved after days in culture (data not shown). cellular bioassays developed with functionally immortalized cell lines aileen bleisch , aleksandra velkova , tom wahlicht , dagmar wirth , tobias may inscreenex gmbh, braunschweig, germany; msys, helmholtz centre for infection research, braunschweig, germany; greiner bio-one gmbh, frickenhausen, germany bmc proceedings , (suppl ):p- background a major challenge of current research is the limited availability of physiologically relevant cells [ ] . thus the development of relevant cellular bioassays that are robust, reproducible and scalable is hindered. to overcome current limitations we developed an immortalization strategy allowing the efficient and reproducible establishment of novel cell lines showing an in vivo-like phenotype. the main feature of our ci-screen technology is the ability to combine the advantage of cell linesthe unlimited cell supplywith the advantage of primary cellsthe physiological relevance. using this technology we have immortalized, amongst others, a human osteoblast cell line (ci-huob) [ ] . in the present study, the in vivo-like phenotype and functionality of the novel ci-huob was examined. therefore, ci-huob cells were used to develop a d cell culture model by using the magnetic d bioprinting technology (nano d biosciences, houston, tx, usa) [ ] . the ci-huob cell line was recently described and cultivated in huob maintenance medium (inscreenex, germany). for spheroid creation ci-huobs were grown in a monolayer, magnetized by adding a magnetic nanoparticle assembly (nanoshuttle, ns, nano d biosciences, houston, tx, usa) at a concentration of μl ns/cm growth area. after an overnight incubation magnetized ci-huob were detached and seeded into cellstar® cell-repellent -well plates (greiner bio-one, frickenhausen, germany). with the help of mild magnetic forces cells were printed into spheroids within h. these consist of . - . cells and were cultured for a period of up to days. the cell viability was analyzed by a propidium iodide (pi) and calcein am staining. to improve spheroid functionality spheroids were cultivated with huob differentiation medium (inscreenex, germany). "mini bone" tissue functionality and thus mineralization was analyzed by an alkaline phosphatase (alkaline phosphatase activity) and an alizarin red s staining (ca + deposits). the combination of ci-huob cells with the magnetic d bioprinting technology enabled the establishment of reproducible and consistent d spheroids. single spheroids per well were formed independent of the amount of cells ( . - . cells) (fig. a) . formed spheroids were stable for a culture period of up to days (fig. b) . neither cell death nor cell proliferation were observed in the bioprinted spheroids which is indicated by the stable size of the spheroids throughout the cultivation (fig. c) . after treatment with a differentiation stimulus the d bioprinted spheroids became fully functional "mini bones". this was highlighted by the alkaline phosphatase activity and the ca + deposits within the d bioprinted spheroids (fig. d,e) . taken together, these results demonstrated that the functional immortalization technology provides physiologically relevant cells in sufficient numbers and that the magnetic d bioprinting technology enabled a fast, consistent cell aggregation and the formation of stable uniform spheroids. importantly, these immortalized cells are capable to differentiate when a suitable stimulus is provided. for differentiation into mini bones, d spheroid cultivation and additional stimulation by small molecules are required. the combination of physiologically relevant cell systems with three dimensional culturing will help to generate in vitro test systems which closely resemble the in vivo physiology and thereby supporting future drug discovery approaches. fig. (abstract p- ) . characterization of spheroid "mini bones". a different number ( . - . cells) of ci-huob cells were printed into spheroids. b . ci-huobs were printed into spheroids and cultivated for indicated time points. c for analyzing spheroid sizes, pictures were taken and quantified by imagej. (d/e) . ci-huob cells were printed into spheroids and cultivated with (huob differentiation medium) or without a differentiation stimulus for two weeks. afterwards, bioprinted spheroids were sectioned by a cryo microtome and d stained for ca + deposits (alizarin red s) or e stained for alkaline phosphatase activity crispr/cas , a novel genomic tool to knock down microrna in vitro and in vivo degrontagged dcas /cpf effectors for multi-directional drug-inducible control of synthetic gene regulation assessing the variability of an innovator molecule n-glycan profile correct primary structure assessment and extensive glyco-profiling of cetuximab by a combination of intact, middle-up, middle-down and bottom-up esi and maldi mass spectrometry techniques d-dige screening of high productive cho cells under glucoselimitation -basic changes in the proteome equipment and hints for epigenetic effects dependence on glucose limitation of the pco influences on cho cell growth, metabolism and igg 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from phage display libraries towards the development of a surface plasmon resonance assay to evaluate the glycosylation pattern of monoclonal antibodies using the extracellular domains of cd a and cd biotinylation of the fc gamma receptor ectodomains by mammalian cell co-transfection: application to the development of a surface plasmon resonance-based assay ambr™ mini-bioreactor as a high-throughput tool for culture process development to accelerate transfer to stainless steel manufacturing scale: comparability study from process performance to product quality attributes maximizing binding capacity for protein a chromatography protein glycosylation and its role in protein folding afucosylated antibodies increase activation of fcγriiia-dependent signaling components to intensify processes promoting adcc sialic acids and other nonulosonic acids production of antibody in insect cells suitability and perspectives on using recombinant insect cells for the production of virus-like particles cloning of cdna and characterization of anti-rnase a monoclonal antibody a production of functional antibody fab fragment by recombinant insect cells optimization of hek- s cell cultures for the production of adenoviral vectors in bioreactors using on-line our measurements enhancing heterologous protein expression and secretion in hek cells by means of combination of cmv promoter and ifnα signal peptide hek cell culture media study towards bioprocess optimization: animal derived component free and animal derived component containing platforms comparison of control strategies for fed-batch culture of hybridoma cells based on on-line monitoring of oxygen uptake rate, optical cell density and glucose concentration continuous bioprocessing: the real thing this time? mabs white paper on continuous bioprocessing fda perspective on continuous manufacturing. ifpac annu. meet screening and assessment of performance and molecule quality attributes of industrial cell lines across different fed-batch systems amanullah: quantitative modeling of viable cell density, cell size, intracellular conductivity, and membrane capacitance in batch and fed-batch cho processes using dielectric spectroscopy optimal and consistent protein glycosylation in mammcalian cell culture journal of laboratory automation. designs and concept-reliance of a fully automated high content screening platform mini-bioreactor as a highthroughput tool for culture process development to accelerate transfer to stainless steel manufacturing scale: comparability study from process performance to product quality attributes perfusion media development using cell settling in automated cell culture system model-based design of process strategies for cell culture bioprocesses: state of the art and new perspectives model-based strategy for cell culture seed train layout verified at lab scale hyperosmotic stimulus study discloses benefits in atp supply and reveals mirna/mrna targets to improve recombinant protein 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, , guglielmo rosignoli generation of stable chinese hamster ovary pools yielding antibody titers of up to . g/l using the piggybac transposon system comparison of three transposons for the generation of highly productive recombinant cho cell pools and cell lines effects of ammonia and lactate on hybridoma growth, metabolism, and antibody production lactate and glucose concomitant consumption as a self-regulated ph detoxification mechanism in hek cell cultures flux balance analysis of cho cells before and after a metabolic switch from lactate production to consumption reducing recon for steady-state flux analysis of hek cell culture trastuzumab -mechanism of action and use in clinical practice hek cell culture media study towards bioprocess optimization: animal derived component free and animal derived component containing platforms enhancing heterologous protein expression and secretion in hek cells by means of combination of cmv promoter and ifnα signal peptide production of 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th annual and international meeting of the japanese association for animal cell technology humanization strategies for an anti-idiotypic antibody mimicking hiv-i gp antibody humanization by molecular dynamics simulations-in-silico guided selection of critical backmutations maxquant enables high peptide identification rates, individualized p.p.b.-range mass accuracies and proteome-wide protein quantification the perseus computational platform for comprehensive analysis of (prote)omics data hoffrogge: label-free protein quantification of sodium butyrate treated cho cells by esi-uhr-tof-ms the art of cho cell engineering: a comprehensive retrospect and future perspectives gs system for increased expression of difficult-to-express proteins the netherlands correspondence: maurice van der heijden (heijden@proteonic.nl) bmc proceedings increased recombinant protein production owing to expanded opportunities for vector integration in high chromosome number chinese hamster ovary cells ires-mediated translation of membrane proteins and glycoproteins in eukaryotic cell-free systems cell-free protein expression based on extracts from cho cells comparison of cell-based vs. cell-free mammalian systems for the production of a recombinant human bone morphogenic growth factor. eng dual-responsive magnetic core-shell nanoparticles for nonviral gene delivery and cell separation pdmaema-grafted core-shell-corona particles for nonviral gene delivery and magnetic cell separation influence of polyplex formation on the performance of starshaped polycationic transfection agents for mammalian cells systematic study of a library of pdmaema-based, superparamagnetic nano-stars for the transfection of cho-k cells systems biology of unfolded protein response in recombinant cho cells dynamics of unfolded protein response in recombinant cho cells cells were transfected with np@(pdmaema ) (n/p ), separated h post transfection (t = ) by magnetically-assisted cell sorting and placed into separated cultures. the bars represent the overall transfection efficiency. distribution of low (light green), middle (green), and high (dark green) producers within the egfp-expressing cell fraction. data represent one experiment carried out in duplicate, with random experimental error shown. d correlogram between the molecular characteristics of the nano-stars (core diameter, arm density, arm length, number of monomeric units per nano-star), the physicochemical properties of the corresponding polyplexes (hydrodynamic radius, zeta potential), the transfection conditions (n/p ratio, amount of polymer), and the cellular reactions (transfection efficiency, magnetism, viability) production of recombinant protein therapeutics in cultivated mammalian cells position effects on eukaryotic gene expression bacterial artificial chromosome library for genome-wide analysis of chinese hamster ovary cells construction of bac-based physical map and analysis of chromosome rearrangement in chinese hamster ovary cell lines suguru imanishi , akira ito , masamichi kamihira , department of chemical engineering cre recombinase-mediated sitespecific modification of a cellular genome using an integrasedefective retroviral vector targeted transgene insertion into the cho cell genome using cre recombinase-incorporating integrase-defective retroviral vectors an accumulative site-specific gene integration system using cre recombinase-mediated cassette exchange improved recombinant antibody production by cho cells using a production enhancer dna element with repeated transgene integration at a predetermined chromosomal site lipid extraction by methyl-tert-butyl ether for high-throughput lipidomics a simple method for the isolation and purification of total lipids from animal tissues using baculovirus as a gene shuttle in hmsc: optimization of transduction efficacy gundula sprick clinical applications of mesenchymal stem cells concise review: mesenchymal stem cell treatment of the 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cells and continuous harvest of vector from the culture media for gmp fix and flt clinical vector development of a cost-efficient scalable production process for raav- based gene therapy by transfection of hek- cells simon arias , mustapha hohoud , roel lievrouw , fabien moncaubeig b- brussels, belgium; généthon, rue de l'internationale cell-free systems based on cho cell lysates: optimization strategies, synthesis of "difficult-to-express" proteins and future perspectives cell-free protein expression based on extracts from cho cells comparison of cell-based vs. cell-free mammalian systems for the production of a recombinant human bone morphogenic growth factor ires-mediated translation of membrane proteins and glycoproteins in production of recombinant factor vii in sk-hep- human cell line zip - , brazil; department of clinical, toxicological and food science analysis, faculty of pharmaceutical sciences of ribeirão preto human cell lines for the production of recombinant proteins: on the horizon production of recombinant protein therapeutics in cultivated mammalian cells recombinant protein therapeutics from cho cells - years and counting establishment of a cell line expressing recombinant factor vii and its subsequent conversion to active form fviia through hepsin by genetic engineering method expression and fast preparation of biologically active recombinant human coagulation factor vii in cho-k cells implications of the presence of n-glycolylneuraminic acid in recombinant therapeutic glycoproteins uniquely human evolution of sialic acid genetics and biology production platforms for biotherapeutic glycoproteins. occurrence, impact, and challenges of non-human sialylation human cells: new platform for recombinant therapeutic protein production therapeutic glycoprotein production in mammalian cells masthering industrialization of cell therapy products tissue cells feel and respond to the stiffness of their substrate matrix elasticity directs stem cell lineage specification continuous cider fermentation with co-immobilized yeast and leuconostoc oenos cells eternity and functionality -rational access to physiologically relevant cell lines generation and characterization of two immortalized human osteoblastic cell lines useful for epigenetic studies biocompatibility of nanoshuttletm and the magnetic field in magnetic d bioprinting publisher's note springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations we accept pre-submission inquiries • our selector tool helps you to find the most relevant journal • we provide round the clock customer support • convenient online submission • thorough peer review • inclusion in pubmed and all major indexing services • maximum visibility for your research submit your manuscript at www submit your next manuscript to biomed central and we will help you at every step authors thankfully acknowledge the biotechnology and biological sciences research council for funding this research work. sns thanks esact for providing her with the opportunity to present her work at the meeting. we would like to thank moritz frei for his support for the generation of the ngs transcriptomics data. many thanks to valentine chevallier for her precious advices, to stefanos grammatikos for his support and to the whole upstream process sciences team. we thank david bruehlmann and thomas vuillemin from merck (vevey, switzerland) for providing the igg glycan variants and the -ab-uplc glycan data. polyplus-transfection would like to thank généthon for their kindly provided data.acknowledgements asmita mukerji, reetesh pm, sasi kumar k, pilot plant team acknowledgment to cedric allier from cea leti, grenoble, france. we would like to thank a. schemel and a. ehrlich for technical assistance. the authors would like to mention that this research was supported by the fi-dgr ( ) from spanish government and the project was led by prof. jordi joan cairó badillo. the authors want to thank the biotech process sciences team at merck in corsier-sur-vevey for their support and also the members of the morbidelli group at eth zürich for their input and collaboration. authors would like to thank dr. benjamin youn in manufacturing science and technology (msat) at biomarin for his help on coding the excel macro program for ambr , and dr. donald l. traul from tap biosystems (now part of the sartorius stedim biotech group) for his assistance on ambr operations. thanks to the bioreactor team of dustin davis, amer al-lozi, and jana mahadevan. we organic vaccines tm and the nih, who kindly provided to univercells. we thank polymun scientific immunbiologische forschung gmbh for providing the antibodies igm , igm and igm as a kind gift. this allison kurz and gian andrea signorell, genedata ag, basel, switzerland allison kurz, gian andrea signorell, genedata, basel, switzerland. allison kurz, gian andrea signorell, genedata ag high glucose concentration and low specific cell growth rate improve specific r-tpa productivity in chemostat culture of cho acknowledgements r. boraston for photographs in fig. . we acknowledge atum for their contributions to vector design and construction. austrian bmwfw, bmvit, sfg, standortagentur tirol, government of lower austria and business agency vienna through the austrian ffg-comet-k . this research is supported by sfi grant /ia/ . financial support of the austrian science fund (fwf; grant number p ) is gratefully acknowledged. we would like to thank the australian institute for bioengineering and nanotechnology, university of queensland-brisbane, australia (aibn) for providing the cho clones. this research is partially supported by the developing key technologies for discovering and manufacturing pharmaceuticals used for next-generation treatments and diagnoses both from meti and amed, japan. this work was supported in part by grants for developing key technologies for discovering and manufacturing pharmaceuticals used for next-generation treatment and diagnoses, both from the ministry of economy, trade and industry (meti), japan and from the japan agency for medical research and developments (amed). many thanks stefanos grammatikos for his support and to the whole upstream process sciences team. the authors thank the hessen state ministry of higher education, research and the arts within the hessen initiative for scientific and economic excellence (loewe program) for the financial support. the authors thank xell ag, bielefeld, for providing hek serum-free media (hek gm and hek tf) and for fruitful discussions. the authors would like to thank dana wenzel for cho lysate preparation (fraunhofer izi, potsdam-golm, germany). this work is supported by the european regional development fund (efre) and the german ministry of education and research (bmbf, no. b a). the authors acknowledge são paulo research foundation -fapesp ( / - ), centro de pesquisa, inovação e difusão (cepid), and national institute of science and technology in stem cell and cell therapy -inctc for financial support. this work was supported by grants from the niedersächsisches ministerium für wissenschaft und kultur ( ) and the german ministry for economic affairs and energy (igf n). the infrastructure which was modularly built up, consists of automated liquid handling robots, plate and tube handling robots as well as incubators, refrigerator and analysis systems as for example an imaging system. the aim is to address the need on reproducibility and reliability of results and to offer access to a maximal controlled and automated environment. with the help of a web-based configurator assay selection as well as parameterization of the assays can be done in an easy way. after the order process, test items can be shipped to the lab. assays will be executed on the fully automated platform. by capturing in process data as well as environmental conditions, a real complete data set is leading to comprehensively results. as soon as results are available during the process, the view and analysing can be done in a secure cloud. the service can be used for single experiments in low throughput applications and is therefore a benefit for labs which cannot afford automated infrastructure or the staff for the maintenance for such platforms. extensive monitoring and data capturing during the run leads to a gapless data trail and the possibility of detailed result analysis. due to automated processing the reproducibility is increased associated with direct reduction of costs and time. the centralized service paired with specific know-how allows up-scaling of processes at any time. the web-based interface provides a flexible guidance for the user and the online order gives / access on the infrastructure, leading to a fast reliable result generation. furthermore the secure interaction with additional services e.g. other specific data analysis tool is possible. this dynamic access to automation offers high flexibility for low throughput experiments and will push high quality research and drug development in early stage. development of alternative animal cell technology platforms: cho based cell-free protein synthesis systems for the production of "difficult-to-express" proteins lena thoring , background nowadays, animal cell technologies are commonly used for a broad range of medical and pharmaceutical applications. one main topic of these technologies is the production of proteins used for therapeutical purposes. these in vivo production processes are often time consuming and limited in production of so called "difficult-to-express" proteins including the pharmaceutical relevant class of membrane proteins. to overcome these issues, novel cell-free protein synthesis platforms were developed based on the industrial working horse cho cells [ ] . cell lysates provide a basis for this technology by including all components of the translational machinery and enabling protein production within a few hours. microsomal structures present in cho cell lysates enable posttranslational modification of target proteins and insertion of membrane proteins into lipid bilayer. in this study a cell-free protein synthesis platform was developed based on a combination of cho cell lysates and a continuous exchange reaction format. the continuous exchange reactor consists of a twochamber system, a reaction and a feeding chamber, separated by a semipermeable membrane. due to concentration gradients, energy components can diffuse to the reaction chamber, while inhibitory byproducts are continuously removed. different classes of proteins were selected to evaluate the quality of the cho cecf system including a transmembrane receptor, a single chain variable fragment and an ion channel. cell-free protein synthesis was performed in the presence of c leucine for radio labeling of synthesized proteins. protein yield was quantified by tca precipitation of radio labeled proteins followed by scintillation measurement and molecular mass was detected by autoradiography. posttranslational modifications and activities of proteins were estimated by kinase assays, elisa, endoglycosidase treatment and electrophysiological measurements. the demonstrated results showed a protein production of up to around g/l while detecting correct molecular weights by autoradiography. analysis of the productivity using different lysate batches by the production of the membrane protein egfr revealed only minimal batch-to-batch variations (fig. a) . posttranslational modifications of proteins, including phosphorylation and glycosylation, were detected using western blot and autoradiography (fig. b) . evaluation of localization of membrane embedded eyfp fusion proteins by confocal laser scanning microscopy resulted in the detection of proteins in the microsomal fraction of cho cell lysate. produced single chain variable fragments showed binding specificity in elisa experiments. the activity of synthesized ion channels was underlined by electrophysiological measurements and detected single channel activities. a cell-free system based on cho cell lysates for high yield production of proteins was developed that provides a platform for efficient production of "difficult-to-express" proteins. the combination of a cho lysate based cell-free system and a continuous exchange cell-free system leads to be a highly efficient production system for various classes of "difficult-to-express" proteins. this approach opens up a fast and cost-effective process pipeline for the production of "difficult-to-express" proteins and shows a high potential for industrial applications including screening technologies, protein structure determination and just-in-time protein production processes. key: cord- -umvi veu authors: subramanian, subbaya; steer, clifford j. title: special issue: microrna regulation in health and disease date: - - journal: genes (basel) doi: . /genes sha: doc_id: cord_uid: umvi veu our understanding of non-coding rna has significantly changed based on recent advances in genomics and molecular biology, and their role is recognized to include far more than a link between the sequence of dna and synthesized proteins [...]. our understanding of non-coding rna has significantly changed based on recent advances in genomics and molecular biology, and their role is recognized to include far more than a link between the sequence of dna and synthesized proteins. micrornas (mirnas) are small regulatory rnas that play a crucial role in posttranscriptional gene regulation. greater than mirnas have been identified and catalogued in humans and many of them are conserved in other species [ ] . mirnas are implicated in almost every facet of fundamental cellular functions including development, senescence and disease. the past decade has experienced a remarkable increase in the understanding of mirna biogenesis, their target genes, mirna biomarkers and potential therapeutics for a growing number of disease conditions. rna-based markers and therapeutics have a potentially significant clinical impact, and many of the mirna-based therapies are at various stages of application and human clinical trial [ ] . as background, non-coding rnas are divided into (i) transcription rnas (including both trna and rrna); (ii) small rnas, which are further subdivided into sirnas, mirnas, snornas, and snrnas; and (iii) most recently, long non-coding rnas, which are now know to transcribe short peptides [ ] . micrornas are single-stranded non-coding rnas that are typically - nucleotides (nts) in length and are best known for their role in the post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression. they are the most abundant class of small endogenous non-protein coding rnas, and make up one of the largest well-conserved gene families found among viruses, plants and animals. the majority of mirna sequences in humans are typically transcribed by introns of non-coding and coding transcripts, with few transcribed by exonic regions. microrna genes are typically transcribed by polymerase ii or iii and generate primary mirnas (pri-mirnas), which can contain sequences for multiple mirnas and be hundreds of nts in length. these structures are then processed and cleaved by drosha-dgcr complex, resulting in the formation of a hairpin-shaped stem-loop structure, which is known as the precursor mirna (pre-mirna) and typically around nts in length. the pre-mirna is exported outside of the nucleus primarily by exportin . further processing takes place in the cytoplasm by dicer -tarbp , which is an rnase iii enzyme, resulting in a two-stranded duplex of mirna-mirna*. typically, it is - nt long, with one strand designated the guide strand and the other as the passenger strand. finally, the guide strand is incorporated into the rna-induced silencing complex (risc), which is a large multiprotein mirna ribonucleoprotein complex that is the effector compound in modulating target gene transcription. alternative pathways have been described that are drosha-dgcr independent as well as dicer-independent, and are likely to greatly advance our understanding of mirna biogenesis and involvement in conditions of health and disease. regulatory interactions between mirna and other noncoding rnas, including long noncoding rnas (lncrna), and circular rna (circrna) are now known to determine the cellular functional status and phenotype. micrornas use seed sequences ( - bases long) to bind microrna response elements (mres) located on their interacting partners, primarily at the 'utr of coding transcripts [ ] . however, it is possible that the frequency of mres in the entire transcriptome of a given cell contributes to the dynamic gene regulatory process by acting as a sponge for mature mirnas, thus regulating their functional availability. thus, the coding and noncoding transcripts sharing common mre sites compete with each other and define the gene expression profile of a given cell. these competing transcripts are collectively called competing endogenous rnas [ ] . thus, gene expression regulation is a complex process involving the dynamic interactions between mirna-mrna-lncrna-circrna. this complexity is increased multifold when these interacting partners are exchanged between cells via extracellular vesicles. recognizing this intricate system will significantly aid in our understanding of the health and disease process. we are beginning to study disease pathogenesis at the cellular, organ, and whole body levels; and the gut microbiota is increasingly recognized as a crucial player [ ] . it is time to acknowledge each of these players as they take center stage in maintaining homeostasis and the normal physiological functioning of an organism. there are still significant gaps in understanding the complex regulatory mechanisms of mirnas; however, the field is advancing rapidly. further, it has been shown that a number of nuclear receptors are involved in the transcriptional regulation of mirna expression, including the small heterodimer partner (shp) and farnesoid x receptor (fxr). in general, mirnas are detected as (i) extracellular circulating mirna bound to different lipoproteins; (ii) part of a non-membrane ribonucleoprotein complex associated with argonaut proteins; and (iii) contained in exosomes as extracellular vesicles, where they act as nano-sized transporters involved in the communication between neighboring cells. the recent finding that mirnas are also transported from one cell to another via tunneling nanotubes underscores their importance in maintaining communication among all cell types, including those associated with cancer. this special issue of genes, entitled "microrna regulation in health and disease" consists of a series of articles spanning the clinical realm from colorectal cancer to pulmonary fibrosis. however, we begin with a research article by liu et al. who reported for the first time the existence of complemented palindromic small rnas (cpsrnas) from sars coronavirus, and propose that cpsrnas and palindromic small rnas (psrnas) constitute a novel class of small rnas [ ] . such a discovery of cpsrnas could pave a way to find novel markers for pathogen detection and to reveal the mechanisms underlying infection or pathogenesis from a different perspective. in a study titled, "a two-cohort rna-seq study reveals changes in endometrial and blood mirnome in fertile and infertile women", rekker et al. compared mid-secretory phase samples between fertile and infertile women [ ] . the study revealed differentially expressed mirnas from the endometrium and one from blood samples. among the novel mirnas, chr _ was validated and showed upregulation in the mid-secretory endometrium. in addition to the novel findings, the authors confirmed the involvement of mir- and mir- family members in mid-secretory endometrial functions. hueso et al. elegantly showed in their article that an exonic switch regulates the differential accession of micrornas to the cd transcript in atherosclerosis progression [ ] . further, they proposed a new mechanism of mirna action, linked to a cryptic splicing site in the target-host gene, that would regulate the differential accession of mirnas to their cognate binding sites. li et al. studied the role of mirna- a- p in inhibiting c c myogenesis via targeting pik r and modulating pi k/akt signaling [ ] . their results showed that mir- a- p was elevated in aged muscles and dexamethasone (dex)-treated myotubes. the up-regulation of mir- a- p significantly reduced the diameters of myotubes accompanied by increased levels of muscular atrophy genes and decreased pi k/akt activities. finally, mir- a- p was demonstrated to directly bind to the '-utr of pik r , thus, repressing pi k/akt signaling. the microbiome appears to interact and perhaps influence an unlimited number of metabolic processes in health and disease. in their article, yuan et al. postulate that the altered nutrient composition and mirna expression in colorectal cancer (crc) microenvironment selectively exerts pressure on the surrounding microbiota, leading to alterations in its composition [ ] . further, the authors present a detailed overview of the current understanding of the role of mirnas in mediating host-microbiota interactions in crc. "single nucleotide polymorphisms in mir contribute to protection against non-hodgkin lymphoma (nhl) in caucasian populations" by bradshaw et al. is first to report a correlation between mirsnps in mir- and a reduced risk of nhl in caucasians [ ] . further, it is supported by significant snps in high linkage disequilibrium (ld) in a large european nhl genome-wide association study (gwas) meta-analysis. axmann et al. compared the mirna profiles in serum and lipoprotein particles of healthy individuals with those of patients with uremia [ ] . they observed a significant increase in levels of cellular mirna level using reconstituted high-density lipoprotein (hdl) particles artificially loaded with mirna, whereas incubation with native hdl particles yielded no measurable effect. based on the results, the authors concluded that there was no relevant effect of lipoprotein-particle-mediated mirna-transfer under in vivo conditions though the mirna profile of lipoprotein particles can be used as a diagnostic marker. mullenbrock et al., carried out an elegant systems analysis transcriptomic and proteomic study on the potential role of mirnas in pulmonary fibrosis [ ] . they specifically targeted fibroblasts and myofibroblasts as the key effector cells responsible for the excessive extracellular matrix (ecm) deposition and fibrosis progression in both idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (ipf) and systemic sclerosis (ssc) patient lungs. the comprehensive analyses of mrna, mirna, and matrisome proteomic profiles in ipf and ssc lung fibroblasts revealed robust fibrotic signatures at both the gene and protein expression levels and identified novel fibrogenesis-associated mirnas whose aberrant downregulation in disease fibroblasts likely contributes to their fibrotic and ecm gene expression. somatostatin (sst) analogues were used to control the proliferation and symptoms of neuroendocrine tumors (nets) in an article by døssing et al., entitled "somatostatin analogue treatment primarily induce mirna expression changes and up-regulates growth inhibitory mir- and mir- a in neuroendocrine cells" [ ] . two mirnas which were highly induced by sst analogues, mir- and mir- a, were shown to inhibit the proliferation of nci-h and cndt cells. sst analogues also produced a general up-regulation of the let- family members. sst analogues controlled and induced distinct mirna expression patterns among which mir- and mir- a both have growth inhibitory properties. as fda-approved small rna drugs begin to enter the arena of clinical medicine, it is critical to expand both preclinical and clinical research studies for mirnas. a growing number of reports suggest a significant utility of mirnas as biomarkers for pathogenic conditions, modulators of drug resistance, and/or as drugs for medical intervention in almost all human health conditions. the pleiotropic nature of this class of nonprotein-coding rnas makes them particularly attractive drug targets for diseases with a multifactorial origin and few, if any, available treatments. the landscape of both diagnostic and interventional medicine will arguably continue to evolve as candidate mirnas pass successfully through phase and clinical trials. in this special issue of genes, we provide a series of articles that highlight micrornas as diagnostic, predictive and therapeutic agents for human disease. the development of bioinformatics programs to identify mirna-binding sites in target genes and their corresponding biological pathways, along with an expanding platform of in vitro and in vivo preclinical research models, has propelled mirnas into clinical medicine. the first sirna human trial was conducted in and, in , the first sirna drug was approved, paving the way for a class of mirna transcripts whose active investigation began only a little more than years ago. the future of human mirna clinical trials is absolutely guaranteed and that time has arrived. the development of mirna diagnostics and therapeutics is an exciting and potentially new frontier in treating diseases for which few treatment options exist. we believe and hope that this special issue of genes will be an important resource for a wide variety of audiences, including students at all levels, and established investigators who are interested in contributing to the remarkable and ever-expanding field of micrornas in health and disease. the authors declare no conflicts of interest. the potential for microrna therapeutics and clinical research a network of noncoding regulatory rnas acts in the mammalian brain the multilayered complexity of cerna crosstalk and competition cerna cross-talk in cancer: when ce-bling rivalries go awry microrna-mediated tumor-microbiota metabolic interactions in colorectal cancer velthut-meikas, a. a two-cohort rna-seq study reveals changes in endometrial and blood mirnome in fertile and infertile women an exonic switch regulates differential accession of micrornas to the cd transcript in atherosclerosis progression microrna- a- p inhibited c c myogenesis via targeting pik r and modulating the pi k/akt signaling host-microrna-microbiota interactions in colorectal cancer single nucleotide polymorphisms in mir contribute to protection against non-hodgkin lymphoma (nhl) in caucasian populations serum and lipoprotein particle mirna profile in uremia patients systems analysis of transcriptomic and proteomic profiles identifies novel regulation of fibrotic programs by mirnas in pulmonary fibrosis fibroblasts somatostatin analogue treatment primarily induce mirna expression changes and up-regulates growth inhibitory mir- and mir- a in neuroendocrine cells key: cord- -bvtchcbt authors: domingo-espín, joan; unzueta, ugutz; saccardo, paolo; rodríguez-carmona, escarlata; corchero, josé luís; vázquez, esther; ferrer-miralles, neus title: engineered biological entities for drug delivery and gene therapy: protein nanoparticles date: - - journal: prog mol biol transl sci doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: bvtchcbt the development of genetic engineering techniques has speeded up the growth of the biotechnological industry, resulting in a significant increase in the number of recombinant protein products on the market. the deep knowledge of protein function, structure, biological interactions, and the possibility to design new polypeptides with desired biological activities have been the main factors involved in the increase of intensive research and preclinical and clinical approaches. consequently, new biological entities with added value for innovative medicines such as increased stability, improved targeting, and reduced toxicity, among others have been obtained. proteins are complex nanoparticles with sizes ranging from a few nanometers to a few hundred nanometers when complex supramolecular interactions occur, as for example, in viral capsids. however, even though protein production is a delicate process that imposes the use of sophisticated analytical methods and negative secondary effects have been detected in some cases as immune and inflammatory reactions, the great potential of biodegradable and tunable protein nanoparticles indicates that protein-based biotechnological products are expected to increase in the years to come. the development of genetic engineering techniques has speeded up the growth of the biotechnological industry, resulting in a significant increase in the number of recombinant protein products on the market. the deep knowledge of protein function, structure, biological interactions, and the possibility to design new polypeptides with desired biological activities have been the main factors involved in the increase of intensive research and preclinical and clinical approaches. consequently, new biological entities with added value for innovative medicines such as increased stability, improved targeting, and reduced toxicity, among others have been obtained. proteins are complex nanoparticles with sizes ranging from a few nanometers to a few hundred nanometers when complex supramolecular interactions occur, as for example, in viral capsids. however, even though protein production is a delicate process that imposes the use of sophisticated analytical methods and negative secondary effects have been detected in some cases as immune and inflammatory reactions, the great potential of biodegradable and tunable protein nanoparticles indicates that protein-based biotechnological products are expected to increase in the years to come. the design of new chemical entities (nce) for diagnosis and treatment of human diseases has relied on the discovery of active chemical drugs from a diverse library of compounds or from naturally occurring molecules. , further chemical modifications improve pharmacokinetic properties to obtain a final product with a known mechanism of action and decreased toxicity. nonetheless, using such approaches, the final products present low specificity for their target molecules, interacting with many other molecules and accumulating in some tissues, disturbing the correct homeostasis of the system. in some cases, the adverse effects of drug administration exceed pharmacological effect and despite the concise mechanism of action of the drug over the target molecule representing an improvement in the patient's state, the treatment has to be prevented or discontinued. in fact, although a maintained steady increase in the number of launched nce has been observed in the last years, the question arises whether this classical approach has already exhausted the discovery of innovative molecules. on the other hand, macromolecular new biological entities (nbe) have been used to supplement cellular deficiencies or to inhibit cellular pathways exploiting their relatively specific mode of action. proteins and peptides have been obtained first from their natural source or produced as recombinant versions after the development of genetic engineering techniques in the late s. however, the delivery of biological entities is sometimes hampered by its low half-life in the bloodstream by unspecific degradation, resulting in an expensive and ineffective process. nevertheless, some solutions have already been explored for biopharmaceuticals to increase solubility and stability and to reduce immunogenicity including postranslational modifications such as glycosylation and covalent conjugation of polyethylene glycol. thus, one of the main objectives in the use of drugs (for either nce or nbe) is the need to optimize the delivery system to reduce the pharmacological dose which would consequently represent a concomitant reduction in toxicity and cost. in that scenario, new delivery approaches have been implemented using biological interactions such as antigen-antibody binding (immunoliposomes) or more sophisticated interactions including the binding between nutrient concentrator sparc (secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine) and albumin in the treatment of some types of cancer (abraxane ). , proteins can be then used for their targeting qualities as molecular delivery vehicles both for the specific delivery of drugs or nucleic acids in gene therapy approaches and by themselves as therapeutic molecules. one of the interesting characteristics of proteins is their ability to form intermolecular driven complexes as sophisticated and structurally perfect as in the case of viral capsids. in addition, through the use of genetic engineering, recombinant proteins can be tuned to include additional properties to optimize drug delivery and nucleic acid delivery in gene therapy. in this chapter, the main available strategies to develop protein-based nanovehicles or biopharmaceuticals will be described. in this context, several parameters will be defined such as proper formulation, stability, immunogenicity, and delivery to the correct cell type and cell compartment. modular protein engineering, virus-like particles (vlps), and other self-assembling entities are envisioned as modulatable novel protein nanoparticles able to include many desirable properties in the correct delivery of drugs and nucleic acids. finally, some successful examples of protein nanoparticles on the market will be described in addition to protein products currently in clinical trials and under preclinical research in order to envision which type of protein nanoparticles will be available soon on the market. with the therapeutic molecule to generate a vehicle capable of being transported in the blood if a systemic administration is needed and retaining a significant stability before reaching the target cell. , in addition, the biological system poses specific barriers that have to be overcome such as membranes (cytoplasmic, endocytic, and nuclear), degradation (protease degradation induced by acid denaturalization in lysosomes, cytosolic proteosomes, and nucleases), cytosolic transport, and nuclear entry if necessary. , for central nervous system therapies, the blood-brain barrier (bbb) represents the main bottleneck, and for that, a specific strategy has to be designed. furthermore, the therapeutic complex has to be flexible enough in order to release the therapeutic molecule in the specific cell compartment. thus, several protein motifs have been described to overcome each and every process described earlier so that a modular multifunctional protein can be generated including those modules that are necessary to achieve its goal. in order to get a rational construction of the multifunctional vector, each step has to be carefully taken into account so as to overcome every step which is needed to achieve its final goal (table i) . the dna/rna condensation or drug interaction with the protein vector is a critical step in the formulation of protein nanoparticles for gene therapy. they have to remain attached to the vector during the whole transport process through the body and the cell until it can be released in the desired localization within the target cell. highly positively charged peptides containing a large number of arginines or polylysines have been used to promote electrostatic interactions since nucleic acids are highly negatively charged molecules. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] natural dna-condensing proteins as nuclear histidines or protamines can also be used to bind nucleic acids. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] protamine, which is the protein that replaces histidines during the spermatogenesis process, is a sperm chromatin component and just as the histidines do, it has very high dna condensation ability to protect nucleic acids form cytosolic endonucleases. , in addition, as soon as the complex reaches the cellular nucleus, protamine is degraded by chromatinremodeling proteins, releasing the transported dna allowing its expression. , in contrast, polycationic dna condensation modules such as polylysines and polyarginines-even they can present higher dna condensation ability depending on the polycationic chain length-usually present lower dna-releasing ability, interfering negatively with the accessibility of cellular transcription factors and dna expression capacity. all these dna condensation modules described above interact with any dna that is incubated in an unspecific way. however, there are proteins such as gal that are able to recognize specific dna sequences [ ] [ ] [ ] and that permit to bind and condensate specific dna sequences in the final vector. in many cases, the multifunctional protein vector is in vivo administrated by the systemic route in order to travel in the blood and reach the target cells. that exposes the vector to all blood components, making it susceptible to be degraded. thus, it is completely necessary that the vector remain in the blood long enough to be able to reach the target cells. it has also been described that naked dna has an estimated half-life in blood of minutes ; so protein nanovehicles in gene therapy, among other properties, are intended to protect nucleic acids from degradation. one important factor when the vector is exposed to the blood is that it can be recognized by the immune system components and produces an immune response against the vector. thus, it is also very important to try to make the vector as less antigenic as possible in order to avoid being degraded or even being toxic to the organism. peptide uptake or internalization involves a step before the protein binding to the cell surface. this attachment can be either specific or unspecific but in all cases the promotion of its internalization is required. positively charged peptides usually bind the cellular surface by unspecific electrostatic interactions with the negatively charged cell surface proteoglicans. this kind of peptides can be used in the multifunctional protein if specific targeting is not required. cell-penetrating peptides (cpps) have been widely described as unspecific cell-binding and internalization peptides [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] (see also the chapter ''peptide nanoparticles for oligonucleotide delivery'' by lehto et al. in this volume). however, specific interactions can be obtained by incorporating cell receptor ligands if cell or tissue targeting is required for the therapeutic action. moreover, some of those ligand-receptor interactions promote the ligand-receptor complex internalization. many peptides have been described in the literature as receptor-specific ligands so any of them can be added to the multifunctional proteins in order to confer them cell specificity. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the most natural specific ligands that can also be used for cell targeting are monoclonal antibodies. , [ ] [ ] [ ] in addition, if no specific peptides are available for an intended target, new specific binding peptides can be found by using phage display or combinatorial chemistry. . endosomal escape several internalization pathways are possible depending on the vector properties, , including endocytosis (clathrin/caveolae-mediated, clathrin/ caveolae-independent), macropinocytosis, and non-endocytic pathways. it is known that more than one internalization pathway can be performed at the same time but usually the peptide-based vector uses endocytic pathways. moreover, it seems that proteins that interact with a specific cellular receptor are internalized by the clathrin-mediated endocytic pathway. most of the generated endosomal vesicles will converge to late endosomes that eventually will fuse with cellular lysosomes. , remaining in the cellular endosomes, the multifunctional protein will be degraded, so it is strictly necessary that the internalized multifunctional proteins be released into the cellular cytoplasm escaping from degradation. several peptides have been described that are able to promote endosomal escape and can be classified into two types depending on their escape mechanism: fusiogenic peptides and histidine-rich peptides. the fusiogenic peptides are small peptides that have hydrophobic amino acids (aa-s) interspersed at constant intervals with negatively charged aa-s. , , , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] thus, when early endosomes become late endosomes, their low ph induces a conformational change in the peptide, which adopts a alpha-helix structure, in an amphipathic structure able to fuse with the endosomal membrane, leading to pore formation and releasing all the endosomal content into the cell cytoplasm. the histidine-rich peptides are small peptides with a high histidine content whose endosmolytic activity is mediated by a mechanism called ''proton sponge''. , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] when the endosomal ph becomes low in late stages, the imidazole groups of the histidines are protonated and attract endosomal cl À ions, buffering against the proton pump. thus, the endosomes collapse by an osmolytic swelling process and the endosomal content is released to the cell cytoplasm. further details are given in the chapter ''peptide nanoparticles for oligonucleotide delivery'' by lehto et al. in this volume. once the protein has achieved the cellular cytosol, it can be degraded by cellular proteases or by the cellular proteosome system. it is important to avoid this process, especially if the protein has to reach the cellular nucleus. if the final target of the nanoparticle is the cellular cytoplasm, it is necessary that it remain there at least long enough to perform its therapeutical action. several peptide proteosome inhibitors have been described that are able to avoid this type of protein degradation. by adding these peptides to the final protein vector it is possible to protect it and enhance cytoplasmatic stability. epstein-barr virus nuclear antigen (ebna ) contains a proteosome inhibitor consisting of glycine-alanine repeats able to prevent proteosomal proteolysis. it has been shown that a minimum of aa-s gly-ala repeats are necessary to achieve such protective activity. [ ] [ ] [ ] if the protein vector is carrying nucleic acids (dna or rna), degradation by the cytosolic endonucleases has to be taken into account, so it is also very important to protect this nucleic acid in order to maintain its integrity. some dna/rna condensing peptides as protamines also protect the dna against cytoplasmic endonucleases and enhance its stability as has been described above. the cellular cytoplasm is a very crowded and compartmentalized environment where cellular organelles and cytoskeleton make the free diffusion of macromolecules such as protein vectors difficult. however, cytoskeleton elements such as microtubules are used by endosomes and other cytosolic macromolecules for intracytosolic mobility. dyneins have been described as being capable of carrying those macromolecules and endosomes along the microtubules in a retrograde transport toward the nucleus. some small peptides that are able to bind dyneins have been identified. they can be added to the multifunctional protein vector in order to mediate an intracytosolic mobility toward the cellular nucleus. several dynein-binding proteins have been identified in viruses that are able to use this transport system. comparing those protein sequences, a consensus peptide sequence (kstqt) that is able to bind to the dynein lc light chain has been identified. molecules lower than kda/ - nm are able to enter in the cellular nucleus by passive diffusion. however, macromolecules higher than kda/ - nm generally require an active transport system through the nuclear pore system. this transport mechanism generally requires a specific targeting signal peptide named nuclear localization signal (nls). these signaling peptides are usually rich in basic aa-s, which are recognized by the cellular importines and actively transported through the nuclear pore. , monopartite or bipartite nls sequences which are nls peptides that have one or two nls recognized sequences respectively have been described. thus, these peptidic sequences can be added into the final multifunctional protein if nuclear localization is required in order to express a carried dna. it has been reported that a single nls sequence is sufficient to transport the vector to the nucleus and that a large number of nls sequences can result in inhibition of its activity. one of the most used nls signal peptides are fragments derived from the - aa-s of the simian virus sv large tumor antigen (t-ag). other nls sequences can be found in gal , protamines, or tat. , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] it is important that when the transported dna reaches the cellular nucleus, it has to be released in order to be accessible to the nuclear transcription factors and achieve the desired expression level. thus, while designing the multifunctional protein vector, this aspect has to be taken into account. once the dna has been released in the cell nucleus, it will be necessary to control its expression level depending on which therapeutic action is being promoted. when the goal is to kill a cell as in cancer therapies, the uncontrolled dna expression levels would not be a problem. however, when a specific protein expression level is required, achieving good control is very important. some expression systems have been developed that can be pharmacologically regulated by oral drug formulation. cell-specific promoters and enhancers can be also used in order to confer high cell specificity to the therapy. , d. ways to get over the bbb the bbb is a hermetic barrier that only allows nonlipophilic molecules smaller than da to cross it. however, some human proteins such as insulin, transferrin, insulin-like growth factor, or leptins are able to go across it by receptor-mediated transporters. thus, the most important factor limiting central nervous system-targeting therapeutics is the presence of the bbb. finding the way to cross it will be the main challenge. some peptides have been described that are able to reach the brain crossing the bbb. moreover, it has been seen that they can be associated with another molecule and transported through the barrier. thus, they could be interesting candidates to be included in the multifunctional vectors if central nervous system targeting is required. , , , antibodies have also been described that bind transferrin and insulin receptors and that are able to cross the bbb efficiently. they can be conjugated with large molecules, allowing its translocation to the central nervous system. , , [ ] [ ] [ ] synthesis, and rational design the development of genetic engineering techniques has increased the natural repertoire of proteins for the design of useful and/or valuable proteins with the aim to obtain new proteins with desired functions. there are three main strategies leading to the construction of engineered proteins: (a) direct evolution, (b) de novo protein design, and (c) rational design. directed evolution has developed quickly to become a method of choice for protein engineers in order to create enzymes having desired properties for all kind of processes. over the past decade, this technique has become a daily part of the molecular toolbox of every biochemist. this is emphasized by the increasing number of publications about the subject. in nature, evolution and creation of new functionalities is achieved by mutagenesis, recombination, and survival of the fittest. directed evolution mimics this and is a process of iterative cycles of producing mutants and finding the mutant with the desired properties. mutations can be introduced at specific places using site-directed mutagenesis or throughout the gene by random mutagenesis. several mutagenesis techniques have been developed in order to avoid codon bias. , the first technique used to mimic evolution was dna shuffling. this method is based on the mixing and subsequent joining of different related small dna fragments in order to form a complete new gene. in the process of shuffling, the recombination frequency is dependent on the degree of homology. a high level of recombination is important to get all possible combinations of mutations. since recombination can be biased, several methods to overcome problems arising from the use of shuffling in the early years were tackled by novel strategies, all having their own advantages and disadvantages. the products obtained by these methods have to be screened for desired qualities and not all of them can be easily screened. de novo protein design offers the broadest possibility for new structures. it is based on searches for amino acid sequences that are compatible with a three-dimensional protein backbone template using in silico techniques. several research groups in the field have applied in silico methods to design the hydrophobic cores of proteins, with the novel sequences being validated with experimental data. in silico protein design has allowed novel functions on templates originally lacking those properties, modifying existing functions, and increasing protein stability or specificity. beyond any doubt, intense research activities are ongoing in the field, the potential of which is simply enormous. so far there have been numerous examples of full sequences designed ''from scratch'' that were confirmed to fold into the target three-dimensional structures by experimental data. the zinc-finger protein designed by dahiyat and mayo was the first one to appear by this method. rational design of proteins is based on the modification or insertion of selected amino acids or domains in a polypeptide chain backbone to obtain proteins with new or altered biological functions. when using that strategy, a detailed knowledge of the structure and function of the backbone protein is needed to make desired changes. this generally has the advantage of being inexpensive and technically feasible. however, a major drawback of this approach is that detailed structural knowledge of a protein is often unavailable or it can be extremely difficult to predict the effects of various mutations. modular engineering enables, by using simple dna recombinant techniques, the construction of chimerical polypeptides in which selected domains, potentially from different origins, provide the required activities. an equilibrate combination and spatial distribution of such partner elements has generated promising prototypes, able to deliver expressible dna or molecules to tissue culture but also to specific cell types in whole organisms. modular fusion proteins that combine distinct functions required for cell type-specific uptake and intracellular delivery of dna or drugs present an attractive approach for the development of self-assembling vectors for targeted gene or drug delivery. one of the first examples was described by the group of uherek et al. they combined a cell-specific target module (antibody fragment specific for the tumor-associated erbb antigen), a dna-binding domain (gal ), and a translocation domain for endosomal escape. in this context, many strategies for the construction of safer vehicles are being explored and the number of nonviral prototype vectors for gene and drug delivery is noticeably increasing. here, the common steps that an approach like this might explore are presented ( fig. ) . when designing a new protein for drug or gene delivery there are many critical aspects, namely (a) design of the vehicle itself, required functions, stability, etc.; (b) production of the protein, suitable expression system, purification procedure, scaling up process, etc.; (c) characterization of the vehicle by physicochemical and functional tests; and finally (d) the administration route and regulatory guidance for biological products. although all these aspects belong to different disciplines, they have to be overviewed together. here, the major needs of a modular protein for gene and drug delivery are presented. to enhance the physicochemical stability of the cargo molecules and their resistance to nuclease/protease-mediated degradation, protein vehicles should ideally exhibit, like their natural counterparts (viruses), nucleic-acid binding and condensing properties. such abilities are, in general, conferred by cationic segments of the main scaffold molecules that interact with nucleic acids, mainly through electrostatic interactions. in addition, such complexes need to efficiently release the nucleic acid in the nucleus (if the cargo is a therapeutic gene), for which endosomal escape is required. such functions have been found in some peptides in many natural molecules and they are suitable for functionalizing protein vehicles. the ability to bind a particular cell type with high specificity is especially significant in a systemic delivery in which appropriate biodistribution and tissue targeting are essential. for nuclear targeting, only naked short nucleic acids can freely enter the nucleus of nondividing cells via free diffusion through the nuclear pore. large molecules require active transport mediated by nlss that are often found in viral proteins. because the molecular mass of plasmidic dna varies from to to mda, dna that is to be expressed, and essentially any macromolecular complex for nucleic acid delivery, requires nlss. the role and types of functional modules peptides used for all these purposes will be discussed in depth in the following sections. in vivo experiments finally, which protein or peptide is better for a given cargo is to be determined empirically and only few rules can be taken literally. , c. production of protein nanoparticles some steps in the production of a protein-based vehicle after molecular cloning such as protein production and protein purification might be experimentally labor intense with a variable success rate. for that reason, when small proteins are needed, solid-phase peptide synthesis guarantees the process. however, the classical procedure of biological production allows scaling up the process in most of the cases and the production of larger polypeptides and fulllength proteins. generally, in protein nanoparticle approaches, the protein is composed by different modules of natural sources such as the cell-penetrating peptide transactivator of transcription (tat) derived from the tat of the human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) or artificial sequences not present in any organism such as the polylysine dna-condensing sequence. once it has been defined which modules will be part of the protein, it is important to define the order they will have in the final construct. it has been demonstrated by boekle and coworkers using melittin conjugated to polyethylenimine (pei) that depending on the side of the linkage (c-or n-terminus), the lytic activity could be changed. some other modules have the need to be in a determined position for its correct function. when producing a protein for gene or drug delivery, it is important to know the origin of its domains to choose the most suitable expression system for its production. for instance, if any module naturally carries a posttranslational modification that is essential for its biological function, the expression system chosen will have to be able to reproduce the same crucial modification. the main biological production systems for protein drugs are described below. escherichia coli is the most widely used prokaryotic organism for the expression of recombinant proteins. the use of this host is relatively simple and inexpensive. added advantages include its short duplication time, growth to high cell densities, ease of cultivation, and high yields of the recombinant product. however, since it lacks fundamental prerequisites for efficient secretion, recombinant proteins manufactured by e. coli systems are mainly produced as inclusion bodies. , moreover, posttranscriptional modifications are not achieved with this system. there are many examples of proteins for gene delivery produced in e. coli with probed efficiency. , like e. coli, yeasts can be grown cheaply and rapidly and are amenable to high-cell-density fermentations. besides possessing complex posttranslational modification pathways, they offer the advantage of being neither pyrogenic nor pathogenic and are able to secrete more efficiently. species established in industrial production procedures are saccharomyces cerevisiae, kluyveromyces lactis, pichia pastoris, and hansenulapolymorpha. s. cerevisiae is the best genetically characterized eukaryotic organism among them all and is still the prevalent yeast species in pharmaceutical production processes. in spite of their physiological advantageous properties and natively high expression and secretion capacity, the employability of yeasts in some cases, however, might reach a limit, particularly when the pharmacological activity of the product is impaired by the glycosylation pattern. in such cases, either a postsynthetic chemical modification has to be considered or the employment of more highly developed organisms. most examples of nanoparticles produced in yeast are for vlps. animal cell expression systems show the highest similarity to human cells regarding the pattern and capacity of posttranslational modifications and the codon bias. however, their culture is more complicated and costlier and usually yields lower product titers. among the known systems, insect cells infected by baculovirus vectors have reached popularity since they are considered to be more stress-resistant, easier to handle, and more productive compared with mammalian systems and are thus frequently employed for high-throughput protein expression. for commercial application, scale-up related questions have to be solved. [ ] [ ] [ ] preferably applied in pharmaceutical production processes are mammalian systems like chinese hamster ovary (cho) cells and baby hamster kidney (bhk) cells. these systems are genetically more stable and easier to transform and handle in scale-up processes, to grow faster in adherent and submerged cultures, and to be more similar to human cells and more consistent in their complete spectrum of modification. in some cases, mammalian cell systems can be the only choice for the preparation of correctly modified proteins. peptides, being complex and unique complex molecules with regard to its chemical and physical properties, can be produced synthetically by the solidphase method. , this technology can be used to avoid problems related to biological production. general advantages of synthetic peptides are that they are very stable compounds, solid-phase chemistry produces highly standardized peptides, and the crucial polycation component is provided by a ''natural'' polycation, thus minimizing toxicity. however, some disadvantages related to synthetic peptides have been reported such as the difficulty to synthesize long and well-folded oligopeptides, peptides with multiple cysteine, methionine, arginine, and tryptophan residues due to technical limitations or production cost. when working with protein nanoparticles, it is very important to characterize them physically and functionally in order to understand their behavior. the size and charge of protein/cargo particles are crucial properties which influence rates of diffusion, binding to polyanionic components of connective tissues, transversal of anatomical barriers, binding of serum proteins, attachment to cells, and mechanisms of endocytosis, among other factors. stability in physiological salt solutions is a key issue for in vivo delivery, as salt is found everywhere in the body. mixing a multivalent polycation and dna results in electrostatic binding of both molecules, with charge neutralization of dna and a particle formation named conjugate. charge neutralization can be easily seen by retardation gel assays and particle formation by dynamic light scattering (dls). dls is a good method to see particle formation but not to quantify relative number of particles of different sizes. to visualize particles, many groups have used transmission electron microscopy (tem) , with good results while others have used fluid particle image analyzer (fpia) to photograph individual particles in physiological solutions. the net charge of protein/cargo particles is an important variable. generally, optimal gene delivery for cell lines requires a net positive charge but, as stated previously, it has to be determined empirically. one of the best techniques to determine the net charge is by calculating the zeta potential that measures the electrophoretic mobility of particles. despite the fact that physical characterization is a key element, understanding and testing the functionality and pharmacokinetics of a gene or drug is the most important part of its development process. most of the initial tests are done using cell lines in in vitro experiments using reporter genes, rna, or drugs. , quantifying the percentage of transfected cells or drug-induced changes is a very valuable tool to evaluate nanoparticle performance in both nuclear and cytoplasmic delivery, respectively. in addition, in vitro experiments may be designed to select a candidate for the in vivo experiments from a group of possible therapy vectors. the quantitative kinetics of particle binding, the molecular basis of particle interactions with target cell membranes, the efficiency of particle internalization, and endosomal escape are all poorly understood. interaction of particles with plasma membranes prior to protein internalization can be either unspecific or specific. untargeted delivery normally is the consequence of electrostatic interactions between anionic ligands in the cell surface and cationic components of the vehicle. on the other hand, targeted delivery to specific membrane molecules is a more sophisticated approach. it aims to improve cell specificity and efficiency, by directing to molecules, only expressed or overexpressed in a particular cell type, that initiate internalization by endocytosis. targeting moieties include many types of molecules and is discussed afterwards. internalization of particles, its mechanisms, and kinetics are not well known and most studies about nanoparticle delivery do not focus on this aspect. there are several endocytic pathways each initiated by different ligands. enhancing the delivery by addition of chloroquine, a synthetic molecule used primarily for the prophylaxis and treatment of malaria that disrupts endosomes, is an accepted parameter to demonstrate endosomal localization of particles. endosomal escape is the area most intensively investigated but is poorly understood. an important practical point to note is that some reagents that are used can be toxic. to enhance this step, anionic fusogenic peptides can be used. these peptides fuse to membranes in an acidic-dependent manner causing its disruption. in gene delivery approaches, translocation of dna expression plasmids into the cell nucleus involves an active, energy-dependent process through the nuclear pore complex. directly injected dna into the cytosol is usually, but not always, poorly transferred to the nucleus , and because of that, the use of proteins carrying cationic nuclear-localizing sequences (such as that of sv large t antigen) has been widely used to overcome this step. iv. natural self-assembling protein nanoparticles: vlps ideal drug delivery and gene therapy vehicles must accomplish some desired features such as appropriate packaging size for its cargo, target cellspecificity, safe and efficient cargo delivery, and protection against immune recognition, or capability to escape immune recognition. moreover, these vehicles must avoid inflammatory toxicity and rapid clearance. in this context, viral vectors have been exploited as one of the vehicles of choice. viruses are nano-sized ( - nm) supramolecular nucleoproteinbased entities, covered or not with a lipid bilayer (enveloped/nonenveloped viruses) that satisfy, into relatively simple structures, outstanding properties and functions that are relevant to drug and gene delivery. viruses are able to recognize and interact specifically with cells by receptor-mediated binding, internalize, escape from endosomes, and uncoat and release nucleic acids in different cellular compartments. they are also capable of transcribing and translating their viral proteins to self-assemble into new infectious virus particles and exit the host cell. , [ ] [ ] [ ] despite all these relevant properties of viral vectors or some other rising vehicles in drug and gene delivery such as cationic liposomes, their therapeutic use presents some limitations and risks because of the complexity of production, limited packaging capacity, insertional mutagenesis and gene inactivation, low probability of integration, reduced efficacy of repeat administration or reduced expression overtime, unfavorable immunological recognition or strong immune response against vehicle and transgene, inflammatory toxicity, and rapid clearance. , in this context, virus capsids or vlps, produced by recombinant capsid proteins but lacking the viral genome, have noticeably emerged as a safer alternative to viral vectors. a. structure of protein self-assembled nanovehicles vlps are classically described as self-assembling, nonreplicative and nonpathogenic, highly organized supramolecular multiprotein nanoparticles (coats) (ranging from to nm) that can be formed from the minimal spontaneous self-assembling of one or more viral structural capsid proteins. it has been described that the self-assembling process of the structural viral proteins for vlp formation involves both spontaneous assembly, under favorable experimental conditions, and the requirement of scaffold proteins as catalysts. , therefore, vlps are considered protein ''coats'', ''shells'', or ''boxes'' that lack the viral genome, still conserve the structure, morphology, and some properties of viruses. some of these properties such as cellular tropism and uptake, intracellular trafficking, membrane translocation, and transfer of nucleic acids or molecules across the cytoplasmic, endosomal, and nuclear membranes are important for drug delivery and gene therapy. , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] usually, the degree of similarity of vlps and their viruses depends on the number of proteins incorporated into the constructs. , since the first description in of the viral dna packaging into mouse polyomavirus (mpyv) vlps and its transduction in vitro, vlps of different viruses such as papillomaviruses, [ ] [ ] [ ] hepatitis b, c, and e viruses, [ ] [ ] [ ] polyomaviruses, vlps offer some structure, dynamics, characteristic features, and functions that make them appealing bionanomaterials to be exploited in the biomedicine arena as drug and gene delivery vehicles and are discussed in detail afterward. on the one hand, viral coat proteins have the ability to spontaneously selfassemble, which ensures the formation of highly organized, regular, repetitive structurally stable, and very low morphological polydisperse particles that provide useful properties to be used as scaffolds for bioimaging, synthesis of bionanomaterials, and as nanocarriers in drug and gene therapy. in addition, homogeneity of particle size and composition is a desired production factor when developing therapeutic molecules. the overexpression of structural viral proteins in a convenient expression system renders recombinant proteins capable of being folded and assembled in discrete organized nanoparticles with a defined size corresponding to the natural capsid geometry. [ ] [ ] [ ] moreover, even though vlps are structurally stable particles, some biochemical and structural studies have observed that viral capsids and bacteriophages may show some structurally dynamic properties varying in shape, size, or rearrangements of the coat proteins, in response to different factors such as ph. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] on the other hand, vlps are considered biologically safe nanostructures since they are not infectious (lack of viral genome) and do not replicate, representing a safer alternative to viral vectors. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] however, they can elicit immune and inflammatory responses, especially when repeated administration is needed. it has to be also noted that when used in vaccination, vlps could show excellent adjuvant properties and the majority of vlps stimulate strong cellular and humoral immune responses as direct immunogens. it has been suggested that recombinant vlps derived from infection of insect cells with baculovirus or even those derived from prokaryotic systems could be contaminated with different residual components of these host cells, contributing those impurities to the adjuvant properties. one interesting property of vlps is that coat viral proteins present an enormous elasticity and adaptability to be modified chemically and/or by protein genetic engineering , , to incorporate multiple directed functionalities, in order to be addressed in biomedical applications such as drug delivery or gene therapy. it has been recently reviewed that chemically and/or genetically modified vlps, including cpmv, ccmv, ms , m bacteriophages, and other virus-based nanoparticles, , could maintain their structural integrity and improve their physical stability and, moreover, these modifications could also confer desired cell-targeting properties to the nanovehicle. [ ] [ ] [ ] , , vlps can be successfully engineered with spatial precision to incorporate (attached or genetically displayed on the surface) targeting tissue-specific ligands such as epidermal growth factor (egfr) and antibodies, or other molecules such as oligonucleotides, peptides, gold, and other metals, target proteins, carbohydrates, polymers, fluorophores, quantum dots, drugs, or small molecules. , , moreover, one of the potential benefits of such modifications is that the specific geometric rearrangement confers precise recognition patterns. , furthermore, accessibility of the materials carried within the particle and the ability of inclusion and separation of nucleic acids, small molecules, and unusual cargoes with appropriate charge is another outstanding feature and key advantage of vlps that has also made them excellent vessels for gene and drug delivery. , as described above, vlps can be used as empty nanocarriers to transport molecules chemically attached on their surface or can be loaded ex vivo with therapeutic small molecules such as drugs, dnas, mrnas, sirnas, oligonucleotides, quantum dots, magnetic nanoparticles, or proteins. , , vlps of different papillomavirus and polyomavirus have been widely characterized and used for directed delivery in biomedical applications. , , , , , osmotic shock and in vitro self-assembling of vlp subunits in the presence of the cargo have been the two main strategies used to packaged nucleic acid or other small molecules. it has to be taken into account that some attachment of the cargo on the vlp surface can occur. besides, diversity of natural tropism including liver for hepatitis b vlps, spleen for some papillomavirus and polyomavirus vlps, antigen-presenting cells for certain papillomavirus vlps, and glial cells for human polyomavirus jc (jcv) vlps, among others is one of the key advantages offered by vlps providing a wide spectrum of specific targeting and distribution profiles depending on the directed application. although each vlp has its own characteristic receptors, entry pathway, and intracellular trafficking, it has been demonstrated that tropism of vlps could be customized, modifying the residues identified as ligands of the cellular receptor on vlps' surface or even varying the delivery routes. , , another key advantage of vlps is that they can be easily produced by using a wide range of hosts and expression systems, each of them with its own conditionings. in the past years, there has been an increasing need to improve and optimize efficient large-scale production systems, process control and monitoring, and up-and down-streaming processes. , , , production of vlps usually involves transfection of the cell host expression system of choice with a plasmid encoding one or more viral structural proteins, further and rigorous purification for the removal of immunogenic cellular contaminants, and quality control of the produced vlp and encapsulation of the cargo ex vivo before administration. , the most frequent and convenient expression systems, adaptable to large-scale processes are ( ) yeast cells , , ( ) bacteria , , ( ) green plants infected with modified viruses , , and ( ) cell-free systems. , the preparative and large-scale manufacture of vlps in some of these hosts has been reviewed by pattenden et al. and can be classified into two main methods of bioprocessing: in vivo and in vitro systems. in addition, the capability of in vitro dissociation and reassociation of vlps contribute to the application of easy and more accurate purification methods than those of viral vectors. , furthermore, depending on the expression system, the resulting vlp might be significantly different even though expressing the same viral proteins. thus, a broad spectrum of vlps could be customized depending on the vlp type, the number of proteins needed for vlp assembling, and the targeted final application. , as described above, vlps have great potential as nanocarriers in drug and gene delivery. at the same time, although there is an increasing flow of developments in this area, these vehicles also present some limitations that should be addressed and taken into account, such as residual cellular components, variable yield of functional vlps after disassembly/reassembly process, immunostimulation and unsuitability for repeated administration, tolerance to the transgene, ineffective therapeutic molecule loading, and low transfection rates. protein nanoparticles engineered for drug delivery and gene therapy due to their versatile nanoparticulate structure and morphology, and nonreplicative and noninfecting nature combined with their natural immunogenic properties and ease production, vlps have principally emerged as an excellent alternative tool to attenuate viruses for vaccination. and ebola virus. , although vlp-based vaccines have been primarily developed for their use against the corresponding virus, in the last decades genetic engineering or chemical modifications have been applied in order to generate chimeric vlps. thus, on the one hand, commonly short heterologous peptide epitopes or full proteins that are unable to form vlps or that are unsafe for vaccination have been presented on surface-exposed loops or fused to n-or c-exposed termini of structural viral capsid proteins on vlps. , , different hpv, - hbv, , parvovirus, , and chimeric polyoma vlps have been engineered , and tested for different applications including vaccination against viral or bacterial diseases, against virus-induced tumors, and more recently, for immunotherapy of nonviral cancer. , on the other hand, chemical bioconjugation for covalent coupling of protein epitopes and small molecules to lysines, cysteines, or tyrosine residues of vlp surfaces has been applied in viral or cancer vaccines. chackerian et al. have demonstrated the efficient induction of protective autoantibodies using self-antigen conjugation to hpv vlps. it is important to point out that vlps can also be engineered to incorporate heterologous cell-specific ligands to cell receptors, thus altering their cellular tropism. , , , this great convertibility and flexibility of vlps to be modified (chemically and/or genetically), their high stability, natural and diverse tropism, their nanocontainer properties, and their ability to enter in the cell and incorporate, bind, and deliver nucleic acids and small molecules have positioned vlps as appealing entities not only for vaccination applications but also for a broad spectrum of other diverse and emerging applications in nanomedicine and nanotechnology such as immunotherapy against cancer, , gene therapy delivery of therapeutic genes into specific cells, , , , , , and targeted delivery of drugs and small molecules using vlps as nanocarriers. , domingo-espÍn et al. although there is no commercial vlp as vector in gene therapy, since the initial work in of uncoating polyoma pseudovirus in mouse embryo cells as gene delivery vector and the establishment in of the viral dna packaging into mpyv vlps and its transduction in vitro, different vlps such as hbv and hepatitis e virus, hpv and polyomavirus nanoparticles , , have been modified toward the specific delivery of therapeutic genes and proteins in different target cells, organs, and tissues in vitro and in vivo by systemic injection or oral administration. for example, recombinant vp -based polyomavirus vlps can encapsulate in vitro exogenous dna, and deliver it by cell surface sialic acid residues to human brain cells and fetal kidney epithelial cells. furthermore, vlps have recently emerged as novel nanocarriers or nanocontainers to store unnatural cargos, deliver modified oligonucleotides, synthetic small interfering rnas, and plasmids expressing short hairpin rnas as therapy to downregulate gene expression. , in this context, chou et al. have recently described the use of jcv vlps as an efficient vector for delivering rnai in vitro using murine macrophage raw . cells and in vivo using balb/c mice in silencing the cytokine gene of il- without significant cytotoxicity for systemic lupus erythematosus gene therapy. one of the key aspects in targeted gene and drug delivery is cell-specific delivery. it is important to point out that vlps are tunable nanoparticles that can also be chemically or genetically engineered to modify their natural cellular tropism in order to diversify the range of therapeutic applications in targeted gene or drug delivery. , some effective approaches to modify the natural cellular tropism include: ( ) genetic engineering of vlp chimeras incorporating heterologous cellspecific short peptides that contain recognition sites of target cell receptors. in this context, polyoma and papillomavirus, with solved atomic structures of their major structural capsid proteins, have been extensively used to obtain chimeric vlps as delivery vector systems. , however, this approach has some bioprocessing limitations such as low production levels as a consequence of vlp modification, alterations of size and properties of the vlps that could affect the structural interactions and conformations for vlp assembly, disassembly and packaging, and low transduction efficiencies. ( ) chemical bioconjugation of purified vlps with epitope-containing peptides , or a wide range of small molecules conferring cell-specific targeting such as transferrins, folic acid, or other targeting molecules. as an example, cmpv vlps have been successfully conjugated with tfn using ''click'' chemistry and with nhs-ester-derivatized folic acid, demonstrating both as internalized into hela cells and kb cells, respectively. , ( ) high-throughput library and directed evolution method is a rational approach that has been recently used to engineer viral vectors with the desired tropism properties. ( ) pseudotyping, which consists of replacing the envelope protein of one virus species by the envelope protein of another virus species. ( ) modification of the delivery route of the vlps. it has been shown that the levels of expression of b-galactosidase in heart, lung, kidney, spleen, liver, and brain are different depending on the delivery route of polyomavirus vp vlps. the great accessibility and reactivity showed by vlps, as well as their ability to serve as nanocarriers, which made them suitable to be exploited in gene therapy, have also been applied to targeted drug delivery. genetic modification and/or chemical functionalization of exposed amino acid residues on the capsid surface in order to attach small molecules, such as markers or bioactives molecules, is one of the most common approaches applied to target drug delivery. , as an example, canine parvovirus (cpv) vlps produced in a baculovirus expression system and exhibiting natural tropism to transferrin receptors (tfrs) were chemically modified on accessible lysines of the capsid surface with fluorescent dye molecules and delivered to tumor cells. derivatization of cpv-vlps did not interfere with the binding and internalization into tumor cells. , one limitation of vlps in gene therapy is the low efficiency of gene transduction due to inefficient dna packaging. however, a recent study presented a novel in vivo dna packaging of jcv vlps in e. coli that effectively reduced human colon carcinoma volume in a nude mouse model. in this study, the exogenous plasmid dna was transformed into the jcv vp expressing e. coli. the packaging of the second plasmid occurs simultaneously as the in vivo assembly of the jcv vlp. even though it is still not clear how the plasmid dna molecules are encapsidated in the vlp, the authors showed that gene transduction efficiency by their in vivo package system was about % in contrast to the - % of gene transduction efficiency achieved by the in vitro osmotic shock system. in addition, the administration of exogenous proteins may induce the immune system response, reducing therapy effectiveness or causing undesirable secondary effects, albeit immunological response of protein nanoparticles can be modulated. spontaneous protein self-assembly to form ordered oligomers is a common event in biology. it can prove advantageous in terms of genome-size minimization, formation of large structures, stabilization of complexes, and inclusion of functional features. it has been widely documented that cellular oligomer proteins as well as viral capsids are stabilized by several weak noncovalent interactions as hydrophobic interaction, electrostatic energy, and van der waals forces. [ ] [ ] [ ] these interactions result in a complex quaternary structure described by three symmetry point groups named cyclic (cn), dihedral (dm), and cubic (t, o, i). , the development of computational techniques to predict protein-protein interactions using solved d protein structures makes it possible to predict and/or strengthen experimental data performing in in silico approaches. furthermore, its use opens up the possibility to design proteins not only displaying specific biological functions but also interesting intermolecular interactions to obtain increased multivalency in the resulting complexes. moreover, it should be considered that not only whole proteins can self-assemble in smart nanoparticles; oligopeptides are also capable of forming organized structures. many applications are possible due to the enormous quantity of different combinations and features that can be exploited with peptides. , furthermore, protein-protein interactions are not the unique parameters involved in particle formation, nucleic acid-peptide interactions, salt concentration, order of mix, and ratio between nucleic acid and protein can also strongly influence the condensation process. , due to their natural tendency to self-assemble forming highly ordered structures, viruses provide a wide variety of scaffold proteins which are used as gene/drug carriers. among them, vlps have been reviewed in the previous section. however, simple bacterial proteins can be also utilized as carriers for gene delivery. for example, heat shock proteins (hsp) from hyperthermophilic archeaon methanococcus jannaschii can assemble in a small structure of subunits having an octahedral symmetry. these nm structures are stable at high temperature, up to c, and wide range of ph. residue modifications are allowed to elicit specific attachment of small molecules. , in bacteria, bacterial microcompartments (bmc) which are intracellular organelles consisting of enzymes encapsulated within polyhedral, protein-only shells, somewhat similar to viral capsids, have been described. bmcs are composed of a few thousand copies of a few repeated protein species (including one or more enzymes involved in specific metabolic pathways), and with sizes of around - nm in cross section. the general role of bmcs is to confine toxic or volatile metabolic intermediates, while allowing enzyme substrates, products, and cofactors to pass. the first described bmc, the carboxysome, was isolated in the early s , and has been found to contain both co -fixing ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rubisco) , and carbonic anhydrase [ ] [ ] [ ] enzymes. carboxysomes' function is to enhance autotrophic co fixation at low co levels. other bmcs were later identified in cyanobacteria and some chemoautotroph bacteria. among them, bmc proteins have been later found to be encoded in the propanediol utilization operon (pdu) of the heterotroph salmonella and by an operon for metabolizing ethanolamine (eut) in enteric bacterial species, including salmonella and escherichia. salmonella enterica forms a polyhedral organelle during growth on , -propanediol ( , -pd) as a sole carbon and energy source, but not during growth on other carbon sources. , the pdu organelles' function is to minimize the harmful effects of a toxic intermediate of , -pd degradation (propionaldehyde). [ ] [ ] [ ] other studies have shown that a polyhedral organelle is involved in ethanolamine utilization (eut) by s. enterica. the function of the eut microcompartment is to metabolize ethanolamine without allowing the release of acetaldehyde into the cytosol, therefore minimizing the potentially toxic effects of excess aldehyde in the bacterial cytosol [ ] [ ] [ ] and also preventing volatile acetaldehyde from diffusing across cell membrane. so far, about proteins containing bmc domains have been identified, covering at least different bacterial phyla. the typical bmc protein consists of approximately amino acids, with an alpha/beta fold pattern. , some individual bmc proteins self-assemble to form hexamers, which further assemble side by side to form the flat facets of the shell. , , the formation of icosahedral, closed shells from such flat layers was elucidated in part by structural studies in carboxysomes: some bmc proteins assemble to form pentamers, which are located at and form the vertices of the icosahedral shell. mechanisms directing enzyme encapsulation within protein-based bmcs have been studied during the last years. it has been described that, in some carboxysomes, protein ccmm is used as a scaffold to form interactions between both shell proteins and enzymes, , through a ccmm c-terminal region with homology to the small subunit of rubisco. other studies revealed that pdu shells can self-assemble without needing interior enzymes and that carboxysomes can self-assemble in vivo when rubisco has been deleted. regarding properties of the encapsulated enzymes, in the pdu bmc some of the internal enzymes are encapsulated by specific n-terminal targeting sequences. , in this line, sutter and colleagues described a conserved c-terminal amino acid sequence that mediates the physical interaction of an iron-dependent peroxidase (dyp) or a protein closely related to ferritin (flp) with a specific type of bmc (encapsulins). in another example, an icosahedral enzyme complex, lumazine synthase (aals) from bacillus subtilis and aquifex aeolicus, was engineered to encapsulate target molecules by means of charge complementarity and can also be modified to give different characteristics to the assembled structure. moreover, enzymatic subunits, like e of pyruvate dehydrogenase from bacillus stearotermophilus, can be modified to be used in gene delivery. e peptides naturally form a dodecahedron of subunits of nm in diameter allowing modification for drug-like accommodation. the assembling/disassembling of these structures can be modulated by changing the operative ph in the experimental environment. these nanoparticles can also be functionalized with antigens for vaccine development. , according to these results, specific targeting sequences could be of use in biotechnological applications to package proteins inside the stable selfassembled icosahedral shell of bmcs, offering appealing opportunities to manipulate in the laboratory such nanocages to fill them with therapeutic molecules. the simplicity of this system makes it very attractive for engineering studies to design, mimicking nature, new applications in biotechnology, providing a new, intriguing platform of microbial origin for drug delivery. bovine serum albumin (bsa) is able to form microspheres after sonochemical treatment in aqueous medium. chemical effects of ultrasound radiation and coupling with an anticancer drug such as taxol (paclitaxel) led to the assembling of a spherical carrier with an average diameter of nm. bsa particles resulting from s-s bonds, due to ho radical formation, are able to release the encapsulated taxol in cancer tissue with best results if compared with mere taxol treatment. this drug for breast cancer treatment is commercially available. , also little cationic peptides can lead to self-assembling particles. among others, arginine-rich cationic peptides are widely known as good tools for gene delivery. for example, purified r -tailored gfp in solution is described to form nanodisk particles nm in diameter. this structure is proved to be induced by the arg tails and is able to bind and condense dna. these nanodisks are also able to deliver dna toward the nucleus where the reporter gene is expressed. on the other hand, the expression of recombinant proteins over physiological rates can cause a bad functioning of cellular quality control system, leading to self-organizing, pseudo-spherical, protein aggregates known as inclusion bodies. these mechanically stable nanoparticles, ranging from to nm in diameter, were considered for a long time as undesired bio-products. recently, it became clearer that they are suitable for medical approaches when utilized as scaffold surface to promote cellular proliferation. [ ] [ ] [ ] one of the most difficult goals for a foreign gene delivery is to reach the nucleus. an approach to overpass this obstacle is by fusing an nls in a nonessential position of a dna-binding protein. such type of modification has been described for a tetracycline repressor protein (tetr) fused with an sv nls. the tetr-nls affinity and specificity to teto dna sequence is exploited to form spontaneous protein-dna complexes which allow an enhancing of dna transportation into the nucleus and subsequent expression of foreign genes, combining the two peculiar characteristics of each fusion component. there is still a tremendous gap between progresses made in protein-based nanoparticle research for drug delivery and clinical reality. hundreds of publications in basic research describe the combination of two or more functional elements in a single protein nanoparticle, by which the delivery of a carried drug is enhanced. these agents act by improving critical steps in the drug delivery process, such as increasing the systemic stability or tissue specificity, favoring internalization, endosomal escape, and entry into the nucleus, or transporting therapeutic material through the bbb, in in vitro and in vivo studies. besides the human recombinant therapeutic proteins currently on the market (or functional segments of them), there are also some fusion proteins approved for clinical use (most by incorporating an antibody fragment or a ligand to enhance cell specificity). sadly no gene therapy trials have so far used full protein carriers in vivo, but rather peptide-functionalized vehicles. bottlenecking the gap between research and clinical application, the us fda/european medicines agency (emea) only approves human proteins, to avoid the risk of an immune response that could affect not only the effectiveness of the nanoparticle but also challenge patients' health. another critical factor is the administration route, where the protein is degraded before arriving at the target; this problem could be solved or minimized by the use of protein d-isomers, pegylation, or the design of protecting groups for labile sites. despite the current situation mentioned above, there are many good examples of multifunctional modular proteins that, when carrying therapeutic material, can improve the prognosis in vivo in animal models for different diseases. these examples are reviewed below, along with those few protein nanoparticles that are currently on the market or in clinical trials. albumin is a natural protein transporter of hydrophobic molecules throughout plasma that has been approved by the fda to reversibly bind water-insoluble anticancer agents, as is the case of albumin-bound (nab) paclitaxel, abraxane . this albumin-nab technology-based drug is in use in patients with metastatic breast cancer who have failed combination therapy, and it is the first protein nanoparticle approved by the fda. albumin potentiates paclitaxel concentration within the tumor by increasing paclytaxel endothelial transcytosis through caveolae formation. it also contributes to the fact that tumors secrete an albumin-binding protein sparc (also called bm- ) to attract and keep albumin-bound nutrients inside the tumor cell. the albuminpaclitaxel complex was not formally considered a nanoparticle in the united states (due to an average size of nm) but only so in europe. apart from whole recombinant therapeutic proteins being currently commercialized, there are also some examples of vehicles formed by chimerical proteins with target ligands already in the market. dab il- (denileukin diftitox or ontak) is a fusion of diphtheria toxin catalytic and translocation domains for lethal effect and interleukin- (il- ) to gain cell specificity in the treatment of persistent or recurrent t-cell lymphoma. belatacept (bms- ) is a ctla -ig fusion protein formed by the cytotoxic t-lymphocyteassociated antigen joined to an immunoglobulin g fc fragment fusion protein, developed by bristol-miers-squibb. etanercept (enbrel) fusion tumor necrosis factor receptor (tnfr), which binds and inhibits specifically tnf activity, to an immune globulin g fc, to prevent inflammation mediated by tnf in autoimmune diseases like arthritis and psoriasis. on the other hand, fusion proteins which include an antihuman epidermal growth factor receptor (her ) monoclonal antibody that binds tumor cell surfaces, among them the so-called ''trastuzumab'' (commercialized as herceptin by roche), associated to dm- , an antimitotic drug, aimed at improving the treatment of breast cancer. finally, vlps, that is, empty viral entities formed by the self-assembly of a viral capsid protein, are the only truly protein nanoparticles (architectonically speaking) which are currently used in clinical practice. hbsag recombinant protein of hbv expressed in yeast and the capsid l recombinant protein of hpv (types , , , and ) administered currently as vaccines tend to form spontaneously vlps that elicit t and b immune response. recently, there have been preclinical and clinical trials to test the security and efficacy of vlp vaccines against chikungunya and seasonal influenza virus (http://www. medpagetoday.com/meetingcoverage//icaac/ ), respectively. influenza vlp vaccines have proven to provide complete protection against h n flu pandemics, within a record preparation time when compared to months for traditional vaccines. the use of vlps as a delivery system for drugs or nucleic acids in gene therapy is still under investigation. drugs and proteins may be transformed through pegylation, a process that can assist them in overcoming some of the potential problems that delay the adoption of protein nanoparticles for clinical use. the covalent attachment of peg can reduce immunogenicity and antigenicity by hiding the particle from the immune system, can increase the circulating time by reducing renal clearance, and can also improve the water solubility of a hydrophobic particle. the use of pegylation has been approved for commercial use by the fda and emea, and some examples of pegylated protein products are adagen (peg-bovine adenosine deaminase), the first pegylated protein approved by the fda in , pegasys (peg-interferon alpha), and oncaspar (peg-l-asparaginase). the majority of protein nanoparticles studied in clinical trials (http://clinicaltrias.gov) are fusion proteins composed of a therapeutic protein/peptide and a target cell-specific ligand. an example is alt- , a biologic compound composed of il- genetically fused to a humanized soluble t-cell receptor directed against the p -derived antigen. the clinical trials evaluated whether directing il- activity using alt- to the patient's tumor sites that overexpress p results in clinical benefits (nct , nct ). another ligand joined to il- is l , a tumor-targeted immunocytokine constituted of a single chain fragment variable (scfv) directed against the ed-b domain of fibronectin, one of the most important markers for neoangiogenesis. l -il- is in a phase i/ii study for patients with solid tumors and renal cell carcinoma (rcc) (nct ). l has also been fused to tnfa with the intention to target tnfa directly to tumor tissues resulting in high and sustained intralesional bioactive tnfa concentrations. the l tnfa is under clinical trial using isolated inferior limb perfusion (ilp) with the standard treatment with melphalan mg/l limb volume in subjects affected by stage iii/iv limb melanoma (nct ). ngr-htnf is another bifunctional protein which combines a tumor-homing peptide (ngr) that selectively binds to amino peptidase n/cd highly expressed on tumor blood vessels, thus affecting tumor vascular permeability, and htnf, with direct anticancer activity. ngr-htnf is undergoing clinical trials as a single agent to treat different cancers, as well as in combination with chemotherapy agents. another strategy to direct a therapeutic protein to the target cell is through fusion to a growth factor receptor ligand. an example is tp- , a recombinant chimerical protein composed of the egfr binding ligand (tgf-a) and a genetically engineered form of the pseudomonas exotoxin, pe- , to treat recurrent grade iv malignant brain tumors (nct ). many clinical trials are based on a therapeutic protein fused to a targeting antibody, as is the case of apc . this drug stimulates the immune system and stops cancer cells from growing by the combination of biological therapies with bevacizumab , an already approved monoclonal antibody that locates tumor cells and kills them in a specific way (nct ). there are also many putative protein drugs against cancer which include antibodies antiintegrins (e.g., cilengitide and imgn ), sometimes in combination with classical therapies. a recently developed tool, the nanobodies or single domain antibodies, have several advantages: small size (only - kda), which lowers the possibility of triggering immune response, safety in clinical trials (nct ), and is easy to be joined to different kinds of compounds. all these features make nanobodies competent drugs against different diseases, and have been tested in vivo as bifunctional proteins associated to a prodrug, very efficient in mice cancer xenografts. even though cpps are very useful tools to deliver drugs and in gene therapy (see the chapter ''peptide nanoparticles for oligonucleotide delivery'' by lehto et al. in this volume), their toxicity and endosomal entrapment slows their inclusion for systemic delivery in clinical trials. nevertheless, there are a few examples of use to prevent undesirable cell proliferation in coronary artery bypass grafts, as is the case of a cpp (r-ahx-r) ahxb-pmo conjugate targeted to human c-myc to be applied ex vivo. the trial, in phase ii, has been completed in (nct ). another case is psorban , a product patented for the treatment of psoriasis based on a cyclosporine-polyarginine conjugate of local application, which circumvents the specificity problem of intravenous (i.v.) application. it is in clinical trial phase iii, but not yet in the market. finally, kai- , a pkcd inhibitor peptide conjugated to tat to function as an intravenous drug for the treatment of acute myocardial infarction, is currently in phase b clinical trial (nct , kai pharmaceuticals). there are many proteins, often organized as nanoparticles, that when associated to a drug, therapeutic protein, peptide, or nucleic acid increase the therapeutic efficacy of a cargo alone in the treatment of various diseases. some of them proved effective in animal models, which are discussed in more detail in this section, with relevant examples listed in table ii . these nanoparticles may simply be (a) a cpp to promote nonspecific internalization, - (b) a peptide to confer cargo specificity by joining a receptor distinctive of a cell type, including scfvs or peptides obtained by phage display, and (c) a mixture of both, since as observed in several studies the cpp does not reduce ligand specificity and increases nanoparticle potency. [ ] [ ] [ ] complex and multifunctional vehicles including endosomal escape peptides enhance the therapeutic potency of the complex, or other domains that allow their selective activation in certain contexts. , apart from the cases listed in table ii , the spectrum of additional examples of multidomain protein nanoparticles tested in vivo is wide, and a considerable proportion of them include cpps, mainly tat and polyarginines. a classical tat fusion protein is the transducible d-isomer ri-tatp c ' fusion protein that activates p protein in cancer cells, but not in normal cells. ri-tatp c treatment in terminal peritoneal carcinomatosis and peritoneal lymphoma preclinical models results in significant increases in life span (higher than sixfold) and full recovery from the disease. there are also several studies in vivo using tat-fused therapeutic proteins which have proven effective in treating tumors [ ] [ ] [ ] and cerebral ischemia , when applied intraperitoneally (i.p.). regarding polyarginines, kumar and colleagues have presented two different models in which a bifunctional peptide formed by nine arginines ( r) and a specific ligand constitute an effective sirna vehicle. in the first model, a chimerical peptide derived from rabies virus glycoprotein (to confer neuronal specificity) fused to d-arginines (rvg- r), was able to transport si-rna across the bbb and silence specific gene expression in the brain when applied intravenously. in the second model, a cd -specific single-chain antibody was conjugated to oligo- -arginine peptide (scfvcd - r) for t cell-specific antiviral sirna delivery in humanized mice reconstituted with human lymphocytes. in hiv-infected humanized mice, this treatment controlled viral replication and prevented the disease-associated cd t cell loss. moreover, it effectively suppressed viremia in infected mice. some other examples of polyarginines in tumor models are -d-arginines fused to a tumor-suppressor peptide, which stopped tumor growth in hepatocellular carcinoma-bearing mice when applied intraperitoneally, and also colesteryl oligoarginines carrying vegf sirna, which inhibited tumor growth in colon adenocarcinoma after local application. another bbb-crossing peptide is g , which is able to transport nanoparticles loaded with loperamide. in general, the partner fusion peptide can confer specificity instead of penetrability, as is the case of egfr fab fragment associated to liposomes that contain anticancer drug, which increases efficiency of anticancer effect in egf overexpressing xenograft tumors ; in addition, rgd- c-doxorubicin in human breast xenografts increases efficacy and diminishes toxicity. in many conjugates, the therapeutic peptide of the chimerical proteins is a toxin. anthrax lethal toxin has been modified to be activated by methaloproteases, and it has probed to be effective for human xenografted tumors such as melanoma, lung, and colorectal cancer. anthrax toxin has also been associated to antibodies or growth factors for lethal effects specifically on cancer cells. the specific cytotoxicity desired to treat a tumor might derive from a tissue factor, which promotes clotting to restrict blood supply in tumor vessels, fused to peptides that provide specificity, like v-cam antibodies, fibronectin, and integrin ligands. eventually, drug activity may decrease when conjugated to a carrier protein, although if the entry of the drug is favored, the overall balance of activity can be much more efficient. on the other hand, the use of noncovalent bond drug carrier could avoid interfering with the activity of the drug. an important issue in a preclinical study to be considered for a clinical trial is the administration route. in in vivo experiments, most of the protein nanoparticles are administered by local or intraperitoneal injection, avoiding systemic spreading and clearance in the vascular system, in a way very similar to in vitro experiments. the fda and emea, on the other hand, will preferentially approve i.v. and oral administrations rather than intraperitoneal or local injections except for very accessible tissues. another relevant issue is the number of active domains to be included in a therapeutic protein carrier, an issue that seems to be relevant for the functionality of the construct. for example, the cpp neutralization of a ligand may depend on the cpp/ligand ratio that is in the vehicle. it has also been observed that the integrin binding power of rgd-containing motives increases with the number of rgd domains over the monomer until a maxim of four moieties. another example is tat activity empowerment when attached to molecules that form tetramers, such as beta-galactosidase and p- . some multidomain protein carriers allow the drug entrance only in selected target cells by tailored smart selective mechanisms. for instance, cpps neutralized by polyanions are activated and enter the cells when they are released by metalloproteases or by lowering the ph, both situations being very common in tumors. cpp-morpholino oligomer (pmo) nanoparticles have also shown their effectiveness in treating viral infections by inhibiting viral replication, as demonstrated with the carrier (r-ahx-r) ahxb-pmo administered i.v. in animal models infected with picornaviruses, i.p. in mice infected with coronaviruses and flaviviruses, and the carrier r f c-pmo administered also i.p. in mice infected with ebola virus. furthermore, it has also been shown in some of these studies that the efficacy of the treatment is dependent on the incorporation of arginine-rich peptides in the nanoparticle. a good example of how a cpp can improve the internalization of a therapeutic protein is the case of insulin. the instability and low absorption in the digestive tract of insulin prevents its oral administration, even though it would be very convenient for a daily administrated drug. in recent studies, noncovalent conjugation of insulin to different cpps enhances its absorption without toxic intestinal effect, l-penetratin being the most efficient as insulin carrier. among the protein nanoparticles tested in vivo, it is worth making special mention of trojan horses generated in pardridge's laboratory to cross the bbb, through a strategy of fusing within a chimerical peptide the therapeutic protein which has to reach the cns to a monoclonal antibody against the human insulin receptor (hirmab). this trojan horse is very potent for humans and primates, and has proven effective to transport b-glucuronidase, a-l-iduronidase, gdnf, abeta amyloid peptides, paroxonase, etc., with potential benefits in diseases like mucopolysaccharidosis type vii, hurler syndrome, parkinson, alzheimer, and organophosphates toxicity, respectively. there are also promising results when protein nanoparticles have been tested as carriers for gene therapy in vivo, some examples being listed in table ii . in this regard, the use of modular proteins generated by insertional mutagenesis of b-galactosidase condensing the sod gene are able to protect neurons against ischemic injury ; a bifunctional galactosylated polylysine is able to conjugate plasmid dna and to differentially promote expression in hepatocytes that display asialoglycoprotein receptor ; a suicide multidomain protein particle formed by herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (hsv-tk) conjugated to transferrin (tf) by a biotin-streptavidin bridging, which, administered i.v. in k massively metastasized nude mice, was able to reduce tumor size and to increase mouse survival. in this chapter, proteins and peptides have been envisioned as potent biotechnological tools for the development of new biocompatible biological entities that can be used as therapeutic agents by themselves or as nanovehicles for the delivery of associated drugs. proteins are nanostructures that can form complex high-order entities such as vlps, resulting in appropriate cages for the internalization of therapeutic molecules. in addition, the design of modular proteins displaying selected functions has been possible by using in silico approximations to the feasibility of recombinant protein production. this approach has demonstrated the versatility of such molecules in the generation of novel delivery nanovehicles opening up the possibility of new functional combinations to enhance the specific interaction with the target tissue. such tunable specificity in the delivery of drugs, nucleic acids, or other proteins is one of the main properties that make multifunctional proteins appealing as more rational delivery vehicles. the presence on the market of such complex entities, which started with the approval of insulin for the treatment of diabetes, has been increasing over the past years, and this tendency is expected to continue. in fact, there are some products in clinical trials that will probably end up being approved and some more are being explored in preclinical experiments which might enter in clinical 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involved in coenzyme b -dependent degradation of , -propanediol in salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium lt pdup is a coenzyme-a-acylating propionaldehyde dehydrogenase associated with the polyhedral bodies involved in b -dependent , -propanediol degradation by salmonella enterica serovar typhimurium lt dna polymerase i function is required for the utilization of ethanolamine, , -propanediol, and propionate by salmonella typhimurium lt glutathione is required for maximal transcription of the cobalamin biosynthetic and , -propanediol utilization (cob/pdu) regulon and for the catabolism of ethanolamine, , -propanediol, and propionate in salmonella typhimurium lt microcompartments for b -dependent , -propanediol degradation provide protection from dna and cellular damage by a reactive metabolic intermediate conserving a volatile metabolite: a role for carboxysome-like organelles in salmonella enterica protein structures forming the shell of primitive bacterial organelles bacterial microcompartment organelles: protein shell structure and evolution atomic-level models of the bacterial carboxysome shell structure and mechanisms of a protein-based organelle in escherichia coli a multiprotein bicarbonate dehydration complex essential to carboxysome function in cyanobacteria analysis of carboxysomes from synechococcus pcc reveals multiple rubisco complexes with carboxysomal proteins ccmm and ccaa analysis of a genomic dna region from the cyanobacterium synechococcus sp. strain pcc involved in carboxysome assembly and function synthesis of empty bacterial microcompartments, directed organelle protein incorporation, and evidence of filament-associated organelle movement halothiobacillus neapolitanus carboxysomes sequester heterologous and chimeric rubisco species short n-terminal sequences package proteins into bacterial microcompartments structural basis of enzyme encapsulation into a bacterial nanocompartment a simple tagging system for protein encapsulation multiple assembly states of lumazine synthase: a model relating catalytic function and molecular assembly thermostability and molecular encapsulation within an engineered caged protein scaffold ph-triggered disassembly in a caged protein complex characterization and activity of sonochemically-prepared bsa microspheres containing taxol-an anticancer drug paclitaxel-clusters coated with hyaluronan as selective tumor-targeted nanovectors protein nanodisk assembling and intracellular trafficking powered by an arginine-rich (r ) peptide the nanoscale properties of bacterial inclusion bodies and their effect on mammalian cell proliferation surface cell growth engineering assisted by a novel bacterial nanomaterial nanostructured bacterial materials for innovative medicines development of a selfassembling nuclear targeting vector system based on the tetracycline repressor protein unraveling mysteries of the multifunctional protein sparc a virus-like particle vaccine for epidemic chikungunya virus protects nonhuman primates against infection recombinant h n viruslike particle vaccine elicits protective immunity in ferrets against the pandemic h n influenza virus properties, production, and applications of camelid singledomain antibody fragments efficient cancer therapy with a nanobody-based conjugate effect of cell-based intercellular delivery of transcription factor gata on ischemic cardiomyopathy morpholino oligomer-mediated exon skipping averts the onset of dystrophic pathology in the mdx mouse overcoming multidrug resistance of small-molecule therapeutics through conjugation with releasable octaarginine transporters in vivo delivery of the caveolin- scaffolding domain inhibits nitric oxide synthesis and reduces inflammation a non-covalent peptide-based carrier for in vivo delivery of dna mimics targeting cyclin b through peptide-based delivery of sirna prevents tumour growth antibody mediated in vivo delivery of small interfering rnas via cell-surface receptors selective inhibition of erbb -overexpressing breast cancer in vivo by a novel tat-based erbb -targeting signal transducers and activators of transcription -blocking peptide design of a tumor-homing cell-penetrating peptide a tumor-homing peptide with a targeting specificity related to lymphatic vessels penetratin improves tumor retention of single-chain antibodies: a novel step toward optimization of radioimmunotherapy of solid tumors killing hiv-infected cells by transduction with an hiv protease-activated caspase- protein development of elastin-like polypeptide for thermally targeted delivery of doxorubicin treatment of terminal peritoneal carcinomatosis by a transducible p -activating peptide antitumor effect of tat-oxygen-dependent degradation-caspase- fusion protein specifically stabilized and activated in hypoxic tumor cells the - amino acid sequence of the beta-domain of von hippel-lindau gene product is sufficient to inhibit renal tumor growth and invasion dendritic cells transduced with protein antigens induce cytotoxic lymphocytes and elicit antitumor immunity protein kinase c delta mediates cerebral reperfusion injury in vivo in vivo delivery of a bcl-xl fusion protein containing the tat protein transduction domain protects against ischemic brain injury and neuronal apoptosis t cell-specific sirna delivery suppresses hiv- infection in humanized mice cholesteryl oligoarginine delivering vascular endothelial growth factor sirna effectively inhibits tumor growth in colon adenocarcinoma epidermal growth factor receptor-targeted immunoliposomes significantly enhance the efficacy of multiple anticancer drugs in vivo cancer treatment by targeted drug delivery to tumor vasculature in a mouse model matrix metalloproteinase-activated anthrax lethal toxin demonstrates high potency in targeting tumor vasculature anthrax fusion protein therapy of cancer comparison of three different targeted tissue factor fusion proteins for inducing tumor vessel thrombosis overcoming methotrexate resistance in breast cancer tumour cells by the use of a new cellpenetrating peptide tumor cell retention of antibody fab fragments is enhanced by an attached hiv tat protein-derived peptide improved targeting of the alpha(v)beta ( ) integrin by multimerisation of rgd peptides probing the impact of valency on the routing of arginine-rich peptides into eukaryotic cells cell-penetrating and cell-targeting peptides in drug delivery tumor imaging by means of proteolytic activation of cell-penetrating peptides tat peptide-based micelle system for potential active targeting of anti-cancer agents to acidic solid tumors cell penetrating peptide conjugates of steric block oligonucleotides usefulness of cell-penetrating peptides to improve intestinal insulin absorption biopharmaceutical drug targeting to the brain gene transfer in vivo: sustained expression and regulation of genes introduced into the liver by receptor-targeted uptake in vivo gene delivery to tumor cells by transferrin-streptavidin-dna conjugate the authors appreciate the financial support received through grants bfu - from micinn, ps from fiss, and sgr- from agaur. the authors also acknowledge the support of the ciber de bioingeniería, biomateriales y nanomedicina (ciber-bbn), an initiative funded by the vi national r&d&i plan - , iniciativa ingenio , consolider program, ciber actions and financed by the instituto de salud carlos iii with assistance from the european regional development fund. protein nanoparticles engineered for drug delivery and gene therapy key: cord- -zr uujh authors: maccoux, lindsey j; clements, dylan n; salway, fiona; day, philip jr title: identification of new reference genes for the normalisation of canine osteoarthritic joint tissue transcripts from microarray data date: - - journal: bmc mol biol doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zr uujh background: real-time reverse transcriptase quantitative polymerase chain reaction (real-time rt-qpcr) is the most accurate measure of gene expression in biological systems. the comparison of different samples requires the transformation of data through a process called normalisation. reference or housekeeping genes are candidate genes which are selected on the basis of constitutive expression across samples, and allow the quantification of changes in gene expression. at present, no reference gene has been identified for any organism which is universally optimal for use across different tissue types or disease situations. we used microarray data to identify new reference genes generated from total rna isolated from normal and osteoarthritic canine articular tissues (bone, ligament, cartilage, synovium and fat). rt-qpcr assays were designed and applied to each different articular tissue. reference gene expression stability and ranking was compared using three different mathematical algorithms. results: twelve new potential reference genes were identified from microarray data. one gene (mitochondrial ribosomal protein s [mrps ]) was stably expressed in all five of the articular tissues evaluated. one gene hira interacting protein isoform [hirp ]) was stably expressed in four of the tissues evaluated. a commonly used reference gene glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh) was not stably expressed in any of the tissues evaluated. most consistent agreement between rank ordering of reference genes was observed between bestkeeper© and genorm, although each method tended to agree on the identity of the most stably expressed genes and the least stably expressed genes for each tissue. new reference genes identified using microarray data normalised in a conventional manner were more stable than those identified by microarray data normalised by using a real-time rt-qpcr methodology. conclusion: microarray data normalised by a conventional manner can be filtered using a simple stepwise procedure to identify new reference genes, some of which will demonstrate good measures of stability. mitochondrial ribosomal protein s is a new reference gene worthy of investigation in other canine tissues and diseases. different methods of reference gene stability assessment will generally agree on the most and least stably expressed genes, when co-regulation is not present. the quantification of gene expression allows the mechanism organising biological activity to be determined. at present, real-time rt-qpcr provides the most accurate and specific measure of gene expression, with an unsurpassed dynamic range and a high level of reproducibility. a number of variables will contribute to the variability of gene expression measurements, such as the number and type of cells in the tissue evaluated, the method and efficiency of mrna extraction, mrna handling techniques [ ] , mrna integrity [ , ] , method of reverse transcription [ ] and analytical detection chemistry method [ ] . these inter-sample differences are addressed through the process of normalisation [ ] , whereby the expression of an individual gene within a sample is related to that of a calibrating gene known as a reference, control or "housekeeping" gene. ideally, a reference gene is expressed at a consistent and repeatable quantity across all samples being compared, so that relative differences in gene expression can be measured with confidence. commonly used reference genes such as beta- -microglobulin (b m), glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh) and beta actin (actb), are not constantly expressed across all tissue types and disease states [ , ] . thus it is widely accepted that the selection of reference genes should be established through the validation of expression stability in the tissue or cells of interest, before use. a number of statistical algorithms exist for the optimisation of reference gene selection, such as genorm [ ] , global pattern recognition [ ] , bestkeeper© [ ] , equivalence tests [ ] and normfinder [ ] . in each case, mathematical evaluation of expression data allows the ordering of candidate reference genes, on the basis of the relative expression stabilities. at present, no gold standard exists for the selection of reference genes, and although methods have been compared with similar results in some reports [ ] [ ] [ ] but not in others [ ] , the optimal method for selections remains unknown. the identification of new reference genes from microarray data, within a particular tissue type, has been demonstrated to provide more "stable" reference genes than those conventionally used [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] , as determined using stability algorithms. microarray data can be stratified on the basis of fold changes in expression [ ] , the variance of expression [ , ] or integrative correlations [ ] . candidate genes can then be selected from stratified data, and frequently demonstrate expression stabilities greater than conventionally used reference genes [ , , ] . however microarray data has yet to identify a new reference gene which shows consistent stability across multiple tissue or cell types, and/or disease situations. therefore a ubiquitous reference gene suitable for normalisation of gene expression of all experiments probably does not exist, but the identification of new reference genes to improve in reference gene stability is important to reduce error in rt-qpcr experiments. in this study, we identified candidate reference genes from microarray expression profiling data generated from the evaluation of two different canine articular tissues (cartilage and cranial cruciate ligament). the relative stability of expression of each reference gene in normal and osteoarthritic canine articular tissues was determined from rt-qpcr reactions using statistical algorithmic packages. the stability of the new reference genes were compared between tissues, and related to a commonly used reference gene(gapdh). identities and putative functions of each of the new reference genes are listed in table . although the genes selected did not localise to common pathways or functions, two of the genes coded for mitochondrial ribosomal proteins. the metrics of the candidate reference gene stability are presented in table . all methods of stability analysis agreed in finding the new genes mrps and mrps to be stably expressed. likewise, c orf b and nck were determined to be the least stably expressed genes by both genorm ( figure b ) and normfinder ( figure a) . gapdh was identified as the th most stably expressed gene by both genorm and best-keeper©, and the th most stably expressed gene by normfinder. all three methods of reference gene analysis agreed on the most stably expressed reference genes, which were c orf b, mrps and mapk . genorm ( figure b ) and normfinder ( figure a ) agreed that the least stably expressed gene was nck . gapdh was identified as the th most stably expressed gene by normfinder, the th most stably expressed gene by genorm, and the th most stably expressed gene by bestkeeper©. methods did not agree on the most stably expressed genes, although all methods agreed on the five most stably expressed genes (albeit, not their order); atic, mrps , c orf b, ormdl and hirp . mrps was the least stably expressed gene as determined by both normfinder (figure a ) and genorm ( figure b ). gapdh was identified as the th most stably expressed gene by normfinder, the th most stably expressed gene by genorm, and the th most stably expressed gene by bestkeeper©. although bestkeeper© and normfinder agreed on the six most stably expressed genes (mrps , atic, hirp , tkt, mrps , ptdss ), and nck was determined to be the least stably expressed gene by normfinder ( figure a) and genorm ( figure b ), no further patterns of agreement in rank ordering of the expression profiles were identified. atic was identified as the most stably expressed gene by normfinder ( figure a) and bestkeeper© ( figure c ), and the th most stably expressed gene by genorm. rank ordering between normfinder and genorm agreed on the seven most stably expressed (c orf b, mrps , pias , ptdss , atic, mrps and hirp ) genes but not their order, and the least stably expressed gene (nck ). bestkeeper© ( figure c ) and normfinder ( figure a ) agreed on the most stably expressed gene (c orf b). using the reference gene stability value (m) of . as the determinant of stable expression [ ] , mrps was stably expressed in all five tissues, and hirp was found to be stably expressed in four tissues ( figure b ). gapdh was found to be unstable in all of the tissues evaluated, which is consistent with the findings of a previous study of reference genes in these tissues [ ] . comparison of gene stability (m) and pairwise stability (v) values with a previous study of commonly used reference genes using similar tissues further illustrates how optimal reference gene stabilities, as assessed by genorm, can be achieved using the new reference genes rather than the commonly used reference genes (table ) . no single reference gene was consistently identified as being the most stably expressed by normfinder, genorm or bestkeeper© across most tissues. there was not consistent agreement in the rank ordering, or the selection of the optimal candidates by the different methods, although reference gene stability measures as determined by: a figure reference gene stability measures as determined by: a. the normfinder algorithm (with a lower value indicating increased reference gene stability). b. the genorm algorithm (with a stability measure [m value] < . indication appropriate reference gene stability). c. the bestkeeper algorithm (with a higher value indicating increased reference gene stability). please note that as only the top genes (as ranked by the normfinder algorithm) are selected for analysis, thus there are not necessarily data points for each gene corresponding to each tissue. agreement was generally reached on the most and least stable gene. for example bestkeeper© and normfinder always identified the same gene as being most stably expressed. when looking at rank order across all three reference gene stability programs, fat pad showed the highest correlation between methods, followed by cruciate ligament, cartilage, bone and synovium as the least consistent ( table ) . when the data for all tissues was compared together (figure a , b, c), a much clearer pattern of reference gene stability was observed. the stability metrics of the reference genes in different tissues show similar patterns across all three methods. mrps demonstrates the most consistent metric (low genorm m value, low normfinder value and high bestkeeper© correlation), with hirp and atic demonstrating a similarly consistent stability across all tissues. this is supported by the finding that mrps was consistently identified as being stably expressed in all tissues by genorm (mrps ), as well as being ranked as one of the two most stable reference genes in four of the five tissues by genorm (cartilage, fat, bone and synovium), and in three of the five tissues using normfinder and bestkeeper© (cartilage, ligament and fat). identification of new reference genes using rt-qpcr methodology for gene normalisation was not successful at identifying new reference genes with increased stability. nck was determined to be the least stably expressed gene in synovium and fat pad, and one of the four least stably expressed genes in cruciate ligament and cartilage. trappc l was not identified as being stably expressed in any tissue using the genorm algorithm, and was not ranked higher than the th most stably expressed gene in any tissue using the normfinder algorithm. a number of different strategies have been employed to filter microarray data to identify new reference genes, such as selection on the co-efficient variation and level of expression [ ] , fold changes of expression [ , ] , or integrative correlations [ ] . we used a combination of filtering on statistical significance, fold change and coefficient of variation (percentage standard deviation) to narrow the potential number of reference genes. furthermore, these criteria were applied to three different experiments, using two different data sets, to identify genes which were more likely to have generic stability across multiple tissues for diseases. genes were finally filtered on the basis of defined annotation and level of expression. in retrospect, genes should also have been selected on the basis of single transcript expression (i.e. the absence of splice variants). although the two most stably expressed genes (mrps and hirp ) currently have no splice variants reported, the absence of splice variants did not necessarily confer reference gene stability across multiple tissues (as demonstrated by gapdh and mrps , genes which do not have splice variants annotated and were not the most stably expressed) but should be taken into account when selecting new reference genes, as another potential indicator of instability. our filtering method was straightforward, quickly performed and easily completed by any person without a full understanding of microarray data set handling, and as such could be applied to publicly available microarray data sets for a given experiment or disease. variability in the expression of commonly used reference genes has been recognised on the analysis of cell culture experiments [ ] and clinical tissue specimens [ ] . the selection of reference genes upon their stability as determined by the mathematical assessment of their expression values is a widely accepted technique [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , ] . we identified one gene which showed stable expression across normal and diseased articular tissues (mrps ), and a number of genes which demonstrated a relatively consistent stability across the majority of tissue specimens (hirp ). one should bear in mind that the tissues evaluated were from the same embryological origin (mesenchymal tissue), and hence there may have been a tendency towards identifying a reference gene which was stable in all tissues, although this is not supported by reports of reference gene stability in different tissues [ ] . likewise, the diseases compared in the microarray data sets were the same as those affecting the tissue samples evaluated by real-time rt-qpcr, which may further tend towards identifying reference genes whose stability was constant. therefore, although we identified one gene as being stably expressed in all tissues, we would not advocate its use as a reference gene in other tissues or diseases without assessment of its stability in the samples to be evaluated [ , , ] , as the utopia of a universal reference gene suitable for all studies probably does not exist on basis of the published evidence to date. mitochondrial ribosomal protein s is involved in mitochondrial protein synthesis. the precise function of this gene is unknown in eukaryotes, but the protein is thought to be involved in organising the ' domain of the s rrna in the mitochondria of prokaryotes, and thus be involved in the initiation of translation in mammalian mitochondria [ ] . microarray data analysis indicated the mitochondrial ribosomal protein s was also stably expressed, although it was only stably expressed in two of the four tissues analysed by rt-qpcr (cartilage and fat pad). in a separate study, mitochondrial ribosomal protein l was one of six genes identified from microarray data obtained from different tissues and cells, as a good reference gene for real-time rt-qpcr experiments, when compared to conventional reference genes for mammary tumour expression profiling [ ] . mitochondrial ribosomal gene expression appears to show greater stability across different tissues and thus may be less affected by tissue type or disease status, and better potential candidate reference genes for other real-time rt-qpcr experiments. comparing the results of this study to a similar previous study of commonly used reference genes in multiple articular tissues demonstrates the increased stability of the "new" reference genes (table ) [ ] . the selection of candidate reference genes from microarray data identified new genes which were more stably expressed and is consistent with the general outcome of previous studies using this methodology [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . the normalisation of microarray data by geometric mean of three reference genes [ ] did not identify genes (nck or trappc l) with appropriate stability to be suitable for use as reference genes. the instability of these genes may be reflected, in part, by the greater variation identified in the triplicate repeats of each assay when compared to more genes determined as being more stably expressed such as hirp or mrps . the less stable expression of the three conventional reference genes (gapdh, rpl a and sdha) probably resulted in the selection of similarly "unstably" expressed reference genes from microarray data, and thus accounted for this being a futile method of trying to select reference genes, which agrees with the evaluation of these types of methodologies for the accurate normalisation of microarray data [ ] . these genes were selected on the basis of a preliminary study of reference gene stability in canine oa tissues [ ] , however subsequent work evaluating greater sample numbers has determined that one of these genes (shda) demonstrates differential expression in oa cartilage [ ] and thus its use may have further predisposed to the selection of genes which were not stably expressed. furthermore, the conventionally used reference gene we evaluated (gapdh) did not show acceptable stable expression in any of the tissues we analysed. we used three different methods of ranking reference gene stability in each experiment. correlation co-efficient could be generated to compare methods and quantify the agreement of the rank ordering of different methods. previous studies have demonstrated that the generation of rank orders can be very similar between different methods [ ] , but this is not always the case [ ] . the best correlation in rank ordering was observed between genorm and bestkeeper©, across all the tissues which is unsurprising as both are generated by pairwise comparisons (although genorm uses transformed data, whereas bestkeeper© uses threshold cycle values), although bestkeeper© and normfinder always identified the same gene as being most stably expressed. the rank order of reference gene stability was identified most consistently for fat pad, followed by cruciate ligament, cartilage, bone and least consistently for synovium. the advantage of using a model based stability assessment is that rank ordering can be changed if co-regulated genes are included in the stability assessment procedure, as pairwise assessments will determine an increase in stability between these methods [ ] . as we identified a number of new reference genes which have very little functional information associated with their annotation, we checked for co-regulation between the most stably expressed genes by removing one of the highest ranked genes (as determined by pairwise comparisons) alternately, and reassessing the rank ordering of reference genes stabilities. no major changes in rank ordering or reference gene stability were observed when this was performed. however, it should be noted that other factors besides gene expression pathway similarities can contribute to co-regulation. yu et al. ( ) identified that genes targeted by similar transcription factors have complex relationships across the co-regulated genes [ ] . the different methods for determining reference gene stability did not necessarily agree on rank order, but were good at determining both the most and least stably expressed genes, regardless of method. the top two most stably expressed genes analysed by genorm for each tissue were then used to study cytokine gene expression in canine osteoarthritis [ ] . the use of microarray data for the selection of reference genes allowed the identification of multiple genes demonstrating greater stability than a conventional reference gene in multiple tissues. mitochondrial ribosomal protein s is suitable for use in all the experimental conditions we analysed, and is suitable for investigation in other experiments. different methods of assessment of gene stability do not always show correlation between the rank order of gene expression stability, but they do generally agree on which genes are suitable for use to normalise gene expression experiments. expression profiling data from hip articular cartilage samples ( control, from osteoarthritic [oa] joints) and cranial cruciate ligament (ccl) samples ( normal low-risk of rupture, normal high-risk of rupture, and ruptured ligament from oa joints) were generated from a custom designed k transcript canine whole genome mer oligonucleotide microarray [ ] . raw data was normalised by two methods; locally weighted scatterplot smoothing (lowess), or using the geometric mean of conventional reference genes arbitrarily selected (glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase [gapdh], ribosomal protein l a [rpl a], succinate dehydrogenase flavoprotein subunit a [sdha]). expression quantification was exported into an excel datasheet (microsoft excel ), and the data compared in three separate experiments as follows; ) normal hip articular cartilage was compared to oa cartilage, ) normal ccl (high-risk of rupture) was compared to normal ccl (low-risk of rupture), the stepwise procedure for identifying candidate reference genes is illustrated in figure . data for each reference gene candidate was compared in each experiment by calculating the fold change in mean expression level (between the two comparison groups), student's t-tests and percentage standard deviation (co-efficient of variation). to identify the most stably expressed genes across each of the experiments, the prospective reference genes were then selected using the following the criteria; . student's t-test p value > . (in all experiments). . ratio of expression between the two groups compared in each experiment < . (in all experiments). . standard deviation of the mean expression in each experimental group being < % (in all experiments). the data sets were reduced to transcripts (lowess normalised) and transcripts (reference gene normalisation). to further refine and filter the new reference gene list, data was ordered on the average signal intensity and; . the probe sequences used from the microarray experiments were entered into the ncbi blast ® database [ ] to confirm the gene identity, . gene function was determined [ ] and the associated gene information checked to ensure no known involvement in oa. complete filtering reduced the data set to genes, of which were selected from the lowess normalised data, ( and cytoplasmic protein nck [nck ]). glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase [gapdh] was also selected as it is a commonly used reference. the sequence details and putative functions (determined by reference to the human transcripts [ ] ) are listed in table . a separate set of samples were collected for the analysis of the new reference genes. infrapatellar fat (n = ), ruptured cranial cruciate ligament (n = ), femoral head articular cartilage (n = ), ulnar subchondral bone (n = ) and synovial membrane (n = ) were obtained from dogs with clinical oa secondary to naturally occurring joint disease. in each case the samples were obtained as part of the standard surgical treatment for the disease in question (total hip replacement, cranial cruciate ligament rupture surgery or fragmented coronoid process removal). con-trol samples (healthy) were obtained from infrapatellar fat pad (n = ), cranial cruciate ligament (n = ), synovial membrane (n = ), hip articular cartilage (n = ) and ulnar bone (n = ) of dogs euthanized for reasons other than, and with no evidence of, joint disease. following the collection of the tissue, the samples were weighed and immediately stored in rnalater™ (qiagen inc, crawley, uk), according to the manufacturer's instructions, until extraction. for all of the tissue samples total rna was extracted using a phenol/guanidine hydrochloride reagent (trizol, invitrogen ltd, uk) with a chloroform extraction and ethanol precipitation, as previously described [ ] . an on column dna digestion step was included (rnase-free dnase set, qiagen ltd, crawley, uk). final elution of the total rna was performed using μl of rnase free water, and repeated to maximize the amount of rna eluted. total rna samples were stored at - °c until use. the concentration of total rna representing each sample was quantified by using a nanodrop ® nd - uv/visible spectrophotometer (nanodrop technologies ltd, utah, usa). reverse transcription was performed using superscript ii reverse transcriptase (invitrogen, dorset, uk) according to the manufacturers instructions [ ] . initially μg ( μl) total rna was pre-incubated with . μg ( μl) oligo-dt [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] (invitrogen, paisley, uk) and mm ( μl) dntp mix (invitrogen, paisley, uk) at ° for minutes. after microarray data normalised by two different methods was filtered to identify new reference genes using statistical significance, fold changes in expression between experimental groups, the co-efficient of variation and ontological evaluation chilling on ice, μl of × first strand buffer (containing mm tris-hci (ph . ), mm kc , mm mgcl ), μl of . m dtt and units ( μl) of rnase (promega, southhampton, uk) were added to each sample and the samples incubated for minutes at °c, followed by the addition of units ( μl) of superscript ii reverse transcriptase (invitrogen, doreset, uk) and incubated for minutes. reverse transcriptase activity was terminated by incubation at °c for minutes, and samples stored at - °c until use. transcript sequences were obtained from the national centre for biotechnology information [ ] and were cross referenced to the ensembl canine genome database [ ] . primer and probe sequences were then designed for each of the reference genes by using the universal probe library assay design centre (roche diagnostics ltd; [ ] ) blast searches were performed for all primer sequences to confirm gene specificity, and electrophoresis of the pcr reaction mixture confirmed a single product of the appropriate length in all cases. primers were synthesized by metabion international ag (martinsried, germany), and probes were synthesized by roche diagnostics (lewes, uk) using locked nucleic acid with '-end reporter dye fluorescein (fam ( -carboxy fluorescene)) and '-end dark quencher dye. real-time rt-qpcr assays were performed in triplicate using the lightcycler ® (roche diagnostics; lewes, uk) in well format, with three no template controls used for each assay. the reaction volume in each well consisted of [ ] , the parameters of which are listed in table . all samples were checked for absence of genomic dna contamination using a canine genome specific rt-qpcr assay, previously described [ ] . the assays were deemed to be reproducible, as determined by the average standard deviation of the triplicate repeats of each assay being less than % (table ) . real-time rt-qpcr data was exported into an excel datasheet (microsoft excel ) and analysed using three separate reference gene stability analysis software packages; genorm [ ] , bestkeeper© [ ] and normfinder [ ] . each of these methods generates a measure of reference gene stability, which can be used to rank the reference genes in order of stability. genorm generates a stability measure (the m value) for each gene which is arbitrarily suggested to be lower than . (with a lower value indicating increased gene stability across samples), and a pairwise stability measure to determine the benefit of adding extra reference genes for the normalisation process, with again a lower value indicating greater stability of the normalised genes, and a lower value indicating greater stability with an arbitrary cut off value of lower than . indicating acceptable stability of the reference gene combination [ ] . normfinder generates a stability measure of which a lower value indicates increased stability in gene expression. by using a model-based approach, normfinder groups samples to allow for a direct estimation of expression variation, compared to the pairwise comparison approach that ranks genes according to the similarity of their expression profiles. therefore, taking a sample set which consists of two sample subgroups where all of the candidates but one show little difference between the groups, the one candidate which shows no difference will have the smallest stability value across all candidates and be the most stably expressed gene. best-keeper© generates a pairwise correlation co-efficient between each gene and the bestkeeper© index (the geometric mean of the threshold cycle values of all the reference genes grouped together). stability measures for combined (normal and diseased) samples were recorded, as ultimately it is these measures which would be used to determine which genes were suitable for normalising expression data from genes of interest in a particular disease (osteoarthritis) in practice. bestkeeper© can only be used to analyse a maximum of housekeeping genes so the three genes least stably expressed (as determined by normfinder) were excluded from bestkeeper© analysis. the stability values for each gene, as determined by each method of analysis, are illustrated in figure a , b, and c. statistical tests were performed using a statistical software package (minitab v . ; minitab ltd.; coventry, uk). spearman rank correlation coefficients were then calculated using the ranking order of genes to compare the relationship of the relative ordering of genes by different methods of analysis (table ) . finally, the stability parameters of the new reference genes were compared to those generated for commonly used reference genes in a similar study of canine oa tissues [ ] (table ) . pitfalls of quantitative real-time reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction towards standardization of rna quality assessment using user-independent classifiers of microcapillary electrophoresis traces quantification of mrna using real-time reverse transcription pcr (rt-pcr): trends and problems sensitivity and accuracy of quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction using sybr green i depends on cdna synthesis conditions real-time rt-pcr normalisation; strategies and considerations accurate normalization of real-time quantitative rt-pcr data by geometric averaging of multiple internal control genes validation of housekeeping genes for normalizing rna expression in real-time pcr customized molecular phenotyping by quantitative gene expression and pattern recognition analysis determination of stable housekeeping genes, differentially regulated target genes and sample integrity: bestkeeper--excel-based tool using pair-wise correlations equivalence test in quantitative reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction: confirmation of reference genes suitable for normalization normalization of real-time quantitative reverse transcription-pcr data: a model-based variance estimation approach to identify genes suited for normalization, applied to bladder and colon cancer data sets reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr analysis in virus infected cells: sars corona virus, yellow fever virus, human herpesvirus- , camelpox virus and cytomegalovirus infections selection of reference genes for quantitative rt-pcr studies in striped dolphin (stenella coeruleoalba) skin biopsies comparison of reference genes for normalization of gene expression levels in epstein-barr virus-transformed lymphoblastoid cell lines and fibroblasts selection of suitable reference genes for accurate normalization of gene expression profile studies in non-small cell lung cancer statistical modeling for selecting housekeeper genes expression stability of commonly used control genes in canine articular connective tissues validation of endogenous controls for gene expression studies in human adipocytes and preadipocytes a comparison of various "housekeeping" probes for northern analysis of normal and osteoarthritic articular cartilage rna martens a: selection of a set of reliable reference genes for quantitative real-time pcr in normal equine skin and in equine sarcoids development and evaluation of canine reference genes for accurate quantification of gene expression identification of a mammalian mitochondrial homolog of ribosomal protein s clinically validated benchmarking of normalisation techniques for two-colour oligonucleotide spotted microarray slides expression stability of commonly used reference genes in canine articular connective tissues analysis of normal and osteoarthritic canine cartilage mrna expression by quantitative-pcr genomic analysis of gene expression relationships in transcriptional regulatory networks expression profiling of select cytokines in canine osteoarthritis tissues design and production of a whole genome dog oligonucleotide microarray. advances in canine and feline genomics information ncb: national centre for biotechnology information assessment of the use of rna quality metrics for the screening of normal and pathological canine articular cartilage samples oligonucleotides used as template calibrators for general application in quantitative polymerase chain reaction lm was self funded, dnc was funded by the biotechnology and biological sciences research council, fs was funded by the university of manchester, and pjd was funded by the higher education funding council of england. the study was funded in part by a grant from the petplan charitable trust, uk, and in part by a project grant from the university of manchester. the manuscript preparation was funded by the university of manchester. neither funding body had any role in the study design; in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript; or the decision to submit the manuscript for publication. dnc and lm carried out the microarray data analysis. lm and fs carried out the assay design. dnc, lm and fs performed the molecular genetic studies and dnc performed the statistical analysis. dnc and pjrd conceived the study, its design and coordination, and drafted the manuscript with lm. key: cord- - o mryu authors: dhama, k.; mahendran, mahesh; gupta, p. k.; rai, a. title: dna vaccines and their applications in veterinary practice: current perspectives date: - - journal: vet res commun doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: o mryu inoculation of plasmid dna, encoding an immunogenic protein gene of an infectious agent, stands out as a novel approach for developing new generation vaccines for prevention of infectious diseases of animals. the potential of dna vaccines to act in presence of maternal antibodies, its stability and cost effectiveness and the non-requirement of cold chain have heightened the prospects. even though great strides have been made in nucleic acid vaccination, still there are many areas that need further research for its wholesome practical implementation. major areas of concern are vaccine delivery, designing of suitable vectors and cytotoxic t cell responses. also, the induction of immune responses by dna vaccines is inconclusive due to the lack of knowledge regarding the concentration of the protein expressed in vivo. alternative delivery systems having higher transfection efficiency and the use of cytokines, as immunomodulators, needs to be further explored. recently, efforts are being made to modulate and prolong the active life of dendritic cells, in order to make antigen presentation a more efficacious one. for combating diseases like acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (aids), influenza, malaria and tuberculosis in humans; and foot and mouth disease, aujesky’s disease, swine fever, rabies, canine distemper and brucellosis in animals, dna vaccine clinical trials are underway. this review highlights the salient features of dna vaccines, and measures to enhance their efficacy so as to devise an effective and novel vaccination strategy against animal diseases. the property of naked dna to get transfected to mammalian cells in vivo was first reported by ito ( ) ; and three decades later, the concept of dna vaccine was evolved by wolff et al. ( ) , when they administered a recombinant bacterial plasmid dna to obtain the expression of β-galactosidase gene in mice. this paved way for the development of nucleic acid based vaccination, an effective way for the in vivo expression of desired protein to initiate immune response (oshop et al. ; liu ) . the application of dna immunization as a new generation vaccine has been well studied since its invention, and a variety of such vaccines have undergone clinical trials, in veterinary practice (dunham ; oshop et al. ; babiuk et al. ; babiuk et al. ). the dna vaccines elicit desired immune responses viz. cell mediated immunity (cmi) and humoral immune response (hir); and it is much easier for their manipulation using recombinant dna techniques and production in bacteria using fed-batch fermentation (liu ; liu et al. ) . as an effective vaccine, plasmid dna have a gene encoding a protective antigen of a pathogen, which when injected into host, is transcribed and translated, to induce a specific immune response. the dna vaccines, described as genetic immunization to elicit a protective immune response, have been further improved by exploiting various gene delivery methods, cytokine adjuvants and prime-boost (dna vaccine priming and recombinant protein boosting) approaches (sharma and khuller ; jiang et al. ). dna vaccines have several advantages, which include simplicity of manufacture, biological stability, cost effectiveness and safety, ease of transport in lyophilized form and the ability to act in presence of maternal immunity. besides, different genes can be combined simultaneously, making it possible to develop multivalent vaccines. the demerits of dna vaccines, of theoretical levels and not yet proven are; integration into host genome, activation of proto-oncogenes, inactivation of tumor suppressor genes and the possibility of generating anti-nuclear antibodies (sharma and khuller ; dunham ) . however, as the merits of dna vaccines outnumber the hypothesized demerits, presently they have moved towards second stage clinical trials with promising results, for human diseases like acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (aids), herpes infections, rabies, ebola, tuberculosis, malaria, and leishmaniosis. however, a commercial product has not reached the market yet, due to the safety concerns raised by the international regulatory organizations. regarding veterinary practice, the last few years have seen numerous trials of dna vaccines against various animal diseases like foot and mouth disease (fmd) and herpes virus infection in cattle, aujeszky's disease and classical swine fever in swine, rabies and canine distemper in canines, and avian influenza, infectious bronchitis, infectious bursal disease and coccidiosis in birds (oshop et al. ; dunham ; ding et al. ; gupta et al. ; patial et al. ). one of the distinct advantages of the dna vaccines is the possibility of differentiating infected from the vaccinated animals (diva), for effective disease eradication programs. the utility of 'marker' dna vaccines has been reported for diseases like fmd and avian influenza (lee et al. ; grubman ) . even though, dna vaccines has ushered a new era in veterinary vaccinology, the potential of the vaccine to develop higher levels of immune response, has to be further improved. keeping in view of the appealing features, and ease of generation of dna vaccines, in the present review, authors have meticulously portrayed the salient features of dna vaccines, ways to improve its efficacy, and their potential applications in veterinary practice. salient features of dna vaccines and strategies to improve vaccine efficacy dna vaccines, generated using plasmids, include a gene encoding target antigen under the transcriptional control of an effective viral/eukaryotic promoter, along with a polyadenylation signal sequence (poly-a) and a bacterial origin of replication ( fig. ) (gurunathan et al. ) . the commonly used promoter has been derived from cytomegalovirus (cmv). the poly-a provides stability and effective translation; and the antibiotic resistance gene facilitates selection of bacteria (gurunathan et al. ; sharma and khuller ; liu ; brandsma ) . for complete optimization, the plasmid should have kozak sequence (gcca/gcc) upstream of initiator codon, and an enhancer, down stream of the poly-a signal (gurunathan et al. ) . as a vaccine, the amount of plasmid dna required for im administration is - μg in mice, - μg in small animals and . - . mg in large animals and humans; but, while using 'gene gun', only one hundredth of this amount is required (dunham ) . if properly optimized, the recombinant plasmids are capable of expressing the desired antigen in vivo (dunham ; babiuk et al. ; babiuk et al. ) . but, to elicit an effective immune response, the protein should undergo post-translational modification and retain their tertiary structure. after in vivo generation, the antigenic peptides are processed and presented by professional antigen presenting cells (apcs), like dendritic cells, by getting primed through direct transfection or by obtaining proteins from myocytes via cross presentation (fig. ) (fu et al. ) , to further allow presentation via both mhc i and ii, to induce cellular and humoral showing essential features of a dna vaccine construct. transcription unit comprises of a promoter, desired immunogenic or protective gene and a polyadenylation signal sequence. a bacterial origin of replication (ori) and an antibiotic resistance gene are also incorporated in the vector back bone to permit growth and selection of the plasmid in bacteria immunity. however, in some cases, dna vaccines have failed to produce measurable antibodies even when the host got protected, suggesting a major role for cellular immune responses (seo et al. ; kodihalli et al. ) . in addition, the potential of dna vaccines to act in presence of maternal antibodies is remarkable, due to the ability to provide a durable source of the antigen by dendritic cells. similarly, when administered with cationic liposomes, they enhance mucosal immunity, to protect the host from respiratory or enteric infections. besides, researchers have suggested the immunogenic properties of the plasmid itself, by virtue of having cpg motifs, functioning as adjuvant and up-regulator of natural killer (nk) cells (krieg ) . for improving dna vaccines, efforts have been made to enhance their efficacy, through efficient vectors, and vaccine delivery systems that combines delivery route and formulation. in animals, dna vaccines are found less effective due to host impedance, improper transfection and low level of expression. but, various delivery formulations and route could enhance the immune response. delivery methods like suppositories (loehr et al. ) , needle free injector system (van rooij et al. ) , mucosal delivery (barnes et al. ) and topical application (oshop et al. ) , have been found useful. vaccination professional apcs like dendritic cells and macrophages receives the secreted antigens (cross presentation) from transfected somatic cells or directly get transfected. they process and present the antigenic peptides to major histocompatibility complex (mhc) class ii molecules for helper t cells, which releases a variety of cytokines to augment activation of various cells of immune system. activation of cytotoxic t lymphocytes occurs by degraded antigenic peptides that are associated with mhc class i molecules. these two mechanisms help in the generation of cellular immune responses. for humoral or antibody responses, b lymphocytes recognize and respond to antigens that are present extracellularly, or as secreted antigens using gene gun, help in direct transfection of dendritic cells, favoring effective antigen presentation (dunham ; ulmer et al. ) . also, by using cationic lipid complexes and cytokine adjuvants, the efficacy could be significantly improved (min et al. ; stevenson ; manoj et al. a; dhama et al. ). however, the major lacuna that still persists is the lack of simultaneous generation of cmi and hir. hence, researchers have evolved various options to improvise dna vaccines for increasing cmi and hir together. addition of a eukaryotic secretory signal sequence have been found to improve the activity of cytotoxic and helper t cells. also, linking of ubiquitin molecule to enhance the proteasome-based degradation, and the use of toll like receptor (tlr) adapter molecule (myd ) along with the desired gene, may elicit a strong cmi and hir. further, the use of l-selectin or cytotoxic t lymphocyte antigen (ctla- ) ligands help better antigen targeting to the immune cells (chaplin et al. ) . similarly, targeting of the dendritic cells by heat shock proteins (hsp); microparticulate formulations, and complexing with nonionic block co-polymers, polycations or cochleates, may also increase vaccine efficacy (manoj et al. a) . targeted intra-cellular delivery of plasmid dna can be further achieved using intracellular bacteria and viruses (liu ; daudel et al. ). recently, prime-boost regimens and ways to increase the functional life of dendritic cells have been explored (ulmer et al. ; tsen et al. ). also, 'electroporation', few days prior to vaccination, has been found to force plasmid into cells or promoting influx of inflammatory cells like macrophages in myocytes (babiuk et al. ; peng et al. ). further, nanoparticle-mediated plasmid delivery has been suggested for augmenting the immune responses (jiang et al. ). veterinary vaccinology is a rapidly developing field and currently, vaccines are not only used for the prevention of diseases in animals, but also to help solve public health crisis, by effectively checking emerging or re-emerging pathogens of zoonotic significance. advancement in science and technology, together with improved knowledge in immunology, microbiology and recombinant technology has played pivotal roles in introducing novel ideas in vaccinology (babiuk et al. ; liu et al. ) . shams ( ) , has pointed out that subunit vaccines, dna vaccines and vectored vaccines are rapidly gaining acceptance as new generation animal vaccines. the last few years have seen the development of nucleic acid vaccines against many diseases like classical swine fever, aujeszky's disease, rabies, foot and mouth disease, brucellosis, bovine tuberculosis, equine herpes infections, avian infectious bronchitis, avian influenza, infectious bursal disease, chlamydiosis and avian coccidiosis (table ). dna vaccines have promoted a revolution in the concept of vaccination, which has been previously dominated by inactivated or live vaccines. among many advantages, dna vaccines also provide diva strategy, and hence vaccine-induced herd/flock immunity can be differentiated for effective sero-surveillance (lee et al. ) . hence, the latest research development in the field of nucleic acid-based vaccination strategy for preventing various bacterial and viral diseases of domestic animals as well as poultry has been discussed further in detail. bovines genetic immunization approach against bacterial diseases of bovines offers attractive possibilities for rapid and effective vaccine development. against brucellosis, an im administered l /l gene has been reported to result in intracellular expression of the immunodominant l /l protein (kurar and splitter ) . brucella abortus glyceraldehyde- -phosphate-dehydrogenase (gdph), a t and b cell reactive protein, which could induce partial protection when co-administered with il- ; and the copper-zinc super oxide dismutase (sod) antigen of b. abortus has also been utilized for the generation of an effective dna vaccine (rivers et al. ) . against mycobacterial infections in cattle, huygen ( ) has explained the utility and feasibility of the dna vaccine approaches. dna vaccine based on myobacterium bovis protein mpb- when tested in mice has shown to elicit protective immune responses (chambers et al. ) . the use of costimulatory molecule cd along with esat- gene has been suggested to enhance the immunogenic properties of mycobacterial dna vaccines. further, m. bovis ag b gene has been found suitable while incorporating in plasmid vector due to its ability to induce a th type of immune response (teixeira et al. ). aside to this, recently, dna vaccines used in combination with bacillus calmette guerin (bcg) elicited superior protection during challenge studies (cai et al. dhama et al. ) . against viral diseases of bovines, the earliest reports suggest the use of a gene encoding the vp protein of bovine rotavirus (brv), found effective in stimulating a th -like immune response (suradhat et al. ) . later, brillowska et al. ( ) reported the generation of an effective cellular immune response with the plasmid encoding envelope glycoprotein gp and transmembrane glycoprotein gp of the bovine leukemia virus (blv). also, dna vaccine encoding the fusion (f) gene of bovine respiratory syncytial virus (brsv) has been found to induce protection against the infection in calves. besides, several workers have developed successful dna vaccine strategies against bovine herpes virus- (bhv- ) infection (loehr et al. ; gupta et al. ; castrucci et al. ) . gupta et al. ( ) reported that dna immunization with gc gene of bhv- could induce neutralizing antibody and lympho-proliferative responses in bovines. also, bhv- gb gene along with il- has been suggested to enhance the ctl responses. further, suppositories containing plasmid coding for gd gene of bhv- induced mucosal immunity (loehr et al. ) ; and bovine cd co-stimulatory molecule linked to gd gene enhanced the immune responses (manoj et al. b ). it has also been suggested that gd gene confers higher protection when compared to gc gene. further, the intercellular trafficking ability of bhv- vp protein has been utilized to improve the efficacy of a dna vaccine encoding gd gene (zheng et al. ) . nucleic acid vaccine that could protect the cattle against bovine viral diarrhea virus (bvdv) infection has also been developed. plasmid dna, expressing the bvdv type glycoprotein e , induced virus-specific neutralizing antibodies (nobiron et al. ) . non-structural protein ns could also be used for inducing humoral immunity against bvd. further, liang et al. ( ) found that the dna prime boost regimens were effective for preventing bvd in cattle when compared to the administration of dna vaccine or protein vaccine alone. vp based dna vaccines are being utilized for developing effective vaccines against foot and mouth disease (fmd) (dong et al. ) . plasmid dna encoding the fmdv vp protein followed by boosting with a vp peptide conjugate resulted in production of high titers of neutralizing antibodies, suggesting that prime-boost strategy could be a key factor for the success of dna vaccine against fmd (jin et al. ) . also, the use of il- along with vp gene may provide enhanced immune response (shao et al. ) . recently, a microparticulate based dna vaccine has been developed that codes for the t and b cell epitopes of vp of the fmdv (wang et al. ) . dna vaccines are also being reported against some rickettsial diseases and ectoparasites of bovines. vaccine containing the gene of a major surface protein, msp b, of anaplasma marginale, offered partial protection against challenge infection (de andrade et al. ) . dna constructs involving orf of genes, cpg and groel and groes of ehrlichia ruminantium could partially protect cattle against "heart water" disease. the potential of dna immunization with plasmid encoding antigen bm to induce humoral and cellular immune responses against the tick, boophilus microplus, has also been studied (ruiz et al. ). ovines and caprines nucleic acid vaccines have been developed that could confer protection to the common bacterial diseases of sheep and goats. dna vaccination with genetically detoxified phospholipase d of corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis, linked with ctla- , protected sheep against caseous lymphadenitis (chaplin et al. ) . in case of anthrax in sheep, the protective antigen (pa ) gene of bacillus anthracis has been employed for developing highly promising dna vaccine (hahn et al. ). paratuberculosis or johne's disease, caused by mycobacterium avium subsp. paratuberculosis, has been successfully controlled by using plasmids coding mycobacterial heat shock protein antigen (hsp- ) (sechi et al. ) . against brucellosis, administering dna vaccine that encode brucella melitensis outer membrane proteins (omp), invasion protein b (ialb), periplasmic protein (bp ) and trigger factor (tf) have been found to induce significant immune responses, which could pave way for the effective control of brucellosis in goats gupta et al. ) . for preventing viral diseases of the small ruminants, dna vaccines have been developed that could protect against diseases like caprine arthritis-encephalitis (cae), foot and mouth disease (fmd), visna-maedi and rift valley fever. a plasmid expressing cae viral envelope gene with prime-boost vaccination strategy has shown to induce protective responses in goats (cheevers et al. ) . if using gene gun-based mucosal dna immunization against visna-maedi in sheep, the plasmid expressing the envelope gene of the virus in combination with ifnγ gene, is expected to give significant protection and also could restrict virus replication. for preventing fmd infection, niborski et al. ( ) reported the development of a vp -based nucleic acid vaccine and found that it was more effective when used along with poly lactide co-galactide (plg) formulation. against rift valley fever, the viral glycoprotein gene of rift valley fever virus (rvfv) when used as dna vaccine have been found to induce neutralizing antibodies during experimental studies. recently, babiuk et al. ( ) reported that a single dna vaccination with the hepatitis b virus surface antigen gene (hbsag), in combination with electroporation, approached the efficacy of the commercial subunit vaccine in maintaining long-term protective serum antibody titers against hepatitis b virus in sheep. dna vaccines are also being developed against many ecto-and endo-parasites of small ruminants. vaccination of sheep with a plasmid for the boophilus microplus antigen bm co-administered with plasmid encoding for ovine granulocyte monocyte-colony stimulating factor (gm-csf) provided significant levels of protection against b. microplus infestation ). an effective recombinant plasmid, encoding the kda sporozoite surface protein of cryptosporidium parvum has been developed for goats, which provided protective maternal immunity to offsprings (sagodira et al. ). also, schistosoma japonicum genes (sj gst and sj ) in dna vaccine formulation offered partial protection as evidenced by a reduction in parasite counts (shi et al. ) . similarly, a nucleic acid vaccine against tapeworms, using the w gene of taenia ovis, a protective membrane bound antigen, showed optimum humoral response (drew et al. ) . swine regarding the dna vaccines developed against bacterial diseases in swine, very few research works have been reported. against swine enzootic pneumonia (sep), caused by mycoplasma hyopneumoniae, plasmid dna coding the heat shock protein gene (p ) should be a suitable candidate as it is capable of inducing both th and th immune responses. against sep, the capability of p adhesin repeat region of m. hyopneumoniae to produce immunogenicity in mice in dna vaccine formulation has also been described (chen et al. ) . however, considerable research has been directed towards developing dna vaccines to prevent swine fever, fmd and psuedorabies infection in pigs. plasmid constructs have been developed that could protect swine against the classical swine fever (csf), which causes significant losses to the pig industry in many asian and european countries (wienhold et al. ; andrew et al. ) . immunization of pigs with a plasmid expressing the complete e protein of classical swine fever virus (csfv), conferred protection against viral challenge; and the co-delivery of il- , il- and cd further enhanced the protective responses (wienhold et al. ; andrew et al. ; li et al. ) . regarding fmd in swine, dna vaccines encoding vp gene of o, a and c strains of fmd virus showed protection against the disease when administered using 'gene gun' (benvenisti et al. ) . two vp epitopes (amino acid residues - and - ) have also been found suitable to elicit both fmdv-specific t cell proliferation and neutralizing antibodies (wong et al. ) . researchers have also developed successful dna vaccines using prm and envelope (e) genes for japanese encephalitis virus and nucleoprotein (n) gene for transmissible gastroenteritis virus. for constructing dna vaccines against psuedorabies (aujesky's disease), the immunogenic viral protein genes such as gb, gc and gd, are often considered (van rooij et al. ; gerdts et al. ; dory et al. ) . plasmids encoding these glycoproteins, when co-injected with cpg motifs, improved the humoral immune response and provided better clinical protection against lethal psuedorabies infection (dory et al. ) . also, it has been suggested that gb and gd genes primes the immune system efficiently even in the presence of maternal antibodies. the utility of dimethyl-dioctadecylammonium (dda), as an adjuvant to psuedorabies dna vaccine, has also been reported. for the prevention of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrs) in swine, dna immunization strategies could be formulated utilizing the viral orf region that codes for a major envelope glycoprotein gp . for endo-parasitic infestations like taeniasis (cysticercosis), recently a dna vaccine using taenia solium b antigen has been developed (guo et al. ) . canines during the last couple of decades, immunoprophylactic agents have been developed that have greatly reduced the incidence of infectious diseases of pet animals. in canines, even though live vaccines have been found superior in efficacy, it is expected that new generation vaccines may dominate the market in the near future. focus has been directed for developing dna vaccines to eliminate the bacterial diseases like leptospirosis and lyme disease. leptospirosis, being a zoonotic disease is being given due attention, and many works has suggested the generation of successful vaccines based on its endoflagellar (flab ) gene. there exist cpg motifs within the flab gene, which could give the dna vaccine an additional immunostimulatory property, with out the use of adjuvants (dai et al. ) . also, hemolysis associated protein (hap ) gene has been found to elicit protection against leptospirosis when encoded in plasmids. against borrelia burgdorferi, a spirochete causing lyme's disease, dna vaccine experiments are under trial stages. the role of outer surface protein genes (ospa and ospc) of b. burgdorferi to elicit protective immune responses when administered as dna vaccines has also been explored. among the viral diseases affecting dogs, the important ones are rabies, canine distemper and parvoviral infections, many studies have been conducted to analyze the utility of dna vaccines. initially, it was against the deadly rabies, the first nucleic acid vaccine was successfully developed (xiang et al. ) . after this, it was jiang et al. ( ) who reported a plasmid dna vaccine to protect the canine population from parvovirus infections, utilizing vp gene of canine parvovirus (cpv). later, by using vp gene of cpv, a successful dna vaccine was developed (gupta et al. a) . now, most of the research has been centered on for developing dna vaccines against rabies and canine distemper (cd). the advantage of plasmid-based vaccine against rabies is that it is a valuable alternative for the mass production of cheaper rabies vaccine when compared to the cell culture based ones. a dna vaccine encoding the rabies virus glycoprotein (g) has been found to yield stronger and more durable virus neutralizing antibody titers in dogs, which has been proven beyond doubt by many researchers (rai et al. ; gupta et al. b) ; and the role of trans-membrane domain of the rabies virus glycoprotein in assisting humoral immune response has been experimentally demonstrated (gupta et al. ). further, the utility of a chimeric glycoprotein gene, constructed from different lyssa viruses, can be used as a multivalent vaccine. also, some works have suggested the advantage of dna vaccine administered intra-dermally in ear in inducing long lasting protective titer against rabies. recently, a bicistronic multivalent dna vaccine has been developed by patial et al. ( ) , which comprised of rabies virus (g) and parvovirus (vp ) genes for inducing neutralizing antibodies against both viral pathogens. it was sixt et al. ( ) who first developed a plasmid vaccine against canine distemper (cd) that encoded the hemagglutinin (ha) and fusion protein (f) gene against this highly infectious and lethal disease of pups. also, plasmids containing the nucleocapsid (n), f and ha genes of a virulent cd virus strain can be developed which could elicit strong humoral and cellular immune responses (jain et al. ) . further, immunization with n protein-based dna vaccine against cd to elicit serum n-specific igg responses and thereby generating satisfactory protection should also be considered as a viable option. similarly, the use of ha and f protein genes in a cationic lipid formulation should work well for protecting the pups from clinical disease even in the presence of high titers of maternally derived antibodies. dna vaccines are also being attempted for canines, targeting protozoan diseases (fukumoto et al. ) . the gene coding the babesia canis protein p has been found to induce protective immunity against canine babesiosis, while the p /lack antigen gene has been used against leishmaniosis. likewise, plasmid dna encoding a xenogenic tyrosinase can also function as tumor vaccine for prolonging the survival of dogs in cases of malignant melanoma. equines: the increasing international movement of horses and the relaxation of regulations have resulted in an increased incidence of equine infectious diseases. vaccination, along with management measures has become the primary method for the effective control rhodococcal infections, equine influenza, african horse sickness and herpes infections. the advent of recombinant technology has encouraged the development of new generation vaccines such as live-vectored vaccines and dna vaccines (minke et al. ). among bacterial diseases, dna vaccines have been generated to protect the foals from rhodococcus equi, which causes pyogranulomatous broncho-pneumonia. nucleic acid vaccine, expressing the virulence associated protein (vapa) gene of r. equi, induced an anamnestic response and has been found capable in generating specific igg antibodies (vanniasinkam et al. ) . against the equine herpesvirus- (ehv- ), a viral pathogen of horses causing respiratory, reproductive and neurological problems, the role of plasmid dna encoding the envelope glycoprotein d (gd) to induce humoral response, has been suggested; and the administration of gm-csf along with such vaccines significantly enhanced virus neutralizing antibody responses to ehv- (minke et al. ) . for equine influenza (ei), lunn et al. ( ) recorded complete protection of the experimental ponies during challenge after administering dna vaccine encoding hemagglutinin (ha) gene of ei virus. aside to this, administration of il- along with ha gene enhances vaccine efficacy and protection (olsen ) . to prevent the west nile virus infection in horses, the envelope protein genes (prm and e) have been incorporated in dna vaccine formulation to elicit satisfactory protection (hall and khromykh ) . similarly, giese et al. ( ) developed effective dna vaccines encoding the orf's ( and ) of equine arteritis virus (eav). development of nucleic acid vaccines has also been attempted for african horse sickness (vp gene) as well as against vesicular stomatitis (envelope gene). poultry historically, inactivated whole viruses with various adjuvant systems or live vaccines have been used for the successful prevention of various bacterial and viral diseases of poultry. however, the development of naked dna immunization as third generation vaccines has been well studied and recently a variety of such vaccines are in clinical trials for their use in poultry (oshop et al. ; dhama et al. ) . a plasmid dna vaccine encoding the enterotoxigenic escherichia coli k fimbrial protein elicited satisfactory protection during e. coli challenge (cho et al. ) . similarly, plasmids expressing the major outer membrane protein (momp) of chlamydophila psittaci serovar a and d strains have been found to induce protective immunity with significant reduction in clinical symptoms (vanrompay et al. ) . also, higher levels of protection against c. psittaci could be obtained while administering interferon gamma (ifn-γ) or vitamin d, along with dna vaccines. besides, dna vaccines have been developed against major viral infections of poultry like avian influenza, utilizing the ha gene of the virus (kodihalli et al. ; lee et al. ) . similarly, a vaccine encoding fusion (f) and haemagglutinin (hn) gene induced higher level of antibodies against newcastle disease (ndv) in chickens (loke et al. ) . for marek's disease, dna vaccine containing the clone of virulent serotype- mdv has been found useful during challenge infection in birds. vaccination with a mutated, nononcogenic v-src gene construct, derived from avian leucosis virus (alv), induced cytotoxic t-lymphocytes (ctl) to protect birds from tumors. protective utility of plasmid coded n protein gene of infectious bronchitis virus (ibv) has also been reported for which dna vaccines expressing the s glycoprotein of ibv has been suggested (seo et al. ) . against infectious bursal disease (ibd), vp gene or vp / / poly-protein gene of ibd virus-based dna vaccination has been found effective in protection . dna vaccination against duck hepatitis b virus has been shown to reduce viremia with rapid removal of the virus from the blood after the challenge. against chicken infectious anemia (cia), for the first time, the simultaneous in vitro and in vivo expression of viral proteins vp and vp has been studied for generating protective antibodies against the infection (senthil kumar et al. ) . also, dna vaccines have been developed against avian reovirus (σc protein gene), and egg drop syndrome (eds- ) virus (penton fiber gene fragment), and both these vaccines were found effective during their respective challenge studies. likewise, against protozoan infections, especially coccidiosis, successful dna vaccines have been developed, utilizing the - e and etmic genes in combination with cytokines to provide protection from this economically important infection of birds (min et al. ; ding et al. ) . vaccination with dna is one of the most promising novel immunization techniques against pathogens, for which conventional vaccination regimens have been less effective. after about years of experimentation, dna vaccines, nick named 'immunological silver bullet', have become well established in clinical trials. however, they have yet to proceed past the second phase trials primarily due to the inability to induce more potent immune responses in higher mammals. in small experimental animals, the milder host impedance has permitted the dna vaccines to induce lasting protective effects in contrast to much tougher host barriers in large animals. significant efforts have been put forward to identify methods of enhancing the immune response of plasmid dna to enable its practical implementation. prime importance has been given to develop vaccines to elicit both humoral and cellular immune responses. researchers have tried a variety of immune modulators, cytokines and co-stimulatory molecules, in this regard. if the potency is improved, plasmid dna vaccines, having numerous advantages, can be useful for the active immunization against infectious diseases of animals. considering the current trends and myriad possibilities, efforts should be targeted towards improving their delivery or to increase their immunogenic potential. poor cellular uptake and rapid in vivo degradation of plasmid dna has to be taken into account and novel delivery systems has to be developed along with the optimization of the plasmid vector. the major challenge in future is the improvement of the transfection efficiency of the dna vaccines. gene gun and electroporation can increase transfection and improve immune responses significantly, but these technologies have not yet advanced to routine use in animals. another promising approach is the development of microparticles as delivery systems or the non-invasive plasmid dna immunization. although the potency of the immune response has been weak while using topical application methods, stratum corneum disrupting agents and novel adjuvants may significantly improve them. further, the properties of dna vaccines have to be modulated via using cationic liposomes for promoting mucosal and systemic immunity, simultaneously. the current scenario of incorporating such novel methodologies unveils much promise regarding the development of effective, safe and economically viable nucleic acid vaccines. in this context, one should be optimistic regarding the continual research efforts for global implementation of dna vaccines as an effective immunological arsenal, which could ably address the threats posed by emerging and highly threatening infectious agents of animals. porcine interleukin- enhances dna vaccination against classical swine fever induction of immune responses by dna vaccines in large animals a single hbsag dna vaccination in combination with electroporation elicits long-term antibody responses in sheep recent developments in mucosal delivery of plasmid dna vaccines. current opinions in molecular therapy gene gun-mediate dna vaccination against foot-and-mouth disease virus dna vaccine design protection of cattle against bovine leukemia virus (blv) infection could be attained by dna vaccination a combined dna vaccine-prime, bcg-boost strategy results in better protection against mycobacterium bovis challenge vaccination trials against bovine herpesvirus- vaccination of mice and cattle with plasmid dna encoding the mycobacterium bovis antigen mpb targeting improves the efficacy of a dna vaccine against corynebacterium pseudotuberculosis in sheep prime-boost vaccination with plasmid dna encoding caprine-arthritis encephalitis lentivirus env and viral su suppresses challenge virus and development of arthritis evaluation of the immunogenicity of the p r adhesin of mycoplasma hyopneumoniae as a mucosal vaccine in mice a plasmid dna encoding chicken interleukin- and escherichia coli k fimbrial protein faeg stimulates the production of anti-k fimbrial antibodies in chickens analysis of cpg motifs in endoflagellar gene (flab ) and expression vector (vr ) of leptospiral dna vaccine. sichuan da xue xue bao yi xue ban use of attenuated bacteria as delivery vectors for dna vaccines immunization of bovines using a dna vaccine prepared from the jaboticabal strain of anaplasma marginale bm antigen induces a protective immune response against boophilus microplus following dna and protein vaccination in sheep immunity and disease resistance strategies in poultry: current and future prospects dna vaccines and prevention of infectious diseases in bovines: a review in ovo vaccination with the eimeria tenella etmic gene induces protective immunity against coccidiosis construction of recombinant plasmid with vp genes against asia i fmdv and elementary analysis of its 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neutralizing antibody response in dogs nucleic acid immunization protects dogs against challenge with virulent canine parvovirus novel chitosan derivative nanoparticles enhance the immunogenicity of a dna vaccine encoding hepatitis b virus core antigen in mice dna prime followed by protein boost enhances neutralization and th type immunity against fmdv strategies for inducing protection against avian influenza a virus subtypes with dna vaccines cpg motifs in bacterial dna and their immune effects nucleic acid vaccination of brucella abortus ribosomal l /l gene elicits immune response generation of reassortant influenza vaccines by reverse genetics that allows utilization of a diva (differentiating infected from vaccinated animals) strategy for the control of avian influenza oral dna vaccination with polyprotein gene of ibdv delivered by attenuated salmonella elicits protective immune response in chickens a semliki forest virus replicon vectored dna vaccine expressing the e glycoprotein 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against eimeria acervulina use of dna and recombinant canarypox viral vectors for equine herpes virus vaccination efficacy of particle-based dna delivery for vaccination of sheep against fmdv dna vaccination against bovine viral diarrhoea virus induces humoral and cellular responses in cattle with evidence for protection against viral challenge dna immunization of dairy cows with the clumping factor a of staphylococcus aureus dna vaccination against influenza viruses: a review with emphasis on equine and swine influenza dna vaccination in avian virus neutralizing antibody response in mice and dogs with a bicistronic dna vaccine encoding rabies virus glycoprotein and canine parvovirus vp electric pulses applied prior to intramuscular dna vaccination greatly improve the vaccine immunogenicity development of rabies dna vaccine using a recombinant plasmid brucella abortus: immunity, vaccines and prevention strategies based on nucleic acids immune response in mice and cattle after immunization with a b. microplus dna vaccine containing bm gene protection of kids against c. parvum infection after immunization of dams with cp -dna immunization with dna vaccines encoding different mycobacterial antigens elicits a th type immune response in lambs and protects against mycobacterium avium subspecies paratuberculosis infection development of dna vaccine against chicken anemia virus simultaneously using it's vp and vp proteins the carboxyl-terminal -residue polypeptide of ib virus nucleocapsid induces ctls and protects chickens from acute infection recent developments in veterinary vaccinology dna fragment encoding human il- β - peptide enhances the immune responses elicited in mice by dna vaccine against foot-and-mouth disease dna vaccines: future strategies and relevance to intracellular pathogens laboratory and field evaluation of schistosoma japonicum dna vaccines in sheep and water buffalo in china cd virus dna vaccination induces humoral and cellular immunity and protects against a lethal intracerebral challenge dna vaccines and adjuvants dna immunization with a bovine rotavirus vp gene induces a th -like immune response in mice dna vaccine using m. bovis ag b antigen induces partial protection against experimental infection in balb/c mice enhancing dna vaccine potency by modifying the properties of antigen-presenting cells dna vaccines: recent technological and clinical advances effect of vaccination route and composition of dna vaccine on the induction of protective immunity against psuedorabies infection in pigs immune response to vaccines based upon the vapa protein of the horse pathogen, rhodococcus equi, in a murine model protection of turkeys against c. psittaci challenge by parenteral and mucosal inoculations and the effect of turkey interferon-gamma on genetic immunization enhanced immunogenicity of microparticulated multiepitope dna vaccine encoding t and b cell epitopes of foot and mouth disease virus in mice immunomodulatory effect of plasmids co-expressing cytokines in classical swine fever virus subunit gp /e -dna vaccination direct gene transfer into mouse muscle in vivo a dna vaccine against fmd elicits an immune response in swine which is enhanced by co-administration with interleukin- . vaccine vaccination with a plasmid vector carrying the rabies virus glycoprotein gene induces protective immunity against rabies virus selection of protective epitopes for brucella melitensis by dna vaccination bovine herpesvirus vp enhances the efficacy of a dna vaccine in cattle key: cord- -zir q authors: chung, t. philip; laramie, jason m.; meyer, donald j.; downey, thomas; tam, laurence h.y.; ding, huashi; buchman, timothy g.; karl, irene; stormo, gary d.; hotchkiss, richard s.; cobb, j. perren title: molecular diagnostics in sepsis: from bedside to bench date: - - journal: j am coll surg doi: . /j.jamcollsurg. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zir q background: based on recent in vitro data, we tested the hypothesis that microarray expression profiles can be used to diagnose sepsis, distinguishing in vivo between sterile and infectious causes of systemic inflammation. study design: exploratory studies were conducted using spleens from septic patients and from mice with abdominal sepsis. seven patients with sepsis after injury were identified retrospectively and compared with six injured patients. c bl/ male mice were subjected to cecal ligation and puncture, or to ip lipopolysaccharide. control mice had sham laparotomy or injection of ip saline, respectively. a sepsis classification model was created and tested on blood samples from septic mice. results: accuracy of sepsis prediction was obtained using cross-validation of gene expression data from human spleen samples and from mouse spleen samples. for blood studies, classifiers were constructed using data from a training data set of microarrays. the error rate of the classifiers was estimated on seven de-identified microarrays, and then on a subsequent cross-validation for all blood microarrays. estimates of classification accuracy of sepsis in human spleen were . %; in mouse spleen, %; and in mouse blood, . % (all estimates were based on nested cross-validation). lists of genes with substantial changes in expression between study and control groups were used to identify nine mouse common inflammatory response genes, six of which were mapped into a single pathway using contemporary pathway analysis tools. conclusions: sepsis induces changes in mouse leukocyte gene expression that can be used to diagnose sepsis apart from systemic inflammation. the incidence of sepsis and the number of sepsisrelated deaths is increasing at substantial cost ($ billion annually in the us), as reported recently. the cornerstone of successful therapy is early, accurate diagnosis, coupled with eradication of the source of infection and appropriate antibiotic therapy. unfortunately, efforts to identify specific and sensitive diagnostic markers for sepsis have met with limited success. the diagnosis of sepsis in icus is especially challenging because it is frequently difficult to distinguish between systemic inflammation and systemic infection. clinicians are unable to identify the pathogen responsible for sepsis in up to % of patients or to determine whether patients are responding to antibiotic therapy ; and the traditional means of identifying the organism responsible for bacterial infections are nonspecific (gram stain), slow (culture), or insensitive (both gram stain and culture). there is compelling evidence that efforts to identify clinically important biomarkers in sepsis will prove successful ultimately, - especially given the recent successes of high-throughput, genomic technologies in other fields that face diagnostic challenges (eg, leukemia, breast , and colon cancer ). this molecular classification strategy involves searching for expression patterns in a subset of genes from tissues of known phenotype (the "training" data set), constructing a prediction rule, and then using these "biomarker" genes to predict the phenotype of new samples (the "test" data set). studies that apply these genome-wide technologies to inflammation and sepsis in animal models and patients are now underway, [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] as reviewed recently. , these reports suggest that genome-wide profiling of gene expression holds promise as a molecular diagnostic tool, capable of generating profiles from leukocytes that are sensitive, specific, and timely for pathogen detection. despite provocative in vitro findings, , there are few reports of using microarrays to study sepsis in vivo. these reports indicate that the transcriptional response during polymicrobial sepsis is organ-specific in mice and rats. there are no reports of using microarrays to make a diagnosis of sepsis, although very recent reports suggest that this will be feasible in patients. , we hypothesized that leukocyte gene expression profiles obtained using dna microarrays could be used to predict septic states; in particular, distinguishing between sterile and infectious sources of systemic inflammation, a common conundrum in caring for the critically ill or injured. tissue samples from both septic patients and clinically relevant mouse models of sepsis were tested. using an investigational protocol approved by the washington university human studies committee, informed consent was obtained to collect samples of splenic tissue intraoperatively or immediately postmor-tem as described previously. seven specimens for expression profiling were chosen retrospectively from patients with injury (trauma or operation) complicated by sepsis and organ dysfunction (sepsis group). these were compared with six age-and gender-matched control specimens from patients with injury (trauma) requiring splenectomy (injury group). a total of patient spleen samples were collected. care and use of laboratory animals were conducted in accordance with a protocol approved by the washington university animal studies committee. seven-to nineweek-old, male c bl/ mice were purchased (harlan, inc) and allowed to acclimatize for at least week. male mice were used to avoid the confounding effect of the female estrous cycle and the well-characterized sexual dimorphism of the adaptive response to cecal ligation and puncture (clp). the seven experimental groups were designed to make classification difficult, reflecting clinically important distinctions relevant to care of icu patients: lethal abdominal inflammation from a sterile source, lethal abdominal infection, and antibiotictreated abdominal infection. mice were assigned to the seven treatments listed in table , grouped into those with no deaths (controls) and those that were "sick" with substantial associated mortality (sterile or infectious causes of systemic inflammation). normal animals were untreated. previously reported protocols were used to perform clp and sham laparotomy. , the ceca of some animals were punctured twice using a -gauge needle (clp), and others were punctured using a gauge needle to produce a "milder" sepsis that caused much lower mortality (mild clp). animals that had laparotomy and cecal manipulation without ligation or puncture were included in the sham laparotomy group (sham). another group of animals had clp and treatment with a standard antibiotic regimen for mouse abdominal sepsis: ip ceftriaxone . mg/kg and metronidazole . mg/kg, delivered , , and hours after clp (clp ϩ antibiotics group). to induce severe systemic inflammation without infection, ip injection of escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (lps) serotype :b mg/kg (sigma, inc) was performed (lps group). the dose of lps ( mg/kg) was used because it reliably produces death over several days in the animals; smaller doses in pilot experiments tended to produce morbidity without mortality. mice injected ip with abbreviations and acronyms clp ϭ cecal ligation and puncture fdr ϭ false discovery rate est ϭ expressed sequence tag ip ϭ intraperitoneal lps ϭ lipopolysaccharide pca ϭ principal components analysis normal saline vehicle (saline group) acted as the concurrent control group for lps treatment. the census of surviving mice was recorded at -hour intervals for days. in a separate cohort, mice were sacrificed at hours after injury by cervical dislocation under halothane general anesthesia. the -hours time point after injury was chosen because pilot experiments showed that the ability to distinguish between spleen expression profiles was greater at hours than at or hours after injury. whole spleen tissue from eight clp and eight sham mice was harvested and flash-frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at Ϫ °c. in another cohort of animals, intracardiac blood from eight animals per group was pooled using the paxgene blood rna system to derive total rna from whole blood (preanalytix gmbh). while genechips from blood for each of the seven groups were prepared, there were a total of mouse blood genechips from animals: gene-chips were in the training data set and genechips were in the test (de-identified) data set. whole blood was collected for automated white blood cell counts from eight animals in each group over two replicates, each run performed with samples from concurrent control animals. a hemavet multispecies hematology analyzer (cdc technologies) provided counts and an automated differential. data were expressed as the mean Ϯ sem. total rna from human and mouse spleens was extracted per trizol protocol (life technologies, inc). total rna from mouse blood was extracted using the paxgene kit as recommended by the manufacturer. crna target for genechip hybridization was prepared from total rna using the protocol recommended (affymetrix, inc). the human spleen crna was hybridized with the human full-length genechip (approximately , probe sets). mouse spleen and blood crna were hybridized with the u av genechip (approximately , probe sets). fluorescent hybridization signal was detected using a genearray scanner (hewlett-packard, inc) at the washington university alvin j siteman cancer center and, for the prospective mouse cohort, the genechip scanner (affymetrix). the data discussed in this publication have been deposited in ncbi's gene expression omnibus (geo, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ geo/) and are accessible through geo series accession number gse . tests for differential expression, class prediction, and pathway analysis expression values were calculated from genechip.cel files using dna chip analyzer software (version . ) and default settings (only perfect match probes were used). principal components analysis (pca) was used to visually explore global effects for genome-wide trends, unexpected effects, and outliers in the expression data (partek software). differentially expressed genes were identified using a mixed-model anova and linear contrasts. we next determined whether it was possible to accurately distinguish tissue samples resulting from models of sterile systemic inflammation or models of systemic infection in human spleen, mouse spleen, and mouse blood. to produce unbiased estimates of prediction accuracy while also optimizing the set of predictor genes, classifier type, and classifier parameters, we used a two-level, nested cross-validation procedure that produces prediction estimates that are not biased by gene, classifier, and parameter selection. this procedure makes use of an "outer" cross-validation to produce the estimate of accuracy, and an "inner" cross-validation to perform classifier and gene selection. for class prediction, we compared k-nearest neighbor, nearest centroid, and linear and quadratic discriminant analysis classifiers. two complementary programs were used to query regulatory networks: pathwayassist (ariadne genomics) and pathway analysis (ingenuity systems). both path-wayassist and pathway analysis use the published literature or publicly available databases to identify relationships between genes, small molecules, or other objects. this information in turn is used to map de novo, putative, interaction networks from a given list of input gene survival data were calculated using the kaplan-meier method and survival curves were compared using logrank test (prism v . , graphpad software, inc). cbc and cell differential data were analyzed by one-way anova using the tukey-kramer post-test to correct for multiple comparisons (prism v . ). modified multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (mods) score are reported as the mean Ϯ sem and analyzed using the mann-whitney u test for nonparametric data (prism v . ). the significance of change in mouse blood relative rna abundance was measured across all seven groups using two-way anova for the effects of treatment and batch (time). from this analysis, a step-up false discovery rate (fdr) of . was used to identify a subset of discriminating genes for treatment effect, visualized using pca. for pair-wise group comparisons across mouse blood, a two-way anova for the effects of treatment and batch was used. because there was no batch effect for spleen, one-way anova was used. an fdr of . was applied to the raw p value for each pair-wise comparison, giving a list of informational genes for each comparison. the characteristics of the patients sampled are found in table . none of the injury (control) patients had positive cultures or signs of infection or sepsis at the time of sample collection, and all but one recovered uneventfully after splenectomy. in contrast, all sepsis patients had positive bacterial or fungal cultures or obvious signs of infection (pus or necrotizing fasciitis) complicated by sepsis-induced organ dysfunction at the time of operation (modified mods score, p ϭ . versus injury). dna chip analyzer hybridization signal analysis using default filters flagged of human genechips as a statistical outlier (Ͼ % probe pair expression values calculated as statistical outliers, suggesting unreliable hybridization signal). this sample (patient ) was omitted from additional analysis. pca was used to explore differences in gene expression for all genes across the remaining microarrays, demonstrating considerable differences between the sepsis and injury classes (data not shown). consistent with the large variance in expression observed across subjects, there were no genes identified as differentially expressed between these two classes using a fdr of . . to estimate sepsis class prediction accuracy among these samples, a ϫ leaveone-sample-out nested cross-validation was performed. the average predictive accuracy was . %. all control group animals (saline, sham, normal) survived the duration of the experiment. in contrast, "sick" animals with systemic infection (clp, clp ϩ antibiotics, mild clp, and lps) exhibited typical signs of piloerection, anorexia, and lethargy followed by -day mortality rates of %, %, %, and %, respectively ( fig. ) . absolute white blood cell counts varied among the seven experimental groups (p Ͻ . ), in particular between control and sick animals (fig. ) . there was no difference among animals with sterile or infectious causes of systemic inflammation (lps, clp, mild clp, or clp ϩ antibiotics). likewise, there was no difference in cell differentials among controls or among animals with sterile or infectious causes of systemic inflammation, except for lps versus clp ϩ antibiotics (neutrophils and lymphocytes, p Ͻ . ). mouse differential gene expression dna chip analyzer hybridization signal analysis flagged of the mouse blood genechips as statistical outliers: one saline and one sham genechip from the training data set. these mouse outliers genechips were omitted from additional analysis. thirty-three gene-chips remained in the mouse blood data set. pca was used to visualize treatment differences in expression for all genes in blood and spleen, demonstrating batch and any-clp treatment effects (p Ͻ . , fig. ). we applied a stringent multiple test correction (bonferroni, . ) to the p values from the two-way anova to identify a small set of genes in blood differentially expressed between the seven treatment groups ( probe sets corresponding to genes, as probe sets for lipocalin appeared twice [ table ]). pca analysis of these probe sets revealed that the seven experimental groups were clustered into three apparent phenotypes (fig. ) : control animals, lps-treated animals (sterile source of systemic inflammation), and those that had any clp treatment (sepsis). comparisons of gene expression across groups generated several informational gene lists (fdr ϭ . ); each indicated apparent increases and decreases in gene expression induced by clp or lps (fig. ). using mouse spleen samples for gene expression analysis, we were able to classify the samples as clp or sham with . % accuracy, estimated using cross-validation. for the blood data, the experimental design dictated that the first four replicates (batches) were used to train the classifiers. the best classifiers were trained on all training samples (batches to ) and used to predict the seven de-identified test samples (batch ). all seven test samples were predicted correctly as any-clp (septic) versus non-clp. we also performed fivefold leave-onebatch-out cross-validation, which produced an overall accuracy estimate of . % (fig. ) . the prediction accuracy differentiating lps from controls was . %. the ability to predict low versus high mortality after clp was substantially lower ( . %). to obtain the final mouse blood classifier, leave-one-batch-out crossvalidation was performed for the purpose of classifier selection. sixty-four classifiers tied for best prediction. the median number of genes for these classifiers was . of these genes, only genes showed changes greater than twofold, and the majority ( . %) were altered by twofold or less. there were nine genes that demonstrated increased rna abundance across spleen and blood and across clp and lps (fig. ) . we call this cluster of genes the "common inflammatory response cluster" (table ). pathway analysis tools also were used to put this list into a biologic (functional) context. all but one of these genes is annotated and has been associated previously with a gene product, small molecule, or cellular process linked to inflammation (fig. ) . a single expressed sequence tag (est) completed the list of nine genes (genechip identifier, _at). a blast search identified this sequence as retroviral. a search of the ncbi gene expression omnibus microarray database showed that rna for this affymetrix probe set is increased in a number of models of inflammation, both animal and human. the ability to diagnose sepsis more accurately would allow appropriate treatment to be instituted earlier, thereby improving the likelihood of survival. , we hypothesized that expression profiles could distinguish between septic and nonseptic states in vivo, and that expression profiles could define lists of common responder genes using a systematic, unbiased approach. , recent , saline, sham, and normal) is apparent, but less notable than the batch effect (appearing on pc and pc , explaining % ϩ % of variance, respectively). no pcs besides pc and pc showed a substantial difference between any-clp and non-clp groups (determined by t-test on each pc). note that the genechip scanner used for batches to was different than that used for batch (latest generation), which is one explanation why batch is most different from the other four batches. reports using microarray technology in vitro indicated that inflammatory and infectious insults produce distinct transcriptional signatures. , the current study is the first examining the ability of microarray gene expression profiles to distinguish sterile from infectious causes of systemic inflammation in vivo. we examined gene expression profiles of splenic tissue from patients with injury versus those with injury complicated by sepsis and organ dysfunction. differences in apparent gene expression between the sepsis and injury (control) phenotypes were used to construct a classifier, the accuracy estimate of which was . %. this small, exploratory clinical study provided "bedside" proof of feasibility using human transcriptional profiles to model the septic phenotype, but also demonstrated a large degree of variance in gene expression between subjects, because of both technical and biologic differences. to control more of this variance we moved from the bedside to the bench, performing a systematic examination of the diagnostic potential of spleen and blood gene expression profiling in inbred mice. consistent with the human data, spleen samples from mice after clp exhibited microarray patterns that could be modeled to predict the septic phenotype. the nested cross-validation accuracy estimate of . % for sepsis prediction using mouse spleen was considerably better than that found using human spleen, likely because of the mouse experimental design that exploited fresh tissues and identical age, gender, and genotype across subjects. because the clinical use of gene expression analysis using splenic tissue is severely limited, we explored next the use of circulating blood for class prediction in our mouse models. the combined accuracy of the predictions for any-clp versus non-clp and lps versus controls was high at . % and . %, respectively. the accuracy estimate for distinguishing between the high and low mortality clp groups (clp versus mild clp and clp plus antibiotics) at this -hour time point was much less at . %. these conclusions are consistent with the pca analysis in figure , in which we sought differences in apparent table . abx, antibiotics. gene expression across the seven experimental groups. interestingly, the only samples that were cluster outliers were in the clp plus antibiotics group, consistent with an effect of antibiotics to change the septic phenotype toward the control phenotypes. we conclude that circulating blood gene expression profiles can be used to predict clp and non-clp phenotypes in prospective cohorts, in particular, distinguishing controls from lethal endotoxicosis (lps) from lethal infection (clp). it is important to note that at this -hour time point, there were no substantial differences between lps or any of the clp groups in clinical presentation or complete blood counts. microarray analysis could make the diagnosis of sepsis (distinguishing between sterile and infectious sources of systemic inflammation) when clinical criteria and white blood cell counts could not, a frequent occurrence in icus. in addition, the differences between groups as measured by absolute fold-changes in individual gene expression were small (eg, in the final model for blood, . % of genes were altered less than twofold), yet the changes in the patterns of expression across hundreds of genes were robust predictors of phenotype. to discover changes in expression generic to the inflammatory and septic responses, we used the intersection of gene lists identified by the pair-wise group comparisons (fig. ) . nine genes were commonly increased, validated across two tissue types (spleen and blood) and two insults (clp and lps). in contrast, there were no genes that were commonly decreased. given that this list of nine genes was based on changes in relative rna abundance across a number of cell types, the network analysis performed served as an exploratory tool, validating in silico the role of six of nine genes in canonical pathways for inflammation, apoptosis, and signal transduction: inhibitor of dna binding , calgranulin a and b, interferon regulatory factor , lipocalin , and formyl peptide receptor-like ( table ) . several characteristics of these nine common inflammatory response genes are notable. inhibitor of dna binding is required for normal mouse immune development, especially of lymph nodes and peyer's patches. calgranulin a and b, which belong to a recently described group of proinflammatory molecules, form extracellular complexes that bind to and activate endothelial cells, promoting chemotaxis and phagocytic adhesion in a positive feedback manner. , interferon regulatory factor is a key regulatory of monocyte development, essential to differentiation of monocytes to macrophages. lipocalin is a secreted protein that undergoes transcriptional induction after cytokine withdrawal and induces leukocyte-specific apoptosis. lipocalin transcription, translation, and secretion are induced by ligation of toll-like receptors on leukocytes, with secreted lipocalin acting to sequester siderophores, thereby limiting bacterial growth. formyl peptide receptor-like is a member of the chemoattractant subfamily of g protein- coupled receptors that are involved in controlling leukocyte migration. the other two annotated genes not listed in the network, neutrophilic granule protein and serum amyloid a , have also been associated with inflammation and cellular defense, although less is known about their functions and protein interactions. neutrophilic granule protein is a cysteine protease inhibitor that has been associated with myeloid differentiation. serum amyloid a is a highdensity apolipoprotein, the only amyloid made by both hepatocytes and peripheral monocytes and macrophages. it is believed to function by retargeting transported lipids, including cholesterol, in the disposal of toxins. the function of the ninth gene, a retroviral species that is increased in a number of different models of infection and inflammation, is not known. we compared this common inflammatory response cluster with the list of proteins recently reported to diagnose intra-amniotic infection in patients, as another means of validating the importance of these nine genes. of the proteins and polypeptides detected in that study, were also identified in our study, specifically calgranulin a and b and lipocalin (neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin). calgranulin a (s a ) was also the most differentially expressed gene in blood in a small microarray study comparing eight septic patients with four surgical controls with-out systemic inflammation. serum amyloid a protein was identified as a plasma proteome biomarker in patients with coronavirus (severe ards). together, these studies support our hypothesis that there are a group of common inflammatory response genes that can be used as novel biomarkers to diagnose inflammation across species, tissue, and different types of infecting organisms, at either the rna or protein level. because of the large degree of variation (noise) in human spleen gene expression, no individual genes surveyed passed the fdr filter. nevertheless, the data from these patients have proved invaluable for the study of immune dysfunction in human sepsis and provided proof-ofprinciple here that molecular profiles of human lymphoid tissues could be used to distinguish between septic and nonseptic phenotypes. because cellular populations of mammalian tissues are heterogeneous, use of microarray profiles to study the cellular response to a given stimulus must be understood in the context of changes in cell populations. this substantially limits conclusions about whole spleen data, given our reports and those of others that sepsis accelerates splenocyte apoptosis. , , in contrast, changes in blood cellular heterogeneity are measured routinely. although clp and lps stimuli changed both absolute wbcs and cell differentials compared with the controls, among the four groups of "sick" animals cell counts were indistinguishable (fig. ) . this mirrors the clinical situation where differentiating between sterile (lps) and infectious (any-clp) sources of systemic inflammation is not possible based on clinical grounds or cell counts. microarray profiles, as we have discussed, were very successful at making this distinction. many questions remain unanswered. what are the optimal computational methods to identify robust predictors from microarray or proteomic data? can gene or protein expression profiles be used to diagnose sepsis in other animal models? if so, are there predictive gene sets that are common to different types of infection (eg, gram-positive versus gram-negative infections)? once the diagnosis has been made, are there markers that indicate response to therapy or prognosis? there are sufficient preclinical and preliminary patient data to justify testing these hypotheses. because of the heterogeneity of expression profiles, large-scale collaborative studies will be required to enroll sufficient patients to identify robust sepsis markers, and in the process, untangle the biology of infection from inflammation. back to the bedside-the promise of molecular profiling for sepsis diagnosis in conclusion, our in vivo data corroborate in vitro findings indicating that microarray analysis holds promise as a means of identifying distinct expression profiles ("molecular fingerprints") that can diagnose the septic phenotype. our human spleen data join recent blood data from septic patients and serum and amniotic fluid data from patients with intra-amniotic fluid infection, indicating that transcriptome and proteome studies will deliver on the promise of novel inflammation diagnostics. , a single inflammation gene, calgranulin a (s a ), was detected in all three studies at either the rna or protein level. our data are unique in that they show that transcriptome molecular profiles can distinguish between sterile and infectious causes of systemic inflammation and can make a diagnosis of sepsis in pro- spective cohorts. importantly, we observed that the magnitude of change in gene expression that was needed to predict the septic phenotype was very small. it was the pattern of these small changes in expression that were predictive, not the magnitude of any single change. we and others reported recently validated clinical protocols for blood gene expression profiling used to characterize the human systemic inflammatory response. , the data presented here suggest that these protocols should be extended to clinical trials, testing the efficacy of microarray gene expression profiling to diagnose human sepsis. we expect that these studies will provide new insight into how specific pathogens uniquely perturb the physiology of cir-culating leukocytes and how the host successfully mounts pathogen-specific defenses. . mouse common inflammatory response cluster. nine probe sets (red genes) were commonly altered regardless of tissue or insult. a contemporary pathway analysis tool was used to automatically create a network of interactions among these nine genes, based on previously reported interactions in the literature. eight of the nine probe sets are known inflammation genes; the ninth probe set is an expressed sequence tag. this network validates in silico that six of these genes are involved in canonical pathways of inflammation, apoptosis, and regulation of signal transduction. the epidemiology of sepsis in the united states from through the pathophysiology and treatment of sepsis sccm/esicm/ accp/ats/sis international sepsis definitions conference the plasticity of dendritic cell responses to pathogens and their components human macrophage activation programs induced by bacterial pathogens measures, markers, and mediators: toward a staging system for clinical sepsis. a report of the fifth toronto sepsis roundtable molecular classification of cancer: class discovery and class prediction by gene expression monitoring molecular portraits of human breast tumours gene expression profiles in hereditary breast cancer broad patterns of gene expression revealed by clustering analysis of tumor and normal colon tissues probed by oligonucleotide arrays molecular signatures of sepsis: multiorgan gene expression profiles of systemic inflammation sepsis gene expression profiling: murine splenic 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model-based analysis of oligonucleotide arrays: expression index computation and outlier detection primary and secondary transcriptional effects in the developing human down syndrome brain and heart multiple organ dysfunction score: a reliable descriptor of a complex clinical outcome controlling the false discovery rate: a practical and powerful approach to multiple testing simultaneous statistical inference treating sepsis reducing mortality in sepsis: new directions determination of infection probability versus the diagnosis and treatment of antibiotic-responsive diseases development of peripheral lymphoid organs and natural killer cells depends on the helix-loop-helix inhibitor id s a : emerging functions and regulation phagocyte-specific s proteins: a novel group of proinflammatory molecules monocyte differentiation to macrophage requires interferon regulatory factor induction of apoptosis by a secreted lipocalin that is transcriptionally regulated by il- deprivation lipocalin mediates an innate immune response to bacterial infection by sequestrating iron agonist-induced trafficking of the low-affinity formyl peptide receptor fprl identification of a series of differentiation-associated gene sequences from gm-csf stimulated bone marrow murine serum amyloid a is a high density apolipoprotein and is secreted by macrophages plasma proteome of severe acute respiratory syndrome analyzed by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry apoptosis in lymphoid and parenchymal cell during sepsis: findings in normal and t & b cell deficient mice we thank ms alice tong, ms sandra k macmillan, and ms tracey h wagner for expert technical assistance. critical revision: chung, downey, buchman, stormo, hotchkiss, cobb tests for differential expression, class prediction, and pathway analysis: for the mouse blood study, a mixed-model anova was used to detect differential expression between treatment groups, with a linear contrast between the any-clp and non-clp groups. the anova model was chosen to partition treatment group and technical batch variability from variability due to biological and experimental noise. the following linear mixed model was used to detect differential expression on a gene-bygene basis in the mouse blood data:where y gij is the expression of the gth gene for ith treatment and jth batch. the mean expression for the gth gene is given by g . the symbols t and b represent effects due to treatment and batch respectively. the error for the gth gene for sample ij is designated as gij . for the mixed-model analysis of variance, treatment is a fixed effect and batch is a random effect. a batch constitutes samples (one from each treatment group) which were processed and hybridized at the same time. in the case of the last batch (batch ), the genechips were scanned on a different scanner. for the mouse and human spleen studies samples were processed in a single batch, so a simple one-way analysis of variance with a contrast between any-clp and non-clp was used to identify differentially expressed genes. the linear contrast between any-clp and non-clp is given by:where clp is the mean of the clp group, clpϩabx is the mean of the clpϩabx group, etc.where possible, the following competing classifiers were considered for all tasks, and the optimal classifier was selected: number of genes ( , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and ), prior probabilities for nearest centroid (equal and proportional), functions for discriminant analysis (liner and quadratic), prior probabilities for discriminant analysis (equal and proportional), number of neighbors (k) for k-nn ( , , and ), and distance functions for k-nn (euclidean distance, pearson's linear correlation, and absolute value distance). thus as many as classification models were considered for each classification task.for the mouse blood data, we used a leave-one-batchout ( -fold, one for each of the batches) outer crossvalidation, while the inner cross-validation is leave-onesample-out. we refer to this as nested cross-validation with an outer "leave-one-batch-out" layer and an inner "leave-one-sample-out" layer. ( ) using this method, the determination of how many and which genes to use for classification were determined using only the training samples. in addition, all additional classifier parameters (e.g., number of neighbors and distance measure) were determined using only the training samples. for each held-out batch in the outer -fold cross-validation, the classifier and genes that performed best on inner cross-validation were selected and applied to the or held-out test samples (two batches only had samples due to removal of an outlier sample). for the mouse and human spleen data where all samples were processed in a single batch, both the outer and inner cross-validation used full leave-one-sample-out. .e key: cord- -k p p authors: keha, abi; xue, luo; yan, shen; yue, hua; tang, cheng title: prevalence of a novel bovine coronavirus strain with a recombinant hemagglutinin/esterase gene in dairy calves in china date: - - journal: transbound emerg dis doi: . /tbed. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: k p p bovine coronavirus (bcov) is the causative agent of diarrhoea in newborn calves, winter dysentery in adult cattle and respiratory tract illnesses in cattle across the world. in this study, a total of faecal samples from dairy calves with diarrhoea were collected from farms in six chinese provinces, and bcov was detected in . % ( / ) of the samples by reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. full‐length spike, hemagglutinin/esterase (he), nucleocapsid and transmembrane genes were simultaneously cloned from clinical samples (eight farms in four provinces), and most of the bcov strains showed a unique evolutionary pattern based on the phylogenetic analysis of these genes. interesting, of the strains were identified as he recombinant strains, and these strains had experienced the same recombination event and carried the same recombination sites located between the esterase and lectin domain. they also shared an identical aa variant (f v) in the r ‐loop. moreover, / strains displayed another identical aa variant (p, s a) in the adjacent r ‐loop of the he gene, which differs from the other available bcov he sequences in the genbank database. our results showed that bcov is widely circulating in dairy cattle in china, contributing to the diagnosis and control of dairy calves diarrhoea. furthermore, a bcov strain that carries a recombinant he gene has spread in dairy calves in china. to the best of our knowledge, this is the first description of an he recombination event occurring in bcov; this is also the first description of the molecular prevalence of bcov in china. our findings will enhance current understanding about the genetic evolution of bcov. bovine coronavirus possesses five major structural proteins: the spike (s), hemagglutinin/esterase (he), nucleocapsid (n), transmembrane (m) and the small membrane (e) (lai & cavanagh, ) . the s protein is involved in receptor recognition and carries distinct functional domains near its amino (s ) and carboxy (s ) termini, while the n-terminal s domains recognize sugar receptors, and the s subunit is a transmembrane protein that mediates viral and cellular membrane fusion during cell invasion (fang li, ) . s and s contain several antigenic domains, but s appears to be the most efficient at inducing antibodies with high neutralizing activities in its host (yoo & deregt, ) . the he protein contains two important functional domains: the lectin domain and the esterase domain. the lectin domain recognizes sugar receptors in the cell, whereas the esterase domain possesses a receptor-destroying enzyme activity capable of removing cellular receptors from the surfaces of the targeted cells. the receptor-binding (lectin) and receptor-destroying (esterase) domains may be important for virus entry (kienzle, abraham, hogue, & brian, ; schultze, wahn, klenk, & herrler, ) . therefore, in addition to the s protein, the he protein serves as a second viral attachment protein for infection initiation (groot, ) . the primary role of bcov n protein is to package the viral genome into long, flexible, helical ribonucleoprotein (rnp) complexes, protect the genome and ensure its timely replication and reliable transmission, as well as playing a role in viral transcription and translation (hurst, ye, goebel, jayaraman, & masters, ) . in contrast, the m protein plays a crucial role in bcov assembly (oostra, haan, groot, & rottier, ) . the high genetic diversity in coronaviruses is attributable to the high mutation rates associated with rna replication, the high recombination frequencies within the coronavirus family and the large coronavirus genomes (woo, lau, huang, & yuen, ). recombination in coronaviruses plays an important role in virus evolution and can result in the emergence of new pathotypes (menachery, graham, & baric, ; wang et al., ) as well as changing the host ranges and ecological niches (bakkers et al., ) . thus far, recombination regions in coronaviruses have been extensively reported for the s gene (kin et al., ; lau et al., ; minami et al., ) , a finding also applicable to bcov (martínez et al., ) . recombination events in m (herrewegh, smeenk, horzinek, rottier, & groot, ), n (kin et al., , rp (lau et al., ) and the orf gene (chen et al., ; kin et al., ) have also been reported. however, to date, recombination events in he have only been reported in mhv, a betacoronavirus, and this situation may act as a strong force for generating strains with new genotypes, host spectra and tissue tropisms (groot, ; luytjes, bredenbeek, noten, horzinek, & spaan, ; smits et al., ) . the presence of bcov has been confirmed in chinese dairy cows (genbank accession number fj ), but the prevalence and molecular characteristics of bcov are still largely unknown. therefore, we sought to investigate the prevalence of bcov in dairy calves with diarrhoea in china. unexpectedly, our results reveal that a bcov containing a recombinant he gene has emerged and spread in dairy calves in china. a total of faecal samples were collected from dairy calves (≤ months of age) with obvious diarrhoea at farms from six provinces in china during september and may (table ) . the samples were shipped on ice and stored at − °c. the faecal samples were fully resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline ( : w/v) and centrifuged at , × g for min. viral rna was extracted from μl of the faecal suspension using rnaios plus (takara bio inc) according to the manufacturer's instructions. the cdna was synthesized using the primescript™ rt reagent kit according to the manufacturer's instructions (takara bio inc.) and then stored at − °c until required. bovine coronavirus nucleic acids in the faecal samples were identified using a pcr assay established in our laboratory that targets the bcov polymerase gene. after validating the specificity and stability of the assay, the detection limit for the viral nucleic acid in the assays was determined to be × − pg per μl- . in detail, a primer pair (f: ′-cgagttgaacaccc agat- ′, the complete s, he, n and m genes were pcr-amplified from samples already known to be bcov-positive based on rt-pcr assays previously reported (gélinas, boutin, sasseville, & dea, ; lau et al., ; martínez et al., ; park et al., ) . all pcr products were purified using the omega gel kit (omega) following the manufacturer's instructions, after which they were ligated to the pmd -t vector (takara bio inc.) and transformed into dh α competent escherichia coli cells (yeasen) for sequencing. the s and n gene sequences were assembled using seqmansoftware (version . ; dnastar inc). the homologies of the nt and deduced amino acid (aa) sequences were determined using the megalign program in dnastar . software (dnastar inc). mega . was used for multiple sequence alignment and to subsequently build the maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree with bootstrap testing ( , replicates). recombination events were assessed using simplot software (version . . ) and the recombination detection program rdp . (version . . ) with the rdp, geneconv, chimaera, maxchi, bootscan, siscan and seq methods (martin, murrell, golden, khoosal, & muhire, ) . of the faecal samples from the calves with diarrhoea, ( . %) were found to be bcov-positive, which revealed that the virus was distributed in / farms across the six provinces (table ) . full-length s, he, n and m genes were successfully cloned out of positive samples from eight farms in four different chinese provinces (shanxi, two strains; henan, three strains; liaoning, five strains; and sichuan, three strains). the s genes, at , -bp each, encode a protein of , aa, the cleavage site of which is located at aa in all . sequence comparisons revealed that all s genes share . %- % nt identity and . %- % aa identity with each other. they also share . %- % nt identity and . %- % aa identity with all full-length bcov s genes available in the genbank database. a phylogenetic tree based on the complete s gene sequences using the maximum-likelihood method showed that of the s genes from this study together with other bcov s genes from china (one strain from cattle, genbank accession number ku ; strains from yaks, bos grunniens, submitted by our team, genbank accession number mh -mh ) clustered on an independent large branch. the remaining s genes clustered with three north american bcov strains (genbank accession number mh , mh and mh ) on a small independent branch of the tree ( figure ). compared with the other bcov s genes, / sequences from this study and the other chinese bcov sequences motioned above, which were located in the independent large branch, each had an identical aa variant (n y) in the s subunit. additionally, / sequences from this study and the above-mentioned sequences from chinese yaks, which are located in the large independent branch, have an identical aa variant (e v) in the s subunit. compared with the bcov mebus prototype strain, these bcov s genes have a total of aa changes in the s subunit and aa changes in the s subunit ( figure ). no frame shifts, deletions, insertions or recombination events were observed in the s gene sequences from all the strains in this study. all he genes were , -bp long, and the protein they encode is aa residues in length. fgds, the putative esterase active site in all he proteins, was located at aa positions - , and nine n- all of the n genes were , -bp in length, each encoding a protein of aa residues. sequence comparison of these genes revealed that they share . %- % nt sequence identity and . %- bovine coronavirus, an important pathogen of calves, is globally responsible for severe economic losses in farming (azizzadeh et al., ; bok et al., ; johnson & pendell, ) . in china, the prevalence of bcov is still largely unknown. therefore, in this study, we screened diarrhoea faecal samples from calves, of which were found to be bcov-positive, and the positive samples were distributed across of the farms we screened across six provinces in the major dairy cattle production areas of china. the results showed that bcov is circulating widely in these dairy cattle, a finding that should help with the diagnosis and control of diarrhoea in these animals. most of the strains from this study are unique in their evolutionary histories based on our analysis of the full-length s, he, n and m genes, a finding similar to that for bcov in korean (ko et al., ; park et al., ) . this may be the result of geographical, environmental and natural selection patterns (bidokhti et al., ; hasoksuz, sreevatsan, cho, hoet, & saif, ; martínez et al., ) . the bcov s protein is involved in receptor recognition, host specificity, antigenic diversity and immunogenicity (fang li, ) . its gene sequences are variable, and mutations in this protein are associated with alterations in viral antigenicity, viral pathogenicity, host range and tissue tropism (gallagher & buchmeier, ; peng et al., ) . in this study, compared with other bcov s genes, we found that nine out of of our sequences and chinese bcov sequences (one strain from cattle and strains from yaks), which clustered on a large independent branch of the phylogenetic tree, each had an identical aa variant (n y) in the s subunit. as a transmembrane protein, the s subunit mediates the fusion of viral and cellular membranes (luo & weiss, ) ; hence, the biological significance of this variant warrants further investigation. in addition, four out of sequences and sequences from chinese yaks were found to have an identical aa variant (e v) in the s receptor-binding region, compared with the other s genes. f i g u r e amino acid variants of the complete s genes in this study. the figures in the box indicate the identical amino acid change sites in all strains in this study compared with the bcov prototype strain mebus s sequences; the figure marked with triangle was an unique aa variant in the four sequences in this study and sequences from chinese yaks; the figure marked with circular was an unique aa variant in the nine sequences in this study and sequences ( from chinese yaks and one from chinese cattle); the figure marked with line was an unique aa variant in shanxi strains in this study; which compared with the other available bcov s sequences in the genbank database. hp, the first hydrophobic domain of the s subunit; hr-n and hr-c, the heptad repeats; s a and s b, the immune reactive domain; s -ntd, receptor-binding domain; sp, signal peptide the s subunit in the n-terminal of bcov (aa - ) recognizes a sugar receptor (peng et al., ) , and aa substitutions in this region can change the receptor-binding capacity (li et al., ) and host receptor specificity (sheahan et al., ) . two bcov strains (genbank accession number mk and mk ) from shanxi province were found to have unique aa substitutions (e v, s p) in the heptad repeat region. this region is crucial for viral entry and for viral and host cell membrane interactions to occur, and it promotes lipid bilayer fusion and nucleocapsid release into the cytoplasm (forni et al., ) . thus, aa substitutions in this region may affect the interaction between the coiled-coil structure and the host cell receptor (martínez et al., ) . the he protein has a receptor-binding function, which also plays a critical were recovered from eight farms in four provinces across a wide geographical distance, with the two furthest provinces being more than , km apart. thus, these novel he recombinant strains have been circulating widely in dairy cattle in china. to the best of our knowledge, this is the first report of a recombination event in the he gene from bcov in cattle, a finding that augments current understanding about the evolution of bcov. in fact, mhv, which is another lineage a member of the betacoronavirus genus, has also reportedly undergone a non-homologous recombination event in the he gene (luytjes et al., ) . recombination in the he gene from influenza c virus and in toroviruses has also been observed (groot, ; smits et al., ) . recombination in the he gene may be a strong driving force for generating strains with new genotypes, host spectra and tissue tropisms (groot, ; luytjes et al., ; smits et al., ) . notably, in our study, the he recombinant and non-recombinant strains simultaneously existed on the same cattle farm in liaoning province. interestingly, the reported decrease in the he receptor-binding capacity of hcov-oc betacoronaviruses was thought to be caused furthermore, nine of the strains have another identical aa variant (p, s a) in the adjacent r -loop of their he genes, which is an identical situation to that seen with the hcov-oc (bakkers et al., ) . thus, further investigation of the significance of the receptor-binding capacity caused by aa substitutions in the receptor-binding region of the he recombinant strains is warranted. notable, monoclonal antibodies against the bcov he protein efficiently neutralized bcov infectivity in vitro (deregt & babiuk, ) and protected the intestinal epithelium of cattle from virus infection in vivo (deregt et al., ) , indicating that the he protein of bcov may also play a significant role in the induction of protective effect on in conclusion, the results of our study have shown that bcovs are circulating widely in dairy calves in china and that most of these strains have unique evolutionary pattern based on our phylogenetic analysis of the complete s, he, n and m genes. recombination events between the esterase and lectin domain of he were identified as occurring at remarkably high frequencies, and these recombinant strains are widely prevalent in dairy cattle in china. as far as we f i g u r e phylogenetic tree based on the deduced aa sequences of the complete n gene. sequence alignments and clustering were performed by clustalw in mega . software. the tree was constructed by the maximum-likelihood method with bootstrap values calculated for , replicates. the strains in this study were marked with a circle, and the other chinese bcov strains were marked with a triangle are aware, this is the first description of a recombination event in the he gene of bcov, and our findings will enhance current understanding about the genetic evolution of bcov. f i g u r e phylogenetic tree based on the deduced aa sequences of the complete m gene. sequence alignments and clustering were performed by clustalw in mega . software. the tree was constructed by the maximumlikelihood method with bootstrap values calculated for , replicates. the strains in this study were marked with a circle, and the other chinese bcov strains were marked with a triangle factors affecting calf mortality in iranian holstein dairy herds betacoronavirus adaptation to humans involved progress loss of hemagglutinin-esterase lectin activity evolutionary dynamics of bovine coronaviruses: natural selection pattern of the spike gene implies adaptive evolution of the strains molecular and antigenic characterization of bovine coronavirus circulating in argentinean cattle during - 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- - cheng tang https://orcid.org/ - - - key: cord- - tk maqk authors: defilippis, victor; raggo, camilo; moses, ashlee; früh, klaus title: functional genomics in virology and antiviral drug discovery date: - - journal: trends in biotechnology doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tk maqk abstract virology research and antiviral drug discovery are poised to benefit from the post-genomic revolution for three main reasons. first, viruses need the host to replicate and are therefore vulnerable to inhibition of cellular pathways. knowledge of complete genomic sequences of both virus and host now permits the study of this interplay on a global scale. combining transcriptomics and proteomics with large-scale gene knockdown experiments will enable the identification of novel antiviral targets. second, massive parallel assay systems, such as dna microarrays, which define the post-genomic era, will facilitate viral diagnostics. third, the combination of genetics with genomics will enable the analysis of viral mutants and strains on an unprecedented scale. the dramatic effects of viral infection on host cell transcriptional patterns have been well-documented and will be briefly highlighted. in addition, we discuss recent trends that apply functional genomics methods to the discovery of new targets and therapies for viral disease. victor defilippis, camilo raggo, ashlee moses and klaus frü h vaccine and gene therapy institute, oregon health and science university, nw th ave, beaverton, or , usa virology research and antiviral drug discovery are poised to benefit from the post-genomic revolution for three main reasons. first, viruses need the host to replicate and are therefore vulnerable to inhibition of cellular pathways. knowledge of complete genomic sequences of both virus and host now permits the study of this interplay on a global scale. combining transcriptomics and proteomics with large-scale gene knockdown experiments will enable the identification of novel antiviral targets. second, massive parallel assay systems, such as dna microarrays, which define the postgenomic era, will facilitate viral diagnostics. third, the combination of genetics with genomics will enable the analysis of viral mutants and strains on an unprecedented scale. the dramatic effects of viral infection on host cell transcriptional patterns have been welldocumented and will be briefly highlighted. in addition, we discuss recent trends that apply functional genomics methods to the discovery of new targets and therapies for viral disease. virology has been a genomic science for longer than any other field because the first complete genomes sequenced were of viral origin [ ] . as of this publication, full viral genome sequences are available in genbank (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/index. html). however, only modern sequencing endeavors made possible the complete sequencing of the human genome as well as that of model organisms. 'virogenomics' research aims to describe the interaction between the products of two genomes using post-genomic methods such as dna microarrays. given that viruses require a host organism to propagate, this approach promises to deepen our understanding of virus -host interactions. eventually, virogenomics research will also lead to new treatments for diseases caused by viruses, because whole genome sequences (virus and host) represent the complete collection of possible antiviral targets. classically, antiviral drug discovery focused on viral gene products. however, the limited number of viral targets and the rapid emergence of drug-resistant mutations in many viral systems make the search for host cell targets an attractive alternative. modern virology and antiviral drug discovery are thus expected to be impacted dramatically by functional genomics methods. the widespread use of these methods is reflected in issues of major virology journals, which are rarely published without articles that include or rely on functional genomics experiments, in particular, dna microarrays. however, most of the published studies are limited to showing that a given virus induces or represses a given set of genes. the future challenge, however, is to determine which of the myriad of host cell gene products are essential for virus survival or for virally induced disease progression. such gene products represent targets for inhibiting virus infection, pathogenesis, or virusinduced tumor formation. recent breakthroughs in gene knockdown technology are expected to accelerate the pace by which host cell pathways crucial to virus replication can be identified. furthermore, diagnostic virology will be impacted by microarray technology because probes for thousands of viral species and strains can be matched against an unknown specimen. here, we highlight some published and as-yet unpublished studies that use dna microarrays and gene knockdown methods in virology. a thorough discussion of the widespread use of microarray technology in biomedicine is beyond the scope of this review, but there are many excellent papers that cover these subjects in depth [ - ] . briefly, microarrays are glass, silicon, or nylon platforms containing oligo-or polynucleotides (targets) identical or complementary to known genes. interrogation of biological samples is performed by synthesis from sample mrna of fluorescently labeled probes that are hybridized to target sequences. gene expression is quantified by measuring fluorescence emission with a confocal laser scanner. the ability to immobilize up to different genes on a single array enables examination of the transcriptional activity of entire eukaryotic genomes in parallel. however, microarrays are adaptable because the investigator can specify target sequences. examination of viral genes, host genes or any such combination can thus be accomplished on a single array. this technology can also be used to immobilize specific probes for many different viral species, different viral strains, or complex dna viruses. many common viruses, such as retroviruses, papillomaviruses and parvoviruses, have very small genomes (often , genes). therefore, using microarrays for examination of gene expression in such viruses is not practical. in these cases other techniques, such as northern blotting and quantitative rt-pcr (qpcr), are more appropriate. however, microarrays are useful for genotyping small viruses, characterization of strain variability and identification of virus type(s) present in a clinical sample. high-density oligonucleotide arrays were used to characterize sequence variability of the hiv quasi-species in patient samples [ ] and oligonucleotide arrays were applied to correlate progression of cervical cancer with the presence of the hpv genotype [ ] . in a particularly clever study, joe de risi's laboratory [ ] constructed microarrays using polynucleotides of conserved regions from a broad range of common viruses. using random pcr amplification from infected samples, they detected infecting viruses by examining specific patterns of hybridization. recently, this technique confirmed that the agent of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) is a member of the coronavirus family (cdc press release, march ) . samples from sars patients reacted with probes from avian and bovine coronaviruses. microarrays allow not only simultaneous diagnosis of multi-strain viral infection from clinical specimens but also identification of new virus types (see [ , ] ). furthermore, diagnostic microarrays will have important applications in the fields of biological warfare and bioterrorism. dna microarrays will be able to rapidly diagnose individuals for exposure to different biothreats such as poxviruses, plague, anthrax and tularemia. these methods can also be used to determine whether viral strains and types used in an attack have been genetically altered. viral genome microarrays are useful for determining the complex transcriptional program of larger viruses, especially members of the herpesvirus family. for instance, the transcriptional program of the kilobase human cytomegalovirus (hcmv) genome [ ] was mapped by chambers and colleagues using oligonucleotide arrays representing all hcmv open reading frames (orfs) [ ] . because the function and expression pattern of many of the hcmv genes are still unknown, such classification might help in characterizing unknown orfs (e.g. non-structural proteins are generally immediate early and early genes whereas structural proteins are often late genes). transcriptional analysis of the tumorigenic g- herpesvirus kaposi's sarcoma-associated virus (kshv, human herpesvirus type ) has also been examined with microarrays. the virus is mostly latent in infected and transformed cells but lytic replication can be induced either spontaneously in a small percentage of cells or artificially using phorbol esters in culture. correlation of viral gene expression with latent and lytic phenotypes has been investigated using nylon membrane [ ] and glass slide-based microarrays [ ] . jenner and colleagues [ ] measured kshv transcription in latently infected cell cultures that were both lysis-induced and uninduced over a time course ( - hr). expression levels for each gene were grouped according to similarity in patterns of expression over all time points and both treatments by cluster analysis [ ] . interestingly, this approach showed that some genes clustering with typical lytic genes had been previously misclassified as latent using other methods. this was because their expression level was very high in a small percentage of cells undergoing spontaneous lytic replication thereby contaminating the 'strictly latent' sample. other large dna viruses, such as poxviruses, are also excellent candidates for such research. the emergence of smallpox as a potential agent of bioterrorism and recent monkeypox outbreaks have renewed interest in finding new therapeutic, diagnostic and immunological targets for improved diagnosis, treatment and vaccination strategies for poxiviruses. viral genome arrays also allow phenotypic classification of viral mutants. for instance, gene expression was examined using microarrays for herpes simplex virus type (hsv ) employing both wild type and a mutant strain lacking immediate-early gene a [ ] . although the mutant used in this study was well characterized, it is conceivable that unknown viral mutants can be classified according to their transcriptome fingerprint in a manner similar to the compendium approach described for yeast [ ] . particularly appealing is use of this approach to characterize and classify randomly generated mutants with targeted mutants. much progress has been made in creating random transposon libraries of herpesvirus genomes cloned as bacterial artificial chromosomes (bacs) [ ] . transcriptional profiles observed in the hcmv and hsv experiments agreed strongly with previous studies of gene expression that used alternative techniques (e.g. northern blotting, rnase protection assays, primer extension) thus validating the use of microarrays for examining gene transcription. a complementary approach to viral mutant characterization is study of their role in manipulating the host cell transcriptional profile. the deletion of non-essential genes often results in a 'normal' phenotype in tissue culturethat is, the mutant virus behaves similar to the wild type in traditional assays such as single-step and multi-step growth curves. however, the microarray fingerprint of such a mutant might be very different from the wild type because the deleted gene might be involved in manipulating host cell pathways that are not essential in vitro but have an important role in vivo. an example for such a situation from our laboratory is shown in fig. . a mutant cmv lacking a nonessential gene grew much like wild type in fibroblasts. however, microarray analysis revealed dramatic differences in the transcriptional profile of fibroblasts infected with the mutant versus wild-type virus. in addition to regulating a similar set of genes as the wild type, the mutant virus induced or repressed a unique set of genes not regulated in cells infected with the wild type. such results will not only help to elucidate the function of nonessential viral genes but also could be used to classify viral mutants generated by random approaches. the investigation of host cell transcriptional changes in response to virus infection and viral protein expression has been a vigorous area of microarray research over the past few years. at last count (july ) there are references containing the words 'microarray' and 'virus' in the pubmed literature database, most of which describe the host cell response to viral infection. given that virus replication involves use and manipulation of multiple host proteins and molecular processes, cellular pathways related to transcription and translation, signal transduction, metabolism, host defense and cell cycle control are review commonly altered in response to, or as a result of, infection with diverse virus types. transcriptional changes in virally infected cells are either the result of anti-viral, 'pro'-viral or bystander host responses. as a common antiviral response, expression of interferon-stimulated genes (isgs) is often observed during infection by diverse, unrelated viruses. isgs create a cellular state in which virus replication is blocked and thus there is natural selective pressure to circumvent or impair this host response (for a recent review see [ ] ). the ability to prevent, inhibit, or limit this induction might therefore contribute to virulence and represent a target pathway for antiviral treatments. for anti-viral therapy, it is conceivable to target viral proteins that interfere with the induction of isgs thus releasing the innate immune response to combat viral infection. an anti-host strategy used by viruses that complicates transcriptome analysis involves interference with cellular rna metabolism. global inhibition of transcription or rna degradation can appear as gene 'repression' in a comparative analysis. a bias toward gene downregulation was indeed observed for influenza [ ] as well as hsv [ ] . interestingly, in each case several host transcripts were upregulated despite massive nonspecific downregulation of host cell mrna. picornaviruses induce degradation of the mrna cap binding complex eif f thereby inhibiting cellular gene expression by preventing recruitment of s ribosomal subunits to caps. following this, translation of genes can only occur when they contain internal ribosome entry sites (ires), as do many viral genes. by selectively isolating mrna-polysome complexes in poliovirus infected (eif f depleted) and uninfected cells, johannes et al. subsequently used microarrays to identify cellular genes that were translated during poliovirus infection [ ] . indeed, a small group of cellular genes were identified as being transcribed despite the lack of caps in infected cells. although these genes had diverse functions it seems possible that the internal ribosomal entry site evolved to overcome the block by picornaviruses. thus, microarray analysis of polysome-fractions can be used to screen for host cell mrnas that survive viral attack thus potentially representing novel anti-viral host factors. in contrast to host pathways that represent an antiviral response, others might be beneficial or even essential for viral replication. inhibiting such 'pro'-viral factors offers novel avenues for anti-viral drug discovery. there are several examples for such essential host factors that were identified by traditional, hypothesis-driven methods (for recent reviews see [ , ] ). in addition, non-hypothesisdriven global gene expression profiling can reveal host cell genes that promote viral growth. however, the challenge is how to pick those genes that might be important for viral replication. several investigators, including our laboratory, chose certain microarray-identified differentially regulated genes because they were associated with interesting biological characteristics or displayed unusual expression patterns. for instance, t. shenk's group noticed in a dna microarray experiment that several genes regulating prostaglandin metabolism were induced by human cytomegalovirus [ ] . one of the induced genes was cyclooxygenase- , which leads to the synthesis of prostaglandin e (pge ) thus modulating cellular gene expression and immune function. based on this initial observation, zhu et al. recently demonstrated that hcmv replication requires the function of cyclooxygenase- [ ] . the authors showed how specific inhibitors of cox- lead to a . -fold decrease in yield of hcmv titers. furthermore, the addition of pge in the presence of such inhibitors restored normal hcmv replication. intriguingly, a virus closely related to hcmv that infects rhesus macaques actually carries a cox- homologue in its genome [ ] , which further emphasizes the importance of this host cell gene for cytomegalovirus reproduction. a recent example from jay nelson's laboratory further supports the notion that some transcriptionally upregulated host cell genes are important for viral replication (a. hirsch and j. nelson, pers. commun.). examination of host gene expression in human cells infected with various flaviviruses revealed significant upregulation of a host cell kinase. cells treated with corresponding kinase inhibitors or with small interfering rna (sirna) that specifically blocks this particular host cell protein resulted in a nearly tenfold decrease in production of west nile virus (fig. ) , as well as other flaviviruses. a special case of virus modulation of host cell gene expression in which functional genomics will reveal novel targets and treatments is viral oncogenesis. because oncogenic transformation involves the misregulation of gene expression, cancer research is a field in which transcriptomics and proteomics will have the most immediate and direct benefit for patients (for a recent review see [ ] ). virus-induced transformation of infected cells occurs because viral oncogenes trigger cellular pathways that ultimately overcome growth restrictions. thus, the study of viral transformation using functional genomics methods will reveal targets relevant to the development of cancer in general. our laboratory is currently studying kaposi's sarcoma (ks), a virally induced tumor that frequently appears in aids-patients. a characteristic feature of ks is the transformation of vascular endothelial cells to so-called spindle cells; a process that is recapitulated in vitro upon infection of primary or life-extended endothelial cells with kshv [ ] . this in vitro model represents an excellent system to study cellular events during transformation because oncogenesis can be reproducibly triggered by infection with kshv. microarray analysis by our laboratory and by others revealed substantial transcriptional changes during spindle cell formation upon infection with kshv [ , ] . our study identified upregulation of the oncogene c-kit. this host gene is particularly interesting because it is involved in other non-viral cancers, some of which also form spindle cells (e.g. gastrointestinal stromal tumors). importantly, signal transduction by c-kit can be inhibited by the receptor, tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib mesylate (sti ; gleevec) [ ] . indeed, sti treatment prevented kshv-induced spindle cell formation in vitro [ ] . this observation suggested that the anti-tumor drug gleevec might be useful in treating ks patients. this prediction was borne out in a recent clinical trial (http://www.asco.org/ac/ , ,_ - - _ - - _ - - _ - a, .asp). treatment with gleevec of cutaneous ks in aids patients resulted in clinical and histological regression of lesions. these results suggest that c-kit [and plateletderived growth factor (pdgf) receptor; another target for gleevec that is also present in ks lesions] represents a valid target for ks therapy. the examples listed earlier demonstrate that, in principle, functional genomics methods can identify new antiviral targets or targets for the treatment of diseases caused by viruses. however, finding the 'needle' in the 'haystack' of changes that occur in host cells during virus infection can be a daunting task. until now, the availability of specific inhibitors was one of the reasons for choosing to study a particular host cell gene that was upregulated in a virally infected cell. however, recent years have seen a dramatic improvement in gene knockdown methods using antisense rna or rna interference (rnai) [ , ] . compared with earlier generations of phosphorothioate antisense molecules, which displayed many nonspecific effects, new antisense oligomers are highly specific and long-lived. for instance, phosphordiamidate morpholino oligomers are highly resistant to enzymatic degradation and can be used to block translation of mrna [ ] . the most recent method for analyzing gene inhibition studies has been rnai or sirna, where small - -nucleotide (nt) rna duplexes interfere with the transcription program by directing degradation of homologous mrna [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . rna gene silencing mechanisms are common to plants, fungi, nematodes, drosophila and mammalian cells [ - ] . the mechanism by which sirna cleaves the target sequence has not been completely defined. the current model proposes that dsrna is cleaved into - nt in an atp-dependent process by the rnase iii enzyme dicer [ , - , ] . the - -nt sirna are thought to form a enzyme complex -the rna induced silencing complex (risc) -that unwinds the duplex sirna and targets the complex to the recognition site on targeted mrna where cleavage occurs and mrna is degraded [ , , , ] . in mammalian cells, synthesized -nt sirna duplexes can lead to sequence-specific mrna degradation without inducing the antiviral interferon response activated by longer dsrna molecules [ ] . both new-generation antisense oligomers and sirna can be used to knockdown expression of genes that were found by dna microarrays to be upregulated in virally infected cells or organisms. what makes the combination of microarray and knockdown methods particularly attractive for viral systems is that, instead of de novo induction, microarrays usually indicate severalfold changes in the level of a given transcript upon infection. thus, it is not necessary to completely shutdown expression of a target, but it is sufficient to reduce the level of induction back to the pre-infection state. using the in vitro ks model, we applied morpholino antisense dna oligomers against c-kit to kshv-infected endothelial cells. a single treatment was sufficient to inhibit foci formation, a process that takes several days to develop [ ] . similar results were obtained with sirna against c-kit (fig. ) . having established that antisense approaches work in this system, we are now using these methods to evaluate a large number of host genes found to be induced by kshv on transformation of endothelial cells. at present, we have examined . different host genes induced by kshv. in several instances, we observed an inhibition of the transformed phenotype comparable to the c-kit antisense or sirna (a. moses and k. frü h, unpublished observations). the corresponding genes represent known or novel oncogenes and potential new targets for therapy of ks as well as other cancers. in other viral systems, sirna targeted against viral or host cell genes has been successfully used to inhibit viral replication. the p gene of the non-segmented negativestrand rna virus, respiratory syncitial virus, was selectively silenced and resulted in a decrease in viral progeny and loss of syncytia formation [ ] . poliovirus, a dsrna virus, had reduced titers when treated with sirna against capsid or viral polymerase genes, confirming that cytoplasmic rna virus can be inhibited by sirna [ ] . however, poliovirus with a single nucleotide difference in the sirna target region can lead to escape mutants, suggesting that multiple target regions need to be generated for therapeutic purposes [ ] . similarly, sirna duplexes targeted against various hiv genes inhibited hiv replication [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in addition, decreasing cd levels by sirna results in decreased hiv entry and spread [ ] . moreover, targeting of the downstream nuclear factor kb (nf-kb) p gene, thought to be involved in stimulating hiv gene expression, decreased hiv- replication [ ] . similarly, human papillomavirus and hepatitis c virus replication were recently modulated with sirna [ , ] . different vector-based sirna approaches have also been developed based on polymerase iii promoter expression of rnai molecules with small hairpin rna structures that can be processed by dicer [ ] . this type of expression cassette has been incorporated into retroviral vectors for stable delivery and expression [ , ] . recently, the therapeutic potential of sirna was demonstrated by retroviral delivery of sirna that could inhibit mutant k-ras v in human pancreatic carcinoma, leading to loss of tumorigencity [ ] . the therapeutic potential of rnai in vivo has also been demonstrated in mice [ ] . although these results demonstrate that sirna can inhibit a wide variety of viruses, it is our opinion that the real potential for this technique will be its use in validating which host cell products are important for virus replication or viral pathogenesis. as described earlier, pre-screening with dna microarrays can identify potential host cell targets. however, an even bolder approach is to bypass microarrays altogether by using a whole-genome knockdown approach in a given system and examining subsequent virus replication ability. although this approach is still difficult to implement in mammalian systems, owing to the large (and still unknown) number of genes and associated costs, a proof-of-principle study was successfully undertaken in drosophila cells. taking advantage of the completion of the drosophila genome and that rnai is extremely efficient in more primitive eukaryotes, n. perrimon's laboratory (harvard medical school) used a high-throughput rnai screen based on dsrnas corresponding to every known drosophila gene to monitor viral replication in schneider cells. this approach revealed dozens of host cell gene products that were essential for viral replication but not for replication of the host cell (s. cherry and n. perrimon, pers. commun.). once whole human-genome sirna libraries are available, it will be possible to use similar approaches to identify the complete set of human genes required for viruses to complete their replication. although most functional genomics studies of virology focus on cataloging global transcriptional and translational events, proof-of-principle studies are emerging demonstrating that some of the detected changes are events required or desired for virus replication or pathogenesis. until now, validation could only be achieved using small-molecule inhibitors or dominant-negative proteins. however, the recent revolution in gene inhibition by antisense and sirna will significantly facilitate the validation of a large number of potential targets identified by dna microarrays or other methods. moreover, wholegenome screens with sirna will enable a complete evaluation and validation of the role of host cell gene products for viral replication. these approaches thus represent an unprecedented opportunity to characterize the functional host gene products essential for virus replication and disease. nucleotide sequence of bacteriophage phi x dna genomics, gene expression and dna arrays dna chips: state-of-the art primer on medical genomics. part iii: microarray experiments and data analysis extensive polymorphisms observed in hiv- clade b protease gene using high-density oligonucleotide arrays correlation of cervical carcinoma and precancerous lesions with human papillomavirus (hpv) genotypes detected with the hpv dna chip microarray method microarray-based detection and genotyping of viral pathogens typing and subtyping influenza virus using dna microarrays and multiplex reverse transcriptase pcr genotyping of human papillomavirus types by dna chip in korean women: comparison with cytologic diagnosis analysis of the protein-coding content of the sequence of human cytomegalovirus strain ad dna microarrays of the complex human cytomegalovirus genome: profiling kinetic class with drug sensitivity of viral gene expression kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus latent and lytic gene expression as revealed by dna arrays transcription program of human herpesvirus (kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus) cluster analysis and display of genome-wide expression patterns global analysis of herpes simplex virus type transcription using an oligonucleotide-based dna microarray functional discovery via a compendium of expression profiles fast screening procedures for random transposon libraries of cloned herpesvirus genomes: mutational analysis of human cytomegalovirus envelope glycoprotein genes viruses and interferon: a fight for supremacy global impact of influenza virus on cellular pathways is mediated by both replication-dependent and -independent events identification of eukaryotic mrnas that are translated at reduced cap binding complex eif f concentrations using a cdna microarray virogenomics: a novel approach to antiviral drug discovery cyclin-dependent kinases as cellular targets for antiviral drugs altered cellular mrna levels in human cytomegalovirus-infected fibroblasts: viral block to the accumulation of antiviral mrnas inhibition of cyclooxygenase blocks human cytomegalovirus replication analysis of the complete dna sequence of rhesus cytomegalovirus the future of cancer management: translating the genome, transcriptome, and proteome long-term infection and transformation of dermal microvascular endothelial cells by human herpesvirus kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirusinduced upregulation of the c-kit proto-oncogene, as identified by gene expression profiling, is essential for the transformation of endothelial cells altered patterns of cellular gene expression in dermal microvascular endothelial cells infected with kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus inhibition of c-kit receptor tyrosine kinase activity by sti , a selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor gene silencing in mammals by small interfering rnas morpholino oligos: making sense of antisense? resistance of morpholino phosphorodiamidate oligomers to enzymatic degradation potent and specific genetic interference by doublestranded rna in caenorhabditis elegans duplexes of -nucleotide rnas mediate rna interference in cultured mammalian cells a species of small antisense rna in posttranscriptional gene silencing in plants rnai: double-stranded rna directs the atpdependent cleavage of mrna at to nucleotide intervals an rna-directed nuclease mediates posttranscriptional gene silencing in drosophila cells role for a bidentate ribonuclease in the initiation step of rna interference evidence that sirnas function as guides, not primers, in the drosophila and human rnai pathways atp requirements and small interfering rna structure in the rna interference pathway phenotypic silencing of cytoplasmic genes using sequence-specific double-stranded short interfering rna and its application in the reverse genetics of wild type negative-strand rna viruses short interfering rna confers intracellular antiviral immunity in human cells sirna-directed inhibition of hiv- infection modulation of hiv- replication by rna interference potent and specific inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus type replication by rna interference rna interference directed against viral and cellular targets inhibits human immunodeficiency virus type replication selective silencing of viral gene expression in hpv-positive human cervical carcinoma cells treated with sirna, a primer of rna interference clearance of replicating hepatitis c virus replicon rnas in cell culture by small interfering rnas rna interference: the new somatic cell genetics? stable suppression of tumorigenicity by virus-mediated rna interference rna interference in adult mice we thank alec hirsch, jay nelson, sara cherry and norbert perrimon for unpublished information. key: cord- - f h cck authors: kozak, marilyn title: pushing the limits of the scanning mechanism for initiation of translation date: - - journal: gene doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: f h cck selection of the translational initiation site in most eukaryotic mrnas appears to occur via a scanning mechanism which predicts that proximity to the ′ end plays a dominant role in identifying the start codon. this ‘position effect’ is seen in cases where a mutation creates an aug codon upstream from the normal start site and translation shifts to the upstream site. the position effect is evident also in cases where a silent internal aug codon is activated upon being relocated closer to the ′ end. two mechanisms for escaping the first-aug rule – reinitiation and context-dependent leaky scanning – enable downstream aug codons to be accessed in some mrnas. although these mechanisms are not new, many new examples of their use have emerged. via these escape pathways, the scanning mechanism operates even in extreme cases, such as a plant virus mrna in which translation initiates from three start sites over a distance of nt. this depends on careful structural arrangements, however, which are rarely present in cellular mrnas. understanding the rules for initiation of translation enables understanding of human diseases in which the expression of a critical gene is reduced by mutations that add upstream aug codons or change the context around the aug(start) codon. the opposite problem occurs in the case of hereditary thrombocythemia: translational efficiency is increased by mutations that remove or restructure a small upstream open reading frame in thrombopoietin mrna, and the resulting overproduction of the cytokine causes the disease. this and other examples support the idea that ′ leader sequences are sometimes structured deliberately in a way that constrains scanning in order to prevent harmful overproduction of potent regulatory proteins. the accumulated evidence reveals how the scanning mechanism dictates the pattern of transcription – forcing production of monocistronic mrnas – and the pattern of translation of eukaryotic cellular and viral genes. the scanning mechanism for initiation of translation postulates that the small ( s) ribosomal subunit enters at the end of the mrna and migrates linearly, stopping when the first aug codon is reached. consistent with the postulated end-dependent entry of ribosomes, translation in vivo is strongly augmented by the m g cap (furuichi and shatkin, ; horikami et al., ; lo et al., ; neeleman et al., ) and ribosome binding in vitro is prevented by circularization of the mrna (kozak, a; konarska et al., ) . perhaps because the scanning mechanism has been around for a while, the evidence for some basic points has been forgotten. one recent commentary even questions whether the s ribosomal subunit has anything to do with it (mathews, ) . the easiest answer is that the stopscanning step is clearly mediated by pairing of the initiation codon with the anticodon in met-trna i (cigan et al., a) , and the s ribosomal subunit is the carrier of met-trna i ·eif . but the s subunit was already implicated by experiments done earlier. the experiments that gave rise to the scanning model concerned unusual polysome-like complexes formed in the presence of edeine, an antibiotic which blocks recognition of the aug codon (kozak and shatkin, ) . analysis of the rapidly sedimenting complexes revealed s ribosomal subunits distributed throughout the body of the mrna. because control experiments showed that, even in the presence of edeine, ribosomes can enter only from the end, the simplest explanation was that s subunits enter at the end and then migrate into the interior of the mrna; in the absence of edeine, the migration would stop when an aug codon is reached. independent experiments confirmed that edeine is targeted to the ribosome (herrera et al., ) , and use of a fractionated translation system confirmed that the edeine-induced complexes are formed by s but not s ribosomal subunits (kozak and shatkin, ; kozak, b) . subsequent experiments, with edeine omitted, showed that scanning can be interrupted by inserting a base-paired structure between the cap and the aug codon; the resulting abortive complexes sediment around s (kozak, (kozak, , paraskeva et al., ) . we are not yet sure which initiation factors are associated with the s ribosomal subunit during the scanning phase. the only factors whose role in scanning has been defined clearly are the gtp-binding protein eif , which escorts met-trna i onto the s subunit, and eif , which activates gtp hydrolysis by eif (asano et al., ; das et al., ) . by controlling the rate of gtp hydrolysis, eif controls the fidelity of initiation, i.e. the fidelity of the stop-scanning step . other protein factors have not yet been fitted in. (the voluminous literature on factors focuses on modifications -phosphorylation, cleavages -rather than on defining the initiation pathway. basic questions, such as when each factor enters and leaves, have not yet been answered.) one untested possibility is that the large initiation factor eif , bound to the s ribosomal subunit, might form a clamp around the mrna that is opened and closed by cycles of atp hydrolysis. scanning appears to be dependent on atp hydrolysis (kozak, ) , thereby implicating eif a, an rna-dependent atpase which might control the hypothetical clamp. some ideas about the function of other initiation factors are reviewed elsewhere (dever, ; mccarthy, ; pestova et al., ) . the strongest evidence that the scanning s ribosome/ factor complex advances linearly is the position effect on selection of the start codon: initiation at the first potential start codon has been demonstrated in rigorous experimental tests (cigan et al., a; kozak, kozak, , and confirmed in many 'natural tests' wherein addition or removal of an aug codon produces the expected shift in the site of initiation (see below). the aforementioned blockade caused by inserting a base-paired structure between the cap and the aug start codon is further evidence that s ribosomal subunits traverse the leader sequence linearly, rather than hopping (discontinuous scanning) or entering directly at the aug codon. although the scanning mechanism predicts that translation should initiate at the aug codon nearest the end of the mrna, two ancillary mechanisms -reinitiation and context-dependent leaky scanning -enable additional initiation events at downstream aug codons in some mrnas. these well-defined mechanisms for escaping the first-aug rule are discussed below. an additional escape mechanism might involve direct entry of ribosomes at an internal site in the mrna. while there is evidence suggestive of direct internal initiation with picornavirus mrnas, the evidence for internal ribosome entry sites (ires) in cellular mrnas is problematic (kozak, a) . the absence of shared structural features among candidate cellular ires elements makes it impossible to predict which mrnas, if any, might use such a mechanism. rather than attempting to summarize the extensive literature on internal initiation, i refer the reader to other detailed reviews on that subject (dever, ; hellen and sarnow, ; pestova et al., ) . the next section provides a terse summary of points that are easily explained by the scanning model. the bulk of the review then focuses on complicated examples and issues. . constraints imposed by the scanning mechanism explain many common aspects of gene expression in higher eukaryotes many plant and animal viruses produce dicistronic or polycistronic mrnas from which only the cistron can be translated (table ). all these viruses solve the problem of 'silent cistrons' by producing -via splicing or discontinuous transcription or an internal promoteradditional forms of mrna in which the downstream cistron is repositioned closer to the end. the reason for the complicated pattern of splicing seen with human immunodeficiency virus type (hiv- ), for example, is simply to produce mrnas that allow downstream open reading frames (orfs) to be translated. the broad range of viruses represented in table merits attention. the same problem and same solution -post-transcriptional processing of polycistronic mrnas -underlie the expression of many genes in caenorhabditis elegans (blumenthal et al., ; hough et al., ) . in mammalian cells, mrnas that contain two full-length nonoverlapping cistrons are extremely rare and, as with the aforementioned viruses, actual translation of the cistron probably occurs from a second, monocistronic mrna (pardigol et al., ; westerman et al., ) or from a second mrna in which the two cistrons are fused into a single translation unit (gray and nicholls, ; hänzelmann et al., ) . a dicistronic transcript derived from the mouse snurf-snrpn locus barely supports translation of the second cistron, as discussed below in the section on reinitiation (section ). recently discovered dicistronic transcripts produced from the mouse hyal locus support translation of only the cistron (shuttleworth et al., ) . a few other reported dicistronic mrnas await testing. wold et al., ; ziff, parvovirus: adeno-associated capsid protein a capsid proteins b/c splicing muralidhar et al., hepatitis b virus core protein s proteins (envelope) promoter switch schaller and fischer, retrovirus: avian, murine gag (capsid) protein env protein splicing e pawson et al., ; van zaane et al., retrovirus: human foamy gag (capsid) protein pol precursor splicing jordan et al., lentivirus: hiv- tat rev and nef f splicing schwartz et al., alphavirus: semliki forest nonstructural proteins capsid protein internal promoter glanville et al., ; strauss and strauss, calicivirus: feline g nonstructural proteins capsid protein independent replication carter, ; neill et al., miller et al., ; shih and kaesberg, tobacco mosaic virus replicase coat and movement proteins internal promoters grdzelishvili et al., ; hunter et al., potato virus x kda movement protein and kda movement proteins f ?? verchot et al., carmovirus: turnip crinkle g replicase (p /p ) p and p movement proteins internal promoters li et al., ; wang and simon, fütterer et al., a the silent downstream cistron identified in the third column is expressed only upon being moved closer to the end via production of a second, shorter mrna. translation of most genes derived from these viruses follows straightforward predictions of the scanning mechanism, although occasional deviations have been reported. in rare instances where a cistron appears to be translated from a dicistronic mrna (grundhoff and ganem, ; kirshner et al., ; nador et al., ; stacey et al., ) , the virus in question employs a complicated pattern of splicing and therefore the existence of an undetected monocistronic mrna is not beyond the realm of reason. in some other cases only a small amount of the protein encoded by the cistron was produced, and the published rna analyses were not sufficiently sensitive to rule out the presence of an additional subgenomic mrna (herbert et al., ). b in some cases the listed example is arbitrary, i.e. with retroviruses, coronaviruses, closteroviruses, etc., there are additional polycistronic mrnas wherein translation is restricted to the cistron. c whereas dna viruses and retroviruses use conventional promoter-switching or splicing mechanisms to generate alternative forms of mrna that allow translation of the downstream cistron, more complicated mechanisms underlie the production of subgenomic mrnas by some rna viruses . d the presence of internal promoters that produce a shorter transcript for each downstream orf is suggestive, but testing of translation is still needed for the mrnas produced by cytomegalovirus and geminivirus. e whereas all retroviruses employ splicing to produce the subgenomic mrna from which envelope protein (env) is translated, some retroviruses also employ an internal promoter which is postulated to mediate expression of novel orfs, such as the superantigen of mouse mammary tumor virus (reuss and coffin, ) and orf-x of the virus that causes lung cancer in sheep (palmarini et al., ) . f see leaky scanning in table and fig. . g in place of the usual m g cap, the end of these viral rnas carries a covalently linked protein (vpg) or is unblocked. the need for a subgenomic mrna even in these cases emphasizes that translation is end-dependent even when it is not cap-dependent. h the full-length genomic mrna supports translation of the cistron in vitro but the cistron is silent in vivo. the latter result is considered more reliable (meulewaeter et al., ) . notwithstanding the documented inability to translate the cistron in natural dicistronic mrnas, synthetic dicistronic mrnas -constructed by inserting a putative ires element between two reporter genes -appear sometimes to allow translation of the downstream cistron. the interpretation that this occurs via direct internal initiation of translation has been questioned (kozak, a) and defended (hellen and sarnow, ) in other reviews. the position effect, indicative of scanning, is seen when a mutation creates an aug codon upstream from the normal start codon and translation shifts to the upstream site (bergenhem et al., ; cai et al., ; gross et al., ; harington et al., ; liu et al., ; lock et al., ; mével-ninio et al., ; muralidhar et al., ; wada et al., ) . in the most stringent test of the rule, the first aug codon was shown to be the exclusive site of initiation even when the second aug was positioned just a few bases downstream from, and in the same optimal context as, the first (kozak, ) . the position effect is seen also when removal of the first start codon activates initiation from the next aug downstream. some genes require production of two versions of the encoded protein, wherein the shorter version, initiated from an internal aug codon, lacks the n-terminal domain of the longer isoform. the problem of how ribosomes can gain access to an internal start codon is solved by producing, via splicing or a downstream promoter, a second form of mrna from which the first aug start codon has been removed. table lists some examples. the n-terminally truncated isoform thus produced may reside in a different cellular compartment, or may function as an antagonist to the full-length protein (as seen with various transcription factors listed in table ), or may function in a surprising way. one such surprise was the discovery that a truncated form of tryptophanyl-trna-synthetase ('minitrprs') has angiostatic activity (wakasugi et al., ) . the entries in table and some other examples (aichem and mutzel, ; beuret et al., ; falvey et al., ; nagpal et al., ) are what i call natural tests of the position rule. additional evidence comes from experimental manipulations wherein removal of the first aug was shown to activate initiation from a downstream site (cahana et al., ; chenik et al., ; tailor et al., ; thoma et al., ) . the scanning mechanism predicts that the untranslated region ( utr, an unfortunate misnomer) is actually traversed by ribosomes. this explains why translation of the major coding domain is reduced when adventitious out-offrame aug codons occur upstream. the upstream aug codons often create small orfs (uporfs) which are indeed translated, as shown by detecting the encoded peptide (hackett et al., ; raney et al., ; wang and wessler, ) or by fusing a reporter gene to the uporf (abastado et al., ; donzé et al., ; liu et al., ; steel et al., ; tanaka et al., ; xu et al., ) . the fusion test is the more reliable, as small peptides are usually degraded rapidly. even if upstream aug codons are arranged in a way that allows reinitiation, there is a penalty because reinitiation is usually inefficient. this topic will be discussed at length in section . the hypothesis that the utr is traversed by ribosomes explains why a highly structured leader sequence is so detrimental to translation. vertebrate mrnas characteristically have long, gc-rich -hence highly structured -leader sequences (kozak, a; macleod et al., ) , and the resulting difficulty in translation has been discovered over and over in the course of cloning. even a short gc-rich utr can inhibit profoundly, as illustrated in cases where a gene produces a mixture of mrnas with different leader sequences, and the worst-translated mrna was found to be the form with the shortest utr (jiang and lucy, ; yang et al., ) . a stem-and-loop structure, stabilized in some cases by a repressor protein, is most inhibitory when its proximity to the end blocks ribosome binding (goossen and hentze, ; kozak, ; wang and wessler, ) . if the structure is far enough from the end to allow ribosome entry, the advancing s ribosome/factor complex apparently has some ability to disrupt base pairing, but this ability is notably less than that of s elongating ribosomes (kozak, a (kozak, , b lingelbach and dobberstein, ; paraskeva et al., ) and is curtailed in yeast (koloteva et al., ) . while there are mechanisms for reducing the inhibitory effects of upstream aug codons, as discussed below, no mechanism has yet been defined for modulating the inhibitory effects of secondary structure. some studies suggest that secondary structure might be less inhibitory to translation in vivo than in vitro (charron et al., ; curnow et al., ; hensold et al., ; hoover et al., ; morrish and rumsby, ; van der velden et al., ) . this could be due to production of an alternative transcript that simply eliminates the secondary structure -a reasonable possibility given that gc-rich domains often harbor promoter elements -or to modification of the translation machinery. interpretation of in vivo tests of translation could also be complicated by effects of secondary structure on mrna stability (stefanovic et al., ) . whether and how translation of gc-rich leader sequences might improve in exponentially growing cells (nielsen et al., ) remains an important open question. the scanning mechanism rationalizes the occurrence of initiation at upstream acg or cug codons in some mrnas. these alternative codons are usually too weak to actually substitute for the aug start codon (reviewed by kozak, ; for some exceptions see falvey et al., ; kiefer et al., ; riechmann et al., ; sadler et al., ) . it is not uncommon, however, for initiation to occur at an upstream non-aug codon in addition to the first aug (see leaky scanning in section ). this is observed frequently with cellular genes that have highly structured, gc-rich leader sequences (kozak, b) , perhaps because secondary structure slows scanning and thus allows more time for the mismatched codon to pair with met-trna i . with some viruses, the extra protein isoform initiated from an upstream non-aug codon serves an essential function (muralidhar et al., ; portis et al., portis et al., , . while the n-terminally-extended isoforms derived from some cellular genes also display distinct functions (arnaud table partial list of vertebrate genes that produce a second, shorter version of the encoded protein via a second form of mrna in which an internal aug codon becomes a functional start site upon elimination of the upstream aug start sun et al., a production of long and short protein isoforms via this mechanism is seen also with genes from insects (mével-ninio et al., ) , plants (cunillera et al., ; wimmer et al., ) , yeast (beltzer et al., ; carlson et al., ; chatton et al., ; ellis et al., ; gammie et al., ; natsoulis et al., ; wolfe et al., ) and viruses (barbosa and wettstein, ; lambert et al., ; liu and roizman, ; liu and biegalke, ; weimer et al., ; welch et al., ; wu et al., b; zheng et al., ). b in these cases, the long and short protein isoforms have different functional effects. other genes that resemble this pattern, producing long and short isoforms with contrasting functions, are not listed in the table because the aug start codon for the shorter protein is carried on an alternative exon present only in the shorter mrna (e.g. koski et al., ; molina et al., ) . that arrangement does not illustrate the main point of the table, which is that a silent internal aug codon in the longer mrna can be activated simply by truncating the transcript. c the long and short isoforms are targeted to different cellular compartments. d the long and short isoforms are expressed in different tissues. e the long and short forms of b , -galactosyltransferase appear to function identically. the main significance of the promoter switch, which eliminates the first aug start codon, is that the shorter utr supports translation more efficiently (charron et al., (charron et al., ). et al., calkhoven et al., ; spotts et al., ) or patterns of localization (acland et al., ; lock et al., ; packham et al., ) , it would not be surprising if some other upstream-initiated proteins turn out to be inadvertent byproducts generated in the course of slowly traversing a gc-rich leader sequence. because the ability of the scanning mechanism to explain the big picture is generally accepted, the remainder of this review directs attention, not to examples that can be seen readily to support the model, but to mrnas that seem to be poorly designed for a scanning mode of initiation. the main point is that the scanning mechanism applies even in these difficult cases. understandably, such mrnas are translated inefficiently and this brings out a second important point: some critical regulatory genes require protein synthesis to be inefficient. an earlier review raised awareness that genes that encode potent regulatory proteins -cytokines, growth factors, kinases, transcription factors -often produce mrnas in which the leader sequence is gc-rich or burdened by upstream aug codons (kozak, a) . some examples described herein validate the prediction that these encumbered sequences are nature's way of limiting the synthesis of potent proteins that would be harmful if overproduced. i also suggested in earlier reviews that, when a cdna sequence has so many upstream aug codons as to challenge the applicability of the scanning mechanism, it is wise to ask whether the cdna correctly reflects the structure of the mrna. that advice is not changed by what is written here. very often, cdna sequences that appear incompatible with scanning have been found to derive from incompletely spliced transcripts or to have been misinterpreted in other ways (kozak, (kozak, , . in other cases, although an encumbered cdna sequence is correct, it derives from a transcript that does not support translation (hake and hecht, ; foo et al., ; larsen et al., ; lee et al., ) . only after one is certain of the mrna structure should the mechanisms below be considered. in mammals, the optimal context for recognition of the aug start codon is gccrccaugg. within this motif, the purine (r) in position is the most highly conserved (see section . ) and functionally the most important position. the importance of a or g (a is somewhat better than g) in position was proved by mutagenesis experiments on a wide variety of genes (kozak, b; and see entries marked 'tested' in table ). the g in position þ is also highly conserved and, especially in the absence of a in position , contributes strongly (kozak, ) . adherence to the rest of the gccrccaugg motif varies, without major consequences as long as positions and þ conform; the upstream gcc motif can be seen to contribute, however, in the absence of other elements (kozak, b) . the aforementioned mutagenesis experiments define two extremes: (i) when the first aug codon occurs in a strong context -annaugn or gnnaugg -all or almost all ribosomes stop and initiate at that point; (ii) when the first aug resides in a very weak context, lacking both r in position and g in position þ , some ribosomes initiate at that point but most continue scanning and initiate farther downstream. this leaky scanning enables the production of two separately initiated proteins from one mrna, as documented below. it is harder to predict what happens at start sites that fall between the extremes, i.e. mrnas in which the first potential start codon has the sequence ynnaugg, gnnaugy or gnnauga. leaky scanning is seen in some but not all such cases. a possible explanation suggested by studies with test transcripts (kozak, a) is that initiation might be restricted to the first aug codon, despite a suboptimal context, when downstream secondary structure slows scanning and thus provides more time for codon/anticodon pairing. suppression of leaky scanning via this mechanism requires a critical distance ( - nt, which corresponds to half the diameter of the ribosome) between the aug codon and the downstream structured element. table lists some examples in which two proteins are produced from one mrna via leaky scanning. the postulated link between context and leaky scanning has been tested in many of these cases by showing that, upon improving the context at the upstream site, initiation from the second site is reduced or abolished. (whether the second aug codon resides in a strong or weak context is not relevant; the ribosome reads the mrna linearly and thus the decision to stop or to bypass the first aug is not influenced by whether there is a better initiation site downstream.) the large number of genes that employ leaky scanning precludes discussion of the biological significance of the proteins thereby produced, but it merits noting that, for many of the viruses in table , replication requires production of both listed proteins. for some other viruses, the second protein is a virulence factor that weakens host defenses (bridgen et al., ; chen et al., ; weber et al., ) . the biological importance of these downstream-initiated proteins shows that leaky scanning is a deliberately employed tool; it does not simply reflect sloppiness on the part of the translational machinery. the long list of examples in table conforms to expectations in that the first start codon resides in a suboptimal context. there are, however, rare instances of leaky scanning despite a good context (r and g þ ) around the first aug. this can happen when the first aug codon is too close to the end to be recognized efficiently (kaneda et al., ; kozak, c; ruan et al., ; sedman et al., ; slusher et al., ; spiropoulou and in all mrnas here listed, the sequence flanking the first start codon deviates from the consensus sequence in position and/or position þ , highlighted by underlining. when the postulated link between context and leaky scanning was tested (so marked in this column), mutations that improved the context at the first start site diminished access to the downstream start site. this test failed only with cucumber necrosis virus, where the short distance between the m g cap and aug# allowed some leaky scanning even when the context was optimized. c in some cases the first and second aug codons are in the same reading frame, generating long and short versions of the encoded protein which may function differently. in cases where the first and second start codons are in different reading frames, indicated by italicizing the second product, the extent of overlap between the two orfs ranges from a few codons (peanut clump virus, southern bean mosaic virus) to codons (turnip yellow mosaic virus). d access to the downstream initiation site via leaky scanning is augmented by a reinitiation shunt, as explained in the text (section . ) and diagrammed in fig. for c/ebpb mrna. e mutations that eliminate aug# usually increase production of the second, downstream protein. in rare cases where the expected increase was not seen (e.g. von hippel-lindau, turnip yellow mosaic virus), it might be because translation of the second protein was restricted at the level of elongation. for a similar reason, improving the context around aug# occasionally fails to elevate production of the protein there initiated (fajardo and shatkin, ) . these entries nevertheless satisfy the main prediction of the leaky scanning mechanism, which is that improving the context around aug# prevents initiation from the second, downstream site (fajardo and shatkin, ; iliopoulos et al., ) . f whereas feline leukemia virus produces an n-terminally-extended, glycosylated form of gag (gp gag ) from the indicated weak aug codon, the corresponding upstream start site in murine leukemia virus is acccugg (portis et al., ) . when that site was experimentally ablated, however, revertants expressed the extended protein from a weak upstream aug codon (uuuaugg) created by a point mutation. those revertants were selected because the extra glycosylated form of gag contributes to viral spread (portis et al., ) . g in the mrnas from baboon reovirus, influenza a virus, and southern bean mosaic virus, the indicated proteins derive from the first (weak) and fourth aug codons. aug# and aug# initiate small orfs that terminate before aug# . thus, a combination of leaky scanning and reinitiation probably mediates access to the downstream start site. nichol, ; werten et al., ) or when the facilitating effect of g in position þ is canceled by u in position þ (kozak, ; sloan et al., ; stallmeyer et al., ) . other occasional claims of leaky scanning despite a strong context at the first aug codon were simply mistaken (scherer et al., ) ; the shorter protein turned out to be translated from a second form of mrna (kogo and fujimoto, ) . at the opposite extreme, there are rare mammalian mrnas in which, despite a very unfavorable context flanking the first aug codon, translation appears to initiate exclusively at that site (arai et al., ; hickey and roth, ; leslie et al., ; mcneil et al., ; plowman et al., ; wu et al., a) . leaky scanning might be suppressed in these and a few other cases because of downstream secondary structure, or because the wider context (c in positions , , , ; g in position ) compensates to some extent for the absence of r and g þ , or for other unknown reasons. the same principle that allows initiation from the first and second aug codons when the first aug is in a suboptimal context (table ) applies in cases where translation initiates at an upstream non-aug codon in addition to the first aug (acland et al., ; arnaud et al., ; carroll and derse, ; fajardo et al., ; florkiewicz and sommer, ; fütterer et al., ; fuxe et al., ; lock et al., ; muralidhar et al., ; packham et al., ; saris et al., ; spotts et al., ) . recognition of an upstream acg, cug or gug start codon requires a strong context (portis et al., ) , despite which scanning is usually leaky because the initiator codon itself is weak. production of long and short protein isoforms via leaky scanning is harder to regulate -e.g. to achieve tissue specific expression of one or the other form -than when a unique mrna encodes each isoform, as in table . there are hints, however, that dual initiation via leaky scanning might be regulable (probst-kepper et al., ; spotts et al., ) . this could conceivably be accomplished via proteins that stabilize downstream secondary structure or, perhaps, via a combination of leaky scanning and regulated reinitiation, if the mrna also has small uporfs. among the examples in table are many plant viruses, indicating that the basic context rules extend to plant systems. mutagenesis experiments confirm the functional importance of r in position and g in position þ in plant mrnas (jones et al., ; lukaszewicz et al., ) and surveys of plant cdna sequences confirm the conservation of those key positions (pesole et al., ; rogozin et al., ) . unlike mammalian mrnas, however, plant mrnas do not show a predominance of c in positions , , and . the foregoing discussion pertains to mrnas from plants and vertebrate animals. there is some evidence for contextdependent leaky scanning in fungi (arst and sheerins, ) , but context effects on initiation have not yet been studied carefully in protozoa, insects, and various other systems. the observation that trans-splicing of mrnas in c. elegans sometimes brings a purine into position is interesting (hough et al., ) but the significance awaits testing. with a number of yeast genes, there is a hint of leaky scanning when the usual a in position is replaced by a pyrimidine (gaba et al., ; slusher et al., ; vilela et al., ; welch and jacobson, ; wolfe et al., ) . context effects were not evident, however, in other studies of translation in yeast (cigan et al., b) . for whatever reason, leaky scanning is rare in yeast, apart from a few cases attributable to the first aug codon residing too close to the end. mrnas that initiate translation from three sites provide a striking illustration of how far leaky scanning, alone or in combination with reinitiation, can be pushed. fig. shows some examples. the predominant translation product obtained from cmyc mrna is a kda 'long form ' which initiates at the first aug codon (fig. a) . a small amount of a longer isoform ( kda) derives from an upstream cug codon which is a weak start site (i.e. very leaky) because the codon is not aug. although the first aug codon has the required a in position , a small percentage of ribosomes bypass that site and initiate at the next aug, producing a third ( kda) form of c-myc. this happens apparently because the context flanking the first aug codon is good but not perfect. thus, production of the kda isoform was eliminated when the upstream site was changed from acgaugc to accaugg (spotts et al., ) . fig. b depicts another example in which ribosomes initiate from three in-frame aug codons. with the mrna that encodes c/ebpb, access to the far downstream site via leaky scanning is augmented by a reinitiation shunt, as explained in the legend to fig. and discussed further in section . translation of c/ebpa mrna occurs by a mechanism similar to that depicted for c/ebpb except that the first start site in c/ebpa is a cug codon (calkhoven et al., ) , which generates a smaller amount of the longest protein (isoform a) than does the aug codon in c/ ebpb. with c-myc, c/ebpb and c/ebpa mrnas, leaky scanning is biologically important because the long and short versions of the protein have opposing effects as regulators of transcription. it is striking that leaky scanning can operate even when the second initiation site resides far downstream from the first. with synthetic transcripts designed to test the processivity of scanning, there was no reduction in initiation from the downstream site when the inter-aug distance was expanded stepwise from to nt (kozak, ) . in some remarkable viral mrnas, the second functional initiation site is more than nt downstream from the fig. . examples of 'maximally leaky' scanning wherein one mrna produces three independently initiated proteins. major (thick arrow) and minor (thin arrow) translation products are identified below their respective start codons. sequences that cause the initiation site to be weak, and thus promote leaky scanning, are highlighted in red. offset rectangles represent orfs in different reading frames. (a) with c-myc mrna, a leaky scanning mechanism was inferred from experiments in which optimizing the context around the first aug codon suppressed production of the kda isoform, while changing the upstream cug codon to aug suppressed production of both the and kda isoforms (spotts et al., ) . access to the downstream start site might be more complicated than here depicted, as there is a small out-of-frame orf between the and kda start sites. (b) with c/ebpb mrna, a mutation that strengthens the first start codon (uucaugc ! accaugg) blocked production of all shorter isoforms, implicating a leaky scanning mechanism (calkhoven et al., ) . a small uporf (blue) superimposes another level of control, causing more ribosomes to bypass the start site for isoform b than would be expected from leaky scanning alone. presumably because the aug start codon for isoform b is positioned close to the termination site of the uporf, reinitiation at site b is inefficient and some ribosomes thus reach the far downstream start site for the kda isoform (lip). as evidence for this reinitiation shunt, calkhoven et al. ( ) showed that eliminating the aug codon of the uporf abolished production of lip and that strengthening or weakening the context around the uporf start codon caused corresponding changes in the yield of lip. although the smallest form of c/ebpb can be generated in some situations by proteolysis (dearth et al., ) , the effects of the aforementioned mutations clearly implicate a translational mechanism. the lap/lip ratio shows tissue and stage specific variation (dearth et al., ; descombes and schibler, ) . (c) whereas leaky scanning allows initiation at multiple sites within a single orf in c/ebpb and c-myc mrnas, leaky scanning allows translation of three separate orfs in the pregenomic mrna of rice tungro bacilliform virus. these orfs (not drawn to scale) have overlapping start and stop codons of the form auga. translation via leaky scanning was inferred from the strong reduction (. -fold) in translation of orf and orf when the start codon of orf was changed from auu to aug (fütterer et al., ) and from the inhibitory effect on expression of orf when an adventitious aug codon was inserted into orf . the leader sequence that precedes orf has ten small uporfs which are not depicted here because that peculiar leader sequence, postulated to be translated by ribosome hopping (fütterer et al., ) , is not required for the leaky scanning mechanism that underlies translation of orfs , and . (d) the avian reovirus s mrna supports translation of one structural and two nonstructural proteins (bodelón et al., ) . the depicted mechanism postulates that orf has a dual function, encoding its own polypeptide (p ) and facilitating translation of orf by shunting some ribosomes past the strong aug start codon for orf . the absence of extraneous aug codons in the nt region between the end of orf and the start of orf is consistent with the idea that orf might be translated by reinitiation. some ribosomes would be expected to translate p (orf ) by leaky scanning, engendered by the poor context at the start of orf . improving the context at the start of orf indeed increased production of p (shmulevitz et al., ) ; unfortunately, the yield of p , which would be expected to decrease, was not monitored. the observation that strengthening the context at the start of orf had no effect on the yield of sc is not surprising because the reinitiation mechanism postulated to underlie translation of orf would probably be limited by other features, such as the relatively large size of orf . first aug (herzog et al., ; sivakumaran and hacker, ) . the pregenomic mrna of rice tungro bacilliform virus (fig. c) provides the most dramatic illustration of these points. use of a weak (non-aug) codon to initiate orf and an unfavorable context at the start of orf (uacauga) enables the majority of ribosomes to reach and initiate at the start of orf . the orf polyprotein is thought to be a precursor from which coat protein, protease and reverse transcriptase are derived by proteolysis. the remarkable absence of aug codons from the long ( nt) coding domain of orf and the presence of but one weak aug codon within orf underscore how carefully this mrna is constructed to support translation via scanning. the careful construction includes minimizing the overlap between adjacent cistrons. without that precaution, elongational occlusion might work against utilization of a far downstream start codon, as documented in other cases (kozak, ) . the avian reovirus rna diagrammed in fig. d offers another example of initiation from three sites in one mrna. additional experiments are needed to validate the postulated mechanism. in contrast with the 'maximally leaky' mrnas in fig. , the mrnas in fig. are minimally leaky: only a small fraction of ribosomes bypass the first aug codon and initiate downstream. here the leaky scanning mechanism has been pushed to the limits in the sense that there is (lowlevel) initiation from a second site despite the presence of a strong context around the first aug codon. the explanation is that the context flanking the first aug start codon is good but not perfect. the resulting low-level leaky scanning enables the viruses depicted in fig. a ,b to produce two proteins -one abundant, the second in small amountsfrom a single mrna. experimental manipulations that support this interpretation are summarized in the legend to fig. . a few other viral genes that might fit this category have been described (chenik et al., ; jayakar and whitt, ) . the hepatitis b virus example is noteworthy because, via the rube goldberg mechanism diagrammed in fig. b , reverse transcriptase encoded by the p gene is initiated independently from a far downstream site, unlike most other reverse transcriptase genes which lack an independent start codon and therefore require frameshifting during translation of the preceding core gene. production of a second protein isoform via low-level leaky scanning is seen also with some cellular mrnas. an interesting example is the production in rats of an osteogenic growth peptide (ogp) initiated from codon in the histone h gene (fig. c) . the leaky scanning explanation was tested by showing that production of ogp increased upon deleting the upstream h start codon, and that production of ogp was suppressed upon changing the h start codon from a good (aggaagaugu) to a perfect (gccaccaugg) context. a similar mechanism might operate with a few other cellular genes that produce a trace amount of a second protein isoform short and pfarr, ; it is not clear whether leaky scanning or a change in splicing underlies the translational switch described by land and rouault, ) . the fourth example in fig. differs from the others in that a good-but-not-perfect context at the first start site serves, not to enable production of two proteins, but simply to modulate the yield of a a -r from the second aug. examination of a a -r genes from various organisms shows conservation of the overlapping orf, with the upstream aug codon always in a context that allows only low-level leaky scanning (lee et al., ) . conservation of the structure supports the interpretation that this is a device contrived to limit the production of a a -r protein. low-level leaky scanning caused by a not-quite-perfect context around the first aug codon might occur with other mrnas where it normally goes unnoticed because the downstream start site(s) are out-of-frame. antigenic peptides recognized by cytotoxic t-lymphocytes (ctls) might be produced in this way, as discussed in section . . a small degree of leaky scanning that normally goes unnoticed could become significant if a mutation that shifts the normal start codon out of frame moves a downstream aug codon into the main reading frame. in some cases where low-level internal initiation was observed with such a mutated gene (e.g. maser et al., ) , the possibility that the downstream site is reached via a combination of leaky scanning and reinitiation -a mechanism such as that proposed for hepatitis b virus (fig. b ) -merits consideration. reinitiation occurs with mrnas, such as those depicted in fig. , that have small orfs near the end. our rudimentary understanding of what happens following translation of the first uporf may be summarized as follows. when the s ribosome reaches the termination site of the uporf, the s ribosomal subunit is thought to be released (this has not actually been shown) while the s subunit remains bound to the mrna, resumes scanning, and may initiate another round of translation at a downstream aug codon. for the downstream reinitiation event to occur, the s subunit must reacquire met-trna i and this appears to be an important point of control. reacquisition of met-trna i is promoted by lengthening the intercistronic domain (abastado et al., ; kozak, c) , which provides more time for met-trna i to bind, or by increasing the concentration of eif (abastado et al., ; hinnebusch, ) . genetic experiments also implicate eif in the met-trna i rebinding step (garcia-barrio et al., ) . another potential point of control is at the termination site of the uporf, where certain features -perhaps nearby secondary structure (grant and hinnebusch, ; vilela et al., ) -might prevent the resumption of scanning or, in some other way, prevent reinitiation. this brief summary is based on studies carried out in yeast and mammals. some studies of reinitiation in plants suggest that the intercistronic sequence may have effects beyond simply providing time for ribosomes to reacquire met-trna (wang and wessler, ) . some results obtained in early experiments with mammalian vectors were interpreted as evidence that ribosomes can scan backwards and thus reinitiate at an aug codon positioned upstream from the termination site (peabody et al., ), but recent experiments contradict fig. . examples of minimally leaky scanning in which a strong, but not quite perfect, context at aug# causes most ribosomes to initiate there while allowing a low level of initiation downstream. with the depicted viral mrnas (a,b), the predominant product of translation is the capsid protein initiated from aug# . low-level leaky scanning generates a small but adequate amount of the indicated second protein. with bovine coronavirus, a mutation in position þ (u ! g, indicated in red) flanking aug# strongly reduced translation from the downstream site (senanayake and brian, ) , supporting the interpretation that the natural mrna is slightly leaky because the context flanking aug# is not a perfect match to the consensus sequence. with hepatitis b virus, ribosomes en route to the p start site (aug# ) apparently bypass the weak aug# by leaky scanning, while translation of the small orf initiated at aug# enables some ribosomes to miss the inhibitory aug# (inhibitory because it resides in a strong context and overlaps the p orf) and thus to reach aug# . whereas the core protein start codon (aug# ) here depicted resides in a context which allows a low level of leaky scanning, a slightly longer mrna which encodes the pre-core protein has a stronger start codon (a in position ) and polymerase cannot be translated from that form of mrna (fouillot and rossignol, ) . the publications on which the scheme shown here is based (fouillot et al., ; hwang and su, ) also discuss some alternative possibilities vis-à-vis translation of polymerase. (c) the first aug codon in rat histone h mrna initiates translation of the full-length protein. the second aug, codons downstream and in the same reading frame, initiates production of a peptide which has growth-regulatory properties (bab et al., ) . (d) with rat a a r adenosine receptor mrna, an overlapping uporf that initiates at an aug codon in a strong context is used to minimize production of a a r protein. the overlapping arrangement precludes reinitiation but the not-quite-perfect context at the upstream start site allows low-level leaky scanning. this interpretation is supported by the observed ten-fold increase in translation of a a r in vivo when the start codon of the uporf was eliminated (lee et al., ) . via a second promoter, the rat a a -r gene produces some transcripts with additional uporfs, but no transcript has yet been found that lacks the inhibitory uporf discussed here. here and in fig. , the major coding domain is shaded gray. small regulatory orfs (blue rectangles) are not drawn to scale. that view (kozak, b) . indeed many studies have shown that the strongest inhibition is caused by an uporf that overlaps the start of the downstream cistron (babik et al., ; bates et al., ; byrne et al., ; cao and geballe, ; ghilardi et al., ; hansen et al., ; kos et al., ; lee et al., ; liu et al., ) , which would not be the case if ribosomes could move backwards to reinitiate. the size of the first orf is a major limitation on reinitiation in eukaryotes: reinitiation can occur following the translation of a 'minicistron' (a small first orf) but not following the translation of a full-length cistron. the long list of mrnas that contain silent cistrons (table ) underscores the point. the only apparent exception occurs with cauliflower mosaic virus, where a protein encoded by the virus appears to promote reinitiation following the translation of a full-length first cistron (park et al., ) . the reason why reinitiation is usually restricted by the size of the first orf is not known, but a possible explanation is that certain initiation factors dissociate from the ribosome only gradually during the course of elongation. if the elongation phase is brief -i.e. if the first orf is a fig. . small upstream orfs in eukaryotic mrnas function in various ways to modulate translation. only the end of each mrna is depicted. (a) the presence of uporfs forces translation of the major orf to occur by a reinitiation mechanism, which is usually inefficient. the extent of inhibition depends on the number and arrangement of uporfs and whether the context flanking the upstream start codon(s) allows some escape via leaky scanning. (b) because reinitiation can occur only in the forward direction, an overlapping uporf strongly impairs translation of the major orf. (c) whereas type b mrnas have a single in-frame start codon which is bypassed due to the overlapping uporf, type c mrnas initiate from two in-frame start codons; the uporf serves to divert some ribosomes to the downstream start site. the depicted sequence is a simplified representation of glyrs mrna (mudge et al., ) . translation of bag- mrna can also be fitted to this pattern: the first start site is an in-frame cug codon which produces the kda form of bag- ; the next start site (aug# , out-of-frame) initiates a small uporf within which the first in-frame aug codon (aug# ) resides, and that aug is thereby skipped; the kda form of bag- is produced from aug# which is accessed by reinitiation following translation of the small uporf (packham et al., ) . some other mrnas that use an uporf to dodge one aug codon in favor of another are described elsewhere (mittag et al., ; sarrazin et al., ) . note that the reinitiation shunt as here defined adheres to the linear scanning mechanism, unlike a shunt postulated to operate with cauliflower mosaic virus mrna (ryabova et al., ) . (d) the common feature of mrnas that use mechanism d is inhibition of translation in cis by a peptide encoded within the uporf. the amino acid sequence of the inhibitory peptide is different in each case (morris and geballe, ) . in the column at the far right, asterisks indicate examples in which the translational control mechanism is regulated, e.g. via a change in concentration of eif (gcn ) or arginine (cpa ) or polyamines (adometdc) or, more commonly, via an alternative promoter that generates a simpler form of mrna devoid of uporfs (c-mos, mdm , il- ; see text for other examples, e.g. in alderete et al., ) . minicistron -the factors required for reinitiation would still be present when the s subunit resumes scanning. although the postulated factors have not been identified, there is evidence for the idea that the duration of the elongation phase matters: when a short uporf which normally permits reinitiation was reconfigured to contain a pseudoknot that is known to slow elongation, reinitiation failed (kozak, b) . that result makes it difficult to specify a cutoff size, i.e. one cannot say 'an uporf this long will allow reinitiation' while a longer orf will not. the permissible size is likely to vary depending on features, such as secondary structure or codon usage, that affect the rate of elongation. as a rough guide, however, one may note that reinitiation often has been observed following translation of a ten to codon uporf, and that reinitiation was substantially reduced, but not abolished, when a codon uporf was lengthened to codons (kozak, b) . in a different study, reinitiation occurred following a codon uporf but not when the orf was lengthened to codons (luukkonen et al., ) . some naturally occurring uporfs that strongly inhibit translation, perhaps because their size precludes reinitiation, include a codon uporf in mitochondrial uncoupling protein mrna (pecqueur et al., ) , a codon uporf in polyoma virus jc mrna (shishido-hara et al., ) , and a codon uporf in plant s-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase (adometdc) mrna (hanfrey et al., in press) . that the size of the uporf might be what limits translation of adometdc is suggested from the five-fold increase in translation observed when the uporf was shortened from to codons, but that result could also be explained in other ways. (the suggested interpretation is not contradicted by the fact that an alternative uporf in adometdc mrna caused little inhibition even when lengthened to codons; the alternative uporf initiates from an aug codon in a weak context which would allow it to be bypassed to some extent by leaky scanning. the codon uporf, in contrast, has a strong start codon.) with the mouse snurf-snrpn transcript, where the first cistron is codons long , a very low level of reinitiation might account for translation of the downstream snrpn cistron. a naturally occurring atg-to-agg mutation in the start codon of the upstream snurf cistron was found to elevate translation of snrpn . fold (tsai et al., ) , which implicates a scanning/ reinitiation mechanism and rules out direct internal initiation. from cdna sequencing data, it is clear that many vertebrate mrnas have small orfs upstream from the start of the major coding domain, but an accurate count of genes in this class is difficult. the tallies that have been attempted (e.g. pesole et al., ; suzuki et al., ) are invariably flawed by inclusion of misinterpreted cdna sequences, such as cdnas in which a putative utr with 'upstream' aug codons turned out to be part of the coding domain or part of an intron that gets removed from the functional mrna (di fruscio et al., ; kozak, kozak, , kubu et al., ; nishitani et al., ; santamarina-fojo et al., ; wagner et al., ) . some transcripts with long, aug-burdened leader sequences are not associated with polysomes (hake and hecht, ; sanchez-góngora et al., ) or not able to support protein synthesis (foo et al., ; larsen et al., ; lee et al., ) , emphasizing that not all cdnas correspond to functional mrnas. a more fundamental complication vis-à-vis which genes to count is the propensity for a single gene to produce transcripts with different leader sequences, only some of which have upstream aug codons (anant et al., ; aplan et al., ; eerola et al., ; huo and scarpulla, ; kawakubo and samuel, ; laurin et al., ; perälä et al., ; perrais et al., ; sanchez-góngora et al., ; suva et al., ; tanaka et al., ; tsuda et al., ; zimmermann et al., ) . the significance of a particular form of rna cannot always be deduced from its abundance, inasmuch as a minor transcript is sometimes the major functional mrna (andrea and walsh, ; babik et al., ; ghilardi et al., ; mitsuhashi and nikodem, ; nielsen et al., ) and incompletely processed transcripts are sometimes more abundant than the fullyspliced, translatable mrna (boularand et al., ; frost et al., ; xie et al., ; zachar et al., ) . translational regulation mediated by small uporfs is important, as discussed below, but equally important are non-translational mechanisms -use of alternative promoters or splice sites -that simplify the utr by eliminating uporfs in certain tissues or at certain times when elevated synthesis of the protein is required (aizencang et al., ; anusaksathien et al., ; arrick et al., ; babik et al., ; brown et al., ; horiuchi et al., ; landers et al., ; lee et al., ; nonaka et al., ; phelps et al., ; ren and stiles, ; steel et al., ; teruya et al., ) . because vertebrate mrna leader sequences are often gc-rich (section . ), secondary structure near the end might impair translation even more than the presence of upstream aug codons. thus, it is not surprising that eliminating upstream aug codons does not improve translation in every case (rao et al., ; wood et al., ) . in many cases, however, mutations targeted to the upstream aug codons confirmed their role in restricting translation from downstream (anant et al., ; babik et al., ; bates et al., ; brown et al., ; child et al., a; gereben et al., ; ghilardi et al., ; griffin et al., ; harigai et al., ; kos et al., ; lee et al., ; marth et al., ; meijer et al., ; pecqueur et al., ; ren and stiles, ; steel et al., ; tanaka et al., ; tsai et al., ; wang and wessler, ; wang and rothnagel, ; wera et al., ; wu et al., ) . this occurs by a variety of mechanisms, as summarized in fig. and discussed next. while the efficiency of reinitiation varies, there is almost always a penalty -demonstrable by showing an increase in translation when the uporf is deleted -and the penalty can be severe. thus, the simplest function of small uporfs is to limit production of the protein encoded in the full-length orf by making downstream translation dependent on an inefficient reinitiation mechanism (fig. a) . the best studied example is yeast gcn , which initiates from the fifth aug codon in the mrna; the long leader sequence contains four small uporfs. in a series of classic experiments, hinnebusch ( ) was able to reconstruct gcn regulation using only the first and fourth uporfs, and i will explain what happens in that simplified case. uporf is always translated efficiently (it is the first aug in the mrna), after which ribosomes resume scanning and reinitiate, usually, at uporf . uporf is unusual in that its translation precludes further reinitiation events: thus, when uporf is translated, gcn is not. that is the situation in yeast cultures that have adequate nutrients. starvation for amino acids, however, causes some ribosomes to bypass the inhibitory uporf and reinitiate instead farther downstream. this happens because starvation creates a pool of uncharged trnas which activate a protein kinase that phosphorylates, and thus partially inactivates, eif . when eif levels fall, it takes longer for ribosomes to reacquire met-trna i and thus become competent to reinitiate. the slower acquisition of competence means that some ribosomes, scanning in the reinitiation mode, will bypass the nearby uporf and can thus reach the downstream gcn start site. three general lessons from the gcn story appear to carry over to mammals. (i) fig. a lists some examples of mammalian mrnas that are translated inefficiently due to small uporfs; many other examples were cited in section . . (ii) experimental manipulations with c/ebpb mrna (fig. b ) support the interpretation that an aug codon which follows the uporf too closely is skipped (presumably because ribosomes have not yet reacquired met-trna i ), allowing reinitiation to occur farther downstream. the same mechanism might be invoked to explain how an internal start codon is accessed in minitrprs mrna (wakasugi et al., ) and baculovirus ie mrna (theilmann et al., ) , and how c-myb gets translated from a rearranged transcript generated by retrovirus insertion (jiang et al., ) . in each of these mrnas, the first aug codon that follows a small uporf must be bypassed to reach the functional start codon downstream. (iii) the third lesson from gcn pertains to regulation of reinitiation by manipulation of eif levels. although hints of this have been described with mammalian genes that encode c/ebp transcription factors (calkhoven et al., ) , macrophage receptor protein cd (griffin et al., ) and activating transcription factor (harding et al., ) , the point requires much more careful study. the mrnas discussed in connection with fig. a have uporfs that terminate before the start of the major coding domain, thus allowing (inefficient) translation of the main orf by reinitiation. in fig. b , however, the uporf overlaps the start of the major coding domain. this precludes reinitiation and profoundly reduces the translational yield. limited access to the main orf in some of these mrnas might be achieved by leaky scanning, as was discussed for a a -r (fig. d) . mrnas derived from the human thrombopoietin (tpo) gene have structures similar to that depicted in fig. b and much can be learned from the tpo story, as outlined in fig. . the normal gene produces a mixture of transcripts with different leader sequences, all of which translate tpo poorly because of an overlapping uporf (uporf in fig. ). targeted mutagenesis (ghilardi et al., ) confirmed that upstream aug# is primarily responsible for blocking translation of tpo. this is because its near-optimal context (gccgccuccaugg) prevents leaky scanning and the overlapping arrangement precludes reinitiation. various mutations that restructure the utr in ways that increase production of tpo cause hereditary thrombocythemia. translation of tpo normally initiates at aug# in exon , but a splice-site mutation that causes deletion of exon causes initiation to shift to a previously silent inframe codon (aug# ) in exon ; this is diagrammed in the center of fig. . the resulting truncated form of tpo lacks only the first four amino acids and appears to function normally . the problem -the cause of the pathology -is that the mutation greatly increases translation of tpo by removing the inhibitory uporf . in two other families affected with hereditary thrombocythemia, production of tpo is elevated by mutations that restructure uporf . in one case, deletion of a g residue shifts uporf into the same reading frame as tpo, thereby causing overproduction of an elongated form of tpo initiated from aug# kondo et al., ) . in the other case, a g ! t mutation creates a terminator codon within uporf and this shortening of the orf, which now terminates nt before aug# , enables efficient reinitiation at aug# . these insightful studies of tpo expression make two important points: (i) the bulk of the transcripts produced by the wild type gene are virtually untranslatable; and (ii) it is necessary for this potent cytokine to be translated poorly; overproduction results in disease. with tpo as precedent, one suspects that in other cases where -despite the production of alternative leader sequences -it is hard to find even one form of mrna devoid of upstream aug codons (e.g. larsen et al., ; lee et al., ; pecci et al., ; peterson and morris, ; wang et al., ) , the goal is to ensure that translation is very, very inefficient. the wig- growth-regulatory gene might be another example: an overlapping uporf initiates from a strong aug codon, while the wig- start codon itself is weak, and these distinctive features are conserved between the human and mouse genes (hellborg et al., ) . whereas an overlapping uporf functions simply to down-modulate translation in the examples depicted in fig. b , with the mrnas in fig. c the overlapping uporf qualitatively affects the protein output. ribosomes that translate the uporf thereby miss the first in-frame aug codon but proceed to reinitiate at another start codon fig. . a low-level reinitiation mechanism normally prevents overproduction of tpo. translational yields from various forms of tpo mrna in transfected cos cells (far right column) are expressed relative to a control transcript that has a short, unencumbered utr. p and p are alternative promoters; a cluster of arrows indicates that p produces staggered start sites. the tpo coding domain (horizontal black bar) begins at an aug codon which is labeled # because, in the longest form of mrna (line ), it is preceded by seven aug codons that initiate small uporfs. superscript letters indicate whether each upstream aug resides in a strong (s) or weak (w) context and horizontal blue lines depict the approximate length and arrangement of the uporfs. vertical lines demarcate the boundaries of exons; carets depict the introns in alternatively spliced transcripts. only the beginning of the tpo coding domain (exons - ) is shown. the key point is that the normal set of transcripts supports translation poorly because uporf overlaps the tpo start site. various mutations (shown in red) that relieve this constraint elevate the translation of tpo, and this overproduction causes hereditary thrombocythemia. among the normal set of mrnas, the 'rare' transcript from promoter p (line ) supports translation slightly better than the others, perhaps because the short distance between uporf and aug# enables some reinitiating ribosomes to bypass aug# and thus reach aug# . because of the strong context at augs # and # , uporfs and would be more effective than uporfs and in setting up this reinitiation shunt. the depicted scheme is based on experiments described by ghilardi et al. ( ) and wiestner et al. ( ) . additional mutations diagrammed near the bottom of the figure were described by , , and kondo et al. ( ). downstream. if the uporf itself has a suboptimal initiation site (u in position in the depicted example), leaky scanning will allow some production of the long protein isoform from the first in-frame aug codon while the reinitiation shunt promotes production of the shorter protein isoform. the operation of a reinitiation shunt is most obvious when the uporf overlaps a potential start codon, as shown in fig. c , but the same principle applies in cases (discussed in section . ) where, although the uporf terminates prior to a potential downstream start codon, the intervening distance is too short to allow reinitiation. the fourth regulatory mechanism diagrammed in fig. is used only rarely. mammalian adometdc mrna is the best studied example in which a small uporf encodes a peptide which functions in cis to inhibit downstream translation. the nascent peptide (magdis) produced during translation of the uporf is thought to interact with ribosomes in a way that prevents completion of the termination process and thus prevents reinitiation (law et al., ) . the stalled ribosome, held at the termination site of the uporf, would also block other ribosomes from reaching the downstream start site via leaky scanning. biologically, this mechanism is important because ado-metdc is a key enzyme in polyamine biosynthesis and, at least in vitro, elevated polyamine levels stabilize the ribosome complex stalled at the end of the uporf (law et al., ) . in other words, elevated polyamine levels down-regulate translation of adometdc. it is interesting to note parenthetically that antizyme, a protein that downregulates polyamine levels, is also translated via a polyamine-sensitive mechanism. elevated polyamine levels up-regulate production of antizyme by promoting a ribosomal frameshift needed to translate the full-length protein (ivanov et al., ) . the foregoing examples illustrate how reinitiation operates as part of the normal translation mechanism in cases where uporfs are constitutively present in mrnas. there are other cases in which a reinitiation mechanism kicks in only when a nonsense mutation is introduced in a way that truncates the coding domain. in effect, the normal aug initiator codon becomes the start of an uporf, following which reinitiation occurs at a normally silent internal aug codon (chang and gould, ; ledley et al., ; zoppi et al., ) . the n-terminally truncated protein thus produced sometimes retains enough function to mitigate the pathological effects of the nonsense mutation (chang and gould, ) . this potential rescue device often fails, however, because many mrnas are rapidly degraded when a nonsense codon is introduced (frischmeyer and dietz, ; he and jacobson, ) . the mrna decay pathway that targets these abnormal mrnas is activated in part by cis elements located in the coding domain (gudikote and wilkinson, ) , which might explain why normal uporf-containing mrnas (e.g. those discussed in figs. and ) are not rapidly degraded. initiation factor eif plays a key role in translational control (clemens, ; dever, ) and mutations that perturb regulation of eif have profound pathological consequences (delépine et al., ; han et al., ; harding et al., ; van der knaap et al., ) . human genetic disorders have been traced also to disruption of regulatory mechanisms mediated by mrna binding proteins cazzola and skoda, ; cazzola et al., ; kaytor and orr, ; mikulits et al., ) . here, however, i focus on pathologies resulting from increases or decreases in translation caused directly by changes in mrna structure. the preceding paragraph mentioned some cases in which an n-terminally truncated protein is produced, apparently by reinitiation, when a mutation introduces a premature nonsense codon. the effects of some other types of mutations can also be understood in light of the scanning mechanism, as outlined next and discussed elsewhere in more detail (kozak, ) . recent investigations have identified diseases that result from failure to produce one of the two protein isoforms derived from genes that encode certain transcription factors (table ). because the second isoform often functions as a modulator, the transcriptional imbalance caused by these changes in translation can have serious consequences. hereditary diseases have been traced occasionally to point mutations that alter the context flanking the aug start codon. the list includes a-thalassaemia caused by an a ! c change in position of the a-globin gene (morlé et al., ) , androgen insensitivity syndrome caused by a g ! a mutation in position þ of the androgen receptor gene (choong et al., ) , and ataxia with vitamin e deficiency caused by a c ! t mutation in position of the a-tocopherol transfer protein gene (usuki and maruyama, ) . there is an interesting report of a somatic point mutation (g ! c in position ) in the brca gene in a highly aggressive case of sporadic breast cancer (signori et al., ) . in mice, a screen for mutations that cause defects in eye development uncovered an a ! t change in position of the pax gene (favor et al., ) . each of these mutations was shown to cause a decrease (generally two-to four-fold) in translation. not every mutation or polymorphism within the consensus motif can be explained simply, however. other considerations, such as codon usage, might prevent an increase in translation even when the context is improved (i.e. translation might be limited at the level of elongation rather than initiation), and some mutations near the aug codon might affect mrna processing or stability rather than translation per se. a clinically relevant polymorphism in position of annexin v appears to have an effect on translation which is inconsistent with the context rules (gonzález-conejero et al., ) , but the effect was small and documented only by assaying translation in vitro, which is not always reliable (section . ). a natural polymorphism in position of the glycoprotein iba gene displayed a small effect on translation in vitro that was consistent with the rules (c worked better than t; afshar-kharghan et al., ) but, in the same study, mutations that changed position þ from c to g did not augment translation. testing mutations in position þ is tricky, however, because the change in identity of the penultimate amino acid might affect protein stability in ways that obscure the effects on translation. the solution is to use an assay that directly monitors the initiation step of translation (kozak, ) . the scanning mechanism predicts that a mutation which weakens or destroys the normal start codon should activate initiation from the next aug downstream. in some hereditary diseases in which the aug start codon is ablated, a truncated protein is indeed produced in this way but it does not function well enough to prevent the disease (cahana et al., ; huang et al., ; o'neill et al., ) . in the case of a mutated vasopressin gene in which the g of the aug start codon is deleted, the shorter signal peptide initiated from the second aug codon is not recognized by signal peptidase (beuret et al., ) . the resulting uncleaved vasopressin-precursor protein folds incorrectly, causing subsequent processing steps to fail, and therefore vasopressin never gets released from the endoplasmic reticulum. the second aug is only four codons downstream from the first, but the processing defect caused by this slight shift in the site of initiation causes diabetes insipidus. the scanning mechanism predicts that, when an out-offrame aug codon is introduced into the utr, the adventitious upstream start codon should supplant the normal start site. a number of pathologies result from this kind of translational block. sometimes the upstream aug codon is created by a rare mutation (cai et al., ; liu et al., ) . other times it derives from a common polymorphism (bergenhem et al., ; endler et al., ; kanaji et al., ; kraft et al., ; zysow et al., ) . the reduction in translation is more or less severe depending on the context of the upstream aug codon and whether reinitiation is possible. i have already explained how hereditary thrombocythemia is caused by mutations that elevate translation of tpo by restructuring or eliminating an inhibitory uporf (fig. ) . translation of proto-oncogenes is also elevated in some cases by eliminating small uporfs from the mrna. the mdm oncogene is one example: whereas the normal mrna has a long utr that includes two upstream aug codons, in tumor cells the use of a different promoter eliminates the upstream augs and thus increases translational efficiency -fold (brown et al., ; landers et al., ) . in the case of oncogene gli , the upstream aug codons that restrict translation in normal cells reside in an intron which is eliminated by more efficient splicing in basal cell carcinomas (wang and rothnagel, ) . translation of many other human or rodent oncogenes is restricted in normal cells by an encumbered (aug-burdened or gc-rich) leader sequence (arrick et al., ; bates et al., ; child et al., a; harigai et al., ; hoover et al., ; horvath et al., ; manzella and blackshear, ; sarrazin et al., ) ; in some of these cases, a shorter utr that better supports translation is produced in transformed cells (arrick et al., ; marth et al., ) . for other oncogenes, although there are alternative leader sequences that might regulate expression in normal tissues (link et al., ; sasahara et al., ) , there is no evidence that switching leader sequences contributes to tumorigenesis. table pathologies resulting from a change in mrna structure which selectively abolishes production of the long or short form of a transcription factor translational mechanism that normally generates two protein isoforms disease-associated change in mrna structure and translation references c/ebpa (human) two proteins from one mrna via leaky scanning þ reinitiation shunt in acute myeloid leukemia, mutations near amino terminus eliminate production of longer isoform. pabst et al., gata (human) two proteins from one mrna via leaky scanning in down syndrome-related leukemia, premature stop codon eliminates production of longer isoform. wechsler et al., lef (human) two proteins from two mrnas (via two promoters) in colon cancer, failure to activate downstream promoter prevents production of shorter (inhibitory) isoform. hovanes et al., rx/rax (mouse) two proteins from one mrna via leaky scanning a in eyeless mice, mutation of second aug, leaving only the weak upstream start codon, results in inadequate yield. tucker et al., a here the long and short isoforms appear to function identically; the significance of the second aug start codon pertains to boosting the overall protein yield. the eyeless mouse serves as a spontaneous model for human anophthalmia. whereas removal of small uporfs elevates the translation of the aforementioned mdm and gli oncogenes in tumor cells, addition of small uporfs shuts off the translation of some tumor suppressor genes. in the case of hyal , retention of an intron which contains eight upstream aug codons renders the mrna untranslatable in squamous cell carcinomas (frost et al., ) . a striking example of translational inactivation of a tumor suppressor gene is seen in some individuals with a predisposition to melanoma. in certain families, a point mutation (g ! t) creates an upstream, out-of-frame aug codon in the cdkn gene . the small uporf initiated from this new aug codon overlaps the cdkn start codon, and the resulting inhibition of translation is profound. structural changes that attenuate the translation of viral mrnas can contribute to the development of persistent infections. the leader sequence on bovine coronavirus mrnas, for example, was found to evolve -by acquiring a small uporf -during the course of establishing a persistent infection (hofmann et al., ) . shishido-hara et al. ( ) speculate that human polyomavirus jc might cause persistent rather than acute infection because all capsid-protein encoding transcripts produced by the jc virus have a small uporf. with the related simian virus , in contrast, the uporf is sometimes eliminated by splicing, generating transcripts that better support translation of the major capsid protein. attenuating effects caused by introducing an upstream aug codon have been described also with other viruses (petty et al., ; slobodskaya et al., ) . a more drastic restructuring of mrnas sometimes occurs during the establishment of persistent infections by the measles virus. instead of the normal monocistronic mrna for the fusion protein, the predominant transcript in some persistently infected cells was a dicistronic mrna from which the f cistron, located at the end, could not be translated (hummel et al., ) . a similar problem encountered in studies with recombinant rhabdoviruses provides insight into the transcriptional defects that can generate untranslatable dicistronic mrnas (quiñones-kochs et al., ) . in the case of a human parvovirus, productive infection is restricted to a subset of erythroid cells in which splicing generates a monocistronic mrna for each of the major capsid proteins. in nonpermissive cells, a slight shift in the position of a splice site imposes an upstream orf which is postulated to restrict translation of the capsid proteins (brunstein et al., ) . translational twists sometimes generate antigens which, by stimulating the ctl response, are important in the host defense against tumor cells and viruses (shastri et al., ) . leaky scanning is a likely explanation in several cases where the major orf starts with an aug codon in a suboptimal context and the ctl antigen derives from initiation at the next (out-of-frame) aug (aarnoudse et al., ; bullock et al., ; probst-kepper et al., ; rimoldi et al., ) . in one notable case, translation shifts upstream to an in-frame aug codon created during insertion of a provirus, and the resulting novel n-terminal amino acid extension functions as a tumor rejection antigen (wada et al., ) . the scanning mechanism cannot explain the translation of ctl antigens for which the start codon resides far in the interior of the mrna (ronsin et al., ; wang et al., ) . in these cases the antigenic peptide might be produced from an undetected alternative form of mrna. sensitive new assay techniques employed with some genes indeed reveal an array of alternative transcripts from which novel tumor antigens can be translated (behrends et al., ) . in another study, a potent tumor rejection peptide, which maps to an internal aug codon in the full-length cdna, was expressed experimentally from a truncated cdna wherein the start codon for the antigenic peptide was made the first aug (rosenberg et al., ) . additional analyses are needed to determine whether, in the melanoma cells wherein this antigen is expressed naturally, a transcript similar to the experimentally truncated cdna is produced via a downstream promoter or splice site. . surveys and assays and problems therein . . cdna surveys surveys of mrna/cdna sequences differ in other details, but every survey confirms the presence of a purine in position in most ($ %) vertebrate mrnas (kozak, a; pesole et al., ; rogozin et al., ; sakai et al., ) . the occasional survey that purports to challenge the context rules involves distortions, such as emphasizing the low percentage of cdnas that have the full consensus sequence while ignoring the high percentage of cdnas that have the critical purine in position (peri and pandey, ) . a major uncertainty pertaining to all cdna surveys concerns the validity of the database. when i re-examined the entries in one study (suzuki et al., ) , i found numerous instances in which the aug start codon had been misidentified; the corrected start sites adhered more closely to the consensus motif (kozak, ) . some authors pre-emptively defend their conclusions on the grounds that the (unidentified) cdna sequences used for their analysis derive from refseq, which is a curated database (pruitt et al., ) . but the entries in refseq are not without errors, some of which -e.g. misidentified start codons, mistaken claims of upstream aug codons -can be traced by comparing curated genbank entries nm_ , nm_ , nm_ and nm_ with results published else-where (campeau et al., ; nishitani et al., ; nolte and müller, ; santamarina-fojo et al., ) . some cdna surveys use misleading terminology, e.g. referring to upstream aug codons as 'unused' (peri and pandey, ) . given that upstream aug codons are used, as proved by detecting the encoded peptide or by fusing the uporf to a reporter gene, it is not anomalous to find a good context around some upstream aug codons. all surveys tend to overestimate the incidence of upstream augs by scoring only the longest cdna isoform, ignoring the existence of alternative transcripts that have shorter, unencumbered utrs (section . ). the significance of upstream aug codons also tends to be misstated: the presence of small uporfs in vertebrate mrnas which are thereby translated inefficiently (see the foregoing discussion of tpo, oncogenes, etc.) constitutes evidence for, rather than against, the scanning model. the first-aug rule, which i cite as evidence for the scanning mechanism, derives not from statistical analysis of cdna sequences but from the experimentally observed fact (section . ) that translation shifts predictably upstream or downstream when an aug codon is added or removed. in short, it makes more sense to use the scanning/context rules to evaluate cdna sequences (hatzigeorgiou, ) than to attempt the reverse. while conclusions about translation derived from experimental studies are arguably more meaningful than those derived from statistics, the interpretation of experimental results can be complicated. in vivo assays avoid the problem of reaction-conditions-dictating-the-outcome (see next paragraph), but there are other potential traps. the usually-valid assumption that polysomal association identifies actively translated mrnas is called into question by the recent discovery of mrnas trapped on large polysomes from which there is no polypeptide production (rüegsegger et al., ) . the major problem when translation is studied in vivo is uncertainty about the structure of the mrna. for example, a claim that ires-mediated translation is developmentally regulated (créancier et al., (créancier et al., , is premature, inasmuch as those studies monitored the amount but not the form of mrna. when mrna structure is examined, the developmentally regulated expression might be found to reflect activation of an internal promoter rather than activation of an ires. other studies wherein translation of an encumbered leader sequence appears to improve under certain conditions or in certain cell types require better analyses to rule out a possible change in structure of the utr (bernstein et al., ; child et al., b; li et al., ; zimmer et al., ) . some useful hints may be found in reports that describe the belated discovery of alternative forms of mrna that were missed the first time around cortner and farnham, ; déjardin et al., ; deng et al., ; frost et al., ; grundhoff and ganem, ; jordan et al., ; kastner et al., b; kiss-lászló et al., ; laurin et al., ; peremyslov and dolja, ; zhang and liu, ; zheng et al., ) . in vitro translation assays pose a different set of problems. the commercial availability of in vitro translation kits is both a blessing -the systems are easy to useand a curse. the latter because insufficient attention is paid to reaction conditions that can affect the selection of aug start codons. when the magnesium concentration is too low, the first aug codon may be bypassed despite an adequate context; when the magnesium concentration is too high, initiation may occur at upstream non-aug codons that are not naturally used. one solution is to include control transcripts for which start-codon selection was determined in vivo, and to adjust the in vitro reaction conditions to give the same result (kozak, b) . some suppliers of translation kits make it possible to adjust the magnesium concentration, but there is little awareness of the need to do so and the use of coupled transcription/translation systems makes it difficult. for whatever reason, in vitro translation results sometimes deviate significantly from what is seen in vivo vis-àvis access to internal aug codons (grove et al., ; land and rouault, ; meijer et al., ; meulewaeter et al., ; mitchelmore et al., ; saucedo et al., ) and the degree of inhibition caused by small uporfs (ghilardi et al., ; harigai et al., ; pecqueur et al., pecqueur et al., , tanaka et al., ; wang and wessler, ) . the fidelity of initiation in vitro is clearly impaired, possibly due to degradation of the mrna, in cases where extraneous, low molecule weight polypeptides are produced (herbert et al., ; liu and biegalke, ; lekven et al., , fig. c; maser et al., , fig. b; packham et al., , fig. ) . the possibility that the input mrna might undergo cleavage during incubation in vitro complicates attempts to study the expression of dicistronic mrnas, as discussed in the next section. this type of artifact is not ruled out by finding that only certain downstream orfs are translated (o'connor and brian, ) . extrapolating from what is seen when mrnas are deliberately cleaved in vivo (thoma et al., ) , activation of internal start codons in vitro would depend on where the accidental cleavage occurs and whether the endolytic cleavage product persists long enough for a ribosome to engage the newly created end before exonucleases take over. this line of reasoning could explain the claim that an 'artificial ires', consisting of a multiple cloning region and a portion of the escherichia coli laci gene, supports internal initiation of translation in starved yeast cells (paz et al., ) : starvation is likely to promote mrna degradation, and the 'ires' might fortuitously stabilize certain intermediates in degradation. the discovery that ires elements are actually targeted by some ribonucleases (elgadi and smiley, ; nadal et al., ) should be remembered. recent studies that use a primer-extension inhibition (toeprinting) assay to monitor the binding of ribosomes to mrnas have the advantage of focusing directly on the initiation step, but care is needed to distinguish authentic initiation complexes from artifactual pauses in primer extension caused by base-paired structures or extraneous proteins bound to the mrna. the complicating effects of mrna secondary structure, which are prominent when avian reverse transcriptase is used for toeprinting, can be minimized by using a form of the enzyme derived from murine leukemia virus (kozak, ) . attempts to explain the origin of multiple isoforms of eif g (bradley et al., ) illustrate how challenging it can be to interpret translation assays. in vitro experiments presented in support of the idea that translation can initiate from five aug codons, in a single form of eif g mrna, might have been compromised by mrna breakage; this would explain the production of an array of extraneous smaller polypeptides (byrd et al., , fig. c , lanes , and ). translation of some eif g isoforms from broken mrnas could also explain the variability in yields noted throughout that study. when the endogenous eif g gene is expressed in vivo, access to certain downstream aug codons might occur via alternative splicing or internal promoters; both mechanisms have been documented in studies of eif g by other investigators (han and zhang, , and references therein). thus, even though one could rationalize the production of at least three isoforms of eif g from one mrna via established translational mechanisms -an overlapping uporf could shunt some s ribosomal subunits past the first in-frame aug codon (position ), and the unfavorable context at aug might allow some ribosomes to reach aug by leaky scanning -it would be premature to propose that solution. the in vitro experiments need to be repeated with careful attention to magnesium levels and with efforts to minimize mrna breakage. the latter might be accomplished by lowering the temperature to c and limiting the window for initiation to or min. (addition of edeine after the first or min, followed by another period of incubation, would allow polypeptides to be elongated without further initiation events.) the possible production of some eif g isoforms by proteolysis also needs to be ruled out, as this protein is notoriously susceptible to cleavage. the study by byrd et al. ( ) included experiments carried out with dicistronic transcripts, predicated on the belief that eif g mrna contains ires elements which allow direct internal initiation of translation. an eif g/ egfp (enhanced green fluorescent protein) fusion gene positioned at the end of a dicistronic transcript was translatable in vitro, but the aforementioned possibility of mrna breakage complicates the interpretation. indeed, the unexpected translation of egfp from the position even without fusion to eif g (byrd et al., , fig. a , lane ) is most easily explained by mrna cleavage. (the authors invoke reinitiation as the explanation, but reinitiation cannot occur following translation of a large cistron.) fragmentation of the mrna could explain why translation of the eif g/egfp cistron persisted when translation of the cistron was blocked by a hairpin structure (byrd et al., , fig. b ). the hairpin test, widely used to test for internal initiation, is meaningless without evidence that the dicistronic input mrna remains intact. the in vivo tests of eif g translation (byrd et al., , fig. ) also require careful rna analyses to document that the vector produces only the intended dicistronic mrna; the quality of the northern blot in that figure falls far short of what is required. to rule out the possibility that the cistron might be translated from an unintended monocistronic mrna, a promoter-deletion control is needed -a control which shows that, upon deleting the promoter that precedes the cistron, expression of the cistron is also abolished. this test failed in studies with some other sequences, revealing that the candidate ires actually harbors a cryptic promoter (han and zhang, ; larsen et al., ) . the foregoing discussion of eif g translation alludes to only some of the problems associated with dicistronic vectors; a more detailed critique may be found elsewhere (kozak, a) . use of a certain popular vector which harbors an intron near the end (jopling and willis, ) increases the likelihood of producing an unintended monocistronic mrna via splicing; the candidate ires need contribute only a cryptic splice site. this indeed happens in some cases (grundhoff and ganem, ; pinkstaff et al., ) . claims of ires activity are problematic when supported by in vitro assays in which translation of the orf is very, very weak (e.g. deffaud and darlix, , fig. ; lekven et al., , fig. b, lane ; maser et al., , fig. e ). the simple idea that an ires can be identified based on the ability to support translation of a cistron runs into trouble when, for example, the bglobin mrna leader sequence, intended to serve as a negative control, turns out somehow to allow translation of a downstream cistron ( van der velden et al., ) . in another study, merely lengthening the intercistronic domain enabled substantial translation of the cistron (gallie et al., ) , perhaps by providing room for rnases to cleave and thus release a translatable fragment. even with the paradigmatic ires elements derived from picornaviruses, the ability to support internal initiation was found to depend inexplicably on the choice and arrangement of and reporter genes (hennecke et al., ) . these odditiesalong with the notable inability to translate the cistron in natural dicistronic mrnas (table ) -are reason to worry about the validity of experiments that employ synthetic dicistronic constructs. the proffered rationale for a cap-independent internal initiation mechanism is that it would enable certain mrnas to be translated when eif e levels decline, but recent experiments presented in support of that idea used the utr from poliovirus rather than utrs from cellular mrnas, such as eif g, that are supposedly regulated via 'a dynamic interplay between cap-dependent and cap-independent processes'. even if the proffered rationale is valid, convincing evidence for direct internal initiation with particular mrnas is needed. the widely used dicistronic assay has flaws, as outlined above. an alternative assay which involves circularization of the mrna has been attempted with only one viral ires element (chen and sarnow, ) ; the results await independent verification and extension to other sequences. the scanning model provides a framework for understanding basic patterns of eukaryotic gene expression, such as the reliance on monocistronic mrnas, and for understanding how translation is perturbed by mutations that restructure the utr. a growing number of human diseases have been traced to such mutations. the scanning mechanism has been shown to operate not only with simple mrnas that have a short utr and initiate at the first aug codon, but also with mrnas that have complicated leader sequences and multiple start codons. one often hears the suggestion that an alternative, iresmediated mechanism of initiation is required when a long leader sequence is encumbered by secondary structure or upstream aug codons (dever, ; pestova et al., ) . that view is not well taken. scanning can occur over long distances, as evidenced by some bifunctional viral mrnas in which the second start site is more than nt downstream from the first (e.g. peanut clump virus, southern bean mosaic virus, rice tungro bacilliform virus; table and fig. c ). the structure-prone, gc-rich leader sequences on mammalian mrnas strongly reduce translational efficiency but do not preclude operation of the scanning mechanism (van der velden et al., ) . upstream aug codons also reduce translational efficiency and that is why they are there. to postulate the need for an alternative mechanism is to miss the point that an encumbered leader sequence ensures that translation via scanning will be inefficient, and thus ensures against harmful overproduction of cytokines (fig. ) and other potent proteins. the high frequency of intron-containing cdna sequences (kozak, a (kozak, , might reflect another type of regulation. inefficient or regulated removal of the first intron has been documented in some cases (boularand et al., ; frost et al., ; van der leij et al., ; wang and rothnagel, ; xie et al., ; zachar et al., ) and i suspect that additional examples might be found -miscategorized -among the aforementioned cdnas that are postulated to require an alternative mechanism of initiation. removal of the intron, or use of a cryptic promoter therein, would eliminate the upstream aug codons that are barriers to scanning. examples in which translation is prevented deliberately by splicing-out the exon that contains the aug start codon (lin et al., ) or by other regulated splicing events (rueter et al., ) underscore the point that not every transcript -hence not every cdna -corresponds to a functional mrna. before postulating the need for a new mechanism to explain how a funny looking cdna gets translated, one must be certain that it is translated. the mechanisms discussed herein for escaping the first-aug rule, within the constraints imposed by the scanning model, obviously cannot explain every report of initiation from an internal position. more information is needed to understand how n-terminally truncated versions of some proteins are produced apparently without truncation of the mrna (goss et al., ; maser et al., ; santagata et al., ; scharnhorst et al., ; vanhoutte et al., ). an ires element was postulated in some of those cases, based on the dicistronic test, but in one study there were no accompanying analyses of rna structure in vivo (goss et al., ) , and in another study the use of an in vitro translation system produced too little of the truncated protein to be convincing (maser et al., ) . speculation about how some other interesting genes are translated (klemke et al., ) also must be postponed pending a search for possible additional forms of mrna. although i listed the von hippel-lindau tumor suppressor gene as a possible example of leaky scanning (table ) , definitive tests are needed to distinguish between that and other mechanisms for producing the short isoform (iliopoulos et al., ) . those of us with an interest in translation have a tendency to interpret every change in mrna structure as a means to control translation, but transcriptional requirements -the need to turn on a gene in various tissues via whatever promoter works in each tissue -underlie most switches in leader sequences. in some cases the actual sequence of the utr is dictated by the presence therein of transcriptional control elements (akiri et al., ; minami et al., ; solecki et al., ; yin and blanchard, ; yu et al., ; zimmermann et al., ) . regulation of transcription is the major reason for the gc-rich domains near the end of many mammalian genes; the accompanying down-modulation of translation is an inevitable consequence -arguably a useful consequence because, given the long half-life of most mammalian mrnas, inefficient translation might be a necessity. it merits repeating that, although the m g cap strongly promotes ribosome binding, the scanning mechanism is not dependent on the presence of the cap. the essence of the scanning model is entry of ribosomes and positiondependent selection of the aug start codon. those key points hold with naturally uncapped mrnas produced by some viruses (footnote g in table ) and with synthetic uncapped mrnas used to study translation in vitro (kozak, a . the inclination to invoke internal initiation based on indirect criteria -absence of a cap, or the ability to be translated in extracts from poliovirus-infected cells -should be resisted. it is a mistake to think that, because archaeal mrnas lack a cap, translation in that system cannot occur via scanning. the discovery in archaea of proteins similar to certain eukaryotic initiation factors (kyrpides and woese, ) is intriguing for other reasons but has no direct bearing on whether the start codon in archaeal mrnas might be recognized via a prokaryotic-or eukaryotic-type mechanism. that interesting question, which bears on the evolutionary origin of scanning, awaits answering. fundamental questions about the molecular workings of the scanning mechanism also await answering. what drives migration of the s subunit during the scanning phase? how does the s subunit hold on at a terminator codon, in order to reinitiate? what prevents reinitiation when the size of the first orf exceeds a certain length? we know nothing about how recognition of the start codon is aided by a purine in position and g in position þ . there is no evidence for base pairing between the gccrcc motif and rrna (or for binding of rrna to any other sequence in eukaryotic mrnas). there is as yet no convincing evidence for recognition of gccrcc by a trans-acting protein factor. it would be easy, and meaningless, simply to find proteins that bind an rna fragment which contains the motif. credible experiments would require controls based on what we know about the consensus sequence: that the purine (a . g) in position plays a dominant role, and the full effect requires that the gccrcc motif abut the aug codon (kozak, , fig. ). with so much effort being directed to searching for possible exceptions to the scanning mechanism, one can only wish that some enterprising soul would tackle these important questions. interleukin- -induced, melanoma-specific t cells recognize camel, an unexpected translation product of lage- suppression of ribosomal reinitiation at upstream open reading frames in amino acid-starved cells forms the basis for gcn translational control subcellular fate of the int- oncoprotein is determined by choice of initiation codon kozak sequence polymorphism of the glycoprotein (gp) iba gene is a major determinant of the plasma membrane levels of the platelet gp ib-ix-v complex specific sequences in p ctn determine subcellular distribution of its multiple isoforms involved in cellular adhesion of normal and malignant epithelial cells unconventional mrna processing in the expression of two calcineurin b isoforms in dictyostelium uroporphyrinogen iii synthase. an alternative promoter controls erythroid-specific expression in the murine gene regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) expression is mediated by internal initiation of translation and alternative initiation of transcription abundant early expression of gpul from a human cytomegalovirus mutant lacking a repressive upstream open reading frame apobec- transcription in rat colon cancer: decreased apobec- protein production through alterations in polysome distribution and mrna translation associated with upstream augs identification of a brain-specific protein kinase cj pseudogene (cpkcj) transcript tissue-specific and ubiquitous promoters direct the expression of alternatively spliced transcripts from the calcitonin receptor gene structural characterization of sil, a gene frequently disrupted in t-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia cloning and characterization of the gene encoding rabbit cardiac calsequestrin a new -kilodalton isoform of human fibroblast growth factor is cap dependently synthesized by using a non-aug start codon and behaves as a survival factor inhibition of translation of transforming growth factor-b mrna by its untranslated region enhanced translational efficiency of a novel transforming growth factor b mrna in human breast cancer cells translational initiation competence, 'leaky scanning' and translational reinitiation in area mrna of aspergillus nidulans multiple roles for the cterminal domain of eif in translation initiation complex assembly and gtpase activation biosynthesis of osteogenic growth peptide via alternative translational initiation at aug of histone h mrna expression of murine il- is regulated by translational control of the p subunit the two proteins encoded by the cottontail rabbit papillomavirus e open reading frame differ with respect to localization and phosphorylation biosynthesis of human fibroblast growth factor- novel products of the hud, huc, nnp- and a-internexin genes identified by autologous antibody screening of a pediatric neuroblastoma library yeast leu encodes mitochondrial and non-mitochondrial forms of a-isopropylmalate synthase mutation creates an open reading frame within the untranslated region of macaque erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase (ca) i mrna that suppresses ca i expression and supports the scanning model for translation the translational repression mediated by the platelet-derived growth factor /c-sis mrna leader is relieved during megakaryocytic differentiation positive and negative regulation of myogenic differentiation of c c cells by isoforms of the multiple homeodomain zinc finger transcription factor atbf mechanism of endoplasmic reticulum retention of mutant vasopressin precursor caused by a signal peptide truncation associated with diabetes insipidus alternative splicing of the imprinted candidate tumor suppressor gene zac regulates its antiproliferative and dna binding activities a global analysis of caenorhabditis elegans operons the avian reovirus genome segment s is a functionally tricistronic gene that expresses one structural and two nonstructural proteins in infected cells the . kb e b mrna of human ad and ad codes for two tumor antigens starting at different aug triplets the human tryptophan hydroxylase gene. an unusual splicing complexity in the -untranslated region mass spectrometric analysis of the n terminus of translational initiation factor eif g- reveals novel isoforms the procaspase- isoform, procaspase- l, recruited to the bap complex at the endoplasmic reticulum bunyamwera bunyavirus nonstructural protein nss is a nonessential gene product that contributes to viral pathogenesis role of two upstream open reading frames in the translational control of oncogene mdm microarray identification of fmrp-associated brain mrnas and altered mrna translational profiles in fragile x syndrome identification of a novel rna splicing pattern as a basis of restricted cell tropism of erythrovirus b initiation codon scanthrough versus termination codon readthrough demonstrates strong potential for major histocompatibility complex class i-restricted cryptic epitope expression generation of multiple isoforms of eukaryotic translation initiation factor gi by use of alternate translation initiation codons translational control of mammalian serine hydroxymethyl-transferase expression targeted mutagenesis of lis disrupts cortical development and lis homodimerization two novel b-thalassemia mutations in the and noncoding regions of the b-globin gene translational control of c/ ebpa and c/ebpb isoform expression alternative translation initiation site usage results in two functionally distinct forms of the gata- transcription factor structure of the pcca gene and distribution of mutations causing propionic acidemia translational inhibition by a human cytomegalovirus upstream open reading frame despite inefficient utilization of its aug codon the secreted form of invertase in saccharomyces cerevisiae is synthesized from mrna encoding a signal sequence translation of equine infectious anemia virus bicistronic tat-rev mrna requires leaky ribosome scanning of the tat ctg initiation codon transcription of feline calicivirus rna translational pathophysiology: a novel molecular mechanism of human disease a novel deletion of the l-ferritin iron-responsive element responsible for severe hereditary hyperferritinaemia-cataract syndrome phenotype-genotype relationships in complementation group of the peroxisome-biogenesis disorders the increased level of b , -galactosyltransferase required for lactose biosynthesis is achieved in part by translational control the yeast vas gene encodes both mitochondrial and cytoplasmic valyl-trna synthetases structure of the gm a gene: identification of an exon nonsense mutation and a naturally occurring transcript with an in-frame deletion of exon initiation of protein synthesis by the eukaryotic translational apparatus on circular rnas a novel influenza a virus mitochondrial protein that induces cell death translation initiation at alternate in-frame aug codons in the rabies virus phosphoprotein mrna is mediated by a ribosomal leaky scanning mechanism translational control by an upstream open reading frame in the her- /neu transcript cell type-dependent andindependent control of her- /neu translation a novel missense mutation in the amino-terminal domain of the human androgen receptor gene in a family with partial androgen insensitivity syndrome causes reduced efficiency of protein translation two distinct protein isoforms are encoded by ntk, a csk-related tyrosine protein kinase gene alternative transcription and splicing of the human porphobilinogen deaminase gene result either in tissue-specific or in housekeeping expression trna met functions in directing the scanning ribosome to the start site of translation mutational analysis of the his translational initiator region in saccharomyces cerevisiae initiation factor eif a phosphorylation in stress responses and apoptosis tissue-and development-specific alternative rna splicing regulates expression of multiple isoforms of erythroid membrane protein . identification of the serum-responsive transcription initiation site of the zinc finger gene krox- fibroblast growth factor internal ribosome entry site (ires) activity ex vivo and in transgenic mice reveals a stringent tissue-specific regulation c-myc internal ribosome entry site activity is developmentally controlled and subjected to a strong translational repression in adult transgenic mice the arabidopsis thaliana fps gene generates a novel mrna that encodes a mitochondrial farnesyldiphosphate synthase isoform alternatively spliced human type angiotensin ii receptor mrnas are translated at different efficiencies and encode two receptor isoforms eukaryotic translation initiation factor functions as a gtpase-activating protein the s genome segment of baboon reovirus is bicistronic and encodes a novel fusion-associated small transmembrane protein expression and function of ccaat/enhancer binding protein b (c/ ebpb) lap and lip isoforms in mouse mammary gland, tumors and cultured mammary epithelial cells rlk/txk encodes two forms of a novel cysteine string tyrosine kinase activated by src family kinases characterization of an internal ribosomal entry segment in the leader of murine leukemia virus env rna a novel subgenomic murine leukemia virus rna transcript results from alternative splicing eif ak , encoding translation initiation factor -a kinase , is mutated in patients with wolcott-rallison syndrome transcriptional regulation of the interleukin- gene of human herpesvirus (kaposi's sarcomaassociated herpesvirus) era gene expression in human primary osteoblasts: evidence for the expression of two receptor proteins a liver-enriched transcriptional activator protein, lap, and a transcriptional inhibitory protein, lip, are translated from the same mrna gene-specific regulation by general translation factors genomic structure of unp, a murine gene encoding a ubiquitin-specific protease control of start codon choice on a plant viral rna encoding overlapping genes the first and third uorfs in rsv leader rna are efficiently translated: implications for translational regulation and viral rna packaging identification of eight novel -exons in cerebral capillary malformation gene- (ccm ) encoding krit picornavirus internal ribosome entry site elements target rna cleavage events induced by the herpes simplex virus virion host-shutoff protein nucleotide sequence and expression of the small (s) rna segment of maguari bunyavirus amino-terminal extension generated from an upstream aug codon increases the efficiency of mitochondrial import of yeast n ,n -dimethylguanosine-specific trna methyltransferases gastric cancers overexpress darpp- and a novel isoform, t-darpp a common c ! t polymorphism at nt in the promoter region of coagulation factor xii is associated with decreased factor xii activity translation of bicistronic viral mrna in transfected cells: regulation at the level of elongation a -amino acid n-terminal extension regulates c-crk binding to tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins the rat hepatic leukemia factor (hlf) gene encodes two transcriptional activators with distinct circadian rhythms, tissue distributions and target preferences molecular characterization of pax neu through pax neu : an extension of the pax allelic series and the identification of two possible hypomorph alleles in the mouse mus musculus human basic fibroblast growth factor gene encodes four polypeptides: three initiate translation from non-aug codons identification of a new isoform of the human estrogen receptor-alpha (her-a) that is encoded by distinct transcripts and that is able to repress her-a activation function a testisspecific promoter in the rat vasopressin gene translational stop codons in the precore sequence of hepatitis b virus pre-c rna allow translation reinitiation at downstream augs translation of the hepatitis b virus p gene by ribosomal scanning as an alternative to internal initiation upstream organization of and multiple transcripts from the human folylpoly-gglutamate synthetase gene nonsense-mediated mrna decay in health and disease hyal luca- , a candidate tumor suppressor gene on chromosome p . , is inactivated in head and neck squamous cell carcinomas by aberrant splicing of pre-mrna viral and cellular mrna capping: past and prospects splicing in a plant pararetrovirus position-dependent att initiation during plant pararetrovirus rice tungro bacilliform virus translation rice tungro bacilliform virus open reading frames ii and iii are translated from polycistronic pregenomic rna by leaky scanning translation of p . ink b , an n-terminally extended and fully active form of p ink b , is initiated from an upstream gug codon physical evidence for distinct mechanisms of translational control by upstream open reading frames the role of -leader length, secondary structure and pabp concentration on cap and poly(a) tail function during translation in xenopus oocytes the two forms of karyogamy transcription factor kar p are regulated by differential initiation of transcription, translation, and protein turnover gcd , a translational repressor of gcn , is the rna-binding subunit of eukaryotic translation initiation factor- the mrna structure has potent regulatory effects on type iodothyronine deiodinase expression a single-base deletion in the thrombopoietin (tpo) gene causes familial essential thrombocythemia through a mechanism of more efficient translation of tpo mrna thrombopoietin production is inhibited by a translational mechanism hereditary thrombocythaemia in a japanese family is caused by a novel point mutation in the thrombopoietin gene initiation of translation directed by s and s rnas from semliki forest virus in vitro a common polymorphism in the annexin v kozak sequence ( c . t) increases translation efficiency and plasma levels of annexin v, and decreases the risk of myocardial infarction in young patients position is the critical determinant for function of iron-responsive elements as translational regulators attenuated apc alleles produce functional protein from internal translation initiation characterization of the cis-acting elements controlling subgenomic mrnas of citrus tristeza virus: production of positive-and negativestranded -terminal and positive-stranded -terminal rnas effect of sequence context at stop codons on efficiency of reinitiation in gcn translational control diverse splicing mechanisms fuse the evolutionarily conserved bicistronic mocs a and mocs b open reading frames an imprinted, mammalian bicistronic transcript encodes two independent proteins mapping of the tobacco mosaic virus movement protein and coat protein subgenomic rna promoters a link between diabetes and atherosclerosis: glucose regulates expression of cd at the level of translation the vitamin d receptor gene start codon polymorphism: a functional analysis of fok i variants cloning and expression of two human p s kinase polypeptides differing only at their amino termini mechanisms governing expression of the v-flip gene of kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus t-cell receptor sequences that elicit strong down-regulation of premature termination codon-bearing transcripts mapping and expression of southern bean mosaic virus genomic and subgenomic rnas synthesis in vitro of a seven amino acid peptide encoded in the leader rna of rous sarcoma virus utilization of an alternative transcription initiation site of somatic cytochrome c in the mouse produces a testisspecific cytochrome c mrna heme-regulated eif a kinase (hri) is required for translational regulation and survival of erythroid precursors in iron deficiency regulation of gene expression by internal ribosome entry sites or cryptic promoters: the eif g story human ubiquitin-activating enzyme, e . indication of potential nuclear and cytoplasmic subpopulations using epitope-tagged cdna constructs abrogation of upstream open reading frame-mediated translational control of a plant s-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase results in polyamine disruption and growth perturbations mouse atf : molecular cloning of two novel mrnas, genomic organization, and odorant sensory neuron localization functionality of alternative splice forms of the first enzymes involved in human molybdenum cofactor biosynthesis regulated translation initiation controls stress-induced gene expression in mammalian cells diabetes mellitus and exocrine pancreatic dysfunction in perk / mice reveals a role for translational control in secretory cell survival characterization of two cis-regulatory regions in the murine b , -galactosyltransferase gene a cis-acting element in the bcl- gene controls expression through translational mechanisms subcellular relocalization of a long-chain fatty acid coa ligase by a suppressor mutation alleviates a respiration deficiency in saccharomyces cerevisiae translation initiation start prediction in human cdnas with high accuracy upflp, nmd p, and upf p regulate the decapping and exonucleolytic degradation of both nonsense-containing mrnas and wild-type mrnas human wig- , a p target gene that encodes a growth inhibitory zinc finger protein internal ribosome entry sites in eukaryotic mrna molecules composition and arrangement of genes define the strength of ires-driven translation in bicistronic mrnas the conserved -untranslated leader of spi- (pu. ) mrna is highly structured and potently inhibits translation in vitro but not in vivo detection of the orf polypeptide of feline calicivirus in infected cells and evidence for its expression from a single, functionally bicistronic subgenomic mrna an altered ribosomal protein in an edeine-resistant mutant of saccharomyces cerevisiae translation of the second gene of peanut clump virus rna occurs by leaky scanning in vitro characterization of the gene encoding human platelet glycoprotein ix translational regulation of yeast gcn . a window on factors that control initiator-trna binding to the ribosome translation initiation and assembly of peripherin in cultured cells a translationattenuating intraleader open reading frame is selected on coronavirus mrnas during persistent infection molecular basis for the dual mitochondrial and cytosolic localization of alanine:glyoxylate aminotransferase in amphibian liver cells pim- protein expression is regulated by its -untranslated region and translation initiation factor eif- e characterization of the infections of permissive and nonpermissive cells by host range mutants of vesicular stomatitis virus defective in rna methylation translational regulation of complement protein c expression by differential utilization of the -untranslated region of mrna multiple elements in the untranslated region down-regulate c-sis messenger rna translation caenorhabditis elegans mrnas that encode a protein similar to adars derive from an operon containing six genes b-cateninsensitive isoforms of lymphoid enhancer factor- are selectively expressed in colon cancer rh mod syndrome: a family study of the translation-initiator mutation in the rh glycoprotein gene gtp hydrolysis controls stringent selection of the aug start codon during translation initiation in saccharomyces cerevisiae genomic structure of the locus encoding protein . . structural basis for complex combinatorial patterns of tissue-specific alternative rna splicing restriction of fusion protein mrna as a mechanism of measles virus persistence messenger rna for the coat protein of tobacco mosaic virus multiple -untranslated exons in the nuclear respiratory factor gene span kb and contribute to transcript heterogeneity and translational efficiency translational regulation of hepatitis b virus polymerase gene by termination-reinitiation of an upstream minicistron in a length-dependent manner pvhl is a biologically active product of the von hippel-lindau gene arising from internal translation initiation conservation of polyamine regulation by translational frameshifting from yeast to mammals identification of two additional translation products from the matrix (m) gene that contribute to vesicular stomatitis virus cytopathology decreased riz expression but not riz in hepatoma and suppression of hepatoma tumorigenicity by riz variants of the -untranslated region of the bovine growth hormone receptor mrna: isolation, expression and effects on translational efficiency minimal truncation of the c-myb gene product in rapid-onset b-cell lymphoma both codon context and leader length contribute to efficient expression of two overlapping open reading frames of a cucumber necrosis virus bifunctional subgenomic mrna expression of bacterial chitinase protein in tobacco leaves using two photosynthetic gene promoters n-myc translation is initiated via an internal ribosome entry segment that displays enhanced activity in neuronal cells expression of human foamy virus reverse transcriptase involves a spliced pol mrna a common genetic polymorphism ( c to t substitution) in the -untranslated region of the coagulation factor xii gene is associated with low translation efficiency and decrease in plasma factor xii level production of three distinct mrnas of kda oxygen-regulated protein (orp ) by alternative promoters: preferential induction of one species under stress conditions two distinct estrogen-regulated promoters generate transcripts encoding the two functionally different human progesterone receptor forms a and b transient expression of human and chicken progesterone receptors does not support alternative translational initiation from a single mrna as the mechanism generating two receptor isoforms human rna-specific adenosine deaminase (adar ) gene specifies transcripts that initiate from a constitutively active alternative promoter rna targets of the fragile x protein molecular cloning of the human p ctn catenin gene (ctnnd ): expression of multiple alternatively spliced isoforms competition between nuclear localization and secretory signals determines the subcellular fate of a single cug-initiated form of fgf expression of the open reading frame (g-protein-coupled receptor) gene of kaposi's sarcoma (ks)-associated herpesvirus: implications for ks pathogenesis splicing of cauliflower mosaic virus s rna is essential for viral infectivity two overlapping reading frames in a single exon encode interacting proteins -a novel way of gene usage murine phospholipid hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase: cdna sequence, tissue expression, and mapping a positive-strand rna virus with three very different subgenomic rna promoters caveolin- isoforms are encoded by distinct mrnas the position dependence of translational regulation via rna-rna and rnaprotein interactions in the -untranslated region of eukaryotic mrna is a function of the thermodynamic competence of s ribosomes in translational initiation binding of ribosomes to linear and circular forms of the -terminal leader fragment of tobacco mosaic virus rna familial essential thrombocythemia associated with one-base deletion in the -untranslated region of the thrombopoietin gene upstream open reading frames regulate the translation of multiple mrna variants of the estrogen receptor alpha independent promoters regulate the expression of two amino terminally distinct forms of latent transforming growth factor-b binding protein- (ltbp- ) in a cell typespecific manner inability of circular mrna to attach to eukaryotic ribosomes migration of s ribosomal subunits on messenger rna when initiation is perturbed by lowering magnesium or adding drugs role of atp in binding and migration of s ribosomal subunits analysis of ribosome binding sites from the s message of reovirus. initiation at the first and second aug codons translation of insulin-related polypeptides from messenger rnas with tandemly reiterated copies of the ribosome binding site influences of mrna secondary structure on initiation by eukaryotic ribosomes point mutations define a sequence flanking the aug initiator codon that modulates translation by eukaryotic ribosomes an analysis of -noncoding sequences from vertebrate messenger rnas at least six nucleotides preceding the aug initiator codon enhance translation in mammalian cells effects of intercistronic length on the efficiency of reinitiation by eucaryotic ribosomes circumstances and mechanisms of inhibition of translation by secondary structure in eucaryotic mrnas downstream secondary structure facilitates recognition of initiator codons by eukaryotic ribosomes evaluation of the fidelity of initiation of translation in reticulocyte lysates from commercial sources an analysis of vertebrate mrna sequences: intimations of translational control structural features in eukaryotic mrnas that modulate the initiation of translation a short leader sequence impairs the fidelity of initiation by eukaryotic ribosomes adherence to the first-aug rule when a second aug codon follows closely upon the first interpreting cdna sequences: some insights from studies on translation recognition of aug and alternative initiator codons is augmented by g in position þ but is not generally affected by the nucleotides in positions þ and þ primer-extension analysis of eukaryotic ribosome-mrna complexes initiation of translation in prokaryotes and eukaryotes do the untranslated domains of human cdnas challenge the rules for initiation of translation (or is it vice versa new ways of initiating translation in eukaryotes? constraints on reinitiation of translation in mammals emerging links between initiation of translation and human diseases migration of s ribosomal subunits on messenger rna in the presence of edeine significant impact of the þ c/t polymorphism in the apolipoprotein(a) gene on lp(a) concentrations in africans but not in caucasians: confounding effect of linkage disequilibrium identification of the translational initiation codon in human maged genomic organization and biosynthesis of secreted and cytoplasmic forms of gelsolin archaeal translation initiation revisited: the initiation factor and eukaryotic initiation factor b ab-d subunit families the molecular biology of coronaviruses a transcriptional repressor encoded by bpv- shares a common carboxy-terminal domain with the e transactivator the genetics of bovine papillomavirus type targeting of a human iron-sulfur cluster assembly enzyme, nifs, to different subcellular compartments is regulated through alternative aug utilization translational enhancement of mdm oncogene expression in human tumor cells containing a stabilized wild-type p protein nucleotide sequence of the gag gene and gag-pol junction of feline leukemia virus genomic organization of the mouse peroxisome proliferator activated receptor b/g gene. alternative promoter usage and splicing yield transcripts exhibiting differential translational efficiency the hormone-sensitive lipase gene is transcribed from at least five alternative first exons in mouse adipose tissue polyamine regulation of ribosome pausing at the upstream open reading frame of sadenosylmethionine decarboxylase mutation eliminating mitochondrial leader sequence of methylmalonyl-coa mutase causes mut o methylmalonic acidemia molecular cloning and characterization of the mouse peroxiredoxin v gene the untranslated regions of the rat a a adenosine receptor gene function as negative translational regulators zebrafish wnt encodes two wnt proteins on a bicistronic transcript and is required for mesoderm and neurectoderm patterning the human galactose- -phosphate uridyltransferase gene translational control of cell fate: availability of phosphorylation sites on translational repressor e-bp governs its proapoptotic potency cell-to-cell movement of turnip crinkle virus is controlled by two small open reading frames that function in trans a translationally regulated tousled kinase phosphorylates histone h and confers radioresistance when overexpressed a -kda alternative translation product of the ccaat/enhancer binding protein a message: transcriptional activator lacking antimitotic activity intron-exon structure of the met gene and cloning of an alternatively-spliced met isoform reveals frequent exon-skipping of a single large internal exon an extended rna/rna duplex structure within the coding region of mrna does not block translational elongation characterization of the untranslated region of the human c-fgr gene and identification of the major myelomonocytic c-fgr promoter the promoter, transcriptional unit, and coding sequence of herpes simplex virus family proteins are contained within and in frame with the u l open reading frame initiation of translation from a downstream in-frame aug codon on brca can generate the novel isoform protein dbrca ( aa) the retinoblastoma interacting zinc finger gene riz produces a pr domain-lacking product through an internal promoter mutation of the cdkn a utr creates an aberrant initiation codon and predisposes to melanoma the human cytomegalovirus ul gene encodes two proteins with different functions rna polymerase i-promoted his expression yields uncapped, polyadenylated mrna that is unstable and inefficiently translated in saccharomyces cerevisiae two isoforms of murine hck, generated by utilization of alternative translational initiation codons, exhibit different patterns of subcellular localization the human aqp gene: definition of the locus encoding two water channel polypeptides in brain cloning and origin of the two forms of chicken vitamin d receptor in vivo evaluation of the context sequence of the translation initiation codon in plants alternative splicing and promoter usage generates an intracellular stromelysin isoform directly translated as an active matrix metalloproteinase efficiency of reinitiation of translation on human immunodeficiency virus type mrnas is determined by the length of the upstream open reading frame and by intercistronic distance expression of nfat-family proteins in normal human t cells an alternative promoter in the mouse major histocompatibility complex class ii i-ab gene: implications for the origin of cpg islands regulation of rat ornithine decarboxylase mrna translation by its -untranslated region translational activation of the lck proto-oncogene an alternative mode of translation permits production of a variant nbs protein from the common nijmegen breakage syndrome allele lost in translation molecular biology of luteoviruses posttranscriptional control of gene expression in yeast. microbiol isolation, characterization, and transcription of the gene encoding mouse mast cell protease translational control of the xenopus laevis connexin- -untranslated region by three upstream open reading frames human mxb protein, an interferon-a-inducible gtpase, contains a nuclear targeting signal and is localized in the heterochromatin region beneath the nuclear envelope subgenomic rnas mediate expression of cistrons located internally on the genomic rna of tobacco necrosis virus strain a the three dominant female-sterile mutations of the drosophila ovo gene are point mutations that create new translation-initiator aug codons posttranscriptional control via iron-responsive elements: the impact of aberrations in hereditary disease synthesis of subgenomic rnas by positivestrand rna viruses synthesis of brome mosaic virus subgenomic rna in vitro by internal initiation on ( )-sense genomic rna transforming growth factor-b -mediated inhibition of the flk- /kdr gene is mediated by a -untranslated region palindromic gata site characterization of two novel nuclear btb/poz domain zinc finger isoforms. association with differentiation of hippocampal neurons, cerebellar granule cells, and macroglia regulation of expression of the alternative mrnas of the rat a-thyroid hormone receptor gene differential translational initiation of lbp mrna is caused by a upstream open reading frame identification of murine p cas isoforms and heterogeneous expression of p cas isoforms in human tumor cell lines inducibility and negative autoregulation of crem: an alternative promoter directs the expression of icer, an early response repressor a-thalassaemia associated with the deletion of two nucleotides at position and preceding the aug codon upstream open reading frames as regulators of mrna translation the utr of protein kinase c confers translational regulation in vitro and in vivo complex organisation of the -end of the human glycine trna synthetase gene mapping of the polycistronic rnas of tomato leaf curl geminivirus site-directed mutagenesis of adeno-associated virus type structural protein initiation codons: effects on regulation of synthesis and biological activity specific cleavage of hepatitis c virus rna genome by human rnase p expression of kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus g protein-coupled receptor monocistronic and bicistronic transcripts in primary effusion lymphocytes rar-b , a retinoic acid receptor isoform is generated from rar-b by alternative splicing and usage of a cug initiator codon the hts gene encodes both the cytoplasmic and mitochondrial histidine trna synthetases of s. cerevisiae translation of a nonpolyadenylated viral rna is enhanced by binding of viral coat protein or polyadenylation of the rna nucleotide sequence and expression of the capsid protein gene of feline calicivirus translational discrimination of mrnas coding for human insulin-like growth factor ii growthdependent translation of igf-ii mrna by a rapamycin-sensitive pathway full-sized ranbpm cdna encodes a protein possessing a long stretch of proline and glutamine within the nterminal region, comprising a large protein complex human o-glcnac transferase (ogt): genomic structure, analysis of splice variants, fine mapping in xq tissue-specific initiation of murine complement factor b mrna transcription downstream ribosomal entry for translation of coronavirus tgev gene b generation from a single gene of two mrnas that encode the mitochondrial and peroxisomal serine: pyruvate aminotransferase of rat liver abcd translation-initiator mutation demonstrates genotype-phenotype correlation for amn ccaat/enhancer-binding protein mrna is translated into multiple proteins with different transcription activation potentials dominant-negative mutations of cebpa, encoding ccaat/enhancer binding protein-a (c/ebpa), in acute myeloid leukemia mammalian cells express two differently localized bag- isoforms generated by alternative translation initiation spliced and prematurely polyadenylated jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus-specific rnas from infected or transfected cells ribosomal pausing and scanning arrest as mechanisms of translational regulation from cap-distal iron-responsive elements hcc- , a human chemokine: gene structure, expression pattern, and biological activity a plant viral "reinitiation" factor interacts with the host translational machinery genetic manipulation of arterivirus alternative mrna leader-body junction sites reveals tight regulation of structural protein expression the size of rous sarcoma virus mrnas active in cell-free translation starved saccharomyces cerevisiae cells have the capacity to support internal initiation of translation effect of upstream reading frames on translation efficiency in simian virus recombinants promoter choice influences alternative splicing and determines the balance of isoforms expressed from the mouse bcl-x gene functional organization of the human uncoupling protein- gene, and juxtaposition to the uncoupling protein- gene uncoupling protein , in vivo distribution, induction upon oxidative stress, and evidence for translational regulation the exon structure of the mouse a (ix) collagen gene shows unexpected divergence from the chick gene identification of the subgenomic mrnas that encode -kda movement protein and hsp homolog of beet yellows virus a reassessment of the translation initiation codon in vertebrates characterization of human mucin gene muc promoter p mdm inhibits the ability of p mdm to destabilize p analysis of oligonucleotide aug start codon context in eukariotic mrnas structural and functional features of eukaryotic mrna untranslated regions molecular mechanisms of translation initiation in eukaryotes human myeloid zinc finger gene mzf produces multiple transcripts and encodes a scan box protein systematic movement of an rna plant virus determined by a point substitution in a leader sequence coupled transcriptional and translational control of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor p ink c expression during myogenesis hepatocyte-nuclear factor b gene transcripts generate protein isoforms with different transactivation properties on the glucagon gene internal initiation of translation of five dendritically localized neuronal mrnas the amphiregulin gene encodes a novel epidermal growth factor-related protein with tumor-inhibitory activity characterization of hypersensitive sites, protein-binding motifs, and regulatory elements in both promoters of the mouse porphobilinogen deaminase gene identification of a sequence in the unique open reading frame of the gene encoding glycosylated gag which influences the incubation period of neurodegenerative disease induced by a murine retrovirus the glycosylated gag protein of mulv is a determinant of neuroinvasiveness: analysis of second site revertants of a mutant mulv virus lacking expression of this protein an alternative open reading frame of the human macrophage colony-stimulating factor gene is independently translated and codes for an antigenic peptide of amino acids recognized by tumorinfiltrating cd t lymphocytes introducing refseq and locuslink: curated human genome resources at the ncbi rat phospholipid-hydroperoxide glutathione peroxidase. cdna cloning and identification of multiple transcription and translation start sites mechanisms of loss of foreign gene expression in recombinant vesicular stomatitis viruses in vitro translation of the upstream open reading frame in the mammalian mrna encoding s-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase the untranslated sequence of the c-sis platelet-derived growth factor transcript is a potent translational inhibitor a single gene encodes two isoforms of the p s kinase: activation upon mitogenic stimulation posttranscriptional mrna processing as a mechanism for regulation of human a adenosine receptor expression expression of the smoothelin gene is mediated by alternative promoters mouse mammary tumor virus superantigen expression in b cells is regulated by a central enhancer within the pol gene non-aug initiation of agamous mrna translation in arabidopsis thaliana efficient simultaneous presentation of ny-eso- /lage- primary and nonprimary open reading frame-derived ctl epitopes in melanoma presence of atg triplets in untranslated regions of eukaryotic cdnas correlates with a 'weak' context of the start codon a non-aug-defined alternative open reading frame of the intestinal carboxyl esterase mrna generates an epitope recognized by renal cell carcinoma-reactive tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes in situ identification of bing- cancer antigen translated from an alternative open reading frame of a gene in the extended mhc class ii region using lymphocytes from a patient with a durable complete regression following immunotherapy cell-specific translational regulation of s-adenosylmethionine decarboxylase mrna. influence of the structure of the transcript leader on regulation by the upstream open reading frame block of hac mrna translation by long-range base pairing is released by cytoplasmic splicing upon induction of the unfolded protein response regulation of alternative splicing by rna editing continuous and discontinuous ribosome scanning on the cauliflower mosaic virus s rna leader is controlled by short open reading frames a complex translational program generates multiple novel proteins from the latently expressed kaposin (k ) locus of kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus correlation between sequence conservation of the untranslated region and codon usage bias in mus musculus genes cot kinase proto-oncogene expression in t cells n-terminal rag frameshift mutations in omenn's syndrome: internal methionine usage leads to partial v(d)j recombination activity and reveals a fundamental role in vivo for the n-terminal domains complete genomic sequence of the human abca gene: analysis of the human and mouse atp-binding cassette a promoter the pim- oncogene encodes two related protein-serine/threonine kinases by alternative initiation at aug and cug negative and translation termination-dependent positive control of fli- protein synthesis by conserved overlapping upstream open reading frames in fli- mrna normal developing rat brain expresses a platelet-derived growth factor b chain (c-sis ) mrna truncated at the end multiple murine double minute gene (mdm ) proteins are induced by ultraviolet light transcriptional control of hepadnavirus gene expression internal translation initiation generates novel wt protein isoforms with distinct biological properties caveolin isoforms differ in their n-terminal protein sequence and subcellular distribution identification and functional analysis of the turnip yellow mosaic tymovirus subgenomic promoter a second major native von hippel-lindau gene product, initiated from an internal translation start site, functions as a tumor suppressor an amino-terminal domain of mxi mediates anti-myc oncogenic activity and interacts with a homolog of the yeast transcriptional repressor sin mechanism of translation of monocistronic and multicistronic human immunodeficiency virus type mrnas mechanisms of synthesis of virion proteins from the functionally bigenic late mrnas of simian virus translation initiation at a downstream aug occurs with increased efficiency when the upstream aug is located very close to the cap cloning, expression, and nucleotide sequence of rat liver sterol carrier protein cdnas bovine coronavirus i protein synthesis follows ribosomal scanning on the bicistronic n mrna ubiquitinactivating enzyme (e ) isoforms in lens epithelial cells: origin of translation, e specificity and cellular localization determined with novel site-specific antibodies cloning and characterization of liverspecific isoform of chk gene from rat producing nature's gene-chips: the generation of peptides for display by mhc class i molecules preferential ribosomal scanning is involved in the differential synthesis of the hepatitis b viral surface antigens from subgenomic transcripts translation of the rnas of brome mosaic virus: the monocistronic nature of rna and rna analysis of capsid formation of human polyomavirus jc (tokyo- strain) by a eukaryotic expression system: splicing of late rnas, translation and nuclear transport of major capsid protein vp , and capsid assembly sequential partially overlapping gene arrangement in the tricistronic s genome segments of avian reovirus and nelson bay reovirus: implications for translation initiation translational regulation of the jund messenger rna characterization of the murine hyaluronidase gene region reveals complex organization and cotranscription of hyal with downstream genes, fus and hyal polyoma virus has three late mrnas: one for each virion protein a somatic mutation in the utr of brca gene in sporadic breast cancer causes down-modulation of translation efficiency the -kda polyprotein of southern bean mosaic virus is translated by scanning ribosomes the two subunits of human molybdopterin synthase: evidence for a bicistronic messenger rna with overlapping reading frames poliovirus neurovirulence correlates with the presence of a cryptic aug upstream of the initiator codon mrna leader length and initiation codon context determine alternative aug selection for the yeast gene mod chop-dependent stress-inducible expression of a novel form of carbonic anhydrase vi the promoters for human and monkey poliovirus receptors characterization of two bifunctional arabidopsis thaliana genes coding for mitochondrial and cytosolic forms of valyl-trna synthetase and threonyl-trna synthetase by alternative use of two in-frame augs a small highly basic protein is encoded in overlapping frame within the p gene of vesicular stomatitis virus identification of downstream-initiated c-myc proteins which are dominant-negative inhibitors of transactivation by full-length c-myc proteins leaky scanning is the predominant mechanism for translation of human papillomavirus type e oncoprotein from e / e bicistronic mrna human molybdopterin synthase gene: identification of a bicistronic transcript with overlapping reading frames elements in the murine c-mos messenger rna -untranslated region repress translation of downstream coding sequences regulatory role of the conserved stem-loop structure at the end of collagen a (i) mrna the alphaviruses: gene expression, replication, and evolution characterization of human mapre genes and their proteins calspermin gene transcription is regulated by two cyclic amp response elements contained in an alternative promoter in the calmodulin kinase iv gene structure of the flanking region of the gene encoding human parathyroid-hormonerelated protein (pthrp) statistical analysis of the untranslated region of human mrna using "oligo-capped" cdna libraries evidence for the existence of a coat protein messenger rna associated with the top component of each of three tymoviruses truncated forms of the dual function human asct neutral amino acid transporter/retroviral receptor are translationally initiated at multiple alternative cug and gug codons the -untranslated region of the mouse glial cell line-derived neurotrophic factor gene regulates expression at both the transcriptional and translational levels testis-specific transcription initiation sites of rat farnesyl pyrophosphate synthetase mrna the baculovirus transcriptional transactivator ieo produces multiple products by internal initiation of translation generation of stable mrna fragments and translation of ntruncated proteins induced by antisense oligonucleotides transcriptional regulation of the interferon-g-inducible tryptophanyl-trna synthetase includes alternative splicing evidence for translational regulation of the imprinted snurf-snrpn locus in mice cancerassociated alternative usage of multiple promoters of human galcer sulfotransferase gene the eyeless mouse mutation (ey ) removes an alternative start codon from the rx/rax homeobox gene expression patterns of the multiple transcripts from the folylpolyglutamate synthetase gene in human leukemias and normal differentiated tissues ataxia caused by mutations in the atocopherol transfer protein gene mutations in each of the five subunits of translation initiation factor eif b can cause leukoencephalopathy with vanishing white matter structural and functional genomics of the cpt b gene for muscle-type carnitine palmitoyltransferase i in mammals ribosomal scanning on the highly structured insulin-like growth factor ii-leader opposing roles of elk- and its brain-specific isoform, short elk- , in nerve growth factor-induced pc differentiation identification of rauscher murine leukemia virus-specific mrnas for the synthesis of gag-and env-gene products in vivo translation of the triple gene block of potato virus x requires two subgenomic mrnas the yeast transcription factor genes yap and yap are subject to differential control at the levels of both translation and mrna stability rejection antigen peptides on balb/c rlf leukemia recognized by cytotoxic t lymphocytes: derivation from the normally untranslated region of the c-akt proto-oncogene activated by long terminal repeat genomic architecture and transcriptional activation of the mouse and human tumor susceptibility gene tsg : common types of shorter transcripts are true alternative splice variants a human aminoacyl-trna synthetase as a regulator of angiogenesis analysis of the two subgenomic rna promoters for turnip crinkle virus in vivo and in vitro inefficient reinitiation is responsible for upstream open reading frame-mediated translational repression of the maize r gene role of mrna secondary structure in translational repression of the maize transcriptional activator lc utilization of an alternative open reading frame of a normal gene in generating a novel human cancer antigen post-transcriptional regulation of the gli oncogene by the expression of alternative untranslated regions a novel, testis-specific mrna transcript encoding an nh -terminal truncated nitric-oxide synthase rna diversity has profound effects on the translation of neuronal nitric oxide synthase bunyamwera bunyavirus nonstructural protein nss counteracts the induction of alpha/beta interferon genomic organization of human mxi , a putative tumor suppressor gene acquired mutations in gata in the megakaryoblastic leukemia of down syndrome infectious tymv rna from cloned cdna: effects in vitro and in vivo of point substitutions in the initiation codons of two extensively overlapping orfs expression of the hepatitis b virus core gene in vitro and in vivo cytomegalovirus assembly protein nested gene family: four -coterminal transcripts encode four in-frame overlapping proteins an internal open reading frame triggers nonsense-mediated decay of the yeast spt mrna deregulation of translational control of the -kda regulatory subunit (pr a) of protein phosphatase a leads to multinucleated cells the short untranslated region of the betaa /a -crystallin mrna is responsible for leaky ribosomal scanning the human achaete scute homolog gene contains two promoters, generating overlapping transcripts and encoding two proteins with different nuclear localization an activating splice donor mutation in the thrombopoietin gene causes hereditary thrombocythaemia cloning and characterization of two novel thyroid hormone receptor b isoforms a mw membrane protein is encoded by region e of adenovirus type the glyoxysomal and plastid molecular chaperones ( -kda heat shock protein) of watermelon cotyledons are encoded by a single gene analysis and mapping of a family of -coterminal transcripts containing coding sequences of human cytomegalovirus open reading frames ul through ul evidence that aguauauga and ccaagauga initiate translation in the same mrna in region e of adenovirus e transcription unit of adenovirus interplay of heterogeneous transcriptional start sites and translational selection of augs dictate the production of mitochondrial and cytosolic/nuclear trna nucleotidyltransferase form the same gene in yeast mechanisms leading to and the consequences of altering the normal distribution of atp(ctp):trna nucleotidyltransferase in yeast the -untranslated region of the n-methyl-d-aspartate receptor nr a subunit controls efficiency of translation characterization of an upstream open reading frame in the untranslated region of pr- , a cathelicidin antimicrobial peptide identification and characterization of a new mammalian mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase, mkk alternative transcriptional initiation as a novel mechanism for regulating expression of a baculovirus trans activator expression of a mitogen-responsive gene encoding prostaglandin synthase is regulated by mrna splicing inhibition of corticotropin releasing hormone type- receptor translation by an upstream aug triplet in the untranslated region ccaat/ enhancer binding protein is preferentially up-regulated during granulocyte differentiation and its functional versatility is determined by alternative use of promoters and differential splicing identification of the start sites for the . -and . -kb rat transforming growth factor-b transcripts and their effect on translational efficiency dna methylation represses the expression of the human erythropoietin gene by two different mechanisms an ercc splicing variant involving the -utr of the mrna may have a transcriptional modulatory function molecular identification and characterization of a and b forms of the glucocorticoid receptor evidence that a regulatory gene autoregulates splicing of its transcript identification of a new form of aqp mrna that is developmentally expressed in mouse brain identification of a noncanonical signal for transcription of a novel subgenomic mrna of mouse hepatitis virus: implication for the mechanism of coronavirus rna transcription novel short transcripts of hepatitis b virus x gene derived from intragenic promoter splicing in adenovirus and other animal viruses tissue specific expression of the retinoic acid receptor-b : regulation by short open reading frames in the -noncoding region analysis of the cc chemokine receptor gene reveals a complex exon organization, a functional role for untranslated exon , and a broadly active promoter with eosinophil-selective elements complete testicular feminization caused by an amino-terminal truncation of the androgen receptor with downstream initiation c/t polymorphism in the untranslated region of the apolipoprotein(a) gene introduces an upstream aug and reduces in vitro translation research in my laboratory is supported by grant gm from the national institutes of health. key: cord- -gfn aa authors: muse, spencer title: genomics and bioinformatics date: - - journal: introduction to biomedical engineering doi: . /b - - - - . -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: gfn aa this chapter discusses the basic principles of molecular biology regarding genome science and describes the major types of data involved in genome projects, including technologies for collecting them. genome science is heavily driven by new technological advances that allow for rapid and inexpensive collection of various types of data. the emergence of genomic science has not simply provided a rich set of tools and data for studying molecular biology. it has been the catalyst for an astounding burst of interdisciplinary research, and it has challenged long-established hierarchies found in most institutions of higher learning. the next generation of biologists needs to be as comfortable at a computer workstation as they are at the lab bench. recognizing this fact, many universities have already reorganized their departments and their curricula to accommodate the demands of genomic science.the chapter discusses practical applications and uses of genomic data. for example, in the foreseeable future, are gene therapies that can repair genetic defects. at the conclusion of this chapter, the reader will be able to: use key bioinformatics databases and web resources. in april , sequencing of all three billion nucleotides in the human genome was declared complete. this landmark of modern science brought with it high hopes for the understanding and treatment of human genetic disorders. there is plenty of evidence to suggest that the hopes will become reality- human genetic diseases are now associated with known dna sequences, compared to the less than that were known at the initiation of the human genome project (hgp) in . the success of this project (it came in almost years ahead of time and % under budget, while at the same time providing more data than originally planned) depended on innovations in a variety of areas: breakthroughs in basic molecular biology to allow manipulation of dna and other compounds; improved engineering and manufacturing technology to produce equipment for reading the sequences of dna; advances in robotics and laboratory automation; development of statistical methods to interpret data from sequencing projects; and the creation of specialized computing hardware and software systems to circumvent massive computational barriers that faced genome scientists. clearly, the hgp served as an incubator for interdisciplinary research at both the basic and applied levels. the human genome was not the only organism targeted during the genomic era. as of june , the complete genomes were available for viruses, microbes, and eukaryotes ranging from the malaria parasite plasmodium falciparum to yeast, rice, and humans. continued advances in technology are necessary to accelerate the pace and to reduce the expense of data acquisition projects. improved computational and statistical methods are needed to interpret the mountains of data. the increase in the rate of data accumulation is outpacing the rate of increases in computer processor speed, stressing the importance of both applied and basic theoretical work in the mathematical and computational sciences. in this chapter, the key technologies that are being used to collect data in the laboratory, as well as some of the important mathematical techniques that are being used to analyze the data, are surveyed. applications to medicine are used as examples when appropriate. understanding the applications of genomic technologies requires an understanding of three key sets of concepts: how genetic information is stored, how that information is processed, and how that information is transmitted from parent to offspring. in most organisms, the genetic information is stored in molecules of dna, deoxyribonucleic acid ( fig. . ) . some viruses maintain their genetic data in rna, but no emphasis will be placed on such exceptions. the size of genomes, measured in counts of nucleotides or base pairs, varies tremendously, and a curious observation is that genome size is only loosely associated with organismal complexity (table . ). most of the known functional units of genomes are called genes. for purposes of this chapter, a gene can be defined as a contiguous block of nucleotides operating for a single purpose. this definition is necessarily vague, for there are a number of types of genes, and even within a given type of gene, experts have difficulty agreeing on precisely where the beginning and ending boundaries of those genes lie. a structural gene is a gene that codes instructions for creating a protein ( fig. . ). a second category of genes with many members is the collection of rna genes. an rna gene does not contain protein information; instead, its function is determined by its ability to fold into a specific three-dimensional configuration, at which point it is able to interact with other molecules and play a part in a biochemical process. a common rna gene found in most forms of life is the trna gene illustrated in figure . . structural genes are the entities most scientists envision when the word ''gene'' is mentioned, and from this point on, the term gene will be used to mean ''structural gene'' unless specified otherwise. the number and variety of genes in organisms is a current topic of importance for genome scientists. gene number in organisms ranges from tiny ( in mycoplasma) to enormous ( , or more in plants). non-free-living organisms have even smaller gene numbers (the hiv virus contains only nine). the number of genes in a typical human genome has been estimated to be about , , perhaps the single most surprising finding from the human genome project. this number was thought to be as large as , as recently as . the confusion over this number arose in part because there is a not a ''one gene, one protein'' rule in humans, or indeed, in many eukaryotic organisms. instead, a single gene region can contain the information needed to produce multiple proteins. to understand this fact, the series of steps involved in creating a functional protein from the underlying dna sequence instructions must be understood. the central dogma of molecular biology states that genetic information is stored in dna, copied to rna, and then interpreted from the rna copy to form a functional protein ( fig. . ). the process of copying the genetic information in dna into an rna copy is known as transcription (see chapter ). the process is thought by many to be a remnant of an early rna world, in which the earliest life forms were based on rna genomes. it is at the level of transcription that gene expression is regulated, determining where and when a particular gene is turned on or off. the transcription of a gene occurs when an enzyme known as rna polymerase binds to the beginning of a gene and proceeds to create a molecule of rna that matches the dna in the genome. it is this molecule of messenger rna (mrna) that will serve as a template for producing a protein. however, it is necessary for organisms to regulate the expression of genes to avoid having all genes being produced in all cells at all times. transcription factors interact with either the genomic dna or the polymerase molecule to allow delicate control of the gene expression process. a feedback loop is created whereby an environmental stimulus such as a drug leads to the production of a transcription factor, which triggers the expression of a gene. in addition to this example of a positive control mechanism, negative control is also possible. an emerging theme is that sets of genes are often coregulated by a single or figure . the transfer rna (trna) is an example of a non-protein-coding gene. its function is the result of the specific two-and three-dimensional structures formed by the rna sequence itself. . introduction small group of transcription factors. these sets of genes often share a short upstream dna sequence that serves as a binding site for the transcription factor. one of the earliest surprises of the genomic era was the discovery that many eukaryotic gene sequences are not contiguous, but are instead interrupted by dna sequences known as introns. as shown in figure . , introns are physically cut, or spliced, from the mrna sequence before the rna is converted into a protein. the presence of introns helps to explain the phenomenon that there are more proteins produced in an organism than there are genes present. the process of alternative splicing allows for exons to be assembled in a combinatoric fashion, resulting in a multitude of potential proteins. for example, consider a gene sequence with exons e , e , and e interrupted by introns i and i . if both introns are spliced, the resulting protein would be encoded as e -e -e . however, it is also possible to splice the gene in a way that produces protein e -e , skipping exon e . much like transcription factors regulate gene expressions, there are factors that help to regulate alternative splicing. a common theme is to find a single gene that is spliced in different ways to produce isoforms that are expressed in specific tissues. the process of reading the template in an mrna molecule and using it to produce a protein is known as translation. conceptually, this process is much more simple than the transcription and splicing processes. a structure known as a ribosome binds to the mrna molecule. the ribosome then moves along the rna in units of nucleotides. each of these triplets, or codons, encodes one of amino acids. at each codon the ribosome interacts with trnas to interpret a codon and add the proper amino acid to the growing chain before moving along to the next codon in the sequence (see chapter ). genome science is heavily driven by new technological advances that allow for the rapid and inexpensive collection of various types of data. it has been said that the field is data-driven rather than hypothesis-driven, a reflection of the tendency for researchers to collect large amounts of genomic data with the (realistic) expectation that subsequent data analyses, along with the experiments they suggest, will lead to better understanding of genetic processes. although the list of important biotechnologies changes on an almost daily basis, there are three prominent data types in today's environment: ( ) genome sequences provide the starting point that allows scientists to begin understanding the genetic underpinnings of an organism; ( ) measurements of gene expression levels facilitate studies of gene regulation, which, among other things, help us to understand how an organism's genome interacts with its environment; and ( ) genetic polymorphisms are variations from individual to individual within species, and understanding how these variations correlate with phenotypes such as disease susceptibility is a crucial element of modern biomedical research. the basic principles for obtaining dna sequences have remained rather stable over the past few decades, although the specific technologies have evolved dramatically. the most widely used sequencing techniques rely on attaching some sort of ''reporter'' to each nucleotide in a dna sequence, then measuring how quickly or how far the nucleotide migrates through a medium. the principles of sanger sequencing, originally developed in , are illustrated in figure . . dna sequences have an orientation. the ' end of a sequence can be considered to be the left end, and the ' end is on the right. sanger sequencing begins by creating all possible subsequences of the target sequence that begin at the same ' nucleotide. a reporter, originally radioactive but now fluorescent, is attached to the final ' nucleotide in each subsequence. by using a unique reporter for each of the four nucleotides, it is possible to identify the final ' nucleotide in each of the subsequences. consider the task of sequencing the dna molecule aggt. there are four possible subsequences that begin with the ' a: a, ag, agg, and aggt. the technology of sanger sequencing produces each of those four sequences and attaches the reporter to the final nucleotide. the subsequences are sorted from shortest to longest based on the rate at which they migrate through a medium. the shortest sequence would correspond to the subsequence a; its reporter tells us that the final nucleotide is an a. the second shortest subsequence is ag, with a final nucleotide of g. by arranging the subsequences in a ''ladder'' from shortest to longest, the sequence of the complete target sequence can be found simply by reading off the final nucleotide of each subsequence. a series of new advances have allowed sanger sequencing to be applied in a highthroughput way, paving the way for sequencing of entire genomes, including that of the human. radioactive reporters have been replaced with safer and cheaper fluorescent dyes, and automatic laser-based systems now read the sequence of fluorescentlabeled nucleotides directly as they migrate. early versions of sanger sequencing only allowed for reading a few hundred nucleotides at a time; modern sequencing devices can read sequences of nucleotides or more. perhaps most important has been the replacement of ''slab gel'' systems with capillary sequencers. the older system required much labor and a steady hand; capillary systems, in conjunction with the development of necessary robotic devices for manipulating samples, have allowed almost completely automated sequencing pipelines to be developed. not to be ignored in the series of technological advances is the development of automated base-calling algorithms. a laser reads the intensities of each of the four fluorescent reporter dyes as each nucleotide passes it. the resulting graph of those intensities is a chromatogram. statistical algorithms, including the landmark program phred, are able to accept chromatograms as input and output dna sequences with very high levels of accuracy, reducing the need for laborious human intervention. by assessing the relative levels of the four curves, the base-calling algorithms not only report the most likely nucleotide at each position, but they also provide an error probability for each site. a single state-of-the-art dna sequencing machine can currently produce upwards of one million nucleotides per day. large regions of dna are not sequenced in single pieces. instead, larger contigs of dna are fragmented into multiple, short, overlapping sequences. the emergence of shotgun sequencing (fig. . ), pioneered by dr. craig venter, has revolutionized approaches for obtaining complete genome sequences. the fundamental approach to shotgun sequencing of a genome is simple: ( ) create many identical copies of a genome; ( ) randomly cut the genomes into millions of fragments, each short enough to be sequenced individually; ( ) align the overlapping fragments by identifying matching nucleotides at the ends of fragments, and finally; ( ) read the complete genome sequence by following a gap-free path through the fragments. until venter's work, the idea of shotgun sequencing was considered unfeasible for a variety of reasons. perhaps most daunting was the computational task of aligning the millions of fragments generated in the shotgun process. specialized hardware systems and associated algorithms were developed to handle these problems. following in the footsteps of high-throughput genome sequencing came technology that allowed scientists to survey the relative abundance of thousands of individual gene products. these technologies are, in essence, a modern high-throughput replacement of the northern blot procedure. for each member in a collection of several thousand genes, the assays provide a quantitative estimate of the number of mrna copies of each gene being produced in a particular tissue. two technologies, cdna and oligonucleotide microarrays, currently dominate the field, and they have opened the door to many exploratory analyses that were previously impossible. as a first example, consider taking two samples of cells from an individual cancer patient: one sample from a tumor and one from normal tissue. a microarray experiment makes it possible to identify the set of genes that are produced at different levels in the two tissue types. it is likely that this set of differentially expressed genes contains many genes involved in biological processes related to tumor formation and proliferation ( fig. . ). a second common type of study is a time course experiment. microarray data is collected from the same tissues at periodic intervals over some length of time. for instance, gene expression levels may be measured in -hour increments following the administration of a drug. for each gene, the change in gene expression level can be plotted against time ( fig. . ). groups of coregulated genes will be identified as having points in time where they all experience either an increase or decrease in expression levels. a likely cause for this behavior is that all genes in the coregulated set are governed by a single transcription factor. a final important medical application of microarray technologies involves diagnosis. suppose that a physician obtains microarray data from tumor cells of a patient. figure . shotgun sequencing of genomes or other large fragments of dna proceeds by cutting the original dna into many smaller segments, sequencing the smaller fragments, and assembling the sequenced fragments by identifying overlapping ends. the data, consisting of the relative levels of gene expression for a suite of many genes, can be compared to similar data collected from tumors of known types. if the patient's gene expression profile matches the profile of one of the reference samples, the patient can be diagnosed with that tumor type. the advent of microarray techniques has rapidly improved the accuracy of this type of diagnosis in a variety of cancers. cdna microarrays were the first, and are still the most widely used, form of highthroughput gene expression methods. the procedure begins by attaching the dna sequences of thousands of genes onto a microscope slide in a pattern of spots, with each spot containing only dna sequences of a single gene. a variety of technologies have emerged for creating such slides, ranging from simple pin spotting devices to technologies using laser jet printing techniques. the rna of expressed genes is next collected from the target cell population. through the process of reverse transcription, a cdna version of each rna is created. a cdna molecule is complementary to the genomic dna sequence in the sense that complementary base pairs will physically bind to one another. for example, a cdna reading gttac could physically bind to the genomic dna sequence caatg. during the process of creating the cdna collection, each cdna is labeled with a fluorescent dye. the collection of labeled cdnas is poured over the microscope slide and its set of attached dna molecules. the cdnas that match a dna on the slide physically bind to their mates, and unbound cdnas are washed from the slide. finally, the number of bound molecules at each spot (genes) can be read by measuring the fluorescence level at each spot. highly expressed genes will create more rna, which results in more labeled cdnas binding to those spots. a more common variant on the basic cdna approach is illustrated in figure . . in this experiment, rna from two different tissues or individuals is collected, labeled with two different dyes, and competitively hybridized on a single slide. the relative abundance of the two dyes allows the scientist to state, for instance, that a particular gene is expressed fivefold times more in one tissue than in the other. oligonucleotide arrays take a slightly different approach to assaying the relative abundance of rna sequences. instead of attaching full-length dnas to a slide, oligonucleotide systems make use of short oligonucleotides chosen to be specific to individual genes. for each gene included in the array, approximately to different oligonucleotides of length - nucleotides are designed and printed onto a chip. the use of multiple oligonucleotides for each gene helps to reduce the effects of a variety of potential errors. fluorescently labeled rna (rather than cdna) is collected from the target tissue and hybridized against the oligonucleotide array. one limitation of the oligonucleotide approach is that only a single sample can be assayed on a single chip-competitive hybridization is not possible. although oligonucleotide and cdna approaches to assaying gene expression rely on the same basic principles, each has its own advantages and disadvantages. as already noted, competitive hybridization is currently only possible in cdna systems. the design of oligonucleotide arrays requires that the sequences of genes for the chip are already available. the design phase is very expensive, and oligonucleotide systems are only available for commercially important and model organisms. in contrast, cdna arrays can be developed fairly quickly even in organisms without sequenced figure . a cdna microarray slide is created by ( ) attaching dna to spots on a glass slide, ( ) collecting expressed rna sequences (expressed sequence tags, ests) from tissue samples, ( ) converting the rna to dna and labeling the molecules with fluorescent dyes, ( ) hybridizing the labeled dna molecules to the dna bound to the slide, and ( ) extracting the quantity of each expressed sequence by measuring the fluorescence levels of the dyes. genomes. in their favor, oligonucleotide arrays allow for more genes to be spotted in a given area (thus allowing more measurements to be made on a single chip) and tend to offer higher repeatability of measurements. both of these facts reduce the overall level of experimental error rate in oligonucleotide arrays relative to cdna microarrays, although at a higher per observation cost. because of the trade-off between obtaining many cheap noisy measurements versus a smaller number of more precise but expensive measurements, it is not clear that either technology has an obvious cost advantage. both techniques share the same major disadvantage: only measurements of rna levels are found. these measurements are used as surrogates for the much more desirable and useful quantities of the amount of protein produced for each gene. it appears that rna levels are correlated with protein levels, but the extent and strength of this relationship is not understood well. the near future promises a growing role for protein microarray systems, which are currently seeing limited use because of their very high costs. the ''final draft'' of the human genome was announced in april . it included roughly . billion nucleotides, with some , to , genes spread across pairs of chromosomes. the next phase of major data acquisition on the human genome is to discover how differences, both large and small, from individual to individual, result in variation at the phenotypic level. toward this end, a major effort has been made to find and document genetic polymorphisms. polymorphisms have long been important to studies of genetics. variations of the banding patterns in polytene chromosomes, for instance, have been studied for many decades. allozyme assays, based on differences in the overall charge of amino acid sequences, were popular in the s. most modern studies of genetic polymorphisms, though, focus on identifying variation at the individual nucleotide level. the international snp consortium (http://snp.cshl.org) is a collaboration of public and private organizations that discovered and characterized approximately . million single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) in human populations. in medicine, the expectation is that knowledge of these individual nucleotide variants will accelerate the description of genetic diseases and the drug development process. pharmaceutical companies are optimistic that surveys of variation will be of use for selecting the proper drug for individual patients and for predicting likely side effects on an individual-to-individual basis. most snps (pronounced ''snips'') are the result of a mutation from one nucleotide to another, whereas a minority are insertions and deletions of individual nucleotides. surveys of snps have demonstrated that their frequencies vary from organism to organism and from region to region within organisms. in the human genome, a snp is found about every to nucleotides. however, the frequency of snps is much higher in noncoding regions of the genome than in coding regions, the result of natural selection eliminating deleterious alleles from the population. furthermore, synonymous or silent polymorphisms, which do not result in a change of the encoded amino acids, are more frequent than nonsynonymous or replacement polymorphisms. the fields of population genetics and molecular evolution provide many empirical surveys of snp variation, along with mathematical theory, for analyzing and predicting the frequencies of snps under a variety of biologically important settings. simple sequence repeats (ssrs) consist of a moderate ( - ) number of tandemly repeated copies of the same short sequence of to nucleotides. ssrs are an important class of polymorphisms because of their high mutation rates, which lead to ssr loci being highly variable in most populations. this high level of variability makes ssr markers ideal for work in individual identification. ssrs are the markers typically employed for dna fingerprinting in the forensics setting. in human populations, an ssr locus usually has or more alleles and a per generation mutation rate of . . the fbi uses a set of tetranucleotide repeats for identification purposes, and experts claim that no two unrelated individuals have the exact same collection of alleles at all of those loci. as the technology for collecting genomic data has improved, so has the need for new methods for management and analysis of the massive amounts of accumulated data. the term bioinformatics has evolved to include the mathematical, statistical, and computational analysis of genomic data. work in bioinformatics ranges from database design to systems engineering to artificial intelligence to applied mathematics and statistics, all with an underlying focus on genomic science. a variety of bioinformatics topics may be illustrated using the core technologies described in the preceding section. it is necessary to carry out sequence alignments in order to assemble sequence fragments. all of these sequences, along with the vital information about their sources, functions, and so on, must be stored in databases, which must be readily available to users in a variety of locations. once a sequence has been obtained, it is necessary to annotate its function. one of the most fundamental annotation tasks is that of computational gene finding, in which a genome or chromosome sequence is input to an algorithm that subsequently outputs the predicted location of genes. a gene sequence, whether predicted or experimentally determined, must have its function predicted, and many bioinformatics tools are available for this task. once microarray data are available, it is necessary to identify subsets of coregulated genes and to identify genes that are differentially expressed between two or more treatments or tissue types. polymorphism data from snps are used to search for correlations with, for example, the presence or absence of a disease in family pedigrees. these questions are all of fundamental importance and draw on many different fields. by necessity, bioinformatics is a highly multidisciplinary field. genome projects involve far-reaching collaborations among many researchers in many fields around the globe, and it is critical that the resulting data be easily available both to project members and to the general scientific community. in light of this requirement, a number of key central data repositories have emerged. in addition to providing storage and retrieval of gene sequences, several of these databases also offer advanced sequence analysis methods and powerful visualization tools. in the united states, the primary public genomics resource is that of the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi). the ncbi website (http:// www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov) provides a seemingly endless collection of data and data analysis tools. perhaps the most important element of the ncbi collection is the genbank database of dna and rna sequences. ncbi provides a variety of tools for searching genbank, and elements in genbank are linked to other databases, both within and outside of ncbi. figure . shows some results from a simple query of the genbank nucleotide database. genbank data files contain a wealth of information. figure . shows a simple genbank file for a prion sequence from duck. the accession number, af , is figure . the result of a simple query of the genbank database at ncbi. this query found entries in the genbank nucleotide database containing the term ''tyrosine kinase.'' each entry can be clicked to find additional information. figure . a simple genbank file containing the dna sequence for a prion protein gene. the unique identifier for this entry. the genbank file contains a dna sequence of nucleotides, its predicted amino acid sequence, and a citation to the chinese laboratory that obtained the data. the ''links'' icon in the upper right provides access to related information found in other databases. it is essential for those working in genomics or bioinformatics to become familiar with genbank and the content of genbank files. ncbi is also the home of the blast database searching tool. blast uses algorithms for sequence alignment (described later in this chapter) to find sequences in genbank that are similar to a query sequence provided by the user. to illustrate the use of blast, consider a study by professor eske willerslev at the university of copenhagen. willerslev and his colleagues collected samples from siberian permafrost that included a variety of preserved plant and animal material estimated to be , - , years old. they were able to extract short dna sequences from the rbcl gene. these short sequences were used as input to the blast algorithm, which reported a list of similar sequences. it is likely that the most similar sequences come from close relatives of the organisms that provided the ancient dna. the european bioinformatics institute (ebi, http://www.ebi.ac.uk) is the european ''equivalent'' of ncbi. users who explore the ebi website will find much of the same type of functionality as provided by ncbi. of particular note is the ensembl project (http://www.ensembl.org), a joint venture between ebi and the sanger institute. ensembl has particularly nice tools for exploring genome project data through its genome browser. figure . shows a portion of the display for a region of human chromosome . ensembl provides comparisons to other completed genome sequences (rat, mouse, and chimpanzee), along with annotations of the locations of genes and other interesting features. most of the items in the display are clickable and provide links to more detailed information on each display component. many other databases and web resources play important roles in the day-to-day working of genome scientists. table . includes a selection of these resources, along with short descriptions of their unique features. the most fundamental computational algorithm in bioinformatics is that of pairwise sequence alignment. not only is it of immediate practical value, but the underlying dynamic programming algorithm also serves as a conceptual framework for many other important bioinformatics techniques. the goal of sequence alignment is to accept as input two or more dna, rna, or amino acid sequences; identify the regions of the sequences that are similar to one another according to some measure; and output the sequences with the similar positions aligned in columns. an alignment of six sequences from hiv strains is shown in figure . . sequence alignments have numerous uses. alignments of pairs of sequences help us to determine whether or not they have the same or similar functions. regions of alignments with little sequence variation likely correspond to important structural or functional regions of protein coding genes. by studying patterns of similarity in an alignment of genes from several species, it is possible to infer the evolutionary history resources and software indices of the species, and even to reconstruct dna or amino acid sequences that were present in the ancestral organisms. many methods for annotation, including assigning protein function and identifying transcription factor binding sites, rely on multiple sequence alignments as input. to illustrate the principles underlying sequence alignment, consider the special case of aligning two dna sequences. if the two sequences are similar, it is most likely because they have evolved from a common ancestral sequence at some time in the past. as illustrated in figure . , the sequences differ from the ancestral sequence and from each other because of past mutations. most mutations fall into one of two classes: nucleotide substitutions, which result in these two sequences being different at the location of the mutation (fig. . a) , and insertions or deletions of short sequences (fig. . b) . the term indel is often used to denote an insertion or deletion mutation. figure . b shows that indels lead to one sequence having nucleotides present at certain positions, whereas the second sequence has no nucleotides at those positions. to align two sequences without error, it would be necessary to have knowledge of the entire collection of mutations in the history of the two sequences. since this information is not available, it is necessary to rely on computational algorithms for reconstructing the likely locations of the various mutation events. a score function is chosen to evaluate alignment quality, and the algorithms attempt to find the pairwise alignment that has the highest numerical score among all possible alignments. consider aligning the two short sequences cagg and cga. it can be shown that there are possible ways to align these two sequences, several of which are shown in figure . . how does one determine which of the possibilities is best? alignments (a) and (b) each have two positions with matching nucleotides; however, alignment (b) includes three columns with indels, whereas (a) has only one. on the other hand, alignment (a) has one mismatch to (b)'s zero. there is no definitive answer to the question of which alignment is best; however, it makes sense that ''good'' alignments will tend to have more matches and fewer mismatches and indels. it is possible to quantify that intuition by invoking a scoring scheme in which each column receives a score, s i , according to the formula s i ¼ m, the bases at column i match d, the bases at column i do not match i, there is an indel at column i < : using this scheme with match score m ¼ , mismatch score d ¼ À , and indel score i ¼ À , the alignment in figure . a would receive a score of À þ À ¼ . similarly, the alignment in figure . b has a score of À À þ À ¼ . the remaining alignments in figure . have scores of , , , , À , and , respectively. alignment (a) is considered best under the standards of this scoring scheme, and, in fact, it has the best score of all possible alignments. this example suggests an algorithm for finding the best scoring alignment of any two sequences: enumerate all possible alignments, calculate the score for each, and select the alignment with the highest score. unfortunately, it turns out that this approach is not practical for real data. it can be shown that the number of possible alignments of sequences of length n is approximately n = ffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffiffi pn p when n is large. even for a pair of short sequences of length , the number of alignments is  , orders of magnitude larger than avogadro's number! techniques such as the needleman-wunsch and smith-waterman algorithms, which allow for computationally efficient identifications of the optimal alignments, are important practical and theoretical components of bioinformatics. conceptually, the task of aligning three or more sequences is essentially the same as that of aligning pairs of sequences. the computational task, however, becomes enormously more complex, growing exponentially with the number of sequences to be aligned. no practically useful solutions have been found, and the problem has been shown to belong to a class of fundamentally hard computational problems said to be np-complete. in addition to the increased computation, there is one important new concept that arises when shifting from pairwise alignment to multiple alignment. scoring columns in the pairwise case was simple; that is not the case for multiple sequences. complications arise because the evolutionary tree relating the sequences to be aligned is typically unknown, which makes assigning biologically plausible scores difficult. this problem is often ignored, and columns are scored using a sum of pairs scoring scheme in which the score for a column is the sum of all possible pairwise scores. for example, the score for a column containing the three nucleotides cgg, again using the scores m ¼ , d ¼ À , and i ¼ À , is À À þ ¼ . other algorithms, such as the popular clustalw program, use an approach known as progressive alignment to circumvent this issue. almost all widely used methods for finding sequence alignments rely on a scoring scheme similar to the one used in the preceding paragraphs. clearly, this formula has very little biological basis. furthermore, how does one select the scores for matches, mismatches, and indels? considerable work has addressed these issues with varying degrees of success. the most important improvement is the replacement of the simple match and mismatch scores with scoring matrices obtained from empirical collections of amino acid sequences. rather than assigning, for example, all mismatches a value of À , the blosum and pam matrices provide a different penalty for each possible pair of amino acids. since these penalties are derived from actual data, mismatches between chemically similar amino acids such as leucine and isoleucine receive smaller penalties than mismatches between chemically different ones. a second area of improvement is in the assignment of indel penalties. the alignments in figure . b and . e each have a total of three sites with indels. however, the indels at sites and of figure . b could have been the result of a single insertion or deletion event. recognizing this fact, it is common to use separate open and extension penalties for indels. if the open penalty is o ¼ À and the extension penalty is e ¼ À , then a series of three consecutive indels would receive a score of À À À ¼ À . the most common bioinformatics task is searching a molecular database such as genbank for sequences that are similar to a query sequence of interest. for example, the query sequence may be a gene sequence from a newly isolated viral outbreak, and the search task may be to find out if any known viral sequences are similar to this new one. it turns out that this type of database searching is a special case of pairwise sequence alignment. essentially, all sequences in the database are concatenated end to end, and this new ''supersequence'' is aligned to our query sequence. since the supersequence is many, many times longer than the query sequence, the resulting pairwise alignment would consist mostly of gaps and provide relatively little useful information. a more useful procedure is to ask if the supersequence contains a short subsequence that aligns well with the query sequence. this problem is known as local sequence alignment, and it can be solved with algorithms very similar to those for the basic alignment problem. the smith-waterman algorithm is guaranteed to find the best such local alignment. even though the smith-waterman algorithm provides a solution to the database search problem for many applications, it is still too slow for high-volume installations such as ncbi, where multiple query requests are handled every second. for these settings, a variety of heuristic searches have been developed. these tools, including blast and fasta, are not guaranteed to find the best local alignment, but they usually do and are, therefore, valuable research tools. it is no exaggeration to claim that blast (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/blast) is one of the most influential research tools of any field in the history of science. the algorithm has been cited in upwards of , studies to date. in addition to providing a fast and effective method for database searching, the use of blast spread rapidly because of the statistical theory developed to accompany it. when searching a very large database with a short sequence, it is very likely that one or more instances of the query sequence will be found in the database simply by chance alone. when blast reports a list of database matches, it sorts them according to an e-value, which is the number of matches of that quality expected to be found by chance. an e-value of . indicates a match that would only be found once every searches, and it suggests that the match is biologically interesting. on the other hand, an e-value of . implies that two matches of the observed quality would be found every search simply by chance, and therefore, the match is probably not of interest. consider an effort to identify the virus responsible for sars. the sequence of the protease gene, a ubiquitous viral protein, was isolated and stored under genbank accession number ay . if that sequence is submitted to the tblastx variant of blast at ncbi, the best matching non-sars entries in genbank (remember that the sars entries would not have been in the database at the time) all belong to coronaviruses, providing strong evidence that sars is caused by a coronavirus. this type of comparative genomic approach has become invaluable in the field of epidemiology. much work in genomic science and bioinformatics focuses on problems of identifying biologically important regions of very long dna sequences, such as chromosomes or genomes. many important regions such as genes or binding sites come in the form of relatively short contiguous blocks of dna. hidden markov models (hmms) are a class of mathematical tools that excel at identifying this type of feature. historically, hmms have been used in problems as diverse as finding sources of pollution in rivers, formal mathematical descriptions of written languages, and speech recognition, so there is a rich body of existing theory. predictably, many successful applications of hmms to new problems in genomic science have been seen in recent years. hmms have proven to be excellent tools for identifying genes in newly sequenced genomes, predicting the functional class of proteins, finding boundaries between introns and exons, and predicting the higher-order structure of protein and rna sequences. to introduce the concept of an hmm in the context of a dna sequence, consider the phenomenon of isochores, regions of dna with base frequencies unique from neighboring regions. data from the human genome demonstrate that regions of a million or more bases have g+c content varying from % to %, a much higher range than one would expect to see if base composition were homogeneous across the entire genome. a simple model of the genome assigns each nucleotide to one of three possible classes (fig. . a) : a high g+c class (h), a low g+c class (l), or a normal g+c class (n). in the normal class, each of the four bases a, c, g, and t is used with equal frequency ( %). in the high g+c class, the frequencies of the four bases are % a, % c, % g, and % t, and in the low g+c class, the frequencies are % a, % c, % g, and % t. in the parlance of hmms, these three classes are called hidden states, since they are not observed directly. instead, the emitted characters a, c, g, and t are the observations. thus, this simple model of a genome consists of successive blocks of nucleotides from each of the three classes ( fig. . b) . the formal mathematical details of hmms will not be discussed, but it is useful to understand the basic components of the models (fig. . ). each hidden state in an hmm is able to emit characters, but the emission probabilities vary among hidden states. the model must also describe the pattern of hidden states, and the transition probabilities determine both the expected lengths of blocks of a single hidden state and the likelihood of one hidden state following another (e.g., is it likely for a block of high g+c to follow a block of low g+c?). the transition probabilities play important roles in applications such as gene finding. & what is the chance of seeing a block of high g+c nucleotides shorter than ? these types of questions will be addressed in the examples discussed in the next section. the task of gene prediction is conceptually simple to describe: given a very long sequence of dna, identify the locations of genes. unfortunately, the solution of the problem is not quite as simple. as a first pass, one might simply find all pairs of start (atg) and stop (tag, tga, taa) codons. blocks of sequence longer than, say, nucleotides that are flanked by start and stop codons and that have lengths in multiples of three are likely to be protein coding genes. although this simple method will be likely to find many genes, it will probably have a high false positive rate figure . an hmm for the states in fig. . . transition probabilities govern the chance that one hidden state follows another. for example, an n state is followed by another n state % of the time, by an l state % of the time, and by an h state % of the time. emission probabilities control the frequency of the four nucleotides found at each type of hidden state. in the hidden state l, there is % a, % c, % g, and % t. (incorrectly predict that a sequence is a gene), and it will certainly have a high false negative rate (fail to predict real genes). for instance, the method fails to consider the possibility of introns, and it is unable to predict short genes. gene finding algorithms rely on a variety of additional information to make predictions, including the known structure of genes, the distribution of lengths of introns and exons in known genes, and the consensus sequences of known regulatory sequences. hmms turn out to be exceptionally well-suited for gene finding, and the basic structure of a simple gene finding hmm is shown in figure . . note that the hmm includes hidden states for promoter regions, the start and stop codons, exons, introns, and the noncoding dna falling between different genes. also note that not all hidden states are connected to one another. this fact reflects an understanding of gene and genome structure. the sequence of states start -intron -stop -exon -promoter is not biologically possible, whereas the series noncoding -promoter -start -exon -intron -exon -intron -exon -stop -noncoding is. good hmms incorporate this type of knowledge extensively. to put the hmm of figure . to use, the model must first be trained. the training step involves taking existing sequences of known genes and estimating all of the transition and emission probabilities for each of the model's hidden states. for example, if a training data set included introns, the observed frequency of c in those intron sequences could be used to come up with the emission probability for c in the hidden state intron. the average lengths of introns and exons would be used to estimate the transition probabilities to and from the exon and intron hidden states. once the training step is complete, the hmm machinery can be used to predict the locations of genes in a long sequence of dna, along with their intron/exon boundaries, promoter sites, and so forth. gene finding algorithms in actual use are much more complex than the one shown in figure . , but they retain the same basic structure. the performance of gene finders continues to get better and better as more genomes are studied and the quality of the underlying hmms is improved. in bacteria, modern gene finding algorithms are rarely incorrect. upwards of % of the predicted genes are subsequently found to be actual genes, and only - % of true genes are missed by the algorithms. the situation is not as rosy for eukaryotic gene prediction, however. eukaryotic genomes are much larger, and the gene structure is more complex (most notably, eukaryotic genes have introns). the effectiveness of gene finding algorithms is usually measured in terms of sensitivity and specificity. if these quantities are measured on a per nucleotide basis, an algorithm's sensitivity, s n , is defined to be the percentage of nucleotides in real genes that are actually predicted to be in genes. the specificity, s p , is the percentage of nucleotides predicted to be in genes that truly are in genes. good gene predictors have high sensitivity and high specificity. the best gene eukaryotic gene finders today have sensitivities and specificities around % at the individual nucleotide. if the quantities are measured at the level of entire exons (e.g., did the algorithm correctly predict the location of the entire exon or not?), the values drop to around %. an emerging and powerful approach for predicting the location of genes uses a comparative genomics approach. the entire human genome sequence is now available, and the locations of tens of thousands of genes are known. suppose that a laboratory now sequences the genome of the cheetah. since humans and cheetahs are both mammals, they should have reasonably similar genomes. in particular, most of the gene sequences should be quite similar. gene prediction can proceed by doing a pairwise sequence alignment of the two genomes and then predicting that positions in the cheetah genome corresponding to locations of known human genes are also genes in the cheetah. this approach is remarkably effective, although it will obviously miss genes that are unique to one species or the other. the degree of relatedness of the two organisms also has a major impact on the utility of this approach. the human genome could be used to predict genes in the gorilla genome much better than it could be used to predict genes in the sunflower or paramecium genomes. in addition to hmms and comparative genomics approaches, a variety of other techniques are being used for gene prediction. neural networks and other artificial intelligence methods have been used effectively. perhaps most intriguing, as more and more genomes become available, are hybrid methods that integrate, for example, hmms with comparative genomic data from two or more genomes. once a genome is sequenced and its genes are found or predicted, the next step in the bioinformatics pipeline is to determine the biological function of the genes. ideally, molecular biological work would be carried out in the laboratory to study each gene's function, but clearly that approach is not feasible. two basic computational approaches will be described, one using comparative genomics and the other using hmms. comparative genomics approaches to assigning function to genes rely on a simple logical assumption: if a gene in species a is very similar to a gene in species b, then the two genes most likely have the same or related functions. this logic has long been applied at higher biological levels (e.g., the kidneys of different species have the same basic biological function even though the exact details may differ in the two species). at the level of genes, the inference is less accurate, especially if the species involved in the comparison are not closely related, but the approach is nonetheless useful and usually effective. simple database searches are the most straightforward comparative genomic approach to functional annotation. a newly discovered gene sequence that returns matches to cytochrome oxidase genes when input to blast is likely to be a cytochrome oxidase gene itself. complications arise when matches are to distantly related species, when the matching regions are very short, or when the sequence matches members of a multigene family. in the first case, the functions of the genes may have changed during the tens or hundreds of millions of years since the two organisms shared a common ancestor. however, if two or more such distantly related organisms have gene sequences that are nearly identical, a strong argument can be made that the gene is critical in both organisms and that the same function has been maintained throughout evolutionary history. short matches may arise simply as a result of elementary protein structure. for example, two sequences may have regions that match simply because they both encode alpha helical regions. such matches provide useful structural information, but the stronger inference of shared function is not justified. multigene families are the result of gene duplications followed by functional divergence. examples include the globin and amylase families of genes. at some point in the past, a single gene in one organism was completely duplicated in the genome. at that point, the duplicated copy was free to evolve a new, but often related, function. subsequent duplications allow for the growth and diversification of such families. because of their shared ancestry, all members of a gene family tend to have similar dna sequences. this fact makes it difficult to assign function with high accuracy when matches appear in database searches, but it often provides a general class of functions for the query sequence. efforts have been made to classify all known proteins into functional groups using comparative genomics. suppose that the genbank protein database is queried with protein sequence a and the result is that its closest match is protein sequence b. if the database is next queried using sequence b and the closest match for b is found to be sequence a, then these two proteins are said to be reciprocal best matches, and they are likely to have the same function. likewise, if the best match to sequence a is b, the best match to b is c, and the best match to c is a, then a, b, and c are likely to have the same function. this general principle has been used to create clusters of genes that are predicted to have similar or identical functions. the cogs (clusters of orthologous groups of proteins) database at ncbi (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/cog) represents a comprehensive clustering of the entire genbank protein database using this type of scheme. there are many known examples of proteins or individual protein domains that have the same function or structure. the pfam (protein family) database (http:// www.sanger.ac.uk/software/pfam) includes multiple sequence alignments of almost such protein families. using the sequence data for each alignment, the pfam project members created a special type of hmm called a profile hmm. this database makes it possible to take a query sequence and, for each of the families and their associated profile hmms, ask the question, ''is the query sequence a member of this gene family?'' a query to the pfam results in a probability assigned to each of the included protein families, providing not only the best matches but also indications of the strength of the matches. currently, about % of the proteins in genbank have a match in pfam, indicating a fairly high likelihood of any newly discovered protein having a pfam match. pfam is of interest not only because of its effectiveness, but also because of its theoretical approach of combining comparative genomic and hmm components. a common experiment is to use microarray or oligonucleotide array technology to measure the expression level for several thousand genes under two different ''treatments.'' it is often the case that one treatment is a control while the other is an environmental stimulus such as a drug, chemical, or change in a physical variable such as temperature or ph. other possibilities include comparisons between two tissue types (e.g., brain vs. heart), between diseased and undiseased tissues (e.g., tumor vs. normal), or between samples at two developmental phases (e.g., embryo vs. adult). one of the primary reasons to carry out such an experiment is to identify the genes that are differentially expressed between the two treatments. the basic format of the data from a simple two-treatment microarray experiment is the following: each spot on a microarray corresponds to a single gene, and in competitive hybridization experiments, a single spot usually provides measurements of gene expression under two different treatments. note that the first column has been intentionally labeled ''spot'' instead of ''gene.'' it is important that the same gene be used and measured multiple times; therefore, a number of different spots will typically correspond to the same gene. the final column of data is the most important for interpreting this experiment. the most extreme difference in relative expression levels is found at spot , where the gene is expressed almost fourfold higher under treatment . the question now becomes, ''how large (or small) must the ratio be to say that the expression levels are really different?'' this question is one of variability and of statistical significance. phrased differently, would a ratio near . for spot be likely if the experiment were repeated? the data in the table do not provide the necessary information to answer this question, and this fact points out the importance of replication in experimental design. whenever quantitative measurements are to be compared, replication is needed in order to estimate the variance of the measurements. this fundamental tenet of experimental design was largely ignored during the early history of microarray studies. fortunately, recent work has included careful attention to experimental design and proper analysis using the analysis of variance (anova). typical experiments now include five or more replicate measurements of each gene. in order to detect very small treatment effects on levels of expression, even larger amounts of replication are needed. a second type of microarry experiment is designed not to find differentially expressed genes, but to identify sets of genes that respond to two or more treatments in the same manner. this type of study is best illustrated with a time course study in which expression levels are measured at a series of time intervals. examples of such studies might involve measuring expression levels in laboratory mice each hour following exposure to a toxic chemical, expression levels in a mother or fetus at each trimester of a pregnancy, or expression levels in patients each year following infection with hiv. if plots of expression levels (y axis) against time (x axis) for each gene are overlaid as shown in figure . , it is possible to visually compare the expression profiles of genes. the desired pattern is a group of genes that tend to increase or decrease their expression levels in unison. in figure . it appears that genes and have very similar expression profiles, as do genes and . the similarity between the expression profiles of two genes can be described using the correlation coefficient, where x i and y i are the expression levels of genes x and y at time point i. values near or À indicate that the two genes have very similar profiles. when faced with thousands of profiles, the task becomes a bit more problematic. a common theme is to cluster genes on the basis of the similarity in their profiles, and many algorithms for carrying out the clustering have been published. all of these algorithms share the objective of assigning genes to clusters so that there is little variation among profiles within clusters, but considerable variation between clusters. top down clustering begins with all genes in a single cluster, then recursively partitions the genes into smaller and smaller clusters. bottom up methods start with each gene in its own cluster and progressively merge smaller clusters into larger ones. clustering algorithms may also be supervised, meaning that the user specifies ahead of time the final number of clusters, or unsupervised, in which case the algorithm determines the final number of clusters. the emergence of genomic science has not simply provided a rich set of tools and data for studying molecular biology. it has been the catalyst for an astounding burst of interdisciplinary research, and it has challenged long-established hierarchies found in most institutions of higher learning. the next generation of biologists will need to be as comfortable at a computer workstation as they are at the lab bench. recognizing this fact, many universities have already reorganized their departments and their curricula to accommodate the demands of genomic science. from a more practical point of view, the results of genomic research will begin to trickle into medicine. already, diagnostic procedures are changing rapidly as a result of genomics. the next phase of genomics will focus on relating genotypes to complex phenotypes, and as those connections are uncovered, new therapies and drugs will follow. consider, for example, a drug that is of significant benefit to % of users, but causes serious side effects in the remaining %. such drugs currently have difficulty remaining in the marketplace. however, the use of genetic screens to identify the patients likely to suffer side effects should make it possible for these drugs to be used safely and effectively. less imminent, but certainly in the foreseeable future, are gene therapies that will allow for repair of genetic defects. the continued interplay of figure . overlaid expression profiles for genes. note that genes and , as well as genes biology, engineering, and the mathematical sciences will be responsible for exploration of these frontiers. exercises . how many possible proteins could be formed by a gene region containing four exons? . in general, eukaryotes have introns, whereas prokaryotes do not. what are possible advantages and disadvantages of introns? . most amino acids are encoded by more than a single codon. if one of these synonymous codons is energetically more efficient for the organism to use, what effect would that have on the organism's genome content? how might this fact be used in gene finding algorithms? . what is the chance that a -nucleotide oligonucleotide matches a sequence other than the one it was designed to match? assume for simplicity that all nucleotides have frequency %. how many matches to that oligonucleotide would one expect to find in the human genome? . if each of the ssr markers used by the fbi for identification purposes has equally frequent alleles, what is the chance that two randomly chosen individuals have the same collection of alleles at those markers? . how many mammalian genomes have been completely sequenced? what are they? . what is the size of the anopheles gambiae genome? how many chromosomes does it have? how many genes does it have? . what is the length of the drosphila melanogaster alcohol dehydrogenase gene? . consider the following two alignments for the sequences cggtca and cagca: c-ggtca c-ggtca ca-g-ca ca-gca. a. find the score of each alignment using a match score of , mismatch penalty of À , and gap penalty of À . b. find the score of each if the gap penalty is À for opening and À for extending. . suppose a computer can calculate the scores for one million alignments per second. how long would it take to find the best alignment of two bp sequences by exhaustive search? . find an example of a zinc finger gene sequence using genbank. use blast to discover how many genbank sequences are similar to the sequence you found. what does the result tell you about zinc finger genes? . what are some additional features that might be added to the simple gene finding hmm of fig. . ? draw a diagram of a simple gene finding hmm that might be useful for prokaryotes. the hmm should contain hidden states for exons and intergenic regions, and it should guarantee that exons have lengths that are multiples of three use the pfam website to give a brief description of the structure and function of members of the hamartin gene family , gene seems to be expressed at higher levels than gene . justify the claim that the two genes have similar profiles and might be coregulated compute the correlation coefficient for each pair of genes. do any of them have similar profiles? . the expression levels for two genes measured at four times are: implication of the correlation coefficient? often, the gene sequences placed on microarray slides are of unknown function. suppose that an experiment identifies such a gene as being important for formation of a particular type of tumor when carrying out a database search using blast with a protein coding gene as the query sequence, there are two possible approaches. first, it is possible to query using the original dna sequence. second, one could translate the coding dna and query using the amino acid sequence of the encoded protein basic local alignment search tool isochores and the evolutionary genomics of vertebrates exploring the new world of the genome with dna microarrays prediction of complete gene structures in human genomic dna the human genome project after a decade: policy issues genomics: the science and technology behind the human genome project new goals for the us human genome project the minimal gene complement of mycoplasma genitalium a primer of genome science principles of population genetics amino acid substitution matrices from protein blocks initial sequencing and analysis of the human genome a map of human genome sequence variation containing . million single-nucleotide polymorphisms analysis of variance for gene expression in microarray data gene-expression profile of the aging brain in mice bioinformatics: sequence and genome analysis a general method applicable to the search for similarities in the amino acid sequences of two proteins a gene expression database for the molecular pharmacology of cancer identification of common molecular subsequences pfam: multiple sequence alignments and hmm profiles of protein domains increasing biological complexity is positively correlated with the relative genome-wide expansion of non-protein-coding dna sequences shotgun sequencing of the human genome the sequence of the human genome database resources of the national center for biotechnology information diverse plant and animal genetic records from holocene and pleistocene sediments gene expression profiles in normal and cancer cells suggested reading key: cord- - oew e authors: aurigemma, rosemarie; tomaszewski, joseph e.; ruppel, sheryl; creekmore, stephen; sausville, edward a. title: regulatory aspects in the development of gene therapies date: journal: cancer gene therapy doi: . / - - - - _ sha: doc_id: cord_uid: oew e preclinical therapeutics development research is directed toward fulfilling two overlapping sets of goals. a set of scientific goals includes defining the best molecule or biologic construct for the task at hand, and proving the case for its development. the second set of goals addresses regulatory requirements necessary to introduce the agent into human subjects. in the case of “small molecule” drugs, in most cases the identity of the molecule and appropriate safety studies are straightforward. in contrast, the development of biologic agents, including gene therapies discussed here, presents distinct challenges. the nature of the “drug” may be an organism subject to mutation or selection of variants through recombination. its properties may vary depending on the scale and method of its preparation, purification, and storage. how to test adequately for its safety prior to first introduction in humans may not be straightforward owing to intrinsic differences in response to the agent expected in humans as compared to animals. preclinical therapeutics development research is directed toward fulfilling two overlapping sets of goals. a set of scientific goals includes defining the best molecule or biologic construct for the task at hand, and proving the case for its development. the second set of goals addresses regulatory requirements necessary to introduce the agent into human subjects. in the case of "small molecule" drugs, in most cases the identity of the molecule and appropriate safety studies are straightforward. in contrast, the development of biologic agents, including gene therapies discussed here, presents distinct challenges. the nature of the "drug" may be an organism subject to mutation or selection of variants through recombination. its properties may vary depending on the scale and method of its preparation, purification, and storage. how to test adequately for its safety prior to first introduction in humans may not be straightforward owing to intrinsic differences in response to the agent expected in humans as compared to animals. the general principles, however, in allowing "first-in-human" experiences are similar for both small molecules and biologics. the ethical conduct of clinical trials in patients with a dire or lifethreatening disease demands an understanding of the identity and dose of an agent that has the possibility of causing clinical benefit with adverse events expected at worst to be easily reversible and well predicted by the preclinical experience. in normal volunteers or patients who are otherwise well, evidence should be gathered that would support an initial range of doses of the test agent expected to be without substantial toxicity or long-term effects. thus, the successful clinical introduction of a novel therapeutic concept requires an organized approach to integrate scientific, technical, and regulatory requirements. this integration should begin in the research laboratory, as the concept becomes a candidate for the clinic, to prevent avoidable and expensive delays in clinical development. for example, if a product is created using a mammalian cell line for which viral or other contamination has not been ruled out, costly rederivation will be required before that product can be manufactured for clinical trials using current good manufacturing practices (cgmp). on the other hand, during the discovery phase, an excessive and premature concern over cgmp compliance can impede research. therefore, a clear strategic understanding of the principles underlying regulatory issues is desirable and is the goal of this chapter. we proceed from the experience of the developmental therapeutics program (dtp) of the national cancer institute in the manufacture of biologicals, including gene therapy constructs for preclinical and clinical use. we outline the basis for our approach to safety testing studies to be included in an investigational new drug (ind) application to the food and drug administration (fda). we focus on studies that would allow phase i and perhaps early phase ii clinical trials. in , dtp contributed to over different cgmp biological projects. most of these activities were selected competitively from applications received from academic researchers or from the intramural laboratories of the national institutes of health (nih). dtp products include viruses for vaccines or gene therapy, plasmids, monoclonal antibodies, recombinant proteins, synthetic peptides, natural product fermentations, and oligonucleotides. during the fiscal year, over different lots were manufactured and released under cgmp for clinical use or further cgmp manufacturing. most products are destined for phase i or phase ii clinical trials in cancer. beyond early (phase i/ii) clinical trials, technology transfer for some products has occurred, with further development through phase iii now addressed by pharmaceutical companies. based on experience accumulated over several years, we abstracted the initial profiles of the more successful concepts (table ) , as well as some early project characteristics that can impede clinical development ( table ) . we note correlations between the thoroughness of the early research, attention to "the rules," outlined in the references cited here, and the development of commercial interest in the product. gene therapy and other biologic therapeutics are regulated within the fda by the center for biologics evaluation and research (cber), which was created in to address products emerging from the new biotechnology. reorganization at the fda is currently under way that will result in regulation of many biotherapeutics by the center for drug evaluation and research, which has oversight of small molecule drugs. it is anticipated, however, that blood products, vaccines, and gene therapy products will remain with cber. the biological response modifiers advisory committee is a chartered advisory group with the role of advising the fda to ensure the safety and effectiveness of biological products, including gene therapy. the recombinant dna advisory committee (rac) also oversees gene therapy research through the nih office of biotechnology activities. the rac was established in in response to public concerns regarding the safety of recombinant deoxyribonucleic acid (dna) technology. human gene transfer trials in which nih funding is involved (either directly or indirectly) are to be submitted to the rac for review. table beyond a good idea: what the successful investigator has already done with a project leading to commercial development defined candidate biologic (or molecule) made comparisons with similar products characteristics of product are consistent with pharmaceutical requirements production scale is adequate product characterization is adequate laboratory reference standard exists in vitro potency assay has been developed stability studies develop confidence product is a "drug" reproducible model systems have confirmed in vivo activity with clinical product early animal work includes some toxicology scale-up requirements practical for initial clinical trials in general, reflects experience and scientific maturity of investigator in addition to the us agencies that develop the regulations that govern drug development and licensing, the international conference on harmonization (ich) was formed in april involving the united states, the european union, and japan to address the issue of globalizing such regulations. the ich steering committee meets at least twice a year to continue their agenda of updating and harmonizing regulations for medicinal products; they emphasize safety, quality, and efficacy. expert working groups were formed within ich to address specific topics related to these basic areas. although the fda has not formally adopted all of the ich guidelines, these guidelines should be followed when they exist in preliminary form. for investigators planning to conduct investigational drug trials in foreign countries, it is imperative that they be familiar with, and adhere to, the regulations set forth by ich. in - , a series of fda and ich guidance documents on characterization and preclinical safety evaluation of biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals was developed ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . these guidances represent the fda's current thinking on preclinical safety evaluation of biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals. these are defined as products derived from characterized cells using a variety of expression systems, including bacteria, yeast, insect, plant, and mammalian cells. the active substances may include proteins and peptides, their derivatives, and products of which they are components. these materials could be derived from cell cultures or produced using recombinant dna technology, including production by transgenic plants and animals. examples include cytokines, enzymes, fusion proteins, growth factors, hormones, monoclonal antibodies, plasminogen activators, recombinant plasma factors, and receptors. the intended indications for use in humans may include in vivo diagnostic, therapeutic, or prophylactic uses. the principles outlined in these guidance documents may also be applicable to recombinant dna protein vaccines, chemically synthesized peptides, plasmaderived products, endogenous proteins extracted from human tissue, and oligonucleotide drugs. the fda defines gene therapy as "a medical intervention based on modification of the genetic material of living cells" ( ) . cells may be modified ex vivo for subsequent administration to humans or may be altered in vivo by gene therapy given directly to the patient. when the genetic manipulation is performed ex vivo on cells that are then administered to the patient, this is also considered a form of somatic cell therapy ( ) . "the genetic manipulation may be intended to have a therapeutic or prophylactic table issues requiring attention at the outset of a project inappropriate antibiotic selection markers (e.g., ampicillin for recombinant proteins) lab-scale affinity purification solubility problems low yield errors in genetic sequence extraneous genetic material poorly defined production systems inadequate purification schemes unvalidated or nonexistent in vitro potency assay(s) lack of key reagents (e.g., antibodies to desired product) poor biochemical characterization inappropriate raw materials raw material qualification problems inappropriate cell banks difficult or unidentified toxicology systems failed vendor qualification intellectual property concerns effect or may provide a way of marking cells for later identification. recombinant dna materials used to transfer genetic material for such therapy are considered components of gene therapy and as such are subject to regulatory oversight". specific information related to gene therapy issues is contained in the "fda guidance for industry: guidance for human somatic cell therapy and gene therapy" ( ) . this guidance document updates and replaces the fda "points to consider" on this subject ( a). new information was intended to provide manufacturers with current information regarding regulatory concerns for production, quality control testing, and administration of recombinant vectors for gene therapy and of preclinical testing of both cellular therapies and vectors. the fda defines somatic cell therapy as "the administration to humans of autologous, allogeneic, or xenogeneic living non-germline cells, other than transfusable blood products, for therapeutic, diagnostic, or preventive purposes." the evaluation of the safety of gene therapy products is perhaps one of the more difficult tasks that faces toxicologists in the drug development arena today. because many of the agents, like other biologicals, are species specific and because these agents integrate into the host genome, the choice of animal models and study designs is fraught with uncertainty, and each product frequently breaks new regulatory ground. until recently, many investigators working in this field were probably lulled into a false sense of security because of the close scrutiny that preclinical studies and clinical protocols received from the nih rac and the fda. with the death of jesse gelsinger, a patient enrolled in a gene therapy clinical trial to correct a metabolic disease, in and the recent reports of a leukemialike disease produced in children who received gene therapy treatments to correct severe combined immunodeficiency disease (scid) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) , the safety of these agents is called into question more than ever. as a result, the toxicologist is under even more pressure to design more rigorous safety evaluation programs. there have been a number of reviews in this area in recent years by toxicologists from the fda ( ) , industry ( , ) , and international workshops ( ) that cover many of the fundamentals regarding safety evaluation of gene therapy products. these resources, in conjunction with this chapter and the various guidance documents from the fda and the ich ( , , ) , can be used by toxicologists to develop sound safety programs. these issues are discussed in greater detail in the latter half of this chapter. the basic foundation of regulations for drug development can be found in the code of federal regulations, title food and drugs ( cfr; ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . in addition to title , fda maintains an extensive number of web sites containing regulatory information that should be consulted during the development of a novel biotherapeutic. the collection of available regulatory information includes points to consider, guidance documents, drafts, and reports from public forums and symposia as well as information on the meetings of the biological response modifiers advisory committee. ich also sponsors a web site for obtaining the most recent guidelines. a free subscription to an e-mail advisory update service is also available ( table ) . in addition to the regulatory guidelines provided by the fda, the nih has published, and frequently updates, the nih guidelines for research involving recombinant dna molecules, which can also be found electronically ( table ) . although published documents disseminated by the fda and nih are essential starting points for planning a cgmp development strategy, it is important to realize that, in this rapidly evolving field, some requirements may be reflected in public comments or a growing consensus among industry long before they are formally adopted. furthermore, it is not unusual during the development of a new biologic to have also developed alternatives to conventional practices that are based on sound scientific data and are then implemented after discussions with the fda. product-specific factors can influence the regulatory requirements for an investigational agent. these issues should be explored in detail with the fda in a pre-ind meeting at which the ind sponsor presents relevant preclinical data and manufacturing and animal safety testing to support the proposed approach to clinical development. the types of further studies pertinent to the particular agent can then be proposed, and input from the agency help shape the final development plan. interactions should take place with regulatory authorities at intervals that will facilitate the development of a product (table ) . a key issue frequently not understood is that regulatory demands become more stringent as a product moves from phase i (safety), through phase ii (activity), to phase iii (comparative efficacy) trials and licensure ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . this philosophy reflects the conscious effort not to stifle innovation in early phase clinical testing, but to ensure that, by the time registrationoriented late-stage trials are contemplated, issues related to production variability, assay, and assurance of safety are mature and well-substantiated because the results of such trials could be the basis for sale of the agent to the public. another factor that affects the level of regulatory compliance is the nature of the study population. products manufactured for phase i trials in healthy normal volunteers typically must meet much stricter requirements than those studied in patients with dire, life-threatening conditions (e.g., cancer or end-stage acquired immunodeficiency syndrome). as improved technology becomes available, requirements also tend to increase ( - ). the level of regulatory compliance to be followed during different stages of development is dependent on the type of biologic product and the technology available for supporting its development. assays, methods, and technologies for monoclonal antibody development ( ) , for instance, are better defined than the techniques available for some of the new virus vectors that are emerging. furthermore, new technologies to support product development are also constantly evolving. the number of specific viral contaminant tests required of cgmp human cell lines, for example, has increased steadily as new pathogens are identified and assays become available. as new scientific knowledge accumulates, novel regulatory challenges can appear. the issue of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, for example, has resulted in stringent requirements in raw material qualifications and traceability ( ) . to minimize the impact of regulatory changes, careful record keeping of all processes and materials involved in deriving the product is highly recommended. finally, because of the availability of improved techniques for characterizing certain biologicals, the fda is reorganizing its regulatory approach in ways that are analogous to the regulation of small molecule drugs. technical demands will rise as regulatory requirements become more standardized. beyond identification and confirmation of an interesting novel concept, a major challenge in the preclinical development of biologicals is the optimal allocation of research and development resources. key to this is proper assessment of a candidate concept's readiness for clinical development. all applicants for the national cancer institute's biologicals production resources now receive a list of "generic questions" corresponding to the appropriate product type. at the beginning of a project, it is not always reasonable to expect all issues to be resolved, but the assumption is that, for a successful candidate, these issues should be in hand by the time the project is completing phase i clinical testing. table lists the generic questions for cgmp production of recombinant virus vectors. because it is not possible to provide a complete guide to cgmp development in a few pages, we highlight some concerns common to many projects arising from academic laboratories. these are based on dtp's experience (both successes and failures) with projects making the transition from the preclinical research phase to pilot clinical studies. our discussion is organized primarily around the concepts of identity, purity, potency, and safety that underlie development, manufacture, and release. from the viewpoint of regulatory compliance, it is essential to establish the identity of the product and the components used to generate it during manufacturing ( , ) . we have noted that, frequently in proposed gene therapy or recombinant dna-derived products submitted to us, dna sequencing shows some deviation from the sequence published and/or submitted by the investigator, sometimes with major consequences for the project. when the dna product, such as plasmid vaccines, will be administered to the patient, full plasmid sequencing has occasionally revealed unacceptable genetic sequences outside the open reading frame, as passengers from previous experiments, spurious promoters, frame shifts resulting in translation of nonsense sequences beyond the intended termination, and so on. dna sequencing and repair are available at relatively low cost compared to the cost of repeating critical preclinical experiments. the fda now requires complete sequencing of vectors of sizes up to kilobases (kb) ( ) . for viral vectors, genetic stability is a major concern, particularly with respect to the possible issues of recombination with generation of replication-competent viruses. specific guidelines are provided for adenovirus, retrovirus, and lentivirus vectors ( , , ) . for other virus vectors, specific assays (e.g., neurovirulence testing of recombinant poliovirus and herpes virus vectors) are required to ensure that an attenuated phenotype is preserved after scale-up. if possible, the investigator should attempt to assess the genetic stability of the vector during preclinical studies, after administration in vivo or propagation in vitro. in addition to the gene therapy product itself, the cells used to produce the product must be similarly identified and qualified for cgmp manufacturing. excellent guidance documents are available for the production of master cell banks, working cell banks, and master virus banks ( , , ) . at minimum, the complete cell history should be known and documented, and the cells should be tested to verify their origin. peptide sequencing or mapping employing liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry is typically used to provide critical information for synthetic peptides and recombinant proteins. for recombinant vectors containing transgenes, the expression of the desired gene product should be verified, for example, by immunoassay using a specific antibody against the product. a. non-gmp for additional preclinical development b. cgmp (clinical grade) . provide details of molecular construct(s), including starting materials (e.g., plasmid, relevant vector maps, detailed vector construction scheme, and so on) . does the construct contain an antibiotic resistance gene or other selectable marker? are alternative methods of selection available? why was the proposed selection chosen? . is the vector replication competent or replication defective? (for replication-selective vectors, what is the molecular basis of the selectivity and the conditions under which the vector would replicate?) . does the vector have an altered cell tropism? define. what is the effect of altered tropism on anticipated host toxicity? . has this construct been sequenced? provide a sequence in an electronic format. . are data available evaluating the genetic stability of the recombinant vector? have mutation rates been established and/or rates of reversion to either wild-type or alternate viral genomes? . are data available evaluating the potential for genetic recombination with other organisms in the patient or in the environment? . is the organism currently grown in a qualified cgmp cell line? if not, is there a qualified cell line available for propagation of this vector? was the cell line genetically modified to support this vector? provide details of its construction and any information regarding the stability of the genetic alteration in the cell line. . is there a cgmp-qualified virus seed bank? . provide details of the proposed production method. . has this material ever been produced for laboratory or clinical studies using this production system? . has this material been produced in a related or other production system? if so, please provide the details. . please provide details of existing purification methods. . what is the average yield of the production system before and after purification? what is the largest amount of material that you have produced in your laboratory in a single production batch? please provide average ratios obtained by this production method for virus particle/infectious unit and infectious units/cell. how does this scale to anticipated quantities for clinical trial? . how much material is available as a reference standard? . is material available as bulk biological substance for preliminary pharmacology and toxicology studies? . are there reproducible assays for the product? please provide the following assays, if available: a. identity b. purity c. potency . what are to be the release criteria for the product? how does one know that a lot of product is qualified for use? . in what form (lyophilized, formulated product, and so on) and fill size is the desired final product? what is the desired final product formulation? . are there issues of formulation that must be resolved? . what is known about the product stability with respect to physical integrity and activity? . do you have any information regarding the estimated costs of this production project? . have you identified any possible sources of production with any commercial firms? please provide details. . are there any safety issues connected with the production, purification, and/or handling of the product? . what is the status of the product(s) regarding intellectual property issues? . sometimes, proposed projects are an improvement or modification of an existing approach. in these cases, this information may significantly affect the analysis of feasibility, cost, and other production issues. please provide a brief summary of the nature of any such antecedents or other approaches that appear closely related to the proposed project. . have there been any meetings scheduled with regulatory agencies, such as a pre-ind meeting with the fda or a presentation to the nih rac? if so, please indicate the type of meeting, the regulatory agency, and the date or proposed date. . if you have had a pre-ind or rac meeting, were any issues concerning manufacturing, safety, or stability raised that will have an impact on producing your product? . who will sponsor the ind for the proposed study? . has a source of funding been identified for performing the clinical trial with this product? purification strategies depend on the nature of the biologic agent and expected impurities. these approaches are guided by the early development of reliable analytical techniques appropriate to the product and to the manufacturing approach. for example, purification of recombinant proteins and monoclonal antibodies for cgmp manufacture typically involve large-scale chromatography based on multiple isolation principles (e.g., charge, hydrophobicity, size, and so on). specific contaminants, such as dna, endotoxin, viruses from mammalian cell production systems, contaminants introduced in the manufacturing process, and the like must be quantified and may require additional specific purification measures to remove or inactivate them. problems in refolding or solubility, tendencies to aggregate, and product stability at intermediate holding points can be significant issues in process development for scale-up. these represent key challenges in scale-up from investigator laboratory-generated lots to a potentially suitable scale to allow clinical testing. additional concerns include subtle degradations of proteins that can lead to undesirable immunogenicity. a major concern is the impact of each additional step on the downstream product, which should be reassessed using in vitro potency assays as well as physicochemical characterization. at major development milestones, selected in vivo models should be reexamined using purified product. production cells must be cgmp qualified and tested for adventitious agents and other contaminants, before initiation of production as well as at end of production. a number of cgmp-qualified cell lines and starting vectors are available commercially at relatively low cost and should be considered for use as raw materials to initiate cgmp seed banks in preference to shared materials of uncertain provenance despite the good intentions of the original provider. in the handling of cell lines, care should also be taken to avoid contamination (e.g., from media components, trypsin, or activities taking place in nearby laboratory space). postproduction cells can be tested for specific contaminants in the presence of a viral product (e.g., using polymerase chain reaction [pcr]). in the presence of virus product, however, it is unlikely that the full set of cgmp tests (e.g., cocultivation) for adventitious agents can be performed on postproduction cells. before initiating cgmp production, therefore, investigators should consider the parallel propagation of a mock-infected control to provide a surrogate postproduction test article. in addition to the usual tests for sterility and purity of purified investigational product ( , , ) , it is important to have an assay for residual host cell dna. assays for host cell proteins are not always required for all phase i products, but are required for phase ii and beyond. this consideration is another reason to start with cgmp-qualified cell lines from a commercial source because host cell dna and protein assays may already be available. the general requirement for adventitious agent testing is given in guidance documents (e.g., ref. ). it is important to note that some specific assays are not yet described in published fda documents, but can enter widespread cgmp practice by sponsor-based industry consensus, liability considerations, or other factors. endotoxin assays are available as kits, which are useful to guide laboratory process development. a qualified good laboratory practice (glp) laboratory, however, should perform endotoxin assays for clinical product release. specific assays may also be required to quantify process residuals from production and purification components (cscl, antibiotics, and so on). in production facilities, particularly those where different types of gene therapy products may be produced, assays are necessary to support decontamination and cleaning, product changeover, environmental monitoring, and raw material qualification ( , ) . in general, all equipment that has contact with the investigational product should be verified free of contaminants before use. special consideration must also be given to assays to qualify virus seeds and end product for the presence of defective particles, replication-competent viruses, or defective genomes. in addition to monitoring for replication-competent and/or pathogenic vectors during manufacture, suitable assays may also be required to monitor patients receiving the therapeutic agent. in this case, levels of sensitivity for detection must be suitable for different types of patient specimens (serum, urine, sputum, and so on). evolving requirements for long-term follow-up of gene therapy patients ( ) should be consulted to ensure that proper assay support is maintained beyond the duration of the planned clinical trial. the fda regulations governing the performance of assays that support the production of biologics for human use can be found in cfr , subpart i, "laboratory controls" ( ) . glp regulations only per-tain to the performance of preclinical animal and in vitro studies ( ). the measured activity of a biological candidate depends on the hypothesized molecular mechanism of therapeutic action ( cfr . ; , ) . although it is most reassuring to see in vivo demonstration of efficacy in appropriate animal models, the efficient development of a cgmp process will strongly benefit from the availability of rapid, reliable, and reproducible in vitro assays relating to the mechanism of action in addition to assays for purity and identity. assays based on the basic therapeutic mechanism, therefore, are critical goals of early research and development. formulation development should begin as early as possible as suitable assays become available and experience with real-time stability accumulates. it is preferable to choose formulations from candidates likely to be acceptable to the fda, such as those whose components are already used for licensed products. as production reaches larger scales, handling and storage considerations become increasingly important. stability studies incorporate assays for identity, purity (including aggregation), and potency. although they can provide some useful information, accelerated stability studies are typically not reliable for predicting real-time stability of biologics. therefore, there is a need for real-time stability studies to be initiated as soon as possible. suitability of formulated product should also be assessed in the identical administration and handling conditions expected in the clinic. this may include transient exposure to conditions expected during transit to the study site and storage in an environment that closely mimics study site conditions. these may result in markedly different product behavior at the study site from that expected from the behavior of vouchered specimens at a central repository site. the results of ongoing stability studies are useful to support process development; to evaluate product at intermediate hold points in scaleup production and at product release; and to support formulation development, product storage, shipment, and handling during toxicology studies and clinical applications. as development proceeds, master specifications for release of intermediate and final product should be established and refined. the ind must indicate a schedule for real-time stability studies to be performed throughout the duration of the clinical trial. some key early milestones common to all product areas include the attainment of an adequate scale of high-quality, single-batch production, the availability of adequate amounts of high-quality laboratory reference standard, and the development of reliable assays for identity, purity, and potency of the product. these milestones are necessary in addition to the exploration of animal models showing safety and promising evidence of efficacy. at early stages in a project, investigators should expect substantial variability in product quality, assays, and animal models. ideally, therefore, a single high-quality batch should be used to establish laboratory standards, support multiple assay qualification runs, and perform replicate animal model experiments. multiple production runs could then be performed to explore process development issues, including scale-up. in this way, fundamental issues could be explored at the research stage to prepare for development required for cgmp manufacture. following this reasoning, our facility often manufactures high-quality glp lots to provide a uniform supply of material for additional preclinical research and development for selected biologics of interest before making the decision to undertake cgmp production. the early establishment of certain aspects of glp ( cfr ) is crucial to the advancement of a drug development project. by following simple rules of laboratory cleanliness, documentation, and segregation of materials and activities at the start of development, time can be saved by avoiding the necessity to duplicate results that were not properly performed or documented from the outset. at the discovery phase, development of reliable assays to explore basic therapeutic mechanisms of action are just as important as the performance of animal models in laying the groundwork for future cgmp product development. laboratory facilities and staff should be adequate to perform necessary studies. assay protocols should be specific and reproducible. research documentation should be kept at a glp level with complete and secure laboratory notebooks. records of all reagents (i.e., manufacturer, catalog number, lot number, certificates of analysis [coas] , and expiration dates) should be routinely archived. even if cgmp production or testing is not contemplated in the development laboratory, fluctuations in product activity are not unusual during later scale-up, and these materials and information may be useful in resolving such issues. key assays for product or reagent identity should be repeated at appropriate intervals. access to critical raw materials and reagents, reference standards, and cell banks should be limited. staff should avoid comingling of research-grade, glp, and gmp activities or reagents by labeling reagent containers and sequestering them as much as possible. similarly, signs should be posted on dedicated equipment, and access should be limited as appropriate. if common equipment must be used, standard operating procedures should be developed to define the use and control of such equipment, to clean equipment before and after use to avoid cross-contamination, and to document the use, cleaning, and calibration of the equipment. critical raw materials (e.g., those used in seed development or pilot product manufacture) must be traceable to their source and obtained from reliable vendors. it is beneficial when possible to use vendors subjected to commercial audits. animal-derived reagents should be avoided; reagents such as glycerol, detergents, proteins, amino acids, and the like should preferably come from vegetable sources. if this is not possible, animal-derived reagents should come from acceptable herds in countries without endemic or questionable transmissible spongiform encephalopathy ( ) . it is important to ensure that raw materials are stored under appropriate conditions and not used beyond their expiration date. inventories and logbooks should be used to track use of important reagents. critical materials requiring special storage conditions should be stored at more than one location to prevent loss in the event of equipment failure. cgmp-qualified cell lines should be purchased from vendors if possible, but if cgmp-qualified cell lines do not exist, cell lines should be obtained directly from a reliable repository source such as the american type culture collection (atcc) and documentation should be archived. incoming cell lines must be tested for sterility and mycoplasma contamination. thorough records should be kept on cell passages, observations, frozen storage, and the coas from media and other components used to grow, freeze, and otherwise manipulate the cells. critical cell lines should be segregated to prevent cross-contamination. stock cells should not be cultured in incubators containing virus-infected cell lines. vectors should be purchased from a reliable vendor, and documentation should be kept on the propagation, storage, and use, including coas, lot numbers, and so on of the reagents used to propagate the vector. if the vector is acquired from another laboratory (i.e., is unavailable for purchase from a vendor), a detailed history should be obtained of the generation of the vector, and detailed records should be kept from that time. all genetic manipulations of the vectors should be well documented and verified by sequencing. a lab-generated reference standard is a critical raw material for a biologic. it is ideal to have a large enough stock of this reference standard to use for the duration of the development work. it is often not possible, however, to produce sufficient quantities or material of sufficient stability at the early development stages. for this reason, it may be necessary to produce fresh batches and to test them thoroughly against independent standards or the current standard before that standard is depleted or loses potency. the same consideration should be given to other critical reagents, such as cell lines and compounds obtained from outside sources. reference standards and key reagents should be made or obtained in adequate amounts, characterized as well as possible, and stored under conditions that will maintain stability for at least the duration of the development process. as improved manufacturing and assay processes are developed, improved reference standards will be required, but quantities of the original standards should also be preserved to provide material for later comparisons as required ( ) . in some cases, such as for retrovirus and adenovirus vector development, the fda has made available reference material against which all sponsors can standardize their own reference reagents. to avoid future questions about data reliability, investigators should consider outsourcing of difficult but common technologies, such as transmission electron microscopy, tandem liquid chromatography mass spectroscopy, peptide mapping, or dna sequencing, if these are not adequate in their facility. product-specific assays, such as potency studies and pilot animal efficacy and toxicity studies, are likely to be performed best at the researcher's own facility, early in development. preclinical assay protocol development and record keeping must ensure that data are useful for later ind submission. at some point in cgmp process development, consideration should be given to technology transfer of critical assays to a glp-compliant laboratory prepared to support the repetitive studies required during cgmp process development, manufacture, release, and postrelease stability studies for the duration of the clinical trial. toxicology material should ideally be manufactured using the same process used to manufacture the cgmp clinical material. therefore, a toxicology lot is produced late in process development. if there are concerns over batch-to-batch variability, production of a single lot for both toxicology and the initial phase i trial is recommended. typically, a toxicology lot can be available several months before the clinical lot is ready for release. for studies involving autologous cells, the handling of cells must be under gmp conditions to preserve sterility and prevent cross-contamination with other cells. for allogeneic cells, it is important to use a cgmp-tested cell line with adequate traceability, including its origin, passage history, and exposure to media products that may have been derived from animal sources. starting material must be routinely checked for sequence accuracy; therefore, the complete plasmid should be sequenced. it is also preferable to examine genetic stability that can lead to the introduction of coding errors and changes in protein expression. the use of penicillin-like antibiotics (b-lactams) for selection is unacceptable because of the possibility of allergic reactions in patients administered products produced using this selection system. other antibiotics, such as kanamycin, are substituted, or alternative methods of selection are employed. measures of dna quality include supercoiled content, as well as assays for endotoxin, genomic dna, and other contaminants from the production system. more in-depth guidance is available through guidance documents ( ). it is generally recommended by the fda that a vector smaller than kb must be completely sequenced ( ) . as technology improves, this criterion may well be expanded to include larger vector genomes. those vectors with genomes larger than kb (e.g., herpes viruses, poxviruses) must have the transgene sequenced along with ' and ' flanking regions and any significant modifications to the vector backbone or sites vulnerable to alteration during molecular manipulation. when qualified vaccine strains exist for the vector of interest (e.g., vaccinia, poliovirus) it is preferable for cgmp manufacture to derive investigational constructs using the vaccine strain if available from the nih, atcc, or commercial sources. for adenovirus vectors, the recent availability of an adenovirus reference standard allows for the normalization of dosing based on virus particle concentration and infectious unit (iu) titer. current recommendations by the fda are for a ratio of viral particle to infectious unit of less than or equal to : ( ) . for replication-defective adenoviruses, generation of replication-competent adenoviruses (rca) must be measured in lots produced for clinical use. the current target requirement is fewer than rca per ´ virus particles as measured by a cell culture/cytopathic effect method ( ) . for viruses that are replication selective, different testing strategies (e.g., quantitative pcr) may be called for and should be discussed with the fda. similarly, the agency may have special considerations for viruses with altered tropism to ensure appropriate containment and prevent the generation of a replicationcompetent adenovirus with an expanded cell tropism. it should be noted that rca assays must be optimized regarding the presence of defective particles and other factors that may affect the sensitivity of the assay. retroviruses are of special concern because of the possibility of insertional carcinogenesis. this potential safety problem is amplified if replication-competent retroviruses (rcrs) are generated ( , ) . the general guideline is to test at least % of the total virus vector supernatant produced by amplifying any rcr on a permissive cell line. in addition, % of the producer cells or (whichever is less) must also be tested at the end of production by the method of coculturing on permissive cells ( ) . as with adenovirus vectors, retrovirus vectors with tropism modifications are of special concern and may require more stringent containment and patient follow-up ( ) . promoter modifications may also affect the safety profile of these virus vectors. lentiviruses generally have the same safety concerns as retroviruses, particularly because they can replicate in a broader variety of cells (dormant as well as actively dividing cells). although there is a retrovirus standard available through atcc to investigators who are developing retrovirus vectors, there is no lentivirus standard currently offered. a lentivirus standard is not planned for the future primarily because of the great variability in lentivirus backbones currently under development for clinical investigations (e.g., equine, murine, human). herpes viruses under development for clinical use either must be replication defective or, if replication competent, must be shown to be nonneurovirulent. neurovirulence is an issue for poliovirus as well. adeno-associated virus (aav) vectors are of concern because, although these vectors are designed to be maintained episomally, there can be reversion to wild type, resulting in integration into the host chromosome, or the vector could be rescued in a patient with a concurrent adenovirus infection ( ) . several interesting concepts seek to employ modified bacteria as the therapeutic agent. as with recombinant viruses, general issues of safety as well as specific issues of genetic stability and exchange should be considered. stabilization of the new genetic material may be required by incorporation into the bacterial genome rather than through a plasmid that can be lost or exchanged. strategies to incorporate new genetic material into bacterial dna will depend on confirming the sequence accuracy of the target bacterial sequences as well as the novel genetic material. introduction of an antibiotic resis-tance gene through a manufacturing step raises special concerns and can be avoided using alternative selection approaches. whether evaluating small molecules or biologically derived materials such as gene therapy products, the basic intent of nonclinical toxicity studies is to define the pharmacological and toxicological effects predictive of the human response, not only prior to initiation of phase i clinical trials in humans, but also throughout the entire drug development process leading ultimately to biologics license application (bla). the goals of these studies include, first, to define an initial safe starting dose and dose escalation schemes for first-in-human clinical trials; second, to identify potential target organs for toxicity, biomarkers or other parameters that can be monitored in patients receiving these therapies, and to determine if this toxicity is reversible; and finally, to determine which patient populations may be at greater risk for developing toxicity to a given cellular or gene therapeutic product ( ) . these nonclinical studies should be designed with the following points in mind: whether the product is transduced cells, the population of cells to be administered, or the class of vector used; the most appropriate animal species and physiological state of that model most relevant for the clinical indication and product class; and the intended doses, route of administration, and treatment regimens that will be used in the clinic. many of the questions that need to be taken into consideration and addressed during the design phase for safety studies include what is already known about the most likely toxicities related to the agent's biodistribution, local as well as systemic toxicity, immune responses (immunogenicity and immunotoxicity), the potential for insertional mutagenesis, and biological activities of the transgene product. then specific questions that arise with the new product or use are addressed. for example, are the safety issues primarily related to the vector, the transgene product, the method of administration, the formulation/excipient, or some combination of the above? how might existing published or unpublished nonclinical or clinical data address the questions mentioned above? safety issues that should be addressed in these studies include evaluation of the toxicity of the vector alone (irrespective of the transgene), including its potential toxicity and/or tumorigenicity (in some cases, this is apparent from previous evaluations with the same vector); toxicity of transgene expression in vivo that may not be evident from in vitro studies; occurrence and consequences of ectopic transgene expression in nontargeted tissues; occurrence and consequences of immune responses to transgene or vector proteins such as autoimmunity; and finally the possibility of germline transduction ( ) . because conventional pharmacology and toxicity testing as typically used for the evaluation of small molecules may not always be appropriate to determine the safety and biologic activity of cellular and gene therapy products, issues such as species specificity of the transduced gene, permissiveness for infection by viral vectors, and comparative animal to human physiology should be considered in the design of these studies. available animal models mimicking the disease indication may be useful in obtaining both sufficient safety and efficacy data prior to entry of these agents into clinical trials. early pre-ind discussions with the fda during development of a toxicology plan may prevent delays and added expenses because of inadequate data or the use of inappropriate species. some of the questions that should be answered by preclinical pharmacology/toxicology studies are the following ( ) : what is the relationship of the dose to the biologic activity? what is the relationship of the dose to the toxicity? does the route and/or schedule affect activity and/or toxicity? what risks can be identified for the clinical trial? for ex vivo gene transfer, the product is considered to be the transduced cells. the general safety test ( cfr . ) must be performed on the final product. when appropriate, modified procedures may be developed according to cfr . . the fda is considering proposed rule making to amend the general safety test rules and scope of applicability, especially for cell therapy products ( ) . finally, it is expected that these nonclinical toxicity studies will be conducted in compliance with glp regulations. however, there will be situations in which highly specialized assays will be required because of the nature of biotechnology-derived products, and it will not be possible to conduct these assays in full compliance with glps (e.g., in university or other discovery laboratories). it will be important that these areas be identified for any impact that they may have on the interpretation of toxicity data. in most cases, carefully performed studies such as this can be used to support inds and blas ( ). when selecting the animal model that will be used in the various preclinical biodistribution, pharmacology, and toxicology studies, consideration should be given to the scientific rationale for the animal species used. for example, would there be an advantage to performing the studies in rodents when larger numbers of animals might be more practical, or is there a necessity for a large animal model, such as a canine or nonhuman primate? if nonhuman primate studies are proposed, is it clear that another large animal or rodent model would not provide the same information? would there be any utility in a genetically deficient model, and would this deficient model be more relevant to the proposed study either because of the potential for adverse immunologic consequences or because of the biological effects in the deficient condition? animal models of disease may not be available for every cellular or gene therapy system proposed for development. this makes species selection an even more difficult process. preclinical pharmacological and safety testing of these agents should employ the most appropriate, pharmacologically relevant animal model available. a relevant animal species might be one in which the biological response to the therapy mimics the human response. this entails some knowledge of the pathophysiology of the disease in humans and of how faithfully it is reproduced in the animal model. the species of animal chosen for preclinical toxicity evaluations of viral preparations should be selected for its sensitivity to infection and production of pathologic sequelae induced by the wild-type virus related to the chosen vector, as well as its utility as a model of biologic activity of the vector construct. there should be a reasonable expectation of a similar distribution of receptors or permissivity in the animal model as there is in humans. thus, the species utilized may vary with the vector administered, the transgene expressed, the route of administration, the patient population treated, and the disease studied. rodent models rather than nonhuman primates may be useful if they are susceptible to pathology induced by the virus class (e.g., cotton rats are semipermissive hosts for adenovirus infections) ( ) ; the use of the scid mouse ( ) or the cotton rat ( ) may be suitable for the evaluation of herpes simplex virus (hsv) rather than the aotus monkey. some investigators have also suggested the use of miniature swine for evaluation of adenoviral vectors ( , ) . when evaluating the activity of a vector in an animal model for the clinical indication, safety data can be gathered from the same model to assess the contribution of disease-related changes in physiology or underlying pathology to the response to the vector. some specialized circumstances illustrating these points follow. the inbred cotton rat (sigmodon hispidus) has been used extensively as an animal model for research since the s, when it was first used in poliomyelitis research. since that time, it has been shown to be a semipermissive host for adenoviral infection ( , ) . in those studies, it was shown that the pulmonary lesions and replication pattern of the virus seen in the cotton rat paralleled those seen in humans. virus persisted in the nasal mucosa and lung for up to and days, respectively, after inoculation. this was even in the presence of high-titer neutralizing antibody that was detected by day . although cotton rats have readily adapted to the laboratory environment, they have retained a number of the characteristics of their wild counterparts. these animals have a tendency to bite, panic when handled, jump out of their cages, and have a large fight-or-flight zone. care and handling of these animals have been described by other investigators ( , ) . the cotton rat has been used for the evaluation of numerous adenovirus vectors by many routes of administration, and some of these studies are described here. when early e -deleted adenoviral vectors were evaluated in the cotton rat, it was discovered that the e region was not required for replication, but that this region plays a critical role in the pathogenesis of the disease in that these mutants induced a markedly greater lymphocyte and macrophage/monocyte inflammatory response in the lungs ( ) . e replacement recombinants were significantly less pathogenic than e -deleted viruses after intranasal administration ( ) . this study also demonstrated that adenovirus replicated in balb/c and cba mice and produced results that were similar to those seen in cotton rats. the intracranial administration of a replication-defective adenovirus expressing the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (hsvtk) gene at a dose of . ´ pfu into both adenoviral immune and adenoviral naïve cotton rats resulted in only mild gliosis and trace meningitis along the injection tract and approximated a "no toxic effect" dose ( ) . when this same vector was administered to either wistar rats or rhesus monkeys, direct neuronal injury or a dose-related inflammatory response was seen at the injection site and in the surrounding parenchyma. there was no apparent injury to tissues not of the central nervous system in any of the three models, and all cerebral spinal fluid, blood, urine, and stool samples failed to culture for adenovirus. in a study with a similar hsvtk adenovirus inoculated into cotton rats via intracardiac injection at doses up to ´ viral particles per animal with and without ganciclovir (gcv), the only significant microscopic lesions observed were epicardial inflammation and splenic hemosiderosis ( ) . vector sequences persisted throughout the -day assay period in the heart, lung, and lymphoid organs. infectious virions were detected for hours, but these virions were only detected at the site of injection of two animals in the highest dose group. when a similar vector was administered as either one or two subcutaneous injection cycles with . ´ viral particles/kg each or as a single course with . ´ viral particles/kg, the only significant treatment-related histopathological finding was dermatitis with mild acanthosis at the site of vector injection ( ) . in addition to these local effects, mild hyperamylasemia, lymphocytosis, and granulocytosis were seen clinically, but no other clinical signs of toxicity or death were observed. vector sequences were detected in the skin at the injection site and to a lesser extent in the liver, spleen, and lungs, and small amounts of vector dna were detected in the ovaries. these were cleared rapidly, and the absence of viral sequences in the excreta and swabs of the majority of animals suggested that there was no significant replication of this adenovirus vector in this host and little shedding. the owl monkey (aotus trivirgatus or nancymae) has been an excellent model for oncogenic and nononcogenic viruses such as hsv type (hsv- ) and others ( ) , and the herpes virus that infects these animals is a strain of hsv- ( ). these animals have been routinely used to test vaccines against hsv- and found to mimic the course of the disease in humans ( , ). as a result, it was only natural that these animals be used to evaluate the safety of gene therapy vectors produced from hsv- . however, these animals tend to be more fragile to use than other species and as a result must be handled with greater care. g , an attenuated, replication-competent hsv- recombinant, was tested for safety after intracerebral inoculation in the aotus ( ). these animals received doses of either or pfu of g or pfu of the wild-type hsv- strain f. wild-type hsv- caused rapid mortality and symptoms consistent with hsv encephalitis, including fever, hemiparesis, meningitis, and hemorrhage in the basal ganglia. for up to year after g inoculation, seven of the treated animals were alive and exhibited no evidence of clinical complications, indicating that this form of hsv was considerably attenuated in comparison to wild-type virus. two animals were reinoculated with pfu of g at the same stereotactic coordinates year after the initial dose. these animals were alive and healthy years after the second inoculation. as a further, more comprehensive clinical evaluation, animals were subjected to cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (mri) studies both before and after g inoculation. these studies failed to reveal radiographic evidence of the typical hsv-related sequelae in the brain seen in the animals treated with the wild-type virus. microscopic examination of multiple tissues found no evidence of hsv-induced histopathology or dissemination in spite of the fact that measurable increases in serum anti-hsv titers were detected. viral shedding and biodistribution in the aotus were also evaluated using pcr analyses and viral cultures of tear, saliva, or vaginal secretion samples ( ) . neither infectious virus nor viral dna was detected at any time-point up to month postinoculation. analyses of tissues obtained at necropsy at month or years after inoculation showed the distribution of g dna was restricted to the brain, although infectious virus was not isolated in these samples. the safety of this construct was also evaluated in the aotus after intraprostatic injections ( ) . safety was assessed on the basis of clinical observations, viral biodistribution, virus shedding, and histopathology. none of the injected monkeys displayed evidence of clinical disease, shedding of infectious virus, or spread of the virus into other organs. no significant microscopic abnormalities were observed in the organs evaluated. the results of these studies demonstrated that g can be safely inoculated into either the brain or the prostate, and that the aotus monkey could be successfully used in preclinical toxicological evaluations. in addition to the studies performed with this vector in aotus monkeys, balb/c mice were also used to evaluate the safety of g . mice were inoculated in the same manner as the aotus either intracerebrally or intraventricularly with pfu of g and survived for over weeks with no apparent symptoms of disease. in contrast, over % of animals inoculated intracerebrally with . pfu of hsv- wild-type strain kos and % of animals inoculated intraventricularly with pfu of wild-type strain f died within days. when mice were inoculated intrahepatically with g ( ´ pfu), all animals survived for over weeks, whereas no animals survived for even week after inoculation with pfu of wild-type kos ( ) . mice were also injected in the prostate with either g or wild-type hsv- strain f and observed for months ( ) . none of the g -injected animals exhibited any clinical signs of disease or died. however, % of mice injected with strain f displayed sluggishness and hunched behavior and were dead by day . on microscopic examination, the prostates injected with g were normal, whereas those injected with strain f showed epithelial flattening, sloughing, and stromal edema. these studies and those described by whitley with the scid mouse ( ) point to the fact that rodents can be used in place of the owl monkey and produce adequate safety data for the evaluation of hsv- vectors for gene therapy. finally, safety data can also be obtained in well-designed efficacy studies. in many cases, mouse studies can provide similar information as studies conducted in nonhuman primates, so smaller species should not be automatically rejected. the nonhuman primate should not be relied on for use as a model simply because of the comfort of going into studies in humans only after evaluation of the toxicity of the agent in nonhuman primates. experience has repeatedly shown for numerous classes of agents, both small molecules as well as biologicals, that no one species may be predictive of all human toxicities, and that not all human toxicities may be seen in other animal species ( ) . finally, certain human populations may not be predictive of all other human populations. this last fact makes predicting each and every toxicity almost impossible. the doses of vectors used in nonclinical studies should be selected based on preliminary efficacy/ activity data from both in vitro and in vivo studies. a no-effect dose level, an overtly toxic dose, and several intermediate doses should be evaluated, along with appropriate controls, such as naïve or vehicle-treated animals. for new formulations, it is very important to include this last group to distinguish formulation-related effects from those of the agent of interest. when products are difficult to produce in large quantities and as a result are in limited supply or for products with an inherently low toxicity, a maximum tolerated dose may not be achievable; as a result, a maximum feasible dose may be administered as the highest level tested in the preclinical studies and should be so designated in appropriate reports. although this may not be intellectually or scientifically satisfying, the data derived from such a study should at least establish the safety of the clinical starting dose. preclinical safety/ toxicity studies should include at least one dose that is equivalent to and at least one dose escalation level exceeding those proposed for the clinical trial. the multiples of the human dose required to determine adequate safety margins may vary with each class of vector employed, and the relevance of the animal model to humans and the rationale for dose selection should be provided. scaling of doses based on either body weight or total body surface area as appropriate facilitates comparisons across the animal species used and humans. although most small molecule cancer therapeutics are scaled based on body surface area ( ), body surface area may not be appropriate for gene therapeutics. information generated in the preclinical studies can be used to determine the margin of safety of the vector for use in the clinical trial, as well as gage an acceptable dose escalation scheme depending on the steepness of the toxicity curve. in a cross comparison of doses for an adenoviral vector for cystic fibrosis ( ), very similar toxicities were seen in cotton rats, mice, hamsters, rhesus monkeys, and baboons when the agent was directly instilled into the lungs of the animals. when the doses were scaled for body surface area, the no observable adverse effect levels for the various species were remarkably similar to one another and to the first human dose at which toxicity was observed, . - . ´ iu/m vs . ´ iu/m for humans. the only notable exception was the rhesus monkey at . ´ iu/m . studies like this enable other investigators to make wiser choices in the selection of doses and species to evaluate. the route of administration of vectors can have an obvious influence on toxicity in vivo because of the distribution and concentrations of the agent that are produced. for example, intravenous bolus doses can produce very high concentrations for short durations; other routes of administration, such as subcutaneous, may produce much lower concentrations and more prolonged exposure. current practice recommends that safety evaluations in preclinical studies should be conducted by the identical route and method of administration as that proposed for the phase i clinical trial whenever possible. when this is difficult to achieve in a small animal species, a method of administration similar to that planned for use in the clinic is advised. for example, intrapulmonary instillation of adenoviral vectors by intranasal administration in cotton rats or mice is an acceptable alternative to direct intrapulmonary administration through a bronchoscope because the latter procedure is simply not feasible in rodents. if the proposed clinical route is a nonintravenous (e.g., intratumoral), it may be wise also to conduct an intravenous study to provide perhaps "worse-case" data for what may happen in the event of an accidental injection directly into a patient's blood vessel. when possible, the schedule of administration in the animal studies should also be identical to that intended in the phase i clinical trial. this may not be feasible in certain instances because of the production of neutralizing antibodies in the animal model that might preclude repeated administration; that may not be a factor in humans. in studies in which additional agents will be administered in combination with the gene therapy agent (e.g., in suicide therapy using hsvtk and gcv or hsv cytosine deaminase and -fluorocytosine), the route and schedule should also be identical to that planned for the clinic. evaluating the vector alone in animal models would not provide sufficient data for predicting additional toxicity that may be produced by the combination, but should be at least one arm of the planned preclinical animal studies. at a minimum, treated animals should be monitored for general health status (clinical observations, body weight and temperature changes, changes in food and water consumption), serum biochemistry, and hematological profiles. target organs and other critical tissues should be examined for gross and microscopic changes. the addition of other parameters to be evaluated will depend on the nature of the product studied, the species used, and the route of administration. there is no set of all-inclusive parameters that is sufficient for each and every new agent. studies should be designed specifically for each agent, utilizing the most appropriate tests to capture as much relevant data as possible. because many biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals intended for human use will be immunogenic in animals, the use of animal-derived proteins/products, if available, should be considered to define the intrinsic toxicity of the new agent. this may entail parallel development processes in which a construct relevant to the species in the safety test is developed to a point to allow a most relevant safety test to proceed. the analogous human construct then may actually be brought into the clinic supported by these results. if human material is used, measurement of antibodies associated with administration of products should always be performed when conducting repeated dose toxicity studies. these data will assist the investigator in the interpretation of the results of these studies. antibody responses produced in animals should be fully characterized (e.g., titer, number of responding animals, neutralizing or nonneutralizing), and their appearance should be correlated with any pharmacological and/or toxicological changes observed. more specifically, the effects of antibody formation on pharmacokinetics and/or pharmacodynamics, incidence and/or severity of adverse effects, complement activation, or the emergence of new toxic effects should be considered when interpreting the data. attention should also be paid to the evaluation of possible pathological changes related to immune complex formation and deposition, especially in the kidney of treated animals. the detection of antibodies in animals should not be the sole criterion for the early termination of a preclinical safety study or modification of the duration of the study unless the immune response neutralizes the pharmacological and/or toxicological effects of the biopharmaceutical in a large proportion of the animals. in most cases, the immune response to biopharmaceuticals in animals will be variable, similar to such responses in humans. if these issues do not compromise the interpretation of the data from the safety study, then no special significance should be ascribed to the antibody response. the induction of antibody formation in animals is not necessarily predictive of a potential for antibody formation in humans. by the same token, humans may also develop serum antibodies against humanized proteins, and frequently the therapeutic response persists in their presence. the same may happen in animals if a purified protein is administered via a gene therapy viral vector. in the case of human factor ix, when the purified protein was administered to rhesus macaques, the monkeys did not make antibodies ( ) . however, when factor ix was administered in a first-generation adenoviral vector, the animals mounted an acute phase response that produced neutralizing antibody that eliminated factor ix from the circulation ( ) . finally, the occurrence of severe anaphylactic responses to recombinant proteins is rare in humans. the results of guinea pig anaphylaxis tests, which are generally positive for protein products, are not considered predictive for reactions in humans; therefore, studies such as this are considered of little value for the routine evaluation of these types of products even though they are frequently performed. inflammatory, immune, or autoimmune responses induced by the gene product may be of concern. animal studies should be conducted over a sufficient duration of time to allow development of such responses. host immune responses against viral or transgene proteins may limit their usefulness for repeated administration in the clinic. the immune status of the intended recipients of a gene therapy should be considered in the risk-benefit analysis of a product, particularly for viral vectors. if exclusion of immunocompromised patients would unduly restrict a clinical protocol, immune-suppressed, genetically immunodeficient, or newborn animals may be used in preclinical studies to evaluate any potential safety risks. it is extremely important to investigate the potential for undesirable pharmacological activity in appropriate animal models and, when necessary, to incorporate particular monitoring for these activ-ities in nonclinical toxicity studies and/or clinical studies. safety pharmacology studies are designed to measure functional indices of potential toxicity. these indices may be investigated in separate studies or may be carefully incorporated into the design of nonclinical toxicity studies. the aim of these studies should be to reveal any functional effects on the major physiological systems of the body (e.g., cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, and central nervous systems) that will have a major impact on whether or how the agent is administered in the clinic. some of these investigations may include the use of isolated organs or other test systems that do not involve the use of intact animals, such as the use of a perfused rabbit heart model for the evaluation of torsade de pointes and qt prolongation ( , ) . the results from all of these safety pharmacology studies may allow a mechanistically based explanation of specific organ toxicities, which should be considered carefully with respect to human use and intended indications. the use of additional biomarkers, exemplified by cardiac troponin t or i ( , ) for agents with potential cardiac toxicity, may be warranted in additional nonclinical animal studies and/or in clinical studies in humans. pharmacology studies can be divided into three main categories, depending on the nature of the effect: primary and secondary pharmacodynamic studies and safety pharmacology studies. safety pharmacology studies are defined in the ich guidance document (s a) on this subject ( ) "as those studies that investigate the potential undesirable pharmacodynamic effects of a substance on physiological functions in relation to exposure in the therapeutic range and above." this last point is particularly important in that these studies should be conducted at dose levels or serum concentrations that are therapeutic targets based on prior efficacy/activity studies. simply conducting these studies at low doses does not provide much useful information or adequately assess the safety of the agent. the objectives of these studies are to identify undesirable pharmacodynamic properties of a drug substance that may have relevance to its human safety and toxicity; to evaluate more fully adverse pharmacodynamic and/or pathophysiological effects of a drug substance that were previously observed in nonclinical toxicology and/or clinical studies; and to investigate the mechanism of action of the adverse pharmacodynamic effects that were either previously observed or suspected. the investigational plan developed to meet these objectives should be clearly identified and delineated by the drug development team. for biotechnology-derived products that achieve highly specific receptor targeting, it is often sufficient to evaluate safety pharmacology end-points as a part of well-designed toxicology and/or pharmacodynamic studies; therefore, the need for separate safety pharmacology studies can be reduced or eliminated. for those bioproducts that represent a new therapeutic class and/or those products that do not achieve highly specific receptor targeting, a more extensive evaluation in separate safety pharmacology studies should be considered. biodistribution studies are generally performed for gene therapy products, and typical pharmacokinetic studies used for most types of drugs that measure serum or plasma levels, half-life, clearance, and the like are generally not performed. these preclinical animal biodistribution studies are designed to determine the distribution of the vector to sites other than the intended therapeutic site as an indicator of potential toxicity. the goals of these studies are generally twofold: determination of dissemination of the vector to the germline and distribution of vector to nontarget tissues. the first has been routinely accomplished by assaying total gonadal tissue. the second provides information on potential target organs of toxicity. both may be addressed in the same preclinical study. studies may use normal, intact animals or animal models of disease. the latter study may be more representative of the clinical setting. whenever possible, the intended route of administration should be employed, again with the consideration that groups of animals might also be treated intravenously as a worst-case scenario. transfer of the gene to normal, surrounding, and distal tissues as well as the target site should be evaluated using the most sensitive detection methods possible, such as reverse transcriptase pcr, and should include evaluation of gene persistence. when aberrant or unexpected localization is observed, additional studies should be conducted to determine whether the gene is expressed and whether its presence is associated with any pathologic effects. biodistribution studies may not be necessary for all new agents ( ) . with "previously defined" vectors, if there is previous experience with a similar vector, route of administration, formulation, and schedule (e.g., adenovirus type vectors), if the transgene product is considered "innocuous" if expressed ectopically, and when the size of the new vector is not essentially different, biodistribution aspects of the prior agent may be referenced. on the other hand, studies may not be postponed if a new class of vector is used (i.e., there is little or no previous experience; e.g., aav, lentivirus, others); if there is a change in the formulation (i.e., lipid carrier instead of an aqueous formulation); if the route of administration is changed to an intentional systemic route from local administration of the "established" vector; and finally, if the transgene has the potential to induce toxicity if it is aberrantly expressed in nontarget organs. as with toxicity studies, there are a number of factors that should be taken into consideration when designing vector biodistribution studies. regarding species selection, nonhuman primates are not always needed. rodents may be perfectly acceptable. the animal gender should reflect the intended patient population. at least - animals per sex and group should be used as a minimum. the use of smaller animals (i.e., mice or rats) allows the inclusion of larger numbers of animals and the easy evaluation of more time points. as in other studies, the following dose groups should be included when practical: controls, the maximally feasible/clinically relevant dose, and a lower dose for establishment of the no observable adverse effect level. the route of administration should mimic intended clinical route to the greatest extent possible. regarding animal sacrifice and/or sampling time points, an early point that reflects peak vector transduction/expression should be included, as should a later timepoint determined by intended clinical use and a time-point that should reflect clearance from the gonads and nontarget organs to determine persistence. the following tissues are generally recommended: peripheral blood; gonads; injection site; highly perfused organs (to assist in determination of toxicity) such as brain, liver, lung, kidneys, heart, spleen; other tissues based on toxicity/pathology as determined by transgene (e.g., bone marrow); and those based on the route of administration, such as draining, contralateral lymph nodes. the methodology used to detect the agent should detect a sequence of the vector dna (or ribonucleic acid) that is unique to that product and should be appropriate to detect the vector sequence adequately in tissue samples from both preclinical animal studies and samples obtained during the initial clinical trials. many of the points presented and discussed in this section are elaborated in publicly accessible fda documents ( , ). shedding of viral vectors through the skin or in excreta is of obvious concern with highly infectious viruses. to measure the dissemination, persistence, and shedding of these vectors, multiple tissues (e.g., brain, heart, lungs, spleen, liver, kidneys, ovaries, and skin) as well as bodily fluids such as urine, feces, tears, saliva, vaginal secretions, and skin swabs are taken at multiple time-points throughout the study and analyzed by real-time quantitative pcr for the presence of vector sequences. if the vector sequences are rapidly cleared and viral sequences are absent in the excreta and swabs of the majority of animals, this suggests that there was no significant replication of the vector in the host ( , , ). even if the intended clinical schedule involves repeated doses, single-dose studies may generate useful data to describe the relationship of dose to systemic and/or local toxicity and the steepness of the dose/toxicity curve. data from these studies can be used to select doses for repeated-dose toxicity studies. information on dose-response relationships may be gathered through the conduct of a single-dose toxicity study or as a component of pharmacology or animal model efficacy studies. the incorporation of safety pharmacology parameters in the design of these studies should be considered, which will reduce the number of animals used, the amount of product required, and the number of studies that must be performed. the route and dosing regimen for these studies (e.g., daily vs intermittent dosing) should reflect the intended clinical use or exposure (e.g., once a week for weeks, every other day, etc.). a recovery period should be included to determine the reversal or potential worsening of pharmacological/ toxicological effects and/or the potential for delayed toxic effects. for biopharmaceuticals that induce prolonged pharmacological/toxicological effects, recovery group animals should be monitored until reversibility is demonstrated. this may not be fundamentally obvious at the outset of the study. the duration of repeated dose studies should be based on the intended duration of clinical exposure and disease indication. this duration of animal dosing has generally been - months for most biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals, but this probably will not be the case for most gene therapy studies. however, in the case of life-threatening diseases such as cancer, longer term studies are generally not required to support phase i trials. one aspect of immunotoxicological evaluation includes the assessment of potential immunogenicity as described in section . . many biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals are intended to stimulate or suppress the immune system and therefore may affect not only humoral, but also cell-mediated immunity. inflammatory reactions at the injection site may be indicative of a stimulatory response. it is important, however, to recognize that simple injection trauma or specific toxic effects caused by the formulation vehicle may also result in toxic changes at the injection site. in addition, the expression of surface antigens on target cells may be altered, which has implications for autoimmune potential. for conventional small molecule drugs, reproductive toxicity is usually assessed in rats and rabbits. the species specificity and potential immunogenicity of biologicals has led to the increased use of nonhuman primates for this purpose. the need for reproductive and developmental toxicity studies will depend on the product, clinical indication, and intended patient population. the specific study design and dosing schedule may be modified based on issues related to species specificity, immunogenicity, biological activity, and/or a long elimination half-life. the issue of germline integration has prompted considerable public discussion ( ) . for gene therapy products directly administered to patients, the risk of vector transfer to germ cells should be seriously considered. animal testicular or ovarian samples should be analyzed for vector sequences by the most sensitive method available. if a signal is detected in the gonads, further studies should be conducted to determine if the sequences are present in germ cells as opposed to stromal tissues; techniques used may include, but are not limited to, cell separations, in situ pcr, or other techniques. semen samples for analysis can be collected from mature animals, including mice, by well-established methods ( , ) for determination of vector incorporation into germ cells. evaluation of biodistribution to the gonads may not be needed prior to all phase i clinical trials, and this issue should be considered carefully in pre-ind meetings with the fda. the informed consent form should address the lack of data and the unknown risks. genotoxicity studies, such as the ames salmonella assay, the micronucleus test, and the mouse lymphoma assay, which are routinely conducted for small molecule pharmaceuticals, are not appli-cable to biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals, especially gene therapy products, and therefore are not needed. the administration of large quantities of peptides, proteins, or viruses may yield uninterpretable results. when there is cause for concern about the product, genotoxicity studies should be performed in available and relevant systems, including newly developed systems. the use of standard genotoxicity studies as indicated for assessing the genotoxic potential of process contaminants is not considered appropriate. if standard assays are performed for this purpose, the rationale should be provided. standard -year carcinogenicity bioassays in normal mice and rats are generally inappropriate for biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals and probably more so for gene therapy products. this issue has received additional attention owing to the emergence of a lymphoproliferative syndrome in a potentially significant fraction of recipients of a vector designed to treat scid syndrome ( , ) . this clinical result actually recapitulates to a certain degree toxicities anticipated from experience in animal models ( ) . thus, product-specific assessment of carcinogenic potential will still be needed for biopharmaceuticals, and studies utilized must be refined after consideration of the duration of anticipated clinical dosing, the patient population, or the biological activity of the product (e.g., retrovirus vectors, growth factors, immunosuppressive agents, etc.). when there is a concern about carcinogenic potential, a variety of new approaches may be considered to evaluate this risk. when the potential to support or induce proliferation of transformed cells and clonal expansion leading to neoplasia is considered possible, the product should be evaluated with respect to receptor expression for the biopharmaceutical or for the transgene's expressed form in various malignant and normal human cells, especially those potentially relevant to the patient population under study. the ability of the biopharmaceutical to stimulate growth of normal and/or malignant cells expressing the relevant receptors should be determined. when in vitro studies such as this give cause for concern about carcinogenic potential, further studies in relevant animal models may be needed if these are available and relevant. as stated in this section, when gene transfer agents must be evaluated, the standard rodent models (mice and rats) and the -year carcinogenicity bioassay are probably not appropriate. daily administration of vector as is usually performed in these studies is not feasible; however, several of these vectors, including aav, continue to express over the lifetime of the animal. the other factor that may be limiting is that the host immune response to the vector or to the transgene may either limit the toxicity, perhaps because of the development of neutralizing antibodies, or may have effects on tumor development. it will be necessary to consult with the fda to develop product-specific studies on an individualized basis or to determine whether and which carcinogenicity studies are needed. local tolerance to administration of the new agent should be evaluated. the formulation intended for the clinical trial should be tested unless there is a cogent reason why this would not be feasible or biologically meaningful. in most cases, the potential adverse effects of the product at the site of administration can be evaluated in the single-or repeated-dose toxicity studies that are usually conducted in the normal course of development, thus eliminating the need for separate studies. adenoviral vectors can efficiently deliver genes to a wide variety of dividing and nondividing cell types both in vitro and in vivo, resulting in a high level of transient gene expression. considerable modifications have been made in the wild-type virus to reduce infectivity and toxicity in normal tissues or to improve transduction or tropism for tumor cells. the death of jesse gelsinger because of several complications, including liver failure, coupled with the fact that adenovirus infections in immunocompromised oncology patients can lead to fatal hepatotoxicity ( , ) , and reports of serious hepatotoxicity and death in nonhuman primates treated with different adenoviral vectors make the safety evaluation of these vectors for cancer treatment paramount. when a first-generation adenovirus vector expressing human factor ix was intravenously injected into rhesus macaques at doses from ´ to ´ pfu/kg, no toxicity was seen at the lower dose level, but substantial, dose-limiting liver toxicity was observed at the higher dose ( ) . this hepatotoxicity was manifested as elevated serum transaminase levels, hyperbilirubinemia, hypoalbuminemia, and prolongation of clotting times. all evidence of liver toxicity resolved except for persistent hypofibrinogenemia in the high-dose recipient, indicating possible permanent liver damage. these data suggested a very narrow therapeutic window for this first-generation adenovirus-mediated gene transfer vector. in follow-up studies ( ) , it was concluded that these abnormalities may be caused by direct toxic effects of the adenovirus vector itself, or may result indirectly from the accompanying acute inflammatory response marked by elevations in interleukin . when another first-generation adenoviral vector expressing b-galactosidase was intravenously injected into two baboons at doses of . ´ or . ´ particles/kg, the baboon receiving the high dose developed acute symptoms, decreased platelet counts, and increased liver enzymes and became moribund at hours after injection; the baboon receiving the lower dose developed no symptoms ( ) . again, a very narrow therapeutic index was demonstrated. recombinant adenoviruses infused into the portal vein of adult rhesus monkeys at a dose of particles/kg resulted in the formation of neutralizing antibody, severe liver toxicity, and death. readministration of a second vector was associated with the same degree of toxicity as the first vector, but prompted a much more vigorous neutralizing antibody response ( ) . the administration of several gene transfer vehicles and routes was studied in rhesus monkeys to develop a model for adenovirusmediated gene transfer for liver. vectors administered via the portal vein or saphenous vein were efficient, but this resulted in transient gene expression and was accompanied by an immune response to both vector and transgene products and acute hepatitis ( ) . turning to models of intracerebral administration, baboons received intracerebral injections of either a high dose of a replication-defective adenoviral vector expressing hsvtk ( . ´ pfu) with or without gcv or a low dose of adv/rsvtk ( . ´ pfu) with gcv to evaluate the safety of this regimen. animals receiving the high-dose vector and gcv either died or became moribund and were sacrificed during the first days of treatment. necropsy of these animals revealed cavities of coagulative necrosis at the injection sites. animals that received only the high-dose vector were clinically normal; however, lesions were detected with mri at the injection sites corresponding to cystic cavities at necropsy. animals that received the low-dose vector and gcv were clinically normal and exhibited small mri abnormalities, and although no gross lesions were present at necropsy, microscopic foci of necrosis were present. neutralizing antibodies were produced in the animals, but no shedding of the vector was found in urine, feces, or serum days after intracerebral injection ( ) . intrapulmonary administration uses are exemplified through the use of recombinant adenovirus vectors containing expression cassettes for human cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator, which were instilled through a bronchoscope into limited regions of lung in baboons. the only adverse effect noted was a mononuclear cell inflammatory response within the alveolar compartment of animals receiving doses of virus that were required to induce detectable gene expression. minimal inflammation was seen at and pfu/ml, but at and, more prominently, at pfu/ml, a perivascular lymphocytic and histiocytic infiltrate was seen ( ). host immune elimination of infected cells often limits gene expression in vivo to - weeks after infection ( , ) . in addition to a cell-mediated immune response to the adenovirus infection, a humoral response to the injected virus is often generated ( ) . although this humoral response may prevent the use of adenoviral vectors for repeated dosing, it may be blocked or reduced by coadministration of immunosuppressive agents or cytokines. alternatively, the use of adenoviruses of different serotypes may allow for repeated administration, even in the presence of neutralizing antibodies ( ) . harvey et al. ( ) reported on years of experience with the local administration of low (< particle units) and intermediate ( to particle units) doses of e -/e adenovirus vectors to six different sites. with a group incidence of only . % for major adverse events and no deaths related to administration of the adenovirus vectors, local administration of low and intermediate doses of adenovirus vectors was well tolerated. second-generation adenoviral vectors, mutated in e a, have been proposed to decrease host immune responses against transduced cells, reduce toxicity, and increase duration of expression as compared with first-generation vectors deleted only in e . the safety of and e -, e a-, e -deleted adenoviral vector (av h ) encoding an epitope-tagged b-domain-deleted human factor viii complementary dna was evaluated in cynomolgus monkeys. animals received intravenous administration of either ´ or ´ particles/kg. vector distribution was widespread, with the highest levels observed in liver and spleen. histopathology, hematology, and serum chemistry analysis identified the liver and blood as major sites of toxicity. transient mild serum elevations of liver enzymes were observed, along with a dose-dependent inflammatory response in the liver. in addition, mild lymphoid hyperplasia was observed in the spleen. mild anemia and a transient decrease in platelet count were observed, as was marrow hyperplasia and extramedullary hematopoiesis ( ) . when vectors deleted in e and containing either a temperature-sensitive mutation in the e a gene or a deletion of the e region were infused into the hepatic artery of nonhuman primates, minimal toxicity was seen. histopathology showed that portal inflammation was present throughout both livers in the animals receiving the high dose. no differences were seen in the level of portal inflammation in targeted and untargeted lobes. pcr analysis detected viral dna sequence in gonads and brain as well as many other tissues in baboons treated with high-dose vector. in baboons treated with lower doses of an e -e -deleted vector expressing the human ornithine transcarbamylase gene, dna was detectable by nested pcr in liver, but not gonads, at days and . the data suggested that intraarterial administration of recombinant adenoviral e -e -deleted vector is feasible and safe. ( ) . toxicity of first-generation and e a-deleted vectors expressing human a -antitrypsin was evaluated in c h mice after administration of increasing doses starting at ´ particles/kg. both vectors induced dose-dependent toxicity, including transient thrombocytopenia, elevated alanine aminotransferase, and increased hepatocyte proliferation, followed by inflammation and then hypertrophy. there were no differences in toxicity between the two vectors when measured at matching levels of human a -antitrypsin expression. however, the e a-deleted vector had slightly reduced hepatocyte toxicity at an intermediate particle dose ( ) . although these vectors are purported to be less toxic, the fact remains that the human fatality that occurred in the ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency trial at the university of pennsylvania was an e , e -deleted construct ( ). the current e -deleted adenoviruses can infect a wide variety of cells through a specific interaction between the viral fiber protein and at least one cell surface receptor. entry of the virus into the cell is further enhanced through a specific interaction of the fiber with an integrin "coreceptor." the host's range of tissue susceptibilities to the virus can therefore be altered by various strategies so that it can bind more efficiently to the target cell surface ( ) ( ) ( ) . antibodies against tissue-specific cell surface proteins can also be coupled to the fiber protein to facilitate partial targeting of the virus ( ) . another approach to achieve "targeting" of the virus is the use of cell-specific promoters to drive expression of a therapeutic gene in the context of the recombinant virus ( ) . enhanced uptake strategies through fiber modification may present special concerns for toxicity, especially regarding hepatotoxicity when administered by an intravenous or direct hepatic artery injection. careful comparison of a tropism-modified adenoviral vector to the nontropism-modified vector in mouse toxicity and biodistribution studies as well as nonhuman primate and toxicity studies might be desirable. members of the family parvoviridae aavs are among the smallest of the dna viruses ( ) . unlike autonomous parvoviruses, aavs or dependo-viruses require coinfection with unrelated helper viruses for a productive infection to occur ( , ) . as recombinant vectors for gene therapy, they seem to have several advantages compared to other vectors, such as the transduction of terminally differentiated and nondividing cells ( , ) , relatively high stability of transgene expression ( ) , and the potential for targeted integration ( , ) . from a safety point of view, aav vectors show a lack of pathogenicity ( - ), low immunogenicity ( , ) , and low risk of insertional mutagenesis ( ) . also, there did not appear to be any evidence of transduction in the gonads of rhesus monkeys ( ) . however, aav has a limited dna capacity. hsv vectors can deliver large amounts of exogenous dna; however, cytotoxicity and maintenance of transgene expression are obvious obstacles to their use. they also have the advantages of the abilities to infect nondividing cells and to establish latency in some cell types. the ability to establish latency in neuronal cells makes hsv an attractive vector for treating neurological disorders such as parkinson's and alzheimer's diseases. in addition, the ability of hsv to infect efficiently a number of different cell types, such as muscle and liver, may make it an excellent vector for treating nonneurological diseases. one problem associated with hsv-based vectors has been the toxicity of the vector in many different cell types. the generation of hsv vectors with deletions in many of the immediate early gene products, which is similar to the strategy used for adenovirus, has resulted in vectors with reduced toxicity and antigenicity as well as prolonged expression in vivo ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . no clinical study has been reported in detail with these vectors. section . . . details a summary of preclinical safety considerations pertaining to use of the aotus monkey in comparison to rodent species. retrovirus vectors are replication-defective and are primarily based on the moloney murine leukemia virus (mmlv), which is a well-studied and well-characterized retrovirus ( , ) with numerous advantages. they have been extensively studied, produce stable integration into the host genome, and are very efficient at gene transfer. disadvantages include an infection that is limited to dividing cells, which makes gene transfer into nondividing cells such as hematopoietic stem cells, hepatocytes, myoblasts, and neurons an impossibility, and low titer of products. there are four theoretical concerns that exist for retroviral-mediated gene transfer that relate to two potential delayed toxicities. these are insertional mutagenesis, recombination with endogenous retroviral sequences, transfer of exogenous genetic material, and accidental exposure to replicationcompetent murine retroviruses ( ) . because retroviral vectors can permanently integrate into the genome of the infected cell, there is a serious concern regarding insertional mutagenesis causing the development of a secondary malignancy. the presence of rcrs is of major concern because of the fact that rcrs have produced lethal malignant t-cell lymphomas in / rhesus monkeys ( ) . these concerns resulted in a publication concerning the fda considerations on these issues ( ) and the issuance of a new fda guidance on this subject in october ( ) . some of these con-cerns are no longer theoretical. the elation that this type of retroviral-mediated therapy was successful in curing a number of children with scid ( ) has been severely dampened by the reports of a leukemialike disease produced in two of these children ( - ). unlike oncoretrovirusus such as moloney murine leukemia virus, one subclass of retroviruses, the lentiviruses, can infect nondividing cells. this makes these viruses attractive for gene transfer. one of these viruses, human immunodeficiency virus (hiv), has been the subject of investigation by a number of groups. the most obvious concerns with using hiv for gene therapy is safety and the possible generation of replication-competent virus during vector production. this involves engineering the vector so that it is replication defective. this has been done in a number of cases by eliminating all accessory genes, such as tat, vif, vpr, vpu, and nef, from a packaging construct that still has the ability to transduce cells ( ) . concern about the possibility of insertional activation of cellular oncogenes by a random integration of the vector provirus into the host genome has led to the development of self-inactivating vectors ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . the use of self-inactivating viruses significantly improves the biosafety of hiv-derived vectors because it reduces the likelihood that rcrs will originate during vector production and target cells and hampers recombination with wild-type hiv in an infected host. in an attempt to make even safer constructs, other groups are working on the development of lentiviral vectors from hiv- ( ), simian immunodeficiency virus ( ), bovine immunodeficiency virus ( , ) , and feline immunodeficiency virus ( ) . these last vectors may be inherently more acceptable because they are not based on hiv- . none of these newer constructs has moved toward the clinic, so there is little animal safety data and no human data on these vectors yet. this chapter presents a range of issues that might be considered in contemplating the development of a gene therapy agent to the point of an early phase clinical trial. as no gene therapy product has yet been recognized as "safe and effective," the standard approach to these issues should be regarded very much as a "work in progress." indeed, the nature of these agents would suggest that each new opportunity would call for its own unique set of requirements, so that a single approach will probably never "standardly" exist. rather, the principles that underlie regulatory policy should be woven into the approach to each new agent. in broad strokes, these involve approaches to answering the following questions: is the identity of the agent clearly defined? can successive batches of the material be made reproducibly in the quantity to support clinical development, and how is this known? are the biological features of the vector, and its transgene when applicable, clearly similar in the animal species used for safety studies and in the human, at least as far as this can be ascertained? what dose is likely to be required for therapeutic effect? what level of gene expression or replication is necessary to attain a therapeutic effect? when toxicity occurs because of the agent, what is the evidence the toxicity will be reversible? is toxicity after repeated doses of agent likely to be attenuated or magnified by immunological response to the agent? what are the consequences of long-term presence of the therapeutic agent in the recipient? is there a danger of producing directly (as the therapeutic agent itself) or indirectly (through recombination and/or replication) an infectious agent that acts horizontally in the population or vertically across generations? how will the presence and distribution of the gene therapy agent be followed in the patient? sponsors are above all encouraged to see the regulatory process as a collaborative interaction with the regulatory agencies with the end not only of protecting the patient, but also of advancing the most scientifically defensible and rigorous questions to clinical trial. far more costly than the conduct of experiments designed to be compliant with regulatory requirements is a failed or overtly injurious clinical trial. a clear understanding and a proactive approach in addressing regulatory issues outlined here will maximally ensure the likelihood of an interpretable clinical outcome. the regulatory issues outlined here must be approached with continuing appreciation of the evolving science associated with the gene therapy field. as such, requirements may evolve with the state of the science, and careful sustained contact with the regulatory agencies is important in incorporating the best and most current science into the design, conduct, and interpretation of regulatory studies. ich guidance on quality of biotechnology/biological products: derivation and characterization of cell substrates used for production of biotechnical/biological products ich: final guideline on quality of biotechnological products: analysis of the expression construct in cells used for production of r-dna derived protein products ich guidance on specifications: test procedures and acceptance criteria for biotechnological/biological products ich guidance for industry q a (r ), stability testing of new drug substances and products ich guidance on viral safety evaluation of biotechnology products derived from cell lines of human or animal origin ich guidance: q a good manufacturing practice guidance for active pharmaceutical ingredients ich guidance for industry: s preclinical safety evaluation of biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals ich: final guidance on stability testing of biotechnological/biological products fda guidance for industry: guidance for human somatic cell therapy and gene therapy gene therapy: a tragic setback a serious adverse event after successful gene therapy for x-linked severe combined immunodeficiency regulators split on gene therapy as patient shows signs of cancer second cancer case halts gene-therapy trials preclinical development strategies for novel gene therapy products the role of the toxicologic pathologist in the preclinical safety evaluation of biotechnologyderived pharmaceuticals nonclinical safety evaluation of biotechnologically derived pharmaceuticals non-clinical safety studies for biotechnology-derived pharmaceuticals: conclusions from an international workshop ich guidance to industry: s a safety pharmacology studies for human pharmaceuticals code of federal regulations, title , food and drugs, part . , subpart b, general biological products standards; general provisions; potency code of federal regulations, title , food and drugs, part . , subpart b, general biological products standards code of federal regulations, title , food and drugs, part . , subpart b, general biological products standards code of federal regulations, title , food and drugs, part . , subpart b, general biological products standards code of federal regulations, title , food and drugs, part , good laboratory practice for nonclinical laboratory studies current good manufacturing practice in manufacturing, processing, packing, or holding of drugs; general code of federal regulations, title , food and drugs, part , current good manufacturing practice for finished pharmaceuticals code of federal regulations, title , food and drugs, part , investigational new drug application inds) for phase i studies of drugs, including well-characterized, therapeutic, biotechnology-derived products fda guidance for industry: ind's for phases and studies of drugs, including specified therapeutic biotechnology-derived products, chemistry, manufacturing and controls content and format fda guidance for industry: content and format of chemistry, manufacturing, and controls information and establishment description information for a vaccine or related product fda guidance for industry for the submission of chemistry, manufacturing, and controls information for a therapeutic recombinant dna-derived product or a monoclonal antibody product for in vivo use fda guidance for industry: formal meetings with sponsors and applicants for pdufa products fda points to consider in the manufacturing and testing of monoclonal antibody products for human use fda letter to manufacturers of biological products: recommendations regarding bovine spongiform encephalopathy (bse) fda biological response modifiers advisory committee: current policy on sequence characterization of gene transfer products fda biological response modifiers advisory committee: adenovirus titer measurements and rca levels fda guidance for industry: supplemental guidance on testing for replication competent retrovirus in retroviral vector based gene therapy products and during follow-up of patients in clinical trials using retroviral vectors fda points to consider in the characterization of cell lines used to produce biologicals fda gene therapy patient tracking system final document fda guidance concerning demonstration of comparability of human biological products, including therapeutic biotechnology-derived products third national nih gene transfer safety symposium: safety considerations in the use of aav vectors in gene transfer clinical trials basic principles of gene therapy: basic principles and safety considerations preclinical animal models in gene therapy research a new animal model for human respiratory tract disease due to adenovirus use of aotus monkey to assess neurovirulence of replication-selective herpes vectors herpes simplex type infects and establishes latency in the brain and trigeminal ganglia during primary infection of the lip in cotton rats and mice tropism of human adenovirus type -based vectors in swine and their ability to protect against transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus porcine toxicology studies of sch , an adenoviral vector for the p gene pathogenesis of adenovirus type pneumonia in cotton rats (sigmodon hispidus) the cotton rat in biomedical research handling the cotton rat for research role of early region (e ) in pathogenesis of adenovirus disease early region -replacement adenovirus recombinants are less pathogenic in cotton rats and mice than early region -deleted viruses intracranial administration of adenovirus expressing hsv-tk in combination with ganciclovir produces a dose-dependent, self limiting inflammatory response distribution, persistency, toxicity, and lack of replication of an e a-deficient adenoviral vector after intracardiac delivery in the cotton rat subcutaneous administration of a replication-competent adenovirus expressing hsv-tk to cotton rats: dissemination, dersistence, shedding, and pathogenicity. hum the owl monkey (aotus trivirgatus) as an animal model for viral diseases and oncologic studies characterization of four herpesviruses isolated from owl monkeys and their comparison with herpesvirus saimiri type (herpesvirus tamarinus) and herpes simplex virus type immunization of experimental animals with reconstituted glycoprotein mixtures of herpes simplex virus and : protection against challenge with virulent virus in vivo behavior of genetically engineered herpes simplex viruses r and r . ii. studies in immunocompetent and immunosuppressed owl monkeys (aotus trivirgatus) attenuated, replication-competent herpes simplex virus type mutant g : safety evaluation of intracerebral injection in nonhuman primates viral shedding and biodistribution of g , a multimutated, conditionally replicating herpes simplex virus type , after intracerebral inoculation in aotus preclinical safety evaluation of g , a replication-competent herpes simplex virus type , inoculated intraprostatically in mice and nonhuman primates attenuated, replication-competent herpes simplex virus type mutant g : safety evaluation in mice concordance of the toxicity of pharmaceuticals in humans and in animals quantitative comparison of toxicity of anticancer agents in mouse, rat, hamster, dog, monkey, and man the rhesus macaque as an animal model for hemophilia b gene therapy adenovirus-mediated expression of human coagulation factor ix in the rhesus macaque is associated with dose-limiting toxicity experimental models of torsade de pointes drug-related torsade de pointes in the isolated rabbit heart: comparison of clofilium, d,l-sotalol and erythromycin elevations in cardiac troponin measurements: false false-positives: the real truth predicting cancer therapy-induced cardiotoxicity: the role of troponins and other markers preclinical considerations for gene transfer clinical trials: vector biodistribution adenoviral-mediated thymidine kinase gene transfer into the primate brain followed by systemic ganciclovir: pathologic, radiologic, and molecular studies meeting summary (available on-line at: www .od.nih.gov/oba/rac/summaries/ - sum.htm.) and meeting minutes rac minutes- / - / . available on-line at: www .od a technique for the artificial insemination of mice an improved method for the artificial insemination of mice helper virus induced t cell lymphoma in nonhuman primates after retroviral mediated gene transfer adenovirus infection in the immunocompromised patient fulminant hepatic failure due to disseminated adenovirus infection in a patient with chronic lymphocytic leukemia toxicity of a first-generation adenoviral vector in rhesus macaques lethal toxicity, severe endothelial injury, and a threshold effect with high doses of an adenoviral vector in baboons gene transfer into the liver of nonhuman primates with e -deleted recombinant adenoviral vectors: safety of readministration liver-directed gene transfer in non-human primates adenovirus-mediated transfer of the cftr gene to lung of nonhuman primates: toxicity study role of viral antigens in destructive cellular immune responses to adenovirus vector-transduced cells in mouse lungs clearance of adenovirus-infected hepatocytes by mhc class i-restricted cd + ctls in vivo circumvention of anti-adenovirus neutralizing immunity by administration of an adenoviral vector of an alternate serotype safety of local delivery of low-and intermediate-dose adenovirus gene transfer vectors to individuals with a spectrum of morbid conditions adenoviral vector-mediated expression of physiologic levels of human factor viii in nonhuman primates selective gene transfer into the liver of non-human primates with e -deleted, e a-defective, or e -e deleted recombinant adenoviruses toxicological comparison of e a-deleted and first-generation adenoviral vectors expressing alpha -antitrypsin after systemic delivery recombinant adenovirus gene transfer in adults with partial ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency (otcd). hum targeting of adenovirus penton base to new receptors through replacement of its rgd motif with other receptor-specific peptide motifs generation of recombinant adenovirus vectors with modified fibers for altering viral tropism towards the use of replicative adenoviral vectors for cancer gene therapy targeted adenovirus gene transfer to endothelial and smooth muscle cells by using bispecific antibodies a new adenoviral vector: replacement of all viral coding sequences with kb of dna independently expressing both full-length dystrophin and b-galactosidase characteristics and taxonomy of parvoviridae adenovirus-associated defective virus particles herpes simplex virus types and completely help adenovirus-associated virus replication prospects for the use of adeno-associated virus as a vector for human gene therapy adeno-associated virus vectors for gene therapy stable in vivo expression of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator with an adeno-associated virus vector site-specific integration by adeno-associated virus mapping and direct visualisation of regionspecific viral dna integration site on chromosome q -qter epidemiology of adenoassociated virus infection in a nursery population a seroepidemiologic study of adenovirus-associated virus infection in infants and children adeno-associated viruses of humans high efficiency transfer of the t cell co-stimulatory molecule b - to lymphoid cells using high-titer recombinant adeno-associated virus vectors. hum regulated high level expression of a human g-globin gene introduced into erythroid cells by an adeno-associated virus vector preclinical evaluation of aav vectors expressing the human ctfr cdna retroviral vectors for use in human gene therapy for cancer, gaucher disease, and arthritis effects of retroviral vector design on expression of human adenosine deaminase in murine bone marrow transplant recipients engrafted with genetically modified cells safety aspects of gene therapy evaluation of recommendations for replication competent retrovirus testing associated with use of retroviral vectors sustained correction of x-linked severe combined immunodeficiency by ex vivo gene therapy minimal requirement for a lentivirus vector based on human immunodeficiency virus type development of a self-inactivating lentivirus vector advanced modular self-inactivating lentiviral expression vectors for multigene interventions in mammalian cells and in vivo transduction transduction of acute myeloid leukemia cells with third generation self-inactivating lentiviral vectors expressing cd and gm-csf: effects on proliferation, differentiation, and stimulation of allogeneic and autologous anti-leukemia immune responses self-inactivating lentivirus vector for safe and efficient in vivo gene delivery human immunodeficiency virus type (hiv- ) vectormediated in vivo gene transfer into adult rabbit retina pseudotyped lentivirus vectors derived from simian immunodeficiency virus sivagm with envelope glycoproteins from paramyxovirus construction and molecular analysis of gene transfer systems derived from bovine immunodeficiency virus mapping of the bovine immunodeficiency virus packaging signal and rre and incorporation into a minimal gene transfer vector gene transfer to the nonhuman primate retina with recombinant feline immunodeficiency virus vectors key: cord- -vmqvropy authors: rukavtsova, e. b.; abramikhina, t. v.; shulga, n. ya.; bykov, v. a.; bur’yanov, ya. i. title: tissue specific expression of hepatitis b virus surface antigen in transgenic plant cells and tissue culture date: journal: russ j plant physiol doi: . /s sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vmqvropy the tobacco plants (nicotiana tabacum l.) carrying the hbsag gene controlled by (aocs)( )amaspmas, the hybrid promoter that includes regulatory elements of the agrobacterial octopine and mannopine synthase genes, as well as plants controlled by the same promoter and adh , maize alcohol dehydrogenase gene intron were obtained. the presence of the adh gene intron did not significantly change the level of expression of the hbsag gene in plants. the analysis of expression of hepatitis b virus surface antigen (hbs-antigen) in transformed plants expressing the hbsag under the control of different promoters was made. the level of hbs-antigen in plants carrying the hbsag gene controlled by (aocs)( )amaspmas, the hybrid agrobacterium-derived promoter, was the highest in roots and made up to . % of total amount of soluble protein. the level of hbs-antigen in plants carrying the hbsag gene controlled by the dual s rna cauliflower mosaic virus promoter was the same in all organs of the plant and made up to . % of the total amount of soluble protein. hairy root and callus cultures of plants carrying the hbsag gene and expressing the hbs-antigen were obtained. the transgenic plant-based technologies for production of subunit vaccines of a new generation, which may become cheaper and safer alternatives to traditionally obtained vaccine preparations, are now being developed. plant cells contain enzymatic systems of post-translational modification necessary for the assembling of monomer vaccine proteins they synthesize into the immunogenic multimer forms. plants are fully able to synthesize target antigens that can cause an active immune response [ ] of the host organism. the viral and bacterial antigens were shown to stimulate the production of immunoglobulines against the corresponding pathogens [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . various transgenic plants are now being produced and tested in research centers worldwide as potential producers of vaccines against infection agents causing various human diseases, including the hepatitis b virus [ , , ] . however, the transgenic plant-derived vaccine preparations are not yet commercially available. earlier we have obtained the tobacco plants expressing the synthetic gene of the hepatitis b surface antigen ( hbsag ) controlled by single and dual s rna cauliflower mosaic virus promoters (camv s and camv ss, respectively) [ , ] . the presence of the dual s promoter increased expression of the antigen to the level of . % of total amount of soluble protein. the transgenic potato plants expressing the hbsag gene controlled by the same promoter and also by the patatin promoter of potato tubers were also produced. the amount of the hbs-antigen in potato tubers exceeded µ g/g of tuber mass and was the highest in plants expressing the hbsag gene controlled by the dual camv ss promoter. to obtain plants with tissue-specific expression of the hepatitis b vaccine gene in tissue cultures and whole plants (as potential producers of the vaccine), tissue-specific promoters, especially of the hybrid agrobacterium-derived promoters (aocs) amaspmas , prove to be effective. these promoters consist of the regulatory elements of the octopine synthase ( ocs ) and mannopine syntase ( mas ) genes of agrobacterium tumefaciens. as was shown earlier, these promoters strongly induced the expression of the β -glucoronidase (gus) gene in plants up to the level greatly exceeding that in plants controlled by the dual s rna cauliflower mosaic virus promoter [ ] . the objective of this study was to obtain transgenic tobacco plants synthesizing the hepatitis b surface anti- gen controlled by ( aocs ) amaspmas promoters and regulated by the elements of agrobacterial octopine synthase and mannopine synthase genes and also to analyze the expression profile of the hbsag gene in different cells of the whole plant as well as that in callus and hairy root tissue cultures. materials and methods construction of plasmids for plant transformation. pss-hbsag, the recombinant plasmid, carrying a synthetic gene encoding the hbsag/mayw polypeptide [ ] , was used as a gene source. the two vectors both containing the ( aocs ) amaspmas promoter were used for cloning and plant transformation: pe and pe (courtesy of dr gelvin, purdue university, united states) [ ] . the extension of the hbsag gene with specific sequences necessary for molecular cloning was done by means of pcr with two primers containing the kpn i and sal i restriction sites: '-cggg-taccatggaaaacattactt and '-cggtcgac-ctatcattaaatgtaaac, respectively. the reaction mixture contained . µ g of pdes plasmid dna as a template, mm kcl, mm tris-hcl, ph . , at ° c, . mm mgcl , . % triton x- , mm -mercaptoethanol, . mm dntps mixture (usb, united states), . µ m of each primer and . units of taq dna polymerase (sibenzim, russia). the reaction volume was µ l. the reaction started with min at ° c and was followed by cycles: min at ° c, min at ° c, min at ° c, and ended with min at ° c. the gene amp pcr system (perkin-elmer, united states) was used for experiments. the amplified gene was cloned into a binary pe vector for transformation of plants between the restriction sites kpn i and sal i. for cloning purposes, the hbsag gene was cut out of the pss-hbsag plasmid between the xho i and cfr i restriction sites and incorporated into the pe vector between the same sites. the plasmid constructions obtained were used for transformation of escherichia coli strain hb . the constructions containing the hbsag gene downstream the promoter were transferred into strain lba (pal ) of a. tumefaciens [ ] by means of direct transformation [ ] . the analysis of dna of the obtained clones was done by southern hybridization with the p-labeled amplification product of the hbsag gene [ ] . transgenic plants. the nicotiana tabacum l., cv. samsun plants were cultivated in vitro in . -to -l cultivation containers on the agar-solidified phytohormone-free ms medium [ ] at to °ë , klx, and % relative humidity. the resulting agrobacterial strain culture was used for the infection of leaf disks according to a standard protocol [ ] . the leaf disks were co-cultivated with the overnight agrobacterial cultures for two days and then transferred onto the selection ms medium containing hormones ( mg/l of ba and . mg/l of naa), mg/l of kanamycin sulfate (km), and mg/l of cefotaxime. the regenerated shoots were passed onto the selection ms medium. calli were obtained from leaf explants of transformed plants on the ms medium containing % sucrose, . mg/l ba, mg/l naa, and mg/l km. the hairy root culture was grown on the hormone-free ms medium from disk leaves of transformed plants infected with strain a of a. rhizogenes [ ] . extraction of dna from tobacco leaves. the dna from tobacco leaves was extracted as described in [ ] . leaves were crushed in . ml eppendorf tubes, . ml of the extraction buffer was added (containing . m tris-hcl, ph . , . m nacl, mm edta, and . % sds); the mixture was incubated for h at room temperature and then centrifuged at rpm for clarification. an equal volume of isopropanol was added, and the dna precipitate was dissolved in µ l of the te buffer ( mm tris-hcl and mm edta, ph . ). the plant dna obtained was used as a template for pcr. pcr analysis of the hbsag gene. for the pcr analysis of hbsag gene, . to µ g of plant genomic dna was used. the reaction mixture and cycle conditions were the same as above. immunoassay of the surface antigen level. the immunoassay of the hepatitis b virus surface antigen level in transformed plants was done as earlier described by us [ ] with minor modifications. leaves, roots, and calli of tested plants were ground in liquid nitrogen, and the extraction buffer ( . m sodium phosphate buffer, ph . , . m nacl, mm edta, . % tween , . mm phenylmethanesulfonyl fluoride, and . % sodium ascorbate). the extract obtained was centrifuged for min at rpm, the supernatant was transferred to . -ml eppendorf tubes and recentrifuged for min at rpm. the "vektohep b-hbs-antigen" test systems (jsc vektor-best, russia) were used for measuring the hbs-antigen level in the supernatant. the recombinant yeast cell-derived hbsantigen [ ] was used as a positive control. the assay was carried out according to the manufacturer's instructions. the total amount of soluble protein was measured according to bradford [ ] . mechanical leaf wounding for induction of hbsag gene expression. leaves were immersed into the liquid ms medium, cut with a scalpel into stripes to mm wide, and incubated at to °ë for h. the injured leaves were used for immunoassay. the recombinant plasmids used for transformation of plants are shown in fig. . these plasmids are based on the pe and pe vectors containing the ( aocs ) amaspmas promoter [ ] . both plasmids are carrying hbsag , a synthetic gene [ ] . the difference between the two vectors is that the pe is carrying the adh the maize alcohol dehydrogenase gene intron, rukavtsova et al. but is lacking the tl enhancer. the obtained plasmid constructs carrying the hbsag gene under the ( aocs ) amaspmas promoter were used for the direct transformation of strain lba (pal ) of a. tumefaciens . separate agrobacterial colonies were collected for extraction of plasmid dna and its visualization in agarose gel electrophoresis. the transformed agrobacterial strains were used for the infection of tobacco leaf disks. to lines of transformed plants of each type were selected for subsequent molecular, genetic, and biochemical analysis. the hbsag gene presence in transformed plants was confirmed by means of pcr. the target dna, which corresponds to the hepatitis b virus surface antigen, was found in all transgenic plants tested (fig. ) . the immunoassay was carried out to study the expression profile of the surface antigen hbsag in obtained plants. the hbs-antigen was found in different amounts in plants of all transgenic tobacco lines tested (see the table). the expression level of this antigen in the in vitro grown transgenic tobacco plants was up to . % of total amount of soluble protein. maximum expression of the surface hbsag antigen was observed in roots. the genetic construct pe -ag used for some of our experiments contained the alcohol dehydrogenase gene intron. the inclusion of introns into plant cells may enhance the expression of foreign genes [ ] . however, in our case the presence of the adh gene intron did not increase the expression of the target gene. the enhancement effect seems to be dependent on the location of the intron in the genetic construct carrying the target gene. the table shows the expression levels of the hbsantigen in plants controlled by different promoters. thus, the expression level of the hbs-antigen in plants controlled by ( aocs ) amaspmas, the hybrid agrobacterial promoter, reached the maximum of . % of total amount of soluble protein in roots. the expression level of the hbs-antigen in plants controlled by the dual s rna cauliflower mosaic virus promoter was the same in all organs of the plant, accounting for up to . % of total amount of soluble protein. therefore, (aocs) amaspmas, the hybrid agrobacterial promoter, can be regarded as a tissue-specific element of the hbsag gene expression, maximum expression being induced in roots. the activity of the agrobacterial mannopine synthase gene can be very different in different tissues and organs of the plant, maximum expression being observed in roots and calli [ , ] . the expression level of the hbs-antigen in leaves of transgenic plants controlled by the (aocs) amaspmas promoter substantially increased after wounding and reached to . % of total amount of soluble protein. these results correspond with the available data on the induction of foreign gene expression in leaves of transgenic plants con-trolled by the mannopine synthase promoter under similar wounding conditions [ , ] . eight lines of transgenic plants with the highest level of expression of the hbs-antigen were selected to obtain so-called hairy root tissue cultures by means of infection of leaf disks with strain a of a. rhizogenes culture. hairy roots, being effectively plant tumors transformed by a. rhizogenes [ ] , are a convenient system for production of secondary metabolites and recombinant proteins due to their genetic stability and fast growth in the hormone-free medium. as a result of retransformation of plants carrying the hbsag gene with strain a of a. rhizogenes, hairy root cultures were obtained also carrying the hbs-antigen (fig. ) . the level of expression of the hbs-antigen in different lines of hairy root cultures remained the same as that in parent transgenic plants making up to . % of total soluble protein. leaf explants of the transformed plants expressing the hbs-antigen controlled by the (aocs) amaspmas promoter were used to obtain callus cultures. the hbsantigen expression in these cultures was also observed (fig. ) . this could be explained by the induction of activity of the mannopine synthase and octopine synthase promoters by a higher level of auxins in callus culture cultivated in the auxin-containing medium [ ] . it should be noted that the results of our study do not confirm the existing data on more efficient expression of foreign genes controlled by the (aocs) amaspmas hybrid promoters that those controlled by the dual camv ss promoter [ ] . in those study, the activity of the (aocs) amaspmas promoter was judged on the basis of gus staining assay. another data, however, are available [ ] when the researchers did not notice a considerable difference between the bt-cry ia , an amaspmas promoters. the attempts have also been made to use the (aocs) amaspmas hybrid promoter for transformation of plants that could potentially produce the vaccine against sars (severe acute respiratory syndrome) [ ] . the expression of sars-cov, the target s protein, was the highest in roots of transformed tobacco and immature fruits of the transformed tomato plants. (aocs) amaspmas, the hybrid promoter, can be considered as a potential tool for tissue specific expression of various pharmaceutically important proteins in transformed plants and their cell cultures. ( - ) tobacco plants transformed with pe -ag (lines , , , , ) ; ( - ) tobacco plants transformed with pe -ag (lines , , , ) . average values are presented for three independent experiments; standard error in each of them did not exceed . %. transgenic plants as vaccine production systems expression of hepatitis b surface antigen in transgenic plants edible vaccines expression of immunogenic glycoprotein s polypeptides from transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus in transgenic plants plant expression systems for the production of vaccines transgenic plants as edible vaccines immunogenicity of porcine transmissible gastroenteritis virus spike protein expressed in plants expression of human hepatitis b virus surface antigen gene in transgenic tobacco polypeptides of hepatitis b surface antigen produced in transgenic potato production of transgenic tobacco plants expressing the gene encoding of hepatitis b virus surface antigen analysis of transgenic tobacco plants carring the gene for hepatitis b virus surface antigen strength and tissue specificity of chimeric promoters derived from the octopine and mannopine synthase genes expression of hepatitis b virus surface antigen in transgenic potato plants and its characteristics transfer of octopine t-dna segment to plant cells mediated by different types of agrobacterium tumouror root-inducing plasmids: generality of virulence systems binary vectors molecular cloning: a laboratory manual, cold spring harbor: cold spring harbor lab revised medium for rapid growth and bioassays with tobacco tissue cultures transformation of dicotyledonous plant cells using the ni plasmid of agrobacterium tumefaciens and ri plasmid of a. rhizogenes, plant genetic transformation and gene expression. a laboratory manual, draper transformation of several species of higher plants by agrobacterium rhizogenes. sexual transmission of the transformed genotype and phenotype a simple and rapid method for the preparation of plant genomic dna for pcr analysis recombinant plasmid dna pdes codes hepatitis b virus surface antigen (hbsag/mayw), yeast strain s. cerevisiae dan- /pdts -producer of hepatitis b virus antigen and vaccine on its base: rf patent no. a rapid and sensitive method for the quantitation of microgram quantities of protein utilizing the principle of protein-dye binding the effect of intron location on intron-mediated enhancement of gene expression in arabidopsis dual promoter of agrobacterium tumefaciens mannopine synthase genes is regulated by plant growth hormones combined usage of regulated promoters and grafting technique in gene fusions to lacz reveal new expression patterns of chimeric genes in transgenic plants evaluation of bt-cry ia (cryv) transgenic potatoes on two species of potato tuber moth, phthorimaea operculella and symmetrischema tangolias (lepidoptera: gelechiidae) in peru severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) s protein production in plants: development of recombinant vaccine the authors thank s.v. chernyshov for assistance in the development of the pe -ag genetic construct.this study was supported by the presidium of russian academy of sciences, the program "dynamics of plant, animal, and human genofonds" and also by russian foundation for basic research (projects nos. - - and - - ). key: cord- -whm ce u authors: li, qingdi quentin; skinner, jeff; bennett, john e title: evaluation of reference genes for real-time quantitative pcr studies in candida glabrata following azole treatment date: - - journal: bmc mol biol doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: whm ce u background: the selection of stable and suitable reference genes for real-time quantitative pcr (rt-qpcr) is a crucial prerequisite for reliable gene expression analysis under different experimental conditions. the present study aimed to identify reference genes as internal controls for gene expression studies by rt-qpcr in azole-stimulated candida glabrata. results: the expression stability of reference genes under fluconazole stress was evaluated using fold change and standard deviation computations with the hkgfinder tool. our data revealed that the mrna expression levels of three ribosomal rnas (rdn . , rdn , and rdn ) remained stable in response to fluconazole, while pgk , ubc , and ubc mrnas showed only approximately . -, . -, and . -fold induction by azole, respectively. by contrast, mrna levels of the other reference genes (act , ef α, gapdh, ppia, rpl a, rpl , rpl a, sdha, tub , and ubc ) were dramatically increased in c. glabrata following antifungal treatment, exhibiting changes ranging from . - to . -fold. we also assessed the expression stability of these reference genes using the (-ΔΔct) method and three other software packages. the stability rankings of the reference genes by genorm and the (-ΔΔct) method were identical to those by hkgfinder, whereas the stability rankings by bestkeeper and normfinder were notably different. we then validated the suitability of six candidate reference genes (act , pgk , rdn . , rdn , ubc , and ubc ) as internal controls for ten target genes in this system using the comparative c(t) method. our validation experiments passed for all six reference genes analyzed except rdn , where the amplification efficiency of rdn was different from that of the ten target genes. finally, we demonstrated that the relative quantification of target gene expression varied according to the endogenous control used, highlighting the importance of the choice of internal controls in such experiments. conclusions: we recommend the use of rdn . , ubc , and pgk alone or the combination of rdn . plus ubc or pgk as reference genes for rt-qpcr analysis of gene expression in c. glabrata following azole treatment. in contrast, we show that act and other commonly used reference genes (gapdh, ppia, rpl a, tub , etc.) were not validated as good internal controls in the current model. the investigation of gene expression has become increasingly prevalent in numerous animal, human, microorganism, and plant studies [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the quantitation of gene expression requires sensitive, precise, and reproducible measurements for specific mrna sequences. generally, gene expression levels can be determined by a variety of techniques, including northern blotting, rnase protection assay, semi-quantitative reverse-transcription pcr, and real-time quantitative pcr (rt-qpcr) [ ] . rt-qpcr has gained favor as it is a highly sensitive, accurate, and fast technique that offers highthroughput and the ability to detect low-abundance mrnas [ ] and quantify mrna copy number [ ] . thus, rt-qpcr has been used for countless different applications [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . one of the main uses of rt-qpcr, when coupled with reverse transcription, is to measure gene expression at the mrna level in various biological samples. however, there is substantial technical variability associated with rt-qpcr, arising from inherent differences in samples, sample collection, rna degradation and extraction efficiency, quantity and quality of input rna, reverse transcription and pcr efficiency, and pipetting accuracy or error. researchers have employed a number of strategies to normalize their data, including normalization to (i) genomic dna, (ii) total rna, (iii) an external standard, and (iv) a reference gene. the most common practice is to normalize to an internal control gene termed a reference gene. a reference gene is subject to the same errors in cdna preparation as the gene of interest, making it an excellent normalizing control. however, selection of an inappropriate reference gene can add large unpredictable error to the analysis and result in incorrect estimates [ ] . the ideal reference gene should have a stable rna transcription level under different experimental conditions and be sufficiently abundant across different tissues and cell types. however, it has become apparent that such an ideal reference gene has not yet been identified [ ] . the most commonly used reference genes, including β-actin, cyclophilin, gapdh, tubulin, and s and s ribosomal rnas, have shown variable expression levels in different cells and tissues under different conditions, and therefore they are unsuitable for normalization purposes owing to large measurement error [ , . hence, it is no longer acceptable to arbitrarily select any reference gene for normalization; it must be demonstrated that the reference gene of choice is suitable for the experiment in question. in recent decades, candida glabrata has emerged as the second most common cause of invasive fungal infection [ , , ] . azoles such as fluconazole are the firstline drugs for the treatment of fungal infections caused by c. glabrata. however, resistance to azoles can arise rapidly in c. glabrata during treatment of patients with azoles [ ] . an increasing body of evidence has implicated atp-binding cassette transporters (e.g., cdr and pdr ) and sterol biosynthetic enzymes (e.g., erg and erg ) in azole resistance in c. glabrata in both clinical and laboratory settings [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the expression of these genes in c. glabrata in response to azoles is not completely understood. therefore, we set out to establish an in vitro model for investigating azole-inducible gene expression in c. glabrata, using rt-qpcr. for reliable gene expression analysis, a compulsory step is the selection of good reference genes for normalization; however, no validated reference genes have been reported for the relative quantification of the mrna expression profile in c. glabrata following exposure to azoles. we have been using act as the internal control for gene expression analysis by rt-qpcr in clinical isolates of c. glabrata in the absence of drug challenges [ ] . other researchers also use act as the reference gene for azole-inducible gene expression studies by slot blotting in candida species [ , , ] . however, the suitability of act in studies of azole-inducible gene expression in c. glabrata has not been validated. in this work, we evaluated reference genes to establish their suitability as control genes for normalization and identified a set of genes that are suitable for quantitative gene expression analysis by rt-qpcr in c. glabrata following fluconazole treatment. all five c. glabrata strains (table ) used in the present study were grown in ypd broth (difco laboratories, the susceptibility of each c. glabrata strain to fluconazole was determined on ypd agar medium using an e-test (ab biodisk, solna, sweden) according to the manufacturer's instructions (table ) . total rna was extracted from c. glabrata logarithmicphase cultures grown in ypd broth, using trizol reagent (invitrogen, life technologies, grand island, ny, usa) according to the manufacturer's instructions. the concentration and purity of the rna was determined using a uv spectrophotometer (nanodrop c; ther-mofisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa) by measuring the absorbance at (od ), (od ) and nm (od ). the od nm /od nm of the samples, reflecting the average purity, ranged from . to . , and the od nm /od nm was in the range of . - . . the integrity of the rna was further checked in a selected subset of samples by electrophoresis through % denaturing and non-denaturing agarose gels. reverse transcription (rt) was performed on μg of total rna using a commercially available kit. prior to rt, the total rna samples were treated with dnase for min at °c (turbo dna-free; ambion, life technologies, grand island, ny, usa) according to the manufacturer's instructions. rna was converted to cdna using the high capacity cdna reverse transcription kit (applied biosystems, life technologies, carlsbad, ca, usa). the reaction took place in a thermal cycler (t thermocycler; biometra, goettingen, germany) with a single cycle and incubation periods of °c for min, °c for min, and °c for min. all investigated samples were transcribed with the same reverse transcription reaction conditions. negative controls, which were run simultaneously, did not contain either rna (no template control) or no reverse transcriptase (rt negative control), to control for rna and genomic dna contamination, respectively. primers and probes were designed in our laboratory using the primer analysis software primer express . (applied biosystems). taqman probes were synthesized by applied biosystems, and primers were synthesized by invitrogen/life technologies. the primers and taqman probes used in the current study were selected to bind specifically to the cdnas of cg u and other c. glabrata strains ( table ). the sequences of taqman probes and forward and reverse primers, the gene numbers, and the localization for each pcr assay for the reference genes and target genes assessed in this study are listed in additional file , additional file , and additional file . rt-qpcr for reference gene rna transcription was performed by sybr green chemistry (sybr green pcr master mix; applied biosystems). the increase in fluorescence of the sybr green dye was monitored using a real-time pcr system (applied biosystems). this technique has been successfully used to validate reference gene expression levels in yeast and other cell types [ ] . primers were used at nm each for specific forward and reverse primers and cdna at ng in -μl reactions. primer sets for the reference genes (additional file ) were used to amplify the open reading frame (orf) region of the genes according to the following conditions: one cycle of °c × min, °c × min; followed by cycles of °c × s, °c × min; with dissociation (a melting curve) during the last cycle of °c × s, °c × min, °c × s. the dissociation protocol to determine the melting curve from °c to °c for each pcr product was added after thermocycling to verify that each primer pair produced only a single product. all samples gave only a single peak, indicating a single pure product and no primer/dimer formation. real-time pcr efficiencies were acquired by amplification of a standardized dilution series of the template cdna and were determined for each gene as the slope of a linear regression model. pcr efficiency was determined by measuring the c t to a specific threshold for a serial dilution of cdna. the corresponding real-time pcr efficiencies were then calculated according to the equation: e ¼ À =slope À À Á  . all pcrs displayed efficiencies between % and %. to study target gene expression, the amplification was detected in real time using taqman chemistry (taqman universal pcr master mix; applied biosystems) according to the manufacturer's instructions. rt-qpcr was performed in -well microtiter plates with a final volume of μl, using a real-time pcr system (applied biosystems). primers were used at nm each for specific forward and reverse primers; probes, at nm; and cdna, at ng in -μl reactions. primer sets and taqman probes for the target genes (additional file ) were used to amplify the orf region of the genes under the following conditions: one cycle of °c × min, °c × min; and then cycles of °c × s, °l c × min. the parallel amplification between the reference genes and the target genes was confirmed for each with probe-primer sets. to minimize technical (run-torun) variation between the samples, all samples were analyzed in the same run for both target genes and reference genes. evaluation of reference gene expression stability using four different software packages non-normalized gene expression levels from our experimental data were analyzed to evaluate the expression stability of potential reference genes, using four different software programs: hkgfinder [ ] , genorm [ , ] , best-keeper [ ] , and normfinder [ ] . the hkgfinder software computes the pooled standard deviation (sd) of non-normalized expression data from both phenotypes (i.e., azole-treated and untreated c. glabrata cells), the fold change (fc) values between the two phenotypes, and student's t-tests of the log fold-change values with holm-adjusted p-values. the reference genes with the smallest sd and the smallest, non-significant fc are identified as the best potential reference genes (additional file ). the genorm software computes a stability value (m) and a pairwise variation (v), which are used to evaluate each individual reference gene candidate or each combination of reference genes, called a normalization factor (nf). the pairwise variability v of two genes j and k is the standard deviation of all log ratios of a j /a k , while the stability value m of gene j is the mean of all possible pairwise variations v jk . graphs of the m values help identify the best individual reference genes, and graphs of the v values identify the optimal number of reference genes for an nf. note that an earlier version called genorm excel was produced as an add-in for ms excel and it required several hand calculations to convert crossing point (cp) values into relative expression values. that version is now unavailable and the new genorm plus from biogazelle does not require those hand calculations. the bestkeeper software uses pairwise correlation to determine whether potential reference genes should be included in a bestkeeper index, which is simply the geometric mean of the cp or cycle threshold (c t ) values. the normfinder software computes a different type of stability value (ρ ig ) based on the intragroup and intergroup variation of the expression data. the software instructions from each package were followed when inputting the rt-qpcr data, fetching the output, and interpreting the analysis results. stability of rna transcription of reference genes in c. glabrata following azole stimulation in the present study, reference genes were chosen from among commonly used reference genes in published studies with yeast and mammalian cells, paying close attention to selecting genes that belong to different functional classes; their full names, symbols, functions, and gene numbers are listed in additional file . our aim was to identify reference genes with minimal variability under our experimental conditions. to this end, rt-qpcr was used to measure the rna transcription levels of reference genes in c. glabrata cells following fluconazole treatment. to compare the different rna transcription levels after azole exposure, the c t values of the reference genes were directly compared between the drug-treated (t) and untreated (ut) samples using the formula: the c t is defined as the number of cycles needed for the fluorescence signal to reach a specific threshold level of detection and is inversely correlated with the amount of template cdna present in the reaction. thus, a higher value of c t change indicates lower stability of a reference gene, considering that the expression of a reference gene should not change significantly with azole treatment. as expected, the rna transcription levels of the reference genes varied ( table ). the three ribosomal rna subunits rdn . , rdn , and rdn were the most stable reference genes, with c t change values less than . , while ubc , pgk , and ubc were relatively stable with c t change values of only around . . by contrast, the other reference genes showed marked variation in response to fluconazole. among them, the most prominent variation was found in the rna transcription levels of sdha, act , and rpl a; as seen in table , the c t change values of these reference genes were as high as . . to validate the stability of candidate rna transcription under our experimental conditions, the levels were compared with the rdn . rna transcription level. we chose to use rdn . as a normalizer because it meets the requirement for both stability and suitability as a reference. first, we calculated the Δc t between the c t values of reference genes and rdn . from fluconazoletreated (t) and untreated (ut) cells: in the second step, we subtracted the change in rna transcription in untreated samples from the change in treated samples to obtain the ΔΔc t (t): ΔΔc thus, ΔΔc t (t) indicates the change in rna transcription caused by fluconazole treatment after normalization to rna transcription changes in rdn . . a high ΔΔc t (t) value indicates a significant fluconazole-related change in the rna transcription level of the tested gene. a positive ΔΔc t (t) value indicates down-regulation of transcription, whereas a negative ΔΔc t (t) indicates upregulation of a gene's transcription following azole treatment. we then transformed ΔΔc t (t) into a -ΔΔct value, which indicates the fold change in rna transcription of a reference gene in response to fluconazole as compared with the level in untreated cells. the calculated ΔΔc t (t) and -ΔΔct values of the tested reference genes in drug-treated samples are given in table . following stimulation with fluconazole, the rna transcription of sdha, act , and rpl a was highly regulated in c. glabrata cells, with changes ranging from to -fold compared with transcription in the untreated cells. there was almost no regulation of rdn . , rdn , and rdn rna transcription, while pgk , ubc , and ubc rna transcription were only approximately -fold induction in response to drug treatment ( table ) . to choose the best reference genes, the reference gene stability was evaluated using four different software packages: hkgfinder, genorm, bestkeeper, and norm-finder. each of these software packages uses a slightly different metric to evaluate the candidate reference genes. our goal was to compare the findings from these four different methods and look for the best-scoring reference genes that might be common to these different methods. the hkgfinder software identifies the best reference genes by ranking the candidate genes according to their sd and fc values ( table ). among the potential reference genes, the sds ranged from . to . , and the fcs ranged from . to . . the best three reference gene candidates were rdn , rdn , and rdn . . the next three best candidate reference genes, which also had reasonable sd and fc values, were ubc , pgk and ubc . the genorm software evaluates reference genes by their m-stability values and v-pairwise variability values. low m values represent more stable expression and thus the most suitable reference genes ( figure ). the genorm analysis identified rdn , rdn , and rdn . as the three most stable genes; ubc , pgk , and ubc as relatively stable genes; and rpl a, act , and sdha as the three least stable genes under fluconazole treatment in c. glabrata. interestingly, the ranking of expression stability of the reference genes was identical between the genorm program and the hkgfinder tool ( figure ; tables and ). the genorm program also estimates the optimal number of reference genes that could be used in combination as an nf value ( figure ). each nf was calculated as the geometric mean of the two most stable genes, then the pairwise variability v was computed between nfn and nfn + for n = , . . ., . vandesompele et al. [ ] proposed . as a cutoff value for v below which additional reference genes do not need to be added to the nf. adding the third gene to the most stable two reference genes, rdn and the fold change shown in the table represents the difference in reference gene expression between azole-treated and untreated c. glabrata without normalization to an internal control gene. the stability ranking is based on the values of standard deviation (sd), log fold change, and fold change of reference genes in fluconazole-treated c. glabrata cells. the best reference genes will have the smallest sd and smallest fold-change values. determination of the optimal number of reference genes as internal references for normalization using genorm analysis. the genorm program calculates a normalization factor from at least two reference genes and the mean pairwise variation (v) between every combination of sequential normalization factors in order to determine the minimum number of reference genes required for accurate normalization in the samples. for example, v / represents the comparison of the normalization factors from five and six reference genes, respectively. on the left-most side is the pairwise variation when the number of reference genes is increased from two to three (v / ). stepwise inclusion of less stable genes generates the subsequent data points. a decrease in the v value indicates a positive effect and means that the added gene should preferably be included for calculation of a reliable normalization factor. the cutoff value for v, below which the inclusion of an additional reference gene does not result in a significant improvement of normalization, was set at . . it was apparent from the analysis of all studied samples that the combination of the two most stable reference genes is the best option and the combination of the five most stable reference genes is the second-best option for accurate normalization. the normfinder program was also used to rate candidate reference gene stability according to a stability value computed from the intragroup and intergroup expression variability. the least reliable reference genes identified by this program were rpl a, act , and sdha, which were identical to the worst reference genes identified by genorm and hkgfinder analyses (table ) . however, the ranking order of the most stable genes and the relatively stable genes by the normfinder program was different from that generated by genorm and hkgfinder (figure ; tables and ) . the genorm and hkgfinder analyses graded rdn , rdn , and rdn . as the most stable reference genes, followed by ubc , pgk , and ubc based on gene expression stability, whereas normfinder rated ubc , pgk , and ubc as the most stable reference genes, followed by rdn . , rdn , and rdn (figure ; tables and ) . finally, the bestkeeper program was used to grade candidate reference gene stability. this approach permits a comparative analysis across reference genes. ten reference genes analyzed were correlated and were combined into an index. subsequently, the correlation between each reference gene and the index was calculated. the best correlations between the reference genes and the bestkeeper index were obtained for ubc , ubc , and pgk (r = . , . , and . , respectively; table ). the rankings of the top three and the last three reference genes identified by the bestkeeper program were the same as those generated by the normfinder analysis, although the order of stability of the other reference genes differed slightly between the two programs ( table ). following the identification of the most stable reference genes from the full gene panel of genes, the comparative c t method was used to validate their suitability. the comparative c t method, also referred to as the ΔΔc t method, is a relative quantitation of gene expression between a specific target gene and a reference gene. for the comparative c t method to be valid, the efficiency of the target amplification and the efficiency of the reference (internal control) amplification must be approximately equal, and this must be determined in a validation experiment. to this end, we first determined the amplification efficiency of target genes (cdr , pdh , pdr , snq , yor , erg , erg , erg , erg , and erg ) and six reference genes (act , pgk , rdn . , rdn , ubc , and ubc ). standard curves were generated by plotting the dilutions of the cdna of each gene against the c t values. the linear correlation coefficient (r ) for all target genes and the six reference genes ranged from . to . . based on these slopes of the standard curves, the amplification efficiencies of the cdna standards, derived from the formula e = ( − /slope − ) × , ranged from to %. the c t values of all genes in the samples were within the range of the standard curves. next, the Δc t (Δc t = c t target − c t reference ) was calculated using the c t values generated from standard curve mass points (target vs. reference gene). these Δc t values were then plotted versus log input amount of cdna to create a semi-log regression line. the slope of the resulting semi-log regression line was used as a general criterion for passing a validation experiment. in a validation experiment that passes, the absolute value of the slope of Δc t versus log input cdna would be < . , meaning the two c t versus log concentration curves are nearly parallel. as seen in table , our validation experiments passed for all reference genes analyzed except rdn , which had an absolute value > . for the slopes of Δc t versus log input cdna for all target genes evaluated. thus, the amplification efficiency of rdn was clearly different from that of the ten target genes, whereas the other five reference genes (act , each value is the slope m of the line (y = mx + b) of the validation experiment and reflects the correlation of reference gene and target gene amplification efficiencies. an absolute slope value < . is generally used as a criterion for passing a validation experiment, as it indicates that the amplification efficiency is approximately equal between the reference and target genes. the slope m = indicates that the efficiencies of the two pcr reactions are equal. pgk , rdn . , ubc , and ubc ) had pcr efficiencies that were similar or relatively equivalent to the target amplification efficiencies ( table ) . to test the effect of azole on the expression of pleiotropic drug resistance genes in c. glabrata, we assessed the fluconazole-induced expression of two abc genes (cdr and pdr ) and one erg gene (erg ) in five c. glabrata strains, including the pdr mutant strain cgb (table ) . for comparison, we used both rdn . and act as references for normalization. as shown in table , fluconazole markedly induced increases in erg mrna levels in all c. glabrata strains examined when normalized to rdn . . fluconazole also significantly increased cdr and pdr mrna expression in all of the strains except cgb , consistent with the critical role of pdr in azole-induced transactivation of abc transporter gene expression, but not ergosterol biosynthesis gene expression, in c. glabrata. in contrast, when using act as the reference gene for quantification, fluconazole appeared to down-regulate the expression of all three target genes in the five c. glabrata strains (table ). finally, we compared the fluconazole-inducibled mrna expression levels of four target genes (cdr , pdr , erg , and erg ) in c. glabrata (cg u strain) after normalizing to different reference genes (act , pgk , rdn . , and ubc ), individually and in pairs. differences in quantitation were detected according to the reference genes used. as seen in table , normalization of the rt-qpcr data against the reference genes suggested as optimal by the four software packages (hkgfinder, genorm, bestkeeper, and normfinder) or the -ΔΔct method, gave comparable relative expression levels of the target genes under fluconazole treatment in c. glabrata. however, normalization against act resulted in relative expression levels of the targets that were substantially different from those normalized using other reference genes, implying that act is not a suitable reference gene for these studies. taken together with the data shown above, these results demonstrate that the relative quantification of azoleinducible gene expression varies largely depending on the reference gene and the number of reference genes used for normalization. this highlights the importance of choosing a suitable reference gene or reference gene pair when using rt-qpcr to determine the level of target gene expression in this model system. in any gene expression study, the selection of a valid normalization or internal control gene to correct for differences in rna sampling is critical in order to avoid misinterpretation of results and to obtain reliable conclusions. when choosing a reference gene as the internal endogenous control for gene expression studies by rt-qpcr, two important criteria must be met. the expression of the reference gene must remain stable throughout the given intervention (i.e., stability), and the amplification efficiency of the reference gene should be similar to that of the genes of interest (i.e., suitability). in the present study, we used five different methods to evaluate reference genes for potential use as internal controls and found that the reference genes performed differently in terms of stability and suitability in c. glabrata cells upon exposure to fluconazole. to our values indicate the fold change in rna transcription for each target gene in fluconazole-treated c. glabrata, as compared with untreated cells. Δc t = c t target − c t reference ; Δc t of each target gene was calculated by using rdn . or act as the reference. ΔΔc t (t) = Δc t (t) − Δc t (ut); ut, untreated; t, fluconazole-treated. fold change = -ΔΔct (t). fold changes of the target genes were also computed with the hkgfinder tool by using rdn . or act as the reference. # p > . and *p < . for the azole-treated group vs. the untreated group after normalization to rdn . or act . *values indicate the fold change in rna transcription for each target gene in fluconazole-treated c. glabrata after normalization to one or more reference genes, as compared with untreated cells. ΔΔc t (t) = Δc t (t) − Δc t (ut); ut, untreated; t, fluconazole-treated. fold change = -ΔΔct (t). fold changes of the target genes were also computed with the hkgfinder tool by using one or more reference genes as the internal control for normalization p < . vs. untreated cells, for all values shown in the table after normalizing to one or more reference genes as indicated. knowledge, this is the first report to validate reference genes as rna internal references in c. glabrata. the poor performance of act in c. glabrata cells was surprising, given that this gene has been used frequently as the reference gene in earlier gene expression studies [ , , , ] . our data clearly demonstrate the unsuitability of act as an internal control for gene expression studies in c. glabrata following fluconazole treatment. the initial results gained from using act as the internal control suggested that target gene expression was not up-regulated (tables and ). in fact, the only substantial change caused by azole treatment was a greater increase in act rna transcription compared with target gene transcription. while these findings are relevant to our specific study, it appears that numerous other studies have also shown the potential of act to detrimentally affect the accuracy of results [ , , , , , , , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] . we have been using act as the internal control for quantitation of gene expression by rt-qpcr in clinical isolates of c. glabrata, and we find that this gene works well as the reference in cells without azole or other agent stimulation [ ] . however, edlind and colleagues used act as the reference gene for azole-inducible gene expression studies by slot blotting in candida species, and their data clearly show the variation of act expression in response to azoles in their systems [ , ] . thus, our data revealing the instability of act in c. glabrata following antifungal treatment, combined with evidence from mammalian and other fungus studies, add to the growing body of evidence that act expression is unstable across various cell types and under different experimental conditions [ , , , , , , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] . although act gene expression was variable in response to fluconazole, the three ribosomal rnas (i.e., rdn . , rdn , and rdn ) remained unaffected and showed stable expression in azole-treated c. glabrata. these results indicate that ribosomal rna expression offers superior consistency compared with the expression of act and the other reference genes assessed. the stable expression levels of s and s rrnas relative to other reference genes under a variety of experimental conditions has previously been described for numerous systems, including both mammalian and yeast cells [ , , , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] . the levels of ribosomal rna, which represents % of total rna, are thought to be less likely to vary under conditions that affect the expression of mrnas because they are transcribed by a distinct rna polymerase. as an example, thellin et al. and other groups have recommended the use of s or s rrna as an internal control for mrna quantification studies because mrna variations are weak and cannot highly modify the total rna level [ , , , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, our further validation experiments showed that of slopes of Δc t versus log cdna were sufficiently parallel between rdn . and the target genes, but not between rdn or rdn and the target genes. with rdn and rdn , the absolute slope values of the Δc t versus log input cdna lines were > . for all target genes. these data indicate that the amplification efficiency of rdn . was similar to the efficiencies of the target genes, whereas the amplification efficiencies of rdn and rdn were different from the target gene amplification efficiencies. this may be attributable to the much higher abundance of rdn and rdn than rdn . compared with target mrna transcripts, making it difficult to accurately subtract the baseline value in rt-qpcr data analysis. therefore, although all three ribosomal rna subunits were stable during fluconazole stimulation, only rdn . may offer a more accurate and suitable alternative to act as an internal control for gene expression studies in c. glabrata. gapdh, a glycolytic enzyme, is encoded by a single gene and has the advantage of being highly conserved across different species [ , ] . like s rrna and β-actin, gapdh has been commonly used as an internal control, often without testing. in the present study, gapdh showed much higher variability than any of the ribosomal rnas in fluconazole-treated samples. these data demonstrate that gapdh is not an appropriate control gene for these studies, as has been pointed out in previous examples, and that it may lead to incorrect results under specific experimental conditions [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , [ ] [ ] [ ] , ] . previous studies have indicated the instability of gapdh in mammalian systems, and this study broadens the scope of this phenomenon to c. glabrata as well. pgk also plays important roles in the glycolytic pathway, and pgk and gapdh are potentially co-regulated [ ] . in our data, however, their potential co-regulation was not significant. pgk mrna levels remained relatively stable, in contrast to the marked variation in gapdh mrna levels in c. glabrata cells, following fluconazole challenge. moreover, our comparative c t calculations showed that the efficiency of pgk amplification was approximately equal to the efficiencies of the target gene amplifications. although pgk shows some variation as a reference gene, this may not affect experimental results as long as the intergroup difference being measured is greater than the reference gene variation, that is, a reference gene rna that has an error of log may not be ideal, but it would be sufficient to measure a log change in a gene of interest. thus, it is inferred that pgk may be a suitable reference gene for the analysis of expression for genes with higher azoleinducible mrna levels, such as erg and erg . ubiquitin is a small regulatory protein that has been found in almost all tissues of eukaryotic organisms. the ubc gene codes for a polyubiquitin precursor protein [ ] . due to its ubiquitous existence in different tissues and cells in eukaryotes, there are an increasing number of studies in the literature using the ubc gene as the internal standard for gene expression analysis in different eukaryotic cell systems [ , ] . out of curiosity, we validated three ubc genes (ubc , ubc , and ubc ) in this study. interestingly, we found that ubc and ubc mrnas (particularly the latter) were relatively stable in c. glabrata during fluconazole treatment. in addition, our validation experiments demonstrated that the amplification efficiencies of these genes were approximately equal to those of the target genes. these findings indicate that like pgk , ubc and ubc may also be suitable internal controls for quantifying the expression of specific genes with higher azole-inducible mrna levels in c. glabrata, such as some ergosterol biosynthesis genes. to successfully select reference genes for our studies involving azole treatment, we also investigated seven other reference genes, in addition to the reference genes mentioned above, with a diversity of functions. these reference genes can be generally classified into several groups: transcription-related genes (ef α), structure/ cytoskeleton-related genes (tub ), protein synthesisrelated genes (rpl a, rpl , and rpl a), and finally, genes that cannot be clearly categorized, including ppia and sdha. these potential reference genes such as ppia, rpl a, and tub are other examples of commonly used internal controls [ , , ] . for example, ppia has been used as a reference gene because of its remarkable evolutionary conservation and broad cellular and tissue distribution [ ] . although these seven reference genes have been used as internal standards for normalization in countless studies, all of these genes showed an unacceptable variable expression in our model system, with values ranging from a . -fold induction with tub to a -fold induction with sdha after antifungal treatment. altogether, these results suggest that the choice of internal controls is highly specific to a particular experimental condition, thus highlighting the importance of validating reference genes for each experimental model before commencement of rt-qpcr studies. although it is now widely accepted that normalizing to a single reference gene represents a strategy that is simple to use and can control for every stage of the rt-qpcr, some researchers also advocate the use of two or more reference genes, rather than relying on a single rna transcript [ , , , ] . this is a robust method for providing accurate normalization and is consequently preferable when fine measurements are to be made. according to vandesompele et al. [ ] , the purpose of normalization is to remove the sampling difference (such as rna quantity and quality) in order to identify real gene-specific variation. they provided evidence that a conventional normalization strategy based on a single gene can lead to erroneous normalization. however, it is not always possible to measure multiple reference genes because of limited sample availability and cost. furthermore, even when multiple genes are chosen, the resolution of the particular assay remains dependent on the variability of the chosen reference genes. as to our case, the genorm analysis using the geometric mean of the expression of the candidate cdnas suggested the use of rdn . , rdn , and rdn in combination or the combination of these three ribosomal rnas plus ubc and pgk as the reference control in the current study. however, the genorm assessment is based solely on the variability of reference genes and does not take other factors into account. for example, we found that although rdn and rdn were quite stable, their amplification efficiencies were not equal to the amplification efficiencies of all target genes tested; thus, they may not be suitable as internal controls in our system. therefore, when multiple reference genes are necessary, we believe that the combination of rdn . plus ubc and/or pgk would be a better choice for quantitation of gene expression by rt-qpcr in c. glabrata following azole stimulation. in this study, we evaluated reference genes for potential use as internal controls for rt-qpcr analysis of gene expression in c. glabrata (cg u strain) following hours of exposure to fluconazole at μg/ml. to our knowledge, this is the first identification and validation of rdn . , ubc , and pgk as the most suitable and stably expressed reference genes among the reference genes tested. therefore, we recommend the use of rdn . , ubc , or pgk alone or the geometric mean of these genes as standards for normalization when analyzing differences in gene expression levels in c. glabrata during antifungal treatment. more specifically, rdn . may be a more suitable reference gene for the analysis of expression for genes with lower azoleinducible mrna levels, while ubc and pgk may be better internal controls for quantifying the expression of genes with higher azole-inducible mrna levels in c. glabrata. in contrast, we demonstrated that reference genes commonly used in published reports, including act , gapdh, ppia, rpl a, and tub , had significant differences in their expression upon azole challenge, and thus were not validated as good endogenous controls in this model. as a main conclusion, this study emphasizes the importance of evaluation studies for the selection of the most appropriate internal controls for each experimental model used for quantitative expression studies. microarray and molecular analyses of the azole resistance mechanism in candida glabrata oropharyngeal isolates quantitative real-time rt-pcr-a perspective the real-time polymerase chain reaction twenty-five years of quantitative pcr for gene expression analysis real-time pcr for mrna quantitation absolute quantification of mrna using real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction assays an overview of real-time quantitative pcr: applications to quantify cytokine gene expression guideline to reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr accurate normalization of real-time quantitative rt-pcr data by geometric averaging of multiple internal control genes housekeeping genes as internal standards: use and limits betaactin-an unsuitable internal control for rt-pcr beta-actin and gapdh housekeeping gene expression in asthmatic airways is variable and not suitable for normalising mrna levels gapdh as a housekeeping gene: analysis of gapdh mrna expression in a panel of human tissues control selection for rna quantitation direct comparison of gapdh, beta-actin, cyclophilin, and s rrna as internal standards for quantifying rna levels under hypoxia mechanical injury of cartilage explants causes specific time-dependent changes in chondrocyte gene expression gene expression studies in prostate cancer tissue: which reference gene should be selected for normalization? effect of experimental treatment on housekeeping gene expression: validation by real-time, quantitative rt-pcr validation of housekeeping genes for normalizing rna expression in real-time pcr comparison of human adult and fetal expression and identification of housekeeping/maintenance genes validation of endogenous controls for gene expression analysis in microdissected human renal biopsies variation in epidermal housekeeping gene expression in different pathological states control genes in quantitative molecular biological techniques: the variability of invariance quantitative assessment of gene expression in highly purified hematopoietic cells using real-time reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction unsuitability of using ribosomal rna as loading control for northern blot analyses related to the imbalance between messenger and ribosomal rna content in rat mammary tumors normalization of real-time quantitative reverse transcription-pcr data: a model-based variance estimation approach to identify genes suited for normalization, applied to bladder and colon cancer data sets reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr in chrysanthemum subjected to biotic and abiotic stress selection of reference genes for quantitative gene expression normalization in flax (linum usitatissimum l.) selection of housekeeping genes for use in quantitative reverse transcription pcr assays on the murine cornea ribosomal s rna prevails over glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase and beta-actin genes as internal standard for quantitative comparison of mrna levels in invasive and noninvasive human melanoma cell subpopulations housekeeping gene expression during fetal brain development in the rat-validation by semi-quantitative rt-pcr reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr analysis in virus infected cells: sars corona virus, yellow fever virus, human herpesvirus- . camelpox virus and cytomegalovirus infections standardization strategy for quantitative pcr in human seminoma and normal testis azole resistance in candida glabrata: coordinate upregulation of multidrug transporters and evidence for a pdr -like transcription factor candida glabrata pdr , a transcriptional regulator of a pleiotropic drug resistance network, mediates azole resistance in clinical isolates and petite mutants mechanism of increased fluconazole resistance in candida glabrata during prophylaxis upregulation of erg genes in candida species by azoles and other sterol biosynthesis inhibitors histone deacetylase inhibitors enhance candida albicans sensitivity to azoles and related antifungals: correlation with reduction in cdr and erg upregulation collaborative comparison of broth macrodilution and microdilution antifungal susceptibility tests function of candida glabrata abc transporter gene application of a master equation for quantitative mrna analysis using qrt-pcr office of cyber infrastructure and computational biology (ocicb), national institute of allergy and infectious disease (niaid) qbase relative quantification framework and software for management and automated analysis of real-time quantitative pcr data determination of stable housekeeping genes, differentially regulated target genes and sample integrity: bestkeeper-excel-based tool using pair-wise correlations effects of fasting on the expression of gastrin, cholecystokinin, and somatostatin genes and of various housekeeping genes in the pancreas and upper digestive tract of rats changes in beta-actin mrna expression in remodeling canine myocardium regulation of hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase, glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase and beta-actin mrna expression in porcine immune cells and tissues housekeeping gene variability in normal and carcinomatous colorectal and liver tissues: applications in pharmacogenomic gene expression studies the quantification of gene expression in an animal model of brain ischaemia using taqman real-time rt-pcr validation of oligonucleotide microarray data using microfluidic low-density arrays: a new statistical method to normalize real-time rt-pcr data relative quantitative rt-pcr to study the expression of plant nutrient transporters in arbuscular mycorrhizas expression profile analysis of the lowoxygen response in arabidopsis root cultures various rat adult tissues express only one major mrna species from the glyceraldehyde- -phosphate-dehydrogenase multigenic family comparison of glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase and s-ribosomal rna gene expression as rna loading controls for northern blot analysis of cell lines of varying malignant potential validating internal controls for quantitative plant gene expression studies enzyme co-localization in pea leaf chloroplasts: glyceraldehyde- -p dehydrogenase, triose-p isomerase, aldolase and sedoheptulose bisphosphatase regulatory mechanisms involved in the control of ubiquitin homeostasis cyclophilin: distribution and variant properties in normal and neoplastic tissues a: evidence based selection of housekeeping genes evaluation of reference genes for real-time quantitative pcr studies in candida glabrata following azole treatment we sincerely thank huei-fung tsai, jason noble, and bryan walker for useful discussions and gratefully acknowledge jason noble for helpful technical assistance. this research was supported by the intramural research program of the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases, the national institutes of health. additional file : summary of the reference genes evaluated in this study.additional file : primers and probes for rt-qpcr analyses of reference gene rna transcription in this study. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. the hkgfinder software is currently available as an r source script and it can be downloaded for free from the niaid exon website [http://exon.niaid.nih. gov/hkgfinder/] with a sample data set and complete instructions. it requires installation of r . or higher on computers using the microsoft windows operating system for complete compatibility with its graphic user interface (gui) elements. experienced r users should be able to use hkgfinder on an apple macintosh or linux/unix operating system with some reasonable adjustments. an hkgfinder webtool should be available soon on the niaid exon website listed above. the genorm software is available from biogazelle [www.biogazelle.com/genormplus/] with a free day trial download as a part of the qbase plus software system. the genorm software has now been integrated into the qbase plus software, where calculation of relative quantities and genorm analysis are combined in a single program to speed up analysis. presently, many manual precalculations are not needed, and cross point (cp) values from rt-qpcr can now be directly used for the gene stability analysis using the qbase plus software. the qbase plus software currently requires microsoft windows xp or above or apple mac os x . (snow leopard) with java . or later. support for linux is also available, but no requirements are listed on the manufacturer's website. the bestkeeper software [http://gene-quantification. com/bestkeeper.html] is available for free download. please note that the software requires a password generated by an automatic email response from genequan@wzw.tum.de or password@gene-quantification.info. it requires the microsoft windows operating system and microsoft excel, but specific versions are not listed on the manufacturer's website. the normfinder software is available for free download from the manufacturer's website [http://www.mdl.dk/publicationsnormfinder.htm]. it requires microsoft windows operating system and microsoft excel or above.authors' contributions qql conceived of the project, conducted the studies, performed all the experimental procedures, carried out the analysis and interpretation of data, wrote the manuscript, and is the primary author of this paper. js developed the hkgfinder software and technically helped with the use of other software packages in the present study. jeb participated in the design and coordination of the study and critically reviewed the manuscript. all authors have read and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- -s ba uy authors: moncany, maurice l.j.; dalet, karine; courtois, pascal r.r. title: identification of conserved lentiviral sequences as landmarks of genomic flexibility date: - - journal: c r biol doi: . /j.crvi. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: s ba uy considering that recombinations produce quasispecies in lentivirus spreading, we identified and localized highly conserved sequences that may play an important role in viral ontology. comparison of entire genomes, including human, simian and non-primate mammal lentiviruses and negative control viruses, led to identify conserved lentiviral sequences (clss). they were located mainly in the structural genes forming hot spots particularly in the gag and pol genes and to a lesser extent in ltrs and regulatory genes. the cls pattern was the same throughout the different hiv- subtypes, except for some hiv- -o strains. only cls and were detected in both negative control htlv- oncornaviruses and d-particle-forming simian viruses, which are not immunodeficiency inducers and display a genetic stability. clss divided the virus genomes into domains allowing us to distinguish sequence families leading to the notion of ‘species self’ besides that of ‘lentiviral self’. most of acutely localized clss in hiv- s ( %) corresponded to wide recombination segments being currently reported. to cite this article: m.l.j. moncany et al., c. r. biologies ( ). hiv genome flexibility is characterized by a high frequency of spontaneous mutations and a variety of rearrangements. the error-prone replication by hiv reverse transcriptase is generally held responsible for the impressive fraction of defective viruses observed in productively infected lymphocytes. a variety of other mechanisms can contribute to generate modifications in the hiv genomes by restabilizing the viral information under new forms, among them recombination phenomena now thought to be mainly responsible for hiv genomic flexibility throughout an infection process [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . this raised the notion of 'mosaic viruses' composed of parts inherited from divergent entire or partial viral genomes that could be present in the cells when the replication steps occur [ ] [ ] [ ] . as lentiviral genomes are composed of an alternation of long variable and short conserved sequences, this appeared to be a characteristic of each part of the genomes organized as a succession of segments that can evolve differently and independently. the sequence conservation can be considered as the maintenance of either the general function of a protein or a potential precise function associated with a nucleotide segment (e.g., restriction or binding site). the extended nucleotide variability allowed by natural selection could lead to the evolution or to the disappearance of a function. in view of this analysis, the short conserved sequences may play crucial roles both in viral ontology and viral divergence independently of gene products functions (e.g., regulatory or enzymatic processes) as some of these sequences overlap genes. they could correspond to recombinogenic sequences important to understand lentiviral genomic flexibility. studies of the hiv genetic variability required computerized methods to investigate genomic divergences [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . a recombinant identification program was applied to the hiv- gag and env coding regions and allowed to determine putative large recombination segments -thus delimiting 'recombination cassettes' -and to create phylogenetic trees [ ] . however, theses trees highly differed when the currently used computation methods were applied to either the gag, pol, or env genes, and when reference genome in the same population was changed [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] . the situation was made more complex when fragment analysis of a single gene showed divergent phylogenetic trees for each studied fragment [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , this being due to the independent evolution of each gene. in lentiviral genomes, the programs have rarely revealed precise recombinogenic segments, but rather computerized plots or large domains possibly implied in the recombination process [ , , ] . comparison of whole genomes of related 'species' (with the meaning of taxons) is currently considered to identify the genomic organization and functionality without prior biological characterization [ , ] . in our global approach concerning complete genomes in all situations, we carried out the detection of conserved lentiviral sequences (clss), their precise location being harmonized thanks to the use of a single mmy ® sequence starting reference (see section ). the analysis was made on genomes belonging to mammal lentiviruses, negative control viruses and randomgenerated genome-like sequences. this scan of the dna lentiviral sequences for conserved stretches allowed to identify clss mainly situated in gag, pol and, in a minor proportion, env structural genes. a few of them were also noticed in the ltrs and the regulatory genes. a large part ( %) of clss located in hiv- s is situated in currently described recombination segments where they might form recombinogenic hot spots [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the similar position of each sequence in the different viral families led to establish the notion of 'lentiviral' and 'retroviral self' that was defined by the specificity of the sequences for restricted viral families. the viral genomes were retrieved from the genbank database and their loci are listed in appendix a. immunodeficiency lentiviral genomes correspond to human viruses ( hiv- s and hiv- s), simian viruses ( cpz, agm, macaque, mandrill, sooty mangabey, sykes' monkey viruses) and non-primate mammal viruses ( bovine, caprine, equine, feline, ovine and ovine/caprine viruses). to test cls specificity, three kinds of negative controls were examined. first, non lentiviral yet retroviral genomes were screened ( spumaviruses, oncornaviruses and d-particle-forming simian viruses). then, a set of human, animal and vegetal viruses was tested: herpes viruses, human and animal viruses ( adenovirus, coronaviruses, filoviruses, flaviviruses, parvoviruses, picornaviruses and rhabdoviruses) and vegetal viruses ( geminiviruses, potyviruses, tobamoviruses, tombusvirus, tymoviruses and necroviruses). finally, -kilobase-dna-like structures were randomly generated with a computer in order to eliminate any bias due to the possible subsequent biological role. using a previously published program [ , ] , a general analysis was carried out to identify the highly conserved sequences common to all or a maximum of lentiviral genomes. we first established the length of sub-sequences with the following trial/error method selecting parts of genomes. when the length was inferior to nucleotides, numerous sub-sequences were found in every genome, including the control ones. when it was superior to nucleotides, very few sub-sequences were found. the correct length was determined when it corresponded to that of sub-sequences common to most of the immunodeficiency viral genomes in either all or certain viral families. a similar approach was used for the determination of the number of accepted transitions. the relationship between both parameters led to an optimized choice of a -nucleotide-long sequence with a maximum of three admitted transitions. all the sequences showing such a determined length were tested and positioned in genomes thanks to the expasy program available on internet. some of them overlapped and created longer conserved domains. sequences present in most lentiviral genomes and checked not to be found in negative controls were selected. the number of accepted transitions was retained according to their lentiviral specificity to allow a variability of to %. in some cases the limit of % was retained, which is thought to delimit the generally admitted jump from one family to another and might fit with a possible biological significance. the genomes supplied by the databases show variable lengths because ltrs are reported with different lengths. thus, as the first considered nucleotides at the extremity vary from one genome to another, the rough detection of the sub-sequences gave heterogeneous localizations. another approach could use the real starting atg (as given in the databases) of the coding sequences as the initial nucleotide, but this was too complex because of the frequent presence of several other atgs. to sharpen and to harmonize the location of clss, we calculated their relative positions as compared to that of one of them chosen as the reference sequence (position + ). this sequence -mmy ® -was previously described for pcr purpose [ , ] and corresponds to the beginning of the pbs (reverse transcription primer binding site) at the extremity of the genomes. it is situated, for example, between nucleotides and on the hiv- bru/lai genome reported in genbank. mmy ® was found in hiv- , hiv- , agm, macaque, cpz, sooty mangabey, mandrill, equine and feline lentiviruses. when two ltrs were present in the genomic banks (hiv- , hiv- and equine viruses), a second mmy ® sequence detected at the extremity of the genomes was not considered in the analysis. in the sykes' monkey, bovine, caprine, ovine and ovine/caprine viruses lacking mmy ® , the indicated numbers corresponding to cls locations were determined as crude positions directly detected on the genomes. when investigated on complete viral genomes, clss were detected, six of them being the mmy ® ones that have been previously used as pcr primers for the early detection of possible hiv infection in highly exposed population [ , ] . these sequences together with some new determined clss classified from cls to cls are shown in table . the relationship between precise positions of clss and genomic organization of the viral families are depicted in figs. to . the cls characteristics together with their specific gene locations shown in tables - were divided into categories according to their lentiviral specificity. these sequences included all the mmy ones, cls to and cls . almost all of them were also present in simian viruses. it is worth mentioning the following particularities for some clss: cls was detected twice in most hiv- s, all cpz and mandrill (pol and nef genes) and most agm virus genomes (nef gene). it was observed only once (nef gene) for most hiv- s, macaque and sooty mangabey viruses. besides, a detection degree of the tested cls in the genomes: (") at least %; ( ) comprised between % and %; (!) less than %. b gene location of the clss: genes separated by ( / ) when cls was detected on each of the two genes; genes separated by (-) when cls overlapped the genes; gene indicated in italics when cls was present at an occasional position. c a gradual detection of cls was observed when the admitted transitions in this sequence varied from ( %) to ( %). the particular sykes' monkey virus presented the single cls in the vif gene. when viral genomes did not possess the second cls (nef gene), cls (from which cls derived) was detected in the pol gene. for cls (gag gene), a maximum of three transitions ( . %) and sometimes four transitions ( . %) were introduced in the computation. in the control viruses, this sequence was only detected in one herpes virus after three permitted transitions. when reaching four transitions, it were detected in almost all lentiviruses and in some negative genomes. while cls (pol gene) as well as cls was found in many genomes in most viral families, they were the only ones present in the four simian d-particle-forming viruses whose presence does not develop aids-like syndrome. cls (pol gene) was present in all the primate viruses, except the sykes' monkey's ones. these sequences corresponded to cls up to cls , in addition to those common to a maximum of hiv- s and hiv- s. the pattern of detection of hiv- s was also found for cpzs except that cls and were missing. cls , and were only detected in hiv- s and in cpz viruses. in particular, cls was detected in most hiv- s (pol gene), sometimes twice for / positive strains (gag and pol genes). it was not found in / hiv- -o viruses (af , him , him , hivant c and hivmvp ) but was in af . when cls was present, its position highly varied in all cpz viruses (pol gene), the two caprine viruses (vif gene), hiv- s and sooty mangabey (env gene), and mandrill viruses (pol gene). cls was present in most hiv- genomes (env gene), except for out of hiv- s including the six hiv- -o viruses, and was found twice in out of ones (env and pol gene). cls only found in most hiv- s was located mainly in gag gene and gradually detected ( % to %) when the admitted transitions varied from to . cls (pol gene) was specific to most hiv- s, but was absent from all the hiv- -o group, and was present in one cpz virus. a detection degree of the tested cls in the genomes: (") at least %; ( ) comprised between % and %; (!) less than %. b gene location of the clss: genes separated by ( / ) when cls was detected on each of the two genes; genes separated by (-) when cls overlapped the genes; gene indicated in italics when cls was present at an occasional position. c n.a.: not attributed. these sequences correspond to cls up to , in addition to those common to a maximum of hiv- s and hiv- s. the five clss characteristic of hiv- s were also conserved in most simian viruses except for cpz, mandrill and sykes' monkey viruses. cls was present in most hiv- s and macaque viruses (env gene) and sometimes in sooty mangabey and agm viruses (rev gene). cls was found in gag gene in all hiv- , agm and macaque genomes and in most sooty fig. . clss localization and genomic organization of cpz, d-particle-forming viruses, feline and equine viruses. the numbers represent the relative positions of the detected cls calculated versus that of the mmy ® , except for d-particle-forming viruses that lack mmy ® , whose numbers correspond to the crude positions of the clss directly referenced from the genomes (see section ). the reference organization of cpz, d-particle-forming viruses, feline and equine viruses was represented using: af , af , fivz and af viruses, respectively. occp.: cls found at an occasional position. mangabey and mandrill ones. cls (gag gene) and (vpx gene) were detected in most hiv- s and cls (env gene) in all of them. cls , and were also present in all macaque and sooty mangabey viruses in the gag, env and vpx genes, respectively. in addition to the sequences common to a maximum of hiv- s, cls was characteristic of all agm and sykes' monkey lentiviruses in the env and tat overlapping genes, respectively. when present in one of the two mandrill viruses (sivmndgb ), cls was located at an unusual position in the gag gene. non-primate lentiviruses showed less clss than primate ones, with / not present at all (table ) , bovine lentiviruses showing the minimal number of two clss. the missing clss concerned particularly those detected in hiv- s. it is worth mentioning that cls was uniquely observed in all equine viruses where it was detected once at the unusual position in gag gene. cls was only present in all caprine viruses (unusually in vif gene) as well as cls in most feline ones (pol gene). mmy ® was restricted to all equine and feline viruses. a few clss were displayed in some negative control viral genomes, while the random-generated tenkilobase-dna-like structures did not present any of them. cls was found in / htlv- s together with cls in / of them while htlv- s did not present any sequence. cls and were the only ones detected in d-particle-forming simian viruses in the pol and gag genes, respectively. mmy ® was in / murine retroviral genomes. one should note that all these different oncornaviruses belong to families that are genetically stable and do not induce immunodeficiency. cls and were in retroviral spumaviruses ( / and / , respectively). cls , , , , and were found in / herpes viruses. remarkably, hiv- s present a crosstransactivation activity on herpes viruses [ , ] as well as htlv- s [ ] . cls was in / picornaviruses while cls was in / parvoviruses. the observed sequences were mapped on all the genomes of the different viral families. from the particular organization of the hiv- and hiv- ( fig. ) , agm and macaque (fig. ) , cpz, feline, equine and d-particle-forming viruses (fig. ) and that of sooty mangabey, mandrill and other non-primate lentiviruses (supplementary data), it appears that a given cls occupied on the viral genome a specific position that was roughly conserved in the different viral families. at first sight, the clss were detected mainly in the gag and pol structural genes and, to a lesser extent, in the ltrs, the env structural gene and the nef, vpr, vpu, vpx, vif, rev and tat regulatory genes in a decreasing order. when analyzing the data among families, the hiv- genome displayed the highest number of clss that were mainly found in the first half of the genome, covering ltr, gag and pol genes and a part of vif gene. particularly, the sequence detection evidenced the p and p proteins for gag gene and the p and p proteins for pol gene, while cls and were found in the gp protein of env gene (see tables and ) . moreover, it was noticeable that cls was at the hinge of the two ltrs. in hiv- genome, clss were also mainly related to gag, pol and env genes. hiv- and siv genomes presented similar organizations, but some differences led us to differentiate the sivs in several categories (figs. and ; supplementary data) . for example, cpz viruses exhibited a striking analogy with hiv- s, while agm, macaque and sooty mangabey genomes showed a cls organization rather similar to that found in hiv- s, confirming molecular data. cpz viruses also presented such a similarity with hiv- s at the molecular level, yet they belonged to the simian viruses concerning the immunological characterization (e.g., [ , , ] ). besides, the sykes' monkey virus appeared to be particular since it presented only six clss, four of them being at the hinge of the pol/vif genes. the d-particleforming viruses showed the simplest organization with only cls and that framed the beginning of pol gene. for the non-primate mammal viruses, the data must be cautiously interpreted, because the low number of studied genomes was not representative for some of these families. however, it is noteworthy that their detected sequences were mainly situated in the gag-pol region. the clss of these viruses whose number increased from bovine, equine, ovine/caprine, ovine, feline and finally up to caprine genomes showed a similar pattern ( fig. ; supplementary data) . lentiviral genomes contained clss allowing them to divide into regions corresponding to 'evolutive cassettes' that defined viral specific subtypes. about one third of clss were common to almost all primate lentiviral genomes. as to clss specific to hivs, their detection fitted with the known immunological families. maps of the viruses that can be reconstructed from building blocks delimited by clss were specific to each viral type, though they presented a similar high density in the gag-pol region. the revealed homology in gene location of clss between hivs and simian viruses confirmed the separation into two categories (hiv- /cpz viruses, hiv- s/other sivs). a clear barrier between primate and other mammal viruses appeared, due to shifting locations for some clss in the non-primate ones. many studies describe lentiviruses as mosaic viruses and numerous examples of recombination between different hiv- s strains have been reported [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the correlation between wide recombination segments (whose list is not exhaustive) and clss acutely localized in the same regions is shown in table . most of clss located in hiv- s ( %) corresponded to such reported sequences, an underestimated value since multiple recombinogenic segments lacking of precise location (e.g., [ , ] ) are not mentioned. cls and as well as mmy were situated in the hiv- recombination sequence shown in the gag-pol region [ ] . other domains contained cls and cls in the nef -ltr region [ ] , mmy (ltr), mmy (gag gene) and mmy , as well as cls (pol gene) in a study using hiv- strains deleted in the env gene [ ] . in complete hiv- genomes, recombinogenic segments have been reported in the pol gene at rt level (p protein), to which corresponded cls , , and , and in the env/nef common part, containing cls [ ] . they concerned also the gag (p protein), env (gp and proteins) and nef genes that carried mmy as well as cls and , table correlation between recombinogenic segments described in hiv- s and clss gene location of reported recombinogenic segments clss detected in corresponding segments [ , ] ltr mmy [ , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] gag mmy , , cls , , [ , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] pol mmy , , cls - , - , , [ , , , , ] vpr/tat/rev cls , [ , , , , , ] env cls , [ , ] env/nef cls , [ ] nef/ ltr cls cls and , and cls and , respectively [ ] . recombinogenic segments corresponded to clss and in env gene (gp protein) and cls in the tat/rev overlapping region [ ] . among the clss present in hiv- s, % belonged to the large recombination domains cited above. mmy and cls that corresponded to gag p protein (core protein) and clss and that corresponded to pol p protein (integrase) have not been correlated until now to recombinogenic segments. clss were characterized by their nucleotide composition and exhibited at first look a clear gap in detection between primate and other mammal viruses. in fact, well-conserved clss can represent a signal specific of the strain, the sub-group, the group or the family of virus to which they belong. these sequences can be classified as a function of the possible recombination events they could induce: 'hiv- type' between the different hiv- and cpz strains; 'hiv- type' between the different hiv- s, macaque and sooty mangabey viruses and the feline ones; 'simian type' between agm, mandrill and sykes' monkey viruses; 'lentiviral type' between approximately all mammal lentiviruses; 'retroviral type' between almost all retroviruses. thus clss can be considered as the 'identifying self' of the viruses and their presence permitted the denomination of 'viral self', which could be a 'species self' (an hiv- -type, for example), or an 'inter-species self' -'lentiviral' or 'retroviral' self. our global study of the entire lentiviral genomes suggested the involvement of recombinations in genome flexibility. it allowed us to postulate that if one recombination induced the formation of one variant, the association of series of related variants formed one subtype. the latter was produced by recombinations between distinct variants that could cause or not the emergence of a new subtype. the genomic flexibility is associated with the viral-derived dna sequences that can recombine [ , , ] and/or produce complementing and/or recombining rnas [ , , ] . once several elements of the viral genome have penetrated into a cell -and sometimes together with hiv dna pieces carried by virions [ ] -they may be rearranged to possibly elicit productive infection in a new target tissue. for example, cls and cls (hiv- env gene) were located at the level of the v and v variable loops of the gp cellbinding protein, respectively corresponding to the recombinogenic segments previously described [ , , , , , ] . this cls /cls tandem seems to correspond to an important building block for the creation of a new cellular tropism. the v domain is critical for chemokine-mediated blockade of infection [ ] and the v and v regions that are separated by the c constant domain represent the targets of many trials for the establishment of a candidate vaccine. a productive viral dissemination has been revealed that evidences recombinations implying independent gene evolutions [ , , ] , and possibly leads to a new gene acquisition [ , ] . such genomic divergences both maintain viral specificity and allow the emergence of new families raising the question: are these divergences selected by the specificity or are they specificityselectors while maintaining the viral integrity? so a new viral cell tropism can be created that correlates with the use of the ccr or cxcr classical co-receptors [ , ] or a postulated new one [ ] . another essential step was to link the determined landmarks of genomic flexibility with precise viral functions. it is worth mentioning that clss and have a very close function. cls was a part of the cppt involved in the initiation of lentivirus reverse transcription [ ] where dna synthesis enhances dna/dna recombination [ ] . cls represented the well-conserved part of the distal ppt, and perhaps the action site, while the neighbouring sequences which varied highly from a virus to another one might constitute a specific recognition site for the reverse transcrip-tase associated with a given virus. hiv- s displayed two cls at positions shown to be the cppt (pol gene) [ ] and the distal ppt (nef gene) [ ] . also, hiv- s revealed a slightly different organization, since cls was part of the cppt (pol gene) and cls part of the distal ppt when the nef gene overlaps the ltr. the role in recombination of clss situated in the conserved ppt was emphasized by the determination in the pol gene (protein p , integrase) of a recombinogenic segment that could affect the viral productive cycle [ ] . another interesting point concerns the sequence structure which could also indicate a specific additional function for some clss. for example, the presence of the repeated aatt motif inside cls ( motives) and ( motives) is similar to a folding-like inducer of the dna [ ] . cls presented the noticeable triplicate aatt structure (aaactaaagaatt acaaaaacaaattacaaaaatt) neighbouring cls to form a termination structure. in view of the structure of the cts (pol gene, p protein) [ ] , cls together with cls showed the aaaaatt and aaatttt motives corresponding respectively to and , strong and weak, stop signals [ , ] . the cts approximately represents the succession of these two sequences. the raison d'être of a cls -simply recombining, participating in the genetic expression or both -can imply important differences in the detected sequence function and/or viral ontology such as generation of a new subtype (e.g., [ , ] ). clss specificity revealed that two kinds of recombinations seemed to coexist. one involved sequences mostly common to all the lentiviral genomes separated by large domains, which could allow interspecific recombinations. the other type of recombination involved sequences that within a same family were separated by short distances or even overlapped as shown in hiv- s for cls and (gag gene). these findings led us to discriminate between restricted or expanded specificity. in a gene-to-gene study on gag and env genes, wide segments have been described where recombinations could be present, which implied that one recombinant virus characterizes one subtype [ ] . the multiplicity of viral subspecies present in the same infected host may be a cause and/or a consequence of the recombination phenomena [ , , , ] , the generation of recombining strains increasing this process. the presence of clss is not directly associated with the role of a gene since a recombination can be either intra-or intergenic. such a process involves two adjacent or distant clss that can be situated in the same gene or in two different genes. considering all the possibilities of recombination that happen during an infection, the viability of the newly recombinant genome is the single criterion of selection. the cascade of slow genomic divergences is an integral part of the viral ontogeny to ensure long-term survival. such genetic approaches could benefit from the defined clss, whose characteristic is to be well-conserved and to keep functional the viral genome. thus the mechanism that maintains the genomic flexibility would be an excellent tool to impede viral growth, particularly when sequences implied in recombination and genetic expression are modified or blocked. as an ad absurdum argument, d-particle-forming viruses that do not cause immunodeficiency presented a single sequence cls (pol gene), and occasionally cls (gag gene), a situation leading to the suppression of some necessary specificity steps. these two clss were the only sequences detected in htlv- s showing a genetic stability like that in htlv- s yet without cls, which suggests that they could play a role in gene exchange between oncorna-and/or retroviruses. during lentiviruses adaptation to changes caused by drug administration [ , , , ] or by environmental conditions to ensure continued reproduction, the viral propagation beyond a critical level is constantly in a situation of flux. thus, clss can allow the spontaneous replacement of defective variants with newly 'recruited' recombined (or complementing) hiv genomes. the high degree of divergence is a vital part of the viral ontogeny, and recombinations induce sustained viral multiplication allowing the environment to select the most efficient genomic alternative. this emphasizes the importance of the number, the position and the specificity of clss on the viral genome, especially since most of them fitted with recombinogenic segments already described. the biological role validity of some clss not associated until now with a known function had to be checked in vitro, for example by reverse genetic experiments that could reveal the importance of the different sequences. clss, which represent essential landmarks of genomic flexibility, may become key targets for the establishment of new drug and/or gene therapies that can escape the resistances encountered with treatments presently in use. chimpanzee ( ): af , af , sivcpzgab. african green monkeys af , af , af , af , af , hl g gnom, hl v cg, htlvcge, nc_ . murine viruses a. . negative control viruses herpes viruses recombinant hiv sequences: their role in the global epidemic different evolutionary patterns are found within human immunodeficiency virus type -infected patients recombination in hiv: an important viral evolutionary strategy mechanisms of retroviral recombination mosaic structure of the human immunodeficiency virus type genome infecting lymphoid cells and the brain: evidence for frequent in vivo recombination events in the evolution of regional populations high frequency of recombinant genomes in hiv type samples from brazilian southeastern and southern regions morgado, molecular epidemiology of hiv- in venezuela: high prevalence of hiv- subtype b and identification of a b/f recombinant infection fast analysis of genomic homologies: primate immunodeficiency virus a likelihood method for the detection of selection and recombination using nucleotide sequences in vivo characteristics of human immunodeficiency virus type intersubtype recombination: determination of hot spots and correlation with sequence similarity a novel exploratory method for visual recombination detection scanning the database for recombinant hiv- genomes characterization of a highly replicative intergroup m/o human immunodeficiency virus type recombinant isolated from a cameroonian patient sequence variability of the integrase protein from a diverse collection of hiv type isolates representing several subtypes high prevalence of diverse forms of hiv- intersubtype recombinants in central myanmar: geographical hot spot of extensive recombination development and application of a highthroughput hiv type- genotyping assay to identify crf _ag in west/west central africa stepwise detection of recombination breakpoints in sequence alignments sequencing and comparison of yeast species to identify genes and regulatory elements genetic characterization of the nef gene from human immunodeficiency virus type group m strains representing genetic subtypes a precise mapping of recombination breakpoints suggests a common parent of two bc recombinant hiv type strains circulating in china genotypic and phenotypic analysis of hiv type primary isolates from western cameroon human immunodeficiency virus type recombination: rate, fidelity, and putative hot spots v i substitution in the reverse transcriptase gene of hiv type crf _ag strains infecting drug-naive individuals in cameroon hiv type- circulating recombinant form crf _cpx from west africa combines subtypes a, f, g, and may share ancestors with crf _ag and z isolation and characterization of a fulllength molecular dna clone of ghanaian hiv type intersubtype a/g recombinant crf 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genetic organization of a chimpanzee lentivirus related to hiv- mechanisms associated with the generation of biologically active human immunodeficiency virus type- particles from defective proviruses how rna viruses exchange their genetic material viral dna carried by human immunodeficiency virus type virions the v domain of the hiv- gp envelope glycoprotein is critical for chemokine-mediated blockade of infection gene acquisition in hiv and siv evolution of the primate lentiviruses: evidence from vpx and vpr biological and molecular aspects of hiv- coreceptor usage impact of antiretroviral treatment on the tropism of hiv- plasma virus populations identification and characterization of hiv- strains obtained from asymptomatic patients that do not use ccr or cxcr coreceptors a single-stranded gap in human immunodeficiency virus unintegrated linear dna defined by a central copy of the polypurine tract strand displacement synthesis in the central polypurine tract region of hiv- promotes dna to dna strand transfer recombination the structure of an oligo(da).oligo(dt) tract and its biological implications hiv- reverse transcription. a termination step at the center of the genome synthesis of dna by human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase is preferentially blocked at template oligo(deoxyadenosine) tracts template-directed pausing of dna synthesis by hiv- reverse transcriptase during polymerization of hiv- sequences in vitro mutations in retroviral genes associated with drug resistance characterization of resistant hiv variants generated by in vitro passage with lopinavir/ritonavir we thank dr christiane plas for critical reading of this manuscript and for helpful discussions. appendix a af , af , a , a , him , him , him , him , him , him , hivant c, hivbcsg x, hivbrucg, hivcam , hivelicg, hivf cg, hivhxb cg, hivibng, hivjrcsf, hivmalcg, hivmncg, hivmvp , hivndk, hivnl , hivny cg, hivoyi, hivpv , hivp c, hivrf, hivsf cg, hivth a, hivu a, hivu , hivu , hivu , hivu , hivu , hivu , hivu key: cord- -flbibrcm authors: kim, jong-oh; kim, jae-ok; kim, wi-sik; oh, myung-joo title: characterization of the transcriptome and gene expression of brain tissue in sevenband grouper (hyporthodus septemfasciatus) in response to nnv infection date: - - journal: genes (basel) doi: . /genes sha: doc_id: cord_uid: flbibrcm grouper is one of the favorite sea food resources in southeast asia. however, the outbreaks of the viral nervous necrosis (vnn) disease due to nervous necrosis virus (nnv) infection have caused mass mortality of grouper larvae. many aqua-farms have suffered substantial financial loss due to the occurrence of vnn. to better understand the infection mechanism of nnv, we performed the transcriptome analysis of sevenband grouper brain tissue, the main target of nnv infection. after artificial nnv challenge, transcriptome of brain tissues of sevenband grouper was subjected to next generation sequencing (ngs) using an illumina hi-seq system. both mrnas from pooled samples of mock and nnv-infected sevenband grouper brains were sequenced. clean reads of mock and nnv-infected samples were de novo assembled and obtained , unigenes. in addition, differentially expressed genes (degs) in response to nnv infection were identified. this result could provide critical information not only for the identification of genes involved in nnv infection, but for the understanding of the response of sevenband groupers to nnv infection. grouper is one of the highest valued marine fish and has become an important species in the aquaculture industry of various asian countries. in korea, sevenband grouper (hyporthodus septemfasciatus) is one the favorite grouper fish consumed. its production rate is increasing. however, viral nervous necrosis (vnn) causes high mortality, especially at the larval and juvenile stage of sevenband groupers during the summer season, which has caused vast economic losses [ ] . viral nervous necrosis is a serious disease in the world aquaculture industry [ ] [ ] [ ] . firstly, it was reported in bigeye trevally (caranx sexfasciatus) in the s and since then it has been reported in over twenty species [ ] [ ] [ ] . the infected fish are usually swimming abnormally and having vacuolization and necrosis of the central nervous system in the brain [ ] . in korea, mass mortalities caused by vnn have been reported from various cultured marine fish such as sevenband grouper (hyporthodus septemfasciatus), rock bream (oplegnathus fasciatus), red drum (sciaenops ocellatus) and olive flounder (paralichthys olivaceus) since [ ] [ ] [ ] . nervous necrosis virus (nnv), the causative agent of vnn, has non-enveloped icosahedral structure and belongs to the family nodaviridae (genus betanodavirus). its genome contains two single-stranded positive senses rna: rna (approximately . kb in length) encodes an rna-dependent rna died from day after infection and showed % of cumulative mortality after week. the moribund fish at days and were selected for sampling. brain tissues of three of ten challenged fish from mock and the virus-challenge group were collected and pooled for ngs analysis, respectively. to obtain high-throughput transcriptome data of sevenband grouper, complementary dna (cdna) libraries were prepared for bp paired-end sequencing using a truseq rna sample preparation kit (illumina, san diego, ca, usa) according to the manufacturer's protocols. they were then paired-end ( × bp) sequenced using an illumina hiseq system (illumina, san diego, ca, usa). prior to de novo assembly, paired-end sequences were filtered and cleaned using an ngs qc toolkit [ ] to remove low quality reads (q < ) and adapter sequences. in addition, bases of both ends less than q of filtered reads were removed additionally. this process is to enhance the quality of reads due to mrna degradation in both ends of it as time goes on [ ] . only high quality reads were used for de novo assembly performed by trinity (version ) using default values [ ] . to remove the redundant sequences, cd-hit-est [ ] was used. ncbi blast (version . . ) was applied for the homology search to predict the function of unigenes. the function of unigenes was predicted by blastx to search all possible proteins against the ncbi non-redundant (nr) database (accessed on july ). the criterion regarding significance of the similarity was set at expect-value less than × − . after obtaining the assembled transcriptome data using trinity, gene expression level was measured with rna-seq by expectation maximization (rsem), a tool for measuring the expression level of transcripts without any information on its reference [ ] . the tcc package was used for deg analysis through the iterative deges/deseq method [ ] . normalization was progressed three times to search meaningful degs between comparable samples [ ] . the degs were identified based on the p-value of less than . . the go database classifies genes according to the three categories of biological process (bp), cellular component (cc) and molecular function (mf) and provides information on the function of genes. to characterize the identified genes from deg analysis, a go based trend test was carried out through the fisher's exact test. selected genes with p-values of less than × − were regarded as statistically significant. all the raw read files were submitted to the sequence reads archive (sra), ncbi database (accession number-srr ). sequencing of the two libraries (mock and nnv-infected brain tissue) using the illumina hiseq platform generated a total of , , ( , , , bases) and , , ( , , , bases) raw reads, respectively (table ) . after the cleansing step with an ngs qc toolkit and removal of low quality (q < ) reads, , , ( , , , bases) and , , ( , , , bases) remained as clean reads, respectively ( table ). the percentages of clean reads were . % and . %, respectively (table ) . all the clean reads were submitted to the trinity for de novo assembly. unigenes were identified after removing redundant sequences from assembled transcripts. the number of unigenes was , , the total length and the average length of the unigenes were , , bp and bp, respectively ( table ). the length distribution of unigenes is presented in figure . among these unigenes, , unigenes ( . %) were no more than bp. a total of , unigenes ( . %) were - bp, unigenes ( . %) were - bp, unigenes ( . %) were - bp, unigenes ( . %) were - bp, and unigenes ( . %) were longer than bp. bases) remained as clean reads, respectively ( table ). the percentages of clean reads were . % and . %, respectively (table ). all the clean reads were submitted to the trinity for de novo assembly. unigenes were identified after removing redundant sequences from assembled transcripts. the number of unigenes was , , the total length and the average length of the unigenes were , , bp and bp, respectively ( table ). the length distribution of unigenes is presented in figure . among these unigenes, , unigenes ( . %) were no more than bp. a total of , unigenes ( . %) were - bp, unigenes ( . %) were - bp, unigenes ( . %) were - bp, unigenes ( . %) were - bp, and unigenes ( . %) were longer than bp. to estimate gene expression levels, we calculated the abundance of reads in the transcriptome. the top most highly expressed transcripts are shown in table . commonly, the most abundant genes in both the mock and nnv-infected groups were ribosomal proteins, such as ribosomal protein (rps) a, rpl , rps , rps , rpls , rps a, rpl and rpl essential for biological metabolism. ubiquitin-like protein a (ubl a), c-c motif chemokine (ccl ), lysozyme g (lyg_epico) and two novel genes (id: sgu , sgu ) were highly expressed in the to estimate gene expression levels, we calculated the abundance of reads in the transcriptome. the top most highly expressed transcripts are shown in table . commonly, the most abundant genes in both the mock and nnv-infected groups were ribosomal proteins, such as ribosomal protein (rps) a, rpl , rps , rps , rpls , rps a, rpl and rpl essential for biological metabolism. ubiquitin-like protein a (ubl a), c-c motif chemokine (ccl ), lysozyme g (lyg_epico) and two novel genes (id: sgu , sgu ) were highly expressed in the nnv-infected group compared to that in the mock group. of them, ubiquitin-like protein a was the most abundant gene in the nnv-infected group. putative annotations of these transcripts were performed using blastx as mentioned in the method section. after gene annotation by using blastx against the non-redundant (nr) database, the putative functions of , sequences ( . %) of , unigenes sequences were identified. a total of unigenes were differentially expressed based on deg analysis using the tcc package. a total of genes from the total of degs were annotated (table s ). immune relevant degs were further manipulated manually (table ). in immune relevant genes, a variety of cytokines were intensely up-regulated after nnv infection. several cytokine genes induced by nnv infection belonged to the chemokine family, including c-c motif chemokine ligand (ccl ), ccl , ccl , ccl , c-x-c motif chemokine ligand (cxcl ), cxcl , cxcl , cxcl , interleukin- subunit alpha (il a) and beta (il b), and il b. ccl was the most critically expressed gene in the infected group showing . log fold change (fc). ccl is involved in neuroinflammatory processes taking place in the central nervous system in various diseases [ ] . cathepsins are lysosomal cysteine enzymes with important roles in cellular homeostasis and innate immune response [ ] . among a dozen members of the cathepsin family, subtypes l, h, k, o, s and z were up-regulated in the brain of sevenband grouper after nnv infection. specifically, cathepsin l was highly expressed in the nnv-infected group showing . log fc. several lectins were expressed in higher levels in the nnv-infected group compared to the mock group, including c-type lectins (clec m, clec a), galectins (lgals , lgals ), fucolectin (fucl ), and mannose-binding lectin (mbl). in the case of c-type lectins, its receptor (cd ) was also highly expressed in the infected group (table ) indicating that c-type lectin might play specific roles in the response of sevenband grouper to nnv infection. as expected, a number of antiviral proteins also showed high levels of expression in the nnv-infected group. for example, radical s-adenosyl methionin domain-containing protein (rsad ), also known as viperin, was highly expressed in the nnv-infected group with . log fc. mx gene (mx), one of the important downstream effectors of interferon (ifn), was also expressed more in the infected group with . log fc. besides mx, a lot of ifn-induced proteins were upregulated by nnv infection, including ifn-induced protein (ifi ), ifn-induced protein with tetratricopeptide repeats (ifit ), ifn-induced very large gtpase (gvinp ), ifn-induced double-stranded rna-activated protein kinase (eif ak ), and ifn-induced helicase c domain-containing protein (ifih ). interestingly, of the various heat shock proteins (hsps), only hsp was significantly upregulated in the nnv-infected group with log . fc. nk-lysin, a known antibacterial protein, was also highly expressed in the nnv-infected group with . log fc. go is a widely used method to classify gene functions and their products in organisms. therefore, the identified degs were subsequently used for go enrichment analysis. according to go terms, ( . %) of the total of degs were classified into the three categories of molecular function, biological process, and cellular component. "binding" ( genes, . %) was the major subcategory in the molecular function. the largest subcategory found in the biological process category was "cellular process" ( genes, . %) while "cell" ( genes, . %) and "cell part" ( genes, . %) were the most abundant go terms in the cellular component category (figure ). because one gene could be categorized into several subcategories, the sum of genes in the subcategories could exceed %. go analysis of the transcriptome revealed nine molecular function subcategories, biological process subcategories, and cellular component subcategories with p value of less than × − ) (table s ). ( . %) of the total of degs were classified into the three categories of molecular function, biological process, and cellular component. "binding" ( genes, . %) was the major subcategory in the molecular function. the largest subcategory found in the biological process category was "cellular process" ( genes, . %) while "cell" ( genes, . %) and "cell part" ( genes, . %) were the most abundant go terms in the cellular component category (figure ). because one gene could be categorized into several subcategories, the sum of genes in the subcategories could exceed %. go analysis of the transcriptome revealed nine molecular function subcategories, biological process subcategories, and cellular component subcategories with p value of less than × − ) (table s ). nnv infection has caused high mortalities of sevenband groupers in aqua-farms during the summer season, especially at larval and juvenile stages. it has also caused tremendous economic losses [ ] . due to the greater damage to the sevenband grouper industry, investigation on the molecular response of nnv infection is required to understand the outbreak mechanism of disease and develop prevention methods such as vaccines. in this study, we performed a transcriptome analysis of the brain tissue of sevenband grouper infected with nnv compared to mock brain tissue using a rna-seq. the total number of unigenes and the average length of the unigenes were , and bp, respectively. the number and average length found in this study indicated a fairly good performance compared to other previous ngs transcriptome studies on crimson spotted rainbowfish ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] common carp ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] , blunt snout bream ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] , orange-spotted grouper ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] and asian seabass ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] . gene annotation by blastx provides valuable information about the transcripts. in this study, , unigenes ( . %) of , unigenes were annotated. this is similar to the result of orange-spooted grouper ( . %) [ ] . liu nnv infection has caused high mortalities of sevenband groupers in aqua-farms during the summer season, especially at larval and juvenile stages. it has also caused tremendous economic losses [ ] . due to the greater damage to the sevenband grouper industry, investigation on the molecular response of nnv infection is required to understand the outbreak mechanism of disease and develop prevention methods such as vaccines. in this study, we performed a transcriptome analysis of the brain tissue of sevenband grouper infected with nnv compared to mock brain tissue using a rna-seq. the total number of unigenes and the average length of the unigenes were , and bp, respectively. the number and average length found in this study indicated a fairly good performance compared to other previous ngs transcriptome studies on crimson spotted rainbowfish ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] common carp ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] , blunt snout bream ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] , orange-spotted grouper ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] and asian seabass ( , transcripts, bp) [ ] . gene annotation by blastx provides valuable information about the transcripts. in this study, , unigenes ( . %) of , unigenes were annotated. this is similar to the result of orange-spooted grouper ( . %) [ ] . liu et al. have addressed the possible reasons of such poor annotation: ( ) novel genes; ( ) sequencing errors; and ( ) artefacts by assembly algorithm [ ] . therefore, more genetic studies are needed to understand the biological functions. the importance of innate defense mechanisms against viral infection has been extensively reviewed [ ] [ ] [ ] . in this study, we identified innate immune response relevant genes of sevenband grouper involved in nnv infection. chemokines are critical components of the immune system. the roles of chemokines and their receptors in viral interactions have been reported in various studies [ ] . the chemokines family comprises four subfamilies based on n-terminal cystein-motifs: c, c-c, c-x-c, and c-x -c subfamilies [ ] . in this study, we also detected significant up-regulation of ccl , ccl , ccl , ccl , cxcl , cxcl , cxcl , and cxcl in sevenband grouper brain tissue after nnv infection. especially, ccl was highly over expressed at about . log fc. ccl is a pro-inflammatory chemokine that is induced during several human acute and chronic viral infections, including human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) [ ] , hepatitis c virus [ ] , epstein-barr virus [ ] , respiratory synctitial virus [ ] , severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) [ ] , herpes simplex virus- [ ] , and japanese encephalitis virus [ ] . cathepsins are lysosomal cysteines that play important roles in normal metabolism for the maintenance of cellular homeostasis. cathepsins are one of the superfamilies involved in the regulation of antigen presentation and degradation as well as immune responses, including apoptosis, inflammation, and regulation of hormone processing [ ] [ ] [ ] . in addition, chandran et al. have shown that cathepsin b and cathepsin l are involved in ebola virus infection [ ] . they are involved in the entry of reovirus [ ] . recently, cathepsin l has also been shown to be involved in the entry mediated by the sars coronavirus spike glycoprotein [ ] as well as in the process of fusion glycoprotein of hendra virus [ ] . in this study, cathepsin l and cathepsin s were found to be notably expressed after nnv infection. their functional roles in the interaction between grouper and nnv merit further studies. lectins are carbohydrate-binding proteins that are highly specific for sugar moieties. they mediate the attachment and binding of viruses to their targets [ ] . lectins are also known to play important roles in the immune system. within the innate immune system, lectins can help mediate the first-line of defense against invading microorganisms. in this study, several kinds of lectins were found to be highly induced in sevenband grouper brain tissue by nnv infection, such as c-type lectins (ctls), galectins, fucolectin, and mannose-binding lectin. ctls are the most well studied lectins. they can promote antibacterial and antiviral immune defense [ ] . many ctls have been identified in teleost but the exact function of ctls remains unclear. hundreds of interferon stimulated genes (isgs) were transcribed in sevenband grouper brain tissue during nnv infection. interferon induced protein (ifi ) was expressed the most. ifi is an interferon-alpha inducible protein associated with infection of several viruses. power et al. have demonstrated that ifi can inhibit hiv- replication in vitro by suppressing hiv- ltr promoter activity [ ] . carlton-smith and elliott have screened isgs related to bunyamwera orthbunyavirus replication using nonstructural (nss) protein knock out virus. one of these isgs that have inhibitory activity is found to be ifi [ ] . whether protein b of nnv has roles in virus replication and its relationship with isgs such as ifi merit further study. hsps are one of the most phylogenetically conserved classes of proteins with critical roles in maintaining cellular homeostasis and protecting cells from various stresses [ ] . ironically, hsp has roles to suppress some virus infections, and support their replication in other viruses [ ] . in this study, hsp was the highly induced gene instead of hsp . hsp has also been reported to be the most induced gene in the nnv infected asian seabass epithelial cell [ ] . however, the function of hsp in nnv infection remains unclear. krasnov et al. previously reported the effects of nnv on gene expression in atlantic cod brain using a microarray [ ] . compared to our study, a number of genes show a similar up-regulation result in the study, such as caspase, cathepsins, irf, radical s-adenosyl methionine domain-containing protein, tripartite motif-containing protein (trim) and so on. however, a lot of novel genes (e.g., nk-lysin, ubiquitin-like protein , granzyme a, etc.) were identified from our rna-seq result because a microarray can only evaluate the genes on a chip. our findings are preliminary based on the small scale of the study and the results have not yet been confirmed by an independent technique such as quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qpcr). in future studies, it will be necessary to confirm the expression level of genes and to characterize the function of genes that are highly involved in nnv infection. in conclusion, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study reporting the transcriptome of brain tissue of nnv-infected sevenband grouper. in this study, we obtained the transcriptome of sevenband grouper. a total of , transcripts were obtained, including degs between nnv infected and non-infected sevenband grouper. a large number of differential expressed genes relevant to immune response were identified as well as several candidate genes (ccl , cathepsins, lectins, hsp , and interferon-induced protein ) that were intensely induced by nnv. their functions in sevenband grouper against nnv infection merit further study. the acquired data from such transcriptome analysis provide valuable information for future functional genes related to nnv infection and vnn outbreak. supplementary materials: the following are available online at www.mdpi.com/ - / / / /s , table s : the annotated degs, table s : gene ontology of sevenband grouper transcriptome after nnv infection. prevalence of viral nervous necrosis (vnn) in sevenband grouper, epinephelus septemfasciatus farms betanodavirus infections of teleost fish: a review special topic review: nodaviruses as pathogens in larval and juvenile marine finfish viral and bacterial diseases of marine fish and shellfish in japanese hatcheries phylogenetic analysis of betanodaviruses isolated from cultured fish in korea comparison of the coat protein gene of nervous necrosis virus (nnv) detected from marine fishes in korea a fish nodavirus isolated from cultured sevenband grouper, epinephelus septemfasciatus transcriptome analysis of orange-spotted grouper (epinephelus coioides) spleen in response to singapore grouper iridovirus comparison of the coat protein genes of five fish nodaviruses, the causative agents of viral nervous necrosis in marine fish characterization of nodavirus and viral encephalophathy and retinopathy in farmed turbot, scophthalumus maximus (l.) using rna-seq to profile soybean seed development from fertilization to maturity rna sequencing reveals a diverse and dynamic repertoire of the xenopus tropicalis transcriptome over development transcriptome profiling reveals th -like immune responses induced in zebrafish bath-vaccinated with a live attenuated vibrio anguillarum characterization of striped jack nervous necrosis virus subgenomic rna and biological activities of its encoded protein b de novo characterization of the spleen transcriptome of the large yellow croaker (pseudosciaena crocea) and analysis of the immune relevant genes and pathways involved in the antiviral response high-throughput sequence analysis of turbot (scophthalmus maximus) transcriptome using -pyrosequencing for the discovery of antiviral immune genes deep sequencing-based transcriptome profiling analysis of bacteria-challenged lateolabrax japonicus reveals insight into the immune-relevant genes in marine fish de novo assembly and characterization of the spleen transcriptome of common carp (cyprinus carpio) using illumina paired-end sequencing development and application of quantitative detection method for nervous necrosis virus (nnv) isolated from sevenband grouper hyporthodus septemfasciatus. asian pac a simple method of estimating fifty percent end points fastqc a quality control tool for high throughput sequence data next-generation transcriptome assembly de novo transcript sequence reconstruction from rna-seq using the trinity platform for reference generation and analysis accelerated for clustering the next-generation sequencing data rsem: accurate transcript quantification from rna-seq data with or without a reference genome tcc: an r package for comparing tag count data with robust normalization strategies a normalization strategy for comparing tag count data chemokines and disease cloning, characterisation, and expression analysis of the cathepsin d gene from rock bream (oplegnathus fasciatus) rna-seq analysis reveals extensive transcriptional plasticity to temperature stress in a freshwater fish species transcriptome analysis and microsatellite discovery in the blunt snout bream (megalobrama amblycephala) after challenge with aeromonas hydrophila transcriptome analysis of the effect of vibrio alginolyticus infection on the innate immunity-related complement pathway in epinephelus coioides transcriptome analysis of genes responding to nnv infection in asian seabass epithelial cells innate immune response to viral infection innate immunity to virus infection pattern recognition receptors and the innate immune response to viral infection ccl : a potential prognostic marker and target of anti-inflammatory strategy in hiv/aids pathogenesis hiv- tat induces monocyte chemoattractant protein- -mediated monocyte transmigration across a model of the human blood-brain barrier and up-regulates ccr expression on human monocytes serum concentrations and peripheral secretion of the beta chemokines monocyte chemoattractant protein and macrophage inflammatory protein α in alcoholic liver disease epstein-barr virus induces mcp- secretion by human monocytes via tlr differential chemokine expression following respiratory virus infection reflects th -or th -biased immunopathology modeling the early events of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection in vitro herpes simplex virus interaction with toll-like receptor contributes to lethal encephalitis japanese encephalitis virus differentially modulates the induction of multiple pro-inflammatory mediators in human astrocytoma and astroglioma cell-lines sharma immunodiagnostic/protective role of cathepsin l cysteine proteinases secreted by fasciolaspecies the lysosomal cysteine proteases in mhc class ii antigen presentation cathepsin l in secretory vesicles functions as a prohormone-processing enzyme for production of the enkephalin peptide neurotransmitter endosomal proteolysis of the ebola virus glycoprotein is necessary for infection cathepsin l and cathepsin b mediate reovirus disassembly in murine fibroblast cells inhibitors of cathepsin l prevent severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus entry cathepsin l is involved in proteolytic processing of the hendra virus fusion protein hepatitis c virus molecular clones and their replication capacity in vivo and in cell culture csctl , a teleost c-type lectin that promotes antibacterial and antiviral immune defense in a manner that depends on the conserved epn motif ifi suppresses hiv- ltr promoter activity and facilitates its latency viperin, mtap , and protein kinase r contribute to the interferon-induced inhibition of bunyamwera orthobunyavirus replication molecular chaperones in cellular protein folding the authors declare no conflict of interest. key: cord- - ldpz m authors: chen, chi-yuan; lin, chin-yu; chen, guan-yu; hu, yu-chen title: baculovirus as a gene delivery vector: recent understandings of molecular alterations in transduced cells and latest applications date: - - journal: biotechnol adv doi: . /j.biotechadv. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ldpz m baculovirus infects insects in nature and is non-pathogenic to humans, but can transduce a broad range of mammalian and avian cells. thanks to the biosafety, large cloning capacity, low cytotoxicity and non-replication nature in the transduced cells as well as the ease of manipulation and production, baculovirus has gained explosive popularity as a gene delivery vector for a wide variety of applications. this article extensively reviews the recent understandings of the molecular mechanisms pertinent to baculovirus entry and cellular responses, and covers the latest advances in the vector improvements and applications, with special emphasis on antiviral therapy, cancer therapy, regenerative medicine and vaccine. baculoviruses are a diverse group of dna viruses capable of infecting more than insects, among which autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus (acmnpv) is the best characterized and most extensively employed, thus baculovirus discussed in this article refers to acmnpv unless otherwise noted. acmnpv contains a circular dsdna genome of ≈ kb and replicates in a bi-phasic fashion. the viral proteins polyhedrin and p are expressed abundantly in infected cells and are dispensable for virus replication, thus recombinant baculovirus can be constructed by placing the foreign gene under the control of polyhedrin or p promoter, and used to infect insect cells for foreign gene expression. such baculovirus-insect cell expression system has been exhaustively utilized for the production of numerous recombinant proteins (kost and condreay, ) and commercial vaccine products such as cervarix ® and provenge ® (hitchman et al., ; . in addition to insect cells, baculovirus is able to transduce animal cells of human, rodent, rabbit, porcine, bovine, fish and avian origins (hu, (hu, , as well as relatively primitive cells including embryonic stem cells, adult stem cells (table ) and induced pluripotent stem cells (fig. ) . within the baculovirus-transduced cells, the transgene can be expressed as long as it is driven by an appropriate promoter (e.g. cytomegalovirus immediate-early (cmv) or hybrid cag promoter consisting of the cmv early enhancer and chicken β-actin promoter). baculovirus cloning capacity is as large as kb (cheshenko et al., ) , thus allowing for the insertion of multiple genes and regulatory elements (kost et al., ; kost and condreay, ) . baculovirus neither replicates inside the transduced cells nor integrates its dna into host chromosomes in the absence of selective pressure (chen et al., a; merrihew et al., ) , hence easing the safety concerns. humans do not possess pre-existing antibody and t-cells specifically against baculovirus (strauss et al., ) , therefore baculovirus may circumvent the pre-existing immunity problem faced by other viral vectors. finally, recombinant baculovirus can be readily constructed and propagated to high titers in biosafety level facilities by infecting its natural host insect cells (hu, ) . these attributes have fueled growing interests to explore baculovirus for a wide variety of applications, ranging from protein production (jardin et al., ; liu et al., ) , virus production lesch et al., lesch et al., , lucifora et al., ; mccormick et al., ; nakowitsch et al., ; zheng et al., ) , virus-like particle production (chen et al., ; matsuo et al., ; wang et al., ) , eucaryotic protein display (ernst et al., , grabherr and ernst, ) , vaccine development madhan et al., ; tani et al., ) , cancer therapy (wang and balasundaram, ) , cell-based assay development (condreay et al., ; condreay and kost, ; kost et al., ) to tissue engineering (lin et al., b) . this article will focus on recent understandings of intracellular events after baculovirus transduction and latest applications of baculovirus for antiviral therapy, cancer therapy, tissue regeneration and vaccine development. baculovirus entry into mammalian cells was initially suggested to depend on electrostatic interactions (duisit et al., ) , heparin sulfate (duisit et al., ) and phospholipids (tani et al., ) , but the exact cell surface molecules for baculovirus docking remained unknown. it was also proposed that clathrin-mediated endocytosis (long et al., ; matilainen et al., ) and macropinocytosis (matilainen et al., ) play roles in baculovirus entry. contradictorily, a recent study (laakkonen et al., ) discovered that ( ) baculovirus entered hek and hepg cells along fluid-phase markers from the raft areas into vesicles devoid of clathrin; ( ) macropinocytosis-related regulators (e.g. eipa, pak , rab and rac ) imparted no significant effects on virus transduction and ( ) the internalization and nuclear uptake were affected by the regulators of clathrin-independent entry. these data unveiled a baculovirus entry pathway independent of clathrin-mediated endocytosis and macropinocytosis and suggested table selected types of cells permissive to baculovirus transduction. human cells hepg (gerner et al., ; laakkonen et al., ; laakkonen et al., ) hek laakkonen et al., ; lavdas et al., ; sollerbrant et al., ) huh ) vero e cells (liu et al., a) coronary smooth muscle and endothelial cells (grassi et al., ) a (guo et al., ) colon cancer cells (paul and prakash, ; yin et al., ) glioblastoma u (lackner et al., ) osteosarcoma saos- (song et al., ) glioblastoma u (balani et al., ) astrocytes (balani et al., ; boulaire et al., ) neurons derived from es cells (zeng et al., ) bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (bak et al., ; ho et al., ; lin et al., a; lo et al., ) embryonic stem (es) cells (du et al., ; zeng et al., ) non-human primate cells cos- (pan et al., ) cv- (tani et al., ) vero (zheng et al., ) coronary smooth muscle cell (grassi et al., ) rodent cells bhk (zheng et al., ) cho hu et al., ; pan et al., ) c c (shen et al., ) l (airenne et al., ; cheng et al., ) sol (shen et al., ) rat hepatic stellate cells (gao et al., ) primary mouse osteoblasts and osteoclast (tani et al., ) rat articular chondrocyte (ho et al., ) mouse amniotic fluid-derived stem cells (liu et al., b) rabbit cells aortic smooth muscle (raty et al., ) intervertebral disk cells ) primary articular chondrocyte (chen et al., c; lee et al., ; sung et al., (ping et al., ) chicken embryonic fibroblast (ping et al., ) chicken embryonic cells ) duck embryonic cells canine cells mdck norden laboratories feline kidney (nlfk) that phagocytosis might play a role (laakkonen et al., ) , which echoed the observations reported previously (abe et al., ) . moreover, other recent studies reported that baculovirus transduction related to direct fusion pathway induced by a short ph trigger (dong et al., ; paul and prakash, ) . these conflicting data underlined the need for more in-depth studies to elucidate the underlying mechanism and might suggest that baculovirus entry pathway varies with cell types. nevertheless, one consensus is that baculovirus envelope protein gp is pivotal for entry because blocking gp can abrogate the baculovirus ability to transduce mammalian cells (abe et al., ; niu et al., ) and activate dendritic cells (dcs) (schutz et al., ) . once inside the cells, baculovirus is transported to the endosome, followed by endosomal escape via acid-triggered gp fusion (kukkonen et al., ) and subsequent nuclear transport van loo et al., ) with the aid of actin filament (matilainen et al., ; salminen et al., ) . a major component of type iii intermediate filaments, vimentin, also participates in intracellular trafficking (mahonen et al., ) . vimentin is reorganized in the optimized culture medium and is linked to enhanced nuclear entry of baculovirus, underscoring the importance of culture medium in the cytoskeleton network assembly and in baculoviral gene delivery. baculovirus encodes ≈ genes and a number of viral genes (e.g. orf , ie , p and gp ) are expressed in transduced mammalian cells (fujita et al., ; kitajima et al., ) . among the baculoviral genes, ie is expressed early in insect cells and transactivates downstream gene expression. forced expression of ie by the minimal cmv promoter in vero e cells also markedly activates gp and pe , and upregulates ie , he , pcna, orf , orf and orf (liu et al., ) . the critical role of ie for transactivating downstream genes was further unraveled in a recent study , which showed that baculovirus deficient in ie gene mitigates residual baculoviral gene expression -to -fold (when compared with wild-type baculovirus) in transduced mammalian cells, thus enhancing safety features to baculovirus-based gene therapy. in contrast to ie , ie overexpression driven by the cmv promoter only upregulates baculoviral genes (pe and orf ), but baculovirusmediated co-expression of ie and ie acts in concert to upregulate out of baculovirus genes in mammalian cells (liu et al., ) . strikingly, ie is a strong transactivator of cmv promoter in both vero e and u- os cells (liu et al., a) . when overexpressed within the baculovirus context, ie forms the nuclear foci and develops into large nuclear bodies (nbs) with a hollow center. the ie nbs structure contains abundant g-actin, closely associates with rna polymerase ii, promyelocytic leukemia (pml) and small ubiquitin-like modifier- (sumo ) and is the site of active transcription, thereby contributing to the ie -associated gene stimulation (liu et al., a) . furthermore, the nbs formation and cmv promoter activation require the n-terminal ring finger and c-terminal coiled-coil domains of ie (liu et al., a) . since cmv promoter is exhaustively used for baculovirus-mediated gene transfer, the transactivating activity of ie may be useful for baculovirus-mediated protein production in mammalian cells . due to the complex cascade of events during baculovirus transduction, it is not surprising that baculovirus can alter the cell morphology and trigger cellular responses. for instance, baculovirus transduction of hepg cells alters the size of pml nbs, induces remodeling of the host cell chromatin and arouses extensive ruffle formation on the cell surface (laakkonen et al., ) . shotgun proteomics also attests that baculovirus-transduced hepg cells exhibit a slight induction of proteins related to inflammation, cell survival and chromatin function (gerner et al., ) . the most well-characterized baculovirus-induced cellular response is the innate immune response, as manifested by the induction of such cytokines as interferon α/β (ifn-α/β), interleukin- (il- ), il- , il- β and tumor necrosis factor-α (tnf-α) (abe and matsuura, ; tani et al., ) . baculovirus transduction of rat chondrocytes also elicits transient expression of ifn-α/β, which attenuates the transgene expression (lee et al., ) . not only the cytokine secretion, in vitro baculovirus transduction also activates human (schutz et al., ) and mouse (abe et al., ) dcs. moreover, wild-type baculovirus transduction of mouse bone marrow-derived dcs (bmdcs) upregulates the major histocompatibility complex (mhc) i and ii and co-stimulation molecules (e.g. cd , cd and cd ) (suzuki et al., a) . the activated bmdcs can further stimulate natural killer (nk) cells upon coculture, as evidenced by the ifn-γ production, cd upregulation and cell proliferation. in contrast to these differentiated, specialized cells, stem cells appear to be less sensitive to baculovirus transduction. upon wildtype baculovirus transduction, human bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells (bmscs) secret il- and il- , but no detectable levels of ifn-γ, ifn-β, tnf-α, tnf-β, il- β, il- , il- , il- , il- and il- (chen et al., b) . human leukocyte antigen i (hla-i) is slightly upregulated, but the expression of hla-ii and other surface markers are barely disturbed (bak et al., ; chuang et al., ) . neither does baculovirus transduction compromise the immunosuppressive properties of bmscs . conversely, wildtype baculovirus transduction of mouse induced pluripotent stem cells (ipscs) elicits only the chemokine ip- , but not other wellknown cytokines (unpublished data). bmscs and ipscs are promising cell sources for regenerative medicine. the lack of these cytokine responses reduces the risk of mounting strong immune responses after transplantation of baculovirus-transduced bmscs and ipscs. in vivo, baculovirus administration triggers innate immune responses, activates macrophages (abe et al., ) , dcs (hervas-stubbs et al., ; schutz et al., ) and nk cells (facciabene et al., ; kitajima et al., ) . the baculovirus-induced innate immunity gives rise to antitumor activity (suzuki et al., a) and is sufficient to confer protection against influenza virus in mice (abe et al., ) , infectious bronchitis virus in chickens (niu et al., ) and foot-and-mouth-disease virus in mice (molinari et al., ) . the innate immunity also confers baculovirus the adjuvant activity to promote humoral and cellular immune responses against co-administered antigens (hervas-stubbs et al., ) . moreover, intramuscular (i.m.) injection of baculovirus triggers t-cell responses against the vector, but the magnitude of anti-baculovirus t cells response is lower than that of anti-adenovirus response (hervas-stubbs et al., ) . toll-like receptors (tlrs) are a family of pattern recognition receptors essential for initiating the innate immunity and substantiating the adaptive immunity (ishii et al., ) . for instance, tlr recognizes virus-derived dsrna while tlr recognizes unmethylated cpg dna motifs. upon engagement with cognate ligands, tlrs are activated and recruit adaptor molecules such as myeloid differentiating factor (myd ) and tir domain-containing adaptor inducing ifn-β (trif) to transduce signals to downstream molecules. besides, stimulator of interferon genes (sting) is a cytoplasmic sensor that activates irf and ifn-α/β in response to viral dsdna while retinoic acid-inducible gene (rig-i) and melanoma differentiation-associated gene (mda ) are tlr-independent cytoplasmic rna detectors that induce the ifn-α/β production through ifn promoter-stimulator- (ips- ). baculovirus-induced innate immunity has been ascribed to the recognition of cpg motifs in viral dna and ensuing activation of tlr / myd -dependent pathway (abe et al., ) . the detection activates nuclear factor-κb (nf-κb) and leads to subsequent ifn-α/β production. however, ifn-α/β are still produced in peritoneal cells derived from myd -or tlr -deficient mice (abe et al., ) . in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (mefs), baculovirus triggers ifn-β and ifn-inducible chemokines through tlr-independent and irf -dependent pathways and endosomal maturation is required for induction (abe et al., ) . these data suggest that baculovirus dna might be recognized by at least two different pathways: tlr -dependent endosomal recognition and tlr independent cytoplasmic recognition. the latter was suggested to be related to sting (abe and matsuura, ) because baculovirus-induced ifn-α/β production was impaired in sting-deficient mefs (ishikawa et al., ), yet ifn-α/β stimulation was found to be independent of other cytoplasmic rna detectors such as rig-i and mda (abe et al., ). however, a recent study noted that rig-i and mda mrna levels were elevated in baculovirus-transduced cells . addition of dna methytransferase inhibitors (dnmti) prior to transduction retarded such upregulation and enhanced baculovirus-mediated gene expression, suggesting that dnmti may somehow facilitate the baculovirus evasion from the cellular recognition and thus ameliorate the transgene expression. using the cdna microarray, wang and coworkers discovered that baculovirus injection into the striatum in the rat brain perturbed the expression of genes, which represented . % of the total gene probes on the microarray . the same study also identified gene probes ( . %) in human astrocytes and gene probes ( . %) in human neuronal cells that were disturbed in response to baculovirus. despite the disparity between cell types, in all samples baculovirus altered the expression of genes associated with tlr signaling pathway (e.g. tlr , tlr , ccl , cxcl and stat ) and cytokine-cytokine receptor interaction (e.g. cxcl , cxcl and ccl ). moreover, genes associated with interferon induction-related genes (e.g. cxcl , mx , mx , oas and stat ) and antigen processing and presentation pathway (e.g. cd and rt- ba) were affected. as such, wang and coworkers proposed that baculovirus recognition by tlrs triggers the expression of ifn-α/β, which initiates the subsequent signaling cascade involving stats, upregulating the expression of ifn-responsive genes and hence confers the cells the antiviral state. concurrent with the aforementioned findings, we also discovered that baculovirus transduction of human bmscs disturbed the expression of genes, most of which were related to signaling pathways: cell adhesion molecules, tlr, jak-stat, apoptosis as well as antigen processing and presentation (chen et al., b) . of note, baculovirus triggered the tlr pathway, resulting in downstream nf-κb and irf- activation and il- /il- production. however, how baculovirus containing the dsdna genome activated the dsrna sensor tlr remains an enigma. also, the transduction did not arouse the secretion of ifn-β (chen et al., b) , a signature cytokine associated with tlr activation, implying a signaling cascade somewhat distinct from that in immune cells. interestingly, the budded form of another baculovirus, antheraea pernyi nuclear polyhedrosis virus (apnpv), triggers the tlr signaling in chicken macrophage-like cells (hd ) but not in chicken b cell-like cells (han et al., ) . apnpv transduction of hd cells concomitantly induces the production of ifn-γ, il- p and nitric oxide (no) (niu et al., ) , which is accompanied by the phosphorylation of extracellular signal-related kinase / (erk / ), p mitogen activated protein kinase (mapk) and c-jun n-terminal kinase (jnk) as well as activation of p -nf-κb (han et al., ). inhibition of p mapk and nf-κb by their respective inhibitors abrogates the expression of cytokines and no, whereas inhibition of jnk abolishes only the induction of cytokines. since in mammals tlrs signaling activates the downstream nf-κb and mapk cascade comprised of at least p mapk, erk / , and jnk (ishii et al., ) , these data altogether suggest that apnpv transduction of hd cells activates tlr and signals though nf-κb, p mapk and jnk pathways, and chicken tlr might play a role similar to mammalian tlr (han et al., (han et al., , . baculovirus envelope protein gp comprises an n-terminal signal peptide and a mature domain that encompasses the transmembrane domain and cytoplasmic domain (ctd). heterologous protein/peptide has been inserted in between the signal peptide and mature domain, which after expression under the polyhedrin or p promoter as a fusion protein is translocated to the plasma membrane and incorporated into the viral envelope upon virus budding. such feature has been exploited for surface display of protein/peptide to improve the virus transduction (grabherr and ernst, ; grabherr et al., ; raty et al., ) or for ligand-directed targeting if an appropriate ligand is chosen (kitagawa et al., ; makela et al., , . for instance, baculovirus poorly transduces b lymphocytes (cheng et al., ; condreay et al., ) . via gp fusion, the transduction has been enhanced by displaying the short peptide motif from gp / of epstein-barr virus (ebv, which naturally infects b cells) on the baculovirus envelope (ge et al., ) . alternatively, the cytoplasmic transduction peptide (ctp) has been fused to gp to enhance the baculovirus transduction of vero e , u- os and cho-rd cells (chen et al., b) . another paradigm is the display of the fragment crystallisable (fc) region of antibody on the baculovirus surface (martyn et al., ) . fc receptors (fcrs) are membrane proteins that bind to the fc region of antibody and mediate the phagocytosis and antigen presentation. the fc display allows for specific baculovirus targeting to cell lines and antigen presenting cells (apcs) expressing fcrs, hence augmenting the vaccine effect (martyn et al., ). the display system also allows for the surface presentation of functional membrane proteins to simplify subsequent isolation . aside from the gp -aided display, expression of vesicular stomatitis virus g protein (vsvg) (chapple and jones, ; makela and oker-blom, ) , influenza virus neuraminidase (borg et al., ) , spodoptera exigua multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus f protein (yu et al., ) , single chain antibody fragments (kitidee et al., ) and human endogenous retrovirus envelope protein (lee et al., ) in insect cells also leads to incorporation of the protein into baculovirus envelope. among these strategies, display of vsvg or heterologous peptide/protein via the vsvg anchor is the most widely adopted and can tremendously enhance baculovirus transduction in vitro and in vivo (facciabene et al., ; kaikkonen et al., ; kaneko et al., ; kitagawa et al., ; lu et al., ; tani et al., tani et al., , zhou and blissard, ) . serum complement proteins (e.g. c b- ) inactivate baculovirus, hence constituting a major hurdle in the in vivo use of baculovirus. the inactivation problem has been circumvented by the use of complement inhibitors such as compstatin (georgopoulos et al., ) and soluble complement inhibitor (hoare et al., ; hofmann et al., ) , avoiding exposure to the complement (airenne et al., ) or administrating the vector to immunoprivileged sites (kinnunen et al., ; lehtolainen et al., ) . alternatively, the baculoviral vector can become complement-resistant by displaying human daf (decay accelerating factor) via gp fusion (huser et al., , kaname et al., . more recently, baculoviral vectors displaying different complement regulatory proteins (e.g. daf, factor h-like protein- , c bbinding protein and membrane cofactor protein) were generated by fusion with the membrane anchor of vsvg (kaikkonen et al., ) . these surface-modified vectors exhibited varying degrees of complement resistance in vitro and daf yielded the highest level of protection. intraportal delivery of the daf-displaying baculovirus increased the survival and gene expression in immunocompetent mice. the daf-displaying baculovirus provoked lower levels of inflammatory cytokines il- β, il- , and il- p in macrophages and mitigated liver inflammation in mice when compared with the control virus. these results prove that daf display offers protection to the baculoviral vector against complement inactivation and attenuates complement-mediated inflammation injury. other than the display on the envelope, heterologous protein has been displayed on the capsid by fusion with the major capsid protein vp . the vp fusion with enhanced green fluorescent protein (egfp) neither interferes with the virus assembly nor affects the virus tier, thereby enabling intracellular baculovirus trafficking and biodistribution monitoring (kukkonen et al., ) . similarly, the zno binding peptide has been fused to the n-terminus of vp while retaining the viral infectivity and conferring the ability to bind nanosized zno powders (song et al., ) . besides, by fusing the protein transduction domain (ptd) of human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) tat protein (a protein responsible for nuclear import of hiv genome) with vp , the engineered baculovirus results in improved transduction of various mammalian cells (chen et al., b) . in addition to surface modification by genetic engineering, baculovirus has been labeled with tracers for tracking (li et al., ) or biodistribution imaging raty et al., ) . chemical coupling of antigenic peptides also enables rapid modification of baculovirus particles and delivery of multiple epitopes (wilson et al., ) . baculovirus can also be chemically conjugated with polyethylene glycol (peg) alone (kim et al., ) or together with folate (kim et al., (kim et al., , to improve the transduction of folate receptor-positive kb cells. additionally, baculoviral vectors have been coated with positively charged polyethylenimine ( kda) through electrostatic interactions (yang et al., ) . the modification imparts baculoviral vectors resistance to human and rat serum-mediated inactivation in vitro and elevates in vivo transduction in the liver and spleen after tail vein injection into mice. rna interference (rnai) is a phenomenon that mediates sequence-specific post-transcriptional gene silencing and can be artificially elicited by the expression of short hairpin rnas (shrna) or microrna (mirna) precursors from an expression vector (garzon et al., ) . since the initial demonstrations of baculovirus-mediated shrna delivery (nicholson et al., ; ong et al., ) , baculovirusmediated rnai has been explored for antiviral therapy. one baculovirus expressing the shrna specific for the c-terminal nucleoprotein of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv) genome inhibits the viral replication in vitro (lu et al., ) . the baculovirus harboring a bispecific shrna targeted against influenza virus a and b can inhibit the production of both virus types in transduced cell lines (suzuki et al., b) . another baculovirus expressing shrna against the peste des petits ruminants virus (pprv) represses pprv replication in vitro and the inhibition effect is superior to that mediated by the adenovirus expressing the same shrna (nizamani et al., ) . hepatitis b virus (hbv) covalently closed circular (ccc) dna is the source of hbv transcripts in chronically infected patients. baculovirus expressing the hbv-specific shrna is able to hinder the formation of hbv ccc dna (starkey et al., ) . additionally, the baculovirus expressing shrnas specific for the highly conserved core region of hepatitis c virus (hcv) genome dramatically impedes the target protein expression (suzuki et al., c) . the replication and segregation of ebv genomes to daughter cells is coordinated by the binding of ebv nuclear antigen (ebna ) to orip, an origin of replication derived from ebv. to prolong the transgene expression, baculoviral vectors incorporating the orip/ ebna sequences were developed (shan et al., ; wang et al., ) . based on this concept, suzuki et al. devised a baculoviral vector that accommodated the orip/ebna sequence and encoded the hcvspecific shrna. this vector inhibited hcv core protein expression for n days, which considerably outlasted the days of inhibition conferred by the conventional vector (suzuki et al., a) . recently, we also exploited the baculovirus vector for mirna delivery and gene regulation. the baculovirus vectors carried artificial gene-specific mirna sequences within the mir scaffold, which after expression under the cmv promoter could undergo the mirna processing pathway and knocked down the target gene (e.g. egfp and tnf-α) expression (unpublished data). the gene suppression effect was extended by flanking the mirna expression cassette with the inverted terminal repeat sequences/direct repeats sequences (ir/dr) recognized by the sleeping beauty (sb) transposase. co-transduction of cells with the hybrid baculovirus/transposon vector and another sb transposase-expressing baculovirus resulted in the integration of mirna expression cassette into the chromosome, giving rise to prolonged target gene suppression (unpublished data). these data altogether implicate the potential of baculovirus-based rnai shuttle for antiviral therapy and treatment of indications necessitating prolonged gene regulation (e.g. arthritis). the feasibility of baculovirus-mediated cancer therapy was first explored by wang et al. ( ) , who developed a baculoviral vector expressing the diphtheria toxin a and demonstrated that the baculovirus impeded the growth of cultured glioma cells and glioma xenograft in the rat brain. since then, baculovirus has been utilized for the treatment of mouse hepatoma (kitajima et al., ) , murine melanoma, lung cancer and brain cancer (kim et al., ) . recently, wang and coworkers constructed another baculovirus that selectively expressed herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (hsvtk) in tumors for glioma suicide gene therapy (balani et al., ). the hsvtk gene was driven by a truncated human high mobility group box (hmgb ) promoter, which allowed hsvtk expression in glioblastoma tissues but not in normal brain tissues. this vector triggered death of glioblastoma cells in the presence of ganciclovir, but did not affect the survival of human astrocytes and neurons. in a mouse xenograft model, intratumoral injection of this baculovirus at days after tumor inoculation suppressed the growth of human glioblastoma and prolonged the mouse survival. however, the tumor mass was not completely eradicated after one single baculovirus injection, presumably due to the transient hsvtk expression (balani et al., ) . alternatively, the hsvtk gene was driven by the gfap (glial fibrillary acidic protein) promoter whose activity is similar in normal and tumor cells of the same lineage (wu et al., a) . to limit the transgene expression in glioma cells, repeated target sequences of mirnas (has-mir , has-mir and has-mir ) that are enriched in astrocytes but are sparse in glioblastoma cells were appended to the ′ untranslated region of the hsvtk gene. the baculovirus vector markedly improved in vivo selectivity when compared with the control vector without mirna regulation, effectively inhibited human glioma xenograft and imparted negligible toxicity to normal astrocytes. the incorporation of selected mirna sponge thus provides an additional safety switch to prevent off-target transgene expression (wu et al., a) . in addition to hsvtk, the baculovirus expressing nes (normal epithelial cell specific- ) can inhibit the growth of gastric cancer cells (sgc- ) in vitro and repress the sgc- xenografted tumor growth after intratumoral injection, implicating the possibility for the therapy of gastric and colon cancers (huang et al., ) . baculovirus can also carry tumor suppressor genes such as p or pdcd (programmed cell death ) for cancer treatment. in the mouse glioma xenograft models, the antitumor effect of the baculovirus-expressed p was substantiated by surface coating of the baculovirus envelope with polyethylenimine (yang et al., ) or by co-administering sodium butyrate (guo et al., ) , a histone deacetylase inhibitor that ameliorates baculovirus-mediated gene expression (guo et al., ; hu et al., ; yin et al., ; zhou et al., ) . the pdcd expressing baculovirus conjugated with folate-peg efficiently expressed pdcd protein and induced apoptosis in human epidermal carcinoma cells (kim et al., ) . in a tumor xenograft, intratumoral injection of the pdcd -expressing baculovirus significantly suppressed tumor growth and induced apoptosis. moreover, apoptin is a chicken anemia virus-derived protein that specifically triggers apoptosis in tumors. the vsvg-pseudotyped baculovirus expressing apoptin efficiently provoked apoptosis in mammalian cells, repressed the growth of xenograft tumors and prolonged the mice survival after intratumoral injection (pan et al., ) . one determinant to the baculovirus-mediated antitumor effects is the innate immune responses elicited by the virus (suzuki et al., b) . takaku and coworkers demonstrated that wild-type baculo-virus, after intravenous (i.v.) injection into immunocompetent b mouse, was taken up by the liver and spleen, preferentially entered dcs and b cells, activated dcs, induced nk cells proliferation in the liver and spleen, and enhanced the antitumor immunity in mice with b liver metastases (kitajima et al., ) . baculovirus administration also increased the survival of c bl/ , jα −/− and ifn-γ −/− mice bearing the b tumor, but did not enhance the survival of nk cell-depleted mice. these results prove that wild-type baculovirus efficiently induces nk cell-mediated antitumor immunity (kitajima et al., ) . besides direct injection, baculovirus has been employed in conjunction with cell therapy for cancer treatment. bone marrowderived dcs (bmdcs), after ex vivo transduction with wild-type baculovirus and i.v. injection into mice, significantly suppressed the lung cancer (suzuki et al., a) . in a mouse melanoma model, baculovirus-transduced bmdcs inhibited tumor growth and improved animal survival at least partly due to the induction of cd + t cell-and nk cell-dependent, cd + t cell-independent antitumor immunity. importantly, bmdcs administration did not provoke evident signs of damage to the liver or kidney, as judged from the negligible disturbance of serum alanine aminotransferase (alt), aspartate aminotransferase (ast) and creatine levels (suzuki et al., a) . another promising cell courier is bmscs thanks to their intrinsic tumor homing property. in this regard, bmscs were transduced with a baculovirus expressing hsvtk and injected via tail vein into the mice pre-inoculated with human u glioma cells (bak et al., ) . after ganciclovir injection, tumor growth was significantly repressed and the life span of animals was considerably prolonged. more recently, the same group generated msc-like cells from human embryonic stem (es) cells which, after transduction with the baculovirus expressing hsvtk and injection into the brain, were capable of inhibiting tumor growth and prolonging the survival of tumor-bearing mice in the presence of ganciclovir (bak et al., ) . these data implicated the feasibility of human es cells-derived mscs as a viable and attractive alternative for cancer therapy. gene therapy has converged with tissue engineering, by which the therapeutic genes stimulating tissue regeneration can be administered to cells either in vivo or ex vivo with an appropriate vector. given the highly efficient gene delivery, baculovirus has been used for cartilage and bone engineering (lin et al., b) . articular cartilage is a weight-bearing tissue comprising chondrocytes and extracellular matrix (ecm) composed of proteins (e.g. collagen ii) and glycosaminoglycans (gags) such as aggrecan. articular cartilage may be damaged due to direct trauma or joint diseases, but its ability to self-repair is limited, ultimately leading to debilitating pain and physical impairment. therefore, cartilage tissue engineering that combines cells, scaffolds and biological signals has emerged for cartilage repair. given that chondrocytes are pivotal in the synthesis, composition modulation, structural arrangement of ecm components and hence the mechanical properties, we developed a protocol for baculovirus transduction of rat (ho et al., ) and rabbit chondrocytes. this protocol involves the incubation of cells with the virus at - °c for - h using dulbecco's phosphate-buffered saline (d-pbs) as the surrounding solution and confers efficiencies higher than % . the key to such high transduction efficiencies is the absence of nahco in d-pbs, which hinders the baculovirus transduction (shen et al., ) . consequently, the surrounding solution has been replaced with nahco -deficient dmem medium . critically, chondrocytes transduced with an egfp-expressing baculovirus remain capable of producing cartilage-specific collagen ii and gags, and grow into cartilaginous tissues when seeded into the porous, poly (l-lactide-co-glycolide) (plga) scaffold and cultivated dynamically . these data demonstrate that baculovirus transduction of chondrocytes does not obstruct the chondrocytes differentiation. therefore, we further constructed baculovirus vectors each expressing one growth factor (tgf-β , insulin-like growth factor- (igf- ) or bone morphogenetic protein- (bmp- )) known to stimulate chondrogenesis, and confirmed the protein expression in chondrocytes isolated from new zealand white (nzw) rabbits . among the baculovirus vectors, only the bmp- -expressing baculovirus (designated bac-cb) remarkably enhanced the aggrecan and collagen ii production by partially de-differentiated passage (p ) cells and restored the differentiation. the baculovirus expressing tgf-β (designated bac-ct) modestly augmented the chondrogenesis but was insufficient to reverse the de-differentiation status of p cells . nonetheless, co-transduction of de-differentiated p chondrocytes with bac-cb and bac-ct synergistically modulated the re-differentiation program (sung et al., ) . albeit the chondrogenic potential, bac-cb transduction alone was insufficient to support uniform d cartilage growth in the static culture due to the lack of mechanical stimulation and poor oxygen/ nutrient transfer. to tackle these problems, p chondrocytes transduced with bac-cb were seeded into plga scaffolds and cultured in a rotating-shaft bioreactor (rsb), which grew into cartilage-like tissues after -week dynamic culture . implantation of the engineered cartilages into the osteochondral defects of nzw rabbits resulted in the regeneration of hyaline cartilages at week and improved the integration of the host and engineered cartilages (chen et al., c) . massive segmental bony defects often occur following trauma or tumor resection and remain a clinical problem. for bone regeneration, bmscs have evolved to be a promising cell source as they are immunoprivileged, immunosuppressive and capable of differentiating into osteoblasts . in this regard, baculovirus transduces bmscs with efficiencies exceeding ≈ % under optimized conditions ), but the transduction efficiencies for bmscs-derived progenitors varies widely with the differentiation states at which the committed progenitors are transduced lee et al., b) . furthermore, transduction of human bmscs with bac-cb (which expresses the potent osteogenic factor bmp- ) directed in vitro commitment of naïve bmscs into osteoblasts (chuang et al., ) . after injection into the back subcutis of immunodeficient nude mice, the transduced bmscs resulted in progressive mineralization and ectopic bone formation (chuang et al., ) . implantation of the bac-cb-engineered human bmscs into rat calvarial defects stimulated mineralized bone matrix deposition and initiated the bone island formation at week , but without immunosuppression the xenogeneic cells were rejected and eradicated at week (chuang et al., ) . to circumvent the rejection, bmscs isolated from nzw rabbits were used for baculovirus transduction and allotransplantation. given the important roles of vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) in angiogenesis, ossification and callus maturation, rabbit bmscs were transduced with bac-cv (expressing vegf) or bac-cb, mixed at a number ratio of : , seeded into plga scaffolds and implanted to the critical-size ( mm in length) femoral segmental defects of allogeneic, immunocompetent nzw rabbits, which represent a fairly rigorous bone healing scenario (lin et al., a ). x-ray radiography, positron emission tomography (pet), micro computed tomography (μct), immunohistochemical staining and biomechanical testing illustrated that the baculovirus-engineered cell/scaffold constructs not only accelerated the bone healing, but also gave rise to prominent angiogenesis and improved mechanical properties at week . adipose-derived stem cells (ascs) are another promising cell source for regenerative medicine thanks to the ease of isolation in abundance and capacity of osteogenic differentiation (levi et al., ) . however, ascs appear to be inferior to bmscs in osteogenic differentiation and ascs engineered by the conventional baculovirus transiently expressing bmp- /vegf (s group) led to significantly poorer healing of segmental femoral bone defects than bmscs engineered by the same vectors (fig. ) . to use ascs for repairing large, segmental bone defects, we surmised that sustained expression of factors promoting osteogenesis (bmp- ) and angiogenesis (vegf) are necessary. as such, we employed a hybrid baculovirus system developed previously for persistent expression . the dual vector system constitutes two baculoviruses whereby one expresses the flippase recombination enzyme (flp) while the other accommodates the bmp- or vegf cassette flanked by the flippase recognition target (frt) sequences. within the mammalian cells cotransduced with the hybrid baculoviruses, flp catalyzes the recombination of the frt-flanking cassette, resulting in the cassette excision off the baculovirus genome, formation of episomal circle and substantially prolonged transgene expression . likewise, the flp/frt-mediated recombination occurred efficiently in the nzw rabbit ascs, enabling persistent transgene expression for n days . allotransplantation of the nzw rabbit ascs transduced with the hybrid baculoviruses expressing bmp- /vegf into the critical-size femoral segmental defects accelerated the healing, improved the bone quality and angiogenesis when compared with transplanting ascs engineered with the conventional baculoviruses (fig. ) . therefore, ascs engineered by the hybrid baculovirus vector hold promise for repairing massive segmental defects . the safety profile of the hybrid baculovirus vectors was recently assessed using human bmscs as the host (chen et al., a) . transduction of human bmscs with the hybrid baculovirus neither compromised the cell viability/differentiation, nor resulted in transgene integration into the host chromosome. the transduction did not disrupt the bmscs karyotype, nor did it disturb the expression of wellknown proto-oncogenes (c-myc, n-ras, k-ras and h-ras) and tumor suppressor genes (p and p ). furthermore, the transduced bmscs did not induce tumor formation in nude mice. these data altogether ensure the safe use of the flp/frt-based hybrid vector for stem cell engineering and tissue regeneration. as discussed in section . , wild-type baculovirus triggers the innate immunity and potentiates the adaptive immune responses, which protect the animals from the infection of several viruses. these attributes have sparked explosive interests to develop baculovirus as a vector vaccine candidate, in which the antigens can be ( ) expressed by the vector within the host cells, ( ) displayed on the baculovirus surface or ( ) displayed and expressed by the vector (table ) . the feasibility of using baculovirus as a vaccine expression vector was first tested by in vivo inoculation of the baculovirus expressing the glycoprotein gb of pseudorabies virus (aoki et al., ) or hemagglutinin (ha) of h n influenza virus (abe et al., ) into mice, which raised antigen-specific antibody. moreover, baculovirus expressing the e glycoprotein of hcv or carcinoembryonic antigen could elicit antigen-specific t cell responses (facciabene et al., ) . similarly, subcutaneous (s.c.) and intraperitoneal (i.p.) immunizations of mice with a baculovirus expressing the antigens of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) induced humoral immune responses and th -biased cellular immunity (bai et al., ) . the efficacy of baculovirus-based vaccines has been potentiated by surface display of vsvg protein on the envelope. the vsvgpseudotyped baculovirus expressing the gp and m proteins of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv) under the cmv promoter elicited anti-prrsv neutralizing antibodies and ifn-γ, and conferred better immunogenicity than the dna vaccine expressing the same antigens . conversely, i.m. immunizations of a mixture of vsvg-pseudotyped baculovirus expressing pseudorabies virus (prv) proteins triggered th -biased immune responses, as manifested by the induction of ifn-γ and prvspecific igg a antibodies (grabowska et al., ) . the immunization also provoked nk cell activity (accompanied by the production of ifn-α and ifn-γ) and protected mice against lethal prv challenge. i. m. immunization of chickens with another vsvg-pseudotyped baculovirus expressing ha of h n avian influenza virus (aiv) also evoked significantly higher levels of h -specific antibody and cellular immunity than those receiving dna vaccines, and conferred protection against lethal challenge with the homologous virus strain (wu et al., b) . similar vsvg-pseudotyped baculovirus vectors have been constructed to express the japanese encephalitis virus (jev) envelope protein (li et al., b) , the capsid protein of porcine circovirus type (pcv ) (fan et al., ) , and the toxoplasma gondii sag protein . all these studies showed that i.m. immunization of the vsvg-pseudotyped baculovirus vector results in stronger vaccine effects than the dna vaccine counterparts, which can be attributable to the adjuvant properties of baculovirus and more efficient transduction of muscle cells in vivo. the effective transduction of muscle cells is desired as the chance of antigen presentation to dcs is increased and baculovirus-mediated expression is considerably prolonged in myogenic cells (shen et al., ) . note, however, that vsvg pseudotyping induces cytotoxicity and impairs the baculovirus titer, hence a truncated version of vsvg comprised of the amino acid ectodomain, the transmembrane and ctd domains was designed for baculovirus pseudotyping (kaikkonen et al., ) . the truncated vsvg reduced the cytotoxicity and was exploited to construct two pseudotyped baculoviruses: one expressing the capsid protein of footand-mouth disease virus (fmdv) and the other encoding the capsid and a t-cell immunogen . i.m. inoculation of the fig. . the ascs engineered with the hybrid baculovirus augment the healing of massive bone defects. the nzw rabbit ascs were transduced with the hybrid baculovirus vectors conferring sustained expression of bmp- or vegf, mixed at a number ratio of : , loaded into cylindrical plga scaffolds ( . × cells/scaffold) and implanted to the critical-size segmental defects at the femora of nzw rabbits ( constructs/defect, designated l group). the s group contained ascs that were transduced with conventional baculoviruses transiently expressing bmp- /vegf and implanted in a similar fashion. the mock group comprised the mock-transduced ascs as the negative control. x-ray radiography, gross appearance examination, micro computed tomography (μct), hematoxylin and eosin (h&e) staining and cd -specific immunohistochemical staining (to detect blood vessel formation) performed at weeks post-implantation collectively demonstrated that the l group (persistently expressing bmp- and vegf) resulted in significantly improved bone healing and angiogenesis in comparison with the s group (transiently expressing bmp- and vegf) and mock group. stars indicate the new bone while arrows indicate the blood vessel formation. baculoviruses into mice induced the fmdv-specific neutralizing antibodies and ifn-γ, and expression of the additional t-cell immunogen augmented the immunogenicity. besides vsvg, human endogenous retrovirus (herv) envelope protein was used for pseudotyping the baculovirus (designated acherv-hp l ) that encoded the l capsid protein of human papillomavirus (hpv ) (lee et al., ) . after i.m. injection and booster injections at -week intervals, the mice developed similarly high levels of igg, iga and neutralization titers, as well as tremendously higher levels of ifn-γ when compared with the mice immunized with the commercial virus-like particle vaccine gardasil ® ( μl/dose). thus acherv-hp l holds promise as a cost-effective and efficient hpv vaccine. as mentioned in section . , surface display of heterologous protein/peptide has been achieved by fusion with gp gene and expression driven by either polyhedrin or p promoter. taking advantage of this technology, baculovirus displaying the rodent malaria plasmodium berghei circumsporozoite protein (pbcsp) (yoshida et al., ) , the antigenic site a of fmdv vp protein (tami et al., ) or the sars-cov spike protein (chang et al., ; feng et al., ) has been shown to induce potent immune responses. more recently, baculovirus vectors displaying the pfs protein of plasmodium falciparum (mlambo et al., ) and -kda carboxyl terminus of merozoite surface protein (pymsp ) of plasmodium yoelii were also developed as potential vaccines against malaria. i.m. and intranasal (i.n) immunizations of mice with the pymsp -displaying baculovirus induced mixed th /th -type immune responses, but i.n. immunization yielded higher pymsp -specific antibody titers and natural boosting after challenge. i.n. immunization also conferred complete protection thanks to the th /th -type immunity associated with tlr -dependent pathway . ha protein is the major antigen of influenza virus and, similar to gp , is a class i transmembrane protein on the viral envelope. gp based fusion was harnessed to display the ha of aiv using the ctd derived from ha or from gp (yang et al., ) . in comparison with the ha ctd, gp ctd endowed more efficient ha display and stimulated stronger hemagglutination inhibition (hi) titers crucial for neutralizing the live aiv (yang et al., ) . the profound effect of gp ctd on ha display was attested in a recent study which delineated that the signal peptide and ctd of gp could enhance the display of influenza ha on baculovirus surface, while the gp transmembrane domain impaired ha display (tang et al., ) . based on the finding, a baculovirus simultaneously displaying has derived from subclades of h n aiv was constructed. i.m. immunization of mice with this tetravalent baculovirus elicited hi titers against all homologous h n viruses, significantly reduced viral lung titers of challenged mice, raised high levels of ifn-γsecreting and ha-specific cd + t cells, and provided % protection against lethal challenge with homologous h n viruses (tang et al., ) . the same design concept exploiting the gp ctd was also adopted to display the σc and σb proteins of avian reovirus (lin et al., ) , e rns envelope glycoprotein , e (xu and liu, ) or ns protein (xu et al., ) of classical swine fever virus (csfv) and the e glycoprotein of jev (xu et al., ) . these studies collectively attested that the antigen can be efficiently displayed on the baculoviral envelope and induce humoral/cellular immune responses against the lethal viral challenge. other than displaying the antigen via genetic engineering, cd + t helper epitope (sferfeipke) and the major b cell epitope (wltekegsyp) derived from the ha of influenza virus a/pr/ / have also been chemically conjugated to baculovirus envelope (wilson et al., ) . i.n. administration of such baculovirus to mice elicited antigen-specific igg a/igg a, iga and ifn-γ, thus chemical coupling allows for the delivery of multiple epitopes to baculovirus. in addition, ha of aiv (h n ) has been displayed on another baculovirus bombyx mori npv (bmnpv) via fusion with gp (jin et al., ) . the virus was produced and purified from silkworm pupae infected with the recombinant virus. immunization of rhesus monkeys with aluminum hydroxide as the adjuvant at doses of mg/kg and . mg/kg elicited neutralizing antibodies and protected monkeys against influenza virus challenge. the vaccine did not cause appreciable toxicity at the dose as large as . mg/kg in cynomolgus monkeys and . mg/kg in mice, indicating the safe vaccine doses (jin et al., ) . food-and-mouth disease virus (cao et al., ) gp and m proteins porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus hpv- l protein human papillomavirus (lee et al., ) toxoplasma gondii (fang et al., ) display hemagglutinin protein influenza virus (jin et al., ; tang et al., ; yang et al., ) xu et al., ; xu and liu, ) -kda carboxyl terminus of merozoite surface protein plasmodium yoelii pfs protein plasmodium falciparum (mlambo et al., ) dual hemagglutinin protein influenza virus he et al., ; lu et al., ; prabakaran et al., ; prabakaran et al., a prabakaran et al., , b prabakaran et al., , c plasmodium falciparum (strauss et al., ) . . baculovirus as a dual vector for antigen expression/display it is perceivable that the antigen-expressing baculovirus mimicks the dna vaccine. following vector injection into the hosts, the antigen is expressed and presented via mhc i pathway in the transduced cells, and activates cd + t cells. conversely, the antigen-displaying baculovirus mimicks the subunit vaccine. antigens on the envelope are internalized by professional antigen presenting cells (apcs) such as macrophages and dcs, and presented by the mhc ii pathway to stimulate humoral immune responses. to fully exploit both mechanisms, a dual baculovirus vector that simultaneously displays and expresses the plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite (cs) protein was developed as a human malaria vaccine (strauss et al., ) . this vector contained two expression cassettes, one encoding the cs-gp fusion protein under the polyhedrin promoter while the other accommodating the cs gene under the cmv promoter, such that cs can be displayed on the envelope and expressed after transduction into mammalian cells. upon i.m. injection into mice, the dual vector induced higher anti-cs antibody titers and higher frequencies of cs-specific cd + and cd + t cells than the vectors that only displayed or only expressed cs. recently, we adopted a similar approach and constructed vectors: bac-ha harbored the ha gene of aiv under the p promoter for ha display; bac-cha expressed ha under the cmv promoter while the dual vector bac-cha/ha encompassed both expression cassettes in opposite orientations, such that bac-cha/ ha displayed and expressed ha in the transduced cells . all vectors, after administration (i.m., i.n. and s.c.) into balb/c mice, provoked ha-specific humoral (igg , igg a and hi titers), mucosal (iga titers) and cellular (ifn-γ and il- producing t cells and ifn-γ + /cd + t cells) immune responses. the strong cellular immunity provoked by bac-ha , which in theory favors the mhc ii pathway and preferentially elicits humoral immune responses, was likely due to the potent adjuvant effects of baculovirus. regardless, via either administration route the dual vector bac-cha/ha triggered superior or at least comparable ha-specific immune responses than the other two vaccine forms, demonstrating the advantages of the dual form for vaccine design . instead of using two separate cassettes as above, yoshida et al. ( ) devised a single cassette system whereby the pbcsp-gp fusion gene was driven by a tandem promoter consisting of the cmv and polyhedrin promoters, so that pbcsp was expressed in insect cells and mammalian cells. i.m. immunization with this baculovirus elicited both th and th responses as evidenced by the high pbcsp-specific igg / igg a titers and pbcsp-specific cd + t-cells responses, and conferred % protection against sporozoite challenge (yoshida et al. ). the same dual expression system was subsequently utilized to express plasmodium vivax transmission-blocking immunogen (pvs ) for the development of malarial transmission-blocking vaccines against the sexual stages of the parasite (blagborough et al., ) . both i.n. and i.m. immunizations of mice induced a mixed th /th response as evidenced by high pvs -specific igg and igg a/igg b titers as well as a strong transmission-blocking response after challenge. another simple approach to developing the dual vector is to drive the antigen expression using the white spot syndrome virus (wssv) ie promoter, which is active in insect, mammalian and avian cells (gao et al., ; he et al., ) . baculovirus encoding the wssv vp envelope protein driven by the wssv ie promoter was able to display vp on the envelope (syed musthaq et al., ) . immunization of shrimp with this baculovirus resulted in vp expression in shrimp tissues, elevated the survival rate and reduced the wssv viral load after wssv infection. wssv ie promoter was also used in conjunction with vsvg pseudotyping. i.m. injection of the vsvg-pseudotyped baculovirus that expressed the e protein of csfv under the ie promoter induced csfv-specific neutralizing antibodies and lymphoproliferative responses in mice (li et al., a) . wssv ie promoter has been most extensively employed by the kwang group to drive the expression of ha of h n aiv, which enabled ha display on the envelope and conferred the viral particle hemagglutination activity . i.m. injection of this vector (designated bacha) into mice elicited the antibodies with hi titers against the tested influenza virus. in sf- cells, wssv ie promoter was more active than cmv promoter, thereby giving rise to more efficient ha incorporation into the baculoviral envelope . the ie promoter also resulted in strong ha expression in the lung (after i.n. inoculation) and thymus (after i.m. inoculation) in chickens. as a result, immunization of chickens with the baculovirus bearing the ie promoter (bacha) elicited higher anti-ha antibody levels than that bearing the cmv promoter . however, i.n. inoculation of bacha stimulated low anti-ha igg titers (prabakaran et al., ) . to enhance the vaccine efficacy via the i.n. route, bacha was co-administered with recombinant cholera toxin b subunit (rctb) as the adjuvant, which significantly enhanced the serum igg, mucosal iga and serum microneutralization titers. with the adjuvant, bacha also triggered higher ha-specific humoral and mucosal immune responses than the inactivated h n virus adjuvanted with the same dose of rctb, and conferred complete protection against challenge with homologous and heterologous h n strains (prabakaran et al., ) . additionally, gastrointestinal delivery of bacha into mice by oral gavage led to transduction in vivo and remarkably boosted the ha-specific igg, hi and mucosal iga titers (prabakaran et al., c) . the live bacha triggered stronger cross-clade neutralization against heterologous h n strains than the inactivated bacha, and provided % protection against challenge with lethal doses of homologous and heterologous h n . moreover, after challenge the immunized mice exhibited only minimal bronchitis in lungs and regained their body weight more rapidly (prabakaran et al., c) . the oral vaccine efficacy was further potentiated by encapsulating the live bacha within a reverse micelle structure of phosphatidylcholine, which provided protection against the destructive environment in the intestinal lumen (prabakaran et al., b) . in comparison with the non-encapsulated bacha, gastrointestinal delivery of the encapsulated baculovirus into mice led to significantly ameliorated ha-specific igg and iga responses, and higher hi titers. the encapsulated vaccine induced strong cross-clade neutralization titers against heterologous h n strains and conferred protection against infection with highly pathogenic, heterologous h n viruses (prabakaran et al., b) . using the same wssv ie approach, more recently kwang and coworkers selected ha proteins from different vaccine strains for expression and display on the baculovirus surface (prabakaran et al., a) . the ha proteins covered the entire variants in the neutralizing epitopes among the h n lineages. s.c. immunization of mice with a mixture of baculoviruses displaying the ha proteins (tri-bacha) induced antibodies capable of neutralizing viruses from clades , . , . , , , and of h n viruses. in contrast, s.c. immunization with a single ha-displaying baculovirus (mono-bacha) or a single strain of inactivated whole virus vaccine neutralized only clade (homologous), clade . , and clade . viruses. also, the tri-bacha vaccine protected % of the mice against challenge with three different clades (clades . , . , and . ) of h n viruses. since the discovery in that baculovirus effectively transduces mammalian cells and mediates transgene expression, baculovirus has emerged as a promising gene delivery vector. albeit the rapidly growing lists of permissive cells and applications, relatively little is known about what happens inside the cells after baculovirus transduction. evidence accumulating in recent years has indicated that after entry, baculovirus can translocate into the nucleus through a complex cascade of steps and express baculoviral genes and the transgene. the entire process results in the recognition of baculovirus by the cells via the tlr -dependent and -independent pathways, and disturbs the expression of a small percentage of host genes, particularly those pertaining to the innate immune responses. however, disparity does exist between reports and the exact intracellular events remain elusive. the lack of comprehensive knowledge about the events governing the virus entry, intracellular transport and cellular responses will constitute a roadblock to future applications in the clinical setting, thus entailing extensive research to elucidate the underlying mechanisms. although the innate immune responses stir up concerns regarding the safety of baculovirus in gene therapy, these responses represent opportunities to harness baculovirus as a vector to defend against infectious agents and tumors. indeed, baculovirus-based vaccine has captured explosive interests over the past years and in one case has entered into trials in primates (jin et al., ) . thanks to the intrinsic adjuvant properties, in most studies baculovirus-based vaccines were able to trigger potent immune responses in the absence of additional adjuvants. due to the widespread use and encouraging preclinical data in comparison with other vaccine forms (e.g. dna vaccine, viruslike particle vaccine and whole virus vaccine), it is envisioned that baculovirus-based vaccines can progress into next phase in the near future. the capability of shrna/mirna delivery also confers baculovirus an edge for target gene regulation and for future applications in antiviral therapy and immunotherapy. furthermore, baculovirus transduction of neural cells (kenoutis et al., ) and adult stem cells (bak et al., ; ho et al., ; zeng et al., ) does not markedly alter the inherent properties and mitigate the differentiation capacity, warranting baculovirus a promising vector for cell therapy and tissue engineering. recent progresses in the baculovirus vectors engineering with respect to surface modification, minimization of in vivo inactivation, transgene targeting and prolongation of expression further corroborate the potentials of baculovirus in these applications. to advance the baculovirus technology from bench to bedside, other roadblocks still stand in the way. over the past few years, a wealth of literature has addressed the problems in baculoviral vector production carinhas et al., carinhas et al., , dojima et al., ; tsai et al., ) , quantification (chan et al., ; ferris et al., ; kärkkäinen et al., ; lo et al., ; lo and chao, ; roldao et al., ) , purification (chen et al., a; kaikkonen et al., ; transfiguracion et al., ; vicente et al., vicente et al., , a vicente et al., , b wu et al., ) and quality assurance (ihalainen et al., ; jorio et al., ) . new baculoviral vectors taking advantage of hybrid promoters (gao et al., ; keil et al., ; lackner et al., ; pan et al., ) and new regulatory elements (du et al., ; mahonen et al., ) are also being developed and evaluated for their potential applications. additionally, the transduction conditions (keil et al., ; pan et al., ) , supplements (guo et al., ; yin et al., ) and parameters (lee et al., a (lee et al., , b shen et al., shen et al., , dictating the transduction efficiencies have been evaluated. these technological progresses undoubtedly will facilitate the production of baculoviral vectors in compliance of cgmp regulations, and advance baculovirus from a research tool to clinical applications. host innate immune responses induced by baculovirus in mammals baculovirus induces an innate immune response and confers protection from lethal influenza virus infection in mice involvement of the toll-like receptor signaling pathway in the induction of innate immunity by baculovirus baculovirus induces type i interferon production through toll-like receptor-dependent and -independent pathways in a cell-type-specific manner baculovirus-mediated periadventitial gene transfer to rabbit carotid artery induction of antibodies in mice by a recombinant baculovirus expressing pseudorabies virus glycoprotein b in mammalian cells vaccination of mice with recombinant baculovirus expressing spike or nucleocapsid protein of sars-like coronavirus generates humoral and cellular immune responses baculovirus-transduced bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells for systemic cancer therapy human embryonic stem cell-derived mesenchymal stem cells as cellular delivery vehicles for prodrug gene therapy of glioblastoma high mobility group box promoter-controlled suicide gene expression enables targeted glioblastoma treatment cell density effect in the baculovirus-insect cells system: a quantitative analysis of energetic metabolism intranasal and intramuscular immunization with baculovirus dual expression system-based pvs vaccine substantially blocks plasmodium vivax transmission amino-terminal anchored surface display in insect cells and budded baculovirus using the amino-terminal end of neuraminidase gene expression profiling to define host response to baculoviral transduction in the brain a pseudotype baculovirus expressing the capsid protein of footand-mouth disease virus and a t-cell immunogen shows enhanced immunogenicity in mice baculovirus production for gene therapy: the role of cell density, multiplicity of infection and medium exchange improving baculovirus production at high cell density through manipulation of energy metabolism determination of the baculovirus transducing titer in mammalian cells induction of il- release in lung cells via activator protein- by recombinant baculovirus displaying severe acute respiratory syndrome-coronavirus spike proteins: identification of two functional regions non-polar distribution of green fluorescent protein on the surface of autographa californica nucleopolyhedrovirus using a heterologous membrane anchor baculovirus-mediated production of hdv-like particles in bhk cells using a novel oscillating bioreactor combination of baculovirus-mediated gene transfer and rotating-shaft bioreactor for cartilage tissue engineering combination of baculovirus-mediated bmp- expression and rotating-shaft bioreactor culture synergistically enhances cartilage formation concanavalin a affinity chromatography for efficient baculovirus purification baculovirus transduction of mesenchymal stem cells triggers the toll-like receptor (tlr ) pathway the repair of osteochondral defects using baculovirus-mediated gene transfer with de-differentiated chondrocytes in bioreactor culture baculovirus as an avian influenza vaccine vector: differential immune responses elicited by different vector forms biosafety assessment of human mesenchymal stem cells engineered by hybrid baculovirus vectors membrane penetrating peptides greatly enhance baculovirus transduction efficiency into mammalian cells a rapid and efficient method to express target genes in mammalian cell by baculovirus a novel system for the production of fully deleted adenovirus vectors that does not require helper adenovirus baculovirus as a new gene delivery vector for stem cells engineering and bone tissue engineering baculovirus transduction of mesenchymal stem cells: in vitro responses and in vivo immune responses after cell transplantation xenotransplantation of human mesenchymal stem cells into immunocompetent rats for calvarial bone repair baculovirus expression vectors for insect and mammalian cells transient and stable gene expression in mammalian cells transduced with a recombinant baculovirus vector baculoviruses and mammalian cell-based assays for drug screening production of scfv-displaying bmnpv in silkworm larvae and its efficient purification autographa californica multicapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus efficiently infects sf cells and transduces mammalian cells via direct fusion with the plasma membrane at low ph the combined use of viral transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulatory elements to improve baculovirus-mediated transient gene expression in human embryonic stem cells baculovirus vector requires electrostatic interactions including heparan sulfate for efficient gene transfer in mammalian cells baculoviruses deficient in ie gene function abrogate viral gene expression in transduced mammalian cells improving baculovirus transduction of mammalian cells by surface display of a rgd-motif baculovirus vectors elicit antigen-specific immune responses in mice construction and immunogenicity of recombinant pseudotype baculovirus expressing the capsid protein of porcine circovirus type in mice construction and immunogenicity of pseudotype baculovirus expressing toxoplasma gondii sag protein in balb/c mice model baculovirus surface display of sars coronavirus (sars-cov) spike protein and immunogenicity of the displayed protein in mice models evaluation of the virus counter ® for rapid baculovirus quantitation expression of autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus genes in mammalian cells and upregulation of the host β-actin gene high efficiency gene transfer into cultured primary rat and human hepatic stellate cells using baculovirus vectors efficient gene delivery into mammalian cells mediated by a recombinant baculovirus containing a whispovirus ie promoter, a novel shuttle promoter between insect cells and mammalian cells targeting micrornas in cancer: rationale, strategies and challenges a surface-modified baculovirus vector with improved gene delivery to b-lymphocytic cells preclinical evaluation of innate immunity to baculovirus gene therapy vectors in whole human blood indications for cell stress in response to adenoviral and baculoviral gene transfer observed by proteome profiling of human cancer cells expression and subcellular targeting of canine parvovirus capsid proteins in baculovirus-transduced nlfk cells baculovirus for eukaryotic protein display developments in the use of baculoviruses for the surface display of complex eukaryotic proteins new baculovirus recombinants expressing pseudorabies virus (prv) glycoproteins protect mice against lethal challenge infection comparison between recombinant baculo-and adenoviralvectors as transfer system in cardiovascular cells sodium butyrate enhances the expression of baculovirusmediated sodium/iodide symporter gene in a lung adenocarcinoma cells antiglioma effects of combined use of a baculovirual vector expressing wild-type p and sodium butyrate upregulation of proinflammatory cytokines and no production in bv-activated avian macrophage-like cell line (hd ) requires mapk and nf-κb pathways involvement of tlr in baculovirus-induced interleukin- gene expression in avian macrophage-like cell line hd wssv ie promoter is more efficient than cmv promoter to express h hemagglutinin from influenza virus in baculovirus as a chicken vaccine insect baculoviruses strongly potentiate adaptive immune responses by inducing type i ifn baculovirus expression systems for recombinant protein production in insect cells highly efficient baculovirus-mediated gene transfer into rat chondrocytes transgene expression and differentiation of baculovirus-transduced human mesenchymal stem cells baculovirus transduction of human mesenchymal stem cell-derived progenitor cells: variation of transgene expression with cellular differentiation states complement inhibition rescued mice allowing observation of transgene expression following intraportal delivery of baculovirus in mice protection of baculovirus-vectors against complement-mediated inactivation by recombinant soluble complement receptor type baculovirus as a highly efficient expression vector in insect and mammalian cells baculovirus vectors for gene therapy baculoviral vectors for gene delivery: a review enhancement and prolongation of baculovirusmediated expression in mammalian cells: focuses on strategic infection and feeding baculovirus as an expression and/or delivery vehicle for vaccine antigens combination of baculovirus-mediated gene delivery and packed-bed reactor for scalable production of adeno-associated virus suppression of gastric cancer growth by baculovirus vector-mediated transfer of normal epithelial cell specific- gene efficient gene delivery into fish cells by an improved recombinant baculovirus incorporation of decay-accelerating factor into the baculovirus envelope generates complement-resistant gene transfer vectors morphological characterization of baculovirus autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus host innate immune receptors and beyond: making sense of microbial infections sting regulates intracellular dna-mediated, type i interferon-dependent innate immunity expression of seap (secreted alkaline phosphatase) by baculovirus mediated transduction of hek cells in a hollow fiber bioreactor system safety and immunogenicity of h n influenza vaccine based on baculovirus surface display system of bombyx mori analysis of baculovirus aggregates using flow cytometry truncated vesicular stomatitis virus g protein improves baculovirus transduction efficiency in vitro and in vivo targeting and purification of metabolically biotinylated baculovirus screening of complement inhibitors: shielded baculoviruses increase the safety and efficacy of gene delivery acquisition of complement resistance through incorporation of cd /decay-accelerating factor into viral particles bearing baculovirus gp inhibition of hiv- replication by vesicular stomatitis virus envelope glycoprotein pseudotyped baculovirus vector-transduced ribozyme in mammalian cells a -well format for a high-throughput baculovirus generation, fast titering and recombinant protein production in insect and mammalian cells novel vectors for simultaneous high-level dual protein expression in vertebrate and insect cells by recombinant baculoviruses baculovirus-mediated gene delivery into mammalian cells does not alter their transcriptional and differentiating potential but is accompanied by early viral gene expression regulation of transduction efficiency by pegylation of baculovirus vector in vitro and in vivo direct vaccination with pseudotype baculovirus expressing murine telomerase induces anti-tumor immunity comparable with rna-electroporated dendritic cells in a murine glioma model suppression of tumor growth in xenograft model mice by programmed cell death gene delivery using folate-peg-baculovirus baculovirus is an efficient vector for the transduction of the eye: comparison of baculovirus-and adenovirus-mediated intravitreal vascular endothelial growth factor d gene transfer in the rabbit eye ligand-directed gene targeting to mammalian cells by pseudotype baculoviruses characterization of baculovirus autographa californica multiple nuclear polyhedrosis virus infection in mammalian cells induction of natural killer cell-dependent antitumor immunity by the autographa californica multiple nuclear polyhedrosis virus baculovirus display of single chain antibody (scfv) using a novel signal peptide recombinant baculoviruses as expression vectors for insect and mammalian cells recombinant baculoviruses as mammalian cell gene delivery vectors baculovirus as versatile vectors for protein expression in insect and mammalian cells baculovirus gene delivery: a flexible assay development tool baculovirus capsid display: a novel tool for transduction imaging mesenchymal stem cells expressing osteogenic and angiogenic factors synergistically enhance bone formation in a mouse model of segmental bone defect baculovirus-mediated immediateearly gene expression and nuclear reorganization in human cells clathrin-independent entry of baculovirus triggers uptake of e. coli in non-phagocytic human cells a bicistronic baculovirus vector for transient and stable protein expression in mammalian cells soluble forms of the cell adhesion molecule l produced by insect and baculovirus-transduced mammalian cells enhance schwann cell motility baculovirus transduction of rat articular chondrocytes: roles of cell cycle variation of baculovirus-harbored transgene transcription among mesenchymal stem cell-derived progenitors leads to varied expression baculovirus transduction of chondrocytes elicits interferon-α/β and suppresses transgene expression development of a novel viral dna vaccine against human papillomavirus: acherv-hp l baculoviruses exhibit restricted cell type specificity in rat brain: a comparison of baculovirus-and adenovirus-mediated intracerebral gene transfer in vivo generation of lentivirus vectors using recombinant baculoviruses production and purification of lentiviral vectors generated in t suspension cells with baculoviral vectors human adipose derived stromal cells heal critical size mouse calvarial defects axonal transport of recombinant baculovirus vectors immune responses induced by a bacmam virus expressing the e protein of classical swine fever virus in mice immunization with pseudotype baculovirus expressing envelope protein of japanese encephalitis virus elicits protective immunity in mice baculovirus surface display of σc and σb proteins of avian reovirus and immunogenicity of the displayed proteins in a mouse model the healing of critical-sized femoral segmental bone defects in rabbits using baculovirus-engineered mesenchymal stem cells baculovirus as a gene delivery vector for cartilage and bone tissue engineering recent patents on the baculovirus systems adipose-derived stem cells engineered with the persistently expressing hybrid baculovirus augment the healing of massive bone defects efficient and stable gene expression in rabbit intervertebral disc cells transduced with a recombinant baculovirus vector stimulation of baculovirus transcriptome expression in mammalian cells by baculoviral transcriptional activators ring and coiled-coil domains of baculovirus ie are critical in strong activation of the cytomegalovirus major immediate-early promoter in mammalian cells baculovirus-transduced mouse amniotic fluid-derived stem cells maintain differentiation potential maximizing baculovirus-mediated foreign proteins expression in mammalian cells rapid titer determination of baculovirus by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction development of a hybrid baculoviral vector for sustained transgene expression rapid baculovirus titration based on regulatable green fluorescent protein expression in mammalian cells functional entry of baculovirus into insect and mammalian cells is dependent on clathrin-mediated endocytosis suppression of porcine arterivirus replication by baculovirusdelivered shrna targeting nucleoprotein baculovirus surface-displayed hemagglutinin of h n influenza virus sustains its authentic cleavage, hemagglutination activity, and antigenicity initiation of hepatitis b virus genome replication and production of infectious virus following delivery in hepg cells by novel recombinant baculovirus vector baculovirus as vaccine vectors post-transcriptional regulatory element boosts baculovirus-mediated gene expression in vertebrate cells culture medium induced vimentin reorganization associates with enhanced baculovirus-mediated gene delivery baculovirus display: a multifunctional technology for gene delivery and eukaryotic library development enhanced baculovirus-mediated transduction of human cancer cells by tumor-homing peptides tumor targeting of baculovirus displaying a lymphatic homing peptide surface display of igg fc on baculovirus vectors enhances binding to antigen-presenting cells and cell lines expressing fc receptors baculovirus entry into human hepatoma cells characterization of hcv-like particles produced in a human hepatoma cell line by a recombinant baculovirus efficient delivery and regulable expression of hepatitis c virus full-length and minigenome constructs in hepatocyte-derived cell lines using baculovirus vectors chromosomal integration of transduced recombinant baculovirus dna in mammalian cells functional immunogenicity of baculovirus expressing pfs , a human malaria transmission-blocking vaccine candidate antigen baculovirus treatment fully protects mice against a lethal challenge of fmdv optimization of baculovirus transduction on freestyle (™) cells for the generation of influenza b/lee/ rna interference mediated in human primary cells via recombinant baculoviral vectors baculovirus up-regulates antiviral systems and induces protection against infectious bronchitis virus challenge in neonatal chicken potential of adenovirus and baculovirus vectors for the delivery of shrna against morbilliviruses hybrid cytomegalovirus enhancer-h promoter-based plasmid and baculovirus vectors mediate effective rna interference efficient gene delivery into mammalian cells by recombinant baculovirus containing a hybrid cytomegalovirus promoter/semliki forest virus replicon antitumor effects of a recombinant pseudotype baculovirus expressing apoptin in vitro and in vivo baculovirus reveals a new ph-dependent direct cell-fusion pathway for cell entry and transgene delivery a chimeric baculovirus displaying bovine herpesvirus- (bhv- ) glycoprotein d on its surface and their immunological properties baculovirus-mediated gene expression in chicken primary cells protective immunity against influenza h n virus challenge in mice by intranasal co-administration of baculovirus surfacedisplayed ha and recombinant ctb as an adjuvant neutralizing epitopes of influenza virus hemagglutinin: target for the development of a universal vaccine against h n lineages reverse micelle-encapsulated recombinant baculovirus as an oral vaccine against h n infection in mice gastrointestinal delivery of baculovirus displaying influenza virus hemagglutinin protects mice against heterologous h n infection enhanced gene delivery by avidin-displaying baculovirus magnetic resonance imaging of viral particle biodistribution in vivo spect/ct imaging of baculovirus biodistribution in rat error assessment in recombinant baculovirus titration: evaluation of different methods improvement in nuclear entry and transgene expression of baculoviruses by disintegration of microtubules in human hepatocytes an orip/ebna- -based baculovirus vector with prolonged and enhanced transgene expression the autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus acnpv induces functional maturation of human monocyte-derived dendritic cells baculovirus-mediated gene transfer is attenuated by sodium bicarbonate sustained baculovirus-mediated expression in myogenic cells a novel method using baculovirus-mediated gene transfer for production of recombinant adeno-associated virus vectors effective transduction of osteogenic sarcoma cells by a baculovirus vector transduction of avian cells with recombinant baculovirus baculoviral capsid display of his-tagged zno inorganic binding peptide hepatitis b virus (hbv)-specific short hairpin rna is capable of reducing the formation of hbv covalently closed circular (ccc) dna but has no effect on established ccc dna in vitro baculovirus-based vaccination vectors allow for efficient induction of immune responses against plasmodium falciparum circumsporozoite protein modulation of chondrocyte phenotype via baculovirus-mediated growth factor expression baculovirus-mediated growth factor expression in dedifferentiated chondrocytes accelerates redifferentiation: effects of combinational transduction stable replication of the ebna /orip-mediated baculovirus vector and its application to anti-hcv gene therapy baculovirus-mediated bispecific short-hairpin smallinterfering rnas have remarkable ability to cope with both influenza viruses a and b suppression of hepatitis c virus replication by baculovirus vector-mediated short-hairpin rna expression baculovirus activates murine dendritic cells and induces non-specific nk cell and t cell immune responses induction of antitumor immunity against mouse carcinoma by baculovirus-infected dendritic cells localization of vp on the baculovirus envelope and its immunogenicity against white spot syndrome virus in penaeus monodon immunological properties of fmdv-gp fusion proteins expressed on sf cell and baculovirus surfaces hemagglutinin displayed baculovirus protects against highly pathogenic influenza characterization of cell-surface determinants important for baculovirus infection in vitro and in vivo gene delivery by recombinant baculoviruses baculovirus vector for gene delivery and vaccine development high yield purification of functional baculovirus vectors by size exclusion chromatography factors influencing the production and storage of baculovirus for gene delivery: an alternative perspective from the transducing titer assay baculovirus infection of nondividing mammalian cells: mechanisms of entry and nuclear transport of capsids purification of recombinant baculoviruses for gene therapy using membrane processes analysis of adsorption of a baculovirus bioreaction bulk on an ion-exchange surface by surface plasmon resonance modeling electrostatic interactions of baculovirus vectors for ion-exchange process development baculovirus-mediated gene expression in zebrafish potential cancer gene therapy by baculoviral transduction baculovirus as a highly efficient gene delivery vector for the expression of hepatitis delta virus antigens in mammalian cells recombinant baculovirus containing the diphtheria toxin a gene for malignant glioma therapy construction and immunogenicity of pseudotype baculovirus expressing gp and m protein of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus inhibition of nasopharyngeal carcinoma growth by rta-expressing baculovirus vectors containing orip dna methyltransferase inhibitors increase baculovirusmediated gene expression in mammalian cells when applied before infection delivery of vaccine peptides by rapid conjugation to baculovirus particles ion-exchange membrane chromatography method for rapid and efficient purification of recombinant baculovirus and baculovirus gp protein combinatorial control of suicide gene expression by tissuespecific promoter and microrna regulation for cancer therapy a pseudotype baculovirus-mediated vaccine confers protective immunity against lethal challenge with h n avian influenza virus in mice and chickens baculovirus surface display of e envelope glycoprotein of classical swine fever virus and immunogenicity of the displayed proteins in a mouse model baculovirus surface display of e rns envelope glycoprotein of classical swine fever virus baculovirus surface display of ns nonstructural protein of classical swine fever virus baculovirus surface display of e envelope glycoprotein of japanese encephalitis virus and its immunogenicity of the displayed proteins in mouse and swine models establishment of medakafish as a model for stem cell-based gene therapy: efficient gene delivery and potential chromosomal integration by baculoviral vectors avian influenza virus hemagglutinin display on baculovirus envelope: cytoplasmic domain affects virus properties and vaccine potential polyethylenimine coating to produce serum-resistant baculoviral vectors for in vivo gene delivery baculovirus vector-mediated transfer of nis gene into colon tumor cells for radionuclide therapy baculovirus virions displaying plasmodium berghei circumsporozoite protein protect mice against malaria sporozoite infection a baculovirus dual expression system-based malaria vaccine induces strong protection against plasmodium berghei sporozoite challenge in mice baculovirus-based nasal drop vaccine confers complete protection against malaria by natural boosting of vaccine-induced antibodies in mice transduction of vertebrate cells with spodoptera exigua multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus f protein-pseudotyped gp -null autographa californica multiple nucleopolyhedrovirus high-efficiency transient transduction of human embryonic stem cell-derived neurons with baculoviral vectors a novel method for isolation of membrane proteins: a baculovirus surface display system baculovirus expression of cloned porcine arterivirus generates infectious particles in both insect and mammalian cells display of heterologous proteins on gp null baculovirus birions and enhanced budding mediated by a vesicular stomatitis virus g-stem construct the feasibility of using a baculovirus vector to deliver the sodium-iodide symporter gene as a reporter the authors acknowledge the financial support from the national tsing hua university booster program ( n e , n e , n e ), cgmh-nthu joint research program ( n e , cmrpg , cmrpg ) and national science council ( - -e- - -my , - -e- - -my , nsc - -e- - -cc , nsc - -b- - ), taiwan. key: cord- -ugd kkor authors: giles, ian g. title: a compendium of reviews in biochemistry and molecular biology published in the first half of date: - - journal: international journal of biochemistry doi: . / - x( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ugd kkor abstract . . a compendium of reviews and mini-reviews in biochemistry and molecular biology published in the first half of is presented. in all titles are listed from different publications. . . this compendium presents the references by journal 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( ) review-enzyme-catalyzed oligosaccharide synthesis. anal. b&hem. , - . gal-l - + ( )glcnac a- + sialyltransferase; acetylneuraminic acid synthetase; immobilized l -galactosidase; gdp-l-fucose; sialic acids; esckrichia coli; rat-liver, glycoprotein oligosaccharides; carbohydrate antigens; determines expression. gabriel . and gersten d.m. ( ) staining for enzymatic activity after gel electrophoresis-review. anal. bbckm. , sodium dodecyl-sulfate.; ted blood-cells; phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase activity; nucleotide-linked dehydrogenases; alkaline-phosphatase isoenzymes; pathogenesis-related proteins; cr-l-fucosidase; polyactylamide-gel; produce phosphate; general-method. wood p.j. ( ) the measurement of parathyroid hormone. ann. cfin. b&km. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] cyclic amp; immtmoradiomettic assay; primary hypatparathytoidism; humoral hypercalcemia; calcium huneostasis; intact parathytin; clinical utility; circadian-rhythm; chromogranin a; lung-cancer. newman d.j.. henneberry h. and price c.p. ( ) particle enhanced light scattering immunoassay. ann. clin. b&hem. , . c-reactive protein; human chorionic-gonadotropin; latex agglutination-test; cell-labeled antibodies; shell corn patticles; counting immunoassay; turbidimetric immunoassay; spectroscopic immunoassay; passive hemagglutinatiom luteinizing-hormone. thompson d.. milfordward a. and whither j.t. ( ) the value of acute phase protein measurements in clinical practice. ann. clin. c-reactive protein; erythrocyte sedimentation-rate; inflammatory bowel-disease; tumornecrosis factor, amyloid a protein; tlteumatoid atthritis; plasma-ptoteins; polymyalgia rheumatica; acute-leukemia; tissue-injury; acute phase. soldi s.j. ( ) drug receptor assays-quo vudis. ann. . allen j.f. ( ) protein phosphorylation in regulation of photosynthesis. biochln. bi@ys. ac& la . light hamsting complex; dtlomphyll a; b protein; cyanobncterium syn&ococc~~ ; excitatiarcnergy distribution; absorptial cross-section; ii reaction center. thylakoid membrane pelypaptides; state-l state- tmnsiticns; amino-acid-sequence; randomixed chlomplast iamellae. anthony c. ( ) the c-type cytochromes of methylotrophic bacteria. b&him. biqhys. acta , l- . methylobacteriwn extorquetu am; electron-transport chain; blue copper proteins; oxidation mutant classes; ammo-acid sequence; sp strain aml; paracoccus dcni~rificons; melhylophilvs mdylotrophur; obligate metbylotmpb; m&and dehydrogenase. hoch f.l. ( ) cardi~lipins and biomembrane function. biochim. biophys. acta , - . rat-liver-mitochondtia; fatty-acid composition; brown-adipose-tissue cytochmme-c-oxidaset munbmne lipid-ccmpositiau adenine-nucleotide translocase; age-related-changes; skeletal-muscle mitochond~, chronic ethanol-consum@n; lateral proton conduction. bandekar j. ( ) amide modes and protein conformation. biochim. biophys. actu . - . transforfn-infrared-spsccpy; laser raman-spectroscopy; secondary-structure-analysis; liver ahohd-dehydmgenase; hydrogadeuteriutn exchange; a transmembrane channel; valyl-glycyl-glycine; iii spectral region; vibratiaral analysis, gramicidin-a. b&him. biophys. acta , - . acetyl-coa carboxylase; coenzyme-a reductase; hormone-sensitive l&se; dependent multipmtein kinase; rat-lives; -hydmxy- -methylglutaryl coenxyme; enxymic activity; phosphorylationdephosphorylatiar; hydmxymethylgfutaryl coenxyme; reversible phosphotylation. w&t k. ( ) origins and fates of fatty acyl-coa esters. biochim. biophys. acfu , - . coenzyme a syntbetase; performance liquid-chromatography; rat-liver micmsomcs; acyltransfemse-cataly~ cleavage; dependent transacylation system; rabbit alveolar macropbages; pemxisomal &oxidation; amcbidonic-acid; brain micmsomes; sbott-chain. low-density~l&protein; high-performance liquid; chrcmatogmphy mass spectmmetry; chicken vitellogam gene; thin-layer chmmatography; apolipoprotein-vldl-ii; fatty-acid composition; laying turkey hens; egg-yolk; plasma-lipoproteins. erlansonalbertsson c. ( ) pancreatic colipase-structural and physiological aspects. biuchim. biophys. acta . - . gastric-inhibitory polypeptide, messenger-rna levels; diabetic rats; pro-colipase; co-lipase; tymsine residues; porcine colipase; sequence; taurodeoxycholrte; triglyceride. coleman r. and rahman k. ( ) wehle e. ( ) reiter r.j. ( ) the ageing pineal gland and its physiological conxequences. bioessays , - . malatonin receptors; admoet@c-receptors; circadian variations; n-acetylscrotonin, plasma melatcoin, serum melatouin; hamsters; gerbil; brain; reduction; downward j. ( ) regulatory mechanisms for ras proteins. bioessap , - . gtaase-activating protein; neurofibranatosis type-l gene; nucleotide exchange-reaction; gap-associated proteins; growth-factor; tymsine phosphorylation; ras-p gtpase; stimulation; p ; recepors. rusciano d. and burger m.m. ( ) adamo m., roberta ct. and lemith d. ( ) how distinct are the insulii and ~sul~-l~e growth factor? -signalling systems. biofwtors . - . human-skin fibroblests; igf binding-protein; messenger ribonucleic-acid; cooh-teminal truncation; monoclonal-antibody; endothelial-cells; factor receptoc amniotic-fluid; dna-synthesis; rat-heart. hehnreich e.j.m. ( ) how pyridoxal s-phosphate could function in glycogen phosphorylaae catalysis. biofbctors , - . aron d.c. ( ) insulin-like growth factor-i and erythropoiesis. biofators , - . factor-binding-protein; erythroid colony formation; cultured human-tibroblasts; factor messenger-rna, n-terminal sequence; fetal bovine serum; igf-i; somatomedin c, clinical-applicstians; stimulating factors. silver b.j. ( ) platelet-derived growth factor in human malignancy. biofmtors , - . terminal coding region; c-sis; b-chain. bmis w.d. and durst r.w. ( ) bajpai p. and bajpai p.k. ( ) arachidonic acid production by microorganisms. biofechnol. appl. biockm. . l- . bellomo m.j., parlier v., muhlematter d., grob j.p. and beris p. ( ) three new cases of chromosome- rearrangement in bandq and band-q with abnormal thrombopoiesis bring further evidence to the existence of a q q -syndrome. cancer genet. cytogenet. . - . acute nonlymphocytic leukemia; chronic myelogcnous leukemia; chronic myeloid-leukemia; acute megakaryoblastic leukemia; chronic myelocytic-leukemia; acute myeloblastic-leukemia; british cooperative group; myelodysplastic syndromes; blast crisis; tmnslocation t(l - ). pedersen b. ( ) survival of patients with t(l- )(pl l-p l&report of cases and review of the literature. cancer genet. cytogenet. , - . acute nonlymphocytic leukemir; trsnslccation i- ; myelodysplastic syndromes; chromosome analysis; mycloid disorders; secondary. nossal g.j.v. ( ) the molecular and cellular basis of affinity maturation in the antibody response. cell . - . mutation. thomas g. ( ) map kinase by any other name smells just as sweet. cell , - . protein-kinsse; insulin; identification; muscle. teach r.e. ( ) type- astrocyte developme ciliaty netttotmphic factoc fibmblast growth-factor. retinoic acid xceptor; chick limb bud; tymsine kinaae m eatiy xatqus embryos; pmto-oncogene int- ; activin-a; w-locus. greenwald i. and rubin gm ( ) mellman i. and simons k. ( ) the golgi complex--in vitro verirus. cell . - . asparsgine-linked oligosaccharides; cell-free system; rough endoplssmic-reticulum; vesicular stomatitis-tims; plasma-manbrane proteins; bmfeldin a; cis-golgi; successive compartments; intracellular-transport; n-acetylglucosamine. chao m.v. ( ) hall a. ( ) signal transduction through small gtpases-a tale of gaps. cell , - . proteins. wetr d.z., peles e.. cupples r., suggs s.v., bacus s.s., luo y., trail g., hu s.. silbiger s.m.. benlevy r.. koski r.a., lu h.s. and yarden y. ( ) neu differentiation factor-a transmembrane glycoprotein containing an egf domain and an immunoglobulin homology unit. cell , - . epidennal growth-factor. human mterleukin- receptor. human-breast-carcinoma; human mammary-tumors; factor-a; nudeotide sequence; molecular cloning; prom-oncogene; tyrosine phosphorylation; signal transduction. travers a.a. ( ) the reprogramming of transcriptional competence. cell . - . position effect variegation; drarophila; protein. helenius a. ( ) unpacking the incoming influenza virus. cell , - . amantscline: protein, virions. jan l.y., jan y.n. and hughes h. ( ) tracing the roots of ion channels. cell . - . protein. gauss p. and walther c. ( ) pax in development. cell , - . genes; conservation; drosophila; nowchord, proteins; domain; box. varshavsky a. 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( ) the distribution of charged amino acids in mitochondrial inner-membrane proteins suggests different modes of membrane integration for nuclearly and mitochondriaily encoded proteins. eur. j. biochem. , - . cytochmme-c-oxidrse; adp-awcartier. beef-heart mitochondria; nicotinamide nucleotide tmnshydrogenase; brown fat mitochondtia; diffemnt genes cdna, imn-sulfur proteirx saccharanyces cerevisiae; unce@ieg potdn; escherichia coli. frrmcklyn c., musierforsyth k. and schimmel p. ( ) youn y.k., lalonde c. and demling r. ( ) haas a. and goebel w. ( ) defromentel c.c. and soussi t. ( ) mackay t.f.c., lyman r.f. and jackson ms. ( ) hpitan n.l.v. ( ) sobell j.l., heston l.l. and sommer s.s. ( ) delineation of genetic predisposition to multifactorial disease-a general approach on the threshold of feasibility. genomics , l- . polymense chain-reaction; fragment length polymorphisms; dependent diabetes-mellitus; sickle-cell anemia; factor-m gene; enzymatic amplificatiat; genomic dna; mutations; sequence; diagnosis; predisposition; genetics. troy f.a. ( ) polysialylation-from bacteria to brains. glycobiology. , - . cell-adhesion molecule; escherichia coli kl; rainbow-trout eggs; deaminated neuraminic acid; endo-n-acetylne.uramiidase; group b meningococci; long oligosaccharide segment: netno-blastoma cells; polysialic acid; sialic-acid. varki a. ( ) diversity in the sialic acids. glycobiology. , - . n-acetylneuramhtic acid, infhtenxa c virus; de-ortho-acetylation; performance liquid-chromatography; hungonuhu d&her antigen; liver golgi vesicles; melanoma-associated ganglioside; bombardment mass-spectrometry; human gastmintestinal-trac deaminated neuraminic acid. stanley p. ( ) glycosylation engineering. glycobiology. , - . hamster ovary cells; mcombinant human erythropoietin; tissue plasminogen-activator. n-linked oligosaccharide, protein glycosylaticm; biological-activity; lysosomal-enzymes; insect cells; animal-cells; sugar chains. harvey d.j. ( ) the role of mass spectrometry in glycobiology. glycoconjugate j. , - . fast-atom-bombardment; -o-methylghtcose pelysaccharide; collisional activation; gas-chromatography; laser desorptien; molecular mass; oligosacdtarides; ionization; proteins. aquit d.a. and b~~~ii~ii c.f. ( ) heat-shock proteins and immunopathology-an overview. heat-shock t-cell receptor; messenger-rna degradation; gamma-delta; stress proteins; antigen-receptor, lymphocytes-t; ~ycobactcrium fuberc&arir. mammalian-cells; cyto-toxicity; dna-binding. fenick d.a. and gemmellhori l. ( ) potential developmental role for self-reactive t cells bearing gamma-delta t cell receptors specific for heat-shock proteins. dendritic epidermal-cells; toxic lymphocytes-$ antigen receptor; intraepithclial lymphocytes; rheumatoid arthritis; athymic mice; mycobacrcritert lubercularis; immune-response; thymic ontogeny; a-chain; cell receptor. christmas s.e. ( ) cytokine production by lymphocytes-t bearing the gamma-delta t cell antigen receptor. antigen; antigen receptor. mceptor. tumor-necrosis-factor; bone-marrow transplantation; a-p+ lymphocytes; interferon-gamma; monoclonal-antibodies; peripheral-blood; cytotoxic activity; fetal thymocytes; different forms; human intestine. wintield j., jarjour w. and minota s. ( ) stress protein autoantibodies and the expression of stress proteins on the surface of human gamma-delta cells and other cells of the immune system. heat-shock proteins and gamma-delta t cells , - . stress; autoantibodies; immune-system; heat-shock protein; rous-sarcoma virus; juvenile rheumatoid-arthritis; t-cells; synovial-fluid; lymphocytes-t, mycobucterium tuberculosis; borrelia bwgdorferi; lupus erythematosus; transforming protein; stmss protein. modlin r.l.. lewis j., uyemura k. and tigelaar r.e. ( ) lymphocytes-t bearing gamma-delta antigen receptors in skin. dendritic epidermaltells; heat-shock protein; mycobacterium-tuberculosis; intraepithelial lymphocytes; limited diversity; murine epidermis; concanavalin a; thy-l antigen; nude-mice; expression. hohlfeld r. and engel a.g. ( ) the role of gamma-delta lymphocytes-t in inflammatory muscle disease. monochmal-antibody analysis; natural-killer cells; mononuclear-cells; cyto-toxicity; receptor; myopathies; recognition; expmssiost; ptoteins; canplex. aquino d.a. and selmaj k. ( ) heat-shock proteins and gamma-delta t cell responses in the central nervous system. heat-shock proteins and gamma-delta t cells , - . experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis; experimental allergic encephalomyelitis; fibrillary acidic protein; myelin basic-protein multiple sclerosis: stress prcteim spinal-cord, insitu hybridixation; alexander's disease; praxosin treatment. mario t., nagasawa m. and yata j. ( ) gamma-delta t cells in patients with primary immunodeficiency syndrome-their function and a possible role in the pathogenesis. heat-shock proteins und gamma-delta t cells , - . wiskott-aldrich syndrome; heat-shock proteins; receptor-delta; ataxia telangiectasia; transgenic mice; lymphocytes t; bearing cells; recognition; expression; incmase. reardon cl., bom w. and obrien r.l. ( ) murine gammadelta lymphocyte-t recognition of hsp a possible source for bacterial immunity or autoimmunity. he&& j.e. and whitelaw p.f. ( ) the role of cellular oncogenes in myogenesis and muscle cell hyperuqhy. int. j. bkxhem. , . muscle; all; rous sarcoma vins; fibroblast growth-factor; c-fos expression; embtyonal caminoma-cel~, chicken skeletal-muscle; myc messatger-rna; proto-oncogene; geneexpnssion; dna-binding; src gmc. colacicchi s.. ferrari m. and sotgiu a. ( ) in vivo electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy imaging -first experiences, problems, and perspectives. bat. j. b&hem. . - . &oxide spin labels; loop-gap resonator. free-radicals; soluble nitroxides; metabolism; phannacokinetics; oxygen; cells; specttusn~, sensitivity. seyer r.. richoux j.p. and aumelas a. ( ) probing angiotensin receptors. iru. j. biochem. , - . message-address concept; if onnplementaty rna, paraventricular nucleus; biological-activities; subfomical organ; binding-sites; amino-acid; rat-brain; antagonists; analogs. tuck m.t. ( ) the formation of internal -methylademne residues in eucaryotic messenger rna. fnt. j. biochem. , - . rekharsky m.v., nemykina e.v. and erokhin a.s. ( ) thermochemistry of n-c bonds hydrolysis in amides, peptides, n-acetyl amino acids and high-energy n-c bonds hydrolysis in n-acetyl imidazole and urea. lnl. konopinska d., rosinski g. and sobotka w. ( ) insect peptide hormones, an overview of the present literature. amino-acid-sequence; bombardment mass-spectranetry; pigment-concentrating hormone; locust adipokinetic hormone; periphneta americana l; akh-rpch family; corpora cardiaca; lencophaea mademe; cotpus caniiaann; matuiuca swrta. dinarello c.a. ( ) the biology of interleukin- . interleukinomolecular biology and immunology . l- . tumor necrosis factor, colony-stimulating factor; smooth-muscle cells; human-immunodeficiency-vims; vascular endothelial-cells; blood mononuclear-cells; recombinant human interleukin- ; human monocyte interleukin- ; hepatic protein-synthesis; autocrine growth-factor. dower sk.. sims j.e., cerretti d.p. and bird t.a. ( ) the interleukin- system--receptors, ligands and signals. interleukin.+molecular biology and hmunology , - . tumor necrosis factor, pmtein kinase c, growth-factor-receptor. nf-kappa-b; factor increase phosphorylation; prostaglandin e production; thaunatoid synovial-cells; high-affinity receptors; gtp-binding pmt+ human t-cells. ihle j.n. ( ) interleukin- and hematopoiesis. interleukim- olecular biology ad i mmunology , - . colony-stimulating factor. human granulocyte-macmphage; protein kinase-c; recombinant human interleukin- ; cell growth-factor, murine bone-marrow; express functional receptors; acute lymphocytic-leukemia; gtpase-activating pm&n; factor-independent growth. ascorbic-acid deficiency; ischemic-heart-disease; low-density-lipoprotein; eastern finnish men; diabetes melli~rcs. guinea-pigs; blood-pressure; oral-contraceptives; experimental atherosclerosis; plasma-cholesteml. mannella ca., forte m. and colombini m. ( ) toward the molecular structure of the mitochondrial channel, vdac. j. bioenerg. biometnbmne , - . outer-membrane channel; neurarpora crassa mitochondria; hexokinase-binding protein; voltage-dependent channel, rat-liver mitochondrip; synthetic polyanion; electron-microscopy; pore protein; sequence; arrays; molecular-structure. depittt~ v. and pahnieri f. ( ) benz r. and brdiczka d. ( ) the cation-selective substate of the mitochondrial outer membrane pore-ainglechannel conductance and influence on intermembrane and peripheral kinases. j. bioenerg. biomembrane x - . rat-liver mitochondria; hexokinase-binding protein, contact sites; synthetic polyanicn; creatine-kinase; inhibition; transport; stae; brain. arora k.k., parry d.m. and pedersen p.l. ( ) khorana h.g. ( ) rhodopsin. photoreceptor of the rod cell-an emerging pattern for structure and function. j. bid chetn , - . schiff-base counterion; bovine rhodopsin; cysteine residue-l ; molecular mechanism; visual excitation; outer segmenl; protein; light; transducin; binding; mds; rhodopsin; photoreceptors. pugh b.f. and tjian r. ( ) diverse transcriptional functions of the multisubunit eukaryotic tfbd complex. j. a-a-crystallin; tissue-specific expmssion; chicken -l crystallin gene; vettebrate lens ctystallins; non-lenticular tissues; x ray-analysis; y-crystaltin; transgenic mice; b-ctystallin; eye lens; gene-regulation. fibroblast growth-faaer; endothelial-cell mitcgen; vascular-permeability factor, tumor necrosis factor. bovine brain; extracellular-matrix; factor-a; neovascularixaticn in viva; dna-synthesis; acidic fgf. sardesai v.m. 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( ) regulation of gene expression by oxygen in saccharomyces cerevisiae. microbial. rev. . l- . cytoehrome-c oxidase; upstream activation site; mitochondtial messenger-ma; yeast hap activator, tihoscmntl-protein genes; sex-determining mgiont dna-binding maif; nuclear gene; glucose mpmssiont cycl gene wittarts s.c. ( ) two-way chemical signaling in agr~tffi~-plot interactions. ~~~~. rev. . - . tumefaeiens %plasmi& vir gate-expression; single-stranded-dna, crown-gall tumors; atopine synthase mhancen transgenic tobacco plants; mc&tducing plasmid; rhizogenes strain a ; opine-like compound; virulence genes. ac /l%-c dowling j.n., saha a.k. and glow r.h. ( ) microbial. rev. !%, [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] cdi; a neurotoxin, light-chains; spasmodic taticolhs; mouucluual-antibodies; mediciue. botsford j.l. and htttman j.g. 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( ) gene regulation of plasmid-determined and chromosome-determined inorganic ion transport in bacteria. microbid. rev. , . eschcrichia coli k ; arsenical resistance openm; gram-negative bacteria; pnol g-encoded nidcel resistance; irondicitrate transport; syringae pv tomato; nucleotide-sequence; alcaligeneseutmphus; staphylucoccus wew; phosphrte legulon. osawa s.. jukes t.h., watanabe k. and mutt a. ( ) recent evidence for evolution of the genetic code. microbiol. complete nuclcotide-sequence; transfer-rna genes; mitochatdnal transfer-rna; neurapporo cmsaa mitochondris directional mutation pressure; transfer rilwnucleic-acid; isoleucine transfer-ma; coli tnnsfer-mas; escherichia cog uycoplosnw capricdtm. vsnrens g.l.m.. dejong w.w. and bloemendal h. ( ) a superfamily in the mammalian eye lens-the &crystallins. mol. biol rep. . i- . x-ny-aualysir, y-ctystallin; ~-cqstalhu; geue family; differential synthesis; messenger-rna, evolutionary dationrhipr; smctural variation; nucleutide-sequeuce. volkenstein m.v. ( ) structure and dynamics of proteins. md. pancmatic trypsin-inhi*, nuclear m&c-resonance; amino-acid-squenc; glcbularptweins; clystd-structure; heliul prutein; enzyme-activity; evelutiat; conformation; principles. barker p.a. and murphy r.a. ( ) the nerve growth factor receptor-a multicomponsnt system that mediams the actions of the neurntrophin family of proteins. md. cd biochcm. . - . nm growth; fatter recepta, wbaat-germ-rgglutinin; rat spinal-cerdt sympatketic-ganglia manbran% kigkrffinity recepon; human-melanana celts; human ngf receptor pcl cells; messenger-rna; sasory neurons; pheochmmocytonu alla. dicker lb. and seetharam s. ( ) what is known ahout the structure and function of the escherichia cdi protein oncogene cooper c.s. ( ) mini review--& met oncogene-from detection by transfection to tmnsmembrane mceptor for hepatocyte @owth factor. t l%?@?f&? , - . protdn t$vwk kinare; c@ bkks locus; human dhine; molecular-&xdng; s ster f-mnnga activa gene; rearrangemens expfessinn. verma d.p.s. ( ) signals in root nodule organogenesis and endocytosis of rhizobium. pbt cell . . pwibac&roid mcmbmn~ glycine-mu; soybean nod&es; celldivision; m-phase; gene; protein; cunpa~ nodulatioq expmstiul. henderson b.w. and dougherty t.j. ( ) h ow does photodynamic therapy work? photo&m. photobid. , - . silver s. 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( ) biophysicai aspects of neutron scattering from vibrational modes of proteins. prog. biophys. mot. bid , - . pancm& tqprin-inhibitor, low-frequency vibrations; time-of-flight liquid glass-transition; hinge-bending mode; biological functions; globular pmtein; temperaturedependence; allosteric transition; supercooled liquids. cinti d.l., cook l., nagi m.n. and suneja sk. ( ) the fatty acid chain elongation system of memmalirm endoplaamic reticulum. prog. lipid res , - . rat-liver nli crosomu; swine cembral mictosanes; acyl-coenzyme a; very-latg-chaim mouse-brain miaoscnnu; enoyl-coa hydratase; pemxisomal bifunctioual protein; cultured skin fib&lasts; lipid-lowering agentr; ~-oxidationheth ea.m. lysolecithitt-lysolecithin acyltmttsferue; rabbit alveolar macmphages; myocatdial lysophos+&mse-tran~~, aortic endothelial-cells: cultumd netuo-blastoma; heart-muscle mictosomes; precursor fatty-acids; rat-brain microsomes; guinea-pig heart; fish oil diet kaya k. ( ) chemistry and biochemistry of taurolipids. prog. lipid res , - . phosphoenolpymvate carboxykinase gtp; diet-induced hypercholesterolemia promoter-regulatory region; tissue-specific expression; enhancer-binding-pn&tu pymvate-kinase gene; rat-liver, messenger-rna, phosphofmcto- kinasefructose , -bispbosphatase; transcriptional regulation. barber j. and andersson b. ( ) lermrd j. ( ) moms d. ( ) smtctura and fum&mal relationships between ~~yl-~f~ rna syt&tases. biodem. sci , - . dimatsiand structure; atp, mechanisms; resohstion; homology; ~ueteim tymsyl; site; ammoacyl-transfer-rna. key: cord- -ydkigome authors: villarreal, luis p. title: the widespread evolutionary significance of viruses date: - - journal: origin and evolution of viruses doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ydkigome in the last years, the study of virus evolution has undergone a transformation. originally concerned with disease and its emergence, virus evolution had not been well integrated into the general study of evolution. this chapter reviews the developments that have brought us to this new appreciation for the general significance of virus evolution to all life. we now know that viruses numerically dominate all habitats of life, especially the oceans. theoretical developments in the s regarding quasispecies, error rates, and error thresholds have yielded many practical insights into virus–host dynamics. the human diseases of hiv- and hepatitis c virus cannot be understood without this evolutionary framework. yet recent developments with poliovirus demonstrate that viral fitness can be the result of a consortia, not one fittest type, a basic darwinian concept in evolutionary biology. darwinian principles do apply to viruses, such as with fisher population genetics, but other features, such as reticulated and quasispecies-based evolution distinguish virus evolution from classical studies. the available phylogenetic tools have greatly aided our analysis of virus evolution, but these methods struggle to characterize the role of virus populations. missing from many of these considerations has been the major role played by persisting viruses in stable virus evolution and disease emergence. in many cases, extreme stability is seen with persisting rna viruses. indeed, examples are known in which it is the persistently infected host that has better survival. we have also recently come to appreciate the vast diversity of phage (dna viruses) of prokaryotes as a system that evolves by genetic exchanges across vast populations (chapter ). this has been proposed to be the “big bang” of biological evolution. in the large dna viruses of aquatic microbes we see surprisingly large, complex and diverse viruses. with both prokaryotic and eukaryotic dna viruses, recombination is the main engine of virus evolution, and virus host co-evolution is common, although not uniform. viral emergence appears to be an unending phenomenon and we can currently witness a selective sweep by retroviruses that infect and become endogenized in koala bears. phylogenetic tools have greatly aided our analysis of virus evolution, but these methods struggle to characterize the role of virus populations. missing from many of these considerations has been the major role played by persisting viruses in stable virus evolution and disease emergence. in many cases, extreme stability is seen with persisting rna viruses. indeed, examples are known in which it is the persistently infected host that has better survival. we have also recently come to appreciate the vast diversity of phage (dna viruses) of prokaryotes as a system that evolves by genetic exchanges across vast populations (chapter ). this has been proposed to be the " big bang " of biological evolution. in the large dna viruses of aquatic microbes we see surprisingly large, complex and diverse viruses. with both prokaryotic and eukaryotic dna viruses, recombination is the main engine of virus evolution, and virus host co-evolution is common, although not uniform. viral emergence appears to be an unending phenomenon and we can currently witness a selective sweep by retroviruses that infect and become endogenized in koala bears. our understanding of virus evolution has reached a threshold in that it now appears to provide a much broader vista regarding its general signifi cance and infl uence on host evolution. several developments have brought us to this point. one has been the realization that viruses often evolve by processes involving the collective action of a consortia, or quasispecies. and the resulting adaptability and power of such evolution is unmatched by any other genetic entity. much of this volume is dedicated to this issue. in such consortia, the concept of a " wild-type " virus is no longer considered to be the fi ttest type, as the quasispecies itself provides fi tness (see chapters and ). the quasispecies model resembles population genetics in some ways, but it has led to some signifi cant departures from population genetics, and these departures are very well supported by experiments. another development that has recalibrated our view of the overall signifi cance of viruses is information on the scale and diversity of viruses. viruses are present at a previously unappreciated global level and appear to have affected the evolution of all life on earth. much of this realization has been brought about by the development of metagenomic methods as applied to various habitats. measurements of major habitats (the oceans, soil, extreme environments) have established that our biological world is predominantly viral, in terms of both numbers and diversity ( paul et al. , ; breitbart et al. , ; rohwer, a, b ; edwards and rohwer, ; comeau et al. , ) . these two developments would seem reason enough to consider virus evolution in a new light. however, there have also been numerous theoretical proposals suggesting viral involvement in some of the very earliest events and major transitions in the evolution of life. we no longer think of viruses as recent agents that escaped from the host chromosomes as run away replicons. viruses now appear very old to us and they relate to and trace all branches of life. the last years have been very active regarding virus evolution. major developments in theory, technology, medicine, and the study of human disease with respect to virus evolution have all occurred. and as we seek to grow and manage various life forms for human use, virus evolution has also had major impact on such efforts. as a science, virus evolution has benefi tted greatly from traditional evolutionary biology. however, since viruses are molecular genetic parasites that are inscrutable by casual observation, our understanding of virus evolution has been dependent upon measuring sequence variation and sequence diversity in a large number of virus genomes. because of this, these small genetic parasites have been the last domain of life to yield their secrets of evolution. and viruses harbor some clearly distinct evolutionary abilities. for one, they are polyphyletic. all major viral lineages have their own distinct origins. they are also difficult if not impossible to defi ne as species and are able to exchange genetic information across normal boundaries. even " dead " and defective viruses can participate in such exchanges, which confuses the defi nitions of fi tness. we now know that viruses can evolve by a consortia process and also exchange information by recombination across vast genetic pools to assemble new mosaic combinations of genes. we thus no longer think of a specifi c genetic lineage in understanding virus evolution, but instead think of a cloud, matrix, or a population as the basis of virus evolution. viruses are inherently fuzzy entities that can differ from their relatives in any specifi c feature. yet even with such fuzziness, it is clear that common themes also link them. patterns of evolution have become clear. diversity and variation are often (but not always) observed. stability and host congruence can also be observed. nevertheless, the evolutionary power of viruses has been learned at a human cost. the application of numerous analytical and phylogenetic tools have provided crucial insights into virus origin and evolution. yet these methods struggle to incorporate the fuzzy nature of viruses and have clear limits, especially regarding quasispecies and high recombination rates. structural biology now also adds tools that extend our vision of virus evolution beyond what can be seen in the genetic sequence. for example, common structural motifs from phage to eukaryotic dna viruses (t and herpesvirus) suggest very ancient links in virus evolution that span all domains of life (see below). nevertheless, our analytical methods are currently lacking as we struggle to understand complex genetic mixtures that provide fi tness, reticulated relationships, polyphyletic origins, and virus-host congruence. virus evolution has, for the most part, been considered to be a specifi c, esoteric part of broader evolutionary biology and has been given limited attention in reference works on evolutionary biology (see pagel, ) . historically, the focus has been on various rna viruses and some dna viruses that cause disease in humans and domesticated animals and plants . however, i have asserted that all life forms must be examined from the perspective of virus evolution ( villarreal, ) , not just those pathogens that impact on us. how viruses evolve in a more general sense informs us of evolutionary paradigms that have not been previously well understood (especially the evolution of consortia or the dynamics of vast reticulated gene pools). this volume now extends these traditional topics of virus evolution to include the vast virology of the prokaryotic world. in so doing, it illuminates the global consequences viruses have had on all life forms. prior to the s we saw some stunning successes in vaccine control for major viral human diseases, such as polio, measles, mumps, infl uenza, and especially smallpox virus. due to this historic success, american health agencies and educators considered virus disease as a thing of the past, no longer a serious threat. the era of infectious disease that they represented was now one for the historical record, an unfortunate part of human history, or so we thought. in what now seems to have been a clear case of hubris and naivety, we have been humbled by the evolutionary power of viruses, which was woefully underappreciated, even by most virologists. by the end of that decade, the evolution and emergence of hiv- permanently changed our views (see chapters and ) . this has also been followed by a seemingly never-ending series of viral threats as newly emerging viral diseases have come to our attention. hiv- provides the only example of a public health situation that has reversed centuries of progress for extending human health and lifespan. it now limits human life expectancy in many parts of the world, especially sub-saharian africa. this development could not have been imagined in the s. we are much less confi dent now about predicting the future of virus evolution and its potential impact on human health. diseases of domesticated microbiological, plant, and animal species have also experienced the trauma of the consequences of emerging viral diseases along with huge losses. however, the human hiv- story may not be a fl uke of virology but may be telling us something basic about human and primate evolution. as we sought to understand the origin of this new virus, we have come to appreciate a much broader virus-host story which involves simian immunodefi ciency virus (siv), foamy viruses, and the speciation of old world primates. we have also come to learn that the genomes of these primates show much evidence of past viral interaction and ongoing endogenous retrovirus colonization. the evolution of retroviral endogenization has taken on a much greater signifi cance in basic evolutionary biology. thus it is with great interest that we now study the ongoing endogenization of retroviruses in the koala bear genome (see below). historically, we are compelled to study viruses because they can cause serious disease. new viruses come to our attention also mainly because of disease. it is therefore understandable that most evolutionary biologists mainly think of viruses strictly as agents of disease. these are the products of run away replicons that provide negative selection to host survival. in this light, the application of predator-prey based mathematical models has seemed most appropriate. with such viral disease, variation has long been observed and was initially used for the generation of most vaccines. however, this disease-centric view has also occluded another more prevalent virus-host relationship. for example the emergence of hiv- has led us conclude that it likely evolved from various versions of siv. but siv is not pathogenic in its native african primate host. nor does it show the genetic diversifi cation of hiv- in these native primate hosts. it is a silent, asymptomatic infection. genomic and metagenomic analysis now allows us to identify many more silent, asymptomatic viruses that would not have previously been observed. we now know of many such viruses that are prevalent in a specifi c host. evolutionary biology must escape the confi nes of disease-centric thinking and seek to understand these relationships as well. in the last ten years i have attempted to provide another view concerning virus-host evolution. i have argued that viruses often attain evolutionary stability by species-specifi c persistence and that such states apply to all domains of life, including prokaryotes. on an evolutionary time-scale, the majority of viral lineages tend to exist as species-specifi c persistent (aka temperate, latent, and chronic) infections in which individual hosts will be colonized by mostly silent (asymptomatic) viruses for the duration of their life . such persistence can have major consequences to the evolution of both virus and host, which also leads us to more directly link virus evolution to broader issues of host evolution. it is from this perspective that we start to clearly see that viruses indeed belong on the tree of life as major participants ( villarreal, ( villarreal, , . persisting viruses are not simply agents responsible for destruction of life, but are also agents that create genetic novelty on a vast scale that infl uences all life and promotes symbiosis ( marquez et al. , ; ryan, ; villarreal, ) . the persistent lifestyle of such symbiotic virus-host relationships is not simply a less effi cient, acute infection; nor is it simply a " reservoir " for acute virus (as epidemiologists are prone to assert). neither can it be attributable to concepts of selfi sh dna. persistence represents a major virus life strategy that is both fundamental and highly adapted. it has distinct genetic, fi tness, and evolutionary characteristics that require intimate, host (tissue)-specifi c viral strategies and precise gene functions to attain stable maintenance in the presence of immunity and to allow biologically controlled reactivation. persistence also must resist displacement by similar viruses and competitors. it is virus-host persistence that provides the thread that allows us to link these polyphyletic viral lineages (and their clouds) with the entire tree of life. in turn, this link identifi es a much more fundamental role for viruses in the evolution of host, visible from the very earliest to the most recent events in host evolution. it is from such species-specifi c persistent states that the large majority of acute diseases evolve and emerge by various mechanisms. we know much about virus replication and disease. however, our understanding of the specifi c mechanisms of persistence is generally poor. persistence is a generally silent and inscrutable state, it does not lend itself to in vitro or cell culture experimental models. we are left with but a few examples from which to attempt to extrapolate the possible existence of general relationships. the study of virus evolution thus struggles to incorporate concepts of persistence. another recent and major development in virus evolution is the arrival of various proposals suggesting that viruses have been involved in some major innovation and transition in the evolution of life. in all these proposals, however, it is necessary that the virus in question has attained a stable genomic persistence with its host. these evolutionary events thus seem to be the products of viral-mediated symbiogenesis of host ( ryan, ; villarreal, ) . proposals include the possibility that viruses may have originated the dna replication system of all three cellular domains (archaea, bacteria, eukarya) of life ( forterre, ( forterre, , ( forterre, , a ( forterre, , b filee et al. , ; forterre et al. , ) . the discovery and analysis of the largest dna virus ( orf mimivirus), a lytic cytoplasmic virus of amebae (a distant relative of phycodnavirus and poxviruses), has also led to proposals that this virus lineage may represent an ancient fourth domain of life ( raoult et al. , ; desjardins et al. , ; claverie et al. , ) . it is interesting that in an initial structural analysis, the large complex replication centers for mimivirus were confused with the host nucleus ( suzan-monti et al. , ) . thus, it seems relevant that others have proposed that a distant relative of phycodnaviruses and poxviruses may have originated the eukaryotic nucleus ( villarreal, ; villarreal and defilippis, ; bell, bell, , takemura, ) . such proposals, although consistent with various observations, however, remain outside of the consensus of most evolutionary biologists. nevertheless, numerous other observations continue to suggest viral involvement in other major host innovations, such as a viral origin of rag / of the adaptive immune system ( dreyfus et al. , kapitonov and jurka, ; fugmann et al. , ) or the role of endogenous retroviruses (ervs) in the evolution of the placenta ( villarreal and villareal, ; harris, ; blond et al. , ; mi et al. , ; dupressoir et al. , ; caceres and thomas, ) . such possible roles for viruses in host evolution are at odds with accepted views of virus-host relationships, but might be the products of viral symbiogenesis. the metagenomic viral measurements mentioned above for prokaryotic dna viruses, along with the increasing realization that viruses and host can co-evolve, has led to various calls that a viral tree of life needs to be considered and developed ( forterre, ; villarreal, ; filee et al. , b ) . a virosphere clearly exists but its nature and boundaries are not so clear. multiple viral origins, their diversity and numerical dominance in distinct and sometimes harsh environments as well as their presence in host genomes suggest that any viral tree of life will be huge, multidimensional, and connected to the host tree of life. as discussed below regarding double-stranded (ds)dna viruses of prokaryotes, they have all the above characteristics. such viruses may represent the big bang of biological novelty. with their unmatched capacity to generate diversity they can function as the mass creators of biological novelty as well as destroyers of most species. surely, such capacity must have had big infl uences on the evolution of life. symbiosis, simply defi ned, is the stable coexistence of two previously separate lineages of organisms. there can be little doubt that many temperate phage can stably colonize a bacterial cell resulting in a stable descendent from two lineages. this is clearly symbiotic. endogenous retroviruses can similarly be found to persist in vertebrate genomes and also appear symbiotic. yet studies of symbiosis seldom consider a role for virus ( villarreal, ) . how important are viruses in general to evolutionary biology? the core concepts of evolutionary biology were developed well before we had a modern understanding and defi nition of viruses ( luria, ) . after all, the basic lysogenic model of phage integration was only clarifi ed in when developed by campbell (see campbell, ) . that cryptic and defective phage are ubiquitous in the genomes of all prokaryotes is generally considered uninteresting by many in the fi eld of evolutionary biology. i suggest that the seemingly applicable concepts of selfi sh dna effectively derailed any thinking that persisting genetic parasites might have a more germinal role in the evolution of life ( doolittle and sapienza, ; orgel and crick, ). yet as outlined above, virus footprints in major evolutionary transitions are clear and a direct role in such events now seems much more plausible. we therefore must seek to defi ning the nature of the virosphere and how its evolution relates to the tree of life. this book represents the fi rst integration of the entire fi eld of virus evolution, including both prokaryotic and eukaryotic life forms. however, because our understanding of virushost relationships remains uneven, the chapters necessarily focus on well-studied models (exemplars). these exemplars also tend to refl ect a historic disease focus (i.e., e. coli , fl owering plants, mouse, humans). it is unfortunate that the silent species-specifi c viruses that tend to exist in stable states with long evolutionary histories seldom provide our examplars. we understand these infections poorly and lack basic defi nitions concerning fi tness or selective advantages. only metagenomics tools now seem able to inform us of their presence, but not their biology. self-organization and the evolution of rna molecules as an origin of biological information are discussed in chapter . autocatalytic chemical reactions, such as replication of rna, presents issues such as how to optimize a rugged fi tness landscape yet allow the study of evolution in vitro with rna. rna in vitro reduces genotype-phenotype issues to rna secondary structure and minimal free energy states. this allows both continuity and discontinuity to be measured. these same issues are crucial for the study of rna viruses, whose sites of secondary structure often defi ne replicator identity. these models currently offer the best system to evaluate an early and simple biological world for evolutionary principles (see chapter ). viruses and viroids with their rna genomes may be the only extant survivors of this pre-dna world. since it was the consideration of error-prone replication that led to the development of the concept of quasispecies (see chapter ), such models have provided a conceptual foundation which led to several basic concepts. chapter discussed the foundations and various aspects of quasispecies theory. viruses appear to operate close to the error threshold, thus allowing maximum evolutionary exploration ( biebricher and eigen, ) . however, as presented below, the loss of the " fi ttest " type concept has also led to clear experimental evaluations of consortia-based evolutionary behaviors. such behaviors were not predicted by classical darwinian models. although virologists were initially attracted to quasispecies models, many evolutionary biologists were initially hostile to the application of the quasispecies concept to evolution. it was thought that the classical mathematical models of population biology, as originally developed by wright and fisher, and later applied by kimura and maruyama to asexual haploid populations at the mutationselection balance, had already fully developed the needed models and precluded additional need for the quasispecies concept. the classical models were thus argued to provide adequate mathematical coverage for viruses, including quasispecies and error threshold ( wilke, ) . however, these two approaches differ fundamentally with regard to the signifi cance of error-prone replication and it was the quasispecies approach that led to the clear experimental establishment that quasispecies selection, per se , is important for viral pathology and fi tness (see below). the development of quasispecies theory to virology does indeed demonstrate distinct differences with population genetics. various phenomena, such as complementation, cooperation, competition, and even defective mediated extinction ( domingo et al. , , domingo grande-perez et al. , ) have been observed, all of which fall outside of the parameters of classical population genetics. viral fi tness has indeed been shown to be due to interaction within a diverse population, and not to the fi ttest or master type. and with rna viruses, error threshold has become a central issue ( biebricher and eigen, ) . the collective experience has thus made clear the value of theory to biology. many working biologists understand that life seems overly complex and defi es most generalizations. thus they do not always appreciate attempts at general theory. although in reality, biology may indeed often be too complex for accurate theoretical predictions, these theories have nevertheless clearly stimulated crucial concepts and experimental evaluation, and biologists should be encouraged by them. by providing new ways of thinking, entirely new experimental approaches can be developed. the existence of error-prone replication and quasispecies also raises the issue of the conservation of information. how is information stability and higher fi tness attained with such errors? how can genetic complexity be created in such a circumstance? can cooperation (or consortia behavior) result from any of these models? these issues have yet to be resolved. some interesting suggestions, however, have been proposed. one involved cooperative evolution that results from ligated genomes. a model was proposed in by stadler and schuster in which they considered the dynamics of replicator networks resulting from higher order reactions involving the templated ligation of smaller genomes ( stadler et al. , ) . although this was based on concepts such as triple-stranded nucleic acids, this clearly has some elements that also resemble the ligation of recombinational processes for dna phage (presented below). a most interesting outcome of these models is that, depending on initial replicator concentrations, permanent coexistence of replicators could result in a cooperative network. such cooperation is a rare outcome for most models and given the conclusion that early dna based life was a " horizontal " consortium, such models are of special interest. the issue of consortia will come up often. consortia selection directly implies cooperation, but cooperation of selfi sh replicators presents dilemmas. replicator networks with interaction functions that give highly non-linear dynamics can result in complex mixtures, with behaviors ranging from survival of the fi ttest to also including attainment of globally stable equilibrium tantamount to permanent coexistence. the fi tness of populations, however, is inherent to current quasispecies concepts in virology. there may also be other ways to explain the genetic origin of cooperation (such as stable persistence involving addiction strategies). the stable persistence of a genetic parasite can compel cooperation and promote the conservation of information (see below). the defi nitions of fi tness with respect to a virus in a natural habitat are far from clear. although the concept of relative replicative fi tness is often applied to lab experiments of virus growth, we know many situations in which virus replication is not maximized in natural settings and many viruses can exist in relatively non-replicative states for long periods. even in the context of an acutely replicating virus in a host organism, the concept of fi tness is clearly conditional, as the virus must replicate through various in vivo habitats that can have opposing selection. as presented below, in vivo models that study fi tness and viral diversity have clearly indicated that diversity per se is important and fi tness is the result of consortia. how do we defi ne such fi tness since the mixture clearly matters? also, how do we defi ne information content or integrity of a consortia? currently, we cannot. in the lab, the viability of a virus is usually measured by the ability to produce plaques. this has been a crucial and main assay for many experimental systems that study virus population. here, the defi nition of fi tness seems direct: plaque formation equals fi tness. various highly useful models have thus been defi ned and developed that depend on these plaque assays (see chapter ). with this, populations and population growth are defi ned as relative growth of plaque-forming units. however, the concept has always been problematic when considered from a natural virology perspective. plaque formation is clearly not equal to fi tness in natural habitats. there are many examples of highly successful viruses that either plaque poorly or not at all. consider the roughly types of human papillomavirus (hpv), a simple small circular dna virus of epithelia; this does not form plaques in any known system (chapter ). hpv is clearly fi t, well adapted to, and stable in its human host. in addition, hpv evolution is phylogenetically congruent with their primate host, as are most persistent viral infections. we have yet to understand the definition of fi tness in this situation. in some cases, it seems selection for plaque propagation has clearly resulted in loss of highly conserved genes; such as with the plaque-adapted laboratory strains of cytomegalovirus (cmv). the problem posed by viruses with ineffi cient plaque formation is not limited to dna viruses. many persisting rna viruses also do not plaque well or at all, such as most rna viruses of plants or many insect picorna-like viruses, such as those found in drosophila and bees (which also conserve an extra orf). nor do most persistent infections make lots of virus. low-level persistence, such as hantavirus in rodents, for example, is common ( hart and bennett, ) . clearly, our simplifying assumptions of viral fi tness and population dynamics cannot apply to these stable evolutionary states. however, if we limit our defi nition of viral fi tness to relative replication or plaque formation we can perform some clear and quantitative evaluations. experimental evaluation forces us to study fi tness by only those defi nitions that we can currently measure. as fi tness appears to be a relativistic and transient concept, depending very much on the tissue, time, place, extant adaptive and innate immunity, and competition, it is likely that we can only measure with any accuracy one aspect of fi tness at any one time. hiv infection of humans shows evidence of this in that the r virus is more fi t for transmission and early disease whereas the x virus is fi t later during the aids disease phase. clearly conditional, time-dependent issues relate to fi tness defi nitions. however, much more problematic is that we have no theory for viral persistence or its fi tness. we lack specifi c or measurable parameters other than the simple maintenance of genetic material. yet it seems clear that some distinguishing features of persistence can already be recognized. for example, the possible participation of viral defectives (normally considered unfi t), which in numerous circumstances can modify or mediate persistence, would need to be included. clearly, a defective role in persistence would also preclude them from being considered as genetic " junk, " or selfish elements, since they would then matter in measurable ways to the biological outcome of virus persistent infection. persistence also requires an extended duration of infection, not simply maximized replication. in fact, persistence generally requires mechanisms to limit the replication of at least the same virus for at least some time. thus, limited replication must be an essential element for this life strategy. in my judgment, and much like the quasispecies concept, the concept of persistence will eventually be recognized for the fundamental (symbiotic) force it represents in virus evolution. the experimental work of domingo and holland spans the modern assessment of quasispecies theory that occurred in the s and s. these investigators were the chief proponents of this theory, bringing it to the attention of the broader virology community (chapter ). this work has transformed our thinking and laid the experimental foundations that we now build upon. this current volume is an extension from an earlier book on quasispecies and now encompasses both prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses . since early experimental phage studies provided the foundations for quasispecies theory ( eigen et al. , ) , using mathematical descriptions (differential equations) of mutation rates in t-even phage ( luria and delbruck, ) , this inclusion is appropriate. interestingly, a second early paper measuring replication rates by these same authors also noted the problems of viral interference and defectives ( delbruck, ) . other early experiments of phage rna polymerase ( batschelet et al. , ) , especially with rna phage qβ ( domingo et al. , ) , helped set the stage for the subsequent experiments of the s and s. from the test tube to mouse models to the study of human disease, the work of domingo and colleagues has spanned the entire history of viral quasispecies ( domingo and gomez, ; chapter ) . quasispecies deals with the products of error-prone replication. however, it is worth repeating that products of error-prone replication are not behaving in a simple " selfish dna " capacity and are not devoid of biological relevance and phenotype. in their complex populations, they create clear and varied affects on viral adaptability, competition, and fi tness. since quasispecies necessarily involve defective and mutant virus, it is easy (and common) to think of these entities simply as genetic junk ( villarreal, ( villarreal, , . defective and even lethal or interfering variation in viral genomes can contribute to adaptability. thus, viruses can clearly adapt as a cloud with a mutant spectra. in addition, unending competition and exclusion, consistent with the red queen hypothesis, has also been observed ( clarke et al. , ) . the poliovirus-mouse model (see below) in particular has provided a solid experimental system for evaluating the adaptive consequence of quasispecies. it is thus ironic that these same experiments have also made clear that the original simplifying assumptions of the quasispecies ordinary differential as presented by eigen are violated by the resulting quasispecies. these products of error-prone replication do indeed strongly interact with each other in both positive and negative ways and such interactions contribute signifi cantly to the observed fi tness of the population. errors and interaction are important for fi tness. for example, defectives have been reported to mediate extermination of a competing wild-type virus ( grande-perez et al. , ). complementation has also been observed ( garcia-arriaza et al. , ) , as has trans -dominant inhibition ( crowder and kirkegaard, ) . genetic memory of past selection has been shown to be maintained in a minority of the population ( ruiz-jarabo et al. , ; briones et al. , ) . such cooperative (consortia) behavior, which can also depend on unfi t or defective members, is at odds with classical darwinian notions regarding survival of the fi ttest. consider, for example, the fi tness of a defective or mutant outside of its role in a quasispecies. such a consideration ignores the very nature of a quasispecies yet it is an issue that has often been posed and experimentally evaluated. we should refrain from thinking of viruses simply as fi t or non-fi t individual types since they clearly exist in populations that provide population-based adaptability. the selection of viral consortia or population raises some fundamental issues for evolutionary biology. this is essentially group selection in which a population, not the fi ttest individual, is selected. this view makes cooperation or interaction of individual genomes a signifi cant component of selection, which is not commonly thought to be a general or accepted process in evolution. yet population selection is no longer a contestable issue in rna virus evolution (see below). i expect that many classical evolutionary biologists might interpret this as evidence that viruses really are an oddity in this feature and are not representative of broader processes of evolutionary biology. furthermore, viral-based group selection may not be limited to quasispecies-based evolution. as presented below, persistent viral infections may also provide population-based selective advantage (see below for the p and mouse hepatitis virus (mhv) persistence exemplars; villarreal, villarreal, , . since viruses are ancient, numerically dominant, and the most diverse biological entities on earth, no life form can escape exposure to them. all extant life forms have evolved in a viral habitat. thus we should expect that the viral footprints (including defectives) that we now fi nd in all genomes have likely played an active role in their evolution; a role, i would argue, that is fundamental, dynamic, and unending. if we can accept this assertion, we may start to see and appreciate the vast evolutionary power that viruses can bring to bear onto host evolution. we can start to attain a global perspective and appreciation for their ability to assemble genetic function from enormous, complex mixtures of genomes, and select gene sets needed to solve multivariant, temporally dynamic evolutionary problems. we can then seek evidence for the role of viral elements in fundamental host innovation and be open to evaluating the occurrence of viral entities from a constructive perspective and not instinctively dismiss such observations as due to coincidence, " junk, " or selfi sh dna. the advantage of such a perspective is that it will promote the specifi c experimental evaluations that can better assess any constructive role genetic parasites might have played in host evolution. for example, there is much reason to think ervs have played an active role in human evolution (for references see ryan, ) . the quasispecies concept has provided the foundation for us to understand virus evolution and informed us of the evolutionary power viruses possess. if that power also links to host evolution, then the tree of life becomes enriched by virus, much larger and more dynamic. the recent experimental studies from andino and colleagues using poliovirus in the mouse model should, in my judgment, provide the keystone exemplar regarding the in vivo fi tness of quasispecies (see chapters and ; vignuzzi et al. , ) . these studies make clear the importance of quasispecies and error-prone replication. such detailed in vivo experiments were made possible by a long and detailed history of poliovirus studies that has identifi ed the nature of rna polymerase fi delity as well as developed mouse models for the study of pathogenesis. few other virus-host systems could have provided such potential for high resolution. these results also provide the experimental observations that distinguish quasispecies-based evolution from the classical fisher-based population genetics. the general importance of this story for understanding virus evolution thus deserves special emphasis. the very origins of modern animal virology stem from poliovirus studies with the need to develop in vitro cell culture technology in order to grow and evaluate poliovirus and generate variants. the live poliovirus vaccine is of special interest with regards to virus evolution and adaptability. the " live " oral sabin vaccine can be considered to have been a miracle of the practical approach to virology developed in the s ( horaud, ) in that it was used well before our understanding of the relevant evolutionary theory. the sabin vaccine strain was the result of rodentadapted virus and differs from the neurovirulent mahoney strain by point mutations (in the consensus sequence), although only a small number of these mutations were needed for neurovirulence ( christodoulou et al. , ) . one of the important neurovirulent mutations was within the rna polymerase gene ( tardy-panit et al. , ) . however, the signifi cance of this observation took many years to unravel and exploit. in time it became apparent that dpol mutants could affect replication fi delity. one poliovirus point mutant, dg s, was shown to have enhanced highfi delity replication and that selective pressure could be designed to increase fi delity in rna polymerase ( pfeiffer and kirkegaard, ) . another major development was the molecular identifi cation of the poliovirus receptor and the subsequent creation of transgenic mice expressing this receptor, making them susceptible to poliovirus infection. one of these transgenic lines allowed mouse brain infections with neurovirulent versions of poliovirus , and has provided a very useful animal model that allowed the evaluation of viral fi tness in the context of in vivo pathogenesis. although dg s replicates well in culture (with lowered error rate), it was less pathogenic in this mouse model and competed poorly with d wild-type virus. it seemed that the decreased viral diversity was less able to generate the variation needed to get past bottlenecks due to multiple selective differences presented in vivo in tissues in the host, such as brain infection ( pfeiffer and kirkegaard, ). this experimental system also makes clear the greater complexity of fi tness in vivo relative to that typically measured in culture. thus it seems that in vivo there may not be one fi tness but several that cannot be distinguished or individually measured. it is likely that various in vivo barriers require distinct fi tness solutions that tend to create bottlenecks and that the diversity per se is essential to get past such bottlenecks. a population, not a clone or a consensus, appeared more fi t as higher titer infections of dg s also failed to be pathogenic. thus, higher levels of a consensus virus are not equivalent to higher diversity. the relationship between rna polymerase structure, error rates, and ribavirin action is discussed by cameron in chapter and has been the subject of numerous studies ( crotty et al. , ; vignuzzi et al. , ) . knowledge of the structure and catalytic mechanism of rna polymerase function has allowed a greatly enhanced level of detail to be considered into what affects error rate (see castro et al. , ; korneeva and cameron, ; marcotte et al. , ) . this has provided insight into the likely action of ribavarin on product fi delity ( harki et al. , ) . thus, it appeared that even a mutant of rna polymerase with increased fi delity could still generate elevated diversity by various methods. such control of fi delity allowed for the design of control experiments in which the same consensus virus genome could be forced to generate either less or more diverse progeny populations. in no other virus-host system have we attained such detailed insight into issues of error rate as those that were put to such excellent use in the poliovirus-mouse system. how generally important is this poliovirus in vivo quasispecies result? although the poliovirus-mouse system provides us with a fi rm experimental result, it seems likely that the generality of this relationship will be questioned by evolutionary biologists for several reasons. for one, this was observed in a lab constructed model system, which, it could be argued, is not an accurate representation of in vivo virus-host fi tness. also, as mentioned above, group selection is a process that will not readily be accepted as representative by the broader community. is there any evidence that this result with poliovirus indeed represents a general virus-host evolutionary relationship in natural settings? as presented in chapters - , retroviruses and also human hepatitis virus c clearly exist as quasispecies populations that affect disease outcome. in the case of the retroviruses, viral populations show diversity that far exceeds that seen for other rna viruses. in both hiv- and hcv there is clear circumstantial evidence for the importance of quasispecies for in vivo disease outcome, drug resistance, and fi tness. in addition, with hcv, cns infection may sometimes result, and such brain infections appear to be mediated by distinct quasispecies ( forton et al. , ; forton et al. , ) , reminiscent of the polio virus mouse model. quasispecies memory, as mentioned above, also seems to be an important issue with regard to failure of antiretroviral therapy ( kijak et al. , ) and it appears that pol gene mutations could also be involved in this ( carobene et al. , ) . measurements of hiv quasispecies in individual patients indicates that multiple evolutionary patterns can be found in typical individual patients ( casado et al. , ) , thus mixtures of hiv exist in patients ( bello et al. , ( bello et al. , , . and hiv- recombination is clearly contributing to diversity ( kijak and mccutchan, ) . thus, with both hiv- and hcv, their capacity to cause human disease is clearly associated with quasispecies compositions that affect fi tness in complex ways. the poliovirus mouse system therefore appears to refl ect quasispecies issues as observed in natural virus-host situations. consideration of retrovirus-host evolution introduces another large issue in evolution: genomic viruses. unlike poliovirus and most rna viruses, retroviruses (e.g. non-lentivirus) have colonized the genomes of animal species in large numbers and represent a large fraction of these genomes. genomic retroviruses are present in vast numbers, most of which are defective and mutant copies. in this genomic colonization they resemble the dsdna viruses of prokaryotes (discussed below) that also colonize all prokaryotes although at a much lower numbers. the human genome has fewer than genes, but appears to have retroviral-related ltr elements. some of these elements are intact and conserved (human ervs (hervs)) and this genomic population has some clear characteristics of a viral quasispecies. such large amounts of genetic material have previously been dismissed simply as selfi sh or junk dna of no fi tness consequences to the host. however, given the importance of quasispecies mutant genomes for viral fi tness and persistence, we might need to re-evaluate this dismissal. retroviruses are clearly part of the human ancestry thus we should seek to understand, not dismiss their role in human evolution. in contrast to the story above in which polio infection of mouse brain was dependent on the quasispecies resulting from lowered fi delity replication, a different relationship has been proposed for the nidoviruses. these are also positive single-stranded polycistronic rna viruses ( gorbalenya et al. , ) . this group of virus includes the coronaviruses (e.g. mouse hepatitis virus and sars-associated coronavirus), which are the largest rna viruses known ( - kb). it has been proposed that such large genomes have required the adaptation of a high-fi delity rna polymerase in order to increase the error threshold and accommodate large rna genomes. based on the phylogenetics of this polymerase and other rna-processing enzymes, this group of viruses appears to be monophyletic and it is thought that the acquisition of a high-fi delity rna replicase was central to the origin of this lineage. this type of replicase is unique to rna viruses. the monophyletic view stems from an analysis of a small set of conserved genes. overall, however, these larger genomes have many other genes that show no similarities to related viruses. the origins and evolution of these more diverse and numerous genes cannot be currently traced. this is an inherent problem in the analysis of virus evolution: a small selected set of hallmark genes with some similarity are assumed to trace an apparently linear (tree-based) viral lineage whereas the larger number of genes are not included and cannot be traced. if most of rna virus evolution is indeed mediated by a mixed cloud of genomes, any role for mutant mixtures thus becomes obscure. but perhaps there is little else we can currently do given the lack of information. how might we explain the increased fi delity and genome size of the nidoviruses? was there some change in viral adaptation in which quasispecies and generation of mixtures was no longer as important for adaptation? did the need and selection for a larger genome override the use of error to generate adaptability as seen in poliovirus and hiv- ? if so, what selective pressures might have changed this seemingly basic feature? what do we know about the natural biology of these viruses, which might provide some insight into this? unfortunately, the natural distribution and gene functions of the nidoviruses are generally poorly understood. in terms of coronaviruses, numerous mammal and avian species can be infected and the virus will cause acute disease. in several of these acute infections, the virus involved seems to have recently been adapted to the new host from other, often unknown sources. with the recent emergence of the sars virus and human infections, however, much greater attention has been focussed on trying to understand the origin and evolution of this virus. it has recently become clear that there indeed appears to exist an evolutionary stable source of this virus from which adaptation to humans was possible. various bat species have been found to support persistent asymptomatic infections by specifi c versions of sars viruses ( tang et al. , ; vijaykrishna et al. , ) . these studies also indicate that there appear to be three different and independent groups of sars viruses in bats. in fact six novel coronaviruses were isolated from six different bat species showing an astonishing diversity in bats. furthermore, phylogenetic analysis indicates that all bat coronaviruses appear to have descended from a common ancestor. only one of these bat groups includes sars and sars-like coronaviruses that adapted to acute human infections. thus, a prevalent and speciesspecifi c persistence of sars viruses is found in particular geographical populations. why is this relationship stable? could the adaptation to a host-specifi c persistence-based basal life strategy provide some explanations for the evolution of the higher fi delity rna replicase of these coronaviruses? as i have argued, persistent viral infection represents the majority of evolutionary stable viral lineages ( villarreal, ) . however, we have almost no knowledge regarding how these bat sars viruses persist and escape elimination by innate and adaptive immunity and what, if any, role the high-fi delity replicase (or other genes) have in this life strategy. although we cannot yet evaluate natural sars virus persistence in native bat hosts, another coronavirus may be more informative regarding the effects of persistence on host populations. mouse hepatitis virus (mhv) may provide our best exemplar of virus-host relationships and show how the concept of virus addiction relates to population persistence. mhv is the best-studied coronavirus. as a natural and prevalent virus of rodents, mhv is our best natural model of persistent rna virus-host relationships for any mammal. in general, rodents are the most studied non-domestic mammals with regard to natural virus distribution. overall, we know that wild-caught rodents seldom show signs of acute virus infection ( kashuba et al. , ) . however, asymptomatic virus persistence is ubiquitous in wild rodents ( descoteaux et al. , ; gannon and carthew, ; schoondermark-van de ven et al. , ) , including voles ( descoteaux and mihok, ) . some fi eld studies have evaluated broader patterns of virus persistence in mice ( singleton et al. , ; becker et al. , ) which indicated that wild house mice are highly colonized with mhv ( - % prevalence). in addition to mhv, mouse cytomegalovirus, mouse parvovirus, mouse thymic virus, and mouse adenovirus are also prevalent. other well-studied mouse viruses, such as lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (lcmv) and polyomavirus (pyv), were at low natural prevalence. interestingly, some non-native house mice that have colonized isolated islands may lack mhv ( moro et al. , ) , although most other isolated island populations retain mhv ( moro et al. , ) . other small mammals have yet to show any viral disease whatsoever (hedgehogs, chinchillas, prairie dogs, gerbils, sugar gliders) ( kashuba et al. , ) . thus, asymptomatic persistent viral infection is clearly the norm in rodents. yet, in spite of this usual asymptomatic viral persistence, historically, some zoonotic viral disease outbreaks have occasionally been documented in natural populations. one such early outbreak was an epizootic diarrhea that occurred in infant mice ( adams and kraft, ) . later, it was established that one such infection was due to mouse hepatitis virus ( carthew, ; ishida et al. , ) . in spite of this disease outbreak, with mhv, it has since become clear that asymptomatic persistent infections are the norm and are highly stable. yet mhv disease outbreaks, especially in virus-free mouse facilities, are also common and severe. how does mhv attain such stable and prevalent persistence in natural population yet retain the ability to cause disease in naive populations? what maintains the mhv fi tness of natural persistence? it is well known that once mhv is established in a mouse or rat colony it can be very diffi cult to eliminate ( gannon and carthew, ; lussier and descoteaux, ) , clearly indicating that stability is rapidly attained and likely genetically programmed by the virus. i propose that these stable evolutionary states of viral persistence are due to a strategy we can call virus addiction ( villarreal, ) and that mhv can provide the exemplar of such a state. with mhv, only persistently infected mice colonies are protected from the disease that is otherwise caused by the virus. in wild asymptomatic mice, mhv is found mostly as an enteric infection. the cns demyelinated disease that mhv can induce is most observed in newborn pups ( homberger, ; nash et al. , ) and once in the brain, mhv can persist in cns with recurring disease ( marten et al. , ) . this recurring cns disease is also associated with quasispecies (in the s gene) and recombination ( rowe et al. , ) . the most serious cns disease is in s-gene variant of mhv- (jhm), thus as with the poliomouse model, pathogenic fi tness with mhv is also associated with quasispecies. such mhv disease is the bane of all mouse colonies ( knobler et al. , ) . however, once mhv persistence is attained, the problem to a mouse facility is not due to acute disease, but because immunological measurements are signifi cantly affected by mhv persistence. thus mhv alters mouse molecular identity regarding immunological (t-cell) reactions ( wilberz et al. , ) . to establish stable asymptomatic persistence, however, mhv needs to infect newborns ( weir et al. , ) , in which acute disease is prevented due to maternal passive immune antibody transfer ( gustafsson et al. , ) . being born to immune mothers thus protects against cns disease and promotes enteric (not brain) virus colonization. in addition, it appears that persistence also promotes cross-species transfer ( baric et al. , ) . mhv persistence may involve genome stability and result in a distinct evolutionary dynamic. asymptomatic persisting infections in a lewis rat, for example, showed no variation in mhv s gene sequence, and no quasispecies as seen in brain infections ( stuhler et al. , ) . the need to establish stable persistence could then be providing a strong selection for increased genome complexity and stability and might better explain the selection for the enhanced rna polymerase fi delity in nidoviruses. how might such selection operate in natural populations? evolutionary biologists often consider what might differentiate one group from another very similar group in a way that leads to two isolated and distinct populations. consider two hypothetical adjacent hay stacks harboring two mus musculus colonies, one of which is persistently infected with mhv the other which is not. what is the fi tness consequence to the colony harboring mhv relative to its uninfected neighbor? our experience with mhv in mouse breeding colony provides a clear answer. the colony that is persistently infected with mhv will have a distinct advantage over its neighbor as mhv introduced into this uninfected colony will have severe effects on the offspring. eventually, we can expect only the mhv-harboring colony will prevail in both hay stacks. this is a state i have called virus addiction. only mice harboring persistent mhv are protected against the potential pathogenic consequence of acute mhv (or related virus) infection. the population is addicted to the virus. such a state, however, is clearly affecting colonies (or groups) of host, not individuals. an individual either quickly succumbs to the virus infection or, if infected, transmits it to others in the colony. a colony is thus under selection by mhv. to generalize this state, we expect that the persistence of sars in specifi c bat populations would be expected to also affect the fi tness of the corresponding specifi c bat populations. persistence is a more demanding phenotype than acute replication. it requires greater gene complexity to counter host immunity and also to promote self-regulation. thus the enhanced fi delity of rna replication is selected in order to conserve this greater genetic complexity and stability. we know that the high-fi delity rna replication system (including rna pol, helicase, endoribonuclease, and other activities) is also present in an ancient nidovirus relative of coronaviruses, such as fi sh-isolated white bream virus ( kb rna). i suggest there will also likely be species-specifi c persistent infections with this virus that require this enhanced replication fi delity and maintain this virus in its natural habitat. thus, i suggest, an ancient persistent life strategy could more easily explain the monophyletic character of the nidovirus virus lineage. it is particularly interesting that one of these unique and conserved replication proteins (adp ribose- -monophosphate) is dispensable for culture growth ( putics et al. , ) . i suggest it will not be dispensable for persistence. the hiv- pandemic is an unfi nished story. hiv- represents a real-time biological event in human evolution that confi rms for us the importance of quasispecies and retroviruses to human biology. however, even though its human toll is huge, modern medicine and culture has responded rapidly enough to limit the impact of hiv- to the point at which it will not likely be the cause of a selective evolutionary sweep that could have altered human genetic makeup (in contrast to the koala bear endogenization presented below). as described earlier, its amazing adaptability via quasispecies along with extensive recombination contribute directly to hiv- ' s diversity and makes it the most dynamic genetic entity ever studied. many studies track the dominant hiv population and fail to examine minority populations. yet it is precisely these minority populations, which evolve independently of the majority population, that can determine drug resistance phenotype and biological outcome ( charpentier et al. , ; briones et al. , ; morand-joubert et al. , ) . clearly, the specifi c makeup of a complex hiv population matters. furthermore, hiv defectives and variants can also have major consequences. in some cases, long-term non-progressors of hiv- have shown mixed populations and unusual polymorphism in the early phase of hiv infection, sometimes contributing to long-term non-progression (ltnp) ( alexander et al. , ) . one population of ltnps was reported to have been colonized by an hiv variant that showed low virus replication and slow or arrested evolution ( bello et al. , ) . in another case, a stable non-progressor was colonized by a replication incompetent version of hiv- ( wang et al. , ) . some of these non-progressors also appear to resist super-infection . it seems clear that at least in these exceptional situations, non-majority hivs are crucial to the outcome. there is also reason to think that other retroviruses have had a major infl uence on recent primate and human evolution, such as apathogenic persisting foamy virus in primates ( switzer et al. , ; murray and linial, ) . human antiretroviral genes seem to have undergone recent adaptations, such as apobec , which can interfere with exogenous retroviruses (such as mlv and siv) and underwent an expansion in the hominid lineage ( esnault et al. , ) . it thus seems clear that human and primate evolution has been signifi cantly affected by earlier, prevalent primate retroviruses. another important human-virus quasispecies story that has long been recognized is with hepatitis c virus (hcv), (see chapter ; domingo and gomez, ) . hcv seems to have adapted to humans in the recent past, possibly from asymptomatic enteric primate viruses currently found in africa ( smith et al. , ) . as hcv remains an infection predominantly transmitted by blood, it does not appear to have fully adapted to the tissues of and transmission within its human host. however, like hiv- , hcv has long been recognized to generate quasispecies in chronically infected people ( martell et al. , ) and it soon became apparent that the viral quasispecies are affected by and affects the outcome of antiviral therapy hohne et al. , ; kurosaki et al. , ; okamoto and mishiro, ) . thus, successful antiviral therapy is directly correlated with an initial dramatic reduction in genetic diversity. unfortunately, it has become clear that only a minority of hcv-infected individuals will respond favorably to a combination of interferon and ribivarin. thus it seems to be diversity per se and the resulting structure of an hcv quasispecies that has a direct consequence to human health. however, since hcv is less well-adapted to humans compared with hiv- , it does not pose the same threat to potentially provoke an evolutionary event in human evolution. vsv is a negative-stranded rna virus that has been a very important experimental model and has provided many laboratory measurements regarding quasispecies theory (see chapter ). using vsv, evidence supporting the red queen hypothesis, involving unending adaptation to greater competition and mueller ' s ratchet has been presented ( clarke et al. , ; novella et al. , ; elena et al. , ) . when vsv was evaluated as an arbovirus, requiring adaptation to alternating and opposing fi tness of insect and mammalian host, it was also apparent that minority quasispecies populations were responsible for maintaining the apparently antagonistic phenotypes ( novella et al. , ) . thus here too, the consortia character of a quasispecies is clear. yet in natural settings several very different virus-host relationships can be seen with rhabdoviruses. a distant relative of vsv (vhsv) is also known to be responsible for mass die-off of commercially important fi sh ( marty et al. , ) . this virus infects many teleost species and has shown % mortality in many experiments (i.e. with i.p. inoculation). in natural outbreaks, however, it has also shown surprising genetic stability ( einer-jensen et al. , ) . clearly error-prone rhabdovirus replication must be kept in check by purifying selection in this situation. in contrast, another rhabdovirus, sigma virus of drosophila , is associated with no mortality but is a vertically transmitted persisting virus in specifi c drosophila populations ( fleuriet, ) . yet in some recent population measurements, sigma virus infected drosophila are expanding for unknown reasons ( fleuriet, ) . clearly this particular virus-host persistent relationship has some undefi ned selective advantage that operates beyond the lab-based concepts as measured above. other rhabdoviruses also have peculiar host-specifi c relationships, such as bats that tend to support many persistent infections ( badrane and tordo, ; li et al. , ) , or birds that seem to be free of almost all rhabdoviruses. clearly, although vsv lab results have been highly informative, we still have much to learn regarding natural settings that affect rhabdovirus adaptation and evolution. another major paradigm for the high rates of negative-strand virus evolution is found with infl uenza virus. due to its history and potential for initiating great human epidemics, it has long held the special interest of evolutionary virologists (see chapter ; nelson and holmes, ) . however, this research has not much emphasized the quasispecies character of infl uenza virus evolution. instead, it concentrates on the evolution of the master template or clades of template for the purposes of vaccine development ( webster and govorkova, ) . the views stemming from this type of evolution have lent themselves well to master template-based phylogenetic analysis and have dominated how many researchers think of virus-host evolution. thus it is curious, given the above emphasis, that the quasispecies character of infl uenza populations often seems of low relevance to issues of acute disease and vaccination, other then to provide a source of diversity. in some situations, viral competitive interference may contribute to drift variation and displacement in antigenic epitopes ( levin et al. , ). yet outcomes of individual human and bird infections do not seem much affected by specifi c quasispecies structures, as we saw with hiv- and hcv. with infl uenza, we are mainly concerned with epidemic human disease. however, by shear numbers of infections and deaths worldwide, it must be admitted that infl uenza virus is really a virus that affects mostly birds. for example, during the outbreak in china, only humans died whereas million domestic birds died ( smith et al. , ) . although our concern on the large potential for human disease is understandable, these numbers should inform us of a more basic virushost biology. in this case, infl uenza shows a high affi nity for various birds; migratory water birds in particular can have high prevalence ( wallensten et al. , ) . some waterfowl, such as wild mallard ducks, have been called the stealth (asymptomatic) carriers of infl uenza h n and free grazing ducks seem to introduce virus into domestic bird populations ( gilbert et al. , ) . thus waterfowl represent the well-accepted epidemiological concept of a reservoir species ( louz et al. , ) . but these wild waterfowl, shorebirds, and gulls that are a natural host for avian infl uenza also seem to show a much slower rate of evolution ( spackman et al. , ) . in contrast, the much higher rate of evolution as seen in chickens and turkeys indicates that these hosts should not be considered as natural reservoirs ( suarez, ) . in waterfowl, infl uenza infections show several distinctions, such as virus co-infection or virus interference ( sharp et al. , ) as well as phylogenetically distinguishable waterfowl dendograms, including specifi c m lineages ( makarova et al. , ; widjaja et al. , ) . the diverse and stable avian pool of infl uenza virus appears to be ancestral to the infl uenza viruses that infected human populations. the phylogenetic methods that have been adapted from evolutionary biology have been tremendously helpful and have allowed us to trace the seemingly untraceable, virus evolution (see chapter ). thus, we have often been able to make informed judgments concerning broader patterns of virus evolution and this has become the major tool for the current study of virus evolution, such as infl uenza virus ( nelson and holmes, ) . infl uenza a, for example can be seen to show extended periods of stasis followed by periods of rapid adaptation that necessitates adaptations in vaccine strategy ( wolf et al. , ) . however, the evolutionary variation between seemingly similar viruses can be surprisingly large (see above vsv section). for example, the very different phylogenetic behaviors between infl uenza a and measles virus, both acute human respiratory infections due to membrane-bound negative-stranded rna viruses, are striking. the reasons for the maintained genetic stability of measles virus remain poorly understood, but may well involve more complex fi tness associated with systemic infections. phylogenetic methods can also be highly informative regarding the likely origins of viral lineages and possible sources of emergence. for example, the studies of dengue virus by holmes and colleagues suggest that this virus fi rst entered its human host about years ago, and that sylvatic (african jungle) asymptomatic infection of primates may have provided the origin of this virus that later became a human pathogen ( holmes and twiddy, ; holmes, ) . such insight provides valuable clues concerning the likely selective pressures that may lead to the emergence of dengue virus. phylogenetic methods are also highly informative regarding classifi cation and taxonomy relationships and have allowed us to understand viral relationships across broad species defi nitions ( zanotto et al. , ) . however, phylogenetic approaches necessarily assume the master template is the fi ttest type and that mutations or variants in the rna populations are a source of genetic load that are deleterious and limiting to virus adaptation ( pybus et al. , ) . such variation is mostly due to " unfi t " mutations, which indicates that a viral cloud is mostly and unfi t consortia. it would seem that such conclusions go against the concept of quasispecies as being fi t per se as described above. in this consideration we see a major weakness of extant phylogenetic methods. they were not developed to access the evolutionary relationship and fi tness of interacting mixtures. nor were they designed to follow the evolution of systems with high rates of recombination between numerous parental templates. we currently lack the analytical tools for such a population analysis. without such tools, however, it seems we can only evaluate those parameters we can defi ne and will remain confused by those we cannot. evolution of a consortia thus provides a new directions for theoretical and laboratory research. we should seek to investigate the mixture, not just its average. another major virus-host system that has been highly studied is the viruses of agricultural plants. our understanding of plant viruses has also been highly infl uenced by disease associated with agricultural domestic species, thus natural virus-plant relationships are much less understood, although some recent fi eld studies are starting to change this situation (see chapter ). we currently have a rather uneven understanding of broader virus-host relationships and evolution in plants. for example, viruses of the more ancient ferns, if they exist, are essentially unknown. the prevalence and diversity of positivestranded rna viruses in plants is striking. in addition, we are starting to appreciate that virus-virus interactions are also frequently involved, although this issue remains poorly studied. one well-studied family of plant virus are the tobamoviruses of angiosperms (see chapter ; gibbs, ) . progenitors of this virus family appear to also be found in algae and fungi consistent with a very long evolutionary history. both high transmission between host and virus-host congruence are observed with these viruses. virus-virus interactions also seem to be important. for example, tobacco mosaic virus (tmv) and tomato golden mosaic virus (tmgv) appear to have shown interactions in australia which have apparently led to the extinction of tmv, but the retention of tmgv with no increase in genetic diversity ( fraile et al. , ) . plant viruses have also been seen as quasispecies in some but not all settings (see chapter ; roossinck, ; roossinck and schneider, ) . besides the interactions expected for typical viral quasispecies, plants often show evidence of more extensive mixed virus infections. there are, for instance, many examples of satellite viruses that must necessarily interact with other rna viruses of plants. it is also clear that the subviral elements of even a single viral lineage can greatly affect the virus-host relationship. such subviral elements (dis) have been observed to both reduce and intensify disease, and also interact with satellite viruses ( qiu and scholthof, ) , thus virus-virus interactions are clearly crucial in many situations ( simon et al. , ) and viral interactions and synergism appear to have led to signifi cant events in plant virus emergence ( fargette et al. , ) . virus-virus interactions are not limited to plant rna viruses. the ssdna plant geminiviruses also display complex interactions with satellites as well as high diversity in fi eld isolates of east africa ( ndunguru et al. , ) . thus, plant viruses seem particularly prone to interactions. more recently, virus-mediated symbiosis with respect to host survival has been reported ( roossinck, ) (discussed below). phylogenetic methods also struggle to address the occurrence of high rates of recombination in viral lineages. such a situation complicates the analysis, creating hardto-defi ne, reticulated trees, although these limitations can be partially overcome by using sliding windows for the analysis. such approaches have allowed surveys of recombination in some viral lineages, such as with the plant potyviruses ( chare and holmes, ) . however, the rampant recombination and quasispecies generation of hiv- makes a quantitative assessment of the virus population problematic. one proposed solution is to use a composition vector method ( gao and qi, ) . the issue of measuring recombination and tracing evolution in large populations is especially a problem that applies to the dna viruses (phage) of prokaryotes (see below). cells. our perception regarding the overall importance of dna viruses of prokaryotes to the evolution of life on earth has undergone a major shift in recent years. the main realization is that dna phage are the numerically dominant genetic entity in most habitats on earth (mentioned above). in addition, as discussed in chapter , it is now clear that some of these viruses are surprisingly complex and that essentially the entire pool of dsdna viruses of prokaryotes may be exchanging dna via recombination at high rates. this would constitute by far the largest common gene pool on earth. historically, the evolution of the dna viruses of prokaryotes has seldom been considered in the broader context of virus evolution or evolutionary biology. although it has long been realized that there are many basic similarities between viruses of bacteria and eukaryotes ( luria et al. , ) , not until structural studies solved the capsid genes of prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses did the evolutionary relationships between these viruses become clear. in addition, there have been a number of striking proposals that suggest that dna viruses of prokaryotes may be involved in the origin of several major systems used by cells and that viruses appear to be involved in several major transitions during host evolution. thus we now consider the possibility that these dna phage were fundamental to the origin and evolution of life on earth. it now seems likely that some large dna viruses infecting eubacteria, archaea, and eukaryotes share some common evolutionary histories. it also seems clear that such viruses can link all three domains of life. this realization was not apparent based on phylogenetic sequence conservation, which is absent. it stems from the structure and assembly of virion capsids in which t phage, halophage, and the herpesviruses all show clear similarity as well as similarity in replication strategies. in addition, phage prd and adenoviruses show similar broad structural and strategic conservation. some biochemical (dna pol family) and genetic similarities (gene order, gene programming) are also apparent, which taken together supports the common origins of these viruses ( hendrix, ( hendrix, , hendrix et al. , hendrix et al. , , . t -like viruses in particular seem to represent a major source of global genetic diversity. this giant genetic pool represents a huge potential to affect life ( filee et al. , ) and the viral genetic creativity represented by this pool would also be vast ( nolan et al. , ) . since t -like phage that infect cyanobacteria also encode virus-specifi c type ii photosynthetic core genes, viruses appear able to create the most complex of genes as well ( clokie et al. , ; sullivan et al. , ) . as presented in chapter , phage are now thought to evolve by distinct and highly mosaic " horizontal " processes of rampant recombination ( hendrix, ( hendrix, , . large dna phage appear to be ancient, present before the split of the three main branches of cellular life: bacteria, archaea, and eukarya ( benson et al. , ) . luca, the last universal common ancestor, would represent the putative cell ancestor prior to this split. however, phyogenetic analysis of common or conserved genes of luca identifi es only about or fewer genes in extant cellular genomes ( mushegian, ; koonin et al. , ; mirkin et al. , ) . ironically, the genes needed for dna replication are not part of this conserved set, calling into question the nature of the fi rst dna-based cell. large-scale " horizontal " transfer seems to have clearly prevailed early in the evolution of dna-based cellular life and it has recently been asserted that luca existed in a highly horizontal " consortia " of cooperative genes that developed the common genetic code ( vetsigian et al. , ) . since the dna replication proteins in the extant three domains of life have distinct compositions, it has been proposed by forterre that dna viruses and retroviruses were directly involved in the invention of the three extant cellular dna replication systems . according to this view, early cellular life was completely entangled with viral (phage) lineages; hence cells must have evolved from an ancestral " virus " -mediated population not a single genetic lineage. thus the evolution of early life would have clear similarity to the quasispecies (consortia) state of genetic information as seen in rna viruses above. thus the huge creative and adaptive potential of virus would have been directly involved in the very earliest evolution of life. clearly, such conjectures regarding the most ancient events in the evolution of life are hard to substantiate. but, these theories are as viable as any other and deserve serious consideration. in spite of this seemingly unending mosaic exchange in dsdna phage, some phage isolates show surprisingly stable genetic makeup. we now accept that t -related phage are an important source of the larger global phage genetic diversity and that most such viral genes are novel ( filee et al. , b ; nolan et al. , ). yet even with t -like viruses, there can be clear barriers to horizontal gene transfer which promote the evolution of stable viral lineages ( filee et al. , a ) . in t -type phage, similar core genes could be seen in all genomes, which seem to be inherited in gene blocks that preclude recombination. however, these blocks were not seen in the broader t-even and pseudo t-even genomes. other phage also show surprising genetic stability when repeatedly isolated from similar habitats, such as soil phages of burkholderia ( summer et al. , ) and bam ( saren et al. , ) as well as some hot spring isolates ( khayat et al. , ) . this bam capsid also identifi es another structural motif mentioned above that is broadly conserved in evolution and shows clear similarity to that capsids found in prd and pbcv- (discussed below). sh also has a clear prd related capsid, membrane, and genome; thus this halophilic euryarchaeon virus, although showing no sequence similarity to prd or any other bacterial phage, is clearly structurally related ( bamford et al. , a ) . it is interesting that overall the viruses of hyperthermophilic crenarchaeota generally show no sequence relationship to phage of bacteria. in addition, the use of the term phage for these viruses can also be questioned as most establish non-lytic chronic infections. many of these crenarchaeota viruses have unique morphologies not found in any other domain of life ( prangishvili et al. , a ( prangishvili et al. , , b ortmann et al. , ) . some, however, have clear structural and genetic similarity to specifi c phage (i.e. t ). considerations of phage evolution and rampant recombination (especially with t and t-even phage) often emphasize the viral lytic lifestyle and host death. in fact this lytic relationship was argued by many early phage researchers to be the fundamental and only character of phage-host relationships in general. we now know, however, that persisting (temperate) phage are also common, some of which have no independent lytic phase. the fundamental model of phage persistence by unique integration into host chromosomes (temperate lysogeny) marks a major development in our understanding of molecular virology and virus-host relationships which was fi rst clarifi ed by campbell in (see campbell, . all free-living prokaryotes show the presence of colonized phage in their genomes. both complete and defective genomes of dsdna viruses have been observed in the sequenced dna of all free living prokaryotic genomes ( gelfand and koonin, ) (exceptions are some intracellular parasites and plastids). thus, the massive genetic diversity and novelty of phage evolution as presented above has a direct conduit into the genetic composition of all prokaryotes via lysogeny. the fi tness and evolutionary consequences of such colonization to the evolution of the host and its virus should be considerable but is in need of theoretical development. fitness of temperate phage, however, is more complicated then that of a lytic virus and, like fi tness of persistence discussed above, cannot be simply described by relative replication or effi cient virion production. here too, successful phage colonization must inherently limit the replication of the same virus. thus, a temperate lifestyle also requires an autoinhibitory capacity. this generally involves an immunity gene set that not only limits self-replication but can also affect replication of other temperate and lytic viruses, i.e. lambda (even as a defective) precludes t and other t-even phage. uncolonized hosts are thus susceptible to lysis by highly prevalent acute tailed phage. host fi tness is thus strongly affected by a temperate phage due to its ability to preclude and survive other competing phage. i suggest this situation is similar to the mhv-mouse exemplar above, in that virus-colonized hosts are in a state of " virus addiction " in which persistence is needed to provide protection from the same or similar virus ( villarreal, ( villarreal, , . it is well established that most natural populations of bacteria have specifi c patterns of phage colonization, hence the utility of phage typing for strain identifi cation. from this, we can infer that virus-virus competition is a prevalent and major issue regarding the prokaryotic fi tness resulting from a symbiotic temperate phage-host combination. in addition, such virus-host symbiosis can also affect competition with other bacteria. this would be very much like the virus addiction concept outlined above for the mhv examplar. the original observation of a lysogenic process and coining of this term occurred in the s when two pure cultures of bacteria were grown together. it was observed that in some combinations, one strain would lyse the other strain (was lysogenic). later, it became clear that such lysis was mediated by reactivation of temperate phage present in the lysogenic strain, but absent from the non-lysogenic susceptible strain. in this relationship, we see another example of group selection operating on bacterial populations harboring a persistent virus. thus, what host is fi t depends very much on the prevalent viruses it will encounter as well as the viruses that colonize it. bacterial populations that are colonized by the same or similar phage express the appropriate immunity functions and are protected from lysis by the same or similar phage. such a situation has signifi cant implication for the evolution of immunity and group identity for cells. host stability becomes a major fi tness issue for a persistent virus life strategy. it is generally thought that a temperate virus attains a stable colonization of its host by simply integrating into and become one with the host genome. however, there are also clear examples of stable phage persistence that does not integrate and uses other strategies to attain host stability (similar to eukaryotic dna viruses; see below for the p phage exemplar of this). like a temperate phage, a host that is colonized by episomal persisting viruses has also been much affected in its evolutionary potential. it is clear that phage can have complex effects on host populations, but these phage themselves often exist in complex and mixed states that can be diffi cult to unravel ( harcombe and bull, ) . it has been known for some time that the presence of otherwise silent phage can greatly affect the growth of other virus and susceptibility of host. one such silent and common phage that has long been studied is p . p was initially discovered due to its effect on t and lambda. however, p has been a very interesting model, not because it causes disease or offers potential therapy against bacterial pathogens, but simply because it persists effi ciently as an episome and competes effectively with many other phage ( yarmolinsky, ) . since it does so without integrating, p provides us with one of the only well-studied models that can inform us regarding the molecular strategies and details of how stability in non-genomic persistence is attained. curiously, a main strategy by which p attains this stability was inapparent and not suspected after several decades of study. it became apparent only after replication mutations were made that induced self-destruction and uncovered the existence of what came to be called " addiction modules " ( lehnherr et al. , ) . p encodes several gene pairs (toxins/ antitoxins, such as the phd/doc pair) that protect bacteria harboring p , but kill daughter bacteria that have lost the p genome ( gazit and sauer, ) . this strategy compels colonized e. coli to maintain p or die (doc, death on curing). however, these very same addiction systems are also involved in protecting a p -colonized colony from t and lambda infection and will also induce self-destruction when cells are infected by those viruses, protecting the colony (population). p also provides an exquisite level of molecular self-identifi cation in that it will recognize a single second copy of its own genome ( yarmolinsky, ) . what then is the fi tness and evolutionary consequence to e. coli harboring p ? clearly it is major, but mostly host fi tness is affected relative to other viruses. accordingly, when contemplating the amazing complexity of the p immunity and how it evolved, yarmolinsky posed the question; " could the byzantine complexity of the controls at immi be the outcome, not of successive host-parasite accommodations, but of competition among related phages? " ( yarmolinsky, ) . if we answer yes to this question, then we would also conclude that virus-virus interactions and competition in general are major forces in the adaptability and evolution of persisting phage and surviving colonized host. in this light, viral persistence takes on a major role in virus and host evolution. the p exemplar has thus provided us the concept of viral addiction that also promotes host group selection. historically, we are biased to think of viruses (and phage) as agents that simply kill their host. some have proposed that the prokaryotic global biomass is phage partitioned into those populations that live and those that die due to viral lysis. from such a perspective, viral novelity would seen of little relevance to host evolution. metagenomic projects as noted above, have sequenced nearly million phage genomes and report that most of these phage genes are unique, not in the database, and likely not derived from host ( edwards and rohwer, ) . the protein repertoire of sequenced phage indicates that % of conserved phage genes are specifi c to phage and show an evolutionary independence from genes of host . this identifi es a massive genetic novelty from virus, which is especially apparent in large dna phage. as just discussed above, however, those hosts that live are also products of phage selection, and persisting temperate phage play a major role in this. such phage colonization allows this massive phage novelty to fi nd its way into host genomes, which allows viral complex gene sets to be applied to novel problems of host adaptation. host novelty can thus be introduced by phage ( comeau and krisch, ) . that persistence is a major life strategy of phage is confi rmed by the large numbers of genes associated with persistence (i.e. integrases, immunity) observed in metagenomic screens. there is also much practical experience that supports the crucial role of prophage in host evolution. one particularly well-studied system that has been studied for over years is the ongoing evaluation of phage evolution as observed in the dairy industry ( canchaya et al. , brussow et al. , ) . the temperate phage analysis of these bacteria follows a long tradition of lambda and e. coli studies ( campbell et al. , ; canchaya et al. , canchaya et al. , , . since lytic phage can severely disrupt dairy fermentation, it was of particular interest to understand and trace their evolution. these studies have led brussow to conclude that much of the more recent dairy bacteria evolution can be considered to have resulted from the action of temperate phage. a similar view applies to e. coli and cyanobacteria. in addition, the ecor collection of sequenced e. coli genomes of medical interest shows that they differ from each other mainly due to patterns of genetic colonization, mostly by prophage, but they also show the presence trna-adjacent defective prophage and plasmid elements that differentiate these strains ( hurtado and rodriguez-valera, ; mazel et al. , ; nilsson et al. , ) . cyanobacteria ( prochlorococcus ) is major model for the study of the origin of the type ii (plant-like) photosynthetic system. since such genes show much evidence of recent and massive horizontal movement, it seem quite likely that prophage are mediators of such transfers, especially as these phage encode their own version of these photosynthetic genes ( lindell et al. , ; sullivan et al. , ) . very similar prochlorococcus strains exist in distinct oceanic populations in various habitats known as ecotypes. some think that such ecotypes represent the initial type of genetic variation that leads to speciation. the sequencing of six ecotypes has shown that they are % similar to one another, but the genetic variation that distinguishes them is mostly due to patterns of prophage colonization (called phage islands) ( bouman et al. , ; coleman et al. , ) . thus in all these prokaryotic models, persisting viruses play a fundamental role in host evolution and host genetic novelty is mostly phage derived. such observations have led some to propose that " war is peace " regarding virus-host evolution ( comeau and krisch, ) . massive and complex innovation by phage appears to be a major force in the prokaryotic world. prokaryotes are the most adaptable of all cells. if we can accept the above conclusion concerning the role for viruses in the evolution of prokaryotes, we must then ask why such a successful evolutionary strategy was not apparently maintained in eukaryotes? in eukaryotes we see little evidence that largescale integration by dna viruses is an important evolutionary process (although the story with retroviruses is different). why should prokaryotes and eukaryotes differ is such a fundamental way? nevertheless, as noted at the start of this section, we do see good evidence that links the evolution of large dna viruses of prokaryotes to the large dna viruses of eukaryotes. in case we were becoming comfortable with the apparently clear distinctions between rna and dna virus evolution as outlined above (quasispecies vs. domain recombination respectively), the evolution of the parvoviruses informs us that dna viruses can also evolve by a quasispecies process. parvovirus evolution (see chapter ) can show a sharp contrast to the evolutionary pattern displayed by other small dsdna viruses above (hpv, py). with the emergence of an acute pandemic in domestic dogs and cats (as well as other wild carnivore species), we see what is essentially evolution driven by single point mutations, mostly affecting the capsid genes and host cell receptor binding. this system provides us with one of the better studied examples of the evolutionary dynamics of an emergent viral disease. in addition, in vivo mouse studies with minute virus of mouse (mvm) now make it clear that parvoviruses can behave much like rna viruses, generating quasispecies of diverse progeny that allow a high adaptability for the generation of fi tness and disease in vivo ( lopez-bueno et al. , ) . this story is very reminiscent of the study of poliovirus in mice mentioned above. human studies with b parvovirus are also consistent with high mutation rates ( parsyan et al. , ; shackelton and holmes, ) . although not specifi cally addressed in this volume, the viruses of eukaryotic unicellular green algae are of special interest from the perspective of dna virus evolution. these large, complex dsdna membrane-containing icosahedral viruses are abundant in some water habitats ( van etten, ; ghedin and claverie, ) . the reason they deserve special attention is that they clearly have many features that are characteristic of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses. they resemble prokaryotic viruses in that their life cycle is clearly phagelike, such as external virion attachment, injection of dna and no pinocytosis. in addition, they also encode many phage-like genes, such as restriction-modifi cation enzymes and homing endonucleases ( filee et al. , c ) . they also resemble eukaryotic viruses in that they have eukaryotic dna replication proteins (dna polymerase beta and pcna; chen and suttle, ; nagasaki et al. , ; villarreal and defilippis, ) as well as many genes associated with eukaryotic signal transduction ( van etten et al. , ) . thus they represent a clear link between prokaryotic and eukaryotic dna viruses. for example, the dna polymerase of paramecium bursaria chlorella virus (pbcv- ) is the most conserved gene and most closely resembles that found in human herpesvirus and is distantly related to the similar family dna pol encoded by t . this polymerase is distinct from that of the poxviruses or prd /adenoviruses (associated with protein-primed dna replication). however, numerous other genes of the phycodnaviruses are similar to some genes found in the mimiviruses (giant dna virus of ameba), including the presence of conserved intenes in the dna pol gene ( ogata et al. , ) . in view of this it is most curious that in structural similarity, polydnavirus capsids clearly resemble prd capsid ( khayat et al. , ; nandhagopal et al. , ) . prd contains the double-barrel trimer capsid structure that was fi rst observed in adenovirus (for references see saren et al. , ) . adenovirus also closely resembles prd in dna replication strategy (i.e. linear dna with covalently closed ends ( benson et al. , ; khayat et al. , ) . the lineage of adenovirus-like dna viruses, however, is thought to be distinct from that herpes and poxviruses and its dna polymerase is clearly distinct from polyndavirus. it is clear that related elements of all these viruses can be found in phycodnaviruses. overall, the phycodnaviruses, like phage, also appear to be creating genes in large numbers and they encode many genes unrelated to their host. what then is the evolutionary relationship that links all of these seemingly distinct viruses? as outlined above, the pattern of evolution of dsdna phage involves lots of exchange by recombination from a vast gene pool. this pool resembles a cloud from which various mosaic subelements and substrategies are assembled to allow viral gene acquisition and novelty ( blum et al. , ; benson et al. , ) . does such a distributed pattern of evolution and gene novelty also apply to the phycodnaviruses? recently, another distinct phycodnavirus has been sequenced: coccolithovirus (ehv- ) ( allen et al. , a ( allen et al. , , b conserves only core genes in common with pbcv- and is unique to the phycodnaviruses in that it has acquired six dnadep rna polymerase subunit genes, which are absent in all other phycodnaviruses. as rna polymerase is considered a core viral gene function, it is clear that phycodnaviruses can alter some very basic molecular functions during their evolution. oceanic phycodnaviruses are thought to have large infl uence on the free-living populations of eukaryotic algae, such as the termination of algal blooms reported for emilian huxley virus ( martinez et al. , ; schroeder et al. , ) . however, not all phycodnaviruses are lytic. another lineage of phycodnaviruses is represented by two viruses of fi lamentous brown algae, esv- and firrv- ( delaroque et al. , ) . unlike the lytic phycodnaviruses noted above, these two viruses are " temperate phage " like. that is they exist as silent viruses whose dna is integrated into the germlines of their host. in this, they are unique to all known eukaryotic dna viruses; host chromosome integration is a normal part of their persistent life strategy. esv- has a -bp genome and encodes likely genes ( delaroque et al. , ) . these genes are mostly unique and only are clearly related to pbcv- genes. the gene differences include many replication genes and their gene order is completely different. like the temperate phage-host evolutionary relationship outlined above, it would be most interesting to understand how the integration of these large dna viruses has affected host evolution. thus, the phycodnaviruses appear to represent a basal but diverse viral lineage that has both acute and persistent lifestyle and have some clear relationships to most large eukaryotic dna viruses and many phage. the phycodnavirus exemplar above should leave us with several impressions regarding the nature and evolution of these large and ubiquitous dna viruses of algae, an early eukaryotic host. they show clear linkages by structure and function to both phage and various eukaryotic dna viruses. they also show major variation and novelty in their own genetic composition, including their core genes. in addition, they show clear relationships to distinct and seemingly separate viral lineages (adenoviruses, herpesviruses, poxviruses, iridoviruses). the picture we are left with is that they seem to resemble phage evolution in that they appear to have evolved from a diverse pool that has exchanged many basic viral features and created many new genes. this view, however, contrasts sharply with the work of iyer et al. ( iyer et al. ( , . by considering the small number of conserved genes in four families of eukaryotic dna viruses (poxviruses, asfarviruses, iridoviruses, phycodnaviruses), they suggest that these viruses are monophyletic, evolving from a common nucleo-cytoplasmic large dna virus (ncldv) with an icosahedral capsid. given the above information, i fi nd this view unhelpful and possibly confusing. it has numerous problems. the main problem is that it fails to acknowledge the clear link between prokaryotic and eukaryotic viruses. furthermore, by focussing on a small set of related genes, it represents a traditional perspective as found in evolutionary biology that assumes a common (fi ttest) linear lineage, not a cloud, cooperative, or mosaic pool as the main source of novelty resulting in the matrix pattern of virus evolution. the virosphere is clearly not disconnected from itself, but it is also clearly not a linear or tree-like evolutionary system as suggested above. we must learn to think of virus evolution in its own terms; fuzzy, mixed, reticulated, and cloud-like. as mentioned in the phage section, there have been various publications that suggest a deep evolutionary relationship between the herpesviruses and dsdna viruses of prokaryotes ( rice et al. , ; khayat et al. , ; duda et al. , ; akita et al. , ) . such enormously distant relationships, however, cannot now be measured by any reliable metric. although herpes-like viruses are found in invertebrates (such as ostreid herpesvirus (oshv- )) in both lytic and asymptomatic states ( barbosa-solomieu et al. , ) , our interest in their evolution has been mainly focussed on the vertebrate herpesviruses. vertebrate herpesvirus do tend to show clear sequence conservation that suggests broad patterns of evolution. one interesting feature of this evolution is the apparent link between the biology of the virus and its evolution. a common, but not universal pattern is that of virus and host co-evolution ( mcgeoch et al. , ( mcgeoch et al. , , mcgeoch and gatherer, ) . this trend has maintained several biological characteristics, such as highly species host-and tissue-specifi c persistence (i.e. neuronal and lymphoid persistence). the discovery of hhv- has further stimulated studies of herpesvirus evolution in that hhv- appears to have undergone much recombination with herpesviruses of related primate lineages ( mcgeoch and davison, ) . thus recombination seems prevalent in herpesviruses. the apparent link between herpesvirus evolution and recent human evolution, as well as an apparent link to primate retroviral evolution, is fascinating, but of unknown signifi cance ( kung and wood, ; lacoste et al. , ) . the herpesviruses lineages will often show the presence of lineage-specifi c genes. many of these genes affect innate and adaptive host functions, whereas others affect host metabolism. when the source of such genes has been contemplated, in contrast to phage, phycodnaviruses, or baculoviruses ( herniou et al. , ) , it is often proposed that most such herpes genes originate from the host. it is well accepted that the three major lineages of herpesviruses descended from a common ancestor in vertebrates ( mcgeoch et al. , ) . there have been numerous proposals that most new lineage-specifi c herpesvirus genes have originated from host (see becker and darai, ) . this includes herpesvirus dutpase ( davison and stow, ) , and viral chemokines and viral bcl- ( nicholas et al. , ) . in my evaluation of such claims, however, it seems clear that the possibility that there was an ancient viral source of such genes was not considered and cannot now be dismissed. we currently believe that ancient herpesvirus ancestors can be traced to tailed phage ( hendrix, ; bamford, ; baker et al. , ; duda et al. , ; mcgeoch et al. , ) . other phage lineages also appear to trace to eukaryotic viruses ( bamford et al. , b ) . within the herpesviruses, the same t- icosahedral structure, as well as invertable dna regions are also present in the very distant but much more recognizable oceanic ostreid herpesvirus . given the highly diverse and mosaic nature of large dna virus evolution in prokaryotes and lower eukaryotes described above, it seem quite possible that many other viral genes might also trace far back in virus evolution. consider the example of dutpase in avian and mammalian herpesvirus ( davison and stow, ; mcgeehan et al. , ) . the current view requires very complicated gene rearrangements to account for the viral source of this gene from its host. yet we know that diverse dutpases are found in many ancient viral lineages. for example, the ervs present in all vertebrate genomes also conserve dut-pase ( jern et al. , ) , as do exogenous retroviruses (i.e. lentiviruses) ( mcintosh and haynes, ) . in fact, since the herpesviruses genes are especially poor in introns, it would seem likely that any herpesviral gene acquisition would necessarily involve a retrovirus via a cdna. the oceans are especially fi lled with large complex dna viruses (such as mimivirus and phycodnavirus, plus numerous relatives of oshv- ) thought to be ancient ancestors of herpesvirus. the phycodnavirus (chlorella virus, pbcv- ) provides a clear bridge between phage and eukaryotic dna viruses. pbcv- also encodes a dutpase that has the highly conserved motif iii ( zhang et al. , ) . many phage are also known to encode dutpases of diverse types, such as b. subtilis (spbeta) ( persson et al. , ) , and a phage of thermus thermophilus ( naryshkina et al. , ) . this thermus phage (phiys ) is of special note since its dutpase gene is clearly related to the dutpases of eukaryotic viruses and has a version that has undergone multiple events of recombination from apparently distinct phage, exactly as expected for mosaic phage genes. thus, the origin of new herpesvirus genes might not be so different than that seen in other large dna viruses and a potential ancient source of new genes from these ancestral viruses remains plausible. similar considerations apply to other possible examples of herpesvirus gene capture. for example, the herpes thymidylate synthase (ts) has also been considered to have originated by host gene capture ). yet distinct versions of these genes are also found in different herpesviral lineages, which would necessitate multiple independent " capture " events of different version of host ts genes. ts genes are present in ancient virus sources. for example, bacillus phage beta encodes ts, which also has a self-splicing intron ( bechhofer et al. , ) . also, phage phikz has a highly conserved ts ( mesyanzhinov et al. , ), yet this virus lacks a dna polymerase or other replication proteins, clearly indicating that the viral ts genes has a basic viral role. similarly, the cytokines-like genes (such as il- ) as found in poxviruses and herpesviruses appear to have originated in at least three independent events prior to the divergence of mammalian eutherian orders. yet it is still presupposed that they are necessarily the products of host gene capture ( hughes, ) . comparative genomics supports the idea that the herpesviruse lineages are originating viral genes. a broader phylogenetic analysis of all herpesvirus genomes identifi ed only genes in common to all taxa of herpesvirus . thus only genes appear to be in common to all the herpesviruses. in this analysis, only a few genes of recent origin could be identifi ed as possibly having been transferred between virus and host (e.g. new genes found at tips of phylogenetic dendograms). thus, gene gain in the herpesviruses (as in dna phage and phycodnavirus) is prevalent but the origination of such genes from the host is not prevalent. i suggest that our tendency to assume that new viral genes are usually " stolen " from the host should be revised ( moreira and lopez-garcia, ). in contrast to the herpesviruses, the poxviruses evolution tend to have little congruence to host evolution (see chapter ). yet, they too show evidence of ancient linkages to other viruses. the replication of poxvirus dna is distinct in that it involves a linear genome with inverted ends that have covalently closed " snapback " dna. the resulting replication structures involve head-to-tail and tail-to-tail intermediates. this replication strategy is very different from that used by the host (and most other dna viruses), but is clearly related to that found in other eukaryotic and prokaryotic viruses. similar replication mechanisms are seen in all poxviruses, as well as african swine fever virus and phycodnaviruses (pbcv- ). this exact replication strategy is also present in archaeal lipothrixviruses (sirv and sirv ) which has been proposed to be ancestral to phycodnaviruses and poxviruses ( persson et al. , ) . a similar replication strategy is also seen with n ( lobocka et al. , ) , an unusual phage of e. coli that persists as a linear dna ( casjens et al. , ) . conservation of such replication similarities clearly suggests ancestral relationships, but no sequence similarity can be seen between these viruses. the similarity between poxvirus and pbcv- dna replication deserves some additional comment. pbvc- and herpesvirus have very similar dna polymerase genes, yet differ fundamentally in replication strategy. furthermore, the poxviral dna polymerase gene is very different from that found in the herpesviruses. yet, the pbcv- capsid was clearly similar to that of adenoviruses and prd phage (and iridovirus capsids). how then do we link poxvirus evolution to other more ancient dna viruses, such as pbcv- which has the same dna replication mechanism, but distinct replication proteins? such observations might seem confusing, but they are clearly consistent with mosaic, reticulated evolution of dna viruses. various distinct phage lineages can link in multiple ways to various distinct eukaryotic dna viruses. the concept of a net or matrix rather than a tree is thus a better way to describe the broad topology of dna virus evolution. the issue of gene gain and gene loss is also of central interest to orthopoxvirus evolution. typically, we seek to understand poxviruses evolution from the perspective of pathogenesis, such as the origin of human-specifi c smallpox virus. with the comparative genomics of several orthopoxviruses now possible, we see curious overall patterns of gene loss in their evolution ( randall et al. , ) . for example, comparing human smallpox to cowpox dna (a rodent virus that is phylogenetically basal to smallpox), we observe an overall diminution of gene content in smallpox virus. several poxviruses seem to have also lost genes relative to cowpoxvirus, especially genes that appear to affect immunity ( hughes and friedman, ) . i suggest that this evolutionary tendency for gene reduction is associated with a switch from a more demanding species-specifi c persistent life strategy to a less demanding, acute life strategy in a new host. cowpox is a naturally persistent infection in rodents (bank voles) ( feore et al. , ; chantrey et al. , ) , which has been called a natural virus reservoir ( hazel et al. , ) . smallpox is a strictly acute and human-specifi c disease. such gene loss in association with lost persistence could be a general situation and might also explain why clinical isolates of human cytomegalovirus isolates show a strong tendency to delete genes with passage in culture ( davison et al. , ) . most orthopoxviruses are not phylogenetically congruent with their vertebrate host. host switching and acute replication seem to be relatively common but recent occurrences in their evolution ( babkin and shchelkunov, ) . the avian poxviruses are not as well studied in this context, but curiously have signifi cantly more complex genomes than the orthopoxviruses ( jarmin et al. , ) . the entomopoxviruses are even less well understood from both a biological and molecular perspective, although they do conserve genes found in all poxvirus family members ( gubser et al. , ) . clearly these poxviruses share some degree of evolutionary history. it is most curious that entomopoxviruses have even larger, more diverse and complex genomes than the other poxviruses. why? as insects lack an adaptive immune system (the target of many orthopoxvirus genes), they would seem to present a simpler host for virus adaptation. this group appears to be the most basal phylogenetically, but evolutionary relationships between entomopoxvirus and insect evolution have not been studied. the enotomopoxviruses are particularly prevalent in grasshopper and locust species, often in unapparent states. interestingly, within these viruses we can fi nd examples of major shifts in core replication genes, such as the family of dna pol gene that is used (a shift from dna pol x to dna pol b in two entomopoxvirus lineages). we can recall that the dna pol b gene closely resembles that found in phycodnaviruses (and herpesvirus), but is distinct from that in orthopoxvirus ( zhu, ) . we also see in the entomopoxviruses some clear links to phage genes, such as t -like rna ligase found in all entomopoxviruses ( ho and shuman, ) as well as a lambdalike integrase seen in d epv ( hashimoto and lawrence, ) . this integrase in d epv implies possible integration and persistence, thus it is most signifi cant that d epv also shows a clear persistent host infection as well as symbiosis and apparent phylogenetic congruence between virus and host. this virus is symbiotic in its parasitoid wasp host in that virus is injected into larval host along with the wasp egg (and also along with a second d rhv rhabdovirus) and virus is needed for successful host parasitization. this symbiosis is clearly very reminiscent of the genomic polydnaviruses of other parasitoid wasp species. diepv is also expressed in the male poison gland. however, it is unknown if diepv is integrating into the host dna. clearly, d epv it is part of a complex virus-virus-host symbiotic interaction. the overall evolution of orthopoxviruses contrasts sharply with that of the papillomaviruses as presented by bernard in chapter . here, highly species-specifi c and tissuespecifi c host infection are the norm and the viral evolution is typically highly congruent with the host (with some exceptions). the resolution between virus and host can be high, in that human racial and geographical populations, for example, can often be differentiated based on the type of hpv they harbor. yet here too there is evidence of signifi cant shifts in core gene usage early during papillomavirus evolution. in the human and rodent viruses, a highly conserved gene function associated with replication and cell control are the e and e early genes. in particular, the prb-binding domain of the e gene is thought to be central to the biological strategy of the virus. thus, it is most curious that the papillomaviruses of lagomorphs, such as bovine and reindeer papillomavirus, lack an e rb-binding domain and instead appear to use e or e genes for this regulatory function ( narechania et al. , ) . it seems an early but signifi cant and bifurcating shift occurred in the molecular strategy during the virus-host evolution of this group of viruses for unknown reasons. other small dna viruses (jcv, bkv, py) can also show similar high-resolution host congruence ( shadan and villarreal, ) . as well as similar curious shifts in basic molecular strategies. for example, the presence of a middle tantigen in mouse virus (a third early gene), but its absence from primate viruses ( gottlieb and villarreal, ) , clearly differentiates these viral lineages. although the origins of these entire small dna viruses are obscure, and any links to prokaryotic viruses are unknown, it does appear they have tended to retain their overall biological strategy and show a strong tendency for tissue-specifi c (especially kidney) persistence and virus-host congruence. since persistence requires the stable coexistence of a virus and its host, it also fi ts the simple defi nition of symbiosis (the stable living together of two distinct lineages of organisms). viral involvement in symbiosis is a foreign idea to many and possibly presents a fundamentally different view of the role viruses may have in host evolution. a major role for persisting (temperate, cryptic) viruses in the evolution of prokaryotes is no longer a controversial idea. thus, at least in the prokaryotic world, virus persistence can be accepted as adaptive. in eukaryotes, however, viral persistence is seldom considered adaptive. the mhv-mouse exemplar as presented above has suggested how persistence can directly affect host survival. can this be considered an example of symbiosis in the accepted sense? a crowning achievement in the fi eld of symbiosis has been to explain the origin of plastids (chloroplasts, mitochondria) from symbiotic prokaryotes in eukaryotic cytoplasm ( margulis and bermudes, ) . this idea involves the high adaptability of prokaryotes to provide innovation but would seem not to involve virus in any way. yet here too we can fi nd viral footprints that suggest some involvement. for example, various plastid-specifi c rna and dna polymerases clearly resemble polymerases from t /t -like phage ( cermakian et al. , ; shutt and gray, ) . other models of symbiosis also show evidence of a viral role, such as the sexual isolation of buchnera ( moran et al. , ) . another very popular topic in the fi eld of symbiosis is the symbiotic origin of the photosynthetic sea slug, elysa chlorotica . what could be more fascinating than a green sea slug-an animal that can use light for photosynthesis? e. chlorotica eats photosynthetic eukaryotic algae ( vaucheria litorea ) and retains the functional chloroplast from algae for months. here too, however, there lies a viral footprint. this slug harbors an unusual endogenous retrovirus which is expressed in large numbers during sexual reproduction, following which all slugs die via synchronized apoptosis and in which the chloroplasts have accumulated numerous viral particles ( pierce et al. , ; mondy and pierce, ) . since there is reason to think gene movement from the algae to the slug genome is involved in this symbiosis, the presence of this retrovirus is a strong candidate to also be involved in symbiogenesis. clearly we should thus investigate retroviral elements as possible symbiotic participants and not dismiss them beforehand as irrelevant or " junk dna " (as is automatically done in many database screens). if viral persistence is a kind of symbiosis, viruses may also mediate the establishment of other symbiotic relationships ( villarreal, ) . the recent studies by roossinck and colleagues (see chapter ), in which a persisting virus, a plant, and a fungus were all symbiotically involved in altering the thermal tolerance of the plant could be an example of this ( marquez et al. , ) . many other virus-host relationships should also be examined for possible symbiosis. for example, placental vertebrate evolution has involved various endogenous retroviruses (i.e. herv-w, herv-frd). intact herv genomes, including env orfs, are important for placental trophoblast fusion (for references see ryan, ) . some will dismiss this situation as the quirky usurping of a viral gene for host function which is of little general signifi cance. the specifi c erv involved is simply selfi sh and mostly defective genetic material of no general consequence. if so, why is it that in sheep a distinctly different lineage of retrovirus (enjsrv) was also selected to provide a related placental function to a another mammal with signifi cantly different placental reproductive biology? it has been experimentally well established the enjsrv env is essential for sheep embryo implantation ( dunlap et al. , a ( dunlap et al. , , b . enjsrv is the endogenous version of jsrv, a problematic sheep-specifi c retrovirus that induces lung tumors (responsible for the death of dolly, the famous fi rst cloned sheep). the endogenous virus (enjsrv) is present in copies in the sheep genome and all sheep have this virus. sheep genomes also encoded a trans -dominant enjrsv gag that is inhibitory to exogenous jsrv ( mura et al. , ; oliveira et al. , ; murcia et al. , ) . it seems clear that this situation can also be considered from the perspective of viral symbiosis and/or virus addiction in host evolution. we should thus seek to understand why colonization by an erv population might generally provide a good solution to the evolutionary demands of placental biology. there are many other opportunities to examine the potential role of persistent and symbiotic viruses in the evolution of viruses, animals, primates, and humans. for example, as we seek to understand the origins of the adaptive immune system we should pay attention to viral footprints. we can ask, for example, why the major histocompatibility complex (mhc) locus, the most polymorphic, diverse, and rapidly evolving gene set in our chromosome, is so densely colonized with retroviral elements ( andersson et al. , ) . why is a retrovirus also the basic element of the duplication unit that was thought to have been the progenitor for the expansion of the mhc class i (and ii) genes ( gaudieri et al. , ; kulski et al. , kulski et al. , , ? why do similar herv element (l and ) also differentiate between human and chimpanzee mhc i ( watkins, ; kulski et al. , ) ? what was the role for siv in the evolution of primate mhc ( vogel et al. , ) ? humans and primates appear to have undergone some signifi cant and relatively recent evolution with regard to their endogenous and exogeneous retroviruses. along these lines, apobec-like genes are basic component of the adaptive immune response but they are also antiretroviral genes that act on retroviral cdna and gag ( ohainle et al. , ) . the apobec antiviral system has expanded recently in humans, but not chimpanzees ( sawyer et al. , ; ohainle et al. , ) . why? all african primates support unapparent foamy viruses (and also siv co-infection), but not humans ( murray and linial, ) . apobec c is active against foamy viruses ( delebecque et al. , ) . old world primates also underwent an expansion of ervl colonization (a clear relative of foamy virus) ( sawyer et al. , ) . was this ervl colonization of relevance to the ancient co-speciation of simian foamy virus and their primate host ( switzer et al. , ) ? what exactly was the relevance of herv endogenization to human survival and adaptations? curiously, human brain (neocortex) specifically expresses many of these more recent ervs as transcripts ( nakamura et al. , ; yi et al. , ) . if we consider these situations as possible examples of virus-mediated symbiosis in human evolution, perhaps they may make more sense of the otherwise confusing role or hervs. as noted, all primates, but especially humans show much evidence of recent endogenization by retroviruses. but these events mostly occurred in our extinct ancestors and we do not see ongoing evidence that any hervs remain active. however, we are currently witnessing a related virus-host evolutionary event of considerable interest. koala bears, native marsupials of australia, are currently experiencing a major epidemic caused by a leukemiainducing retrovirus. as a consequence, they are undergoing massive endogenization by a gammaretrovirus (mlv-related). this virus is similar to gibbon ape leukemia virus, but most likely originated from rodent ancestry ( tarlinton et al. , ; fiebig et al. , ) . the expectation is that extinction awaits those koalas that do not adapt or endogenize the retrovirus successfully ( stoye, ) . this event has the appearances of a retroviral-driven addiction that will result in a genetic variant of koala bear that has acquired a new antiretroviral state. this seems equivalent to the expansion of human apobec ; or perhaps a closer analogy is the endogenization of a suppressive gag as occurred with enjsrv. the surviving koala bears will likely tolerate or be persistently infected with this retrovirus pool. the genome of the species will have undergone considerable (but unpredictable) genetic perturbations and likely contain a large pool of variant and defective retrovirus. however, in so doing, the descendent koalas will likely present a biological hazard to any koala species that remain virus-free (as in virus addiction). currently, one island colony of koalas is suffi ciently isolated to have remained virus-free. this population will henceforth be under persistent threat from populations of endogenized koalas, now favored by group selection. from the very earliest events in evolution of prebiotic replicators to very recent events in human evolution, including the emergence of human-specifi c hiv, we expect viral evolution to show profound effects on the evolution of all life. unlike accepted host evolution, viruses also employ consortia and mixed populations to evolve, sometimes at unprecedented rates. thus viruses have informed us of quasispecies, group dynamics, and group selection in evolution. virus evolution should now be considered as basic science, not just a medical concern. we must acknowledge that the tree of life cannot be properly understood without virus evolution. this book helps to lay the foundation for such understanding. epizootic diarrhea of infant mice: indentifi cation of the etiologic agent the crystal structure of a virus-like particle from the hyperthermophilic archaeon pyrococcus furiosus provides insight into the evolution of viruses unusual polymorphisms in human immunodefi ciency virus type associated with nonprogressive infection a ) genome comparison of two coccolithoviruses b ) evolutionary history of the coccolithoviridae retroelements in the human mhc class ii region host switching in lyssavirus history from the chiroptera to the carnivora orders common ancestry of 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essay on virus reproduction mutations of bacteria from virus sensitivity to virus resistance virus growth and variation: ninth symposium of the society for general microbiology prevalence of natural virus infections in laboratory mice and rats used in canada different patterns of molecular evolution of infl uenza a viruses in avian and human populations crystal structure of poliovirus cd protein: virally encoded protease and precursor to the rna-dependent rna polymerase symbiosis as a mechanism of evolution: status of cell symbiosis theory a virus in a fungus in a plant: three-way symbiosis required for thermal tolerance hepatitis c virus (hcv) circulates as a population of different but closely related genomes: quasispecies nature of hcv genome distribution mhv infection of the cns: mechanisms of immunemediated control molecular dynamics of emiliania huxleyi and cooccurring viruses during two separate mesocosm studies role of disease in abundance of a pacifi c herring ( clupea pallasi ) population . can antibiotic resistance in the ecor collection: integrons and identifi cation of a novel aad gene evolution of the dutpase gene of mammalian and avian herpesviruses the descent of human herpesvirus integrating reptilian herpesviruses into the family herpesviridae toward a comprehensive phylogeny for mammalian and avian herpesviruses topics in herpesvirus genomics and evolution hiv and human endogenous retroviruses: an hypothesis with therapeutic implications the genome of bacteriophage phikz of pseudomonas aeruginosa syncytin is a captive retroviral envelope protein involved in human placental morphogenesis algorithms for computing parsimonious evolutionary scenarios for genome evolution, the last universal common ancestor and dominance of horizontal gene transfer in the evolution of prokaryotes apoptotic-like morphology is associated with annual synchronized death in kleptoplastic sea slugs ( elysia chlorotica ) the players in a mutualistic symbiosis: insects, 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during an emiliania huxleyi bloom phylogenetic evidence for the rapid evolution of human b erythrovirus the evolution of small dna viruses of eukaryotes: past and present considerations coinfection of wild ducks by infl uenza a viruses: distribution patterns and biological signifi cance bacteriophage origins of mitochondrial replication and transcription proteins plant virus satellite and defective interfering rnas: new paradigms for a new century prevalence of viral antibodies and helminths in fi eld populations of house mice (mus domesticus) in southeastern australia the origin of hepatitis c virus genotypes emergence and predominance of an h n infl uenza variant in china phylogenetic analyses of type a infl uenza genes in natural reservoir species in north america reveals genetic variation dynamics of autocatalytic replicator networks based on higher-order ligation reactions koala retrovirus: a genome invasion in real time no evidence for quasispecies populations during persistence of the coronavirus mouse hepatitis virus jhm: sequence conservation within the surface glycoprotein gene s in lewis rats evolution of avian infl uenza viruses prevalence and evolution of core photosystem ii genes in marine cyanobacterial viruses and their hosts ultrastructural characterization of the giant volcano-like virus factory of acanthamoeba polyphaga mimivirus ancient co-speciation of simian foamy viruses and primates poxviruses and the origin of the eukaryotic nucleus prevalence and genetic diversity of coronaviruses in bats from a mutation in the rna polymerase of poliovirus type contributes to attenuation in mice retroviral invasion of the koala genome unusual life style of giant chlorella viruses phycodnaviridae-large dna algal viruses collective evolution and the genetic code ribavirin and lethal mutagenesis of poliovirus: molecular mechanisms, resistance and biological implications quasispecies diversity determines pathogenesis through cooperative interactions in a viral population evolutionary insights into the ecology of coronaviruses dna virus contribution to host evolution viruses and the evolution of life how viruses shape the tree of life virus-host symbiosis mediated by persistence a hypothesis for dna viruses as the origin of eukaryotic replication proteins on viruses, sex and motherhood acute and persistent viral life strategies and their relationship to emerging diseases major histocompatibility complex class i genes in primates: co-evolution with pathogens high prevalence of infl uenza a virus in ducks caught during spring migration through sweden first demonstration of a lack of viral sequence evolution in a nonprogressor, defi ning replication-incompetent hiv- infection phylogenetic analysis, genome evolution and the rate of gene gain in the herpesviridae the evolution of major histocompatibility class i genes in primates h n infl uenza-continuing evolution and spread elimination of mouse hepatitis virus from a breeding colony by temporary cessation of breeding matrix gene of infl uenza a viruses isolated from wild aquatic birds: ecology and emergence of infl uenza a viruses persistent mhv (mouse hepatitis virus) infection reduces the incidence of diabetes mellitus in non-obese diabetic mice long intervals of stasis punctuated by bursts of positive selection in the seasonal evolution of infl uenza a virus bacteriophage p in retrospect and in prospect human endogenous retroviral elements belonging to the herv-s family from human tissues, cancer cells and primates: expression, structure, phylogeny and evolution a reevaluation of the higher taxonomy of viruses based on rna polymerases chlorella virus-encoded deoxyuridine triphosphatases exhibit different temperature optima persistence of extraordinarily low levels of genetically homogeneous human immunodefi ciency virus type in exposed seronegative individuals key: cord- -fuz r vj authors: al ali, sally; baldanta, sara; fernández-escobar, mercedes; guerra, susana title: use of reporter genes in the generation of vaccinia virus-derived vectors date: - - journal: viruses doi: . /v sha: doc_id: cord_uid: fuz r vj vaccinia virus (vacv) is one of the most extensively-studied viruses of the poxviridae family. it is easy to genetically modify, so it has become a key tool for many applications. in this context, reporter genes facilitate the study of the role of foreign genes introduced into the genome of vacv. in this review, we describe the type of reporter genes that have been used to generate reporter-expressing vacv and the applications of the recombinant viruses obtained. reporter-expressing vacv are currently employed in basic and immunology research, in the development of vaccines and cancer treatment. since the first description of recombinant dna techniques, many advances have been achieved in the field of molecular biology and genetic modification. currently, there is a wide variety of tools that allow the genetic modification of animals, plants, bacteria and viruses [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the genetic modification of viruses has become one of the best strategies for introducing nucleic acids into different cells, tissues or even in in vivo models, given the high transfection efficiency and ease of carrying it out, compared to chemical or physiological methods [ , ] . after the description of recombination events in cells infected with vaccinia virus (vacv) and through recombinant dna technology [ , ] , vacv has become a suitable model for the generation of recombinant virus vectors [ ] . at first, the main purpose for introducing foreign genes into virus genomes was basic research about the biology of the viruses both in vitro and in vivo. however, with the latest technical advances and the higher understanding of the vacv viral cycle, virus genetic modification is getting a wider spectrum purpose. thus, they can also be used for the development of vaccines or as oncolytic agents. this review aims to highlight the main aspects of the genetic modification of vacv and the generation and application of reporter-expressing virus in this model. vacv is the prototype member of the poxviridae family, so most research of poxvirus has been focused on its use [ ] . vacv is a large dna double-stranded virus, with a complex envelope. it was the live vaccine used to eradicate smallpox and nowadays is also used as a viral vector for recombinant vaccines and cancer therapy [ , ] . the vacv genome is one of the largest of all dna viruses, with a size of kbp and about encoding genes [ ] . the genome has a high genetic compaction, with a few intergenic and small non-coding regions. the coding regions are continuous, thereby not given to splicing [ , ] . vacv have a complete replicating cycle inside the cytoplasm of the host cell, even though it is a dna virus (figure ) [ ] . this fact determines the genetic characteristics of the virus, being completely independent of the replication and transcription machinery of the host cell. once the virion infects the host cell, the viral core is uncoated, and nearly early viral genes are transcribed [ , ] . early genes produce the required enzymes for catalyzing the viral core breakdown, viral dna replication and the modulation of the host antiviral response [ ] . viral dna begins to replicate inside the infected host cell using viral enzymes at h post-infection. as soon as the viral replication starts, transcription of downstream genes encoding for regulatory proteins that induce the expression of the late genes occurs. late genes encode for proteins and enzymes required for the assembly of new viral particles. after dna and all viral proteins are synthesized, the process known as morphogenesis begins, which results in the formation of the new virions [ , ] . these can be retained inside the cell until cellular lysis or released to the environment by other mechanism [ , ] . several features of the biology of vacv make it suitable for its use as a vector in biological experiments, vaccine design or cancer therapy. the complete cytoplasmic replication of vacv facilitates the expression of foreign genes inserted in the viral genome and its detection or isolation [ , ] . usually, bacterial or non-mammalian viral vectors fail to make the expressed proteins to perform its full activity as antigens. however, vacv has the ability to transcribe its genes using its own transcription factors and enzymes. that means that if a foreign gene is inserted directly to a vacv promoter element, it will be transcribed with foreign proteins reaching high levels of expression in the infected cell. moreover, this replication cycle is an appropriate model for molecular and genetic investigations of cis and trans factors that are mainly required for gene expression [ , ] . furthermore, since vacv remains in the cytoplasm, the risk of insertional mutagenesis and oncogenesis, the main problems encountered in gene therapy using integrative viruses, disappears. in some cases, patients treated with retroviral vectors have developed cancer years after they have been treated [ , ] . vacv can replicate in different cell lines, primary cell cultures, and also grows in several animal species, such as mice, guinea pigs, rabbits, etc. [ ] . this broad host range allows infection of cell lines with recombinant viruses for large-scale expression of heterologous proteins, which reduces its cost several features of the biology of vacv make it suitable for its use as a vector in biological experiments, vaccine design or cancer therapy. the complete cytoplasmic replication of vacv facilitates the expression of foreign genes inserted in the viral genome and its detection or isolation [ , ] . usually, bacterial or non-mammalian viral vectors fail to make the expressed proteins to perform its full activity as antigens. however, vacv has the ability to transcribe its genes using its own transcription factors and enzymes. that means that if a foreign gene is inserted directly to a vacv promoter element, it will be transcribed with foreign proteins reaching high levels of expression in the infected cell. moreover, this replication cycle is an appropriate model for molecular and genetic investigations of cis and trans factors that are mainly required for gene expression [ , ] . furthermore, since vacv remains in the cytoplasm, the risk of insertional mutagenesis and oncogenesis, the main problems encountered in gene therapy using integrative viruses, disappears. in some cases, patients treated with retroviral vectors have developed cancer years after they have been treated [ , ] . vacv can replicate in different cell lines, primary cell cultures, and also grows in several animal species, such as mice, guinea pigs, rabbits, etc. [ ] . this broad host range allows infection of cell lines with recombinant viruses for large-scale expression of heterologous proteins, which reduces its cost in comparison to other production systems [ , ] . additionally, vacv enables high production titers, so it is an advantage in the manufacturing of a large amount of vaccines [ ] . although the vacv genome is large and compact, it can tolerate the deletion of certain viral sequences and the insertion of exogenous genetic material [ ] . a vacv vector has a transgene capacity of approximately - kb, higher than other viral vectors, including adeno-associated virus ( . kb), adenovirus ( - kb) and retrovirus ( - kb) [ ] . thus, vacv is an excellent candidate vector in the design of polyvalent vaccines with antigens from several pathogens or different antigens from the same pathogen [ , ] . finally, as far as its use as a vaccine vector is concerned, vacv is clearly immunogenic effective, strong evidence being the eradication of smallpox in [ ] . vacv is also safe and easy to inoculate, since it can be administrated intradermally or with an air gun without medical training. in some organisms, it has been found that it can cause problems by preexisting immunity, but the probability of having post-vaccination complications, such as progressive vacv infection or encephalitis, is significantly low [ ] . nowadays, due to the better knowledge of the vacv biology and the immune response generated after vaccination, vaccines based on this virus are becoming safer [ ] . in addition, it is important to remark that vacv vectors are very stable and can be lyophilized and kept frozen for several years, facilitating its transport and storage [ ] . to get recombinant vacv expressing foreign genes, the main method used is homologous recombination ( figure ) [ ] . first, it is necessary to construct a plasmid that contains the gene or transgene of interest. after that, the cells have to be infected with the virus and subsequently transfected with the plasmid that contains the transgene. an alternative method could be used, employing two viruses, one defective for some genes and one wild-type acting as a helper [ , ] . for both methods, the recombinant viruses are produced by homologous recombination inside the infected cell. in comparison to other production systems [ , ] . additionally, vacv enables high production titers, so it is an advantage in the manufacturing of a large amount of vaccines [ ] . although the vacv genome is large and compact, it can tolerate the deletion of certain viral sequences and the insertion of exogenous genetic material [ ] . a vacv vector has a transgene capacity of approximately - kb, higher than other viral vectors, including adeno-associated virus ( . kb), adenovirus ( - kb) and retrovirus ( - kb) [ ] . thus, vacv is an excellent candidate vector in the design of polyvalent vaccines with antigens from several pathogens or different antigens from the same pathogen [ , ] . finally, as far as its use as a vaccine vector is concerned, vacv is clearly immunogenic effective, strong evidence being the eradication of smallpox in [ ] . vacv is also safe and easy to inoculate, since it can be administrated intradermally or with an air gun without medical training. in some organisms, it has been found that it can cause problems by preexisting immunity, but the probability of having post-vaccination complications, such as progressive vacv infection or encephalitis, is significantly low [ ] . nowadays, due to the better knowledge of the vacv biology and the immune response generated after vaccination, vaccines based on this virus are becoming safer [ ] . in addition, it is important to remark that vacv vectors are very stable and can be lyophilized and kept frozen for several years, facilitating its transport and storage [ ] . to get recombinant vacv expressing foreign genes, the main method used is homologous recombination ( figure ) [ ] . first, it is necessary to construct a plasmid that contains the gene or transgene of interest. after that, the cells have to be infected with the virus and subsequently transfected with the plasmid that contains the transgene. an alternative method could be used, employing two viruses, one defective for some genes and one wild-type acting as a helper [ , ] . for both methods, the recombinant viruses are produced by homologous recombination inside the infected cell. another way to generate recombinant viruses is the method described by falkner and moss [ ] , denominated transient dominant selection (tds), which allows the introduction of site-directed mutations into the vacv genome. generally, the recombinant viruses obtained by this method are rescued by metabolic selection, using the guanine phosphoribosyltransferase gene (gpt) from escherichia coli as a marker. the presence of the protein encoded by gpt allows the recombinant viruses to grow in the presence of mycophenolic acid, xanthine and hypoxanthine [ ] . subsequently, after this first metabolic selection, a second recombination event must occur to eliminate the selection marker, maintaining the mutation introduced into the vacv genome ( figure ) [ ] . in contrast to the method described above, in the tds technique the marker should not be flanked by homologous regions of the vacv genome [ ] . alternatively, puromycin resistance could be used as a selection marker in tds, increasing the recombinant viruses' generation efficiency [ ] . another way to generate recombinant viruses is the method described by falkner and moss [ ] , denominated transient dominant selection (tds), which allows the introduction of site-directed mutations into the vacv genome. generally, the recombinant viruses obtained by this method are rescued by metabolic selection, using the guanine phosphoribosyltransferase gene (gpt) from escherichia coli as a marker. the presence of the protein encoded by gpt allows the recombinant viruses to grow in the presence of mycophenolic acid, xanthine and hypoxanthine [ ] . subsequently, after this first metabolic selection, a second recombination event must occur to eliminate the selection marker, maintaining the mutation introduced into the vacv genome ( figure ) [ ] . in contrast to the method described above, in the tds technique the marker should not be flanked by homologous regions of the vacv genome [ ] . alternatively, puromycin resistance could be used as a selection marker in tds, increasing the recombinant viruses' generation efficiency [ ] . two important aspects to be considered when obtaining recombinant poxvirus are the vacv genome insertion sites and the reporter genes introduced. the vacv genome has about seven known insertion sites where foreign genes can be inserted ( figure ) [ ] . the insertion site choice depends mainly on the future application of the recombinant viruses. it may also be important in the later selection of the recombinant viruses obtained. for instance, inserting the gene of interest in the thymidine kinase (tk) locus confers a detectable phenotype (tk-): the recombinant viruses are able to grow in the presence of -bromo- '-deoxyuridine (brdu), a synthetic analog of thymidine [ , ] . another important site of insertion that allows a subsequent selection is the vacv hemagglutinin (ha) gene as the recombinant viruses can be easily recognized by their disability to bind erythrocytes in a hemagglutination test [ ] [ ] [ ] . two important aspects to be considered when obtaining recombinant poxvirus are the vacv genome insertion sites and the reporter genes introduced. the vacv genome has about seven known insertion sites where foreign genes can be inserted ( figure ) [ ] . the insertion site choice depends mainly on the future application of the recombinant viruses. it may also be important in the later selection of the recombinant viruses obtained. for instance, inserting the gene of interest in the thymidine kinase (tk) locus confers a detectable phenotype (tk-): the recombinant viruses are able to grow in the presence of -bromo- '-deoxyuridine (brdu), a synthetic analog of thymidine [ , ] . another important site of insertion that allows a subsequent selection is the vacv hemagglutinin (ha) gene as the recombinant viruses can be easily recognized by their disability to bind erythrocytes in a hemagglutination test [ ] [ ] [ ] . vacv has five more places of insertion: the bamhi site of the hindiii-f dna fragment [ ] ; the vacv growth factor gene (vgf), located in both inverted terminal repeats (itrs) [ ] ; the n and m genes located on the left side of the vacv genome [ ] ; the m subunit of the ribonucleotide reductase (rr) gene in the hindiii-i dna fragment [ ] ; and the a l gene encoding the kda fusion protein, in the large hindiii-a dna fragment [ ] . it is noteworthy that some strains of vacv have only one copy of vfg, such as vacv lister variants [ ] . recombinant production using these insertion sites, although successfully occurring, requires the use of a marker gene or other strategies for later selection of the recombinant viruses. due to these limitations, the tk gene is the most common site of insertion in the vacv genome [ ] . some authors have used temperature-sensitive vacv strains, allowing the recombinant viruses to be selected in culture at ˝c [ ] . however, the most common way for an easy identification of recombinant viruses is the use of reporter genes as selectable markers, which will be discussed in section . [ ] . vacv has five more places of insertion: the bamhi site of the hindiii-f dna fragment [ ] ; the vacv growth factor gene (vgf), located in both inverted terminal repeats (itrs) [ ] ; the n and m genes located on the left side of the vacv genome [ ] ; the m subunit of the ribonucleotide reductase (rr) gene in the hindiii-i dna fragment [ ] ; and the a l gene encoding the kda fusion protein, in the large hindiii-a dna fragment [ ] . it is noteworthy that some strains of vacv have only one copy of vfg, such as vacv lister variants [ ] . recombinant production using these insertion sites, although successfully occurring, requires the use of a marker gene or other strategies for later selection of the recombinant viruses. due to these limitations, the tk gene is the most common site of insertion in the vacv genome [ ] . some authors have used temperature-sensitive vacv strains, allowing the recombinant viruses to be selected in culture at °c [ ] . however, the most common way for an easy identification of recombinant viruses is the use of reporter genes as selectable markers, which will be discussed in section . [ ] . in spite of the promoter or the regions between the promoter and coding region, the insertion site also influences foreign gene expression and virus virulence [ , , ] . insertion into the tk, vgf, rr or a l genes has an impact on viral replication in vivo, but not in vitro [ , ] . moreover, the method described in figure requires the use of special cell lines or mutagenic selective agents, such as tk-/-cell lines and brdu [ ] . for this reason, different strategies and new insertion sites are being studied to ensure the correct expression of the transgenes in vitro and in vivo [ , , , ] . reporter-expressing viruses are recombinant viruses expressing a reporter gene [ ] . in some cases, the reporter gene is located downstream of a viral promoter, to study biological pathways or, fused with other viral or foreign genes. as reporter genes are expected to be easily detected, they are the best indicators for screening successfully recombinant viruses. the reporter gene should be chosen considering the non-endogenous activity in the cell type, tissue or organism used to culture the viruses [ ] . reporter genes have additional applications in vitro and in vivo, as the reporter gene acts as a substitute of the gene of interest. moreover, reporter genes facilitate the use of tissue-specific and pathway-specific promoters, as well as regulatory promoter elements as biomarkers for a particular event route. furthermore, it is important that the existence of the reporter gene should not affect the normal physiology and general characteristics of the transfected cells [ ] [ ] [ ] . table presents an overview of the reporter genes commonly used in the generation of recombinant vacv. in spite of the promoter or the regions between the promoter and coding region, the insertion site also influences foreign gene expression and virus virulence [ , , ] . insertion into the tk, vgf, rr or a l genes has an impact on viral replication in vivo, but not in vitro [ , ] . moreover, the method described in figure requires the use of special cell lines or mutagenic selective agents, such as tk-/cell lines and brdu [ ] . for this reason, different strategies and new insertion sites are being studied to ensure the correct expression of the transgenes in vitro and in vivo [ , , , ] . reporter-expressing viruses are recombinant viruses expressing a reporter gene [ ] . in some cases, the reporter gene is located downstream of a viral promoter, to study biological pathways or, fused with other viral or foreign genes. as reporter genes are expected to be easily detected, they are the best indicators for screening successfully recombinant viruses. the reporter gene should be chosen considering the non-endogenous activity in the cell type, tissue or organism used to culture the viruses [ ] . reporter genes have additional applications in vitro and in vivo, as the reporter gene acts as a substitute of the gene of interest. moreover, reporter genes facilitate the use of tissue-specific and pathway-specific promoters, as well as regulatory promoter elements as biomarkers for a particular event route. furthermore, it is important that the existence of the reporter gene should not affect the normal physiology and general characteristics of the transfected cells [ ] [ ] [ ] . table presents an overview of the reporter genes commonly used in the generation of recombinant vacv. elisa: enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. cat was the first reporter gene used in transcriptional assays in mammalian cells. cat is an enzyme from escherichia coli that detoxifies the antibiotic chloramphenicol, which inhibits protein synthesis in bacteria [ ] . particularly, cat links acetyl-coenzyme a (acetyl-coa) groups to chloramphenicol, preventing it from blocking the s ribosomal subunit. this gene is not found in eukaryotes, so eukaryotic cells do not present any basal cat activity [ ] . the reaction catalyzed by cat can be quantified using fluorogenic or radiolabeled substrates, such as h-labeled acetyl-coa and c-labeled chloramphenicol. cat can be detected either by thin-layer chromatography, autoradiography or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa) [ ] . there is a strong link between cat gene transcript levels and enzymatic activity, which is easy to quantify. thus, cat has become a suitable reporter gene for investigating transcriptional elements in a wide variety of experiments implicating animal and plant cells, as well as viruses [ ] . there are some disadvantages of using the cat system, such as the higher amount of cells required when compared to other assays, like the luciferase assay (detailed in section . . ). in addition, the cat system is not suitable for use with weakly-expressed genes and cat promoter activity quantification takes longer than other reporter systems [ ] . finally, this reporter gene has another important limitation due to the use of radioisotopes [ ] . the first study using lacz as a reporter gene was published in , and since then, it has become one of the most commonly-used reporter genes in molecular biology [ ] . although β-galactosidase catalyzes the cleavage of the disaccharide lactose to form glucose and galactose, it recognizes several artificial substrates, which has promoted its use as a reporter gene [ ] . thus, β-galactosidase can hydrolyze substrates such as ortho-nitrophenyl beta-galactoside (onpg), -bromo- -chloro- -indolyl beta-d-galactopyranoside (x-gal) and , -cyclohexenoesculetin beta-d-galactopyranoside (s-gal), resulting in a yellow, blue or black product precipitate, respectively [ , ] . furthermore, expression of the lacz gene can be stimulated with isopropyl beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside (iptg), which is a highly stable synthetic and non-hydrolyzable analog of lactose [ ] . one of the applications of the lacz reporter gene is the selection of transformed bacterial colonies. the recombinant (white) and non-recombinant (blue) bacteria are discriminated based on the interruption of the lacz gene by the insert dna or gene of interest using x-gal as a substrate [ ] . other uses are the visualization of the β-galactosidase expression in transfected eukaryotic cells or the selection of the recombinant virus by viral plaque screening [ ] . finally, lacz is used to detect β-galactosidase activity in immunological and histochemical experiments [ ] . one of the main advantages of using this reporter gene system is its low cost, since it does not require specific devices to detect the colorimetric reaction or to identify its expression. another escherichia coli-derived hydrolyzing enzyme gene that lends a reporter assay is gus. the β-glucuronidase protein catalyzes the breakdown of complex carbohydrates, such as glycosaminoglycans. this reporter gene system has been widely used in transgenic plants, and it has also been successfully used in mammalian cells for vacv recombinant virus selection [ ] . for the β-glucuronidase (gus) assay -methylumbelliferyl beta-d-glucuronide (mug) or -bromo- -chloro- -indolyl beta-d-glucuronide (x-gluc) can be used as substrates. they respectively lead to a fluorogenic or a blue product after cleavage [ , ] . monitoring β-glucuronidase activity through a gus assay allows the determination of the spatial and temporal expression of the gene of interest [ ] . the most known fluorescent protein is green fluorescent protein (gfp), which was cloned from the species of jellyfish aequorea victoria. because of the great impact of fluorescent proteins in molecular biology applications, the nobel prize in chemistry was awarded to osamu shimomura, martin chalfie and roger y. tsien for the discovery and development of gfp [ , ] . gfp is the most used reporter gene; however, genetic engineering has developed a wide variety of color mutants, such as red fluorescent protein (rfp) or yellow fluorescent protein (yfp) among others [ ] . fluorescent proteins tolerate n-and c-terminal fusions to a wide-range of proteins, have been expressed in most known cell types and are used as a non-harmful fluorescent marker in living cells and organisms. the use of fluorescent proteins allows a variety of applications: cell lineage tracker , reporter for gene expression assays or measure of protein-protein interactions. additionally, cell-fixation is not needed to examine its expression, and the probability of artifacts is quite small compared to immunocytochemical methods which require cell fixation [ ] . one of the disadvantages of these proteins is their size. therefore, in some cases, they can affect the in vivo function of fused proteins or genes of interest. nevertheless, one limitation of using gfp is its low sensitivity [ ] , another is that its signal cannot be exogenously amplified [ ] . the first luciferase (luc), from the firefly photinus pyralis, was cloned in and luc has been widely used as a reporter gene. later, it was also described in bacteria and dinoflagellates [ ] . luciferases are enzymes that catalyze a chemical reaction resulting in the production of light. firefly luciferase oxidize the d-luciferin, in the presence of oxygen and adenosine triphosphate (atp) as the energy source. as in β-galactosidase assays, an exogenous substrate is needed, and it may be a disadvantage [ ] . in other systems, such as the luciferase identified in bacteria (luxcdabe operon), the enzyme catalyzes the oxidation of long-chain aldehydes and flavin mononucleotides (fmnh ) in the presence of oxygen to yield green-blue light [ ] . although in bacteria this operon encodes all components necessary for light emission, it is limited in mammalian cells. therefore, the exogenous substrate has to be added to improve the reaction [ ] . besides the different substrates required, each luciferase system is categorized by having specific kinetics, with a particular detection and sensitivities that require adjusting the experimental design [ , ] . the use of luciferase is extremely widespread in biological systems studies and includes cell proliferation assays, protein folding/secretion analyses, in vivo imaging and control of in vivo viral spreading [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . the main advantage of using this system is its high sensitivity when compared to other systems, such as cat. additionally, the luc system is more direct, rapid and suitable when it comes to weakly-expressed genes, and it can be used to quantify gene activity. one disadvantage of the luc system is the requirement of ultrasensitive charge-coupled device (ccd) cameras to detect gene expression [ ] . reporter-gene assays have helped the pox virologists in basic research, for example for the study of the location, structure and function of many vacv proteins during the infection cycle and their interaction with proteins of the host cell [ , ] . as shown in dvoracek and shors [ ] , the gus reporter gene was used for deleting the d r viral protein and selecting the recombinant viruses, with the aim to understand the role of this protein in the viral life cycle. in addition, the lacz gene has typically been used mainly for the selection of recombinants [ ] . moreover, several studies have reported the different transgenes' insertion points and vacv promoters in which the recombinant virus production was enhanced. these studies are essential for improvement of the development of vaccines based on recombinant vacv [ , ] . on the other hand, fluorescent markers such as the gfp, yfp or luciferase are also useful for labelling vacv replicative strains. these viruses have allowed the study of processes like the input and output morphogenesis in virus-infected cells [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in these studies, fluorescence of certain viral proteins allows us to study their interaction with other viral or cellular proteins [ ] . furthermore, vacv is a clear example of how viruses have developed strategies to evade the immune response [ ] . in this field, the generation of recombinant vacv with reporter genes is also useful to discern the molecular mechanism by which vacv proteins manipulate the immune system of the host. thus, in unterholzner et al. [ ] , the generation of a gfp-labeled recombinant vacv revealed that the c viral protein acted as an immunomodulatory agent, blocking the expression of type i interferon. another major application of reporter-expressing vacvs is the design of high-throughput assays. the generation of lacz or gfp expressing recombinant virus can be used to optimize antibody neutralization assays [ , ] . lastly, vacv and reporter genes have been used to study proteins from other viruses, particularly rna viruses, such as influenza or severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus (sars-cov) [ ] . to genetically modify these viruses, rna must be reverse transcribed to cdna, since this is particularly unstable in plasmids, making vacv a good tool for functional studies of proteins from such viruses [ ] . there are several in vivo applications for recombinant reporter-expressing viruses. for example, in virulence studies, the use of labeled viruses allows us to follow the viral pathogenicity and detect in which organs the viral replication and dissemination occur [ , ] . for example, zaitseva et al. [ ] used the recombinant vacv western reverse strain (wr)-luc to analyze the viral spread in vivo for several days reducing the number of mice used. moreover, vacv is an effective enhancer for both humoral and cell-mediated immunity; it is used as a vector to study the immune system and the expression of proteins' antigenicity of other pathogens. furthermore, vacv is used to explore the immunopathological mechanisms, to know which epitopes or antigens presented by a pathogen have the ability to induce the host-immune response, and to demonstrate the specific role of a particular antigen during the pathogenic process [ , , ] . despite the examples mentioned above, the most common uses of recombinant vacv in vivo are the production of prophylactic vaccines and treatments against cancer [ , ] . table shows some of the vaccines based on vacv, with the reporter gene and the insertion site employed indicated in each case. in these vaccines, vacv acts as a vector capable of delivering antigens from other organisms [ ] . while in many recombinant vaccines a viral antigen has been inserted, some of them have also been developed against bacteria [ ] or protists [ , , ] . these vaccines simulate infection by the pathogen from which the antigens are and elicit the immune response, by producing antigens for different pathogens. in several vaccines, mainly against human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) or influenza, genes of immunomodulatory cytokines are added for coexpression with the antigen, improving the immunogenicity of the vaccines [ , , ] . as summarized in table , most of the transgene insertion sites are within the tk or the ha genes, making the selection of recombinants easier, as explained above. however, in several vaccines, besides using this strategy, a reporter gene is used as well. the use of reporter genes facilitates the preliminary tests of the vaccine on animal models. moreover, especially in vaccines used in animals, the reporter gene makes it possible to distinguish between vaccinated and infected animals [ ] . for example, vacv has been used for nearly twenty years to eradicate rabies from wildlife as an oral-based vaccine. in this case, the recombinant vacv expresses the rabies virus glycoprotein and has been used to vaccinate raccoons, red foxes, skunks and coyotes in the united states and europe. this battle has successfully purged rabies in some parts of europe and the united states [ ] . streptococcus pyogenes m protein tk gene not mentioned [ ] another application for vacv vectors is in cancer treatment, known as oncolytic virotherapy [ ] . this is the use of replication-competent viruses to selectively attack and destroy cancer cells, without harming healthy host cells [ ] . examples of recombinant vacv used are summarized in table . a promising study is the use of oncolytic vacv as a vector for the human sodium iodide symporter (hnis) gene in prostate cancer therapy, which has been demonstrated to restrict tumor growth and to increase survival in mice [ ] . vacv is also a promising therapeutic agent for pancreatic cancer [ ] , cholangiocarcinoma [ ] and colorectal cancer [ ] . it is worth mentioning that many of the viral vectors developed to treat tumors have several common characteristics. generally, vacv oncolytic vectors have a deletion in the tk gene, essential for the pyrimidine synthesis pathway, which forces the virus to replicate in cells displaying a high amount of nucleotide pools, enhancing the viral tropism to cancer cells. others have a deletion in the vgf gene, preventing non-infected cells from proliferation [ ] . furthermore, as in the development of vaccines, viral vectors are "armed" with genes that enhance the antitumor activity, the virus tropism or the immunoreactivity, to promote better tumor destruction, such as granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (gm-csf) or erythropoietin genes (enhanced virus; table ). another particular feature is that many of these recombinants carry reporter genes, and thus viral replication can be monitored by non-invasive imaging methods [ , , , ] . the main limitation of using vacv as a vector is the short-term gene expression, since it is a lytic virus killing the infected cells. thus, gene expression will not last for more than - h post-infection [ , ] . additionally, although for some applications it is an advantage, since vacv replicates completely in the infected cell cytoplasm, it is hard to use vacv to engineer nuclear gene replacement [ ] . the other main disadvantage is the limited immunogenicity in individuals vaccinated against smallpox. this pre-existing immunity reduces the effectiveness of vaccines based on vacv, although some trials have overcome this problem by mucosal vaccination with vaccinia vectors [ ] . the vacv safety profile should be considered because it has progressive complications especially with immunocompromised individuals [ ] . these limitations primarily affect in vivo applications of vacv recombinants in vaccine development, so several attenuated strains of vacv are being generated [ ] . as for other viruses, the development of vaccines or oncolytic therapies based on vacv requires the understanding of its pathogenesis and biology. despite improvements in the vectors' design, such as the use of different promoters or insertion sites, homologous recombination has been almost exclusively the way to obtain vacv recombinants [ ] . homologous recombination requires the use of markers or reporter genes for selecting recombinants, which offers many disadvantages. apart from the physical space needed for the marker gene, which is limited in therapeutic virus, the use of certain markers can introduce mutations or generate artifacts that are only found after an analysis of the generated virus. sometimes, these problems cannot be detected in vitro, but are very important to overcome when these vectors are used in vivo on animal models [ , ] . in recent years, some strategies have been developed to avoid these risks using markers, or at least to remove them from the final recombinant vacv. rice and colleagues [ ] described a double selection method to improve the selection of recombinant vacv, so that a reporter or marker gene is not necessary. a helper virus is used to rescue a recombinant vacv and is subsequently grown in non-permissive cells to the helper virus; allowing the selection of a large percentage of recombinant virions. however, the method that has certainly had an enormous importance in the modification of genomes is the clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats (crispr)/crispr-associated protein (cas ) system. briefly, the crispr/cas system consists of an endonuclease (cas ) employing a guide rna to generate a break in a target place of the genome, later to be repaired, either randomly or precisely using a specifically designed "restful" template [ ] . the effectiveness of this system has been proven in different organisms, including viruses, such as herpes simplex virus (hsv) [ ] , hepatitis b virus (hbv) [ ] and hiv [ ] . currently, this technique is starting to be used also in vacv [ ] . for example, this system has achieved the deletion of vacv virulence genes, such as a l and n l. a l and n l are vacv intracellular proteins that inhibit nuclear factor-kappa b (nf-kb) activation, so it is undesirable that they were present in vacv vectors with therapeutic purposes [ ] . furthermore, given the efficiency of the method, "reparative" vectors with excisable marker genes have been designed. therefore, recombinant viruses are effectively isolated, but eventually, the marker gene is eliminated [ ] . given the simplicity of recombinant vacv by the crispr/cas system generation, an exponential increase of applications with better markers for basic research or without selectable markers for clinical application is expected [ , ] . in conclusion, the development of recombinant viruses is a promising therapeutic 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cancer recombinant vaccinia virus glv- h is a promising oncolytic vector in the treatment of cholangiocarcinoma phase b trial of biweekly intravenous pexa-vec (jx- ), an oncolytic and immunotherapeutic vaccinia virus in colorectal cancer armed therapeutic viruses -a disruptive therapy on the horizon of cancer immunotherapy jx- , a targeted oncolytic poxvirus for the treatment of cancer systemic cancer therapy with a tumor-selective vaccinia virus mutant lacking thymidine kinase and vaccinia growth factor genes double-deleted vaccinia virus in virotherapy for refractory and metastatic pediatric solid tumors vaccinia virus-mediated expression of human erythropoietin in tumors enhances virotherapy and alleviates cancer-related anemia in mice oncolytic vaccinia virus expressing the human somatostatin receptor sstr : molecular imaging after systemic delivery using in-pentetreotide recent progress in crispr/cas technology engineering large viral dna genomes using the crispr-cas system application of crispr/cas technology to hbv we thank all of the pox virologist who contributed to this study. this work is supported by grant fis - and reference saf - -r to sg. key: cord- -x f ahr authors: nistal, manuel; paniagua, ricardo title: non-neoplastic diseases of the testis date: - - journal: urologic surgical pathology doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: x f ahr nan testicular biopsy infertility and chromosomal anomalies other syndromes associated with hypergonadotropic hypogonadism secondary idiopathic hypogonadism hypogonadism secondary to endocrine gland dysfunction infertility secondary to physical and chemical agents infertility in patients with spinal cord injury orchitis histiocytosis with testicular involvement non-neoplastic diseases of the testis manuel nistal, ricardo paniagua chapter embryology and anatomy of the testis embryology sexual differentiation is the result of complex genetic and endocrine mechanisms that are closely associated with the development of both the genitourinary system and the adrenal glands. formation of the bipotential gonad and, subsequently, of the ovaries and testes, depends on gene expression in both sex and autosomal chromosomes. testes secrete steroid and peptidic hormones that are necessary for the development of inner and outer male genitalia. these hormonal actions are mediated by specifi c receptors that are transcriptional regulators. alteration of these genetic events leads to sexual dimorphism involving the inner and outer genitalia, and can also hinder the development of other organs. chromosomal gender is established at fecundation with formation of an egg with either a xy (male) or a xx (female) karyotype. each chromosomal constitution initiates a cascade of genetic events leading to the development of female (ovaries) or male (testes) gonads (gonadal gender). hormonal secretions from the ovaries or testes are essential for the development of external genitalia (phenotypic gender). the relationship between the individual and the environment determines the social gender. there are multiple genes involved in the formation of the undifferentiated gonad. the two most important for the proper formation of the bipotential gonad are wt (wilms' tumor gene) and nr a ( fig. - ). wt contains exons located on chromosome p , with two alternative splicing loci in introns and . intron splicing can lead to the inclusion or exclusion of three amino acids (kts: lysine, threonine and serine), giving rise to kts+ or kts− isoforms. an adequate kts+/kts− balance is crucial for normal expression of the gene. translation of this gene may generate up to isoforms with several zinc-fi nger domains. this gene is expressed mainly in the kidneys and gonads, and mediates the transition from stroma to epithelium and morphogenetic differentiation (inhibits those genes that encode proliferative factors and activates those that enhance epithelial differentiation). wt gene anomalies lead to a wide variety of phenotypes; deletions are associated with minimal genitourinary alterations and predisposition to develop wilms' tumor. [ ] [ ] [ ] missense heterozygous mutations give rise to denys-drash syndrome (complete or partial xy gonadal dysgenesis, renal disease of early onset with diffuse mesangial sclerosis, and wilms' tumor (omim ) ). loss of the kts+ isoform accounts for frasier's syndrome ( xy gonadal dysgenesis, renal disease of late onset and absence of wilms' tumor (omim )). nr a gene product is termed sf- (steroidogenic factor ). the gene has seven exons in chromosome q . , and is expressed in the urogenital ridge that forms the gonads and adrenal glands. sf- promotes the expression of the anti-müllerian hormone (amh) and joins elements that regulate upstream the amh gene. sf- is fi rst detected in the developing sertoli cells of sex cords, but later is mainly localized in leydig cells. a heterozygous deletion causes a female phenotype in patients with xy, adrenal failure during the fi rst weeks of extrauterine life, persistence of normal müllerian structures, and gonads consisting of poorly differentiated tubules embedded in abundant connective tissue. these patients do not respond to hcg stimulation. in xx patients, ovarian development is not modifi ed by sf- mutations, and they present with adrenal failure only. lim- is another gene involved in the formation of the bipotential gonad and kidneys. it was recently identifi ed in mice that bore homozygous deletions and presented alterations in both organs. fgf- (fi broblastic growth factor ) has also been related to gonadal development. both gonosomal and autosomal genes mediate the progression of the bipotential gonad toward testicular differentiation. the signal is triggered by the sry gene on the distal portion of the short arm of the y chromosome (sexdetermining region of the y chromosome; yp . ), also called tdf (testis determining factor gene). this gene stimulates the differentiation of sertoli cell precursors and germ cells, is responsible for the production of the anti-müllerian hormone, and regulates other genes of the downstream cascade. these are either activated or inhibited by other genes in such a way that dozens of genes are involved in testicular differentiation. the sry gene contains a single exon that encodes a amino acid protein whose central part ( amino acids) encodes a dna-binding domain termed hmg (high mobil- ity group). immunohistochemical studies have demonstrated expression of the sry gene in the nuclei of both sertoli cells and germ cells, suggesting that this gene acts in somatic cells of genital ridge and germ cells. sry works with the amh promoter gene and also regulates steroidogenic hormone expression. sry mutations produce pure gonadal dysgenesis (swyer's syndrome) or true hermaphroditism; the karyotype of patients with the male phenotype lacking y chromosome is either xx sry+ ( %) or xx sry− ( %), and all have male external genitalia, testes, azoospermia and no müllerian structures. some xx srypatients have sox- duplication. following discovery of the sry gene, the knowledge about genes involved in gonadal formation advanced experimentally with knockout mice and the study of human syndromes. now, there are numerous reported genes (including sox- , sox- , dax- , lhx- , lim- and dmrt- ) that encode associated transcription factors. sox- and sox- (sryy box and or sry hmg-box gene ) are related to autosomal genes. sox- is on chromosome q , q , and is expressed after sry expression in the same cell type (the pre-sertoli cell). this gene is also essential for the development of the cartilaginous extracellular matrix. in the mouse gonad, sox- inhibits testicular development or sertoli cell marker expression, and the gonad acquires an ovarian pattern. sox- haploinsufficiency (loss of a functional allele) causes camptomelic dysplasia (a syndrome characterized by abnormal formation of cartilage) and a xy constitution with female phenotype, , whereas sox- duplication results in xx patients with male phenotype. sox- is other cofactor in amh regulation and acts by protein-protein interaction with sf- . experimental models show that sox- dysfunction results in replacement by sox- expression via a feedback mechanism. dax- (dosage-sensitive sex-reversal, adrenal hyperplasia, x-linked) gene is involved in the development of testes, ovaries, and adrenal glands. dax- , on x chromosome, is expressed during ovarian formation and inhibited by sry during testicular formation. duplication of the dax- region in xp results in xy gonadal dysgenesis. , conversely, dax- mutations decrease gene expression, resulting in absence of adrenal cortex and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism; testicular determination is normal. deletions in chromosomes p and q are associated with the female phenotype in xy individuals. chromosome p deletions are also associated with facial malformations, premature closure of the frontal suture, hydronephrosis, and delayed development. deletions of two genes (dmrt and dmrt ) on chromosome p . may be found in xy females. terminal deletions in chromosome q are associated with genital malformations, multiple phenotypic anomalies, and mental retardation. in the fourth week of gestation, the urogenital ridges appear as two parallel prominences along the posterior abdominal wall. these give rise to two important pairs of structures: the genital ridges arising from the medial prominences, and the mesonephric ridges from the lateral prominences. the genital ridges are the fi rst primordium of the gonad and stand out as a pair of prominences about the midline. in - -day embryos, each genital ridge is lateral to the aorta and medial to the mesonephric duct ( fig. - ) . the celomic epithelium forming the genital ridges grows as cordlike structures to create the primary sex cords. immediately beneath the celomic epithelium there are several mesonephric ductuli and glomeruli ( fig. - ) . the origin of the gonadal blastema results from the junction of two cell types: epithelial cells from the celomic epithelium and mesenchymal cells from the mesonephric region, , although experimental data are confl icting. one of the earliest effects of sry expression is induction of mesonephric cell migration toward the genital ridge. , histochemical studies revealed that an early event is also disruption of the celomic epithelium basal lamina, permitting the migration of these epithelial cells inside the gonad. if chromosomal constitution is xy, these cells give rise to sertoli cells. cells derived from the celomic epithelium are recognized by their pale cytoplasm, large size, embryology and anatomy of the testis the rete testis originates from mesonephric remnants of sex cords that are in continuity with the seminiferous cords. the connection between the testis and the mesonephros becomes progressively thinner ( fig. - ) . the testis has a round transversal section, and remains located between two suspensory ligaments: the cranial and the caudal, the latter of which gives rise to the gubernaculum. the development of the urogenital tract begins at the stage of the undifferentiated gonad, with the appearance of two different pairs of ducts: the wolffi an and the müllerian. the wolffi an ducts are formed in the mesonephros in the third week of gestation, when the cranial region of the segmented intermediate mesoderm gives rise to pairs of tubules (the nephric tubules) that are metamerically arranged. these tubules form the pronephros. on each side of the body, the tubules converge to form a longitudinal duct that opens in the celomic cavity. in the fourth week, the pronephros disappears and is replaced by another tubular system (derived from the intermediate mesoderm, which is not segmented) that forms the mesonephros. the medial ends of the mesonephric tubules do not open to the celomic cavity but are connected to glomeruli at one end and the wolffi an duct at the other. at the end of the second month of gestation, the mesonephros is replaced by the metanephros or defi nitive kidney. however, in the male, the most caudal mesonephric tubules and the wolffi an duct persist. the former give rise to the ductuli efferentes, and the latter forms the ductus epididymidis, the ductus deferens, the seminal vesicle, and the ejaculatory duct. both müllerian ducts originate from a longitudinal invagination of the celomic epithelium in the anterolateral aspect of the genital ridge. the cranial end of each duct is a funnel that opens in the celomic cavity. each duct runs parallel and lateral to the respective wolffi an duct and, as they pass caudally, the müllerian duct crosses over the wolffi an duct and lies medial to it. finally, the two müllerian ducts fuse into the uterovaginal duct. this elongates caudally up to the posterior and ovoid euchromatic nucleus. the cells of mesonephric origin are darker and have a mesenchymal pattern. initially, the genital ridges are devoid of germ cells. in the third week, primordial germ cells appear in the extraembryonal mesoderm lining the posterior wall of the yolk sac near the allantoic evagination. they are ovoid, measuring - µm in diameter, and are easily detected histochemically by a high content of alkaline phosphatase. the nuclei are spherical and possess one or two prominent central nucleoli. the cytoplasm contains mitochondria with tubular cristae, lysosomes, microfi laments, lipid inclusions, numerous ribosomes, and abundant glycogen granules. attracted by chemotactic factors, the primordial germ cells migrate along the mesenchyma of the mesentery and reach the genital ridge by - days. the seminiferous cords arise from the gonadal blastema. , many germ cells reach the seminiferous cords, but some degenerate during migration. the seminiferous cords are delimited from the stroma by a basement membrane and lose their connection to the celomic epithelium, which reduces its depth to one or two cell layers only. the intercordal mesenchyma, composed chiefl y of cells that migrated from the mesonephric stroma, differentiate later into myoid cells, leydig cells, fi broblasts, and blood vessels. up to the sixth week, the gonads appear similar, although the incipient testes have more numerous blood vessels, more abundant stroma, and a higher total dna content, suggesting more rapid growth. sertoli cells arise from somatic sex cord cells. these cells differentiate at the end of the seventh week from the somatic cells in the cords, develop adherent junctions between them and a basal lamina on the other cord surface, and begin to express amh. in the eighth week, leydig cells differentiate from the intercordal gonadal blastema, and immunohistochemical detection of β-hsd is apparently the fi rst step in this process. leydig cell development peaks during the th week, and numbers subsequently decrease progressively. aspect of the urogenital sinus, forming the müllerian tubercle. the wolffi an ducts terminate at either side of this tubercle. the remaining structures of the male genital system are derived from the urogenital sinus. epithelium with endodermal origin forms the prostate, the urethra, and the bulbourethral and periurethral glands. the primitive urogenital sinus derives from the cloaca, a structure that appears at the end of the fi rst month and which consists of a dilation of the terminal portion of the primitive posterior intestine. the cloaca is closed by the cloacal membrane. in the third week, mesenchyma proliferates in the outer aspect of the cloacal membrane to form the cloacal folds and the cloacal eminence. in the sixth week, the cloacal folds enlarge to form the genital (or urethral) tubercle. external to the genital folds, another mesenchymal thickening develops into the genital prominences or genital swellings. in the fi fth week, a septum forms, dividing the cloaca into two compartments. the anterior compartment is the primitive urogenital sinus that is covered by the urogenital membrane. the posterior compartment is the anorectal canal, covered by the anal membrane. the primitive urogenital sinus then divides into two new compartments: superior and inferior. the superior compartment is the vesicourethral canal that later forms the urinary bladder and the urethra. the inferior compartment is the defi nitive urogenital sinus that will develop later according to the gender. the development of the male genital system is directly infl uenced by the action of multiple hormones, including anti-müllerian hormone (amh), dihydrotestosterone (derived from testosterone), and the pituitary hormones folliclestimulating hormone (fsh) and luteinizing hormone (lh) . amh (müllerian inhibitory substance; mis), secreted by the sertoli cells, is a glycoprotein polymer consisting of two identical kda subunits linked by disulfi de bonds. [ ] [ ] [ ] it belongs to the tgf-β family and is synthesized as a amino-acid precursor protein with proteolytic cleavage at amino acids from the c terminal. cleavage is necessary to activate the hormone. amh is encoded by a . kb gene that comprises fi ve exons and is located on the p . region of chromosome . amh is secreted by somatic cells only in both sexes: sertoli cells in males and granulosa cells in females. it is detected by - weeks of gonadal development ( - weeks of gestation), probably as soon as germ cells make contact with pre-sertoli cells, a week before the müllerian ducts lose their responsiveness. , amh is at high concentration in the second trimester, but drops precipitously in the third trimester. levels rise again during the fi rst year after birth, are detectable during infancy and childhood, and fi nally drop defi nitively to undetectable levels at the onset of puberty. the secreted amount of amh is inversely correlated to the degree of sertoli cell maturation. amh regulation is incompletely understood. its expression is controlled by steroidogenic factor (sf- ), also called ad bp, which is an orphan nuclear receptor that acts as a transcriptional regulator of all steroidogenic genes. amh regulates sry expression, which in sertoli cells is detected immediately before amh expression. during puberty, amh is negatively regulated by androgens. amh acts on the testis, genital tract, and extragenital structures. it causes involution of the ipsilateral müllerian duct. action begins at the caudal testicular pole and progresses rapidly. in adults, remnants of the müllerian ducts include the appendix testis at the cranial end and the prostatic utricle (verumontanum) at the caudal end. amh also stimulates development of the tunica albuginea, formed by insertion of mesenchyma between the celomic epithelium and primordial sex cords. this mesenchyma is also the origin of collagenized connective tissue, with deposition of collagen fi bers in several layers that parallel the testicular surface. amh also hinders the entry of spermatogonia in meiosis. the best-known function of amh in the extragonadal system is the maturation of fetal lungs. testosterone is synthesized by the leydig cells. these fi rst appear among the sex cords in the eighth week of gestation, and their number increases to million per pair of testes by the th week, occupying about % of the testicular volume ( fig. - ). the relative number of leydig cells decreases from the th to the th week, owing to rapid enlargement of the testis during this period. however, the absolute number of leydig cells remains constant. from the th week to birth, the number of leydig cells decreases to million per pair of testes. testosterone synthesis begins after the th day of gestation. testosterone secretion is regulated by hcg and lh concentrations. hcg peaks between weeks and and drops markedly thereafter; hcg-dependent testosterone is the most important determinant of genital differentiation. wolffian duct differentiation occurs only as a response to the testosterone secreted by the ipsilateral testis. this secretion stimulates differentiation of the ductus epididymidis, ductus deferens, and seminal vesicle. anomalies in androgen synthesis lead to incomplete masculinization and cryptorchidism. dihydrotestosterone (dht) derives from testosterone by the action of the enzyme α-reductase and is responsible for differentiation of the prostate and the development of the external genitalia, male urethra, penis and scrotum. it induces fusion of the labioscrotal folds in the middle plane to form the scrotum and the middle scrotal raphe. the urethral folds become fused to form the penile urethra. the genital tubercle enlarges to form the glans penis. an ectodermal invagination of the glans tip forms the terminal portion of the urethra. the urogenital sinus gives rise to the urinary bladder, prostatic urethra, and prostate. the initial effects of dht (labioscrotal fusion) occur on approximately day ; the urethral groove is closed on about day ; and the external genitalia are completely developed by week . the actions of these hormones occur at precise moments in development. failure in the amount or timing of secretion or in the responsiveness of target tissues causes most of the malformations found in intersex conditions. fsh and lh both play an important role in the last months of gestation. lh appears in the fetal circulation during the th week and peaks by the th, decreasing progressively and slowly thereafter until birth. lh chiefl y regulates androgen production during the second half of fetal life. fsh is an essential mitogen for sertoli cells that reach the highest mitotic ratio at the end of fetal life ( fig. - ) . , testicular descent testicular descent is the result of hormonal and mechanical actions that are not fully understood. three steps are recognized: nephric displacement, transabdominal descent, and inguinal descent. in nephric displacement, the gonad detaches from the metanephros in the seventh week of gestation. transabdominal descent occurs in the th week and consists of the displacement of the testis towards the deep inguinal ring. inguinal descent occurs between the seventh month and birth. clinically, the term testicular descent often refers only to this last step, in which the testis passes from the abdominal cavity to the scrotum. testicular descent is directed by the gubernaculum testis, a structure that appears in the sixth week as an elongate condensation of mesenchymal cells extending from the genital ridge to the presumptive inguinal region. , at this level in the abdominal wall, the gubernaculum cells persist as a simple mesenchyma while the remaining abdominal wall cells differentiate into muscle. these mesenchymal cells give rise to the inguinal canal. thus, the testis lies on a continuous column of mesenchyma limited by the cranial testicular ligament in the upper pole and by the plica gubernaculi that joins the testis to the future scrotal region in the inferior pole. the periphery of this mesenchymal tissue is invaded by the processus vaginalis, which develops from a peritoneal pouch that grows into this mesenchyma. once the inguinal canal and the plica gubernaculi are formed, development slows. in the seventh month the processus vaginalis undergoes active growth, the cremasteric muscle develops from the mesenchyma outside the processus vaginalis, and the distal end of the gubernaculum enlarges markedly. gubernacular enlargement occurs from the th to the th weeks of gestation period and is caused by hyperplasia, hypertrophy, and the absorption of a great volume of water by the glycosaminoglycans of the matrix. the tissue is reminiscent of wharton's jelly of the umbilical cord. by this time, the testis-epididymis complex is pear-shaped and its largest component is the gubernaculum. the testis and epididymis slide through the inguinal canal behind the gubernaculum. simultaneously, development of the processus vaginalis is completed and the gubernaculum begins to shorten, the epididymis develops further, and the testicular blood vessels and vas deferens lengthen. testicular descent is a complex process integrating several essential factors, including normal function of the hypothalamopituitary-testicular axis, normal development of abdominal musculature, gubernaculum and the processus vaginalis, , and a testis with normal endocrine function. the critical role of normal hormonal function is supported by clinical and experimental observations: destruction of the hypophysis in laboratory animals impedes testicular descent; anencephalic fetuses usually have undescended testes; many cryptorchid patients have transitory neonatal hypogonadotropic hypogonadism; and some undescended testes descend after treatment with human chorionic gonadotropin or gonadotropin-releasing hormone. adequate intra-abdominal pressure is another requisite. , in the prune-belly syndrome, bilateral cryptorchidism is associated with urologic malformations and absence of the abdominal wall musculature. in a variant of this syndrome, termed pseudo-prune-belly syndrome, there is a positive correlation between the development of the abdominal wall musculature and testicular descent. development of the processus vaginalis also plays a critical role in testicular descent. this structure grows within the gubernaculum; if it is partially replaced by fi brous tissue, the testis will follow other directions in its descent and end in an ectopic location. if fi brous tissue completely replaces the gubernaculum, the processus vaginalis and cremasteric muscle fail to develop fully, and descent of the testis is mechanically blocked. the hormonal requirements for testicular descent are not clear. the most important factor in transabdominal descent is the androgen-independent peptide insulin-like factor (insf- ), a member of the relaxin-insulin family that is produced by fetal leydig cells. this peptide stimulates gubernaculum cells to initiate gubernaculum swelling, a necessary step for the initiation of testicular descent. mutations in insl- gene or its receptors lgrb- (leucine-rich repeatcontaining g protein-coupled receptor ) or great (g protein-coupled receptor affecting testicular descent) interfere with transabdominal descent and cause cryptorchidism. , amh and androgens are also involved in the gubernaculum swelling reaction; androgens also facilitate regression of the cranial suspensory ligament. uncertainty exists regarding the mechanism of inguinoscrotal descent and its hormonal control. androgens and the genitofemoral nerve are two factors strongly implicated in these processes. the role of androgens on the gubernaculum is very limited, because this structure has neither muscular cells nor androgen receptors at the time of testicular descent. androgenic effects are explained by the hypothesis of the genitofemoral nerve. androgens appear to act on the nucleus of the genitofemoral nerve in the spinal cord rather than directly on the gubernacula, producing masculinization of the neurons that form this nucleus (these neurons are much more numerous in males than in females) and secreting great amounts of calcitonin gene-related peptide (cgrp). in rats, cgrp causes rapid rhythmic contractions of the gubernaculum and it has been suggested that the gubernaculum might have embryonic cardiac muscle cells. however, it is also possible that cgrp acts on the cremasteric muscle that develops within the gubernaculum and is innervated by the genitofemoral nerve. this hypothesis is supported by the observation of neurogenic atrophy of this muscle in cryptorchid patients. other factors involved in testicular descent are estrogens and epidermal growth factor (egf). during the fi rst trimester of gestation, mothers of cryptorchid infants have free estradiol serum concentrations that are signifi cantly higher than those of controls. experimental studies have shown that estradiol diminishes gubernacular swelling and stabilizes müllerian ducts. it has been proposed that estradiol inhibits the cell proliferation that causes gubernaculum swelling. , egf may facilitate testicular descent throughout the placental-gonadal axis. maternal egf levels increase just before fetal masculinization occurs. the placenta has an elevated concentration of egf receptors, and placental stimulation by egf might stimulate hcg production, which may also stimulate fetal leydig cells to produce androgens; hypothetically, these and/or other factors may determine testicular descent. after birth, the gubernaculum and processus vaginalis regress. the gubernaculum is replaced by fi brous tissue that forms the scrotal ligament. the cephalic segment of the processus vaginalis atrophies after testicular descent. an exaggerated resorption of the processus vaginalis with pulling up of the testis may induce a testis that had descended normally to ascend, resulting in cryptorchidism. from birth to puberty the testis is a dynamic structure, an important consideration in interpreting biopsies from children. all testicular components undergo waves of proliferation and differentiation prior to puberty. three waves of germ cell proliferation occur: during the neonatal period, infancy, and puberty. the last gives rise to complete spermatogenesis. there also are three waves of leydig cell proliferation (fetal, neonatal, and pubertal); the last corresponds to the pubertal wave of germ cell proliferation. the testis at birth the newborn testis has a volume of about . ml and is covered by a thin tunica albuginea from which the intratesticular septa arise. these divide the testis into lobules containing the seminiferous tubules and testicular interstitium ( fig. - ) . the seminiferous tubules measure - µm in diameter, with no apparent lumina, and are fi lled with sertoli cells and germ cells. sertoli cells are the most abundant, with - cells per tubular cross-section ( fig. - ) . they form a pseudostratifi ed cellular layer and have elongated to oval nuclei with darker chromatin than that of mature sertoli cells, as well as one or two small peripheral nucleoli. the cytoplasm contains abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum, several golgi complexes and numerous vimentin fi laments, and expresses inhibin b (fig. - ) . no specialized intercellular junctions appear between sertoli cells, but desmosome-like junctions are present between sertoli cells and germ cells. two types of germ cell are present at birth: gonocytes and spermatogonia. gonocytes are usually located near the center of the tubules, with voluminous nuclei and large central nucleoli. gonocyte migration is probably facilitated by cell adhesion molecules such as p cadherin, which is expressed by sertoli cells of immature testes. spermatogonia are mainly located on the basal lamina, and possess smaller nuclei and less cytoplasm than gonocytes; the nucleoli are peripheral and very small. at birth, most spermatogonia correspond to the adult type a (see discussion on the adult testis below) ( fig. - ) . the testicular interstitium contains fetal leydig cells that resemble adult leydig cells but lack reinke's crystalloids ( fig. - ) . , additionally, mast cells, macrophages, and hematopoietic cell are present. the fi rst wave of testicular development occurs during the neonatal period and involves germ cells and leydig cells. these changes are caused by a signifi cant increase in secretion of both fsh and lh during the third postnatal month. - testicular weight and volume increase. lh stimulates the leydig cells to produce testosterone, , which stimulates the transformation of gonocytes to spermatogonia of the ad type ( fig. - ) . afterwards, some of these in some normal testes at this age, meiotic primary spermatocytes and round spermatids are observed ( fig. - ). this spermatogenic attempt fails and many degenerate germ cells may be present. , the testis continues to produce amh (by sertoli cells) and inhibin b. amh modulates the number and function of leydig cells by regulating differentiation of their mesenchymal precursors and the expression of steroidogenic enzymes. inhibin b plays a role in fsh inactivation during infancy. the cause of this second wave of germ cell proliferation is unknown; there is no elevation of fsh or lh serum concentrations between months and years of life. after the sixth year, there is a slight increase in adrenal androgens, but testicular testosterone levels increase only after the th year. , by the third year, most leydig cells have degenerated: from a peak of about million at birth, only remain by the age of years. at this age, testosterone levels embryology and anatomy of the testis divide to form ap spermatogonia (see discussion on the adult testis below). six months after birth, gonocytes are absent, coinciding with the loss of fetal germ cell markers (placental alkaline phosphatase and c-kit). paraganglia are often observed in epididymides and spermatic cords from newborns. this is not surprising, as paraganglia are the main source of catecholamine before birth ( fig. - ) . the testis in infancy from the sixth month to approximately the second half of the third year of life, the testis is in a resting period; this quiescence is broken by the second wave of germ cell proliferation. the number of ap spermatogonia increases, and b spermatogonia (derived from ap spermatogonia) appear. are similar to those of girls, and most androgens are of adrenal origin. at about years of age, the third and defi nitive wave of spermatogenesis begins, coinciding with a signifi cant elevation of lh. this is followed by additional increases in the level of this hormone between and years of age. lh induces fi broblast-like leydig cell precursors to differentiate into mature leydig cells. by the end of puberty, the population of leydig cells per testis has risen to about million. leydig cells secrete androgens, which, together with the rise in fsh between and years of age, cause sertoli cell maturation, germ cell development, and the appearance of tubular lumina ( fig. - ) , increasing the size of the testes between the ages of . and . years of life. at . years, before the testis reaches adult size, spermatozoa are present, secondary sex characteristics are completely developed, and the epiphyses close. testicular biopsy in children is useful for diagnosing those with ambiguous genitalia, a history of leukemia or lymphoma whose testes underwent a rapid enlargement, or precocious testicular maturation of unknown cause. in other situations, the value of testicular biopsy is less established. for example, the value of biopsy of cryptorchid testes during orchidopexy is controversial. evaluation of biopsies of the prepubertal testis should involve the assessment of several features, including tunica albuginea thickness, mean tubular diameter, and the number of germ cells, sertoli cells, and leydig cells. the most frequent anomalies of the tunica albuginea include thin, poorly collagenized tunica albuginea with abnormal tubules typical of testicular dysgenesis (see the section on male pseudohermaphrodites with müllerian remnants, below); well-collagenized tunica albuginea containing ectopic seminiferous tubules, a frequent fi nding in cryptorchidism; and poorly collagenized tunica albuginea containing ovocytes characteristic of true hermaphroditic ovotestes. the mean tubular diameter is an excellent indicator of the development of the seminiferous epithelium. in the prepubertal testis, tubular diameter depends principally on the sertoli cells and thus indicates whether they are adequately stimulated by fsh. tubular diameter varies throughout, being smallest in the end of the third year of life, slowly enlarging up to years of age, and rapidly enlarging thereafter up to years ( fig. - ) . the most frequent abnormality in the prepubertal testis is a low mean tubular diameter. this is seen in undescended testes as well as in hypogonadotropic or hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. in the latter, the lesion results from anomalous sertoli cell responsiveness to fsh. there are three levels of severity of low tubular diameter: slight tubular hypoplasia (up to % reduction in relation to the diameter normal for the age); marked tubular hypoplasia (from % to % reduction); and severe tubular hypoplasia (more than % reduction). many testicular biopsies show malformed seminiferous tubules that vary from straight or branched tubules up to ring-shaped. these are megatubules formed by either tight spiral or bell-shaped tubules. the presence of these malformations suggests the child will be infertile in adulthood. diffuse increase in mean tubular diameter may be unilateral or bilateral. unilateral increase is found in monorchidism (compensatory testicular hypertrophy) and some testes that are contralateral to cryptorchid testes. most frequently, diffuse enlargement occurs with benign idiopathic macroorchidism or macroorchidism associated with fragile x chromosome, familial testotoxicosis, hypothyroidism, or different forms of precocious puberty. focal increases in mean tubular diameter are usually associated with precocious maturation of the seminiferous epithelium layers, and occur at the periphery of some sertoli cell and leydig cell tumors. germ cells can be counted in two ways: calculation of the number of cells per tubular cross-section, or determination of the tubular fertility index. the former counts the number of germ cells in a light microscopic fi eld and divides this by the number of cross-sectioned tubules in the same fi eld. in the fi rst months of postnatal life the normal testis has two germ cells per cross-sectioned tubule. this number drops to . at the end of the fi rst year and to . at the end of the third year. the number of germ cells increases to . cells at the age of - years, which coincides with the appearance of spermatocytes in some tubules. the tubular fertility index refl ects the percentage of tubular sections containing germ cells. in newborns, % of tubular sections contain at least one germ cell. from birth to years this decreases to %, followed by a progressive increase to % at puberty. if the numbers of gonocytes and spermatogonia are calculated separately, it is possible to determine when the transformation of gonocytes to spermatogonia occurs. the most accurate measure is calculation of total germ cell numbers per testis. this is more diffi cult because it requires morphometric assessment of intratubular volume and careful clinical measurement of the three axes of the testis. congenital decrease of germ cells occurs in numerous conditions, including trisomies , , and , some forms of primary hypogonadism such as klinefelter's syndrome, anencephaly, many cryptorchid testes, and in patients with posterior urethral valves and severe obstruction of the urinary ducts. an increased number of germ cells may be seen at the periphery of germ cell tumor, gonadal-stromal tumor, and paratesticular sarcoma. at the periphery of leydig cell tumor, seminiferous tubular cellular maturation may be complete. three levels of severity of germinal hypoplasia are recognized: slight (tubular fertility index > ), marked (tubular fertility index between and ), and severe (tubular fertility index < ) ( fig. - ). marked and severe germinal hypoplasia is usually associated with marked or severe tubular hypoplasia, in most cases resulting from tubular dysgenesis. it also is useful to determine whether the seminiferous tubules devoid of germ cells are randomly distributed. if they are grouped, they probably belong to the same lobule or group of lobules that never will develop normally. other germ cells observed are multinucleate or hypertrophied spermatogonia and gonocyte-like cells; these latter may require immunohistochemical studies to exclude intratubular germ cell neoplasia. the number of sertoli cells per tubular cross-section varies during childhood as a result of slow proliferation from years to years and the redistribution of sertoli cells as the seminiferous tubules become longer and broader. the pseudostratifi ed cellular pattern characteristic of sertoli cells at birth changes slowly to a columnar pattern at puberty . testicular biopsies may reveal hypoplasia or hyperplasia of sertoli cells; hyperplasia is usually pronounced and a sign of tubular dysgenesis, often detected during the fi rst year of life or the beginning of puberty. some biopsies reveal one or several tubular sections containing sertoli cells with eosinophilic and granular cytoplasm that is positive to cd and α -antitrypsin. these oncocytic changes are the result of lysosomal accumulation. calculation of leydig cell numbers during childhood is diffi cult because at this age the population is scant. semi-thin sections or immunohistochemistry to detect testosteronecontaining cells may be helpful. selection of the appropriate denominator to express the leydig cell population is another problem. the most frequent measures are leydig cell number per tubular section, per unit area, or total number per testis. low numbers of leydig cell are observed in undescended testes, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, some variants of male pseudohermaphroditism caused by a defect in the lh receptor, and in anencephalic fetuses. high numbers of leydig cells occur in congenital leydig cell hyperplasia, triploid fetuses, variants of precocious puberty, several syndromes such as leprechaunism and beckwith-wiederman syndrome, and in most male pseudohermaphroditisms. an apparent increase in loose connective tissue is found in patients with marked tubular hypoplasia; in addition, disordered thick fusiform cell bundles are seen in patients with androgen insensitivity. other alterations include the presence of excessively developed lymphatic vessels (lymphangiectasis), focal hematopoiesis, leukemic infi ltration, and the presence of cells similar to those of the adrenal cortex (tumors of the adrenogenital syndrome). embryology and anatomy of the testis the adult testis is an egg-shaped organ that hangs in the scrotum from the spermatic cord, the retroepididymal surface, and the scrotal ligament. mean weight in caucasian men is . ± . g for the right testis and ± . g for the left. mean testicular diameter is . cm (range, . - . cm) for the longest axis and . cm (range, . - . cm) for the shortest. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] testicular volume varies from to ml. the tunica albuginea and interlobular septa make up the connective tissue framework of the testis. the tunica albuginea consists of three connective tissue layers and an outer surface covered by mesothelium. from the outer to the inner layers, the amount of collagen fi bers decreases while the number of cells increases. the fi bers and cells in the two outermost layers form planes parallel to the testicular surface; cell types include fi broblasts, myofi broblasts, and mast cells. myofi broblasts are more numerous in the posterior portion of the testis. the thickness of the tunica albuginea increases with age from - µm in young men to more than µm in elderly men. it acts as a semipermeable membrane that produces the fl uid of the vaginal cavity. the presence of many contractile cells showing high concentrations of gmp suggests that the tunica albuginea undergoes impulses of contraction and relaxation. these cells might regulate testicular size and favor the transport of spermatozoa into the epididymis. the innermost layer, the tunica vasculosa, consists of loose connective tissue containing blood and lymphatic vessels. the interlobular septa consist of fi brous connective tissue with blood vessels supplying the testicular parenchyma. the interlobular septa divide the testis into approximately pyramidal lobules with their bases at the tunica albuginea and vertices at the mediastinum testis. each lobule contains two to four seminiferous tubules and numerous leydig cells. adult seminiferous tubules are - µm in diameter and - cm long. the total combined length of the seminiferous tubules is about m (range, - m). they are highly convoluted and tightly packed within the lobules. the seminiferous tubules comprise about % of testicular volume. the tubular lining of germ cells and sertoli cells is surrounded by a lamina propria (tunica propria) ( fig. - ). sertoli cells are columnar cells that extend from the basal lamina to the tubular lumen, with - cells per crosssectioned tubule. they are easily identifi ed by their nuclear characteristics. the nucleus is located near the basal lamina and has a triangular shape with indented outline, pale chromatin, and a large central nucleolus ( fig. - ). charcot-böttcher's crystals and lipid droplets often are visible in the cytoplasm. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ultrastructurally, sertoli cells have characteristic nucleoli, plasma membranes, and cytoplasmic components. the nucleolus has a tripartite structure with a round fi brillar center, a compact granular portion, and a three-dimensional net composed of intermingled fi brillar and granular portions. [ ] [ ] [ ] the plasma membrane has two types of intercellular junction which develop at puberty: junctions between adjacent sertoli cells, and junctions between sertoli cells and germ cells. the inter-sertoli cell junctions are tightjunction complexes. the adjacent cytoplasm has numerous actin fi laments and parallel-arranged smooth endoplasmic reticula cisternae. in adjacent plasma membranes there are adhesion molecules, including connexin- . between the plasma membrane and the adjacent endoplasmic reticulum cisterna there are many molecules, including those required for actin fi lament anchorage, vinculin, zonula occludens- , plakoglobin, and radixin. the inter-sertoli cell junctions are the morphologic basis for the blood-testis barrier and divide the seminiferous epithelium into two compartments: the basal compartment (which contains spermatogonia and newly formed primary spermatocytes) and the adluminal compartment (which contains meiotic primary spermatocytes, secondary spermatocytes and spermatids). these junctions permit each compartment to have its own microenvironment for spermatogenic development. [ ] [ ] [ ] the sertoli cell-germ cell junctions persist from the primary spermatocyte stage through spermatozoon release. these junctions are desmosomes and gap-type junctions. the adhesion among sertoli cells and germ cells is mediated by n-cadherin. these junctions have also occasionally been observed between spermatogonia. sertoli cell cytoplasm contains abundant smooth endoplasmic reticulum, elongated mitochondria, annulate lamellae, lysosomes, residual bodies, glycogen granules, microtubules, vimentin fi laments around the nucleus , actin fi laments in both inter-sertoli cell junctions and ectoplasmic specializations that surround germ cells, lipid droplets in amounts that vary with the seminiferous tubular cycle, charcot-böttcher crystals (structures several micrometers long, formed of multiple parallel laminae of protein), and scant rough endoplasmic reticulum and ribosomes. the number of sertoli cells decreases with age, from about million per testis in young men to million in men over years. , there is a positive correlation between the number of sertoli cells and daily sperm production. sertoli cells are the target of fsh , and androgen action ( fig. - ) . in adulthood, they produce testicular fl uid through an active transport mechanism, and synthesize multiple products to ensure the nutrition, proliferation and maturation of germ cells, to stimulate other cells such as leydig cells and peritubular cells, and to contribute to hormonal regulation (inhibin secretion) (table - ). the transport of small molecules (< - da) such as pyruvate, lactate, and probably choline from the sertoli cell, to germ cells occurs through gap junctions. large or small soluble molecules are transported by proteins that are synthesized by the sertoli cell, and include androgen-binding protein, transferrin, ceruloplas-embryology and anatomy of the testis min, sulfated glycoproteins, α -macroglobulin, and γ-glutamyl transpeptidase. activin and inhibin are sertoli cell-secreted proteins that induce the proliferation and differentiation of germ cells. whereas activin stimulates fsh production and, subsequently, spermatogonial proliferation, inhibin b inhibits fsh secretion, and is an important marker of spermatogenesis. other sertoli cell secretions are interleukins, mainly il- , and growth factors such as transforming growth factor-β (tgf-β), insulin growth factors and (igf- and igf- ), and seminiferous growth factor (sgf) or stem cell factor (scf). some of these growth factors, such as tgf-α, tgf-β, and igf- , are involved in the regulation of leydig cell function. other secreted substances include clusterin, the steroid -α- -pregnen- -one ( hp), and prostaglandin d synthase (table - ) . sertoli cells are also involved in migration of differentiating germ cells towards the tubular lumen. this movement leads to a continuous remodeling of the plasma membrane and requires synthesis of several proteases, including urokinase, tissue-type plasminogen activator, cyclic protein , collagenase iv, other metalloproteins, and several antiproteases, such as cystatin c, tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase type , and α -macroglobulin. the sertoli cell also regulates germ cell apoptosis by the production of fas-ligand, which binds to the fas-ligand receptor (apo- , cd ) in germ cell plasma membranes. in addition, sertoli cells possess receptors for several factors such as the nerve growth factor (ngf) produced by spermatocytes and young spermatids, emphasizing the complexity of the sertoli cell-germ cell relationship. sertoli cells also produce some steroid hormones (estradiol and testosterone) and several components of the seminiferous tubule wall, including laminin, type iv collagen, and heparin sulfate-rich proteoglycans. the germ cells of the adult testis include spermatogonia, primary and secondary spermatocytes, and spermatids . spermatogonia there are two types of spermatogonia: a and b. type a are about µm in diameter, rest on the basal lamina, and are surrounded by the cytoplasm of the adjacent sertoli cells. the nuclei of type a spermatogonia are spherical, contain several peripheral nucleoli, and have four different patterns: ad (dark), ap (pale), al (long), and ac (cloudy). , the cytoplasm of these spermatogonia contains a moderate number of ribosomes, small ovoid mitochondria joined by electron-dense bars, and lubarsch's crystals. these are several micrometers long and are composed of numerous - nm parallel fi laments intermingled with ribosome-like granules. ad spermatogonia are thought to be stem cells in spermatogenesis. some of them replicate dna and, during replication, acquire the al pattern. afterwards, they divide to make another ad (maintaining the stem cell reservoir) and an ap spermatogonium. during replication, ap spermatogonia become ac and then divide to form two type b spermatogonia. [ ] [ ] [ ] type b spermatogonia are the most numerous, and their contact with the basal lamina is less extensive than that of ultrastructural studies show coarse chromatin masses in which synaptonemal complexes and sex pairs may be present. the nucleolus acquires a peculiar appearance, with segregation of the fi brillar and granular portions. associated with the nucleolus is the round body that contains proteins but no nucleic acids. in the pachytene spermatocyte, homologous chromosomes are completely paired, and on electron microscopy the chromatin masses appear larger and less numerous than in the zygotene spermatocyte. in the diplotene spermatocyte, paired homologous chromosomes begin to separate and remain joined by the points of interchange (chiasmata); neither synaptonemal complexes nor sex pairs are observed. the diakinesis spermatocyte shows maximal chromosome shortening and the chiasmata begin to resolve by displacement towards the chromosomal ends. the nuclear envelope and the nucleolus disintegrate. the spermatocyte completes the other phases of the fi rst meiotic division (metaphase, anaphase and telophase), forming two secondary spermatocytes; the fi rst meiotic division lasts days. secondary spermatocytes are haploid cells, smaller than primary spermatocytes, and show coarse chromatin granules and abundant rough endoplasmic reticulum cisternae. these cells rapidly undergo the second meiotic division and within hours give rise to two spermatids. the newly formed spermatids differ from secondary spermatocytes, having smaller nuclei with homogeneously distributed chromatin. spermiogenesis the transformation of spermatids into spermatozoa is called spermiogenesis. during this process pronounced changes occur in the nucleus and cytoplasm. the nucleus becomes progressively darker and elongated. the cytoplasm develops the acrosome and fl agellum, the mitochondria cluster around the fi rst portion of the spermatozoon tail, and the remaining cytoplasm is phagocytosed by sertoli cells. , by electron microscopy, there are four tran-sient stages of spermatid development: golgi, cap, acrosome, and maturation. these correspond to those defi ned by light microscopy of nuclear morphology: sa, sb, sb , sb , sc, sd and sd . , these phases may be grouped as early (or round) spermatids that comprise the stages with round nuclei (sa and sb), and as late (or elongated) spermatids that comprise the stages with elongated nuclei (sc and sd). mature spermatids (sd ) are the spermatozoa that are released into the tubular lumen (spermiation). all the germ cells derived from the same stem cell remain interconnected by cytoplasmic bridges that ensure synchronous maturation during the spermatogenic process. cycle of the seminiferous epithelium at fi rst glance, the arrangement of the germ cells in the seminiferous tubules appears disorderly. however, closer study reveals that these cells are grouped into six successive associations, designated i-vi. in contrast to other mammals, in humans the volume occupied by each association is small, so that several associations may be observed in the same tubular cross-section. stereological studies have shown that the successive associations are organized helically along the length of the seminiferous tubule. , [ ] [ ] [ ] each association persists for a specifi c number of days (i, . days; ii, . days; iii, day; iv, . days; v, days; and vi, . days), and each successively transforms into the following one. finally, at the end of association vi, the cycle is repeated; the spermatogenic process requires . cycles. because each cycle lasts . days, the transformation of spermatogonium into spermatozoon takes days (fig. - ) . the succession of different associations probably depends on cyclic sertoli cell activity. cyclic changes in the mitochondria, rough endoplasmic reticulum, golgi complex, lysosomes, and lipid droplets have been reported. [ ] [ ] [ ] this cyclic activity is probably regulated by germ cell signals. the yield of human spermatogenesis is lower than that of embryology and anatomy of the testis the six different germ cell associations of the seminiferous tubules and the sequence of spermatogenesis. completion of spermatogenesis requires more than four cycles and lasts for approximately days. each association is indicated by roman numerals with its corresponding duration. ad: dark type of a spermatogonia; ap: pale type of a spermatogonia; b: b spermatogonia; i: interphase primary spermatocyte; l: leptotene primary spermatocyte; z: zygotene primary spermatocyte; p: pachytene primary spermatocyte; ii: secondary spermatocyte (only in stage vi). s a , s b , s b , s c , s d , and s d represent the progressive stages of spermatid differentiation into spermatozoa. most mammalian species, including primates, with maximal cell degeneration occurring at the end of meiosis. the seminiferous tubule is surrounded by a µm thick lamina propria (tunica propria) consisting of a basement membrane, myofi broblasts, fi broblasts, collagen and elastic fi bers, and extracellular matrix. , the basement membrane measures - nm in thickness, and displays three layers: lamina lucida (beneath the sertoli cells), lamina densa (basal lamina), and lamina reticularis (a discontinuous layer containing fi bers). the basal lamina contains laminin, type iv collagen, entactin (nidogen), and heparan sulfate. external to the basal lamina there are fi ve to seven layers of fl attened, elongated peritubular cells that have important secretory functions (table - ) . the cells forming the three to fi ve innermost layers are myofi broblasts containing numerous actin, myosin, and desmin fi laments. these cells play an important role in the rhythmic tubular contractions that propel spermatozoa toward the rete testis. , the two outermost cell layers consist of fi broblasts without desmin fi laments, and with less actin and myosin than the myofi broblasts. collagen fi bers are present among the peritubular cells and are abundant between the basal lamina and the peritubular cells. elastic fi bers are located mainly at the periphery of peritubular cells. because elastic fi bers appear at puberty, their absence in adults is a sign of tubular immaturity or dysgenesis. the extracellular matrix contains proteoglycans and fi bronectin. in addition, the tubular wall contains capillaries and leydig cells. these are very similar to the interstitial leydig cells and are named peritubular leydig cells. the most important functions of myofi broblasts are contraction of seminiferous tubules and control of sertoli cells. myofi broblasts have α and β adrenergic and muscarinic receptors. contractility depends on several factors produced in the testis (endothelin- , vasopressin, oxytocin, and tgf-β) and prostaglandins. relaxation can be facilitated by the no/cgmp system because myofi broblasts are also able to synthesize nitric oxide. sertoli cell control by myofibroblasts is facilitated by the production of p-mod-s, which activates aromatase activity, inhibin production, and the secretion of androgen-binding protein and transferrin. the interstitium between the seminiferous tubules contain leydig cells, macrophages, neuron-like cells, mast cells, blood vessels, lymphatic vessels, and nerves, accounting for - % of testicular volume. the most numerous connective tissue cells are fi broblasts and myofi broblasts. the former are also known as interstitial dendritic cells or cd -positive stromal cells. they display a network around the seminiferous tubules and leydig cells, and also form the outermost layers of the tubular wall. this distribution begins in fetal life. some of these cells are in contact with typical macrophages, so it has been suggested that they might be involved in immune surveillance. myofibroblasts, in addition to their presence in the inner layer of the tubular wall, are numerous in the tunica albuginea. leydig cells are distributed single or in clusters, and form about . % of testicular volume. most are in the testicular interstitium, although they may also be found in the tubular tunica propria, mediastinum testis, tunica albuginea, epididymis, and spermatic cord. extratesticular leydig cells are usually seen within or near nerve trunks. [ ] [ ] [ ] leydig cells have spherical eccentric nuclei with one or two eccentric nucleoli and prominent nuclear lamina. the cytoplasm is abundant, eosinophilic, and contains lipid droplets and lipofuscin granules (residual bodies) ( fig. - ). reinke's crystalloids are found only in the leydig cells of adults and, although it was believed that these crystals were present exclusively in humans, they have also been observed in the wild bush rat. reinke's crystalloids are up to µm long and - µm wide, consisting of a complicated meshwork of nm fi laments with a trigonal lattice arrangement. depending on the plane of section, three basic aspects of this lattice can be discerned. frequently, the crystalloids display pale lines, con- sidered to be potential planes of cleavage. the fi laments are grouped into nm-wide hexagons visible on cross-section. in some areas there are aggregates of electron-dense, rodshaped structures. some leydig cells contain other types of paracrystalline inclusion, the most common of which consists of multiple parallel-folded laminae. leydig cells contain abundant well-developed smooth endoplasmic reticulum, pleomorphic mitochondria with tubular cristae, lysosomes, and peroxisomes. leydig cells react with antibodies to s protein and neuron-specifi c enolase. leydig cells immunoreact to lh receptors, -β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase ( -β-Ηsd), relaxin-like factor, inhibin, and ghrelin. relaxin-like factor, also known as insulin-like factor (insf- ), is a peptide that is involved in testicular descent and can be found in serum. its concentration is a maker of the leydig cell functional status. as occurs with testosterone, insf- production is associated with that of lh. leydig cells immunoreact with calretinin, a kda calcium-binding protein that has a buffering effect to avoid abnormal increases in intracellular calcium. calretinin is a more sensitive marker than inhibin, albeit less specifi c ( fig. - ) . leydig cells also contain vegf and its two receptors (flt- and kdr), and endothelin and its two receptors (α and β). vegf and endothelin are involved in paracrine and autocrine control of leydig cells. leydig cells near seminiferous tubules show immunoreactivity for glial fi brillar acid protein (gfap) (fig. - ). the demonstration of several substances that are characteristic of nerve cells, such as substance p, neurofi lament triplet proteins (nf-l, nf-m and nf-h), and the ultrastructural observation of microtubules, intermediate fi laments, and clear and dense core vesicles, qualifi es leydig cells for inclusion within the family of the diffuse endocrine system or paraneurons. , leydig cells of the adult testis originate from fi broblastic precursor cells at puberty under lh stimulation. experimental studies in rats have shown that adult leydig cells differentiate from peritubular cells (myofi broblasts and blood capillary pericytes). precursor leydig cells are reminiscent of neural stem cells because they express nestin and eventually acquire properties of neurons and glial cells. the human testis contains about million leydig cells. this number decreases with age: the testes of -year-old men contain about half as many as those of -year-old men. [ ] [ ] mitotic fi gures are seen occasionally in normal leydig cells. leydig cells are the target cell of lh, in response to which they produce testosterone and other androgens necessary for the maintenance of spermatogenesis and many structures of the male genital tract, as well as other tissues such as bone, muscle, and skin. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] testosterone acts on the sertoli cells, either directly or via the p-mod-s factor secreted by the myofi broblasts in the tunica propria. [ ] [ ] [ ] leydig cells also secrete numerous non-steroidal factors, including oxytocin, which acts on myofi broblasts and stimulates seminiferous tubule contraction; β endorphin, which inhibits sertoli cell proliferation and function; egf, which regulates spermatogenesis; and other factors with less known actions, such as angiotensin, pro-opiomelanocortin, and α-melanotropic stimulating hormone (table - ) . together with sertoli cells, peritubular cells, and endothelial cells, leydig cells produce nitric oxide, which has a relaxing effect on smooth muscle. leydig cells are associated with cholinergic and adrenergic nerve fi bers. varicosities containing synaptic vesicles in the proximity of leydig cells and nerve endings in direct contact with leydig cells have been reported, although the functional signifi cance of this innervation is unknown. , macrophages, neuron-like cells, and mast cells macrophages are a normal component of the testis - and can be classifi ed into two groups: resident and activated. resident macrophages are an essential cell type of the testicular interstitium (about % of interstitial cells in mouse testis). in young adult men, there is one macrophage per - leydig cells, and this number increases with age. macrophages are closely related to leydig cells and play a role in proliferation and differentiation of leydig cell fi broblastic precursors. interaction between macrophages and leydig cells is an example of paracrine function. in the rat, testicular macrophages produce -hydroxycholesterol ( -hc) and express -hydroxylase, which transforms cholesterol into -hc. , activated macrophages produce interleukins and (il- and il- ), tumor necrotizing factor-α (tnf-α), and transforming growth factor-α (tgf-α). immunohistochemical techniques have demonstrated neuron-like cells in the testicular interstitium. these cells are an important source of intratesticular cate-cholamines, which appear to be increased in some disorders such as the sertoli cell-only syndrome, and hypospermatogenesis. mast cells are a normal component of the testicular interstitium, where they are often found near blood vessels. their number increases in several diseases. the testis is supplied by the testicular artery, which arises from the abdominal aorta. in the spermatic cord, the testicular artery gives rise to two or three branches that obliquely penetrate the tunica albuginea testis and to multiple branches that run along the intralobular septa of the testis. these centripetal arteries lead to the mediastinum testis. along their course, the centripetal arteries give off branches that abruptly reverse direction; these are called centrifugal arteries. at puberty, both the centripetal and the centrifugal arteries develop a pronounced spiral architecture. , the centrifugal arteries develop additional branches in the testicular interstitium, giving rise to arterioles and capillaries that form intertubular plexuses, some of which are apposed to the tunica propria. , capillaries are of the continuous type, except for the seminiferous tubule capillaries, which are partially fenestrated, and their endothelial cells are similar to those of brain capillaries, with scant pinocytosis, intercellular junctions of the fascia adherens type, and low permeability. the mediastinum testis is poorly vascularized. the inner two-thirds of the testicular parenchyma is drained by veins that follow the interlobular septa to the mediastinum testis (centripetal veins). the outer third is drained by veins that lead to the tunica albuginea (centrifugal veins). both centripetal and centrifugal veins join to form the pampiniform plexus, which drains the testis via the spermatic cord. lymphatic vessels are poorly developed in the testis and limited to the tunica vasculosa and interlobular septa, where they accompany arterioles and venules. prelymphatic vessels have been reported in the interstitium and probably drain interstitial fl uid into the true interlobular lymphatic vessels. efferent innervation of the testis is mainly supplied by neurons of the pelvic ganglia, where contralateral and bilateral neural connections occur. postganglionic nerve fi bers enter the testis via the pelvic nerves, extend throughout the tunica vasculosa, and follow the interlobular septa to reach the interstitium. these nerve fi bers end in the wall of arterioles, the wall of seminiferous tubules, and the leydig cells. adrenergic nerve fi bers innervate the tunica albuginea and the blood vessels of the tunica vasculosa. peptidergic nerve endings are uncommon. afferent nerve endings form corpuscles similar to those of meissner and pacini in the tunica albuginea. the rete testis is a network of channels and cavities that connects the seminiferous tubules with the ductuli efferentes. differences in the confi guration and size of channels and cavities distinguish three portions of the rete testis: septal (intralobular), composed of the tubuli recti; mediastinal, composed of a network of interconnected channels; and extratesticular, composed of dilated cavities (up to mm in diameter) termed the bullae retis. the tubuli recti are short tubules ( . - mm long) that connect the seminiferous tubules to the mediastinal rete, although some seminiferous tubules may connect directly to the mediastinal rete, principally those in the central region of the testis. the tubuli recti are lined by cuboidal epithelium. there are approximately tubuli recti (or their analogous seminiferous tubule segments). the tubuli recti in the cranial, central, and anterior testis are perpendicular to the mediastinal rete testis channel into which they drain, and those in the caudal testicular region are parallel to their respective channels. the transitional segments between the seminiferous tubules and the tubuli recti are formed by modifi ed sertoli cells. the epithelium of the mediastinal rete testis consists of fl attened cells interspersed with small areas of columnar cells. both cell types have single centrally located cilia and numerous microvilli on their free surfaces, and contain keratin and vimentin fi laments. there are interdigitations between adjacent cells. the epithelium rests on a basal lamina, surrounded by a layer of myofi broblasts and a more peripheral layer of fi broblasts and collagen and elastic fi bers. the rete channels and cavities are traversed by the chordae rete, columns from µm to µm long and from µm to µm wide, arranged obliquely to the long axis of the cavity. the chordae consist of fi brous connective tissue with fi broblasts and are covered by fl attened epithelium; the widest contain capillaries. the rete testis probably has the following functions: damping differences in pressure between the seminiferous tubules and ductuli efferentes; reabsorption of protein and potassium from tubular fl uid; and, occasionally, phagocytosis of spermatozoa. anorchidism refers to the absence of one (monorchidism) or both testes (testicular regression syndrome). monorchidism is estimated to occur in about . % of cryptorchid testes, % of the testes that are impalpable in physical examination, or in males. bilateral anorchidism occurs in approximately in males. monorchidism the hormonal pattern in prepubertal patients with monorchidism does not differ from that of normal children, whereas children lacking both testes have elevated levels of gonadotropins and fail to respond to stimulation with hcg. [ ] [ ] [ ] although the hcg stimulation test is often positive in children with bilateral cryptorchidism, it is negative in some children with bilateral intra-abdominal cryptorchidism and this further complicates the differential diagnosis between anorchidism and cryptorchidism. for unknown reasons, the left testis is more frequently absent ( . %) than the right. in such cases the contralateral scrotal testis undergoes compensatory hypertrophy and its volume increases to more than ml. compensatory hypertrophy has also been reported in association with abdominal cryptorchid testis. the absence of testicular parenchyma should be confi rmed before diagnosing monorchidism. at exploration, the fi nding of a vas deferens ending near or in a hypoplastic epididymis is not suffi cient for the diagnosis of monorchidism. the only acceptable fi nding is blind-ending spermatic vessels. if inguinoscrotal exploration fails to identify these vessels, intra-abdominal exploration is required to insure against an undescended testis and avoid the development of a testicular tumor. all remnants found at exploration should be removed. testicular regression syndrome testicular regression syndrome refers to a variety of conditions, including agonadism, anorchidism, testicular agenesis, rudimentary testes, hypoplastic testes, and embryonal testicular dysgenesis. each of these syndromes shares a complete absence or involution of both testes but differ in the time of testicular disappearance during development. the most frequently observed are swyer's syndrome (see discussion on gonadal dysgenesis below), true agonadism, rudimentary testes, bilateral anorchidism, vanishing testes syndrome, and leydig cell-only syndrome (table - ) . true agonadism ( xy gonadal agenesis syndrome) patients with true agonadism have ambiguous external genitalia, fusion of the labia, and a short vagina, refl ecting very early testicular regression (between the eighth and th weeks of embryonal development). the internal genitalia consist of a uterus and two uterine tubes, although both müllerian and wolffi an derivatives may be absent. no gonads (not even in an ectopic location) are found. patients are phenotypically girls, and the male gender may be discovered only at the time of referral for other symptoms. both sporadic and familial cases with associated extragenital anomalies have been reported. in some cases the cause is a heterozygous mutation of wt . in most familial cases inheritance is either recessive autonomic or x-linked, and the cause seems to be either unknown anomalies in the wt gene or known anomalies in other genes involved in development. a sry molecular defect has never been observed. agonadism may be associ-ated with several syndromes, including those of pagod (hypoplasia of lungs and pulmonary artery, agonadism, omphalocele/diaphragmatic defect, dextrocardia), kennerknecht, seckel, and charge. rudimentary testes syndrome patients with rudimentary testes have a normal male phenotype. müllerian remnants are absent and wolffi an derivatives usually are found. the testes are cryptorchid and very small, less than . cm long. seminiferous tubules are few ( fig. - ). the testicular regression occurs between the th and th weeks of gestation. this syndrome has been reported in several members of the same family, suggesting genetic transmission, but this is not a constant feature. , congenital bilateral anorchidism congenital bilateral anorchidism occurs in in newborns. the patients have male external genitalia, but the internal genitalia consist only of normal wolffi an derivatives without müllerian derivatives, suggesting that the testes were present and functionally active up to approximately the th week of gestation. patients have male external genitalia with hypoplasia of both the scrotum and penis. the karyotype is the normal male. the disorder may be associated with other malformations, such as anal atresia, rectourethral and rectovaginal fi stula, and urinary exstrophy. patients diagnosed at adulthood have male phenotype, androgen insuffi ciency symptoms, and elevated levels of both fsh and lh. , familial incidence in some cases suggests sry gene mutation, but this has not been confi rmed. , vanishing testes syndrome this term refers to the disappearance of one or both testes between the last months of intrauterine life and the beginning of puberty. [ ] [ ] [ ] as testicular regression occurs after the seventh month, exploration fi nds the vas deferens in the inguinal canal or high in the scrotum; it may be accompanied by the epididymis and, less frequently, by testicular remnants consisting of small groups of seminiferous tubules ( fig. - ). patients lacking both testes develop hypergonadotropic hypogonadism after puberty, with gynecomastia, infantile phallus, hypoplastic scrotum, and impalpable prostate. the condition is usually secondary to a perinatal scrotal torsion, although rarely there is a genetic cause. , leydig cell-only syndrome patients with leydig cell-only syndrome have agonadism without eunuchoidism and a normal male phenotype, although meticulous surgical exploration fails to fi nd testicular remnants. study of serial sections from the spermatic cord reveals clusters of leydig cells. detection of testosterone in spermatic vein blood indicates that these ectopic leydig cells are functionally active and synthesize testosterone in amounts suffi cient to induce a rudimentary male phenotype but insuffi cient to support the complete development of secondary sex characteristics. the morphology of spermatic cord remnants is similar in monorchidism and testicular regression syndrome occurring after the th week of gestation. [ ] [ ] [ ] grossly, a small, fi rm mass is found at the end of the cord ( fig. - ). histologic examination reveals vas deferens, epididymis, or small groups of seminiferous tubules in - % of cases. vas deferens is the most constant fi nding ( %), followed by epididymis ( %) and seminiferous tubules ( - %). the spermatic vessels are abnormally small in % of cases. , areas of dystrophic calcifi cation, hemosiderin deposition, and giant cell reaction may be found within the mass in place of the testis. other fi ndings include arterial and venous vessels ( %), fat ( %), and nerves that may resemble traumatic neuroma ( %). the minimal requirement to diagnose vanishing testis is to fi nd either a vascularized fi brous nodule with calcifi cation or hemosiderin, or a fi brous nodule with cord elements. it has been proposed that removal of the testicular nubbin in this syndrome may not be required because the percentage of seminiferous tubules is very low and the presence of germ cells low, and thus the probability of a tumor is minimal. , the general recommendation is scrotal exploration as a fi rst step, reserving laparoscopy for cases in which either the atrophic remnant cannot be identifi ed during scrotal exploration or has a patent vaginal process. the histologic fi ndings suggest that most cases of unilateral and bilateral anorchidism are produced during the fetal period after the testis has inhibited the müllerian ducts and induced differentiation of wolffi an duct derivatives. two hypotheses account for the disappearance of the testes: primary anomaly of the gonad; and atrophy secondary to a vascular lesion such as thrombosis or intrauterine torsion. the presence of macrophages with hemosiderin and dystrophic calcifi cation supports the latter. absence of one testis may be associated with malformations of the urogenital system, such as absence of the kidney, cystic seminal vesicles, and ipsilateral renal dysgenesis. , this clinical term refers to diverse conditions (klinefelter's syndrome, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, rudimentary testes syndrome, bilateral cryptorchidism, etc.) that share small testicular size. , a peculiar case is presented by some patients with kenny-caffey syndrome: short stature, cortical thickening and medullary stenosis of long bones, delayed closure of anterior fontanelles, hypoparathyroidism, and several ocular alterations. fsh serum levels are elevated, but only in some cases, whereas lh and testosterone are normal. adult testes are small, with seminiferous tubules showing complete but diminished spermatogenesis. leydig are hyperplastic. unlike patients with the rudimentary testes syndrome, microorchidism patients have a normal-sized penis and no epididymal or prostatic atrophy. polyorchidism is a rare condition, with approximately reported cases. , it was fi rst described in a postmortem study in , and the fi rst case treated surgically and confi rmed histologically was reported in . although three testes are the most common, four testes have been reported in six patients, [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and fi ve in one case but without histologic confi rmation. age of diagnosis varies from newborn to years, with a mean of years. testicular duplication is usually an incidental fi nding during surgery for inguinal hernia, cryptorchidism, or testicular torsion, but has also been detected in patients with infertility or unexplained fertility after bilateral vasectomy. the extra testis is often intrascrotal ( %) and less frequently inguinal ( %), abdominal, or retroperitoneal ( %). , duplication is three times more frequent on the left than on the right. high-resolution ultrasound is the appropriate diagnostic technique. , testicular maldescent ( %), inguinal hernia ( %), hydrocele, varicocele, and contralateral cryptorchidism are the most frequently associated anomalies. [ ] [ ] [ ] testicular torsion ( %) and testicular cancer ( . %) are occasional complications. although the extra testis may be histologically normal, - usually it is not, , and displays lesions such as sertoli cell-only tubules, hypospermatogenesis, or maturation arrest. the lack of spermatogenesis has been attributed to the anomalous location of the testis and the absence of communication between the testis and excretory ducts. the embryologic origin of polyorchidism remains uncertain, and the following have been proposed to account for the variety of fi ndings in different cases ( fig. - the clinical differential diagnosis of polyorchidism includes most of pathologic conditions that enlarge the scrotum and spermatic cords: spermatocele, hydrocele, cysts and tumors of the spermatic cord, crossed testicular ectopia, adrenal cortical ectopia, and splenogonadal fusion. orchidectomy used to be the treatment of choice for all atrophic and non-scrotal testes. today, most surgeons undertake fi xation of the testis to the scrotal pouch and the re-creation of a 'simple testis' if it is permitted by the anatomical condition and malignancy has been precluded. this treatment may allow spermatogenesis as well as additional psychologic and cosmetic benefi ts. intrascrotal rhabdomyosarcoma, testicular teratoma, and seminoma have been reported in patients with polyorchidism. , macro-orchidism may be uni-or bilateral and be associated with chromosomal anomalies or endocrine alterations. an increase in the testicular parenchyma occurs in several conditions, including congenital leydig cell hyperplasia, compensatory hypertrophy, benign idiopathic macroorchidism, bilateral megalotestes with low gonadotropins, fragile x chromosome, and the testicular hypertrophy observed in juvenile hypothyroidism. congenital leydig cell hyperplasia is uncommon and may be diffuse or nodular. the diagnosis of diffuse leydig cell hyperplasia requires quantifi cation of leydig cells by morphometry, using normal newborn testes as controls ( fig. - ). nodular leydig cell hyperplasia is characterized by the presence of non-encapsulated leydig cell nodules in the mediastinum testis, adjacent testicular parenchyma and connective tissue among the ductuli efferentes ( fig. - ) . the differential diagnosis of nodular leydig cell hyperplasia includes intratesticular adrenal rests and bilateral leydig cell tumor. except for patients with adrenogenital syndrome, intratesticular adrenal rests are rare. these rests are encapsulated, with the exception of the adrenogenital tumors, and consist of radially arranged cells with vesicular nuclei and small nucleoli displacing the rete testis or seminiferous tubules. leydig cell tumors may be bilateral, poorly circumscribed, and surrounded by testicular parenchyma, features making it diffi cult to distinguish from leydig cell hyper-plasia. however, leydig cell tumors are rarely congenital, whereas those occurring at infancy often induce precocious maturation of the adjacent seminiferous tubules and early macrogenitosomia. leydig cell hyperplasia is caused by large quantities of hcg entering the fetal circulation. diabetic mothers, particularly those with hypertension, may develop hyperplacentosis; the resulting edema in the placental villi alters the vascular permeability and allows the passage of hcg to the fetus. congenital leydig cell hyperplasia decreases rapidly during the fi rst months of postnatal life, after maternal human chorionic gonadotropin is gone. combined diffuse and nodular leydig cell hyperplasia occurs in several malformative syndromes, such as beckwith-wiederman, leprechaunism, triploid fetuses, fetuses with rh isoimmunization, and in several complications of pregnancy. compensatory hypertrophy has been observed in monorchidism, cryptorchidism ( fig. - ) , varicocele, and after testicular injury. hypertrophy persists and may increase during childhood and puberty, but ceases thereafter; the hypertrophied testis then becomes normal or remains slightly enlarged. , the degree of hypertrophy is determined by three factors: the volume of the remaining testicular parenchyma, the age at which the injury occurred, and the functional ability of the descended testis. compensatory hypertrophy results from an alteration in the hypophyseal hormonal feedback mechanism, followed by an increase in secretion of fsh, evidence that the contralateral testis is normal. in monorchidism, the testis is initially normal. when a % reduction of testicular mass occurs (probably before birth), the endocrine feedback changes and the resulting secretion of fsh (before or immediately after birth) causes accelerated growth of the contralateral testis. in cryptorchidism, the reduction in testicular mass is less severe than in monorchidism, and the scrotal testis may also be abnormal, inducing a lesser compensatory hypertrophy. compen- satory hypertrophy develops between birth and years of age, and the testis may reach a volume twice normal when the other testis is absent. some prepubertal and pubertal patients have pronounced unilateral or bilateral [ ] [ ] [ ] testicular hypertrophy in the absence of other pathologic fi ndings. this probably results from hormonal receptivity in the testicular parenchyma. morphometric studies have shown that the testicular enlargement is chiefl y due to an increase in the length of the seminiferous tubules, although increases in tubular diameter and sertoli cell numbers have also been observed. elevated fsh serum levels, reported in some cases, or hyperactive fsh receptors might be the cause of the excessive sertoli cell proliferation and the lengthening and thickening of seminiferous tubules. [ ] [ ] [ ] in addition, leydig cell hyperplasia and defi cient spermatogenesis are frequent fi ndings in adult life. as the development of the two testes may be asynchronous during puberty, some unilateral macroorchidisms may represent cases in which these differences are unusually exaggerated. about % of adults with fertility problems have enlarged testes, with volumes over ml, and low levels of fsh, lh, testosterone, prolactin, and estradiol. despite the important hormonal changes, sperm concentrations and total numbers of spermatozoa are higher than normal. low fsh levels may be attributable to increased inhibin secretion because the number of sertoli cells is elevated in these testes, but no explanation for the reduction in the other hormone levels has been found. fragile x chromosome is the best-known form of inherited mental retardation, with an incidence of in males and in females. in addition to facial dysmorphia (large ears, prognathism, high forehead, and arched palate), macroorchidism (martin-bell syndrome) is often an associated fi nding. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the impaired gene (fmr gene) is mapped to xq , which is genetically fragile. the gene alteration is due to a lengthening of a trinucleotide cgg repeat that results in fmr gene silencing. if the cgg sequence is repeated fewer than times, the disorder is considered a premutation and males show no symptoms; if the number of repetitions exceeds , mutation is complete and all show the disorder. [ ] [ ] [ ] in men with this syndrome, the average testicular volume is more than ml (four times greater than normal). the penis also is larger than normal, and both anomalies are apparent in infancy. the scrotum is also enlarged and prematurely pigmented. this precocious genital development is diffi cult to explain because the hypothalamopituitary axis is normal, but it may be caused by increased sensitivity to stimulation by fsh. testicular biopsies from adults may be normal or show interstitial edema and hypospermatogenesis ( fig. - ) . usually, there is normal testicular parenchyma with focal reduced spermatogenesis and sertoli cell hyperplasia ( fig. - ) or tubules containing only immature sertoli cells. morphometry indicates that testicular enlargement is chiefl y the result of lengthening of seminiferous tubules. the low number of spermatids is attributed to atrophy caused by compression of the seminiferous epithelium by marked increase in intratubular fl uid. meiotic anomalies have been excluded. the fragile x syndrome is second in frequency only to down's syndrome as a cause of mental retardation. [ ] [ ] [ ] however, this chromosomal anomaly is not always associated with mental retardation or macroorchidism, and there are men with fragile x syndrome who are otherwise normal. the terms 'fragile x-negative martin-bell syndrome' or 'mental retardation-macro-orchidism' refer to x-linked (mrmo) or xlmr+mo patients who have the martin-bell syndrome phenotype but do not present the fragile x site. the gene responsible for this disorder is mapped to xq -q . starts. , , the etiopathogenesis has been explained by three hypotheses: an increase in gonadotropin secretion caused by trh stimulation of gonadotropic cells; , a direct tsh effect on the testis due to the structural similarity between tsh receptors and fsh receptors present in the testis; and a lack of steroid hormones that are required for testicular maturation (in their absence, sertoli cell proliferation is excessive, giving rise to testicular enlargement). [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] precocious puberty precocious puberty is defi ned by onset of secondary sex characteristics at a chronologic age that is below the mean middle age for the population. for practical purposes, this is considered to be before years of age in girls and years in boys. the incidence is estimated at between in and in , with a female:male ratio higher than : . in boys, the fi rst symptom is rapid testicular enlargement followed by growth of pubic and axillary hair, enlargement of the penis, and acceleration of skeletal growth. according to hypothalamopituitary-gonadal axis function, precocious puberty can be classifi ed into three groups: central or gonadotropin-dependent, which results from the activation of this axis; peripheral or gonadotropinindependent, mediated by sex steroid hormones secreted by the testis or adrenal glands; and a mixed group that fi rst appears as peripheral precocious puberty and thereafter, because of the secondary response of the hypothalamus, becomes gonadotropin dependent. other possible causes of precocious puberty are hypoprolactinemia, pituitary tumor, and alteration of testicular steroid metabolism. central precocious puberty (cpp) central precocious puberty, also known as true precocious puberty, is isosexual. it is the most common form of precocious puberty in girls and accounts for more than % of cases in boys. the age of presentation is between and years. the cause is only known in % of cases; most are related to lesions in the central nervous system, whereas the others are usually idiopathic. lesions in the central nervous system that causes cpp share alterations of specifi c areas, including the posterior hypothalamus (eminencia media and tuber cinereum), mammillary bodies, the bottom of the third ventricle, or the pineal gland. testicular hypertrophy appears associated with fsh-secreting pituitary adenoma, hyperprolactinemia, hypoprolactinemia, and hypothyroidism. , the most frequent association of testicular hypertrophy is with hypothyroidism. children with hypothyroidism often show testicular enlargement without virilization. about % have macroorchidism, most have elevated fsh levels, and half have increased lh levels. , testosterone levels are normal during infancy. the response of fsh and lh to gnrh is altered and no pulsatile lh release occurs ( fig. - ). testicular biopsies before puberty show an accelerated development of the testis with pubertal maturation of seminiferous tubules but not leydig cells. testicular biopsies in untreated adults show tubular and interstitial hyalinization with few leydig cells. , testicular size in this type of macroorchidism diminishes as soon as the substitutive therapy • hereditary diseases as neurofi bromatosis and tuberous sclerosis. children with type i neurofi bromatosis often have also optic pathway tumors. • cerebral irradiation, as occurs in hypothalamopituitary selective irradiation, prophylactic irradiation in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia, and irradiation of cerebral tumor that is far from the hypothalamopituitary region. the diagnosis of central precocious puberty is easy if the hormonal fi ndings show elevated gonadotropin levels (both basal values and in response to gnrh), associated with high testosterone levels and an increase in either lh/fsh ratio or in lh and fsh values after stimulation with gnrh agonists. however, in some cases it is necessary to measure nocturnal lh secretion to fi nd secretion pulses before a dynamic test can reveal the pubertal pattern. knowledge of the etiology in males has improved with the use of ct and mri. , one of the most important contributions of these techniques is the fi nding of a high number of hamartomas in children with precocious puberty. [ ] [ ] [ ] these lesions, also known as gangliocytomas, consist of abnormally located neurons and glial cells. lesions are usually multiple, small, and located on the hypothalamus between the anterior part of the mammillary body and the posterior part of the tuber cinereum. these neurons contain lhrh-positive neurosecretory granules, suggesting that this hormone can be released into the blood draining the hypophyseal portal system and reach the gonadotropic cells. precocious puberty owing to cerebral tumors usually occurs with advanced stage of the tumor, preceded by cerebral symptoms such as hydrocephaly, papillary edema, or psychic alterations. the same occurs when precocious puberty results from cerebral infl ammation or cerebral malformation. although pineal gland tumor is rare in children, % produce precocious puberty, principally in boys. this tumor is usually a teratoma or non-parenchymatous tumor that destroys the pineal gland, hindering its antigonadotropic action and initiating puberty. in contrast, pinealocytederived tumor secretes great amounts of melatonin that delay the onset of puberty. peripheral precocious puberty (ppp) peripheral precocious puberty is also known as precocious pseudopuberty. it may be caused by a primary testicular disorder, a lesion in other endocrine glands, or hormonal treatment. primary testicular disorders causing precocious pseudopuberty include familial testotoxicosis, functioning testicular tumor, excessive aromatase activity, or leydig cell hyperplasia with focal spermatogenesis. the principal secondary anomalies include adrenal cortical anomaly (congenital adrenal hyperplasia, virilizing tumor of the adrenal, and nelson's syndrome), and lesion secondary to hcg-secreting tumor (hepatoblastoma accounts for half of precocious pseudopuberty cases, and testicular germ cell tumor and the tumors of the retroperitoneum, mediastinum, and pineal gland are responsible for the other half of cases). familial testotoxicosis: gonadotropin-independent precocious puberty (gipp) or familial male-limited precocious puberty (fmpp) familial testotoxicosis is a form of male sexual precocity characterized by early differentiation of leydig cells and the initiation of spermatogenesis in the absence of stimulation by pituitary gonadotropin. this is a primary testicular abnormality with autosomal dominant inheritance. , ultrastructural studies confi rm an adult leydig cell pattern and complete spermatogenesis, although many spermatids are abnormal. the cause of familial testotoxicosis is a constitutive activating mutation of the lh receptor gene. this gene comprises exons and has been mapped to p . hormonal measurements show elevated serum levels of testosterone, and low levels of dihydroepiandrosterone sulfate, androstenedione, -hydroxyprogesterone, gonadotropin-releasing hormone (grh), and lh, as well as absence of a pulsatile pattern. in addition, serum levels of inhibin b appear elevated before the normal age of onset of puberty. in some patients, a mutation in lh receptor induces leydig cell adenoma. precocious puberty secondary to functioning testicular tumor a syndrome of precocious puberty can be the result of different tumors, including leydig cell tumor, sex cord tumor, adrenal cortex virilizing carcinoma, and extratesticular hcg-secreting germ cell tumor. leydig cell tumor may cause precocious puberty. the testis is enlarged owing to tumor growth and maturation of the seminiferous tubules adjacent to the tumor; such maturation results from androgen secretion by tumor cells (fig. - ) . in most cases, the contralateral testis is not enlarged. , sex cord tumor with annular tubules and large cell calcifying sertoli cell tumor may give rise to precocious pseudopuberty that is isosexual (development of musculature and axillary and pubic hair) and heterosexual (gynecomastia). this precocious testicular maturation and the development of the tumor itself cause testicular enlargement. it has been suggested that tumor cells stimulate leydig cells to produce androgens that are aromatized to estrogens by the tumor cells themselves, thus accounting for the clinical symptoms. these tumors are frequently observed in peutz-jeghers syndrome , and carney's complex. most infants with adrenal cortex virilizing tumors have small testes, but some cases of testicular hypertrophy have also been observed. testicular development in these cases is attributed to adrenal androgenic action on seminiferous tubules. in untreated (or maltreated) congenital adrenal hyperplasia, both testes can be enlarged because they contain growing masses of adrenal cortex-like cells. a similar condition is observed in nelson's syndrome. testicular enlargement is modest in paraneoplastic precocious pseudopuberty secondary to hepatoblastoma or extratesticular hcg-secreting germ cell tumor, although nodular or diffuse precocious maturation has been occasionally reported. precocious pseudopuberty secondary to excessive aromatase activity biosynthesis of c estrogens from c androgens occurs by three consecutive oxidative reactions that are catalyzed by an enzymatic complex known as estrogen synthetase or aromatase. this complex has two components: p arom (a product from the cyp gene located on p . ), which joins c substrate and catalyzes the insertion of oxygen in c to form c estrogens; and nadph-cytochrome p reductase, a ubiquitous fl avoprotein that conveys reducing equivalents to any form of cytochrome p it meets. aromatase is in the endoplasmic reticulum of estrogensynthesizing cells and expressed in placenta, ovarian granulosa, sertoli cells, leydig cells, adipose tissue, and several central nervous system regions, including the hypothalamus, amygdala, and hippocampus. excessive aromatase causes excessive conversion of androgens to estrogen, and is a heterogeneous genetic disorder with an autosomal dominant inheritance. the disorder leads to heterosexual precocious pseudopuberty with gynecomastia in males, and to isosexual precocity and macromastia in females. ultimately, patient stature is short because of the potent ability of androgens to accelerate epiphyseal closure. most males are fertile and have normal libido. generally, the inhibitory estrogenic effect on testicular function is less than that observed with estrogen-producing tumors or in patients treated with exogen estrogens. excessive aromatase caused by p mutation induces alterations in both males and females. in females lacking estrogens owing to desmolase defi ciency, excessive aromatase leads to pseudohermaphroditism and progressive virilization at puberty; conversely, pubertal development is normal in males. in children, fsh and lh levels and gonadotropin response to gnrh are normal, suggesting that the role of estrogens in pituitary regulation is weak during infancy. in both genders, epiphyseal closure is delayed and a eunuchoid habitus results. adult males have small testes, severe oligozoospermia, and complete asthenozoospermia; fsh and lh levels are high, testosterone levels are normal, and serum estrogen levels are very low. all patients with excessive aromatase have short stature, with continuing linear growth into adulthood, unfused epiphyses, osteoporosis, bilateral genu valgum, and eunuchoid proportions. the testes show macroorchidism with normal testicular consistency in some cases, and are small with severe oligozoospermia and % immotile spermatozoa in other cases. a syndrome similar to that of excessive aromatase production is found in patients with estrogen resistance caused by disruptive mutations of the er gene. these patients show macroorchidism, elevated testosterone levels, and increased levels of fsh, lh, estradiol, and estrona. precocious pseudopuberty secondary to leydig cell hyperplasia with focal spermatogenesis this entity can present with clinical symptoms similar to those of a functioning leydig cell tumor; this is a precocious pseudopuberty with ipsilateral testicular enlargement. the testes contains hypertrophic leydig cell nests in association with normal spermatogenesis. no tumoral mass is seen. leydig cells do not contain reinke's crystalloids and do not compress the seminiferous tubules. there is a clear delimitation between tubules with spermatogenesis and infantile immature tubules. the differential diagnosis between this entity and leydig cell tumor with precocious pseudopuberty is based on the histological pattern. open excisional testicular biopsy is recommended; if there is leydig cell tumor, or the diagnosis by frozen section is not conclusive, removal is advisable. there are no data to suggest that this hyperplasia might develop into leydig cell tumor. mixed precocious puberty the best known form is the mccune-albright syndrome (mas), characterized by the association of 'coffee and milk' pigmentary lesions in the skin, bone lesions (polyostotic fi brous dysplasia), enlarged testes, prepubertal size of the penis, and absence of pubic and axillary hair. although testicular enlargement is usually bilateral, unilateral macroorchidism may be the fi rst symptom. an interesting fi nding is that the onset of testicular maturation is induced by the testis itself, which produces steroid secretion due to autonomous hyperfunction of sertoli cells without evidence of leydig cell involvement. this secretion causes early maturation of the hypothalamopituitary-testicular axis and, subsequently, true precocious puberty. serum levels of testosterone are low, but those of inhibin b and amh are abnormally increased. this syndrome is caused by mutations that activate the gnas- gene, which encodes the α subunit of the trimeric g-protein. because mutations are lethal in the uterus, those subjects producing amh bear a mosaicism chromosomal constitution for this defi ciency. a testis is ectopic when it is in a location outside the normal path of descent. unlike cryptorchid testes, ectopic testes are nearly normal in size and are accompanied by a spermatic cord that is normal or even longer than normal, and by a normal scrotum. testicular ectopia is classifi ed according to location; [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] in decreasing order of frequency, the major types are: • interstitial or inguinal superfi cial ectopia. this is the most frequent form and may be confused with inguinal cryptorchidism. after passing through the outer genital opening, the testis ascends to the anterosuperior iliac spine and remains on the aponeurosis of the major oblique muscle. these testes often are more nearly normal histologically than are cryptorchid testes. • femoral or crural ectopia. after passing through the inguinal canal, the testis lodges in the high crural cone in scarpa's triangle. • perineal. the testis is located between the raphe and the genitocrural fold. • transverse or crossed ectopia. both testes descend through the same inguinal canal and lodge in the same scrotal pouch. each possesses its own vascular supply, epididymis, and vas deferens. in addition, there is ipsilateral hernia. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] between % and % of patients with this ectopia have persistent müllerian duct syndrome [ ] [ ] and show a high incidence of testicular germ cell tumor. • pubopenile ectopia. the ectopic testis is on the back of the penis near the symphysis pubis. • pelvic ectopia. the testis is in the pelvis, usually in the depth of douglas' cul-de-sac. • other unusual testicular ectopias include retroumbilical, craniolateral to the inner inguinal opening between the outer and inner oblique muscles, and subumbilical. rarely, the testis and its spermatic cord may protrude through a defect in the scrotal skin, a condition called testicular exstrophy. the term testicular dislocation refers to testes that secondarily disappear from the scrotum and lodge around the superfi cial inguinal ring, within the inguinal ring, or inside the abdominal cavity as a result of testicular trauma. the formation of canalicular and intra-abdominal dislocation requires the presence of previous inguinal hernia. testicular fusion is a rare anomaly characterized by fusion of the testes to form a single structure, usually in the midline. each has its own epididymis and vas deferens. this anomaly is often associated with other malformations, such as fusion of the adrenal glands or horseshoe kidney. cystic dysplasia of the testis is a congenital lesion characterized by cystic transformation of an excessively developed rete testis that may extend to the tunica albuginea of the opposite pole. to date, fewer than cases have been reported. , the seminiferous tubules may be dilated and atrophic; this is more evident after puberty. ultrasound images are characteristic. , cysts arise in the septal and mediastinal rete testis ( fig. - ); they are interconnected and contain acellular, eosinophilic, periodic acid-schiffpositive material. they are lined by cuboidal cells that resemble those of the normal rete testis. [ ] [ ] [ ] the connective tissue between the cysts is scant and histologically similar to the interstitial connective tissue. there may be small groups of cysts limited to the region of the mediastinum testis, or cysts extending throughout the entire testis. in extensive cases, residual seminiferous tubules occupy only a small crescent beneath the tunica albuginea and the testis is grossly spongy. cystic dysplasia occurs in normally descended and cryptorchid testes in children and adults, and may affect one or both testes. in adults, the residual parenchyma often shows complete tubular sclerosis or hypospermatogenesis with intratubular accumulation of spermatozoa and leydig cell pseudohyperplasia. in most cases the epididymis is altered. the head of the epididymis is small and contains few ductuli efferentes with irregular, usually dilated lumina. the ductus epididymidis is dilated, has an atrophic epithelium, and thick connective tissue replaces the muscular layer ( fig. - ) . testicular cystic dysplasia is frequently associated with severe anomalies of the urinary system. renal agenesis, [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] renal dysplasia, hydroureter, and urethral stenosis have been reported ipsilateral to cystic dysplasia. the clinical differential diagnosis should consider all cystic testicular lesions impairing prepubertal testes, including epidermoid cyst, cystic teratoma, juvenile granulosa cell tumor, testicular lymphangiectasis, and simple cyst of the testis. the presence of ipsilateral renal anomalies during ultrasound exploration provides an important diagnostic clue. previously, orchidectomy was the treatment of choice, but testis-sparing surgery is now recommended. , the etiology and pathogenesis of cystic dysplasia are uncertain. given that the rete testis is a mesonephric derivative and most of the associated renal malformations are apparently caused by failure in the induction of renal blastema by the mesonephros, cystic dysplasia is considered to be the result of an abnormal mesonephros. during childhood, the normal rete testis has no lumina, and these form during puberty. the adult rete testis is a conduit for the passage of tubular fl uid and spermatozoa and also actively reabsorbs part of this fl uid while adding ions, proteins and steroids to it. malfunction of the rete testis cells may cause the formation of excessive fl uid of abnormal composition, resulting in a condition morphologically similar to cystic dysplasia of the rete testis induced in fowl by sodium intoxication or the administration of the saltretaining hormone deoxycorticosterone acetate. gonadoblastoid testicular dysplasia refers to an abnormally differentiated testicular parenchyma beneath the tunica albuginea. the anomaly consists of large tubular or nodular structures within a dense stroma, reminiscent of ovarian stroma ( fig. - ). each structure is composed of three cell types: cells with vesicular nuclei and vacuolated cytoplasm; cells with hyperchromatic nuclei; and germ cell-like cells. the former two types are arranged at the periphery, forming a pseudostratifi ed epithelium. the third type resembles fetal spermatogonia and are fewer in number. these structures contain eosinophilic, periodic acid-schiff-positive material, similar to call-exner bodies ( fig. - ). there may be continuity between these structures and normal seminiferous tubules. the differential diagnosis includes conditions showing anomalous seminiferous tubules at the gonadal periphery, including testicular dysgenesis and gonadoblastoma. testicular dysgenesis also presents tubular or cord-like structures, but these are differentiated (some form true seminiferous tubules) and may also be present within a poorly collagenized tunica albuginea; patients with testicular dysgenesis are male pseudohermaphrodites with müllerian remnants. gonadoblastoma usually appears in a streak gonad or dysgenetic gonad and contains granulosa-sertoli cells and germ cells that are similar to those of dysgerminoma or seminoma; these cells are absent in gonadoblastoid testicular dysplasia. several cases with this disorder have been reported in patients with walker-warburg syndrome. , this disorder refers to the presence, in an adult testis, of one or several foci of infantile (immature) seminiferous tubules. each group of tubules appears well delimited but unencapsulated. nodule size varies from microscopic to mm. on section, each nodule is distinguished by its whitish color. sertoli cell nodule is found in most adult cryptorchid testes, regardless of when the testes descended. it is also present in % of normal scrotal testes in some series, and is an occasional fi nding in males with idiopathic infertility. the seminiferous tubules have a prepubertal diameter and may be anastomotic. the epithelium is columnar or pseudostratifi ed, devoid of lumina, and usually consists only of sertoli cells ( fig. - ). the cells have elongated hyperchromatic nuclei with one or several peripherally placed small nucleoli. the interstitium varies from scant to well collagenized. leydig cells are usually absent in these areas and, if present, their numbers are low. study of serial sections reveals continuity between some of these tubules and normal tubules. sertoli cell nodule changes with advancing age. the sertoli cells produce large amounts of basal lamina that protrudes inside the hypoplastic tubules. in transverse and oblique sections, these protrusions might be misinterpreted as intratubular accumulations of basal lamina material ( fig. - ). this material can undergo calcifi cation to form microliths. immunohistochemical study reveals two basic components of the basal lamina (collagen iv and laminin), confi rming its extracellular origin; the protrusions consist mainly of laminin, whereas collagen iv delimits the outer profi le of the seminiferous tubules. so, while the amount of collagen iv is uniform around the tubules, the depth of laminin varies within the same tubule. tubular hypoplasia is assumed to be a primary testicular lesion, and refers to the presence of seminiferous tubules that are unable to undergo pubertal development despite the same hormonal stimuli of adjacent normal tubules. this dysgenesis includes immature sertoli cell pattern, low inhibin secretion, absence of androgen receptors, and lack of maturation of peritubular myoid cells that fail to synthesize elastic fi bers. the presence of hypoplastic zones in a testicular biopsy is an adverse prognostic sign for fertility. the differential diagnosis includes tubular hamartoma in androgen insensitivity syndrome, sex cord tumor with annular tubules, and mixed atrophy of the testis. tubular hamartoma in androgen insensitivity syndrome is multiple, similar to the hypoplastic zones of tubular hypoplasia; however, the sertoli-like cells of hamartoma have spherical nuclei (rather of elongated nuclei), form a cuboidal epithelium, and contain numerous leydig cells among the tubules (see androgen insensitivity syndrome, below). sex cord tumor with annular tubules may present with multiple foci of intratubular neoplasia, similar in distribution to that of hypoplastic zones; however, sex cord tumor appears in undescended testes, and in patients with peutz-jeghers syndrome, and consists of cuboidal or spherical cells that express cytokeratins that are not expressed in hypoplastic tubules. it is possible that hypoplastic tubules contain some germ cells that may be spermatogonia or gonocytes. there are scant spermatogonia that fail to display signs of maturation or proliferation. also, some of the tubules contain intratubular undifferentiated germ cell neoplasia that usually also appears in the adjacent, non-hypoplastic seminiferous tubules. the histologic picture is similar to that of gonadoblastoma, but such a tumor can be easily excluded because it arises in malformed gonads (gonadal dysgenesis and testicular dysgenesis) characteristic of intersex stages, unlike patients with tubular hypoplasia. congenital testicular lymphangiectasis is characterized by abnormal and excessive development of lymphatic vessels in the tunica albuginea, mediastinum testis, interlobular septa, and testicular interstitium. [ ] [ ] [ ] ultrastructurally these dilated vessels are similar to normal lymphatic capillaries, although some are markedly dilated and the testicular interstitium is slightly edematous ( fig. - ). testicular lymphangiectasis occurs in both cryptorchid and scrotal testes; in one of the latter cases, the patient had noonan's syndrome. the disease does not seem to affect the seminiferous tubules, and low numbers of spermatogonia and reduced tubular diameters are observed only in cryptorchid testes. the epididymis and spermatic cord are not affected, and congenital testicular lymphangiectasis is not associated with pulmonary, intestinal, or systemic lymphangiectasis. during fetal life, lymphatic vessels are visible only immediately beneath the tunica albuginea and in the interlobular septa. during childhood, the number and size of the septal lymphatic vessels decreases; by adulthood they are inconspicuous. in lymphangiectasis, the septal lymphatic vessels are large and often massively dilated. testicular lymphangiectasis occurs only in the childhood testis, suggesting that these dilated vessels undergo involution at puberty or that pubertal development of the seminiferous tubules masks the lymphangiectasis. one exceptional case of epididymal lymphangiectasis, with dilated epididymal blood vessels, was reported in a -year-old man. the vessels distort the architecture of the ductuli efferentes, which in turn become irregularly dilated by mechanical compression. other hamartomas of the testis include hamartoma of the rete testis and smooth muscle hamartoma. hamartoma of the rete testis is a disordered proliferation of tubular structures in a loose connective tissue. cystic transformation of the rete testis associated with proliferation of smooth muscle cells and abundant myxoid stroma was reported in a -year-old man. smooth muscle hamartoma is located in the inferior testicular pole, the cauda of the epididymis, and the proximal segment of the vas deferens ( fig. - ) , and is similar to that reported in the digestive and respiratory tracts. , smooth muscle hyperplasia also occurs in the androgen insensitivity syndrome, forming nodules up to cm in diameter. the muscular proliferation is located in the lower testicular pole, and involves the tunica albuginea and adjacent soft tissues. this infrequent fi nding has been observed in newborns and consists of gonadal blastema in otherwise normal testes. the blastema is located in the vicinity of the upper testicular pole, near the implantation of the caput of the epididymis, displays a crescent shape, and extends throughout the depth of the tunica albuginea and the adjacent testicular parenchyma. the blastema consists of epithelial cords of cells or solid masses in continuity with the mesothelium (fig. - ). these cells are intermingled with others that are larger, with pale cytoplasm, vesicular nuclei, and prominent nucleoli. the blastematous epithelial cells display immunoreactivity for vimentin, laminin, type iv collagen, and cytokeratin; the expression of the latter in the most superfi cial cells is similar to that of mesothelial cells and decreases in intensity in the deeper cells. this suggests that these may be pre-sertoli cells. the cord-like structures are delimited by laminin and type iv collagen. the second larger cell type is immunoreactive for placenta-like alkaline phosphatase (plap) on the surface, suggesting that it is related to the gonocyte. leydig cells have not been observed among the cords of gonadal blastema. the differential diagnosis of gonadal blastema ectopia is with ovotestes. the small size of the gonocytes distinguishes them from ovocytes, which are several times larger. in addition, no intersex condition is observed. the presence of seminiferous tubules within the tunica albuginea is rare and usually an incidental histologic fi nding. ectopic tubules are present in approximately . % of pediatric autopsies and . % of adult autopsies. the lower inci- dence in adults may be explained by proportionally less sampling. the lesion ranges from microscopic size to a few millimeters in diameter, and may be visible as minute bulges in which multiple small vesicles protrude through a thin tunica albuginea. histologically there are groups of seminiferous tubules in the tunica albuginea, sometimes accompanied by leydig cells. in children, the ectopic tubules appear normal ( fig. - ), whereas in adults they are usually slightly dilated, although some may be hyalinized. serial sections reveal continuity with the intraparenchymatous seminiferous tubules. ectopia of the seminiferous tubule is probably congenital, although it has been found in elderly men. it does not appear to be the result of trauma. the malformation probably arises in the sixth week of gestation, when the primordial sex cords have formed and are branching toward the gonadal surface, and the developing testes is covered by only one to three layers of celomic epithelium. later, the tunica albuginea forms around the sex cords and under the celomic epithelium. failure of insertion of the tunica albuginea between the sex cords and celomic epithelium may entrap seminiferous tubules. ectopia differs from testicular dysgenesis, a distinctive form of male pseudohermaphroditism with müllerian remnants. numerous features, characteristic of ectopic seminiferous tubules, distinguish it from other conditions, including normal thickness and collagenization of the tunica albuginea, absence of interstitial tissue resembling ovarian stroma (characteristic of testicular dysgenesis), and clear delimitation of the tunica albuginea and testicular parenchyma (see discussion on male pseudohermaphroditism with müllerian remnants, below). in a unique case, there were multiple clusters of seminiferous tubules in the wall of a hernia sac that accompanied an undescended testis removed from an adult man. the ectopic tubules were not surrounded by tunica albuginea and were similar to those in cryptorchid testicular parenchyma with only dysgenetic sertoli cells. leydig cells occur normally in the testicular interstitium (interstitial leydig cells) and in the wall of the seminiferous tubules (peritubular leydig cells). however, clusters of leydig cells are often observed in other locations in the testis, or in the epididymis or spermatic cord. ectopic leydig cells may be found in the interlobular septa, - rete testis, tunica albuginea, [ ] [ ] [ ] or within hyalinized seminiferous tubules. , [ ] [ ] [ ] intratubular leydig cells are found only in tubules with advanced atrophy and marked thickening of the tunica propria, including the tubules in adult cryptorchid testes, those of men with klinefelter's syndrome, and in some other primary hypogonadisms ( fig. - ). immunohistochemical studies suggest that the endocrine function of these leydig cells is low. several theories have been offered to account for these ectopic cells, including in situ differentiation, migration from the testicular interstitium, and trapping of peritubular leydig cells in the tunica propria during its thickening. leydig cells are commonly found in the epididymis and spermatic cord; , of autopsies had such foci. extratesticular leydig cells usually form small groups within or adjacent to nerves ( fig. - ) . , the occurrence of ectopic leydig cells in the albuginea, epididymis, or spermatic cord may account for the rare cases of leydig cell tumor in these paratesticular structures. ectopic leydig cells should not be misinterpreted as tumor cells (infi ltration or metastasis) when malignancy of a testicular leydig cell tumor is suspected. other rare forms of ectopia are found within and outside the testis. intratesticular ectopia includes adrenal cortical ectopia, osseous and adipose tissue heterotopia, and ectopia of the ductus epididymidis. extratesticular ectopia includes splenic ectopia (splenogonadal fusion), hepatic ectopia (hepatotes- adrenal cortical ectopia may be important in two conditions that develop tumoral masses: adrenogenital syndrome and nelson's syndrome. tumors in adrenogenital syndrome appear in . % of patients with congenital adrenal hyperplasia, appearing as bilateral testicular masses of synchronous growth. these tumors consist of well delimited but non-encapsulated yellow nodules, several centimeters long, composed of large microvacuolated cells. the cause seems to be prolonged stimulation by elevated acth secretion. the differential diagnosis includes leydig cell tumor. the diagnosis of tumors in adrenogenital syndrome is supported by a family or personal history of salt-lost syndrome or hypertension, demonstration of β-hydroxysteroids (a specifi c marker for adrenal cortex) in spermatic vein blood, or a rapid positive response of tumor to corticoid treatment. nelson's syndrome occurs in patients who, after adrenalectomy for treatment of cushing's syndrome, develop an acth-secreting pituitary adenoma. these patients may develop testicular tumor growth similar to that in adrenogenital syndrome. most nelson's syndrome tumors do not respond to dexametasone treatment. cartilaginous heterotopia may be found in the caput of the epididymis and has been attributed to metaplasia of metanephric rests. osseous heterotopia (testicular osteoma) is a metaplasia occurring in areas of the testicular parenchyma with fi brosis or ischemia. adipose metaplasia is frequent in undescended testis, elderly men, and those with cowden's syndrome ( fig. - ). groups of tubular formations that resembles the epididymis have been reported inside the testicular parenchyma in testes with marked tubular atrophy, and probably represent a rare form of metaplasia. testicular descent is not always complete at birth, and about . % of full-term newborns have incompletely descended testes. most of these descend within months, and only . % of infants have incompletely descended testes months after birth. spontaneous testicular descent is exceptional after the fi rst year. in recent decades, a signifi cant increase in the incidence of cryptorchidism has been detected. only % of patients with impalpable testes are actually devoid of testes. other causes include true cryptorchidism, testicular ectopia, and retractile testes. true cryptorchidism includes abdominal, inguinal, and high scrotal testes that cannot be moved to the scrotum. ectopic testes are those located out of the normal path of testicular descent; the most frequent site is the superfi cial inguinal pouch. other rare locations of ectopia include the abdominal wall, the upper thigh, the perineum, and the base of the penis. retractile testes may be moved to the scrotum at exploration and account for about one third of undescended testes. patients with true cryptorchidism account for about % of cases of empty scrotum. these testes most frequently are found in the inguinal canal or upper scrotum; arrest within the abdomen is less frequent. cryptorchidism is slightly more frequent on the right than the left, and in approximately % of cases is bilateral. there is a family history of cryptorchidism in % of cases. the cryptorchid testis is usually smaller than the contralateral one, and this difference is often discernible at months of age. one-third of cryptorchid testes are soft. several conditions are predictive of high risk of cryptorchidism, including increased maternal age, maternal obesity, pregnancy toxemia, bleeding during late pregnancy, and smoking, tallness, subfertility antecedents, cesarean birth, low birthweight, preterm newborn, twin birth, hypospadias and other congenital malformations, and children born from september to november, and in may and june. , of these associations, low birth weight seems to be the most important. there are two types of cryptorchidism: congenital and acquired. this cryptorchidism is caused by anomalies in anatomic development or hormonal mechanisms involved in testicular descent (described above). impalpable undescended testes are infrequent because the transabdominal phase follows the simple mechanism of relative movement of the testis, whereas displacement of the ovary is more complex. conversely, palpable undescended testes are more frequent because the second phase of testicular descent is more complex. unilateral cryptorchidism may be caused by androgen failure, which leads to either an ipsilateral lesion in the development of genitofemoral nerve neurons or a defect in cgrp release that hinders normal migration of the gubernaculum. a normally descended testis may become cryptorchid and locate even in the abdominal cavity. two categories of acquired undescended testis have been described. the postoperative trapped testis is a normally descended testis that leaves the scrotal pouch after surgery owing to an inguinal hernia or hydrocele. [ ] [ ] [ ] this iatrogenic cryptorchidism occurs in . % of children after herniotomy. adherence of the testis or the cremasteric muscle to the surgical incision causes testicular ascent when the incision heals and undergoes retraction. spontaneous ascent from unknown causes. various mechanisms have been proposed, including inability of the spermatic blood vessels to grow adequately, anomalous insertion of the gubernaculum, failure in reabsorption of the vaginal process , and failure in postnatal elongation of the spermatic cord. , the spermatic cord measures - cm at birth and reaches - cm at years of age. this growth does not occur if the peritoneal-vaginal duct has become a fi brous remnant. the cause might be a defect in postnatal cgrp release by the genitofemoral nerve. , , pathogenesis the most frequent fi ndings in congenital and acquired cryptorchidism at infancy are decreased germ cell numbers and diminished tubular diameter. , there are multiple causes of testicular maldescent, including anatomical anomalies of the gubernaculum testis, hormonal dysfunction (hypogonadotropic hypogonadism), mechanical impairment (insuffi cient intra-abdominal pressure, short spermatic cord, underdeveloped processus vaginalis), dysgenetic (primary anomaly of the testis), and heredity. most cryptorchidism appears to be caused by either a defi cit of fetal androgens or an excess of maternal estrogens. androgen insuffi ciency seems to be slight and transient because anomalies other than hypoplasia of the epididymis are not seen. elevated maternal estrogens level could cause diminution of fsh secretion by the fetal pituitary, inducing low müllerian-inhibiting hormone production that would hinder testicular descent. three mechanisms seem to be involved in the process: • primary testicular anomaly. cryptorchid testes may bear an anomalous germ cell population, as suggested many years ago. more than % of cryptorchid patients have a marked decrease in the tubular fertility index, in the normal testis there is transient formation of spermatocytes at - years of age. this meiotic attempt is probably an androgenic event that does not occur in cryptorchid testes and agrees with the characteristic low numbers of spermatogonia in the prepubertal age. prepubertal testes undescended testes are usually smaller than the contralateral ones. this difference is already significant at months of age. , although there have been a number of biopsy studies in the fi rst years of life, there is no agreement about the severity of damage or the time of its onset. , , based on the tubular fertility index (tfi) and mean tubular diameter (mtd), most testicular biopsies from cryptorchid testes of children can be classifi ed into one of three groups: • type i (testes with slight alterations). the tubular fertility index is higher than , and the mean tubular diameter is normal or slightly (< %) decreased. approximately % of cryptorchid testes are in this group ( fig. - ). • type ii (testes with marked germinal hypoplasia). tubular fertility index is between and , and mean tubular diameter is - % lower than normal. the spermatogonia are distributed irregularly and most are in tubular sections that are grouped in the same testicular lobule. these testes comprise approximately % of cryptorchid testes ( fig. - ). • type iii (testes with severe germinal hypoplasia). tubular fertility index is less than , and mean tubular diameter less than % of normal. many of the spermatogonia are giant with dark nuclei (fig. - ). these testes often contain ring-shaped tubules, induced by increased temperature. testes with type ii or iii lesions bear variable degrees of dysgenesis that, in addition to germ cells, involve sertoli cells, peritubular myofibroblasts, and leydig cells. the dysgenesis of these other cell types is evident only after puberty. in about % of cases the contralateral scrotal testis also has histologic lesions of variable severity. this fi nding supports the hypothesis of a bilateral defect in many cases of unilateral cryptorchidism. microdeletions in the long arm of the y chromosome are present in % of patients with corrected unilateral cryptorchidism who present with azoospermia or severe oligospermia. these fi ndings are similar to those observed in patients with azoospermia or severe idiopathic oligospermia. unilateral cryptorchidism with a normal contralateral testis could be due to an end-organ failure. in cryptorchidism secondary to spontaneous ascent, lesions are similar to megatubules (with or without eosinophilic bodies or microliths) ( fig. - ) , and focal granular changes in the sertoli cells ( fig. - ). the testicular interstitium is wide and edematous. these comprise about % of cryptorchid testes. about % of tests with type i lesions show many multinucleated spermatogonia (with three or more nuclei) ( fig. - ). the seminiferous tubules of testes with types ii or iii lesions have a thickened lamina propria during childhood and, at puberty, sertoli cell hyperplasia. patients with bilateral cryptorchidism have a higher incidence of type ii and iii lesions than those with unilateral cryptorchidism. type i lesions are comparable to those seen in experimental cryptorchidism; normal testes in which lesions were those of congenital cryptorchidism, whereas in cryptorchidism secondary to herniotomy, germ cell depletion is slight and becomes important only after years of age. adult testes most pubertal and adult cryptorchid testes have anomalies in all testicular structures. the seminiferous tubules have decreased diameters and defi cient spermatogenesis. in decreasing order of frequency, the most common germ cell lesions are tubules with sertoli cell and spermatogonia-only pattern; tubules with sertoli cells (dysgenetic) only; tubular hyalinization; and mixed atrophy. the lamina propria has scant elastic fi bers and increased collagen fi bers. sertoli cells are present in increased numbers and do not mature normally except in tubules with germ cells (fig. - ). , often, groups of tubules containing only sertoli cells with a prepubertal pattern (very small diameter and total absence of maturation) are present and are considered hypoplastic, dysgenetic, or hamartomatous. areas of apparent leydig cell hyperplasia are frequent, and many of these cells contain vacuolated lipid-laden cytoplasm ( fig. - ). the rete testis is hypoplastic in most cases and is lined by columnar epithelium with rare areas of fl attened cells. cystic dilation is common, and adenomatous hyperplasia has been found in some cases. near the rete testis, the testicular parenchyma frequently contains metaplastic fat. in some cryptorchid testes, several tubular segments are destroyed by infl ammation that probably has an autoimmune cause (focal orchitis). epididymal tubules are poorly developed and peritubular tissue is immature. blood fl ow is associated with testicular histology. for example, testicular volume, histologic pattern, and testicular artery resistive index are lower in undescended testes than in controls, and testicular artery resistive index is inversely proportional to testicular histology score in undescended testes. there is also an apparent correlation between testicular size, spermiogram, and hormone levels. assuming that a signifi cant reduction in testicular size (> ml) is only observed in . % of cases, and that serum levels of fsh, lh, and testosterone are normal, an inverse correlation is seen between fsh and testicular volume, sperm concentration, sperm motility, and normally shaped sperm. in addition, there is a direct relation between testicular volume and sperm concentration, sperm motility, and normally shaped sperm. these fi ndings indicate the cause of tubular impairment in young men operated on in childhood for cryptorchidism. obstructed testes are located in the superfi cial inguinal pouch (denis-browne pouch) and are considered ectopic by some authors and cryptorchid by others. , histologic studies reveal that most obstructed testes bear the same lesions as true cryptorchid testes. type i lesions are observed in half, type ii in more than one-third, and the remainder show type iii lesions. the higher proportion of type i lesions suggests a better prognosis than in true cryptorchid testes. some authors assume that retractile testes are normal and exclude them from studies of cryptorchidism. , however, these testes may present important lesions and many consider them to be a form of cryptorchidism. [ ] [ ] [ ] retractile testes may not always be movable to the lower scrotum ( - mm from the pubic tubercle) and in % of cases are smaller than scrotal testes. approximately % of retractile testes remain high after age years, when cremasteric activity declines. retractile testes have a % risk of becoming ascending or acquired undescended testes. the risk is higher in boys younger than years, or when the spermatic cord is tight or inelastic. during childhood, tubular diameter and tubular fertility index decrease. adults with retractile testes that descended spontaneously but late may be fertile or infertile. usually there is germ cell atrophy that varies in severity from lobule to lobule. regular examination of retractile testes is advisable during childhood and, if complete testicular descent does not occur, orchidopexy is indicated. most cryptorchid patients have a patent processus vaginalis, and - % have a hernia sac, although most hernias are not clinically visible. urologic anomalies are present in . % of patients, the most frequent being hypospadias, complete duplication of the urinary tract, non-obstructive ureteral dilatation, kidney malrotation, and posterior urethral valves. cryptorchidism is more frequent in patients with microcephaly, myelomeningocele, bifi d spine, omphalocele, gastroschisis, micropenis, and imperforate anus. cryptorchidism may appear isolated or associated with congenital anomalies, endocrine dysfunction, chromosomal disorders, or intersex conditions. thus, cryptorchidism is found in the kallmann, prader-willi, klinefelter, noonan, smith-lemli-opitz, aarskog-scott, rubinstein-taybi, prune belly, and caudal regression syndromes, anomalies of the androgen receptor, absence of anti-müllerian hormone, charge association, and trisomies , , and . sperm excretory duct anomalies occur in - % of cryptorchid patients, , and are classifi ed into three types: • ductal fusion anomalies ( % of cases). these consist of anomalous fusion of the caput of the epididymis to the testis or segmental atresia of the epididymis and vas deferens. this is chiefl y associated with intraabdominal or high scrotal cryptorchid testes. • ductal suspension anomalies ( % of cases). the caput of the epididymis is attached to the testis, whereas the corpus and the cauda of the epididymis are separated from the testis by a mesentery. a variant consists of an excessively long cauda of the epididymis that descends along the inguinal duct to the scrotum. • anomalies associated with absent or vanishing testes ( % of cases). cryptorchidism is part of the testicular dysgenesis syndrome. this consists of abnormal testicular development that predisposes to cryptorchidism, hypospadias, spermatogenetic alterations, and testicular cancer. the association of these disorders with cryptorchidism has been corroborated by numerous clinical, epidemiological and genetic studies. the least severe form of this syndrome is a defect in spermatogenesis; the most severe is testicular cancer. a constellation of histologic lesions is common in the testes of men with testicular dysgenesis; these lesions include sertoli cellonly pattern, mixed atrophy, hypoplastic tubules (sertoli cell nodules), microlithiasis, malformed tubules, granular changes in sertoli cells, nodular leydig cell hyperplasia, and intratubular germ cell neoplasia. it is assumed that there is a prenatal development of the lesions as a result of several genetic, environmental, or endocrine disruptor factors that would interfere with the estrogen/androgen ratio. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the main complications of cryptorchidism are testicular cancer, infertility, testicular torsion, and psychological problems. approximately . % of -year-old males have cryptorchidism, and about % of testicular cancer patients had cryptorchidism. the risk of testicular cancer in cryptorchid males is four to times higher than that of the general population. testes with elevated number of multinucleated spermatogonia seem to have a higher risk of cancer and adulthood. about % of biopsies in children contain cells similar to those seen in undifferentiated intratubular germ cell neoplasia, and these cells may evolve toward germ cell tumor ( fig. - ). the most frequent tumor in undescended testes is seminoma. , regardless of timing, orchidopexy does not reduce the risk of cancer, although it facilitates early detection as the intrascrotal testis is palpable. one in fi ve testicular tumors arises in properly descended testes contralateral to cryptorchid testes, suggesting that there is a primary bilateral testicular anomaly in cryptorchidism. intra-abdominal testes also have a higher incidence of tumors. infertility infertility is the most frequent problem caused by cryptorchidism. in a series of patients with infertility, nearly % had cryptorchidism. infertility is infl uenced by several factors, including bilaterality, number of germ cells, location and size of the testis, and age at time of orchidopexy. the most important risk factors are bilaterality and germ cell number. only % to % of men with bilateral cryptorchidism have normal sperm counts ( million/ml or more). the highest sperm counts occur with testes in the superfi cial inguinal pouch. patients with bilaterally impalpable testes are usually azoospermic. fertility rates in unilateral cryptorchidism vary from % to %. the number of germ cells per cross-sectioned tubule is the most important prognostic factor. patients with no increase in inhibin b during the postoperative period usually have a low number of spermatogonia per cross-sectioned tubule and a low tubular fertility index. in unilateral cryptorchidism, fertility depends on the number of spermatogonia in the contralateral testis. however, if the number of germ cells per cross-sectioned tubule in the cryptorchid testis is lower than % of normal, the risk of infertility is %. in bilateral cryptorchidism the risk of infertility rises from % to % when one or both testes have less than % of germ cells per cross-sectioned tubule. neither the preoperative location of the testis in patients with unilateral cryptorchidism nor the small size of the testis at the time of orchidopexy is relevant for fertility. [ ] [ ] [ ] an important fertility factor is the permeability of sperm excretory ducts. the age at orchidopexy may also infl uence fertility, although this has not been proven. in patients over years of age orchidopexy does not enhance fertility. , benefi t of testicular biopsy in patients with cryptorchidism testicular biopsies of infantile testes at orchidopexy are useful for determining baseline germ cell status and whether surgery should be completed with hormonal treatment. however, even if biopsy supplies important data, it is not considered a routine procedure. even in the best cases when the number of spermatogonia is nearly normal, spermatogenesis may never occur owing to defi cient spermatogonium development during childhood, failure of spermatogenesis at puberty, and, if complete spermatogenesis occurs, this might be associated with obstruction of sperm excretory ducts. in childhood, the chance of a biopsy fi nding an occult cancer or precancer is low because intratubular germ cell neoplasia is not diffusely distributed throughout the testis. testicular biopsy is recommended in patients with intra-abdominal testes, abnormal external genitalia, or abnormal karyotype. the situation is different in adults because intratubular germ cell neoplasia is present in - % of cases and is diffuse. , when intratubular germ cell neoplasia is detected in a child, further examination of the testis and rebiopsy after puberty are recommended. in adults, if intratubular germ cell neoplasia is unilateral orchidectomy should be performed, but if it is bilateral, radiation may be used to eradicate the neoplasia while maintaining leydig cell function. testicular microlithiasis (tm) is characterized by the presence of numerous calcifi cations diffusely distributed throughout the testicular parenchyma. the number and size of the calcifi cations often is great enough to be detected radiographically or by ultrasound. isolated microliths have been reported in undescended testes, prepubertal klinefelter's syndrome, male pseudohermaphroditism, and otherwise normal children and patients studied for other diseases. in adults, microliths are frequently observed in cryptorchid and ex-cryptorchid testes, seminiferous tubules located at the periphery of germ cell tumor, infertile patients, [ ] [ ] [ ] and in some patients complaining of orchialgia , or testicular asymmetry. testicular microlithiasis occurs in . % of cryptorchid testes and is slightly more common in prepubertal than adult testes. in adults, it usually is diagnosed when men seek help for infertility, pain, or testicular asymmetry. microlithiasis has been observed in . - % of testicular echographies of different disorders. , in infertile patients the incidence is slightly higher. microlithiasis is present in % of testis having a malignant tumor. ultrasound studies reveal two types of microlithiasis: classic tm, in which the number of microliths is fi ve or more; and limited tm, when there are fewer than fi ve microliths ( fig. - ). the incidences of tm in these studies are lower than % in infants, . % in the general population aged between and years (bilateral in % of patients showing microliths, . - . % in patients with other disorders, , , - from . % to % in subfertile patients, . % in ex-cryptorchid testes, and more than % in adult testes with germ cell tumors). , - several cases of testicular microlithiasis have also been observed in infant testes with germ cell tumor or gonadal stroma tumor. , the incidence is higher in whites than in blacks. pain is the most common clinical symptom in patients without a palpable testicular mass, and has been attributed to dilation of seminiferous tubules secondary to obstruction by microliths. microliths are made by hydroxyapatite, according to x-ray diffraction studies and raman spectroscopy. in the prepubertal testis, microliths are surrounded by a double layer of sertoli cells and measure up to µm in diameter. when they are very large, the seminiferous epithelium may be destroyed and the microlith is surrounded by peritubular cells (fig. - ). testes with microliths have subnormal mean tubular diameters and tubular fertility index. in adult testes with microliths there is incomplete spermatogenesis. some seminiferous tubules with microliths are cystically dilated (fig. - ). microliths arise as extratubular eosinophilic bodies that mineralize and pass into the tubular lumina. microlithiasis may be a disorder of the tunica propria. also, testicular microlithiasis is occasionally associated with pulmonary microlithiasis and with calcifi cations in the parasympathetic nervous system. , the association of microlithiasis and testicular cancer is controversial. , although the development of testicular cancer has been observed in several patients whose testicular microlithiasis had been previously diagnosed by ultrasound studies, [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] it is also thought that patients with testicular microlithiasis not associated with other disorder do not require any follow-up. when microlithiasis is associated with infertility the incidence of cancer varies according to the unilaterality or bilaterality of microlithiasis: subfertile patients with unilateral microlithiasis show no intratubular germ cell neoplasia, whereas this is present in % of those with bilateral microlithiasis. the risk of malignancy is higher in classic than in limited tm. the nexus between microlithiasis and cancer does not seem to be the predisposition of one disorder towards the other but rather the predisposition of both to develop in abnormal testes. this may also explain the association between microlithiasis and infertility. yearly ultrasound examination, perhaps with testicular biopsy, is recommended in those with testicular microlithiasis associated with cryptorchidism, infertility, atrophic testes, or contralateral testis bearing germ cell tumor. microlithiasis also occurs in the rete testis or sperm excretory ducts. epididymal rupture and extravasation of microliths into the interductal tissue may cause a histiocytic reaction resembling malakoplakia ( fig. - ). the disorder is asymptomatic and not associated with testicular cancer. gonadal dysgenesis refers to disorders characterized by amenorrhea and streak gonads in phenotypically female patients. in adults, streak gonads are elongated masses of fi brous tissue resembling ovarian stroma ( fig. - ). they may contain hilar cells and rete or epithelial cords with variable degrees of maturation, and may result from failure in gonad formation, failure of gonadal differentiation to ovary, or failure of gonadal differentiation to testis. some streak gonads contain a few ovocytes or primordial follicles, but all germ cells disappear at puberty. patients with streak gonads have a hypoplastic uterus and fallopian tubes. four types of gonadal dysgenesis have been described: xy pure, xx pure, x , and mixed. xy gonadal dysgenesis (swyer's syndrome) is characterized by female phenotype, absence of turnerian stigmata, and female external genitalia, sometimes with fused labia majora, a hypertrophic clitoris, and hypospadias. the breasts develop at puberty. sexual infantilism persists in adulthood, and eunuchoidism and amenorrhea appear. these patients have elevated serum gonadotropin levels and low serum estradiol. there are two types of gonadal dysgenesis: complete and incomplete. patients with the complete type have female external genitalia and classic streak gonads, although cases with ovarian tissue have been reported. the cause is unknown in about % of cases, and is due to alterations in the sry gene in the remainder (a mutation in - % of cases, and a sry deletion as a result of an aberrant x/y interchange in - %). the consequence of failure is very early gonadal alteration (sixth to eighth week of gestation). with the subsequent absence of müllerian inhibiting factor, testosterone, and dihydrotestosterone, a female phenotype develops. patients with incomplete xy gonadal dysgenesis have ambiguous external genitalia and variable degree of development of the müllerian and wolffi an structures. although they have streak gonads, testicular development is usually observed. this gonadal dysgenesis does not seem to be caused by sry alterations. these fi ndings suggest that in the fi rst type ovarian differentiation was canceled, and that in the second type testicular differentiation failed. the fi rst is similar to the gonad of x turner's syndrome, whereas the second resembles the gonad of mixed gonadal dysgenesis. the clitoromegaly may be caused by androgens secreted by hyperplastic leydig cells in the streak gonad. some patients with xy gonadal dysgenesis present with extragonadal anomalies and multiple syndromes, including camptomelic dysplasia and renal disorder, myotonic dystrophy and terminal renal disease, without facial anomalies or short stature, renal insufficiency and wilms' tumor (denys-drash syndrome), the combination of cleft palate, micrognathia, kyphosis, scoliosis, and clubfoot (gardner-silengo-wachtel syndrome or genitopalatocardiac syndrome), pterygium multiple syndrome, graves' disease, , and congenital universalis alopecia, microcephaly, cutis marmorata, and short stature. , most cases are sporadic, although the syndrome has been reported in several members of the same family, [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and several forms of inheritance (x-linked, autosomal recessive, and male-limited autosomal dominant) have been proposed. in addition to infertility, patients with xy gonadal dysgenesis have a high risk of germ cell tumor. this risk is about % in the fi rst decade of life, and - % overall, [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and, thus, prophylactic gonadectomy is recommended. patients with xx gonadal dysgenesis have normal stature, female phenotype, well-developed external genitalia, and hypoplastic ovaries rather than streak gonads ( fig. - ). the anomaly is usually detected when patients present with primary amenorrhea or infertility. this syndrome is sporadic and familial, and it may be linked to recessive autosomal inheritance. , patients have no predisposition to gonadal neoplasia. associated somatic anomalies such as neurosensory hearing loss (perrault's syndrome) are rare. some familial cases have shown a balanced translocation of the x chromosome (from the long arm to the short arm) , or between chromosomes and . because the development of ovarian follicles requires fsh, mutations have been sought in the fshr gene. mutations have been detected in familial cases and also in unrelated patients, , whereas other patients have shown no mutations in this gene. the incidence of tumors in these patients is very low, and the most common is dysgerminoma. [ ] [ ] [ ] this is one of the most common chromosomal anomalies (from / to / in female newborns), although % of zygotes with this karyotype are aborted in the fi rst stages of embryonal development. patients with xo gonadal dysgenesis have characteristic stigmata of turner's syndrome, including short stature, pterygium coli, lymphedema, and cardiac malformations. the external genitalia are female and infantile; the gonads are typical streak gonads. today, turner's syndrome is defi ned by the combination of physical features and the complete or partial absence of one of both x chromosomes, frequently associated with mosaicism. turnerian stigmata may be classifi ed into four groups: skeletal anomalies such as cubitus valgus, shortening of the fourth metacarpal and madelund's deformity characteristic of leri-weill dyschondrosteosis; soft tissue anomalies such as webbed neck, low posterior hair line, and puffy hands and feet; visceral anomalies such as aortic coarctation, horseshoe kidney, polycystic kidney, urethral stenosis and vesicourethral refl ux; and miscellaneous anomalies such as nevus pigmentosus. during embryonic life, these gonads show normal germ cell numbers up to the third month, when germ cell proliferation ceases. , ovogenesis stops in meiosis i, usually before the pachytene stage. the cause seems to be generalized meiotic pairing errors with the start of an apoptotic mechanism to avoid the formation of abnormal gametes. massive apoptosis of ovocytes occurs between the th and the th weeks. surviving germ cells disappear throughout fetal life, and their numbers at birth are usually low ( fig. - ). patients with mosaicism have fewer anomalies than pure x individuals; % have menstruation (compared to % of pure x patients), and % have breast development (compared to % of pure x patients). in - % of x patients the sry gene is demonstrable by in-situ hybridization. it has been proposed that patients with sry expression should undergo gonadectomy, because this gene is also a marker of gonadoblastoma. these patients may develop gonadoblastoma, dysgerminoma, and mixed germ cell tumor. , mixed gonadal dysgenesis is characterized by the presence of a streak gonad and a contralateral testis (often cryptorchid) or streak testis (see discussion on male pseudohermaphroditism with müllerian remnants, below). true hermaphroditism is a disorder of gonadal differentiation characterized by the presence in the same individual of both testicular and ovarian tissue. this condition is rare and usually diffi cult to diagnose, so only % of male hermaphrodites are diagnosed before age . failure to recognize this disorder may lead to surgical intervention for hernia repair or orchidopexy. most hermaphrodites raised as males display symptoms for the fi rst time at puberty because of breast development ( % of hermaphrodites have some degree of gynecomastia), periodic hematuria (if they have a uterus ending in the urinary tract), or cryptorchidism. hermaphrodites raised as females initially present with irregular menstruation or clitoromegaly. true hermaphroditism should be suspected in all children with ambiguous sex characteristics ( fig. - ). the gonads of these patients are ovotestes, ovaries, or testes, with all possible combinations. true hermaphroditism can be ( ) unilateral, if there are both testicular and ovarian tissues (forming one ovotestes or two separated gonads) on one side, and a testis or an ovary in the other side; if there is no gonadal tissue in this latter side, unilateral hermaphroditism is incomplete; ( ) bilateral, if testicular and ovarian tissues are present on both sides of the body; and ( ) alternate, if there is a testis on one side, and an ovary on the other side. ovotestis is the most frequent gonadal type in true hermaphroditism. it is more frequent on the right side and is located in the abdomen ( % of cases), labioscrotal folds, inguinal canal, or the external inguinal ring. the ovotestis has a bilobated or ovoid shape ( fig. - ). in the bilobated ovotestis the testis and ovary are connected by a pedicle, whereas in the ovoid ovotestis the ovarian tissue forms a crescent capping the testicular parenchyma. the proportion of ovary to testis varies widely ( fig. - ). at adulthood, the ovarian follicles mature and corpora lutea or corpora albicantia may be seen. the seminiferous tubules rarely develop complete spermatogenesis. the interstitium usually contains leydig cells. ovotestis is associated with a fallopian tube in % of cases, and with a vas deferens in the remainder. if the patient has ovotestis/ovary, a completely developed uterus is present. if the patient has bilateral ovotestis ( %), uterine agenesis is frequent (fig. - ). the testis of hermaphrodites is most often on the right side ( %) and is located anywhere from the abdomen to the scrotum. these testes have low tubular fertility indices during childhood. after puberty, the seminiferous tubules remain small, often containing only dysgenetic sertoli cells, similar to the tubules of cryptorchid testes. incomplete spermatogenesis has been reported, but complete spermatogenesis is exceptional. the ovary of hermaphrodites is most frequently on the left side ( %) and usually is hypoplastic with few primordial follicles. however, in occasional patients the ovary is histologically and functionally normal. the most frequent karyotype is xx ( %), followed by several mosaicisms ( %) which, in decreasing order of frequency, are xx/ xy, xy/ xxy, x / xy, xx/ xxy. the xy karyotype is the least common ( %). there is variation in the incidence of some karyotypes around the world. mosaicism is found in . % of european cases, but in only % of north america cases. conversely, most african true hermaphrodites ( %) have xx karyotype. the karyotype xy is rare and its frequency is similar in europe, asia, and north america. , most cases are sporadic, and families with several affected members also have xx males. this fi nding suggests that both genetic anomalies are alternative forms of a single genetic defect. the following mechanisms , have been proposed to explain the occurrence of testicular parenchyma: true hermaphroditism xx, a hidden mosaicism with a cell line having a y chromosome; transfer from a y chromosome fragment (including sry gene) to the x chromosome; autosomal mutation of variable penetrance; and x-linked mutation coupled with rare x inactivation or x mutation that permits testicular differentiation in the absence of sry. some xx hermaphrodites with sry-negative leukocytes are positive for this gene in dna from the testicular parenchyma in the ovotestis. over pregnancies in true hermaphrodites have been reported, in contrast to the exceptional cases of paternity. ovules may arise from the ovotestes or the ovary. management of true hermaphroditism depends on the patient's age at the time of diagnosis, the nature and location of the gonads, and the developmental stage of the external genitalia. although bilateral castration may be justifi ed in order to avoid the risk of neoplasia, gonadal preservation may be desirable until adulthood. in this case, if the patient is raised as a girl, puberty will occur spontaneously and there is a small chance of fertility. however, the high risk of malignancy (estimated at . %) should be taken into account. the most frequent tumors are gonadoblastoma, dysgerminoma, and yolk sac tumor. the risk of cancer may be reduced if some precautions are taken, including removal of the testis if it has not descended and surveillance of the residual gonad with periodic ultrasound studies, especially in cases of chromosomal mosaicisms. normal male development requires adequate differentiation of the testes in the fetal period, synthesis and secretion of testicular hormones, and proper response of target organs to these hormones. anti-müllerian hormone produced by sertoli cells inhibits the development of müllerian derivatives that would otherwise form the uterus and fallopian tubes. testosterone produced by leydig cells stimulates differentiation of the wolffi an ducts into male genital ducts. the conversion of testosterone into dihydrotestosterone by the enzyme α-reductase ensures the development of male external genitalia. alterations in these processes may cause male pseudohermaphroditism. androgen synthesis defi ciencies these autosomal recessive syndromes are characterized by an error in testosterone synthesis that results in incomplete or absent virilization. cholesterol is the source for the synthesis of androgens, estrogens, and other steroid hormones through multiple steps. first, the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (star) generates cholesterol into mitochondria; star gene mutations cause congenital lipoid adrenal hyperplasia. second, within mitochondria, the cholesterol sidechain cleavage enzyme p scc transforms cholesterol into pregnenolone; a disorder in this enzyme is rare because it is highly lethal in embryonic life. third, pregnenolone undergoes α-hydroxylation by microsomal p c ; defi ciency in α-hydroxylase causes female sexual infantilism and hypertension. fourth, -oh-pregnenolone is converted into dhea by , -lyase activity of p c . the ratio of , -lyase to α-hydroxylase activity of p c determines the ratio of c to c steroids produced. the ratio is regulated by at least three factors, including the electrondonating protein p oxidoreductase (por), cytochrome b , and serine phosphorylation of p c . mutations in por are present in the antley-bixler skeletal dysplasia syndrome as well as a variant of polycystic ovarian syndrome. figure - shows the enzymes involved in the abovementioned steps. the enzyme β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase transforms dhea to androstenedione, and the enzymatic complex called aromatase transforms androstenedione into estrone and testosterone into estradiol. in some patients cholesterol synthesis is also impaired, and congenital adrenal hyperplasia is superimposed on androgen defi ciency. defi cient testosterone synthesis may result from abnormalities in the enzymes involved in pregnenolone formation (congenital lipoid adrenal hyperplasia), including β hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, αhydroxylase, , -desmolase, and β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase ( fig. - ). congenital lipoid adrenal hyperplasia is the most severe form of congenital adrenal hyperplasia. the disorder is characterized by a defi cit in steroid hormone synthesis in the adrenal cortex and gonads, producing a female phenotype with severe salt-loss syndrome. conversion of cholesterol to pregnenolone requires the enzymes α-hydroxylase, , desmolase, and α-hydroxylase. failure of any of these leads to defi cits in cortisol, aldosterone, and testosterone. the enzymatic defect is usually is caused by a defi cit in the steroidogenic acute regulatory (star) protein; in other cases, the defi cit is in p ssc. the mitochondrial protein star promotes cholesterol transfer from the outer to inner mitochondrial membrane, where cholesterol serves as a substrate for p scc and initiates steroidogenesis. more than different mutations in the star gene have been identifi ed. as a result, cholesterol is not converted to pregnenolone, which is required for the synthesis of mineralocorticoids, glucocorticoids, and sex hormones. the disorder is rare in most countries, but is common in japan, korea, and the arabian countries. , patients usually present with salt-losing crisis in the fi rst months of life. , in most cases, males have female or ambiguous external genitalia and a blind-sac vagina, hypoplastic wolffi an derivatives, absence of müllerian structures, and cryptorchidism. the adrenals usually appear enlarged and contain lipid accumulations, , but these diminish with age and the adrenals shrink. in the testes, lipid accumulations may be present or absent in leydig cells , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] or sertoli cells. an -year-old child had partially hyalinized seminiferous tubules with sertoli cell-only pattern. the testes of pubertal patients are usually normal for age. , intratubular germ cell neoplasia has been reported in one case. most patients die from adrenal insuffi ciency. survivors have female phenotype and require the administration of glucocorticoids, mineralocorticoids, and gonadal steroids. β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase defi ciency patients with this defect have two main problems: salt-loss syndrome produced by reduced aldosterone secretion, and incomplete virilization. at puberty, virilization increases and gynecomastia develops. , the enzyme bhsd catalyzes the conversion of - βhydroxysteroids such as pregnenolone, -hydroxypregnenolone, and dehydroepiandrosterone into respectively - β-ketosteroid, progesterone, -hydroxyprogesterone, and androstenedione. there are two bhsd genes located on the p -p region of chromosome . the type i gene is expressed in the placenta, kidney, and skin, whereas the type ii gene bhsd is expressed only in the gonads and adrenal glands. complete absence of the bhsd gene is lethal; therefore, most reported cases have only partial bhsd deficits. [ ] [ ] [ ] it is assumed that these defi cits account for % of cases of congenital adrenal hyperplasia. the classic form of salt-losing bhsd defi cit is diagnosed in the fi rst months of life because of insuffi cient aldosterone synthesis and subsequent loss of salt. the other bhsd defi cit, without salt loss, is due to mutations in the type ii bhsd gene and its diagnosis may be delayed until puberty. severe forms of bhsd defi ciency are associated with defi cits in aldosterone, cortisol, and estradiol. symptoms may vary widely, as enzymatic activity in the adrenal gland is not the same as in the testis. most patients show salt loss and adrenal crisis; they have incomplete masculinization and may develop spontaneous puberty and gynecomastia. , , patients with mild forms have normal genitalia and normal mineralocorticoid levels. some patients have only hypospadias or micropenis. the testes are smaller and softer than normal. α-hydroxylase defi ciency the cause of defi cits in the enzymes α-hydroxylase and , -lyase are mutations of the cyp gene that encodes cytochrome p c . the cyp gene is located on chromosome q -q , and different mutations have been described. p c catalyzes the α-hydroxylation of pregnenolone to ohpregnenolone and of progesterone to α-oh-progesterone. this enzyme also catalyzes , -lyase activity, transforming oh-pregnenolone to dhea. the classic form of αhydroxylase defi cit is caused by severe defi ciencies in cyp ; less severe defects give rise to the isolated , -lyase defi cit. α-hydroxylase defi cit impairs the synthesis of both cortisol and testosterone. low cortisol levels stimulate acth secretion, causing hypersecretion of aldosterone precursors and the development of hypokalemic hypertension and male pseudohermaphroditism in males. patients usually have hypospadias and develop gynecomastia at puberty. the enzyme , -desmolase cleaves the side chain of -hydroxypregnenolone and hydroxyprogesterone to form dehydroepiandrosterone and androstenedione, respectively. varying degrees of , desmolase defi ciency are seen, resulting in varied development of external genitalia, ranging from female phenotype to virilization with microphallus, bifi d scrotum, and perineal hypospadias. in childhood, the testes contain reduced numbers of spermatogonia (figs - , - ) . , the cause may be mutations in one of the genetic loci encoding p c , fl avoprotein or or b . β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase defi ciency this enzyme transforms androstenedione into testosterone and also converts estrone into estradiol. the enzymatic defects are sexlinked. most patients have female phenotype at birth and are raised as girls, but at puberty undergo virilization. one or both testes may be cryptorchid or are located in the labia majora. normal spermatogenesis has never been observed. the most common testicular patterns are hypoplasia or absence of germ cells and leydig cell hyperplasia. the germ cell injury was initially attributed to cryptorchidism, but it is now thought to be a primary testicular lesion because even very young patients lack germ cells. this defi cit is due to mutations in the hsd b gene located on q . , leydig cell hypoplasia this variant of male pseudohermaphroditism is defi ned by insuffi cient testosterone secretion and the following characteristics: predominance of female external genitalia; absence of male secondary sex characteristics at puberty; absence of uterus and fallopian tubes and the presence of epididymis and vas deferens; xy karyotype; lack of response to human chorionic gonadotropin stimulation; absence of an enzymatic defect in testosterone synthesis; and small undescended testes that are gray and mucous on section. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] age at diagnosis varies from months to years. the syndrome is sporadic and familial. , the best-known cause of leydig cell hypoplasia is inactivating mutation of the lh receptor in these cells. [ ] [ ] [ ] during fetal life, there is an inadequate response to placental hcg initially and to pituitary lh subsequently. phenotypes vary widely according to the presence of complete or partial loss of receptor function. these changes range from male pseudohermaphroditism with female external genitalia (type i of leydig cell hypoplasia) to male phenotype with micropenis, hypospadias, pubertal delay, and primary hypogonadism (type ii of leydig cell hypoplasia). in type i hypoplasia, the testes contain small seminiferous tubules with sertoli cells, spermatogonia, and thickened basement membranes. leydig cells are rare or absent, in contrast to leydig cell hyperplasia seen in other types of male pseudohermaphroditism, such as those arising from defects in androgen synthesis or androgen action on peripheral tissues. , leydig cell hypoplasia accounts for low serum testosterone levels, lack of virilization, and lack of spermatogenesis. the absence of müllerian derivatives suggests a normal function of sertoli cells, which synthesize müllerian inhibiting factor. in type ii hypoplasia, adult testes show maturation arrest of spermatogonia and a few incompletely differentiated leydig cells. , resistance to androgen stimulation is the cause of several syndromes with phenotypes varying from complete testicular feminization to normal male. , these syndromes are caused by partial or complete lack of response of the target organs to androgens due to the absence, diminution, or impairment of androgen receptors or postreceptor anomaly. the gene for the androgen receptor is located on the x chromosome (xq -q ), and x-linked transmission occurs in two-thirds of cases. the karyotype is usually xy, but xxy and several mosaicisms have been observed. these syndromes affect : - : newborns. the diverse phenotypes associated with androgen insensitivity may be classifi ed as: complete androgen insensitivity syndrome (cais) or testicular feminization syndrome; partial androgen insensitivity syndrome (pais) or partial testicular feminization syndrome, which includes the syndromes of lubs, gilbert-dreyfus, reifenstein, and rossewater; and mild androgen insensitivity syndrome (mais), infertile men with light androgen insensitivity, and kennedy's disease. complete androgen insensitivity syndrome (complete testicular feminization syndrome) this form of male pseudohermaphroditism is characterized by female phenotype with testes. complete testicular feminization syndrome is rarely diagnosed during childhood except in patients who present with hernia, inguinal tumor, or with a family history of pseudohermaphroditism. primary amenorrhea is the principal presentation in adults. the testes may be in the abdomen, inguinal canal, or labia majora, and during the fi rst year of life may be normal histologically except for reduced tubular diameter and low tubular fertility index. after the fi rst year, decreased germ cell numbers become evident and the few remaining spermatogonia are concentrated in clusters of seminiferous tubules. the testicular interstitium contains numerous spindle cells arranged in bundles, and during the fi rst year of life has leydig cells with abundant eosinophilic or vacuolated cytoplasm. at puberty, patients have female external genitalia, a short blind-ended vagina, feminine breast development; and scarce pubic and axillary hair. serum testosterone is at the normal male level and lh is markedly increased. in adults, the testes vary in size from small to large, are tan-brown, and contain small seminiferous tubules without lumina which usually contain only sertoli cells. , in one-third of patients both sertoli cells and spermatogonia are present. ultrastructurally, sertoli cells lack charcot-böttcher crystals and annulated lamellae; inter-sertoli cell specialized junctions are not well developed, and in cryofracture studies the arrangement of membrane particles has an immature pattern. leydig cells are abundant, but few contain reinke's crystalloids. often, there are areas resembling ovarian stroma in the testicular interstitium. in about two-thirds of cases the testes contain grossly visible white nodules that stand out from the surrounding testicular parenchyma (figs - , - ). histologically, the nodules consist of clusters of small seminiferous tubules with immature sertoli cells, hyalinized lamina propria, numerous leydig cells, and an absence of elastic fi bers ( fig. - ) . these have been referred to as sertoli-leydig cell hamartoma. about % of testes have sertoli cell adenoma, sometimes very large, consisting of tubules resembling infantile testis but lacking in germ cells and peritubular myofi broblasts. no leydig cells are present between the tubules (figs - , - ). other benign tumors include sertoli cell tumor (large cell calcifying sertoli cell tumor and sex cord tumor with annular tubules), leydig cell tumor, leiomyoma, and fi broma. approximately % of cases have small cystic structures closely apposed to the testes, and about % of patients have thick bundles of smooth muscle fi bers resembling myo- metrium near the testis. true myometrium has been demonstrated in only one case. hypoplastic fallopian tubes are present in about one-third of cases. in about % of patients the epididymis and vas deferens are rudimentary; the only explanation for this is residual activity of the mutated androgen receptor. approximately % of testes from patients with testicular feminization syndrome develop cancer. the frequency increases with age, but tumors rarely appear before puberty. these tumors include intratubular germ cell neoplasia ( fig. - ) , several types of germ cell tumor, , and sex cord tumor. thus, the gonads should be removed immediately after puberty. partial androgen insensitivity syndrome (partial testicular feminization syndrome) the phenotype of patients with partial testicular feminization varies from normal female to normal male. the disorder includes four classic syndromes: lubs' syndrome, characterized by partial fusion of labioscrotal folds, a defi nitive introitus, clitoromegaly, pubic and axillary hair, and poor breast development; gilbert-dreyfus syndrome, characterized by progressively greater male phenotypic features that include small phallus, hypospadias, incomplete development of wolffi an derivatives, and gynecomastia; reifenstein's syndrome, characterized by hypospadias, weak or absent virilization, testicular atrophy, gynecomastia, azoospermia, and infertility; and rosewater-gwinup-hamwi syndrome, characterized by infertile men whose only abnormal feature is gynecomastia. mild androgen insensitivity syndrome spermatogenesis requires high levels of intratesticular testosterone. a minor form of androgen insensitivity may be observed in some patients with male phenotype who present with infertility. the frequency of androgen resistance among azoospermic and oligozoospermic men is estimated at about % or lower. , some patients have lost exon or mutated exons or . kennedy's disease kennedy's disease (spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy, sbma) is an x-linked recessive disorder of the adult male , characterized by loss of motor neurons in the spinal cord and brain stem and associated with less important loss of sensory neurons and atrophy caused by skeletal muscle denervation. , disease onset around years of age includes muscular weakness, cramps, and fasciculations. in most cases the male reproductive system is impaired. [ ] [ ] [ ] the testes may be normal in the initial stages of the disease, and many patients are fertile; however, with progression, there is onset of secondary testicular atrophy and gynecomastia. testosterone levels are decreased in some cases. the disease results from mutations in the fi rst exon of the androgen receptor (ar) gene. the smba gene, located on xq - , has expansion of a repetitive cag sequence in exon a. the number of cag repeats is (range, - ) in control men and more than in men with kennedy's disease. , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] this disorder is a variant of male pseudohermaphroditism caused by a lack of the enzyme α-reductase with failure of conversion of testosterone to dihydrotestosterone. in patients with the xy karyotype there are two isoenzymes: isoenzyme is encoded by the gene srd a, located on p , and isoenzyme is encoded by the gene srd a on p . most reported cases result from defects in srd a . many mutations in different exons have been reported. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] during childhood, patients have a clitoriform penis, bifi d scrotum, urogenital sinus, and testes in the inguinal canal or labioscrotal folds (fig. - ) . müllerian derivatives are absent. at puberty they acquire the male phenotype, with development of the penis and scrotum. adults have erections, ejaculations, and normal libido, scant body hair and a thin beard, a very small prostate, and lack of temporal hairline recession (male pattern baldness). serum levels of fsh, lh, and testosterone are increased, but dihydrotestosterone is decreased. , the disorder is autosomal recessive and has been observed in many consanguineous families from the dominican republic. this group of male pseudohermaphrodites is characterized by the presence of müllerian derivatives and unilateral or bilateral testicular dysgenesis. these two features depend on anti-müllerian hormone gene mutations and end-organ insensitivity. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] in normal development, anti-müllerian hormone is responsible for inhibition of the ipsilateral müllerian ducts and collagenization of the tunica albuginea. patients with defi cient secretion of this hormone may also have androgen defi ciency. three variants of defective müllerian duct regression have been reported: mixed gonadal dysgenesis, dysgenetic male pseudohermaphroditism, and persistent müllerian duct syndrome. mixed gonadal dysgenesis (asymmetric gonadal differentiation) is characterized by the presence of a testis on one side of the body and a streak gonad on the other. if the gonads are intra-abdominal, the labioscrotal folds may appear as either normal labia or empty scrotal sacs (fig. - ). in the former, the syndrome cannot be recognized in the newborn unless a peniform clitoris is present. if the gonad is descended, it is usually a testis. müllerian derivatives such as fallopian tubes are usually associated with streak gonad ( % of cases), but may also be associated with testicular tissue ( %). ipsilateral to the testis there is one epididymis and one vas deferens. on the contralateral side, no gonad or a streak gonad and a fallopian tube are present. a hypoplastic uterus and a poorly developed vagina are frequent fi ndings. this syndrome accounts for about % of intersex conditions. some patients are raised as males, although their external genitalia are usually ambiguous as a result of fetal virilization. the penis is clitoriform, and the urethra opens in the perineum. most have cryptorchid testes and are raised as girls, becoming virilized at puberty. infertility is a common symptom. the etiology is heterogeneous: one-third of patients have turnerian features, in accordance with the presence of the x / xy karyotype in more than % of patients. other observed karyotypes are xy and x / xyy. approximately % of patients have one y chromosome. mutation in the sry gene has not been found. the testes can show two different patterns: testicular dysgenesis and streak testis. testicular dysgenesis is characterized by a tunica albuginea that varies in width and is reminiscent of ovarian stroma by the storiform distribution of cells and fi bers; there are also malformed seminiferous tubules (fig. - ) that are small, usually lack lumina, and contain only immature sertoli cells. in adults, spermatogenesis has been observed occasionally. the testicular interstitium contains increased numbers of leydig cells. streak testes are complex gonads in which testicular dysgenesis is associated with a fi brous streak. most of the gonad consists of a testis showing the characteristic lesions of testicular dysgenesis. in a pole of the gonad, or in continuity with it, there is a fi brous streak whose structure may correspond to any of the varieties mentioned above (fig. - ). this peculiar gonad can also be observed in some dysgenetic male pseudohermaphrodites as well as in the persistent mül- lerian duct syndrome. in these cases, the streak contains no ovocytes. light microscopy indicates a wide spectrum of testicular lesions, ranging from those of patients with xy pure gonadal dysgenesis to true hermaphroditism. differentiation of the ovocyte-containing streak testis and ovotestis remains controversial. , the testes in mixed gonadal dysgenesis are incapable of müllerian duct inhibition and allow complete differentiation of wolffi an derivatives, virilization of external genitalia, and, in most cases, testicular descent. the risk of germ cell neoplasia reaches % in the third decade of life, usually beginning with gonadoblastoma. the testes should be removed after puberty. dysgenetic male pseudohermaphroditism is a disorder of sexual differentiation characterized by bilateral dysgenetic testes or streak testis, persistent müllerian structures, and cryptorchidism. this syndrome is considered a variant of mixed gonadal dysgenesis ( fig. - ) . , the karyotype may be xy or x / xy, and turnerian stigmata may be present. the uterus and fallopian tubes are present and both are usually hypoplastic (fig. - ). the testes show lesions characteristic of testicular dysgenesis, with few germ cells during childhood (fig. - ) . in adults, spermatogenesis is poorly developed and the testicular interstitium shows leydig cell hyperplasia. about % of patients develop gonadoblastoma. persistent müllerian duct syndrome has many names, including male with uterus, tubular hermaphroditism, persistent oviduct syndrome, and hernia uteri inguinalis. it is a rare form of pseudohermaphroditism, with müllerian derivatives in an otherwise phenotypically normal male, and is the most characteristic form of isolated anti-müllerian hormone defi ciency. the molecular basis of this syndrome is heterogeneous. three hypotheses have been proposed, including a defect in anti-müllerian hormone synthesis, caused by mutation in the anti-müllerian hormone gene ( % of cases); resistance of target organs to this hormone, caused by mutation in the receptor ii for this hormone ( % of cases); and failure in the action of this hormone immediately before the eighth week of gestation ( % of cases). although the external genitalia are male, one ( % of cases) or both testes ( % of cases) are cryptorchid. the syndrome usually also includes inguinal hernia contralateral to the undescended testis, with a uterus and fallopian tubes within the hernia sac (figs - , - ) . several cases with transverse testicular ectopia and persistent müllerian duct structures have been reported. , patients usually have inguinal hernia, but others have cryptorchidism, infertility, and testicular tumor. in childhood, the testes have a low tubular fertility index and decreased tubular diameter. in adults, the tunica albu- ginea is variably thickened, contains connective tissue resembling ovarian stroma, and may contain tubular structures -alterations typical of testicular dysgenesis. the seminiferous tubules are usually atrophic and hyalinized. tubules with reduced spermatogenesis or patterns suggesting mixed atrophy (seminiferous tubules with spermatogenesis intermingled with sertoli cell-only tubules) have also been reported. the leydig cells appear hyperplastic. azoospermia or oligozoospermia are common, and paternity is exceptional. the syndrome is sporadic or familial, with autosomal recessive or x-linked inheritance. , these patients have a higher risk of testicular tumor than that attributed to cryptorchidism, and all types of germ cell tumor have been observed. , other forms of male pseudohermaphroditism of the dysmorphic syndromes associated with incomplete virilization of external genitalia, the best-known are those of rsh, denys-drash, wagr, opiz, camptomelic dysplasia, atr-x, gardner-silengo-wachtel, meckel, branchioskeletal-genital, down's, and other trisomies. rsh (smith-lemli-opitz) syndrome is a malformative recessive autosomal syndrome caused by mutations in the gene encoding for -dehydrocholesterol reductase (dhcr ), responsible for the synthesis of cholesterol from its immediate precursor -dehydrocholesterol. [ ] [ ] [ ] the disorder is common in europe and rare in other countries. the most severe form is lethal before birth. fetuses show postaxial oligodactyly (instead of polydactyly) and sometimes severe hydrops. non-lethal forms are characterized after birth by severe growth failure; a semi-obtunded state; absence of psychomotor development; microcephaly; congenital cataracts; peculiar facies; broad anteriorly rugose alveolar ridges with cleft palate, edema of the nape of the neck, and unilobulate lungs; male pseudohermaphroditism or female external genitalia in ,xy patients; postaxial polydactyly of the hands and feet; congenital heart defects; and renal anomalies. hepatic and renal insuffi ciencies are frequent. the less severe forms in the male have genital anomalies ( %) varying from normal genitalia to severe hypospadias with or without cryptorchidism, and numerous small anomalies whose collection characterizes the syndrome. most patients also show mental retardation and severe behavioral problems. the dhcr gene maps to chromosome q - . its product is a microsomal, membrane-bound protein. many different missense, nonsense, and splice-site mutations as well as duplications and deletions have been reported. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] prenatal diagnosis is possible by relating ultrasound and cytogenetic studies and carrying out a biochemical analysis in the second trimester in those pregnant women who have low levels or no conjugated estriol. in denys-drash syndrome, male pseudohermaphroditism is associated with nephroblastoma and renal insufficiency. the pseudohermaphroditism is usually either mixed gonadal dysgenesis, dysgenetic male pseudohermaphroditism, xy pure gonadal dysgenesis, or true hermaphroditism. the most common nephropathy is diffuse mesangial sclerosis. most patients have mutations in the wt- gene, which is expressed in the genital ridge in the sixth week of gestation and gives rise to either streak gonads or testicular dysgenesis, but, if a delay in testicular determination occurs, normal testes are formed. the term wagr syndrome refers to wilms' tumor, aniridia, genital anomalies, and mental retardation. prevalence is estimated at between . % and % of wilms' tumor patients. the syndrome is related to the syndrome of denys-drash and that of frasier (a variety of ,xy gonadal dysgenesis). , all have in common mutations in the wt- gene located on chromosome ( p ). wt- product is a transcription factor expressed in different tissues that participates in embryogenesis and cell differentiation. mutations lead to the production of an anomalous protein that causes alterations in renal function, gonadal anomalies, and the loss of tumor suppressor function. six variants of alleles have been described: isolated wilms' tumor, mesothelioma, isolated diffuse mesangial sclerosis, denis-drash syndrome, frasier syndrome, and wagr syndrome. frasier syndrome is caused by mutations in the donor zone of the intron link, with the subsequent loss of the +kts isoform (the patient has an imbalance in kts isoforms), whereas large deletions or loss of genetic material that comprises the wt- gene and other contiguous genes (pax or an) lead to the wagr syndrome. , patients with opitz's syndrome are mainly boys with hypertelorism and, in the severe forms, unilateral or bilateral lip cleft, laryngeal cleft, severe dysphagia with more or less life-threatening aspiration, hypospadias and, occasionally, imperforate anus. the most important internal anomalies are those in the tracheobronchial tree, cardiovascular system (defects in cardiac septation), and gallbladder, with a subjacent defect of the developing embryonal ventral midline. the syndrome is genetically heterogeneous and consists of two entities that were described as different in the past: ados, or autosomal dominant opitz syndrome or g syn- drome with a mutated gene that maps to q . ; and xlos, or x-linked opitz syndrome or bbb syndrome with a mutated gene that maps to xp . . , camptomelic dysplasia is an autosomal dominant syndrome with multiple osseous malformations. patients have xy karyotype and external genitalia that are ambiguous or female. gonadal histology varies from testes to dysgenetic ovaries with primary follicles. the cause is a haploinsufficiency of sox , located on q. the incidence of gonadoblastoma is low. atr-x syndrome is characterized by mild α-thalassemia, mental retardation, facial dysmorphism, and hypospadias. , the disorder is x-linked, and is caused by mutation in the art-x gene (synonymous xnp, hx ). testicular biopsy to diagnose infertility began in the s, , and most of the diagnostic terms used today were created then. these terms are usually descriptive and, except for a few (normal testes, sertoli cell-only tubules, tubular hyalinization, for example), do not specify the degree of tubular abnormality that is evaluated by each pathologist subjectively. the terms maturation arrest and hypospermatogenesis have been applied to biopsies in more than % of cases of infertility, - but the criteria for these vary widely among pathologists. two forms of maturation arrest have been described: spermatogenic arrest, and spermatocytic arrest, or its equivalent, meiotic arrest. true spermatogenic arrest is rare because germ cell maturation usually does not arrest at the level of a defi ned germ cell type. to avoid confusion the term irregular hypospermatogenesis has been proposed for testicular biopsies with decreased numbers of germ cells, subclassifi ed as slight, moderate, or severe. however, this diagnosis is of little help to clinicians. the reported frequency of spermatocytic (meiotic) arrest in infertile men varies from % to . % and is present in one or both testes of about % of oligozoospermic or azoospermic patients. if observed in only one testis, the contralateral testis may show histologic changes ranging from normal spermatogenesis to hyalinized tubules. disorganization of the seminiferous tubular cell layers is another frequent diagnosis in testicular biopsies, , , but this term is rejected by many pathologists. actual disorganization of the seminiferous tubular cells is unlikely and has not been demonstrated in ultrastructural studies. in most cases, the apparent disorganization is an artifact induced by handling or fi xation. , the term tubular blockage was introduced by meinhard and co-workers for testes with at least % of seminiferous tubules devoid of a central lumen and showing spatial disorganization of germ cells. this morphology was found in % of testicular biopsies from infertile men, mainly those with obstructive azoospermia. although this appearance can result from improper fi xation, the accumulation of sertoli cells and immature germ cells in the centers of tubules suggests a specifi c lesion, a variant of germ cell sloughing. diagnostic confusion decreased the interest and trust of urologists and andrologists in the study of testicular biopsies. subsequent studies attempted to correlate semen spermatozoa concentration with testicular size and biochemical fi ndings such as serum levels of fsh, and testicular biopsies were undertaken in only a limited number of oligozoospermic and azoospermic patients. , , however, these studies were also discouraging because fsh was found to correlate poorly with numbers of spermatozoa in the semen but better with numbers of spermatogonia in the seminiferous tubules, and normal numbers of spermatozoa can be produced by relatively small testes whereas some large testes have no spermatogenesis. in recent years, serum levels of inhibin b have been shown to have a positive correlation with spermatozoon numbers and serum fsh level. , the development of morphometry caused a resurgence of interest in biopsies. many semiquantitative , - and quantitative [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] studies were carried out. the greatest achievements of these studies were enhancement of the reproducibility of results and better evaluation of the reversibility of lesions. morphometry emerged as the best method to objectively evaluate the seminiferous tubular cells. the scoring method of johnsen, estimation of the germ cell/ sertoli cell ratio for each germ cell type, and calculation of germ cell number per unit length of seminiferous tubules are reliable and useful. several methods are available to evaluate the leydig cell population, including the mean number of cells per seminiferous tubule and per cell cluster; the mean number of leydig cell clusters per seminiferous tubule; the ratio of leydig cell area to seminiferous tubule area; and the ratio of leydig cells to sertoli cells. these methods have shown that the appearance of leydig cell hyperplasia described in many conditions is false, and that true leydig cell hyperplasia is extremely rare. optimal interpretation of testicular biopsies depends on the surgical technique by which the tissue sample is taken, the care and delicacy with which the specimen is manipulated, and proper fi xation and processing of the tissue. the size of the biopsy should not be greater than a grain of rice: that is, no diameter should be greater than mm. this amounts to about . % of testicular volume (normal volume is approximately ml). the biopsy should be bilateral because in more than % of patients the fi ndings differ between the testes. at the time of biopsy, the testicular axes should be measured as the basis of quantitative studies. the tissue should be taken opposite to the rete testis through a - mm incision in the tunica albuginea. this parenchyma herniates through the incision and can be carefully snipped off. if only light microscopy is to be performed, the specimen should be fi xed in bouin's fl uid for hours. if electron microscopy is indicated, a small biopsy fragment should be fi xed in glutaraldehyde-osmium tetroxide or a similar fi xative. to perform meiotic studies, testicular biopsy should be processed by air-drying or surface-spreading methods. the examination of testicular biopsies includes qualitative and quantitative evaluation of the testis and correlation between the biopsy and spermiogram. light microscopy immediately reveals whether the lesion is focal or diffuse. if focal, the percentage of tubules showing each lesion (sertoli cell-only, hyalinization, tubular hypoplasia, etc.) should be calculated. it is useful to evaluate elastic fi bers with a special stain because this highlights groups of small tubules that may be missed with hematoxylin and eosin. a minimum of cross-sectioned tubules should be studied (this is usually possible when fi ve or six histological sections are available). the diameter of each tubule should be measured, and the number of spermatogonia, primary spermatocytes, young spermatids (also called round spermatids or s a + s b spermatids), mature spermatids (also called elongated or s c + s d spermatids), sertoli cells, and, in some cases, peritubular cells counted. the presence of tubular diverticula, the most frequently observed lesions are sertoli cell-only tubules, tubular hyalinization, alterations in spermatogenesis in either the adluminal or the basal compartments of seminiferous tubules, and mixed tubular atrophy. sertoli cell-only syndrome includes all azoospermias in which the seminiferous epithelium consists only of sertoli cells. to better understand this syndrome, it is necessary to consider the morphological and functional changes induced in the sertoli cell by hypophyseal gonadotropin secretion during puberty. during childhood, sertoli cells are pseudostratifi ed and their nuclei are dark, small, and round or elongated, with regular outlines and one or two small peripherally placed nucleoli. the cytoplasm lacks specialized organelles. adult sertoli cells have characteristically pale, triangular nuclei with irregular, indented outlines. the nucleoli are large and have tripartite structures. the cytoplasm contains abundant smooth endoplasmic reticulum and specialized structures, including annulate lamellae, charcot-böttcher crystals, and specialized junctional complexes with other sertoli cells. the pubertal increase in length and width of the seminiferous tubules replaces the infantile pseudostratifi ed pattern with a simple columnar distribution. five variants of the sertoli cell-only syndrome are identifi ed by sertoli cell morphology, the degree of development of the seminiferous tubules, and the presence or absence of interstitial lesions. these variants are designated by the appearance of the predominant sertoli cell population: immature sertoli cells, dysgenetic sertoli cells, adult sertoli cells, involuting sertoli cells, and dedifferentiated sertoli cells (fig. - ) . each type is associated with other tubular and interstitial alterations (table - ) . the most frequent types of sertoli cell-only syndrome in infertility patients are dysgenetic sertoli cells, adult sertoli cells, and involuting sertoli cells. the clinical manifestations are similar, including normal external genitalia, welldeveloped secondary male characteristics, azoospermia, elevated serum fsh level, normal or elevated serum lh level, and normal or slightly low testosterone. these clinical and histologic features were long thought to constitute a single syndrome, del castillo's syndrome, but recent ultrastructural, histochemical, immunohistochemical, and cytogenetic studies have shown that this results from a variety of syndromes that may have primary or secondary causes (table - ) . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] some patients with the adult or dysgenetic sertoli cellonly syndrome variants have a few spermatozoa in their spermiograms. this discrepancy between oligozoospermia and the biopsy histology is caused by the presence of some seminiferous tubules with complete spermatogenesis elsewhere in the testicular parenchyma. sertoli cell-only syndrome with immature sertoli cells sertoli cells in adult testes with this variant of sertoli cell-only syndrome have an immature prepubertal appearance with pseudostratifi cation. the number of cells per cross-sectioned tubule is greater than normal. other tubular and interstitial features suggest immaturity, including small tubular diame-ters (< µm), tubules lacking central lumina, thin lamina propria lacking elastic fi bers, and interstitium lacking mature leydig cells. [ ] [ ] [ ] this syndrome is caused by a defi ciency of both fsh and lh which begins in childhood and is responsible for the lack of maturation of the sertoli cells, tubular walls, and interstitium. subsequently, there is no renewal or differentiation of germ cells, and these eventually disappear. when these patients are treated with hormones, the biopsy may show some degree of spermatogenesis or thickening and hyalinization of the tubular basement membrane. sertoli cell-only syndrome with dysgenetic sertoli cells dysgenetic sertoli cells begin pubertal differentiation but variably deviate from normal maturation, so that the morphology of dysgenetic sertoli cells differs among tubules and even among sertoli cells within the same tubule. nuclei usually have both mature features (pale chromatin and a centrally located, tripartite nucleolus) and features of immaturity (ovoid or round shape; regular outline; and small, dense chromatin granules) (fig. - ) . in addition to vimentin, sertoli cells immunoexpress anti-müllerian hormone (amh) and cytokeratin . immunoreaction to these two substances is assumed to be a sign of immaturity, as under normal conditions it is not detected after puberty. other signs of immaturity are poor development of the hematotesticular barrier and the absence of tubular lumina. tubular lumina are very small or absent in most dysgenetic sertoli cell-containing tubules, because the ability to produce testicular fl uid is greatly reduced. sertoli cell numbers per cross-sectioned tubule are very high, and mean tubular diameter is lower than µm. the tubular walls have few elastic fi bers, and most tubules show a variable degree of tunica propria hyalinization. completely hyalinized tubules are frequent. the testicular interstitium contains a variable number of leydig cells (normal, decreased, or apparently increased), many of which are pleomorphic with abundant paracrystalline inclusions. , most patients have normal or slightly subnormal testosterone level and elevated levels of fsh and lh. this syndrome can be observed in men with cryptorchid testes, at the periphery of germ cell tumors, in men with idiopathic infertility, and in men with y chromosome anomalies. sertoli cell-only syndrome with mature sertoli cells in this variant, most sertoli cells appear mature but are present in increased numbers ( ± . per cross-sectioned tubule). the seminiferous tubules have small diameters, but are still larger than in the two variants described above, and central lumina are visible. the cytoplasm contains abundant vacuoles that communicate with the tubular lumina ( fig. - ). the lateral cell surfaces have many unfolding and extensive specialized junctions with other sertoli cells (from the basement membrane to the apical cytoplasmic portion). lipid droplets, usually derived from phagocytosis of spermatid tubulobulbar complexes and dead germ cells, are scant. vimentin fi laments are abundant in the basal and perinuclear cytoplasm. the lamina propria is normal or slightly thickened. leydig cells are normal. serum testosterone level is normal or nearly normal, and fsh and lh levels are elevated. [ ] [ ] [ ] this syndrome is probably caused by failure of migration of primordial germ cells from the primitive yolk sac to the gonadal ridge. this failure may be due to a deletion in the azfa region in yq or a mutation in the genes that encodes c-kit or its ligand (stem cell factor), responsible for migration, proliferation, and survival of germ cells. testes with this variant of sertoli cell-only syndrome have numerous changes. sertoli cell nuclei may have lobulated shapes with irregular outlines, coarse chromatin granules, and inconspicuous nucleoli. seminiferous tubules have central lumina, decreased diameters, and variable thickening of the basement membrane (fig. - ) . elastic fi bers are present in normal or diminished amounts. leydig cells are variably involuted. this syndrome may be a primary disorder or secondary to irradiation or cytotoxic therapy, such as cancer chemotherapy or treatment for nephrotic syndrome. it is not usually possible to determine the etiology from the biopsy fi ndings alone. changes in the tubular walls are more pronounced in patients with a history of cyclophosphamide treatment, combination chemotherapy, or radiotherapy. the testicular interstitium may be fi brotic in patients treated with cis-platinum or cyclophosphamide. some syndromes with involuting sertoli cells, mainly those associated with decreased number of elastic fi bers, probably express a primary testicular anomaly with involuting and dysgenetic sertoli cells within the same tubule. the presence of immature-appearing sertoli cells in the tubular wall is thickened and contains elastic fi bers, increased amounts of collagen fi bers, and elevated numbers of peritubular cells as a result of tubular shortening. mean tubular diameter is markedly decreased to less than µm. the testicular interstitium contains few leydig cells, and these appear dedifferentiated or contain an increased amount of lipofuscin. this variant has been observed in surgical specimens from patients receiving androgen deprivation therapy for prostatic cancer, estrogen treatment for transsexuality, and cancer chemotherapy with cis-platinum. there is a correlation between the degree of sertoli cell dedifferentiation and the dose and timing of treatment with estrogens or anti-androgens. brief treatment induces germ cell loss and inconspicuous sertoli cell changes; long-term treatment causes pronounced sertoli cell changes, including initial nuclear rounding followed by nuclear elongation and the development of dark chromatin masses. eventually, the nuclei come to resemble those of infantile sertoli cells, including pseudostratifi cation. at the same time, the tubules become hyalinized and peritubular cells increase whereas leydig cells disappear. , estrogens act on the pituitary by inhibiting lh secretion, and on leydig cells. the action of gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist analogs is only on the pituitary, whereas cis-platinum acts only on the testis. the most common causes of tubular hyalinization include dysgenetic hyalinization, hormonal defi cit, ischemia, obstruction, infl ammation, and physical or chemical agents. the differential diagnosis is given in table - . dysgenetic hyalinization dysgenetic hyalinization is a diffuse lesion in which most tubules are uniformly hyalinized (fig. - ) . tubules lack seminiferous tubular cells and have a reduced number of peritubular cells. the few preserved tubules usually contain only sertoli cells, although rarely a few with spermatogenesis are present. dysgenetic hyalinization is seen in klinefelter's syndrome, testes that remain cryptorchid through puberty, and some hypergonadotropic hypogonadisms associated with myopathy. focal lesions are seen in mixed atrophy of the testis. tubular hyalinization is pronounced in klinefelter's syndrome, and from infancy the seminiferous tubules are small, containing reduced numbers of sertoli cells and few or no spermatogonia. at puberty, the dysgenetic sertoli cells fail to infertility mature and soon disappear. the tubules collapse, giving the appearance of phantom tubules. peritubular cells fail to differentiate and their number is low. they form a discontinuous ring around the hyalinized tubules and are incapable of synthesizing elastic fi bers and other components of the lamina propria. dysgenesis also involves the interstitium: leydig cells exhibit a characteristic adenomatous pattern, although their total number is decreased. the morphology of the leydig cell is not uniform, and there are shrunken, normal, and large forms. most contain reduced amounts of lipofuscin granules and lipid droplets. reinke's crystalloids are uncommon, and paracrystalline inclusions are abundant. in spite of the hyperplastic adenomatous appearance of the leydig cells, testosterone secretion is markedly decreased, and the resulting hypogonadism is the most important clinical feature of klinefelter's syndrome. tubular hyalinization in the cryptorchid testis is also dysgenetic. however, in contrast to the atrophic collapse seen in klinefelter's syndrome, cross-sections of the hyalinized tubules in cryptorchidism are targetoid. this results from the arrangement of the peritubular cells into two layers, suggesting an atrophic process that has evolved over a longer period than in klinefelter's syndrome, or a lower degree of dysgenesis. elastic fi bers are diminished. in the interstitium leydig cells appear hyperplastic, forming large aggregates, although their absolute numbers are decreased. leydig cell pleomorphism is less intense than in klinefelter's syndrome. many leydig cells have abundant vacuolated cytoplasm. whereas tubular hyalinization in klinefelter's syndrome is secondary to the effect of pubertal gonadotropin secretion on dysgenetic tubules, tubular hyalinization in cryptorchidism probably results from the effect of increased temperature on the dysgenetic tubules. however, other mechanisms are also involved in cryptorchid tubular hyalinization, including obstruction of sperm excretory ducts (anomalies in these ducts are frequent in cryptorchidism) and ischemia (principally in testes that could only be incompletely descended by surgery). hyalinization caused by hormonal defi cit hormonal defi cit causes diffuse tubular hyalinization, although the tubules may be recognized for a time as cellular cords surrounded by hyaline material. sertoli cell, a few spermatogonia, and rare primary spermatocytes may be identifi ed in these cords. when hyalinization is complete, only the elastic fi bers in the lamina propria indicate the structure of the previously normal adult testis. peritubular myofi broblasts decrease in number and form a ring at the periphery of the lamina propria. leydig cells disappear as hyalinization progresses, and the few that remain have pyknotic nuclei and shrunken cytoplasm with abundant lipofuscin granules. this process manifests clinically as postpubertal hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and is usually caused by a lesion in or near the pituitary, such as pituitary adenoma, craniopharyngioma, and trauma to the cranial base or sella turcica (see discussion on hypogonadotropic hypogonadism in this chapter). ischemic hyalinization ischemic atrophy is usually caused by torsion of the spermatic cord, vascular injury during inguinal surgery, polyarteritis nodosa, and severe arteriosclerosis. except for cases caused by torsion of the cord, these patients usually are not referred to infertility clinics. torsion of the spermatic cord often is not listed as a cause in large series of infertile patients. however, follow-up of men with torsion reveals marked alteration in their spermiograms. several hypotheses have been offered to explain the low number of sperm produced by the contralateral normal testis; the most promising include response to the release of antigens by the ischemic testis, and primary lesions of the contralateral testis (see discussion on testicular torsion in this chapter). testicular anoxia caused by torsion rapidly produces severe lesions that are irreversible without adequate treatment. eight hours after torsion, there is intense hemorrhagic infarction of the seminiferous tubular cells. chronic anoxia leads to tubular hyalinization and loss of leydig cells (fig. - ) . testicular atrophy secondary to inguinal hernia surgery occurs in . - . % of patents in the fi rst repair, and in . - % in surgery for recurrent hernia. atrophy is most fre- postobstructive hyalinization obstruction of sperm excretory ducts may cause atrophy of seminiferous tubules. in order to produce tubular hyalinization, the obstruction must be close to the testis because the ductuli efferentes in the caput epididymis absorb about % of tubular fl uid and protect the testis from excessive intratubular pressure. obstructive tubular hyalinization is usually focal and secondary to varicocele and other disorders involving dilation of the channels of the rete testis. these may be congenital, as in epididymis-testis dissociation, or acquired, as in rete testis dilation secondary to epididymal atrophy caused by arteritis, arteriosclerosis, or androgen insuffi ciency. obstructive tubular hyalinization also occurs in the seminiferous tubules at the periphery of the testis in patients who have had orchitis. obstructive hyalinization has a mosaic distribution: lobules of completely hyalinized tubules are intermingled with lobules of normal tubules (fig. - ). the diameter of the hyalinized tubules is not as small as in other causes of hyalinization, and the tubules occasionally contain sertoli cells. in the centers of many of the tubules there is a small lumen or vacuole, the latter in the cytoplasm of a residual sertoli cell. the lamina propria is thick and contains hypertrophic peritubular cells and abundant extracellular material. finally, the peritubular cells dedifferentiate and only fi broblasts remain. the interstitium contains a normal number of leydig cells forming small clusters, some of which are among hyalinized tubules. this is not seen in other patterns such as ischemic hyalinization. in addition, dilated veins with eccentrically hyalinized walls can be seen in testes associated with varicocele. this lobular pattern of tubular atrophy causes a peculiar ultrasound image which has been described as a striated pattern. , postinfl ammatory hyalinization many infections of the testis cause irreversible lesions in the seminiferous tubules. in bacterial infection the epididymis is usually involved, resulting in obstructive azoospermia. in viral infection the testis is often affected, even without symptoms. two types of viral orchitis often cause infertility, including mumps orchitis and coxsackie b orchitis. tubular atrophy caused by viral infection has a mosaic topography in which hyalinized and normal tubules are intermingled. in fully hyalinized tubules, the only recognizable cells are peritubular cells that form an incomplete, peripheral ring around the hyalinized material. the presence of elastic fi bers in these tubules distinguishes this from dysgenetic hyalinization. leydig cells form clusters of variable size, but their total number is normal. in bacterial infection the pattern of tubular hyalinization is variable. tubular atrophy of unknown etiology may be caused by an autoimmune response. this appears to occur in hypogonadism associated with disorders in other endocrine glands, such as addison's disease associated with gonadal insufficiency; adrenal-thyroid-gonadal insuffi ciency; and the association of diabetes, hypogonadism, adrenal insuffi ciency, and hypothyroidism. the testicular lesions are morphologically similar to those seen in the seminiferous tubules at the periphery of germ cell tumor and in testes with burn-out germinal cancer. in the initial stages of hyalinization associated with germ cell neoplasm, the tubules are small, contain intratubular germ cell neoplasia and dedifferentiating sertoli cells, and the lamina propria is infi ltrated by macrophages, lymphocytes, and plasma cells. in the fi nal stages, the intratubular cells have degenerated, the infl ammation has disappeared, and the seminiferous tubules are replaced by areas of hypocellular or acellular fi brosis (fig. - ) . it should be noted that autoimmune hyalinization is not the most common type of hyalinization associated with testicular tumors: the obstructive, ischemic, and dysgenetic variants are more common. radiation and a wide variety of chemicals cause tubular hyalinization. lengthy cancer chemotherapy combined with infertility radiotherapy invariably causes hyalinization. children's testes are more sensitive to radiation than those of adults. radiation for testicular leukemia frequently causes tubular hyalinization. in addition, radiation induces dense interstitial fi brosis and loss of peritubular cells, obscuring the borders between the interstitium and the tubules. this makes the tubules hard to see in hematoxylin-eosin-stained sections. leydig cells are atrophic and decreased in number. ischemia secondary to radiation-induced vascular injury also contributes to hyalinization. in tubular hyalinization associated with cancer chemotherapy, in addition to the direct toxicity of drugs on seminiferous tubular cells (see discussion on sertoli cell-only syndrome with involuting sertoli cells in this chapter), nutritional defi ciencies cause hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. , histophysiological studies have distinguished two compartments in the seminiferous tubules: basal and adluminal. the blood-testis barrier separates these, and each contains different cell types with diverse hormonal and nutritional requirements. on this basis, lesions may be classifi ed as involving only the adluminal compartment or both the basal and the adluminal compartments. the following discussion of spermatogenic lesions uses this new concept of tubular pathophysiology, conserving as much as possible of the classic terminology. this category includes all infertile testes with normal numbers of spermatogonia per cross-sectioned tubule, normal or decreased numbers of spermatocytes and young spermatids, and variable numbers of adult spermatids. a descriptive term for this disorder is immature germ cell sloughing. a few immature germ cells are normally found in the lumina of the seminiferous tubules, a fi nding that correlates with their presence in the ejaculates of fertile men. when these cells make up more than % of the cells in the ejaculate, it is abnormal and the result of premature sloughing of spermatids and, in some cases, of spermatocytes. , some authors have attempted to establish a correlation between the number of sloughed immature germ cells and the severity of lesions of the seminiferous tubules using light and electron microscopy. lesions in the adluminal compartment are classifi ed according to the most abundant type of germ cell whose maturation is arrested and which then sloughs: young spermatids, late primary spermatocytes, or early primary spermatocytes ( fig. - ) . young spermatid sloughing young spermatid sloughing is present when the ratio of elongated (s c + s d ) spermatids to round (s a + s b ) spermatids is lower than normal. the implication of this pattern is that many round spermatids are incapable of further differentiation and are sloughed ( fig. - ) . late primary spermatocyte sloughing in this condition, spermatogenesis develops normally up to the level of interphase primary spermatocytes, and these are present in normal numbers. afterwards, these spermatocytes degenerate without achieving meiosis and slough into the tubular lumen. all types of spermatid are greatly reduced in number. when biopsies of these testes are not properly fi xed, the seminiferous tubules may have a target-like appearance, with numerous cells in the lumen. this appearance sometimes has been referred to as tubular blockage. another descriptive term, spermatogenic arrest, also has been applied to this morphology. the latter term is inadequate in most cases, because some spermatids are present, and the number of primary spermatocytes is usually not increased as would occur if the transformation of spermatocyte into spermatid were blocked (fig. - ). late spermatocyte sloughing is a more accurate term for this condition and is preferred. primary spermatocyte sloughing occurs at the pachytene or diplotene stage of meiosis. early primary spermatocyte sloughing this lesion is characterized by the presence of a normal number of spermatogonia and decreased numbers of primary spermatocytes (fig. - ). the seminiferous tubules may contain a few spermatids. the term early primary spermatocyte sloughing does not necessarily imply an early meiotic lesion, which is quite rare. , rather, it refers to the sloughing of newly formed spermatocytes. the sertoli cells may show vacuolation of the apical cytoplasm as an expression of germ cell loss. this lesion is more severe than that in testes with late primary spermatocyte sloughing, and is considered to result from failure of the sertoli cells to maintain the adluminal compartment. etiology the mechanisms causing adluminal compartment lesions can be classifi ed into obstructive and nonobstructive. obstruction is present in more than % of cases, and is characterized by variability of involvement among lobules and the presence of at least two of the following abnormalities: enlargement of tubular diameter and a lumen with remarkable differences among lobules; sertoli cells with adherens germ cells protruding into the lumen, giving an indented outline; intense apical vacuolation of sertoli cell cytoplasm; accumulation of spermatozoa in the lumen of some tubules; or number of spermatids s c + s d is higher that that of s a + s b (see testicular lesions resulting from obstruction of sperm excretory ducts). the three levels of severity of adluminal compartment lesions emphasized by the terms young spermatid sloughing, later primary spermatocytes sloughing, and early primary spermatocyte sloughing, depend on the degree (total or partial) of obstruction and the level of sperm excretory duct obstruction: as the obstruction gets nearer to the testis, the greater the severity. obstruction may be extratesticular (epididymis, vas deferens, and ejaculatory ducts) or intratesticular (rete testis or any level of the seminiferous tubule length). the most frequent causes of extratesticular excretory duct obstruction are vasectomy, infl ammation (epididymitis, prostatitis), mucoviscidosis (congenital bilateral absence of vas deferens), and testis-epididymis dissociation. rete testis obstruction. varicocele is the most frequent cause of obstruction of the rete testis. more than % of testes with varicocele patients also often have spermatozoa with characteristically elongated heads with thin bases. initially, abnormalities are confi ned to the testis ipsilateral to the varicocele, but eventually both testes are affected, although abnormalities are more severe in the ipsilateral testis. elevated pressure in the pampiniform plexus is transmitted to the veins within the testes, principally to the centripetal veins that cross the testicular mediastinum and drain most of the testicular parenchyma ( fig. - ). the dilated centripetal veins compress the intratesticular sperm excretory ducts, explaining the mosaic distribution of the tubular lesions. seminiferous tubule obstruction. obstruction at the level of the seminiferous tubules can be dysgenetic or post-orchitic. a dysgenetic cause may be suspected in specimens with a mosaic distribution of lesions and seminiferous tubules with small diameters, thickened lamina propria, and an unusual seminiferous tubular cell layer consisting of cuboidal sertoli cells and spermatozoa that clog the lumina (fig. - ) . the diagnosis is confi rmed if study of serial sections demonstrates continuity between these tubules and those with conserved spermatogenesis. the structure of seminiferous tubules has been observed with scanning microscopy at such points of continuity. , tubular stenosis appears to be due to a primary anomaly of sertoli cells and peritubular cells. post-orchitic obstruction should be suspected in cases of tubular atrophy with a mosaic pattern without dysgenetic tubules or varicocele. some patients have a history of orchitis associated with parotiditis; in others the only fi ndings are oligozoospermia and small testes. testicular biopsy, sampling only the testicular periphery, reveals only the consequences of obstruction, lesions similar to those observed with varicocele. however, some postinfl ammatory changes should also be present, including hyalinized tubules, dilated tubules lined by cuboidal sertoli cells, or complete spermatogenesis. occasionally, there is modest perivascular or peritubular infl ammation and angiectasis. , about % of testes with lesions in the adluminal compartment have no obstruction, and most have primary anomalies of germ cells. this claim is supported by the following: pronounced decrease of germ cell type when the preceding type is greatly increased in number; normal correlation between the number of mature spermatids in biopsy and number of spermatozoa in the spermiogram; and the presence of numerous malformed germ cells in the adluminal compartment. decrease in the number of a germ cell type may be so important that spermatogenesis is arrested, with subsequent azoospermia. in some cases, maturation arrest is only partial and results in severe oligozoospermia. this maturation arrest is observed mainly in primary spermatocytes and young spermatids. primary spermatocyte sloughing may also be owing to meiotic anomalies ( fig. - ). the observation of increased numbers of spermatocytes arrested in preleptotene-leptotene or, more frequently, pachytene suggests the diagnosis. the lesion is always bilateral. spermatocytes arrested in pachytene are usually increased in size and later degenerate. in addition, some spermatids have large, diploid, spherical, hyperchromatic nuclei. the anomaly does not always affect all spermatocytes, and then a higher number of spermatids are produced. young spermatid sloughing not associated with obstruction may be due to either meiotic anomalies or defective spermiogenesis. the former gives rises to the appearance of many multinucleate, polyploid, hyperchromatic young spermatids. in the second cause, young spermatids are incapable of transforming into mature spermatids, and only round spermatids appear in the ejaculate. lesions in the basal and adluminal compartments of seminiferous tubules are the most frequent histological fi ndings in testicular biopsies from infertile men. these testes may be classifi ed into two major subgroups: hypospermatogenesis and spermatogonial maturation arrest ( fig. - ) . hypospermatogenesis: types and etiology hypospermatogenesis is defi ned as a reduced number of spermatogonia and primary spermatocytes, with primary spermatocytes outnumbering the spermatogonia. most seminiferous tubules contain few spermatids. about % of patients with hypospermatogenesis have focal tubular hyalinization. two variants of hypospermatogenesis have been quantitatively distinguished: pure hypospermatogenesis, and hypospermatogenesis associated with sloughing of primary spermatocytes. pure hypospermatogenesis is defi ned as a proportionate decrease in the number of all types of germ cell. the number of spermatogonia per cross-sectioned tubule is less than and usually more than . the number of primary spermatocytes is equal to or higher than that of spermatogonia. the number of round spermatids is higher than that of primary spermatocytes, and the number of elongated spermatids is similar to that of spermatogonia ( fig. - ) . hypospermatogenesis associated with primary spermatocyte sloughing is characterized by two features: low numbers of spermatogonia and primary spermatocytes (with spermatocytes more numerous than spermatogonia), and degeneration and sloughing of many primary spermatocytes. the remaining spermatocytes give rise to the few spermatids observed in the tubules (fig. - ) . etiology of hypospermatogenesis. hypospermatogenesis may result from hormonal dysfunction, congenital germ cell defi ciency, sertoli cell dysfunction, leydig cell dysfunction, infertility androgen insensitivity, exposure to chemical or physical agents, and vascular malfunction. hormonal dysregulation. although complete spermatogenesis may be observed in men with low levels of fsh and lh, the production of a normal number of spermatozoa requires normal gonadotropin levels. hypospermatogenesis has been reported in patients with abnormal pulsatile secretion of fsh and lh, low gonadotropin secretion, biologically inactive gonadotropins, mutation in the gonadotropin β subunit, inactivating mutation of fsh receptor gene, hyperprolactinemia, and adrenal and thyroid dysfunction (see discussion on hypogonadisms secondary to endocrine gland dysfunction in this chapter). congenital germ cell defi ciency. biopsy of cryptorchid patients after orchidopexy reveals that spermatogonia proliferation is decreased and germ cell development is insufficient in adulthood even if the number of spermatogonia was normal in infancy. is it likely that this poorly understood primary anomaly of germ cells is present in some cases of hypospermatogenesis. sertoli cell dysfunction. for many years, primary germ cell defi ciency was considered the most common cause of hypospermatogenesis; today, it is known that sertoli cell failure is the cause of many cases of germ cell defi ciency. this conclusion is based on several fi ndings. sertoli cells in many infertile patients are markedly abnormal, with an increase in the number of glycogen granules and acid phosphatase activity; a decrease in the number of lipid droplets; and alterations in the cytoskeleton, the nucleus, and cytoplasmic organelles. in some cases sertoli cells have abnormal maturation, with elongated nuclei containing coarse clumped chromatin instead of triangular-shaped nuclei with pale chromatin. anomalies in sertoli cell fsh receptors may be present in idiopathic oligozoospermia associated with elevated levels of fsh. serum inhibin b concentration may be used as a marker to estimate sertoli cell function. leydig cell dysfunction. testosterone synthesis by leydig cells is necessary for normal spermatogenesis, and abnormal leydig cell function is a frequent fi nding in idiopathic oligozoospermia. [ ] [ ] [ ] leydig cell dysfunction should be suspected when the cells appear diffusely hyperplastic. patients have elevated serum lh level with depletion of rapid-release testosterone, revealing a lack of early response of leydig cells to gonadotropin-releasing hormone stimulation. the ratio of testosterone to lh in the plasma indicates the degree of leydig cell dysfunction. decreased ratio with normal testosterone level suggests compensated dysfunction. patients with a ratio of less than : and normal other parameters may have complete spermatogenesis. androgen insensitivity. some patients with severe oligozoospermia or azoospermia have a defect in androgen receptor responsiveness, similar to that in reifenstein's syndrome. [ ] [ ] [ ] the abnormality may arise from a genetic defect in the eight exons that code for this receptor, mapped to xq - , or from post-translational errors. , this defect is also referred to as infertile male syndrome and mild androgen insensitivity, and the patients have male phenotype with somatic features of slight androgen defi cit. histologically, the testis is similar to that observed with leydig cell dysfunction or mixed atrophy, although the mechanism causing the leydig cell hyperplasia is quite different (fig. - ) . peripheral resistance to testosterone action alters regulation of the hypothalamohypophyseal-testicular axis, and lh and testosterone levels are elevated. androgen insensitivity causes between % and % of all cases of severe oligozoospermia or azoospermia. in such cases spermatogenesis improves with the administration of tamoxifen citrate, clomiphene citrate, or androgen therapy. , calculation of the index of androgen insensitivity can be helpful: plasma lh (miu/ml) × plasma testosterone levels (ng/ml). in patients with androgen insensitivity, the index is higher than (normal is about ). physical and chemical agents. the number of chemicals implicated in infertility increases daily. a detailed history is invaluable in evaluating these patients. the same is true of physical agents such as prolonged exposure to heat, ionizing radiation, or microwave radiation. etiology of hypospermatogenesis associated with primary spermatocyte sloughing. most testes with primary spermatocyte sloughing have varicocele, and this is commonly associated with infertility. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] varicocele is found in % of the general population, and is present in - % of infertile men. the mechanism by which varicocele affects fertility is unknown. clinical varicocele may occur without a testicular lesion (or only phlebectasis), and subclinical varicocele may be associated with severe spermatogenic lesions. increased testicular temperature , and compression of intratesticular sperm excretory ducts by dilated veins are the most plausible mechanisms. in other cases, primary spermatocyte sloughing results from anomalies of primary spermatocytes and spermatids, suggesting a meiotic anomaly. finally, in some patients the cause may be the presence of involuting sertoli cells. spermatogonial maturation arrest spermatogonial maturation arrest is a disorder defi ned by the presence of fewer than spermatogonia per cross-sectioned tubule and even fewer primary spermatocytes. spermatids are usually absent. there have been attempts to correlate the etiology of spermatogonial maturation arrest with the sertoli cell type present. immature sertoli cells are characteristic of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and some syndromes with androgen insensitivity (fig. - ) . mature sertoli cells, if their presence is unilateral, are observed in varicocele, epididymitis, and ipsilateral testicular traumatism, but if they appear in both testes the etiology is unknown. involuting sertoli cells are usually present bilaterally; some cases are idiopathic, whereas others are associated with a history of alcoholism or chemotherapy. dedifferentiated sertoli cells are found in spermatogonial maturation arrest caused by gonadotropin inhibition in treatment with estrogen, -releasing hormone agonist, or anti-androgen. mixed atrophy is a descriptive term for the coexistence, in the same testis, of tubules containing only sertoli cells and tubules with complete or incomplete spermatogenesis. this disorder includes patchy failure of spermatogenesis and partial del castillo's syndrome. the extent of sertoli cell-only tubules varies widely. tubules with spermatogenesis may be normal or partially atrophic. tubular hyalinization is occasionally seen (fig. - ) . mixed atrophy is more common than suggested by the literature, and many cases are included under other diagnoses, such as 'hypospermatogenesis with a severe germ cell depletion in such a way that some sertoli cell-only tubules are seen,' and 'sertoli cell-only syndromes with focal spermatogenesis.' serial sections from testes with mixed atrophy reveal that the two different types of tubule are grouped according to their histologic pattern, suggesting that the distribution is by testicular lobules. in cases of mixed atrophy, the percentage of tubules with spermatogenesis, the degree of spermatogenic development in the tubules, and the type of sertoli cell present should be reported. correlation of the fi rst two with the spermiogram gives an indication of prognosis, and the sertoli cell types identifi es the nature (primary or secondary) of the lesion. mixed atrophy (probably primary) is observed in idiopathic infertility, cryptorchidism (even if orchidopexy was done at infancy, in both the cryptorchid and the contralateral descended testis), retractile testes, macroorchidism, intravaginal torsion of the spermatic cord (in both twisted and contralateral testis), and chromosomal anomalies such as down's syndrome, /xyy karyotype, /xx karyotype, infertility giant y chromosome, klinefelter's syndrome with chromosomal mosaicism, partial androgen insensitivity, and some male pseudohermaphrodites. secondary mixed atrophy may be seen in patients undergoing chemotherapy, corticoid therapy, or in those with a history of viral orchitis. in addition to anomalies in the seminiferous tubules, examination of the biopsy should include a description of the morphology of the germ cells. giant spermatogonia are a normal component of the seminiferous epithelium. these cells may be altered spermatogonia in the s or g phases of the cell cycle. they rest on the basal lamina and have pale cytoplasm and an ovoid nucleus measuring at least µm in diameter. the frequency of these cells in normal and infertile men is about . cells per cross-sectioned tubules, although their number is usually higher in mixed atrophy. these cells should not be mistaken for intratubular germ cell neoplasia; they are also present in normal numbers in tubules at the periphery of germ cell tumor ( fig. - ). multinucleate spermatogonia are a common fi nding in cryptorchid testes that were surgically corrected, infertile patients, and old men. nuclei of both ad and ap spermatogonial types may be seen within the same cell. normally, spermatogonia are present only in the transition zone between the seminiferous tubule basal layer and the tubuli recti. dislocated spermatogonia have been found throughout the testis in old age, in infertile patients with a variety of lesions, after long-term estrogen therapy, and in seminiferous tubules with intratubular germ cell neoplasia. megalospermatocytes are large primary spermatocytes arrested in the leptotene stage ( fig. - ) that exhibit asynapsis of chromosomes. joined by cytoplasmic bridges, they form small groups. these cells may be clones of synchronously degenerating spermatocytes. they are frequently found in elderly men and are a non-specifi c fi nding in infertile patients. the presence of spermatids with multiple nuclei (from to ) is frequent is old age. similar cells with fewer nuclei have also been reported in infertility due to cryptorchidism, hyperprolactinemia, and idiopathic infertility ( fig. - ). there are at least four teratozoospermic syndromes that may be easily identifi ed by testicular biopsy, although in most the diagnosis previously relied on morphologic study of the spermiogram: ( ) round-headed spermatids (characteristic of spermatozoa lacking acrosomes) (fig. - ) , ( ) s c + s d spermatids with a very elongated head (characteristic of varicocele) (fig. - ) , ( ) macrocephalic s c + s d spermatids whose dna content suggests an anomaly in the fi rst meiotic division, and ( ) s c + s d spermatids with voluminous eosinophilic cytoplasmic droplets (syndrome of spermatozoa with short thick fl agella or fi brous sheath dysplasia). in some patients, s a + s b spermatids rest in these initial phases of spermiogenesis and eventually become sloughed in the tubular lumina. in other testes there are macrocephalic s c and s d spermatids with anomalous dna content, suggesting an anomaly in the fi rst meiotic division. ultrastructural study of spermatozoa is sometimes necessary to determine the cause of male infertility. a number of mor-phologically abnormal spermatozoa are present in all semen samples, including those from fertile men, but abnormal spermatozoa are very numerous in infertile patients. ultrastructural study is advised in all cases of asthenozoospermia, in teratozoospermia when the number of spermatozoa showing the same morphological anomaly is high, and in cases with apparently normal spermatozoa that fail to fertilize in vitro. the classifi cation of ultrastructural anomalies in spermatozoa is based on light microscopy fi ndings of lesions in the head and tail. anomalies of the spermatozoal head these are defi ned by changes in the shape of the head, and usually involve both the nucleus and the acrosome. some anomalies, such as pear-shaped, candle-shaped, or egg-shaped heads, , are regarded as minor variants of normal. more signifi cant abnormalities are the elongated, microcephalic, macrocephalic, and crater-defect forms. the most frequent abnormal head shape is elongated with a narrow base (tapered head spermatozoa). this anomaly is frequently associated with varicocele. microcephalic spermatozoa have spherical (globozoospermia) or irregularly shaped heads. the former have spherical nuclei with poorly condensed chromatin and lack acrosomes, postacrosomal sheaths, and a nuclear ring (fig. - ). most cases are sporadic, but this lesion was also reported in two pairs of infertile brothers. , microcephalic spermatozoa with irregularly shaped heads have small and irregularly shaped acrosomes that usually are not in contact with the nucleus. this anomaly may be congenital, as in aarskog-scott syndrome, or secondary to heat exposure or hashish smoking. in both types of microcephaly loss of connection between the acrosomal vesicle and the spermatozoal head is attributed to a defi ciency in basic proteins of the sperm perinuclear theca that promotes nuclear envelope organization and adhesion of the acrosomal vesicle. acrosin is reduced or absent in spermatozoa lacking acrosomes and those with small acrosomes. motility may be infertility normal. the occurrence of aneuploidy and disomy of sex chromosomes , in some cases should be evaluated before performing intracytoplasmic sperm injection (icsi). the cause of round-headed spermatozoa might be the lack of golgi-associated protein known in male mice as golgi-associated pdz-and coiled-coil motif-containing protein (gopc). this protein is principally localized in the trans-golgi region in round spermatids, and its loss produces globozoospermia. the primary defect consists of an inability of acrosomal vesicles to fuse to each other to create the acrosome. macrocephalic spermatozoa (macronuclear spermatozoa) have enlarged, irregularly shaped heads and defi cient chromatin condensation. there are two types (multiple tails , and afl agellate), both of which have abnormal dna content (many are tetraploid), suggesting a meiotic anomaly. , irregularly shaped spermatozoa are characterized by irregularity in the shape of the nucleus or acrosome. in the crater defect syndrome, there is invagination of the nuclear envelope in which the acrosome penetrates. the tail is morphologically normal, and motility is only slightly reduced. in spermatozoa with spoon-shaped nuclei, the defect is probably genetic. other anomalies include double-headed spermatozoa with two nuclei sharing a single acrosome. anomalies in the spermatozoal tail spermatozoal tail anomalies are classifi ed as generalized anomalies of the tail or anomalies in defi ned tail components, such as the connecting piece, the axoneme, or the periaxonemal structure. generalized anomalies in the tail cytoplasmic remnants. the presence of cytoplasmic droplets is normal during spermiogenesis. an elevated number of spermatozoa with cytoplasmic droplets in semen is associated with premature sloughing of spermatozoa, as occurs in varicocele, and should not be misinterpreted as spermatozoa with excess residual cytoplasm. these spermatozoa are very often abnormal and the residual cytoplasm may be located around the intermediate piece or surrounding the head. these spermatozoa also have other fl agellar anomalies. bent tail. a bend in the tail may occur at the level of the connecting piece or the intermediate piece. in bends of the connecting piece, the tail is laterally implanted and forms an angle with a nucleus that displays a thin base. bends of the intermediate piece are associated with cytoplasmic droplets, malposition of mitochondria, and loss of the parallel arrangement of the dense outer fi bers. coiled tail. spermatozoa with a coiled tail are a frequent fi nding in centrifuged semen, but they may also be a true abnormality. these spermatozoa have a perinuclear cytoplasmic remnant containing a fl agellum that is coiled around the nucleus and along the middle or principal pieces (fig. - ). this is frequently associated with abnormalities of the periaxonemal structures. tail stump (short-tail spermatozoa). the presence of many spermatozoa with short, thick tails in semen represents a well-defi ned teratozoospermic syndrome. ultrastructural examination reveals hypertrophy and hyperplasia of the fi brous sheath, hence this syndrome has also been termed 'fi brous sheath dysplasia.' additional axonemal malformations, including absence of the central pair of microtu-bules ( fig. - ) and, less frequently, lack of dynein arms, are observed in % of cases. about % of patients have respiratory disease, such as rhinosinusitis, bronchitis, and bronchiectasis from an early age. similar fi ndings have been reported in the cilia of the upper respiratory tract, and thus a relationship between fi brous sheath dysplasia and immotile cilia syndrome has been assumed. clinical presentation may be sporadic or familial. the cause of fi brous sheath dysplasia and the subsequent lack of motility in these spermatozoa is probably related to the occurrence of deletions in akap and akap genes, as well as the absence of akp protein in the fi brous sheath. multiple tails. the presence of more than two tails is associated with macrocephalic spermatozoa. sperm tail agenesis. teratozoospermia with % sperm tail agenesis has been reported in patients with a high degree of consanguinity. these spermatozoa also have defects in chromatin condensation and residual cytoplasmic droplets. anomalies of the connecting piece anomalies of the connecting piece are classifi ed as acephalic spermatozoa, defi cient organization of the connecting piece, and separation between the head and the tail. acephalic spermatozoa are known as 'pin-headed,' although they lack a true head; the small cephalic knob-like thickening is actually a cytoplasmic droplet with a variable degree of mitochondrial organization giving rise to a variable degree of motility. this anomaly is due to an early failure in spermiogenesis. it may be familial in some cases. , spermatozoa with defi cient organization of the connecting piece have narrowing at this level, with loss of alignment of the head and fl agellum axes. spermatozoa with a separated head and fl agellum, known as decapitated and decaudated spermatozoa, are also the result of an anomaly in spermiogenesis, but the separation between heads and tails can occur during spermiation or at any level of the sperm excretory ducts. , anomalies in axoneme abnormalities of the axoneme are classifi ed as numerical anomalies, microtubular ectopia, and immotile cilia syndrome. the most common numerical anomalies are the absence of one or both microtubules of the central pair and complete lack of the axoneme. spermatozoa lacking the central microtubule pair also lack the central sheath and are immotile, although they are normal by light microscopy. familial cases have been reported. this anomaly may be associated with ciliary dyskinesia. immotile cilia syndrome (primary ciliary dyskinesia) refers to patients having low mucociliary clearance associated with otitis, sinusitis, bronchitis, bronchiectasis, and immotile spermatozoa. most patients have the same defect in the axoneme and cilia of the respiratory mucosa. the frequency of this syndrome is estimated at between in and in men. clinical symptoms consist of reduced clearance of ciliary mucus in the airway, with onset at infancy. in order to prevent the later development of bronchiectasis, ultrastructural study of the respiratory mucosa is advisable if other disorders have been excluded, including cystic fi brosis, allergy and other immune disorders, α antitrypsin defi ciency, and cardiovascular and metabolic diseases. the most frequent anomalies of this syndrome are the absence of microtubule doublets and peripheral junctions, the central microtubule pair, the outer dynein arms, the central junctions, the two dynein arms, and the inner dynein arm plus the peripheral junctions ( fig. - ) . spermatozoa lacking the two dynein arms or the peripheral junctions are immotile. reduced motility is seen in spermatozoa with only one dynein arm. kartagener's syndrome is a variant of the immotile cilia syndrome characterized by the classic triad of situs inversus, bronchiectasis, and chronic sinusitis. the syndrome has autosomal recessive inheritance and is found in - % of patients with situs inversus. anomalies in periaxonemal structures periaxonemal abnormalities include mitochondrial sheath defects, malposition of the annulus, alteration in number, shape, or length of the outer dense fi bers, and absence, thickening, or disruption of the fi brous sheath. , many cases of asthenozoospermia, present in % of infertile men, may be attributable to defi cient mitochondrial function, possibly caused by mutations in their dna. abnormalities of the dense fi bers are associated with deficient motility. abnormalities of the fi brous sheath include, in addition to the abovementioned dysplasia of the fi brous sheath, absence of the fi brous sheath, and redundant fi brous sheath material associated with a defi cit or lack of mitochondria. the three defects are probably inherited. the incidence of intratubular germ cell neoplasia (igcn) in infertile patient is . % in england, . % in spain, . % in germany, and . % in denmark. a higher risk occurs in patients with severe oligozoospermia (fewer than million spermatozoa per milliliter), azoospermia associated with unilaterally or bilaterally diminished testicular volume, a history of testicular maldescent, , or unilateral testicular cancer. the cells of igcn are located in seminiferous tubules with decreased tubular diameter and lacking spermatogenesis. these cells are large and have pale cytoplasm and large and irregularly outlined nuclei, with one or several prominent nucleoli. they stain intensely with periodic acid-schiff and express placenta-like alkaline phosphatase, c-kit, and the cell adhesion molecule cd . a reduction in the number or absence of leydig cells is infrequent in infertility, and only occurs in hypogonadotropic hypogonadism secondary to lh defi cit and in patients infertility with biologically inactive lh. leydig cell hyperplasia is very common, and has been observed in klinefelter's syndrome, cryptorchidism, male pseudohermaphroditism, minor androgen insensitivity, infertility secondary to leydig cell dysfunction, varicocele, after treatment with αreductase inhibitors or non-steroidal anti-androgens, and in some elderly men. such hyperplasia may give rise to hypoechoic or hyperechoic images that may be misdiagnosed as tumor. there is a close relationship between testicular dysfunction and elevated mast cell numbers in the testis. an increase in interstitial and peritubular mast cells occasionally occurs in infertile patients. , this increase is higher than that observed in infl ammatory or neoplastic process. daily administration of ketotifen, an antihistamine-like drug with a mast cell-stabilizing effect, signifi cantly improves the spermiogram parameters in some patients. for effective therapy, it is important to know whether or not the azoospermia or oligozoospermia is the result of obstruction. , obstructive azoospermia and oligozoospermia azoospermia caused by obstruction is usually easily diagnosed, but this determination is more diffi cult with oligozoospermia. obstruction of the ductal system should be suspected when there are more than mature spermatids (s c + s d ) per cross-sectioned tubule and fewer than million spermatozoa in the spermiogram (fig. - ) . , obstructive azoospermia is implicated in . - . % of cases of male infertility. obstruction is classifi ed as proximal, distal, and mixed, according to the distance from the testis to the point of obstruction in the ductal system. proximal obstruction obstruction is considered proximal when the lesion lies between the seminiferous tubules and the distal end of the ampulla of the vas deferens. epididymal obstruction, principally of the caput-corpus transition zone, accounts for % of cases. rarely, there is a defective connection between the rete testis and epididymal ductuli efferentes. because the seminal vesicles are normal, men with proximal obstruction have a normal volume of semen (the testicular contribution to semen is about % of the total volume). when obstruction is in the cauda of the epididymis, epididymal markers, including carnitine, glycerophosphorylcholine and α-glycosidase are low. the nearer the obstruction is to the caput of the epididymis, the higher the level of these markers. distal obstruction distal obstruction is located between the ampulla of the vas deferens and the junction of the ejaculatory ducts and urethra. these patients present with sacral, perineal, or scrotal pain on ejaculation. rectal examination often reveals enlarged seminal vesicles. the volume of semen is low and consists of watery fl uid that fails to coagulate. seminal vesicle secretions are lacking. the concentration of prostatic secretions, such as acid phosphatase and citric acid, is increased owing to the lack of semen dilution. vasography may help in diagnosis, as higher segments fail to fi ll. transrectal ultrasonography is the most accurate imaging modality for the diagnosis of ejaculatory duct obstruction. needle aspiration of seminal vesicle fl uid may show spermatozoa that have entered the seminal vesicles by refl ux. mixed obstruction mixed obstruction refers to lack of patency of the vas deferens or the epididymis and alterations in the ejaculatory ducts or seminal vesicles (low ejaculate volume, and absence of fructose). the most frequent cause is mucoviscidosis. one-third of patients with congenital bilateral absence of the vas deferens have agenesis or hypoplasia of the seminal vesicles. the cause of epididymal obstruction in patients with anomalies of the prostate-vesiculo-deferential junctions is diffi cult to determine. etiology of obstructive azoospermia obstructive azoospermia may be caused by congenital or acquired lesions. congenital azoospermia the most frequent anomalies associated with congenital azoospermia are testis-epididymis dissociation, epididymal malformation in cryptorchidism, bilateral absence of the vas deferens, congenital unilateral absence of the vas deferens associated with pathology of the contralateral testis or its sperm excretory ducts, seminal vesicle agenesis, and ejaculatory duct obstruction (table - ) . agenesis of all mesonephric duct derivatives. agenesis of all mesonephric duct derivatives is a rare disorder that gives rise to varied anatomical anomalies, depending on the stage of embryonic development at which the mesonephric duct derivatives disappear. if failure occurs before the fourth week the ipsilateral kidney and ureter are absent, although the testis may be present, or there may be other renal anomalies. if failure occurs in the fourth week, and the ureteral bud is already formed, the ureter and kidney may develop normally. if failure occurs between the fourth and the th weeks, there is a variable constellation of anomalies that most frequently include normal development of the testis and globus major and hypoplasia of the other excretory duct segments, or agenesis of an excretory duct segment (epididymis, vas deferens, or seminal vesicle). epididymal anomalies. the most frequent epididymal anomalies are absence of the epididymis, testis-epididymis dissociation, defective connection of the vas deferens and epididymis, epididymal cyst, and anatomical abnormalities of the epididymis. complete absence of the epididymis is frequent in monorchidism and anorchidism. the epididymis is replaced by a small mass of cellular connective tissue with abundant blood vessels at the blind end of the vas deferens. partial absence of the epididymis is more frequent than complete absence. absence of the corpus of the epididymis gives rise to a characteristic malformation called bilobated epididymis. this varies from simple strangulation to complete separation of the caput and cauda. these anomalies are often associated with absence of the vas deferens. testis-epididymis dissociation is found in % of cases of obstructive azoospermia and is usually associated with cryptorchidism. defects in connection between the ductuli efferentes and the ductus epididymidis are rarely complete. in the incomplete form, some of the fi ve to ductuli efferentes in the epididymis are short and end blindly. epididymal cysts usually arise from blind-ended ductuli efferentes and contain spermatozoa. these spermatoceles retain their epithelial lining, although it becomes atrophic ( fig. - ). spermatozoa may be obtained from these cysts. some epididymal cysts arise from embryonic remnants, do not contain spermatozoa, and are lined by columnar or pseudostratifi ed epithelium. wolffi an cyst, unlike müllerian cyst, is immunoreactive in the apical border of epithelial cells with cd . cyst lined by clear cells with or without papillae raises concern for von hippel-lindau disease. large epididymal cyst requires removal and must be excised with great care to avoid damaging the ductuli efferentes and resulting in obstruction. epididymal cyst is present in about % of males, and the incidence is high ( %) in those exposed to diethylstilbestrol during gestation. the incidence of epididymal cyst in those with hepatorenal polycystosis is similar to that in the general population. anomalies in epididymal confi guration, altering its shape and location, are frequent in men with cryptorchidism and uncommon with descended testes. the most common malformations are elongated epididymis, angulated epididymis, and free epididymis. elongated epididymis is found in approximately % of undescended testes. the length of the epididymis may be several times that of the testis, and, in abdominal or inguinal cryptorchidism, the epididymis extends several centimeters below the testis. angulated epididymis is characterized by a long epididymis that has a sharp bend in the corpus with or without stenosis. with free epididymis, all or part of the epididymis is unattached to the testis. the most common variant is epididymis with free cauda. vas deferens anomalies. the most frequent anomalies are of the vas deferens are congenital absence, segmental aplasia, ectopia, duplication, diverticula, and crossed dystopia. congenital absence is defi ned as unilateral or bilateral absence of either the whole vas deferens or only a segment. obviously, azoospermia occurs with bilateral absence. the frequency of this malformation varies among populations. at autopsy, the prevalence is . %, but the clinical incidence infertility is - . % in infertile men and - % in patients with obstructive azoospermia. unilateral complete absence is three times more frequent than bilateral absence, and absence of only a segment is even more frequent. the affected segment may be absent or reduced to a fi brous cord. absence of the vas deferens may be associated with other malformations of the sperm excretory ducts or urinary system. the most frequent malformations of the excretory ducts are absence of the ejaculatory ducts ( % of cases) and, less frequently, absence of the seminal vesicles. about % of patients with bilateral absence of the vas deferens have partial aplasia of the epididymis. the most frequent malformations of the urinary system are absence of the ipsilateral kidney and other renal anomalies. complete or partial absence of the vas deferens occurs frequently in patients with cystic fi brosis. persistent mesonephric duct consists of the ureter joined to the vas deferens, forming a single duct that opens in an ectopic orifi ce between the trigone and the verumontanum. this malformation may be associated with cystic transformation or absence of the seminal vesicle. the kidney may be normal or dysplastic. anomalies of seminal vesicle and ejaculatory duct. the most frequent anomalies are agenesis of the seminal vesicles or ejaculatory ducts, cyst of the seminal vesicle, and ectopic opening of the ureter into the seminal vesicle. the last is the most common and often is associated with ipsilateral renal dysplasia. acquired azoospermia infl ammation and trauma are the main causes of acquired azoospermia. epididymitis is a frequent cause; chlamydia trachomatis , and escherichia coli are the most common infectious causes in developed countries. infections with neisseria gonorrheae and mycobacteria are also implicated, and non-specifi c epididymitis is important. apart from elective vasectomy, the most frequent traumatic causes of azoospermia are surgical accidents during herniorrhaphy in chidren, orchidopexy, varicocelectomy, hydrocelectomy, deferentography, and removal of epididymal cyst. obstructive azoospermia may also result from blockage of the ejaculatory ducts following transurethral resection, or as a result of chronic urethral catheterization. lesions of the testis and epididymis may result from obstructed sperm excretory ducts, depending on the location, origin (congenital or acquired), and duration of the obstruction. location of obstruction obstruction at the level of the ampulla of the vas deferens, seminal vesicles, or ejaculatory ducts does not usually cause signifi cant lesions in the testis or epididymis. more proximal obstruction at the level of the vas deferens, epididymis, or testis-epididymis junction usually causes severe lesions in both the sperm excretory ducts and the testicular parenchyma. obstruction of the vas deferens causes increased pressure within the ductus epididymis. as a result, epididymal lumina dilate, the epithelium atrophies, and fl uid containing few spermatozoa and some spermiophages accumulates in the lumen (fig. - ) . the most dilated epididymal segment is the caput. the ductuli efferentes often become cystically dilated and fi lled with spermatozoa and macrophages. from reabsorption and lysosomal degradation of this protein-rich fl uid, the epithelium accumulates lipofuscin granules or aquires apical eosinophilic granules (paneth cell-like change). rupture of the vas deferens gives rise to microgranulomas and ceroid granuloma (fig. - ). macrophages and lymphocytes are often present in the intertubular connective tissue. the most frequent testicular lesions in proximal obstruction involve the adluminal compartment, and are the result of the negative effect of hydrostatic pressure on the seminiferous tubular cell layers and, in particular, on the sertoli cell (figs - - - ) . etiology of obstruction obstruction secondary to congenital absence of the vas deferens usually causes little testicular injury, mainly dilation of the seminiferous tubules and an increase in the number of mature (s c + s d ) spermatids. lesions resulting from vasectomy are more important. increased intraluminal pressure in the epididymis may give rise to pain (late post-vasectomy syndrome). testicular lesions depend on the surgical technique used: they are slight if the proximal end of the vas deferens is not ligated or sperm granuloma forms at the site of vasectomy. the spermatogenic rhythm in the testis is slower than before vasectomy, and lesions characteristic of testicular obstruction develop, including thickening of the lamina propria and fi brosis of the interstitium. , in testicular obstruction secondary to herniorrhaphy in infancy, testicular lesions are mild. testicular lesions may be important if the epididymis is damaged by hydrocelectomy, and consist mainly of primary spermatocyte sloughing. in addition to these lesions, hyalinized tubules may be observed when obstruction is caused by infl ammation. in acquired obstruction the testicular lesions worsen with time. obstruction in the caput of the epididymis leads to disappearance of all germ cells in the adluminal compartment of seminiferous tubules. the tubules become dilated and sertoli cells appear vacuolated. testicular alterations after vasectomy may not be related to the duration of the obstruction but rather to the initial injury, and may disappear with time as the intraluminal pressure decreases. however, if a signifi cant amount of time has elapsed after vasectomy, the possibility of attaining a normal spermiogram with vasovasostomy is very low. vasal patency is restored in most cases of reanastomosis, but paternity rates are markedly lower ( - %) than normal ( %). some azoospermic patients have testicular biopsy with minimal histologic abnormality or minor tubular dilation without detectable excretory duct obstruction. these fi ndings are characteristic of two main conditions: young's syndrome, and alterations in spermatozoal transport. young's syndrome young's syndrome is defi ned by the following constellation of fi ndings: azoospermia, sinusitis, bronchitis or bronchiectasis, and normal spermatozoal fl agella. the incidence is probably higher than that recorded in the literature, and young's syndrome should be suspected in all patients with obstructive azoospermia without a history of epididymitis or scrotal trauma. these patients have a lesion at the junction of the caput and corpus of the epididymis that gives the epididymis a characteristic gross appearance. the caput of the epididymis is distended, the ductuli efferentes contain yellowish fl uid and numerous spermatozoa, and the remaining epididymal segments are normal. the ductus epididymidis is blocked by thick fl uid. young's syndrome should be distinguished from other causes of infertility also associated with chronic sinusitis and pulmonary infections, including ciliary dyskinesia and cystic fi brosis. ciliary dyskinesia consists of morphological, biochemical, and functional alterations in cilia and fl agella, and includes infertility several diseases such as the immotile cilia syndrome, kartagener's syndrome, and miscellaneous syndromes characterized by imperfectly defi ned abnormalities of cilia and fl agella. in young's syndrome, sinusitis and pulmonary infections develop in childhood and stabilize or improve in adolescence; in other conditions, the pulmonary damage increases with age and the cilia and fl agella are ultrastructurally abnormal. alterations in spermatozoon transport normally, spermatozoa detach from the sertoli cells and are transported through the intratesticular and extratesticular excretory ducts, where they are stored, mainly in the cauda of the epididymis, and fi nally released from the corpus by ejaculation or eliminated by phagocytosis. only about % of spermatozoa are ejaculated. whereas the release of spermatozoa from the corpus is intermittent, their transport through the sperm excretory ducts is continuous. transport is accomplished by the myofi broblasts in the wall of the seminiferous tubules and ductuli efferentes and the smooth muscle cells in the wall of the ductus epididymidis and vas deferens. these cells cause peristaltic contraction, propelling spermatozoa along the length of the epididymis in a mean of days (range, - days). the walls of the seminiferous tubules and extratesticular excretory ducts are under hormonal and neural control. the myofi broblasts in the seminiferous tubules have oxytocinic, α -β-adrenergic, and muscarinic receptors. unmyelinated nerve fi bers penetrate the tubular lamina propria, pass among the myofi broblasts, and end near the sertoli cells. along their length these nerve fi bers have varicosities containing sympathetic vesicles. the ductus epididymis is innervated by sympathetic adrenergic nerve fi bers that end among the smooth muscle cells. several hormones, including oxytocin, endothelin- , vasopressin, and prostaglandins, act on the musculature of the ductus epididymis. the peristaltic contractions begin in the caput and propagate toward the cauda. the frequency and amplitude of contractions vary from region to region, being higher in frequency near the caput and of maximal amplitude in the initial portion of the cauda. the progressive increase in amplitude parallels the progressive increase in thickness of the muscular wall and the requirement for greater force to propel the fl uid as it becomes progressively more viscous with a higher concentration of spermatozoa. the distal portion of the cauda is unusually at rest because it is the main reservoir of spermatozoa between ejaculations. several times daily, vigorous contractions of the distal cauda impel the spermatozoa from the cauda toward the vas deferens. several drugs that favor contraction of the muscular wall (α blocking and f α prostaglandins) have been successfully used in the treatment of alterations in the spermatozoon transport. knowledge of the incidence of chromosomal abnormalities in male infertility has progressed in parallel with advances in technology: karyotypic studies in peripheral blood, meiotic and chromosomal studies of testicular biopsies, analysis of chromosomes in spermatozoa, and analysis of dna in blood and spermatozoa for the detection of chromosome y deletions. the incidence of chromosomal anomalies in infertile men is . - . %, whereas in the general population it is lower than . %. the frequency of chromosomal abnormalities increases with the decrease in number of spermatozoa in the ejaculate. klinefelter's syndrome genetic and clinical aspects klinefelter's syndrome is characterized by an abnormal number of x chromosomes and primary gonadal insuffi ciency. the original description was of a man with eunuchoidism, gynecomastia, small testes, mental retardation, and elevated level of serum gonadotropins. the frequency of this syndrome varies according to the population studied: in to in surviving newborns; in patients in mental institution; . in infertile men; and % of patients who are azoospermic. in % of cases, the karyotype is xxy. the remaining % have chromosomal mosaicism with at least two x chromosomes. the most common are xy/xxy, xy/xxxy, xx/ xxy, xxy/xx/xy, xy/xo/xxy, xx/xxy/xxxy, and xxxy/ xxxxy. the xxy lesion is due to non-disjunction in sex chromosome migration during the fi rst or second meiotic division of the spermatocyte or ovule, or during the fi rst meiotic division of the zygote. study of the xg antigen in blood revealed that the extra x chromosome is from the mother in % of cases. advanced maternal age increases the incidence of children with the xxy karyotype. in xxy patients, the most common clinical fi ndings are: • eunuchoid phenotype with increased stature. the increased height is due to a disproportionate lengthening of the lower extremities. the ratio of span to height is less than . • incomplete virilization. this is variable and ranges from normal development to absence of secondary sex characteristics. • gynecomastia, usually bilateral, present in % of patients. • mental retardation. other commonly associated conditions include chronic bronchitis; varicose veins; cervical rib; kyphosis; scoliosis or pectus excavatum; and a high incidence of hypothalamic, hypophyseal, thyroid, and pancreatic dysfunction. the external genitalia usually are normally developed. the testes are usually less than . cm long, although in some cases of chromosomal mosaicism they are of normal size. the incidence of cryptorchidism is low in xxy patients but increased in mosaicism. supernumerary x-chromosome material is associated with a reduction of gray matter in the left temporal lobule, a fi nding correlated with verbal and language defi cits. histologically, the testes show the classic picture of tubular dysgenesis with small hyalinized seminiferous tubules lacking elastic fi bers and pseudoadenomatous clustering of leydig cells (figs - , - ). most biopsies show some tubules with a few sertoli cells. these cells may be dysgenetic (pseudostratifi ed distribution of nuclei that are dark and elongate and contain small peripherally placed nucleoli in tubules without apparent lumina). sex chromatin may only be observed in dysgenetic sertoli cells. this suggests that either there is testicular mosaicism of the x chromosome, or that both x chromosomes are heterochromatinized. in mosaicism, sertoli cell-only tubules may be more numerous than hyalinized ones. the reduced testicular volume gives an appearance of leydig cell hyperplasia, although quantitative studies have shown that the total number of leydig cells is lower than normal. many of the leydig cells are pleomorphic and some are multivacuolated. immature fi broblast-like leydig cells may be present. the abnormally differentiated leydig cells have nuclei with coarse masses of dense chromatin, deep unfolding of the nuclear envelope, multiple paracrystalline inclusions instead of reinke's crystalloids, multilayered concentric cisternae of smooth endoplasmic reticulum, large masses of microfi laments, and scant lipid droplets. sex chromatin is apparent in - % of leydig cells. leydig cell function is insuffi cient and androgen levels are less than % of normal. basal fsh and lh are markedly increased. , , in a few patients the testicular damage is less severe, with some tubules showing spermatogenesis and less prominence of leydig cells. exceptionally, complete spermatogenesis and even paternity have been reported. the xy/xxy karyotype is the most frequent variant of klinefelter's syndrome with chromosomal mosaicism. in this condition, the clinical abnormalities may be attenuated. gynecomastia is present in % of cases, compared to a frequency of % in men with the xxy karyotype. azoospermia is found in % of cases ( % in xxy men). the testes are larger and spermatogenesis is more developed in men with xxy ( fig. - ) . patients with the xxy karyotype who have spermatozoa in seminiferous tubules are bearers of xy spermatogonia and also of xxy spermatogonia, whereas those who have no spermatozoa have xxy spermatogonia only; these xxy spermatogonia may include some spermatozoa with x or y chromosomal complement, elevated numbers of both xy and xx spermatozoa, and also a high frequency of spermatozoa with disomy; this could be an important risk for gonosomy and also for trisomy . genetic counseling is advisable in patients seeking intracytoplasmic sperm injection therapy. genetic diagnosis before implantation of the zygote or prenatal diagnosis have been recommended, except for parents who assume the risk of gonosomy. the incidence of the xxyy karyotype is estimated to be . per live births. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] this karyotype may be associated with aggressive character, antisocial behavior, more severe mental retardation, and a higher frequency of congenital malformations than the xxy karyotype. men with the xxyy karyotype also have characteristic dermatoglyphics with an increase in arches, a decrease in total fi nger ridge count, and ulnar triradiuses associated with changes in the hypothenar region. concentric lamellae of smooth endoplasmic reticulum in leydig cells are a characteristic fi nding (fig. - ). men with the xxxy or xxxyy karyotype often have skeletal malformations, principally radioulnar synostosis, and cryptorchidism. in addition to the characteristic symptoms of xxy klinefelter's syndrome, men with the xxxxy karyotype have other abnormalities, including severe mental retardation, hypoplasia of external genitalia, cardiac malformations, radioulnar synostosis, microcephaly, and a high arched palate. association of klinefelter's syndrome with malignancy patients with klinefelter's syndrome have a higher incidence of malignancy than the general population. the association was fi rst discovered with breast carcinoma, which had an incidence times greater than in the general male population, and is related to hormonal stimulation. although testicular germ cell tumor is rare in these patients, extragonadal germ cell tumor is - times more frequent than in the general population. most occur in the mediastinum (about %) and are less frequent in the pineal gland, central nervous system, and retroperitoneum. the most frequent types are teratoma and choriocarcinoma; embryonal carcinoma and seminoma are rare. [ ] [ ] [ ] the extragonadal origin of germ cell tumors has been attributed to abnormal germ cell migration from the yolk sac. the high incidence has been attributed to elevated hormone levels and chromosomal anomaly. in a patient with the xy/xxy chromosomal mosaic and bronchogenic carcinoma, cultured xxy fi broblasts transformed three times more frequently when exposed to sv virus than did fi broblasts from normal men. other tumors reported in patients with klinefelter's syndrome (lymphoma, leukemia, bronchogenic carcinoma, urothelial carcinoma of the bladder, adrenal carcinoma, prostatic adenocarcinoma, testicular leydig cell tumor, and epidermoid cyst) do not appear to have a higher incidence than in the general population. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] occurrence of klinefelter's syndrome in childhood early identifi cation of this syndrome is possible with systematic cytogenetic study of newborns with positive sex chromatin or mental retardation. several clinical symptoms suggest klinefelter's syndrome. initial symptoms include decreased muscle tone, delayed speech, and poor language skills with an increased incidence of reading diffi culties and dyslexia. later, there may be recognition of mental retardation, psychiatric problems, excessive stature for age, disproportionately long legs, micropenis, and small testes. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] androgen defi ciency is an early fi nding. testicular biopsy reveals scant or absent germ cells. quantitative studies indicate that the number of germ cells in xxy fetuses is signifi cantly lower than in normal xy fetuses. the seminiferous tubules have reduced diameter, particularly those devoid of germ cells. the number of sertoli cells per cross-sectioned tubule is reduced. megatubules, ring-shaped tubules, and intratubular eosinophilic bodies are common (fig. - ) . in some cases of klinefelter's syndrome associated with down's syndrome, tubular hyalinization is observed in childhood. the interstitium is wide and contains few leydig cell precursors. if one testis is undescended, its histology does not differ from that of the contralateral testis. the testicular pattern remains constant through childhood. at puberty, before maturation of the tunica propria occurs, the seminiferous tubules rapidly hyalinize and leydig cell precursors differentiate into leydig cells. association of klinefelter's syndrome with precocious puberty although precocious puberty is not a characteristic fi nding in klinefelter's syndrome, karyotyping in older boys with mental retardation, gynecomastia, small testes, and precocious puberty is advisable. in most cases, the cause of precocious puberty is a hcg-secreting germ cell tumor in the mediastinum. infrequently, precocious puberty is idiopathic, and only in isolated cases is there a hamartoma in the third ventricle. klinefelter's syndrome is often associated with pituitary disorders such as panhypopituitarism or incomplete hypopituitarism. defi cits in fsh, lh, or both , have been reported. the cause of this association is unknown, and diverse etiologies such as trauma, immunologic disorders, and genetic defi ciencies have been postulated. alternatively, it may be due to exhaustion of pituitary gonadotropin-secreting cells after years of gonadotropin-releasing hormone stimulation. in patients defi cient in both gonadotropins, testicular biopsy shows diffuse tubular hyalinization and a marked reduction in or absence of leydig cells. the histological picture is similar to that of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism occurring after puberty, except for the presence of isolated tubules containing only dysgenetic sertoli cells and absence of elastic fi bers in the hyalinized tubular wall (fig. - ) . biopsy of patients with a defi cit only in fsh is similar to that of the dysgenetic sertoli cell variant of the sertoli cell-only syndrome, although some hyalinized tubules are present. the testicular biopsy of patients defi cient only in lh resembles that of men with classic xxy klinefelter's syndrome. xx males the xx karyotype may be present in three phenotypes: male phenotype, including normal external genitalia; male pseudohermaphrodites, with a variable degree of ambiguity in external genitalia, ranging from hypospadias to micropenis; and true male hermaphrodites. xx males with male phenotype and normal external genitalia men with the xx karyotype having male phenotype and normal external genitalia have clinical features similar to those of klinefelter's syndrome, including small testes, small or normal penis, azoospermia, gynecomastia, and minimal development of secondary sex characteristics. however, these men have harmonious body proportions, normal or slightly low stature, and normal intelligence. the incidence of xx males varies from : to : live births, accounting for about . % of infertile men. , males with xx karyotype have hypergonadotropic hypogonadism with elevated serum levels of fsh and, to a lesser degree, elevated lh, with normal or slightly decreased testosterone. familial cases have been reported. during childhood, biopsy of xx males reveals decreased numbers of germ cells. , biopsies from adults show one of three patterns: histology similar to that of xxy men, including diffuse tubular hyalinization with prominent leydig cells; sertoli cell-only tubules; , and both patterns intermingled with less prominent leydig cells. the last is the most frequent ( fig. - ) . ultrastructural studies reveal an increase in intermediate fi laments, absence of annulate lamellae in sertoli cells, absence of reinke's crystalloids, and abundance of intracytoplasmic and intranuclear paracrystalline inclusions in leydig cells. xx males with ambiguous external genitalia some patients with the xx karyotype have ambiguous external genitalia or hypospadias and are assumed to have a variation of male pseudohermaphroditism. these males, together with true hermaphrodites, may be found in the same family, suggesting that both disorders are different manifestations of the same genetic defect. the origin of xx males may be diffi cult to determine. however, as testicular differentiation requires genes located on the y chromosome, xx males have been classifi ed by cytogenetics as those having the sry gene, those lacking the sry gene, and xx/xy mosaicism. males with the sry gene comprise % of xx males. it is likely that this occurs when the genetic material from infertility the short arm of the y chromosome is translocated to the x chromosome. during paternal meiosis, the homolog pseudoautosomal regions of chromosomes x and y interchange the terminal portions of their short arms, giving rise to an x chromosome with the sry gene but lacking the azoospermia factor. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] alternatively, the sry region may be inserted in an autosome. most xx patients who are sry positive have a normal male phenotype. about % of xx males are sry negative and most have ambiguous genitalia. some patients have a normal male phenotype and only infertility. although sry is assumed to be the most important regulator factor of testicular determination, these patients may have mutation of one of the downstream non-y testis-determining genes. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] about % of xx males have xx/xy mosaicism or other karyotype with the chromosomal complement y. in these cases, detection of the specifi c dna sequences of y chromosome may be diffi cult because this chromosome may be only in some tissues and in a small number of cells. xyy syndrome the xyy syndrome was fi rst described in in the father of a girl with down's syndrome. the only clinical fi ndings were excessive height and pustular acne. study of other cases suggests that these men are predisposed to a psychopathic personality and antisocial behavior, although most have a normal personality and are socially adapted. the incidence of xyy patients is estimated to be . % of the general population, . - . % of men in prison, and . % of sexual homicide criminals. the extra y chromosome originates from non-disjunction during the paternal second meiotic division. in the past decade, many cases have been diagnosed prenatally. from birth, the patients have weight, stature and cephalic circumference above mean values and a higher risk for delayed language and/or motor development. about % of children have psychological and psychiatric problems such as autism; although their intelligence is normal, many patients are referred to special education programs. as adults, they have normal external genitalia and secondary sex characteristics. fertility is reduced, although many have been fathers. usually, testicular biopsy reveals mixed atrophy characterized by tubules with spermatogenesis associated with sertoli cell-only tubules (fig. - ) . , those tubules with spermatogenesis may show normal spermatogenesis or have lesions in the adluminal or basal compartments. in these tubules, many xxy spermatocytes degenerate during meiosis. about % of pachytene cells have three sex chromosomes. the number of normal spermatozoa in the ejaculate is low. there is a high incidence of both yy and xy spermatozoa and disomy . the variability in germ cell development is apparently due to elimination of germ cells that could not pair their sex chromosomes during the fi rst or second meiotic divisions or, later, during the round spermatid stage. spermatocytes that succeed in forming trivalent chromosomes are initially viable. the ultimate trivalent chromosome segregation yields aneuploid and euploid cells in equal numbers. sertoli cell-only tubules are attributed to either spermatogonial damage by substances released from degenerated spermatocytes or absence of testicular colonization by primordial germ cells. these men have normal serum levels of testosterone and lh. the latter may be slightly increased in xyy men with severe spermatogenic alterations. xyy men with mosaicism ( xyy/ xy) have a higher risk of fathering children with hyperdiploid chromosomal constitution, and spermatozoa should be studied genetically to evaluate the risk of intracytoplasmic sperm injection. men with three and four y chromosomes have been reported. men with the xyyy karyotype are tall and have normal male phenotype, slight mental retardation, azoospermia and, during childhood, frequent infections of the upper respiratory tract. testicular biopsy shows sertoli cell-only tubules, severe hyalinization of tubular basement membrane, and diffuse leydig cell hyperplasia. the chromosomal complement of parents can be normal. men with xyyyy also have no signifi cant phenotypic abnormalities (except for cases of chromosomal mosaicism). slight mental retardation, infertility, and antisocial behavior are the most signifi cant clinical fi ndings. rarely patients have facial dysmorphism and various skeletal abnormalities. the y chromosome is essential for gender determination and spermatogenesis, and abnormalities often lead to infertility. the relationship between y chromosome abnormalities and infertility is best understood in azoospermic men with alterations in yq , the distal region of the euchromatic part of the long y arm, the location of a male fertility gene complex called azoospermia factor. infertility may result from deletion of any of four subregions in which the azoospermia factor has been divided (azfa, azfb, azfc and azfd). , the best-known y chromosome genes involved in spermatogenesis are rbm. daz, dffry, cdy, smcy, and zfy. six different partial deletions of this region have been found in azoospermic patients (table - monocentric deleted yq chromosome partial deletion of the distal portion of the yq euchromatic region is associated with azoospermia owing to loss of the azoospermia factor. these men have normal external genitalia except for small testes, normal testosterone and lh serum levels, and increased fsh serum level. the most frequent histological fi nding is sertoli cell-only pattern, although many other patterns have been reported. the number of leydig cells is normal or increased. these fi ndings suggest that the azoospermia factor is required for early spermatogenesis. if the breakpoint of yq is proximal to the centromere, patients are short because the gene that controls stature is close to that for the azoospermia factor. dicentric yq isochromosomes sterility is frequent in men with dicentric yq isochromosomes. this anomaly is usually associated with a x cell line. the proportion of this line varies between patients and between cell types (fi broblasts or lymphocytes). when the point of breakage and fusion of the two y chromosomes is in the distal region yq , and the second centromere is inactivated, the y isochromosome is normal in size but does not stain with quinacrine, and thus is called non-fl uorescent y chromosome (ynf). as the breakpoint is in the yq region, the azoospermia factor function is altered. development of external genitalia varies from ambiguous to normal, and is probably related to the extent of xo present. testicular biopsies are similar to those of men with monocentric deleted yq chromosomes (fig. - ) . , ring y chromosome men with ring y chromosomes have normal male phenotype, azoospermia, and, in some cases, short stature. most have mosaic karyotype with a x line. in some cases, testicular biopsy resembles that of men with monocentric deleted yq chromosome, but in others there is premeiotic arrest of spermatocyte maturation. this is attributed to diffi culty in pairing the x and y chromosomes during meiosis. many patients have deletion of some azf regions. , y/y translocation chromosome patients with this anomaly have small soft testes and primary spermatocyte maturation arrest owing to defective pairing of the x and y chromosomes. the karyotype may be mosaic with a x line. translocation of y chromosome to x chromosome most frequently this translocation is cytogenetically undetectable, and patients present with infertility and are found to have xx karyotype. the phenotype is similar to that of men with klinefelter's syndrome except for shorter stature, absence of mental retardation, and smaller teeth. testicular biopsy shows sertoli cell-only pattern. men with cytogenetically detectable translocations have short stature, small testes, tubular hyalinization, and prominent clustered leydig cells similar to klinefelter's syndrome. autosomal translocation of y chromosome translocation of the distal heterochromatic portion of the y chromosome to the short arm of an acrocentric chromosome occurs occasionally. the most frequent are translocations to chromosomes , , , , and . the fertility of these men depends on the point of breakage. , if this occurs in the yq heterochromatic region, the patient has a male phenotype and is fertile. if the point of breakage is in the yq region, the patient is infertile and has small testes. seminiferous tubules may show only sertoli cells, spermatogenetic arrest in early stages of meiosis, or an infantile pattern. , interstitial microdeletion in yq yq microdeletion is the most frequent congenital cause of infertility. the frequency of y chromosome microdeletion in infertile patients varies widely ( - %). in azoospermic men, the frequency is between % and %. in oligozoospermic males the incidence drops. most microdeletions are in the azfc subregion. , testicular biopsy shows only sertoli cells, maturation arrest, or mixed atrophy. there is no correlation between site of azf subregion alteration and histological pattern. there is no exact correlation between genotype and phenotype, but most microdeletions in azfa are associated with azoospermia, most microdeletions in azfb are associated with maturation arrest, and most microdeletions of azfc are associated with spermatid maturation arrest or mixed testicular atrophy. partial deletion of azfc has a mild effect on fertility. external genitalia in xy patients with duplication of distal xp vary from male, ambiguous, to female, and gonadal dysgenesis is frequent. if the patient has male genitalia, these are usually hypoplastic with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and, frequently, multiple congenital anomalies and mental retardation. males with translocation of the x chromosome to an autosome may have disturbed spermatogenesis with subfertility or infertility. , xxx males show mental retardation, gynecomastia, normal stature, hypoplastic scrotum, a well-confi gured but small penis, small testes, and poorly developed pubic hair. serum testosterone levels are very low. seminiferous tubules appear severely hyalinized. xxx males result from an abnormal x-y interchange during paternal meiosis and x-x non-disjunction during maternal meiosis. there have been many reports on the relationship between autosomal anomalies and infertility, although the causes are not fully understood because the same anomaly is associated with infertility in some patients but not in others. robertsonian translocations are found in . % of infertile men ( . % higher than in the normal population) and are more frequent in oligozoospermic than in azoospermic men. the most frequent translocations are ; and ; . the incidence of reciprocal translocations in infertile patients is . % ( . % in the general population) and increases to . % in patients with azoospermia or severe oligozoospermia. the most frequent in infertile men are ; and ; . paracentric and pericentric inversions (except for the pericentric inversion of the heterochromatic region in chromosome ) are eight times greater in infertile patients ( . %) than in the general population. the highest risk for infertility occurs in the pericentric inversion of chromosome . , the most common testicular lesions in men with autosomal anomalies are spermatogonial maturation arrest, primary spermatocyte sloughing sometimes associated with hypospermatogenesis, and sertoli cell-only pattern. the only autosomal anomaly with prolonged survival is down's syndrome. in addition to trisomy of chromosome and the characteristic appearance, patients with down's syndrome usually have cryptorchidism, small testes, hypoplasia of the penis and scrotum, and hypospadias. adults have oligozoospermia or azoospermia secondary to primary testicular defi ciency. levels of fsh and lh are elevated, but testosterone is normal or slightly diminished. isolated cases of paternity have been reported. , in utero, there is marked delay in germ cell development. histologic studies of prepubertal testes at autopsy reveal decreased tubular diameter and tubular fertility index. eosinophilic bodies or microliths may be present in some tubules (fig. - ). adult testes have defi cient spermatogenesis and mixed atrophy, with some tubules showing complete spermatogenesis and others containing sertoli cellonly pattern. hypergonadotropic hypogonadism is found in several myopathies (myotonic dystrophy and progressive muscular fig. - prepubertal testis in down's syndrome. there are megatubules, ring-shaped tubules, and small tubules. germ cell number is very low in all these tubules. eosinophilic bodies or microliths are present in some tubules. dystrophy) and dermopathies (bloom's, rothmund-thomson, werner's, cockayne's, and tay's syndromes), with testicular histology that resembles that of klinefelter's syndrome. hypogonadism is also observed in noonan's syndrome, cerebellar ataxia (with milder testicular lesions), and a miscellaneous group of syndromes with variable histological fi ndings. myotonic dystrophy accounts for approximately % of men with muscular disorders, and about % have testicular atrophy. the estimated incidence is in live births. the abnormality involves the distal muscles of the extremities. in addition, patients may have premature baldness, posterior subcapsular cataracts, cardiac conduction defects, impotence, gynecomastia (rarely), and dementia (at later stages). myotonic dystrophy is an autosomal dominant inherited disease with variable penetrance. two loci are associated with the disease phenotype: dm in q . , and dm in chromosome . mutation in dm results in a serine/threonine protein kinase defi ciency that causes expansion of a ctg repeat (from to several hundred repeats) located on the ′-untranslated region of the dystrophy myotonic-protein kinase gene. the number of repeats is positively correlated to severity of the disease and negatively correlated to age of clinical onset. [ ] [ ] [ ] dm is caused by a mutation in q . of the znf gene and accounts for cctg-repeat expansion (from to repeats) in intron of this gene. the common clinical symptoms are due to gain of function of rna mechanism in cug and ccug repeats altering cellular function, including alternative splicing of various genes. the severity of the disease increases in the successive generations. the number of ctg repeats is not associated with male subfertility. hypogonadism is hypergonadotropic in most cases and is not related to the number of ctg repeats. testicular lesions probably begin late because % of patients are fathers. testicular biopsy shows different degrees of severity, ranging from nearly normal to fully hyalinized seminiferous tubules, with the number of leydig cells varying from increased to decreased. in some patients the hypogonadism is hypogonadotropic, and the testes show an infantile pattern. infertility may be the fi rst symptom of myotonic dystrophy. progressive muscular dystrophy is a multisystemic x-linked disease. it is usually associated with gonadal atrophy caused by a defective locus in chromosome . patients rarely live more than years. the incidence is approximately in live births. in both duchenne and becker forms the cause is a defect in the dystrophin gene. , bloom's, rothmund-thomson, and werner's syndromes are caused by a homozygous defect in human receq helicases in chromosome . of the fi ve members of this gene family (recq , blm, wrn, recq , and recq ), three produce autosomal recessive inherited diseases. mutations of blm have been identifi ed in patients with bloom's syndrome, wrn has been shown to be mutated in werner's syndrome, and mutations of recq have been associated with rothmund-thomson syndrome. , despite the close genetic origin of the three syndromes, symptoms are very different. bloom's syndrome is characterized by short stature, narrow face with prominent nose, facial 'patchy' skin color changes that become more marked with sun light exposure, and increased susceptibility to respiratory diseases, cancer and leukemia. severe oligozoospermia and azoospermia are common. leydig cell function is conserved. rothmund-thomson syndrome presents with poikiloderma, juvenile cataracts, sparse hair, short stature, skeletal defects, dystrophic teeth and nails, and hypogonadism. these patients are predisposed to cancer and osteogenic sarcoma. werner's syndrome (progeria) is characterized by short stature, prematurely graying hair, baldness, cataracts, atrophy and calcifi cation of muscle and fat, wrinkling of the skin, keratosis, osteoporosis, telangiectasis, atheroma, diabetes mellitus, gynecomastia, and hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. the lifespan of fi broblasts and other cells is shortened in this syndrome. the mutation is in the recq helicase gene. cockayne's syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder. signs and symptoms include infantile failure to thrive, short stature, poorly developed trunk, premature aging, neurological alterations, retinitis pigmentosa, optic atrophy, cataract, deafness, microcephaly, micrognathia, photosensitivity, delayed eruption of primary teeth, congenital absence of some permanent teeth, partial macrodontia, atrophy of the alveolar process and caries, limited articular movements in elbows, knees, and fi ngers, abnormally small eccrine glands, and hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. it may be caused by two gene mutations: cnk (ercc ) and ercc , located respectively on chromosomes and , and causing two variations of cockayne's syndrome, including cs-a, secondary to a ercc mutation, and cs-b with ercc mutation. cs-b patients have hypersensitivity to ultraviolet light secondary to a dna repair defect. tay's syndrome (trichothiodystrophy) has two presentations: ibsd (ichthyosis, brittle hair, impaired intelligence, short stature) and ibisd (photosensitivity, ichthyosis, brittle hair, impaired intelligence, short stature). in both forms, patients have decreased fertility. one case of hypergonadotropic hypogonadism has been reported. noonan's syndrome is characterized by multiple malformations reminiscent of turner's syndrome, including short statute, pterygium coli, and cubitus valgus, although there is normal male karyotype. the disease has an incidence of in to in live births and autosomal dominant inheritance, with sporadic occurrence in about % of cases. a locus for dominant forms has been mapped to q . . mutation in ptpn (protein-tyrosine phosphatase, nonreceptor-type ) accounts for half of cases, although similar germline mutations also cause leopard's syndrome and certain pediatric hematopoietic malignancies. cryptorchidism is present in about % of cases and is usually bilateral. during childhood, testicular biopsy shows a low tubular fertility index. puberty is often delayed, and, at adulthood, hypogonadotropic or hypergonadotropic hypogonadism occurs. ultrastructural studies reveal morphologic anomalies in germ cells. although spermatogenesis is generally impaired, some patients have been fertile (fig. - ) . cerebellar atrophy may be associated with hypogonadism. patients are infertile and have moderate ataxia without endocrine disorder. infertility is due to morphological abnormalities of spermatozoa caused by decreased expression of map (the most important microtubule-associated protein), and a defect in erythroid ankyrin. , many other syndromes also present with primary hypogonadism. the best known are alström's, weinstein's, borjenson-forssman-lehmann, marinesco-sjögren, richards-rundle, robinow's, and silver-russell syndromes. hypogonadotropic hypogonadism or hypogonadism of hypothalamo-hypophyseal origin is classifi ed according to whether the hypothalamo-hypophyseal failure occurs before or after puberty. eunuchoidism, present only in the former group, is the basis of the distinction. the most frequent types of hypogonadism caused by hypothalamo-hypophyseal failure are those caused by a defi cit of gonadotropinreleasing hormone, bioinactive fsh and lh, defi cit in growth hormone, those associated with prader-willi syndrome, and laurence-moon-rozabal-bardet-biedl syndrome. the onset and maintenance of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal-gonadal axis is due to pulsatile gonadotropin-releasing hormone (gnrh) secretion by neurons of the nucleus arcuatus hypothalamus, with release into the pituitary portal system and subsequent stimulation of gonadotropinreleasing hormone receptors on the surface of gonadotropinsecreting cells. the gnrh gene is located on q . patients with gnrh defi cit have partial or complete absence of gnrh-induced pulsatile lh secretion, and normalization of pituitary and gonadal secretions after exogenous gnrh administration. imaging studies of the hypothalamo-hypophyseal region are normal. clinical symptoms vary with age at presentation (congenital or acquired) and severity (complete or partial defi cit). clinical presentations include delayed puberty, idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (isolated gonadotropin defi cit), kallmann's syndrome, isolated fsh defi cit, and isolated lh defi cit (fertile eunuch syndrome). constitutional delayed puberty is assumed to be a minor form of gnrh defi cit, and is characterized by delayed sexual maturation in otherwise healthy males. patients are short and usually have a family history of delayed puberty. puberty usually begins at - years of age and progresses over years. if a -year-old boy has not begun pubertal changes (testicular enlargement, growth in height, and development of secondary sex characteristics), delayed puberty should be suspected. simple pubertal delay that is overcome naturally in a short time without treatment must be distinguished from hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. the latter should be suspected when any of the following symptoms are present in the patient or his family: a midline defect, anosmia, or pubic hair without testicular development. hormone assays may also assist in diagnosis. if a patient between and years old has prepubertal gonadotropin levels, he probably has hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. a variant of hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, isolated gonadotropin defi cit is characterized by defects in the synthesis or release of fsh and lh; other hypophyseal functions are normal. patients have eunuchoid phenotype, with small testes and penis, scanty body hair and beard, a high-pitched voice, and poorly developed muscles. presentation may be sporadic, autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive, or xlinked. the cause might be a mutation in the gnrh receptor gene. patients have very low levels of fsh, lh, testosterone, and estrogen. clomiphene citrate treatment fails to stimulate hormonal secretion. pulsatile administration of gnrh is useful to promote both androgen production and spermatogenesis. the lh-leydig cell-testosterone axis is normal in most cases, but normalization of the fsh-sertoli cell-inhibin axis is not achieved in all cases. basal inhibin levels higher than pg/ml and absence of cryptorchidism are favorable predictor factors for the acquisition of normal testicular size and acceptable spermatogenesis. testicular biopsy reveals an immature pattern. the seminiferous tubules have neither lumina nor elastic fi bers (fig. - ). sertoli cells are immature, and no differentiated leydig cells are seen. spermatogonia are rare. in some patients the pattern is similar to that of sertoli cell-only testes with immature sertoli cells. hypogonadism associated with anosmia is also known as maestre de san juan, kallman, abnormalities include olfactory bulb agenesis, cryptorchidism, mental retardation, color blindness, facial asymmetry, nerve deafness, epilepsy, shortening of the fourth metacarpal, tarsal navicular fi brous dysplasia, familial cerebellar ataxia, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, gynecomastia, cleft lip, maxillary or palate, unilateral renal aplasia, and cardiovascular abnormalities. the syndrome may be xlinked or autosomal. the gene for the x-linked form is mapped to xp . and may have different mutations (termed kal-x, kalig- , and admlx), complete deletion, and point mutations. this gene encodes the protein anosmina- , which is similar to other nerve cell adhesion molecules and is involved in axonal growth and development. kal protein, secreted by mitral cells, permits the passage of olfactory neurons into the olfactory bulbs and is lacking in kallmann's syndrome. this failure also inhibits migration of neuroblasts from the olfactory epithelium to the hypothalamus to form gnrh-secreting neurons. the autosomal dominant presentation (occurring in % of cases) is due to loss of function of fi broblastic growth factor receptor (fgfr ). interaction between kal and fgfr is required for neuronal migration. patients are classifi ed into two groups according to the partial or complete absence of gnrh. partial absence of gnrh is diagnosed by the presence of spontaneous pulses of lh, fsh, and testosterone during a -hour period. complete absence is diagnosed by the absence of spontaneous pulses of lh, fsh, and testosterone during a -hour period. these patients show an increase in fsh only after gnrh administration. testes are histologically infantile; the tubules have a small diameter, lack lumina, and contain immature sertoli cells and isolated spermatogonia. the interstitium is wide and consists of acellular connective tissue with no recognizable leydig cell precursors (fig. - ). autopsy studies in patients with anosmia and hypogonadism reveal agenesis of the olfactory bulbs that may be partial or complete and unilateral or bilateral, together with an apparently normal hypophysis and normal or hypoplastic hypothalamus. this syndrome is the least severe form of holoprosencephaly-hypopituitarism complex, a spectrum of developmental anomalies associated with impaired midline cleavage of the embryonic forebrain, aplasia of the olfactory bulbs and tracts, and midline dysplasia of the face. testicular seminoma has been reported in a patient with anosmia with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. this rare syndrome is characterized by azoospermia or oligozoospermia in normally virilized patients with normal sexual potency. serum levels of lh and testosterone are normal, but fsh levels are very low or undetectable. the clomiphene stimulation test gives variable results. the gnrh test induces a normal response only of lh. mutations in the fsh-β gene are exceptional. , testicular biopsy shows maturation arrest at the spermatocyte level, hypospermatogenesis, or partial sertoli cell-only pattern. gonadotropin treatment increases spermatozoal numbers in most cases, and fertility may be induced. isolated lh defi ciency, also known as pasqualini's or fertile eunuch syndrome, , is characterized by hypogonadism secondary to lh defi cit with preservation of spermatogenesis. patients have eunuchoid habitus, small testes, decreased libido, female distribution of pubic hair, and a high-pitched voice. other frequent fi ndings include gynecomastia, anosmia, ocular lesions, and pituitary tumor. fsh level is normal, but lh and testosterone levels are very low. mutations in the lh-β subunit gene and the gnrh receptor have been reported. the clomiphene test is usually negative, and gnrh stimulation increases lh and, to a lesser degree, fsh. testicular biopsy shows seminiferous tubules with normal or slightly decreased diameters and complete spermatogenesis; however, the number of all germ cell types is below normal. leydig cells are rare or absent (fig. - ) . maintenance of spermatogenesis in the absence of leydig cells and serum testosterone can only be explained by assuming the occurrence of testosterone secretion suffi cient for spermatogenesis but not to be detectable in the blood. in addition to adequate hypothalamic function, spermatogenesis requires that fsh and lh are biologically active. lh is a heterodimer, composed of two subunits: α (common to fsh and lh) and β (specifi c for lh). the genes for the β subunit are on q . . if both alleles are mutated for this subunit, the lh produced in biologically inactive although it may be detectable in standard hormone assay. homozygous patients have elevated serum level of lh and low testosterone levels, lack of puberty, and infantile testes. heterozygous patients are only infertile. patients with mutation in the β subunit of the fsh gene are oligozoospermic or azoospermic. activating and inactivating mutations of gonadotropin receptor genes have been reported. activating mutation of the lh/human chorionic gonadotropin receptor gene causes familial precocious puberty (see discussion on familial testotoxicosis, below). inactivating mutation of this gene causes male pseudohermaphroditism (see discussion on leydig cell hypoplasia in this chapter). inactivating mutation of the fsh receptor gene produces only mild spermatogenetic lesions, emphasizing the relative value assumed for fsh in spermatogenesis. activating muta-tion of this gene gives rise to spermatogenesis even in the absence of pituitary function. patients with isolated growth hormone defi cit and those with resistance to growth hormone action may have delayed puberty and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. some patients with spermatogenetic maturation arrest or idiopathic oligozoospermia have a relative defi cit of growth hormone. this hormone probably acts on the testis by stimulating local secretion of insulin-like growth factor- , which cooperates with testosterone. prader-willi syndrome is characterized by hypogonadism, obesity, muscular hypotonia, mental and physical retardation, and acromicria. other frequent fi ndings include strabismus and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. the incidence is estimated at between in and in newborns in live births, and is higher in males. patients have low serum levels of lh, testosterone, estradiol, and inhibin b, and high levels of fsh. these hormonal fi ndings suggest the occurrence of a mixed form of central (low lh) and peripheral (low inhibin b and high fsh) hypogonadism. the penis and testes are hypoplastic, and cryptorchidism is present in about % of cases (bilateral in % of cases) (fig. - ). during infancy and childhood, the testes have reduced tubular diameters; adults have an infantile pattern. this syndrome is caused by an anomaly of chromosome , usually in the p - band. other chromosomal anomalies include robertsonian translocations, reciprocal translocations, small supernumerary metacentric chromosomes, and partial deletion of the long arm of chromosome . this syndrome is a pleiotropic disorder characterized by obesity, infantilism, short stature, diabetes insipidus, mental retardation, retinitis pigmentosa, polydactyly, and syndactyly. it is more frequent in males than in females. men with this syndrome are infertile, and about % show hypogonadism. the testes are prepubertal, the scrotum is hypoplastic or bifi d, and the penis is small. cryptorchidism is found in % of males, and is bilateral in %. at least genes responsible for this syndrome have been cloned, and it is probable that additional genes are involved. the function of the products of these gene is to mediate and regulate microtubule-based transport processes. , hypogonadotropic hypogonadism associated with dermatologic diseases several dermatopathies are associated with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, including ichthyosis and johnson's neuroectodermic syndrome. most cases of ichthyosis associated with hypogonadism are x-linked. about % of these patients have cryptorchidism, small testes, micropenis, and high risk of testicular cancer. the cause is a defective microsomal enzyme, steroid sulfatase, causing the accumulation of cholesterol sulfate that hinders sloughing of the cornifi ed layer of the epidermis. the gene responsible for this enzyme is mapped to xp , . some of these patients also have anosmia or hyposmia owing to involvement of the neighboring genes, causing a contiguous gene defect. johnson-mcmillin neuroectodermic syndrome is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterized by alopecia, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, anosmia or hyposmia, deafness, prominent ears, microtia and/or atresia of the external auditory meatus, and a pronounced tendency to dental caries. hypogonadism associated with ataxia is rare. most patients are the offspring of a consanguineous marriage. inheritance is autosomal recessive. the most frequent syndromes are louis-bar's syndrome (ataxia-telangiectasia) and friedreich's ataxia. ataxia-telangiectasia is the most common inherited ataxia and is characterized by cerebellar ataxia that starts in infancy and develops progressively; mucocutaneous telangiectasis; anomalies of the immune system that cause pulmonary infection; hypersensitivity to ionizing radiation owing to impairment of dna repair; and a high risk of lymphoid neoplasia. the gene responsible is on q -q . . this ataxia results from inactivation of the a-t mutated (atm) kinase, a critical protein kinase that regulates the response to dna double-strand breaks by selective phosphorylation of a variety of substrates. friedreich's ataxia is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by degeneration of dorsal root ganglia and spinocerebellar tracts. hypertrophic myocardiopathy is also observed in many of these patients. the incidence is estimated at in children. it is caused by defects in the gene encoding frataxin, a protein required for vesicular traffi c in cell and synaptic transmission. about % of patients are homozygous for an unstable trinucleoid (gaa) expansion in intron of stm on q . the normal gene has up to or triplet repeats, whereas patients with this ataxia carry to more than gaa triplets. the normal gene has seven to gaa repeats, whereas the mutated gene has over repeats. the extent of the expanded allele is directly proportional to the severity of disease, early onset of disease, and development of cardiac abnormalities. other ataxias associated with hypogonadism are kearns-sayre, boucher-neuhauser, and gordon-holmes syndromes. hypogonadotropic hypogonadism may also be present in carpenter's, biemond's, fraser's, and moebius' syndromes, and in patients with mental retardation. maintenance of spermatogenesis requires the harmonious cooperation of several endocrine glands and proper functioning of other tissues. symptomatic endocrinopathy is present in only . % of infertile men, but over % of infertile patients have abnormalities in their endocrine studies. hypogonadism may be present in disorders involving the hypothalamus-hypophysis, thyroid, adrenals, pancreas, liver, kidney, and gastrointestinal tract, and may be associated with aids, chronic anemia, obesity, lysosomal and peroxisomal diseases, and neoplasia. hypogonadotropic hypogonadism can also be found in some (usually women) who perform rigorous sports (long-distance runners, swimmers, dancers, and rhythmic gymnasts). hypopituitarism hypogonadism may result from destruction of the hypothalamus or hypophysis by primary or secondary hypothalamic tumor; granulomatous disease ( fig. - ); fracture infertility of the cranial base; radiotherapy for malignancy of the nasopharynx, central nervous system, or the eye orbit; pituitary adenoma and cyst; aneurysm of the inner carotid artery; and chronic and nutritional disease. many of these processes cause panhypopituitarism with varied symptoms. clinical manifestations of hypogonadism in patients with pituitary lesions vary according to time of onset (childhood, or after puberty). in prepubertal hypopituitarism the testes retain an infantile appearance into adulthood, and there is rarely proliferation of spermatogonia and the development of primary spermatocytes. biopsy shows variable hyalinization of tubules. in postpubertal hypopituitarism the appearance ranges from complete spermatogenesis to tubular hyalinization ( fig. - ) . the presence of elastic fi bers in tubular walls indicates that pubertal maturation occurred before the development of hypopituitarism. leydig cells have pyknotic nuclei and retracted cytoplasm with abundant lipofuscin. in some patients, recovery of spermatogenesis occurs after administration of human chorionic gonadotropin. there are cases in which pituitary adenoma secretes both fsh and lh, inducing testosterone hypersecretion and an elevated sperm count. fsh-secreting pituitary adenoma associated with large testes and increased serum inhibin concentration has been reported. hyperprolactinemia prolactin inhibits gnrh secretion and hence fsh and lh secretion. in addition, prolactin has a direct inhibitory effect on androgens in target tissues. in men, hyperprolactinemia causes impairment of spermatogenesis, impotence, loss of libido, and depressed serum testosterone. some patients seek treatment because of oligozoospermia and infertility. hyperprolactinemia is also associated with dysfunction of prolactin receptors. spermiograms usually show oligozoospermia and an elevated level of fructose, although not all males with hyperprolactinemia have subnormal testicular function. testicular biopsy reveals variable testicular atrophy. the most frequent lesion is in the tubular adluminal compartment, with degenerative changes in the apical cytoplasm of sertoli cells, sloughing of young spermatids, and increased lipid droplets in leydig cells. in boys, two different conditions associated with abnormal prolactin secretion have been reported: hyperprolactinemia, testicular enlargement, and primary hypothyroidism; and prolactin defi ciency, obesity, and enlarged testes. infertility caused by thyroid gland malfunction is rare but reversible. it accounts for about . % of male infertility testicular function is impaired more by hypo-than by hyperthyroidism. patients with hyperthyroidism may have gynecomastia, impotence, and infertility. levels of fsh and lh serum are normal or increased, with elevated sex hormonebinding globulin, increased testosterone concentration, reduced non-sex hormone-binding globulin-bound testosterone, and little or no change in free testosterone. , in graves' disease there is a pronounced inhibition of gonadal steroidogenesis. in patients with hyperthyroidism, spermatozoa may be normal or reduced in number, and in both cases progressive motility is low. prepubertal hypothyroidism may impair testicular function by causing precocious or delayed puberty. in delayed puberty, hypothyroidism leads to hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, with testes showing incomplete maturation arrest and, in severe myxedematous hypothyroidism, hydrocele. in experimental hypothyroidism, testicular enlargement is frequently associated with increased spermatid production. primary hypothyroidism in adults causes hypergonadotropic, hypogonadotropic, or normogonadotropic hypogonadism, but testicular function is rarely impaired and patients are usually infertile. the cause of testicular damage is decreased gonadotropins or hyperprolactinemia. children with hypothyroidism usually have precocious pseudopuberty. about % of infertile patients reportedly have subclinical adrenal dysfunction, but the true incidence is probably lower. adrenal disorders most frequently associated with infertility are adrenal hypoplasia, adrenal hyperplasia, and adrenal carcinoma. congenital adrenal hypoplasia with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism is an x-linked recessive disorder that gives rise to adrenal insuffi ciency in the fi rst months of life. in later presentations, patients have cryptorchidism and delayed puberty. the responsible gene, dax on xp , is expressed in the adrenals, testes, pituitary, and hypothalamus. the resulting hypogonadism may be either pure or mixed (hypophyseal and testicular). in the last case, hypogonadism is partial. testicular biopsy from one adult with adrenal hypoplasia showed an apparent primary lesion, including tubules with dysgenetic sertoli cells and others with spermatogonial maturation arrest in associated with hypertrophy and hyperplasia of leydig cells. infertility is frequent in patients with minor forms of congenital adrenal hyperplasia. those with defi ciency of hydroxylase or β-hydroxylase usually have complete spermatogenesis but with reduced numbers of all germ cells. the characteristic histologic fi nding is decreased numbers of leydig cells. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] in untreated patients, the testes become enlarged by 'tumors' of the adrenogenital syndrome that consist of cells similar to adrenal cortical cells ( fig. - ). [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] adrenal cortical carcinoma adrenal carcinoma is often associated with excessive secretion of several hormones, causing hyperaldosteronism, cushing's syndrome, virilization, or feminization. virilizing tumors in infancy have their own characteristics, which differ from those of the same adult tumors as the infantile form may be associated with other disorders, such as hemihypertrophy and beckwith-wiederman syndrome, may be included in the spectrum of 'families with cancer predisposition' (mutations in p gene), and produce precocious pseudopuberty syndrome. in adults, adrenal carcinoma may cause marked spermatogenic depletion owing to the conversion of large amounts of dehydroepiandrosterone produced by the tumor into estrogen. feminizing tumor in infancy causes gynecomastia and pubic hair development. feminizing tumor presents more striking clinical characteristics, including progressive loss of secondary sex characteristics and feminization due to elevated estrogen. testicular atrophy results from the inhibitory effect of estrogen on pituitary gonadotropins. similar symptoms may be observed in patients with prostatic carcinoma treated with estrogens ( fig. - ) and in other conditions with excessive estrogen production, such as sertoli cell or leydig cell tumor. patients with cushing's syndrome or diseases that require long-term corticoid therapy, such as ulcerous colitis, rheumatoid arthritis, or asthma, have reversible reduction of fertility. the explanation for this is that most testicular receptors for corticoids are in leydig cells, and thus glucocorticoids are powerful inhibitors of testosterone synthesis. alterations in the carbohydrate, lipid and protein metabolism characteristic of diabetes mellitus involve the genital system, although most diabetic patients are fertile. gonadal impairment depends on the type of diabetes and the time of disease onset (infancy and childhood, puberty, or adulthood). , testicular lesions in newborns with diabetic mothers are discussed in the section on congenital anomalies of the testis. puberty may be delayed in diabetic patients, although the cause is unknown. other gonadal alterations appear at puberty, and diabetic men who have not been adequately treated may be infertile and have sexual dysfunction. serum levels of fsh, lh, and testosterone are decreased. spermiograms reveal low numbers and poor motility of spermatozoa. prolactin levels are increased and testosterone levels low or near normal. the seminiferous tubules have reduced diameters, thickening of the lamina propria, and alterations in the adluminal compartment. these consist of degenerative changes in the sertoli cell apical cytoplasm and sloughing of immature germ cells. the major lesion is in the interstitial connective tissue and leydig cells. small interstitial blood vessels show diabetic microangiopathy characterized by enlargement and duplication of the basal lamina, pericyte degeneration, and endothelial cell alterations. the number of fi broblasts infertility and the amount of collagen and ground substance in the interstitial connective tissue are increased. leydig cells are decreased in number and show increased amounts of lipid droplets and lysosomes, accounting for the reduced function of these cells. the tubular lesions are attributed to low serum testosterone, probably owing to defi cient leydig cell stimulation by insulin (or a decrease in insulin-dependent fsh) and abnormal carbohydrate metabolism of sertoli cells. sexual dysfunction is present in more than half of patients and consists of impotence, decreased libido, disorders of intercourse, and retrograde ejaculation. the causes of impotence are multiple, including microangiopathy and macroangiopathy, hormonal defi ciencies, psychological factors, and autonomic neuropathy affecting the parasympathetic system. neuropathy is probably chiefl y responsible for erectile failure in diabetic men. alterations in sperm excretory ducts may be associated with diabetes. the most frequent are enlarged seminal vesicles and calcifi cation of both seminal vesicles and vasa deferentia. calcifi cations are found in the muscular layers and display a concentric arrangement (fig. - ). although cystic fi brosis (mucoviscidosis) was recognized as a disease prior to , its effects on the male genital system were not recognized until the s. this may be explained by improvements in medical care during childhood, allowing the survival of many patients to adulthood, and the recognition of cystic fi brosis in patients who had been diagnosed with chronic bronchitis and hepatic or digestive dysfunction. in the us, cystic fi brosis is the most lethal congenital disease, with a prevalence of in children, and a carrier status of in white men. lesions in sperm excretory ducts involve (in decreasing order of frequency) the vas deferens (congenital bilateral absence, unilateral absence), ejaculatory ducts (bilateral obstruction), epididymis (diffuse or segmental hypoplasia), and seminal vesicles (incomplete development). thus, it appears that most patients with cystic fi brosis have infertility due to obstruction. , histologic studies in children, even at an early age, reveal that the vas deferens and ductus epididymis are absent or reduced to small ductuli with reduced or absent lumina and thin, poorly muscular walls (fig. - ). the testes are normal during childhood, but show hypospermatogenesis and spermatid malformations by adulthood. the spermiogram is characteristic of obstructive azoospermia, with acid ph, decreased semen volume and fructose concentration, and increased citric acid and acid phosphatase. the disease is a genetic disorder with autosomal recessive inheritance. the impaired gene (cystic fi brosis gene) is on chromosome ( q ), and encodes a protein termed cystic fi brosis transmembrane regulator (cftr). alterations in this protein cause cystic fi brosis. although more than mutations of this gene have been identifi ed, the most frequent mutation in caucasians is d-f , responsible for % of cases. congenital bilateral obstructive azoospermia secondary to bilateral absence of the vas deferens, even in the absence of other symptoms, is often a forme fruste of cystic fi brosis. before initiating treatment for infertility, the possibility that the patient is a carrier of the cystic fi brosis gene should be evaluated. malformation of the genital system plays the most important role in infertility in cystic fi brosis. the lesions begin in the th week of gestation, when the wolffi an duct forms the sperm excretory ducts. variable penetrance of the cystic fi brosis gene accounts for the diversity of malformations affecting different regions of the male genital system. the liver has a primary role in metabolism, detoxifi cation, and excretion of sex steroid hormones. chronic hepatic failure damages the hypothalamo-hypophyseal-testicular axis, and subsequently all related endocrine glands. hypogonadism is frequent in the fi nal stages of severe chronic liver diseases, including alcoholism, non-alcoholic liver disease, and hemochromatosis. the association of testicular atrophy with gynecomastia and hepatic cirrhosis is well known and is referred to as silvestrini-corda syndrome. , alcohol has a direct toxic effect on leydig cells. acute alcoholic intoxication suppresses serum testosterone in voluntary non-alcoholic men and laboratory animals. chronic alcohol ingestion, even in the absence of cirrhosis, causes hypogonadism, with symptoms of leydig cell failure, including testicular atrophy, infertility, decreased libido, impotence, and reduced size of the prostate and seminal vesicles. chronic alcoholic patients with cirrhosis also have symptoms of hyperestrogenism, including gynecomastia, female escutcheon, and female fat distribution pattern. most chronic alcoholic men, with or without cirrhosis, have signifi cant testicular lesions. the seminiferous tubules have reduced diameters, thickened lamina propria, and decreased or absent germ cells. leydig cells are reduced in number and contain abundant lipofuscin granules ( fig. - ). the epididymis becomes atrophic, mainly in the ductuli efferentes, owing to androgen deprivation. the epithelium of the rete testis becomes cuboidal or columnar due to estrogens. the spermiogram correlates with the variability of histologic fi ndings, usually showing a marked reduction in the number and motility of spermatozoa and an increase in the percentage of morphologically abnormal spermatozoa. , about % of patients initially have an increase in serum testosterone; with advanced disease, testosterone level decreases. the initial increase is due to an elevation in sex hormone-binding globulin concentration and reduced testosterone metabolism by the liver. serum estrogen level also increases owing to increased conversion of testos-terone into estrogen in peripheral adipose and muscular tissue. non-alcoholic liver disease impairs gonadal function according to the severity of the disease. patients have decreased levels of total and biologically active free testosterone. hormonal alterations are not as severe as in alcoholic patients, emphasizing the direct action of alcohol on leydig cells. in α -antitrypsin defi ciency testicular function and fertility are conserved; only in advanced stages of the disease do minor biochemical alterations occur. in alagille's syndrome (intrahepatic biliary duct hypoplasia), hypogonadism is associated with cholestasis, frequent vertebral, cardiac, and facial malformations, and mental retardation. hypogonadism is manifest by small testes, delayed puberty, and, in adults, lack of germ cell development. hereditary hemochromatosis is the most frequent genetic disease in the northern hemisphere and results from excessive iron absorption and accumulation in multiple tissue and organs, leading to cirrhosis, diabetes, hypogonadism, and arthralgia. four types of hereditary hemochromatosis have been reported. type , the most frequent, is caused by mutation in the hfe gene (c y), leading to increased intestinal absorption of iron, supersaturation of iron deposits, and damage in multiples organs. the type i hereditary hemochromatosis gene (hfe) is located on the short arm of chromosome , , is present in - % of hemochromatosis patients with northern european ancestry, and its protein product is mainly expressed in the epithelium of lieberkühn crypts. this protein interacts with the transferrin receptor, reducing its affi nity for iron-bound transferrin; therefore, hfe becomes a negative regulator of transferrinbound iron uptake. type gene is a juvenile form that expresses before the age of years in both sexes, and is associated with severe cardiomyopathy and hypogonadism. the type hemochromatosis locus is on chromosome q , but this gene has not yet been isolated. , type is on chromosome q , impairs the transferrin receptor, and its consequences are similar to those of type receptor defect. type is autosomal dominant, on q , and affects the basolateral iron carrier ferroportin , resulting in iron deposition in macrophages. types , , and have recessive autosomal inheritance and show a similar distribution pattern of iron deposits. in these three types, alteration of gonadal function has also been reported. iron homeostasis depends on many genes that act in a coordinated manner, and their exact function is not well known. it is assumed that normal individuals absorb - mg/day of iron, whereas homozygous patients with hereditary hemochromatosis absorb up to - mg/day. once iron deposits become saturated (cells of liver, pancreas, hypophysis, heart, adrenals, and gastric mucosa), the toxic effects of iron cause dysfunction of the liver (cirrhosis and cancer in - % of patients), the pancreas (diabetes in % of patients), the heart (myocardiopathy), musculoskeletal system (arthritis), and hypophysis (hypogonadism) (fig. - ) . hypogonadism may be the fi rst sign of disease when it starts in adult life. with age, hypogonadism becomes hypogonadotropic, with low serum levels of testosterone, lh, and fsh in more than % of patients, except if early treatment is initiated. the most frequent fi ndings are testicular atrophy with diminished tubular diameter, tubular wall thickening, a progressive decrease in spermatogenesis, and increased lipofuscin granules in leydig cells. the cause of these testicular disorders might be preferential deposition of iron in gonadotropic cells. iron deposits are not observed in the testis. hypogonadism decreases after aggressive therapy. polycystic renal disease in adults is a dominant autosomal disorder that appears with in frequency in the general population. patients with this disease comprise % of end-stage renal failure cases. infertility is common, even before the beginning of renal insuffi ciency. oligoteratozoospermia and necrospermia are frequent fi ndings. , serum levels of fsh, lh, prolactin, testosterone, and estradiol remain normal for a long time before the onset of renal insuffi ciency. the causes of spermiogram alterations have been related to partial obstruction of ejaculatory ducts (based on fi nding cystic dilations in seminal vesicles in % of patients) or seminal vesicle cyst. the incidence of these two disorders in patients with polycystic renal disease is very high compared to andrological patients without this disease ( . %). chronic renal insuffi ciency is associated with disturbed endocrine function in the pituitary, thyroid, parathyroids, and testes. the associated sexual dysfunction consists of erectile impotence, diminution of libido and semen volume, oligozoospermia or azoospermia, and infertility. in children, skeletal development and puberty are delayed. hormonal studies reveal elevated levels of fsh, lh, and prolactin, but testosterone levels are low. testicular biopsy shows seminiferous tubules with reduced diameters and reduced or absent germ cells (fig. - ) . , the interstitium contains a normal number of leydig cells and increased numbers of macrophages. additionally, patients with chronic renal insuffi ciency due to glomerulonephritis have thickening of the tubular lamina propria and decreased number of leydig cells. patients with end-stage renal disease who undergo dialysis show calcifi cations in several organs and tissues, including the male genital system (epididymidis, tunica albuginea, and cavernous tissue) in % of cases, and, in isolated cases, calcifi cation of the testicular parenchyma and microlithiasis. elevated serum levels of phosphorus, increased calciumphosphorus product, severe hyperparathyroidism secondary to other disorders, older age, and prolonged time on dialysis contribute to this disorder. uremic calcifi cation is a cell-mediated process in which elevated levels of tgf, vitamin k-dependent proteins such as osteocalcin and atherocalcin, and defects in calcium-regulatory proteins such as fetuin are implicated. when these patients are dialyzed, accumulations of urate and oxalate crystals are deposited in the rete testes and ductuli efferentes. these crystals are deposited beneath the epithelium and often sloughed into the lumen. reactive changes in the rete testis, including cystic transformation, are frequent (see disorders of the rete testis). the cause of gonadal dysfunction is unclear and probably involves several factors, including impaired testicular steroidogenesis, reduced clearance of pituitary hormones, and secretory defects of the pituitary and hypothalamus. dialysis does not improve testicular function. the response to renal transplantation is not immediate and is related to the glomerular fi ltration rate. patients with rates lower than ml/min develop atrophy of the seminiferous tubular cells. hypogonadism is a frequent fi nding in men with celiac disease, and results in clinical symptoms in - % of untreated patients. celiac disease causes infertility in some cases. spermiograms show reduced motility and numerous morphologic anomalies in spermatozoa. hormonal studies show elevated serum fsh levels in more than % of men with celiac disease. lh also is increased in more than % of these men. the response of fsh and lh to gnrh stimulation is excessive. the cause of this pituitary derangement is unknown. sperm anomalies are not always corrected by a gluten-free diet. studies in patients with ulcerative colitis and regional enteritis reveal a low sperm count, impaired motility, and ultrastructural alterations, including nuclear pleomorphism and chromatin malcondensation and decondensation. zinc defi cit may be responsible for these alterations in crohn's disease. the alterations apparently are related to the extent of the intestinal lesions and the severity of symptoms. patients with ulcerative colitis treated with salazopyrine, mesalazine or fasalazine present with signifi cant impairment of spermatogenesis and subfertility. spermiogram parameters improve when treatment ceases. more than % of hiv-infected men have hypogonadism, which can be observed even in those whose viral replication is under control and show normal numbers of cd lymphocytes. patients frequently develop 'early andropause,' marked by dysregulation of the hypothalamopituitary-testicular axis. hypogonadism is more frequent in hiv-infected men with wasting syndrome, and therefore these patients should undergo screening for hypogonadism and, if necessary, physiologic androgen replacement therapy. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the incidence of hypogonadism in males with aids is estimated to be %. , according to autopsy studies this increases to % in the - months prior to death. histological studies reveal that % have complete but quantitatively abnormal spermatogenesis, and the remainder have spermatocytic arrest or sertoli cell-only pattern. patients with chronic anemia requiring multiple transfusions develop iron deposits in the pituitary and polyglandular insuffi ciency, with atrophy of the thyroid, adrenals, and testes ( fig. - ) . the most frequent conditions are βthalassemia and sickle cell anemia (see fig. - ) . β-thalassemia is an autosomal dominant disease with three types: thalassemia trait (heterozygous β-thalassemia), intermediate thalassemia, and major β-thalassemia. the cause is mutation in the β-globin gene resulting in ineffective erythropoiesis, hemolysis, and anemia. nearly % of patients with major thalassemia have delayed puberty, [ ] [ ] [ ] and % have hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. gonadal dysfunction persists in most patients after healing of the thalassemia. sickle cell anemia is an autosomal recessive disorder with a constellation of fi ndings resulting from abnormal synthesis of hemoglobin, with over % of hemoglobin being type a. most patients have hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. the majority of people in developed countries are currently overweight, and the incidence of obesity seems to be increasing. infertility is frequently associated with obesity. very obese males have increased levels of serum estradiol and decreased levels of free testosterone and inhibin b. testosterone reduction is not followed by a compensatory increase in gonadotropins, resulting in hypogonadotropic hypogonadism. , testicular abnormalities begin with the adluminal compartment and later involve the basal compartment; also, there are leydig cell atrophy, cuboidal metaplasia of the rete testis, and epididymal atrophy. there are three types of autoimmune polyglandular insufficiency syndrome. type i is defi ned by the presence of at least two of three characteristic features: addison's disease, hypoparathyroidism, and chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis. the aire gene (autoimmune regulator), responsible for type l disease, is on q . , , and the disorder is recessive autosomal. hypergonadotropic hypogonadism is frequent. patients with type i syndrome have antibodies against many autoantigens, intracellular enzymes including the p side-chain cleavage enzyme, α-hydroxylase , and -hydroxylase, glutamic acid decarboxylase , aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase, tyrosine phosphataselike protein ia- , tryptophan hydroxylase (tph), tyrosine hydroxylase, and cytochrome p a . type ii autoimmune polyglandular syndrome is characterized by the presence of diabetes mellitus, hyperthyroid- infertility ism, hashimoto's thyroiditis, addison's disease, vitiligo, alopecia, pernicious anemia, and hypogonadism (listed in decreasing order of frequency). type iii syndrome includes thyroiditis, diabetes mellitus, pernicious anemia, and vitiligo or alopecia. about % of patients have hypogonadism owing to autoimmune destruction of the testis or pituitary gonadotropin-secreting cells (fig. - ) . , there are at least four diseases caused by metabolic deposits in lysosomes or peroxisomes associated with testicular alterations, including fabry's disease, adrenal leukodystrophy, wolman's disease, and cystinosis. fabry's disease is an x-linked metabolic disorder characterized by intralysosomal deposits of globotriaosylceramide (gb ) owing to α-galactosidase defi ciency. clinical symptoms begin with painful neuropathy and progressive renal, cardiovascular, and cerebrovascular dysfunction. all endocrine glands may accumulate gb as a result of welldeveloped vasculature and low rate of cell proliferation. testes and sperm excretory ducts are always damaged. some alterations, including those of endothelial cells, smooth muscle cells, and fi broblasts, are non-specifi c; others, such as those of myofi broblasts, leydig cells, and epididymal epithelium, are specifi c (figs - , - ). spermatogenesis is defi cient. enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant human α-galactosidase eliminates existing glycosphingolipid deposits and blocks new ones, and is thus recommended for implementation as soon as possible after diagnosis. [ ] [ ] [ ] adrenoleukodystrophy (adrenal testicular myeloneuropathy) this disorder is caused by mutation in the adrenoleukodystrophy gene on xq . mutation at this site produces three peroxisomal diseases: adrenoleukodystrophy, adrenomyeloneuropathy, and addison's disease. adrenoleukodystrophy is characterized by progressive demyelinization of the central nervous system, usually in children and young adults, often with adrenal insuffi ciency and testicular failure. peroxisomal β-oxidation is defi cient and, as a result, very long-chain fatty acids accumulate inside peroxisomes in many tissues, causing the signs and symptoms of the disease. , adrenomyeloneuropathy begins at a later age (about years) with progressive paraparesis, peripheral neuropathy, and adrenal cortical failure. males usually have gonadal dysfunction with oligozoospermia or azoospermia and hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. testicular atrophy develops slowly, the seminiferous epithelium disappear, and leydig cells contain characteristic cytoplasmic lamellar inclusions, with similar inclusions in adrenal cortical cells and cerebral cells. wolman's disease is a rare inherited lysosomal disease characterized by a defi cit in acid lipase/cholesteryl ester hydrolase. the genetic mutation has been mapped to q . -q . . complete enzymatic defi ciency (wolman's disease) causes death in infancy as a result of the accumulation of cholesterol esters and triglycerides in numerous organs such as the liver, adrenal cortex, and intestines. partial defi ciency is known as cholesteryl ester storage disease, and the testis accumulates triglycerides and cholesterol in leydig cells and, to a lesser degree, in interstitial macrophages. delayed disruption of spermatogenesis by this storage disease probably accounts for the frequent lack of fertility problems in men with this disease. early treatment of children with wolman's disease by transplantation of umbilical cord blood-derived stem cells may successfully restore acid lipase level in some. cystinosis is an autosomal recessive metabolopathy characterized by alterations in cystine transport from the lysosomes to the cytosol that results in intralysosomal accumulation of cystine. there are several genes responsible, all on chromosome p . cystine storage occurs in all body tissues. deposits in the renal parenchyma cause the main complication of cystinosis, namely renal insuffi ciency (nephropathic cystinosis). patients also develop hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. testicular involvement may be massive, with interstitial macrophages fi lled with cystine crystals that are visible by polarized light. niemann-pick disease consists of a heterogeneous group of inherited recessive autosomal diseases characterized by deposition of lipids in macrophages and other tissues. there are four reported types (a, b, c, d). the most common, type a, results from excessive storage of sphingomyelin owing to a mutation in the acid sphingomyelin gene that encodes a lysosomal hydrolase, located on p . - region. interstitial macrophages in the testes have wide eosinophilic, granular cytoplasm. ultrastructural studies reveal a large number of lysosomes fi lled with laminate bodies. physical and chemical agents may impair testicular function by direct action on the pituitary, the testis, or the sperm excretory ducts. in the pituitary, damage to gonadotropic cells may be caused by estrogen. in the testes, gonadotoxic agents may selectively impair a select cell type, but later, global dysfunction occurs. for example, there is direct toxicity to sertoli cells by phthalates used as plasticizers, nitroaromatic compounds intermediate in the production of dyes and explosives, and γ-diketones used as solvents. direct toxicity on spermatogenesis is seen wtih ionizing radiation. many drugs that impair epididymal fl uid or spermatozoon transport damage sperm excretory ducts, with subsequent loss of fertility. the relationship between infertility or subfertility and certain professions or exposures to environmental agents is well known. adverse effects of the following agents on spermatogenesis has been demonstrated: organic solvents such as chlorinated solvents, aromatic solvents and varnishes, degreasers, thinners, and adhesives; this is also the case with carbon disulfi de exposure; pesticides such as ddt, linuron, and polychlorinated biphenyls; heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, mercury, and copper; industrial wastes such as dioxins and ethylene dibromide; phthalates and polyvinyl chloride; oral contraceptives; exposure to radiation or high temperature; and recreational drugs and doping. there is also a long list of potentially harmful agents that disrupt testicular function. carbon disulfi de is used as a solvent in the production of rayon. continuous exposure is toxic to the nervous system, and causes a decrease in spermatogenesis and libido and an increase in fsh and lh serum levels. , dibromochloropropane dibromochloropropane is used as a soil fumigant to control nematodes. lengthy exposure causes oligozoospermia, azoospermia, increased fsh and lh levels, and y-chromosome non-dysjunction. of the two natural forms of lead, organic and inorganic, the inorganic form is more dangerous. exposure to inorganic lead by workers in smelting, battery, and stained-glass plants causes direct spermatogenic damage. patients have asthenospermia, teratozoospermia, and oligozoospermia. , oral contraceptive manufacture workers in pharmaceutical plants using synthetic estrogens and progestins develop hyperestrogenism with gynecomastia, decreased libido, and impotence. neonatal exposure of males to diethylstilbestrol may induce cryptorchidism, testicular hypoplasia, epididymal cyst, and severe anomalies in semen production. there is increasing evidence to suggest that estrogen-like effects are produced by a variety of naturally occurring estrogens (so-called phytoestrogens) and numerous synthetic compounds such as phthalates, pesticides, and polychlorinated biphenyls. the principal methods of contact with potential endocrine-disrupting compounds is dietary ingestion of milk, fi sh, meat, fruits and vegetables, or environmental exposure. the increasing incidence of cryptorchidism, hypospadias, testicular cancer, and poor semen quality may be related to the negative infl uence of environmental factors on the testis during fetal life. the term 'testicular dysgenesis syndrome' has been proposed to designate this constellation of putative syndromes. estrogen exposure in utero may disrupt development of the testes and the entire male reproductive tract. estrogen may hinder fsh secretion by the fetal pituitary, and also interfere with subsequent sertoli cell proliferation, and hence the secretion of amh required for the regression of müllerian ducts. persistence of müllerian derivatives is associated with lack of testicular descent. changes in amh secretion may also account for altered germ cell proliferation during fetal life. exposure to high concentrations of estrogen might compromise testosterone production as well as masculinization of external genitalia (hypospadias) and inguinal descent of the testis (cryptorchidism). abnormal development of sertoli cells and low germ cell numbers could cause diminished spermatozoon production and infertility. marijuana decreases sperm density and motility and increases the number of morphologically abnormal spermatozoa. cocaine induces apoptosis in the rat testis ( fig. - ). about % of injection drug users have low serum testosterone levels. consumption of more than g alcohol per day adversely affects spermatogenesis in two-thirds of patients. women smoking more than cigarettes per day have fertility problems, neonatal and perinatal mortality, miscarriage, and congenital malformations. abuse of anabolic steroids by athletes causes hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and transient azoospermia. ionizing radiation causes alterations in spermatogenesis and hormonal regulation of the testes. some patients recover fertility a few years after exposure. the effects of non-ionizing radiation are less severe; however, reduced libido and reduced numbers of spermatozoa have been reported in men exposed to microwaves. heat normal intratesticular temperature is - °c, about - °c lower than core body temperature. conditions causing higher testicular temperature, such as varicocele and cryptorchidism, also cause testicular damage, with decreased numbers of spermatozoa and an elevated percentage of sper-matozoa with abnormal forms and low motility. , primary spermatocytes at the end of the pachytene stage are most sensitive to heat. the mechanism by which heat produces testicular lesions is unknown; hyperthermia affects the activity of enzymes such as ornithine decarboxylase and carnitine acetyl transferase, both necessary for metabolism and proliferation of the seminiferous tubular cells. the synthesis of dna and rna by germ cells also depends on temperature. dna synthesis by spermatogonia and preleptotene primary spermatocytes is higher at °c than at °c. rna and protein synthesis are normal at temperatures between °c and °c, but decrease markedly at °c. testicular trauma is especially frequent among athletes. trauma results in a wide variety of lesions, including contusion with or without hematocele, rupture, dislocation, and eventually spermatogenetic alteration that may lead to infertility. dislocation involves the displacement of one or both testes to a non-scrotal location , such as the inguinal canal, abdominal cavity, acetabular area, or distant locations such as the perineum, subcutaneous tissues, or superfi cial to the outer oblique fascia. , spermatogenetic recovery by orchidopexy has been successfully performed up to years after bilateral traumatic dislocation. sexual dysfunction is found in - % of patients who are treated for cancer. testicular cancer, hodgkin's disease, and leukemia are the most frequent malignancies during the reproductive years. therefore, preservation of fertility requires careful selection of less gonadotoxic therapeutic regimens; if paternity is planned, cryopreservation of semen before treatment may be considered. the most destructive treatments for gonadal function are radiation therapy and alkylating agents. the testicular parenchyma is one of the most radiosensitive tissues of the body, and the germ cells are the most radiosensitive cells of the testis. experimental irradiation of volunteers with a single dose revealed that late spermatogonia (ap and b) are more radiosensitive than early (ad) spermatogonia. ap and b spermatogonia may be destroyed with doses as low as . gy ( gy = rad), whereas ad spermatogonia tolerate doses higher than gy. type a spermatogonia, spermatids, and spermatozoa are respectively , , and times less radiosensitive than b spermatogonia. doses higher than gy produce a sertoli cellonly pattern. leydig cells tolerate up to gy and sertoli cells up to gy, although sertoli cells show ultrastructural alterations and increased phagocytosis of germ cell remnants after low doses of radiation. even with optimal protection, the contralateral testis absorbs from . to . gy in adjuvant therapy for rectal cancer or when the opposite testis is irradiated, a dose suffi cient to cause temporary azoospermia. likewise, irradiation of iliac or inguinal lymph nodes for hodgkin's disease or other forms of lymphoma exposes the testes to about gy. restoration of testicular function is time-dependent, requiring at least years. fertility in thyroid cancer patients who received radioiodine- ( i) therapy decreases briefl y, but infertility is not permanent. electromagnetic radiation from cell phones impairs spermatozoon motility according to one study. prepubertal testes also are sensitive to radiation therapy. patients treated for wilms' tumor may have delayed puberty and, at adulthood, oligoospermia or azoospermia with elevated levels of fsh; this fi nding suggests that leydig cells are also damaged. a special case is that of children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia involving the testis. radiotherapy with doses of - gy, either alone or with chemotherapy, causes irreversible damage to the seminiferous tubules and leydig cells. these patients develop azoospermia and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism with low serum testosterone ( fig. - ). widespread use of cytotoxic chemotherapy has created a number of adverse side effects, including gonadotoxicity. combination chemotherapy makes it diffi cult to ascertain which specifi c agent is responsible for azoospermia and leydig cell dysfunction. comparative studies of chemotherapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia, extragonadal solid tumors, hodgkin's disease, ewing's sarcoma, and other soft tissue sarcomas in children and pubertal boys have shown that alkylating agents cause the most severe testicular damage. alkylating agents destroy the seminiferous tubular cells and induce tubular atrophy, shrinking the testis and increasing fsh serum concentration. these agents also impair leydig cell function, causing low testosterone, normal or elevated serum levels of lh, and an exaggerated response of lh to gnrh administration. testicular damage may be increased by combination with other agents (fig. - ). cyclophosphamide appears to be responsible for the greatest number of permanent or temporary cases of azoospermia after chemotherapy. this agent acts directly on the spermatogenic stem cells, and recovery depends on the number of surviving cells. in children, cyclophosphamide reduces seminiferous tubule diameter and germ cell numbers; in the residual spermatogonia nuclei are enlarged. puberty may progress, even during treatment, and the adult testis may show a sertoli cell-only pattern. in adults, cyclophosphamide treatment may cause irreversible testicular damage. administered alone, a dose of mg/m produces permanent azoospermia in % of men. if cyclophosphamide is administered with doxorubicin, vincristine, dacarbazine, or dactinomycin (drugs that alone do not cause azoospermia), doses of mg/m cause azoospermia in % of patients. fludarabine, used for the treatment of chronic lymphocytic leukemia, produces testicular damage with diminution of ejaculate volume, oligozoospermia, increase in serum levels of fsh and lh, and decreased testosterone level. dna in spermatozoa is markedly abnormal, an effect that persists for several months. procarbazine, used to treat hodgkin's disease, causes permanent azoospermia in % of patients, even when not combined with alkylating agents. patients treated with a combination of cyclophosphamide and procarbazine in the copp protocol (cyclophosphamide, vincristine, procarbazine, and prednisone) do not recover spermatogenesis even if the cyclophosphamide dose does not exceed mg/m . chemotherapy without both alkylating agents and procarbazine, such as the abvd (dexorubicin, bleomycin, vinblastine and dacarbazine) or vbm (vinblastine, bleomycin and methotrexate) regimens, produces reversible azoospermia in % of patients. the alternating use of mopp (mechlorethamine, vincristine, procarbazine and prednisone) and fig. - testis from a -year-old patient who, at the age of years, underwent surgery followed by radiotherapy for paratesticular rhabdomyosarcoma. the testicular biopsy shows post-irradiation lesions, including germ cell aplasia and peritubular and interstitial fi brosis. abvd treatments causes testicular dysfunction in % of patients, but spermatogenesis recovers in %. patients with germ cell cancer who received chemotherapy with bep regimens (cisplatinum, etoposide, and bleomycin) become azoospermic - weeks after starting treatment. when the total doses reaches mg/m , infertility is irreversible; at lower dosages, fertility might be recovered over a period of about ( % of patients) to ( %) years, although a high percentage of spermatozoa with dna abnormalities persists. an important consideration in patients with testicular cancer or hodgkin's disease is the existence of testicular dysfunction before treatment. in some series dysfunction is present at diagnosis in more than % of patients; its cause is unknown. proposed mechanisms include primary germ cell defi ciency, release of toxic substances by tumor cells, and alteration in the hypothalamo-hypophysealtesticular axis. sexual function is often lost in patients who undergo bilateral retroperitoneal lymph node dissection for nonseminomatous testicular cancer. up to % lose antegrade ejaculation, although libido, erection, and orgasm are normal. loss of antegrade ejaculation results from the removal of or injury to sympathetic ganglia and the hypogastric nervous plexus during surgery. unilateral surgery, especially if the left side is not operated on, reduces this complication. , hypospermatogenesis sometimes occurs after surgery for rectal cancer, perhaps due to vascular compromise. spinal cord injury is a frequent fi nding, with more than cases annually in the us, mostly in young adults. fertility is impaired in % of males with spinal cord injury. the major sexual dysfunctions in these patients are the lack of erection and ejaculation and poor semen quality. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] failure of ejaculation occurs in % of patients. semen may be obtained by means of vibratory stimulation of the penis or electroejaculation in more than %, but its quality is low, with increased numbers of dead spermatozoa, markedly low motility, and reduced fertilization rate. [ ] [ ] [ ] possible explanations include genitourinary tract infection, endocrine anomaly, and impaired spermatogenesis. recurrent infection occurs in - % of patients. compared to controls, a signifi cant increase in the numbers of neutrophils and macrophages occurs, with a marked increase in the production of reactive oxygen species. , this fi nding and the presence of elevated cytokine levels are assumed to be involved in pathogenesis. endocrine anomalies are transient, and hormonal levels return to normal after a few months. more than % of patients have abnormalities of the adluminal compartment of the seminiferous tubules, with variable degrees of immature germ cell sloughing; in % of patients the number of mature spermatids per cross-sectioned tubule is less than (normal > ). possible etiologies include an increase in testicular temperature due to vascular dilation, or an alteration in scrotal thermoregulation secondary to impaired sympathetic innervation from prolonged wheelchair restraint; alteration in sperm transport secondary to nerve injury, resulting in sperm stagnation in seminal vesicles, a hostile environment that normally is devoid of spermatozoa; and abnormal composition of seminal fl uid, causing deterioration of spermatozoa that in the epididymis and ductus deferens had good motility. more than % of patients with spinal cord injury have brown-tinged semen in some ejaculations. although the cause is unknown, it might be related to seminal vesicle dysfunction. when spermatozoa cannot be obtained by electroejaculation or vibratory stimulation, vasal aspiration or testicular biopsy are recommended. most patients have at least a few mature spermatids in some seminiferous tubules; therefore, testicular sperm extraction followed by intracytoplasmic sperm injection is a reasonable consideration in azoospermic patients. infectious agents may reach the testis and epididymis through blood vessels, lymphatics, sperm excretory ducts, or directly from a superfi cial wound. infection transmitted through the blood mainly affects the testis and causes orchitis, whereas infection ascending through the sperm excretory ducts usually causes epididymitis. acute infl ammation is accompanied by enlargement of the testis or epididymis. the tunica albuginea is covered by a fi brinous exudate, and the testicular parenchyma is yellow or brown. bacterial infection may cause abscess. in some cases the infection begins to heal, with the deposition of granulation tissue and fi brosis; in others, the infection may persist as an active process for a long time, resulting in chronic orchidoepididymitis. the most frequent causes of viral orchidoepididymitis are mumps virus and coxsackie b virus. other viral infections that occasionally cause acute orchitis include infl uenza, infectious mononucleosis, echovirus, lymphocytic choriomeningitis, adenovirus, coronavirus, bat salivary gland virus, smallpox, varicella, vaccinia, rubella, dengue, and phlebotomous fever. subclinical orchitis probably occurs during other viral infections (fig. - ) . before vaccination was commonly used, mumps orchidoepididymitis complicated - % of adult mumps cases and was bilateral in - % of cases. nevertheless, miniepidemics still occasionally occur. , as expected, the incidence remains high in countries where vaccination is not obligatory. in about % of cases of mumps orchitis the epididymis is also involved, but epididymal involvement alone is rare. clinical symptoms of orchitis usually appear - days after symptoms of parotiditis, but orchitis may also appear without parotid involvement. testicular involvement is multifocal, and consists of acute infl ammation of the interstitium and seminiferous tubules. the tubular lining is destroyed, and eventually only hyalinized tubules and clusters of leydig cells remain. with time, the testes shrink and become soft. if the infection is bilateral the patient is usually infertile, with severe oligozoospermia or azoospermia, although biopsy may reveal the presence of mature spermatids in some tubules, allowing sperm extraction for paternity. if only one testis was affected, the sperm concentration may be normal or slightly decreased and fertility is maintained. occasionally the testicular damage is so severe that testicular endocrine function is impaired, causing hypergonadotropic hypogonadism, with low testosterone levels and regression of secondary sex characteristics. mumps orchidoepididymitis is infrequent in childhood. most bacterial orchitis is associated with bacterial epididymitis. orchitis secondary to suppurative epididymitis caused by escherichia coli is most common. on light microscopy, the tubules are effaced by intense acute infl ammation. chronic orchitis with microabscesses is caused by e. coli, streptococci, staphylococci, pneumococci, salmonella enteritidis, and actinomyces israeli. , in some cases of chronic bacterial orchitis, the testis contains an infl ammatory infi ltrate consisting of numerous histiocytes with foamy cytoplasm (xanthogranulomatous orchitis) (fig. - ) , similar to that of idiopathic granulomatous orchitis but lacking intratubular giant cells. rarely, as in whipple's disease, large numbers of bacilli are present in histiocytes in the interstitium, vascular walls, and seminiferous tubules. the most frequent complications of pyogenic bacterial orchidoepididymitis are scrotal pyocele and chronic draining scrotal sinus. small fragments of testicular parenchyma may be eliminated through the scrotal skin, known clinically as fungus testis. another complication is testicular infarct, resulting from compression or thrombosis of the veins of the spermatic cord, in the scrotal neck, or the superfi cial inguinal ring. most cases of chronic orchidoepididymitis are associated with granulomas in the testis. specifi c causes may require special stains, cultures, or serologic tests, and include tuberculosis, syphilis, leprosy, brucellosis, mycoses, and parasitic diseases. in sarcoidosis and idiopathic granulomatous orchitis, the agent is unknown. the incidence of tuberculous orchidoepididymitis declined after the development of effective antibiotics, but it has recently undergone a resurgence among people who have emigrated from countries with a high incidence of the disease and the increasing population of immunologically compromised patients. most cases of tuberculous orchidoepididymitis are associated with involvement elsewhere in the genitourinary system. tuberculous epididymitis is usually the result of ascent from tuberculous prostatitis, which in turn is often secondary to renal or pulmonary tuberculosis. the pattern of spread is different in children: more than half have advanced pulmonary tuberculosis, and the testis is infected through the blood. more than % of patients with renal tuberculosis develop tuberculous epididymitis, and orchitis occurs in approximately % of patients with genital tuberculosis, usually secondary to epididymal tuberculosis. it has been suggested that some cases of tuberculous orchidoepididymitis are sexually transmitted. tuberculous orchidoepididymitis occurs mainly in adults: % of patients are older than years, and % are over years. the signs and symptoms may be mild, consisting only of testicular enlargement and scrotal pain. in such cases, fever is infrequent and constitutional symptoms may be absent. histologically, there are typical caseating and noncaseating granulomas that destroy the seminiferous tubules and interstitium (figs - , - ). in immunosuppressed patients, the granulomas consist of epithelioid histiocytes and a few lymphocytes with rare giant cells. acid-fast bacilli tend to be more numerous in immunosuppressed patients. similar lesions may be observed in orchidoepididymitis caused by bacillus calmette-guérin, which is usually used for intravesical instillation in patients with vesicular urothelial carcinoma. syphilis syphilitic orchitis may be congenital or acquired. in congenital orchitis, both testes are enlarged at birth. the histological fi ndings are similar to those of the interstitial orchitis of acquired syphilis. if diagnosis is delayed until puberty, the testis often shows retraction and fi brosis. in adults, acquired orchitis is a complication of the tertiary stage of syphilis and has two characteristic histologic patterns: interstitial infl ammation and gumma. early in the disease, patients with interstitial orchitis have painless enlargement. grossly, the parenchyma is gray with translucent areas. histologically, plasma cells are abundant. the infl ammation begins in the mediastinum testis and testicular septa, later extending through the parenchyma as the seminiferous tubules lose their cellular lining and undergo sclerosis. initially, the arteries show an obliterans type of endarteritis. small gummas may be observed. eventually, the infl ammation subsides and is replaced by fi brosis. the epididymis is usually not affected. gummatous orchitis is characterized by the presence of one or several well-delineated grossly gray-yellow zones of necrosis. histologically, ghostly silhouettes of seminiferous tubules are visible within the gumma, surrounded by infl ammation consisting of lymphocytes, plasma cells, and scattered giant cells. in most cases spirochetes may be demonstrated histochemically with warthin-starry silver stain, but the most specifi c diagnostic technique is genetic testing. the testis may be infected in patients with lepromatous or borderline leprosy. frequent involvement of the testis in lepromatous leprosy results from the low intrascrotal temperature that promotes growth of the bacilli. orchitis is usually bilateral, although the degree of involvement may differ between the testes. occasionally, testicular involvement may be the sole indication of the infection, and the diagnosis may be made by testicular biopsy. the histologic fi ndings in the testis vary with the duration of the infection. initially, there is perivascular lymphocytic infl ammation and interstitial macrophages that contain numerous acid-fast bacilli. later, the seminiferous tubules undergo atrophy, the leydig cells cluster, and blood vessels show endarteritis obliterans. finally, the testis is replaced by fi brous tissue with a few lymphocytes and macrophages containing acid-fast bacilli. most patients with lepromatous leprosy are infertile, even if the orchitis was clinically mild. , brucellosis brucellosis is common in some parts of the world, including the middle east. , orchitis occurs in some patients and may be the fi rst sign of disease. brucellosis should be suspected when testicular enlargement occurs in patients with undulating fever, malaise, sweats, weight loss, and headache. occasionally this may mimic testicular tumor. histologically, there is a dense lymphohistiocytic infl ammation with occasional non-caseating granulomas in the interstitium. the seminiferous tubules are infi ltrated by infl ammatory cells and undergo atrophy. diagnosis is made by clinical and laboratory fi ndings, including blood culture, the bengal rose test, and high brucella agglutination titers, , or by real-time polymerase chain reaction assay of urine. sarcoidosis is a systemic granulomatous disease of unknown etiology that preferentially affects young black adults. the genitourinary tract is involved in only . % of clinical cases and % of autopsy cases. fewer than cases of primary epididymal involvement have been reported, and about of these also involved the testis. , isolated testicular involvement is exceptional. , , testicular sarcoidosis is usually unilateral and nodular. it is often asymptomatic and found at autopsy. the testis contains non-caseating granulomas similar to sarcoid granulomas at other locations. before diagnosing testicular sarcoidosis, other granulomatous lesions should be excluded, including tuberculosis, sperm granuloma, granulomatous orchitis, and seminoma. seminoma often has an intense sarcoid-like reaction, and examination of multiple histologic sections may be necessary to fi nd diagnostic foci of seminoma. an association of mediastinal sarcoidosis and testicular cancer has been reported. genital involvement of sarcoidosis may be the cause of intermittent azoospermia that benefi ts from corticoid therapy. malakoplakia is a chronic infl ammatory disease that was initially described in the bladder and subsequently in many other organs. the testes (alone or together with the epididymis) are involved in % of cases involving the urogenital system. , grossly, the testes are enlarged and have a brown-yellow parenchymous discoloration, often with abscesses. malakoplakia causes tubular destruction that is associated with a dense infi ltrate of macrophages with granular eosinophilic cytoplasm that often contains michaelis-gutmann bodies (fig. - ) . , the differential diagnosis includes idiopathic granulomatous orchitis and leydig cell tumor. infl ammation in idiopathic granulomatous orchitis includes intratubular multinucleate giant cells; in malakoplakia it is diffi cult to identify the tubular outlines, and giant cells are usually absent. leydig cell tumor is not usually associated with infl ammation, but may contain mononucleated or binucleated cells with abundant eosinophilic cytoplasm. reinke's crystalloids are identifi ed in up to % of cases of leydig cell tumor but absent in malakoplakia, and michaelis-gutmann bodies are absent. fungal orchitis is rare; most cases are associated with blastomycosis, coccidiomycosis, histoplasmosis, and cryptococcocis. the genital tract may be involved in widespread blastomycosis. in decreasing order, the organs most frequently affected are the prostate, epididymis, testis, and seminal vesicles. grossly, there often are small abscesses that may have caseous centers. fungi measuring - µm in diameter with double refringent contours are present in the giant cells in granulomas and stain positively with periodic acid-schiff and methenamine silver stains. coccidioidomycosis is endemic in california, the southwestern united states, and mexico, and may present as epididymal disease after remission of systemic symptoms. the granulomas are similar to those of tuberculosis and contain - µm sporangia with endospores that stain with periodic acid-schiff. dissemination of histoplasmosis and cryptococcosis frequently occurs after steroid therapy and may give rise to granulomatous orchitis with extensive necrosis. histoplasma capsulatum measures - µm in diameter and may be demonstrated with silver stain. cryptococcus is identifi ed by its thick wall that stains with mucicarmine. most parasites that reach the genital tract, such as phyllaria and schistosoma, are in the spermatic cord, and testicular lesions are secondary to vascular injury. testicular infection has also been reported in patients with visceral leishmaniasis, congenital and acquired toxoplasmosis ( fig. - ) , echinococcus infection, and orchitis due to trichomonas vaginalis. idiopathic granulomatous orchitis is a chronic infl ammatory condition of older adults (mean, . years). the most prominent clinical symptom is testicular enlargement, suggesting malignancy. most patients have a history of scrotal trauma, % have symptoms of urinary tract infection with negative cultures, and % have sperm granuloma in the epididymis. an autoimmune etiology has been suggested. the testis is enlarged, with a nodular cut surface and areas of necrosis or infarction. there are two histologic forms, according to whether the lesion is predominantly in the tubules (tubular orchitis) or the interstitium (interstitial orchitis). in tubular orchitis, germ cells degenerate and the sertoli cells have vacuolated cytoplasm and vesicular nuclei. plasma cells and lymphocytes infi ltrate the walls of the seminiferous tubules, forming concentric rings. multinucleated giant cells are present in the tubular lumina and sometimes in the interstitium (fig. - ). vascular thrombosis and arteritis are common. in interstitial orchitis, the infl ammation is predominantly interstitial. ultimately, tubular atrophy and interstitial fi brosis prevail in both forms, which may arise from different immune mechanisms. tubular orchitis histologically resembles experimental orchitis caused by injection of serum from animals with orchitis, whereas interstitial orchitis resembles orchitis produced by the transfer of cells from immunized animals. the differential diagnosis of idiopathic granulomatous orchitis is infectious orchitis caused by bacteria, spirochetes, fungi, or parasites. a useful clue in the tubular form is the presence of giant cells within seminiferous tubules. the occurrence of focal lymphoid cell infi ltrates in the testicular interstitium is common in infertile patients, , patients who have undergone surgery for bilateral inguinal hernia, vasectomized patients who developed post-infection obstruction, after testicular piercing, and cryptorchidism. infl ammatory infi ltrates usually involve the seminiferous tubules, and this suggests the disorder is due to an immunologic response (fig. - ). pseudolymphoma is a benign reactive process with a lymphoid cell proliferation so intense that it may be mistaken for lymphoma. testicular pseudolymphoma consists of infl ammatory infi ltrates with numerous lymphocytes and plasma cells that partially or totally destroy testicular parenchyma. , the differential diagnosis includes lymphoma, various forms of orchitis, and seminoma. the diagnosis of lymphoma may be excluded by the lack of atypia and polyclonal nature of the infl ammation. syphilitic orchitis also contains a plasma cell-rich infl ammatory infi ltrate, but pseudolymphoma does not have other characteristic features of syphilitic orchitis, such as endarteritis obliterans; spirochetes cannot be demonstrated by special stains. the lack of granulomas or signifi cant numbers of macrophages, together with the negative results of specifi c histochemical stains, also helps to exclude idiopathic granulomatous orchitis, tuberculosis, leprosy, sarcoidosis, and fungal infection. finally, although the presence of a prominent infl ammatory infi ltrate and, in many cases, numerous lymphoid follicles, may suggest the diagnosis of seminoma, the presence of seminoma cells should be easily demonstrated with best's carmine stain, periodic acid-schiff, or placenta-like alkaline phosphatase. the term plasma cell granuloma refers to a reactive process characterized by the presence of polyclonal adult plasma cells that are absent in testicular plasmacytoma. sinus histiocytosis with massive lymphadenopathy (rosai-dorfman disease) is a benign proliferation of macrophages that uniquely contain numerous lymphocytes in their cytoplasm. the disease was reported in a kidney and testis of a patient in remission from malignant lymphoma in association with monoclonal iga gammopathy, and in a second patient with diabetes mellitus who had been previously treated for pulmonary tuberculosis. increased numbers of interstitial macrophages may also be observed in more than two-thirds of autopsies from adult patients, but the cause is unknown. one condition associated with this disorder is treatment with hydroxyethylstarch plasma expander. in this lesion, the interstitial macrophages stand out by virtue of their large size and multivacuolated cytoplasm, suggesting thesaurosis. there is no evidence of mucin glycoproteins, proteoglycans, starch, lipids, glycogen, or foreign body material. most patients have no clinical symptoms other than pruritus and persistent erythrema. epididymitis nodosa is a proliferation of small irregular ducts whose epithelium lacks the characteristic features of the epididymal epithelium. the disorder is associated with infl ammation and fi brosis, similar to vasitis nodosa. in several tissues, including the testis, amiodarone is concentrated up to times its plasma level, causing testicular atrophy and increased serum levels of fsh and lh in some patients. the incidence of epididymitis during amiodarone therapy varies from % to %, , and more than cases (in several cases involvement was bilateral) have been reported, although there are probably many others. , the disorder may occur at any age. when amiodarone dosage is reduced to mg/day the epididymitis heals within a few weeks. autopsy studies show focal areas of fi brosis and lymphoid cell infi ltrates not related to infection. recognition is important to avoid unnecessary antibiotics or aggressive surgery. this term describes a lesion located in the epididymal head characterized by non-infectious necrosis with polypoid masses of infl amed granulation tissue in peripheral ductal structures. granulomas containing multinucleated giant cells present within efferent ductuli or form sperm microgranulomas with ductal neoformation similar to that of epididymitis nodosa. the cause is unknown, but may result from ischemia. the terms 'testicular calculus' and 'stone in the testis' have been used to describe a lesion characterized by the presence of nodular testicular calcifi cation that is not related to ischemia, orchitis, vasculitis, hematoma, or tumor. , the testicular arteries may be affected by systemic disorders such as schönlein-henoch purpura, wegener's disease, , kogan's disease, behçet's disease, relapsing polychondritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and dermatomyositis, but the most frequent involvement is with polyarteritis nodosa. approximately % of patients with polyarteritis nodosa have testicular or epididymal involvement, but only - % are diagnosed during life. rarely, testicular or epididymal polyarteritis nodosa is the fi rst manifestation of the disease. in these cases the symptoms may suggest orchitis, epididymitis, testicular torsion, or tumor. [ ] [ ] [ ] the testis usually shows arterial lesions in different stages of evolution, including fi brinoid necrosis, infl ammatory reaction, thrombosis, or aneurysm. the parenchyma initially has zones of infarction ( fig. - ). histologic and immunohistochemical fi ndings similar to those of polyarteritis nodosa may occasionally be observed in the testis or the epididymis without lesions elsewhere; this condition is referred to as isolated arteritis of the testis and epididymis, and differs from classic polyarteritis by a lack of vascular thrombosis, aneurysm, or infarct. the etiology of isolated arteritis is unknown, but the prognosis is excellent. the histologic fi ndings of necrotizing arteritis in the testis or epididymis should be followed by clinical, hematologic, and biochemical studies to exclude systemic arteritis. , torsion of the spermatic cord is the most frequent cause of testicular infarct, followed by trauma, incarcerated inguinal hernia, epididymitis, and vasculitis. spermatic cord torsion is a surgical emergency. if repair is delayed more than hours, testicular viability is usually compromised. this disorder may appear at any age, but the other testicular and epididymal lesions peaks of maximal incidence are the perinatal period and puberty. factors that predispose to testicular torsion are anatomical anomalies in testicular suspension and abnormal position of the testis. many men with testicular torsion have an abnormally high refl ection of the tunica vaginalis, giving rise to the deformity known as 'bell-clapper.' other anomalies include elongated mesorchium, separation between the epididymis and testis, and absent or very elongated gubernaculum. the frequency of testicular torsion is higher in cryptorchid and retractile testes than in normal testes. there are two classic anatomic forms of testicular torsion: high (supravaginal or extravaginal) and low (intravaginal). each appears at a different age. extravaginal torsion typically occurs in infancy and childhood, whereas intravaginal torsion is more frequent at puberty and adulthood. neonatal torsion is bilateral in - % of cases. most torsion observed on the fi rst of life is intrauterine. pubertal and adult torsion causes testicular pain that may radiate to the abdomen or other sites. about % of patients have a previous history of pain or swelling in one or both testes. the differential diagnosis includes all causes of acute scrotum. , torsion causes hemorrhagic infarction of the testis ( fig. - ). in old neonatal torsion, the histological fi ndings are so advanced that only collagenized tissue containing calcium and hemosiderin deposits is seen. in adults, three degrees of histological lesion may be distinguished. degree i ( . % of adult twisted testes) is characterized by edema, vascular congestion, and focal hemorrhage. seminiferous tubules are dilated, with sloughed immature germ cells, apical vacuolation of sertoli cells, and dilated lymphatic vessels. degree ii ( . % of testes) has pronounced interstitial hemorrhage and sloughing of all germ cell types in the seminiferous tubules. the lesion is more severe in the center of the testis, and thus biopsy might provide erroneous information (fig. - ). degree iii lesions ( % of testes) are characterized by necrosis of the seminiferous tubular cell layers. there is often a correlation between the time interval of torsion and the degree of the histologic lesion. degree i appears in torsion of less than hours' duration, degree ii in torsion of between and hours, and degree iii in torsion of more than hours. nevertheless, there are some exceptions that could probably be related, among other factors, to the number of twists in the torsed spermatic cord (degrees of testicular rotation). the testicular salvage rate, defi ned as testicular growth and development that refl ects the age of the patient and the contralateral testis, is around % in all cases of testicular torsion. testes that do not bleed into the albugineal incision within minutes are assumed to be non-viable and should be removed. little attention has been paid to intermittent testicular torsion. early orchiopexy may save these testes, but after surgery, the testis becomes small and excessively mobile, and most have the bell-clapper deformity. seminiferous tubules are devoid of germ cells and have hyalinized walls. some adults with untreated testicular torsion develop lipomembranous fat necrosis of the spermatic cord. patients seek help for pain in the high scrotum. at this level, there is a small nodule that corresponds to remnants of the twisted testis. the epididymis and proximal spermatic cord characteristically contain fat necrosis (fig. - ) . adults with prior spermatic cord torsion often consult for infertility. the mechanism causing spermiogram alteration is controversial, and three hypotheses have been proposed: • autoimmune process. it has been suggested that the ischemic injury breaks the blood-testis barrier, and antigens released from the necrotic germ cells activate macrophages and lymphocytes in the interstitium, stimulating the formation of antibodies against these antigens. these antibodies that enter in the blood circulation may presumably damage the contralateral testis. • alterations in microcirculation. after testicular torsion, blood fl ow decreases in the contralateral testis, causing an increase in the characteristic products of hypoxia, such as lactic acid and hypoxanthine. intense apoptosis involving mainly spermatocytes i and ii has been observed. long-term effects are yet unknown. • primary testicular lesions. many twisted testes have lesions that cannot be formed in a few hours, such as hypoplastic tubules, microlithiasis, and focal spermatogenesis. in addition, more than half of biopsies of the contralateral testis show marked spermatogenetic lesions. these fi ndings suggest that torsion occurs in testes with congenital lesions. trauma and lesions of the vessels of the spermatic cord may also cause testicular infarct. ischemic atrophy is a risk of inguinal surgery, including herniorrhaphy, varicocelectomy, hydrocelectomy, and descent of cryptorchid testis ( fig. - ). the incidence of atrophy after inguinal herniorrhaphy varies from . % in primary herniorrhaphy to . % after surgery for recurrent herna, depending on the diffi culty and extent of the hernia. atrophy occurs in some cases of thrombosis of the vena cava or spermatic artery. focal infarction of the testis is associated with polycythemia, sickle cell disease, trauma, , and laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair. focal infarction may also be spontaneous. clinical symptoms of testicular infarct mimic testicular tumor. color doppler ultrasound reveals the diagnosis in most cases. cystic malformation of the tunica albuginea and testicular parenchyma was fi rst described in the th century, and was long considered rare and mainly present in the tunica albuginea. , with the systematic use of ultrasonography, the incidence of cysts has been found to be much higher: non-neoplastic cysts are found in . % to . % of testes. , cyst of the tunica albuginea is usually an incidental fi nding in patients in the fi fth or sixth decade of life. it is located in the anterolateral aspect of the testis and may be unilocular or multilocular, ranging from to mm and containing clear fl uid without spermatozoa. the cyst may be embedded within the connective tissue of the tunica albuginea, protrude from the inner surface of the tunica albuginea into the testicular parenchyma, or protrude from the outer surface forming a blue lump in the tunica albuginea. the epithelium lining the cyst may be simple columnar or stratifi ed cuboidal, and is supported by a thin layer of collagenized connective tissue. the columnar epithelium usually includes some ciliated cells, and the cuboidal epithelium is composed of two layers of non-ciliated cells (fig. - ) . cyst of the rete testis is identifi ed by a distinctive epithelial lining of areas of fl attened cells intermingled with areas of tall columnar cells. spermatozoa are frequently found within the cyst, and hence the cyst is also called intratesticular spermatocele. it may be associated with cystic transformation of the rete testis and multiple epididymal cysts. rete testis cyst is not always attached to the rete and may be found at a distance. simple cyst of the testis constitutes the remaining intraparenchymal cyst. it is usually lined by cuboidal epithelium and contains no spermatozoa. , simple cyst ranges other testicular diseases from nm to mm in diameter. , the disorders occurs at any age, from months to years, with a bimodal distribution with peaks at month and years. it may occur bilaterally, and may present as two cysts in the same testis. origin of the three types of testicular cyst is uncertain. previously, traumatic and infl ammatory origins were attributed to tunica albuginea cyst, but most now believe that they are derived from embryonal remnants of the mesonephric ducts , or mesothelial cells embedded in the tunica albuginea during embryogenesis. , , simple cyst of the testis may also have a mesothelial origin, but it is possible that some arise from ectopic rete testis epithelium. these cysts are unrelated to epidermoid cyst, differing in the ultrasonographic , and histologic features (see discussion on cystic dysplasia and testicular tumors in the section on hamartomatous testicular lesions). ultrasound studies indicate that testicular cyst has little potential for growth. , currently, excision is recommended only in children when the cyst may impair testicular development. dysgenesis of the rete testis is characterized by inadequate maturation and persistence of infantile or pubertal characteristics in adults. this disorder is frequent in undescended adult testes. the lesion involves the rete testis segments referred to as septal, mediastinal, and extratesticular. there is poor development of the cavities and their epithelial lining, which becomes cuboidal or columnar instead of fl attened with areas of columnar cells. the lumina of the rete testis cavities may be completely absent (simple hypoplasia) or, conversely, undergo microcystic dilation (cystic hypoplasia). in a few cases, the rete testis develops papillary, cribriform, or tubular formations (adenomatous hyperplasia). the epithelium of the rete testis is usually fl attened, with scattered areas of columnar cells. in estrogen-treated patients, those with chronic hepatic insuffi ciency, functioning tumor that secretes estrogens or human chorionic gonadotropin, and other disorders that are described as hyperplasia of the rete testis it may undergo diffuse transformation into tall columnar epithelium. except for the latter group, metaplasia of the rete testis seems to be an estrogen-dependent process, and estrogen receptors are present in the rete testis epithelium. acquired cystic transformation of the rete testis is common, and its incidence increases with age and associated disorders. ultrasound ultrasound , and magnetic resonance studies reveal characteristic images that may suggest malignancy. the lesion has three forms: simple, associated with epithelial metaplasia, and with crystalline deposits. simple cystic transformation consists of dilated cavities with normal epithelium. it results from obstruction of the epididymis or the initial portion of the vas deferens due to ischemia (aging men); compression by epididymal and spermatic cord tumor, or by congestive veins in varicocele; infl ammation in patients with previous epididymitis; malformation (testis-epididymis dissociation, malformed epididymis and absence of the vas deferens); or iatrogenic causes (surgery for epididymoectomy or removal of epididymal cyst) (fig. - ) . cystic transformation with epithelial metaplasia is a frequent fi nding at autopsy. its development is probably due to the concurrence of sperm excretory duct obstruction and conditions involved in increased serum estrogen levels, such as chronic liver insuffi ciency. another possible cause is infl ammation involving the rete testis. cystic transformation with crystalline deposits has also been called cystic transformation of the rete testis secondary to renal insuffi ciency. it is a bilateral lesion of adult testes characterized by the concurrence of three fi ndings: cystic transformation of the rete testis, cuboidal or columnar metaplasia of its epithelium, and the presence of urate and oxalate crystalline deposits that may be recognized by polarized light. the lesion is pathognomonic of dialyzed patients with chronic renal insuffi ciency. crystalline deposits are initially formed beneath the epithelia of the rete testis and ductuli efferentes; later they protrude into the lumina, where they are fi nally released. infl ammation is absent or slight, although a few giant cells and small fi brotic areas are often seen (figs - , - ). this lesion is characterized by diffuse or nodular proliferation of tubular or papillary structures that are derived from the rete testis and are observed in cryptorchid or normally descended testes. cases have been reported in newborns, children, and adults. adenomatous hyperplasia in newborn and infantile testes consists of enlargement of the mediastinum testis by cordlike or tubular structures derived from the rete testis. the lesion may extend up to one-third of testicular volume. despite excessive development of the rete testis, the normal connections with seminiferous tubules and efferent ductuli remain. presentation may be unilateral or bilateral. unilateral presentation is associated with cryptorchidism or vanishing testis. bilateral cases may also present with bilateral renal dysplasia. efferent ductuli may show luminal dilation and irregular outlines. the etiopathogenesis might be similar to that of cystic dysplasia of the testis. adenomatous hyperplasia in adults is usually an incidental fi nding at autopsy, in cryptorchid testes, or in testes with germ cell tumor. the rete testis epithelium forms nonencapsulated nodular outgrowths or a diffuse pattern. nodule size may be large enough to suggest tumor. the epithelium consists of cuboidal cells with ovoid nuclei, deep nuclear folds, and peripheral nucleoli. atypias and mitotic fi gures are lacking (fig. - ) . the ultrastructure and immunophenotype of the epithelium are similar to those of the normal rete testis. spermatozoa may be seen inside the cavities in some cases, suggesting that such a proliferation is connected with the seminiferous tubules. most of the testes show a certain degree of seminiferous tubular atrophy. in incidental autopsy cases the etiology is unknown, although it may be related to hormonal or chemical agent effects. [ ] [ ] [ ] in cryptorchid testes and with many testicular tumors, the most probable cause is a primary anomaly that is part of the testicular dysgenesis syndrome. adenomatous hyperplasia should be distinguished from three entities: rete testis pseudohyperplasia, which appears in atrophic testes; primary rete testis tumor; and metastasis of adenocarcinoma. in pseudohyperplasia, lesions are focal, microscopic, and usually located in the septal rete, although the mediastinal rete shows few or no alterations. benign rete testis tumor such as adenoma (solid and papillary variants) fig. - changes in the rete testis associated with dialysis. dilation of the rete testis and initial portion of the ductuli efferentes can be observed. crystalline structures, mainly rhomboidal in shape, accumulate inside and outside the tubules. other testicular diseases and cystoadenoma are isolated and focal, whereas rete testis hyperplasia is diffuse. adenocarcinoma of the rete testis is a tumor that displays numerous mitotic fi gures and infi ltrates adjacent structures. metastasis of prostatic adenocarcinoma may be excluded because these metastases alter the rete testis architecture and are immunoreactive for prostatic acid phosphatase and psa. this reactive lesion is characterized by the presence of intracytoplasmic accumulation of hyaline eosinophilic globules in the epithelial cells of the rete testis. the epithelium may be hyperplastic, but does not contain mitotic fi gures or nuclear atypia. the globules are up to µm in diameter ( fig. - ). this lesion is associated with tumor and infl ammatory processes occurring near the mediastinum testis, and can be observed in association with % of mixed testicular germ cell tumors, % of seminomas, and % of non-germ cell testicular tumors, such as epididymal tumor that infi ltrates the testis (adenomatoid tumor). yolk sac tumor infi ltrating the rete testis may closely resemble this type of rete testis hyperplasia. positive immunoreactions for α-fetoprotein and placenta-like alkaline phosphatase, as well as nuclear atypia, are helpful to distinguish germ cell neoplasia from this rete testis hyperplasia. this lesion, described as nodular proliferation of calcifying connective tissue in the rete testis, is characterized by the presence of multiple nodules that originate from the rete testis lining and subjacent connective tissue, protruding into the channels of the rete testis. these consist of cellular connective tissue covered by several layers of a fi brin-like material, which in turn is covered by rete testis epithelium. the nodules may be totally or partially calcifi ed (fig. - ). the lesion is an incidental fi nding at autopsy in patients with impaired peripheral perfusion. selective location of the lesion in the walls of the cavities and chordae rete testis is probably related to poor vascularization of these structures. the etiopathogenetic mechanism may be anoxia, necrosis, fi brin deposition, proliferation of 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evaluation of the technique and comparison with orchidometer estimates ethnic differences. variation in human testis size testicular size: the effects of ageing, malnutrition, and illness testicular size: assesment and clinical importance studies of the participation of the tunica albuginea and rete testis (ta and rt) in the quantitative structure of human testis postnatal development and differentiation of contractile cells within the rabbit testis the tunica albuginea of the human testis is characterized by complex contraction and relaxation activities regulated by cyclic gmp histology of the normal testis a method for determining the relative total lenght of the tubules in the testis the fi ne structure of sertoli cells in the human testis some observations on the fi ne structure of the sertoli cell in the human testis on the morphology of the human sertoli cell organization and morphogenesis of the human seminiferous epithelium the mammalian spermatozoon ultrastructural observations on nucleoli and related structures during human spermatogenesis ultrastructure of the nucleus of human sertoli cells in normal and pathological testes cell-cell communication in the testis the fi ne structure of the monkey (macaca) sertoli cell and its role in maintaining the blood-testis barrier electron microscopic observations on the structural components of the blood testis barrier sertoli cell junctions: morphological and functional correlates morphological and functional evidence for sertoli-germ cell relationship the testis evidence that vinculin is codistributed with actin bundles in ectoplasmic ('junctional') specializations of mammalian sertoli cells changes in the lipid inclusion/ sertoli cell cytoplasm area ratio during the cycle of the human seminiferous epithelium fine structure of the sertoli cell of the human testis testicular involution in elderly men: comparison of histologic quantitative studies with hormone patterns multinucleate sertoli cells in aged human testes infl uence of age on sperm production and testicular weights in men localization of folliclestimulating hormone (fsh) immunoreactivity and hormone receptor mrna in testicular tissue of infertile men role of fsh in male gonadal function androgen receptor distribution in adult human testis the paracrine role of sertoli cells on leydig cell function receptormediated endocytosis of testicular transferrin by germinal cells of the rat testis regulation of inhibin production in the human male and its clinical applications human testis cytosol an ovarian follicular fl uid contain high amounts of interleukin- -like factor(s) cell interactions during the seminiferous epithelial cycle quantitative differences between variants of a spermatogonia in man the ultrastructure of the four types of human spermatogonia decrease in the number of ap and ad spermatogonia and the ap/ad ratio with advancing age quantifi cation of cell types throughout the cycle of the human seminiferous epithelium and their dna content normal and abnormal spermatogonia in the human testis development of the endoplasmic reticulum during human spermatogenesis kinetics of the germinal epithelium in man atlas of human spermatogenesis ultrastructural features of human spermiogenesis morphogenetic factors infl uencing the shape of the sperm head the fi ne structure and development of the neck region of the mammalian spermatozoon morphogenesis and fate of the residual body in human spermiogenesis the phagocytic function of sertoli cells. a morphological, biochemical, and endocrinological study of lysosomes and acid phosphatase localization in the rat testis renewal of spermatogonia in man ultrastructural observations on the differentiation of spermatids in man further observations on the numbers of spermatogonia, spermatocytes and spermatids connected by intercellular bridges in the mammalian testis evidence of a wave of spermatogenesis in the human testis computeraided threedimensional reconstructions of the arrangement of primary spermatocytes in human seminiferous tubules the cycle of the seminiferous epithelium in man morphometrical analysis of sertoli cell ultrastructure during the seminiferous epithelial cycle in rats stage-specifi c signals in germ line differentiation control of sertoli cell phagocytic activity by spermatogenic cells changes in the lipid inclusions/ sertoli cell cytoplasm area ratio during the cycle of the sertoli cell of the human seminiferous epithelium interaction between germ cells and sertoli cells in the testis apoptosis of male germ cells, a generalized or a cell typespecifi c phenomenon? ultrastructure and function of the lamina propia of mammalian seminiferous tubules the peritubular tissue in the normal and pathological human testis: an ultrastructural study basement membrane regulation of sertoli cells the lamina propia of vertebrate seminiferous tubules: a comparative light and electron microscopic investigation contractile cells in human seminiferous tubules peritubular myoid cells of human and rat testis are smooth muscle cells that contain desmin-type intermediate fi laments elastic tissue in the limiting membrane of the human seminiferous tubules the biology of myofi broblasts evidence for contractility of the human seminiferous tubule confi rmed by its response to noradrenaline and acetylcholine agerelated variations in seminiferous tubules in men. a stereologic evaluation distribution and role of cd -positive stromal cells and myofi broblasts in human normal testicular stroma giant interstitial cells and extraparenchimal interstitial cells of the human testis morphological relationship between testicular nerves and leydig cells in man sertoli cells and leydig cells in man ultrastructure of leydig cells in human ageins testes neuron-specifi c enolase-like inmunoreactivity in human leydig cells relaxin-like factor: a highly specifi c and constitutive new marker for leydig cells in the human testis ghrelin and reproduction: a novel signal linking energy status and fertility a novel circulating hormone of testis origin in humans calretinin is expressed in the leydig cells of rat testis calretinin, a more sensitive but less specifi c marker than α-inhibin for ovarian sex cord-stromal neoplasms: an immunohistochemical study of cases barrier properties of testis microvessels the leydig cell of the human testis -a new member of the diffuse neuroendocrine system sertoli and leydig cells of the human testis express neurofi lament triplet proteins isolation of human leydig cell mesenchymal precursors from patients with the androgen insensitivity syndrome: testosterone production and response to human chorionic gonadotropin stimulation in culture progenitor cells of the testosterone-producing leydig cells revealed attrition of the human leydig cell population with advancing age effect of ageing on the volume, structure and total leydig cell content of human testis stereological analysis of leydig cell ultrastructure in aged humans multinucleate leydig cells in normal human testes mitosis in adult human leydig cells leydig cell numbers, daily sperm production and serum gonadotropin levels in ageing men agerelated change in numbers of other interstitial cells in testes of adult men: evidence bearing on the fate of leydig cells lost with increasing age testosterone and spermatogenesis. identifi cation of stage-specifi c, androgen-regulated proteins secreted by adult rat seminiferous tubules regulation of the semininiferous epithelium changes in surface area and number of leydig cells in relation to the stages of the cycle of the human seminiferous epithelium actions of the testicular paracrine factor (p-mod-s) on sertoli cell transferrin secretion througout pubertal development diaphragmatic hernia in denys-drash syndrome sex reversal and diaphragmatic hernia in phenotypically female sibs with normal xy chromosomes clinical expression and sry gene analysis in xy subjets lacking gonadal tissue pagod syndrome: eighth case and comparison to animal models of congenital vitamin a defi ciency familial occurrence of agonadism and multiple internal malformations in phenotypically normal girls with ,xy and ,xx karyotypes, respectively: a new autosomal recessive syndrome low birth-weight, microcephalic malformation syndrome in a ,xx girl and her ,xy sister with agonadism: third report of the kennerknecht syndrome or autosomal recessive seckel-like syndrome with previously undescribed genital anomalies agonadism in a ,xy patient with charge association the syndrome of rudimentary testes: occurrence in live siblings identical twins discordant for the 'rudimentary testes' syndrome rudimentary testes syndrome revisited congenital anorchism: diagnostic and therapeutic aspects congenital bilateral anorchia: clinical, hormonal and imaging study in cases pcr analysis and sequencing of the sry sex determining gene in four patients with bilateral congenital anorchia is bilateral congenital anorchia genetically determined? the vanishing testis syndrome. indications for conservative therapy the vanishing testis the vanishing testis is the vanished testis always a scrotal event? bilateral anorchia: discordance in monozygotic twins an analysis of the genetic factors involved in testicular descent in a cohort of male patients with anorchia report of cases with discussion of etiology and pathogenesis hyperplasia of spermatic cord nerves: a sign of testicular absence signifi cance of testicular biopsies in cryptorchidism in children human monorchism: a clinicopathological study of unilateral absent testes in boys testicular regression syndrome a pathological study of cases testicular regression syndrome: a clinical and pathologic study of cases laparoscopic and histologic evaluation of the inguinal vanishing testis histological evaluation of the testicular nubbin in the vanishing testis syndrome ureteral ectopia into cystic seminal vesicle with ipsilateral renal dysgenesis and monorchia renal and testicular agenesis in a patient with darier's disease findings: small testicles klinefelter's syndrome diagnosed three years after surgery for mediastinal teratoma kenny-caffey syndrome and microorchidism polyorchidism: case report and review of literature polyorchidism: sonographic and magnetic resonance image fi ndings a case of supernumerary testis polyorchidism presenting as retractile testes polyorchidism: evaluation by mr polyorchidism: an unusual case polyorchidism: a strange anomaly with unsuspected properties bilateral double by testis: evaluation magnetic resonance imaging one man with fi ve testes: report of case triorchidism with normal spermatogenesis: an unusual cause for failure of vasectomy abdominal polyorchidism: a case report and review of the literature ultrasound of polyorchidism: case report and literature review sonographic features of polyorchidism polyorchidism: case report and literature review polyorchidism discovered as testicular torsion associated with undescended atrophic contralateral testis. a surgical solution revisión y aportación de un nuevo caso polyorchidism discovered as testicular torsion polyorchidism with normal spermatogenesis polyorchidism with normal spermatogenesis polyorchidism with normal spermatogenesis and equal sized testes. a theory of embryonal development testiculo supernumerario. comunicación de un caso y revisión de la literatura polyorchidism: case report and review of the literature polyorchidism: a case report polyorchidism: report of a case polyorchidism in a newborn: case report and review of the literature polyorchidism: a case report and review of the literature polyorchidism and seminoma in a child a case of polyorchidism with testicular teratoma signifi cance of testicular size measurement in andrology. ii correlation of testicular size with testicular function congenital leydig cell hyperplasia evidence in favor of the mechanical (intrauterine torsion) theory over the endocrinopathy (cryptorchidism) theory in the pathogenesis of testicular agenesis compensatory hypertrophy of testicle in unilateral cnyptorchidism impact of varicocele on testicular volume in young men: signifi cance of compensatory hypertrophy of contralateral testis plasma lh and fsh response to lrh in boys with compensatory testicular hypertrophy followup of boys with unilateral compensatory testicular hypertrophy testicular volume during adolencence unilateral testicular hypertrophy: an apparently benign occurrence without cryptorchidism benign bilateral testicular enlargement benign macroorchidism in a pubescent boy idiopathic macroorchidism macro-orchidism: light and electron microscopic study of four cases idiopathic benign bilateral testicular enlargement in a pubertal boy: a case report and review of literature macroorchidism: a case report endocrine and spermatological characteristics of patients with bilateral megalotestis the fragile x premutation: new insights and clinical consequences a marker x chromosome a pedigree of mental defect showing sex-linkage x-linked mental retardation associated with macroorchidism inherited congenital normofunctional testicular hyperplasia and mental defi ciency. a corroborative study x-linked mental defi ciency megalotestes syndrome xlinked mental retardation with macroorchidism and the fragile site at xq or familial-x-linked mental retardation with a marker x chromosome and its relationship to macroorchidism a recognizable syndrome of sex-linked mental retardation, large testes and marker x chromosome gonadal function in men with the martin-bell (fragile x) syndrome spermatogenesis in two patients with the fragile x syndrome. i. histology: light and electron microscopy spermatogenesis in two patients with the fragile x syndrome x-linked mental retardation and an x-chromosome marker population incidence and segregation ratios in martin-bell syndrome study of a family with a fragile site of the x chromosome at xq - without mental retardation testicular size in fetal fragile x syndrome a family with mental retardation, variable macrocephaly and macroorchidism, and linkage to xq -q testicular enlargement and elevated serum inhibin concentrations occur in patients with pituitary macroadenomas secreting follicle stimulating hormone juvenile hypothyroidism with testicular enlargement hipotiroidismo y maduración testicular precoz thyroid hormone and male gonadal function sexual maturation in juvenile hypothyroidism hypothalamic-pituitary gonadal axis in boys with primary hypothyroidism and macroorchidism thyroid hormones: their role in testicular steroidogenesis male hypogonadism in hypothyroidism: a study of six cases macroorchidism and testicular fi brosis associated with autoimmune thyroiditis juvenile hypothyroidism and precocious testicular maturation acquired hypothyroidism with muscular hypertrophy and precocious testicular enlargement regulation of gonadotropin-releasing hormone (gnrh) gene expression in hypothalamic neuronal cells hypothyroidism-induced macroorchidism: use of a gonadotropin-hormone agonist to understand its mechanism and augment adult stature a potential novel mechanism for precocious puberty in juvenile hypothyroidism high neonatal triiodothironine levels reduce the period of sertoli cell proliferation and accelerate tubular lumen formation in the rat testis, and increase serum inhibin levels increased numbers of sertoli and germ cells in adult rat testes induced by synergistic action of transient neonatal hypothyroidism and neonatal hemicastration tri-iodothyronine directly affects rat sertoli cell proliferation and differentiation neonatal hypothyroidism causes delayed sertoli cell maturation in rats treated with propylthiouracil: evidence that the sertoli cell controls testis growth central precocious puberty. an overview of diagnosis, treatment, and outcome precocious puberty precocious puberty sexual precocity precocious puberty caused by a suprasellar arachnoid cyst. analysis of cases the endocrine spectrum of arachnoid cysts in childhood growth, puberty and hypothalamicpituitary function in children with suprasellar arachnoid cyst aspects étiologiques cliniques et biologiques des pubertés précoces d'origine centrale precocious puberty following severe head trauma precocious puberty after traumatic brain injury endocrine disorder as the only sign of chronic 'nonhypertensive' hydrocephalus precocious puberty after hypothalamic and pituitary irradiation in young children precocious and premature puberty associated with treatment of acute lymphoblastic leukaemia endocrine function and morphological fi ndings in patients with disorders of the hypothalamopituitary area: a study with magnetic resonance the radiological approach to precocious puberty mr imaging features in hypothalamic hamartoma: a report of three cases and review of literature boys with precocious puberty due to hypothalamic hamartoma: reproductive axis after discontinuation of gonadotropinreleasing hormone analog therapy etiology of central precocious puberty in males: the results of the italian study group for physiopathology of puberty hypothalamic hamartoma: a source references of luteinizing-hormone-releasing factor in precocious puberty mixed germ cell tumour of the pineal region: a case report hcg-secreting pineal teratoma causing precocious puberty: report of two patients and review of the literature puberty without gonadotropins: a unique mechanism of sexual development gonadotropinindependent familial sexual precocity with premature leydig and germinal cell maturation (familial testotoxicosis): effects of a patent luteinizing hormone-releasing factor agonist and metroxyprogesterone acetate therapy in four cases testicular changes in gonadotropin-independent familial male sexual precocity. familial testotoxicosis gonadotropin-independent precocious puberty due to luteinizing hormone receptor mutations in brazillian boys: a novel constitutively activating mutation in the fi rst transmembrane helix activating mutations in the lh receptor gene: a human model of non fsh-dependent inhibin production and germ cell maturation mutational analysis of the luteinizing hormone receptor gene in two individuals with leydig cell tumors tumor de células de leydig con pseudopubertad precoz leydig cell tumor in a child with spermatocyte maturation and no pseudoprecocious puberty an aromatase-producing sex-cord tumor resulting in prepubertal gynecomastia sertoli cell tumour in a boy with peutz-jeghers syndrome carney complex: the complex of mixomas, spotty pigmentation, endocrine overactivity, and schwannomas virilising adrenal cortical tumours in children virilizing adrenal cortical carcinoma with hypertrophy of spermatic tubules in childhood bilateral testicular tumours in congenital adrenal hyperplasia: a continuing diagnostic and therapeutic dilemma hepatoblastoma presenting as isosexual precocity. the clinical importance of histologic and serologic parameters gonadotropin-secreting pineal teratoma causing precocious puberty the p gene superfamily: updated listing of all genes and recommended nomenclature for the chromosomal loci human aromatase: cdna cloning, southern blot analysis, and assignment of the gene to chromosome familial hyperestrogenism in both sexes: clinical, hormonal, and molecular studies of two siblings the aromatase excess syndrome is associated with feminization of both sexes and autosomal dominant transmission of aberrant p aromatase gene transcription aromatase defi ciency caused by a novel p arom gene mutation: impact of absent estrogen production on serum gonadotropin concentration in a boy aromatase defi ciency in male and female siblings caused by a novel mutation and the physiological role of estrogens effect of testosterone and estradiol in a man with aromatase defi ciency estrogen: consequences and implications of human mutations in synthesis and action primary testicular abnormalities causing precocious puberty leydig cell tumor, leydig cell hyperplasia, and adrenal rest tumor focal lobular spermatogenesis and pubertal acceleration associated with ipsilateral leydig cell hyperplasia mccune-albright syndrome in a boy may present with a monolateral macroorchidism as an early and isolated clinical manifestation macroorchidism due to autonomous hyperfunction of sertoli cells and g(s)alpha gene mutation: an unusual expression of mccune-albright syndrome in a prepubertal boy mccune-albright syndrome in a male child: a clinical and endocrinologic enigma anomalies of the testicle preperitoneal ectopic testis: a case report ectopia epidídimo-perineal testículo ectópico perineal perineal testicle crossed ectopic testis: a case report and review of the literature crossed ectopic testis. case report and review transverse testicular ectopia crossed ectopic testis with common vas deferens crossed testicular ectopia detected by laparoscopy transverse testicular ectopia: a case report crossed testicular ectopia in association with double incomplete testicular descent two rare genital abnormalities: crossed testicular and scrototesticular ectopia transverse testicular ectopia associated with persistent müllerian duct syndrome. a case report the persistent müllerian duct syndrome: a rare cause of cryptorchidism mixed germ cell tumor after bilateral orchidopexy in persistent müllerian duct syndrome with transverse testicular ectopia two rare cases of ectopic testes subumbilical ectopic testis exstrophy of the testis testicular dislocation after scrotal trauma cystic dysplasia of the testis: a unique anomaly studied by microdissection cystic dysplasia of the rete testis. case report cystic dysplasia of the rete testis associated to cryptorchidism: a case report cystic dysplasia of the testis: sonographic and pathologic fi ndings cystic testicular lesions in the pediatric population the human rete testis the rete testis in man: ultrastructural aspects the mammalian rete testis. a morphological examination cystic displasia of the testis: light and electron microscopic study of three cases cystic dysplasia of the testis associated with multicystic dysplasia of the kidney ectasia of the rete testis with ipsilateral renal agenesis cystic dysplasia of the testis cystic dysplasia of testis coffi n cm. cystic testicular lesions in the pediatric population cystic dysplasia of the testis with ipsilateral renal agenesis. a case report and review of the literature conservative managemet of cystic dysplasia of the testis testicular cystic dysplasia: evaluation of new cases treated without surgery cystic dysplasia of rete testis associated with ipsilateral renal agenesis. case report fetal gonadoblastoid testicular dysplasia gonadoblastoid testicular dysplasia in walker-warburg syndrome fetal gonadoblastoid testicular dysplasia: a focal failure of testicular development frequency of so-called hypoplastic or dysgenetic zones in scrotal and otherwise normal testes androgen receptor expression in sertoli cells as a function of seminiferous tubule maturation in the human cryptorchid testis congenital testicular lymphangiectasis congenital testicular lymphangiectasis in noonan's syndrome congenital testicular lymphangiectasis in children with otherwise normal testes macromicroscopischeskoe is sledavanie vnutriorgannoi limfaticheskoi sistemy muzhskoi polovoi zhelezy [macro/ microscopic study of intraorgan lymphatic system of male gonad in man distribution and fi ne structure of the lymphatic system in the human testis lymph vascular system of the interstitial tissue of the testis as revealed by electron microscopy epididymal lymphangiectasis tumors and cysts of the paratesticular region complex multilocular cystic lesion of rete testis, accompanied by smooth muscle hyperplasia, mimicking intratesticular leydig cell neoplasm smooth muscle hyperplasia of the testicular adnexa clinically mimicking neoplasia. clinicopathologic study of sixteen cases myoepithelial hamartoma of the small bowel: report of a case focal muscular hyperplasia of the trachea ectopic seminiferous tubules in the tunica albuginea of normal and dysgenetic testes pseudocysts of the tunica albuginea: benign invasion by testicular tubules development of the testis from birth to puberty testosterone immunoexpression in human leydig cells of the tunica albugiena testis and spermatic cord. a quantitative study in normal fetuses, young adults, elderly men and patients with cryptorchidism giant interstitial cells and extraparenchymal interstitial cells of the human testis the infi ltrative activity of leydig cells relation of leydig cells in the human testicle to the tubules and testicular function a histological study of extraparenchymal leydig-like cells Über die zwischenzellen des hodens zur pathologischen anatomie der leydig zelle leydig cells within the lamina propria of seminiferous tubules in four patients with azoospermia ectopic leydig cells in seminiferous tubules of an infertile human male with a chromosomal aberration leydig cells within the spermatogenic seminiferous tubules immunohistochemical and quantitative study of interstitial and intratubular leydig cells in normal men, cryptorchidism, and klinefelter's syndrome Über das verhalten von hoden und nebenhoden bei angeborenem fehlen des ductus deferens, zugleich zur frage des vorkommens von zwischenzellen in menschliche nebenhoden sur l'existence de glands sympathicotropes dans l'ovaire et le testicule humains; leur rapport avec la glande interstitielle du testicule zur ultrastrusktur der leydigzellen im funiculus spermaticus des menschen histogenesis of human extraparenchymal leydig cells presentación de un caso y revisión de la literatura testicular lipomatosis in cowden's syndrome age-related epididymis-like intratesticular structures: benign lesions of wolffi an origin that can be misdiagnosed as testicular tumors male reproductive disorders in humans and prenatal indicators of estrogen exposure. a review of published epidemiological studies testicular cancers occurring in brothers with cryptorchism anatomical, morphological and volumetric analysis: a review of cases of testicular maldescent risk factor patterns for cryptorchidism and hypospadias cryptorchidism: a registry based study in sweden on some factors of some possible etiological importance maternal and neonatal risk factors for cryptorchidism risk factors for cryptorchidism and hypospadias abnormalities of testicular descent surgical outcome of orchidopexy ii. trapped and ascending testes iatrogenic cryptorchidism resulting from hernia repair iatrogenic ascent of the testis: an under-recognized complication of inguinal hernia operation in children iatrogenic ascent of the testis: an underrecognized complication of inguinal hernia operation in children testicular descent and ascent in the fi rst year of life late presentation of cryptorchidism: the etiology of testicular re-ascent ascent of the testis: fact or fi ction incomplete disappearance of the processus vaginalis as a cause of ascending testis undescended testis: congenital or acquired? spontaneous ascent of the testis acquired undescended testis does proximal genitofemoral nerve division induce testicular maldescent or ascent in the rat? association between testicular microlithiasis, testicular cancer, cryptorchidism and history of ascending testis the ascending testis and the testis undescended since birth share the same histopathology elevated placental estradiol: a possible etiological factor of human cryptorchidism histologic observations in cryptorchidism: the congenital germinal-cell defi ciency of the undescended testis histologic classifi cation of undescended testes cytophotometric dna quantifi cation in human spermatogonia of cryptorchid testes early postnatal testicular maldevelopment in cryptorchidism hormonal treatment of cryptorchidism -hcg or gnrh -a multicentre study busereline treatment of cryptorchidism: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study abnormal germ cell development in cryptorchidism anatomical, morphological and volumetric analysis: a review of cases of testicular maldescent impact of early orchidopexy on testicular growth effi cacy of orchiopexy by patient age year for cryptorchidism clinical and histopathologic evaluation of operated maldescended testes after luteinizing hormonereleasing hormone treatment bilateral prepubertad testicular biopsias predict signifi cance of cryptorchisism-associated mixed testicular atrophy, and allow assessment of fertility multinucleated spermatogonia in cryptorchid boys: a possible association with an increased risk of testicular malignancy y chromosome microdeletions in cryptorchidism and idiopathic infertility an unusual subset of cryptorchidism: possible end organ failure ascent of the testis in children impaired germ cells in secondary cryptorchid testis after herniotomy elastic fi bers in tunica propria of undescended and contralateral scrotal testes from cryptorchid patients hyperplasia and the immature appearance of sertoli cells in primary testicular disorders focal orchitis in undescended testes: discussion of pathogenetic mechanisms of tubular atrophy undescended testes in adults: clinical signifi cance of resistive index values of the testicular artery measured by doppler ultrasound as a predictor of testicular histology testicular function in men treated in childhood for undescended testes histologic lesions in undescended ectopic obstructed testes is a testis located at the superfi cial inguinal pouch (denis browne pouch) comparable to a true cryptorchid testis? histologic maldevelopment of unilaterally cryptorchid testes and their descended partners anatomical, morphological and volumetric analysis: a review of cases of testicular maldescent les testicules oscillants. forme degradée de cryptorchidie? infertility in adult males with retractile testes changes in the volume and histology of retractile testes in prepubertal boys the retractile testis retractile testis -is it really a normal variant? bilateral retractile testes -subsequent effects on fertility effect of cryptorchidism and retractile testes on male factor infertility: a multicenter, retrospective, chart review epididymal anomalies associated with hydrocele/hernia and cryptorchidism: implications regarding testicular descent congenital deformities of the testis and epididymis signifi cance of epididymal and ductal anomalies associated with undescended testis insulin-like factor gene mutations in testicular dysgenesis syndrome: clinical and functional characterization testicular dysgenesis syndrome: possible role of endocrine disrupters ethnic differences in occurrence of tds -genetics and/or environment? granular changes in sertoli cells in children and pubertal patients erythropoietin may reduce the risk of germ cell loss in boys with cryptorchidism early orchiopexy: prepubertal intratubular germ cell neoplasia and fertility outcome testicular cancer and cryptorchidism cryptorchidism and testicular neoplasia testicular maldescent and infertility histology of testicular biopsies taken at operation for bilateral maldescended testes in relation to fertility in adulthood semen analysis in patients operated on for impalpable testes fertility in cryptorchidism: an overview in paternity and hormone levels after unilateral cryptorchidism: association with pretreatment testicular location no relationship of testicular size at orchiopexy with fertility in men who previously had unilateral cryptorchidism fertility potential: a comparison of intra-abdominal and intracanalicular testes by age groups in children surgical mangeament of undescended testis: retrospective study of potential fertility in cases orchiopexy and infertility: a critical long-term retrospective analysis the importance of mini-puberty for fertility in cryptorchidism cryptorchidism: aspects of fertility references and neoplasms. a study including data of , consecutive boys who underwent testicular biopsy simultaneously with surgery for cryptorchidism experience of screening for carcinoma-in-situ of the testis among young men with surgically corrected maldescended testes distribution of carcinoma-in-situ in testes from infertile men carcinoma-in-situ of the testis: aneuploid cells in semen cryptorchidism and testicular neoplasia testicular microlithiasis: sonographic features with pathologic correlation testicular microlithiasis in a child with torsion of the appendix testis testicular microlithiasis occurring in a postorchidopexy testis microcalcifi cations in testicular malignancy: diagnostic tool in occult tumor? testicular microlithiasis with sterility testicular microlithiasis in male infertility microlitiasis testicular asociada a infertilidad painful testicular lithiasis testicular microlithiasis: diagnosis associated with orchialgia idiopathic testicular microlithiasis. ultrastructural study testicular microlithiasis in a uk population: its incidence, associations and follow-up testicular microlithiasis is associated with testicular pathology testicular microlithiasis -a possibly premalignant condition the prevalence of testicular microlithiasis in an asymptomatic population of men to years old testicular microlithiasis: prevalence and tumor risk in a population referred for scrotal sonography testicular calcifi cation and microlithiasis: association with primary intra-testicular malignancy in , patients testicular microlithiasis, a premalignant condition: prevalence, histopathologic fi ndings, and relation to testicular tumor seminal profi le of subjects with testicular microlithiasis and testicular calcifi cations bilateral testicular microlithiasis predicts the presence of the precursor of testicular germ cell tumors in subfertile men testicular nicrolithiasis and cryptorchidism: ultrasound analysis after orchidopexy testicular microlithiasis. a benign condition with a malignant association testicular microlithiasis: a review and its association with testicular cancer testicular microlithiasis heralding mixed germ cell tumor of the testis in a boy signifi cance of testicular microlithiasis yolk sac tumor and testicular microlithiasis testicular microlithiasis in children: sonographic features and clinical implications identifi cation of seminiferous tubule aberrations and a low incidence of testicular microliths associated with the development of azoospermia raman spectroscopic analysis identifi es testicular microlithiasis as intratubular hydroxyapatite testicular calcifi cation in a -year-old boy the origin of testicular microliths testicular microlithiasis in children with bilateral cryptorchidism pulmonary alveolar microlithiasis with involvement of the sympathetic nervous system and gonads testicular microlithiasis and concomitant testicular intraepithelial neoplasia increased risk of carcinoma in situ in patients with testicular germ cell cancer with ultrasonic microlithiasis in the contralateral testicle testicular carcinoma in a patient with previously demostrated testicular microlithiasis testicular microlithiasis and subsequent development of metastatic germ cell tumor detection of testicular microlithiasis by sonography the interval of development of testicular carcinoma in a patient with previously demonstrated testicular microlithiasis surveillance of testicular microlithiasis? results of an uk based national questionnaire survey testicular microlithiasis: us follow-up testicular microlithiasis as a predictor of intratubular germ cell neoplasia microlithiasis of the epididymis and the rete testis three novel sry mutations in xy gonadal dysgenesis and the enigma of xy dysgenesis cases without sry mutations a novel postzygotic nonsense mutation in sry in familial xy gonadal dysgenesis mutations in sry and wt genes required for gonadal development are not responsible for xy partial gonadal dysgenesis pathology of ,xy pure gonadal dysgenesis: absence of testis differentiation associated with mutations in the testis-determining factor xy gonadal dysgenesis: genetic heterogeneity based upon clinical observations, h-y antigen status and segregations analysis chronic renal disease, myotonic dystrophy, and gonadoblastoma in xy gonadal dysgenesis renal failure with xy gonadal dysgenesis: report of the second case a syndrome of chronic renal failure and xy gonadal dysgenesis in young phenotypic females without genital ambiguity atypical presentation of denys-drash syndrome in a female with a novel wt gene mutation molecular analysis of frasier syndrome: mutation in the wt gene in a girl with gonadal dysgenesis and nephronophthisis frasier syndrome: a rare syndrome with wt gene mutation in pediatric urology xy siblings with inadequate virilization and cns defi ciency testicular dysgenesis and mental retardation in two incompletely masculinized xysiblings analysis of the testisdetermining gene sry in patients with xy gonadal dysgenesis the gardner-silengo-wachtel or genitor-palato-cardiac syndrome: male pseudohermaphroditism with micrognathia, cleft palate, and conotruncal cardiac defects xy gonadal dysgenesis associated with a multiple pterygium syndrome phenotype xy pure gonadal dysgenesis: a case with graves' disease a case of gonadal dysgenesis, breast development, graves' disease, and low bone mass alopecia universalis congenita, xy gonadal dysgenesis and laryngomalacia: a novel malformation syndrome alopecia congenita universalis, microcephaly, cutis marmorata, short stature and xy gonadal dysgenesis: variable expression of el-shanti syndrome syndromal (and nonsyndromal) forms of male pseudohermaphroditism familial ovarian dysgerminomas (swyer syndrome) in females associated with a new familial syndrome of xy gonadal dysgenesis with anomalies of ectodermal and mesodermal structural familial xy gonadal dysgenesis familial xy gonadal dysgenesis xy gonadal dysgenesis: genetic heterogeneity based upon clinical observations, h-y antigen status and segregations analysis the x linked recessive form of xy gonadal dysgenesis with high incidende of gonadal cell tumors: clinical and genetic studies the relationship of neoplasia to disorders of abnormal sexual diferentiation xy gonadal dysgenesis: evidence for autosomal dominant transmission in a large kindred gonadoblastomas in patients with xy gonadal dysgenesis familial ,xx gonadal dysgenesis pure gonadal dysgenesis xx and xy: observations in fi fteen patients gonadal dysgenesis in a patient with an x; translocation: case report and review gonadal dysgenesis, intra-x chromosomal insertion, and possible position effect in an otherwise normal female ovarian dysgenesis with balanced autosomal translocation a novel mutation in the fsh receptor inhibiting signal transduction and causing primary ovarian failure a novel loss of function mutation in exon of the fsh receptor gene causing hypergonadotropic hypogonadism: clinical and molecular characteristics no evidence of mutations in the follicle-stimulating hormone receptor gene in mexican women with ,xx pure gonadal dysgenesis dysgerminoma and gonadal dysgenesis in a ,xx female with no evidence of y chromosomal dna dysgerminoma with syncytiotrophoblastic giant cells references arising from ,xx pure gonadal dysgenesis familial dysgerminoma associated with , xx pure gonadal dysgenesis prenatal and postnatal prevalence of turner's syndrome: a registry study the distribution of chromosomal genotypes associated with turner's syndrome: livebirth prevalence and evidence for dismissed fetal mortality and severity in genotypes associated with structural x abnomalities or mosaicism primary ovarian failure turner syndrome and female sex chromosome aberrations: deduction of the principal factors involved in the development of clinical features turner's syndrome the anatomy and 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involvement after cure of non-hodgkin's lymphoma rosai-dorfman disease of the testis: an unusual entity that mimics testicular malignancy persistent erythema and pruritus, with a confl uent histiocytic skin infi ltrate, following the use of a hydroxyethylstarch plasma expander epididymitis nodosa. an epididymal lesion analogous to vasitis nodosa amiodarone in testis and semen testicular dysfunction with amiodarone use non-infectious epididymitis associated with amiodarone therapy amiodaroneinduced epididymitis: report of a new case and literature review of cases amiodarone-induced sterile epididymitis recurrent bilateral amiodarone induced epididymitis amiodarone induced epididymitis in children amiodarone-induced epididymitis granulomatous epididymal lesion of possible ischemic origin a stone in the testicle testicular calculus orchitis mimicking testicular torsion in henoch-schönlein's purpura wegener's granulomatosis involving the urogenital tract testicular infarction in a 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ultrasonographic features, management and histopathological fi ndings torsion of the testis testicular torsion in a -year-old man testicular torsion: simple grading for histological evaluation of tissues damage primary testicular lesions in the twisted testis torsión testicular antes de horas late postoperative results in males treated for testicular torsion during childhood testicular tissue bleeding as an indicator of gonadal salvageability in testicular torsion surgery intermittent testicular torsion lipomembranous fat necrosis in three cases of testicular torsion immunologic aspects of testicular torsion: detection of antisperm antibodies in contralateral testicle ipsilateral and contralateral testicular biochemical acute changes after unilateral testicular torsion and detorsion increased apoptosis in the contralateral testes of patients with testicular torsion as a factor for infertility unilateral testicular torsion: abnormal histological fi ndings in the contralateral testis. cause or effect? testicular injury. late results of semen analyses after orchiectomy testicular atrophy as a sequela of inguinal hernioplasty cooper's ligament repair for adult growing hernias spontaneous thrombosis of left spermatic vein: report of cases postsurgical focal testicular infarct localised infarction of the testis acute segmental testicular infarction: differentiation from tumour using high frequency colour doppler ultrasound observations on the structure and diseases of the testis cysts of the testicle tunica albuginea cyst: rare testicular mass high-resolution sonography of scrotal contents in asymptomatic subjects the high incidence of benign testicular tumors testicular cysts. us fi ndings benign intrascrotal lesions sonography of benign intrascrotal lesions cysts of the testicular parenchyma and tunica albuginea efferent ductule cyst of tunica albuginea simple cyst of the rete testis intratesticular spermatocele simple cyst of the testis: case report and review of literature congenital simple cysts of the testis: a hitherto undescribed lesion intratesticular cysts testicular cysts: differentiation with us and clinical fi ndings simple testicular cyst: a rare cause of scrotal swelling in infancy bilateral intratesticular cysts. a specifi c entity cysts of the tunica albuginea (cysts of the testis) cysts of the tunica albuginea testis nonneoplastic cystic lesions of the tunica albuginea: an electron microscopic and clinical study of cases cysts of the tunica albuginea: report of cases and review of the literature cysts of the tunica albuginea: a report of cases with a review of the literature high resolution ultrasonography in the diagnosis of simple intratesticular cysts simple testicular cyst diagnosed preoperatively by ultrasound surveillance strategy for intratesticular cysts: preliminary report simple cysts of the testis in children: preoperative diagnosis by ultrasound and excision with testicular preservation rete testis dysgenesis. a characteristic lesion of undescended testes estrogen receptor alpha has a functional role in the mouse rete testis and efferent ductules cystic transformation of the rete testis tubular ectasia of the rete testis: an ultrasound diagnosis cystic ectasia of the rete testis pronounced cystic transformation of the rete testis. mri appearance the diversity of reproductive tract abnormalities in males with cystic fi brosis postsurgical changes in the testis: a diagnostic dilemma acquired cystic transformation of the rete testis secondary to renal failure adenomatous hyperplasia of the rete testis adenomatous hyperplasia of the rete testis. a review and report of new cases displasia quística del testículo: anomalia en la diferenciación del parénquima testicular por probable fallo en la conexión entre los conductos de origen mesonéfrico y los cordones testiculares adenomatous hyperplasia of the references rete testis: report of two cases glandular changes in the rete testis: metastatic tumour or adenomatous hyperplasia? [letter tumors and cysts of the paratesticular region adenomatous hyperplasia of the rete testis. a clinicopathologic study of nine cases primary testicular lesions are associated with testicular germ cell tumors of adult men adénome du rete testis adenocarcinoma of the rete testis: case report, ultrastructural observations, and clinicopathologic correlates infarcted adenomatoid tumor: a report of fi ve cases of a facet of a benign neoplasm that may cause diagnostic diffi culty rete testis hyperplasia with hyaline globule formation. a lesion simulating yolk sac tumor nodular proliferation of calcifying connective tissue in the rete testis: a study of three cases key: cord- -i reanan authors: nan title: ecb : th european congess on biotechnology date: - - journal: j biotechnol doi: . /j.jbiotec. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: i reanan nan in the last years biotechnology has made tremendous progress in its different application fields: red biotechnology, the use of biological methods for medical purposes, is firmly established in the development of new drugs. the use of plant or green biotechnology is under controversial discussion in politics and public. nevertheless, genetically modified herbicide and insect resistant crops are cultivated to a large extent. industrial biotechnology, now often named white biotechnology, seems widely underestimated in the public perception. it includes all industrial processes for the production of chemical products and enzymes, which fully or partly rely on the biological toolbox of nature. white biotechnology processes are carried out in a contained environment, typically in a bioreactor in a dedicated industrial plant. well-known examples are the fermentative productions of antibiotics, amino acids, vitamins and enzymes, products related to medical, food and feed applications. many products like the amino acids glutamic acid, lysine, threonine and tryptophane are exclusively produced using microbes in large scale industrial processes. in other cases, like the water soluble vitamin b , biotechnological processes successfully replaced chemical productions, due to lower costs and improved ecoefficiency. in contrast to this, most industrial chemicals and polymers are produced by chemical synthesis based on oil and gas. however, there are some examples for bioproducts among industrial chemicals. the solvents acetone and butanol, for instance, were manufactured by fermentation for several decades in the last century. since the s these fermentations have been replaced by more efficient and cheaper chemical synthesis. recently, new pilot and production processes for biopolymers like pha or biomonomers like , -propanediol or lactic acid were announced by different companies. currently, ethanol is by far the largest white biotech product by volume. in brazil, where bioethanol is used as liquid transportation fuel, the annual production is in the range of mio m . bioethanol is of growing importance also in the united states. business consultants predict a tremendous growth of biotechnological products within the chemical industry. high prices for crude oil, dropping prices for renewable resources, and scientific progresses nourish the expectation that industrial biotechnology will replace many bulk chemicals. is this realistic? will we switch from a petrochemical industry to a biobased chemistry within the next years? based on economic considerations it can be stated that this is a long term goal. to achieve this it remains a scientific challenge to make renewable raw materials available for competitive bioproduction of bulk chemicals at low costs. conversion of lignocellulosic material to fermentation sugar may be a solution. also green biotechnology can contribute to the supply of cheap fermentation raw materials. innovative ideas for downstream processing or further chemical conversion of fermentation products are required to enter the chemical value chains. furthermore, the identification of new higher value bioproducts is a chance for short term successes in white biotechnology. enzyme and protein engineering has the potential to create new biomolecules, metabolic engineering can contribute to develop new metabolic pathways, may be even for unnatural compounds. by continuously increasing the efficiency and throughput of dna sequencing we, together with colleagues, have sequenced the human genome and the genomes of all the major model organisms. the challenge now centers on understanding these vast instruction sets. our ability to read these instructions must be enhanced through collection of key additional data sets. one productive path for delineating the functional sequences and inferring their function is comparative sequence. the mouse genome sequence, for example, led to estimates that only % of the human genome is functional. sequencing of an extensive set of additional mammalian genomes promises to define these functional sequences with a resolution of less than base pairs. on a different course, we have sequenced the chimpanzee genome to learn what has changed in the evolution of humans. beyond providing for the first time a catalog of the differences between the two genomes, the comparison of the chimpanzee and human genomes reveals the patterns of neutral mutation and regions that deviate from that. the talk will summarize these and related findings. the sequence of additional primate genomes will help delineate what has changed specifically in humans and add power to the analysis. ultimately, capturing human sequence variation and correlating with phenotypic variation will be required to understand function. but learning what these functional elements do requires new sets of experimental data. for this, we have turned to the nematode c. elegans. in this simple system most of the ∼ k genes have been defined and experimentally confirmed. beyond the hundreds of genes with already known mutants, two centers are systematically producing gene knockouts or rnai can be used to inhibit any gene temporarily. sequences of three caenorhabditis species are already available, and two more are underway. expression data has been collected for all the genes under many conditions and time points through development. to enhance the resolution of expression data and to simplify phenotypic analysis of embryonic mutants, we are developing a system that will automatically trace the cell lineage and assign gene expression to precise cells with high temporal resolution. the latest results with the system will be described. in the longer term, this and similar datasets should provide an understanding of how the genome specifies the form and behavior of the worm. uhlen department of biotechnlogy, albanova university center, royal institute of technology (kth), stockholm, sweden here, we present a new protein atlas database (www.proteinatlas.org) showing the expression and localization of human protein in normal and cancer tissues. the atlas is based on the use of antibodies (agaton et al., ) to generate high-resolution immunohistochemistry images representing normal tissues and different cancer types (uhlen and ponten, ) . each antibody is used to generate more than individual images and each image has been annotated by a pathologist (kampf et al., in press) . the database has been created by the swedish human proteome resource (hpr) and the program has been set-up to allow the exploration of the human proteome with antibody-based proteomics (nilsson et al., in press) . the basic concept is to generate, in a systematic and high-throughput manner (uhlen and ponten, ) , specific antibodies to all human proteins, and subsequently used these for functional analysis of the corresponding proteins in a wide range of assay platforms, including (i) a protein atlas for tissue profiles (kampf et al., in press) , (ii) specific probes to evaluate the functional role of individual proteins, and (iii) affinity reagents for purification of the specific proteins and their associated complexes for structural and biochemical analyses. ments, most effective source of variation was perturbation in growth medium, followed by perturbation in growth rate. effect of gene deletion on data variation was found to be less apparent when compared to other perturbations. a significant similarity in variation of metabolome and mrna data was observed, which may be used as the key point for integration of these two sets of data in functional analysis of genes. projection to latent structures (partial least squares, pls) is used for integration of transcriptome and metabolome data. comparison of pca and pls shows that linear model constructed via pls to predict the metabolome data does not make use of all the variation in transcriptome data. thus, pls allows the discrimination between the portion of gene expression change that affects the metabolome profile and the portion that is not directly effective on metabolome. both pca and pls can be used to detect the open reading frames (orfs) which are the main sources of variation in transcriptome data and/or effective on metabolome profile. extracellular metabolomics to accelerate the discovery of key genes involved in fibre degradation silas g. villas-bôas, geoffrey lane, graeme attwood, adrian cookson agresearch limited, grasslands research centre, tennent drive, private bag , palmerston north, new zealand. e-mail: silas.villas-boas@agresearch.co.nz (s.g. villas-bôas) the genome of the hemicellulose-degrading microbe clostridium proteoclasticum is been sequenced and an array of candidate genes with diverse activity relevant to fibre degradation have been identified by automated gene annotation methods. c. proteoclasticum falls within the butyrivibrio-pseudobutyrivibrio assemblage of rumen bacteria which are though to play an important role in the degradation of plant hemicellulose-lignin complexes which limit fibre degradation in the rumen. for new zealand it makes strategic sense to invest in microbial genomics efforts applied to agriculture where the country holds a strong competitive advantage and where ruminants constitute the vast majority of farmed animals. in conjunction with dna sequencing, proteomics and transcriptomics (micro-array analysis) we are using metabolomics as an additional functional genomics tool for gene discovery. we have established a footprinting approach for microbial metabolome analysis focused mainly on metabolic intermediates of polysaccharide degradation to provide quantitative information on end products of fibre-degrading enzymes. a gc-ms method has been developed that is able to resolve complex biological mixtures containing mono-, di, and oligosaccharides, in addition to a series of organic acids. we are currently phenotyping a series of c. proteoclasticum mutants to validate our analytical methodology and we are going to fully characterize the fibrolytic ability of c. proteoclasticum to be compared with other fibre-degrading microbes. we believe that our metabolomics data will complement current proteomic analysis of fibre-degrading enzymes and micro-array analysis of gene expression from a series of mutants by providing direct evidence of the metabolic function of key genes involved in fibre-degradation processes. many gram-negative bacteria utilize cell-to-cell communication systems that rely on diffusible n-acyl homoserine lactone (ahl) signal molecules to monitor the size of the population in a process known as quorum sensing (qs). in human pathogens this form of gene regulation ensures that the cells remain invisible to the immune system of the host until the pathogen has reached a critical population density sufficient to overwhelm host defenses and to establish the infection. the qs regulon of pseudomonas aeruginosa and burkholderia cepacia, two important pathogens for patients suffering from cystic fibrosis, has been studied by proteome analyses. comparative twodimensional gelelectrophoresis of pre-fractionated protein mixtures (extra-, surface-, and intracellular proteins) coupled to mass spectrometry analysis or n-terminal sequencing has been employed to recognize and identify qs-controlled proteins. our findings strongly support the importance of ahl-mediated cell-cell-communication as a global regulatory system and suggest that qs control also operates via post-translational mechanisms. as qs has been proven to be a central regulator for the expression of pathogenic traits and biofilm formation in opportunistic human pathogens it represents a highly attractive target for the development of novel anti-infective compounds. functional genomics technologies (transcriptomics and proteomics) have been exploited to validate the target specificity of natural and synthetic qs inhibitors, thus having a great potential as alternative therapeutics for the treatment of bacterial infections. modeling cell cycle complex formation from high-throughput data sets lars juhl jensen european molecular biology laboratory, meyerhofstrasse , heidelberg, germany. e-mail: jensen@embl. de to analyze the dynamics of protein complexes during the mitotic cell cycle, we integrated data on protein interactions and gene expression. the resulting time-dependent interaction network for the first time places both periodically and constitutively expressed proteins in a temporal cell cycle context, thereby revealing novel components and modules. we discover that most complexes consist of both periodically and constitutively expressed subunits, suggesting that the former control complex activity by a mechanism of just-in-time assembly. consistent with this, we show that additional regulation through targeted degradation and phosphorylation by cdk (cdc p) specifically affects the periodically expressed proteins. alessandra luchini, andrea callegaro, silvio bicciato department of chemical engineering processes, university of padova, padova, italy. e-mail: alessandra.luchini@unipd.it (a. luchini) since transcriptional control is the result of complex networks, analyzing dynamical states of gene expression is of paramount importance to detect the multivariate nature of biological mechanisms. although hundreds of studies fully demonstrated the relevancy of microarrays in describing different physiological conditions, to reconstruct complex interaction pathways it is necessary to analyze the temporal evolution of transcriptional states. however, a robust experimental design for identifying differentially expressed genes over a temporal window would require large amounts of microarrays. unfortunately, replicates for each time point and experimental condition are not always available, because of cost limitations and/or biological samples scarcity. in addition, common data analysis tools, like anova, require replicates and disregard correlation structure among times. we present a method for the identification of differentially expressed genes in un-replicated time-course experiments. the procedure does not assume any model or distribution function, takes into account the correlation of data, and does not require sample replicates at the various time points, other than the presence of an initial time point for all analyzed conditions. the identification of differentially expressed genes as the result of a system perturbation is formally stated as a hypothesis testing problem in which a defined statistic is used to rank transcripts in order of evidence against the null hypothesis. specifically, (i) data are structured so that measurements are correlated in time, within the same biological condition; (ii) the null hypothesis is formulated so that changes in expression levels at different time points are equivalent; (iii) time point t represents the system before the perturbation. therefore, modulated genes are detected testing the statistical significance of expression differences between physiological states at each time point, once corrected by the variability at t , and given an empirical null distribution constructed using permutations. statistical significance is assessed by the q-value. the method has been tested on time-course microarray experiments aimed at studying the temporal changes of gene expression in: (i) skeletal muscle cells treated with a histone deacetylase inhibitor (iezzi et al., ) and (ii) immature mouse dendritic cells (dc) exposed to larval and egg stages of s. mansoni (trottein et al., ) . differentially expressed genes, identified using the proposed algorithm, have been compared with results obtained from anova model and sam paired test. the biological significance and soundness of selected transcripts was also verified using global functional profiling by means of ontotools. results demonstrate that this novel procedure allows the identification of biologically relevant genes using half of the replicates required by standard model-based approaches. carbon sources. interesting data on the expression profile of the sty and paa genes in pseudomonas sp. y have been obtained, and have raised new questions on styrene and paa degradation by this bacterium. the calcium-dependent antibiotic (cda) is a lipopeptide synthesised non-ribosomally and produced by streptomyces coelicolor a ( ). cda contains several non-proteinogenic amino acid residues. hydroxyphenylglycine ( -hpg) is one of the unusual amino acids in the structure of the cda and vancomycin groups of antibiotics. for the members of the vancomycin group of antibiotics, the -hpg residue plays crucial roles in the structure and function of the final glycopeptide antibiotic. to reveal the putative biosynthetic pathway of this amino acid in cda, a standard "double crossover replacement strategy" was used to delete -hydroxymandelic acid synthase ( -hmas, encoded by hpd) from s. coelicolor mt and , using the delivery plasmid pzmh . there was no cda production in the disrupted strains. plates containing a gradient of hydroxymandelic acid were used to restore cda production in both s. coelicolor mt hpd and hpd. exogenous supply of -hydroxyl phenylglyoxylate and -hydroxyphenylglycine reestablished cda production by the hpd mutant. feeding analogs of these precursors to the mutant resulted in the directed biosynthesis of novel lipopeptides with modified arylglycine residues (mutasynthesis). a cxcl tandem repeat promoter polymorphism is associated with susceptibility to severe sepsis in the spanish population n. maca-meyer , c. flores , l. pérez-méndez , r. sangüesa , e. espinosa , j. villar : research institute, hospital universitario n.s. de candelaria, s/c tenerife , spain; department of anesthesiology, hospital universitario n. s. de candelaria, s/c tenerife , spain. e-mail: nmacame@ull.es (n. maca-meyer) sepsis describes a complex clinical syndrome resulting from a systemic inflammatory response to bacteria, and remains an important cause of mortality in the intensive care unit. cxcl chemokine (or mip- ) exhibits a pivotal role in the immune response, and several functional studies in animal models of sepsis have catalogued cxcl as a candidate gene for the development of sepsis. we have performed a case-control association study of cxcl gene variants and susceptibility to severe sepsis in hospitalised patients and healthy individuals. after the examination of linkage disequilibrium in the region, we analysed whether two promoter polymorphisms (snp rs and a newly described polymorphic short tandem repeat d s ) were associated with the syndrome. we found a significant association of common variants at d s with the development of severe sepsis (heterozygote carriers or . ; % ci . - . , and homozygote carriers or . ; % ci . - . ; mantel-haenszel χ test for linear trend p = . ). the risks remained significant even after a genomic control adjustment, based on additional genotyped polymorphisms not linked to the candidate gene. these preliminary results suggest that cxcl gene variants may contribute to the development of severe sepsis. kasper møller , ana paula oliveira , jens nielsen , mark johnston : center for microbial biotechnology, biocentrum, technical university of denmark, denmark; department of genetics, school of medicine, washington university, st. louis, usa glucose is the preferred carbon and energy source for most cells. in saccharomyces cerevisiae, a complex regulatory network ensures that s. cerevisiae ferments glucose to ethanol even in the presence of oxygen. to obtain a better understanding of this crabtree effect and the logic of the glucose signalling network in s. cerevisiae, we are analyzing glucose sensing and signalling in the related species saccharomyces kluyveri, which exhibits much less of a crabtree effect (it prefers not to ferment glucose when oxygen is available). we show that there are only two major glucose transporters in s. kluyveri, and that these are regulated in response to the availability of glucose via a glucose sensor and a signalling pathway similar to the glucose induction (rgt /snf -rgt ) pathway in s. cerevisiae. we have used dna-microarrays for s. kluyveri to find targets of the s. kluyveri glucose induction pathway, as well as to evaluate the global response to a change in environment from growth on ethanol to growth on glucose. this study identifies a number of differences in the regulation of glucose uptake and global responses to glucose between s. kluyveri and s. cerevisiae, which may contribute to their different glucose metabolism. detection and analysis of microrna using lna probes nana jacobsen, christian lomholt, peter mouritzen, peter stein nielsen, mikkel noerholm exiqon a/s, bygstubben , dk- vedbaek, denmark. e-mail: mouritzen@exiqon.com (p. mouritzen) micrornas are a class of short endogenous rnas that act as post-transcriptional modulators of gene expression. growing evidence suggest that micrornas exhibit a wide variety of regulatory functions and exert significant effects on cell growth, development, and differentiation. recent studies have shown that human microrna genes are frequently located in cancer associated genomic regions and perturbed microrna expression patterns have been observed in many malignant tumors. we have exploited the significantly improved hybridization properties of lna oligonucleotides against rna targets to design lna-modified dna probes for detection of different micrornas in animal and plants by northern blot analysis, microarray hybridization and in situ hybridization. we will describe the results obtained from detection and analysis of different micrornas in c. elegans, zebrafish, mouse, and plants. in addition, we will describe a novel lna-based method for expression profiling of mature micrornas by quantitative rt-pcr. expression profile of the sty and paa genes in pseudomonas sp. y by means of dna microarrays david bartolomé-martín , david juck , m a teresa del peso-santos , charles w. greer , julián perera : departamento de bioquímica y biología molecular i, facultad de ciencias biológicas, universidad complutense de madrid, madrid, spain; environmental microbiology group, biotechnology research institute, national research council canada, montréal, que., canada h p r . e-mail: perera@bio.ucm.es (j. perera) dna microarrays are a new and powerful tool to study gene expression in very diverse systems. environmental biotechnology and biodegradation are some of the fields of research where this technology may be very promising. pseudomonas sp. y is a bacterium able to grow in minimal medium plus either styrene (sty) or phenylacetic acid (paa) as the sole carbon and energy sources. this bacterium is the only organism where the genes that code for both the upper (sty genes) and the lower (paa genes) catabolic pathways for the styrene degradation have been described till now. it is unique in having two active copies of the genes encoding the lower pathway (paa and paa gene clusters). we have designed a dna microarray with the sty and paa genes in order to analyse their expression in the wild type pseudomonas sp. y , in p. sp. y t (a paa deletion mutant) and in p. sp. y c (a crc gene mutant). this analysis has been performed on bacterial cultures grown in media with different carbon sources. interesting data on the expression profile of the sty and paa genes in pseudomonas sp. y have been obtained, and have raised new questions on styrene and paa degradation by this bacterium. dynamics in induced repression of phosphomannose isomerase pmi gene of saccharomyces cerevisiae anssi törmä , , juha-pekka pitkänen , , laura huopaniemi , risto renkonen : medicel ltd., haartmaninkatu , helsinki, finland; rational drug design program, department of bacteriology and immunology, haartman institute and biomedicum, university of helsinki, p.o. box , helsinki, finland. e-mail: juhapekka.pitkanen@medicel.com (j.-p. pitkänen) gdp-mannose is the precursor of cell wall biosynthesis in s. cerevisiae. to understand the system level role of gdp-mannose, we studied a conditional knock-out strain of the key enzyme in its synthesis; pmi . the experimental procedure allowed us to study the order of mechanisms the cells launch in order to adjust to a sudden malfunction in the metabolic machinery. we collected samples from continuous cultivations over h and measured genome-wide gene expression levels, enzyme activities, and concentrations of intracellular metabolites. for sampling we have built a sample robot, which automatically takes and preserves the samples. in order to carry out this magnitude of experimentations and generated data, we have constructed a proprietary software platform to handle all the phases from project management in wet-lab to workflow and pathway management in in silico. after normalization and clustering, significantly changed genes and metabolites were searched for enrichment in biological processes and molecular complexes. further, gene expression levels, metabolite concentrations, and enzyme activities were searched against each other for causality over time. overall, we focused on thorough analysis of our own data and known database data in order to reward our efforts with knowledge. at the transcriptome level, repression of pmi led to two major types of activation profiles, one peaking at the time when pmi p activity and gdp-mannose were depleted and the other later during recovery from the perturbation. the primary response was most enriched with genes known to play roles in mating and filamentous growth and associated with the transcription factors ste p, tec p, dig p, and mcm p, whereas the secondary response consisted of genes involved in carbon metabolism and associated with the general stress response regulators msn p and msn p. skn p, a high-level transcription factor was associated with both the primary and the secondary response, consistent with its suggested role of coordinating environmental responses and developmental processes. transcriptome of pig ovarian cells: discriminant genes involved in follicular development bonnet a., le cao k.a., low-so g., san cristobal m., tosser-klopp g., hatey f. laboratoire de génétique cellulaire, centre inra de toulouse, castanet-tolosan , france in order to identify genes and gene networks involved in pig ovarian follicular development, we built subtractive suppressive hybridization libraries (ssh) from granulosa cells of healthy follicles (small, medium or large). the rna isolated from these cells was used to hybridize cdna nylon micro-arrays. data analysis using a gaussian linear mixed model showed that % of the variability is due to the genes. two hundred fifty one regulated genes (from the expressed) were identified and clustered into three groups according to the follicle size. moreover, we found previously identified genes such as aromatase, igfbp which supported the validity of our experimental model. ramdom forest analysis put forward the most discriminant genes between the three follicle classes. this study put forward gene sets such as those involved in cell modeling, regulation of transcription, apoptosis during follicle growth. the next step will be to describe more precisely the spatio-temporal expression patterns at the mrna levels of the genes identified by these experiments. microalgae constitute a significant source of valuable natural products, e.g. sulfated polysaccharides, polyunsaturated fatty acids, and phycobiliproteins that find applications in wide range of industries, including food, pharmaceutical, agricultural and cosmetics. however, genomic and molecular genetic studies of microalgae lag far behind those of higher plants. in order to accelerate red microalgal genomic studies by taking advantage of current genomics and post-genomic technologies, we have generated expressed sequence tag (est) databases of two red microalgae porphyridium sp. and dixoniella grisea grown under various physiological conditions. to date we have sequenced and ests of porphyridium sp. and d. grisea, respectively. the sequence assembly resulted into, ca. non-redundant unigenes for each microalga, only % of which were identified by similarity to sequences in the public databases. porphyridium sp. and d. grisea unigenes were compared with the whole-genome predicted proteomes of three microalgae and those of representative eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms. both microalgae have highest similarity to the red microalga cyanidioschyzon merolae. the order of sequence similarity to other organisms examined was arabidopsis thaliana, oryza sativa, chlamydomonas reinhardtii, thalassiosira pseudonana (diatom), saccharomyces cerevisiae, caenorhabditis elegans, archaea and cyanobacteria. although red microalgae are considered as phylogenetic bridge between prokaryotes and eukaryotes, our data show that the red microalgae have strong similarity to eukaryotes and only distant similarity to prokaryotes. gene expression profiles were studied by analyzing cdna and subtraction libraries constructed from algae grown under various physiological conditions. we observed that top three most abundant ests in the stationary phase of porphyridium sp. were adp ribosylation factor like- , flavohemoglobin and adp ribosylation factor- . in addition, we have identified several genes which were specific to nitrate-and sulfate starvation. the sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum ca + -atpase (serca, "the calcium pump"), is responsible for pumping the ca + released into the cytoplasm during muscle contraction back into the sarcoplasmic reticulum store while proton are pumped the opposite way as counter-cations. these transport processes go against the concentration gradients and are therefore energy consuming. the energy is derived from atp hydrolysis via formation and break-down of a phospho-enzyme intermediate. over the last year a number of new crystal structures have been published which have added to our understanding of how this task is accomplished, which provides an impressive insight to the mechanism of a molecular pump. rhomboids are a family of intramembrane serine proteases that are widely conserved throughout evolution. among diverse functions discovered so far, rhomboids participate in intercellular signalling, parasite invasion, membrane dynamics and bacterial quorum sensing, making them potentially valuable therapeutic targets. the identification of physiological substrates and of selective inhibitors will be key towards their evaluation as drug targets. we have developed an in vitro cleavage assay to monitor rhomboid activity in the detergent solubilised state, enabling the first isolation of a highly pure rhomboid with catalytic activity. analysis of purified mutant proteins suggests that rhomboids use a serine protease catalytic dyad instead of the previously proposed triad, and gives insights into subsidiary functions like ligand binding and water supply. this work was supported principally by embo and the mrc. structure and target-specificity of thioredoxin h kenji maeda , anette henriksen , per hägglund , christine finnie , birte svensson : biochemistry and nutrition group, biocentrum-dtu, technical university of denmark, dk- kgs. lyngby, denmark; biostructure group, carlsberg laboratory, dk- valby, denmark. e-mail: kenji@biocentrum.dtu.dk (k. maeda) thioredoxins are ubiquitous small proteins with protein disulphide reductase activity. thioredoxins can alter the structures and the activities of various target proteins by reducing their disulphide bonds. seeds of several plants are abundant in cytosolic thioredoxins referred as h-type. in barley, two thioredoxin h isoforms, hvtrxh and hvtrxh that share % sequence identity but differ in temporal and spatial distributions were previously identified and characterised. in the present study, the relationship between structures and targetspecificities of h-type thioredoxins are analysed. the d-structures of hvtrxh and hvtrxh are determined by x-ray crystallography as the first crystal structures of thioredoxin h. comparison of the structures shows that the majority of solvent exposed residues near the active sites are conserved between the two isoforms. this is in agreement with previously observed similarity in target-specificity of the two isoforms. thioredoxins from organisms distantly related to barley, such as e. coli, have highly similar folds but different surface charge distributions compared to barley thioredoxins. a comparison of the target-specificities of hvtrxh , hvtrxh , e. coli thioredoxin and several thioredoxin mutants will be attempted to reveal the structural features that influence specificity of barley thioredoxin h isoforms. enbrel is a dimeric fusion protein consisting of the extracellular ligand binding portion of the human kda (p ) tumor necrosis factor receptor (tnfr) linked to the fc portion of human igg . the cho-expressed molecule contains both n-and o-linked oligosaccharides with a total carbohydrate content of % by mass. the o-linked oligosaccharides were released by hydrazinolysis and their structure determined by exoglycosidase sequencing and maldi-tof mass spectrometry. to locate precisely the o-linked sites, the glycosylation heterogeneity of tnfr:fc was simplified by treatment with n-acetyl neuraminidase and n-glycanase. the remaining molecule, which only carries core o-linked glycan structures, was cleaved by trypsin and analyzed by lc-ms. precise localization of o-glycosylation sites was determined based on the concept of a specific modification of the o-glycosylated serine into aminopropenoic acid and o-glycosylated threonine into -amino- butenoic acid. the deficit in mass resulting from this transformation was the marker used to localize the modified residues on the peptides by tandem mass spectrometry sequencing (ms-ms). ms-ms spectrum of enbrel glycopeptides were interpreted based on the presence of -aminopropenoic acid and -amino- -butenoic acid, resulting in a complete map of o-linked glycans precisely located at different sites. anu mursula, beatrix fahnert, sari krapu, eija-riitta hämäläinen, ritva isomäki, peter neubauer bioprocess engineering laboratory and biocenter oulu, university of oulu, oulu, finland. e-mail: anu.mursula@oulu.fi (a. mursula) wnt proteins form a highly conserved family of secreted glycoproteins important in cell-cell signaling events during embryogenesis and adult tissue maintenance. impairments within this complex signaling pathway can lead for example to developmental defects in embryos, degenerative diseases and cancer. respectively, wnt proteins can be used as tools in basic research concerning wnt function, developmental biology, screening for interacting compounds, and for medical applications (e.g. therapeutics, stem cells). hence, recombinant wnts provide a valuable basis for these purposes. however, production of recombinant wnt proteins is challenging, because they contain multiple disulfide bonds making the folding very difficult. a process for production of murine wnt- in e. coli has been developed in our laboratory. the knowledge obtained from this research has also been applied to the expression of other wnts, namely wnt- and wnt- , and can be used to approach other cysteine-rich proteins as well. since the expression level of wnt proteins is rather low so far, tools for monitoring and optimizing the production process have been established. by means of this sandwich hybridization method the level of target (wnt) mrna can be measured. the technique has already been applied to analyzing wnt- mrna levels. probes also for wnt- and wnt- have been generated. thus, transcription of wnt genes in all kind of cells (e.g. tissue, recombinant hosts) in general as well as kinetics of transcription can be studied using these tools. in growth factor signaling, stimulation of cell-surface receptors first triggers activation of the receptor itself and then of a large number of intracellular effector molecules. the stimulus is integrated with a host of other cellular processes, leading to cytoskeletal changes, activating transcriptional programs in the nucleus and ultimately resulting in cell proliferation, differentiation or motility. classical signaling pathways and networks depict potential protein-protein interactions only in a static form. in the cell, these interactions are dynamic and occur in an ordered fashion. here, we apply a mass spectrometric method that converts temporal changes to differences in peptide isotopic abundance in order to study the global dynamics of signaling events. briefly, three cell populations are metabolically labeled with either normal arginine or a c substituted form, or a c n variant (stable isotope labeling by amino acids in cell culture, silac). each population was then stimulated with egf for a different time period and tyrosine phosphorylated proteins were affinity purified with anti-phosphotyrosine antibodies. the proteins from the precipitated complexes were quantitatively analyzed and identified using lc-ms/ms. arginine containing peptides occurred in three forms, directly indicating protein activation at the corre-sponding time point. combination of two experiments sharing one common time point of activation then generated five-point dynamic profiles. from the proteins quantified, we identified signaling proteins, including virtually all known egfr substrates and novel effectors, and the time course of their activation upon egf stimulation. discriminating proteins involved in the signaling network from unspecific binders was straightforward as these presented an activation profile. we have now further extended this study by directly measuring in vivo phosphorylation sites in response to growth factor stimulation and monitoring the time evolution of the phosphorylation events. finally, we determined and quantitatively compared the global egf and pdgf tyrosine phosphoproteomes in human mesenchymal stem cells and revealed a control point in their differentiation into bone-forming cells. such global activation profiles provide a novel perspective in cell signaling and will be crucial to model the highly dynamic signaling networks in a systems biology approach. klaus schneider , dave g smith , steven skaper , alastair d. reith : discovery research, glaxosmithkline, coldharbour road, harlow, essex, uk; neurology & gastrointestinal cedd, glaxo-smithkline, coldharbour road, harlow, essex, uk over the last years, progress in signal transduction research has revealed an astonishing degree of complexity in cell signalling which is manifested in positive and negative regulations and feedback loops within signalling pathways and by cross-talks between pathways, all of which are highly cell-type dependent. it has become evident that protein phosphorylation by protein kinases plays a major role in this complex regulation of cell signalling (hunter, ) . due to the importance of signal transduction in disease processes, many protein kinases may constitute key targets for disease intervention. yet, the lack of a full understanding of the regulation, the activation and, importantly, of downstream substrates of particular protein kinases requires often more detailed studies before initiation of resource-intensive efforts to find disease-modifying molecules. technologies for the study of protein kinase signalling include p labelling, mutational and knock-out studies and more recently rna interference. these tools are complemented by approaches that are based on proteomic technologies developed over the course of the last years. in this presentation, the scope of proteomics technologies to contribute to an understanding of kinase signalling will be discussed. an overview of available technologies will be given and results will be presented from a proteomic study of glycogen-synthase kinase (gsk ) signalling (coghlan et al., ) . novel findings will be presented on a study of gsk inhibition in a primary neuronal cell line by differential d gel electrophoresis, which resulted in the identification of more than proteins that were significantly regulated. proteome analysis is typically done by nanospray lc/ms in order to achieve higher sensitivity and thus a greater number of protein identifications. however, nano-scale lc systems can be more challenging to use and maintain. to obtain the best chromatographic performance, connections must be made carefully to minimize band broadening. improved chromatographic performance can enhance the mass spectrometric results by tandem ms as a greater number of peptides can be detected. a microfluidic chip-based system has been developed (yin et al., ) that minimizes the number of connections and the delay volumes. this work evaluates the performance of this device against the traditional nanospray approach. a yeast extract sample was separated by sds-page and bands were excised from the gel for further analysis. after in-gel digestion, the sample was analyzed by both traditional nanospray and the microfluidicbased chip device. after protein database searching, the identified proteins and the protein sequence coverage's were compared for the two approaches. the microfluidic device was demonstrated to be equivalent or better compared to the traditional approach. yin, h., killeen, k., brennen, r., et al., . anal. chem. , - . plant cytochromes p (p s) play key roles in the biosynthesis of most bioactive compounds with agronomic and therapeutic applications. a collection of about plant p s was expressed in yeast. the cdnas were isolated from the model plant with a sequenced genome arabidopsis thaliana, some others from wheat, helianthus tuberosus or vicia sativa. they were expressed under the control of a galactose-inducible promoter in an engineered strain of saccharomyces cerevisiae in which the gene of the native p reductase was replaced with the gene of a p reductase from a. thaliana under the control of the same galactose-inducible promoter, in order to provide an optimal context for plant p expression and activity (pompon et al., ) . an original procedure was designed for the high-throughput functional screening of this enzyme collection. it is based on the detection of oxygen consumed during the catalytic reaction by a fluorochrome embedded in the bottom of the microwell plates. this method was validated using several recombinant p s of known activity. it also allows for a very efficient screening for enzyme inhibitors. the advantages and limits of the method will be discussed. this work was carried out with the support of génoplante programme (no ) . reference pompon, d., louerat, b., bronine, a., urban, p., . methods enzymol , - . folding of a bacterial membrane protein studied by protein engineering daniel e.otzen, pankaj sehgal, peter a. christensen department of life sciences, aalborg university, sohngaardsholmsvej , dk - aalborg. e-mail: dao@bio.aau.dk (d.e. otzen) we have carried out a kinetic analysis of the folding of the -helix transmembrane protein dsbb in a mixed micelle system consisting of varying molar ratios of sodium dodecyl sulfate and dodecyl maltoside. this analysis incorporates both folding and unfolding rates, making it possible to determine both the stability of the native state and the process by which the protein folds. the analysis also takes into account the composition of the mixed micelles, which is different from the bulk detergent composition. refolding and unfolding are consistent with a three-state folding scheme involving the sdsdenatured state, the native state and an unfolding intermediate that accumulates only under unfolding conditions at high mole fractions of sds. the temperature-dependence of the folding reaction displays an unusual decrease in heat capacity accompanying unfolding, which probably reflects the amphiphilic environment of the membrane protein. destabilization of dsbb by different short-chain alcohols correlates very well with the alcohols' respective hydrophobicities. data from a series of ala-scanning mutants tentatively identify a nucleus for folding, which is relatively diffuse and involves all four helices. we are currently complementing this work with studies of the association of peptides corresponding to individual transmembrane segments of dsbb. the reca protein of e. coli plays a crucial role in homologous recombination and dna repair. the recombination process takes place in a filamentous complex, in which the protein monomers are arranged in a helical manner around a single-stranded dna (ss-dna). in the presence of atp the filament can accommodate a second, double-stranded dna (ds-dna) and the strand exchange reaction can occur. the three-dimensional structure of reca itself and its complex with adp have been determined by x-ray crystallography. the active nucleoprotein filament, however, has only been studied at low resolution. both electron microscopy (em) and small-angle neutron scattering (sans) indicate significant differences between the structures of the active nucleoprotein filament and the compressed, inactive filament of only reca. we have presented a structural model of the reca protein in its active filament with ss-dna, using data obtained by linear dichroism (ld) polarized-light spectroscopy, based on a technique, we call "site-specific linear dichroism", which allows the orientation of a set of amino acids to be determined from ld data by systematic modification of the protein. here, we show that ld data of the nucleoprotein filament with ds-dna is over all similar to the data of the complex with ss-dna, indicating that the orientation as well as internal structure of reca in the active filament is not significantly altered when the bound dna is changed from single-stranded to double-stranded. this result supports the idea that the strand exchange reaction occurs without large conformational change of the reca protein. the choline-binding modules: a powerful biotechnological tool jesús m. sanz instituto de biología molecular y celular, universidad miguel hernández, elche, spain choline-binding modules (chbms) are present in some virulence factors of streptococcus pneumoniae (pneumococcus). the most extensively studied chbm is c-lyta, the carboxy-terminal domain of the pneumococcal cell-wall amidase lyta. the three-dimensional structure of choline-ligated c-lyta is built up from six loop-hairpin structures ("choline binding repeats", chbrs) forming a left-handed -solenoid with four choline binding sites. although the structure of the ligand-free form is not yet known, our folding studies suggest that it is more loosely packed, with a partially unfolded amino-terminal region and a stable carboxy-terminal moiety that is extremely resistant to chemical denaturation (maestro and sanz, ) . the affinity of c-lyta for choline and other structural analogues allows its use as an efficient affinity tag for overexpression, immobilization and single-step purification of proteins of biomedical interest (c-lytag fusion protein purification system). this system presents many advantages when compared to current commercial methods, namely simplicity, compatibility with buffers and robustness. the availability of multiple supports that specifically bind chbms (such as multiwell plates) has recently allowed the development of a new procedure for the immobilization of c-lyta-containing hybrid proteins that may be used in proteomics, diagnostics and peptide display. in this communication, we present our last results about the stability, folding and engineering of c-lyta, together with a compendium of the current biotechnological potential of this protein, and highlight the productive link between basic molecular studies and their application. many of the modern approaches for studying disease compare steady state functions, such as repair, growth, and regulated gene expression within the various biological compartments organised by specialized function, be it mitochondria or blood vessels. the assignment of protein identities, which are linked to key biological mechanisms, which are associated with disease processes and disease progressions are an important area of this work (marko-varga and fehniger, ) . today, the technology available for studying proteome expression and resolving exact protein and peptide identities in complex mixtures of biological samples allows global protein expression within cells, fluids, and tissue to be approached with confidence. this confidence is due in part to reproducible repetitive sampling and analysis technologies including robotics data acquisition and high level mass spectrometry including both laser-desorbtion and electro spray ionisation. the precision in defining differences between normal and diseased steady states is aided by the creation of compiled reference and master data sets and by new methods for multiplexing the analysis of samples in groups. the establishment of key representative reference proteome systems representing the dynamic changes in protein expression during disease will be vital to the interpretation of changes observed in specific samplings of disease states and specific cells obtained from these samples. the creation of reference databases of proteins linked to disease pathways will play an important role in furthering our understanding of the "proteome of disease". examples will be given where protein expression patterns have been generated from compartments within tissue sections. marko-varga, g., fehniger, t.e., . j. proteome res. , - . adaptation of the saccharomyces cerevisiae proteome to nutrient limitations studied by metabolic stable isotope labeling and mass spectrometry albert j.r. heck netherlands proteomics centre and utrecht university, the netherlands. e-mail: heck@npc.genomics.nl. url: www.netherlandsproteomicscentre.nl one of the major aims of proteomics is to provide quantitative data on differential protein expression levels. recently, mass spectrometry-based methods have been introduced that can provide quantitative data on differential protein expression, mostly using stable isotope labeling (goshe and smith, ) . we opted for metabolic labeling as this provides efficient means to quantify differential protein expression, and has the advantage that all proteins are labeled universally (romijn et al., ) . in their natural habitat microorganisms encounter non-optimal growth conditions and often growth is limited by one nutrient. microorganisms need to respond rapidly to changes in the environment in order to survive. in the present study, we investigate the proteome response of chemostat cultivated wildtype saccharomyces cerevisiae to two different nutrient limitations, namely carbon and nitrogen limitation. yeast was metabolically labeled in well-controlled chemostat cultures. n and n labeled proteins were separated using d gel electrophoresis followed by rp-lc-esi-ms on a lc-q. relative quantification was performed by using relex software (maccoss et al., ) . we quantified proteins, using on average peptide peak pairs per protein. this analysis revealed that proteins showed a significant increase/decrease in expression level. the functional annotation of these proteins revealed that the yeast cells change expression levels of enzymes involved in metabolism of the growth-limiting compound. the protein expression ratios were compared with corresponding transcript levels. moreover, we compared the accuracy of quantifica-profiles mainly reflected differences in cellular origins in addition to different functional roles. mass spectrometric analysis identified proteins pertaining to several functional classes, i.e. acute phase proteins, antioxidant proteins and proteins involved in protein synthesis/maturation/degradation, cytoskeletal (re)organization and in lipid metabolism. several proteins not previously implicated in nerve regeneration were identified, e.g. translationally-controlled tumor protein, annexin a / , vitamin d-binding protein, ␣-crystallin b, ␣-synuclein, dimethylargininases and reticulocalbin. real-time pcr analysis of selected genes showed which were expressed in the nerve versus the dorsal root ganglion neurons. in conclusion, this study highlights the complexity and temporal aspect of the molecular process underlying nerve regeneration and points to the importance of glial and inflammatory determinants. yeasts plasma membrane macromolecular components involved in stress resistance paola branduardi, paola paganoni, danilo porro dipartimento di biotecnologie e bioscienze, università degli studi di milano-bicocca, piazza della scienza, - milano, italy. e-mail: paola.branduardi@unimib.it (p. branduardi) the plasma membrane is a universal structure of living cells constituting an essential barrier dividing and defining the intracellular from the extracellular environment. it is consequently easy to deduce the crucial role played by said structure for any cell of any living organism, and especially for unicellular organisms, since all the information deriving from the external environment as well as many of the consequent cellular responses have to pass through this barrier. unicellular organisms, thanks to easy manipulation and cultivation techniques, can represent a very useful model for studying the plasma membrane function and response. in addition microorganisms, and among them yeasts, can be considered advantageous cell factories for recombinant productions. in this contest, the implementation of any process of production has to take into account, among others, the response and the tolerance of the host to the external environment. from these considerations derives the interest of our group to analyse the main macromolecular components of yeasts plasma membranes (proteins, lipoproteins and lipids), isolated from cells grown under different stress conditions, with particular attention to acidic environments. here, we present our recent data about separation and identification (by sequencing analyses) of lipoproteins isolated from the conventional yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae as well as from the non-conventional and acid tolerant yeast zygosaccharomyces bailii cell cultures grown in different conditions. in parallel, the protein fraction is under evaluation through a differential d proteomic approach and consequent analyses. effect of fungal polysaccharides on the expression of pancreatic proteins in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats sang woo kim , hye jin hwang , kwang bon koo , jang won choi , jong won yun * : department of biotechnology; department of bioindustry, daegu university, kyungsan, in an attempt to search novel biomarkers for monitoring diabetes prognosis, we examined the influence of the hypoglycemic fungal extracellular polysaccharides (eps) on the differential expression of pancreatic proteins in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats. the results of diabetic study revealed that orally administrated eps exhibited excellent hypoglycemic effect, lowering the average plasma glucose level of the diabetic rats to . %. pancreatic proteome were analyzed by -de system, which separated more than individual spots. the -de analysis demonstrated that thirty-four proteins from a total of about matched spots were differentially expressed, of which spots were identified as the proteins whose expression has previously been associated with diabetes. twenty-two overexpressed and twelve underexpressed proteins were significant (p < . ) between the healthy and diabetic rats, and the altered proteins were restored (p < . ) upon eps treatment. it was first found that carbonyl reductase ( . -fold, p < . ) and mawdbp ( . -fold, p < . ) were surprisingly upregulated upon diabetes induction, and then those two protein concentrations were completely restored by eps treatment. moreover, we obtained eight unidentified proteins that have not been reported to be related with diabetes mellitus. these results evidenced the effect of fungal eps on searching potential markers for diagnosis and therapeutic manipulation of diabetes mellitus. although molecular basis of protein modulation after eps administration in diabetic rats was not verified in this study, the results of the proteomic analysis provide impetus for further studies of mining the biomarkers for diabetic therapy. the model established in our experiment is expected to mimic human diabetic status, which will help us to interpret the roles of biomarkers in diabetic state. the use of polyol-responsive monoclonal antibodies in immunoaffinity chromatography and as a probe for unfolding of wild-type and altered (t i) amidase from pseudomonas aeruginosa s. martins , j. andrade , a. karmali , a.i. custódio , m.l. since immunoaffinity chromatography is a powerful protein purification technique of interest in proteomics, monoclonal antibodies (mabs) against mutant (t i) amidase from p. aeruginosa were raised by hybridoma technology. in order to identify mabs that bind t i amidase tightly but release under gentle conditions, hybridoma clones secreting polyol-responsive mabs (pr-mabs) were previously screened. nearly % of elisa assay-positive hybridoma produced clones secreting pr-mabs with potential application as ligands for immunoaffinity chromatography. to select the optimal conditions for amidase elution, an elisa-elution assay was carried out, with two of these clones (f g ; e a ). the dissociation of ag-ab complex required % of propylene glycol and either . m (nh ) so or . m nacl. the binding of purified mab of igm class (e a ) to wild-type and mutant amidases was investigate by direct elisa, which revealed that it recognised specifically a common epitope on both amidases. conformational changes on antigen molecule were studied. mab e a showed a higher affinity for heat denatured forms than for native forms as revealed by affinity constants suggesting that the mab recognizes a cryptic epitope. the effect of mab e a on amidase activity was also investigated. the binding of mab to wild-type and mutant amidases exhibited an inhibition and activation of % as a function of time, respectively. this pr-mab is useful as a probe to detect conformational changes in native and denatured amidases as well as a ligand in immunoaffinity chromatography, which is of great interest in protein purification and proteomics. fragility and solubility of non-classical inclusion bodieš s. peternel , a. ristič , , v. gaberc-porekar , v. menart , : national institute of chemistry, ljubljana, si- ; lek pharmaceuticals d.d., ljubljana, si- . e-mail: spela.peternel@ki.si (Š. peternel) human granulocyte colony stimulating factor (g-csf) is a pharmaceutically important cytokine. when overexpressed in escherichia coli, it is usually accumulated in the form of inclusion bodies (ibs) . when produced at • c classical insoluble ibs are formed while at • c non-classical ibs containing a high amount of correctly folded g-csf are formed. as higher fragility and solubility of non-classical ibs were noticed, we decided to check whether bacterial cell disruption method has any influence on their mechanical stability and solubility. enzymatic lysis, sonication and homogenization, methods often used for disruption of bacterial cells during the isolation of ibs were compared. lysozyme treatment of bacterial cells appears to be mild enough disruption method not influencing the integrity of ibs. homogenization of bacterial cells at high pressure ( . - . kpa) shows no impact on classical ibs while some loss of target protein from the non-classical ibs is observed. sonication seems to be most harmful as even at rather low sonication altitudes, noticeable disassembling and solubilization of non-classical ibs occurs while no effect on classical ibs is perceived. our studies show that non-classical ibs are much more fragile and soluble than classical ones. therefore, one should extremely carefully choose the method for cell disruption to avoid undesirable loss of the target protein. the danish tick ixodes ricinus parasitize three different hosts both mammals and birds during the -year life cycle. the aim of this study was to identify the last blood host being the host, which the nymph had parasitized before molting to the adult instar. the reason for the study was to reveal the origin of the host contributing the most to the life cycle of the tick and thereby the maintenance of tick-borne diseases in denmark. the most common tick-borne diseases are lyme borreliosis and tick-borne encephalitis (tbe) causing illness in both animals and humans. we analyzed adult ticks, which were collected from known hosts. the analysis was performed at different heat stable proteins, which could be detected during the off host period by elisa. we found that heat stable proteins could be used as identification markers for host recognition. mushroom polysaccharides alter the expression of diabetesassociated proteins in the liver of streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats hye-jin hwang , sang-woo kim , kwang-bon koo , jang-won choi , jong-won yun * : department of biotechnology, daegu university, kyungsan, kyungbuk - , korea; department of bioindustry, daegu university, kyungsan, kyungbuk - , korea. e-mail: jwyun@daegu.ac.kr (j.-w. yun) in the present study, we investigated the influence of the hypoglycemic fungal extracellular polysaccharides (eps) on the differential expression of liver proteins in streptozotocin (stz)-induced diabetic rats. the results of diabetic study revealed that orally administrated eps exhibited an excellent hypoglycemic effect, lowering the average plasma glucose level in eps-fed rats to . %. in the next step, we analyzed the differential expression patterns of rat liver proteins from each group, to discover potent candidates for diabetesassociated proteins. a total of proteins of the -de gel were expressed differentially between diabetic and healthy rats. among them, proteins were upregulated and proteins were downregulated upon diabetes induction. many of these changes were in accordance with observations in previously published studies. surprisingly, the altered levels of most proteins in diabetic group were fully or partially restored to those of non-diabetic control group by eps treatment. moreover, we obtained unidentified proteins that have not been reported to be related with diabetes mellitus. although molecular basis of protein modulation after eps administration in diabetic rats was not verified in this study, the results of the proteomic analysis provide impetus for further studies of mining the biomarkers for diabetic therapy. potential is still limited by the differences observed in the structure of plant and mammalian n-glycans. indeed, theses differences and particularly the presence of  , -xylose and ␣ , -fucose glycoepitopes are responsible for the immunogenicity of plant n-glycans. in order to reduce the structural differences between plant and mammalian n-glycans, current strategies are to knock out plant-specific glycosyltransferases or to humanize plant n-glycans by expression of mammalian glycosyltransferases in plants. in the present study, we have expressed a human  , -galactosyltransferase in alfalfa. in order to further increase the efficiency of the human  , -galactosyltransferase in the plant golgi apparatus, we have exchanged the endogenous targeting signal of this human glycosyltransferase for the ones from plant glycosyltransferases recently characterized in our laboratory. we will illustrate this approach of targeted expression with the results obtained by fusion of the catalytic domain of human  , -galactosyltransferase with the n-terminal sequence of a plant glycosyltransferase that targets the fusion to the very early compartments of the golgi apparatus. the efficiency of natural versus targeted expression of human  , galactosyltransferase in alfalfa will be compared in term of n-glycan humanization. altogether, our results clearly illustrate that we are now on the way to get perfect copy of mammalian glycoproteins in alfalfa plants. construction of recb-recd gene fusion and analysis of fusion enzyme activities oytun portakal , gerald r. smith , pakize dogan : department of biochemistry, hacettepe university medical school, , ankara, turkey; divisions of basic sciences, fred hutchinson cancer research center, seattle, wa - , usa. e-mail: oytun@hacettepe.edu.tr (o. portakal) protein folding is a fundamental process to gain protein function. in an oligomeric protein, the interaction between polypeptides affects the folding process and assembly to the holoenzyme. recbcd is a heterotrimeric and multifunctional enzyme that plays an essential role for major pathway of homologous recombination in e. coli. it is composed of recb, recc and recd gene products. recd is the fast motor unit of the recbcd enzyme. recd also plays a role for high affinity dsdna binding, nuclease activity and chidependent regulation. this study was designed to test the hypothesis that recd polypeptide regulates the essential reca loading activity. the approaching of the study was to fuse recd gene to subsequent recb gene and to observe the changes in enzyme activity and structure. for these purpose two genetic fusion mutations, two-nucleotide deletion and three-codon substitution were created at the overlap sites (ta) of recb and recd genes. fusion mutations were constructed by phage-mediated recombination system, which is called recombineering. this technology requires red function but not host reca protein function. here, we showed the recbd fusion polypeptides in crude extracts. genetic characterization tests were revealed that both fusion enzymes are recombination proficient and have wild-type phenotype. biochemical assays demonstrated that recbdc fusion heterotrimers have dsdna exonuclease, unwinding and chi cutting activities. they were also resistant to dna damaging agents. western blot analysis also detected a wild type length recd polypeptide together with recbd fusion polypeptides and a decreased heterotrimer compared to wild type. our findings suggest that recb-recd genetic fusions may affect recd assembling to the heterotrimer, but not affect it's native folding. sandwich immunoassay-a simple strategy for enhancement of the sensitivity and the specificity in prostate specific antigen detection based on surface plasmon resonance cuong cao, sang jun sim department of chemical engineering sungkyunkwan university, chunchun-dong, jangan-gu suwon, prostate cancer is a deadly disease in men. prostate specific antigen (psa) has been proved to be the most reliable and specific biomarker in preoperative diagnosis, monitoring and followup of patients with prostate cancer. in this study, a biochip based on surface plasmon resonance was fabricated to detect psa at concentrations ranging from to ng/ml. to reduce nonspecific binding, the chemical surface of sensor was constructed by using various ethyleneglycol mixtures of different molar ratios of hs(ch ) (och ch ) cooh and hs(ch ) (och ch ) oh. we also biotinylated the sams surface to enhance the orientation of protein immobilization. by using this surface, spr-based psa detection gave a positive ru value at the fist response in the whole range of psa concentrations. however, this ru value could get better and more reliable by simply applying a secondary interactant, the psa polyclonal antibody, in sandwich immunoassay. the results shown this approach could satisfy our purpose without modify the secondary interactant, which has usually been done by the other report. expression of epitopic domains of human coagulation factor viii in escherichia coli amir amiri yekta , , naser amirizadeh , alireza zomorodipour * , fariba ataei : department of mol genet. national institute for genet eng & biotechnol tehran-iran p.o. box: - , tehran, iran; islamic azad university of jahrom, jahrom, iran; department of hematol, faculty of med, tarbiat modarres university, tehran, iran. e-mails: amir amiriyekta@yahoo.com (a.a. yekta), * zomorodi@nrcgeb.ac.ir (a. zomorodipour) human factor viii (hfviii) plays major role in the intrinsic pathway of blood coagulation and is used to treat individuals with hemophilia a for bleeding episodes. many researches have been focused on the molecular aspects of this protein. in this regard, epitopes of hfviii as well as their corresponding antibodies have many important applications. bacterially produced fviii-epitopes are capable to neutralize the alloantibodies that inhibit hfviii activity. the purpose of present study was to over-express two epitope-containing fragments of fviii in e. coli under t promoter (novagen). two dna fragments from light-and heavy-chains of hfviii ( bp-c c and bp-a a , respectively) were subcloned in the expression vector. the use of his -tagged tail was also considered for detection and purification purposes. in each of the examined clones, a protein of expected size was detectable. in the c c -expressing clone the specificity of the over-expressed protein was confirmed by its reaction with the rabbit serum directed against native hfviii as well as anti-his-tag antibody. in the heavy chain-related-expressing clone, the expression level was low, but it was detectable by immunoblotting experiments. manipulations of the growth as well as induction may be required. the over-expression of the other epitopes reported in the heavy chain may be achievable by the expression of (a) sub-fragment(s) of this region. the over-expressed his-tagged c c -related protein was appeared to be trapped in the cell as non-soluble inclusion bodies. therefore, after homogenizing of the induced recombinant cells, the nonsoluble fraction was dissolved in a solution of denaturant (guanidine hydrochloride) and subjected for the purification, using a ni-nta resin (qiagen) followed by protein measurement. accordingly, an expression level of mg/l (of culture) of the purified c c -related peptide was obtained. the recombinant hfviii c c -derived peptide has provided useful mean for further experimental and medical applications. isotachophoresis has almost exclusively been applied for contracting and stacking samples ions before zone electrophoretic separation of proteins. this study attempts to apply microfluidic isotachophoresis (itp) as a high resolution analytical method for proteins. beta-lactoglobulin and other milk proteins with slightly different pi were labelled with fluorescent red and analysed by the micralyne tk system using microfluidic glass chips, either with simple cross (sc) or double cross (tt) injection or designed d-itp-cze chips with double tt injection and sc for transfer to the second dimension cze channel, efficiently non-covalently coated with . % w/v epoxy-polydimethylacrylamide to lower electroendoosmosis. capillary zone electrophoresis (cze) in borate or phosphate buffer was reproducibly perform for more than consecutive runs using upchurch tm reservoirs glued to the wells to enable larger buffer volumes and greater run-to-run stability. finally, isotachophoretic anionic separation of the proteins were done using phosphate (ph . ) or chloride (ph . ) as leading ion and -amino-caproic acid (ph . ) as terminating ion. the effect of narrow cut ampholytes as spacers needs further investigations. the perspective aim is to combine the migrating itp separated zones with second dimension capillary zone electrophoresis as a new microfluidic proteomic danalysis. development of strategies for heterologous expression of glucose dehydrogenase from the halophilic archaeon halobacterium sp. nrc- juan carlos cruz-jiménez , lorenzo saliceti-piazza , rafael montalvo : chemical engineering, university of puerto rico-mayagüez campus, mayagüez , puerto rico; biology, university of puerto rico-mayagüez campus, mayagüez , puerto rico. e-mail: juancruzj@hotmail.com (j.c. cruz-jiménez) halophilic archaea are excellent model organisms and valuable for biotechnology applications; they are easy to culture in the lab, genetically tractable, and exhibit a variety of interesting and useful characteristics. most halophilic archaea require . m nacl to sustain growth and structural integrity. among the . genes in halobacterium, we are studying the gene encoding a glucose dehydrogenase, gene id is , located between the and bases (halobacterium sp. nrc- genome project). this extremozyme is bioengineerable, and its use as a model for studying biocatalysis in aqueous/organic and nonaqueous media has not been explored to date. the utilization of enzymes in organic solvents has several potential advantages over aqueous systems. a major benefit is the increased solubility of many substrates, resulting in higher concentrations of reactant and products, hence reducing and purification costs and simplifying recovery protocols. cells were grown aerobically during seven days at • c in a complex medium, harvested by centrifugation and their genomic dna extracted. for cloning of the gene, primers were designed based on the sequence recently published by the halobacterium sp. nrc- genome project. the forward ( -ccgcatgcgcc cacagtccc- ) and reverse ( -ccggcctctagaacggcctgg- ) primers were designed to incorporate restriction sites for sph i and xba i, respectively (in bold). we are pcr amplifying the genomic dna and developing methods for the heterologous expression using the mesophilic escherichia coli, as well as purifying the enzyme. the purification procedure will be carried out using high resolution methods based on the protein's halophilicity. bioinformatics methods will be used to facilitate conforming of protein function and for comparison with a native enzyme. quantitative measurements by mass spectrometry of hundreds of proteins simultaneously using the new proteinchip systemseries p. iversen, e. fernvik ciphergen biosystems inc., symbion research park, fruebjergvej , dk- copenhagen, denmark. e-mail: piversen@ciphergen.com (p. iversen) most mass spectrometry methods used in proteomics allow for the identification of multiple proteins in a limited number of complex samples, but lack the ability to assess the quantity of the proteins and their modifications. however, mounting evidence shows specific cleavage of well-known proteins as being strong candidates for specific biomarkers, and in order to discover these biomarkers one has to be able to monitor the quantity and mass of hundreds of proteins from hundreds of complex samples reproducibly. the new series instrument in connection with proteinchip arrays ® from ciphergen biosystems enables this. the new series instrument is optimized for sensitivity, reproducibility and quantitation. new ion optics allows the use of higher acceleration voltages thus increasing the sensitivity, but without lowering the resolution. a new method of blanking the detector in connection with a non-linear gain of the detector also increases the sensitivity to the effect that igg can be detected down to . fmol. furthermore, the unique design of the instrument permits the detection of proteins with great variation in both mass and concentration and thus making it ideal for proteomics studies. a unique feature of the series instrument is the possibility to normalize the output by controlling the laser and detector so that results can be read with equal precision on different instruments, which is not often possible in mass spectrometry where individual instruments yield different results. this feature is vital in the validation of research results beyond individual laboratories. the coupling of liquid chromatography with mass spectrometry is now firmly established as a routine method for the identification of proteins that have been subjected to enzymatic digestion. in an on-line lc-ms experiment, the column eluent is coupled to the electrospray source via an emitter and any tryptic peptides present in the mixture are mass analyses as they elute from the hplc column. should there be any co-eluting species in the eluent, these will be separated in the mass analyser by their mass-to-charge ratio. it has become increasingly clear that relative quantification of protein expression changes is important in modern biology and medicine. several current approaches have been developed that utilise stable isotope labelling of samples in combination with separation and subsequent analysis by mass spectrometry. however, we have recently described an lc-ms strategy where quantification is achieved via normalisation of the ms datasets and comparison of the peptide intensities (of the observed tryptic peptides) across samples is performed. in this case, it is desirable to perform replicate injections and hence reduce statistical errors. this approach places a requirement upon good chromatography, especially in terms of retention time reproducibility. in addition exact mass measurement of the eluting ions is required as well as the ability to generate reproducible and reliable peak intensity, or area, calculations for the eluting tryptic peptides. the ability to measure the mass to charge ratios of ions accurately, across injections and across samples, increases confidence that the same ions have been matched from each sample injection. in this presentation our current strategy for the relative quantification of proteins will be discussed using, as examples, complex protein mixtures from salmonella enterica, eschericia coli and human serum. proteomic analysis for the production of rhctla ig in transgenic rice cell cultures using dige ji-suk cho, song-jae lee, inha university, difference in gel electrophoresis (dige) technology using fluorescent dyes is a novel method, which simplifies the process of detecting and matching proteins between multiple gels by allowing the separation of up to three separate protein samples in the same gel. it provides accurate quantitative and reproducible differential expression values for proteins in several samples. recombinant human cytotoxic t lymphocyte-associated antigen -immunoglobulin (rhctla ig) was produced in the transgenic rice suspension cell cultures using ␣-amylase promoter system. this system is efficient for the production of recombinant proteins, as it secretes target proteins into culture medium under sugar-depleting condition. in this study, the intracellular proteins expressed at both growth and induction stages of culture were separated and analyzed using -d dige. each sample from different conditions and internal standard were labeled with n-hydroxy succinimidyl ester-derivatives of cy , cy and cy dyes and run within a single dige gel. using decyder tm software, spots were detected with two-fold thresholds with % confidence and it was found that proteins underwent significant change during the production of rhctla ig with normalization method improving data distribution. a pooled sample mixture for the picking gel was prepared with deep purple staining and analyzed with mass spectrometry. in addition, the intracellular rhctla ig spots were identified with western blot analysis using goat anti-human igg (fc) antibody after dige gel was transferred to pvdf membrane. study of substrate specificity of rnr-exoribonucelases using hybrid proteins ana barbas, mónica amblar, cecília m. arraiano instituto de tecnologia química e biológica, ean, - oeiras, portugal. e-mail: ab@itqb.unl.pt (a. barbas) the ribonucleases are essential enzymes responsible for the regulation of gene expression and have shown to be important for biotechnology purposes. for instance, commercial mutants deficient in ribonucleases have been quite relevant for the over-production of recombinant proteins. escherichia coli rnase ii is a processive - exoribonuclease prototype of the rnr family that has homologues widespread in the majority of the sequenced genomes. by sequence alignment it has been proposed for the rnr type proteins the existence of three different domains: an n-terminal cold shock nucleotide binding domain (csd), a rnb catalytic domain, and a c-terminal s nucleotide binding domain. we have constructed several rnase ii deletion mutants to enable the characterization of each domain. these studies have allowed us to determine that both csd and s are involved in the binding of the enzyme to the rna substrate, being the s domain the most important. in rna-binding proteins it has been shown that the s domain's conformation is highly conserved. however, it is not known whether the substrate specificity is s -dependent. in order to characterize the s domain and verify if it is directly related to substrate specificity, we have constructed rnase ii hybrid proteins in which the s domain was substituted by the s of two other exoribonucleases, rnase r (rnii-rnr) and pnpase (rnii-pnp). preliminary results have demonstrated that both quimeric proteins are capable of binding and degrading various rna substrates. in addition, studies are currently being carried out to verify the possibility that s domain of pnp in the hybrid protein might be involved in multimerization and/or interaction with other proteins. the murine monoclonal antibody igg , anti-digoxin was produced in a rolling bottle fermentor. purification was performed on a protein g column. cd spectra were recorded on a jasco- spectropolarimeter. protein concentrations of - g/ml and path length of cm were used for measurements in a far uv region. all measurements were performed in a cell holder thermostand with an accuracy of ± . at • c. at this temperature the predominance of -strands is indicated. large conformational changes occur at • c. at this temperature the spectra tense to irregular -strands and unordered structures. these evidences confirming temperaturedependent conformational changes of protein and also high thermal stability of mentioned monoclonal antibody. generation of monoclonal antibodies for the assessment of protein purification by recombinant ribosomal coupling janni kristensen, kim kusk mortensen, hans peter sørensen laboratory of biodesign, department of molecular biology, aarhus university, gustav wieds vej c, dk- aarhus c, denmark. e-mail: hans.peter.sorensen@teknologisk.dk (h.p. sørensen) we recently described a conceptually novel method for the purification of recombinant proteins with a propensity to form inclusion bodies in the cytoplasm of escherichia coli. recombinant proteins were covalently coupled to the e. coli ribosome by fusing them to ribosomal protein (rpl ) followed by expression in an rpl deficient strain of e. coli. this allowed for the isolation of ribsomes with covalently coupled target proteins which could be efficiently purified by centrifugation after in vitro proteolysis at a specific site incorporated between rpl and the target protein. to assess the efficiency of separation of target protein from ribosomes, by site specific proteolysis, we required monoclonal antibodies directed against rpl and gfp. we therefore purified rpl -gfp-his, rpl -his and gfp from e. coli recombinants using affinity, ion-exchange and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. these proteins could be purified with yields of , and g per gram cellular wet weight, respectively. however, rpl -gfp-his could only be expressed in a soluble form and subsequently purified, when cells were cultivated at reduced temperatures. the purified rpl -gfp-his fusion protein was used to immunize balb/c mice and the hybridoma cell lines resulting from in vitro cell fusion were screened by elisa using rpl -his and gfp to select for monoclonal antibodies specific for each protein. this resulted in antibodies directed against rpl and antibodies directed against gfp. antibodies were screened for isotypes and their efficiency in western immunoblots. the most efficient antibody against rpl and gfp were purified by protein g sepharose affinity chromatography. the purified antibodies were used to evaluate the separation of ribosomes from gfp, streptavidin, murine interleukin- , a phagedisplay antibody and yeast elongation factor a by centrifugation, when ribosomes with covalently coupled target protein were cleaved at specific proteolytic cleavage sites. proteomic analysis for the production of rhctla ig in transgenic rice cell cultures using dige ji-suk cho, song-jae lee, inha university, difference in gel electrophoresis (dige) technology using fluorescent dyes is a novel method, which simplifies the process of detecting and matching proteins between multiple gels by allowing the separation of up to three separate protein samples in the same gel. it provides accurate quantitative and reproducible differential expression values for proteins in several samples. recombinant human cytotoxic t lymphocyte-associated antigen -immunoglobulin (rhctla ig) was produced in the transgenic rice suspension cell cultures using ␣-amylase promoter system. this system is efficient for the production of recombinant proteins, as it secretes target proteins into culture medium under sugar-depleting condition. in this study, the intracellular proteins expressed at both growth and induction stages of culture were separated and analyzed using -d dige. each sample from different conditions and internal standard were labeled with n-hydroxy succinimidyl ester-derivatives of cy , cy and cy dyes and run within a single dige gel. using decydertm software, spots were detected with two-fold thresholds with % confidence and it was found that proteins underwent significant change during the production of rhctla ig with normalization method improving data distribution. a pooled sample mixture for the picking gel was prepared with deep purple staining and analyzed with mass spectrometry. in addition, the intracellular rhctla ig spots were identified with western blot analysis using goat anti-human igg (fc) antibody after dige gel was transferred to pvdf membrane. similarity searches and multiple alignment of s and s protein of sars-cov for modeling d structure and its evolution (origin) mohammad soltany rezaee rad, iman tavassoly, negar mottaghi, banafsheh rezaee. e-mail: mohammad.soltany@gmail.com (m.s.r. rad) aims: the exact origin of the cause of severe acute syndrome (sars) is still an open question. nowadays recombinant origins for this virus have been found. s and s subunit of spike protein of this virus are the most important proteins responsible for severe acute respiratory syndrome. in fact they are glycoproteins of this virus exist on its surface. they are responsible for mediating fusion of viral and cellular membrane. the classification and modeling d structure of this virus can help us to suggest new ideas about its charististics and function, which may lead to new therapeutic and preventing modalities. methods: we used nucleotide sequence of s and s subunit of s (spike) protein for multiple alignments. we have done multiple alignments with different bioinformatics software (clusterx, entrez) for comparing the sequence with the other viruses and, we used weblab view software for modeling and identifying d structure of these proteins. findings: the similarity searches on nucleotide sequence of this protein with the single strands rna (ssrna) shows the virus belong to a known classification named coronaviridae. these d structures show the responsibility of s protein in this syndrome. another findings based on these alignments is an important similarity between these subunits and genome of hiv- showing they have familiar mechanism in pathogenesis. discussion: multiple alignments are powerful tool in classification of new recombinational virus and emerging infection. d structure model of this virus is an important guide to understand the mechanism of this virus. the shape of glycoprotein that modeled with bioinformatics software can help us in understanding mechanism of binding this virus to human cells. this fact can be used in designing drug and vaccine to cure and prevent the sars. blocking these origins and sites leads to inhibiting the virus attachment. also the similarity between this virus and hiv- shows us that both of them have similar proteins that cause pathogenesis of these viruses. the simulated moving bed (smb) technology is a continuous countercurrent chromatographic separation technique that has been applied successfully in the last years to a number of significant problems. an smb consists of a series of fixed bed chromatographic columns connected in a loop, and outperforms column chromatography in terms of productivity and solvent consumption. the use of smb instead of batch processes for bioseparations, i.e. separations involving large and rather complex molecules with multiple d configurations depending on parameters such as ph, temperature, etc., is becoming of greater and greater interest. examples of these are therapeutic proteins, antibodies and plasmid dna among others. for all chromatographic processes in this field, one of the most crucial issues is the cleaning of the chromatographic media with a special solvent system, an operation usually referred to as cleaning in place (cip). in single column chromatography this is easily done off-line, but this is not compatible with standard smb operation. in order to overcome this limitation, the standard smb configuration has been modified by adding a dedicated section plus an additional section for the re-equilibration of the freshly cleaned column with the working solvent before it is re-inserted into the smb loop. in such a way, cip according to gmp criteria can be incorporated into the smb unit and operation, which is then called cip-smb. this new smb configuration is also related to the three fraction separation unit called f-smb that has been recently introduced and applied to the separation of nucleosides. in this work we apply cip-smb using a size exclusion stationary phase to the separation of plasmid dna from the filtered cell lysate solution. plasmid purification has become a key issue in the last years as a result of the advances in gene therapy, whereas traditional laboratory methods are not always suitable for therapeutic purposes. we report about separation performances, which are then discussed in the light of smb design criteria and compared to column chromatography performance. computer guided optimization of adsorptive bioseparation processes bernt nilsson department of chemical engineering, lund university, lund, sweden. e-mail: bernt.nilsson@chemeng.lth.se separation processes like chromatography can be highly nonlinear and the behavior can sometimes be hard to predict. optimization of preparative chromatography is often done experimentally, which is both time consuming and expensive. a model-based approach to optimization is therefore an attractive and challenging way to overcome some drawbacks in the traditional working procedure in biotechnical industry. efficient model-based optimization for industrial needs requires three parts; models, methods and tools. model-based methodology requires a set of chromatography column model structures, which can capture the phenomenon of interest. for instance they have to capture column load variations, elution profile changes, operation condition disturbances, column configurations and stationary phase properties. to derive a reliable model for optimization it has to be calibrated and validated to experimental data, which requires an efficient calibration procedure. different calibration procedures are discussed and compared. after validation the model can be used in the design of a separation step. to do a robust design a set of requirements have to be fulfilled. the column size and operation conditions are used to optimize the performance of the step, which requires a constraint nonlinear optimization method. the choice of objective function for optimization and corresponding constraints are not obvious and the resulting operation conditions are often not robust. therefore there have to be additional methods available for analysis of the performance, like sensitivity and robustness analysis. optimization of the purification of antibodies is discussed and exemplified. the work with mathematical models and numerical methods has to be supported by a set of computer tools of different kinds in order to solve industrial problems effective. there is a need for different kinds of tools; customized tool to solve specific problems by a non skilled user and general toolbox for the expert. an example of a toolbox is presented. tina tarmann, alois jungbauer department of biotechnology, university of natural resources and applied life sciences, vienna, austria plasmids and viruses are the contemporary vehicles for genetherapy and genetic vaccination. extremely promising results have been reported from in-vitro, in-vivo and clinical studies. currently a lot of these compounds are manufactured with a technology which has been directly transferred from laboratory to pilot scale without further engineering. membrane based separations, chromatographic separations and precipitation have been employed for separation of plasmids and viruses. chromatographic separation have been designed with aim of protein separation. thus such processes suffer from either mass transfer limitations or low capacity. monoliths without intraskeleton mesopores and chromatography particles with giga pores are excellently suited for adsorption and separation of plasmids and viruses. low mass transfer resistance and high capacity compared to conventional beaded materials can be observed. adsorption kinetics were derived from infinite and finite bath methods and isotherms were constructed. these data also suggest that a conformational change of the plasmids takes place upon adsorption. discussion of the mass transfer properties and an example of scale up of a chromatographic separation process using these novel materials will be shown and discussed in respect to already existing processes. the recent developments in molecular therapies such as non-viral gene therapy and dna vaccination have fostered the development of efficient plasmid dna (pdna) purification processes. the separation of supercoiled (sc) and open circular (oc) isoforms is one of the key steps in the large scale purification of pdna vectors intended for a therapeutic use. although escherichia coli produces mainly the more compact sc pdna isoform, oc, linear and denatured pdna isoforms are usually present and are likely to be less efficient in transferring gene expression. for this reason, regulatory agencies specify that more than % of pdna in a therapeutic product is in the sc isoform. in this work histidine-base recognition is explored as a mean to separate pdna isoforms. the agarose gel used here combines the mild hydrophobic characteristics of an epoxy spacer arm with a pseudo-affinity histidine ligand. chromatographic profiles were obtained by injection of native plasmid (sc + oc) samples in the histidine-agarose support showing an efficient and baseline separation of both isoforms. the high resolution obtained with this support indicates that the method is potentially applicable to the separation of pdna at preparative and analytical scale. affinity ligand development with a novel encoded bead screening technology ib johannsen, versamatrix a/s, gamle carlsberg vej , dk- valby, denmark. e-mail: www.versamatrix.com the presentation describes a new invention for fast development of affinity ligands, where up to , ligands can be screened onbead and identified in a few hours. combinatorial synthesis by the split and mix procedure is a powerful technique for generating vast numbers of diverse chemical compounds on polymer beads with relatively little effort. traditionally, the technique is hampered by the laborious spectroscopic and chemical analysis, needed to determine the exact structures of the ligand on selected beads. in this way, - month analysis time could easily be spent just to analyze a tiny fraction of the library. in the versaffin tm technology each bead is encoded, individually tracked, and identified during the synthesis and screening. this decreases the whole ligand development time from months to weeks and increases the amount of information significantly. the bead code further enables evaluation of the ligandprotein binding under varying binding and elution conditions. the instrument for reading the encoded beads and for quantifying the amount of bound protein is presented. the encoded beads we use are based on functional cross-linked polyethylenglycol (peg), which is compatible with water as well as most organic solvents. thus, the combinatorial synthesis can be carried out in organic solvents and the resulting compounds can be evaluated, still bound to the parent beads, under aqueous conditions. a further advantage of using peg based beads for on-bead screening is the fact that peg is biologically inert and therefore does not interfere in a bioassay. in the biopharmaceutical industry, pressure is mounting to shorten development times and thereby time to market, e.g. in the field of monoclonal antibodies, generic processes have been established which allow for more rapid development from gene to production of pre-clinical and proof of concept/phase i material. for non-mab products from various expression systems, productspecific approaches still prevail. however, for most product types similar issues like clearance of process-and product-related impurities, overall purity and yield, or manufacturing issues have to be dealt with in downstream process development. integrated and timely approaches based on process science and developed orthogonal analytical tools are often hampered by tight time frames and limited resources available. on the other hand, thorough understanding and analytical characterization of product characteristics but also of (process-related) impurities are pre-requisites for fully exploiting separation power and for achieving final purities way above % in a robust and cost-effective manner. from primary separation to polishing steps, we have made several attempts to improve the efficiencies of process steps themselves but also of ways to develop them. the strategies applied comprise implementation of innovative processing tools, rational streamlining and optimization of a sequence of unit operations, tech transfer and scale up considerations. also in this context, the applicability of scale down and ultra scale down models for process development and optimization purposes, their potential for speeding up and their limitations will be discussed. chromatographic monoliths are rather new chromatographic stationary phases. they consist of a single piece of a highly porous material. the pores are interconnected forming a network of channels. since the transport mechanism is predominantly based on convection, mass transfer between mobile and stationary phase is significantly enhanced resulting in short separation times. because of that they seem to be an ideal support for separation and purification of extremely large molecules like proteins, dna or even viruses. in this talk, various features of the monoliths like high porosity, fast mass transfer, surface accessibility and dynamic binding capacity will be described. effect of each feature on the separation and purification efficiency will be discussed in terms of molecular size and properties. while chromatographic monoliths are already widely accepted in microchip fluid devices, capillary columns as well as analytical columns, very few reports about preparative monolithic columns can be found. reasons for lack of preparative chromatographic columns will be elucidated and preparation strategy for construction of several liter volume methacrylate based monoliths will be presented. finally, several examples of biomolecule purification like large proteins, plasmid and genomic dna and viruses on cim convective interaction media ® monolithic columns will be given. further, their application as bioreactors and supports for solid state synthesis will be demonstrated. hubbuch institute of biotechnology, forschungszentrum juelich, juelich, germany. e-mail: m.schroeder@fz-juelich. de (m. schroeder) the intraparticle diffusion coefficient is an important parameter for modeling of chromatographic separation processes. a new method based on dynamic measurements of intraparticle concentration profiles of proteins in process chromatographic media with a confocal laser scanning microscope is presented. the diffusion coefficient is determined by fitting experimental data to a spherical diffusion model. excellent agreement of experimental data with simulation results is obtained. the diffusion coefficient is measured for seven proteins in sepharose ff, spanning molecular weights from . to kda. in addition, multicomponent diffusion processes for combination of differently sized proteins are analyzed and the influence of adsorbed proteins on the diffusion coefficient is measured in sp or q sepharose ff. taken together the presented method allows measuring the diffusion coefficient of proteins in process chromatographic media in a packed column. use of automated docking for predicting chromatographic behavior of proteins in hydrophobic interaction chromatography andrea mahn, m. elena. lienqueo contreras university of chile, santiago, chile in the present work, we have extended and automated the methodology proposed by mahn et al., for predicting protein behavior in hydrophobic interaction chromatography (hic). this methodology is based on the good correlation level between the average surface hydrophobicity of the interfacial zone (local hydrophobicity lh) and protein retention time in hic, for only three different ribonucleases. for determining the lh it is necessary to select the most probable protein-ligand conformation. in this work, we have determined the most probable conformation, of more than proteins, using (i) first, the module insight ii affinity by accelrys for providing automated docking (grid method) of ligands (phenyl) to the proteins ( conformations); (ii) then, the different probable docked protein-ligand conformations were automatically scored using the module insight ii ludi by accelrys; (iii) after that, each conformation was clustered and each cluster was scored by using the average score of each cluster (iv) finally, the most probable conformation was selected using a function based on the number of cluster components, and the average score value. then, when the most probable conformation was selected, the local hydrophobicity (lh) was calculated using the graphical representation and analysis of structural properties (grasp) program. the results have shown an acceptable correlation level (r > . ) between lh and the experimental dimensionless retention time (drt). in view of these results, we consider that this methodology could be used to adequately represent the chromatographic behavior in hic for all kinds of proteins (with a heterogeneous and homogeneous surface hydrophobicity distribution) and without a large number of tedious experiments, but only using computational simulation and adequate score criterion. potato tuber proteins are nutritious and show potential as functional ingredient in food systems. however, the present bulk processing technology can only recover byproduct protein for animal feed use. an expanded bed adsorption (eba) process for isolating functional food-grade protein from crude potato starch effluent was previously developed. moderate capture efficiency ( - %) of the total crude protein was most likely caused by diffusion limitations and aggregated protein, inaccessible for adsorption. we employed the same adsorption ligand attached to agarose-tungsten carbide beads to create stable beds of . - . × expansion using flow rates at - cm h − . a pilot scale eba process was run in a commercial processing plant over a three month campaign of starch production from potatoes of mixed variety. fresh crude effluent ( - l/cycle) was applied to a column ( cm × m) containing l of resin. protein capture by eba was reliable in operation, producing a refined protein material, which after dewatering and gentle drying, showed improved functionality over heat-coagulated protein produced at the same plant. overall productivity increased. however, finding a robust operating window of predictable productivity is challenging since the potato fruit water is complex and deteriorates easily. from breakthrough curves, it is observed that the major bulk protein, patatin, displays non-langmuir adsorption behavior. this may indicate a range of interactions for different species of the same protein. chlorogenic acid (ca), the main polyphenolic substance in potato tuber, causes enzymatic browning and undesirable flavor changes, but polyphenols can also react with protein. assessing the effects of interacting cell components therefore applies to the bioprocessing of plant material. at present the acceptance of biochip technology for on site use, e.g. diagnosis or environmental control is hindered by rather expensive and complex instrumental systems. there is a need to provide reliable and cost-effective systems that can be operated with minimal training. the construction of electronic biochip microarrays using semiconductor technology enables the construction of compact systems with high integration at acceptable production costs. the key feature of the fully electrical biochip technology are micro arrays made in advanced si-technology and carrying several array positions with interdigitated nanometer gold electrodes on its surface. the chips are fabricated by standard silicon fabrication methods allow-ing high volume production and to minimise the cost per chip. the advantage of fully electronic microarrays is the intrinsic high spatial resolution and direct signal coupling of the biosensing element and the transducer. the function of fully electronic biochips is also based on the electrochemical transduction and quantification of the formation of affinity complexes on the chip surface. a portable device for field applications and point of care diagnosis have been designed and manufactured. the amperometric device enables the recognition of biomolecular interactions by measuring the redox recycling products of elisa enzyme labels. the highly sensitive signal transduction is achieved with a -channel interdigitated ultramicroelectrode array. one major advantage of fully electronic microarrays is the direct signal coupling of the biosensing element and the resulting robustness and opportunity for miniaturisation. those electrical biochip arrays have been adapted for the detection of all types of affinity complexes, such as for dna, rna, proteins and haptens. self assembling of capture oligonucleotides via thiol-gold coupling have been used to construct the array chip nucleic acid interface. thus e.g. pathogenic micro organisms have been identified and quantified via their genomic dna or ribosomal rna respectively. another application based on immobilized antibodies is shown to sense extreme low concentration of bioagent toxins. for processing the assay formats and the electrical read out of the detection of affinity complexes a modular fully automated measurement system has been developed. it is manufactured in industrial lines and available at market. dynamics and self-assembly of organic molecules on surfaces revealed by high-resolution, fast-scanning stm flemming besenbacher interdisciplinary nanoscience center (inano), university of aarhus, dk- aarhus c, denmark. e-mail: fbe@inano.dk in the interdisciplinary area of nanoscience and nanotechnology, the adsorption and self-assembly of organic molecules on singlecrystal surfaces have attracted much attention lately due to the potential applications in fields ranging from molecular electronics to biocompatible interfaces. the supramolecular structures formed upon deposition of molecular species on solid surfaces depend on the molecular architecture and the distribution of functional groups on one hand, which determines the thermodynamically stable molecular arrangement, and on the other hand, on kinetic factors like thermal diffusion, spontaneous rotations and conformational dynamics. i will show how the unique aspect of our aarhus stm and the time-resolved, high-resolution stm imaging can be used to obtain important new insight into the dynamics, and can provide very important new information on the atomic-scale realm and on the dynamics of molecular nanostructures. the time-resolved stm data are visualized in the form of stm movies (see www.inano.dk/spm) which can subsequently be analyzed in order to extract quantitative information on the activation energy, the prefactors and the adsorbate-promoted diffusion. i will specifically discuss: (i) the self-assembly of guanine quartets on au( ) and the influence of cooperative hydrogen bonds, and (ii) the molecular recognition in binary mixtures of dna bases. g molecules are found to self-assemble into a hydrogen-bonded network of g-quartets, whose structure corresponds perfectly with the quartet structure of telomeric dna determined by x-ray crystallography. the strong preference of g molecules to form quartets can be explained by a cooperative effect that strengthens the hydrogen bonds within the g-quartet network over the hydrogen bonds in isolated dimers. by means of a combination of stm experiments and dft calculations we compare the d molecular networks formed on deposition of the binary mixtures g-c (purine-pyrimidine pair of complementary bases) and a-c (purine-pyrimidine pair of non-complementary bases). we find that the non-complementary bases segregate into islands of pure a and a network of pure c, whereas the complementary bases g and c form a network that cannot be separated by annealing up to the desorption temperature for c. high-resolution stm images allow us to identify the structures for the enhanced thermal stability as structures that contain g-c bonds, possibly with the same structure as the watson-crick pairs in dna molecules. kühnle, r., et al., . nature , . otero, r., et al., . angewandte chemie int. ed. , . otero, r., et al., . nat. mater. , . otero, r., et al., . angewandte chemie int. ed. , . rosei, f., et al., . science , . schunack, m., et al., . biomedical and pharmaceutical companies are using an increasing number of carbohydrate polymers in the formulation of drugs. one such polymer with highly attractive features is chitosan that can be produced from crustacean shells. chitosan is non-toxic, biocompatible and biodegradable. chitosan can be formulated as nanoparticles or membranes and have enhanced several bioprocesses. among the well-documented features are enhanced drug uptake by tight junction relaxation and enhanced in vivo uptake and protection of nucleic acid formulations. chitosan research has increased throughout this decade. research programs are addressing the potential of chitosan applications but preparations with variable molecular size and charge are not easily available. specifically companies working with the development of new drugs and enhancement of drug functionality are in need of formulation technology that provides well characterized biocompatible material. in the chitosan innovation consortium the danish companies, coloplast, novozymes biopolymers, pipeline biotech, and zgene, together with the research center inano (aarhus university) and bioneer a/s have developed a series of chitosan preparations suitable for research of biopharmaceutical applications (www.chitosan.dk). the ability to obtain functional formulations is currently being tested in both in vitro and in vivo experiments. the consortium participants have established a platform from which chitosan processing, characterization and formulation technology can be extracted. by providing specified chitosan preparations the polymer feature can be adjusted to fit specialized biopharmaceutical applications. high throughput bioprocessing govind rao center for advanced sensor technology, umbc, baltimore, md , usa the post genome era holds a great deal of promise. an enormous number of new proteins await study. these will require sophisticated culture techniques, as cells will have to be grown under large numbers of environmental conditions to elucidate expression triggers. unfortunately, unlike molecular biology, bioreactor technology is little changed since its inception. the primary reason has been a lack of sensor technology that can be readily employed to monitor the cellular environment. we will take a look at the current status of the technology and report on promising optical sensor technology that permits low-cost high throughput cell culture and fermentation. noninvasive sensors that monitor ph, po and pco and high sensitivity solutions for glucose and glutamine measurements will be presented. in addition, the mixing characteristics that determine bioreactor performance will be examined at the small scale and their relevance to the large scale will be demonstrated. on-line monitoring and fed-batch operation in shake flask and micro titre plate cultures jochen büchs , frank kensy , markus jeude , tibor anderlei , barbara dittrich , doris klee : biochemical engineering, rwth aachen university, aachen, germany; ac biotec, jülich, germany; textile chemistry and macromolecular chemistry, rwth aachen university, aachen, germany although methods of molecular biology has led to rational design of micro-organisms to suit our requirements, screening of large numbers of strains and media is still one of the most important tasks in biotechnology. batch operation of shaken bioreactors and absence of on-line monitoring is still the general state of the art for that purpose. it is also a very common practice in screening projects that only the final product titre is measured at the end of the culture for the evaluation of the "best performers". in the recent years several approaches were introduced to follow microbial cultures also in shaken bioreactors like shake flasks or micro titre plates (mtp's). it became obvious that the cultures can behave quite unexpected and most relevant and essential information is lost, if only the final product titre at the end of the cultures is utilised for evaluation. as a result, the screening may be directed to an unknown and non-intended direction or may even fail. this is demonstrated with some examples in this contribution. new methods and techniques are introduced to measure the oxygen and carbon dioxide transfer rate and the respiratory quotient in shake flasks and the optical density, nadh fluorescence, ph and do in mtp's. if the desired product can be fused to a fluorescence protein, like gfp or yfp, also the product formation can be monitored on-line in mtp's. it is of utmost importance that the operating conditions of the applied shaking bioreactors are suitable and shaking motion is not stopped during the measurement. otherwise, e.g. power input, mixing and oxygen supply is interrupted and the micro-organisms will ongoingly rearrange their metabolism to cope with these disturbances of their environmental conditions. another problem of screening is the commonly applied batch operation mode. a lot of microbial systems display an overflow metabolism, substrate or osmotic inhibition or are characterised by a catabolite repressed product formation. in all these cases, batch operation is not the preferred operation mode and, therefore, these cultures are run in fed-batch in larger scales. in particular, it is nearly impossible to screen systems, which are catabolite repressed by the carbon source, in batch mode in defined mineral media. after initial growth has led to a nearly complete consumption of the carbon source, the product formation is derepressed. but then no more carbon source is available to continue with production. it is quite questionable whether in batch operation mode suitable strains can be selected for later fed-batch operation or not. this consideration has resulted in the development of a new technique which allows to run the screening in fed-batch operation mode. this technique is applicable in shake flasks as well as in mtp's. dramatic increases in product titre between -and -folds were observed under these conditions compared to conventional batch screenings. mikkel nordkvist, john villadsen center for microbial biotechnology, technical university of denmark, dk- lyngby. e-mail: mnq@biocentrum.dtu.dk (m. nordkvist) efficient mixing and mass transfer are highly important in the chemical industry and in the fermentation industry. poor mixing can result in low yield and variable product quality in a number of cultivation processes, and mass transfer can easily become the limiting step in aerobic cultivations, especially at high cell density. we have tested a new tank reactor system, where liquid is withdrawn from the bottom of a tank, rapidly circulated, and injected back into the bulk liquid through the nozzles of rotary jet heads. liquid feed as well as gas is added in the recirculation loop and thereby distributed via the rotary jet heads. solid feed in powder form can also be added in the loop with advantage, and heat is efficiently removed in a plate-type heat exchanger, which is part of the loop. the system has a very simple design with no internal baffles or heat exchange area, and between batches the rotary jet heads are used for cleaning in place. a number of applications ranging from dispersion of liquid and powder to mass transfer will be presented. mass transfer applications include baker's yeast cultivation and oxidation of lactose to lactobionic acid by a carbohydrate oxidase. fast and accurate analytical information that can be used to rapidly evaluate the interactions between biological systems and bioprocess operations is essential for optimization of biological production processes. we have researched and developed a multiplexed microbioreactor system for the parallel operation of multiple microbial fermentations. the microbioreactors have working volumes from to l, and are instrumented for real-time monitoring of dissolved oxygen, ph and optical density. the growth profiles obtained with escherichia coli compare favorably to results obtained from conventional ml batch bioreactors. we also demonstrate the use of our microbioreactors coupled to dna microarray analy-sis, as a tool for accelerated discovery and elucidation of metabolic pathways and gene expression profiles. the multiplexed system represents a significant step towards high-throughput data acquisition and has the potential to replace current instrumented bioreactors, which are bulky, expensive to run, and require many mechanical manipulations. design of a laboratory scale bioreactor to study solid-state tobacco fermentation m. di giacomo, l. nappi, d. silvestro, m. paolino, d. parente r&d biology department, british american tobacco italia, naples , italy italian toscano cigar production is based on the fermentation of dark fire-cured tobacco. the process starts with the rise of leaf moisture to levels of water activities assuring development of the wild phylloplane microflora in the absence of free water. the intense growth of microorganisms modifies leaf characteristics (ph rise from acidic to alkaline condition) contributing to define the toscano typical smoke profile. tobacco fermentation takes place in great bulks of kg which cause considerable amount of heat evolution as a function of the metabolic activities of the microorganisms. this heat accumulates and temperature can rise to as high as • c. a laboratory cylindrical packed-bed bioreactor was designed to work under isothermal conditions. the reactor was ideal to ferment small quantities of tobacco ( g) and was made up of a column aerated from the bottom with humidified air and placed in a thermoregulated room. experiments were conducted with constant temperature and air flow. moreover, bioenrichment experiments were conducted in the presence of different microbial starter cultures. fermentation courses were monitored by measuring microbial counts and chemical/physical modification of the substrate. with this laboratory scale system we obtained different kinds of information on the role and dynamics of the microorganisms involved in the fermentation process and on the influence of different environmental conditions. for the future, the design of an adiabatic device for tobacco fermentation is planned. on-line liquid chromatography as a process analytical technology for monitoring and control of biotech processes rick e. cooley , : process analytics center of excellence, dionex corporation, sunnyvale, ca, usa; eli lilly and company, indianapolis, in, usa (retired) biotech processes, used to produce an active pharmaceutical ingredient (api), generally differ from small molecule api manufacturing processes in that the starting materials tend to be more variable, more complex, and the product of interest in lower concentration due to the fact that they originate from a biological rather than a chemical process. this complexity and low starting concentration has generated a high level of interest in developing technologies that can be utilized to increase yield and reduce variability in the initial bioreactor phase, as well as, downstream isolation and purification operations. the use of process analytics, or on-line analytical measurements, is a technology approach that can contribute to increased process understanding and control. this presentation will provide examples of how various analytical measurement technologies have been utilized to monitor typical bioprocess unit operations leading to increased automation and control. examples of the use on-line liquid chromatography to monitor bioreactors, process scale chromatography columns, and enzymatic reactions will be presented in more detail. application of advanced monitoring strategies for recombinant protein production karl bayer department of biotechnology, university of natural resources and applied life sciences, vienna a- , austria high yield in combination with the required quality are the key objectives of large-scale production of recombinant proteins using different host/vector systems. however, in the past the efficient production of recombinant proteins was frequently limited due to inadequate exploitation of the cell factory and deficiencies in process design. to achieve optimal exploitation of microbial cell factories the key requirement is to enhance the monitoring capabilities to improve the insight into the host metabolism dynamics and to cope with limited understanding of the interaction of recombinant protein synthesis with host cell metabolism. since each protein exerts an individual influence on the host/vector system, the selection of appropriate analytical methods is even more important. in order to overcome these problems high throughput technology platforms, such as dna microarrays for transcriptome and differential -d electrophoresis (dige) for proteome analysis provide extensive data to screen for significant analytes and provide an appropriate basis for in silico modelling and reverse engineering of regulatory networks. taking advantage from such an iterative process experimental design will be improved and further aid to increase the performance of modelling. in addition, transcriptome data are used to screen fast stress responsive promoters to set up gfp based reporter gene fusions for in-situ monitoring of the metabolic load due to recombinant gene expression. moreover chemometric methods are frequently applied to model complex data from easily obtainable on-line data sets to overcome the limited monitoring capabilities due to the high complexity and nonlinearity of biological reactions and reaction networks. this strategy has been successfully applied to model bdm (bacterial dry matter), pcn (plasmid copy number) and the amount of recombinant protein using data sets acquired from off-gas analysis (o consumption, co evolution), alkaline consumption rate, in-situ capacitance and multi-wavelength fluorescence measurements. at-line monitoring of bioprocess-relevant marker genes using an electric dna-chip britta jürgen , daniel pioch , le thi hoi , jörg albers , rainer hintsche , stefan evers , karl-heinz-maurer , michael hecker , thomas schweder : institut für pharmazie, ernst-moritz-arndt-universität, greifswald, germany; ebiochipsystems, itzehoe, germany; vtb-enzymtechnologie, henkel kgaa, düsseldorf, germany; institut für mikrobiologie, ernst-moritz-arndt-universität, greifswald, germany. e-mail: britta.juergen@uni-greifswald.de (b. jürgen) the gram-positive bacteria bacillus licheniformis and bacillus subtilis represent important industrial hosts for the production of enzymes (e.g., proteases and amylases) or antibiotics (e.g., bacitracin). both organisms are attractive for this purpose because of their apathogenity and their classification as gras organisms (generally regarded as save). moreover, their easy cultivation and their high natural capacity to secrete proteins into the growth medium qualify them for the industrial overproduction of homologous or heterologous proteins (simonen and palva, ) . for the control of the physiological state and the productivity of the production cells efficient analysis tools are of great interest. a prerequisite for the evaluation of the physiological state of cells during industrial fermentation processes is the analysis of so-called process-relevant marker genes, the expression of which indicates unfavorable growth and production conditions (schweder and hecker, ) . by means of proteome and transcriptome analyses we have identified critical process-relevant genes of b. licheniformis and b. subtilis cells under different nutrient limitation conditions and during industrialclose bioprocesses. dna-chips with probes for such process-relevant marker genes could be valuable diagnostic tools for the monitoring of the cellular physiology during microbial bioprocesses. in order to provide reliable tools for the monitoring of the cell physiology during microbial bioprocesses, we have developed a fast mrna analytical approach, which allows an at-line monitoring of the transcriptional activity of selected marker genes during bioprocesses. this approach is based on an easy, fast and reliable rna isolation procedure and the measurement of specific mrnas by means of an electric dna-chip barken et al., a robust bioprocess is crucial to ensure the consistent process performance and provide the high quality of product for drug manufacturing in biopharmaceutical industries. existing methodologies for bioprocess design do not involve establishing mechanisms to achieve the desirable robust bioprocesses and have low capacity in handling uncertainty in the product manufacturing. also, the solutions are often obtained step wise and do not account for interactions between the steps. despite its importance, the robustness of a bioprocess has not been properly defined and studies carried out in statistic sense are often retrospective. in addition, the computational cost is expensive due to using a line search algorithm for finding an optimal operating solution. finally, the existing methodologies are difficult to apply to the whole bioprocess in biopharmaceutical industries. this paper attempts to define rigorously a measure for process robustness and presents a new methodology for evaluating the robustness of bioprocess operations and their performance. the methodology is based on the concept of 'windows of operation' which shows the whole range of possible operating regions. the methodology also establishes a lower bound for the largest variation of a design variable to ensure the performance. these bounds are achieved by min-max optimization techniques. a direct search algorithm has been developed and its computational cost is much lower than the line search algorithm. results include visualization of robust operating regions and a set of indices which compare the performance of different operating strategies. the capabilities and efficiency of this methodology are illustrated by applying it to the centrifuge selection for the clarification of high solids density cell broths. the research work will impact considerably upon robust bioprocess operation. when grown on methanol, pichia pastoris is able to synthesize proteins to high titres as well as secreting and glycosylation, thereby making this organism a very interesting host for the production of recombinant drugs at large scale. the methanol residual concentration has been reported to strongly influence the specific productivity, the optimum concentration being around g/l. a suitable monitoring and control technique is therefore necessary to study and improve the productivity of p. pastoris fermentations. the current research aims at showing how a mid-infrared spectrometer (atr-ftir) can be calibrated in-situ in order to monitor and control p. pastoris fermentations. this method is simple and fast, and eliminates the need of both standards preparation and off-line calibration. it is based on the observation that during fed-batch processes, only substrate and biomass concentrations vary significantly. the method therefore consists in adding a known amount of methanol at the beginning of the process, just after inoculation, and subsequently calibrating the instrument. financial support for the swiss national science foundation is gratefully acknowledged. implantable biomaterials are subjected to inflammatory responses mediated by adherent phagocytes such as monocytes and macrophages. these cellular responses and behavior have been shown to be dependent on the type of protein that adsorbs to the surface. surface modification is necessary to control and prevent protein adsorption, and thus modulate the inflammatory responses. hydrophilic surfaces that adsorb minimal amounts of protein are considered useful for minimizing the inflammatory reactions to biomaterials. in this study we have used two routes to modify polyethylene terephthalate (pet) films: ( ) a wet-chemical method for attachment of linear polyethylene glycol chains (mpeg); and ( ) gas-phase plasma polymerisation of diethylene glycol vinyl ether (degve) to generate peg-like surfaces. the surface chemistry was assessed by x-ray photoelctron spectroscopy (xps), fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ftir) and time-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (tof-sims). the two pegylated surfaces were compared for their ability to minimise both fibrinogen adsorption and the adhesion and activation of macrophage-like human leukocytes. adsorbed fibrinogen has been shown to be one of the key proteins in stimulating inflammatory responses to biomaterials. adsorption was investigated quantitatively using i-radiolabeled human fibrinogen. in addition, the conformation of the adsorbed protein was tested using an antifibrinogen monoclonal antibody in an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. the results showed that pegylated surfaces adsorbed up to % less fibrinogen, and that unfolding of adsorbed fibrinogen was more pronounced on the linear mpeg layers than on the peg-like plasma polymer surfaces. adhesion of in-vitro differentiated macrophage-like u cells was reduced on both the peg-like plasma polymer surfaces and the linear mpeg layers compared to the unmodified pet surface, but cells adhering to the peg-like plasma polymer surfaces secreted less tumor necrosis factor-␣ (tnf-␣) than cells adhering to the linear mpeg layers. thus, the linear mpeg surface is relatively efficient at reducing adhesion of macrophage-like cells, but those cells that do attach are in a more activated and proinflammatory state. analysis of ceramides from biological samples m. budvytiene , j. liesiene , b. niemeyer , n. ceramides in human skin play an important role in the regulation of cell growth, differentiation and apoptosis. moreover, they are involved in the numerous signaling pathways. the growing interest in the investigations of ceramides physiological functions requires efficient separation methods of ceramides from biological resources and sensitive analytical methods. in this work some sensitive and selective methods, involving thin layer chromatography (tlc), high performance liquid chromatography (hplc), mass spectrometry (ms) and nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (nmr) were employed for the separation and characterization of ceramides from human foreskin. epidermal lipids were extracted from human foreskin for h at room temperature using three solvent mixtures (chloroform/ethanol/water : : . , v/v/v); (chloroform/ethanol : , v/v), and (chloroform/ethanol : , v/v). ceramides retention char-acteristics in tlc and hplc were compared with the retention of commercial standards. the best separation was obtained using normal phase column packed with hilic silica m. the elution was performed using mixture of chloroform and ethanol / (v/v) as an eluent. two commercial standards n-stearoyl-sphingosine cer(ns), r f = . , and n-palmitoyl-sphingosine cer(np), r f = . , were selectively separated with hplc system in above mentioned conditions. the retention time of cer(np) and cer(ns) was . and . min, respectively. the same lipids were detected by hplc in the human foreskin extracts. the structure of the lipids from collected fractions was confirmed by means mass spectrometry and nmr. the physiological functions of the separated ceramides are investigated. production recombinant human thymosin-␣ overexpressed as intein fusion protein in e. coli roman s. esipov, vasily n. stepanenko, anatoly i. miroshnikov, shemyakin-ovchinnikov institute of bioorganic chemistry, russian academy of sciences, ul. miklukho-maklaya / , moscow, russia. e-mail: esipov@ibch.ru (roman s. esipov) medicines based on polypeptides consisting of and more amino acid residues are widely spread in pharmaceutical market at the present time. practically all polypeptide medicines known are prepared by general chemical synthesis that caused high cost of their production. that's why biotechnological way of polypeptide medicines preparation using recombinant gene expression in bacteria seems to be promising. during our work we design hybrid construction allowing solving a problem of specific cleavage of target polypeptide from the hybrid protein using system of protein splicing from new england biolabs. in case of thymosin-␣ production system intein mediated purification with affinity chitin (impac system)-binding tag has been used, where the modified sce vma from s. cerevisiae has been applied as intein. in contrast to other systems, impact allows the preparation of target protein without using of serine protease and other factors that may cleave the hybrid protein. in the presence of thiol reagents, such as dithiothreitol, mercaptoethanol, or cystein the hybrid protein can be site-specifically cleaved to give intein, the target protein and small fragment of nextein. using of this system does not allow to obtain the target protein with ser, cys or thr on n-terminal of protein, because in those cases target protein and n-extein ligation product will be formed. ser is n-terminal amino-acid in thymosin-␣ . it was recently found that some metal ions essentially affect the splicing. we tried to use zncl and we have found that, in case of intein-thymosin-␣ , the maximal yield of target polypeptide and the minimal yield of splicing products are observed in the absence of dithithreitol and in the presence of . - mm zinc chloride in buffers on all stages of thymosin ␣ isolation. the structure of recombinant thymosin-␣ of human was confirmed by the determination of n-and c-terminal amino-acid sequences and by maldi tof mass-spectrometry. we present a microbioreactor with thermoelectric cooling to inactivate cellular metabolism by cell culture freezing. small-scale cultivation methods have gained increased importance and their development has been supported by advances in bioprocess monitoring methods. yet efficient sampling methods for off-line analysis remain important where in-situ real-time measurements are difficult, for example for intracellular metabolite concentration or enzyme activity measurements, and for all methods which are invasive by nature, such as protein purification. freeze-stop measurements of metabolite levels are ideal, because they are inert, i.e. do not require the addition of a chemical. in large systems, the chilling time is often the limiting factor, and alternative methods for cell metabolism inactivation are required, such as the spraying of the cell suspension in % methanol at a temperature of − • c, or the use of boiling buffered ethanol. due to the small thermal mass of microsystems, shorter chilling times can be expected. sample cooling to • c in a microbioreactor has been presented previously. in this contribution, we investigate sample freezing to completely inactivate the cell metabolism from microbioreactor working volumes of approximately l. the use of multi-parameter flow cytometry for characterisation and monitoring of insect cell-baculovirus fermentations in a mechanically-agitated bioreactor bojan isailovic , alvin w. nienow , ian w. taylor , ryan hicks , christopher j. bacteria and mammalian cells have been traditionally used as hosts for commercial recombinant protein production. however, in recent years, the insect cell-baculovirus system has emerged as a potentially attractive recombinant protein expression vehicle. although flow cytometry has been used widely for analysis of mammalian and microbial cells, there is very little information on applications of this powerful technique in insect cell culture. here we compared cell ratiometric counts and viability (propidium iodide and calcein am) of sf- cell cultures using flow cytometry to those determined by more traditional methods using a haemocytometer and the trypan-blue exclusion dye. flow cytometry has also been used to monitor various parameters during cultures of sf infected with the recombinant autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (acnpv) containing the inserted nucleic acid sequence amfp coding for am-cyan coral protein, which emits natural green fluorescence. the optimization of a fermentation process requires the organism to be cultivated under desirable conditions, which depends on how well the fermentation process is controlled. inadequate mixing and mass transfer are responsible for the heterogeneous environment at large scale in terms of nutrient concentration and ph profile, resulting in lower product yields. these have been associated with, inadequate control of ph and the production of acetate or formate in response to over-feeding of glucose and oxygen deficiency. rapid analyses of substrates and indicator metabolites in a fermentation process is critical for optimal control. this can be achieved in real time with nir spectroscopy. in this study, nir-spectroscopy has been applied to monitor the concentrations of glucose, acetate, formate, ammonium hydroxide and biomass in the cultivation of e. coli (w ). a comparison of partial least square models built using water standards, synthetic medium standards and fermentation samples has been made. the control of the brewing process is important for improving product quality, and lowering costs. infrared spectroscopy is a technique that can be used at-line and on-line to rapidly measure component concentrations of unprocessed whole broth samples in real time. in this study, both mid -infrared (mir) and near-infrared (nir) spectroscopy have been used and compared for the monitoring of ethanol, flavour components, wort sugars, biomass and specific gravity during the brewing. partial least-squares regression (pls) was used to model relationships between component concentrations and spectra. the performance of these models was evaluated in terms of the standard error of prediction (sep), number of pls factors and the correlation coefficient (r). calibration models were constructed using spectra acquired for multi-component mixtures, intended to simulate brewing fermentation conditions, and actual brewing fermentation samples. chemometric results indicated that nir is a powerful tool for accurately measuring sugar, ethanol and biomass concentrations. when choosing an expression host for production of a specific recombinant protein, one can essentially select from a multiplicity of different systems. while e. coli bacterium is usually the starting point for any cloning and expression effort, there is no universal expression host that would work optimally for all proteins. practical issues to consider include e.g. need for post-translational modifications and protease activity of the host. we have produced recombinant hiv- nef in different host cell systems: e. coli, p. pastoris yeast and stable drosophila s insect cells. using strain/cell line development, production and purification data from practical experiments, we were able to conduct a techno-economical comparison of the different host cell systems. the annual production goal was set at mg of high-purity nef. this was supposed to be produced campaign-wise in - batches using laboratory-scale bioreactors and other equipment. in this study, it was shown that although the production costs of the different systems were in the same range, the production in e. coli was most inexpensive, and the s cell system was the most expensive. regardless of the selected host system, the labour costs incurred the most expenses. when comparing different stages of the work (strain/cell line development, bioreactor production and down-stream processing), the strain development, the most man-hours demanding stage, involved approximately half of the costs of every production system. although e. coli was the most inexpensive host system for producing nef, it has some definite disadvantages: e.g. the production of endotoxins and the disability to perform post-translational modifications. if these disadvantages are of importance, the production must be done using more expensive system. modelling and control of industrial fermentation j.k. rasmussen, s.b. jørgensen capec, department of chemical engineering, technical university of denmark, dk- lyngby, denmark. e-mail: jkr@kt.dtu.dk (j.k. rasmussen) fed-batch processes play a very important role in chemical and biochemical industry. fermentations in biochemical industry are most often carried out as fed-batch processes. present control schemes do not utilize the full potential of the production facilities and may fail to achieve uniform product quality and optimal productivity. the introduction of model based control strategies is considered difficult because suitable models are not readily available. first principle engineering models can be used but the usually limited knowledge of the regulatory network in the micro-organism makes model development very time consuming. another strategy is to use a purely data-driven approach where only limited prior knowledge of the process is required. a framework for generation of such blackbox models is used in this project. this framework is called "grid of linear models" (golm), it uses a large number of linear models which each describes the behaviour of the process within a certain time interval. the combination of these models results in a model which covers the entire time span of the fermentation and approximates the nonlinear time varying behaviour. a procedure for deriving golm models from operational data has been developed and because they consist of a large set of linear models it makes them suitable for model predictive control implementation with iterative learning capabilities from batch to batch. iterative learning model predictive control (ilmpc) based on a golm model is being implemented on a fermentor at novozymes a/s. the results will be evaluated in terms of the controller's capability to ensure uniform product quality and reject both intra and inter batch process disturbances. the model based approach renders optimization of the process recipe possible by using the ilmpc capability. this opportunity provides a great potential for increase of productivity and reduction of cost. j.m. viader-salvadó, j.a. fuentes-garibay, l.j. galán-wong, m. guerrero-olazarán institute of biotechnology, biological science school, autonomous university of nuevo león, san nicolás de los garza, n.l., méxico, the production of recombinant trypsin and trypsinogen has been reported as difficult due to a probably toxicity on host or its instability. in an effort to attain high-level production of shrimp trypsin for aquaculture applications, we have evaluated shrimp trypsinogen production by recombinant pichia pastoris strains in -l bioreactors. a p. pastoris gs mut+ containing in its genome the litopenaeus vannamei trypsinogen cdna fused in frame to saccharomyces cerevisiae ␣-factor secretion signal, previously constructed in our laboratory, was used. four three-step fermentations (glycerol batch, glycerol and methanol fed-batch) were carried out. the glycerol batch step ( l of basal salts medium, g/l glycerol, . ml biotin . %, . ml ptm , l antifoam, ph adjusted to with % nh oh) was carried out until glycerol was completely exhausted ( h). the glycerol fed-batch step was carried out feeding with % glycerol ( ml/l biotin . % and ptm ) at . ml/min by h and min of posterior starvation. the methanol fed-batch step was carried out feeding with % methanol ( ml/l biotin . % and ptm ) by h using a methanol concentration on/off feedback control to maintain constant the methanol concentration in the culture medium to g/l. in all the fermentations the air flow rate and the agitation were set at l/min and - rpm, respectively. with the four fermentation assays, the influence of the ph and temperature in the production phase to the recombinant shrimp trypsinogen production were evaluated. in the four fermentations, at the end of the second step a biomass of g/l wet weight were obtained (od ). the methanol demand in the four fermentations surprisingly was not increasing rather initially it was . ml/min, after h decreased . times for h, increased to . ml/min for h and afterwards it was decreased manually to a constant value of . ml/min for that the dissolved oxygen will not decrease to values less than % (last h). the total protein amount in the culture medium supernatant increased during the production step until values of . g/l (assay at ph ), . times more than the worst assay (ph ) recombinant shrimp trypsinogen production was confirmed by sds-page (about mg/l) and trypsin enzymatic activity was detected using bapna as substrate after trypsinogen activation with shrimp hepatopancreas extract. large conformational change on giant dna induced by ascorbic acid: a nobel scheme on its antioxidative activity yuko yoshikawa, emi sakai, yoshiko oda department of food and nutrition, nagoya bunri college, nagoya - , japan ascorbic acid is often regarded as an antioxidant in vivo, where it protects against dna damage by scavenging reactive oxygen species. in the present, we will show another potent scenario on the protective effect of ascorbic acid through a significant structural change of giant dna. recently, we examined the effect of ascorbic acid on the higher order structure of dna through single molecular observation with fluorescence microscopy, and found that ascorbic acid generates a pearling structure in giant dna molecules, where elongated and compact parts coexist along a molecular chain. the results of observations with atomic force microscopy indicate that the compact parts assume a loosely packed conformation. as the extension, here we study the protective effect against double-strand breaks by reactive oxygen at different concentrations of ascorbic acid, in relation to the change of the higher order structure of giant dna. we have performed a real time observation on the doublestrand breaks on individual dna molecules by use of fluorescence microscopy. we have found that the double-strand break is markedly protected when ascorbic acid exists over millimolar concentrations. it is found that such a protective effect of ascorbic acid corresponds well to the above mentioned change on the higher order structure of dna. it has been reported that human circulating immune cells, such as neutrophils, monocytes and lymphocytes, accumulate ascorbic acid in millimolar concentrations. therefore, it is expected that the ascorbic acid concentration that induces the large conformational change on dna may be of physiological significance. , y., et al., . febs lett. , - . yoshikawa, y., et al., . plant proteins are increasingly being used as an alternative to proteins from animal sources and substantially contribute to the human diet in several developing countries. there are many process both industrial and food based which employ protein hydrolysis and hydrolytic products have a wide variety of applications from industrial fermentation media to food additives. traditionally, proteins are hydrolysed by chemical means. acid hydrolysates of protein are used to produce food ingredients and flavour compounds. however, hydrolysis by chemical reagents produce potentially hazardous byproducts and these non-selective hydrolysis products cannot easily be defined. the use of enzymes allows for selective hydrolysis of protein and thus produces a potentially safer and more defined material. the present investigation describes the effects of substrate, enzyme and hydrolysate concentration on the hydrolysis of corn gluten. the corn gluten was hydrolysed by a commercial protease preparation neutrase. the protein hydrolysis reactions were carried out in . l of aqueous solutions at the temperature of • c and ph and were monitored by using ph-stat method. the degree of hydrolysis (%) and soluble protein concentration depending on time were investigated by using , , , , and % (w/v) substrate concentrations; and . , . , . , . and . , % (v/v) enzyme concentrations; and , , and % (v/v) this paper describes medium optimization for urease production by aspergillus niger ptcc by one-factor-at-a-time and orthogonal array design methods. the one-factor-at-a-time method was used to study the effects of carbon and nitrogen sources on urease production. among various carbon and nitrogen sources used, sucrose and yeast extract were the most suitable for urease production, respectively. subsequently, the concentration of sucrose, yeast extract and mineral sources were optimized using the orthogonal array method in two stages. the effects of nutritional components for urease production by a. niger ptcc in the first and second stages were in order of urea > niso > sucrose >kh po > k hpo > cacl > yeast extract > mgso and yeast extract > sucrose > k hpo > kh po > urea > cacl > niso , respectively. the optimal concentrations of nutritional components for improved urease production were determined as g/l sucrose, . g/l urea, . g/l yeast extract, . g/l niso · h o, . g/l mgso · h o, . g/l cacl , . g/l kh po , and . g/l k hpo . these results showed that urea, niso , yeast extract and sucrose had significant effect on urease production by a. niger ptcc . tween and mgso had negligible effect on urease production by this strain. the subsequent confirmation experiments determined the validity of the models. maximum urease activity in optimized media by onefactor-at-a-time and orthogonal array methods were about . and . times greater than with the basal medium, respectively. carbon sources create fingerprint fermentation characteristics pınar Ç alık , güzide Ç alık , tunçer h.Özdamar : bre lab, department of chemical engineering, ankara university, ankara, turkey; ib lab, department of chemical engineering, metu, ankara, turkey. e-mail: calik@eng.ankara.edu.tr (g. Ç alık) this work reports on a systematic investigation of the interactions between the single-carbon sources, i.e. glucose and citric acid, and complex-medium components, i.e., carbon and nitrogen sources, in enzyme fermentation processes, i.e. serine alkaline protease (sap; ec . . . ),) and -lactamase (ec . . . ), with the oxygentransfer and ph conditions to demonstrate the influences of carbon sources that create the fingerprint fermentation characteristics, moreover, their influences on the product and by-product formations and the intracellular reaction rates. the influence of the medium composition i.e. citric acid-, glucose-, molasses-and soybean-based media together with the oxygen transfer (ot)-and ph-conditions applied, on the product and by-product distributions and ot characteristics were investigated in batch bioreactors. for sap, in general, under uncontrolled-ph operations the variation of the medium ph in sap fermentation process has a tendency to increase in the sap production phase; however, depending on the carbon source used, its behaviour changes in the early stages of the fermentation as the consequences of the directed functioning of the intracellular bioreaction network. the loci of the dissolved oxygen (do) curves also strongly depend on the carbon source(s) utilised, in addition to the applied ot conditions. the complex media profiles are significantly different compared to the defined media as the ph and do profiles are interrelated owing to the bioreactor operation conditions affecting the metabolic reaction network. the highest volumetric oxygen uptake rates were obtained with soybean-based medium that was ca. three-fold higher than the values reported in citrate-based and glucose based media, and ca. . - -fold higher than the values reported in molasses-based medium. the significant changes, moreover, the drastic change observed with the use of soybean-based complex medium are due to the compositions of the fermentation media used, and its influence on the intracellular bioreaction network. thus, we conclude that the change in medium composition based on the carbon source changes the fermentation characteristics under the designed bioreactor operation conditions that appear as the fingerprints of the bioprocess. effects of oxygen transfer on ␣-amylase production by b. amyloliquefaciens nurhan güngör, güzide Ç alık bre lab, department of chemical engineering, ankara university, ankara, turkey ␣-amylase (e.c. . . . ) a commercially important enzyme used in food, textile, detergent, brewing, paper, and animal feed industries; hydrolyses ␣- , glucosydic bonds in amylose, amylopectin, and related polysaccharides. optimum medium composition and influence of bioreactor operation parameters on ␣-amylase production with high yield and selectivity were determined together with the metabolic flux distributions using b. amyloliquefaciens (nrrl b- ) which is found to be a good producer of the enzyme. systematic investigation of oxygen transfer in relation with the metabolic fluxes for ␣-amylase is not available in the literature. shake-flask experiments were conducted in . dm airfiltered bioreactors in orbital shakers with agitation and heating controls (b. braun, certomat-bs ). laboratory-scale bioreactors were composed of agitation, heating, foam, dissolved-oxygen and ph-controlled . and . dm systems (b. braun, biostat q; and chemap). after separation of the cells with a sorval rc s ultracentrifuge, ␣-amylase activity was measured by the dns method (bernfeld, ) . amino acid concentrations were determined with a hplc (waters), protein and organic acid concentrations were measured with a hpce (waters, quanta e) (Ç alık et al., ) . oxygen transfer characteristics in the bioreactor systems were calculated using the dynamic method (rainer, ) . in the mass flux balance-based analyses, a pseudo-steady state approximation for the intracellular metabolites and the accumulation rates of the extracellular metabolites measured throughout the fermentations in considerations of the biochemical feature of the system were used to acquire the flux distributions. in laboratory scale, the effects of different c sources i.e., glucose, fructose, maltose, lactose and soluble starch; n sources i.e., (nh ) hpo , (nh ) so , and nh cl and/or their concentrations; and the operation parameters, ph and temperature on cell growth, substrate utilization, ␣-amylase and byproduct concentrations, and ␣-amylase activity were investigated. in pilot scale, the fermentation and oxygen transfer characteristics of the bioreaction system together with the metabolic fluxes were determined. oxygen transfer regulates benzaldehyde lyase production in e. coli pınar Ç alık iblab, department of chemical engineering, metu, ankara, turkey. e-mail: pcalik@metu.edu.tr the effects of oxygen transfer rate on benzaldehyde lyase (bal) production by puc ::bal carrying recombinant e. coli on a defined medium with . kg/m glucose were investigated in order to finetune the bioreactor performance, in v = dm batch bioreactors at five different conditions with the parameters at, i.e. q /v r = . vvm and n = , , and min − and; q /v r = . vvm and n = min − . the concentrations of the product and by-products amino acids and organic acids were determined in addition to bal activities. medium oxygen transfer rate conditions and uncontrolled ph operation at ph . are optimum for maximum bal activity, i.e. u/cm at h, and productivity and selectivity. on the bases of the data, response of the intracellular bioreaction network of r-e. coli to oxygen transfer conditions were analysed using a mass-flux balance based stoichiometric model that contains metabolites and reaction fluxes. the results reveal that metabolic reactions are intimately coupled with the oxygen transfer conditions. oxygen transfer rate showed diverse effects on the product formation by influencing metabolic pathways and changing metabolic fluxes. metabolic flux analysis was helpful to describe the interactions between the cell and the bioreactor by predicting the changes in the fluxes and the rate controlling step(s) in the metabolic pathways. therefore, knowing the distribution of the metabolic fluxes during the growth, and bal and by-product formations provide new information for understanding physiological characteristics of the r-e.coli, and reveals important features of the regulation of the bioprocess and opens new avenues to successful application of metabolic engineering. the detection and diagnosis of pathogenic bacteria causing many diseases to the human body is an area of important research to public welfare. food is the most important energy source to humans, but it can give rise to disease caused by pathogenic bacteria not performing adequate detection tests. oligonucleotide-based microarrays are becoming increasingly useful for the analysis of expression profiles and polymorphisms among interested genes. here, we checked the possibility of development of oligonucleotide-based microarrays for detection and diagnosis of foodborne pathogenic bacteria. the oligonucleotide chip technology was applied to one control strain and seven foodborne pathogenic bacteria strains. it was designed repeated spots of eight hyperspecific and two highly conserved (control) capture probes from s rdna sequences. in order to validate experimental quality and to certificate specificities among specific spots at a glance by d and d views, quantitative visualization tool was developed. using the proposed oligonucleotide chip, we could classify and diagnose species and even subtypes of some pathogens. induction of in vitro neuro-muscular junctions using neuroblastoma and fibroblast cell lines for facilitating receptor-binding studies with botulinum toxin arindam chaudhury, bal ram singh department of chemistry and biochemistry, university of massachusetts dartmouth, old westport road, north dartmouth, ma - , usa. e-mail: g achaudhury@umassd.edu (a. chaudhury) botulinum toxin (bont), the most potent biological toxin known, is responsible for botulism, a fatal paralytic disease of the neuromuscular transmission. it blocks the release of acetylcholine at the neurotransmitter junction of the synapse. the objective of the current study was to induce in vitro neuro-muscular junctions through co-culturing of nerve and precursor-muscle cell lines. presently no known primary cultures or cell lines are available for nerve-muscle co-culture, thus validating the current work. j - t fibroblast cell line was first adapted to grow in media conducive for growth of sh-sy y neuroblastoma cell line. the two cell lines were then splitted and co-cultured and observed for junction formations. light and fluorescent microscopic studies revealed en plaque (twitch-type) and en grappe (bulbous nerve endings) nerve-muscle junctions. growth rate of j - t cells decreased substantially when the media was initially changed. structurally they were more spindle-shaped than the normal reticular shapes of j - t cells, when grown in a media tailor-made for them. the formation of nerve-muscle junctions were confirmed using markers specific for each cell type. future work is focusing on receptor identification for the botulinum toxin in the established in vitro neuro-muscular junctions and also the transcellular translocation of the toxin. fourier-transform infrared (ftir) spectrometers have recently enjoyed widespread popularity in bioprocess monitoring applications due to their non-invasiveness and in-situ sterilizability. their online applicability creates an interesting opportunity for process control and optimization. however, the precision and accuracy of the predicted analyte concentration values directly depend on the quality of the measured signal and the robustness of the calibration model. instability and time drift in the measured spectra are currently one of the main obstacles in ftir monitoring. the intensity of the detected signal is influenced both by random noise and structural drifts and offsets. as a result, it is often necessary to scale the measured spectrum with respect to a constant reference spectrum, a technique similar to the internal standard approach used in analytical assays, such as hplc. applying this technique has lead to a noticeable decrease in the standard error of prediction in the monitoring of an anaerobic s fermentation of the saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast. in order to test the robustness of the calibration model and to increase its resistance to signal instability, random spikes of known amounts of analytes were introduced into the measured medium. this approach can be used to fine-tune the calibration model on-line and is currently one of the aspects investigated in this laboratory. the effect of the stringent response induction on l-valine biosynthesis by corynebacterium glutamicum ilze denina , , longina paegle , liga zala , , maija ruklisha : faculty of biology, university of latvia, kronvalda blvd. , riga lv- , latvia; institute of microbiology and biotechnology, university of latvia, kronvalda blvd. , riga lv- , latvia. e-mail: ilzede@hotmail.com (i. denina) the present study was focused on methods of the stringent response induction and on investigation of its effect on valine overproduction by isoleucine auxotrophs of corynebacterium glutamicum. the intracellular level of guanosine -diphosphate diphosphate (ppgpp) increased and bacterial growth rate (µ) decreased during the short-term experiments when the exponentially growing cells were exposed to isoleucine limited conditions. the induction of the cellular stringent response resulted in a drastic increase in the activity of acetoxydroxy acid synthase (ahas), also by a significant increase in valine production. in contrast, an increase in ahas activity and valine synthesis by c. glutamicum was not achieved when bacterial growth was down-regulated in a ppgpp-independent manner. these results demonstrated that induction of the ppgpp-mediated stringent response might be significant in order to increase valine overproduction by c. glutamicum. infections with human cytomegalovirus (hcmv) continue to be an important health problem in certain patient populations, such as newborns, graft recipients of solid organs, or bone marrow and aids patients. in these groups, hcmv is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. the complex biology of hcmv necessarily begins with an initial interaction between the envelope of the infectious virus and the host cell. glycoprotein b (gb) is the major antigen, on the envelope of hcmv, for the induction of neutralizing antibodies. the region between aa and of hcmv gb (termed antigenic domain , ad- ) has been identified as the immunodominant target for the humoral immune response following natural infection. screening methods for detection of neutralizing antibodies have not been used because they are costly and labor intensive and thus far are not feasible for use on a large scale. for the development of reliable and inexpensive serodiagnostic tests the ad- of hcmv glycoprotein gp , which are known to bind neutralizing antibodies, was expressed in prokaryotic systems. in this work, one prokaryotically expressed fusion protein which codifies ad- with -galactosidase was used. the influence of different process conditions, on the production of the fusion protein containing the ad- as well as sugars addition to the fermentation medium was investigated. in order to analyze the expression of fusion protein, the -galactosidase activity was followed throughout the fermentation. lysis process was also optimized and some final confirmation tests about protein antigenicity were performed. polyenzymic systems for the preparation of drugs based on modified nucleosides d. chuvikovsky, r. esipov, t. muravyova, a. miroshnikov shemyakin-ovchinnikov institute of bioorganic chemistry, russian academy of sciences, ul. miklukho-maklaya / , moscow , russia. e-mail: esipov@ibch.ru (r. esipov) considerable progress in the preparation of nucleoside analogues was achieved by combination of chemical and biochemical transformations. enzyme-catalyzed chemical transformation is now widely recognized as practical alternative to traditional organic synthesis in pharmaceutical and chemical industries. pentofuranosyltransfer reaction catalyzed by nucleoside phosphorylases was successfully employed for the synthesis of a variety of base-and sugar-modified nucleosides. enzymes involved in the metabolism of ribose phosphate and deoxyribose phosphate, such as ribokinase and phosphopentomutase, were used for the preparation of sugar-modified nucleosides. nucleosides phosphorylases (thymidine phosphorylase (tp), uridine phosphorylase (up) and purine nucleoside phosphorylase (pnp)), ribokinase and phosphopentomutase from e. coli have been cloned and overexpressed in e. coli. fast and efficient methods for the purification of nucleosides phosphorylases have been developed. the amount of purified protein was about mg/l of cell culture, corresponding to , , and units, respectively, of the up, tp and pnp. synthesis of medicinal drugs ribavirin ( -(-d-ribofuranosyl)- , , -triazole- -carboxamide), cladribine ( -chloroadenine- --d- -deoxyribofuranoside) and fludarabine ( -fluoroadenine- --darabinofuranoside) with the use of recombinant enzymes were studied. several important factors affecting the modified nucleosides production (ph, temperature, enzyme concentration, donor/acceptor ratio) were investigated and optimized. under optimum conditions ribavirin, cladribine and fludarabine produced in the reaction mixture in yields of , and %, referred to , , -triazole- -carboxamide, -chloroadenosine and -fluoroadenosine, respectively. aggregation and adsorption of fibroin molecules in aqueous solution won hur school of biotechnology and bioengineering, kangwon national university, chunchon - , korea. e-mail: wonhur@kangwon.ac.kr fibroin, the structural protein from bombyx mori, is composed of heavy chain (generally called 'fibroin') and light chain polypeptides of about and kda, respectively. this study investigated the aggregation of fibroin and the adsorption between fibroin and surfaces. the variations of particle size and zeta potential were investigated by electrophoretic light scattering spectrophotometer (els). the adsorption of fibroin on surface was investigated in a continuous flow system by biacore applied surface plasmon resonance(spr) technique. the particle size and zeta potential range of aqueous fibroin were nm, ± mv, respectively. iso-electric point(ph iep )of fibroin was ph . . the amount of fibroin adsorbed on a gold surface was less than . g/ml even in the presence of high concentration of fibroin. the modification of gold surface was accomplished by applying chemicals known to form self-assembled monolayer, those are carrying nh + , coo − , benzene ring and peptide that similar structure with fibroin. the adsorbed amount of fibroin on the self-assembly monolayers (sams) increased in the following order: nh + > benzene ring > coo − > peptide surface. the deposition of fibroin in aqueous solution on non-waven fabric was affected by nacl and high temperature. ph influences metabolite profiling of -lactamse producing b. licheniformis nazarİleri , pınar Ç alık , ali Şengül : ib lab, department of chemical engineering, metu, ankara, turkey; gülhane sch med, dept immunol, ankara, turkey. e-mail: e @metu.edu.tr (n.İleri) ph conditions in the bioreactor affect product and by-product formations by influencing metabolic pathways and changing metabolic fluxes, based on its influence on, i.e. dna transcription, protein synthesis, transport mechanism, atp generation and cellular energetics. whereupon, some fermentation processes favours uncontrolled-ph conditions while others favours controlled-ph conditions. on the bases of the interactions between the cell and the bioreactor through a process, carried out at either uncontrolled-or controlled-ph conditions, intracellular ph can be widely different and variable during the fermentation process. consequently, if one aims towards a quantitative understanding of the cell metabolism, one has to take into account the time variations of the intracellular ph and its effects on the in-vivo kinetics of the metabolic steps involved. moreover, since the presence of dormant or dead cells in the cultivation medium have negative effect on the synthesis of the production of desired product; the physiological state of the culture has great importance. in this context, the effects of ph on the regulation of intracellular ph, transport mechanism, and metabolic activity of b. licheniformis during production of -lactamase (ec . . . ), an industrial enzyme catalyzing the hydrolysis of beta-lactam ring in beta-lactam antibiotics, was investigated. in addition, the physiological state of the organism and its effect on the production were observed. the optimal controlled-ph operation was found to be ph . with u/cm enzyme activity. the intracellular and extracellular na + , k + ion concentrations increased significantly throughout the process with increasing ph. on the other hand, the intracellular nh + ion concentration was relatively constant. isolation and characterization of angiotensin-i converting enzyme inhibitory peptides by use of anti-peptide antibody fida hasan , megumi kitagawa , yoichi kumada , naoya hashimoto , masami shiiba , shigeo katoh , masaaki terashima : graduate school of science and technology, kobe university, nada, kobe - , japan; department of human science, kobe college, okadayama, nishinomiya - , japan inhibitory peptides against angiotensin-i converting enzyme can be promising bio-functional peptides as natural alternatives for the non-peptide ace inhibitory drugs. these peptides are inactive within sequences of parent proteins and can be released during enzymatic digestion or food processing. immunointeraction is very effective for the purification of proteins and peptides with high purity. in this study, ace inhibitory peptides from hydrolysate of bonito meat were isolated by an anti-peptide antibody column and hplc, and kinetics of production of these ace inhibitory peptides was studies. an anti-peptide antibody against an ace inhibitory peptide, which was found by kohama et al. from tuna was obtained by immunization of the antigen peptide pc-iace (kkpthikwgd). water extract of bonito meat was digested at • c in a modified gastric juice, . mg/ml nacl containing g/ml pepsin (ph ). peptides in hydrolysates were purified by use of an affinity column coupled with the antipeptide antibody and separated by hplc equipped with a reverse phase column (cosmosil c -ms-ii, . cm × cm). amino acid sequences and ic values of the potent ace inhibitory peptides were determined. sds-page and western blotting experiments clarified that bonito protein contained peptides having similar sequence to the antigen peptide. a fraction of retention time - min in hplc purification samples showed high inhibitory activity, and several peptides in this fraction were separated. after h digestion, two major inhibitory peptides, herdpthikwgd and pthikwgd, were found to be relatively stable in the gastric juice. kluyveromyces marxianus physiology on several levels of carbon, nitrogen sources and oxygenation during inulinase production silva-santisteban yépez, o. bernardo, francisco maugeri department of food eng./unicamp, - , campinas, sp-brazil. email: maugeri@fea.unicamp.br (f. maugeri) inulinase produced by yeasts is an interesting alternative compared with the one produced by filamentous molds, as culture conditions can be better controlled. during the assays, it was observed that inulinase production levels varied with nutritional conditions in batch culture. kluyveromyces marxianus atcc culture is described by two main phases, the first one being the growth phase, where substrate consumption and basal inulinase production were performed, and the second one being the phase where some metabolites are uptaken and high inulinase production is observed. the metabolic fluxes analyses were used to describe the cell physiology in the first phase, in a variety of conditions of sucrose and ammonium sulfate concentration and aeration condition. the metabolic network included the main metabolic pathways such as glycolisis, pentose phosphate pathway, krebs cycle, oxidative phosphorylation and biomass biosynthesis. the physiology in this phase was correlated with high inulinase production in the second phase. it was also noticed that inulinase production diminished when sucrose was in high concentration, leading, additionally, to ethanol production. in these terms, it was unveiled a kind of crabtree effect performed by this strain. forward extraction of l-aspartic acid from fermentation broths by reverse micelles and backward extraction by gas hydrate methodÖ. aydogan , e. bayraktar ,Ü. mehmetoglu , m. parlaktuna , t. mehmetoglu : department of chemical engineering, faculty of engineering, ankara university, tandogan, ankara , turkey; department of petroleum and natural gas engineering, middle east technical university, ankara , turkey. e-mail: mehmet@eng.ankara.edu.tr (Ü. mehmetoglu) recently gas hydrate method has been applied as a technique for backward extraction of amino acids from reverse micelle systems. in this study, backward extraction of l-aspartic acid was investigated by gas hydrate method. at the first stage, production of l-aspartic acid was carried out using ml of . m ammonium fumarate (ph . ) as substrate at circc in an orbital shaker at rpm for h. e. coli (atcc ) was used as biocatalyst. at the end of reaction excess fumaric acid was extracted in reverse micelle phase. then forward extraction of l-aspartic acid was carried out with injection method in reverse micelle phase. for back extraction, co is used to form gas hydrates crystalline structure. back extraction experiments were carried out between - bar g pressure and at circc. at the end of the back extraction l-aspartic acid was obtained in crystalline form. the results indicate that recovery of l-aspartic acid from reverse micelles by forming gas hydrate can be achieved with a yield of . %. consequently, gas hydrate method can be used as a new technique for backward extraction of amino acids from reverse micelles. aerobic and anaerobic cultivations of aspergillus niger on different nitrogen sources susan meijer, gianni panagiotou, lisbeth olsson and jens nielsen center of microbial biotechnology, biocentrum-dtu, technical university of denmark, dk- lyngby, denmark in this study, we aim at creating a succinic acid producing strain of a. niger. a. niger is known to be a strictly aerobic organism, meaning it is not able to use the reductive part of the tca cycle to produce succinate. during aerobic growth a. niger uses oxygen as electron acceptor in the respiratory chain, thereby reoxidizing the produced nadh to nad + . however, under anaerobic conditions other compounds than oxygen, such as no − are required as electron acceptor (denitrification). this process consists of no − reduction to nh + coupled to substrate-level phosphorylation that supports growth under anaerobic conditions. in the present study, our aim was to investigate the effect of different nitrogen sources on the physiology of a. niger during growth under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. aerobic growth experiments on three different nitrogen sources; ammonium, nitrate and nitrite, showed that ammonium and nitrate could be consumed by the filamentous fungus. nitrite on the other hand could not facilitate growth, indicating the absence of a nitrite uptake system. however, under anaerobic conditions notable growth was only observed on nitrate. these data support the hypothesis of the existence of an alternative electron acceptor that might facilitate anaerobic growth of a. niger. among the therapeutic proteins derived from mammalian cells, recombinant antibodies received a great deal of attention as a prominent product through biotech pipelines toward the marketplace. they now occupy about % of the estimated medicines in clinical development and many more antibodies which lead the value of the market going forward are reported. there are various environmental factors affecting rcho cell cultures such as medium components, temperature, ph, and byproducts (ammonia, lactate, and, etc.) . because most of mammalian cells are very sensitive to their environmental change, appropriate control of environmental parameters is a very important consideration to enhance cell growth and production of target proteins. balanced addition of limiting medium components plays an essential role on improvement of cell density and product concentration. temperature and ph are easily adjustable process parameters, being reported to influence cell growth and recombinant protein production. ammonia and lactate are well-known byproducts which have an inhibitory effect on cell growth when their concentrations exceed a specific level. in this work, effects of various environmental factors including temperature, ph, amino acids, vitamins, hormones, and metabolic byproducts on cell growth and recombinant antibody production were investigated in the cultivation of recombinant chinese hamster ovary cells. the most suitable condition of each environmental condition was proposed for enhancement of the cell growth and the productivity of recombinant antibody. the present study was carried out in order to assess the protective effects of calycosin- -o--d-glucopyranoside isolated from astragali radix (ar) on hyaluronidase (haase) and the recombinant human interleukin-  (il- ) induced matrix degradation in human articular cartilage and chondrocytes. we isolated the active component from the n-butanol soluble fraction of ar as haase inhibitor and structurally identified as calycosin- -o--d-glucopyranoside by lc-ms, ir, h nmr, and c nmr analyses. the protective effect of arbu on the matrix gene expression of immortalized chondrocyte cell line c- /i treated with haase was investigated using a reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr). its effect on haase and il- -induced matrix degradation in human articular cartilage was determined by using a staining method and calculating the amount of degraded glycosaminoglycan (gag) from the cultured media. pretreatment with calycosin- -o--d-glucopyranoside effectively protected against matrix degradation of the human chondrocytes and articular cartilage. therefore, it would appear that calycosin- -o--d-glucopyranoside from ar is a potential natural ant-inflammatory or anti-osteoarthritis agent and can be effectively used to protect against proteoglycan (pg) degradation. catechol-o-methyltransferase (comt) is an enzyme that catalyses a variety of endogenous and exogenous catechol substrates by transferring a methyl group from s-adenosylmethionine (sam) to either the meta-or the para-hydroxyl group of the catechol ring. the enzyme has a physiological role in the metabolism of the catechol estrogens, inactivation of the catecholamine neurotransmitters such as dopamine and epinephrine and detoxification of a variety of xenobiotic catechols. comt activity has been identified in various tissues; however with the developments in molecular biology and gene technology, the production and purification of large amounts of recombinant comt is a good option for biochemical, pharmacological and structural studies. in this work, cultures of recombinant e. coli harbouring a model plasmid were grown in a ml shake-flask containing ml of complex medium. the influence of medium composition and induction time on comt production, recovery and clarification by sonication, ammonium sulphate precipitation and purification by hydrophobic interaction chromatography onto a butyl-sepharose column will be presented and discussed. bioactive bacterial exopolysaccharides corinne sinquin , karim senni , jacqueline ratiskol , farida guéniche , jean guézennec , gaston godeau , sylvia colliec-jouault : ifremer, nantes cedex , france; ea université rené descartes, montrouge, france. e-mail: corinne.sinquin@ifremer.fr (c. sinquin) interest in mass culture of microorganisms from the marine environment has increased considerably, representing an innovative approach to the biotechnological use of under-exploited resources. marine bacteria associated with deep-sea hydrothermal conditions have demonstrated their ability to produce in an aerobic carbohydrate-based medium, unusual extracellular polymers (guezennec, ; colliec-jouault et al., ) . these exopolysaccharides (eps) present original structural features that can be modified to design innovative bioactive compounds and improve their specificity. with the aim of promoting biological activities, chemical modifications (depolymerization and substitution reactions) of one eps produced by vibrio diabolicus have been undertaken (raguenes et al., ) . the structure of the native eps has been described (rougeaux et al., ) the potential of the eps derivatives as therapeutical agents will be presented. physiological responses of e. coli to glucose and oxygen shifts in fed-batch fermentations jaakko soini , christina saarimaa , arne matzen , peter neubauer : bioprocess engineering laboratory, department of process and environmental engineering, university of oulu, oulu fi- , finland; sanofi-aventis, germany. e-mail: jaakko.soini@oulu.fi (j. soini) in high-cell density fermentations e. coli cells are often subjects of transient changes in microenvironment around them. these changes can be, for example, medium component gradients or differences in oxygen availability. we have studied the physiological response of e. coli w cells to simultaneous oxygen limitation and overfeeding of glucose. the aim is to obtain more information of physiological changes for better understanding of the bottlenecks in such processes. the response of the cells for glucose and oxygen shifts was studied by analyzing key metabolites and proteins and mrna transcript levels. the transcript levels were measured using a sandwich hybridization technique (rautio et al., ) proteomic analysis was carried out by d-electrophoresis and the metabolite analysis by hplc. the main focus of this study is to monitor the expression patterns of marker genes involved in mixed acid fermentation, glycolytic pathway and tricarbonic acid cycle. rautio et al., . sandwich hybridisation assay for quantitative detection of yeast rnas in crude cell lysates. microb. cell fact. influence of ner on genetic instability of the (ctg/cag) tracts in bacterial chromosome sylwia szwarocka , paweł parniewski : department of microbiology and immunology, university of Łódź, - Łódź, banacha / , poland; centre for medical biology, polish academy of sciences, - Łódź, lodowa , poland many human hereditary neurological diseases, including fragile x syndrome, myotonic dystrophy and friedreich's ataxia, are associated with expansions of triplet repeat sequences (trs) (cgg/ccg, ctg/cag and gaa/ttc) in or near specific genes. mechanisms that mediate the expansions and deletions of trs include dna replication, repair and recombination. many investigations suggest that the structural properties of the trs play a consequential role in their genetic instabilities. nucleotide excision repair (ner) is the major cellular system in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes and recognises damages due to distortion of the dna helix. involvement of ner in the hairpin loop repair that can form within ctg tracts has been reported. the participation of this repair systems in the trs instability was investigated in e. coli only on multicopy plasmids. the results showed that deficiency of some ner functions dramatically affects the stability of long (ctg/cag) inserts. in this work we present a chromosomal model to study the instability of the trs in e. coli. we introduced the (ctg/cag)n tracts into the chromosome of e. coli and used strains with some deficiency of the ner and investigated genetic stability of these tracts after multiple recultivations. in general, our results show that the (ctg/cag)n repeats are much more stable in the chromosome than in plasmids. these data may suggest that instability of trs in plasmids is associated with interaction between repetitive tracts on different plasmid molecules inside the cell. however, mutations of ner genes may increase (uvra and uvrb mutants) or decrease (uvrc and uvrd mutants) stability of the trs in the e. coli chromosome. this study was partially funded by the kbn grant p a . performance analyses of a multi-stage integrated fermentation process for lactic acid production hsun-tung lin, feng-sheng wang department of chemical engineering, national chung cheng university, chia-yi - , taiwan. e-mail: chmfsw@ccu.edu.tw (f.s. wang) in this work, we considered a multi-stage integrated continuous fermentation process for producing lactic acid. each stage consists of a mixing tank, a fermenter, a cell recycle unit and an extractor. the generalized kinetic model is first applied to formulate the integrated process. we have compared the overall productivity and conversion of the integrated process with those of two simplified processes. from the design equations, we obtain that three processes have the identical overall conversion. however, the proposed process has the greatest overall productivity. the specific kinetic model for lactic production (youssef et al., ) was applied to the integrated process in order to find the maximum overall productivity. two optimization problems are respectively considered to determine the optimal stages, operating conditions and design variables. the first problem supposes that the integrated process has the equal working volume ratio for each fermenter. such a process requires four stages to yield the maximum overall productivity and the nearly complete overall conversion. however, if the working volume ratio for each stage is considered as the decision variables in the second optimization problem, three stages is enough to achieve the identical overall productivity. youssef, c.b., guillou, v., olmos-dichara, a., . contr. eng. pract. , - . modelling of the binding of ligands to macromolecules jørgen m. mollerup department of chemical engineering, building , dtu, lyngby, denmark a variety of factors that govern the properties of proteins are utilized in the development of chromatographic processes for the recovery of biological products including the binding and release of protons, the non-covalent association with non-polar groups (often hydrophobic interactions), the association of small ions (ion exchange) and the highly specific antigen-antibody interaction (affinity interactions). the fulcrum point in the understanding and modelling a chromatographic separation is the adsorption isotherm that determines the peak shape at preparative load. to enable an efficient chromatographic process development strategy it is necessary to conduct theoretical and experimental investigations of the adsorptive behaviour of proteins. thermodynamically consistent models for ion exchange chromatography and hydrophobic interaction chromatography have been developed and can be utilised in the simulation of a chromatographic separation. besides, measurements on hic media can be utilised to determine the cohn salting-out coefficient. the lig-and binding process can frequently be coupled to associated structure changes in the protein, the ligand or both. this gives rise to nonlinear adsorptive behaviour known as cooperativity which cannot be modelled using conventional models which displays convex behaviour. examples of cooperative behaviour are the reversible binding of oxygen and carbon monoxide to haemoglobins and the binding of nad + to yeast glyceraldehydes -phosphate dehydrogenase. in the paper we discuss the modelling of reversible binding of mobile as well as immobilised ligands to macromolecules and compare modelling to experiment. comparative analysis of the temperature policy for processes with a deactivating native enzyme i. grubecki, m. wojcik department of chemical and biochemical engineering, university of technology and agriculture, - bydgoszcz, ul. seminaryjna , poland a comparative analysis of the temperature policy for an enzymatic reaction with michaelis-menten kinetics in a batch reactor has been carried out. both isothermal and optimal temperature policies for processes with deactivating native enzyme have been considered. in the model, the thermal deactivation was described by a first-order reaction, and the arrhenius-type dependence between rate parameters and temperature was assumed. as an indicator for a direct comparison between the isothermal and optimal temperature policies the quotient of conversions under identical initial and final condition was used. a method was presented to calculate this indicator, which is based on the analytical and numerical solutions. this method can be of great importance for the industrial practice. application of changeable temperature policy could result in significant increase in conversion when ratio of activation energy for deactivation and activation energy for reaction is high. studies on the impact of mixing during brewing using near and mid-infrared spectroscopy georgina mcleod , alvin w. nienow , graham poulter , reg wilson , henri tapp , christopher j. the control of the brewing process is important for improving product quality, and lowering costs. infrared spectroscopy is a technique that can be used at-line and on-line to rapidly measure component concentrations of unprocessed whole broth samples in real time. in this study, both mid -infrared (mir) and near-infrared (nir) spectroscopy have been used and compared for the monitoring of ethanol, flavour components, wort sugars, biomass and specific gravity during the brewing. partial least-squares regression (pls) was used to model relationships between component concentrations and spectra. the performance of these models was evaluated in terms of the standard error of prediction (sep), number of pls factors and the correlation coefficient (r). calibration models were constructed using spectra acquired for multi-component mixtures, intended to simulate brewing fermentation conditions, and actual brewing fermentation samples. chemometric results indicated that nir is a powerful tool for accurately measuring sugar, ethanol and biomass concentrations. the optimization of a fermentation process requires the organism to be cultivated under desirable conditions, which depends on how well the fermentation process is controlled. inadequate mixing and mass transfer are responsible for the heterogeneous environment at large scale in terms of nutrient concentration and ph profile, resulting in lower product yields. these have been associated with, inadequate control of ph and the production of acetate or formate in response to over-feeding of glucose and oxygen deficiency. rapid analyses of substrates and indicator metabolites in a fermentation process is critical for optimal control. this can be achieved in real time with nir spectroscopy. in this study, nir-spectroscopy has been applied to monitor the concentrations of glucose, acetate, formate, ammonium hydroxide and biomass in the cultivation of e. coli (w ). a comparison of partial least square models built using water standards, synthetic medium standards and fermentation samples has been made. template refolding utilizing biospecific interactions shigeo katoh , yoichi kumada , nanae maeshima , daisuke nohara : graduate school of science and technologykobe university, kobe - , japan; department of biomolecular sciencegifu university, gifu - , japan. e-mail: katoh@kobe-u.ac.jp (s. katoh) recombinant proteins over-expressed in e. coli are often accumulated as insoluble particles called inclusion bodies. proteins in inclusion bodies must be solubilized by a denaturing agent, such as urea and guanidine hydrochloride, and refolded to recover their native structures having biological activities. in bioprocesses it is important to obtain high refolding efficiencies and high throughputs at high protein concentrations. in refolding operation, a denatured protein solution is usually added batch-wise into a large volume of a refolding buffer in order to start refolding by reducing the concentration of a denaturant and to prevent aggregate formation of renaturing molecules. thus, a large volume of a stirred tank is required, and the concentration of protein after renaturation becomes low. biointeractions between a pair of biomolecules, such as enzyme-inhibitor, antigen-antibody and hormone-receptor, are highly specific and have been used for detection and separation of biomolecules. these interactions may be used as templates for refolding of target molecules, which can be captured with the templates and are prevented from aggregate formation and, in the case of proteases, from autoproteolysis. the specific interaction might promote refolding of the target molecules. these might improve the refolding efficiency. the biointeractions between antigen-antibody and enzyme-inhibitor were used for efficient refolding in packed columns, in which template ligands (antibody, inhibitor) were coupled on gel support. denatured solutions of target molecules (carbonic anhydrase and s. griseus trypsin) were mixed with refolding buffer and supplied to the affinity column coupled with the template ligands for refolding. with refolding in the column, higher refolding efficiencies were obtained than those by the batch dilution method with relatively low concentrations of denaturants. by increasing the adsorption capacity of the column, throughput of refolding can be increased without decrease in the refolding efficiency. the use of multi-parameter flow cytometry for characterisation and monitoring of insect cell-baculovirus fermentations in a mechanically-agitated bioreactor bojan isailovic , alvin w. nienow , ian w. taylor , ryan hicks , christopher j. bacteria and mammalian cells have been traditionally used as hosts for commercial recombinant protein production. however, in recent years, the insect cell-baculovirus system has emerged as a potentially attractive recombinant protein expression vehicle. although flow cytometry has been used widely for analysis of mammalian and microbial cells, there is very little information on applications of this powerful technique in insect cell culture. here we compared cell ratiometric counts and viability (propidium iodide and calcein am) of sf- cell cultures using flow cytometry to those determined by more traditional methods using a haemocytometer and the trypan-blue exclusion dye. flow cytometry has also been used to monitor various parameters during cultures of sf infected with the recombinant autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (acnpv) containing the inserted nucleic acid sequence amfp coding for am-cyan coral protein, which emits natural green fluorescence. carbon sources create fingerprint fermentation characteristics pınar Ç alık , güzide Ç alık , tunçer h.Özdamar bre lab, department of chemical engineering, ankara university, ankara, turkey; ib lab, department of chemical engineering, metu, ankara, turkey. e-mail: calik@eng.ankara.edu.tr (g. Ç alık) this work reports on a systematic investigation of the interactions between the single-carbon sources, i.e., glucose and citric acid, and complex-medium components, i.e., carbon and nitrogen sources, in enzyme fermentation processes, i.e., serine alkaline protease (sap; ec . . . ),) and -lactamase (ec . . . ), with the oxygentransfer and ph conditions to demonstrate the influences of carbon sources that create the fingerprint fermentation characteristics, moreover, their influences on the product and by-product formations and the intracellular reaction rates. the influence of the medium composition i.e. citric acid-, glucose-, molasses-and soybean-based media together with the oxygen transfer (ot)-and ph-conditions applied, on the product and by-product distributions and ot characteristics were investigated in batch bioreactors. for sap, in general, under uncontrolled-ph operations the variation of the medium ph in sap fermentation process has a tendency to increase in the sap production phase; however, depending on the carbon source used, its behaviour changes in the early stages of the fermentation as the consequences of the directed functioning of the intracellular bioreaction network. the loci of the dissolved oxygen (do) curves also strongly depend on the carbon source(s) utilised, in addition to the applied ot conditions. the complex media profiles are significantly different compared to the defined media as the ph and do profiles are interrelated owing to the bioreactor operation conditions affecting the metabolic reaction network. the highest volumetric oxygen uptake rates were obtained with soybean-based medium that was ca. three-fold higher than the values reported in citrate-based and glucose based media, and ca. . - -fold higher than the values reported in molasses-based medium. the significant changes, moreover, the drastic change observed with the use of soybean-based complex medium are due to the compositions of the fermentation media used, and its influence on the intracellular bioreaction network. thus, we conclude that the change in medium composition based on the carbon source changes the fermentation characteristics under the designed bioreactor operation conditions that appear as the fingerprints of the bioprocess. kinetic resolution of racemic benzoin with different lyophilized microorganisms Ç . babaarslan ,Ü. mehmetoglu , a.s. demir : ankara university, faculty of engineering, department of chemical engineering, , ankara, turkey; middle east technical university, department of chemistry, ankara, turkey. e-mail: barslan@eng.ankara.edu.tr (Ç . babaarslan) the biocatalytic resolution of racemates is valuable tool for enantioselective synthesis and proved to be a convenient method for obtaining optically enriched compounds from their racemic form. in this work, enantiomerically pure benzoin which is one of the -hydroxy ketones was synthesized by kinetic resolution of racemic benzoin using different lyophilized microorganisms as lipase sources. the effect of lyophilized microorganism type, solvent type and acyl donor type on enantioselectivity were studied. in kinetic resolution experiments, lyophilized microorganism was resuspended in the media containing solvent, racemic benzoin and acyl donor at • c and rpm on orbital shaker. the reaction was followed by tlc during the experiment and the enantiomeric ratio of benzoin was determined by hplc analysis using chiral cell ob column. the best enantioselectivity value was obtained with lyophilized rhizopus orayzae cbs - as ee s = % and ee p = % (conversion = %) using thf as solvent and vinyl acetate as acyl donor. otimizing the fermentation broth for tanase production by a new isolated strain paecilomyces variotii vania battestin, gláucia pastore, gabriela macedo department of food science, unicamp, p.o. box , campinas, cep - , são paulo, brazil tannase is an inducible enzyme that catalyses the breakdown of ester linkages in hydrolysable tannins, resulting in gallic acid and glucose. the fermentation broth can use by-products as wheat bran, rice or oats, adding tannic acid. the use of by products or residues rich in carbon source for fermentation purposes an alternative to solve pollution problems that can be caused by an incorrect environmental disposal. in the present study we have optimized the production of an extracellular tannase by a new isolated paecilomyces variotii using response surface methodology. the first step was identify the variables having a significant effect on enzyme production. the variables evaluated were temperature, residues ratio (coffe: wheat bran), concentration of tannic acid, salt solution during , and days of fermentation time. results showed that temperature, residues ratio (coffe: wheat bran) and tannic acid had significant effects on tannase production. commercial wheat bran (cwb) and coffe rusk residues (cr) were used as solid substrate. for fermentation the mediun was composed by, cwb:cr were mixed with distilled water and transferred into ml capacity erlenmeyers flasks and autoclaved at • c for min. the medium was then inoculated with spores ( . × ) and the flaks were incubated at • c. tannase was assayed according to the methodology of mondal et al. ( ) . acording to the statist analyses, the optimum conditions to produce tannase was the range of temperature ( - • c); tannic acid ( . - %); residues % (coffe: wheat bran) ( : ) and days fermentation time. the enzyme production increased . times more enzyme production than that was obtained before this optimization. how to cope with fda's pat-initiative with respect to fermentation process monitoring and control marco jenzsch , andreas luebbert , rimvydas simutis : institute of bioengineering, martin-luther-university halle-wittenberg, halle (saale), germany; process control department, kaunas university of technology, kaunas, lithuania with its pat initiative, fda forces drug manufacturers to increase their activities in innovative manufacturing techniques, and, more than previously, to focus on quality assurance. the agency particularly places emphasis on making use of modern process supervision and control techniques such as up-to-date process analytics, multivariate data acquisition and analysis tools in order to improve process monitoring and control. in this contribution we show by means of practical examples how this guidance can be applied to cultivations of genetically modified microorganisms. a comparison of different multivariate state estimation techniques will be presented and compared with more knowledge-based techniques such as the extended kalman filter. the comparison was made for the model system gfp expressed from e. coli bacteria (bl /de /gfp) for which more than full data sets are available. all these techniques have already been used during real protein formation at productionscale fermenters, with the same success. hence, the requirements expressed in the pat initiative can immediately be put into practice. feedback control of the recombinant protein production processes based on such estimations is show for several cultivation systems. simple parameter adaptive controllers are compared with model supported controllers, for instance, generic model controllers and model predictive controllers. the results clearly show that we have at hand a rather extended arsenal of feedback control procedures that can be used successfully to tightly control the processes even along set-point profiles of physiological variables such as the specific growth rate (µ). again, fda's suggestion with respect to "control in the engineering sense" can be applied immediately to reduce batch-to-batch variances and thus to increase process quality. extending life by alternative respiration? alexander kern, franz hartner, anton glieder institute of biotechnology, graz university of technology, a- graz, austria. e-mail: a.kern@tugraz.at (a. kern) alternative oxidase transfers electrons directly from the ubiquinol pool in mitochondria to oxygen, allowing cell respiration in presence of complexs iii and iv inhibitors like antimycin a or cyanide. electron transfer by alternative oxidase is not coupled with proton transfer across the mitochondrial membrane, thereby uncoupling the supply of small metabolic intermediates by the central metabolic pathway from energy production in the cell. alternative oxidase is present in mitochondria of plants, many fungi and a few, mostly crabtree-negative yeasts, but not in p. angusta (hansenula polymorpha) and s. cerevisiae. alternative oxidase has multiple functions in different organisms. it is involved in stress answers, in programmed cell death, maintenance of the cellular redox balance, and also citric acid accumulation in a. niger. we isolated the alternative oxidase gene from the methylotrophic yeast p. pastoris in order to study its effects on the cellular energy content, respiratory activity, its protective role against oxidative stress. our results indicate the importance of an exact regulation of the alternative oxidase due to its impact on many cellular functions. new types of energy efficient fermenters with better mass transport, mixing and cooling properties than the current crop of rushton turbine derived tank bioreactors are likely to be required in the future. such fermenters will be needed in order to meet the increasing pressure on costs for low price commodity type products such as single cell protein or food and technical grade enzymes, and to meet the demands of the new wave of white biotech, in which bio-produced chemicals must be made at prices competitive with those of the traditional chemical industry. with this in mind, a prototype pilot scale ( l) u-loop fermenter has recently been commissioned at biocentrum-dtu. in this fermenter, liquid circulation is driven by a propeller pump through a vertical u-shaped pipe, which is connected at the top with a de-gassing tank. we present here a study of liquid mixing and dispersion in the prototype u-loop fermenter. sub-sequently we show that the results can be described with the tanks in series model. mixing was characterised using pulses of nacl tracer, which were detected with a conductivity probe in various parts of the fermenter. bodenstein numbers (bo) were determined for flow rates corresponding to a linear fluid velocity of . m/s in the 'legs' of the reactor and showed that the majority of the mixing occurred in the top degassing part (bo = ) rather than in the u-loop section (bo = ). it was also observed that the time for mixing to % homogeneity after tracer pulse addition was a function of the number of cycles through the reactor ( - . ) within the range of flow velocities (u) studied (u = . m/s to u = . m/s). the mixing time to % homogeneity was between . s (at u = . m/s) and s (at u = . m/s). today many biotechnological processes are operated at suboptimal conditions and according to best practice. however, the current industrial development is towards analyzing more parameters and in particular there is a large interest in analysis of biological/biochemical variables. the quality of products and also the possibility to optimize production in submerged cultivations would be greatly enhanced if more on-line/real-time information were at hand. the present investigation was undertaken with the aim of evaluating the potential in using multi-wavelength fluorescence for monitoring and control of filamentous fungi fed-batch cultivations. a recombinant a. oryzae expressing a heterologous lipase was applied as model system. spectra of multi-wavelength fluorescence were collected every five minutes with the bioview ® system (delta, denmark) and both explorative and predictive models, correlating the fluorescence data with the important biological parameters cell mass and lipase activity, were built. the models will be presented, furthermore, advantages and disadvantages of multiwavelength fluorescence for monitoring of cultivation processes will be discussed. moving from r&d to pharmaceutical development is a costly process. it is therefore of paramount importance to design a manufacturing process that combines robust and well-documented technological platforms. therapeutic recombinant proteins designed for human administration should be as close to the authentic product as possible. here, the use of a scalable process and an economically sound affinity tag can be a relevant choice. the tagzyme tm system has been designed to allow for the precise removal of amino terminal affinity tags. the system is based on the use of recombinant aminopeptidases including dipeptidyl peptidase i (dapase tm ). dapase tm is currently produced under cgmp providing a suitable strategy for its use in pharmaceutical production. the tagzyme tm system is superior to other methods since: ( ) it is based on exopeptidases, precluding, e.g., unspecific protein cleavage reported when using so-called site-specific endoproteases. ( ) it has been tested for production of more than recombinant proteins. ( ) it is easily scalable from lab scale to kg of processed protein. ( ) it allows the use of his-tags for commercial production without patent infringment, due to our ipr position. ( ) the commercial use of tagzyme tm does not require any licensing, only purchase of the enzyme(s). ( ) the use of aminopeptidases for pharmaceutical production has been extensively documented for approved drugs. ( ) a number of therapeutics is currently being developed using tagzyme tm . ( ) unizyme can assist in the optimization of the dsp to enable further cost reduction in the process. these aspects will be discussed and illustrated in the presented poster. website sphingolipids are biologically active molecules involved in the regulation of a large quantity of biological responses. they function in cell proliferation, survival and death (apoptosis) as messengers. dysregulation of apoptosis has significance in numerous pathological conditions including cancer. several anticancer agents act by increasing tumor cell ceramide (a kind of sphingolipid) content. so, a novel approach to cancer therapy would be the pharmacological manipulation of sphingolipid metabolism. in this study, sphingolipid metabolism in baker's yeast s. cerevisiae is used as a model system as many of its sphingolipid related genes and proteins have been characterized. gepasi-biochemical kinetics simulator was used for metabolic control analysis (mca) of the above-specified system. the concentration control coefficients (ccc), flux control coefficients (fcc) and elasticity coefficients were calculated, and their significance in identification of anticancer drug targets is determined. elementary flux modes were also identified and metabolic pathway analysis (mpa) was performed. quantitatively, control effective flux (cef) values were used for potential drug target identification. the results from mca and mpa indicate almost the same potential drug targets: serine palmitoyl transferase, ceramide synthase and ceramidase. drugs against these targets are in preclinical and clinical development. for the identification of new potential drug targets, the cccs, fccs, cefs and elasticity coefficients were examined with an objective function of maximizing the cell ceramide concentrations. it was found that manipulation of inositol- -phosphate synthase and phosphoinositide kinase activities have considerable effects on ceramide concentrations. if a drug targeting the two enzymes at the same time is designed, it might give a better outcome in terms of cancer therapy. in recent years, there is a growing interest in utilization of airlift reactors (alrs) to biotechnological processes. nevertheless, their industrial application still remains limited because of a lack of reliable studies on transfer phenomena and mixing enabling a suggestion of suitable scale-up procedure. the way to more widely utilization of alrs to biological processes lies in experimental research (on a model medium as well as on a real fermentation medium) followed by mathematical modelling and scaling-up of the processes. this paper deals with a modelling of a glucose-gluconic acid fermentation by a. niger in an internal loop airlift reactor. knowledge of the stoichiometric relationship in the key reaction provides a good opportunity for estimation of substrate and product concentration. the model is based on material balance equations and has been adjusted to experimental data obtained from three internal loop airlift reactors ( . , and l) . in the model, the alr is divided into ideal stirred tanks in series. in each zone (tank) of the alr the material balance is calculated in two phases (the gas and the liquid phase). this work was supported by the slovak scientific grand agency, grant number vega / / alkaline phosphatase (ap, e.c. . . . ) is a thermolabile enzyme which is indigenous to all dairy products. it has an inactivation temperature slightly above the value that is required to destroy the most resistant pathogenic microorganism likely to be found in milk. due to that feature, this enzyme is used as an indicator of proper pasteurization. the effect of temperature treatment on the activity of ap was investigated in raw cow's and goat's milk. the stability of alkaline phosphatase in raw milk was compared with the stability of this enzyme in a . m potassium phosphate buffer with ph . . the ph value of the buffer was approximately the same as that of raw milk. the inactivation curves were measured in the temperature range from to • c. ap in cow's milk was completely inactivated at • c during s but approximately % of activity remained at • c after min of treatment. the time required for a complete inactivation of the enzyme in the raw cow's milk was reduced from to min as the temperature increased by • c. heat treatment of goat's milk caused the decrease of activity of the enzyme in the same temperature range as in the case of cow's milk. the increase of temperature from to • c reduced the inactivation time from min to s. the study of thermal stability of the alkaline phosphatase in the buffer solution showed that the time required for inactivation of enzyme was significantly shorter than in milk. milk thus had a protective effect on the activity of alkaline phosphatase. the experi-mental curves were fitted simultaneously using kinetic models where the initial heating period was considered. this work was supported by a grant of th framework program of eu, project foodpro, no. sme- - - . during the process of separation, purification and concentration of monoclonal antibodies (mabs) at industrial scale, the chromatographic unit operations have an important role. three different protein-binding modes are employed: ion-exchange, hydrophobic and affinity binding. two adsorbent properties are of uppermost importance: a high selectivity and adsorption capacity. in the case of ion-exchange/hydrophobic chromatography, the binding of charged proteins can be affected by ph and ionic strength. in this work, the adsorption capacity of eight commercially available adsorbents designed for separation of mabs (mabselect, rprotein a sepharose ff, poros a, prosep-va, fractogel emd se hicap (m), sp sepharose ff, mep hypercel, s ceramic hyperd f) was measured as a function of ph. as a model mab and contaminant proteins, human immunoglobulin (igg), human serum albumin (hsa) and horse skeletal muscle myoglobin (myo) were used. the resin properties were investigated within the range of ph - . the experiments were conducted in a batch-mode, individually for each model protein. the results showed that ion-exchange and hydrophobic resins provided the best selectivity for igg at ph . the selectivity of affinity adsorbents was essentially unaffected by ph, however, the highest capacity for igg was at ph . another investigated aspect was the dynamics of protein binding. the solution of individual protein in contact with tested adsorbent was circulated through an uv spectrophotometer, what enabled the measurement of time-dependent decrease of protein concentration. the results indicated that affinity adsorbents with a rigid matrix needed approximately four times shorter time to reach the adsorption equilibrium with igg in comparison with a gel. the gels, however, provided higher adsorption capacity. at ion-exchange resins, the time necessary to adsorb % of total amount of igg was about . - h. the affinity adsorbents were highly selective and therefore they adsorb very small amount of tested contaminant proteins (hsa, myo). the adsorption capacity was saturated by % in less than min in all cases of dynamic adsorption measurements. this work was supported by a grant of th framework program of eu, project aims, no. nmp -ct- - . microtechnology has for several years been applied within chemical reaction engineering. the advantages of microtechnology are that it makes it possible to develop light weight and compact systems, and the systems enable large surface-to-volume ratio, which results in low mass-transfer distances. in addition, parameters like pressure, temperature, residence time, and flow rate are more easily controlled. the use of microtechnology is also beginning to find its ways into the field of biotechnology. what we are aiming at is the development of a microreactor that can be applied as a production tool in industry as an alternative to conventional enzymatic reactors. our strategy is to use a small plate of a suitable material with microchannels fabricated into its surface, and the approach is to covalently couple enzymes into the microchannels. substrate can then be pumped through the channels and the enzymatic conversion will take place within the channels. as model enzyme in the development of the microreactor we are applying celb, a thermostable -glycosidase from pyrococcus furiosus. kinetic resolution of racemic benzoin with different lyophilized microorganisms Ç . babaarslan ,Ü. mehmetoglu , a.s. demir : ankara university, faculty of engineering, department of chemical engineering, , ankara, turkey; middle east technical university, department of chemistry, , ankara, turkey. email: barslan@eng.ankara.edu.tr (Ç . babaarslan) the biocatalytic resolution of racemates is valuable tool for enantioselective synthesis and proved to be a convenient method for obtaining optically enriched compounds from their racemic form. in this work, enantiomerically pure benzoin which is one of the -hydroxy ketones was synthesized by kinetic resolution of racemic benzoin using different lyophilized microorganisms as lipase sources. the effect of lyophilized microorganism type, solvent type and acyl donor type on enantioselectivity were studied. in kinetic resolution experiments, lyophilized microorganism was resuspended in the media containing solvent, racemic benzoin and acyl donor at • c and rpm on orbital shaker. the reaction was followed by tlc during the experiment and the enantiomeric ratio of benzoin was determined by hplc analysis using chiral cell ob column. the best enantioselectivity value was obtained with lyophilized rhizopus orayzae cbs - as ee s = % and ee p = % (conversion = %) using thf as solvent and vinyl acetate as acyl donor. chromatography is one of the most important unit operations at separation, purification and concentration of monoclonal antibodies (mabs) at industrial scale. since these proteins belong to the group of immunoglobulins, their molecular weight (about , g/mol) or hydrodynamic radius ( . nm), respectively, is relatively large. the adsorbents used in ion-exchange/affinity chromatography of these biomolecules should thus provide a high pore accessibility coupled with a high value of specific surface area in order to ensure a sufficient ligand density and a high binding capacity. in this study, the pore accessibility of eight commercially available adsorbents designed for separation of mabs (mabselect, rprotein a sepharose ff, poros a, prosep -va, fractogel emd se hicap (m), sp sepharose ff, mep hypercel, s ceramic hyperd f) was investigated via size exclusion of standard-sized molecules (glucose, sucrose and dextrans with molar weight range - × g/mol) at nonbinding conditions. the experiments were conducted in a batch and column-mode. the batch experiments provided absolute partition coefficients, which were calculated from a mass balance and represent the fraction of pore water accessible to a solute. it was found that several adsorbents contained a small fraction of very small pores (less than nm), whereas some adsorbents contained a significant fraction of pores larger than nm. the column measurements provided relative partition coefficients, which were calculated from the retention volumes of solutes and represented the relative accessibility of pores, scaled between the accessibility of the smallest and largest solute used. when the absolute partition coefficients were recalculated into the relative form, it was found that the coefficients obtained by both methods correlated very well. the relative partition coefficients of solutes with the hydrodynamic radius of nm (corresponding to mabs) was about . - . at ion-exchange and hydrophobic adsorbents and . - . at affinity adsorbents. the relation between hydrodynamic radius of the solutes and their partition coefficients was successfully described with the giddings random plane model. this work was supported by a grant of th framework program of eu, project aims, no. nmp -ct- - . the transfer of laboratory results to a larger scale is often a critical step in process development to industrial application. the objective of this study was to scale-up the bioreactor for the fructosyltransferase production based on the results obtained in a dm stirred bioreactor. the investigations made in this bioreactor provided a clear picture of the effect of medium composition on the obtained fructosyltransferase (ftase) activity but the influence of mixing intensity was unequivocal. the increase of agitation rate had a positive effect up to a certain level where both fructosyltransferase and biomass production increased. the final optimal yield factor of ftase per dry cell mass obtained in the laboratory bioreactor was , u g − . we studied the effect of oxygen transfer on the process of ftase production at a larger scale, in and dm mechanically stirred bioreactors and in air-lift bioreactors, and dm whilst the medium composition was kept constant. the yield factors of ftase were comparable in both mechanically stirred bioreactors and they were about u g − . this decrease compared to that in the laboratory bioreactor could be explained by a slower cell growth. this fact was also confirmed by that glucose was not depleted till the end of fermentation and free fructose concentration was also lower. the yield factor of ftase was u g − in the dm air-lift reactor and u g − in the dm air-lift bioreactor. the lower yield of ftase in dm bioreactor was caused by a better biomass growth. this work was supported by slovak scientific grand agency, grant numbers vega / / and / / and by science and technology assistance agency, grant number apvt- - . the poster gives an overview of the objectives and achieved results of an interdisciplinary project on direct product isolation from crude feedstocks using magnetic micro adsorbents in combination with suitable magnet technology. the project was funded by the deutsche bundesstiftung umwelt and was running between august and november . in the course of the project several milestones could be met, which can be looked at as critical key points on a route towards an industrial realization of the process. among these milestones are: (i) the production of magnetic micro adsorbents with high capacity and selectivity in batches up to - g; (ii) the proof that the micro adsorbents can be reused many times; (iii) generation of a variety of recombinant tagged, active enzymes; and (iv) the design, assembly and operation of a fully automated pilot plant capable of generating approx. g/h (≈ % purity) protein. the process was also simulated by help of the software tool superpro designer and simple mass balance and sorption equilibrium approaches were used to derive rules for estimating optimum process parameters and productivities. finally an environmental performance evaluation was conducted externally by the german dechema. in this study the effect of fed-batch cysteine addition to a culture of a high-gsh-accumulating yeast strain on the metabolism of glutathione was investigated. it is known that cysteine is the rate limiting amino acid in the biosynthesis of gsh. the influence of the consumption rate of cysteine on glutathione metabolism and growth of s. cerevisiae mt- was determined. the results show that for rates of consumption below a critical value the microorganism growth is similar to a culture without feed of cysteine, but glutathione production is increased two-fold. on the other hand, if cysteine consumption rate is above the critical value the changes of cell metabolism implies ethanol accumulation in the extracellular media which diminishes biomass synthesis. the maximum specific glutathione production in this case is maintained at two-fold; however, gamma-glutamylcysteine accumulation is increased. cysteine present in culture media directs cell metabolism to a greater synthesis of ammonia and amino acids. hydrophobic interaction chromatography (hic) exploits the hydrophobic properties of protein surfaces for separation and purification by performing interactions with chromatographic sorbents of hydrophobic nature. in contrast to reversed phase chromatography this methodology is less detrimental to the protein and is therefore more commonly used in industrial scale as well as in bench scale when the conformational integrity of the protein is important. hydrophobic interactions are promoted by salt and thus proteins are retained in presence of a cosmotropic salt. when proteins are injected on hic columns with increasing salt concentrations under isocratic conditions only, a fraction of the applied amount is eluted. the higher the salt concentration the lower is the amount eluted protein. the rest can be desorbed with a buffer of low salt concentration or water. it has been proposed that the stronger retained protein fraction has partially changed the conformation upon adsorption. this has been also corroborated by physicochemical measurements. the retention data of five different model proteins and different stationary phases were evaluated. partial unfolding of proteins upon adsorption on surfaces of hic-media were assumed and a model describing the adsorption of native and partial unfolded fraction was developed. furthermore we hypothesize that the surface acts as catalyst for partial unfolding, since the fraction of partial unfolded protein is increasing with length of the alkyl chain. stationary phases for bioseparation of glycoproteins j. aniulyte , j. liesiene , b. niemeyer : department of chemical technology, kaunas university of technology (ktu), radvilenu pl. , kaunas, lithuania; institute of thermodynamic, helmut-schmidt-university/university of the federal armed forces hamburg, holstenhofweg , hamburg, germany d- nowadays glycomics raise new challenges for affinity chromatography related with an abundance of glycoconjugates in living organisms and with scaling-up of the preparative processes. economics, efficiency and practicality dictate the search of novel chromatographic biospecific adsorbents that could contribute to enhancing the productivity of the affinity separation process. the purpose of the work was to prepare cellulose-and silica-based biospecific adsorbents with immobilized lectins and to evaluate them for the affinity chromatography of glycoproteins. cellulose-based matrix granocel and silica coated with hydrophilic polymers were used as a support. the effect of support characteristics, such as pore size, chemistry of active groups and their density on the support' surface on lectin immobilization and on the efficiency of adsorbents obtained were evaluated.three different methods were used for the activation of the support: oxidation with sodium periodate, modification with pentaethylenhexamine (spacer arm of atoms) and carbonyldiimidazole activation.cona and wga two lectins of different molecular weight and shape were selected to notice differences resulting from the size and diffusion behaviour. chromatographic performances of the adsorbents were studied applying two different glycoproteins (god and fetuin) carrying specific terminal glycomoieties of mannose (god), and n-acetylglucosamine (fetuin) for specific interaction with cona and wga, respectively. the adsorbents demonstrated high affinity to glycoproteins with a sorption capacity in the column up to . mg per ml support and a high recovery (up to %). it was shown that spacer arm affected ligand coupling kinetic as well as the chromatographic behavior of the adsorbents obtained. the adsorption isotherms of god onto cona adsorbents reveal an adsorption behavior with high and low affinity binding sites. the dissociation constant k d of the ligand-sorbate complex is approximately × − m, and . × − m, respectively. it was supposed that the second step is related to the sorption of solvated god onto already adsorbed god forming sorbate dimers. cell disruption and chromatography are key unit operations in the downstream processing of an intracellular product. the cost involved in the extraction and purification of intracellular products can be reduced by selective release of proteins and reduction in the number of steps involved in the purification. the extent of disruption can be varied to provide a selective release, limiting the release of the contaminant proteins. the particle size distribution of the cell debris in the resulting suspension depends on the extent of disruption. expanded bed adsorption chromatography allows for the direct capture of the proteins from an unclarified suspension. this technique allows for the integration of solid-liquid separation, concentration and preliminary purification in one unit operation. a perfectly stable expanded bed can be obtained by choosing the appropriate flow conditions and a suitable adsorbent. the difference in the density between the adsorbent and the cell debris in the suspension, permits the cell debris to flow through the column without blocking, whilst the protein molecules in the suspension are adsorbed onto the adsorbent. after sample application, the bed is washed with buffer and the proteins eluted from the column in the packed bed mode. the presence of the cell debris in the feedstock influences the expansion of the bed and the adsorption of protein molecules. the physical properties of the suspension obtained after cell disruption depends on the extent of disruption. the particle size distribution of the cell debris, the viscosity and the release of soluble proteins and other intracellular components are influenced by the extent of disruption. the influence of the extent of disruption of e. coli on the expansion of the bed and the adsorption of ß-galactosidase is presented in the current study. e.coli cells were disrupted at different operating pressure using a high pressure homogenizer. the resulting crude homogenate is subjected to expanded bed adsorption chromatography using streamline deae as adsorbent. the disrupted suspension was characterised in terms of viscosity, density, particle size distribution of the cell debris and the extent of protein and ß-galactosidase released. the interaction between cell debris and adsorbent was quantified as the cell transmission index (ratio of the amount of cells present in the sample before and after passing through the bed). the expansion of the bed at a constant settled bed height and flow rate was measured. the influence of the cell debris on the extent of adsorption of ß-galactosidase has been quantified in terms of dynamic binding capacity (dbc) at % of the inlet concentration. the dbc of ß-galactosidase that was released by disruption at psi ( %, w/v, w/w, pass) was found to be u/ml of adsorbent while dbc of samples disrupted at psi ( % w/v, w/w, pass) was u/ml of adsorbent. the extent of disruption of e. coli over a wide range and its effect on the expansion and adsorption will be presented. study of dna binding during expanded bed adsorption and factors affecting adsorbent aggregation ayyoob arpanaei , niels mathiasen , timothy hobley , owen rt thomas , : center for microbial biotechnology, building , biocentrum-dtu, technical university of denmark, , lyngby, denmark; department of chemical engineering, university of birmingham, edgbaston, b tt, uk. e-mail: aa@biocentrum.dtu.dk (a. arpanaei) the adsorption of sonicated calf thymus dna (as a model dna molecule) to biosepra q hyper z adsorbents was evaluated in batch and expanded bed modes. stability of the expanded bed during feedstock loading was also studied. two batches of prototype q hyper z (batch and ) were examined, which had ionic capacities measured to be and mmol cl − /ml support respectively. in all adsorption experiments a mm tris-hcl ph buffer was used. maximum static binding capacities of adsorbent batches and were determined to be . and . mg dna/ml particle, respectively. dynamic binding capacity at % breakthrough (dbc % ) was measured in a -cm diameter eba column containing . ± . cm settled bed with a feed of g/ml dna. dbc % of the adsorbents were . and . mg dna/ml support for batches and , respectively in buffer containing no salt. however, the maximum dbc % for batch ( . mg dna/ml support) and ( . mg dna/ml support) were obtained in buffers containing . and . m nacl, respectively. further increases in salt concentration led to a decrease in dbc % for both adsorbent batches. the bed compression during loading that was observed in experiments at high conductivities (achieved by adding salt) was less than that seen with low conductivity ( ms/cm) solutions. aggregation of adsorbent particles and channeling of flow were not observed in the presence of salt concentrations more than . m. the effect of different concentrations of dna during loading in the presence of . m nacl was studied. it was found that increasing dna concentrations in the feed from to g/ml, to g/ml resulted in a decrease of dbc % by , and %, respectively. the bed compressed slower during loading of feedstock with low dna concentrations compared to that for higher concentrations. the expanded bed showed a partly reversible compression behavior during feedstock loading. this is attributed to the electrostatic interaction between dna adsorbed on the particles surface and rearrangements of dna strands as the number of free ligands on the adsorbent surfaces decrease during loading. large-scale production of plasmid dna for gene therapy and dna vaccination applications has become necessary as a result of the increasing number of approved protocols using non-viral vectors for gene delivery. a major challenge of large-scale plasmid production is to establish a robust cgmp manufacturing capable of producing hundreds of milligrams or grams of a pharmaceutical grade product. alcohol and salt precipitation are operations largely used in the early steps of plasmid downstream processes. however, there are few systematic studies on the influence of these precipitation agents in the final plasmid recovery and purity. in this work, alcohol and salt precipitation steps used in a plasmid purification process developed by our group have been optimized aiming at large-scale production. the optimization of alcohol precipitation indicated that almost % of the pdna precipitated when . vol. of isopropanol were used. the studies also indicated that the precipitation profile was strongly influenced by pdna initial concentration. finally, the final plasmid recovery and purity after a sequential alcohol and salt precipitation were strongly dependent on the concentrations of these precipitation agents. thus, a commitment between high recovery and purity level should be made during the development of the downstream processes. comparison of novel and conventional processes for protein refolding and initial purification h. ferré , , u. jørgensen , l. scale down of downstream processing unit operations is convenient for assessing process alternatives, particularly if feedstock is scarce. in this study it was imperative to use the smallest possible scale for comparison of a new system for continuous protein refolding and direct expanded bed adsorption (eba) capture with a traditional process composed of discrete operations of batch renaturation, centrifugation, microfiltration and packed bed chromatography (pbc). minimisation of the scale was restricted by the eba step: the smallest practical scale being a cm diameter column with - cm of settled bed, expanded two fold. in order to permit a fair comparison a similar column diameter and adsorbent volume was used in the packed bed process. in both alternatives, chelating media charged with cu + was used and a feedstock of denatured hat-tagged human beta- microglobulin (hat-h m). following batch refolding and clarification, the performance of the packed column was severely hampered due to fouling of the top adapter. reducing the protein loaded to the packed bed to % of dbc working lead to a recovery of . % at a purity of % and . -fold concentration. the eba-based process performed unimpeded and productivity was calculated to be % higher than for that employing a packed bed. however, due to the severe scale restrictions placed on the eba process, which limited optimisation, significant productivity improvements of eba over packed bed are expected at larger scale. high gradient magnetic filtration has the potential for rapid processing of large volumes of crude bioprocess liquors when magnetic adsorbents are employed. the binding of a protein to a superparamagnetic solid support provides a unique selective 'handle'. typically the focus is placed on using the magnetic handle for direct capture of a protein from a fermentation broth. however, magnetic adsorbents may provide solutions to a range of downstream processing problems and in this presentation we illustrate this with a number of case studies. using whey as a model system, we show that the extent of the tryptic hydrolysis (ca. . mg/ml added enzyme) of proteins could be controlled by adding benzamidine-linked magnetic adsorbents after a given period ( - min), followed by removal of the loaded adsorbents using a magnetic filter. hydrolysis was stopped effectively and approx. % of the added trypsin could be recovered. a coupled process was devised for the refolding and purification of inclusion body proteins. solubilised (in m urea) inclusion bodies of recombinant histidine affinity tagged human beta microglobulin (hat-h-beta m), were refolded by dilution in a pipe reactor ( s), then captured directly on cu(ii) charged magnetic immobilised metal affinity adsorbents in a second pipe reactor ( s residence time). loaded adsorbents were retained in a magnetic filter, then washed and the protein eluted. a generic framework for the prediction of scale-up when using compressible chromatographic packings r. tran , j. joseph , a. sinclair , y. zhou , n. packed bed chromatography is the pre-eminent technique in the downstream purification of many biological products. the aspect ratio of a packed bed has a significant effect on the column pressure drop by virtue of wall support which is reduced at low aspect ratios. this can result in unexpectedly high pressures during manufacturing caused by the compression of the matrix via drag forces due to fluid flow through the bed. the need for an accurate model to predict flow conditions at increasing scale is essential for the scaling-up of chromatographic processes and for avoiding bed compression during operation so that maximum throughput can be achieved. several studies have generated correlations which allow for the prediction of column pressure drops but have either been mathematically complex, which makes their practical use unfeasible, or they have used highly specific empirical constants and hence require a large amount of experiments to be performed before they can be used. in this study, we have established relationships to link the critical velocity of operation, to bed height (l), column diameter (d c ), feed viscosity (µ) and also to the matrix rigidity through the level of agarose cross-linking (a%). the correlation is straight forward to use and involves very few system-specific constants thus significantly reducing the need for any preceding laboratory-scale experimentation. this paper describes the series of experiments that were performed to establish the correlation, using a range of cross-linked agarose matrices ( - %), at various aspect ratios, fluid flow rates and varying viscosities ( . - . mpas). a mathematical model was developed where parameter estimation for multi-variables was achieved by least squares optimisation. the model can be used to predict the extent of compression in industrial chromatography applications and will be useful in the development of chromatographic operations and for column sizing. institute of process engineering, swiss federal institute of technology, zurich. e-mail: makart@ipe.mavt.ethz.ch (s. makart) simulated moving bed (smb) technology receives increasing attention in biotechnology and in the biopharmaceutical industry as it enables an increase in productivity per unit mass of stationary phase, reduced solvent consumption, and fast and reliable scale-up. combining continuous chromatographic separation unit and reactor should enable the production of biopharmaceuticals and fine chemicals with high purity and yield at the same time. due to the increasing demand of enantiopure intermediates in the pharmaceutical industry, biocatalytic processes gain more and more importance because of their excellent enantioselectivity. yet the application of biocatalytic carbon-carbon bond formation on process scale is often hampered by an unfavourable equilibrium position and difficult downstream processing due to substrate/product mixtures. coupling a continuous separation unit to such a process would improve the feasibility by driving the reaction to completion and thus increasing the overall yield. we will discuss the design of such an integrated biocatalytic/smb process, taking the formation of l-allo-threonine from glycine and acetaldehyde, catalysed by the glycine-dependent aldolase glya from e. coli, as a model reaction. the enzyme exhibits absolute stereoselctivity at the c-alpha atom, whereas selectivity is less strict at c-beta. in situ product removal, by the integration of an smb unit, would aid to maintain a high diastereomeric excess as it shortens the residence time of the products in the reactor, in addition to shifting the reaction to the product side. the in-line coupling of the chromatographic unit to the enzyme reactor requires the use of the same solvents for reaction and separation, so the choice is limited to aqueous solutions close to physiological ph, limiting in turn the possible stationary phase materials. in a screening of different cation exchangers, amberlite cg- ii gave promising results: threonine is more retained than glycine, acetaldehyde is poorly and the cofactor plp is not retained. adsorption isotherms were determined by the retention time method and a smb under process conditions was simulated. by improving the packing of the column, i.e. achieving a more even particle size distribution, we tried to further increase the efficiency of the separation step. the application of enzymes for the synthesis of optically active substances is nowadays of growing importance in the pharmaceutical industry. this requires a proper cultivation of the microorganism as well as a posterior isolation process yielding a constant catalyst quality at high purity. goal of this project is the development of an integrated process for the production and isolation of a lipase from trichosporon beigilie and its posterior application for the enantioselective synthesis of pharmaceutical products. the cultivation of the microorganism is optimised in a laboratory and pilot-scale fermenter in a fed-batch mode. parameters like media composition, temperature, ph and aeration rate are set up. taking advantage of the localisation of the enzyme (covalently attached to the cell membrane) the first step of product isolation consists of a continuous cell disruption. optimal results are achieved with the continuous bead mill disruption process ( % enzyme release with a specific activity of . u/mg of protein). the non disrupted cells are recycled as inoculums for a new cultivation, increasing the yield of the overall process (by -times in the pilot-scale fermenter). in order to isolate the product two different process sequences are considered. the first one consists of an extraction (peg and phosphate buffer) coupled to an ion-exchange chromatography (q-sepharose ff). the second one applies a precipitation step with ammonia sulphate followed by a hydrophobic interaction chromatography (sepharose-hic) provid-ing a lipase yield of % ( -times higher than the one provided by combining extraction-chromatography). an ultrafiltration process is used in order to concentrate the lipase and its final properties (molecular weight, isoelectric point, activity, stability and kinetic data) are studied using p-nitrophenylacetate as model substrate. the relevance of the obtained product for its application in the pharmaceutical industry is proven by transforming (r,s)-naproxen-methylester into (s)-naproxen acid with an enantiomeric excess of > % (after h). biotensides (sugar fatty acid esters, sfaes) find nowadays a wide range of applications in pharmaceutical, personal care and food industry because of their biocompatibility, biodegradability and special surfactant properties. goal of this project is the development and optimisation of an integrated process for the enzymatic synthesis of sfaes from renewable sources to be used in cosmetic formulations. the following figure shows the scheme of the overall process. commercial and also new screened lipases are applied in the reaction between sugar and fatty acid. the mixture grade of the initial reaction system is increased by ultrasounds taking into account the influence on the catalyst characteristics and also the necessity of an organic solvent as adjuvant. the reaction takes place in an enzymatic membrane reactor (emr) equipped with an ultrafiltration membrane which retains the catalyst. the separation of the by-product (water) from the rest of the components can be achieved by means of a pervaporation unit which coupling to the emr allows the semi-batch process. in order to separate the esters from the fatty acid a stepwise elution chromatography method is developed using silica as adsorbent and ethyl acetate and methanol as eluents. with this system % of the dimer is isolated with purity (hplc) of %. the application of a dialysis membrane technique allows the separation of % of the fatty acid by building ester micelles changing the polarity of the organic solvent used as eluent. solubility and crystallisation properties of recombinant bacillus halmapalus ␣-amylase cornelius faber centre for microbial biotechnology, biocentrum dtu, building , lyngby, denmark a comprehensive knowledge of solubility properties is a prerequisite for the efficient design and operation of bulk enzyme recovery processes, however, complete phase diagrams are only available for very few proteins, in particular lysozyme of high purity. here, we present the results of detailed solubility studies in aqueous solutions of an industrially relevant ␣-amylase of technical grade. experiments were conducted in small scale batch mode (working volume of ml). the influence of selected cations and anions from the hofmeister series on the stability of the ␣-amylase was examined. the hofmeister series for anions was followed in the correct order at all salt concentrations studied, i.e. from to m, whereas the series was reversed for monovalent cations at concentrations up to . m, with the exception of lithium. to further investigate why the position for lithium was different to the hofmeister series established for lysozyme, the zeta potential of protein solutions at low concentrations of selected salts was determined. the results of these measurements indicate a pronounced effect of lithium on the zeta potential, as compared to other salts. in particular, the ph of zero zeta potential (i.e. the pi) was shifted approximately . ph units towards alkaline conditions in the presence of lithium, whereas the pi stayed almost constant for sodium and potassium. since the solubility exhibits a minimum at ph-values at or near the protein's pi, shifts in ph caused by salt addition are important to identify and quantify to avoid uncontrolled phase separation. the measurement of the zeta potential of proteins in solution holds significant promise as an attractive tool for understanding and controlling processes that are operated close to the solubility limit and which are often plagued by uncontrolled precipitation or crystallisation and thus rely on carefully chosen operating conditions. polyphenolic interactions with potato proteins during industrial expanded bed adsorption processing sissel løkra , knut olav straetkvern , bjørg egelandsdal , gerd vegarud : department of natural science & technology, hedmark university college, n- hamar, norway; norwegian university of life sciences, as, norway. e-mail: sissel.lokra@lnb.hihm.no (s. løkra) in plant extracts it has been shown that polyphenols have a tendency to react with proteins, either by covalent or non-covalent interactions. these reactions can induce changes in the surface properties of the proteins, and, e.g. cause proteins to be insoluble and precipitate at ph-values below their isoelectric point. potato proteins have a high nutritional quality and show interesting functional properties in food systems. moreover, chlorogenic acid (ca) and caffeic acid constitute about % of the total polyphenol content of potato tuber. we have experienced expanded bed adsorption (eba) chromatography to be a method well suited for recovering industrial proteins from potato starch effluent. the process separates proteins from polyphenolic pigments, fiber and minerals. during the adsorption step, patatin, the major potato tuber protein shows complex binding kinetics demonstrated by breakthrough curves. in addition to diffusion limitations in the eba resin, changes in protein structure and surface properties probably are likely to affect this adsorption behavior. reactions between ca and patatin might result in a range of interactions for different species of the same protein. this project therefore aims to assess the interactions between ca, patatin and other major tuber protein fractions and how these changes affect the protein capture in eba. changes in size and charge are screened in -d electrophoresis and analyzed further. samples of different protein fractions are taken from breakthrough curves and dynamic binding capacity experiments in model systems with real feedstock. sandwich hybridisation assay for analysis of brewery contaminants s. huhtamella , m. leinonen , t. nieminen , a. breitenstein , p. neubauer : bioprocess engineering laboratory, university of oulu, finland; scanbec gmbh, halle, germany. email: peter.neubauer@oulu.fi (p. neubauer) here we describe the development of a sensitive, cultivationindependent analytical method for the analysis of brewery contaminants which can be performed within three hours in crude sample extracts. the method is based on s rrna detection by a paramagnetic bead based sandwich hybridization assay (sha) with two oligonucleotide probes designed to either detect the species or a group of contaminants. the signals were read out either by a fluorimeter (rautio et al., ; leskelä et al., ) or potentiometrically with an electric biochip instrument (ebiochip systems) . this assay is advantageous over rt-pcr becasue it only detects viable cells and the method can be directly applied to crude cell extracts without prior purification. we describe the principle of designing and evaluating a series of groupspecific lactobacillus probes and the optimisation towards effective cell lysis and high assay sensitivity. the applicability of the sha was evaluated with real brewery samples and the results were compared to routine tests. in all steps of the evaluation the reliability and usability of the method was prioritised. the optimised method combined with a h pre-enrichment period gave reliable results, had a detection limits of about - cells per assay and was easily applicable in a brewery environment. biodesulfurization is one of the possibilities studied by the researchers to attain the maximum sulfur levels imposed for a near future by governments (european directive, ) . rhodococcus erythropolis igts is a natural and strictly aerobic microorganism able to remove the sulfur atom from dibenzothiophene (dbt) in a selective way ( s route (oldfield et al., )), obtaining hydroxibifenyl (hbp) and sulfate. growth is carried out using the experimental procedure performed in previous works dealing with the inoculum built up, media composition and operational conditions (del olmo et al., a (del olmo et al., , b . this work is focused to determine the oxygen uptake rate during the production of the biocatalyst. four experiments were carried out at a biostat b fermentor (braun biotech.) using as only variable the constant stirrer speed used: , , and rpm. oxygen uptake rate have been determined by means of two methods: dynamic technique at different times during growth for few seconds to ovoid influences and from oxygen profile when the term dealing with oxygen transfer rate is known (predicted by the model proposed in a previous work (garcía-ochoa and gómez, )). our values obtained from the techniques used present the same tendency in all the runs carried out: our values from dynamic technique is always lower than our values obtained from the oxygen profile. these values are modeled and the difference observed is explained due to the cellular economy principle: during the seconds employed in the dynamic technique determinations microorganism do not produce s route enzymes. it was studied different methods to recover a p. salmonis antigenic protein from recombinant e. coli cells. this protein has shown be highly effective in vivo vaccine. it has the ability to stimulate salmon immune system protecting them against of aggressive disease salmonid rickettsial syndrome resolving by this way a great problem of salmonid aquaculture. biomass obtained from iptg induced e. coli bl (de ) codon plus culture was used for soluble and insoluble antigenic protein recovery. it was evaluated recuperation by glass bead mill, freezing and thawing, osmotic shock and lisozyme/edta treatments, all of them applied in single or combined way. biomass was measured by dry weight of cells, soluble protein concentration was quantified according to bradford method, and antigenic protein was identified by sds-page and western-blot analysis. cells treated with lisozyme/osmotic shock and then glass bead mill the soluble protein was a . % of the dry weight cell mass whereas using lisozyme/edta and glass bead mill as a single treatment only a . and . % were obtained respectively. the freezing and thawing disruption treatment released less than % of soluble protein, as well as the osmotic shock procedure too. the sds-page and west-ernblot analysis revealed that the antigenic protein must be purified from the insoluble cell fraction when physical or mechanical disruption methods were employed and from the soluble cell fraction when chemical or enzymatic treatments were used. we propose investigate in further studies the inclusion bodies formation to design an efficient purification procedure for the target protein. the iso-peroxidase pox from garlic bulb allium sativum that represented the major peroxidase activity was purified to homogeneity. the enzyme is monomeric and has a molecular mass of kda, and a pi around . the optimum temperature ranged between and • c, while optimum ph was around . pox appeared remarkably thermostable since it retained % of its activity at • c for at least h. in addition, the enzyme was stable at a ph range from , to . kinetic constants were calculated, the apparent k m values were and m for gaïacol and h o , respectively. the high thermostability of pox may represent clear advantages in a number of processes including immobilizing peroxidase and use it as a biosensor to detect oxidant component as h o and other peroxides. immobilization of pox was achieved by binding covalently the enzyme to a sepharose matrix (bead and membrane va epoxy). the immobilized peroxidase showed great stability at heat and storage than the soluble enzyme. the native enzyme retained % of its activity at • c for mn while the immobilized pox retained full activity for mn at the same temperature. in other side, the free enzyme retained full activity for at least one month and a half during storage at • c, and lost m of its activity after months. the immobilized form of pox retained complete activity for months at the same temperature. the immobilized enzyme was used to detect h o in some food components such as milk and fruit juices. in a second study, same experiments were performed in order to detect the smaller quantity of added h o to the farming milk. purpose: a new research field has been created to begin to address protein function at level of regulation of enzyme activity. this new area has been given the name chemical proteomics, or activity-based proteomics (abps), and makes use of small molecules that can covalently attach to catalytic residues in an enzyme active site. the selectivity of the chemically reactive group allows specific proteins or protein subset to be tagged, purified and analyzed. methods: this molecule (abps) has three subsets: tag, linker, and warhead. warhead is a nucleophile and attach to active site. linker is a polypeptide that makes a simple connection between warhead and tag. tag is fluorcent or radioactive material that facilitates the detection of drugs. findings: several diseases such as cancer, rheumatoid arthritis and osteoporosis are associated with elevated levels of protease activity. serine hydrolyses abps have been used to profile enzyme activity in a diverse range of cancer cell lines. in studies comparing metastatic and non-metastatic human breast cancer models, it was shown that the former exhibited a higher activity of a ␥-glutathione-s-transferase, an enzyme that has not previously been associated with breast cancer. discussion: additionally, abps can be used to develop robust screens for small molecule inhibitors of a specific enzyme target within a large family of related enzymes. this method of inhibitor screening allows compounds to be assayed for both potency and selectivity against a set of related in complex biological samples. this technique is able to identify novel enzymatic proteins and drugs and has the potential to accelerate the discovery of new drug target. a cyclodextrin glycosyltransferase (cgtase) from a new isolated strain from bacillus clausii e , was purified through q-sepharose, gel filtration chromatography and deae-sephadex a- . the mw of the pure enzyme was kda with sds-page. the enzyme displayed optimum ph value and ph stability at ph . and in range of . - . , respectively. the optimum temperature and thermostability were at • c and up to • c by h, respectively. the k m and v max were . mg/ml and . mol/min mg and . mg/ml . mol/min mg using maltodextrin and soluble starch, respectively. the isoeletric point was . and the n-terminal region of the pure enzyme was sequencing by maldi-tof-ms. the ratio of ␣-, and ␥-cd was . : . : . and : : with maltodextrin and soluble starch at . %. application of magnetic separation technology for recovery of immobilised lipases nadja schultz , anke neumann , george metreveli , matthias franzreb , christoph syldatk chair of technical biology, university of karlsruhe, engler bunte ring , d- karlsruhe; forschungszentrum karlsruhe, institute of technical chemistry, water-and geotechnology; inst. für wasserchemie, engler bunte ring , ka. e-mail: nadja.schultz@ciw.uni-karlsruhe.de (n. schultz). url: www.fzk.de/itc-wgt (m. franzreb) first results on the development of the magnetic separation technology for the recovery of immobilised lipase from a -phase-system, which should be suitable for a large scale use in future, known as high gradient magnetic separation (hgms) are presented. the application of immobilised lipases makes the reuse of the enzyme in a process possible and is therefore interesting for industrial applications. in this study immobilised lipase is used in a -phase-system. here the new approach to recycle and reuse the lipase, immobilised on magnetic particles, from a -phase-system with the help of the new high gradient magnetic separator (hgms) is examined in ml scale. as model enzyme for the immobilisation on magnetic microparticles (polyvinyl alcohol (pva), - m) the commercially available (novonordisc) lipase a (cala) from candida antarctica was used. necessary for screening of immobilisation methods and characterisation of the immobilised lipase (candida antarctica) was the development of a robust, simple and rapid chromophoric activity assay. therefore the pnpp-lipase assay was optimised for direct application on immobilised lipases (in preparation schultz et al., ) . further more a ph-stat-assay for measuring the activity of free and immobilised cala in a -phase-system of tributyrate and buffer was optimized for this system. another important basis for the realisation of the recovery of immobilised lipases was to optimise the immobilization technique of the lipase. furthermore approaches for the explication of generally empirical based immobilization techniques on insoluble support were made. hereby we successfully applied the zeta potential measurement on the immobilization behaviour of the lipase cala. for to determine the operating temperature for the biomagnetic separation procedure we studied stability analysis of free and immobilised lipase cala at different temperatures ( , , , − • c) and at different ph values (ph , and ). the optimal temperature and ph value for the free and immobilised lipase was determined. presently and constructively on the so far developed methods and techniques we intensively work on the demonstration and feasibility of the recovery of immobilized lipase from a -phase-system. challenging approaches and first results on the recovery of immobilized lipase from a -phase-system in ml scale were shown already. nowadays glycomics raise new challenges for affinity chromatography related with an abundance of glycoconjugates in living organisms and with scaling-up of the preparative processes. economics, efficiency and practicality dictate the search of novel chromatographic biospecific adsorbents that could contribute to enhancing the productivity of the affinity separation process. the purpose of the work was to prepare cellulose-and silica-based biospecific adsorbents with immobilized lectins and to evaluate them for the affinity chromatography of glycoproteins. cellulose-based matrix granocel and silica coated with hydrophilic polymers were used as a support. the effect of support characteristics, such as pore size, chemistry of active groups and their density on the support' surface on lectin immobilization and on the efficiency of adsorbents obtained were evaluated. three different methods were used for the activation of the support: oxidation with sodium periodate, modification with pentaethylenhexamine (spacer arm of atoms) and carbonyldiimidazole activation. cona and wga two lectins of different molecular weight and shape were selected to notice differences resulting from the size and diffusion behaviour. chromatographic performances of the adsorbents were studied applying two different glycoproteins (god and fetuin) carrying specific terminal glycomoieties of mannose (god), and n-acetylglucosamine (fetuin) for specific interaction with cona and wga, respectively. the adsorbents demonstrated high affinity to glycoproteins with a sorption capacity in the column up to . mg per ml support and a high recovery (up to %). it was shown that spacer arm affected ligand coupling kinetic as well as the chromatographic behavior of the adsorbents obtained. the adsorption isotherms of god onto cona adsorbents reveal an adsorption behavior with high and low affin-ity binding sites. the dissociation constant k d of the ligand-sorbate complex is approximately × − , and . × − m, respectively. it was supposed that the second step is related to the sorption of solvated god onto already adsorbed god forming sorbate dimers. quantitative methods in high throughput screening of aqueous two phase systems matthias bensch, björn selbach, jürgen hubbuch institute of biotechnologie , forschungszentrum jülich, germany purification of biopharmaceuticals is one of the most expensive and at the same time least understood steps in bioprocesses. during the process development for protein production, short time to market and the demand for cheap processes dominate today's process development. one way of reducing process costs is to implement integrative processes. aqueous two phase systems (atps) combine the advantages of removing cell debris and simultaneously purifying and concentrating the target protein, however, to the cost of highly complex systems which are difficult to predict and optimize. using high throughput screening techniques in the development of atps processes thus seems to be an ideal candidate for achieving both a reduced development time and an economical process without the need for preliminarily well characterized systems. in this study, we use the robotic system tecan freedom evo tm as an automation platform for the evaluation of aqueous two phase systems. central to this workstation are the integrated hardware as liquid handler, gripper, reader and centrifuge. we have created high throughput methods for rapid parameter estimations. as a first step, pipetting and mixing had to be calibrated for the use of highly viscous polymer solutions which are common in atps. the focus of the current work lies on the integration of the automatic preparation and analysis of two phase systems in microtiter plate scale. the robotic platform can now automatically create aqueous two phase systems and measure characteristic values such as binodal curves, protein concentrations and protein distributions between the two phases. the major bottleneck of hts processes, namely the rapid analysis of impure systems, is tackled by using automated elisa tools. depending on the intended use, the high number of measured partition coefficients and yields can be used for modelling or rapid process design. today, most optimisations of chromatography separations are based on experimental work and rule of thumb. the pat initiative has opened up for a model-based approach for downstream processing of pharmaceutical substances. this work uses a nonlinear chromatography model to optimize an ion exchange separation step. the general rate model with langmuir mpm kinetics described the behaviour of the components in the column. the optimal operating points using both productivity and yield as objective functions were found. the optimizations were run with both igg and bsa as target proteins respectively to compare their optimal operating points. the requirement on the optimal operating point was a purity of at least %. this requirement was added to the optimization problem as a nonlinear inequality constraint. flow rate, loading volume, start salt concentration in elution, elution gradient and cut points were used as decision variables in the optimization. the more retained component, bsa, was much easier to separate from igg with a gradient elution than igg from bsa while still retaining a high productivity and yield. the higher load volume at the optimal operating point, with bsa as target protein, causes a displacement of igg and thereby improving the separation. a high productivity at the yield optimum was still possible with bsa as target protein. both a lower productivity and yield was obtained with igg as target protein. optimisation and robustness analysis of a hydrophobic interaction chromatography step niklas jakobsson, marcus degerman, bernt nilsson department of chemical engineering, lund university, p.o. box , se- lund, sweden process development, optimisation and robustness analysis for chromatography separations are often entirely based on experimental work and generic knowledge. the present study proposes a method of gaining process knowledge and assisting in the robustness analysis and optimisation of a hydrophobic interaction chromatography step using a model-based approach. factorial experimental design is common practice in industry today for robustness analysis. the method presented in this study can be used to find the critical parameter variations and serve as a basis for reducing the experimental work. in addition, the calibrated model obtained with this approach is used to find the optimal operating conditions for the chromatography column. the methodology consists of threes consecutive steps. firstly, screening experiments are performed using a factorial design. secondly a kinetic-dispersive model is calibrated using gradient elution and column load experiments. finally the model is used to find optimal operating conditions and a robustness analysis is conducted at the optimal point. the process studied in this work is the separation of polyclonal igg from bsa using hydrophobic interaction chromatography. department of biochemistry and microbiology, ict prague, technicka , prague cz- , czech republic the display of novel metal binding sites on the surface of the biosorbent represents potent tool to increase its binding capacity and improve selectivity. in this study, the . kda transcriptional regulator merr of mercury-inducible mer operon of tn exhibiting high affinity and selectivity towards hg + , was displayed on the surface of s. cerevisiae. to achieve this, merr was genetically fused with gene encoding c-terminal domain of ␣-agglutinin which resulted in covalent attachment of the of the fusion protein on the cell wall glucan via glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor. to evaluate the performance of such modified whole-cell biosorbent with specific regard to hg + , we constructed a new biosensor e. coli strain, which utilizes kanamycine resistance gene as a reporter under the control of mer promoter. it allowed determination of hg + in a range of - nm by simply monitoring the growth in the hg + /kanamycine-containing media. the effect of genetic engineering of s. cerevisiae surface by merr became significantly pronounced in biosorption experiments with solutions containing m hg + when modified cells accumulated . -fold more hg + than the control strain expressing mere anchoring domain. sensitivity analysis of amino acids in simulated moving bed chromatography ju weon lee, chong ho lee, yoon mo koo center for advanced bioseparation technology, inha university, inchon - , korea. e-mail: ymkoo@inha.ac.kr (y.m. koo) the difficulty of simulated moving bed (smb) design is that the optimization of the operation conditions relies on the determination of accurate adsorption isotherms. most smb chromatograph is carried out under nonlinear conditions, and the nonlinear behavior should be considered properly in the equilibrium isotherms. the other difficulty is the smb operation which has the characteristics of continuous process, all flow rates and switching time of valves should be maintained during the operation of smb. if the disturbances of operating conditions and isotherm parameters are occurred, it affects the zone flow rates and the migration velocity of the solutes, and these effects change the internal profiles of the solutes. therefore, it is the reason of decreasing the purity and the yield of products the objective of this work is to consider the sensitivity of isotherm parameters and operating parameters in smb chromatography process. two amino acids, phenylalanine and tryptophan, separation by smb process is selected as control system. application of ph and po probes during bacillus caldolyticus fermentation: an additional approach in improving a feeding strategy johannes bader , boris neumann , karima schwab , milan popovic , rakesh bajpai : studiengang biotechnologie, fachbereich v, tfh-berlin, seestr., berlin, germany proteome factory ag, dorotheenstr. , berlin, germany; department of chemical engineering, university of missouri-columbia, w ebe, columbia, mo, usa. e-mail: popovic@tfh-berlin.de (m. popovic) bacillus caldolyticus,a thermophilic microorganism, is a good producer of thermostable liquefying ␣-amylase. during optimisation of initial and feeding media for fed-batch fermentation a two component feeding containing starch and casitone was found advantageous. to approach the optimal feeding rate the method published by akesson et al., was extended to two component feeding. the key idea, discussed in this presentation, was using the po and ph probing signals to determine if the feeding of one or the other component should be increased or decreased. each of the probes offers information of different areas of feeding condition. to prevent excessive feeding of starch the ph probe is preferable. in case of excessive casitone feeding the po probe responds in very authentic way enabling together with the ph signal reliable and reproducible evaluation of feeding strategy. however a congruent response of po and ph probes means the approaching of the optimum feeding rate for both components. akesson, m., hagander, p., axelsson, j.p., . probing control of fed-batch cultivations: analysis and tuning. contr. eng. pract. , - . antibody immobilization by using the plasma polymerized acrylic acid r. jafari, m.tatoulian, f. arefi-khonsari laboratoire de génie des procédés plasmas et traitement de surface, enscp, upmc, rue pierre et marie curie, paris, france the objective of this work is therefore to produce a surface containing a high density of cooh functions on the polymer beads (ps) for the covalent immobilization of antibodies. we have investigated the plasma polymerization of acrylic acid in a fluidized bed reactor the polystyrene (ps) beads. for such application, there is a strong need to obtain stable plasma polymerized acrylic acid (ppaa) coating, resistant to washing with water. different physico-chemical analyses have been used (water contact angle measurements (wca), xps and sem analysis) to characterize the ppaa coating deposited on ps beads under different experimental conditions. the xps results showed that the pretreatment of surface of the beads before deposition of acrylic acid plays an important role on the stability of ppaa layer. the instability of the coating is partially due the fact that under certain conditions the coatings are soluble in water and secondly due to the bad adhesion of the polymer beads which are hydrophobic to the growing ppaa coatings. xps as well as tof-sims gives evidence of the immobilization of the antibody. xps results as well as static sims allows to detect nitrogen on the surface of the treated beads which proves the presence of the immobilized antibodies. under optimum condition the ppaa coatings provides the possibility to show a nitrogen uptake which varies between . and % of the apparent stoicheiometry of the surface. holst department of medical physiology, the panum institute, university of copenhagen, dk- copenhagen, denmark glp- (glucagon-like peptide- ), a peptide of amino acids secreted by endocrine cells in the gut in response to meal ingestion, was discovered during a systematic search for gut factors capable of enhancing insulin secretion. it turned out to be the most efficacious insulin releaser known, and unlike other factors, was shown to retain its insulinotropic activity also in patients with type diabetes. subsequent research has documented that the peptide not only releases insulin from the beta cells, but also enhance all steps of insulin biosynthesis, up-regulates beta cell gene transcription, and has trophic effects on the beta cells. the latter includes both proliferation of existing cells, neogenesis from ductal precursor cells, and inhibition of apoptosis. the peptide also inhibits glucagon secretion, reduces gastric emptying and reduces appetite and food intake. because of these actions, glp- administered to patients with type diabetes dramatically lowers blood glucose as well as glycated hemoglobin levels, and reduces body weight. however, natural glp- is extremely rapidly metabolized in the body, and the problem has been how to convert the unstable peptide into a clinically useful agent. the two main problems are its susceptibility to enzymatic degradation by ubiquitous dipeptidylpeptide peptidase iv (dpp-iv) and its rapid renal elimination. a related peptide, isolated from the saliva of a lizard, exendin- , was found to be a full agonist of the glp- receptor, to be resistant to dpp-iv and to be cleared more slowly by the kidneys. this peptide was highly effective in clinical studies and has now ( / ) been approved for diabetes treatment by the fda. other approaches include acylation of glp- whereby it attaches to albumin in the body and acquires resistance to dpp-iv as well as a slow renal elimination. also this analogue (liraglutide) has favourable clinical effects. fusion proteins of glp- and larger, slowly eliminated proteins in the body are currently being evaluated. small molecule, orally available inhibitors of dpp-iv have been demonstrated to protect endogenous glp- from degradation and to be efficacious in both experimental and clinical diabetes, and numerous inhibitors are currently in clinical development. the incretin hormones are released from gut endocrine cells upon meal ingestion. they enhance glucose-induced insulin secretion and nay be responsible for up to % of postprandial insulin secretion. the incretin hormones are glucagon-like peptide- (glp- ) and glucosedependent insulinotropic polypeptide (gip). in patients with type diabetes ( dm) the incretin effect is severely reduced or absent. in dm patients the secretion of gip is normal, but its effect on insulin secretion is almost completely lost. glp- secretion, on the other hand, may be impaired, but its insulinotropic actions are preserved and it may restore insulin secretion to near normal levels. substitution therapy with glp- might therefore be possible. glp- is a product of the glucagon gene and its actions include: ( ) potentiation of glucose-induced insulin secretion; ( ) stimulation of the expression of -cell genes essential for insulin secretion, including the insulin gene; ( ) stimulation of -cell proliferation and neogenesis (by enhancing endocrine differentiation of duct cells) and inhibition of -cell apoptosis; ( ) inhibition of glucagon secretion; ( ) inhibition of gastrointestinal secretion and motility, notably gastric emptying; and ( ) inhibition of appetite and food intake. these actions make glp- particularly attractive as a therapeutic agent for dm. thus, continuous subcutaneous administration of glp- for weeks resulted in a mmol/l reduction in mean plasma glucose and a reduction in hgba c of . %; a weight loss of kg; improved insulin sensitivity; improved -cell function; and the treatment was associated with no significant side effects. unfortunately, glp- is rapidly destroyed in the body by the ubiquitous enzyme, dipeptidylpeptidase iv (dpp-iv). clinical strategies therefore include: ( ) the development of metabolically stable analogues of glp- viz. activators of the glp- receptor; and ( ) inhibition of dpp-iv. orally active dpp-iv inhibitors have proven successful in experimental diabetes and several companies are now trying to develop clinically suitable inhibitors. so far the clinical experience is limited, but recent clinical studies have provided proof of concept. metabolically stable analogues/activators include the structurally related lizard peptide, exendin- or analogues thereof, as well as glp- derived molecules that bind to albumin and thereby assume the pharmacokinetics of albumin. these molecules are effective in animal experimental models of type diabetes, and have been employed in clinical studies of up to weeks' duration. on the basis of these studies it can be concluded that a therapy of type diabetes mellitus based on stimulation of glp- receptors is likely to be effective and to become a clinical reality within the not too distant future( - ). recombinant activated coagulation factor vii (rfviia) was developed to treat bleedings in hemophilia patients, who have developed inhibitors against fviii or fix, and has been demonstrated to have an efficacy rate of - % in major surgery as well as in serious bleedings in such patients. to use rfviia as a hemostatic agent in severe hemophilia is a new concept of treatment, not being a substitution therapy, but using a pharmacological dose of exogeneous rfviia to compensate for the lack of fviii or fix. the administration of extra rfviia has been found not only to bind to tissue factor (tf), but also to the negatively charged phospholipids surface of thrombin activated platelets. hemostasis occurs on surfaces being initiated on the tf-expressing cells as a result of exposure of tf, not normally exposed to the circulating blood, following an injury to the vessel wall. tf is a true receptor protein with an intramembraneous part and an intracellular tail. its ligand is fvii/fviia. as soon as tf is being exposed to the blood, it forms complexes with fviia already present in the circulation. these complexes activates fx and provide the initial limited amount of thrombin molecules activating the co-factors, fviii and fv, as well as fxi and platelets. following the thrombin activation of platelets, negatively charged phospholipids are being exposed on the outer surface of the platelets. on this surface most coagulation proteins bind tightly, facilitating the conversion of fx into fxa and the full thrombin burst, necessary for the formation of a tight fibrin hemostatic plug resistant against premature lysis. in hemophilia patients the initiation of hemostasis is essentially normal, but, since they lack fviii or fix, they do not form the fviiia-fixa complex necessary for full thrombin generation on the activated platelet surface. as a consequence the fibrin plug formed in hemophilia is loose, fagile and easily dissolved resulting in continuous bleeding. pharmacological doses of rfviia have been demonstrated to mediate direct binding of rfviia to the negatively charged thrombin activated platelet surface, thereby generating thrombin formation in the absence of fviii/fix. through this mechanism hemostasis is generated in hemophilia patients independent of fviii/fix. furthermore, by generating more thrombin at an increased rate the formation of stable, tight fibrin hemostatic plugs are facilitated. such fibrin plugs are more resistant against premature lysis and help not only to initiate but also to maintain hemostasis. based on its capacity of enhancing thrombin generation locally on the activated platelet surface, rfviia has been used to ensure hemostasis also in other situations than hemophilia, such as platelet defects including thrombocytopenia. recently, rfviia was shown to be hemostatically effective in patients with profuse bleedings as a result of vast trauma and tissue damage. in these patients with a complex hemostasis pattern including a host of changes leading to an impaired hemostatic function, extra rfviia seems to help generate a burst of thrombin resulting in the formation of a stable hemostatic plug more resistant against the ongoing lysis. in patients with intracerebral haemorrhage, one single dose of rfviia recently was found to limit the expansion of the haemorrhage and thereby leading to improved functional outcome. institute for medical microbiology and immunology, panum . . , blegdamsvej , dk- copenhagen n, denmark. email: s.buus@immi.ku.dk complete genomes from several species including many pathogenic microorganisms are rapidly becoming available along with the corresponding "proteomes". even at the peptide level, the diversity of proteome is enormous and easily represents a unique imprint of the originating organism. it is perhaps not surprising that the immune system considers peptides as key targets. recent immunological advances have shown that mhc molecules act as peptide selectors for immune recognition. we have proposed to generate accurate predictions of peptide binding to mhc and used these to identify immunogenic epitopes directly from genomic data. we have developed an iterative data-driven immunobioinformatics approach where data is used to generate predictors, and predictors are used to select new and complementary data for the next iteration. we have demonstrated the superior performance of this approach compared to a random data selection approach. we have also developed an efficient approach to select the most informative mhc molecules to investigate. the resulting, immunobioinformatics resource represents an immediate and powerful application and interpretation of genomic data, and will enable a rational approach to immunotherapy in the future. allergen specific immunotherapy is a causal treatment for igemediated allergic diseases such as hay-fever, and it has relied traditionally on preparations derived from aqueous extracts of various natural allergenic source materials. the cloning and production of an increasing number of allergens through the use of dna technology has not only facilitated the characterisation and analysis of the allergenic proteins, but also provided the opportunity to use these recombinant proteins instead of natural allergen extracts for the diagnosis and therapy of allergic disease. detailed physicochemical, biochemical and immunological characterisation are essential for the comparison of natural and recombinant proteins, and also provide a basis for developing derivatives. chemically modified allergens with attenuated ige-reactivity are currently used for immunotherapy in order to enable high doses to be achieved with a minimized risk of inducing allergic side reactions. dna technology provides the opportunity to develop and produce hypoallergenic allergen variants using strategies including gene mutation. the design of such variants must ensure that t cell reactivity and immunogenic activity are retained in order to preserve therapeutic potential. the recombinant allergens and their derivatives have several advantages over natural allergen extracts. they are relatively easy to produce in consistent pharmaceutical quality; the problems of natural extract standardisation can be avoided completely; the relative concentrations of the individual allergens can be controlled to obtain optimal dosages; nonallergenic proteins are excluded; the possible risks of contamination are avoided. the first clinical trials with grass pollen allergens and birch pollen hypoallergenic variants have yielded very encouraging results. the use of recombinant polyclonal antibodies (pabs) may improve the treatment of disease caused by complex targets such as infectious agents, when compared to monoclonal antibody therapy. symphogen has developed a method for reproducible production of target-specific fully human pab compositions, so-called symphobodies. the antibody genes are first isolated from donors with an immune response against the target and antibodies are screened for specificity. subsequently, the pabs are expressed in mammalian cells using the sympress technology, which is based on site-specific integration. this procedure ensures that each of the expression constructs encoding the antibody genes are stably integrated at the same site in each of the host cells, thereby eliminating genomic position effects and differential growth and production rates. further, the sympress technology comprises the generation of a polyclonal working cell bank (pwcb) which is used as inoculation material for the manufacturing. these cells display sufficient genetic stability to enable a controlled gmp production of recombinant polyclonal antibodies. symphogen's first product, sym , is a recombinant human polyclonal rhesus d-specific symphobody preparation consisting of different anti-rhesus d antibodies. this product is intended to be used for treatment of idiopathic thrombocytopenia purpura and prevention of hemolytic disease in newborns. recombinant anti-rhesus d symphobodies were produced and shown to be biologically active against rhesus d. the expression technology provided a compositional reproducibility between batches which is sufficient for manufacturing of such a polyclonal product for clinical use. scaledup production for clinical trials is currently ongoing. stem cells play an important role in renewing tissues such as skin and cornea. they are responsible for the continuous generation of the differentiated epithelium. we have characterized stem cells of the skin and cornea in situ and their fate in vitro in human skin reconstructed by tissue engineering using keratin (k) . in the outer root sheath of the hair follicle, stem cells (label-retaining cells) present in the basal layer of the bulge area express k and present a loosely arranged keratin filament network and low levels of k protein in their cytoplasm. in addition, another stem cell population (also labelretaining) is present in the first suprabasal layers. these cells exhibit a very dense keratin network and express k . three-dimensional tissue constructs (dermis and epidermis) obtained by the self-assembly approach of tissue engineering allow the preservation of k positive stem cells in the basal layer of the epithelium. in the eye, the stem cells are located in the limbal part but not in central cornea and they express k . the epithelium of reconstructed cornea is thinner compared to reconstructed skin and more transparent. the characterization of stem cells in reconstructed tissue is essential to evaluate the long-term survival of these tissues in vitro but also after grafting. these human reconstructed tissues are developed for fundamental (physiological, toxicological studies) and clinical applications such as transplantation for the permanent replacement of damaged organs. lg is holder of the canadian research chair (cihr) on stem cells and tissue engineering. alessandra gliozzi physical department, university of genoa, genoa, italy hollow nanometer-sized capsules can be prepared by means of different techniques. first "nanocapsules" were liposomes, however they are too unstable for many medical or pharmaceutical applications. in contrast, recently developed polyelectrolyte capsules prepared by means of the layer-by-layer technique are much more stable and seem to be a very promising way for coating living cells or tissues in order to prevent or reduce their immune rejection after implantation. several observations on single living cells encapsulated by the alternative adsorption of oppositely charged polyelectrolytes will be presented. the most relevant result is that cell preserve their metabolic activity, are still capable of dividing and performing specific functions. moreover, a technique to immobilize in defined arrays coated cells expressing green fluorescent protein by using a microcontact printing of polyelectrolytes will be presented. finally, tests performed to study the induction of fibrosis and vascularization by nanocapsules implanted in rat kidney and liver will be presented. over the past decade we have developed methods to generate spontaneously and synchronously beating tissue equivalents from neonatal rat heart cells in the culture dish. these tissue equivalents display the key morphological and functional features of intact myocardium and have been termed engineered heart tissue (eht). to generate ehts, heart cells are mixed with freshly neutralized, liquid collagen i, matrigel and growth supplements and grown in a circular casting mold around a central cylinder, which subjects the cells to a continuous mechanical load. this process is enforced by cyclic mechanical stretch. we use eht mainly for two purposes, as a test bed for the effects of pharmacological or genetic manipulations and for cardiac repair. as a cell culture model, ehts compare with standard d monolayer cultures of neonatal rat cardiac myocytes and freshly isolated adult cardiac myocytes. advantages of ehts are their functional similarities with intact heart muscles, the ability to easily measure force of contraction under mechanical load, the pos-sibility to transfect cardiac myocytes inside ehts with adenovirus at high efficiency and the reproducibility in large series. a disadvantage is that contractile function as measured at the end of the culture period also integrates influences on tissue development, cell-cellconnections, extracellular matrix production and on non-myocytes. at present we are working on downscaling the eht method to a well format for screening purposes. to use ehts for cardiac repair we created multi-looped ehts from five circular ehts large enough to cover the infarct scar days after coronary artery ligation in rats. ehts survived and formed a layer of muscle tissue on top of the infarct scar. ehts restored undelayed anterograde impulse propagation over the scar, prevented further ventricular dilatation, normalized enddiastolic pressure and relaxation, and partly restored contraction of the scar. thus, the study provides evidence that implanting ehts onto infarcted hearts can improve cardiac contractile function after myocardial infarction. the goal of tissue engineering is the development of skin, bones and even organs to restore, maintain and improve tissue function within the body. the current paper focuses on the investigation of invitro growth of osteoblast cells in different types of scaffolds. three of the scaffolds were made of pcl (polycaprolactone) % glycerol and % hca(hydroxylapetite). two of the scaffolds were made by compression molding, and one was made by fused deposition modeling utilizing the stratasys. the fourth cerabio was a commercially available product totally ceramic. the pores in compression molding were obtained by putting in % volume of sugar either and m which was later removed by leaching. the fused deposition scaffold was made by placing the filaments in a predetermined arrangement. the stratasys system was a computer designed model. the scaffolds were seeded with hfob . human fetal osteoblast cell line with vigorous shaking overnight and incubating at • c and % co . observation of the seeded scaffolds was made after days and days of incubation. the seeded cells were stained with bcip/nbp at • c overnight. the cell proliferation in the and m scaffolds appeared approximately the same with a possible advantage of m. the cerabio sample demonstrated the greatest proliferation among the four scaffolds studied and the stratasys sample exhibited a different type of cell adhesion with the cells were clustered in the interstices of the structure. denise freimark, ruth freitag, valérie jérôme chair of process biotechnology, university of bayreuth, d- bayreuth, germany. e-mail: denise.freimark@uni-bayreuth. de (d. freimark) tissue engineering is emerging as an alternative to bone grafts for the regeneration of defects that do not heal spontaneously. ultimately, the development of an optimum carrier and the identification of ideal inductive factors and cells may enable tissue engineering to provide an improvement over bone grafts in the future. bone formation and repair require a complex cascade involving growth factors, cytokines and angiogenesis. at present the complexity of the molecular mechanisms that control gene expression in bone forming cells in embryo as well as in adult is not fully understood. several factors like bone morphogenetic proteins (bmps), transforming growth factor beta (tgf-), vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) and insuline-like growth factor (igf) have been identified and their ability to stimulate bone formation in vitro and in vivo has been investigated. while much is known about these factors per se, less is known about genetic regulation of artificially stimulated osteogenesis. interestingly, some in vitro investigations showed that only optimal growth factors concentrations lead to effective bone formation whereas higher concentrations had deleterious effects which suggest some variation in the activated regulation pathways. therefore, one of our goals is to analyze kinetics, dose-dependence and synergistic effects of growth factors and cytokines on regulation pathways of bone formation. moreover, the optimal vascularization of the scaffold is a major hurdle in the development of engineered bone. it is well known that: (i) vascular invasion precedes bone growth and (ii) osteogenesis takes place in the vicinity of newly formed vessels. thus, inadequate bone vascularization is associated with decreased bone formation. further analysis of the intercommunication between endothelial cells and osteoprogenitors in co-culture systems could provide key information that could be thereafter used to solve this problem. we propose to add some new knowledge to this complicated puzzle. a first step in our investigation is the production of some of the growth factors mentioned above in recombinant form. these factors are expressed in a novel vector (ptriex tm ; novagen) which allows recombinant protein production in prokaryotic or in eukaryotic systems with a single plasmid. afterwards, we analyze potential synergistic effects of these factors as well as kinetic and dose-depend parameters on the genetic regulation of downstream pathways in osteoblasts culture. in parallel, we develop an in vitro system allowing us to investigate the intercommunication between endothelial cells and osteoprogenitors. there has been significant interest in the therapeutic and scientific potential of human embryonic stem (es) cells since they were first isolated in . if human es cells could be differentiated into suitable cell types, stem cells might be used in cell replacement therapies for degenerative diseases such as type i diabetes and parkinson's disease, or to repopulate the heart following myocardial damage. however, there is a significant shortage of high quality human es cell lines and few research groups have experience in the propagation and manipulation of these cells. we are addressing this important issue using the combined expertise of the stem cell biology laboratory and the assisted conception unit at king's college, london. with local ethical approval and under licence from the uk human fertilisation and embryology authority, we have been establishing high quality human es cell lines from a novel source of human embryos. to date, we have derived three human es cell lines and are now focused on the generation of therapeutically important cell populations, including cells that may have clinical application in degenerative and traumatic injury to the brain and spinal cord, heart, retina and other target organs. wallenberg neuroscience center, department of physiological sciences, lund university, bmc a , s- lund, sweden cell replacement therapy for parkinson's disease is based on the idea that implanted dopamine neurons may be able to substitute for the lost nigrostriatal neurons. in rodent and primate models of parkinson's disease it has been shown that transplanted dopamine neuroblasts can re-establish a functional innervation and restore dopaminergic neurotransmission in the area of the striatum reached by the outgrowing axons; that the grafted neurons are spontaneously active and release dopamine in an impulse-dependent manner, at both synaptic and non-synaptic sites; and that they can reverse or ameliorate some of the parkinson-like motor impairments induced by damage to the nigrostriatal system. clinical trials in patients with advanced parkinson's disease have shown that dopamine neuroblasts obtained from fetal human mesencephalic tissue can survive and function also in the brains of pd patients, restore striatal dopamine release, and ameliorate impairments in motor behavior. the principal limitation of this approach is the problems associated with the use of tissue derived from aborted human fetuses, and the large numbers of donors needed to obtain good therapeutic effects. until now, transplantation of dopamine neurons has focused primarily on differentiated neuroblasts and young postmitotic neurons, at the stage of neuronal development that is optimal for survival and growth of the grafted cells. however, progenitors taken at earlier stages of development might prove more effective. efforts are now made to expand multipotent neural stem-or progenitor cells in vitro, and control their phenotypic differentiation into a dopaminergic neuronal fate. initial results suggest that in vitro expanded cells can survive and function after transplantation to the striatum in the rat pd model, but the overall yield of surviving dopamine neurons has been very low. with further development, expanded progenitors or dopamine neuron precursors, possibly in combination with cell engineering techniques, may offer new sources of cells for replacement therapy in pd. stem cell therapy has been very much in vogue for several years now. like gene therapy before it, it has raised unrealistic hopes of cures being available imminently. unlike gene therapy, it can cite proof of principle in the well established practice of bone marrow transplantation which is actually a good example of stem cell therapy. however, most of the uses that are now touted as targets for stem cell therapy, envisage the conversion of the stem cells into lineage restricted progenitor cells or more commonly, the final differentiated cell type. such conversions are extremely difficult to initiate and control. the procedures involve the manipulation, differentiation, and expansion of cell cultures in the laboratory, with unknown long term effects on the genetics and physiology of the cells. these issues are compounded when one considers as source material, human embryonic stem cells, where not only the final cell product requires significant scrutiny, but also there are safety issues surrounding the persistence of undifferentiated cells. on top of all these challenges are commercial (for stem cell companies), clinical, and regulatory pressures which will impact heavily on the pace of progress. nonetheless, despite all these hurdles, various academic groups and companies are making significant progress and examples of such developments in diabetes and cardiovascular repair will be given stem cells have the unique ability to perpetuate themselves while continually replenishing tissues throughout the life of an organism. the era of cellular and tissue regeneration for the treatment of disease and the effects of aging has indeed begun. it has been known that mechanical factors play an important role in the regulation of cell physiology. it is therefore reasonable to believe that mechanical factors also play a significant role in the metabolic activity and differentiation of mscs. in this study, we investigated the viscoelasticity of individual bone marrow-derived adult human mesenchymal stem cells (hmscs), and the role of specific cytoskeletal component -f-actin microfilaments on the mechanical properties of individual hmscs. the mechanical properties of hmscs were determined using the micropipette aspiration technique coupled with a viscoelastic solid model of the cell. for the hmscs under control conditions the instantaneous young"s modulus e was found to be ± (pa), the equilibrium young"s modulus e ∞ ± (pa), and the apparent viscosity ± (pas). after exposed to m of chemical agent-cytochalasin d that disrupt the f-actin microfilaments, the young's moduli of hmscs decreased by up to % and the apparent viscosity increased by %. these findings suggest that microfilaments are crucial in providing the viscoelastic properties of the hmscs, and changes in the structure and properties of them may influence the mechanical properties of hmscs significantly. pharmacologic transcription control of desired transgenes is essential for gene-function analysis, drug discovery, biopharmaceutical manufacturing, design of complex artificial regulatory networks, precise and timely reprogramming of key cell characteristics for gene therapy and engineering of preferred cell phenotypes for tissue engineering. capitalizing on our recent advances in the design of small molecule-responsive transcription control modalities we have used conditional molecular interventions for (i) improvement of specific productivity in biopharmaceutical manufacturing, (ii) transdifferentiation of therapeutically relevant cell phenotypes and (iii) design of artificial microtissues. we will also report on a completely new dimension of transgene control as well as engineering of hysteretic and epigenetic gene networks in mammalian cells. chronic diseases are a growing burden for the individual and society alike. one key factor driving this increase is an ageing population. currently, there are million persons aged years or over and this number is predicted to triple by the middle of the st century. effective prevention of irreversible damage to major organ systems requires early diagnosis and treatment yielding significant quality of life to the individual and sparing valuable health care resources. even when safe and effective medicines are available, a remaining problem to successful therapy are issues of patient compliance. historically, vaccines have been one of the major advances towards the longevity we enjoy today, with compliance rates close to %. hence, vaccines for early treatment of chronic diseases are ideally positioned for long-term therapy, and will take away the burden of self-medication associated with orally active drugs. here we will discuss a new generation of therapeutic vaccines based on virus-like particles (vlps). by displaying target molecules in a highly repetitive manner on vlps, it is possible to break b cell unresponsiveness in experimental animals as well as in humans. using such vaccines in animals, chronic diseases such as hypertension, alzheimer's disease, obesity and rheumatoid arthritis could be treated. furthermore, vaccination against nicotine resulted in high nictotine-specific antibody titers in humans, greatly facilitating smoking cessation in immunized individuals. interdependence of the impact of methanol and oxygen supply on protein production with recombinant pichia pastoris n.k. khatri, f. hoffmann martin-luther-university halle-wittenberg, institute for biotechnology, halle d- , germany. e-mail: f.hoffmann@biochemtech.uni-halle.de (f. hoofmann) the methylotrophic yeast pichia pastoris is a potent expression system for secretion of recombinant proteins. methanol as inductor of the foreign gene expression is also a substrate with high oxygen demand, which can lead to sudden oxygen depletion upon induction. thus, supply rates of methanol and oxygen are major process parameter during protein production with recombinant pichia pastoris. limiting dosage of methanol allowed maintenance of oxygen sufficient conditions during production of a single chain antibody fragment, but the product was degraded from the c-terminal end. in contrast, full-length product accumulated with controlled methanol concentrations despite oxygen limitation. the volumetric methanol uptake rate are limited by the oxygen transfer capacity of the reactor. higher methanol concentrations decreased the biomass yield and thereby increased the specific methanol uptake rate. this enabled prolonged production and yielded fivefold higher product concentrations. at the same time, the accumulation of small molecular weight contaminants was reduced. dosage of pure oxygen accelerated methanol uptake, grow and production. switching to dostat mode upon oxygen depletion led to an arrest of product accumulation, in contrast to persistent methanol feeding. the productivity was tenfold higher than without oxygen. combined with high methanol concentrations, however, fast methanol uptake led to toxication of the cells and early stop of production. flow cytometry revealed that perturbation of oxygen metabolism was followed by partial lysis of the culture. recombinant production of therapeutic proteins poses severe challenges due to their complexity (cystines, subunits, size). formation of the correct disulphide bridges is a prerequisite for activity but difficult to achieve in a prokaryotic host. there proteins mainly fold post-translationally as opposed to eukaryotic co-translational folding. thus the recombinant products are often not soluble and/or active. that is why different production parameters (e.g. host, induction conditions, temperature, compartment, proteinaceous fusion partners, co-expression of chaperones, foldases) are applied in order to gain functional recombinant proteins. the impact of all these strategies cannot be predicted and every problem of the production (expression, solubility, activity) might need to be solved for every target protein separately. nevertheless, much effort has been put into this for almost decades, because they are important targets for the pharmaceutical industry. human growth factors influencing cellular proliferation and/or differentiation are one example. this case study gives an overview of strategies tested within the development of two processes leading to an optimised yield of active protein. murine wnt- (wnt family) possesses conserved cysteines (most likely all involved in disulphide bridge formation and one in posttranslational modification) and could only be successfully produced in e. coli (fahnert, ) recently despite various attempts for many years. the other target protein is human collagen prolyl- -hydroxylase being a heterotetramer consisting of two ␣-subunits and -subunits each. the ␣-subunit strongly aggregates if produced separately whereas the -subunit is pdi and is suggested to have a chaperone function. therefore a sequential induction strategy was proposed for this protein . the moss physcomitrella patens has been recently recognized as an ideal producer of recombinant proteins with respect to glycosylation. due to the elaborated post-translational capabilities of moss cells, the glycosylation patterns have been manipulated to obtain similar proteins to those found in animal cells. the protein expression using moss in suspension offers important advantages in comparison to other systems e.g. cho cells. the recombinant proteins can be targeted into the mineral medium, simplifying the down stream processing. moreover, there are neither known moss viruses nor plant viruses that are pathogenic for humans. the moss are cultivated axenically in a filamentous stage, the so called protonema. a pilot l tubular photoreactor is used to characterize the response of p. patens to variations on the culture conditions. the phototrophic culture in bioreactors is systematically investigated, where light quantity and quality, stress, concentration of phytohormones, and moss morphology influence the differentiation, growth, and protein expression. a tight control of the moss morphology in suspension, quantified by image analysis, has shown to be advantageous in order to delay the cell differentiation and maintain the carbon dioxide uptake in long bioreactor runs. the introduced perfused culture system by means of cross flow filtration allowed for a continuous product separation and concentration, and feed back of the productive cells. the characterization of this highly controlled culture system is presented and the potential of p. patens as an alternative tool for molecular farming is discussed. (rnai) is an evolutionarily conserved, endogenous mechanism for sequence-specific gene silencing that uses small double-stranded rnas (called short interfering rnas or sirnas) to direct cleavage or prevent translation of homologous mrnas. harnessing rnai for therapy presents an opportunity for potentially treating a wide variety of diseases. the main obstacle is delivering sirnas into the cytosol of target cells in vivo. although we were able to protect mice from autoimmune hepatitis by hydrodynamic tail vein injection of sirnas targeting fas, this delivery method is unlikely to be adaptable for human use. alternate strategies to deliver sirnas in vivo as small molecule drugs using currently available, clinically acceptable injection methods that have shown promise in mouse models will be discussed. these include local delivery to mucosal surfaces and delivery into specific cells via cell surface receptors using an antibody fragment fused to protamine. these sirna complexes silence gene expression in vivo only in cells bearing the targeted receptor. experiments showing efficient, effective and cell-specific delivery in a mouse tumor model will be discussed. in addition, encouraging preliminary data using rnai for a microbicide to prevent sexually transmitted infection will be presented. rna interference (rnai) holds significant progress as a therapeutic approach to siolence disease-causing genes, particularly those that encode "non-druggable" targets. the key hurdle for rnai therapeutics is in vivo delivery. a critical requirement for achieving systemic rnai in vivo is the introduction of "drug-like" properties, such as stability, cellular delivery and tissue biodistribution, into synthetic sirnas. our progress in achieving in vivo silencing of endogenous genes with chemically modified sirnas will be discussed. hiv- replication in human t cells can be inhibited by stable expression of a short hairpin rna targeting the viral nef gene (shrna-nef). however, hiv- escape variants emerge after prolonged culturing, and all but one escape mutant acquire a mutation in the shrna-nef target sequence. we observed single and multiple nucleotide substitutions, but also partial or complete deletion of the target sequence. these results demonstrate the sequencespecificity of this antiviral approach. we observed an inverse correlation between the level of resistance and the stability of the shrna/target-rna duplex for most of the escape mutants. however, two escape variants did not follow this pattern, including an escape mutant with a single point mutation at position − upstream of the target sequence. these mutants provide a much higher level of resistance than expected based on duplex stability, which is obviously not affected in the − mutant. we demonstrate that these mutants adopt an alternative rna secondary structure that occludes the target sequence. this results in reduced shrna-nef binding and provides a novel mechanism for rnai-resistance. to avoid viral escape, one should ideally target hiv- with multiple effective shrnas against conserved genome sequences. we performed a large scale screening to identify such targets, and we have identified at least nine genome segments that can be targeted effectively with shrnas. these potent antivirals are currently being assembled in a lentiviral vector for gene therapy applications in hiv-infected individuals. furthermore, we will describe approaches to forecast viral escape routes and to effectively block such evolutionary paths with additional rnai measures. in this study we analyzed the effect of antibodies against electronegative ldl on the development of atherosclerotic lesions in low-density receptor-deficient (ldlr −/− ) mice. two groups of (ldlr −/− ) mice (eight females) fed . % cholesterol-enriched chow were used. the first group received a monoclonal antibody against electronegative ldl ( g) and the second one received pbs (controls). additionally, other two groups (eight males) of (ldlr −/− ) mice were treated with a polyclonal antibody against electronegative ldl ( g) or pbs (controls). antibodies were administered by intravenous route one week before starting the hypercholesterolemic diet and then every week over an experimental time of days. afterwards, quantification of atherosclerotic plaque area of heart and aortic arch was done by analysis of the slices stained with oil red/hematoxolin/light green with the image propus software. the passive immunization with either monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies against electronegative ldl significantly reduced the atherosclerotic plaque areas in atherosclerosis-prone ldlr −/− mice. in conclusion, antibodies against electronegative ldl administered by intravenous route may play a protective role in atherosclerosis. supported by fundação de amparoà pesquisa do estado de são paulo (fapesp, scholarships to d.m.g., l.s. and a.b. and grants to m.h.k. and d.s.p.a.). the enzyme asparaginase from the procaryote escherichia coli or erwinia crysanthemi is used for the treatment of lymphoblastic leukaemia. the drug causes immunological reactions in despite of the treatment efficiency. asparaginase may also be obtained from saccharomyces cerevisiae and this enzyme could provide an alternative to its bacterial counterparts. in this study, the periplasmic nitrogen regulated asparaginase ii from s. cerevisiae, that is coded by the asp gene, was cloned and expressed in the methylotrophic yeast pichia pastoris under the control of the aox gene promoter. the recombinant p. pastoris strain was cultured in shake flasks and in a l instrumented bioreactor. in both cases it was observed specific enzyme yields seven fold higher in comparison to that using a nitrogen derepressed strain of s. cerevisiae, reaching u/g dry cell mass. high cell density cultures carried out in the l bioreactor, in which it was attained g dry cell mass/l, resulted in a dramatic improvement in asparaginase fermentation. as such, it was measured enzyme yields of , u/l and productivities of u/l h. department of biochemistry and food chemistry, biotechnology, university of turku, tykistokatu , biocity th floor, turku, finland. e-mails: lorenzo.galluzzi@utu.fi; deadoc@libero.it; deadoc@aliceposta.it (l. galluzzi) the bacterial luciferase operon from the bacterium photorhabdus luminescens has been used, since its first description, for exceptionally different applications. these ranged from the environmental monitoring to the cell tagging, from the analysis of cellular metabolism to the high-throughput screening of novel compounds. the wild-type luxcdabe operon has been engineered in countless ways (for instance by changing the order of the constituent genes, by optimizing the codon usage and by coupling it to many promoters) and has been expressed in prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms in order to meet precise research and commercial needs. upon the operon expression light is emitted as the side product of a chemical reaction catalyzed by the luciferase enzyme, an ␣ heterodimer encoded in luxa and luxb genes. the reaction involves the oxidation of a long-chain aliphatic aldehyde and reduced flavin mononucleotide (fmnh ) with the liberation of excess free energy in the form of a blue-green light at nm. the luxcde genes code for the polypeptides (transferase, synthetase, and reductase) forming the fatty acid reductase complex that catalyzes the conversion of fatty acids into the long-chain aldehyde required for the luminescent reaction. noteworthy is that for the production of the substrates for the luciferase both atp and nadph are required, while neither is involved in the actual light emitting reaction (wilson and hastings, ) . recently, the coupling of the luciferase operon to regulated promoters lead to the construction of genetically modified bacteria able to sense the presence of chemicals and to respond, in a dosespecific manner, with light emission. this approach has been applied to the detection of antibiotics in samples from the food industry as well as to the detection of heavy metal ions in environmental samples (kurittu et al., ; bechor et al., ) . in addition, it opened the possibility of screening wide libraries of new compounds looking for molecules with pre-determined features, able to induce the bioluminescent response by de-repressing the lux operon transcription when incubated with the appropriate bacterial sensor. the high throughput and low costs are the main advantages of this system, which shows as well a certain degree of specificity (galluzzi and karp, ; galluzzi et al., ) . nevertheless, since the in vivo bioluminescence relies upon a complex network of biochemical reactions, under certain circumstances the light emission is not a direct consequence of the lux operon transcriptional induction but it more likely originates at a posttranslational stage. as a matter of fact, one can suppose that a change in the light emission will be observed whenever the concentration of one or more substrates for the lux␣ reaction occurs. consequently, all the molecules sharing the ability to impair the delicate chemical equilibrium regarding the compounds involved in bioluminescence will be sensed by the bacteria as inducing compounds. this, in turn, will result in a loss of specificity of the assay. we investigated this aspect of the whole-cell assays based upon the bacterial luciferase operon for drug discovery by means of a reporter plasmid in which the luxabcde genes, rearranged and optimized for the after min (black downward arrow) of incubation at • c under vigorous shaking the following concentrations of trimethoprim were added to the growing cells: g/ml (triangles), g/ml (circles) and g/ml (rumbles). water was administered to control cultures (squares). light emission was quantified every min by means of the wallac victor multilabel counter (perkin-elmer, turku, finland) and normalized to the absorbance, measured at nm with the same device. multi- white-walled transparent-bottomed plates were used for the assays (nalge nunc, usa). between the measurements the plates were kept at + • c under vigorous shaking. filled symbols refers to the absorbance values (left side y-axis); open symbols to the normalized count per seconds (right side y-axis). expression in gram + organisms, are under the control of the qacr regulatory region from staphylococcus aureus . non-pathogenic s. aureus rn cells bearing the pqaclux plasmid (cultivated in lb broth supplemented with , % d-glucose and g/ml chloramphenicol) emit light upon the specific transcriptional induction with quaternary ammonium compounds, widely used as surface disinfectants and in many over-the-counter drugs . however, the incubation of the same cells with an inhibitor of the dihydrofolate reductase enzyme, trimethoprim (sigma-aldrich chemie, steinheim, germany), enhanced in a dosedependant manner the light emission observed upon the induction with the optimal concentration ( g/ml) of benzalkonium chloride (bc). the extent of this increase in luminescence varied from - % to more than %, according to the trimethoprim concentration and to the measurement time. interestingly, when the same plasmid is carried by escherichia coli xl cells, the lux operon is expressed constitutively (since the qacr regulatory region is not functional in xl cells) and at much higher levels than in induced rn cells. also in this experimental system the incubation with trimethoprim results in a dramatic increase of the luminescent signal from the cultures. the explanation for these observations can be found in the molecular mode of action of trimethoprim. the inhibition of dihydrofolate reductase, indeed, directly leads to the accumulation of its substrates, among which is nadph, deeply entangled in the biochemical network of reactions centred on the light emission from the lux operon. nadph provides the reducing power to restore the reduced flavin mononucleotide pool and it is as well involved in fig. . xl /pqaclux growing cells were incubated with the following concentration of trimethoprim: g/ml (triangles), g/ml (circles) and g/ml (rumbles). water was administered to control cultures (squares). light emission and absorbance measurements were performed as previously described for rn cells. filled symbols refers to the absorbance values (left side y-axis); open symbols to the normalized count per seconds (right side y-axis). the diverse level of growth observed for rn and xl cells can be accounted by the different antimicrobial activity exerted by trimethoprim towards gram− and gram+ cells and by the lower activity of the promoter which in pqaclux plasmid drives the transcription of the selection marker (chloramphenicol acetyl transferase). the production of the long-chain aldehyde, both substrates of the lux␣ heterodimer (wilson and hastings, ) . in conclusion, here we demonstrate that the use of light emission from the bacterial luciferase as a transcriptional reporter has to be very carefully controlled, since some molecules (here trimethoprim) could mimic to some extent a specific promoter activation by impairing the delicate intracellular biochemical equilibrium. on the reverse side of the coin, fig. . simplified scheme depicting the bacterial folate metabolic pathway. only part of the reactions and compounds are reported. trimethoprim inhibits the nadph-dependant reduction of dihydrofolic acid into tetrahydrofolic acid catalyzed by dihydrofolate reductase. this results in the accumulation of both substrates, which become available for other reactions, and in the depletion of tetrahydrofolate, the major c carrier in the synthesis of purines, thymidine, glycine, methionine, and pantothenate in bacteria. for antimicrobial purposes trimethoprim is often associated with sulfonamides, with which it displays a synergistic activity (since they act on the same pathway but at an earlier reaction) (scholar and pratt, ) . however, it has to be noted that the lux reporter system could be used in many different in vivo experimental setups, where the change in the intracellular concentration of nadph, atp or other metabolites would be sensibly detected. we have carried out the construction of five pichia pastoris strains harboring in their respective genome three different growth hormones cdna's ( and kda human growth hormones and bovine growth hormone), a shrimp (litopenaeus vannamei) trypsinogen cdna and a bacterial (bacillus subtilis) phytase gene. in all the cases, the same kind of expression vector and the same transformation technique were used. each dna was fused in frame to saccharomyces cerevisiae alpha-factor secretion signal to lead the secretion of the foreign protein into the culture medium. the induction of each recombinant strain, all with his + and mut + phenotype, was carried out in shake flaks using methanol buffered minimal medium (bmm) and growth rates on methanol determined. production level of secreted proteins was evaluated by protein analysis by sds-page. furthermore, the expression with three of the constructed strains was performed in a -l bioreactor and the level of secreted protein determined in each case. both human growth hormones (hghs) were secreted into the culture medium with a high degree of purity obtaining up to % of hghs of total proteins in crude fermentation medium and - mg/l of hghs. neither bovine growth hormone, shrimp trypsinogen or bacterial phytase were detected in methanol induced cultures of the respective strains, in spite of the same culture conditions were used for all p. pastoris strains. the growth rates on methanol were different between some strains. in fermentor cultures the hghs production were increased and shrimp trypsinogen was produced and secreted into the culture medium after improving the culture conditions. bovine growth hormone was detected only when the culture conditions were modified. the protein production level for each strain was affected by the proprieties of each recombinant protein produced. competitive advantages of the diagnostic method for invasive amoebiasis using preserved antigenic extracts without using enzymatic inhibitors m.s. flores , * , e. tamez we have patented a method to diagnose invasive amoebiasis using a novel assay that preserves antigenicity of extracts with high protease content without using enzymatic inhibitors (ic:mc). the available tests for serologic diagnosis of invasive amoebiasis like elisa and indirect haemaglutination (iha) do not have consistent results in endemic zones. here we show the advantages of the assay and the validation of this diagnostic test for invasive amoebiasis. we demonstrated the reduction of proteolytic activity of ic:mc compared with the proteolytic activity of crude extract and crude extract with enzymatic inhibitors using assays. we displayed the ic:mc sds-page pattern and the western blot (wb) pattern useful for diagnosis. to search the clinical utility of this test we examined the wb obtained with sera from patients with different liver diseases; patients had invasive amoebiasis and patients had other liver diseases. the results were compared with those of iha test. also we have tested the accuracy of wb using sera from people with multiple intestinal parasites, like giardia lamblia, hymenolepis nana, blastocystis hominis, entamoeba coli, etc. the sensibility of the wb using the preserved amoebic antigens was %, specificity was %, positive predictive value was %, negative predictive value was % and accuracy was %. the wb did not exhibit cross reactions with sera from persons with intestinal parasites. our test was better than the (iha) test commonly used in endemic zones. these results show the improvement of using the preserved amoebic antigens in diagnostic tests. also they prove the diagnostic accuracy of our new wb test. antibacterial and antifungal activity of heracleum sphondylium subsp. artvinense yasemin kaçar , sema tan , aysun ergene , perihan güler , semra mirici , ergin hamzaoglu , ahmet duran , sinem yildirim : mersin university, faculty of science and literature, department of biology, mersin, turkey; kırıkkale university, faculty of science and literature, department of biology, yahsihan-kırıkkale, turkey; akdeniz university, faculty of education, department of biology education, antalya, turkey; selcuk university, faculty of education, department of biology education, konya, turkey turkey is covered yearly with a huge number of plant species. about species are condenced on the region that between asia and europe. many plant species have been used in folkloric medicine to treat various ailments. heracleum l (apiaceae) is include over than species on the world. this variety is represent with species in turkey that seven species are endemic. heracleum sphondylium subsp. artvinense is endemic species for turkey. ethanolic and aquous extract of heracleum sphondylium subsp. artvinense were investigated for their antimicrobial activities against six bacterial species (e. feacalis, e. coli, s. aureus, p. aeruginosa, l. monocytogenes, shigella) and two yeast (c. albicans, c. krusei). both ethanolic and aqueous extract of heracleum sphondylium subsp. artvinense showed antimicrobial activity against the gram negative bacterium (shigella) and gave the best activity against c.albicans. to develop artificial vectors allowing nucleic acid to transfect into mammalian cells are crucial for extending gene therapy. synthetic vectors based on lipid molecules are particularly attractive because of their potential safety. however, the low encapsulation efficiency of nucleic acid is one of the problem to be solved. recent advances in dna-lipid complex have improved this drawback, and now some lipid molecules are used as transfection agents. in particular, cationic lipids interact with negatively-charged cell surfaces and nucleic acids. the former interaction results in delivery of the nucleic acids directly across the cell membrane. on the other hand, the latter interaction improves the efficiency of nucleic acids entrapment. in this study, we developed a preparation method of "nanovesicle" containing nucleic acids by using reverse micellar solubilization. since dna interacts spontaneously with cationic amphiphiles, complete extraction of the dna molecules into an organic phase using dimethyl distearyl ammonium bromide ( c ab), an oil-soluble cationic surfactant, is achieved. the re-encapsulation of the reverse micellar droplets solubilizing dna by water-soluble surfactants facilitates the formation of nanovesicles. a high salt concentration at the re-encapsulation step promotes the production of nanovesicles containing dna molecules. eventually, more than % of dna was encapsulated in this nanovesicles under the condition of m nacl and % (w/v) cetyltridecyl ammonium bromide (ctab). in addition, the nanovesicles prepared at • c was smaller than that prepared at room temperature. the resultant c ab/ctab nanovesicle was ca. nm. asymmetric and chemically-modifiable vesicle surface are effective to design gene delivery system. moreover, such a small dna (or rna) carrier has a potential for novel gene therapy application from skin. the key players in clinically important inflammatory diseases, endothelial cells and leukocytes, communicate through membranebound cell adhesion molecules (cam's). obvious strategies for therapeutic intervention include specific means to affect the expression of cam's on the cells involved. rna-interference (rnai) is a well known means to achieve specific gene-inhibition. for this study, two cam's were chosen, namely vascular cell adhesion molecule- (vcam- ) as a target for inhibition, and intercellular adhesion molecule- (icam- ) as a non-target reference. we designed short interfering rna (sirna) oligos for vcam- in order to selectively inhibit the expression of this cam in cultured human vascular endothelial cells (huvec). real-time rt-pcr showed an % down-regulation of vcam- mrna while the expression of icam- remained unaffected. neither cam was affected by non-specific sirna. in order to further substantiate the potential use of sirna for therapeutic purposes, we have set out to investigate two things: ( ) does vcam- -specific sirna affect the amount of vcam- on the surface of huvec? ( ) is adhesion between leukocytes and endothelial cells affected by vcam- -specific sirna? the manufacturing of plasmid dna (pdna) is crucial to obtain a consistent product for gene therapy applications. although flowsheets for pdna production are established on the basis of experience, simulation tools provide a valuable help for evaluating alternatives. a process designed to produce kg pdna/year is analysed with the superpro designer tool. the target pdna is amplified in escherichia coli. after harvest, alkaline lysis is used to disrupt cells and release pdna and impurities. precipitations with isopropanol and ammonium sulphate are performed to concentrate/pre-purify pdna prior to hydrophobic interaction chromatography. experimental data is used as input for simulation. inventory analysis identified water, yeast extract, tryptone, isopropanol and ammonium sulphate as the major raw materials. major raw material costs ( %) are related to fermentation components. economic analysis indicates a unit production cost of $ /g pdna. for a selling price of $ /g, the payback time was . years and the roi was . %. an environmental analysis highlighted the replacement of the isopropanol precipitation for a microfiltration step as a benefit which would: (i) reduce the cost of raw materials ( . %), (ii) reduce the environmental impact associated with isopropanol ( %) and (iii) reduce costs associated with the treatment/disposal of liquid waste ( . %). preparation of chitosan microspheres for controlled release of somatotropin s. simsek , j. introduction: proteins and peptides have received extensive interest for their therapeutic applications in clinical applications. in order to achieve high administration efficacy of proteins, polymeric particulate carriers have been developed as an effective way to control the drug release profile and to protect the protein molecules from degradation. somatotropin also known growth hormone is a protein hormone of about amino acids. growth hormone is of considerable interest as a drug used in both humans and animals. chitosan a natural linear biopolyaminosaccharide is obtained by alkaline deacetylation of chitin. properties such as biodegradability, low toxicity and good biocompatibility make it suitable for use in biomedical and pharmaceutical formulations. the aim of this study was to prepare chitosan microspheres containing somatotropin and to investigate these microsphere formulations in-vitro release properties. methods: somatotropin-chitosan microspheres were prepared as follows: chitosan was dissolved in acidic solution ( %) containing polysorbate . sodium sulphate solution ( % w/v) containing somatotropin was added into the chitosan solution and mixed rpm for a hour. resulting suspension was centrifuged , rpm min at • c. the formed microspheres were freeze-dried and sieved. in-vitro release studies were performed in ph . phosphate buffer and time interval samples were removed and analysed by bradford protein assay method. results: microspheres were obtained by using chitosan. protein encapsulation efficiency was between and %. average particle size of microspheres was between and m. during to in-vitro release studies burst effect was observed with chitosan microspheres. for decreasing the burst effect gluteraldehit, betacyclodextrin and poly ethylene oxide were added to formulations. conclusion: according to our results modified chitosan microspheres are promising vehicles for controlled release somatotropine delivery. cancer immunotherapy using hyperthermia with magnetic nanoparticles and dendritic cells k. tanaka, a. ito, t. kobayashi, t. kawamura, s. shimada, k. matsumoto, t. saida, h. honda department of biotechnology, school of engineering, nagoya university, nagoya, aichi - , japan. e-mail: h d@mbox.nagoyau.ac.jp (k. tanaka) our hyperthermia system utilizes magnetic nanoparticle covered with lipid layer including cationic lipid (magnetite cationic liposomes, mcls) as a heating mediator and necrotic cell death is induced by means of locally generating heat. in this process, heat shock proteins (hsps) are strongly induced and released. dendritic cells (dcs) are potent antigen-presenting cells (apcs) that play a pivotal role in regulating immune responses in cancer, which is in carrying antigens to apcs and in the maturation of dcs by acting as a danger signal. in the present study, we investigated the therapeutic effects of dc therapy combined with mcl-induced hyperthermia on b melanoma. in an in vitro study, when immature dcs were pulsed with b cells heated at • c for min, mhc class i/ii, costimulatory molecules cd /cd , and chemokine receptor ccr in the dcs were up-regulated, thus resulting in dc maturation. c bl/ mice bearing a b melanoma nodule were subjected to combination therapy using hyperthermia and dc immunotherapy. mice were divided into four groups: group i (control), group ii (hyperthermia), group iii (dc therapy), group iv (hyperthermia + dc therapy). complete regression of tumors was observed in % of mice in group iv, while no tumor regression was seen among mice in the other groups. increased ctl and nk cell activity was observed on in vitro cytotoxicity assay using splenocytes in the cured mice treated with combination therapy, and the cured mice rejected a second challenge of b melanoma cells. this study has important implications for the application of mcl-induced hyperthermia plus dc therapy in patients with advanced malignancies as a novel cancer therapy. fermentation of a marine bacterium for the production of cytotoxic compounds vicky webb , els maas , eiichi akaho , hiroto kambara , debbie hulston , anna kilimnik : marine biotechnology, national institute for water and atmospheric research ltd, kilbirnie, wellington new zealand; faculty of pharmaceutical sciences, kobe gakuin university, kobe - , japan marine bacteria are a potential source of novel compounds for the pharmaceutical industry. new zealand marine bacteria were isolated from a variety of sources and initially bacterial supernatants were screened using a cell based mtt cytotoxic assay. two bacteria were chosen for further fermentations in different media to optimise cytotoxic compound production. the media used were selected for their diverse ingredients. they were either carbon rich, nitrogen rich, starch rich or a basic seawater medium. the fermentations were extracted using ethyl acetate and methanol prior to assaying. the results showed that cytotoxic compound production was enhanced ten fold in the starch rich medium compared to the other media. the levels of cytoxicity appeared to be depended on the cell line used, with the epithelial lung carcinoma cell line a being more sensitive to the cytotoxic compounds than the human fibroblast cell line mrc- . isolation and identification of marine bacteria from deep-sea sediments els maas , cara brosnahan , vicky webb , helen neil , phil sutton : marine biotechnology, national institute for water and atmospheric research ltd., kilbirnie, wellington new zealand; oceanography, national institute for water and atmospheric research ltd., kilbirnie, wellington, new zealand polystyrene micro plate activated by utilizing a common co- gamma source with a crotonic acid. the well surface have been studied in term of optical quality, protein (h-igg) binding capacity and stability. a significantly enhanced total capacity and strength of binding to grafted surfaces was demonstrated as compared to passive adsorption of the proteins to untreated surfaces.the majority routine laboratory tests for the measurement of rheumatoid factor (rf) are semi quantitative and in order to achieve accurate, sensitive and specific rf assay, we are developed enzyme linked immuno sorbent assay (elisa) for human igm-rf kit. stable and reproducible binding of antigen (human-igg) to well of micro titer plate is a prerequisite for rf-elisa kit. the principle of the assay was that the antibodies in serum of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (ra), commonly rheumatoid factor (rf) are directed to the fc part of human igg. in most cases rf belong to the igm class, the well of micro titer plate are coated with antigen (h-igm), and antibodies (h-igg) binding to immobilized antigen is detected by adding enzyme conjugate (anti human-igm-hrp-enzyme) to the wells, substrate was used for color reaction.the performance characteristics of the assay was, the coefficient of variation (c.v) of intra and inter assay was . % and . % respectively, the linearity is ranging from to %, and the recovery for three different sera is ranging from to %. the data presented in this paper indicated that the activation of polystyrene micro titer plate by the gamma rays could be use for preparation of igm-rf kit and may be others immunoassay techniques. overcoming the nuclease barrier to gene expression during trafficking of plasmid dna vectors a.r. azzoni , a. tavares , g.a. monteiro , d.m.f. prazeres : centro de engenharia biológica e química (cebq), instituto superior técnico, - lisboa, portugal; instituto gulbenkian de ciência, rua da quinta grande , - oeiras, portugal. e-mail: azzoni@ist.utl.pt (a.r. azzoni) inefficient nuclear delivery of plasmid dna (pdna) vectors is thought to be a bottleneck to gene transfer in gene therapy and dna vaccination utilizing non-viral delivery systems. one of the main barriers found by pdna vectors during trafficking to the nucleus is degradation by a population of endo/exo-nucleases. this barrier may be partially circumvented by shielding the pdna from the nucleaserich cell environment with adjuvants or by using nuclease inhibitors. a different approach that has been studied at the cebq is the generation of pdna vectors that are more resistant to nuclease action a priori. in this work, the nuclease barriers to gene expression are being studied aiming at the generation of pdna with improved resistance to nucleases and thus higher transfection efficiency. by engineering the plasmid labile sequences, new plasmid vectors with an improved resistance to physical-chemical and biological degradation are being generated. this was indicated by an extended half-life of the supercoiled isoforms during storage and when the plasmids were exposed to nucleases present at eukaryotic cell lysates and mice plasma. the intracellular trafficking of the new plasmid vectors through the cytosol of mammalian cells was then assessed by fluorescence in situ hybridisation (fish) and the expression of the reporter protein (egfp) was detected by fluorescence microscopy. identification and evaluation of antibacterial phytochemicals of fishbone fern (nephrolepis cordifolia) rikhia chakraborty , , promod kumar verma : department of cancer biology, lerner research institute, euclid avenue cleveland, oh , usa, department of biotechnology, guru nanak dev university, amritsar, punjab , india. e-mail: riar @rediffmail.com (r. chakraborty) in this study, different aqueous and organic extracts from the fern, nephrolepis cordifolia, were used for screening tests for antibacterial effects. protein and lipid extracts were first tested for antibacterial activity. subsequently, crude extracts of leaves, roots, and stems were prepared in methanol, ethanol, chloroform, hexane, petroleum ether, diethyl ether, and water using optimized standard protocols. each fraction was tested for anti-microbial effect through agar well-diffusion assay, and paper disc method. the antibacterial spectrum against which the fern is active was thus determined. dosagedetermination for optimum activity was also determined for each of the extracts. bacillus and staphylococcus were used as the indicator test-organisms. the results were very encouraging; being effective even at the th day, thus showing that the antibacterial properties were not due to any changes in external factors and physiological effects. ethanol, methanol and chloroform extracts from the subaerial portions had strong anti-microbial properties. agar-well diffusion assay and paper-disc diffusion assay done for different solvent fractions were giving comparable results. . mg was adequate for maximum effect against b. circulans, s. aureus, s. epididermis, and streptococcus sp. . mg was adequate as effective dosage for kleb-siella pneumoniae. mg was required for mycobacterium bovis, e. coli. pseudomonas was not showing any susceptibility. given the broad spectrum of activity, especially towards the gram-negative bacteria, nephrolepis cordifolia is definitely a promising plant having pharmacological importance. for a full interpretation of the present results further investigations are necessary to elucidate the different physical and chemical parameters of the active principles and also to determine the mechanism of action. the present work highlights n. cordifolia as a plant having a broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity, a phenomenon very rarely observed in the plant kingdom. bacteria (escherichia, salmonella, proteus, staphylococci and bacillus) were isolated from hospital soil using selective enrichment and growth on selective and differential medium, viz. macconkey's agar, clyed medium and baird parkers medium. confirmation and species identification was carried out by biochemical and serological tests. from these isolates, three different pathogens were used to study multiple antibiotic resistances. e. coli bj showed resistance to ampicillin, streptomycin and cefurixime. s. typhi and s. aureus showed resistance to ampicillin and cefuroxime. assay using octadisc using e. coli and s. typhi showed a broader resistance pattern to antibiotics including amoxicillin, clavulanic acid, cephalexin, chloramphenicol, ciprofloxacin, and cotrimoxazole. the r plasmid profile was studied to understand the mechanism of drug resistance. to combat the problem of drug resistance, a strategy of combined antibiotic response of cultures were studied. such a synergistic combination would possibly have the effect of overcoming multiple antibiotic resistances. for e.g. kanamycin resistance strains were inhibited in presence of kanamycin and cefotaxime. further, the bactericidal activities of antimicrobials in honey and garlic were also tested. the mic of honey was observed to be %, while that of garlic was between . and %. honey and garlic were also found to inhibit the growth of organisms in the presence of antibiotics. kanamycinresistant e. coli was unable to grow in presence of kanamycin and . % garlic. these traditional agents, long used in ayurvedic system of medicine in india, could be further explored for potent antimicrobial properties. hepatitis b virus (hbv) infection is s global health problem. assays for hbv antigens and antibodies are widely available and standardized. extremely sensitive qualitative pcr kits are also available for detection of hbv in serum. hbv pcr kit may be useful in assessment of occult hepatitis b in hbcab positive alone subjects and carriers. a positive pcr results show presence of virus articles in serum without considering serologic results. but there are differences in efficiency of hbv dna amplification kits. in this study we compare two commercially available hbv pcr kits for evaluation viremia of hbsag positive carriers and hbcab alone positive subjects. material and methods: of the randomly selected subjects serologically examined for hbv, and were positive for hbsag and hbcab alone respectively. both later groups were tested for hbv dna by two commercial kits, hbv pcr detection kit (cinnagen, iran) and hbv pcr test (pazhohesh azma, iran). dna extraction kits recommended by each manufacturer were used for hbv dna extraction. amplicons in both kits were a highly overlapped fragment in conserved sequence of viral genome. results: of the hbsag positive carriers, hbv dna was detected in . and . % using kit and kit respectively. only . % were positive in both kits. in hbcab positive subjects (n = ), . % were positive by kit and all samples were negative when tested by kit . there was a significant difference between two kits. sensitivity of kit and kit were . and . %, respectively. overall, kit increased the detection rate of hbv dna by . %. discussion: our study show there is a significant variation between these two commercial kits especially in hbcab positive subjects that the copy of virus is very low. from these results, it can be concluded that the unstandardized kits have not compatible results, and pcr test interpretation should be done with great care. . the antibacterial activity of the extracts was evaluated based on the inhibition zone using plate diffusion method. most of the extracts were active against both gram positive and gram-negative bacteria, but pseudomonas aerugenosa, bacillus subtilis and sarcina marcescens, were more susceptible to almost all the extracts. finally, further research will be done to elucidate the nature of the active compound and investigate for peptides by using protein gel immobilization bioassay. short interfering rna delivery and gene silencing using polymeric nanocarrier systems k.a. howard , x. liu , d. oupicky , f. besenbacher , j. kjems : inano, university of aarhus, denmark, department of pharmaceutical sciences, wayne state university, detroit, usa the effectiveness of a drug is determined by the ability to migrate through the body and reach target sites in therapeutically relevant levels. nanocarriers for delivery of bioactive agents are being developed at inano to maximise drug payload at target sites. the inclusion of "biological triggers" into the nanocarrier design is used for modulation of cellular nucleic acid trafficking and increased target interaction. chitosan and peptide-based polymers were used to formulate nanocarriers in the size range - nm containing small interfering rnas (sirnas) for gene silencing applications. page analysis showed the structural integrity of the sirna was maintained during particle formation. in systems composed of bioresponsive polymers, nanocarrier disassembly and sirna release under cellular conditions were shown, using atomic force microscopy. the time course for sirna uptake into nih cells was visualised using confocal microscopy. in addition, sirna localisation within cells could be modulated by the composition of the polymer used. the ability of the nanocarrier system to mediate gene expression was investigated in a cell line stably expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (egfp). furthermore, the various delivery systems were tested in a mouse model stably expressing the egfp protein using both nasal and intravenous delivery routes. the use of animals as a source of organs and tissues for xenotransplantation can overcome the growing shortage of human organ donors. however, the presence of xenoreactive antibodies in humans directed against swine gal antigen present on the surface of xenograft donor cells leads to the complement activation and immediate xenograft rejection as a consequence of hyperacute immunological reaction. the graft of genetically modified organ of a swine depleted of enzyme ␣ , -galactosyltransferase that is responsible for gal antigen origin, would be tolerated with simultaneous administration of medicines decreasing other less severe immunological reactions. to prevent hyperacute rejection it is also possible to modify swine genome by human genes controlling enzymatic cascade of complement or modifying the set of donor's cell surface proteins. for this purpose genetic constructs containing inactivated ␣ , -galactosyltransferase gene, human cd , cd and cd genes controlling complement activation and human genes encoding ␣ , -fucosyltransferase and ␣-galactosidase enzymes modifying cell surface proteins were prepared. these genetic constructs were transfected into the pig foetal fibroblast using lipofection method. after selection, molecular and cytogenetic characteristic of cells with transgene integrated into the host genome were performed. introduction: protease a( a-pro) of coxsackievirus b (cvb ) plays major role in viral replication. in case of infection, viral proteins are being synthesized from viral mrna using host biosynthesis machinery. a-pro of virus, after being synthesized, exhibit two critical functions, cleavage of viral proteins and breaking eif g (eukaryotic initiation factor g-formerly called p ) which leads to host cell translational system shot-off. the enzyme plays essential role in viral replication and cellular damage. to understand pathogenicity of infection and also developing potent and selective inhibitors against picornavirus infection, it is necessary to prepare pure apro enzyme. in this study an expression system with efficient and high yields was obtained. methods: cdna of apro was synthesized using in vitro infection of permissive host through reverse transcription process and was cloned in pet b(+) and since a-pro is a toxic product, naturally before induction its expression will act on the host and damage the cells. for this different hosts were checked and finally, blr(de ) plyss which carries an extra-plasmid for lysozyme expression that minimizes unwanted target protein production (leakage) was selected. on the other hand for biological activity assay, polyclonal antibodies against antigenic sites of p was prepared by synthesizing small peptides, corresponding to antigenic site of p coupling to klh and injecting subcutanously to rabbit. then, the enzyme and its substrate (hela cells lysate that contain p ) were incubated together for different times intervals. results: the recombinant product was confirmed by sds polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and immunoblot analysis. also p cleavage by apro was assessed by sds-page and western blot analysis. cleavage of p by r a-pro was prominent after h. so recombinat a-pro with good activity was prepared. application of bombyx mori nuclear polyhedrosis virus (bmnpv) bacmid system on production of glycoprotein in larvae of silkworm ayano kageshima, tatsuya kato, misun kwon, enoch y. park department of applied biological chemistry, shizuoka university, ohya , suruga-ku, shizuoka - , japan bombyx mori nuclear polyhedrosis virus (bmnpv) bacmid system was applied on production of glycoprotein in larvae of silkworm. the bacmid system of autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (acnpv) has already been established and widely used. since the acnpv does not have a potential to infect silkworm we developed the first practical bombyx mori nuclear polyhedrosis virus (bmnpv) bacmid system directly applicable for the protein expression of silkworm. by using this system, the green fluorescence protein and glycoprotein, human  , -n-acetylglucosaminyltransferase were successfully expressed in silkworm larvae not only by infection of its recombinant virus but also by direct injection of its bacmid dna. three different kinds of signal sequences were tested for the secretion of glycoprotein into hemolymph of silkworm. signal peptides of prophenoloxidase-activating enzyme and bombyxin: insulin-like brain secretory peptide showed the highest secretion ratio, % of total expressed  , -n-acetylglucosaminyltransferase was secreted into hemolymph of silkworm. using bacmid system mu/ml of  , -n-acetylglucosaminyltransferase was expressed in hemolymph of silkworm, which was -three times higher than that of insect cell. silkworm is one of the most attractive hosts for large-scale productions of eukaryotic proteins as well as recombinant baculoviruses for gene transfer to mammalian cells. this method provides the rapid protein production in silkworm, is free from biohazard, thus will be a powerful tool for the future production factory of recombinant eukaryotic proteins and baculoviruses. we have established an efficient system for foreign gene expression in lily (lilium longiflorum) pollen in a transient mode. pollen was transformed using agrobacterium via vacuum filtration for min. the pollen germinated for h was analyzed to confirm its foreign gene expression in molecular analysis. mouse fed the transgenic pollen culture for weeks showed immune reaction specific for pollen-derived recombinant protein. and the igg level was highly elevated by one time boosting injection afterwards. the lily pollen system may be suggested as a novel type of biofactory for producing edible vaccine with rapidity. anti-apoptosis engineering with the kc gene obtained from silkworm shin sik choi, won jong rhee, tai hyun park school of chemical and biological eng., seoul national university, seoul - , korea the chinese hamster ovary (cho) cell line producing recombinant human erythropoietin (epo) was manipulated to express the kc gene, which was originally obtained from a silkworm. the expression of kc inhibited serum deprivation-induced apoptosis and increased the cell density and epo expression level per unit cell by five-and two-folds, respectively. an increase in these two factors resulted in a -fold increase in the volumetric productivity of epo. compared with the controls, the oligosaccharide structures of the epo synthesized by the cells expressing kc showed greater homogeneity. the terminal sialylation of the glycans of epo were promoted by the expression of kc . the positive effects of kc expression on the cell viability and productivity were attributable to the stable maintenance of the mitochondrial activity. these results demonstrate that the cho cell line genetically engineered with the kc gene has a great potential for use in the production of therapeutic proteins. evaluation of fucoidan-chitosan hydrogels on superficial dermal burn healing in rabbit: an in vivo study a.d. sezer , f. hatipoglu , z. ogurtan , a.l. baş , j. introduction: healing of dermal wounds with macromolecular agents such as natural polymers is one of the research areas of the pharmaceutical biotechnology. fucoidan is a sulphated polysaccharide which is commonly obtained from seaweeds. although a great number of studies on the different pharmacological properties of fucoidan are present, there is very limited information on the fucoidan-based system used in dermal burns. the aim of this study was to prepare chitosan hydrogel containing fucoidan and to investigate this hydrogel formulation for treatment of dermal burns on rabbits. methods: fucoidan-chitosan hydrogels were prepared as follows: the polymers were dissolved in acidic solution and sonicated for removing the air-bubbles then the gels were stored at + • c for in vivo studies. seven adult male new zealand white rabbits (mean weight, . ± . kg) were used for the evaluation of the gels on superficial dermal burns. the back of the rabbits were depilated and sedated. the wounds were made by circular stamp aluminium caps ( . cm ) at • c. four wounds were formed for each rabbit; (a) was treated with fucoidan-chitosan gel, (b) was treated with fucoidan solution, (c) was treated with chitosan gel (without fucoidan) and (d) as a negative control group. biopsy samples were taken at , and st days at the beginning of the study and each wound site was macroscopically observed and evaluated histopathologically. results: oedema was not observed in all groups after days treatment except controls. after days treatment, fibroplasia and scar were observed on wounds treated with fucoidan-chitosan gel and fucoidan solution. the best regenerate dermal papillary formation and the fastest closure of wounds were observed in group a after days treatment. the wound epithel elongation and thickness values were measured; a ( and m), b ( and, m), c ( and, m), d ( and, m) at the end of the study. conclusion: re-epithelization and contraction of the wound area which was treated with fucoidan-chitosan hydrogel were faster than the other groups. the fucoidan-chitosan hydrogel formulations can be suitable for the treatment of dermal burns. aim: to analyze the neutralizing -related activity of antibodies against e region of hcv, specific polyclonal antibody was raised by immunized rabbits with synthetic peptide that had been derived from e region of hcv with the amino acid sequence e antibody [ghrmawdmm). materials and methods: hyper-immune hcv e antibodies were incubated over night at • c with serum samples from patients positive for hcv rna, with different viral load, ranged - million copes/ml, then incubated min to hepg cells. rt-pcr and flow cytometry were used to study the inhibition binding and entry effect of e antibody. direct immunostaining of e antibody conjugated with fitic and flow cytometry analysis showed reduced the mean fluorescence intensity in the samples pre-incubated with e antibody compared with samples without e . of positive serum samples, ( %) samples showed completely inhibition of infectivity as detected by rt-pcr. conclusion: in house produced e antibody, blocks binding and entry of hcv virion infection to target cells suggesting the involvement of this epitope in virus binding and entry. isolation of these antibodies that block virus binding and entry will be useful in providing potential therapeutic reagents and for vaccine development. tumor necrosis factor beta (tnf) is a pleiotropic cytokine mediating its activity through the same receptors as the structurally related tnf␣. shortening of the n-terminal part has been reported to enhance its cytotoxic activity, with the explanation that removal of the flexible n-terminus reduces steric interferences in the receptor binding process. for studies of relationship between the n-terminal protein structure and physicochemical properties, three different forms mettnf, his tnf and n tnf were expressed in e. coli. high solubility of n tnf was expected, however, both analogs his tnf and n tnf were predominantly obtained in the form of inclusion bodies (ibs). on the other hand, mettnf was equally distributed between the soluble and insoluble fraction. most probably, the composition of the n-terminal part, such as the exposure of hydrophobic residues in the case of n tnf, or a mildly hydrophobic stretch of seven histidines appended to the natural hydrophobic n-terminus in the case of his tnf, lead to incorrect folding and force aggregate formation. solubilization of ibs was performed under native and denaturing conditions using various concentrations of nls, urea and gndhcl. mettnf ibs were easily dissolved with . % nls, while his tnf and n tnf demanded denaturing conditions. structural differences in the nterminal part of various tnf proteins were also reflected in protein refolding characteristics and chromatographic behavior. dilution, ultrafiltration and dialysis were used for refolding, and imac was chosen as the main chromatographic step. our results suggest that not only the length of the n-terminal part of tnf but also the composition and exposure of certain amino acid residues affect its physicochemical properties. enzymatic modification of sphingomyelin long zhang, lars hellgren, xuebing xu biocentrum-dtu. e-mail: lz@biocentrum.dtu.dk (l. zhang) due to its major role in maintaining the water-retaining properties of the epidermis, ceramide is of great commercial potential in cosmetic and pharmaceuticals such as hair and skin care products. currently, chemical synthesis of ceramide is a costly process, and developments of alternative cost-efficient, high yield production methods are of great interest. in the present study, the potential of producing ceramide through enzymatic hydrolysis of sphingomyelin (sm) have been studied. sm is a ubiquitous membrane-lipid and rich in dairy products or by-products. in present study, we have optimized the production of ceramide from sm using phospholipase c from clostridium perfringens. water and enzyme amount had the biggest influence on sm hydrolysis in the system. botulinum neurotoxins constitute a family of bacterial toxins for botulism syndrome in human. the toxins bind with high affinity to nerve cells where they cause a complete inhibition and release of neurotransmitters and thereby produce flaccid paralysis. in this work we have reported isolation of the binding domain of type e neurotoxin by pcr and expressed in a proper expression vector. the output of this investigation can be used as a tool to study the mechanism of binding of holotoxins and also can be useful to study the antibody production against botulism syndrome. the synaptobrevin (vamp ) a protein which play a key role in the fusion and exocytosis of the vesicle of mammalian nerves terminals this protein is substrate different serotypes of botulinum neurotoxins. light chain of clostridium botulinum type b, d, f and g cleave end of neurons. due to intraction of clostridium botulinum neurotoxin with vamp , this protein can be used as one of the toolsin the detection of poisings cause by this bacteria in the clinical laboratory using the enzyme with proof reading activity the above gene amplified by pcr technique for the production of the recombinant protein, the prokaryotic expression vectors (pet system) was used. a recombinant protein developed on poly acrylamide gel analyzed by western blotting and eliza. most children with down syndrome (ds) are born to younger mothers (< years). recent reports linking down syndrome (ds) to maternal polymorphisms at the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (mthfr) gene locus have generated great interest among investigators in the field. in this study, forty mothers with their affected outcomes and control mothers were included. all mothers were subjected to complete medical and nutritional history with special emphasis on folate intake through food or oral supplementation. estimation of blood homocysteine level was done. also we examined the two polymorphisms in genes encoding the folate metabolizing enzyme methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (mthfr), namely, c > t and a > c. folic acid intake from food and from vitamin supplements was significantly low (below the recommended daily allowance) in the group of mothers with ds children compared to control mothers (p < . ) using student t-test. blood homocysteine was normal in both control and ds mothers. the prevalence of the two polymorphisms, namely, c > t and a > c in mothers of ds children (case mothers) (n = ) was compared with controls (n = ). frequencies of mthfr genotypes (cc, ct, and tt) at position demonstrated no difference between the case and control groups. genotype frequencies of mthfr at position a (aa, ac, and cc) were different among the case and control mothers. we here report the first study on a possible relation between ds with mthfr a > c genotypes in egypt. our results showed that mthfr a > c polymorphism is a remarkable genetic entity among egyptian females with d.s. children. sufficient folate intake and supplementation is an important preventive strategy in overcoming the risk of nondisjunction. homologous recombination (hr) is the mechanism that permits the creation of genetically engineered strains through gene targeting. in order to further develop gene targeting techniques, notably for higher eukaryotes such as filamentous fungi, it is of crucial importance to fully understand the molecular mechanisms behind mitotic hr. in saccharomyces cerevisiae, a dna double strand break (dsb) is an essential intermediate in meiotic hr. however, as hr occurs at a low rate in mitotic cells, it has been difficult to determine the nature of the event(s) that triggers it. rad is a key protein involved in hr and is evolutionarily conserved from yeast to human. to shed light on the molecular events in hr, we have generated a large collection of defined rad mutant strains in the yeast s.cerevisiae. a screen of these mutants led to the identification of strains that fail to repair dna dsbs, yet are proficient for homologous recombination. this result strongly suggests that dsbs may not be the major cause of spontaneous mitotic hr and gives new perspectives in respect to novel potential gene targeting substrates. we have analyzed these separation of function mutants in a variety of new assays to obtain a more detailed understanding of their controversial phenotype. our latest results will be presented. the outcome of interferone plus ribavirine treatment of hepatitis c virus (hcv) genotype is unfortunately poor. development of alternative therapy for this genotype is of a paramount importance. inhibition of hcv gene expression in vitro by the use of antisense phosphorothioate oligodeoxynucleotides (s-odn) against internal ribosomal entry site (ires) elements were associated with favorable results. to assess s-odn activity, previous studies utilized viral subgenomic or full cdna fragments linked to reporter genes and transfected into adhered cells or in a cell free system. in the present study we utilized hepg cells infected with native hcv rna of genotype . the culture system presented herein was shown to support hcv replication on the following bases ( ) consistent detection of both plus and minus rna strands for weeks in cells and in fresh culture supernatent, ( ) ability of supernatent to infect naive hepg cells ( ) consistent expression of core and e envelope proteins in infected cells throughout the week culture. s-odns against aug translation start site (s-odn- , nt - ) of the viral polyprotein precursor and stem loop iiid within the ires region (s-odn , nt - ) were added to infected cells. intracellular viral replication was monitored by nested rt-pcr of plus and minus strands. the results of these experiments demonstrated that intracellular replication of hcv genotype was completely arrested after h in culture using either s-odn molecule (with more efficacy of s-odn than s-odn ) at concentrations as low as m. the inhibitory effect of s-odn appeared to be specific to hcv replication since equal levels of human glyceralehyde -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh) gene expression were noted pre and post supplementation of s-odns. in conclusion, the present study provides evidence antisense phosphorothioate oligonucleotides have potent inhibitory effect on genomic replication of hcv genotype , the most common type in egypt. a sensitive and specific pcr-elisa was developed to detect shigella dysentery in food. the assay was based on the incorporation of degoxigenin-labeled dutp and a biotin-labeled primer specific for shiga toxin genes during pcr amplification. the labeled pcr product were bound to streptoavidin-coated wells of a microtiter plat and detected by an elisa. the elisa detecting system was able to increase the sensitivity of the pcr assay by up to -fold, compared with a conventional gel electrophoresis. the detection limit of the pcr-elisa was . - cfu dependent upon shigella dysentery serotypes and genotypes of shigatoxin. the entire procedure took about h. isolation, cloning, expression and purification of snap- as a substrate of botulinum neurotoxin type a and e m.l. mossavi , f. ebrahimi , j. amani * , h. basiry , z. ahmadi : department of biology, faculty of science, imam hussein university, tehran, iran; department of biology, faculty of medicine, bageatallah university, tehran, iran. e-mail: kpjamani@ihu.ac.ir (j. amani) clostridial neurotoxin inhibit neurotransmitter relase by selective and specific intracellular proteolysis of synaptosomal associated protein of kda (snap- ); synaptobrevin/vamp- and syntaxin. snap- is one of the components that form docking complex in synaptic ends. this protein is substrate for botulinum neurotoxins type a and e. each of these toxin serotypes specifically cleave snap- in particular position and there by block docking and synaptic vesicle membrane fusion and finally prevent neurotransmitter exocytosis and transition of neurotic signals. in order to use the protein as a substrate for detection of different type of clostridium neurotoxin in vitro test, the protein was produced by recombinant technique. the dna encoding snap- was isolated from rat brain by pcr using the two primer the amplified fragment colonel into expression vector pet a.the expression protein was purified by affinity chromatography. confirm by different method the his tag fusion protein was digested with entrokinase. the present work deals with the preparation of pure alpha- antitrypsin (aat) protein from healthy subjects, which can be used in preparing its corresponding monospecific antibody in albino rabbits. this antibody was found very useful in the immuno-diagnosis of pulmonary emphysema. this study has been also concerned with the biochemical changes associated with aat deficiency in pulmonary diseases. to fulfill this work, a group of healthy blood donors was selected for separation of pure aat antigen from blood. the pure aat was used for the preparation of anti-aat, the purity and potency of antibody was checked by titration methods. the biochemical changes were studied in thirty subjects clinically divided into three groups including, control, heavy cigarette smokers with pulmonary emphysema, and non-smoking subjects with pulmonary emphysema. the activity of elastase and hydroxyproline (hp) level as a marker of elastin and collagen breakdown were assayed in bronchoalveolar lavage (bal) fluid. the activity of aat and to inhibit proteases as represented by tryptic inhibitory capacity (tic) was evaluated. serum ceruloplasmin, transferrin and iga level as well as thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (tbars) were estimated in all groups. our data revealed that aat and its tic showed very highly significant decreased levels in all patients with emphysema as compared to control, while the elastase activity and hp level in bal fluid were significantly increased in these patients. serum tbars was significantly increased in such patients associated with increasing level of both ceruloplasmin and transferrin. while, serum iga was significantly increased. furthermore, the biochemical changes were markedly changed in smokers with emphysema than non-smoking subjects. in conclusion, the preparation of anti-aat on the local level is very important where less expensive and less time consuming and can be useful in immuno-diagnosis and prognosis of pulmonary diseases. a new method combined with boosting and projective adaptive resonance theory for analysis of gene expression data from cancer patients hiro takahashi, yasuyuki murase, hiroyuki honda department of biotechnology, school of engineering, nagoya university, nagoya - , japan. e-mail: h d@mbox.nagoyau.ac.jp (h. takahashi) an optimal and individualized treatment protocol based on accurate diagnosis is urgently required for the adequate treatment of patients. for this purpose, it is important to develop that a sophisticated algorithm that can manage large amount of data, such as gene expression data from dna microarray, for optimal and individualized diagnosis. in our previous study, we developed the projective adaptive resonance theory (part) as a gene filtering method and boosted fuzzy classifier with sweep operator (bfcs) as a modeling method. in the present study, we applied the combination of part and bfcs (part-bfcs method) to microarray data of brain tumor (central nervous system tumor) obtained from the website. the method enabled the selection of important genes related to the prognosis of the tumor, i.e., sensitivity for combined therapy with surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy mainly with vincristine, cisplatin, and cytoxan. the constructed model showed about % higher accuracy than that of the conventional method. genomic signal analysis of hiv variability based on rt gene p.d. cristea, rodica tuduce d. otelea biomedical engineering center, university "politehnica" of bucharest, romania. e-mail: pcristea@dsp.pub.ro (p.d. cristea) dna sequences genotyped from clade f hiv- isolates from romanian patients in the laboratory of the national institute of infectious diseases "matei bals", bucharest, romania, have been studied. the symbolic sequences have been converted into digital genomic signals by using a complex quadrantal representation of the nucleotides described earlier. the cumulated phase and unwrapped phase of a complex genomic signal reflect the statistical distribution of bases and base-pairs, respectively. independent component analysis of the genomic signals has been used to characterize the variability of the f subtype hiv strains isolated in romania. the sequenced segment is of (about) base pairs, approximately aligning with the standard sequence of hiv- (accession nc in genbank) over the interval - bp. this segment, which is currently used for the standard identification and assessment of hiv- strains, comprises the protease (pr) gene and two thirds of the reverse transcriptase (rt) gene. only results referring to the analysis of the rt gene region are presented here and used for extracting features of virion isolates and for establishing phylogenetic trees of the studied strains. the analyzed rt encoding segment has the length bp and is located in the second interval ( - bp) of the analyzed dna segment, respectively along the - bp region of nc . taking into account the mutations identified in these sequences, the samples were classified in three groups from the point of view of their resistance to current antiretroviral compounds: sensitive, resistant and multiresistant. the paper presents results for the isolates in which mutations leading to multiple drug resistance have been identified. over expression of secb protein in e. coli enhances the periplasmic expression of human growth hormone m. ghafari , , a. zomorodipour : islamic azad university of jahrom, tehran, iran; national institute for genet eng and biotechnol., tehran, iran. email: maryamghafari @yahoo.com (m. ghafari) among several proteins involved in the secretion pathway of proteins in e. coli, secb plays a key-important role in solubilization of preproteins before processing. in order to increase processing of a human growth hormone precursor (pelb::hgh) which appeared to have problem in processing efficiency, as a possible solution a regulated co-expression of a secb gene was considered. in this regard, we designed an arabinose-regulated secb expressing plasmid compatible with an iptg/lactose-regulated pelb::hgh expressing plasmid. for the construction of the secb expressing plasmid the origin of replication and antibiotic resistant gene (amp) of a pbad vector was replaced by a p a-ori and a kanamycin resistant gene, respectively. the expression and processing of pelb::hgh preprotein in the two-plasmid containing bacteria in a secb over-expression state was compared to that of the pelb::hgh expression in normal bacteria. although a decline in total expression level of hgh during the overexpression of secb was observable, probably due to presence of two different expressing plasmids, but both the processing efficiency of pelb::hgh and the transport of mature protein into the periplasmic space was enhanced during prolonged arabinose induction. current diagnostics and therapeutics for cat allergy are based on cat epithelial extracts. natural allergen extracts contain a mixture of allergenic and non-allergenic components that are difficult to standardize. recombinant allergens can improve diagnosis and de-sensitization against single component. major cat allergen is a heterodimer composed of disulfide linked . and . kda polypeptide chains. both chains of feldi protein were obtained in e.coli system. purification of recombinant proteins was performed in denaturing conditions using immobilized metal affinity chromatography specific for proteins with histidine tag. from ml culture approximately mg protein for feldi chain and mg of feldi chain were obtained. after purification histidine tag was removed by hydrolysis with thrombin. immunological activity of feldi against serum of patients allergic to cat was narrowed to subgroup of patients allergic to feldi protein by surface plasmon resonance. immunological activity of each chain and renatured heterodimer was also tested using immunoprecipitation techniques against serum of population group. subdoligranulum variabile -a novel member of the human gut micro flora with a high prevalence kim holmstrøm, trine møller bioneer a/s, hørsholm, dk- , denmark in we isolated and cultured for the first time a bacterium from a human fecal sample representing a hitherto unknown member of the clostridium leptum rrna supra generic cluster. the c. leptum rrna supra generic cluster represents one of the major phylogenetic lineages within the human gut microbiota, and is characterized by having only a small proportion of its members actually identified by cultivation compared to the estimated numbers of bacteria contained in this group from culture-independent gut flora analyses. s. variabile is an obligate anaerobe gram negative bacterium with a characteristic pleiomorphic coccoid-droplet-like cellular morphology. its closest previously cultivated relative based on a s rdna phylogenetic analysis is faecalibacterium prausnitzii, a rod-shaped and therefore easily distinguishable gram negative bacterium present in high numbers in the human fecal micro flora. based on s rdna sequence we designed a s. variabile specific oligonucleotide probe for use in fish analysis to estimate the prevalence of this "new" bacterium in fecal samples collected from healthy human beings. interestingly, we observed a high proportion of s. variabile present in all tested samples, and in some instances we observed a higher prevalence than the more well-known group of bifidobacteria equally estimated by fish analysis. documentation of these results will be presented. several species of sea cucumbers, long an incumbent of traditional medicines were selected as the source of animal based antibiotic compounds. swabs of the inner surface and coelomic fluid (inner fluid) samples from sea cucumber (holothuria atra jaeger) were taken. thirty strains of bacteria were isolated. these strains were grown in different antibiotic production media. nine human pathogenic bacterial species were used as test agents and they are, k. pneumoniae, mrsa, m. luteus, s. thyphimurium, s. epidermitis, s. saprophyticus, b. subtillis, p. aeruginosa and s. pyogenes; only four bacterial strains showed mild antibiotic activity against s. pyogenes and s. thyphimurium. similar testing on two other species, h. scabra and s. variegatus will be carried out. different media, especially antibiotic production enrichment media will also be used. characterization will be done upon obtaining an antibiotic compound, which shows moderate to high activity against at least one of the nine human pathogens used. for plant based medicines, three rhizomes, "cekor," "jerangau" and "bonglai" were analyzed. solvent extraction using ethanol, methanol and acetone was carried out, at a concentration of - mg per ml solvent. the filtrates were used for the antibiotic testing stage. all the three plant species showed moderate antibiotic activity against m. luteus, s. epidermitis, s. pyogenes and s. saprophyticus. interestingly, the antibiotic activity increased when combinations of the herbal extracts were used. cell-based therapy continues to be a promising avenue for the treatment of duchenne muscular dystrophy, an x-linked skeletal muscle-wasting disease. recently, we have demonstrated that freshly isolated myogenic progenitors contained within the adult skeletal muscle side population (sp) can engraft into dystrophic fibers of non-irradiated mdx cv mice after intravenous transplantation. engraftment rates, however, have not been therapeutically significant, achieving at most % of skeletal muscle myofibers expressing protein from donor-derived nuclei. to improve the engraftment of transplanted myogenic progenitors, an intra-arterial delivery method was adapted from a previous procedure. cultured, lentivirus transduced skeletal muscle sp cells were transplanted into the femoral artery of non-injured mdx cv mice. based on the expression of microdystrophin and gfp transgenes in host muscle, sections of the recipient muscles exhibited % to % of skeletal muscle fibers expressing donor-derived transgenes. further, donor muscle sp cells, which did not express any myogenic markers prior to transplant, express the satellite cell transcription factor pax and the musclespecific intermediate filament desmin after extravasation into host muscle. the expression of these muscle-specific markers indicates that progenitors within the side population can differentiate along a myogenic lineage after intra-arterial transplantation and extravasation into host muscle. given that femoral artery catheterization is a common, safe clinical procedure and that the transplantation of cultured adult muscle progenitor cells has proven to be safe in mice, our data may represent a step towards the improvement of cell-based therapies for dmd and other myogenic disorders. metabolic engineering design of an extracellular hgh synthesis system birgül Şentürk , pınar Ç alık , güzide Ç alık , tunçer h.Özdamar : bre lab, department of chemical engng, ankara university, ankara, turkey; iblab, department of chemical engineering, metu, ankara, turkey. e-mail: ozdamar@eng.ankara.edu.tr (t.h.Özdamar) metabolic engineering design of an extracellular human growth hormone (hgh) synthesis system is based on cloning the dna encoding human therapeutic protein together with the signal dna sequence of an extracellular enzyme gene into a host-vector system. in this context, extracellular protease (subc) signal dna sequence, i.e. pre-signal dna sequence, was fused into the frame in front of hgh mature dna sequence, by the use of four primers designed using pcr-based gene splicing by overlap extension method. b. licheniformis chromosomal dna and plasmid carrying hgh cdna were used as templates in pcrs, respectively, for the amplification of the subc signal dna sequence and hgh mature peptide sequence. for the fusion of two target genes, i.e. mature peptide sequence of hgh and, signal dna sequences were amplified separately by pcrs. the primers used at the ends to be joined were designed as complementary to one another by including nucleotides at their ends that are complementary to portion of the other primer. these products were mixed in the next pcr reaction, where one strand from each fragment contains the overlap sequence at end. extension of this overlap by dna polymerase has yielded the recombinant hybrid-gene; and hybrid-gene serve as template for the continuation of reactions for the increase of the concentration in the microreactors. the hybrid gene fragment was first cloned into puc , and then sub-cloned to pmk e.coli-bacillus shuttle plasmid. thus, a new expression vector with high stability and high copy-number was obtained and transferred into host b. subtilis (spo − ). the metabolic flux distributions calculated by the mass balance based stoichiometric model based on the proposed metabolic reaction network for r-b.subtilis were determined by using time profiles of the substrate, dry-cell, hgh, amino acids and organic acids concentrations as the constraints. on the basis of the intracellular bioreaction rates and the interactions with the bioreactor operation parameters, an in-depth insight will be provided for further metabolic engineering design for the extracellular hgh production in r-b.subtilis. medicines based on polypeptides consisting of and more amino acid residues are widely spread in pharmaceutical market at the present time. practically all polypeptide medicines known are prepared by general chemical synthesis that caused high cost of their production. that's why biotechnological way of polypeptide medicines preparation using recombinant gene expression in bacteria seems to be promising. during our work we design hybrid construction allowing solving a problem of specific cleavage of target polypeptide from the hybrid protein using system of protein splicing from new england biolabs. in case of thymosin ␣ production impac system (intein mediated purification with affinity chitin-binding tag) has been used, where the modified sce vma from s. cerevisiae has been applied as intein. in contrast to other systems, impact allows the preparation of target protein without using of serine protease and other factors that may cleave the hybrid protein. in the presence of thiol reagents, such as dithiothreitol, mercaptoethanol, or cystein the hybrid protein can be site-specifically cleaved to give intein, the target protein and small fragment of nextein. using of this system does not allow to obtain the target protein with ser, cys or thr on n-terminal of protein, because in those cases target protein and n-extein ligation product will be formed. ser is n-terminal amino-acid in thymosin ␣ . it was recently found that some metal ions essentially affect the splicing. we tried to use zncl and we have found that, in case of intein-thymosin ␣ , the maximal yield of target polypeptide and the minimal yield of splicing products are observed in the absence of dithithreitol and in the presence of . - mm zinc chloride in buffers on all stages of thymosin ␣ isolation. the structure of recombinant thymosin ␣ of human was confirmed by the determination of n-and c-terminal amino-acid sequences and by maldi tof mass-spectrometry. mature embryos of five t. aestivum and five t. durum cultivars formed embryogenic callus on two different media. embryos were removed from surface sterilised seeds and placed with the scutellum upwards on a solid agar medium containing the inorganic components of murashige skoog and mg/l , -dichlorophenoxyacetic acid ( , -d) or mg/l naphtalenacetic acid (naa). the developed calli and regenerated plants were maintained on , -d or naa free ms medium. wheat plants can be regenerated via two different systems. there were significant differences in percentage of callus induction and regeneration capacity on the different initiation medium. among the t. aestivum cultivars, yakar had the highest regeneration capacity in both induction medium. in t. durum cultivars, kiziltan gave the highest regeneration capacity in ms + , d medium and yilmaz gave the highest regeneration capacity in ms + naa medium. a strong genotypic effect on the culture responses was found for both induction medium. tumor necrosis factor beta (tnf) is a pleiotropic cytokine mediating its activity through the same receptors as the structurally related tnf␣. shortening of the n-terminal part has been reported to enhance its cytotoxic activity, with the explanation that removal of the flexible n-terminus reduces steric interferences in the receptor binding process. for studies of relationship between the n-terminal protein structure and physicochemical properties, three different forms mettnf, his tnf and n tnf were expressed in e. coli. high solubility of n tnf was expected, however, both analogs his tnf and n tnf were predominantly obtained in the form of inclusion bodies (ibs). on the other hand, mettnf was equally distributed between the soluble and insoluble fraction. most probably, the composition of the n-terminal part, such as the exposure of hydrophobic residues in the case of n tnf, or a mildly hydrophobic stretch of seven histidines appended to the natural hydrophobic n-terminus in the case of his tnf, lead to incorrect folding and force aggregate formation. solubilization of ibs was performed under native and denaturing conditions using various concentrations of nls, urea and gndhcl. mettnf ibs were easily dissolved with . % nls, while his tnf and n tnf demanded denaturing conditions. structural differences in the nterminal part of various tnf proteins were also reflected in protein refolding characteristics and chromatographic behavior. dilution, ultrafiltration and dialysis were used for refolding, and imac was chosen as the main chromatographic step. our results suggest that not only the length of the n-terminal part of tnf but also the composition and exposure of certain amino acid residues affect its physicochemical properties. high level expression of recombinant growth hormones in e.coli faces common problems such as protein aggregation and inclusion body formation. discussions are raised whether it is more beneficial to obtain soluble protein but to loose expression rates. here we describe an experiment based on the hypothesis that slower expression should result in at least partially soluble recombinant protein. experiments were performed on bovine, chicken and mink growth hormones. expression rate was controlled externally by adjusting cultivation temperature, media, inducer amount, and both induction and cultivation times. another approach to the problem was performed through genetic manipulation. we changed strong t promoter to e. coli promoter consensus sequence thus reducing expression rate. recombinant growth hormone was still found to form aggregates, even when expressed at extremely low levelsseveral ( - ) percent of total intracellular protein. we developed optimization scheme of insoluble protein production and showed that expression rate minimization is not influencing recombinant growth hormone solubility in vivo thus suggesting an idea of sequence specific aggregation. to optimize the recombinant protein production in small-scale shake-flask system and high cell density fermentation, new tools have been developed at our laboratory which helps to get knowledge about the physiological state of the cell culture. these tools include (i) a quantitative monitoring system for cellular mrnas based on a sandwich hybridization technique, and (ii) a wireless online monitoring tool (senbit), applicable for standard sensors such as ph, po and temperature for the continuous data collection from shake flasks. the senbit system is a new tool supplying valuable information for the optimisation of the expression of recombinant genes in shake flasks and allowing conclusions towards the reproducibility of shake flask cultures. the presentation will focus on use of the sensitive sandwich hybridization technology for the quantitative analysis of process relevant marker genes in different kind of microbial cell cultures with a focus on the production of recombinant proteins. samples from shake flask cultures and high cell density fed-batch fermentations of the yeast pichia patoris, have been analysed. additionally the mrna analysis was combined with the application of the senbit wireless system to study the production of a recombinant protein in shake-flask cultures of p. pastoris. aside from p. pastoris, mrna sandwich hybridization also was used to monitor product expression in fed-batch fermentation of e. coli for the production of a protein with two subunits by sequential induction. quantitative rna analysis as a tool for optimization of tetrameric collagen prolyl -hydroxylase production in e. coli a. neubauer , m. bollok , j. myllyharju , p. collagen prolyl -hydroxylase (p h) involved in the biosynthesis of collagens is an ␣  tetramer. recombinant expression of p h in e. coli was described recently . the construct for cytoplasmic expression contains the genes of both subunits in one plasmid under control of different promoters. the ␣ subunit forms inactive aggregates, when expressed separately. in mammalian cells the  subunit is available in large excess and keeps the ␣ subunit in a soluble active form. to mimic this in the bacterial system, we induced both genes sequentially. after induction of the  subunit with iptg, expression of the ␣ subunit was initiated with anhydrotetracycline. here we use the analysis of the product mrnas with a bead based sandwich hybridisation assay (sha) (rautio et al., ) for optimization of the fermentation procedure. a high p h activity was obtained if a high mrna level of the ␣ subunit could be maintained over a longer time. the obtained results illustrate the importance of the second induction for a high level expression of the p h tetramer. the cells need to be in a "healthy state" with low metabolic load to react efficiently to the second induction. the data illustrate the optimization of a fermentation process by monitoring mrna levels which is of general interest for optimization of products which are difficult to detect. cell-based therapy continues to be a promising avenue for the treatment of duchenne muscular dystrophy, an x-linked skeletal muscle-wasting disease. recently, we have demonstrated that freshly isolated myogenic progenitors contained within the adult skeletal muscle side population (sp) can engraft into dystrophic fibers of non-irradiated mdx cv mice after intravenous transplantation. engraftment rates, however, have not been therapeutically significant, achieving at most % of skeletal muscle myofibers expressing protein from donor-derived nuclei. to improve the engraftment of transplanted myogenic progenitors, an intra-arterial delivery method was adapted from a previous procedure. cultured, lentivirus transduced skeletal muscle sp cells were transplanted into the femoral artery of non-injured mdx cv mice. based on the expression of microdystrophin and gfp transgenes in host muscle, sections of the recipient muscles exhibited - % of skeletal muscle fibers expressing donor-derived transgenes. further, donor muscle sp cells, which did not express any myogenic markers prior to transplant, express the satellite cell transcription factor pax and the muscle-specific intermediate filament desmin after extravasation into host muscle. the expression of these muscle-specific markers indicates that progenitors within the side population can differentiate along a myogenic lineage after intra-arterial transplantation and extravasation into host muscle. given that femoral artery catheterization is a common, safe clinical procedure and that the transplantation of cultured adult muscle progenitor cells has proven to be safe in mice, our data may represent a step towards the improvement of cell-based therapies for dmd and other myogenic disorders. collagen and its derived product gelatin are attractive mammalian proteins to be used as model for the production of complex heterologous proteins in plants. the availability of a recombinant product will provide a safer, more homogeneous product than the current animal-derived material. the aim of the project is to investigate the feasibility of a production system for the accumulation of recombinant collagen for conversion to gelatin using barley. the -end of the cocksfoot mottle virus (cfmv; genus sobemovirus) genomic rna sequence, called cfmv -element, has been shown to enhance recombinant protein synthesis in barley (wo / , mäkinen et al., ) . the -element will be used to study whether accumulation levels of complex mammalian proteins can be further increased, using collagen as a model that will serve as basis for exploring the expression of other complex proteins. this system can be study the production of barley-derived recombinant collagen for conversion to gelatin. classical swine fever virus (csfv) is an animal pestivirus which can be used as a surrogate model to elucidate the role of envelope glycoproteins of closely related human hepatitis c virus (hcv). the necessity to use the surrogate models for hcv is due to the fact that this virus cannot be grown in vitro cultures. csfv genome codes for three major antigenic glycoproteins which are located in the same cluster of genes; they are designated as e and e (e rns ) and e . glycoproteins form heterodimeric and homodimeric complexes on the external part of viral particles. it is generally accepted that envelope glycoproteins play a major role in the initial stages of viral infection both for csfv and hcv. formation of complexes is needed to effectively infect host cells. we have investigated the formation of glycoprotein dimers by immunoperoxidase monolayer assay and by immunoblotting (western blotting). immunoblotting is a very useful technique in these studies because the complexes are formed via cysteine-cysteine disulphide bonds and they are retained during sds-page under non-reducing conditions. by modifying the glycoprotein genes and by arresting n-glycosylation of e and e we have investigated which factors influence the formation of complexes. it has been found that some glycosylation inhibitors which act at the early stages of glycan chain processing influence, not only glycosylation, but also the stability of e protein, effectively inhibiting the formation of glycoprotein complexes and the yield of the virus. these inhibitors are potential agents for arresting the multiplication and spread of csfv, and its relative -human hcv. recombinant proteins have been produced in a variety of heterologous protein expression systems. eukaryotic unicellular algae have distinct advantages, e.g. it can synthesize complex protein that requires post-translational modification. furthermore, microalgae can be grown in confined environment and thus prevents leakage of genes to the environment. our group has developed a platform technology for the production of recombinant proteins in red microalga porphyridium sp. we have constructed algal transformation plasmid vectors containing a camv s promoter and polya signal site. a streptoalloteichus hindustanus bleomycin-resistant gene was used as the selective marker. we have expressed ovalbumin and hepatitis-b surface antigen (hbsag) as model proteins. transformation was carried out by agitating algal cells and vector dna with glass bead. transgenic lines were selected by growing algal cells on agar plate containing g/ml zeocin. positive transgenic lines were selected by screening the colonies by pcr and confirmed by dna sequencing. expression of ovalbumin and hbsag protein was examined by western blot analysis. ovalbumin was found to be expressed inside the algal cells while small hbsag was secreted into the medium due to presence of signal peptide. these findings indicate that red microalgae are capable of producing heterologous proteins. life-material exhibition as ethical interpretation chang shih-lung biotechnology industry study center, taiwan institute of economic research, taipei , taiwan. email: schang@tier.org.tw in this thesis we aim to explore the medical-related life-material exhibitions within ntu hospital-the humanity building, and taipei mackay hospital-the historical showroom as abecedarian clues to understand the burgeoning phenomenon-medical museums in taiwan. following these clues, we treat the whole context of medical museums, which transform values through situational construction, as the background to interpret the ethical implications of group val-ues that are transformed in the medical profession. in this thesis, we see medical museums, as the social prescription transforming medical profession, format the ritual context of situation ethics with the cultural construction of life-material. multi-disciplinary interactions and visiting itinerary can be transferred to the exploring horizon of research approach through description and interpretation. among them, we observe that humanistic elements have become essential equipment (or mat'eriel) of medical profession. though humanistic equipment (or mat'eriel) has its bottleneck in the museum situation, it can also unblock new possibilities for museum exhibitions, ethical practice or life ethics. as part of a wide research program aimed at developing new antitumoral agents, we present herein a series of stereoisomeric derivatives of fused tetrahydrofuranes (fthf) substituted with diverse protecting groups either at the primary or secondary hydroxyl groups. unprotected derivatives were also synthesised to investigate the influence of substituents on the in vitro activity of fthf. data on the synthesis, chemosensitivity and apoptosis induction by this series of fthf will be correlated to substitution pattern, stereochemistry and protecting groups, as an aid to the rational design of novel antitumour drugs. establishment of in vitro test systems for pulmonary edema resorption by peptide drug candidates dominik geiger, aswin mangerich, rudolf lucas, klaus p. schäfer, inge mühldorfer department of biotechnology, altana pharma ag, konstanz, germany; imc university of applied sciences, krems, austria tnf-␣ was found to up-regulate the rate of lung liquid clearance (llc) in several animal models by the activity of its lectin-like tip domain. this activity can be mimicked by a circular peptide designated tip. tip was shown to induce llc and consequently pulmonary edema resorption in different animal models. in order to study the mechanism of action of tip, we established two in vitro test systems for edema resorption with the human lung epithelial cell line calu- : ( ) the ability of calu- cells for spontaneous dome formation within confluent monolayers was utilized for quantitative examination of tip's activity on active transepithelial fluid transport ("dome assay"). ( ) the effects of tip on bioelectrical properties of polarized cell monolayers were studied by using the transepithelial electrical resistance (teer) technology ("teer assay"). dome assay experiments confirmed that dome formation is a sodium dependent process and that tip is able to increase this process. teer assay experiments proofed that tip acts in a polarized and dose dependent manner. in conclusion, there is strong evidence that the dome and the teer assays are suitable systems for in vitro activity testing of tip and other anti-edema peptide drug candidates and are useful for studies on their mechanism of action. increasing safety concerns in gene therapy result in more stringent regulatory requirements. those cover the complete process chain of cell banking, fermentation, and purification. a wide range of applications for pdna requires gram to kilogram amounts for clinical trials and market supply. economic, productive and robust processes are a prerequisite for low cost of goods (cogs). therefore manufacturer of biopharmaceuticals need to address these considerations by developing new production processes meeting the new standards. boehringer ingelheim austria developed a novel pdna production process suitable for large-scale cgmp production. the process is based on e. coli fermentation. the process contains no components from animal origin. the optimized fermentation process yields up to g pdna/l fermentation volume. for isolation of pdna from e. coli alkaline lysis in glass bottles or stirred tanks is commonly used. cell wall structure is destroyed by a combination of alkaline ph and detergents. in our process alkaline lysis is operated in a closed, continuous system directly connected to clarification without using enzymes. we developed a scalable process for pdna purification based on different chromatographic principles. the capture step is carried out by hydrophobic interaction chromatography followed by anion exchange chromatography as intermediate step. final polishing is carried out by conventional size exclusion chromatography in a group separation mode providing also buffer exchange and desalting for the final formulation. the process results in a pdna drug substance of highest quality containing a low level of impurities (genomic dna, rna, proteins endotoxines) suitable for therapeutic applications. depending on the conditions during fermentation and the used host homogeneities of greater than % or even % are possible, while a high over all yield can be achieved (∼ %). during the development monolithic chromatography supports (cim ® ) were compared with conventional resins and evaluated as potential alternatives. the complete process is monitored by a set of analysis covering cell banking to final purification. new sensitive methods based on hpce, hpiex and fluorometric measurement were developed. whereas many natural amino acids are currently produced by very cost efficient biological processes, the manufacture of methionine is still performed by traditional chemical synthesis. this was mainly due to the poor performances of the currently available producing strains that inhibited the development and commercialization of a biological process to l-methionine. metabolic explorer has recently reinvestigated and developed an efficient biological process that employs an engineered microorganism and utilizes a renewable starting material (corn sugar) as its feedstock and converts glucose into l-methionine. we will describe (a) the general scheme for the engineering of the host organisms and (b) the general approach to maximize carbon and reducing equivalent throughput to l-methionine. to highlight this effort, we will present the global approach developed to improve the process combining metabolic flux analysis, traditional protein biochemistry, molecular biology and fermentation optimisation. saccharomyces cerevisiae is an established 'work horse' of the fermentation industry and modern biotechnology has led to a spectacular expansion of the range of products that can be produced by this yeast. however, for the large-scale sustainable production of chemicals, it is equally important that the range of carbohydrate feedstocks be expanded. especially relevant in this respect is the ability to consume the pentose sugars d-xylose and l-arabinose, which make up a substantial part of plant carbohydrates. wild-type s. cerevisiae strains cannot metabolise d-xylose, but are capable of slowly metabolising its keto-isomer, d-xylulose. therefore, efficient conversion of d-xylose into d-xylulose has long been a key issue in yeast metabolic engineering. non-saccharomyces yeasts that is capable of growing on d-xylose use two enzymes, xylose reductase and xylitol dehydrogenase for this purpose. while both enzymes have been successfully expressed in s. cerevisiae, this is not always compatible with efficient product formation. for example, in the case of ethanol production, the different cofactor specificities of these two oxidoreductases cause massive byproduct formation. theoretically, introduction of a xylose isomerase, which catalyses the interconversion of xylose and xylulose, might circumvent these problems. however, it is notoriously difficult to express bacterial and archaeal xylose isomerases in s. cerevisiae and, until recently, activities of heterologous xylose isomerases expressed in s. cerevisiae were vanishingly low, at least under physiological conditions. a breakthrough was reached when, in , a xylose isomerase gene from the anaerobic fungus piromyces was expressed in s. cerevisiae. while this led to high activities of xylose isomerase, these were not enough to enable fast growth or product (ethanol) formation. in this presentation, we will discuss how a combination of metabolic and evolutionary engineering led to fast and efficient xylose utilization by engineered saccharomyces cerevisiae strains under aerobic as well as anaerobic conditions. furthermore, we will illustrate how evolutionary approaches can be applied to facilitate the utilization of mixed substrates. hyaluronic acid (ha) is a natural and linear polymer composed of - , -n-acetyl glucosamine and - , -glucuronic acid repeating disaccharide units with a molecular weight (mw) up to mda. it is a major constituent of the extracellular matrices and the synovial fluid. in the last decades, various fields of application including cosmetics, ophthalmology, rheumatology, tissue engineering and drug delivery have been explored, owing to the many important biological functions of ha and its unique physico-chemical properties. however, for some specific applications, the relatively high mw of ha is a limiting factor and the availability of low mw fractions would be highly desired. for food applications, low mw ha has been shown to penetrate the gastrointestinal barrier, thereby increasing the ha bioavailability. moreover, low mw ha fractions are able to re-establish the ha content in the skin and can thus be used in cosmetics as anti-aging and anti-wrinkle agents. finally, low mw ha has shown to prevent oxygen free radical damage in granu-lation tissue during wound healing. a range of methods has been described for the depolymerization of ha to low mw fractions. these techniques involve heat treatment, ultrasonication, uv/gamma irradiation, chemical and enzymatic degradation. we present results on a degradation process of ha originating from bacillus subtilis fermentation into well-defined low mw fractions. the process developed in lab scale is safe, well-controlled and produce low mw ha fractions with narrow polydispersity. moreover, the process is readily up-scalable. the low mw ha fractions are being evaluated in various cosmetic applications. metabolic pathway manipulation for improving the properties and productivity of microorganisms is becoming an established concept. metabolic engineering can be defined as the directed improvement of product formation or cellular properties through the modification of specific biochemical reactions or introduction of new ones with the use of recombinant dna technology. a detailed analysis of the physiological means of the different pathways is needed to be able to introduce modifications aimed to the production of not only important metabolites, but also to understand the fundamentals of cell biology. aimed to produce single compounds, metabolic engineering necessarily includes the modification of the cellular pathway(s) as well as the redirection of the energy toward the production itself. the existing metabolic engineering applications are the culmination of more than two decades of global experience developing processes for the production of fine chemicals, vitamins, nutraceuticals and animal nutritional aids such as amino acids. based on the relative low complexity, the first biotechnological applications have been developed from microorganisms. our laboratory has been engaged in this field since different years. yeasts like saccharomyces cerevisiae, kluyveromyces lactis and zygosaccharomyces bailii have been developed for the production of fine chemicals like lactic and ascorbic acids from d-glucose. in this contribution, we will present the last data obtained. since years amino acid production is in the focus of industrial microbiology. l-glutamate and l-lysine are produced with corynebacterium glutamicum, while escherichia coli is used for l-threonine production. the worldwide market of threonine drastically increases: in the amount of threonine produced worldwide was , t and raised to , t in and , t in . concerning predictions of experts the demand of threonine will rise with a two-digit rate of economic growth within the next few years. meanwhile the prices declined. these conditions enforce very efficient production processes. beside the strain development and an optimised downstream procedure the fermentation process is an important target for productivity improvement. strain development is dependent on detailed knowledge of the production strains. with innovative methods we are able to get a close look inside the cells under different culture conditions. these methods have been called 'omics' in recent literature. knowledge about genome, transcriptome, proteome, phosphoproteome, metabolome and fluxome leads to new ideas for strain improvements. data generated by these methods must be based on clearly defined culture conditions. therefore, highly parallel fermentations have to be performed to generate biological parallel samples. cutting-edge technical equipment is the basic requirement for experiments like this. other requirements are optimised sampling for different analysis, technical parallels of analytical steps and a detailed statistical analysis of data. these procedures guarantee distinction between real data and data noise. integration of all these data to a holistic model of the cell is the challenge for the future. by combination of a new strain, process and downstream improvements the plant productivity was increased drastically. we ended up in an optimized, fast and high yield process to scope challenges worldwide market comes up with. rieping, m., hermann, t. ( ); fermentation process for the preparation of l-threonine; wo/ . ) are potentially quite useful biocatalysts, as they allow for the regioselective and stereoselective hydroxylation of activated as well as non-activated carbon atoms. in addition, the large number of members of the p superfamily exhibits a wide diversity of specificities from which a useful biocatalyst may be selected. from a technical point of view, however, they have significant drawbacks. thus, they usually cannot be produced in large quantities nor recovered or stored without a severe loss in activity. their catalytic activity is mostly quite low, and their operational stability leaves much to be desired. most p enzymes require a complex protein/phospholipid machinery for activity, and the final electron donor in the reaction cascade, usually nadph, does require extensive recycling to arrive at a commercially satisfactory process. recently, the use of bacterial cytochromes as hydroxylation biocatalysts has received considerable attention. some of them are natural fusion proteins, which contain the heme and the reductase domains on a single polypeptide chain. they are catalytically much more active compared to, e.g. cytochromes occurring in human tissue. we thus have set out to further improve the technical applicability of these enzymes, and have centered our activities around several bacterial cytochromes. it proved very useful to apply rational mutagenesis and directed evolution to these enzymes, leading to a surprising compatibility of mutant enzymes with a wide variety of substrates. mechanisms for the limited stability of the enzymes were explored, leading to hybrid enzymes with enhanced stability, and the cofactor problem was alleviated using auxiliary enzymes or mediator-based technologies. as a result, a bioreactor based on microbial cytochromes was built and operated for several days. baeyer-villiger monooxygenases represent useful biocatalytic tools as they can catalyze reactions, which are difficult to achieve using chemical means. however, so far only a limited number of these monooxygenases were available in recombinant form kamerbeek et al. ( ) . using a recently described protein sequence motif fraaije et al. ( ) and the available genome sequence information, we were able to identify and overexpress a number of novel bacterial bvmos. one of the overexpressed bvmos was found to be relatively stable as it originates from thermobifida fusca, which grows at ∼ • c. the enzyme was shown to be active on a broad range of substrates, preferring aromatic ketones fraaije et al. ( ) . the best substrate discovered so far is phenylacetone, hence its name: phenylacetone monooxygenase. we have solved the crystal structure of phenylacetone monooxygenase, which represents the first structure of a bvmo malito et al. ( ) . the crystal structure provides insight into the complex mechanism of catalysis mediated by fadcontaining bvmos. by site-directed mutagenesis we have probed the role of several active-site residues. a crucial role is played by an arginine residue. as phenylacetone monooxygenase shares significant sequence identity (> %) with all known nadph-dependent bvmos, many of the observed structural features seem to be conserved within this class of atypical monooxygenases. by homology modeling using the phenylacetone monooxygenase structure, catalytic properties of other baeyer-villiger monooxygenases can be explained or predicted. screening for fungal baeyer-villiger monooxygenases l. butinar , j. friedrich , v. alphand : laboratory of biotechnology, national institute of chemistry, ljubljana si- , slovenia; groupe biocatalyse et chimie fine cnrs fre , université de la méditerranée, marseille, france the asymmetric form of the baeyer-villiger (bv) oxidation (transformation of ketones into lactones) is an important challenge for organic chemistry since the obtained lactones are valuable building blocks for synthesis of countless biologically active products. to date, enzymatic or microbial bv oxidations appears as more successful than their chemical counter-parts. (ten brink et al.) whereas most active bv monooxygenases are produced by bacteria (among which the well-studied enzyme of acinetobacter calcoaceticus), only a few fungal strains expressing bvmo were described (alphand et al., carnell and willetts) . in order to increase the number of available biocatalysts which perform such an asymmetric biotransformations, a screening of fungi belonging to major groups of zygo-, ascoand basidiomycetes was conducted using bicycloheptenone as testsubstrate. surprisingly, a large number of the tested fungi were able to transform the substrate into one to four different lactone isomers. the yields, the enantio-and regio-selectivity of the reaction depended on the fungal strain. alphand, v., furstoss, r., . j. mol. catal. b , - . carnell, a., willetts, a., . biotechnol. lett. , - . ten brink, g.j., et al., . pyranose oxidase (p ox) is a periplasmic enzyme that widely occurs in basidiomycetes. it catalyses the c- oxidation of several aldopyranoses to the respective -keto derivatives, transferring electrons to molecular oxygen to yield h o . p ox is of interest for carbohydrate conversions, as its reaction products ( -keto sugars) can be attractive intermediates in the production of food ingredients. we cloned the gene encoding p ox, and subsequently amplified a cdna clone by rt-pcr. the cdna was inserted into a bacterial expression vector and successfully expressed in e. coli. properties of the heterologous protein were compared to those of the native enzyme showing that they are essentially identical. both the native as well as the recombinant enzyme were used in biotransformations of sugars. recently, the d-structure of this tetrameric enzyme was elucidated. based on structural information, several enzyme variants containing point mutations were constructed and further characterised. two of these variants (e k and e r) displayed improvements in stability and certain kinetic properties thus making them attractive for biocatalytic applications. lactones are important compounds for the fragrance and flavour industry. right now the production of lactones is dependant on the import of crude materials from tropical countries. in this project, we want to tackle the manufacture of lactones via a biocatalytic route using p monooxygenases. cytochrome p monooxygenases catalyse the oxyfunctionalization of non-activated c-atoms. cyp a from bacillus megaterium, cyp a and cyp a from bacillus subtilis are soluble fusion proteins comprising p monooxygenase and fad/fmn reductase domains in one polypeptide chain. all three enzymes are highly homologous fatty acid hydroxylases. especially, cyp a also known as p bm- is well characterized and shows high activity compared to other p monooxygenases. the aim of the work is to change selectivity but conserve the high activity that is typical for those enzymes. using methods of structure modelling, rational protein design and directed evolution new mutants of these enzymes with changed regioselectivity are obtained. products of conversion with monooxygenases are intermediates in the production of lactones. the interface of biology and materials science has led to new materials with unique structural and functional properties, and new process technologies with the ability to produce, from "bottoms up", a wide range of biomimetic structures. these materials and their designs have broad application as catalysts, sensors, and devices for use in synthesis, cell and tissue engineering, bioanalysis and screening, and nanoelectronics. we have focused on the generation of sugar-based nanostructures, complete with tailored selectivities and biocatalytic activities at the molecular and nanoscales. these include biocatalytically-generated carbohydrate derivatives that selfassemble with high precision to give novel architectures with functional and responsive properties. izumoring: a strategy for total production of rare sugars ken izumori rare sugar research center, kagawa university, kagawa - , japan. e-mail: izumori@ag.kagawa-u.ac.jp we found a new enzyme, d-tagatose -epimerase (dte), that epimerize all ketohexoses at c- position. this epimerase catalyze not only between d-tagatose and d-sorbose, but also d-fructose = dpsicose, l-sorbose = l-tagatose, and l-psicose = l-fructose. this new enzyme offered us a useful key tool to connect all ketohexoses using hexitols as intermediates. the figure shows that all eight ketohexoses can be connected with dte and polyol dehydrogenases (pdh) in a ring. using this ring, we can easily find the pathway to transfer d-fructose to d-tagatose via d-psicose using dte and pdh. various aldose isomerases transform ketohexoses to the corresponding aldohexoses. so, we can connect all aldohexoses with ketohexoses using the enzyme. finally, all hexoses, ketohexoses, hexitols and aldohexoses are connected using enzyme reactions in a ring structure (not shown). this kind of strategy is effective also on transformation of tetroses and pentoses. now, we can produce all monosaccharides; tetroses, pentoses and hexoses by enzyme reac-tions. the bioproduction strategy of all rare sugars (monosaccharides that are rare in nature) is illustrated using ring form structures named as izumoring. we have already succeeded to produce d-psicose in large scale and are now in the progress of mass production of various rare sugars from natural and cheap sugars using izumoring. bioprocess development for chiral intermediates christian wandrey institute of biotechnology, forschungszentrum jülich gmbh, jülich d- , germany chiral alcohols, diols, amino alcohols and chiral acids (e.g. hydroxy acids and amino acids) play an important role in pharma and agro synthesis. in the past such chiral intermediates were obtained by racemic resolution via chiral reductions using prochiral precursors. here the problem of cofactor regeneration arises. this problem could be solved by enzyme-coupled or substrate-coupled cofactor regeneration using formate or isopropanol as reducing agent. alternatively, whole cell bioreductions were developed where glucose is used as the reducing agent. in recent years "designer microorganisms" were developed in which oxidoreductases (e.g. alcohol dehydrogenases) were over-expressed in escherichia coli. in such cases, cofactor regeneration was achieved intracellularly with isopropanol as the reducing agent or by coexpression of a formate dehydrogenase, so that once again format could be used for reduction. another route to obtain chiral intermediates is a fermentative approach using classical pathways (like the aromatic amino acid pathway). here, the pathway is interrupted after the intracellular production of chorismate. new chiral intermediates can be obtained by over expression of additional genes, which catalyzed the production of chorismate derivatives leading to cyclohexadiene-transdiols and the corresponding amino cyclitols. the last example can be regarded as an example of industrial biotechnology where glucose is used as starting material (white biotechnology). here bioprocess development is carried out in an integrated approach, in which molecular biochemical engi-neering cares for the optimal intracellular metabolic network and the classical biochemical engineering cares for the optimal environment of the cell in a fermenter. examples will be given which reach (in cooperation with industrial partners) up to kilogram scale. biotransformations are usually involved in just one or very few separate reactions in organic syntheses. the development of a cell-free "system of biotransformations" (sbt), in which a set of enzymes acts in a coordinated fashion in a one-pot synthesis, lead to increased catalytic complexity, selectivity and yield, as well as facilitated operation at reduced costs. the example chosen to prove the usefulness of the sbt-approach is the production of dihydroxyacetone phosphate (dhap). dhap, a c -compound from glycolysis, is an important precursor for asymmetric c-c-bond formation. so far, the production of dhap is difficult and expensive. for the construction of the dhap-producing sbt, e. coli's glycolysis is isolated from the metabolism to an as large as possible extent by the construction of a multi-ko-mutant. a culture is grown in an appropriate medium, homogenized in the production buffer, and used as the catalytic system. high production yields can be achieved since the production pathway is almost completely isolated from the metabolic network. the employed dhap-producing sbt provides not only a path from glucose to the product, but also an integrated atp-regeneration and nad-recycling system. in first experiments with a tpi-ko-mutant, a dhap-production yield on glucose of % could be achieved, without optimizing the system. the system remained active for more than h. up to now, atp cannot be applied in catalytic concentrations, but has to be present in equimolar amounts to glucose. the production yield could be increased by % through the addition of phosphate ions as substrate to the reaction, enabling the system to utilize atp more efficiently. these experiments indicate that the sbt-approach is viable and a large potential remains to improve the dhap-producing sbt. for some years novozymes have manufactured a pectate lyase for scouring of textile as an ecological alternative to the traditional harsh chemical treatment, and recently, we at novozymes discovered additional applications for pectate lyases. however, to be commercially attractive more robust pectate lyses had to be developed. in this paper, we will demonstrate how we for two different pectate lyases have improved their stability significantly. as the two enzymes are quite similar in sequence and structure, it was a new discovery for us to find that different concepts of protein engineering had to be used in our attempt to stabilize each individual pectate lyase. the stability of one enzyme was improved by substitutions in the internal of the structure whereas the stability of the other pectate lyase was primarily improved by changing surface residues. starting with knowledge from structural analysis, we have applied rational based protein engineering resulting in few selected variants. also random based protein engineering combined with screening of hundreds of thousands variants was used. in conclusion: the project team showed that by synergistic use of the two approaches, we were able to move faster towards a solution and eventually we succeeded finding new stabilized pectate lyase variants, applicable for new business areas. the importance energy independence as a national goal equals or exceeds that of the moon landing in . the development of a new industry to produce fuel ethanol from woody biomass would increase national security, improve employment and the environment, and provide substantial relief from the debt of imported petroleum. costs associated with the rapid development of this new industry (∼$ . billion per year) could be paid by re-assigning cent per gallon from existing federal gasoline taxes, a small price to pay for future energy independence. the corn-to-ethanol industry continues to make a remarkable contribution to our liquid fuel needs through expansion. today, one row of every six rows of corn is converted into fuel ethanol in the u.s. however, this expansion will be limited to - % of total automotive fuel by the economics of corn costs and production. corn can do more! corn stover is the single most abundant agricultural residue in the us and can be used as a feedstock to produce - gallons of ethanol per dry ton. further expansion with other biomass feedstocks such as agricultural and municipal residues (lignocellulose, woody biomass) could produce over billion gallons of fuel ethanol annually according at a recent joint report by the usda and doe (april, ) . current technology has been demonstrated at pilot scale for the production of fermentable sugars from hemicellulose by dilute acid hydrolysis and for the hydrolysis cellulose using fungal cellulose enzymes. biocatalysts such as recombinant escherichia coli have been developed and demonstrated for the efficient conversion of all sugar constituents of biomass to ethanol. a national goal for the full-scale deployment of current technology to produce biomass-based fuel ethanol will allow the us to reduce imported petroleum by %. together with increased efficiencies of hybrid vehicles, energy independence could be achieved within - years. similar gains could be realized by many nations around the world to provide new manufacturing and employment, redistributing wealth and ensuring a cleaner, healthier environment. bioethanol production using thermophilic bacteria marie just mikkelsen, birgitte k. ahring emab, biocentrum-dtu, lyngby, denmark the industry of bioethanol production is facing the challenge of redirecting the process from fermentation of relatively easily convertible but expensive starchy materials, to complex but inexpensive lignocellulosic biomass. on lignocellulosic hydrolysates, gram-positive thermophilic bacteria have unique advantages over the conventional ethanol production strains. the primary advantages are their natural broad substrate specificities, and in some strains, a high tolerance to lignocellulosic hydrolysates. moreover, ethanol fermentation at high temperatures also has the advantages of high productivities and substrate conversions, low risk of contamination and facilitated product recovery. some thermophilic bacteria naturally produce primarily ethanol from most sugar monomers present in lignocellulosics, but modifications are still necessary to increase ethanol yields. the release of useable sugars from lignocellulose biomass for industrial fuel-ethanol fermentation is often facilitated by a weak acid hydrolysis step. as a consequence, inhibitors such as furfural and -hydroxymethylfurfural (hmf) are formed as degradation products of xylose and glucose, respectively. moreover, the fermentative end-product of ethanol is also inhibitory. these, and other inhibitors present an environment, which elicits the expression of stress-related genes in saccharomyces cerevisiae. recently, s. cerevisiae genes have been identified as important in furfural stress tolerance. when furfural is present, yeast with these genes disrupted grows poorly compared to wild-type yeast. a sub-class of these genes suggests that yeast grown under furfural-induced stress may rely upon similar pathways as cells grown under various other stresses, including oxidative, heat, and sorbate. to investigate this link further, we analyzed stress-induced phenotypes such as ros activity, dna damage, and membrane damage in wild-type and mutant yeast exposed to furfural or hmf stress. moreover, we investigated whether overexpression of this sub-class of genes would provide protection from furfural-induced stress and oxidative damage. micro-organism to be used in fermentation of lignocellulose hydrolyzates should preferably have three characters: (a) high ethanol tolerance, (b) resistance to inhibitors found in the hydrolyzate, and (c) a broad substrate utilization range, since the hydrolyzate contains several sugars. in addition to the possibility of controlling the level of potential inhibitors, fed-batch fermentations also permit the parallel uptake of several different monomeric sugars. two strains of saccharomyces cerevisiae, cbs (a commonly used laboratory strain) and tmb (a strain isolated from a spent sulfite liquor fermentation plant), were characterized in batch and fed-batch fermentation of a dilute-acid hydrolyzate from spruce. the strains had different abilities to ferment spruce hydrolyzate. the study suggests that the furan reduction capacity of a yeast strain is a key factor for its performance in fermentation of lignocellulosic hydrolyzate. polyketides constitute a structurally highly diverse group of natural products that possess broad ranges of pharmacological properties and represent a major source for novel cancer therapeutics. however, these compounds may be sub-optimal in regard of activity, selectivity, availability and unwanted side effects. in addition, the sustainable production of these valuable metabolites can be a challenge. studying the molecular basis of the biosynthetic pathways may set the basis for improving the production and for rationally engineering derivatives with altered bioactivity profiles, e.g. through targeted knockouts, mutasynthesis ziehl et al. ( ) , and swapping of pathway genes. our results in elucidating and manipulating the biosynthesis of selected antitumoral polyketide metabolites from bacteria (aureothin, chartreusin) and fungi (cytochalasines, rhizoxin) are presented. analyses at the genetic and biochemical levels provided new insights into several unusual biosynthetic features, e.g. non-linear polyketide assembly for the nitroaryl-substituted polyketide aureothin he and hertweck ( , ) , an oxidative rearrangement cascade in the chartreusin pathway xu et al. ( ) , and a fungal iterative pks-nrps hybrid synthase schuemann and hertweck ( ) involved in cytochalasin biosynthesis. the most surprising result was obtained from elaborating the biogenesis of the antimitotic agent rhizoxin from rhizopus sp., which allowed for a significant improvement in large-scale production partida-martinez and hertweck ( ). he, j., hertweck, c., chem. biol. , , - chem. bio. chem. , , glycopeptides such as vancomycin and teicoplanin are the drugs of last resort for the treatment of severe infections caused by antibiotic resistant gram-positive bacteria. glycopeptides inhibit the peptidoglycan biosynthesis by binding as dimers to the d-ala-d-ala termini of the cell wall precursors. amycolatopsis balhimycina synthesizes the vancomycin-type glycopeptide balhimycin, whose structure and biological properties greatly resemble vancomycin and which only differs by its glycosylation pattern. using a "reverse genetics" approach we have identified the -kb gene cluster encoding the biosynthesis of balhimycin. by a combination of genetics, biochemistry and analytical organic chemistry, we were able to elucidate the biosynthetic pathway and to assign functions to almost all genes of the cluster. the biosynthesis starts with the pathway-specific provision of the non-proteinogenic amino acids -hydroxytyrosine (-ht), hydroxyphenylglycine (hpg) and dihydroxyphenylglycine (dpg) which form together with (n-methyl)-leucine and asparagine the heptapeptide backbone of balhimycin. dpg is synthesized via a polyketide synthase mechanism (pksiii) similar to that known from plant chalcon/stilben synthases (pfeifer et al., ) . for the -ht synthesis three genes are essential which form an operon (puk et al., ) : bpsd, an nrps binds a tyrosine molecule, which is then hydroxylated by the p monooxygenase oxyd. the perhydrolase bhp is required for the release of -ht. subsequently bhaa, a nadh/fad-dependent halogenase catalyzes the chlorination of -ht to form chloro--hydroxytyrosine (puk et al., ) , which is needed to stabilize the dimerization. the amino acids are linked by non-ribosomal peptide synthetases (recktenwald et al., ) , and the aromatic side chains are interconnected by p monooxygenases; a series of reactions which lead to the first antibiotically active intermediate. inactivation of the oxygenase genes revealed the order of the cyclization steps (bischoff et al., ) : the oxygenases act in a stepwise fashion in the sequence oxyb, oxya and oxyc. the resulting cross-linked heptapeptide is then finally modified by methylation and glycosylation. the biosynthesis is regulated by the strr-type regulator bbr, which was shown to bind in front of different operons of the balhimycin gene cluster. this ensures the coordinated expression of the biosynthetic genes. the non-producing mutants, defective in the supply of the non-proteinogenic amino acids, were used as recipients in cloning experiments as well as in approaches of precursor-directed biosynthesis by feeding chemically synthesized alternative precursors. thus, novel balhimycin derivatives were generated (weist et al., (weist et al., , . bischoff et al., . angew. chem. int. ed. , - . pfeifer et al., . j. biol. chem. , - . puk et al., . j. bacteriol. , - . puk et al., . chem. biol. , - . recktenwald et al., . microbiology , - . weist et al., . angew. chem. int. ed. , - . weist et al., spectroscopy guided discovery of novel bioactive microbial natural products thomas ostenfeld larsen, michael edberg hansen cmb biocentrum-dtu, technical university of denmark, lyngby, denmark the task of finding novel bioactive natural products is usually bioassay driven. often a certain type of compound (e.g. polyketide, alkaloid) turns out to be active in an assay. when having generated a promising hit in a bioassay the normal procedure in the drug discovery process usually is to produce a large number of structurally analogous compounds either by traditional chemical synthesis or by combinatorial chemistry in order to study structure activity relation-ships and to find even more active lead compounds. alternatively to chemical synthesis of analogues nature can be explored for structurally similar compounds by uv-spectroscopy guided screening. this work will present a new method for the systematic and automated computer assisted search of full uv spectra in large number of datafiles for both dereplication of known and discovery of new natural products based on the use of the new mathematical algorithm x-hitting. exploring the substrate spectrum of the antibiotic producing bacteria saccharopolyspora erythraea p. krabben, p. oliveira, f. baganz, j. ward department of biochemical engineering, university college london, london wc e je, uk knowledge of substrate utilisation capabilities play an important role in the development of genome scale metabolic models (borodina et al., ) and refinement of first generation annotations. furthermore, knowledge of the product formation during catabolism of different substrates provides valuable information about the distribution of metabolic fluxes and thereby forms a basis for rational strain improvement. we present here, data on the substrate utilisation capabilities and the corresponding product formation of s. erythraea. this analysis will help in improving the production of erythromycin and provide clues to the activation of the cryptic secondary metabolic pathways present in the s. erythraea genome. reference borodina, i., et al., ( ) . genome-scale analysis of streptomyces coelicolor a ( ) modeling of growth and product formation on complex media containing multiple substitutable substrates is a challenge. complex media offers the organism multiple choices of carbon and nitrogen substrates including free amino acids, peptides, soluble and insoluble proteins in addition to the defined sources such as glucose and ammonium sulfate. we present a structured model that accounts for growth and product formation kinetics of rifamycin b fermentation in a multi-substrate complex medium. the model considers the organism to be an optimal strategist with a mechanism to regulate the uptake of the substrate combinations. further, we assume that the uptake of a substrate depends on the level of a key enzyme, which may be inducible. the model also considers control parameters as fraction of flux through a given metabolic branch. the control parameters are obtained using a simple multi-variable constrained optimization. the model parameters were rigorously estimated via a specifically designed experimental plan. the model correctly predicts the experimentally observed growth and product formation kinetics and the regulated simultaneous uptake of the substitutable substrates under different fermentation conditions. the model and the model parameters provide useful insights into the growth and product formation strategy of this industrially important process. this presentation will describe the experimental results, the model development and the relevant model parameters for a. mediterranei s . the recent surge in oil price and the increasing concern on our environment have generated much interest in the production of chemicals from renewable resources. succinic acid, also called as amber acid, is a four-carbon dicarboxylic acid, which can be used as a precursor of numerous products including biodegradable polymers, green solvents, pharmaceuticals, and bulk and fine chemicals. a new capnophilic bacterium named mannheimia succiniciproducens mbel e was isolated from the rumen of korean cow. this bacterium can produce large amounts of succinic acid along with some other metabolites such as lactic, formic and acetic acids. we have completely sequenced the genome of m. succiniciproducens and charaterized its genome content in the context of metabolic pathways. we then constructed the genome scale in silico metabolic network for metabolic flux analyses, and carried out metabolic flux analysis under varying environmental conditions. based on the in silico analyses results, we selected several target genes to be manipulated for enhanced succinic acid production. detailed results of metabolic engineering based on genome-scale information will be reported. we have been developing tools for inverse metabolic engineering in order to identify gene targets that improve the phenotype of industrial strains and cells for medical applications. to this end, we create genomic fragment libraries from a source organism and use it to transform the host organism. cells are properly selected in environments that favor the phenotype of interest and genes enriched in these cells are sequenced and used in follow up transformations of cells with specific genetic backgrounds. this overall strategy is complemented with additional tools for modulating gene over-expression, gene deletion, and high throughput clone isolation. we will demonstrate applications of this strategy to the identification of gene targets for improved xylose assimilation in recombinant saccharomyces cerevisiae and improved lycopene production in escherichia coli. based on assumed reaction network structures, nadph availability has been proposed to be a key constraint in -lactam production by penicillium chrysogenum. in this study, nadph metabolism was investigated in glucose-limited chemostat cultures of an industrial p. chrysogenum strain. enzyme assays confirmed the nadpspecificity of the dehydrogenases of the pentose-phosphate pathway and the presence of nadp-dependent isocitrate dehydrogenase. pyruvate decarboxylase/ nadp-linked acetaldehyde dehydrogenase and nadp-linked glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase were not detected. although the nadph requirement of penicillin-gproducing chemostat cultures was calculated to be . - . -fold higher than that of non-producing cultures, activities of the major nadph-providing enzymes were the same. isolated mitochondria showed high rates of antimycin a-sensitive respiration of nadph, thus indicating the presence of a mitochondrial nadph dehydrogenase that oxidizes cytosolic nadph. the presence of this enzyme in p. chrysogenum has important implications for stoichiometric modelling of central carbon metabolism and -lactam production and may provide an interesting target for metabolic engineering. bacteria and mammalian cells have been traditionally used as hosts for commercial recombinant protein production. however, in recent years, the insect cell-baculovirus system has emerged as a potentially attractive recombinant protein expression vehicle. although flow cytometry has been used widely for analysis of mammalian and microbial cells, there is very little information on applications of this powerful technique in insect cell culture. here we compared cell ratiometric counts and viability (propidium iodide and calcein am) of sf- cell cultures using flow cytometry to those determined by more traditional methods using a haemocytometer and the trypan-blue exclusion dye. flow cytometry has also been used to monitor various parameters during cultures of sf infected with the recombinant autographa californica nuclear polyhedrosis virus (acnpv) containing the inserted nucleic acid sequence amfp coding for am-cyan coral protein, which emits natural green fluorescence. complete elucidation of the genetic control of a metabolic flux requires the availability of fine-grained expression levels of the gene(s) of interest. we developed a collection of promoters of varying strength for tuning gene expression in the yeast s. cerevisiae. engineered promoters were obtained through random mutagenesis of the constitutive tef promoter. eleven mutated promoters were selected by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (facs) spanning gradually increasing activities between about and % compared to the native tef promoter. data were also confirmed at the level of mrna via rt-pcr. by introducing selectable markers in front of the different tef promoter mutations, we provided plasmid collections, which can be directly used to amplify promoter replacement cassettes for genomic integration of the fine-grained promoter collection in front of any yeast gene. l-arabinose, widely distributed in plant kingdom, is a component of plant cell wall. l-arabinose does not abundantly exist in free state in plants, but usually in corn hull, sugar beet pulp, gum arabic, mesquite gum, as the polysaccharide such as arabinoxylan and arabinogalactan. to produce arabinose from agricultural wastes, we screened arabinogalactan degradable strain from compost. thereafter, putative arabinase gene from this strain was cloned (b ts - ). as a result of spectrometric assay using -nitrophenyl ␣l arabinofuranoside, recombinant showed - -fold higher activity than wild type e. coli strain. after enzymatic reaction with corn fiber, b ts - produced . g/l of l-arabinose, which was detected on hplc. however, the enzyme activity was very low. so, we are transferring the gene into expression vector system. further characterization study and enzyme engineering to enhance the activity toward corn fiber will be presented in poster. there are only a limited number of hypersaline areas all over the world, which include several locations in turkey such as van lake located in eastern region of turkey. isolation and identification of halophilic and hyperhalophilic microorganisms from such locations is essential for the determination of biodiversity in turkey. high-level production of extremozymes from these microorganisms has also many economical advantages due to their stability at extreme reaction conditions. proteolytic enzymes are the most important group of enzymes produced commercially. of these, proteases produced by alkalophilic microorganisms are investigated not only in scientific areas such as protein chemistry and protein engineering but also find wide application in food, pharmaceutical, leather and detergent industries. in this study, microorganisms isolated from van lake were screened for the presence of extracellular alkaline protease activity. the optimum screening temperature and ph were determined as • c and ph . , respectively. one of the isolates that could grow at - % salinity reached highest levels of extracellular alkaline protease activity. this best producer, which was identified as the halotolerant bacillus pumilus, was found to produce alkaline protease both in the presence and absence of nacl. to improve enzyme production yields, culture conditions such as medium composition, growth ph and temperature were optimized. the effect of different carbon sources, organic and inorganic nitrogen sources on the production of alkaline protease was studied. whereas a mixture of inorganic and organic nitrogen sources induced high protease production, use of only an organic nitrogen source supported poor enzyme production. halotolerant bacillus pumilus produced maximum alkaline protease activity when maltose, yeast extract and sodium nitrate were used as carbon source, organic and inorganic nitrogen sources, respectively. this project was supported by tubitak through project tbag - t . in the market of biochemical products a very important role is played by heterologous proteins production, and despite recent advances in mammalian cells exploitation, yeasts can still present advantages as host systems. among them, the spoilage yeasts belonging to the zygosaccharomyces genus have become, due to some peculiar properties, significantly attractive. in particular, z. bailii is characterized by acid resistance, osmotolerance to high sugar and ethanol concentration combined with high biomass yield. despite still little is known about its genetics and cellular biology, our group is working on its development and exploitation for recombinant productions with an integrated approach coupling physiological study with the creation of molecular tools for heterologous proteins production. we previously described and did a patent application regarding the first techniques necessary to transform this yeast and to express and secrete different proteins derived from different sources. here we present and discuss the last advances in optimization of heterol-ogous protein expression in particular, on one side we present a reproducible strategy for target gene deletion, leading to the first z. bailii auxotrophic mutant, and on the other we show the improvement of gene dosage and plasmid stability by building a set of multicopy expression vectors based on the sequences of the z. bailii -like endogenous plasmid psb and an integrative plasmid. all the known ␥-butyrolactone autoregulator receptors are highly conserved in the dna binding motif present in their n-terminal portions and have been proposed to play roles as transcriptional regulators in antibiotic production and/or morphological differentiation. previously, kim et al. reported that the cloned scar in streptomyces clavuligerus has several characteristics of the autoregulator receptors in the genus streptomyces. in this study, to clarify the in vivo function of scar, a scar-disrupted strain was constructed by means of homologous recombination after introducing a scar-disruption construct via transconjugation from e. coli. no difference in morphology was found between the wild-type strain and the scar disruptant. however, the scar disruptant showed a . -fold higher production of clavulanic acid than the wild-type strain. the phenotype was restored to the original wild-type phenotype by complementation with intact scar. therefore, the autoregulator receptor, scar, acts as a negative regulator of biosynthesis of clavulanic acid but plays no role in cytodifferentiation of s. clavuligerus. lactate dehydrogenase catalyses the production of lactate from pyruvate. it is the first target for many researches on lactic acid producer microorganisms like rhizopus oryzae. in the present study based on the known sequences of r. oryzae ldha and ldhb genes skory ( ), they were cloned and expressed in a citric acid producer fungus aspergillus niger. the aspergillus niger strains expressing ldha or ldhb gene resulted in increased production of lactate in aspergillus niger. among transformants tested ldha and ldhb expressing strains were found to have higher lactate dehydrogenase activity compared to wild type in the conditions tested. the highest specific activity obtained with ldha transformants was only . times of the wild type while this was times for one of the transformants expressing ldhb. in addition to increased lactate production citric acid production was also increased. however, gluconic acid production ceased in the ldha or ldhb expressing a. niger strains. the production of lactic acid in a. niger transformants and lactate dehydrogenase a and lactate dehydrogenase b enzymes are being investigated in the chosen strains. selection of n source suitable for production of rhodococcus sp. biomass for the purposes of microbial transformation of ␣h-epoxypregnanolone ( ␣h) and -epoxy-pregnenolone ( ) into their ␣-hydroxy-derivatives was carried out. three dehydrated and three non-dehydrated n sources were tested. the transformation reaction was carried out in phosphate buffered medium containing g l − of the steroid substrate and . g l − cells. the steroids were determined by hplc. the transformation resulted in formation of three derivatives appearing in the reaction medium in the sequence: - -keto-; ␣-hydroxy-and ␣, -hydroxy-epoxy-pregnenolone. a strong influence of the n source on the hydroxylating activity of the biomass was observed. triptose (difco) gave a cell depot actively hydroxylating ␣h without any significant accumulation of the - -keto-derivative. the most effective accumulation of hydroxylated derivatives of was observed with biomass grown on freshly prepared meat extract while the commercial products triptose (difco), meat extract (difco) and lactalbumin (flika) gave valuable information about the dynamics of the transformation process. biobleaching of kraft cellulose pulp by poliporus versicolor aysun ergene , nazif kolankaya : kırıkkale university, faculty of science and literature, department of biology, yahsihan, kırıkkale, turkey; hacettepe university, faculty of science, department of biology, beytepe, ankara, turkey the suitability of culture supernatant from poliporus versicolor for use in the biobleaching of kraft cellulose pulp was investigated. p. versicolor was found to grow on mycological broth ( % soytone, % d-glucose and . % cellulose pulp). maximal extracellular ligninase production was detected after day ( nkat). the optimum biobleaching conditions are • c and ph: . , with days. in this condition p. versicolor decreased the kapa number from . to . and increased brigthness from to . in day treatment. xylanase production, purification and characterization from a soil isolate, bacillus m- ayşegül ersayin , aytaç kocabaş , b. zümrüt ogel , ufuk bakir : biotechnology department, middle east technical university, ankara, turkey; food engineering department, middle east technical university, ankara, turkey; chemical engineering department, middle east technical university, ankara, turkey, . e-mail: ubakir@metu.edu.tr (u. bakir) xylan is a major component of the plant cell wall, representing up to % of the dry weight. xylan molecule is a complex polymer consisting of a -d- , -linked xylanopyranoside backbone substituted with acetyl, arabinosyl and glucuronosyl side chains. hydrolysis of the xylan backbone is mainly catalysed by endo-- , -xylanases (ec . . . ). many bacterial and fungal species are able to utilize xylan as a carbon source. interest in the enzymology of xylan hyrdolysis has increased because use of xylanases in bioconversion of agricultural wastes to valuable products like single cell protein, xylo-oligosaccharides and fuel, in bio-bleaching processes, food and animal feed industries. in this study, xylanolytic nature of a soil isolate bacillus spp., bacillus m- , has been shown. bacillus m- produced multiple xylanases when grown on a liquid medium containing agricultural wastes as the sole carbon source. various agricultural wastes including corn-cobs and cotton waste, with and without pretreatments were used to maximize enzyme production. the major xylanase having molecular weight of kda upon sds-page and a pi of . upon ief was partially purified by liquid chromatographic techniques -fold with % recovery, including gel filtration, ion exchange and hydrophobic interaction chromatography. enzymes are important constituents in the laundry detergents due to their contribution to shortening washing times, reduction of energy and water consumption by lowering washing temperatures, provision of environmentally friendlier wash-water effluents and fabric care. however, they can loose a significant part of their activity in the chemically-hostile detergent matrix over a time period of several weeks. therefore, improving the storage stability of enzyme granulates is the main challenge in the development of a new product. the complexity of the detergent matrix implies the presence of a complicated mechanism involved in the inactivation of the enzymes. a combination of factors, such as oxidation by h o released by the bleaching agents, humidity, high temperature, autolysis of enzymes, high local ph in a granule, oxygen, and other detergent components, plays a role in the activity loss. an experimental investigation on the inactivation of the solid-state enzyme during storage has been initiated. the release rate of h o from the bleaching agent, sodium percarbonate, was determined using a simple and accurate method for measuring the gas phase h o concentration. the deactivation kinetics of pure enzyme was determined as a function of gas phase h o concentration and humidity. the preliminary results indicate that humidity plays a significant role in the inactivation mechanism of the detergent enzyme due to a possible increase in the mobility of the enzyme molecule and the surface area exposed to destructive agents. the effect of main granulate ingredients on the stability of the enzyme was investigated and the extent of the protection of each component was estimated. the study is important for the revealing of the phenomena occurring in the detergent matrix during storage. understanding the inactivation mechanism provides a valuable tool for the development of more effective protective coatings and stabilizers. the use of biosurfactants in cosmetic industry has attracted great attention of biotechnological researchers because they consist of two inexpensive, renewable and easily accessible starting agricultural materials: sugar and oil/fat. carbohydrate based products are non-toxic, biocompatible and biodegradable. in addition, the enzymatic processes present many advantages in comparison with the chemical methods, which employ high temperatures in the presense of alkalin catalysts, high-energy consuption and low selectivity of products. sugar esters present vast application, such as for antibiotics, biomaterials, surfactants, cosmetics and so on. we investigated the synthesis of sugar vinyl esters, using protease-catalysed transesterefication method applying protease from bacillus subtilis. sucrose . m and vinyl ester . m has been mixed in dimethylformamide at rpm of agitation. at first, we have studied the effects of protease from bacillus subtilis concentrations ( , , and mg/ml) as catalyst. afterwards, the influence of the temperature ( and • c). after that, the influence of the molar ratios ( : ; : ; : m/m) between vinyl laurate (ch (ch ) cooch ch ) and sucrose. subsequently, we investigated the effects of water amount, using , , and % of water in dmf. the conversion ratios of sucroseto-sucrose esters were determined decreasing sucrose measurement with hplc. the results showed that the best conditions to produce high activity on the enzymatic reaction was by using mg/ml of protease from bacillus subtilis at • c, molar ratio of : (vinyl laurate:sucrose) and adding % of water in dmf. finally, we succeeded in the characterization of vinyl sugar ester, which was produced after hours of reaction by c nmr. the results confirmed the c substituted sugar mono-ester ( -o-vinyl lauroyl sucrose). effects of oxygen transfer on ␣-amylase production by b. amyloliquefaciens nurhan güngör, güzide Ç alık bre lab, department of chemical engng, ankara university, ankara, turkey ␣-amylase (e.c. . . . ) a commercially important enzyme used in food, textile, detergent, brewing, paper, and animal feed industries; hydrolyses ␣- , glucosydic bonds in amylose, amylopectin, and related polysaccharides. optimum medium composition and influence of bioreactor operation parameters on ␣-amylase production with high yield and selectivity were determined together with the metabolic flux distributions using b. amyloliquefaciens (nrrl b- ), which is found to be a good producer of the enzyme. systematic investigation of oxygen transfer in relation with the metabolic fluxes for ␣-amylase is not available in the literature. shake-flask experiments were conducted in . dm air-filtered bioreactors in orbital shakers with agitation and heating controls (b. braun, certomat-bs ). laboratory-scale bioreactors were composed of agitation, heating, foam, dissolved-oxygen and ph-controlled . and . dm systems (b. braun, biostat q; and chemap). after separation of the cells with a sorval rc s ultracentrifuge, ␣-amylase activity was measured by the dns method bernfeld ( ) . amino acid concentrations were determined with a hplc (waters), pro-tein and organic acid concentrations were measured with a hpce (waters, quanta e) Ç alik et al. ( ) . oxygen transfer characteristics in the bioreactor systems were calculated using the dynamic method rainer ( ) . in the mass flux balance-based analyses, a pseudo-steady state approximation for the intracellular metabolites and the accumulation rates of the extracellular metabolites measured throughout the fermentations in considerations of the biochemical feature of the system were used to acquire the flux distributions. in laboratory scale, the effects of different c sources, i.e. glucose, fructose, maltose, lactose and soluble starch; n sources, i.e. (nh ) hpo , (nh ) so , and nh cl and/or their concentrations; and the operation parameters, ph and temperature on cell growth, substrate utilization, ␣-amylase and by-product concentrations, and ␣-amylase activity were investigated. in pilot scale, the fermentation and oxygen transfer characteristics of the bioreaction system together with the metabolic fluxes were determined. bernfeld, p., . methods in enzymol. : - . Ç alık, p., Ç alık, g.,Özdamar, t.h., . enzyme microb. technol. , - . rainer, b.w., . geldanamycin is a benzoquinone ansamycin produced as a secondary metabolite by the actinomycete, streptomyces hygroscopicus var. geldanus, in submerged culture. it is a broad-spectrum antibiotic and exhibits an anti-tumour activity through its interaction with the heat shock protein family of chaperone proteins. the optimal recovery of geldanamycin from fermentation broths is the focus of the presented work. the application of adsorbent resins was assessed and the viability of developing a solid phase extraction process for geldanamycin was determined. it was found that recovery of geldanamycin from fermentation broth was possible using adsorbent resins and the use of resins facilitated the recovery of a product stream of high purity. the composition of the fermentation broth had an impact on the performance of the resins and it was found that assessing performance on the basis of experimentally derived data was more apt than studying the kinetics of adsorption alone. adsorptive processes are, by their nature, difficult to optimise and this was found to be the case when optimising the recovery of geldanamycin from partially clarified fermentation broth. considerable effort was required to optimise geldanamycin adsorption, via examining the effect of environmental conditions and process system configuration, and geldanamycin desorption, via examining the effect of environmental conditions and investigating selective elution patterns. it is well known that halophilic eubacteria synthesize compatible solutes in order to face the high ionic strength environment in which they proliferate. these biomolecules are gaining more and more importance as biotechnological tools in a wide array of applications, and the recently developed novel bioprocesses enabled large-scale production of these compounds and therefore commercial distribution. however, there is still interest in the optimization of the production process of sole hydroxyectoine that was demonstrated to have a superior stabilization capacity. in this research project, we optimized growth conditions of marinococcus m to obtain high yield of hydroxyectoine. their production proved faster in the batch experiments at a higher oxygen supply, even if the stationary phase was comparable in all cases. the mf experiments showed a final biomass which was -fold that obtained in the corresponding batch process. in addition the monitoring of compatible solutes production showed that in the last h experiment hydroxyectoine accounted for - % of the total content, accumulating up to - % of the cell dry weight. studies for improving downstream process for ectoine and hydroxyectoine recovery showed that short permeabilization cycles in water are effective in a temperature range between • c and • c using a ratio : /biomass:water. moreover, we evaluated the ability of ectoine to stabilize lactic acid bacteria during freeze-drying and to protect human cells from heat stress. in particular, the compatible solutes were added to the medium of confluent keratinocytes before subjecting the cells to heat stress, or lps insult. rt-pcr and western blot analysis demonstrated the hsp b' gene over-expression in heat stressed human keratinocytes treated with ectoine. finally, we demonstrated that even at low concentration ( mm) these compatible solutes are able to diminish cell death in lactic acid bacteria due to lyophilization procedure. among all existing alternative energy sources, biomass-derived bioethanol is especially advantageous since it is clean, sustainable and potentially inexpensive. the actual production of bioethanol is divided into a pre-treatment step, an enzymatic hydrolysis step and a fermentation step. while fermentation has been practiced by humans for centuries, our knowledge of enzymatic hydrolysis is still limited. nevertheless, it is well accepted that hydrolysis is a synergism among three classes of enzymes, -glucosidase, endoglucanase and cellobiohydrolase. furthermore, a complete and efficient hydrolysis is only achieved when the enzymes are in the correct proportion. the common enzyme proportions have so far been based on the natural enzyme abundance as produced by the microorganism or mainly been determined by a trial-and-error approach. in this study, however, we used metabolic control analysis (mca) as a modelling tool to gain fundamental knowledge about enzymatic hydrolysis and to design an optimal enzyme mixture. using gepasi, a free software, the degree of control of each reaction step or each enzyme towards the overall hydrolysis can be calculated. our hypothesis is that the amount of each enzyme used for hydrolysis should be proportional to the degree of control of the enzyme. with mca, a significant amount of time, labour and reagents can be saved on developing hydrolysis enzyme mixture. furthermore, this study should demonstrate the usefulness of mca on understanding enzyme-catalyzed reactions outside the cell. process optimization for fed-batch fermentation of bacillus thuringiensis subsp. israelensis arindam chaudhury, gopinathan c department of biotechnology, university of calicut, calicut, kerala india. e-mail: g achaudhury@umassd.edu (a. chaudhury) bacillus thuringiensis (bt) is a desirable biopesticide because of its low cost and lack of toxicity. the use of bt in developing countries is limited due to process complications and economic non-feasibility of the fermentation process. in the present study, we have shown how regional production, using inexpensive alternatives for carbon and protein sources, can effectively reduce the cost of mass production of bt. while using alternative media supplements, the biomass production, nor the larvicidal activity was hampered. in addition, the positive effects of sparged aeration and the indispensable role of yeast extract were also proved. this work provides the first experimental proof of delineating the sporulation process and delta-endotoxin production. the role of various buffering agents and additives in increasing biomass production and early sporulation were also investigated. for the production of coenzyme q (coq ), an electron carrier in the respiration chain with antioxidant activity. with decrease of dissolved oxygen level from to %, the intracellular coq content increased about -fold, yielding mg per g-dry cell weight at % dissolved oxygen level. azide significantly increased the intracellular coq content, with the highest value of . mg per g dry cell weight in the presence of . mm of sodium azide. however, dnp (up to m) and h o (up to m) did not affect the intracellular coq content, indicating proton gradient release and oxidative stress do not affect the synthesis of coq . these results show that restricted electron flux by limited oxygen supply and the addition of azide increases the intracellular coq content. fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ft-ir), combined with in situ heat sterilizable attenuated total reflection (atr) probes, constitutes a promising and versatile technique for on-line monitoring of bioprocesses. the ft-ir enables rapid determinations of the medium composition without the requirement of sample withdrawal and preparation. in this work the concentration levels of the substrates glycerol and methanol were monitored on-line in pichia pastoris cultivation. partial least squares (pls) models were used for obtaining the concentration readings. the glycerol concentration measurement proved to be very reliable and reproducible in the glycerol batch phase. however, the on-line information regarding the glycerol concentration was not utilized for any process control purposes. on the other hand, the availability of on-line information about the methanol concentration proved to be crucial for the successful implementation of the cultivations. the temperature strategy in the methanol fed-batch phase utilized temperatures as low as • c. in order to keep the metabolic activity at a reasonable level the culture was therefore pushed towards the maximal substrate consumption rate, rather than being a conventional substrate limited fed-batch. as a consequence methanol accumulation occurred on occasions. without on-line information about the concentration this accumulation, if sustained, would have resulted in a poisoning of the culture, either from methanol itself, or perhaps more importantly from formaldehyde. therefore, it can be concluded that the ft-ir/atr instrument was very useful in this application. jørgensen department of chemical engineering, denmark technical university, building , dk- lyngby, denamrk. e-mail: fpd@kt.dtu.dk (f.p. davidescu) modeling biochemical reaction network in microorganisms still represents a challenge due to the very large number of enzyme catalyzed biochemical reactions, to the very complex system and to the many feed-forward and feedback regulation mechanisms. the presented approach to model such a system is based on the stochastic grey-box modeling framework proposed by kristensen et al. ( ) . this methodology consists of parameters estimation based on a prediction error method followed by different statistical tests for parameter significance and for model (in-) validity. the methodology furthermore allows estimation of unknown functional relations, e.g. kinetic rates. a set of experimental data zangirolami ( ) obtained during continuous cultures of a high enzyme producing aspergillus oryzae strain. the oxygen concentration was decreased stepwise and the substrate concentration was modified from one experiment to other. a model proposed by agger et al. ( ) is investigated on these data. the primary interest is to develop a physiologically feasible model, also at the low oxygen concentrations often found in industrial practice. microbially produced secondary metabolites such as antibiotics have tremendous economic importance. streptomyces spp. have long been identified as sources of antibiotics and chemotherapeutic compounds, synthesising over bioactive compounds. geldanamycin is a novel chemotherapeutic agent produced by streptomyces hygroscopicus var. geldanus in submerged fermentation. initial studies have focused on optimisation of media design through understanding and controlling metabolic routes of biosynthesis within the cell. geldanamycin is a by-product of the shikimate or aromatic amino acid biosynthesis pathway. stimulation of this pathway and concomitant production of geldanamycin is achievable through amino acid control. increasing concentrations of primary carbon source greatly influence biomass generation and product formation, as does the inclusion of cations such as magnesium and calcium to the fermentation media. optimisation of production media through balancing minerals, nitrogen, and carbon sources has significantly improved antibiotic yields in shake flask cultures and the development process will be extended into pilot scale through the use of bioreactors. microbiology and biotechnology research group, school of life sciences, napier university, edinburgh, eh dt, scotland. email: m.el-mansi@napier.ac.uk (m. el-mansi) synopsis: during growth of corynebacterium glutamicum on glucose or other glycolytic intermediates, pep carboxylase fulfils an anaplerotic function as it replenishes intermediary metabolism with biosynthetic precursors that are essential for growth and glutamate production. under these conditions, pep carboxylase plays a central role and this in turn is characterised by a high flux control coefficient thus rendering this enzyme an ideal target for metabolic interventions. further analysis in silico revealed that any increases in the concentration of the enzyme was accompanied by increases in flux through the enzyme itself as well as glutamate formation, presumably as a consequence of sustaining a high intracellular level of ␣-ketoglutarate; the immediate precursor for glutamate biosynthesis. a combined approach to enhance periplasmic expression of human growth hormone in escherichia coli, using a modified signal peptide from alpha amylase gene of bacillus licheniformis s.k. falsafi , , a. zomorodipour : islamic azad university of jahrom, iran; department of mol genet. national inst for genet eng & biotechnol., tehran, iran. e-mail: soheil falsafi@yahoo.com (s.k. falsafi) the alpha amylase gene signal peptide, originated from a strain of bacillus licheniformis, was shown to be able to transport its native protein, when expressed in e. coli the competence of the fusion protein being processed and translocated through the inner membrane is highly dependent on the amino acid sequences in the signal peptide. therefore, in order to increase the expression efficiency of bla signal peptide, we reconstructed the bla signal peptide coding fragment with the following modifications. two rare codons of arg (cgg) and arg (cga) and codons for leu (tta) and pro (cct), in the signal peptide were substituted with their corresponding e. coli major codons. two other changes, including phe (ttc) → leu (ctg) and ala (gcg) → met (atg), were also introduced to increase the processing efficiency. the hgh-expressing plasmid equipped with the modified bla (blaf ) was subjected for further expression analysis in a t -based expression system. the results obtained from the protein patterns of the induced bacteria indicates in high expression level of hgh preprotein (hgh::blaf ) followed by efficient transfer of the mature hgh to e. coli periplasm. (ip ) has been demonstrated to have a wide range of health benefits such as prevention and therapy of various cancers, amelioration of heart disease, and prevention of renal stone formation as well as complications from diabetes. on the hand, lower phosphorylated forms of inositol, especially inositol trisphosphate (ip ) and inositol tetrakisphosphate (ip ) are important signal transduction molecules within the cells both in plants and the animal kingdom. it has been hypothesized that at least the anticancer function of ip is mediated via these lower inositol phosphates. the diversity and practical unavailability of the individual myo-inositol phosphates preclude their investigation. phytases, which catalyze the sequential hydrolysis of phytate, render production of defined myoinositol phosphates in pure form and sufficient quantities. different phytases may result in different positional isomers of myo-inositol phosphates and therefore different biochemical properties. phytases differing in ph optima, substrate specificity, and specificity of hydrolysis have been identified in plants and microorganisms. in this paper the dephosphorylation pathway of the novel phyfauia was compared to other bacterial phytate degrading enzymes. preliminary results have shown that phyfauia converted ip into ip (myoinositol , , , , pentakisphosphates) and another isomer, which is yet to be elucidated. characterization of the novel -peptidyl aminopeptidase (bapa) from sphingomonas sp. - w that cleaves synthetic peptides birgit geueke, hans-peter e. kohler environmental microbiology, eawag, duebendorf, switzerland. e-mail: birgit.geueke@eawag.ch (b. geueke) non-natural peptides, which are capable of evoking a specific biological response, are currently receiving much attention. oligomers of -amino acids (-peptides) are representing a group of pharmaceutically interesting peptides because of their very high stability towards enzymatic degradation and their ability to mimic the structure of naturally occurring biologically active peptides. the pharmaceutical potential on the one hand and the high stability on the other hand aroused interest for studies on the environmental fate and the degradation behaviour of this class of compounds. a novel bacterial strain (sphingomonas sp. - w ) that was capable of degrading short -peptides was isolated from an enrichment culture. the peptide degrading enzyme was purified and its gene sequence was determined (bapa). the gene encodes a -peptidyl aminopeptidase (bapa) of amino acids that is synthesized as preprotein with a signal sequence of amino acids. it belongs to the n-terminal nucleophile (ntn) hydrolase superfamily and is the first peptidase that is capable of cleaving amide bonds in -peptides composed of synthetic -amino acids. the biochemical properties of recombinant bapa were investigated regarding its substrate specificity and possible application in the synthesis of -peptides. to produce efficient strains of agaricus bitorquis (quel.) saccardo, which are resistant to high temperatures p. guler, a. ergene, s. tan kirikkale university, faculty of science and literature, department of biology, yahsihan-kirikkale in this study, the culture mushroom agaricus bitorquis (quel.) sacc. the growth of the mycelium and the fructifications under high temperature is examined. the spores taken from the mushrooms that were collected from nature were grouped as a, b, c, d, e. the spores were inoculated into malt extract agar and incubated at • c and primer mycelium was produced. the mycelium discus taken from primer mycelium in mm diameter were inoculated into the center of malt extract agar and incubated at , , , and • c separately. during the incubation period the growth of the mycelium were measured. during the growing period the radial growth speed of the mycelium were taken as criteria. the best mycelium growth for all groups was seen at • c. at • c the e group mycelium and at • c other group's mycelium did not grow. these temperatures were determined as thermal lethal point for the groups. from all the mycelium produced from all temperatures spawn was prepared and with the results taken from these, spawn calendar is prepared. in this research, the spawn was inoculated to compost with mixing system and separately put in culture rooms, temperatures as and • c. at this level the culture mushroom production techniques were used. the harvested mushrooms were inspected morphologically. at this morphological inspections the cap width, cap tissue thickness, stalk thickness and stalk long ness was taken as criteria. in the study the best growth was seen at d group mushrooms and this group mushrooms tyrosinase's activities were measured and graphics were made. introduction: viral contamination of biological products; cause many problems in viral diagnostic laboratories, blood transfusion organizations, and biological producers. bovine viral diarrhea virus (bvdv), from the pestivirus genus, is the most common viral contamination in (fetal) bovine serums (fbs). also, bvdv used as a module, for study hepatitis c virus inactivation due to its similarity in structure and genome. pulsed uv lights (puvls) have this potential to inactivate known and unknown or reemerging viruses as well as prions. two puvl with the wavelengths of and nm, were produced by q-switched nd + :yag laser in its third and forth harmonic, respectively. the energy of each pulse for nm was . mj/cm and for nm was . mj/cm . bvdv were produced and titrated in mdbk cell line. mdbk and fbs were already checked for non-cytopathic or cytopathic pestiviruses, using related ag-elisa kit. bvdv suspended in solution with the dilution of : before exposure. the quartz tube with the minimum uv-absorption in compare with air, used as a container for exposed solutions. calculation of the virus titer, . tcid /ml, was done based on the reed and muench method. bvdv suspended in pbs was exposed into the . - j/cm of puvls with the wavelength of nm and also, was exposed into the . - . j/cm of puvls with the wavelength of nm. furthermore, bvdv suspended in fbs was exposed into the , , and j/cm of puvls with the wavelength of nm and also, was exposed into the . , . , . , and . j/cm of puvls with the wavelength of nm. results: the minimum dose for inactivation of bvdv suspended in pbs with the and nm wavelengths of puvls, were and . j/cm , respectively. also, the minimum dose for inactivation of bvdv suspended in fbs with the and nm wavelengths of puvls, were and j/cm , respectively. to evaluate the fbs quality to support cell culture, treated fbs with the dose of . j/cm of nm puvls was used to grow vero cell line in successive passages. the viability of cells in two study groups was identical. the statistical evaluation of two treated groups showed no significant difference, in passages. conclusion: because inexpensive equipment can be used to produce puvls capable of handling different volumes of biologics with operational ease, this viral inactivation technique is cost effective for relevant industries. the procedure has the potential to be combined synergically with other inactivation method. puvls offer a new, nonadditive and chemically safe alternative for the treatment of fbs to inactivate adventitious viruses and to preserve the biological activity necessary for the propagation of cell culture. characterization and gene cloning of the g-resorcylic acid decarboxylase for application to selective production of g-resorcylic acid y. iwasaki , y. ishii , k. kino , k. kirimura : dept. appl. chem., sch. sci. eng., waseda univ., tokyo, japan; bme, asmew, waseda univ., tokyo, japan. e-mail: iwasaki@moegi.waseda.jp (y. iwasaki) for selective production of ␥-resorcylic acid (␥-ra, , -dihydroxy-benzoic acid) from resorcinol (re, , dihydroxybenzene) under mild conditions, we screened various microorganisms and found the reversible ␥-ra decarboxylase (rdc) as a novel enzyme applicable to carboxylation of re to form ␥-ra, in a bacterial strain rhizobium radiobacter wu- ) . rdc catalyzed the decarboxylation of ␥-ra, and regio-selective carboxylation of re to form ␥-ra, without formation of ␣-ra and -ra. the molecular weight of rdc was estimated to be kda by gel-filtration, and that of the subunit was determined to be kda by sds-page, suggesting that rdc is a homotetrameric structure. the gene encoding rdc was sequenced, and a site-directed mutagenesis study revealed that the two histidine residues at positions of and in rdc are essential for the catalytic activity of rdc. through the reactions using e. coli cells highly expressing rdc, . mm ␥-ra was produced from mm re at • c for h, with a yield of %. ishii, y. et al., . biochem. biophys. res. commun., , - . laccase biosynthesis in stirred fermenters teresa jamroz, stanislaw ledakowicz, barbara sencio department of bioprocess engineering, technical university, lodz pl - , poland industrial applicability of enzymes is closely related to development of efficient methods of their production. currently, significant interest in lignolytic enzymes, including laccase, has been observed. laccase is an enzyme applied in various industrial branches and environmental processes. broad laccase applicability induces researchers to develop urgently efficient methods for its commercial production. laccase (ec. . . . . p-diphenol oxidase) is produced by cap mushrooms from the class basidomycetes. this is the so-called white rot fungi which in natural conditions appears on both living and dead wood. as shown in the practice of biotechnological processes, high-efficient strains have low resistance to destructive factors in bioreactors. hence, to preserve a proper morphology and physiological state of an organism, strictly determined culture conditions must be obeyed. this is very important in the case of basidomycetes for which submerged culture in the liquid phase is not a natural habitat. results of studies on laccase production from cerrena unicolor family are discussed. cultivation of active biomass was carried out in stirred tank and rotating disc bioreactors of different volume (b. braun of working volume dm ; fas- of working volume . dm ). experiments in both fermenters were made at impeller revolutions and min − , on a modified lindberg substrate. significant differences in the rate and yield of laccase production were reported. an almost three times higher values of laccase activity were obtained in the b. braun fermenter, at rotational speed min − . to retain suspended cells in bioreactor a filtration process can be used. the biomass is concentrated by withdrawing cell-free culture broth. if the desired product is dissolved in the broth (extracellular production), the procedure enables the continuous harvest in the cellfree permeate. an application test of filtration system for suspended biomass of aspergillus niger in submerged single stage continuous culture was presented in this report. the system is easy to construct and there is a possibility of its sterile exchange during cultivation. the culture medium contained the following substances (g/dm ): white sugar, . ; nh no , . ; mgso · h o, . ; kh po , . ; feso · h o, . . fermentations were carried out in the lab bioreactor biomer . the bioreactor was a standard cstr (continuous stirred tank bioreactor) with working volume of dm . high citric acid concentration in culture medium (p = . g/dm ), high yield of citric acid (y p/s = . %) and high efficiency coefficient (k ef = . ) were observed in single stage continuous culture with biomass retention. oxygen transfer regulates benzaldehyde lyase production in e. coli pınar Ç alık, iblab, department of chemical engineering, metu, ankara, turkey. e-mail: pcalik@metu.edu.tr the effects of oxygen transfer rate on benzaldehyde lyase (bal) production by puc ::bal carrying recombinant escherichia coli on a defined medium with . kg/m glucose were investigated in order to fine-tune the bioreactor performance, in v = dm batch bioreactors at five different conditions with the parameters at, i.e. q o /v r = . vvm and n = , , , min − and; q o /v r = . vvm and n = min − . the concentrations of the product and by-products amino acids and organic acids were determined in addition to bal activities. medium oxygen transfer rate conditions and uncontrolled ph operation at ph o = . are optimum for maximum bal activity, i.e. u/cm at h, and productivity and selectivity. on the bases of the data, response of the intracellular bioreaction network of r-e. coli to oxygen transfer conditions were analysed using a mass-flux balance based stoichiometric model that contains metabolites and reaction fluxes. the results reveal that metabolic reactions are intimately coupled with the oxygen transfer conditions. oxygen transfer rate showed diverse effects on the product formation by influencing metabolic pathways and changing metabolic fluxes. metabolic flux analysis was helpful to describe the interactions between the cell and the bioreactor by predicting the changes in the fluxes and the rate controlling step(s) in the metabolic pathways. therefore, knowing the distribution of the metabolic fluxes during the growth, and bal and by-product formations provide new information for understanding physiological characteristics of the r-e. coli, and reveals important features of the regulation of the bioprocess and opens new avenues to successful application of metabolic engineering. saprophytic mycobacterium strains belong to the best known microorganisms which have been applied to the pharmaceutical industry for the production of steroid drugs. the mycobacterial cell wall is the permeation barrier to chemical compounds, including lipophiles. using isoniazid (inh), the inhibitor of the mycolic acids biosynthesis, we were able to demonstrate increased ad production and susceptibility to antimicrobial agents. the process of sterol transformation and products accumulation was monitored using gas chromatography. isoniazid was shown to intensify -sitosterol side-chain degradation by mycobacterium sp., and accumulation of -androstene- , -dione (ad) and , -androstadien- , -dione (add), which are the starting materials in the biotechnology of medically important steroids. to confirm these results, the sensitivity of the bacteria to antimycobacterial drugs was performed. the minimum inhibitory concentration mic of rifampicin and erythromycin decreased markedly in the presence of inh. this work was supported by grant nr p c of the committee for scientific research. for the purpose of high-throughput screening and to reduce experiments with animals in pharma biotechnology biosensor systems gain importance. the principle of a biosensor is the combination of cultured cells and a sensorchip device, which allows the monitoring of cellular activity. in contrast to traditional analytics with a biosensor you can measure on-line cellular activity change caused by an effector as well as the restored activity after privation of the effector (re-native activity). cmos technology can be used for the realisation of various biological sensorchips such as adhesion sensorchips, metabolical sensorchips and electrophysiological sensorchips. the standard cmos technology allows a high reproducibility of the chips, the integration of electronic components on the chip, which reduces the amount of external devices and the combination of different sensors on one chip. in cooperation with the semiconductor company micronas and the biotech company bionas we have realised different types of cmos sensorchips to measure adhesion of a cellular monolayer with interdigitated electrodes (ides), metabolical activity via acidification with ion-sensitive field effect transistors (isfet) and sponteneous neuronal network activity with passive palladium electrodes. microbial agents have been applied to the different stages of pulp and paper processing. the work presented describes a study on the effect of applying ligninolytic enzymes, such as a laccase plus mediator system, on a variety of different types of pine and eucalyptus pulps and subsequently subjecting these to different ageing processes. industrial pulps were obtained from different portuguese pulp and paper companies. the pulps used were ( ) unbleached pine pulp from portucel tejo; ( ) unbleached eucalyptus pulp from portucel setúbal; ( ) bleached eucalyptus pulp from portucel setúbal; and ( ) pulp made from recycled paper from renova s.a. several types of handsheets were produced with different grammage namely, and g/m . the prepared handsheets were subject to an aging sequence in three different chambers: ultraviolet radiation (wavelength of nm), temperature ( • c) and moisture ( %); and thick saline fog at a concentration of % and temperature of • c. in order to evaluate the effect of moisture cycles and temperature, two aging sequences were used for each type of handsheet. in the first, the moisture varied ( , and %), while the temperature was held constant ( • c); in the second the temperature varied ( , and • c) and the moisture was held constant ( %). following the aging phase, the handsheets were subject to several chemical (viscosity and index kappa) and physico-mechanical (colour, tensile breaking strength, stretch and the bursting strength) tests in order to characterize the effect of the aging conditions. results will be presented describing the effect of application of the laccase-mediator system on the optical and mechanical properties of the prepared handsheets. fundação para a ciência e a tecnologia, project pocti/ agr/ / . aspergillus niger is a filamentous fungi widely used in industry. its growth as freely dispersed hyphae leads to an increase in the medium viscosity and to problem of mass transfer, especially oxygen transfer. oxygen acts both as final electron acceptor in the mitochondrial chain and as nutrient for the biosynthesis of unsaturated fatty acids and sterols. thereby, a lack of oxygen affects the nadh/nad ratio, the atp production, the growth and has a strong influence on the physiology of the microrganism. in the present study, the metabolic changes of a. niger in response to a lack of oxygen was investigated using oxygen limited chemostats combined with nitrogen pulse. under these conditions, the main consequence of a sudden decrease of oxygen availability is an increase in the mannitol production. this work showed that the mannitol biosynthesis, involving the enzyme mannitol- -p dehydrogenase, helps the reoxidation of nadh when the final electron transport acceptor, oxygen, is limiting. investigation of the lipase activity of the bacteria isolated from olive mill wastewater sevgi ertugrul , nur koçberber , gönül dönmez , serpil takaç department of biology faculty of science ankara university beşevler ankara turkey; department of chemical engineering faculty of engineering ankara university tandogan, ankara, turkey the bacteria that could grow on media containing olive mill wastewater (omw) were isolated and their lipase production capacities were investigated. the strain possesing the highest lipase activity among strains grown on tributryin agar medium was identified as bacillus sp. the effect of ph on the lipase activity of the strain was investigated in tributryin medium and ph was found to be the optimal. the liquid medium composition was improved by adding different carbon sources and fatty acids into tributryin medium -omitted tributryin -to increase the enzyme activity. the cultivations were performed at • c and ph . lipase activity of the bacillus sp. was measured spectrophotometrically through the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenol palmitate. among the media containing different compositions of tricapryn, trimyristin, tributyrin, triacetin, tween , glycerol-trioleate, glycerol-trioctanoate, glycerol-tridodecanoate, omw, glucose, and whey; the medium consisted of % whey + % glycerol-trioleate was found to give the highest lipase activity. cultivation of bacillus sp. in the optimum medium at ph = and • c for h was resulted in the extracellular and intracelluar lipase activities of and u/ml, respectively. this study was supported by ankara university biotechnology institute (project no: - and - ) . under different abiotic stresses, cell growth and metabolic activity are highly influenced in all types of living organisms medium osmolality is usually one of those factors affecting different types of biological systems in different ways. however, even in the same organ of higher eukaryotes the degree of osmoregulation mechanism is highly variable in different types of cells. therefore, studying the effect of osmotic stress on mammalian cell is very important subject for particular cell line. the effect of hyperosmotic pressure on the kinetics of cell growth of and metabolic activity of mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) and two industrially important cell lines, hybridoma cells and human embryonic kidney cell (hek) were investigated in batch cultures at different osmotic pressures in the range from to mosm kg − . in case of mscs cells, the maximal specific growth rate [] of . [h − ] associated with the highest specific glucose consumption rate [-q gluc ] of . × − [mol cells − h − ] was obtained in medium of mosm kg − . in case of hybridoma cells, osmotic pressure showed not only influence on the kinetics of cell growth and metabolism but also on the monoclonal antibody production. the maximal mab production was obtained in case of cells cultivated under osmotic pressure of mosm kg − . further increase in osmotic pressure resulted in significant reduction in growth rate as well as mab production. on the other hand, hek cells were more sensitive to osmotic pressure in industrially used serum free medium and the addition of serum decreased the inhibitory effect of high osmotic pressure on the cells. gustavo g. fonseca , , andreas k. gombert , elmar heinzle , christoph wittmann : biochemical engineering, saarland university, saarbrücken, germany; chemical engineering, são paulo university, brazil kluyveromyces marxianus cbs is a potentially interesting yeast strain characterized by a high capacity of conversion of substrate into biomass. however, this yeast has been only marginally studied so far. therefore, we performed a metabolic characterization in batch and chemostat cultures at dilution rates of . , . and . h − . the specific rate of o consumption (qo ) increased with dilution rate from . to . mmol (g dw) − h − . the respiratory coefficient remained almost stable around . for all metabolic states investigated. even at the dilution rate of . h − , which is close to the maximum growth rate of the strain of . h − , no significant overflow metabolism was observed. the concentration of extracellular metabolites increased with the dilution rate, but remained below % of the carbon consumed as glucose. all carbon balances closed near % underlining the consistency of the data. in contrast to s. cerevisiae the respiratory capacity of k. marxianus cbs is not strongly influenced by the dilution rate in aerobic chemostat or batch cultures, indicating its high potential for biomass-directed applications. a thermostable l-arabinose isomerase for enzymatic production of d-tagatose o. hansen, f. jørgensen, p. stougaard department of enzyme technology, bioneer a/s, kogle allé , dk- hørsholm, denmark. e-mail: och@bioneer.dk (o. hansen) d-tagatose, an isomer of d-fructose, is a low-calorie bulk sweetener with a sweetness equivalent to sucrose. d-tagatose has obtained gras approval for use as a food ingredient, and is currently produced by chemical isomerization of d-galactose, which may readily be obtained by hydrolysis of lactose. structurally, d-galactose is closely related to l-arabinose, and it has previously been shown that some variants of l-arabinose isomerase (araa) may catalyze the conversion of d-galactose to d-tagatose, in addition to the metabolic conversion of l-arabinose to l-ribulose. we have screened a number of bacterial araa enzymes for their ability to catalyze the isomerization of d-galactose to d-tagatose. the best enzyme was found in the thermophilic bacterium thermoanaerobacter mathranii (dsm ). the araa gene of t. mathranii was cloned, sequenced and expressed in e. coli. amino acid sequence comparisons of the t. mathranii sequence and other known araa sequences showed a relatively low sequence identity of about %, indicating a distant phylogenetic relationship to the other members of the l-arabinose isomerase group. the t. mathranii enzyme was thermostable with optimal activity at • c and it required manganese ions. unlike other araa variants, the t. mathranii enzyme showed k m values in the same order of magnitude for l-arabinose and d-galactose, suggesting that this enzyme is a versatile isomerase capable of isomerizing structurally related aldoses. the enzyme was immobilized by chemical cross-linking of a crude e. coli cell homogenate, and the immobilized enzyme efficiently converted d-galactose into d-tagatose. currently, we are developing an enzymatic method for industrial production of d-tagatose using the immobilized enzyme. the agricultural production can be negatively affected by different pest insects (pi) and the use of chemical insecticides (chi) has been the traditional method for controlling pi during decades. nevertheless, there are various ecological implications due to the extensive application of chi. a viable alternative for the use of chi in certain agro-systems, is the use of entomopathogenic nematodes (epn) of the genera steinernema and heterorhabditis that are natural pathogens for different pi; besides, the presence of a symbiotic bacterium is necessary for an effective entomopathogenic activity can take place. the nematode/bacterium complex does not represent a risk for the environment. different authors propose that the best alternative for the massive production of epn is the submerged culture within bioreactors; nevertheless, more research is required to have really robust processes. particularly, information regarding the actual hydrodynamics during epn production and its relation with the epn productivities are scarce, among other aspects. the present study deals with the hydrodynamic characterisation during the production of the epn steinernema carpocapsae and its symbiont bacterium xenorhabdus nematophilus, in submerged monoxenic culture in an internal-loop air-lift bioreactor (v l = . l) using two culture media: one of them containing whey and the other one, agave juice, aguamiel, (agave spp.). process viscosity of the culture broth was determined along the time, exhibiting a maximum value of mpa s. moreover, it was determined that the hydrodynamic conditions were always located within the laminar region (re < ). at the experimental conditions tested, it can be inferred that the epn productivity are more sensitive to changes in the culture medium composition than on the prevailing hydrodynamic conditions during the fermentations. bacillus thuringiensis is a gram-positive bacterium used as a biological pest control agent. moreover, it is able to produce, several biologically active molecules such as bacteriocins and hydrolytic enzymes among which chitinases that play double roles, fungicide and improving the insecticidal effect of b. thuringiensis deltaendotoxins. a newly isolated b. thuringiensis subsp. kurstaki strain bupm , was shown to produce a novel bacteriocin named bacthuricin f . the highest bacteriocin activity was found in the growth medium and evidenced in the late exponential growth phase. upon purification of bacthuricin f , the specific activity was increased -fold. this bacteriocin was heat-stable up to • c and resisted up to ph . . its molecular mass, determined by mass spectrometry was . da. direct n-terminal sequencing of bacthuricin f revealed the following sequence: dwtxwsxl. the latter was unique in the databases. bacthuricin f was active against bacillus species while it had little or no effect on gram-negative bacteria. the bacteriocin produced by the b. thuringiensis strain bupm respond to both criteria of thermostability and stability to low phs. thus, it could be used as a source of bacteriocin active against related species of bacillus harmful for agricultural products and as food preservative. the other example of antimicrobial compound produced by b. thuringiensis is a chitinase. we describe the selection of b. thuringiensis high chitinase-producing strain bupm , and the characterization and the heterologous expression of a novel chitinase encoding gene. the cloning and sequencing of the corresponding gene named chi showed an open reading frame of bp, encoding a amino acid residue protein. both nucleotide and amino acid sequences similarity analyses revealed that the chi is a new chitinase gene, presenting several differences from the published chi genes of b. thuringiensis. the identification of chitin hydrolysis products resulting from the activity, exhibited by chi through heterologous expression in e. coli revealed that this enzyme is a chitobiosidase. the addition of the sequence of chi to the few sequenced b. thuringiensis chi genes might contribute to a better investigation of the chitinase "structure-function" relation. cloning and characterization of s-adenosyl-l-methionine synthetase from pichia ciferrii dscc - kwon-hye ko , gee-sun yoon , gi-sub choi , joo-won suh , yeon-woo ryu s-adenosyl-l-methionine(sam) has an important role for dna methylation and cell signaling. sam was synthesized from methionine and atp by sam synthetase and play an pivotal function in the primary and secondary metabolism of cells. recent studies have revealed in the effect of sam in case of morphological differentiation in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes. the p. ciferrii produces large quantities of sphingoid base. tetraacetylphytosphingosine(taps), which is a precursor of sphingolipid, could be used for the production of pharmaceuticals and cosmetics. we isolated sam gene from p. ciferrii and cloned it into expression vector for e. coli and p. pastoris, respectively. an . kb sam-s gene fragment was isolated by low-strigency pcr using degenerated primer. by the analysed primary sequence deduced from dna sequence, this gene included conserved domains similar with other well-known sam synthetase. first of all, sam synthetase gene cloned pgem-t vector and subcloned into histidine tagging system to purify the expressed protein using metal chelating resin. typical characteristic analysis of this enzyme is underway. metabolic networks offer a large variety of different synthesis pathways starting from cheap substrates and leading to interesting high-value compounds, i.e. metabolites. in case an interesting pathway can be disconnected from the remaining metabolic network, the perforated cell or the crude extract could be used for a one-pot multi-step synthesis of the desired compound. pathway isolation, achieved by deletion of genes encoding gene products enabling side reactions, interferes with the viability of the organism, which is a requisite for the production of the system of biotransformation (sbt). in this work, a rational systems biology-derived approach is presented for the design of a sbt. it is illustrated for a sbt allowing for production of dihydroxyacetone phosphate. the design procedure comprises three steps: (i) a production pathway is identified in the metabolic network of e. coli. the e. coli pathway is complemented by two additional enzymes in order to obtain a fully energy and redox balanced production pathway. (ii) an optimal combination of gene knockouts is designed and a suitable growth medium composition is identified, both by a model-based approach: flux balance analysis of a genome-scale metabolic network is used to predict enzyme expression within the wild-type organism on different media, while a mixed-integer optimisation is employed to identify viable mutants as this approach strongly depends on the quality of the fba prediction, available regulatory information on the usage of metabolic pathways and thermodynamic constraints were taken into account. (iii) thermodynamic analysis of the obtained, partially branched sbt reaction cascade revealed the extent of loss in yield by the remaining side reactions. in summary, this systems biology-driven approach potentially enables the substitution of a elaborative multi-step synthesis process by a one-pot enzyme reaction cascade. institute of industrial biotechnology, inha university, incheon - , korea. e-mail: leecg@inha.ac.kr (c.-g. lee) algal biotechnology is drawing increasing interest due to its potential as a source of valuable pharmaceuticals, pigments, carbohydrates, and other fine chemicals. currently, its application is being extended to the areas of wastewater treatment and agriculture. however, lack of suitable photobioreactors (pbrs) makes the cost of algally-derived compounds higher than those derived by chemical synthesis and thus has prevented widespread use of algal cultures. the culture of algae prior to the late s was apparently restricted to laboratory scale operations. experiments on outdoor algal mass production began in the late s with nearly concurrent development of experimental culture facilities in germany and the united states. for the next two decades, outdoor mass culture of algae was undoubtedly the hottest topic in the algal biotechnology area. recent developments of high-density pbrs enable the production of valuable biologically active compounds by algal mass cultures. however, light is almost always the limiting factor in high-density photobioreactors. key factors for successful photobioreactors will be discussed and various photobioreactors will be analyzed and compared for their advantages and disadvantages. the new techniques, such as pigment redcution and application of flashing light and lumostatic operation, will be discussed for possible solutions to overcome the light limitation in high-density microalgal cultures. a quick and reliable method for screening fungal transformants for specific genetic modifications is essential for many molecular applications, for example when one tries to develop a transformation system for a new fungal host. southern analysis is laborious and time consuming. several colony hybridisation methods have been developed for the analysis of a large number of transformants. unfortunately these methods suffer from different disadvantages such as non-specific binding, a limited usability to screen for specific integration and the fact that these procedures always take a few days (van zeijl et al., ) . recently, methods for pcr-based analysis of fungal transformants have been described. most of these methods require high quality dna. many methods for dna extraction from fungi have been described in the past few years. these methods often are tedious, time consuming, costly or limited to a small number of samples each time. most of the available protocols include the growth of mycelium in a liquid culture, followed by freeze-drying or maceration in liquid nitrogen and grinding of the frozen material to break the cell walls (cassago et al., ) . lately a few methods have been described to isolate dna from fungi suitable exclusively for pcr and appropriate for the simultaneous treatment of a large number of samples. some methods also describe the direct use of mycelium (cooke et al., ) in the pcr-reaction mixture. we compared the applicability of a few rapid dna extraction methods for myrothecium gramineum and tested the resulting dna samples on there suitability for pcr-applications. myrothecium gramineum is a filamentous ascomycete used in ongoing research as a new cloning and expression host. five methods were tested. in four of these methods dna was extracted from mycelium (goodwin et al., and aljanabi et al., ) or spores (ferreira et al., and xu et al., ) prior to pcr. a fifth assay used mycelium straight in the pcr-reaction mixture. only this last method seemed useful for myrothecium to isolate dna suitable for pcr. fragments up to bp were amplified. cheese whey is a liquid effluent from cheese-making processes. there is an increased interest in the economic utilization of whey produced by the dairy industries, because the whey is a pollutant, due mainly to its lactose content. the goal of this work was to find the most suitable values of some fermentation parameters for lactic acid production from whey by a lactic acid bacterium, lactobacillus helveticus (atcc ). the effects of lactose content, temperature, ph and the supplementation with yeast extract were investigated using surface response methodology. a composite central design was used with three center points, making a total of operational conditions. the region of maximum production is outlined by the following intervals: temperature around • c; lactose concentration between and g/l; concentration of yeast extract between and g/l; ph between and . . fermentation studies on a continuous fermentative process coupled to a vacuum flash evaporator were carried out in lab scale equipment. the phases of this work consisted in an assembly and instrumentation of the prototype and elaboration of a supervisory system coded in labview . , which allows the data acquisition and control through personal computers. the experiments in continuous fermentation used saccharomyces cerevisiae and sugar cane molasses as substrate. the analytical follow up was done through analysis of total reducing sugars, ethanol, glycerol, dry mass and viable cells. the system worked for months uninterruptedly, producing an alcoholic solution at the condenser with • gl. the fermentation operated with concentrations of ethanol at • gl, which is a weakly inhibitory value for the yeast of the process, even when fed with concentrated cane molasses, containing up to g/l of sugar. the result meets the initial goal, which was to operate the system with low level of ethanol and to guarantee high productivity, even in high concentrations of sugar in the feeding. the results showed that system productivity was superior to that of the conventional continuous process. lactic acid (la) is a versatile chemical, used as an acidulant, flavor and preservative in the food, pharmaceutical, leather and textile industries, and for production of biodegradable poly lactic acid (pla). l(+)lactic acid is the only optical isomer for use in pharmaceutical and food industries because human body is only adapted to assimilate this form. in this research, lactic acid production was improved on l fermentor. in our experience, among six strains of lactobacillus were examined for the production of l(+) lactic acid, lactobacillus casei ssp. casei atcc was selected as a highest l(+) lactic acid producer. optimized medium used for lactic acid production contained (per l) g glucose, g whey powder and g corn steep powder. for a homofermentative process, ph . was found to be optimal. in order to avoid product inhibition, the produced lactic acid was neutralized using calcium hydroxide. maximum production and productivity of lactic acid in batch system, were g and . g/lh, but in fed batch system, after feeds of glucose, production and productivity increased up to g and g/lh. saleh a. mohamed molecular biology dept., national research centre, cairo, egypt an extracellular polygalacturonase (pgii) from trichoderma harzianum was purified to homogeneity by two chromatography steps using deae-sepharose and sephacryl s- . the molecular weight of t. harzianum pgii was , da by gel filtration and sds-page. pgii had isoelectric point of . and optimum ph of . . pgii was very stable at the ph . . the extent of hydrolysis of different pectins by enzyme was decreased with increasing of degree of esterification (de). pgii had very low activity toward nonpectic polysaccharides. the apparent km value and kcat value for hydrolyzing polygalacturonic acid (pga) were . mg/ml and s − , respectively. pgii was found to have temperature optimum at • c and was approximately stable up to • c for min of incubation. all the examined metal cations showed inhibitory effects on the enzyme activity. , phenanthroline, tween , tween , triton x- and sds had no effect on the enzyme activity. the rate of enzyme catalyzed reduction of viscosity of solutions of pga or pectin was higher three times than the rate of release of reducing sugars indicating that the enzyme had an endo-action. the storage stability of the enzyme in liquid and powder forms was studied, where the activity of the powder form was stable up to one year. these properties of t. harzianum pgii with appreciable activity would be potentially novel source of enzyme for food processing. tarek m. mohamed, biochemistry division, chemistry department, tanta university, tanta, egypt preparation of peroxidase from horseradish, which could be used for commercial applications such as diagnostic kits, was occurred through a simple reproducible method consisting of extraction, ammonium sulphate precipitation, filtration through non-binding protein filter and lyophilization. the purification method was developed allow the preparation of mg of enzyme from kg of horseradish roots. the one mg of enzyme contains units of peroxidase. this value is similar to that produced by sigma ( - unit mg − powder). the final preparation is salt free reddish brown powder with free ammonia content less than . g − units. the rz value (a /a ) of the enzyme, which is a good criterion of purity and heme content, was . . the lyophilized enzyme was stable at − • c for at least one year. the liquid form of the enzyme in presence of . % sodium azide was stable up to days at • c, while it lost most of activity at room temperature in the same period. the properties of horseradish peroxidase including km, optimal ph and temperature, activation energy, thermal stability and effect of different compounds were studied. the applicability of this enzyme in determination of serum glucose was performed. the analysis of glucose in human sera gave results using the kit containing the prepared peroxidase similar to those obtained with a commercial glucose kit. lactobionic acid production using lactose oxidase: from laboratory to l scale mikkel nordkvist , per munk nielsen , peter budtz , john villadsen : center for microbial biotechnology, technical university of denmark, dk- lyngby, denmark; novozymes a/s, dk- bagsvaerd, denmark; chr. hansen a/s, dk- hørsholm, denmark. e-mail: mnq@biocentrum.dtu.dk (m. nordkvist) currently, lactobionic acid is mainly a high-price specialty product used, e.g. in solutions for organ stabilization. however, lactobionic acid can also be used as a biodegradable cobuilder in detergents, and it has several applications in food technology. with lower production costs it has the potential to become a bulk chemical. the kinetics for the oxidation of lactose to lactobionic acid by a new carbohydrate oxidase was studied in a l bio-reactor with control of ph, temperature, and dissolved oxygen. the byproduct hydrogen peroxide has a negative influence on the lactose oxidase enzyme, and hence additional experiments were made with addition of catalase to remove hydrogen peroxide, thereby also providing extra oxygen. on the basis of the experiments in l scale, experiments were performed in a l reactor equipped with a new system for dispersion of air to supply the necessary oxygen for the oxidation. the aeration system in the large scale reactor was able to supply oxygen sufficiently fast to give the same production rate, at low values of the air flow rate and the energy input, as was obtained in the high-performance laboratory reactor. the non-characterized gene previously proposed as d-tagatose -epimerase from agrobacterium tumefaciens was cloned and expressed in escherichia coli. the expressed enzyme was purified by affinity chromatography on histrap hp, desalting chromatography on hiprep / , and gel filtration chromatography on sephacryl s- hr with a final specific activity of . u/mg. using maldi-tof-ms, the native protein was estimated to have a molecular mass of , da and a monomeric structure. the purified enzyme exhibited maximal activity at • c and ph . without the addition of metal ions and at • c and ph . with . mm mn + . among various metal ions, mn + was the most effective divalent cation for d-fructose epimerization activity. the addition of mn + significantly increased the thermal stability and the epimerization activity with other ketoses such as d-psicose, d-tagatose, d-ribulose, d-sorbose, and d-xylulose. the activity, substrate affinity, maximum velocity, and catalytic efficiency (k cat /k m ) of the enzyme for d-psicose were higher than those for d-tagatose, which suggests that the enzyme is not d-tagatose -epimerase but d-psicose -epimerase. the equilibrium ratio between d-psicose and d-fructose was : at • c with . mm mn + . when the enzyme was used at u/ml, dpsicose was produced at g/l from g/l d-fructose containing mm mn + after min, corresponding to a conversion yield of . %. the role of ammonium ions in glucosamine formation during the citric acid fermentation process by aspergillus niger m. papagianni , f. wayman , m. mattey : department of hygiene and technology of food of animal origin, school of veterinary medicine, university of thessaloniki, thessaloniki , greece; department of bioscience, university of strathclyde, glasgow, g xw, uk. e-mail: mp @vet.auth.gr (m. papagianni) stoichiometric modeling of the citric acid fermentation process by aspergillus niger, in -l stirred tank reactor, indicates that nh + ions combine with a c-containing metabolite inside the cell to form a nitrogen compound which is then excreted by the mycelium. the close correlation between calculated and experimental profiles indicates that this metabolic process is rapid and takes place before the c-structure of the glucose has been greatly altered by glycolysis or the pentose phosphate pathway. hplc analysis identified glucosamine as the product of this relationship. a clear effect of medium concentration of nh + on glucosamine formation was observed when fermentations carried out with optimal and sub-optimal ammonium concentrations. (nh ) so addition when medium nitrogen was depleted, enhanced the formation of new cells from the tips of fragmented hyphae and led to glucosamine accumulation in amounts depending to pulse concentration. the fungus reacts in excess ammonium by converting it to glucosamine, to be utilized later when a regeneration process takes place with fragmentation of vacuolated hyphae and subsequent regrowth, depending always on the culturing conditions. however, depending on carbon and ammonium concentration in medium, glucosamine can be secreted in concentrations as high as g/l. about microorganisms originated from traditional korean food origin were screened for efficient palatinose production. an isolate designated fmb was exceptionally efficient in sucrose-palatinose conversion activity. conversion of sucrose into palatinose by fmb was much faster than a reference strain of erwinia rhapontici. fmb is a gram negative, facultatively anaerobic, motile, noncapsulate, and straight rod-shaped bacterium producing acid from glucose. based on api and s rdna analyses, fmb was determined to be enterobacter sp. the maximum conversion of % sucrose to palatinose and trehalulose by enterobacter sp. fmb was achieved within h. the preliminary dna sequencing result of the gene corresponding to sucrose isomerase of enterobacter sp. fmb revealed that it showed % similarity to that of klebsiella sp. (??). within the scope of an r&d project developed in collaboration with leather tanning portuguese industrial partners a screening of new proteases to be used in the industrial process was performed. a bacillus subtilis strain isolated from alkaline spent purge liquor was shown to be a promising protease producer. microorganism growth was studied for optimisation of temperature, agitation, ph and medium composition either for biomass or proteases production. optimal growth temperature is different for maximum biomass growth ( • c) and optimal proteolytic activity ( • c) yielding biomass specific growth rate of . and . h − , respectively. the achieved proteolytic activities were . and . u/ml of protease, respectively. optimised medium composition ( g/l beef extract, g/l yeast extract, g/l peptone and . g/l cacl ) yielded a specific growth rate of . h − and . ku/l of protease, in shake flask experiments. bioreactor experiments (from to l) with the selected medium were performed at • c in order to test aeration rate ( and vvm), stirring ( - rpm) and ph (uncontrolled, controlled at and ). best protease activity was u/ml in l bioreactor without ph control at rpm and vvm. the proteolytic extract was characterized and compared to commercial bates. results indicate that these proteases can be employed in the purge phase of the leather tanning process in industry. the gram positive bacterium bacillus megaterium is known for its capacity to produce exoenzymes including amylases, proteinases, and penicillin amidase at industrial scale. here, we describe the development of various vectors for the production and export of recombinant heterologous proteins employing b. megaterium signal peptides. the target gene can be cloned directly adjacent to the signal peptide coding sequence (bart et al., ) . this arrangement allows for a correct n-terminal sequence of the mature protein after processing by the signal peptidase sipm. using this newly developed protein production and export system lactobacillus reuteri levansucrase (van hijum et al., ) was secreted in significant amounts (∼ mg/l) into the growth medium. fusion of the recombinant levansucrase to affinity tags allowed one-step purification of the recombinant protein from the growth medium. however, fused peptide tags resulted in a decreased secretion of the fusion protein. . mg his -tagged levan-sucrase were purified per litre of culture. the system was further enhanced via coexpression of a gene for the signal peptidase sipm (malten et al., a) and deletion of the gene for the extracellular protease nprm. developed new tools allow for various strategies of integrated high level production, export and purification of heterologous proteins in b. megaterium. methods for high-throughput screening of secreted enzymes are under development. the determined sequence of the b. megaterium genome, studies using high-cell density cultivations (malten et al., b) and proteome data from batch fermentations implicate new targets for directed genetic optimization of b. megaterium production and secretion strains. novel strong and inducible promoters are currently under investigation. toru matsui , naoya shinzato , hisashi saeki , hitoshi matsuda : center of molecular biosciences, university of the ryukyus, okinawa - , japan; japan energy co., japan. e-mail: tmatsui@comb.u-ryukyu.ac.jp (t. matsui) optically active epoxides are considered as the potential intermediate for chiral drugs synthesis. although s-styrene oxide (so) have been extensively investigated using styrene monooxygenase from pseudomonas sp., microbial production of r-so with high enantiomeric excess was hardly examined. in this study, r-so producing bacteria from styrene was screened using various alkene assimilating bacteria. r-so with the highest ee (ca. %ee) was obtained using ethene utilizing bacteria, identified as mycobacteirum sp., while produced relatively lower at around %ee when using propene utilizing bacteria. the alkene monooxygenase gene homologue sequence amplified from the genomic dna revealed a significant similarity to that of etnabc. these bacteria also showed stereoselective degradation of racemic so, suggesting that the produced so might be further stereoselectively degraded to increase the ee. the ethene utilizing bacteira produced not only r-so but also s-epichrolhydrin at high ee.when using arylchloride as the substrate. this research was supported by nagase science and technology foundation. the secretion efficiency of the escherichia coli sec pathway is dependent on the growth phase but not on protein size f.j.m. mergulhão, g.a. monteiro centro de engenharia biológica e química, instituto superior técnico, av. rovisco pais, - lisbon, portugal. e-mail: filipem@alfa.ist.utl.pt (f. mergulhão) the secretion efficiency of the escherichia coli sec pathway was evaluated through the expression of green fluorescent protein and human proinsulin fusion proteins. translocation to the periplasm is dependent on the growth phase of the bacterial culture and the highest secretion efficiency is attained in mid-exponential phase. secretion performance is independent of protein size ( - kda) and even when the amino acid composition of the secreted proteins is very similar, the amino acid distribution within the protein can affect translocation. in silico prediction analysis suggests that proteins that are prone to form ␣-helix structures are more efficiently translocated. culture medium composition plays an important role on secretion performance with the highest secretion results being obtained in minimal medium. streptokinase is a common fibrinolytic drug. that is used in thrombolytic therapy for long time. to compare with another thermbolytic drugs like tpa, it has lot of advantages. in this present research dna was extracted from s. equisimilis h a for the first time in iran. streptokinase gene was amplified by using two forward primers and one reverse primer. a common restriction enzyme, bamh-i, was used for cloning. both ends of the pcr products (full length: bp and mature section: bp) and the restriction site on mcs of pqe- vector were digested. in this study, pqe- expression vector was used with high level expression ability for production of recombinant fusion streptokinase with simplifying the purification by employing affinity-metal chromatography method. in addition, the cloning results were controlled by double digestion and sequencing. takesono oxidation of short-chain iso-alkanes was studied with propanegrown resting mycelia of scedsporium sp. a- . isobutane was oxidized to tert-butanol, but not to isobutanol. isobutanol was used for growth, but both isobutene and tert-butanol were not used for growth. isopentane was oxidized to -methyl- -butanol, -methyl- -butanol, and -methyl- -butanol but not to -methyl- -butanol. -methylpentane was oxidized to -methyl- -pentanol, -methyl- pentanol, and -methyl- -pentanol but not to -methyl- -pentanol or -methyl- -pentanol. -methylpentane was not oxidized. oxidation of branched alcohols was also studied. application of nadph-dependent . -diketo-gluconic acid reductase for production of l-ascorbic acid claudia pacher , : division of food biotechnology, department of food sciences and technology, boku, university of natural resources and applied life sciences, muthgasse , a- vienna, austria; research centre applied biocatalysis, petersgasse , a- graz, austria. e-mail: claudia.pacher@boku.ac.at ascorbic acid is an organic acid with various applications in the food and pharmaceutical industries. at present, the majority of commercially manufactured vitamin c is synthesized via the reichstein process, which is highly energy-consuming, involves considerable quantities of organic solvents and gives an overall yield of about %. therefore, during the past decades a lot of research was done to develop biotechnological alternatives for the synthesis of reichstein intermediates by enzymatic or fermentative means, which show some advantages regarding costs and environmental friendliness. one of the fermentation routes runs via . -diketo-d-gluconic acid ( . -kdg), produced by pectobacter (erwinia) cypripedii. this compound has been reduced by a nadph-dependent . -diketogluconic acid reductase (dkr) from corynebacterium glutamicum to the key intermediate -keto-l-gulonic acid ( -klg) before chemical rearrangement leads to the final product. for economical reasons we wanted to express dkr heterologously. based on our long term experience with coenzyme regeneration we wanted also to perform the reaction in homogeneous solution. the spent coenzyme of nadph-dependent dkr has been regenerated by a second isolated nadp-dependent enzyme like glucose dehydrogenase. we describe here the recombinant production, purification and characterization of dkr and the results of enzymatic -klg formation by using the recombinant enzyme in a homogeneous system with conjugated coenzyme regeneration. grp residing in endoplasmic reticulum (er) functions as a molecular chaperon by associating transiently with incipient proteins as they traverse the er and aiding in their folding and transport. furthermore, the protein can also be induced under various stress condition such as glucose starvation, inhibition of protein glycosylation by tunicamycin, blockage of vesicular trafficking by brefeldin a and er-calcium-atpase pump inhibition by thapsigargin. thus, substances that directly down and up-regulate grp transcription are expected to be useful for treatment of cancer and alzheimer's disease, respectively. in the course of our screening program to obtain substances, which regulate grp expression, we first constructed an assay system monitored by the expression of a reporter gene. hela cells, which are transformed with luciferase gene under the control of grp promoter designated as hela c cells, respond sensitively to luciferase grp induction by er stress such as treatment of tunicamycin. by using this screening system, we isolated pyrisulfoxin as an up-regulator of grp , and valinomycin, citreoviridin and alternariol as down-regulators. detailed studies on other biological activities were now under way. pdh is an enzyme that was described only several years ago in a number of ecologically related litter-decomposing fungi (agaricales, gasteromycetales). it catalyzes the c- and/or c- oxidation of several aldopyranoses to the respective keto sugar derivates. pdh shows a very broad substrate range, oxidizing almost all major sugar components of wood polysaccharides, and is implicated to play a role in lignocellulose degradation. agaricus bisporus, the white button mushroom, is an economically significant agricultural crop. the cultivation, which is done by solid-substrate fermentation on straw-and hay-based composted substrate, is sometimes seen as one of only few economically feasible methods for bioconversion of lignocellulosic agricultural waste material. deeper insight in the physiological role of pdh may provide help for mushroom growers to increase yield, improve quality or make new sources of raw materials utilizable. we amplified a fragment of the pdh gene with degenerated primers derived from internal peptide sequences. the screening of a genomic library led to the isolation of the pdh gene. subsequently we amplified a cdna clone by rt-pcr and investigated the transcriptional regulation by different carbon sources on a defined minimal medium. optimization of monoclonal antibody production processes with simulation and scheduling tools demetri petrides, charles siletti intelligen inc., scotch plains, nj , usa. e-mail: dpetrides@intelligen.com (d. petrides) this presentation will review the state of the art in batch process simulation and scheduling tools and their applications in the design and debottlenecking of integrated biopharmaceutical processes. a systematic methodology will be presented for identifying and eliminating size, time, and throughput bottlenecks that limit production in single and multi-product facilities. the methodology will be illustrated with an industrial case study dealing with the optimization of a multi-product facility that produces therapeutic monoclonal antibodies (mabs). mab processes are characterized by a long bio-reaction time (e.g., . - weeks for fed-batch operation and - months for perfusion operation). the cycle time for processing a lot in the recovery and purification train typically takes - days. consequently, one way of increasing throughput is by installing extra bioreactors that operate in staggered mode and utilize the same recovery train. the result is that multiple batches may be at different stages of completion at any given time. since cleaning equipment (e.g., cip skids) and buffer preparation and holding tanks are shared by multiple steps across many batches, this type of operation leads to time/scheduling bottlenecks that constrain the cycle time and the throughput of a process. the problem becomes more challenging in the context of multi-product facilities and when constraints imposed by the limited availability of resources are considered. our methodology and its computer implementation will illustrate how to systematically identify and eliminate such bottlenecks. the industrial case study will provide a real world example of the methodology. application of two stage continuous cultures of aspergillus niger for citric acid biosynthesis jerzy j. pietkiewicz, malgorzata janczar, wladyslaw lesniak food biotechnology department, university of economics, wroclaw - , poland. e-mail: jerzy.pietkiewicz@ae.wroc.pl (j.j. pietkiewicz) the aim of the work was application test of submerged two stage single stream continuous cultures of aspergillus niger for citric acid production from sucrose. studies were carried out in lab fermenters with working volume of dm . the bioreactors were standard cstrs. in two stage continuous cultures (tscc) high mycelium growth and high citric acid production were observed in the first bioreactor. there was almost four times lower growth of biomass rate and about three times lower citric acid production rate in the second bioreactor. studies on influence of dilution rate in race from . to . dm /(dm h) on course and efficiency of tscc showed, that the highest citric acid yield (y p/s = . %), high volumetric rate of its production (r pc = . g/(dm h)) and the highest biosynthesis efficiency coefficient (k ef = . ) were obtained with dilution rate d = . dm /(dm h). there was also high citric acid concentration (p = . g/dm ) and low residual sugar concentration (s k = . g/dm ) in the medium flowing out the second bioreactor in those cultures. the beta-galactosidases in commercial use are of different origins and yeast and fungal lactases present the greatest interest. the yeast lactases present neutral optima ph and are suitable for the hydrolysis of lactose in milk. in this work, the aim was to study the influence of aeration in the production of beta-galactosidase in batch fermentations with kluyveromyces marxianus atcc . the medium composition for culture was as follows (in g/l): lactose pa , yeast extract , (nh ) so and kh po . the fermentations was carried out at • c, ph . , at rpm starting with an initial cellular concentration of × cels/ml, with different aeration rates. the cells were disruped with chloroform % (v/v) as solvent. the enzymatic activity was determined as initial rate of lactose hydrolysis at defined conditions. the studies have revealed the importance of aeration on kluyveromyces marxianus in the growth and beta-galactosidase synthesis. the enzymatic activity of fermented medium with . vvm was % higher than one without aeration. furthermore, the cellular growth was faster in the aerobic fermentation than in the anaerobic one. the aeration has taken an important place in the enzymatic synthesis and in the cellular growth, however the results have shown that the aeration rate increase of . - . vvm has not implied a increase in the cellular growth neither in the enzymatic reached activity. the lactose presents in the milk has a solubility of only % at • c, and a high percentage of the world population presents intolerance to this sugar, due to the low or absence of the activity of the lactase enzyme in the organism. to minimize such problems, the most viable alternative for nourishing dairy products is the enzymatic hydrolysis of milk, although it is an expensive process due to the high cost of the beta-galactosidase enzyme. an alternative that has been greatly studied is the immobilization of this enzyme, originated from many different sources. there are several immobilization procedures for this enzyme, however, a procedure considered ideal was not obtained yet. the objective of this work was to study the immobilization process of beta-galactosidase from aspegillus oryzae in sodium alginate with commercial gelatin. in the immobilization process was studied the glutaraldehyde influence for , and %, in the presence of commercial gelatin at the concentration of % at the immobilization medium. the activities of the immobilized enzymes were obtained in a stirred micro-reactor, at the temperature • c, ph . with a gl − lactose solution in acetate buffer. the experimental results showed that the immobilized biocatalyst that presented the larger initial activity was the one obtained at the immobiliza-tion medium that contained % of glutaraldehyde. after daily determinations of enzymatic activities, a fall of , and % was verified in the enzymatic activities for the immobilized biocatalysts using glutaraldehyde at , and %, respectively, however, in all cases, the enzymatic activity reached the half of their initial activity after determinations. hydrolysis of sucrose by immobilized beta-fructofuranosidase in silica eloízio júlio ribeiro, ubirajara coutinho filho faculdade de engenharia química, universidade federal de uberlândia, uberlândia - , brazil. e-mail: ejribeiro@ufu.br (e.j. invertase, known as beta-fructofuranosidase (ec . . . ), plays a catalytic role in the conversion of sucrose into glucose and fructose. it is largely used in the food industry to prevent the crystallization of sucrose in sugar mixtures and can be used in enzyme reactors for hydrolysis of sucrose. the objective of this work was to study the kinetic of sucrose hydrolysis by immobilized betafructofuranosidase in a continuous recirculation reactor, evaluated the enzyme stability and determine the effective half-life of immobilized enzyme. invertase was covalently immobilized on sillanized controlled pore silica. nonlinear fitting were used to determine the kinetic parameters for substrate and product inhibition observed in the enzymatic hydrolysis of sucrose. the kinetics studies of immobilized invertase were carried out in a continuous recirculating reactor. the half-time of enzyme inactivation (t / ) was calculated from the initial rates of the remaining enzyme activity. the model of inhibition by substrate and product adequately represented the enzymatic hydrolysis. the fructose effect was competitive inhibition (k f = . . − mol/ml) and the glucose effect was noncompetitive inhibition (k g = . . − mol/ml). the effective diffusivity of sucrose into the support was shown to be the same as for sucrose in dilute solution ( . × − cm /s at • c). the half-time of enzyme inactivation (t / ) was h. controlled pore silica showed to be an excellent immobilizing support. the immobilized invertase was very stable at temperatures lower than • c. the intrinsic parameters (k i , k f , k g and v m ) were shown to be similar to the apparent values. the low permeability of mycobacterial cell wall envelopes is a result of the unique composition and organization of the cell wall lipids. the permeability of mycobacterial cell wall can be changed by means of partial disintegration of its compounds. the aim of present work was to characterize the changes in the cell wall skeleton (cws) and non covalently bound free lipids under the influence of isoniazid, the inhibitor of mycolic acids biosynthesis. fatty acid (fames) and mycolic acid methyl esters (mames) obtained from all tested preparations were analyzed by gc/ms analysis. the analysis of free lipids and cws revealed distinct changes in the composition of the frac-tions obtained from the cells exposed to action of the isoniazid. the changes in the quantity of fatty acids in the inh-treated cells indicates that inh interferes with the synthesis of lipidic compounds of the mycobacterial cell wall also. the decreased amount of covalently bound mycolic acids in the cws is responsible for the enhanced penetration of hydrophobic compounds through the cell wall. this work was supported by grant nr p c of the committee for scientific research. barbara sencio, teresa jamroz, stanislaw ledakowicz department of bioprocess engineering, technical university, lodz, poland the enzyme laccase (ec. . . . . p-diphenol oxidase) is a subject of research in many centres dealing with improvement of bioprocesses with the use of different white rot fungi species. most strains that produce this enzyme in vitro require inductors initiating its biosynthesis. when cerrena unicolor was applied, it was found that the strain produced laccase very efficiently without additional toxic compounds. to specify optimum conditions for laccase production in a submerged culture, research was undertaken to obtain the most efficient inoculum c. unicolor. the goal of this research was to determine the effect of form and incubation time of inoculum on enzymatic activity of the laccase producing strain. the experimental inoculum was the mycelium prepared on a solid and liquid substrate. basing on results obtained, it was found that the laccase yield was the highest in the cultures where the mycelium was grown on a solid substrate. maximum activity of the c. unicolor strain was achieved on the th day of culture, and the amount of laccase produced was higher by, ca. % as compared to the mycelium obtained from the liquid substrate. results of these experiments were used to continue studies on the impact of inoculum age. experiments were carried out using an inoculum incubated for - weeks at the temperature • c in a certomat bs shaker at rpm. the best results in the c. unicolor strain culture were achieved using a -day-old inoculum. effect of alcohol treatment on hydrolytic activity of candida rugosa lipase serpil takaç, a. ezgiÜnlü department of chemical engineering, institute of biotechnology, ankara university, tandogan, ankara, turkey candida rugosa lipase (crl) was treated with , , and % concentrations of methanol (m), ethanol (e), -propanol ( p) and -butanol ( b) to investigate the changes in its hydrolytic activity toward p-nitrophenylacetate. the treatment included the following steps at + • c: (i) stirring crl with phosphate buffer for h; (ii) treating the solutions with alcohols; (iii) stirring treated-crl for h; (iv) centrifugation at , rpm for min; (iv) dialysis the supernatant against bidistilled water for h. the activity of crls was followed for h at • c in the presence and absence of isooctane. the enzyme activity was measured spectrophotometrically and the protein concentration was measured by lowry's method. it was found that the recovered protein did not change considerably with the type of alcohol; however, decreased with alcohol concentration. in the presence of isooctane, specific activities of the untreated and treated-crls increased compared with those obtained in the absence of isooctane. b-crls and e-crls showed higher activities than m-crls and p-crls whereas untreated-crl exhibited higher activity than m-crls, e-crls and p-crls. the highest and the lowest activities were obtained with % b-crl and % p-crl, respectively. the changes occur in the structure of crl after treatments were investigated by electrophoretic analysis. this study was supported by ankara university biotechnology institute (project no: ) . different genera, species and strains of microorganisms were found to posses different cryoresistance. optimal ways for cryopreservation of microorganisms-producers of antibiotics, microorganisms, used in food industry, agriculture and veterinary have been developed. it was demonstrated, that non-lethal damages could occur in cryopreserved microorganisms after their returning to physiological culture conditions, which were manifested in streptomyces' hypha fragmentation, that of cyanobacteria's, streptococci's chains as a result there was an increase in a number of colony-forming units, a reversible inhibition of microorganisms' proliferative activity in bacillus thuringiensis and lactic streptococci, stimulation of the enzyme processes and antibiotic production. non-lethal damages are repaired during microorganism culturing in the first passage. the cause of non-lethal damages is a reversible inhibition of biosyntheses of protein and nucleic acids respiratory activity. the repairing of non-lethal damages is accompanied by the production of stressproteins, different from heat shock proteins. effect of ph in the -propanol treatment of candida rugosa lipase on its enantioselectivity in the hydrolysis of racemic naproxen methyl ester serpil takaç, a. ezgiÜnlü department of chemical engineering, ankara university, tandogan, ankara, turkey candida rugosa lipase (crl) was treated with -propanol ( p) at the ph values of . , , , . , and to investigate the changes in its enantioselectivity in the hydrolysis of racemic naproxen methyl ester. the treatment included the following steps at + • c: (i) stirring crl with different buffer solutions to maintain the desired ph values for h; (ii) treating the solutions with % p; (iii) stirring treated-crls for h; (iv) centrifugation at , rpm for min; (iv) dialysis the supernatant against bidistilled water for h. hydrolyses of racemic naproxen methyl ester to form s-naproxen were performed in shaking flasks at rpm and • c for h in isooctane-phosphate buffer solution biphasic system using treated-crls with the activity of . u. the concentrations of the enantiomers of naproxen methyl ester and naproxen were determined with hplc. it was found that the treatment ph has an important role on the enantioselectivity and conversion. the highest enantiomeric excess for the substrate, for the product, enantiomeric ratio, and con-version were obtained with crl treated at ph . as , , and %, respectively. these values were followed with p treated crl at ph as , , and %. however, lower enantiomeric excesses, conversions and enantiomeric ratios were obtained at the treatment ph values between . and . the effects of fatty acids, nitrogen (as nh no ), phosphorus (as kh po ), ph value, manganese (mn + ), iron (fe + ) and methanol concentration on growth and production of oxalic acid from post refining fatty acids by a mutant of aspergillus niger xp in submerged fermentation experiments was studied. of the a. niger strains screened, a. niger xp was identified as the best oxalate producer on lipids. the influence of the ph on oxalic acid formation shows that the maximum production rate and higher concentration of product are observed at the ph ranging from to . with a medium containing g fatty acids/l, the production reached a maximum of g oxalic acid/l after days. the addition of . % (w/v) methanol to seed culture increased the product yield and concentration of oxalic acid but decreased the amount of an undesired by-product (citric acid). under this condition, the maximum oxalate productivity ( - g/l days) was maintained for - days of fermentation. other results of the experiments show that supplementation of the production medium with manganese and iron enhances oxalate production. fatty acids proved to be a very good substrate for oxalic acid production by a. niger xp giving excellent yields and productivity at low ph. the results are very promising as they may lead to cheap alternative processes for oxalic acid production from renewable lipid resources. department of food engineering, middle east technical university, ankara , turkey. e-mail: banuy@metu.edu.tr (b. yalcindag) laccase (e.c. . . . , p-benzenediol:oxygen oxidoreductase), which is an enzyme belonging to the multi-copper oxidase family, catalyzes the oxidation of a broad variety of polyphenols with a preference for p-isomers, which are converted to p-quinones. fungi generally contain several laccases which have been found to be involved in delignification, melanin synthesis and pathogenesis. laccase has also important potential application areas especially in food and chemical industries. after aspergillus fumigatus genome data were released, research on functional analysis of laccases has been initiated in our laboratory. laccase genes of aspergillus nidulans, ya and tila, and laccase and multi-copper oxidase genes of aspergillus fumigatus, abr and abr , were used to analyze a. fumigatus genome for laccases. this sequence analysis resulted in probable laccase genes, one of which was the previously cloned abr gene. in this study, one of these genes (aflac ) was further characterized. after sequence alignment and characterization studies, aflac was predicted to have bp having six introns, which makes the protein amino acid long, and the predicted protein sequence showed % homology with the dihydrogeodin oxidase of aspergillus terreus and % homology to the laccase of botryotinia fuckeliana. aflac gene is found within an uncharacterized gene cluster containing genes with homology to glutathione-s-transferase, polyketide synthase, o-methyl transferase, and others. the information obtained from sequence analysis was employed in designing pcr-primers to amplify the aflac gene, followed by cloning onto pan - and pan - vectors for heterelogous expression in aspergillus sojae. in addition, by the use of rt-pcr, aflac cdna will be cloned and expressed in escherichia coli. furthermore, gene silencing studies will be performed to enlighten the function of aflac and associated gene cluster. stability of growth rate of photosynthetic cells is an important factor in designing of effective photobioreactors especially in long term operations. in our experiments, in order to keep operational parameters almost constant, a semi-continuous culture method was developed. in this method, a part of culture broth containing grown cells was repeatedly replaced by fresh medium at a predetermined time interval. the replacement of broth with fresh media could keep the cell concentration, volume of broth and distribution of light intensity constant at initial values throughout the cultivation. it was shown that in one side illumination with a halogen lamp, if the ratio of the light intensity at the front side of a flat plate photobioreactor to that at the rear side was kept lower than , the growth rates was sustained in constant levels. however, at higher ratios the growth was followed by rapid decrease after - h. supplemental illumination with a fluorescent lamp from the rear side of the flat plate photobioreactor could sustain almost stable growth rate. beside of the illumination conditions, increased ferrous ion concentrations in medium could keep the stability of growth rate even in unstable illumination conditions, while consumed ferrous ion was slight. glutathione (gsh) plays a pivotal role in protecting cells from by-products generated by oxidative metabolism. these characteristics make this active tripeptide an important drug for the treatment of liver diseases and is of interest in the food additive industry, therapeutics and sport nutrition. in the first part of the research, a screening was carried out among yeast strains, to find out those able to accumulate higher gsh intracellular levels. two saccharomyces cerevisiae strains proved to be the best gsh producers ( . %dw), in every samples the presence of s-adenosyl-methionine in traces ( . % dw) was also evidenced. s-adenosyl-methionine (sam) plays a role in the immune system, maintains cell membranes, participates in detoxification reactions and in the manufacture of brain chemicals and cartilage. the second part of the research was aimed at increasing, in a post fermentative procedure, gsh levels present inside the cells at the end of the growth phase. moreover, time course of sam intracellular levels, to be related with accumulated gsh, was also monitored. cells were then suspended in an appropriate solution containing mineral salts, glucose and the aminoacids, precursors of the two studied molecules. according to this procedure, gsh intracellular levels reached . % dw after h incubation. moreover, gsh levels can be related to sam production (up to . % dw). the presence, in several samples, of intermediate metabolites, such as cystathionine and omocysteine, proved the establishement of an intracellular equilibrium between gsh and sam; this behaviour represents a promising starting point for the set-up of a microbial process for the simultaneous production of the two studied molecules. three acetate mutants of y. lipolytica yeasts, which varied in colony morphology (rough and smooth), were employed for continuous citric acid production from glucose and fructose syrup in a membrane reactor with cell recycle. the strains were compared for their product yields, specific acid production rates and ratios of citric acid to isocitric acid. experiments shoved that glucose syrup was a better substrate for citric acid production by y. lipolytica. citric acid concentration in the effluent ranged from to g/l, depending on the yeast strain used. all y. lipolytica strains produced very low amounts of isocitric acid. its concentration did not exceed g/l. based on the results of these experiments, smooth strain awg- was found to be the most suitable for citrate production both from glucose and fructose syrup during long time continuous processes ( h). in the steady state, the highest citrate productivity ( . g/lh) was obtained with this strain, when the feed medium contained g/l of glucose and dilution rate (d) was d = . /h. supplementation of the feed medium with bacto-pepton improved the productivity, citric acid yield and stability of the continuous process in the cell recycle fermentation system. for textile dyeing with natural dyes, indigo has an almost unique position as the most blue natural dye. due to the importance of indigo, considerable research has been conducted to replace the chemical synthesis of the dye by an application of biotechnological methods. therefore, we investigated several characteristics of natural indigo derived from polygonum tinctorium and its dyeing properties using silk fabrics, such as washing, perspiration, and light fastnesses. this work was financially supported by program for cultivating graduate students in regional strategic industry from korea industrial technology foundation. glycine oxidase is the product of the yjbr gene of bacillus subtilis that was predicted by sequence homology to be a flavoprotein similar to sarcosine oxidase. glycine oxidase catalyzes the oxidative deamination of various primary and secondary amino acids (e.g. sarcosine, n-ethylglycine, and glycine) and d-amino acids to form the corresponding ␣-keto acids and hydrogen peroxide. previous investigations reported on the cloning and production of the glycine oxidase gene in escherichia coli was up to u/g cell. the present works has improved the expression of the recombinant his-tagged glycine oxidase by -fold by using pet a and rosetta cells under the optimal iptg, temperature and time of induction. the protein obtained represented % of total soluble proteins in crude extract. the enzyme was purified to near homogeneity using imac with a % recovery and with and specific activity of . u/mg protein. the enzyme was active towards glycine, sarcosine and different d-amino acids, having in general, a basic ph optimum. the kinetic parameters were also studied, showing a km range from . to mm. the enzyme was immobilized, and used to obtain pyruvic acid (␣-keto acid) from d-alanine with a good yield. the enzymatic synthesis of lipophilic derivatives of various natural antioxidants including flavonoid glycosides, as well as derivatives of cinnamic acid, was performed using various immobilized lipases in ionic liquids such as -butyl- -methylimidazolium tetrafluoroborate (bmim-bf ) and -butyl- -methylimidazolium hexafluorophosphate (bmim-pf ). the influence of various reaction parameters on the catalytic behavior and the selectivity of lipases was pointed out. a response surface methodology was applied for the optimization of the yield and the productivity of the biocatalytic process. the antioxidant activity of the biocatalytically prepared lipophilic derivatives of natural antioxidants, as expressed on cu + -induced oxidation of low-density lipoprotein (ldl) and total serum, was investigated. process strategy for reduction of proteolysis in pichia pastoris fermentations jan weegar , john dahlbacka , noora sirén , niklas von weymarn , kaj fagervik : faculty of chemical engineering,Åbo akademi university, finland; laboratory of bioprocess engineering, helsinki university of technology, finland. e-mail: jan.weegar@abo.fi (j. weegar) the yeast pichia pastoris is a popular host organism for production of recombinant proteins. it is, however, common that the products are degraded by proteases towards the end of the fermentation, resulting in productivity and purity decreases. proteolysis of recombinant proteins in p. pastoris fermentations is affected by the temperature and ph of the growth medium. in this study, it was shown that decreasing the temperature from to • c during the induction phase effectively prohibited proteolysis. on the other hand, the temperature decrease resulted in a reduced maximal methanol consumption rate, which subsequently resulted in a culture highly sensitive to residual methanol. the temperature was slowly decreased according to a predetermined trajectory. as the temperature reached values below • c, the methanol concentration had to be closely monitored and the substrate feed rate adjusted in order to prohibit methanol poisoning as well as to maintain the culture as a substrate limited fed-batch. measurement of protease concentrations revealed that proteases were present at • c, but at this temperature the proteolysis rate was evidently effectively reduced. the recombinant protein produced could almost totally be recovered (i.e. high purity) with this process strategy compared to a constant high temperature culture ( • c) where severe breakdown of the product was observed. with the growing of an ecological conscience in the public opinion, more and more industrial processes are analyzed for a possible ecologically beneficial alternative. for the production of ascorbic acid, which is nowadays done by the reichstein process, a lot of research was done to develop biotechnological alternatives for the synthesis of reichstein intermediates by enzymatic means, which show some advantages regarding costs and environmentalfriendliness. besides of two-stage fermentation, our approach is to design a tailor-made organism that produces -keto-l-gulonic acid, which is the direct precursor of ascorbic acid from glucose or gluconic acid and which can easily be converted to the final product by conventional methods. erwinia (pectobacter) cypripedii, which is a natural producer of , -diketo-d-gluconic acid, was selected as a suitable host for a , -diketo-d-gluconate reductase from corynebacterium glutamicum. to increase the yield of the desired compound we investigate two -keto-reductases in the host organism that diminish the yield of -keto-l-gulonate by reducing the compound to l-idonic acid, or by metabolisation of intermediates. these two enzymes were investigated with vari-ous biochemical and molecular biological methods, which will be presented. overproduction of bioinsecticides by heat and salt stress and control of dissolved oxygen in cheap media of bacillus thuringiensis nabil zouari, dhouha ghribi, samir jaoua laboratoire des biopesticides, centre of biotechnology of sfax, tunisia, bp:k, sfax, tunisia bioinsecticides based on preparations of spores and insecticidal crystal-proteins (icps) produced by the bacterium bacillus thuringiensis (bt) proved to be a high tool for fighting some agricultural pests and vectors of diseases. however, the use of bt preparations as commercial insecticides would be prohibitively expensive because it is not easy to reach cheap overproduction of icps during large-scale fermentation. here, we report possibilities to improve delta-endotoxins production as a consequence of responses of bt strains to low levels of heat and salt stress. each stressor results differently in the improvement of delta-endotoxins production, but both were shown to be most efficient at the beginning or the midexponential phase of the cultures which become resistant at the stationary or the sporulation steps. heat stress caused increase of % of synthesis yields of the sporulating cells, in contrast, salt caused increase of % of spores counts, corresponding to % toxins production improvement. combined effects of both stressors lead to toxins production improvement of %, yield improvement of %. we focused on the overcome of carbon repression catabolite, closely related to oxidative metabolism, by an adequate control of dissolved oxygen in the cheap media we formulated for bt insecticides production. we showed that an equilibrium between the high density of vegetative cells and their ability to synthesize toxins during their sporulation was necessary to take into account. % increase of icps production was reached into l fermenter combination of mutagenesis, heat and salt stress and oxidative metabolism control allowed more than % improvement of delta-endotoxins. these results are of great importance in practical point of view, since high bioinsecticides concentrations could be produced without decrease of the yields of their production. mechanism and function of the intramembrane-cleaving protease rhomboid marius lemberg , javier menendez , christopher koth , matthew freeman : mrc laboratory of molecular biology, cambridge, uk; ontario center for structural proteomics, toronto, canada rhomboids are a family of intramembrane serine proteases that are widely conserved throughout evolution. among diverse functions discovered so far, rhomboids participate in intercellular signalling, parasite invasion, membrane dynamics and bacterial quorum sensing, making them potentially valuable therapeutic targets. the identification of physiological substrates and of selective inhibitors will be key towards their evaluation as drug targets. we have developed an in vitro cleavage assay to monitor rhomboid activity in the detergent solubilised state, enabling the first isolation of a highly pure rhomboid with catalytic activity. analysis of purified mutant proteins suggests that rhomboids use a serine protease catalytic dyad instead of the previously proposed triad, and gives insights into subsidiary functions like ligand binding and water supply. oligosaccharides and -keto-glycosides. availability of the enzyme is, however, hampered by the very slow growth and low production rates of the fungus. cloning of the encoding gene and production of the protein by heterologous expression are therefore a prerequisite not only for any biotechnological application, but further scientific investigations as well. on the basis of peptide sequences degenerated primers were designed, and the resulting pcr fragment was used as a probe to isolate the gene from a genomic library. two very similar genes encoding previously uncharacterized proteins were also found, and flanking regions were amplified using rage-pcr. furthermore cdna clones of all genes were isolated by rt-pcr. for textile dyeing with natural dyes, indigo has an almost unique position as the most blue natural dye. due to the importance of indigo, considerable research has been conducted to replace the chemical synthesis of the dye by an application of biotechnological methods. therefore, we investigated several characteristics of natural indigo derived from polygonum tinctorium and its dyeing properties using silk fabrics, such as washing, perspiration, and light fastnesses. this work was financially supported by program for cultivating graduate students in regional strategic industry from korea industrial technology foundation. the behavior of phytate degrading enzymes isolated from malaysian zea mays root in rice bran media anis shobirin meor hussin , abd-elaziem farouk , hamzah mohd salleh , ralf greiner : biomolecular engineering research group, department of biotechnology engineering, kulliyyah of engineering, international islamic university malaysia, jalan gombak, kuala lumpur, malaysia; centre for molecular biology federal research centre for nutrition and foods, haid-und-neu-straße , d- karlsruhe, germany phytate degrading enzymes catalyze the step-wise release of phosphate from phytate, the principle storage form of phosphorus in plant seeds and pollen. they are widespread in nature, occurring in plants and microorganisms, as well as in some animal tissues. phytate-degrading enzymes have been studied intensively in recent years because of the great interest in such enzymes for phytate degradation and their application for animal feed and human health. from over isolate screened isolates of phytate degrading enzymes, three isolates from the root malaysian maize plantation have shown phytate degrading activity. the production of phytate degrading enzyme was studied using different concentrations [%, w/v] of rice bran media during different stages of cultivation. the dephosphorylation of phosphate from rice bran phytate has shown regulatory effect on the secretion of bacterial phytases. in this conference, we will present data for the characterization of the enzymes. in this paper we present the properties of a phytase purified from a bacterium isolated from malaysian wastewater, which might find application as an animal feed supplement. the phytase described herein is a periplasmic enzyme. the phytase was purified about fold to apparent homogeneity using ion-exchange chromatography and gel-filtration with a recovery of % referred to the phytatedegrading activity in the crude extract. the enzyme exhibits an activity of about u mg − . gel filtration of the native enzyme on a calibrated sephacryl s- column gave a molecular mass of the phytase of , ± da with elution position being measured by determination of enzyme activity. lower molecular mass species or higher molecular mass aggregates were not observed. the phytase appeared homogeneous by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis under non-denaturing conditions at ph . and . and gave a single protein band upon sds gel electrophoresis after coomassie staining of the gels. these results indicate that the phytase could be regarded as homogeneous. the estimated molecular mass after sds-page indicated that the phytase having a molecular mass of , ± da. consequently, this enzyme is a monomeric protein. the purified enzyme had a single ph optimum at ph . and was virtually inactive above ph . . at ph . , % and at ph . , % of the activity at optimal ph was observed. the effect on enzyme stability was studied in the ph range . - . at • c. within days the phytase did not lose any activity in the ph range from . to . , but at ph values below . a rapid decline in activity was observed. at ph . , % and at ph . , % of the initial activity was lost during h. in the range of temperatures studied, - • c, the optimum temperature for the enzyme was found to be • c. the apparent activation energy was estimated at ph . from the slope of log v max versus /t. the data showed excellent linearity from to • c. the arrhenius activation energy for the hydrolysis of phytate was calculated to be . kj/mol. in order to check thermal stability, the purified enzyme was incubated at different temperatures, cooled to • c and assayed using the standard phytase assay. the enzyme lost no activity in min at temperatures up to • c. when exposed for min at • c, it retained % and at • c % of the initial activity. in order to determine the substrate selectivity of the purified phytase, several phosphorylated compounds in addition to phytate, were used for k m and v max estimation by detecting the release of the phosphate ion during hydrolysis using formation of a soluble phospho-molybdate complex in an acidic water-acetone mixture. only phytate was identified as a substrate. the kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis of phytate were determined to be k m = . mmol l − and k cat = s − at ph . and • c. like other bacterial phytatedegrading enzymes, the purified enzyme showed substrate inhibition. the activity of the purified enzyme was inhibited at substrate concentrations > mm. the study of the effect of metal ions on enzyme activity showed that none of them had an activating effect when used at a concentration between − and − m. mg + , ca + , mn + , co + , ag + , hg + , and cu + had little or no effect on enzyme activity, while zn + , fe + , and fe + showed strong inhibitory effects. the reduced phytate-degrading activity in the presence of fe + and fe + is attributed to a lower phytate concentration in the enzyme assay because of the appearance of a fe-phytate precipitate. when compounds which tend to chelate metal ions, such as o-phenanthroline, edta, oxalate, citrate or tartrate, were tested for their effect on enzyme activity, it was noted that none of them was inhibitory at a concentration from − to − m. fluoride, a known inhibitor of different phytate-degrading enzymes from bacteria and the hydrolysis product phosphate as well as its structural analogs molybdate, wolframate and vanadate were found to be strong inhibitors of the purified enzyme. flouride inhibited the hydrolysis of phytate with a k i value of mol l − . several fusion strategies have been developed for the expression and purification of small antimicrobial peptides (amps) in recombinant bacterial expression systems. in the present work, we investigated the use of the baculoviral polyhedrin (polh) protein as a novel fusion partner for production of a model amp (halocidin subunit; hal ) in escherichia coli. the recombinant hal amp could then be hydroxylamine cleaved from the fusion protein and easily recovered by simple dialysis and centrifugation. this was facilitated by the fact that polh was soluble in the alkaline cleavage reaction but became insoluble during dialysis at a neutral ph. importantly, recombinant and synthetic hal peptides showed nearly identical antimicrobial activities against e. coli and staphylococcus aureus, which were used as representative gram-negative and -positive bacteria, respectively. these results demonstrated that baculoviral polh can provide an efficient and facile platform for production or functional study of target amps. extensive industrial and food additive applications of succinate have attracted much effort towards finding an environment-friendly alternative to the petrochemical production processes. it is very attractive to engineer s. cerevisiae for succinate production because of its generally regarded as safe (gras) status, ease of genetic manipulation and fermentation. we approached this metabolic engineering problem with a two-step methodology combining modern computational as well as molecular biology tools. in the first step we identified potential metabolic engineering targets leading to high succinate yield and productivity, with the aid of genome scale metabolic model and a bi-level optimization framework using flux balance analysis and quadratic programming. in the next step, various deletion mutants are being constructed and characterized for physiology and succinate production. results from these experiments then will be used to improve the predictions in computational models. so far, we have constructed a saccharomyces cerevisiae mutant deleted in sdh , which encodes a major subunit of sdh-complex converting succinate to fumarate in mitochondria. the physiology of sdh mutant has been characterized in aerobic and anaerobic batch cultivations and in glucose limited chemostat at dilution rate as low as . h − . in aerobic batch fermentations, the mutant showed reduced maximum specific growth rate as compared to the wild-type, and it was incapable of growing on ethanol as sole carbon source, as predicted from the model. interestingly, the mutant showed much higher specific growth rate in anaerobic conditions, close to the wildtype strain. moreover, the chemostat cultivations indicate that the critical dilution rate of the mutant is below . h − . this opens further opportunities to investigate interesting behavior of the mutant and the underlying regulatory processes to improve our understanding of yeast mitochondrial metabolism. department of chemical engineering, yıldız technical university, davutpaşa campus, esenler/istanbul, turkey. e-mail: dkilic@yildiz.edu.tr (d.k. apar) lactose is the dominant carbohydrate in milks which are, in turn, the only significant natural sources of lactose. a large number of people do not digest lactose properly due to a lack or inactivity of the intestinal beta-galactosidase and they suffer from intestinal dysfunctions -gas, abdominal pain and diarrhea -if their diet contains lactose. moreover, lactose is a sugar with a high bod, low sweetness, low solubility, when compared to the products of its hydrolysis (glucose and galactose) and being a hygroscopic sugar has a strong tendency to adsorb flavours and odours. the hydrolysis of this sugar is very attractive towards the improvement of processes for the production of ice cream and other refrigerated dairy products and it could be very interesting for the development of additives for animal and human alimentation. the enzymatic hydrolysis of lactose is carried out by beta-galactosidases, enzymes that are widely distributed in nature, appearing in micro-organisms, plants and animal tissues. the present investigation describes the effects of the sonication process parameters on enzymatic hydrolysis of milk lactose and enzyme stability. bandelin sonopuls sonicator was used for the lactose hydrolysis experiments. -galactosidase enzyme used is produced from kluyveromyces marxianus. the reactions were carried out in ml of milk. the process variables for the sonicator are duty cycle, acoustic power and enzyme concentration. the amount of residual lactose concentration (g/l) and residual enzyme activity (%) against time were investigated versus process variables. beside of this; the mathematical models depending on the operating conditions were also derived by using the experimental data of lactose concentration and enzyme activity. kinÖzbek department of chemical engineering, yıldız technical university, davutpaşa campus, esenler/istanbul, turkey. e-mail: dkilic@yildiz.edu.tr (d.k. apar) over the last decade, the use of plant protein hydrolysates alternative to animal protein hydrolysates in human nutrition has broadly expanded. protein hydrolysates are often used in different nutritional formulations, such as supplementation of drinks to enhance their nutritional and functional properties, or special medical diets. there are many processes which employ protein hydrolysis and hydrolytic products. among these processes, the use of enzymes allows selective hydrolysis of protein and produces a potentially safer and more defined material. in the present study, the effect of the temperature, ph and viscosity on the hydrolysis of corn gluten was investigated using a stirred batch reactor system. the corn gluten was hydrolysed by using neutrase enzyme, a bacterial protease produced by a selected strain of bacillus amyloliquefacien. the reactions were carried out in . l of aqueous solutions containing % (w/v) corn gluten and . % (v/v) enzyme. the degree of hydrolysis (%) and soluble protein concentration depending on the time were investigated at the temperatures , , , , and • c; and at the ph values . , , . , and . to investigate the effect of viscosity, the various amounts of glycerol was added to the reaction solutions to produce viscosities in the range of . - . cp. the degree of hydrolysis (dh) was computed by using ph-stat method. for the soluble protein determination in the hydrolysates samples, the folin-lowry method ( ) was used. polyhydroxyalkanoates (pha), one of the most promising bioplastics for the partial replacement of synthetic polymers like polypropylene, are polyesters produced by bacteria as intracellular storage reserves of carbon and energy. the industrial production of pha is achieved by pure cultures in its natural state or using genetically engineered organisms. the main obstacle to the replacement of synthetic plastics by biopolymers is their great cost difference. research on the field of biopolymers synthesis using mixed cultures and waste organic carbon sources as substrates prove to decrease substantially the production costs of pha. the optimization of pha production under aerobic feeding conditions (adf) was achieved recently in our group, obtaining the highest value of pha content stored by mixed cultures ( . % of cell dry weight). in this work only a homopolymer of polyhydroxybutyrate (phb) was obtained and since it is a highly crystalline and brittle material its application field is limited. the mechanical and thermal properties of pha can be varied to a great extend by adjusting the monomer composition. the incorporation of different monomeric units, other than hb, in the polymer chain, originates copolymers with improved mechanical properties. optimization of pha production from propionate by a mixed culture was studied varying the carbon and ammonia concentrations. propionate only, acetate alone or a mixture of acetate and propionate were tested. copolymers of hydroxybutyrate and hydroxyvalerate, p(hb/hv), with different compositions were obtained. consequently polymer properties could be manipulated by feeding the selected volatile fatty acid composition. the pharmaceutically important plant species of glycyrrhiza sp. (called licorice) is an important commercial product used as a natural sweetener, anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer and anti-diabetic agents. agrobacterium rhizogenes transformation system was used for the hairy root cultures of licorice g. uralensis. after inoculation of aseptic stem segments the ability of hairy root formation was scored for a period of weeks. mean transformation frequency ranged from % (for up to % (for ). some transformed genotypes showed significant differences in roots weight, flavonoids and glycyrrhizin (gl) production. the cotransformation rate of licorice intact explants cultivars with lba tl-dna and the s gus gene showed an average of more than %. these obtained root cultures were additionly elicited with extracts of biotic elicitor acremonium sp. (endomycorhizal fungus), and were used as an in vitro system to metabolites production. the transformed and elicited hairy roots of g.uralensis were obtained by infection of a. rhizogenes have produced gl at an yield of . % dry weight on the period of culture as a days. according to tentative analyses the hairy roots cultures of glycyrrhiza species produced flavonoids (liquiritigenin and liquiritigen). more high levels ( . g/l) of the total flavonoids production have been identificated on the strains which transformed by lba . this study involved any difference among elicitor treatments and incubation periods for the optimal meabolites production. clearly, the selection of an effective agrobacterium strain for the production of transformed root cultures is highly dependent on the plant species, and must be determined empirically. production, purification and characterization of scytalidium thermophilum phenol oxidases didem sutay , ufuk bakir , zumrut b. ogel : chemical engineering department, middle east technical university, inonu bulvari, ankara, turkey; food engineering department, middle east technical university, inonu bulvari, ankara, turkey. e-mail: ubakir@metu.edu.tr (u. bakir) phenol oxidases (pos) are a group of enzymes which are responsible for oxidation of various phenolic compounds in the presence of molecular oxygen. there are different types of pos present in nature and three major groups of these enzymes are laccases (e.c. . . . , p-benzenediol: oxygen oxidoreductase), catechol oxidases (e.c. . . . , o-diphenol oxidoreductase) and tyrosinases (e.c. . . . , monophenol monooxygenase). another group of enzymes, peroxidases (e.c. . . . ), can also be considered as a member of po family. pos have very wide substrate range and final oxidation products of these substrates are quinones, which are highly reactive molecules and polymerize into brown, red or black waterinsoluble compounds. pos are very common in nature, they can be found in almost all plants, animals and microorganisms. pigmentation and protection from the environment are main functions of these enzymes. pos have different applications in food, pharmaceutical, textile industries and waste-water treatment systems. the objective of this study was po production by the thermophilic fungus, scytalidium thermophilum, purification and characterization of the enzyme. for this purpose, enzyme production was performed either in a shaker-incubator or a temperature, ph and dissolved oxygen controlled l bioreactor (probiotem) to optimize enzyme production medium composition and bioreactor parameters. as the carbon and nitrogen sources, % glucose and . % yeast extract were determined as the optimal concentrations, respectively. copper, gallic acid and tannic acid were determined to increase enzyme production. purification was performed by using membrane and chromatographic techniques. hydrophobic, ion exchange and gel filtration columns were used by using a fplc system;Äkta prime (amersham biosciences). especially the phenyl sepharose tm high performance column appeared to be very efficient for po purification from scytalidium thermophilum. purified po have been characterized by electrophoretic techniques and kinetic studies. isolation of lipolytic microorganisms from subtropical soils. cloning, purification and characterization of a novel esterase from strain pseudomonas sp. cr- núria prim, cristian ruiz, cristina bofill, f.i. javier pastor, pilar diaz department microbiology, university of barcelona. av. diagonal , microorganisms or their enzymes are used in a wide range of biotechnological activities such as polymer hydrolysis, synthesis of added-value compounds, sample decontamination, etc. thus, there is an increasing interest for isolating new enzymes and new enzymeproducing organisms for their use in industrial conversions (cherry and fidantsef, ) . among these enzymes, lipases, esterases, cellulases, xylanases and pectinases play an important role in many biotechnological processes like those related to pulp and paper processing. three samples of subtropical forest soil from puerto iguazú (argentina) were used for the isolation of autoctonous microorganisms growing in an organic matter-rich environment. a total of pure cultures of bacteria and fungi were obtained and their hydrolytic activities on polysaccharide and lipidic substrates were assayed using olive oil, tributyrin, cholesterol esters, xylan, cellulose and pectin as substrates. among the isolates analysed, were active on one or more of the substrates evaluated, and of them degraded all substrates. nearly half of the strains displayed lipolytic activity, whereas the number of strains active on xylan, cellulose, pectin and cholesterol esters, was much lower. the strains bearing the highest hydrolytic activities were selected and stored for further characterization (ruiz et al., ) . among them, strain cr- , one of the most active isolates on tributyrin, was selected for identification and characterization of its lipolytic system. lipolytic strain cr- was identified by morphological, physiological and phylogenetic tests, as a pseudomonas sp., closely related to p. fluorescens. sds-page and zymogram analysis (diaz et al., ) of cell extracts and supernatants from the strain revealed a complex lipolytic system consisting of at least two lipolytic enzymes. sequence alignment and clustering of previously described pseudomonas lipases and esterases allowed the design of different sets of primers for the isolation of the lipase/esterase coding genes. a gene coding for an esterase with homology to family vi bacterial lipases (arpigny and jaeger, ) was isolated and cloned in escherichia coli. the cloned enzyme was further purified and characterized, showing preference for short fatty acid esters and displaying a typical michaelis-menten kinetics, with no interfacial activation. the substrate profile, together with the kinetic behaviour and sequence similarity of the cloned enzyme to family vi bacterial esterases, allowed to identify this enzyme as an esterase and was named esta . maximum activity was achieved on muf-butyrate at • c and ph . , suggesting that it could be of interest for biotechnological purposes. microbial xylitol production from agricultural wastes has recently attracted much attention from industries because it has potentials to realize the cheaper production of xylitol with low environmental impact (tada et al., ) . in order to realize the effective xylitol production by a xylose utilizing yeast, the oxygen supply is a key for maximizing xylitol yield over consumed xylose (y xl ) because the intracellular xylitol metabolism is strongly influenced by the amount of available oxygen. in the present work, we tried to apply a metabolic reaction model in order to determine the optimal oxygen transfer rate (otr) in a fermentor for maximizing xylitol yield. corn cob hydrolysates containing g-xylose/l was employed as medium for xylitol production by computer-controlled batch cultures using candida magnoliae (ferm p- , aist). a metabolic reaction model considering main xylitol metabolisms including glycolysis, pentose-phosphate pathway, tca cycle and cell synthesis was developed. the model allows to estimate various intracellular metabolic flux distributions including a xylitol production rate. the oxygen uptake rate to maximize the ratio of xylitol production rate over xylose consumption rate corresponds to the otr condition to maximize a xylitol yield over xylose consumed. based on the metabolic reaction model, the otr was optimized by a linear programming, the optimal otr and the maximum xylitol yield were estimated as . mmol o /l h and . g-xylitol/g-xylose, respectively. the experimental verification using the optimal otr demonstrated that the xylitol yield was greatly improved to . g-xylitol/g-xylose from . g-xylitol/g-xylose in our previous study. expression of a bacterial sugar phosphate transporter in s. cerevisiae to release l-glycerol -phosphate accumulated by metabolic engineering almut popp, huyen thi thanh nguyen, ulf stahl, elke nevoigt department of microbiology and genetics, university of technology, berlin, germany. e-mail: a.popp@lb.tu-berlin. de (a. popp) in contrast to glycerol, its phosphorylated precursor l-glycerol- phosphate (l-g p) is retained by the plasma membrane. therefore, engineered yeast strains accumulate l-g p in the cytosol resulting in low overall yield of the desired product and laborious downstream processing. a suitable sugar phosphate transporter in the yeast plasma membrane would overcome these limitations. the glycerol- -phosphate transporter (glpt) of e.coli is an antiporter and naturally mediates the uptake of l-g p in exchange with inorganic phosphate. we assume that this transporter would also mediate the excretion of accumulated l-g p into a phosphate-rich medium if it was present in the plasma membrane of engineered yeast. despite many inconsistencies in codon usage, we were able to express the bacterial glpt gene in yeast. expression was monitored by a c-myc tag added to the c-or n-terminal hydrophilic tail, respectively. the quantity of the construct with n-terminal tag clearly exceeds the quantity of the construct with c-terminal tag. both gene products are located in the endoplasmic reticulum, as shown by immunofluorescence microscopy. obviously, yeast's transmembrane protein sorting machinery does not recognise it as a substrate for the secretory pathway. metabolic flux analysis of c-and p-limited shikimic acid producing e. coli gaspard lequeux , louise johansson , jo maertens , peter vanrolleghem , gunnar lidén : biomath, ghent university, coupure links , gent, belgium; department of chemical engineering, lund university, p.o. box , lund, sweden. e-mail: gaspard.lequeux@biomath.ugent.be (g. lequeux) metabolic flux analysis (mfa) was applied to decipher why plimited e. coli fermentations are more optimal for shikimic acid production in comparison with glucose-limited fermentations. as mfa allows obtaining insight in the intracellular flux distribution over different pathways by only measuring net production and consumption rates of metabolites, under the condition that parallell pathways are removed. to this end a detailed metabolic network model was created and checked for consistency, dead-ends, and parallell pathways. several fermentations were performed at different dilution rates (ranging from . to . h − ) and different limitations (phosphate and glucose). the e. coli strain used was w with genetic modifications in the aromatic amino acid pathway to enhance shikimic acid production. for each dilution rate, a metabolic model was solved. this way, the evolution of each flux can be followed with respect to the dilution rate. the p-limited cultures showed a better yield which can be explained by the diminished excretion of dehydro-shikimic acid (as is known from literature) and a reduction of the hydrolysis of atp. takasumi hattori, kuniki kino, kohtaro kirimura department of applied chemistry, school of science and engineering, waseda university, tokyo, japan. e-mail: takasumi@suou.waseda.jp (t. hattori) alternative oxidase is a terminal oxidase in respiration chain, which is a branched chain of cytochrome pathway, and inhibited by salicylhydroxamic acid (sham), but not by cyanide. the citric acid-producing fungus aspergillus niger wu- l has a cyanide-insensitive and sham-sensitive respiration catalyzed by the alternative oxidase (kirimure et al., ) and did not produce citric acid when cultivated with sham (kirimure et al., ) . in this study, the transcript levels of alternative oxidase gene (aox ) (kirimure et al., ) and activities of alternative oxidase under the conditions of citric acid production were examined during days-cultivation. the amount of aox mrna was determined by northern blot analysis, and the specific activity of alternative oxidase as that of duroquinol oxidase. the transcript level and the activity were highest at days at log-phase, decreased during and days, and thereafter maintained at low levels. however, the transcript and alternative oxidase activity was constitutively detected during whole the cultivation periods under the conditions of citric acid production. the sequence analysis of aox chromosomal dna revealed the presence of potential binding site of cyclic amp responsive element (cre), stress responsive element (stre) and heat shock factor (hsf) in its upstream region. these results indicated that the expression of alternative oxidase was regulated in the transcription level and alternative oxidase contributes as the main respiration chain during citric acid production. kirimura, k., et al., . curr. genet. , - . kirimura, k., et al., . biosci. biotechnol. biochem. , - . trichoderma strains are considered to be among the most useful fungi in industrial enzyme production, agriculture and bioremediation. metabolic versatility displayed by these fungi makes it a very amenable source of new gene products. functional analysis of candidate genes goes by two complementary ways: gene overexpression and loss-of-fuction mutants generation. a few expression systems are available mainly to direct constitutive gene expression in catabolite repression conditions. following a genomic approach, we have recently cloned some gene promoters with high expression in glucose in trichoderma harzianum cect . a main goal in a gene functional analysis is the generation of knock-out mutants. up to date, there is no reference about successful gene disruptions in t. harzianum mainly due to a very low homolog recombination frequency. rna-mediated gene silencing has been shown as an efficient tool to diminish or totally abolish specific gene expression. especially those strategies based on the use of hairpin constructs allow rapid and easy generation of strains with reduced levels of mrna from genes of interest. we have used the t. harzianum cect tss promoter to direct the expression of a hairpin dna construct that induced the appearance of small-interfering rnas (sirnas) and the silencing of the uida reporter gene in a previous uida overexpressing strain. reduced levels of mrna and gus activity correlated with the presence of sirnas. this is the first report on rna-mediated gene silencing in trichoderma and constitutes a useful and promising tool for functional genomic studies in fungal systems. analysis of the metabolic response of escherichia coli to quantitative modulations of the glucose- -phosphate dehydrogenase based on c-labelling experiments cécile nicolas, fabien létisse, stéphane massou, philippe soucaille, jean-charles portais. e-mail: fabien.letisse@insa-toulouse.fr (f. létisse) microorganisms have an efficient capacity for adapting their metabolism in response to genetic or environmental changes, and understanding metabolic robustness has become an emergent issue. part of the robustness originates from the network organization of metabolic systems, where the interplay between all available biochemical reactions provides alternative mechanisms for compensating the perturbations. recently, c-metabolic flux analysis ( c-mfa) has been applied to escherichia coli knock-out mutants lacking key enzymes to determine the phenotypic effects of structural changes in the metabolic network, providing further evidences for compensatory phenomena. the aim of our on-going work is to understand how the central metabolism in e. coli responds to quantitative alterations at a specific key-point of the metabolic network. the glucose- -phosphate dehydrogenase (g pdh), a key enzyme in the central metabolism for which the effects of deleting the gene (zwf) has been already described (zhao et al., ) , was chosen as the target. to this aim we have generated a set of expression mutants, i.e. mutants having each a fixed level of expression of the zwf gene. four different levels of expression, leading respectively to g pdh activity ; . ; . and times higher than in the wt strain, have been obtained. for each mutant, transcriptomics analysis will be carried out and compared to both the zwf-and wt strains to detect changes in the network structure, and the distribution of fluxes will be measured using c-mfa. the flux maps obtained for the various strains will be compared to evaluate the quantitative response of the central metabolic network to imposed and increased g pdh activity. metabolic control analysis will be applied to provide insights onto the sensitivity of the measurable metabolic fluxes to g pdh activity. combination of transcriptomics and fluxomics approaches will provide information on the nature and extent of the compensatory mechanisms. because the activity of a single enzyme is tuned at different levels in knock-out and expression mutants, this investigation provides a situation that mimics gene-level regulation of metabolism. , j., et al., , metab. eng., , . with the depletion of the world's petroleum supply, there has been an increasing worldwide interest in ethanol as an alternative, nonpetroleum source of energy. this fact caused increased interest in the new ethanol technology fermentation process research. as reported before, bacteria zymomonas mobilis possesses more advantages than saccharomyces cerevisiae, microorganism used for ethanol production in industrial scale. for that reason, we have focused on the fermentation studies of this facultative bacterium in free and immobilized form. the immobilization of the cells into polyvinylalcohol (pva) hydrogel lens-shaped capsules lentikats, improved the batch fermentation process efficiency nine times. starch, the substrate considered as one of the best of renewable energy source is considered as fuel ethanol feedstock. due to z. mobilis disability of maltose, maltotriose and dextrin utilization, the starch has to be converted into glucose monomers. this pre-fermentation step can overcharged whole ethanol production process. this ineffective part of the process was resolved with immobilization of glucoamylase into lentikats. the system with immobilized enzyme and cell was stabile in continuous mode for days without any significant change in the system efficiency. the combination of cell and enzyme immobilization can significantly improve the efficiency and the cost of ethanol production in industrial scale. fermentation of an inhibitory dilute acid-hydrolysate from spruce using a fed-batch procedure combined with cell-reuse andreas rudolf, gunnar lidén department of chemical engineering, box , lund university, se- lund, sweden. e-mail: andreas.rudolf@chemeng.lth.se (a. rudolf) a well-controlled addition of hydrolysate to the fermentation has proved very efficient in reducing yeast inhibition due to compounds formed during lignocellulose hydrolysis. furthermore, using high cell mass concentrations has been another way of avoiding the negative impact of the inhibitory compounds. if possible, the yeast should therefore be re-used in the process. in the present work a dilute-acid hydrolysate from spruce was fermented using a fed-batch procedure with reutilization of yeast. the fermentation procedure worked satisfactorily, with more than % of fermentable sugars consumed in each of the four consecutive fed-batch fermentations performed. the ethanol yields on fermentable sugars reached . g/g. there was continued cell growth in the repeated fed-batch experiments, with an average cell yield on fermentable sugars of . g/g. in contrast, only about % of the fermentable sugars were consumed within h, when the fermentation of the hydrolysate was run in a batch process. the work shows the potential to re-use the yeast in a suitably designed process. metabolic engineering is defined by bailey in his seminal paper as "the improvement of cellular activities by manipulation of enzymatic, transport, and regulatory functions of the cell with the use of recombinant dna technology". the manipulation of these functions ultimately results in the manipulation of metabolism, which is the purpose of many biotechnological processes. metabolic engineering has sought its methods and tools in mathematics and the physical sciences, and later in information technology (it) leading to the proliferation of bioinformatics. in this work we propose a novel approach to metabolic engineering that regards it as a business process reengineering (bpr) endeavour. hammer and champy in their celebrated book define bpr as "the fundamental rethinking and radical redesign of business processes to achieve dramatic improvements in critical contemporary measures of performance, such as cost, quality, service and speed". our thesis is that metabolic engineering with its goal of reengineering the metabolism of the microorganism, is equivalent to business process reengineering (bpr) in business and management. indeed this is essentially what metabolic engineering does to the cell through the use of recombinant dna technology, which can be viewed as a radical redesign of the metabolic process. after all, it causes changes that cannot be attained otherwise, and whose purpose is to achieve dramatic improvements in cellular activities such as the increase in production of some metabolites by orders of magnitude. the cost incurred by the process, which is metabolism in this case, can be, for example, energy requirements or change to a cheaper substrate. in this study we elucidate this parallelism between the two with emphasis on modelling of metabolism and how the concepts of business process modelling can be applied to it. the purpose is not to produce a model, but rather to introduce the modelling methodology and demonstrate its utilisation and benefits and outline its limitations and challenges. we believe that the novelty of our work lies in applying a new paradigm in approaching metabolic engineering that has not been considered previously. thermophilic ethanol production from wheat straw hydrolysate in continuous culture tania i. georgieva, birgitte k. ahring biocentrum-dtu, technical university of denmark, building , dk- lyngby, denmark. e-mail: tig@biocentrum.dtu.dk (t. georgieva) ethanol production from lignocellulosic biomass has attracted widespread attention as an unlimited low cost renewable source of energy to transportation fuels due to increasing petroleum use and air pollution towards greenhouse gases. wheat straw available as agricultural residue has been considered as a potential lignocellulosic substrate for industrial bioethanol production. a major technical obstacle to commercialize bioethanol production form lignocellulose (such as wheat straw) is associated with a lack of microorganism able to rapidly and efficiently ferment both hexose and pentose sugars into ethanol and to tolerate the inhibitors present in undetoxified hydrolysates. currently used industrial mesophilic microorganisms (saccharomyces cerevisiae and zymomonas mobilis) are excellent ethanol producer from glucose, however, they are not able to ferment other sugars such as xylose, which is the second most abundant sugar in lignocellulose. thermophilic anaerobic bacteria have been considered for ethanol production from lignocellulosic biomass as an alternative to mesophilic ethanol producing strains, predominantly because of their abilities naturally to ferment the whole diversity of sugars found in lignocellulosic biomass. an increase attention to thermophilies for ethanol production have also arise from broad spectrum of advantages regarding industrial scale ethanol fermentation such as high growth and metabolic rates, low oxygen solubility, reduced risk of reactor contamination, and cost savings via mixing, cooling and facilitated product recovery. in addition, simultaneous co-fermentation of glucose and xylose in a single operation unit could substantially reduced the ethanol production cost. research has been attempted to study the potential of using a thermophilic anaerobic bacterium for continuous ethanol fermentation of lignocellulosic biomass, with particular emphasis on effectiveness of our strain to ferment undetoxified wet oxidized wheat straw hydrolysate with respect to sugar (glucose and xylose) conversion and ethanol yield. the experiment was carried out in a lab-scale reactor operated at • c with wheat straw hydrolysate as a substrate in concentrations from to wt.% equivalent to total sugar mixture of - g/l. wheat straw hydrolysate (woh) [ g/l wheat straw, . % dry matter (dm)] was prepared using wet oxidation pretreatment process followed by enzymatic saccharification with commercial enzymes mixture of celluclast . , and novozym (novozymes, denmark). both xylose and glucose sugars were simultaneously converted to ethanol. the sugar utilization was higher than %, and high ethanol yields were achieved. reactor shows good long-term performance ( days) in terms of operation stability and reactor contamination. maltotriose is the second most abundant fermentable sugar in wort and due to incomplete fermentation, residual maltotriose in beer may cause problems in the brewing industry. to study genes that might improve utilization of maltotriose we used a library with dna from brewer's strains and a laboratory strain and identified a new transporter encoded by mtt . mtt gave lager strain a the ability to grow on yp/ % maltotriose in the presence of mg/l of the respiratory inhibitor antimycin a. this transporter gene shares % similarity with mph and mph , % similarity with agt and % similarity with mal and mal . moreover, mtt shares even higher similarity ( %) with the s. pastorianus mty gene (m. salema-oom, unpublished, ncbi accession number aj ). purified radiolabeled maltotriose and radiolabeled maltose were used to study sugar uptake of lager strains a and ws / , and of a containing mtt or mtt alt, a more efficient, altered version of this gene lacking the basepairs from the end and containing base-pairs of vector sequences. these transport studies show that mtt and, especially, mtt alt encode maltose transporters with relatively high activity towards maltotriose compared to maltose. this study is part of a multi-disciplinary project, funded by the european union (contract no. qlk -ct- - ) focusing on the development of high-gravity resistant brewer's yeast strains. metabolic engineering of l-phenylalanine pathway in bacillus subtilis yasemin demirci , pınar Ç alık , güzide Ç alık , tunçer h.Özdamar : bre laboratory, department of chemical engineering, ankara university, ankara, turkey; iblab, department of chemical engineering, metu, ankara, turkey. e-mail: ozdamar@eng.ankara.edu.tr (t.h.Özdamar) metabolic engineering design of a recombinant l-phenylalanine (phe) production system is based on coordinated overexpression of the flux-controlling genes in the aromatic-amino acid pathway. based on the insights gained by the work carried out in our laboratories (Özçelik et al., ) , aroh for the reaction r at the branch-point chorismate that connects the preceding reactions of the aromatic group amino acid pathway to the proceeding reactions towards phe, was predicted as the first-, and aroa for dahp synthase (r ) predicted as second-metabolic engineering sites. aroa gene was cloned next to aroh, by the use of four primers designed using pcr-based gene splicing by overlap extension method. the genes were amplified separately by pcrs. the primers used at the ends to be joined were designed as complementary to one another by including nucleotides at their ends that are complementary to the portion of the other primer. these products were mixed in the next pcr reaction, where one strand from each fragment contains the overlap sequence at end. extension of this overlap by dna polymerase has yielded the recombinant two-gene product; and the two-gene product serve as template for the continuation of reactions for the increase of the concentration in the micro-reactors. the two-gene fragment was first cloned into puc , and then sub-cloned to pmk e. coli -bacillus shuttle plasmid. the new expression vector with high stability and high copy-number was obtained and transferred into host b. subtilis. the metabolic flux distributions calculated by the mass balance based stoichiometric model based on the metabolic reaction network for r-b.subtilis were determined by using time profiles of the substrate, dry-cell, phe and other amino acids, and organic acids concentrations as the constraints. on the bases of calculated intracellular fluxes of recombinant b. subtilis carrying pmk ::aroa::aroh, an in-depth analyses of the metabolic engineering design will be presented. ozçelik,İ., Ç alık, p., Ç alık, g.,Özdamar,t.h., . metabolic engineering of aromatic group amino acid pathway in bacillus subtilis for l-phenylalanine production. chem. eng. sci. ( - ), - . the % respiratory-deficient nuclear petite amylolytic saccharomyces cerevisiae npb-g strain capable of excreting a hybrid protein possessing both ␣-amylase and glucoamylase enzyme activities was generated and its employment for direct fermentation of starch into ethanol was investigated under both shake flask and controlled bioreactor cultivation conditions. when compared with a standard host strain, higher ethanol concentrations and yields were achieved with the nuclear petite strain under both cultivation conditions. further improvement in ethanol production was achieved by the use of an initial glucose supplement. comparison of the ethanol fermentation performances of the respiratory-deficient npb-g and the parental respiratory-sufficient wtpb-g strain showed an increase of, ca. % in both ethanol production yields and ethanol productivities with the respiratory-deficient strain. response surface methodology (rsm) was used as a statistical tool to optimize the initial yeast extract and starch contents of the medium, which resulted in a substantial increase in the stability of the expression plasmid in both strains with concomitant improvement in their amylolytic potentials. high ethanol yields on substrate values of the bioreactor cultures, that were very close to the theoretical yield, indicated that the amylolytic respiratory-deficient strain developed in this study was very effective in the direct fermentation of starch into ethanol. establishing a biotechnology educational framework to support a knowledge-based economy in puerto rico rosa buxeda, lorenzo saliceti-piazza industrial biotechnology program, university of puerto rico, mayagüez campus, mayaguez , puerto rico. e-mail: rbuxeda@uprm.edu (r. buxeda) industrial biotechnology has been identified as a major thrust area of economic development within the past five years for the island of puerto rico. the portfolio of biotechnology manufacturing investments in the island has passed the two billion dollar mark. world known companies like amgen, abbott and eli-lilly lead these investments, which have catalyzed a strong technology transfer to the island. a strong collaboration between industry and academia was needed to provide a well-trained workforce for these company startups. as a result, the university of puerto rico, mayagüez campus (upr-m) developed four initiatives which are part of the educational pipeline in biotechnology. these are: (i) an industrial biotechnology program, a -year bs degree which contains a novel curriculum with courses from science and engineering with undergraduate research and industrial internships as part of the degree requirements; (ii) an industrial biotechnology learning center, which provides customized biotechnology and bioprocessing training modules, including lectures and hands-on experiences to train and develop the workforce needed in the biotechnology manufacturing plants; (iii) a biotechnology summer camp, which addresses the high school student population and its main purpose is to educate and advise on the different career paths that can be followed in the field of biotechnology; and (iv) a biotechnology center for research and training in bioprocessing, that will address the development of corporatesponsored research projects to strengthen links between industry and academia in order to build up a knowledge-based economy. our paper will describe each initiative in detail as well as its outcomes and impact on puerto rico's knowledge-based economy goals. isolation of acid phosphatase from sweet potato and immobilization using different adsorbent d. omay, y. güvenilir, n. deveci istanbul technical university, department of chemical engineering, maslak , istanbul, phosphatase enzymes occur in a wide range of plant and animal tissues. they catalyze the hydrolysis of phosphate bonds in organic phosphates, between the phosphate group and rest of the molecule. immobilization of enzymes and biological compounds is currently gaining importance due to its wide variety of applications in the food and pharmaceutical industries and also its biomedical applications. it was reported that enzymes can be activated by complexation with polysaccharides such as chitin or chitosan. the aim of this experimental study was determined as partial purification and isolation of acid phosphatase enzyme and its immobilization. the purification was realized by applying centrifugation, ammonium sulfate precipitation and dialysis respectively. the specific activity of the supernatant was . u/mg and after % saturation this value increased . u/mg. furthermore, acid phosphatase was investigated using different adsorbent (chitin, chitosan, synthetic zeolite and raw zeolite) and evaluated the storage stability and re-usability of the immobilized acid phosphatase. it was estimated that, acid phosphatase activity was shielded the ratio of , , , and % by using raw zeolite, synthetic zeolite, chitin and chitosan respectively under h operation condition. Øyvind m. jakobsen , , michael c. flickinger , svein valla , trond e. ellingsen , trygve brautaset : department of biotechnology, norwegian university of science and technology, norway; sintef applied chemistry, sintef, norway; biotechnol. institute, department of biochemistry, molecular biology and biophysics, university of minnesota, usa aerobic methylotrophs can utilize one-carbon (c ) compounds such as methane and methanol as a sole c-source for growth and energy. the majority of research on these organisms has focused on their biochemical novelity and commercial viability. for the industrial production of bulk products such as the amino acids lysine and glutamate raw material costs and abundance are important, and c sources are thus attractive compared to sugars. bacillus methanolicus can secrete up to g/l of glutamate upon methanol growth at • c (thermotolerant and methylotroph) and mutants producing - g/l of l-lysine have been selected. we study the genetics for conversion of methanol into biosynthesis of glutamate and lysine, and in the present report we unravel the regulation of genes impor-tant for the consumption and tolerance level for c compounds by b. methanolicus. b. methanolicus has a methanol dehydrogenase gene (mdh) for oxidation of methanol into formaldehyde and a ribulose monophosphate (rump) pathway for assimilation of formaldehyde. we recently discovered that mdh and five rump genes are carried by natural plasmid pbm in this bacterium and this represented the first documentation of plasmid-dependent methylotrophy in any microorganism. we here use real-time pcr to analyse the regulation of plasmid-and chromosomally located rump genes, in cells upon methylotrophic and non-methylotrophic growth. high methanol concentrations in the growth medium is cell toxic and the mechanisms for this sensitivity of b. methanolicus is poorly understood. our results indicate that plasmid pbm plays a fundamental role for this trait as well and the impact of our results on the biotechnological applications of this bacterium is discusssed. department, national research centre, dokki, cairo, egypt adding a proteolytic enzyme extraction from jack fruit (artocarpus integrifolis) in combination of fermentation process in low fat yogurts manufacture was tried to improve yogurt flavour and rheological properties. experimental yogurts milk contained control, . (t ), . (t ) and . (t ) units/ml milk from crude extracts of plant proteinase. the ph of the product treated with crude proteinase was lower than the control. however, the rate of acidity development during storage slightly increased with increasing the addition of crude proteinase level and progress of storage period of yogurt. the proteolytic activity of all yogurts gradually increased until the end of storage period ( days). yogurts made from milk treated with crude proteinase preparations were less firm compared with control at all storage periods, where t showed more less firm after days of storage being . g/ g. generally, increasing units of plant proteinase preparations decreased the firmness. on the other hand, yogurt made from milk pretreated with plant proteinase had higher syneresis, and apparent viscosity than the untreated product. the greatest viscosity was found in t and t of and mpa s respectively, compared with control of mpa s at days storage. the results indicated that there is an inverse relationship between the amount of units of crude proteinase preparations and susceptibility of yogurt to syneresis. the t gained the highest scores ( points) followed by the control ( . points) after days of storage, while yogurt of t showed a low scoring being . from the foregoing results, it is recommend to use jack fruit (artocarpus integrifolis) as a source of plant proteinases and utilize it to develop a high quality yogurt at a level of . units of plant proteinases/ml milk. the penicillium chrysogenum oat gene encoding a class iii omega-aminotransferase has been cloned and characterized. this enzyme that converts lysine into -aminoadipic semialdehyde is important in providing -aminoadipic acid, a precursor of penicillin and other -lactam antibiotics. the enzyme is related to ornithine- -aminotransferases and to lysine- -aminotransferases encoded by the lat gene located in the bacterial cephamycin gene clusters. expression of oat is induced by lysine, ornithine and arginine and repressed by ammonium ions. area-binding consensus sequences and an -bp direct repeat associated with arginine induction in emericella (aspergillus nidulans) have been found in the oat promoter region. deletion of the oat gene resulted in the loss of omegaaminotransferase activity. the deletion mutants were unable to grow on ornithine or arginine as sole nitrogen sources and showed a reduced growth on lysine. complementation of the deleted mutant with the oat gene restored growth on ornithine, arginine and lysine to the levels of the parental strain and omega-aminotransferase activity. the strong expression of oat gene after induction by the basic amino acids may provide additional -aminoadipic acid for the formation of the -aminoadipyl-cysteinyl-valine tripeptide for -lactam biosynthesis. morphological characterisation of two high producing strains of penicillium chrysogenum carrying a disruption in the nadph-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase k. rueksomtawin, j. thykaer, h. noorman, j. nielsen center for microbial biotechnology, biocentrum-dtu, technical university of denmark, dk- lyngby, denmark. e-mail: kr@biocentrum.dtu.dk (k. rueksomtawin) metabolic engineering has proven to be useful in optimisation of -lactam production, e.g. constructing superior strains with multiple copies of the -lactam gene cluster. it is however, of equal importance to gain insight into other aspects of the metabolism to establish a general overview in order to apply metabolic engineering for further improvement of the production strains. in that context, the redox metabolism is essential, as it functions as a tightly controlled connection between the different parts of the metabolism. in order to investigate this role of the redox metabolism in more detail, the gdha-gene, encoding the nadph-dependent glutamate dehydrogenase, was disrupted in two industrial strains of penicillium chrysogenum. during physiological characterisation of the two strains it became apparent that considerable changes in the morphology had occurred due to the genetic alteration. since the morphology is an important parameter in process optimisation, an examination of the morphology of the two strains was undertaken. in this work, the morphological differences between the gdha-disrupted strains and the reference strains were comprehensively investigated both during growth on solid media and submerged growth in a flow-through growth chamber. with the advance development of computerized image analysis techniques, the key morphological properties of the individual hyphal elements were quantified. in comparison to the reference strains, the disruption of the gdha gene resulted in a morphological change from short hyperbranched hyphal elements to long elongated hyphal elements with less branches. in the parallel studies with aspergillus nidulans and its corresponding gdha-deleted strain, no difference in the morphology was observed. polyketides (pk) represent one of the largest groups of natural products and are found in fungi, bacteria and plants. since many useful polyketides either originate from sources that are difficult or even impossible to cultivate or are produced in inadequate amounts, we are interested in expressing polyketide synthases (pkss) in heterologous hosts. saccharomyces cerevisiae, aspergillus niger and aspergillus nidulans were chosen as initial hosts, because the techniques necessary to cultivate and manipulate these strains genetically are well established. -methylsalicylic acid synthase ( -msas) was chosen as a model pks. replicative plasmids carrying the genes encoding -msas from penicillium patulum and phosphopantetheinyl transferase (pptase), respectively, were transformed into s. cerevisiae. in addition, an integrative vector was designed and the gene encoding -msas was integrated in the yeast chromosome. batch cultivations on galactose minimal media were performed. the results are presented and in particular the effect of expression mode and type of pptase (bacterial versus fungal) is discussed. furthermore, the progress of the work on expressing -msas in a. niger and a. nidulans using an integrative vector system is presented and discussed. the valorisation of functionalized chemicals from biomass resources compared to the conventional fossil production route ben brehmer, wageningen ur agrotechnology & food sciences, workgroup: valorisation of plant production chains, p.o. box , aa wageningen, the netherlands. e-mail: ben.brehmer@wur.nl at some undisclosed point in the foreseeable future, cheap fossil fuels resources will become depleted and the industry will be forced to pursue more difficult reserves with increasingly high extraction costs. most alternatives available and under research do not consider price as the main motivation for replacement, but focus solely on sustainability and environmental benefits. sustainability is an interesting word as there are enough fossil resources scattered around the world to be sustainable in quantity but not sustainable in price. seeing that fossil fuels are derived from prehistoric biomass it is not at all presumptuous to assume that every application and product can be replaced by the biomass of today. in fact, many highly specialised pharmaceutical chemicals already have a biomass origin. yet, not all of the uses of fossil fuels need to be replaced by a comparable carbon based source, such as biomass. energy and transportation in particular do not necessary need to rely on carbon cleavage, whereas practically all of the petrochemicals contain a carbon backbone. the main stipulation in substituting fossil-based chemicals with bio-based chemicals is availability and cost. it is proposed that already today, by utilising existing, recently developed and developing technology, it is economically advantageous for many chemicals to derive from biomass, in particular the functionalized chemicals. the only way to validate this conjecture is to develop a complete comparative life cycle analysis. as opposed to a traditional lca, the "multicriterion" developed here will revolve around energy flows and process efficiency in terms of exergy. the aim is to assess the optimum route with the best production options along the whole production chain while determining any possible limiting factors. using this tool, a systematic production matrix relating several logical source crops and a few key chemicals of varying derivative levels can be created and compared to the conventional fossil routes. combined with economic considerations and some unambiguous environmental factors, the investigation will provide all the information relevant to the industry. the goal is to create an objective and reliable simulation system ratifying the economic and environmental feasibility of exploiting biobased chemicals today and indicate the steps necessary for further improvement. biosynthesis of multi-enzymatic preparation from aspergillus niger ibt- useful in textile fabric treatment rita pyc , jadwiga sojka-ledakowicz , tadeusz antczak , joanna lichawska : institute of technical biochemistry, the technical university of lodz, lodz - , poland; textile research institute, lodz - , poland among many methods of producing enzymatic preparations, i.e. by liquid surface fermentation -lsf, submerged fermentation -smf or solid state fermentation -ssf, this last is most advantageous. cultivation in solid state means fermentation on a matrix formed by industrial and agricultural wastes. most often filamentous fungi -due to the lack of available water in the foundation -are the efficient, competitive microorganisms applied in solid state bio-conversion. the aim of research works carried out at the institute of technical biochemistry of the technical university of lodz and at textile research institute, lodz was defining optimal conditions for biosynthesis and testing the possibility of applying multi-enzymatic preparation from aspergillus niger ibt- in the treatment of woven fabrics made of natural cellulose fibres. as the result of biosynthesis optimization process, malt sprouts, wheat barn and beet pulp were selected as the best media to obtain enzymes of high pectinolytic activity maintaining at the same time high activity of cellulolytic enzymes and xylanase. the highest obtained activities reached: pm for total pectinolytic activity, j/ml for endoglucanase and j/ml for endoxylanase and they were . - . times higher than those achieved before optimizing process. performed research works demonstrated that the optimum activity of applied enzymatic system is obtained in the range of ph . - . . woven fabrics made of flax and cotton fibre blends, subjected to bio-pre-treatment, were evaluated with reference to their sorption properties. comparative evaluation of liquid sorption by woven fabrics allowed to notice efficient enhancement of fibres' sorption capabilities after pre-treatment using enzymes system from aspergillus niger ibt- . this offers the possibility of substitution of alkali scouring of linen-cotton woven fabrics before their bleaching by bio-treatment. the phylum actinobacter includes many bacteria of industrial importance both for accumulation of primary and secondary metabolites. both primary and secondary metabolites are dependent on precursors and cofactors that are provided by the central carbon metabolism of microorganisms. there are alternative pathways for catabolism of carbon either via the embden meyerhof parnas (emp) and pentose phosphate (pp) pathway or through the entner doudoroff (ed) pathway. the emp pathway is energetically more favorable and has therefore been presumed to be the dominating route for carbon metabolism in bacteria producing secondary metabolites. however, primary metabolism is poorly studied for most actinobacter species as focus traditionally has been on secondary metabolism. with the aim to gain more knowledge about the diversity of central carbon metabolism within the phylum actinobacter, different strains were collected from various sources and strain collections. the strains were grown in minimal medium with supplement of standard vitamin solution and [ - c] glucose as carbon source. the c-labeling patterns of proteinogenic amino acids were determined by gc-ms analysis. through this method, the fluxes in the central carbon metabolism during balanced growth were estimated and pathways for carbon metabolism were determined. in particular the labeling patterns of alanine and valine were of interest as they are derived from pyruvate and therefore can be used to distinguish between whether glucose is metabolized through the ed pathway or the emp pathway. nobacter, amycolatopsis balhimycina produces the glycopeptide balhimycin. the balhimycin aglycone is identical to the aglycon of vancomycin, which is a commercial glycopeptide. as a. balhimycina appears to be accessible to genetic modifications and the biosynthetic cluster responsible for balhimycin production is published, this genetically well-characterised academic strain can serve as a platform strain for production of vancomycin analogues derived through combinatorial biosynthesis. the understanding of the physiology of this microorganism is essential for the efficient accumulation of potentially commercial secondary metabolites. the bacterium is capable of growth in a fully defined minimal medium, with the production of balhimycin. the strain was grown at either nitrogen or phosphate limitation and balhimycin accumulation was followed at these conditions. flux analysis of balhimycin production by amycolatopsis balhimycina based on c labelling experiments was performed. the zygomycetes blakeslea trispora and phycomyces blakesleeanus accumulate beta-carotene, ubiquinone (coenzyme q), various different sterols, and other terpenoids, all of them produced via the mevalonate pathway. these fungi are used or could be used for the industrial production of these terpenoids, edible oil, chitosan, and various organic acids. by measuring the specific radioactivity of terpenoids made from radioactive mevalonate, leucine or acetate in the presence of excess glucose in wild types and mutant strains we have concluded that these fungi have separate subcellular compartments for the production of carotene, sterols and triacylglycerols. the terpenoid moiety of ubiquinone is synthesized in the same compartment as ergosterol. these compartments contain separate pools of all their common metabolites, beginning from acetyl-coa. mevalonate carbon atoms do not find their way back to general metabolism, i.e., these fungi lack the "shunt" pathway. the compartments are regulated independently. the very large variations in carotene content caused by many environmental and genetic changes are not accompanied by variations in the ubiquinone content. the ubiquinone content increases when the cultures grow on leucine or acetate as carbon sources and is not affected by illumination. phycomyces, but not blakeslea, increases the production of ubiquinone in presence of oligomycin. lincomycin, produced by streptomyces lincolnensis, is important, clinically used antibiotic. its gene cluster consists of putative open reading frames with biosynthetic or regulatory functions (lmb genes) and three resistance genes (lmra, lmrb, lmrc). the organization of transcription units was determined. the analysis of the lincomycin biosynthetic gene transcripts in various cultivation stages revealed the genes with putative regulatory functions which are transcribed in early stages of cultivation. previous analysis of biosynthetic pathways of lincomycin and functionally different anthramycin antibiotics (anthramycin, sibiromycin, tomaymycin, mazetharmycin and porothramycin) indicates that the genetic information on the lincomycin and anthramycin biosynthesis should share common elements (genes), both biosynthetic and regulatory. hybridization experiments demonstrated presence of several analogues of lmb genes involved in the biosynthesis of anthramycin produced by streptomyces refuineus and porothramycin produced by streptomyces albus. effect of various calcium salts on the erythromycin production by saccharopolyspora erythraea m. rostamza , a. noohi , j. hamedi * : department of biology, faculty of science, science and research branch, islamic azad university, tehran, iran; microbial biotechnology lab., department of biology, faculty of science, university of tehran, tehran, iran. e-mail: jhamedi@khayam.ut.ac.ir (j. hamedi) calcium carbonate has the positive effect on the erythromycin, however, because of its low water solubility, caused to clogging the spargers of fermenters and fouling the microfilters. in this research, various soluble calcium salts was added to the fermentation medium and their effect the growth of saccharopolyspora erythraea and erythromycin production was studied in the complex medium consisted soy bean meal, dextrin and starch as major ingredients. the fermentation conditions were rpm, days at • c. the results obtained showed that there is no significant difference between erythromycin concentrations in the medium containing calcium lactate and calcium carbonate. however, erythromycin concentrations in the other calcium salts containing media were less than to calcium carbonate containing medium. optimum concentration of calcium lactate for erythromycin production was g/l. lincosamides and its derivatives are clinically important antibiotics. comparison of gene cluster coding for lincomycin biosynthesis and newly identified cluster of genes for celesticetin biosynthesis revealed new information on functions of several genes common for both biosynthetic pathways. the celesticetin gene cluster was identified by screening the cosmid library of streptomyces caelestis with heterologous probes based on lincomycin biosynthetic genes involved in a part of biosynthesis shared by both antibiotics. sequence analysis of the cluster revealed putative orfs, out of which are lincomycin biosynthetic genes analogues, four are specific for celesticetin biosynthesis and one codes for resistance. the gene cluster is bounded with transposase genes on both sides. in order to clarify function of three putative regulatory genes of lincomycin biosynthesis, the insertional inactivation with the pcr targeting system in streptomyces lincolnensis was done and resulted in differently reduced production of lincomycin. larsen cmb biocentrum-dtu, technical university of denmark, kgs. lyngby, denmark we present a new algorithm called "x-hitting" for automatic identification of novel bioactive compounds based on full spectroscopic characters of highly complex mixtures of natural product. one of the most dramatic advances in recent drug discovery has been the increase in screening capacity throughput and data handling. therefore, analysis has become the bottleneck in the drug discovery process. the algorithm presented here is investigated and demonstrated on identifying potentially new bioactive compounds. in addition method is shown to have a high performance for automatic identification of known structures. these tasks are referred to as new-hitting and cross-hitting, respectively. finally, the receiver operating characteristics (roc) is introduced to the research field as an important tool for evaluating the performance of the "compound predictor". through examples it is shown, that known cross-hits are identified with high proficiency, and that the new-hitting works on finding new targets represented by analogues and structurally new compounds. a gene encoding a ␥-butyrolactone autoregulator receptor that have a common activity as dna-binding transcriptional repressors, controlling secondary metabolism and/or morphological differentiation in streptomyces was cloned from a natamycin producer, streptomyces natalensis, and its function was evaluated by in vivo. pcr using the primers designed from two highly conserved regions of streptomyces autoregulator receptors gave a -bp band, the sequence of which revealed high similarity to the expected region of a receptor gene. by genomic southern hybridization with -bp insert as a probe, a -bp intact receptor gene (sngr) was obtained from s. natalensis. in vivo to clarify the function of sngr, a sngrdisrupted strain was constructed, and a phenotype was compared with the wild-type strain. the sngr disruptant started natamycin production h earlier and showed a . -fold-higher production of natamycin than the wild-type strain. in addition, sporulation was earlier and -fold abundance. the phenotype indicates that the autoregulator receptor protein of s. natalensis acts as a primary negative regulator of the biosynthesis of natamycin and is related to regulation of sporulation. exploring the biocatalytic potential of the novel thermostable baeyer-villiger monooxygenase: phenylacetone monooxygenase daniel e. torres pazmiño , gonzalo de gonzalo , gianluca ottolina , giacomo carrea , dick b. janssen , marco w. fraaije , biochemical laboratory, groningen biomolecular sciences and biotechnology institute, university of groningen, nijen- baeyer-villiger monooxygenases (bvmos) represent useful biocatalytic tools as they can catalyze reactions which are difficult to achieve using chemical means. however, only a limited number of these atypical monooxygenases are available in recombinant form. using a recently described protein sequence motif, a putative bvmo was identified in the genome of the thermophilic actinomycete thermobifida fusca. the nadph-dependent and fad-containing monooxygenase is active with a wide range of aromatic and aliphatic ketones and sulfides. genetic and kinetic data suggest that phenylacetone is the physiological substrate of the enzyme. previously, it was reported that this bvmo exhibits only a moderate enantioselectivity with (r,s)-␣-methylphenylacetone. this poster we will show an overview of the biocatalytic potential of the enzyme as explored so far. interestingly the enzyme has been found to perform highly enantioselective oxidations with a range of ketones and sulfides. this again indicates that this novel thermostable oxidative biocatalyst can be a useful tool for the synthesis of chiral building blocks. the enzyme s-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase (adohcyase) catalyzes hydrolysis of s-adenosylhomocysteine (adohcy), an inhibitor of transmethylation reactions, into adenosine (ado) and homocysteine (hcy). the catalysed reaction is reversible, and the equilibrium is strongly displaced in direction of the synthesis of adohcy when reaction occurs in vitro. nevertheless, its biotechnological application resides in the synthesis of antivirals. for it, we selected between different producing microorganisms of the enzyme, the gram positive bacterium corynebacterium glutamicum. after designing the specific oligonucleotides, the gene was expressed in escherichia coli using the expression system pet a+ with iptg. the electrophoretic analysis under denaturing conditions, shows a clear induction and over-expression of a protein with a mw of kda. on the other hand, the immobilization of this recombinant enzyme in a solid support allows to use it as a catalyst for the synthesis of adohcy. the enzyme was purified by imac thanks to the presence of n-terminal × his tag end, and immobilized in eupergit c for the optimization of the production of adohcy, a product of high value. sequencing, cloning, expression, purification and characterization of a novel cytochrome p monooxygenase from rhodococcus rubber luo liu, rolf d. schmid, vlada b. urlacher institute of technical biochemistry, stuttgart university, allmandring , stuttgart, germany. e-mail: itbvur@itb.unistuttgart.de (l. liu) the cytochrome p monooxygenases are heme-containing proteins, which catalyze a wide range of oxidative reactions (werck-reichhart and feyereisen, ) . a monooxygenation activity was observed for the strain rhodococcus ruber dsm . a p -like gene fragment was amplified by pcr using degenerated primers. for identification of regions that flank this p -like dna fragment, the method "directional genome walking using pcr" was applied (mishra et al., ) . the full size gene encoding a cytochrome p enzyme was amplified by pcr from genomic dna and cloned into the vector pet a(+) for heterologous expression in escherichia coli bl (de ) cells. the enzyme was purified using metal affinity chromatography. the primary protein structure suggests, that this enzyme is a natural self-sufficient fusion protein consisting of a ferredoxin, a reductase and a p monooxygenase. the reductase activity was determined using an exogenous electron acceptor cytochrome c. the reductase domain of this p monooxygenase showed a strong preference for nadph over nadh. the substrate spetrum was investigated. in the presence of nadph the p enzyme shows hydroxylation activity towards -ethoxycoumarin, naphthalene, indene, acenaphthene, toluene and fluorene. mishra, r.n., singla-pareek, s.l., nair, s., sopory, s.k., reddy, m.k., . directional genome walking using pcr. biotechniques , - . werck-reichhart, d., feyereisen, r., . cytochromes p : a success story. genome biol. ( ), . - . . selective production of monoglyceride consisted of conjugated linoleic acid by penicillium lipase yomi watanabe , , yoshie yamauchi-sato , toshihiro nagao , satoshi negishi , tadamasa terai , takashi kobayashi , rolf d. schmid , yuji shimada : osaka municipal technical research institute, osaka, japan; stuttgart university, stuttgart, germany; the nisshin oillio group, ltd, yokosuka, japan; osaka institute of technology, osaka, japan conjugated linoleic acid (cla) is a group of c fatty acid (fa) containing two conjugated double bonds. it is expected to prevent cancer, adipositas, atherosclerosis etc, and is commertially available in the primary form of free fa, containing almost equal amounts of cis, trans-and trans, cis-cla. it is therefore desired to be converted to a palatable form. for this purpose, we have previously proposed two enzymatic ways to convert cla to monoglyceride, an emulsifier, with penicillium camembertii lipase; ( ) sequencial esterification-glycerolysis, ( ) esterification at low tem-perature. these methods, however, are time-and energy-consuming. esterification of cla with glycerol under ambient pressure by the lipase produces equal amounts of mono-and diglycerides. in contrast, it was newly found that the reaction under reduced pressure supressed the formation of diglycerides and achieved to produce % monoglyceride at % esterification. improving the thermal stability of cellobiohydrolases i (cel a) from t. reesei by site directed evolution frits goedegebuur , lydia dankmeyer , peter gualfetti , brad kelemen , edmundo larenas , paulien neefe , pauline teunissen , colin mitchinson : genencor international bv, archimedesweg , cn leiden, the netherlands; genencor international inc., page mill road, palo alto, ca , usa genencor international has been working to produce improved enzyme products for economic conversion of ligno-cellulosic biomass to fermentable sugars. most of this work was performed under a subcontract with the u.s. department of energy for cellulose cost reduction for biomass conversion. cellulolytic biomass conversion is performed in nature by a complex mixture of enzymes. cellobiohydrolases play a key role and all effective cellulase mixtures contain a large excess of cellobiohydrolases over endoglucanases, suggesting that it is the exoglucanase activity that is limiting. the fundamental dependence of reaction rate on temperature predicts that large increases in performance, and decreased enzyme cost, would be achieved if the enzymatic conversion could be operated at elevated temperatures. industrial strains of trichoderma reesei produce cellulases at very high levels and low cost. however, t. reesei cbh (hypocrea jecorina cel a) does not have sufficient stability to survive and perform at high temperatures. this poster shows the thermal stability improvement in t. reesei cbh by site directed evolution. sites with increased thermal stability properties were combined and evolved in high temperature stable cbhi variants. the evaluation of lipases as biocatalysts for organic chemistry can be carried out, at laboratory scale, by using soluble enzymes for biotransformations in aqueous media. however, the industrial exploitation of such an enormous potential should require a suitable protocol for immobilization of lipases. the binding of lipases on suitable pre-existing supports should greatly improve the performance of industrial reactors allowing us a continuous use or re-use of such interesting biocatalysts. in addition, lipases, like most enzymes, are not perfect chemical catalysts. lipases may be unstable and they may not have the optimal activity nor the optimal enantio or regioselectivities. in this way, immobilization of lipases, together with its relevance for the performance of each different industrial reactor, could be also used as a tool to improve and optimize some of these parameters. that is, immobilization of lipases, far from an already solved problem, constitutes an exciting field of research in the promising area of industrial bio-organic chemistry. in this work we would like to present useful immobilization methods of several lipases. the lipase immobilised were used for enzymatic hydrolysis of peptidomimetics of structure a. type of immobilzation used can changed the enantioselectivity of biocatalyst prepared. the absolute configuration of products b and c obtained in enzymatic reactions were assigned by chemical correlation. two-component flavin-dependent monooxygenases form an interesting class of flavoenzymes. they consist of two separate proteins; a monooxygenase component, which catalyses an oxygenation reaction in the presence of reduced flavin, and a flavin reducing component, which reduces flavin (fad or fmn) using nad(p)h as an electron donor. a well-known example of this class of monooxygenases is styrene monooxygenase (otto et al., ) . due to the ability to form enantiopure epoxides, which are relevant building blocks for the pharmaceutical industry, styrene monooxygenases form a valuable class of enzymes for biocatalysis. while screening a metagenomic library for oxidative enzymes, an indigo-producing clone was found. sequencing the particular clone revealed an inserted fragment of environmental dna encoding a two-component monooxygenase ( many investigations over the recent years have been directed to the production of natural aroma compounds. through biotransformation and bioconversion, aroma compounds considered as "natural" can be produced starting from monoterpenes, generating high value products as rose oxide. rose oxide is found in small amounts in some essential oils such as bulgarian rose oil and geranium oil. (−)-rose oxide is an impacting flavor compound and has a small threshold: . ppb. application of agro-industrial residues in bioprocess on one hand provides alternative substrates, and on the other hand helps solving pollution problems, that might be caused by the disposal of this residue in nature. the liquid cassava waste, is originated by the pressing of cassava roots. it is considered as a "harmful" pollutant waste due to its high organic charge and presence of cyanide. on the other hand, can be considered rich in nutrients that can be used in other applications. it was found that sporulated surface cultures of penicillium sp. were able to convert citronellol into cis-and trans-rose oxides. other bioproducts were , -dimethyl- -octen- , diol and , -dimethyl- , -epoxy- -octanol. no chemical oxidation or auto-oxidation products were detected in liquid control broths. the experiments were conducted at • c and rpm. when the medium was cassava, the production of rose oxide, , -dimethyl- octen- , -diol and , -dimethyl- , -epoxy- -octanol were insignificant reaching trace amounts. but when the mycelium developed in cassava medium and than transferred to mineral medium (citronellol as c-source) the concentrations of rose oxide increased dramatically, reaching mg/l for the cis-isomer and mg/l for trans-isomer. a mechanistic mathematical model of enzymatic degradation of avicel and phosphoric acid swollen cellulose (pasc) has been proposed. the model is based on the degree of polymerization (dp) of starting substrate, and follows its decline with time, to the final end product -glucose. three enzyme classes, namely, endoglucanase (eg), cellobiohydrolase (cbh) and -glucosidase (bg) are all individually incorporated in the model. the model is, additionally, taking into account cooperative action of the involved enzymes, as well as effects of enzyme inhibition by end-products, cellobiose and glucose. to be able to describe the complex process of enzymatic hydrolysis with a set of differential equations certain assumptions needed to be introduced. those assumptions represent the simplification of an up-to-date knowledge of both substrate and enzyme structure, but also enzyme mode of action. for example, one of the often asked questions is: "what is happening with shorter cellooligosacharides (dp and up) laying on the surface of cellulose chain? are they being adsorbed to the core cellulose chain or partly solubilized to a hydrolysis broth?" to give answers to these questions and confirm mathematical modeling real enzyme hydrolysis data are needed. in this work, four well characterized, highly purified mono-component enzymes from humicola insolens (two eg and two cbh) and one bg from aspergillus niger were used to hydrolyze avicel and pasc. by careful choice of catalyst, some enzyme specific characteristics like presence or absence of cellulose binding domain will also be incorporated into the model. hydrolysis experiments were initially performed by distinct mono-component enzymes, to confirm the basic characteristics of each of the enzyme classes. soluble hydrolysis products (dp - ) were analyzed by hplc and detection of non-soluble, higher-dp polysaccharides was performed by technique of polysaccharide analysis using carbohydrate gel electrophoresis. optimisation of halogenase enzyme activity k. muffler , m. retzlaff , k.-h. van pée , r. ulber : technische universität kaiserslautern, germany; technische universität münchen, germany; technische universität dresden, germany. e-mail: muffler@rhrk.uni-kl.de (k. muffler) halogenases provide the opportunity of a regioselective and stereospecific halogenation of organic subtrates in contrast to the class of haloperoxidases. these enzymes allow a gentle synthesis of halogenated organic molecules and are capable to halogenate in specific positions (hammer et al., ; keller et al., ) , whereas traditional organic synthesis often failures or mainly leads to byproducts (hasegawa et al., ) , e.g. halogenation of tryptophan in other positions than position . our current research is focussed on tryptophan- -halogenases, because the -br/cl-tryptophan could be applied as a pharmacologically attractive precursor of serotonin. in our work we describe the optimization of an enzyme assay respectively the enzyme activity. for this purpose we use a genetic algorithm. the responsible gene of the fadh dependent enzyme was cloned from streptomyces sp. origin into a pseudomonas fluorescens strain. however, the optimization procedure was done with the purified his-tagged tryptophan- -halogenase, which was easily obtained from the crude extract of the lysed cells by application of immobilized metal affinity chromatography. the application of algorithms allows an optimization of the multidimensional search problem leading to a global optimum in the search space in contrast to the traditional used one-factor-at-a-time method. latter often failures, because this method does not reflect possible influences the parameters can have on each other. effect of organic solvent type on the enantioselectivity of candida rugosa lipase in the hydrolysis of racemic naproxen methyl ester in biphasic reaction system serpil takaç, deniz mutlu department of chemical engineering, institute of biotechnology, ankara university, tandogan, ankara, turkey hydrolysis of racemic naproxen methyl ester to produce s-naproxen was carried out in the biphasic system using isooctane, cyclohexane, hexane and toluene with candida rugosa lipase after stirring in the phosphate buffer (ph . , . m) for h at + • c and centrifuging. the hydrolyses were carried out in shaking flasks for h at rpm and • c with the initial substrate concentration of . m. the concentrations of the enantiomers of racemic naproxen methyl ester in organic solvents and those of naproxen in buffer solution were determined with hplc. it was found that the enantiomeric excess for substrate (ee s ), enantiomeric ratio (e) and conversion (x) decreased in the following order: isooctane > cyclohexane > hexane > toluene. the enantiomeric excess for product (ee p ) was found to be the same for isooctane, cyclohexane and hexane where the lowest ee p was obtained in toluene. the highest ee s , ee p , e and x values achieved in isooctane at the residence time of h were , , , and %, respectively. this study was supported by ankara university biotechnology institute (project no: ). fusarium fujikuroi (gibberella fujikuroi mating group c) produces multiple secondary metabolites such as gibberellins and bikaverin. gibberellins are terpenoid hormones that induce growth and regulate various stages of development in plants. they have numerous applications in agriculture industry. bikaverins are polyketides that have toxicity against different organisms because they inhibit respiration. regulation of polyketide and gibberellin synthesis by nitrogen has been intensively studied in fusarium but little is known about their regulation by carbon source. our main interest is to understand the regulation of biosynthesis of these compounds in f. fujikuroi imi . to investigate this regulation the organism was grown in high nitrogen medium under submerged conditions and then transferred to nitrogen-free media having various concentrations of different carbon sources. the gibberellin production was not affected significantly. on the other hand bikaverin was synthesized enormously when sucrose was used as the only carbon source. high production in sucrose required a minimal amount of the sugar, but did not change appreciably above this threshold along a wide range of concentration. the bikaverin synthesis was repressed when glucose coexisted with sucrose in the medium. the effect of the c source on the expression of key genes, cps/ks (copalyl diphosphate synthase/kaurene synthase) for gibberellin and pks (polyketide synthase) for bikaverin biosynthesis is currently under investigation. ment of dormancy and loss of viability in seeds with the passage of time, it lacks any systematic propagation from seeds and is typically propagated through rhizomes. this restricts large scale cultivation of this plant. in vitro propagation of plants is an effective means for rapid multiplication of species, in which conventional methods have limitations. in the pesent study we have analysed the role of various growth promoters and the effects of dark and light incubation on germination of n. alba seeds. the results indicate that in vitro propagation of n. alba from seeds can be applied as an efficient method of multiplication. the study was funded by the state planning commisson (dpt) turkey and the university of ankara vide projects no. . this research was performed for developing of biological treatment process of odor gas such as mek, h s, and toluene, which is generated from the food waste recycling process. to establish the operational conditions of odor gas removal by small-scale biofiltration equipment, it was continuously operated by using toluene as a treating odor object. when the odor treating microorganisms were adhered to fibril form biofilter, high removal efficiency over % was obtained by biofilm formation. at ppm of inlet odor gas concentration and s of retention time, the removal efficiency was and % in first stage reactor and second stage reactor, respectively. however, the removal efficiency remained over % at the operational conditions above s of retention time. post soviet countries are going through the transition stage and are extremely sensitive to new technology, economics or social changes and globalization processes. that is why decision-making and system of regulation of the use of gmo's are very sensitive to number of factors. three levels of factors, the most influential to decision-making: global, regional and local; are identified at the research paper. global level depends on external policy of leaders of gmo regulations. usa and eu have the biggest influence on transition countries, though their positions completely differ. as usa was leader in inventing gmos, it is lobbing newly created biotechnological industry. in eu and other european countries lobbing of biotechnological industry was not as strong as in usa. thus, their national law is stricter. world trade organization and international agreements are also part of global level. regional level. geographical position of country is also very important because every regulation system depends a lot on regulation that is implemented in neighboring countries. countries do not exist in vacuum; they are linked territorially, politically, economically and socially with neighboring states. regulation systems of the transition countries in the eastern europe can be divided into three types: those who have no system of regulation of gmo (belarus, romania, hungary and ukraine); who approved some variety that are treated as safe to the market (poland, moldavia and georgia) and who approved all of the gmos (bulgaria, croatia and russia [before ]). but even if a country declares not to use gmo it is rather difficult to control import of such products, because of the lack of the testing laboratories, corruption of the state employees, agreements on intellectual property, and institutional country problems. in spite of global and regional tendency of gmos related regulation the most important part is the local level, namely the national regulation system. depending on national level we are choosing priorities at higher levels. as an example of post soviet countries ukraine is taken, as ukraine is one of the largest countries and one of the biggest exporters of agricultural products in europe. research includes the analysis of attitude to gm product, their potential risks and benefits of three categories that influence decision-making the most: farmers, gm experts and non-governmental organizations. recombinant microorganism development for extracellular benzaldehyde lyase production hande kaya , pınar Ç alık , tunçer h. ozdamar : iblab, department of chemical engineering, metu, ankara, turkey; bre laboratory, department of chemical engng, ankara university, ankara, turkey. e-mail: e @metu.edu.tr (h. kaya) in this study, the extracellular production of the benzaldehyde lyase (bal, ec . . . ) that catalyses the synthesis the enantiopure -hydroxy ketones for drug syntheses, by bacillus sp., was aimed. for this purpose, the signal dna sequence of an extracellular bacillus enzyme, i.e., serine alkaline protease, was fused in front of the bal gene (accession number ax ) from pseudomonas fluorescens biovar i, using pcr-based gene splicing by overlap extension (soe) method. b. licheniformis (dsm ) chromosomal dna was used as sap gene (accession number x ) template for the synthesis of sap signal sequence. bal gene was amplified by using the plasmid carrying bal gene, puc ::bal. thereafter, the signal peptide of sap with its own promoter was fused in front of the bal gene by soe method. the hybrid gene first cloned into puc plasmid, thereafter sub-cloned into pbr , pmk and phv shuttle vectors. the escherichia coli-bacillus plasmids carrying the hybrid gene pre(subc)-bal was transferred into bacillus subtilis npr− apr−, and bacillus licheniformis. the influence of the host bacillus species on bal production on a defined medium with glucose was investigated in bioreactor systems. for each of the recombinant (r-) bacillus species, effects of initial glucose concentration on cell growth and bal production were investigated; and, physiological differences and similarities between the wild-type and r-bacillus species are discussed. thereafter, the benzaldehyde lyase production capacities of recombinant e. coli and b. subtilis are compared in terms of cell concentration and bal volumetric and specific activities. for the comparison bal gene was cloned into prseta vector which is under the control of strong t promoter and expressed in e. coli bl (de ) plyss strain. the variations in by-product distributions with each recombinant organism and yields are also discussed. phosphoketolases (ec . . . ) are thiamine diphosphate (thdp)-dependent enzymes, that play a crucial role in the pentose phosphate pathway (ppp) of heterofermentative and facultative homofermentative lactic acid bacteria, and of the d-fructose phosphate shunt of bifidobacteria. reports affirm that cellulomonas flavigena can use the ppp when is cultured under anaerobic conditions. a genomic library of c. flavigena constructed in -zap express vector was screened. four positive clones were isolated, in vivo excised and the resulting pbk-cmv phagemids, each containing a . kb insert, were characterized by restriction analysis and dna sequencing. the open reading frame (orf) of the dxylulose -phosphate/d-fructose -phosphate phosphoketolase gene, xpkl, was located from nucleotide to . the xpkl orf encoded a amino acids-residue polypeptide (xpkl) with a calculated molecular mass of , da, a value coincident with that estimated by comparative sds-page (about , da). a putative ribosome binding site (gggagc) is present - nucleotide upstream of the translational start of the xpkl polypeptide. the c. flavigena xpkl polypeptide sequence was % identical to dxylulose -phosphate/d-fructose -phosphate phosphoketolase from bifidobacterium sp., bifidobacterium gallinarum, gloeobacter violaceus and bifidobacterium adolescentis. this analysis also revealed highly conserved regions. lactococcus lactis is a main diacetyl-producing bacteria by citrate metabolism in dairy products. the transport of citrate in these bacteria is dependent on citrate permease that is encoded by citp gene. previous studies of the citqrp operon in escherichia coli mutants showed that citp message is considerably stabilized in rnase iii mutant. so, in the context of the citrate metabolism research, the characterization of the lactococcal rnase iii enzyme is very important for the dairy industry. rnase iii is an endoribonuclease which has an important role in rrna processing and control of gene expression. with the aim of studying lactococcal rnase iii we have cloned the rnc gene from l. lactis ssp lactis il in the broad host range pls rgfp vector. this plasmid includes the gfp gene, encoding the green fluorescent protein (gfp), cloned under the control of the pm promoter, that is inducible by maltose. maltose induction of the lactococcal rnc expression showed a -fold increase of rnc transcription from this plasmid. activity assays for lactococcal rnase iii were standardized using crude extracts and a substrate specific for b. subtillis rnase iii. the results showed that this substrate was specifically cleaved by lactococcal rnase iii and its activity induced by maltose. lac-rnc was cloned in pet vector and the corresponding six-histidine-tagged rnase iii protein was overproduced in e. coli bl (de ) strain by iptg induction. the protein was purified by affinity chromatography using hplc system and was shown to be active by in vitro activity assays using the lac-rnase iii specific substrate mentioned above. we have also cloned lactococcal rnc gene and studied its expression in an e. coli rnc deletion mutant ( rnc). complementation assays performed in e. coli demonstrate that the lactococcal rnase iii (lac-rnase iii) is able to process rrnas and to regulate the levels of polynucleotide phosphorylase (pnpase). these results demonstrate that the lactococcal enzyme is able to substitute the ec-rnase iii not only in the rrna processing, but also in the processing of mrnas. the amount of lactococcal rnc transcript in an e. coli rnc strain was . -fold higher than in the wild type strain, suggesting that the e. coli rnase iii triggers the degradation of the heterologous rnc mrnas. the results obtained have shown that lac-rnase iii is an interesting enzyme for biotechnological purposes. objectives: the pharmaceutical and food industry has an increasing demand for selectively glycolized active agents. in our application isomaltose can be synthesized by immobilized dextransucrase, which transfers a glycosyl residue from sucrose (substrate) to glucose (acceptor). as the reaction proceeds, isomaltose can act as an acceptor and is converted into undesired follow-up products called isomalto-oligosaccharides, imos. we investigate on two approaches to avoid imo formation, selective adsorption of isomaltose (ergezinger et al., ) and the co-entrapment of dextranase adsorbate, which breaks imos down to isomaltose. results and conclusions: the first part of our research concerns the adsorption of dextranase on bentonite, which complies with langmuir model. at complete saturation ( . g g − ) our immobilisate exhibits an activity of , u g − . a kinetic analysis does not reveal significant differences between the adsorbed and free form of enzyme (k m,bentonit : . ± . m versus k m,free : . ± . m). thus, bentonite displays a high binding capacity paired with favorable kinetic properties. beyond that we investigate the activity of dextransucrase in co-immobilisates, which is reduced during coimmobilization due to interactions with the adsorbate. among various co-immobilisates, the one containing dextranase bound to preblotted bentonite imparts the highest activity ( % as compared to control: immob. dextransucrase). the molar yield coefficient of coimmobilisates y isomaltose/sucrose surpasses coefficient of control by %. further on we will characterize mass transfer of dextranase substrate into alginate matrix as well as bentonite-dextransucrase interactions. and kefir. a second approach is to use yeast as a production organism to produce natural folates for fortification. here we investigate and discuss the folate content in skq n, a diploid strain of saccharomyces cerevisiae, when cultured in different media and at different stages of growth. the aim is to gain a basal knowledge of the folate production profile, forms of folate produced and degree of leakage to the surrounding medium, in relation to the culturing medium and physiological state of the cells. danisco innovation, danisco a/s, langebrogade , po box , dk copenhagen k, denmark we at danisco a/s (copenhagen, denmark) have revealed a new starch degrading pathway by the discovering several new enzymes and metabolites in fungi and algae. these new enzymes include glucan lyases, dehydratases and tautomerases, which proved to be useful in biocatalysis. these new metabolites proved to be useful as both antioxidants and antimicrobials for food and non-food applications. this pathway is named as anhydrofructose pathway of starch and glycogen degradation. this technology is referred to as the anhydrofructose technology. diet is evolving from nourishing populations via providing essential nutrients to improving health of individuals through nutrition. modern nutritional research focuses on health promotion and disease prevention, on protection against toxicity and stress, and on performance improvement. as a consequence of these ambitious objectives, the disciplines "nutrigenetics" and "nutrigenomics" have evolved. nutrigenetics asks the question how individual genetic disposition, manifesting as single-nucleotide polymorphisms (snps), copy-number polymorphisms (cnps) and epigenetic phenomena, affects susceptibility to diet. nutrigenomics addresses the inverse relationship, i.e. how diet influences gene transcription, protein expression and metabolism. the mid-term objective of nutrigenomics is integrating genomics (gene analysis), transcriptomics (gene expression analysis), proteomics (global protein analysis) and metabolomics (metabolite profiling) to define a "healthy" phenotype. the long-term deliverable of nutrigenomics is personalised nutrition for maintenance of individual health and prevention of disease. the major challenges for -omics in nutrition and health still lie ahead of us, some of which apply to -omic disciplines in general while others are specific for -omic discovery in the food context: (i) the integration of gene-and protein expression profiles with metabolic fingerprints is still in its infancy as we need to understand how to (a) select relevant sub-sets of information to be merged, and (b) resolve the issue of the different time-scales, at which transcripts, proteins and metabolites appear and act; (ii) the definition of health and comfort is less of a clear-cut case than the one of disease; (iii) -omics in nutrition must be particularly sensitive: it has to reveal rather many subtle than a few abundant signals to detect early deviations from normality; (iv) in the food context, health cannot be uncoupled from pleasure, that is, food preference and nutritional status are interconnected. transcriptomics serves to put proteomic and metabolomic markers into a larger biological perspective and is suitable for a first "round of discovery" in regulatory networks. metabolomics, the comprehensive analysis of metabolites, is an excellent diagnostic tool for consumer classification. the great asset of this platform is the quantitative, non-invasive analysis of easily accessible human body fluids like urine, blood and saliva. this feature also holds true to some extent for proteomics, with the constraint that proteomics is more complex in terms of absolute number, chemical properties and dynamic range of compounds present. proteomics in the context of nutrition and health has the potential to (a) deliver biomarkers for health and comfort, (b) reveal early indicators for disease disposition, (c) assist in differentiating dietary responders from non-responders, and, last but not least, (d) discover bioactive, beneficial food components. independent of the context of application, proteomics represents the only platform that delivers not only markers for disposition or condition but also targets of intervention: the only way to intervene in a biological condition and to modulate its outcome is interfering with the proteins involved. it is evident that not only comprehensive analyses with one discovery platform (lateral integration of information) are required but also vertical integration between different -omic levels are indispensable for a deeper understanding of disposition, health, environment and diet (desiere, ) . a major "vertical integration issue", to date unresolved, is given by different timescales of transcript production, protein expression and metabolite generation (nicholson et al., ) . the transcript machinery usually responds fast to an external stimulus (seconds to minutes), the proteins may be expressed within minutes to hours (and have a halflife from minutes to even months) and metabolites vary significantly during the day and depend on latest dietary input. this means that data, which seem to correlate qualitatively (e.g. reflecting the same pathway), may not necessarily be related time-wise. rather, they may represent different responses at different time points and, possibly, to different stimuli. comprehensive -omic analyses is an essential building block of "systems biology", which can be defined as follows (clish et al., ) : systems biology is the comprehensive analysis of the dynamic functioning of a biological system (cell, organ, organism or even ecosystem) at gene, protein and metabolite (or higher organizational) level, achieved by comparison of two defined biological states of this system, typically before and after perturbation. while a comprehensive list of components (genes, proteins, metabolites) of a given biological system is a pre-requisite for this kind of research, the main reasoning for the "system view" is that only information on the interactions between the components gives clues to function of the entire network. a systems biology approach has recently demonstrated the power of proteomics to dissect immunity and inflammation. toll-like receptor recognition and signalling was elucidated and showed, how bacterial "barcodes" are read and interpreted in order to trigger an adapted immune response (aderem and smith, ) . in order to address some of the challenging objectives of -omics-driven nutritional research, we have addressed (a) the effect of early antibiotic administration on the maturation of intestinal tissues, (b) protein discovery in human milk, (c) the effects of polyunsaturated fatty acids on gene expression and lipid profile in the liver, and (d) biomarkers for intestinal stress. (a) antibiotics and gut maturation: the effects of early administration of antibiotics on intestinal maturation were assessed at the gene expression level in a rat model. (b) human milk: rapid enrichment and iterative, consolidated identification of immunologically relevant milk proteins was achieved through the employment of restricted-access media and a tailored proteomic strategy (labéta et al., ; lebouder et al., ; panchaud et al., ) . (c) fatty acids and liver transcriptome/lipidome: epidemiological studies have correlated higher intakes of poly-unsaturated fatty acids (pufas) with lower incidence of chronic metabolic disease. the molecular mechanisms regulated by pufa consumption were examined assaying the liver transcriptome and lipid metabolome of mice fed a control and a pufa-enriched diet (mutch et al., ) . (d) gut stress markers: as a first step, we catalogued protein expression along the jejunum, ileum and colon of the rat intestine and found gut segment-specific proteins (marvin-guy et al., ) . the innovative combination of a neonatal separation model with proteomic analysis allowed us to study, whether early life psychological stress may impact the adult gut neuromuscular protein expression and the approach revealed specific protein biomarkers. omics for engineering lactic acid bacteria willem m. de vos wageningen center for food sciences, wageningen university, the netherlands. e-mail: willem.devos@wur.nl. url: http://www.wcfs.nl/ lactic acid bacteria (lab) are high at-rich gram-positive bacteria that have a well-established record in industrial food fermentations where they contribute to conservation, flavour and texture. in addition, several lab are used as food-grade hosts for the production of enzymes, peptides or metabolites. finally, lab are exploited in functional foods that contribute to the health and well-being of the consumer. a variety of metabolic engineering approaches have allowed for the improvement of many attributes of lab. these approaches have been facilitated by the possibility of uncoupling of growth and metabolite production in lab, the wealth of genetic tools that allow modulation of gene expression in a dynamic range, and the determination of several complete lab genomes (de vos et al., ) . we have developed lactobacillus plantarum as a paradigm for lab engineering by experimental and modelling approaches, the application of functional and comparative genomics, and the implementation of other post-genomics avenues (kleerebezem et al., ; smid et al., ; de vos et al., ) . examples of optimizing the production of vitamins and other cofactors, the impact of these engineering approaches on the global transcription and metabolite profiles, and determining the l. plantarum activity in the human host will be discussed. solanum tuberosum (potato) is the fourth major crop worldwide and used for food, feed and biotechnological applications. to fully realize the biosynthetic potential for production of starch, protein and metabolites, we conducted an extensive quantitative profiling of the expressed genes of mature potato tuber. a total of , sage (serial analysis of gene expression) tags of nt representing , different tags were analyzed. the tags seen or more times were assigned a tentative function by comparison to homologous genes. contrary to the transcript profile of rice seedlings (gibbings et al., ) the storage organ of potato is not dominated by transcripts encoding storage proteins. transcripts for four types of protease inhibitors, a metallothionein and a lipoxygenase were more prominent than patatin isoforms. the lactic acid bacterium lactococcus lactis is used extensively in the production of fermented milk products. during cheese production the bacterium experiences many changes in its immediate environment, as a result of its own reactions. the most severe change is the accumulation of lactic acid, which changes the ph of the medium until growth is totally inhibited. we have focused upon a survey of these dairy related stress responses, as a means of constructing more robust strains. when l. lactis starter cultures are produced in rich media, they will experience an initial period with purine limitation after being added to the milk substrate, a stress condition that in several studies have been found to induce cross resistance towards a number of other stresses. we have analyzed both general purine nucleotide (atp and gtp) and specific gtp limitation in chemi-cally defined medium, using both proteomics and transcriptomics. the differential expression analyses were performed with a custom designed dna microarray of pcr amplified probes. the two stress conditions resulted in very different stress responses, both at the transcriptomic and proteomics level. from a new study on the temporal expression pattern of l. lactis during growth in milk, we present preliminary data showing differential expression of genes and proteins of the purine stress stimulon as well as other stress stimulons. cell physiology of the yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae glucose repression mutants ∆snf , ∆snf and ∆snf ∆snf was studied in batch and glucose limited chemostat cultivations. detailed physiological studies were performed on cells grown in batch using glucose, galactose, or glucose-galactose mixture as a carbon source. during growth on glucose-galactose mixtures it was shown that after glucose was consumed, galactose consumption remained repressed for about h in ∆snf or ∆snf mutants, and for more then h in ∆snf ∆snf mutant, whereas it only lasted h in wild-type cells. the global transcriptional response in the glucose repression mutants was studied using chemostat cultures. s. cerevisiae wild type and the mutants were grown in glucose limited aerobic chemostats at a dilution rate of . h − . biological triplicates were performed for each strain. to identify transcriptional responses of the glucose repression mutants, statistical tests, clustering method and a model-driven analysis method were used. the global transcription data analysis experiments showed that genes involved in hexose transport, carbohydrates metabolism, respiration, and signal transduction were differently expressed in ∆snf and ∆snf mutants comparing to wild type cells. combination of gene expression data and gene-scale metabolic model indicated changes in the metabolic sub-networks among studied glucose repression mutants. genomics technologies have recently been introduced into food and nutrition science for identifying targets of molecular actions of nutrients as well as non-nutrient components of foods. changes in the transcriptome, proteome and metabolome have been determined for assessing the molecular actions of zinc as an essential micronutrient and of flavonoids in processes such as colon carcinogenesis and atherosclerosis. zinc is essential for the structural and functional integrity of cells and plays a pivotal role in the control of gene expression. zinc deficiency effects in human cells and an animal model (rats) were analyzed by microarrays and showed that a low intracellular zinc concentration caused major alterations in the steady-state mrna levels of several hundred target genes-dependent on the tissues studied including liver, brain, muscle, intestine and kidney. proteome analysis from the same samples by d-page followed by peptide mass fingerprinting via maldi-tof-ms identified similarly a large set of proteins with altered expression level but allowed a common theme of action to be identified. although pleiotropic in first view, the obtained pattern of zinc-affected genes/proteins may represent a reference for defining the zinc regulon in mammalian cells. flavonoids occurring in large number in plant species are considered protective agents in a variety of processes including inflammation and cancer development. we have studied the effects of around selected flavonoids in a screening program and identified for compounds such as flavon, genistein or quercetin by genomics technologies their putative mode of action in colon cancer models and endothelial cells. as part of a collaborative effort employing human endothelial cells and blood mononuclear cells from a human intervention trial with soy isoflavones (genistein/daidzein) the effects of the flavonoids on the stress-response to oxidized ldl and homocystein was analyzed. a set of markers of anti-inflammatory and anti-apoptotic activity was identified for genistein and daidzein and cell biological studies confirmed that both compounds prevented programmed cells death in stressed endothelial cells. in the food processing industry, unwanted presence of extremely heat-resistant bacterial endospores creates major problems due to their capability to survive classical thermal treatments and their ability to subsequently germinate and form actively growing vegetative cells. screening of spoilage isolates using genomic typing techniques to visualise putative genome-based biomarkers allowed us to classify strains according to the degree of thermal resistance of their spores. in addition, we showed that sporulation in the presence of ingredients rich in calcium ions promotes thermal resistance of developing spores and correlates with the expression of specific (marker) genes (see oomes and brul, ) . finally, the molecular program that forms the basis of spore germination has been assessed using genome-wide expression analysis. noticeably genes involved in dna-repair were transiently expressed in germinating wild-type spores. also, surprisingly, it was found that spores contain significant levels of ribosomal and messenger rnas. degradation of these rna molecules upon spore thermal injury was found to be characteristic for their thermal resistance and predictive for their subsequent outgrowth behaviour. this finding is currently being patented. the information on spore presence, predictions of their thermal resistance and process survival chances, is used to structure a process management system to facilitate optimal food quality assurance and allow for real time analysis in case of the need for quality control. the information on spore presence, predictions of their thermal resistance and process survival chances is now being integrated. this is used to formulate the conditions for a process management system with state of the art food production quality assurance, which allows for real time analysis in case of the need for quality control. the interplay of the pectinase spectrum of aspergillus niger as revealed by dna microarray studies elena martens, jac benen, johan van den berg, peter schaap fungal genomics group, laboratory of microbiology, wageningen university, dreijenlaan , ha wageningen, the netherlands. e-mail: elena.martens@wur.nl (e. martens) the saprobic fungus aspergillus niger is an efficient producer of extracellular enzymes many of which show carbohydrate modifying activities. these enzymes have gras status and therefore are widely used in the food and feed industry. after determination of the genomic sequence of a. niger by dsm, it was estimated that only a fraction of the potential of secreted enzymes is currently characterised. database mining using the proprietary genome sequence has resulted in the identification of more then genes encoding enzymes involved in the depolymerisation of the back bone and the site chains of the complex polysaccharide pectin. additional enzymatic activities required to remove methyl and acetyl esters, present in pectin were also observed. by using dna microarrays we have sought to gain insight into the complex regulation of all the genes involved in pectin degradation. a. niger was cultivated on sugar beet pectin and on the monomeric constituents of pectin, viz. galacturonic acid, rhamnose and xylose. subsequently the corresponding transcriptomes were analysed. we will report on our findings concerning the regulation of the expression of the genes involved in the degradation of pectin and its main constituent-galacturonic acid and the consequences for the interplay of the encoded (novel) enzymes. since reactive oxygen species (ros) are formed in all living organisms a wide range of antioxidative enzyme systems are present to keep the system in balance. when an animal is slaughtered the cellular anti-oxidative capability is reduced, resulting in an accumulation of ros followed by an increased oxidation of dna, lipids and proteins. generally lipid oxidation is a well-known problem, causing increased rancidity during prolonged storage, of especially fatty fish. the implications of protein oxidation are, however, more unclear also in respect to quality decay of fish. protein oxidation causes a wide variety of amino acids modifications, where of the most studied is carbonylation of proline, argenine, lysine or threonine. these carbonyl groups can be labelled with , -dinitro-phenylhydrazine. combining two-dimensional gel electrophoresis with immunoblotting enables the detection of carbonyl groups for each single protein. the results presented here, reveal that both during frozen storage and tainting of rainbow trout protein oxidation/carbonylation increases, furthermore there is an increase in oxidation/carbonylation for distinct proteins. anne-marie neeteson european forum of farm animal breeders, benedendorpsweg , wl oosterbeek, the netherlands society is concerned about food, animal welfare, food safety, new technologies, scientists and industry. these elements are all present in genomics for farm animals. therefore, it is important to build awareness in scientists and industry, start a dialogue with stakeholders and society, and to be transparent in a pro-active way. this paper will address the issues at stake for scientists and industry, when it comes to genomics and animal health. it will combine the results of imperical, ethical and sociological efforts in three eu funded projects. (c) the proper use of genomics in relation to infectious diseases in production animals, and the role of the scientist in the development in new technologies in this field, are being addressed in european animal disease genomics network of excellence (ead-gene, http://www.eadgene.org/). some observations are that: ( ) genomics does not concern changing the gene. however, acceptability of any discovery dealing with living beings and edible products, is not obvious just like that! animals have a symbolic and emotional load. ( ) genes are still related to eugenics, in the mind of people. genes as such cause reluctance, but it is seen as positive if the use of medication can be reduced, and if animals will be better resistant to disease. ( ) consumers are in favour of consumer education, compulsory labelling and the imposition of minimum standards. the inclination to pay more for foods produced according to desired standards relates closely to income level. ( ) animal welfare is the major issue citizens mention as a concern. the focus of breeding organisations on productivity should be counterbalanced by serious attention to the animal's needs in order to avoid unnecessary negative impact on the welfare of the animals. ( ) when technical specialists and lay people communicate, they tend to use different languages: they use the same words, but with rather different interpretations. so transparency of breeding practices and clear definitions of terminology will be essential for effective communication among all stakeholders. ( ) food safety and human health are the major concern for most people, when it comes to making a choice. during the latest decades research within the field of animal genomics has in general been following the same strategies as those used within the field of human genomics, although with much less resources. the porcine genome has been characterized intensively through the development of linkage maps, comparative maps and physical maps. until a few years ago it had not been anticipated that it would be possible to embark on whole genome sequencing of animals genomes. however, because of technological developments and much lower costs for sequencing, several animal genomes have now been assembled/are on the way to being assembled. the initial step towards sequencing the porcine genome was taken by the sino-danish pig genome project. the efforts within this project have now generated approximately . million genomic shotgun sequences and . expressed sequence tags (ests). the shotgun sequences have been included in a three-species alignment to make an initial evolutionary analysis. the results show that pig is much closer to human than mouse is. the ests represent -end sequences from a total of non-normalized cdna libraries. based on assembly and annotation of the ests the structure of the porcine transcriptome has been analysed. the relevance of assembling the porcine genomic sequence is justified both from the perspective of sustainable animal breeding and from the fact that the porcine model is an important research platform because of the anatomical, physiological, biochemical and metabolically similarities with man. examples of functional genomic studies both aimed at sustainable animal breeding and aimed at exploiting the pig as a model for medical studies will be discussed. genomics refers to global, systematic and high throughput approaches that allow collecting large amount of data and thus offer new possibilities for analysis and understanding biological processes. we will present some new knowledge related to reproduction in farm animals resulting from three different strategies. ( ) functional analysis of gene and protein expression: the transcriptome and the proteome analysis allowed to identify new genes and proteins whose expression is associated with processes of ovarian follicular growth and atresia as well as oocyte maturation in bovine and porcine species, maturation of spermatozoa in the different compartments of epididymis. farm animals produce food as cost effectively as possible, however this may have negative side effects for their health and welfare. trade off processes between production on one hand and reproduction and health on the other hand play a crucial role. the principles of selective breeding for the best of naturally occurring variation has proven to be able to balance an increased level of production and quality of life for the animal. every year, the economic value of the genetic gain achieved by the breeders and carried over to the producers is . % of the economic value of eu farm animal production. consequently, a conservative estimate of the gain from animal breeding is, every year d . billion in europe. recent developments, such as the sequencing of the genomes of the human, chicken and cow, together with high throughput laboratory techniques, means that there are new opportunities to enhance quality of life. the goal of this paper is to give an overview of the options offered by genomics for enhanced quality of life with focus on identifying relevant gene variants and technologies for large scale tracking and tracing. selective breeding for the best of naturally occurring variation remains the same as in traditional systems, but by pinpointing the relevant gene variants along genomics it is possible to identify directly the animals best selected for high production without comprising health and welfare. the combination of full genome sequences, software tools, study of functional physiological processes cost-effective high-throughput snp genotyping and comparative mapping have the (proven) potential to identify relevant gene variants, e.g. pork color, boar taint, general disease resistance. functional mutations have direct option of application in breeding programs. unfortunately this is not the case for genetic markers due to cost of genotyping and inconsistent phenotypic effects. new technologies for snp genotyping are cost effective and enable large scale genotyping ( . of animals/day). a selection of the best technology and strategic use of these opportunities enable tracking and tracing. the application of this technology offers new opportunities for quality of life, both for animal and humans. background: studies have shown that prebiotic and probiotic consumption alters the gastrointestinal flora, modulates the immune system, inhibits genotoxicity and has a protective effect on colon carcinogenesis. however, the effect of synbiotic consumption on these parameters in subjects at risk of colon cancer has not until now been investigated. aim: to determine if a synbiotic (prebiotic and probiotics together) modulates cancer risk biomarkers in human subjects at risk of colon cancer. methods: a -week randomised, double blind, placebo controlled, ethically approved trial of a food supplement containing lactobacillus gg, bifidobacterium bb- and raftilose synergy (prebiotic) was performed in colon cancer subjects who had undergone 'curative resection'. faecal and blood samples were obtained before (t , week ) midway through (t , weeks) and following intervention (t , weeks). rectal biopsies were obtained at t and t . the effect of synbiotic consumption on the faecal flora was assessed using standard plate count techniques. genotoxic damage was measured in single cells derived from biopsies using the comet assay. fw was prepared by diluting faeces : in dmem, ultracentrifugation and sterile filtration. the genotoxic (comet assay) and cytotoxic potential (almar blue assay) of fw was determined. peripheral blood mononuclear cells were isolated from blood and cytokine production in vitro assayed by elisa. natural killer cell cytotoxic activity and the phagocytic and respiratory burst activity of monocytes and granulocytes in whole blood were determined by flow cytometry. results: in the synbiotic group faecal numbers of bifidobacteria significantly increased (p < . ) and lactobacilli increased although not significantly (p = . ) while coliforms decreased (p < . ). enterococci, clostridium perfringens and bacteroides were unaffected. in the placebo group bifidobacteria decreased (p < . ), the other bacterial groups were unaffected. in biopsies genotoxic damage was increased in the placebo group at t versus t (p = . ) but was unchanged in the synbiotic group. the genotoxic and cytotoxic potential of fw was unaltered. synbiotic consumption significantly increased (p < . ), ifn-␥ production by pbmcs but il- , il- , il- , and tnf-␣ production was unaffected. natural killer cell, phagocytic and respiratory burst activities were unaltered. conclusion: synbiotic consumption did not have a strong immunomodulatory effect on the systemic immune system in this study, nor did it influence the genotoxic and cytotoxic potential of fw. however, synbiotic consumption altered the composition of the gut flora to a more beneficial composition as well as protecting against genotoxic damage in vivo, suggesting a protective effect of synbiotics against colon carcinogenesis. emmaÅrsköld, malin svensson, halfdan grage, peter rådström, ed w.j. van niel applied microbiology, lund institute of technology, lund university, p.o. box , sweden lactobacillus reuteri is used today in a variety of dairy products as a probiotic bacterium. several lactic acid bacteria have the ability to produce different kinds of exopolysaccharides (eps), which have the potential to be used as an alternative biothickener. however, the yield of eps is too low to be profitable in the food industry. to optimise the environmental conditions for eps formation a l. reuteri strain was chosen for a factorial design study. the factors used in this experiment were temperature ( - • c), ph ( . - . ) and sucrose concentration ( - g/l); for each factor three different values were chosen. the strain was grown in batch mode using a semi-defined medium at constant ph and sucrose as the carbon source. the results obtained with fermentations revealed that the highest eps formation was found at • c, ph . and g/l of sucrose. sucrose did not further affect the eps formation above a concentration of g/l. temperature and ph were significant for the eps formation, but only temperature was significant for growth. a central composite design study was chosen for further optimization of the ph and sucrose concentration for maximum eps formation. also the gene expression of the sucrase enzyme responsible for eps formation was investigated using qrt-pcr. the data were used to develop a model for growth and eps formation. dendritic cells (dc) play a pivotal immune regulatory role in the th , th and treg cell balance. dc are present in the gut mucosa and may thus be target for modulation by gut microbes. here, we screened a large panel of human gut-derived lactobacillus and bifidobacterium spp. for dc polarizing capacity: bone marrow-derived murine dc were exposed to lethally irradiated bacteria and cytokine and dc surface markers were analyzed. substantial differences were found among strains in their capacity to induce proinflammatory cytokines, while the differences for anti-inflammatory cytokines were less pronounced. bifidobacteria were weak il- , il- and tnf-␣inducers, while both strong and weak cytokine-inducers were found among the strains of lactobacillus. remarkably, strains weak in il- induction inhibited il- , il- and tnf-␣ production induced by otherwise strong cytokine-inducing strains, while il- production remained unaffected. those lactobacilli with greatest capacity to induce il- were also most effective in up-regulating surface markers. surface marker up-regulation was however reduced in the presence of weak il- -inducing strains. in conclusion, human lactobacillus and bifidobacterium spp. polarize differentially dc maturation. thus, the potential exists for th /th /treg-driving capacities of the gut dc to be modulated according to composition of gut flora including ingested probiotics. cell surface-associated glycolytic enzymes from lactobacillus plantarum v mediate adhesion to human epithelial cells and extracellular matrix proteins s.m. madsen, j. glenting, a. vrang, p. ravn, h.k. riemann, h. israelsen, m.r. nørrelykke, a.m. hansen, m. antonsson, s. ahrné, h.c. beck bioneer a/s, hørsholm dk- , denmark among the main selection criteria of lactic acid bacteria for probiotic use, the ability to adhere to intestinal epithelial cells, mucus, or extracellular matrix proteins is considered important. using a proteom based approach we identified a group of novel surface proteins that are non-covalently bound to the cell wall of the probi-otic bacterium lactobacillus plantarum v. surface proteins were extracted and analysed by gel electrophoreses followed by mass spectrometry analysis. the surface proteins included glycolytic enzymes like, e.g glyceraldehyde -phosphate dehydrogenase, which usually is a typical intracellular enzyme. a collection of lactobacillus species was screened and the phenomenon of surface-associated glycolytic enzymes was found in many of the analyzed species. this is to our knowledge the first example of surface-associated glycolytic enzymes in probiotic bacteria. however, in pathogenic bacteria these enzymes are well known and their surface localization is involved in adhesion to human epithelial cells and invasion. we suspect that the presence of these enzymes on the surface of probiotic bacteria could prevent adhesion of pathogenic bacteria and possibly also involve other probiotic activities such as immune modulation. binding studies showed that the surface-associated glycolytic enzymes of lb. plantarum v were able to bind to caco- intestinal cells and extracellular matrix proteins like fibronectin. scientific and industrial interest on exopolysaccharides (eps) synthesized by microorganisms and on their chemico-physical properties has been quickly growing in the last years. many strains of lactobacilli produce eps allowing them to adhere to human mucosae and therefore to have probiotic effects such as the stimulation of immune response and even antitumoral activity of these molecules has been claimed. futhermore prebiotic actions of eps beneficially affect the human host health improving the properties of indigenous microflora. in this research we have studied two novel interesting lactobacilli strains: lactobacillus plantarum dsmz and a particular human isolated strain of lactobacillus crispatus that have probiotic potentialities and are good eps and l(+)-lactic acid producers. the aim of this work has been to characterize these strains and their metabolites (eps, organic acid and bacteriocins), to state them as probiotics and to study their adhering ability on human cells. we have studied the physiology of l. plantarum and l. crispatus in shaking flasks as well as their optimal fermentation conditions to obtain high cell density cultures suitable for use as starters in the food industry and eventually for probiotic preparations. fermentation experiments have been performed in a bioreactor equipped with microfiltration (mf) modules using a semidefined medium and various carbohydrates in different culture conditions (aeration, temperature). the kinetic of eps production has been followed and according to results both strains have shown a growth-related production ranging from to mg/l. in vitro studies concerning the ability of these strains to adhere to human mucosae are in progress as well as the structural characterization of the exopolisaccharides. previous studies have shown that compression coating improves the storage stability of freeze-dried lactobacillus acidophilus, although this stability is related to the degree of cell injury, which in turn is related to the compression pressure used. compression coating has also been found to improve the survival of freeze dried l. acidophilus during exposure to simulated gastric fluid (sgf). the aim of the present work is to create a compression coated l. acidophilus formulation, with targeted release at the terminal ileum and beginning of the colon in the human gastrointestinal tract. dissolution studies were performed using a phosphate buffer with a ph of and . , to simulate gastric fluid and intestinal fluid (sif), respectively. cell viability was monitored using multi-parameter flow cytometry (mpfc), together with traditional cfu/ml counts. mpfc was used to identify live, dead and stressed cell populations, using the fluorescent stains propidium iodide (pi), , -dihexylocarbocyanine iodide (dioc ( )) and to-pro- . results show that an enteric coating material, eudragit l - , is both suitable for compression coating, and enhancing the survival of cells when exposed to sif. pectin usp has also been shown to promote targeted release of the cells. the opium poppy papaver somniferum contains more than tetrahydrobenzylisoquinoline-derived alkaloids. it is the source of the narcotic analgesics codeine and morphine, which accumulate in specialized internal secretory cells called laticifers. in the aerial parts of the plant, the laticifer cells are anastomosed, forming an articulated network. laticifers are found associated with the vascular bundle in all plant parts. the morphinan alkaloids morphine, codeine and thebaine are found both in roots and in aerial plant parts and specifically accumulate in vesicles within laticifers. the benzo[c]phenanthridine alkaloids sanguinarine and -hydroxysanguinarine are found in root tissue. the syntheses of sanguinarine and of the tetrahydrobenzylisoquinoline latex alkaloid laudanine are completely understood at the enzyme level. nearly all enzymes of morphine biosynthesis have also been described. in more recent years, cdnas encoding enzymes of alkaloid biosynthesis in p. somniferum have been isolated and characterized. the cell-specific localization of several of the enzymes of morphine, sanguinarine and laudanine biosynthesis has also been described. with knowledge of many of the gene of alkaloid formation and their sites of expression, the metabolic engineering of p. somniferum for tailored alkaloid profiles is now being undertaken. an agrobacterium tumefaciens-based transformation and a regeneration protocol have recently been developed specifically for narcotic tasmanian cultivars. the various cdnas encoding genes of alkaloid biosynthesis in p. somniferum are being systematically reintroduced into the plant to achieve engineered plants with altered alkaloid profiles. the first results have now been obtained with sense and antisense genes stably expressed in a regenerated tasmanian cultivar. the ultimate goal of exploiting the genes of alkaloid biosynthesis is to produce transgenic medicinal plants of specific alkaloid content that would facilitate commercial production and improve our understanding of the factors that regulate biosynthesis as well as provide experimental systems with which to investigate the ecological role of alkaloids in planta. integrated transcript and metabolite profiling for gene discovery in plant natural product pathways richard a. dixon, lahoucine achnine, bettina deavours, mohammed farag, marina naoumkina, lloyd w. sumner plant biology division, samuel roberts noble foundation, ardmore, ok , usa the rich diversity of chemical structures found in the plant kingdom arises in large part from a limited number of basic chemical scaffolds (e.g. terpene, polyketide) that are modified by a limited number of chemical substitution types (hydroxylation, glycosylation, acylation, prenylation, o-methylation, etc.) . much of the diversity is brought about by the substrate-and/or regio-specificities of the substitution enzymes. in contrast to the large collections of gene sequence and transcript level data available on-line, little detailed information exists on the plant (secondary) metabolome. promiscuity of substrate specificity in vitro may complicate attempts to assign functions to genes of secondary metabolism accessible to researchers through various cdna library collections. using the isoflavonoid and triterpene pathways in medicago species as examples, we describe how integrated metabolite and transcript profiling approaches can aid functional genomics, help explain metabolic regulation, and provide tools for assessing the impacts of genetic modifications in plant secondary metabolism. focused and non-targeted approaches were used to assess the impact associated with introduction of new high flux pathways in arabidopsis thaliana by genetic engineering. transgenic a. thaliana plants expressing the entire biosynthetic pathway for the tyrosine derived cyanogenic glucoside dhurrin as accomplished by insertion of cyp a , cyp e , and ugt b from sorghum bicolor accumulated % dry-weight dhurrin with marginal inadvertent effects on plant morphology, free amino acid pools, transcriptome and metabolome. in a similar manner, plants expressing only cyp a accumulated % dry-weight of the novel tyrosine derived glucosinolate, p-hydroxybenzylglucosinolate with no morphological pleitropic effects. in contrast, insertion of cyp a plus cyp e resulted in stunted plants, transcriptome alterations, accumulation of numerous new glucosides derived from detoxification of intermediates in the dhurrin pathway, and in loss of the brassicaceae specific uv protec-tants sinapoyl glucose and sinapoyl malate as well as kaempferol glucosides. the accumulation of new glucosides in the plants expressing cyp a and cyp e , was not accompanied by induction of glycosyltransferases, demonstrating that plants are constantly prepared to detoxify novel xenobiotics. the pleiotrophic effects observed in plants expressing sorghum cyp a and cyp e were complemented by retransformation with s. bicolor ugt b . accordingly, insertion of high flux pathways directing synthesis and intracellular storage of high amounts of natural products is achievable in transgenic plants with marginal inadvertent effects. arabidopsis thaliana-distinct function in gene transcription dynamics? jeppe madura larsen, brian stougaard vad, søren mølgaard, kell andersen, mads n. davidsen, klaus d. grasser department of life sciences, aalborg university, aalborg, denmark in recent years it has been shown that introns to some extent can regulate expression in the eukaryotic cell. insertion of introns in the utr in arabidopsis genes has shown to increase gene expression at both rna and protein level. in order to investigate if utr introns have distinct characteristics, we analyse these in the well annotated arabidopsis thaliana genome published by the arabidopsis genome initiative. , loci annotated with full-length cdnas were analysed and loci ( . %) containing utr introns were isolated. we studied if the genes containing these introns showed different patterns in alternative splicing and gene function (gene ontology classification) compared to the remaining genes not containing this intron type. of the isolated loci ( . %) contained only one utr intron and these were used for further analysis, where it was investigated if the utr introns had a characteristic size distribution. genes containing transcripts with utr introns were more subjected to alternative splicing ( . % versus . %) and had a tendency to be more involved in cell regulatory functions compared to genes without this intron type. it was also found, that utr introns was characteristically size-distributed. we identified thee predominant sizes of approximate , and bp compared to only one for orf introns. this suggests widespread multiple splicing events in utr introns. the results presented here suggest that utr introns have distinct characteristics and function in gene transcription dynamics. cytochrome p monooxygenases appear to be involved in the biosynthetic pathways of a large variety of primary and secondary metabolites in microbial, animal and plant cells. in particular, cytochrome p scc catalyzes the conversion of cholesterol into pregnenolone-the precursor of all steroid hormones in mammalian steroidogenic tissues. cytochromes p are also involved in the biosynthesis of different plant steroid derivates that play important role in regulation of plant growth and development. therein, investigation of possible influence of cytochrome p scc expression on plant regulatory system is of a great interest. this report devoted to the investigation of transgenic tobacco plants, which have been generated by the transformation with recombinant plasmid pgbp f constitutively expressing cyp a cdna of the bovine cytochrome p scc . the transgenic state of the plants was confirmed by southern blot analysis. transgenic plants are phenotypically different from the control ones. in particular, they obtained a substantially higher growth rate and are larger than wild type plants. we have demonstrated that incubation of fragments of the transgenic plants leaves in [ c]-labeled cholesterol containing medium results in formation of the radioactively labeled product with chromatographic mobility corresponding to pregnenolone. the presence of this metabolite in the steroid fraction of lipid extracts obtained from the transgenic plants leaves was confirmed by gas chromatography mass spectrometry (gc-ms) method. the data obtained indicate that cytochrome p scc synthesized in transgenic plants displays its specific catalytic activity. biotechnological production of glucose isomerase enzyme with streptomyces olivochromogenes for production of fructose syrup from hydrol m. hashemiravan, a. sadat barikani department of food science and technology, azad university (pishva, varamin unit), institute of food science and agriculture, tehran, iran the use of glucose isomerase for isomerization and production of fructose syrup was performed by selected industrial strain of streptomyces olivochromogenes ptcc . growth of microorganism and production of enzyme in different culture media was studied, and effects of different parameters such as phosphate and aeration was evaluated. the growth of microorganism at • c, caused a production of high amount of enzyme. the production of enzyme was considered in two culture media (a and b). medium (a) was selected for the higher production amount of enzyme. the highest amount of enzyme production was seen in medium a, which was . giu/ml, after h. the use of baffles in culture flasks, increased the amount of enzyme production, four times more. the production of enzyme was increased, . times more, in phosphate deficient medium. the cells containing enzyme (intra cellular glucose isomerase) was separated by centrifuge, and extraction and release of enzyme was performed by ultra sonication, that is a physical-mechanical method. this method released about . % of total intracellular enzyme. the best length of time for sonication was found to be min. experiments showed that optimum ph and temperature of the enzyme were . - and • c, respectively. the highest activity of the enzyme was observed at ph . for up min. at the time of isomerization reaction the existence of magnesium ions showed to be necessary and omission of this ion cause a decrease of enzyme activity in isomerization process, but this effect was not necessary for the enzyme activity results showed that treatment of glucose syrup at temperatures of , and • c, by the enzyme, caused %, % and % of isomerization, respectively. efficiency increase of high acetic acid production with the use of acetobactereace iranian native strains mutation m. hashemiravan , a. alirezasadat barikani : department of food science and technology, azad university (pishva, varamin unit) institute of food science and agriculture, iran; young iranian researchrer's club, tehran, iran the first step in the present research is the isolation of acetobactereace native strains from fruits (such as grape or apple) and fresh vinegar. this separation has been done with the use of effective isolation methods and optimized mediums. ten strains were isolated effectively, the bio chemicals test were performed, each of them were detected, classified and nominated with a special code. two methods have been used for mutation: (a) mutation with the ultraviolet radiation; (b) mutation with nitrous acid. in the first method the microbial cells were treated with us radiation for different periods of , , and s, and the effect of the uv mutation was assessed. as a result, the period of s was determined as the optimum mutation periods. in the second method, the microbial cells were first washed with the acetate buffer . m with the ph of . , then ml nitrous acid . m was added and was mixed for - min. finally the sampling was done in the periods of , , , and min and was transferred to a plate containing the medium of ethanol-phenol red-agar. the two methods have been compared with each other. each method has its own advantages and disadvantages. the mutation pathway in method (b) is more stable and conducted, while mutation with the uv radiation method, change the position of thiamine-cytosine bases absolutely randomly. finally, the best mutant site was inoculumed with the medium containing alcohol %, acetozyme gz . g/l, acetozyme d g/l, acetic acid . % and l double distilled water. the acetic acid was produced in the rate of g/ ml. also the mutant strains were detected with scanning electron microscope (sem) and interesting photographs were taken from mutant cell. the performed experiments were planned with the use of taguchi statistical method (qualitek ). this research has been performed in the irost as the thesis of ph.d. in food biotechnology industry. isotachophoresis has almost exclusively been applied for contracting and stacking samples ions before zone electrophoretic separation of proteins. this study attempts to apply microfluidic isotachophoresis (itp) as a high resolution analytical method for proteins. beta-lactoglobulin and other milk proteins with slightly different pi were labelled with fluorescent red and analysed by the micralyne tk system using microfluidic glass chips, either with simple cross (sc) or double cross (tt) injection or designed d-itp-cze chips with double tt injection and sc for transfer to the second dimension cze channel, efficiently non-covalently coated with . % (w/v) epoxy-polydimethylacrylamide to lower electroendoosmosis. capillary zone electrophoresis (cze) in borate or phosphate buffer was reproducibly perform for more than consecutive runs using upchurch tm reservoirs glued to the wells to enable larger buffer volumes and greater run-to-run stability. finally, isotachophoretic anionic separation of the proteins were done using phosphate (ph . ) or chloride (ph . ) as leading ion and -amino-caproic acid (ph . ) as terminating ion. the effect of narrow cut ampholytes as spacers needs further investigations. the perspective aim is to combine the migrating itp separated zones with second dimension capillary zone electrophoresis as a new microfluidic proteomic danalysis. genotypical differences affecting the response of pisum sativum to differing boron/iron applications e.e. hakki, u. zeynep, m. hamurcu, a. tamkoc, m.b. babaoglu, s. gezgin department of field crops, faculty of agriculture, selcuk university, kampus, konya , turkey. e-mail: eehakki@selcuk.edu.tr (e.e. hakki) boron and iron are among the microelements required for the proper development of the vegetative and generative tissues of plants. though iron is present in high amounts in almost all soil types, its bioavailability to crops is extremely reduced, hence most of the plants face an iron defficiency problem and while on one side crop productions effected, on the other hand the nutrition problems come up to human through contagious nutritional chains. boron is also among the most problematic micronutrients of the major crop plantation areas of turkey. both defficiency and toxicity problems exist in a total of about % of the central anatolian soil where pea is among the legumes cultivated. application of varying levels of boron and iron combinations in greenhouse and the analysis of plant aquisition via icp-aes as well as determination of the effects of the element combinations both in morphological and molecular levels are the aim of our studies. the genetic bases of the response differences of plant genotypes to b and/or fe, were investigated through the applications of molecular marker techniques. considerable growth rate and stem size differences were detected within the parents (wild-type versus cultivar) and the f plants. the presence of efficient genotypes to high micronutrient levels are expected to help us increase the cultivation of the crop in problematic areas as well as in exploring the molecular bases of the microelement uptake mechanisms. increase in sulfite production by accelerating sulfate uptake in brewing yeast t. fujimura, y. kodama, y. nakao, n. nakamura, w. miki institute for advanced technology, suntory ltd., mishima-gun, osaka - , japan sulfite plays a role as an antioxidant, which stabilizes beer flavor. therefore, it is important to control the sulfite concentration during fermentation. sulfite is produced as an intermediate in the sulfate assimilation pathway in yeast. we have already reported that over-expression of a lager yeast-specific ssu gene, encoding a sulfite efflux pump, leads to increase of sulfite production (fujimura et al., ) . in the present work, we have clarified that there are two types of sul genes (scsul and non-scsul ) each encoding a high affinity sulfate permease in lager brewing yeast. eighty percent and % identity are found by comparing the dna sequences and the deduced amino acid sequences, respectively. a comparative functional analysis of the two genes has been performed aimed at achieving further increases in sulfite production by accelerating sulfate uptake. over-expression of scsul and non-scsul has been achieved by transformation of lager brewing yeast, saccharomyces pastorianus. experiments have been done with and without expression of non-scssu . the resultant transformants have been evaluated by fermentation tests in wort. over-expression of either scsul or non-scsul failed to show significant effect on sulfite formation. a combination of over-expression of non-scsul and non-scssu resulted in two-fold higher sulfite production compared with overexpression of only non-scssu and four-fold higher compared with the parental strain. these results suggest that the non-sc-gene types significantly contribute to sulfite production in lager brewing yeast. , t., et al., . functional phytases (myo-inositol hexakisphosphate phosphohydrolase) catalyse the release of phosphate from phytate (myo-inositol hexakisphosphate), the predominant form of phosphorus in cereal grains, oilseeds and legumes. possible applications of phytases have been suggested in animal nutrition to increase mineral bioavaliability and to decrease phosphate pollution in area of intensive life stock management and in human health. zea mays is one of the cereals that contain high amount of phytate as the major phosphate storage compound. over bacteria were isolated and screened for phytases from the halosphere, rhizosphere and endophyte of malaysian maize plantation. the phytase activity of the isolates was screened by a modification of the ammonium molybdate method. the highest extracellular phytase activity was detected from bacteria that isolated from the endophyte of the maize root. in this paper, results for isolates chosen for media, temperature and ph optimization will be presented. production of plant proteinase from jack fruit seeds (artocarpus integrifolis) and its influence on rheological and sensory characteristics of low fat yogurt el-sayed el-tanboly dairy sciences department, national research centre, dokki, cairo, egypt adding a proteolytic enzyme extraction from jack fruit (artocarpus integrifolis) in combination of fermentation process in low fat yogurts manufacture was tried to improve yogurt flavour and rheological properties. experimental yogurts milk contained control, . (t ), . (t ) and . (t ) units/ml milk from crude extracts of plant proteinase. the ph of the product treated with crude proteinase was lower than the control. however, the rate of acidity development during storage slightly increased with increasing the addition of crude proteinase level and progress of storage period of yogurt. the proteolytic activity of all yogurts gradually increased until the end of storage period ( days). yogurts made from milk treated with crude proteinase preparations were less firm compared with control at all storage periods, where t showed more less firm after days of storage being . g/ g. generally, increasing units of plant proteinase preparations decreased the firmness. on the other hand, yogurt made from milk pretreated with plant proteinase had higher syneresis, and apparent viscosity than the untreated product. the greatest viscosity was found in t and t of and mpa s, respectively, compared with control of mpa s at days storage. the results indicated that there is an inverse relationship between the amount of units of crude proteinase preparations and susceptibility of yogurt to syneresis. the t gained the highest scores ( points) followed by the control ( . points) after days of storage, while yogurt of t showed a low scoring being . from the foregoing results, it is recommend to use jack fruit (artocarpus integrifolis) as a source of plant proteinases and utilize it to develop a high quality yogurt at a level of . units of plant proteinases/ml milk. an effective process for the chemical-biotechnological utilization of distilled white lees was studied. a first treatment with hydrochloric acid allowed the solubilisation of tartaric acid. the influence of temperature, amount of hcl and reaction time were considered through an experimental design. under the optima conditions g/l from white distilled lees and . g/l from red distilled lees were recovered. the tartaric acid was precipitated as calcium tartrate so that it can be isolated from the rest of the raw material compounds. the solid residue was used as an economic nutrient for lactic acid production by lactobacillus pentosus using trimming wastes as substrate. the lactic acid concentrations and volumetric productivities achieved were similar to those obtained using distilled lees without tartaric acid recovery as nutrient. toasted wine was traditionally produced in galicia, northwest of spain. nowadays this technique is being recovered. grapes after harvesting are air dried in order to concentrate sugars, acids and flavor compounds. raisings are pressed to obtain a must with high sugars concentrations. two different grape wines were prepared concentrating the sugars up to and brix, respectively. in order to get a better knowledge of the problems involved, synthetic media simulating the grape musts were prepared. theses musts were used to optimize the initial sugar concentration, the amount of nutrients required, the optimum temperature to carry out the fermentation and the influence of the type and amount of yeast. under the best conditions some fermentations with grape must were carried out to produce wines with intense aroma and flavor notes and high residual sugar concentrations. in this studies, bacillus sp. e strain was isolated from koreanstyle fermented soybean paste and it was producing the biological response modifier (brm). the brm activated the b cell selectively. it was identified the bacillus licheniformis e . the brm was purified by ion-exchange chromatography and gel filtration. chemical properties of brm: molecular weight of brm was estimated to be about , , da. sugar content of brm was . % (w/w) and glucosamine ( . mol%) was the high level. protein content of brm was . % (w/w) and serine ( . mol%) was the high level. infra-red absorption spectrum was showed the characterization of glycoprotein. biological properties of brm: the brm which isolated from fermented soybean paste was similar to that of bacillus licheniformis e by immuno-fluorescence assay. we confirmed that the brm was capsular substance of b. licheniformis e . potato nitrogen concentrate (pnc) is a highly viscous liquid with high complex nitrogen content produced from the protein-fraction in potato starch extraction. the concentrated extract is rich in minerals and ␣-amino nitrogen. although ␣-amylase nowadays is mainly produced exploiting bacillus production systems there is still considerable demand for fungal ␣-amylase from aspergillus oryzae origin. the aim of the experiments to be reported here was to investigate, if pnc can replace commonly used complex nitrogen sources in the production of fungal ␣-amylase. the following data have been measured in pnc pretreated by diluting to / and clarifying by centrifugation. total-n: . g n/l; ␣-amino-n: . % (w/v) (as glycine); soluble protein (bradford): . mg/l (as bsa); total carbohydrates: . g/l; reducing sugars: . g/l; dry weight: . % (w/w). in the following experiments nitrogen sources were replaced on the basis of their ␣-amino nitrogen content. the carbon source for all experiments was maize starch. the formation of ␣-amylase by a. oryzae atcc in shake flasks -using pnc (centrifuged or not), yeast extract, malt extract, casein hydrolysate or meat extract -was compared to "standard" cultivation with corn steep liquor. the experiments showed only small differences in ␣-amylase titers using complex nitrogen sources. no remarkable differences were observed in the resulting biomass. in general no differences in enzyme productivity and biomass formation could be seen after h of incubation. especially the bench top bioreactor experiments indicated an optimal fermentation time of about h. cultivations of a. oryzae atcc were carried out in bench top bioreactors. comparing cultivations in a medium with pnc as the sole complex nitrogen source to one containing csl as such no significant differences both in the formation and amount of ␣-amylase and the fungal growth were observed. thus pnc might be able to replace complex nitrogen sources such as csl or even the more expensive yeast extract and casein hydrolysate in fungal amylase production systems. . ) is involved in the metabolism of inositol and catalyzes the conversion of d-glucuronic acid to l-gulonic acid with nadph as a cosubstrate posterior to the oxidation of inositol to glucuronic acid by the enzyme inositol oxygenase. although the yeast sporobolomyces oryzicola (nakase and suzuki, ) is not able to grow on inositol as the sole carbon source, intracellular glucuronate reductase can be found in cells grown in a medium containing d-glucuronic acid. the enzyme could be a useful tool in the design of a specific quantitative assay for glucuronic acid, e.g. in so called energy drinks. the organism was grown in media containing either glucose and glucuronic acid or only glucuronic acid and difco yeast nitrogen base. whereas growth on both media was similar in shake flask culture, hardly any growth in either medium was observed in bench top bioreactors. the influence of dissolved oxygen tension was investigated and the relevant data will be shown. the formation of intracellular glucuronate reductase activity by sp. oryzicola is inducible by media containing glucuronic acid. no activity is found in cells grown in a medium containing only glucose as the carbon source. besides the activity against d-glucuronic acid, activities against -ketogluconate and -at very low levelsagainst galacturonic acid and the lactone of glucuronic acid were detected. the enzyme activity is stable up to • c. the ph has relatively low influence on the activity against glucuronate, whereas the reduction rate of -ketogluconic acid is optimal at ph . - . with significantly lower values at ph . and . , respectively. data on the kinetics of the conversion of both glucuronate and -ketogluconate will be shown. nakase, t., suzuki, m., . j. gen. appl. microbiol. , - . the multiple nutritional and functional impacts of food fermentation on human health have been widely accepted (reddy and pierson, ; hugenholtz et al., ) . however, the related role of the involved microorganisms to the nutritional effect from the fermented food is still not well defined and the mechanisms involved are still largely unknown. the present study was to investigate iron bioavailability in carrot juice fermented by two selected lab strains, l. pentosus fsc and ln. mesenteroides fsc . after digestion by gi enzymes, the juice was supplied to fully differentiated caco- cells to study iron uptake and transepithelial transport by caco- cells from the digested juice. our data revealed strain specified changes in iron bioavailability in carrot juice fermented by these two strains. after in vitro digestion with pepsin and pancreatic-bile enzymes, the best yield of soluble iron was from ln. mesenteroides fsc fermented juice. surprisingly, the l. pentosus fsc fermented juice yielded about five times higher uptake iron as compared to fresh juice, while ln. mesenteroides fsc fermented juice was not significantly different from the fresh juice. interestingly, the transepithelial transferred iron across the cell line was however better from ln. mesenteroides fsc fermented juice than from l. pentosus fsc fermented juice. to summarise, our study showed that level of soluble iron after in vitro digestion does not necessary indicate iron absorption, especially in the case of lab fermented food. data on improved iron uptake from l. pentosus fsc fermented juice indicated exiting of promoter(s) for iron absorption in such juice that is not related to the production of organic acids and lowering ph effect. peng zhang, herve vanderschuren, martin stupak, wilhelm gruissem institute of plant sciences, zurich, the tropical root crop cassava (manihot esculenta crantz) is a major source of food for approximately billion people worldwide. in sub-saharan africa, more than million people rely on cassava as their major source of dietary energy. in many parts of africa and latin america, cassava leaves are a vegetable source for daily uptake. cassava is grown mostly by poor farmers under marginal environmental conditions and in areas where few other crops can sustain competitive yields. the crop is therefore fundamental for subsistence farming and food security, but it is also very susceptible to stresses common in the areas and conditions where it grows. in many parts of africa, reliable cassava production is strongly impacted by infections with the african cassava mosaic geminiviruses (cmgs), a rapidly spreading disease that causes large yield losses. in the coastal areas of east africa, cassava production now is threatened by another devastating disease, cassava brown streak disease (cbsd). cassava plants are also frequently attacked by many pests, such as cassava hornworm and stemborers. several reports also indicate that greater leaf longevity, especially under drought conditions, could be important for increasing yields and/or the stability of production in cassava, as well as improve the access to an important nutrient source. conventional breeding efforts have attempted to address the constraint to cassava production, but with limited success. the new tools of biotechnology can change this situation by offering new approaches to the challenges of cassava. these new technologies have the potential to make cassava much more productive, a better source of nutrients, and profitable to grow, hence, greatly contributing on the sustainable development of tropical agriculture. recently we have developed biotech cassava with value-add traits, including resistance to cassava mosaic virus, prolonged leaf life and insect resistance. new strategies are also explored to increase protein content of cassava storage roots. we are currently undertaking pilot studies with two teams of leading scientists and experts for projects to test acmv-resistant transgenic cassava lines in africa and lines with extended leaf retention at ciat, colombia under field conditions. this development of substantially equivalent improved transgenic cassava lines is part of a larger study to analyze the need, effectiveness and biosafety of biotech cassava for agricultural production. the goal of the pilot studies will be the development and coordination of a broader project that produces important and novel scientific results, valuable information on the need and impact of biotechnology at the subsistence farming level, and a sound scientific basis for the development of guidelines for biosafety assessments and release of transgenic organisms into the environment and agricultural production in africa and latin american countries. this study was conducted to reveal the effects of different pretreatments on obtaining haploid plants by using the anther culture in pepper capsicum annum l. cultivars demre sivrisi and sirena. buds were collected at uninucleate microspore stage. anthers collected from buds were cultured in ms medium containing different hormones and hormone concentrations. experiment results revealed that when sirena anthers were pre-treated cold at + • c for h and kept in darkness at • c for a period of week gave good results. in the case of demre sivrisi anthers were pre-treated cold at + • c for h and kept in darkness at • c for a period of week gave good results. on the other hand no cold pretreatment to anthers resulted with low embryo formation. similar results were also observed on the anthers kept at • c for week as callus was produced in some petri dishes but no regeneration was observed. as a conclusion, since no cold pretreatment to anthers resulted with low embryo formation it is possible to say that cold pretreatment should be applied to anthers in pepper another culture studies. the yeast d. hansenii ufv- was tested in this work in batch experiments in synthetic media at constant initial substrate concentration ( g l − ) under variable oxygenation conditions. to get additional information on its fermentative metabolism, a stoichiometric network was proposed on the basis of the general knowledge available in the literature on xylose metabolism in pentose-fermenting yeasts and the specificities of xr and xdh activities in d. hansenii and checked through a bioenergetic study performed using the experimental data of product and substrate concentrations. it can be stressed that under strongly oxygen-limited conditions xylitol production was negligible, whereas under semi-aerobic conditions maximum xylitol production (p max = . g l − ) and yield (y p/s = . g g − ) were obtained. a progressive decrease in these parameters was observed under fully aerobic conditions, suggesting that xylitol-producing yeasts require limited oxygen conditions, which is species-dependent. the proposed model, which utilizes the experimental specific rates of substrate consumption and product formations, allows estimating the main bioenergetic parameters. besides, it proved to be an effective tool to investigate different metabolic situations and showed how they can influence the flux distribution of the carbon source and the bioenergetics of this biosystem. the effect of disinfectants on fungi anne svendsen, pernille skouboe bioneer a/s, hørsholm dk- , denmark prevention of mould spoilage of foods can only be carried out successfully, if the species, which are actually spoiling the food product, are known. a very limited number of fungal species has been associated with the spoilage of each food category. proper disinfection of production facilities is very important to avoid mould spoilage. resistance of moulds to disinfectant treatments are known and different species have shown different response to the same disinfectant. to obtain proper disinfection it is important to know the resistance of the spoilage fungi against different disinfectants. in this study the effect of disinfectants on the spoilage fungi of cheese, rye bread, liver paté and fruit juice was investigated. in collaboration with five food companies the dominating species responsible for spoilage of each food product were isolated and used for testing. commercial disinfectants and disinfectants "under development" were tested. tests were performed in suspension and on surfaces, the methods used were modified after en and en . considerable variability in fungicidal effect among the species was observed. some disinfectants were ineffective at low temperature. some disinfectants showed different effect in suspension and on surfaces, resulting in an effective kill in suspension and almost no effect on surface. the identification of effective disinfectants in the food industry includes: ( ) testing against the specific spoiling species of the food product, ( ) testing on surface, not only in suspension, ( ) test parameters adapted to the food manufacturing plant. intensified research efforts in recent years confirm the major importance of the microbial flora in the gastro-intestinal tract for human health. ingestion of prebiotic oligosaccharides increases the number of the desirable bacteria like bifidobacteria and lactobacilli in the colon. we are looking at beta-galactosidases from lacto-bacillus spp. for the production of galacto-oligosaccharides (gos) because we speculate that the enzymes of probiotics will form gos with high prebiotic potential. in this present study, purified betagalactosidases of selected lactobacillus strains were used for the production of gos from lactose. different enzyme reactor set-ups, both discontinuous and continuous, were tested and compared. temperatures up to • c and ph values between and . were required for satisfactory enzyme stability during the process. enzyme source, substrate concentration and the level of substrate conversion were found to be critical process parameters for gos yields and composition. yields of up to % (w/w) of total sugars were achieved when the initial lactose concentration was g/l. capillary electrophoresis (ce) and hplc with pulsed amperometric detection were the analytical tools for investigating the influence of reactor type, enzyme source and conversion level on gos composition. the prebiotics market is increasing rapidly and is expected to more than double until to about million d world-wide. therefore, the development of enzymatic processes on an industrial scale is a high priority goal of our research. starter addition does not always succeed in improving standardisation and quality of the complex sensory properties of traditional fermented foods. in many cases the added strains do not grow as well as the environmental strains present in the production plant. here, a method of geometric simplification (by dichotomy) of a complex ecosystem found on a raw milk livarot ( strains) was tested on cheese curd. by a limited number of cultures, successively, out of , out of and out of strains were selected on the basis of two criteria (i) respect of the taxonomic proportion, (ii) generation by the daughter ecosystems of an odour close to the one of the mother ecosystem. finally a sub-ecosystem of strains gave an odour similar to the one of the more complex mixture. the use of molecular methods (pcr-sscp) permitted to follow the main species growing. mother and daughter ecosystems were characterized by sensory analysis and gc-ms. probably because of an important redundancy of the strain functions, the method was very efficient. this method may permit to improve a lot the set up of mixture of strains and species used in fermented food industry. effect of the dilution rate on the exopolysaccharide production by bifidobacterium longum atcc c. shene, m. rubilar, s. bravo universidad de la frontera, chemical engineering, av. francisco salazar , casilla -d temuco, chile exopolysaccharides (eps) producing lactic acid bacteria are used in dairy industry (cheese and yogurt) due to the rheological properties that these compounds confer to the products. preliminary results also suggest the use of eps as health-promoting (anti-tumor and immunostimulatory actions) ingredients. bifidobacteria are grampositive bacteria natural inhabitants of the gut of warm-blooded animals and man. a number of investigations have shown that bifidobacteria promote host health mainly because of the reduction proliferation of some pathogenic bacteria through acid synthesis. in this work results obtained in the experiments carried out to test the capability of b. longum atcc to synthesize eps are presented. continuous culture fermentations were carried out at dilution rates between . and . h − . composition of the culture media was that of the mrs broth. biomass concentration presents higher values ( . - . g l − ) at dilution rates between . and . h − . biomass growing at these rates is difficult to pellet and adheres to the fermentor walls behavior that was not observed at other growth conditions. eps from cultures grown at these rates were preparated and fractionated. authors wish to thank the chilean conicyt for the economical assistance given through the project fondecyt . high pressure-low temperature (hplt) inactivation processes were performed on bacillus subtilis vegetative cells at various conditions. at atmospheric pressure, lowering the temperature to as low as − • c was found to have minor anti-microbial effects. upon application of high pressure various phase transitions occurred in the microbial suspensions under study. after pressure treatment at - mpa, cells were plated under optimal conditions to assess cell viability. treatments at - mpa and − • c were the most effective in inactivation. in these cases, ice i-iii solid-solid phase transition was observed. in addition, we hypothesised that intracellular thawing (solid-liquid phase transition) had already occurred while the extracellular surrounding was undergoing solid-solid phase transition. this double effect is suggested to be key in mediating the observed large drop in viability. we speculate that more cells survived after treatment at − • c compared to the same treatment at − • c because both the extra-and intracellular surrounding remained fully frozen. at − • c a solid-solid phase transition was observed when pressure was higher than mpa. a metastable state of ice i was observed at mpa treatment. results from the current study will be presented (see also shen et al., ifset in press) . the data call for a mechanistic evaluation of the effects of hplt as an anti-microbial treatment. such data are currently being gathered and will be used in defining optimal hplt process conditions for the food industry. the influence of saccharomyces cerevisiae, kloeckera apiculata and candida pulcherrima mixed cultures on the selected alcohols formation during model fermentation pawel satora, tadeusz tuszynski department of fermentation technology and technical microbiology, food technology faculty, agricultural university, cracow, poland. e-mail: psatora@ar.krakow.pl (p. satora) for the study five yeast species were chosen, isolated from successive stages of plum fruits spontaneous fermentation: from the beginning (candida pulcherrima, kloeckera apiculata, saccharomyces cerevisiae w ), middle (s. cerevisiae w ) and final fermentation (s. cerevisiae k ). to characterize the potential influence of yeast mixed cultures on the selected alcohols formation, wick-erham synthetic medium ( % glucose) was fermented by mixed cultures of two and three yeast species. after distillation, ethanol, propanol, isobutanol, isoamyl alcohols, hexanol and -phenylethanol were determined using gas chromatography. findings were compared with the results obtained after monoculture fermentations. the use of mixed cultures resulted in increasing of glucose utilization rate, ethanol and fusel alcohols formation (except propanol) and decreasing of methanol synthesis. the samples fermented using two yeast species characterized higher (about %) amount of volatile compounds in relation to monocultures. it takes note of especially high level of ethanol (av. . g/dm ), methanol ( . mg/dm ) and isoamyl alcohols ( . mg/dm ). the positive feature of triple cultures using was limitation of methanol and fusel alcohols synthesis that was accompanied by relatively high ethyl alcohol production (av. . g/dm ). the consumption of sugar syrup becomes increasingly significant in industrial processes due to economic advantages and the easy of use. the production of sucrose syrup using enzymatic hydrolysis represents the safest alternative, once the reaction does not produce any toxic or undesirable substance. this work consists on the production of sugar syrup by immobilized inulinase from kluyveromyces marxianus, with two alternatives process: (a) syrup enriched with fructooligosaccharides or solely with glucose and fructose. the process is comprised by the following stages: production and purification of the enzyme in optimized conditions, immobilization of the enzyme in solid support and the conversion of sucrose in a fixed bed bioreactor with the immobilized enzyme. the final composition of the product can be a mixture of glucose, fructose, sucrose and fructooligosaccharides or a mixture of fructose and glucose, according to the operational conditions. the bioreactor can be operated continually for approximately months with the same biocatalyst. the product from this process is ideal for applications in the food products such as sweet, candies, chocolates, yogurts, etc. besides, the prebiotics properties of the fructooligosaccharides, is a beneficial stimulant of the intestinal flora, which gives to the product a functional property. studies on plant microbial interactions using azotobacter sp. as bio-inoculants towards soil fertility baljeet singh saharan faculty of biotechnology, jcdm college of engineering, sirsa , india. e-mail: baljeet.saharan@gmx.de, baljeet br@yahoo.co.uk (b.s. saharan) high nitrogen fixing, phytohormone producing isolates of azotobacter, azospirillum, acetobacter and pseudomonas were used as inoculants on wheat and cotton with varying doses of nitrogen under field conditions. bio-inoculants were selected on the basis of yield, dry weight and survival rate of bacteria under field conditions. seeds of wheat variety wh were treated with different biofertilizers using nitrogen level of , and kg ha − and one level of p, i.e. kg ha − in field along with control. under field conditions, maximum yield was obtained with azotobacter chroococcum e at ( ± . kg ha − ) as well as kg ha − ( ± . kg ha − ) followed by a. chroococcum ht ( ± . kg ha − ) and avk ( ± . kg ha − ). whereas, with kg ha − highest yield was observed with mac ( ± . kg ha − ) followed by e ( ± . kg ha − ) and avk ( ± . kg ha − ). maximum height at kg ha − was observed with mac inoculation ( . ± . cm) followed by avk ( . ± . cm) and ht ( . ± . cm). various chosen strains were tested with desi (hd ) and american cotton (h ) under similar pot and field conditions as for wheat in the following season. plant height and yield were determined at the time of harvesting whereas survival rate was monitored at various intervals of time. survival rate of inoculated bacteria was determined after , , and days. highest survival rate was observed in mac (( . ± . ) × ), which decreased after and days, respectively. ( . ± . ) × , ( . ± . ) × with mac and ( . ± . ) × and ( . ± . ) × with ht , respectively. maximum boll weight was with avk ( . ± . g boll wt. plant − ) followed by pseudomonas ( . ± . g), ac ( . ± . g) and ala ( . ± . g) boll no. plant − was maximum with ala and avk ( ± . plant − ) followed by pseudomonas ( ± . plant − ). maximum height and dry matter was obtained with pseudomonas ( . ± . cm) and avk ( . ± . cm) with variety hd under field conditions. net saving of % nitrogen was observed using a. chroococcum (e and avk ) bioinoculants for wheat and cotton, respectively. to characterize the antioxidative properties of tempeh-fermented food prepared from vicia faba (l. kontu) with the use of rhizopus oligosporus, the sulfhydryl groups content and surface aromatic hydrophobicity of albumins were investigated. the results obtained for tempeh albumins were compared with raw vicia faba and bovine serum albumin (bsa). these results indicate that tempeh fermentation increased antioxidative activity of albumins. the measurements of antioxidative activity were carried out with the use of , -diphenyl- -picrylhydrazyl (dpph) and , -azinobis-( ethylbenzothiazoline- -sulfonic acid (abts). the albumins of faba bean-tempeh have possessed much higher activity for scavenging free radicals as measured with the dpph and abts ( . % and . %) than raw seeds ( . % and . %) and bsa ( . % and . %), respectively. it has been also found that tempeh fermentation process increased . times sulfhydryl groups content ( . m/mg of albumins) as compared to raw seeds ( . m/mg of albumins). the tempeh albumins have possessed lower surface aromatic hydrophobicity than raw seeds ( . fi and . fi, respectively). orange peel characterization and generation of fermentable sugars solutions for the biotechnological production of food additives b. rivas , j.m. domínguez , p. torre , j.c. parajó : department of chemical engineering, vigo university (campus of ourense), polytechnic building, as lagoas, ourense, spain; department of chemical and process engineering, genoa university, via opera pia , genoa, italy. e-mail: brivas@uvigo.es (b. rivas) the citrus processing industry generates in mediterranean area around millions tonnes of orange peel as byproduct from the extraction of citrus juices in industrial plants. in order to avoid ecological problems and provide an extra profit, this residue was studied in order to generate a suitable substrate for the fermentation process oriented to the production of food additives. orange peels were characterized and the data collected allowed quantifying a % of this waste. soluble sugars ( . %), cellulose ( . %) and pectin ( . %) were identified as more important fractions. this material was submitted to two hydrolysis techniques, prehydrolysis (with diluted sulfuric acid) and autohydrolysis (with water) under different experimental conditions. autohydrolysis was selected as the most appropriate technique for the production of suitable fermentation media. finally, the liquors obtained at • c and liquid:solid ratio of g/g, containing . g/l of sugars, without additional nutrients, were employed to citric acid production by aspergilus niger cect (atcc , nrrl ) . the influence of the addition of calcium carbonate and methanol were studied. under the best conditions an effective conversion of sugars into citric acid was attained, showing the viability of the production of fermentable solutions from this industrial waste. today there is an increasing interest in using high gravity fermentation in brewing. high-gravity fermentation involves production of beer wort of up to • p or even higher and results in beer that has more consistent product quality. the main aim of this study is an increased understanding of how brewer's yeast respond to the various stress factors imposed during high gravity beer fermentation and the consequences these stress factors have on the gene regulation and its consequences on the metabolite levels (both intra-and extracellular). higher attenuation of the wort will be achieved by two different techniques: by the addition of highly fermentable adjuncts such as sucrose or glucose syrups and by mashing with addition of microbial enzymes such as pullulanases and glucoamylases. in the first part of the study model fermentation conditions are established, where the sugar uptake and product formation can be studied in details. characterization of the carbohydrate profile is analyzed by hplc. as flavour changes may occur at higher gravities, it is important to study changes in formation of secondary metabolites, especially esters. transcriptome and metabolome analysis will be used to establish how the stressful conditions prevailing under high gravity fermentations may influence the secondary metabolism in saccharomyces cerevisiae. furthermore, analytical aroma characterization of final beer will be studied by spme and gc-ms. detailed analysis of the effect of different stress factors on the cellular response using dna arrays and metabolite profiling will be carried out. dna arrays will be employed to evaluate if specific metabolic pathways are up-regulated or down-regulated as a consequences of the stress factors. naringin, a bitter compound that occurs in citrus fruit juices, may be converted to a nonbitter form by enzyme hydrolysis. the enzymatic complex naringinase was produced in aspergillus niger cect cultures with naringin as inducer (pérez-mateos et al., ) . crude extracts from a. niger and purified naringinase from penicillium decumbens were immobilized into a polymeric matrix of polyvinyl alcohol (pva) hydrogel cryostructured in liquid nitrogen. the operating stability of the pva-naringinase beads was tested using synthetic citric juice (gray and olson, ) . immobilized enzymes reduced % the naringin content at • c and ph . . furthermore, immobilized preparations from aspergillus and penicillium could be re-used through six cycles ( h) remaining % and % catalytic efficiency, respectively. financial support from "ministerio de ciencia y tecnología" and feder (no. agl - /ali). gray and olson, . j agric. food chem. , - . pérez-mateos, et al., ( ), . otimizing the fermentation broth for tanase production by a new isolated strain paecilomyces variotii vania battestin, gláucia pastore, gabriela macedo department of food science, unicamp, p.o. box , campinas, cep - são paulo, brazil tannase is an inducible enzyme that catalyses the breakdown of ester linkages in hydrolysable tannins, resulting in gallic acid and glucose. the fermentation broth can use by-products as wheat bran, rice or oats, adding tannic acid. the use of by products or residues rich in carbon source for fermentation purposes an alternative to solve pollution problems that can be caused by an incorrect environmental disposal. in the present study we have optimized the production of an extracellular tannase by a new isolated paecilomyces variotii using response surface methodology. the first step was to identify the variables having a significant effect on enzyme production. the variables evaluated were temperature, residues ratio (coffe: wheat bran), concentration of tannic acid, salt solution during , and days of fermentation time. results showed that temperature, residues ratio (coffe: wheat bran) and tannic acid had significant effects on tannase production. commercial wheat bran (cwb) and coffe rusk residues (cr) were used as solid substrate. for fermentation the medium was composed by, cwb:cr were mixed with distilled water and transferred into ml capacity erlenmeyers flasks and auto-claved at • c for min. the medium was then inoculated with spores ( . × ) and the flaks were incubated at • c. tannase was assayed according to the methodology of mondal et al. ( ) . according to the statist analyses, the optimum conditions to produce tannase was the range of temperature ( - • c); tannic acid ( . - %); residues percent (coffe: wheat bran) ( : ) and days fermentation time. the enzyme production increased . times more enzyme production than that was obtained before this optimization. yeast and lactic acid bacteria are two major microbial groups of the most fermented products. a large variety of fermented foods and beverage are made by the activities of both yeast and lactic acid bacteria, simultaneously or successively. during the spontaneous mixed fermentation of lactic acid bacteria and yeast population, it is extremely difficult to control microbial species due to the complexity of the microorganism involved. therefore, we have compared the antimicrobial activity of chitosan against two lactic strains, lactobacillus plantarum and lb. brevis, and yeast strains, saccharomyces cerevisiae to investigate the possible use of non toxic biopolymer chitosan for selective control in mixed culture. the lactobacilli were more sensitive to the inhibitory activity of chitosan than s. cerevisiae. the results suggest the possible use of low molecularweight-chitosan for the control of food fermentation in which both groups of organisms frequently occur together. the effect of vegetable oils on astaxanthin production of phaffia rhodozyma and xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous csaba vágvölgyi, gyöngyi lukács, miklós takó, Árpád csernetics, tamás papp department of microbiology, faculty of sciences, university of szeged, p.o. box , astaxanthin ( , -dihydroxy-,-carotene- , -dione) is one of the most important carotenoid product. it is used primarily as food colorant and animal feed additive. their effective antioxidant properties linked to a preventive action on various types of cancer and an enhancement of the immune response could lead to expanded commercial applications. among the natural microbial source available, the closely related red pigmented yeasts phaffia rhodozyma and xanthophyllomyces dendrorhous are of great biotechnological interest. these yeasts have desirable properties as biological sources of pigment, including rapid metabolism and producing high cell densities in fermentor, but the commercial production of astaxanthin is limited by the relatively low content in wild-type strains. the purpose of this study was to determine whether the different vegetable oils had an effect on the carotenoid production in p. rhodozyma. effects of media supplemented with corn germ oil, wheat germ oil, sesame-seed oil, palm oil, pumpkin-seed oil, coconut grease, olive oil (extra virgin), olive oil (sanza), sunflower-seed oil and cottonseed oil were tested. studies were performed on both a phaffia and a xanthophyllomyces strain. yeast was grown in yeast-pepton-glucose liquid medium complemented with the appropriate vegetable oil in different concentrations ( . - , v/v, %) . after four days the total carotenoid production was determined spectrophotometrically, and it was referred to dry cell mass. palm oil increased significantly the carotenoid production of the phaffia strain, while a similar effect on the xanthophyllomyces strain could be observed with coconut grease. composition of carotenoid compounds in the strains was determined by thin layer chromatography. lutein is considered a nutraceutic compound that has developed an increasing interest since it is one of the two carotenoids that are located in the macula of the human eye. its consumption is associated with the prevention of age related macular disease (amd). industrially, lutein may be produced using a saponification step of a mixture of lutein diesters that are previously extracted with hexane from natural sources. our proposal is to improve the process by catalyzing the same reaction using microbial lipases during the extraction step with hexane. additionally, the use of supercritical fluids represents an extension of enzymology in non-conventional media with process and environmental advantages. this work was developed using extracts from marigold flower (tagetes erecta) in hexane and supercritical carbon dioxide (sc-co ) where the lutein esters were hydrolyzed by two commercial lipases: lipase b from candida antarctica (novozym ) and lipase from mucor miehei (lipozyme rm m). in particular, we focused our interest in the role of water in the system. interestingly our results show an inverse dependence of the initial reaction rate with respect to the initial water activity (awi) for both lipases, a phenomena that seems to be related to the partition of substrates and products in the solid support)and the hexane phase as a function of water. when sc-co was used as solvent an increase in the consumption rate of lutein diesters occurred, reaching conversions of % in h. for hexane, the same conversion was reached after h. this result suggests a significant effect of the media on the reaction that can be related to shifts in the partition of compounds that bring the substrates in closer contact with the enzyme. this work also demonstrates that lutein hydrolysis seems to be another potential application of commercial immobilized lipases in the food/nutraceutical market. the enzyme of interest in this work is -galactosidase from lactobacillus sp. (ec . . . ). -galactosidases catalyze the hydrolysis and transgalactosylation of -d-galactopyranosides (such as lactose). an attractive biocatalytic application is found in the transgalactosylaction potential of these enzymes which is based on the catalytic mechanism of -galactosidases. the products of transgalactosylation, galacto-oligosaccharides, are non-digestible carbohydrates which meet the criteria of 'prebiotics' and therefore have attracted increasing attention. to produce these 'prebiotic' galactooligosaccharides, an inexpensive and efficient process is desired. immobilization of the enzyme -galactosidase on an insoluble support is an attractive tool to make the process of lactose conversion more economical because the enzyme can be recovered and reused during continuous operation. in this present study, we aimed at immobilizing -galactosidase from lactobacillus sp. by covalent linkages on two solid supports which are commonly used for protein immobilization: chitosan and eupergit c. the protein-binding capacity, the immobilization yield, ph and temperature dependency of activity and stability, and the kinetic parameters of immobilized enzymes were studied. higher activity retention of the immobilized enzymes over a broader ph range and at higher temperatures compared to those of the free enzyme was observed. the immobilized enzymes were evaluated in terms of transgalactosylation activity and stability for a to introduce of foreign genes for the important crop plants such as rice, we need a reproducible efficient procedure for regeneration of the calli through somatic embryogenesis. for this intention, we established the best callus induction medium for tarom mahalli and deilamani cultivars and created the method that the regeneration frequency was reached to %. calli were induced from scutellar tissues of mature seeds on ms medium supplemented with three level of , -d ( , . and mg l − ) and n medium supplemented with five level of , -d ( . , , . , and . mg l − ). for deilamani cultivar the best medium was n with . mg l − , -d and for tarom mahalli the same medium with mg l − were the best. in subculture media, sucrose was used instead of maltose. for regeneration analysis of plantlets, we used two-factorial experiment in base of crd; one factor was regeneration media with six levels (ms medium supplemented with five amount of kinetin and: naa (mg l − ) [( : ), ( : ), ( : . ), ( : ), ( : ), respectively] and . mg l − , -d and mg l − bap). other factor was dehydration process with three levels (without dehydration, dehydration with two layers of filter paper for min [prior to transfer to the regeneration medium], and third factor was factor of with substitution of sucrose with maltose [after weeks; sucrose: maltose]). we conclude that maltose due to changing in osmolarity proceeding can elevate the regeneration frequency to %. therefore, type of carbon source is critical in callus induction and regeneration. márová ivana, hrdličková jana, kubešová jitka, kočí radka, vidláková tereza faculty of chemistry, brno university of technology, purkyňova , brno, carotenoids are the most widespread natural pigments with important biological activities and applications mainly in food and feed industry. at present many ways including genetic engineering are developed to reach higher production of naturally formed carotenoids using microbial producers. in this work cloning and expression of crt gene cluster from pectobacterium carotovorum in recipient bacterial strain e. coli dh ␣ as well as in yeast strain s. cerevisiae was tested. plasmid vector phsg with inserted crt genes was used for transformation of chemically competent e. coli dh ␣ cells, while in s. cerevisiae shuttle vector paur was used. transformants were selected based on resistance to antibiotics, formation of orange-coloured transformant colonies, analysis of recombinant plasmid size and lc/ms analysis of carotenoids produced by recombinant cells. the yield of individual carotenoids (lutein, beta-carotene, lycopene) obtained from various bacterial transformants was several fold higher than in natural producer (lutein: . - . g/g of d.w., beta-carotene: . - . mg/g of d.w.). the highest yield obtained in transformed strain was . g/g of lutein and . g/g of beta-carotene. the yield of biomass and carotenoids in. transgenic s. cerevisiae was comparable to some industrial red yeast strains ( . mg of total carotenoids + mg ergosterol/l; g/l of biomass). so, transgenic yeasts could be suitable for large scale production of carotenoids and/or enriched biomass, while transgenic bacterial producers are perspective above al for high production of rare carotenoids as lutein or lycopene using transformation by specific genes of crt gene cluster. this work was supported by the project msm of the czech ministry of education, youth and sports. two forms of grape seeds, whole and powdered forms, were heated at four different temperatures- , , and • c. after heating, grape seeds were extracted with % ethanol ( . g grape seed/ ml of % ethanol), and total phenol contents (tpc), radical scavenging activity (rsa) and reducing power of the extracts were determined. thermal treatment of grape seed increased the antioxidant activity of extracts. the maximum tpc and rsa of whole grape seed extract (wgse) were achieved when the seeds were heat-treated at • c for min, while that of powdered grape seed extract (pgse) were at • c for min, and were greater than that of the non-treated control. according to the gc-ms analysis, several low-molecular-weight phenolic compounds were newly formed in the wgse heated at • c for min. these results indicated that antioxidant activity of gse was affected by heating conditions (temperature and time) and physical conditions of grape seeds at the time of heat treatments. analysis of the unexpected phenotypic consequences associated with plant transformation jonathan latham, allison wilson, ricarda steinbrecher econexus, , canon frome court, ledbury hr td, uk. e-mail: jrlatham@gn.apc.org (j. latham) transgenic plants often exhibit unexpected phenotypes. such phenotypes could arise from pleiotropic effects associated with the transgene, or they could arise from other sources. a recent econexus report underlined the potential for the process of plant transformation to result in genetic damage to the transformed plant (genome scrambling-myth or reality? transformation-induced mutations in transgenic crop plants: http://www.econexus.info/). the report showed that mutations arising at the site of transgene insertion are often substantial, frequently resulting in loss or rearrangement of chromosomal dna and insertion of multiple superfluous dna fragments. unintended mutations were also documented at other locations in the plant genome. such transformation-induced mutations could provide an explanation for unexpected phenotypes in transgenic plants. we decided to survey regulatory documents and the scientific literature for instances of unexpected phenotypic consequences arising in transgenic plants. this poster documents the preliminary results of our survey. it is intended to assess the range and frequency of unexpected consequences and to examine whether there is sufficient data available to determine their origin. it is our belief that investigating the origin of these unexpected phenotypes should be a principal aim of biosafety research. biotechnological production of metabolites such as carotenoids could be of high interest because of their antioxidative and antimutagenic activities in human body. production of these metabolites by microbial cells is dependent on cultivation conditions. so, presence of exogenous stress in cultivation environment could stimulate biosynthetic pathways of desired metabolites. two non-conventional yeast strains, rhodotorula glutinis and sporidiobolus salmonicolor, were chosen for study of carotenoid production useful in feed industry. hydrogen peroxide, sodium chloride and/or their combinations were used as exogenous stimulators of carotenoid pathway. presence of exogenous stress led to important overproduction of pigments as well as of supplementary studied substances (ergosterol, glycerol). higher adaptability of yeast cells was observed not only in cultivations with one type of stress. combination of stress factors in cultivation media induced significant increase of pigment formation. moreover, under controlled conditions in laboratory fermentor s. salmonicolor produced about eight-fold amount of -carotene ( g/g) in medium with % nacl and mm h o than in control sample. similar result was observed in r. glutinis cultivated in presence of % nacl in inoculation medium only ( g/g of -carotene). the use of stressed biomass of red yeasts in feed industry could have positive effect not only in animal and fish feeds because of high content of physiologically active substances, but it could influence nutritional value and organoleptic properties of final products for human nutrition. this work was supported by the project msm of czech ministry of education. the culture ph significantly affects mycelial growth and morphology, exopolysaccharide (eps) formation, and their molecular properties during submerged cultures of a medicinal mushroom ganoderma lucidum. when the culture ph shifts from to , mycelial growth ( . g/l) and eps production ( . g/l) were favorable compared with other ph-control strategies. the mycelial morphology was also significantly varied upon culture ph: a feather-like pellets were found when the ph was controlled shifting from to at day , which was regarded as undesirable morphological form for eps production. compositional analyses revealed that the ratios and chemical compositions of the eps formed in bottom or top fractions of ethanolic precipitates were significantly different upon culture ph. the molecular characteristics of the eps were further investigated using a size exclusion chromatography/multi-angle laser light scattering (sec/malls) system. plant -n-acetyl-hexosaminidase (hex) (ec . . . ) is reported to have diverse physiological roles like fruit ripening, degradation of reserved glycoproteins in germinating seed and chitin-elicited lignification. in this paper we report the purification and characterization of hex from korean ginseng roots. after extraction with citrate-phosphate buffer, hex was purified to homogeneity using ion exchanger chromatography, hydrophobic interaction chromatography and gel filtration. its molecular weight was determined using gel filtration and mass spectrometer. enzymatic parameters were studied with -methyl-umbelliferyl-n-acetylglucosaminide as substrate. the effect of heat stress and weak organic acids on escherichia coli and a comparison of its recovery by the plate count method and flow cytometry monica s. talsania due to the importance of microbiology for human health, methods have been developed to enumerate viable bacteria. dilution plating is seen to be the 'gold standard' for proof of a cells viability. however, the success of this method relies on post sampling growth, which is limited by our ability to grow cells in the laboratory. additionally, stressed or sub-lethally damaged cells, remain undetected. single cell measurements can provide rapid detailed physiological information, and the assessment of population heterogeneity. this work compared the recovery of stressed e. coli as measured by the number of cfu/ml and by multi-parameter flow cytometric analysis. weak organic acids and high temperature-short time processing (htst) were used to stress the cells both methods commonly used during food preservation. it was shown here that flow cytometry is a powerful tool for the enumeration and detailed analysis of any non-culturable microbial population, which is important because cytotoxic compounds and heat stresses used in food preservation often have a growth inhibiting effect but not necessarily a lethal one. paul g. kovalenko molecular biology & genetics nasu, zabolotnogo str. , kyiv, ukraine the pharmaceutically important plant species of glycyrrhiza sp. (called licorice) is an important commercial product used as a natural sweetener, anti-inflammatory, anti-cancer and anti-diabetic agents. agrobacterium rhizogenes transformation system was used for the hairy root cultures of licorice g. uralensis. after inoculation of aseptic stem segments the ability of hairy root formation was scored for a period of weeks. mean transformation frequency ranged from % (for up to % (for , ). some transformed genotypes showed significant differences in roots weight, flavonoids and glycyrrhizin (gl) production. the cotransformation rate of licorice intact explants cultivars with lba tl-dna and the s gus gene showed an average of more than %. these obtained root cultures were additionally elicited with extracts of biotic elicitor acremonium sp. (endomycorhizal fungus), and were used as an in vitro system to metabolites production. the transformed and elicited hairy roots of g. uralensis were obtained by infection of a. rhizogenes have produced gl at an yield of . % dry weight on the period of culture as a days. according to tentative analyses the hairy roots cultures of glycyrrhiza species produced flavonoids (liquiritigenin and liquiritigen). more high levels ( . g/l) of the total flavonoids production have been identificated on the strains which transformed by lba . this study involved any difference among elicitor treatments and incubation periods for the optimal meabolites production. clearly, the selection of an effective agrobacterium strain for the production of transformed root cultures is highly dependent on the plant species, and must be determined empirically. ayse gul nasircillar akdeniz university, biology, akdeniz univ. faculty of art-science, biological department, antalya, turkey mature embryos of five t. aestivum and five t. durum cultivars formed embryogenic callus on two different media. embryos were removed from surface sterilised seeds and placed with the scutellum upwards on a solid agar medium containing the inorganic components of murashige skoog and mg/l , -dichlorophenoxyacetic acid ( , -d) or mg/l naphthalenacetic acid (naa). the developed calli and regenerated plants were maintained on , -d or naa free ms medium. wheat plants can be regenerated via two different systems. there were significant differences in percentage of callus induction and regeneration capacity on the different initiation medium. among the t. aestivum cultivars, yakar had the highest regeneration capacity in both induction medium. in t. durum cultivars, kiziltan gave the highest regeneration capacity in ms + , -d medium and yilmaz gave the highest regeneration capacity in ms + naa medium. a strong genotypic effect on the culture responses was found for both induction medium. the glycolytic enzyme triosephosphate isomerase (tpi), which catalyses the interconversion of the triosephosphates dihydroxyacetone phosphate (dhap) and glyceraldehyde- -phosphate (gap), was studied for its control on glycolysis and mixed acid production in lactococcus lactis il . we constructed a number of l. lactis strains in which the tpi activity was modulated from % to % of the wild-type level. the enzyme was found to be present in high excess with % tpi activity supporting % of the wildtype glycolytic flux, and with % of the wildtype tpi activity the glycolytic flux was essentially unchanged. measurements of the upstream metabolites glucose- -phosphate (g p), fructose- , bisphosphate (fbp) and dhap were essentially unchanged for tpi activities from % to %, and only in the strain with % tpi activity we observed a significant increase in the intracellular dhap concentration. homolactic product formation was preserved throughout the interval of tpi activity studied, though a small increase in the amount of acetate and formate production was observed in the strain expressing tpi at the lowest level ( % tpi activity). the finding of an increased mixed acid pattern under intracellular conditions with a high dhap concentration is in contrast to earlier data from literature, which indicated that the triosephosphates play an important role in regulation of pyruvate metabolism in l. lactis with a negative effect on the mixed acid flux. we have recently shown that alcohols induce the adhesion of l. monocytogenes at low temperatures, presumably accompanied by enhanced exopolysaccharide (eps) production. however, little is known about the mechanisms involved in the formation of biofilm and eps by l. monocytogenes. in the present project, we show that deletion of selected regulatory and up-regulated genes did not abolish attachment, though the degree of alcohol-induction in some cases was affected. we are applying bioinformatics to search for homologues in l. monocytogenes of known eps genes from various gram positive bacteria. this has revealed candidate genes involved in the synthesis of eps, such as genes encoding glycosyltransferases. moreover, we are at present performing dna microarray analysis for the egde strain grown at • c in the presence of . % isopropanol. this data should, combined with the bioinformatic results, give us a good indication of the genes involved in alcohol-induced surface attachment. repetitive-pcr (rep-pcr) was applied in research on non-starter lactic acid bacteria (nslab) in cheese. we first showed that strains previously differentiated by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (pfge) also could be differentiated by rep-pcr. this was partially due to slight changes in the pcr conditions that allowed reproducible amplification of - kb bands. more than bands were obtained for most strains. a clear differentiation was also obtained between lactobacillus paracasei, lactobacillus plantarum, lactobacillus curvatus and lactobacillus danicus (a new species found in danish and estonian cheeses and traditional starter cultures). we found that this technique is highly reproducible, e.g. identical profiles in three different pcr-machines, two different dna isolation procedures, and different trained personnel. we applied the developed rep-pcr technique to confirm that survivors after heat treatment, were the actual strains introduced and not due to post-pasteurization contamination. we also showed that when we added a cocktail combination of five strains as protecting cultures to cheese, two to three members of this cocktail was dominating the cheese nslab microflora. in control cheeses without the cocktail in most cases other strains dominated, but in a few cases we were able to show cross-contamination between cheese vats. these data indicate that the rep-pcr will be useful to follow development of adjunct cultures as well as provide a reproducible subspecies (e.g. strain) differentiation. rep-pcr is a much quicker and less labour requiring procedure than pfge, and is apparently a much more reproducible technique than what has been seen for rapd. dynamic modeling of lactococcus lactis metabolism and its dynamic behavior for lactate secretion and regulatory characteristics jinwon lee, ui sub jung, hye won lee department of chemical and biomolecular engineering, sogang university, seoul, south korea, - . e-mail: jinwonlee@sogang.ac.kr (j. lee) dynamic metabolic model for lactococcus lactis has been developed in order to analyze a time-dependent behavior of lactate secretion mechanism and probe its regulatory roles. the model was used to compare and analyze the lactate metabolism through in silico simulation and in vitro experimental measurements most of all pyruvate branch point seems to play a major role in producing lactate, and the results of metabolic control coefficient analysis recommend to increase lactate dehydrogenase activity and to decrease nadh oxidase activity. for obtaining more realistic data, we have added some measured flux data including some intermediate metabolites. by combining the simulation results and experimental measurements, we could establish more reliable and robust systematic lactate secretion model. in addition, an efficient parameter estimation method was used to test the exactness of the reported kinetic parameters. what to choose -the fast or the detailed -strategy to get informative profiles of secondary metabolite produced by fungi in culture. chemo-diversity and lead discovery calls for high throughput techniques, but do we need columns will direct infusion esi-ms (dims) do the job. the latter may give matrix effects and lacks resolution resulting in loss of information, while lc-ms analysis takes time and challenge the data processing. results from nano-esi dims and lc-ms analyses of the same extracts important penicillium species are compared. these results illustrate advantages and problems using these techniques for rapid profiling of fungal secondary metabolites, reviling that matrix effects in dims do not seriously hampers detection of important metabolites while the specificity and certainty, for e.g. de-replication is much higher in lc-ms. phenotypic classification of fungi is essential in food biotechnology ulf thrane center for microbial biotechnology, biocentrum-dtu, søltofts plads , technical university of denmark, dk- kgs. lyngby, denmark. e-mail: ut@biocentrum.dtu.dk fungi are of great importance in food and food production. the intended use of fungi as cell factories for production of food ingredients is an upcoming issue in food biotechnology; however, this brings up a possible contamination with mycotoxins as a major issue. a reliable identification of the producer strains is crucial as a correct identification at species level following an updated taxonomy is the key to information on functional characters, e.g. useful metabo-lites and potential mycotoxins, growth conditions, resistance, etc. unfortunately, many mycological reports do not specify the taxonomy used or do not pay sufficient attention to taxonomical systems based on classification by functional characters-in contrast they are using a nucleotide sequence based phylogeny, which conveys little -if anything -about function of the organism. this situation is a major challenge for biotechnologists and mycologists in the years to come and will be highlighted by illustrative examples. the commercial interest in functional foods containing sufficient amounts of living probiotics is paralleled by the increasing scientific attention to the beneficial effect in the digestive tract. a daily intake of viable cells is proposed to ensure probiotic effect on consumer's health. one of the approaches which seems to be feasible to enhance probiotic viability and stability is to improve the fermentation conditions. during batch fermentation the viability of lactobacillus gasseri decreases after reaching a maximal value apparently indicating cell death. in this work, the apparent loss of viability can be avoided during fed-batch fermentation. a three-fold increase in viability is obtained when nutrient concentration was controlled compared with the viability reached in batch cultures. as a consequence, higher biomass concentration and lower specific lactic acid production were obtained. a mathematical model was developed to simulate and describe the effect of nutrient limitation on growth, viability, glucose consumption and lactic acid production. contribution to the metabolic adaptation to food restriction in rabbits (preliminary results) s. van harten , s. borges , p. cravo , l.a. cardoso : instituto de investigação científica tropical, cvz, lisboa, portugal; instituto de higiene e medicina tropical, lisboa, portugal. e-mail: svharten@gmail.com (s. van harten) in order to understand metabolic differences between two breeds of rabbits (halop ab and oryctolagus cuniculus algirus) during food restriction, the activities and expression of key enzymes and hormones of the rabbit were studied. animals from each breed were divided in two groups (ad libitum and restricted), revealing the results a similar difference in glycemic levels between fed and underfed rabbits, with a restriction of % of ad libitum feeding in the wild animals (decrease of % lw) and % of that ingestion in the halop breed (decrease of % lw). the activities of glutamine synthetase and glutaminase show a higher reduction of these enzymes in the wild animals superior to that of the halop breed, compromising, in this way, the ammonium detoxification and the entry of residual carbonated groups of the protein catabolism into the krebs cycle. in the latter animals, a rapid mobilization capacity of triacylglycerols (tga) appears to exist, with a rapid catabolism of fatty acids leading to their oxidation. the wild breeds' results reveal a rise of circulating tga, reflecting difficulties in the lipolysis and mobilization of nefa for oxidation. in these underfed animals, phosphoenolpyruvate and pyruvate suffered a large increase and oxaloacetate a decrease. the halop breed revealed results that indicate a diminution of glycolisis, being glucoses' energy substituted by carbonated chains of lipolysis and protein catabolism. hormone results showed a higher decrease in insulin, t and igf- in the underfed halop animals. in order to confirm the biochemical results, relative quantification of enzyme expression was studied by real time-pcr. since the introduction of genetically modified (gm) crops in , the area under their cultivation has globally increased from . million hectares in to . in . the number of countries adopting gm crops also rose from one country, the usa, in to in . despite numerous successes public opinion still questions the ecological, moral, ethical considerations and issues concerning altering the natural state of the organisms. in this study, a survey of food shoppers' knowledge, attitudes and perceptions of gm foods was carried out in food outlets in nairobi. the food outlets were determined by simple random sampling. using systematic sampling, shoppers were interviewed at targeted imported food products. focus group discussions were also conducted with farmers at city markets. the survey reflected views of a systematic sample of shoppers in seven food outlets between november and december of . it revealed knowledge at %, with positive attitudes and good perceptions towards gm foods (χ = . , d.f. , p < . ). seventy nine percent of shoppers were willing to buy and consume gm foods (χ = . , d.f. , p < . ). cross-tabulation of shopper's position on various issues raised in the survey showed a strong correlation between the respondents' respective knowledge, attitudes, and perceptions (r = . ). nineteen percent of food sampled tested positive for gms. poisson statistics were used to calculate the number of sample sequences. the statistical tools were obtained from spss version . . the results of this study will be of great interest in determining the use and adoption of gm crops in kenya. it will also guide the development of national foreign food policy on gm foods. the technology should be embraced as soon as it is acceptable to alleviate, drought, famine and hunger estimated to be affecting . million kenyans today, mostly children. consumers and gm foods: the case of turkeyÖzlenÖzgen , mustafa yildiz : department of family and consumer sciences, school of home economics, university of ankara, ankara , turkey; department of field crops, faculty of agriculture, university of ankara, ankara, turkey the future development of food biotechnology depends on consumer acceptance. scientists are aware that consumer attitudes will have a crucial impact on the process of the food biotechnology. because, food is one of the central features in human life. consumers' attitudes and trusts in the institutions will determine how gene technology will be used in food sector, in the future. recently, research concerned with consumer aspects of gm foods accelerated. but in turkey, the literature that deals with this subject is very limited and sparse. therefore, this research was carried out on the turkish consumers with the purpose of analyzing the consumers' awareness, assessments about benefits-risks, market place and labelling, and trusts in institutions, towards gm foods. this study was based on interviews with consumers who have recently purchased from major malls, during shopping hours. of the four major malls, voluntary male and female consumers were included in the research if they had main or secondary responsibility for household shopping. the questionnaire form was applied to subjects through face-to-face individual interview. the data were analyzed by using statistical methods according to explanatory variables, including age, gender and educational level. findings indicated that consumers' awareness and views about gm foods were connected to selected demographic characteristics. the results of this study can be important for consumer educators, marketing managers and policy makers. benefit-risk perceptions and moral beliefs of turkish consumers towards transgenic productsÖzlenÖzgen , haluk emiroglu , mustafa yildiz , ayşe sezen taş : department of family and consumer sciences, school of home economics, university of ankara, ankara, turkey; faculty of law, university of bilkent, ankara, turkey; department of field crops, faculty of agriculture, university of ankara, ankara, turkey the use of biotechnology in production has generated considerable debate involving the benefits-risks and moral beliefs associated with its use. consumer acceptance of genetically modified product is a critical factor will affect the future of this technology. this study was planned and conducted to determine the relationship between product/process related benefit perceptions, product/process related risk percentions and moral beliefs of consumers towards transgenic products. a total of university educated consumers, consisting of males and females, employed at the ministries selected by random sampling method in ankara, were included into study. interview techniques were used in the gathering the research materials. the interview instrument had been prepared considering previous research and literature. answers given to sentences typed likert were scored, used "varimax analysis technique" for validity. in order to test the reliability of questionnaire were calculated "cronbach alpha" as inner consistency coefficient. the t-test were performed for determining the differences dependent on gender and age variables between product related benefit perceptions, process related benefit perceptions, product related risk perceptions, process related risk perceptions and moral beliefs of consumers. the examination of relationships between product/process related benefit perceptions, product/process related risk perceptions and moral beliefs of consumers was made by correlation analysis technique. it is thought that the results of this study are important both for scientists and social scientists. the application of the dna recombinant technology for food production is generating a great debate in our society with the participation of scientists trying to explain the way of obtaining these new foods and which are their implications; environmentalist groups and anti-biotechnology associations that systematically are against to the application of this technology; legislatives bodies and the public in general, represented by consumers' organizations that expresses their right to be informed. considering that university students will be the future professionals and consumers their opinion on this topic will be decisive in its success or failure, this research is aimed to performed a global and comparative study of the agrobiotechnology perception by students from different areas of knowledge and studies. this study was carried out during the academic years - , being analyzed a total of valid surveys. the designed questionnaire included questions relatives to: evaluation of the own knowledge and interest on the topic; evaluation of the information sources mainly used by university students to obtain nutritional information; the opinion about gm food labelling; risks/benefits perception; purchasing intention and support of biotechnology. results obtained showed that % of the university students interviewed have a clear positive perception of biotechnology, mainly the students of the health sciences area. these students understand the scientific terminology and they use the university as the main source of information. they support the development of the biotechnology and they consider that in a future it will report them benefits. other group ( %) has a clear negative perception, they are mainly students from law and art history. they do not understand the scientific terminology, they consider that biotechnology will cause them risks, and as a consequence they don't have intention of buying these foods. the technology of the dna recombinant can be also used to introduce in the plants genome the gene that codes a protein of interest for their use as antigen. the application of agrobiotechnology has allowed the development of a new generation of vaccines that try to reduce or to eliminate the inconveniences of the classic ones. for the new vaccines design, the detailed knowledge of the biology of the pathogen is considered. with this knowledge the genes implied in virulence can be inactivated or modified selectively. the term "edible vaccines" it is usually applies to the use of edible parts of the plants (tubers, fruits, leaves, etc.) genetically modified with the purpose to produce specific components (antigens) of a pathogen (virus, bacteria, etc.) against which is wanted to protect a person or animal. however, oral is not the best vaccination route since the quantity of antigen for an efficient immunization it is usually high, being also needed, the co administration of an adjuvant that stimulates the immune answer. on the other hand, it is also important to highlight that the levels of antigen accumulation in transgenic plants is usually lower than the necessary ones. another problem is the irregular accumulation of the antigen in the different parts of the plants, thus difficult the appropriate control of the doses. tannin is polyphenolic component having some antioxidant properties and exists in many plants and fruits. in pomegranate juice this component causes turbidity and haze. during fruit juice clarification by conventional gelatin method, all poly phenolic substances which are responsible for antioxidant activity are removed and as a result the quality of the product is reduced. in the present study tannase enzyme (tannin acyl hydrolase; ec . . . ) was used to decompose tannin to gallic acid and glucose and as the result the amount of turbidity of the juice is decreased, however, the antioxidant properties remain unchanged since tannin is not decomposed and not separated in the juice as it occurs in the gelatin method. the amount of gallic acid in pomegranate juice samples before and after addition of tannase was measured using hplc tests and the optimum temperature, the enzyme and juice contact time, ph, and solvent concentration for clarification of pomegranate juice were obtained as • c, ph = . , h and mm citrate buffer, respectively. the potential benefits of enzymatic clarification of pomegranate juice, that is preservation of antioxidant activity and hence increasing the quality of the fruit product, in comparison to that of conventional clarification method by gelatin introduce a new technique in turbidity and haze removed in tannin containing fruit juices. the objectives of this study are to investigate the inhibitory effect of low molecular weight chitosan for its use as biopreservatives of foods. the inhibitory activity of chitosan against escherichia coli and staphylococcus aureus was investigated by determining the effect of chitosan treatment on bacterial growth during culture and its effect on the viability of non-growing cells. the activity of chitosan was decreased considerably for both strains when sucrose was added to ts broth containing chitosan. the addition of ethanol affected little on the inhibition of chitosan against s. aureus. the influence of nacl on the activity of chitosan was similar to the influence of sucrose and ethanol. however, the experiments with non-growing cells showed that the ethanol enhance drastically the antibacterial activity of chitosan on s. aureus. the results presented in this paper demonstrate that its antibacterial activity may be affected considerably by common food additives such as sucrose, ethanol and nacl. in lactococcus lactis the enzymes phosphofructokinase (pfk), pyruvate kinase (pk) and lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) are uniquely encoded in the las operon. we have applied metabolic control analysis to study the role of this organisation. earlier work showed that ldh at wildtype level has zero control on glycolysis and growth rate but high negative control on formate production (c j formate ldh = − . ). we find that pfk and pk have zero control on glycolysis and growth rate at the wildtype enzyme level but both enzymes exert strong positive control on the glycolytic flux at reduced activities. pk has high positive control on formate (c j formate pk = . − . ) and acetate production (c jacetate pk = . − . ), whereas pfk has no control on these fluxes. decreased expression of the entire las operon resulted in a strong decrease in growth rate and the glycolytic flux. increased las expression resulted in a slight decrease in the glycolytic flux. at the wildtype level the control was close to zero on both glycolysis and the pyruvate branches. the sum of control coefficients for the three enzymes individually was comparable to the control coefficient found for the entire operon at the wildtype level; the strong positive control by pk almost cancels out the negative control by ldh on formate production. the analysis suggests that co-regulation of pfk and pk provides a very efficient way to regulate glycolysis, and co-regulating pk and ldh allows the cells to maintain homolactic fermentation during regulation of glycolysis around wildtype level. bovine chymosin is used extensively in cheese production because of its specificity and low proteolytic activity. we are interested in the caprine chymosin as an alternative because in the canary islands cheese has traditionally been made using goats milk with extract from the abomasum of newborn goats as coagulating factor. we isolated and characterized the prochymosin cdna from the abomasum of milk-fed kid goats. this cdna predicts a polypeptide of amino acid residues, with a signal peptide and a proenzyme region of and amino acids, respectively. the caprine preprochymosin has % and % identity with the corresponding lamb and calf sequences. the cdna fragment encoding prochymosin was fused in frame to the killer toxin signal sequence in a constitutive vector, and to the ␣-factor signal sequence-flag in an inducible expression vector. kluyveromyces lactis pm - c, k. lactis sel , characterized by a "supersecreting" phenotype, and saccharomyces cerevisiae bj were transformed with the recombinant plasmids. activated culture supernatants of yeast transformants showed milk-clotting activity. the flag-prochymosin fusion was purified from bj culture supernatants by affinity chromatography. after activation at acid ph, proteolytic activity assayed toward casein fractions showed that the recombinant caprine chymosin specifically hydrolyzed -casein. the recombinant caprine enzyme could be an alternative milk coagulant in cheese making. lipid accumulation in schizochytrium g / s was studied under batch and continuous culture. different glucose and glutamate source concentrations were supplemented in a defined medium. during batch cultivation, lipid accumulation occurred towards the end of the growth phase but ceased when cell proliferation stopped. under continuous culture, as dilution rate decreased from . to . h − , both cell dry weight and total fatty acid content (tfa) of the cell increased. with a constant dilution rate of . h − , nitrogen limitation induced lipid synthesis ( % tfa) as described for other lipid-accumulating organisms. however, with carbon-limited conditions, some lipid accumulation was still possible, the tfa being %. finally, the batch and continuous culture methods are compared for docosahexaenoic acid ( : , n − ) production. the objectives of this study is to investigate the inhibitory effect of low molecular weight chitosan for its use as biopreservatives of foods. the inhibitory activity of chitosan against e. coli and staphylococcus aureus was investigated by determining the effect of chitosan treatment on bacterial growth during culture and its effect on the viability of non-growing cells. the activity of chitosan was decreased considerably for both strains when sucrose was added to ts broth containing chitosan. the addition of ethanol affected little on the inhibition of chitosan against s. aureus. the influence of nacl on the activity of chitosan was similar to the influence of sucrose and ethanol. however, the experiments with non-growing cells showed that the ethanol enhance drastically the antibacterial activity of chitosan on s. aureus. the results presented in this paper demonstrate that its antibacterial activity may be affected considerably by common food additives such as sucrose, ethanol and nacl. nitrite-oxidizing bacteria catalyze an essential step of nitrogen elimination in biological wastewater treatment. recently, novel and yet uncultured nitrite-oxidizing nitrospira-like bacteria were found to be abundant in municipal and industrial wastewater treatment systems where they outcompete nitrobacter, which has long been considered as the organism responsible for nitrite oxidation in bioreactors. despite the importance of nitrospira-like bacteria for wastewater treatment and for nitrogen fluxes in natural ecosystems, little is known about their ecophysiology and interactions with other organisms. cultivation-independent molecular techniques were applied to investigate the diversity, distribution, and physiological and genetic features of nitrospira-like bacteria in nitrifying activated sludge and biofilm. a surprisingly high diversity of these organisms was found to exist in these engineered and in natural habitats. moreover, significant physiological differences could be identified among various phylogenetic sublineages in the genus nitrospira. quantitative co-localization analyses performed by novel image analysis software revealed that these metabolic features are reflected by the spatial organization of nitrifiers living in biofilm and activated sludge flocs. based on an environmental genomics approach the genome of a nitrospira-like bacterium found in activated sludge is being analyzed. results obtained so far point at unexpected physiological capabilities of this organism, and allow us to propose that nitrospira-like bacteria may also play roles in the bioremediation of (per)chlorate and chlorite. the activated sludge process is the most common way to remove organic matter, nitrogen and phosphorus from wastewater by microbiologically means. knowledge about the microorganisms involved is fundamental for optimisation of existing plants and development of new plants and process designs. many of the bacteria believed to be involved in nitrification, denitrification, biological phosphorusremoval, and removal of organic matter in full scale plants are now identified by use of molecular methods. recent developments in experimental approaches have allowed the study of the ecophysiology of these uncultured and potentially important bacteria, thus providing a better understanding of their function in full-scale activated sludge ecosystems. relatively few dominant species in each functional group (e.g. denitrifiers and polyphosphate accumulating organisms) seems to be present. some species appear to be very specialized regarding nutrient requirements while others are more versatile. a new method for mercury remediation from industrial wastewater based on the enzymatic reduction of mercury by live mercury resistant bacteria immobilized on the pumice particles has been developed in gbf, germany, and implemented in the industrial scale (unknown). the experience gained during operation of this instalation led to the idea, that the process of bioremediation may be integrated in one bioreactor with the sorption of mercury from wastewater, by immobilization of the bacteria directly on the activated carbon. for this it was necessary to define several significant parameters of the activated carbon used and the sorption process itself. the paper presents results of the equilibrium and kinetics investigations of the process of mercury sorption from aqueous solutions onto seven different types of activated carbon. the effective diffusion coefficients in the particles were obtained from the transient-state experiments and the sorption isotherms, saturation capacity of the sorbents and its dependence on the temperature and ph were identified. then the hydrodynamic and sorption characteristics of the activated carbon bed in a laboratory-scale fixed-bed bioreactor were investigated in different process conditions (mercury concentration, volumetric flow rate, temperature, ph). the results (effective capacity of the bed, dispersion and diffusion coefficients, mass transfer coefficient) enable implementation of this bioreactor for modified, integrated process of mercury bioremediation from industrial wastewaters. research supported by the grant kbn t c . bacterial cr(vi) reductases convert the very mobile toxic cr(vi) to the less toxic and less mobile cr(iii). the ability to reduce cr(vi) was studied on cell extracts of ochrobactrum tritici strain bvl and microbacterium sp. strain a. both microorganisms were isolated from the same sample of chromium-contaminated sludge, taken from a wastewater treatment plant. while in the first case activity was found to be associated with the intracellular soluble extract, in the second case it was a process occurring extracellularly. cr(vi) reduction by the intracellular soluble extracts of strain bvl required the presence of nadh or nadph as electron-donor, while the extracellular fraction of strain a only used nadph. several studies were made on strain bvl intracellular soluble extracts. a k m of . m cr(vi) and a v max of . ± . nmol cr(vi) min − mg − protein were estimated from the lineaweaver-burk plot and michaelis-menten non-linear regression. the temperature and the ph optima for cr(vi) reduction were . • c and . , respectively. hyperthermus butylicus is an anaerobic hyperthermophilic crenarchaeon, isolated from the solfataric sea floor off sáo migel island, azores (zillig et al., ) . h. butylicus grows at up to • c (optimally between and • c) at ph . it can utilize peptides, polysaccharides, and other substrates, as carbon sources to produce acetate, butyrate, and n-butanol. the capability to produce enzymes (e.g. hydrolases, dna and rna polymerases, etc.) that can tolerate and function at temperatures • c higher than most other thermophilic archaea, renders h. butylicus of particular interest to the biotechnology industry. the complete genome sequence of h. butylicus was determined and it contains , , bp on a single circular chromosome. protein encoding genes were identified which use a high level of uug and gug start codons. many of these were assigned functions on the basis of sequence comparisons. our analyses revealed some unusual metabolic properties in h. butylicus. several sugar transporters were identified, although the set of genes required for glycolysis is incomplete. moreover, genes encoding enzymes converting glucose to trioses are absent and no genes encoding enzymes of the pentose phosphate cycle or the kdpg pathway were detected. the h. butylicus genome encodes many proteases and peptidases although the lon proteases, encoded in all other archaeal genomes, are absent. although it was reported that h. butylicus does not utilize free amino acids in the media, genes for amino acid transporters were identified, and several proteins involved in di-or oligo-peptide transport are encoded. genes encoding signal peptidases are absent. we will summarize gene products of special biotechnological interest. reference zillig et al., . j. bact. , - . hot genomics: insights in the thermophilic lifestyle of thermus thermophilus from its complete genome holger brüggemann , , anke henne , gerhard gottschalk : göttingen genomics laboratory, institute of microbiology and genetics, university of göttingen, germany; institut pasteur, unité de génomique des microorganismes pathogènes, paris, france thermus thermophilus is an extremely thermophilic, halotolerant bacterium, which was originally isolated from a natural thermal environment. recently completed genome sequences of two strains, hb and hb , provide a solid foundation for investigating many aspects of thermophilic lifestyle; these range from molecular stability determinants to key elements of organismic physiology. in addition, the species has considerable biotechnological potential; many thermostable proteins isolated from members of the genus thermus are indispensable in research and in industrial applications. the closely related genera thermus and deinoccoocus belong to a distinct branch of bacteria called the deinococcus-thermus group. genome comparison of t. thermophilus and d. radiodurans, a mesophilic organism, which exhibits high resistant to radiation, oxidative stress, and desiccation, is of particular interest for the identification and exploration of thermophilic determinants. a large number of orthologs with a high degree of sequence identity are shared between the two species. this opens the opportunity for comparative studies of conformational and chemical thermostability of proteins, as well as for the identification of specific traits for each organism, explaining their unique physiological properties and their intriguing differences in stress tolerance. although strains hb and hb share a highly conserved chromosome, striking differences can be found between their megaplasmids, which encode a huge proportion of genes not found in the genome of d. radiodurans. possible contributions made by the megaplasmids to a thermophilic lifestyle will be discussed. microorganisms that can live in high temperatures, extreme ph and high salt concentration are called extromophiles. extromophilic microorganisms have extended our knowledge and understanding of fundamental questions such as the origin of life. the ability to grow in extreme conditions and to produce stable proteins makes extremopliles very attractive for the researchers and also for the industry. extremozymes from extremophiles have a great economic potential in many industrial processes, including agricultural, chemical and pharmaceutical applications. concurrent development of protein engineering will increase the application of enzymes from extremophiles in industry. turkey has vast and various ecologi-cal areas, and so it has a broad microbial diversity. based on the extremophilles which defined in the scope of this project, halophilic microorganisms produced industrially important proteins were isolated from Ç amaltı saltern area in izmir, turkey. in this work, growth of isolates at different temperature, salinity and ph values were investigated to determine the effects of various growth conditions. eight isolates grow at ph between . and . and two isolates at . - . . they grow at temperature between and • c and salt concentration between % and %. the results of some phenotypic characters showed that they are gram (−) and oxidase,ürease, dnase and nitrate reduction are (−), and catalase (+). they used d(+) glucose, maltose, lactose, sucrose, l(+) arabinose, d(+) mannose, glycerol and four of isolates used d(+) xylose as a carbon source. the isolates resistant to erythromycine, ampicilin sulbactam, cefoxitin, penicillin, bacitracin, novabiocin, amikacin and sensitive to ceftazidine, ciprofloxacin, amoxycillin/clavulanic acid, imipenem, chloromphenicol, ceftazidime/clavulanic acid, aztreonam, cefepime, cefotaxime, cefoperazone amoxicillin. this project was supported by tubitak through project tbag - t . the technology of producing renewable energy sources such as ethanol, methane and hydrogen from biomass holds the potential of creating in-house energy resources while lowering the emission of greenhouse gasses as demanded by the kyoto protocol. recently, goals were defined for the european union determining that . % of the transportation fuel has to come from biofuels in year . a large-scale implementation of biofuels into the transportation sector will demand that lignocellulosic biomass, which is found in a surplus throughout the world is used as the raw material for the production process. the presentation will include a comprehensive description of the special bio-refinery concept developed in denmark for production of biofuels and other valuable products from straw. the concept includes several innovative steps such as a pre-treatment method using wet oxidation, on-site production of enzymes and a continuous fermentation process using a genetic modified thermophilic bacterium. by co-producing several biofuels in the plant optimal use of the biomass has been assured and the price of for instance of bioethanol is getting close to conventional oil-based fuels. optimizing each step in the bio-refinery, while having the full integration in mind, will be the way to make an economical viable biofuel production. in the presentation we will present our road map for achieving this goal in the nearest future. replacement of gasoline by liquid fuels produced from renewable sources is a high-priority goal in many countries worldwide. one such fuel, which has been found well suited, is ethanol. it may be produced from various lignocellulosic materials, such as forest and agricultural residues, which are fairly inexpensive. to compete with gasoline the production cost must be substantially lowered. ethanol production from lignocellulose comprises the following main steps: hydrolysis of hemicellulose, hydrolysis of cellulose, fermentation, separation of lignin, recovery and concentration of ethanol and wastewater handling. the enzymatic hydrolysis and fermentation can either be run separately (shf) or combined into a simultaneous saccharification and fermentation (ssf). the latter has been shown to result in higher ethanol yields than shf. some of the most important factors to reduce the cost are: efficient utilisation of the raw material by high ethanol yields, high productivity, high ethanol concentration in the feed to distillation and process integration in order to reduce capital cost and energy demand. in the last years we have performed several studies on the hydrolysis and fermentation of various forest and agricultural residues in a mini-pilot to improve the overall yield of ethanol and to reduce the energy demand and production cost. steam pretreatment, with small addition of acid catalyst, has resulted in sugar yields close to % of the theoretical for various types of raw materials, e.g. spruce, salix and corn stover. the ssf has been developed and optimized to give high yield of ethanol. for spruce an ethanol yield of about % of theoretical based on the composition of the raw material has so far been obtained using a two-stage steam-pretreatment of so impregnated raw material followed by ssf. improvements of the ssf step, in the form of high dry matter content, recirculation of process streams and adapted yeast have resulted in ethanol concentrations around g/l leading to substantial reduction in energy demand and production cost. these improvements have been assessed by techno-economic evaluation to determine the effect on the ethanol production cost. the process has been further optimised by process integration to further reduce the energy demand. the ethanol production cost was estimated to be around . - . euro/l ethanol assuming a yearly capacity of tonnes raw material (dry matter). production of bioethanol from spent grain, a by-product of beer production sho shindo, tadanori tachibana, akita research institute of food and brewing, akita-city, akita - , japan. e-mail: shindo@arif.pref.akita.jp (s. shindo) the breweries generate one million tons of spent grain every year, and about % of the spent grain is recycled in japan. therefore, it is environmentally and economically significant to consider the production of ethyl alcohol as biomass energy using the spent grain from the breweries industry. ethyl alcohol production from spent grain with immobilized yeast cells was investigated. spent grains were liquefied by a steam explosion treatment to obtain liquefied sugar. when kg of wet spent grain was treated under the kg/cm pressure for min using a l steam explosion reactor, g of total sugar was obtained from the liquefied spent grain. furthermore, . % (w/v) of glucose, . % (w/v) of xylose, and . % (w/v) of arabinose were produced when the liquefied spent grain was treated with glucoamylase, cellulase, and hemicellulase enzymes. ethyl alcohol production was carried out by immobilized sacchromyces cereviseae and immobilized yamadazyma stipitis simultaneously from liquefied spent grain. both yeast cells were immobilized on the glass beads carrier. xylose and arabinose were consumed after glucose was consumed completely during ethyl alcohol production. . % (v/v) ethyl alcohol was produced from liquefied spent grain that was adjusted % of initial sugar concentration after days. the vegetable oils constitute a resource of renewable potential for the production of fuels, becoming a viable alternative when compared to the diesel from petroleum. among the vegetable oils, the extracted oil of the castor plant seeds is a promising alternative source because it is constituted mainly of the ricinoleic acid ( -hydroxy- octadecenoic) that represents % of the total constitution of the oil approximately. the biodiesel obtained from castor oil can be defined chemically as being a mixture of methyl esters or ethyl esters of carboxylic acids synthesized by transesterification reaction of the existent triglyceride and an alcohol of little chain through the use of alkaline or enzymatic catalysts. in this work, we described the results found in castor oil with different degrees of purity. initially, it was made a rheological characterization followed by structural characterization (rmn c, rmn h and infrared) and thermal characterization (dtg, dta and dsc) of the crude and refined castor oil. it has been also measured the hydroxyl tenor, acidity index, saponification index and iodine index in different oils. later, these results were used to evaluate possible differences in the quality of the biodiesel (ethyl esters) produced in the enzymatic alcoholysis of the castor oil catalyzed by lipases (novozym , liposyme rm im and lipozyme tl im). the degree of substitution of castor oil derivative was performed by titration with . n hcl and confirmed by tlc analysis and the results showed conversion rates about %. has been demonstrated to have a wide range of health benefits such as prevention and therapy of various cancers, amelioration of heart disease, and prevention of renal stone formation as well as complications from diabetes. on the hand, lower phosphorylated forms of inositol, especially inositol trisphosphate (ip ) and inositol tetrakisphosphate (ip ) are important signal transduction molecules within the cells both in plants and the animal kingdom. it has been hypothesized that at least the anticancer function of ip is mediated via these lower inositol phosphates. the diversity and practical unavailability of the individual myo-inositol phosphates preclude their investigation. phytases, which catalyze the sequential hydrolysis of phytate, render production of defined myoinositol phosphates in pure form and sufficient quantities. different phytases may result in different positional isomers of myo-inositol phosphates and therefore different biochemical properties. phytases differing in ph optima, substrate specificity, and specificity of hydrolysis have been identified in plants and microorganisms. in this paper the dephosphorylation pathway of the novel phyfauia was compared to other bacterial phytate degrading enzymes. preliminary results have shown that phyfauia converted ip into ip (myoinositol , , , , -pentakisphosphates) and another isomer, which is yet to be elucidated. in a denitrifying pilot plant reactor, a new obligately anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) process with great potential for nitrogen removal for high strength wastewater was discovered. after transfer of the complex microbial community to a laboratory sbr system, a highly enriched population, dominated by a single anaerobic chemolithoautotrophic bacterium related to the planctomycetes was obtained. the bacterium was purified via percoll centrifugation and characterized as 'candidatus brocadia anammoxidans'. survey of different wastewater treatment plants using anammox specific s rrna gene primers and anammox specific oligonucleotide probes revealed the presence of at least four other anammox bacteria, tentatively named 'candidatus kuenenia stuttgartiensis', 'candidatus brocadia fulgida', 'candidatus scalindua wagneri' and 'candidatus scalindua brodae'. a close relative of the two scalindua species, 'candidatus scalindua sorokinii' was found to be responsible for about % of the nitrogen conversion in the anoxic zone of the black sea and in the benguela upwelling system along the namibian coast, making anammox an important player in the global nitrogen cycle. electron microscopic studies of all five anammox bacteria showed that several prokaryotic membrane-bounded compartments are present inside the cytoplasm, which are surrounded by unique ladderane lipids. hydroxylamine oxidoreductase, a key anammox enzyme, was present exclusively inside one of these compartments, named the 'anammoxosome'. unique peptides fragments of the purified hao were used to locate the hao gene in genome assembly of 'candidatus kuenenia stuttgartiensis'. the implementation of the anammox process in the treatment of wastewater with high ammonium concentrations was started at the treatment plant in rotterdam, the netherlands, where it is combined with the partial nitrification process sharon. the estimated price for nitrogen removal with partial nitrification and anammox is about . euro/kg n. gas lift reactors could sustain the highest anammox capacity at . kg n removed/m reactor per day. an alternative configuration of anammox is the oxygen-limited canon process in which aerobic ammonium-oxidizing bacteria protect anammox bacteria from oxygen and produce the necessary nitrite. maximum nitrogen removal with canon in gas lift reactors was . kg n/m reactor per day. using several different conditions and parameters, the competition and co-existence of aerobic and anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing bacteria were modeled. in addition to ammonia, urea was also converted after a -week adaptation in the canon system. recently it was shown that anammox bacteria can use organic acids as additional energy source. murray moo-young, wa anderson department of chemical engineering, university of waterloo, waterloo, ont., canada n l g bioreactors are central to the bioremediation of contaminated environments of water, air or soil. in all three areas of application, bioreactor design is critical to the development of new or improved processes. this overview focuses on the physical limitations of bioreactors caused by biological requirements. the information is based on our own research findings. the need for more applicationsoriented bioremediation research becomes apparent. for technoeconomic reasons, the airlift type has often been the bioreactor of choice for most bioremediations. however, lack of adequate understanding of the quantitative effects of operating conditions on its performance has been an ongoing concern. these effects have been characterized for engineering implementation. to enhance productivity, innovative pretreatment techniques of the polluted sources have also been developed using photocatalytic and chemical oxidation methods. case studies on petrochemical-contaminated water and soil reveal significant enhancement potentials. other studies on microbial biofilters for air bioremediation indicate that the active mass of the biological consortia is not sufficiently understood for rational design. analysis and retrofit design of wastewater treatment facilities using process simulation tools demetri petrides, alexandros koulouris, intelligen, inc., scotch plains, nj , usa. email: dpetrides@intelligen.com (d. petrides) process simulators have been used in the petroleum and chemical industries for over four decades to facilitate the design of new processes and optimize the performance of existing ones. similar benefits can be derived from the use of such tools in the environmental arena, particularly in the field of physical and biological treatment of municipal and industrial wastewater. specifically, process simulators can be used to evaluate and improve options for: ( ) more efficient removal of nutrients (e.g., organic nitrogen and phosphorous) that cause eutrofication, ( ) estimation and control of volatile organic compound (voc) emissions from open tanks, and ( ) more efficient removal and control of hazardous compounds. the potential benefits will be illustrated with cases studies involving both municipal and industrial wastewater facilities. the microbial reduction of metals has showed recent interest as these transformations can play crucial roles in the cycling of both inorganic and organic species in a range of environments and, if harnessed, may offer the basis for a wide range of innovative biotechnological processes. under certain conditions, however, microbial metal reduction can also mobilise toxic metals with potentially calamitous effects on human health. some effluents present heavy metals as soluble compounds, several microorganisms have the capacity to precipitate these metals as insoluble compounds, and this fact allows the collection and separation of these metallic precipitates from contaminated medium. sulfate-reducing bacteria (srb), under anaerobic conditions, oxidize simple organic compounds (such as acetic acid and lactic acid) by utilizing sulfate as an electron acceptor and generate hydrogen sulfide. hydrogen sulfide reacts with heavy metal ions to form insoluble metal sulfides that can be easily separated from a solution. the purpose of this work was study the capacity of desulfovibrio sp. cultures to reduce mixtures of the heavy metals in presence or not of petroleum. for it the experimental design k (k = ) was carried out. the five studied factors were cr, cu, mn, zn and petroleum. the study was carry out with desulfovibrio sp. batch studies were performed in ml sealed bottles with different concentrations (cr(iii)- ppm, cu(ii)- ppm, mn(ii)- ppm, zn(ii)- ppm) of metal sulfate and g l − of petroleum. during batch incubation the dissolved concentration of metal studied in supernatant were decreased to undetectable levels for zn ( - %), however with cu ( - %), mn ( - %) and cr ( - %). the development of continuous process with sulfatereducing bacteria seems to be a suitable alternative to reduce metals in solution from contaminated media such as industrial or mine effluents. after these preliminary results, some experiments in course are focused to study that purpose. reduction of odour emissions from livestock buildings using a bioscrubbing system morten Øgendahl, nawaf abu-khalaf, jens jørgen lønsmann iversen department of biochemistry and molecular biology, university of southern denmark, dk- odense m, denmark. e-mail: tvede@bmb.sdu.dk (m. Øgendahl) a bioscrubbing system for reducing odour emissions from livestock buildings is presented. the bioscrubbing system consists of two separate units; an absorption column and a water purification module. the absorption column is mounted in the ventilations stacks in the livestock buildings absorbing odorants in the effluent air flow. the odorants are absorbed in a spray of droplets formed by a grid of high pressure nozzles in the inlet of the absorption column. the spray of droplets is extracted from the air flow and pumped to a centrally located water purification module, an inverse three phase fluidised bed bioreactor, where the bio-degradation of the absorbed odorants occurs. the bioreactor features a split sparging system for maximum mixing and aeration. the cleaned water is recirculated to the absorption column. an electronic tongue will quantify key odorants in the bioreactor. the absorption column is designed to be retrofitted into existing livestock building ventilation systems. the water purification module is constructed in standard size units simplifying scaling to match the requirements of individual applications. the total bioreactor volume is increased by increasing the number of standard bioreactors. this work describes a "light off" toxicity bioassay sensor based on whole cell genetically modified bioluminescent bacteria. the biosensor was constructed by mating between the environmentally isolated phenol-degrading acinetobacter sp. strain df and the plasmid putk that is an inc p plasmid with the bioluminescence genes luxcdabe inserted into a genetic region involved in plasmid replication and transfer. subsequently, the bioreporter designated df /putk and used to investigate phenolics toxicity. among examined phenolics, pentachlorophenol, catechol and nitrophenol recorded the fastest effect on the bioluminescence of bioreporter df /putk over incubation period of min. the effect of various concentrations of phenol and its derivatives either in an individual, duple or triple mixture forms on the bioluminescence response of the constructed bioreporter df /putk were also examined. significant reduction of the bioluminescence was observed whenever a mixture contained pentachlorophenol, catechol and nitrophenol, respectively. to develop a system appropriate to commercialize, the constructed bioreporter df /putk was subjected for immobilization in microtiter plates using several entrapment gels. after a selection of materials was tried, lb/agar was chosen as the most suitable candidate material. characterization of key odour compounds in an air wet scrubber is presented. the key odour compounds represent five chemical groups, i.e. sulphide, alcohol, volatile fatty acids (vfas), phenol and indole. direct aqueous injection (dai) and solid phase extraction (spe) methods were used before injection of key odorants into the gas chromatography-flame ionisation detection (gc-fid). the dai and spe methods were efficient in the identification of odour compounds in the wet scrubber. the spe method had a high recovery and can be more effective in the identification of compounds at low initial concentration. however, dai showed a better linearity and a lower limit of detection (lod) than the spe method. the dai method was the method of choice for characterization, as it is cheaper, easier to handle and highly applicable. at least two odorants, phenol and -butanol, were quantified successfully using the dai method. their lod was less than their odour detection limit in the wet scrubber. dai method can be used as a reference measurement method for any further analytical application, e.g. electronic tongue. recent developments in biotechnology enabled the widespread use of microbial enzymes in textile, detergent, food and dairy industries and also in various environmental applications. microorganisms which live at extremes of temperature, ph and salinity, produce extremozymes that offer many exciting opportunities for their use in clean production. in this study, microorganisms were isolated from camaltı saltern area inİzmir, turkey. effect of medium salinity on the growth of these microorganisms was determined. seven out of isolates required salt for growth. the salinity ranges at which growth was detected were: - % for two isolates, - % for one isolate, - % for two isolates and - % for one isolate. the isolates were also screened for their capability of producing industrially important enzymes such as amylase, protease, lipase, xylanase and cellulose which are widely used not only in textile, detergent, food and dairy industries but also in various environmental applications. all of the isolates were found to be producers of both amylase and xylanase enzymes at varying salinity array within - % salt concentration range at ph . . extracellular protease activity was detected in the medium of all isolates grown at , , , and % salinity at both ph . (optimum growth ph) and ph . . out of isolates, , and were found to produce cellulase enzyme when the salt concentrations were , and %, respectively. at % salt concentration, only one isolate was found to be cellulase enzyme producer. none of the isolates were found to produce lipase enzyme at - % salt concentration range. this project was supported by tubitak through project tbag - t . chemical engineering department, middle east technical university, ankara , turkey. e-mail: ubakir@metu.edu.tr (u. bakir) glass and ceramic tiles are very widely used industrial materials. in most cases, periodical cleaning is required to maintain their optical properties such as transparency and visual aspects. because of the ever-growing demand for healthy living, there is a keen interest in materials capable of killing harmful microorganisms. the application of these tiles in care facilities to reduce the spread of infections, in public and residental places to improve hygienic conditions are of general interest. in this study the aim is developing methods to apply thin film coatings on glass tiles to make them anti-bacterial by utilizing photocatalysis and investigating their anti-bacterial properties. semiconductors because of their reasonable band gap energies find great attraction through this purpose. the photocatalytic property of semiconductors are used in this process. oxidising radicals are formed on the coated surfaces and these radicals attacks the organic pollutants and bacteria on contact with the surface. titanium dioxide (tio ) coated surfaces are considered to be very effective against organic and inorganic materials, as well as against bacteria. in the experimental procedure coating solution is prepared by sol-gel technique. after pretreatment of surfaces, the coating solution is applied on the surfaces by dip-coating method. after appropriate thermal treatments, to achieve thin, dense and strong coatings, indicator microorganism is directly applied on the coated surfaces and illuminated under solar simulater light source. finally, the number of surviving microorganisms are determined. in this study, the effects of titanium dioxide (tio ), tin oxide (sno ) solutions and metal doping to these coating solutions on anti-bacterial function were investigated. as a result of this study, the number of escherichia coli that is used as indicator microorganism, on tio and sno coated glasses with respect to the control glass reduced by - % and - %, respectively. doping with metals increased the activity of the coatings, hence the number of surviving microorganisms decreased. activity of a methanogenic ecosystem during the primary contact with a solid support s. michaud, n. bernet, p. buffière, j.p. delgenès inra-lbe, avenue des etangs, f- narbonne, france in this paper, the biological activity during the first initial contact between a methanogenic sludge and a solid support was investigated in batch experiments, at different solid concentrations, using two different granular solid materials and with glucose as the main organic substrate. in all cases, the introduction of a solid material in a methanogenic suspended biomass induced a response of the anaerobic microorganisms, after a lag phase during which biological activity was not detected. this lag phase could be the consequence of a physical stress induced by the first contact between microbial cells and the solid surface. this lag phase was not observed when the biomass used originated from a biofilm reactor, i.e. using a biomass previously exposed to a solid material. a change in the metabolism of organic matter from catabolism and methane production toward production of other compounds could be observed, characterised by a sharp decrease of the methane yield in the anaerobic system. analyses of the gas and liquid phases did not show the production of any new gaseous or soluble compound as the biological end product of this activity. this suggests the production of non-soluble compounds by an anabolic pathway, which could indicate the initiation of biofilm formation. this metabolic activity was shown to be directly correlated to the ratio between the solid surface introduced and the microorganism concentration in the anaerobic culture (m g vs − ). from kinetic observations, it could be observed that acetogenic methanogenesis recovered more rapidly than syntrophic propionate and butyrate degradation. evaluating microbial diversity of hydrocarbon degrading bacteria cleantis braithwaite, howard rosser, tawfiq al-ibrahim, hussain, al-bandi research and development center, saudi aramco, dhahran, saudi arabia the analysis of microbial diversity with molecular methods is central to isolating and identifying new and potential biocatalysts resources for research and industry. the ability to degrade hydrocarbon components of petroleum is widespread among bacteria, and is an effective method for remediation of a variety of ecosystems. due to the high carbon content of oil and the low levels of other nutrients essential for microbial growth, treatment of oil with phosphorus and nitrogen is generally required to enhance the growth of hydrocarbon-degrading bacteria and to stimulate oil sludge degradation. in this research study, three types of oily sludges from a gas plant, refinery, and terminal facilities were treated with nutrients. to assess the microbial diversity, both biolog culture method and culture independent polymerase chain reaction (pcr,) denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (dgge) methods were used. nutrient addition significantly improved oil sludge degradation. we identified and characterized several hydrocarbon degrading bacterial strains that have the ability to convert petroleum. these bacteria included representatives both gram positive and gram-negative genera. there were slight difference in the quantity and type of hydrocarbon degrading bacteria found in the three sites. this is the first molecular analysis of hydrocarbon degrading microbial population in saudi arabian operations. mussel adhesive proteins, including the -plus variants of foot protein type (fp- ), have been suggested as potential environmentally friendly adhesives for use in aqueous conditions and in medicine. here we report the novel production of a recombinant mytilus galloprovincialis foot protein type variant a (mgfp- a) fused with a hexahistidine affinity ligand in escherichia coli, and its ∼ % purification with affinity chromatography. recombinant mgfp- a showed a superior purification yield and better apparent solubility compared to those of the previously reported recombinant m. galloprovincialis foot protein type (mgfp- ). the adsorption abilities and adhesion forces of purified recombinant mgfp- a were compared with those of cell-tak (a commercial mussel extract adhesive) and mgfp- using qcm analysis and modified afm, respectively. these assays showed that the adhesive ability of recombinant mgfp- a was comparable to that of cell-tak but lower than that of recombinant mgfp- . collectively, these results indicate that recombinant mgfp- a may be useful as a commercial bioadhesive or an adhesive ingredient in medical or underwater environments. cresol, a monomethylated phenol, is an aromatic compound. the environmental protection agency (epa) has determined the carcinogenic potential of cresol. various options are being examined for the degradation of cresol because of their unavoidable large scale production and toxicity. many aromatic hydrocarbons can be used as electron donors aerobically by species of pseudomonas, thus leading to the ring cleavage of these compounds. in the present study, pseudomonas strains were isolated from activated sludge collected from sewage treatment plant. it was repeatedly transferred onto nutrient agar plate to check the purity of the culture. the organism was grown aerobically in an inorganic medium with p-cresol as the solitary carbon source. pseudomonas was confirmed by the expression of green pigment, gram staining and biochemical tests including koh, catalase, nitrate reduction and carbohydrate fermentation reaction. inoculation status was used to determine the rate of degradation of p-cresol. the effect of temperature on p-cresol degradation was studied. moreover, the effect of different concentrations of the aromatic compounds on pseudomonas as well as substrate variability was also documented. phenolic intermediates were estimated colorimetrically using -aminoantipyrene, folin-lowry method, uv spectrophotometry and hplc. the results indicated that pseudomonas could degrade up to mg/l of p-cresol within h. pseudomonas sp. exhibited good metabolic versatility and degraded other aromatic compounds including m-cresol and p-hydroxybenzoic acid. we conclude that this strain of pseudomonas has excellent potential for bioaugmenting the degradation of p-cresol-containing waste water treatment units. a considerable amount of waste cooking oil is produced by the restaurant industry worldwide. this poses a significant environmental and economic problem, since high oil and grease concentrations in the sewage system could lead to pipes occlusion and decreased efficiency in water treatment operation plants. therefore, sending these wastes to recycling companies or hazardous waste processors is usually required. yarrowia lipolytica, a well-known lipase producer, requires the presence of lipidic compounds (i.e. vegetable oils) to boost enzyme biosynthesis. in this work, the suitability of waste cooking oil as lipase inducer in submerged cultures of this yeast has been assessed. if successful, this procedure could allow both the degradation of an abundant waste and its valorisation as a raw material for the production of a high added value product. the microorganism was grown in a liquid medium to which various amounts of waste cooking oil were added. biodegradation degrees up to % (measured as decrease in cod) were obtained after days of treatment. also, initial glucose concentration in the basal medium seemed to influence the efficiency of the process. on the other hand, addition of waste oil led to a significant increase in lipase production (more than two-fold), compared to oil-free cultures. moreover, chain-length specificity of the produced enzymes was significantly different: high activity towards medium chain length esters was found, which hinted to the occurrence of both lipases and esterases. biodesulfurization: a documental review j. ferrer, simon bolivar university, environmental engineering lab. caracas, venezuela a documental review about larger interest aspects in biodesulfurization technique is showed. especifically, the investigation is related to general framework and the justification of this technique, degradatives pathways elucidated up to now, involved microorganism, important elements in development of bacterial desulfurization and progress areas, and future tendency. in situ bioremediation of a p-nitrophenol contaminated site and assessment of its community structure debarati paul, gunjan pandey, sumeet labana, rakesh k. jain institute of microbial technology, sector a, chandigarh , india. e-mail: rkj@imtech.res.in (r.k. jain) biodegradation of p-nitrophenol (pnp), a priority pollutant, was studied as a model system for bioremediation of sites contaminated with nitroaromatic/organic compounds. bioremediation studies were carried out in pnp-spiked soil in small plots under natural field conditions using arthrobacter protophormiae rkj . role of carrier material was examined by immobilizing the bacteria on corncob powder prior to adding them to soil. these studies demonstrated successful removal of pnp by immobilized cells that were able to deplete pnp completely in days, whereas free cells were able to deplete % pnp in the same time period. monitoring the fate of released bacteria revealed fairly stable population of the cells when they were immobilized on corncob powder throughout the period of study. on the other hand, there was a decrease of . log units in colony forming units of free cells at the end of the study ( days). bacterial community structure and diversity was also studied for the pesticidecontaminated site wherein the effect of addition of an exogenous strain on the existing soil community structure and on soil functionality was determined using molecular techniques. as revealed by restriction fragment length polymorphism (rflp) studies different phylotypes could be identified on the basis of similar banding patterns. sequencing of representative clones of each phylopyte showed that the community structure of the pesticide-contaminated soil mainly constituted of proteobacteria and actinomycetes. terminal fragment length polymorphism (t-rflp) analysis showed only subtle changes in community structure during the process of bioremediation. bacteriocins encompass an array of structurally different molecules produced by a number of phylogenetically distinct bacterial groups and trigger the killing of the same or closely related species. the recombined escherichia coli strain harboring a bacterocin coding region of xanthomonas campestris pv glycines ra was disrupted to obtain cell homogenate. peptidic xanthomonas bacteriocins (pxb) were separated by lowering ph and adding salt. the resulting pxb's were partially purified using ion exchangers, gel filtration. two final active fractions, a and b, were obtained with a yield of . % and - -fold purification. the activity of pxb was stable at the ph ranging from . to . . andreja kresal, vanja kokol, vera golob textile department, university of maribor, , slovenia wastewater from textile dyeing industries is characterized by high chemical and biological oxygen demands (cod and bod) and intense color due to the extensive use of synthetic dyes. as dyes of complex aromatic structures are resistant to removal by the typical microbial population and may be toxic to the microorganisms present in the treatment plants, discharge of the wastewater to the treatment plants may lead to its failure. beside, direct discharge of these effluents into municipal wastewater plants and/or environment may cause the formation of toxic carcinogenic and/or unhealthy breakdown products. different chemical and physical methods (adsorption, coagulation-flocculation, oxidation, filtration and electrochemical treatments) for color removal have been proposed, but due capital costs and slow operating speed as well as huge amounts of sludge creation there is still a great need to develop an economic and effective method. the use of lignin degrading white-rot fungi and their enzymes (laccase, lignin peroxidase, manganese peroxidase) has attracted increasing scientific attention due their ability to oxidative degrade a wide range of recalcitrant organic compounds. in the contribution, the decolorization efficacy of different commercial textile reactive dyes (anthraquinone, azo, triphenylmethane) will be investigated after the treatment by laccase from trametes versicolor. in order to examine the reuse of enzymatically decolorized liquors, the ecological suitability and the toxicity of the degradation products after different time of enzyme exposure will be studied. this work was carried out within the scope of research project e! cawab. influence of heavy metals on growth and extracellular enzyme production of a trichoderma harzianum strain with biocontrol potential l. hatvani , l. kredics , a. szekeres , z. antal , l. manczinger , a. nagy , c. vágvölgyi : department of microbiology, university of szeged, p.o. box , h- szeged, hungary; hungarian academy of sciences, university of szeged, microbiological research group, hungary; pilze-nagy ltd. kecskemét, p.o. box , hungary. e-mail: kredics@bio.u-szeged.hu (l. kredics) trichoderma species are common soil inhabiting asexual filamentous fungi with teleomorphs belonging to the hypocreales order of the ascomycota division. besides the industrial and clinical importance of the genus, certain strains have been found to cause great losses in mushroom cultivation while other strains are well known to possess high antagonistic activity against several plant pathogenic fungi and therefore used as biocontrol agents. important mechanisms of antagonism include competition and mycoparasitism, which -among others -can be related to the fast growth of trichoderma strains and the production of several extracellular enzymes. the influence of certain, soil-occurring heavy metals on mycelial growth and the secretion of extracellular enzymes involved in competition and mycoparasitism was examined in this study regarding an effective, potential biocontrol isolate of trichoderma harzianum. the metal ions zinc, manganese, copper, iron, lead and mercury were applied at the concentrations of , , , , , and m, and dry mycelial weight as well as the activities of extracellular ß-glycosidase, cellobiohydrolase, trypsinand chymotrypsin-like protease and n-acetyl-glucosaminidase enzymes were determined. it was found that mercury totally blocked mycelial growth, while other metal ions exerted a much lower influence on growth. the presence of heavy metals did not have a significant effect on the activity of the examined extracellular enzymes with the exception of trypsin-like protease, which showed a four-to six-fold rise in activity in the presence of certain sublethal concentrations of copper. based on these results, our further aim is to develop copper-resistant derivatives by mutagenesis from trichoderma strains with biocontrol potential. since proteases play an important role in mycoparasitism, these strains could be applied within the frames of integrated pest management in combination with copper-containing fungicides, resulting in an enhanced level of crop protection even with reduced amounts of fungicides. this work was supported by grants f of the hungarian scientific research fund and grant omfb- / of the hungarian ministry of education. the significance of biocontrol agents (bcas) is that some of them possess good antagonistic abilities against plant pathogenic fungi. a significant number of the most prominent fungi for the purposes of agricultural application belong to the genus trichoderma. in previous studies, in vitro assays on agar plates were reported as the generally used method for the evaluation of antagonistic abilities, as the results of these assays are well transferable to the practical application. the aim of the present study was to develop an accurate, image analysis-based method for the evaluation of the biocontrol characters of bcas. randomly selected trichoderma isolates were tested against fusarium culmorum. in the currently developed method, the areas of the fungal colonies were calculated on petri dishes by measuring the occupied surface of the medium on digital images. the inhibition effect was recorded as the value of biocontrol index (bci), which was calculated from the ratio of the area of the trichoderma colony and the total area occupied by the colonies of trichoderma and the plant pathogen. the proposed method was tested for numerous parameters, and the results revealed that bci proves to be capable for the accurate measurement and scale of the biocontrol abilities of fungal isolates. this work was supported by grants f of the hungarian scientific research fund and grant omfb- / of the hungarian ministry of education. the effect of advanced oxidation processes and recirculation on biodegradation of leachates from aerobic landfills liliana krzystek, anna zieleniewska-jastrzębska, stanisław ledakowicz department of bioprocess engineering, technical university of lodz, - lodz, poland modern landfills are built and operated in a way which allows us to treat them as a special type of bioreactor. simulation of municipal waste biodegradation in lysimeters provides knowledge on basic processes that take place in an aerated landfill. the aim of aeration is to stabilise mainly biodegradable and nitrogen containing components and to reduce methanogenic potential. stabilised leachates from old landfills contain big quantities of refractive carbon compounds that cannot be removed by biological methods. in such case most advantageous is to apply advanced oxidation processes (aops). the objective of this study is an experimental simulation of a landfill aerobic stabilisation and the impact of aops and recirculation of leachate on the reduction of organic load. the performance of the processes was monitored by the reduction in time of basic indices of organic load (bod , cod, toc, vfa, tkn, n-nh + ) and changes in biogas composition. the simulation of aerobic landfill processes was carried out in lysimeters with a fixed bed of household solid waste stabilised during months in anaerobic conditions. leachates taken from the lysimeters were recirculated and subjected to advanced oxidation processes, i.e. ozonation and uv radiation with the addition of h o . experimental studies showed that the aerobic waste stabilisation was a very quick process. during a month the bed was stabilised, reaching a significant reduction of organic load indices. aeration of the lysimeters caused a quick reduction of mainly degradable organic substance (in terms of bod ) and n-nh + and vfa. the reduction of methanogenic potential of the landfill was even faster. the composition of gas at the outlet from the lysimeter changed and after one day already its content was similar to atmospheric air. a more frequent recirculation of leachates enhanced greatly the aerobic biodegradation. it was found that application of advanced oxidation processes (especially ozonation) contributed to a growing reduction of the organic load in the leachates from aerated lysimeters. the application of leachate ozonation resulted in a very high degree of reduction of organic compounds (up to %). the objective of the experimental study was to assess the effect of temperature on the extent of aerobic batch biodegradation of potato stillage with a mixed culture of bacteria of the genus bacillus. the experiments were performed at , , , , , , , , and • c, at ph , in five l l working volume stirred tank reactor (str) (biostat ® b, b. braun biotech international). the duration of the process was h. initial cod of the stillage amounted to . g o /l, the main carbon sources being reducing substances ( . g/l), organic acids (determined as their sum) ( . g/l) and glycerol ( g/l). at • c, no cod reduction or biomass increment was found to occur. at the other investigated temperatures, the reduction in cod measured after suspended solids (ss) separation varied from . % ( • c) to . % ( • c). without ss separation, cod reduction ranged between . % ( • c) and . % ( • c). this indicates that, in terms of the extent of cod reduction, the optimal process temperature was • c and that there was a local optimum at about • c. according to the temperature applied, the content of reducing substances decreased by . - %, that the organic acids by . - . %, and that of glycerol by . - %. the experiments also produced the following two findings: ( ) the rise in temperature brought about a decrease of biomass concentration in the str (measured as ss and bacterial number), and ( ) temperature was a factor affecting the demand for ammonia nitrogen (n-nh ), which was the highest at and • c. the high n-nh demand observed both over the higher and lover ranges of the investigated temperature should be attributed to the release of n-nh and to the large amounts of the biomass produced, respectively. the results obtained imply that the extent of potato stillage biodegradation with a mixed bacterial culture was high over a wide range of the investigated temperature. polychlorinated compounds such as tetrachloroethylene (pce) have become serious environmental pollutants. considerable attention has been paid to these organochlorine compounds. this paper describes the molecular analysis of dechlorinating gene in halorespirating bacterium and efficient bioremediation process. an anaerobic bacterium, that dechlorinates pce to tce, was isolated and identified as a species of the genus desulfitobacterium. a novel pce reductive dehalogenase (prda) gene from the desulfitobacterium sp. strain kbc- was identified. these prd genes, including membrane anchor protein, were classified as a novel type of pce reductive dehalogenase (approximately % homology with the general pce dehalogenase). according to the substrate utility of this strain kbc- and phylogenetic analysis of prda, the type of this microorganism may be expected to play the role of a primary degrader of pce in the environment. high efficient bioremediation process so called the restricted aeration system which means microaerobic/aerobic reciprocal bioremediation process was developed. strong modifications take place, as ammonia production with a subsequent rise of the ph value and a rapid heat evolution leading to temperatures of up to • c. little is known about the microbial community in the toscano cigar fermentation and its development as fermentation proceeds. the aim of this study is to investigate the microbial community composition, its dynamic and its influence on the toscano cigar production process. our results show that the fermentation could be divided into three different phases: initially yeasts are the predominant microorganisms while bacterial growth is partially inhibited; the middle phase is characterized by exponential growth of bacteria while yeasts disappear. in the final phase the microorganism population is mostly represented by sporigen microbial species. the occurrence of yeasts in the first phase could be attributed to their ability to grow at low temperature and low ph levels. the bacterial population flourishes after the yeast cells have reached a stationary phase and probably grows on residual nutrients and autolysing yeast cells. yeasts and bacteria involved in the fermentation process were isolated and characterized. the microbial community was investigated by a combination of phenotypic and molecular approaches. the phenotypic characterization was based on both colony and cell morphology. the isolates were then identified by rrna genes sequence analysis. finally, in order to clarify the role of the identified microorganisms in the production process, a preliminary biochemical characterization was carried out. biosensors have undergone rapid development over the last few years; in particular, in environmental field many biosensors using microorganisms and purified enzymes as biological component, were recently studied. benzene is present everywhere with high levels in the cities and sometimes, in petroleum processing plants. it is classified as carcinogenic compound of first class able to cause leukaemia. because the evaluation of benzene requires complex instruments and quite long analysis times, it is required to study alternative systems for benzene detection simple, fast and highly sensitive, such as biosensors. from pseudomonas putida mst, strain previously isolated in our laboratory and able to degrade benzene, we isolated genes encoding for benzene , -dioxygenase and cis- , -dihydrodiolbenzene dehydrogenase to use in the development of two different hydrocarbon biosensors based on microorganisms and on purified enzymes. the genes isolated were cloned in pvlt and we developed three microbial systems carrying: ( ) benzene dioxygenase, ( ) dihydrodiol dehydrogenase and ( ) benzene dioxygenase-dehydrogenase modified by pcr to obtain enzymes with histidine tag. the cloning was planned to construct recombinant strains able to overproduce the enzymes; the enzymatic activities will be evaluated both using whole cells and purified enzymes. study of operation condition of biofilter using fibril-form matrix for odor gas removal don-hee park, chonnam national university, this research was performed for developing of biological treatment process of odor gas such as mek, h s, and toluene, which is generated from the food waste recycling process. to establish the operational conditions of odor gas removal by small-scale biofiltration equipment, it was continuously operated by using toluene as a treating odor object. when the odor treating microorganisms were adhered to fibril form biofilter, high removal efficiency over % was obtained by biofilm formation. at ppm of inlet odor gas concentration and s of retention time, the removal efficiency was % and % in first stage reactor and second stage reactor, respectively. however, the removal efficiency remained over % at the operational conditions above s of retention time. ozonated water is produced using an ozone generator in a container filled with cold water. it is useful for sanitizing the surfaces of various products for which heat or chemical treatment is inappropriate, such as fresh food products. in this study, we investigated the antimicrobial effects of ozonated water and electrolyzed ozonated water against escherichia coli, s. aureus, bacillus subtilis and yeast, saccharomyces cerevisiae for practical use in sanitizing various products. the results demonstrated that the electrolyzed ozone water was effective for the reduction of microbial population at relatively low concentration of ozone. also, the electrolyzed and the ozonated water showed synergistic antimicrobial effects. many xenobiotics can react spontaneously with thiol moieties of glutathione (gsh), forming gsh-conjugates, or via glutathione s-transferases (gst). these enzymes participate in detoxification of potentially harmful compounds from endo or xenobiotic origin. using saccharomyces cerevisiae as experimental model, we observed that cells mutated in the gtt or gtt genes showed twice as much cadmium absorption than the control strain. we proposed that the formation of the cadmium-glutathione complex is dependent on those transferases, since it was previously demonstrated that the cytoplasmic levels of this complex affect cadmium uptake. the addition of glutathione monoethyl ester (gme), a drug that mimics glutathione (gsh), to gtt ∆ cells restored the levels of metal absorption to those of the control strain. however, with respect to gtt ∆ cells, addition of gme did not alter the capacity of removing cadmium from the medium. taken together, these results suggest that gtt p and gtt p play different roles in the mechanism of cadmium detoxification. by analyzing the toxic effects of this metal, we verified that gtt ∆ and gsh ∆ cells showed, respectively higher and lower tolerance to cadmium stress than control cells, suggesting that although gsh plays a relevant role in cell protection, formation of the gsh-cd + conjugate is deleterious to the mechanism of defense. furthermore, analyzing the harmful effects of other xenobiotic, menadione ( -methyl- , -napthoquinone), we have also observed that gtt p and gtt p isoforms play distinct functions in the process of cell protection as well as in drug remove, since both strains showed lethal phenotypes after direct exposure to mm menadione. however, after adaptive treatments (mild-heat or exposure to a lower menadione concentration), cells acquired tolerance to menadione stress, although the gtt ∆ mutant had still shown a higher sensitivity against drug toxicity. by analyzing the malondialdehyde (mda) produced in response to menadione, we observed that gtt ∆ cells exhibited increased levels of lipid peroxidation, indicating that, during menadione exposure, gsh-conjugates are formed by the same transferase isoform, gtt p, involved in cadmium stress. financial support: stint (sweden), cnpq and faperj (brazil). polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (pahs) are ubiquitous and persistent throughout the environment. they are generally distributed from both natural and industrial sources. many pahs can have a detrimental effect on the flora and fauna of affected habitats through uptake and accumulation in food chains, and in some instances, they induce serious health problems and/or genetic defects in humans. many research efforts have been expended to find a suitable method for remediation of soil and water environments contaminated with pahs. amongst them, the use of ligninolytic fungi is particularly suitable for the development of such processes, since they produce extracellular lignin-degrading enzymes (mnp, lip, laccase, . . .) which degrade a wide range of organic pollutants. coriolopsis rigida has been reported to produce extracellular laccase as the sole ligninolytic enzyme. this makes this fungus particularly suitable for the study of xenobiotics degradation by laccase. the purpose of this research was to obtain high laccase activities by c. rigida in solid state cultures and to determine their ability to degrade anthracene (typical pah). both in vivo and in vitro assays were performed. the former led to - % degradation in days depending on the culture conditions, whereas the latter showed a degradation percentage above % in days when low mediator concentration (hbt) was added to the reaction mixture. focus will be given on pressure-driven membrane bioreactors, gastransfer membrane bioreactors and the novel ion exchange membrane bioreactor (iemb). the latter concept has been developed and currently studied by our group. this process, based on integration of donnan dialysis with bioconversion of one or more target pollutants to harmless products, has been modeled and experimentally verified for the removal of various charged inorganic pollutants such as nitrate, perchlorate and bromate by mixed microbial cultures under anoxic conditions. tests of up to months showed a very good operational stability. the essential role of the microbial membraneattached biofilm, which develops naturally in this type of systems, will be also demonstrated and discussed. poly(lactic acid) (pla), which is one of biodegradable plastics, is depolymerized by hydrolysis and releases soluble monomer or oligomer of lactic acid. many bacteria can use the monomer and oligomer as an energy source or a carbon source. in this study, we applied pla to an electron donor for denitrification process of the previously developed bioreactor, which could remove ammonia from wastewater by simultaneously carrying out two biological processes, aerobic nitrification and anaerobic denitrification. a bench-scale bioreactor was constructed with a gel-plate containing pure-cultured cells of nitrosomonas europaea and paracoccus denitrificans and a pla-plate. the pla-plate was prepared by mixing three kinds of plas with different molecular weight and tricalcium phosphate to keep the constant release of the electron donor for a long term. batch treatment experiment with the bioreactor was repeated with an artificial wastewater containing ammonia for days. the bioreactor could remove nitrogen from the artificial wastewater at nitrogenremoval rate of approximately g n/day per square meter of gel-plate surface during the experiment period without an additional electron donor. the performance was equivalent to that obtained with our bioreactor using ethanol as electron donor for denitrification. the bioreactor using pla dose not need an additional pump for serving an electron donor (e.g., ethanol) and a hollow space for serving. therefore, the concept using solid electron donors like a pla would be effective our bioreactor to compact and simplify, and would be possible to develop a portable or disposable bioreactor. leucosporidium antarcticum as a source of enzymes for biotechnology arkadiusz wojtasik , , marianna turkiewicz , jaroslaw dziadek , pawel parniewski : centre for medical biology pas, lodowa street, - lodz, poland; faculty of biotechnology and food sciences technical university of lodz, stefanowskiego / street, - lodz, poland. e-mail: awojtasik@cbm.pan.pl (a. wojtasik) leucosporidium antarcticum is a psychrophilic yeast able to growth at low temperature. these microorganisms live in antarctic marine waters and are endemic to that cold environment. furthermore, l. antarcticum is also isolated from the digestive tract of antarctic krill euphausia superba. enzymes isolated from coldadapted microorganisms such as l. antarcticum having a specific activity at low temperatures ranging from to • c are considered for utilization at biotechnological applications such as bioremediation, production of polyunsaturated fatty acids of dietary significance and might be a source of industrially useful enzymatic proteins. the main goal of this study was to construct a cdna library of l. antarcticum. the partial cdna library was obtained and some of the clones were analysed. the sequencing analyses allowed us to find an approximately base pair nucleotide sequence which displayed a very high homology to disulfide bond chaperone belonging to the hsp family from psychrobacter sp. high similarity of that heat shock protein was found on an amino acid sequence level and was reaching nearly %. the main object of our further research is to clone hsp family protein gene and to obtain its expression in a mezophilic host strain. also, further clones will be analysed to find other interesting genes encoding the psychrophilic proteins. this work was partially funded by the kbn grant i / / . out of plant species found in the flora of turkey, about are endemic. beautiful flowering (geophytes) bulbous plants form an important part of this rich biodiversity. besides use as ornamental plants, these have great potential in perfume and pharmaceutical industry. genera of fritillaria, ornithogalum, muscari, bellevalia, tulipa, galanthus, sternbergia, crocus, arum and biarum have important and critically endangered species with high export potential that enters into this group. most of these are endangered and their collection from wild and export has been banned to conserve them. large scale production and conservation of these species could also be achieved by in vitro techniques. therefore bulb scale and immature embryo explants of sternbergia candida, s. fischeriana, muscari muscarimi, fritillaria imperialis and f. persica were cultured on different nutrient media supplemented with various concentrations of plant growth regulators using different culture applications. large numbers of bulblets were produced (over bulblets/explants) from single immature embryos on nutrient media in most species tested after months of culture initiation. regenerated bulblets were kept at • c for weeks and then transplanted to soil successfully. to our knowledge the present study is the first report for in vitro bulblet production from immature embryos of geophytes. the procedure described here provides a prolific bulblet production system that may form the basis of bioreactor culture and conservation of endemic and endangered geophytes. the commercial use of organofluorine compounds in industrial, pharmaceutical and pest-control applications has dramatically increased over the past few years, resulting in the introduction of numerous new organic compounds into the environment. organofluorine compounds are chemically very stable and are assumed to be resistant to biological degradation. given the chemical inertness of fluorinated organics, their bioactivity, and their potential for accumulation in the environment, it is important to understand their environmental fate and the mechanisms by which they might be degraded. examples of the biodegradation of fluorinated compounds in literature are scarce, being fluorobenzoic acids the most commonly reported. information on the cleavage of carbon-fluoride bonds in synthetic compounds is limited to fluoroacetate dehydrogenase. in this project we try to obtain more insight in the defluorination mechanisms by investigating the diversity of degradation routes for these compounds in several soil bacteria by making use of modern genetic tools. a gram-positive strain capable of aerobic biodegradation of -fluorophenol ( -fp) as the sole source of carbon and energy was isolated by selective enrichment from soil samples collected near an industrial site. batch cultures were set up and substrate consumption, accumulation of intermediates and product formation were monitored. the consortium was able to use -fp up to concentrations of . mg l − and was able to utilize a range of other organic compounds. stoichiometric release of fluoride ions was measured in batch cultures suggesting that there is no formation of dead-end products during -fp metabolism. biobleaching of kraft cellulose pulp by poliporus versicolor aysun ergene , nazif kolankaya : kırıkkale university, faculty of science and literature, department of biology, yahsihan, kırıkkale, turkey; hacettepe university, faculty of science, department of biology, beytepe, ankara, turkey the suitability of culture supernatant from poliporus versicolor for use in the biobleaching of kraft cellulose pulp was investigated. p. versicolor was found to grow on mycological broth ( % soytone, % d-glucose and . % cellulose pulp). maximal extracellular ligninase production was detected after days ( nkat). the optimum biobleaching conditions are • c and ph . , with days. in this condition p. versicolor decreased the kapa number from . to . and increased brightness from to . in -day treatment. boron and iron are among the microelements required for the proper development of the vegetative and generative tissues of plants. though iron is present in high amounts in almost all soil types, its bioavailability to crops is extremely reduced, hence most of the plants face an iron defficiency problem and while on one side crop productions effected, on the other hand the nutrition problems come up to human through contagious nutritional chains. boron is also among the most problematic micronutrients of the major crop plan-tation areas of turkey. both defficiency and toxicity problems exist in a total of about % of the central anatolian soil where pea is among the legumes cultivated. application of varying levels of boron and iron combinations in greenhouse and the analysis of plant acquisition via icp-aes as well as determination of the effects of the element combinations both in morphological and molecular levels are the aim of our studies. the genetic bases of the response differences of plant genotypes to b and/or fe, were investigated through the applications of molecular marker techniques. considerable growth rate and stem size differences were detected within the parents (wild-type versus cultivar) and the f plants. the presence of efficient genotypes to high micronutrient levels are expected to help us increase the cultivation of the crop in problematic areas as well as in exploring the molecular bases of the microelement uptake mechanisms. butachlor is one of the selective systemic herbicide toxins that are act by inhibition of protein synthesis. this toxin is used exclusively in the rice, barely, cotton and wheat farmlands. butachlor is belonging to chloroacetanilide herbicide group, which are consisting of butachlor, alachlor, acetochlor, metolachlor and poropachlor. in the view of bioenvironmental, butachlor is degraded in the soil by microbial activity. its stability is about - weeks. it is converted to the water-soluble derivatives in soil or water, with a slow evolution of carbon dioxide. because of butachlor is one of the herbicide toxin, it is inhibitor factor against growth of bacteria and microorganisms. microorganisms can be continuing their activities in the limited concentration of butachlor. therefore treatment of industrial wastewater consist of concentrated butachlor by the biological treatment is impossible and it is necessary chemical or physico-chemical treatment are used. in this research, biological treatment methods are used. in the biological treatment, an activated sludge system with volume of . l is used. in this method, butachlor with concentration of mg/l are treated. removal percent of butachlor for concentration of . and mg/l are calculated to . % and . %, respectively. removal percent of cod is also calculated to %. olive oil mill wastewater (omw) as the effluent of the concern of olive industry has high organic load. the conventional biological treatments despite of their simplicity and rather suitable performance are ineffective for the omw treatment since phenolics possess antimicrobial activity. in order to carry out a proper treatment on omw, use of microorganism able to degrade the phenolics thus, is necessary. the ability of phanerochaete chrysosporium immobilized purification and downstream process of xylitol obtained biotechnologically from hemicellulosic hydrolyzate of corncobs b. rivas , p. torre , j.m. domínguez , j.c. parajó , a. converti : department of chemical engineering, vigo university (campus of ourense), polytechnic building, as lagoas, ourense, spain; department of chemical and process engineering, genoa university, via opera pia , genoa, italy. e-mail: brivas@uvigo.es (b. rivas) biotechnological production of xylitol from lignocellulosic materials has been widely studied in the recent years with promising results that confirming the possible industrial application of this technology. xylitol purification from fermented broth is the limiting stage of this process. previous works suggest crystallization procedures in order to recovery xylitol from fermented synthetic solutions. the complexity of fermented hydrolyzate not allows direct crystallization. in this work, corncobs hydrolyzate obtained with autohydrolysis-posthydrolysis techniques, detoxificated with activated charcoal and concentrated was fermented to xylitol by d. hansenii. the fermented broth composition was . % of xylitol ( g/l), . % of other sugars and . % of other compounds that interferes in the crystallization process (as dry matter of the liquor). the fermented media was submitted to an absorption process with activated charcoal and concentrated until a xylitol concentration of g/l. the liquor was then submitted to a second step of precipitation with ethanol, the best results achieved in this study were obtained with an ethanol/liquor ratio of . in these conditions this treatment allows to remove a . % of the impurities. the resulting solution was evaporated and crystallized containing % of ethanol and a xylitol concentration of g/l. crystallization was performed at t = • c with slightly agitation. after h were separated xylitol crystals with a recovery yield of % and a purity degree of %. numerous publications have documented that only a minor number of the indigenous prokaryotic organisms found in complex environments such as the human intestine, biogas reactors, and soil are known, and probably only a fraction of this diversity can be accessed using traditional culturing techniques. some of the reasons for this are the lack of knowledge of specific growth conditions, specific nutrients, and obligate coculture requirements. also growth on a solid surface directly exposed to the atmosphere puts a very strong selective pressure on single cells supposed to develop into visible colonies. therefore, the knowledge of these microorganisms is scarce and generally limited to the s rrna genes that have been extracted from different environments and cloned for phylogenetic analyses. an obvious approach to circumvent these problems was the development of techniques based upon micromanipulation for isolation of single cells from complex mixtures. continuous development of modern microscopes in combination with the precision of a servo-powered micromanipulator and the development of the modern microscopic micro injectors used in ivf techniques has further aided the manipulation of single cells. this technique, however, does not solve the problems of the non-culturable cells, and other approaches are needed to gain more information about these organisms. an approach to the non-culturable cells could be genomic analysis of isolated single cells without preceding cultivation. this pcr-based technique is widely used for genetic analysis of human cells, but due to the small amounts of dna present in prokaryotic cells it has so far not been possible to produce identifiable amounts of dna from single cell amplification using conventional polymerases. a promising alternative used for amplification of small amounts of dna is the f dna polymerase operating under isothermic conditions. applying random hexamer primers, this polymerase carries out a multiple displacement amplification (mda) of high molecular weight dna template. in this study we demonstrate the successful application of mda for selective amplification of genomic dna from a single prokaryotic cell. the yield was > mg of amplified genomic dna corresponding to about a billion-fold amplification from a single cell. the technique was used to approach a large group of non-thermophilic archaea found in agricultural soil. our results show that combining mda with fluorescent in situ hybridization and cell isolation by capillary micromanipulation enables an unprecedented ability to investigate new species without cultivation. also this combination of techniques opens for studies of genetic heterogeneity within populations and processes such as horizontal gene transfer. precipitation of zn + , cu + and pb + at bench scale using biogenic hydrogen sulphide produced from the utilization of volatile fatty acids by sulphate reducing bacteria maria teresa alvarez , , carla crespo , bo mattiasson : department of biotechnology, center for chemistry and chemical engineering, lund university, p.o. box , s- lund, sweden; instituto de investigaciones fármaco bioquímicas, universidad mayor de san andrés, la paz, bolivia biological production of hydrogen sulphide (h s) from sulphate using sulphate reducing bacteria (srb) is popular within environmental biotechnology. srb require absence of oxygen, presence of nutrients required for growth and oxidizable organic substrates (to supply hydrogen atoms for reduction of sulphate). many organic wastes have been used as electron donors for the sulphate-reducers in the treatment of acid mine drainage (amd) including straw, hay, sawdust, peat, spent mushroom compost and whey, however, other wastes such as municipal organic waste can be used. the aim of this work was to study the possibility of using srb for the treatment of amd at bench-scale. this process involved three stages: the volatile fatty acid (vfa) production by hydrolytic bacteria from the degradation of vegetables and fruits, the production of h s through the utilization of the produced vfas by sulphate reducing bacteria and the precipitation of metals by using the biologically produced h s. the substrates used for vfa production consisted of tomato, papaya, apple and banana. the h s produced from the degradation of vfas was utilised for the precipitation of an artificial effluent simulating the heavy metal concentrations of a mine located at bolivian andean region, containing approximately mg/l of zn + , mg/l of cu + and mg/l of pb + . the maximum concentration of hydrogen sulphide obtained was approximately mm. removal efficiencies of %, % and % for zinc, cooper, and lead, respectively, were achieved in the present work. at • c during days. bacterial population was determined by counting in a neubauer chamber with optical microscope. sulfate concentration was measured by turbidity method and metal concentrations in the filtered supernatant were measured by icp-aes. the first part of study consists of determine the maximum concentration of each metal at which d. vulgaris and desulfovibrio sp. grow in similar way than control culture (without metal). both cultures tolerate: cr(iii) ppm, ni(ii) . ppm, zn(ii) ppm. the maximum precipitation percentages were approximately: % ( ppm cr(iii)), % ( . ppm ni(ii)) and % (for d. vulgaris- ppm zn(ii) and desulfovibrio sp.- ppm de zn(ii)). time to reach the highest precipitation was minor for mixed culture (desulfovibrio sp.) y all the cases. the next part was focused to study the precipitation percentage when metals are present in combination in the same metal levels (cr(iii)-ni(ii), cr(iii)-zn(ii), ni(ii)-zn(ii) and cr(iii)-ni(ii)-zn(ii)). the combination of metals does not affect significantly the bacterial growth and precipitation percentage of metals. this fact supposes an importance advantage so metals are commonly found together in the environment. future experiments are focused in development of this process in continuous operation mode. biosolubilisation and depolymerisation of coal has potential to produce a clean energy source or high value organic products from low rank coals such as lignite or sub-bituminous coal. these complex soluble phenolic compounds are of value as starting materials for biotransformation to value-added compounds such as antioxidants and flavourants. the bioprocess is carried out at ambient temperature and pressure and is perceived to be environmental benign. in the evaluation of coal solubilisation an important quantity for the assessment of process feasibility is the yield, i.e. the determination of the mass of product obtained per unit mass of coal solubilised. to date, results for coal biosolubilisation reported in the literature are qualitative or at best semi-quantitative, indicating trends with operating variables. the process kinetics has not been determined rigorously because measurement of fungal growth during coal solubilisation is hindered by the presence of the solid coal substrate. knowledge of the profile of biomass growth is required for the rigorous determination of the kinetic parameters necessary for process design and optimisation. in this paper, the use of an indirect method for the estimation of the growth and metabolism of fungal biomass by measuring co evolution and o consumption using an off-gas analyser is reported in the study of fungal coal solubilisation. coal determined rigorously because measurement of fungal growth during coal solubilisation is hindered by the presence of the solid coal substrate. knowledge of the profile of biomass growth is required for the rigorous determination of the kinetic parameters necessary for process design and optimisation. biosolubilisation was carried out in a stirred tank slurry bioreactor with working volume of . l. complete suspension of the coal particles of - m mean diameter was achieved at an agitation rate of rpm. growth yield coefficients based on coal and oxygen as well as maintenance coefficients were calculated from growth of the fungus under the same conditions using a non-coal carbon source such as glucose. these data were used to determine the stoichiometric coefficients for biomass growth, enabling the biomass production rate to be quantified in terms of co production rate and o consumption rate. a dna-chip platform for parallel detection of microorganisms related to biofilm in industrial systems and drinking water systems pernille skouboe, dorte lauritsen, kim holmstrøm bioneer a/s, kogle allé , dk- hørsholm, denmark. e-mail: psk@bioneer.dk (p. skouboe) an oligonucleotide microarray for simultaneous detection and identification of pathogenic bacteria related to technical water systems as well as drinking water has been developed. the approach is based on the use of a tandem hybridization technique with two ribosomal s rdna-pcr products, bp and bp long, generated from two consensus pcr reactions using conserved ribosomal primers end-labeled with cy and cy , respectively. the tandem hybridization technique implies an internally quality control for discrimination between target and non-target signals. the current prototype of the dna-chip platform includes oligonucleotide probes representing different genera (and subgroups of species), e.g. legionella, mycobacterium, aeromonas, campylobacter, vibrio and enterococcus. the platform has been used for detection and identification of species from pure cultures, and initial experiments with water samples from industrial systems have been performed. the potential as well as the limitations of using a dna-chip based detection format in its present form will be documented. particularly, its potential application as a rapid method for initial screening of environmental or food samples will be addresses. the aim is to reduce and optimize the number of samples required for traditional microbiological identification tests. in the course of a project for the development of a novel kind of a mycotoxin inactivating feed additive, the aim of this study was to isolate and characterize microorganisms with the specific ability to enzymatically break down and detoxify fumonisins, a group of structurally related fungal toxins, with fumonisin b (fb ) being the most abundant and -with respect to toxicology -also the most important representative of this group. these toxins are produced as secondary metabolites by some fusarium species such as fusarium verticillioides and f. proliferatum and are naturally occurring contaminants of cereal grains worldwide. they are found especially in maize and maize based products, and are known to be hazardous to human as well as to animal health. a natural feed additive, based on microorganisms and/or enzymes, should ensure the detoxification of fumonisins during feed uptake and digestion via microbial or enzymatic break down of these compounds, by that protecting the animal from the harmful effects of these mycotoxins. besides an extensive screening of microbial strains derived from strain collections, various different natural habitats were investigated for the presence of fb degrading microbial activity, such as intestinal contents of pigs, soil samples, and naturally fumonisin contaminated maize. while testing of nearly organisms from strain collections did not show positive results, fumonisin transforming activity could be detected in one soil sample and a number of maize samples. trials in order to isolate the respective fumonisin degrading microorganisms resulted in a number of strains, whose fb degrading activity could be proven. the most promising bacterial and yeast strains were further characterized with regard to a general taxonomic description, and to different aspects of their toxin degradation behaviour. approaching a more relevant in vivo situation, fb degradation trials in food-and feed-stuffs were conducted. further on, the applicability of the respective organisms as stabilized lyophilisates was investigated. arsenic is one of the most important global environmental pollutants and the toxicological effects are related to its chemical form and oxidation state. arsenite [as(iii)] is reported to be on average times more toxic than arsenate[as(iv)]. this work shows the ability of one strain of the species ochrobactrum tritici to grow in presence of several metals including arsenite, arsenate, selenite, selenate, tellurite and antimonite. its arsenite mic was determined as mm, whereas for arsenate, this bacterium could resist to concentrations upper than mm. we report the identification of two loci involved in high-level arsenic resistance. sequencing of the first locus identified four complete genes in the following order: arsr, arsd, arsa, arsb. the second locus containing genes for arsenic resistance was also characterized. each sequence has been compared with nucleotide and protein databank (blast programs) and significant homology with known orfs coding for arsenic resistance has been found. it is also possible that the phenomenon of high-level arsenic resistance in o. tritici could evolve other genes or loci. the ability of the ␣-proteobacterium o. tritici to tolerate high levels of arsenic in addition to other oxyanions has considerable potential for detoxification and bioremediation of contaminated environments. this work is based on the mathematical modeling of kinetics of a thermophilic bacteria cultivation system. the cultivation proceeded by way of batch and continuous on the synthetic medium with the main carbon source-lactose. this medium simulated an industrial waste approximately. mixed thermophilic aerobic bacteria popula-tion, applied to the wastewater treatment (sludge v&k bystrice pod hostynem), was used to the inoculation. the cultivation system consisted of the laboratory fermentor biostat b (b. braun biotech) with working volume l and the control unit connected with a computer. it is possible the temperature, ph, aeration, stirring and foaming regulation. physical and chemical cultivation conditions were optimized. the chemical oxygen demand (cod), generally expressive the impurity level, was selected as the main parameter for the cultivations run classification. but into the mathematical model also the kinetics of biomass growth, lactose consumption, production of choice metabolites (acetate, lactate, succinate) and dissolved oxygen concentration was included. the modeling was located to two head distinguishable growth phases of the microorganisms. an optimization and identification of mathematical model parameters was practised in the software language psi/c. the difference between simulated curves and experimental data is not statistically significant on the relevancy level . (f-test). it took place the cod degradation at . % with the average yield coefficient y chsk/x . g cod/g biomass in the batch process with the air aeration only. there is a better way to the cod elimination (> . %)-the aeration of air enriched by the pure oxygen. in experiments with the continuous system was obtained the . % cod decrease after the steady state stabilization. this work was supported by project msm . fluorescence in situ hybridization (fish) of whole cells using oligonucleotide probes was applied to study the influence of low temperature and temperature reduction on the bacterial community of biofilm reactors for the removal of chlorophenols (cps). two packed bed reactors were set up for degradation of a mixture of -cp, -cp, , -dicp, and , , -tricp as sole source of carbon and energy at • c (ra) and • c (rb) and were inoculated with bacterial consortia adapted to these respective initial temperatures. the performance of the reactors was studied under different conditions of pollutant loading, aeration rate, and hydraulic retention times over months. total chlorophenol removal capacities of and mg l − day − were achieved in the bioreactors ra and rb, respectively, under a total pollutant load of mg l − day − . the population of -proteobacteria was the major bacterial community of the biofilm ( - %) followed by the ␥-proteobacteria ( - . %). two bacteria with the ability to mineralize mg chlorophenols l − were isolated from the bioreactors and characterized as ralstonia basilensis and alcaligenes sp., both belonging to -proteobacteria. decreasing the temperature by • c (in two steps of • c each) resulted in an increase in the population of ␥-proteobacteria and a decrease in the population of -proteobacteria in both reactors. application of genus specific probes showed an increase in the pseudomonas population from % of the ␥-proteobacteria at • c to % at • c. the pollutant removal capacity decreased to and mg l − day − in ra ( • c) and rb ( • c), respectively. the ␣and ␦-proteobacteria, cytophaga-flavobacteria and actinobacteria the survey was carried out in urban and rural areas of two cities (ankara and isparta). this paper is only analysing urban people by excluding villagers. urban sample is consisted of urban consumers and professionals. professionals were selected amongst pharmacists, doctors, agricultural engineering's and industrialists that is thought are affective in the process of developing new technologies and also the development of biotechnology in the society. basic data was gathered by a questionnaire including both structured and open-ended questions besides deep interviewed. workforce development for life sciences-the scottish experience carol booth scottish entreprise, uk the presentation will look at, the background and definition of workforce development for scottish enterprise, examine information available to support scottish enterprises economic intervention and where and when to intervene. conclusions emerging from the evidence base will be used to outline scottish enterprises approach to workforce development and look at which actions might be required to address identified issues. moving on to reasons for integrating workforce development into business development and how the life sciences cluster team at scottish enterprise, stakeholders and partners in scotland have approached their current and future contributions to workforce development for life sciences using a variety of projects. the national institute for bioprocessing research and training (nibrt) in ireland is a proposal that will be a state-of-the-art training, research and pilot plant service facility that brings together institutions with complementary expertise and state-of-the-art research technology, and industry partners. these include university college dublin, trinity college dublin, institute of technology, sligo and dublin city university. nibrt is an innovative collaboration between academic institutions at the forefront of biotechnology, cell biology, engineering and pharmacy and industry. for training, two separate training labs, for upstream and downstream training, in addition to research labs are planted. it will also include a state-of-the-art pilot plant fermentation facility for fermentation optimisation, fermentation scale-up, product separation and purification, regulatory aspects and automation. by aligning with industrial demands, the new institute will tailor its training programmes while remaining on the cutting edge of biotechnology research and technologies. the fermentation facility will offer hands-on training workshops and educational modules for outside researchers and companies. these workshops cover the fundamentals of small-scale fermenta-tion, scale-up considerations, and fermentor design and set-up. the training and educational philosophy underpinning the nibrt will focus on the needs of industry with an emphasis on providing training for accreditation of existing industry staff and prepare technicians and graduates for the technical, business, regulatory and professional aspects of the industry. the strategy is to provide specialised modules in nibrt in support of courses established in the higher education institutions, which will provide the certificates, diplomas and degrees. modules will be offered for all categories of students and will be given credits respected by other third level institutions in ireland. the role of professional graduate degrees in meeting current and future biotechnology industry workforce needs a. stephen dahms san diego state university, usa the presentation will review the status of new graduate training models designed to meet the unique needs of the biotechnology industry as it transitions to commercialization. emphasis will be on professional master's degree programs in biotechnology and their various versions, with a focus on operational and funding strategies and industry acceptance. discussion will also centre upon the creation and operation of industry-validated, specialized and highly targeted professional masters degrees in various refined aspects of the drug development process, including regulatory affairs, biomedical quality systems, clinical affairs, management of drug development, management of reimbursement affairs, bioinformatics, etc. the eurodoctorate in biotechnology, new combined mba/phd combined degrees in the molecular life sciences, the u.s. professional doctorate in chemistry and the proposed u.s. professional doctorate in biotechnology will be also discussed. data will also be presented on the current workforce and the industry's projected needs. genetic studies show that mankind is a rapidly expanded population of closely related individuals with very similar disease sensitivity. bad nutrition and infections dominate among the main health problems in the world. apart from malnutrition, the overeating habits of the developed world are now creating problems in the developing world as well. infectious diseases are also a global problem since new contagious agents like hiv, sars and avian flew do not recognize borders. thus, the global responsibilities of modern health care are obvious. many research scientists from and in developing countries find it nearly impossible to use their talents for the benefit of their own countries. some struggle to develop research and education programmes with poor facilities, some leave science completely, and others migrate to more developed countries. the talents of such people are either being wasted or lost completely to their home countries just at the time they are most needed to combat the great humanitarian challenges of hunger, illness and lack of knowledge. europe must strengthen programmes which allow third world scientists to work to their full potential in their home countries or regions. yang beijing genomics institute, chine academy of sciences, beijing, china europe has all the reasons to be proud of being the cradle of modern science and of its achievements and resources in life sciences. as a model of having solved many of the problems that many other counties are now facing, europe is expected by the whole world to make its further contribution to a better future of mankind and to play a more important role in the international community of life sciences. tropical diseases and public health basilio valladares director of the university institute of tropical diseases and, public health, university of la laguna, la laguna, tenerife, spain. e-mail: bvallada@ull.es the presentation will look at the main research interests of the university institute of tropical diseases. these are the following: . immunology and molecular biology of parasites. we express and purify recombinant proteins from leishmania sp. which have been shown to act as immunomodulators and protect against disease such as l , hsp , hsp . the study of acanthamoeba pathogenic factors has also resulted in the isolation and silencing of extracellular proteins related to their pathogenecity, which has a great potential in the development of novel chemotherapeutics. . diagnosis of parasites. the immunological diagnosis of leishmaniasis has been one of the main research interests in our laboratory for several years. as a result, we have identified peptides which could be used to develop kits for the immunological diagnosis of leishmaniasis such as hsp c-end, l n-end, etc. we have also developed some dna based methods for the identification of acanthamoeba species from biological and environmental sources. . water quality. biological parameters. our water research group has the expertise to identify and characterise bacterial, viral and parasitic indicators of faecal contamination in diverse water sources including tap water, rivers, reservoirs, sea, etc. this research area has been developed in collaboration with the local sewage treatment plant and reservoir managing authorities. currently, we are establishing a conjoined project with the center for disease control and prevention (cdc) in atlanta, usa for the identification of water-borne emerging pathogens. . development and formulation of chemotherapeutic antiparasitic agents. in this field, we evaluate the leishmanicidal activity both in vivo and in vitro of natural and synthetic drugs and synthetic peptides. in a later stage, the drugs which have shown the highest antiparasitic activity have been subjected to cytotoxicity assays and their molecular targets dissected. some of the drugs tested in the last few years have been submitted to patent due to their outstanding activity. finally, in order to allow the commercialization of these drugs, both in vivo and in vitro assays are being carried out to predict their chemical stability and degradation pathways. this will be followed by the use of liofilization and controlled crystallisation strategies for the development of efficient and safe treatments. . human and population genetics. tachykinins and their receptors in different tissues and groups of patients and their association with molecular polymorphisms is another one of our research interests. the knowledge of ligand and receptor sequences and their similarities will allow the rational development of drugs with specific activity against these receptors. furthermore, we are also interested in the interspecific variation along the evolutionary scale of these markers. . nitrate assimilation group. research in our group is focused on understanding nitrate assimilation in the yeast hansenula polymorpha. several biotechnological companies use this yeast to produce heterologous proteins (hepatitis b vaccine). genetic manipulation techniques for h. polymorpha are available in our laboratory. head of the department of biotechnology, technological institute of canary islands, pozo izquierdo santa lucía, las palmas, spain single cell analysis by flow cytometry has proved to be a tool to perform simultaneous and rapid measurements related to cell morphology and physiological state. previous studies showed the possibility of quantifying neutral and polar lipids spectrofluorometrically using a lipid specific fluorescent dye, nile red (nr), however the existence of inter and intraspecific variations in the fluorescent response had not been clearly established. in this work, two strains of marine microalgae: crypthecodinium cohnii and tetraselmis suecica, characterized both by high contents of polyunsaturated long chain fatty acids (dha and epa, respectively) and an hypersaline microalgae: dunaliella salina, characterized by a high -carotene production, were grown under different conditions and collected at different growth phases to be used for in vivo lipid quantification with nr by flow cytometry. our results showed a high correlation between the mean fluorescence signal of nr stained cells and the neutral and polar lipid content measured by gravimetry for each strain. in this respect, these data make feasible the development of a rapid method for lipid quantification in monoalgal cultures. however, differences in the dye uptake related to specificity were detected. in this communication we also assess the possibility of use this cytometric technique to select microalgal strains with high lipid and polyunsaturated long chain fatty acids content from mixed samples. performance of such technique would be a good alternative to the time-consuming traditional screening protocols based on gravimetry and gas chromatography and would optimise the search of new commercial strains of microalgae. claverie-martín head of research unit, biomedical research institute, hospital universitario, de n.s. de candelaria, santa cruz de tenerife, spain our group is involved in the cloning and production of proteins of interest to the food and pharmaceutical industry. we have recently expressed in yeast the cdna that encodes the precursor of caprine chymosin. chymosin is the enzyme responsible for the coagulation of milk in the abomasum of unweaned calves. this enzyme is secreted by gastric mucosa cells as an inactive precursor, known as prochymosin. in the acidic conditions of the lumen, prochymosin is converted into the active form by autocatalytic cleavage of the n-terminal prosequence. chymosin is used extensively in cheese production because it cleaves -casein in a specific manner with low proteolytic activity. several biotechnology companies are producing the bovine recombinant enzyme for commercial use in the process of cheese making. we are interested in the caprine chymosin as an alternative because in the canary islands cheese has traditionally been made using goats milk with extract from the abomasum of newborn goats as coagulating factor. it is well known that the activity of these types of extracts varies depending on the age of the animal and the type of food ingested. these difficulties should be overcome using a recombinant caprine chymosin. the caprine mrna used for the synthesis of the cdna was obtained from the abomasum of milkfed kid goats. the cdna fragment encoding the mature portion of caprine prochymosin was fused in frame to a signal sequence in yeast expression vectors. culture supernatants of yeast cells transformed with the recombinant plasmids showed milk-clotting activity after activation at acid ph. proteolytic activity assayed toward casein fractions indicated that the recombinant caprine chymosin specifically hydrolysed -casein (patent ). the recombinant caprine chymosin could be an alternative milk coagulant in cheese making. work is underway to optimise the expression of the new recombinant prochymosin for further purification and characterization. smart molecules for health victor martín head of research, university institute of bio-organics "antonio gonzález", avda. astrofísico francisco sánchez , la laguna, tenerife, spain the instituto universitario de bio-orgánica "antonio gonzález" (iubo) is a multidisciplinary research centre that belongs to the university of la laguna. the iubo is located at the town of la laguna, inscribed on unesco's world heritage list in , and former capital of the canary island of tenerife. the geographical location in addition to its mild climate has made the canary islands to posses a variety of ecosystems with unique plants and animals. the institute was started up in the s with the need to study the natural products and secondary metabolites produced by those marine and terrestrial organisms, thus providing a new source of bioactive products. the main research lines that are being developed at iubo are summarised in the following paragraphs: anticancer agents from natural sources: several natural products and their semisynthetic derivatives are produced at the iubo in diverse joint projects for the development of new antitumour drugs with novel mechanisms of action. as an example we can mention natural products from the mevalonic, shikimic or polyketide pathways. some products have recently shown in vitro reversion of the resistance in multidrug resistant (mdr) tumour cell lines. genetic engineering: in vitro cultures of the plants atropa baetica, maytenus amazonica and m. macrocarpa are developed in order to manipulate their biosynthetic pathways and induce the production in large scale of the secondary metabolites for diverse applications, including arthritis, rheumatism, and back pain. marine organisms and toxins: dinoflagellates are marine organisms responsible for the red tides and food poisoning episodes. among others, okadaic acid and yessotoxin are the most common toxins present in european shellfish. the isolation of these products is best done from the microorganism cultures, since they are present in very low amounts in the natural sources. at the iubo we develop culture systems to provide us with amounts of toxins large enough to perform biological, metabolic and bioactive studies. insecticide and repellents: natural products are being isolated for their use against plagues, specially those affecting agriculture. these projects are run in collaboration with a number of public institutions and agrochemical companies throughout europe and latin america. fine chemicals and pharmachemicals: our institute possesses large expertise in the field of organic synthesis devoted to the synthesis of medicinal substances, with special focus on asymmetric processes. of particular interest is the development of new methodologies for the total synthesis of biologically active substances like polyether toxins, (un)natural amino acids, sphingosine analogs, alkaloids, etc. with an annual source of s of new compounds, the fine chemicals and medicinal chemistry branch at iubo have recently started and anticancer screening program in collaboration with the biomedical research unit at the hospital universitario n.s. de la candelaria. the program is committed to the discovery of novel drugs for application in cancer treatment. the outcome of this project in its first year has been outstanding, leading to the finding of several leads that form the basis for current and future projects. institute of canary islands, biotechnological department, playa de pozo izquierdo s/n, santa lucía, gran canaria, spain the presentation will look at the main research interests of the biotechnological department of the technological institute of canary islands. these are the following: nutrition and feeding in aquaculture: we conduct studies on digestion, absorption, transport, and utilization of the different nutrients applying also different techniques such as histology, enzymology, genetic or immunology among others. aquaculture feeding is the main important cost in fish farms, being higher that the prize of fries, personnel cost or energetic costs. thus, studies conducted on the improvement of diet formulation and the use of different dietary ingredients is one of our main research lines (such as vegetable oils and meals to be used as alternative to fish meal and oil, or carotenoid sources to improve fish colour). not only the use of the different ingredient is studied, but also the effect of these ingredients on fish health, flesh quality, flesh healthy aspects related with human consumption, are being studied. different formulae are being developed and patents of different diets are being obtained. studies on nutritional requirements are also conducted allowing us to patent different formulae in larvae studies, developing microdiets to substitute the high-cost processes associated with live prey in larval nutrition. development of immunostimulants, anti-stress diets, immune techniques to be applied as bio-indicators of fish health and welfare, as well as use of dietary ingredients derived from bio-reactors are other research lines in our group. genetics: genetic techniques applied to aquaculture are being an important tool. microsatellites are being used to determine genealogy of the fish, allowing to decreases important problems in aquaculture such as fish deformities. genetic techniques such as micro-arrays and gene expression are being applied to obtain indicators of stress and health in fish. these technologies also permit to make different selective breeding programs, increasing the accuracy to estimate genetic parameters and evaluating brood-stock. furthermore, this technology allows to obtain a procedure to increase the productivity and quality of fish hatcheries. new species for aquaculture. development of new culture techniques: the diversification of species cultured is one of the main objectives of european aquaculture, since nowadays only four marine species are commercially produced: gilthead sea bream. european sea bass, turbot and salmon. we have been developed rearing techniques for new species such as red porgy or canarian abalone and also we are conducting studies on different new species, such as different sparids species, octopus or yellowtail. new rearing technology: the election of adequate systems for fish growth for each species and site of production and the localization of more appropriate sites for farms, using gis technology are also of special importance in our research team. besides, new larval rearing techniques such as semi-extensive hatchery (mesocoms) were development and nowadays is being used to increase fry quality (survival, no-deformities, better growth). this technology is being exported to other countries in order to offer new technology easy to manage to be implanted in developing countries. alejandro cañeque project officer, canary islands special zone, ministry of finance, c/leon y castillo - a planta, edificio urbis, las palmas, spain. e-mail: acaneque@zec.org the canary islands special zone is the newest tax instrument within the canary islands economic and fiscal regime (ref). it offers a reduced tax rate of between and % of corporate income tax for companies setting up a business. the companies must cover the following minimum requirements: create employment and make a minimum investment. the zec offers other tax advantages such as the exemption from paying transfer tax and stamp duty and the canary islands general indirect tax (igic). this tax scheme particularly fosters the biotechnology and pharmaceutical sectors. references fahnert references bechor the antimicrobial drugs high-level production of human collagen prolyl -hydroxylase in sandwich hybridisation assay for quantitative detection of yeast rnas in crude cell lysates microbial processes and products press. biotech. bioeng. . van hijum microbial xylitol production from corn cobs using candida magnoliae the role of bacillus methanolicus citrate synthase gene, city, in regulatiing the secretion of glutamate in lysine-secreting mutants plasmid-dependent methylotrophy in thermotolerant bacillus methanolicus , -anhydrod-fructose; a versatile chiral building block: biochemistry and chemistry detailed dissection of a new mechanism for glycoside cleavage: the ␣- , -glucan lyase ␣- , -glucan lyase, a new class of starch and glycogen degrading enzyme ␣- , -glucan lyase, a new starch processing enzyme for production of , -anhydro-d-fructose efficient purification, characterization and partial amino acid sequencing of two ␣- , -glucan lyases from fungi ␣- , -glucan lyases producing , -anhydro-d-fructose from starch and glycogen have sequence similarity to alpha-glucosidases enzymatic description of the anhydrofructose pathway of glycogen degradation i. identification and purification of anhydrofructose dehydratase, ascopyrone tautomerase and ␣- , -glucan lyase in the fungus anthracobia melaloma a systems approach to dissecting immunity and inflammation integrative biological analysis of the apoe* -leiden transgenic mouse innate recognition of bacteria in human milk is mediated by a milk-derived highly expressed pattern recognition receptor, soluble cd soluble forms of toll-like receptor (tlr) capable of modulating tlr signaling are present in human plasma and breast milk proteomics of the rat gut: analysis of the myenteric plexuslongitudinal muscle preparation an integrative metabolism approach identified stearoyl-coa desaturase as a target for an arachidonate-enriched diet the challenges of modeling mammalian biocomplexity rapid enrichment of bioactive milk proteins and iterative, consolidated protein identification by mudpit technology post-genomics of lactic acid and other food-grade bacteria to discover gut functionality genetics, metabolism and application of lactic acid bacteria. fems microbiol complete genome sequence of lactobacillus plantarum wcfs functional ingredient production: application of global and metabolic models metabolic engineering of lactic acid bacteria for the production of nutraceuticals reduction in antinutritional and toxic components in plant foods by fermentation the authors gratefully acknowledge the financial supports given to this work by ankara university, biotechnology institute (project no k - ). the authors gratefully acknowledge the financial supports given to this work by ankara university, biotechnology institute (project no. k - ) and the microorganisms given to this work by prof. dr. francesco molinari at university of milano, and prof. dr. leyla aÇ ikel at gazi university. the authors gratefully acknowledge the financial supports given to this work by ankara university, biotechnology institute (project no k - ) and the microorganisms given to this work by prof. dr. francesco molinari at university of milano, and prof. dr. leyla aÇ ikel at gazi university. mrs. lynnette fernandez, johanna mäkeläinen, m.sc. and olli rämö, m.sc. are gratefully acknowledged for their help. this work was supported by the health science council, the academy of finland and the tekes-neobio program. supported by the mec of spain (ppq - -c - ) and the canary islands government. jmp thanks icic for a postdoctoral fellowship. frpc thanks cajacanarias for a fpi fellowship. tm thanks the spanish mcyt-fse for a ramón y cajal contract. this work was supported by the korean systems biology research grant from the ministry of science and technology, lg chem chair professorship, ibm sur program and bk program. this study was supported by ankara university biotechnology institute (project no: ). this work was partially supported by mec and feder (bio - ), and fundación séneca carm ( /pi/ ). this work was supported by grants f of the hungarian scientific research fund and grant omfb- / of the hungarian ministry of education. keto sugars have long been implicated as attractive intermediates or substrates for further chemical or enzymatic reactions, to generate a number of synthetic sugar derivatives and fine chemicals. the quinone-dependent pyranose dehydrogenase (pdh) purified of the basidiomycete fungus agaricus meleagris catalyzes with high specificity the oxidation of the c- of glycosidically bound d-glucose, whereas in contrast it oxidizes simultaneously the c- and c- of free d-glucose. considering the broad substrate tolerance, pdh provides a new convenient tool for high yield production of -keto- this work was partially financed by the scientific and technological research council (cicyt, spain), grant ren - , by the iii pla de recerca de catalunya (generalitat de catalunya), grant sgr- , and by the generalitat de catalunya to the "centre de referència en biotecnologia" (cerba). this work was supported by mega a.s. (czech republic) (www.mega.cz) and following vega grants: / / and / / . this work was partially supported by mec and feder (bio - ), and fundación séneca carm ( /pi/ ). financed by a marie curie re-integration grant merg-ct- - and consejería de educación y ciencia de la junta de andalucía. this project is part of the collaborative research centre sfb "development of biotechnological processes by integrating genetic and engineering methods", which is supported by the german research foundation dfg. this research was supported in part by grants from the hungarian scientific research fund (otka t , f and d ) and the hungarian-spanish intergovernmental s & t cooperation programme (omfb / ). this research was supported in part by grants from the hungarian scientific research fund (otka t , f and d ) and the hungarian-spanish intergovernmental s & t cooperation programme (omfb / ). this research was supported in part by grants from the hungarian scientific research fund (otka t , f , d ) and gvop- . . .- - - . the authors thank dr. hamid narjiss (director of morocco inra) for the instruction to identify nadorcott mandarin by molecular markers and helpful discussions regarding this paper. this work was partially funded by the program for scientific cooperation cnrst (morocco) and iccti (portugal), the international foundation for science (ifs) support in stockholm (sweden). this work has been financed by xunta de galicia (pgidt pxib pr). sevgil sadettin, gönül dönmez department of biology, faculty of science, ankara university beşevler, ankara, turkey this study was supported by ankara university biotechnology institute. demet Ç etin , sedat dönmez , gönül dönmez : department of biology, faculty of science, ankara university, beşevler, ankara, turkey; department of food engineering, faculty of engineering, ankara university, dışkapı, ankara, turkey sulfate-reducing bacteria (srb) that could grow on modified postgate c medium (pc) containing chromium(vi) were isolated from industrial wastewater and their chromium(vi) reduction capacities were investigated as a function of changes in the initial ph values, chromium, sulfate, nacl concentrations and carbon source. the optimum ph value at mg l − initial chromium(vi) concentrations was determined as . chromium(vi) reduction by srb was investigated at . - . mg l − initial chromium(vi) concentrations. at the end of the experiments, the mixed cultures of srb were found to reduce more than % of the initial chromium(vi) levels which ranged from . to . mg l − within - days period. the effects of initial - . g l − concentrations of sulfate and - % (w/v) concentrations of nacl to chromium reduction were showed that, the lowest concentrations of sulfate and nacl, were the best for chromium reduction in the pc media including mg l − chromium(vi). when the % whey was used as carbon source in the pc medium, . % of the . mg l − initial chromium(vi) concentration was reduced within this study was supported by ankara university biotechnology institute. this study was carried out as a part of the project for analyzing and controlling the mechanism of biodegrading and processing entrusted by the new energy and industrial technology development organization (nedo). this work has been financed by xunta de galicia (pgidt pxib pr). lead ions are considered a high pollutant of different waters. in our previous work were selected seven potential sorbent-strains rhodotorula mucilaginosa , rh. aurantiaca , rhodotorula sp. , williopsis californica , candida krusei t, cryptococcus sp. wt of lead ions. it was determined their stability to high concentration (up to mg/l) of lead ions in medium. the ph changes and yeast physiologies of growth were studied in medium with these heavy metal ions. the influences of environmental factors such as ph of solution, age of microbial culture, biosorbent concentration in suspension, alive or living state of biosorbent, time of contact on sorption were investigated. the levels of maximal sorption ability and biomass affinity to heavy metal ions were established by experimentally received sorption isotherms with mathematical modeling of biosorption process separately for everyone researched yeast strain. the sorption isotherms obtained in these experiments for non-living yeast biomass showed that the maximal sorption capacity was and × − mol (g sorbent) − for rh. aurantiaca and s. cerevisiae , respectively. in the case of living biomass, the high- this work has been financed by the spanish ministry of science and technology and european feder (project ctm - ). the authors wish to thank dra. m.j. martínez (cib, csic, madrid, spain) for providing coriolopsis rigida. this work was supported principally by embo and the mrc. fed-batch cultivation of haematococcus pluvialis under illumination with leds for production of astaxanthin abdolmajid lababpour, tomohisa katsuda, shigeo katoh department of molecular science and material engineering, kobe university, kobe, hyogo - , japan photosynthetic microalga haematococcus pluvialis is a most promising microorganism for production of astaxanthin, which has powerful antioxidant activity and is used both for human being as a food supplement and cosmetic; as well as animal farming such as salmon and poultry. the deficiency of nutrients in batch culture of h. pluvialis decreases the growth of cells and increases the induction of astaxanthin as an induction factor. therefore, it is impossible to reach to high cell concentrations in batch cultures. in previous experiments, the medium replacement increased the cell concentration, while accumulation of astaxanthin was not induced without other factors. in this work, the effects of fed-batch addition of culture medium on the cell growth and astaxanthin production in h. pluvialis cultures were studied. h. pluvialis was cultivated in cm culture medium containing sodium acetate, yeast extract, l-asparagines, mgcl · h o, feso · h o and cacl · h o (ph . ). light was supplied by panels of blue or red led lamps. the temperature was kept at • c and the culture was mixed with a magnetic stirrer. in fed-batch cultures of h. pluvialis, the cell concentration and production of astaxanthin increased in comparison with those in batch culture. in addition, the operation in feb-batch manner is easier than medium replacement from industrial viewpoints for production of astaxanthin. simvastatin and similar compounds are wide used as antihypercholesterolemic agents. simvastatin is obtained by c-methylation of side chain of lovastatin. this process is not perfect and some unreacted lovastatin is present in the reaction mixture. simvastatin is separated from lovastatin using fungi clonostachys compactiuscula. using of living microbials has some disadvantages such as high cost, difficult product separation from the reaction mixture. we work on overcome these difficulties by separation and immobilization of enzyme that hydrolyses lovastatin ammonium salt in presence of simvastatin ammonium salt. our results of purification and immobilization lovastatin hydrolase will be presented. investigation of peptide antibiotics produced by trichoderma strains isolated from winter wheat rhizosphere a. szekeres , l. kredics , l. hatvani , z. antal , l. manczinger , a. nagy , c. vágvölgyi : department of microbiology, university of szeged, p.o. box , h- szeged, hungry; hungarian academy of sciences, university of szeged, microbiological research group, hungry; pilze-nagy ltd. , kecskemét, p.o. box , species of the imperfect filamentous fungal genus trichoderma with teleomorphs belonging to the hypocreales order of the ascomycota division are of great economic importance as sources of enzymes, antibiotics, as plant growth promoters, decomposers of xenobiotics, and as commercial biofungicides. peptaibols and related peptaibiotics (prps) are secondary metabolites constituting a family of fungal peptide antibiotics which is constantly growing since alamethicin was isolated from cultures of trichoderma viride. these compounds are linear, amphipathic polypeptides composed of - amino acids and usually containing several non-proteinogenic amino acid residues, which are representing characteristic building blocks of the structure. one hundred and twenty trichoderma strains were isolated from roots of winter wheat grown in agricultural fields of southern hungary. the identity of species was examined based on morphological and molecular characters. the presence of prps-producing strains among the isolated trichoderma strains was detected by biological tests and the antibiotics were partially purified using a multistep chromatography procedure involving exclusion chromatography, adsorption chromatography and thin-layer chromatography. about % of the isolates proved to be able to produce prps. the antibacterial activity of the compounds was tested against staphylococcus aureus, bacillus subtilis, micrococcus luteus and escherichia coli, while the antifungal effect was recorded against fusarium oxysporum, f. culmorum, rhizoctonia solani and pythium debaryanum. ergezinger, m., bohnet, m., berensmeier, s., buchholz, k., . integrierte enzymatische synthese und adsorption von isomaltose in einem mehrphasenbioreaktionsreaktor. cit , - . glucansucrases from family of glycoside-hydrolases are transglucosidases that produce ␣-glucans from sucrose, a very cheap substrate, without any use of nucleotide activated sugars. based on sequence analyses, these enzymes have been classified in two families, the family and the family of glycoside hydrolases. among the natural diversity existing in family in which are found the glucansucrases produced by lactic acid bacteria, three enzymes have been selected for their distinctive specificities: dextransucrase from l. mesenteroides nrrl b- f (dsr-s), which catalyses almost essentially the synthesis of ␣- , -linkages, alternansucrase from l. mesenteroides nrrl b- (asr), which produces alternan polymer formed of ␣- , and ␣- , -alternated linkages and finally dextransucrase from l. mesenteroides nrrl b- (dsr-e), which is responsible for the synthesis of a branched dextran composed of about % of ␣- , -linkages in the main chain and % of ␣- , -branched linkages. for all these enzymes, the natural polymerase activity can be shifted towards oligosaccharide production or gluco-conjugate syntheses by introducing acceptors in the reaction medium. a number of sugar acceptors have been successfully glucosylated with the view of developing new functional food products. acceptor glucosylation yield as well as acceptor reaction product structures were shown to be highly dependant on the enzyme specificity. consequently, using glucansucrases of distinctive specificities and varying the acceptors give access to a large variety of applications. amylosucrase, the sole glucansucrase found in family of glycoside-hydrolases is also of great interest for functional food applications. this enzyme is able to synthesize highly resistant amylose from sucrose. again the reaction conditions can be used to modulate the yield and the size of amylose. the aim of our work is to further develop the applications of these enzymes via rational and combinatorial engineering. the most recent results obtained in this field will be discussed. novel food structure engineering concepts with enzymes johanna buchert vtt biotechnology, espoo, finland food structure is a very important quality attribute in food choice, since it affects not only the sensory perception of texture, but also release of flavour. enzymes offer specific means to engineer food structure by creating cross-links to food biopolymers, i.e. to proteins and/or carbohydrates. enzymatic cross-linking of food biopolymers can be exploited to create novel types of structures to foods without any need of added food ingredients. laccases and peroxidases can be used to crosslink ferulic acid containing carbohydrates, such as sugar beet pectin or arabinoxylan. proteins can be crosslinked by different oxidative or transferase type of enzymes. transglutaminases can crosslink protein via formation of isopeptide bond between glutamine and lysine residues. laccase and peroxidase can oxidize tyrosine residues to corresponding radicals, which in turn can further react with different groups in proteins. tyrosinases, on the other hand, oxidize tyrosine to a quinone, which can further react with aromatic ring, amine and thiol groups present in proteins. the biopolymer networks formed can be further engineered by combining adequate processing to the enzyme treatment. in this work the potential of enzymatic food structure engineering is reviewed. asparaginase-mediated reduction of acrylamide formation in baked, fried, and roasted products hanne vang hendriksen, beate kornbrust, steffen ernst, mary stringer, hans peter heldt-hansen, peter Østergaard novozymes a/s, dk- bagsvaerd, denmark. e-mail: hvhe@novozymes.com (h.v. hendriksen) in , it was discovered that acrylamide is formed in several potato and grain-based foods (e.g. chips, french fries, toasted bread, biscuits, cereals) and in coffee, all of which have been prepared at high temperatures. the level of this potential carcinogen in the final food appears to range from to ppb. later that year, the mechanism of acrylamide formation was unraveled, demonstrating that asparagine and reducing sugars are the precursors for acrylamide. this pointed to several potential enzymatic approaches to remove the root cause of the problem by degrading the precursors in situ. here, we demonstrate that asparaginase treatment leads to a more efficient reduction in acrylamide than alternative enzymatic treatments. asparaginase from aspergillus oryzae is used to reduce acrylamide formation significantly in laboratory models of a range of common food products. examples are french fries, biscuits, crisp bread, and fabricated chips. the sensory qualities appear to be constant. the implications for scaling up the processes for industrial food production are discussed. effect of cultivation conditions on folate content in yeast: exploring the potential of yeast as a bio-enrichment vehicle for folate in foods sofia hjortmo , johan patring , jelena jastrebova , thomas andlid : department of chemical and biological engineering, chalmers university of technology, po box , gothenburg, sweden; department of food science, swedish university of agricultural sciences, po box , uppsala, sweden. e-mail: sh@fsc.chalmers.se (s. hjortmo) over the past years, the interest in health benefits of the b vitamin folate has increased considerably. a good folate status may hinder progression of several diseases such as neural tube defects and downs syndrome in foetus, as well as cancer, dementia, alzheimer's disease and cardiovascular disease in adults. it is however not easy to reach the recommended intake and new strategies have to be developed to increase the folate status. in this project we explore the use folate producing microorganisms for this purpose. many yeasts have the ability to synthesise folate de novo and can thus serve as a source for humans. folate enrichment in fermented foods could be much improved by using starter cultures better at producing folate compared to traditional strains. this is, e.g. applicable to bread making fb over-expression of isoprene biosynthetic enzymes in the -carotene producer zygomycete mucor circinelloides tamás mucor circinelloides has been involved to study the carotene biosynthesis genesis of fungi. this fungus is more amenable to molecular techniques than the others traditionally used in carotenogenic studies (e.g. blakeslea trispora and phycomyces blakesleeanus). moreover, mucor has a great advantage: it is a dimorphic organism. this type of morphology is preferred by the fermentation industry because yeast-like growth allows the submerged culture, when usually higher biomass production can be achieved and cells can be more easily separated from the media. β-carotene is a terpenoid-type chemical compound likewise to sterols, quinones or chlorophylls. the production can be increased by improving the non-carotene specific terpenoid biosynthesis. this can be carried out by the overexpression of the genes responsible for the ratelimiting steps of these pathways. in this study, polyethylene glycol mediated transformations of m. circinelloides protoplasts were performed with autoreplicative expression vectors containing the known terpenoid genes of m. circinelloides (e.g. isoa encoding farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase and carg encoding geranylgeranyl pyrophosphate synthase). carotene production of the transformants and the wild-type strains were analysed by high-performance liquid chromatography (hplc). transformants harbouring plasmids with isoa or carg produce about . times more carotene than the recipient strain, while carotene production increased about two times in the co-transformants containing both type of plasmids. members of the genus rhizopus are important from biotechnological aspects in consequence of their effective extracellular enzyme, alcohol and organic acid production. moreover, rhizopus strains are used for fermentation of various foods, because they are capable of transforming soybeans into edible products. the high affinity iron permease (ftr ) contains both highly conservative and variable regions applicable for phylogenetic comparisons. the aim of this study was the comparative analysis of this gene of different rhizopus species in order to elaborate a simple and fast method to identify these fungi at a species and subspecies level. conserved regions of candida albicans and rhizopus oryzae ftr genes (fu et al., ) have been analysed to design degenerate primers for polymerase chain reaction. they were used to amplify the homologous regions from different strains of r. oryzae, r. microsporus, r. stolonifer and r. niveus. isolates of the similarly thermophilic rhizomucor miehei and r. pusillus, as well as a strain of m. rouxii were involved in the study as outgroups. deduced protein sequences were aligned and phylogenetic analysis was performed. surprisingly the r. oryzae isolates formed a group completely different with a significant distance from the r. microsporus isolate. r. niveus is currently not distinguished from r. stolonifer var. stolonifer because of morphological considerations. however, phylogeny of ftr gene sequences, in agreement with earlier results based on rapd data (vágvölgyi et al., ) , raise the need to handle r. niveus as a separate species. sequences and pcr primers useful for identification of all tested rhizopus strains were elaborated. potential application in a lactose conversion process. the prebiotics market is at high demand therefore the development of the process to produce 'prebiotic' galacto-oligosacharides efficiently and inexpensively is our particular interest. citrus, particularly mandarins and clementines, are among the most economically important fruit crops in morocco. besides morphological traits multiple molecular markers have been used for the caracterisation of citrus germplasm. the main aim of this study was to evaluate the moroccan mandarin germplasm and to identify specific polymorphisms among accessions sharing identical name. eighty mandarin and two sweet orange varieties were analyzed by dna markers. issr markers were amplified using anchored primers and analysed by agarose gel electrophoresis. aflp markers analyses were performed using three primer combinations. the dice coefficient was used to estimate genetic similarities and the upgma algorithm was utilised to generate a phenogram depicting the genetic relationships among the acessions. the selection of primers out of the issr primers primarily assayed, allowed us to maximize the average number of amplified fragments analyzed per reaction ( . ), and the percentage of informative polymorphisms ( %). the three combinations of ecori/msei primers revealed reliable aflp markers, ( %) of witch were polymorphic. the range of fragment sizes varied from to bp. contrasting with the phenotypic diversity for agronomic and fruit quality traits, very low variability at the dna level has found among mandarins, which always showed a high (s > . ) coefficient of genetic similarity. the molecular marker analyses allowed the clarification of ambiguous denominations and the establishment of phenological relationships. the mandarin cultivars have been clustered into several different sub groups. this study allowed the identification of one issr marker, distinct and specific for the clementine sidi aissa and some aflp markers specific to maroc late and w. navel. many hybrids used in this study presented high coefficient of the similarity with one of their parents, such as siamelo and king of siam (s = . ), fortuna and clementine (s = . ), kara and king of siam (s = . ). this work was partially funded by the program for scientific cooperation cnrst (morocco) and iccti (portugal), the international foundation for science (ifs) support in stockholm (sweden). the new morocco mandarin variety nadorcott became very important in the international market because of high quality, good size, easy peeling and absence of seeds. also known as afourer or w. murcott, this variety was selected in - at the afourer experimental station, inra, located near to beni mellal city, as an original tree among several -year-old murcott honney (c. reticulata × c. sinensis) seedling trees. in order to shed additional light on the genetic origin of this variety, we have carried out isozyme and dna fingerprinting analyses. for better interpretation of the nadorcott molecular profiles, others mandarin cultivars, among which murcott honney, were also analyzed by molecular markers. three enzymatic systems (idh, pgm and pgi) permitted the discrimination between nadorcott and his female parent murcott honney. the molecular patterns displayed by these cultivars point out the sexual origin of nadorcott and discard the previously assumed hypothesis for its origin as a mutation of a nucellar zygote. the issr and rapd markers analyses allowed the identification of kinnow; du japon, vietnam; and swett lime as the genetically most closely related mandarins (s ∼ . ) to nadorcott. strong genetic similarity was also found with the clementine group, a possible male parent of nadorcott. the analysis by aflp markers confirmed the hybrid origin of nadorcott and the high genetic relatedness (s = . ) of this mandarin to its putative female parent murcott honey, and other cultivars as kinnow (s = . ) and clementine (s = . ). the possibility of an accurate molecular identification of nadorcott by specific molecular markers is of paramount importance for the protection and management of this original moroccan citrus variety. an effective process for the chemical-biotechnological utilization of distilled white lees was studied. a first treatment with hydrochloric acid allowed the solubilisation of tartaric acid. the influence of temperature, amount of hcl and reaction time were considered through an experimental design. under the optima conditions g/l from white distilled lees and . g/l from red distilled lees were recovered. the tartaric acid was precipitated as calcium tartrate so that it can be isolated from the rest of the raw material compounds. the solid residue was used as an economic nutrient for lactic acid production by lactobacillus pentosus using trimming wastes as substrate. the lactic acid concentrations and volumetric productivities achieved were similar to those obtained using distilled lees without tartaric acid recovery as nutrient. thermophilic cyanobacterial strains that could grow in the bg media was isolated from hot springs and their reactive dye bioaccumulation was studied under thermophilic conditions in a batch system, in order to determine the optimal conditions required for the highest dye accumulation. in the experiments performed with newly isolated synechocystis sp. and phormidium sp., the optimum ph values at about mg l − initial reactive dye concentrations was determined as . lipases are extremely versatile enzymes, that catalyze both hydrolysis and synthesis reactions. they have a wide range of industrial applications, among which the manufacture of detergents, pharmaceuticals and fine chemicals are outstanding. the fungus rhizopus oryzae has been reported to synthesize a number of commercially interesting enzymes. in this work, its ability to produce extracellular lipases when grown in solid state culture has been assessed. cultures were carried out in erlenmeyer flasks, using a complex medium and several supports, both synthetic (nylon sponge) and natural (barley bran, ground walnut or peanut). the latter appeared to be more suitable for lipase production. since the best results were initially obtained with lipid-containing supports, barley bran cultures were supplemented with a vegetable oil, in an attempt to optimise lipase production and design an efficient procedure for reusing this agroindustrial waste. surprisingly, this strategy did not improve enzyme synthesis. however, when a surfactant (triton x- ) was added to the basal medium, a dramatic increase in extracellular activity was detected (up to -fold). the results agreed with those previously obtained in submerged cultures of r. oryzae, in which addition of olive oil did not increase lipase production, while the presence of triton x- had a remarkably beneficial effect. also, enzyme concentration in solid state cultures was up to two-fold that of the submerged ones. est maximal sorption capacity was found for yeasts cryptococcus sp. wt and rh. aurantiaca . these cultures also demonstrated the high sorption affinity, which makes them especially efficient biosorbents at low concentrations of lead ions. the high efficiency of lead elution was shown with . n edta. isolation and identification of marine bacteria from deep-sea sediments els maas , cara brosnahan , vicky webb , helen neil , phil sutton : marine biotechnology, national institute for water and atmospheric research ltd., kilbirnie, wellington, new zealand; oceanography, national institute for water and atmospheric research ltd., kilbirnie, wellington, new zealand marine sediments were obtained using a piston corer with associated trigger core ( . m, . m diameter). cores were collected from depths of to m, along norfolk ridge and across challenger plateau. sediments ranged from coarse carbonate sands in the north to sandy and silty hemipelagic mud with increasing depth and latitude. all samples sites underlie subtropical surface water masses associated with, and south of, the tasman front. sediment samples were aseptically taken from the triggers cores upon recovery. samples were stored in sterile tubes at • c on board the vessel for - days. the core samples were plated on several different agar types and incubated aerobically for weeks at • c. individual colonies were sub-cultured and purified using standard microbiological techniques. morphological and molecular taxonomy revealed that the bacteria isolated from the sediments were closely related to novosphingomonas, halomonas, stappia, glaciecola, pseudoalteromonas and leeuwenhoekiella. phylogenetic trees constructed using s rrna gene sequence data showed that two other isolates were unrelated to known genera. the bacterial isolates are currently being investigated for their biotechnological potential. olive oil mill wastewater (omw) as the effluent of the concern of olive industry has high organic load. the conventional biological treatments despite of their simplicity and rather suitable performance are ineffective for the omw treatment since phenolics possess antimicrobial activity. in order to carry out a proper treatment on omw, use of microorganism able to degrade the phenolics thus, is necessary. the ability of phanerochaete chrysosporium immobilized on loofa was studied. the basal mineral salt solution along with glucose, ammonium sulfate and yeast extract were used to dilute omw properly. the fungus did not grow on the concentrated omw. therefore, omw diluted by % was used thought this study. the extent of removal in this biotreatment, of total phenolics (tp) and cod were and %, respectively. while the color and aromatocity decreased by and %, respectively. the kinetic behavior of the loofa immobilized fungus was found to follow monod equation. the maximum growth rate was . h − while the monod constant based on the consumed tp and cod (mg/l) were and , respectively. the control of water pollution has become of increasing importance in recent years. the release of dyes into the environment constitutes only a small proportion of water pollution, but dyes are visible in small quantities due to their brilliance. many dyes are difficult to decolourise due to their complex structure and synthetic origin. the adsorption of reactive dye remazol brilliant blue r (rbbr) on polyelectrolyte complex (pec) was studied in a batch systems. the adsorption parameters determined were: effect of the different values of ph on the adsorption of dye by pec, and the effect of contact time on the amount of rbbr adsorbed (in mg g − ). the data indicates that the adsorption capacity of rbbr by pec is dependent on ph. the maximum adsorption at ppm was . % equal to . mg of dye/g of polymer. the results show a tendency towards greater adsorption for reactive dyes (ph range of - ). the effect of contact time was studied at initial concentration ( ppm) of dye, the amount of rbbr adsorbed for these pec increased and reached a constant value with the increase in contact time. the increase in the extent of removal of dye after min of contact time is less and hence it is fixed as the optimum contact time. the pec show their capacity to remove rbbr to aqueous solutions by adsorption. flocculation of saccharomyces cerevisiae (diastaticus) ifo was studied. cells of ifo did not flocculate even in the stationary phase without mg + ("mg + -deficient cells") although they began to flocculate strongly h after inoculation in the presence of mg + ("complete cells"). cycloheximide completely inhibited induction of floc-forming ability of "mg + -deficient cells". co-flocculation between "complete cells" and "mg + -deficient cells" was investigated by chemical modification. treatment of "mg + -deficient cells" by proteolytic enzymes did not affect the co-flocculation with "complete cells". photo-oxidation or mercaptoethanol-reduction of "mg + -deficient cells" failed to weaken the co-flocculation with "complete cells" while treatment of "mg + -deficient cells" by periodate brought about a significant loss of the co-flocculation. on the contrary, "complete cells" deflocculated by proteolysis or chemical modification of proteinaceous component failed to co-flocculate with "mg + -deficient cells". these findings suggest that "mg + -deficient cells" are non-flocculent because of lack of proteinaceous component essential for flocculation of cells of ifo . the industrial toscano cigar production starts with the dark firecured kentucky tobacco fermentation process. during this phase the present work is a trial to study the portal serum factors which stimulate the cell proliferation of the schistosomules, aiming to find ways to block or inhibit their effects. our previous studies showed that portal serum of human and hamster (highly susceptible hosts) and a - kd fraction separated from human portal sera by ultrafiltration stimulate cell proliferation in immature schistosomules ( days old) in vitro. for further identification of the portal serum factors in the range of - kd that stimulate cell proliferation, schistosomules were incubated in vitro in medium containing % fetal calf serum, % portal human serum or % peripheral human serum or their fractions separated by native electrophoresis followed by electroelution, incubations were performed in presence of bromodeoxyuridine (brdu) in order to measure differences in cell proliferation. the results showed that human portal sera enhanced cell proliferation of schistosomules compared to the peripheral serum. this stimulatory effect was substantially reproduced by fraction separated from human portal serum with molecular weight . kd. these results may help in designing a drug or antibody therapy to block the stimulating effect of the portal serum fraction and subsequently to disturb the life cycle of the parasite at early stage of development. center of molecular biosciences, university of the ryukyus, okinawa - , japan. e-mail: naoya-s@comb.u-ryukyu.ac.jp (n. shinzato)oil strage tank sludge, mainly composed of water and solid hydrocarbons (waxes) needs to be treated when harvesting the stored oil. although the sludge treatment by microbial surfactant or microbial cracking are considered as the feasible method, microbial degradation of the waxes (ca. solid n-alkanes) have been reported in a very limited species such as acinetobacter. in addition, long-chain n-alkanes (so called paraffin waxes) are one of the major components of oil, and their resistant properties to biological attack hold up the recovery of oil-polluted environments. in this report, we have screened n-tetracosane (c ) degrading bacteria from soils in okinawan island, an unique sub-tropical area in japan, to know the bacterial diversity and their degrading mechanism. srdna phylogenetic analysis of the isolates, totally ca , showed they were not only acinetobacter and pseudomonas, but also other proteobacteria (alcaligenes), actinomycetes (gordonia, nocardia, and leifsonia), bacillus, staphylococcus, and unidentified ones. they also grew not only the solid n-alkanes but also iso-alkanes, mid-chain n-alkanes as the sole carbon source. results for the biosurfactant production will also be shown. the properties of environmental enterococci were studied. the strains were isolated mainly from surface and waste waters and several strains from sheep manure were also included. species identification was provided by combination of phenotypic (micronaut system, merlin) and molecular detection methods (automated its-pcr, ddl-pcr). several discrepancies were observed when comparing molecular and biochemical identification. six enterococcal species were overall identified; e. faecium and e. hirae were the most abundant ones, almost % of isolates belonged to these two species. the distribution of selected genes conferring virulence to enterococci (cyla, gele and esp) was investigated, the positive signal was obtained mainly for e. faecalis strains. the strains were also characterized for the possession of enterocin genes (enta, entb, entp, ent , entl ab) and high frequency of enterocins was observed. biosorption of three different dyes (reactive black , cibacron brilliant yellow, cibacron brilliant red) onto immobilized scenedesmus obliquus a microalga was investigated in a batch sys-tem. the immobilized alga exihibited the highest dye uptake capacity at the initial ph value of . for all dyes. the effect of temperature on equilibrium sorption capacity indicated that maximum was obtained at • c for rb , cby and cbr biosorption. the freundlich, and langmuir adsorption models were used for the mathematical description of the biosorption equilibrium and isotherm constants were evaluated. biocontrol properties of microbially-treated sugar beet wastes in presence of rock phosphate n. vassilev, i. nikolaeva, m. vassileva department of chemical engineering, faculty of sciences, university of granada, c/fuentenueva s/n, granada- , spain. e-mail: nbvass@yahoo.com (n. vassilev) the effect of soil application of sugar beet wastes (sb) treated with aspergillus niger in the presence of rock phosphate (rp) on the control of fusarium wilt of tomato were studied. two treatments and a control were used: inoculation with glomus intraradices (am), further inoculation with a. niger grown on sb + rp medium, and the control (c). application of the am fungus increased plant growth, p and n uptake and reduced disease caused by fusarium oxusporum f. sp. licopersici (fol) as compared to non-mycorrhizal control plants. soil amendment with sb + rp + a. niger resulted in % and % (versus c) higher plant shoot biomass in plant-soil experiments contaminated or not with fol, respectively. in this case, disease severity and number of fol cfu reached the lowest levels while soil phosphatase and beta-glucosidase activities increased compared to all other treatments. fol negatively affected plant root mycorrhization determined in the am treatment while the difference between the mycorrhization of plants grown in the presence and absence of f. oxysporum in sb + rp + a. niger-amended soil was insignificant ( % versus %, respectively). in conclusion, the fermentation mixture containing mineralized organic matter, partially solubilized rp, and a. niger biomass could be efficiently used not only in improving plant growth, nutrient uptake and properties of degraded and polluted soils, as previously reported (vassilev and vassileva, ) , but also in environmentally-mild management of fusarium wilt. vassilev, n., vassileva, m., . appl. microbiol. biotechnol. , - . biological treatment processes allow for the effective elimination of charged inorganic micropollutants, e.g. a number of oxyanions, heavy metals, etc. from contaminated drinking water supplies. however, dedicated technologies have to be implemented in order to eliminate the target pollutants without changing the quality of treated water, avoiding its secondary pollution by cells, nutrients and metabolic by-products. some innovative technologies, which combine the use of membranes with the bioconversion of charged micropollutants in order to deal with the secondary water contamination problem, will be presented and critically compared. a special on loofa was studied. the basal mineral salt solution along with glucose, ammonium sulfate and yeast extract were used to dilute omw properly. the fungus did not grow on the concentrated omw. therefore, omw diluted by % was used thought this study. the extent of removal in this biotreatment, of total phenolics (tp) and cod were and %, respectively. while the color and aromaticity decreased by and %, respectively. the kinetic behavior of the loofa immobilized fungus was found to follow monod equation. the maximum growth rate was . h − while the monod constant based on the consumed tp and cod (mg/l) were and , respectively. advanced start-up strategy of an anaerobic three-phase turbulent bed reactor treating winery wastewaters r. cresson, h. carrère, n. bernet, j.p. delgenès laboratoire de biotechnologie de l'environnement, institut national de la recherche agronomique (inra), avenue des etangs, narbonne, france. e-mail: cresson@ensam.inra.fr (r. cresson)the objective of our study was to compare two start-up strategies for an anaerobic biofilm process, to create an effective biofilm and increase the organic loading rate (olr) as quickly as possible. two methanogenic three-phase biofilm reactors have been started, using the same operational parameters (solid hold-up ratio, gas velocity of mm s − ), in order to test two different strategies:• maximal load strategy (reactor a): the olr is increased as long as the global amount of removed cod (biogas production) increased. • maximal removal strategy (reactor b): the olr is increased stepwise as soon as the cod removal rate reaches %.both reactors have been operated for days, until a volumetric olr of g cod l − j − , with more than % of carbon removal. the total amount of cod removed and methane produced were higher in reactor b ( . and . %, respectively). in both reactors, the short hydraulic retention time (hrt) applied during all the experiment caused a rapid wash-out of planktonic bacteria and an exclusive use of the substrate by the attached micro-organisms, which accelerates the biofilm growth. the lag-phase was reduced to approximately days. the reactor submitted to repetitive disturbance by the maximal removal strategy appeared to be more robust when confronted to perturbation like organic overload or nutritional deficiency. experiments have demonstrated capability and the efficiency of the aggressive strategy for controlling anaerobic bioreactor start-up. sustainability is the generally accepted paradigm for future industrial development. the re-integration of waste products into production processes is a major aspect of environmental sustainability. in this study the use of sugar cane molasses is being investigated for the production of bioplastics by mixed microbial cultures, with the added possibility of parallel biohydrogen production. polyhydroxyalkanoates (phas) are polyesters synthesized by bacteria and accumulated as granules in the cytoplasm. studies conducted by this group have shown that mixed microbial cultures subjected to dynamic feeding conditions may accumulate phas up to % cell dry weight, a value close to that obtained for pure cultures. volatile fatty acids are good substrates for the production of phas by mixed cultures. on the other hand, sugar molasses, with a very high sugar content (about % dry weight), can produce organic acids by fermentation. the two-stage process being implemented in this study includes a molasses fermentation step, in which the high sugar content of the molasses is converted into volatile fatty acids (vfas), and a pha production step, in which the vfas serve as the precursors to the formation of phas under dynamic feeding conditions. moreover, hydrogen can be produced by anaerobic bacteria from carbohydrate-rich substrates giving organic fermentation end products, h and co . to optimize the production of both high-value products, design of experiments (doe) is being used to elaborate a set of experiments to study the effect of ph, hydraulic retention time and organic loading on both the organic acids distribution (which will serve as precursors for pha production in the second step) and h production in the acidogenic fermentation reactor (a l cstr). preliminary results show that the effluent of the acidogenic reactor fed with g/l total sugars and operated at ph and d = . h − (composed mainly of acetate and propionate) can be successfully fed to a polymer-accumulating mixed culture. under these conditions, the h production yield has been estimated at . mol h /mol sucrose. vanillin is a flavour compound used in food industry, fragrances and pharmaceutical preparations, which is nowadays mainly produced by chemical synthesis. the increased demand of natural products for the food industry as well as the high cost of natural vanillin extracted from vanilla pods has recently stimulated the research for alternatives to produce this compound by a natural way. the microbial transformation of ferulic acid, a phenolic compounds from lignin degradation, is recognized as being the most interesting alternative to produce natural vanillin. the combined effects of initial ferulic acid concentration (s ) and biomass concentration (x ) on vanillin production by resting cells of escherichia coli strain were investigated using response surface methodology. e. coli jm /pbb a recombinant strain producing key enzymes of ferulate catabolic pathway from p. fluorescens bf (feruloyl-coa synthetase and feruloyl-coa hydratase/aldolase) was utilized in this work. a full-factorial design was employed for experimental design. the results shown a possible inhibition phenomena at a vanillin concentration of about . g l − leading to the accumulation in the fermentation media of secondary compounds like vanillic acid and vanillin alcohol. removal of dissolved nutrients from wastewater using a microalgae biofilter line christensen, suvina sooknandan, jens jørgen lønsmann iversen department of biochemistry and molecular biology, university of southern denmark, odense, a microalgae biofilter can be used for treatment of wastewater from landbased fish farms in order to remove excess amounts of dissolved nutrients such as nitrate, ammonium and phosphate. a bubble column bioreactor has been developed for cultivation and characterization of microalgae. this type of bioreactor is equipped with a control system that enables online determination of the photosynthetic quotient and optimization of light intensity. furthermore the bioreactor has a dualsparging system simultaneously allowing adequate mixing and high gas-liquid mass transfer coefficients. different species of microalgae have been cultivated in batch and fed batch cultures to characterize growth and ability to take up the different dissolved nutrients. the specific growth rate and substrate uptake rate have been determined to compare and select the algal species most suited for use in a biofilter. additionally the composition of lipid, protein and carbohydrates has been measured to determine the nutritional quality of the algae when used as animal feed. at present, biological nitrogen-removal is mostly carried out through several complicated steps. to simplify the present systems for nitrogen-removal, we have investigated a new nitrogenremoval bioreactor using packed gel envelopes capable of simultaneous nitrification and denitrification. the envelope consists of two plate polymeric gels with a spacer in between. ammonia oxidizer, nitrosomonas europaea and denitrifier, paracoccus denitrificans are co-immobilized in the plate gels. when the envelopes are exposed to wastewater containing ammonia, the immobilized n. europaea oxidizes ammonia to nitrite in the outer aerobic surfaces of envelopes. at the same time, as ethanol solution is injected into the internal anaerobic spaces of envelopes, the immobilized p. denitrificans reduces the nitrite to nitrogen gas using the ethanol solution as an electron donor for denitrification. in this way, the envelopes can remove ammonia from wastewater in a single step. we have already reported advantages of our bioreactor in laboratory-scale experiments. in this study, we show our large-scale bioreactor (water volume . m ) could treat three kinds of wastewater derived from coal power plants. ammoniacontaining wastewater that occurred regularly in a coal power plant was continuously treated with the bioreactor using thirty envelopes for over a year. the bioreactor could remove more than % of total nitrogen at hydraulic retention time (hrt) of h. at hrt of h, the bioreactor accomplished a maximum rate (the transformation of nh + to n ) of . g n/day m of the envelopes' surface. the performance was equivalent to that obtained in the laboratory-scale experiments. furthermore, our bioreactor showed similar nitrogen-removal performances when it treated nitrate-containing wastewater occurring regularly and condensed ammonia-containing wastewater occurring at irregular intervals in coal power plants. these results show that our bioreactor can treat various wastewater containing nitrogen in coal power plants. thus, our concept is effective to simplify the large-scale systems in coal power plants and the other plants. in order to establish an environmentally friendly process for the treatment of metal containing waste, in a portuguese refinery a process involving sulphur oxidizing acidophilic microbes is being considered. bioleaching of metal containing bottom ash, from fluidised bed incineration of sludge resulting from the refinery water treatment station, was performed using a sulphur oxidising acidophilic culture isolated from an acid pool resulting from the weathering of sulphur piles from the claus plant. this sample served as inoculum for liquid medium cultures with % sterile sulphur flowers as source of energy. application of monod kinetics to adapted culture growth of free cells presented a value of µ = . day − . yield of sulphur conversion to sulfate after days was η = %. in the presence of bottom ash from the incineration of refinery sludges µ = . day − and the yield of sulphur conversion was η = . %. a η fe = % removal of iron is obtained from the treated ash. x-ray fluorescence spectroscopy of the solid residue revealed a total removal of metals namely, v, cu, ni, zn and most of the fe after days of bioleaching. the present of heavy metals in the environment is a serious problem. they are commonly present in effluents from mining and industrial activities. usually, chemical conventional methods are very expensive and they have limitations when heavy metals are in low concentrations. at the moment the interest increases for processes that involve microorganisms as alternative method. some effluents present heavy metal sulphates which are soluble compounds. sulphate-reducing bacteria (srb), under anaerobic conditions, oxidize simple organic compounds (such as acetic acid and lactic acid) by utilizing sulphate as an electron acceptor and generate hydrogen sulphide. hydrogen sulphide reacts with heavy metal ions to form insoluble metal sulphides that can be easily separated from a solution. the purpose of this work was to evaluate the ability of srb to reduce cr(iii), ni(ii) and zn(ii) in artificial contaminated solution. desulfovibrio vulgaris and desulfovibrio sp. strains has been tested in this study. batch cultures was carried out in ml sealed bottles with different concentrations of studied metals ( - mg/l), with % of inoculum bacterial and adapted to postgate's medium c. a gaseous nitrogen current was employed to purge oxygen and obtain anaerobic conditions. the assays were incubated statically represented very low portion (less than - %) of the total bacterial community at all temperatures tested. schistosomules of schistosoma mansoni ( days old) were incubated in rpmi medium containing % fetal calf serum, % hamster portal venous or % hamster peripheral venous serum (highly susceptible host) or % rat portal venous or % rat peripheral venous serum (poorly susceptible host) in presence of bromodeoxyuridine (brdu) in order to measure differences in cell proliferation. also the rate of cell proliferation of s. mansoni were assessed in vivo in hamster to study the cell proliferation in the natural ontogeny of the organism. the rates of cell proliferation as expressed by brdu labeling indices (blis) were determined as a function of time of incubation by immunohistochemistry using monoclonal antibody to brdu. compared to schistosomules cultured in presence of rpmi plus % fetal calf serum, blis were increased by % in the presence of hamster portal, but not in peripheral serum. while in case of rat, no significant changes were observed in the blis in both portal and peripheral sera. the experiment was repeated using hamster portal and peripheral sera containing different schistosomal igg antibody titres. the results showed decreased values of blis compared to sera which did not contain the schistosomal antibody(ies). the in vivo results revealed that there was no cell proliferation of s. mansoni schistosomules ( days old) in the lungs. cell proliferation was detected in schistosomules of days old and the results revealed a significant decrement in the brdu labeling indices (blis) with the increase of the age of schistosomules in vivo. the results indicated that hamster portal venous serum (highly susceptible host) could have stimulating factor(s) for schistosomule cell proliferation which is not found in rat (poorly susceptible host) and the presence of antibody(ies) greatly inhibit the cell proliferation. this could be due to the blocking of some portal serum factors, which stimulate the cell proliferation by the antibody(ies). the release of dyes into the environment constitutes only a small proportion of water pollution, but dyes are visible in small quantities due to their brilliance. many dyes are difficult to decolourise due to their complex structure and synthetic origin. the adsorption of reactive dye remazol brilliant blue r (rbbr) on polyelectrolyte complex (pec) was studied in a batch systems. the adsorption parameters determined were: effect of the different values of ph on the adsorption of dye by pec, and the effect of contact time on the amount of rbbr adsorbed (in mg g − ). the data indicates that the adsorption capacity of rbbr by pec is dependent on ph, the maximum adsorption at ppm was . % equal to . mg dye/g of polymer. the results show a tendency towards greater adsorption for reactive dyes (ph range of - ). the effect of contact time was studied at initial concentration ( ppm) of dye, the amount of rbbr adsorbed for these pec increased and reached a constant value with the increase in contact time. the increase in the extent of removal of dye after min of contact time is less and hence it is fixed as the optimum contact time. the pec show their capacity to remove rbbr to aqueous solutions by adsorption. compared to other european nations, the austrian population shows a low level of knowledge in biosciences and a strong denial of gene technology ( ). the austrian non-profit organisation dialog<>gentechnik, a scientific society, organizes various activities to raise awareness for the "hot topics" in the life sciences. according to its principle of independence, all activities are funded publicly. projects on behalf of the austrian authorities and international cooperations demonstrate credibility and trust in dialog<>gentechnik ( ). a few examples will be presented. dialogue with the public: on the occasion of the first anniversary that the gmo labelling rules became effective, the action "gene technology on my plate" is performed austrian wide in shopping centres. here, consumers are informed about health and labelling aspects of gm food. two days of open discussions were organized in the context of the austrian genome research program gen-au ( ): topics were "gene diagnosis" ( ) and "genome research-what is in it for me?" ( ) . an open lab is currently set up in vienna to offer "hands on" experience in life sciences for everybody. motivating students: in the very successful gen-au summer school ( ), high school students spend - weeks in the lab and work with scientists. the best documentations are awarded. in an innovative project, student groups (age - ) work on the topics stem cells and cloning and develop units of an elearning course which will be accessible for all austrian schools in the near future. engaging stakeholders: dialog<>gentechnik manages interdisciplinary wor king groups that develop leaflets, brochures and questionnaires on various aspects of gene diagnosis. four products are currently distributed to the public and to health services. ( ) european commission. eurobarometer . , december ; ( ) www.dialog-gentechnik.at; ( ) www.genau.at. the aim of this paper is to compare the attitudes of the urban consumers with professionals towards to new technologies, especially to biotechnology. it was tried to find out in which area, medical, agriculture or industry, people can accept biotechnological developments and in which area not accept. key: cord- -ol buwld authors: gonzales, natalia m.; howell, viive m.; smith, clare m. title: th international mammalian genome conference meeting report date: - - journal: mamm genome doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ol buwld nan during november - , , the th annual international mammalian genome conference (imgc) attracted researchers from all over the world to yokohama, japan to discuss the latest advances, tools, and techniques in mammalian genetics. organized by piero carninci (riken) and the international mammalian genome society (imgs; www.imgs.org), the meeting brought together scientists from countries, not to mention hundreds of online participants that followed the live tweeting of talks (#imgc ). social media has become an integral part of the imgc, complementing the scientific content and facilitating ongoing discussions between scientists around the globe. the conference opened with a bioinformatics workshop, guided tours of riken laboratories, and a trainee symposium, giving ph.d. students and early-career postdoctoral researchers an opportunity to share their works in a collegiate and mentoring setting and vie for the chance to present at the main meeting. participants were officially welcomed to yokohama at the evening reception, where old friends and new were met over a smorgasbord of local cuisine. the main meeting was divided into sessions showcasing the wide-ranging research interests of imgs members. these included human disease models and immunology, neuroscience, development and stem cells, genomics and computational analysis, epigenomics and noncoding rnas, advances in genome editing, and largescale resources. the verne chapman lecture was given by professor john mattick, director of the garvan institute of medical research in sydney, and the inaugural darla miller distinguished service lectureship was awarded to janan eppig, professor at the jackson laboratory and a pioneer of the mouse genome informatics (mgi) program project. several poster sessions, a mentor lunch for trainees and workshops on bioinformatics, systems genetics, scientific literature curation, gene enrichment analysis, and fantom were also featured in the meeting program, which culminated in a feast of epic proportions. abstracts from the meeting are available at www.imgc .jp. the imgc has a strong reputation for advocating new scientific talent, epitomized by the trainee scholarships awarded for conference travel, the mentor-trainee lunch, presentation awards, and numerous opportunities to present work and receive feedback. the trainee symposium is an integral part of the meeting, featuring oral presentations from graduate students and postdoctoral researchers. the wide variety of topics presented exemplified the diversity and utility of mammalian model systems for both clinical and basic research. xenograft mouse models were utilized by hiroyuki yoda (ts- ; chiba cancer centre research institute) and takahiro inoue (ts- ; chiba cancer centre research institute) to demonstrate the in vivo anti-tumor effects of novel alkylating agents targeting the oncogenes mycn in neuroblastoma, and kras g d/v in colorectal cancer, respectively. the power of forward genetics was demonstrated by lisa gralinski (ts- ; university of north carolina) using the precollaborative cross to identify sars-coronavirus susceptibility loci and irina treise (ts- ; german mouse clinic), exploiting n-ethyl-n-nitrosourea (enu) mutagenesis to uncover molecular mechanisms of immunodeficiency. the sanger knockout mouse resources were highlighted by kifaythullah liakath-ali (ts- ; kings college london), who conducted a phenogenomics screen to investigate the genetic basis of skin phenotypes. gennadiy tenin (ts- ; university of manchester) followed up on human genomewide association studies (gwas) of the congenital heart defect tetralogy of fallot by developing an in vitro mouse heart culture for testing candidate genes by sirna knockdown. ximena ibarra-soria (ts- ; wellcome trust sanger institute) took us on a journey through the mouse olfactory system, demonstrating that novel olfactory receptor genes can be identified, characterized, and distinguished from environmental regulators despite the system's overwhelming complexity. several speakers focused on behavioral traits, including yuki matsumoto (ts- ; national institute of genetics), who identified a locus on chromosome associated with mouse tameness in wild-derived heterogeneous mouse stocks, and akira tanave (ts- ; national institute of genetics) who is exploring the etiology of anxiety and stress by studying strain differences between wild-derived msm mice and c bl/ mice. guzel gazizova (ts- ; kazan federal university) introduced the dormouse as a genetic model, discussing how transcriptome-level differences between two genera of dormice can be analyzed to yield insights into the evolution of hibernation and to clarify the status of the dormouse in the mammalian phylogeny. belinda goldie (ts- ; kyoto university) took us further into the world of gene expression, demonstrating the importance of extending micro-rna (mirna) analysis beyond evolutionarily conserved targets when exploring gene regulation of human neuronal synapses. hazuki takahashi (ts- ; riken) demonstrated a high-throughput system to optimize antisense long-noncoding rnas that increase translation of target mrnas, and riti roy (ts- ; university of western australia) examined expression profiles of receptors and ligands in cell lines profiled in the fantom project and tumors profiled by the cancer genome atlas (tcga) to understand how cancer cells communicate. mice were not the only model system represented by trainee symposium talks. pavel mazin (ts- ; skolkovo institute of science and technology) examined brain rna-seq data from humans, chimpanzees, and macaques to identify species and age-related differences in alternative splicing patterns. pavel prosselkov (ts- ; riken) branched from the mammalian tree, using the sea squirt to investigate the role of gene paralogs in cognition. finally, brandon velie (ts- ; swedish university of agricultural sciences) showcased the horse, an underutilized organism in mammalian genetics, as a model for identifying genetic factors related to locomotion, allergic diseases, and eczema. ximena ibarra-soria, akira tanave, hazuki takahashi, and irina treise were named as the lorraine flaherty awardees for their talks during the trainee symposium ( fig. ; table ) and received the opportunity to present their work at the main conference. several plenary sessions focused on a range of mammalian tools and resources for modeling human disease. the session showcased tools such as recombinant inbred lines (rils), outbred populations, classic crosses, and enu mutagenesis to yield new understanding and identify candidate genes for disease susceptibility, while knockout and patient-derived xenograft mice enabled further mechanistic insight. the session featured many talks utilizing the phenotypic diversity and genetic mapping power of diversity outbred (do) mice and the collaborative cross (cc), community resources * years in the making. fernando pardo- umass medical school) showed that resistance loci underlying tuberculosis pathogenesis could be mapped in * cc lines and * lines of the incipient c bl/ dba/ (bxd) cross. interestingly, bacterial modules could be mapped onto the host genome to understand how both host and pathogen genomes determine disease outcome. the mapping resolution of the do population was also highlighted in cancer, with nigel crawford (o- ; national institutes of health, bethesda, md) using quantitative trait locus (qtl) mapping in tramp j:do f males to identify metastasis susceptibility loci for prostate cancer. the power of the enu approach was demonstrated by several talks. gaetan burgio (o- ; australian national university) identified host factors altering malaria infection outcomes that could be targeted as a novel host-directed antimalarial therapy, and kart tomberg (o- ; university of michigan) mapped thrombosis modifier genes by bulk exome sequencing mice from a sensitized enu suppressor screen. both talks featured the use of gene editing candidate mutations with crispr/cas to validate causative alleles. the impact of mouse models on precision oncology was showcased by carol bult (o- ; the jackson laboratory), who discussed how patient-derived xenograft models can provide a platform for testing therapeutic options to guide treatments for breast and other cancers (fig. ) . kate ackerman (o- ; university of rochester) used inducible wt creert to determine the impact of loss of ctnnb at different time-points, concluding that b-catenin is critical for diaphragm development during a defined window of time. han kyu lee (o- ; duke university) analyzed polymorphisms among the ancestral haplotypes of inbred mouse strains to map loci for ischemic stroke outcomes, validating the interleukin receptor as a candidate by analysis of gene expression patterns and knockout models. other features of this session included a gwas of aerobic capacity in rats segregated on running ability by yu wang german center for neurodegenerative diseases tuebingen) conducted a massive forward genetic screen using human exome data, followed by systematic rnai screens in worms, flies, and human cell lines to identify genes and pathways involved in parkinson's disease. this year's imgc included a mini-session that sought to address the question of whether or not the mouse is still relevant as a model for human disease. while this particular audience needed no convincing of the fundamental scientific understanding gained through use of the mouse as a model, tsuyoshi miyakawa (o- ; fujita health university) gave a thought-provoking narration of his lab's response to a controversial publication claiming otherwise. his careful consideration of arguments made from both sides of the controversy emphasized the importance of understanding the experimental design and methods for analyzing a study before interpreting its results. miyakawa compared his re-analysis of mouse genomic data from seok et al. ( ) with the original study, which had concluded that genomic responses in mouse models poorly mimic human inflammatory diseases. miyakawa's group drew the opposite conclusion from the data, demonstrating that responses in mouse models greatly mimic human inflammatory diseases (takao and miyakawa ) . alterations to the seok et al. ( ) analysis included comparing genes that exist in both mouse and human, not just human disease genes that lack rodent homologs. he emphasized the need to define appropriate phenotypes and choose appropriate statistical methods. ultimately, he concluded, the % overlap in gene expression between mouse and human does not mean that the mouse is a bad model; instead, the overlapping % probably contain the genes that are the most important for disease. the panel responses also emphasized other advantages of mouse models, including but not limited to access to tissue, ability to measure responses at different time-points on the same background and the capacity to do epigenetic studies. the symposium also raised a conundrum of the scientific review process by highlighting ways in which the design and methods chosen to address a question can either obscure or reveal scientific truths, inciting a thoughtful series of questions about training and the process of peer review. how can we ensure that future generations of biologists are adequately trained to evaluate statistical methods? when the same data can be analyzed to show very different results, potentially affecting funding decisions on models, is the ultimate onus for publication on the journal or expert scientific reviewers? these questions were discussed in the open forum and reflect a larger conversation taking place within the wider scientific community, where they will undoubtedly continue to be discussed. this plenary session encompassed the use of mouse embryonic stem cells (mescs), gene expression analysis, and recent advances in genome engineering to address fundamental questions about development and degenerative disease. anne czechanski (o- ; the jackson laboratory) described how her experience deriving novel pluripotent mescs with the inhibitor cocktail i led to the unexpected observation that female cell lines experience a higher rate of attrition than male cell lines. future transcriptional profiling may uncover why the combination of x chromosome dosage and i culture conditions leads to attrition of female lines and will have important implications for those using mescs. sandra richardson (o- ; university of queensland) used retrotransposon capture sequencing (rc-seq) to deduce the timing and frequency of retrotransposon insertions in multigeneration c bl/ pedigrees. she presented data showing retrotransposition in the early embryo resulting in somatic and germline genetic mosaicism, adding to the evidence for retrotransposition as an important source of genetic diversity. patrizia rizzu (o- ; german center for neurodegenerative diseases) shared how she used fantom data to understand how a hexanucleotide repeat expansion influences the transcriptional profile of c orf , a gene involved in neurodegenerative disease. yasuhide furuta (o- ; riken) derived compound mutant mice from mescs containing multiple targeted mutations in the fibroblast growth factor (fgf) signaling system to study the role of fgf family genes in eye development. due to tight linkage between the genes of interest and reduced fertility in fgf mutant lines, it was previously impossible to generate compound mutants from an experimental cross. however, the development of crispr/cas allowed furuta's group to measure the extent of functional redundancy within the fgf pathway and uncover novel roles for its constituents. gabriela sanchez-andrade (o- ; wellcome trust sanger institute), recipient of this year's verne chapman young investigator award (table ) , closed the session with a discussion of her efforts to identify new biomarkers of neurodegenerative disease in a mouse model of frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism (ftdp) with severe olfactory deficits. olfactory dysfunction is one of the earliest and most common symptoms of neurodegenerative disease in humans, yet the underlying molecular mechanisms are unknown. sanchez-andrade's impressive analysis of the olfactory epithelium measured differential expression and protein dynamics in wild-type and transgenic mice to identify a set of candidate genes correlated with onset of ftdp. furthermore, she demonstrated that similar changes in the expression of these genes occur in other brain regions relevant to ftdp pathology, highlighting the potential of her approach to identify additional biomarkers of human disease. the imgc featured three sessions on genomics and computational analysis. although the selected talks were diverse in both content and approach, each of them touched upon at least one of the following themes: advances in omic technology, molecular mechanisms underlying complex traits, and the relationship between genomic architecture and mammalian evolution. speakers in the first session discussed their experiences with single-cell rna-seq to address a series of questions that remain integral to the imgc each year; namely, what tools and technologies are driving our field forward? what exciting possibilities do they create, and what obstacles do we face in using these methods and interpreting their results? anna mantoski (o- ; roslin institute) shared her solutions to some of the analytical puzzles that technical variability can create for single-cell sequencing experiments and described how studying differences in gene in describing cap analysis of gene expression (cage), a method for capturing single-cell transcriptomes, charles plessy (o- ; riken) highlighted many of the challenges familiar to researchers using rna-seq and shared how his strategy of combining cage with techniques including ''pseudo-random'' primers to remove rrna, molecular tagging, and fragmentation can improve the quality of single-cell data. anton kratz (o- ; riken) further emphasized cage's potential as he described how his group applied translating ribosome affinity purification (trap), which can isolate the ribosome-associated transcriptome (the translatome) to purkinje dendrites to measure transcription at the subcellular level and identify biomarkers for specific cell types. much of the remaining work sought to address broad evolutionary questions dealing with the relationship between biological mechanisms, complex traits, and genomic architecture. martin taylor (o- ; university of edinburgh) discussed how the distribution of replicationassociated polymorphisms in mouse and human genomes may be explained in part by patterns of transcription factor binding and chromatin accessibility in the paternal germline. satoshi oota (o- ; riken) used enu mutagenesis in the mouse to observe evolution in real time, which allowed gaining insight into how the distribution of gc content has evolved in mammalian genomes. andrew morgan (o- ; university of north carolina chapel hill) explored the functional and evolutionary impacts of large copy number variations at a specific locus in the mouse genome. another prominent theme among the research featured in the sessions on genomics and computational analysis was the relationship between genotypes and quantitative phenotypes at both the level of the cell and the organism. jason lin (o- ; chiba cancer center research institute) discussed how a new class of molecules that combine the histone deactylase inhibitor saha and dna-binding pyrrole-imidazole polyamide (saha-pip) can induce epigenetic reprogramming and regulate pluripotency. steven munger (o- ; the jackson laboratory) used a system's genetics approach in the do to resolve the conflict between the expectation of high mrna-protein expression correlation from the central dogma of biology and recent observations suggesting a weak correlation. his work showed that while the levels of many proteins are regulated by nearby variants that influence mrna expression levels (cis-eqtl), the relative stoichiometry of proteins in stable partnerships and complexes is a key posttranslational regulator of protein abundance that can act to buffer individual member proteins against cis-acting transcriptional variation. robert young (o- ; university of edinburgh) presented evidence of divergence in the patterns of promoter gain and loss in humans and mice, offering insight into the evolutionary processes that contribute to gene expression and phenotypic diversity in both species. peter williamson (o- ; university of sydney) used a panel of inbred mouse strains to identify qtl related to metabolism, body composition, lactation, and other complex traits. a common approach featured at the imgc each year is the use of the mouse as a model for understanding how biological processes influence and respond to changes in the mammalian genomic landscape. notably, this year's sessions on genomics and computational analysis also included speakers that used a variety of other organisms in their research. in addition to the several talks mentioned above, we heard from david beier (o- ; seattle children's research institute) who analyzed the genomewide distribution of nonsense mutations in the exomes of individuals without severe mendelian disorders. he found that the strength of heterozygote selection correlated with the likelihood of recessive lethality and that many genes with established roles in developmental diseases had high heterozygote selection. martin frith (o- ; national institute of advanced industrial science and technology, tokyo) used sequence data from humans, chimps, orangutans, and dogs to classify different types of human chromosomal rearrangements, which occur in slowly evolving regions. finally, isaac adeyemi babarinde (o- ; national institute of genetics) introduced the audience to the capybara (the world's largest living rodent) and shared how he used its genome to understand the relationship between mutation rate and body size in rodents. for the first time at an imgc, two plenary sessions were devoted to epigenomics and noncoding rnas. this highlights the increasing awareness of looking beyond the traditional gene-protein relationship for understanding transcriptional control in both normal and diseased states in mammals. the influence of parental diet was featured in two presentations. joseph nadeau (o- ; pacific northwest research institute) illustrated that both folate supplementation and mutations in rna modulating genes such as dnd , a cf, and apobec bias fertilization toward wildtype genotypes. johannes beckers (o- ; helmholtz zentrum, munich) reported the epigenetic inheritance of an acquired metabolic disorder. he showed that a parental high-fat diet increased offspring susceptibility to obesity and type diabetes. both speakers stressed the importance of understanding the underlying mechanisms related to diet for guiding future public health policies. different aspects of genomic location as a determinant of transcriptional regulation were also discussed in the first plenary session. through determination of the three-dimensional configuration of x chromosomes in different tissues and cells, christine disteche (o- ; university of washington) demonstrated that genes that escape x inactivation preferentially localize at the periphery of the nucleus. she also showed that the expressed alleles of imprinted genes have greater chromatin contacts than the silent alleles, suggesting that these expressed regions are under greater organizational constraints. reanalysis of the publicly available encode data led siddharth sethi mrc harwell) to the discovery that transcription factor-binding sites are highly enriched in dnase hypersensitive sites compared to promoter and enhancer regions. as such, dnase hypersensitivity data could be used as an alternative method for discovering enriched regulatory motifs with the aim of improving understanding phenotypic variability. the second plenary session continued the theme of using genomewide data to understand transcriptional control by different noncoding elements-promoters, enhancers, microrna, and l -transposable elements. to dissect the relationship between dynamic changes in mrna and enhancer rna, erik arner (o- ; riken) measured the activities of promoters and enhancers over time in a number of cell types following different biological stimuli. he presented data supporting enhancer transcription as the earliest event in successive waves of transcriptional change. this phenomenon was observed in multiple biological systems, suggesting this may be a general feature of mammalian transcriptional regulation, contrary to models showing coexpressions of enhancers and promoters. albin sandilan (o- ; university of copenhagen) provided a clinical application, presenting rna-seq data profiling colon specimens from patients with inflammatory bowel disease. a promoter set was identified, which could accurately distinguish between the primary disease subtypes: crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis. moreover, , active enhancer regions were identified with subsets induced in general inflammation or specifically in one subtype. these enhancers had links to both known and novel genes involved in the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease. michiel de hoon (o- ; riken) turned attention toward the role of mirna in gene regulation. he presented the results from a collaboration spanning centers internationally, which analyzed deep, sequencing data of paired small rna and cage libraries across a wide range of cell types. this analysis revealed two classes of mirna: celltype-specific mirnas and ubiquitous mirnas. cell-typespecific mirnas are highly expressed in only a few cell types and may act as buffers of gene expression. ubiquitous mirnas are expressed in most cell types, but depleted in particular cell types and may be important in preventing inappropriate activation of transcriptional programs. valerio orlando (o- ; ircss fondazione santa lucia) presented the last talk in the plenary session focusing on the epigenetic role of retrotransposable elements, specifically long interspersed nuclear elements (l ). analysis of l transcription followed that of enhancer elements and myogenic program in normal muscle cells but was absent in duchenne muscular dystrophy (dmd)-affected muscle cells. pharmacological rescue of the dmd phenotype by histone deacetylase inhibitors or gene therapy was accompanied by normal l expression. he proposed that deregulation of l mobilization is a key trait in loss of cell identity and disease. genome editing using crispr/cas technology has taken the scientific world by storm, allowing rapid and efficient editing in eukaryotic cells. the in vitro and in vivo applications of crispr/cas genome editing was a strong theme at this year's meeting, with every plenary session including talks that made use of this technology, as well as the plenary session being completely devoted specifically to advances in genome editing. marie-christine birling (o- ; institut clinique de la souris) kicked off the session demonstrating crispr/cas genome editing in rats. she described her group's effort to generate alleles with precise gene deletions and duplications of a -mb region by means of two different guide rnas on both sides of the target region. kazuto yoshimi (o- ; national institute of genetics) then combined crispr/cas ''scissors'' with single-stranded oligodeoxyribonucleotides as the ''paste'' mechanism to ligate the cut sites for efficient replacement of rat genes with human genes. finally, dave bergstrom (o- ; jackson laboratory) presented his lab's modified crispr approach to enable rapid ''humanizing'' of large segments of the mouse genome, giving the example of replacement of a mouse tumor suppressor gene with kb of the orthologous human gene. inbred strains with whole-genome illumina sequencing and discussed the challenges of making alignments in complex regions. attendees were treated to the test site launch of the latest data available through the uscd genome browser (http://www.hgwdev-mus-strain.sdsc.edu/cgi-bin/hggateway). the verne chapman lecture titled ''the hidden layer of regulatory rna in mammalian genome biology'' was delivered by eminent molecular biologist john mattick (o- ; garvan institute of medical research). mattick is known for his research in revealing the central role of nonprotein-coding dna in the production of regulatory nonprotein-coding rnas (ncrnas) and his efforts to understand how ncrna regulation contributes to the staggering level of phenotypic complexity observed throughout the animal kingdom. he began his lecture with the quote ''are we letting a philosophy of the protein-coding gene control (our) reasoning? what then is the philosophy of the gene?'' he pointed out that this quote was not from this year or even this century-it was in fact a concern attributed to nobel laureate barbara mcclintock years ago. he reminded us that the mammalian genome contains only * , protein-coding genes, the same number as in simple nematodes. on the other hand, the extent of nonprotein-coding dna increases with increasing developmental and cognitive complexity, reaching . % in humans. he guided us through the events leading up to his discovery and the explosion of studies that followed, peppering his tale with vivid descriptions of the findings and figures that have influenced him over the years. he shifted effortlessly between concrete descriptions of data and philosophical speculations on the evolution of paradigm shifts, the mysteries of biological complexity, and the silent assumptions that inform (and occasionally hinder) scientific practice. he entertained the audience with his encyclopedic knowledge of molecular genetics, framing his research within a larger historical context that served to complement data-driven descriptions of his and others' work establishing ncrnas as prominent regulators of development, cognition, and disease in the mammalian genome. mattick also elaborated on the relevance of ncrnas to incipient areas of research and technology development in epigenomics and neurobiology, creating a memorable and thought-provoking experience for both experienced investigators and trainees (fig. ) . this year there were two additional keynote lectures, both showcasing scientific advancements using induced pluripotent stem cells (ipscs). masayo takahashi (o- ; riken center for developmental biology) provided a historical perspective of ipscs, from basic research to clinical application. it is remarkable that the field has gone from the invention of ipsc technology to the clinic in only years. dr. takahashi presented the first human application of ipsc-derived targeting age-related macular degeneration, a retinal disease. she described an impressive panel of experimental validations for retinal pigment epithelial cell sheets derived from ipscs, including whole genome, genotyping arrays, methylome, and single-cell analysis. next, her group hopes not only to treat the retinal epithelium but also to use ipscs to derive photoreceptors to completely restore vision in patients. the talk discussed the use of allogenic as well as autologous ipscs and treated the audience to an early view of potentially revolutionary treatments utilizing ipscs, highlighting the steadily growing wave of interest in this technology. hideyuki okano (o- ; keio university graduate school of medicine) then went on to discuss the use of ipscs in the study and treatment of neurological disorders. he described work to establish ipscs from patients with psychiatric disorders and characterize their pathophysiology. in a quest to investigate human psychiatric and neurological disorders more effectively, hideyuki then presented his group's impressive work generating transgenic marmoset models of parkinson's disease. the marmosets express human synuclein and recapitulate typical human diseases including sleep disturbances, lewy bodies, tremors, and gait abnormalities. in summary, the meeting showcased a variety of cutting edge mammalian genetic approaches, concepts, and results-from large-scale mapping to single gene approaches and everything in between. the meeting ended in a spectacular fashion, with attendees treated to the spa and fig. a spectacular finale for an amazing conference massage facilities at the yokohama minatomirai manyo club, donning kimonos and yakutas for a traditional banquet (fig. ) . attendees were entertained by local performers before awards were made to acknowledge exceptional trainee oral and poster presentations, and to thank the outgoing imgs secretariat and nominations and elections committee. it is certainly the first and only imgs meeting to date where ongoing scientific collaborations were made and discussed in a traditional japanese onsen: a most fitting end to a wonderful meeting. we eagerly await the next imgc, which will be part of mouse genetics at the allied genetics conference (tagc) in orlando, florida in july . that conference will bring the mouse genetics community together with yeast, ciliate, c. elegans, drosophila, and zebrafish communities to highlight the importance of model systems in understanding and translating fundamental advances in genetics. updates about tagc and the following imgc in heidelberg, germany in can be found at www.imgs. org. follow us on twitter (https://www.twitter.com/imgs_ news) or facebook (https://www.facebook.com/mamma lian.genome/). genomic responses in mouse models poorly mimic human inflammatory diseases genomic responses in mouse models greatly mimic human inflammatory diseases key: cord- - g w mc authors: beckman, m. f.; igba, c. k.; mougeot, f. b.; mougeot, j.-l. title: comorbidities and susceptibility to covid- : a generalized gene set meta-analysis approach date: - - journal: nan doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: g w mc background the covid- pandemic has led to over , deaths for almost million confirmed cases worldwide, as of august th, , per who report. risk factors include pre-existing conditions such as cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity, and cancer. there are currently no effective treatments. our objective was to complete a meta-analysis to identify comorbidity-associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps), potentially conferring increased susceptibility to sars-cov- infection using a computational approach. results snp datasets were downloaded from publicly available gwas catalog for of candidate covid- comorbidities. gene-level snp analysis was performed to identify significant pathways by using magma program. snp annotation program was used to analyze magma-identified genes. covid- comorbidities from six disease categories were found to have significant associated pathways, which were validated by q-q plots (p< . ). the top human mrna gene expressions for snp-affected pathways, extracted from publicly accessible gene expression profiles, were evaluated for significant pathways. protein-protein interactions of identified differentially expressed genes, visualized with string program, were significant (p< . ). gene interaction networks were found to be relevant to sars and influenza pathogenesis. conclusion pathways potentially affected by or affecting sars-cov- infection were identified in underlying medical conditions likely to confer susceptibility and/or severity to covid- . our findings have implications in covid- treatment development. keywords: sars-cov- , covid- , comorbidity, susceptibility, severity visualization of protein-protein interaction networks was completed using stringv . [ ] program by testing different confidence levels to identify ontologies of biological significance for the significant pathways associated with comorbidities. possible comorbidity significant associated gene sets/pathways were checked for quality control by generating quantile-quantile (q-q) plots using observed quantiles and residual z-scores of genes within the gene set, based on the magmav . b publicly available rv . . script (posthoc_qc_ a.r) [ , ] . ensembl's variant effect predictor program (vep) [ ] was used to analyze magmav . b annotation files for each gene set associated with comorbidities [ ] . magmav . b annotation files were converted into vep format using a bash script. all converted annotation files were uploaded into vep online tool separately. vep summary statistics and analysis tables were downloaded for the comorbidities' associated genes and pathways found significant by magmav . b. corresponding tables were merged [ , ] containing annotated gene symbols and entrez gene identifiers for all human genes were used to retrieve missing gene identification [ ] . these tabular (.csv) files were merged and loaded into rv . . . entrez gene ids were matched to gene symbols from vep analysis files to identify affymetrix gene symbols. genes and their corresponding entrez id's were then matched to significant genes' entrez ids found through combined magmav . b -string analysis. all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org / . was used to test the top human mrna gene expressions for each comorbidity based on available human data using ncbi geo[ ] , by only including comorbidities that had significant pathways identified by magmav . b and vep string analyses. human mrna expression datasets comparing disease group to healthy controls since were searched. if no datasets were available post- the latest dataset was downloaded using characteristics described for prior datasets. for diseases with no publicly available datasets comparing healthy controls to disease type, the newest, most relevant dataset was used. tissue types used for analysis included: (i) peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs), (ii) cancer tissues, (iii) adipose tissue, (iv) pulmonary tissue, (v) post-mortem brain tissue, (vi) cardiovascular tissue, and (vii) blood stem cells. for each comorbidity, human mrna gene expression data corresponding to average log-fold change (alfc) were formatted for clustering of genes identified by magmav . b and vep and subsequently matched to string protein-protein interactions. gene weights were added manually to account for duplicate genes in the dataset. genes were mean centered and normalized. hierarchical clustering was completed using a similarity metric of manhattan cityblock distance for genes and arrays with average linkage via cluster . v . . clusters were visualized using heatmaps created using javatreeviewv . . r [ ] . clustered groups of genes for magmav . b and vep genes were run separately through genecodisv . online tool [ ] for identification of possible biological processes or pathways involved in viral infection [ ] . google searches including hugo gene symbol and either "influenza" or "sars" [ , ] . risk of bias was assessed according to "cochrane's handbook for systematic reviews of interventions" [ ] . human tissue expression relevant to covid- for genes with direct involvement was validated using ensembl expression atlas [ , ] . genes not generally expressed in central nervous, cardiovascular, or pulmonary systems were removed from the dataset. visualization of protein-protein interaction network of genes directly involved with influenza and sars (caused by sars-cov- ) was completed using stringv . using an interaction score of . [ ] . all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org / . / . / the overall computational analytical design and associated primary results are presented in figure . to conduct generalized gene set analysis, we retrieved publicly available gwas catalog datasets for out of covid- possible comorbidities/underlying medical conditions. the comorbidities were grouped into categories by disease type based on organ most affected (table s ). following our magma analysis (figure : flowchart section a), gene set and reactome gene level analyses yielded pathways representing significant genes (p< . ). these pathways were significant for covid- comorbidities representing disease categories, namely, cancer (n= ); cardiovascular (n= ); neurologic/mental (n= ); respiratory (n= ); skin/musculoskeletal (n= ); autoimmune/endocrine/metabolic (n= ). reactome significant pathways and genes obtained through magmav . b gene-level analysis from enrichment map are shown in tables a and b. using stringv . program with the highest confidence interaction score (cis) of . , processing of the genes yielded a protein-protein interaction network of genes, which was found to be highly significant based on hypergeometric test with benjamini-hochberg correction (p= . x - ) (figure a) . the top kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) pathway, identified by using stringv . , corresponded to epstein-barr virus infection with a false discovery rate of . x - . verification of significant pathways using q-q plots showed a high association between genes and their relative gene ontology defined pathways, since all plots show a distribution of residual z-scores deviating from the diagonal early on. there were no q-q plots with any ambiguous feature. significant genes had high levels of association with each pathway. q-q plots of more than five genes, representing the pathways ontologies "post-translational protein modification", all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org / . / . / "translocation of zap- to immunological synapse", "metabolism" and "cell cycle" and associated possible covid- comorbidities (including asthma), are described in figure s . annotation files were converted for of the comorbidities with gwas catalog datasets available (figure : flowchart section b). of hugo gene symbols extracted from vep, corresponding entrez gene ids were identified using affymetrix human genome annotation file. of these gene ids, were matched with the significant genes identified by magmav . b for the comorbidities with significant pathways ( table ) . of the genes, all were included in a protein-protein interaction network of genes using a low cis in stringv . (figure b) . the top kegg pathway identified using stringv . was htlv- infection with a false discovery rate of . x - using hypergeometric test with benjamini-hochberg correction. geo human mrna expression datasets were retrieved for of comorbidities. a description of geo datasets is presented in table s . using magmav . b identified genes ( figure : flowchart section a), javatreeviewv . . r clustered of cancer types in the heatmap (partial view in figure a , full heatmap in supplementary image). also, interstitial lung disease, multiple sclerosis, asthma, obesity, and heart failure were clustered (figure a) . vep string matched genes (n= ) also clustered of cancer types and clustered interstitial lung disease, multiple sclerosis, asthma, obesity, and heart failure together (figure b ). in both heatmaps nucleoporin (nup ), nucleoporin (nup ), fibroblast growth factor [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . we also identified three genes kpnb , signal transducer and activator of transcription (stat ), and interleukin receptor subunit alpha (il ra) shown to play a significant role in sars [ ] [ ] [ ] . genes identified as being possibly directly associated with influenza and/or sars are shown in table s . string protein-protein interaction network yielded / ( . %) genes involved in influenza and / ( . %) genes involved in sars, using an interaction score of . (figures a and b) . no gwas study was found for sars-cov- infection to identify possible susceptibility genes within the genes. additionally, no studies were found to be at high risk for bias (table s ) . this is the first study conducting generalized gene set analysis on a broad spectrum of possible covid- comorbidities, with the prospect of identifying comorbidity-specific genes that could impact infection by sars-cov- . starting with a list of diseases, our magma pipeline was able to identify significant reactome pathways with a total of significant genes corresponding to comorbidities that might have implications in predicting the severity of sars-cov- infection (figure , table , table s ). of the comorbidities, we were able to validate pathways associated with cardiovascular disease, diabetes, obesity, and pulmonary diseases. cardiovascular diseases identified included heart failure, atherosclerosis, kawasaki's disease, and hypertension. pulmonary diseases included asthma and interstitial lung disease. cancer has been reported as a possible risk factor for covid- [ ] . we were able to identify nine cancers with gwas data and significant associated pathways including acute myeloid leukemia, renal cell cancer, small cell lung cancer, and lung cancer. furthermore, the known covid- comorbidities, hypertension, obesity and diabetes had significant pathways and genes. while q-q plots indicated validity of our findings, caution for interpretation of q-q plots must be used as these plots are normally used for pathways containing many genes. to a certain degree, these allow us to convey a certain level of confidence that there is a true association between gene and pathway [ ] . in our analysis, however, less genes identified allowed us to narrow possible gene targets and pathways. indeed, certain genes identified in our study may have significant biological relevance to infection by sars-cov- . for instance, sialyl all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . transferase st n-acetylgalactosaminide alpha- , -sialyltransferase (st galnac ) was found significant in the post-translational protein modification pathway ( figure s ). another sialyl transferase, st galnac , has been previously investigated as a drug target against infection of smooth airways epithelial cells by influenza virus [ ] . it remains, however, to be determined whether st galnac , generally expressed at high levels in renal cell cancer[ ], plays a significant role in covid- pathogenesis. interestingly, alfc gene expression of st galnac was positive in our analysis for of comorbidities (including renal cell cancer), namely, in tumor, pulmonary, brain, adipose tissues and pbmcs (figure a&b ). stringv . analysis produced significant enrichment for both magmav . b genes and vep matched genes containing snps that had characteristics of deleterious effects ( table ) . therefore, we believe the interactions among genes from significant pathways from magma and matched vep genes are likely not due to chance and that these genes are biologically connected. furthermore, stringv . analyses identified top kegg pathways including, epstein-barr virus pathway (magma genes), and htlv- pathway (vep matched genes). string was able to cluster genes into four functional groups among the magma significant genes: cell regulation and immune response, cell transport and nervous tissue function, protein homeostasis and gene expression, transcriptional regulation and rnamediated silencing (figure a) . additionally, nup , nup , and kpnb clustered tightly together in the cell transport and nervous tissue function group. stringv . analysis of the vep matched genes with a lower confidence interval of . was required to obtain sufficient network connections for interpretation. although network analysis may be subjective and is dependent on established knowledge, it is important to note that the enriched protein-protein interaction p-value was statistically significant. for the vep matched gene stringv . analysis, there were four distinct biological groupings recognized within the mapped network based on the closeness of protein interactions (figure b ). those groupings were (i) antigen specific immune response, (ii) cell division and molecule formation/development, (iii) cell growth, survival, proliferation, motility, and morphology, (iv) and voltage gated ion channel transmembrane proteins. notably, one of the comorbidities with significant associated pathways, breast cancer, contained snps affecting solute carrier family member (slc a ) and solute carrier family member (slc a ) genes. these genes are involved with sodium, calcium, and potassium ion transport and play a role in the malignant progression of breast cancer [ ] . in addition, euchromatic histone lysine methyltransferase all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . epithelial signaling by fibroblast growth factors is required for effective recovery from lung injuries resulting from influenza infection [ ] . our analysis coincides with previous findings linking induced inactivation of fgfr with increased mortality and influenza-induced lung injury [ ] . kpnb (figure a) . furthermore, kpnb is involved in the early stage of influenza virus replication via nuclear trafficking, by way of, nuclear import of viral cdna or viral/host proteins into the host chromosome [ , ] . based on previous studies, the interaction between nup and kpnb has been investigated in relation to nuclear transport [ ] . the degradation of nup in influenza virus a infected cells, such as madin-darby canine kidney ii and human lung epithelial cells, results in an enlargement and widening of nuclear pores [ ] . this disease process allows viral ribonucleoprotein complexes to be exported from the nucleus to the plasma membrane [ ] . additionally, nup has been shown to work in conjunction with nup to mediate nuclear import and export [ ] . therefore, degradation of one or both can prevent the import of signal transducers and activators of transcription, reducing effectiveness of the anti-viral interferon all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint response [ ] . our results support the interactions between these genes and viral respiratory further research is needed to confirm these genes (or associated regulations) as possible drug targets for sars-cov- infection. while there is no shortage of publicly available data, not all diseases have the same level of dedicated research. therefore, not all possible comorbidities had publicly available snp datasets from gwas catalog or human mrna gene expression datasets from ncbi's geo datasets database. this resulted in a large decrease from possible comorbidities to . additionally, we were only able to use of significant comorbidities for geo r analysis and heatmap visualization. another caveat is that geo r mrna expression datasets have been generated through different independent studies using different genomic platforms and analysis pipelines, so that optimal normalization of raw data cannot be implemented. little is still known about covid- pathogenesis, although research on the matter has increased greatly since the beginning of the pandemic. all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org / . / . / dr. jean-luc mougeot and dr. farah bahrani mougeot conceived the study, contributed to the design of the analytical strategy, data interpretation and verification. micaela beckman designed the overall analytical strategy, conducted most computational analyses and data interpretation, and wrote the manuscript draft. chica igba contributed to the design of analytical strategy, conducted analyses and participated into data interpretation. all authors had significant contributions in writing and revisions of main manuscript, tables and figures. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org / . / . / preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org / . / . / ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; activation of apc c and apc c: cdc mediated degradation of mitotic proteins; cyclin b; mitotic proteins; cell cycle proteins; cell cycle protein prior to satisfaction of cell cycle checkpoint; phospho-apc c mediated degradation of cyclin a; phosphorylation and regulation of apc c between g s and early anaphase; e f enabled inhibition of prereplication complex formation; mapk mapk signaling; regulation of mitotic cell cycle; slc-mediated transmembrane transport; transport of inorganic cations anions and amino acids oligopeptides . e- ; . e- ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; axon guidance; cell death signaling via nrage, nrif, and nade; death receptor signaling; developmental biology; g alpha ( ) all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org/ . preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint a list of candidate comorbidities (n= ) possibly associated with increased severity/infectivity of covid- were curated. snps associated with comorbidities with available gwas catalogdata (n= ) were analyzed. multi-marker analysis of genomic annotation (magma) was performed. snps were annotated to genes using ncbi gene reference file (ncbi . .gene.loc). in magmav . b, gene set/pathway analysis was performed for which each snp that was identified, using the "multi-mean=snp-wise" model-generated results, taking into account ethnicities associated with a possible comorbidity. gene-level analysis was completed using reactome pathways retrieved from enrichment map program. stringv . protein-protein interaction program was used to visualize the network of significant genes. quantile-quantile (q-q) plots in rv . . for significant pathways were used for quality control. ncbi-gene expression omnibus (geo) human mrna differential expression datasets were downloaded via geo r for each comorbidity with associated genes/ pathways (n= of ). human mrna expression was visualized with a heatmap of the significant genes using cluster . v . and javatreeviewv . . r . tissue expression relevance to sars and influenza was determined using disgenetv and ensembl expression atlas databases. magmav . b annotation files were converted for ensembl variant effect predictor (vep) format (n= of the gwas datasets). gene symbols (n= ) were extracted for vep analysis from significant comorbidity-associated genes/pathways per magmav . b analysis. entrez gene ids (n= ) were matched to gene symbols using affymetrix gene symbols annotation files (hg-u a/b human genome files). stringv . protein-protein interaction program was used to visualize the network (n= genes). ncbi-gene expression omnibus (geo) human mrna differential expression datasets were downloaded via geo r for each of the comorbidities with associated genes/pathways (n= of ). vep genes were matched to network genes and formatted for cluster . v . . human mrna expression was visualized with a heatmap using average log-fold changes (alfc) in javatreeviewv . . r (i.e., vep identified genes matched to magma identified genes). all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . genes were filtered by removing those with less than % values present, mean centered and normalized. hierarchical clustering was completed using weights for duplicate/synonymous genes with a similarity metric of city-block (manhattan) distance for genes and arrays with average linkage through cluster . v . software. heatmaps were created using javatreeviewv . . r . yellow depicts positive alfc, blue depicts negative alfc, black depicts missing data and values of zero. string protein-protein interactions of magmav . b identified genes with direct involvement with (a) influenza (n= ) and/ or (b) sars (n= ) are shown. level of stringency in stringv . program was set to a medium confidence interaction score (cis) of . in both influenza and sars related molecular networks (a, b), resulting in a cluster of / ( . %) and / ( . %) genes, respectively. all rights reserved. no reuse allowed without permission. preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this this version posted september , . . https://doi.org / . / . / clinical characteristics of coronavirus disease in china world health organization: q&a: influenza and covid- -similarities and differences. www.who.int/emergencies/diseases/novel-coronavirus- /question-and-answershub/q-a-detail/q-a-similarities-and-differences-covid- -and-influenza#:~:text=mortality for covid- ,quality of health care the incubation period of coronavirus disease (covid- ) from publicly reported confirmed cases: estimation and application review of the novel coronavirus (sars-cov- ) based on current evidence evaluation, and treatment of coronavirus (covid- ) coronaviruses pathogenesis, comorbidities and multi-organ damage -a review prevalence of comorbidities and its effects in patients infected with sars-cov- : a systematic review and meta-analysis determinants of severity in cancer patients with covid- illness effect of underlying comorbidities on the infection and severity of covid- in korea: a nationwide case-control study understanding modernday vaccines: what you 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organisms fgfr is required for aec homeostasis and survival after bleomycin-induced lung injury human host factors required for influenza virus replication a host of factors regulating influenza virus replication ms asthma ; ; ; ; ; heart failure tns iv; dgv hypertension lung cancer we thank kathleen sullivan for her editorial expertise in preparation of this manuscript. this work was supported by the atrium health foundation research fund (internal). dcun d agbl inpp f stat a agtrap psmc cd gba ctsc rfwd ppp cb stat cd btrc kcnj mtmr shtn acsl agtpbp elovl ncoa cacnb slc a aqp syne nr c ppkar b iqgap muc mapk trim slc a st galnac cntrl il ra atxn -dqa il r sh b adatms acoxl lpcat myl osbpl cacna d mcm ehmt prkce kif b tap ext ncoa iqgap muc adcy fgfr ngef vac tollip hla-drb pik r slc a ntm kcnd mad l prkca slc a rarb vps tns agtpbp nup lamc nup stat il ra cacnb slc a mapk nr c syne key: cord- -og sg qw authors: howell, gareth j.; holloway, zoe g.; cobbold, christian; monaco, anthony p.; ponnambalam, sreenivasan title: cell biology of membrane trafficking in human disease date: - - journal: int rev cytol doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: og sg qw understanding the molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying membrane traffic pathways is crucial to the treatment and cure of human disease. various human diseases caused by changes in cellular homeostasis arise through a single gene mutation(s) resulting in compromised membrane trafficking. many pathogenic agents such as viruses, bacteria, or parasites have evolved mechanisms to subvert the host cell response to infection, or have hijacked cellular mechanisms to proliferate and ensure pathogen survival. understanding the consequence of genetic mutations or pathogenic infection on membrane traffic has also enabled greater understanding of the interactions between organisms and the surrounding environment. this review focuses on human genetic defects and molecular mechanisms that underlie eukaryote exocytosis and endocytosis and current and future prospects for alleviation of a variety of human diseases. the human cell is a complex network of membranes and protein enclosed in a membrane lipid bilayer. the interactions within and associated with such biomembrane bilayers have profound consequences for the organism as a whole; a single defect in just of the potential - , gene products made by each cell can cause devastating, if not fatal, evects for the whole organism. in addition to this, humans pass genetic information onto their ovspring and, with it, any genetic mutations or polymorphisms. it is believed that at least in people have, or will eventually develop, a disease caused by mutation or variation at the gene level. understanding how genetic mutations increase risk for human disease is critical in our understanding and treatment of the majority of human ailments that are caused by interactions between the organism and the environment. this review focuses on the research undertaken in the past years relating to the molecular mechanisms that underlie membrane traycking within eukaryotic cells. we address mechanisms and factors that control protein progression through the secretory and internalization pathways and highlight key human diseases that illuminate mechanisms of membrane traycking. in addition, current and future strategies for therapeutic intervention in such genetic disorders are considered. common to all eukaryotic cells is the presence of multiple biomembrane lipid bilayer compartments, or organelles, which are maintained by specific protein-protein and protein-lipid interactions. such interactions are maintained within each compartment in spite of continuous traycking of membrane-bound and soluble components to diverent intracellular locations, and for secretion from the cell. in the majority of cases, this transfer of material occurs through vesicular movement: fission, docking, and fusion of membrane bilayer-enclosed intermediates occurs between donor and acceptor compartments (palade, ) . proteins, including membrane-bound receptors, secreted enzymes, and antibodies, begin their journey by entering the early secretory pathway at the endoplasmic reticulum (er). from here they are transported through the golgi apparatus and finally distributed to their final destination such as other intracellular organelles, the plasma membrane, or the extracellular environment. but how does a specific protein ''know'' how to reach a specific cellular destination when hundreds of newly synthesized, diverent molecules require specific transport and targeting? many of these transport intermediates or vesicles, whether derived from the er, other internal organelles, or the plasma membrane, are ''coated'' with unique protein complexes, tethering factors, and regulatory factors that ensure correct targeting to an acceptor compartment. vesicle coat proteins, such as the clathrin or coat protein (cop) complexes, are relatively well studied. such complexes are assembled onto the cytoplasmic face of donor compartments to facilitate the fission of transport intermediates. allied with these coat proteins are diverent molecules that mediate recognition of cytoplasmic motifs in cargo proteins either directly (e.g., transmembrane proteins) or indirectly (e.g., soluble secreted enzymes). the snare hypothesis is central to our understanding of vesicular targeting to intracellular compartments (rothman, ; sollner et al., ) . initially uncovered in a screen for intra-golgi transport docking and fusion regulators, the snare (soluble n-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion attachment protein receptor) proteins have been found to regulate diverent membrane interactions in all eukaryotes via a highly conserved mechanism for membrane traycking based on accessory docking and fusion regulators. snare proteins are present on both the vesicle (vesicular or v-snare) and the acceptor (target or t-snare) and comprise coiled-coil domains that assemble to facilitate vesicle docking and membrane fusion (bennett, ; pelham, ) . in conjunction with snare proteins, small ras-related rab gtpases are implicated in further ensuring the fidelity of vesicle docking and fusion (olkkonen and stenmark, ) . these -to -kda proteins are gtphydrolyzing enzymes that act to recruit diverent proteins or evectors to membranes in a gtp/gdp-regulated manner (collins, ) . rab gtpase activity and protein conformation are regulated by interaction with soluble and membrane-bound proteins; such regulators can also tether vesicles to acceptor membranes and mediate intracellular signaling. a. early secretory pathway the endoplasmic reticulum (er) is the first stage of quality control along the secretory pathway. proteins destined for secretion (e.g., hormones), the plasma membrane (e.g., membrane-bound receptors), or other intracellular membrane compartments such as the lysosome (e.g., lysosomal proteases) emphysema and liver cirrhosis (perlmutter, ) endophillin ii clathrin-coated pit formation leukemia (dreyling et al., ; jones et al., ; narita et al., ; tebar et al., ) alzheimer's disease presenilin presenilin -involved in cleavage and trafficking of amyloid precursor protein to plasma membrane neurodegenerative disorder (uemura et al., ) tau tau -microtubular stability through formation of aggregates autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (adpkd) polycystin- or causes a defect in e-cadherin assembly and basolateral trafficking renal cysts in kidney and other tissues leading to endstage renal failure (charron et al., ) (continued ) autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa rhodopsin inhibited interaction of rhodopsin and arf , leading to inhibited post-golgi delivery to rod outer segment narrowing of visual fields, night blindness (deretic et al., ) autosomal dominant ventricular tachycardia cardiac arrhythmia, hyperthermia (yano et al., ) autosomal recessive primary hyperoxaluria mistargeting of peroxisomal proteins to mitochondria kidney disease (danpure, ) ab-lipoproteinaemia mtp er retention thus preventing apob secretion vascular disease (sharp et al., ) batten's disease cln -cln group of gene products implicated in regulating the processing and targeting of lysosomal and synaptic proteins neurological disease (pearce, ) breast cancer caveolin- deletion or dominant negative mutation of caveolin- promotes tumor progression breast cancer (bouras et al., ; williams and lisanti, ) (hayasaka et al., ; matsuyama et al., ) chediak-higashi syndrome (chs) chs /lyst lyst involved in regulation of protein secretion from lysosomes -enlarged lysosomes partial albinism, recurrent bacterial infections, impaired chemotaxis and abnormal natural killer cell function (shiflett et al., ; ward et al., ) choroideremia (chm) rab escort protein (rep ) rab a remains cytosolic due to defective geranylgeranyl modification in chm lymphoblasts x-linked form of retinal degeneration combined factors v and viii deficiency ergic- /p c-type lectin er retention and defective secretion of factors v and viii blood disease congenital finnish nephritic syndrome nephrin (nphs ), podocin (nphs ) er retention kidney inflammation (kestila et al., ; kramer -zucker et al., ) pancreatic atp-sensitive potassium channel (k-atp) er or golgi retention of k-atp due to mutations in its sulfonylurea- (sur ) subunit excess insulin leading to hypoglycaemia (dunne et al., ; yan et al., ) congenital hypothyroid goiter thyroglobulin er storage disease. thyroglobulin is misfolded and accumulates in er constipation, large tongue, swelling around the eyes, failure to suckle, mental retardation (hishinuma et al., ; kim and arvan, ) (fan et al., ; garman and garboczi, ) familial hemophagocytic lymphoschistiocytosis (fhl) perforin -defective ctl (cytotoxic t lymphocytes) mediated killing immunodeficiency (feldmann et al., ; stepp et al., ) munc (hogg et al ., ; mathew et al., ) three forms of menkes disease can arise from diverent mutations in the atp a gene: premature stop codons, deletions, or splicing defects. these can prevent atp a function and/or traycking. classical menkes disease is the most common and fatality usually results by the age of years. in two other nonfatal forms of menkes, mild and occipital horn syndrome, atp a maintains the ability to transport copper ions across intracellular membranes, although traycking to the plasma membrane can be compromised (la fontaine et al., ) . atp a is ubiquitously expressed and is the major copper transporter in cells of the intestine, kidney, and brain. in the liver, however, the major copper transporter is the wilson's disease protein, atp b (bull et al., ) . this second p-type atpase shares strong similarity with atp a and also translocates copper ions across membranes. although these gene products share functional similarities, mutations in atp b result in copper accumulation in the liver and brain. familial hypercholesterolemia is an autosomal dominantly inherited disease caused by mutations in the low-density lipoprotein receptor (ldlr), leading to premature atherosclerosis and coronary heart disease. in healthy individuals, the ldlr is expressed on the surface of cells, where it binds circulating ldl particles and promotes uptake and cellular metabolism of its constituents, which includes cholesterol. in these patients, ldlr alleles display amino acid substitutions (cassanelli et al., ; jensen et al., ) , truncations (lehrm an et al ., ) , or mis sense mutat ions ( leiter sdorf et al ., ) , which can result in er retention and degradation. the point mutation at residue of the insulin receptor compromises the ability of the receptor to dimerize correctly within the er, therefore leading to er retention. decreased plasma membrane levels of insulin receptor cause inhibited insulin binding after stimulus by a meal, and subsequent elevations in plasma glucose levels. this then leads to type ii diabetes mellitus (kadowaki et al., ) . a number of human diseases can induce the er stress response. here, the mutant protein is retained within the er, resulting in either dilation of the organelle, such as in congenital hyperthyroidism (medeiros-neto et al., ) and hypofibrinogenemia (callea et al., ) , or chronic er stress as is the case for hereditary emphysema (perlmutter, ) . in pelizaeus-merzbacher disease, an x-linked leukodystrophy disease, er accumulation of proteolipid protein (plp) results in oligodendrocyte apoptosis (gow et al., ) and the subsequent disruption of white matter formation in the brain observed in humans and mouse models. plp is a central nervous system protein that is the major component of myelin and, when expressed in cultured fibroblasts, is localized to the plasma membrane (gow et al., ) . the link between plp and the er stress response provides a tool for elucidating the cellular response to misfolded protein accumulation . accumulation of proteins within the er, leading to blockage of protein secretion, is an unwanted cellular property and mechanisms have evolved to overcome such events. this disposal of unwanted proteins is termed er-associated degradation (erad) (fig. ) . as recently as the early s, it was still believed that aberrant proteins were degraded within the er (fra and sitia, ) ; however, current models suggest that aberrant er-retained proteins actually undergo retrotranslocation and subsequent degradation in the cytoplasm. retrotranslocation has been proposed to occur through the same ''pore'' used to translocate nascent proteins into the er lumen during translation, namely the sec translocon (biederer et al., ; rö misch, ) . various yeast and mammalian proteins have been shown to be retrotranslocated from the er and degraded within the cytoplasm in a proteasomedependent manner, including the budding yeast proteins carboxypeptidase y, and a mutant pro-a-factor. when a mammalian protein such as cftr is expressed in budding yeast, it matures relatively slowly within the yeast er, leading to retrotranslocation to the cytoplasm and degradation (ward et al., ) . a further example is that of a -antitrypsin deficiency. a -antitrypsin is responsible for inactivating the enzyme elastase produced by lung neutrophils. in this inherited disease, a mutated form of a -antitrypsin is retrotranslocated and degraded in proteasomes, leading to retention of active elastase in lung tissues and thus is a cause of lung emphysema (rutishauser and spiess, ) . however, retrotranslocation and proteasomal degradation may not be functionally coupled processes. pharmacological inhibitors that cause proteasome inactivation lead to egress of molecules such as mhc class i (wiertz et al., a,b) , ribophorin (de virgilio et al., ) , and carboxypeptidase y (biederer et al., ) from the er to the cell cytoplasm. in contrast, inhibition of protein ubiquitination results in the retention of such molecules within the er. schmitz et al. ( ) suggest that two distinct proteasome-regulated pathways mediate degradation of retrotranslocated b-amyloid precursor protein. interestingly, endocytosed toxins that target key cytosolic factors appear to use the erad pathway to move out of the er and into the cytosol (deeks et al., ; hazes and read, ) . cholera and ricin toxins are routed from the cell surface through the golgi apparatus and to the er before being retrotranslocated into the cell cytosol. it is believed that the unusually low lysine content of these protein toxins prevents subsequent er-associated ubiquitination for degradation by the cytosolic proteasome. protein cargo is shuttled between the er and golgi within vesicular intermediates or -nm-diameter spherical vesicles containing coat protein complexes fig. quality control of protein assembly within the endoplasmic reticulum. proteins destined for the secretory pathway (this example shows a transmembrane protein) are cotranslationally translocated from the ribosome into the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (er) through a portal referred to as the sec translocon. as the newly synthesized protein enters the er, quality control mechanisms in the form of protein chaperones bind to it and fold it to its correct conformation. further processing occurs through interactions with other chaperones before the successfully folded protein is loaded into copii-coated vesicles and shuttled from the er to the golgi apparatus. however, if the protein carries a mutation that causes it to take on an aberrant conformation the er chaperones will trigger a misfolded protein response. this has two outcomes: either the chaperones will remain bound to the misfolded protein, preventing its escape from the organelle (er retention), or the protein will be ubiquitinated and retrotranslocated through the sec complex for proteasomal degradation in the cell cytoplasm. a number of human genetic diseases are a result of key proteins failing to trayc through the secretory pathway and as a consequence are retained or degraded in this manner. such as copi or copii. initially discovered in mammals and yeast (kaiser and schekman, ; malhotra et al., ; novick et al., ; rothman and wieland, ) , cop complexes are required for the formation of vesicles at the er, er-golgi intermediate compartment (ergic), and golgi apparatus. cop recruitment to membranes facilitates the specific capture, packaging, transport, and delivery of membrane-bound and soluble protein cargo to an acceptor compartment. copii recruitment to sites on the smooth er initiates the formation of anterograde (forward) transport vesicles. these copii vesicles move from the er to the ergic, or vesicular tubular clusters (vtcs). from here, copi-coated vesicles are thought to mediate the continued anterograde movement from the ergic to the cis face of the golgi apparatus (scales et al., ) . the sar p gtpase regulates copii vesicle formation via interaction with the sec p guanine exchange factor (gef). sec p-mediated activation of sar p to a gtp-bound form leads to recruitment of the sec p-sec p heterodimer to membranes; this also initiates protein cargo selection within the er and recruitment of v-snares such as bet p and bos p. binding of sec p-sec p mediates further recruitment of the sec p-sec p complex. this copii complex then acts as a protein scavold that causes deformation of the membrane, resulting in vesicular fission, with anterograde movement of protein cargo-containing copii vesicles to the ergic. copii docking at an acceptor compartment is thought to trigger sec p function, causing a conformational change in sar p and gtp hydrolysis and dissociation or uncoating of the copii complex. thus copii vesicle docking and fusion with an acceptor compartment are mediated by cognate v-snare/ t-snare interactions (kirchhausen, ; kuehn et al., ; matsuoka et al., ; tang et al., ) . a severe hereditary bleeding disorder called combined deficiency of factor v factor viii (f f d) highlights the functional importance of traycking between the er and ergic. some f f d patients are deficient in the ergic-localized ergic- (lman ) protein and display defective secretion of the factor v and viii clotting factors. ergic- is a mannosebinding lectin that acts as a ''cargo receptor'' and recycles between the er and ergic (neerman-arbez et al., ; . however, % of f f d patients show normal levels of ergic- /lman , but are deficient in an associated protein, mcfd , another ergic resident that interacts with ergic- /lman in a calcium-dependent manner . small intestinal cells called enterocytes absorb fats and fat-soluble vitamins from food in the form of fatty acids and monoglycerides. the fats enter the lumenal surface of absorptive enterocytes by free divusion across their membranes, and emerge from the basolateral surface as particulate structures referred to as chylomicrons. formation of chylomicrons occurs within the er and golgi apparatus by vesicular transport before being traycked from the golgi to the plasma membrane. chylomicron retention disease (cmrd), anderson disease, and a neuromuscular disorder, cmrd associated with marinesco-sjö gren syndrome (cmrd-mss) , are examples of inherited diseases that result in compromised fat absorption, low blood cholesterol, and severely depleted blood chylomicron levels. jones et al. ( ) identified eight mutations in the sar p gene product and copii component associated with these lipid absorption diseases, thus strongly implicating a role for the copii vesicular transport system in the movement of dietary fats from the intestine to the circulating bloodstream. copii mediates anterograde trayc from the er to the golgi apparatus; however, copi vesicles appear to function primarily in the retrograde (backward) transfer of proteins from the golgi and ergic back to the er. this retrograde trayc is necessary for recovering escaped er resident proteins, coat and snare proteins that have arrived at the ergic and golgi from copii vesicles, or glycosylation enzymes that have been incorrectly modified (duden, ; lee et al., ) . the golgi-associated copi coatomer is a complex of seven polypeptides: a-, b-, b -, g-, d-, e-, and z-cop gene products, which interact with the donor membrane to form copi vesicles. vesicle formation is triggered by the gtpase adp-ribosylation factor (arf ), which recruits copi coatomer to the donor membrane. transmembrane proteins containing cytoplasmic lysine-based motifs such as kkxx or kxkxx, or soluble proteins containing the c-terminal kdel motif, are recycled by copi-coated vesicles from the golgi apparatus back to the er. the kdel motif, present in soluble er chaperones such as bip and protein disulfide isomerase, is recognized by the membrane-bound kdel receptor (majoul et al., ) . in both cases, cytoplasmic motifs in these transmembrane proteins are recognized and bound by copi coatomer, promoting inclusion into vesicles destined for the er. actin microfilaments are also involved in this retrograde transport step (valderrama et al., ) . this golgi-er step is regulated by the gtpase cdc and n-wasp protein (luna et al., ) , factors previously implicated in actin-linked processes at the plasma membrane. live imaging of cells expressing an engineered fluorescent and temperaturesensitive vesicular stomatitis virus g-glycoprotein (ts vsvg) demonstrated sequential action of copii-and copi-coated vesicles (scales et al., ) . vsvg accumulated in structures close to the er that contained intermediate compartment resident proteins. these structures then matured into vesicles that contained copi proteins. stephens et al. ( ) showed that this ''segregation'' between copii and copi vesicles occurred at a location in close proximity to exit sites on er membranes. a cop-independent mechanism has also been implicated in retrograde trayc between the golgi apparatus and the er. the rab gtpase is implicated in regulating the movement of bacterial shiga toxin b fragment (stb) via a retrograde step from the golgi apparatus to the er. expression of a dominant-negative gdp-bound form of rab inhibited stb retrograde movement, whereas copi transport was unavected (white et al., ) . the golgi apparatus is composed of flattened cisternae and membrane compartments that are closely juxtaposed in a stack-like appearance. in mammalian cells these stacks are positioned end-to-end, forming a ribbonlike structure near the nucleus (barr and warren, ) . the golgi apparatus is a highly dynamic organelle sited at the hub of the secretory pathway with key processing and sorting functions. the golgi is a polarized structure with proteins and lipids from the er received at the cis side, followed by the medial and trans subcompartments, where further glycosylation modifications occur; the trans-golgi network (tgn) is the final subcompartment where sorting and packaging events take place. the golgi apparatus also sorts proteins and lipids bound on a retrograde pathway from the cis-golgi back to the er. in addition, proteins can also return to the tgn from the endomembrane/lysosomal system (fig. ) . controversy exists regarding the mechanism for anterograde movement of cargo proteins within the golgi apparatus. the golgi apparatus contains secretory proteins that can vary in physical size, from relatively small polypeptides to large, bulky multisubunit complexes; all need to reach the tgn for final sorting into transport intermediates. there are also resident glycosylation enzymes that have spatially restricted functions within the golgi, that is, enzymes that function within specific subcompartments to ensure the correct addition or trimming of n-and o-linked sugars on secreted proteins as they progress through the pathway. this raises a key question: how do protein and lipid cargo move through the golgi apparatus while resident enzymes retain their localization? we know that many golgi enzymes contain transmembrane golgi localization signals that mediate targeting to a specific compartment (munro, ) . two models have been proposed: the cisternal maturation model and the vesicular transport model (elsner et al., ; storrie et al., ) . briefly, the cisternal maturation model suggests that large proteins or aggregates remain within a single golgi cisterna, which matures through the retrograde transfer of resident enzymes via copi vesicles. in contrast, the vesicular transport model proposes that newly synthesized protein is traycked from cisterna to cisterna via copi-coated vesicles that sequentially bud ov membranes and fuse with the next subcompartment. in either case, copi-coated vesicles play a central role in intra-golgi the secretory pathway and vesicular traycking. protein enters the secretory pathway at the endoplasmic reticulum (er) and is traycked in copii-coated vesicular structures to the intermediate compartment (ergic/vtc), from which copi-coated vesicles carry it to the cis face of the golgi. cargo protein (c) continues along the secretory pathway through the golgi apparatus to the trans-golgi network (tgn). retention signals in er resident proteins (r) ensure they undergo retrograde traycking from the golgi in copi vesicles. retrograde transport of transport. a number of snare proteins, such as membrin, rbet , gs , and syntaxin- , have also been localized to the golgi apparatus and are required for intra-golgi transport and homeostasis (nichols and pelham, ) . golgi-tethering molecules called golgins and golgi reassembly stacking proteins (grasps) belong to a family of regulatory factors involved in golgi maintenance and vesicular transport. the reader is pointed to an indepth review that covers golgins in more detail (short et al., ) . in brief, the golgins can be anchored to golgi membranes through various mechanisms and contain characteristic coiled-coil domains that extend from the membranes as a rod-like structure (burkhard et al., ) . golgins such as giantin and golgin- are securely anchored to the membrane via a transmembrane domain near their c terminus. electrostatic or ionic interactions mediate the attachment of other golgins to membranes. for example, proteins of the grasp family (grasp and grasp ) bind to gm and golgin- to recruit these factors to the cis and medial golgi membranes, respectively. moreover, a large number of golgins are recruited to membranes via interactions with the rab, arf, and arl (arf-like) gtpases. vesicular and cis-golgi membrane recruitment of golgin p is regulated by rab , whereas membrane attachment of yeast golgin rud p is regulated by arf p. golgin- binds to membranes by interaction with arl p, a member of a new class of arf-like gtpases termed arls (short et al., ) . interestingly, autoantibodies directed against giantin, golgin- , golgin- , gm , and golgin- golgins and grasps are present in patients with autoimmune conditions such as sjö gren's syndrome and systemic lupus erythematosus. in sjö gren's syndrome, moisture-producing glands are targeted by the autoimmune response, resulting in dry eyes and mouth (lichtenfeld et al., ) . systemic lupus erythematosus is a chronic rheumatic condition that avects joints and muscles, causing skin rash and kidney problems. sjö gren's syndrome patients can also simultaneously display both rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus. golgi biogenesis requires golgin function at diverent stages during cell division. mammalian p is crucial for maintenance of the stacked nature of the golgi cisternae (puthenveedu and linstedt, ) . during mitosis, the golgi stack disperses into clustered vesicles. these vesicles then fuse in the daughter cells to form new cisternae, alignment and stacking of which result in the formation of a fully functional organelle. grasp tethers have been proposed to hold cisternae in close proximity through interactions with p and gm (shorter and warren, ) . the golgin p is also involved in tethering copi vesicles to golgi membranes (sonnichsen et al., ) and may be needed for snare complex assembly (shorter et al., ) . the budding yeast p homolog (uso p) tethers copii-coated vesicles to golgi membranes during anterograde transport from er exit sites to the cis-golgi (barlowe, ; cao et al., ; sapperstein et al., ) . mammalian p is also essential for the tethering of transport vesicles to the cis-golgi (alvarez et al., ) and during intra-golgi transport (seemann et al., ; waters et al., ) . golgins such as golgin- are implicated in the regulation of golgi structure and the formation of the golgi ribbon (diao et al., ) . golgin- may function as a tethering molecule in retrograde trayc from the endosome to the tgn (lu et al., ) . moreover golgins are also implicated as tethering components between the cytoskeleton and the golgi apparatus (short et al., ) . the trans-golgi network (tgn) is the final golgi subcompartment where secreted proteins are sorted, packaged, and directed to their final destination. traycking from the tgn can occur in either a constitutive or regulated manner. constitutive transport is the continuous release of protein from the trans-golgi network. regulated secretion occurs in response to extracellular stimuli such as secretagogues, metal ions, hormones, or growth factors, which trigger the docking and fusion of secretory granules or vesicles with the plasma membrane. various mechanisms control the traycking of proteins from the tgn by the formation and delivery of membrane-derived transport vesicles to the plasma membrane, endosomes, or lysosomal structures (ponnambalam and baldwin, ) . the expression of inactive (dominant-negative) protein kinase d isoforms in tumor lines (liljedahl et al., ) , polarized canine kidney cells (yeaman et al., ) , and mouse fibroblasts (prigozhina and waterman-storer, ) has been shown to inhibit vesicle fission (release) from the tgn. vesicle release is modulated by this family of kinases in response to cellular diacylglycerol (baron and malhotra, ) and binding to an as yet unknown evector protein on the cytoplasmic face of the tgn (van lint et al., ) . in addition, the cdc gtpase is linked to actin remodeling and has been shown to inhibit the exit of basolateral targeted proteins in polarized cells (kroschewski et al., ; musch et al., ) and copper-regulated protein transport (cobbold et al., ) . copper is an essential element and cofactor required for functionality of many secreted enzymes (cuproenzymes). at steady state, atp a (menkes howell et al. disease copper transporter; section iii.a. ) resides in the tgn, where it provides newly synthesized cuproenzymes such as lysyl oxidase with copper ions as they traverse the secretory pathway. when intracellular copper ion levels rise, atp a responds to this environmental danger by redistributing to the plasma membrane in a cdc -regulated manner (cobbold et al., ) . here, atp a acts as a copper ezux pump to remove copper ions from the cytoplasm to maintain homeostatic function and prevent toxicity. when copper levels are reduced, atp a recycles back to the tgn. this endocytic internalization and sorting event is independent of both clathrin and caveolae (cobbold et al., ) , although relying on a cytoplasmic dileucine motif present in the atp a c-terminus petris and mercer, ) . dent's disease, an x-linked kidney disorder that presents with hypercalciuria, nephrocalcinosis (kidney stone formation), and progressive renal failure, is caused by missense, nonsense, and deletion mutations within the endosomal clc- voltage-gated chloride channel. clc- is a member of a large family of voltage-gated chloride channels that have a diverse array of cellular functions including membrane excitability, transepithelial ion transport, and cell volume regulation (thakker, ) . when expressed in xenopus oocytes, a number of missense mutations in the clc- gene localized the channel to the golgi apparatus and showed reduced conductance and significantly reduced plasma membrane (pm) localization (ludwig et al., ) . similarly, expression of mutant clc- alleles in cultured cells revealed an approximate -fold increase in golgi retention (carr et al., ) . a. receptor-mediated endocytosis clathrin-coated vesicles (ccvs) are a route for protein internalization conserved from yeast to humans. roth and porter ( ) first observed this process in mosquito oocytes and these vesicles have subsequently become one of the best characterized membrane transport steps in eukaryotes. clathrin is one of the principal proteins involved in this transport step and, in combination with more than clathrin-associated factors, this unique structural component forms transport vesicles on the cytoplasmic face of the tgn, endosomes, and the plasma membrane. clathrin-coated vesicles bud from their donor membranes and are directed to target membranes by associated proteins and factors. this highly conserved -kda clathrin complex comprises heavy ( kda) and light ( kda) chain proteins that are assembled into a three-legged structure called a triskelion. triskelions can be polymerized by accessory factors into striking lattice-like ''cages'' comprising pentagons and hexagons, resembling a soccer ball structure or buckminsterfullerene. clathrin cages are - nm in diameter; significantly larger than copi or copii vesicles (ccvs). clathrin-coated vesicles are believed to assemble through a sequence of events that can be designated as activation, cargo capture, coat assembly, scission, movement, and vesicle uncoating (kirchhausen, ) . members of a class of clathrin-associated factor termed adaptor protein (ap) complexes are recruited to donor membranes through interactions with a docking complex, which then further interacts with motifs within the cytoplasmic tail of cargo proteins, resulting in ''cargo capture.'' this leads to clathrin cage assembly and the concomitant polymerization of the clathrin triskelion and resultant deformation of the donor membrane. scission, or vesicle release from the plasma membrane, is believed to occur through the action of the gtpase dynamin and other accessory proteins, such as amphiphysin (wigge et al., ) . in the fruit fly drosophila melanogaster, a dynamin gene mutation (shibire) causes temperature-sensitive paralysis. this is likely due to a block in the endocytic uptake of synaptic vesicle proteins at the plasma membrane, leading to a block in recycling and reformation of competent synaptic vesicles at nerve terminals (chen et al., ; koenig and ikeda, ; kosaka and ikeda, ; van der bliek and meyerowitz, ) . the expression of a dominant-negative gdp-bound dynamin mutant, k a, results in compromised ccv formation (herskovits et al., ; van der bliek et al., ) and inhibition of clathrin-mediated internalization of the glucose transporter glut (al-hasani et al., ) , human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) (daecke et al., ) , and influenza virus (roy et al., ) . the scission function of dynamin is assisted by specific lipid-modifying enzymes such as endophilin, synaptojanin, and phospholipase d (bi et al., ; havner et al., ; ringstad et al., ; schmidt et al., ; woscholski et al., ) . finally, ccv uncoating at the target membrane occurs through the actions of the heat shock protein hsc (schlossman et al., ) and auxilin (ungewickell et al., ) . sorting of proteins from donor to target membranes involves the recognition of cytoplasmic sequences in membrane proteins by clathrin-associated ap complexes. four adaptor protein complexes (ap -ap ), each comprising four diverent subunits, have been identified (robinson, ) . the ap complex is involved in clathrin-coated vesicle formation at the tgn for transport to late endosomes; evidence has also implicated a role for this complex in a tgn-to-plasma membrane step (folsch et al., ) . ap is the best-studied of the four complexes and mediates internalization of transmembrane howell et al. receptors at the plasma membrane via clathrin-coated vesicles. the ap complex is involved in traycking from early endosomes to either late endosomes or lysosome-related organelles such as melanosomes, platelet-dense bodies, and antigen-processing compartments. finally, the ap complex was the last to be cloned (dell'angelica et al., a; hirst et al., ; ) . in contrast to ap -ap , ap does not possess the b ''ear'' domain (see below), which allows interaction with clathrin and other cytosolic factors such as eps and auxilin (lundmark and carlsson, ) . by electron microscopy, ap has been localized to vesicles at the tgn, plasma membrane, and early endosomes, although there is debate as to whether these vesicles are clathrin-coated (barois and bakke, ; hirst et al., ) . interestingly, ap and ap may function independently of clathrin (hirst et al., ; vowels and payne, ) , suggesting the existence of another, as yet unidentified, coat protein that is analogous to clathrin. all four ap complexes comprise two large -kda subunits: a b subunit (b -b ) plus a g (ap ), a (ap ), d (ap ), or e (ap ) subunit. in addition, each ap complex contains a -kda subunit (m -m ) and a small -kda subunit (s -s ). ap , - , and - contain two carboxyl ''ear'' domains connected to the head of each large -kda subunit by a flexible hinge of approximately - residues. importantly, the ear domain of the b subunit and the hinge domains of the g and a subunits have been shown to bind clathrin (goodman and keen, ; morgan et al., ; owen et al., ) , and consensus sequences in the hinge domains of b and b have clathrin-binding properties (dell'angelica et al., ) . the b and m subunits of the ap complex interact with motifs present in the cytoplasmic domains of transmembrane proteins to mediate cargo recruitment into clathrin-coated vesicles. such motifs include npxy, yxxØ, and dileucine-based sequences (Ø represents a bulky hydrophobic amino acid). one such motif, npxy, is present in key cellular receptors such as low density lipoprotein receptor (ldlr), epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr or erb ), and insulin receptor, and mediates endocytosis and sorting. importantly, the jd mutation (y c) in ldlr lies within this key motif and causes familial hypercholesterolemia (knoblauch et al., ) . the second tyrosinebased motif, yxxØ, mediates plasma membrane internalization, lysosomal targeting, and basolateral targeting of cargo. this motif is found in lysosomal residents such as lamp- and - , cd , the recycling transferrin receptor (tfr), and tgn-associated recycling membrane proteins, furin and tgn . di-leucine motifs present on transmembrane transporters such as glut (glucose transporter), atp a, and mannose- -phosphate receptors (m pr) can fall into two categories: [de]xxx[li] and dxxll related motifs. the [de]xxx[li] motif is associated with proteins internalized from the plasma membrane and targeted to lysosomes, while dxxll motif is found in transmembrane proteins that shuttle between the tgn and endosomal system (bonifacino and traub, ) . another class of clathrin-associated factor is the golgi-localized, g-earcontaining, arf-binding proteins (ggas) found on the tgn and postulated to interact with ap to mediate transport of m pr (section v.b) to endosomes (doray et al., ) . ggas can act as multifunctional adaptors that link transmembrane proteins, arf gtpases, clathrin and accessory proteins at sites of ccv formation (robinson and bonifacino, ) . the disease oculocerebrorenal syndrome of lowe (ocrl) is an x-linked disorder caused by mutations in the ocrl gene (lowe, ) . the gene product is an inositol -phosphatase that catalyzes the removal of the phosphate from this position on the inositol moiety. the preferred ocrl substrate is pi( , )p , a phosphoinositide shown to be important in endocytosis because of its central role in recruiting accessory proteins to ccvs (padron et al., ) . ocrl has been localized to clathrin-coated vesicles associated with endosomal and tgn membranes (choudhury et al., ) . this is not surprising as ocrl interacts with clathrin and promotes its assembly into clathrin lattices and cages (choudhury et al., ; ungewickell et al., ) . ocrl also interacts with the rac gtpase that regulates actin dynamics, possibly via a gtpase activation domain to accelerate gtp hydrolysis (faucherre et al., ) . although the exact function of ocrl is still unclear, the disease phenotype hints to ocrl function in membrane traycking. ocrl mutations can cause loss of protein expression and phosphatase activity. rnai-mediated inhibition of ocrl expression in cultured human cells results in partial redistribution of a cation-independent mannose- -phosphate receptor and a tgn recycling protein (tgn ) to early endosomes (choudhury et al., ) . this suggests that loss of ocrl perturbs endosome-to-tgn vesicle transport, suggesting a functional requirement for this membrane trayc step. it is possible that ocrl plays a role in anterograde traycking from the tgn-to-endosomes as well, since ocrl is abundantly present on tgn-associated clathrin buds destined for the endocytic pathway. ocrl disease symptoms include congenital cataracts, mental retardation, and renal tubular dysfunction (lowe et al., ) . renal failure in ocrl patients is probably partly caused by defects in solute and protein readsorption in kidney proximal tubules. this is likely due to missorting of megalin and cubilin, cell surface receptors involved in kidney solute uptake. in ocrl patients plasma membrane shedding of these receptors is reduced (norden et al., ) , indicating ocrl regulation of either receptor traycking from the tgn-to-plasma membrane or recycling from plasma membrane-to-tgn. paraneoplastic stiv-person syndrome (sps) is a neurological autoimmune disease characterized by severe muscle stivness and spasms, and often has secondary symptoms including diabetes, epilepsy, and breast cancer. autoantibodies are produced against the clathrin-associated regulator, amphiphysin i (de camilli et al., ) , a protein shown to bind dynamin in nerve terminals (david et al., ) and which is implicated in regulating the endocytosis of neuronal synaptic vesicle components (burns, ) . in support of this hypothesis, sommer et al. ( ) showed that sps-like symptoms could be triggered in rats injected with anti-amphiphysin antibodies from a human sps patient. genetic translocations leading to the formation of hybrid clathrin-accessory proteins can lead to other forms of acute myeloid leukemia, lymphoblastic leukemia and acute megakaryoblastic leukemia (dreyling et al., ; jones et al., ; narita et al., ; tebar et al., ) . in these diseases, an aberrant hybrid protein consisting of the putative transcription factor af and the clathrin accessory protein calm (clathrin assembly lymphoid myeloid leukemia protein) is formed because of a partial inversion of the af gene on chromosome (salmon-nguyen et al., ) . finally, in hermansky-pudlak syndrome (hps) type , a condition that results in partial albinism and prolonged bleeding, mutations have been found in the b a gene that encodes a subunit of the ap adaptor complex (dell'angelica et al., b) . hps is discussed in more detail in section v.c. originally identified more than years ago (palade, ; yamada, ) , caveolae are flask-shaped invaginations of approximately - nm in diameter at the plasma membrane. these plasma membrane profiles are related to lipid rafts and contain unique mixtures of gpi-anchored proteins, transmembrane proteins, signaling factors and lipids, such as cholesterol. caveolae are believed to mediate the uptake of small solutes, regulate protein traycking (hommelgaard et al., ; tagawa et al., ) , transcytosis (transport across endothelial cells) (simionescu et al., ) , signal transduction (insel et al., ; lisanti et al., ; ostrom and insel, ) and cholesterol homeostasis (fielding and fielding, ) . however, their exact role in the internalization of membrane proteins and soluble protein ligands is controversial. caveolin- , also known as vip , is a structural component essential for the formation and stability of caveolae (kurzchalia et al., ; rothberg et al., ) . of the three members of the caveolin gene family (caveolin- , - , and - ) tang et al., ) , caveolin- and - are abundant in a wide variety of cell types including endothelial cells, adipocytes, alveolar type i pneumocytes, and smooth muscle cells (williams and lisanti, ) , whereas caveolin- is a muscle-specific isoform expressed in striated muscle cells such as cardiac and skeletal myocytes (cohen et al., ; tang et al., ) . caveolin- and - are both able to induce formation of caveolae at the plasma membrane (galbiati et al., ; li et al., ) . however, caveolin- requires the presence of caveolin- for expression, membrane localization, and formation of caveolae (razani et al., ) . caveolae are absent from cells that lack caveolin- but can be induced by ectopic expression of the gene (fra et al., ) . caveolins adopt a hairpinlike structure that inserts into the membrane such that the n and c termini are cytoplasmic. caveolins can polymerize to form a striated coat surrounding an invagination site . caveolin- can bind cholesterol (murata et al., ) , which is enriched within both caveolae and lipid rafts (sargiacomo et al., ) ; this may explain why caveolae have been considered a subset of lipid rafts. however, caveolae and lipid rafts are considered to be independent entities as some proteins can be found in one but not the other (liu et al., ) . certain ligands can internalize via a lipid raftdependent but clathrin-independent mechanism in cells that lack caveolae (lamaze et al., ) . a large pool of the plasma membrane caveolar vesicles cluster into dense grape-like structures where individual caveolae appear stacked on top of each another (thomsen et al., ) . these structures are intimately associated with the actin cytoskeleton (stahlhut and van deurs, ) ; caveolaassociated proteins are also implicated in regulating plasma membrane dynamics and cellular movement. a small pool of ''transport-competent'' caveolar vesicles may undergo short-range constitutive fusion and budding cycles just under the plasma membrane . caveolae and caveolins can also be detected at the tgn (dupree et al., ; kurzchalia et al., ) and may form stable ''platforms'' for the movement of proteins and lipids from the tgn to the plasma membrane (tagawa et al., ) . the caveolar pathway can be hijacked and used by pathogens or toxins to gain entry into the cell. viruses such as polyomavirus, echovirus , and simian virus (sv ) use caveolae to internalize viral particles. these viruses cluster lipid rafts and sequester them into caveolae through interactions with raft components such as integrins and glycosphingolipids ; in the case of sv , the virus binds to the raft component ganglioside gm (tsai et al., ) . tagawa et al. ( ) have shown that sv can trigger the long-range movement of transport-competent caveolar vesicles. moreover, cell infection with sv more than doubles the number of caveolae capable of undergoing viral internalization and long-range traycking. caveolae contain much of the molecular machinery required for ''classical'' vesicle fission, docking, and fusion, for example, snare proteins, monomeric and trimeric gtpases, annexins ii and vi, n-ethylmaleimide (nem)sensitive fusion protein (nsf), and atpases (schnitzer et al., ) . caveolae also contain the dynamin gtpases, which can be transiently recruited to sv -loaded caveolae and implicated in membrane scission (henley et al., ; oh et al., ; pelkmans and helenius, ) . internalized caveoladerived vesicles move to an endocytic compartment termed the ''caveosome'' and eventually arrive at the early endosome. after fusion with the target compartment, caveolae do not disassemble but maintain their integrity in the membrane, preserving their compartmentalization and retaining their lipid and protein components (pelkmans et al., ) . the fate of internalized sv viruses after reaching the caveosome eventually results in arrival at the smooth er (pelkmans et al., ) . interestingly, mutations in caveolin have been implicated in muscular dystrophy and cardiovascular disease, and mutations causing the downregulation of caveolin have been linked to the progression of various human carcinomas; it is therefore possible that caveolins may have a tumor suppressor role. the caveolin- and caveolin- genes are located on human q . near the microsatellite repeat marker d s . this region is commonly deleted in various cancers (engelman et al., ) , hinting that caveolin gene deletion may be advantageous for tumor progression. in one report, the caveolin- p l mutation was present in % of breast cancer patients studied (hayashi et al., ) . the p l mutation was also linked to the metastatic potential of tumors and disease prognosis. the caveolin- p l mutation also conferred increased cell migration and altered morphology. caveolin- protein levels can be reduced or absent from a number of human breast cancer cell lines compared with normal mammary cells (lee et al., ) . similarly, silent and missense mutations in caveolin- have also been associated with oral carcinomas (han et al., ) . caveolin- , and to a lesser extent caveolin- , gene expression is downregulated in some cases of thyroid carcinoma (aldred et al., ) . although it remains unclear as to why the loss of caveolin causes cell proliferation diseases such as cancer, one can speculate on the role of caveolin in regulating signaling pathways. in endothelial cells, which have a high abundance of caveolin, the key vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (vegfr ) has been shown to be inactive when localized to caveolae (labrecque et al., ) . this receptor tyrosine kinase modulates the endothelial response to the key vegf-a cytokine and controls angiogenesis and new blood vessel formation, thus regulating neovascularization and tumor growth (neufeld et al., ) . similarly, platelet-derived growth factor (pdgf) receptor tyrosine kinase activity is reduced when associated with caveolae (yamamoto et al., ) . in addition to vegfr and pdgfr, a number of g protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs) have been shown to interact with caveola-associated factors (insel et al., ) . gpcrs are a large family of transmembrane receptors involved in a variety of signal transduction events. these receptors are activated by a range of ligands, including hormones and peptides, and have been linked to a number of cancers such as cell biology of membrane trafficking in human disease thyroid, lung, and gastric. the presence of a number of gpcrs in caveolae suggests that these plasma membrane structures may interact with gpcrs and modulate their signaling potential. lisanti and others (li et al., a) have shown that caveolin- interacts solely with inactive forms of g-protein a subunits, lending credence to the negative regulation hypothesis caused by the association of caveolae with transmembrane signaling receptors. a number of mutations in muscle-specific caveolin- have been associated with four distinct but related autosomal dominant muscle disease phenotypes (woodman et al., ) : limb girdle muscular dystrophy type c (minetti et al., ) , rippling muscle disease, hyperckemia (persistently elevated levels of serum creatine kinase), and distal myopathy. some mutations cause aberrant retention of caveolin- in the golgi and subsequent degradation; other mutations may cause mutant caveolin- to act in a dominant-negative manner by forming unstable aggregates with wild-type caveolin- (galbiati et al., ; sotgia et al., a,b) . hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (hcm) patients have a caveolin- t s mutation that reduces plasma membrane levels (hayashi et al., ) . caveolin gene knockout mice are providing insights into protein function in diverent human diseases. for example, lack of caveolins can cause diabetes, atherosclerosis, and cardiomyopathies in mouse models (cohen et al., ; williams and lisanti, ) . however, such phenotypes have yet to be linked to caveolin dysfunction in humans. phagocytosis is a process used by white blood cells such as macrophages, neutrophils, and dendrites to ingest large particulate material into specialized vesicles called phagosomes. these professional phagocytes are paramount in the defense against infection as they engulf and ingest whole microorganisms such as bacteria. they also use this route for ''mopping up'' apoptotic debris or senescent cells from tissues. in contrast to constitutive pinocytic transport, phagocytosis is regulated by cell surface-localized fc receptor (fcr) contact or interaction with complement-or antibody-coated particles which results in clustering of fcr on the cell surface, a step important for subsequent intracellular signaling and cellular activation (daeron, ) . polymorphisms in leukocyte-specific fcg receptors may contribute to autoimmune diseases such as guillain-barré syndrome or rheumatoid arthritis, and enhanced susceptibility to infection (van sorge et al., ) . fc-mediated binding can trigger a complex signaling response involving extrusion of fine plasma membrane projections (pseudopodia) from the macrophage to surround and engulf the pathogen, forming a phagosome. the signaling response is reviewed in greater detail elsewhere (bokoch, ; chimini and chavrier, ; niedergang and chavrier, ) . in brief, the activation of tyrosine kinases and rho gtpases is triggered through fcr signaling. the rac and cdc gtpases, in conjunction with the downstream evector wasp, mediate remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton, leading to pseudopodium formation and phagosome closure (castellano et al., ; chimini and chavrier, ) . in contrast, the complement mediated-uptake of opsonized particles divers such that they appear to ''fall'' into the cell in a process that requires rho, but not rac or cdc (bokoch, ) . phagocytosis, although designed to destroy pathogens, can paradoxically be used as a route of entry by pathogens such as mycobacterium (m. leprae and m. tuberculosis) or leishmania (nguyen and pieters, ; scott et al., ) . normally, internalized pathogens are destroyed successfully through phagosome maturation into lysosomes and subsequent degradation. mycobacterium can evade host degradation by secreting a soluble serine/threonine protein kinase g molecule into the phagosome. this molecule initiates a signaling response that interferes with phagosome-lysosome fusion, and promotes intracellular pathogen survival (walburger et al., ) . furthermore, phagosome maturation is compromised by a pathogen induced block of p map (mitogen-activated protein) kinase recruitment to the tethering molecule early endosome antigen (fratti et al., ) . the leishmania protozoan parasite, which is transmitted to humans by sand flies, produces a membrane molecule called a lipophosphoglycan, which is inserted into the lipid bilayer of the phagosome in infected macrophages. this lipophosphoglycan is thought to modulate intracellular signaling pathways, resulting in a less fusogenic phagosome and preventing maturation; this would facilitate pathogen replication and disease progression (lodge and descoteaux, ) . molecules internalized from the cell surface by receptor-mediated endocytosis and clathrin-coated vesicles are delivered to the early endosome for sorting. molecules such as low-density lipoprotein receptor (ldlr) and transferrin receptor (tfr) are eyciently recycled between the early endosome and the plasma membrane. however, after ligand-mediated activation (fig. ) , receptor tyrosine kinases such as epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) are sorted along the endocytic pathway for degradation. early endosomes are thought to be formed through the fusion of internalized vesicles and recruitment of specific proteins and lipids. one key protein traycking through the endosomal-lysosomal system. cell surface receptors are internalized through clathrin-coated vesicles (ccvs) at the plasma membrane. in the cell cytoplasm, ccvs shed their coat components and fuse to produce endosomes. internalized receptors are either recycled from sorting endosomes (housekeeping receptors, e.g., transferrin receptor) or targeted for degradation within the lysosome (signaling receptors, e.g., growth factor receptors) after movement through the late endosome and multivesicular body (mvb) compartments. endosomal regulator is the ubiquitously expressed rab a gtpase. rab a is present on the cytosolic face of the plasma membrane, vesicles, and tubular endosomal profiles (chavrier et al., ) . a number of rab a-associated evector proteins regulate endosomal fusion and mediate protein cargo movement and endosomal sorting (zerial and mcbride, ) . such evector proteins, including , are clustered on the cytosolic face of the early endosome and stabilize the gtp-bound rab a in an activated state (horiuchi et al., ) . gtp-bound rab a directly binds to early endosome antigen eea to regulate vesicular and endosomal tethering. eea contains a c-terminal rab a-binding domain, and a phosphatidylinositol -phosphate-binding zinc finger domain referred to as an fyve (conserved in fab , yotb, vac , and eea ) domain (gaullier et al., ; stenmark et al., ) . overexpression of wild-type rab a, or a constitutively active rab a mutant, causes endosome enlargement and defective traycking through this compartment, whereas expression of a constitutively inactive rab a mutant leads to formation of small endosomes and decreased endocytosis (bucci et al., ) . a family of evector proteins that accelerate gtpase hydrolysis (rabgaps) have been identified: rabgap- binds to rab a and regulates traycking through the endocytic pathway . the importance of rab a activity is further illustrated in the genetic disorder tuberous sclerosis (ts), a disease that causes tumors in the brain, eyes, heart, kidneys, lungs, and skin. ts arises when the tumor suppressor gene, tuberous sclerosis complex (tsc), is absent; introduction of the wild-type tsc gene into an animal model or cultured cells results in tumor suppression and reduced cellular proliferation (kobayashi et al., ; yeung et al., ) . interestingly, the tsc gene product (tuberin) is implicated in regulating gtp/gdp exchange on rab a, thus regulating traycking through this endosome system (xiao et al., ) . in chronic myelomonocytic leukemia (cmml) a genetic translocation causes fusion of rab a evector rabaptin- and the pdgfbr (magnusson et al., ) . this chromosomal translocation results in enhanced cellular proliferation by compromising endosomal fusion and traycking, and thus regulation of growth factor degradation. it is likely that this aberrant gene product is not degraded and triggers sustained intracellular signaling, leading to cell proliferation and tumor progression in a subset of lymphoid cells. recycling from endosomes back to the cell surface is often used by receptors that internalize nutrients such as lipoproteins and ions. receptor recycling rather than degradation conserves receptor functionality and nutrient uptake and reduces energy expenditure in the synthesis of new receptors (mukherjee et al., ) . genetic screens in the nematode caenorhabditis elegans identified rme- and delineated a new family of conserved class of eps homology (eh) domain proteins . both the worm and mouse homologs of rme- are associated with the endosomal compartment: a dominant-negative rme- g r mutant had little evect on receptor-mediated endocytosis but had a substantial evect on endosomal recycling, suggesting a functional role in this step . although information is currently limited, a number of neurological diseases are associated with dysfunction of early endosomal proteins. in some cases of demyelinating polyneuropathy, characterized by progressive weakening and sensory dysfunction of the legs and arms, eea autoantibodies have been detected (selak et al., ) . a number of disorders, from muscular dystrophy to rheumatoid arthritis, reveal the presence of circulating anti-eea antibodies. interestingly, eea epitopes recognized by such autoantibodies varied from patient to patient (selak et al., ) . autoantibodies against eea have also been detected in cases of subacute cutaneous systemic lupus erythematosus (scle), characterized by the appearance of an unsightly red rash, often occurring after sun exposure (mu et al., ) . lysosomes are terminal, membrane-enclosed degradative compartments that interact with other organelles through vesicular transport originating from the secretory, endocytic, and autophagic pathways. this organelle stores various proteases, lipases, hydrolases, and degradative enzymes within an acidic environment that maximizes enzymatic activity and degradation. resident lysosomal membrane proteins, integral proteins, and glycoproteins are targeted to the organelle via the endosome. lysosomal proteases such as cathepsin d are processed in the golgi apparatus to add a mannose -phosphate (m p) moiety to n-linked sugars. the m p moiety is recognized by plasma membrane or tgn-resident mannose -phosphate receptors (m prs) and sorted to the late endosome and eventually the lysosome. here, the acidic ph (ph < . ) results in receptor-ligand disassociation and recycling of the m pr to the tgn. fusion between the endosome and preexisting primary lysosomes allows the delivery of lysosomal resident proteins. the importance of m p-mediated targeting of lysosomal proteins is highlighted in the human neurological disorder, i-cell disease (mucolipidosis ii), where lysosomal enzymes are secreted from cells rather than targeted to the lysosome. the defect in i-cell disease involves lack of m p moiety addition as a result of mutations to the n-acetylglucosamine- -phosphotransferase enzyme usually present within the golgi apparatus (ben-yoseph et al., ) . how lysosomes are formed is still unclear (luzio et al., ) . three mechanisms have been proposed to explain lysosomal biogenesis: vesicular transport between late endosomes and preformed primary lysosomes (griyths and gruenberg, ), early endosomal ''maturation'' to lysosomes (murphy, ) , or the current favored model of ''kiss-and-run,'' in which transient interactions between endosomes and lysosomes transfer endosomal contents to the latter compartment (duclos et al., ; storrie and desjardins, ) . late endosome and lysosome interactions in the kiss-and-run model are thought to be regulated by the rab gtpase, which is present on late endosomes; a vps complex, homologous to budding yeast vacuole fusion regulators, is also implicated in sorting and delivery to lysosomes (seals et al., ) . the mammalian form of the vps complex interacts with syntaxin- , a t-snare that is concerned in regulating membrane dynamics along this route (kim et al., ) . danon disease is caused by point mutations in, or complete absence of lysosome-associated membrane protein (lamp ) or complete absence of this protein: changes which result in cardiomyopathy, myopathy, and mental retardation. in danon disease patients and lamp -deficient mice, autophagic vacuoles accumulate within the cytoplasm; these vacuoles arise via intracellular engulfment of old membranes to form an autophagosome, thus sequestering membranes and proteins for eventual degradation (shintani and klionsky, ) . autophagosomes fuse with lysosomes, leading to degradation for provision of molecules for cellular homeostasis. the accumulation of autophagic vacuoles in lamp -deficient cells suggests that lamp mediates interactions between autophagosomes and lysosomes. this pathway is commonly activated during conditions of cellular stress such as starvation or pathogenic infection (kirkegaard et al., ) . lysosomal storage diseases are caused through insufficient degradation of targeted components within lysosomes, leading to substrate accumulation and lysosome enlargement. more than lysosomal storage diseases have been documented and generally manifest themselves as neurological disorders; disease severity correlates with the levels of lysosomal enzyme activity. niemann-pick disease is a neurodegenerative condition caused by sphingomyelin accumulation in reticuloendothelial cells and ganglion neurons, leading to cell death. it is classified into five types (a-e), each distinguished by either clinical severity or age-related disease phenotype. niemann-pick type a (npa) is most common, with death occurring before years of age. npa patients have point mutations in the smpd gene that encodes a lysosomal sphingomyelinase (levran et al., ; takahashi et al., ) . interestingly, in npc patients, endocytosed ldl particles are not fully degraded in lysosomes, leading to defects in cholesterol metabolism (li et al., a) . the npc disease is caused by mutations in the npc gene, which encodes a lysosomal resident protein with similarity to sterol-sensing enzymes and proteins (scott and ioannou, ) . fabry disease is an x-linked condition caused by changes in lysosomal a-galactosidase activity resulting in glycosphingolipid accumulation within vascular endothelial lysosomes. this leads to angiokeratomas (a wart-like thickening of the skin), progressive renal impairment, cardiomyopathy, and cerebrovascular disease. mutations in the a-galactosidase a gene can also show reduced enzymatic activity of the encoded protein and retention within the endoplasmic reticulum (yasuda et al., ) . receptor tyrosine kinases such as epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) are degraded by lysosomes after ligand binding and receptor activation. egfr lysosomal targeting is dependent on ligand-stimulated ubiquitination of the cytoplasmic domain. binding of egf to egfr causes downstream signaling, clathrin-mediated internalization, and traycking to endosomes. internalized receptor-ligand complexes are sorted to the late endosome or multivesicular bodies (mvbs), which eventually deliver their contents to the lysosome (katzmann et al., ) . whereas other receptors such as tfr are recycled to the plasma membrane, egfr is moved through the endosome-lysosome system by a ubiquitin-dependent sorting and recognition system. these include the hrs/stam heterodimer and tsg (bilodeau et al., ) present on endosomal membranes. the tsg tumor suppressor gene is mutated in nearly % of breast cancer patients and encodes a membrane-associated protein (lee and feinberg, ) . this factor participates in the sorting of ubiquitinated proteins on the endosome, but its exact function is not clear. in some specialized cells, such as cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctls), platelets, and melanocytes, regulated secretion can be routed through compartments other than the tgn. such cells have evolved mechanisms whereby modified or secretory lysosomes release their contents at the plasma membrane in response to extracellular stimuli. these secretory lysosomes (sls) share lysosomal characteristics such as acid ph and lamp (lysosome-associated membrane proteins) residents but also contain unique markers such as tyrosinase, present in melanosomes. the ctl secretory lysosomes contain unique components such as perforin and granzymes required for triggering apoptosis in target cells. on ctl contact with a target cell, sls trayc toward the immunological synapse formed between the ctl and target cell. a signal then causes sl fusion with the ctl plasma membrane (stinchcombe et al., ) , and release of sl contents and subsequent target cell death. a number of autosomal genetic diseases causing immunodeficiency and albinism involve defects in regulated lysosomal secretion (stinchcombe et al., ) . in the rare, fatal disease familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (fhl) sls congregate at the plasma membrane in ctls, where they can dock but cannot fuse with the membrane. in one group of fhl patients, this disease is due to a mutation in the gene encoding munc - ; this is closely related to the neuronal munc - gene product that is involved in snare complex formation in neuronal cells (feldmann et al., ) . assembly of this neuronal syntaxin- , snap- , and synaptobrevin complex is regulated by munc - , which binds and locks syntaxin- (t-snare) in a closed, inactive conformation, thus preventing it from interacting with snap- (yang et al., ) . however, munc - (sassa et al., ) and rim (rab a-interacting protein evector) (koushika et al., ) can compete with munc - and displace it from syntaxin- . this reinforces the syntaxin- open conformation and allows snare complex formation to occur. munc - may act as a conformational switch to promote t-snare into an ''open'' state, thus allowing formation of the snare complex that mediates synaptic vesicle docking and fusion. from observations of fhl patients, one speculation is that munc - has a role similar to that of munc - in regulating snare complex formation for sl docking and fusion in ctls (yang et al., ) . chediak-higashi syndrome (chs) is a key example of a disease avecting sl function in ctls, with patients displaying hypopigmentation (stinchcombe et al., ) . chs patients have genetic mutations in the lyst or chs gene (barbosa et al., ; perou et al., ) and produce ctls containing strikingly enlarged sls that are able to polarize to the immunological synapse but are unable to fuse with the pm. this suggests a role for the chs gene product in regulating membrane docking and fusion . overexpression of chs leads to the presence of small lysosomes, indicating increased lysosomal fission (ward et al., ) . in addition, chs interacts with snare proteins, further indicating a role in sl fusion (tchernev et al., ) . griscelli syndrome patients also display defects in sl dynamics within ctls and exhibit hypopigmentation and silvery hair. in melanocytes, cells responsible for pigment storage and production, rab a is required to recruit melanophilin to pigment granules called melanosomes (sls). melanophilin binds the myosin motor protein myosin va and regulates melanosome movement along actin cables to the plasma membrane strom et al., ; wu et al., ) . in type griscelli syndrome patients, rab a gtpase is missing or defective, whereas in type griscelli syndrome patients the myosin va motor protein is absent. these defects are also evident in mouse models such as ashen (rab a defective), dilate (myosin va defective), and leaden (melanophilin defective). in both the human griscelli syndromes and the mouse models, melanosomes are clustered in a perinuclear location, a defect attributed to rab a dysfunction (wilson et al., ; wu et al., ) . interestingly, ctls isolated from type griscelli syndrome patients and ashen mice (rab a deficient) are unable to kill target cells, whereas type griscelli syndrome patient and dilate mouse ctls are functional. this suggests that rab a interacts with diverent evectors to induce sl fusion with the plasma membrane in diverent cell types (haddad et al., ) . hermansky-pudlak syndrome (hps) is a fourth example of sl dysfunction and is characterized by oculocutaneous albinism, ceroid deposition, and excessive prolonged bleeding (hermansky and pudlak, ; swank et al., ) . however, hps cannot be viewed as a single disease but a group of at least seven autosomal genetic disorders. each of the seven subgroups (hps - ) is due to mutations in individual genes, most of which encode components of multisubunit protein complexes involved in vesicle traycking , whereas the function of others remains unclear. three of these complexes, termed blocs (biogenesis of lysosome-related organelle complexes), play a role in regulating traycking involved in platelet and melanosome secretion, but their exact functions are unclear (di pietro and dell'angelica, ) . in hps patients a nonsense mutation in the gene encoding the b a subunit of the ap adaptor protein prevents expression of this subunit (huizing et al., ) . as previously mentioned, ap is involved in the recruitment of transmembrane proteins into vesicles at the early endosome for delivery to the lysosome (peden et al., ) . in melanocytes derived from hps patients, the tyrosinase that catalyzes the formation of melanin is not transported to maturing melanosomes (huizing et al., ) . this leads to the characteristic pattern of albinism seen in patients with this condition. furthermore, patients with hps display an impaired ctl response and immune response. ctls from hps patients have lytic granules that cannot move in an oriented fashion toward the microtubule-organizing center; therefore, when ctls are stimulated by contact with target cells, the lytic granules are not targeted to the immunological synapse for cell killing . studies on the cell biology of hiv infection have suggested the existence of a viral secretory compartment. work by marsh and others pelchen-matthews et al., ) has localized viral envelope (gp ) and matrix proteins (p ) to tetraspanin-positive endosome-related organelles in infected macrophages and dendritic cells. these viral secretory compartments move from an intracellular localization to an infectious synapse when infected macrophages or dendritic cells form an immunological synapse with activated t cells. this may be one mechanism for subsequent viral infection of cd -positive t cells, thus causing the impaired immune response seen in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (aids). cells require a highly organized framework or cytoskeleton to station and move membrane organelles within three-dimensional space. components of the cytoskeleton can guide organelles or vesicles to specific destinations within the cell. the microtubule cytoskeleton is commonly associated with the directional movement of intracellular transport vesicles or intermediates. in contrast, actin has been envisioned to have a structural role in determining cell shape, plasma membrane dynamics, and cell locomotion. however, evidence points to a role for actin in regulated traycking from the tgn (allan et al., ; badizadegan et al., ; cobbold et al., ) and endocytosis (ascough, ; engqvist-goldstein and drubin, ) . the cytoskeleton is a dynamic structure likened to a collapsible scavold that can be rapidly disassembled and reconstituted depending on cellular requirements. actin or tubulin polymerization (elongation) and depolymerization (breakdown) rely on the controlled addition or removal of monomers in a polarized and energy-dependent manner. protofilaments in either structure are both polarized, with the plus end growing at a faster rate. actin cables are each composed of two parallel protofilaments that twist around each other, whereas microtubules are composed of a hollow cylindrical structure comprising parallel protofilaments. actin nucleation is an initial step required for elongation involving formation of a stable trimer subunit base for protofilament elongation. a heptameric complex termed arp / (actin-related protein) binds to the ends and sides of actin filaments to nucleate and further accelerate the growth of the actin network (millard et al., ) . the function of the arp / complex can be regulated by membrane-associated rho gtpases. these regulators, which include cdc and various rac isoforms, act as molecular switches that cycle between an active gtp-bound state and an inactive gdp-bound state. cdc regulates arp / indirectly through its downstream target wiskott-aldrich syndrome protein (wasp), which binds directly to the arp / complex (jave and hall, ) . patients with x-linked wiskott-aldrich syndrome display mutations in the wasp gene and have thrombocytopenia (reduced platelet count), eczema, recurrent infections, hematologic malignancy, and autoimmune disorders (lemahieu et al., ) . approximately disease mutations in wasp have been reported, which lead to defective control of wasp in actin polymerization and severe disease phenotypes (burns et al., ) . wasp expression is restricted to hematopoietic cells, although the ubiquitously expressed n-wasp is present in various cells and tissues (burns et al., ) . the actin network is important for the formation of immunological synapses between cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctls) and their targets, as well as t lymphocytes and antigen-presenting cells such as macrophages. the formation of the immunological synapse in ctls is essential for the transport, docking, and fusion of sls and subsequent destruction of the target cell as described above. defective wasp inhibits the formation of the immunological synapse and t cell activation (notarangelo and ochs, ) , probably causing the immunological deficiencies observed in wiskott-aldrich syndrome patients. wasp deficiency in t lymphocytes also avects the regulation and composition of lipid rafts (dupre et al., ) , indicating that the cell biology of membrane trafficking in human disease formation of the immunological synapse is dependent on lipid rafts, wasp, and actin dynamics. motor proteins provide the physical force to move membrane vesicles along the polymerized cytoskeletal filaments via atp-dependent hydrolysis. actinbased motor proteins belong to the myosin superfamily. the myosin va gene is mutated in a small number of patients with griscelli syndrome (bahadoran et al., ; pastural et al., ) (other traycking mutations contributing to griscelli syndrome are discussed in section v.c). mutations in the myosin viia gene can cause usher's syndrome, resulting in blindness and deafness. intracellular transport is probably compromised in usher syndrome patients; the mouse shaker model has a mutant myosin viia gene, displaying defective melanosome transport in retinal pigment epithelial cells (liu et al., ) and altered distribution in photoreceptor cells (richardson et al., ) . microtubule motor proteins, which actively move vesicles along the microtubules, and microtubule-associated proteins (maps), serve as docking molecules to bind cargo to motor proteins (gerdes and katsanis, ) . microtubule motor proteins belong to either the kinesin or dynein families. with the exception of the c-terminal kinesins, kinesin-based motors generally transport cargo toward the plus end of the microtubule, whereas the dyneins are minus end-directed motors. long-range vesicular transport is particularly important in neurons, where axons can reach up to m in length. newly synthesized lipids, and secreted or membrane-associated proteins, are made in the cell body; long-range and directional transport is crucial for replenishing the constituents of the presynaptic cleft (at the terminal end of the axon) with synaptic vesicles and plasma membrane receptors (holzbaur, ) . a number of human neurological diseases are linked to mutations in microtubule motors and associated proteins. lissencephaly, a greek term meaning ''smooth brain,'' causes severe brain malformation resulting in mental retardation and epilepsy. one of the genes mutated in the disease is lis (originally identified in miller-dieker syndrome patients with lissencephaly) (reiner et al., ) . the lis protein regulates microtubule motor function by binding dynein and p glued , a component of the dynactin complex that binds to and activates dynein (smith et al., ) . it is proposed that lis regulates retrograde axonal transport. another gene mutated in some patients with lissencephaly is doublecortin, a microtubule-associated protein that binds tubulin and stabilizes microtubules (horesh et al., ; moores et al., ) . the kif b kinesin regulates transport of synaptic vesicle precursors along the neuronal axon. patients with charcot-marie-tooth disease type a display neuronal axonal degeneration due to a loss-of-function mutation in the motor domain of kif b . in alzheimer's disease, a classical sign is hyperphosphorylated aggregates of the microtubule-associated protein, tau, in neuronal cells and tissues. tau protein can influence vesicular transport (ebneth et al., ) by regulating the attachment of motors to microtubules (trinczek et al., ) . one theory is that the tau protein can interfere with kinesin-dependent transport by blocking motor access to microtubules, thus slowing or preventing vesicle movement along axons (mandelkow et al., ) . moreover, an early sign of alzheimer's disease is the loss of synapses and retrograde degeneration of neurons, complemented by a breakdown in intracellular transport. the disruption of microtubule-mediated vesicular traycking may also be a causative factor of the neurodegenerative phenotype of huntington's disease. this disease is caused by expansion of polyglutamine repeats occurring in the brain-enriched protein huntingtin (htt). it has been demonstrated that htt enhances vesicular transport of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (bdnf) along microtubules (gauthier et al., ) . htt is localized in the cytoplasm and is associated with vesicular and microtubule-based trayc through its ability to bind huntingtin-associated protein (hap ) (li et al., b) , a protein that has aynity for the dynactin p glued subunit (engelender et al., ) . dysfunctional polyq-htt associated with the disease state may disrupt the transport of bdnf by binding and blocking the hap /dynactinmediated delivery of bdnf vesicles along microtubules (gauthier et al., ) . this is further supported by the finding that bdnf levels are decreased in brains of huntington's disease patients (ferrer et al., ) . the current treatment of genetic disorders involves addressing the symptoms rather than the cause. to that end, many mild forms of disorders such as niemann-pick disease, and familial hypercholesterolemia, can be controlled by diet regimens and lifestyle changes. in contrast, a life-threatening disease such as cystic fibrosis requires extensive physiotherapy and pulmonary exercise to loosen and prevent mucus accumulation within the lungs. new antidementia drugs are increasingly successful in treating neurological disorders such as alzheimer's disease. drugs such as galantamine, donepezil, rivastigmine, and memantine target the posttranslational processing of bapp to reduce amyloid deposits (prasher, ) . in familial hypercholesterolemia, statin treatment is a common strategy for reducing plasma ldl and cholesterol levels by targeting hmg-coa reductase, the rate-limiting enzyme in cellular cholesterol biosynthesis. furthermore, less commonly used ldl-lowering drugs such as probucol have shown some success in (buckley et al., ) . the administration of adrenalin receptor antagonists (b-blockers) to patients with the cardiac condition long-qt syndrome reduces arrhythmia risk. enzyme replacement therapy (ert) has been carried out in patients with fabry's disease, a lysosomal storage disease. patients are given recombinant lysosomal a-galactosidase (mignani and cagnoli, ) to reduce the risks of strokes and kidney failure associated with the condition. finally, organ transplantation is occasionally carried out for some disease states: for example, bone marrow transplants for chediak-higashi syndrome patients (liang et al., ) and rab a-defective patients with griscelli syndrome (schuster et al., ) and wiskott-aldrich syndrome (filipovich et al., ) . however, although transplant operations can be successful in alleviating the immunological issues associated with these diseases, it does not address problems associated with the nervous system or pigmentation. b. gene therapy: the next generation of medical treatment? completion of the human genome sequencing project has given science the ability to track gene(s) responsible for potentially any genetic disorder and, as a consequence, to allow these genes to be corrected in patients. this is the goal of gene therapy research. of course, gene therapy has a fundamental limitation: it is only really suitable for single-gene defect diseases, and multigenic or chromosomal defects will be beyond the ability of the technique because of the complex nature of the disease. however, there are more than single gene defects that cause human disease, so there are many diseases requiring such approaches. the history of gene therapy is discussed in more detail by russell ( ) and scollay ( ) . much evort has been made in developing techniques that allow successful replacement or augmentation of defective genes. gene therapy is performed by introducing a gene vehicle directly into the patient (in vivo) or by removing cells from a patient, introducing the gene into these cells in culture, and replacing the cells back in the patient (ex vivo). most studies have focused on the use of viral vectors as delivery vehicles. retroviruses are potentially the best gene delivery system (kurian et al., ) . these rna viruses are able to infect a great many cell types and replicate by inserting their viral genes into the genome of the host. the host cellular machinery is then modulated to produce and assemble viral particles. in gene therapy, retroviruses could be used to express the target gene to be replaced but be modified to prevent viral disease (hiv, which is the causative agent of aids, is also a retrovirus). the principal drawback of a retrovirus vector is the possibility that genomic integration could elevate oncogene expression, thus causing cancer. therefore, the majority of clinical trials using retrovirus vectors have been performed ex vivo. a ''successful'' gene therapy experiment was exemplified in the case of a -year-old female patient lacking adenosine deaminase (ada), which results in severely compromised immunodeficiency (ada-scid) and dysfunctional t cells (blaese et al., ) . in this case, a retroviral vector was used to deliver the coding sequence for ada into cells, resulting in successful expression of this enzyme in hitherto defective cells. although successful, it is uncertain whether enzyme replacement treatment (recombinant ada injections) also influenced the patient outcome. adenovirus (adv) (mcconnell and imperiale, ) is a dna virus and key gene therapy vehicle that maintains the viral genome as a separate transmissible episome within the nuclei of infected host cells. the use of attenuated or inactivated adv for human gene delivery has attracted much interest. the advantages of adv gene transfer are that its genome can easily be manipulated and recombinant virus can be grown to high titers in vitro with eycient transduction of target cells in vitro or in vivo. as adv can evectively infect nondividing cells such as lung pulmonary tissues it is a popular vector of choice for gene therapy to treat cystic fibrosis (cf) patients. although there are promising studies (zabner et al., ) , failures have also been noted (knowles et al., ) . a major disadvantage of an adv-based approach is the triggering of a strong host immune response to the virus, which becomes a serious problem in subsequent long-term delivery of recombinant virus for disease alleviation. one approach to circumventing such an issue is to use a viral delivery system that produces a low host immune response such as the adeno-associated virus (aav) (flotte, ) . aav is a nonpathogenic virus that requires coinfection with a helper virus to replicate. however, aav has broad host cell specificity and is diycult to grow in large quantities, probably because of its reliance on a helper virus. finally, nonviral methods are increasingly available for the delivery of dna constructs directly into cells and tissues. these are often lipid-based reagents (e.g., liposomes) that bind to the plasmid dna and fuse with the plasma membrane, thus enabling cytosolic delivery of the gene. the plasmid dna would then be transported into the host nucleus by endogenous cellular machinery. this type of gene delivery can only be performed ex vivo and can be limited by the poor dna transfection eyciency of primary cells or tissues. this type of method, however, is a potentially useful method for delivering genes into progenitors or precursors (e.g., stem cells) before cellular cell biology of membrane trafficking in human disease diverentiation and tissue formation within a particular microenvironment in the body (mendell et al., ) . numerous disease states are caused by protein misfolding within the er, leading to degradat ion (table i ; section s iii. a. an d iii.a. ). one strategy would be to promote the correct protein conformation in a mutant gene product either chemically or pharmacologically. a number of membrane-divusible chemical and pharmacological ''chaperones'' have been identified that could avect protein folding in cells. chemical chaperones such as glycerol and trimethylamine n-oxide (tmao) can restore the wild-type traycking and activity of cftrÁf in cultured epithelial cells (brown et al., ) , and porcine kidney epithelial cells expressing cftrÁf and treated with dimethyl sulfoxide (dmso) increased plasma membrane levels of the channel protein (bebok et al., ) . loo et al. ( ) have demonstrated that a novel quinazoline derivative specific for cftr will rescue the defective traycking of cftrÁf in cultured cells. cell surface levels of a water channel, aquaporin- , can be enhanced with dmso (tamarappoo and verkman, ) . defects in this gene can result in x-linked nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, a condition in which patients are unable to concentrate their urine because of an inability to reabsorb water from the kidneys into the blood. although chemical chaperones are somewhat nonspecific in their action (the protein folding of the whole cell is avected and not just the target protein), pharmacological chaperones can be tailored to individual proteins. for example, the compound sr a is a nonpeptide vasopressin v receptor antagonist (morello et al., ; robert et al., ) . patients with a mutant vasopressin v receptor can also display nephrogenic diabetes insipidus. on treatment, the cell-permeant sr a compound would act as a chaperone and accompany the mutant v receptor to the cell surface to rescue correct functionality. geldanamycin, a naturally occurring antifungal agent, has potential as an anticancer drug (beliakov and whitesell, ; miyata, ) . geldanamycin interacts with and inhibits activity of the heat shock protein and chaperone hsp , a cytosolic cellular stress protein that supports the correct folding, stability, and function of ''client'' proteins. many hsp client proteins are implicated in cell cycle progression, proliferation, and angiogenesis (whitesell and lindquist, ) . the erbb tyrosine kinase complex is implicated in regulation and development of epithelial breast tumors and is an hsp client. inhibition of hsp action by geldanamycin results in degradation of both erbb and downstream signaling evectors, resulting in reduced cellular growth and tumor formation (citri et al., ) . a number of cell-permeable peptide sequences found in viruses and host proteins have been discovered that mediate the delivery of cargo (proteins, drugs, plasmid dna, oligonucleotides) directly into cells (brooks et al., ; gupta et al., ; schwartz and zhang, ) . such peptide sequences could be fused or attached to recombinant or engineered proteins and administered to patients to complement defects of a particular gene product. for example, the drosophila melanogaster antennapedia homeodomain (antp) transcription factor contains a short -residue sequence that mediates protein translocation across biological membrane bilayers in an energy-independent manner (derossi et al., ; joliot et al., ) . other sources of cell membrane-permeable proteins have been uncovered in viruses. the hiv- replication protein tat contains a basic, arginine-and lysine-rich peptide sequence (residues - ) that modulates the translocation of exogenous tat across the plasma membrane in a number of cell types, and is able to activate intracellular genes controlled by an hiv promoter (frankel and pabo, ; mann and frankel, ) . this basic -residue sequence can internalize conjugated b-galactosidase and horseradish peroxidase (fawell et al., ) as well as a fab antibody fragment (anderson et al., ) . the major structural protein of herpesvirus (hsv- ), vp , can trayc between cells (elliott and o'hare, ) , whereas the pres- domain of hepatitis b virus surface antigen acts as a shuttle for peptides and functional proteins (such as egfp) in hepatocytes and other cells (oess and hildt, ) , suggesting further the existence of naturally occurring peptide sequences that may act as drug delivery vectors. finally, a ''synthetic'' amphipathic peptide, fluos-klalklalkalkaalkla-nh , has been shown to be internalized in mast and endothelial cells (oehlke et al., ) . the employment of small molecular inhibitors as a method of treating human disease has moved at exponential pace. a number of compounds have been synthesized or isolated from nonhuman organisms that directly avect cellular function and have been used in research on a variety of diseases. plant-and microorganism-derived polyhydroxylated alkaloids referred to as iminosugars have been used in the treatment of patients with gaucher disease (cox et al., ) . gaucher disease type i and type ii is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by a mutation in the gene encoding the cell biology of membrane trafficking in human disease acid b-glucosidase (gba) enzyme and results in the accumulation of toxic glucosylceramide in a patient's spleen, liver, and bones; manifesting itself in enlargement of these organs, as well as heart and lung disease. iminosugars act on glycosylating enzymes present within the er and golgi and inhibit their ability to transfer sugar moieties onto proteins. one member of the iminosugar family, n-butyldeoxynojirimycin (nb-dnj; also called miglustat or zavesca) inhibits the enzyme important in the maturation of the gba substrate glucocerebroside, namely ceramide glucosyltransferase (cgt) (butters et al., ) . inhibition of cgt has resulted in significantly reduced levels of glucocerebroside in the liver and spleen of patient in clinical trials (cox et al., ) . however, nearly % of patients in the trials displayed osmotic diarrhea as a side evect of the treatment. in a mouse model for human tay-sachs disease, which is caused by a mutation in the gene encoding hexosamidase a, levels of the harmful glycophospholipid gm were significantly reduced on treatment with nb-dnj (platt et al., ) . in addition to the treatment of lysosomal storage diseases, an nb-dnj derivative called miglitol has been used in the treatment of diabetes mellitus, resulting in reduced activity of the sucrose-isomaltase enzyme complex and reduction of carbohydrate digestion (mitrakou et al., ) . a major aspect of human disease is the production and subsequent degradation of misfolded proteins, either by the proteasome or within the lysosome. lysosomotropic agents such as chloroquine cause an increase in the intralumenal ph of endosomes and lysosomes, reducing lysosomal protease activities and the traycking of proteins through the endosome-lysosome system. a number of proteasome inhibitors such as mg , lactacystin, and alln can specifically inhibit the activity of a range of serine and cysteine proteases and chymotrypsin-like enzymes (kisselev and goldberg, ) . proteasome inhibition has been linked with a number of aspects of human disease. treatment of endothelial cells with proteasome inhibitors resulted in apoptosis of proliferating cells (drexler et al., ) and inhibition of plasminogen activator levels; this factor promotes angiogenesis and new blood vessel sprouting (oikawa et al., ) . however, inhibiting proteasome function has broad cytotoxic and apoptotic evects in cells and tissues. chemotherapeutic agents targeting signaling pathways are currently of much interest in relation to cancer therapeutics. cellular proliferation can be regulated by growth factor binding to a cell surface receptor and signaling through either the mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk) or phosphoinositide- -kinase (pi k) cascades. activation of these pathways induces the expression of oncogenes such as c-jun and c-fos and inhibits apoptosis through a sequence of protein phosphorylation events. shelton et al. ( ) demonstrated that inhibition of the mapk pathway with small molecule inhibitors specific for raf- or mek reduced cell proliferation and induced apoptosis in conditionally transformed hematopoietic cells. however, such pathways also regulate other cellular functions besides proliferation or apoptosis and there are likely to be consequences for cellular homeostasis. structural studies are important in the development of new small molecule inhibitors that target specific enzymes and regulators. c-akt (pkb) is a serine/ threonine protein kinase required for survival and proliferation in many human cancers and its structure has been elucidated (kumar and madison, ; yang et al ., ; and refer ences therei n). chem otherape utic agents have been consequently designed that inhibit c-akt activity; molecules such as h- target the atp-binding pocket in c-akt (kumar and madison, ) . compounds that bind specifically to c-akt isoforms or target specific domains within the kinase have been reported (barnett et al., ) , but there are no reports of clinical trials with such compounds (kumar and madison, ) . finally, small molecule inhibitors are being developed to target the posttranslational processing of proteins or peptides implicated in human disease. the enzyme that catalyzes the initial steps in b-amyloid synthesis, g-secretase, is an attractive target for prevention of amyloid deposits in alzheimer's disease patients (churcher and beher, ) . such small molecule inhibitors could also be used to treat pathogenic infections such as those caused by severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars), influenza, hiv, or hepatitis c viruses. attractive targets are virus-encoded or host proteases required for processing of viral proteins to generate infectious virus particles from the host cell. in the case of the sars virus, a viral chymotrypsin-like cysteine protease is responsible for processing sars viral proteins required for viral replication. inhibition of this protease would evectively inhibit viral replication. a molecule referred to as cs was found to inhibit the replication of human sars with no toxic evect on normal cells (dooley et al., ) . much work is also being carried out in targeting host proteases required for the processing of hiv envelope glycoproteins by the biosynthetic secretory pathway to generate viral gp and gp polypeptides. the completion of the human genome sequencing project has led to the prediction that a large number of diseases will be identified and understood at the gene level . as noted in this review, a number of examples exist in which a single gene mutation can have devastating evects on human function. at present, the symptoms of some mild forms of genetic diseases can be modulated through diet or drug regimens, and some success has been achieved with organ transplantation. gene therapy has attracted much attention but has suvered setbacks due to viral toxicity issues. an alternative strategy is the use of small molecule therapeutics, which cell biology of membrane trafficking in human disease may override specific defects or target specific pathways to compensate for gene defect(s). in addition, our understanding of how we respond at a genetic level to pathological infection will enable us to design evective drug strategies to presently chronic infections. in essence, understanding the cell biological basis for human diseases will enable us to design evective methods to deliver therapeutic strategies to patients. caveolin- and caveolin- , together with three bone morphogenetic protein-related genes, may encode novel tumor suppressors down-regulated in sporadic follicular thyroid carcinogenesis endocytosis of the glucose transporter glut is mediated by the gtpase dynamin motoring around the golgi the p -interactive proteins gm and giantin participate in endoplasmic reticulum-golgi trayc cftr and chaperones: processing and degradation tumor cell retention of antibody fab fragments is enhanced by an attached hiv tat protein-derived peptide endocytosis: actin in the driving seat traycking of cholera toxin-ganglioside gm complex into golgi and induction of toxicity depend on actin cytoskeleton comment on elejalde syndrome and relationship with griscelli syndrome identification of the homologous beige and chediak-higashi syndrome genes coupled er to golgi transport reconstituted with purified cytosolic proteins the akt/pkb family of protein kinases: a review of small molecule inhibitors and progress towards target validation the adaptor protein ap- as a component of the clathrin coat machinery: a morphological study role of diacylglycerol in pkd recruitment to the tgn and protein transport to the plasma membrane loss of function associated with novel mutations of the scn a gene in patients with brugada syndrome disassembly and reassembly of the golgi apparatus activation of deltaf cftr in an epithelial monolayer hsp : an emerging target for breast cancer therapy snares and the specificity of transport vesicle targeting mutations associated with neutropenia in dogs and humans disrupt intracellular transport of neutrophil elastase altered molecular size of n-acetylglucosamine -phosphotransferase in i-cell disease and pseudo-hurler polydystrophy congenital and acquired neutropenia the role of regulated cftr traycking in epithelial secretion phosphatidic acid formation by phospholipase d is required for transport from the endoplasmic reticulum to the golgi complex degradation of subunits of the sec p complex, an integral component of the er membrane, by the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway role of cue p in ubiquitination and degradation at the er surface the vps p hse p complex binds ubiquitin and mediates endosomal protein sorting t lymphocyte-directed gene therapy for ada-scid: initial trial results after years regulation of innate immunity by rho gtpases signals for sorting of transmembrane proteins to endosomes and lysosomes caveolin- in breast cancer tat peptide-mediated cellular delivery: back to basics chemical chaperones correct the mutant phenotype of the delta f cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator protein the small gtpase rab functions as a regulatory factor in the early endocytic pathway probucol. a reappraisal of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic use in hypercholesterolaemia the wilson disease gene is a putative copper transporting p-type atpase similar to the menkes gene coiled coils: a highly versatile protein folding motif mechanisms of waspmediated hematologic and immunologic disease a step forward for stiv-person syndrome small-molecule therapeutics for the treatment of glycolipid lysosomal storage disorders hepatic endoplasmic reticulum storage diseases initial docking of er-derived vesicles requires uso p and ypt p but is independent of snare proteins a role for cbs domain in traycking of chloride channel clc- a ''de novo'' point mutation of the low-density lipoprotein receptor gene in an italian subject with primary hypercholesterolemia actin dynamics during phagocytosis adpkd: a human disease altering golgi function and basolateral exocytosis in renal epithelia localization of low molecular weight gtp binding proteins to exocytic and endocytic compartments multiple forms of dynamin are encoded by shibire, a drosophila gene involved in endocytosis function of rho family proteins in actin dynamics during phagocytosis and engulfment lowe syndrome protein ocrl interacts with clathrin and regulates protein traycking between endosomes and the trans-golgi network gamma-secretase as a therapeutic target for the treatment of alzheimer's disease the achilles heel of erbb- /her : regulation by the hsp chaperone machine and potential for pharmacological intervention lytic granules, secretory lysosomes and disease adaptor protein -dependent microtubule-mediated movement of lytic granules to the immunological synapse novel membrane trayc steps regulate the exocytosis of the menkes disease atpase the menkes disease atpase (atp a) is internalized via a rac -regulated, clathrin-and caveolae-independent pathway actin and microtubule regulation of trans-golgi network architecture, and copper-dependent protein transport to the cell surface role of caveolae and caveolins in health and disease the human genome project: lessons from large-scale biology rab and arf gtpase regulation of exocytosis novel oral treatment of gaucher's disease with n-butyldeoxynojirimycin (ogt ) to decrease substrate biosynthesis copper transporting p-type atpases and human disease defective intracellular transport and processing of oa is a major cause of ocular albinism type involvement of clathrin-mediated endocytosis in human immunodeficiency virus type entry fc receptor biology the molecular basis of alanine: glyoxylate aminotransferase mistargeting: the most common single cause of primary hyperoxaluria type a role of amphiphysin in synaptic vesicle endocytosis suggested by its binding to dynamin in nerve terminals the synaptic vesicle-associated protein amphiphysin is the -kd autoantigen of stiv-man syndrome with breast cancer a novel form of hereditary myeloperoxidase deficiency linked to endoplasmic reticulum/proteasome degradation the low lysine content of ricin a chain reduces the risk of proteolytic degradation after translocation from the endoplasmic reticulum to the cytosol low-density lipoprotein receptor-its structure, function, and mutations association of the ap- adaptor complex with clathrin ap- , a novel protein complex related to clathrin adaptors altered traycking of lysosomal proteins in hermansky-pudlak syndrome due to mutations in the beta a subunit of the ap- adaptor rhodopsin c terminus, the site of mutations causing retinal disease, regulates traycking by binding to adp-ribosylation factor (arf ) the third helix of the antennapedia homeodomain translocates through biological membranes rab geranylgeranyl transferase alpha mutation in the gunmetal mouse reduces rab prenylation and platelet synthesis ubiquitination is required for the retrotranslocation of a short-lived luminal endoplasmic reticulum glycoprotein to the cytosol for degradation by the proteasome mutations in the mdr gene cause progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis the coiled-coil membrane protein golgin- is a novel rab evector required for golgi ribbon formation the cell biology of hermansky-pudlak syndrome: recent advances from genome to drug lead: identification of a small-molecule inhibitor of the sars virus cooperation of ggas and ap- in packaging mprs at the trans-golgi network inhibition of proteasome function induces programmed cell death in proliferating endothelial cells the t( ; )(p ;q ) in the u cell line results in the fusion of the af gene and calm, encoding a new member of the ap- clathrin assembly protein family remodeling of endosomes during lysosome biogenesis involves ''kiss and run'' fusion events regulated by rab er-to-golgi transport: cop i and cop ii function (review) hyperinsulinism in infancy: from basic science to clinical disease wiskott-aldrich syndrome protein regulates lipid raft dynamics during immunological synapse formation caveolae and sorting in the trans-golgi network of epithelial cells overexpression of tau protein inhibits kinesin-dependent traycking of vesicles, mitochondria, and endoplasmic reticulum: implications for alzheimer's disease a novel gene for autosomal dominant stargardt-like macular dystrophy with homology to the sur protein family intercellular traycking and protein delivery by a herpesvirus structural protein cisternal maturation and vesicle transport: join the band wagon! (review) huntingtin-associated protein (hap ) interacts with the p glued subunit of dynactin genes encoding human caveolin- and - are co-localized to the d s locus ( q . ), a known fragile site (fra g) that is frequently deleted in human cancers actin assembly and endocytosis: from yeast to mammals accelerated transport and maturation of lysosomal alpha-galactosidase a in fabry lymphoblasts by an enzyme inhibitor lowe syndrome protein ocrl interacts with rac gtpase in the trans-golgi network tat-mediated delivery of heterologous proteins into cells munc - is essential for cytolytic granules fusion and is mutated in a form of familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (fhl ) brain-derived neurotrophic factor in huntington disease caveolae and intracellular traycking of cholesterol impact of donor type on outcome of bone marrow transplantation for wiskott-aldrich syndrome: collaborative study of the international bone marrow transplant registry and the national marrow donor program adeno-associated virus-mediated gene transfer for lung diseases the ap- a and ap- b clathrin adaptor complexes define biochemically and functionally distinct membrane domains the endoplasmic reticulum as a site of protein degradation de novo formation of caveolae in lymphocytes by expression of vip -caveolin identification of a di-leucine motif within the c terminus domain of the menkes disease protein that mediates endocytosis from the plasma membrane cellular uptake of the tat protein from human immunodeficiency virus induction of p mitogen-activated protein kinase reduces early endosome autoantigen (eea ) recruitment to phagosomal membranes caveolin- null mice show a loss of caveolae, changes in the microdomain distribution of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex, and t-tubule abnormalities phenotypic behavior of caveolin- mutations that cause autosomal dominant limb girdle muscular dystrophy (lgmd- c). retention of lgmd- c caveolin- mutants within the golgi complex hiv- traycking to the dendritic cell-t-cell infectious synapse uses a pathway of tetraspanin sorting to the immunological synapse structural basis of fabry disease fyve fingers bind ptdins huntingtin controls neurotrophic support and survival of neurons by enhancing bdnf vesicular transport along microtubules microtubule transport defects in neurological and ciliary disease wilson disease the alpha chain of the ap- adaptor is a clathrin binding subunit intracellular transport and sorting of the oligodendrocyte transmembrane proteolipid protein disrupted proteolipid protein traycking results in oligodendrocyte apoptosis in an animal model of pelizaeus-merzbacher disease evidence that rme- , a conserved c. elegans eh-domain protein, functions in endocytic recycling the arguments for pre-existing early and late endosomes intracellular delivery of large molecules and small particles by cell-penetrating proteins and peptides a gtpase-activating protein controls rab function in endocytic traycking defective granule exocytosis in rab a-deficient lymphocytes from ashen mice synaptojanin : localization on coated endocytic intermediates in nerve terminals and interaction of its kda isoform with eps mutation and aberrant expression of caveolin- in human oral squamous cell carcinomas and oral cancer cell lines traycking, turnover and membrane topology of prp charcot-marie-tooth neuropathy type b is associated with mutations of the myelin p gene invasion activating caveolin- mutation in human scirrhous breast cancers identification and functional analysis of a caveolin- mutation associated with familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy accumulating evidence suggests that several ab-toxins subvert the endoplasmic reticulum-associated protein degradation pathway to enter target cells the delta f mutation shortens the biochemical half-life of plasma membrane cftr in polarized epithelial cells dynaminmediated internalization of caveolae albinism associated with hemorrhagic diathesis and unusual pigmented reticular cells in the bone marrow: report of two cases with histochemical studies evects of mutant rat dynamin on endocytosis characterization of a fourth adaptor-related protein complex missense mutation (c r) in the thyroglobulin gene causes congenital goiter with mild hypothyroidism by impaired intracellular transport a novel leukocyte adhesion deficiency caused by expressed but nonfunctional beta integrins mac- and lfa- caveolae: stable membrane domains with a potential for internalization doublecortin, a stabilizer of microtubules a novel rab gdp/gtp exchange factor complexed to rabaptin- links nucleotide exchange to evector recruitment and function hereditary neutropenia: dogs explain human neutrophil elastase mutations ap- mediates tyrosinase but not trp- traycking in human melanocytes nonsense mutations in adtb a cause complete deficiency of the {beta} a subunit of adaptor complex- and severe hermansky-pudlak syndrome type the leaden gene product is required with rab a to recruit myosin va to melanosomes in melanocytes caveolae and lipid rafts: g protein-coupled receptor signaling microdomains in cardiac myocytes rho gtpases: biochemistry and biology a common w s mutation in the ldl receptor gene of danish patients with familial hypercholesterolemia encodes a transport-defective protein antennapedia homeobox peptide regulates neural morphogenesis identification and molecular characterisation of a calm-af fusion in acute megakaryoblastic leukaemia mutations in a sar gtpase of copii vesicles are associated with lipid absorption disorders substitution of arginine for histidine at position in the alpha-subunit of the human insulin receptor. a mutation that impairs receptor dimerization and transport of receptors to the cell surface distinct sets of sec genes govern transport vesicle formation and fusion early in the secretory pathway metabolic and molecular bases of menkes disease and occipital horn syndrome receptor downregulation and multivesicular-body sorting stress signaling from the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum: coordination of gene transcriptional and translational controls positionally cloned gene for a novel glomerular protein-nephrin-is mutated in congenital nephrotic syndrome endocrinopathies in the family of endoplasmic reticulum (er) storage diseases: disorders of protein traycking and the role of er molecular chaperones a conditional mutation avecting localization of the menkes disease copper atpase. suppression by copper supplementation molecular characterization of mammalian homologues of class c vps proteins that interact with syntaxin- three ways to make a vesicle cellular autophagy: surrender, avoidance and subversion by microorganisms proteasome inhibitors: from research tools to drug candidates a cholesterol-lowering gene maps to chromosome q a controlled study of adenoviral-vector-mediated gene transfer in the nasal epithelium of patients with cystic fibrosis a germline insertion in the tuberous sclerosis (tsc ) gene gives rise to the eker rat model of dominantly inherited cancer disappearance and reformation of synaptic vesicle membrane upon transmitter release observed under reversible blockage of membrane retrieval possible temperature-dependent blockage of synaptic vesicle recycling induced by a single gene mutation in drosophila a post-docking role for active zone protein rim hiv interaction with endosomes in macrophages and dendritic cells organization of the pronephric filtration apparatus in zebrafish requires nephrin, podocin and the ferm domain protein mosaic eyes cdc controls secretory and endocytic transport to the basolateral plasma membrane of mdck cells copii-cargo interactions direct protein sorting into er-derived transport vesicles akt crystal structure and akt-specific inhibitors defective human ether-a-go-go-related gene traycking linked to an endoplasmic reticulum retention signal in the c terminus retroviral vectors vip , a -kd membrane protein is an integral component of trans-golginetwork-derived transport vesicles regulation of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor- activity by caveolin- and plasma membrane cholesterol intracellular localization and loss of copper responsiveness of mnk, the murine homologue of the menkes protein, in cells from blotchy (mo blo) and brindled (mo br) mouse mutants interleukin receptors and detergent-resistant membrane domains define a clathrinindependent endocytic pathway aberrant splicing but not mutations of tsg in human breast cancer tumor cell growth inhibition by caveolin re-expression in human breast cancer cells bi-directional protein transport between the er and golgi a missense mutation in the low density lipoprotein receptor gene causes familial hypercholesterolemia in sephardic jews novel mutations in the wiskott-aldrich syndrome protein gene and their evects on transcriptional, translational, and clinical phenotypes niemann-pick disease: a frequent missense mutation in the acid sphingomyelinase gene of ashkenazi jewish type a and b patients evidence for a regulated interaction between heterotrimeric g proteins and caveolin a huntingtin-associated protein enriched in brain with implications for pathology expression and characterization of recombinant caveolin hermansky-pudlak syndrome type (hps- ) results from mutant dysbindin molecular, anatomical, and biochemical events associated with neurodegeneration in mice with niemann-pick type c disease the listeria protein internalin b mimics hepatocyte growth factor-induced receptor traycking bone marrow transplantation from an hla-matched unrelated donor for treatment of chediak-higashi syndrome familial sjogren's syndrome with associated primary salivary gland lymphoma protein kinase d regulates the fission of cell surface destined transport carriers from the trans-golgi network rme- regulates the distribution and function of the endocytic recycling compartment in mammalian cells caveolae, caveolin and caveolin-rich membrane domains: a signalling hypothesis organized endothelial cell surface signal transduction in caveolae distinct from glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein microdomains mutant myosin viia causes defective melanosome distribution in the rpe of shaker- mice rescue of deltaf and other misprocessed cftr mutants by a novel quinazoline compound organic-aciduria, decreased renal ammonia production, hydrophthalmos, and mental retardation; a clinical entity structure and function of the lowe syndrome protein ocrl autoantigen golgin- , an evector of arl gtpase, participates in trayc from the endosome to the trans-golgi network functional evaluation of dent's disease-causing mutations: implications for clc- channel traycking and internalization regulation of protein transport from the golgi complex to the endoplasmic reticulum by cdc and n-wasp the beta-appendages of the four adaptor-protein (ap) complexes: structure and binding properties, and identification of sorting nexin as an accessory protein to ap- function and regulation of the mammalian coppertransporting atpases: insights from biochemical and cell biological approaches membrane dynamics and the biogenesis of lysosomes rabaptin- is a novel fusion partner to platelet-derived growth factor beta receptor in chronic myelomonocytic leukemia kdel-cargo regulates interactions between proteins involved in copi vesicle trayc: measurements in living cells using fret purification of a novel class of coated vesicles mediating biosynthetic protein transport through the golgi stack clogging of axons by tau, inhibition of axonal trayc and starvation of synapses endocytosis and targeting of exogenous hiv- tat protein a novel point mutation in cd causing the expression of dysfunctional cd /cd leucocyte integrins in a patient with leucocyte adhesion deficiency (lad) copii-coated vesicle formation reconstituted with purified coat proteins and chemically defined liposomes altered traycking and adhesion function of mpz mutations and phenotypes of charcot-marie-tooth disease b biology of adenovirus and its use as a vector for gene therapy the putative tumor suppressors ext and ext form a stable complex that accumulates in the golgi apparatus and catalyzes the synthesis of heparan sulfate congenital hypothyroid goiter with deficient thyroglobulin. identification of an endoplasmic reticulum storage disease with induction of molecular chaperones mutations in rab a cause griscelli syndrome associated with haemophagocytic syndrome myoblast transfer in the treatment of duchenne's muscular dystrophy enzyme replacement therapy in fabry's disease: recent advances and clinical applications signalling to actin assembly via the wasp (wiskott-aldrich syndrome protein)-family proteins and the arp / complex mutations in the caveolin- gene cause autosomal dominant limb-girdle muscular dystrophy long-term evectiveness of a new alpha-glucosidase inhibitor (bay m -miglitol) in insulin-treated type diabetes mellitus genetic disorders avecting proteins of iron and copper metabolism: clinical implications hsp inhibitor geldanamycin and its derivatives as novel cancer chemotherapeutic agents mechanism of microtubule stabilization by doublecortin identification and functional analysis of two novel mutations in the multidrug resistance protein gene in israeli patients with dubin-johnson syndrome pharmacological chaperones: a new twist on receptor folding a conserved clathrin assembly motif essential for synaptic vesicle endocytosis eea , an early endosome-associated protein. eea is a conserved alpha-helical peripheral membrane protein flanked by cysteine ''fingers'' and contains a calmodulin-binding iq motif localization of proteins to the golgi apparatus vip /caveolin is a cholesterol-binding protein maturation models for endosome and lysosome biogenesis cdc regulates the exit of apical and basolateral proteins from the trans-golgi network consistent detection of calm-af chimaeric transcripts in haematological malignancies with t( ; )(p ;q ) and identification of novel transcripts molecular analysis of the ergic- gene in families with combined factor v-factor viii deficiency vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) and its receptors the trojan horse: survival tactics of pathogenic mycobacteria in macrophages snares and membrane fusion in the golgi apparatus mutations in the er-golgi intermediate compartment protein ergic- cause combined deficiency of coagulation factors v and viii regulation of phagocytosis by rho gtpases urinary megalin deficiency implicates abnormal tubular endocytic function in fanconi syndrome wiskott-aldrich syndrome: a model for defective actin reorganization, cell traycking and synapse formation identification of complementation groups required for post-translational events in the yeast secretory pathway cellular uptake of an alpha-helical amphipathic model peptide with the potential to deliver polar compounds into the cell interior non-endocytically novel cell permeable motif derived from the pres -domain of hepatitis-b virus surface antigens dynamin at the neck of caveolae mediates their budding to form transport vesicles by gtp-driven fission from the plasma membrane of endothelium the proteasome is involved in angiogenesis role of rab gtpases in membrane trayc the evolving role of lipid rafts and caveolae in g proteincoupled receptor signaling: implications for molecular pharmacology the structure and function of the beta -adaptin appendage domain phosphatidylinositol phosphate -kinase i{beta} recruits ap- to the plasma membrane and regulates rates of constitutive endocytosis fine structure of blood capillaries intracellular aspects of the process of protein synthesis two genes are responsible for griscelli syndrome at the same q locus localization and processing of cln , the protein associated to batten disease: where is it and what does it do? localization of the ap- adaptor complex defines a novel endosomal exit site for lysosomal membrane proteins infectious hiv- assembles in late endosomes in primary macrophages snares and the specificity of transport vesicle targeting caveolar endocytosis of simian virus reveals a new two-step vesicular-transport pathway to the er caveolin-stabilized membrane domains as multifunctional transport and sorting devices in endocytic membrane trayc alpha -antitrypsin deficiency: liver disease associated with retention of a mutant secretory glycoprotein in the endoplasmic reticulum alpha- -antitrypsin deficiency: diagnosis and treatment identification of the murine beige gene by yac complementation and positional cloning the menkes protein (atp a; mnk) cycles via the plasma membrane both in basal and elevated extracellular copper using a c-terminal dileucine endocytic signal participation of the endoplasmic reticulum chaperone calnexin (p , ip ) in the biogenesis of the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator prevention of lysosomal storage in tay-sachs mice treated with n-butyldeoxynojirimycin correction of a mineralization defect by overexpression of a wild-type cdna for col a in marrow stromal cells (mscs) from a patient with osteogenesis imperfecta: a strategy for rescuing mutations that produce dominant-negative protein defects constitutive protein secretion from the trans-golgi network to the plasma membrane review of donepezil, rivastigmine, galantamine and memantine for the treatment of dementia in alzheimer's disease in adults with down syndrome: implications for the intellectual disability population protein kinase d-mediated anterograde membrane traycking is required for fibroblast motility gene replacement reveals that p /snare interactions are essential for golgi biogenesis constitutive skipping of alternatively spliced exon in the atp a gene abolishes golgi localization of the menkes protein and produces the occipital horn syndrome traycking and folding defects in hereditary spherocytosis mutants of the human red cell anion exchanger caveolin- -deficient mice show evidence of severe pulmonary dysfunction without disruption of caveolae isolation of a miller-dicker lissencephaly gene containing g protein [beta]-subunit-like repeats myosin viia is required for aminoglycoside accumulation in cochlear hair cells endophilin/sh p is required for the transition from early to late stages in clathrinmediated synaptic vesicle endocytosis mechanisms of cell-surface rerouting of an endoplasmic reticulum-retained mutant of the vasopressin v b/v receptor by a pharmacological chaperone adaptor-related proteins adaptable adaptors for coated vesicles surfing the sec channel: bidirectional protein translocation across the er membrane yolk protein uptake in the oocyte of the mosquito aedes aegypti caveolin, a protein component of caveolae membrane coats mechanisms of intracellular protein transport protein sorting by transport vesicles early stages of influenza virus entry into mv- lung cells: involvement of dynamin science medicine, and the future. gene therapy endoplasmic reticulum storage diseases calm-af fusion gene in leukemias: simple and inversion-associated translocation ( ; ) assembly of the er to golgi snare complex requires uso p signal transducing molecules and glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol-linked proteins form a caveolin-rich insoluble complex in mdck cells regulation of the unc- -caenorhabditis elegans syntaxin complex by unc- visualization of er-to-golgi transport in living cells reveals a sequential mode of action for copii and copi identification, sequence, and expression of caveolin- defines a caveolin gene family an enzyme that removes clathrin coats: purification of an uncoating atpase endophilin i mediates synaptic vesicle formation by transfer of arachidonate to lysophosphatidic acid endoplasmic reticulumlocalized amyloid beta-peptide is degraded in the cytosol by two distinct degradation pathways endothelial caveolae have the molecular transport machinery for vesicle budding, docking, and fusion including vamp, nsf, snap, annexins, and gtpases griscelli syndrome: report of the first peripheral blood stem cell transplant and the role of mutations in the rab a gene as an indication for bmt peptide-mediated cellular delivery gene therapy: a brief overview of the past, present, and future phagosome maturation: a few bugs in the system the npc protein: structure implies function rab gtpases, intracellular trayc and disease a ypt/rab evector complex containing the sec homolog vps p is required for homotypic vacuole fusion the role of the tethering proteins p and gm in transport through the golgi apparatus in vivo early endosome antigen. : an autoantigen associated with neurological diseases identification of the b-cell epitopes of the early endosome antigen (eea ) cloning and gene defects in microsomal triglyceride transfer protein associated with abetalipoproteinaemia diverential evects of kinase cascade inhibitors on neoplastic and cytokine-mediated cell proliferation chediak-higashi syndrome: a rare disorder of lysosomes and lysosome related organelles autophagy in health and disease: a double-edged sword golgins and gtpases, giving identity and structure to the golgi apparatus a role for the vesicle tethering protein, p , in the postmitotic stacking of reassembling golgi cisternae in a cell-free system sequential tethering of golgins and catalysis of snarepin assembly by the vesicle-tethering protein p transcytosis of plasma macromolecules in endothelial cells: a cell biological survey regulation of cytoplasmic dynein behaviour and microtubule organization by mammalian lis snap receptors implicated in vesicle targeting and fusion paraneoplastic stiv-person syndrome: passive transfer to rats by means of igg antibodies to amphiphysin a role for giantin in docking copi vesicles to golgi membranes phenotypic behavior of caveolin- r q, a mutant associated with hyperckemia, distal myopathy, and rippling muscle disease phosphofructokinase muscle-specific isoform requires caveolin- expression for plasma membrane recruitment and caveolar targeting: implications for the pathogenesis of caveolin-related muscle diseases identification of filamin as a novel ligand for caveolin- : evidence for the organization of caveolin- -associated membrane domains by the actin cytoskeleton endosomal localization of the autoantigen eea is mediated by a zinc-binding fyve finger perforin gene defects in familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis copicoated er-to-golgi transport complexes segregate from copii in close proximity to er exit sites the immunological synapse of ctl contains a secretory domain and membrane bridges linking albinism and immunity: the secrets of secretory lysosomes the biogenesis of lysosomes: is it a kiss and run, continuous fusion and fission process? breaking the copi monopoly on golgi recycling a family of rab -binding proteins. melanophilin links rab a and myosin va function in melanosome transport retinal stimulates atp hydrolysis by purified and reconstituted abcr, the photoreceptor-specific atp-binding cassette transporter responsible for stargardt disease abnormal vesicular traycking in mouse models of hermansky-pudlak syndrome protein folding and translocation across the endoplasmic reticulum membrane role of calnexin in the glycan-independent quality control of proteolipid protein assembly and traycking of caveolar domains in the cell: caveolae as stable, cargo-triggered, vesicular transporters identification and expression of five mutations in the human acid sphingomyelinase gene causing types a and b niemann-pick disease. molecular evidence for genetic heterogeneity in the neuronopathic and non-neuronopathic forms defective aquaporin- traycking in nephrogenic diabetes insipidus and correction by chemical chaperones misfolding of mutant aquaporin- water channels in nephrogenic diabetes insipidus molecular cloning of caveolin- , a novel member of the caveolin gene family expressed predominantly in muscle copii and exit from the endoplasmic reticulum identification of a familial hyperinsulinism-causing mutation in the sulfonylurea receptor that prevents normal traycking and function of katp channels mutations of the pds gene, encoding pendrin, are associated with protein mislocalization and loss of iodide ezux: implications for thyroid dysfunction in pendred syndrome the chediak-higashi protein interacts with snare complex and signal transduction proteins clathrin assembly lymphoid myeloid leukemia (calm) protein: localization in endocytic-coated pits, interactions with clathrin, and the impact of overexpression on clathrin-mediated trayc how peroxisomes arise chloride channels cough up caveolae are highly immobile plasma membrane microdomains, which are not involved in constitutive endocytic traycking tau regulates the attachment/detachment but not the speed of motors in microtubule-dependent transport of single vesicles and organelles gangliosides are receptors for murine polyoma virus and sv protein traycking and alzheimer's disease role of auxilin in uncoating clathrincoated vesicles the inositol polyphosphate -phosphatase ocrl associates with endosomes that are partially coated with clathrin actin microfilaments facilitate the retrograde transport from the golgi complex to the endoplasmic reticulum in mammalian cells dynamin-like protein encoded by the drosophila shibire gene associated with vesicular trayc protein kinase d: an intracellular trayc regulator on the move fcgammar polymorphisms: implications for function, disease susceptibility and immunotherapy a dileucine-like sorting signal directs transport into an ap- -dependent, clathrin-independent pathway to the yeast vacuole protein kinase g from pathogenic mycobacteria promotes survival within macrophages degradation of cftr by the ubiquitinproteasome pathway use of expression constructs to dissect the functional domains of the chs/beige protein: identification of multiple phenotypes a novel -kd peripheral membrane protein is required for intercisternal transport in the golgi stack rab coordinates a novel golgi to er retrograde transport pathway in live cells hsp and the chaperoning of cancer sec -mediated transfer of a membrane protein from the endoplasmic reticulum to the proteasome for destruction the human cytomegalovirus us gene product dislocates mhc class i heavy chains from the endoplasmic reticulum to the cytosol amphiphysin heterodimers: potential role in clathrin-mediated endocytosis the caveolin genes: from cell biology to medicine a mutation in rab a causes the vesicle transport defects observed in ashen mice caveolinopathies: mutations in caveolin- cause four distinct autosomal dominant muscle diseases four contiguous amino acid substitutions, identified in patients with laron syndrome, diverently avect the binding aynity and intracellular traycking of the growth hormone receptor synaptojanin is the major constitutively active phosphatidylinositol- , , -trisphosphate -phosphatase in rodent brain rab a enables myosin va-dependent melanosome capture by recruiting the myosin to the organelle identification of an organelle receptor for myosin-va the tuberous sclerosis gene product, tuberin, functions as a rab gtpase activating protein (gap) in modulating endocytosis the fine structure of the gall bladder epithelium of the mouse caveolin is an inhibitor of platelet-derived growth factor receptor signaling sulfonylureas correct traycking defects of atp-sensitive potassium channels caused by mutations in the sulfonylurea receptor nsec binds a closed conformation of syntaxin a abnormal ryanodine receptor function in heart failure fabry disease: characterization of alpha-galactosidase a double mutations and the d y plasma enzyme pseudodeficiency allele protein kinase d regulates basolateral membrane protein exit from trans-golgi network predisposition to renal carcinoma in the eker rat is determined by germ-line mutation of the tuberous sclerosis (tsc ) gene adenovirus-mediated gene transfer transiently corrects the chloride transport defect in nasal epithelia of patients with cystic fibrosis rab proteins as membrane organizers bleeding due to disruption of a cargo-specific er-to-golgi transport complex charcot-marie-tooth disease type a caused by mutation in a microtubule motor kif b the lebanese allele at the low density lipoprotein receptor locus. nonsense mutation produces truncated receptor that is retained in endoplasmic reticulum sucrase-isomaltase deficiency in humans. diverent mutations disrupt intracellular transport, processing, and function of an intestinal brush border enzyme surfing the sec channel: bidirectional protein translocation across the er membrane crystal structure of an activated akt/protein kinase b ternary complex with gsk -peptide and amp-pnp key: cord- -fna s te authors: bochud, pierre-yves; bochud, murielle; telenti, amalio; calandra, thierry title: innate immunogenetics: a tool for exploring new frontiers of host defence date: - - journal: lancet infect dis doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: fna s te the discovery of innate immune genes, such as those encoding toll-like receptors (tlrs), nucleotide-binding oligomerisation domain-like receptors (nlrs), and related signal-transducing molecules, has led to a substantial improvement of our understanding of innate immunity. recent immunogenetic studies have associated polymorphisms of the genes encoding tlrs, nlrs, and key signal-transducing molecules, such as interleukin- receptor-associated kinase (irak ), with increased susceptibility to, or outcome of, infectious diseases. with the availability of high-throughput genotyping techniques, it is becoming increasingly evident that analyses of genetic polymorphisms of innate immune genes will further improve our knowledge of the host antimicrobial defence response and help in identifying individuals who are at increased risk of life-threatening infections. this is likely to open new perspectives for the development of diagnostic, predictive, and preventive management strategies to combat infectious diseases. environmental and host factors are important determinants of susceptibility to infection. in recent years, a rapidly growing body of evidence has underscored the importance of host genetic factors. the eff ect of genetic and environmental factors on the risk of death was assessed in a study of adoptees. death of a biological parent (but not of an adoptive parent) from infection before the age of years resulted in a six times increase in the relative risk of dying from infection in the adoptee, strongly suggesting that susceptibility to infection aggregates in families. individuals who are heterozygous for haemoglobin s are known to be protected against malaria, whereas homozygous individuals have sickle-cell anaemia. the high frequency of sickle-cell anaemia and other red blood cell disorders in regions where malaria is highly prevalent suggests that infectious agents (eg, plasmodium falciparum) can exert quite substantial selective pressure on human populations. although natural immunity ensures survival of the species as a whole, individuals themselves are not likely to be immunocompetent to all pathogens, and individual diff erences in susceptibility to specifi c pathogens are quite common. the development of the human genome project in propelled the scientifi c community into a new era, allowing genetic mapping and the development of large-scale gene identifi cation that has greatly facilitated the study of gene polymorphisms. we review recent advances in the fi eld of innate immunogenetics of host defences and show how an interdisciplinary approach of combining genetic epidemiology, genetics, genomics, and molecular and cellular biology will improve our understanding of the pathogenetic basis of infectious diseases, and help the development of new preventive and therapeutic treatment strategies. little inter-individual variation exists within the human genome. in fact, all genetic diff erences between individuals are estimated to be caused by variability in million bp, which represent about · % of the human genome. since the mutation rate in mammalian genomes is low ( -⁹ per bp per year), most interindividual variations are inherited. the most frequent variation is the single nucleotide polymorphism (snp), which occurs on average every bp. another type of genetic mutation is the variable number of tandem repeat (vntr); vntrs consist of repeats of sequences ranging from a single basepair to thousands of basepairs. the term microsatellite is used for repeats of one to six nucleotides, whereas repeats of longer units are called minisatellites (seven to nucleotides) or, in the extreme case, satellite dna (more than nucleotides). since the number of repeats varies among individuals, vntrs have been widely used as genetic markers. within a coding region of a gene, an snp can either induce an aminoacid change (non-synonymous snps) or not (synonymous snps). snps may be located in the promoter region of a gene and therefore infl uence gene expression or splicing. similarly, diff erent lengths of vntr regions have been associated with diff erential gene expression. certain snps or vntr alleles, or both, may be linked together so that non-functional polymorphisms can be used as genetic markers of functionally important mutations. only · % of snps are thought to be located in a coding region of a gene. the functions of nearly all snps that are located outside gene-coding or regulatory regions are unknown. in recent years, snp genotyping technologies with high throughput and aff ordable costs have become available. these technologies are based on a few basic biochemical reactions (hybridisation, pcr with diff erential primer extension, specifi c ligation, and diff erential cleavage), which are used on diff erent support media and can be detected by diff erent methods (fi gure ). recent highthroughput technologies allow genotyping at low cost (ie, a few cents per snp per sample). once markers have been typed, two main approaches can be used to analyse them: single marker analysis or haplotype analysis. a haplotype refers to the arrangement of two or more alleles on the same chromosome. currently, there is much debate about which approach is the most appropriate. studies have proposed that the underlying structure of the human genome can be described by use of a relatively simple framework in which the data are parsed into a series of discrete haplotype blocks. , this observation has led to the development of haplotype tagging methods that aim to capture the haplotype structure in a candidate region. haplotype tagging refers to the concept that most of the haplotypic structure in a particular chromosomal region can be captured by genotyping a smaller number of markers than all of those that constitute the haplotypes. the crucial markers to type would be the minimum set of markers that unambiguously identify each possible haplotype. the detection and estimation of familial aggregation is usually the fi rst step in the genetic analysis of a trait. once familial aggregation has been documented, the traditional approach has been to narrow down the genetic region of interest by use of linkage analysis, followed by fi ne mapping and association studies (table ) . linkage and association studies are based on the same underlying principle: once a mutation occurs on a particular chromosome, it is subsequently transmitted to off spring together with nearby loci. this association is broken down at each successive generation by recombination (ie, homologous chromosomes pair during the meiotic cell division and exchange genetic material). when two loci are close enough on the same chromosome that their alleles cosegregate when passed on to the next generation, we say that the two loci are linked. linkage disequilibrium refers to allelic association that is caused by linkage, or in other words, that has not yet been broken up by recombination. an association between two loci, such as the non-independence of alleles at these loci, may be caused not only by linkage, but also to factors such as population stratifi cation or chance. population stratifi cation refers to the situation in which study participants are selected from genetically diff erent subpopulations. population stratifi cation will only lead to a spurious association (and hence be a confounder) if both the allele and disease frequencies diff er across subpopulations. some researchers have argued that too much emphasis has been put on this issue and surprisingly few examples can be found that unequivocally show that population stratifi cation has led to a spurious association. , whereas linkage and association studies can be done in families, only association studies can be done in unrelated cases and controls (table ). the main diff erence between related and unrelated cases is the number of meiotic events that separate them, so that unrelated cases share a much shorter chromosomal segment around a particular causative mutation than related cases. linkage and association can be obscured by incomplete penetrance (ie, there is no one-to-one correspondence between genotype and phenotype), misdiagnoses, genetic heterogeneity (several genes can produce a similar phenotype), phenocopies (ie, environmental factors mimicking the eff ect of certain genes), and disease an important advance toward enabling effi cient wholegenome-scan association studies is the determination of linkage disequilibrium patterns on a genome-wide scale through the hapmap project. because most diseases are likely to be infl uenced by several genes and environmental factors, the analysis of gene-gene interactions (epistasis) and gene-environment interactions will represent an important task in the future, but this is, and will remain, a challenging issue for the years to come. the innate immune system assumes an essential role in the natural host defences against microbes. the recognition of microbial pathogens, either in tissue in contact with the host's environment or in the systemic circulation after invasion of the bloodstream, is done by macrophages, dendritic cells, natural killer cells, granulocytes, and monocytes, which act as sentinels of the innate immune system (fi gure ). this process involves coordinated action of several families of proteins, such as toll-like receptors (tlrs), nucleotide-binding oligomerisation domain (nod)-like receptors (nlrs), , rna helicase-containing proteins, and the c-type lectins. tlrs are essential components of the innate immune system. , , tlrs are type i transmembrane proteins that function as homodimers or heterodimers. the extracellular domain comprises multiple leucine-rich repeat structures that vary among diff erent tlrs and are implicated in the selective recognition of a vast range of microbial-associated molecular patterns (mamps). so far, members of the tlr family have been identifi ed in mammals. several molecules, including cd , cd , and md , have also been shown to participate in the sensing of microbial products and are therefore integral components of these receptor complexes. binding of microbial products to microbial-recognition molecules activates signal transduction pathways and the transcription of immune genes that code for costimulatory molecules expressed at the cell surface or for immunoregulatory eff ector molecules (including cytokines and chemokines) released in the extracellular milieu that orchestrate the host innate immune defence response. , in addition to lipopolysaccharide of gram-negative bacteria, , tlr detects other mamps that are structurally unrelated to lipopolysaccharide, such as mannan (candida albicans) or the fusion protein of respiratory syncytial virus (fi gure ). other endogenous ligands, including fi brinogen, fi bronectin, hyaluronic acid, heparin sulphate, beta-defensins, or heat-shock proteins, have been reported to activate tlr . however, endotoxin contamination has been argued to account for tlr tl r tl r microbial-associated molecular patterns are recognised by transmembrane receptors ( : eg, toll-like receptors [tlrs]), which trigger the activation of several signal-transducing pathways, leading to the production of cytokines and expression of costimulatory molecules. cytokines induce and regulate the infl ammatory response and orchestrate the adaptive immune response. by contrast with other tlrs, tlr , tlr , tlr , and tlr are expressed mainly in the endosomal compartment ( ), where local acidifi cation is required for recognition of microbial products by their cognate receptors. intracellular pathogens or microbial products released intracellularly after lysis of ingested microorganisms may also interact with intracytoplasmic receptors, such as nucleotide-binding oligomerisation domain-like (nlr) proteins ( ), or the rna helicase-containing molecules ( : rig-i or mda ). tcr=t-cell receptor. tlr detects lipopolysaccharide (lps), mannan (candida albicans), and the fusion protein of the respiratory syncytial virus. tlr forms a heterodimer with either tlr to detect triacyl lipopeptide or tlr to detect diacyl lipopeptide and zymosan. tlr is also involved in the recognition of lipoteichoic acid (lta), peptidoglycan (pg), lipoarabinomannan (lam), porins (neisseria spp), glycosylphosphatidylinositol mucin (trypanosoma spp; tgpi), and the haemaglutinnin protein (ha, measles virus). tlr , tlr , tlr , and tlr are located in the endosomal compartment and detect nucleic acids and/or haemozoin (plasmodium spp, tlr ). through their intracellular domain, tlrs interact with specifi c adaptor proteins, including the myeloid diff erentiation primary response protein (myd ), the tir domaincontaining adaptor protein (tirap), the tir domain-containing adapter inducing interferon (trif), and the trifrelated adapter molecule (tram). these adaptors lead to the activation of several transcription factors such the nuclear factor κb (nfκb), the activating-protein (ap ), and/or the interferon regulatory factors and (irf / ) that ultimately induce the production of pro-infl ammatory mediators. ss=single-stranded. ds=double-stranded. the tlr specifi city of some of these putative tlr ligands. tlr and tlr heterodimers detect diacyl lipopeptides, whereas tlr and tlr heterodimers recognise triacyl lipopeptides. tlr has also been proposed to sense lipoteichoic acid, peptidoglygan, lipoarabinomannan, phospholipomannan (c albicans), zymosan (saccharomyces cerevisiae), porins (neisseria spp), glycosylphosphatidylinositol mucin (trypanosoma spp), and the haemagluttinin protein of the measles virus. tlr , tlr , tlr , and tlr , which are mainly expressed in endosomes, serve to detect viral or bacterial nucleic acids. tlr detects double-stranded rna and tlr detects single-stranded rna. tlr senses dna containing the unmethylated cpg motifs found in bacteria and viruses and the malaria pigment haemozoin. compartmentalisation of tlr , tlr , tlr , and tlr thus allows the detection of pathogenic dna and rna within the endosomal compartment, while avoiding the detection of self-dna and mrna. on binding of cognate ligands, the intracellular tollinterleukin- receptor (tir) domain of tlrs recruits and activates diff erent adaptor proteins, including myeloid diff erentiation primary response protein (myd ), tir domain-containing adaptor protein, tir domaincontaining adapter-inducing interferon β (trif; also known as ticam), and trif-related adapter molecule, ultimately leading to the activation of several specifi c signal-transducing pathways and transcription factors such as nuclear factor κb (nfκb) and activating protein (ap ; fi gure and fi gure ). myd -dependent signalling pathways (nfκb and ap ) are activated by all tlrs, whereas myd -independent, trif-dependent signalling path ways (interferon regulatory factor [irf] ) are activated only by some tlrs (such as tlr and tlr ). the observation that diff erent tlrs may activate diff erent signalling pathways with diff erent biological conse quences shows that the innate immune system can produce pathogen-specifi c defensive responses. in addition to the tlrs, the family of proteins comprising nod proteins and the nalps (neuronal apoptosis inhibitor [like] proteins), also known collectively as nlrs or nacht-leucine-rich-repeat-containing proteins, have been shown to have a crucial role in the sensing of microbial products, invasive pathogens, and endogenous host proteins. nlrs are cytosolic proteins composed of three diff erent structural domains, a carboxy-terminal ligand-binding domain consisting of leucine-rich repeats, a nucleotide oligomerisation domain, and an aminoterminal eff ector domain consisting of various caspaserecruitment domains (card), a pyrin domain, or a baculoviral inhibitor-of-apoptosis repeat. , nod and nod have been shown to recognise specifi c bacterial peptidoglycan motifs, and to interact with tlr signalling pathways. , nod detects muramyldipeptide, a peptidoglycan fraction of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, traf =tumour necrosis factor-receptor-associated factor . snp=single nucleotide polymorphism. γ-d-glutamyl-meso-diaminopimelic acid, a peptidoglycan fraction found in gram-negative bacteria and in a few gram-positive bacteria (listeria and bacillus spp). , on exposure to microbial products, nods activate transcription factors, including nfκb and the mitogenactivated protein kinase, and induce the cleavage of prointerleukin β into active interleukin β. [ ] [ ] [ ] the nalp subfamily of nlr proteins interact with several adaptor molecules, including asc (apoptosis-associated specklike protein containing a card domain), caspase , and caspase , and are essential for the activation of interleukin β. the nalp-related protein card (also known as ipaf) is involved in salmonella typhimuriuminduced activation of caspase . nalp is implicated in the detection of atp, bacterial rna, and uric acid crystals. however, most nalps are orphan recognition proteins with no known ligands. a series of fascinating articles have provided strong evidence implicating the innate immune system in the host defence against viruses. two intracytoplasmic molecules have been implicated in the detection of viral rna. retinoic-acid-inducible protein i (rig-i) and melanoma diff erentiation-associated gene (mda ) - possess a card domain and rna helicase domains that function as sensors of double-stranded rna. rig-i and mda signal through the adaptor molecule mavs (mitochondrial antiviral signalling protein; also known as cardif or visa) , , and interact with several other signal-transducing molecules, including fadd (tumour necrosis factor receptor superfamily member precursor [tnfrsf , also know as fas]-associated death domain protein), ripk (receptor-interacting serine/threonineprotein kinase ; also known as rip or rip ), tbk (traf family member-associated nf-kappa-b activator [tank]-binding kinase- ), and ikke (inhibitor of nfκb kinase subunit epsilon; also known as ikk-i). these molecules are involved in the production of type i interferons (interferons α and β) in response to infection by rna viruses. therefore, rig-i and mda are able to detect single-stranded rna present in the cytoplasmic compartment and thus not accessible to endosomal tlr . interestingly, rig-i and mda can discriminate between diff erent types of viruses. rig-i is essential for the production of interferons in response to paramyxoviruses, infl uenza virus, and japanese encephalitis virus, whereas mda is crucial for detection of picornavirus. a newly described form of innate immunity, termed intrinsic immunity, ensures protection by providing a constitutive, always-on line of defence, relying on intracellular obstacles to hinder the replication of pathogens. this component of the immune system has gained much attention as a cornerstone of the resistance of mammals against several classes of retroelements and retroviruses. among the best studied proteins are the family of apolipoprotein b mrna-editing enzyme catalytic polypeptide (apobec ) proteins, which interfere with the viral lifecycle by incorporating themselves into viral particles, leading to viral dna hypermutation on the next round of infection. , a series of studies involving infection of human cd + t cells and macrophages with wild-type hiv- and hiv- defi cient in the vif gene showed that the antiviral eff ect of abc g (also known as cem or apobec g) is counteracted by vif. interestingly, in non-human primates, abc g orthologues provide antiviral activity against wild-type hiv- , but not their cognate simian immunodefi ciency viruses, suggesting that virus permissiveness in diff erent primates results from species-specifi c diff erences within vif. one human variant of abc g has been associated with rapid hiv- disease progression. the tripartite motif (trim) family is a well-conserved family of proteins characterised by a structure comprising a ring-fi nger domain, one or two b-box motifs, and a predicted coiled-coil region. additionally, most trim proteins have additional carboxy-terminal domains. members of the trim protein family are involved in various cellular processes, including cell proliferation, diff erentiation, development, oncogenesis, and apoptosis. , some trim proteins exert antiviral properties. trim α is reported to restrict retroviral infection by specifi cally recognising the viral capsid and promoting its premature disassembly. human trim α has limited effi cacy against hiv- , whereas some primate trim α orthologues can potently restrict this particular lentivirus. , substantial interspecies sequence diversity characterises trim α and may underlie diff erences in the pattern and breadth of restriction of multiple lentiviruses. human trim α variants do not modify susceptibility to hiv- ; however, they change susceptibility to other retroviruses, such as n-tropic murine leukaemia virus. polymorphisms found in trim α might conceivably have been selected in past epidemics by viruses unrelated to hiv- . the increasing availability of genomic data allows comparative analyses of genetic sequences involved in innate and intrinsic immunity. this approach, also described as evolutionary genomics, identifi es the role of adaptive forces on protein-encoding genes by determining signs of positive (diversifying) or negative (purifying) selection. for example, positive selection in the human genome indicates shifts in living conditions experienced by modern human populations, such as diff erent habitats, food sources, population densities, and exposure to pathogens. several families of innate immunity genes have been investigated by use of comparative genomics. vertebrate tlrs are an example of evolutionary conservation that review indicate the diffi culty for the microbes to mutate genes that encode mamps. , the cd (dc-sign) proteins, a family of c-type lectins that participate in the recognition of various pathogens, display a complex pattern of evolution. whereas cd has been under a strong selective constraint that prevents accumulation of aminoacid changes, cd l (also known as dc-sign or dc-signr) exhibits greater variation across human populations. such variations may be tolerated because of the potentially redundant functional activities of the molecules encoded by these genes. the killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptor (kir) genes encode a family of receptors expressed by natural killer cells, which participate in early responses against infected or transformed cells through production of cytokines and direct cytotoxicity. , by contrast with tlrs and cd , only a small proportion of kir alleles are conserved among primates, showing a rapid species-specifi c diversifi cation of the kir gene family members and a plasticity of the genomic region that parallels that of the mhc loci. thus, the evolutionary forces driving the genesis of natural killer receptors and their hla ligands represent a concerted response to pathogens. finally, a remarkable success of evolutionary genomics in infectious diseases is the identifi cation of protein regions relevant for host-pathogen interactions in hiv- infection. comparative analysis of the primate antiretroviral cellular defence genes encoding for abc g and trim α have revealed the powerful selective pressures emerging from a long-standing battle between retroviruses and their hosts. [ ] [ ] [ ] singular aminoacids or regions (patches) contain key residues that confer primates the ability to combat hiv- . given that the innate immune system is at the interface between the host and the pathogen, polymorphisms of innate immune genes are very likely to aff ect the host susceptibility to infections. since the innate immune system senses only a limited number of highly conserved microbial-associated molecular patterns via a limited number of receptors and signalling molecules, as anticipated, several polymorphisms have been found to confer an increased susceptibility to specifi c pathogens (table , table , and fi gure ). a study from turkey revealed an association between susceptibility to tuberculosis and an snp (r q) in the tlr gene. ( · %) of tuberculosis patients were homozygous for the minor allele compared with two ( · %) of healthy controls (odds ratio · , % ci · - · , p= · ). of note, r q was associated with decreased responsiveness to bacterial lipopeptides. the role of a microsatellite polymorphism (gt repeat) in the exon of tlr has been studied in korean patients with tuberculosis and healthy controls. a shorter gt repeat was found more frequently in tuberculosis patients than healthy individuals ( · % vs · %, p= · ), and was associated with weaker promoter activities and lower tlr expression in cd positive peripheral blood monocytes. two nonsynonymous snps in the extracellular domain of tlr found to be in linkage disequilibrium (d g and t i) have been associated with an increased susceptibility to infections caused by gram-negative bacteria, , brucella spp, respiratory syncytial virus, and p falciparum. individuals heterozygous for the d g and t i snps were hyporesponsive to lipopolysaccharide as measured by bronchospastic response after inhalation of endotoxin. furthermore, airway epithelial cells isolated from heterozygous individuals had defi cient response to lipopolysaccharide, suggesting that d g and t i acted in a dominant fashion with respect to the wild-type allele. however, monocytes and whole blood isolated from heterozygous individuals did not show abnormal responses to lipopolysaccharide, , suggesting that the eff ects of these mutations may vary between cell types. although two studies had shown that d g, or d g and t i, were associated with an increased risk of gram-negative infections or septic shock, three subsequent studies did not fi nd an association in patients with meningococcal sepsis. [ ] [ ] [ ] however, in one study, rare heterozygous missense mutations of tlr were linked with the development of meningococcal disease. unexpectedly, d g and t i were associated with decreased rather than increased susceptibility to legionella pneumophila infection. a stop codon polymorphism in tlr (r stop), shown to abolish the ability of tlr to detect bacterial fl agellin, has been associated with increased susceptibility to pneumonia caused by l pneumophila. several studies have shown associations between mutations in genes encoding several proteins of the tlr signalling pathways (irak , , ikbkg, [ ] [ ] [ ] and iκbα , ) and rare inherited immunodefi ciencies. complete recessive interleukin- receptor-associated kinase (irak ) defi ciency is characterised by recurrent infections with pyogenic bacteria at an early age that tend to disappear over time. by contrast, mutations aff ecting the other genes result in x-linked (ikbkg) or autosomaldominant (iκbα) anhydrotic ectodermal dysplasia, which is characterised by increased susceptibility to a broader range of pathogens, such as atypical mycobacteria or pneumocystis jirovecii and a complex disorder involving impaired development of skin appendages, conical teeth, and hypotrichosis. [ ] [ ] [ ] taken together, these data clearly show that mutations in the genes encoding tlrs and downstream signal-transducing molecules infl uence innate immune responses and increase susceptibility to many infectious diseases. similarly, polymorphism of cytokines and cytokine receptor genes, which are key eff ector molecules, have also been associated with altered susceptibility to invasive pathogens. polymorphisms in genes encoding nlrs have been shown to infl uence susceptibility to infl ammatory diseases. polymorphisms in nod have been associated with susceptibility to crohn's disease, common limitations of genetic association studies are shown in table . genetic studies done to date often fail on the following factors: ( ) to properly account for confounding factors (such as lack of information on ethnicity), and selection and information biases (insuffi cient data on the source population of cases and controls or study endpoints); ( ) to present appropriate statistical analyses (such as lack of sample size calculation and correction for multiple testing); and ( ) to provide convincing information about biological plausibility. as an example, among fi ve studies that assessed the eff ect of tlr polymorphisms on susceptibility to, and outcome of, severe infections, only two included more than patients, two provided information about patient's ethnicity, , and only one limited the analysis to a specifi c ethnic group. comparison of data is often impaired by the fact that apparently similar studies used markedly diff erent controls groups and endpoints. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] proving causality is never trivial. associations are likely to occur when noncausal markers are in linkage disequilibrium with the true disease locus. although the replication of a fi nding in an independent sample decreases the risk of a falsepositive result, the functional signifi cance of the genetic variant should ultimately be shown in biological studies. however, proving biological plausibility may be diffi cult in view of the limitations of in-vitro studies used as proxy of complex in-vivo biological processes. for example, use of gene-silencing techniques often reduces the biological observation to that of an on/off system, which does not allow the detection of quantitative variations (ie, a dose-response eff ect) of gene expression or discrete functional alterations. with the increasing use of high-throughput genotyping techniques, the number of genetic associations that will be reported in the years to come will most probably exceed our capacity to do proper functional studies and hence to provide convincing evidence for biological plausibility. jain et al, jain et al, functional studies should therefore focus on genetic polymorphisms that exert a strong eff ect, have been replicated by independent investigators, and have potential diagnostic or therapeutic implications. to limit the importance of positive publication bias, it will be crucial for investigators and journal editors to become less reluctant to publish well-conducted negative studies. in recent years, innate immunogenetic studies of inherited genetic disorders have provided researchers and clinical investigators with crucial information that has improved our understanding of the host defences against microbial pathogens. table shows examples of the eff ect of recent discoveries in the fi eld of innate immunogenetics with foreseeable applications for the short, middle, and long term in areas such as vaccine development and predictive and preventive medicine. the persistence or emergence of potentially devastating infectious diseases, such as tuberculosis, malaria, hiv/ aids, and, most recently, severe acute respiratory syndrome or avian infl uenza, underscore the need to develop new vaccines and therapeutic treatment strategies. a better understanding of microbial genomics and genetics and host innate immunogenetics is likely to provide important information for the development of new vaccines. vaccine immunogenicity is determined not only by the chemical and physical nature of microbial antigens and adjuvants, but also by the genetic make-up of vaccine recipients. analyses of polymorphisms of innate immune genes may also help understand why some individuals exhibit suboptimum responses to vaccination. immuno suppression as a result of myeloablative chemotherapy, solid organ or haematological stem-cell transplantation, or corticosteroid therapy for autoimmune diseases represent other clinical conditions for which immune gene polymorphisms may help to predict the risk of life-threatening infectious complications. the recent discoveries of genes encoding tlrs, nlrs, and the related signal-transducing molecules has markedly improved our understanding of innate immunity. the availability of high-throughput genotyping techniques opens new perspectives to further improve our understanding of the pathogenesis of infectious diseases and for the development of new diagnostic, predictive, and preventive treatment strategies. clinicians and researchers should be aware of the results and far-reaching implications of recent innate immunogenetic studies that have associated genetic polymorphisms with susceptibility to, or outcome of, infectious diseases. collecting dna should now be an integral part of epidemiological or clinical infectious disease studies. national and international consortia should be created to put together large cohort studies to promote and facilitate research in the fi eld. we declare that we have no confl icts of interest. relevant articles for this review were identifi ed by searching medline ( to november, ) by use of the terms "genetics", "single nucleotide polymorphisms", "toll-like receptors" or "tlrs", "nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain receptors" or "nods", "immunology", and "innate immunity", and by extracting references from these articles. the review was limited to articles published in the english language. genetic and environmental infl uences on premature death in adult adoptees protection aff orded by sickle-cell trait against subtertian malareal infection the immunogenetics of resistance to malaria genetic dissection of immunity to mycobacteria: the human model a map of human genome sequence variation containing · million single nucleotide polymorphisms microsatellites: simple sequences with complex evolution the association between microsatellite polymorphisms in intron ii of the human toll-like receptor gene and tuberculosis among koreans accessing genetic variation: genotyping single nucleotide polymorphisms single nucleotide polymorphism genotyping: biochemistry, protocol, cost and throughput the structure of haplotype blocks in the human genome haplotype blocks and linkage disequilibrium in the human genome introduction and overview. statistical methods in genetic epidemiology reporting, appraising, and integrating data on genotype prevalence and gene-disease associations population stratifi cation and spurious allelic association counterpoint: bias from population stratifi cation is not a major threat to the validity of conclusions from epidemiological studies of common polymorphisms and cancer the international hapmap consortium. the international hapmap project pathogen recognition and innate immunity cardif is an adaptor protein in the rig-i antiviral pathway and is targeted by hepatitis c virus signalling pathways and molecular interactions of nod and nod diff erential roles of mda and rig-i helicases in the recognition of rna viruses myeloid c-type lectins in innate immunity toll-like receptors in the induction of the innate immune response inferences, questions and possibilities in toll-like receptor signalling innate immunity: an overview lps, tlr and infectious disease diversity cd is a sensor of diacylglycerides innate immune recognition defective lps signaling in c h/hej and c bl/ sccr mice: mutations in tlr gene md- , a molecule that confers lipopolysaccharide responsiveness on toll-like receptor endotoxin contamination in recombinant human heat shock protein (hsp ) preparation is responsible for the induction of tumor necrosis factor alpha release by murine macrophages tlr mutations are associated with endotoxin hyporesponsiveness in humans tolllike receptor polymorphisms are associated with resistance to legionnaires' disease distinct mutations in irak- confer hyporesponsiveness to lipopolysaccharide and interleukin- in a patient with recurrent bacterial infections pyogenic bacterial infections in humans with irak- defi ciency a hypermorphic ikappabalpha mutation is associated with autosomal dominant anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia and t cell immunodefi ciency a novel x-linked disorder of immune defi ciency and hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia is allelic to incontinentia pigmenti and due to mutations in ikkgamma (nemo) specifi c missense mutations in nemo result in hyper-igm syndrome with hypohydrotic ectodermal dysplasia specifi c nemo mutations impair cd -mediated c-rel activation and b cell terminal diff erentiation x-linked anhidrotic ectodermal dysplasia with immunodefi ciency is caused by impaired nf-kappab signaling nod-lrr proteins: role in host-microbial interactions and infl ammatory disease the role of toll-like receptors and nod proteins in bacterial infection host recognition of bacterial muramyl dipeptide mediated through nod . implications for crohn's disease nod detects a unique muropeptide from gram-negative bacterial peptidoglycan an essential role for nod in host recognition of bacterial peptidoglycan containing diaminopimelic acid rick/rip / cardiak mediates signalling for receptors of the innate and adaptive immune systems role of nod in the response of macrophages to toll-like receptor agonists heterotypic interactions among nacht domains: implications for regulation of innate immune responses nlrs join tlrs as innate sensors of pathogens diff erential activation of the infl ammasome by caspase- adaptors asc and ipaf cryopyrin activates the infl ammasome in response to toxins and atp bacterial rna and small antiviral compounds activate caspase- through cryopyrin/nalp goutassociated uric acid crystals activate the nalp infl ammasome the rna helicase rig-i has an essential function in double-stranded rna-induced innate antiviral responses the v proteins of paramyxoviruses bind the ifn-inducible rna helicase, mda- , and inhibit its activation of the ifn-beta promoter expression analysis and genomic characterization of human melanoma diff erentiation associated gene- , mda- : a novel type i interferon-responsive apoptosis-inducing gene mda- : an interferon-inducible putative rna helicase with double-stranded rna-dependent atpase activity and melanoma growth-suppressive properties shared and unique functions of the dexd/h-box helicases rig-i, mda , and lgp in antiviral innate immunity visa is an adapter protein required for virus-triggered ifn-beta signaling ips- , an adaptor triggering rig-i-and mda -mediated type i interferon induction lentiviral vectors and antiretroviral intrinsic immunity role and mechanism of action of the apobec family of antiretroviral resistance factors innate cellular defenses of apobec cytidine deaminases and viral counter-defenses isolation of a human gene that inhibits hiv- infection and is suppressed by the viral vif protein a single amino acid determinant governs the species-specifi c sensitivity of apobec g to vif action apobec g genetic variants and their infl uence on the progression to aids the tripartite motif family identifi es cell compartments trim family proteins: retroviral restriction and antiviral defence control of viral infectivity by tripartite motif proteins specifi c recognition and accelerated uncoating of retroviral capsids by the trim alpha restriction factor highfrequency persistence of an impaired allele of the retroviral defense gene trim alpha in humans a map of recent positive selection in the human genome toll-like receptor recognizes a conserved site on fl agellin required for protofi lament formation and bacterial motility the evolution of vertebrate toll-like receptors novel member of the cd (dc-sign) gene family in primates the heritage of pathogen pressures and ancient demography in the human innate-immunity cd /cd l region mhc class i molecules and kirs in human history, health and survival the impact of variation at the kir gene cluster on human disease single haplotype analysis demonstrates rapid evolution of the killer immunoglobulin-like receptor (kir) loci in primates ancient adaptive evolution of the primate antiviral dna-editing enzyme apobec g positive selection of primate trim alpha identifi es a critical species-specifi c retroviral restriction domain patterns of evolution of host proteins involved in retroviral pathogenesis polymorphisms in cd , mannose-binding lectin, and toll-like receptor- are associated with increased prevalence of infection in critically ill adults cd and tlr gene polymorphisms in adult periodontitis combined carriership of tlr − c and cd − t alleles enhances the risk of developing chronic relapsing pouchitis cd promoter polymorphism − c>t is associated with susceptibility to chronic chlamydia pneumoniae infection in peripheral blood monocytes the cd functional gene polymorphism − c>t is not involved in either the susceptibility to chlamydia trachomatis infection or the development of tubal pathology association between common toll-like receptor mutations and severe respiratory syncytial virus disease genetic polymorphisms of cd , toll-like receptor , and caspase-recruitment domain are not associated with necrotizing enterocolitis in very low birth weight infants gene variants of the bactericidal/permeability increasing protein and lipopolysaccharide binding protein in sepsis patients: gender-specifi c genetic predisposition to sepsis tlr and tlr polymorphisms are associated with susceptibility to invasive aspergillosis after allogeneic stem cell transplantation polymorphisms in toll-like receptor are associated with increased viral shedding and lesional rate in patients with genital hsv- infection a microsatellite polymorphism in intron of human toll-like receptor gene: functional implications and racial diff erences the arg gln polymorphism of the human toll-like receptor gene in tuberculosis disease a novel polymorphism in the toll-like receptor gene and its potential association with staphylococcal infection lack of association between toll-like receptor polymorphisms and susceptibility to severe disease caused by staphylococcus aureus heterozygous arg gln polymorphism of human tlr- impairs immune activation by borrelia burgdorferi and protects from late stage lyme disease tlr polymorphism in iranian patients with brucellosis toll-like receptor (tlr) polymorphisms in african children: common tlr- variants predispose to severe malaria common polymorphisms of toll-like receptors and are associated with the clinical manifestation of malaria during pregnancy the toll-like receptor (asp gly) polymorphism is a risk factor for gram-negative and haematogenous osteomyelitis role of tlr receptor polymorphisms in boutonneuse fever human toll-like receptor mutations but not cd polymorphisms are associated with an increased risk of gram-negative infections relevance of mutations in the tlr receptor in patients with gram-negative septic shock tlr and tnf-alpha polymorphisms are associated with an increased risk for severe sepsis following burn injury eff ects of functional toll-like receptor- mutations on the immune response to human and experimental sepsis polymorphisms in toll-like receptor and the systemic infl ammatory response syndrome functional gene polymorphisms in aggressive and chronic periodontitis gingival epithelial cells heterozygous for toll-like receptor polymorphisms asp gly and thr ile are hypo-responsive to porphyromonas gingivalis gene polymorphisms in pro-infl ammatory cytokines are associated with systemic infl ammation in patients with severe periodontal infections tolllike receptor (tlr) and mutations in periodontal disease toll-like receptor thr ile polymorphisms are a risk factor for candida bloodstream infection candida-specifi c interferon-gamma defi ciency and toll-like receptor polymorphisms in patients with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis role of the toll-like receptor asp gly polymorphism in susceptibility to candida albicans infection relationship between a toll-like receptor- gene polymorphism, bacterial vaginosis-related fl ora and vaginal cytokine responses in pregnant women diff erences in infl ammatory cytokine and toll-like receptor genes and bacterial vaginosis in pregnancy the toll-like receptor asp gly variant: no infl uence on lps responsiveness or susceptibility to pulmonary tuberculosis in the gambia innate immunity genes infl uence the severity of acute appendicitis the role that the functional asp gly polymorphism in the toll-like receptor- gene plays in susceptibility to chlamydia trachomatis-associated tubal infertility assay of locus-specifi c genetic load implicates rare toll-like receptor mutations in meningococcal susceptibility variation in toll-like receptor and susceptibility to group a meningococcal meningitis in gambian children a functional polymorphism of toll-like receptor is not associated with likelihood or severity of meningococcal disease a common dominant tlr stop codon polymorphism abolishes fl agellin signaling and is associated with susceptibility to legionnaires' disease host susceptibility and clinical outcomes in toll-like receptor -defi cient patients with typhoid fever in vietnam polymorphisms in toll-like receptor infl uence the clinical course of hiv- infection innate immune receptor genetic polymorphisms in pouchitis: is card a susceptibility factor? heterozygous tolllike receptor polymorphism does not infl uence lipopolysaccharide-induced cytokine release in human whole blood monocytes heterozygous for the asp gly and thr ile mutations in the toll-like receptor gene show no defi cit in lipopolysaccharide signalling inherited disorders of human toll-like receptor signaling: immunological implications cytokine promoter polymorphisms in severe sepsis host recognition of bacterial muramyl dipeptide mediated through nod . implications for crohn's disease nod is a general sensor of peptidoglycan through muramyl dipeptide (mdp) detection card mutations in blau syndrome early-onset sarcoidosis and card mutations with constitutive nuclear factor-kappab activation: common genetic etiology with blau syndrome both donor and recipient nod /card mutations associate with transplant-related mortality and gvhd following allogeneic stem cell transplantation mutation of a new gene encoding a putative pyrin-like protein causes familial cold autoinfl ammatory syndrome and muckle-wells syndrome chronic infantile neurological cutaneous and articular syndrome is caused by mutations in cias , a gene highly expressed in polymorphonuclear cells and chondrocytes the bare lymphocyte syndrome and the regulation of mhc expression host genetic determinants in hepatitis c virus infection lipopolysaccharides from distinct pathogens induce diff erent classes of immune responses in vivo this work was supported by grants from the swiss foundation for medical and biological grants ( to pyb), the swiss national science foundation ( la- to pyb, - . and - . to tc), the bristol-myers squibb foundation (to tc), the leenaards foundation (to pyb and tc), and the santos-suarez foundation for medical research (to tc and at). key: cord- -biqbsggu authors: shaw, timothy i.; srivastava, anuj; chou, wen-chi; liu, liang; hawkinson, ann; glenn, travis c.; adams, rick; schountz, tony title: transcriptome sequencing and annotation for the jamaican fruit bat (artibeus jamaicensis) date: - - journal: plos one doi: . /journal.pone. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: biqbsggu the jamaican fruit bat (artibeus jamaicensis) is one of the most common bats in the tropical americas. it is thought to be a potential reservoir host of tacaribe virus, an arenavirus closely related to the south american hemorrhagic fever viruses. we performed transcriptome sequencing and annotation from lung, kidney and spleen tissues using and illumina platforms to develop this species as an animal model. more than , contigs were assembled, with , genes that were functionally annotated. of the remaining unannotated contigs, % were found within bat genomes or transcriptomes. annotated genes are involved in a broad range of activities ranging from cellular metabolism to genome regulation through ncrnas. reciprocal blast best hits yielded , sequences that are orthologous to mouse, rat, cattle, horse and human. species tree analysis of sequences from , loci was used to achieve % bootstrap support for the placement of bat as sister to the clade containing horse, dog, and cattle. through substitution rate estimation between bat and human, genes were identified with evidence for positive selection. we also identified immune-related genes, which may be useful for studying tacaribe virus infection of this species. the jamaican fruit bat transcriptome dataset is a resource that should provide additional candidate markers for studying bat evolution and ecology, and tools for analysis of the host response and pathology of disease. bats are an ancient and diverse group [ ] and are the second largest taxonomic group of mammals with more than , identified species among the , known mammals [ , ] . bats are the only mammals to have evolved powered flight, which has allowed dispersal across all continents other than antarctica. bats are critical components of ecosystems, serving as major predators of insects, pollinating flowers and dispersing seeds of keystone plant species worldwide. the body sizes of bats range from less than gm with cm wingspans to more than kg with m wingspans. most contemporary species of bats are insect-, nectar-, or fruit-eaters, but about % are carnivores, including fish-eating and blood-drinking species. the evolutionary origin of bats remains controversial [ , ] . in early work, bats were thought to be closely related to rodents and primates [ ] . bats are now established within laurasiatheria; however, the placement of bats within laurasiatheria has been difficult to resolve because the major groups diverged from one another within a relatively short period of time [ ] . different placements recently hypothesized for bats include: (a) sister to perissodactyla (horse) [ ] ; (b) sister to cetartiodacyla (cattle+dolphin) [ ] , (c) sister to perissodactyla+cetartiodacyla (horse, cattle, dolphin) [ ] , (d) sister to ferungulata (cattle+dolphin, dog+horse) [ , ] and (e) the pegasoferae hypothesis which places bat with perissodactyla and carnivora (horse+dog) [ ] (see [ ] for a review). two bat genomes have been sequenced to date [ ] , the little brown bat (myotis lucifugus, coverage) and the large flying fox (pteropus vampyrus, . coverage), but neither has been extensively annotated. these species represent the two major clades within bats: the microbats and megabats. transcriptome sequencing for another megabat species, the australian flying fox (pteropus alecto), has recently been published [ ] . thus, a transcriptome for a microbat species is needed. many highly pathogenic viruses are hosted, or suspected to be hosted, by bat reservoirs, including ebolaviruses, marburg virus, hendra virus, nipah virus, rabies virus and coronaviruses [ ] . in total, more than viruses have been isolated from, or detected in, bats of dozens of species, yet many of the viruses that cause disease in humans cause little or no disease in the bats. significantly, the great majority of bat species have not been examined for infectious agents and are, thus, likely underappreciated as reservoir hosts. the continued encroachment of humans upon bat habitat and bat migrations caused by climate change may lead to novel infectious diseases among humans and livestock. moreover, some infectious diseases cause significant morbidity and mortality in bats that could have dramatic impacts on population numbers and cascading ecological effects [ ] . thus, the study of bats and their infectious agents is an important but neglected aspect of zoonotic and wildlife disease research. jamaican fruit bats (artibeus jamaicensis) are one of the most common bats in the tropical americas, ranging from the caribbean islands, tropical south and central america, mexico and the florida keys [ ] . the jamaican fruit bat is a microbat in the family phyllostomidae, which contains genera and species. they are a frugivorous generalist and fig specialist of medium size; about mm in length with a wingspan of mm and mass of about grams. they can readily fly km per night, although they typically maintain a smaller home range as long as food is available, and can live years or more in the wild. females typically produce two offspring per year and provide maternal care for about days, with pups reaching adult body weight by about days. several microbes of interest have been isolated from or detected in jamaican fruit bats, including histoplasma capsulatum, trypanosoma cruzi, eastern equine encephalitis virus, mucambo virus, jurona virus, catu virus, itaporanga virus and tacaiuma virus, suggesting the species may be an important reservoir and vector of infectious diseases [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . it is unknown what diseases these pathogens may cause in bats. tacaribe virus (tcrv) was isolated from artibeus bats ( a. lituratus, a. jamaicensis) in the late s in and near port of spain, trinidad [ ] . tcrv was the first arenavirus isolated in the americas and during the next decades other arenaviruses with substantial similarity to tcrv were identified that cause the south american hemorrhagic fevers (sahf) [ , ] . the known reservoir hosts for all other arenaviruses are rodents, making tcrv exceptional for its repeated isolation from artibeus bats. because exhaustive searches for evidence of other potential reservoir hosts of tcrv failed to suggest another reservoir species [ , ] , it has been suspected that artibeus bats are reservoirs of the virus. however, recent work by us demonstrated that trlv- , the only remaining isolate of tcrv, causes a fatal infection resembling the sahf in jamaican fruit bats, one of the species from which tcrv was isolated, or is cleared without disease, suggesting this species is not a suitable reservoir host for tcrv and the virus may be a significant pathogen for bats [ ] . because of the equivocal role of artibeus bats as a reservoir host species for tcrv, and because of the similarities with human sahf, the jamaican fruit bat may be a novel model for studying the pathology of the disease. however, as an unusual, non-model organism, very little is known about its physiology, immunology or host response to tcrv. no antibodies are available with known specificity to jamaican fruit bat proteins, which dramatically limits its usefulness. to address some of these deficiencies, we have performed transcriptome sequencing and analysis of spleen, lung, kidney and poly-ic-stimulated primary kidney cells to identify genes of interest for assessing the host response to tcrv infection. more than , reads and million illumina reads were obtained ( table ). the reads were submitted to short read archive (sra) under srr and srr . reads from lung, kidney, and poly-ic-stimulated primary kidney cell libraries were pooled for a combined de novo assembly using the gs assembler program, yielding , contigs. for the illumina spleen sequences, we first corrected reads using the soapdenovo correction tool and further assembled them using soapdenovo, yielding , contigs. a total of , snps and , indels were detected through gigabayes. at least reads covering a site were required to ensure the snp was of high quality. using tgicl, a combined assembly of the and illumina contigs was constructed that contained , contigs with n , n , and n of , bp, , bp, and bp, respectively. human and mouse genomes were used as references to estimate the distribution of bat contigs within known gene transcripts. human and mouse genomes were chosen for completeness of their annotations. genomic features were divided into groups: kb upstream of utr, utr, cds (coding sequence), utr, kb downstream of utr. we found . % and . % mapped cds region for human and mouse genome respectively ( figure a ). because we performed transcriptome sequencing, we expected a majority of the sequences to map to cds and utr regions of the genome. many rna genes were also mapped, including long noncoding rnas and a substantial number of micrornas ( figure b ). annotation was concentrated on identifying micrornas because they could be cross validated through their rna secondary structure features. to further obtain a confident set of microrna sequences, a microrna prediction pipeline was used to cross validate the blast mapping of prediction. in the process, confident microrna candidates were found that have been deposited within mirbase [ , ] . we present the list of predicted micrornas as table s . mapping the predicted snps on the genomic features indicates that the vast majority of snps are in the cds region ( figure c- d) . although humans and mice are both outside laurasiatheria the relatively fast rate of molecular evolution of mice is expected to result in more differences between bats and mice than bats and humans [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the presence of sequences mapped kb upstream or downstream of the known transcript indicated possible alternative splicing from human and mouse transcripts. blast go was used to functionally annotate contigs. a total of , contigs ( . % overall) had significant matches to known proteins in the ncbi non-redundant protein (nr) database. horse and human were identified as the top two species with best blast hits for bat contigs ( figure ). the blastx annotation process is biased by the completeness of the annotation for each respective genome; therefore, despite the lack of a completely annotated horse genome, a high similarity between bat and horse genomes was apparent. the human genome is well annotated, which explains the high number of blast hits between bat and human. the go annotation divides the functional annotation into three main components: biological process, cellular process, and molecular [ ] . a majority of the annotated genes encoding proteins that function within a cell or organelle are involved in metabolic and cellular processes. the primary molecular functions of these genes are catalytic and binding activities ( figures a-c) . a total of immune-related genes were annotated by blast go. these immune genes include toll-like receptors, cytokines, transcription factors, kinases and several chemokine receptors. in addition, categorizer was used to categorize the immune class using the goslim database, resulting in categories representing a broad range of immune activities ( figure ). the immune response and lymphocyte activation genes represented the largest proportion of theses transcripts. there were , unannotated contigs. a total of , sequences had open reading frames longer than nt; , were identified through blastp to the nr database with evalue, e . for the remaining contigs, , mapped to the assembled myotis lucifugus genome, and , mapped to the assembled pteropus vampyrus genome. there were , contigs that mapped to pteropus alecto, australian flying fruit bat, and , that overlapped between genomic and transcriptome sequences for all three datasets ( figure ). through this process, we were able to account for , ( %) unannotated contigs. the completeness of genes mapped to immunological pathways was examined using human and mouse as reference species. based on the ortholog data obtained, all contigs were mapped onto immune system related kegg pathways ( table ) and determined that many genes were missing from these pathways. this could be due to the low expression within bat tissues or due to the overly stringent e-value cutoff of e during reciprocal blast annotation that we chose to limit the number of false positives. a kegggraph visual representation of contigs mapped onto the mouse pathway was generated (figures s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s ). pathways involved in the adaptive immune response, t and b cell signalling pathways, generally had more mapped genes than did those involved in innate response or natural killer (nk) cell-mediated cytotoxicity pathways ( figures a and b ). the nk cell cytotoxicity pathway appears to have almost half of its genes missing, whereas the b cell receptor pathway appears to have most of its genes present. nucleotide substitution in the coding region can be synonymous or non-synonymous. the ratio between the rate of synonymous (ds) and non-synonymous mutation (dn) can be used to infer the degree of selection operating on the system. we used the human genome as a reference for dn/ds calculations because the human genome is well annotated. reciprocal blast was used to identify human, mouse, and bat orthologs. macse was used to generate codon alignments. the alignments were trimmed for excessive gap codon triplets, and paml was used to calculate dn/ds for each gene. when genes are highly conserved, synonymous mutations (ds) tend to be estimated as , resulting in a larger dn/ds ratio, therefore those results were removed from the analysis. after filtering, dn/ds results were obtained for , genes. the majority of the genes have close to zero dn/ds with clear evidence of purifying selection, a feature common among mammalian genes [ ] [ ] [ ] . for investigation of positive selection, tang et al. [ ] have argued that a dn/ds threshold of greater than for positive selection might be overly stringent. because of this, a dn/ds cutoff of . was chosen to investigate genes that might be experiencing weak purifying selection. a total of genes above the . threshold were found (table s ) . for genes with evidence of positive selection, exceeded the . dn/ds threshold (figure ) . through annotation by david [ , ] , there were genes involved in transcriptional activation and regulation processes. there were genes associated with cellular signaling. in particular, we found dna-damage-inducible transcript (ddit ) gene with dn/ds . ; this protein is involved in the mtor signaling pathway and it regulates cell growth and promotes neuronal cell death [ , ] . ectodysplasin a (eda), involved with cytokine:receptor interaction pathways, had a dn/ds value of . . the phylogenetic placement of bats within laurasiatheria is still unresolved. through reciprocal blast, we identified , putative orthologs across mouse, rat, cattle, horse and human (table s ) . afterward we filtered out alignments with greater than % gap, the , genes remaining were used to construct iteration multilocus bootstrap species tree (see methodology). this resulted in a highly supported species tree placing bat sister to the clade containing cattle, horse, and dog ( figure ). the jamaican fruit bat transcriptome described here is a major new resource for genetic studies of bats. this bat is an important seed dispersing and pollinating species found in most of the tropical americas. it is likely susceptible to infectious diseases, could be a zoonotic reservoir and vector, and may be a suitable model for the pathogenesis of sahf. considering the importance of immunological functions in response to infections, we conduct- ed a transcriptome assessment of genes from spleen, kidney and lungs so that genetic tools and methods can be used to study this species as well as other microbats. genes were identified that mapped to immune response pathways; based on categorize classification of immune classes, we found different immune classes. recently, the transcriptome sequencing for the australian black flying fox was performed [ ] . our data contain a greater proportion of lymphocyte related immune classes than does the flying fox's transcriptome dataset. however, our dataset also contained a lesser proportion of cytokine related immune classes than the flying fox's transcriptome dataset. genes involved in adaptive immune response generally had more mapped genes compared to genes involved in innate responses. from figures a and b , more genes were mapped to the b cell receptor signalling pathway than to the nk cellmediated cytotoxicity pathway. this bias is likely due to the large number of b cells found in the spleen. due to our stringent blast criteria, it is also possible that lowering the e-value threshold could obtain additional genes mapped but at the risk of more false positives. we deposited microrna genes for a. jamaicensis into mirbase, and according to mirbase this gene set is the first deposited bat microrna genes. estimates of substitutions within the orthologous contigs found genes with a dn/ds ratio. . this ratio provides a guide for indicating potential genes that are under positive selection. many genes were involved in transcriptional activation/regulation processes, suggesting potential differences in the transcriptional regulating architectures of bats and humans. the ddit and eda have a dn/ds ratio. , suggesting these genes are under positive evolutionary selection. ddit is involved in regulation of cell death and its positive selection suggests a potential difference in cell death regulation between human and bats; further analysis will need to be performed to verify the functional differences. another potential positively selected gene, eda is associated with ectodermal dysplasia type [ ] , a disorder associated with abnormal development of physical structures, including skin, hair, nails, teeth, and sweat glands. we suspect the bat's eda gene could be used as a potential reference for future studies of the disorder. for transcripts that failed to be identified by reciprocal blast searches, we predicted the orf for the unannotated contigs and used blastp against the nr database to identify , unannotated contigs. for the remaining unannotated contigs, we used genomic data from myotis lucifugus and pteropus vampyrus, as well as transcriptome data from pteropus alecto to identify additional unannotated contigs. existing artibeus contigs that were not present within the nr database, but overlapped among myotis and pteropus genomic and transcriptomic sequences indicated the possibility for bat specific transcripts. we also found contigs that mapped only to the myotis lucifugus genome indicating the possibility for microbat specific contigs. in total, we were able to account for % of the unannotated trancripts, and the remaining unannotated transcripts likely include misassembled contigs, contigs not sequenced sufficiently in the other bats to be included in their genome assemblies, as well as a few transcripts specific to artibeus jamaicensis. many additional analyses are warranted to further refine the transcriptome information from artibeus and other bats. phylogenomics is an important tool for resolving the tree of life, and this transcriptome data set provides an opportunity to study the evolutionary history of bats. bats were once thought to be closely related to primates [ ] ; however, further work using molecular information placed them within laurasiatheria [ ] . our finding of bat as sister to the clade containing horse, dog, and cattle is consistent with the recent study by mccormack et al. [ ] and zhou et al [ ] . here, we used , loci from a microbat and species tree analyses to obtain % bootstrap support, whereas mccormack et al. use loci to obtain %bootstrap support. a recent study by nery et al. [ ] obtained a concatenated data from , loci from megabat with % bootstrap support and . posterior probability placing bat as sister to cattle. our phylogenetic tree is less resolved than nery et al., probably because we did not include the more limited transcriptome data available from dolphin and hedgehog. maximum likelihood analyses are powerful, yet can lead to incorrect conclusions in certain situations, whereas species tree analyses are less powerful but more robust to well-known violations of the models used for maximum likelihood phylogenetic analysis, such as incomplete lineage sorting (see [ ] and references therein). additional work is clearly warranted, especially by using additional taxa, testing for convergence and specific violations of gene-tree models, and other sources of conflict among protein-coding genes and other portions of the genome. a principal difficulty for identifying mechanisms of pathogenesis of the sahf, in which the immune response may play a contributory role, is a lack of animal model resources that faithfully recapitulate human disease [ ] . although laboratory mice (mus musculus) and rats (rattus norvegicus), which have substantial experimental methodologies and reagents, can be infected with junín virus (junv), the etiologic agent of argentine hemorrhagic fever, the pathogenesis is markedly different than human disease. the guinea pig (cavia porcellus) typically exhibits signs of disease that closely resembles human disease; however, there are few immunological or genetic tools for assessing the host response to infection. junv is also a bsl- and select agent, thus use of virulent strains is confined to only a few laboratories with highly specialized containment facilities. the pathogenesis of tcrv, a bsl- agent, in jamaican fruit bats exhibits many similarities to the sahf in humans, thus the use of transcriptome data could be useful for studying pathogenesis using a variety of new technologies, such as pcr arrays for pathway discovery, and for the development of antibodies to specific artibeus proteins that are important in the pathogenesis of disease. the transcriptome resource provided will facilitate research into artibeus host responses to infectious agents, including mechanisms of pathogenesis of arenavirus disease and will also provide further resource for additional understanding for the bat species evolution and physiological development. all procedures were approved by the unc institutional animal care and use committee (iacuc) and were in compliance with . substitution estimation scatter plot. we calculated the nonsynonymous mutation rate (dn) and synonymous mutation rate (ds) using orthologous genes between bat and human. two lines were drawn representing the two dn/ds cutoffs of . (green) and . (blue). doi: . /journal.pone. .g figure . unrooted species tree from the orthologous dataset across six boreoeutheria mammals. the species tree was generated from gene loci. there was % bootstrap support for placing bats (chiroptera) sister to perissodactyla, cetartiodactyla, and carnivora. doi: . /journal.pone. .g the usa animal welfare act. unc animal care and use committee approval number, c-ra-b- . five bats from the university of northern colorado jamaican fruit bat colony were used for this work. male and female a. jamaicensis bats were euthanized by respiratory hyperanesthesia followed immediately by thoracotomy. tissues were aseptically removed and flash frozen in liquid nitrogen for subsequent rna extraction. tissues were homogenized in buffer rlt (rneasy kit, qiagen, valencia, ca) containing me using a bead beater and silicone beads. the homogenate was passed over a qiashredder column prior to total rna extraction according to manufacturer's instructions. for cell culture, one kidney from one bat was collected in serum-free hbss and minced under aseptic conditions, then trypsinized (trypsin-versene) at room temperature in a sterile ml trypsin flask. cells were washed in % fbs-emem, then seeded into a vented t- flask. the next day, unattached cells were removed and fresh % fbs-emem added. when cells approached confluence they were passaged with trypsin at a split ratio of : . poly-ic was added to mg/ml in two t- flasks containing ml each of % fbs-emem and incubated for hours, after which rna was extracted according to manufacturer's instructions (qiagen). total rna was extracted using the rneasy minelute cleanup kit (qiagen) and then shipped on dry ice to seqwright (houston, tx) for cdna library construction and sequencing. rna concentrations and quality were assessed by a /a and a /a absorbance values and agarose gel electrophoresis. a /a values were all above . and a /a were all above . . electrophoresis of the rna samples demonstrated that s and s rrna were not degraded. libraries for the were prepared from three tissues (kidney, lung, poly-ic-stimulated kidney cells). for library construction, full-length cdna was synthesized with two set of primers for driver and tester cdna [ , ] . single-stranded cdna was used for hybridization instead of double-stranded cdna. excess amounts of sense-stranded cdna hybridized with antisense-stranded cdna. after hybridization, duplex was removed by hydroxyapatite chromatography. normalized tester cdna was re-amplified with tester specific primer l n. driver cdna was unable to amplify using l n. an illumina truseq rna library was made from spleens according to manufacturer's instructions. the libraries were then sequenced according to manufacturer's recommendations: using titanium chemistry and illumina using nucleotide paired-end sequencing on a hi-seq . the and illumina libraries were assembled individually and also by combining both libraries. bases from the reads were called from the generated sff file using pyrobayes [ ] and gs assembler (version . ) was used to perform the assembly. soap denovo [ ] (version . ) was used to assemble reads obtained from spleen (illumina library). only contigs greater than bases were used in the final analysis. prior to performing the combined assembly, duplicates from pre-assembled contigs of lung, kidney and spleen tissues were removed with cd-hit [ ] (cd-hit- - ) at default criterion and then combined into longer fragments with tgicl [ ] . gigabayes [ ] -a short-read snp/indel discovery program was used to detect polymorphisms. snp/indel detection was performed for both libraries separately. to make snp/indel predictions more reliable, we used the criterion that minor allele and major allele (alleles with fewer reads are minor alleles, and alleles with more reads are major alleles) occur at least twice and times for and illumina libraries, respectively. to identify the approximate relative position of conserved mammalian genes, we mapped the bat contigs on to the genome of mouse mm and human grch (downloaded from the ucsc genome browser) using blat v. [ ] with a minimum score of used as a filter. coordinates of the protein coding genes were obtained from ensemble (http://uswest.ensembl.org/index.html) xenoref and gtf files. we also normalized the number of blat hits based on the total annotated transcript regions ( nt upstream of utr, utr, cds, utr, and nt downstream of utr) that were present in the mouse and human. to predict precursor-microrna genes within assembled sequences, we downloaded precursor micrornas for mouse, rat and human from mirbase [ , ] . we performed a blast search focused on high quality candidates, hits with $ % sequence identity [ ] . based upon rnafold [ ] secondary structure prediction, we further filtered out sequences that did not possess any hairpin loop structure. previously, it had been demonstrated that micrornas tend to have deterministic folding [ ] and, therefore, we used unpaired structural entropy (use) to evaluate the rna secondary structure base pairing distribution (cutoff . use score). mir-abela, a support vector machine learning program [ ] , was used to cross validate the prediction. the final remaining unfiltered sequences are considered as highly confident microrna candidates. orthologous contigs (against human, mouse, dog, cattle and horse) were identified using the reciprocal blast (blastn) approach [ ] as it has been found to be superior to sophisticated orthology detection algorithms [ ] . a stringent cutoff of e was used to separate paralogs from orthologs. cdna sequences from human (homo_sapiens.grch . the substitution rate is inferred from orthologous genes between bat and mouse. sequences were aligned using macse [ ] and an in-house java script was used to trim/remove codon gap triplets from the alignment. substitution rate was estimated using a maximum likelihood method implemented in the codeml program of paml . [ , ] . the pairwise maximum likelihood analyses were performed in runmode- . estimated rates of non-synonymous to synonymous substitutions (dn/ds) were plotted as a scatter plot. blast go [ ] was used to functionally annotate contigs. a combined graph was generated for each go category. to prevent overloading graphs, the sequence filter value was changed to in all categories (biological process, molecular function and cellular component). functional annotation was performed separately for all assembled contigs present in the combined assembly. based on categorizer [ ] , we further classified the genes using the go slim database immune classes. the completeness of mapping the bat genes using euarchontoglires as a reference was further examined through kegg. to do this, we first downloaded the xml file of annotated kegg pathways [ , ] for human and mouse. to identify genes that are functionally important within kegg pathways, kegggraph was used to represent a graph form of the kegg pathway. we further used kegggraph to compute the relative betweenness centrality, which is the algorithmic representation of the involvement of a node within a network. we chose to set a cutoff of grabbing the top nodes within each network, or selecting the top functionally important genes within each pathway [ ] . open reading frame was predicted from the assembled contigs through the orfpredictor web server (http://proteomics.ysu.edu/ tools/orfpredictor.html) [ ] . a customized java program was used to parse through the prediction to identify sequences longer than nt. to perform additional annotation of the predicted open reading frame we used blastp with an e-value of e against the most recent nr database that is available from ncbi during our analysis (august th , ). using contigs that were functionally unannotated, we compared the jaimacan fruit bat contigs against three other available bat sequence dataset. myotis lucifugus and pteropus vampyrus genomes were downloaded from the ncbi tracedb ftp server (ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/pub/tracedb/). the pteropus alecto transcriptome was obtained from dr. a. papenfuss [ ] . an evalue threshold of e was used to indicate blast hit. we then used an r package venndiagram [ ] for displaying the mapped unannotated contigs that overlapped between different bat genome and transcriptomes. to resolve the evolutionary relationship for the artibeus bat species, we filtered the putative bat orthologs between human, mouse, dog, cattle, and horse. insectivores such as hedgehog and dolphin were not used in our analysis due to limited gene annotation in these taxa. to obtain the best multiple sequence alignment for each putative orthologs, we used aqua's pipeline for performing multiple sequence alignment; the pipeline consists of multiple sequence alignment through muscle and mafft which is refined by rascal and assessed by normd [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . a customized java program was used to filter alignments (obtained through aqua) with greater than % gap per sequence. additionally, we filtered for sequences that are at least. , bp long. phyml was used to generate a maximum likelihood gene tree [ , ] . mraic, a perl script wrapper for phyml, was used to infer the best substitution model for each gene tree based on aic, aicc, bic, and akaike weights [ ] . aic was used as the objective function since not much variation was observed across different objective function. njst was used to calculate the unrooted species tree based on our gene trees [ ] . a customized rprogram is used for performing a nonparametric bootstrap species tree through resampling nucleotides within loci as well as resampling the loci within the data set as described by seo [ ] . fossil evidence and the origin of bats bats: important reservoir hosts of emerging viruses iucn red list version . : tabel a -status category summary by major taxonomic group (animals) ultraconserved elements are novel phylogenomic markers that resolve placental mammal phylogeny when combined with species-tree analysis resolution of the laurasiatherian phylogeny: evidence from genomic data mammalian phylogeny: shaking the tree mammalian phylogenomics comes of age using genomic data to unravel the root of the placental mammal phylogeny confirming the phylogeny of mammals by use of large comparative sequence data sets phylogenomic analysis resolves the interordinal relationships and rapid diversification of the laurasiatherian mammals pegasoferae, an unexpected mammalian clade revealed by tracking ancient retroposon insertions a highresolution map of human evolutionary constraint using mammals the immune gene repertoire of an important viral reservoir, the australian black flying fox emerging diseases in chiroptera: why bats? artibeus jamaicensis identification of a new venezuelan equine encephalitis virus from brazil humoral and cell-mediated immunity to histoplasma capsulatum during experimental infection in neotropical bats (artibeus lituratus) 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selection on protein-coding genes in the human genome a scan for positively selected genes in the genomes of humans and chimpanzees positive selection on the human genome a new method for estimating nonsynonymous substitutions and its applications to detecting positive selection systematic and integrative analysis of large gene lists using david bioinformatics resources bioinformatics enrichment tools: paths toward the comprehensive functional analysis of large gene lists rtp is elevated in parkinson brain substantia nigral neurons and mediates death in cellular models of parkinson's disease by a mechanism involving mammalian target of rapamycin inactivation rtp is a novel retinoic acid-responsive gene associated with myeloid differentiation mutations within a furin consensus sequence block proteolytic release of ectodysplasin-a and cause x-linked hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia parallel adaptive radiations in two major clades of placental mammals junin virus. a xxi century update construction of a uniformabundance (normalized) cdna library construction and characterization of a normalized cdna library pyrobayes: an improved base caller for snp discovery in pyrosequences de novo assembly of human genomes with massively parallel short read sequencing cd-hit: a fast program for clustering and comparing large sets of protein or nucleotide sequences tigr gene indices clustering tools (tgicl): a software system for fast clustering of large est datasets a general approach to single-nucleotide polymorphism discovery blat-the blast-like alignment tool a uniform system for microrna annotation fast folding and comparison of rna secondary structures analyzing modular rna structure reveals low global structural entropy in microrna sequence identification of clustered micrornas using an ab initio prediction method gapped blast and psi-blast: a new generation of protein database search programs phylogenetic and functional assessment of orthologs inference projects and methods macse: multiple alignment of coding sequences accounting for frameshifts and stop codons paml : phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood paml: a program package for phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood blast go: a universal tool for annotation, visualization and analysis in functional genomics research categorizer: a web-based program to batch analyze gene ontology classification categories kegg for integration and interpretation of large-scale molecular data sets kegg: kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes kegggraph: a graph approach to kegg pathway in r and bioconductor orfpredictor: predicting proteincoding regions in est-derived sequences venndiagram: a package for the generation of highly-customizable venn and euler diagrams in r muscle: multiple sequence alignment with high accuracy and high throughput mafft: a novel method for rapid multiple sequence alignment based on fast fourier transform aqua: automated quality improvement for multiple sequence alignments rascal: rapid scanning and correction of multiple sequence alignments morephyml: improving the phylogenetic tree space exploration with phyml estimating maximum likelihood phylogenies with phyml model selection and multi-model inference estimating species trees from unrooted gene trees calculating bootstrap probabilities of phylogeny using multilocus sequence data we thank jason shaw for assistance with bat handling and stephanie james for laboratory assistance, and uga's georgia advanced computing resource center and institute of bioinformatics for computational resources and support. we thank anthony papenfuss for providing the assembled transcriptome for p. alecto. contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: ts tg ll. wrote the paper: tis tg ts. key: cord- -kf m zho authors: cho, won kyong; yu, jisuk; lee, kyung-mi; son, moonil; min, kyunghun; lee, yin-won; kim, kook-hyung title: genome-wide expression profiling shows transcriptional reprogramming in fusarium graminearum by fusarium graminearum virus -dk infection date: - - journal: bmc genomics doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: kf m zho background: fusarium graminearum virus strain-dk (fgv -dk ) is a mycovirus that confers hypovirulence to f. graminearum, which is the primary phytopathogenic fungus that causes fusarium head blight (fhb) disease in many cereals. understanding the interaction between mycoviruses and plant pathogenic fungi is necessary for preventing damage caused by f. graminearum. therefore, we investigated important cellular regulatory processes in a host containing fgv -dk as compared to an uninfected parent using a transcriptional approach. results: using a ′-tiling microarray covering all known f. graminearum genes, we carried out genome-wide expression analyses of f. graminearum at two different time points. at the early point of growth of an infected strain as compared to an uninfected strain, genes associated with protein synthesis, including ribosome assembly, nucleolus, and ribosomal rna processing, were significantly up-regulated. in addition, genes required for transcription and signal transduction, including fungal-specific transcription factors and camp signaling, respectively, were actively up-regulated. in contrast, genes involved in various metabolic pathways, particularly in producing carboxylic acids, aromatic amino acids, nitrogen compounds, and polyamines, showed dramatic down-regulation at the early time point. moreover, genes associated with transport systems localizing to transmembranes were down-regulated at both time points. conclusion: this is the first report of global change in the prominent cellular pathways in the fusarium host containing fgv -dk . the significant increase in transcripts for transcription and translation machinery in fungal host cells seems to be related to virus replication. in addition, significant down-regulation of genes required for metabolism and transporting systems in a fungal host containing the virus appears to be related to the host defense mechanism and fungal virulence. taken together, our data aid in the understanding of how fgv -dk regulates the transcriptional reprogramming of f. graminearum. fusarium graminearum (teleomorph gibberella zeae) is a well known phytopathogenic fungus associated with fusarium head blight (fhb) disease, which causes blights, root rots, or wilts, especially in economically important cereal crops such as wheat, maize, and barley [ ] . fhb is considered an important fungal disease because it drastically reduces grain yield and quality, and produces mycotoxins such as deoxynivalenol (don) and nivalenol (niv) in cereals, which are very harmful to human and animal health [ , ] . the fungus can also infect several dicotyledonous plants including arabidopsis, tobacco, tomato, and soybean [ ] . viruses that infect plant fungi are referred to as mycoviruses. infection by some mycoviruses confers hypovirulence by attenuating pathogenicity to their fungal hosts, which are mostly plant pathogens. mycoviruses tend to be double-stranded rna (dsrna) viruses [ ] , and several fusarium-infecting mycoviruses have been isolated [ ] [ ] [ ] . in addition, several whole genome sequences of dsrna mycoviruses strains derived from f. graminearum have recently been reported [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in many cases, such as those of f. poae (fusarium poae virus , fpv ) [ ] and f. solani (fusarium solani virus , fsv ), viral infection is not associated with phenotypic changes [ ] . however, fusarium graminearum virus strain-dk (fgv -dk ) exhibits interesting phenotypes including reduced mycelial growth and the induction of dark red pigmentation [ ] . several previous studies have provided strong evidence that hypovirulent mycoviruses could be used as substitutes for fungicides [ , ] . a recent study demonstrated that protoplast fusion is the most efficient approach for transmitting mycoviruses among a wide range of phytopathogenic fungi and that this approach will facilitate the use of mycoviruses as a biocontrol agent [ ] . with the increasing availability of whole genome sequences for representative plant fungal pathogens [ ] , extensive and diverse genome-wide analyses can be performed, including transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics [ ] . proteomics approaches for different fusarium species have enabled examinations of extracellular proteins, proteins involved in fumonisin biosynthesis, and proteome profiles upon antagonistic rhizobacteria inoculation and mycovirus infection [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . several gene expression analyses based on microarrays have also been conducted [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . for example, genome-wide expression profiling of f. graminearum was carried out to examine responses to treatment with azole fungicide tebuconazole and during perithecium development [ , ] . microarrays provide a valuable tool for detecting and identifying fusarium species that produce specific metabolites such as trichothecene and moniliformin [ , ] . moreover, the recently completed genome sequencing of three major fusarium species provides an important resource for studying pathogenicity and functions of individual genes [ ] . several microarray-based studies have demonstrated transcriptional changes in fungal genes following mycovirus infection, although most of these studies examined only chv - infecting the chestnut blight fungus cryphonectria parasitica. initially, a polymerase chain reaction (pcr)-based approach demonstrated that elevation of camp levels by chv - resulted in reduced accumulation of the gtp-binding (g) protein subunit cpg- [ ] . in addition, cdna microarrays containing , genes from c. parasitica showed transcriptional change in g-signaling pathways following hypovirus infections showing different virulence or phenotypes [ ] [ ] [ ] . infection by a virus leads to changes in diverse biological processes between fungal host and viral factors. it is of interest to examine such alterations at the molecular level. however, no previous reports have examined expression differences between a fungus containing a mycovirus and an infected parent, aside from two papers that used microarray cdna chips based on expressed sequence tags to examine fungal host gene expression upon mycovirus infection [ , ] . here, we examined genomewide transcriptional differences in f. graminearum expression between a strain harboring fgv -dk and its uninfected parent. this is the first report of a genome-wide fungal gene expression analysis during mycovirus infection using a ′ tiling microarray, and our findings show global differences in host cellular pathways in f. graminearum harboring fgv -dk . genome-wide ′-tiling microarray to identify differentially expressed genes in f. graminearum harboring fgv -dk the virus-infected f. graminearum exhibited strong inhibition of mycelia growth as well as reduced levels of don at days after inoculation ( figure ). to visualize how gene expression patterns were affected at different time points, we generated scatterplots ( figure ). radial growth was measured on pda h after inoculation. b the number of spores was measured in cmc broth at °c for days. the number of spores indicated represents the number per ml. data were described previously [ ] . c production of deoxynivalenol and -acetyldeoxynivalenol. for toxin analysis, all strains were grown in minimal medium supplemented with mm agmatine and incubated for days. d n/d: not detected. * the value is significantly different than that of the virus-free isolate as determined by a student's t-test. interestingly, the scatterplots showed that there were no significant differences in the number of differentially expressed genes between h and h; however, it appeared that the changes in gene expression at h were somewhat more extensive than those at h ( figure ). to identify differentially expressed genes, we first performed hierarchical clustering, which identified gene sets of significantly differentially expressed genes at figure differentially expressed f. graminearum genes during fgv -dk infection identified by microarray. scatterplots of normalized signal intensities h (a) and h (b) after inoculation with fgv -dk as compared to virus-free samples. all signal intensities were converted to a log scale. the diagonal lines indicate a two-fold change. the venn diagram illustrates the total number of genes that were significantly differentially expressed at h and h (c), down-regulated genes (d), and up-regulated genes (e). the heat map shows the expression patterns of genes that were hierarchically clustered and differentially expressed at both and h (f). red and green indicate upregulation and down-regulation, respectively. two different time points (additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). most of the identified genes showed at least two-fold differential expression. a total of genes, representing . % of , genes, were differentially expressed at both time points ( figure c ), with ( . %) and genes ( %) identified as differentially expressed at h and h, respectively ( figure c ). moreover, genes ( %) were differentially expressed at both time points ( figure c ). we further analyzed the lists of differentially expressed genes according to those down-regulated vs. those upregulated ( figure d , e). genes with an adjusted p-value less than . were selected as differentially expressed genes. in both time points, genes ( %) were downregulated whereas genes ( %) were up-regulated ( figure d , e). among the down-regulated genes, there were more differentially expressed genes at h ( genes) than at h ( genes) ( figure d ). in contrast, more genes were induced at h ( genes) than at h ( genes) ( figure e ). moreover, genes and genes were commonly found in the group of downregulated and up-regulated genes, respectively ( figure d , e). we then investigated the expression patterns of genes that were differentially expressed at both time points using hierarchical clustering, which sorted the genes into four groups according to expression patterns ( figure f ). group a contained genes that were highly downregulated at h but were up-regulated at h. in contrast, the genes belonging to group b were highly induced at h, and subsequently down-regulated ( figure f ). group c included genes that were strongly repressed regardless of virus infection time, and group d contained genes that showed consistently elevated gene expression across both time points. representative genes showing significant expression change and real-time validation of the microarray data by quantitative real-time reverse transcription pcr representative fungal genes that showed significant gene expression are listed in table . at h, several genes encoding enzymes including phospholipase/carboxylesterase, polyketide synthase, eukaryotic aspartyl protease and dipeptidyl aminopeptidases were highly induced, whereas transcripts involved in transport, such as amino acid transporter permease and abc transporter, were up-regulated at h (table ). in contrast, several of the repressed genes at h included maltose transporter, linoleate diol synthase, and genes with unknown functions, whereas those encoding ferric reductase and abhydrolase were strongly repressed at h (table ) . to validate the microarray data, we selected genes whose expression was significantly affected in the host containing fgv -dk , as demonstrated by the microarray analysis, and determined their relative expression by quantitative real-time reverse transcription pcr (qrt-pcr) ( figure and additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). genes that showed diverse expression patterns were categorized into different functional classes (figure and additional file : table s ). the results of the qrt-pcr were highly consistent with those of the microarray data. for example, according to the qrt-pcr and microarray results, the transcript levels for three genes, including fgsg_ , fgsg_ , and fgsg_ , were highly reduced at both h and h, whereas fgsg_ , fgsg_ , fgsg_ , fgsg_ , and fgsg_ were strongly induced regardless of the time point ( figure a -c). when the mrna level of a gene is too low to quantify, or the p-values from the microarray data are very high, it is highly likely that qrt-pcr results will not correlate with microarray data, as was observed for fgsg_ and fgsg_ ( figure a ). as compared to the microarray approach, qrt-pcr offers a highly sensitive technique for detecting low amounts of transcripts and provides the transcript level for the gene of interest. for example, the expression intensities for genes were relatively low, ranging from to . ( figure a ), whereas the amount of mrnas for nad-dependent aldehyde dehydrogenases (fgsg_ ) and dipeptidyl aminopeptidases (fgsg_ ) were very high and ranged from . to . , particularly in the host containing fgv -dk at h ( figure c ). funcat classification for an overview of the transcriptional reprogramming of f. graminearum harboring fgv -dk we subjected a total of differentially expressed genes to functional catalogue (funcat) annotation to gain insight into their functional classifications [ ] . specifically, we divided differentially expressed genes into four groups (table ). more than half of the differentially expressed genes were not assigned to any functional category. specifically, genes ( . %) in the group of down-regulated genes at h were unclassified. of the functional categories, the vast majority of differentially expressed genes were associated with metabolism ( table ). note that genes ( . %) were downregulated while genes ( . %) were up-regulated at h, whereas there were more up-regulated genes ( ) than down-regulated genes ( ) at h. based on the number of differentially expressed genes, it is likely that genes involved in various metabolic pathways were severely repressed at h and then were gradually induced at h. along with a gene set for metabolism, genes associated with energy were highly down-regulated ( genes) at h (table ). in contrast, genes involved in transcriptional and translational machinery were dominantly up-regulated early after fgv -dk infection. for example, genes associated with the cell cycle and dna processing ( genes), transcription ( genes), protein synthesis ( genes), protein fate ( genes), and those encoding proteins with binding function ( genes) were highly upregulated at h. the number of down-regulated genes associated with cellular transport at h was almost twice that of up-regulated genes. conversely, the number of upregulated genes that govern cellular transport was similar to that of the down-regulated genes at h. next, we analyzed the enriched gene ontology (go) terms of the differentially expressed genes. the identified enriched go terms are listed in additional file : table s . the directed acyclic graph (dag) illustrates the go terms that were over-represented (figures , , , , , and ) . interestingly, go terms related to ribosome biogenesis, such as the ribosome ribonucleoprotein complex assembly (go: ), ribosome assembly (go: ), ribonucleoprotein complex biogenesis (go: ), and ribosome biogenesis (go: ), were highly over-represented ( figure ). moreover, go terms for rna processing (go: ), ncrna processing (go: ), rrna metabolic processes (go: ), rrna processing (go: ), and maturation of ssu-rrna (go: ) were over-represented with high levels of transcripts ( figure ). similarly, go terms related to the nucleolus, such as the small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein complex (go: ), the nuclear lumen (go: ), and nucleolus (go: ), were over-represented ( figure ). transcripts associated with the nucleolus were highly accumulated at h. it was not surprising that the expressions of genes that involve a range of metabolic pathways were significantly affected by fgv -dk infection. consistent with the funcat annotation, go enrichment analysis showed that genes associated with a variety of metabolic pathways were significantly down-regulated, particularly at h. for example, over-represented go terms included cellular aromatic compound metabolic processes (go: ), in the cellular component ontology, go terms associated with membranes (go terms , , , and ) were over-represented ( figure ). interestingly, genes associated with membranes were down-regulated regardless of the time point ( figure ). furthermore, transporter activity was one of the significantly over-represented go terms with respect to molecular function. of a total of go terms for transporter activity, were present at h, including carbohydrate transmembrane transporter activity (go: ), ion transmembrane transporter activity (go: ), and sugar:hydrogen symporter activity (go: ) (figure ). at h, three go terms, including primary active transmembrane transporter activity (go: ), atpase activity, and coupled to transmembrane movement of substances (go: ), were over-represented ( figure ). transcription factors (tfs) play a key role in signal transduction pathways by regulating gene expression to control biological processes [ ] . thus, it is of interest to understand their involvement in fungi-virus interactions at the transcriptional level. whole genome sequences of f. graminearum show that there are at least tfs divided into families [ ] . we identified more differentially expressed tfs at the early time point ( tfs) than at the late time point ( tfs) (additional file : table s ). zn cys ( tfs) was the most prevalent tf family, followed by the c h zinc finger ( tfs) and bhlh ( tfs) families. in addition, centromere protein b, dna-binding region, homeodomain-like, lambda repressor-like, dna-binding, nucleic acid-binding, ob-fold, tf jumonji, and bzip were also identified as tfs showing significant change at the transcript level (additional file : table s ). zn cys ( tfs) was also the most prominent tf family at the late time point, followed by c h zinc finger ( tfs), bhlh ( tfs), and bzip ( tfs) (additional file : table s ). moreover, the gene expressions of tfs belonging to the myb (a negative transcriptional regulator), tf jumonji, zinc finger (cchctype), and zinc finger (nf-x -type) families were significantly changed. recently, a mutant library of putative tfs was established via homologous recombination in f. graminearum, providing a valuable resource to study gene regulation in fungus [ ] . thus, it might be of interest to compare phenotypes of mutants for the differentially expressed tfs. most tf knock-out mutants show distinct phenotypes. for example, five mutants for which members of the c h zinc finger family were deleted (fgsg_ and fgsg_ ) and zn cys (fgsg_ , fgsg_ , and fgsg_ ) displayed abnormal phenotypes compared to wild type controls. interestingly, the deletion of fgsg_ resulted in a hypervirulence phenotype. the expression of all five of these tfs was strongly up-regulated h after virus infection. two genes (fgsg_ and fgsg_ ) were highly expressed in both early and late time points. the ascospore was not formed in fgsg_ mutants, while that for fgsg_ exhibited increased resistance to oxidative stress. fgv -dk drastically induces the expression of fungal host genes required for their replication perhaps the most striking finding of this study is that the host containing fgv -dk accumulates transcripts associated with translation machinery, such as ribosome biogenesis and the nucleolus. ribosomes function in the production of proteins, while the nucleolus is the site of ribosomal rna synthesis and ribosome assembly [ ] . the nucleolus actively participates in a variety of biological processes, including cell cycle regulation, cell growth, stress sensing, and viral infection [ ] . moreover, genes involved in rna processing were highly induced. these genes convert precursor rnas such as non-coding rna (ncrna) and small subunit (ssu) ribosomal rnas molecules into mature rna molecules. taken together, these findings suggest that the entire complex for protein synthesis and processing in fungal host cells was highly activated by fgv -dk . viruses rely on host cell machinery and have evolved sophisticated mechanisms to achieve replication efficiently during virus infection [ ] . given that nucleolus localizing genes were up-regulated, it appears that the virus stimulates gene expression associated with nucleolus. as a result, the nucleolus produces numerous ribosomes to maximize viral replication. in addition, the virus might control protein synthetic machinery in host ribosomes to replicate viral proteins. recently, proteomics-based studies confirmed the involvement of the nucleolus in viral infection and replication [ , ] . previous studies have shown that rna viruses can interact with several nucleolar proteins such as nucleolin, b , and fibrillarin to facilitate virus replication [ ] . thus, it might be of interest to examine the interactions between nucleolar proteins from f. graminearum and fgv -dk viral proteins in future studies. although our data suggest that expression of genes related to ribosomes was strongly affected by virus infection, this might be a common phenomenon in hosts in response to various kinds of virus. thus, we cannot exclude the possibility that ribosomes are indirectly involved in the replication of dsrna viruses. since little is known about dsrna viruses, we refer to many results from singlestranded (ss) rna viruses to support our data. the system for dsrna viruses might differ from that of ssrna viruses. metabolism is the core of cellular functions, and comprises numerous reactions that function in the degradation of nutrients and biosynthesis of cellular components including proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, dna, and rna. our results, as well as a previous report of c. parasitica, found dramatic differences in gene expression associated with metabolic pathways [ ] . however, there are inherent differences between that study and the present one. specifically, our microarray data demonstrated down-regulation of genes involved in metabolism. in contrast, the previous study found that the majority of metabolites, including lipids and carbohydrates, were significantly accumulated [ ] . this difference may be due to different infection times. we found the most dramatic changes in gene expression at the early time point, whereas metabolic probing showed that a variety of metabolites accumulated with increasing infection time [ ] . differential expression of genes related to metabolism might be associated with the altered host phenotype. for example, in the group of down-regulated genes at h, genes for cell type differentiation were also highly enriched, suggesting that host cell differentiation seems to be induced by viral infection. interestingly, several studies provide evidence that filamentous differentiation in fungi is required for virulence [ ] . regardless of viral infection stage, genes related to cell rescue, defense, and virulence were highly up-regulated, suggesting that the host defense system was consistently activated. compared to the whole genome, genes with significantly enriched functions were mostly found in the group showing up-regulation at h, suggesting that the transcriptional regulation in the host harboring mycovirus is more important at the early time point than the late time point. of the altered metabolites, our study as well as a previous report [ ] found dramatic changes in gene expression levels for polyamine production. polyamines play roles in many biological processes, such as cell growth, development, and responses to various stresses [ ] . thus, it is likely that the down-regulation of genes involved in polyamine biosynthesis during the early stage ( h) could be correlated with reduced levels of don, which confers hypovirulence to host f. graminearum (figure ) . a previous study showed that polyamine biosynthesis inhibitors decreased mycelial growth of sclerotinia sclerotiorum [ ] . this result is highly consistent with observed phenotypes in virus-infected f. graminearum showing strong inhibition of mycelia growth (figure ). however, we do not know whether the inhibition of mycelial growth in f. graminearum is directly related to polyamine biosynthesis. changes to the membrane-associated transporting system of the host harboring fgv -dk along with the reduced amounts of many metabolites such as carbohydrates, gene expression for the transfer of such metabolites or ions from one side of the membrane to the other was greatly suppressed in the host harboring fgv -dk . this indicates that virus infection affects the transport of many micro-and macroelements in host cells at the transcript level. moreover, this transport system mediates cell-to-cell communication within the host via plasma membranes. for example, transcripts required for cellular communication were highly accumulated at h, suggesting that the virus might first stimulate cell-to-cell communication in fungal host cells, which is necessary to trigger host defense mechanisms against viral pathogens. indeed, a recent study reported that infection of chlorovirus, paramecium bursaria chlorella virus , affects the transport activity of solutes via plasma membranes in chlorella [ ] . plasma membranes are the first barriers to block pathogen attack and can transmit information and molecules between neighboring cells. viruses utilize plasma membranes to interact with signaling molecules. a previous study suggested that virus infection causes depolarization of the host cell membranes, thus decreasing the transport of solutes by active transporters via plasma membranes [ ] . the impairment of plasma membranes by viruses suggests that all materials required for virus replication should be recruited within the host cell [ ] . taken together, these data suggest that fgv -dk might inhibit the transport of diverse metabolites via plasma membranes to the maximize energy required for virus replication within the nucleolus. fungal-specific tfs are key players in the gene expression regulation in f. graminearum harboring fgv -dk the expressions of members of the zn cys tf family were strongly altered at both the early and late time points. these are known to be fungal-specific, and their functional roles are diverse, including sugar and amino acid metabolism, gluconeogenesis, respiration, vitamin synthesis, cell cycle, chromatin remodeling, nitrogen utilization, peroxisome proliferation, drug resistance, and stress response [ ] . the zn cys family is the largest tf family in f. graminearum, comprising tfs. of the nine tfs that were differentially expressed at both the early and late time points, six belong to the zn cys family, indicating that expression of zn cys is necessary in the host harboring fgv -dk . furthermore, the enriched go terms for nucleic acid binding that were up-regulated at h provide evidence for transcriptional regulation by tfs such as the zn cys tf family (figure ). to characterize the functional roles of the zn cys tf family associated with fgv -dk , it is necessary to examine the phenotypes of knock-out mutants. therefore, the recently generated f. graminearum deletion mutant lines will be very useful resources for characterizing the functions of host tfs associated with hypovirulence. fungi utilize camp-mediated signal transduction pathways to recognize and respond to diverse environmental stimuli. camp signaling is implicated in the regulation of hyphal growth, mating, and gluconeogenesis in many fungi [ , ] . in addition, camp and the g-protein alpha subunit coordinate their activities to regulate differentiation and virulence in some fungi. we found that transcripts for genes associated with responses to camp were highly accumulated in the late stage of virus infection. this result is consistent with previous data that suggested up-regulation of camp levels in the fungal transcriptome by hypovirus infection [ ] . thus, we hypothesize that fgv -dk attenuates the pathogenicity of f. graminearum via camp-mediated signaling and that this process occurs relatively late after virus infection. recent years have seen extraordinary developments in genome-wide experimental methods. of these, microarray analyses facilitate an understanding of the dynamic gene expression patterns of target organisms during environmental stimuli such as biotic and abiotic stresses. here, given the benefits of the available whole genome sequences of f. graminearum, we generated a ′ tiling microarray system covering whole genes. to decipher global transcriptional reprogramming in f. graminearum harboring fgv -dk in detail, samples were harvested at two different time points, thus providing lists of differentially expressed genes early and late in the host containing fgv -dk as compared to an uninfected strain. numbers of differentially expressed genes at the early and late time points were comparable, but the gene lists differed, suggesting time-dependent transcriptional changes. genes that were up-regulated at the early time point included those involved in protein synthesis, such as ribosome assembly, as well as nucleolus and ribosomal rna-processing genes, suggesting that fgv -dk strongly modulates translational machinery in f. graminearum to maximize viral replication. moreover, the accumulation of transcripts associated with transcription, such as tfs, indicated that the transcriptional machinery, which is largely regulated by fungal-specific tfs, might be one of the main targets for virus infection. in contrast, genes involved in various metabolic pathways, particularly those that produce carboxylic acids, aromatic amino acids, nitrogen compounds, and polyamines, were highly down-regulated at the early time point ( h) . interestingly, such components are closely associated with the host defense mechanism. these results suggest that fgv -dk suppresses the production of such defense-related components until the transcriptional and translational machinery in host cells have adjusted to fgv -dk replication. in addition, transport systems associated with membranes were severely damaged by hindering the recruitment of materials for viral replication within host cells. when faced with viral infection, f. graminearum tries to establish a defense mechanism by consistently up-regulating genes associated with defense and virulence at the late time point ( h). taken together, our data provide strong genome-wide transcriptional evidence of how fgv -dk regulates the transcriptional reprogramming in f. graminearum. virus-free and fgv -dk -infected f. graminearum strain-dk were stored in % (v/v) glycerol at − °c and reactivated on pda at °c with a h light-dark cycle. f. graminearum cultures used for rna extractions were grown as described previously [ ] . freshly grown mycelia from pda media plates were inoculated in or ml complete media (cm) broth [ ] and incubated at °c for h or h in an orbital shaker ( rpm). hyphae were collected by filtering through mm paper, washed with distilled water, dried by blotting with paper towels, and frozen at − °c. conidia of virus-free and fgv -dk -infected f. graminearum strains were harvested in ml of cmc broth at days after inoculation. conidial suspensions ( × conidia per dish) were grown in ml of defined media containing mm of agmatine [ ] in × mm petri dishes for days prior to filtrate harvests. three replicates were used for this treatment. mycotoxin was extracted from the isolates and analyzed with a shimadzu qp- gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer, as described previously [ ] . the trichothecenes were measured based on biomass produced by each strain. preparation of total rna samples and cdna synthesis for rt-pcr frozen mycelia were pulverized with a mortar and pestle using liquid nitrogen for nucleic acid extraction. total rnas were extracted by iso-rna lysis reagent ( prime, germany). extracted total rna was treated with dnase i (takara, japan) to remove genomic dna according to the instructions provided by the manufacturer. these total rna samples were precipitated with ethanol and resuspended in depc-treated water. next, μg total rna of each sample was used to synthesize first-strand cdna with an oligo (dt) primer and m-mlv reverse transcriptase (promega, usa) according to the manufacturer's protocols. all synthesized cdnas were diluted : with nucleasefree water for rt-pcr. expression profiling was conducted with the gibberella zeae k microarray, which was designed based on the f. graminearum sequences released in march (http://www.broad.mit.edu/annotation/genome/fusarium _group/). the genome contains a total of , genes. ten -nucleotide-long probes were designed from each gene starting base pairs (bp) ahead of the end of the stop codon and by shifting bp. thus, these probes covered bp in the ′ region of the target gene. mitochondrial genes ( genes) and selected markers such as gfp, gus, hyg, bar, and kan were included. in total, , probes were designed. the average probe size was nucleotides long, and the tm values were adjusted from to °c. the microarray was manufactured by nimblegen inc. (http://www.nimblegen.com/). random gc probes ( , ) to monitor the hybridization efficiency and four corner fiducial controls ( ) to assist with overlaying the grid on the image were included. to assess the reproducibility of the microarray analysis, we repeated the experiment three times with independently prepared total rnas. thus, a total of samples were subjected to total rna isolation and used for microarray analyses. for the synthesis of double-stranded cdnas, the revertaidtm h minus first strand cdna synthesis kit (fermentas, lithuania) was used. in brief, μl oligo dt primer ( μm) and μl ( μg) total rnas were combined and denatured at °c for min and renatured by cooling the mixture in ice. first-strand dna was synthesized by adding μl x first strand buffer, μl ribolocktm ribonuclease inhibitor, μl mm dntp mix, and μl rever-taidtm h minus m-mulv reverse transcriptase enzyme and incubating at °c for h. the reaction was stopped by heating at °c for min. to synthesize the second strand, . μl nuclease free water, μl x reaction buffer for dna polymerase i (fermentas, lithuania), μl x t dna ligase buffer (takara, japan), μl unit/ul dna polymerase i (fermentas, lithuania), . μl unit/μl ribonuclease h (fermentas, lithuania), and . μl unit/μl t dna ligase (takara, japan) were added to the firststrand reaction mixture and the reaction was performed at °c for h. the double-stranded cdna mixture was purified using the minelute reaction cleanup kit (qiagen, usa). for the synthesis of cy -labeled target dna fragments, μg double-stranded cdna was mixed with μl ( optical density) cy - mer primer (sigma-aldrich, usa) and denatured by heating at °c for min. the reaction was further proceeded by adding μl x dntp mix ( mm each), μl deionized water, and μl klenow fragment ( unit/μl, takara, japan) and incubating at °c for h. dna was precipitated by centrifugation at , x g after adding . μl m nacl and μl isopropanol. precipitated samples were rehydrated with μl water. the concentration of each sample was determined using a spectrophotometer. a μg aliqout of dna was used for microarray hybridization. the sample was mixed with . μl x hybridization buffer (nimblegen, usa) and finalized to μl with deionized water. hybridization was performed with an maui chamber (biomicro, usa) at °c for - h. after hybridization, the microarray was removed from the maui hybridization station and immediately immersed in a shallow ml wash i (nimblegen, usa) at °c for - s with gentle agitation, then transferred to a second dish of wash i and incubated for min with gentle agitation. the microarray chip was then transferred to another dish of wash ii and further washed in wash iii for min with agitation. the slide was dried in a centrifuge for min at g and scanned using a gene-pix scanner b (axon, usa). the hybridized microarray chip was scanned with genepix b (axon instruments) preset with a μm resolution for the cy signal. signals were digitized and analyzed by nimblescan (nimblegen, usa). the grid was aligned to the image with a chip design file called the ndf file. the alignment was assessed by ensuring that the grid's corners were overlaid on the image corners. this was further checked by uniformity scores in the program. the analysis was performed in a two-part process. first, pair-report files were generated in which the sequence, probe, and signal intensity information for the cy channel were collected. databased background subtraction using a local background estimator was performed to improve fold-change estimates on arrays with high background signals. the data were normalized and processed with a cubic spline normalization using quantiles to adjust for signal variation between chips [ ] . a probe-level summarization by robust multi-chip analysis (rma) using a median polish algorithm implemented in nimblescan was used to produce call files in order to improve the sensitivity and reproducibility of microarray results [ ] . the multiple correction analysis was performed using the limma package in an r computing environment [ ] . linear models implemented in lmfit and empirical bayes methods implemented in ebayes were applied to assess the differential expression of genes. genes for which the adjusted p-value or false discovery rate was below . were collected and further selected. hierarchical clustering was performed by acuity . (axon instruments) with similarity metrics based on squared euclidean correlation, and average linkage clustering was used to calculate the distance of genes. the microarray data were deposited in the ncbi gene expression omnibus (geo) database with the accession number gse . to gain insight into the functions of the differentially expressed genes, go enrichment analysis was conducted with gominer [ , ] . the , genes were matched to the m. grisea sequencing assembly sc (http://www. broad.mit.edu/annotation/genome/magnaporthe_grisea/) with scores of and up by blastp analysis and were used as the total gene set for go enrichment analysis. the gominer program first categorizes each gene according to its go terms and the mode of gene expression (either down-or up-regulation). modes of expressions are denoted as under, over, and change. the program then calculates p-values using a one-sided fisher exact test for the number of categorized go terms out of the total number of terms. false 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normalization, and summaries of high density oligonucleotide array probe level data linear models and empirical bayes methods for assessing differential expression in microarray experiments gominer: a resource for biological interpretation of genomic and proteomic data gene ontology: tool for the unification of biology. the gene ontology consortium the funcat, a functional annotation scheme for systematic classification of proteins from whole genomes submit your next manuscript to biomed central and take full advantage of: • convenient online submission • thorough peer review • no space constraints or color figure charges • immediate publication on acceptance • inclusion in pubmed, cas, scopus and google scholar • research which is freely available for redistribution rate (fdr) values were obtained from randomizations. go terms for which the fdr was less than . were selected.qrt-pcr analysis qrt-pcr was performed on bio-rad's cfx ™ real-time pcr system using gene-specific internal primers. each reaction mix ( μl) consisted of ng total cdna, μl x ssofast ™ evagreen w supermix (bio-rad, usa), and pmoles each primer. the thermal profile was as follows: min at °c and cycles of s at °c, s at °c, and melting curve data obtained by increasing the temperature from to °c. elongation factor α (ef- α; fgsg_ ) and cyclophilin (cyp ; fgsg_ ) were used as internal reference genes to normalize mrna levels between samples (ef- α; genbank accession no. xm , cyp ; genbank accession no. xm ). data were analyzed using the bio-rad cfx manager v . . . software (bio-rad, usa). rna was extracted from three independent replicate experiments, and each pcr product was evaluated in at least three independent experiments, including three technical replicates [ ] . additional file : table s . differentially expressed f. graminearum genes at h.additional file : table s . differentially expressed f. graminearum genes at h.additional file : table s . the representative f. graminearum genes selected for qrt-pcr validation.additional file : table s . oligonucleotide primers used for qrt-pcr.additional file : table s . enriched go terms of differentially expressed genes.additional file : table s . f. graminearum transcription factors which were differentially expressed by fgv -dk infection. the authors declare that they have no competing interests.authors' contributions jy, kml, ms, ywl, and kk designed the experiment. jy, kml, and ms performed cultivation of f. graminearum and infection with fgv -dk . jy and km conducted mycotoxin analysis, isolated total rnas, and conducted rt-pcr. wkc, jy, and kk analyzed the microarray data and interpreted the results. jy and kk coordinated the study. wkc, jy, ywl, and kk wrote the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- -g fwk authors: hachim, mahmood yaseen; al heialy, saba; hachim, ibrahim yaseen; halwani, rabih; senok, abiola c.; maghazachi, azzam a.; hamid, qutayba title: interferon-induced transmembrane protein (ifitm ) is upregulated explicitly in sars-cov- infected lung epithelial cells date: - - journal: front immunol doi: . /fimmu. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: g fwk current guidelines for covid- management recommend the utilization of various repurposed drugs. despite ongoing research toward the development of a vaccine against sars-cov- , such a vaccine will not be available in time to contribute to the containment of the ongoing pandemic. therefore, there is an urgent need to develop a framework for the rapid identification of novel targets for diagnostic and therapeutic interventions. we analyzed publicly available transcriptomic datasets of sars-cov infected humans and mammals to identify consistent differentially expressed genes then validated in sars-cov- infected epithelial cells transcriptomic datasets. comprehensive toxicogenomic analysis of the identified genes to identify possible interactions with clinically proven drugs was carried out. we identified ifitm as an early upregulated gene, and valproic acid was found to enhance its mrna expression as well as induce its antiviral action. these findings indicate that analysis of publicly available transcriptomic and toxicogenomic data represents a rapid approach for the identification of novel targets and molecules that can modify the action of such targets during the early phases of emerging infections like covid- . coronaviruses are a large family of viruses that were first described over years ago ( ) . since the turn of the millennium, there have been two major global outbreaks caused by coronaviruses, namely sars-cov in and mers-cov in ( ) . the ongoing covid- pandemic caused by sars-cov- represents the third and most devastating of these outbreaks. these outbreaks, notably the covid- pandemic, are harsh reminders of the challenges posed by emerging infectious diseases. the global impact of the covid- pandemic has brought to the forefront the need to rapidly develop and deploy an effective vaccine. however, despite ongoing concerted research efforts, it is accepted that such a vaccine will not be available in time to contribute to the containment of the ongoing pandemic. current management guidelines include the use of repurposed drugs such as chloroquine and its analog hydroxychloroquine as well as antiviral agents ( ) . however, the need for well-designed clinical trials to validate their efficacy continues to be highlighted. to effectively address the ongoing covid- pandemic, there is a recognized need for a framework for rapid identification of novel targets for diagnostic and therapeutic interventions as well as determine clinically approved drugs with high potential for repurposed use against sars-cov- . publicly available transcriptomic datasets generated from sars-cov infected humans, and mammalian cells represent a wealth of data that could be used to identify consistent differentially expressed genes, which could then be validated against sars-cov- infected epithelial cells transcriptomic datasets. a comprehensive toxicogenomic analysis of the identified genes could potentially identify possible interactions with clinically proven drugs. this simple approach can be used for the rapid identification of novel targets and drugs for further validation. in this study, we have applied this approach, and our findings have identified ifitm as an early upregulated gene and indicate that valproic acid enhances ifitm mrna expression and antiviral action. publicly available transcriptomic datasets were retrieved from gene expression omnibus (geo) mouse lung tissue transcriptome response to a mouse-adapted strain of sars-cov in wild type c bl /nj mice and tlr -/-mice c bl /nj ma gse ( ) (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/). only microarray gene expression datasets with the word "sars-cov, " virus, or modified strain infected vs. mock-infected and no more than h after the infection. twelve datasets fulfilled the criteria, as detailed in table . we used geoquery and limma r packages through the geo r tool for each dataset ( ) . after sorting the genes according to the false discovery rate (fdr), the top , differentially expressed probes with fdr < . were selected from each dataset. the annotated genes of the , probes in each dataset were intersected with differentially expressed genes (degs) from all other datasets. the degs that were common in at least out of the ( %) datasets were identified as shared genes that are consistently deg in the first h of sars-cov infection. enriched ontology clustering for the identified genes was performed to explore using the metascape (http://metascape.org/gp/index.html#/main/step ). the shortlisted genes expression was then explored in another dataset (gse ), where rna-sequencing of primary human lung epithelium (nhbe) mock-treated or infected with sars-cov- was done to examine whether there is a difference in the response of sars-cov- from other strains in terms of degs ( ) . in total, , genes were differentially expressed genes (degs) between mock-infected and virally infected models in the studies. thirty-eight genes that were degs in at least out of studies ( %) were considered common degs due to sars-cov infection of the lungs in the first h post-infection. these genes are listed in table . in order to identify deg in sars-cov infected lung tissuespecific to each of the models used and those which are shared, we intersected the degs from datasets that use the same model. human epithelial cells datasets (gse , gse , gse , gse , and gse ), mice datasets (gse , gse , gse , gse , and gse ), ferret (gse ) and cynomolgus macaques (gse ) were all intersected with the covid- infected epithelial cells dataset as shown in figure . the number of deg intersected between different species is listed in the table . epithelial cells infected with sars-cov- shared degs (mx , oas , xaf , ifi , mx , irf , stat , ifit , and ifit ) with human lung cells, mice, and cynomolgus maca. the identified genes are involved in the immune response against rna viruses as expected, the top genes identified are involved in innate immune responses against rna viruses. these include the cytosolic dna-sensing pathway, toll-like receptor signaling pathway, and negative regulation of binding. interferon (ifn) response to viral infections such as type i interferon signaling pathway, defense response to the virus, the antiviral mechanism by ifn-stimulated genes, regulation of type i interferon production, response to interferon-alpha, and regulation of defense response to virus and influenza a, were also upregulated. genes that play significant roles in activating immune systems such as regulation of response to cytokine stimulus, negative regulation of immune response, myeloid cell homeostasis, and positive regulation of the multi-organism process are also upregulated (figure and table ). the identified genes expression levels were higher in human bronchial epithelium infected with sars-cov- compared to those mock-infected (figure ) . however, only ifitm showed a significant difference (p < . ), while two other genes oas and mx showed a trend of enhancement, although it was not statistically significant (p = . using the two-stage linear stepup procedure of benjamini, krieger, and yekutieli). ifitm mrna levels were one of the highly expressed genes compared to the other identified genes at baseline in mock-infected hbe and were further induced by the virus, which results in overall high mrna levels. valproic acid can upregulate the ifitm mrna expression next, we searched the comparative toxicogenomics database (http://ctdbase.org/) to identify drugs/chemicals that might affect the mrna expression of ifitm in at least two reference studies ( ) . interestingly valproic acid, carbon nanotubes, nickel, and tert-butylhydroperoxide were shown to upregulate ifitm expression while pirinixic acid, acetaminophen, and ethinyl estradiol decreased such an expression ( table ) . in order to examine the effect of valproic acid therapy on the ifitm mrna expression in immune cells of the blood, a publicly available transcriptomics dataset (gse ) was extracted and reanalyzed. healthy controls were compared to responders and non-responders patients on valproic acid therapy. we found upregulation of the mrna expression of ifitm in patients, and the difference was significant in the responder group only (p < . ) compared to healthy controls (figure ) . in response to viral rnas, like in the case of sars-cov- , the innate immune system will unleash interferon (ifn), to activate antiviral mechanisms and effector cells like natural killers ( ) . in mice infected with sars-cov, a delayed and prolonged type i interferon (ifn-i) signaling leads to lung immunopathology as it promotes the accumulation of pathogenic inflammatory cells with increased lung cytokine/chemokine levels and vascular leakage ( ) . this prolonged ifn-i and virally induced il- set the scene for secondary bacterial infection, which can add a strong il β and tnfα-mediated inflammatory response to magnify lung damage ( ) . understanding how sars-cov- can manipulate ifn is vital in deciphering the battle of the body against the viral spread and consequence. our reanalysis of transcriptomic data showed that although the ifn pathway is upregulated consistently in sars-cov related infection, sars-cov- showed specific upregulation of the gene for a unique interferon-induced protein, namely ifitm . ifitm is a -kda protein that localizes to endosomes and lysosomes and is possibly acquired by mammalian ancestral cells via horizontal gene transfer ( ) . interferon-induced transmembrane proteins (ifitms , , and ) are innate immune responders to virus infections as they regulate the fusion of invading virus and endocytic vesicles and direct it to the lysosomes ( , ) . ifitm can further alter membrane rigidity and curvature to inhibit virus membrane fusion ( ) . such action is important to prevent the release of viral particles into the cytoplasm, which controls viral spread ( ) . during influenza a infection of human airway epithelial cells, ifitm was shown to clusters on viruscontaining endosomes and lysosomes within few hours postinfection, indicating its role in the early phase of viral entry ( ) . even platelets and megakaryocytes were shown to remarkably upregulate ifitm to prevent viral progression during influenza infection ( ) . bst , ifi , ifit , ifit , ifit , irf , isg , mx , mx , oas , oas , sp , stat , isg , ifitm , usp , xaf , zbp , rsad , trim , ddx , il , cxcl , cxcl the epithelial cell and resident leukocytes in lung upper and lower airways that constitutively express ifitm can withstand viral infections, and this is vital to decide viral tropism as viruses favor cells with low ifitm expression ( ) . ifitm enhances the accumulation of cd + t cells in airways to promote mucosal immune cell persistence ( ) . lung and circulating immune cells were reported to express less ifitm than other tissues, and this was a suggestive reason for covid- severity and cytokine release syndrome ( ) . interestingly, ifitm -rs -c/c snp prevalence in the chinese population is . %, and recent research confirmed that snps in ifitm could change the severity of influenza infection, as was shown in one case with covid- ( ) . ifitm polymorphisms have been linked with hospitalization and mortality during influenza virus infection ( ) . expressing the gene is not the only prerequisite to the antiviral action of ifitm , as it was found recently that within the protein, an amphipathic helix is critical for its blocking effect of viral fusion of similar pathogenic viruses like influenza a virus and zika virus ( ). another factor that regulates the ifitm trafficking specificity to such viruses is that it requires s-palmitoylation ( , ) . s-palmitoylation (s-palm) is the reversible process of linking a fatty acid chain to cysteine residues of the substrate protein ( ) . multiple zinc finger dhhc domain-containing palmitoyltransferases (zdhhcs) can palmitoylate ifitm to make it a fully functional antiviral protein ( ) . it seems that bats (order chiroptera), which act as natural hosts for many viral infections, use ifitm as an antiviral mechanism if there is s-palmitoylation of the protein; however, if this modification is disturbed, the bat can develop viral infection ( ) . based on that, we can suggest that severe covid- cases might be due to either non-functional ifitm by snp, failure of lung cells to upregulate ifitm in response to interferon, a mutation in amphipathic helix sequence or modification in s-palmitoylation. further examination and screening for the ifitm dynamics in covid- might explain the possible therapeutic and diagnostic options. our toxicogenomic analysis showed that valproic acid increased the mrna expression of ifitm , supporting a new report that the sars-cov- -human protein-protein interaction map showed that valproic acid might be a potential repurposing drug for covid- ( ) . virtual screening, docking, binding energy calculation, and simulation show that valproic acid forms stable interaction with nsp of cov and can inhibit its function ( ) . valproic acid is currently used for the treatment of epilepsy and known to target histone deacetylases (hdacs) that modify the gene expression epigenetically ( ) . valproic acid was shown to inhibit mature and fully infectious enveloped viruses release as it alters cellular membrane composition ( ) . the modest and broad antiviral activity of valproic acid made the drug an attractive possibility due to its availability, and limited side effects for a short term of use during acute viral disease ( ) . the reported side effects like hepatotoxicity and teratogenicity are mainly associated with the parental compound valproate and can be avoided by the use of its derivatives like valpromide (vpd) and valnoctamide (vcd) . a recent open-label proof-of-concept trial of days intravenous valproic acid for severe covid- showed a % reduction in the case fatality rate and length of stay ( ) . more studies are needed to explore the promising potential of valproic acid in the treatment of covid- . one limitation of the study is that it is based on the publicly available transcriptome dataset, which is limited in number, partly because this is a novel disease, but also because ongoing lockdowns have made it challenging for scientists to carry out the extensive laboratory work required. our evaluation showed that the analysis of publicly available transcriptomic data could be a reasonable approach to identify the novel target and suggest drugs that can modify the action of such targets during the early phases of emerging infections like covid- until a complete understanding of the disease become clear. this can justify the experimental use of clinically approved drugs and guide the clinicians in their limited options against such lethal disease. all datasets 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and analysis the palmitoyltransferase zdhhc enhances interferoninduced transmembrane protein (ifitm ) palmitoylation and antiviral activity bat ifitm restriction depends on s-palmitoylation and a polymorphic site within the cd domain a sars-cov- -human protein-protein interaction map reveals drug targets and potential drug-repurposing. biorxiv exploring the inhibitory activity of valproic acid against the hdac family using an mmgbsa approach new pharmacological strategies to fight enveloped viruses trends in antiviral strategies methods of an openlabel proof-of-concept trial of intravenous valproic acid for severe covid- . medrxiv all authors listed have made a substantial, direct and intellectual contribution to the work, and approved it for publication. key: cord- -q b lm authors: cao, ying-li; wang, ying; guo, rong; yang, fan; zhang, yun; wang, shu-hui; liu, li title: identification and characterization of three novel small interference rnas that effectively down-regulate the isolated nucleocapsid gene expression of sars coronavirus date: - - journal: molecules doi: . /molecules sha: doc_id: cord_uid: q b lm nucleocapsid (n) protein of severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus (sars-cov) is a major pathological determinant in the host that may cause host cell apoptosis, upregulate the proinflammatory cytokine production, and block innate immune responses. therefore, n gene has long been thought an ideal target for the design of small interference rna (sirna). sirna is a class of small non-coding rnas with a size of - nt that functions post-transcriptionally to block targeted gene expression. in this study, we analyzed the n gene coding sequences derived from different isolates, and found that nucleotide deletions and substitutions are mainly located at the first nt sequence. combining previous reports and the above sequence information, we create three novel sirnas that specifically target the conserved and unexploited regions in the n gene. we show that these sirnas could effectively and specifically block the isolated n gene expression in mammal cells. furthermore, we provide evidence to show that n gene can effectively up-regulate m gene mediated interferon β (ifnβ) production, while blocking n gene expression by specific sirna significantly reduces ifnβ gene expression. our data indicate that the inhibitory effect of sirna on the isolated n gene expression might be influenced by the sequence context around the targeted sites. severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) that spread worldwide in is caused by a novel type of coronavirus called sars-associated coronavirus (sars-cov). sars-cov is an enveloped and positively single-stranded rna virus with a typical genome size . kb [ ] [ ] [ ] . the viral envelope is a lipid bilayer enbedded with three viral transmembrane proteins: the matrix (m), envelope (e) and spike (s) proteins. the genomic rna of sars-cov is protected and packaged by the viral nucleocapsid (n) protein by forming a helical structure of ribonucleoprotein complex within the viral envelope. in addition, the physical interaction between the n and m proteins might be necessary for the assembly of coronavirus [ ] [ ] [ ] . the n gene of sars-cov is located at a region proximal to the ' end of the viral genome with a size of nt long that encodes for a aa basic protein. the main functions of n protein are two folds: ) it binds to viral genomic rna for the formation of viral nucleocapsid; ) it also selfassociates into polymer that might be critical for the helical structure formation [ ] . protein structural study reveals that the sars-cov n protein contains two structural domains flanked by intrinsically disordered (id) regions [ ] . the n terminal domain (ntd, amino acid residues - ) can bind nonspecifically to a variety of nucleotide substrates [ ] and functions as a putative rna binding domain associated with the viral rna genome [ ] , whereas the c terminal domain (ctd, amino acid residues - ) is thought to be responsible for the dimerized self-association [ , ] . however, recent studies show that the c terminal sequence of n protein also promotes higher ordered oligomerization and is able to interact with nucleic acids as well [ , ] . moreover, chang demonstrated that all id sequences are able to bind rna [ ] , indicating that the multisite nucleic acid binding property of sars-cov n protein may have an inherent advantage to promote the formation of viral helical nucleocapsid core. sars-cov infection is a life-threatening disease that often develops with acute lung injury and acute respiratory distress syndrome. the inflammation and immune responses in the host are often induced or damaged by viral gene products such as n gene products. sars-cov n protein possesses multifarious activities and may be actively involved in sars-cov induced pathogenesis [ ] . for instance, n protein induces the pro-inflammatory responses by activating the promoter activity of either cyclooxygenase- (cox- ) or il- by directly interacting with the nfb binding element [ , ] . overexpression of n protein in serum starved cell lines such as monkey kidney cos- cells [ ] or human pulmonary fibroblast hpf cells [ ] induces apoptosis. more importantly, sars-cov n protein can function as an antagonist to counteract the host innate immune response by inhibiting the activity of irf and nfkb, and subsequently blocking interferon production [ ] . sars-cov n protein is believed to be one of the major pathological determinants in the host cells [ ] . therefore, down-regulating n protein expression by the small interference rna (sirna) approach might be good strategy to reverse the virus-induced damage to the host and may help development of a more effective therapeutic means to control viral transmission. sirna is a type of rna molecule with - nt in length that functions post-transcriptionally to down-regulate the targeted gene expression. sars-cov n gene specific sirnas have been designed and investigated by a number of groups, and at least targeted sites of n gene specific sirnas have been selected and tested [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . sequence analysis indicates that all these known sirnas are located at / of the ' n gene sequence (within first nt out of the total nt). nucleotide substitution and deletion mutations can be frequently recovered from the first nt sequence of n gene. therefore, these sequence alterations may have a potential to weaken the effect of sirna mediated gene silencing. in the current study, we compared the n gene sequences derived from different isolates of sars-cov and selected three novel sirna targeting sites in the n gene, including one targeting the ' terminus of the gene. functional analysis indicates that all three novel sirnas are effective in downregulating n gene expression. moreover, our study demonstrates that sars-cov n gene is able to up-regulate the m gene mediated interferon production, while the n gene specific sirna can effectively reduce this up-regulation. sars-cov n protein is a multi-functional protein that contributes greatly to viral induced pathogenesis and often serves as the therapeutic targeting site for the development of anti-viral drugs against sars-cov infection, including sirna. sars-cov is a positive single-stranded rna virus frequently associated with sequence alterations during viral transmission. a better sirna should be designed to target the conserved region in the targeted sequence. to this end, we randomly selected the n genes derived from different isolates of sars-cov: hku- (ay ), tor (ay ), bj (ay ), hzs -fb (ay ), zj (ay ), sin (ay ), shanghaiqxc (ay ), shanghaiqxc (ay ), cuhk-ag (ay ), pumc (ay ), gz-b (ay ), tc (ay ), gz-c (ay ), zs-c (ay ), lc (ay . ) and lc (ay . ). clustalw analysis revealed that a total of five sequence alterations (two sequence deletions and three nucleotide substitutions) occurred in the n gene in these isolates ( figure ). interestingly, sequence alterations in the n gene are frequently uncovered in the ' portion of the gene (within the first nt), which is similar to our previous observation on sars-cov m gene [ ] . however, different from the m gene mutation, which is associated with single nucleotide substitution, the n gene mutation tends to be larger in size, such as twelve nucleotide deletions (nt - ) and di-nucleotide substitutions (nt - , figure ). the n gene also possesses two additional single nucleotide substitutions (nt and nt ) and one single nucleotide deletion (nt ). previously, a number of n gene-specific sirnas based on random selection have been reported by other groups [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . sequence analysis revealed that all these sirnas are located within the first nt sequence of the n gene, and no targeted site has been selected for the last nt sequence. considering the nucleotide substitutions in n gene as well as the previous reports, we chose three unexploited regions that were well conserved in the n genes among the isolates of sars-cov. the selected targeted sites were at + + nt, + + nt and + + nt relative to the ' atg initiation codon, and their respective sirnas were named as si-n , si-n and si-n ( figure ). a known sirna (named si-n# , previous name no. in reference [ ] ) that targeted the ' terminus (+ + nt) of n gene was also constructed for control purposes. three novel sirnas (si-n , si-n and si-n ) targeting at nt, nt and nt, respectively, are underlined. a known si-n# (no. ) targeting at nt reported by shi et al. [ ] is also indicated. the full length of n gene cdna was amplified from sars-cov strain hku- infected vero e cells. after confirmation by sequencing analysis, the n gene was then subcloned into eukaryotic expression vector pcmv-myc to generate a pcmv-myc-np plasmid construct. the expression of n gene was confirmed by rt-pcr and western blot analysis (figure a and b) . to visualize the subcellular localization of n protein, n gene was also fused with egfp to make a pegfp-np fusion gene construct. after transfection into hek cells, egfp-np fusion protein was mainly distributed in the cytoplasm (figure c ). alternatively, hek cells transfected with pcmv-myc-np were subjected to immunostaining analysis. in agreement with the above result, as well as a previous report [ ] , the myc-tagged np gene products were indeed predominantly expressed in the cytoplasm ( figure d ). to test if the selected sirnas have an inhibitory effect on n gene expression, pegfp-np was cotransfected with increased doses of either si-n or si-n into hek cells. figure demonstrates that both si-n and si-n inhibited pegfp-np expression post-transcriptionally and functioned in a dose-dependent manner, indicating that both sirnas are effective in inhibiting the targeted mrna expression. pegfp-np was co-transfected with the increased dose of either pbs/u -si-n or pbs/u -si-n into hek cells. total rnas were isolated from the transfected cells and subjected to standard rt-pcr by using n specific primers. beta actin expression was served as internal control. the effect of sirna on n gene repression was further confirmed by western blot analysis. figure a demonstrates a significant reduction in n protein expression as the ratio of n to si-n increased. quantitation of the band intensity revealed about fold reduction in n protein expression when cotransfection with higher doses of si-n (figure b) . the specificity of si-n on n gene expression was further confirmed by using a non-specific sirna, si-m , as a negative control. si-m has been shown to be a potent inhibitor to sars-cov m gene expression [ , ] . higher doses of si-n but not si-m dramatically inhibited egfp-np gene expression, indicating the specificity of si-n mediated n gene repression (figure c ). quantitative analysis by flow cytometric approach further demonstrated that si-n could specifically and markedly reduce egfp-np gene expression (figure d) . similarly, si-n , which targeted at the ' half of n gene, also dramatically inhibited n protein expression by about four-fold when the molar ratio of si-n : n reached : (figure a and b) . the specificity of si-n mediated n gene repression was demonstrated by the fact that higher doses of si-n , but not si-m , dramatically inhibited egfp-np gene expression (figure c ). the results were further confirmed by measuring the mean fluorescent intensity (mfi) of the transfected cells cotransfected with egfp-np and the indicated sirnas (figure d ). sequence analysis reveals that all the n gene sirnas reported by other groups have their own recognition sites, mainly located within the first nt sequence of the n gene [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . therefore, to our knowledge, the last nt sequence of n gene has not been designed for sirna targeting. to this end, we created the third sirna that targets to the ' terminus (+ + nt) of n gene, and named it si-n . western blot analysis demonstrated that si-n markedly inhibited myc-tagged n protein expression in a dose dependent manner (figure a and b ). in addition, pegfp-np was also co-transfected with increased doses of either si-m or si-n into targeted cells. the result shown in figure c clearly demonstrated that higher doses of si-n , but not si-m , dramatically inhibited egfp-np gene expression. the result was further confirmed by flow cytometric analysis by measuring the mean fluorescent intensity (mfi) of the transfected cells co-transfected with egfp-np and the indicated sirnas (figure d ). overall, the above results provide strong evidence to show that all three novel sirnas (si-n , si-n and si-n ) are specific and effective inhibitors to block the isolated sars-cov n gene expression. to assess the strength of si-n , si-n and si-n mediated n gene repression, we chose a known sirna, si-n# (no. ) , which has been shown to be a potent n gene inhibitor [ ] as a positive control. about . g of pcmv-myc-np was co-transfected with . g of each plasmid pbs/u , si-n# , si-n , si-n and si-n into targeted cells. the real time qrt-pcr result showed that si-n# , si-n , si-n and si-n all induced significant inhibition on the isolated n gene expression as compared with that of the vector control (figure ) . the quantitative analysis showed that the n gene inhibitions induced by si-n# , si-n , si-n and si-n were about . , . , . and . -fold, respectively (figure ) , indicating that si-n might be a more potent inhibitor on n gene expression. previously, we demonstrated that sars-cov m gene could upregulate inf gene expression in a transient transfection system [ ] . also, it has been shown that inf gene expression and transcription could be inhibited by sars-cov infection, probably due to the presence of n gene products [ ] . to detect the influence of n gene on m mediated inf production, n and m were co-transfected into hek cells. interestingly, we found that the n gene was not able to inhibit, but rather enhanced m gene mediated inf mrna production (figure a ). addition of si-n , si-n or si-n in the co-transfection system significantly reduced inf mrna production (figure a) . the semiquantitative rt-pcr result was further confirmed by using real time qrt-pcr analysis (figure b) , indicating that the identified n gene specific sirna could functionally counteract the n gene mediated cellular processes. human embryonic kidney cell line (hek ) cells were obtained from the cell culture center of institute of basic medical sciences, chinese academy of medical sciences. african green monkey kidney epithelial cell line vero e was provided by dr. k.y. yuen from the university of hong kong. cells were cultured in dulbecco's modified eagle medium (hyclone, south logan, ut, usa) supplemented with % fetal calf serum and incubated in a c incubator containing % co . anti-myc and anti-actin antibodies were purchased from santa cruz biotechnology (santa cruz, ca, usa). horseradish peroxidase (hrp)-labeled goat anti mouse igg and enhanced chemiluminescence (ecl) detection kit were also derived from santa cruz biotechnology. the sars-cov n gene was isolated from sars-cov strain hku- [ ] (provided by dr. ky yuen, the university of hong kong) by standard rt-pcr with a pair of primers: n : -tatagaatt ctgtctgataatggaccccaat- and n : -tataggtaccttatgcctgagttgaatcag- . the amplified full length of the n gene was first subcloned into pgem-t easy vector. after confirmation by sequencing analysis, the n gene products were released by ecori/kpni double digestion and then subcloned into the respective sites of pcmv-myc to generate pcmv-myc-n. the n gene products were also inserted into the ecori/kpni sites of pegfp-n vector to form pegfp-np fusion gene construct. for construction of n gene specific sirnas, three novel targeted sites ( - nt, - nt and - nt) in the n gene coding sequence were selected. two oligos for each targeted site were synthesized as sin- -f, '-gggcgttccaatcaacaccaaaagcttttggtgttgattggaacgccctttttg- ' and sin- -re, '-aattcaaaaagggcgttccaatcaacaccaaaagcttttggtgttgattggaacgccc- '; sin- -f, -gggaccaagacctaa tcagacaagcttgtctgattaggtcttggtccctttttg- and sin- -re, -aattcaaaaagggaccaagacctaatcagacaagcttgt ctgattaggtcttggtccc- ; sin- -f, -ggagcttctgctgattcaactaagcttagttgaatcagcagaagctcctttttg- and sin- -re, -aattcaaaaaggagcttctgctgattcaactaagcttagttgaatcagcagaagctcc- . the oligos sin- -f and sin- -re, sin- -f and sin- -re, sin- -f and sin- -re were annealed pair-wisely to form duplexes. to construct the sirna targeting to the terminus of n gene (named as si-no that targets to - nt) as described by shi et al. [ ] , two synthesized oligos -gataatggaccccaatcaaacaagcttgtttgattggggtccattatctttttg- and -aattcaaaaagataatggaccccaatcaaacaa gcttgtttgattggggtccattatc- were also annealed. the duplex products were then subcloned into pbs/u [ ] (provided by dr. yang shi, harvard medical school) to form pbs/u -sin , pbs/u -sin , pbs/u -sin and pbs/u -no , respectively. total rnas were extracted from the cultured cells with trizol (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca). all primers used in the rt-pcr reactions were listed in table . one g of total rnas was first reverse transcribed using amv reverse transcriptase (promega, usa). about l of the transcribed cdnas was subjected to standard pcr reaction using n gene specific primers. one-step real-time quantitative rt-pcr (qrt-pcr) (takara biotechnology, dalian, china) was also performed to monitor the targeted gene expression. real time qrt-pcr was carried out with iq real-time pcr detection system (bio-rad laboratories) at the following conditions: °c for min and °c for sec; °c for sec and °c for sec and repeated for cycles. the dissociation of the reaction products was conducted from °c to °c as the temperature rose at . °c per ten seconds. cell cultured in -mm dishes were transiently transfected with the indicated plasmid dnas using profection ® mammalian transfection systems (promega, usa) according to the manual instruction. briefly, transfected dnas were first mixed with l of m cacl and brought to total l with sterile and deionized water. then the dna-cacl mixture was added into equal volume of ×hbs drop by drop accompanying with gentle vortexing. after minutes incubation, the reaction mixture was evenly distributed into the cell culture medium and incubated for hours before harvesting. the transfected cells were lysed with a lysis buffer containing % np- , mm tris-hcl (ph . ), mm nacl, μm navo , g/ml leupeptin, g/ml aprotinin, and m pmsf. about g of cell lysate for each sample was resolved onto % sds-page. after separation, the separated proteins were transferred onto hybond nitrocellular membrane (pharmacia). the transferred membrane was first probed with a primary antibody. then, a secondary antibody labeled with horseradish peroxidase was added to the reaction and finally visualized with an ecl kit. sars-cov n gene has long been selected as one of the major targets for sirna design. however, genomic alterations such as nucleotide deletion and substitution frequently occur in sars-cov. this type of change has the potential to weaken the inhibitory effect induced by sirna. in the current study we analyzed the n gene sequences derived from different isolates and found that in addition to single nucleotide substitutions, the n gene also possesses a longer nucleotide deletion and dinucleotide substitution. previous studies on m gene specific sirnas indicate that the sirna targeting site and its surrounding sequences may influence the inhibitory effect [ ] . the current study further support this observation by showing that si-n# , which targets a twelve nucleotide deletion region in the n gene of one viral strain generates a less inhibitory effect than that of either si-n or si-n (figure b ). although n gene specific sirna has been intensively studied, no sirna was reported for the last nt sequence. in this study, we created and tested a third sirna (si-n ) which was effective to target the ' terminal sequence of n gene and subsequently in downregulating n gene expression. interestingly, the inhibitory effect induced by si-n was similar to that of si-n# , implying that sirnas targeting at both the and terminal sequences of the isolated n gene might induce less inhibition. we also notice that there might be a discrepancy between our study and a previous report by shi et al. in which they demonstrated that si-n# (no. ) was the strongest inhibitor among the eleven n gene sirnas tested [ ] . this discrepancy might be due to: ) the potential structural difference between vector expressed n mrna and virus derived subgenomic n mrnas and/or ) the differences in the expression system used by us (pbs/u ) versus shi's (chemical synthesized sirnas). finally, we provide evidence to show that sars-cov n gene products were able to up-regulate m gene mediated inf production, while n gene specific sirna could functionally reduce this enhancement. however, the mechanism underlining n gene mediated inf production remains an interesting point to be further addressed. the genome sequence of the sars-associated coronavirus characterization of a novel coronavirus associated with severe acute respiratory syndrome comparative full-length genome sequence analysis of sars coronavirus isolates and common mutations associated with putative origins of infection dissection and identification of regions required to form pseudoparticles by the interaction between the nucleocapsid (n) and membrane (m) proteins of sars coronavirus a major determinant for membrane protein interaction localizes to the carboxy-terminal domain of the mouse coronavirus nucleocapsid protein characterization of the coronavirus m protein and nucleocapsid interaction in infected cells structure of the sars coronavirus nucleocapsid protein rna-binding dimerization domain suggests a mechanism for helical packaging of viral rna modular organization of sars coronavirus nucleocapsid protein biochemical and immunological studies of nucleocapsid proteins of severe acute respiratory syndrome and e human coronaviruses structure of the n-terminal rna-binding domain of the sars cov nucleocapsid protein crystal structure of the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) coronavirus nucleocapsid protein dimerization domain reveals evolutionary linkage between corona-and arteriviridae carboxyl terminus of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus nucleocapsid protein: self-association analysis and nucleic acid binding characterization multiple nucleic acid binding sites and intrinsic disorder of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus nucleocapsid protein: implications for ribonucleocapsid protein packaging the sars-cov nucleocapsid protein: a protein with multifarious activities nucleocapsid protein of sars-cov activates the expression of cyclooxygenase- by binding directly to regulatory elements for nuclear factor-kappa b and ccaat/enhancer binding protein nucleocapsid protein of sars-cov activates interleukin- expression through cellular transcription factor nf-kappab the sars coronavirus nucleocapsid protein induces actin reorganization and apoptosis in cos- cells in the absence of growth factors m and n proteins of sars coronavirus induce apoptosis in hpf cells severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus open reading frame (orf) b, orf , and nucleocapsid proteins function as interferon antagonists prophylactic and therapeutic effects of small interfering rna targeting sars-coronavirus inhibition of genes expression of sars coronavirus by synthetic small interfering rnas small interfering rna inhibits sars-cov nucleocapsid gene expression in cultured cells and mouse muscles kinetics and synergistic effects of sirnas targeting structural and replicase genes of sars-associated coronavirus inhibition of sars-cov gene expression by adenovirus-delivered small hairpin rna small interfering rna effectively inhibits the expression of sars coronavirus membrane gene at two novel targeting sites sirnas targeting terminal sequences of the sarsassociated coronavirus membrane gene inhibit m protein expression through degradation of m mrna inhibition of beta interferon induction by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus suggests a two-step model for activation of interferon regulatory factor the complete genome sequence of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus strain hku- (hk- ) a dna vector-based rnai technology to suppress gene expression in mammalian cells this article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the creative commons attribution license key: cord- - o ofk e authors: dawson, harry d.; chen, celine; gaynor, brady; shao, jonathan; urban, joseph f. title: the porcine translational research database: a manually curated, genomics and proteomics-based research resource date: - - journal: bmc genomics doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: o ofk e background: the use of swine in biomedical research has increased dramatically in the last decade. diverse genomic- and proteomic databases have been developed to facilitate research using human and rodent models. current porcine gene databases, however, lack the robust annotation to study pig models that are relevant to human studies and for comparative evaluation with rodent models. furthermore, they contain a significant number of errors due to their primary reliance on machine-based annotation. to address these deficiencies, a comprehensive literature-based survey was conducted to identify certain selected genes that have demonstrated function in humans, mice or pigs. results: the process identified , candidate human, bovine, mouse or rat genes/proteins used to select potential porcine homologs by searching multiple online sources of porcine gene information. the data in the porcine translational research database ((http://www.ars.usda.gov/services/docs.htm?docid= ) is supported by > references, and contains data fields for each entry, including > full length ( ′ and ′) unambiguous pig sequences, > real time pcr assays and reactivity information on > antibodies. it also contains gene and/or protein expression data for > genes and identifies and corrects errors (gene duplications artifacts, mis-assemblies, mis-annotations, and incorrect species assignments) for porcine genes. conclusions: this database is the largest manually curated database for any single veterinary species and is unique among porcine gene databases in regard to linking gene expression to gene function, identifying related gene pathways, and connecting data with other porcine gene databases. this database provides the first comprehensive description of three major super-families or functionally related groups of proteins (cluster of differentiation (cd) marker genes, solute carrier superfamily, atp binding cassette superfamily), and a comparative description of porcine micrornas. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article (doi: . /s - - - ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. swine are an important models for human anatomy, nutrition, metabolism and immunology [ ] [ ] [ ] . their organs are anatomically and histologically similar to humans as are their sensory innervation and blood supply [ ] . pigs are naturally susceptible to infection with organisms that are closely related or identical to those species infecting humans including helminths (ascaris, taenia, trichuris, trichinella, shistosoma, strongyloides), bacteria (campylobacter, chlamydia, eschericia coli, helicobacter, neisseria, mycoplasma, salmonella), protozoans (toxoplasma) and viri (coronavirus, hepatitis e, influenza, nipah, reovirus, rotavirus) [ , , ] . the last years has seen a boon in the development of genetically modified pig as models for human cardiovascular and lung disease, neurodegenerative and musculoskeletal disorders [ , ] and cancer [ ] . there is also a robust effort to develop pigs as sources for organs and tissues for human xenotransplantation [ ] . despite these potential strengths as a model, the lack of an annotated database for porcine gene and protein expression data is a limiting factor for translating findings in one species to another. multiple online databases exist for the storage and retrieval of diverse bovine, rodent or human biomedical data [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . other databases exist for zebrafish (zfin, [ ] ), c. elegans (wormbase, [ ] ), and drosophila melanogaster (flybase, [ ] ). databases that encompass multispecies analysis such as homologene and/or that rely on manual annotation such as innatedb [ ] include bovine but not porcine genes. several porcine genome companion databases exist; however they lack robust manual annotation and are somewhat limited in scope or are infrequently updated [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . agbase, a large, multispecies functional analysis database allows the user to search , porcine genes based on criteria including gene and protein names (uniprot) and gene ontology (go) annotations. furthermore, databases can contain a significant number of errors due to their primary reliance on machine-based annotation [ ] . for example, the sus-bar database [ ] is designed to identify protein orthologs based upon data that includes annotations from the machine-annotated ncbi genome. ncbi has recently begun to include go annotations into curated entries for non-human and rodent species but most of these are indirect and often based on observations made in other species. as swine are an important model for comparative human studies, there is a critical need to have a centralized, manually-curated source of information for biomedical research. to address these needs, we created the porcine translational research database. to generate content of immunological relevance, broadbased literature searches were conducted using the following terms: apoptosis, b cell development or activation, cd markers, chemokines, chemokine receptors, cytokines, cytokine receptors, dendritic cells, type ifn induced genes, inflammation, nuclear factor kappa-lightchain-enhancer of activated b cells (nfκ-b) signaling pathway, toll receptor signaling pathway, t cell development or activation, th cell development and th cell development. in addition, immunologically related genes associated with the susceptibility to or pathology of allergy, asthma, arthritis, atherosclerosis and inflammation were included. in addition, the gene ontology consortium's community annotation wikis for immunology, cardiovascular disease and muscle biology were searched (http://wiki.geneontology.org/index.php/main_page). the jackson laboratory database of knockout mouse phenotypes was searched for genes leading to defects in immune or metabolic phenotypes when over or under expressed. these genes include the vast majority of genes that are related to immunity and inflammation [ , , , ] . for additional metabolically related genes, genes involved in the transport or metabolism of macronutrients, trace vitamins and minerals were searched. other genes, associated with the susceptibility to or pathology of atherosclerosis, diabetes, and obesity, were identified. this process identified , candidate human, bovine, mouse or rat genes/proteins of interest used to select potential porcine orthologs by searching various online sources of porcine gene information. one to one orthology of protein coding genes were determined by protein structure similarity (best reciprocal blast hits) and the presence of a corresponding gene in the syntenic region of the human and or mouse genome. no : orthology could be established for members of some gene families including the leukocyte immunoglobulin-like receptor (lilr) killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor (kir), carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule (ceacam) and cytochrome p superfamilies. one to one porcine orthologs of human genes utilize the approved hgnc name according to the international society for animal genetics (isag) publishing guidelines. we defined pseudogenes by the criteria used by ensembl and enscode; namely the presence of one or more stop codons in the open reading frame that disrupt the protein structure, and (usually) a lack of intron structure at the genome level [ ] . pseudogenes are further classified into processed, duplicated, unitary or polymorphic categories [ ] . genbank (non-redundant, expressed sequences tag, high throughput genomic sequence, trace archive databases and whole genome shotgun contigs databases) was searched by discontiguous megablast using default settings (word size = ), using reference sequence accession numbers to human, bovine, mouse or rat genes/ proteins of interest. a similar search was conducted in the following databases using the human or bovine reference sequence; nih intramural sequencing center (nisc) comparative vertebrate sequencing project [ ] ; national center for biotechnology information (ncbi), sus scrofa genome assembly releases to and ensembl v . releases to . for genes that were determined to be missing from build . (additional file ) (and for the mis-assembled or duplicated gene artifacts (additional file ), we also constructed templates from de novo assemblies derived from illumina bp reads of the pig alveolar macrophage transcriptome (dawson, unpublished results) using the de novo assembly algorithm of clc genomics workbench using word size of and a bubble size of . when necessary, predicted templates (from bovine or human sequences) were supplemented with porcine expressed sequence tag (est) assemblies, single ests and portions of the published tibetan (bioproject # prjna ), wuzhishan (bioproject # prjna ), goettingen (bioproject # prjna ) [ ] , jinhua, meishan, bamei, large white, berkshire, hampshire, pietrain, landrace, rongshang and duroc (bioproject # prjna ) porcine genomes [ ] . ests were assembled using cap (http://doua.prabi.fr/software/cap ). rnaseq reads were then mapped to these predicted templates in order to derive the full-length consensus sequence (unambiguous x coverage) using clc genome workbench . (qiagen bioinformatics, redwood city ca). the following settings were used. mismatch cost = , insertion cost = , deletion cost = , similarity fraction = . , length fraction = . . nucleotide sequences were translated using the expasy translate tool (http://web.expasy.org/translate/). a total of of these sequences have been deposited to the transcriptome shotgun assembly sequence database under bioproject prjna and the short read archive under project srp ). in silico-derived full-length rna sequences are provided for an additional genes. this process/pipeline is summarized in fig. . a summary of these sequences is provided in table . we randomly chose of these mrna for comparison of the ′, ′ and orf length comparison to the corresponding human mrna. data are presented in additional file . for the protein-coding genes missing from the genome, we entered the gene symbols into the david version . (https://david.ncifcrf.gov) to assess overrepresentation of groups of gene with related function. the functional data were limited to human. nine hundred and fifty six genes out of genes were recognized and had functional annotations, of the unrecognized gene are pig or artiodactyl specific genes. data on functional enrichment of genes with a multiple comparison adjustment (benjamini) value of > . are presented in table . we chose the largest proteins of extreme size (> amino acids) to compare the status (number of loci and completeness) in the ncbi and ensembl build . genome. because exon preservation is usually well conserved and there is fragmentation of certain areas of the porcine genome, the number of exons for the corresponding human gene was used for comparison. lastly, we determined the chromosomal location of duplicated gene artifacts ( loci, additional file ) to identify problematic regions. data are expressed as duplication per megabase (number of bases derived from the ncbi genome build (http:// www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome?term=sus% scrofa) and are presented in fig. . the currently described database was constructed in the filemaker po advanced v . program (filemaker inc., it was deployed using the filemaker server advanced v . program (filemaker inc., santa clara, ca). external access to the database has been successfully tested using chrome, internet explorer and safari browsers. other areas of the database were populated from existing published or our own unpublished data. each publication is manually reviewed and data (antibodies, real-time pcr assays, rna or protein expression data, functional data) is abstracted and entered into the database, along with the pubmed id, in the appropriate field. we have developed taqman real-time pcr assays for of these genes making them cross reactive for as many species as possible ( are partially or fully human gene cross reactive). this is to ensure that comparable areas of the gene are being analyzed as well as for economic reasons. we also conducted a literature survey to determine the sequence of porcine sybr green pcr assays. tissue-specific gene expression summaries, using these assays, are provided for these and other studies (i.e., those using microarray and rnaseq), and a comprehensive search of catalog and published literature to identify antibodies to the corresponding proteins. last, the "notes field" in the database was populated with information such as types of errors discovered, degree of ′ and ′ utr conservation, degree of positive selection pressure in various species, and intron status. when the gene (sequence) is present in the genome but not annotated as a gene, we annotate the gene in the notes field as "not an identified gene in ensembl build . ." or "not an identified gene in ncbi build . ". to date, we have generated full-length transcripts representing genes (table ) . they include genes missing from ensembl build . (table and additional file ) and genes that have been sequenced at least two times (gene duplicated artifacts shown in table and additional file that were annotated as separate genes in either ensembl or ncbi builds. functional enrichment analysis of proteincoding genes that are missing from the genome reveals that genes that are annotated as cytokines ( , p = . ) and transcription factors ( ) (particularly homeodomainlike transcription factors ( , p = . ) and cenp-b/ helix-turn-helix (hth) domains ( , p = . ) are significantly overrepresented (table ) . of note, the great majority of the interleukin superfamily (il f , il rn, il a, il b , il g, il rn, il ) members are significantly (p = . ) overrepresented. data analysis that do not account for these genes risk missing assessment of important genes involved in inflammation and development. based upon gene number estimates from other closely related species such as human and cow, we estimated that our database has a coverage rate of approximately % of the porcine genome. these represent sequences found in , unigene entries ( . per gene), ncbi loci ( are single loci that are not duplicated gene artifacts or split into multiple loci, and genes have multiple ( ) loci. a total of and of the genes have no assigned unigene number or ncbi loci, respectively. in addition to go and kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) annotations, literature-based functional annotations (derived from more than references) are provided for these sequences. we have also discovered a relatively large number ( ) of porcine or artiodactyl-specific paralogs (additional file ) for protein or non-protein coding porcine genes. for genes with multiple paralogs, genes are named in the order of phylogenetic distance of the parent human or bovine gene. some of these genes are expressed pseudogenes. some of these genes have been previously discussed (i.e., cd , il b [ , ] ) or will be discussed in the following sections. the transcripts we have generated for protein-coding genes include, on average, . % of the corresponding ′ and ′ ends (each) of the human sequence (additional file ). the orf is . % conserved on a nucleotide count basis. these percentages indicate the fidelity of our procedure. we discovered extensive gene truncation (incomplete orf) and gene duplicated artifacts (genes sequenced more than once) among the machine annotated versions of these genes. these problems are common among st drafts of other genomes [ , ] . gene duplicated artifacts appear most frequently for chromosomes , and , and less frequently for chromosomes x, , , and (fig. ) . the most frequent areas should be targeted for re-sequencing or reassembly. analysis of the largest porcine proteins in the database shows that gene fragmentation and truncation roughly correlate with protein size and number of exons (table ). figure shows blast search results from two extremely large proteins, hemicentin (hmcn , panel a) and titin (ttn, panel b) that have loci assignments each, in the current ncbi build. surprisingly, these proteins are not represented in ensembl build . as annotated genes. overall, of the largest porcine proteins, only and are represented as single full-length sequences of the correct size in ensembl and genbank, respectively. we have deposited de novo assemblies in the tsa archive and have provided in silico predicted rna and protein sequences for of these genes. in previous studies, we extensively compared porcine, human and mouse genes related to immunity and inflammation [ , , , ] . in the following section, we will summarize our findings for three major superfamilies or functionally related groups of proteins (cd marker genes, solute carrier superfamily, atp binding cassette superfamily) or non-coding rna (microrna) that have complete or nearly complete representation. cd markers (accessible as a group by entering cd markers in the annotations field) encode a heterogeneous group of cell surface proteins. the human leucocyte differentiation antigen (hlda) workshop has designated molecules (some of which are grouped within a cd) as cd markers [ ] . based upon our assembly and analysis, we could establish : orthology for porcine genes to those that compose hlda version . forty-three genes are not present in the porcine genome or could not be designated as : orthologs. of these, nine genes (clec c, clec m, [ ] [ ] [ ] . klrc (cd c) is found in humans and rodents but not pigs. fcgr c is a human-specific gene/pseudogene that belongs to a family of three low-affinity immunoglobulin gamma fc receptors (cd ) [ ] . we have determined that pigs have two member of this family that roughly corresponds to fcgr a and fcgr b. tnfrsf (cd ) is a marker for b cells, dendritic cells, monocytes, and treg cells [ ] found in humans and rodents, but not cows. although, canine, feline, equine and ursine homologs have been identified, this gene may be a pseudogene in pigs as the putative orf is interrupted by an endogenous retroviral sequence (h. dawson, unpublished). fcrl (cd b) is a marker for b cells in humans. although sequences corresponding to fcrl have been identified in other mammals including dog and horse, no mouse ortholog has been identified [ ] . this gene shows evidence of positive selection in humans [ ] and is most likely a pseudogene in pigs. due to rapid evolution and post-speciation gene duplication, no : orthology could be established for most mouse and pig lilr or kir family members, including lilra (cd g) and lilrb (cd k) [ ] . similarly, other than ceacam (cd ) and ceacam (cd c), no : orthology could be established for most pig and mouse ceacam family members (ceacam (cd d) ceacam (cd e). ceacam (cd ) may be a pseudogene as ests in unigene ssc. predict a amino acid protein interrupted by several stop codons. ceacam and ceacam were previously determined to have no direct murine orthologs [ ] . several other shared human-pig cd marker orthologs (adgre (cd ), adgre (cd r), cd a, cd e, cr (cd ), cd , fcgr a (cd ), fcar (cd ), fcrl (cd c), fcrl (cd d), icam (cd ), ncr (cd ), ncr (cd ) and tlr (cd r) have no rodent orthologs [ , , ] . a significant number of errors were discovered in genes encoding porcine orthologs of human cd markers; are not present in ensembl build . , of the proteins are truncated and are duplicated gene artifacts. sixty-seven full-length mrna sequences encoding proteins, assembled from macrophage rna-seq reads, have been deposited in genbank. an additional in silico constructs are provided. antibody data, gathered from publications, manufacturers or generated in house, is provided for proteins including monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies. additional cross reactivity for proteins is expected because they are > % similar to human proteins. several of the cd marker family are members of other gene families including the solute carrier and atp-binding cassette super family. the human genome organization's gene nomenclature committee (hgnc) has assigned genes to the solute carrier superfamily, are pseudogenes and three hundred seventy four encode proteins (accessible as a group by entering solute carrier superfamily in the annotations field). these are organized into subfamilies; about % are dedicated to nutrient transport. the porcine solute carrier super family contains protein-coding members and all human subfamilies are represented. forty-two of these genes are present in other porcine genomes but missing from ensembl build . , are truncated and of these are duplicated gene artifacts. sixty three full-length mrna sequences, assembled from macrophage rna-seq reads, have been deposited in genbank and an additional in silico constructs are provided. forty-two of these genes are missing from all porcine genomes or are present as pseudogenes. among these genes are ucp (thermogenein), a protein involved in non-shivering thermogenesis and a pseudogene in pigs [ ] and slc a , a primate specific riboflavin transporter [ ] . other speciesspecific genes include eight primate-specific (slc a , slc a , slc e , slc g , slc g , slc g , slco b , slco b ), one human specific (slc a ) gene and mouse or rodent-specific genes (slc a b, slc a , slc a , slc a , slc a , slc a , slc a , slc a , slc a , slc a , slc a , slco a , slco b , and slco b ). slc a is present in human and rodent genomes but is missing from bovine and porcine genomes. slc a is present in primate and rat genomes but not mouse. slc c is a pseudogene in mouse [ ] . slc a is an expressed pseudogene in pigs and is missing in rodents. slc a is an expressed pseudogene in pigs and a non-expressed pseudogene in mouse. lastly, slc a , an intestinal nucleobase transporter [ ] , is a pseudogene in humans but is present in pig, cow and rodent genomes. several porcine or artiodactyl-specific gene expansions are found in subfamilies (additional file ) including slc a ( members), slc a ( members) slc a ( members), slc a ( members) and slc a ( members). the biological functions of these paralogs remain to be determined; however the parent genes are involved in amino acid (slc a , slc a ) or dipeptide transport (slc a ) [ , ] . the hgnc has assigned genes to the atp binding cassette superfamily, three are pseudogenes and encode proteins (accessible as a group by entering atp binding cassette superfamily in the annotations field). these are organized into five subfamilies (a-g), about % are dedicated to nutrient (i.e., carotenoid, cholesterol and vitamin a) transport. the porcine atp binding cassette family contains members and all human subfamilies are represented. these include five that are missing from ensembl build . and that are duplicated gene artifacts. five of these genes are present in other porcine genomes, but missing from ensembl build . , are truncated, and of these genes are duplicated gene artifacts, eleven full-length mrna sequences, assembled from macrophage rna-seq reads, have been deposited in genbank and an additional in silico constructs are provided. an analysis of this superfamily revealed that abcc has no murine ortholog [ ] and abca has no direct rodent ortholog as the gene has diverged into two paralogs, abca a and abca b [ ] . the abcc , a prostaglandin e transporter [ ] , has diverged from the parent gene into five paralogs (abcc l , abcc l , abcc l , abcc l and abcc l (additional file ). abca , involved in human macrophage cholesterol transport [ ] , is a pseudogene in rodents. it may be an expressed pseudogene in pigs as the predicted protein is half ( amino acids) the size of human abca ( amino acids) and weak expression (by rnaseq) was detected in macrophages and moderated expression in intestine (h. dawson, unpublished) . abca is an expressed pseudogene is humans and pigs. like the solute carrier superfamily, most of the genes in the atp binding cassette super family have not been characterized at the functional level. nevertheless, the similarities and differences in the atp binding cassette and atp binding cassette super families impact the suitability of rodents and pigs as models for human drug and nutrient transport and metabolism. the exact number of micrornas in the porcine genome is unknown. there are annotated micrornas in the human genome (build ). although there are several papers describing the measurement of porcine micrornas in various tissues or estimating the number in the porcine genome [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and three partially overlapping sources of porcine microrna sequences, the exact number of porcine micrornas is currently unknown. there are only , and (non-redundant) annotated pig mirna sequences in mirbase, ncbi gene build, and ensembl build . , respectively. these three sources of information have a significant amount of overlap (fig. a) . we have consolidated this information and provide sequence data for our own predicted sequences based on conserved sequence identity to human, mouse or bovine sequences, to provide nonredundant porcine microrna sequences (accessible as a group by entering microrna in the annotations field). of note, all of the sequences found in mirbase were found in the ncbi gene build, of the microrna sequences in ensembl were found to be duplicated artifacts, and of the sequences are not present in the current ensembl gene build ( . ) . this includes that we have predicted based upon their presence in other species and other unfinished porcine genomes. we discovered the following species-or genera-specific microrna; pigs ( ), humans ( ), primates ( ) bovine ( ), mouse ( ) and rodents ( ) . many of the porcine-specific microrna have arisen from biological duplication/expansion (additional file ). a comparison of microrna that are present in pigs and shared among at least one of the three other species (human, cows, and mice) revealed that microrna are shared among the four species, are shared between pigs, humans and cows but not mice, and are shared between pigs, mice and cows but not humans (fig. b) . thus, the frequency of non-conserved microrna preservation between human and pig is nearly three times that of mouse to pig. the porcine translational research database is named because of its unique utility to translate findings made in rodents to pigs and from those in pigs to humans. a comprehensive literature-based survey was conducted to identify genes that have demonstrated function in humans, mice or pigs. the resulting data in the database is documented by > references. the database currently contains data fields for each entry. our efforts to improve the genome and its annotation are similar to other efforts, for example the sequencing of , genes to supplement annotation of the pig genome [ , , ] and de novo assembly of multiple pig genomes to reveal protein coding genes that are missing from ensembl build . [ ] . the online supplemental data from the latter manuscript was unavailable at the time of the preparation of this manuscript so no comparison could be made. the manual assembly of > rna sequences has direct practical implications for genomics-based analysis. the state of the current genome build (mis-annotations, duplication artifacts, and missing sequences) effectively prohibits its use for aligning rnaseq reads. we have used these sequences to compare gene expression separately from ensembl . and have also compared the number of reads obtained from the corresponding templates in ensembl . . for the great majority of transcripts compared, as expected, our full-length sequences provided a higher level of sensitivity than the corresponding ensembl sequences (h. dawson unpublished) . the full ′ and ′ representation of each gene will also allow for characterization of regulatory regions and mirna target sites. in our estimation, > % of transcripts in ensembl or ncbi genomes do not represent the fulllength gene. our efforts will also allow for further consolidation of porcine unigene numbers. currently, each gene is represented by from to > unigene assignments, and > % of genes have more than one. it is significant that we discovered a large number of errors (about % of entries) in the publicly available sequence databases (these can be accessed by searching the "notes field" using the word "error" (fig. ) ). in addition to the duplication artifacts, mis-annotations and missing genes, we also encountered a number of rna sequences in publically available archives belonging to other species. for, example, human (ahr, af . ), panda (il , nm_ . ) and rat (nudt , ests in unigene ssc. ) rna sequences are annotated as porcine derived. we also found sources of contaminating dna from completely unrelated species. for example, about / of porcine chromosome clone cu . is from zebrafish. these sequences represent zebrafish genes (loc , loc , loc , loc , loc , and loc ) and are annotated as porcine genes by ensembl build . (enssscg ) and ncbi genomes (loc ). similarly, several ncbi loci (asna l*, loc , loc , loc , loc ) and one ensembl locus (enssscg ) are derived from contaminating babesia bigemina genomic dna. we have discovered several sources of systematic errors in the ensmbl and ncbi gene/protein prediction or annotation pipelines. for example all selenoproteins in ensembl are truncated because the codon (uga) for selenocysteine is mistranslated or translated as a stop codon. we and others have identified a systematic error in the identification of another gene family, the taste receptor, type (tas r) superfamily. despite being intronless and mostly devoid of ′ and ′ utr regions, ensembl consistently fails to recognize them as genes [ ] . these data illustrate the critical importance of the manual-curation process to reduce errors. we believe that this is the largest manually curated database for any veterinary species and that the infomantics are unique among those targeting a veterinary species in regard to linking gene expression to gene function, identification of related gene pathways, and connectivity with other porcine gene databases, as well as for reagents that measure gene and protein expression. in addition, it is the largest source of centralized antibody information for the pig. any database must be updated frequently in order to be useful. currently the database is updated monthly and we anticipate expanding the content to include all porcine genes. there are several super families of genes that will be the next targets of our efforts. one is the gpcr super family, the exact size of the gpcr super family is still unknown, but nearly different human genes (or~ % of the entire proteincoding genome) have been predicted to code for them. we will also continue to develop and annotate new assays. we intend to include our own prediction analysis for the promoter and ′ utr region of rna for transcription factor and microrna binding sites. lastly, we intend to synchronize our database with the porcine "snowball" array and porcine gene expression atlas [ ] . the pig as a model for human nutrition a comparative assessment of the pig, mouse and human genomes analyses of pig genomes provide insight into porcine demography and evolution livestock models in translational medicine the pig: a model for human infectious diseases chlamydiaceae infections in pig genetically modified pig models for neurodegenerative disorders porcine models of muscular dystrophy pigs as models of human cancers genetic modification of pigs as organ donors for xenotransplantation iris: a database surveying known human immune system genes an update on the functional molecular immunology (fimm) database lefranc mp. imgt, the international immunogenetics information system(r): a standardized approach for immunogenetics and immunoinformatics gpx-macrophage expression atlas: a database for expression profiles of macrophages challenged with a variety of pro-inflammatory, anti-inflammatory, benign and pathogen insults immunoinformatics comes of age pede (pig est data explorer): construction of a database for ests derived from porcine full-length cdna libraries agbase: a functional genomics resource for agriculture piggis: pig genomic informatics system sus-bar: a database of pig proteins with statistically validated structural and functional annotation the zebrafish model organism database: new support for human disease models, mutation details, gene expression phenotypes and searching wormbase : expanding to enable helminth genomic research flybase : a database for the drosophila research community innatedb: systems biology of innate immunity and beyond-recent updates and continuing curation use and misuse of the gene ontology annotations structural and functional annotation of the porcine immunome an in-depth comparison of the porcine, murine and human inflammasomes; lessons from the porcine genome and transcriptome the gencode pseudogene resource parallel construction of orthologous sequence-ready clone contig maps in multiple species functional analysis and transcriptional output of the gottingen minipig genome comprehensive variation discovery and recovery of missing sequence in the pig genome using multiple de novo assemblies activation of the transcription factor nuclear factor-kappa b in uterine luminal epithelial cells by interleukin beta : a novel interleukin expressed by the elongating pig conceptus lineage-specific biology revealed by a finished genome assembly of the mouse nomenclature of cd molecules from the tenth human leucocyte differentiation antigen workshop comparative genomics of natural killer cell receptor gene clusters signal regulatory proteins in the immune system siglecs and their roles in the immune system genomic organization of classical human low-affinity fcgamma receptor genes regulatory t cell expression of herpesvirus entry mediator suppresses the function of b and t lymphocyte attenuator-positive effector t cells fc receptor-like molecules from evolutionary genetics to human immunology: how selection shapes host defence genes inhibitory leukocyte immunoglobulin-like receptors: immune checkpoint proteins and tumor sustaining factors comparative functional evolution of human and mouse cr and cr the uncoupling protein gene (ucp ) is disrupted in the pig lineage: a genetic explanation for poor thermoregulation in piglets novel riboflavin transporter family rfvt/slc : identification, nomenclature, functional characterization and genetic diseases of rfvt/slc traditional and emerging roles for the slc na+/h+ exchangers identification and functional characterization of the first nucleobase transporter in mammals: implication in the species difference in the intestinal absorption mechanism of nucleobases and their analogs between higher primates and other mammals a new member of the cationic amino acid transporter family is preferentially expressed in adult mouse brain human organic anion transporter oat is not responsible for glutathione transport but mediates transport of glutamate derivatives characterization of the mouse abcc gene and its transcript encoding an atp-binding cassette transporter, an orthologue of human abcc evolutionary analysis of a cluster of atp-binding cassette (abc) genes multiple drug resistance-associated protein (mrp ), prostaglandin transporter (pgt), and -hydroxyprostaglandin dehydrogenase ( -pgdh) as determinants of pge levels in cancer abca , a novel cholesterol-regulated abca -like abc transporter microrna buffering and altered variance of gene expression in response to salmonella infection deciphering the porcine intestinal microrna transcriptome structured rnas and synteny regions in the pig genome distribution of mirna genes in the pig genome large-scale sequencing based on full-length-enriched cdna libraries in pigs: contribution to annotation of the pig genome draft sequence a gene expression atlas of the domestic pig the authors declare that they have no competing interests publisher's note the dataset(s) supporting the conclusions of this article are included within the article, its additional file (additional files , , and ) and within the online database (http://www.ars.usda.gov/services/docs.htm?docid= ).authors' contributions hdd, cc, bg and js contributed to the content of the database. hdd and jfu wrote the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript.ethics approval and consent to participate not applicable. not applicable.• we accept pre-submission inquiries • our selector tool helps you to find the most relevant journal submit your next manuscript to biomed central and we will help you at every step: key: cord- -vvtv b authors: nikaido, masato; kondo, shinji; zhang, zicong; wu, jiaqi; nishihara, hidenori; niimura, yoshihito; suzuki, shunta; touhara, kazushige; suzuki, yutaka; noguchi, hideki; minakuchi, yohei; toyoda, atsushi; fujiyama, asao; sugano, sumio; yoneda, misako; kai, chieko title: comparative genomic analyses illuminate the distinct evolution of megabats within chiroptera date: - - journal: dna res doi: . /dnares/dsaa sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vvtv b the revision of the sub-order microchiroptera is one of the most intriguing outcomes in recent mammalian molecular phylogeny. the unexpected sister–taxon relationship between rhinolophoid microbats and megabats, with the exclusion of other microbats, suggests that megabats arose in a relatively short period of time from a microbat-like ancestor. in order to understand the genetic mechanism underlying adaptive evolution in megabats, we determined the whole-genome sequences of two rousette megabats, leschenault’s rousette (rousettus leschenaultia) and the egyptian fruit bat (r. aegyptiacus). the sequences were compared with those of other mammals, including nine bats, available in the database. we identified that megabat genomes are distinct in that they have extremely low activity of sine retrotranspositions, expansion of two chemosensory gene families, including the trace amine receptor (taar) and olfactory receptor (or), and elevation of the dn/ds ratio in genes for immunity and protein catabolism. the adaptive signatures discovered in the genomes of megabats may provide crucial insight into their distinct evolution, including key processes such as virus resistance, loss of echolocation, and frugivorous feeding. bats belong to the order chiroptera and have the ability of powered flight. accounting for one-fifth of all mammals in terms of the number of species, bats are one of the most successful groups of mammals. it is of primary interest for biologists to identify the processes and mechanisms of dynamic adaptation in bats. traditionally, morphological and paleontological analyses placed the order chiroptera within the superorder archonta (primates, dermoptera, chiroptera, and scandentia). however, dna sequencing data has challenged the validity of the archonta, and alternatively proposed the inclusion of bats into laurasiatheria (cetartiodactyla, perissodactyla, carnivora, pholidota, chiroptera and eulipotyphla). [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] although laurasiatheria is now considered to be a natural assemblage, the phylogenetic position of bats within laurasiatheria remains to be resolved. , the paraphyly of microbats is also under debate. traditionally, morphological studies proposed the sub-division of the order chiroptera into two suborders: microchiroptera (microbats) and megachiroptera (megabats or old-world fruit bats). microbats use ultrasonic echolocation for flight and for foraging in the night, whereas megabats do not echolocate, and primarily use vision to fly and feed on fruits and/or nectars. megabats are also neuroanatomically distinct from microbats, as megabats have a developed visual system. molecular data suggests that five lineages of microbats, including rhinopomatidae, rhinolophidae, hipposideridae, craseonycteridae, and megadermatidae, are more closely related to megabats than to other microbats. therefore, the five lineages of rhinolophoid microbats and megabats were re-classified as 'yinpterochiroptera' and the remaining microbats as 'yangochiroptera'. , , thus, recent molecular studies suggest that several adaptive characteristics specific to megabats have emerged within a short period of time from a microbat-like ancestor. genome-wide analyses have been used to identify the unique evolution of bats in several studies. seim et al.'s study determined the genome sequence of one microbat (brandt's bat) and found the signatures for adaptive evolution in genes related to physiology and longevity. zhang et al. determined the genome sequences of one microbat (david's myotis) and one megabat (black flying fox) and found that genes for flight and immunity evolved due to positive selection. parker et al. identified the genomes of three microbats, including the greater horseshoe bat, the greater false vampire bat, and parnell's mustached bat, and one megabat, the straw-coloured fruit bat. in comparing the genomes of these bats with those of other mammals, this study identified that genes related to hearing/deafness showed convergent evolution among echolocating mammals. pavlovich et al. recently determined the whole genome of the egyptian fruit bat (r. aegyptiacus), which is a natural reservoir for the marburg virus, and revealed that the genes for immunity were expanded and diversified, suggesting an antiviral mechanism that is used to control viral infection. especially, as bats are natural hosts for zoonotic virus including henipaviruses, filoviruses, and coronaviruses, which are emerging viruses with high rates of fatality, the comparative genomic study in bats may provide an effective solution against the current global pandemics of coronavirus disease- . in this study, we determined the genome sequences of two rousette megabats, leschenault's rousette (rousettus leschenaultia) and the egyptian fruit bat (r. aegyptiacus). we assessed the genomic signatures for the process of natural selection that facilitates the dynamic and adaptive evolution of megabats. in particular, the main aim to determine the whole-genome sequence of egyptian fruit bat in addition to the previous study is to obtain higher quality genome data, which facilitates more accurate and comprehensive gene annotations, especially for multi-gene families. in addition, the genome sequences of leschenault's rousette belonging to the same genus as the egyptian fruit bat is of our interest to identify genomic differences in closely related bat species. these genome sequences were compared with those of mammals, including six microbats and three megabats, available in the database. we used genome-wide phylogenetic analyses, followed by candidate gene analyses focussed on retroposons and chemosensory multi-gene families for taste, olfaction, and pheromone detection. in addition, we also performed global positive selection analyses. as a result, the inter-relationships among laurasiatheria were consistently reconstructed, with the order eulipotyphla diverging first, followed by the divergence of chiroptera and the remaining groups, including cetartiodactyla, perissodactyla, pholidota, and carnivora. the reciprocal monophyly of yinpterochiroptera and yangochiroptera was also shown with reliable statistical support. we revealed several notable distinct features in megabat genomes, including extremely low activity of sine retrotranspositions and the expansion of the genes for the trace amine receptor (taar) and olfactory receptor (or). additionally, the signatures for positive or relaxed selection were observed in genes for immunity and protein catabolism. thus, our comparative genomic analyses may illuminate the genetic mechanisms underlying the dynamic adaptation of megabats during diversification in the order chiroptera. egyptian fruit bats (r. aegyptiacus) and leschenault's rousettes (r. leschenaulti), both of which were provided by ueno zoo, were maintained under controlled conditions using an air conditioner and moisture chamber. the animals were kept in steel cages and fed fruit and water at the same time every day. all experiments were performed in accordance with the animal experimentation guidelines of the university of tokyo and were approved by the institutional animal care and use committee of the university of tokyo. as for egyptian fruit bats, we prepared kidney-derived primary cultured cells. a pregnant egyptian fruit bat was deeply anesthetized with isoflurane, the uteri were surgically removed, and the animal was euthanized by bleeding. the kidney from the fetus was fragmented using scissors and treatment with tryple (gibco). the fragmented kidney was then cultured in dmed containing % fetal calf serum to obtain primary cultured cells. genomic dna was extracted from the frozen spleen tissue or cultured kidney cells of two individuals of egyptian fruit bat, and frozen kidney tissue from one individual of leschenault's rousette, using a blood & cell culture dna kit (qiagen, hilden, germany), according to the manufacturer's protocol with minor laboratory customizations, the information can be available upon request. the dna samples (> kb) were subjected to the sequencing as described below after quality and quantity check. to construct paired-end sequencing libraries, the genomic dna was fragmented using a covaris s focussed-ultrasonicator (covaris, woburn, ma, usa). the paired-end libraries were constructed using the truseq dna pcr-free library prep kit (illumina, san diego, ca, usa). mate pair libraries were prepared from genomic dna using the nextera mate pair sample preparation kit (illumina, san diego, ca, usa). all libraries were sequenced on an illumina-hiseq system using rapid-mode chemistry with paired-end sequencing. prior to assembly, data pre-processing was performed. first, the adapter sequences were trimmed using the fastq-clipper ea-utils v . . , setting the parameters to '-p -m -l '. second, we filtered the reads mapped to the mitochondrial genome using bwa-aln v . . with default parameters. finally, we performed base error correction using soapec v . with the parameters '-k -l '. we then assembled the reads using platanus v . . with default parameters. contamination candidates were removed by mapping to escherichia coli and phix genomes using blastn v . . , setting the parameters to '-e e- '. the statistics of the genome assemblies and the information of sequence libraries are summarized in supplementary tables s - and s - . in order to test the quality of the reference assembly in the egyptian fruit bat, we additionally constructed a fosmid library, which was end-sequenced using abi xl sequencers. the protein-coding genes in the genomes of egyptian fruit bat and leschenault's rousette were identified based on the alignment with annotated gene sequences of mammals (cat, dog, horse, cow, hedgehog, human, macaque, mouse, rat, black flying fox, little brown bat, brandt's bat, david's myotis, and large flying fox; supplementary table s ) that are available in the database. the sequences for each gene of the mammals were aligned to the two bat genomes by using blat to identify approximate gene loci. the blat alignments of the gene sequences to the genomes were refined by the exonerate software to estimate the exon-intron boundaries. in addition to the homology-based identification, rna-seq-based transcript reconstruction and ab initio gene prediction were performed to identify the protein coding genes. rna of primary culture cells from the kidney of the egyptian fruit bat was extracted by using trizol reagent (thermo fisher). a total of , , paired-end reads of mrna (illumina-hiseq, bp) were aligned to the genomes using tophat. in total, , , and , , paired-end reads could be mapped to the genome sequences of r. aegyptiacus and r. leschenaultii, respectively. transcript structures were reconstructed using augustus based on the tophat alignment of the illumina reads to the bat genomes. the expression levels of the reconstructed genes were computed using cufflinks based on the tophat alignment of the illumina reads to the genomes. a total of , genes were expressed with fragments per kilobase of transcript per million of reads mapped (fpkm) ! in the kidney-derived primary cultured cells. examples are shown in supplementary fig. s . ab initio genes were obtained by using genscan and snap. the genomic sequences were cut to seven megabase-long fragments, and genscan was run on each fragment. the genes identified were assigned to gene loci based on the overlap of exons on the same strand, and the redundancies of the transcripts were removed. only transcripts annotated with the start codon (atg) and introns flanked by canonical splice dinucleotide pairs (gt-ag, gc-ag, and at-ac) were retained. a total of , and , transcripts were annotated over , and , gene loci, respectively, on the genomes of the egyptian fruit bat and leschenault's rousette. the completeness of the gene determination was evaluated by using busco. similarly, we assessed protein-coding genes on the genomes of four other bat species, the straw-coloured fruit bat, the greater false vampire bat, the greater horseshoe bat, and the strawcoloured fruit bat. due to fragmental nature of these genome assemblies (n : - kb), however, we did not use the thresholds of initial codon and splice sites as used in the annotation of the genomes of the egyptian fruit bat and leschenault's rousette. we identified the longest orf in each transcript mapped by exonerate by using transdecoder (https://github.com/transdecoder/transdecoder/ blob/master/transdecoder.longorfs) and used it as the gene annotation. we identified , - , transcripts in , - , gene loci on these genomes (supplementary table s ). the ratio of complete genes of the annotated genes evaluated by busco was . - . %. additional to this annotation, the tandemly duplicated receptor genes, including ors, taste receptors (t rs and t rs), vomeronasal receptors (v rs and v rs), formyl peptide receptors (fprs), and taars, were annotated separately. olfactory receptors were identified by the method described previously. , the other receptor genes were identified using another protocol. in short, we obtained protein sequences of mammalian t rs, t rs, fprs, v rs, v rs, and taars from the ncbi refseq database (https://www.ncbi.nlm. nih.gov/refseq/). the redundant sequences, which contain more than % identity as identified by cd-hit , were removed to establish representative query sequences. for t rs, we used only the transmembrane regions as query sequences. we used the ncbi conserved domains database to annotate the -transmembrane domains of t rs. using the query sequences, we performed a tblastn search against the whole-genome sequence assemblies available in genbank (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genbank/). the taxonomic classification and the accession numbers of the whole-genome sequences are summarized in supplementary table s . the exon-intron structure of each sequence, which was obtained by tblastn, was predicted with the exonerate program using translated query sequences as protein models. the resulting hit sequences were classified into 'intact', 'truncated', and 'pseudo-genes'. due to an assembly issue, the 'truncated' genes included poly 'n' sequences. in order to estimate the gene copy numbers, in these analyses, we treated the 'truncated' genes as 'putatively intact'. the pseudo-genes include inactivating mutations in the coding region. the resulting genes were assessed to determine whether they encode the chemosensory receptors of interest using blastx searches and ghostz against the uniref database (https://www.uniprot.org/help/uniref). we used the framework for annotating translatable exons (fate), which is available in github (https://github.com/hikoyu/fate), for the automation of the procedures described above. we constructed a phylogenetic tree based on the single-copy orthologous gene sets of mammals, as previously reported by wu et al., to elucidate the phylogenetic relationships of megabats with other mammals. briefly, the nucleotide sequences of the , proteincoding genes of the two megabat species and other mammalian species (supplementary table s ) were aligned using the prank software v. in codon level. sites that are shared by < % of the species were removed from the alignment. among the , genes, , genes were listed for all species, and were used for the analyses. the gene tree was constructed using raxml software, v . . using the gtrþcþi model with , bootstrap replicates for each , gene. we collected the best tree for all , genes, which were used to infer the coalescent species tree with branch length by astral-iii. the node support of the species tree was obtained by , replicates of bootstrapping. branch length shown in the tree indicates the branch length in coalescent units. we used the genome of leschenault's rousette for the identification of tes, based on two approaches, including de novo characterization of tes and identification of homologous copies of known tes in another megabat, the large flying fox (supplementary table s ). in the first approach, repeatmodeler ver. . . (http://www.repeatmasker. org/repeatmodeler.html) was used to obtain a collection of repetitive sequences. for each of the preliminary consensus sequences, we conducted a local nucleotide blast search (r ¼ , g ¼ , e ¼ , with an e-value cutoff of À ) and collected - copies along with their -kp flanking sequences. the copy sequences were aligned using mafft ver. . the alignment was manually modified using mega . and a consensus sequence was re-constructed. the consensus sequence was used for the next round of the blast search, as described above, to obtain additional copies. this procedure was repeated until a full-length consensus sequence was completed. the full-length tes were characterized and classified based on the sequence structure, including terminal inverted repeats and long terminal repeats (ltrs), coding proteins such as transposase and reverse transcriptase, and by comparison with known elements using repeatmasker ver. . . (http://repeatmasker.org), censor, and rtclass . for the second approach, a te library of another megabat, the large flying fox, including te families which were obtained from repbase, was used as a query for a homology search against leschenault's rousette. the local nucleotide blast search, alignment of the copy sequences, and reconstruction of the consensus sequence were conducted as described above. a similar blast search was also conducted using te families of a microbat (the little brown bat, supplementary table s ) library; however, no additional novel tes were found except in the results from the two approaches listed above. all of the newly characterized te (sub) families were designated in conformity with the repbase classification. the repeat contents of the two rousettus genomes were estimated using repeatmasker with the sensitive option (-s) of cross-match search using the rousettus repeat library which we developed here. the te contents, such as the number of copies and length, were summarized based on their divergence (%) from the consensus sequence at the family/subfamily levels by using in-house perl scripts. the te contents of other species were summarized based on the repeatmasker output (http://www.repeatmasker.org/genomic datasets/rmgenomicdatasets.html). orthologous genes under relaxed selection on megabat lineages were identified from the aligned , single-copy genes. on every alignment, we used the codeml branch model in paml . to detect the elevation of the dn/ds ratio (the non-synonymous substitution rate to the synonymous substitution rate) on stem and crown megabat branches. the species tree shown in fig. was used as a guide tree in the analysis. likelihood ratio tests and inspections of the p-value were used to compare likelihoods between two models: (i) that assumed the megabat lineages as foreground branches; and (ii) that assumed the dn/ds ratio was not altered in all branches (null hypothesis), to evaluate the significance of the elevation of the dn/ds ratio for megabat branches. we performed further analyses for the genes of interest using the codeml branch-site models for analysing the positive selection on each site. in the branch-site test, we tested stem and crown megabats as the foreground branches and used microbats and outgroup species, including human, macaque, mouse, rat, cat, dog, chinese pangolin, sunda pangolin, bottlenose dolphin, cow, horse, hedgehog, asian musk shrew, and common shrew, as background branches. for the branch-site test, we used two models for the analysis, including one model of a null hypothesis that assumes that the gene was under two types of selective pressures (purifying selection and neutral selection), and one model that used an alternative hypothesis to assume the gene was under three categories of selective pressures, including positive selection on the megabat branches. the likelihood ratio test comparing the likelihoods of these two models was used to evaluate the significance of the alternative model. to assess the functionality of positively selected sites, protein structure deposited in protein data bank (pdb) was used. the protein structures were depicted using the open-source version of pymol. we constructed draft genomes of the egyptian fruit bat and leschenault's rousette by assembling short read data into contigs and scaffolding them using platanus v . . . the genome of the egyptian fruit bat is composed of . gbp with , scaffolds (n ¼ . mbp) and the genome of leschenault's rousette is composed of . gbp with , scaffolds (n ¼ . mbp) (supplementary tables s - and s - ). the high qualities of the two genomes are demonstrated by the ratios of complete genes, which are . and . %, respectively, as evaluated by busco (supplementary table s ). the quality of both genomes in terms of the continuity of the scaffolds and the rate of n is high enough to facilitate genome-wide evolutionary analyses and characterization of multi-gene families. in addition, independent genome assemblies and gene annotations of the two individuals of egyptian fruit bat determined in the previous study and this study may be utilized as an initial step towards the identification of the genotypic, transcriptomic, and phenotypic variation of this species in the future research. figure shows the maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree with the time scale for mammals, including bats (five megabats and six microbats) based on , single-copy orthologous gene sets. four species of euarchontoglires, including humans, macaca, mouse, and rat, were used as outgroups. the tree successfully highlights the evolutionary history of laurasiatherian mammals in that eulipotyphla diverged first among them. in this phylogenetic tree, chiroptera diverged after eulipotyphla; however, the bootstrap probability (bp) supporting this node was not so high ( . ) . in addition, the grouping of pegasoferae (chiroptera, perissodactyla, and carnivora), which was originally proposed by the insertion of retroposons and supported by several genome-wide analyses, , was not supported. given that the bps for the inter-relationships of cetartiodactyla, perissodactyla (carnivora þ pholidota), and chiroptera were relatively low ( . , . ) and the branch lengths were markedly short, it is highly likely that the initial divergence of laurasiatherian mammals occurred rapidly during evolution. such rapid speciation events may hamper reconstruction of the consistent tree topology for these groups. , importantly, as it was shown in the previous studies, , , the reciprocal monophyly of yangochiroptera and yinpterochiroptera was successfully supported in this analysis, suggesting that the megabats are nested in microbat lineages. although it is difficult to estimate the ancestral state in the megabat ancestors due to the rarity of the fossil record, the phylogenetic tree suggests that several distinct characteristics in megabats, including the welldeveloped visual system, frugivorous diet, and the absence of echolocation, evolved in a short period of time during evolution from a 'microbat-like' ancestor. we next focussed on assessing the signatures for such adaptive evolution in these groups based on the genome-wide comparative analyses. in both the leschenault's rousette and egyptian fruit bat genomes, tes account for $ % of the genome, including sines ( . %), lines ( %), ltr retrotransposons ( . %), and dna transposons ( . %) (supplementary table s and fig. s ). it is notable that the proportions of tes in megabats, including the two rousettus species and the large flying fox, are considerably lower as compared to the levels in other mammals, such as humans, where nearly half of the genome is covered by tes ( fig. a and supplementary fig. s ) . consistent with the previous observations, it is also interesting that the proportion of tes is generally correlated with the genome size in mammals , (supplementary fig. s ). co-variation between an accumulation of tes and dna loss by large segmental deletions is considered a major contributing factor to determine the genome size. therefore, the smaller genome sizes in the megabats may be due to a lower activity of tes, at least in part. indeed, our analysis revealed that the number of young (recently retrotransposed) te copies in the megabat genomes is very small (fig. b and supplementary fig. s ). as exemplified by the microbat myotis lucifugus, where the number of tes representing < % divergence from the consensus sequence is , ( . % among all te copies; supplementary fig. s ) consistent with the previous studies, in general, young tes constitute a few percent among all tes in mammalian genomes. however, the copy numbers of young tes is only , ( . %) and , ( . %) for the rousettus species and large flying fox, respectively ( fig. b supplementary fig. s ). the small proportion of young tes is partly accounted for the low frequency of retrotransposition events in megabat-specific sines (fig. ) . in general, different types of sine families are distributed for each mammalian clade, such as order, sub-order, or family. in megabats, the only known active sines are the s rrna-derived meg sines. it should be noted that rousettus genomes contain no more than , copies of the meg-related sines, which cover . % of the genome. however, clade-specific sines are, in general, retrotranspositionally highly active, with - copies present in each mammalian genome (fig. a) . the large flying fox (pteropus vampyrus) also has only , copies of meg-related sines. based on the wide distribution of meg sines in megabats, including rousettus, macroglossus, eonycteris, and cynopterus, the origin of meg can be traced back to the common ancestor of megabats, which existed at least million years ago. it is possible that such a low retrotranspositional activity of the sines found in rousettus and pteropus is observed widely among megabats. it has been demonstrated that flying vertebrates, including bats, have substantially lost tes and have smaller genome sizes in association with cellular metabolic constraints. , the small proportion of meg sines in the megabats may also be a result of the constraint related to their powered flight. another notable te family is line- (l ), as it has been reported that the retrotranspositional activity of l has been lost in megabats. it is unlikely that the extinction of l resulted from the quiescence of l itself, because a synthesized sequence of the reconstructed megabat l is capable of retrotransposition in human hela cells. in addition, we identified that in addition to l , all types of tes have the least activity in megabats among the mammals investigated (fig. b) . this low activity of young tes may be due to an unknown megabat-specific mechanism for te repression or a result of extensive dna loss during the past tens of millions of years. one of the possible mechanisms by which te activity may be tightly repressed is an antiviral immune system in megabats. suggesting that the egyptian fruit bat may possess a novel mode of antiviral defense, several antiviral-related genes are known to have expanded in this bat. for example, ribonuclease l, an interferoninducible endoribonuclease that cleaves viral rnas, evolved under relaxed selective constraint in bats. ribonuclease l is also known to restrict retrotransposition of human l and mouse iap elements in human cells. in addition, several other factors that restrict retrotransposition in humans and mice are known to be involved in an antiviral immune system. thus, it is possible that a unique antiviral mechanism against exogenous parasites (i.e. viruses) is secondarily used for the restriction of the endogenous retroelements. as general mobilization of sines in mammals relies on the l machinery, the restriction of megabat l could limit the meg sine activity. the low activity of tes may partly contribute to the small genome size ( supplementary fig. s ), which could also be advantageous with respect to cell size and metabolic constraints in megabats as well as other flying vertebrates , . therefore, the unusual characteristics of the tes, likely shared among megabats, are an important example to study the molecular mechanisms underlying restriction of retrotransposition. such future studies may shed light on the reason why bats have such compact genomes. it also remains unknown why ves sines in microbats are active, whereas the genome size is relatively small among mammals (fig. ) . the difference in the sine activity between megabats and microbats may be affected by a possibly distinct antiviral immune system between the two groups, given that expansion of some antiviral-related genes occurred specifically in megabats. most of the chemosensory receptors are encoded by multi-gene families, allowing animals to detect highly diversified chemicals in the environment. the previously published studies have shown that the collections of the chemosensory receptor genes are flexible and highly variable among mammals, including the ors, taste receptors (t rs and t rs), vomeronasal receptors (v rs and v rs), fprs, and taars. the number of certain chemosensory receptor gene families has been shown to have a strong correlation with the degree of dependence on these ligand chemicals for survival. , , several studies have revealed that bats lost several chemosensory receptor genes, such as t r for umami, and v rs for pheromone(s) that may be due to the specific sensory adaptation in the ancestor of these groups. it is possible that megabats re-allocated the diversity in chemosensory receptor genes as a sensory trade-off, given that megabats have experienced the secondary loss of echolocation ability, which is one of the most specialized senses in bats. to examine this possibility, we comprehensively characterized the chemosensory receptor genes and compared their diversity by focussing on whether or not the repertoires in megabats show notable differences from those in microbats. our comparative genomic analyses of chemosensory receptor genes in the genomes of mammals revealed that the copy number of the intact genes and pseudo-genes show a certain variation among bat species. in t rs, the absence of t r , the umami receptor, in all of the bats that we analysed is consistent with the findings of the previous studies. all megabats possess two t rs (t r and t r ), whereas microbats are somewhat variable, in that they can possess no (greater false vampire bat), one (little brown bat), or two (brandt's bat, greater horseshoe bat) t rs (fig. a and supplementary table s ). it is noteworthy that all megabats possess t r , which is the sweet receptor, suggesting the importance of sweet taste for their frugivorous lifestyle. no intact t rs in the greater false vampire bat could be explained by their specific adaptation for a carnivorous diet, which resembles the blood-feeding activity of the vampire bat (desmodus rotundus), which also lost t rs. , as for t rs, which are bitter taste receptors, the copy numbers are relatively smaller in megabats than those in microbats ( fig. a and supplementary table s ). the smaller number of t rs in megabats can also be explained by their frugivorous diet, as compared with that of microbats, which are mostly insectivores. indeed, the repertoires of t rs in primates have a strong correlation with their diet, suggesting the importance of t rs for feeding adaptation in mammals. we identified little variation between megabats and microbats in fprs, which are expressed in the sensory neurons of the vomeronasal organ and mediate innate avoidance behaviours (fig. a supplementary table s ). suggesting that fpr-mediated chemodetection is not directly linked with the difference in their habitats, mega-and microbats both possess two to eight fprs. however, a previous study, by comparing the orthologous sequences among a broad range of mammals, found the signatures for the operation of positive selection in fprs. therefore, to examine the possible contribution of fprs to the adaptive evolution of megabats, more detailed investigation is necessary by focussing on the dn/ds values among orthologous fpr sequences of many bat species, which are lacking at present. there was an extensive reduction in v rs, which are known to be expressed in vno neurons of mammals and detect various pheromones, [ ] [ ] [ ] in both megabats and microbats ( fig. a and supplementary table s ) . especially, only one v r was found in the genomes of megabats. the reduction of v rs revealed in this study is consistent with the findings of the previously published studies. the inactivation of trpc s , and ancv rs, , which is responsible for vno function, suggested the degeneration of vnos in most bat lineages including megabats. although most bats do not possess intact v rs, parnell's mustached bat possesses four intact v rs (fig. a and supplementary table s ) , which is consistent with the presence of the vno in this species. in addition, recent study has suggested that there are a substantial number of v rs in distantly related groups of phyllostomids and miniopterids, which possess an intact vno, suggesting that they retained v r-mediated chemical communication. , therefore, the ancestor of all extant bats is expected to possess an intact vno, as well as a certain number of v rs, that were independently degenerated after the divergence of each family, including megabats (pteropodidae). namely, the loss of echolocation and the degeneration of the vno occurred spontaneously in the ancestor of megabats. v rs are expressed in the basal region of the vno neurons , , and peptide pheromones were detected in mice. , however, intact v rs have been identified only in a limited number of mammals, such as rodents, mouse lemurs, and opossum. our comprehensive analysis failed to find intact putative v rs in the genomes of all bats and most of other mammals. this result suggests that, before the acquisition of the echolocation ability, the v r-mediated pheromone detection system has already been lost in the common ancestor of all extant bat lineages. it is noteworthy that the hedgehog and the horse possess seven and one intact v rs, respectively ( fig. a and supplementary table s ). this provides the first description of intact v rs in the genomes of laurasiatherian mammals. more detailed analyses may provide insight into the v r-mediated pheromone detection system in these species. one of the most intriguing results in the chemosensory receptor genes was obtained from taars. trace amine receptors have been believed to function as receptors for trace amines, for example, tyramine and octopamine in the brain. however, a recent study revealed that taars may be expressed primarily or exclusively in the moe, and are responsible for detecting volatile amines, including ethological odors that evoke innate animal behavioural responses. in this study, we revealed that the number of taars was increased in the common ancestor of megabats. in particular, the number of taars, which were identified to be from five to seven copies in microbats, increased to more than copies in megabats. in particular, leschenault's rousette possess putatively intact ( intact and truncated) taars, which is the largest number the number of intact, truncated, and pseudo-genes is indicated in blue, yellow, and red, respectively. we treated the truncated genes as 'putatively intact'. the dotted lines show the variation in the number of intact þ 'putatively intact' genes among mammals. it should be noted that the number of taars is obviously higher in megabats than in microbats. (b) phylogenetic tree of intact taars in mammals. only the intact genes were included in the tree. the taars of the egyptian fruit bat and leschenault's rousette are indicated by the square (green) and triangle (blue). it is obvious that the taars of subfamilies seven and eight were expanded in two rousettus bats. zebrafish taar c in the ncbi database was used as an outgroup. mouse taar - in the ncbi database was used as an indicator for each taar subfamily. accession codes for these database-derived genes are available in supplementary fig. s . identified among mammals ( fig. a ; supplementary tables s and s ). the phylogenetic analyses of intact taars for the mammals clearly demonstrated that the expansion of the genes in the two rousettus bats, including the egyptian fruit bat and leschenault's rousette, occurred in subfamilies seven and eight in a species-specific manner ( fig. b; supplementary fig. s and table s ). eyun et al. also reported a high copy number of taars in one megabat, the large flying fox; however, the repertoire was quite different from that of these two rousettus bats ( fig. a ; supplementary tables s and s ). although taars were expanded in subfamilies seven and eight in the two rousettus species, they were expanded only in subfamily seven in the java fruit bat. the number of intact genes, as well as the pseudo-genes, was highly variable among the megabats, suggesting that birth and death of taars were quite active. phylogenetic, as well as copy number, analyses suggest that taars have provided a large contribution to some process of adaptive evolution and diversification of megabats. interestingly, pavlovich et al. revealed the gene expansion of mhc genes in the genomes of the egyptian fruit bat, suggesting novel modes of antiviral defense. thus, the mhc genes and taars were both expanded in megabats. santos et al. reported that taars may be a key mediator in mhc-dependent mating choices in the sac-winged bat (saccopteryx bilineata). based on these findings, it is possible that the megabats use diversified taars for mate choice, by taking advantage of mhc-related molecules that are also diversified. functional experiments investigating taars and mating in megabats may provide insight into the possible link between taars and mhc genes. ors, which are expressed in the moe, have undergone extensive expansion and contraction that may be associated with environmental adaptations. in ors, we also revealed the notable increase of the genes in megabats, which is more evident in two rousettus bats, including the egyptian fruit bat and leschenault's rousette ( fig. a and supplementary table s ). although the copy numbers of putatively intact (intact and truncated) ors span from to in microbats, those of megabats ranges from to . the increase in the number of ors in megabats may be the signature for the reallocation in response, leading to the loss of the echolocation ability in the megabat ancestor. hayden et al. identified convergent or patterns linked to frugivorous diet in megabats and new world fruit-eating microbats (phyllostomids). given that the increase in the ors is more extensive, these patterns of ors are not only linked to the frugivorous diet, but also to some other roles, such as predator avoidance and social communication. by extensively analysing the copy-number variations of chemosensory receptor genes between megabats and microbats, we revealed obvious differences in taars and ors, both of which are expressed in the moe. it is possible that the contraction of vnomediated chemo-detection and echolocation in megabats may lead to the expansion of chemo-detection genes expressed in the moe. in addition, it is noteworthy that the repertoires of taars and ors function was deduced by enrichment analysis in webgestalt. were obviously differentiated even between closely related two species belonging to the rousettus, suggesting that birth and death of these genes are quite active in this genus ( fig. a and b ; supplementary tables s and s ). the results propose the possibility that two rousettus bats are particularly dependent on olfaction through taars and ors. in addition to the candidate approach, which focussed on retroposons and chemosensory receptor genes, we also performed global analyses on the protein-coding genes of megabats. the elevation of dn/ds ratios were examined for the , single-copy orthologous genes using the branch model of codeml implemented in paml . . the likelihood ratio tests and the inspection of p-value identified that the elevation of dn/ds ratios (p < . ) was significant in genes (supplementary table s ). as shown by the enrichment analyses for the resultant genes using webgestalt, the elevation of the dn/ds ratios in megabats was remarkable in genes related to the immune system and protein catabolism (table and supplementary table s ). the elevation of the dn/ds ratios in immune system genes has been reported in several comparative genomic analyses on mammals, including the pangolin, microbat, and megabat. notably, microbats and pangolins have recently begun to attract attention as possible host reservoirs of sars-related coronaviruses responsible for the current outbreak of coronavirus disease- (covid- ). , pavlovich et al. revealed the episodic evolution of immune response genes in egyptian rousette, a natural reservoir of marburg virus, by showing an unusual expansion of ngk , cd , mhc, and ifn gene families. we revealed the episodic evolution by showing the elevation of dn/ds ratios in many immune response genes in megabat lineages ( table ). the tolerance for zoonotic viruses without overt pathology in bats are consistent with the episodic evolution in immune response genes. namely, co-evolution of viruses and immune system in these species may be facilitated by the adaptive evolution. further molecular biological and physiological investigations of these candidate genes are of primary importance in elucidating how bats tolerate infections by various zoonotic viruses. interestingly, the elevation of the dn/ds ratio of protein catabolism was also reported in the tyrosine aminotransferase gene (tat) in megabats. to further investigate the evolution of the protein catabolism pathway in megabats, we focussed on another representative gene, -hydroxyacyl-coa dehydrogenase (hadh), in which the elevation of the dn/ds ratio was significant in the branch model (table ; supplementary tables s and s ). hadh is involved in the degradation of ile, val, lys, and tyr to convert them into energy via the citric acid (tca) cycle (fig. a) . the branch-site test for hadh ( fig. and supplementary table s ) revealed that seven sites were positively selected with a posterior probability (p) of > %, including three sites with a p of > % (fig. b) . the likelihood for the operation of positive selection was not significant, as only a few sites were detected as positively selected ( %, figure . positively selected sites in hadh on megabat lineages. (a) in protein metabolism, hadh is involved in the degradation of ile, val, lys, tyr and transforms these factors into acetyl-coa or succinyl-coa for the tca cycle (https://www.genome.jp/dbget-bin/www_bget?hsa: ). (b) the sequence alignment between the positively selected sites in hadh in the megabat lineages and microbats and human hadh. the codon alignment of all hadh sequences used in this study is available in supplementary alignment file s . the sites were identified by the branch-site model on paml. positively selected sites are highlighted in yellow (p, > %) and red (p-value,p > %). (c) positively selected residues on megabat lineages are mapped on the human hadh dimer (pdb: f y). the a chain is presented as a spherical model (yellow and red). the hadh dimer a chain is shown as a cartoon model (white) and the b chain is shown as a surface model (gray). the ligands of hadh, nad, and acetoacetyl-coa are shown as a stick model (blue and orange, respectively). supplementary table s ). we then mapped the positively selected sites on the human hadh dimer structure (pdb: f y, fig. c ). although the positively selected sites were not located on the ligand (nad and caa) binding sites, it was of interest that four sites (r , e , a , and l ) were located on the dimer interface (fig. c) . the mutations on these four residues change electric charges or polarities, such as r y, e n, a s, and l s, suggesting that dimer formation is likely to be interrupted and enzyme catalysis is degraded. shen et al. identified the significantly low activity of tat in megabats and discussed that the elevation of the dn/ds ratio in tat may be the relaxation of purifying selection in response to their frugivorous diet. megabats may utilize the ingested proteins for the synthesis of new proteins, rather than for energy production through catabolism, as their diets, which include fruits and nectar, are rich in carbohydrates but poor in protein. accordingly, it is possible that the megabats are less dependent on the protein catabolism pathway. in this study, we provide additional and inclusive evidence which suggests that the evolutionary constraints on genes for protein catabolism were relaxed due to the adaptation for frugivorous diets. in summary, our comparative genomic analyses revealed several distinct signatures for adaptive evolution in megabats. (i) the activity of tes is considerably lower compared to other mammals, which is possibly related to a defense mechanism against viruses. the small size of the genomes, which may be due to the low activity of tes, could be advantageous in association with cellular metabolic constrains of flying organisms. (ii) taars and ors, which function in the neurons of moe, show specific expansions, implying the important contribution of olfaction in their adaptation processes. (iii) positive selection in genes for immunity may suggests the coevolution of immune system and viruses, providing crucial insights into the mechanism of asymptomatic infection of bats for zoonotic viruses as a host reservoir. 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burrows-wheeler transform soapdenovo : an empirically improved memory-efficient short-read de novo assembler efficient de novo assembly of highly heterozygous genomes from whole-genome shotgun short reads basic local alignment search tool blat-the blast-like alignment tool automated generation of heuristics for biological sequence comparison tophat: discovering splice junctions with rna-seq using native and syntenically mapped cdna alignments to improve de novo gene finding transcript assembly and quantification by rna-seq reveals unannotated transcripts and isoform switching during cell differentiation prediction of complete gene structures in human genomic dna gene finding in novel genomes busco: assessing genome assembly and annotation completeness with single-copy orthologs identification of olfactory receptor genes from mammalian genome sequences acceleration of olfactory receptor gene loss in primate evolution: possible link to anatomical change in sensory systems and dietary transition evolution of vomeronasal receptor (v r) genes in the common marmoset (callithrix jacchus) cd-hit: a fast program for clustering and comparing large sets of protein or nucleotide sequences faster sequence homology searches by clustering subsequences rates of molecular evolution suggest natural history of life history traits and a post-k-pg nocturnal bottleneck of placentals phylogeny-aware alignment with prank raxml version : a tool for phylogenetic analysis and post-analysis of large phylogenies astral-iii: polynomial time species tree reconstruction from partially resolved gene trees gene tree discordance, phylogenetic inference and the multispecies coalescent mafft multiple sequence alignment software version : improvements in performance and usability mega : molecular evolutionary genetic analysis using maximum likelihood, evolutionary distance, and maximum parsimony methods annotation, submission and screening of repetitive elements in repbase: repbasesubmitter and censor simple and fast classification of non-ltr retrotransposons based on phylogeny of their rt domain protein sequences repbase update, a database of repetitive elements in eukaryotic genomes paml : a program package for phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood the pymol molecular graphics system a genomic approach to examine the complex evolution of laurasiatherian mammals a molecular phylogeny for bats illuminates biogeography and the fossil record characterization of the mitochondrial genome of rousettus leschenaulti dynamics of genome size evolution in birds and mammals transposable elements as genetic accelerators of evolution: contribution to genome size, gene regulatory network rewiring, and morphological innovation pinpointing the vesper bat transposon revolution using the miniopterus natalensis genome s rrna-derived and trna-derived sines in fruit bats origin of avian genome size and structure in non-avian dinosaurs palaeogenomics of pterosaurs and the evolution of small genome size in flying vertebrates loss of line- activity in the megabats reviving the dead: history and reactivation of an extinct l viral encounters with , -oligoadenylate synthetase and rnase l during the interferon antiviral response rnase l restricts the mobility of engineered retrotransposons in cultured human cells restricting retrotransposons: a review line-mediated retrotransposition of marked alu sequences the evolution of animal chemosensory receptor gene repertoires: roles of chance and necessity dramatic variation of the vomeronasal pheromone receptor gene repertoire among five orders of placental and marsupial mammals a cluster of olfactory receptor genes linked to frugivory in bats genomic and genetic evidence for the loss of umami taste in bats extreme variability among mammalian v r gene families prenatal development supports a single origin of laryngeal echolocation in bats evolution of the sweet taste receptor gene tas r in bats frequent expansions of the bitter taste receptor gene repertoire during evolution of mammals in the euarchontoglires clade formyl peptide receptor-like proteins are a novel family of vomeronasal chemosensors adaptive evolution of formyl peptide receptors in mammals molecular organization of vomeronasal chemoreception from genes to social communication: molecular sensing by the vomeronasal organ evolution of v r pheromone receptor genes in vertebrates: diversity and commonality widespread losses of vomeronasal signal transduction in bats trpc pseudogenization dynamics in bats reveal ancestral vomeronasal signaling, then pervasive loss a single pheromone receptor gene conserved across million years of vertebrate evolution inactivation of ancv r as a predictive signature for the loss of vomeronasal system in mammals vomeronasal organ in bats and primates: extremes of structural variability and its phylogenetic implications expressed vomeronasal type- receptors (v rs) in bats uncover conserved sequences underlying social chemical signaling a novel family of putative pheromone receptors in mammals with a topographically organized and sexually dimorphic distribution a multigene family encoding a diverse array of putative pheromone receptors in mammals the male mouse pheromone esp enhances female sexual receptive behaviour through a specific vomeronasal receptor sexual rejection via a vomeronasal receptor-triggered limbic circuit first evidence for functional vomeronasal receptor genes in primates comparative genomic analysis identifies an evolutionary shift of vomeronasal receptor gene repertoires in the vertebrate transition from water to land a renaissance in trace amines inspired by a novel gpcr family a second class of chemosensory receptors in the olfactory epithelium trace amine-associated receptors: ligands, neural circuits, and behaviors molecular evolution and functional divergence of trace amine-associated receptors mhc-dependent mate choice is linked to a trace-amine-associated receptor gene in a mammal webgestalt, a more comprehensive, powerful, flexible and interactive gene set enrichment analysis toolkit pangolin genomes and the evolution of mammalian scales and immunity isolation of sars-cov- -related coronavirus from malayan pangolins identifying sars-cov- -related coronaviruses in malayan pangolins adaptive evolution in the glucose transporter gene slc a in old world fruit bats (family: pteropodidae) the authors thank mr. yujiro kawabe for the illustration of the animals in fig. . computations were partially performed on the nig supercomputer at rois national institute of genetics. all nucleotide sequence reads and the genome assembly have been deposited in the ddbj sequence read archive (sra) for egyptian fruit bat (dra ) and for leschenault's rousette (dra ). the sequences of fosmid library of egyptian fruit bat were also deposited in the database (ddbj accession nos. ga -ga ). the raw data for the rna-seq analyses of the kidney-derived primary cultured cells of the egyptian fruit bat has been deposited in ddbj sra (dra ). none declared. the supplementary data are available at dnares online. key: cord- -eyxc rt authors: mohammadinejad, reza; dehshahri, ali; madamsetty, vijay sagar; zahmatkeshan, masoumeh; tavakol, shima; makvandi, pooyan; khorsandi, danial; pardakhty, abbas; ashrafizadeh, milad; afshar, elham ghasemipour; zarrabi, ali title: in vivo gene delivery mediated by non-viral vectors for cancer therapy date: - - journal: j control release doi: . /j.jconrel. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: eyxc rt gene therapy by expression constructs or down-regulation of certain genes has shown great potential for the treatment of various diseases. the wide clinical application of nucleic acid materials dependents on the development of biocompatible gene carriers. there are enormous various compounds widely investigated to be used as non-viral gene carriers including lipids, polymers, carbon materials, and inorganic structures. in this review, we will discuss the recent discoveries on non-viral gene delivery systems. we will also highlight the in vivo gene delivery mediated by non-viral vectors to treat cancer in different tissue and organs including brain, breast, lung, liver, stomach, and prostate. finally, we will delineate the state-of-the-art and promising perspective of in vivo gene editing using non-viral nano-vectors. since the elucidation of the molecular mechanisms of several diseases along with the discovery of nucleic acid structure, the replacement of defective genes with functional versions has been considered as a new therapeutic paradigm called "gene therapy" ( , ). gene therapy is carried out by expression constructs in order to increase the production of specific proteins inside the cells. on the other hand, down-regulation of specific genes has shown great potential for the treatment of various diseases ( ) . therefore, the modulation or silencing of such genes using accessed by the ribosome for the production of proteins. on the other hand, mrna directly enters the cytoplasm and interacts with ribosome for protein production. these unique properties have made mrna as a potential candidate not only for gene therapy but also for vaccine development particularly for the immunization against widespread viruses including sars-cov- ( ). however, the major concerns regarding the application of mrna for gene therapy are its unstable nature and the existence of degrading enzymes such as rnases in the extra-and intra-cellular environments ( , ). to overcome these problems, new developments, including snim (stabilized non-immunogenic mrna), have been introduced in which the modified nucleotides could be incorporated into the mrna structure to increase its stability and reduce its immunogenicity ( , - ). the aim of gene therapy is not just increasing the expression of certain gene as it was expected in previous decades. there are several pathological conditions related to the genes over-expression. in such conditions, the gene therapy goal would be silencing the target genes. the knock-down of such genes could be achieved by different nucleic acid materials, including antisense and sirna. it must be considered that there are some differences between gene therapy and oligonucleotide therapy ( ). oligonucleotide-based medications such as antisense do not need the transcriptional and translational machinery of the cells while the conventional gene therapy is based on the replacement of defected genes by the functional ones as well as the introduction of new gene into the cells including germlines or somatic cells ( ). antisense technology is defined as a powerful tool to down-regulate a specific gene by transferring the antisense strand to the cells with the ability to interact with the sense strand. the base pairing between the sense and antisense strands results in the translational block ( , ) . on the other hand, rnai technology employs several enzymes (e.g., dicer) and proteins (e.g., risc complex) to interfere with the layer on the surface of the carriers reduces the risk of aggregation and increases colloidal stability. the reduction of the interaction between the stealth gene carriers and serum components reduces the recognition of the vehicles by mononuclear phagocyte system (mps), including macrophages, which in turn leads to enhanced circulation time ( ) . in order to direct the carriers into the precise site of action, smart gene carriers have been designed. these carriers could be targeted to the specific receptors by the conjugation of small molecules as well as macromolecules including monoclonal antibodies or aptamers ( ) ( ) ( ) . once the nano-carriers reach the cells, they may enter endosomal compartment, which degrades the nucleic acid therapeutics and leads to failed transfection. hence, the promotion of proton sponge effect or the conjugation of membrane fusogenic compounds could be considered as brilliant strategies to overcome the endo/lysosomal barrier ( , ) . while the sirna site of action is the cytosolic environment, plasmids must be able to cross the nuclear barrier. it has been shown that the molecules with the molecular mass of - kda ( - nm) are able to passively diffuse via nuclear pores. however, the exact mechanism of nuclear entry is not completely understood ( , ) . it is not clear whether the polyplexes goes under vector unpackaging outside the nucleus or the transcriptional machinery of the cell dissociate the nucleic acids from the carrier inside the nucleus. regardless of the mechanism, it has been demonstrated that cell cycle may have a crucial impact on the cell entry. the cells at the phases of s/g have shown the highest transfection efficiency. however, most cells are not in the dividing phase in vivo; therefore the alternative approaches, including the conjugation of nuclear localization signals (nls), must be employed to increase nucleus entry ( , ) . the real value of these important findings is dependent on their translation to clinical application. the approval of patisiran (onpattro ® ) as the first fda approved sirna based therapeutic for hereditary transthyretin-mediated (hattr) j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f amyloidosis opened up new horizons for the scientists to seek for the efficient delivery systems enabling the nucleic acids to be used as therapeutic agents. patisiran has been formulated as lipid nanoparticles (nps) and is used by intravenous infusions while the second approval for sirnabased therapeutics belongs to givosiran (givlaari ® ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . givosiran has been prepared as nacetylgalactosamine (galnac) conjugated sirna and is administrated subcutaneously. the first polymer-based gene therapy investigation in human was carried by transferrin-polylysine (adenovirus-enhanced transferrinfection; avet) carrier in order to transfer the plasmid encoding il- gene for the treatment of melanoma ( ) . in the first-ever human study of polyplexes, the ex-vivo gene transfer was performed to deliver the plasmid dna into the patient cells. peg conjugated polylysine was used to transfer the pdna to treat cystic fibrosis as a nasal drug delivery system ( ) . in another study to design a vaccine for hiv, mannose conjugated pei was prepared as the carrier for the plasmid encoding various hiv antigens and used as a dermal formulation in a human clinical trials ( ). the intraperitoneal injection of peg-pei-cholesterol to transfer il- plasmid was also used for ovarian cancer treatment ( ). the intravenous injection of transferrin-cyclodextrin oligocation complexed with sirna to silence ribonucleotide reductase m (rrm ) was applied in various solid tumors ( ) . since various routes of administration have been used to transfer non-viral delivery systems for gene therapy, it seems that the route is highly dependent on the characteristics of the carrier and nucleic acids as well the prepared complex and the final formulation. it seems that there is no restrict limitation for a specific route of administration for non-viral gene delivery carriers at least in the theoretical aspect ( table ). j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f despite advances in chemotherapy, surgery, and radiation therapy, lung cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer-related deaths globally ( , ) . even though there is some initial response with present conventional chemotherapy, patients will develop resistance and exhibit poor survival with prolonged usage ( ) . several attempts were made to improve the survival of lung cancer patients using various combination therapies that have demonstrated that no further improvement observed, suggesting the need for specific, less toxic treatment approaches such as genetic alterations. tumor suppressor genes and oncogenes are the two major genetic factors affecting the progression of the disease ( , ) . hence, altering these explicit genes can advance the therapeutic benefit of present therapies. ( ) . numerous gene therapy strategies have been adopted, such as the deletions of oncogenes, immune stimulation, replacement of tumor-suppressor genes and transfer of genes that enhance conventional treatments ( ) . here, there are several other non-viral vectors used for the delivery of various nucleic acid materials for lung cancer ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . another most common genetic alteration happen in the lung cancer is associated with the tumor suppressor genes. for example, tumor suppressor gene tusc /fus (tusc ) is inactivated in lung cancer. however, no drug development approach is available for targeting the loss-of-function genetic deviations. roth ja and his team developed a systemic gene therapy approach by using a tusc -expressing plasmid vector packaged in dotap:chol nanovesicles. they found that following the tumor treatment with dc-tusc , some major changes in the intrinsic pro-apoptotic pathway happened ( , ) . these nanovesicles were administered intravenously in the patients bearing lung cancer and the results showed an improvement in delivering tusc genes to both human primary and metastatic tumors safely ( ) . among several existing polymeric transporters, pei was mostly exploited to transfer genes for both in vitro and in vivo transfection. for example, scientists used pei to develop a phsensitive in vivo selective gene delivery system to transfer p dna at the tumor site. a single administration of p dna nanocomplex along with laser radiation, significantly inhibited tumor growth and prolonged median survival ( ) . gold nps also used to deliver p dna to lung cancer cells ( ) . several other studies also demonstrated that the p -based gene delivery is able to improve the therapeutic outcome for lung cancer ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . in summary, based on these there are several strategies to treat breast cancers based on the severity and the mechanisms involved in the pathogenesis including autophagy and apoptosis ( ) . although there are cxcr sirna and an rna-triple-helix in the hydrogels nps without synthetic polycationic reagents for the treatment of breast cancer ( ) . amorphous calcium carbonate fusion nanospheres fabricated with caip nps were efficient in carrying genes to the tumor site. scientists showed that akt sirna loaded caco /caip nanocomplexes substantially inhibited tumor growth ( ) . similarly, a polypeptide containing lah -l -simdr loaded nanocomplexes displayed significant tumor growth inhibition when used along with ptx. in this study, high mdr gene silencing efficacy was observed in the tumor-bearing nude mice ( ) . enormous efforts are still underway for developing novel and effective gene delivery systems based on biocompatible nanomaterials to transfer the target genes to the tumor site ( , , ) . for example, researchers have developed an elastin-like recombinant (elr) and specific muc aptamers for intracellular delivery of the muc gene to breast tumors ( ) . more recently, the same group developed a double protection tumor-specific nanomaterial device for gene therapy in breast cancer ( ) . the functionalized peptides/ligands can also improve the delivery of nucleic acid-complexed nps to tumors ( , , ) . ( ) . cell-penetrating peptide (cpp)-containing and egfr-sirna loaded nanobubbles showed synergism with ultrasound irradiation mediated egfr-sirna delivery to tnbc ( ) . zhou et al also developed cd -conjugated targeted cationic microbubbles for antiangiogenesis gene therapy for breast cancer ( ) . similarly, endostatin loaded and cd antibody conjugated immunoliposomes were prepared for antiangiogenic and imaging therapy ( ) . gu nanocomplexes. this nanocomplex could inhibited the tumor growth synergistically and prolonged the survival of drug-resistant breast tumors mice ( ) . in another similar study, the investigators proved that the co-delivery of p dna and avpi peptide enabled a complete arrest of tumor growth when used in combination with a reduced dose of dox. in their study, they modified avpi peptide not only to enable it to penetrate to tumor cells but also acts as a gene delivery vehicle by forming a nano complex with cationic r moiety ( ) . there are j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f several studies demonstrating that the p mediated gene therapy for breast cancer treatment is an efficient approach in cancer gene therapy ( , ) . overall, the combination of chemotherapy along with gene therapy may enhance the therapeutic effects against breast cancer. there are other categorization methods for brain tumors including primary and secondary tumors. primary tumors originate from meninges, glands, nerve and other brain cells, while secondary tumors originate from other parts of the body and spread to the brain ( ) . the most common brain cancers are glioma, neuroblastoma, meningioma, vestibular schwannoma and pituitary adenoma. the brain tumors can be primary diagnosed using mri, ct scan, angiography, skull x-ray and biopsy. despite enormous advances in the field of pharmaceutics and radiotherapy, the brain cancers cannot be completely cured. polymer-based carriers are accounted as one of the most effective carriers in drug delivery ( ) ( ) ( ) ( , ) . moreover, gene delivery is accounted as a hopeful strategy for brain cancer treatment. one of the most important obstacles in brain drug delivery is the blood-brain barrier (bbb). therefore, there are many efforts to overcome this barrier including functionalization and modification of non-viral gene delivery vectors ( , ) . the modification leads to the transcytosis and endocytosis of vectors through cell-penetrating peptides (cpp) mediated transmembrane transport, adsorptive-mediated endocytosis and receptor-mediated endocytosis ( ) . there are some receptors on the surface of it seems that r l is safer than pei and conjugation with epo enhances its gene and drug delivery efficacy in hypoxia condition ( ) . dendrimers have been considered as effective drug delivery carriers and polyamidoamine (pamam) is one the most well-known dendrimers in drug delivery. it seems that primary and tertiary amines in dendrimer play a critical role in dna condensation and release ( ) . however, there are controversial reports on the safety of dendrimers owing to their positive surface charge, especially for g -g dendrimers ( , ) . it has been shown that pegylated lactoferrin-dendrimer-dna has shown significantly less toxicity and higher transfection efficacy than non-pegylated ones. interestingly, they showed that brain uptake and transfection efficacy of the lactoferrin conjugated complexes were significantly higher than the transferrin substituted enhances cell viability, rat survival and vegf marker while decreases apoptosis as compared to the polyplex-trail, polyplex-hsv-tk and pbs in glioma-bearing sd rats ( ) . however, the complex containing sv-tk with erythropoietin and nestin intron (ni ) showed that its complexation with reducible poly oligo d-arginine has significantly less cytotoxicity than pei even at hypoxic condition. furthermore, the polyplex induced significantly higher apoptosis and tumor size decrease in an intracranial glioblastoma rat model ( ) . overall, the targeting strategies might be considered as a prerequisite for non-viral vectors used for brain gene therapy. j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f gastrointestinal cancers including colorectal and gastric cancers. these nano carriers have been employed as delivery vehicles for rna silencing of oncogenes, dna delivery of tumor suppressors, apoptosis inducers, suicide genes or immune-stimulatory molecules. colorectal cancer is the third most deadly diagnosed cancer in the world due to its metastasis tumor-bearing nude mice ( ) . in addition to various materials used for the delivery of nucleic acids for colorectal carcinoma, electrotransfection is a promising route for facilitated delivery of genes into the target cells. gastric cancer is the second most malignant cancer worldwide with the poor five-year survival of % ( ) . a range of nanoparticulate systems have been investigated for efficient and safe delivery of genes to gastric cancer models. for example, calcium phosphate nps (cpnps) were used to deliver a novel fusion suicide gene, ycdglytk, which is regulated by a cancer-specific cea promoter and a cmv enhancer (cv) ( ) ( ) ( ) . it was observed that cpnps specifically hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) is another deadly cancer worldwide due to the late diagnosis and the impaired and insufficient treatments. therefore, it is necessary to develop the carriers with enhanced targeted specificity, improved efficiency and safety ( , ) . its promoter is associated with the risk of several cancers including hcc. it can also be a predictive factor for poor hcc prognosis. in vivo efforts to re-express rassf a has shown the arrest of hcc growth as well as the improved sensitivity of hcc cells to mitomycin ( ) . plasmid dna was used as a reporter gene. the average hydrodynamic size and zeta potential of the carrier system at c/p ratio of were ± nm and + ± . mv, respectively. the nanovehicle was intratumorally injected to subcutaneous huh- xenografts in athymic nude mice. it was suggested that biodegradable nps would also be appropriate for systemic or transarterial delivery due to its small size which preferentially localized in tumor through epr effect ( ) . in another effort for hcc gene therapy, a multifunctional np targeted for hcc was designed to deliver trail gene in mice ( ) . these self-assembled lipid-bilayer structures (lcpp nps) are composed of the calcium phosphate (cap) and protamine core, which act as a ph stimuliresponsive and trail nuclear localization agent, respectively. moreover, the ca ions released from cap reverse the trail resistance. hcc-targeting peptide (sp ) was also used for for hepatocellular carcinoma treatment. the results showed that the treatment of the cells with such system combined with ultrasound irradiation increased the mir- expression level by fold in human hcc xenografts ( ) . hence, these methods have shown potential for further studies to develop safe and efficient gene therapy approaches. prostate cancer is the fourth most common cancer and the second most extensive cancer in males leading to the mortality of around , individuals per year. almost , new patients have been diagnosed per annum. the late diagnosis of prostate cancer is the primary cause of death ( , ) . based on the stage and severity of the tumor, different treatments can be suggested to the patient including prostatectomy, radiotherapy, hormone therapy, chemotherapy, gene therapy, and a combination of them. the most recent procedure is gene therapy that mainly initiated via transferring a new gene to achieve destruction or fixation of cancerous cells ( ) ( ) ( ) . transferrin and lactoferrin are two iron-binding proteins that widely used as targeting ligands for prostate cancers ( , ) . another promising approach for prostate targeting is using the integrins that can be attached to the extracellular matrix of prostate cancer j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f microenvironment. integrin receptors are supposed to be over-expressed on prostate cancer cells ( , ) . prostate-specific membrane antigen (psma), integrins, and prostate stem cell antigen (psca) are the glycoprotein which could be targeted by various ligands ( , ) . the most common treatment of cancers is chemotherapy while having various challenges and side effects including the lack of selectivity to the cancer cells and toxicity to the healthy cells ( ) . different approaches such as gene therapy and combination therapy have been suggested to circumvent these limitations ( , , ) . combination therapy may decrease the toxicity of each agent by reducing the individual drug-related dose. in this field, co-delivery of drug and gene-based nps have attracted more attention ( , ) . co-delivery of doxorubicin and sirna against p-glycoprotein. it has been observed that the emerged synergistic effect is even more efficient than co-treatment of chemotherapeutics and sirna ( , , , ) . only in these systems, cas protein is an essential compartment for dna interference. generally, this system contains a nuclease protein (cas ) and a guide rna (grna) ( ) . since, the grna could be replaced by sgrna (synthetic chimeric single guide rna), the cas protein could be directed to the target site using sgrna which consequently leads to the induction of double-stranded dna breaks (dsbs). finally, the major pathways of repair mechanism in the cells are responsible for inducing the alterations. this simple, robust, userfriendly, specific, and efficient system has enabled researchers to create models for various diseases as well the novel therapeutic approaches ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . generally, there are three different approaches for crispr/cas delivery ( ) . the ultimate goal is to transfer the whole system into the cells. however, the ribonucleoprotein complex could since the difficulties for efficient delivery of cas protein reduces the transfection efficiency of sgrna and cas protein, the alternative strategy is to use the cas mrna with sgrna. for efficient delivery of cas protein and sgrna, the delivery platform must be able to transfer a large positively charged protein (cas ) and a negatively charged nucleic acid (sgrna) together. designing such delivery systems is not simple. the second approach includes the delivery of two mrna molecules with similar biophysical properties that facilitates the design of delivery systems. besides, the introduction of cas mrna into cells does not need to be entered into the cell nucleus for subsequent transcription. therefore, the main advantage for this approach is the quick onset of action. the transient expression of cas mrna in the cytosol along with the quick onset of cas action make this approach an attractive way for the researchers to reduce the off-target effects associated with the long time presence of cas protein inside the cells. however, the low stability of mrna is the major hampering factor for this delivery method. various non-viral delivery strategies have been employed to transfer cas mrna with the sgrna together including zwitterionic aminolipid nps ( - ) and branched-tail lipid nps. since there are several problems for efficient delivery of cas protein, cas mrna and sgrna, the third method have been introduced which includes the design of a plasmid encoding cas and sgrna inside the cells. the stability of plasmid-based crispr/cas systems is really higher than protein or mrna making these systems more attractive for in vivo applications. however, there are several major obstacles reducing its clinical applications. this system could be able to cross the nuclear membrane and access the transcriptional machinery of the cells. since the transcription of the plasmids and the production of cas protein and sgrna need more time rather than the direct introduction of these macromolecules into the cells, the delay in the onset of therapeutic action is expected. in addition, the off-target effects associated with the long-term production of cas protein is more probable rather than the previous methods. also, the risk of the integration of plasmid into the genomic materials may reduce their potential for in recent decades, various oligonucleotide-based therapeutics have been introduced for human clinical applications. this novel category of therapeutic materials includes antisense oligonucleotides and aptamers as well as sirna-based medications. the clinical applications of these new drugs are the result of breakthrough discoveries in molecular biology. however, the translation of these achievements to the clinical applications is substantially dependent on the development of efficient and safe delivery systems. an optimized delivery system for nucleic acids should be able to form a stable structure outside the cells and release the payloads at the specific site of action. in addition, the toxicity of the delivery vehicle must be tolerable by the human cells. the biophysical properties and the pharmacokinetic characteristics of the vehicles are the other significant points which determine the potential of delivery system for human applications. in order to improve these properties, stealth technology using various materials such as peg and targeting strategies have been introduced. using these approaches, the biophysical characteristics of the carriers could be modified and their pharmacokinetic properties might be improved. generally, polymer and dendrimer-based delivery systems have shown higher transfection efficiency ( , , ) . however, their toxicity is the major concern for the further developments towards the clinical applications. for these carrier systems, the main j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f modification strategy is focused on the reduction of cytotoxicity through the modulation of cationic charge or designs the biodegradable polycationic compounds. in addition, these materials suffer from the low targetability for the specific cells or tissues ( ). therefore, the addition of targeting moieties on these materials could be considered as an effective way to improve their properties. these materials are appropriate delivery systems for the formation of complexes based on the electrostatic interaction between the nucleic acid and carrier. on the other hand, lipid-based carriers have demonstrated higher biocompatibility rather than the polymeric delivery systems ( , ). these delivery systems have shown great potential for clinical applications due to their low toxicity. however, the transfection efficiency of such materials is generally lower than the polymeric compounds. therefore, the major approaches to improve the properties of these vehicles are focused on the augmentation of their transfection efficiency. similar to the polymeric delivery systems, lipid-based materials need the targeting moieties for efficient transfer of nucleic acid to the target cells or organs. although the toxicity of lipid-based delivery systems is lower than the polycationic polymers or dendrimers, they may induce inflammatory responses following systemic administration. the translation of these materials for commercial application needs a scalable production process which leads to the commercial products with highest batch-to-batch uniformity. the most recent clinical trial on the application of mrna as a potential vaccine for sars-cov- has been conducted by lnps which shows the importance of this category of delivery system for human application ( prospects and problems of gene therapy: an update recombinant adeno-associated virus-mediated alpha- antitrypsin gene therapy prevents type i diabetes in nod mice therapeutic and biological activities of berberine: the involvement of nrf signaling pathway comparison of the effectiveness of polyethylenimine, polyamidoamine and chitosan in transferring plasmid encoding interleukin- gene into hepatocytes gene therapy clinical trials worldwide to : an update progress and problems with the use of viral vectors for gene therapy a tragic setback after glybera's withdrawal, what's next for gene therapy? accumulation of sub single-stranded dna-packaged polyplex micelle as adeno-associated-virus-inspired compact vector to systemically target stroma-rich pancreatic cancer virus treatment questioned after gene therapy death polymer systems for gene delivery-past, present, and future. progress in polymer science cationic polymer based gene delivery systems design and development of polymers for gene delivery evaluation of cellular uptake and gene transfer efficiency of pegylated poly-l-lysine compacted dna: implications for cancer gene therapy regulatory sequences of the h gene in dna based therapy of bladder cancer current issues of rnai therapeutics delivery and development treatment of disseminated ovarian cancer using nonv k - v mannose polyethylenimine conjugates for targeted dna delivery into dendritic cells the first targeted delivery of sirna in humans via a self-assembling, cyclodextrin polymer-based nanoparticle: from concept to clinic shedding light on gene therapy: carbon dots for the minimally invasive image-guided delivery of plasmids and noncoding rnas-a review preparation, characterization and transfection efficiency of cationic pegylated pla nanoparticles as gene delivery systems conjugation of poly (amidoamine) dendrimers with various plant virus nanoparticles: novel and robust nanocarriers for drug delivery and imaging cancer gene therapy using plasmid dna: purification of dna for human clinical trials advances in non-viral dna vectors for gene therapy preparation, characterization, and transfection efficiency of low molecular weight polyethylenimine-based nanoparticles for delivery of the plasmid encoding cd gene modified polyethylenimine: self assemble nanoparticle forming polymer for pdna delivery plasmid dna delivery into hepatocytes using a multifunctional nanocarrier based on sugar-conjugated polyethylenimine systemic therapeutic gene delivery for cancer: crafting paris' arrow new amphipatic polymer-lipid conjugates forming longcirculating reticuloendothelial system-evading liposomes evaluation of circulation profiles of liposomes coated with hydrophilic polymers having different molecular weights in rats phosphatidyl polyglycerols prolong liposome circulation in vivo sheddable coatings for long-circulating nanoparticles plasmid dna delivery using l-thyroxine-conjugated polyethylenimine nanocarriers tetraiodothyroacetic acid-conjugated polyethylenimine for integrin receptor mediated delivery of the plasmid encoding il- gene double domain polyethylenimine-based nanoparticles for integrin receptor mediated delivery of plasmid dna polyplex evolution: understanding biology, optimizing performance absence of na+, k (+)-atpase regulation of endosomal acidification in k erythroleukemia cells polyethylenimine: a versatile, multifunctional non-viral vector for nucleic acid delivery nanoparticles of compacted dna transfect postmitotic cells uptake pathways and subsequent 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sensitivity of glioma to radiotherapy boosting rnai therapy for orthotopic glioblastoma with nontoxic brain-targeting chimaeric polymersomes growth inhibition, cytokinesis failure and apoptosis of multidrug-resistant leukemia cells after treatment with p-glycoprotein inhibitory agents stability, intracellular delivery, and release of sirna from chitosan nanoparticles using different cross-linkers receptor-mediated gene delivery using pamam dendrimers conjugated with peptides recognized by mesenchymal stem cells protective effect of pegylation against poly glioblastoma u- mg tumour cells suppressed by zno folic acid-conjugated nanoparticles: an in vitro study. artificial cells, nanomedicine, and biotechnology preparation, characterization, and evaluation of the anticancer activity of artemether-loaded nanoniosomes against breast cancer improved drug delivery and therapeutic efficacy of pegylated liposomal doxorubicin by targeting anti-her peptide in murine breast tumor model targeted 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strategies for metastatic colorectal cancer therapy nanoparticle-based delivery of sidcamkl- increases microrna- and inhibits colorectal cancer tumor growth via a notch- dependent mechanism selective blockade of dcamkl- results in tumor growth arrest by a let- a microrna-dependent mechanism cell state plasticity, stem cells, emt, and the generation of intra-tumoral heterogeneity synthetic anticancer gene medicine exploits intrinsic antitumor activity of cationic vector to cure established tumors nan fang yi ke da xue xue bao novel polyethyleneimine-r -heparin nanogel for high-efficiency gene delivery in vitro and in vivo efficient inhibition of c- colon carcinoma by vsvmp gene delivered by biodegradable cationic nanogel derived from polyethyleneimine synergistic and low adverse effect cancer immunotherapy by immunogenic chemotherapy and locally expressed pd-l trap liposomal nanostructures for drug delivery in gastrointestinal cancers liposome-encapsulated plasmid dna of 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iron oxide nanoparticles (peg-g-pei-spion) as an mrivisible vector for sirna delivery in gastric cancer in vitro and in vivo current status of nanomaterial-based treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma advances in delivery vectors for gene therapy in liver cancer gene therapy approaches against cancer using in vivo and ex vivo gene transfer of interleukin- asialoglycoprotein receptor-magnetic dual targeting nanoparticles for delivery of rassf a to hepatocellular carcinoma rassf a expression inhibits the growth of hepatocellular carcinoma from qidong county a nanoparticle-based model delivery system to guide the rational design of gene delivery to the liver. . in vitro and in vivo uptake results gold nanoparticles delivered mir- for treatment of hepatocellular carcinoma advances in the application of nanotechnology in the diagnosis and treatment of gastrointestinal tumors pten and trail genes loaded zein nanoparticles as potential therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma m v αfetoprotein promoter-mediated tbid delivered by folate-pei -cyclodextrin nanopolymer vector in hepatocellular carcinoma yap inhibition restores hepatocyte differentiation in advanced hcc, leading to tumor regression highly efficient and tumorselective nanoparticles for dual-targeted immunogene therapy against cancer prostate cancer gene therapy clinical trials prostate cancer: diagnosis and clinical management history of gene therapy non-viral gene delivery methods cancer nanotechnology: the impact of passive and active targeting in the era of modern cancer biology regression of prostate tumors after intravenous administration of lactoferrin-bearing polypropylenimine dendriplexes encoding tnf-α trai k - therapeutic efficacy of intravenously administered transferrin-conjugated dendriplexes on prostate carcinomas integrins and prostate cancer metastases tumor targeting via integrin ligands novel strategies for targeting prostate cancer targeted nonviral gene therapy in prostate cancer preparation of nanobubbles carrying androgen receptor sirna and their inhibitory effects on androgen-independent prostate cancer when combined with ultrasonic irradiation interleukin- gene delivery for modifying malignant interactions between prostate tumor and bone dna/lipid complex incorporated with fibronectin to cell adhesion enhances transfection efficiency in prostate cancer cells and xenografts autophagy modulators: mechanistic aspects and drug delivery systems which one performs better for targeted lung cancer combination therapy: pre-or postbombesin-decorated nanostructured lipid carriers? drug delivery near-infrared/ph dual-responsive nanocomplexes for targeted imaging and chemo/gene/photothermal tri-therapies of non-small cell lung cancer nanotechnological strategies for osteoarthritis diagnosis, monitoring, clinical management, and regenerative medicine: recent advances and future opportunities memory of viral infections by crispr-cas adaptive immune systems: acquisition of new information rna-guided genetic silencing systems in bacteria and archaea emt signaling: potential contribution of crispr/cas gene editing multiplexed crispr technologies for gene editing and transcriptional regulation efficient genome editing in zebrafish using a crispr-cas system exploiting crispr-cas nucleases to produce sequence-specific antimicrobials correction of a genetic disease by crispr-cas -mediated gene editing in mouse spermatogonial stem cells targeted genome engineering in human cells with the cas rna-guided endonuclease harnessing nanoparticles for the efficient delivery of the crispr/cas system direct cytosolic delivery of crispr/cas -ribonucleoprotein for efficient gene editing cytosolic delivery of crispr/cas ribonucleoproteins for genome editing using chitosan-coated red fluorescent protein gene disruption by cellpenetrating peptide-mediated delivery of cas protein and guide rna a ph-responsive silica-metalorganic framework hybrid nanoparticle for the delivery of hydrophilic drugs, nucleic acids, and crispr-cas genome-editing machineries a biodegradable nanocapsule delivers a cas ribonucleoprotein complex for in vivo genome editing the authors would like to thank dr. horacio cabral (department of materials engineering, the university of tokyo) for his constructive comments. key: cord- -tq n mx authors: smith, kevin r title: gene transfer in higher animals: theoretical considerations and key concepts date: - - journal: j biotechnol doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tq n mx gene transfer technology provides the ability to genetically manipulate the cells of higher animals. gene transfer permits both germline and somatic alterations. such genetic manipulation is the basis for animal transgenesis goals and gene therapy attempts. improvements in gene transfer are required in terms of transgene design to permit gene targeting, and in terms of transfection approaches to allow improved transgene uptake efficiencies. during the s it became possible to introduce exogenous dna constructs into higher eukaryotic cells in vitro. mammalian (germline) transgenesis was first achieved in the early s, mice being the subject species. transgenic members of a wide range of animal (and plant) classes and species have now been produced, including amphibians, cattle, chickens, fish, insects, nematodes, pigs, rabbits, and sea urchins. gene transfer methods have been used in gene therapy attempts on humans since . gene therapy approaches have so far focused primarily on monogenic disorders and cancers. to date, limited clinical success has been achieved. how-ever, gene therapy is in its infancy and holds great promise for the future. as indicated above, gene transfer methods may be used to generate transgenic animals. such animals may in principle be utilised in either of two broad ways: (a) as models for fundamental or applied scientific study; and (b) as novel sources of pharmaceutical agents, or human-compatible organs for xenotransplantation. gene transfer in higher eukaryotes may in principle be applied directly for therapeutic purpose to humans in either of two broad ways: (a) somatic gene therapy, the genetic manipulation of a subset of cells in the body; and (b) germline gene therapy, involving an alteration of genetic information in germ cells. germline gene therapy has never (yet) been attempted with humans (unless one includes the transfer of foreign mitochondria during fertilisation), and is fraught with major ethical concerns, thus there is a dearth of scientific literature available on the subject. to achieve germline alterations, transgenesis must occur at an early stage of development. by contrast, somatic cell alterations, as in somatic gene therapy, involve a very wide range of cell types. various somatic cell types are mentioned at appropriate points throughout this paper. the present section reviews the cell types that may be used for germline transgenesis. genetic manipulation of a newly fertilised, single-cell egg (zygote) should in principle result in the development of an organism in which all or very many cells contain the (identical) alteration. hence, the zygote has been the main focus for transgenic engineering. (in keeping with common usage, in this paper the term 'egg' is applied to all developmental stages from oocyte to unhatched blastocyst.) pre-fertilisation eggs may in principle be suitable targets for transgenesis. however, fundamental practical problems have so far precluded their use. eggs collected following ovulation would have to be fertilised after transgenic manipulation. this would entail the use of in vitro fertilisation. potentially-transgenic eggs would thus have to endure a further, extensive ex vivo procedure. since this could only be detrimental to the eggs, it is difficult to see any role for transgenesis directed at this level rather than at the zygote. speculatively, en masse transgenic manipulation of pre-ovulatory oocytes in vivo could in principle be attempted. the resultant 'proto-transgenic' organism would be expected, upon each subsequent ovulation, to produce transgenically altered eggs ready for fertilisation. however, the relevant technology has not yet been sufficiently developed to support this type of in vivo approach, and no transgenic animals are reported to have been generated in this way. eggs that have undergone cleavage are less than ideal for transgenesis. where only one cell is transgenically altered, the resulting organism is likely to take the form of a genetic mosaic. such an organism would consist of: (a) cells harbouring the transgene; and (b) cells without the transgene. indeed, the more rounds of cleavage there have been prior to transgenesis, the lower the probable proportion of altered cells in the transgenic. manipulating more than one cell in an egg is technically very difficult. more crucially, each manipulated cell would not contain an identical alteration, for reasons to be explored later. thus, although comprising only altered cells, the resultant organism would again be a mosaic (jaenisch, ; whitelaw et al., ; wilkie et al., ) . mosaicism need not always be a problem. mosaic transgenics may produce gametes that contain the transgene, allowing the subsequent generation(s) to be fully transgenic. however, mosaic transgenics do not always contain genetically altered germline cells. of those transgenics that do, not all of the germline cells will necessarily be altered. thus the use of post-zygotic eggs would result in a lower ultimate efficiency of transgenesis in comparison with zygote-stage eggs. a major limitation associated with eggs is that the targeting of transgenes to chosen genomic loci is not a practical proposition, due to the inability to select for eggs that contain rare targeted integration outcomes. although gene targeting has been reported following gene transfer to eggs, the rate of targeting (versus random integration) is too low for practical purposes (brinster et al., ) . however, many transgenic experiments do not require gene targeting (rulicke and hubscher, ) . randomly integrated transgenes have been used in a variety of approaches. examples include controlled trangene expression via administration of an extrinsic agent (kistner et al., ) , ablation of hormone-producing tissues by expression of a toxin-producing transgene (wallace et al., ) and production of human blood clotting factor viii in the milk of transgenic sheep (niemann et al., ) . inner cell mass (icm) cells from the mouse blastocyst can be propagated in vitro as embryonic stem (es) cells (reviewed by torres, ) . in contrast to other cultured cell lines, es cells retain their normal karyotype even after several weeks in culture, during which time they remain totipotent. furthermore, es cells are capable of colonising the embryo. these unique properties allow es cells to form chimeras when injected into blastocysts or aggregated with morulae. the resultant embryos are transferred to the uterus of a pseudopregnant female mouse, where approximately % should develop successfully to term. approximately % of the resultant offspring should be chimeric. the es cell contribution to a mouse can be as high as % of the cells, and will often include the germline cells. it is during the in vitro culture stage that es cells may be transgenically manipulated (pirity et al., ) . the great advantage of es cells is that they can be subjected to a range of selective agents in vitro, which allows the selection of particular transgenic modifications. this ability makes es cells extremely useful for gene targeting experiments and applications. es cell technology has enabled a large range of transgenic approaches in the mouse. types of gene modifications presently available in the mouse include targeted elimination of endogenous gene expression (gene 'knockout'), targeted gene repair/ replacement, conditional gene targeting and 'gene trap' reporter systems (for relevant reviews see demayo and tsai, ; stanford et al., ; gao et al., ; jasin et al., ; ledermann, ; lewandoski, ; metzger and feil, ; muller, ) . the use of es cells is limited due to the fact that, to date, the mouse is the only animal from which es cell lines have been unequivocally established. it would be surprising if this limitation represents a fundamental biological barrier. however, further empirical work is needed before true es cell lines become available for other species. it is possible that the inbred strains of mice used to generate es cells may carry mutations that are essential for the generation of es cells. if such mutations represent a precondition for es cell derivation, then it may take a considerable amount of time to establish nonmurine es cell lines. nevertheless, major progress has recently, been made in the analysis of molecular pathways of icm and trophoblast differentiation in mammals (niwa, ; rossant, ) . such progress is expected to have a positive impact on nonmurine es cell establishment. when nonmurine es cells become available, the established mouse technologies will provide the basis for in vitro genetic modification of all species. building upon fundamental research into cell cycle co-ordination, wilmut et al. ( ) , schnieke et al. ( ) and campbell et al. ( ) have reported the successful transfer of 'reprogrammed' ovine donor nuclei. unfertilised, metaphase-stage enucleated ('universal recipient') eggs received the transferred nuclei. nuclei were taken from somatic cells that had been forced into a form of cell cycle stasis (by incubating the cells in a minimal nutrient medium), such that dna replication and gene expression were halted (or virtually so). the transfer of 'static' donor nuclei to 'universal recipient' eggs resulted (in some cases) in successful embryo development, the donor nuclei having been 'reprogrammed' into totipotency. offspring were produced following the transfer of such 'reconstructed' embryos to recipient ewes. subsequent molecular genetic testing showed that the lambs' dna had originated from the donor cells. in some of the experiments, the donor nuclei were obtained from (ovine) embryo-derived cultured cell lines. following these ground-breaking experiments, successful cloning from cultured cells of various animals including cattle, goats and pigs has been reported (see reviews by tsunoda and kato, ; wolf et al., ) . the prospects for germline transgenesis via nuclear transfer (nt) are very significant: transgenes can be introduced to donor cells in vitro, permitting the production of genetically modified animals by nt . moreover, because selection can be applied to cultured donor cells, nt can be used to produce gene-targeted transgenic animals (reviewed by clark et al., ) . the generation of the first gene-targeted sheep by mccreath et al. ( ) provides a useful illustration. in this approach, fetal fibroblasts were transfected with a therapeutic transgene carried by liposomes (see section . . ). key parts of the transgene construct included (a) sequences homologous to the ovine a (i) procollagen locus and (b) a promoterless neomycin selectable marker. these transgene features were employed such that (a) homologous recombination (hr) between transgene and target would result in targeted transgene integration, and (b) targeted integration would confer g resistance by bringing the neomycin gene into proximity with the endogenous promoter. g -resistant fibroblasts were cultured in reduced serum medium prior to the transfer of their nuclei into recipient (enucleated) oocytes. from reconstructed embryos, fetuses were produced, from which live-born lambs resulted. of lambs and fetuses analysed, showed the presence of the transgene at the target locus. similarly, lai et al. ( ) have recently reported successful nt gene targeting in pigs. the target was the alpha- , -galactosyltransferase locus in porcine fetal fibroblasts. following in vitro selection, reconstructed embryos were created, which in turn gave rise to live-born piglets. of these, piglets contained transgene dna at the target locus, such that in each case one allele of the alpha- , -galactosyltransferase gene was knockedout. thus, nt is potentially able to provide the same range of transgenic manipulations presently available in mice (via the es cell route) to all animal species. however, in comparison with es cell transgenesis, nt has thus far proved to be relatively inefficient: only a small proportion of reconstructed embryos survive to become live animals. for example, in the foregoing cases, live targeted sheep were produced at an efficiency of . % (mccreath et al., ) , and pigs at . % (lai et al., ) . the health status of nt-derived animals is also proving to be problematic (reviewed by smith et al., ; renard et al., ) . developmental abnormalities are very common, and frequently result in death (fetal or postnatal) or debility. for example, of the live-born lambs described above (mccreath et al., ) , seven died within h of birth, and four died within weeks. similarly, out of the piglets described above (lai et al., ) , piglets died shortly after birth, and one died at days; only one appeared to be entirely free of developmental abnormalities. transgenesis and gene targeting are not of themselves implicated: the health problems are associated with nt per se. during the in vitro (cell culture) stage, the pattern of chromosomal imprinting may change; there are indications that inappropriate expression of imprinted genes following such epigenetic alteration may be mainly responsible for the poor health of nt-derived animals (kono, ; rideout et al., ; wakayama and yanagimachi, ) . research into epigenetic reprogramming in nt embryos is in progress, and it is to be hoped that developmental abnormalities arising from nt will eventually be eliminated or reduced in frequency. meanwhile, it is anticipated that nt-related health problems, to the extent that the basis for such is epigenetic, are unlikely to affect the offspring of surviving first generation animals. as should become clear later, one of the major technical drawbacks of germline transgenesis is the difficulty of physically introducing exogenous dna (the transgene) to the zygote. given that the natural role of sperm cells is to deliver dna to the egg, an intriguing approach would be to induce sperm cells to carry transgenes. a number of groups have claimed varying degrees of success in this regard. however, others have had difficulty replicating such work, and there are as yet no clear answers to the questions: (a) is it possible; and (b) if so, how? (reviewed by smith, ). an alternative possibility could be to introduce the transgene into testicular (sperm) stem cells in vivo. this would in principle remove the need to collect, manipulate or transfer eggs, thus providing a major streamlining of germline transgenesis. preliminary results have been reported in mice, where transgene constructs were directly injected into the testis. for example, Á/ % of sperm were reported to carry the transgene following injection of naked dna into the vas deferens (huguet and esponda, ) , with a follow-up report claiming detection of the transgene in the cells of . % of offspring animals produced following fertilisation with the transgene-bearing sperm (huguet and esponda, ) . similar results were reported by sato et al., using lipidassociated transgene molecules injected through the testicular capsule (sato et al., ) . this section reviews several methods that may be used for getting exogenous dna into recipient cells. the most widely used/widely applicable methods */retroviral transfer and microinjection */are considered first. some fundamentals of transgene design are also considered, because most work in this regard has probably been carried out (and has the widest scope) with microinjection, at least as far as germline modifications are concerned. however, such fundamentals of transgene design also apply to other delivery methods, as should become clear in later sections of this paper. other delivery methods */ i.e. those currently under development or less widely applicable */are considered also. retroviruses are found in many species including most mammals (reviewed by lazo and tsichlis, ) . retroviruses have rna as their genetic material. following infection, the rna is transcribed by the virus-encoded enzyme reverse transcriptase. the resultant single-stranded dna is replicated as double-stranded dna (dsdna). the dsdna viral genome has the important property of being able to linearly integrate (as a provirus) into the chromosomal dna of the host cell. the site of integration appears to be essentially random. the genome of retroviruses can be manipulated to carry exogenous dna. eggs may be incubated in media containing high concentrations of the resultant retroviral vector. alternatively, retroviral vector-producing cell monolayers may be used, upon which eggs are co-cultivated. in either case, between and % of (surviving) embryos will be infected. following egg transfer into pseudopregnant females, the infected embryos should give rise to transgenic offspring. molecular genetic analysis of transgenics produced in this way usually show integration of a single proviral copy into a given chromosomal site. rearrangements of the host genome are normally restricted to short direct repeats at the site of integration. in many embryos the germline cells contain viral integrants: thus, transmission of the transgene to the next generation will often occur. methods have also been developed to allow infection into postimplantation embryos. virus uptake is effective for many somatic cell lines, however germline cells are infected at low frequency, due to a high level of mosaicism (braas et al., ; morgan and french anderson, ) . infection into highly developed tissues, such as those of foetuses, juveniles or adults, is also a possibility (reviewed by hu and pathak, ) . this holds great promise in the context of somatic gene therapy. retroviral vectors have also been used to introduce transgenes into the es cell genome (for example, see robertson et al., ) . the major advantages of retroviral vectors are: (a) is the ease of introducing the transgene (the virus is naturally equipped to carry exogenous genetic material into cells and to integrate it into the cells' endogenous dna); and (b) the unitary form of integration (one intact copy per genome of transgene-positive cells is the norm). however, retroviral vectors are limited or problematic in a number of respects, as discussed in the following sections. because the size of the viral dna Á/protein complex precludes it from passing through the nuclear pores, the host cell must be in mitosis for integration to occur (miller et al., ) . thus only actively dividing cells are infectable by retroviral vectors. this means that: (a) retrovirus-based gene therapies would not be applicable to many cell/ tissue/organ types in the adult (e.g. brain tissue); and (b) eggs need to be at the eight-cell stage (at least) before infection can begin: this leads to problems of mosaicism. retroviral vectors are somewhat limited in respect of the length of transgene sequence it is possible for them to carry. the upward length of transgene sequence is Á/ kb (for example see hu and pathak, ) . retroviral vectors integrate into the host dna in a largely random fashion. thus the chromosomal location of the provirus/transgene varies between individual transgenics created with an identical retroviral vector construct. each particular chromosomal environment is likely to have a particular effect on the transcription of the transgene. the result is inconsistency and irreproducibility of expression (for example see jahner and jaenisch, ) . transgene expression in the provirus is driven by the viral ? long direct terminal repeat. hence, it is problematic to engineer into the construct the ability for it to be controlled (a) in a tissue-specific manner or (b) by external (experimenter) influence (for example see hoatlin et al., ; pannell and ellis, ) . using integration-deficient retroviral vectors, ellis and bernstein ( ) were able to target genomic loci such that vector sequences homologously recombined with endogenous sequences. however, the frequency of targeting was very low (:/ targeted event per )/ infected cells). given the essentially random (nonhomologous) mode of integration of natural retroviruses, retroviral vectors do not appear to hold much promise for applications in which gene targeting is required. . . . instability/safety concerns it is possible for integrated retroviral dna to be spontaneously reactivated (weiss et al., ) , leading to the production of new integration within the dna of the cell, to new infection of other cells or to infection of other individual animals. such instability again may result in transgene expression problems and safety concerns (reviewed by temin, ; cornetta et al., ; gunter et al., ) . however, retroviral vectors may be engineered such that they lack the genetic sequences required for a normal life cycle (reviewed by vile et al., ) . the creation of such 'defective' retroviral vectors goes a long way towards curing instability-related expression and safety problems. however, the risk of reactivation can probably never be completely eliminated, because complementation by a competent 'helper' retrovirus cannot be ruled out. in a controlled laboratory environment this may well represent only a minor concern. however, for transgenically altered organisms entering the outside environment (e.g. transgenic dairy cattle bioreactors, or humans treated with gene therapy), the risk may be more acute. in addition to the risks of releasing infectious agents into the general environment, there are concerns for patients who have been treated with retroviral vector-based gene therapeutic agents. in such cases, retroviral reactivation could conceivably lead to oncogenesis. thus there are serious safety concerns over the use of retroviral vectors. such risks are generally difficult to qualify. whatever the actual risk may turn out to be, in the absence of certainty most regulatory bodies have tended to be fairly restrictive with regard to what they will allow in respect of retroviral vector usage (for example, see kessler, ) . in fact, a wide range of safety issues surrounds the use of retroviruses as agents of exogenous gene delivery. the following list summarises the main areas of concern. . integration problems: accidental integration into or near to an endogenous gene could lead to insertional mutagenesis/oncogene activation (although this is not unique to the retroviral method of gene delivery). . pathogenesis: immunocompromised patients may be at risk from infection: such infection could result in direct damage or oncogenesis. . pathogen contamination: if the packaging cells become infected */especially with another virus */this agent is likely to contaminate the retroviral product. . pseudotyping: surface/structural changes to the virus may occur due to packaging cell viralbased sequences: this may result in altered/ expanded host cell range (paradoxically, this may be useful if harnessed correctly, in some possible applications */see review by dornburg, ) . . complementation: as alluded to previously, complementation by a competent 'helper' retrovirus cannot be completely ruled out. this may occur in vitro or in vivo. despite the limitations and safety concerns referred to above, retroviral-mediated gene therapy has already been used in a number of gene therapy attempts, and appears to hold a good deal of promise in this regard. however, although retroviral-mediated gene therapy has been used successfully for (nonhuman) germline modifications, the most used */and to date the most useful */method for germline transgenesis is microinjection, reviewed in the following section. jon gordon in demonstrated that exogenous dna could be introduced into the genome simply by the physical injection of a solution of cloned dna into the zygote (gordon et al., ) . subsequently, microinjection has become the most widely used method of germline transgenesis. the technique is most established with mice, however microinjection is also carried out fairly commonly with other animals including rats, rabbits, farmyard animals and fish. a finely drawn out glass micropipette, loaded with dna solution, is used for the injection. under the microscope, with the aid of micromanipulators the egg is held fast and penetrated with the micropipette. the micropipette is guided through the cytoplasm towards one of the egg's pronuclei. once the tip of the micropipette has entered the pronucleus, around Á/ pl of dna solution is injected, bringing typically dna molecules into the pronucleus. some eggs lyse following microinjection, probably due to the physical trauma of being penetrated by the micropipette. surviving eggs are transferred to the uterus of a pseudopregnant mother. following gestation, between and % of the resulting offspring are likely to be transgenic (hogan et al., ) . in this method of transgenesis, the transgene dna integrates into the endogenous dna. integration is random and usually occurs at only one chromosomal site in each transgenic. the number of copies of the transgene at an integration site may range from one to thousands. for multiple copy inserts, the most common arrangement is an array of molecules joined head-to-tail (reviewed by gordon and ruddle, ) . less usually, tail-totail and head-to-head arrangements occur. deletions, duplications and other rearrangements may occur at the junctions between chromosomal and transgenic dna sequences (reviewed by bishop, ) . only a limited amount is known about the mechanisms of transgene integration. it has become apparent that the majority (:/ %) of pronuclear microinjection-derived transgenic founders are mosaics of transgenic and nontransgenic cells (whitelaw et al., ) . this surprising finding may be explained by postulating that (endogenous) dna replication is required for chromosomal integration. if transgene integration occurs during dna replication, only one of the two resulting cells will contain transgene sequences. during embryogenesis, a small number of cells (]/ for mice) are recruited as embryo progenitors. thus, the resulting animal will most frequently comprise a mixture of transgene-harbouring and transgene-free cells. in approximately Á/ % of mosaic founders, the foreign dna apparently integrates at later stages of the embryo cell replication, resulting in mice that contain the transgene in varyingly small proportions of their cells. as with other mosaics, transmission of the transgene is dependent upon the existence and extent of germline colonisation by transgene-containing cells. in the vast majority of cases where transmission occurs (whether from fully transgenic founders, from mosaic founders or from subsequent generations of transgenics), the transgene is inherited in a stable mendelian fashion, although exceptions have been found (for example, see palmiter et al., ) . due to the hemizygous nature of transgene insertion, even a nonmosaic founder will transmit its transgene to only (on average) % of its offspring. there is no particular restriction on the size of dna molecule used for microinjection. yeast artificial chromosome (yac) based transgene constructs consisting of / kb of dna have been successfully introduced into the mouse germline by pronuclear microinjection (reviewed by lamb and gearhart, ) . indeed, it may become possible (pending development of the necessary transgene constructs) to microinject autonomous artificial 'mini-chromosomes' (mammalian artificial chromosomes, or macs), complete with centromeres, telomeres and replication origins in addition to structural genes, promoters and enhancers. these specialized constructs would be expected to give a number of benefits compared with integrated transgenes, the most important of which would probably be the absence of chromosomal position effects on transgenic expression (reviewed by sgaramella and eridani, ) . because there are no special problems with microinjecting large transgene constructs, it is possible to incorporate structural gene-plus-promoter (plus other potentially useful sequences such as enhancers) combinations into the host genome. the main areas of application for microinjected geneplus-promoter combinations (i.e. current transgene designs) are reviewed in the following sections. as noted previously, some of the fundamentals of transgene design also apply to other methods of transgene delivery, as should become clear in later sections of this paper. 'housekeeping gene' promoters, such as the bactin promoter (beddington et al., ) and the histone h promoter (choi et al., ) , can be fused with chosen structural genes. the 'housekeeping gene' promoters in such genetic constructs generally drive a fairly high level of constant transcription in most cell types and developmental stages when these constructs are integrated as transgenes. beyond simply driving gene expression, promoters may be chosen to allow specificity in, or control over, patterns of expression. a transgene comprising a particular structural gene fused with a tissue-specific promoter should only produce its gene product in the tissue(s) specified by that promoter. in terms of germline gene therapy, this might allow treatment to be directed exclusively to the required tissues or organs. another application would be to direct expression of a novel exogenous gene to a body part where the gene product will not cause physiological havoc, and where the product could be readily recovered. indeed, pharmaceutically-useful products such as human factor ix and human alpha- -antitrypsin (haat) have already been obtained from the milk of transgenic animals. factor ix is an anti-haemophilic agent, and haat may be used for the treatment of emphysema. in the former case, the construct used comprised the factor ix structural gene fused with the ovine b-lactoglobulin promoter (clark et al., ) . the same promoter was used in the latter case, fused with the haat structural gene (simons et al., ) . if outside (i.e. experimenter) manipulation of gene expression is required, an inducible promoter may be used. inducible promoters are able to respond to specific environmental cues such as temperature, or to dietary factors such as zinc. thus the structural gene within a transgene can be switched on or off at will. for instance, a metallothionein (mt) promoter fused with a growth hormone (gh) gene (palmiter et al., ) should allow gh production to be switched on simply by providing the transgenic with a zincsupplemented diet. this might avoid the possible physiological difficulties associated with continuous global production */particularly in utero */of transgene products such as gh. potential applica-tions for inducible promoters in terms of gene therapy are conceivable. more recently, inducible systems employing prokaryotic tetracycline resistance gene components have been developed (gossen et al., ; kistner et al., ; park and rajbhandary, ; schultze et al., ; shockett et al., ) . these systems usually require two separate transgenes: thus, for use with transgenic animals (as opposed to cells in vitro) these systems usually require the establishment of two separate transgenic lines, each line containing one of the two transgenes. double heterozygotes (containing both transgenes) are obtained by mating the two lines. one transgene (transgene i) includes a promoter construct consisting of (a) an array of tet operator sequences and (b) a minimal promoter sequence; (a) and (b) are coupled to the gene that is to be controlled (gene w). the other transgene (transgene ii) comprises a hybrid transcriptional transactivator gene fused to a suitable (e.g. tissuespecific) promoter. the hybrid transactivator gene product consists of a viral transcriptionactivating domain coupled with a tetracylinebinding domain. there are two main variants of the basic system: an 'on' system and an 'off' system. these variants are based upon functionally different transactivators. in the 'on' system, in cells in which transgene ii is active, exogenously administered tetracycline (or its analogue doxycycline) binds to the transactivator protein: this renders the transactivator able to bind to the tet sequences on transgene i, thereby activating expression of gene w. by contrast, the transactivator in the 'off' system binds to the tet sequences only in the absence of tetracycline: thus, administration of tetracycline prevents expression of gene w. several other promoter-based systems for the control of transgene expression are in the developmental stage. promising areas include natural promoters inducible by aryl hydrocarbons and promoter constructs inducible by steroid hormones (fussenegger, ; saez et al., ; smith et al., ; wang et al., wang et al., , . site-specific recombination provides a novel means of controlling transgene expression (kuhn et al., ; stark et al., ; utomo et al., ) . as with the tetracycline approach (above), two separate trangenes are usually required, necessitating the mating together of separate transgenic lines to produce double heterozygotes (where transgenic animals are required). one transgene (transgene i) consists of an appropriate (e.g. tissue-specific) promoter coupled to the gene that is to be controlled (gene x), engineered to contain a strong stop signal flanked on each side by a recombinase recognition site (e.g. loxp from bacteriophage p ). the other transgene (transgene ii) consists of a recombinase gene (cre in the case of bacteriophage p ) fused to an inducible promoter. exogenous administration of inducer drives the production of cre recombinase from transgene ii. the cre recombinase binds to the loxp sites on transgene i and catalyses the excision of the flanked stop signal, thereby rendering gene x competent for expression. a variant of this system can be used to inactivate a transgene, in which gene x (or an essential component thereof) is flanked by recombinase recognition sites. in this case, recombinase production results in the removal of essential sequences, thereby eliminating expression of gene x. transgene sequences integrating randomly into the host genome tend to give poor levels of expression, or exhibit inappropriate expression, in the form of temporally or spacially (ectopic) aberrant expression. the primary reason for such problems is the 'position effect', whereby the particular genetic environment at any point of insertion is likely to influence the expression of the integrated transgene. in some cases the remedy lies with transgene design: for example by ensuring that an appropriate enhancer sequence is included in the transgene construct. beyond this, it may be possible to insulate a gene from the position effect. matrix attachment regions are sequences which, when placed on either side of a gene within a transgene construct, appear to allow the gene(s) within an integrated transgene to occupy a separate chromosomal domain. ultimately, however, the best solution to transgene expression problems would be to avoid the position effect entirely. this is achievable through gene targeting: a transgene targeted to a chosen genomic locus will by definition avoid the position effect. as discussed in section . and section . , reliable ways of germline gene targeting do exist. however, current germline gene targeting approaches rely upon the use of es cells or nt, and gene targeting is not possible at present with pronuclear microinjection, due to the inability to select for eggs that contain rare targeted integrations (see section . ). therefore, the use of germline gene targeting as a means to avoiding transgene expression problems awaits progress in es cell technology and nt technology. the above sections review ways in which gene function can be added-in by gene transfer. however, potential applications also exist for the ability to eliminate endogenous gene function in the recipient organism. for example, a dominant, gain-of-function single-gene disorder requires for its treatment the removal of the aberrant gene activity (rather than the addition of a missing activity). in animal transgenesis, the ability to eliminate specific gene function is often very desirable in the production of animal models for scientific/medical research. ideally, exogenous dna would be targeted to the precise chromosomal locus in question. integration of the transgene would cause disruption of endogenous dna sequences, resulting in nonexpression of the endogenous gene. however, as discussed above, gene targeting is not widely available and is presently incompatible with pronuclear microinjection. until gene targeting becomes readily available, alternative methods of gene function elimination may be employed. one such approach is to fuse a toxin gene (e.g. the gene for diphtheria toxin a) to a particular promoter (for examples, see palmiter et al., ; wallace et al., wallace et al., , delaney et al., ) . thus, the cell population(s) in which the promoter is active will die (or simply fail to develop) due to intracellular toxin production. an alternative approach employs a viral thymidine kinase (tk) gene as the expressing part of the transgene. gancyclovir (gcv), a toxic thymidine analogue, may be administered systemically to the transgenic animal or, in principle, to the gene therapy-treated patient. gcv is relatively nontoxic unless phosphorylated by the viral tk gene product. phosphorylated gcv is incorporated into the cellular genome during dna replication, leading to cell death. thus, dividing cells containing and expressing the transgene will be ablated. as with the 'toxin' transgenes considered above, promoter choice can determine which (transgenecontaining) cells should express the tk gene. the tk/gcv approach is very promising for gene therapy applications, particularly in respect of antitumour approaches. two properties are important in this respect: (a) the ability to 'switch on' transgene activity (only) when required, by administration of gcv; and (b) the ablation only of dividing cells. ablating entire cell populations is a rather heavy-handed way to eliminate specific functions. a more precise approach employs antisense dna (reviewed by sokol and murray, ) . this approach is feasible where the sequence of the gene to be turned off is known accurately. the antisense dna represents the sequence of the nontranscribed dna strand of the endogenous gene; the transgene construct is prepared by inverting the isolated structural gene and rejoining it with its promoter. expression of the integrated transgene results in antisense rna transcript production. the antisense rna should hybridise with the 'sense' transcripts produced by the endogenous gene (located at a separate chromosomal locus). the resulting duplexes of rna cannot be processed by the translational machinery, therefore protein production (hence, endogenous gene expression) is eliminated. beyond uses in basic research, antisense dna constructs may have potential uses in gene therapy. an anti-viral strategy represents perhaps the most promising approach. dna encoding an antisense viral rna sequence would be coupled to an appropriate promoter to form the transgene construct. once integrated into the host genome, the transgene should block viral replication by production of antisense rna. an alternative potential application for antisense constructs might be in antitumour therapy. antisense dna-based constructs do not, however, hold a great deal of promise for the treatment of dominant, gain-of-function single-gene disorders. the problem is that, unless the rna sequence and size of a disease allele transcript happens to be quite different from that of the normal allele (assuming the sufferer to be a heterozygote), the antisense rna may also act against the normal allele's transcripts. although microinjection is well established as an effective technique of transgenesis, it does have certain inherent limitations. such limitations are reviewed in the following sections. . . . . practical constraints. the most obvious drawback of microinjection is its cost. although conceptually very simple, the physical introduction of dna into egg pronuclei requires sophisticated levels of equipment and expertise. very high quality microscopes are required, together with micromanipulators, incubators, micropipette pullers, microinstrument forges, and a whole host of ancillary equipment. in terms of expertise it typically takes several years for a microinjector to be trained to a satisfactory level of competence. further, microinjection requires such a high level of concentration over the long duration of a single session that it is usually impossible for an individual microinjector to perform efficiently more than about once per week. a single murine microinjection session lasts around h. this (unbroken) period is dictated by the biological 'window' available between fertilisation and pronuclear fusion. added to the above costs is the problem of low absolute efficiency of transgenic production. for mice, a successful laboratory typically microinjects around eggs per session. from these eggs, around offspring should result, of which between and are likely to be transgenic. thus the highest overall efficiency of murine microinjection is in the region of % (hogan et al., ) . efficiencies for nonmurine mammalian species (e.g. cattle, pigs, sheep) are much lower, typically less than % (wall et al., ) . such lower efficiencies may be accounted for by the fact that more expertise exists in respect of mice, and the existence of certain biological factors that hamper microinjection of nonmurine eggs. a major limiting biological factor associated with cow, pig and sheep eggs is the difficulty of visualising their pronuclei. cow and pig eggs are optically opaque, due to the presence of extensive cytoplasmic lipid particles. sheep eggs do not have dense cytoplasmic particles, however their pronuclei remain extremely difficult to visualise. this effect seems to be due to the pronuclei and cytoplasm sharing similar refractive indexes. another difficulty concerns the size of pronuclei. murine pronuclei are relatively large entities compared with those of farm animals. thus, the micropipette must travel further into the farm animal egg compared with that of the mouse. the extra distance travelled by the micropipette causes a larger entry hole (due to the tapering section of the micropipette), thus increasing the likelihood of cell death. more difficulties with agricultural animal eggs include poorly anchored pronuclei and a lack of visible indicators of post-injection egg damage. for practical considerations concerning transgenesis by pronuclear microinjection, the reader is referred to the following excellent reviews: wall ( ) , niemann and kues ( ) , wolf et al. ( ) . gene therapy via pronuclear microinjection has not been attempted with humans. current knowledge of human gametes lends support to the idea that, for microinjection purposes, the human egg would probably be more akin to an agricultural animal egg than to the mouse egg. . . . . fundamental constraints. more basic than issues of cost and efficiency are limitations associated with the mode of transgene integration into the chromosome. the problem is that the whole process is, as mentioned previously, entirely random. there is no way of predicting or controlling major aspects of transgene integration such as copy number, copy orientation, endogenous sequence rearrangement nor, most importantly, chromosomal site of insertion (reviewed by jaenisch, ) . as mentioned previously (in the context of retroviral vectors), each chromosomal locus im-parts a particular position effect on the transgene. thus, random integration may result in transcriptional failure in some transgenics, and always requires that each founder transgenic be treated as unique. another problem arising from random integration is that the exogenous dna can disrupt and therefore inactivate an endogenous gene (doerfler et al., ) . such new mutations are thought to occur in a small but significant number of transgenics. in terms of applying transgenesis to particular purposes, it is not possible to deliberately introduce a nul mutation in zygotes using microinjection. nor, therefore, is it currently possible to replace a particular gene function with a new function. the same applies to attempts to subtly alter (rather than switch-off) endogenous gene activity. however, one speculative possibility might be to co-inject a recombinase enzyme (or gene) along with the transgene, in order to increase the frequency of hr, thus increasing the frequency of gene targeting. however, although several candidate enzymes/genes for enhancing hr have been described, the use of these in gene targeting is at an early experimental stage (vasquez et al., ) . finally, it should be noted that microinjection can be applied to many types of cells in addition to zygotes. es cells fall into this category. for es cells used in transgenesis, exogenous dna must enter the cells somehow, and microinjection into the es cell's nucleus is an effective option (see for example zimmer and gruss, ) . the drawback is that microinjection does not allow es cells to be treated en masse. somatic cells, whether in culture, temporarily removed from the body or, in principle, in situ in the body, may also receive exogenous dna via microinjection (reviewed by celis, ) . as for es cells, the drawback is the inability to treat cells en masse, together with enormous practical difficulties surrounding any attempt at in situ microinjection. (i.e. the huge numbers of cells likely to need microinjection and the difficulty of locating, visualising and manipulating such cells.) thus, microinjection is fundamentally unsuitable for in vivo somatic cell gene therapy. somatic gene therapy via microinjection remains a possibility where ex vivo cells are involved. microinjecting a relatively small number of ex vivo stem cells might, following their return to the body, allow the stem cells to recolonise and hence, amplify the number of treated cells. alternatively, but more speculatively, somatic cells from foetal tissues could be microinjected prior to in vitro culturing; the treated cells would thus be amplified in culture, such that an adequate number could be (heterologously) transplanted to the patient. lastly, cells in culture may be microinjected simply in order to study the mechanisms of transgene integration. retroviral infection and, especially, microinjection have become the main methods of gene transfer in higher animals, the former for somatic approaches and the latter for germline approaches. however, alternative methods are available or have been proposed. the following sections review a range of such methods. insoluble molecules such as calcium phosphate and deae-dextran can, when mixed with dna molecules, co-precipitate to form granules. these granules are phagocytosed by cells and, in a proportion of recipients, the dna appears in the nucleus where it may be transiently expressed. in a small proportion of treated cells, the dna becomes stably integrated into the genome (robins et al., ) . despite its proven worth (and continuing use) with cultured somatic cells, co-precipitation is of limited use in transgenesis. co-precipitation is somewhat laborious compared with electroporation and liposome-mediated gene transfer. there are no reports of successful gene transfer to eggs by co-precipitation. es cells can be transfected by co-precipitation (gossler et al., ) , as can ex vivo somatic cells. however, the range of potential cell types is limited: co-precipitation works well with fibroblasts, but has proved difficult to apply to other cell types. even in non-refractory cell types, co-precipitation remains less than ideal because it is associated with transgene mutations and ultra-high copy number integrations (calos et al., ; razzaque et al., ) . additionally, for unknown reasons, co-precipitation appears to allow only relatively low levels of hr (reviewed by mohn and koller, ) , making it less than ideal for gene targeting applications. finally, coprecipitation is strictly an in vitro procedure: it is difficult to envisage ways in which it could be adapted for in vivo gene therapy. retroviruses offer good opportunities for gene transfer due to their integration into the host chromosome. however, only actively diving cells are infectable by retroviral vectors, yet many potential targets for gene therapy are organs and tissues comprising slowly-or non-dividing cells. thus, alternative viruses have been explored as potential agents for somatic cell gene therapy. such viruses include the adenoviruses (tomanin, ), hepatitis delta virus (hdv) (netter et al., ) and herpes viruses (hsv) (burton et al., ) . a major limitation with these viruses as transgene vectors is that it is unclear whether they can reliably be induced to infect es cells, or eggs from a variety of species. thus, at present the major potential application for these viruses lies in the domain of (somatic) gene therapy. however, given that most if not all cultured cell types can be made permissive for infection by such viruses, one might speculate as to the likelihood of es cells being made similarly permissive by empirical advances. alternatively, nt (section . ) may in the future prove able to circumvent this limitation entirely. . . . . adenoviruses. adenoviruses (ad) have a number of properties that make them potential candidates for gene therapy. ad are able to carry large transgenes (up to c. kb) without adversely affecting their infectivity (bett et al., ) . ad have a low host cell/species-specificity, providing a very large range of tissues and organs as putative candidates for treatment, and permitting current animal models to be used for testing adenovirusmediated therapies. transgene expression is stable and persists beyond year after a single treatment (stratford-perricaudet et al., ) . moreover, given that: (a) serious disease following adenoviral infection is very rare; and (b) the viral genome rarely integrates into the host's chromosomes, adenoviral-mediated gene therapy promises higher safety levels than those associated with retroviralmediated therapies (lee et al., ) . in addition to their potential role in gene therapy applications, there are indications that ad may be able to be used as transgene vectors. tsukui et al. ( ) report the production of transgenic mice following the infection of zonafree eggs with a replication-defective ad vector. this intruiging result suggests the possibility of a promising new strategy for animal transgenesis. however, further research is required in order to determine (a) the parameters within which ad can reliably deliver transgenes to eggs; and (b) the range of species potentially amenable to this form of gene transfer. . . . . hepatitis delta virus. hdv is potentially usable as an agent of gene therapy directed at somatic cells. hdv is self-replicating, and may reach high copy-numbers (:/ per cell) in infected tissues. this property makes hdv attractive as a gene therapy vector, although there are safety issues to be considered in view of the possible consequences of germ cell infection by a self-replicating vector. another safety consideration is that hdv is potentially cytopathic, although it might be possible to modify the viral genome to reduce such effects. a limitation with hdv is its size: at only . kb, it is unlikely to be able to carry large exogenes (netter et al., ) . hsv have large ( Á/ kb) genomes, and therefore offer the potential for transferring large exogenes (roizman, ) . herpes viruses also have the attractive capacity of being able to induce permanent latent infection in their hosts (stevens, ) . although herpes viruses certainly offer great potential for gene therapy, particularly in respect of disorders of the nervous system (reviewed by lachmann and efstathiou, ) , the development of gene therapy systems employing these viruses awaits substantial progress in certain areas, including the ability to control the viral life-cycle and to prevent immune attack of treated cells. further, the pathology of herpes viral infection is poorly understood; thus there remain potential safety problems to be resolved. . . . . other viruses. the viruses considered above are not the only types of viruses that are under scrutiny as transgene vectors. no single virus has the necessary characteristics for all applications. nor have all possible types of viruses been assessed for the potential utility in somatic or germline transgenesis. other types of viruses will doubtless be added to the current store of potential gene transfer vectors. liposomes are artificial vesicles that can act as delivery agents for exogenous materials including transgenes (see excellent reviews by watwe and bellare, ; nicolau et al., ; ilies and balaban, ) . like their natural cellular counterparts, liposomes comprise a lipid bilayer surrounding a small volume of aqueous solution. the liposome's lipid bilayer is similar to that of natural cells, consisting mainly of phospholipids and cholesterol. liposomes have been created in a variety of distinct forms, some of which are available as commercial preparations: the major differences are of structure, size and charge. the main structural difference is between liposomes with a single lipid bilayer and those with a multilamellar ('onion-skin') lipid bilayer. liposome sizes range from around nm to several micrometers, and may be either negatively or positively charged. liposomes for use as gene transfer vehicles are prepared by adding an appropriate mix of bilayer constituents to an aqueous solution of dna molecules. in this aqueous environment, phospholipid hydrophilic heads associate with water while hydrophobic tails self-associate to exclude water from within the lipid bilayer. this self-organising process creates discrete spheres of continuous lipid bilayer membrane enveloping a small quantity of dna solution. the liposomes are then ready to be added to target cells (felgner, ; mahato et al., ) . when they come into contact with a target cell, liposomes may interact with the cell membrane in a variety of ways. possible liposome Á/cell interactions include: (a) exchange of membrane constituents (lipsky and pagano, ) ; (b) adsorption to the cell membrane (eggens et al., ) ; (c) endocytosis (connor et al., ) ; and (d) membrane fusion (lamb, ) . interactions (a) and (b) are undesirable, as they result in the transgene molecules remaining outside the cytoplasm. interaction (c) is undesirable where it results in the formation of late endosomes, as the outcome is the destruction of engulfed transgene molecules. nevertheless, interaction (c) may be desirable where early endosomes release transgene molecules into the cytosol. interaction (d) is desirable because liposome Á/cell fusion allows the exogenous dna to directly enter the cytosol. 'simple' liposome systems comprise negatively or neutrally charged liposomes: interaction (d) is quite rare in such systems, and generally takes several days for completion (schaeferridder et al., ) . although the success rates (with cultured cells) are better than those obtained using standard co-precipitation gene transfer protocols, the relative rarity of liposome Á/cell membrane fusion presents a problem for transgenesis and gene therapy per se. furthermore, the slow rate of fusion is particularly problematic for in vivo therapies because free liposomes are rapidly captured and destroyed by macrophages (schoilew et al., ) . more recent systems employ cationic liposomes. the positively charged lipids in such liposomes bind directly with the cell membrane. such liposomes have been developed into commercially available systems that offer ease of preparation, stability and high transfection efficacy: examples include: lipofectin tm , lipofectamine tm , and transfectace tm (gibco-brl); transfectam † (promega); and dotap (boehringer mannheim) (reviewed by chisholm, ) . an alternative approach to the problem of inefficient liposome Á/cell membrane fusion in-volves the use of fusion-inducing virus glycoproteins. glycoproteins from several viruses (including parainfluenza viruses, paramyxoviruses, coronaviruses and retroviruses) have powerful cell-fusion promoting properties, and inclusion of virus glycoproteins responsible for these properties into the liposome lipid bilayer results in a more frequent and rapid occurrence of liposome-cell fusion (bailey and chernomordik, ) . the major potential use of liposomes is in gene therapy, particularly with in vivo somatic approaches, for example in antitumour approaches (dass et al., ) . in this context, liposomes rival viral vectors as a dna delivery method. given that they consist only of biological lipids, liposomes have low toxicity. there is a theoretical risk for patients with lipid metabolism disorders; however studies designed to assess this have suggested minimal actual risk (for example see tsuboniwa et al., ) . antigenicity does not appear to be a problem either (yanagihara et al., ) , and there are of course no concerns about viral proliferation within the host. cationic liposome-mediated gene therapy has been carried out using animals/animal models. for example, partial correction of the ion transport deficit in the cystic fibrosis mouse model was reported following instillation (hyde et al., ) and nebulization (stern et al., ) of liposomes. similarly, canonico et al. ( and losordo et al. ( ) have reported expression of haat and gh genes in rabbits following aerosol delivery and intravenous injection of liposomes. fusion-inducing glycoprotein-based liposomes have been used to deliver genes in vivo in several animal studies. gene expression has been reported following injection of such liposomes into various tissues including heart, kidney, liver, lung, skeletal muscle and testis; gene expression has also been reported following trans-arterial delivery (reviewed by yanagihara et al., ) . although liposome-based gene transfer systems are now able to efficiently deliver transgenes to the cytoplasm, only in a minority of cells will transgenes reach the nucleus. this represents a significant limitation in terms of transgene stability and expression. one way of avoiding this problem might be to characterise and utilise the biochem-ical apparatus that permits some viruses (e.g. poxviruses: carroll and moss, ; moss, ) to exist and replicate in the cytoplasm. following liposome-mediated gene transfer, amongst transgene molecules reaching the nucleus, only a minority integrate into the host cell chromosomes. transgene expression is therefore essentially transient, with reported durations of expression varying widely between separate studies: the range is from around days to several months, with a typical duration of perhaps around days (see reviews by ilies and balaban, ; yanagihara et al., ) . for in vivo gene therapy, transient expression would necessitate repeated administration of liposomes, perhaps for the entire lifetime of the patient. however, this may not be a fundamental problem, given the previously mentioned low toxicity and antigenicity associated with liposomes, although a suitably non-invasive administration route would certainly be required. from a safety perspective, the non-integration that underlies transient expression would be positively beneficial for in vivo therapies, particularly in respect of oncogenesis but also with regard to the genetic integrity of the patients' germ cells. germline transgenesis is possible with liposomemediated gene transfer, and es cells have been successfully transfected by liposomes (for example see pain et al., ) . however, the rate of transgene integration into the genome is broadly similar to that of electroporation. as with electroporation, the relatively low integration frequency renders liposome-mediated transfection impractical for use with mammalian zygotes. however, an indirect approach to the germline via the zygote remains a putative possibility, where liposomes would be used to deliver transgenes to sperm cells. some success has been claimed for this approach (reviewed by smith, ) . in summary, liposomes look set to become increasingly important as agents of transgene delivery, particularly for in vivo gene therapy. efforts are being exerted towards improving and developing methods in a number of respects, including the following areas (sections . . . , . . . and . . . ). . . . . improved site-specificity of in vivo treatment. beyond simply changing the site/route of liposome administration, accurate organ targeting might be achieved by incorporating tissuespecific recognition molecules (e.g. receptor-binding proteins, antibodies) into the liposome membrane (tiukinhov et al., ) . . . . . improved nuclear targeting. efficient translocation of exogenous dna to the host cell's nucleus might be achieved by incorporating nuclear-localisation proteins into the liposome complex (reviewed by boulikas, ) . improved nuclear translocation should: (a) enhance expression levels; and (b) increase the frequency of chromosomal integration, thus increasing the scope for germline modification. . . . . improved expression longevity. if chromosomal integration could be induced (see previous section), expression could persist for the lifetime of the host cell; however, nuclear translocation without integration would be very useful in itself. the capacity of liposomes to carry dna molecules of great size (more than kb has been reported*/ see for example strauss et al., ) may in future allow transfer of macs. long-lived expression would be an expected outcome. electroporation is a process by which highintensity electric field pulses temporarily destabilise cellular membranes. during the destabilisation period, dna molecules present in the surrounding media are able to permeate the cell's external and internal membranes to enter the cytoplasm and nucleoplasm (reviewed by lurquin, ) . electroporation provides a fast and inexpensive means of introducing exogenous dna into cultured mammalian cells. electroporation is not associated with transgene mutation. the process can be equilibrated to yield copy numbers (of integrated transgenes) of between and copies per genome */an advantage compared with microinjection. large transgene molecules (e/ kb) can be transferred. in addition to the advantages of being able to transfer large conventional transgenes, the dna transfer capabilities of elec-troporation may in future allow transfer of macs (section . . ). such constructs should be immune to nuclease attack and might be designed to replicate in step with the host cell cycle, thus providing long-lived transgene expression. the main drawbacks of electroporation are that: (a) specialised equipment is required; (b) each cell type and culture system requires fairly extensive empirical optimisation; and (c) typically only around . % of treated cells show genomic integration of transgene (see excellent reviews by chang et al., ; lurquin, ; potter and cooke, ) . in terms of mammalian transgenesis, electroporation is an effective method of introducing exogenous dna into es cells (chu et al., ) . the advantage of electroporation over microinjection in the context of es cells is that electroporation allows the en masse treatment of large numbers of cells. this is extremely useful where a rare integration event requires selection from a background of unwanted integrations, as in gene targeting. similarly, electroporation has been successful with nt transgenesis (mccreath et al., ; schnieke et al., ) . the relatively low efficiency of electroporation renders it impractical for use with mammalian zygotes. the best superovulation protocols deliver around eggs per animal for mice and pigs, and for cattle and sheep (wall et al., ) . extrapolating from these figures, a . % efficiency rate would necessitate on average '/ mice or pigs, and approximately cattle or sheep in order to obtain just one transgenic. however, for (mammalian) species that produce large numbers of easily recovered eggs, electroporation shows more promise in terms of transgenesis. many fish species are potentially useful in this respect, and some successes have been claimed. for example, murakami et al. ( ) report the successful use of electroporation to create transgenic medaka, as do ono et al. ( ) , with the latter also reporting successful transmission of transgenes to f progeny. an attractive putative use of electroporation for transgenesis would be as an adjunct to sperm cellmediated dna. for example, gagne et al. ( ) report an increase from to % of transgenic bovine blastocysts when electroporation is in-cluded in an otherwise passive sperm-dna uptake protocol. similar findings were reported by rieth et al. ( ) , again with transgenic bovine blastocysts. several experiments have indicated that fish species may be able to be genetically manipulated in this way (for examples see walker et al., ; patil and hong woo, ) . however, these results await replication, and big questions remain over the effectiveness or otherwise of sperm cells as vectors per se (smith, ) . if it turns out that there is substance to claims that sperm cells can be induced to carry transgenes, then the techniques' efficiency would have to be high. otherwise, electroporation of sperm cells could be as limited as it is (in principle) for zygotes, with excessively high numbers of animals needed in order to obtain each transgenic. the only way around this limitation would be via the development of a selection system for 'positive' sperm cells in vitro */a highly unlikely possibility, give that sperm cells exist in a quiescent state as far as gene expression is concerned. in terms of its use in gene therapy, electroporation has the potential to be used in vivo. this field is at a very early stage of development, but empirical improvements may in future permit electroporation to be used to deliver transgenes to particular tissues or to tumours (hofmann et al., ; swartz et al., ) . clearly, this has great potential utility in the context of gene therapy. moreover, given that there is no evidence that any particular somatic cell types are inherently unable to be successfully electroporated, the range of treatable tissues */and hence, diseases */is potentially very great. ex vivo gene targeting approaches using electroporation are also under development. hatada et al. ( ) used electroporation to correct by gene targeting a defective hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase gene in hematopoietic progenitor cells. the approach was similar to gene targeting with es cells or nt, in that selection was used to enrich for targeted outcomes. if similar successes can be obtained with appropriate stem cells in humans, it may be possible to return such targeted cells to the body of the patient such that repopulation by the altered cells yields a therapeutic or curative outcome for various genetic disorders. finally, electroporation has recently, been used to transfer genes into cultured mammalian embryos at defined stages of development (akamatsu et al., ; osumi and inoue, ) . the purpose here is to gain insights into mammalian development at the molecular level (as opposed to generating transgenic animals). in the experiments described by osumi and inoue ( ) , plasmid dna was injected into the neural tube of rat embryos prior to electroporation. following in vitro maintenance of the electroporated embryos, exogenous dna was detected in Á/ % of the cells in the target region. finally, it is worth considering a highly novel technique, as an illustration of the many and varied means by which emerging technologies are enabling gene transfer. in particle bombardment, dna may be adsorbed onto spherical tungsten or gold particles (diameter c. mm) and transferred into a mass of cells by a particle gun; once inside the target cells, the dna is solubilised and may be expressed (klein et al., ) . this approach, sometimes known as 'biolistics', was originally developed for plant transgenesis but has been shown to be effective for transferring transgenes into mammalian cells in vivo (cheng et al., ) . indeed, there are indications that biolistics may be more efficient than alternative methods such as liposome-mediated transfection and recombinant viral infection (gainer et al., ) , although the amount of research data presently available is too little to permit definitive comparisons. if the method does prove to be effective in vivo, tumours are the most likely targets for particle bombardment (reviewed by mahvi et al., ) . biolistics then, is a promising method for treating cells en masse, and looks most useful in terms of somatic gene therapy. there have been no reported attempts to utilise biolistics for altering germline cells. the en masse nature of the approach places it in a similar position to that of electroporation or liposome-based methods in respect of fertilised eggs: impractically large numbers of eggs would undoubtedly be required per successful transgenic event. in principle it might be possible to apply biolistics to es cells as a route to the germline, however to date no such attempts have been recorded. the ability to transfer genes into the higher animal cells is a prerequisite for continued progress in animal transgenesis and in human gene therapy. however, improvements in gene transfer are urgently required, particularly if hopes of effective gene therapies are to be realised. key aspects for attention include improved control of target cell range, improved transgene uptake efficiencies, the ability to localise transgenes to the nucleus and improvements in gene targeting to enable the efficient integration of transgenes into chosen genomic loci. mammalian elav-like neuronal rnabinding proteins hub and huc promote neuronal development in both the central and the peripheral nervous systems lipid effects in liposome cell fusion mediated by influenza hemagglutinin an in situ transgenic enzyme marker for the midgestation mouse embryo and the visualization of inner cell mass clones during early organogenesis packaging capacity and stability of human adenovirus type vectors chromosomal insertion of foreign dna nuclear localization signal peptides for the import of plasmid dna in gene therapy strategies for the isolation and purification of retroviral vectors for gene therapy targeted correction 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type-specific control of cre-mediated dna recombination in transgenic mice manipulating the mammalian genome by homologous recombination retroviral vectors */from laboratory tools to molecular medicines mouse cloning with nucleus donor cells of different age and type gene transfer by electroporated chinook salmon sperm transgenic livestock progress and prospects for the future making transgenic livestock */genetic-engineering on a large-scale specific ablation of thyroid-follicle cells in adult transgenic mice consequences of thyroid-hormone deficiency induced by the specific ablation of thyroid-follicle cells in adult transgenic mice positive and negative regulation of gene expression in eukaryotic cells with an inducible transcriptional regulator a regulatory system for use in gene-transfer manufacture of liposomes molecular biology of tumor viruses: rna tumor viruses the majority of g transgenic mice are derived from mosaic embryos germline and somatic mosaicism in transgenic mice viable offspring derived from fetal and adult mammalian cells transgenic technology in farm animals */progress and perspectives liposome-mediated gene transfer production of chimaeric mice containing embryonic stem (es) cells carrying a homeobox hox- . allele mutated by homologous recombination key: cord- -nzc ir n authors: guo, sun-wei title: china’s “gene war of the century” and its aftermath: the contest goes on date: - - journal: minerva doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nzc ir n following the successful cloning of genes for mostly rare genetic diseases in the early s, there was a nearly universal enthusiasm that similar approaches could be employed to hunt down genes predisposing people to complex diseases. around , several well-funded international gene-hunting teams, enticed by the low cost of collecting biological samples and china’s enormous population, and ushered in by some well-connected chinese intermediaries, came to china to hunt down disease susceptibility genes. this alarmed and, in some cases, enraged many poorly funded chinese scientists, who perceived them as formidable competitors. some depicted foreign gene-hunters as greedy pilferers of the vast chinese genetic gold mine, comparing it to the plundering of national treasures from china by invaders in the past, and called upon the government and their fellow countrymen to rise up and protect china’s genetic gold mine. media uproar ensued, proclaiming the imminent “gene war of the century.” this article chronicles the key events surrounding this “war” and its aftermath, exposes some inherent complexities in identifying susceptibility genes for complex diseases, highlights some issues obscured or completely overlooked in the passionate and patriotic rhetoric, and debunks some misconceptions embedded in this conflict. in addition, it argues that during the entire course of this “war,” the public’s interest went conspicuously unmentioned. finally, it articulates several lessons that can be learned from this conflict, and outlines challenges facing human genetics researchers. around , and amid the talks of hong kong's upcoming return to china and later the asian financial crisis, a recurring topic in the chinese media was the so-called ''gene war of the century'': the lopsided condemnation of foreign scientists coming purportedly to pilfer china's vast genetic resources for a profit. some scientists wrote articles and gave lectures, calling for heightened vigilance for the pilfering act, and proposed that the country protect its precious genetic resources by conducting genetic research on its own. while the public might have been completely flummoxed by some esoteric and arcane jargons, the message was nonetheless loud and clear: the western capitalists were trying to profit from china's unique genetic heritage. in a country with a past history of repeated foreign invasion, defeat, and humiliation, this message struck a tender emotional chord and caused an eruption of national furor. the person who likely triggered, perhaps unintentionally, the first spark of this ''war'' is xiping xu, a chinese expatriate at harvard at the time. despite his repeated proclamation as a staunch and unwavering patriot loyal to his beloved motherland and dedicated to the advancement of china's science and technology, he nonetheless later became embroiled in an avalanche of controversies surrounding the ''gene war.'' he effectively became a lightning rod for all the controversy on genetic resources, intellectual rights, informed consent, and the protection of human research subjects. well over a decade has since passed. what was at stake? did these precious genetic resources actually exist? who was the most likely beneficiary of the gene-hunting endeavor? how did this ''war'' end? who were the winners and losers, if there were any in the first place? what happened after the conflict? as war is invariably a continuation of politics by other means, what was the politics behind it? what happened to the people who were embroiled in the ''war''? the answers to all these questions can be addressed, at least in part, now with the benefit of a / hindsight. war breaks out simply because of irreconcilable conflicts in interest. the ''gene war,'' whether it was real or fictitious, was no exception. this article chronicles the key events surrounding the ''war'' and its aftermath, exposes some inherent complexities in identifying susceptibility genes for complex diseases, highlights some issues obscured or completely overlooked in the passionate and patriotic rhetoric, and debunks some misconceptions embedded in the lopsided condemnations. in addition, it describes how, during the entire course of the ''war'' of intense and often politically charged uproars, the patients' interest was conspicuously unmentioned and likely overlooked. examining the larger issues regarding science and politics, it also argues that the ''war'' and its surrounding events can be best understood through the lens of credibility contest vying for resources. finally, it lists several lessons that can be learned from this conflict, and outlines challenges facing current researchers in human genetics. ''gene war of the century'': the genesis in , the human genome project (hgp) was launched. with a price tag of billion us dollars and a -year timeline, this ambitious megaproject aimed to sequence the entire human genome, with the ultimate goal of ''understand[ing] the human genome'' and ''knowledge of the human as necessary to the continuing progress of medicine and other health sciences as knowledge of human anatomy has been for the present state of medicine.'' supported by the us department of energy (doe) and the us national institute of health (nih), the hgp was the culmination of several years of research building on a series of breathtaking breakthroughs in molecular genetics. considered the ''genetic blueprint for human beings'' and hailed as the ''book of life'' or simply the holy grail, the human genome, when completely sequenced, would purportedly unlock the secrets underlying a plethora of human traits as mundane as facial resemblance between parents and offspring and as complex as human behavior. against this foreground, human genetics research entered a golden age. in , scientists identified (called ''cloned'') the genetic mutation responsible for a rare genetic disease called cystic fibrosis, that is, the gene responsible for the disease was identified with known location and size. in the inaugural year of the hgp, a gene responsible for breast cancer was localized, or ''mapped,'' to chromosome . in the following few years, the genes responsible for huntington's disease, breast cancer ( - % of the cases), alzheimer's disease and other rare genetic diseases often with a tongue-twisting name would be cloned (see table for the timeline of research milestones and events surrounding the ''gene war''). following on the heels of successful cloning of genes for these mostly rare mendelian diseases in the early s, there emerged a nearly universal enthusiasm, hope or even conviction that similar gene-mapping approach could be employed to hunt down susceptibility genes predisposing people to various complex diseases -primarily common chronic diseases such as asthma, diabetes, and cancer that invariably have an elusive pathogenesis and collectively contribute to the major health burdens (lander and schork ; risch and merikangas ) . it was hoped that once genes were identified, the characterization of their functions would not only help better understand genotype-phenotype relationships, but also facilitate the development of specific therapies and preventative measures and the identification of people at increased risk of developing the disease (collins and mckusick ) . it was also hoped that once the risk of particular combinations of genotype and environmental exposure is known, medical interventions, such as lifestyle changes, could then be institutionalized to target high-risk groups or individuals (collins and mckusick ) . some biotech companies quickly saw the potential of enormous business opportunities and joined the fray. human genome sciences, founded in by william a. haseltine, a noted harvard professor and aids researcher, partnered with some genomics companies and soon filed patents on , genes and, in , quadrupled its stock price (zimmer ). other genomics companies followed suit. yet this practice had one problem: most, if not all, patented ''genes,'' in fact, rna transcripts, were merely pieces of cdna without any known functions at the time of filing. to understand what a gene does and how it does, and to establish the causal relationship between a gene and a human disease, let alone treatment, is by no means an easy task, even with modern technology. very often, it is a slow, arduous, painstaking, and imprecise process full of dead-ends and false leads. many other biotech companies and academic scientists took a different approach called ''positional cloning.'' this approach eliminates the need to understand the molecular genetic mechanisms underlying the disease of interest. instead, through the collection of pedigrees enriched with patients having the disease, the existing genetic sign posts (called dna markers, which are scattered around the human genome with known locations and content) would be used to localize the responsible gene in a particular region. this would allow researchers to zero in the gene, identify it, and ultimately figure out its function and its relationship with the disease through extensive lab work. thus, by ''positioning'' the gene, the gene could be cloned and its functions and roles in disease pathogenesis elucidated without any prior knowledge of the possible pathogenesis of the disease. this conceptual simplicity and beauty, coupled with increasingly fast and affordable methods of making genetic signposts (called ''genotyping'') attracted many biomedical scientists and even converted many of them this discovery was later found to hold universally true in all organisms, including humans, and became a corner stone and a principle in genetics. basically, if a trait is determined by a gene, then the gene will tend to go hand in hand with its neighboring signposts when transmitted from parents to offspring-thus the term ''linkage.'' if many relatives in a pedigree having the same trait all carry the same signposts, then there is a chance that the gene responsible for the trait is near to the signposts. although different cross-breeding cannot be made in humans for obvious reasons, this difficulty can be offset by statistical computations. the advent of personal computers in the s coincided with the booming of human genetics and proved to be indispensable in this endeavor. the discovery of various classes of dna markers also facilitated the gene hunting. the approach based on pedigree data is called ''linkage analysis.'' since , scientists found that for common diseases, another approach, called ''association studies,'' can be more powerful in gene hunting. association studies identify disease genes by finding the significant gene frequency differentials between a group of unrelated healthy individuals and another group of unrelated people with the disease of interest. ''gene war of the century'' and its aftermath to human genetics, who were frustrated by the slow, arduous and often fruitless process of finding the cause(s) for disease. thus, in the s hardly a week went by without a news report or announcement of the discovery of genes for some disease, at least in the us. one high-profile study, published in in a prestigious journal, science, reported the localization of a gene in chromosome x q that is responsible for male sexual orientation. this approach has one catch, however. one critical prerequisite for position cloning is the availability of a sufficient number of pedigrees saturated with people having the same disease, along with correct diagnoses or precise measurements of the disease (called ''phenotyping''). once such pedigrees are collected, phenotyping and genotyping can proceed and the positional cloning endeavor can start. since genotyping and phenotyping a large number of people can be costly, there are strong incentives to cut the cost of either process. everything else equal, locations with low costs of acquiring blood samples (for genotyping purposes) and labor (for phenotyping purposes) would be extremely attractive. in , sequana therapeutics, a start-up biotech company located in la jolla, california, announced that it had achieved two significant research milestones related to its asthma gene discovery program. it analyzed dna collected from about people on tristan da cunha, an island in the south atlantic, about , miles from south africa. approximately % of the island residents had asthma, presumably passed on from an original settler generations ago. the announcement prompted cash payments of $ million from boehringer ingelheim, ingelheim, germany, based on a prior agreement. boehringer later paid sequana an additional $ million for its exclusive right to market the drug derived from the putative asthma gene, while sequana retained the exclusive right for developing gene-based diagnostics. sequana announced in late may that it had identified a mutated gene that predisposes people to asthma, a feat hailed by one clinical investigator as ''perhaps this century's most important finding in the etiology of asthma'' (asthma gene discovered. ). early in the same year, sequana announced that it had signed a letter of intent with pe applied biosystems to form a broad-based dna sequencing joint venture in shanghai, china. circa , several well-funded international gene-hunting teams, lured apparently by the low cost of collecting biological samples and the sheer population size and also ushered in by some well-connected chinese scientists working in north america, arrived in china to hunt down susceptibility genes for various complex diseases (shou ) . one biotech company from california announced that it had discovered a large pedigree of hundreds of people enriched with asthma patients in a small village in zhejiang province, china. perhaps the most notable team was one led by dr. xiping xu, who was at that time working at harvard and was well-connected in anhui, china. an anhui native, xu spent the mid- s after high-school as a ''barefoot doctor'' in anhui, providing basic medical care for peasants after a small amount of training at a time when access to medical care in rural china was a luxury. he received his medical degree from anhui medical college (now anhui medical university) in the early s, and was admitted to beijing medical college (now peking university school of medicine) for a student exchange program, a prep program for oversea studies. he went on to get his ph.d. degree in epidemiology in japan, went to harvard to receive his post-doctoral training in epidemiology in respiratory diseases, and received his master's degree in biostatistics from harvard university school of public health (hsph). he stayed on at hsph as a faculty member. even at harvard, xu apparently kept close ties with the anhui medical college, and was involved in several epidemiological studies in the anhui province. when his post-doc supervisor, dr. scott weiss, a harvard university respiratory epidemiologist, told geoffrey duyk, a geneticist who had left harvard to join a biotechnology start-up called millennium pharmaceuticals, that one of his postdoctoral fellows came from the anhui province and had access to a large number of dna samples, they instantly saw the potential and quickly formed a collaborative relationship to discover susceptible genes in complex diseases in anhui (keim ) . a formal partnership between harvard and millennium was established, where xu would direct the collection of a large number of dna samples in anhui, for which millennium would pay the university $ million (keim ) . with tens of thousands of blood samples provided by anhui's villagers, the partnership hoped to identify the susceptibility genes predisposing people to asthma, obesity, miscarriages, schizophrenia and other illnesses. contingent upon its access to the anhui population's dna, millennium also secured sizable capital shortly afterwards from the swedish pharmaceutical company astra ab and from another pharmaceutical giant, hoffmann-la roche. the company's access to dna from the ''large, homogeneous population'' of anhui province was also featured prominently when millennium went public in , raising $ million in its initial public offering (keim ) . leveraging the existing and some preliminary data collected from anhui, xu went on to apply for more funding support from the nih. a search of crisp, a searchable database of nih-funded biomedical research projects (crisp ) using ''xiping xu'' as the principal investigator (pi)'s name reveals that xu received grant on genetics of airway responsiveness and lung function in besides two other nih non-genetics grants, and in he received nih grants on genetics of osteoporosis, airway responsiveness and lung function, nicotine addiction vulnerability, hypertension, and asthma on top of other nih grants (table ) . being a pi almost concurrently on nih grants is remarkable, especially for a junior faculty without much track record, but having nih grant support in diverse research areas ranging from osteoporosis, hypertension, nicotine addiction, and asthma to human reproductive effects due to endocrine disruption or rotating shift work is extraordinary and certainly breathtaking. in all, he received well over million usd in grant support from the nih, the pharmaceuticals industry, the march of dimes, and other funding agencies to investigate genetics of various complex diseases (yang ; keim ) . recognizing his scholarly potential and the growth area he was in, hsph promoted xu to associate professor in and made him the director of the newly established program in population genetics (now disbanded) in hsph. the solid financial backing and extensive connections allowed xu to enlist the enthusiastic support of the local government officials and his alma mater, who helped xu collect thousands of blood samples from rural villagers. a nearly palpable aura of harvard university which xu embodied and was (and still is) revered by many in china as the premium research institution and the most prestigious institution of higher learning also helped. many villagers were illiterate, had no idea what would be done with their samples, and were given merely empty promises of free medical care in exchange for their blood samples. these lapses of oversight, deliberate or otherwise, would return later to haunt xu and his team. the increasing number of scientists like xu with huge financial backing arriving in china to conduct genetic research alarmed many poorly funded chinese scientists, who perceived the situation as a major threat to their profession and a danger of eclipsing their own work. in november , about leading chinese biomedical and genetic researchers gathered in xiang shan, beijing, and held a conference on ''the human genome project and the development strategy for the st -century medicine'' to evaluate and discuss the situation. one incident further fueled the concern shared by all participants. a translated version of a science article was presented at the conference, which stated that xu sought to gain ''access to million chinese through collaboration with six chinese medical centers.'' but in the chinese version, the program became one that would ''take blood samples from million chinese'' (hui and jue ) . this seemingly astronomical figure incensed all conference participants, who were at that time cash-strapped and still playing catch-up with the west. they quickly reached a consensus and soon made it public: ( ) china's genetic resources should not be pilfered by foreigners; ( ) chinese scientists should immediately grasp the opportunity to find disease genes and patent them; ( ) we should educate the people, and raise the awareness and importance of protection of our genetic resources; ( ) we welcome all international collaborations based on fairness and mutual benefits; ( ) through various avenues, the chinese scientists should be vocal about certain views deemed to be harmful to china's genetic research (xiao et al. ) . soon after the xiang shan conference, some scientists published articles depicting foreign gene-hunters as greedy pilferers of the vast chinese genetic gold mine and comparing them to past foreign invaders plundering china's national treasures. they called upon the government and their fellow countrymen to rise up and protect the putative genetic gold mine of the chinese gene pool (fang a, b; lv ) . shortly after, financial details about the millennium-harvard deal based on anhui samples were leaked to the chinese press and caused a media blitz of condemnations. the media called it an imminent ''gene war of the century'' (shou ) . in fact, the notion of foreign capitalists profiting from china's precious genetic resources sparked such a fury that several other genetic research projects unrelated to xu were stalled for a year (hui and jue ) . around the same time, it was rumored that one prominent geneticist, who received his ph.d. from cal-tech in the s for his work on ladybug genetics, yet had no training in either medical genetics or genetic epidemiology, had written a letter to president jiang zemin urging the government to take the matter seriously and to protect china's precious genetic resources. this, along with the media furor, duly alarmed the central government. in , the office for management of china's human genetic resources was quickly established under the auspice of the ministry of science and technology, and charged with overseeing the handling and export of all biological specimens potentially containing genetic materials. soon a de facto law, the interim measures for the administration of human genetic resources, promulgated by the general office of the state council (ministry of science and technology & the ministry of public health, ), was enacted in june . it mandated that genetic resources were not allowed to be taken abroad without explicit permission and observance of due procedures as defined in the interim measures. funding for domestic human genetic research subsequently poured in (swinbanks ), which spurred human genetics research in china (du et al. ) . two genome research centers, one located in beijing and the other in shanghai, were established. while the phrase, ''china's genetic resources,'' has been used widely and extensively, surprisingly no definition has ever been officially provided. some scientists likened china's genetic resources to natural resources, claiming that, as the most populous nation in the world, china has the largest number of ethnic groups and also has the widest and the most complex disease spectrum (xiao et al. ). in addition, with a long documented history and many isolated populations, there were many genetic isolates and thus china has the purest genetic heritage in the world. therefore, china is a ''gene giant'' and ''the new world of genes,'' making many technologically advanced nations envy and salivate (xiao et al. ) . however, the analogy between ''genetic resources'' and natural resources has several problems. granted, the vast population facilitates the recruitment of patients with rare diseases for medical research and the low cost of collecting specimens is conducive to large-scale biomedical research. however, china did not and still does not necessarily have more types of diseases, and even if it did, few people outside china would be interested in finding the genetic causes for diseases that are unique to the chinese population. in fact, for many rare genetic diseases (called ''orphan diseases'') for which susceptibility genes have been cloned, many pharmaceutical companies are often reluctant to invest in drug research and development (r&d) for these diseases due to concerns of profitability. the values of natural resources are determined by their amount, their extractability, and market demand. there are two forms, renewable (such as wind power) and non-renewable (such as fossil fuels). a commodity is considered a natural resource when the primary human activities associated with it are extraction and purification, as opposed to creation. thus, mining, petroleum extraction, fishing etc. are natural resource industry, but agriculture is not. since gene identification requires much more than collecting blood samples and are both labor and knowledge intensive, genetic resources are, by definition, not natural resources. in addition, unlike fossil fuels, genetic resources are not entirely non-renewable, if the disease spectrum remains the same. with dramatic economic and social changes, the living standard in china has risen remarkably in the last years. following these changes, diet and lifestyles also have changed quite dramatically. as a result, the disease spectrum in the chinese has shifted, especially in coastal regions. the incidences of breast cancer, colon cancer, prostate cancer, hypertension, and type diabetes all have risen sharply in the last decade (xiang et al. ) . in large cities such as beijing, childhood obesity is used to be very rare but now it is reported to be in the range of % (and another % of children are overweight). in contrast, incidence of stomach cancer has decreased, especially in those highincidence areas where living standards have been improved. ''gene war of the century'' and its aftermath the rapidly changing disease spectrum means that, firstly, the genetic resources would be forever lost if not used in a timely fashion for gene-hunting purposes. secondly, hunting disease susceptibility genes for a disease that obviously has a strong environmental component was an uncharted territory -no one at the time was absolutely certain how it would turn out. over ten years would elapse before people realized that heritability would vanish even for human traits that are known to be mostly hereditary (maher ) . lastly, the notion of china's genetic resources touched upon some thorny issues. unlike other natural resources, genetic materials, as in blood samples, exist only in the human body, which is technically owned by their hosts, not by the state. if a person strikes a deal with a drug company, or acts simply out of genuine altruism, and is willing to give away his blood sample, does the state have the right to intervene? if so, would such intervention infringe on the donor's human rights? giving away or even selling one's blood sample is certainly different from prostitution or selling one's own body parts. if the state does have the right to intervene, where can we draw the line? unfortunately, such questions were never raised and discussed. for biomedical research, there surely is such thing as a genetic resource. but what is it? what constitutes a genetic resource? contrary to the popular belief, population size and diversity of diseases, in and by themselves, actually do not make china ''an ideal place for gene hunters'' (guo et al. ) . few among the common diseases in china are known to have a hereditary component or to be amenable for positional cloning. in fact, while a small portion of breast cancer cases, for example, may be attributed to gene mutations, the large proportion of common and complex diseases is unlikely due to a few gene mutations or polymorphisms (see below). as demonstrated by an interventional study conducted in finland, by reducing body weight, eating healthy and regularly engaging in physical exercise, the risk for developing type diabetes can be reduced by nearly % (tuomilehto et al. ). the dramatic changes in incidence of various diseases in china clearly show that many complex diseases have a very strong environmental component. indeed, a -year interventional study conducted in da qing, china, shows that, after merely years of lifestyle intervention after recruitment, those in the intervention groups had a % lower incidence over the year period as compared with control participants (li et al. ) , very similar to the finnish results. what constitutes a genetic resource, then? an ideal population for positional cloning and association studies should have a well-enumerated genetic disease positional cloning is a method of gene identification in which a gene for a specific disease is identified. a scientist can know nothing about the disease etiology. but just by collecting family data, dna, and some sleuthing, s/he could roughly localize the putative gene in a chromosomal region (i.e. positioning). then, with other molecular genetic tools, the scientist can then identify the gene from the region-thus the phrase, positional cloning. heritage, such as that of the finns (norio et al. ) , and a relatively welldelineated population genetic structure, such as in finland, where extensive church records often exist that document pedigree information for many populations. the catalogue of the genetic disease heritage would allow for correct specification of genetic models and facilitate gene identification. a well-delineated genetic structure of the population should facilitate fine-mapping (i.e. zero-in) and genetic association studies. in contrast, when the ''gene war'' broke out, the documentation of chinese disease heritage was scant at best, and its research in population genetics and genetic epidemiology lagged far behind that of other developing countries. since genetic epidemiology is itself a new branch of epidemiology, and since the design, execution and analysis of genetic epidemiologic studies require not only the expert knowledge of disease epidemiology but also a good command of statistical genetics, genetic epidemiology in china was in its infancy at the time. consequently, there was little, if any, genetic epidemiologic research in china. as a result, little was known of the mode of inheritance, penetrance, and gene frequency for major complex diseases. even credible estimates of disease incidence/prevalence were hard to find. therefore, the notion that china is ''an ideal place for gene hunters'' is questionable and somewhat dubious. the fact that after well over a decade no genes for any common, chronic disease have been identified in china is a testament to this. while calling for protection of china's genetic resources and equating large number of dna samples to huge commercial profits, virtually no one at the time was even remotely aware that there are actually numerous obstacles to this gene prospecting. first, there were huge financial barriers. hunting susceptibility genes for complex diseases usually requires a large number of blood samples, along with accurate phenotypic data in the first place. while genotyping costs have been reduced substantially, they were still expensive in the late s, especially when the whole genome would be scanned. these procedures alone would require a significant upfront capital investment. and like any other scientific endeavor, the gene hunting expedition would carry inherent risk of failure, lacking any guarantee that the investment would bear any financial rewards. the demand for huge resources, coupled with the uncertainty of yield from the investment, raises the question as to whether these endeavors were actually good investments, especially in a developing nation like china where there were and still are problems in providing affordable and equitable medical care for all its citizens (hsiao ). indeed, lifting living standard for all, improving child and maternal health, and better health education on healthy lifestyles (smoke-cessation, healthy a well-enumerated genetic disease heritage can provide the scientists with basic information about the disease of interest, such as mode of transmission and disease frequency. a well-delineated population genetic structure would come in handy when trying to narrow down the gene in a chromosomal region. penetrance refers to the probability that a person with a certain genotype (a genetic makeup) will develop the disease. ''gene war of the century'' and its aftermath diet, physical exercises etc.) can have a proven improvement of health of the general population. secondly, there were numerous scientific hurdles, some seemingly insurmountable. hunting for complex disease genes was an uncharted territory in , and no one could be reasonably sure as to whether there were susceptibility genes, and, if so, whether they could be identified, especially with reasonable time and resource constraints. even if they could be identified, whether they could fulfill the promises of better diagnosis and treatment is also completely uncertain. the genetic mechanism for sickle cell anemia has been known for well over half a century, for example, but so far no gene-derived therapeutics is available. lastly, there were technical hurdles. to genotype large number of samples with high accuracy and reasonable cost was still a challenge around . methodologically, how to analyze the data for diseases which apparently are also influenced by environmental factors and aging process was, and still is, a serious challenge. in addition, how to handle gene-gene interaction, gene-environment interaction, and variable age of onset posed formidable analytical challenges (di and guo ) . these hurdles were further compounded by the lack of a systematic catalogue and documentation of hereditary diseases in china in terms of disease frequency, mode of transmission and penetrance, the lack of documentation of population genetic structures in china, and the scarcity of well-trained genetic epidemiologists. even though the per-sample cost of sample collection was relatively low, this only advantage rarely offset the other, more fundamental deficiencies, and boded ill for many gene-hunting endeavors. viewing the xiping xu case as the nexus of international, transnational, national, and local interests, sleeboom eloquently provides ten different perspectives representing the views and ideals of different interest groups on xu's genetics research program in china (sleeboom ) . indeed, it is often stated that there are several stakeholders in the putative ''gene war'': chinese scientists, foreign gene hunters, and the chinese government. all of them apparently had a vested interest, mostly financial, in china's genetic resources. however, one critically important stakeholder and a potential beneficiary of this gene prospecting, obscured by the media blitz, were actually the patients of various complex diseases in china and the rest of the world. somehow, their voices were muffled and not heard. indeed, from a patient's perspective, it really does not matter which country finds the genes first and comes up with an efficacious therapeutics as long as s/he can access it at a reasonable cost and within a reasonable timeframe. in the s, china's drug r&d lagged significantly behind the west. most, if not all, drugs and diagnostic kits with proven efficacy used in china today have sickle cell anemia is a life-long blood disorder, characterized by abnormal, sickle-shaped red blood cells that do not have usual elasticity as normal red blood cells do. the disorder is caused by a single mutation in a gene called hemoglobin and manifests excruciating pain and shortened lifespan. it has been known to be an abnormality in the hemoglobin molecule since . been first discovered and developed outside china. in fact, all major pharmaceutical companies have now set up manufacturing facilities in china, and almost all drug companies market their products in china once approved by the state food and drug administration of china, a counterpart of the fda of the us. in fact, anecdotal evidence suggests that, when money is not an issue, many patients in china, especially those with potentially fatal diseases, usually prefer imported drugs or drugs made by foreign companies even though cheaper, domestically made drugs of purportedly equal efficacy are available. thus, one simple fact was overlooked in the entire media blitz: an intellectual right on genes can be profitable only when it has a market. china's market is too big to ignore for any rational pharmaceutical company. and when a drug company sells its gene-derived products to china using materials collected from chinese, some patients may still reap the fruits of gene prospecting. this seemingly obvious fact was completely overlooked at the height of the ''gene war.'' the attention that xu's projects drew was certainly unexpected and was likely distracting to xu's projects. xu vehemently denied that he was exploiting poor villagers in anhui for personal gains. he lamented that ''i came from china, and i love the country. but i have been treated like a traitor'' (hui and jue ) . fearing that the media furor and the lopsided condemnation from scientists in china would torpedo his projects in anhui, xu quickly moved to act. when a letter to the editor appeared in science questioning the validity of the ''gene war'' (guo et al. ) , xu quickly translated it into chinese and circulated it among chinese officials. xu also enlisted the support of several established chinese scholars in the us. he appealed to peng peiyun, who was then the director of the state family planning commission, soliciting support for his projects. he adamantly maintained that he was patriotic, and his projects in anhui and elsewhere in china had already trained chinese scientists and elevated their research capabilities. xu apparently had mastered the finesse of keeping a good relationship with the government officials and adroitly played the card of a patriotic oversea chinese scholar. the official people's daily reported in that ''in the last few years, the chinese biomedical researchers collaborated with the world-famous harvard university on various projects, and achieved exciting results in the pathogenesis of complex chronic diseases…. in particular, the research in genetic epidemiology of asthma and hypertension is now at the forefront in the world'' ([benefiting thousands and thousands of families.] ). in another report, it said that ''harvard's project has so far produced postdocs, doctoral students, visiting scholars, and senior investigators'' ([east and west collaborate for the health of humankind.] ). in xu's hometown, the provincial newspaper reported, after enumerating various human genetics research projects with harvard, that ''these collaborative projects not only injected new vitality to anhui's science and technology but also helped attract investment in the amount of about million ''gene war of the century'' and its aftermath rbm yuan'' ([anhui-native scientist climb peak of human genetics.] ). it remarked that ''these projects helped establish tens of laboratories with advanced instruments, …, and laid the foundation for our nation to catch up and surpass the west in human complex diseases research in the st century'' ([anhui-native scientist climb peak of human genetics.] ). xu's preference for dealing with the high-rank officials, however, went overboard and nearly caused his undoing (see below). as xu's various gene-hunting projects in anhui took off, some disturbing incidents involved in these projects gradually surfaced and leaked to the press. participants were initially promised by the research team that they would get free or reduced-cost medical care, but these promises were never honored. informed consent supposed to be obtained from potential participants actually was not-a flagrant violation of nih regulations. rumors circulated regarding coercion by local officials to participate in the projects, sample mishandling and mix-ups in the lab. prompted by these allegations, a fact-finding team of six people from harvard, including xu and his mentor, scott weiss, arrived in anhui in march to investigate the ethical and scientific integrity of xu's projects, but found no irregularities. five months later, the department of health and human services (dhhs) launched its own investigation of harvard's genetic research in china, based on the complaint of a whistle-blower from hsph alleging violations of us human subject protection regulations (pomfret and nelson ) . in late , the washington post ran a lengthy report detailing the allegations that chinese villagers had not been given low-cost medical care as they were promised in exchange for providing blood samples for xu's us-funded genetic research. the report also included allegations of xu's lapses in informed consent (pomfret and nelson ) . partly because of the controversy surrounding this case and others like it in china, the us embassy in beijing issued an advisory recommending that american scientists stop conducting medical research in extremely poor areas of china like anhui. in march , an investigative report by two xinhua news agency reporters was published in outlook, a major chinese magazine. the report reiterated some of the allegations made in an earlier report published in the washington post and supplemented them with interviews with chinese farmers in an isolated region of the anhui province and their various predicaments. the controversies surrounding xu's anhui projects reached a new crescendo at the symposium on bioethics, biotechnology and biosecurity held in early april , which was sponsored by the united nations educational, scientific, and cultural organization (unesco) and organized by the hangzhou municipal government. xiong lei, the lead reporter of the outlook report, presented her investigation and findings with their interview with chinese rural villagers in anhui. her presentation elaborated various irregularities in xu's projects, including the lack of informed consent, broken promises of providing medical care for those who participated in xu's projects, and xu's taking more blood samples than officially approved. an intense debate ensued, starting with xu's anhui collaborators, who maintained that the rate of getting informed consent was close to %, and that the chinese side did reap benefits from the collaboration with the harvard team. but their presentation was confronted by incensed chinese scientists, who questioned their numbers and practice. xu's legal counsel also made some comments, but the comments were challenged and ridiculed. some scientists expressed grave concerns about the loss of chinese genetic materials to the west, in fear of jeopardizing china's own genetic research. prompted by the outlook report, china's office for management of human genetic resources also launched its own investigation. it soon concluded, in june , that xu's projects did not violate any chinese regulations, and told the us embassy so (pomfret a) . but the controversy took another turn in late june . in a letter to xu dated june , , the dean of the hsph reprimanded him, strongly criticizing him for writing two letters to senior chinese government officials, in which xu urged the government to silence the voice from his detractors and to take actions against a major figure who had criticized his work. defending himself as a patriot, xu's letter suggested that the outlook report had released state secrets to ''foreigners'' (pomfret b) . the dean condemned xu's actions, and warned him that he would ''not receive the continued support of the school for you or your research if you persist in exercising independent action.'' if he continued his campaign against journalists and others who questioned his research, the letter said, xu would face ''appropriate sanction'' (pomfret b ). yet xu's woes, unfortunately, showed no sign of abating. on march , , the federal office for human research protections (ohrp) of the dhhs issued a scathing indictment of the hsph research. the ohrp found that projects in china that hsph was involved, including projects on which xu served as the pi, failed to be approved by institutional review boards (irb); where approval had been granted, significant and unannounced changes were often made. it found that many of the informed consent documents approved by the hsph irb included complex language that would not be comprehensible to all subjects, particularly for rural chinese subjects. hsph was charged with failing to minimize risks to their vulnerable subjects, such as economically or educationally disadvantaged persons. in the end, subjects never even received the free medical care as promised. as a result of the indictment, xu was ordered to suspend all human subject interventions in his active studies pending the outcome of an internal audit. this new development was soon reported dutifully in china's press (xiong and wang ) . on may , , lawrence summers, then the president of harvard university, gave a speech at peking university. when responding to a question from a student in the audience regarding harvard's projects in anhui, summers admitted that some irregularities in the projects were ''wrong.'' xu eventually breathed a sigh of relief when ohrp sent a letter to hsph in early may , stating that all issues raised in the hsph-involved china studies have been either resolved or dissolved because of unsubstantiated allegations (as in alleged forged informed consent documents). consequently, ''there should be no need for further involvement of ohrp'' in these matters. notably, the letter acknowledged that xu had decided not to continue the hypertension study due to ohrp's concern that some of the interventions in the protocol exceeded the level of minimal risk. shortly afterwards, hsph held a press release announcing the ''[c]onclusion of u.s. government's inquiry into hsph genetic research in china. '' soon after the hsph news release, one internet article, by xiong lei, alleged complacency and a likely cover-up on the part of the chinese government. it raised several issues (xiong ) . first, among the harvard projects in china that the ohrp found to have problems, projects were headed by xu. yet officially, only of xu's projects had ever been approved by the government. hence there was a glaring discrepancy. second, the official from the office for management of human genetic resources, who was in charge of the investigation of the allegation of irregularities in xu's projects, told xiong privately that it was not an official investigation. however, the same official then turned around and told the american embassy that no violation was found. it was rather strange that the results of this unofficial investigation, which was shielded from the media and the public, would then be used by the americans to prove that there are no irregularities in these projects. lastly, one peasant in anhui whose ordeal led to the exposure of apparent lapses in informed consent later recanted his story after talking with officials from anhui and the central government. presumably, he changed his story because of pressure he experienced. this changed story explained why the ohrp eventually found no wrong-doings in xu's projects (xiong ) . since xiong's article appeared in a website that is officially blocked in china, it did not cause any stir. in china's news media, the criticism of xu's anhui projects also subsided consequently. xu's woes finally ended. more than a decade has passed since the purported ''gene war.'' despite well over a decade of hard work and well over million us dollars in grant support of various forms, xu's team has so far not cloned a single gene for any complex disease or disorder. in fact, they are not even close. other teams were no luckier. in fact, besides numerous reports of association of diabetes, asthma, and other complex diseases with certain genetic polymorphisms, so far not a single gene has been proven to be chiefly responsible for any of these diseases. most genetic loci identified to be associated with the disease risk confer only miniscule relative risks, ranging from . to . (kraft and hunter ) . even when genetic polymorphisms that are associated with a modest increase in risk are combined, they generally have a low discriminatory and predictive ability (janssens and van duijn ) . a more recent study reports that after examination of genetic variants reportedly linked to heart disease, the variants turned out to have no value in predicting disease among , women who had been followed for over years and that family history had better predictive value (paynter et al. ). for human height, a trait that is known to be mostly hereditary, it is calculated that approximately , single nucleotide polymorphisms that are required to explain % of the population variation (goldstein ). this nearly astronomical number certainly inspires no enthusiasm for conducting large-scale gene hunting projects, and questions their value in genetic screening, genetic testing, and the possibility of developing gene-derived therapy (wade ). the idea that disease genes can be quickly identified, patented, and then quick profits can be made now seems to be too naïve. indeed, years after the first draft of the human genome was completed, medicine has yet to see any large part of the promised benefits (wade ) . even gene patenting, the very topic that made the ''gene war'' so contentious, has begun to encounter resistance (kintisch ). there is indication that, at least in the united states, the status of gene patenting is changing (kintisch ). in fact, the us government recently decided that human and other genes should not be eligible for patents because they are part of nature (pollack ) . this move, viewed as ''a bit of a landmark, kind of a line in the sand,'' followed a surprising ruling made in march , by judge robert w. sweet of the united states district court in manhattan, which ruled the patents held by myriad pharmaceuticals and the university of utah on two genes that predispose women to breast and ovarian cancer invalid (pollack ). on june , , the u.s. supreme court ruled in association for molecular pathology vs. myriad genetics that ''naturally occurring'' dna sequences, but not lab-created synthetic cdnas, are off-limits for patent protection. millennium pharmaceuticals, the initial financial backer of xu's projects, pulled out of anhui early in , with no significant medical or business discoveries to show for its $ . million investment (pomfret and nelson ) . it since has moved into a field of drug r&d that seeks to customize medical treatments for individual patients. it has grown into a successful, billion-dollar enterprise. yet no doubt xu's anhui projects played a crucial role early in its success by securing a much needed infusion of funds (pomfret and nelson ) . for sequana therapeutics, despite its public announcement of the discovery of the asthma gene in , so far there have been no publications from the company regarding the gene. the claim has never been independently verified. the prospect of making diagnostics or therapeutics derived from the putative gene never materialized. it was acquired by arris pharmaceuticals, forming axys pharmaceuticals which later on formed axys advanced technologies, later bought by chemrx. the remains of axys were bought by celera. what used to be sequana therapeutics no longer exists. human genome sciences' stock price reached its peak at $ on january , and went through two splits in . its president and founder haseltine said that his work ''speeds up biological discovery a hundredfold, easily.'' he talked of finding ''the fountain of youth'' in genes in the form of ''cellular replacement'' therapies. the company raised more than $ billion in investments by . in september , the company reported that it had found a way to treat large, painful sores that often plague elderly patients, using a protein spray called repifermin, made by a human gene called keratinocyte growth factor- . in february , however, the company said that it was ending the development of repifermin because it showed no more benefit than a placebo in clinical trials. another initial drug also failed in clinical trials. in late , the company announced haseltine's retirement and named h. thomas watkins the new president and ceo. in , the first draft version of the human genome was published, thanks to collaborative work among geneticists from china, france, germany, japan, united kingdom and united states. in , the completed version of the human genome was published, marking the completion of the hgp. from the first draft of the human genome, it was quickly learned that there are about , genes, less than one quarter of , ''genes'' patented by the human genome sciences. along with this shrinkage in the number of genes, the company stock price also shrank dramatically: the closing price on july , , was $ . , a reduction of . % from its historical high. other genomics companies have not fared much better. iceland-based decode genetics, for example, was founded in to identify human genes associated with common diseases using population studies. its stock price reached $ . on september , , but plummeted to $ . on july , , a reduction of . % in value. its stock was removed from the nasdaq biotechnology index in november . the company's annual report reveals that its net losses were in excess of million us dollars, and that they have never turned a profit. its annual report says that ''decode has recorded substantial operating and net losses over the past years'' and the company filed for chapter bankruptcy in the same year (http://www.decode. com/investors/dcgn-sec-filings.php). it was acquired by amgen at the end of for million usd. on the chinese side, human genetics research moved on with the infusion of research funding from the government. most scientists who participated in the xiang shan symposium established themselves in genetics research. several of them were later elected to the chinese academy of sciences, the most prestigious honor that can be bestowed on to a scientist in china. besides all the trappings and perks, being an academy member also carries far more influence and political clout than its us counterpart. huangmin yang, the most vocal in criticizing xu's projects, went on to establish china's premier genome research center, and his career culminated recently in the completion of the diploid genome of the first asian individual (wang ) , rumored to be the dna extracted from yang himself. the purported ''gene war'' has a profound resonance. even today, over a decade after, the reverberations of the media blitz and the fallout are still palpable: a google search of ''gene war'' or ''genetic resource'' turns up numerous websites still talking about the ''gene war'' or even the purported attempt by the us to wage war against china using ''gene weapons'' (tong ) . the ''war'' also spurred a flurry of research papers in chinese scholarly journals, universally calling for the protection of china's genetic resources and profit-sharing arising from gene research (jia and wang ; jiang and wei ) . xu left harvard in and joined the school of public health, university of illinois in chicago, as a non-tenure track research professor of epidemiology (http:// www.cade.uic.edu/sphapps/faculty_profile/facultyprofile.asp?i=xipingxu), apparently failing to secure a tenured position at harvard. the negative publicity surrounding xu likely made him seem more a liability than an asset to hsph, especially when he and his group had made no important discoveries. in , the epidemiologist-turned genetic epidemiologist went through another metamorphosis and became an entrepreneur. he was the chief technology officer and, as of writing, is now the president of ausa pharmed company in shenzhen, china. in a glowing profile of xu and his company by people's daily, xu is quoted as saying, ''i used to write prescriptions for people in a small village, and now i am writing a big prescription for people all over the world'' (wang ) , apparently referring to the company's blockbuster-to-be drug for stroke prevention, yiye (''yi'' is the pronunciation of the first syllable of enalapril in chinese and ''ye'' is that of folic acid). according to the company's website, the drug, a polypill consisting of a combination of enalapril (an angiotension converting enzyme inhibitor, or acei, used as an anti-hypertensive drug, on which merck had a patent, now expired) and folic acid (a member of the vitamin b family, used to prevent neural tube defects for pregnant women, and, as an auxiliary, to treat hyperhomocysteine and other conditions), is the fruit of extensive research by ausa scientists, ''the only class i cardiovascular drug approved by the state food and drug administration (the us fda counterpart in china) in the last three years with all china-owned intellectual rights, and is the first novel drug in the world that can simultaneously control two risk factors for stroke, hypertension and hyperhomocysteine.'' in , xu was among the first that were granted the ''thousand scholars'' support, a program designed to attract full-professor-level senior professionals from overseas to work in china. this is a title with enormous privileges and perks given to a select group of best scholars recruited from overseas by beijing. on december , , xu was featured in the oriental satellite tv's special program, people in years, a program that profiled prominent people and their achievements in the years of economical reform in china. in the program, xu talked about his early life as a ''barefoot doctor,'' his admission to peking university and then to harvard, and his dream, as a youth, of ''writing big prescriptions for people all over the world.'' he talked about his work in epidemiologic studies of air pollution and health and his new venture in developing drugs for chinese people. he made no mention, however, about his genetics studies and their associated controversies, and showed no trace of bitterness. curiously, the ausa-sponsored clinical trial on the evaluation of yiye in prevention of stroke was registered at the clinical trial registry, www. clinicaltrials.gov, on november , , which coincided with the official approval from the sfda of yiye. the registered trial, china stroke primary prevention trial (csppt), is a phase iv trial (nct ), which compares the efficacy of enalapril and folic acid combination vs. enalapril alone in preventing strokes. as of writing, its status is listed as ''on-going, but is not recruiting participants.'' its estimated completion date is august, . in modern society, science has become a firmly institutionalized social activity, attracting people through offering generally prized opportunities of engaging in socially approved patterns of association with one's fellow and the consequent creation of cultural products esteemed by the group, in addition to economic benefits that science may offer (merton [ ). as merton eloquently put it, ''such group-sanctioned conduct tends to continue unchallenged, with little questioning of its reason for being. institutionalized values are conceived as selfevident and require no vindication'' (merton [ ). in modern science, especially in biomedical research, scientific enquiries often require large amount of resources-expensive instruments and reagents, lab space, and talented and hardworking students. hence the pressure for getting resources is enormous. anything that promises to help ease the pressure is welcome. scholars of sociology of science often view science as agonistic, made up of rival individuals or groups vying to have their scientific ideas or views recognized and/or accepted as valid (greenhalgh ) . science, as a space of maps of culture, is drawn by scientists hoping to have their research accepted as valid and recognized, their practices esteemed and patronized, and their culture sustained as home of objectivity, reason, truth or utility. the maps are then used by all who are unsure about the reality (gieryn ). yet maps of science change over time, as competing cartographers are constantly drawing, erasing, and redrawing the boundaries of science. by doing this, the scientist cartographers claim authority over a particular issue by taking it within their science or turf. thus, vying for acceptance or the valid ''truth'' among scientists is essentially a credibility contest, with winners viewed as the epistemic authority (gieryn ) . the one with the epistemic authority obviously would be the most influential, and their views and voices would be the most visible and vocal when it comes to policy issues (greenhalgh ). gieryn's credibility contest metaphor aptly depicts the quest for epistemic authority in science, it also is applicable, rather fittingly, to the situation when scientists vie for resources from funding agencies. in fact, when the process of deciding who would get resources lacks procedural justice, and when there is a lack of tradition for open and rational debate and of a checks-and-balances system, the credibility contest becomes literally a ''beauty'' contest-the most glamorous, in terms of rank, status, or simply seniority in the administrative ladder, but not necessarily the vision, merit, or talent, would get the resources. in a country where political loyalty and connections are valued far more than scientific merit and talent, the credibility contest further becomes a contest of political correctness or patriotism. coupled with the lack of a clean and efficient government and of transparency and also with the pervasiveness of guanxi or personal connections, this contest might create winners who are not necessarily the scientifically most visionary. as human beings, scientists are also susceptible to all human frailties. aside from questing for epistemic authority, they also compete for resources and influence, and often vie for political clout, credit, fame, and even glamour, especially when such activities help their quest for epistemic authority or increase their professional and personal gains. if there are no set rules of the game with certain procedural justice or a checks-and-balances system in place that can curtail the tendency and channel it into the maximization of the common good, the human frailties, coupled with the lack of proper avenues for open debate, the contest would be an invitation for inefficiency, waste, corruption, and even disaster. winners might take all, but in the long run the bad money drives out the good. the spectacular fiasco in containing the sars epidemic and in sequencing the coronavirus that causes sars are a prime example (enserink ; cao ) . lured mostly by the low cost of collecting large dna samples and the perceived genetic homogeneity, many gene hunters from the west came to china in the hope to identify genes responsible for complex diseases, and some of them may have hoped to get rich in the process. this was mostly accomplished through some wellconnected chinese intermediaries ''as experienced guide,'' as washington post reporter john pomfret put it (pomfret and nelson ) . letting the intermediary do the leg work did spare them from doing the dirty field work but also insulated them from the sentiment from villagers and the scientific establishment in china and prevented from establishing a rapport with these people. from a scientific standpoint, many gene-hunting projects were launched without much understanding of the population genetic structure of the chinese population or foundational genetic epidemiologic data, let alone the appreciation of the inherent risk in this scientific endeavor. there was no plan b that one could have something to fall back on in case what was planned did not pan out. the execution also was fraught with various deficiencies. with little or no oversight, the daily work was left to the hands of not-so-well trained people. and when rumors of irregularities surfaced, inspection was largely perfunctory, nothing more than sugar-coating or bandaging. it would have been a miracle if such projects were ever productive. faced with numerous well-endowed gene hunting teams coming to china, the cash-strapped chinese genetics scientists had every reason to be worried. the taking of large number of dna samples and, worse yet, the tracking down of some large pedigrees with rare genetic diseases would effectively deprive their chance of finding disease genes, outshining them in the genetic research of chinese populations and threatening their careers. providing dna materials without any reasonable share of possible future financial payoff for the people who donated their blood could also be a concern, but it is not clear which was the primary concern. by calling the attention of the central government through evoking nationalism via calling the protection of china's genetic resources, they got the resources and also claimed a territory that would be off-limit to ''foreign devils.'' yet by doing so, no one apparently was aware then of numerous and enormous hurdles to gene prospecting and vastly underestimated its complexity and challenge. by evoking the urgency to protect china's genetic resources, some scientists played the card of nationalism, wining the contest in getting resources through nudging the unsuspecting government to cough up some much needed funds to thwart ''foreign devils''' pilfering act. through the drafting and implementation of the interim measures for the administration of human genetic resources, the domestic scientists effectively enacted an embargo of the transfer of all dna-containing materials from china to the outside by drawing a clearly demarcated boundary. this may explain why dr. xiping xu repeatedly proclaimed, in many public occasions during the entire course of the ''war,'' that he is a patriot. well-connected and clearly a master of nuances of guanxi, he certainly knew the psyche of many chinese and government officials. lapses and missteps aside, he was no match to domestic scientists united in the name of patriotism. yet his biggest deficiency in the credibility contest was attributable to his betting on a wrong horse: many, if not all, of his well-funded projects did not pan out in the end, producing no headline scientific discovery and failing to establish an epistemic authority. while credibility contest to quest for epistemic authority depicts science and its working, the contest for credibility, glamour or patriotism in getting resources as we see in the ''gene war'' may be ultimately detrimental to china's science and technology. today, china's r&d investment, in terms of dollar amount, has increased dramatically as compared with the era of ''gene war.'' it reached a historical high of . billion yuan, or about . billion us dollars, in , amounting to . % of china's gdp. as a result, china's scientific output, measured by the number of papers published in international journals, also has increased remarkably and is reportedly ranked as the second in the world, just behind the us. yet in terms of average number of citations-a rough measure of impact or research quality, china was ranked a distant th . a more disconcerting observation is that the fruit of biomedical research seldom translates into better patient care, better therapeutics, better prognostics, or better prevention. in other words, the vast majority of tax-payers have not received any tangible benefit from the supposedly noble and grandiose scientific endeavor. this situation, if left unchanged, is not going to justify for heavy investment in biomedical research and to win the continued support from tax-payers in the long-run. ultimately, it would raise the issue of sustainability of biomedical research in china. this problem will become all the more acute as china enters into an aging society in which health care cost will surely skyrocket. it should be noted that, at the height of the ''gene war,'' similar concerns were also raised in finland and india. however, few seemed to have framed their concerns at the level of nationalism, and even fewer have gone overboard and demonized, often in passionate and patriotic rhetoric, all foreign-supported gene hunting projects. the near paranoid that instigated towards all foreign-backed gene-hunting project did help to cough up some much needed research funding from the government, but also fermented xenophobia and some utterly unfounded yet sensational non-sense such as ''gene weapons'' (tong ) and tarnished genetic research in china. remarkably, when a book was published in , sensationally claiming that the sars virus was deliberately manufactured by the west based on dna materials smuggled out of china (tong ) , no one stood out and debunked such scientific rubbish. the chinese also carry a burden of humiliation and painful memories of the past as a result of repeated ravages by foreign aggression and exploitation in the last two centuries. consequently, issues that may be remotely related to national sovereignty or foreign exploitation are hot-button ones. minor incidents can be easily escalated into a major event, as evidenced by the calls for boycotts of french carrefour and other foreign retailers in china in response to the disruptions of the olympic torch relay in paris in , and, more recently, by the vandalization of japanese-made cars in many chinese cities at the height of anti-japanese sentiment rekindled by the territorial dispute between china and japan. china's current funding system and the science policy-making also are vulnerable to subterfuge of various kinds, behind which personal gains are often masquerading as patriotism or national interest. as ambrose bierce once defined, patriotism is a ''combustible rubbish ready to the torch of any one ambitious to illuminate his name.'' it is a challenge to weed out charlatans impersonating as patriots, but the best bet would be a transparent system that values merit, talent and vision above cheap patriotic or nationalistic rhetoric. as china is aspiring to be a leader in science and technology, this ''gene war of the century'' and its aftermath, as narrated here, serve as a cautionary tale. it reminds us, first and foremost, how important it is to be clear-headed and not to follow blindly whatever in vogue. very often, what we see is the conspicuous ''me-too'' science, following whatever fashionable. yet the most important ball that all eyes should lay on, i.e. better health for all, is seemingly lost. in the absence of procedural justice in the process of deciding who would get resources, and when there is a lack of tradition for open and rational debate and of a checks-and-balances system, the credibility contest for resources would easily become a ''beauty'' contest. in a country where political loyalty and nationalism are valued more than scientific merit and talent, the credibility contest would further become a contest of political loyalty, political correctness, or patriotism. the news of pilfering of china's genetic resources by foreign companies could easily strike a chord of painful memories of foreign aggression and exploitation in the last two centuries. the isolation from the world community for nearly three decades since one key finding of the hgp is that all human races are . % identical-dna sequence-wise. therefore, racial differences are genetically insignificant. for many genes, it has been established that genetic variations within the same racial group are larger than those among racial groups. thus, scientifically, it is impossible to devise a ''gene weapon'' to target a specific racial or ethnic group. ''gene war of the century'' and its aftermath the founding of the people's republic purportedly due to the prejudice, discrimination, and containment of the western imperialists and capitalists-or so it was told by the state media-also helped foster or reinforce a nearly xenophobia attitude towards anything perceived to be dangerous if coming from outside of china, especially it touches on ideology. thus, a spark of minor incident could easily kindle the fire of tumultuous nationalistic uproar. hence, the ''gene war'' holds a lesson that being seemingly the most patriotic is not an assurance for good science. the mere possession of resources does not guarantee scientific productivity, either. vision and brain are more important when it comes to scientific innovation and discovery. the over-politicizing science will ultimately prove to be detrimental to china's science and technology. we have seen it during china's great cultural revolution, in which nearly everything in science and technology was politicized. but science and technology then were essentially decimated, and the characteristic hallmark was jia, da, kong or falsehood, grandeur, and emptiness. in addition, when political loyalty prevails over talent and vision, some unscrupulous scientists can hijack the value system to their own advantage. and when there is also a lack of avenue for open debate, then one project purported of to be of national importance could be usurped by another with purportedly greater importance. the conflict also reminds us that scientists are no more than human beings and have all the human frailties. personal gains or some ulterior motives can be camouflaged as patriotism or public interest, as shown in the politics of paleoanthropological nationalism in china (sautman ) . as merton succinctly put it, ''any extrinsic reward-fame, money, position-is morally ambiguous and potentially subversive of culturally esteemed values. for as rewards are meted out, they can displace the original motive: concern with recognition can displace concern with advancing knowledge. an excess of incentives can produce distracting conflict'' (merton [ ). without any measures or system to guard against this, the interest of the nation and of the public will suffer. in human genetics, china's premier challenge now remains to be, as was a decade ago, ''to build up a critical mass of highly competent and visionary scientists who will be able to bring chinese genetics into the world community'' (guo et al. ) . the ultimate goal of biomedical research in general and human genetics in particular is to bring tangible benefits and better health to the general public, not merely some ranking of scientific output, for it is the source of gaining sustainable support from the general public and of economic prosperity. science thrives on openness, reason, and the competition of ideas, and it suffers when subjected to political agenda, faux patriotism or nationalism. anhui-native scientist 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''violation advances in science and progress of humanity: a global perspective on dna the gene puzzle acknowledgments the author would like to thank drs. cong cao, partha majumder, margaret sleeboom-faulkner for their constructive comments on an earlier version of this manuscript. he also thanks dr. yang huanmin for the reading of an earlier draft, two anonymous reviewers and the editors for their helpful comments. thanks also goes to charles guo for his critical reading of and helpful comments on the manuscript. key: cord- -zolwjl u authors: xiao, shuqi; jia, jianyu; mo, delin; wang, qiwei; qin, limei; he, zuyong; zhao, xiao; huang, yuankai; li, anning; yu, jingwei; niu, yuna; liu, xiaohong; chen, yaosheng title: understanding prrsv infection in porcine lung based on genome-wide transcriptome response identified by deep sequencing date: - - journal: plos one doi: . /journal.pone. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zolwjl u porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrs) has been one of the most economically important diseases affecting swine industry worldwide and causes great economic losses each year. prrs virus (prrsv) replicates mainly in porcine alveolar macrophages (pams) and dendritic cells (dcs) and develops persistent infections, antibody-dependent enhancement (ade), interstitial pneumonia and immunosuppression. but the molecular mechanisms of prrsv infection still are poorly understood. here we report on the first genome-wide host transcriptional responses to classical north american type prrsv (n-prrsv) strain ch a infection using solexa/illumina's digital gene expression (dge) system, a tag-based high-throughput transcriptome sequencing method, and analyse systematically the relationship between pulmonary gene expression profiles after n-prrsv infection and infection pathology. our results suggest that n-prrsv appeared to utilize multiple strategies for its replication and spread in infected pigs, including subverting host innate immune response, inducing an anti-apoptotic and anti-inflammatory state as well as developing ade. upregulation expression of virus-induced pro-inflammatory cytokines, chemokines, adhesion molecules and inflammatory enzymes and inflammatory cells, antibodies, complement activation were likely to result in the development of inflammatory responses during n-prrsv infection processes. n-prrsv-induced immunosuppression might be mediated by apoptosis of infected cells, which caused depletion of immune cells and induced an anti-inflammatory cytokine response in which they were unable to eradicate the primary infection. our systems analysis will benefit for better understanding the molecular pathogenesis of n-prrsv infection, developing novel antiviral therapies and identifying genetic components for swine resistance/susceptibility to prrs. porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrs), also called ''blue ear'' disease due to a typical, but not often observed hallmark of ''blue ears'', is widely accepted as being one of the most economically important diseases affecting swine industry. since its first appearance in the late s in the us and europe, prrs has spread worldwide [ , , ] . prrs is characterized with high mortality in piglets, reproductive failure (late-term abortions and stillbirths, premature farrowing, mummified pigs) in pregnant sows and respiratory disease (interstitial pneumonia, respiratory difficulties) in nursery and grower/finishing pigs, causing highly significant economic losses to the swine industry worldwide, resulting in .$ . million losses each year in the us alone [ ] . the etiologic agent of prrs is prrs virus (prrsv), a small enveloped, linear, single, positive-stranded rna virus, which is a member of the family arteriviridae which includes lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus, equine arteritis virus, and simian hemorrhagic fever virus and enters in the newly established order delayed and their levels remain low, which can not eliminate effectively prrsv-infected cells [ , ] . because of these features of prrsv infection, prrs has been one of the most challenging subjects of research in veterinary viral immunology [ ] . regulation of immune responses and genetic resistance to infectious viral diseases is an area of concern for human and swine [ ] . prrsv strongly modulates the host's immune responses, and changes the host's gene expression. studies showed that prrsv inhibits type i interferons (ifn-a/b, spi ifn), especially ifn-a [ ] , and induces interleukin- (il ) [ , ] . because the primary cellular target of prrsv is the porcine alveolar macrophages (pams) of the lung, several studies have analysed the immune responses of pams to prrsv infection. one group [ ] used differential display reverse-transcription pcr to identify molecular genetic changes within prrsv-infected pams over a h pi period. their results suggest that myxovirus resistance (mx ) and ubiquitin specific proteases (usp) genes may play important roles in clinical disease during prrsv infection. notably, one recent paper on genome-wide transcriptional response of pams following infection with the lelystad prrsv strain (european type, eu prrsv) using affymetrix microarrays has been published during the preparation of our manuscript [ ] . they found that the expression of beta interferon (ifn-b) was strongly upregulated while the expression of il- and tnf-a was weakly upregulated. almost in the same time, the other group employed serial analysis of gene expression (sage) to examine the global expression of genes in vr- prrsv strain (north american type, na prrsv)-infected pams. they identified over unique tags with significantly altered expression levels [ ] . in vitro studies will be useful for investigating how prrsv modifies genes expression in primary target cells, such as pams. however, many of the outstanding issues will be answered only in the context of prrsv-infected animals. hence, the characterization of host immune response under in vivo environment to prrsv is still an area in urgent need of investigation. lung pathogenesis is a major feature of prrsv infection. moreover, in addition to serving as a source of protein in the human diet, the pig is also an excellent biomedical model for humans because of the similarity in size and physiology, and in organ development and disease progression [ ] . thus, understanding the host's immune response to prrsv infection is important not only for swine production but also for human consumption. however, to date, the immune response to prrsv in porcine lung has not been analyzed by transcriptome profiling. next generation high-throughput sequencing technology has been adapted for transcriptome analysis because of the inexpensive production of large volumes of sequence data [ , , , ] . the technology developed by illumina (formerly solexa sequencing) [ ] , which is also referred to as digital gene expression (dge) tag profiling, allows identification of millions of short rnas in a sample and of differentially expressed genes without the need for prior annotations. here we employed the illumina genome analyzer platform to perform a digital gene expression analysis of the porcine lung transcriptome response to n-prrsv infection, and used histopathology examination to analyze the pulmonary pathological changes of the infected-porcine lungs. the relationship between pulmonary gene expression profiles after n-prrsv infection and infection pathology was systematically analyzed. the comprehensive analysis of the global host response induced by n-prrsv suggested an inflammatory response, mediated by multiple inflammatory molecules early during infection that induced tissue injury, an immunosuppressive state, mediated by apoptosis of infected cells, which caused depletion of immune cells and induced an anti-inflammatory cytokine response in which they were unable to eradicate the primary infection. our systems analysis will benefit for better understanding the molecular pathogenesis of n-prrsv infection, developing novel antiviral therapies and identifying genetic components for swine resistance/susceptibility to prrs. our study had been approved by animal care and use committee of guangdong province, china. all animal procedures were performed according to guidelines developed by the china council on animal care and protocol approved by animal care and use committee of guangdong province, china. nine conventionally-reared, healthy -week-old, crossbred weaned pigs (landrace yorkshire) were selected from a highhealth commercial farm that has historically been free of all major pig diseases, such as prrsv, porcine circovirus type , classical swine fever virus, porcine parvovirus, pseudorabies virus, swine influenza virus and mycoplasma hyopneumoniae infections. all pigs were prrsv-seronegative determined by elisa (herdchek prrs xr; idexx laboratories) and absence of prrsv tested by rt-pcr. pigs were randomly assigned to two groups in the experiment and raised in isolation rooms. six pigs were inoculated with ml viral suspension ( ml intranasally and ml intramuscularly) of classical north american type prrsv (n-prrsv) strain ch a, isolated from china in , gifted by dr. zhang guihong, south china agricultural university) at a dose of . tcid ml on day . three uninfected negative control (unc) pigs were treated similarly with an identical volume of dmem culture media from uninfected marc- cells day prior to experimental infection, and were immediately necropsied. n-prrsv-inoculated pigs were clinically examined daily and rectal body temperatures were recorded from days to pi. viral reisolates were performed after the pigs were killed. the infected group showed positive, and the unc group was negative. tissue homogenates and serum were examined by n-prrsv-specific quantitative pcr (qpcr). the oligonucleotide primers used were nsp f( -gtgggtcggcaccagtt- ) and nsp r , designed in the gene segment encoding for nsp . the taqman probe, fam-cacagttctacgcggtgcagg -tamra , was synthesized. three infected pigs randomly chosen were necropsied at each time point of h pi and h pi. lung samples were collected from unc group (c), three pigs at h pi (n ), three pigs at h pi (n ) and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen for rna isolation or fixed in % neutralized buffered formalin for histological processing. lungs of unc and experimentally infected pigs were processed routinely for haematoxylin and eosin (h&e) and immunohistochemistry staining, as described previously [ ] . total rna was extracted from frozen lungs using standard protocols (trizol) and then treated with dnase to remove potential genomic dna contamination according to the manufactures's protocols. rna integrity and concentration were evaluated by agilent bioanalyzer (agilent technologies). for rna library construction and deep sequencing, equal quantities of rna samples from three unc individual lungs were pooled, rna samples from the three infected pig lungs (n ) were pooled, and rna samples from the three infected individual lungs (n ) were pooled. approximately mg of rna representing each group were submitted to solexa (now illumina inc.) for sequencing. sequence tag preparation was done with illumina's digital gene expression tag profiling kit according to the manufacturer's protocol. in brief, mrna was isolated from mg total rna by binding the mrna to a magnetic oligo bead. first-and secondstrand cdna were synthesized while the mrna was attached to the beads. the double stranded cdnas were digested with nlaiii to wash away all fragmens other than the catg fragment attached to the oligo bead. then gex nlaiii adapter was ligated at the site of nlaiii cleavage. in addition, gex nlaiii adapter contains the sequence for the restriction enzyme mmei, subsequently, we applied the restriction enzyme mmei to create the bp tag. the gex adapter was ligated at the site of mmei cleavage. a pcr with cycles was performed with two primers that anneal to the ends of the adapters to enrich the adapterligated cdna construct. the resulting bp fragments were purified from % novex tbe page gel. subsequently, the purified cdna tags were sequenced on the illumina cluster station and genome analyzer. image recognition and base calling were performed using the illumina pipeline. all data is miame compliant. the raw data (tag sequences and counts) has been submitted to gene expression omnibus (geo) under series gse . for the raw data, we filtered adaptor tags, low quality tags and tags of copy number = to get clean tags. subsequently, we classified the clean tags according their copy number in the library and show their percentage in the total clean tags and analyzed saturation of the library. the preprocessed database of all possible catg + -nt tag sequences was created, using sus scrofa unigene (http://www.ncbi. nlm.nih.gov/unigene/ugorg.cgi?taxid = , unigene build # sus scrofa, nov, th, ) from ncbi. for monitoring the mapping events on both strands, both the sense and the complementary antisense sequences were included in the data collection. information on the position of polyadenylation signals was also collected from the transcript dababase. then we aligned all clean tags to the reference sequences, and unambiguous tags were annotated. we counted the clean tag number corresponding to each gene. to compare the de of gene across samples (n /c, n /c, n /n ), the number of raw clean tags in each library was normalized to tags per million (tpm) to obtain normalized gene expression level. de detection of gene or tag across samples was performed according to the previous description [ ] . genes were deemed significantly differentially expressed with a p-value , . , a false discovery rate (fdr) , . and an estimated absolute log -fold change . . in sequence counts across libraries. in order to verify the dge results, we used qpcr analysis. the rna samples used for the qpcr assays were both the same as for the dge experiments and independent rna extractions from biological replicates. qpcrs were done on the lightcycler (roche), with sybr-green detection (sybr primescript rt-pcr kit, takara biotechnology co., ltd.), according to the manufacture's instruction. each cdna was analyzed in triplicate, after which the average threshold cycle (ct) was calculated per sample. the relative expression levels were calculated with the ddct method. the results were normalized to the expression level of hprt and relative to the c sample. through browsing all health traits of pig quantitative trait locus (qtl) database (pigqtldb, http://www.animalgenome. org/qtldb/pig.html) by trait classes, we obtained mapping details of qtl on the corresponding pig chromosome. then pig affymetrix elements corresponding to health trait qtl regions were downloaded to an excel file. by matching the id of de genes to all genes in the qtl regions, we obtained de genes of the corresponding qtl region. pathway analysis was mainly based on the kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) database. two-side fisher's exact test with a multiple testing and x test were used to classify the pathway category. the false discovery rate (fdr) was used to correct the p-value. we chose only pathway categories that had a p, . . within the significant category, the enrichment re was , where n f is the number of flagged proteins within the particular category, n is the total number of proteins within the same category, nf is the number of flagged proteins in the protein reference database list, n is the total number of proteins in the gene reference database list. stc is implemented entirely in java. the clustering algorithm first selects a set of distinct and representative temporal expression profiles. these model profiles are selected independent of the data. the clustering algorithm then assigns each gene passing the filtering criteria to the model profile that most closely matches the gene's expression profile as determined by the correlation coefficient. since the model profiles were selected independent of the data, the algorithm can then determine which profiles have a statistically significant higher numberthan genes assigned using a permutation test. this test determines an assignment of genes to model profiles using a large number of permutations of the time points. it then uses standard hypothesis testing to determine which model profiles have significantly more genes assigned under the true ordering of time points compared to the average number assigned to the model profile in the permutation runs. significant model profiles can either be analyzed independently, or grouped together based on similarity to form clusters of significant profiles [ , ] . stc-go supports gene ontology enrichment analyses for sets of genes having the same significant temporal expression pattern. we select random samples of s a (s a is the number of genes assigned to the same model temporal expression profile r.) genes at each iteration and compute fisher's exact test p-values for the selected genes in all go biological categories [ ] . the two-sided fisher's exact test p-value for a category reflects a test of the null hypothesis that the category is enriched in genes assigned to profile r with respect to what would have been expected by chance alone. to decide whether or not to follow up a category that appears enriched in these genes, we would know the statistical reliability of the apparent enrichment. to assess the significance of a particular category, we need to know the distribution of p-values that would occur by random chance. the percentage of false positives to be tolerated will generally depend on the relative costs of false positives and false negatives in whatever follow-up study is to be done. this way of framing the question leads us to specify the false discovery rate (fdr) for a set of categories, rather than significance level (p-value) for each category. with the significance at the . level, for a given category, the enrichment r e is given by r e~( i=m)=(s a =n) where i is the number of genes assigned to profile r within the go category of interest, m is the total number of genes within the go category of interest, and n is total number of unique genes in the gene reference database list. after n-prrsv infection, the affected pigs exhibited the following clinical symptoms within - days: fever of . - . uc, depression, anorexia, rough hair coats, dyspnoea, reddening of skin, oedema of the eyelids, conjunctivitis, mild diarrhoea, shivering. those unc pigs did not show any obvious changes in body temperature and clinical signs. qpcr assay showed that n-prrsv virus was present in each of the infected pigs. but n-prrsv nsp gene was not differentially expressed at h pi and h pi (table s ). histopathology examination of n-prrsv-affected pigs showed interstitial pneumonia in lungs with thickening of alveolar septa accompanied with infiltration of immune cells ( figure b ). most viral antigen was detected in alveolar cells and bronchiolar epithelial cells in lesions ( figure c ). to investigate the regulation of the host response to the n-prrsv virus, we considered the global gene expression profiles in lungs using solexa/illumina's dge system, a tag-based transcriptome sequencing method. we sequenced three porcine lung dge libraries from c, n , n using massively parallel sequencing on the illumina platform. major characteristics of these three libraries were summarized table . we obtained approximately . million total sequence tags per library with distinct tag sequences. prior to mapping these tag sequences to reference sequences, we filtered adaptor tags, low quality tags and tags of copy number = , producing approximately . million total clean sequence tags per library with distinct clean tag sequences. the c library had the highest number of both total sequence tags and distinct sequence tags; this was followed by the n , n libraries. moreover, the c library had the highest ratio of number of distinct tags to total tags and the lowest percentage of distinct clean high copy number tags. the data showed that more genes were detected in the c library than other two libraries and more transcripts were expressed at lower levels in the c library. saturation analysis of capacity of libraries showed that new emerging distinct tags were gradually reduced with increasing of total sequence tags when the number of sequencing tags was big enough. when the number of sequencing tags reached million, library capacity approached saturation ( figure s ). for tag mapping, we preprocessed one reference tag database that included sequences from sus scrofa unigene. to get the reference tags, we used nlaiii to digest all the samples and took all the catg+ tags in the gene as the gene's reference tags, not only the most one. we obtained total reference tag sequences with unambigous tag sequences. considering polymorphism across samples, tolerances were set to allow one mismatch in each alignment. by the criteria, . %, . % of distinct clean tags mapped to the unigene virtual tag database, . %, . % of the distinct clean tags mapped unambiguously to the unigene, and . %, . % of the distinct clean tags didn't map to the unigene virtual tag database ( table ). the occurrence of unknown tags was probably due to the incompleteness of pig genome sequencing. most solexa experimental tags matched to the st or nd catg site in high-confidence transcripts ( figure s ). for solexa sequencing can distinguish between transcripts originating from both dna strands, employing the strand-specific nature of the sequencing tags obtained, we found evidence for bidirectional transcription in to of all detectable unigen clusters and to antisense-stand specific transcripts (table s ). by comparison, the ratio of sense to antisense strand of the transcripts was approximately . : for all libraries. this suggests that in spite of the high number of antisense mapping events detected, the transcriptional regulation in the n-prrsv-induced immune response acts most strongly on the sense strand. to analyze the depth of transcriptome sampling in the dge libraries, we studied the rate of increase of the number of genes (sense+antisense strand) identified as the size of the corresponding library increases. when the library size reached one million, we could identify % and % all genes and genes identified by unambigous tags, respectively ( figure s ). at this time, library capacity approached saturation. to gain the global transcriptional changes in n-prrsv infected porcine lungs, we applied the method described previously [ ] to identify de genes from the normalized dge data by pairwise comparisons between all differential time points (n /c, n /c, n /n ) during infection. results showed that genes had p values , . , false discovery rate (fdr) , . and estimated absolute log -fold change . . in at least one of the pairwise comparisons, which were declared to be differentially expressed during infection course (table s ) . to characterize the functional consequences of gene expression changes associated with infection with n-prrsv, we performed pathway analysis of de genes based on the kegg database by two-side fisher's exact test. we chose only significant pathway categories that had a p-value of , . and an fdr of , . . as shown in figure s , the significant signaling pathways include cell adhesion molecules (cams), t cell receptor signaling pathway, antigen processing and presentation, toll-like receptor signaling pathway, biosynthesis of unsaturated fatty acids, pantothenate and coa biosynthesis, etc (table s ) . to validate de genes identified by solexa sequencing, we selected genes for qpcr confirmation. the set included two down-regulated genes (epithelial chloride channel protein (aecc) and hyaluronan and proteoglycan link protein (hapln )) and six up-regulated genes (inflammatory response protein (irg ), dead (asp-glu-ala-asp) box polypeptide (ddx ), usp , cxcl , cytochrome p (cyp a ), and cd ). data were presented as fold changes in gene expression normalized to the hprt gene and relative to the c sample. pearson's correlation coefficient (r) showed that both the dge and qpcr data (pooling samples) were highly correlated, for the genes modulated by n-prrsv had a high consistency and r values ranging from . (cyp a ) to . (aecc) between the two methods ( figure ). qpcr analysis (both pooling samples and independent rna extractions from biological replicates) confirmed the direction of change detected by dge analysis. this correlation indicated the reliability of dge results. qtl play a central role in linking genomic information with phenotypes. the ultimate goal of qtl studies is to identificate the actual gene(s) that are responsible for the phenotypic variation observed in a particular trait [ ] . in the present paper, we mapped the de genes to pig qtl regions of health traits in pig qtldatabase (pigqtldb). our search found that de genes were distributed in different known qtl regions related to pig health traits ( figure s ; table s ). among the de genes, and were located in qtl regions of the cd -positive leukocytes and cd -positive leukocytes, respectively; were distributed in the qtl region of the band-formed neutrophils and cd -positive leukocytes. immune responses against pathogens depend in part on the generation of fully differentiated 'killer' (or effector) and memory cd + t cell. effective priming and maintenance of cd + t cell responses to viral infection require 'help' from cd + t cells, the latter play also a critical role in programming cd + t cell memory development [ ] . moreover, recent study showed that cd + t cells guide effector cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctls) to virally infected tissues where they can destroy infected cells [ , ] . in order to profile gene expression time series and search for the most probable set of clusters generating the observed time series, we used stc algorithm of gene expression dynamics, which explicitly took into account the dynamic nature of temporal gene expression profiles during clustering and identified the number of figure s ; table s ) with (profile , , , ) significant cluster profiles which have significantly more genes assigned under the true ordering of time points compared to the average number assigned to the model profile in the permutation runs ( figure s ). then gene ontology (go) based on biological process (bp) enrichment analyses for sets of de genes having significant cluster profiles was performed by two-side fisher's exact test (table s and table s ; figures s , s , s s ). we chose only significant go categories that had a p-value of , . . the most prominently overrepresented go terms of significant cluster profile ( , , ) and profile ( , , ) , which are down-regulated genes, involved in regulation of lipid, cholesterol biosynthetic and metabolic process; regulation of skeletal muscle development, muscle cell differentiation; digestion; negative regulation of neuron apoptosis and neurological system process (table s ; figures s and s ) . the most prominently overrepresented go terms of significant cluster profile ( , , ) and profile ( , , ), which are up-regulated genes, included negative regulation of fibroblast proliferation; natural killer cell, macrophage, lymphocyte, mononuclear cell, leukocyte and t cell proliferation, differentiation and activation; complement activation, immune response, inflammatory response, defense response, and apoptosis; response to stimulus(stress); lipid and fatty acid metabolic process and oxidation; positive regulation of ubiquitinprotein ligase activity and protein proteolysis, protein targeting to mitochondrion (table s ; figure s and s ). these results are consistent with these genes and their associated processes playing important roles in n-prrsv replication and pathogenesis. viral infection of host leads to the initiation of antiviral innate immune responses, which results in the induction of expression of the type i interferons [ ] . meanwhile, many viruses have also developed strategies to evade and subvert the immune response. as shown in figure a , transcripts of the ifn c was significantly induced in n-prrsv-infected pigs at days through pi, but short type i interferon (spi ifn) gene expression was suppressed, and interferon alpha (ifna ) gene expression was markedly down-regulated. lipid rafts, lipid microdomains of the cell membrane enriched in sphingolipids, cholesterol and associated proteins, play critical roles in the life cycle of many viruses [ ] . some viruses enhance their replication by modulating host cell lipid metabolism [ ] . dge analysis of pigs infected with n-prrsv showed significant increase of transcript abundance in many genes involved in lipid metabolism, including those for apolipoprotein b receptor (apob r), apolipoprotein-e (apoe), low density lipoprotein b (ldlb), phosphatidylinositol -kinase catalytic subunit type (pik c ) ( figure b ). perhaps n-prrsv alters hosts' lipid metabolism to create a lipid-rich intracellular environment to facilitate its own multiplication. moreover, we also observed that n-prrsv induced upregulation expression of anti-apoptotic genes in n-prrsv infected lungs, including myeloid cell leukemia sequence (bcl -related) (mcl ), nuclear factor kappa-b (nfkb ), nfkb , adrenomedullin (adm), and interleukin (il ), and downregulation expression of pro-apoptotic genes, including bak protein (bak), (apoptosis-related protein ) (apr ) ( figure d ) to inhibit apoptosis, which might prolong cell life and increase the yield of progeny virions. n-prrsv infection caused anorexia and subsequent slow growth. accordingly, we observed that transcript abundance of genes involved in digestion, such as gastric mucin (muc ac) and cytochrome p (cyp a ), was significantly decreased ( figure e ). simultaneously, transcript abundance of the genes associated with cell, muscle and cartilage development was markedly decreased ( figure f ). these genes include insulin-like growth factor binding protein (igfbp ), collagen, type ii, alpha isoform (col a ), connective tissue growth factor (ctgf), epidermal growth factor (egf). fever and heat shock fever is frequently the host's initial response to infection [ ] . after viral infection, pathogen-associated molecular patterns (pamps) in viral proteins and nucleic acids were recognized by host pathogen-recognition receptors (prrs), such as toll-like receptors (tlrs), which trigger gene expression and synthesis of the il- b precursor. active caspase- (casp ) cleaves the il- b precursor into mature, bioactive il- b, which is an inflammatory cytokine most responsible for fever [ , , ] . as shown in figure a , transcript abundance of tlr , , , , il- b and casp was significantly increased in n-prrsv infected porcine lungs. moreover, transcript abundance of genes involved in the activation of casp and il- b secretion including apoptosisassociated speck-like protein containing a card (asc), prostaglandin e synthase (pge ) and phospholipase a , group vii (pla g ) was significantly increased ( figure a ). the expression of heat shock proteins (hsps), known as stress proteins, can be markedly upregulated by all cells under conditions of stress, such as increased temperature (fever) and viral infection [ ] . transcript abundance for most of these heat shock genes, including -kda hsp (hsp ), hsp , and heat shock protein beta- (hsp ) was significantly elevated in n-prrsv infected lungs relative to unc lungs ( figure b ). viral infection results in an inflammatory response, which is an essential component of the antiviral innate immune response [ ] . after recognizing the pamps, either surface or intracellular prrs trigger intracellular signaling cascades that results in the activation of transcription factors, including nuclear factor-kb (nf-kb), interferon-regulatory factors (irfs), and signal transducer and activator of transcription (stats). as shown in figure a , transcripts of the toll-like prrs tlr , tlr , tlr , tlr , were significantly increased in n-prrsv-infected pigs at days through pi, but no change in tlr which specializes in the recognition of viral dsrna was detected. cytoplasmic prrs ( figure a ), retinoic-acid-inducible protein i (rig-i, ddx ) and melanoma differentiation-associated gene (mda ), the two most relevant for defense against viruses, were expressed at a high level after n-prrsv infection. cell surface prrs such as cd , md- protein (md ) and cd (which is probably involved in prrsv entry during uncoating [ ] ) were likewise up-regulated expression after n-prrsv infection ( figure a ). after binding to n-prrsv viral pamps, prrs initiate intracellular signaling cascades that activate transcription factors, including irf , irf , irf , but not irf and stat , stat , stat ( figure b ). activated transcription factors and stats in turn induce the transcription of specific sets of interferon-stimulated genes (isgs) [ , ] , and expression of multiple inflammatory genes [ ] , which induce a pro-inflammatory response and attract cells, such as neutrophils and macrophages, to sites of infection. accordingly, we observed significant increase of transcript abundance in many genes involved in isgs ( figure c ), pro-inflammatory cytokines (such as il b, il ) ( figure d ), chemokines (ccl , cxcl , cxcl ) ( figure e ), adhesion molecules (vcam, icam , sell), and other inflammatory molecules (such as mmp- ,) ( figure f ). moreover, immunoglobulin (such as igg b, igg ) ( figure g ), three categories of fc receptors and mannose receptor c (mrc ) ( figure h ), and complement proteins ( figure i ) were also significantly induced in the n-prrsv-infected lungs. however, several complement inhibitors that possess inhibitory and/or decay-accelerating acitivity, such as decay-accelerating factor cd , complement component binding protein, alpha (c bpa), c bpb, were significantly repressed in the n-prrsvinfected lungs ( figure i ). cytotoxic t lymphocytes (ctls) detect cells infected with a virus and destroy them through perforin-mediated apoptosis [ ] . cd + t cells activation require t cell receptors (tcrs) to recognize cognate antigenic peptides for presentation on mhc class i molecules displayed on the surface of antigen presenting cells (apcs) [ ] . accordingly, we observed that transcript abundance of ubiquitin specific peptidase (usp) and ubiquitin enzyme ( figure a ), proteasomes, and aminopeptidases ( figure b ) was significantly increased in n-prrsv-infected lungs. the transcript abundance of b m, mhc class i antigen (sla- ), sla- , tap , and chaperones (such as grp ) was markedly increased after infection with n-prrsv while the transcript abundance of sla-b was significantly decreased ( figure c ). in addition to recognization of cognate peptides presented by mhc class i molecules, cd + t cells activation needs also to receive 'costimulatory' signals and help by helper cd t + cells [ ] . as shown in figure d and e, cathepsins and mhc class ii antigens were significantly induced in n-prrsv-infected lungs. the transcript abundance of costimulatory molecules (such as cd , icos), cams, and tcrs/cd complex as well as co-receptor molecules (such as cd a, table s for full gene names. doi: . /journal.pone. .g cd b) was remarkably increased after infection with n-prrsv ( figure f and g) . activated ctls release perforin (pfr) and granzymes, which two effectors act collaboratively to induce apoptosis of target cells. as shown in figure h , prf and granzyme b (gzmb) transcript abundance was significantly elevated in n-prrsv infected lungs relative to unc lungs. in addition to cytotoxins released from ctls, the transcript abundance of other pro-apoptotic members ( figure i ), such as nfkbia, growth arrest and dna-damage-inducible protein alpha (gadd a), bh interacting domain death agonist (bid), xiap-associated factor (xaf ), cytochrome c (cycs), casp , was also significantly increased after infection with n-prrsv, which can induce apoptosis of virus-infected cells. in addition, we also identified the upregulated expression of cytochrome b heavy chain (gp -phox), a critical component of the membrane-bound oxidase of phagocytes (macrophages and neutrophils), and the downregulated expression of heme oxygenase (hmox ) during n-prrsv infections, which might result in the oxidative stress response and subsequent oxidative damage of tissues ( figure j ). from the data presented in the paper, a model for the relationship between pulmonary gene expression profiles and infection pathology can be surmised in figure , n-prrsv virus replicates and spreads by subverting host innate immune response and hijacking host lipid metabolism as well as inducing an antiapoptotic and anti-inflammatory state, as indicated by suppression expression of spi ifn, ifn-a, down-regulation expression of proapoptotic genes for bak, apr- , sarp , high levels expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism, such as apoe, ldlb, pik c , anti-apoptotic genes for mcl , bcl a , chfr, adm, nfkb, il , and anti-inflammatory molecule pge as well as cd . infections of n-prrsv viruses resulted in fever and inflammatory response, as indicated by high expression of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, adhesion molecules, inflammatory enzymes and receptors, such as il- b, il , sell, icam, ccl , cxcl , cxcl , b m, proteasomes, cathepsins. this was compounded by cell death and elevated expression of nfkbia, xaf , gadd a, perforin, granzymes, and cytochrome c, coupled with increased ros-mediated oxidative stress, as indicated by by up-regulation expression of cytochrome b . taken together, the n-prrsv infections may have resulted in an excessively immune and inflammatory response that contributed to tissue damage. infection of pigs with n-prrsv caused fever, dyspnoea, reddening of skin, oedema of the eyelids, conjunctivitis, depression, anorexia, mild diarrhoea. histopathology examination showed interstitial pneumonia in lungs with thickening of alveolar septa accompanied with infiltration of immune cells [ ] (figure ). although great efforts have been made by many researchers, the molecular basis of n-prrsv infection is largely unknown. here we report on the first genome-wide host transcriptional response to n-prrsv infection using solexa/illumina's digital gene expression (dge) system, a tag-based novel high-throughput transcriptome deep sequencing method. given the nature of the methodology of illumina's dge system, we have pooled biological replicates from three pigs for each group to make representative samples for deep sequencing analysis. we could reach a sequencing depth of . - . million tags per library (table ) and found over genes to be differentially expressed during n-prrsv infection processes (table s ) . although others studies have also pooled biological replicates for library construction and deep sequencing [ , ] , resulting in the lack of biological replicate, one may blur the impact of variations in pooling samples. because of the variations of pigs in response to prrsv infection, it is possible that one pig could significantly affect results without independent libraries. but we performed the qpcr validation both on the same pooled material that was used for deep sequencing and on independent rna extractions from each pig, which all confirmed the direction of change detected by dge analysis (figure ). our dge analysis showed massive changes in the transcript abundace of known immune response genes and of genes that have been implicated in prrsv infection [ , , ] . we also identified many interesting genes that had not been linked to prrsv infection in previous studies. for example, transcript abundace of lipid metabolism-related genes including apob r, apoe, pik c, was significantly increased during n-prrsv infection processes. alterations in lipid metabolism, perhaps including those with significant upregulation in this study, have been observed in response to infection by a range of viruses including sars-cov, hcv, influenza a virus, or dengue virus [ , , , ] . although in vitro studies have investigated how prrsv modifying genes expression in pams [ , , ] , many of the outstanding issues will be answered only in the context of prrsv-infected animals [ ] . hence, we characterized the genome-wide transcriptome response to prrsv infection in porcine lung by deeping sequencing. but studies of transcript abundance in lung tissues have also their intrinsic limitations. for example, the transcriptome of lung tissues is actually a merging transcriptional responses of a wide range of cell types, some of which are infected, some of which are responding directly to the infectious process and others of which are bystanders. moreover, increased cellularity of tissues may be confused as biologically important increased transcript abundance. despite such limitations, our dge study offers a broad, system-wide window into molecular processes that regulate gene expression and also provides new leads for functional studies of candidate genes involved in host-virus interaction, as illustrated in this paper. the induction of expression of type i interferons (ifns; including ifn-a and ifn-b) is a well-known innate antiviral immune reaction in the virus-infected cells [ , ] . however, n-prrsv infection suppressed spi ifn gene expression and decreased the transcript abundance of ifn-a ( figure a ). previous studies [ , , ] , both in vitro and in vivo, have also showed that prrsv elicited only a minimal ifn-a production or even suppressed it's expression. the suppression of spi ifn, in particular of ifn-a, is probably a crucial step in the pathogenesis, because ifn-a has been shown to inhibit prrsv replication [ ] . other viruses infection, such as the influenza virus [ ] , hepatitis c virus (hcv) [ ] , ebola virus [ ] , also suppressed type i ifn gene expression which led to extensive viral replication and increased pathogenesis. irf plays an important role for type i ifn gene expression. the transcript abundance of irf was decreased intensively in n-prrsv-infected pigs by h pi ( figure b ). one study [ ] indicated that prrsv nsp b inhibited irf , and then down-regulated ifn-b gene expression. it is worth mentioning that the nsp of the influenza a can also suppress innate immunity by inhibiting irf activation, and subsequently disrupting the induction of a/b-interferon [ ] . research has indicated that the expression of cd , a prrsv receptor [ ] , on macrophages in different microenvironments, in vivo, may determine the replication efficiency and subsequent pathogenecity of prrsv [ ] . transcript abundance of cd was significantly increased after n-prrsv infection ( figure a ). the internalization of prrsv via cd in the target cells may induce the expression of il , and in turn induce the expression of cd on neighboring undifferentiated monocytes and increased overall prrsv susceptibility [ ] . moreover, infected pigs develop a strong and rapid humoral response but these initial antibodies do not confer protection and can even be harmful by mediating an ade [ ] . these antibodies enhance prrsv viral replication by coating the virus and enhancing the internalization of viral particles into macrophages [ ] . as shown in figure g and h, igg and fcc receptors were significantly induced during n-prrsv infection processes. interestingly, the presence of antibodies during feline enteric coronaviruses (fecvs) infection does not also provide sterilizing immunity, instead, these antibodies opsonize virus particles and facilitate their entry to monocytes and/or macrophages through fcc receptors, resulting in disease enhancement [ ] . the activation of pro-inflammatory transcription factor nf-kb induces robust activation of the casp inflammasome and subsequent release of il- b that cause fever and inflammation [ , , , ] . accordingly, we identified upregulation expression of casp , nf-kb, and il- b genes during n-prrsv infection processes ( figure a ). nf-kb activation also enhanced the expression of matrix metalloproteinases (mmp ) and mmp , two cytotoxic substances in prrsv-infected cells [ , ] . similarly, transcript abundance of mmp and ngal ( kda alpha- -microglobulin-related subunit of mmp- ) was significantly increased in the lungs of n-prrsv-infected pigs ( figure f ). upregulation expression of mmps would likely facilitate infiltration of inflammatory cells and increase inflammation. upregulation expression of il (also known as cxcl ), which is an attractant for neutrophils and other polymorphonuclear leukocytes produced after acute infection, in prrsv-infected pams [ , ] and lungs of n-prrsv-infected pigs ( figure d ), was observed. other chemokines such as ccl (also known as mcp ), cxcl , cxcl (also known as ip ), which were significantly increased ( figure d ), may be also crucial for lymphocyte and macrophage infiltration into the sites of n-prrsv infection. ccl , il and ip expression were upregulated during sars-cov [ , ] , and murine coronavirus [ ] infections process, which may recruit monocytes and/or macrophages to sites of infection and be a major cause of lung pathology. although the present study indicates that upregulation expression of pro-inflammatory molecules contributes to the pathogenesis of n-prrsv, increased transcript abundance of anti-inflammatory molecules, such as il , pge , was also detected in the study. upregulation of il gene expression was found previously in prrsv-infected porcine leukocytes, pams, dcs, and in vivo in prrsv infected pigs [ , , , ] . perhaps an increase in pro-inflammatory molecules followed by increased anti-inflammatory molecules is the normal progression of events in inflammation [ ] . the upregulation expression of il might skew the immune response away from a protective th -cell response towards a non-protective th -cell response, therefore impairing clearance of virus, which benefits viral infections [ ] . upregulation expression of anti-inflammatory molecules and proinflammatory molecules occurring concurrently was also observed after sars-cov and fipv infection [ , ] . antibodies might also contribute to immunopathogenesis through increasing the uptake of virus by macrophages, resulting in activation of these macrophages and secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines. antigen-antibody complexes might increase transcript abundance of complement ( figure i ), which leads to generation of the classical inflammatory response through the production of potent proinflammatory molecules [ ] . furthermore, complement activation might also contribute to the development of pulmonary edema and oedema of the eyelids. further understanding the roles complement plays in the hostpathogen interactions may help to develop more effective pharmacological agents against infection. moreover, damage to the lungs of n-prrsv-infected pigs seems to occur directly by viral destruction of alveolar and bronchial epithelial cells and macrophages ( figure c) , as well as indirectly through production of immune mediators. activated ctls and nk cells release perforin (pfr) and granzymes, which two effectors act collaboratively to induce apoptosis of target cells. transcript abundance of pfr and granzymes increased in the lungs of n-prrsv infected pigs ( figure h ). pro-apoptotic molecules xaf , bid, cyto c, casp , aifm , were significantly up-regulated after infection with n-prrsv, which may induce apoptosis of virus-infected cells ( figure i ). simultaneously, we also observed upregulation expression of anti-apoptotic genes in n-prrsv infected lungs, including bcl a , mcl , chfr, nfkb, adm, il etc ( figure d ). upregulation expression of anti-apoptotic genes and pro-apoptotic genes occurring concurrently after n-prrsv infection seems in contradiction of each other. however, this may reflect a balance between apoptotic and anti-apoptotic mechanisms. perhaps prrsv actively induces an anti-apoptotic state to complete its virus replication cycle through delaying cell death while induces apoptosis of virus-infected cells after completion of virus replication to increase rate of spread of virus [ , , ] . anti-apoptotic and pro-apoptotic activaties were also observed in prrsv-infected marc- cells, in which prrsv stimulated anti-apoptotic pathways early in infection while caused apoptosis of prrsv-infected cells late in infection [ , ] . infection with n-prrsv also increased transcript abundance of nfkbia ( figure i ), an inhibitor of the tnf receptor activated transcription factor nf-kb. loss of nf-kb activity has been shown to increase the cytotoxic effects of tnf which resulted in increased cell death [ ] . an increase of transcript abundance in proapoptotic genes might result in disruption of the mitochondria transmembrane potential, thereby inducing release of cyto c from mitochondrial membranes to induce apoptosis and secondary necrosis [ ] . the production of ros, especially superoxide radicals, and the subsequent oxidative damage of cells and tissues are recognized as key contributors to the viral pathogenesis [ , ] . ros-mediated oxidative stress might also be involved in inducing apoptosis by prrsv [ ] . accordingly, we identified the remarkable upregulation of cytochrome b heavy chain (gp -phox) ( figure j ), a critical component of the membrane-bound oxidase of phagocytes (macrophages and neutrophils), after infection with n-prrsv, that generated superoxide radicals that killed both infected and normal cells at sites of infection, which would further exacerbate the immunopathological response. infection of macrophages, monocytes and dcs that are essential for immune function, is likely to be a key component in n-prrsv-induced pathogenesis [ , , , ] . apoptosis of infected cells causes immune suppression by two mechanism: apoptosis either induces a decrease in the numbers of immune cells that compromises both the innate and adaptive immune response in which they are unable to eradicate the primary infection, or impairs immunity by inducing immunosuppressive effects in the surviving cells [ ] . for example, uptake of apoptotic cells by normal macrophages and dcs stimulates immune tolerance by inducing the release of anti-inflammatory cytokines, such as il , and suppressing the release of pro-inflammatory cytokines [ ] . histopathological analysis of the lymphnodes of pigs infection with n-prrsv revealed a profound depletion of immune cells compared with those of unc (data not shown). in summary, the data presented in this study suggest that n-prrsv appears to utilize multiple strategies for its replication and spread in infected pigs, including subverting host innate immune response, inducing an anti-apoptotic and anti-inflammatory state as well as developing ade. after infection of macrophages and possibly dcs, prr-pamp interactions triggered signaling cascades that increased the transcript abundance of multiple inflammatory molecules, including cytokines, chemokines, adhesion molecules and inflammatory enzymes that induce a proinflammatory response, activate and recruit immune cells, such as macrophages and neutrophils, to sites of infection for virus elimination and thereby produce the clinical symptoms of viral infection, such as fever, dyspnoea, interstitial pneumonia in lungs. further, antibodies and complement activation might exacerbate inflammatory response. n-prrsv might induce an immunosuppressive state, mediated by apoptosis of infected cells, which caused depletion of immune cells and induced an anti-inflammatory cytokine response in which they were unable to eradicate the primary infection. figure s signaling pathways of de genes. pathway analysis was mainly based on the kegg database. a p-value of , . and an fdr of , . in the two-side fisher's exact test were selected as the significant criteria. the vertical axis is the pathway category and the horizontal axis is the log (p value) of these significant pathways. found at: doi: . /journal.pone. .s ( . mb tif) figure s genes that distributed in the known pig qtls of health traits. the x axis represents the qtl symbol, and the y axis indicates the number of genes associated with health traits. see table s for full qtl names. figure s biological process go terms of profile . functional classification of the de genes was performed according to go biological processes. a p-value of , . in the two-side fisher's exact test were selected as the significant criteria. these de genes were sorted by the enrichment of go categories. the vertical axis is the go category and the horizontal axis is the enrichment of go. found at: doi: . /journal.pone. .s ( . mb tif) figure s biological process go terms of profile . functional classification of the de genes was performed according to go biological processes. a p-value of , . in the two-side fisher's exact test were selected as the significant criteria. these de genes were sorted by the enrichment of go categories. the vertical axis is the go category and the horizontal axis is the enrichment of go. found at: doi: . /journal.pone. .s ( . mb tif) figure s biological process go 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inflammation in sepsis death-defying immunity: do apoptotic cells influence antigen processing and presentation? we thank the beijing genomics institute (bgi) shenzhen and genminix informatics ltd.,co for their providing us with technical assistance in dge and bioinformatics analysis. key: cord- -oxyzndsj authors: ortego, javier; sola, isabel; almazán, fernando; ceriani, juan e; riquelme, cristina; balasch, monica; plana, juan; enjuanes, luis title: transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus gene is not essential but influences in vivo virus replication and virulence date: - - journal: virology doi: . /s - ( ) -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: oxyzndsj transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus (tgev) contains eight overlapping genes that are expressed from a ′-coterminal nested set of leader-containing mrnas. to facilitate the genetic manipulation of the viral genome, genes were separated by duplication of transcription regulating sequences (trss) and introduction of unique restriction endonuclease sites at the ′ end of each gene using an infectious cdna clone. the recombinant tgev (rtgev) replicated in cell culture with similar efficiency to the wild-type virus and stably maintained the modifications introduced into the genome. in contrast, the rtgev replication level in the lungs and gut of infected piglets and virulence were significantly reduced. rtgev in which gene expression was abrogated (rtgev-Δ ) were recovered from cdna constructs, indicating that tgev gene was a nonessential gene for virus replication. interestingly, in vivo infections with rtgev-Δ showed an additional reduction in virus replication in the lung and gut, and in virulence, indicating that tgev gene influences virus pathogenesis. transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus (tgev) is a member of the coronaviridae family, which, together with the arteriviridae and roniviridae families forms the nidovirales order (cowley and walker, ; enjuanes et al., a; mayo, ) . tgev replicates in both the villous epithelial cells of the small intestine and the lung cells of newborn piglets, resulting in a mortality of nearly % (saif and wesley, ) . the tgev genome contains a leader sequence at the Ј end and a poly(a) tail at the Ј end. genes are arranged in the order Ј-rep-s- a- b-e-m-n- - Ј (enjuanes et al., b; penzes et al., ) . the Ј end of the majority of tgev genes overlaps with the Ј terminus of the next gene (enjuanes et al., b) , complicating insertion of heterologous genes into the viral genome and deletion of different genes to determine whether they are essential. the tgev gene , located at the Ј end of the genome, encodes a amino acid hydrophobic protein that may play a role in membrane-associated replication complexes or in virion assembly (tung et al., ) . gene is a groupspecific gene (de haan et al., ) with homologous versions in group coronaviruses such as feline infectious peritonitis virus (fcov) and canine enteric coronavirus (ccov) (enjuanes et al., a; lai and cavanagh, ) . in contrast, group coronaviruses such as mouse hepatitis virus (mhv), bovine enteric coronavirus (bcov), or the human coronavirus (hcov) oc , and group coronaviruses such as avian infectious bronchitis virus (ibv), do not have a homologous gene (enjuanes et al., a; lai and cavanagh, ) . interestingly, the group coronavirus hcov- e does not have gene (herold et al., ) , which could indicate that this gene is nonessential for coronavirus replication, even in group coronaviruses. to study whether gene is dispensable for tgev replication, its deletion by reverse genetics would be required. we used a genomic tgev cdna clone assembled as a bacterial artificial chromosome (bac) (almazán et al., ; gonzález et al., ) to separate the overlapping genes by duplicating sequences at the Ј flank of each gene and by introducing unique restriction endonuclease sites between each gene pair. gene separation allowed the deletion of gene , showing that it is nonessential for virus replication. furthermore, we show that the accumulation of modifications in gene domains where the trss are located and insertion of restriction sites led to the generation of a collection of recombinant tgevs (rtgevs) with variable virulence, including a highly attenuated recombinant. these viruses could be the basis for coronavirus vector development. to facilitate genetic manipulation of the viral genome, full-length cdna clones were constructed by separating the contiguous genes and inserting unique restriction sites between each gene pair (fig. a ). cdna clones with the wild-type sequence or containing one [pbac-tgev-paci (p), pbac-tgev-mlui (m), pbac-tgev-fsei (f), and pbac-tgev-asci (a)], two [pbac-tgev-fsei-pmei (f-pm), pbac-tgev-pmei-asci (pm-a), and pbac-tgev-paci-mlui (p-m)], three [pbac-tgev-fsei-pmei-asci (f-pm-a)], or five [pbac-tgev-paci-mlui-fsei-pmei-asci (rs)] restriction endonuclease sites (fig. b) were transfected into bhk cells expressing the porcine amino peptidase n (papn) (bhk-papn cells). on the third day of transfection, a cytopathic effect was observed in cells transfected with each cdna, but not in mock-treated cells. virus production was amplified by passing the supernatants four times in cultured cells. after the fourth passage, viruses were cloned by three plaque-isolation steps, and their genomes were partially sequenced. all the rtgev viruses conserved the modifications engineered in the cdnas (data not shown), indicating that the orf separation and the insertion of unique endonuclease restriction sites between genes were stably maintained in the rtgev genomes. cloned rtgev viruses containing the unique restriction sites showed similar growth kinetics in cell culture to the parental rtgev-wt after infection at both low ( . ) and high ( ) m.o.i. (fig. ) , indicating that removal of the overlapping region between tgev genes and the insertion of endonuclease restriction sites did not significantly affect the in vitro virus replication. to analyze whether gene was essential for viral growth, recombinant virus genomes with gene deleted were generated from pbac-tgev-rs constructs, contain-ing either the s gene from the tgev strain pur-c (sánchez et al., ) able to infect both the enteric and the respiratory tracts (pbac-tgev-sc -rs-⌬ ) or the s gene from the strain ptv (sánchez et al., ) with an exclusive respiratory tropism (pbac-tgev-sptv-rs-⌬ ). the rtgev-⌬ contained a deletion spanning nucleotides upstream of the orf aug and the first nucleotides of this orf (fig. a) . bhk-papn cells were transfected with plasmids including five restriction endonuclease sites and carrying gene (pbac-tgev-sptv-rs and pbac-tgev-sc -rs), or without this gene (pbac-tgev-sptv-rs-⌬ and pbac-tgev-sc -rs-⌬ ). virus titers were determined in supernatants throughout four additional passages in cell culture ( fig. b and c). viruses were recovered from the cdnas containing the deletion of gene , and viral titers increased with passage, basically to the same extent as the viruses with gene (rtgev-sptv-rs and rtgev-sc -rs). as expected, no virus was recovered from the mock-transfected cultures. after four passages in cell cultures, the recombinant viruses were cloned by three plaque isolation steps. the cytopathic effect and plaque morphology produced by the rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ and rtgev-sc -rs-⌬ were identical to those of the parental viruses containing the complete genome (data not shown). the isolate rtgev-sc -rs-⌬ induced the formation of large-size plaques ( -mm-diameter), whereas the virus rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ induced smallsized plaques ( -mm-diameter). the cloned viruses with gene deleted showed standard growth kinetics after infection at an m.o.i. of ( fig. d and e). recombinant rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ and rtgev-sc -rs-⌬ generated the highest virus titers (around ϫ and pfu/ml, respectively) at h postinfection, similar to those of the parental viruses rtgev-sptv-rs and rtgev-sc -rs. these data indicated that the protein encoded by gene was not essential for tgev replication in cell culture. to confirm that the subgenomic mrna (sgmrna) was not transcribed, bhk-papn cells were infected with rtgev-sptv-rs or rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ viruses. total rna was extracted and analyzed by northern blot with a probe complementary to the Ј end of the tgev genome (fig. a ). the mobility and relative amount of the sgmrnas , , , , and were indistinguishable in both viruses. as expected, sgmrna was transcribed in rt-gev-sptv-rs-infected cells, but not in cells infected with rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ . analysis of viral proteins at h p.i. by western blot showed that the amount of s, n, m, and e proteins was similar in rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ -infected cells and in cells infected with the parental virus rtgev-sptv-rs, except for protein that was not detected in rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ virus-infected cells (fig. b) , confirming that the partial deletion of gene prevented the synthesis of protein . identical results were obtained with rtgev-sc -rs and rtgev-sc -rs-⌬ (data not shown). in vivo growth of a selected set of rtgevs containing the unique endonuclease restriction sites, and the rtgev-rs-⌬ viruses, was determined by infecting newborn piglets. the animals were sacrificed at , , , and days p.i. recombinant viruses with a modification including a restriction endonuclease site Ј upstream of some genes, in general, showed lower titers than the wild-type virus, al- outlined sequences indicate the punctual mutations introduced to generate unique restriction sites. the core sequence (cs) is underlined. the atg start codon is shown in bold. duplicated sequences are indicated by dark boxes. tgev genes are indicated by light boxes. b, replicase b gene; s, spike gene; e, envelope gene; m, membrane gene; n, nucleoprotein gene. *, gene rep b termination codon (tga) and the initiation codon of gene s (atg) partially overlap. the sequence of the and nt located Ј upstream of genes s and a, respectively, are described in the full-length tgev genome sequence previously reported (penzes et al., ) . (b) schematic illustration of the full-length tgev cdna without (top bar) or with one (pbac-tgev-p, pbac-tgev-m, pbac-tgev-f, and pbac-tgev-a), two (pbac-tgev-f-pm, pbac-tgev-pm-a, and pbac-tgev-p-m), three (pbac-tgev-f-pm-a), or five (pbac-tgev-rs) restriction endonuclease sites. cmv, cytomegalovirus immediate-early promoter; rep, replicase; an, poly(a) tail of a residues; hdv, hepatitis delta virus ribozyme; bgh, bovine growth hormone termination and polyadenylation sequences. though there was some titer variability over the days postinfection ( fig. a and b) . alteration in domains Ј upstream of two or more genes did not lead to a significant decrease in virus titer in comparison with recombinants with a single modification. interestingly, analysis of viral growth in the gut of infected piglets showed a -to -fold reduction of recombinant viruses containing one or more restriction sites in relation to the rtgev-wt virus ( fig. d and e) . the rtgev-rs, that included modifications Ј upstream of five genes and insertion of endonuclease restriction sites between each contiguous gene, showed a titer decrease comparable with that of rtgevs with two (tgev-f-a) or three (tgev-f-pm-a) restriction endonuclease sites. these data show that modification of sequences Ј upstream of genes affected virus replication in the gut. recombinant viruses were isolated from the gut and sequenced. all the modifi-cations introduced were stably maintained in the tgev genome during in vivo infections (data not shown). the growth in lungs of gene deletion mutants (rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ and rtgev-sc -rs ⌬ ) showed around fold reduction of virus titers compared with the parental viruses rtgevsptv-rs and rtgev-sc -rs (fig. c ). in contrast, in vivo growth of rtgev-sc -rs-⌬ in the gut showed slightly lower replication levels than rtgev-sc -rs ( ϫ pfu/g) probably because the introduction of modifications at the Ј upstream of five genes had already caused a significant titer reduction (fig. f ). as expected, the respiratory recombinants rtgev-sptv-rs and rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ did not grow in the gut since the s gene was derived from the respiratory ptv strain. piglet survival after infection by rtgev viruses was compared with survival after infection with their virulent parental virus tgev-pur -c (tgev-sc -wt). rtgev viruses with one, two, three, or five unique restriction sites were highly attenuated (they produced mild enteritis and led to to % survival at days p.i.), except for rtgev-p and rtgev-m viruses, in which the restriction sites paci and mlui were introduced by point mutations, without introducing trs duplication. in these two recombinant viruses the survival was from to %. piglets infected by rtgev-sc -rs-⌬ showed % survival, although a very mild and transitory enteritis was observed in % of the animals. these data indicate that gene deletion further reduced virus virulence. in general, a good correlation be-tween growth of recombinants with a single restriction endonuclease insertion and virulence was not clear. this could be due to differences in the distribution of viral antigens and inflammatory responses in pigs infected with wild-type or each mutant. nevertheless, in viruses with two or more restriction endonuclease sites inserted there was a good correlation between virus titers in the gut and mortality. tgev genomes with all the genes separated by unique endonuclease restriction sites have been engineered. the separation of tgev genes implied the duplication of sequences Ј upstream of each gene, a sequence domain involved in regulating transcription, and affected in vivo virus growth and virulence. in this article, the first demonstration that tgev gene is nonessential for virus viability is provided. in addition, it has been demonstrated that gene deletion affects tgev replication and attenuates virus virulence in piglets, its natural host. interestingly, the intro- fig. . in vivo growth kinetics of rtgev viruses. two-to three-day-old non-colostrum-deprived swine were used to study the growth kinetics of rtgev viruses containing one (a and d) or more (b and e) endonuclease restriction sites, or partial deletion of gene (c and f). groups of to piglets were oronasally ( ϫ pfu/pig) and intragastrically ( ϫ pfu/pig) inoculated. virus titers at the indicated number of days postinoculation were determined in the indicated tissue extracts. the whole organs were homogenized to obtain representative samples. error bars represent standard deviations of the mean from four experiments. (g) number of surviving piglets at different days postinoculation. results from a representative experiment of two that gave similar results are shown. recombinant virus titers were compared with that of the wild-type virus by the kruskal-wallis test and, in general, were significant (p Ͻ . ) between viruses with gene deleted and the wild-type virus. western blot analysis of lysates from bhk-papn cells infected with either rtgev-sptv-rs or rtgev-sptv-rs-⌬ viruses. cell extracts were obtained at h p.i., resolved by to % gradient sds-page, transferred to nitrocellulose membranes, and immunoblotted with monoclonal antibodies specific for s, n, m, and e, and with an antiserum specific for a protein peptide (garwes et al., ). duction of one or more modifications into the tgev genome has led to the generation of a collection of tgev recombinants with a variable degree of virulence. overlapping of genes has been proposed as a mechanism by which nidoviruses preserve the genetic integrity of vital parts of their genomes (de vries et al., ) . nevertheless, in coronavirus we have generated viable and stable rtgev viruses in which genes have been separated by the insertion of unique restriction endonuclease sites and modification of the domains where the transcription-regulating sequences (trss) map. maximum titers of mutant rtgev viruses in cell culture were similar to those obtained for the parental virus, indicating that changes in the sequences between tgev genes had little effect on viral yield. in contrast, in vivo assays showed lower tgev mutant virus replication in the lungs and gut, and attenuation of virulence in viruses in which a trs duplication was introduced between genes. in arteriviruses, mutants that had the overlap between orfs and , or between orfs and removed, were also viable (de vries et al., ) . taken together, these data demonstrate that gene overlapping is not an obligatory requirement for nidovirales viability. viral attenuation resulting from gene separation was possibly due to modification of the trss affecting mrna transcription levels. in the case of nonsegmented negativestrand rna viruses it has also been shown that sequence alterations, such as restriction endonuclease site or heterologous gene insertion, and gene rearrangement may affect virus replication (wertz et al., ) . gene is a group specific gene, absent in genome of coronaviruses from groups and (armstrong et al., ; boursnell et al., ; kamahora et al., ; lapps et al., ; skinner and siddell, ) . interestingly, no mortality was observed in piglets infected with rtgev-⌬ . since these recombinants still replicate with titers between and pfu/g of tissue ( fig. c and f) , tgev-⌬ mutants could be good candidates as virus vectors. a relationship between gene and virulence has also been observed in the fcovs. the most Ј end genes of these viruses are genes a and b. deletions in fcov orf a, which is homologous to the tgev orf , have been reported in a natural infection of a cat population and correlated with a decrease in virulence (kennedy et al., ) . similarly, mutations in fcov orf b occur in vitro and have also been correlated with loss of virus virulence (herrewegh et al., ) . therefore, the most Ј end genes of group coronaviruses seem to influence in general virus pathogenesis. deletion of gene did not affect virus replication in cell culture. therefore, the reduction of in vivo virus replication and virulence was probably due to an effect on virus-host interaction. it has been suggested that coronavirus groupspecific genes, such as gene , may affect host immune response (de haan et al., ) . it would be of interest to determine whether the immune response to a heterologous gene inserted in recombinant viruses with and without gene is influenced by the presence of this gene. in an attempt to identify gene homologous protein sequences or motifs, a sequence search was performed in the databases using gene sequences without success. the high hydrophobicity of tgev protein (garwes et al., ) could facilitate its insertion in membranes providing a role in virus replication, since coronavirus replication complexes have been associated with membranes (dennison and sims, ; snijder et al., ) . similarly, the tentative location of protein within the nucleus (garwes et al., ) could be taken as an indication for a possible interference with the cell cycle, similarly to coronavirus nucleoprotein that seems to interact with cell nucleolus proteins and interfere with cell cycle (hiscox, ) . therefore, genes a, b, and of group coronaviruses are nonessential for replication. similarly, genes a/he and / a, and possibly gene e, are dispensable in mhv (de haan et al., ; kuo and masters, ) . manipulation of transcription-regulating sequences and deletion of nonessential genes, such as gene , will facilitate the study of the molecular basis of viral attenuation and provide an attractive approach to generate attenuated rtgevs with high potential as virus vectors. baby hamster kidney cells (bhk- ) stably transformed with the gene coding for the porcine aminopeptidase n (bhk-papn) (delmas et al., ) were grown in dmem supplemented with % fetal calf serum and geneticin g ( . mg/ml) as a selection agent. bhk-papn cells were used for all the experiments except for standard virus titrations that were performed in porcine swine testis (st) cells (mcclurkin and norman, ) . virus titers were compared by the kruskal-wallis test (motulsky, ) and, when significant (p Ͻ . ), it was indicated. rtgev viruses were generated from pbac-tgev constructs containing the s gene from the virulent tgev strain pur-c (sc ) as described (almazán et al., ; gonzalez et al. ) . viruses containing the s gene from the attenuated strain ptv (sptv) were derived from the corresponding pbac tgev vectors with gene sc by replacing this gene by that (sptv) of the respiratory strain. two different approaches were followed to introduce into pbac-tgev unique restriction endonuclease sites separating each gene of tgev genome (fig. a) , leading to pbac-tgev-rs. the first approach was the introduction of punctual mutations in the tgev genome to generate the restriction sites paci (between genes rep b and s) and mlui (between genes s and a) (fig. b) . due to overlapping in the tgev genome, the second approach involved the duplication of , , and nucleotides from the Ј transcription-regulating sequences of genes m, n, and (trs-m, trs-n, and trs- ) after the restriction sites fsei, pmei, and asci, respectively ( fig. a and b) . point mutations, duplications, and insertion of restriction endonuclease sites were generated by overlapping pcr amplification from the tgev genome as described (ortego et al., ) . the assembly of the full-length pbac-tgev constructs was performed as previously reported (almazán et al., ; gonzález et al., ) . to generate the deletion ⌬ , oligonucleotide primers Ј-asc- . -vs ( Ј-gaggcgcgcctgctgtatttat-tacag- Ј), including the restriction site asci (underlined) and the deletion of nucleotides from trs- plus the first nucleotides of orf , and bgh -rs ( Ј-cagatg-gctggcaactagaaggc- Ј) were used to generate a pcr product comprising from nt , to nt , of the tgev cdna clone. pcr product was digested with asci and bamhi and cloned into the asci-bamhi-digested pbac-tgev-sc -rs and pbac-tgev-sptv-rs, generating pbac-tgev-sc -rs-⌬ and pbac-tgev-sptv-rs-⌬ , respectively. bhk-papn cells were grown to % confluence on -mm-diameter plates and transfected with g of cdna plasmid and g of lipofectin (life technologies, gibco) according to the manufacturer's specifications. recovery and amplification of viruses were performed as described (ortego et al., ) . cell lysates were analyzed by to % gradient sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (sds-page). proteins were transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane and analyzed as described (ortego et al., ) , using mabs specific for s ( b.h ), n ( d.c ), m ( d.b ), and e (v ) proteins (ortego et al., ) , and a swine polyclonal antibody specific for tgev protein (provided by p. britton, compton, uk). total rna was extracted by using an ultraspec rna isolation system (biotecx) according to the manufacturer's instructions and analyzed by northern blotting as described (ortego et al., ) . two-to three-day-old non-colostrum-deprived swine, from crossing large white and belgium landrace, were used to study in vivo growth kinetics of rtgev, as described (sanchez et al., ) . piglets were obtained from sows seronegative for tgev, as tested by radioimmunoassay. engineering the largest rna virus genome as an infectious bacterial artificial chromosome sequence of the nucleocapsid gene from murine coronavirus mhv-a sequences of the nucleocapsid genes from two strains of avian infectious bronchitis virus the complete genome sequence of gill-associated virus of penaeus monodon prawns indicates a gene organisation unique among nidoviruses the group-specific murine coronavirus genes are not essential, but their deletion, by reverse genetics, is attenuating in the natural host genetic manipulation of equine arteritis virus using full-length cdna clones: separation of overlapping genes and expression of a foreign epitope further characterization of aminopeptidase-n as a receptor for coronaviruses mhv-a gene proteins are associated with two distinct membrane populations coronaviridae nidovirales the polypeptide of mr of porcine transmissible gastroenteritis virus: gene assignment and intracellular location stabilization of a full-length infectious cdna clone of transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus by the insertion of an intron nucleotide sequence of the human coronavirus e rna polymerase locus the molecular genetics of feline coronavirus comparative sequence analysis of the orf a/ b transcription unit of different biotypes the nucleolus-a gateway to viral infection? sequence analysis of nucleocapsid gene and leader rna of human coronavirus oc deletions in the a orf of feline coronavirus associated with an epidemic of feline infectious peritonitis genetic evidence for a structural interaction between the carboxy termini of the membrane and nucleocapsid proteins of mouse hepatitis virus the molecular biology of coronaviruses sequence analysis of the bovine coronavirus nucleocapsid and matrix protein genes a summary of taxonomic changes recently approved by ictv studies on transmissible gastroenteritis of swine. ii. selected characteristics of a cytopathogenic virus common to five isolates from transmissible gastroenteritis comparing two paired groups: paired t and wilcoxon tests generation of a replication competent, propagation-deficient virus vector based on the transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus genome complete genome sequence of transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus pur -mad clone and evolution of the purdue virus cluster transmissible gastroenteritis targeted recombination demonstrates that the spike gene of transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus is a determinant of its enteric tropism and virulence coding sequence of coronavirus mhv-jhm mrna non-structural proteins and interact to modify host cell membranes during the formation of the arterivirus replication complex the -kda hydrophobic protein encoded at the Ј end of the porcine transmissible gastroenteritis coronavirus genome is membrane-associated adding genes to the rna genome of vesicular stomatitis virus: positional effects on stability of expression this work was supported by grants from the comisión interministerial de ciencia y tecnología (cicyt), la consejería de educación y cultura de la comunidad de madrid, fort dodge veterinaria, and the european union (frame v, key action , control of infectious disease projects qlrt- - , qlrt- - , and qlrt- . i.s. received postdoctoral fellowships from the community of madrid and the european union (frame v, key action , control of infectious disease projects). key: cord- -el bdkcf authors: wang, hai-fang; feng, liang; niu, deng-ke title: relationship between mrna stability and intron presence date: - - journal: biochemical and biophysical research communications doi: . /j.bbrc. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: el bdkcf abstract introns were found to enhance almost every steps of gene expression except increasing mrna stability. by analyzing the genome-wide data of mrna stability published by someone previously, we found that human intron-containing genes have more stable mrnas than intronless genes, and the arabidopsis thaliana genes with the most unstable mrnas have fewer introns than other genes in the genome. after controlling for mrna length, we found mrna stability is still positively correlated with intron number in human intron-containing genes. but in yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae, two different datasets on mrna half-life gave conflicting results. the components of messenger ribonucleoprotein particles recruited during intron splicing may be retained in cytoplasmic mrnps and act as signals of mrna stability or simply insulators to avoid mrna degradation. introns are widespread noncoding sequences in eukaryotic genomes, their cost and benefit to the host are still not established [ ] [ ] [ ] . recent progress has revealed that splicing out introns from pre-mrnas can enhance almost every steps of gene expression from transcription to translation [ ] . as mrna accumulation is determined by both synthesis and degradation, mrna stability is equally important in regulating gene expression as transcription [ , ] . do introns also increase the amount of protein produced from a gene by enhancing the mrna stability? ryu and mertz [ ] showed that mutants of virus sv late transcript lacking introns are defective in mrna stability in the nucleus, but not in mrna stability in the cytoplasm. in maize, inclusion of salt intron can stimulate cat gene expression to - -fold higher than the intronless control gene; but the spliced mrnas do not have a higher stability than those encoded by the intronless control gene [ ] . nott et al. [ ] found that human tpi intron inserted into reporter gene renilla luciferase can enhance the mrna accumulation, but they did not observe any significant splicing-dependent alteration in mrna stability. chang et al. [ ] found that insertion of a -bp intron into sars-cov spike protein gene can enhance the protein expression in mammalian cells, but the mrnas exhibited similar decay rates as the intronless control mrna. splicing was found to be essential for significant protein expression of human b-globin gene. absence of introns results in inefficient -end mrna processing, and the unprocessed b-globin mrna is substantially less stable than the end processed mrna [ ] . in addition, the half-life of -end processed b-globin mrnas encoded by intron-containing gene was ± h while the half-life of the -end processed b-globin mrnas encoded by intronless gene was ± h [ ] . but the authors [ ] and another scientist that cited the paper [ ] looked it as a minor difference, and so they did not think that introns can alter mrna stability. the accumulating data from genome sequencing and large-scale analysis of gene expression make it possible to re-examine or further testing the conclusions of previous experimental studies on specific genes. a successful example is the survey of genes with one or more -untranslated exons to test the rule for termination-codon position in nonsense-mediated mrna decay [ ] . for the present issue, the relationship between mrna stability and intron presence was not extensively studied in genome scale. gutierrez et al. [ ] compared genes with the most unstable transcripts against genes encoding stable transcripts in arabidopsis thaliana. they did not find significant differences in intron numbers. although most of the genes are intronless in yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae, more than % of ribosome protein genes have at least one intron [ ] . five ribosome protein genes were found to encode anomalous unstable mrnas (half-life < min). wang et al. [ ] noticed that four of the five genes lack introns. the aberrantly decay rates of these genes were attributed to specialized regulatory programs and distinct functions [ ] . here, we collected the genome-wide data on the stability of mrnas (half-life or decay rate) in homo sapiens, s. cerevisiae, and a. thaliana from publication supplements and examined their relationships with intron presence/ abundance. the genome annotation files of h. sapiens (build version ), yeast s. cerevisiae (updated february , ) , and a. thaliana (updated november , ) were downloaded from the ncbi genome database (ftp://ftp.ncbi.nih.gov/genomes/). in the case of alternative splicing variants, we retained the longest mrna for analysis (although similar results were obtained by analyzing the shortest mrna, data not shown). the data on mrna stability were gathered from publication supplements, including the decay rates of human mrnas in hepatocellular carcinoma cell line hepg cells and primary fibroblast cell line bud cells [ ] , mrna half-lives in human t lymphocytes stimulated with medium, human t lymphocytes stimulated with an anti-cd antibody, and human t lymphocytes stimulated with antibodies anti-cd and anti-cd [ ] . the mrnas with decay rate h À were excluded from our analyses. in assigning faster expressed genes and slower expressed genes and surveying motifs that regulate mrna decay, we followed the methods/results of yang et al. [ ] . we use gnf geneatlas version [ ] to determine human gene expression level. the data on mrna half-life and gene expression levels of yeast s. cerevisiae strain y [ ] and yeast s. cerevisiae strain rpb - [ ] were collected from publication supplements deposited by the authors, http://web.wi.mit.edu/young/pub/holstege.html and http://genome-www.stanford.edu/turnover/data.shtml, respectively. gutierrez et al. studied the mrna stability of a. thaliana [ ] . but they only provided the data of genes with the most unstable transcripts (with half-life min). so, these genes were compared with other genes annotated in a. thaliana genome. the data were normalized by logarithmic transformation using as the base in partial correlation analyses. in human, the mrnas of intron-containing genes are more stable in human hepg cells and bud cells, the mrnas of intron-containing genes have lower decay rates than those of intronless genes (table ). in human t lymphocytes stimulated with medium and t lymphocytes stimulated with antibodies anti-cd and anti-cd , the mrnas of intron-containing genes have longer half-lives than those of intronless genes (table ). in human t lymphocytes stimulated with anti-cd antibody, there is also a significant difference between mrna half-lives of intron-containing genes and those of intronless genes (p = . ). considered from the average value of mrna half-lives, the mrnas of intronless genes are a little more stable than those of the intron-containing genes. but if considered from the median value of mrna half-lives, the mrnas of intron-containing genes are more stable than those of the intronless genes. as the nonparametric mann-whitney test uses the ranks of the data rather than their raw values to calculate the statistic, the conclusion based on median value is stronger. that is, the mrnas of intron-containing genes have longer half-lives than those of intronless genes in human t lymphocytes stimulated with anti-cd antibody. as a stable mrna can be measured by lower decay rate or longer half-life, our analyses of different sources of data consistently showed that the mrnas of intron-containing genes are more stable than those of intronless genes in human cells. we further tested the relationship between intron presence and human mrna stability by controlling other biological characters to see whether the above relationship is the byproduct of other relationships. some evidence suggested that short mrnas may be more stable [ , ] . but the intronless genes we analyzed have significantly shorter mrnas than the intron-containing genes (supplementary table s ). so the difference in mrna stabilities between intron-containing genes and intronless genes could not be attributed to the difference in mrna lengths. human intronless genes are not randomly distributed across molecular function categories [ ] . meanwhile, previous studies on yeast and human showed a strong relationship between physiological function and mrna turnover rates [ , ] . could the difference in mrna stability between intronless genes and intron-containing genes be attributed to functional differences? according to the observed mrna decay rates, yang and coauthors [ ] divided the gene ontology (go) categories into three groups: faster, slower, and no significant. we analyzed the distribution of intron-containing genes and intronless genes in the three go groups by chi-square test. there are no significant differences in the genes analyzed in bud cells and those analyzed in t cells (p > . ). for the genes analyzed in hepg cells, intronless genes appear to be enriched in faster decay group (p = . ), but the p value is near the conventional significant borderline of . . furthermore, we designed a method to remove the effects of functional difference on mrna stability. for each human intronless gene, we selected an intron-containing gene with similar function and similar mrna length to pair with it. the functional similarity was defined as if they share two or more go terms (http://www.geneontology.org/) and the mrna length similarity was defined as if the length difference is below %. more stringent criteria result in much fewer pairs of genes giving too small a sample to study. in the cases that two or more intron-containing genes are paired with one intronless gene, we used the median value of the mrna stabilities of the intron-containing genes in the pairwise comparison with the intronless gene. we found that the mrnas of intronless genes are less stable (i.e. have higher decay rates or shorter half-lives) than the intron-containing genes with similar mrna lengths and functions (fig. ) . but the differences are not significant in wilcoxon signed ranks tests of the data from t lymphocytes with anti-cd and from t lymphocytes with both anti-cd and anti-cd (fig. ) . some au-rich elements in the -untranslated region of mrnas were found to decrease mrna stability [ , ] . but we found they are not more abundant in the mrnas of intronless genes (supplementary table s ). on the contrary, they are a little more abundant in the mrnas of intron-containing genes (supplementary table s ). the presence of introns seems to enhance mrna stability in human. a further question is whether multiple introns have cumulative effect on mrna stability in intron-containing genes. after controlling for mrna length, we found significant negative correlations between intron number and mrna decay rate in human hepg cells and bud cells, and significant positive correlations between intron number and mrna half-life in human t lymphocytes ( table ) . controlling for mrna length together with other potential factors like gene expression level and gc content gave similar results (data not shown). the mrnas of intron-containing genes are more stable than those of intronless genes in yeast strain y (table ) . strangely, we found that the mrnas of intronless genes are more stable in yeast strain rpb - (table ) , although the difference is very small. different from human genes, the mrnas of the yeast intronless genes we analyzed are significantly longer than those of intron-containing genes (supplementary table s ). we further compared the mrna stabilities between intronless genes and introncontaining genes with similar mrna length and similar go annotations as above (as intron-containing genes are rare in yeast, we selected intronless genes with similar functions and mrna lengths to pair with each intron-containing gene). the mrnas of intron-containing genes are still more stable than those of intronless genes in yeast strain y , but less stable in yeast strain rpb - (fig. ) . controlling for mrna length, mrna stability and intron number are positively correlated in strain y , but not in strain rpb - ( table ) . we re-examined the relationship between mrna stability and intron-presence in a. thaliana. in the genes reported to have the most unstable mrnas [ ] , genes were found in the annotated genome of a. thaliana. as the authors did not provide a list of genes with stable transcripts, we compared the genes with all other genes annotated in a. thaliana genome. we found . % of the genes are intronless. comparably, there are much lower percentage of intronless genes in the other genes ( . %, pearson chi-square test p = . · À ). different from previous study [ ] , we found a significant difference in intron number between the genes with the most unstable transcripts and the other genes (table ) . furthermore, the difference in intron number between intron-containing genes with the most unstable transcripts and other intron-containing genes annotated in a. thaliana genome is also significant ( table ) . the data from yeast strain y [ ] and from strain rpb - [ ] did not give consistent results. we do not exactly know which dataset is more reliable. considering the date of publishing (the dataset from strain y was pub-lished in while that from strain rpb - was published in ), it is likely that the data from strain y [ ] may be more accurate because of the advancement of analyzing techniques. for that reason, we are inclined to think that introns and/or their splicing out from pre-mrnas have enhancing effects on mrna stability in yeast s. cerevisiae. the data from human t lymphocytes gave weaker results than those from hepatocellular carcinoma cell line hepg cells and primary fibroblast cell line bud cells. heat shock, hypoxia, and other stresses were reported to cause stabilization of some mrnas [ , ] . the stability of mrnas apparently varies with environmental or physiological changes. nonetheless we can see a trend (although not very distinct) for the mrnas of intronless genes to be less stable. the enhancing effect seems to be not very strong and so it may be overwhelmed by environmentally or physiologically induced changes. statistical analysis of genome-wide data can reveal significant small differences. as we see, common experimental studies on specific genes are difficult to reveal small differences. previous experiments [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] did not show the enhancing effect of introns on mrna stability probably because the effects are not very strong. in addition, there is the possibility that a limited number of genes do not follow the general rules because of some specific reasons. then, how can introns enhance the mrna stability? the components of mrnps (messenger ribonucleoprotein particles) recruited during intron splicing or deposited onto exon-exon junctions [ , ] may be retained in cytoplasmic mrnps and act as signals of mrna stability, or simply insulators to avoid inter-or intra-rna base-pairing. some proteins have been shown to have such insulating effects to prevent rna:dna hybrid (i.e. r loop structure) in nucleus, thereby suppressing unwanted dna recombination [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . similarly, a gene having high intron density is expected to have better insulated mrnas in cytoplasm. the mrnas of a human gene without introns or with few introns are more likely to form stem-loop which will stall ribosome and trigger endonucleolytic mrna cleavage [ , ] . meanwhile these mrnas are also more likely to form double-stranded rna with other rnas in cytoplasm, being prone to degraded by rna interference [ ] . in addition, there is also evidence that the exon junc-tion complexes of mrnps promotes mrna ribosome association [ ] . the ribosomes attached on mrna may have the effect of stabilizing mrna in a way similar with the protein components of mrnps. the biology of intron gain and loss the evolution of spliceosomal introns: patterns, puzzles and progress the rise and falls of introns how introns influence and enhance eukaryotic gene expression bringing the role of rnrna decay in the control of gene expression into focus post-transcriptional control of gene expression: a genome-wide perspective simian virus late transcripts lacking excisable intervening sequences are defective in both stability in the nucleus and transport to the cytoplasm intronmediated enhancement of transgene expression in maize is a nuclear, gene-dependent process a quantitative analysis of intron effects on mammalian gene expression influence of intron and exon splicing enhancers on mammalian cell expression of a truncated spike protein of sars-cov and its implication for subunit vaccine development analysis of the stimulatory effect of splicing on mrna production and utilization in mammalian cells the effect of intron location on intron-mediated enhancement of gene expression in arabidopsis a rule for termination-codon position within intron-containing genes: when nonsense affects rna abundance identification of unstable transcripts in arabidopsis by cdna microarray analysis: rapid decay is associated with a group of touch-and specific clockcontrolled genes precision and functional specificity in mrna decay decay rates of human mrnas: correlation with functional characteristics and sequence attributes genome-wide analysis of mrna decay in resting and activated primary human t lymphocytes a gene atlas of the mouse and human protein-encoding transcriptomes dissecting the regulatory circuitry of a eukaryotic genome the relationship between mrna stability and length in saccharomyces cerevisiae relationship between mrna stability and length: an old question with a new twist the non-random distribution of intronless human genes across molecular function categories molecular mechanisms regulating mrna stability: physiological and pathological significance induction of tsp gene expression by heat shock is mediated via an increase in mrna stability linking nuclear mrnp assembly and cytoplasmic destiny the exon junction complex is detected on cbp -bound but not eif e-bound mrna in mammalian cells: dynamics of mrnp remodeling cotranscriptionally formed dna:rna hybrids mediate transcription elongation impairment and transcription-associated recombination keeping rna and dna apart during transcription inactivation of the sr protein splicing factor asf/sf results in genomic instability mrna processing and genomic instability endonucleolytic cleavage of eukaryotic mrnas with stalls in translation elongation rna lost in translation post-transcriptional gene silencing by sirnas and mirnas splicing enhances translation in mammalian cells: an additional function of the exon junction complex we thank jie guo and da-yong zhang for suggestion. this work was supported by the national natural science foundation of china (grant no. ) and beijing normal university. key: cord- - tf ah g authors: weber, wilfried; fussenegger, martin title: emerging biomedical applications of synthetic biology date: - - journal: nat rev genet doi: . /nrg sha: doc_id: cord_uid: tf ah g synthetic biology aims to create functional devices, systems and organisms with novel and useful functions on the basis of catalogued and standardized biological building blocks. although they were initially constructed to elucidate the dynamics of simple processes, designed devices now contribute to the understanding of disease mechanisms, provide novel diagnostic tools, enable economic production of therapeutics and allow the design of novel strategies for the treatment of cancer, immune diseases and metabolic disorders, such as diabetes and gout, as well as a range of infectious diseases. in this review, we cover the impact and potential of synthetic biology for biomedical applications. | mammalian gene expression control strategies. a | repression-based expression control. a repressor protein binds to its operator and thus prevents activation of the promoter and expression of the gene of interest. in response to an inducer, the repressor dissociates from the operator, the promoter is derepressed, and the gene of interest is expressed. b | activation-based expression control. a minimal promoter (p min ) is activated when a chimeric transcription factor that is constructed by fusing a repressor protein to a transcription activation domain binds to its operator. in the presence of an inducer, the repressor protein-transcription-activation domain complex dissociates from its operator, p min is no longer activated, and transcription of the gene of interest is prevented. c | mrna transcript-based expression control. a self-cleaving ribozyme is fused to a small-molecule-binding aptamer and introduced into the ′ untranslated region (utr) of a gene of interest. in the absence of the inducer, the ribozyme undergoes self-cleavage, thereby eliminating the poly(a) tail (pa) from the open reading frame and preventing translation. however, in the presence of the inducer, the aptamer undergoes a conformational change, which inactivates the ribozyme and allows translation to occur. genetic circuits that can be switched between two stable expression states (for example, an 'on' and an 'off' state) by a transient stimulus. in the absence of a switching stimulus, the expression state is locked and inherited across cell generations. genetic circuits whose response dynamics depend on a combination of past and present states. the capacity of a species to sense and score its surrounding ecosystem, for example, to identify the type and population density of neighbouring species. a small-molecule-based chemical language by which bacteria communicate within and across populations (the 'quorum'). production and response to quorum-sensing molecules is correlated with population density. these are devices that are selectively induced within a specific concentration range of the input signal. at lower or higher trigger levels, the band-pass filter shuts down output signals. are starting to emerge [ ] [ ] [ ] . this review focuses on the recent progress in synthetic biology towards improving human health, including diagnostic applications, design of novel preventive care strategies, progress in drug discovery, design and delivery, and development of novel treatment strategies, such as prosthetic networks. synthetic biology holds the promise of providing unique opportunities for major advances in the improvement of human health in the twenty-first century , , . understanding disease mechanisms pathogen mechanisms. the availability of affordable technology for synthesizing and assembling sequences for proteins or for viral and bacterial genomes with increased speed has dramatically improved our understanding of host-pathogen interactions and of disease mechanisms. the synthetic biology principle of 'analysis by synthesis' provides mechanistic insight by combining rapid synthesis, assembly, shuffling and mutation of individual genetic components with straightforward liposomes that are decorated with antigenic peptides or proteins that elicit an immune response. these are molecular devices that promote the spreading of a specific gene throughout a target population by taking advantage of a mechanism that multiplies the specific gene in the host genome. gene drive systems produce non-mendelian patterns of inheritance. functional analysis. for example, the genome of the h n virus that was responsible for the spanish influenza pandemic was synthesized using sequence information from genomic pieces that were extracted from permafrost-conserved tissue samples. functional analysis of the reconstructed virus provided new insight into the key virulence factors of the pathogen: namely, a haemagglutinin variant that induces membrane fusion without trypsin activation and a modified polymerase that enhances viral replication . the same study also revealed that a combination of eight genes was responsible for the exceptional virulence of the spanish influenza strain , . this finding may help to identify the pandemic potential of future virus variants [ ] [ ] [ ] . synthesis and analysis of chimeric viruses have also made a substantial contribution to the understanding of coronavirus zoonoses that were responsible for the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) pandemic of and . the characterization of the history of the sars coronavirus, especially its switch in tropism, was particularly challenging, as its direct ancestors could not be propagated in laboratory models. however, after a kb sars-like bat coronavirus was designed to contain the receptor-binding spike protein of its human homologue, the synthesized chimeric virus was able to replicate in culture and infect mice . these in vivo studies revealed infectionenhancing mutations in the spike protein and established this surface protein as a key factor that is responsible for tropism switches in coronavirus zoonoses . reconstruction of pathogens by dna synthesis can also be used for the production of diagnostic high-density antigen arrays , , such as those used to profile post-lyme-disease syndrome or the humoural immune responses to hepatitis c and the human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) . immune systems. synthetic biology has recently provided new insight into disorders that are related to deficiencies of the immune system, which is known for its particularly complex control circuits and cellular interaction networks. for example, dysfunction of b-lymphocyte activation underlies several physiological disorders . functional reconstitution and analysis of the human b cell antigen receptor (bcr) signalling cascade in insect cells revealed that bcrs are not activated by antigen-specific crosslinking, as presented in textbooks, but instead have an autoinhibitory oligomeric conformation on resting b lymphocytes that shifts to an active dissociated form when antigens bind . this triggers the signalling cascade, which results in antibody production and the onset of a humoural immune response. also, construction of a representation of the complete human peptidome engineered for display on the surface of t phages enabled church and colleagues to discover new autoantigens. they used patient-derived autoantibodies to enrich autoantigenic peptides displayed on the phages; they could then identify the antigens by high-throughput sequence analysis . knowledge of the antigens that are involved in autoimmune processes is important for understanding disease aetiology, developing accurate diagnostic tests and designing drugs that neutralize autoreactive immune cells . vaccines. high-throughput and high-precision assembly and engineering of entire genomes from welldefined genetic components using synthetic biology principles has provided new opportunities for the design of attenuated pathogens for use as vaccines. for example, primates immunized with virus-like particles that were produced by selective expression of particular chikungunya virus (chikv) structural proteins were protected against viraemia after a high-dose challenge; even immunodeficient mice that were treated with monkey-derived antibodies survived subsequent lethal doses of chikv . dna synthesis and assembly has also played an essential part in pioneering a safe live vaccine against the poliovirus . the poliovirus was attenuated by systematic genome-scale changes of adjacent pairs of codons from over-to underrepresented codon sets in viral capsid genes (for example, gcc|gaa is strongly under-represented compared with gca|gag, although both encode ala-glu). these changes reduced translation and impaired the replication competence and infectivity of the virus. this attenuated poliovirus provides protective immunization in mice and offers a high safety standard given the low probability that all individual changes will revert and thus reconstitute infectious wild-type viruses. the genome-engineering approach used here could represent a general strategy for designing live vaccines against infectious diseases. other promising vaccination concepts include using antigen-producing immunostimulatory liposomes as genetically programmable synthetic vaccines and the production of heat-stable oral algae-based vaccines to protect against staphylococcus aureus infections , . vector control. suppression of insect vector populations using transgenic viral strains that harbour conditional dominant-lethal synthetic circuitry may control the transmission of malaria parasites and dengue viruses and could eventually control the spread of untreatable diseases [ ] [ ] [ ] . mosquitoes that are transgenic for a tetracycline-dependent transactivator (tta) that is exclusively expressed in the female's indirect flight muscle can only be propagated in the presence of tetracycline, which represses the transcription of this gene. however, the absence of tetracycline leads to the development of a female-specific flightless phenotype , . putting the eggs of this transgenic mosquito into the ecosystem results in male-only releases; female mosquitoes remain grounded and cannot feed, mate or take blood meals, which effectively represents a lethal phenotype. males do not transmit the disease, but they disseminate the synthetic circuit across the resident wild-type mosquito population , (fig. a) . similarly, a synthetic homing endonuclease-based gene drive system could be used to spread genetic modification, such as malaria resistance, from engineered mosquitoes to the field population. homing endonucleases typically produce a single sequence-specific double-strand break in the host genome that is repaired by homologous recombination using the homing endonuclease gene (heg) as a template. consequently, × × × figure | synthetic biology for understanding and preventing disease. a | a female-specific dominant-lethal gene network for mosquito control. mosquitoes were engineered to express an intron-containing variant of the tetracycline (tet) transactivator (tta) under the control of a flight-muscle-specific promoter (p fm ). in male mosquitoes, the intron is not spliced out, which prevents correct tta translation. in female progeny, however, functional tta translation is restored by sex-specific mrna splicing. this results in the activation of the tta-responsive promoter p tet and the expression of a toxic gene that triggers a flightless phenotype. if mosquitoes are raised in the presence of tetracycline (tet), tta is prevented from activating p tet , which results in a normal phenotype. however, following their release into the tet-free environment, engineered males mate with wild-type females. this transmits the female-specific dominant flightless phenotype and should eventually result in the reduction or extinction of the wild-type population. b | propagation of a selfish gene converting a heterozygous into a homozygous host. the homing endonuclease i-scei is expressed and cleaves its cognate restriction site (rs) on the homologous chromosome. following end resection and repair, the i-scei expression cassette is inserted into the second chromosome. pa, poly(a) tail. these constitute a group of secondary metabolites produced through linear decarboxylative condensation of acetyl-coa with several malonyl-coa-derived extender units to a polyketide chain. many pharmacologically active compounds, such as antibiotics and anti-cancer drugs, belong to the polyketide class. the selfish heg is copied to the broken chromosome in a gene conversion process referred to as 'homing' . expressing the heg i-scei under the control of a male germline promoter enabled efficient homing in transheterozygous males and rapid genetic drive, which led to heg invasion in caged mosquito populations (fig. b) . by engineering the sequence specificity of other hegs (for example, i-anii or i-crei), the gene drive concept could, in principle, be used to knock in or knock out gene functions that target the mosquito's ability to serve as a disease vector . field tests of release of insects carrying dominant lethals (ridl) technology using first-generation ttatransgenic mosquitoes have already been conducted in grand cayman. first, a small-scale release confirmed that transgenic males could survive, mate with wild females and produce transgenic larvae, and then the full field trial showed an % reduction in the numbers of wild mosquitoes about weeks after release. as the study site was not isolated and the surrounding areas contained high densities of wild-type mosquitoes, scoring the actual suppression efficiency remains challenging . drug development drug discovery. synthetic mammalian transcription circuits consisting of a chimeric small-molecule-responsive transcription factor and a cognate synthetic promoter were originally designed for future gene-based therapies, and the aim was to adjust therapeutic transgene expression in mammalian cells in response to a pharmacologically active substance , , , . as most chimeric transcription factors are derived from repressors that manage drug resistance in bacteria (for example, resistance to antibiotics ) and are promiscuous for structurally related compounds, mammalian cells containing such circuitry could also be used in 'reverse mode' , as integrated screening devices for the class-specific discovery of new drug candidates , (for example, new antibiotics ) (fig. a) . when mammalian cells that are transgenic for the screening circuit are exposed to a compound library, they detect and modulate reporter gene expression in the presence of a non-toxic, cellpermeable and bioavailable molecule that has a classspecific core structure and corresponding drug activity (for example, antibiotic activity) (fig. b) . using the same screening setup, compounds have been detected that lock the transcription factor onto the dna, which may block induction of antibiotic resistance in pathogens and render them drug-sensitive (for example, see bioversys). using such compounds alongside the specific antibiotic may offer novel anti-infective treatment opportunities and a new life cycle for established antibiotics (fig. c) . other trigger-inducible transcription control systems can be used in this manner as well, such as those that are responsive to streptogramin , tetracycline or macrolide antibiotics , anti-diabetes drugs or immunosuppressive lactones , . one example of the efficacy of a transcription circuit system involves the bacterial transcriptional repressor ethr. ethr represses transcription of etha and so prevents etha-mediated conversion of the lastline-defence antibiotic ethionamide into a pathogenkilling metabolite . the chemical -phenyethylbutyrate, best known for its strawberry flavour, was the first compound found that specifically inactivated ethr and so triggered etha expression and re-established the sensitivity of mycobacterium tuberculosis to ethionamide (fig. d) . further work revealed other ethr-inactivating ethionamide booster compounds; these have also been successfully tested in a mouse model of human tuberculosis . restoring drug sensitivity by pharmacological inhibition of master resistance regulators may be widely applicable . a further example of the use of synthetic circuitry for drug discovery is provided by mammalian cells that are conditionally arrested in the g phase of the cell cycle by circuitry controlling the expression of the cycline-dependent kinase inhibitor p . these cells reproducibly formed a mixture of isogenic subpopulations of proliferation-inhibited cells and proliferating cells that had spontaneously escaped the synthetic cell cycle block . these cells could be used as a cell-based cancer model and could be used to screen for anticancer compounds that selectively eliminate proliferating cells while leaving arrested ones intact , . drug production and drug delivery. the synthetic pathways that are created by assembling enzymatic cascades or networks in bacteria, yeast and plants have been instrumental for the large-scale economic production of high-value drug and drug precursor compounds, as well as for the biosynthesis of new secondary metabolites with novel therapeutic activities. examples include complex polyketides , , halogenated alkaloids [ ] [ ] [ ] and the precursors of the anti-malaria drug artemisinin (which is produced by the company amyris, for example) and of the anti-cancer compound taxol . for production of these compounds, it was necessary to overcome several challenges, including the functional expression of complex biosynthetic enzymes (such as cytochrome p monooxygenases ) and the overall orchestration of the multistep pathway to avoid accumulation of (toxic) intermediate products and to ensure metabolic channelling . small-molecule-responsive protein-protein and protein-dna interactions that are used to pioneer gene switches in mammalian cells , , have also been successfully re-engineered in the design of triggerinducible biohybrid materials for drug delivery [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . using synthetic protein-polyacrylamide and dnapolyacrylamide monomers, hydrogels can be produced that dissolve when specific ligands are supplied (fig. ) . biopharmaceuticals (for example, vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf)) supplied during gel formation are loaded into the hydrogel and can be released in a dose-dependent manner after subcutaneous implantation into mice and oral administration of the trigger compound . it is thought that any trigger-inducible protein-protein and protein-dna interactions could be used to produce drug-sensing and drug-releasing hydrogels , , . in chinese hamster ovary (cho-k ) cells, the streptogramin-responsive repressor (pip) was expressed by a constitutive promoter (p const ). pip binds to its multimeric operator (pir ) and represses expression of the reporter gene secreted alkaline phosphatase (seap). exposing this screening cell line to a small molecule library only resulted in seap production for compounds that were streptogramin-like, cell-permeable and non-toxic (indicated by the brown star) . b | discovery of small molecules that are able to overcome antibiotic resistance. the mycobacterium tuberculosis antibiotic resistance regulator (ethr) was fused to the herpes-simplex-derived transcriptional activator (vp ) and expressed in human embryonic kidney cells (hek -t) under the control of a constitutive promoter (p const ). when ethr-vp binds to its cognate operator (o ethr ), the minimal promoter (p min ) is activated, which results in expression of the reporter gene seap. a screen is performed to identify a cell-permeable, non-toxic molecule (indicated by the yellow star) that prevents ethr binding to o ethr , stopping seap expression. c | overcoming resistance to ethionamide in m. tuberculosis. in m. tuberculosis, ethr represses transcription of both the baeyer-villiger monooxygenase (etha) and itself in a negative feedback loop. when -phenylethylbutyrate (indicated by the pink star) is added, it prevents ethr binding its target promoter (labelled 'p' in the figure). this derepresses etha production, thereby turning ethionamide into a cytotoxic compound that kills the mycobacterium. pa, poly(a) tail. interactive biohybrid material based on the interaction of a repressor protein with its cognate dna operator motif. homodimeric tetracycline repressor (tetr) is converted into a single-chain repressor (sctetr) by connecting two tetr subunits through a flexible peptide linker, and it is tagged with six histidines (sctetr-his ). this molecule is coupled to a polymer and is mixed with a polyacrylamide that has copies of a tetracycline operator (teto) attached to it. sctetr binds to teto so crosslinks are formed, making a hydrogel. when tetracycline is added, sctetr releases teto, and the gel is dissolved. this can be used to release another molecule that was attached to the polymer -in this case, the cytokine interleukin (il- ). genetically encoded repair program protecting against dna damage. in prokaryotes, the repair program is coordinated by lexa and reca. dormant individual cells within a bacterial population that show a high tolerance to antimicrobials. biofilms are surface-associated bacterial communities that are encased in a hydrated extracellular polymeric substance (eps) matrix that is composed of polysaccharides, proteins, nucleic acids and lipids. they are crucial to the pathogenesis of many clinically important bacteria and exhibit resistance both to the immune system and to antimicrobial treatments, making them difficult to eradicate , . collins and colleagues successfully engineered bacteriophage t to constitutively express dspb: an enzyme that hydrolyses β- , -n-acetyl-d-glucosamine, which is an adhesin that is required for biofilm formation and integrity in staphylococcus spp. and escherichia coli clinical isolates. the initial infection of a bacterial biofilm with this bacteriophage (known as t dspb ) results in rapid multiplication of the phage and expression of dspb. following lysis, t dspb and dspb are released into the biofilm, which leads to re-infection and degradation of β- , -n-acetyl-d-glucosamine. during the process of t dspb infection, bacterial biofilm cell counts are reduced by . % -over two orders of magnitude greater than when a non-enzymatic phage is used . in a follow-up study, bacteriophage m was engineered to express lexa , which suppresses the sos dna repair system that bacteria require to counteract antibiotic-induced oxidative stress [ ] [ ] [ ] . infection by this designer phage sensitizes e. coli to quinolone antibiotics. use of this phage increases the survival of mice that are infected with e. coli, decreases the survival of antibiotic-resistant bacteria, persister cells and biofilm cells and reduces the number of antibiotic-resistant bacteria that arise from an antibiotic-treated population. it also acts as a strong adjuvant for other bactericidal antibiotics . the designer phage platform can be used to produce other antibiotic adjuvants . although it was once abandoned after the introduction of antibiotics, phage therapy is currently being revisited in several clinical trials around the world as the prevalence of multidrug-resistant pathogens is dramatically increasing. although phage therapy may face clinical challenges associated with development of bacterial phage resistance, phage neutralization by the immune system and pharmacokinetics, the field will certainly receive an impetus from designer phages . bacteria can communicate with each other using a chemical language known as quorum sensing. individual bacteria produce and secrete signalling molecules (called autoinducers) that are common to multiple species or are species-specific. these molecules accumulate as the population grows and can bind to receptors that coordinate colony-wide gene expression or manipulate the behaviour of other bacterial populations. for example, vibrio cholerae produces cholera autoinducer (cai- ) and autoinducer (ai- ), which trigger repression of key virulence factors. feeding infant mice with a probiotic e. coli that naturally produces ai- and has been engineered to constitutively synthesize cai- significantly increased the animals' survival rate after ingesting v. cholerae . this suggests that such an approach could be an economic strategy to prevent infectious diseases. unlike antibiotics, quorumsensing-based interventions do not kill pathogens but reprogram their behaviour; this strategy may be free of selection pressure and therefore may be less prone to develop resistance. in another study, commensal bacteria were equipped with synthetic circuitry to stimulate glucose-dependent insulin production in intestinal epithelial cells . after intravenous injection, escherichia coli accumulates in cancer tissue, where it reaches high population densities. e. coli is engineered to link the quorum-sensing receptor luxr to an autoinducer (ai- )-inducible promoter (p lux ). p lux is also used to drive luxi and the invasin gene inv. luxi produces ai- , generating a positive feedback loop that coordinates invasion throughout the population. b | acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin)-triggered killing of cancer cells after invasion of salmonella spp. salmonella spp. naturally invade cancer cells after intravenous injection. salmonella spp. were engineered with a pseudomonas putida-derived signal-amplifying two-level cascade in which nahr controls salicylate promoter (p sal )-driven xyls expression and xyls then triggers a xyls -dependent promoter (p m )-driven expression of the cytosine deaminase (labelled cd in the figure) . salicylate induces both nahr-based p sal and xyls -mediated p m activation. mammalian cells are resistant to -fluorocytosine because they lack cytosine deaminase, which converts -fluorocytosine into the toxic cancer therapeutic -fluorouracil. c | invasive bacteria suppress oncogene expression. e. coli is engineered to constitutively co-express a catenin β- -specific short hairpin rna (shrna), listeria monocytogenes listeriolysin (llo*) and inv under control of the bacteriophage t promoter (p t ). they invade cancer cells (using the inv protein), escape from the phagosome (using llo*) and knock down the catenin β- oncogene (using shrna). d | therapeutic protein transduction. lentiviral particles are produced using an integrase-negative helper vector (designated 'helper' in the figure) and a constitutive expression vector encoding the protein of interest (designated 'protein' in the figure) fused to viral protein r (vpr) and a protease cleavage site (pc). this can be delivered to any target cell in the absence of viral nucleic acids and proteins. an example application is described in the main text. pa, poly(a) tail. p ef a , elongation factor alpha (ef a) promoter. the action of drugs in the body over a period of time. it covers absorption of the drug as well as its distribution, tissue localization, biotransformation and excretion. commensal bacteria live in close contact with the host. in this special type of symbiosis, one partner is benefited, whereas the other is neither benefited nor harmed. despite decades of progress in cancer therapy, a major challenge remains: how to specifically target and selectively kill neoplastic cells that develop within native and implanted tissue and relocate within the organism to form metastasis. therefore, therapeutic strategies that are designed to eliminate cancer cells must be extremely precise to exclusively target diseased tissue while leaving normal tissue intact. although native cytotoxicity or the constitutive expression of anticancer compounds have demonstrated some potential in animal studies and human clinical trials , trigger-inducible drug expression circuits delivered by tumour-invasive bacteria or tumour-transducing viral particles may improve cancer therapy. synthetic biologists have recently designed a few anti-cancer devices that provide precise timing, location and dosing of drug production by external cues and could provide greater intra-tumoural effects while minimizing systemic toxicity. after intravenous injection or oral administration, many bacterial species (for example, e. coli and salmonella spp.) naturally sense and selfpropel towards tumours. these bacteria have also been engineered to selectively invade and proliferate in tumour tissues and to produce cytotoxic compounds as well as reporter proteins for non-invasive follow-up monitoring of tumour regression . these bacteria express flagella to penetrate tissue and chemotactic receptors to promote migration towards aspartate produced by viable cancer cells, ribose released by necrotic tissue or hypoxic regions generated by the hyper-metabolic activities of neoplastic cells. after they have reached the tumour site, the bacteria then either proliferate in the extracellular space or invade the tumour cells. in either situation, selective cytotoxicity was engineered by expressing toxins, cytokines, tumour antigens, pro-apoptotic factors or prodrugconverting enzymes . non-invasive e. coli has successfully been programmed to invade cultured tumour cells in a hypoxia-responsive or population-density-dependent manner. the corresponding circuitries consist of the anaerobically induced formate dehydrogenase promoter driving the yersinia pseudotuberculosis invasin gene (inv), which mediates invasion using specific integrin receptors that are typically expressed on tumour cells. populationdensity-dependent invasion requires an engineered quorum-sensing circuit that triggers inv expression after the bacterial population has reached a threshold size at the tumour site. this circuitry consists of quorum-sensing receptor luxr that co-induces luxi (which encodes the enzyme producing the quorum-sensing messenger autoinducer (ai- )), and inv. ai- -triggered, luxrmediated expression of luxi represents a positive feedback loop that amplifies inv expression and ai- production; this coordinates and broadcasts the invasion order across the entire population (fig. a) . tumour-invading bacteria have also been engineered for trigger-inducible drug expression after entering tumour cells. in addition to l-arabinose- and γ-irradiation-induced drug expression, a synthetic salicylate-triggered expression device has been used to control expression of drug components following systemic administration of the trigger molecule in mice in tumour cells that have been invaded by salmonella spp. . the device is based on a circuit that is derived from pseudomonas putida, which controls expression of cytosine deaminase in a salicylate-inducible manner . mammalian cells normally lack cytosine deaminase, which means that they are resistant to -fluorocytosine because this enzyme is needed to convert -fluorocytosine into the cytotoxic molecule -fluorouracil. tumour-bearing mice were injected with attenuated salmonella enterica engineered with the p. putidaderived circuit and then treated with -fluorocytosine. the mice showed significant tumour regression when fed with acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin) , which is rapidly converted to salicylate after intake by the animal (fig. b) . rnai is a potent and highly conserved mechanism for the targeted knockdown of mrna translation by small rnas. non-pathogenic e. coli was engineered to express a short rna hairpin that triggers rnai against catenin β- , which is a colon-cancer-specific oncogene . these bacteria, which were also engineered to express proteins to mediate cellular invasion and escape α α from the phagosome, were administered orally or intravenously and significantly reduced catenin β- levels in the intestinal epithelium and in human colon cancer xenografts in mice (fig. c) . combining various bacterial anti-cancer treatment strategies may increase safety, specificity and efficiency in future clinical trials. viral synthetic devices. viruses have also been successfully engineered to transduce specific cells by expressing epitopes that are recognized by particular cell-surface receptors and to express prodrug convertases and cytokines for use in cancer therapy . most of these oncolytic viruses carry coding viral nucleic acids, which may cause side effects owing to recombination with the host chromosome or proviral elements that are already in the host cell. recently, synthetic viral particles have been designed that lack coding nucleic acids and that exclusively package therapeutic proteins, which can be released in a dose-dependent manner . for example, viral particles carrying linamarase from manihot esculenta were injected into human breast cancer xenografts in mice that had been treated with the non-toxic natural product linamarin; these viruses triggered efficient tumour regression owing to the cyanide produced by linamarase-mediated conversion of linamarin (fig. d) . similarly, protein-carrying viral nanoparticles have been used to deliver site-specific dna recombinases, such as flp, to precisely integrate or excise genetic components on the host chromosome . they might also be used to deliver native or chimeric transcription factors that could transiently control the expression of target genes that are involved in therapeutic interventions, lineage control or induction of pluripotency . a transformation sensor for cancer therapy. gene therapy advances for cancer include virus-mediated delivery of cytotoxic effector genes controlled by cancer-specific promoters , or delivery of chimeric adaptor proteins to link tyrosine kinase signalling to the apoptosis-inducing caspase machinery . most promoters and control circuits that coordinate simple reactions such as these are inherently noisy and only allow linear responses, which means limited control of specificity and efficacy. however, using two internal input signals can improve fidelity, mediate sharp response profiles and ensure robust biochemical processes . using decision-making circuits as blueprints, nissim and bar-ziv designed a tunable dual promoter integrator (dpi) to target cancer cells precisely. the dpi consists of two native promoters that are concurrently activated by two independent transcription factors. each cancer-sensing promoter produces a different fusion protein in proportion to its activity, and these two proteins assemble together as a chimeric transcription factor. this transcription factor then activates a synthetic promoter that controls expression of the herpes simplex virus type thymidine kinase (tk ), which is cytotoxic in the presence of nucleotide analogues, such as ganciclovir (fig. a) . the dpi could be optimized for a specific cancer cell type by using different combinations of input promoters and effector genes, as well as by modulating the assembly efficiency and half life figure | synthetic genetic cancer classifiers. a | a transformation-sensing cancer kill switch can consist of a two-input, transformation-sensing device with 'and' logic. the device constantly monitors the transformation state of a cell and produces a kill signal when two malignancy markers occur. two independent malignancy-sensitive promoters drive expression of two chimeric proteins (docs-vp and gal bd -coh ). when they are simultaneously expressed, both proteins dimerize to form a synthetic transcription factor that binds gal operator sites (o gal ), induces downstream minimal promoters (p min ) and triggers expression of the herpes simplex virus type thymidine kinase (tk ). in the presence of ganciclovir, the system is cytotoxic. b | a microrna (mirna)-based cancer classifier that discriminates cancer cells from non-transformed cells by scoring high and low expression profiles of a set of cancer-specific mirnas. the classifier consists of high and low mirna sensors that exclusively promote output gene expression if the specific input mirnas are expressed at high or low levels, respectively. in the high mirna sensor, high-target mirna concentrations prevent translation of mrnas encoding the reverse tetracycline-dependent transactivator (rtta) and the repressor of the lactose operon (laci). this results in derepression of transcription of the output gene (labelled 'output' in the figure). in the low mirna sensor, the output-gene-encoding mrna is only translated when low-target mirna concentrations are present. c | by combining different high and low mirna sensors, the classifier can be customized to sense predetermined profiles of high and low mirna levels, such as the ones that are typically produced by cancer cells and respond with expression of the apoptosis-inducing human bcl -associated x protein (bax). pa, poly(a) tail. a vitamin-a-dependent, g-protein-coupled receptor that is expressed in intrinsically photosensitive retinal ganglion cells networks that replace existing cellular functionality that is ill-driven or out of order. they represent molecular prostheses for non-functional cellular activity; they differ from other synthetic networks that add useful functionality but do not replace non-functional cellular networks. of the chimeric transactivator components. so far, a set of three promoters have been characterized in detail, but the dpi design may accommodate other suitable promoters. the recently developed 'cell-type classifier' is conceptually similar to the dpi, as it can also be programmed to destroy cells that express a specific set of neoplastic markers . the cell-type classifier combines transcription and translation control components in a single scalable synthetic circuit that senses expression levels of a set of (currently up to six) endogenous micrornas (mirnas); it triggers an apoptosis-inducing response only if those levels match a preset profile. the cell-type classifier combines sensor modules for the detection of highly and lowly expressed mirnas (fig. b) . for clinical implementation, both the dpi and the cell-type classifier must either be delivered to the cancer tissue, or they must provide a fail-safe mechanism that constantly eliminates transforming cells from engineered tissue implants. other emerging tools for biomedicine novel treatment strategies will require new technologies to sense and control disease. synthetic biologists have designed new devices that could sense key physiological activities and have found new ways to dose therapeutic interventions precisely in response to external physical cues. such synthetic devices could have wide-ranging biomedical applications. thus far, synthetic control devices that are designed to interface with host metabolism and to reprogram cellular behaviour have largely been limited to heterologous transcription factors. rna controllers may represent an alternative. they are straightforward to design and can be integrated into a single expression unit containing sensors (aptamers), gene-regulatory components (ribozymes) and effector transgenes , , . the inherent modularity and compatibility of rna-based control components enables them to be independently optimized or exchanged. for example, an rna control device consisting of a drug-responsive aptamer linked to a ribozyme in the ′ untranslated region (utr) of a cytokine expression unit enabled trigger-inducible inactivation of ribozymemediated transcript cleavage and full transgene expression in the presence of the input signal . this synthetic rna control device was applied to control proliferation of engineered primary human t cells and enabled external control of the expansion of transgenic t cells that are implanted into mice. synthetic rna control devices could provide the advance that is necessary to enable t cell therapy ; by contrast, state-of-the-art, triggerinducible expansion of engineered t cells using chimeric antigen receptors has only led to moderate proliferation and poor survival of t cells in clinical trials , . another use for synthetic rna is the design of programmable sensor-actuator devices that convert levels of an intracellular protein into a discrete high or low transgene-expression state . the rna devices consist of a three-exon, two-intron minigene followed by the transgene. the introns contain protein-sensing aptamers, and the central exon includes a stop codon. binding of the protein to the aptamers controls splicing of the minigene; when the central exon is spliced out, the transgene is expressed at high levels, and when it remains unspliced, the transgene is expressed at low levels. such a device was configured to sense subunits of nuclear factor kappa b (nfκb) or β-catenin (which are neoplastic markers) and to express the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase. thymidine kinase renders cells susceptible to ganciclovir, so this device only operated as a cancer kill switch in the presence of the cancer markers and gangcicolvir . the modular configuration of the rna sensor-actuator device allows it to be tailored to different intracellular proteins and even to multi-protein input using specific intronic aptamers. also, responsiveness and performance can be tuned by placing the aptamers at different locations within the introns. the availability of compact rna sensor-actuators that are easy to design and to alter and that control transgene expression in response to intracellular levels of key proteins may also improve the ability to link metabolic disease states with gene-based therapeutic interventions. light is becoming increasingly popular as a traceless, moleculefree input signal for triggering transgene expression in living systems. bacteria have been engineered to record projected images with gigapixel resolution [ ] [ ] [ ] and to adjust transgene expression in response to multichromatic input , and now genetic light switches have also been designed to control gene expression and shape of mammalian cells . devices that convert light pulses into transcription may foster novel therapeutic opportunities in future gene-and cell-based therapies and may improve the manufacturing of difficult-to-produce protein pharmaceuticals, such as cancer therapeutics. an illustrative example is light-controlled expression of the glucagon-like peptide (glp ), which is a promising drug candidate for the treatment of type diabetes (fig. a) . an optogenetic device that enables light-triggered gene expression in human cells was designed. this involves ectopic expression of melanopsin in human embryonic kidney cells and functional rewiring of signalling downstream of melanopsin; the cascade integrates blue-light-pulsetriggered photoreception and produces a reversible and sustained intensity-dependent transcription response. when placed in hollow fibre containers and implanted into mice, transgene expression in the engineered lightsensitive cells could be controlled remotely by an optical fibre . illuminating mice that carried subcutaneous implants of microencapsulated photo-responsive cells also enabled transdermal control of transgene expression and of corresponding protein levels in the blood of treated animals. this system was able to attenuate glycaemic excursions and to control glucose homeostasis in a mouse model of human type diabetes . prosthetic networks. prosthetic networks are synthetic sensor-effector devices that act as molecular prostheses. when engineered into cells and functionally connected to host metabolism, they sense, monitor and score disease-relevant metabolites, process off-level concentrations and coordinate adjusted diagnostic, preventive or therapeutic responses in a seamless, automatic and self-sufficient manner. an example of the use of a prosthetic network is the sensing of metabolites to improve control of urate homeostasis (fig. b) . moderate levels of uric acid, which scavenges radicals, are deemed to be beneficial. however, a transient surge in uric acid that is released by dying cells during cancer therapy leads to tumour lysis syndrome, and chronic hyperuricaemia can result in gout. humans are particularly sensitive to imbalances of urate homeostasis because they lack uricolytic activity. a prosthetic network that constantly monitors blood urate concentrations and restores urate homeostasis by controlled expression of a urate oxidase -which reduces excessive urate concentration while preserving levels that are suitable for radical scavenging -could represent a treatment strategy for hyperuricaemic disorders . in brief, human cells that contain such a prosthetic network have recently been designed by combining: the uric acid sensor hucr , which manages oxidative stress protection in deinococcus radiodurans; the human uric acid transporter urat (also known as slc a ), which increases the intracellular uric acid levels and thus the sensitivity of the prosthetic circuit; and a secretionengineered urate oxidase (smuox) that is clinically licensed for the treatment of the tumour lysis syndrome . figure | advanced therapeutic and prosthetic networks. a | light-triggered transcription control of blood glucose homeostasis. the synthetic phototransduction cascade consists of rewired melanopsin and nuclear factor of activated t cells (nfat) control circuits. photo-isomerization of the -cis-retinal chromophore (r) by blue light (~ nm) activates melanopsin. this sequentially turns on gaq-type g protein (gaq), phospholipase c (plc) and phosphokinase c (pkc) and triggers ca + ion influx via transient receptor potential channels (trpcs) and possibly also from the endoplasmic reticulum. this ca + ion surge activates calmodulin (cam) to calcineurin (can), which dephosphorylates nfat. nfat then translocates into the nucleus, where it binds to specific promoters (p nfat ) and coordinates transgene transcription. when linked to the glucagon-like peptide (glp ), this mechanism allowed light-controlled blood glucose homeostasis to be achieved in a mouse model of type diabetes. b | prosthetic network for the treatment of tumour lysis syndrome and gout. implanted sensor-effector cells are used to monitor serum urate levels constantly: they import urate via a transgenic human uric acid transporter (urat ). urate prevents binding of the uric acid-sensitive transsilencer (krab-hucr, which is the uricase regulator linked to a krab domain) to its operator (huco ). this operator controls expression of secretion-engineered urate oxidase (smuox), so smuox is expressed when urate concentration reaches pathological levels. smuox mediates conversion of urate into allantoin. expression of smuox stops when urate concentration reaches oxidative-stress-protective urate levels. pa, poly(a) tail. part a is modified, with permission, from ref. © ( ) american academy for the advancement of science. the prosthetic uric-acid-responsive expression network (urex) was able to sense uric acid concentrations precisely and to activate secretion of smuox when the uric acid concentration was at pathologic levels. secretion of smuox is stopped as soon as the uric acid concentration has returned to the homeostasis level. this was impressively demonstrated when urex-transgenic cells were implanted into urate-oxidase-deficient mice, which develop acute hyperuricaemia with symptoms that are similar to human gout. urex was able to degrade urate and restore urate homeostasis in the blood, resulting in the dissolution of uric acid crystal deposits in the kidney of treated animals . its straightforward design may allow urex to serve as a blueprint for the assembly of other prosthetic networks that sense metabolic disturbances and circulating pathologic metabolites. an artificial insemination device. artificial insemination is standard practice to facilitate both human reproduction and livestock breeding. because of broad variations in oestrus expression and ovulation timing, coordinating sperm delivery with female oestrus is still a major challenge. ovulation is triggered at a specific time when the pituitary gland releases luteinizing hormone, which binds to the luteinizing hormone receptor (lhr) and coordinates the release of the oocyte. by integrating synthetic signalling cascades with advanced biomaterials, kemmer and colleagues designed an artificial insemination device that coordinates sperm delivery with oestrus control. the artificial insemination device consists of cellulose sulphate capsules containing bull sperm and sensor cells , , . the sensor cells are engineered to express lhr constitutively so that when it is activated, it triggers expression of cellulase that can be secreted. after implantation into the cow's uterus, the sensor cell line constantly monitors the animal's luteinizing hormone levels, and the oestrus-triggered surge in luteinizing hormone levels leads to the production of secreted cellulase, which degrades the implanted capsule and results in the timely delivery of the sperm and successful conception. fine tuning of the designer cascade could enable its use in other species, including in humans. in recent years, synthetic biology has substantially advanced strategies for classical biomedical applications, such as pathogen characterization , , , disease analysis [ ] [ ] [ ] , diagnostics [ ] [ ] [ ] , screening assays , , , , , drug production [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] and vaccination , , . this progress may imminently develop into shorter drug discovery , and drug development timelines, increased precision of drug delivery , and production of new and more affordable medicines [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . ultimately, sophisticated therapeutic sensor-effector devices that can sense disturbances, seek out pathological conditions and restore function are on the roadmap. such therapeutic networks that connect diagnostic input with therapeutic output may provide all-in-one diagnostic, preventive and therapeutic solutions in future gene-and cell-based therapies. matching diagnostic outcome with high-end therapies has recently become a focus of the pharmaceutical industry, which has declared personalized medicine as the treatment strategy of the future. tools that will have a tremendous impact in future biomedical applications include: using light-activated triggers to bring about a precise therapeutic response in cells , programming bacteria to seek and destroy cancer cells , , and using synthetic circuitry to keep crucial metabolites at homeostatic levels , , to manage disease-controlled expansion or to eliminate specific cell populations , , . recent work has shown that this is, in principle, possible and that some devices are working as expected and are producing a therapeutic impact in animal models of human diseases , . implants consisting of engineered microencapsulated cells represent a way of introducing prosthetic networks with a predefined function instead of directly targeting the host cells with the genetic material. although implants containing cells with engineered prosthetic networks are certainly the most promising way forward, they will limit biomedical applications to extracellular disease metabolites that can be therapeutically addressed through the vascular system. however, there is still a long way to go until syntheticbiology-based biomedical devices will be a clinical reality. placing therapeutic circuits in specific cells of a patient and making sure that there will be no interference with human metabolism are the most important challenges. therefore, clinical use of synthetic-biology-based devices and therapeutic scenarios will face the same scientific, ethical and legal issues as any gene-and cell-based therapy, but they may offer more complex control dynamics and are therefore expected to have a higher therapeutic impact. although none of the synthetic devices, prosthetic networks and related products that are pioneered by synthetic biologists have yet been used in the clinics or in clinical trials, the stage is set -with novel treatment strategies available and the commitment of the pharmaceutical industry in place -for synthetic biology to deliver the biomedicines of the twenty-first century. network news: innovations in st century systems biology evolvability and hierarchy in rewired bacterial gene networks identification of functional elements and regulatory circuits by drosophila modencode informing biological design by integration of systems and synthetic biology genome-sequencing anniversary. a celebration of the genome, part i genotype and snp calling from next-generation sequencing data scalable gene synthesis by selective amplification of dna pools from high-fidelity microchips high-fidelity gene synthesis by retrieval of sequence-verified dna identified using high-throughput pyrosequencing parallel on-chip gene synthesis and application to optimization of protein expression creating bacterial strains from genomes that have been cloned and engineered in yeast evidence for large diversity in the human transcriptome created by alu rna editing hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy with a lentiviral vector in x-linked adrenoleukodystrophy creation of a bacterial cell controlled by a chemically synthesized genome life after the synthetic cell making cellular memories a synchronized quorum of genetic clocks diversity-based, model-guided construction of synthetic gene networks with predicted functions a synthetic oscillatory network of transcriptional regulators a synthetic gene-metabolic oscillator construction of a genetic toggle switch in escherichia coli an engineered mammalian band-pass network hysteresis in a synthetic mammalian gene network an engineered epigenetic transgene switch in mammalian cells rationally designed logic integration of regulatory signals in mammalian cells a universal rnai-based logic evaluator that operates in mammalian cells a fast, robust and tunable synthetic gene oscillator intron length increases oscillatory periods of gene expression in animal cells a tunable synthetic mammalian oscillator a synthetic-natural hybrid oscillator in human cells a synthetic time-delay circuit in mammalian cells and mice multi-input rnai-based logic circuit for identification of specific cancer cells this paper describes a synthetic network that classifies cells according to their specific microrna expression profiles. this strategy might be generally applicable for identification andengineering of specific cell types synthetic biology: integrated gene circuits mammalian synthetic biology-from tools to therapies recent advances in mammalian synthetic biology -design of synthetic transgene control networks synthetic gene networks in mammalian cells molecular diversity-the toolbox for synthetic gene switches and networks rna-based computation in live cells ligand-dependent regulatory rna parts for synthetic biology in eukaryotes frameworks for programming biological function through rna parts and devices refinement and standardization of synthetic biological parts and devices mammalian synthetic biology: engineering of sophisticated gene networks ultrasensitivity and noise propagation in a synthetic transcriptional cascade semi-synthetic mammalian gene regulatory networks intronically encoded sirnas improve dynamic range of mammalian gene regulation systems and toggle switch origin of bistability underlying mammalian cell cycle entry synthetic ecosystems based on airborne inter-and intrakingdom communication streptogramin-based gene regulation systems for mammalian cells controlling transgene expression in subcutaneous implants using a skin lotion containing the apple metabolite phloretin de novo design and construction of an inducible gene expression system in mammalian cells development of genetic circuitry exhibiting toggle switch or oscillatory behavior in escherichia coli multistability in the lactose utilization network of escherichia coli a genetic time-delay circuitry in mammalian cells engineered bidirectional communication mediates a consensus in a microbial biofilm consortium programmed population control by cell-cell communication and regulated killing a synthetic multicellular system for programmed pattern formation watch the clockengineering biological systems to be on time a synthetic low-frequency mammalian oscillator synthetic biology: exploring and exploiting genetic modularity through the design of novel biological networks eukaryotic systems broaden the scope of synthetic biology synthetic biology: applications come of age next-generation synthetic gene networks the second wave of synthetic biology: from modules to systems a designer network coordinating bovine artificial insemination by ovulation-triggered release of implanted sperms this describes the first synthetic closed-loop control gene network that manages homeostasis of a crucial disease metabolite in an animal model the first optogenetic device that controls the production of a therapeutic protein in an animal disease model is the potential of synthetic biology: a view from the european academies science advisory council synthetic biology moving into the clinic characterization of the reconstructed spanish influenza pandemic virus complete chemical synthesis, assembly, and cloning of a mycoplasma genitalium genome a two-amino acid change in the hemagglutinin of the influenza virus abolishes transmission infectious diseases. as swine flu circles globe, scientists grapple with basic questions origins and evolutionary genomics of the swine-origin h n influenza a epidemic synthetic viruses: a new opportunity to understand and prevent viral disease synthetic recombinant bat sars-like coronavirus is infectious in cultured cells and in mice antibody-profiling technologies for studying humoral responses to infectious agents anti-borrelia burgdorferi antibody profile in post-lyme disease syndrome lips arrays for simultaneous detection of antibodies against partial and whole proteomes of hcv, hiv and ebv mutations of the igbeta gene cause agammaglobulinemia in man oligomeric organization of the b-cell antigen receptor on resting cells autoantigen discovery with a synthetic human peptidome this study is a demonstration of how the synthesis of the human peptidome enables the direct identification of new autoantigens a virus-like particle vaccine for epidemic chikungunya virus protects nonhuman primates against infection this provides a description of a standard strategy for the production of codon-pair deoptimized viral genomes for use as attenuated life vaccines optimization and quantification of protein synthesis inside liposomes from pond scum to pharmacy shelf heat-stable oral alga-based vaccine protects mice from staphylococcus aureus infection female-specific insect lethality engineered using alternative splicing female-specific flightless phenotype for mosquito control this paper presents a strategy in which transgenic insects containing a synthetic gene network could provide pest control by disseminating a conditional flightless female phenotype among natural insect populations genetic elimination of dengue vector mosquitoes a synthetic homing endonuclease-based gene drive system in the human malaria mosquito science snipes at oxitec transgenicmosquito trial macrolide-based transgene control in mammalian cells and mice design of a novel mammalian screening system for the detection of bioavailable, non-cytotoxic streptogramin antibiotics the impact of synthetic biology on drug discovery in this study, the reconstruction of a synthetic antibiotic resistance network in mammalian cells enabled the discovery of novel anti stringent rosiglitazone-dependent gene switch in muscle cells without effect on myogenic differentiation a system for small-molecule control of conditionally replication-competent adenoviral vectors streptomyces-derived quorumsensing systems engineered for adjustable transgene expression in mammalian cells and mice synthetic ethr inhibitors boost antituberculous activity of ethionamide controlled proliferation by multigene metabolic engineering enhances the productivity of chinese hamster ovary cells in vitro assays for anticancer drug discovery-a novel approach based on engineered mammalian cell lines a novel mammalian cell-based approach for the discovery of anticancer drugs with reduced cytotoxicity on non-dividing cells drug discovery and natural products: end of an era or an endless frontier? exploiting plug-and-play synthetic biology for drug discovery and production in microorganisms chemical biology: synthetic metabolism goes green silencing of tryptamine biosynthesis for production of nonnatural alkaloids in plant culture this work described the biosynthesis of halogenated molecules in plants using synthetic pathways production of the antimalarial drug precursor artemisinic acid in engineered yeast isoprenoid pathway optimization for taxol precursor overproduction in escherichia coli engineering escherichia coli for production of functionalized terpenoids using plant p s the impact of mammalian gene regulation concepts on functional genomic research, metabolic engineering, and advanced gene therapies conditional dna-protein interactions confer stimulus-sensing properties to biohybrid materials drug-sensing hydrogels for the inducible release of biopharmaceuticals genetically engineered protein in hydrogels tailors stimuli-responsive characteristics synthetic mammalian gene networks as a blueprint for the design of interactive biohybrid materials a gene therapy technology-based hydrogel for the trigger inducible release of bipharmaceuticals in mice a coumermycin/novobiocin-regulated gene expression system regulation of protein secretion through controlled aggregation in the endoplasmic reticulum this paper describes a novel metabolite-based strategy for the eradication of antibiotic-tolerant bacterial 'persister cells bacterial charity work leads to population-wide resistance dispersing biofilms with engineered enzymatic bacteriophage sublethal antibiotic treatment leads to multidrug resistance via radical-induced mutagenesis how antibiotics kill bacteria: from targets to networks a common mechanism of cellular death induced by bactericidal antibiotics engineered bacteriophage targeting gene networks as adjuvants for antibiotic therapy fighting bacterial infections-future treatment options engineered bacterial communication prevents vibrio cholerae virulence in an infant mouse model secretion of insulinotropic proteins by commensal bacteria: rewiring the gut to treat diabetes engineering the perfect (bacterial) cancer therapy environmentally controlled invasion of cancer cells by engineered bacteria genetically engineered salmonella typhimurium as an imageable therapeutic probe for cancer tumour-targeted delivery of trail using salmonella typhimurium enhances breast cancer survival in mice in vivo gene regulation in salmonella spp. by a salicylate-dependent control circuit short hairpin rna-expressing bacteria elicit rna interference in mammals reprogrammed viruses as cancer therapeutics: targeted, armed and shielded therapeutic protein transduction of mammalian cells and mice by nucleic acid-free lentiviral nanoparticles protein transduction from retroviral gag precursors efficient construction of sequencespecific tal effectors for modulating mammalian transcription purification and characterization of -aminocyclopropane- -carboxylate oxidase from apple fruit targeting cancer by transcriptional control in cancer gene therapy and viral oncolysis redirecting tyrosine kinase signaling to an apoptotic caspase pathway through chimeric adaptor proteins how erk / activation controls cell proliferation and cell death: is subcellular localization the answer? a tunable dual-promoter integrator for targeting of cancer cells engineering ligandresponsive gene-control elements: lessons learned from natural riboswitches artificial ribozyme switches containing natural riboswitch aptamer domains genetic control of mammalian t-cell proliferation with synthetic rna regulatory systems control of large, established tumor xenografts with genetically retargeted human t cells containing cd and cd domains the promise and potential pitfalls of chimeric antigen receptors in this paper, the abundance of specific cellular proteins was linked to transcription of target genes via splicing-modulating rna controllers. this enables proteome-based classification and engineering of individual cells synthetic biology: engineering escherichia coli to see light multichromatic control of gene expression in escherichia coli a synthetic genetic edge detection program induction of protein-protein interactions in live cells using light spatiotemporal control of cell signalling using a light-switchable protein interaction hucr, a novel uric acid-responsive member of the marr family of transcriptional regulators from deinococcus radiodurans cloning and expression in escherichia coli of the gene encoding aspergillus flavus urate oxidase a novel system for trigger-controlled drug release from polymer capsules design of high-throughputcompatible protocols for microencapsulation, cryopreservation and release of bovine spermatozoa short-term bmp- expression is sufficient for in vivo osteochondral differentiation of mesenchymal stem cells an autonomous system for identifying and governing a cell's state in yeast the authors declare no competing financial interests. key: cord- -yck t pp authors: kozaki, toshinori; kimmelblatt, brian a.; hamm, ronda l.; scott, jeffrey g. title: comparison of two acetylcholinesterase gene cdnas of the lesser mealworm, alphitobius diaperinus, in insecticide susceptible and resistant strains date: - - journal: arch insect biochem physiol doi: . /arch. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: yck t pp two cdnas encoding different acetylcholinesterase (ache) genes (adace and adace ) were sequenced and analyzed from the lesser mealworm, alphitobius diaperinus. both adace and adace were highly similar ( and % amino acid identity, respectively) with the ace genes of tribolium castaneum. both adace and adace have the conserved residues characteristic of ache (catalytic triad, intra‐disulfide bonds, and so on). partial cdna sequences of the alphitobius ace genes were compared between two tetrachlorvinphos resistant (kennebec and waycross) and one susceptible strain of beetles. several single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) were detected, but only one non‐synonymous mutation was found (a s in adace ). no snps were exclusively found in the resistant strains, the a s mutation does not correspond to any mutations previously reported to alter sensitivity of ache to organophosphates or carbamates, and the a s was found only as a heterozygote in one individual from one of the resistant a. diaperinus strains. this suggests that tetrachlorvinphos resistance in the kennebec and waycross strains of a. diaperinus is not due to mutations in either ache gene. the sequences of adace and adace provide new information about the evolution of these important genes in insects. arch insect biochem physiol. © wiley‐liss, inc. the lesser mealworm, alphitobius diaperinus, is a manure-breeding beetle that is the primary structural pest of the poultry industry in the united states (axtell, ; hinton and moon, ) . the lesser mealworm is also a reservoir of salmonella typhimurium, escherichia coli, tapeworms, avian leucosis virus, turkey coronavirus, turkey enterovirus (avincini and ueta, ; axtell and arends, ; despins et al., ; goodwin and waltman, ; mcallister et al., ; watson et al., ) , and may serve as a source of campylobacter contamination of poultry (bates et al., ) . high beetle populations consume significant amounts of bird feed (savage, ) . under dry conditions in the broiler house, beetles bite the skin of birds resting at night. to prevent these bites, birds will rest for short periods and then move (despins et al., ; vaughan and turner, ) . this can affect the weight gain of chicks. organophosphate and carbamate insecticides have served as effective tools for control of the lesser mealworm, and tetrachlorvinphos continues to be used for this purpose in the united states. however, a recent study indicated that there were some populations of lesser mealworm in which a substantial portion of the population was highly resistant to tetrachlorvinphos (hamm et al., ) . the mechanism responsible for this resistance has not been determined. organophosphate and carbamate insecticides exert their toxic effects via inhibition of acetylcholinesterase (ache). recent studies have discovered archives of insect biochemistry and physiology march that some insect species have a single ace gene (drosophila melanogaster and musca domestica), while many other species have two ace genes (culex pipiens, bombyx mori, myzus persicae, among others). beetles (coleoptera) are the most evolutionarily successful metazoans, contributing % of all known animal species, far more than any other taxonomic order. despite the diversity and economic importance of coleoptera, ace genes have been reported from only two beetles: leptinotarsa decemlineata (say) (zhu et al., ) and tribolium castaneum (http://www.hgsc.bcm.tmc/edu/projects/ tribolium/). evidence has accumulated that indicates a limited number of mutations in ace are as- fig. . the nucleotide and deduced amino acid sequences of adace (drosophila ace orthologous) cdna (accession no. eu ). the residues that make intra-disulfide bonds are marked with *, oxianion hole with §, catalytic triad with +, acyl binding site with ¶, and anionic subsite with ‡. the locations of the primers used for genotyping are indicated as **. sociated with resistance (i.e., mutations that code for an organophosphate and/or carbamate insensitive ache) in insects (fournier, ; kono and tomita, ; oh et al., ) . in this study we examined if there was one or two ace genes in a. diaperinus, and if mutations in ace could be correlated with tetrachlorvinphos resistance. three strains of lesser mealworm were used. the denmark-s (susceptible) strain was obtained from saturnia (bjerringbrovej rødovre, denmark). two strains (from kennebec, co., me, and waycross, ga) that contain high proportions of tetrachlorvinphos resistant individuals (hamm et al., ) were also used. a. diaperinus colonies were maintained at °c with - % rh, and provided a diet of cracked corn:wheat bran ( : ) ad libitum. adult beetles from the kennebec and waycross strains were exposed to tetrachlorvinphos using a residual contact bioassay method as described previously (hamm et al., ) . beetles that survived exposure to a concentration of tetrachlorvinphos that was -fold greater than the susceptible strain lc for hr (i.e. resistant individuals) were used in genotyping. five denmark-s adult beetles ( mg) were used to isolate mrna using a quickprep micro mrna purification kit (ge healthcare, waukesha, wi,), and cdna was synthesized with ng of mrna using superscript iii reverse transcriptase (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca). a fragment that encoded the ace cdna, orthologous drosophila ace (fournier et al., ) , was amplified by s ace (taygar-tayttycciggitt), s iace (garatgtggaaycci-aayac), and as ace (ccicciccrtaiaycca). a fragment that encoded the ace-paralogous gene was amplified using dl (gciaciatgtgga aycciaa) and dr (ggytticcigtyttigcraa) with the following thermal cycler program °c for min, cycles ( °c for sec, °c for sec, °c for . min) and a final extension at °c for min. we obtained a fragment of bp for the drosophila ace orthologous gene and a fragment of bp for the paralogous gene. gene specific primers for ′-and ′-race were designed based on these sequences. race was performed using the bd smart race cdna amplification kit (bd biosciences, mountain view, ca). to compare the ace alleles in the susceptible and tetrachlorvinphos-resistant beetles, the ace cdnas were sequenced from individual beetles. the mrna was prepared using a polyatract system (promega, madison, wi), and was concentrated with a microcon ym- (millipore, billerica, ma). one fourth of the mrna from a beetle was used in the rt-pcr ( °c for sec, °c for min, cycles ( °c for sec, °c sec, and °c for min) using the superscript iii one-step rt-pcr system and platinum taq (invitrogen). gene-specific primers, s adace (aagctgcccaattcttgcta), s adace (tct-acctcaacatctgggtgcctcagc), and as adace (aagctagggccatccttttc) were used for the amplification of the drosophila ace-orthologous gene. primers s adace (gctgaacaccaccac-catgc), s adace (gacacggtgttcggggactt), and as adace (gcgaactcgttgacgttaca) were used to amplify the drosophila ace paralogous gene. dna sequencing was performed with s adace and as adace for the drosophila ace orthologous gene and with s adace and as adace for the paralogous gene at the cornell biotechnology resource center. we obtained the nearly complete orfs for adace and adace (figs. and ) . both genes show a high similarity ( and % amino acid identity, respectively) with the predicted ace genes of t. castaneum (xp_ . , xp_ . ) . kyte-doolittle hydropathy plots indicated the c-terminal of both adace and adace were hydrophobic (data not shown), and thus potentially exchanged for glycolipids. the cdna sequence of adace (the drosophila ace orthologous gene, eu ) was , bp; archives of insect biochemistry and physiology march encoding amino acid resides of an immature ache (fig. ) . the deduced amino acid sequence had the characteristic features of ache, including the residues for the intra-molecular disulphide bonds (c ( )-c ( ), c ( )-c ( ), c ( )-c ( )), catalytic triad (s ( ), e ( ), h ( )), protein dimerisation (c ), anionic subsite (w ( )), oxianion hole (g ( ), g ( ), a ( ), and acyl binding site (w ( ), f ( ), f ( )) (number in parentheses indicates the corresponding amino acid in torpedo ache). we could not unambiguously identify the translation start site because no stop codon was found in frame in the ′ upstream region. if this transcript is similar in size to the ace gene in the colorado potato beetle, l. decemlineata (zhu and clark, ) , it will be more than kb in size. however, adace has an initiation codon that is identical to the one tentatively identified in l. decemlineata. given that adace does not have any of the mutations associated with organophosphate and/or carbamate resistance in drosophila (mutero et al., ) , lucilia cuprina (chen et al., ) , or m. domestica aches (kim et al., ; kozaki et al., ; walsh et al., ) , we conclude that adace encodes an organophosphate-sensitive ache (characterized by m , v , g , f , and g ). this is consistent with the denmark-s strain being insecticide susceptible. we sequenced , bp encoding amino acids of adace (the d. melanogaster ace paralogous ache, eu ) (fig. ) . as also found for adace , fig. . alignment of the deduced amino acid sequences from the drosophila ace orthologous genes in coleoptera. ad, tc, and ld represent a. diaperinus, t. castaneum, and l. decemlineata, respectively. archives of insect biochemistry and physiology march the residues for the intramolecular disulphide bonds (c ( )-c ( ), c ( )-c ( ), c ( )-c ( )), catalytic triad (s ( ), e ( ), h ( )), protein dimerisation (c ) anionic subsite (w ( )), oxianion hole (g ( ), g ( ), a ( )), and acyl binding site (w ( ), f ( ), f ( )) were found in adace . we were unable to complete the ′-race for adace , although we tried multiple variations of the protocol given by the manufacturer, including increased or decreased cation concentration, increasing the viscosity of the reaction mix by bsa or by using an alternative cation (mg + to mn + ). the alignment of this gene with the drosophila ace paralogous aches showed that, as expected for an insecticide-susceptible strain, beetles from the denmark-s strain had an organophosphate and carbamate sensitive type. a partial cdna, covering the amino acid residues found to be responsible for insecticide resistance in other species, was sequenced from individual adults for both alphitobius ace genes to ascertain if resistance was due to a change in one or both genes. if resistance was due to a mutation in adace or adace , all resistant individuals should have a unique allele (i.e., different from the susceptible strain). the drosophila ace orthologous gene, adace , was sequenced from two susceptible denmark-s, four waycross (tetrachlorvinphos-resistant), and two kennebec (tetrachlorvinphos-resistant) adults. the deduced amino acid sequences from all individuals were the same. there were six synonymous polymorphisms detected (data not shown). the ace paralogous gene, adace , was sequenced from three susceptible (denmark-s), five waycross (tetrachlorvinphos-resistant), and five kennebec (tetrachlorvinphos-resistant) adults. the sequences from all individuals were highly similar. one of the denmark-s and one of the waycross beetles had a a ( )s mutation (detected as a heterozygote in both individuals). there were an additional synonymous polymorphisms identified (data not shown). given that neither adace nor fig. . alignments of the deduced amino acid sequences from the drosophila ace paralogous genes in coleoptera. ad and tc represent a. diaperinus and t. castaneum, respectively. manure breeding insects responsible for cestodiasis in caged layer hens poultry integrated pest management: status and future ecology and management of arthropod pests of poultry relationship of campylobacter isolated from poultry and from darkling beetles in new zealand the acetylcholinesterase gene and organophosphorus resistance in the australian sheep blowfly, lucilia cuprina transmission of enteric pathogens of turkeys by darkling beetle larvae (alphitobius diaperinus) construction profiles of high rise caged layer houses in association with insulation damage caused by the lesser mealworm, alphitobius diaperinus (panzer) in virginia mutations of acetylcholinesterase which confer insecticide resistance in insect populations drosophila melanogaster acetylcholinesterase gene structure, evolution and mutations transmission of eimeria, viruses, and bacteria to chicks: darkling beetles (alphitobius diaperinus) as vectors of pathogens resistance to cyfluthrin and tetrachlorvinphos in the lesser archives of insect biochemistry and physiology alphitobius diaperinus, collected from the eastern united states arthropod populations in highrise caged-layer houses after three manure cleanout treatments cloning, mutagenesis, and expression of the acetylcholinesterase gene from a strain of musca domestica; the change from a drug-resistant to a sensitive enzyme amino acid substitutions conferring insecticide insensitivity in ace-paralogous acetylcholinesterase fenitroxon insensitive acetylcholinesterases of the housefly, musca domestica, associated with point mutations reservoir competence of alphitobius diaperinus (coleoptera: tenebrionidae) for escherichia coli (enterobacteriales: enterobacteriaciae) resistanceassociated point mutations in insecticide-insensitive acetylcholinesterase expression of the ace-paralogous acetylcholinesterase of culex tritaeniorhynchus with an amino acid substitution conferring insecticide insensitivity in baculovirus-insect cell system reducing darkling beetles residual and topical toxicity of various insecticides to the lesser mealworm (coleoptera: tenebrionidae) identification and characterization of mutations in housefly (musca domestica) acetylcholinesterase involved in insecticide resistance limited transmission of turkey coronavirus (tcv) in young turkeys by adult lesser mealworms, alphitobius diaperinus panzer (tenebrionidae) comparisons of kinetic properties of acetylcholinesterase purified from azinphosmethyl-susceptible and resistant strains of colorado potato beetle a point mutation of acetylcholinesterase associated with azinphosmethyl resistance and reduced fitness in colorado potato beetle we thank d.a. rutz for the beetles and c. leichter, j. briddell, and c. reasor for technical as-sistance. the daljit s. and elaine sarkaria professorship and a research fellowship (to t.k.) from the japanese society for the promotion of science for young scientists supported this project. adace were different between resistant and susceptible beetles, we conclude that the mechanism of tetrachlorvinphos resistance in these strains of a. diaperinus is not due to mutations in the ace genes (i.e., is not an altered acetylcholinesterase).alignments of the deduced amino acid sequences from the drosophila ace orthologous and paralogous genes in coleoptera are shown in figures and , respectively. as expected, the ace orthologous sequences of the two tenebrionidae, a. diaperinus and t. castaneum, were more similar to each other than to the leptinotarsa decemlineata (fig. ) . these three coleopteran sequences differed primarily at the n-and c-terminal regions, but showed expected conservation at most functionally important residues. similarly, the ace paralogous sequences from a. diaperinus and t. castaneum were highly similar, with the greatest number of differences found in the c-terminal region (fig. ) .the phylogenic tree of the arthropod aches (fig. ) shows there are two major groups, with the acari aches being intermediates. each group is further divided into the subgroups, primarily by order. adace and adace clustered with the other coleoptera genes in both. this is consistent with the idea that beetles have two ace genes. the mutations related to organophosphate resistance were first studied in d. melanogaster and m. domestica. however, studies of drosophila ace orthologous genes failed to identify mutations responsible for organophosphate resistance in other species. subsequently, mutations in the drosophila ace paralogous genes were found to be associated with the resistance in some mosquitoes. the increasing number of insect genome sequences reveal that the ancestral condition, at least in pterygota, is two copies of ace. it also appears that mutations on the drosophila and musca ace paralogous genes are more important than the mutations on the drosophila orthologous genes, in terms of conferring organophosphate resistance, at least in many species. key: cord- - bxvenue authors: ashwell, m.; freire, m.; o’nan, a.t.; benito, j.; hash, j.; mcculloch, r.s.; lascelles, b.d.x. title: characterization of gene expression in naturally occurring feline degenerative joint disease-associated pain date: - - journal: vet j doi: . /j.tvjl. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: bxvenue degenerative joint disease (djd) associated-pain is a clinically relevant and common condition affecting domesticated cats and other species including humans. identification of the neurobiological signature of pain is well developed in rodent pain models, however such information is lacking from animals or humans with naturally occurring painful conditions. in this study, identification of housekeeping genes (hkg) for neuronal tissue and expression levels of genes considered associated with chronic pain in rodent models were explored in cats with naturally occurring osteoarthritic pain. fourteen adult cats were evaluated — seven without clinical signs of osteoarthritic pain, and seven with hind limb radiographic djd and pain. expression of an investigator-selected set of pain signaling genes (including asic , atf , cox , cx cl , nav . , nav . , nav . , ngf, nk r, tnfα, trka) in lumbar spinal cord dorsal horn and lumbar dorsal root ganglia tissues from clinically healthy cats and cats with djd were studied using quantitative rt-pcr (qpcr). hkg identified as the most stable across all tissue samples were many of the ribosomal protein genes, such as rpl and rps . qpcr results showed atf and cx cl up-regulated in djd-affected dorsal root ganglia compared to clinically healthy controls. in spinal cord, cx cl was up-regulated and ngf was down-regulated when djd-affected samples were compared to healthy samples. further work is needed to understand the neurobiology of pain in naturally occurring disease and what rodent models are predictive of these changes in more heterogeneous populations such as domestic cats. feline degenerative joint disease (djd) can be associated with mobility impairment in feline patients (gruen et al., (gruen et al., , lascelles, ) . this impairment is believed to be due to pain associated with the djd as mobility appears to be increased when pain relief is provided (gruen et al., (gruen et al., , lascelles, ) . the approach to pain management can be divided into two basic approachesto try analgesics known or thought to be effective in other conditions or other species, or to base the analgesic selection on a rationale evaluation of the neurobiological changes present in the target disease state in the target species. this latter approach could be described as making rationale analgesic choices on the neurobiological signature of the pain. presently, nothing is known about the neurobiology of feline djd pain. one approach to understanding the neurobiology of pain is to look at differences in gene expression between normal and phenotypically well-defined diseased states. limited work has been performed along these lines in dogs. hegemann et al. ( ) measured gene expression levels of interleukin (il)- α, il- ß, il- , il- , il- , il- , il- , il- , il- , interferon gamma (if-g), transforming growth factor beta (tgfß), and tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnfα) in synovial fluid collected from dogs with osteoarthritis and immune-mediated polyarthritis using semi-quantitative real-time pcr methods. they reported differences in gene expression levels for some of these genes when they compared affected and unaffected dogs, but did not relate the findings to the presence of painan important consideration given that common measures of disease, such as radiographic features, do not correlate well with pain levels. other investigators have evaluated the changes in gene expression in canine osteoarthritic cartilage (clements et al., (clements et al., , , but again, the results were not evaluated against whether or not there was a pain state present. quantitative real-time pcr (qpcr) studies have evaluated expression levels of various cytokines in feline allergic skin disease (taglinger et al., ) , feline chronic gingival stomatitis (harley et al., ) and feline coronavirus infection (gelain et al., ) . however, no studies have been performed in cats with djd to determine gene expression changes in relation to pain. we were interested in understanding the gene expression changes at crucial points in the nociceptive signal (pain) generation and transmission pathway in the dorsal root ganglia (drg) and the dorsal horn (dh) of the spinal cord. in this study, we first evaluated a panel of potential housekeeping genes to identify the most stable reference genes in djd and healthy cats in drg and dorsal horn as this had not been previously done. after the most stable reference genes were identified, a selection of genes previously associated with nociception in rodent models, and of interest to the authors, were examined using qpcr in the same samples to allow us to start characterizing the neurobiological signature of pain associated with djd in cats. identification of stable reference genes in pain-related tissues in felines is important because of the cat's use as a potential animal model for human conditions and the prevalence of aging cats in veterinary medicine. this study was approved by the ncsu institutional animal care and use committee (iacuc; approval no. - -o; approval date: october ). fourteen domestic cats euthanased at a local animal shelter, and of known pain status via pre-euthanasia examinations, were used for sample collection. the investigators evaluated the cats prior to euthanasia to determine whether they had pain associated with hind limb joints. cats were euthanased with an overdose of barbiturates for reasons unrelated to this study (population control) and the investigators had no input into which cats were euthanased. immediately after euthanasia orthogonal digital radiographs of the lumbar axial skeleton and appendicular joints of the hind limbs were performed and evaluated for the presence of radiographic signs indicative of naturally occurring djd as described previously (lascelles, ) . the tarsus, stifle and hip joints were opened and visually inspected for evidence of macroscopic lesions indicative of djd as described previously (freire et al., ) and scored as described previously . the spinal canal from the last thoracic vertebrae to the sacrum was opened and evaluated for macroscopic lesions indicative of intervertebral disc degeneration with disk prolapse and spinal cord compression. in summary, cats were considered 'pain positive' if there were signs of discomfort on manipulation of hind limb joints; there was gross evidence of djd in those joints; there was muscle atrophy in the hind limbs that was not seen elsewhere in the body; and there were no grossly visible indications of intervertebral disk prolapse or spinal cord compression. seven cats were considered free of musculoskeletal pain on pre-euthanasia evaluation, and of free of naturally occurring appendicular joint djd and spinal djd, and were included in the normal group (no abnormalities seen on digital radiographs and on macroscopic inspection of appendicular joints and axial skeleton). seven cats were included in the hind limb djd group and showed radiographic signs indicative of moderate-severe djd in one or multiple appendicular joints of the hind limbs. no evidence of spinal compressive lesions was present. the lumbar spine from mid body of third lumbar vertebrae to mid body of the fifth lumbar vertebrae (lumbar intumescence) was harvested and drg of fourth, fifth and sixth spinal segments from both sides were dissected and individually stored. right and left dh of the spinal cord segment harvested were dissected and individually stored (after initial exposure to rnalater for at least h). dissection was performed using a dissecting microscope (olympus szx , ). looking at the transverse cut surface of the spinal cord, the white and grey matters can be differentiated and the dorsal horn can easily be identified. the dorsal and ventral aspects of the spinal cord are identifiable by location of the ventral median fissure and the cranial and caudal aspects are determined by looking at the orientation of the nerve rootlets. the dura mater was opened and the spinal cord was divided into right and left segments following the ventral median fissure. another cut placed just dorsal to the central canal allowed the dorsal horn to be separated from the ventral. this cut was performed carefully to assure separation by identification of the grey matter corresponding to the dorsal horn on the transverse cut surface of the spinal cord (supplementary figs. s -s ). the same drg and dh segments of the spinal cord were sampled in normal cats for comparison. all tissue samples were stored in rnalater (qiagen) at À c for h and at À c thereafter until sample processing. total rna from drg and dh was extracted using the qiagen rneasy kit and an on-column dnase digestion to remove genomic dna. the manufacturer's protocol was followed through the chloroform extraction but instead of precipitating the rna in % ethanol, % ethanol was added and the mixture applied to the rneasy (qiagen) column, following the rneasy kit instructions through the end of that manufacturer's protocol. quantity of the extracted rna was measured on a nanodrop spectrophotometer (thermo scientific, wilmington, de) and quality was evaluated by running the extracted rna on a . % agarose gel to determine the integrity of the s and s ribosomal subunits. only samples showing a s: s rrna band intensity ratio of approximately (as determined visually) were used in this study. a high capacity cdna reverse transcription kit (applied biosystems inc., foster city, ca) was used to reverse transcribe ng of total rna per the manufacturer's protocol. subsequently, reactions were diluted : to provide enough template for all genes to be evaluated. primer sequences for gusb, hmbs, rpl , rps , rps and ywhaz were obtained from penning et al. ( ) . the remaining housekeeping and target gene primers were designed using beacon designer software (premier biosoft intl., palo alto, ca) to be compatible with sybr green i and to span an intron in order to detect genomic contamination. pcr primer sequences for the remaining housekeeping genes and pain-related target genes are given in table . quantitative pcr was performed in a volume of ml, consisting of ml of diluted cdna, nmol/l of forward and reverse primers, nmol/l fluorescein, and  power sybr green master mix (applied biosystems). a three-step amplification protocol was performed in an icycler iq (bio-rad). each reaction included one cycle at c for min, following by cycles at s at c, s at c- c for annealing, and extension for s at c. specificity of each reaction was assessed by melt curve analysis ( cycles starting at c with an increase of . c every cycle, with a dwell time of s) and one amplicon from each primer pair was dna sequenced to confirm identity. reactions were performed in duplicate, c t values were averaged for the replicates and negative controls were included to detect possible contamination. any duplicate measurements more than . c t apart were repeated for that sample or removed from the analysis. standard curves were evaluated for each primer pair by combining equal amounts of cdna from each specimen into a pool. the pool was then diluted : , : , : , : and : . dilutions were evaluated in duplicate to calculate amplification efficiencies which ranged from % to %, depending on the type of tissue and primer pair. bestkeeper (pfaffl et al., ) , genorm (vandesompele et al., ) and normfinder (ohl et al., ) were used to evaluate the potential reference genes and select the most stable in these particular tissues. fold changes between healthy and djd affected samples were computed via normalization to the geometric mean of the selected housekeeping genes. the fold change calculations incorporated corrections for reaction efficiency using the method of pfaffl et al. ( ) . changes in the expression of healthy and djd samples were evaluated for statistical significance using a linear mixed model derived from the work of steibel et al. ( ) . bayesian information criteria was used to select the best parameters to include in the model (those contributing to the lowest bic score). fixed factors included health status (healthy vs. djd), reproductive status (sterilized vs. intact), and radiographic score for djd. random factors included variables for position of the sample (left vs. right), age, and sex of the cats. the model was established with duplicate samples from a given cat nested within the cat. all analysis was conducted with spss software (version . , ibm) and an alpha (α) of . was used for all analyses. cats included in the djd-pain group were two castrated males, three intact males and two spayed females. mean age (aestandard deviation, sd) was ( . ) years old, and mean weight (aesd) was . ( . ) kg; median body condition score was / . the characteristics of the cats are detailed in table s (supplementary data), and all were designated 'pain positive'. bilateral hind limb appendicular joint djd in one or multiple joints were present in five of seven cats and samples from right and left dh of the spinal cord and right and left drg were analyzed. in the other two cats in the djd-pain group, only one hind limb had one or multiple joints affected with djd and samples from the nervous tissue ipsilateral to the affected side were collected. cats studied included in the healthy group were two castrated males, three intact males, one spayed female and one intact female. mean age (aesd) was . ( . ) years, and mean weight (aesd) was . ( . ) kg; median body condition score was / . samples were collected from right and/or left nervous tissues in these cats to match with the samples collected in the cats with djd. ten potential housekeeping genes for drg and dh collected from djd-affected and unaffected cats were examined using the three gene expression reference gene programs. the ten genes evaluated in this study were selected based on previous work by penning et al. ( ) that examined the stability of these genes in feline liver, kidney, dental roots, heart and mammary gland tissues but not in any central nervous system tissues. the genes examined were beta actin (actb); beta- -microglobulin (b m); beta glucuronidase (gusb); hydroxymethylbilane synthase (hmbs); tyrosine -monooxygenase/tryptophan -monooxygenase activation protein-zeta polypeptide (ywhaz); and ribosomal proteins l (rpl ), l (rpl ), s (rps ), s (rps ) and s (rps ). due to dissection errors, two drg were missing from the sample set; however drg representing all cats were used to evaluate the reference gene panel using bestkeeper and norm-finder, as those programs allow for missing data. only paired samples from cats were able to be evaluated using genorm as that program requires complete data. all genes amplified in the majority of the samples examined but b m had a sd > and was removed as a potential reference gene based on the recommendation from the bestkeeper software. based on bestkeeper results, actb, rps and rps were the most stable housekeeping genes in the drg samples. using results from genorm, rps , rps and actb were the most stable. and norm-finder produced results that differed from both genorm and bestkeeper, finding rpl , hmbs and gusb as the most stable genes in the drg samples (table ). an additional feature of genorm is the determination of the optimum number of reference genes needed for accurate normalization (fig. s a and s b ). the number of reference genes associated with an expression stability value of . or lower is considered the optimum number of housekeeping genes needed. for each of the tissues examined in the feline samples, the variation in normalization factor with two vs. three reference genes was < . , indicating the optimum table reference gene rankings for each tissue type using bestkeeper, genorm and normfinder. reference gene ranked order (most stable to least stable) bestkeeper number of genes needed was two. however, since the three programs did not always agree on the two most stable genes, three were selected for each tissue type. based on these results, the geometric mean of actb, rps and rpl was used as the reference value in each of the drg samples. a total of dh samples ( from cats with djd and from healthy cats) were used to evaluate potential housekeeping genes in this tissue. all ten reference genes amplified and had sd < so all were included in the reference gene analyses. determination of the most stable reference genes in dh was very consistent across the three evaluation programs, with hmbs being the most stable gene ( table ) . actb was the next most stable using bestkeeper and normfinder and this gene was placed as the third most stable using genorm. based on these results, the geometric mean of actb, hmbs and rpl was used as the reference value in each of the dh samples. after a set of stable reference genes were identified for each tissue type, genes associated with pain in rodents were selected (based on current knowledge of genes involved in pain states (foulkes and wood, ) and their expression levels compared in the drg from djd-affected and healthy samples. we hypothesized that these genes would show increased expression in djd cats. the selected genes were as follows: acid sensing ion channel (asic ); activating transcription factor (atf ); calcitonin gene related peptide (cgrp); cyclooxygenase (cox ); chemokine (c-x -x motif) ligand (cx cl ); sodium channel, voltage-gated, alpha subunit types ix (nav . ), x (nav . ) and xi (nav . ); nerve growth factor (ngf); tachykinin receptor (nk r); substance p (tac ); tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnfα); and tropomyosin receptor kinase a (trka). although two primer pairs were designed for each target gene, no amplification was detected for cgrp and tac , so they were excluded from this study. when djdaffected cats were compared to healthy control cats for the remaining target genes, atf and cx cl were significantly upregulated in the drg ( . -fold and . -fold, respectively; table ). ten target genes were selected for examination in dh samples-asic , cox , cx cl , nav . , nav . , nav . , ngf, nk r, tnfα, and trka. asic , nav . and trka were excluded because their pcr efficiencies were outside the acceptable range of - % and two genes (nav . and nav . ) did not amplify in any of the dh samples. of the five remaining genes, cx cl was up-regulated ( . -fold) and ngf was down-regulated ( . -fold) in the djd affected samples (table ). with quantitative pcr, multiple target genes may be evaluated to measure changes in expression. however, to accurately determine the relative expression levels, a reference is used to normalize the expression results for differences in cdna quantity between different samples, enabling comparisons between target genes across disease states. bestkeeper, genorm, and normfinder provide three different approaches for examining potential genes to select as the most stable genes for a given set of conditions. at least three other studies have identified suitable gene expression housekeeping genes in various feline tissues. penning et al. ( ) found that most of the ribosomal genes they tested appeared to be suitable reference genes in the different feline tissues. wensman et al. ( ) tested six potential housekeeping genes in different brain tissues and found that hprt, ywhaz and rps were the most stable. kessler et al. ( ) tested potential reference genes in neoplastic, endocrine, blood, liver, intestine and lymphoid tissues in healthy cats and found that rps , actb and abl were the most stably expressed housekeeping genes. while none of these other feline studies examined central nervous tissues, our results are similar, with several of the ribosomal genes and actb being stable reference genes. in rat dorsal root ganglia and dorsal horn samples piller et al. ( ) found that actb and hprt and also rpl and rpl a were suitable housekeeping genes in drg and dh samples, respectively, and wan et al. ( ) found rpl , rpl and actb most stable in drg samples isolated from a rat model of neuropathic pain. based on these other studies, our findings that many of the ribosomal genes and actb are the most stable in feline drg and dh samples are reasonable. the target genes selected in this study were chosen based on results from work on skeletal pain conducted in rodents (e.g. mantyh, ) and knowledge of genes involved in pain states (foulkes and wood, ) in an attempt to characterize the neurobiology of djd-associated pain in the cat. they were also chosen because of therapeutics that are available, or in development, or because of their involvement in neuropathic pain states. mrna levels of cx cl , also known as fractalkine, were higher in the drg of djd-affected cats, suggesting that these cats were experiencing a neuropathic pain state (clark & malcangio, ) . in studies examining changes in gene expression in drgs, the expression of activating transcription factor (atf ) is increased in the drg after peripheral nerve injury (shortland et al., ) and more recently has been shown to be increased also in models of oa in rodents (thakur et al., ) . atf is considered indicative of neuronal-damage and neuropathic pain. similar results were identified in the drgs isolated from the djd-affected cats used in this study, where the expression of atf was increased . -fold, and further suggests that cats with djd may be experiencing neuropathic pain like states. very little other work has been performed in drg from nonrodent species, but in horses with laminitis, immunohistochemical analysis of drg from hind limb laminitic horses, comparing lumbar drg with cervical drg showed an increased expression of atf , and the authors suggested this may be indicative of neuropathic pain (jones et al., ) . in many experimental pain models the expression of cox has been found to be increased in the spinal cord in response to inflammation and injury (vardeh et al., ) and contributes to pain, but we did not observe a significant difference in cox when we compared djd and healthy samples. the transcription factor atf has been shown to negatively regulate cox levels during acute inflammation in mice (hellmann et al., ) and our results may indicate the same negative regulation is occurring in cats with djd-pain. however, it is important to remember that our results reflect a single crosssectional chronic time point. the mechanisms of pain likely change over time, and the time course of the rodent models tends to be very short, and may not reflect mechanisms at later stages of the pain state. however, considering again our findings around cox , investigators have struggled to show clinical benefit of nsaids in cats with djd-associated pain (gruen et al., ) . in the djd-affected cats, we found significant increased expression of cx cl in dh, similar to what we detected in the drg samples. studies in rodents have shown that cx cl and its receptor cx cr are an important signaling pathway involved in microglial contributions to chronic pain. interestingly the fractalkine protein is membrane-bound until it is cleaved by different proteases, including cathepsin s. the cleaved, soluble form of fractalkine is associated with neuropathic pain, not the membrane-bound form (clark & malcangio, ) . we also found ngf to be significantly differentially expressed in dh, but not in the expected direction of that reported in other pain models. interestingly, in a study of a monoclonal antibody to nerve growth factor (anti-ngf mab) (gruen et al., ) , the anti-ngf mab produced robust and long-lasting improvements in activity and mobility, presumably due to a decrease in pain. this may illustrate how simply evaluating the expression of genes may not give the whole picturefor a comprehensive understanding of the neurobiology of pain, gene expression, translation into protein and post-translational modifications need to be evaluated. taken together, our results do point to increased expression of genes considered to be involved in neuropathic pain, and may be evidence of a neuropathic like pain state in cats with djdassociated pain. we expected that several of the genes we selected (which have all been shown to play a role in pain in rodent models of arthritis) would show altered expression between the djd-pain and healthy groups. there are several reasons for the relative lack of change across the genes we selected. rodent models are just thatinduced models, and these models may not reflect the neurobiology of pain in naturally occurring pain states. indeed, this is one of the reasons that has been suggested for the lack of translation of basic pain research into effective new therapeutics (lascelles et al., ) . another aspect of our study that should be factored into the interpretation of the results is that the tissues we collected contained varying types of cells and indeed tissue, and so we cannot directly infer that changes or lack of changes are due to any particular tissue type. we made every attempt to only use cats that definitely had djd-pain or were healthy, however, we did not have detailed history on each cat, and our pain status was simply designated as 'yes' or 'no'. future studies should endeavor to collect tissues from more highly phenotyped animals (with respect to pain status). this is particularly important as the neurobiology of pain probably varies over time and with features of the phenotype (e.g. excessive sensitivity present or not). the lack of changes in our study may reflect an underpowered study and the heterogeneity of the samples assessed. despite the shortcomings, we believe our study points to the need to look more closely at the naturally occurring pain states and such investigations may lead to novel therapeutic targets. however, there is a danger of missing novel, relevant targets if the starting point is already biased to what is known from rodent models, as our study was. selection of appropriate stable housekeeping genes is extremely important and has not been previously done for feline nervous tissues. as rodent species continue to illustrate they are not appropriate models for different human conditions, other animal models with naturally occurring disease, such as the cat, will become more and more prevalent and appropriate reference genes will be needed for accurate gene evaluation studies. our approach of evaluating neurobiological changes (gene expression) in nervous system tissue from cats with naturally occurring pain appears feasible. the results of this small study point to increased expression of genes considered to be involved in neuropathic pain, and may be evidence of a neuropathic like pain state in cats with djd-associated pain. further work should be undertaken to confirm our results, and expand on these studies. funding for this work was provided by private donations to translational research in pain program from individuals concerned about the lack of effective therapeutics for cats with chronic pain. jb was employed on a morris animal foundation grant, d fe- , working to develop an assessment tool for chronic pain in cats. none of the authors has any other financial or personal relationships that could inappropriately influence or bias the content of the paper. fractalkine/cx cr signaling during neuropathic pain analysis of normal and osteoarthritic canine cartilage mrna expression by quantitative polymerase chain reaction cartilage gene expression correlates with radiographic severity of canine elbow osteoarthritis pain genes radiographic evaluation of feline appendicular degenerative joint disease vs. macroscopic appearance of articular cartilage whole blood cytokine profiles in cats infected by feline coronavirus and healthy non-fcov infected specific pathogen-free cats detection of clinically relevant pain relief in cats with degenerative joint disease associated pain criterion validation testing of clinical metrology 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monoiodoacetate model of osteoarthritis accurate normalization of real-time quantitative rt-pcr data by geometric averaging of multiple internal control genes cox in cns neural cells mediates mechanical inflammatory pain hypersensitivity in mice identification and validation of reference genes for expression studies in a rat model of neuropathic pain development of a real-time rt-pcr assay for improved detection of borna disease virus supplementary data associated with this article can be found, in the online version, at https://doi.org/ . /j.tvjl. . . . key: cord- -kjvvoveq authors: qu, renjun; miao, yujing; cui, yingjing; cao, yiwen; zhou, ying; tang, xiaoqing; yang, jie; wang, fangquan title: selection of reference genes for the quantitative real-time pcr normalization of gene expression in isatis indigotica fortune date: - - journal: bmc mol biol doi: . /s - - -y sha: doc_id: cord_uid: kjvvoveq background: isatis indigotica, a traditional chinese medicine, produces a variety of active ingredients. however, little is known about the key genes and corresponding expression profiling involved in the biosynthesis pathways of these ingredients. quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qrt-pcr) is a powerful, commonly-used method for gene expression analysis, but the accuracy of the quantitative data produced depends on the appropriate selection of reference genes. results: in this study, the systematic analysis of the reference genes was performed for quantitative real-time pcr normalization in i. indigotica. we selected nine candidate reference genes, including six traditional housekeeping genes (act, α-tub, β-tub, ubc, cyp, and ef -α), and three newly stable internal control genes (mub, tip , and rpl) from a transcriptome dataset of i. indigotica, and evaluated their expression stabilities in different tissues (root, stem, leaf, and petiole) and leaves exposed to three abiotic treatments (low-nitrogen, aba, and meja) using genorm, normfinder, bestkeeper, and comprehensive reffind algorithms. the results demonstrated that mub and ef -α were the two most stable reference genes for all samples. tip as the optimal reference gene for low-nitrogen stress and meja treatment, while act had the highest ranking for aba treatment and cyp was the most suitable for different tissues. conclusions: the results revealed that the selection and validation of appropriate reference genes for normalizing data is mandatory to acquire accurate quantification results. the necessity of specific internal control for specific conditions was also emphasized. furthermore, this work will provide valuable information to enhance further research in gene function and molecular biology on i. indigotica and other related species. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article ( . /s - - -y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. properties. however, most of them have a low abundance in plants, for example, indican, isatin, indirubin, and indigotin account for . - . μg/g dw (dry weight), . - . μg/g dw, . - . μg/g dw, and . - . μg/g dw, respectively [ ] . these active compounds are secondary metabolites that accumulate during normal plant growth or exposure to environmental stresses [ ] . it is necessary to elucidate the biosynthetic pathway of i. indigotica under various stresses to increase the content of active ingredients. with the development of high-throughput sequencing technology, many candidate genes involved in the biosynthesis of active ingredients have been obtained from the transcriptome database [ , ] . therefore, an understanding of functional gene expression profiling will provide us with better insight into the metabolic pathway and the regulatory mechanism operating under stresses in this medical herb. with its high sensitivity, accuracy, and specificity as well as its high-throughput characteristic, the quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qrt-pcr) has become the most powerful and reliable molecular technique for gene expression analysis in a wide range of biological research areas [ , ] . however, the quantitative results are often affected by several error sources, such as the amount of starting material, the rna integrity, reverse transcription, and qrt-pcr amplification [ ] . to obtain accurate qrt-pcr analysis results, it is crucial to normalize the raw gene expression data. the use of stable reference genes as normalization factors to minimize these errors has become the most common approach [ ] . housekeeping genes, or genes involved in basic metabolism, such as actin (act ), glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh), tubulin (tub), and elongation factor alpha (ef- α) have traditionally served as references in plant science, because they were believed to be consistently expressed across various tissues, developmental stages, and treatments [ , ] . nevertheless, numerous studies have reported that the transcription level of commonly-used housekeeping genes shows unacceptable variability under different experimental conditions [ ] . if inappropriate reference genes are selected for normalization, the noise of the expressing assay will be increased, and thus, misinterpretation of the results will appear [ ] . consequently, it is essential to systematically evaluate potential reference genes to ensure that they are appropriate for a specific experimental condition [ ] . to date, igg (http://icg.big. ac.cn), a wiki-driven knowledgebase that collects internal reference genes for diverse species, has been integrating a comprehensive collection of more than plants [ ] , such as arabidopsis [ ] , cucumber [ ] , wheat [ ] , rice [ ] , artemisia annua [ ] , and panax ginseng [ ] . however, it has not been used for the systematic selection of a reference gene for qrt-pcr analysis in i. indigotica under hormone treatment or low-nitrogen stress, a factor that impedes functional gene studies. high-throughput mrna sequencing (rna-seq), a transcriptome profiling-based deep-sequencing technology approach, has paved the way for the use of transcriptome analysis in various species at an amazing scale and speed [ ] . with recent advances, rna-seq can reveal novel genes, carry out tissue-specific alternative splicing, and identify differentially expressed genes [ ] . meanwhile, plant transcriptome data have commonly been used to search for appropriate reference genes through this technique [ ] . excel-based tools, such as genorm [ ] , normfinder [ ] and bestkeeper [ ] , have been developed to select the most suitable reference genes from a set of biological samples under investigation to be used in an expression stability analysis. besides this, the optimal gene should be evaluated with genes of interest to obtain reliable results. as a non-model species, few previous studies have been conducted on i. indigotica at a molecular level. lignans, a component of i. indigotica that are produced by the phenylpropanoid pathway, are important chemical ingredients that exhibit various biological activities. cinnamoyl coenzyme a reductase (ccr) is one of the key enzymes involved in the biosynthesis of lignin monomers, and the expression of the iiccr gene shows prominent diversity in response to hormonal stress [ ] . therefore, iiccr may be used to demonstrate that the reference genes are reliable under various experimental conditions. in this study, nine common candidate reference genes were selected based on the transcriptome libraries of i. indigotica (srr ) to determine appropriate reference genes for qrt-pcr normalization in different plant tissues, and under low-nitrogen stress and exposure to hormonal stimuli (aba and meja). moreover, the expression level of one target gene, iiccr , was assayed to verify the reliability of the proposed reference genes. finally, the results will provide the basis for further research in exploring gene expression profiling under different experimental conditions. based on previous reports in arabidopsis [ ] , cucumber [ ] and wheat [ ] , we selected nine genes as candidate genes by mining the isatis indigotica transcriptome data [ ] . the details of gene symbol, gene id, gene name, arabidopsis ortholog no, and characteristics of pcr amplification in isatis indigotica are shown in table . subsequently, qrt-pcr primers were designed, and their specificity was determined using gel electrophoresis and a melting curve. the % agarose gel electrophoresis showed that only one amplicon corresponding to the expected fragment size was obtained after pcr amplification in all candidate reference genes (additional file : figure s ), and a single amplification peak was present on the melting curve for all primer sets (additional file : figure s ). qrt-pcr amplification efficiencies of % and % with correlation coefficients (r ) ranging from . to . were calculated based on a standard curve assay generated from amplification with a series of cdna dilutions (table ) . the transcript abundances of the nine reference genes were determined from their mean cycle threshold value values (ct) and varied from to , with lower ct values corresponding to higher expression abundance. among all candidates, ef -α had the highest transcript level with the lowest mean ct value of . ± . (mean ± sd), followed by rpl ( . ± . table s ). genes with ct values with large sds had more variable expression compared to these with lower sds. mub showed the smallest variation in gene expression ( . ± . ), while β-tub showed the most variable level of expression. the expression stability of nine candidates across different sample sets was evaluated and ranked using four different computational algorithms including genorm, normfinder, bestkeeper, and reffinder. the expression stability values (m) calculated by genorm were used to evaluate the stability of the nine proposed reference genes by comparing the average variation of each gene to all others. an m value of . was used as a threshold for expression stability, so the gene with the lowest m value was recognized as the most stable reference gene and vice versa [ ] . based on the above criteria, when all the samples of different tissues and abiotic stresses were combined, ef -α and mub had the lowest m value, whereas ubc had the highest value, indicating that ef -α and mub possessed the most stable expression, and ubc was the most variably expressed. for the aba stress set, the two most stable genes for normalization were act and mub with the minimum m value, and β-tub was the least stable gene. in the meja stress set, ef -α and tip ranked as the two most stable gene and ubc was the least stable one. in the set of samples under lownitrogen stress, mub and cyp were the top two stable gene and α-tub was the most unstable candidate. finally, in the various tissues set, ef -α and cyp were the most stable gene, and tip was the least stable gene (fig. ) . to obtain the optimal number of genes needed for qrt-pcr normalization, the average pairwise variation (vn/vn + ) between two sequential normalization factors (nf n and nf n+ ) was calculated using the genorm programme. the cutoff value of vn/vn + < . indicated that n stable reference genes are enough to obtain accurate results [ ] . under exposure to aba stress, meja stress, low-nitrogen stress, and different tissues, the v /v value was already below . , indicating that two reference genes were sufficient for accurate normalization. when all the samples were taken together, the pairwise variation (v /v ) was . , while v /v was . , indicating that the addition of a third reference gene had a significant effect on the results (fig. ). the optimal normalization gene among these candidates was determined by normfinder according to their table . a lower stability value indicated more stable expression of a gene. in the subset of all samples, mub, ef -α, and act were identified as the three most stable reference genes, while ubc showed higher variation. tip and ef -α were identified as the two most stable reference genes under lownitrogen stress, while tip was the least stable gene in different tissues. under meja stress, mub and α-tub were suggested to be the most stable genes, and ubc was the least stable one. consistent with the genorm analysis, act was shown to be the most stable gene under aba stress, and ef -α and cyp were the two most stable genes in different tissues. the bestkeeper algorithm was used to rank the stability of the reference genes according to the standard deviations (sd) and coefficients of variance (cv) of their ct values, which are listed in table . higher stability was indicated by a lower cv ± sd value. ct values with sds of less than were considered to have an acceptable range of variation. mub ( . ± . ) and tip ( . ± . ) were the most stable genes for expression normalization in the aba stress set; tip ( . ± . ) and mub ( . ± . ) in meja stress; cyp ( . ± . ) and tip ( . ± . ) in low-nitrogen stress; and act as for the all-samples set, mub showed the highest expression stability, which is consistent with the genorm and normfinder results. as shown in table , the reffinder program, which integrates genorm, normfinder and bestkeeper, was used to generate a comprehensive ranking of the nine candidate reference genes. in this process, mub and ef -α were ranked as the top two genes of the total sample. tip was suggested to be the most stable gene under meja stress and low-nitrogen stress, while it was unstably expressed under different tissues. cyp comprehensively ranked first in different tissues. under aba stress, act was the most stable. the transcript abundances of ubc were extremely unstable in all samples, different tissues, and under meja stress. α-tub was found to be unstable under low-nitrogen stress, while for aba stress, β-tub was the least stable gene. to validate the utility of the proposed reference genes in these four experiments, the relative expression level of iiccr was detected using the most stable (mub or tip were used alone or mub was combined with tip for low-nitrogen stress and meja stress, mub, ef -α, or their combination for aba stress and different tissues) and least stable (ubc for low-nitrogen stress, meja stress and different tissues, β-tub for aba stress) reference genes as calibrators. in low-nitrogen stress, the highest expression level of iiccr was detected in n , followed by n and n , and then in n . by contrast, there was a distinct discrepancy when using ubc as the least stable reference gene (fig. a) . we noticed that iiccr has a similar expression pattern normalized by the optimal reference gene and the most unstable reference visibly differed (fig. b) . the iiccr expression level was significantly upregulated at h and h under aba treatment when mub, and ef -α were used as the internal control genes. however, it was at h and h when β-tub was used (fig. c) . the normalization results of the iiccr expression level in meja treatment were consistent when using the two optimal genes (mub and tip ) as calibrators, while significant deviations appeared when normalized by the worst reference gene, ubc (fig. d) . these outcomes proved that accurately normalize gene expression, it is important to validate reference genes with stale expression under diverse experimental conditions. the growth and development of plants is challenged by unsuitable environmental factors, such as salinity, drought, uv stress, and pathogen infection due to habitat restriction [ ] . being sessile, it is necessary for plants to evolve a series of defense and/or adaption mechanisms. among these, plant secondary metabolites are known to play major roles in the adaptation of plants to their environments and in conferring protection against stress conditions [ ] . furthermore, the metabolites are unique sources for active pharmaceuticals, cosmetics, and food additives [ ] . unfortunately, the yield of plant secondary metabolites is so low that they cannot meet the increasing demand of the market. to increase their production, the biosynthesis pathways and key gene expression profiling related to the biosynthesis of the secondary metabolites need to first be elucidated. then, we will be able to establish a better understanding of gene functions [ ] . qrt-pcr has emerged as a broadly accepted method for gene expression analysis due to its accuracy, highthroughput, and sensitivity [ ] . nevertheless, selecting reference genes from the literature without systematic validation could cause inaccurate qrt-pcr results [ ] . hence, the selection and validation of appropriate reference genes for normalizing data is mandatory to acquire accurate quantification results under various experimental conditions for a given species. high-throughput sequencing technologies with fast development have provided a highly effective method to study plant transcriptomics [ ] , plant epigenomics [ ] , and plant genomics [ ] . moreover, the creation of large data sets and gene expression data by sequencing are regarded as an abundant source for reference gene selection, especially for non-model plants. therefore, i. indigotica large-scale transcriptome data (srr ) can serve as a gene pool to identify potential internal control genes. systematic and comprehensive evaluation of nine reference genes was performed in different tissues of i. indigotica and in leaves subjected to various treatments. the results showed that a single amplification peak presented on the melting curve images, so all the primer sets had quite good specificity (additional file : figure s ). additionally, the qrt-pcr performance of tested reference genes suggested high amplification efficiency values (close to %) ( table ). the statements mentioned above justify that these primers worked as expected and were reliable for further analyses of the stability of candidate reference genes. three statistical algorithms (genorm, normfinder, and bestkeeper) were used to analyze the stability of these candidates. however, the stability rankings obtained from the algorithms were not identical. the results of genorm and normfinder were similar for some conditions, but discrepancies occurred for the orders ranked by best-keeper. for instance, in the aba treatment, genorm and normfinder calculated act to be the most stable gene, while it was ranked moderately by bestkeeper. this apparent variation was probably due to the different calculation principles in the three statistical algorithms [ ] . to obtain consistent results, a comprehensive online tool, reffinder, which integrates the three algorithms, has been widely applied to generate a final comprehensive ranking of reference gene expression [ ] . in the current study, the reffinder analysis, identified mub as the most stable gene in the all-samples set. meanwhile, ubc, α-tub and β-tub had relatively poor expression stability values, which is similar to previous results in artemisia annua l [ ] and brassica napus [ ] . traditionally, classical housekeeping genes have been regarded as stably expressed at various development stages and under different treatments. however, an increasing number of studies is showing that the expression stabilities of most of these genes actually have great variation [ , ] . therefore, the use of housekeeping genes as references must be validated under specific conditions. in this study, six traditional housekeeping genes, which are involved in the cytoskeleton (act , α-tub and fig. relative expression of iiccr using the selected reference genes. the results were normalized using the selected stable reference genes (singly or in combination) and the unstable genes in sample sets across treatment with a n, b different tissues, c aba, and d meja. the bars indicate the standard error (± se) evaluated from three biological replicates β-tub), post-translational modification (ubc and cyp), and ribosomal structure and biogenesis (ef -α), were shown to display dramatic differences in expression patterns under conditions of low-nitrogen stress, hormonal stimuli, and in different tissues. cyp was the most stable reference gene in different tissues of i. indigotica but exhibited relatively low stability in lycoris aurea [ ] . ef -α ranked neither as the top, nor as the least suitable gene under four experimental conditions. α-tub and β-tub of the tubulin gene family are used as reference genes in many species, such as capsicum annuum l. [ ] , cynodon dactylon under cold stress [ ] , and eremosparton songoricum under various stress conditions [ ] , but in our study, they, along with ubc, always displayed the least stable expression pattern. in addition, act was ranked first in aba treatment and was also the most stable gene in the all-samples set. consistent with the result in lilium davidii var. unicolor, act also showed strong stability in i. indigotica [ ] ; however, act is not appropriate for gene normalization in different organs of salix matsudana [ ] . compared with the traditional housekeeping genes, the newly reported reference genes performed better in gene normalization under specific conditions [ , ] . in this research, three newly reported reference genes, mub, tip , and rpl, were analyzed. mubs are membraneanchored ubiquitin-fold proteins, which are thought to play a crucial role in diverse signaling cascades [ ] . the corresponding genes are universally expressed in the tissues of many plants, animals, and fungi [ ] . in salix matsudana, mub was shown to be highly stable under salt and drought stress conditions [ ] . in the current study, we also found mub to be the most suitable gene in the all-samples subset. the rpl gene also served as a stable reference gene [ ] , but it showed less stable expression patterns under almost all tested conditions in i. indigotica. similar to lycoris aurea [ ] , tip was revealed to be the optimal reference gene for meja stress. as for i. indigotica, tip also ranked first under low-nitrogen stress and was selected as the best reference gene. previous studies have indicated that tip has fairly stable expression during salt stress in oilseed rape as well as at different developmental stages and in various tissues of arabidopsis plants [ , ] . in addition, tip was not only validated as a reliable internal control gene under abiotic stress in chickpeas [ ] , it was shown to be suitable for cucumber plants under various degrees of nitrogen nutrition [ ] . the expression patterns of a target gene iiccr were examined using the two most stable and least stable reference genes to further confirm the stabilities of reference genes. the results showed that the iiccr displayed a consistent expression pattern in response to low-nitrogen stress, hormonal stimuli and in different tissues when mub was used as an internal control, either singly or in combination with tip or ef -α. however, severe variance appeared when the least stable genes, ubc or β-tub, were used for normalization. our results were consistent with previous studies, which reported that the use of unstable reference genes for qrt-pcr analysis resulted in significant variation in target gene amplification profiles, resulting in the misinterpretation of expression data [ ] . consequently, it is extremely important to systematically select reference genes to accurately measure the target genes' expression levels. the selection of suitable reference genes is a prerequisite to quantifying gene expression by qrt-pcr. in this study, a series of candidate reference genes were systematically validated to normalize gene expression during i. indigotica's response to various conditions. three prevalentlyused algorithms (genorm, normfinder, and bestkeeper) were adopted to analyze the expression stability of the nine candidates. reffind produced the final comprehensive ranking, showing that the optimal reference genes were mub and ef -α across all samples; tip and cyp under low-nitrogen stress; ef -α and tip under meja stress; cyp and ef -α in different tissues; and act and mub under aba stress. the reference genes identified as the least stable, β-tub and ubc, are not recommended for the normalization of transcripts. the qrt-pcr of iiccr was used to validate the reliability of these results, and the selected reference genes were shown to significantly reduce the error rate in gene quantification. the results obtained from the present work will help to further increase the accuracy of normalization in qrt-pcr analysis and will facilitate gene expression studies in i. indigotica. seeds of isatis indigotica, collected from shanxi province in northern china, were used in this study. the seeds were soaked in tap water to wash away the empty seeds floating on the water. the plump seeds were sown in plastic pots filled with a mixture of perlite and vermiculite (ratio, : ; v/v) and maintained in the greenhouse of nanjing agricultural university ( ° ′ e; ° ′ n), nanjing, china. after germination, seedlings were irrigated with / strength hoagland's solution once a week before being subjected to different experimental treatments weeks later. for the hormonal stimuli, the leaves of the seedling were sprayed with μm abscisic acid (aba treatment) or μm methyl jasmonate (meja treatment) and then collected at , , , , and h. low-nitrogen level stress was produced by irrigating the seedlings with a solution comprising five concentration levels of nitrogen for week, which all included mm kh [ ] in addition to mm kno , . mm kno , mm kno , and mm kno . root, stem, leaf, and petiole tissues were collected from untreated seedlings. three biological repeats were collected for all samples from each treatment, immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen, and stored at − °c for total rna extraction. total rna from each sample was extracted using the rnaprep pure plant kit (tiangen) and treated with dnase i to avoid genomic dna contamination, in accordance with the kit instructions. the rna concentration and purity were quantified using a colibri spectrophotometer (berthold detection). the integrity of the purified rna samples was examined by . % (p/v) agarose gel electrophoresis. samples were used for cdna synthesis at absorption ratios of a /a = . - . and a /a ≥ . . a first strand cdna synthesis reaction was carried out and transcribed from μg total rna and μg oligo-dt in a final volume of μl using the primescript ™ st strand cdna synthesis kit (takara) by following the manufacturer's protocols. the final cdna samples were diluted five-fold with rnaasefree water and then stored at − °c until further analysis. the candidate genes selected in the present study served as reference genes that were previously reported as suitable for gene expression normalization in other model plants and similar species subject to different experimental conditions. their names were used to search the i. indigotica transcriptome library (srr ) and the genes that were extensively expressed in organizations were selected (table ) . moreover, to ensure the reliability and correctness of the proposed reference genes, we blast-searched the nucleotide sequences of candidate genes against the arabidopsis genome database to identify their homologs in i. indigotica. based on the unigene sequences (additional file : file s ), specific primers were designed using primer software (http://bioin fo.ut. ee/prime r - . . /) with the following criteria: melting temperature (tm) - °c, gc content - %, primer length - bp, and amplicon length - bp ( table ) . self-complementarity and hair-pin structures were avoided. the primer specificity was judged by the agarose gel electrophoresis of the pcr amplification products (additional file : figure s ) and observed via melting curves (additional file : figure s ). pcr amplification was performed in a total volume of μl, containing . μl of ddh o, μl of five-fold diluted cdna, μl of × pcr buffer, μl of dntps ( mm), μl of each primer ( mm), and . μl of kod fx ( . u/μl). the pcr program was as follows: min at °c, cycles of s at °c, s at °c, and s at °c, followed by min extension at °c. the pcr products were run on % agarose gel electrophoresis (additional file : figure s ). the qrt-pcr was conducted in -well plates with an abi realtime pcr system (applied biosystems) using the sybr ® green i (biouniquer). the reaction mixture contained μl of five-fold diluted cdna, μl of each primer ( mm), . μl of × rox and μl of realtime pcr master mix to give a final volume of μl. the program for qrt-pcr was set as min at °c, cycles of s at °c, and s at °c. the melting curves were recorded in each reaction by constantly raising the temperature from to °c (additional file : figure s ). each sample was run with three technical replicates, and every plate included one no template control (ntc) to monitor possible dna contamination. the threshold cycle (ct) was measured automatically. a standard curve was generated with five-fold series dilution of the mixed cdna of all samples to calculate the pcr efficiency (e) and correlation coefficient (r ). the pcr amplification efficiency (e) of each primer pair was calculated by the curve slope using e = [ (− /slope) − ] × % [ ] . the stability and suitability of the nine selected reference genes were evaluated by three algorithms, genorm [ ] , normfinder [ ] , and bestkeeper [ ] , across all experimental sets. finally, reffinder (http:// . . . /refer enceg ene.php) integrated the three algorithms to obtain an overall ranking. for genorm and normfinder, the mean ct value of three biological repeats from each gene was converted into the relative expression level using the formula −Δct (Δct = ct value of each sample − the lowest ct value) [ ] . for bestkeeper, the mean ct value was imported into the program directly. stability measures (m) of the candidate genes were calculated with the genorm algorithm. stepwise exclusion of the gene with the highest m (least stable gene) value was used to rank the analyzed genes. subsequently, the pairwise variation (vn/vn + ) values calculated by the genorm were used to determine the optimal number of candidate reference genes; a value below . indicated that no additional reference gene was required. normfinder evaluated the genes' expression stability by assessing intra and intergroup variation in a given sample set, offering a ranking in which the highest stability (s) value represented the least stable gene [ ] . bestkeeper was used to calculate the standard deviation (sd) and coefficient of variation (cv) of the average ct values. analyzed genes with a standard deviation (sd) > were considered to be unacceptable reference genes, and the gene with the lowest cv ± sd value was the most stable one. to obtain a more accurate expression analysis, the samples were divided into four experimental sets and analyzed individually: samples from the aba-induced i. indigotica leaves (set , aba treatment); samples from the meja-induced i. indigotica leaves (set , meja treatment); samples from the low-nitrogen stressed i. indigotica leaves (set , n treatment); and samples from different tissues (roots, stems, leaves, and petioles) of i. indigotica (set , different tissues). in addition, the stability of the four sets together and that of each variety was analyzed. to identify the stability of the reference genes selected in this study, the expression level of iiccr , a gene involved in the lignin monomers biosynthesis pathway [ ] , was detected with qrt-pcr analysis. the expression patterns of iiccr in samples of i. indigotica under low-nitrogen stress, meja treatment, aba treatment, and in different tissues were normalized using two most and one least stable reference genes, respectively, as recommended by reffinder. the −ΔΔct method, a commonly used method to analyze the relative exchange in gene expression, was used to calculate the relative expression data of the target gene [ ] . three technical replicates were performed for each biological sample. additional file : table s . ct values of the candidate reference genes. figure s . specificity of primer pairs for qrt-pcr amplification. figure s . melting curves of the candidate reference genes showing single peaks. file s . sequences of nine candidate reference genes. act : actin; ubc: ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme; α-tub: alpha-tubulin; β-tub: beta-tubulin; ef -α: elongation factor -α; mub: membrane-anchored ubiquitin-fold protein; cyp: cyclophilin; rpl: ribosomal protein l ; tip : tip -like family protein. indole alkaloids from the roots of isatis indigotica and their inhibitory effects on nitric oxide production the cytotoxicity to leukemia cells and antiviral effects of isatis indigotica extracts on pseudorabies virus anti-sars coronavirus c-like protease effects of isatis indigotica root and plantderived phenolic compounds clinical efficacy and il- targeting mechanism of indigo naturalis as a topical agent in moderate psoriasis indigo naturalis ameliorates murine dextran sodium sulfate-induced colitis via aryl hydrocarbon receptor activation characterization of anti-leukemia components from indigo naturalis using comprehensive two-dimensional k /cell membrane chromatography and in silico target identification indirubin, the active constituent of a chinese antileukaemia medicine, inhibits cyclin-dependent kinases antiviral activity of isatis indigotica root-derived clemastanin b against human and avian influenza a and b viruses in vitro thermochemical studies on the quantity-antibacterial effect relationship of four organic acids from radix isatidis on escherichia coli growth effect of extracts from indigowood root (isatis indigotica fort.) on immune responses in radiation-induced mucositis novel indolo[ , -b]quinazoline analogues as cytostatic agents: synthesis, biological evaluation and structure-activity relationship determination of indican, isatin, indirubin and indigotin in isatis indigotica by liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry influence of abiotic stress signals on secondary metabolites in plants high-throughput sequencing and de novo assembly of the isatis indigotica transcriptome dynamic metabolic and transcriptomic profiling of methyl jasmonate-treated hairy roots reveals synthetic characters and regulators of lignan biosynthesis in isatis indigotica fort quantification of mrna using real-time rt-pcr validation and evaluation of reference genes for quantitative real-time pcr in macrobrachium nipponense quantification of mrna using real-time reverse transcription pcr (rt-pcr): trends and problems selection and validation of appropriate reference genes for quantitative real-time pcr analysis of gene expression in lycoris aurea evaluation of suitable reference genes for qrt-pcr normalization in strawberry (fragaria × ananassa) under different experimental conditions evaluation of candidate reference genes for expression studies in pisum sativum under different experimental conditions the implications of using an inappropriate reference gene for real-time reverse transcription pcr data normalization control genes and variability: absence of ubiquitous reference transcripts in diverse mammalian expression studies icg: a wiki-driven knowledgebase of internal control genes for rt-qpcr normalization systematic validation of candidate reference genes for qrt-pcr normalization under iron deficiency in arabidopsis selection of appropriate reference genes for gene expression studies by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction in cucumber reference gene selection for qpcr gene expression analysis of rust-infected wheat defining reference genes for quantitative real-time pcr analysis of anther development in rice reference gene selection in artemisia annua l., a plant species producing anti-malarial artemisinin validation of suitable reference genes for quantitative gene expression analysis in panax ginseng rna-seq: a revolutionary tool for transcriptomics differential gene and transcript expression analysis of rna-seq experiments with tophat and cufflinks reference gene selection for qrt-pcr normalization analysis in kenaf (hibiscus cannabinus l.) under abiotic stress and hormonal stimuli accurate normalization of real-time quantitative rt-pcr data by geometric averaging of multiple internal control genes normalization of real-time quantitative reverse transcription-pcr data: a model-based variance estimation approach to identify genes suited for normalization, applied to bladder and colon cancer data sets determination of stable housekeeping genes, differentially regulated target genes and sample integrity: bestkeeper-excel-based tool using pair-wise correlations isolation and characterization of a gene encoding cinnamoyl-coa reductase from isatis indigotica fort plant responses to simultaneous biotic and abiotic stress: molecular mechanisms plant cell cultures: chemical factories of secondary metabolites production of plant secondary metabolites: a historical perspective performance comparison of benchtop high-throughput sequencing platforms high-throughput sequencing technologies exploring plant transcriptomes using ultra highthroughput sequencing selection and validation of appropriate reference genes for quantitative real-time pcr normalization in staminate and perfect flowers of andromonoecious taihangia rupestris selection of housekeeping genes for gene expression studies in human reticulocytes using real-time pcr selection of reference genes for quantitative reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction normalization in brassica napus under various stress conditions identification of reference genes for reverse transcription quantitative real-time pcr normalization in pepper selection and validation of reference genes for target gene analysis with quantitative rt-pcr in leaves and roots of bermudagrass under four different abiotic stresses reference gene selection in the desert plant eremosparton songoricum validation of reference genes for accurate normalization of gene expression in lilium davidii var. unicolor for real time quantitative pcr selection of suitable reference genes for quantitative real-time pcr gene expression analysis in salix matsudana under different abiotic stresses protein lipid modifications in signaling and subcellular targeting mubs, a family of ubiquitin-fold proteins that are plasma membrane-anchored by prenylation stable internal reference genes for the normalization of real-time pcr in different • fast, convenient online submission • thorough peer review by experienced researchers in your field • rapid publication on acceptance • support for research data, including large and complex data types • gold open access which fosters wider collaboration and increased citations maximum visibility for your research ready to submit your research ? choose bmc and benefit from: sweetpotato cultivars subjected to abiotic stress conditions genomewide identification and testing of superior reference genes for transcript normalization in arabidopsis identification and validation of reference genes and their impact on normalized gene expression studies across cultivated and wild cicer species reliable reference genes for normalization of gene expression in cucumber grown under different nitrogen nutrition selection of reference genes for diurnal and developmental time-course real-time pcr expression analyses in lettuce comparison of the response of ion distribution in the tissues and cells of the succulent plants aloe vera and salicornia europaea to saline stress selection of suitable reference genes for qrt-pcr normalization during leaf development and hormonal stimuli in tea plant (camellia sinensis) identification of stable reference genes for quantitative pcr in koalas analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative pcr and the −ΔΔct method not applicable. this research was supported by grants of the national natural science foundation of china (grant no. ). springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. authors' contributions qrj, yj, and txq conceived the study and designed the experiments. qrj, myj, and cyj performed the experiments. cyw and zy analyzed the data with suggestions from wfq, yj, and txq. qrj wrote the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. college of horticulture, nanjing agricultural university, nanjing , china. institute of food crops, jiangsu academy agriculture sciences, nanjing , china. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. the datasets supporting the conclusions and description of a complete protocol are included within the article and its additional files. not applicable. not applicable. key: cord- -wyrg nq authors: bourdon, julie a.; williams, andrew; kuo, byron; moffat, ivy; white, paul a.; halappanavar, sabina; vogel, ulla; wallin, håkan; yauk, carole l. title: gene expression profiling to identify potentially relevant disease outcomes and support human health risk assessment for carbon black nanoparticle exposure date: - - journal: toxicology doi: . /j.tox. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: wyrg nq new approaches are urgently needed to evaluate potential hazards posed by exposure to nanomaterials. gene expression profiling provides information on potential modes of action and human relevance, and tools have recently become available for pathway-based quantitative risk assessment. the objective of this study was to use toxicogenomics in the context of human health risk assessment. we explore the utility of toxicogenomics in risk assessment, using published gene expression data from c bl/ mice exposed to , and μg printex carbon black nanoparticles (cbnp). analysis of cbnp-perturbed pathways, networks and transcription factors revealed concomitant changes in predicted phenotypes (e.g., pulmonary inflammation and genotoxicity), that correlated with dose and time. benchmark doses (bmds) for apical endpoints were comparable to minimum bmds for relevant pathway-specific expression changes. comparison to inflammatory lung disease models (i.e., allergic airway inflammation, bacterial infection and tissue injury and fibrosis) and human disease profiles revealed that induced gene expression changes in printex exposed mice were similar to those typical for pulmonary injury and fibrosis. very similar fibrotic pathways were perturbed in cbnp-exposed mice and human fibrosis disease models. our synthesis demonstrates how toxicogenomic profiles may be used in human health risk assessment of nanoparticles and constitutes an important step forward in the ultimate recognition of toxicogenomic endpoints in human health risk. as our knowledge of molecular pathways, dose–response characteristics and relevance to human disease continues to grow, we anticipate that toxicogenomics will become increasingly useful in assessing chemical toxicities and in human health risk assessment. chronic inhalation of fine and ultrafine particulate matter has been associated with adverse pulmonary effects including fibrosis and cancer, as well as exacerbation of existing conditions such as asthma, bronchitis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder (bonner, ; knaapen et al., ) , in addition to cardiovascular disease (dockery et al., ; pope et al., ) . human exposure to manufactured nanomaterials (nms), which have at least one size dimension that is less than nm, may constitute an increased risk of adverse effects especially following inhalation exposure, and their potential to induce toxic effects is poorly understood (handy and shaw, ) . moreover, the human health risks associated with inhalation exposure have not been adequately investigated. methods that can be effective in screening for nm toxicities are paramount, due to the countless variations in physical and chemical properties of nms in terms of size, shape, agglomeration and surface coatings. traditional assays used in human health risk assessment (hhra) generally involve chronic and subchronic rodent exposures with concomitant analyses of tumour induction (e.g., two-year rodent cancer bioassay), in addition to various non-cancer endpoints, the most sensitive of which is used for regulatory decision-making (meek et al., ) . these approaches form the foundation of the chemical regulatory system and have been invaluable for hhra. however, some of these assays, such as those based on chronic animal exposures at the maximum tolerated dose, are time and resource intensive, thus limiting broad application (suter et al., ) . recent discussions have identified gene expression profiling as a potentially rapid and cost-effective approach for identifying and assessing prospective hazard, characterizing chemical (or particle) mode of action, and assessing human relevance in support of hhra (national academy of sciences, ) . in order for gene expression data to become accepted for routine use in hhra, it is necessary to demonstrate that mrna/protein expression profiles can effectively predict the modes of action and biological outcomes of exposure at relevant doses, and to confirm that these data can be used to strengthen the foundation for hhra and regulatory decisions. in this regard, it has been hypothesized that gene expression profiling will be extremely useful in identifying effects at low doses, and moreover, useful for distinguishing between doses that elicit an adaptive response vs. those that yield adverse effects (boverhof and zacharewski, ) . to date, the application of gene expression profiling in regulatory toxicology has largely focused on qualitative identification of chemical modes of action and transcription biomarkers that can predict specific toxicities. however, the utility of gene expression profiling in quantitative determination of threshold values (e.g., benchmark doses) has not yet been rigorously explored . in the present study we investigate the utility of gene expression profiles derived from mice exposed to printex carbon black nanoparticles (cbnps) by intratracheal installation to identify potential hazards, modes of action, and doses above which adverse effects may be expected for specific toxicological outcomes. in addition, we quantitatively compare benchmark doses for pathways to those of apical endpoints derived from the same experimental animals. we employ printex as a model nm due to the rich database of traditional toxicity information on which our findings can be anchored. briefly, printex consists almost entirely of carbon, with very low levels of impurities in terms of polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and endotoxins (bourdon et al., b; jacobsen et al., ; saber et al., ) they generate reactive oxygen species (jacobsen et al., ) , induce dna strand breaks in vitro and in vivo (jacobsen et al., ; saber et al., ) and mutations in vitro (jacobsen et al., ) that are associated with oxidative stress . the data in this study are from previously published experiments investigating printex cbnp exposure in c bl/ mice at various doses (i.e., vehicle, , and g) collected at several time-points ( , and days) following a single acute instillation (bourdon et al., a) . we previously characterized widespread changes in gene expression involving acute phase response and inflammation, supported by concomitant influxes of pulmonary bronchoalveolar lavage cells (bal) and increases in tissue-specific dna strand breaks (bourdon et al., a,b) . in addition to the examination of bmds and bmdls, we compare cbnp-modified gene expression profiles to various models of lung disease in mice and humans reported in the literature, in order to explore the utility of our data in predicting the potential risk of adverse health outcomes and the human relevance of expression changes. the work demonstrates one approach by which gene expression profiling may be integrated into hhra to support or predict apical toxicological endpoints, dose-response, and relevance to human diseases. details of the mouse exposures, particle characterization and pulmonary phenotype were previously published in bourdon et al. ( a,b) . briefly, female c bl/ mice were exposed to a single installation of vehicle or printex ( , or g) and euthanized , and days post-exposure (n = /group). the intratracheal instillation route of exposure allows for deposition of known doses directly in the lungs of the mice, and controls for potential dermal-and ingestion-related cbnp exposure that can occur during whole body inhalation exposures. the doses were selected to represent , and working days of exposure at the occupational inhalation exposure limit of . mg/m of cb (as established by the us occupational safety and health administration (osha) and the us national institute for occupational safety and health (niosh))) for a mouse (assuming . l/h inhalation rate and . % particle deposition in mouse, for an h working day) (dybing et al., ; jacobsen et al., ) . very limited filtration of cbnps from the nose is expected during human exposure. printex cbnps were characterized and displayed the following properties: nm primary particle size, - m /g brunauer emmett and teller (bet) surface area, . g/g pahs, eu/g endotoxin, polydispersity index of , − . mv zeta potential, . m peak hydrodynamic number and . m peak volume-size-distribution (bourdon et al., b) . analysis of pulmonary inflammatory cellular influx in bronchoalveolar lavage (bal) revealed neutrophilic inflammation that was sustained to day at all doses. tissue-specific genotoxicity, as observed by dna strand breaks, persisted up to day at the two highest doses and fpg-sensitive sites at all doses on day and the highest dose on day (bourdon et al., b) . whole mouse genome dna microarray revealed and differentially expressed genes (fdr adjusted pvalue ≤ . and fold changes ≥ . ) overall in lung and liver, respectively (bourdon et al., a) . the complete microarray dataset is available through the gene expression omnibus at ncbi (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/, superseries gse , subseries gse ). this dataset was previously used to examine molecular interactions between lung and liver upon cbnp exposure (bourdon et al., a) . to determine the most affected processes of cbnp exposure, pathway analysis of gene expression data was conducted using a rank based test in r (r development core team, ) as described in alvo et al. ( ) . the relative expression for the genes in a pathway was first aligned by subtracting the median expression value for the combined treatment and control groups. these values were then ranked within each subject and the vector of average ranks was calculated for each treatment group. the distance between the two treatments was calculated and a permutation analysis was used to obtain a p-value for each pathway. pathways with p < . were considered significant. . . benchmark dose (bmd)/lower confidence limit benchmark dose (bmdl) calculation for apical endpoints and rt-pcr data bmd (bmd representing an excess risk of % in exposed animals vs. controls) and bmdls ( % confidence limit) were calculated for apical endpoint data (inflammation and genotoxicity) and for rt-pcr using epa bmds . (davis et al., ) . only data that were statistically above control levels (p < . ) for at least two of the doses were included. prior to running the analysis, the data were screened for homogeneity of variance, and then fit against five continuous dose-response models (i.e., hill, polynomial, linear, power and exponential). goodness of fit > . and scaled residuals within ± . was applied as a cut off for selection of the appropriate model, and curves were also inspected visually. when more than one model was suitable, the one with the lowest akaike's information criterion (aic) was selected. in order to determine bmds and bmdls for gene expression data, bmdexpress was employed . briefly, microarray probes with more than one representation on each array were averaged. analyses were performed on genes that were identified as statistically significant by one-way anova (p < . ) using the four following models: hill, power, linear • and polynomial • . the power model had a power restriction of ≥ . selection on linear and polynomial • was based on choosing a model which describes the data with the least complexity. a nested chi-square test, with cut-off of . , first selects among linear and polynomial models, followed by comparing aic, which measures the relative goodness of fit. a hill model was excluded if the "k" parameter of the model was less than / of the lowest positive dose ( g) (black et al., ) . other settings included maximum iterations of , confidence level of . , benchmark response (bmr) of . (number of standard deviation defining bmd) . for functional classifications and analyses, the resulting bmd datasets were mapped to kegg pathways with promiscuous probes removed (probes that mapped to multiple annotated genes). bmds that exceeded the highest exposure dose ( g) and that exceeded a goodness-of-fit p-value of . were removed from the analysis. to determine the correlation between gene expression profiles of mice exposed to cbnps with those of mouse pulmonary disease models, a prediction analysis for microarrays (pam) (tibshirani et al., ) was conducted in r (r development core team, ) using the pamr library (hastie et al., ) . data for this analysis encompassed mouse lung disease models, and were obtained from the national centre for biotechnology information gene expression omnibus (accession #gse and #gse ). the samples were labelled as belonging to one of three models of lung inflammation: bacterial infection, lung injury and fibrosis, or th response (allergic airway inflammation). probes with common genbank accessions were collapsed to a single measurement for each sample using the mean. using the common accession numbers, a prediction model using shrunken centroids was estimated. cross-validation of the nearest shrunken centroid classifier was conducted to identify an appropriate threshold. pamr implements -fold cross-validation. this involves dividing the samples into ten approximately equal-size parts ensuring that the classes are distributed proportionally. ten-fold cross-validation works by fitting a model on % of the samples and then predicting the class labels of the remaining %. this procedure is repeated ten times, with each part playing the role of the test samples and the errors on all ten parts added together to compute the overall error. a threshold of was selected, yielding a classifier with genbank accessions. the means of the nine cbnp treatment conditions were then classified using the estimated prediction model. functional analysis was conducted to establish molecular perturbations that were in common or discrepant between cbnp exposed mice and inflammatory lung disease models. the analysis was conducted on genes that were common between cbnp and each lung disease model, then again for genes that were unique to cbnp, using a cut-off of fdr-adjusted p < . and a fold-change > . for all datasets. the less stringent cut-off was employed for disease models because of the low power in several of the datasets. david bioinformatics resources . was used to identify enriched biological functions from terms with similar genes and biological meaning (huang et al., a,b) . david biological functions with enrichment scores > . were considered significant, in accordance with david recommendations (huang et al., a) . clusters with enrichment scores > . in our analysis contained at least one gene ontology term or pathway for which the benjamini-corrected p-value was ≤ . . in order to predict potential disease outcomes of relevance to humans, gene expression profiles were mined against genomic data repositories. disease prediction analysis was done in nextbio (http://nextbio.com) using the high dose exposure profiles as differentially expressed genes were identified at all time-points for this dose. data from cbnp exposed mice were compared to curated datasets to identify disease studies with similar gene profiles, gene ranking and consistency. pairwise gene signature correlations and rank-based enrichment statistics were employed in the calculation of nextbio scores for each disease. the disease that ranked highest in comparison with cbnp exposure was given a score of , and the rest of the results were normalized accordingly (kupershmidt et al., ) . meta-analysis was performed using select disease models for mice, as well as for human studies representative of disease state. the analysis identified, ranked and scored all genes and biogroups that were common between the studies according to the scoring method described above for disease prediction (kupershmidt et al., ) . biogroups were filtered for canonical pathways. the rank-based pathway analysis revealed a total of , and differentially expressed kegg pathways on days , and , respectively. the most affected pathways according to statistical significance were primarily related to inflammation on day , to steroid biosynthesis and dna repair on day and to apoptosis and inflammation on day . significant pathways (p < . ) pertaining to genotoxicity (dna damage and repair) and inflammatory and immune responses are summarized in table , along with previously established phenotypes. all significant pathways are presented in supplemental table . analysis of the number of common pathways between doses for each time-point revealed that most pathways occurring at lower doses also occur at higher doses. however, the number of significant pathways increased with dose (fig. ) . epa bmds . bmds and bmdls were generated for apical endpoints and rt-pcr data (bmd values for each endpoint and gene presented in supplementary table ; curves are presented in supplemental fig. s ). although many of the apical endpoints and rt-pcr data were not suitable for modelling, bmd and bmdl values generally increased over post-exposure time as expected. the mean bmds for inflammatory apical endpoints were . , . and . g, and bmdls were . , . and . g on days , and , respectively. bmd values for rt-pcr data of genes involved in inflammation tended to be higher than for apical endpoints. mean bmds of inflammatory genes were . , . and . g, and mean bmdls were . , . and . g, on days , and , respectively. bmds and bmdls were also generated for microarray gene expression profiles using bmdexpress. minimum bmds for kegg pathways relevant to inflammation, kegg pathways relevant to genotoxicity, for the most sensitive kegg pathways as well as for apical endpoint data are presented in table . minimum bmds were calculated according to the median of all significant genes for each pathway and the th percentile of significant genes of all pathways, in order to increase sensitivity. even the th percentile bmds tended to be higher than bmds generated for apical endpoints (table ) . however, minimum bmds, representing the most sensitive gene for each relevant pathway, were much more comparable to bmds of apical endpoints (table ) . pam was used to compare the printex gene expression dataset to pulmonary gene expression profiles that represent a range of murine pulmonary disease models (e.g., transgene overexpression, treatments with infectious agents, toxic chemicals and allergens) as described in lewis et al. ( ) , thomson et al. ( ) . the models were classified according to the three following subgroups: ( ) bacterial infection, ( ) lung injury and fibrosis, and ( ) th response (allergic airway inflammation). clustering of the models using pam is shown in fig. a . two cbnp exposure conditions (day low and medium doses) did not cluster with other cbnp exposure condition or other disease models, likely due to lack of response. models of bacterial infection did not cluster with other disease models or cbnp exposure. pam analysis revealed an association between cbnp exposure, th responses and lung injury/fibrotic responses. although th response and lung injury/fibrotic responses were more closely associated with one another than with cbnp exposure, pam analysis revealed that cbnp exposure was more closely related to lung injury/fibrotic responses than to th responses, which is also supported by probability statistics comparing cbnp exposure with each disease sub-group (fig. b) . in order to examine commonalities and discrepancies between disease models and cbnp exposure in more detail, functional analysis was conducted on ( ) genes that were in common between cbnp and each disease model and ( ) genes that were unique to cbnp. the number of significant genes used for each analysis is presented in supplemental table . the david biological functions are summarized in table . this analysis demonstrates that inflammation was common between most models at all time-points (excluding aspergillus extract). on day , commonalities for cbnp exposure were observed with bacterial infection models (i.e., due to the acute phase response) and with injury and fibrosis models (i.e., due to changes in tissue morphogenesis related genes). day revealed inflammation and cell cycle disturbances in most of the models. however, cbnp responses were more similar to bleomycin-induced lung injury as shown by the high degree of overlapping biological functions on day (table ) . cbnps triggered an adaptive immune response on day that was also only apparent in lung injury and fibrosis models. gene expression profiles from the high dose cbnp-exposed mice vs. control were analysed in nextbio to identify closely related respiratory disease profiles in humans. on all post-exposure days, severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars), congenital cystic table summary of significant kegg pathways (p ≤ . ) relating to phenotypes established in bourdon et al. ( a,b . venn diagrams illustrating overlap of significant pathways (p < . ) according to dose, for each post-exposure day ( , and days) in c bl/ mice exposed to cbnps. adenomatoid malformation, and injury of lung, were identified as the top three respiratory diseases associated with cbnp exposure. interestingly, fibrosis was identified as a predicted disease outcome of cbnp exposure that increased considerably with time (e.g., score of on day , on day and on day ). in order to examine the molecular mechanisms that may be involved in fibrosis in more detail, a meta-analysis was completed using curated studies within nextbio that identified fibrosis as a phenotype. meta-analysis in mouse employed models that included fibrosis-induced by injury with naphthalene, bleomycin and ganciclovir, doxycyclineinduced over-expression, and tgf- over-expression in a variety of mouse models (wild type, inflammation resistant/susceptible). meta-analysis using cbnp gene expression profiles in mouse ranked canonical pathways and , genes present in at least one of the studies on select models of pulmonary fibrosis and lung injury (identified in nextbio disease correlation profiles). in order to establish human-relevance, the analysis was repeated using human studies curated in nextbio. meta-analysis encompassed studies from lung biopsies of patients affected with fibrosis, with intermediate to severe pulmonary hypertension, pneumonia and exacerbation of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. overall, canonical pathways and , genes were ranked as present in at least one of the studies. the top ranked pathways and genes for the mouse and human meta-analyses are presented in table . interestingly, comparison of fold-ranks between the mouse and human analysis revealed that the most affected pathways were the same in both species. however, the genes that were most perturbed during fibrotic responses were considerably different in cbnp-exposed mice compared to human diseases, with the exception of glycerol- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gdp ), kruppel-like factor (klf ), secreted phosphoprotein (spp ) and ceruloplasmin (cp). it is now widely accepted that toxicity is preceded by, and accompanied by, transcriptional changes, thus providing molecular signatures of direct and indirect toxic effects (auerbach et al., ; fielden et al., ; gatzidou et al., ) . it is hypothesized that toxicogenomic profiling can be used as a screening tool to prioritize the specific assays that should be conducted from the standard battery of tests, thus minimizing animal use, cost and time (dix et al., ) . moreover, global analyses of transcriptional changes provide a wealth of information that can be used to identify putative modes of action and to query relevance to human adverse health outcomes (currie, ) . this type of approach is the general premise of the widely supported paradigm outlined in 'toxicity testing in the st century' (national academy of sciences, ) . however, substantive work demonstrating the ability of gene expression profiles to identify hazards, to assess risk of exposure via quantitative dose-response analysis, and to identify adverse outcomes associated with specific modes of action is required before these endpoints can be used in hhra. the present study applies pathway-and network-based approaches, bmd modelling, and disease prediction tools to gene expression data to explore the relationship between apical endpoints and transcriptional profiles. the work investigates the potential utility of gene expression profiling in determining hazard and mode of action of nps, in characterizing dose-response relationships and in predicting the relevance of these findings to potential disease-outcomes and human health effects for hhra. the utility of gene expression profiling in hazard identification has been examined for a limited number of chemicals, including dibutyl phthalate and acetaminophen (euling et al., ; kienhuis et al., ; makris et al., ) . toxicogenomic profiles of alachlor exposure in rat olfactory mucosa (genter et al., ) and dimethylarsenic (dma) exposure in human cultured bladder cells and rat bladder epithelium (sen et al., ; us epa, ) have also table comparison of cbnp profiles with lung disease models using functional analysis for genes in common (grey) and genes unique to cbnp (black). provided useful information for two final assessments of acetochlor and arsenicals (us epa, . our data demonstrate that gene expression profiles can also be viewed as effective predictors of the biological effects of cbnp exposure. for example, inflammatory responses manifested at the gene expression level and detected using dna microarrays and classified in this work using kegg pathway analyses and previously in the same mice using ingenuity pathway analysis (bourdon et al., a) are entirely consistent with the observed pulmonary influx of inflammatory markers (e.g., neutrophils, eosinophils and lymphocytes). the number of genes perturbed and the magnitude of expression changes in these pathways correlates with dose and time. in addition, observed transcriptomic changes associated with perturbations of cell cycle networks, alterations of non-homologous end-joining, and p signalling support the sustained genotoxicity observed in the mice, although dose and time correlations were not as apparent (e.g., levels of dna strand breaks remained relatively constant at the two highest exposure doses (bourdon et al., b) whereas induction of dna repair genes decreased with dose and time). the transcriptomic changes associated with alterations in glutathione metabolism and free radical scavenging correlate with induction of dna formamidopyrimidine dna glycoslase (fpg) sensitive sites (an indicator of oxidative dna damage) early after the exposure. the persistence of this response is an indication of an adaptive response to oxidative stress in the lungs of the mice. interestingly, cbnp-induced alterations in gene expression profiles also revealed a pulmonary acute phase response and unexpected changes in lipid homeostasis, which were subsequently supported by measured decreases in plasma high density lipoprotein (hdl) (bourdon et al., a) . the strong association between cbnpinduced gene expression profiles and apical endpoints collectively support the use of toxicogenomics for hazard identification of table meta-analyses in nextbio using mouse and human profiles in which fibrosis was a phenotype. values in parentheses represent rank in the opposite species (mouse or human). rank (rank ) pathway rank (rank ) gene (symbol) nms, and perhaps more importantly, for highlighting unexpected adverse outcomes. moreover, ongoing work within the organization for economic co-operation and development (oecd) is actively developing adverse outcome pathways (aop) approaches that are expected to provide tangible methods by which systems biology endpoints can be used in human health risk assessment. toxicogenomics data that examine responses over dose and time in a variety of tissues can be very useful for such applications, as illustrated for cbnp exposure in fig. . overall, our data suggest that gene expression profiles can be effectively used to identify putative mode(s) of action and hazards of np exposure, in the absence of phenotypic data. in addition to identification of hazard, it has been suggested that gene expression profiles may be useful for quantitative assessment (e.g., establishment of reference doses) of responses related to both cancer and non-cancer endpoints . benchmark doses are generally considered more informative than the no observable adverse effect level (noael) in deriving reference doses as they are based on the entire dose-response relationship (crump et al., ) . because alterations in gene expression can be initiated in the absence of biological effects (e.g., adaptive or stress response pathways effective in mitigating toxic effects), it is expected that reference doses for genomics endpoints may be too sensitive for use in hhra. however, previous analyses of chemicals (i.e., , -dichlorobenzene, propylene glycol mono-t-butyl ether, , , -trichloropropane, methylene chloride and naphthalene) showed that median bmd and bmdls for the most sensitive pathways and go categories were highly correlated with bmd and bmdls of cancer and non-cancer endpoints (thomas et al., . in the current study, rather than choosing the most sensitive (i.e., lowest) bmds, we focussed on the analysis of pathways that were specific to biological outcomes observed in the mice (i.e., phenotypically anchored), and calculated bmds for these relevant genes and pathways. the pathway-based bmds and bmdls calculated here for relevant pathways were actually less sensitive (i.e., higher bmds) than those of the observed apical endpoints. however, the mean of the minimum bmds and bmdls across all the pathways that we assigned as relevant to the apical endpoints (i.e., corresponding to the most sensitive genes within the relevant pathways) were similar to those of relevant apical endpoints. median bmds and bmdls for the most sensitive pathways also correlate more closely with apical endpoints even though the pathways were not necessarily relevant to these endpoints. this finding supports previous examples demonstrating a : correlation between bmds for gene expression and apical endpoints (thomas et al., . these data indicate the potential utility of using gene expression profiles in determining acceptable exposure limits for nps. in order to determine the specific utility of pathway derived bmds in hhra, it will be necessary to establish a comprehensive catalogue of pathways that are actually perturbed in the event of specific adverse effects. perhaps the principal motivation for including gene expression profiling in hhra is the wealth of information that can be used to identify key events that are correlated with adverse outcomes that are relevant to human disease, and moreover can be used to predict the likelihood of a human disease. identification of key events at the transcriptional level can facilitate the identification of processes that are critical for disease initiation and progression, thus allowing information from animal experiments to be queried and used for extrapolation to human scenarios (edwards and preston, ) . comparison of our data with specific models of lung disease, including bacterial infection, airway hypersensitivity and lung injury revealed that cbnps induced responses that were more closely related to lung injury and fibrosis than to other models. this finding was further supported by comparison of the expression profiles of cbnp exposed mice to those of curated studies of animals and humans exhibiting a myriad of pulmonary disease phenotypes. this analysis demonstrates that cbnp exposure perturbs genes that are known to be involved in tissue injury and fibrosis in mice. although it is unclear if cbnp exposure would result in the same gene expression profile in humans, similar pathways including many involved in fibrotic responses were found in both mice and humans ( % of the top pathways found were common between mouse and human). despite concordance of pathways, the top ranked genes differed considerably between both species. however, many of the genes found in mice and humans had similar functions, including inflammatory and acute phase responses (e.g., saa , socs and mt in mice and cp, vnn and cxcl in humans), cell cycle progression (cdkn a in mice and klf in humans) and bone and tissue modelling (mmp , timp , eln and ogn in mice and spp in humans). thus, despite discordance in the gene expression profiles between species, the similar functions of top ranked genes and concordance between pathways supports the likelihood of similar responses in the event of cbnp exposure in humans. in addition, fibrosis has been identified as an outcome of exposure to various particles and nps in animals (bermudez et al., ; shvedova et al., ) , including printex (e.g., -day nose only inhalation in wistar wu rats) (bellmann et al., ) , as well as in humans (lkhasuren et al., ; wang and christiani, ) . the process of pulmonary fibrosis is closely related to progression of carcinogenic outcome (hubbard et al., ) . these data demonstrating very similar fibrotic pathways in mice and humans and a significant overlap with cbnp-induced gene expression changes thus support the use of pathway-based approaches in identifying molecular mechanisms of disease onset and progression, and using gene expression profiles to support hhra. this study confirms several key elements that are necessary for the application of gene expression profiling for hhra of toxicant exposures in general. first, transcriptional profiles can effectively predict the biological effects of chemical exposures. specifically, in the absence of data for any apical endpoints, our data would have suggested that mice exposed to cbnps exhibit an inflammatory response, oxidative stress, dna damage and perturbations in cholesterol metabolism. second, a comparison of bmds and bmdls of relevant pathways and apical endpoints confirms that minimum pathway bmds and bmdls are in the same range as those of apical endpoints. third, that expression profiles can be fairly easily mined to identify potential adverse outcomes (i.e., diseases) that are relevant to humans, and might reasonably be expected to occur in humans exposed to substances that elicit specific gene expression patterns in experimental animals. we believe that our work constitutes a significant step towards the ultimate recognition of toxicogenomic endpoints for routine assessment of human health risk. gene expression profiling offers a promising approach to decipher the largely unknown hazards of np exposure. due to the unique properties of nps, powerful technologies that can assess a multitude of adverse outcome possibilities will be required to elucidate their modes of action and potential impacts on human health within a time-frame that is suitable for prompt regulatory decision making. this same premise should hold true for any new chemical products, for which toxicity is largely or completely unknown. in order to establish a strong foundation for the integration of gene expression profiling into hhra, it will be necessary for the approach employed here to be applied to a variety of additional chemicals/particles that span a wide range of toxicological potencies and modes of action, and using a variety of experimental designs (e.g., multiple doses and time-points). as our knowledge of molecular pathways, and of the diverse tools used to decipher their biological significance, dose-response characteristics and relevance to human disease continues to grow, we anticipate that toxicogenomics will become increasingly useful in assessing the toxicological hazards of a wide range of test articles, and by extension, for hhra. marchetti, lynn berndt-weis 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riad, emad m.; mohamed, hossam e.; elhaig, mahmoud m.; yousef, sulaiman a. al; hozzein, wael n.; ghobashy, madeha o. i. title: genes encoding the virulence and the antimicrobial resistance in enterotoxigenic and shiga-toxigenic e. coli isolated from diarrheic calves date: - - journal: toxins (basel) doi: . /toxins sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vfh op a calf diarrhea is one of the considerable infectious diseases in calves, which results in tremendous economic losses globally. to determine the prevalence of shiga-toxigenic e. coli (stec) and enterotoxigenic e. coli (etec) incriminated in calf diarrhea, with special reference to shiga- toxins genes (stx and stx ) and enterotoxins genes (lt and sta) that govern their pathogenesis, as well as the virulence genes; eaea (intimin) and f (fimbrial adhesion), and the screening of their antibiogram and antimicrobial resistance genes; aadb, sul , and bla-tem, a total of fecal samples were collected (april –feb ) from diarrheic calves at different farms in el-sharqia governorate, egypt. the bacteriological examination revealed that the prevalence of e. coli in diarrheic calves was . %. the serotyping of the isolated e. coli revealed serogroups; o( ), o( ), o( ), o( ), o( ), o( ) and o( ). furthermore, the congo red binding test was carried out, where . % of the examined strains (n = ) were positive. the antibiogram of the isolated strains was investigated; the majority of e. coli serotypes exhibit multidrug resistance (mdr) to four antimicrobial agents; neomycin, gentamycin, streptomycin, and amikacin. polymerase chain reaction (pcr) was used to detect the prevalence of the virulence genes; stx , stx lt, sta, f and eaea, as well as the antimicrobial resistance genes; aadb, sul , and bla-tem. the prevalence of stec was . % (n = ), while the prevalence of etec was . % (n = ). briefly, the shiga toxins genes; stx and stx , are the most prevalent virulence genes associated with stec, which are responsible for the pathogenesis of the disease and helped by the intimin gene (eaea). in addition, the lt gene is the most prevalent enterotoxin gene accompanied by the etec strains, either alone or in combination with sta and/or f genes. the majority of pathogenic e. coli incriminated in calf diarrhea possesses the aadb resistance gene, followed by the sul gene. enrofloxacin, florfenicol, amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, and ampicillin-sulbactam, are the most effective antimicrobial agents against the isolated stec and etec strains. calf diarrhea is one of the most predominant syndromes in newly born animals all over the world, that are associated with remarkable economic losses, high morbidity and mortality rates [ ] . the most prevalent bacterial pathogen which is incriminated in young calf's diarrhea is escherichia. coli (e. coli); moreover, the most common viral causes are rotavirus and coronavirus [ ] . based on the molecular and pathological criteria, the most common pathotypes of e. coli incriminated in neonatal colibacillosis are; shiga-toxigenic e. coli (stec), enterotoxigenic e. coli (etec), and enterohemorrhagic e. coli (ehec) [ ] . etec is a common pathotype associated with infectious diarrhea in calves. the newly born calves exhibit a high affinity to etec, which is associated with watery diarrhea. they colonize the small intestine after fimbrial adhesion and predispose to severe watery diarrhea [ ] . two main virulent factors are included; the fimbriae and the enterotoxins [ ] . etec is skillful in generating major types of enterotoxins; heat-labile (lt) and heat-stable (sta and stb) enterotoxins, in both man and animal [ ] . ruminants are considered the main reservoir of stec; the severity of infection in ruminants varies depending upon the animal age, immunity, and the gastrointestinal tract conditions. certain animals undergo the exaggerated shedding of stec (> cfu/g fecal matter), which results in the contamination of the environment and the transmission of the infection [ ] . a large number of stec-outbreaks were reported, due to the ingestion of contaminated vegetables and fruits with the animal feces. stec infection in humans is mainly associated with hemolytic uremic syndrome and hemorrhagic colitis. stec has major public health importance, since it is incriminated in causing several food-borne outbreaks [ ] . stec are associated with dysentery in young calves. they produce two various potent types of shiga-toxins; stx and stx , and certain types of stec have the ability to produce the intimin. the e. coli strains, which possess the eaea gene and do not produce stx and stx genes, were defined as enteropathogenic e. coli [ , ] . the bacteriophages play a major role in the transmission of stx genes. the stx-phages are sharing an identical sequence that analogous to lambdoid-phages. the presence of stx genes in the phage lysis-portion illustrates the link between the production of shiga-toxins and the release of phage during the lytic growth [ , ] . the antimicrobial resistance is usually associated with pathogenic e. coli that could be attributed to the widespread improper use of antibiotics. the multidrug resistance (mdr) is common in e. coli and primarily associated with several genes like; bla-tem, blactx (β-lactamase genes), sul (sulfonamide resistance gene), and aadb (aminoglycoside resistance gene) [ , ] . the current study was performed to investigate the prevalence of shiga-toxigenic and enterotoxigenic e. coli incriminated in calf diarrhea, with particular reference to shiga-toxins genes (stx and stx ) and enterotoxins genes (lt and sta) that govern their pathogenesis, as well as the virulence genes; eaea and f . in addition, the screening of their antibiogram and antimicrobial resistance genes; aadb (aminoglycosides-resistance gene), sul (sulfonamides-resistance gene), and bla-tem (extended β-lactamase gene) is conducted, in order to select the antibiotics of choice. the bacteriological examination of fecal swabs obtained from diarrheic calves revealed that the overall prevalence of e. coli was . % (n = ), based on the microscopical examination, colonial characters on macconkey's agar and eosin-methylene-blue agar, as well as biochemical tests. concerning the age of the examined calves, the results revealed that diarrheic calves were infected with e. coli in the first months of age ( . %), calves at - months old ( . %), and calves at - months old ( . %) ( table ) . in the present study, the serological identification of the retrieved isolates revealed that a total of ( . %) of the isolated strains were typable with o antisera, while isolates ( . %) were untypable. the most common serogroup was o ( . %), followed by o ( . %) and o ( . %), o ( . %), o ( . %), o ( . %), and o ( . %). the frequency of e. coli serogroups was illustrated in table . there is no statistically significant difference in the prevalence of e. coli serogroups (p > . ). the congo red test revealed that . % of the tested e. coli strains (n = ) were positive, including the members of serotypes; o , o , o , o , o , o and untypable strains, while the strains of the o serogroup were cr negative (n = ). the antimicrobial susceptibility testing of the isolated e. coli strains (table ) showed a remarkable resistance to neomycin ( . %), gentamycin and streptomycin ( %), and amikacin ( . %). furthermore, substantial sensitivity was recorded to enrofloxacin ( . %), florfenicol ( . %), and both amoxicillin/clavulanic acid and ampicillin/sulbactam ( . %, each). the statistical analysis proved that the resistance of the tested strains against various antimicrobial agents was significantly different (p < . ). regarding the occurrence of the multidrug-resistance and the distribution of the antimicrobial resistance genes among the isolated strains, we noticed that . % of the tested e. coli strains (n = ) exhibited multidrug resistance to neomycin, gentamicin, streptomycin, and amikacin and harbored the aadb resistance gene. moreover, . % of the examined strains (n = ) showed multidrug-resistance to neomycin, gentamicin, streptomycin, amikacin, and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole, and harbored both aadb and sul resistance genes. in addition, . % of the tested strains (n = ) exhibited a multidrug-resistance to neomycin, gentamicin, streptomycin, amikacin, amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, and ampicillin/sulbactam, and harbored both aadb and blatem resistance genes (table ) . concerning the distribution of the antimicrobial resistance genes; the aadb gene is the most predominant antimicrobial resistance gene associated with the retrieved e. coli strains, either alone or in combination with the sul gene ( . %), or in combination with the blatem gene ( . %). moreover, the sul gene was determined alone in . % of the examined strains. statistically, there is a significant difference in the distribution of the antimicrobial resistance genes among the examined e. coli strains (p < . ) (tables and , and figure ). p value = . (significant; p < . ). regarding the distribution of the virulence genes among the examined e. coli strains, the pcr revealed two pathotypes ( / , . %); shiga-toxigenic e. coli (stec) ( / , . %) and enterotoxigenic e. coli ( / , . %). regarding the stec; the stx gene is the most predominant regarding the distribution of the virulence genes among the examined e. coli strains, the pcr revealed two pathotypes ( / , . %); shiga-toxigenic e. coli (stec) ( / , . %) and enterotoxigenic e. coli ( / , . %). regarding the stec; the stx gene is the most predominant shiga-toxin gene, either found alone (n = ) or in combination with stx and eaea genes (n = ), or in combination with the stx gene (n = ), while the stx gene was detected alone in three e. coli strains. concerning the etec; the lt gene was the most prevalent enterotoxin gene, either found in combination with the f gene (n = ), or in combination with sta gene (n = ), or in combination with sta and f genes (n = ). in addition, the sta gene was detected alone in seven e. coli strains (tables and , and figures and ). there is no statistically significant difference in the distribution of virulence genes among the isolated e. coli strains (p > . ). shiga-toxin gene, either found alone (n = ) or in combination with stx and eaea genes (n = ), or in combination with the stx gene (n = ), while the stx gene was detected alone in three e. coli strains. concerning the etec; the lt gene was the most prevalent enterotoxin gene, either found in combination with the f gene (n = ), or in combination with sta gene (n = ), or in combination with sta and f genes (n = ). in addition, the sta gene was detected alone in seven e. coli strains (tables and , and figures and ). there is no statistically significant difference in the distribution of virulence genes among the isolated e. coli strains (p > . ). this study was aimed at determining the prevalence of stec and etec incriminated in calf diarrhea, with special reference to the shiga-toxins genes (stx and stx ) and enterotoxins genes (lt and sta) that govern their pathogenesis, as well as the virulence genes; eaea and f , and the screening of their antimicrobial resistance profiles and antimicrobial resistance genes; aadb, sul , and bla-tem. the overall prevalence of e. coli was . %, which is lower than what was reported in diarrheic calves in egypt ( . %) [ ] , ethiopia ( . %) [ ] , argentina ( . %) [ ] and india ( . %) [ ] ; however, a lower prevalence was reported in other previous studies in korea ( %) [ ] and switzerland ( . %) [ ] . differences in the prevalence of e. coli may be due to the differences in geography, management practices, floor type, health conditions, and the calf's age [ , , ] . further, the high rate of e. coli isolation in the present study could be attributed to many reasons, such as the mixing of different age groups, poor environmental and hygienic conditions, or the poor quantity and/or quality of colostrum. in addition, the colostrum maternal antibodies cannot neutralize the high dose of pathogenic e. coli infection [ ] . regarding the age of the examined calves, the prevalence of e. coli was . %, . %, and . % in the first months old, - months old, and - months old aged calves, respectively. there is no statistically significant difference in the prevalence of e. coli among the different ages (p = . ). a previous study reported that the prevalence of e. coli was high in the young calves, and then decreased as the age increased [ ] . the serological identification of the retrieved isolates revealed that a total of ( . %) strains were typable, while isolates ( . %) were untypable. the most common serogroup was o ( . %), followed by o ( . %) and o ( . %), o ( . %), o ( . %), o ( . %), and o ( . %). the identified serogroups in the current study have a different variety than those previously recorded [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] , which are often associated with sick children with diarrhea [ , ] . in the current study, . % of the e. coli strains were cr positive, including serogroups o , o , o , o , o , o and untypable strains; a finding endorsed by a previous study [ ] stated that % of e. coli isolates are pathogenic by cr binding, which indicates the virulence of these strains. in other studies, it was reported that . - % of e. coli isolates were cr positive [ , ] . in the present study, the isolated strains exhibited a remarkable resistance against four antimicrobial agents, including; neomycin ( . %), gentamycin and streptomycin ( %), and this study was aimed at determining the prevalence of stec and etec incriminated in calf diarrhea, with special reference to the shiga-toxins genes (stx and stx ) and enterotoxins genes (lt and sta) that govern their pathogenesis, as well as the virulence genes; eaea and f , and the screening of their antimicrobial resistance profiles and antimicrobial resistance genes; aadb, sul , and bla-tem. the overall prevalence of e. coli was . %, which is lower than what was reported in diarrheic calves in egypt ( . %) [ ] , ethiopia ( . %) [ ] , argentina ( . %) [ ] and india ( . %) [ ] ; however, a lower prevalence was reported in other previous studies in korea ( %) [ ] and switzerland ( . %) [ ] . differences in the prevalence of e. coli may be due to the differences in geography, management practices, floor type, health conditions, and the calf's age [ , , ] . further, the high rate of e. coli isolation in the present study could be attributed to many reasons, such as the mixing of different age groups, poor environmental and hygienic conditions, or the poor quantity and/or quality of colostrum. in addition, the colostrum maternal antibodies cannot neutralize the high dose of pathogenic e. coli infection [ ] . regarding the age of the examined calves, the prevalence of e. coli was . %, . %, and . % in the first months old, - months old, and - months old aged calves, respectively. there is no statistically significant difference in the prevalence of e. coli among the different ages (p = . ). a previous study reported that the prevalence of e. coli was high in the young calves, and then decreased as the age increased [ ] . the serological identification of the retrieved isolates revealed that a total of ( . %) strains were typable, while isolates ( . %) were untypable. the most common serogroup was o ( . %), followed by o ( . %) and o ( . %), o ( . %), o ( . %), o ( . %), and o ( . %). the identified serogroups in the current study have a different variety than those previously recorded [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] , which are often associated with sick children with diarrhea [ , ] . in [ ] stated that % of e. coli isolates are pathogenic by cr binding, which indicates the virulence of these strains. in other studies, it was reported that . - % of e. coli isolates were cr positive [ , ] . in the present study, the isolated strains exhibited a remarkable resistance against four antimicrobial agents, including; neomycin ( . %), gentamycin and streptomycin ( %), and amikacin ( . %). a previous study from egypt in diarrheic buffalo-calves farms reported that the most prevalent phenotypic resistance patterns were; ampicillin ( . %) and amoxicillin ( . %), as well as trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole ( %) and gentamicin ( . %) [ ] . a previous study in iran reported that e. coli strains retrieved from diarrheic calves showed maximum resistance to penicillin, streptomycin, tetracycline, lincomycin and sulfamethoxazole [ ] . the resistance pattern observed in our study and the previous other studies indicated that the emergence of multidrug-resistant species has become an increasing problem worldwide, due to the overuse of antimicrobial drugs in both animal and human medicine [ , ] . the increased pattern of multidrug resistance could be attributed to the accumulation of genes encoding for the antibiotic resistance, either on the bacterial chromosome or plasmid [ ] . concerning the occurrence of the multidrug-resistance patterns and the distribution of the antimicrobial resistance genes among the isolated e. coli strains, . % of the tested strains showed multidrug resistance to the aminoglycosides antibiotics; neomycin, gentamicin, streptomycin, and amikacin (harbored aadb gene), while . % exhibited multidrug resistance to the aminoglycosides antibiotics and trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole (harbored both aadb and sul genes). although clavulanic acid and sulbactam are known as effective β-lactamase inhibitors, . % of the tested strains showed multidrug resistance to amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, ampicillin/sulbactam, and the aminoglycosides antibiotics (harbored both aadb and blatem genes). in addition, the most predominant antimicrobial resistance gene was aadb gene, which occurred in / of the examined strains. these findings are endorsed by a previous study, which reported that an aminoglycoside-resistance determinant (aadb) gene was prevalent among the pathogenic e. coli strains originated from diarrheic calves. such type of resistance could be attributed to the presence of aadb gene, as well as the widespread improper use of aminoglycosides for the treatment of calf diarrhea in the past years [ ] . genes encoding resistance to aminoglycosides, sulfonamides, and ampicillins were aadb, sul , and blatem genes, respectively [ ] . a previous study revealed that the most usually detected βlactamase gene is blatem, occurring in / of the tested strains; the resistance to the antimicrobial agents could be due to the presence of variable gene variants in the resistant isolates [ ] . in the present study, the prevalence of the enterotoxigenic e. coli was . %, while the prevalence of shiga-toxigenic e. coli was . %. concerning the isolated stec strains, the stx gene is the most predominant shiga-toxin gene, either found alone or in combination with stx and eaea genes, or in combination with the stx gene. a previous study from diarrheic calves in india reported that the profile of virulence genes of the stec isolates was found in diverse combinations, and the combination of hlya and eaea genes was most the predominant [ ] . shiga toxins usually inactivate the host cell-ribosomes with subsequent inhibition of protein-biosynthesis. the occurrence of the stx , eaea, and stx genes together constitute an epidemiological significance, as previous studies reported that the combination of these genes could increase the ability of e. coli to cause severe human illness [ , ] . regarding the isolated etec strains, the lt gene was the most prevalent enterotoxin gene, either found in combination with the f gene, or in combination with the sta gene, or in combination with both sta and f genes. lt (heat-labile toxin) usually stimulates the adenylate-cyclase enzymatic system, while sta (stable-toxin) activates the guanylate-cyclase system, resulting in severe watery diarrhea. the f gene is usually associated with the occurrence of diarrhea in calves and has a higher prevalence in diarrheic calves rather than healthy ones, which warrants a great role of this gene in etec pathogenesis [ ] . in argentina, the most prevalent virulence genes of pathogenic e. coli isolated from dairy calves were k , f and f [ ] . in brazil, the prevalence of the combination of sta and lt genes was . % in e. coli isolated from diarrheic calves [ ] . in china, . % of the etec which originated from healthy calves were carried lt and sta genes [ ] . furthermore, in italy, the sta gene was absent in e. coli that isolated from diarrheic buffalo calves [ ] . the diversity in the prevalence of shiga-toxins genes, enterotoxins genes, and other virulence-related genes in the present study and the other studies may be attributed to the geographical origin of samples, the sample size, the handling of collected samples, the number of examined strains, the type of the examined virulence genes, and the role of the examined virulence genes in the pathogenesis of the disease. in conclusion, e. coli continues to be one of the major causes of calf diarrhea resulting in severe economic losses. both shiga-toxigenic and enterotoxigenic e. coli are the most prevalent pathotypes incriminated in the disease occurrence. the shiga toxins genes; stx and stx , are the most prevalent virulence genes associated with stec, which are responsible for the pathogenesis of the disease and helped by the intimin gene (eaea). furthermore, the lt gene is the most prevalent enterotoxin gene which accompanies the etec strains isolated from calf diarrhea, either alone or in combination with the sta and or the f genes. the majority of the isolated stec and etec harbored aadb antibiotic resistance gene and exhibited a multidrug-resistance pattern to neomycin, gentamycin, streptomycin, and amikacin. moreover, enrofloxacin, florfenicol, amoxicillin-clavulanic acid, and ampicillin-sulbactam are the most effective antimicrobial agents against the isolated stec and etec strains. the incessant implementation of the antibiogram profile is needed to determine the most effective antibiotic, due to the high prevalence of the multidrug-resistant e. coli strains. a total of fecal specimens were aseptically gathered using sterile rectal swabs from april -feb , from diarrheic calves aged between day and months, from two private farms ( calves from farm i and from farm ii) at el-sharqia governorate, egypt. the collected specimens were rapidly transferred to the bacteriological lab, faculty of veterinary medicine, suez canal university, for further analysis. the handling of animals was carried out by well-trained scientists, according to the instructions of the animal ethics review committee of suez canal university (scu- - / / ). the collected specimens were inoculated in nutrient broth and then incubated for h at • c. loopful from the culture suspension was streaked on macconkey's agar and eosin methylene blue agar (oxoid, uk). the recovered typical colonies (pink colonies on macconkey's agar and metallic green sheen colonies on emb) were completely identified morphologically and biochemically, as described by quinn et al. [ ] . the obtained e. coli isolates were serogrouped by the detection of o antigens using the slide agglutination test, according to the method previously described by edwards and ewing [ ] . the congo red (cr) binding test has been used to detect the invasive e. coli, using trypticase agar supplemented with . % cr dye (oxoid, uk). the colonies were streaked on congo red agar and incubated at • c for hrs, then plates were kept at room temperature for hrs. the demonstration of the invasive strains (red colonies) was observed and recorded according to the methods previously described by panigrahy and yushen [ ] . the isolated e. coli strains were tested against nine antimicrobial agents; amoxicillin/clavulanic acid ( / mcg), ampicillin/sulbactam ( / mcg), amikacin ( mcg), neomycin ( mcg), enrofloxacin ( mcg), florfenicol ( mcg), streptomycin ( mcg), trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole ( mcg) and gentamicin ( mcg) (oxoid, uk), using the disc diffusion method. the diameter of the inhibition zone was measured in millimeters and expressed as sensitive, intermediate, and resistant, as described by clsi [ ] . bacterial dna of purified bacterial cells was extracted using the qiaamp dna mini kit (invitrogen, usa). recovered dna templates were quantified using a nanodrop (nanodrop , thermo scientific, loughborough, uk), adjusted to ng µl − . to assess the virulence genes (stx , stx lt, sta, f and eaea), as well as the antimicrobial resistance genes (aadb, sul , and bla-tem) in the obtained e. coli strains, pcr was performed using specific sets of primers (metabion, germany) ( table ). the pcr reaction ( µl) consists of . µl go taq ® green master mix x (promega, wisconsin, usa), µl ( pmol) of each primer, µl dna extract, and pcr grade water up to µl. the cycling conditions are listed in table . negative control (no dna template) and positive control reference strains (previously isolated and kindly provided by a.h.r i, dokki, egypt) were used in the pcr assay. amplified fragments were screened by . % agarose gel electrophoresis (applichem gmbh, darmstadt, germany) for min at v in × tae, visualized using µl of dna gel stain (sigma-aldrich, st. louis, mi, usa) and photographed under uv transilluminator. a bp ladder (fermentas, thermo scientific, darmstadt, germany) was used. the chi-square was performed to analyze the data, to test the null hypothesis of different treatments using the statistical analysis software (sas ® software version . , sas institute, cary, nc, usa). the significance level was (p < . ). comparison of electrocardiographic parameters and serum electrolytes and microelements between single infection of rotavirus and coronavirus and concurrent infection of cryptosporidium parvum with rotavirus and coronavirus in diarrheic dairy calves an overview of calf diarrhea-infectious etiology, diagnosis, and intervention clinical and sero-molecular characterization of escherichia coli with an emphasis on hybrid strain in healthy and diarrheic neonatal calves 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escherichia coli and salmonella species from a tertiary hospital in the eastern cape detection of shiga-toxigenic escherichia coli (stec) in diarrhoeagenic stool & meat samples in mangalore occurrence and characteristics of enterohemorrhagic escherichia coli o and o in calves associated with diarrhea multiplex pcr for enterotoxigenic, attaching and effacing, and shiga toxin-producing escherichia coli strains from calves relative distribution and conservation of genes encoding aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes in salmonella enterica serotype typhimurium phage type dt simple and reliable multiplex pcr assay for detection of blatem, blashv and blaoxa- genes in enterobacteriaceae genetic diversity and antimicrobial resistance of escherichia coli from human and animal sources uncovers multiple resistances from human sources this article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the creative commons attribution (cc by) license the authors are grateful to the researchers supporting project number (rsp- / ), king saud university, riyadh, saudi arabia. the authors declare no conflict of interest. key: cord- - rpoll y authors: mitchell, hugh d.; eisfeld, amie j.; stratton, kelly g.; heller, natalie c.; bramer, lisa m.; wen, ji; mcdermott, jason e.; gralinski, lisa e.; sims, amy c.; le, mai q.; baric, ralph s.; kawaoka, yoshihiro; waters, katrina m. title: the role of egfr in influenza pathogenicity: multiple network-based approaches to identify a key regulator of non-lethal infections date: - - journal: front cell dev biol doi: . /fcell. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rpoll y despite high sequence similarity between pandemic and seasonal influenza viruses, there is extreme variation in host pathogenicity from one viral strain to the next. identifying the underlying mechanisms of variability in pathogenicity is a critical task for understanding influenza virus infection and effective management of highly pathogenic influenza virus disease. we applied a network-based modeling approach to identify critical functions related to influenza virus pathogenicity using large transcriptomic and proteomic datasets from mice infected with six influenza virus strains or mutants. our analysis revealed two pathogenicity-related gene expression clusters; these results were corroborated by matching proteomics data. we also identified parallel downstream processes that were altered during influenza pathogenesis. we found that network bottlenecks (nodes that bridge different network regions) were highly enriched in pathogenicity-related genes, while network hubs (highly connected network nodes) were significantly depleted in these genes. we confirmed that this trend persisted in a distinct virus: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars). the role of epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) in influenza pathogenesis, one of the bottleneck regulators with corroborating signals across transcript and protein expression data, was tested and validated in additional mouse infection experiments. we demonstrate that egfr is important during influenza infection, but the role it plays changes for lethal versus non-lethal infections. our results show that by using association networks, bottleneck genes that lack hub characteristics can be used to predict a gene’s involvement in influenza virus pathogenicity. we also demonstrate the utility of employing multiple network approaches for analyzing host response data from viral infections. despite high sequence similarity between pandemic and seasonal influenza viruses, there is extreme variation in host pathogenicity from one viral strain to the next. identifying the underlying mechanisms of variability in pathogenicity is a critical task for understanding influenza virus infection and effective management of highly pathogenic influenza virus disease. we applied a network-based modeling approach to identify critical functions related to influenza virus pathogenicity using large transcriptomic and proteomic datasets from mice infected with six influenza virus strains or mutants. our analysis revealed two pathogenicity-related gene expression clusters; these results were corroborated by matching proteomics data. we also identified parallel downstream processes that were altered during influenza pathogenesis. we found that network bottlenecks (nodes that bridge different network regions) were highly enriched in pathogenicity-related genes, while network hubs (highly connected network nodes) were significantly depleted in these genes. we confirmed that this trend persisted in a distinct virus: severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars). the role of epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) in influenza pathogenesis, one of the bottleneck regulators with corroborating signals across transcript and protein expression data, was tested and validated in additional mouse infection experiments. we demonstrate that egfr is important during influenza infection, but the role it plays changes for lethal versus non-lethal infections. our results show that by using association networks, bottleneck genes that lack hub characteristics can be used to predict a gene's involvement in influenza virus pathogenicity. we also demonstrate the utility of employing multiple network approaches for analyzing host response data from viral infections. keywords: systems biology, network topology, influenza, sars-cov, data integration introduction viruses that are newly introduced to the human population have the potential to be highly pathogenic. while the pathogenicity of these new strains tends to wane as adaptation progresses, emerging viruses, such as highly pathogenic avian influenza strains, are an ever-present threat to human health and the global economy because it is difficult to predict when a new pathogenic strain will appear. the influenza a virus pandemic claimed - million lives worldwide (peiris et al., ) . multiple influenza pandemics have emerged since. most recently, human infections of h n influenza, which first emerged in the spring of , have resulted in infections including deaths (food and agriculture organization [fao] , ). since , h n avian influenza has caused human infections with a mortality rate of % (world health organization [who] , ). the h n pandemic caused less severe disease in humans but spread to nearly countries (michaelis et al., ) and may have contributed to the deaths of an estimated , people (dawood et al., ) . the fact that influenza strains vary greatly in pathogenicity underscores the need to understand the underlying host mechanisms that contribute to the severity of infection so that we are better prepared to alleviate the effects of highly pathogenic strains. despite the potential for pandemic infection with a highly virulent, highly transmissible new strain of influenza, the current understanding of these mechanisms remains limited. a major advantage of a systems biology approach to pathobiology is the ability to identify novel, key elements of a biological process, such what regulators are involved in critical processes. high-throughput profiling methods (e.g., transcriptomics) provide powerful tools for examining how entire systems respond to different perturbations such as acute disease. network reconstruction provides the opportunity to utilize all available data and is a critically important tool for representing complex sets of interactions. for biological systems, network analysis has proven useful for analyzing genetic interactions among genes, as well as protein-protein, protein-dna, and kinase-substrate interactions (ideker and krogan, ) . in addition, network approaches have attempted to identify regulatory associations between genes and proteins by comparing expression patterns across multiple conditions (faith et al., ; mcdermott et al., mcdermott et al., , . these approaches may capture physical interactions but can also identify more subtle, though equally important, regulatory relationships between gene pairs or within gene clusters. previous work has shown that prioritization of key regulators based on network topology is superior to simple ranking of differentially expressed genes (mcdermott et al., ) . our group and others have demonstrated that genes occupying certain topological positions in association networks play important regulatory roles in the biological process being studied (yu et al., ; mcdermott et al., mcdermott et al., , mitchell et al., ) . network hubs are identified by the degree centrality metric, which is the number of edges associated with any given node. network bottlenecks are identified by the betweenness centrality metric, which is the number of shortest paths between all pairs of nodes that pass through a given node. these are two of the most studied topological features, yet it is unclear from the literature which of these is the most effective predictor of regulatory function for any given network construction approach or biological context. it is also unclear what distinct regulatory roles each has; such information is important to discern as it may be used to identify targets for therapeutic intervention. typically, studies that attempt to uncover the underlying mechanisms of pathogenicity simply compare a single high-and low-pathogenicity strain or dose (hatta et al., ; kobasa et al., ; cilloniz et al., ; safronetz et al., ; tisoncik-go et al., ) . while this approach may allow pathogenicity-related host responses to be identified, it can be difficult to distinguish between responses that are truly tied to pathogenicity and those that are strain-specific. for this study, we use network clustering and topology to compare six influenza strains and mutants of varying pathogenicity (referred to herein as the pathogenicity gradient) at multiple doses and four time points in the context of a murine infection model. this allows us to identify pathogenicityrelated traits with greater certainty than in previous studies. we utilize global transcriptomic and proteomic data from these experiments, thus providing a more complete view of the layered interaction between host and virus. we demonstrate a networkbased approach for identifying critical factors in influenza pathogenesis and test our findings with a pharmacological inhibitor during lethal and non-lethal infections. microarray data was deposited previously in the gene expression omnibus (geo) under the following accession numbers: gse : influenza a/vn/ / infection in mice with three viral doses at , , , and days (im ); gse : ha avirulent mutation in a/vietnam/ / (h n ) infection in mice at pfu at , , , and days (im ); gse : influenza a/vn/ / pb - e mutant infection in mice with pfu at , , , and days (im ); gse : influenza a/vn/ / pb - e mutant infection in mice with pfu at , , , and days (im ); gse : influenza a/vn/ / pb -f mutant infection in mice with pfu at , , , and days (im ); gse : influenza a/vn/ / ns trunc mutant infection in mice with two doses at , , , and days (im ); gse : influenza a/ca / infection in mice with four doses at , , , and days (ca m ); gse : sars-cov ma infection in mice with four viral doses at , , , and days (sm ); gse : sars-cov ma , icsars-cov, or sars batsrbd infection in mice with two viral doses at , , , and days (sm ); gse : sars-cov ma or sars deltaorf infection in mice with o pfu at , , , and days (sm ); gse : sars-cov ma or sars nsp infection in mice with pfu at , , , and days (sm ). proteomics data for im , im , im , im , and im (described above) can be found at https://omics.pnl.gov/ project-data/systems-virology-contract-data. we set out to build a synthetic pathogenicity profile that represents the severity of the infection for each experimental condition. the viruses used to construct the pathogenicity gradient include the h n strain, a/california/ / (ca ), from the pandemic,; the highly pathogenic h n avian strain, a/vietnam/ / (vn ); and four mutants of vn : vn -haavir (which lacks the multi-basic cleavage site in the viral hemagglutinin protein that is critical for extra-pulmonary viral spread), vn -pb - e (which lacks a mammalian-adapting mutation that substantially increases the replicative ability of the viral polymerase complex in mammalian cells), vn -ns trunc (which encodes a c-terminal truncation in the effector domain of the ns host response antagonist protein), and vn -pb f del (which lacks expression of the pb -f protein). genes that mirror this profile are hypothesized to be related to pathogenicity in some way, a proposition similar to that given by taylor et al. ( ) . to construct the profile, we scaled all six strains/mutants proportional to their median lethal dose (mld ) value, or the amount of viral particles at which % of infected mice succumb to infection ( figure a) . we therefore assigned a score for each strain corresponding to the log of the mld and then adjusted the scores to account for differences in administered doses across studies. since infection conditions for each strain included a dose at pfu, the corresponding strain's log mld was assigned to all infection conditions at this dose. to make the score more intuitive (high score = high pathogenicity), each log mld was subtracted from the maximum observed log mld . the intent was to quantitatively relate the experimental conditions to each other, with the expectation that genes related to pathogenicity would manifest expression patterns similar to the pathogenicity profile. to avoid negative values, an additional unit was added to each score. therefore, the pathogenicity level for a given infection condition i, with dose d i and the particular viral strain's mld m i , is given by: where m max is the maximum observed mld , and d com is the dose common to all strains/mutants, i.e., the experimental conditions for all infections included at least this dose, if not others. applying this calculation across all conditions yielded the profile ( figure b) . since the array of conditions differed somewhat between the transcripts and protein data, profiles unique to each of these datasets were generated. sample collection and microarray processing are described for this dataset in tchitchek et al. ( ) . for our analysis, we selected the probes that were ( ) present on all arrays after quality control filtering, ( ) previously identified as significantly changed from mock expression (q-value < . ), and ( ) had a simultaneous log fold change of at least . in at least one experimental condition (li et al., ) . this resulted in the selection of probes for analysis. the results for proteomic data, sample processing, capillary lc-ms/ms analysis, spectral matching, and peptide-to-protein rollup are described in tchitchek et al. ( ) . missing value imputation was performed using a regularized expectation maximization algorithm (webb-robertson et al., ) . selected proteins were only those that were (peiris et al., ) detected in every experiment before imputation (experiment = set of infections with one given strain), and (food and agriculture organization [fao] , ) significantly changed from mock (p < . ) in at least one experimental condition; this resulted in proteins that were used in our analysis. for the correlation calculations (below), expression data from selected time points were extracted and then mean-summarized for each strain and dose. some viruses received heavier experimental coverage than others; we therefore expanded the data compendium to equalize the influence each virus strain in the pathogenicity gradient has on the correlation calculations by duplicating the data from under-represented conditions so that every strain was equally represented in the compendium. we calculated pearson's correlation using the expanded expression profile for each gene/protein and the appropriately expanded pathogenicity profile. day , day , day , and day designations were used to refer to the top % of pathogenicitycorrelated genes (both positive and negative correlation) using individual time point data for correlation calculations. network inference was performed using the context likelihood of relatedness software tool as described (mitchell et al., ) . the network centrality measures of betweenness and degree were determined using the r igraph package. to identify regulators of interest, we used the "interactions by protein function" and "significant interactions within set(s)" tools in the metacore software package (clarivate analytics, philadelphia pa) to identify genes/proteins whose interactors were enriched among pathogenicity-related proteins. a similar approach was used for pathogenicity-related genes. we used the r weighted gene correlation network analysis (wgcna) package to identify clusters of genes or proteins with behavioral similarity (langfelder and horvath, ) . cluster identification was performed using the blockwisemodules function with the following parameter values for transcript cluster analysis: power = , minmodulesize = , maxblocksize = , reassignthreshold = , mergecutheight = . , and pamrespectsdendro = f. all animal experiments and procedures were approved by the university of wisconsin (uw)-madison school of veterinary medicine animal care and use committee under relevant institutional and american veterinary association guidelines. all experiments using replication competent h n viruses were performed in biosafety level (bsl- ) or animal enhanced biosafety level (absl- ) containment laboratories at uw-madison. experiments using replication competent h n virus were performed in an absl- + containment laboratory at uw-madison. uw-madison bsl- , absl- , and absl- + laboratories are approved for use by the united states (us) centers for disease control and prevention (cdc) and the us department of agriculture. experiments using replication competent sars-cov were performed in an absl- + containment laboratory at the university of north carolina at chapel hill (unc). unc bsl- , absl- , and absl- + laboratories are approved for use by the us cdc. madin-darby canine kidney (mdck) cells were propagated in a minimum essential medium (mem) containing % newborn calf serum and were maintained at • c in an atmosphere of % co . cell stocks are periodically restarted from early passage aliquots and routinely monitored for mycoplasma contamination. the a/california/ / h n virus (ca ) was provided by the us cdc. the a/chicken/vietnam/ty / (h n ) virus (ty ) was obtained through surveillance activities in vietnam. stock viruses were generated by passaging an aliquot of the original virus once in mdck cells containing . % bovine serum albumin (bsa) fraction v (sigma-aldrich) and µg/ml tosyl phenylalanyl chloromethyl ketone (tpck)-treated trypsin (ca ) or in embryonated chicken eggs (ty ), as previously described (eisfeld et al., ) . stock virus titers were quantified by plaque assay in mdck cells using standard methods. sars-cov was propagated and assayed for titer levels, as published previously . nine-to ten-week-old female c bl/ j mice (the jackson laboratory) were administered or mg/kg of gefitinib (tocris bioscience) in % tween- in phosphate-buffered saline (pbs) by oral gavage day prior to infection and each subsequent day until the end of the experiment. four mice were used for each drug and viral dose combination. for infection, mice were anesthetized by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection of ketamine and dexmedetomidine ( - mg/kg ketamine + . - mg/kg dexmedetomidine) and were intranasally inoculated with µl of pbs-containing viruses, as indicated in figure and the corresponding text in the "effect of egfr inhibition on influenza pathogenesis in mice" section. following inoculation, dexmedetomidine was reversed by i.p. injection of atipamezole ( . - mg/kg). subsequent to infection, individual body weights and survival were monitored for up to days, and mice were humanely euthanized when exhibiting severe clinical symptoms or at the end of the observation period. sars-cov infections in mice were performed as previously published . to model the trend in mice weight over time, we used linear mixed effects models with a normal conditional distribution and identity link on each time course. fixed effects were day, gefitinib level, and the interaction between day and gefitinib level, while random effects for each mouse were included to account for variability in the mice and for the non-independent nature of the data over time. a second model that did not include the gefitinib level and day interaction terms was also fit; a likelihood ratio test was then conducted to determine if the group slopes were significantly different. due to the patterns of mouse weight over time, a single linear model was not always sufficient to model the data; this was determined by using linear splines to estimate change points where separate linear models should be used to represent the trend for different time ranges. specifically, knot points were identified by determining if adding an additional time point to the linear model of an existing segment changed the model. if the new point changed the model significantly, then a new knot point was identified; otherwise, the time point was added to the segment. after all knot points were found, a single random mixed effect model was fit to each segment of data. ty at pfu was modeled as a single segment, ca at pfu and pfu in three segments, and ty at pfu in four segments. separate p-values were determined for each segment (as identified from the knot points as boundaries), which are provided in table . our overall strategy is depicted in figure . we used transcriptomics and proteomics data in conjunction with pathogenicity data from the different virus strains/mutants (figures a,b) to identify pathways and individual genes/proteins that were important for influenza pathogenicity. correlated gene modules in the transcriptomics were first detected ( figure c ) and compared with the pathogenicity profile (figure a ) to identify gene modules whose behavior linked them to pathogenicity. individual proteins whose behavior correlated with pathogenicity were incorporated into interaction enrichment analysis, which identified genes whose interaction neighbors from curated networks were enriched among pathogenicity-correlated proteins ( figure d) . these results could be connected to host responses evident in the gene clusters depicted in figure c . an association network built from mutual information of perturbed gene pairs ( figure e ) was used for topology analysis, which yielded network hubs and bottlenecks. lists of pathogenicity-correlated genes from early and late time points ( figure f ) were combined and compared to network nodes with high hub and bottleneck scores. comparison of genes correlated with pathogenicity to network hubs and bottlenecks showed significant overlap with network bottlenecks (figure g ), but hubs were strikingly excluded ( figure h) . examination of results from interaction enrichment ( figure d ) and network topology (figures e-g) revealed epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) as a candidate for follow-up experiments ( figure i ). we utilized transcriptomic and proteomic datasets (represented by figure b ) of mouse infection with six strains/mutants of influenza at varying doses and times, as described in tchitchek et al. ( ) . these viruses display varying degrees of virulence, as assessed by the minimal dose that is lethal to % of animals to which it is administered (mld , figure a , see section "materials and methods" for details). samples were collected at , , , and days post-infection for global transcriptomics and proteomics analysis of lung tissues relative to time-matched mock-infected controls. to identify transcripts correlated with pathogenicity, we used the wgcna network clustering approach (langfelder and horvath, ) to cluster gene expression profiles across all experiments into expression modules that represent groups of genes with similar expression behaviors ( figure c ). this approach further affirms that the overall gene expression pattern of each module has true biological meaning because each identified pattern is manifested by many genes. the representative expression profile of each module, or eigengene, can be correlated with clinical measures or other metadata to identify modules of interest (langfelder and horvath, ; saris et al., ; levine et al., ) . we thus applied wgcna to our transcript dataset to identify network modules related to influenza pathogenicity. figure a shows the correlations of all eigengene profiles to pathogenicity. two of the modules, pink and black, showed much higher correlations than the others and were selected for further analysis. the pink module is strongly positively correlated with pathogenicity ( figure b) . we found statistical enrichment in plasminogen activation among the genes in this module, particularly klkb and coagulation factor x ; this suggests that pathogenic influenza infection involves a perturbed coagulation cascade. the black module ( figure c ) is strongly negatively correlated with pathogenicity and was strikingly enriched for b-cell activation, implying that a diminished presence of b-cell activity is related to pathogenesis in influenza. interestingly, a previous report showed that influenza caused apoptotic loss of bone marrow b-cells in mice despite the complete lack of viral particles detected in the bones (sedger et al., ) . since figure | overview of analysis strategy. omics data (transcriptomics and proteomics) were used in conjunction with pathogenicity data from the different virus strains/mutants (a,b). correlated modules in the transcriptomics were detected (c) and compared with the pathogenicity profile (a) to identify gene modules whose behavior linked them to pathogenicity. individual proteins whose behavior correlated with pathogenicity were submitted to interaction enrichment analysis, which looked for genes whose interaction neighbors from curated networks were enriched among pathogenicity-correlated proteins (d). an association network built from mutual information of perturbed gene pairs (e) was used for topology analysis, which yielded network hubs and bottlenecks. lists of pathogenicity-correlated genes from early and late time points (f) were combined and compared to network nodes with high hub and bottleneck scores. overlap was seen with network bottlenecks (g) but not hubs (h). egfr was identified as a candidate for follow-up experiments based on overlaps between interaction enrichment and pathogenicity-related bottlenecks (i). b-cells are known to both reside in and travel through the lungs (polverino et al., ) , high-path flu may trigger death of lung b-cells, resulting in previously unappreciated effects on host response during these infections. to determine the extent to which proteome data validated our transcriptomics findings, we used the matching protein expression data to evaluate downstream pathway regulation related to infection severity at different time points (figure d) . we reasoned that correlation with pathogenicity could have different meanings depending on which time points are used for the correlation calculation. correlated genes identified early in the infection could be filling regulatory roles, while those from later points are expected to be the downstream effects of earlier events. accordingly, we identified genes and proteins whose expression profiles correlated with pathogenicity at individual time points and designated the resulting lists as day , day , day , and day . we then integrated the gene and protein data using target enrichment to identify the regulatory targets of protein pathway expression (supplementary tables s , s ). we found that syk, prkcb, and ebf were day genes and that each of these is a regulator of b-cell activation/maturation. proteins known to be regulated by and/or bind to these regulators were significantly enriched among day (syk) proteins, while transcripts of genes regulated by ebf and prkcb were enriched among day and day (ebf ) or day (prkcb) genes. like the b-cell-related module from the cluster analysis, the expression profiles of all three of these b-cell regulators showed strong negative correlation to pathogenicity, thus reinforcing the concept of decreased b-cell presence in the mouse lung during severe influenza infection. thus, our observation that the presence of b-cell-related functions is tied to pathogenicity is borne out by comparing results across time points and data types. similarly, we observed enrichment in proteins regulated by coagulation factor xiii a (f a ) in day proteins, with the f a transcript also among day genes. transcripts for coagulation regulators plat and serpine as well as their downstream targets were found among day genes. these latter results validated our findings from transcript expression that coagulation-related pathways are linked to pathogenicity. in addition to findings related to regulation of b-cell activity and coagulation, we also observed that direct protein targets of egfr activity are significantly enriched among day and day proteins. in this way, integration of transcriptomic and proteomic data enhances our analysis and identifies the pathways most likely to be important for infection severity. from this analysis we constructed three lists of genes that were identified as being correlated to pathogenicity in early infection (supplementary table s table s ), or both ( figure f and supplementary table s ) . we focused on genes that are correlated with pathogenicity both early and late in the infection, for two reasons: (peiris et al., ) high correlations from two separate groups of data points for the same gene means it is likely that these genes truly correlate with pathogenicity, and (food and agriculture organization [fao] , ) the overlap of the two groups helps yield the identity of genes important both early and throughout the infection process. because influenza viral titers reach maximal levels by day , regulatory responses are likely to occur in the first h of infection. we thus designated the day results as "early" and other time points as "late." to identify genes with both early and late infection correlation to pathogenicity, genes were identified from the top % of pathogenicity-correlated genes at early time points. the same procedure was used for late time points, and the intersection of these two resulted in a list of early/late correlated genes. the overlap between day genes and the set of combined day , day , and day genes resulting in genes (we refer to these as early/late correlated genes). the overlap between early and late was highly significant (p = . e- , fisher test). the clustering analysis provided a way to determine what kinds of genes manifested expression behaviors connected to pathogenicity. however, we were interested in identifying regulatory mechanisms of influenza infection in the context of pathogenicity. as a means of identifying key regulators, we turned to an approach based on network topology. a growing body of work has shown that network topology, or the placement of nodes in the network structure, can be used to identify entities with key regulatory roles (yu et al., ; zhou and liu, ; narang et al., ; mcdermott et al., ) . of particular interest are network bottlenecks and hubs, both of which have been shown to be enriched for regulators under various circumstances (yu et al., ; mcdermott et al., mcdermott et al., , mcdermott et al., , zhou and liu, ; narang et al., ) . we built a mutual information-based association network with transcript data (mcdermott et al., (mcdermott et al., , mitchell et al., ) using genes deemed significantly changed in at least one experimental condition (strain, dose, or time; see section "materials and methods") as input; we also identified network hubs and bottlenecks, which were defined as the top % of betweenness scores and degree scores, respectively ( figure e) . since network hub nodes are known to have critical systemic functions, we hypothesized that pathogenicity-related genes may be enriched in bottleneck or hub genes. to test this hypothesis, we examined the statistical enrichment of the identified pathogenesis sets with bottlenecks and hubs identified from the network analysis. interestingly, no overlap was discovered between network hubs and early/late correlated genes (p = . , twosided fisher test). in contrast, we found these genes to be significantly enriched in network bottlenecks ( of the , p = . e- , two-sided fisher test), suggesting bottlenecks are lung sulfonated steroid importer important early regulators of pathogenesis (figures g,h ; names and descriptions of the genes are found in table ). notably, three of these ten, cd , fcrl , and ikzf , are closely related to b-cell activation and overlapped with members of the black wgcna module. another of these genes is egfr (figure i ), which we found to have protein targets enriched among correlated proteins at day and day . to determine if these results were biased by the selection of arbitrary thresholds, we generated rankings for the degree, betweenness, and correlation to pathogenicity of all genes, then produced matrices of upper percentile thresholds by applying a fisher enrichment test for each threshold pairing. remarkably, we observed a dramatic exclusion (blue cells in figure , upper right) of hubs from correlated genes across a wide range of thresholds. in contrast, bottlenecks showed a strong enrichment trend (red cells in figure , upper left). these results show that for influenza infection, network hubs and bottlenecks have strikingly opposite roles regarding pathogenicity of the virus. given that network bottlenecks have a unique relationship with genes related to pathogenicity, we hypothesized that network hubs might be enriched in genes involved in more general aspects of infection. to test this, we identified the most highly perturbed genes across the transcriptome by ranking genes by their maximum fold change value across all data sets and then built matrices that compared the maximum expression to betweenness and degree, as before. as shown in the lower panels of figure , genes with high maximum expression overlapped dramatically with network hubs but showed minimal enrichment for bottlenecks. thus, highly connected genes (hubs) are strongly related to high expression and are strongly segregated from pathogenicity-related genes, while network bottlenecks show a strikingly different strong relationship to pathogenicity. to determine if similar relationships exist in a distinct infection system, we applied a similar analysis to a compendium of four datasets obtained from mice infected with the sars coronavirus (sars-cov), one of which was previously published by gralinski et al. ( ) . mice were infected with wt sars-cov and three attenuated mutants at varying doses and analyzed for lung gene expression at one, two, four, and seven days postinfection. since lethality is not readily observed in attenuated sars-cov mutants, we used animal weight loss at each time point to represent pathogenicity at each infection condition. also, since viral replication kinetics are slower for sars-cov infection compared to that of influenza virus, we used days and to represent early infection and days and for late infection when ranking genes for pathogenicity. when applying the approach outlined above, we observed very similar results with sars-cov to those seen with influenza virus (figure ) . the same patterns of exclusion and enrichment of hubs and bottlenecks in regard to pathogenesis-correlated genes and high-expression genes was shown to be even more dramatic in sars-cov. thus, the enrichment of pathogenicity-related genes in network bottlenecks and their exclusion from network hubs appears to be a widespread phenomenon characteristic of respiratory viral infections in mice. this finding is significant because the network betweenness measurement we applied was in no way informed by our pathogenicity results, yet it is able to significantly enrich for pathogenicity-related genes. thus, network bottlenecks but not hubs facilitate the identification of critical regulators as intervention targets. further studies will determine whether this approach is applicable in other infection systems as well. interestingly, no overlap was found between pathogenicityrelated genes in influenza and sars-cov, but significant overlap in bottlenecks ( genes, p-value < − ) and hubs ( genes, p-value << − ) was found between the two viruses. epidermal growth factor receptor has previously been shown to play a role in influenza infection (eierhoff et al., ; ueki et al., ) but has not been tied to pathogenicity. because we identified egfr as a pathogenicity-correlated bottleneck gene with apparent signaling effects evident in proteomics and transcriptomics, we investigated the role of egfr in pathogenesis further with a mouse model. we treated mice for days with the egfr inhibitor gefitinib and monitored infection-related weight loss of treated and untreated animals to determine if egfr inhibition affected the course of infection. after one day of treatment, mice were infected with one of two strains of influenza virus at various doses: ca ( , , and pfu) or the highly pathogenic h n avian strain, a/chicken/vietnam/ty / (ty ) ( , , , and pfu). the alternative h n figure | overlap in biological measures and graph topology for influenza infection. genes were ranked according to their correlation with the pathogenicity profile (top panels), maximum fold change across all infection conditions (bottom panels), network betweenness (left panels), and network degree (right panels). the top fraction from one ranking was compared to the top fraction in the other ranking using a two-tailed fisher's exact test as indicated. numerical scale represents the absolute value of the log p-value. for negative enrichment, these values were multiplied by - . strain was used since the mld for vn- is very low and makes identification of drug effects difficult. linear mixed effects models were used to model the weight loss trajectories from different infection conditions and to determine if the weight loss slope differed between treatments (table and figure ). red lines represent segments of the data that could be modeled with a single linear model; segments are separated by knot points. for all doses of cal/ and the two lower doses of ty , drug treatment significantly increased infection severity in some segments. however, higher doses of ty erased this trend and possibly partially reversed it. while all animals died by day , weight loss was less rapid by a small but significant margin in drug-treated animals at the highest viral dose. thus, egfr appears to play a significant role in the severity of non-lethal infections such that when it is inhibited, the infection is more severe. however, when the threshold is crossed to the highly lethal pathogenesis of h n , other mechanisms potentially take over and supersede or override the role of egfr. we used a multi-faceted approach to uncover critical components of pathogenicity in an attempt to take full advantage of the pathogenicity gradient in our study's influenza viruses and mutants. we compared the expression behavior of genes and proteins to the pathogenicity measurements of viruses in our study; this allowed us to identify which pathways and features are most closely associated with pathogenicity. the results provide clues to the underlying causes of the severity of highly pathogenic strains. our group previously used this dataset to determine that host responses to various infection conditions involve similar pathways but are characterized by distinct kinetic expression profiles (tchitchek et al., ) . in the current study, we use a complementary approach to identify the genes and pathways that are most closely associated with more pathogenic viruses instead of identifying elements common to all. we show that the network topology of association networks can be used to figure ; however, weight loss values at each infection condition were used as a pathogenicity measurement. weight loss correlations for early (days and ) and late (days and ) were combined to obtain the pathogenicity ranking. predict genes' involvement in pathogenicity-related processes. we used this knowledge in conjunction with other network methods to identify genes and pathways associated with disease severity. our results show that signaling downstream of egfr, coagulation pathways, and b-cell down-regulation in the lung are tied to infection severity in highly pathogenic influenza. a follow-up validation study in mice confirms the role of egfr in influenza pathogenicity. we first asked what broad trends in pathogenicity could be identified using a network clustering approach. one of the detected network clusters was strongly enriched for functions related to b-cells and was negatively correlated with the pathogenicity profile. this could be caused by either a general down-regulation of gene expression in lung b-cells or a general loss of b-cells from the lung. although influenza may infect b-cells expressing flu-specific b-cell receptors (dougan et al., ) , initially naïve mice from our experiment are not likely to have expanded virus-specific b-cells during the time frame of our omics experiments. thus, the effect is not likely a result of gene regulation within infected b-cells and is more likely due to a diminished b-cell lung population in highly pathogenic infections. a previous report demonstrated apoptotic death of bone marrow b-cells in flu-infected mice despite failing to show that the virus was present in the bone marrow (sedger et al., ) . therefore, a systemic signal appears to target remote b-cells and may target lung b-cells as well. while the adaptive immune response is not likely to play a direct role during the time frame of these experiments, a lower b-cell population, for whatever reason, may signal important immune response dynamics not previously understood. histological or other studies would be necessary to confirm the relationship between severe infection and diminished b-cell numbers. the second cluster was related to coagulation/fibrinolysis, which has shown a precedent in previous work for an involvement in influenza infection (berri et al., ) . plasminogen (which opposes clot formation) appears to promote destructive inflammation during influenza infection. while we observed both pro-and anti-coagulation factors that were positively correlated with pathogenicity, these responses may represent a mixture of virusinduced responses and host responses to a pathogenic state. we then corroborated these results by identifying links between pathogenicity-correlated genes and pathogenicitycorrelated targets of these genes. since a dataset of this kind deals strictly with the expression of genes and proteins, other events such as protein-protein interactions, protein-mrna interactions, and phosphorylation/dephosphorylation events are not directly monitored. thus, a portion of the very early events that determine the severity of an infection is not observable with this dataset. by integrating transcript and protein data, however, we were able to reveal links between upstream and downstream effectors for egfr signaling, coagulation regulation, and b-cell down-regulation that would not be possible without the availability of both data types. since correlations between transcript and protein expression profiles are consistently observed to be low across biological systems (vogel and marcotte, ) , validation of transcript expression using direct correlation of protein abundances is generally not successful. however, we believe that functional rather than direct correspondence of transcripts and proteins represents an effective integration of both data types. hence, our study provides hypotheses for the involvement of a number of genes/pathways in the pathogenicity of influenza virus. to learn more about regulatory mechanisms of influenza infection, we determined whether topological positions in association networks were related to pathogenicity. we found that genes correlated with pathogenesis overlapped significantly with bottlenecks but were dramatically excluded from hubs. this result may be explained by the fact that network hubs are highly connected to many other network nodes so that rather than being involved only in highly pathogenic conditions, they tend to be involved in all infection conditions. this is affirmed by the observation that genes with the largest changes in gene expression (therefore likely to exert the strongest influence on other genes) were very strongly enriched for hub genes. on the other hand, network bottlenecks represent nodes linking different areas of the network and may identify genes that have an influence on only a subset of the processes being monitored by the data. interestingly, in a network built with data from infections of varying pathogenicity, the genes exerting these influences appear to be involved in pathogenicity-related processes. the same relationships between network topology, viral pathogenicity, and gene expression that were observed for influenza virus were also noted when we used a similar dataset of sars-cov infections, thus further validating our analysis and demonstrating that these relationships appear to apply to respiratory viruses in general. we observed remarkably high ( % of possible) overlap between hub genes in sars-cov and influenza virus networks; this is consistent with the tendency of these genes to have a universal influence during infectious disease. in contrast, bottlenecks and pathogenicity genes showed much lower or non-existent overlap between the two infection systems, suggesting that each virus maintains unique mechanisms of host interaction. this finding is important because it demonstrates that the identification of nonhub bottlenecks may represent a way to naively identify virusspecific pathogenicity-related genes when pathogenicity data is not available. previous work has shown that network bottlenecks have important regulatory roles (yu et al., ; mcdermott et al., mcdermott et al., , mcdermott et al., , mcdermott et al., , mitchell et al., ) , but this is the first time that an association has been seen between bottlenecks and pathogenesis, with network hubs being conspicuously excluded. to validate our findings, we treated mice with the egfr inhibitor gefitinib during infection with high-and low-path influenza. weight loss was significantly worsened when egfr was inhibited during low-path infection as well as during low dose infection treatment with a highly pathogenic strain, all of which were non-lethal infections. these results suggest that care should be taken when administering gefitinib to patients at risk of or currently infected with influenza. interestingly, however, high-dose, high-pathogenicity conditions displayed a possible reversal of this trend, with gefitnib showing a significant slowing of the weight loss trend at the highest dose. thus, the role of egfr is dependent on the severity of the current infection, indicating a role in pathogenicity as predicted by our omics studies. egfr stimulation has previously been shown to play a role in promoting influenza particle uptake, and egfr inhibition diminished viral titer in infected mice (eierhoff et al., ; ueki et al., ) . however, the effect of egfr inhibition on pathogenicity was not determined in previous studies. viral titer measurements made during this experiment would have allowed us to determine the effect of the drug on viral replication simultaneously with pathogenicity, allowing a clearer picture of the mechanisms at play during egfr inhibition. while the specific mechanisms are unknown, our results point to a scenario where egfr inhibition mainly exacerbates pathogenicity at low severity, likely because of the resulting blockage of host benefits such as wound-healing in the lungs (puddicombe et al., ) . interestingly, sars-cov infection in the context of overactive egfr results in pulmonary fibrosis (venkataraman et al., ) , supporting the idea that egfr signaling supports tissue regrowth during respiratory figure | egfr inhibition during influenza infection. mice were exposed to the indicated dosages of gefitinib and influenza virus strains, then monitored for body weight over the indicated days post-infection (dpi). red vertical lines indicate knot points for linear modeling (see sections "materials and methods" and "statistical analysis"). green star: significance below . ; see table for segments with near-significant changes (segments with no significance indication had p-values above . ). infection. the beneficial effect that comes from preventing viral particle uptake is only apparent under severe conditions when the host is largely unable to repair damaged tissue, as is likely the case in our high-dose, high-pathogenicity infection when mice are moribund. thus, egfr activation is a double-edged sword in influenza infection, promoting viral replication through increased virion uptake or suppression of cytokine production (kalinowski et al., ) while simultaneously driving tissue maintenance. this shift in the effect of egfr inhibition across pathogenicity provides new clues to the role of egfr regulation during lethal and non-lethal influenza virus disease. in summary, we have used a unique combination of networkbased analyses of transcript and protein expression from our pathogenicity gradient dataset to ( ) identify b-cell downregulation and coagulation pathway up-regulation as being likely associated with pathogenicity in influenza; ( ) show that identification of non-hub bottlenecks represents a way to use association networks to enrich prediction of pathogenicityrelated genes and pathways; ( ) validate the involvement of one of these pathways, egfr signaling; and ( ) show that egfr inhibition appears to override a key host response mechanism involved in non-lethal viral infections. the transcriptomics datasets generated for this study can be found in gene expression omnibus, gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , and gse . proteomics datasets can be found at https://omics.pnl.gov/project-data/ systems-virology-contract-data. all animal experiments and procedures were approved by the university of wisconsin (uw)-madison school of veterinary medicine animal care and use committee under relevant institutional and american veterinary association guidelines. ml isolated a virus strain. ae, lg, rb, yk, and kw designed the experiments. ae, lg, and as performed the experiments. hm, ks, jm, and km conceived and designed the analysis. hm, ks, nh, and jw performed the analysis. hm and kw wrote the manuscript. all authors reviewed the manuscript. plasminogen controls inflammation and pathogenesis of influenza virus infections via fibrinolysis lethal influenza virus infection in macaques is associated with early dysregulation of inflammatory related genes estimated global mortality associated with the first months of pandemic influenza a h n virus circulation: a modelling study antigen-specific b-cell receptor sensitizes b cells to infection by influenza virus the epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) promotes uptake of influenza a viruses (iav) into host cells influenza a virus isolation, culture and identification large-scale mapping and validation of escherichia coli transcriptional regulation from a compendium of expression profiles h n situation update mechanisms of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirusinduced acute lung injury molecular basis for high virulence of hong kong h n influenza a viruses differential network biology egfr activation suppresses respiratory virus-induced irf -dependent cxcl production aberrant innate immune response in lethal infection of macaques with the influenza virus wgcna: an r package for weighted correlation network analysis transcriptome analysis of hiv-infected peripheral blood monocytes: gene transcripts and networks associated with neurocognitive functioning host regulatory network response to infection with highly pathogenic h n avian influenza virus defining the players in higher-order networks: predictive modeling for reverse engineering functional influence networks topological analysis of protein co-abundance networks identifies novel host targets important for hcv infection and pathogenesis the effect of inhibition of pp and tnfalpha signaling on pathogenesis of sars coronavirus bottlenecks and hubs in inferred networks are important for virulence in salmonella typhimurium novel swine-origin influenza a virus in humans: another pandemic knocking at the door a network integration approach to predict conserved regulators related to pathogenicity of influenza and sars-cov respiratory viruses automated identification of core regulatory genes in human gene regulatory networks re-emergence of fatal human influenza a subtype h n disease b cells in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease: moving to center stage involvement of the epidermal growth factor receptor in epithelial repair in asthma pandemic swine-origin h n influenza a virus isolates show heterogeneous virulence in macaques weighted gene co-expression network analysis of the peripheral blood from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients bone marrow b cell apoptosis during in vivo influenza virus infection requires tnf-alpha and lymphotoxin-alpha identification of pathogenicity-related genes in fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cepae specific mutations in h n mainly impact the magnitude and velocity of the host response in mice integrated omics analysis of pathogenic host responses during pandemic h n influenza virus infection: the crucial role of lipid metabolism respiratory virus-induced egfr activation suppresses irf -dependent interferon lambda and antiviral defense in airway epithelium overactive epidermal growth factor receptor signaling leads to increased fibrosis after severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection insights into the regulation of protein abundance from proteomic and transcriptomic analyses review, evaluation, and discussion of the challenges of missing value imputation for mass spectrometry-based label-free global proteomics cumulative number of confirmed human cases for avian influenza a(h n ) reported to who the importance of bottlenecks in protein networks: correlation with gene essentiality and expression dynamics a computational model to predict bone metastasis in breast cancer by integrating the dysregulated pathways this study was funded by grant u ai , provided by the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases, national institutes of health. pacific northwest national laboratory is a multi-program laboratory operated by battelle for the united states department of energy (doe) under contract de-ac - rl . the authors would like to thank daniel beechler for technical assistance, catherine himes for editorial services, and nathan johnson for graphic arts contributions. the supplementary material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/ . /fcell. . / full#supplementary-material key: cord- - p nr authors: schroyen, martine; tuggle, christopher k. title: current transcriptomics in pig immunity research date: - - journal: mamm genome doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: p nr swine performance in the face of disease challenge is becoming progressively more important. to improve the pig’s robustness and resilience against pathogens through selection, a better understanding of the genetic and epigenetic factors in the immune response is required. this review highlights results from the most recent transcriptome research, and the meta-analyses performed, in the context of pig immunity. a technological overview is given including wholegenome microarrays, immune-specific arrays, small-scale high-throughput expression methods, high-density tiling arrays, and next generation sequencing (ngs). although whole genome microarray techniques will remain complementary to ngs for some time in domestic species, research will transition to sequencing-based methods due to cost-effectiveness and the extra information that such methods provide. furthermore, upcoming high-throughput epigenomic studies, which will add greatly to our knowledge concerning the impact of epigenetic modifications on pig immune response, are listed in this review. with emphasis on the insights obtained from transcriptomic analyses for porcine immunity, we also discuss the experimental design in pig immunity research and the value of the newly published porcine genome assembly in using the pig as a model for human immune response. we conclude by discussing the importance of establishing community standards to maximize the possibility of integrative computational analyses, such as was clearly beneficial for the human encode project. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article (doi: . /s - - - ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. anticipating the need to efficiently feed an estimated billion people, pig farms have significantly increased in size, which also unfortunately increases the risk of disease incidence. a better understanding of the immune system in swine is essential, because susceptibility to infectious diseases has great influence on pig performance (mellencamp et al. ; boddicker et al. ) . selection for improvement in economical traits such as feed conversion and prolificacy is already routine practice, and improvement of immune capacity through selection is gradually catching up (edfors-lilja et al. ; uddin et al. ; lu et al. ). in addition, pigs are an important biomedical model for humans as they share great similarity in anatomy, physiology, genetics, and genomics, including many genes in the immune system (dawson ; dawson et al. ) , which is very helpful when modeling human immune responses and diseases (lunney ; fairbairn et al. ; kapetanovic et al. ; meurens et al. ) . moreover, pigs have recently been genetically modified to serve as an improved model for human disease (suzuki et al. ) . for more genetically modified pig models for human diseases, we refer the reader to the reviews of ross and prather ( ) and walters et al. ( ) . at the genomics and transcriptomics level, the pig is a very appealing model since one can extrapolate more easily to human due to the high homology in gene sequence and chromosomal structure (groenen et al. ). the immune system components of the pig genome (immunome) have become the best-annotated genes in the current genome (dawson et al. ) . this improved pig genome annotation will greatly aid creation of biomedical models. when the cause of a medical condition in humans is found, the corresponding mutation(s) can be genetically engineered in pigs to mimic the disease, and (novel) drug therapies can be tested (walters et al. ) . differences in genotype associated with a different immune response phenotype in pig can easily be examined with the use of the porcine k high-density snp chip (boddicker et al. ; lu et al. ; wang et al. a ). the last decade witnessed a steep increase in the amount of transcriptomic pig immune response data using whole porcine genome microarrays. meanwhile, custom-made arrays enriched in annotated genes of the pig immune system were used to address specific research questions (gao et al. ). in addition, novel techniques are surfacing in studies focusing on the porcine immune response transcriptome. high-density oligonucleotide tiling arrays and next generation sequencing (ngs) have been further broadening the knowledge of the pig's immunome (mockler et al. ; morozova and marra ) . these techniques are able to identify and quantify known and unknown transcripts and can be used to extend recent efforts made on the pig genome annotation (gao et al. ) . the understanding of the function of diverse mirnas will profit immensely from ngs, and papers on the porcine mirnaome are being published sharbati et al. ) , as surely soon will follow on epigenetic changes such as dna methylations or histone modifications. several research groups have graciously provided information to our review on their recently published and unpublished studies, including whole genome microarrays to rna-seq, mir-na-seq, rip-chip, and some of those methylation and histone modification studies (table ) . the aim of this review is to summarize the use and results of recent transcriptomic research in pig immunity, identify current needs in the field, and anticipate future areas of progress. an overview will be given of studies using whole genome microarrays and immune-specific arrays, small-scale high-throughput expression methods, high-density tiling array, and ngs (table ; fig. ). experimental design concerns and studies using the newest sequencing techniques and epigenetic tools together with a systems biology approach to interpret the data will also be discussed. for this review, we searched the entrez pubmed database, using keyword search terms such as pig transcriptomics, pig immunity, microarray, immune-specific array, high-throughput qpcr, rna-seq and mirna-seq, and systems biology. in addition, references from the articles obtained by this method were checked for additional relevant material. the arrayexpress database from ebi was consulted to create supplementary table , using sus scrofa as organism and filtered on 'array assay' as technology. whole genome microarray studies, the start of global high-throughput transcriptomics the range of genes assayed with whole genome microarray depends on the array used (table ; fig. ). the first porcine whole genome array available, the qiagen-nrsp array, was a result of collaboration between qiagen-operon and the usda-nrsp- swine genome community (zhao et al. ) . until then, human arrays were used to tackle porcine transcriptomic issues, or swine arrays were developed for a specific research question, as described in the next section. the pigoligoarray was a second-generation porcine -mer oligonucleotide array (steibel et al. ). currently, the most well known are commercially available microarrays such as the porcine gene expression microarray of agilent and the genechip porcine genome array of affymetrix (tuggle et al. ; huang et al. ; zhou et al. ; bao et al. ) . freeman and colleagues recently introduced the affymetrix snowball microarray, which is more comprehensive than the first affymetrix chip in coverage both for transcript structure and for the transcriptome as a whole, containing more than double as many probes (freeman et al. ) . details and examples of these whole genome arrays are shown in table . an overview of pig immunity experiments submitted to the arrayexpress database is given in supplementary table . since global porcine microarray studies have been extensively described earlier , ), we will limit this section by highlighting the importance of using microarrays in a systems biology approach; we do provide a comprehensive table on all porcine immunerelated microarray experiments submitted to arrayexpress (supplementary table ) . several microarray studies have been conducted to study host response to porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrs) using commercial or more specific pig annotated microarrays (bates et al. ; genini et al. a; ait-ali et al. ; wysocki et al. ) . badaoui et al. ( ) recently illustrated how the information of multiple prrs studies could be used simultaneously to gain insight on host response to prrsv challenges. they collected all publicly available microarray data covering multiple porcine immunology studies and including many different breeds, tissues, pathogens, and array platforms. the data of general immune response arrays were assembled, and separate meta-analyses for differential expression were performed using these arrays as well as a subset of arrays specifically from prrs experiments (badaoui et al. ) . to find prrs-specific expression responses, they eliminated differentially expressed genes common to these two metaanalyses. other meta-analysis studies, examining the immune response to salmonella typhimurium, combine microarray information with data such as serum cytokine measurements or microbiota differences. the results of these meta-analyses performed on prrs or s. typhimurium will be discussed in the section ''overall value of transcriptomics in important infectious swine diseases.'' in addition, whole genome microarrays were used to study pig response to haemophilus parasuis infection by zhao et al. ( ) . in one of their earlier studies, a genome-wide affymetrix array experiment revealed differentially expressed genes between non-infected and h. parasuisinfected pigs in spleen at dpi ). among them were retn, s a , s a , and s a , all important innate immunity genes marking inflammation. chen et al. ( b) reexamined the raw data of this first experiment and used a more robust genechip rma (gcrma) normalization (wu and irizarry ) , and an improved annotation using anexdb (couture et al. ) . a network analysis revealed that the ps a /ps a -casp -slc a pathway played an important role in h. parasuis infection, and cebpb may act as a transcription factor of the two s family members (chen et al. b ). later, zhao and co-workers describe a systems biology approach starting from the same affymetrix data. with the use of the kegg and reactome databases, , transcripts from the affymetrix chip were flagged as immunogenes. with this reduced dataset, exploratory analyses such as a principal component analysis (pca) and a geneset enrichment analysis (gsea) were conducted. with this pca/ gsea method, they came to a core set of differentially expressed genes, indicative of an h. parasuis infection (zhao et al. ) . to construct the immunologically important topology involved in an h. parasuis infection, the c net algorithm was used (altay and emmert-streib ). several networks were created, and the largest network had the complement gene c r as hub; although c r was not differentially expressed on the microarray, it was predicted to play a crucial role in the immune defense. with this immunome-focused method, more subtle differences could be pulled out, and much new information was obtained as compared to the earlier whole genome array analysis (zhao et al. ). the immune-specific array, a focused microarray besides using commercially available or custom-made transcriptome-wide microarrays, or examining only immunogenes on those arrays, arrays focusing only on the genes involved in the porcine immune response are also used (table ). in the past, several of these arrays were constructed to specifically focus on key immune genes (ledger et al. ) , to explore gene expression in a specific immune tissue (dvorak et al. ; machado et al. ; niewold et al. ) , or to examine host interactions with a specific pathogen (zhang et al. ; skovgaard et al. ). more information on these studies is given in table . next to these small-scale arrays, other immunespecific arrays were made using an existing whole genome array and adding probes examining immune-related genes. in a study by flori and co-workers, the qiagen-nrsp array was extended by adding probes for pseudorabies virus rnas as well as probes for transcripts from the porcine major histocompatibility complex, also called the swine leukocyte antigen (sla) complex, referred to as the qiagen ? sla/prv in fig. . this array was the first to simultaneously examine viral transcripts and porcine immune transcripts (flori et al. ). gao and colleagues used the nrsp - k chip enriched with sla genes and immunity genes outside the sla complex and called it the sla-ri/nrsp - k chip (gao et al. ). in the future, when using microarrays to examine gene expression patterns, whole genome arrays or the extended versions of them are clearly preferred. when the objective of the study is to examine only a relative small number of genes, other techniques such as fluidigm digital array or nanostring (described in more detail below) can be performed. these low cost, user-friendly, and rapid approaches make the small-scale in-house printed arrays redundant. upcoming sub-genomic-scale, high-throughput methods: fluidigm and nanostring even though qrt-pcr is often used as the routine method to confirm microarray and rna-seq findings, it has been used in many pig immune studies as a primary means to measure expression levels of a dozen or more immune genes (borca et al. ; lastra et al. ; islam et al. a, b; uddin et al. ; martins et al. a, b; uddin et al. ), together with suitable housekeeping genes for normalization . although it is a very accurate and sensitive method, standard qrt-pcr has the major drawback that only a few genes in a few samples can be examined at once as compared to high-throughput methods (fig. ) . further, significant amounts of money and time are spent controlling sample and assay variation by using appropriate-and preferably multiple-housekeeping genes and validating pcr efficiencies or correcting for them by using standard curves. the use of highthroughput qrt-pcr methods, such as the fluidigm digital array, can help overcome these issues. the fluidigm digital array integrated fluidic circuit (spurgeon et al. ) is an example of a nanofluidic chip through which up to , qrt-pcr reactions can be performed at once, which represents genes tested on samples (ramakrishnan et al. ) (fig. ) . beyond sheer speed of analysis, an important advantage of nanotechnology is that a much smaller amount of rna per sample is necessary to perform assays. in livestock, the first fluidigm experiments have been published only recently, as a stand-alone expression study or as a validation of a microarray/rna-seq experiment (robic et al. ; skovgaard et al. ; sorg et al. ; pilcher et al. ) . in a h n influenza virus study, skovgaard and coworkers used fluidigm to examine the expression of several pattern recognition receptors, ifn and ifn-induced genes, cytokines, and acute response protein genes after hpi, hpi, and dpi. they expanded their study by including data on differentially expressed mirnas and mrnas in the lungs and saw several mirnas potentially targeting the differentially expressed mrnas (skovgaard et al. ) . another high-throughput method uses the nanostring ncounter system by which color-coded probes are counted to digitally measure gene expression (fig. ) . this nonamplification method can be seen as a small-scale, hybridization-based platform. per gene of interest, two sequence-specific probes are needed, a capture probe that has an affinity tag such as biotin to capture the gene on a surface, and a reporter probe with a multiple-fluorescent tag code that acts as a unique detector (geiss et al. ). its strength lies in the non-enzymatic approach, with no reverse transcriptase and no pcr amplification. this approach essentially eliminates primer-primer interactions, and up to transcripts can be measured at a time. the technique is not described in livestock species thus far. however, with the possibility to use degraded rna samples such as rna from formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue samples, this method could become a very useful expression measuring tool. high-density oligonucleotide tiling array for gene expression and genome annotation high-density oligonucleotide tiling arrays have diverse genomic applications, such as transcriptome mapping and quantification. in general, tiling arrays are similar to microarrays as they both utilize oligonucleotide probes. however, through utilization of large numbers of probes, tiling arrays can span large genomic sequences without being restricted to annotated sequences (gao et al. ) . thus, tiling arrays may contain probes covering the entire genome in an unbiased manner (liu ) , and such partially overlapping probes can be used to find expressed genes, previously annotated or not. gao and co-workers used a nimblegen tiling array ( , probes) for the analysis of the transcription map of the sla complex (gao et al. ) . ninety-seven genes were found to be differentially expressed between un-stimulated peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) and pbmcs stimulated with phorbol myristate acetate (pma)/ionomycin. these results are in nearly complete agreement with their previous experiment using the sla-ri/nrsp - k chip. furthermore, with the tiling array, they were able to confirm and refine the previous annotation of the sla genes (gao et al. ). transcriptome sequencing rna-seq is a recently developed method enabling the examination of the complete set of transcripts in a cell using a sequencing by synthesis approach ). with this technique, mrna is converted into a library of cdna fragments, and at one or both ends of these fragments, adaptors are ligated. each fragment is read in a highly parallel manner, and typical read lengths are between and bp, and go up to an average of , bp and more with the pacbio rs sequencer (ferrarini et al. ) . the resulting reads are aligned to a reference genome of the organism examined, and a genomewide transcription map can be made describing the structure and enumerating the expression level of each gene. de novo assembly of a transcriptome is also possible if the reference genome is not available or poorly annotated (martin and wang ) ; integrated approaches are also possible. rna-seq has already proven to be a cost-effective way to investigate the sequence of all mrna transcripts in a specific tissue and/or for a specific physiological condition. not only is the sequence obtained together with the quantitative level of transcripts, but also splice variants can be detected, which is a major advantage in contrast with techniques such as microarrays. moreover, with rna-seq, there is very low, if any, background noise, and no transcript specific primers or probes are required, so no prior knowledge is needed ). this latter attribute is important when working with livestock species for which genomic sequence assemblies are incomplete (bauersachs and wolf ). as such, esteve-codina and colleagues reported hundreds of un-annotated protein coding genes in the porcine genome while studying the gonad transcriptome (esteve-codina et al. ). however, projects costs are influenced by the research question asked. if the goal is to examine general expression pattern differences in well-annotated, moderately expressed genes, sequencing does not have to be very deep, and samples can be multiplexed in one lane. for novel transcripts or genes with a low expression level, higher coverage is needed, and costs will increase (the encode consortium project a). one may also consider depleting highly abundant genes of little interest, such as alpha and beta globin in a blood sample, prior to sequencing in order to improve detection sensitivity (choi et al. submitted) . in , xiao and collaborators performed a ' tag digital gene expression (dge) analysis of the porcine lung transcriptome on pigs infected with the prrs virus (xiao et al. a, b) . this dge technique can be seen as a predecessor of rna-seq. whereas rna-seq will sequence all transcripts containing poly-a ? tails, dge detects those transcripts containing catg recognition sites because the transcripts are 'tagged' through digestion of cdnas at a nlaiii restriction site (hong et al. ) . with dge, only a portion of the transcript is analyzed instead of the nearly full transcripts as seen with rna-seq ). both techniques offer similar estimates of gene expression levels but rna-seq has the advantage to be able to provide information about transcript structure and consequently can detect splice variants (hong et al. ). xiao and colleagues sequenced lung rna libraries of control noninfected pigs (n = ), prrs-affected pigs necropsied at dpi (n = ,) and prrs-affected pigs necropsied at dpi (n = ) after infection with the classical north american prrsv type (nprrsv) (xiao et al. a) or the highly virulent prrsv (hprrsv), typically found in asia (xiao et al. b ) and found , (hprrsv) and , (nprrsv) differentially expressed genes. for both types of prrsv, a higher expression of anti-apoptotic genes and a lower expression of pro-apoptotic genes could be seen as a viral strategy for replication and spread (xiao et al. a, b) . as such, suppressed expression of short type i interferon (spi ifn) and ifna, both important innate anti-viral genes, was detected. additionally, there was an upregulation of cd noted, which could indicate an increase in internalization of prrsv since a positive correlation is described between the expression of this prrsv receptor gene and prrsv infectivity (patton et al. ). patton and colleagues described that treatment with modulators such as lipopolysaccharide (lps) or il , affecting cells to express cd , as a consequence also affected the susceptibility of the host for prrsv, thereby increasing or decreasing viral infectivity (patton et al. ). miller and colleagues examined gene expression profile data obtained by sage tag analysis of trachea-bronchial lymph nodes of sham-or prrsv-infected pigs at dpi. infection occurred with both highly pathogenic hprrsv (n = ) as well as north american type nprrsv (n = ) (miller et al. ). the hprrsv strain showed a more altered gene expression profile with higher fold change differences relative to the controls than the nprrsv, indicating the increased pathogenicity of the hprrsv. among the top genes that were upregulated were three serum amyloid a acute-phase isoforms, resistin (retn), and three s calcium binding proteins, s a , s a , and s a (miller et al. ) . jiang et al. ( ) used the go, kegg, and reactome databases to analyze the data on nprrsv infection further and identified six biological system categories affected by prrsv, including cellular processes, genetic information processing, environment information processing, metabolism, organismal systems, and human diseases (jiang et al. ) . in a largescale prrsv infection study aimed at finding genes controlling variation in immune response outcomes, boddicker and colleagues identified a region on ssc , containing snp marker wur , was strongly associated with both weight gain and prrs viral load for days postinfection (boddicker et al. (boddicker et al. , . eisley and coworkers performed an rna-seq analysis of all genes in this wur region through comparing blood rna from pairs of littermates with one of two different wur genotypes. they identified a strong candidate gene differentially expressed between favorable and unfavorable genotypes (eisley et al. ) . several other immune-related rna-seq studies are forthcoming (table ) . their objective is to examine viral or bacterial immune responses in pig macrophages, dendritic cells, lymph nodes, globin depleted whole blood, and tissue samples from the gastrointestinal tract. undoubtedly, the knowledge of pig immune responses at the transcriptome level will greatly benefit from these recently published and to-be-published studies. next to exploring the ''traditional'' transcriptome, mir-naome analyses are also progressing in the pig (mcdaneld ; liu et al. ) . micrornas (mirnas) are small non-coding rnas that can regulate gene expression through degrading or interfering with the respective mrna sequence, often at the ' un-translated region ( 'utr) of the gene. during the last few years, high-throughput sequencing has lead to a steep rise in discovering novel porcine mirnas (xie et al. ) . moreover, ngs can facilitate distinguishing between mirnas and other small rna fragments, and thus, ngs is the most promising technique for exploring the mirnaome. criteria to distinguish true mirna from other rna fragments are listed in kozomara and griffiths-jones ( ) . mirna sequences and predicted targets for all important livestock animals can be found in mirbase, a comprehensive mirna information database (griffiths-jones et al. ) . with regard to immunological responses in pigs, recent studies have reported that porcine mirna can intricately engage itself in host-virus interaction networks (he et al. ; loveday et al. ; guo et al. ) . conversely, mir-nas expressed by the viral pathogen can promote a favorable host cell environment for enhanced viral replication by targeting porcine mrnas (skalsky and cullen ) . an example of this involving response to pseudorabies virus was published by anselmo and co-workers. using ngs, they analyzed both viral and host mirna expressions in infected dendritic cells, and identified viral mirnas, known porcine and new porcine mirnas (anselmo et al. ). another group used ngs techniques to analyze mirna expression profiles in pseudorabies virus infected porcine epithelial cell lines . eleven mirnas were detected in the viral genome, and known and novel mirnas assigned to the porcine genome were also found. wu and colleagues mainly focused on the viral mirnas, which were associated with regulation of viral gene transcription but also proposed to control gene expression in the host of genes annotated for immune processes, viral replication, cell death, as well as other processes. podolska and colleagues compared the mirnaome in necrotic and visually unaffected pieces of lungs from piglets infected with a. pleuropneumoniae and found conserved and candidate novel mirnas. twenty-nine were significantly up-or down-regulated between necrotic and unaffected tissue (podolska et al. ). timoneda and colleagues noted differences in mirna expression between aujeszky's disease or suid herpesvirus type (suhv- ) virus-infected and mockinfected animals, as well as differences when looking at a virulent strain of suhv- compared to an attenuated one (timoneda et al. ). mrna-seq and mirna-seq: a powerful combination toward the elucidation of mirna-rna interactions, endale ahanda and colleagues analyzed the 'utr variants of all genes of the sla region by analyzing rna-seq data. in this way, snps in mirna target sequences, potentially impacting gene expression, could be revealed. to investigate the co-expression between mrna and mirna, mrna-seq and mirna-seq data from an earlier study looking at liver, longissimus dorsi, and abdominal fat were used (chen et al. a; endale ahanda et al. ) . negative correlation between expression levels of mirnas and their predicted target genes could be found, which suggested that the prediction algorithms used were reliable (endale ahanda et al. ) . since mirnas can play an important role in hostpathogen interactions (scaria et al. ), gao and colleagues looked by means of mirna-seq at host mirnas that could target prrsv transcripts. deep sequencing was performed on pams inoculated with a mock dose or with prrsv. the resulting data were mapped against all known mirnas listed in the current mirbase. mirna target prediction revealed that one mirna family, the mir- members, seemed to suppress prrsv replication in vivo at the early stage. one mir- c target is the 'utr of cd mrna, which encodes an important prrsv receptor. mir- c is able to downregulate cd expression and thus interferes with viral attachment and penetration . similar results were seen for other mir- members. there is also good evidence that expression profile differences with regard to an s. typhimurium infection may be partially controlled by mirnas. huang and co-workers found that mir- was decreased in persistently shedding (ps) pigs in comparison with low shedding (ls) pigs ) after an s. typhimurium infection. mir- targets transcription factors cebpb and spi , which in turn control the expression of important immunogenes (adamik et al. ; wei et al. ) . bao and co-workers specifically investigated potential mirna-mrna regulatory interactions occurring during challenge with s. typhimurium. mrna-seq and mirna-seq data were collected on whole blood samples of ls and ps animals (bao et al. unpublished) . they found and mirnas up-and down-regulated at dpi when looking at ls and ps pigs together. several of them were thought to be involved in innate and adaptive immune responses. they also discovered mirnas to be higher expressed in ls than in ps pigs at day , which could be interesting candidates for biomarkers for selection toward low shedders. bao and colleagues subsequently used the sequence-based mirna target prediction software miranda to propose mirnas-mrna regulatory relationships associated with the s. typhimurium infection (bao et al. unpublished) . ye and colleagues searched for factors controlling susceptibility for enterotoxigenic e. coli with fimbria (etec-f ) in intestinal tissue in the sutai pig and found differentially expressed mirnas, and after examining regulatory networks with differentially expressed mrnas that are target of one of those mirnas, of them were shown as hubs for an enriched list of differentially expressed immune-related genes (ye et al. ) . several other porcine mirnaome studies are to be published soon focusing on the impact of mirnas after bacterial or viral infections (table ) . in addition to different expression measurement techniques to examine pig immune responses, various experimental designs to study immunity have been used in these studies. first, there are in vitro versus in vivo studies. whereas in vitro studies are performed outside the living organism, and thus can be more controlled, in vivo studies usually better reflect the underlying biology. choices can be made to compare challenged and non-challenged or vaccinated versus non-vaccinated pigs, and whenever possible preferably littermates are chosen for such comparisons. to reduce genetic background variation even more, treated and untreated tissue within animal can be compared, as seen with the small intestinal segment perfusion (sisp) technique (hulst et al. ) . one can also choose to challenge all animals with a specific pathogen, and not using separate uninfected animals as controls, but contrast high and low responders, as was done in the salmonella experiments (uthe et al. ; huang et al. ; knetter et al. ) . less controlled, but perhaps more realistic, are studies performed after an on-farm outbreak, comparing healthy and diseased pigs or low and high responders (serao et al. ) . another key variable concerns the type of samples to be collected. most pig immune studies conducted to identify host response to common porcine pathogens or to immune response stimulators such as lps or pma/ionomycin described in this review provide gene expression data from a single tissue or isolated cell type, and this at a limited number of times post-infection/stimulation. to study specific components of immune response, it is clear that dissection and analysis of primary or secondary immune tissue are required. in human and mouse studies, significant effort has been taken a step further-the analysis of the transcriptome of highly specific cell types. such samples are isolated on the basis of cell surface marker expression. the parameters for cell selection and isolation are often complex, utilizing a multifactorial list of cell surface markers to identify a highly refined cell population (novershtern et al. ; shay and kang ) . reports on, and options for, specific cell subsets are limited in swine (genini et al. a; kapetanovic et al. ) and are mostly due to the relative lack of immune-targeted reagents critical for such detailed cell phenotyping. examining the whole blood transcriptome has several advantages, including ease of collection and repeated sampling of the same individual during response to a stimulus, which is especially useful in controlling for baseline variation in the study of immune responses. blood rna profiling is advantageous in screening for biomarkers as well; it can be used to study variation in immune response and develop gene signatures predictive of inflammatory and/or disease status. an example is given by the prrs host genome consortium (phgc) project, where blood of infected animals per trial is collected at day and different times post-infection ). however, since whole blood comprises a number of cell types, gene expression differences should be handled with great caution. with the aid of complete blood counts, the transcriptional response data can be deconvoluted to help identify the unique regulatory control of specific cellular responses to pathogens (shen-orr et al. ) . at the end of the day, the ultimate goal is to see how the results of all these individual transcriptomic studies fit into an improved understanding of porcine immune response. recently, such a meta-analysis was performed by combining results of several microarray-based pig immune studies to find prrs-specific responses (badaoui et al. ) . this meta-analysis successfully summarized the general pathway(s) believed to be induced by prrsv. several interferon regulatory factors (irfs) were highlighted in this analysis, and interferons clearly play an important role in viral infections. in agreement with the digital gene expression experiment (xiao et al. a) , in several microarray and qpcr experiments, a dampened expression type i ifn response can be seen, which indicates an inadequate stimulation of the innate anti-viral immune response (genini et al. a; xiao et al. a; ait-ali et al. ; garcia-nicolas et al. ). genini and colleagues observed a strong elevation of ifnb at hpi, but only a slightly elevated expression of ifna (genini et al. a ). ait-ali and colleagues noted a similar low ifna expression, but an, albeit late, accumulation of ifnb expression. they stated that prrsv could delay type i interferon transcriptional response in an attempt to counteract the host's early immune response (ait-ali et al. ) . van reeth and colleagues measured the ifna levels in bronchoalveolar fluids during prrsv infection and saw that its presence was low, a thousand-fold lower than with an infection with swine influenza virus or porcine respiratory coronavirus (van reeth et al. ). however, different prrsv isolates were shown to invoke different (and sometimes significantly higher) ifna expression levels, but no detectable ifna protein levels were found by elisa (lee et al. ). zhang and colleagues found that prrsv does not fail to induce ifna or ifnb mrna expression in monocyte-derived dendritic cells, but the protein seems to be blocked post-transcriptionally . although all described data point out to a weakened ifn response, greatly responsible for a persistent viral infection, the data by these last two studies demonstrate the incomplete information achieved from looking solely at transcriptomic data. another overall prrs finding is the induction of proinflammatory chemokines and cytokines. the differential expression of a cell surface receptor involved in cytokine regulation, trem , was found through the meta-analyses by badaoui et al. ( ) and was also present in the list of top ten upregulated transcripts in the rna-seq experiment of miller et al. ( ) . in the meta-analysis study, trem changed, among others, the expression of chemokines such as ccl and ccl , interleukins il , il , and il b, and toll-like receptors tlr and tlr . xiao et al. ( a) showed an upregulation in the inflammatory response toll-like receptor genes tlr , tlr , cytokines (among which il b), and chemokines. the acute-phase protein saa and inflammasome genes retn, s a , s a , and s a were upregulated in the rnaseq experiment by miller and colleagues. for s. typhimurium, as mentioned earlier, transcriptomic studies in blood have examined differences between ls and ps pigs. in the in vivo study by knetter and colleagues, when looking at cytokine presence in serum at dpi, the pro-inflammatory cytokines il b, tnfa, and ifnc levels were higher in ps pigs compared to ls and control pigs, and the anti-inflammatory il was upregulated in both ls and ps pigs, while only cxcl was elevated in the ls animals (knetter et al. ) . also, uthe and colleagues saw a correlation between ifnc levels and shedding status. it seems that the ps animals have a much more extreme inflammatory response, as if the ps animals respond less quickly and thus extend their inflammatory response (uthe et al. ). additionally, looking at gene expression differences at dpi compared to dpi, ps animals showed a more extensive transcriptomic response, both in number of differentially expressed genes, as well as in level of expression compared to the ls animals. the most overrepresented regulation networks in ps animals at dpi involve the stat , ifnb , and ifnc networks, showing a complex pro-inflammatory profile (knetter et al. ) . the genes casp , tnfa, and il were also found upregulated in these networks, and hence, a nice correlation between serum cytokines and gene expression could be noted. other important regulators cebpb, spi , and tlr in the ps upregulated expression pathways as well as the tnfa and ifnc pathways were earlier reported by huang and colleagues in similar challenge studies . not surprisingly, the microbiota that differ between ls and ps on dpi point to microbiota that play a role in gastrointestinal inflammation (bearson et al. ) . there are, however, regional differences in the inflammatory response to s. typhimurium expression pattern in the gut on dpi (collado-romero et al. ) . while cytokine genes such as tnfa, il , il b, and ifnc are upregulated in the jejunum and colon, they are not induced in the ileum. collado-romero and co-workers proposed that the ileum mucosa reacts slowly against the pathogen. martins and colleagues and wang and colleagues both examined transcriptomic differences due to s. typhimurium in mesenteric lymph nodes. martins and colleagues describe an elevation of ifnc, il b, cxcl , cxcl , casp , slc a, defb , tlr , and nod at dpi. nfjb was significantly down-regulated at and dpi (martins et al. a ). wang and colleagues also note an early repression of the nfjb pathway from to hpi in mesenteric lymph nodes . when looking at gene expression at only , , or hpi in jejunal scrapings, elevated gene expression was observed of inflammatory genes such as il , il b, pap, and s a (hulst et al. ) . they also noted an upregulation of nfkbia, an nfjb inhibitor at this early time point. a study using in vitro stimulation with endotoxin of blood of animals prior to infection was also able to find cytokine differences between ls and ps pigs, showing an attenuated response in ls animals, in contrast to a clear pro-inflammatory response in ps pigs (knetter ) . interestingly, while gene expression on day showed a similar magnitude of response in ls and ps pigs, response differences to lps in blood at dpi between ls and ps pigs were dramatic. only probesets were differentially expressed in ls animals after endotoxin stimulation, while probesets in ps animals changed significantly, showing an apparent tolerization mechanism in ls animals. since differences in gene expression patterns between ls and ps animals on day were not significant enough to create predictor sets of genes in this and earlier studies, kommadath and co-workers used the more sensitive weighted gene co-expression network analysis (wgcna) technique after rna-seq profiling of ls and ps animals. wgcna creates modules of co-expressed genes that are significantly correlated with shedding levels. they include interesting genes such as cytokine genes, genes involved in tlr, nfjb, and nod-like receptor pathways and genes linked to bacterial infections (kommadath et al. ) . for over a decade, microarrays have provided an enormous amount of information concerning different immune-related questions in pig transcriptomics. they have become increasingly inexpensive tools to search for gene expression differences between distinct immune phenotypes. recently, rna-seq, and other sequence-based methods such as mirna-seq, bs-seq, chip-seq, and medip-seq, experiments have become more cost-effective. the advantage of gaining information about all expressed and modified genes, different regulation of splice variants, as well as information about sequence-specific and histone code regulation, is a big plus for rna-seq over microarrays. however, in the near future, the biggest challenge lies in comparing all existing data from many different kinds of platforms, so as to integrate such orthogonal data and better understand the physiology behind the disease phenotype and to find regulatory networks or biomarkers for disease resistance. such meta-analyses use a set of statistical techniques to combine results from different studies (badaoui et al. ) , requiring only that the platform elements can be matched. it is not necessary that the exact same questions were addressed; e.g., an experiment looking at high and low responders to an infection can be compared to a study with infected versus control animals. or an acute response study can be matched to a chronic response study. adding to this, the possibility to integrate new (and broader) information obtained from upcoming next generation sequencing studies would really improve our transcriptomic and epigenomic insights into pig immunity. an example of combining microarray studies for deeper insight is given by pérez-montarelo and co-workers. a meta-analysis was performed on independent gene expression studies, using data from of the same affymetrix array. by doing so, the expression of , genes could be checked in tissues and they could identify tissue-specific genes and tissue-specific regulatory networks and transcription factors (perez-montarelo et al. ) . the meta-analysis study by badaoui and colleagues described above illustrates how a meta-analysis experiment could be achieved for a prrs-specific research question even across different platforms. disparate microarray elements that mapped to the same ipa cdna assembly (couture et al. ) were considered to be comparable. , such elements could be compared across all datasets used, of which more than a third was investigating prrs. to facilitate these kinds of meta-analyses, lessons can be learned from the human encode project by conducting experiments in a similar way and processing and archiving data using standard procedures (the encode consortium project b; birney ; landt et al. ) . in this way, data quality is assured, data utility can be extended, and it becomes easier to compare datasets, combine computational analyses, and consequently perform meta-analysis. besides cross-platform meta-analyses, also cross-species meta-analyses are very promising, and r packages are freely available to conduct them (kuhn et al. ; kristiansson et al. ). however, until now, the main goal of these cross-species expression comparisons is often to employ model organisms for human diagnostic or therapeutic research (yu et al. ; grigoryev et al. ). kapetanovic and colleagues show how the clustering software biolayout express d (be d) can be used to visualize inter-species expression comparisons (kapetanovic et al. ). when comparing differential gene expression in mouse, human, and pig macrophages after lps stimulation, they noted that pig macrophages act more human-like than do mouse macrophages. in a first paper, this group used be d to identify and visualize sets of genes responding similarly over time to lps. they found that a subset of these genes had similar patterns of induction with human macrophage response, but not with mouse, where much lower stimulation or even repression was observed (kapetanovic et al. ) . they extended this work in a later paper by using the larger snowball array. taking only the differential genes between mouse and human, and removing those that did not have pig orthologues on the snowball array, be d showed a large upregulated cluster in human compared to mouse macrophages which contained ido as the hub gene. this cluster was highly upregulated in pig macrophages as well. other genes such as those clustering around nos a also behaved in a murine-specific manner, with an upregulated expression in mouse macrophages while no differential expression in human or pig (kapetanovic et al. ) . in addition to cross-platform and cross-species comparisons, it is important to investigate simultaneously different biological levels influencing the pig's immune status. in the past, disease research very often focused only on one part of the host-pathogen interaction (smits and schokker ) . one examined a portion of the host response, and looked at its ability to fight off an infection and examining its degree of disease susceptibility. or one focused solely on the pathogen, describing level of virulence among different pathogen variants. as well, very often, only a small part of the host immune response was measured, such as a specific cell type or tissue, or only one particular timeframe was targeted. narrow time windows or even single stages can be quite limiting, as immune response varies dramatically over time, and thus, time is a particularly crucial variable in an expression study of immune responses. with a systems biology approach, many levels of knowledge are gathered on both host and pathogen in a challenge study (genomic, transcriptomic, epigenomic, and metabolomic) and at different time points (smits and schokker ; tuggle et al. ) . the ultimate goal is to combine that data to fully explain host-pathogen interactions and discover emergent properties of the system that are difficult to reveal with current approaches. to disseminate public data and improve transcriptomic and epigenomic data mining, a livestock expression and epigenetic database (epidb) is under development. epidb includes data from chickens, cattle, pigs, sheep, and horses and provides a useful repository source, as well as tools to process and visualize expression and epigenetic data ). examples of systems biology approaches integrating transcriptomic and epigenomic data can already be found in many mirna-seq experiments, where one mirna can regulate a network of several mrnas (giles et al. ; valdmanis et al. ; szeto et al. ; yang et al. ) . a porcine mrna-seq study often precedes a mirna-seq experiment on the same sample set to test for correlations between mrna and mirna in order to predict influences of specific mirnas on components of the whole transcriptome (bao et al. unpublished; endale ahanda et al. ) . however, the accuracy and depth of understanding stand or fall with the quality of the pig draft genome assembly and its annotation. recently, the immunome response annotation group (irag) was able to improve the characterization of the pig immunome by manual annotation of almost , transcripts mapping to over , genes (dawson et al. ). this was accomplished using the latest swine genome assembly version . . for the genes without porcine rna sequence evidence, rna sequences of other species (often of human) were used to annotate more than , transcripts using the alignment tools in otterlace (searle et al. ; loveland et al. ) . furthermore, gene expression clustering after infection or stimulation for many independent challenge experiments provided evidence for the involvement of over genes not previously annotated for function in immune response processes (dawson et al. ). ongoing improvements of the draft assembly and additional annotation of the immunome will greatly improve the value of pig disease transcriptomic studies as well as further support the pig as model for human immune response. since immune networks are very complex (gardy et al. ), a deeper understanding of such complexity is needed for advancements in unraveling porcine disease response mechanisms and in developing the pig as a viable model for human immunity. it is encouraging that substantial new high-throughput data have been reported in this area, and that analysis of such data is moving toward a systems biology approach by integrating different methods and combining multiple datasets. with the even higher throughput whole genome techniques coming to the forefront and performed at a relatively low cost, these comprehensive experiments will become more commonplace in the near future. the making of 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pleuropneumoniae key: cord- - knzjnyr authors: hu, fang; chen, si‐liang; dai, yu‐jun; wang, yun; qin, zhe‐yuan; li, huan; shu, ling‐ling; li, jin‐yuan; huang, han‐ying; liang, yang title: identification of a metabolic gene panel to predict the prognosis of myelodysplastic syndrome date: - - journal: j cell mol med doi: . /jcmm. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: knzjnyr myelodysplastic syndrome (mds) is clonal disease featured by ineffective haematopoiesis and potential progression into acute myeloid leukaemia (aml). at present, the risk stratification and prognosis of mds need to be further optimized. a prognostic model was constructed by the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (lasso) regression analysis for mds patients based on the identified metabolic gene panel in training cohort, followed by external validation in an independent cohort. the patients with lower risk had better prognosis than patients with higher risk. the constructed model was verified as an independent prognostic factor for mds patients with hazard ratios of . ( . ‐ . ) and . ( . ‐ . ) in the training cohort and validation cohort, respectively. the auc of ‐year overall survival was . and . in the training cohort and validation cohort, respectively. the high‐risk score was significantly related to other clinical prognostic characteristics, including higher bone marrow blast cells and lower absolute neutrophil count. moreover, gene set enrichment analyses (gsea) showed several significantly enriched pathways, with potential indication of the pathogenesis. in this study, we identified a novel stable metabolic panel, which might not only reveal the dysregulated metabolic microenvironment, but can be used to predict the prognosis of mds. pro-inflammatory of bone marrow microenvironment and so on. , at present, the mds revised international prognostic scoring system (ipss-r) is one of the gold standards for risk stratification and prognostic assessment in mds patients, in which, patients are categorized into five well-defined risk groups according to platelet count, haemoglobin levels, absolute neutrophil count (anc), marrow blast percentage and cytogenetics. , although patients in intermediate-risk group are reported to have an intermediary survival, it is possible that the disease course might vary, with variable outcome actually. in the meantime, mds lacks a diversified prognostic classification system at present. therefore, identification of more diversified prognostic models would better guide therapeutic decisions, further assisting to design more perfect clinical trials. furthermore, mds is a stem cell-derived disorder affecting multiple lineages. mds stem cells with cd + have been reported to have higher levels of protein synthesis and change cellular energy metabolism, which are similar with aml. , the anti-leukaemia mechanism of b cell lymphoma (bcl- ) inhibitor (venetoclax) combined with demethylated drugs (azacytidine) is the eradication of lscs by disrupting the tricarboxylic acid (tca) cycle for further and durable remissions for older aml patients. moreover, isocitrate dehydrogenase (idh ) enzyme inhibitor has been approved by us food and drug administration (fda) in for refractory or relapsed aml patients by targeting tumour energy metabolism for. bm microenvironment is vitally involved in the pathogenesis of mds according to the 'seed soil' theory, which consists of cellular compo- non-cellular components (metabolites, cytokines, hormones and angiogenic factors). leukaemia cells use oxidative phosphorylation for survival, while hscs depend on glycolysis for energy production. leukaemia cells are likely to uptake mitochondria from stromal cells by endocytosis. as a consequence, metabolism plays key roles for non-cellular components. accumulative studies have revealed that the relationship between pathogenesis, treatment and metabolism of mds recently. therefore, we established a prognostic panel of metabolic gene by downloading data from gene expression omnibus (geo) datasets in the training cohort, which was further validated in an independent external cohort. in conclusion, we constructed a metabolic panel to predict the prognosis of mds and revealed that metabolism played significant roles in the prognosis of mds. the mrna expression profiles and relevant clinical information were downloaded from gse and gse datasets from the geo database. the metabolic gene sets utilized as the candidate metabolic gene lists were retrieved from 'c .cp.kegg. v . .symbols' in gene set enrichment analysis (gsea). in addition, perl scripts were used to retrieve metabolic genes for further analysis. transcripts per million normalization and log transformation were performed on the expression profiles. de analysis was conducted on annotated metabolic-related genes with protein coding functions by the limma. the expression pattern of metabolic genes was examined in training cohort. genes were subjected to prognostic analysis in the case of consistent expression pattern in training cohort and independent external cohort. gse dataset was used as the training cohort to construct metabolic risk panel. the lasso regression penalizes the data fitting criteria in a way that eliminates less informative predictor variables to yield simpler and more interpretable models. therefore, the metabolic panel was constructed according to the penalized maximum likelihood estimator with -fold cross-validation. the least criteria of the penalized maximum likelihood estimator were employed to determine the optimal values of penalty parameter λ. in addition, gse dataset served as an independent external validation cohort. the unified formula determined in the training cohort was used to generate the metabolic risk score in every patient, who were further categorized into high-and lowrisk groups according to the median metabolic risk score. univariate and multivariate forwarding stepwise cox regression analyses were conducted in both training and validation cohorts. a p < . indicated statistical significance. gsea v . . software (http://softw are.broad insti tute.org/gsea/ login.jsp) was utilized to recognize the potential biological pathways between high-and low-risk groups by using 'c .cp.kegg.v . .symbols' gene sets. nom p-value < . indicated statistical significance and was further exhibited. time-dependent receiver operating characteristic (roc) curve was performed to assess the predictive performance of metabolic signature in the raining and validating cohorts, followed by calculation of area under the curve (auc) using survival roc package. overall survival (os) was defined as the primary outcome, which was calculated as the date of the study entry until death due to all causes. kaplan-meier curve was plotted by 'survival' package, followed by comparison by log-rank test. univariable and multivariable cox analyses were used to evaluate the prognostic performance of clinical and genetic features. categorical variables were compared by chi-square test or fisher's exact test. spss ® version . (ibm) and r software (version . . ) were used for statistical analysis. a two sided p < . indicated statistical significance. the detailed patient characteristics of the two included cohorts and the correlation between clinicopathological features and metabolic risk level in training cohort and external validation cohort in mds ckmt fhit pik ca dgkd entpd ada cbr dgkh hmgcs pde d pfkfb mtmr pde b chdh cyp a ipmk rrm b agps pfkfb mgst polr d glud ces dgkz nme nt c chst galt ass cel acp synj dgat oxct polr f aldh a adk tyms lpcat polr a mcee afmid eprs aldh a sord mpst gcdh srm tpi dnmt b ppat gmps mtr gstm nt m dgat cant cs gys inpp e polr a agpat hk ppox tsta gmpr pip k a mboat pip k b ptgds acads gclc gclm aco gsr tpmt among the metabolic genes subjected to de analysis by the limma, genes were differently expressed between healthy sample and mds sample ( figure a,b) . further, the prognostic values of these genes were analysed via univariate cox regression analysis. ultimately, genes that were differentially expressed as well as survival-related (p < . ) were identified. ( figure c) . afterwards, the lasso-penalized cox analysis regression was used to select the most useful predictive genes from the genes. a penalized maximum likelihood estimator was performed with bootstrap replicates. the regularization parameter lambda was used to identify the optimal weighting coefficients via the least criteria (figure a,b) . afterwards, metabolic genes were selected and the coefficient was estimated to construct the the in total, patients with complete clinical data including age, gender, who category, karyotype, ipss, transfusion dependent, haemoglobin, bone marrow blasts cells, platelet count and absolute neutrophil count were included in the training and validation cohort. high-risk patients were associated with male, higher numbers of bone marrow blast cells, higher ipss score and lower absolute neutrophil count (table ) figure a ,b. gsea identified significantly enriched kegg pathways in the training or validation cohort. the majority of the metabolism-associated pathways were enriched in the low-risk group, and the metabolic pathways ranked by nes were cysteine and methionine metabolism, glycine serine and threonine metabolism, fatty acid metabolism and pyrimidine metabolism. on the contrary, the majority of the non-metabolism-associated pathways were enriched in the high-risk group. additionally, most enriched pathways were correlated with cancer (such as the cell cycle and phosphatidylinositol signalling system) or metabolism (such as the glycine serine and threonine metabolism, cysteine and methionine metabolism) ( figure a ,b). the mutation variants of the metabolic gene panel were explored in ccle database by the cbioportal for cancer genomics. , as was expected, the gene amplification, which can change fifteen metabolic genes were identified to construct the metabolic model, most of which have been reported to be involved in malignancy. pfkfb , a vital regulator of glucose metabolism, has been defined as a candidate gene for gc-triggered apoptosis according to comparative expression profiling in childhood acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (all). interestingly, pfkfb was suppressed by mir- in gastric cancer, which could further inhibit cell proliferation and invasion. the expression pattern is reported for the first time as a potential marker in mds plcb , involved in inositol phosphate metabolism, has been narrowly linked to the poor prognosis in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma, lung cancer and mammary carcinoma. in our study, plcb was negatively correlated with study should also be acknowledged. firstly, we are unavailable to more clinical information due to the data driving from geo database. secondly, the significance of the metabolic panel should be further confirmed in real-world research, and further basic experiments are simultaneously necessary to explore the underlying pathogenesis. in summary, we constructed a novel prognostic prediction model based on metabolic genes from geo database for mds, and further validated in the validation cohort. the prognostic model was not only an independent prognostic predictor for mds but also reflected the disordered metabolism of mds. moreover, this panel could be utilized as an effective approach for prognostic prediction in mds patients in clinical practice. the authors sincerely thank geo for sharing the huge amount of data. the authors declare no conflict of interest. conceptualization, fh and yl; methodology, csl, and fh; validation, csl; formal analysis,; investigation, fh, csl, and dyj; resources, yl; data curation, cyy; writing-original draft preparation, yw, and fh; writing-review and editing, yw, fh and jyl; visualization, slc, and lls and djd; supervision, yl; project administration, yl; funding acquisition, yl. the gse and gse datasets were collected via the gene expression omnibus (geo) database, which were utilized for retrieving clinicopathological data and rna expression patterns. all data or code generated or used during this study are available from the corresponding author by reasonable request. si-liang chen https://orcid.org/ - - - the genetic basis of phenotypic heterogeneity in myelodysplastic syndromes myelodysplastic syndromes clinical implications of genetic mutations in myelodysplastic syndrome immunologic aspects of hypoplastic myelodysplastic syndrome revised international prognostic scoring system for myelodysplastic syndromes myelodysplastic syndromes, version . , nccn clinical practice guidelines in oncology use of newer prognostic indices for patients with myelodysplastic syndromes in the low and intermediate- risk categories: a population-based study transplantation of a myelodysplastic syndrome by a long-term repopulating hematopoietic cell characterization and targeting of malignant stem cells in patients with advanced myelodysplastic syndromes inhibition of amino acid metabolism selectively targets human leukemia stem cells venetoclax with azacitidine disrupts energy 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phase ii study of arginine deiminase (adi-peg ) in relapsed/refractory or poor-risk acute myeloid leukemia patients arginine deprivation using pegylated arginine deiminase has activity against primary acute myeloid leukemia cells in vivo microarray analysis reveals a major direct role of dna copy number alteration in the transcriptional program of human breast tumors impact of dna amplification on gene expression patterns in breast cancer identification of a metabolic gene panel to predict the prognosis of myelodysplastic syndrome key: cord- - ku cmwj authors: hajjo, rima; tropsha, alexander title: a systems biology workflow for drug and vaccine repurposing: identifying small-molecule bcg mimics to reduce or prevent covid- mortality date: - - journal: pharm res doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ku cmwj purpose: coronavirus disease (covid- ) is expected to continue to cause worldwide fatalities until the world population develops ‘herd immunity’, or until a vaccine is developed and used as a prevention. meanwhile, there is an urgent need to identify alternative means of antiviral defense. bacillus calmette–guérin (bcg) vaccine that has been recognized for its off-target beneficial effects on the immune system can be exploited to boast immunity and protect from emerging novel viruses. methods: we developed and employed a systems biology workflow capable of identifying small-molecule antiviral drugs and vaccines that can boast immunity and affect a wide variety of viral disease pathways to protect from the fatal consequences of emerging viruses. results: our analysis demonstrates that bcg vaccine affects the production and maturation of naïve t cells resulting in enhanced, long-lasting trained innate immune responses that can provide protection against novel viruses. we have identified small-molecule bcg mimics, including antiviral drugs such as raltegravir and lopinavir as high confidence hits. strikingly, our top hits emetine and lopinavir were independently validated by recent experimental findings that these compounds inhibit the growth of sars-cov- in vitro. conclusions: our results provide systems biology support for using bcg and small-molecule bcg mimics as putative vaccine and drug candidates against emergent viruses including sars-cov- . electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article ( . /s - - - ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. few months after the declaration of covid- pandemic by the world health organization (who), the disease-causing virus is still sweeping the globe, causing more fatalities, failing health care systems, and resulting in severe economic losses. currently there are no approved drugs to treat covid- , and new vaccine development is expected to take at least - months ( , ), with growing fears of possible failure associated with changes in viral antigenic determinants ( ) or shortlived immunity ( ) . additionally, the highly specific virusneutralizing antibodies in recovered patients may be short lived and ineffective in preventing the disease caused by the emerging variable strains of the virus ( ) . with these uncertainties regarding an eminent specific sars-cov- vaccine, there is a need to search for current alternatives, such as agents that can stimulate or emulate the unique capabilities of our innate immune system. recent immuno-oncology success stories indicate that the best cancer-fighting strategies results from unleashing the patients' immune power ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . there is an increased awareness that harnessing innate immune responses, opens up new possibilities for long-term, multifaceted tumor control ( , ) and infectious disease prevention ( ) ( ) ( ) . therefore, next generation antiviral vaccines should be capable of boosting innate immune responses to tackle a wide range of novel pathogens very early after exposure, as single treatments or adjuvants to traditional vaccines targeting the adaptive immune system. accumulating evidence from the biomedical literature indicates that sars-cov-mediated pathology, a very similar pathology to sars-cov- , was mainly caused by ineffective innate immune responses, associated with a severe reduction in the number of t cells in the blood ( ) . recent evidence indicated that sars-cov- and mycobacterium tuberculosis (mtb) share unique similarities in terms of the host protein interaction partners, and both pathogens infect lung tissues ( ) . on the other hand, old 'polypharmacological' vaccines, such as the bcg vaccine for tuberculosis (tb), has shown promising therapeutic effects for a wide range of infectious and non-infectious diseases including bladder cancer ( ) ( ) ( ) . studies showed that bcg's polypharmacological effects were not limited to memory t cell immunity, but promoted strong, beneficial, and long-lasting effects on innate immunity. the who also recognized these beneficial 'offtarget' effects of bcg, calling for a further investigation to repurpose this vaccine for other orphan life-threatening diseases ( ) . indeed, there are multiple clinical trials testing bcg for conditions other than tb including studies for covid- as reported on clinicaltrials.gov ( ) . additionally, few recent peer-reviewed reports have pointed to an epidemiological relationship between bcg and covid- without providing substantial evidence ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . one should expect that the results of the randomized clinical trials (rcts) will help establish the value of the bcg vaccine as a treatment or prophylactic against the disease. herein, we describe a unique drug and vaccine repurposing workflow, and list high confidence proteins and pharmacological classes of compounds, that work as bcg mimics at the system level by inducing beneficial long lasting trained immune response. we also propose that bcg mimics can be used as alternatives to bcg in protecting from covid- and other emergent infectious diseases. we have developed and applied a systems biology workflow to study the bcg network pharmacology and prioritize smallmolecule bcg mimics and antivirals. this workflow is based on our original chemocentric informatics workflow described thoroughly in a previous report ( ) . our current workflow ( fig. ) incorporates three major components: ( ) a module for mining and prioritizing gene signatures representative of a condition or a biological state; ( ) a network-mining module to identify genetic perturbations that induce gene expression profiles that are highly enriched with the genes constituting the condition gene signature; and ( ) a pathway enrichment module to understand the biological processes involved in the mechanism of action of bcg and highly correlated genetic perturbagens. a consensus gene signature for bcg vaccine was derived from gene expression profiles in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) in response to a bcg challenge test reported by matsumiya et al ( ) , gse dataset on ncbi gene expression omnibus (geo) ( ) . we used the data collected from whole blood samples taken from healthy human subjects enrolled in phase trial (clinical trials registration: nct ). for the purposes of this study we used the gene expression profiles generated from two human subject groups included in the above trial: group (bcg naive), and group (bcg vaccinated; median time since vaccination, years). to study network pharmacology and query the connectivity map, we developed a consensus gene signature using genes that showed significant differential gene expression in response to a bcg challenge test (stimulated) in comparison with controls (unstimulated) on days and in both groups and . a systematic search, for nearest neighbor (nn) genes/proteins of the upregulated and downregulated genes in bcg's gene signature, was conducted in cytoscape ( ) version . . using the string ( ) protein query application. all retrieved protein-protein interactions (ppis), including both physical and functional interactions were retrieved from widely used and reliable databases such as mint ( ) , hprd ( ), bind ( ) , dip ( ), biogrid ( ) , kegg ( ), reactome ( ), ecocyc ( ) , nci-nature pathway interaction database ( ) , and gene ontology (go) ( ) protein complexes. network building tools in cytoscape version . . were used to generate ppi networks for bcg-cgs. enrichment analysis was conducted in cytoscape ( ) and metacore to identify pathways and biological processes associated with bcg-cgs and cmap genetic connections. the significance of the enrichment was determined by the hypergeometric test ( ) . all terms from the ontology were ranked based on their calculated p values. ontology terms with p values less than the p value threshold . are defined as statistically significant and therefore relevant to the studied list of genes. all terms from the ontology were ranked according to their calculated p values. the cmap ( , ) is a chemogenomics database that catalogs . million profiles of transcriptional responses of human cells to chemical and genetic perturbations. currently, there are , perturbagens ( , small molecules, and genetic perturbagens) producing , expression signatures in human cell lines: pc , vcap, a , a , ha e, hcc , ht , mcf , hepg . this database of cellular signatures has been produced using the l platform ( ) ; a high-throughput gene expression assay that measures the mrna transcript abundance of "landmark" genes from human cells. causal reasoning ( ) analysis identifies genes and proteins of a 'topological significance' in order to make decisions whether these genes/proteins are eligible for targeting in the studied phenotype. in this study, we applied causal reasoning to identify molecular regulators that most likely directly cause the observed expression changes in transcriptional profiles in response to bcg. in this approach, changes in gene expression in both directions as well as the effect of edges in the network are taken into account. for each node (i.e., gene) in the causal reasoning network, observed changes in expression are matched with the expected changes inferred from the network structure given the hypothesis that the observed gene expression is decreased or increased due to its activity. each node has an outgoing activation or inhibition effects on other objects in the knowledge database, and a key hub with a predicted increase in activity shows increased expression for those genes that the hub is known to activate, and it shows decreased expression for genes it is known to inhibit. each predicted key hub has a prediction p value which is produced as a result of a binomial test used to assess the probability of making a given number of supportive data out of all defined differentially expressed genes (degs) in the examined data. it is noteworthy that causal reasoning examines both direct neighbors of differentially expressed genes, and remote (several steps away) regulators. all causal reasoning predictions were performed in key pathway advisor from clarivate analytics, using the pollard method ( ). gplots ( ) v . . . was used for plotting enhanced heatmaps for transcriptional data (e.g., heatmap representing bcg-cgs in fig. ). heat maps were generated using the heatmap. function included in this package. to study the bcg polypharmacology and potential beneficial effects of this vaccine in preventing the fatal consequences of covid- , we have devised and implemented a 'network biology' workflow ( fig. ) to interrogate the hypothesis that bcg vaccination may protect from covid- fatalities. this workflow is based on our drug repurposing chemocentric informatics workflow which has been validated previously for small-molecule drug repurposing ( ) . the current workflow is tweaked towards vaccine repurposing by employing novel bioinformatic approaches to computationally model and connect molecular networks in an effort to understand the underlying 'network' biology of vaccines, and pinpoint the regulatory genes and proteins responsible for causing the observed beneficial multitherapeutic effects. although we are not the first group to use network biology approaches to study the transcriptional changes of vaccines, to our knowledge, this is the first study that uses these approaches both to support vaccine repurposing, specifically for covid- , as well as identify putative small molecule drugs that can mimic the vaccine effects. our workflow starts with the prioritization of a gene signature to study the bcg network pharmacology. first, we derived a consensus gene signature (cgs) for bcg based on geo's dataset gse ( ) . details on bcg-cgs signature are found in table s (supporting information). twenty-two differentially-expressed genes across all experiments ( groups × time points discussed in methods) formed bcg's consensus gene signature (bcg-cgs) shown in fig. a . all genes in bcg-cgs were used as seed nodes to build a protein-protein interaction network for signature genes (fig. b ). interactions were extracted from string database, and high confidence interactions included physical interactions (e.g., binding), functional interactions (e.g., activation, inhibition, catalysis), or gene co-expression. two types of networks were generated: ) high-confidence 'core' network restricted to bcg signature genes as network nodes and high confidence (≥ . ) interactions as network edges, and ) mediumconfidence interaction network obtained from expanding the core network by additional nodes (fig. ). enrichment analysis results performed in cytoscape, using string's protein-protein interactions, indicated that bcg-cgs is enriched in inflammatory cytokines and immune response modulators (fig. b) . some signature genes are also involved in the negative control of important viral processes (e.g., (fcn , tnf and ccl ), and others are involved in the response to viral infections (e.g., ifng, rnase , il and tnf). the complete lists of enriched pathways are included in tables s and s (supporting information). we identified key hubs using the causal reasoning method, which seeks to identify molecular regulators that can directly cause the observed transcriptional changes in response to bcg vaccination. key regulators can be transcriptional factors and proteins with potentially altered activity that explains the transcriptional changes. top five statistically significant inhibited key hubs included hey , dsipi (gilz), jagged , hand and mir- - - p, whereas top five statistically significant activated key hubs were phf , tafii , glutaredoxin, runx and notch (nicd). top causal key hubs are shown in table i and all identified key hubs are included in table s (supporting information) . in order to identify experimentally validated upstream regulators that cause transcriptional changes similar to those induced by bcg, we queried the connectivity map (cmap) ( ) database of the broad institute with bcg-cgs and identified proteins and small-molecule drugs that have strong connectivity scores with bcg (fig. ) . the cmap approach enabled us to compare bcg-cgs with 'experimentally' predefined signatures of therapeutic compounds and genetic perturbations (i.e., over expression or knockdown) included in the cmap and ranked according to a connectivity scores (ranging from + to − ), representing relative similarity to bcg-cgs. the connectivity score itself is derived using a nonparametric, rankbased, pattern-matching strategy based on t he kolmogorov-smirnov statistics ( ) . all instances in the database are then ranked according to their connectivity scores with bcg-cgs; those at the top (+) are most strongly correlated to the query signature and looked at as bcg mimics, and those at the bottom (−) are most strongly anticorrelated and can reverse bcg's gene signature. our analysis identified three highly enriched classes of genetic knockdown (kd) perturbagens and one pharmacological class of drugs that have positive connectivity scores in alveolar a cells (i.e., caused similar transcriptional changes to those induced by bcg in alveolar a cells). these hits can be considered as bcg mimics capable of inducing transcriptional changes similar to those caused by the bcg vaccine. therefore, we suggest that bcg mimics can be used as alternatives to bcg vaccination to promote long-lasting b a beneficial effects on immune cells. the three enriched protein classes are: protein phosphatases (with best positive connection for ppp c kd), histone deacetylases (with best positive connection for hdac kd followed by hdac kd), and mediator complex proteins (with best positive connection for med kd followed by med kd). additionally, protein kinase c (pkc) activators were enriched as a drug class; and top three pkc activators with highest cmap connectivity scores to bcg-cgs were prostratin, phorbol- -myristate- -acetate, and ingenol. it is evident that all of the above four classes of proteins share one common feature: they participate in the transcriptional and metabolic regulation of immune cells in response to environmental cues including responses to pathogens ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . all top-scoring pkc activators from the cmap, are also known to have antiviral effects or affect t cell activation ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . remarkably, analyzing top ten cmap positive connections with bcg-cgs obtained from nine cell lines indicated that two compounds are approved antiviral drugs: raltegravir (top rd positive connection, an hiv integrase inhibitor) and lopinavir (top th positive connection, an hiv protease inhibitor). more interestingly, emetine (top th positive connection) and lopinavir were recently validated to inhibit sars-cov- replication in vitro ( ) . we also found evidence in the biomedical literature indicating that mst- ( ), narciclasine ( ) and verrucarin-a ( ) possess antiviral activities. all cmap hits are provided in tables s and s (sup porting information). initial reports from clinical studies evaluating the use of lopinavir in covid- patients showed that the unbound lopinavir concentrations in the lungs were calculated to be subtherapeutic against sars-cov- ( , ) . another study found that the unbound drug concentrations of lopinavir are far from reaching the ec of sars-cov- ( . μg/ml), although they clearly suffice to inhibit hiv- ( ) . the authors mentioned fig. high-confidence expanded network for bcg-cgs. nodes are color-coded using a split pie chart coloring scheme indicating pathway/gene set contribution to each node from the top most enriched pathways/gene lists. core network is composed of genes in the bcg-cgs that are not singletons. step expansion, added additional nodes (i.e., genes) to the core network. step expansion, added another nodes for the first expansion. step expansion, added another nodes to the second expansion. expansions were performed to see which pathways remained most statistically significant, and therefore are considered high confidence pathways. that approximately -to -fold higher concentrations than those found in covid- patients treated with lopinavir-ritonavir, are required to reach the assumed ec at trough levels, making effective treatment of covid- with lopinavir and ritonavir at the currently used doses unlikely ( ) . in order to prioritize high confidence bcg genetic mimics, we integrated hypotheses derived independently from the cmap with those predicted by causal reasoning, and accepted common hits only (i.e., cmap positive connections with bcg-cgs that are also predicted as beneficial drug targets by causal reasoning). this analysis resulted in high confidence common hits reported in table s (supporting information) . we tested whether bcg-cgs, cmap positive connections, or predicted key hubs will have any impact on covid- by identifying overlaps with sars-cov- interactome, i.e., human proteins that were experimentally validated to interact with sars-cov- and extracted from two recent reports ( , ) . this analysis (fig. a ) validated protein hits to have physical links to sars-cov- . the three proteins are transcribed by brd , prkaca and sirt ; they all were positive connections from the cmap, predicted as statistically † predicted activity of the key hub by causal reasoning is denoted byif the hub is inhibited, and denoted by + if the hub is activated ‡ correct/total network predictions: correct for the genes in the dataset predicted correctly; total for the total number of genes in the causal reasoning network § calculation distance: using causal reasoning one-step key hubs are defined as statistically significant transcriptional factors that are associated with experimental differential expressed genes regulation. two-step and three-step key hubs are distant key hubs that regulate one-step transcriptional factors *p-value calcualted for the polynomial test ( ) : significant key hubs, and were also validated as sars-cov- interacting proteins ( ) . additionally, high-confidence cmap positive connections, were validated to make physical interactions with sars-cov- proteins. these proteins are: psen , pabpc , hmox , cit, plat, igf r, ripk , ndufs , ndufa , ggh, neu , scarb , csnk b, f rl . and two positive connections, mark and mark , were reported to have interactions with corona viruses ( ) . predicted causal key hubs, sigmar and gnb , were also validated to have physical links to sars-cov- ( ) , and a third key hub ppia was known as a human protein interacting with proteins from corona viruses ( ) . additionally, we mined the biomedical literature to identify evidence for linking bcg small molecule mimics with sars-cov- , corona viruses or viral infections in general. we found that two out of ten top positive compound connections (emetine and lopinavir), were recently validated to inhibit sars-cov- replication in vitro ( ) . other compounds we found to inhibit the growth of corona viruses, or had general antiviral activities (table ii) . previous peer-reviewed reports indicated that bcg's nonspecific effects on the immune system, can reduce all-cause child mortality ( ) , protect individuals from numerous viral infections ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) , and it can even enhance the efficiency of some viral vaccines ( ) ( ) ( ) . recently, several peer-reviewed studies have pointed to a striking correlation between universal bcg vaccination policies and reduced covid- mortality ( ) . however, most epidemiological studies identified this correlation without acknowledging other important study confounders like social, economic, and demographic differences between countries. lately, escobar et al. mitigated multiple confounding factors for the first time and still observed several significant associations between bcg vaccination and reduced covid- deaths ( ) . the authors of this study highlighted the need for mechanistic studies behind the effect of bcg vaccination on covid- , and for clinical evaluation of the effectiveness of bcg vaccination to protect from severe covid- . earlier studies suggested that the documented beneficial off-target effects of bcg in protecting from non-tb infections, including perhaps covid- , involve a potentiation of innate immune responses through epigenetic mechanisms ( ) ( ) ( ) . to our knowledge, we report here on the first study providing a mechanistic insight to explain the relationships between bcg and covid- at the molecular and systems biology levels as well as extend this insight toward proposing several bcg mimetics among known drugs as candidates for repurposing against the disease. our results indicate that bcg-cgs, key regulatory hubs and bcg-mimics identified from the cmap enrich common biological pathways important for key viral processes such as rna synthesis and processing, virus-host interactions, positive regulation of viral genome replication, and they are also important for the immune response mounted against the virus. supporting evidence from the biomedical literature confirms that bcg has many beneficial 'off-target' effects that can protect humans from emerging novel pathogens by boasting their innate immune responses ( ) . our studies suggest that bcg promotes a wide-range of transcriptional and metabolic changes, including beneficial gene commensalism, that have been shown to reduce mortality and morbidity from non-tb infectious diseases ( , ) . we show that bcg can produce these protective 'off target' effects mainly by increasing the production of thymus-generated short-lived undifferentiated cd + cells known as naive t cells (th ), and triggering their differentiation into the long-lived mature naive t cells (mnts), such as cd + and cd + t cells ( ) . interestingly, a very recent study published in science ( ) showed that many unexposed patients ( - %) carry selective and cross-reactive sars-cov- t cell epitopes protecting patients against severe infection. another recent study in cell ( ) reported similar observation of strong sars-cov- selective memory t cell immunity (reminiscent of the functional patterns observed after successful vaccine immunizations) in patients with asymptomatic or mild infections. although these studies make no connection to any previous bcg vaccination as a source of selective epitopes, we observe that these observations are consistent with our mechanistic hypothesis concerning the protective effect of bcg against covid- . these conclusions are supported by the enrichment results produced using the 'compare experiment' algorithm in metacore from clarivate analytics, which looks for significant coordinated gene expression effects across all experiments to test whether the pathway is being up-or down-regulated in a manner that is unlikely to be accounted for by random chance. the top enriched pathway map, with upregulated genes in response to bcg, is 'immune response t cell subsets: secreted signals' (fig. b) . a recent study showing that sars-cov- reshapes central cellular pathways, such as translation, splicing, carbon metabolism and nucleic acid metabolism ( ), provides further support for this observation. naturally, bioinformatics techniques relying on gene expression, pathway over-representation and network biology have some limitations and biases: ) results are impacted by the user-selected cut-off thresholds used to determine significant genes, which could make the results userdependent ( ) ; ) all components in the pathway are given equal weights without paying attention to the nature of the interactions between the different components ( ) ; ) there are underlying assumptions that pathways are independent of each other, contrary to the fact that pathways cross-talk and overlap ( ); ) assuming independence between genes may result in false positive predictions of highly enriched genes or gene sets ( ); ) these methods are incapable of modeling an organism's biology as a dynamic system, and cannot predict changes in the system due genetic mutations or environmental changes ( ); ) most pathway knowledge databases are built by curating experiments performed in different cell types at different time points under different conditions, so they are missing condition-and cell-specific information ( ) . in order to mitigate some of the aforementioned limitations, we used a consensus gene signature since it is more stable than other gene expression signatures, we paired overrepresentation pathway analysis with causal reasoning to b a fig. (a) a venn diagram showing overlaps between bcg genetic mimics and key hubs with sars-cov- and corona viruses interactomes. (b) top "pathway map" with the highest level of enrichment by genes in bcg-cgs. this map is generated using metacore from clarivate analytics. red thermometers indicate genes overexpressed in response to bcg treatment, and the hight of the red bars is representative of the differential gene expression level (i.e., log values of the fold change). the numbers under the thermometers - refer to the experiment number: ) gene expression on day in response to bcg vaccination to a bcg-naïve population on day ; ) gene expression on day in response to bcg re-vaccination to a previously vaccinated population; ) gene expression on day in response to bcg vaccination to a bcg-naïve population; ) gene expression on day in response to bcg revaccination to a previously vaccinated population, and ) positive connections from the connectivity map, and the red bar in the thermometer number represents presence of the gene only. predict protein activities based on the nature of interactions between upregulated or downregulated genes, and we also integrated results from several bioinformatics methods such as causal reasoning and cmap predictions to prioritize common hypotheses. a recent publication ( ) in lancet has questioned whether bcg's effects can last for a long time. our top enriched pathway map (fig. b) indicates that bcg's effects can be longlasting if the effects were exerted on thymus-generated th cells, which can occur to a greater extent very early in life before reaching thymic involution by puberty ( ) . this pathway map indicates that bcg is capable of affecting both the numbers and the types of produced innate immune cells, as well as their maturation to long-lived memory t cells (i.e., what is known as trained immunity). this is very significant in the context of bcg's protective effects from sars-cov- and other emergent novel viruses where the individual's ability to eradicate such viruses is dictated by the number and diversity of naive t cell reservoir ( , ) . our analysis suggest that bcg may protect individuals from novel pathogens by priming their trained immunity to fight such pathogens, including sars-cov- . supporting evidence for this hypothesis is found in the literature ( ) indicating that the protective effects of the bcg against tb, can last from to years after vaccination ( , ) , with longer lasting effects when the vaccine is administered during the first year of life ( , ) . a recent study indicated that "school-aged bcg vaccination offered moderate protection against tuberculosis for at least years, which is much longer than previously thought" ( , ) . another year follow-up study, showed that bcg vaccine efficacy persisted for to years after a single dose of bcg ( ) . of special interest is a recent study that showed that mucosal vaccination resulted in an increased frequency of antigenspecific lung tissue-resident cd + t cells that provide longterm immunity ( ) . these studies serve as additional evidence from the literature supporting our claim that a single dose of an 'effective' bcg vaccination to infants can have a very long duration of protection against pathogens including sars-cov- . our findings provided systems biology support for using bcg to protect from the severe consequences of covid- . bcg is currently on who's list of essential medicines; it is considered one of the safest and most effective medicines unknown †score refer to the cmap score. it represents the level of similarity between transcriptional effects induced by bcg and each of the compounds ‡ validation refers to the presence of any supporting evidence from the biomedical literature that the predicted bcg mimics have any antiviral activities. antiviral means there is evidence that the compound is used as or has antiviral activity; sars-cov- means that the compound should antiviral activity against sars-cov- ; corona viruses means that the compound showed antiviral activity against corona viruses other than sars-cov- § covid- ct: there is evidence that the compound is being tested in clinical trials for covid- . there are studies found for ruxolitinib in covid- on clinicaltrials.gov. needed in a health system. there is also evidence indicating that bcg can improve the response to vaccines directed against viral infections ( , ( ) ( ) ( ) , which may prove useful when sars-cov- -specific vaccines become available. therefore, we suggest that administering the bcg vaccine to all newborns may protect them from the infection by sars-cov- and other emerging pathogens. since this is an approved vaccine for tb, it can directly enter phase iii testing for the protection from covid- caused fatalities. however, we caution that running these experiments during an active covid- outbreak, might expose participants to aggravated immune responses if they contract covid- during the study. we also advise that clinical study design takes into account several factors that are known to affect the performance of bcg vaccine, such as: the age of the participants, geographies, ethnicities, route of administration and the mycobacterium strain used in the vaccine. it is equally important to run experimental validation studies, to evaluate the effects of bcg mimics, in preventing covid- or for treating urological cancers. our results provide systems biology support for using bcg and small-molecule bcg mimics as putative vaccine and drug candidates against emergent viruses including sars-cov- . of course, any practical actions to repurpose this vaccine as a means of protection against sars-cov- , or other novel viruses, should be preceded by the successful in vitro and animal experimentation. we also caution that previous studies showed that the protective effects of bcg were found to be weaker when the vaccine was given after the first year of life and particularly after puberty ( ). research at al-zaytoonah university of jordan grant - / / . at acknowledges partial support from nih grant ot tr . we thank clarivate 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two molecular mechanisms: inhibiting viral replication and decreasing viral entry the natural compound homoharringtonine presents broad antiviral activity in vitro and in vivo publisher's note springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations key: cord- -msk p yy authors: lee, c.-w.; jackwood, m. w. title: evidence of genetic diversity generated by recombination among avian coronavirus ibv date: journal: arch virol doi: . /s sha: doc_id: cord_uid: msk p yy previously, we demonstrated that the de strain of ibv is a recombinant which has an ibv strain d -like sequence in the s gene. herein, we analyzed the remaining . kb ′ end of the genome, which includes gene , gene , gene , gene , and the ′ non-coding region of the de and d strains. those two viruses had high nucleotide similarity in gene . however, the other individual genes had a much different level of sequence similarity with the same gene of the other ibv strains. the genome of five ibv strains, of which the complete sequence of the ′ end of the genome has been determined, were divided at an intergenic (ig) consensus sequence (ctgaacaa or cttaacaa) and compared phylogenetically. phylogenetic trees of different topology indicated that the consensus ig sequences and the highly conserved sequence around this regions may serve as recombination ‘hot spots’. phylogenetic analysis of selected regions of the genome of the de serotype field isolates further support those results and indicate that isolates within the same serotype may have different amounts of nucleotide sequence similarity with each other in individual genes other than the s gene. presumably this occurs because the consensus ig sequence serves as the template switching site for the viral encoded polymerase. infectious bronchitis virus causes a highly contagious upper-respiratory disease in chickens. the disease is characterized by increased ocular and nasal secretions, excess mucus in the trachea, decreased weight gain and feed efficiency in broilers, and declines in egg production and egg quality in layers. although live attenuated vaccines are available, ibv continues to be a severe economic problem in commercial chickens because many different serotypes of the virus exist and do not cross protect [ ] . [ ] . members of the nidovirales order have a single stranded positive sense rna genome and produce a nested set of subgenomic mrnas when they replicate [ ] . coronaviruses are divided into three antigenic groups based primarily on their structural proteins. infectious bronchitis virus is the type strain of coronaviruses and is the only virus placed in antigenic group three. characteristics of this group are a cleaved spike (s) glycoprotein, an n-glycosylated membrane (m) protein, and no hemagglutinin/esterase protein [ ] . the genome of ibv is approximately kilobases in length [ ] . it is organized into six regions, each containing one or more open reading frames (orf's), which are separated by intergenic sequences (ig) that contain the signal for transcription of subgenomic mrnas [ , ] . the viral rna-dependent rna polymerase is encoded in the two thirds of the viral genome by two overlapping open reading frames (orf a and orf b) [ ] . the structural protein genes are located to the viral polymerase gene and are in order from to , the s glycoprotein gene (gene ), the small envelope (e) gene (gene ), the m glycoprotein gene (gene ), and the nucleocapsid (n) gene (gene ) [ , ] . evolution in ibv has been observed through the occurrence of variant viruses and analysis of known serotypes. more than twenty serotypes within ibv have been recognized worldwide and are thought to be generated by insertions, deletions, point mutations and rna recombination [ , , , ] . evidence of natural recombination for several ibv strains has been reported [ , , ] . however, because of the limited sequence information, recombination has only been described for a small part of the genome. so far, the complete sequence of the end of the genome (from the end of the polymerase gene to the poly a tail) of only three strains, beaudette, kb and cu-t have been determined [ , , ] . the de strain was first isolated in in the delmarva peninsula region of the usa and initial characterization of this virus indicated this virus was serologically distinct from any other ibv serotypes in north america [ ] . previously, we demonstrated that the de strain is a recombinant which has a d -like sequence in the s and s genes [ ] . d is an ibv vaccine strain of the d serotype from the netherlands [ , , ] . herein, we describe the sequences of the remaining genes of the de and d strains with the exception of gene (the polymerase gene). we conducted phylogenetic analysis by dividing the genome in the ig sequence to elucidate possible role of this sequence in the homologous recombination in ibv. further, we conducted sequence analysis of six isolates of the de serotype in order to determine if recombination is frequently occurring in this region in field isolates of ibv. viruses used in this study are listed in table . the viruses were propagated in -day-old embryonated specific-pathogen-free (spf) chicken eggs (select laboratories, gainesville, ga, usa). the d strain of ibv was obtained as phenol-inactivated allantoic fluid using usda import permit # . viral rna from ibv grown in embryonating eggs was extracted using the high pure pcr template preparation kit (boehringer mannheim, indianapolis, in, usa) according to the manufacturers recommendation. rna from the phenol-inactivated allantoic fluid of d was extracted with a modification in first several step of the high pure pcr template preparation kit. briefly, . ml of the infectious allantoic fluid was placed into a microcentrifuge tube and centrifuged at , ×g for min. the aqueous top layer, approximately l, was transferred to new tube. binding buffer ( l) and l of proteinase k ( mg/ml) was added and incubated for min at • c. then l of chloroform/isoamyl alcohol ( : ) was added, vortexed gently for - sec and then placed on ice for min. the mixture was centrifuged at , ×g for min. the upper phase was transferred to a clean . ml tube and l of chloroform/isoamyl alcohol ( : ) was added. the mixture was vortexed gently for - sec. this was centrifuged for min at , ×g, and the upper phase was transferred to a clean . ml tube. remaining steps were followed sequentially as described by the manufacturer. gene , gene , gene , gene , and a bp hypervariable region (hvr) of the s gene were amplified separately using the titan one tube rt-pcr system (boehringer mannheim). primer sets used to amplify gene , gene , and the hvr in s are listed in table . the primers utilized for amplification of gene and gene have been reported [ , ] . the reaction conditions for rt-pcr were previously described [ , ] . pcr products were cut from % agarose gels and purified using the qia quick gel extraction kit (qiagen, santa clarita, ca, usa). purified pcr products were either sequenced directly or cloned into the ta cloning vector (invitrogen, carlsbed, ca, usa), and automated sequencing with the prism dyedeoxy terminator cycle sequencing kit (perkin elmer, foster city, ca, usa) was conducted at the molecular genetics instrumentation facility, university of georgia. sequencing primers to various regions of the gene for de and the relative primer positions were calculated using the atg start site of gene as for primers gene and , and atg start site of s gene as for primers hvr in s d were designed using oligo version . software (national bioscience, plymouth, mn, usa) and are available upon request. assembly of sequencing contigs, translation of nucleotide sequence into protein sequence, and initial multiple sequence alignments were performed with the clustal v method in megalign software versin . (dnastar inc., madison, wi, usa). phylogenetic trees for each gene were generated using the maximum parsimony method with bootstrap replicates in a heuristic search using the paup . software program [ ] . the nucleotide sequences reported here have been deposited with the genbank. the accession numbers are as follows: de (gene ), af ; de (gene ), af ; de (gene ), af ; de (gene ), af ; de ( end non-coding region), af ; d (gene ), af ; d (gene ), af ; d (gene ), af ; d (gene ), af ; d ( end non-coding region), af ; - (hvr in s ), af ; - (hvr in s ), af ; - (hvr in s ), af ; - (hvr in s ), af ; - (hvr in s ), af ; - (hvr in s ), af the complete sequence of the end of the genome of three strains, beaudette, kb and cu-t and gene of holl strain have been previously reported [ , , , ] . a total of nucleotide and nucleotide were found, respectively, in a region beginning from the end of gene to the end of de and d genome. the intergenic sequence ctgaacaa or cttaacaa was found immediately upstream of the start site for each gene of both strains. the sequences were identical to those found in the corresponding genomic areas of the beaudette, kb , and cu-t strains (fig. ). fig. . the nucleotide sequence alignment of gene , gene , gene , and gene , and noncoding region. dots indicates nucleotide identical to that of de strain. the conserved nucleotide sequences ctgaacaa or cttaacaa, which is located at the starting site of each gene, is in bold character. heavy underlines indicate the putative start codons, asterisks above the sequence indicate the stop codons gene of both strains contained three orfs, a, b, and c. gene consisted of the m protein gene with a single orf and a non-coding region between the end of the m protein gene and gene . gene contained two orfs ( a and b). gene consisted of the n protein gene with a single orf and a non-coding region. downstream from the stop codon of the n gene, a base insertion was found in the d genome which also occurs in the genome of the holl (fig. ) . the -terminal . kb of the genome of five strains and gene of the holl strain were compared. the nucleotide sequence similarities among coding regions of gene , m, gene , and the n protein gene of de and other strain were between . - . %. those of d and other strains were between . - . % identical. d showed only . % nucleotide difference with holl in gene . gene c and gene b were relatively more conserved than the other genes (table ) . genes were divided by ig sequences (ctgaacaa/cttaacaa) and phylogenetic analysis was conducted. the de strain clustered with the cu-t (fig. ) . kb , which is only the nephropathogenic strain, was solely placed in all genes compared. in order to demonstrate the genetic heterogeneity of the same serotype isolates of ibv, we conducted phylogenetic analysis using six de serotype field isolates. phylogenetic analysis of the hypervariable region (hvr) in s , clustered all the de serotype isolates in one group with the prototype strain of the de serotype of ibv. this group was far from other serotypes of ibv strains in tree length. however, phylogenetic tree of gene and gene showed differences in tree topology among six isolates. in gene , only one isolate, - , clustered with de . in gene , no isolates clustered with de and formed groups randomly with other serotypes of ibv (fig. ) . de is a recent isolate made in [ ] . in a previous study of the s gene, we demonstrated that this virus was closely related to d which is an ibv vaccine strain of the d serotype from the netherlands [ , , ] . analysis of gene also reveals a high sequence relatedness between de and d (table ) . however, in the other genes analyzed in this study, de shares high sequence similarity with the cu-t strain which has also been reported to be a recombinant between arkansas and massachusetts strains [ ] . considering the fact that both strains were isolated in the northeastern usa, it is possible that they had undergone similar selection pressure. on the other hand, d shows high similarity with beaudette and holl strains in genes other than the s gene. the percent similarity in the n gene and a base insertion in the non-coding region suggests that both d and holl are closely related (table , fig. ). the holl strain has been extensively used as a live vaccine in europe [ ] . this finding provides more convincing evidene that vaccine strains are contributing to the emergence of variants in the field. based on these results, we suggest that de and d had the same origin, but diverged a long time ago and evolved independently in different geographical locations. since recombination in coronaviruses is thought to occur by a template switching mechanism [ , ] , we speculate that ig sequences may serve as 'hot spots' for homologous recombination. so far, recombinations suggested in ibv have been used on a small part of the genome [ , , ] . examining only a small part of the genome may result in misleading conclusions because of point mutations or conserved regions of the gene. we conducted phylogenetic analysis by dividing . kb of the end of the genome among five ibv strains at the ig sequences. phylogenetic trees of this sequence data had very different topology (fig. ) , which indicates that recombination had occurred. it has been reported that rna recombination in ibv can occur randomly in non-localized sites in vitro [ ] . however, considering the selection pressure in vivo recombination in the ig sequences should be advantageous to virus in two aspects. first, since crossovers occur at the site of consensus ig sequences, there would be no shift in the codon reading frame. second, since whole genes are substituted, there would be no drastic change in the conformation of proteins encoded by individual genes. further, cross-overs at each of the five ig sequences would generate tremendous genetic diversity. this amount of diversity may contribute to persistence and to the continuing emergence of new variants of ibv despite vaccination efforts. finally, we conducted sequence analysis of isolates of the de serotype to demonstrate how random recombination occurs within the same serotype. phylogenetic analysis of the hvr in s shows that these isolates cluster together because they are the same serotype. however, these isolates had a much different level of nucleotide sequence similarity with each other in gene and gene , and clustered randomly with other serotypes of ibv (fig. ) . based on this result, it is clear that isolates of the same serotype can differ substantially in individual genes. thus, every field isolate of ibv could be unique in each gene sequence because of recombination. completion of the sequence of the genome of the coronavirus avian infectious bronchitis virus location of the amino acid differences in the s spike glycoprotein subunit of closely related serotypes of infectious bronchitis virus infectious bronchitis nidovirales: a new order comprising coronaviridae and arteriviridae occurrence and significance of infectious bronchitis virus variant strains in egg and broiler production in the netherlands variant serotypes of infectious bronchitis virus isolated from commercial layer and broiler chickens antigenic and s- genomic characterization of the delaware variant serotypes of infectious bronchitis virus infectious bronchitis virus detection in allantoic fluid using the polymerase chain reaction and a dna probe poliovirus rna recombination: mechanistic studies in the absence of selection a novel variant of avian infectious bronchitis virus resulting from recombination among three different strains sequence analysis of gene , gene and gene of avian infectious bronchitis virus strain cu-t experimental evidence of recombination in coronavirus infectious bronchitis virus molecular epidemiology of infectious bronchitis virus in the netherlands phylogeny of antigenic variants of avian coronavirus ibv sequence evidence for rna recombination in field isolates of avian coronavirus infectious bronchitis virus differentiation of infectious bronchitis virus serotypes using polymerase chain reaction and restriction-fragment-lengthpolymorphism analysis coronavirus: how a large rna viral genome is replicated and transcribed spike gene analysis of the de strain of infectious bronchitis virus: origin and evolution the coronaviridae cloning and sequencing of genes encoding structural proteins of avian infectious bronchitis virus paup: phylogenetic analysis using parsimony. version . illinois natural history survey evidence of natural recombination within the s gene of infectious bronchitis virus comparative analyses of the nucleocapsid genes of several strains of infectious bronchitis viruses and other coronaviruses we express appreciation to dr. yoram weisman for providing d virus and deborah hilt for technical assistance. thanks are also extended to drs. bruce seal, maricarmen garcia, and holly sellers for the review of this manuscript. received december , key: cord- -zsp sh o authors: weeraratna, ashani t.; nagel, james e.; de mello-coelho, valeria; taub, dennis d. title: gene expression profiling: from microarrays to medicine date: journal: j clin immunol doi: . /b:joci. . . d sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zsp sh o with the mapping of the human genome comes the ability to identify genes of interest in specific diseases and the pathways involved therein. laboratory technology has evolved in parallel, providing us with the ability to assay thousands of these genes at once, a technique known as microarray analysis. the main #x fion that this type of technology raises is how we can apply this powerful technology to clinical medicine. recently, advances in data analysis, as well as standardization of the technology, have allowed us to examine this #x fion, and indeed a few clinical trials currently being performed include microarrays as part of their protocol. in this review we outline the microarray technique and describe these types of studies in further detail. one of the promises of the human genome project is that through knowledge of genomic organization and chromosomal location, it will be possible to identify and link specific genes to susceptibility to various human diseases. in the past, gene expression information has been obtained on a one-by-one, single-gene basis typically through the use of northern blot analysis; however, the introduction of hybridization to nucleotide arrays now permits the rapid, simultaneous screening of the expression of several thousand individual genes at a given time. the two most common forms of gene expression profiling used today are the serial analysis of gene expression (sage) and microarray analysis. the sage technique is based on the principle that a -to -bp sequence referred to as a "tag" can uniquely identify a transcript, provided that the tag is obtained from a unique position within a transcript ( ) . this method of profiling allows researchers to examine the changes in the absolute levels of transcripts in a cell and, because it does not require an a priori knowledge of the transcriptome, can uncover novel genes expressed therein. however, this technique is quite labor-intensive and technically challenging, and the costs involved with the generation and sequencing of sage libraries are beyond the scope of many laboratories. microarray technology, the older of the two techniques, is intrinsically more "user-friendly." the first recorded instance of this technology is often overlooked, but was published in a study by augenlicht et al. where, in , investigators used a nylon membrane, containing complementary dna (cdna) sequences to examine changes in gene expression in colon cancer ( ) . since these early studies, microarray profiling has been significantly refined and modified to optimize the sensitivity of the assay as well as the number of genes examined in a given experiment. gene expression profiling may provide valuable insights into the molecular mechanisms underlying disease. to perform a successful experiment, there is a need to identify clones of interest for arraying, isolate high-quality rna from tissues of interest, and analyze the data in the most informative manner possible (fig. ) . each of these steps will be examined in detail below. in a microarray experiment, gene expression is often compared in two samples of rna. this typically means comparing "normal" to "diseased" tissues or "treated" and "untreated" cells or samples derived from various experimental conditions. what has become quite clear through its development and application is that microarray analysis is an exquisitely sensitive technique and prone to a ( ) rna is extracted from cells or tissues of interest and labeled either with cy or cy (glass slides) or with p (nylon filters) and hybridized. ( ) images are analyzed using programs such as arraypro or iplab. ( ) data is clustered and information extracted using bioinformatics. myriad of unavoidable variability, which leads to difficulty when designing an experiment. the first hurdle one must overcome is to select an appropriate disease state, or experimental condition as a reference against which all samples in a given test set can be compared. one major problem begins in simply defining "what is normal?" or obtaining a specimen to which a diseased tissue can be legitimately compared. skin from different areas of the body can significantly vary, just as cells derived from different tissues or region of a given organ may significantly differ. tumors are frequently a heterogenous mixed population displaying varying degrees of anaplasia, necrosis, and vascular proliferation. thus, even comparing a single tumor cell type derived from different patients can yield quite varied gene expression profiles. overall, sample selection is a conundrum. peripheral blood, the prototypical clinical specimen, is seldom a useful source of informative specimens simply because localized gene expression changes in tissues are not represented in rna made from peripheral blood leukocytes. moreover, the percentage of white blood cells within a given patient can vary from sample to sample affecting the rna recovered. because of the exquisite sensitivity inherent in microarray analysis, the use of mixed cell populations is a tenuous proposition. this is especially true for more complex organ structures such as the brain, where, for example, dopaminergic cells that display pathogenesis in several neurodegenerative and addiction disorders, are very sparsely represented in the total organ cell population. most commonly, inclusion of a pure population of the suspected infiltrating cell types in the experiment can assist in the identification of genes associated with infiltration or contamination, and then statistical analysis can be used to exclude these genes from the analysis. in addition, research techniques such as facs or laser capture microdissection can further enrich these heterogenous cell populations, resulting in more isolated and defined cell subpopulations for profiling. however, such enrichments must also consider the fact that inflammatory infiltrates or cells present in an adjacent tissue may themselves be part of the disease process and therefore are an appropriate component of the specimen. the development of many diseases may occur over an extended period of time and some may even include an orderly progression of stages. the originating event(s) leading to clinical symptoms or findings may have been initiated many years prior to diagnosis so that specimens obtained when symptoms develop may have limited informational value in predicting pathoformic disease. despite these caveats, over the past few years, a steady stream of reports has appeared describing the use of microarray technology in a variety of research areas including cancer, autoimmune or infectious disease, and a variety of inherited disorders, all with the intent of identifying and understanding their molecular origins and mechanisms. some have indeed identified potentially valuable markers for diagnosis. more recently, as the genomes of various bacteria, viruses, parasites, and other pathogens are sequenced, studies have been directed toward elucidating specific genes involved in microbial pathogenicity and virulence with the obvious expectation that such genes may serve as potential therapeutic targets in disease treatment. the first step in the construction of a microarray is to identify and collect clones (cdnas) or short oligonucleotides that encode genes important for research purposes. cdna arrays can be designed and constructed with a number of different goals in mind. such arrays may be focused on a particular tissue, chromosome, developmental stage, gene family, disease, or functional characteristic (e.g., signaling molecules, cytokines, apoptotic-mediators), or may be unfocused. oligonucleotide microarrays are manufactured by in situ synthesis on glass using a combination of photolithography and oligonucleotide chemistry. the result is a panel of short oligonucleotides that, depending on the particular array, identify up to about , discrete human genes. recently, other manufacturers have begun to produce what are being called "spotted" oligonucleotide arrays. rather than the oligonucleotide being directly synthesized on the array substrate, these arrays are constructed using a robotic pin-based microarrayer to spot conventionally synthesized -to -bp oligonucleotides onto glass slides or nylon filters ( ) . genes of interest can be identified using the public uni-gene database (http://www. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/unigene/). unigene is an experimental system for automatically partitioning nucleotide sequence data deposited in gen-bank into a nonredundant set of gene-oriented clusters ( ) . each unigene cluster contains sequences that represent a unique gene as well as related information such as the tissue types in which the gene has been expressed and its chromosomal location. unigene numbers may also correlate to hypothetical proteins (i.e., proteins identified by in silico analysis of genetic sequences) or as yet uncharacterized transcripts obtained from random-primed cdna libraries, referred to as expressed sequence tags (ests). each unigene cluster typically includes a number of clones that may be potentially used for cdna array construction. a useful public source of cdna clones are those made available by the integrated molecular analysis of genomes and their expression (image) consortium that also places sequence, map, and expression data about these clones into the public domain ( ) . at the present time, there are approximately . million ests in the ncbi databases (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/) and most are available from commercial distributors. additional cdna clones are available from commercial enterprises and from research laboratories that have constructed and sequenced unique cdna libraries. after choosing the appropriate genes and ests for a given array, these genes can be cloned into plasmid vectors suitable for transforming bacteria. bacterial clones containing cdnas of interest are propagated and the dna extracted and purified. the gene-specific inserts are amplified in microtiter plates by pcr. the best arrays contain only clones that are sequence-verified, to ensure accuracy and quality. such verification is crucial to the reliability of the data obtained from such arrays. using a multiwell format, these cdna inserts or oligonucleotides can be spotted by a robotic microarrayer onto glass slides, or nylon or nitrocellulose membranes that have been pretreated to augment their surface charge and increase the adherence of the dna ( ). currently, depending on whether the format is nylon-based or glass-chip-based, an array may contain anywhere from (nylon) to over , (glass chip) genes. glass-and nylon-based arrays are often regarded as alternative technologies. however, they have both strong and weak points that are often complementary. filter-based arrays used with radioactivity generally require less total rna, although with current protocols such as dendrimer or amino-allyl labeling, small amounts of rna can be used for fluorescence arrays as well ( ) . however, filter-based arrays have lower per filter cost, making them an attractive choice for smaller laboratories ( ) . on the other hand, fluorescent labeling allows control and experimental rna to be hybridized together, allowing for the significant advantage of a direct comparison. the process of dna hybridization involves the reassociation of single-stranded dna to form double-stranded dna with one strand originating from a cell or tissue under study and the other strand with the target sequence that has been printed or synthesized on the microarray. a crucial factor for successful hybridization is the purity and quality of the rna extracted from the cells or tissue of interest. contamination of this rna with genomic dna, proteins or detergent residues, or its degradation by ubiquitous ribonucleases may cause serious problems during the rt-pcr steps of the procedure. the method of labeling probe rna depends on the particular type of microarray being used for the study. with microarrays printed on glass slides, it is customary to label during reverse transcription one sample with the dye cyanine- (cy ) that, when excited by light, yields green fluorescence and, the other sample with cyanine- (cy ) that yields red fluorescence ( ) . synthesized oligonucleotide arrays typically use biotinylated probes and are stained posthybridization with streptavadin conjugated to phycoerythrin. for microarrays using nylon membranes, the target rna is typically radioactively labeled by incorporation of [ p] dctp or [ p] dctp nucleotides during reverse transcription ( ). while not commonly performed, arrays on glass slides may also be queried with radiolabeled probes. irrespective of labeling method, the probes are purified and incubated in a suitable buffer for - h with the microarray. posthybridization, the arrays are washed and quantity of signal incorporated in each spot is measured using either a specialized slide reader or an imaging system. analysis of microarray data continues in an evolutionary state with a number of different research groups analyzing their data in a variety of ways using combinations of various microarray-specific, spreadsheet, data display, and statistical software programs ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . to date, there is no universally accepted method to analyze microarray data and thus the analytic method selected is frequently directed toward the specific research question being asked. often, microarray data is examined using several techniques with the method providing the most robust interpretation being utilized for publication and further pursuit. one of the challenges in array data analysis is to distinguish specific physiologic changes in gene expression from the noise and variability inherent within the microarray technique. although there is a paucity of data specifically addressing such variability in human tissue, current available information suggests that the normal variance of expression of tightly regulated genes in a given tissue may range up to - %. the miniaturization of the assay and the ability to conduct thousands of experiments at a given time (for analysis purposes, hybridization to each array spot can be considered a small experiment) in parallel inherently produces considerable variability in a microarray experiment ( ) . the sources of fluctuation accumulate at each step of the microarray procedure from the initial processing of the tissue sample, through target and array preparation, hybridization, and image processing ( , ) . whereas fluorescent-labeling of spotted cdnas allows both the experimental and control rna to be hybridized on the same microarray, radioactively labeled samples require that each specimen be hybridized on a separate array. the arrays are queried using specific software that recognizes and assigns a numeric density value to each spot on the microarray. irrespective of whether fluorescent-or radioactive-labeled microarrays are used, most research groups then apply a normalization procedure to the family of arrays included in an experiment to bring their signal range into an acceptable confidence interval and adjust the signals on each filter to approximate a normal distribution with a mean of and a standard deviation of . many different normalization techniques have been described but there is yet no agreement as to a "best" way to normalize microarray data ( ) . normalization is important to eliminate artifacts and allow comparison between filters. however, normalization has limits that, when ignored, can result in the creation of false signals and misinterpretation of the data ( ) . following normalization, microarray data is examined to identify differences in gene expression. the simplest technique is the ratio of experimental to control or fold change. many published studies have used the "twofold change" criterion as a measure of significance and it has been shown that this method can be reproducible even taking into account interlaboratory variability. for example, one study compared gene expression changes in yeast, in three different laboratories, and showed a greater than % concordance in genes increased over twofold ( ) . while this method is straightforward, it rapidly becomes apparent that this calculation may not be useful in all cases, most importantly because it eliminates all information about absolute gene expression levels. more significantly, fold change does not embrace any knowledge of biology. succinctly, genes that are members of a defined pathway or that respond to a common challenge are likely to be coregulated and therefore could be expected to display similar patterns of expression. a statistical technique generically termed "exploratory multivariate data" or "cluster analysis" has come into the forefront to identify groups of genes that display similar changes in expression. in general, classical clustering techniques start by creating a set of bidirectional distance vectors that represent the similarity between genes and between clusters of genes. an iterative process is then undertaken where each gene profile is compared to all the other gene profiles and clusters until eventually all genes are in one cluster ( ) . there are numerous hierarchical clustering algorithms that differ in their starting point and the manner in which they calculate and compare the distances between the existing clusters and the remainder of the data set ( ) . bottom-up (agglomerative) hierarchical clustering was first applied to microarray analysis by eisen et al. ( ) . because this technique produces readily visualized patterns of coordinately regulated genes and is supported by software programs such as clusteru c and treeview c created by eisen (http://rana.lbl.gov/), it has become extremely popular for microarray analysis. other types of cluster analysis include multidimensional cluster analysis, which uses the similarities between two samples to generate a pearson's pairwise correlation coefficient. this gives an idea of the magnitude of difference between two samples and, when applied to three or more samples, also provides a direction of the difference between them. once these samples have been mapped into a three-dimensional plot, the similarity between two samples can be assessed by the distance between them. the more tightly two samples cluster together, the more similar they are. once these classes of genes have been identified, statistical analyses can be used to best determine which genes cause the samples to segregate as they do ( ) . however, irrespective of the particular clustering method chosen, it quickly becomes apparent that microarrays can differentiate tens of thousands of genes, only a small subset, in the range of - %, undergo significant change in expression, and are therefore worthy of additional study. this point led to the testing of another group of statistical techniques that included selforganizing maps ( ) and k -means clustering ( ) that organize the expression data before actual clustering ( , ) . more recently mathematical procedures such as probabilistic principal component analysis ( ) and support vector machines (svms) ( ) ( ) ( ) , as well as models based on neural network designs ( , ) or bayesian inference ( , ) , have begun to be explored. in these techniques, an analysis algorithm is "trained" with a portion of the data set and these results used to heuristically select among various data-fitting models, one of which is then used to examine the entire data set. if an analysis technique can be developed and validated that can identify the genes that undergo a significant change in expression and remove those that do not, it could alter microarray design and construction in favor of smaller focused arrays that query only biologically relevant genes. clearly, gene expression analysis remains a work in progress. the goal is to develop tools that can identify meaningful expression changes, evaluate the significance of these changes to determine whether they are different than what might occur by chance alone, and ultimately group genes to reveal and examine the combinatorial nature of transcriptional control. two important points to take into consideration when running a microarray experiment are the necessity to run replicate experiments ( ) ( ) ( ) and to validate the gene expression changes using other techniques such as real-time pcr. it may also be useful to analyze the expression levels of proteins encoded by the altered genes. this can be done by techniques such as immunocytochemistry or western blot, using specific antibodies for the proteins of interest. recently, members of the microarray gene expression data (www.mged.org) society have advocated the adoption of the minimal information about a microarray experiment (miame) guidelines ( , ) (www.mged.org/workgroups/miame/miame checklist. html). one effect of these standards seems certain-there will be a move to the use of a single microarray product for all future clinical studies. bioinformatics applies principles of information science and technology to make life science data more understandable and useful. in practice, when dedicated computer software is used to search for hidden patterns in groups of data and to link this information to other data, this is referred to as "data mining." the usual first endpoint of a microarray experiment is a list of the genes or their genbank accession numbers that have undergone a meaningful change in expression. more often than not, a few of the gene names are recognizable, but the majority are not. however, what we really want to know is the function(s) of the gene, how it is related to other biologic pathways and processes or defined clinical syndromes or diseases, how this gene was affected by how the microarray experiment was conducted, and to link this information with clinical data, treatment outcomes, and drug responses. ultimately, we want to develop gene expression data into a prognostic or diagnostic tool. as previously noted, the trend in microarray analysis is toward various unsupervised clustering techniques. more recently, supervised techniques such as svm or neural networks that allow nonexpression data to be incorporated into the clustering model have shown added promise. however, it is accepted that there is really no single technique that is appropriate for all data sets, leaving the interpretation of microarray data an inexact science ( ) . depending on how the data is processed, different relationships may be revealed which in and of themselves may be informative. data-mining software continues to evolve with several dozen commercial and academic products available. so far, no "one program does it all," and one is typically left with moving the expression data between various database, statistical, graphics, and annotation packages during analysis. numerous new high-quality databases have been constructed and other previously existing databases such as genbank significantly augmented by data produced by the human genome project (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ sitemap/index.html). together, these databases contain a truly amazing amount of information that is being updated and expanded on a regular basis. the effect of this continuous updating is that there is a degree of impermanence associated with the data. this has produced the secondary effect of turning the retrieval of information about individual genes from the various online genomic databases such as locuslink (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/locuslink), omim (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/omim/), aceview (www. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ieb/research/acembly/ ), unigene (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/unigene), kegg (www.genome. ad.jp/kegg/kegg .html), and genecards tm (http:// nciarray.nci.nih.gov/cards/) into complex hot-linked spreadsheets and databases, that are nonetheless userfriendly. this situation will persist into the foreseeable future as new gene function and pathway data becomes available over the internet. another concept receiving a great deal of recent attention, particularly by the pharmaceutical industry, is the observation that there are genetically based differences in drug and immune responses between individuals that may be utilized to optimize a person's therapy and that are responsible for adverse or suboptimal drug responses. further, a logical corollary to this idea is that through sequence analysis, it will be possible to identify disease-susceptibility genes that might represent potential targets for future drug development or other interventional therapy ( ) . this has created a new field, pharmacogenomics, that examines inherited gene variations that dictate drug response and studies their effect on clinical drug responses ( ) . presently, the identification and cataloguing of snps is the most popular method to investigate these complex genetic associations. snps are the most common form of genetic variation, occurring approximately once every bp throughout the billion base pair human genome. although their incidence varies substantially across the genome, the total number of human snps is estimated to be over million ( ) . as of september , . million snps have been deposited in the public dbsnp database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/snp/) and approximately . million snps have been mapped in silico to the human genome by the snp consortium (tsc; a private, not-for-profit alliance of major multinational companies and the wellcome trust; http://snp.cshl.org) ( , ) . since dna possesses only four nucleotides, the number of potential snp variations is quite restricted, making snps well-suited for high-throughput automated or parallel analysis ( ) . however, the bottleneck in snp genotyping is the sample preparation; i.e., purifying hundreds of thousands of different loci so that snp genotyping can be done at each site. many different snp detection technologies are under commercial development ( ) . presently, most large-scale projects examining genome-wide snp expression are based on differential hybridization affinity using either spotted or in situ synthesized oligonucleotide arrays ( , ) or utilize mass spectroscopy for genotype analysis ( , ) . however, a new spotted thiol-modified oligonucleotide gold thin film array appears capable of substantially improving detection speed and sensitivity ( ) . snp data analysis is much simpler than microarray data analysis because the readout can be designed to be binary (i.e., fluorescent or nonfluorescent) rather than scalable. at present, snps have provided the most clinically relevant data linked to the hgp but continue to be a work in progress. a number of clinical studies are already under way using snp-based genetic testing to identify patients who are at increased risk for diabetes, cardiovascular disease, adverse drug reactions, cancer, or deep vein thrombosis. snp genotyping holds great promise as a breakthrough technology that will introduce the era of personalized medicine. however, the clinical snp genotyping studies that are now in progress are largely, if not exclusively, based on gene-disease associations and gene polymorphisms that were discovered - years previously demonstrating that considerable important work is still needed to identify meaningful disease-causing and modifying genes. linking these discoveries with public data produced by large genome-wide snp discovery and validation initiatives can be expected to promote a gradual introduction of snp genotyping into diagnostic medicine and gene-based pharmacotherapeutics. although there are several potential pitfalls associated with microarray technology, it is a powerful technique, and as evidenced by the surge in the medical literature over the past few years, has become increasingly popular (table i) . it is nevertheless accepted that the widespread inclusion of clinical data into microarray analysis algorithms will not be simple. several decades of research and development of clinical record systems has shown that a data model needed to capture the broad array of clinical parameters is extremely complex and difficult to standardize. for example, molecular profiling of cutaneous melanoma allowed for the identification of a more motile group of tumors histopathologically indistinguishable from their less aggressive counterparts ( ) . in addition, potential usefulness of microarray-derived gene expression data has been shown in several recent studies of lymphoma, leukemia ( , ) , and multiple myeloma ( ) where modeling techniques that incorporate outcome and drug response during treatment were used to define tumor types or patient groups and to suggest rational targets for drug therapy or development. it is becoming increasingly evident that these techniques may have a significant impact on current diagnostic methods ( ) . although many studies have demonstrated that current clinical parameters are reliable predictors of outcome, a few studies are beginning to reveal that certain prognostic indicators can more efficiently be derived from profiling studies. analysis of breast cancer samples by microarray revealed that where standard clinical and histological criteria can be useful in predicting disease outcome in patients with early onset breast cancer, these patients had a very distinct gene expression signature that acted as an even more powerful predictor ( ) . this sort of robust prediction can also be made on the basis of microarray analysis of children presenting with medulloblastomas, in whom, again, outcome can be determined on the basis of their molecular signature ( ) . in addition to classifying disease states and predicting outcomes, microarray analysis can also be used to analyze the effects of treatments and patient response to therapy. a recent study demonstrated that the effects of diverse regulators of breast cancer growth on breast cancer cells in culture linked the behavior of these cells to important clinical properties seen in in vivo specimens ( ) . array analysis has been used to examine the probability of the rejection of renal allografts, by studying the gene expression profiles of patients who rejected their grafts as compared to those who did not. again, accurate predictions as to whether or not a patient would reject a graft could be made on the basis of their molecular profiles. other examples include using an oligonucleotide array, encoding several variations for the gene which encodes debrisoquine hyroxylase (cyp d ) that metabolizes various psychotropic medications, and thus similar to an snp chip, where researchers were able to determine which patients might need adjustments in dosage due to their ability to metabolize these drugs, based on the alleles expressed ( ) . in another study examining the changes in skeletal muscle tissues of patients with and without insulin treatment, several genes were differentially expressed. these genes were associated with muscle insulin resistance and complications associated with insulin metabolism, allowing again for the reassessment of treatment of patients with differing profiles ( ) . when genes are identified that are useful as prognostic indicators, or markers of response, as indicated by the aforementioned studies, smaller arrays can be custom made to reflect these discoveries, and to aid with patient assessment, diagnostically or therapeutically. in at least two cases, a chip has been made to aid in diagnosis. one of these, the ovachip, contains genes involved in ovarian cancer as identified by sage analy-sis, and the utility of this chip is under investigation by several different groups ( ) . another, the lymphochip, uses a custom array to help diagnose tumors of lymphoid origin ( , ) . in cancers where tumor type and origin can be difficult to diagnose, this type of chip could have great utility. in addition, using a microarray platform to analyze viral dna has proven its effectiveness. an hpv dna chip uses a microarray platform to screen patients for possible human papilloma virus (hpv) infection, by spotting several different hp viruses on a microarray, allowing clinicians and researchers to determine the possibility of probable complications (such as cervical cancer) depending on the type of hpv present in the patient ( , ) . furthermore, the most recent array application of clinical significance was the use of microarray technology to identify the virus responsible for sars. to do this, researchers created a chip containing over , different viral gene signatures (the virochip) and only a few spots on this chip, all of which correlated to corona virus, showed positive expression ( ) ( ) ( ) . the time saved using this method of analysis may significantly advance the discovery of a treatment for this epidemic and others of its kind. to date, microarray analysis has existed almost exclusively as research tool that requires considerable effort and time by skilled individuals to prepare high-quality rna, label and hybridize the arrays, and read and analyze the data. although microarray technology has begun to enter clinical medicine, several significant hurdles need to be overcome. for routine clinical lab use, significant improvements are needed in microarray fabrication, hybridization methodology, and analysis that will allow much or all of the processes to be fully automated and thus increase reproducibility within and across experiments. microfluidics and nanofabrication technologies that range from the use of dna as a construction material for mechanical devices to the use of carbon nanotubules to produce microarray-like device may have greater potential for full automation as well as increasing throughput speed and accuracy in the study of gene expression. in addition, the field of proteomics is a rapidly burgeoning one, and the identification of proteins and antigens for therapeutic use will be of high significance in the future. several commercial software vendors have already announced they plan to modify their data-mining software to link nucleotide and protein databases and tools that in the future may allow both individual gene transcription and translation to be readily evaluated. upon the accumulation of these technologies and data-mining tools, it is likely that the promise of microarrays as a tool for the clinician may one day be realized. serial analysis of gene expression expression of cloned sequences in biopsies of human colonic tissue and in colonic carcinoma cells 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gastric cancer by oligonucleotide microarrays genome-wide analysis of gene expression in human hepatocellular carcinomas using cdna microarray: identification of genes involved in viral carcinogenesis and tumor progression hormone therapy failure in human prostate cancer: analysis by complementary dna and tissue microarrays failure of hormone therapy in prostate cancer involves systematic restoration of androgen responsive genes and activation of rapamycin sensitive signaling differential gene expression in renal-cell cancer gene expression profiling of alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma with cdna microarrays prostasin, a potential serum marker for ovarian cancer: identification through microarray technology microarrays and toxicology: the advent of toxicogenomics the promise of toxicogenomics key: cord- -xv k authors: chow, ryan d.; chen, sidi title: the aging transcriptome and cellular landscape of the human lung in relation to sars-cov- date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: xv k since the emergence of sars-cov- in december , coronavirus disease- (covid- ) has rapidly spread across the globe. epidemiologic studies have demonstrated that age is one of the strongest risk factors influencing the morbidity and mortality of covid- . here, we interrogate the transcriptional features and cellular landscapes of the aging human lung through integrative analysis of bulk and single-cell transcriptomics. by intersecting these age-associated changes with experimental data on host interactions between sars-cov- or its relative sars-cov, we identify several age-associated factors that may contribute to the heightened severity of covid- in older populations. we observed that age-associated gene expression and cell populations are significantly linked to the heightened severity of covid- in older populations. the aging lung is characterized by increased vascular smooth muscle contraction, reduced mitochondrial activity, and decreased lipid metabolism. lung epithelial cells, macrophages, and th cells decrease in abundance with age, whereas fibroblasts, pericytes and cd + tcm cells increase in abundance with age. several age-associated genes have functional effects on sars-cov replication, and directly interact with the sars-cov- proteome. interestingly, age-associated genes are heavily enriched among those induced or suppressed by sars-cov- infection. these analyses illuminate potential avenues for further studies on the relationship between the aging lung and covid- pathogenesis, which may inform strategies to more effectively treat this disease. these data indicate that differential expression of sars-cov- host entry factors alone is unlikely to explain the relationship between age and severity of covid- illness. to discern the host cell types involved in covid- entry, we turned to a single cell rna-seq (scrna-seq) dataset of , human lung cells from the tissue stability cell atlas . in agreement with prior reports, analysis of the single cell lung transcriptomes revealed that alveolar type (at ) cells were comparatively enriched in ace and tmprss -expressing cells , ( supplementary figure a-b) . however, ace -expressing cells represented only . % of all at cells, while . % of at cells expressed tmprss . alveolar type (at ) cells also showed detectable expression of ace and tmprss , but at lower frequencies ( . % and . %). ctsl expression could be broadly detected in many different cell types including at cells, but its expression was particularly pronounced in macrophages (supplementary figure c) . since the expression of host entry factors ace , tmprss and ctsl did not increase with age, we next sought to identify all age-associated genes expressed in the human lung (methods). using a likelihood-ratio test , we pinpointed the genes for which age significantly impacts their expression. with a stringent cutoff of adjusted p < . , we identified two clusters of genes in which their expression progressively changes with age (figure d) . cluster is composed of genes that increase in expression with age, while cluster contains genes that decrease in expression with age. gene ontology and pathway analysis of cluster genes (increasing with age) revealed significant enrichment for cell adhesion, vascular smooth muscle contraction, oxytocin signaling, and platelet activation, in addition to several other pathways (figure e) . these findings are consistent with known physiologic changes of aging, including decreased pulmonary compliance , and heightened risk for thrombotic diseases . of note, deregulation of the reninangiotensin system has been implicated in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury induced by sars- china and italy have found that patients with hypertension were more likely to develop ards , require icu admission , and die from the disease , though we note that correlative epidemiologic studies do not necessarily demonstrate causality. cluster genes (decreasing with age) were significantly enriched for mitochondrion, mitochondrial translation, metabolic pathways, and mitosis, among other pathways (figure f) , which is consistent with prior observations of progressive mitochondrial dysfunction with aging [ ] [ ] [ ] . of note, cluster was also enriched for genes involved in lipid metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, peroxisome, and lysosomal membranes. age-associated alterations in lipid metabolism could impact sars-cov- infection, as sars-cov can enter cells through cholesterol-rich lipid rafts [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . similarly, age-associated alterations in lysosomes could influence late endocytic viral entry, as the protease cathepsin l cleaves sars-cov spike proteins from within lysosomes , . having compiled a high-confidence set of age-associated genes, we sought to identify the lung cell types that normally express these genes, using the human lung single cell transcriptomics dataset from the tissue stability cell atlas . by examining the scaled percentage of expressing cells within each cell subset, we identified age-associated genes predominantly enriched in different cell types. cell types with highly enriched expression for certain cluster genes (increasing with age) included fibroblasts, muscle cells, and lymph vessels (figure a) . in contrast, cell types with highly enriched expression for certain cluster genes (decreasing with age) included macrophages, dividing dendritic cells (dcs)/monocytes, and at cells (figure b) . similar results were found using an independent human lung scrna-seq dataset from the human lung cell atlas (supplementary figure a-b) . examining the muscle-enriched genes that increased in expression with age, gene ontology analysis revealed enrichment for vascular smooth muscle contraction, cgmp-pkg signaling, z-disc, and actin cytoskeleton, among other pathways ( figure c ). as for the at -enriched genes that decreased in expression with age, gene ontology analysis revealed enrichment for metabolic pathways, biosynthesis of antibiotics, lipid metabolism, extracellular exosome, and mitochondrial matrix (figure d) . a subset of these enriched gene ontologies had also been identified by the bulk rna-seq analysis (figure e-f) . thus, integrative analysis of bulk and single-cell transcriptomes revealed that many of the age-associated transcriptional changes in human lung can be mapped to specific cell subpopulations, suggesting that the overall abundance of these cell types, their transcriptional status, or both, may be altered with aging. as the pathophysiology of viral-induced ards involves an intricate interplay of diverse cell types, most notably the immune system , , aging-associated shifts in the lung cellular milieu could contribute an important dimension to the relationship between age and risk of ards in patients with covid- . to investigate the cellular landscape of the aging lung, we applied a gene signature-based approach to infer the enrichment of different cell types from the bulk rna-seq profiles. since bulk rna-seq measures the average expression of genes within a cell population, such datasets will reflect the relative proportions of the cell types that comprised the input population, though with the caveat that cell types can have overlapping expression profiles and such profiles may be altered in response to stimuli. using this approach, we identified ageassociated alterations in the enrichment scores of several cell types (figure a) . whereas epithelial cells decreased with age, fibroblasts increased with age (figure b ). this finding is consistent with the progressive loss of lung parenchyma due to reduced regenerative capacity of the aging lung , as well as the increased risk for diseases such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and pulmonary fibrosis . in addition, these results are concordant with the findings from analysis of human lung single-cell transcriptomes (figure a-b) . among the innate immune cell populations, the enrichment scores of total macrophages were inversely associated with age (figure c) . macrophages are major drivers of innate immune responses in the lung, acting as first-responders against diverse respiratory infections . thus, the age-associated decrease in macrophage abundance may be a possible factor related to the greater severity of lung pathology in patients with covid- . although macrophage accumulation is often associated with the pathologic inflammation of viral ards , , pulmonary macrophages can act to limit the duration and severity of infection by efficiently phagocytosing dead infected cells and released virions [ ] [ ] [ ] . notably, macrophages infected with sars-cov have been found to abort the replication cycle of the virus , , further supporting their role in antiviral responses. however, macrophages may suppress antiviral adaptive immune responses , , inhibiting viral clearance in mouse models of sars-cov infection . in aggregate, these prior reports suggest that the precise role of lung macrophages in sars-cov- pathophysiology is likely contextdependent. it is also plausible that the increased numbers of macrophages are not the primary distinction between young and old patients, but rather the functional status of the macrophages. in line with this, we observed that the age-associated changes in macrophages were specifically attributed to the pro-inflammatory m macrophage subset but not the immunoregulatory m subset (figure c) , though this binary classification scheme represents an oversimplification of macrophage function. nevertheless, elucidating the consequences of age-associated changes in lung macrophages may reveal insights into the differential outcomes of older patients with covid- . further studies are needed to investigate whether macrophages or other innate immune cells respond to sars-cov- infection, and how their numbers or function may change with aging. among the adaptive immune cell populations, we observed that th cells and cd + tcm cells trended in opposite directions with aging (figure d) . while the lungs of younger donors were enriched for th cells, they were comparatively depleted for cd + tcm cells; the inverse was true in the lungs of older donors. of note, mouse models of sars-cov infection have indicated important roles for cd + t cell responses in viral clearance , . additionally, th cells are responsive to sars-cov vaccines and promote macrophage activation against viruses . it is therefore possible that age-associated shifts in cd + t cell subtypes within the lung may influence the subsequent host immune response in response to coronavirus infection. however, future studies will be needed to determine the role of th cells and other adaptive immune cells in the response to sars-cov- , and how these dynamics may change with aging. we next explored the roles of lung age-associated genes in host responses to viral infection. since functional screening data with sars-cov- has not yet been described (as of march , ), we instead searched for data on sars-cov. while these two viruses belong to the same genus (betacoronaviridae) and are conserved to some extent , they are nevertheless two distinct viruses with different epidemiological features, indicating unique virology and host biology. therefore, data from experiments performed with sars-cov must be interpreted with caution. we reassessed the results from a prior in vitro sirna screen of host factors involved in sars-cov infection . in this kinase-focused screen, factors were determined to have a significant effect on sars-cov replication. notably, of the factors exhibited age-associated gene expression patterns (figure a) , with genes in cluster (increasing with age) and genes in cluster (decreasing with age). the genes in cluster were all associated with increased sars infectivity upon sirna knockdown; these genes included clk , akap , alpk , and itk. paradoxically, while knockdown of clk was associated with increased sars infectivity, cell viability was also found to be increased (figure b) . of the genes in cluster , were associated with increased sars infectivity and reduced cell viability upon sirna knockdown (aurkb, cdkl , pdik l, cdkn , mst r, and adk). age-related downregulation of these factors could be related to the increased severity of illness in older patients. however, we emphasize that until rigorous follow-up experiments are performed with sars-cov- , the therapeutic potential of targeting these factors in patients with covid- is unknown. using the human lung scrna-seq data, we then determined which cell types predominantly express these host factors. of the genes in cluster that had a significant impact on sars-cov replication, clk was universally expressed, while alpk expression was rarely detected (figure c, supplementary figure a) . itk was preferentially expressed in lymphocytic populations, and akap was most frequently expressed in ciliated cells and muscle cells. of the overlapping genes in cluster , aurkb and cdkn were predominantly expressed in proliferating immune cell populations, such as macrophages, dcs/monocytes, t cells, and nk cells (figure d, supplementary figure b) . mst r, pdik l, and pskh were infrequently expressed, through their expression was detected in a portion of at cells ( . %, . %, and . %, respectively). finally, adk and cdkl exhibited preferential enrichment in at cells ( . % and . %). in aggregate, these analyses showed that the age-associated genes with functional roles in sars-cov are expressed in specific cell types of the human lung. we then investigated whether age-associated genes in the human lung interact with proteins encoded by sars-cov- . a recent study interrogated the human host factors that interact with different sars-cov- proteins , revealing the sars-cov- : human protein interactome in cell lines expressing recombinant sars-cov- proteins. by cross-referencing the interacting host factors with the set of age-associated genes, we identified factors at the intersection ( figure a ). of these genes showed an increase in expression with age (i.e. cluster genes), while decreased in expression with age (cluster genes). mapping these factors to their interacting sars-cov- proteins, we noted that the age-associated host factors which interact with m, nsp , nsp , nsp , nsp , orf a, orf , orf c, and orf proteins generally decrease in expression with aging (figure b) . however, a notable exception was nsp , as the age-associated hostfactors that interact with nsp both showed increased expression with aging (crtc and mycbp ) (figure c ). nsp encodes for the primary rna-dependent rna polymerase (rdrp) of sars-cov- , and is a prime target for developing therapies against covid- . the observation that crtc and mycbp increase in expression with aging is intriguing, as these genes may be related to the activity of nsp /rdrp in host cells. of note, mycbp is a known repressor of camp signaling , , and camp signaling potently inhibits contraction of airway smooth muscle cells . thus, age-associated increases in mycbp could promote smooth muscle contraction, which is concordant with our analyses on age-associated gene signatures in the lung (figure e) . mycbp might possibly contribute to covid- pathology by not only interacting with sars-cov- rdrp, but also through its normal physiologic role in promoting smooth muscle contraction. to assess the cell type-specific expression patterns of these various factors, we further analyzed the lung scrna-seq data. of the sars-cov- interacting genes that increase in expression with age, mycbp was frequently expressed across several populations, particularly proliferating immune populations (dc/monocyte, t cells, macrophages), muscle cells, fibroblasts, and lymph vessels (figure d) . mycbp was also expressed in . % of at cells. cep was preferentially expressed in lymph vessels, while akap l and crtc showed relatively uniform expression frequencies across cell types, including a fraction of at cells ( . % and . % expressing cells, respectively). of the sars-cov- interacting genes that decrease in expression age, npc and ndufb were broadly expressed in many cell types, including at cells ( . % together, these analyses highlight specific age-associated factors that interact with the sars-cov- proteome, in the context of the lung cell types in which these factors are normally expressed. finally, we assessed whether sars-cov- infection directly alters the expression of lung ageassociated genes. a recent study profiled the in vitro transcriptional changes associated with sars-cov- infection in different human lung cell lines . we specifically focused on the data from a lung cancer cells, a cells transduced with an ace expression vector (a -ace ), and calu- lung cancer cells. several age-associated genes were found to be differentially expressed upon sars-cov- infection (figure a-c) . of note, the overlap between lung ageassociated genes and sars-cov- regulated genes was statistically significant across all cell lines (figure d-f) , suggesting a degree of similarity between the transcriptional changes associated with aging and with sars-cov- infection. among the age-associated genes that were induced by sars-cov- infection, the majority of these genes increase in expression with age (cluster ) (figure g-i) . conversely, among the age-associated genes that were repressed by sars-cov- infection, most of these genes decrease in expression with age (cluster ). of note, the directionality of sars-cov- regulation (induced or repressed) and the directionality of ageassociation (increase or decrease with age) were significantly associated across all cell lines (figure g-i) . to identify a consensus set of age-associated genes that are regulated by sars-cov- infection, we integrated the analyses from all cell lines. genes were consistently induced by sars-cov- infection (figure a ). of these, genes are in cluster (increase with age) and genes are in cluster (decrease with age). the induced genes in cluster include several factors involved in ras signaling (rab b, rasa , and rasgrp ) as well as clk , which was shown to be involved in host responses to sars-cov infection (figure a-b) . on the other hand, genes were concordantly repressed by sars-cov- infection (figure b here we systematically analyzed the transcriptome of the aging human lung and its relationship to sars-cov- . we found that the aging lung is characterized by a wide array of changes that could contribute to the worse outcomes of older patients with covid- . on the transcriptional level, we first identified , genes that exhibit age-associated expression patterns. we subsequently demonstrated that the aging lung is characterized by several gene signatures, including increased vascular smooth muscle contraction, reduced mitochondrial activity, and decreased lipid metabolism. by integrating these data with single cell transcriptomes of human lung tissue, we further pinpointed the specific cell types that normally express the age-associated genes. we showed that lung epithelial cells, macrophages, and th cells decrease in abundance with age, whereas fibroblasts and pericytes increase in abundance with age. these systematic changes in tissue composition and cell interactions can potentially propagate positive feedback loops that predispose the airways to pathological contraction . we find that some of the age-associated genes have been previously identified as host factors with a functional role in sars-cov replication , and a fraction of the age-associated factors have been shown to directly interact with the sars-cov- proteome . furthermore, age-associated genes are significantly enriched among genes directly regulated by sars-cov- infection , suggesting transcriptional parallels between the aging lung and sars-cov- infection. moreover, it is intriguing that the genes induced by sars-cov- infection tend to increase in expression with aging, and vice versa. whether any of these age-associated changes causally contribute to the heightened susceptibility of covid- in older populations remains to be experimentally tested. it is also important to note that the datasets analyzed here were not from patients with covid- . given the limited data that is currently publicly available, we emphasize that the analyses presented here at this stage should not be used to guide clinical practice. these analyses resulted in a number of previously unnoted observations and phenomena that illuminate new directions for subsequent research efforts on sars-cov- , generating genetically-tractable hypotheses for why advanced age is one of the strongest risk factors for covid- morbidity and mortality. ultimately, we hope such knowledge can help the field to sooner develop rational therapies for covid- that are rooted in concrete biological mechanisms. we thank akiko iwasaki, craig wilen, hongyu zhao, wei liu, wenxuan deng, andre levchenko, katie zhu, ruth montgomery, bram gerriten, steven kleinstein and a number of other colleagues for their critical comments and suggestions, which were incorporated into the analyses and manuscript. we thank antonio giraldez, andre levchenko, chris incarvito, mike crair, and scott strobel for their support on covid- research. we thank our colleagues in the chen lab, the genetics department, the systems biology institute and various yale entities. we also want to thank all of the healthcare workers who are risking their health on the frontlines to treat patients with this disease. rc and sc conceived and designed the study. rc developed the analysis approach, performed all data analyses, and created the figures. rc and sc prepared the manuscript. sc supervised the work. no competing interests related to this study. the authors have no competing interests as defined by nature research, or other interests that might be perceived to influence the interpretation of the article. the authors are committed to freely share all covid- related data, knowledge and resources to the community to facilitate the development of new treatment or prevention approaches against sars-cov- / covid- as soon as possible. as a note for full disclosure, sc is a co-founder, funding recipient and scientific advisor of evolveimmune therapeutics, which is not related to this study. c. david gene ontology and pathway analysis of cluster age-associated genes that exhibit enriched expression in muscle cells. d. david gene ontology and pathway analysis of cluster age-associated genes that exhibit enriched expression in alveolar type (at ) cells. a. venn diagram of the intersection between age-associated genes in human lung and the sars-cov- : human protein interactome (gordon et al., ) . of the age-associated genes that were found to also interact with sars-cov- , of them increased in expression with age, while decreased with age. b. age-associated genes in human lung and their interaction with sars-cov- proteins, where each block contains a sars-cov- protein (underlined) and its interacting age-associated factors. blocks are colored by the dominant directionality of the age association (orange, decreasing with age; blue, increasing with age). gene targets with already approved drugs, investigational new drugs, or preclinical molecules are additionally denoted with an asterisk. the genotype-tissue expression (gtex) project was supported by the common fund of the office of the director of the national institutes of health, and by nci, nhgri, nhlbi, nida, nimh, and ninds , . rna-seq raw counts and normalized tpm matrices were downloaded from the gtex portal (https://gtexportal.org/home/index.html) on march , , release v . all accessed data used in this study are publicly available on the web portal and have been deidentified, except for patient age range and gender. case-fatality rates in china and italy were from the chinese cdc and italian iss, for visualization of rna-seq expression data, the tpm values were log transformed and plotted in r (v . . ). all boxplots are tukey boxplots, with interquartile range (iqr) boxes and . × iqr whiskers. pairwise statistical comparisons in the plots were assessed by two-tailed mann-whitney test, while statistical comparisons across all age groups were performed by kruskal-wallis test. to identify age-associated genes, the raw counts values were analyzed by deseq (v . . ) , using the likelihood ratio test (lrt). age-associated genes were determined at a significance threshold of adjusted p < . . genes passing the significance threshold were then scaled to z-scores and clustered using the degpatterns function from the r package degreport (v . . ). gene clusters with progressive and consistent trends with age were retained for downstream analysis. gene ontology and pathway enrichment analysis was performed using david (v . ) (https://david.ncifcrf.gov/), separating the age-associated genes into the two clusters (increasing or decreasing with age), as described above. scrna-seq data were analyzed in r (v . . ) using seurat , and custom scripts. of the age-associated genes identified from gtex bulk transcriptomes, genes were matched in the tissue stability cell atlas dataset and genes were matched in the human lung cell atlas dataset. to determine the percentage of cells expressing a given gene, the expression matrices were converted to binary matrices by setting a threshold of expression > . cell typespecific expression frequencies for each gene were then calculated using the provided cell type annotations. to identify genes preferentially expressed in a specific cell type, we further scaled the expression frequencies in r to obtain z-scores. data were visualized in r using the nmf package . where applicable, gene ontology analysis was performed with david (v . ) , using genes with z-score > in the cell type of interest for analysis. to infer the cellular composition of each lung sample, we analyzed the tpm expression matrices using the xcell algorithm . the resultant cell type enrichment tables were analyzed in r. for data visualization, cell type enrichment scores were scaled to z-scores, and the median zscore for each age group was expressed as a heatmap, using the superheat package . ageassociation was assessed across all age groups by kruskal-wallis test. to assess whether any age-associated genes affect host responses to sars-cov (a coronavirus related to sars-cov- ), we analyzed the data from a published sirna screen of host factors influencing sars-cov (data set s in the publication; accessed on march , ). for data visualization, each point corresponding to a target gene was size-scaled and color-coded according to the age-association statistical analyses described above. to assess whether any lung age-associated genes encode proteins that interact with the sars-cov- proteome, we compiled the data from a preprint manuscript detailing the human host factors that interact with different proteins in the sars-cov- proteome (accessed on march , ). to assess whether the expression of lung age-associated genes is influenced by sars-cov- infection, we utilized the data from a preprint manuscript detailing the transcriptional response to sars-cov- infection , from the gene expression omnibus (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=gse ) (accessed on april , ). differentially expressed genes were determined using the wald test in deseq (v . . ) comparing sars-cov- infected cells to batch-matched mock controls, with a significance threshold of adjusted p < . . of the age-associated genes, genes were matched to the rna-seq dataset. statistical significance of overlaps between the gene sets was assessed by hypergeometric test, assuming , total genes as annotated in the rna-seq dataset and age-associated genes. statistical significance of the association between the directionality of sars-cov- regulation and the directionality of age-association was assessed by two-tailed fischer's exact test. gene ontology and pathway enrichment analysis was performed using david (v . ) (https://david.ncifcrf.gov/). comprehensive information on the statistical analyses used are included in various places, including the figures, figure legends and results, where the methods, significance, p-values and/or tails are described. all error bars have been defined in the figure legends or methods. codes used for data analysis or generation of the figures related to this study are available upon request to the corresponding author and will be deposited to github upon publication for free public access. all relevant processed data generated during this study are included in this article and its supplementary information files. raw data are from various sources as described above. all data and resources related to this study are freely available upon request to the corresponding author. tables table s : demographics of donors for gtex lung samples. (gordon et al., ) with age-association statistics from this study. table s : differential expression analysis in a cells, infected with sars-cov- vs mock control, with age-association annotations. table s : differential expression analysis in a -ace cells, infected with sars-cov- vs mock control, with age-association annotations. table s : differential expression analysis in calu- cells, infected with sars-cov- vs mock control, with age-association annotations. cdkn b gna rab b n bp rasgrp camsap mxi gem c s rbm rasa brwd phc gatad b pnrc arid b atrx clk pnisr prtg h f nckipsd cnn ptov cfd rhoc polr f gnai tk tm sf pskh ap m msh atp v e pgam mvk aacs acaca acss nipsnap nsdhl aifm agr gipc mmab hadh qdpr ap s ndufa poldip ahcy mrps samm prpf nup gba cln apeh atic arpc b ppp ca aprt atp v d akr a phb c qbp parp cbr acat pdhb ndufa mrpl prdx mtch ormdl ndufs a t p b a l g n e u p r i m c e n p f h o o k g c c p i g o n a r s a a r a t p v a n d u f a f a g p s n p c p p t n d u f b -log 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sars-cov- -human protein-protein interaction map reveals drug targets and potential drug-repurposing protein associated with myc (pam) is a potent inhibitor of adenylyl cyclases pam mediates sustained inhibition of camp signaling by sphingosine- -phosphate camp regulation of airway smooth muscle function sars-cov- launches a unique transcriptional signature from in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo systems a microphysiological model of the bronchial airways reveals the interplay of mechanical and biochemical signals in bronchospasm systematic and integrative analysis of large gene lists using david bioinformatics resources integrating single-cell transcriptomic data across different conditions, technologies, and species comprehensive integration of single-cell data a flexible r package for nonnegative matrix factorization superheat: an r package for creating beautiful and extendable heatmaps for visualizing complex data key: cord- -w tps p authors: razvi, mohammad h.; peng, dunfa; dar, altaf a.; powell, steven m.; frierson, henry f.; moskaluk, christopher a.; washington, kay; el‐rifai, wael title: transcriptional oncogenomic hot spots in barrett's adenocarcinomas: serial analysis of gene expression date: - - journal: genes chromosomes cancer doi: . /gcc. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: w tps p serial analysis of gene expression (sage) provides quantitative and comprehensive expression profiling in a given cell population. in our efforts to define gene expression alterations in barrett's‐related adenocarcinomas (ba), we produced eight sage libraries and obtained a total of , expressed tags with , ( . %) accounting for singleton tags. the tumor samples produced an average of , tags per library, whereas normal samples produced an average of , tags per library. our libraries contained , unique tags representing , known gene symbols. five hundred and sixty‐eight unique tags were differentially expressed between bas and normal tissue samples (at least twofold; p ≤ . ), of these matched to known genes. interestingly, the distribution of altered genes was not uniform across the human genome. overexpressed genes tended to cluster in well‐defined hot spots located in certain chromosomes. for example, chromosome had overexpressed genes, of which mapped to q . using the gene ontology approach for functional classification of genes, we identified several groups that are relevant to carcinogenesis. we validated the sage results of five representative genes (anpep, ecgf , pp , eif a , and gkn ) using quantitative real‐time reverse‐transcription pcr on ba samples and normal samples. in addition, we performed an immunohistochemistry analysis for anpep, which demonstrated overexpression of anpep in / ( %) barrett's dysplasias and / ( %) bas. anpep is a secreted protein that may have diagnostic and/or prognostic significance for barrett's progression. the use of genomic approaches in this study provided useful information about the molecular pathobiology of bas. © wiley‐liss, inc. gastroesophageal reflux disease (gerd) is a major health problem in the united states with a prevalence of - % in the general population and an increasing incidence rate (serag, ) . approximately % of patients with chronic gerd develop a metaplastic condition known as barrett's esophagus (be) in which the normal squamous epithelium of the esophagus is replaced by a columnar epithelium with goblet cells. be is a serious premalignant lesion that can ultimately progress from metaplasia to dysplasia and subsequently to barrett's adenocarcinoma (ba) (ferraris et al., ; o'connor et al., ; rana and johnston, ) . the incidence of ba has rapidly increased in the western world over the past three decades (hamilton et al., ; phillips et al., ; blot et al., ) , and is comprised of aneuploid tumors characterized by complex molecular alterations (el-rifai et al., ; . several genetic abnormalities have been associated with barrett's tumorigenesis, including microsatel-lite instability (meltzer et al., ) , loss of heterozygosity (dolan et al., ) , gene-promoter hypermethylation (sato and meltzer, ) , as well as up-and down-regulation of various genes (wu et al., ; swami et al., ; regalado et al., ; brabender et al., ) . comprehensive molecular analyses of dna amplifications and gene expression have revealed complex genetic alterations in gastroesophageal and lower esophageal adenocarcinomas (el-rifai et al., ; varis et al., ; van dekken et al., ; kuwano et al., ) . analyses of the human transcriptome map of normal tissues have shown clustering of highly expressed genes in chromosomal domains (caron et al., ) . chromosomal arms and bands are known to occupy specific locations within the nucleus known as chromosome territories (cts). the positioning of a gene(s) can influence its access to the machinery responsible for specific nuclear functions such as transcription and splicing (cremer and cremer, ) . recently, a few reports have suggested the presence of transcriptional hot spots in the cancer genome, (wu et al., ) where overexpressed genes tend to cluster in defined chromosomal domains; however, similar information remains lacking for most cancer types. serial analysis of gene expression (sage) provides unlimited, comprehensive, genome-wide analysis of gene expression in a given cell population (velculescu et al., . the major advantage in using sage is the quantitative ability to accurately evaluate transcript numbers without prior sequencing information. this method has proven invaluable in studies of several tumor types, including adenocarcinomas of the colon (parle-mcdermott et al., ; st croix et al., ) , prostate (culp et al., ) , pancreas (argani et al., ) , ovary (hough et al., ) , and breast (seth et al., ) . in this study, we explored the ba transcriptome using sage and mapped gene-expression changes to chromosomal positions, thereby generating a map of transcriptional oncogenomic hot spots of this deadly cancer. high-quality total rna ( lg) was extracted from four intestinal-type, moderately to poorly differentiated, ba cases (three gastroesophageal junctional [gej] and one lower esophageal) using an rneasy kit (qiagen, hilden, germany) . in addition, four normal gastric mucosa pools were used as reference samples. each of these pools consisted of four normal gastric mucosal biopsy samples from four different individuals. the tumors selected for sage analysis were estimated to consist of more than % tumor cells. all normal samples had histologically normal mucosae confirmed on review of hematoxylin-and eosin-stained sections. importantly, histopathological examination confirmed that none of the normal samples had any areas of inflammation or necrosis. all samples were collected with consent in accordance with approved institutional review board protocols. sage libra-ries were constructed using nlaiii as the anchoring enzyme and bsmfi as the tagging enzyme as described in sage protocol version . e, june , , which includes a few modifications of the standard protocol (velculescu et al., ) . a detailed protocol and schematic of the method is available at (http://www.sagenet.org/protocol/ index.htm). we sequenced , clones with an average of , clones per library, using the cancer genome anatomy project (cgap). esage . a software was used to extract sage tags, remove duplicate ditags, tabulate tag contents, and link sage tags in the database to unigene clusters using the recently reported ehm-tag-mapping method (margulies and innis, ; margulies et al., ) . the resulting libraries' tags were compared with unigene clusters and the sage tag ''reliable'' mapping database (http://www.sagenet. org/resources/genemaps.htm). statistical analyses of these tags were then performed using esage software. quantitative real-time reverse-transcription pcr quantitative real-time reverse-transcription pcr (qrt-pcr) was performed on adenocarcinomas of barrett's-related origin, normal gastric epithelial tissues, and barrett's metaplasia tissue samples. all tissues were dissected to obtain ! % cell purity. all of the adenocarcinoma samples were collected from the gej or lower esophagus and ranged from well differentiated (wd) to poorly differentiated (pd), stages i-iv, with a mix of intestinal-and diffuse-type tumors. rna was purified from all samples using an rneasy kit. single-stranded cdna was generated using an advantage tm rt-for-pcr kit (clontech, palo alto, ca). qrt-pcr was performed using an icycler (biorad, hercules, ca) with sybr green technology, and the threshold cycle numbers were calculated using icycler software v . . reactions were performed in triplicate and threshold cycle numbers were averaged. for validation of sage results, we designed gene-specific primers for human anpep, ecgf , pp , eif a , gkn , and hprt . these primers were obtained from integrated dna technologies (idt, coralville, ia) and their sequences are available upon request. a single-melt curve peak was observed for each product, thus confirming the purity of all amplified cdna products. the qrt-pcr results were normalized to hprt , which had minimal variation in all normal and neoplastic samples tested. fold overexpression was calculated according to the formula, ðr t Àe t Þ = ðr n Àe n Þ , as described earlier (buck- , ) where r t is the threshold cycle number for the reference gene observed in the tumor, e t is the threshold cycle number for the experimental gene observed in the tumor, r n is the threshold cycle number for the reference gene observed in the normal sample, and e n is the threshold cycle number for the experimental gene observed in the normal sample. r n and e n values were averages of the corresponding normal analyzed samples. the relative fold expression with standard error of mean ( sem) is shown in figure . immunohistochemistry immunohistochemical (ihc) analysis of anpep protein expression was performed on a tumor tissue microarray (tma) that contained adenocarcinomas. samples from adjacent normal and dysplastic tissues were included when available. all tissue samples were histologically verified, and representative regions were selected for inclusion in the tma. all of the adenocarcinoma samples were collected from either the gej or lower esophagus and ranged from wd to pd, stages i-iv, with a mix of intestinal-and diffuse-type tumors. tissue cores with a diameter of . mm were retrieved at least two tumors showed more than fivefold change (p . ). tags with '' '' value were replaced with arbitrary . values for relative calculation of fold expression. the ratio was calculated after normalization to total tag numbers. figure . chromosomal localization of deregulated genes. chromosomal regions that contain up-regulated genes are shown in red, whereas those that contain down-regulated genes are displayed in green. regions which contain both up-and down-regulated genes are colored in yellow. the distribution of these genes did not follow a random distribution pattern and several genomic regions contain clusters of deregulated genes. some of the more significant ''hot spots'' can be seen here on chromosomes (p . ), (p . ), (p . ), (p . ), and (p . ). from the selected regions of the donor blocks and punched to the recipient block using a manual tissue array instrument (beecher instruments, silver spring, md). each tissue sample was represented by four tissue cores on the tma. sections ( lm) were transferred to polylysine-coated slides (super-frostplus, menzel-gläser, braunschweig, germany) and incubated at c for hr. the resulting tma was used for ihc analysis utilizing a : dilution of anpep antibody (cd /aminopepti- overexpressed genes q s a , s a , s a , s a , s a , ecm , s a , s a , lmna, sprr , hdgf, hist h be, tagln dase-n ab- mouse monoclonal antibody; lab vision corporation, fremont, ca). sections were deparaffinized and rehydrated. tma slides were treated in a microwave with citrate buffer for min and incubated with the antibody at room temperature. detection was performed using an avidin-biotin immunoperoxidase assay. cores with no evidence of staining, or only rare scattered positive cells less than %, were recorded as negative. the overall intensity of staining was recorded as that for the core with the strongest intensity. ihc results were evaluated for intensity and frequency of staining. the intensity of staining was graded as (negative), (weak), (moderate), and (strong). the frequency was graded from to by percentage of positive cells as follows: grade , < %; grade , - %; grade , - %; grade , - %; grade , > %. the index score was the product of multiplication of the intensity and frequency grades, which was then classified into a point scale: index score product of , index score products and , index score products and , index score products through . sequence analyses of , clones from eight sage libraries produced , expressed tags, with , tags ( . %) accounting for singleton tags. the four tumor sage libraries (gsm , gsm , hg , and hs ) produced , tags with an average of , tags per library. the normal samples (gsm , gsm , s, and s) produced , tags with an average of , tags per library. the comparison of expressed tags to the unigene cluster release of may identified , unique sage tags. these tags represented , known gene symbols according to unigene information. of these, unique tags were differentially expressed between bas and normal tissue samples (at least twofolds and p . ). these unique tags matched known genes ( upregulated and downregulated) that regulate diverse cellular functions and signaling pathways, which may prove to be quite significant in the detection and prevention of cancer. ninety-three genes were significantly altered, showing a greater than fivefold expression change in at least two tumor libraries as compared to all four normal libraries (p . ) ( table ) . fortyeight genes showed up-regulation, whereas were down-regulated. the group of over-expressed genes contained several with known cancer-related functions, including members of s a calciumbinding proteins, heat-shock protein kda (hsb ), heat-shock kda protein beta (hspcb), prothymosin (ptma), transmembrane bax inhibitor motif containing- (pp ), peroxiredoxin- (prdx ), and endothelial growth factor- (ecgf ). down-regulated transcripts included genes such as gastrokine (gkn ), down-regulated in gastric cancer (gddr), gastric intrinsic factor (gif), methyl-cpg binding domain protein (mbd ), and trefoil factor (tff ). cgap maintains the public sage database for gene expression in human cancer (lal et al., ) , and sequence data are publicly available at http:// www.ncbi.nih.gov/geo and http://cgap.nci.nih.gov/ sage/. onto-express online software (http://vortex.cs. wayne.edu/index.htm) (khatri et al., ; draghici et al., ) was used to identify potential transcriptional oncogenomic hot spots in the genome and obtain the functional classification of the deregulated genes. we mapped all sage unique transcripts ( , gene symbols) to their corresponding cytogenetic locations. the altered transcripts ( known gene symbols) were analyzed against all transcripts to generate an expression ideogram and identify transcription hotspots (fig. ) . interestingly, the distribution of altered genes was not uniform along the human chromosomes. overexpressed genes tended to cluster in well-defined hot spots across the human genome (table ) . for example, overexpressed genes mapped to chromosome , of which mapped to the single chromosome band q . similarly, genes mapped to chromosome , of which mapped to the chromosome band q . table and figure summarize these data and map the genes to their corresponding cytogenetic locations. gene ontology (go) terms are organized in three general categories: biological process, cellular role, and molecular function; terms within each go category are linked in defined parent-child relationships that reflect current biological knowledge (ashburner et al., ) . among the differentially expressed genes, the number corresponding to each category was tallied and compared with the number expected for each go category based on its representation on the reference gene list, which contained all of the unique , known gene symbols detected by analysis of the eight sage libraries. significant differences from the expected were calculated with a twosided binomial distribution. false discovery rates (benjamini et al., ) and bonferroni adjustments were also calculated. the biological meaning of the p values obtained depends upon the list of genes that are submitted; as our gene list is from a comparison of ba samples, it can be inferred that this cancer stimulates the processes involved within the functional groups that were most highly represented in the results of the go classification. in our set of differentially expressed genes, the functional groups demonstrating the most significant representation appear under the biologicalprocess ontology and map to the cell-cycle regulation, dna binding and regulation, cell-environment interaction, and cell-signaling categories. table summarizes several important go functional classes. to evaluate further the sage data, we selected five novel genes (anpep, ecgf , pp , eif a , and gkn , all of which have important cellular or biological features) for validation with qrt-pcr. we confirmed over-expression of anpep, ecgf , pp , and eif a and downregulation of gkn in primary gej and lower esophageal adenocarcinoma samples (table , fig. ) . interestingly, gkn was not expressed in normal esophageal mucosa samples but showed a transient expression in be samples where / of these samples demonstrated expression levels com- the average ratio is shown. this ratio was calculated by comparing the total number of tags in tumor samples and normal samples. parable to those observed in normal gastric mucosae. we did not have samples with barrett's dysplasia for qrt-pcr. the gkn expression was lost in almost all adenocarcinoma samples (fig. ) . the qrt-pcr products were run on . % agarose gels for visual confirmation of these results (fig. ) . rt-pcr results for all five genes were also compared in each individual primary tissue sample to determine any correlations in combined gene expression levels; however, we were unable to find any correlations of statistical significance. the ihc analysis demonstrated a lack of immunostaining for anpep in normal esophageal and gastric epithelial tissues. on the other hand, bas showed overexpression of anpep (score to ) in / ( %) tumors. a weak to moderate expression of anpep (score to ) was observed in / ( %) high-grade barrett's dysplasia samples. the immunostaining pattern of anpep was cytoplasmic with strong extracellular and luminal expression (fig. ) . the immunostaining for anpep was observed in tumors with intestinal and diffuse histological subtypes and in all stages (table ). however, the relatively small sample size did not provide a sufficient statistical power to detect significant correlations between the ihc staining patterns and clinicopathological factors such as tumor histology, grade, or stage. in this study, we performed a comprehensive analysis of the transcriptome of bas using sage. the major advantage to using sage is the quantitative ability to evaluate accurately transcript numbers without prior sequence information. the sage analysis produced a great deal of information about transcripts and candidate cancer genes, and we have interpreted these data in terms of possible genomic and functional organization of candidate cancer genes. sage analysis requires laborious and extensive sequencing that often limits the number of samples that are subjected to analysis. we obtained a total of , expressed tags from eight sage libraries with minimal singleton tags ( , ; . %). the qrt-pcr analysis on a larger sample size confirmed the sage results and validated the overexpression of anpep, ecgf , pp , and eif a and downregulation of gkn . ecgf (thymidine phosphorylase) expression has been shown to correlate with the angiogenic activity of some tumors (mazurek et al., ) . ecgf expression may be a sign of tumor-stromal interac- ( ) / ( ) n -n / ( ) / ( ) / ( ) / ( ) / ( ) na / ( ) / ( ) / ( ) / ( ) / ( ) a values in parentheses are percentages. na, information not available; gej, gastroesophageal junction; eso, esophageal; wd, well-differentiated; md, moderately-differentiated; pd, poorly differentiated. we did not observe statistical significance with any of the correlates due to small sample size. the horizontal axis shows sample numbers, whereas the fold expression in tumor samples compared with that in normal samples is shown on the vertical axis. the fold expression was calculated according to the formula: ðrtÀetÞ = ðrnÀenÞ as detailed in the ''materials and methods'' section. each bar represents one sample. the displayed mean fold expression for each sample is calculated in comparison with the expression average of the normal samples. the expression of each gene was normalized to the expression of hprt , which showed minimal variation in all normal and neoplastic samples tested. gkn shows downregulation ( . -fold expression) whereas anpep, pp , eif a , and ecgf demonstrate overexpression (! . fold expression) in primary tumors as compared to normal tissue samples. tion promoting greater vascularization around the cancer lesion and has also been found to protect cells from dna-damaging agents and related apoptosis (jeung et al., ) . eif a (eukaryotic translation factor ) has been shown to be involved in cell proliferation through the action of polyamines (nishimura et al., (nishimura et al., , , and plays a role in the regulation of tp -related apoptosis (li et al., ) . pp , also known as transmembrane bax inhibitor motif-containing (tmbim ), is a novel gene of cancer cells. although very little is known regarding gkn , it has been previously reported as highly expressed in normal gastric epithelium (martin et al., ) and down-regulated in gastric carcinomas (oien et al., ) . we have detected strong expression of gkn in be that was followed with loss of its expression in adenocarcinomas. this transient expression of gkn may be a protective response to acid-induced reflux-disease injury that is the lost with cellular progression to cancer. anpep, also known as cd , is of a particular clinical interest since it is a secreted protein that may be used as a potential biomarker. using ihc, analysis of anpep expression demonstrated protein expression at the outer cell membrane layers with significant secretion into the lumen of / barrett's high-grade dysplasia samples and generally greater expression in / adenocarcinomas, suggesting that anpep overexpression may be an early event in carcinogenesis. anpep expression plays a role in angiogenesis where a reduction in expression has been shown to cause reduced capillary formation (fukasawa et al., ) , cell motility (chang et al., ) , and adhesion (fukasawa et al., ) . inhibition of anpep decreases the invasive potential of metastatic tumor cells in vitro (saiki et al., ) . interestingly, anpep is also a cell-surface metalloproteinase that acts as a recep-tor for human coronavirus (yeager et al., ) and is considered to be a marker for epithelial-mesenchymal interaction (sorrell et al., ) . the combination of transcriptional analysis together with cytogenetic information provided a powerful tool to align altered transcripts across the human genome. interestingly, the distribution of deregulated genes did not follow a uniform pattern across the genome. instead, we found a remarkable pattern of distribution with the presence of transcriptional hot spots along chromosomal domains. from this pattern, we were able to identify novel, transcriptionally active, and oncogenomic hot spots. one of our surprising findings was the clustering of overexpressed genes in one of the smallest human chromosomes, . we also identified a number of other hot spots, such as q ( genes), p ( genes), and p . ( genes) (table ) in a recent analysis of amplification-based clustering demonstrated that cancers with similar etiology, cell-of-origin, or topographical location have a tendency to obtain convergent amplification profiles (myllykangas et al., ) . in line with this observation, vogel et al. ( ) reported that genes expressed in concert are organized in a linear arrangement for coordinated regulation. the present evidence suggests organization of a large proportion of the human transcriptome into gene clusters throughout the genome, which are partly regulated by the same transcription factors, share biological functions, and are characterized by nonhousekeeping genes (vogel et al., ) . taken together, our results further highlight the complex organization of the cancer genome and suggest that integrated analysis of the transcriptome may reveal similar findings in other tumors as well. each cancer candidate gene was assigned to a functional group based on go information (table ). five matched tumor and normal samples that were analyzed using qrt-pcr were subjected to . % agarose gel electrophoresis and ethidium bromide staining. the intensity of bands confirms the pcr results, indicat-ing higher mrna expression levels of anpep, pp , eif a , and ecgf, as well as lower expression of gkn in most of the tumor samples as compared with their matched normal control samples. hprt was used as a control to show similar levels in each matched normal and tumor samples. using this approach, several groups that are highly interesting and relevant to carcinogenesis were identified including transcriptional regulators ( genes) and zinc finger transcription factors ( genes). similarly, several candidate genes were found to be involved in the notable functional groups of cell-environment interaction and signal transduction. subsets of these groups were of inter-est and included metalloproteinases and g proteins and their regulators. among the interesting groups, we also observed deregulation of genes that regulate cell calcium homeostasis. the role of calcium-binding proteins in carcinogenesis has drawn a complex picture showing downregulation or overexpression depending upon the tumor type and location (kao et al., ; mueller et al., ; heighway et al., ; heizmann et al., ; imazawa et al., ) . the sage data also indicated up-regulation of several members of the protein phosphatases such as ppap b, hif a, and ppp r b that are known to regulate and activate several cellular kinases (parsons, ; nigg, ; bakkenist and kastan, ; ventura and nebreda, ) . we have recently shown that over-expression of ppp r b in gastrointestinal cancers is associated with several oncogenic properties including the resistance of cancer cells to drug-induced apoptosis (belkhiri et al., ) . taken together, our data suggest a genomic organization of cancer genes, which are involved in the deregulation of specific cellular processes important for the tumorigenesis cascade. in conclusion, our findings indicate the presence of transcriptionally active oncogenomic hot spots in the cancer genome of bas. we have detected deregulation of several important cancer genes and identified novel targets for carcinogenesis. the biological functions and clinical significance of these genes will be elucidated in future studies. discovery of new markers of cancer through serial analysis of gene expression: prostate stem cell antigen is overexpressed in pancreatic adenocarcinoma gene ontology: tool for the unification of biology. the gene ontology consortium phosphatases join kinases in dnadamage response pathways darpp- : a novel antiapoptotic gene in upper gastrointestinal carcinomas controlling the false discovery rate in behavior genetics research continuing climb in rates of esophageal adenocarcinoma: an update glutathione s-transferase-pi expression is downregulated in patients with barrett's esophagus and esophageal adenocarcinoma secreted and cell surface genes expressed in benign and malignant colorectal tumors the human transcriptome map: clustering of highly expressed genes in chromosomal domains cd (aminopeptidase n) can associate with tumor-associated antigen l and enhance the motility of human lung cancer cells chromosome territories, nuclear architecture and gene regulation in mammalian cells tracking prostate carcinoma micrometastasis to multiple organs using histochemical marker genes and novel cell systems loh at the sites of the dcc, apc, and tp tumor suppressor genes occurs in barrett's metaplasia and dysplasia adjacent to adenocarcinoma of the esophagus global functional profiling of gene expression molecular and biologic basis of upper gastrointestinal malignancy gastric carcinoma consistent genetic alterations in xenografts of proximal stomach and gastro-esophageal junction adenocarcinomas genetic differences between adenocarcinomas arising in barrett's esophagus and gastric mucosa gastric cancers overexpress darpp- and a novel isoform, t-darpp incidence of barrett's adenocarcinoma in an italian population: an endoscopic surveillance programme. gruppo operativo per lo studio delle precancerosi esofagee (gospe) aminopeptidase n (apn/ cd ) is selectively expressed in vascular endothelial cells and plays multiple roles in angiogenesis prevalence and characteristics of barrett esophagus in patients with adenocarcinoma of the esophagus or esophagogastric junction expression profiling of primary non-small cell lung cancer for target identification s proteins: structure, functions and pathology large-scale serial analysis of gene expression reveals genes differentially expressed in ovarian cancer s a overexpression is frequently observed in esophageal squamous cell carcinoma protection against dna damage-induced apoptosis by the angiogenic factor thymidine phosphorylase active involvement of ca in mitotic progression of swiss t fibroblasts profiling gene expression using onto-express genetic alterations in esophageal cancer a public database for gene expression in human cancers a novel eif a complex functions as a regulator of p and p -dependent apoptosis esage: managing and analysing data generated with serial analysis of gene expression (sage) a comparative molecular analysis of developing mouse forelimbs and hindlimbs using serial analysis of gene expression (sage) a novel mitogenic protein that is highly expressed in cells of the gastric antrum mucosa evaluation of tumor angiogenesis and thymidine phosphorylase tissue expression in patients with endometrial cancer microsatellite instability occurs frequently and in both diploid and aneuploid cell populations of barrett's-associated esophageal adenocarcinomas subcellular distribution of s proteins in tumor cells and their relocation in response to calcium activation dna copy number amplification profiling of human neoplasms cell cycle regulation by protein kinases and phosphatases inhibition of cell growth through inactivation of eukaryotic translation initiation factor a (eif a) by deoxyspergualin independent roles of eif a and polyamines in cell proliferation the incidence of adenocarcinoma and dysplasia in barrett's esophagus: report on the cleveland clinic barrett's esophagus registry gastrokine is abundantly and specifically expressed in superficial gastric epithelium, down-regulated in gastric carcinoma, and shows high evolutionary conservation serial analysis of gene expression identifies putative metastasis-associated transcripts in colon tumour cell lines phosphatases and tumorigenesis high-dose cytarabine and daunorubicin induction and postremission chemotherapy for the treatment of acute myelogenous leukemia in adults incidence of adenocarcinoma and mortality in patients with barrett's oesophagus diagnosed between and : implications for endoscopic surveillance abundant expression of the intestinal protein villin in barrett's metaplasia and esophageal adenocarcinomas role of aminopeptidase n (cd ) in tumor-cell invasion and extracellular matrix degradation cpg island hypermethylation in progression of esophageal and gastric cancer time trends of gastroesophageal reflux disease: a systematic review novel estrogen and tamoxifen induced genes identified by sage (serial analysis of gene expression) production of a monoclonal antibody, df- , that identifies cells at the epithelial-mesenchymal interface in normal human skin. apn/cd is an epithelial-mesenchymal marker in skin e-cadherin expression in gastroesophageal reflux disease, barrett's esophagus, and esophageal adenocarcinoma: an immunohistochemical and immunoblot study evaluation of genetic patterns in different tumor areas of intermediate-grade prostatic adenocarcinomas by high-resolution genomic array analysis targets of gene amplification and overexpression at q in gastric cancer serial analysis of gene expression analysing uncharted transcriptomes with sage protein kinases and phosphatases as therapeutic targets in cancer chromosomal clustering of a human transcriptome reveals regulatory background sucrase-isomaltase gene expression in barrett's esophagus and adenocarcinoma a novel method for gene expression mapping of metastatic competence in human bladder cancer human aminopeptidase n is a receptor for human coronavirus e the contents of this work are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the national cancer institute, university of virginia, or vanderbilt university. we thank mr. frank revetta for his technical assistance and mrs. sheryl mroz for editing this manuscript. ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) na, information not available; gej, gastroesophageal junction; eso, esophageal; wd, well-differentiated; md, moderately-differentiated; pd, poorly differentiated. we did not observe statistical significance with any of the correlates due to small sample size. a values in parentheses are percentages. key: cord- -m j dekj authors: smith, s. e.; gibson, m. s.; wash, r. s.; ferrara, f.; wright, e.; temperton, n.; kellam, p.; fife, m. title: chicken interferon-inducible transmembrane protein restricts influenza viruses and lyssaviruses in vitro date: - - journal: j virol doi: . /jvi. - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: m j dekj interferon-inducible transmembrane protein (ifitm ) is an effector protein of the innate immune system. it confers potent, cell-intrinsic resistance to infection by diverse enveloped viruses both in vitro and in vivo, including influenza viruses, west nile virus, and dengue virus. ifitm prevents cytosolic entry of these viruses by blocking complete virus envelope fusion with cell endosome membranes. although the ifitm locus, which includes ifitm , - , - , and - , is present in mammalian species, this locus has not been unambiguously identified or functionally characterized in avian species. here, we show that the ifitm locus exists in chickens and is syntenic with the ifitm locus in mammals. the chicken ifitm protein restricts cell infection by influenza a viruses and lyssaviruses to a similar level as its human orthologue. furthermore, we show that chicken ifitm is functional in chicken cells and that knockdown of constitutive expression in chicken fibroblasts results in enhanced infection by influenza a virus. chicken ifitm and - are constitutively expressed in all tissues examined, whereas ifitm is only expressed in the bursa of fabricius, gastrointestinal tract, cecal tonsil, and trachea. despite being highly divergent at the amino acid level, ifitm proteins of birds and mammals can restrict replication of viruses that are able to infect different host species, suggesting ifitm proteins may provide a crucial barrier for zoonotic infections. t ype i and ii interferons (ifns) are critical for the development of the cell intrinsic antiviral state and achieve this by inducing the expression of genes collectively named ifn-stimulated genes (isgs). expression of the interferon-inducible transmembrane (ifitm) genes (new members of the isg family) restricts the replication of several highly pathogenic human viruses, including severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) coronavirus, filoviruses (marburg virus and ebola virus), influenza a viruses (iavs), and flaviviruses (dengue virus) ( , ) . although restriction of hiv- infection has also been reported in some studies ( , ) , others have failed to demonstrate such activity ( ) . ifitm proteins are small, with an average size of amino acids, and share a topology ( ) defined by a conserved cd domain ( ) . this domain consists of two intramembrane (im) regions and a conserved intracellular loop (cil). as their names suggest, ifitm proteins are upregulated by type i and ii ifns; however, some cell and tissue types express constitutive levels of one or more of these proteins ( ) . in humans, ifitm , - , and - are expressed in a wide range of tissues, while ifitm expression is limited to osteoblasts. mice have orthologues for ifitm , - , - , and - and additional ifitm genes, ifitm and ifitm ( ) . genome analysis of chickens has predicted the existence of two ifitm genes, orthologous to human ifitm (huifitm ) and huifitm ( ) . however, such in silico analysis is often confounded by inappropriate identification of pseudogenes and incorrect assignment of orthologues, due to an incomplete knowledge of ifitm gene duplication and evolutionary history of this locus during speciation. under such circumstances, careful genome analysis of syntenic regions and functional characterization of genes are required to attempt to unambiguously define orthologous genes. ifitm proteins are the only mediators of innate immunity known to inhibit viral infection by blocking cytoplasmic entry and replication of diverse enveloped viruses ( ) . ifitm-mediated viral restriction occurs at entry sites of susceptible viruses, in the late endosomal and lysosomal compartments, where the proteins are predicted to adopt an intramembrane structure. the n and c termini of the proteins are predicted to be cytoplasmic, the two intramembrane domains are buried within the cytoplasmic facing lipid bilayer, and the cd domain is thought to be facing the cytoplasm ( ) . ifitm proteins inhibit formation of a fusion pore between the virus and endosomal membranes following acidic activation of virus envelope fusion proteins. recently, the ability of ifitm proteins to alter cellular membrane fluidity was demonstrated, leading to the arrest of fusion pore formation at the stage of hemimembrane fusion ( ) . furthermore, it was recently found that ifitm interacts with vesicle-membrane-protein-associated protein a (vapa) and prevents its association with oxysterolbinding protein (osbp) ( ) , which disturbs intracellular cholesterol homeostasis and thus causes inhibition of viral fusion in the late endosome, by an unknown mechanism. the high constitutive levels of ifitm proteins observed in many tissues potentially provide a first line of defense against virus infection. the induction of type i ifns further promotes ifitm expression, increasing their protective effect on sur-rounding uninfected cells. depletion of ifitm in mouse cells results in a loss of % to % of ifn=s protective effect against endosomal entering viruses ( ). a similar attenuation is also observed from cells derived from ifitmdel mice, lacking ifitm , - , - , - , and , suggesting ifitm accounts for most of the antiviral activity of this locus for the viruses investigated ( ) . importantly, mice homozygous for ifitm deletion suffer fulminant viral pneumonia when challenged with low-pathogenicity iav ( , ) . direct clinical relevance of ifitm 's involvement in restricting human iav infection has recently been shown in individuals hospitalized with seasonal or pandemic influenza h n / viruses ( ) , where a statistically significant number of hospitalized patients show overrepresentation of a minor c allele in ifitm (rs -c) that correlates with a decrease in the ability of ifitm to restrict influenza virus infection in vitro. importantly, the significance of the association of the rs -c allele with severe influenza infection was recently replicated in a chinese cohort of patients ( ) . together, these data reveal that the action of ifitm profoundly alters the course of influenza virus infection in mammals and that allelic variation in ifitm alters host susceptibility to severe influenza virus infection. although ifitms have been well characterized in humans and mice, little compelling functional data exists for this isg family in other species. avian iavs represent a continuing threat to human populations both as a source for direct human infection and as a reservoir for iav genetic variation. these reservoirs provide the conditions for the generation of reassorted iavs with altered host ranges and pandemic potential ( ) . furthermore, endemic and emerging avian viral pathogens create major challenges to the poultry industry through loss of productivity and mortality. similarly, lyssaviruses, particularly rabies virus (rabv), pose a substantial public health threat, with half of the world's population living in areas of endemicity ( ) , although reports of avian lyssavirus infections are rare. the clinical presentations of an infection are identical for all lyssavirus species; however, while current vaccines and postexposure prophylaxis provide sterilizing immunity against rabv and genetically similar species, no such protection is conferred against the more genetically diverse lyssaviruses ( ) . intrinsic innate immunity plays an important role in controlling the spread of numerous enveloped viruses; however, the influence of the ifitm isgs on members of the lyssavirus genus has not previously been evaluated. although putative ifitm genes have been identified by database searching in many species ( , ) , no formal genome analysis or functional assessment of avian ifitm genes has been undertaken. here we report the analysis of the ifitm locus, reaffirming the existence of chicken ifitm (chifitm ) and providing the first functional characterization of chifitm and chifitm , as well as demonstrating restriction of endosomeentering viruses by chifitms in vitro. cell culture and generation of ifitm-expressing cell lines. human-derived a cells (ccl- ; atcc) were grown in f- medium (life technologies) and human hek t (crl- ; atcc) and chicken df- (crl- ; atcc) cells were grown in dulbecco's modified eagle's medium (dmem) (life technologies); all media were supplemented with % (vol/vol) fetal bovine serum (fbs) (biosera). chicken and human ifitm gene sequences were synthesized (geneart; life technolo-gies) as codon-optimized genes for expression in human cells, and chicken ifitms were also synthesized for optimal expression in chicken cells. all ifitm genes were cloned into the bamhi and noti sites of the lentivirus vector, psin-bnha ( ) , and sequences confirmed by capillary sequencing (gatc biotech). the gene cassette was cloned into psin-bnha, to ensure that a c-terminal hemagglutinin (ha) tag followed the ifitm protein. lentivirus vector stocks were made by a three-plasmid transfection of hek t cells, grown to confluence in a -cm dish. briefly, l of opti-mem (gibco) was mixed with l of fugene- (roche) before addition of g of a gag-pol-expressing vector (p . ), g of a vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein (vsv-g)-expressing vector (pmdg), and . g of vector expressing the transgene (psin-bnha) and incubated for min. the medium was removed from the cells and replaced with ml of dmem plus % fetal bovine serum (fbs), and the dna mixture was added dropwise to the cells. after h at °c and % co , the medium was removed and replaced with ml dmem plus % fbs and incubated for a further h. packaged lentivirus vector was harvested and h after transfection by collecting the supernatant and being filtered through a . -m-pore filter (millex). the lentiviruses were used to transduce human a lung epithelial cells and produce a mixed population from which single cell clones were derived by limiting dilution. expression of ifitms was detected by ha flow cytometric analysis. confocal microscopy. cells were seeded at ϫ /well on coverslips in a -well plate day prior to transfection with an ifitm-encoding plasmid ( g dna with l of fugene [promega]). cells were fixed with % methanol for min followed by being blocked in % bovine serum albumin (bsa) for min. the ha epitope was targeted by an anti-ha antibody conjugated to alexa fluor (ab ), and endosomes were visualized by a lamp antibody with human (ab ; abcam) or chicken (lep igg; developmental studies hybridoma bank) specificity, followed by incubation with a secondary antibody conjugated to alexa fluor (ab ; abcam). flow cytometric analysis. transfected cells were harvested using l . % trypsin-edta (life technologies), neutralized with l of cell culture medium plus % fbs, and pooled with the supernatant. the cells were spun at , ϫ g for min, and the pellet was resuspended in l pbs and transferred to a -well v-bottomed plate (nunc). the plate was centrifuged, and the cells were fixed and permeabilized in l of cytofix/cytoperm buffer (becton, dickinson) and washed according to the manufacturer's guidelines. the cells were resuspended with the anti-ha antibody conjugated to fluorescein isothiocyanate (fitc) (a - f; cambridge bioscience) and incubated for h at °c, followed by two rounds of washing. iav replication was detected by antinucleoprotein (anti-np) antibody (ab ; abcam) followed by incubation with anti-mouse alexa fluor (ab ; abcam). cells were resuspended in l of pbs before analysis by flow cytometry (facscalibur ii; becton, dickinson). chicken or human ifitm-expressing a cell lines were seeded at ϫ using the target activation bioapplication. briefly, this method counts every cell on the plate by drawing a perimeter around each of the nuclei (detected by hoechst) and calculates the percentage of these cells also expressing gfp. luciferase activity, as a measure of lentivirus infection, was determined at h postexposure using l bright-glo reagent (promega). the cells were allowed to lyse for min before the level of luciferase activity was measured using the fluostar omega (bmg labtech). gfp and luciferase levels are reported relative to infection of a cells in the absence of ifitm protein overexpression. sirna knockdown studies. df- chicken cells were seeded at ϫ cells/well in a -well plate and transfected with a small interfering rna (sirna) against chifitm (gcgaagtacctgaacatcacg) or a nonspecific sirna (uucuccgaacgugucacgugu), using lipofectamine rnaimax (life technologies) h prior to ifn stimulation. plaque assays. material to be assayed was serially diluted in serumfree dmem and used to infect mdck cells in -well plates. after h of incubation, the inoculum was removed, and the cells were overlaid with dmem containing . % bsa (sigma-aldrich), . % avicel (fmc biopolymer), and g trypsin ml Ϫ ( ). after days, the overlay was removed, and the cells were fixed with % formal saline-pbs solution for min before being stained with . % toluidine blue solution (sigma-aldrich) so that the number of pfu could be calculated. expression of ifitm proteins in different chicken tissues. tissues were removed from -week-old specific pathogen-free (spf) rhode island red (rir) chickens, specifically thymus, spleen, bursa of fabricius, cecal tonsil, gastrointestinal tract, trachea, bone marrow, brain, muscle, heart, liver, kidney, lung, and skin. rna was dnase treated, and reverse transcription was carried out (superscript iii reverse transcriptase; life technologies). the cdna from each tissue was amplified by pcr using the following primer sets: chifitm (f=-agcacaccagcatcaaca tgc, r=-ctacgaagtccttggcgatga), chifitm (f=-aggtgag catcccgctgcac, r=-accgccgagcaccttccagg), chifitm (f=-ggagtcccaccgtatgaac, r=-ggcgtctccaccgtcacca), and chicken_gapdh (glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase) (f=-actgtcaaggctgagaacgg, r=-gctgagggagctgagatga). the chicken genome (ensembl browser, version . ) contains two putative ifitm genes on chromosome , the so-called ifitm (ensgalg ; chromosome : to : ) and ifitm (ensgal g ; chromosome : to : ). the putative ifitm gene is located next to an uncharacterized gene (ensgalg ), with which it shares % amino acid identity. immediately adjacent to this are three sequence gaps whose estimated sizes are kb, kb, and bp in the ensembl chicken genome build. importantly, the putative ifitm genes in chicken are flanked by the telomeric - , -n-acetyl-galactosaminyl transferase (b galnt ) gene and the centromeric acid trehalase-like (athl ) gene. the b galnt and athl genes flank the antiviral ifitm , , - , and - gene block in mammalian genomes. sequence similarity searches of the most recent build of the chicken genome (v . , ncbi) using tblastn analysis and the putative ifitm amino acid sequence, revealed several transcripts with high amino acid identity to ifitm . additionally, blast hits were also identified to putative genes loc and loc , within the locus flanked by b galnt and athl . between these putative genes, two blast hits span the exons of genes designated chicken ifitm like (ncbi, loc ; genbank accession no. xm_ . ) and ifitm -like (ncbi loc ; genbank accession no. xm_ . ). a third blast hit matches an uncurated gene, "gene ," which is positioned between ifitm -like and ifitm . further analysis of gene showed it shared amino acid sequence identity with both ifitm -like and ifitm -like genes. sequence similarity searches of the ncbi chicken expressed sequence tag (est) database suggests gene is expressed. all of the ch-ifitm paralogues, like mammalian ifitms, are comprised of two exons, and the location of the intron-exon boundary is conserved across all of the chicken ifitm genes. therefore, the chicken genome contains an intact ifitm locus with four putative ifitm genes flanked by the genes b galnt and athl (fig. a) . annotation of the chicken ifitm genes. using genome synteny, we ascribe chifitm as orthologous to mammalian ifitm , gene as orthologous to ifitm , loc (ifitm like) as orthologous to ifitm , and loc (ifitm -like) as orthologous to ifitm . multiple amino acid sequence alignments between the three predicted antiviral chifitm genes and direct orthologues in primate species suggest this assignment is plausible. a number of conserved ifitm family motifs are present in some of the chicken sequences (fig. b) , and although the chicken sequences differ significantly from the human and chimpanzee orthologues, many amino acids in the cil domain are conserved. multiple sequence alignments also reveal important amino acids in the chicken ifitms that help to categorize each sequence as either ifitm or ifitm / . tyr is conserved in all primate ifitm or - sequences and is also present in chicken "ifitm like" (ncbi) but none of the other ifitm orthologues. this, as well as the longer n terminus, further supports our assessment of this gene as an ifitm or - gene, and by synteny, the gene is ifitm . the alignment also reveals that other functionally significant amino acids are conserved in some of the chicken ifitm sequences, including the two cysteines (cys and - ) in im that are palmitoylation sites in other species ( ) and are important for membrane positioning. phe , also in im , is conserved in chicken "ifitm -like" (chifitm ), which is believed to be important for mediation of a physical association between ifitm proteins ( ) . in light of syntenic analysis (and functional support shown later), we suggest the following revisions of the ncbi nomenclature: loc as chifitm (previously "ifitm like"), loc as chifitm (previously chicken "ifitm like"), and gene as chifitm (fig. ) . subcellular localization of ifitm proteins. human ifitm , - , and - localize distinctly in the cell, with ifitm being predominantly cell surface expressed and ifitm and - being predominantly intracellular, localizing with endosomes ( fig. d and e). the cellular localization of ifitm proteins can further delineate their orthologous relationships. we therefore synthesized codon-optimized, c-terminal ha-tagged chifitm , - , and - and transiently transfected chicken df- fibroblasts, comparing their cellular localization to the orthologous human ifitm (hu-ifitm) proteins expressed in human a cells. confocal microscopy using an anti-ha antibody and an anti-lamp antibody showed chifitm was diffusely expressed throughout the cyto-plasm, and chifitm was present in the cytoplasm and the cell membrane, whereas chifitm localized perinuclearly ( fig. a to c), consistent with huifitm . chifitm therefore shares synteny, amino acid similarity, and subcellular localization with hu-ifitm . in the case of the other two chifitms, their localization is a less clearly paired with the human ifitms; thus, our nomenclature is founded on the gene order. chicken ifitm proteins restrict diverse virus infection. we investigated if, despite considerable amino acid sequence divergence, chicken ifitms could function as restriction factors. by expressing chifitm at different levels in the cell, we show that there is a strong expression-level-dependent correlation between the level of chifitm expression and the percentage of cells infected by a lentivirus vector pseudotyped with the lyssavirus envelope of lbv (fig. ). we then compared the level of antiviral restriction of chicken ifitm and - to that of their orthologous human proteins in a cells. overexpression of chifitm resulted in . % and % reductions in infection of a s to lentivirus vectors pseudotyped with the lyssaviruses envelopes rabv and lbv, similar to the level of restriction by huifitm to the same viruses (fig. a) , even though chickens are rarely infected by lyssaviruses ( ) . chifitm also restricts lyssavirus lbv and rabv infection to a similar level as chifitm . a similar pattern of restriction is seen for lentiviruses pseudotyped with iav h , h , h , and h (fig. b ). huifitm restricts viral infection of all influenza virus hemagglutinins, reducing infection by greater than %, and chifitm restricts h and h pseudotypes as effectively, but restricts h and h less well. chifitm and huifitm restrict more moderately, as shown by others. consistent with previous studies on huifitm protein ( , ), chifitm failed to restrict mlv-a (fig. d) . overall, although chifitm and hu-ifitm only share % amino acid identity, the level of viral restriction of chifitm is similar to that in huifitm . data are not shown for chifitm , as a stably expressing cell line could not be made; this lack of stability at high expression levels is supported by hach et al. ( ) , who show that overexpression of unpalmitoylated murine ifitm is difficult to achieve. we assessed the constitutive level of expression of chifitm in df- cells, by quantitative rt-pcr with primers for chifitm . df- cells abundantly express chifitm (threshold cycles [c t s] of for ifitm and for gapdh). despite being ifn inducible, addition of ifn-␥ resulted in only a moderate induction, whereas addition of ifn-␣ caused a . -log ( . -fold) increase in chifitm expression (fig. a) . we assessed our ability to knock down chifitm expression in df- cells using an sirna . note that the orientation change of chifitm and chifitm makes the assignment of orthology difficult; therefore, the chicken genes are named by gene order and conservation of specific functionally defined amino acid residues. the predicted mass is shown above the gene block. the colored columns in the sequence alignment (b) show residues that are shared between all nine ifitm sequences from humans, chimpanzees, and chickens. significant residues have been highlighted with a symbol below the sequence: o, tyrosine; oe, double cysteine; star, phenylalanine important for multimerization; , conserved ubiquitinated lysine. im , intramembrane ; cil, conserved intracellular loop; im , intramembrane . designed to the chifitm transcript. treatment with this sirna on unstimulated df- cells resulted in a . -log ( . -fold) reduction in the transcript level, with no change in chifitm transcript abundance with a nonspecific sirna. knockdown of endogenous chifitm resulted in a greater than -fold increase in infection of df- cells by replication-competent influenza a virus (a/wsn/ ) (fig. b) , assayed by flow cytometric analysis of np expression. furthermore, overexpression of chifitm in df- cells reduced viral replication by an average of % (fig. d) , and plaque assays show that the viral load was reduced from . ϫ pfu ml Ϫ to . ϫ pfu ml Ϫ after chifitm overexpression (fig. e) . together, these results show chifitm is able to restrict iav entry into df- cells. differential expression of chifitms in chicken tissues. we assessed the tissue-specific gene expression pattern in chickens using a panel of rna extracted from tissues from -week-old a s transfected with huifitm proteins to (d, e, and f) in the absence of infection. panels show nuclei stained with dapi ( =, -diamidino- -phenylindole) (blue), endosomes marked with an antibody against lamp (green), ifitm protein marked by an antibody against the ha tag (red), and a merged image. rhode island red (rir) chickens focusing on thymus, spleen, bursa of fabricius, cecal tonsil, trachea, gastrointestinal tract, bone marrow, brain, muscle, heart, liver, kidney, lung, and skin. using primers specific to chifitm , - , or - (fig. ) , expression of chifitm and - was detected in all tissues, although with lower levels of expression in the muscle and brain and higher levels in the cecal tonsils (fig. ). in contrast, expression of chifitm was more restricted and confined to the bursa of fabricius, the gastrointestinal tract, and the cecal tonsil. to date, the antiviral activities of the ifitm and ifitm proteins have only been demonstrated in mammals, with a single report characterizing the function of chicken ifitm and ifitm ( ) . computational analysis of vertebrate genomes suggests the ifitm gene family is present throughout vertebrates. however, this analysis and any phylogenetic reconstruction of gene history are complicated by the paralogous nature of the ifitm gene family, the presence of copy number variations, and the presence of numerous processed pseudogenes ( ) . indeed, the identification of avian ifitms as part of the dispanin protein family failed to identify chicken ifitms in the antiviral ifitm -to - subfamily defined as dsp a to -c ( ) . similarly, a more thorough analysis of vertebrate ifitms, while identifying distantly related ifitms in reptiles and birds, focused on eutherian clade sequences for a detailed phylogenetic analysis ( ). hickford et al. ( ) have undertaken a comprehensive analysis of ifitm genes across a broad range of chordates. the authors have shown that all of the species analyzed, including "lower" vertebrates, such as lampreys, possess at least one ifitm-like gene. phylogenetic analysis of all of the ifitm paralogues they identified revealed that ifitm emerged in bony fish, while ifitm appears restricted to tetrapods. here we have resolved the entire antiviral ifitm locus on chromosome of the chicken genome, expanding the number of ifitm genes to in this locus, and confirmed that the locus is flanked by the genes athl and b galnt ( ) . crucially, we have shown that antiviral activity is conserved in chicken ifitms. the low-level sequence identity and orientation change of ch-ifitm and chifitm make the phylogenetic assignment of orthology problematic. our revised nomenclature of the chicken ifitm locus is based on the syntenic gene order, as previously discussed, and functional data where possible. however, given chifitm is localized to the plasma membrane, and the lack of an n-terminal extension (characteristic of huifitm / ), it is possible that it is analogous to huifitm . it is likely that similar extensive genetic and functional analyses will be essential to characterize the ifitm loci in other vertebrate species and define unambiguously ifitm , - , and - orthologues. using the chifitm amino acid sequence, we also searched the duck genome (v . ) and identified a scaffold ( ) containing two duck ifitm (duifitm) orthologues. sequence identity and conserved synteny with the chifitm locus indicate they are ifitm and ifitm . the two ifitm flanking genes, b galnt and athl , are also located on the scaffold in conserved positions. although annotated gene structures are absent in the browser, ifitm cdnas in other avian species align with the regions adjacent to both ends of the ifitm structure. this suggests the duck retains four ifitm genes at a conserved locus. we would expect the positions of duifitm and duifitm to be conserved with their orthologues in the chicken and other species. following infection with two h n strains of avian influenza virus (a/duck/ hubei/ / and a/goose/hubei/ / ), levels of expression of duck ifitm , - , and - (measured by rnaseq) were increased to various degrees, reflecting a response befitting their expected function ( ) . control of animal pathogens, especially those with zoonotic potential, is a key component of ensuring human health and food security. rabv is responsible for approximately , human deaths each year ( ) , while other lyssaviruses have only been conclusively shown to cause a handful of fatalities ( ) , although this could be due to poor surveillance. our results are the first to show diverse members of this genus of virus are sensitive to the inhibitory action of human ifitm proteins. furthermore, although most warm-blooded animals are susceptible to rabv, domestic birds are rarely infected by lyssaviruses ( ) . despite this, chifitm and - were able to significantly reduce cell lyssavirus infection. avian iav infections, however, pose significant threats to human health, to the international poultry industry, and to small-scale poultry farmers ( ) . our identification and functional characterization of the avian ifitm locus, together with knowledge that this gene family exists with copy number and allelic variants in other species ( , , ) , should provide a focus for identifying ifitm variants with enhanced antiviral activity for use in farm animal breeding strategies to improve animal infectious disease resistance. specifically, we hypothesize that certain wild or outbred chicken ifitm allelic variants will confer enhanced levels of protection to pathogenic avian viruses that enter through acidic endosomes and that breeding for enhanced activity in ifitm variants will improve disease resistance in chickens. similarly, should chicken ifitm proteins restrict iav infection in chick embryos, the ablation of if-itm protein expression could improve vaccine production and boost yield. we have shown that chifitm proteins expressed in a cells are capable of restricting diverse viruses that enter cells through the acidic endosome pathway. furthermore, we show that df- chicken cells constitutively express chifitm , and this is able to restrict influenza virus infection in vitro. despite sharing less than % amino acid identity, both chifitm and huifitm effectively restrict the entry of all lyssavirus and iav envelope pseudotypes tested. nevertheless, certain key amino acids in the n terminus, im , and cil domain are conserved in chicken and human ifitm , suggesting functional importance. this work describes our elucidation of the ifitm locus in the chicken genome and provides the first functional characterization of chifitm and chifitm . despite this, many key questions remain; it is unclear how genes such as ifitm in humans and chickens, separated by million years of evolution ( ) and sharing less than % amino acid identity, maintain a conserved cellular location and a strong antiviral activity against a diverse range of viruses. it is of equal importance to determine, given the level of antiviral activity and the proposed indirect mechanism of ifitm protein restriction ( , ) , how viruses overcome the restriction either within or between species. investigation of appropriately defined ifitm loci from different host species where cross-species transfer of virus in- the ifitm proteins mediate cellular resistance to influenza a h n virus, west nile virus, and dengue virus distinct patterns of ifitm-mediated restriction of filoviruses, sars coronavirus, and influenza a virus the ifitm proteins inhibit hiv- infection characteristics of ifitm, the newly identified ifn-inducible anti-hiv- family proteins molecular analysis of a human interferon-inducible gene family phylogenetic analysis of interferon inducible transmembrane gene family and functional aspects of ifitm ifitm proteins restrict antibodydependent enhancement of dengue virus infection normal germ line establishment in mice carrying a deletion of the ifitm/fragilis gene family cluster evolutionary dynamics of the interferon-induced transmembrane gene family in vertebrates new developments in the induction and antiviral effectors of type i interferon palmitoylome profiling reveals s-palmitoylationdependent antiviral activity of ifitm ifitm proteins restrict viral membrane hemifusion the antiviral effector ifitm disrupts intracellular cholesterol homeostasis to block viral entry ifitm limits the severity of acute influenza in mice ifitm restricts the morbidity and mortality associated with influenza interferon-induced transmembrane protein- genetic variant rs -c is associated with severe influenza in chinese individuals influenza virus evolution, host adaptation, and pandemic formation re-evaluating the burden of rabies in africa and asia rabies virus vaccines: is there a need for a pan-lyssavirus vaccine? multiply attenuated lentiviral vector achieves efficient gene delivery in vivo new low-viscosity overlay medium for viral plaque assays the cd domain of ifitm is required for both ifitm protein association and inhibition of influenza a virus and dengue virus replication rabies antibodies in sera of wild birds palmitoylation on conserved and nonconserved cysteines of murine ifitm regulates its stability and anti-influenza a virus activity the dispanins: a novel gene family of ancient origin that contains human members evolution of fig differential expression of chifitm transcripts in chicken tissues. expression levels of ifitm , - , and - were determined by rt-pcr across a range of chicken tissues (a) and compared to the expression level of gapdh (b). gapdh pcr was performed without reverse transcriptase (Ϫrt) to control for genomic dna contamination. vertebrate interferon inducible transmembrane proteins the duck genome and transcriptome provide insight into an avian influenza virus reservoir species wildlife, environment and (re)-emerging zoonoses, with special reference to sylvatic tick-borne zoonoses in north-western italy human rabies due to lyssavirus infection of bat origin avian influenza virus (h n ): a threat to human health continental breakup and the ordinal diversification of birds and mammals this work was supported by the wellcome trust (grant ) and funding from the biotechnology and biological sciences research council institute strategic program grant at the pirbright institute (bb/ j / ) and the medical research council (grant g ).we declare we have no conflicts of interest and no competing financial interests. fection occurs may help explain barriers and vulnerabilities to infection by diverse viruses. key: cord- -j eqmxt authors: robertson, matthew j.; kent, katarzyna; tharp, nathan; nozawa, kaori; dean, laura; mathew, michelle; grimm, sandra l.; yu, zhifeng; légaré, christine; fujihara, yoshitaka; ikawa, masahito; sullivan, robert; coarfa, cristian; matzuk, martin m.; garcia, thomas x. title: large-scale discovery of male reproductive tract-specific genes through analysis of rna-seq datasets date: - - journal: bmc biol doi: . /s - - -z sha: doc_id: cord_uid: j eqmxt background: the development of a safe, effective, reversible, non-hormonal contraceptive method for men has been an ongoing effort for the past few decades. however, despite significant progress on elucidating the function of key proteins involved in reproduction, understanding male reproductive physiology is limited by incomplete information on the genes expressed in reproductive tissues, and no contraceptive targets have so far reached clinical trials. to advance product development, further identification of novel reproductive tract-specific genes leading to potentially druggable protein targets is imperative. results: in this study, we expand on previous single tissue, single species studies by integrating analysis of publicly available human and mouse rna-seq datasets whose initial published purpose was not focused on identifying male reproductive tract-specific targets. we also incorporate analysis of additional newly acquired human and mouse testis and epididymis samples to increase the number of targets identified. we detected a combined total of genes for which no previous evidence of male reproductive tract-specific expression was annotated, many of which are potentially druggable targets. through rt-pcr, we confirmed the reproductive tract-specific expression of novel orthologous human and mouse genes without a reported mouse model. of these, we ablated four epididymis-specific genes (spint , spint , spint , and ces a) and two testis-specific genes (pp d and saxo ) in individual or double knockout mice generated through the crispr/cas system. our results validate a functional requirement for spint / and ces a in male mouse fertility, while demonstrating that spint , pp d , and saxo are each individually dispensable for male mouse fertility. conclusions: our work provides a plethora of novel testis- and epididymis-specific genes and elucidates the functional requirement of several of these genes, which is essential towards understanding the etiology of male infertility and the development of male contraceptives. the world human population reached nearly eight billion people in august . this number continues to rise and is predicted to reach nearly ten billion by the year [ ] . the increasing need to promote family planning through the development of reliable contraceptive options available to both men and women is widely recognized. currently there are numerous contraceptive options available to women; however, identification of a safe, non-hormonal contraceptive option for men is still an ongoing challenge. although several different fertility control alternatives for men have been investigated, none are currently clinically approved for use. our understanding of the mechanisms underlying male reproductive physiology is still at an early stage as the identification and elucidation of the function of key reproductive proteins is still an ongoing effort. identifying druggable protein targets expressed in the male reproductive tract has been the focus of numerous studies dedicated to the development of male contraception. the mammalian epididymis is a segmented organ comprised of a single, highly coiled tubule with functionally and morphologically distinct regions that can be subdivided most simplistically into a proximal, central, and distal region, conventionally named the caput, corpus, and cauda regions, respectively [ ] . as mammalian spermatozoa transit through the epididymis, they acquire the ability to recognize and fertilize an egg, properties that they did not possess upon exiting the testis [ ] . considering its essential role, the epididymis-in addition to maturing germ cells of the testis and spermatozoa-is a prime target for the development of a male contraceptive. to advance progress towards the development of a non-hormonal male contraceptive, several previous high-throughput studies have been published that identified a number of human, mouse, and rat genes as testis-specific or epididymis-specific [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in , schultz et al. conducted the first study to identify male reproductive tract-specific genes using microarrays. through affymetrix-based genome-wide geneexpression analysis of meiotic-and post-meiotic spermatogenic cells, together with parallel analysis of available data from the ncbi unigene database, the authors identified mouse genes as testis-specific, which included genes with both known and unknown function at the time [ ] . in the following years, through two additional microarray-based studies of rat testes and purified rat testicular cells, johnston et al. identified [ ] and [ ] additional or overlapping genes as testisspecific. in , as part of the continued effort to identify novel contraceptive targets, the newer rna-seqbased transcriptomics methodology was utilized identifying human genes as testis-specific [ ] . together with antibody-based protein profiling, many of these genes were characterized in terms of the spermatogenic cell populations showing expression [ ] . the first high-throughput transcriptomics study to identify epididymis-specific genes was a mouse epididymal transcriptome study, in which rna isolated from each of the epididymal segments was analyzed by microarray analysis, identifying epididymis-specific genes with distinct patterns of segmental gene regulation [ ] . later in , additional transcriptome profiling utilizing whole genome microarrays resulted in identification of previously unreported epididymis-specific transcripts in the mouse [ ] and epididymis-specific transcripts in the rat [ ] . a significant number of the identified mouse and rat genes in these studies were not known at the time, and only the probe identification numbers were presented. when evaluating potential druggability in a targetbased drug discovery process, one must consider the protein properties that are required for safe and effective inhibition. among the most significant is tissue expression specificity to minimize potential adverse effects, protein function and whether protein activity or interaction with other proteins is potentially druggable, sequence similarity to closely related paralogs that may be ubiquitously expressed, and whether genetically manipulated animal models demonstrate a functional requirement for the target of interest [ ] . several noteworthy review publications have mentioned numerous genes whose critical functions, high expression, and specificity to the testes or epididymides make them viable nonhormonal male contraceptive targets [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, among the identified genes, a significant number either ( ) are required for fertility, but are expressed in nonreproductive tissues, or ( ) are reproductive tractspecific, but, when disrupted, lead to subfertility [ ] . in either case, both are ineffective and highly undesirable outcomes for a potential male contraceptive target. therefore, the identification of additional novel male reproductive tract-specific genes would allow for further advances to be made in the quest to develop an effective and safe non-hormonal male contraceptive. in this study, newly acquired and previously published human and mouse rna-seq datasets [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] were processed in parallel through a custom bioinformatics pipeline designed to identify novel reproductive tractspecific and reproductive tract-enriched transcripts. additional databases obtained from illuminating the druggable genome [ ] , mouse genome informatics [ ] , and ensembl biomart [ ] were utilized to stratify the results into subgroups based on protein druggability and on the availability of a mouse model. numerous reproductive tract-specific and reproductive tract-enriched, potentially druggable targets for which no published mouse model exists, congruent in expression across both mouse and human datasets were identified through our analysis and verified through conventional polymerase chain reaction (pcr). we present the data in a manner that should be most relevant and of substantial interest to the male contraceptive development field since identification of new targets worthy of consideration for further functional analysis in a knockout animal model and potential drug targeting continues to be of vast importance. through our results, we identified four novel epididymis-specific genes (spint , spint , spint , and ces a) and two novel testis-specific genes (pp d and saxo ) worthy of functional validation in an animal model. through the crispr/cas system, we generated four individual gene knockouts (spint , ces a, pp d , and saxo ) and one double knockout mouse model (spint / ) revealing an essential requirement for spint and spint in male mouse fertility, and the potential utility of pursuing spint in humans as a non-hormonal contraceptive target. despite significant advances in our understanding of the human and rodent testis and epididymis transcriptome, mostly through microarray-based studies, no prior studies have utilized purified human testis cells for the identification of human testis-specific transcripts, no prior studies have utilized the more state-of-the-art rna-seqbased transcriptomics methodology for analysis of human epididymis-specific transcripts, and no prior studies have utilized rna-seq analysis of rodent reproductive tissues or cells to identify rodent reproductive tractspecific transcripts. to address these gaps in knowledge, and to increase the number of identified reproductive tract-specific genes in both species using the most relevant high-throughput transcriptomics methodology, we analyzed in parallel on a custom bioinformatics pipeline a large number of published and newly acquired human and mouse rna-seq datasets. one hundred and sixtytwo previously published human and previously published mouse rna-seq datasets were retrieved from the sequence read archive (sra). the sra value for each sample is listed in additional file : table s and additional file : table s . we also generated new human and new mouse reproductive tissue rna-seq samples (geo accession gse ). the final dataset is comprised of new and previously published human testis datasets [ ] , previously published purified human germ cell datasets [ , ] , previously published purified human sertoli cell datasets [ , ] , new and previously published human epididymis segment datasets [ ] , previously published mouse testis datasets [ ] , new mouse epididymis datasets, previously published purified mouse germ cell datasets [ , ] , and previously published purified mouse sertoli cell datasets [ ] . an additional previously published datasets contributed to the non-reproductive human tissues [ ] and previously published datasets contributed to the non-reproductive mouse tissues [ ] . figure a , b summarizes all the samples acquired for the study. we performed a principal component analysis to visualize the variation in the samples after correcting for batch effects. human reproductive and non-reproductive tissues grouped according to sample type. the reproductive tissue samples clustered by tissue type whether or not they were newly generated or acquired from the sra (fig. c) . mouse data showed a similar variation in the samples based on the tissue type (fig. d) . for both human and mouse reproductive tissues, samples separated by whether or not the rna-seq was performed on isolated cells or the whole tissue. epididymal tissue was distinct from testis tissue in both human and mouse (fig. c, d) . to identify potential male reproductive tract-specific drug candidates, we analyzed the aggregated rna-seq data to find genes that were statistically significant in expression when compared to the non-reproductive tissue that had the maximum expression for that gene. this gene list was then further refined by filtering for genes that were lowly expressed in the non-reproductive tissue that had the maximum expression for that gene (tpm less than or equal to . for human; tpm less than or equal to . for mouse). finally, this tpm filtered list was then filtered for the genes that had a reproductive tissue or cell expression value greater than or equal to . tpm for human, or . tpm for mouse (fig. a) . across all the reproductive tissues, candidate genes were identified in the human and candidate genes were identified in the mouse samples (fig. b , additional file : fig. s ). additional file : table s and additional file : table s summarize the differential fold change, identity of the non-reproductive tissue with maximal gene expression based on the differential gene analysis, fdr, average and standard deviation tpm expression values, and log cpm gene expression value for the human and mouse samples, respectively. the results from the fdr and tpm expression value filtering for the human and mouse samples are summarized in additional file : table s and additional file : table s , respectively. additional file : table s and additional file : table s report the log fold change for the reproductive tissue or cell of interest compared to the tissue with maximal gene expression. the genes identified in additional file : table s and additional file : table s pass the filters in at least one of the reproductive tissues or cells of interest. in additional file : table s and additional file : table s , a value of zero for a given gene and fold expression comparison indicates that for that comparison, the gene did not pass the filters. the majority of genes were downregulated in the reproductive tissue of interest compared to the maximal gene expressing nonreproductive tissue (additional file : fig. s ). from the analysis, the majority of the candidate genes that passed the fdr and tpm filters were identified in the testis-or sperm-related cells in both human and mouse samples (additional file : fig. s ). the majority of candidate genes identified in our screen that were testis-specific were already identified by the human protein atlas [ ] and/or our reanalysis of (see figure on previous page.) fig. summary of the human and mouse rna-seq samples used in the identification of novel male reproductive tract-specific drug targets. the rna-seq samples used in the human (a) and mouse (b) analyses are schematically shown. principal component analysis was performed on the human (c) and mouse (d) non-reproductive and reproductive samples separately. the colors of the circles next to the tissues listed in a and b correspond to the colors used in the circles for the pca in c and d. sample size (n) values in red and/or black denote the number of new (red) and previously published (black) samples included in our analysis. fig. identification of candidate drug male reproductive gene targets. a diagrammatic representation of overall methodology used to identify reproductive tract-specific candidate genes in humans ( genes) and in mice ( genes). the maximum gene expression was determined across all the non-reproductive tissue samples for each gene for a reproductive tissue or cell sample of interest. genes were then filtered for significance using a false discovery rate (fdr) of less than or equal to . based on the differential gene expression analysis for the nonreproductive tissue with maximum gene expression and reproductive tissue or cell sample of interest. genes that passed the fdr filter were filtered such that the average tpm expression value of the maximum expressing non-reproductive tissue was less than or equal to . tpm and the average tpm expression value of the reproductive tissue or cell of interest was greater than or equal to . tpm. b diagrammatic representation of the number of human and mouse candidate genes in terms of ( ) the number of orthologs in the opposite species, ( ) the number of genes previously or not previously identified in a prior transcriptomics-based drug target report, ( ) the availability and phenotypic outcome of any reported mouse models, and ( ) the number of novel genes without a reported mouse model congruent across both species. the main value in each bubble represents the total number of candidate genes identified regardless of tissue or cell identified in. the numbers in parentheses comprise the total number of candidate genes that are either epididymis-specific or specific to testis and epididymis, but not testis and/or testis cell-specific only. the hpa testis datasets (additional file : fig. s and additional file : table s ). thirty-six out of the genes that were identified across all the human epididymis tissue were also identified by the human combined (newly acquired and previously published datasets) testis candidate gene list. finally, the majority of the candidate genes, , identified from the combined newly generated and previously published human testis datasets were shared with genes identified from the various testis cell datasets. we identified more candidate genes in the newly generated human epididymis tissues compared to previously published data: out of genes were unique to the newly generated caput samples compared to only out of genes which was unique to the previously published samples, out of genes were unique in the newly generated corpus samples compared to out of genes which were unique to the previously published corpus samples, and genes were unique to the newly generated cauda samples compared to genes in the previously published cauda data with no overlap between the two cauda gene lists (additional file : fig. s and additional file : table s ). there were candidate genes that overlapped between the newly generated human testis samples and mouse testis sample gene lists, while there were candidate genes that overlapped between the previously published human testis sample and mouse testis sample gene lists (additional file : fig. s and additional file : table s ). across all human epididymis tissue samples, including the newly generated and previously published samples, there were genes in common with the combined list of candidate genes across all the mouse epididymis tissue samples. there was a small overlap between the human and mouse samples when the newly generated human caput, corpus, and cauda tissues were individually compared to the mouse caput, corpus, and cauda tissues; there was an overlap of , , and for the caput, corpus, and cauda, respectively (additional file : fig. s and additional file : table s ). this trend was continued for the candidate gene lists derived from the previously published human caput, corpus, and cauda samples when compared to the candidate gene list from the mouse caput, corpus, and cauda, with , , and genes in common for the caput, corpus, and cauda comparisons, respectively (additional file : fig. s and additional file : table s ). additional file : table s details the genes that are unique and in common for each of the comparisons. to assess the potential usefulness of the candidate genes identified in each human reproductive tissue as drug targets, we assigned the genes to a protein family (i.e., gpcr or ion channel). the majority of identified genes were not from a traditional drug target family like kinases or enzymes. the testis and germ cell datasets provided the most potential targets while the epididymis datasets provided the fewest (additional file : fig. s a ). the protein family classification for each candidate gene identified in each reproductive tissue is detailed in additional file : table s . the majority of the candidate genes do not have a reported mouse model (additional file : fig. s b ). additional file : table s summarizes mouse model availability for each candidate gene identified from human reproductive tissues or cells. figure shows the complete list of novel human genes without a reported mouse model as identified in each of the respective cell and/or tissue datasets. digital pcrs (heatmap) and conventional pcrs demonstrating expression of a subset of the novel human reproductive tract-specific genes without a reported mouse model that we identified are shown in figs. and , respectively. additional file : fig. s shows the complete list of previously identified human genes that remain without a reported mouse model as identified in each of the respective cell and/or tissue datasets. additional file : fig. s shows the complete list of male reproductive tract-specific human genes for which a previously generated mouse model shows male infertility phenotype, as identified in each of the respective cell and/or tissue datasets. through our bioinformatics analysis of previously published and newly acquired rna-seq datasets, we identified a total of genes as reproductive tract-specific in humans (fig. ). of these genes, genes do not have a mouse gene ortholog, while genes have a mouse gene ortholog (fig. ) . of those with a mouse gene ortholog, have a single gene ortholog ( have the same symbol in mouse, while have a different symbol in mouse), while have two or more orthologous mouse genes. seventy-six human genes had - orthologous mouse symbols, genes had - orthologous mouse symbols, and genes (fam a, krta p - , magea , or ag , pramef , pramef , ssx , ssx , and ssx b) had greater than orthologous mouse symbols ( - symbols) (additional file : table s ). of the human genes that we identified as male reproductive tract-specific, have not been previously identified in a transcriptomics-based male reproductive tract-specific study [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the sum of our human data confirms the findings of out of genes from djureinovic et al. [ ] . after re-identification of gene symbols from reported affymetrix ids and consideration of orthologous genes (mouse to human and rat to human), our human data confirm the findings of out of genes from johnston et al. [ ] , out of genes from schultz et al. [ ] , out of genes from johnston et al. [ ] , out of genes from johnston et al. [ ] , out of genes from johnston et al. [ ] , and out of genes from jelinsky et al. [ ] . of the genes that have a mouse gene ortholog, have not been previously identified as male reproductive tractspecific, and of these, human genes currently lack mouse phenotype information based on data obtained from ensembl biomart, mgi, impc, and ncbi. three hundred and eighty-six genes were identified as testis-specific through either the reanalysis of djureinovic et al. testis datasets ( genes identified), analysis of our de novo testis datasets ( genes identified), or both (additional file : table s ). three hundred and thirteen genes were congruent across both datasets, while genes were uniquely identified through our reanalysis of djureinovic et al.'s datasets and only genes [ac . , ankrd a , ankrd , fam a, ggtlc , iqcm, potec, prnt, and utf ] were uniquely identified through our de novo datasets (additional file : table s ). interestingly, of the genes we identified through djureinovic et al.'s reanalyzed datasets, were not previously identified in their report [ ] or any of the other previous reports [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . of these genes, we randomly verified of these genes as testis-specific in humans through conventional pcr (fig. ) . we also verified through rt-pcr an additional genes-such as allc, cdkl , cox b , or h , and sppl c-that had been identified through previous studies (additional file : fig. s ). of the genes identified through either testis datasets, have not been previously identified; of these, genes have one or more mouse orthologs; and of these, genes are lacking reported phenotype information. of the novel genes lacking a reported mouse model, genes encode enzymes (adam , cpa , dusp , naa , plscr , prss , and triml ), encode transcription factors (bhmg , foxr , prdm , tgif ly, znf , znf ), encode transporters (slc a , slc a ), and encode proteins of unknown drug target type two hundred and thirty-three novel human reproductive tract-specific genes that each have mouse orthologous genes but with no reported knockout mouse models. the listed genes were identified in one or more datasets as indicated in the venn diagram. underlined genes were also identified in our studies as reproductive tract-specific in mouse ( genes). genes written in blue encode either enzymes, kinases, gpcrs, ogpcrs, transporters, transcription factors, or proteins involved in epigenetic regulation ( genes) . genes written in dark red were identified in both testis (testis and/or testis cell) and epididymis ( genes). (such as etdb, smim , bend , btg , cnbd , dppa , efcab , erich , fthl , iqcm, mroh b, ms a , oosp , pnma e, ppp r c, rbmxl , rtl , spdye , spem ). all of these genes are listed in fig. , and many of these genes are listed in figs. , , and/or . to the best of our knowledge, no prior studies have utilized purified human testis cells for the identification of human testis-specific transcripts. through our analysis, we identified genes as human testis-specific through one or more of the human germ cell datasets, but not through either of the human testis datasets (additional file : table s ). seventy-six genes were identified exclusively through one or more of the five human spermatogonia datasets (genes such as anp d, c orf , dscr , or g , or d , or e , ssx , tle ), while genes were identified exclusively through the human spermatocyte datasets (genes such as h bfm, mageb , mageb , or b , tcp , and znf ) and genes were identified exclusively through the human spermatid datasets (genes such as ac . , clec a, or e , pramef , spat a a , tmem c, znf ). thirty-four genes were identified through all three cell types' datasets (genes such as ccdc , eloa , fam a, heat r , and spata a ). many of these genes are listed in figs. , , , and/or . of the genes identified as human testis-specific through one or more of the human germ cell datasets, genes have not been previously identified, of which have one or more equivalent mouse orthologs with of these genes having not been knocked out in mouse. of these novel genes with no mouse model, encode enzymes (glt d , prss , satl , sult b , tmprss , tpte , triml , and ttll ), encodes an epigenetic protein (taf l), encode gpcrs (gpr , tas r , tas r , tas r , tas r , vn r ), encodes a kinase (cdkl ), encode ogpcrs (such as or d , or a , or e , or g , or j , and ) and obp b met candidate threshold through our analysis of human testes datasets but did not meet candidate threshold from any of the germ cell or sertoli cell datasets, indicating potential expression in peritubular myoid cells, leydig cells, or other cell outside of the seminiferous epithelium. fam a has not been previously identified, and neither mouse orthologs ( m rik, gm ) have been knocked out. obp b was previously identified through djureinovic et al. [ ] and johnston et al. [ ] ; however, of the equivalent mouse orthologs (lcn , obp a, obp b), only obp a has been knocked out revealing abnormal coat/hair pigmentation [ ] . ism and magec were identified through both human sertoli cell datasets, while also identified through testis and/or germ cell datasets. both genes have been previously identified (ism [ ] , magec [ ] ). ism knockout mice display non-reproductive phenotypes [ ] . consistent with this finding, our mouse data do not identify ism as reproductive tract-specific in mice. magec lacks a mouse ortholog for functional analysis in mice. human sertoli cell-specific krtap - , krtap - , lhx , and psg were identified through one or both human sertoli cell datasets but were not identified through any of the testis or germ cell three hundred and two novel mouse genes with human orthologs without a reported mouse model. the listed genes were identified in one or more mouse datasets as indicated in the venn diagram. underlined genes were also identified through our studies as reproductive tractspecific in human ( genes). genes written in blue encode either enzymes, kinases, gpcrs, ogpcrs, transporters, transcription factors, or proteins involved in epigenetic regulation ( genes). genes written in dark red were identified in both testis (testis and/or testis cell) and epididymis ( genes). datasets indicating sertoli cell-specific expression in the testes (additional file : table s ). none of these genes have been previously identified as reproductive tractspecific in humans although lhx and psg have mouse orthologs that have been knocked out [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . human krtap - has mouse orthologs krtap - , gm , gm , and gm , and human krta p - has mouse orthologs krtap - and gm ; none of these mouse orthologs have been knocked out ( fig. and additional file : table s ). psg knockout mice display non-reproductive phenotypes [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ; however, lhx knockout mice display absent testes and sterility due to an essential requirement for lhx during mouse gonad formation [ ] . a lhx -gfpcreer knock-in mouse line-generated by knocking-in gfpcreer at the endogenous lhx locuscrossed with the rosa -tdtomato reporter mouse line revealed cre recombinase activity in retinal amacrine cells, developing limbs, testis, hippocampal neurons, thalamic neurons, and cerebellar neurons [ ] . thus, lhx is not reproductive tract-specific in mice. our mouse data confirm this finding. to the best of our knowledge, no prior studies have utilized rna-seq for analysis of human epididymis-specific transcripts. through our studies, we identified genes as human epididymis-specific through one or more of the human epididymis segment datasets that were not identified through any of the other human male reproductive tissue or cell datasets, indicating true epididymis specificity (additional file : table s ). of these genes identified as human epididymis-specific, genes have not been previously identified, of which have equivalent mouse orthologs with of these genes having not been knocked out in mouse. of these novel human epididymis-specific genes with no mouse model, encodes an enzyme-related gene (spint ) and the remaining encode proteins of unknown drug target type (such as actbl , bsph , mslnl, spag a, spag b, wfdc a, and wfdc ) (fig. ) . seven genes were identified through our de novo sequenced human epididymis segment datasets that were not identified through our reanalysis of the human epididymis segment datasets by browne et al.; two of these genes are considered novel without mouse models: defb a and defb b (fig. , additional file : table s , and additional file : table s ). meanwhile, five genes were identified through our reanalysis of the human epididymis segment datasets by browne et al. that were not identified through our de novo-sequenced human epididymis segment datasets; two of these genes are considered novel without mouse models: actbl and mslnl (fig. , additional file : table s , and additional file : table s ). fifty-two genes met the criteria for identification as epididymis-specific through one or more of the human epididymis segment datasets, while also being identified as reproductive tract-specific through one or more of the testes, germ cell, and/or sertoli cell datasets (additional file : table s ). thus, these targets are not epididymis-specific per se, but may be desirable potential male contraceptive targets considering their broader target availability. of these genes identified as human male reproductive tract-specific and epididymisexpressed, genes have not been previously identified, of which have one or more equivalent mouse orthologs with of these genes having not been knocked out in mouse. all of these novel genes with no mouse model encode proteins of unknown drug target type (al . , ccdc , ccnb , defb , defb , eppin-wfdc , krtap - , magea , pnma e, spem , tex ) ( fig. and additional file : table s ). since model organisms other than mice may be of interest for the future functional study of human genes-especially those for which no known mouse ortholog exists-we list novel reproductive tract-specific human genes without a mouse ortholog in additional file : fig. s , which may be of interest for generating null rat or marmoset models [ ] . digital pcr (heatmap) demonstrating expression of a subset of these novel human reproductive tract-specific genes without mouse orthologs is shown in additional file : fig. s . through our bioinformatics analysis of previously published and newly acquired mouse rna-seq datasets, we identified a total of genes as reproductive tractspecific in mice. of these genes, genes do not have a human gene ortholog, while genes do (fig. ) . of those with a human gene ortholog, have a single ortholog ( with the same gene symbol in human; with a different symbol), while mouse genes have two or more ortholog human genes (fig. ). ninety-two mouse genes have - orthologous human symbols, genes have - orthologous human symbols, and genes (such as o rik, ankrd , fam a b, gm , magea , pramel , spdye a, spdye b, and zfy ) have greater than orthologous human symbols ranging anywhere from twelve to twenty-six symbols (additional file : table s ). of the mouse genes that we identified as male reproductive tract-specific in mouse, have not been identified in a previous transcriptomics-based study [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the sum of our mouse data confirms the findings of out of mouse genes from schultz et al. [ ] , out of mouse genes from johnston et al. [ ] , and out of mouse genes from johnston et al. [ ] (additional file : table s ). of the mouse genes that have a human ortholog equivalent, have not been previously identified as male reproductive tract-specific, and of these, genes currently lack mouse phenotype information based on data obtained from ensembl biomart, mgi, impc, and ncbi (fig. ). digital pcr (heatmap) demonstrating expression of a subset of the novel mouse reproductive tract-specific genes with human orthologs and no reported mouse model, and with human reproductive tract enrichment, is shown in fig. . seventeen novel genes without mouse models ( k rik, fthl b, fthl c, fthl d, fthl e, fthl f, gm , gm , magea , magea , magea , magea , magea , mageb , xlr a, xlr b, and xlr c) were identified through the mouse id + spermatogonia datasets that were also identified as spermatogonia-specific through the human datasets (bend , bx . , fam a, fthl , magea , magea , magea , mageb , and pnma e) and were not identified through either mouse or human testis datasets, indicating restricted expression in spermatogonia, spermatogonial stem cells, or both (additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). eight genes ( o rik, ccnb , gm , gm , pet , prr a , prr a , and prr a ) were identified through the mouse id + spermatogonia datasets, genes whose human orthologs-ccnb , dcaf l , magea , magea , magea , magea , magea b, prr a, prr b, prr c, and tle -were also identified through the human spermatogonia datasets. since these genes were also identified through mouse, human, or both species' respective testis datasets, this indicates either strong expression in the spermatogonia compartment or expression outside of and in addition to the spermatogonia compartment. twenty-two genes were identified as mouse sertoli cellspecific as they were not otherwise identified as reproductive tract-specific through our analysis of mouse testes or germ cell datasets (encode project consortium testes and helsel et al.'s id + germ cell datasets) (additional file : table s ). of these genes, have human orthologs; of these genes, are novel and not previously identified as male reproductive tract- specific; of these genes, have not been previously knocked out in the mouse (c ql , gm , mageb , mycs, shc , sowahd, and tmsb b ); and of these genes, genes (gm and mageb ) were identified with human orthologs (pnma e and mageb ) that were also identified through our human analysis as human reproductive tract-specific (additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). unlike the limited number of reproductive tract-specific genes we identified through human sertoli cell-specific datasets, a considerable number of genes- mouse genes-were identified as reproductive tract-specific through analysis of zimmermann et al.'s mouse postnatal day sertoli cell datasets that were also identified through either the mouse testis datasets, mouse id + germ cell datasets, or both (additional file : table s ). of these genes, have one or more human orthologs; of these genes, are novel and not previously identified as male reproductive tract-specific; of these genes, have not been previously knocked out in the mouse; and of these genes, ( l rik, m rik, b rik, g rik, ankrd , ankrd , etd, gm , gm , gm , magea , spata d b, tcp c, tex , tex , and wfdc ) were identified with human orthologs that were also identified through our analyses as human reproductive tractspecific (fig. , additional file : table s , and additional file : table s ). to the best of our knowledge, published rna-seq data of mouse whole epididymis or epididymis segments does not exist, for the identification of epididymis-specific transcripts or otherwise. therefore, we isolated caput, corpus, and cauda segments from adult (postnatal day ) b / mice and subjected the rna to sequencing. sixty-six genes were identified as mouse epididymisspecific as they were not identified as mouse male reproductive tract-specific through our reanalysis of the en- table s ). of these genes, have human orthologs; of these genes, are novel and not previously identified as male reproductive tract-specific; of these genes, have not been previously knocked out in the mouse (ascl , bsph , c s , clec a, cyp j , cyp a b, defb , gm , lce a, lcn , muc , odam, spag a, spag b, spink , svs , tchhl ); and of these genes, genes (bsph , defb , gm , spag a, and spag b) were identified with human orthologs (bsph , defb , spag a, and spag b) that are also human epididymis-specific (fig. , additional file : table s , and additional file : table s ). sixty-five genes were identified as reproductive tractspecific in mouse with expression in both epididymis and testis and/or testis cell. of these genes, have human orthologs; of these genes, are novel and not previously identified as male reproductive tract-specific; of these genes, have not been previously knocked out in the mouse ( n rik, d rik, d rik, d a rik, defb , dgkk, fam a b, gm , hrasls , nxf , shc , spint , trpc os, wfdc ); and of these genes, genes (spint , trpc os, and wfdc ) were identified with human orthologs (spint , trpc os, and wfdc ) that are also human epididymis-specific (fig. , additional file : table s , and additional file : table s ). through the aforementioned studies, we identified spint , spint , ces a, pp d , and saxo as congruent in expression across both mouse and human datasets with expression restricted to either the epididymis (spint , spint , ces a) or the testis (pp d and saxo ) (figs. , , , and ; additional file : table s ; additional file : table s ). spint was also identified as epididymisspecific in mouse (fig. , additional file : table s ); however, in humans, spint p is a pseudogene that is not processed into protein. conventional rt-pcr of a panel of mouse and human tissue cdnas confirmed epididymis-or testis-restricted expression of spint , spint , ces a, pp d , and saxo in both species and spint in mouse (fig. ) . to glean insight into the onset of expression for the epididymis-specific genes, spint , spint , spint , and ces a; whole epididymides from postnatal days (p) , p , p , and p ; and epididymis segments (caput, corpus, and cauda) from p , p , p , and p aged mice were collected and analyzed through rt-pcr (additional file : fig. s ). spint expression begins as early as p (low) and gradually increases through p and p reaching steady levels throughout p to p in all three segments of the epididymis (additional file : fig. s ). in contrast, spint and spint display near identical expression levels with no expression at p , p , or p , and expression apparent at p and later time points, with expression restricted to corpus only at p and p , and caput and corpus, but not cauda at p and p (additional file : fig. s ). rnascope-based fluorescence in situ hybridization revealed a distinct segment-specific pattern of expression for spint that was identical to spint , with both showing expression in most of the epithelial cells restricted to a brief region of distal caput/proximal corpus (additional file : fig. s ) . spint , on the other hand, displayed a pattern of expression in a majority of epithelial cells that begins just a bit further downstream along the corpus, but persisting for much further along the corpus, throughout the corpus and into the cauda (additional file : fig. s ). these results indicate that spint shares a role that is distinct from spint and spint and indicates a potential redundancy between spint and spint and how humans may have lost the evolutionary pressure to keep spint p as a protein-coding gene. to glean insight into the potential spermatogenic cell population(s) expressing pp d and saxo , we performed rt-pcr of mouse testes isolated at postnatal day (p) , a time point enriched for gonocytes; p (onset of expression of type a spermatogonia); p (early spermatocytes); p (late spermatocytes); p (spermatids); and p and p , which display complete spermatogenesis [ ] (additional file : fig. s ). expression of pp d and saxo is detected at similar levels at p and later, but not at p or before indicating expression during spermiogenesis and spermiation (additional file : fig. s ). to determine the male reproductive requirement and potential functional role of the identified novel male reproductive tract-specific genes, spint , ces a, pp d , and saxo were individually ablated by crispr/cas mediated zygote approach. since in humans spint p is a pseudogene, and in mice, spint protein is most similar in sequence to mouse spint , we simultaneously ablated both mouse spint and spint genes, which on mouse chromosome are only separated by . kilobases. the efficiency of generating each mutant is summarized in additional file : table s . each of the genes contained deletions of differing sizes and genomic targets. the genomic sequences flanking the deletion in each mutant are presented in additional file : table s , and representative sanger sequencing results for each mutant are presented in fig. . using the forward and reverse primer pairs presented in fig. a -e and listed in additional file : table s , offspring carrying the mutant alleles were identified through routine genotyping (fig. k-o) . spint , spint / , ces a, pp d , and saxo knockout mouse lines were examined in parallel with littermate controls of equivalent age to determine the effect of gene ablation on spermatogenesis, sperm maturation, and fertility in male mice. none of the knockout strains generated in this study displayed any overtly abnormal appearance, difference in body weight (fig. ) or composition, or difference in behavior when compared to the controls. to determine the male reproductive requirement of each of the genes of interest, spint , spint / , ces a, pp d , and saxo knockout and control adult male mice were housed continuously with two females for months and the size and number of litters were recorded. although spint , pp d , and saxo knockout males sired a number and size of litters during the test mating period that was not significantly different from controls (fig. a-c) , spint / and ces a knockout males sired significantly fewer litters and pups over the test mating period (fig. a-c) . spint / null males displayed a statistically significant % reduction in the number of litters and pups sired per male and statistically significant % reduction in litter size, over the -month mating period (n = controls, n = kos) (fig. ). seven out of males displayed complete infertility, and the two remaining males, who sired pups, sired pups at a significantly reduced number of litters and pups per month with litters of reduced litter size (fig. a-c) . this fertility defect in spint / double ko males was not associated with any significant changes in epididymis and testis histology (additional file : fig. s ) or sperm numbers, motility, and morphology ( fig. g-i) . ces a null males displayed a variegated phenotype with an overall statistically significant % reduction in the number of litters and pups sired per male, but no significant difference in litter size, over a -month mating period (n = controls, n = kos). the fertility defect in ces a ko males was associated with significant changes in epididymis histology (additional file : fig. s ) and significant reductions in sperm motility and progressive motility (fig. h, i) . ces a null males displayed a % reduction in sperm motility and progressive cells, a % increase in static cells, and a % decrease in average path velocity and progressive velocity after hyperactivation. no changes in testis histology were found (additional file : fig. s ) , and despite the sperm motility defect, scanning electron microscopy failed to identify a morphological defect in ces a null sperm in comparison to controls (additional file : fig. s ) . the epididymides and testes weights of spint , spint / , ces a, pp d , and saxo knockout mice were not significantly different from littermate control mice (fig. e, f) . histological analyses of testes from spint , spint / , ces a, pp d , and saxo knockout mice revealed all had seminiferous tubules with intact epithelia and the presence of all germ cell subtypes and all stages of spermatogenesis (additional file : fig. s and additional file : fig. s ). histological analyses of caput, corpus, and cauda from spint , spint / , pp d , and saxo ko mice revealed spermatozoa in tubule lumens of all knockouts with no significant differences in epididymal histology in comparison to controls (additional file : fig. s and additional file : fig. s ). however, ces a knockout mice displayed significant histological abnormalities including lumen dilation (possibly from occlusion), inflammation, and the appearance of abnormal epithelia (additional file : fig. s ). computer-assisted sperm analysis of spint , spint / , pp d , and saxo knockouts phenotype analysis of crispr/cas generated null mice for determining the contraceptive potential of the selected genes. spint / and ces a null mice show significant fertility defects; meanwhile, spint , pp d , and saxo null mice appear normal. fertility (a-c), body and reproductive organ weights (d-f), and sperm parameters (g-i) were all measured between knockout (−/−) and littermate control [wild-type (+/+) and heterozygous (+/−)] mice as indicated. bars represent mean ± sem. *p < . , **p < . , ***p < . . ns, not significant. showed no statistically significant differences across all measured parameters including sperm concentration, sperm motility, and progressive motility (fig. g-i) . ces a knockouts displayed significant decreases in sperm number and sperm motility (fig. h, i) ; however, cauda epididymal sperm isolated from a variety of ces a null animals looked morphologically indistinguishable to controls (additional file : fig. s ). to date, the etiology of idiopathic male infertility is not fully understood, and hormonal male contraceptives have not been effective. therefore, identification of novel reproductive tract-specific genes, and elucidating the functional requirement or lack thereof of these genes, is essential towards understanding the etiology of male infertility and the development of male contraceptives. despite significant advances in our understanding of the human and rodent testis and epididymis transcriptome, mostly through microarray-based studies, no prior studies have utilized purified human testis cells for the identification of human testis-specific transcripts, no prior studies have utilized the more state-of-the-art rna-seq-based transcriptomics methodology for analysis of human epididymis-specific transcripts, and no prior studies have utilized rna-seq analysis of rodent reproductive tissues or cells to identify rodent reproductive tract-specific transcripts. to address these gaps in knowledge, and to increase the number of identified reproductive tract-specific genes using the most relevant high-throughput transcriptomics methodology, we analyzed in parallel on a custom bioinformatics pipeline a large number of published and newly acquired human and mouse rna-seq datasets. through our studies, we identified and verified many novel male reproductive tract-specific transcripts in both species, and through the crispr/cas system, we interrogated the reproductive requirement of a subset of these genes. we found that spint (together with spint ) in mice is required for normal male mouse fertility, and although not required for male fertility, we identified ces a as playing a major biological role in the epididymis. we report the remaining genes that we knocked out-spint , pp d , and saxo as dispensable for male reproductive function, which is essential information to disseminate to the scientific community. our study also verified the male reproductive tract-specific expression of many previously identified genes (additional file : fig. s , additional file : fig. s ) , and genes for which previously published mouse models display male infertility phenotypes (additional file : fig. s ). this later group of already functionally validated genes serves as potential male contraceptive targets worth underscoring to the research community. prior to massively parallel microarray-based and rnaseq-based transcriptomics analyses for the identification of reproductive tract-specific genes, the ncbi unigene database was a valuable resource for many in the male reproductive biology field for identifying testis-specific transcripts [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . although in our study we only considered prior microarray-based and rna-seq-based studies when considering the novelty of the genes that we identified, it is worth noting that several genes that we identified-not previously identified in microarray-based and rna-seq-based transcriptomics studies-were previously identified through studies that solely utilized the unigene database [ , ] . nineteen human genes that we identified-c orf , ccdc , cpa , fam a, fam d, fam c, fbxo , fbxw , fkbp , galn tl , kcnu , mageb , mroh b, nutm , prdm , rbmxl , spata e , triml , and trpc os-were previously identified by liu et al. [ ] , and seven mouse genes that we identified- d rik, akap , ankrd , hrasls , spesp , tex , and ubqlnl-were previously identified by choi et al. [ ] and liu et al. [ ] . thus, our results confirm the findings of these previous studies. since more than half of all human protein-coding genes are categorized as unknown in terms of drug target potential (additional file - table s ), and only % encode for classically druggable enzymes, gpcrs, ion channels, nuclear receptors, and transporters (additional file - fig. s ) , the potential to find new undiscovered drug targets that can be drugged using classical approaches is somewhat limited. indeed, in our study, we found one hundred and nine genes to be novel in terms of previously published high-throughput transcriptomics studies, without a current reported mouse model, and reproductive tract-specific in both humans and mice (figs. , , and ). many of these genes ( genes; %) fall into the category of unknown and may otherwise be considered "undruggable" due to various challenges with existing targeting approaches [ ] . however, the contraceptive potential of these genes should not be overseen, but rather investigated for potential identification of a high-affinity small molecule that can either interfere with protein-protein interaction (ppi) or target the protein specifically for degradation using a new technology called proteolysis targeting chimeras (protacs). protein-protein interaction targets are not deemed undruggable, based on the discovery of small molecules capable of deeper and higher affinity binding within the contact surfaces of the target protein [ ] . additionally, once a high-affinity small molecule against a specific target protein is identified, an engineered protac molecule can mark a target protein for proteasomal degradation by linking the target protein to the polypeptide co-factor, ubiquitin [ ] [ ] [ ] . there are currently various combinations of protacs developed to overcome the limitations of cell permeability, stability, solubility, selectivity, and tissue distribution [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . therefore, disrupting ppis or utilizing protacs provides the potential to greatly promote the development of contraceptive drugs against the "undruggable" nonenzymatic target protein space. if gene knockouts for closely related and ubiquitously expressed paralogs display no abnormal phenotype, then unintended drug targeting of these proteins may result in no side effects in humans. however, the burden of safety for a male contraceptive is extremely high, and if it can be avoided, targeting non-reproductive tractexpressed proteins in humans should be avoided since the functional requirements for these proteins may not be fully understood. further, although mice are one of the best models for human disease, they are unable to communicate when they are unwell, a phenomenon that may occur independent of any measurable phenotypic traits. thus, potential reported side effects in humans during clinical trials may have been present, but missed, during animal studies, or in fact be present in humans and not in mice because of the vast biological differences across these two species. thus, with drug safety in mind, reproductive tract-specific candidates should be prioritized based on somatic cell-expressed protein sequence similarity, especially in the drug binding pocket. according to ensembl, several novel reproductive tract-specific genes without mouse models that we identified and verified-ac . , al . , bhmg , c orf , c orf , c orf , ccdc , spint , tex , tex , tex , and trpc os (figs. , , and ; additional file : table s )-have no known associated paralogs, indicating reproductive tract-specific drug targeting is highly likely. additionally, spag a and spag b are epididymis-specific paralogs (figs. , , and ; additional file : table s ) with no other known paralogs according to ensembl. efcab (figs. and , additional file : table s ) has a ubiquitously expressed paralog, nsrp , with only % amino acid sequence similarity, indicating specific drug targeting potential for this candidate. likewise, erich and mroh b (figs. and , additional file : table s ) have ubiquitously expressed paralogs erich b and mroh a, respectively, with % and % amino acid sequence similarity, indicating reasonable potential for specific drug targeting. prr a, prr b, and prr c are testis-specific paralogs (figs. and , additional file : table s ) with prr d as the next closest paralog according to ensembl. since prr d has less than % amino acid sequence similarity to prr a, prr b, and prr c, but appears to be epididymis-specific according to the human protein atlas [ ] , all four proteins of unknown function make suitable drug candidates. likewise, spat a d , spata d , and spata d are testis-specific paralogs (figs. and , additional file : table s ) with spata a as the next closest paralog according to ensembl. since spata a has less than % sequence similarity to spata d , spata d , and spat a d , but also appears to be reproductive tractspecific according to hpa [ ] , all four proteins with unknown function also appear to be worthy of consideration for potential drug targeting. tpte and tpte are testis-specific paralogs (figs. and , additional file : table s ) with ubiquitously expressed pten as the next closest paralog according to ensembl. since pten has less than % sequence similarity to tpte and tpte , off-target effects appear to be unlikely. likewise, wfdc a, wfdc b, and wfdc are all epididymis-specific paralogs with the closest nonreproductive tract-expressed paralog, wfdc , having less than % sequence similarity to any of the rts paralogs, also indicating high drug specificity potential. several additional novel reproductive tract-specific enzyme and gpcr genes without mouse models that we identified-gpr , prss , prss , sult b , tmpr ss , triml , and ttll (fig. , , and ; additional file : table s )-have non-reproductive tract-expressed paralogs with less than % sequence similarity indicating good drug specificity potential. a novel testis-specific transporter gene without a reported mouse model that we identified, slc a , would make a poor drug candidate since its closest paralog, slc a , is % similar in amino acid sequence and ubiquitously expressed. cpa , iqca l, and ppp r c have ubiquitously expressed paralogs, cpa , iqca , and ppp r b, respectively, with - % protein sequence similarity indicating careful consideration must be made for potential drug targeting without off-target effects. of the seventy-three genes that our study identifies as reproductive tract-specific in humans and for which a published mouse model shows male infertility phenotype (additional file : fig. s ) [ , , ] , it is worth noting that genes-cnbd , defb , fam a, fbxo , meig , meiob, meioc, odf , odf , rec , rnf , spaca , spata , spem , spo , sycp , terb , tex , tex , tnp , and topaz-do not have any associated paralogs and, thereby, may be considered most suitable for further drug development. however, it is also worth noting that it may be possible that genes required for male fertility in mice may not necessarily be required for male fertility in humans. of the seventy-three human reproductive tract-specific genes our study identified with male mouse infertility phenotypes, twenty-seven genes-actl b [ ] , akap [ ] , boll [ ] , brdt [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , catsper [ ] , ccdc [ ] , fkbp [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] , meig [ ] , meiob [ ] [ ] [ ] ] , nanos [ , ] , odf [ ] , prdm [ , , ] , prss [ ] , rad l [ ] , rbmxl [ , ] , rnf [ ] , sohlh [ , ] , spaca [ ] , spata [ , ] , spem [ ] , spo [ , , ] , sun [ ] [ ] [ ] , sycp [ ] , tex [ ] , tnp [ ] , tssk b [ ] , and zpbp [ ] -are currently associated with mutations underlying human male infertility, confirming a similar functional requirement for these genes in humans may exist. for the remaining genes, however, either these genes are not required for human male fertility as they are required in mice, or associated mutations in male infertile patients have not yet been reported. although many reproductive tract-specific genes have been studied through functional genetics approaches, many remain to be solved. elucidating the function of these novel genes is necessary to build a better understanding of the factors underlying spermatogenesis and sperm maturation, which has implications in understanding the etiology of male infertility and the development of male contraceptives. in this study, four epididymis-specific genes (spint , spint , spint , and ces a) and two testis-specific genes (pp d and saxo ) were deleted in mice to determine their functional requirement in male fertility and potential utility as male contraceptive target. we chose to study these genes because all but saxo encode enzymes or enzyme-related protein products and are thus considered druggable in the classical sense. saxo , a cilia-related gene, was chosen because prior literature demonstrated expression in sperm [ ] . although not druggable in the classical sense, if targeted through non-canonical approaches, one could obtain a fast-acting drug with greater reversibility potential and a decreased likelihood of affecting testicular function and size. the epididymis-specific genes we chose to target for functional analysis, by the very nature of their tissue's expression, also fit this potential drug profile of modulating only the latest stages of sperm development. analyses of testis and epididymis organ weights and histology, sperm parameters and morphology, and fertility revealed no significant differences in spint , pp d , and saxo knockout mice in comparison to littermate controls demonstrating that, individually, spint , pp d , and saxo are not required for male mouse fertility and are not suitable targets for the development of a male contraceptive. however, we found partial effects on male fertility in ces a knockout mice and profound effects on male fertility in spint / double knockout mice. ces a is a member of a multigene family of mammalian carboxylesterases that can hydrolyze ester, thioester, amide, and carbamate linkages in a wide variety of endogenous and exogenous molecular substrates, including triglycerides, thus playing key roles in both metabolism and detoxification [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . ces a shares roughly similar percent homology (~ % homology) to all four of its related paralogs, ces , ces , ces , and ces a. human carboxylesterase (ces ) is predominantly expressed in the liver and has been shown to have triglyceride hydrolase activity as overexpression of human ces in cells leads to an increase in cholesteryl ester hydrolysis and free cholesterol efflux [ ] . further, mouse ces g-a protein expressed by one of a cluster of eight syntenic genes (ces a through ces h) orthologous to the human ces gene-has been shown to have triglyceride hydrolase activity as ces g null mice display hyperlipidemia and abnormal lipid homeostasis including increased liver and circulating cholesterol and triglycerides, and altered saturated and unsaturated fatty acid levels [ , ] . therefore, it is likely that ces a exhibits similar carboxylesterase activity in the epididymis hydrolyzing cholesteryl ester and affecting free cholesterol efflux. indeed, recombinant ces a protein has been previously shown to have carboxylesterase activity hydrolyzing cholesterol ester and choline ester [ ] . since sperm cholesterol content is significantly decreased during epididymal maturation [ , ] and a proper cholesterol/phospholipid (c/pl) ratio of the sperm plasma membrane is required for sperm capacitation [ , ] , ces a may be pivotal in regulating sperm membrane cholesterol and lipid levels to ensure the normal function of male gametes in the last steps of the fertilization process. the most closely related paralog to spint is eppin, which, as reviewed in o'rand et al., has at least three physiological functions [ ] . eppin inhibits sperm motility when it binds the semen coagulation protein semenogelin (semg ) on the sperm surface [ ] ; it modulates the proteolytic activity of prostate-specific antigen (psa), a serine protease, against its seminal plasma substrate, semg [ ] ; and it exhibits strong antibacterial activity [ ] . these functions are postulated to prevent premature hyperactivation and capacitation of sperm in the female reproductive tract [ ] , and to protect spermatozoa from proteolytic and bacterial attack during transit in the female reproductive tract [ , ] . thus, it is possible that the physiological function of spin t is similar. however, unlike spint and spint , which have been shown to act as protease inhibitors against a wide variety of prss and tmprss proteases [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , when tested against a panel of eight proteases (including psa, trypsin, chymotrypsin, plasmin, urokinase, thrombin, factor xa, and elastase), spint and spint were shown to lack protease inhibiting capability [ ] . this indicates that either the protease inhibiting properties of spint and spint were lost in favor of yet unknown functions or their protease activity has a narrower spectrum of inhibition against unknown targets. since spint / null male mice are severely subfertile, without an apparent difference in epididymis histology, sperm number, sperm morphology, and sperm motility parameters in comparison to the wild-type (wt) mice, this phenocopies the reproductive phenotype of several null mice of testis-, epididymis-, or prostate-specific genes (sof , tmem , and spaca ; pate , and pate ), which reveal a requirement in regulating sperm migration through the oviduct and sperm-oocyte fusion in mice [ , ] . a severe fertility defect associated with normal sperm number, morphology, and motility is also shared among mice lacking the sperm membrane protein adam , thought to be crucial in sperm-zp binding and sperm migration through the uterotubular junction (utj) [ , ] . more than proteins including proteases (ace, adam a, adam , calr , clgn, cmtm a/b, pdilt, pmis , prss , rnase , tex , and tpst ) have been described that affect the processing and/or localization of adam protein in spermatozoa [ , ] . further studies with spint / null mice are required to determine whether sperm behavior in the female reproductive tract, specifically the sperm migration through the utj, is adversely affected. since a large , -bp genomic region-including the intergenic region between the spint and spint genes-was deleted ( fig. ; additional file : table s ), based on the evidence presented in this manuscript, we cannot exclude the possibility that cis-acting elements and/or trans-acting factors affecting the expression of other genes may have contributed to the phenotype of these mice. lack of protein-coding ability of human spint p does not necessarily indicate that this pseudogene is functionally obsolete. pseudogenes have been shown to play roles in gene expression and gene regulation [ ] . for example, pseudogene transcripts can act as competitive endogenous rnas (cerna) through competitive binding of mirna, which results in regulation of gene expression [ ] . to this end, studying the functional requirement of spint in male mice is necessary to further our knowledge of evolutionarily conserved genes between species. since humans are genetically diverse, a limitation to phenotype characterization of genetically manipulated mice is the reliance of a single mouse background to the examination of complex genetic outcomes, such as fertility, that is under the control of many genes with different levels of contribution to the phenotype [ ] . it is possible that a gene that causes complete infertility in an inbred mouse background may only cause partial infertility or subfertility in a different inbred line or more robust outbred background. since the mice used in our study were a cross between c bl/ (b ) mice and dba/ (d ) mice, and thus, these b d f mice are heterozygous for b and d alleles at all loci in their genome, we can eliminate infertility susceptibility of either the b or the d background as the cause for fertility defects in ces a and spint / mice. it does remain to be determined, however, whether the phenotype of the genes we knocked out would be more or less severe on a different mouse background, and if required for male fertility in humans, the level of contribution to male fertility of these genes across genetically diverse men. a limitation to this study is the reliance on mrna abundance positively correlating with protein abundance. future studies are necessary to elucidate the relationship between mrna and protein expression levels of the candidate genes identified in our study. furthermore, despite batch corrections that were made, technical differences in sample preparation and integrity across the various published rna-seq datasets can influence the results of our findings. one of the major advantages to our study design is the use of rna-seq datasets from purified human and mouse germ cells and sertoli cells to identify reproductive tract-specific targets since the use of whole testes for the identification of cell typespecific transcripts in past studies is subject to dilution effects. however, this advantage could also be considered a disadvantage since purified cells from nonreproductive tissues were not used for comparison but, if analyzed, purified cells from non-reproductive tissues may have revealed significant levels of expression in non-reproductive tissues. ultimately, functional studies in animals and humans will help to confirm whether genes identified in our study are essential for male fertility and not any other physiological process. through the integration of hundreds of published and newly acquired human and mouse reproductive and non-reproductive tissue and cell rna-seq datasets, we have generated a list of novel genes expressed predominantly or exclusively in the male reproductive tract that are worthy of consideration for functional validation in an animal model and potential targeting for a male contraceptive. our results further validate a functional requirement for spint / and ces a in male mouse fertility, while demonstrating that spint , pp d , and saxo are each individually dispensable for male mouse fertility. identifying novel reproductive tract-specific genes congruent across species adds insight into organismal biology and valuable information that can be used to identify potential male contraceptive drug target candidates. furthermore, elucidating the individual functional requirement or lack thereof of these novel genes builds a better understanding of the factors underlying spermatogenesis and sperm maturation, which has implications in understanding the etiology of male infertility and further validation of the utility of a potential male contraceptive target. the de novo isolated human testes and epididymides included in this study were obtained from three donors through a local organ transplant program in quebec, canada, called transplant quebec. all procedures were approved by the local ethics committee, and written consent was obtained from each respective donor's family. the donors were of , , and years of age with no preexisting medical condition that could affect reproductive function. donor testes and epididymides were removed under artificial circulation to preserve other organs that were assigned for transplantation. each testis and epididymis were dissected in the laboratory of robert sullivan at université laval. each epididymis was dissected into three segments corresponding to the caput, corpus, and cauda regions and minced into small tissue pieces. testes and epididymides tissue fragments were immediately snap frozen in liquid nitrogen, stored at − °c, and shipped frozen to baylor college of medicine for further processing. eight non-reproductive tissue types (kidney, liver, lung, skin, spleen, and stomach) and female reproductive tissues (ovary and uterus) were obtained from the baylor college of medicine tissue acquisition and pathology core. thirteen nonreproductive tissue types (adipose, adrenal gland, brain, colon, heart, leukocytes, pancreas, prostate, salivary gland, skeletal muscle, small intestine, smooth muscle, thyroid) were obtained as purified rnas from takara bio (kusatsu, japan). human testes and epididymis segments were used for de novo rna-seq analysis; all human tissues and/or resulting rnas were used for rt-pcr verification. mouse tissues [testis, caput, corpus, cauda, ovary, uterus, and non-reproductive tissue types (adipose, bladder, brain, colon, eye, heart, kidney, liver, lung, prostate, skeletal muscle, skin, small intestine, spleen, stomach)] were obtained from dissection of b / mice; the remaining non-reproductive tissues (smooth muscle and thyroid) were obtained as purified rnas from takara bio. mouse epididymis segments were used for de novo rna-seq analysis; all mouse tissues and/or resulting rnas were used for rt-pcr verification. rna for both rna-seq and/or rt-pcr verification was isolated from human and mouse tissues using trizol/ chloroform extraction method followed by rneasy mini kit from qiagen with on-column dnase (qiagen) treatment using the manufacturer's protocol. rnas used for rna-seq were assessed by bioanalyzer for rna integrity. for rt-pcr, rna was reverse-transcribed to cdna using superscript iii reverse transcriptase from thermo fisher according to the manufacturer's protocol. cdna was then pcr amplified using gene-specific primers designed using ncbi primer design tool. primer sequences are listed in additional file : table s . library generation for rna-seq rna-seq libraries were made using kapa stranded mrna-seq kit (kk ). briefly, poly-a rna was purified from total rna using oligo-dt beads; subsequently, it was fragmented to small size; and first strand cdna was synthesized. second strand cdna was synthesized and marked with dutp. resultant cdna was used for end repair, a-tailing, and adaptor ligation. finally, the library was amplified for sequencing on an illumina novaseq platform. the strand marked with dutp was not amplified, allowing strand-specific sequencing. sequence alignment, quantification, and differential gene expression human testes, human epididymis segments, and mouse epididymis segments were sequenced by the department of molecular and human genetics functional genomics core at baylor college of medicine (additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). previously published reproductive and non-reproductive tissue and cell sequences were downloaded from the sequence read archive (sra) [ ] (additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). all sequences were trimmed using trim galore! and aligned against the human genome (grch ) or mouse genome (grcm ) using hisat [ , ] . gene expression in each tissue was quantified using featurecounts, filtered for only protein-coding genes, and batch corrected by removing unwanted variation using the ruvr method from ruvseq [ , ] . differential gene expression was determined for each reproductive tissue against each nonreproductive tissue using the r package edger [ ] . principal component analysis (pca) was performed in the r statistical environment using the log counts per million (cpm) for each gene in the corresponding tissue after using the ruvr method to correct for batch variation as described above. our procedure for identifying a reproductive-specific gene was repeated for each reproductive tissue or cell sample independently. the following selection criteria were applied to each reproductive tissue or cell sample. first, the non-reproductive tissue with the maximum expression, expressed as the log fold change between the non-reproductive tissue and the reproductive tissue or cell of interest, was identified for each gene using the results from the differential gene expression analysis. second, we identified reproductive-specific gene drug candidates using three filters: a false discovery rate (fdr) filter, a maximum transcript per million (tpm) expression value filter on the non-reproductive sample with the maximum expression identified as described above, and a minimum tpm expression value filter on the reproductive tissue or cell sample of interest. a gene was kept if the fdr from the differential gene expression analysis was less than or equal to . for the comparison of the reproductive tissue or cell sample of interest to the non-reproductive tissue with the maximum expression. a gene was considered to be a male reproductive tissue-specific drug target if the average tpm expression value in the non-reproductive tissue with the maximum expression from the differential analysis was less than or equal to . for human ( . for mice), and if the average tpm expression value for that gene was greater than or equal to . for human ( . for mice) in the reproductive tissue or cell sample of interest. the average and standard deviation of the tpm expression value for each gene was calculated from the ruvr batch corrected counts per million expression value for each tissue or cell sample. we consolidated data from ensembl biomart [ ] and mouse genome informatics (mgi) [ ] to create a comprehensive database of mouse gene symbols orthologous to human genes and vice versa. each respective species' stable ensemble gene id was used for each conversion, with gene symbol as the final output. as mentioned, several notable high-throughput gene expression studies using microarrays or rna-seq, focused on identifying male reproductive tract-specific genes, have been previously published [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . tables and supplementary tables from these studies were gathered to collect the lists of genes previously identified. for microarray-based studies, affymetrix ids were used to confirm the identity of a listed gene, based on current sequence mappings, or in many cases to identify de novo the identity of a gene only known at the time of the study by its affymetrix id and not gene symbol. for mouse and rat studies, gene symbols were converted to orthologous human symbols, to systematically catalog both the rodent and corresponding human symbols as previously identified. for example, affymetrix probe ids were listed as reproductive tract-specific in johnston et al. [ ] . after re-identification of gene symbols based on current ensembl sequence mappings, identified gene symbols remained the same, received an updated/replacement gene symbol identification, genes that were previously unidentified received a new gene symbol identification, affymetrix ids lost mapping to any gene symbol, and remain unidentified. out of the total of affymetrix ids that mapped to current rat gene symbols, rat gene symbols converted to at least one human ortholog gene symbol that was either the same symbol or different. both rat and human symbols, based on new mappings, were considered previously identified. for the complete list of previously identified genes, see additional file : table s . genes were classified as encoding either enzymes, epigenetic-related proteins, g protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs), ion channels, kinases, nuclear receptors, orphan gpcrs (ogpcrs), transcription factors, transporters, or unknown proteins based on data obtained from illuminating the druggable genome [ ] (additional file : table s ). we used data obtained from ensembl biomart [ ] , mgi [ ] , the international mouse phenotyping consortium (impc) [ ] , and pubmed searches to generate a comprehensive database identifying the existence of a mouse model for all mouse genes (additional file : table s ). we then queried our identified candidate human and mouse genes against this list. for a given human gene, we queried the equivalent mouse ortholog gene symbol(s). spint , spint / , ces a, pp d , and saxo knockout mice were produced at baylor college of medicine. b d f (c bl/ × dba ) mice were used as embryo donors, and cd mice were used as foster mothers. mice were purchased from charles river (wilmington, ma). all mice were housed in a temperature-controlled environment with -h light cycles and free access to food and water. mice were housed in accordance with nih guidelines, and all animal experiments were approved by the institutional animal care and use committee (iacuc) at baylor college of medicine. generation of spint , spint / , ces a, pp d , and saxo knockout mice to generate spint , spint / , ces a, pp d , and saxo knockout mice, grna/cas ribonucleoprotein complex was electroporated into fertilized eggs and transplanted into surrogate mothers as previously described [ ] . briefly, to harvest fertilized eggs, card hyperova ( . ml, cosmo bio) was injected into the abdominal cavity of b d f females (charles river), followed by human chorionic gonadotropin (hcg) ( units, emd chemicals). forty-eight hours after card hyperova, b d f males were allowed to mate naturally. twenty hours after mating, fertilized eggs with pronuclei were collected for electroporation. custom crrnas targeting each gene were purchased from millipore-sigma. the sequences for all guide rnas used for crispr/cas mediated gene editing are listed in additional file : table s . crrna and tracrrna (millipore-sigma) were diluted with nuclease-free water. the mixture was denatured at °c for min and allowed to anneal by cooling gradually to room temperature ( h). each grna was mixed with cas protein solution (thermo fisher scientific) and opti-mem media (thermo fisher scientific), and then incubated at °c for min to prepare the grna/cas rnps [final concentration, ng/μl cas for ng/μl of each grna]. the grna/cas rnp solution was placed between electrodes with a mm gap in the ecm electroporation system (btx). fertilized eggs were arranged between the electrodes, and then, the electroporation was performed with the following conditions: v, -ms pulse duration, and pulses separated by -ms pulse interval. for egg transfer, electroporated embryos were transplanted into the oviduct of pseudo-pregnant icr recipients. after days, offspring were obtained by natural birth or cesarean section. the f mice with sequence-predicted heterozygous mutations were used for the mating with additional b d f mice to generate homozygous mutants. the f or later generations were used for the phenotypic analyses. for sanger sequence analysis of mutant mice, genomic dna was isolated by incubating tail tips in lysis buffer [ mm tris-hcl (ph . ), mm edta, mm nacl, . % sds, and μg/ml actinase e solution] at °c overnight. polymerase chain reactions (pcrs) amplifying the genomic region containing the insertion/deletion events were performed using kod xtreme enzyme (toyobo, osaka, japan); pcr products were purified using the qiaquick pcr purification kit (qiagen, carlsbad, ca, usa) and sent for sanger sequencing on an abi xl genetic analyzer (thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa) using the forward primer. for routine genotyping of mutant mice, genomic dna was isolated by separately incubating ear snips and tail tips in mm naoh solution at °c overnight and inactivating with m tris ph = . . pcrs amplifying wild-type and mutant-specific amplicons were performed using x amfisure pcr master mix (gendepot, barker, tx). primer sequences are listed in additional file : table s . upon sexual maturation ( - weeks of age), knockout and littermate control male mice (n = - mice per genotype) were continuously housed with two - week-old wild-type b d f /j female mice per male for weeks. during the fertility test, the number of pups was counted shortly after birth. the total number of litters and pups per male over the mating trial was calculated and divided by the number of months to generate averages and statistics per genotype. the average number of pups per litter is based on the average litter size per male where a litter is considered one or more pups. knockout and littermate control male mice (n = - mice per genotype) that were weeks of age were used to examine body and reproductive organ weights, and testicular and epididymal histology. testes and epididymides were fixed in bouin's fixative, embedded in paraffin, sectioned at μm thickness, and stained with % periodic acid-schiff (pas) stain followed by counterstaining with hematoxylin solution. histological images were acquired with an aperio at slide scanner (leica microsystems). knockout and littermate control male mice (n = - mice per genotype) that were weeks of age were used to examine sperm numbers and motility parameters using computer-assisted sperm analysis (casa). cauda of both epididymides was isolated, transferred into human tubule fluid (htf) (irvine scientific, santa ana, ca) containing mg/ml of bsa, minced, and placed in a humidified incubator for min at °c with % co . following incubation, the sperm were diluted : in htf, added to a pre-warmed slide, and analyzed using a hamilton-thorne bioscience's ceros ii instrument. several fields of view were illuminated and captured until at least cells were counted. rnascope . hd reagent kit (red) (cat. , advanced cell diagnostics, newark, ca, usa) was used to detect spint , spint , and spint mrna transcripts on pfa-fixed, paraffin-embedded sections from -monthold wild-type epididymis. the probes against mm-spint , mm-spint , and mm-spint were custom-made, and the standard positive control (mm-ppib, cat. ) and negative control (dapb, cat. ) probes were used. the assay was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions. slides were counterstained using dapi and mounted using prolong glass antifade mountant (thermo fisher scientific inc.). multi-channel fluorescent images were acquired with an aperio versa (leica microsystems). all measurements are expressed as mean ± standard error of the mean. statistical differences were determined using student's t test. differences were considered statistically significant if the p value was less than . . supplementary information accompanies this paper at https://doi.org/ . /s - - -z. additional file : tables s , s , s , s , s , and s . table s . summary of human rna-seq datasets. this table contains the sra value for each previously published human rna-seq dataset that was reanalyzed as part of this study. the geo accession number for each new human rna-seq dataset generated and subsequently analyzed in this study is also included. table s . summary of mouse rna-seq datasets. this table contains the sra value for each previously published mouse rna-seq dataset that was reanalyzed as part of this study. the geo accession number for each new mouse sample generated and subsequently analyzed in this study is also included. table s . single-guide rnas targeting the genes' upstream (u) and downstream (d) regions used for generating knockout mice. efficiency of embryo transplantation was presented using the number of total pups delivered by pseudopregnant mice divided by the number of total embryos used for oviduct transplantation (total pups/embryos transplanted). efficiency of genome editing was determined by the number of pups carrying enzymatic mutations divided by the number of pups subjected to genotyping (gm pups/pups genotyped). table s . sanger sequencing of detailed genotype of mutant dna sequences in all the five mouse lines. table s . primers and pcr conditions used for genotyping the mutant alleles of the knockout mouse lines. table s . human and mouse rt-pcr primer sequences used for verification of reproductive tract-specificity. additional file : fig. s . genes that passed the tpm and fdr filters in at least one of the measured reproductive tissues or cells were visualized using a heatmap of the ruvr batch corrected log cpm gene expression values for the human (a) and mouse (b) samples. additional file : table s . human expression summary. contains differential fold change, identity of the non-reproductive tissue with maximal gene expression based on the differential gene analysis, false detection rate (fdr) value, average and standard deviation tpm expression values, and log cpm gene expression value for the human samples. all protein-coding genes ( , genes) that had expression in at least one reproductive tissue or cell is listed. additional file : table s . mouse expression summary. contains differential fold change, identity of the non-reproductive tissue with maximal gene expression based on the differential gene analysis, false detection rate (fdr) value, average and standard deviation tpm expression values, and log cpm gene expression value for the mouse samples. all protein-coding genes ( , genes) that had expression in at least one reproductive tissue or cell is listed. additional file : table s . all human male reproductive tract-specific genes that met the criteria of identification as reproductive tract-specific in at least one male reproductive tissue or purified cell type, with the level of fold change listed under the tissue or cell if all criteria were met. the criteria of selection are as follows: fdr < . ; tpm repro > ; tpm non-repro , max < . a fold change value of indicates the criteria were not met for that that tissue or cell. additional columns indicating .) the equivalent mouse ortholog gene symbols (single or multiple symbols) that exist, and .) if our studies identified any of these mouse orthologs as reproductive tract-specific in mouse, are included. additional file : table s . all mouse male reproductive tract-specific genes that met the criteria of identification as reproductive tract-specific in at least one male reproductive tissue or purified cell type, with the level of fold change listed under the tissue or cell if all criteria were met. the criteria of selection are as follows: fdr < . ; tpm repro > ; tpm non-repro , max < . a fold change value of indicates the criteria were not met for that that tissue or cell. additional columns indicating .) the equivalent human ortholog gene symbols (single or multiple symbols) that exist, and .) if our studies identified any of these human orthologs as reproductive tract-specific in human, are included. received: april accepted: july population division: un the mouse epididymal transcriptome: transcriptional profiling of segmental gene expression in the epididymis the human 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perturbation of cdk using selective cdk inhibition or degradation catalytic in vivo protein knockdown by small-molecule protacs hijacking the e ubiquitin ligase cereblon to efficiently target brd lessons in protac design from selective degradation with a promiscuous warhead assessing different e ligases for small molecule induced protein ubiquitination and degradation cell-penetrating peptides: years later, where do we stand? tat peptide-mediated cellular delivery: back to basics proteomics. tissue-based map of the human proteome single nucleotide polymorphisms: discovery of the genetic causes of male infertility a comprehensive gene mutation screen in men with asthenozoospermia malacards: an amalgamated human disease compendium with diverse clinical and genetic annotation and structured search genetic evaluation of patients with non-syndromic male infertility a systematic review on the genetics of male infertility in the era of nextgeneration sequencing genetics of male infertility: from research to clinic association study of single-nucleotide polymorphisms in faslg, jmjdia, loc , tex , brdt, or w , insr, and tas r genes with male infertility evaluation of candidate polymorphisms for association with oligozoospermia or azoospermia in a large cohort of men of european descent point-of-care whole-exome sequencing of idiopathic male infertility the biology of infertility: research advances and clinical challenges mutation screening of the fkbp gene and its association study with spermatogenic impairment in idiopathic infertile men efficient typing of copy number variations in a segmental duplication-mediated rearrangement hotspot using multiplex competitive amplification genetic defects in human azoospermia single-nucleotide polymorphisms of the prdm (meisetz) gene in patients with nonobstructive azoospermia two single nucleotide polymorphisms in prdm (meisetz) gene may be a genetic risk factor for japanese patients with azoospermia by meiotic arrest single-nucleotide polymorphisms in the human rad l gene may be a genetic risk factor for japanese patients with azoospermia caused by meiotic arrest and sertoli cell-only syndrome excess of rare variants in genes that are key epigenetic regulators of spermatogenesis in the patients with non-obstructive azoospermia mutations in sohlh gene associate with nonobstructive azoospermia human fam a (saxo ) is a microtubule-stabilizing protein specific to cilia and related structures human carboxylesterases: a comprehensive review structure and catalytic properties of carboxylesterase isozymes involved in metabolic activation of prodrugs human carboxylesterases and their role in xenobiotic and endobiotic metabolism the mammalian carboxylesterases: from molecules to functions heterologous expression, purification, and characterization of human triacylglycerol hydrolase hepatic carboxylesterase is essential for both normal and farnesoid x receptorcontrolled lipid homeostasis deficiency of carboxylesterase /esterase-x results in obesity, hepatic steatosis, and hyperlipidemia baculo-expression and enzymatic characterization of ces esterase lipid remodeling of murine epididymosomes and spermatozoa during epididymal maturation development changes occurring in the lipids of ram epididymal spermatozoa plasma membrane regionalization and redistribution of membrane phospholipids and cholesterol in mouse spermatozoa during in vitro capacitation variation in the cholesterol/phospholipid ratio in human spermatozoa and its relationship with capacitation analysis of recombinant human semenogelin as an inhibitor of human sperm motility characterization of an eppin protein complex from human semen and spermatozoa antimicrobial activity of human eppin, an androgen-regulated, sperm-bound protein with a whey acidic protein motif the role of type ii transmembrane serine proteasemediated signaling in cancer delineation of proteolytic and non-proteolytic functions of the membrane-anchored serine protease prostasin mechanisms of hepatocyte growth factor activation in cancer tissues regulation of cell surface protease matriptase by hai is essential for placental development, neural tube closure and embryonic survival in mice three genes expressing kunitz domains in the epididymis are related to genes of wfdc-type protease inhibitors and semen coagulum proteins in spite of lacking similarity between their protein products sperm proteins sof , tmem , and spaca are required for spermoocyte fusion in mice identification of multiple male reproductive tract-specific proteins that regulate sperm migration through the oviduct in mice disruption of adam impairs the migration of sperm into oviduct in mouse male mice deficient for germ-cell cyritestin are infertile co-expression of sperm membrane proteins cmtm a and cmtm b is essential for adam localization and male fertility in mice factors controlling sperm migration through the oviduct revealed by gene-modified mouse models pseudogenes regulate parental gene expression via cerna network interspecific recombinant congenic strains between c bl/ and mice of the mus spretus species: a powerful tool to dissect genetic control of complex traits the sequence read archive cutadapt removes adapter sequences from high-throughput sequencing reads transcript-level expression analysis of rna-seq experiments with hisat, stringtie and ballgown systematic selection of reference genes for the normalization of circulating rna transcripts in pregnant women based on rna-seq data featurecounts: an efficient general purpose program for assigning sequence reads to genomic features edger: a bioconductor package for differential expression analysis of digital gene expression data crispr/cas mediated genome editing in es cells and its application for chimeric analysis in mice publisher's note springer nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations we thank drs. yumei li all data generated or analyzed during this study are included in this published article, its supplementary information files, and publicly available repositories. the sra values for each of the previously published reproductive and non-reproductive human rna-seq datasets [ , , , , , ] and previously published reproductive and non-reproductive mouse rna-seq datasets [ , , ] are listed in additional file : table s and additional file : table s . all raw and processed data for the new human and new mouse samples generated in this study is deposited in ncbi geo (accession gse ). all mice generated in this study, and any additional information about this study, are available from the corresponding authors upon request.ethics approval and consent to participate human tissue acquisition was approved by the ethics committee at université laval with written consent obtained from each respective donor's family. all animal experiments were approved by the institutional animal care and use committee (iacuc) at baylor college of medicine. additional file : fig. s . summary of number of statistically significant up and down-regulated genes, and quantification of candidate genes with respect to the individual reproductive tissue or cell of interest. the plots in panels (a) and (b) summarizes the number of statistically significant human or mouse genes respectively, that are up-regulated or downregulated in each reproductive tissue or cell of interest compared to the non-reproductive tissue with maximal gene expression. red columns depict the number genes that are up-regulated and blue columns depict the number genes that are down-regulated. changes in gene expression were considered statistically significant for an fdr of less than or equal to . . the total number of candidate genes are designated by the black columns. candidate genes are genes that passed the fdr and tpm expression value filters.additional file : fig. s . venn diagrams comparing the overlap between the candidate male reproductive genes identified by the indicated reproductive tissues. the human testis combined gene list is the list of genes from both new samples we isolated and from previously published testis samples. the human epididymis combined gene list is the list of genes identified in either previously published samples or the newly generated samples across all sections of the epididymis. lastly, the mouse epididymis combined gene list is the list combined list of genes identified across all three sections of the mouse epididymis.additional file : table s . complete cross-sample comparison identifying human and mouse reproductive tract specific genes common to two or more samples and unique to each as identified through our studies.additional file : fig. s . classification of genes into different protein families and identification of the existence of an experimental mouse model. each candidate human gene was classified as an enzyme (enzyme), chromosome and histone modifiers (epigenetic), g-proteincoupled receptor (gpcr), orphan g-protein-couple receptor (ogpcr), kinase (kinase), transcription factor (tf), nuclear receptor (nr), ion channel (ic), chromosome and histone modifying transcript factor (tf; epigenetic), transporter (transporter) and unknown (a). the total number of candidate genes identified in our search for mouse models were plotted. orange columns designate the number of candidate genes where a model was identified while yellow designates candidate genes where a model was not identified (b).additional file : table s . drug target type classification for human genes. genes are listed according to the tissue and/or cell that they were identified as reproductive tract-specific in.additional file : table s . availability of a mouse model for human genes with a mouse ortholog. genes are listed according to the tissue and/or cell that they were identified as reproductive tract-specific in.additional file : fig. s . one-hundred and forty-two previously identified human male reproductive tract-specific genes that remain without a reported mouse model. the listed genes were identified in one or more datasets as indicated in the venn diagram. underlined genes were also identified in our studies as reproductive tract-specific in mouse. genes written in blue encode either enzymes, kinases, gpcrs, ogpcrs, transporters, transcription factors, or proteins involved in epigenetic regulation. genes written in dark red were identified in both testis (testis and/or testis cell) and in epididymis.additional file : fig. s . seventy-three human male reproductive tract-specific genes that each have a reported mouse model with male infertility phenotype. the listed genes were identified in one or more datasets as indicated in the venn diagram. underlined genes were also identified in our studies as reproductive tract-specific in mouse. genes written in blue encode either enzymes, kinases, gpcrs, ogpcrs, transporters, transcription factors, or proteins involved in epigenetic regulation. genes written in dark red were identified in both testis (testis and/or testis cell) and in epididymis.additional file : fig. s . rt-pcr confirmation of reproductive tractspecificity in both humans (a) and mice (b). the genes listed in this figure were identified through our studies and previous studies, but currently remain without a reported mouse model. gapdh and hprt are included as housekeeping genes.additional file : fig. s . eighty-nine novel human genes without a mouse ortholog. the listed genes were identified in one or more datasets as indicated in the venn diagram. genes written in blue encode either enzymes, kinases, gpcrs, ogpcrs, transporters, transcription factors, or proteins involved in epigenetic regulation. genes written in dark red were identified in both testis (testis and/or testis cell) and in epididymis.additional file : fig. s . novel reproductive tract-specific human genes that do not have any equivalent mouse orthologs. these genes may serve as potential contraceptive targets, however functional validation would need to be carried out in another model organism than mouse, such as rat or marmoset, which do have orthologs to these genes. the digital pcr (heatmap) depicts the average transcripts per million (tpm) value per tissue per gene from the indicated human rna-seq datasets as processed in parallel through our bioinformatics pipeline. white = tpm, black ≥ tpm. the expression profile of the human housekeeping gene, gapdh, is included as reference. for data obtained from published datasets, superscript values reference the dataset publication as previously mentioned.additional file : table s . previously identified genes. genes previously identified as male reproductive tract-specific through high throughput gene expression studies using either microarrays or rna-seq [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the human ortholog to genes identified in mouse and rat studies is included.additional file : fig. s . developmental expression pattern of spint , spint , spint , pp d , and saxo in epididymis and testis of postnatal and adult mice. whole epididymides were used at postnatal days , , , and and epididymis segments (caput, corpus, and cauda) were used at postnatal days , , , and . whole testes were used at all time points. the housekeeping gene, hprt, was used as reference.additional file : fig. s . multi-channel fluorescence images of bilateral epididymis serial sections stained with custom rnascope probes targeting either spint , spint , or spint mrna (red) and dapi (blue). the position of caput (cap), corpus (cor), and cauda (cau) is labeled in the overview image (left column). the position of the magnification over the epididymis is the same for all three sections (right column).additional file : fig. s . representative periodic acid-schiff staining of spint and spint / knockout and littermate control (wild-type) testes and epididymis segments (caput, corpus, and cauda) at months of age.additional file : fig. s . representative periodic acid-schiff staining of ces a knockout and littermate control (wild-type) testes and epididymis segments (caput, corpus, and cauda) at months of age.additional file : fig. s . representative scanning electron microscopy images of spint / and ces a ko and littermate control mouse sperm.additional file : fig. s . representative periodic acid-schiff staining of pp d and saxo knockout and littermate control (wild-type) testes and epididymis segments (caput, corpus, and cauda) at months of age. all authors have no competing interests. key: cord- -qb zeazk authors: thibivilliers, sandra; joshi, trupti; campbell, kimberly b; scheffler, brian; xu, dong; cooper, bret; nguyen, henry t; stacey, gary title: generation of phaseolus vulgaris ests and investigation of their regulation upon uromyces appendiculatus infection date: - - journal: bmc plant biol doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qb zeazk background: phaseolus vulgaris (common bean) is the second most important legume crop in the world after soybean. consequently, yield losses due to fungal infection, like uromyces appendiculatus (bean rust), have strong consequences. several resistant genes were identified that confer resistance to bean rust infection. however, the downstream genes and mechanisms involved in bean resistance to infection are poorly characterized. results: a subtractive bean cdna library composed of , unisequences was constructed and enriched in sequences regulated by either bean rust race , a virulent strain, or race , an avirulent strain on cultivar early gallatin carrying the resistance gene ur- . the construction of this library allowed the identification of , new bean ests, significantly adding to the available sequences for this plant. regulation of selected bean genes in response to bean rust infection was confirmed by qrt-pcr. plant gene expression was similar for both race and during the first hours of the infection process but varied significantly at the later time points ( – hours after inoculation) mainly due to the presence of the avr gene in the race leading to a hypersensitive response in the bean plants. a biphasic pattern of gene expression was observed for several genes regulated in response to fungal infection. conclusion: the enrichment of the public database with over , bean ests significantly adds to the genomic resources available for this important crop plant. the analysis of these genes in response to bean rust infection provides a foundation for further studies of the mechanism of fungal disease resistance. the expression pattern of bean genes upon rust infection shares several features with other legumes infected by biotrophic fungi. this finding suggests that the p. vulgaris-u. appendiculatus pathosystem could serve as a model to explore legume-rust interaction. common bean, phaseolus vulgaris, represents a great source of nutrition for millions of people and is the second most important legume crop, after soybean. it is the target of multiple pests and diseases causing substantial losses. for example, on susceptible bean cultivars, bean rust, caused by uromyces appendiculatus, may cause yield reduction from to % with favorable environmental conditions, such as high moisture and temperature between and °c [ ] . among the different stages of the bean rust life cycle, basidia, pycnia, aecia, uredinia, and telia, the most devastating on bean is the uredinial stage. the latent period between the germination of an urediniospore and the formation of a sporulating pustule can be as short as days. signs of infection by uromyces appendiculatus include the presence of uredinia or sporeproducing pustules on the surface of the leaf. the identification of fungal proteins from quiescent and germinating uredospores enhanced the understanding of the infection process of this fungus [ , ] . based upon mapping and quantitative trait loci (qtl) analysis, several genes involved in colletotrichum lindemuthianum (co; anthracnose)resistance and other resistance genes for bean common mosaic virus (bcmv), bean golden yellow mosaic virus (bgymv), common bacterial blight, and bean rust are clustered [ , ] . the large number of resistance (r) genes for bean rust may correlate with the high pathogen population diversity; with different races identified [ ] . the locus ur- confers resistance to out of the u. appendiculatus races present in the usa [ , ] . besides the ur- locus, a number of other r genes were identified in bean; such as locus ur- for race , locus ur- epistatic to ur- for race or locus ur- mapped to the linkage group b [ , ] . to date, no large scale transcriptomic analysis of bean rust infection has been performed to better understand the mechanism of resistance. all of these ur genes are effective against one specific rust strain, following the gene-for-gene resistance theory. consequently, gene pyramiding was used to produce cultivars carrying multiple resistance genes [ ] . unfortunately, such resistance may prove to be effective in the field for only a short time due to the adaptation of the fungus to overcome plant defenses [ ] . consequently, unraveling and understanding the mechanisms downstream of these r genes is a key research goal to circumvent the adaptation of the fungus to plant resistance. we investigated the phaseolus vulgaris-uromyces appendiculatus pathosystem at a transcriptional level for a better understanding of the plant response to fungal infection. in this study, we developed a subtractive suppressive hybridization (ssh) library made from the common bean cultivar early gallatin that exhibits susceptibility to u. appendiculatus race (virulent strain) but resistance to u. appendiculatus race (avirulent strain). the resistance to u. appendiculatus is conferred by the presence of the ur- gene in this cultivar that leads to a hypersensitive response (hr) in presence of the pathogen race [ ] . this cdna bean library was enriched in expressed sequence tags (ests) that are potentially up-regulated by the compatible and incompatible interactions. more than , clones from the ssh library were sequenced and assembled into contigs. a total of , p. vulgaris sequences and u. appendiculatus sequences were added to the ncbi database, significantly increasing the number of ests available for common bean. the regulation of genes was confirmed by quantitative real time polymerase chain reaction (qrt-pcr) revealing main expression patterns and highlighting gene regulation that occurs downstream of r protein activation. common bean is a diploid (n = ) with a small genome size estimated at to mb [ ] . so far, the total number of common bean ests available is , (verified on march, ). this number was significantly less before the publication of [ ] who added ests from root nodules, phosphorus deficient roots, developing pods, and leaves, and from leaves and shoots with and without c. lindemuthianum inoculation [ ] . (the current number also includes the , ests added in this study.). the lack of sufficient p. vulgaris sequences precludes the construction of a useful dna microarray for this plant. consequently, in order to study the response of bean to u. appendiculatus infection, we created a ssh library and sequenced , clones from ' and ' ends. from , sequences, . % were discarded due to the absence of a cloned sequence or low sequence quality. during cdna generation, sequence tags were incorporated prior to pooling cdnas from different conditions (see material and methods for details). the tags identify the treatment and time points used in generating the original mrna. the distribution of these tags among the library is presented in the figure . approximately % of the sequences lacked a tag after sequencing, while % of the sequences had a "race " tag and more than % had a "race " tag. it is important to note that the majority of the ests coming from the fungus were tagged "late ", consistent with an effective colonization of the leaf by the virulent fungus (race ). the lack of tag identification may come from inefficient incorporation of the tag during the library construction or the presence of non-identified nucleotide in the tag sequence making it indiscernible. the various cdnas in the library could be resolved back to their source tissue by the presence of unique sequence tags. for example, % percent of the est sequences were derived from bean tissue infected with race since they had the "race " tag. this likely reflects the compatible interaction between the race and its host allowing greater fungal penetration. biotrophic fungi are known to reprogram the host plant cell to support their growth [ ] and plant ests tagged with race could be involved in this process. contig assembly and removal of redundant sequences was performed on , sequences using tigr gene indices clustering tools (tgicl) and cap software. two thousand seven hundred twenty one sequences showed no similarity with other sequences and were categorized as singletons. these sequences had an average length of bp. seven thousand eight hundred sixty contigs were assembled from the remaining , sequences. the average contig length was estimated to be kb. an average contig contains . sequences (min: , max: ). ultimately, , unisequences were identified and represent genes that are potentially differentially up-regulated during bean infection by virulent or avirulent pathogen isolates. among these , unisequences, , were annotated as bean genes and were annotated as fungal genes based on best blast hits to the database these fungal unisequences included singletons and contigs (table ) . sequence analysis revealed that , ests had significant similarity with sequences in public databases such as dfci or ncbi (using blastn with an e-value ≤ e- ). forty-three percent of annotations were based on similarities to sequences in soybean databases and . % were derived from comparisons with common bean ( table , see additional file : excel file of the , unisequences). these unisequences were grouped into different functional categories ( figure ). the most abundant category contained the unknown ( . %), non-classified ( . %), and low or no hit ( . %) groups and represents . % of the entire library. the remaining . % of the sequences were grouped into categories, such as, protein metabolism and catabolism ( . %), nucleotide and nucleic acid metabolism ( . %), or stress defense response ( . %). taken together, signal transduction regulation and nucleotide and nucleic acid metabolism represent . % of the library. tian et al. ( ) also found that % of their est library, made from phosphorus starved bean plants, fell into these two categories [ ] . similar observations were made on soybean in response to stresses such as drought, phosphorus starvation or nematode infection [ ] . it would seem that under various biotic and abiotic stresses, plants activate several common pathways that alter the expression profile of genes, which allow the plant to response to the specific environmental condition. the ssh library was normalized to reduce the redundancy of the most highly expressed genes. however, some genes are very highly expressed and thus remain overrepresented in the normalized library. as expected, the largest contigs (i.e., composed of the most sequences) are involved in basic metabolism processes. the primary metabolism category comprises the largest component ( . %) of the library based upon the number of unisequences and the proportion of contigs composed of a high number of sequences. for example, cl contig is composed of aligned sequences and not surprisingly, represents ribulose- , -bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase activase (rubisco activase). three of the other largest contigs are also found in the primary metabolism category ( table , see additional file : excel file of the , unisequences). this library was constructed to reveal the plant and fungal genes up-regulated during the rust infection process. contigs correlated with stress response pathways also have a high number of sequences such as the contig cl contig with sequences encoding an -aminoc-distribution of the sequences according to their tag figure distribution of the sequences according to their tag. the est sequences are representing in the grey or black columns depending on whether they came from tissues harvested early ( to hai) or late ( to hai). x-axis represents the fungal race with which the leaves were infected prior to cdna isolation. y-axis represents the percentage of sequences in each category versus the total number of sequences of the library. yclopropane- -carboxylic acid oxidase (acc oxidase), the contig cl contig with sequences encoding for a glucan endo- , -beta-glucosidase, and the contig cl contig with sequences and encoding an endochitinase. to determine the proportion of new p. vulgaris unigenes among the library, the sequences were compared with the p. vulgaris ests present in the ncbi database. by this analysis, , sequences, out of the , bean ests, can be considered as new p. vulgaris unigenes with the remaining , sequences matching known sequences with more than % identity over more than bp. the ests present in the ncbi database originate from common bean cultivars such as bat , negro jamapa or g , facilitating the identification of putative single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) between these public sequences and the ests derived from this study using cultivar early gallatin. of the , matching sequences, sequences present a perfect match, sequences have mismatch or indel, have mismatches and/or indels, and , have more than mismatches and/or indels. an average of snp/indel is putatively identified every bp. however, we were not able to further confirm these snp/indels due to the lack of the sequence trace files for the bean ests present in the ncbi database. this snp frequency is very similar to that reported previously by ramirez et al., ( ) who found snp every bp. our estimation is based on the comparison of cv early gallatin with other cultivars (bat , negro jamapa , and g ). when this comparison is made between only different cultivars (early gallatin and g ) the snp frequency in the coding sequences decreases to snp every bp. for comparison, the snp frequency in the soybean coding sequence was estimated at snp/ bp in exons and snp/ bp in introns [ ] . the genes identified by est sequencing represent candidates involved in the plant host's ability to withstand rust infection. therefore, genetic mapping of these gene candidates is a means to correlate their position with known qtl involved in disease resistance. the fungal sequences represent . % of the library. two studies in rice showed that the harvesting time (i.e., fungal biomass in the infected leaf is low at the earliest time points) and the stringency of selection (i.e., choice of the appropriate e-value for the blast) are very important to accurately sample the abundance of fungal est in infected leaf tissue [ , ] . in this study, the selected e-value was e- , greatly reducing the risk of false positive clones. tissue was sampled after days of infection allowing the multiplication of the fungi in the leaf tissue. at dai, the haustoria are already mature and are probably redirecting the nutrient up-taken from the plant based on their genes expression pattern [ ] . these genes were mainly annotated predominantly by comparison to ests from germinating uredospores of u. appendiculatus [ , ] (table , see additional file : excel file of the , unisequences). two hundred seventy two fungal sequences, representing . % of the total, were considered identical to ests already present in the ncbi database while sequences are new and unique as identified by less than % identity over at least bp. interestingly, among the fungal ests that showed no similarity with ests from u. appendiculatus germinating uredospores, showed similarity with uromyces viciae haustorium-specific cdnas and may be specific to successful infections. these remaining sequences represent candidates for fungal genes more directly involved in the infection mechanism. the library was made from tissues infected with a virulent and avirulent rust strain to allow for the identification of genes involved in both pathogenhost compatibility and resistance. beside, the high simi- "unisequence", "singleton", "contig = ", and "contig> " columns represent the number of total unisequences, those found once in the ssh library, the contigs made up of only sequences and the contigs composed of more than sequences, respectively, having a hit with an organism listed in column one. larity of these sequences with haustoria-specific ests makes them likely candidates to encode potential effectors or avirulence proteins. the largest contig has sequence similarity to a putative beta-galactosidase (an enzyme involved in the degradation of the cell-wall) based on a match to a cdna from germinating p. pachyrhizi uredospores. among the , unisequences, we sought to confirm the expression of ests using qrt-pcr. to normalize gene expression based on qrt-pcr, the identification of constitutively expressed bean reference genes is required. the use of house keeping genes as reference genes for gene expression normalization can induce some error in the analysis of the data without confirmation of their constitutive expression especially when using qrt-pcr [ , ] . consequently, three bean genes, tc , tc , and tc (encoding a guanine nucleotide-binding protein beta subunit-like protein, ubiquitin, and tubulin beta chain respectively) were selected based on their housekeeping function and/or their presence in different bean cdna libraries [ , ] . additionally, homologs of soybean genes cons , cons , and cons (encoding for a f-box protein family, a metalloprotease, and a peptidase s respectively), were chosen since they were recently shown to be expressed constitutively in soybean [ ] . preliminary analysis of these putative constitutive genes by qrt-pcr performed on leaf, stem, and pod cdna led to the elimination of tc , cons and tc due to the variability of their expression levels (data not shown). the stability of the expression level of the remaining genes, tc , cons and cons was evaluated by qrt-pcr on cdnas from bean uninfected or infected with bean rust race or at , , , , , and hours after inoculation (hai). after analysis of their expression stability using genorm software [ ] , cons was the most stably expressed in our experimental conditions (figure ). for this reason, cons was selected for normalization of the expression data. it is interesting to note that cons was also among the most stably expressed constitutive genes in soybean [ ] and, therefore, could be a candidate to use for expression normalization in other legumes. in order to compare expression of genes responding to u. appendiculatus race to those responding to race , during bean infection and colonization, the expression level of six, selected fungal genes was analyzed using qrt-pcr ( figure ). during the first hours of the infection, the six genes were expressed at comparable levels. however, by hai, the expression of all six genes was significantly higher in tissues infected with the virulent race isolate. this result likely reflects the nature of the compatible, virulent interaction as compared to inhibition of race infection by the host defenses. consistent with this, all six genes used in this analysis came from the ests possessing the tag of the "late " library. the est cl contig , encoding for a plant-induced rust protein , exhibits significant similarity with nmt (no messenger in thiamine), which is involved in the biosynthesis of the pyrimidine moiety of thiamine (vitamin b ). this gene was strongly expressed only in tissue infected with the virulent fungus race . similar observations were made previously using bean plants infected with uromyces fabae [ ] . these data also suggest that the haustoria may not only be the site of nutrient uptake from the plant [ ] but also the site of metabolite biosynthesis with specific haustorial genes involved in vitamin biosynthesis [e.g., nmt ] [ ] . ninety bean unisequences were selected (based on their putative function and tag) and their regulation was confirmed by qrt-pcr using rna obtained from three independent biological replicates. unisequences coming from the ests in the "race " tagged libraries were desirable due to their potential involvement in a resistance pathway. the regulation of these genes was evaluated by qrt-pcr using rna from uninoculated leaf tissues or those inoculated with either u. appendiculatus uredospores of race or race isolates at the time points , , , , , , or hai. the data obtained were used to compare the ratio of gene expression in tissues infected with race or race to that in uninoculated bean leaves. the data also allowed a direct comparison of gene expression induced by either race or race . the first two comparisons highlight regulation in the infected plants by the rust fungi, while the third comparison highlights gene expression differences between the two types of infection, resistant and susceptible. the genes showed significant expression differences in at least one of the comparisons (p-value < . , cut-off < - or > or p-value < . , cut-off < - . or > . in log base ). the transcriptional response was profiled in relation to the time after inoculation ( figure ). for example, and genes showed differential regulation within and hai, respectively, in tissue inoculated with race . at these same time points and genes, respectively, were differentially regulated in tissues infected with race . at the latest time points, and hai, and genes, respectively, for race and and genes, respectively, for race were differentially regulated. it is interesting to note that the regulation occurring at the early time points appeared to be independent of the fungal race used for inoculation. at the early time points (i.e., first hours), only genes ( % of those tested) showed a difference in expression in tissues inoculated with the two fungal races. however, at the later time points, this number increased to genes with ( %) and ( %) at and hai, respectively. these results suggested that during the beginning of the infection most of the bean gene regulation is independent of the fungal race, but differences due to fungal race occur as the infection progresses. it is possible that fungal-pathogen associated molecular pattern (pamp) elicitors (e.g., chitin) induce the same response from the plant at the beginning of the infection. subsequently, the avr protein in the race is recognized after a couple of days leading to the induction of defense-related genes. however, in bean infected by race , no plant defense is activated and gene expression may reflect the reprogramming of the plant host by the fungus especially at the haustorial site. a key finding of the van cl contig uromyces viciae haustorium-specific cdna similar to mitochondrial substrate carrier cl contig uromyces appendiculatus cdna from hyphae from gernimating uredospore similar to translation elongation factor cl contig uromyces appendiculatus cdna from hyphae from gernimating uredospore similar to von willebrand factor cl contig phakopsora pachyrhizi cdna from germinating urediniospores ssh-library similar to von willebrand factor cl contig uromyces appendiculatus cdna from hyphae from gernimating uredospore similar to unknown cl contig uromyces appendiculatus cdna from hyphae from gernimating uredospore similar to unnknown cl contig uromyces appendiculatus cdna from hyphae from gernimating uredospore similar to unknown cl contig uromyces viciae haustorium-specific cdna similar to nucleotide excision repair protein yeast rad cl contig uromyces viciae haustorium-specific cdna similar to -phosphogluconate dehydrogenase cl contig uromyces appendiculatus cdna from hyphae from gernimating uredospore similar to unknown cl contig puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici ssh-library of puccinia graminis infected wheat leaves similar to s ribosomal protein l gene cl contig uromyces viciae haustorium-specific cdna similar to voltage-dependent ion-selective channel cl contig puccinia graminis f. sp. tritici ssh-library of puccinia graminis infected wheat leaves similar to glutathione s-transferase cl contig uromyces appendiculatus cdna from hyphae from gernimating uredospore similar to cysteine-rich secretory protein (crisp/scp/tpx ) expressed at - hai ( figure ) . therefore, the dip pattern of gene expression upon rust infection appears to occur in both bean and soybean. furthermore, this biphasic regulation seems to be shared not only by rust fungi but by other biotrophic fungi. for example barley infected by blumeria graminis (causal agent of the powdery mildew), also showed a biphasic gene response, the first set of genes responded in the first hours of the infection in the epidermis whereas the second set responded after - hours of infection in the mesophyll cells [ ] . in contrast, soybean plants infected with phytophthora sojae, a hemibiotrophic oomycete, did not show a biphasic pattern of gene response [ ] . based on these examples, this biphasic pattern might be specific to the biotrophic rust fungi. further comparisons need to be made to establish the specificity of this "dip" pattern of gene expression in response to biotrophic fungal infection. a more detailed analysis was performed on the expression ratio of transcripts in bean leaves inoculated with the fungus race or race versus uninoculated bean leaves. these analyses are presented in a hierarchical cluster based on euclidian distance ( figure , see additional file : excel file of the ratio of the expression level of the regulated genes for all conditions). this cluster can be divided into five main groups. the first, group a (a and a ), is composed of genes up-regulated by both fungal races in the first hours of the infection but enhanced expression is subsequently maintained only in the plants infected by race at the later time points (up to hai). genes in this group include those annotated as plant defense ( % of this group) containing pr , wound induced protein (win ) genes, cell-wall related (i.e., a cell-wall invertase gene), and signal transduction regulation category with a g-box binding protein pg or sensory transduction histidine kinase genes. these genes are likely involved in the defense pathways induced by a fungal-pamp since they have the same expression pattern during the first hours of infection independent of the fungal race used. for example, the wound-induced protein win protein has anti-fungal activity [ ] and possesses a domain that can bind a well known pamp, chitin [ ] . the formation of haustoria by the fungus in the plant can occur within hours of infection [ ] . after successful colonization of the bean cell, rust race likely secretes effector proteins that can suppress the plant defense pathway induced by pamps. the initial induction of genes such as win by race and their subsequent reduction in expression may be associated with this suppression of defense by the virulent pathogen only. the second group, group b, is composed of genes that were induced at the beginning of the infection but were slightly down-regulated at the later time points independent of the fungal race. this group is rich in genes categorized as plant defense representing % of this group. the third group, group c (c and c ), is composed of genes that appeared to be repressed by inoculation. in group c , the genes were repressed during the first hours by both races but this repression was only maintained at later time points (i.e., and hai) in tissues infected with race . in contrast to group c , the apparent repression of genes occurred only after hai with both races. the fourth group, group d, consists of genes that were repressed in the first hours by both races and subsequently expressed at levels comparable to the uninfected tissue. the genes repressed specifically at the early time points could also be involved in the basal defense response. this pool is composed of ests known to be involved in plant defense pathways [e.g., chitinase class [ ] , an auxin response factor and an auxin conjugate hydrolase [ ] , and a mlo-like protein [ ] ]. finally, the fifth group represents genes that gave no discernable pattern of expression. these representative genes mainly identified genes involved in the early responses of the bean under rust infection (i.e., first hai). these genes share different expression patterns but are likely involved in the basal defense response, which is induced by pamps. these genes were induced by both races at the early time points but their regulation was often maintained only in plants infected by the fungus race . this may be due to the inability of this avirulent pathogen to suppress the plant ranking of bean genes based on their expression stability measured by qrt-pcr figure ranking of bean genes based on their expression stability measured by qrt-pcr. the expression levels of three putative constitutive genes (tc , cons , and cons ) was measured during infection by both fungal race and in order to identify the best reference gene for qrt-pcr normalization. genes with the most stable expression during the conditions tested are on the right of the diagram, the less stably expressed being on the left. figure generated by genorm software. <::::: least stable genes most stable genes ::::> average expression stability m defense system. the same observation was made also by lee et al. ( ) at the protein level. lee et al. ( ) proposed a new model for plant disease resistance where rgene mediated resistance is integrated into the basal immunity system of the plant and functions primarily to restore the innate immunity response that is actively suppressed by virulent pathogens [ ] . similar patterns of expression, independent of the pathogen virulence, were observed in arabidopsis [ ] and barley [ ] . another category of genes (i.e. cell-wall invertase or amino acid transporter-like protein ) involved in the plant defense system are likely involved in the hr and were regulated only at the later time points in plants infected by the race fungus. the expression of these genes may be the result of recognition of avrur- by the ur- resistance protein and lead to the presence of hr ten days after infection with this isolates. in summary, we identified , p. vulgaris unisequences and confirmed the regulation of plant genes by rust infection in common bean. these data have added significantly to the genomic resources available for common bean, while also providing insight into how this plant responds to fungal infection. as part of this study, we identified constitutively expressed bean genes that can be used for normalization in gene expression studies. the data also suggest that a biphasic gene expression pattern may be a common feature in plants infected by biotrophic fungi. bean tissues were produced at the usda-ars facility (beltsville, md). p. vulgaris cv. early gallatin plants were inoculated with either u. appendiculatus race (virulent strain) or race (avirulent strain) uredospores. the primary leaves of day old plants were inoculated on the top and bottom. spores ( × spores/ml) were mixed in water and then sprayed on leaves with an aerosol canister. the plants were placed in a dew chamber in the dark at °c for hours and then moved to a growth room transcriptional expression of selected fungal genes during the infection process figure transcriptional expression of selected fungal genes during the infection process. expression ratio of selected u. appendiculatus genes during the first hours of the infection with bean rust race or . qrt-pcr was performed on three independent biological replicates using cons as a reference for normalization. six ests, cl contig (heat shock protein ), cl contig (proteasome subunit alpha), cl contig (glutamine synthetase), cl contig (asparaginyl-trna synthetase), cl contig (planta-induced rust protein ), and cl contig (unknown), were found strongly up-regulated in tissues infected with the fungal race in comparison to tissues infected with the fungal race . the tag identification for these ests is "late race " indicating that they came originally from tissue infected with race . *: data significant with . < p-value ≤ . . **: data significant with . < p-value ≤ . . ***: data significant with p-value ≤ . . nd: not determined. *** ( °c, % relative humidity) with supplemental fluorescent lighting ( hours light/ hours light). leaves were harvested , , , , , , , and hai in independent experiments. the presence of pustules or hr lesions when inoculated with u. appendiculatus race or isolates was observed days after inoculation. bean leaf, stem, and pod tissues used for the identification of the putative constitutive genes were harvested on month old plants grown in a greenhouse. the normalized ssh library was generated at the roy j. carver biotechnology center (urbana, il). the library is composed of more than , ests and was prepared as described by bonaldo et al. ( ) following the th method [ ] . the cdna from bean infected with u. appendiculatus race or was pooled and tagged as follows, early / and late / for cdna from bean tissues infected for - - - or - - - hours, respectively, by either race or race . the enrichment in cdna regulated by the infection was possible by subtraction of cdna from the described pools against cdna derived from uninoculated leaves and germinated spores. the library was subsequently sub-divided in parts based on sequence tags added during library construction. , cdnas were cloned in pgem-t (promega) for sequencing. the , cdna clones were sequenced using an abi xl dna sequencer (ame bioscience) at the catfish genetic research facility (usda-asr, stoneville, ms). the conversion of the electropherogram into base and quality files was performed using phred [ ] . the est sequences were first cleaned of polya, polyt, and low complexity sequence using seqclean from tigr http://comp bio.dfci.harvard.edu/tgi/software/. contig assembly was done using the tigr gene indices clustering tools (tgicl) http://compbio.dfci.harvard.edu/tgi/software/ after removing vector and tag sequences. it uses a slightly modified version of ncbi's megablast, and the resulting clusters are then assembled using the cap assembly program (huang and madan. ). annotations for the sequences were obtained by blast against the tigr plant and fungal sequence databases and uniprot database. the ests were submitted to ncbi genbank dbest under the accession numbers fe to fe . rna extraction and cdna synthesis from leaf tissues of common bean cv early gallatin infected with either u. appendiculatus race (virulent strain) or race (avirulent strain) and from soybean tissues infected by p. pachyrhizi, were performed as described by libault et al., . briefly, rnas were extracted from ground frozen tissues using trizol@reagent (invitrogen, carlsbad, calif.) and purified by two phenol/chloroform extractions. the rnas were treated with turbo dna-free enzyme (ambion) to remove all dna contaminants. cdna synthesis was prepared from μg of rna using the mmlv reverse transcriptase (promega, madison, wi). the qrt-pcr primers were designed with primer software http://frodo.wi.mit.edu/primer /input.htm using the following criteria, tm of °c, pcr amplicon length from to bp, primer sequence length from to nucleotides with guanine-cytosine contents from % to % (see additional file : excel file of the qrt-pcr primers). the qrt-pcr on bean leaf tissues were performed in a -well plate format ( ht sequence detection system; applied biosystems, foster city, ca). the qrt-pcr of soybean leaf, pod, and stem tissues was performed with a -well plate qrt-pcr machine ( real-time pcr system; applied biosystems, foster city, ca). data analysis was performed as described by libault et al. ( ) with modifications [ ] . the data collection was performed during cycles for bean but cycles for soybean with an rn threshold set at . for ct value determination. the ratios of the expression level were transformed into a log base for clustering in gene traffic software using a hierarchical clustering algorithm. a t-test was used to assess the statistical differences of the mean of the ratio for each sample at each time point. temporal expression pattern of the regulated transcripts during the infection process the identification of a reference gene for qrt-pcr normalization was made using genorm software [ ] . this software calculates the mean pairwise variation (based on geometrical mean) for each gene and compares these values among these genes. a high mean pairwise variation is found for gene with low expression stability. the use of host resistance in disease management of rust in common bean giraldez r: a genetic linkage map of phaseolus vulgaris l. and localization of genes for specific resistance to six races of anthracnose (colletotrichum lindemuthianum). tag theoretical and applied genetics anthracnose resistance and linked molecular markers in common bean line a phenotypic and genotypic characterization of uromyces appendiculatus from phaseolus vulgaris in the americas monogenic and epistatic resistance to bean rust infection in common bean development of comprehensive rust resistant bean germplasm (abstr.) crg, a gene required for ur- -mediated rust resistance in common bean, maps to a resistance gene analog cluster scar markers linked to the common bean rust resistance gene ur- . tag theoretical and applied genetics sources, genes for resistance and pedigrees of rust and mosaic resistant dry bean germplasm lines released by the usda beltsville bean project in collaboration with michigan, nebraska and north dakota agricultural experiment stations a critical analysis of durable resistance using specific races of the common bean rust pathogen to detect resistance genes in phaseolus vulgaris nuclear dna amounts in angiosperms sequencing and analysis of common bean ests. building a foundation for functional genomics comparative bioinformatic analysis of genes expressed in common bean (phaseolus vulgaris l.) seedlings. genome/national research council canada = genome/conseil national de recherches canada infection of arabidopsis thaliana leaves with albugo candida (white blister rust) causes a reprogramming of host metabolism molecular cloning and characterization of phosphorus starvation responsive genes in common bean (phaseolus vulgaris l.) sequencing and analysis of approximately , soybean cdna clones from a full-length-enriched cdna library a soybean transcript map: gene distribution, haplotype and single-nucleotide polymorphism analysis large-scale identification of expressed sequence tags involved in rice and rice blast fungus interaction analysis of genes expressed during rice-magnaporthe grisea interactions analysis of expressed sequence tags from uromyces appendiculatus hyphae and haustoria and their comparison to sequences from other rust fungi shotgun identification of proteins from uredospores of the bean rust uromyces appendiculatus protein accumulation in the germinating uromyces appendiculatus uredospore genome-wide identification and testing of superior reference genes for transcript normalization in arabidopsis reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr analysis in virus infected cells: sars corona virus, yellow fever virus, human herpesvirus- , camelpox virus and cytomegalovirus infections identification of four soybean reference genes for gene expression normalization. the plant genome accurate normalization of real-time quantitative rt-pcr data by geometric averaging of multiple internal control genes high level activation of vitamin b biosynthesis genes in haustoria of the rust fungus uromyces fabae nutrients of a rust fungus: the role of haustoria differential gene transcript accumulation in barley leaf epidermis and mesophyll in response to attack by blumeria graminis f.sp. hordei (syn. erysiphe graminis f.sp. hordei). physiological and molecular plant pathology patterns of gene expression upon infection of soybean plants by phytophthora sojae differential expression within a family of novel wound-induced genes in potato a novel pathogen-and woundinducible tobacco (nicotiana tabacum) protein with antifungal activity volatiles modulate the development of plant pathogenic rust fungi purification and characterization of an acidic beta- , -glucanase from cucumber and its relationship to systemic disease resistance induced by colletotrichum lagenarium and tobacco necrosis virus a plant mirna contributes to antibacterial resistance by repressing auxin signaling mlo, a novel modulator of plant defenses and cell death, binds calmodulin quantitative proteomic analysis of bean plants infected by a virulent and avirulent obligate rust fungus arabidopsis senescence-associ-ated gene stabilizes and signals within an enhanced disease susceptibility complex in plant innate immunity. the plant cell nuclear activity of mla immune receptors links isolate-specific and basal diseaseresistance responses normalization and subtraction: two approaches to facilitate gene discovery base-calling of automated sequencer traces using phred. i. accuracy assessment identification of arabidopsis transcription factor and ubiquitinligase genes responding to chitin, a plant-defense elicitor st contributed to the sequences production and analysis, performed the expression analysis and drafted the manuscript; tj performed the bioinformatic analysis. kbc produced the plant material and contributed to the sequences production; bs sequenced the clones; dx supervised the bioinformatic part of the project and worked over the draft version of the manuscript; bc and htn supervised the project and worked over the draft version of the manuscript; gs conceived and supervised the project and worked over the draft version of the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. click here for file [http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/supplementary/ - - - -s .xls] click here for file [http://www.biomedcentral.com/content/supplementary/ - - - -s .xls] key: cord- -i t cvr authors: pardo, a. title: the human genome and advances in medicine: limits and future prospects date: - - journal: archivos de bronconeumología ((english edition)) doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: i t cvr nan on april , , the international human genome sequencing consortium announced the successful completion of its task. the correct sequence of the bases cytosine (c), thymine (t), adenine (a), and guanine (g) in the gene-containing regions of dna had been elucidated with an accuracy of . % for % of the euchromatin. this is considered to be the most that can be achieved with current technology, and all that now remains is to sequence the remaining regions, which are more difficult because they include almost highly repetitive dna fragments in addition to the centromeres, the structures that divide chromosomes. the consortium of which the human genome project (hgp) formed a part included centers in countries (china, france, germany, great britain, japan, and the united states of america). this international group chose to announce the completion of the task in april in order to coincide with the th anniversary of the publication, in april , of the paper by watson and crick that first described dna's double helix structure. the hgp's initial objectives were fulfilled years ahead of schedule, and, in addition to compiling a highly accurate sequence of the human genome which has been made freely available and accessible to everyone, the consortium has developed a set of new technologies and has constructed genetic maps of the genomes of various organisms. moreover, this program of scientific investigation is linked to a parallel bioethics program. it is also interesting to note that, thanks to advances in technology, this result was achieved for a cost lower than the initial budget, which estimated that mb would be sequenced annually at a cost of . dollars per finished base. the final figure was mb per year at a cost of . dollars per base. the size and scope of the hgp has also provided valuable lessons about the organization and management of large projects involving international collaboration, and those lessons will no doubt prove useful in the administration of other large scale projects. what was the genesis of this project? what general lessons has it taught us so far? how will it influence medicine? what future prospects, hopes, and fears has it given rise to? what ethical problems does it pose? these are just some of the general questions that this article will attempt to analyze. the genome is the total set of genes carried by an organism, and each gene is a segment of dna's double helix structure containing the recipe for making a polypeptide chain in a protein. a protein may contain a single polypeptide chain, as in the case of insulin, and therefore a single gene will code for this protein, or it may contain more than one chain, as in the case of hemoglobin, so that this protein is encoded by more than one gene. there are around billion (us trillion) cells in the human organism, and each one of these contains a complete genome. this genome is found on the pairs of chromosomes in the cell nucleus. around . meters of dna containing approximately million ( billion us) base pairs is packed into the nucleus of each cell. the genetic code uses groups of dna bases to specify the amino acids that make up the polypeptide chains of proteins, the principal actors in life's drama. one of the first genomes to be completely sequenced was that of simian virus (sv ), which contains nucleotides. by the beginning of the s, viral genomes containing over bases had been sequenced, making it possible for scientists to envisage the possibility of sequencing bacterial genomes containing over bases. when the idea of sequencing the human genome was first proposed during the mid- s, the undertaking seemed hardly feasible using the technology available at that time. however, after various preparatory meetings, the national institutes of health and the department of energy of the usa officially announced on october , the launch of a program to sequence the human genome, and james watson (of watson appointed director of the recently created national center for human genome research. around the same time, the public consortium known as the human genome project was formed, and this organization announced a -year plan (from to ) with the following objectives: a) to determine the complete nucleotide sequence of human dna and identify all the genes in human dna (estimated to number between and ); b) to build physical and genetic maps; c) to analyze the genomes of selected organisms used in research as model systems (eg, the mouse); d) to develop new technologies; and e) to analyze and debate the ethical and legal implications for individuals and for society as a whole. one of the difficulties that had to be overcome in the task of accurately sequencing the bases that make up the human genome was that approximately % of dna is highly repetitive. the strategy adopted by the hgp was to sequence the dna whose location on the chromosomes was already known. however, this strategy was challenged in by j. craig venter and his team, who had just set up a private company called celera genomics. taking advantage of recent advances in technology, this team proposed an alternative strategy based on cutting the genome into small segments and using a computer to reassemble the sequences by matching the overlapping ends of each fragment. with these innovations, this private consortium announced that they would sequence the human genome in years, in other words, that they would complete the task by . this undoubtedly brought immense pressure to bear on the public group, the hgp, headed since by francis s. collins, and also gave rise to fears that a private company might control a large part of the human genome through patents. after several unsuccessful attempts to get the private and public sector groups to collaborate, an agreement was reached to simultaneously publish a first draft of the human genome in february, . this draft did not, however, have the degree of precision of the current one. consequently, the hgp consortium published its results in nature in february , and celera did likewise in science. the sequences were subsequently corroborated with a greater degree of reliability, and in april , with the sequence practically complete, the hgp consortium declared the task to be completed. , discoveries and surprises one of the surprising facts thrown up by the sequencing of the human genome was that it only contains approximately genes. owing to its size, it had been estimated that the genome would contain between and genes. in simple organisms, such as yeasts, the number of genes directly correlates with the size of the genome because most of the information in the genome clearly codes for proteins, and the individual genes have a well-defined beginning and a clear stop point and exit for the messenger rna. it had seemed logical, therefore, that the greater the complexity of the organism, the larger would be the number of genes. however, the sequencing of the genomes of other organisms has yielded unexpected results. for example, the common fruit fly, drosophila melanogaster, has approximately genes, fewer than other simpler organisms, such as the earth worm, caenorhabditis elegans, with genes, and the mustard plant, arabidopsis thaliana, with around . - therefore, the human genome only has around more genes than arabidopsis despite its obviously greater biological complexity. so we have learned that the human genome has fewer genes than expected and also that that the distance separating them is considerable. it has been calculated that the gene density in the human genome is around per bases, while in drosophila this figure is , and in arabidopsis, . it is important to understand that the genes in human dna, as in most eukaryotes, are highly fragmented; in other words, not all of the bases from the beginning to the end of the gene are read to make a protein. the dna in the genes has coding regions, called exons, interrupted by long noncoding sequences, called introns (intergenic regions). these noncoding regions are removed by the process of splicing in the formation of messenger rna, so that the resulting messenger rna is much shorter than the original dna from which it was produced. for example, it has been reported that around % to % of genes in human chromosomes and undergo alternative splicing-the exons combine in different ways and produce various different proteins. , this means that the number and variety of proteins in an organism does not depend solely on the number of genes in the genome, but rather on the way these genes are used. another important question thrown up by the results of the hgp was the following: if only % to % of the bases in the human genome code for proteins, then what do the rest do? an equivalent part of the noncoding portion of the genome probably contains most of the sequences that regulate the expression of genes, such as the promoters, regions that occur before the beginning of the gene. there are many other elements in the genome that affect the behavior of other components, such as the centromeres and telomeres. finally, a large part of the genome is made up of highly repetitive dna sequences, the function of which is little understood. why are there so many repetitive sequences in the human genome not found in the genomes of invertebrates? many dna sequences seem to have originated as a result of the movement of genetic elements called transposons, segments of dna that can move from one site to another within the genome. it has been postulated that many of the changes that have occurred during the evolution of vertebrates may have been triggered by the action of transposons which jumped to regulating regions and modified the expression pattern of the genes. genome sequencing is a tool that allows us to reconstruct the history of hundreds of millions of years of evolution marked by mutation, that is, the process of exchange and rearrangement of the sequences that has contributed to the formation of new species or has given rise to new genes. the task of solving these puzzles and fitting each piece into its place still presents a huge challenge because clues to our history still lie undiscovered in the noncoding sequences found in each chromosome, the sequences previously considered to be "junk dna." for example, the complete sequencing of the sex-determining y chromosome has revealed some very intriguing facts that have aroused great interest among geneticists and biologists who study evolution. these will be described in general terms in the following section. the human sex chromosomes, x and y, both had their origin in the same ancestral autosome several hundred million years ago, but their sequences diverged through evolution. as a result, sequences identical to those of the x chromosome that permit recombination between the two chromosomes in those regions only exist today in the terminal regions of the y chromosome. however, over % of the modern y chromosome has specific regions with no equivalents on another chromosome that would enable recombination during sperm production, and this is a rare example of persistence in the absence of sexual recombination. these regions contain genes that specifically code for testicular proteins as well as highly repetitive sequences which-probably because they are not understoodwere previously considered to be nonfunctional "junk" dna. with the complete sequencing of these regions, it has been found that some of these sequences are palindromic (as in the phrase anita lava la tina); that is, they read the same from left to right as from right to left, on both strands of the double helix. this fact has led to the hypothesis that x-y recombination has been replaced by recombination between the arms of the y chromosome in the regions where the palindromic sequences are located. in this context, the y chromosome reveals great powers of self-preservation, using evolutionary strategies to survive in the absence of recombination with another homologous chromosome. probably one of the greatest expectations generated by the sequencing of the human genome has been the hope that this knowledge might benefit humans through its medical applications. the understanding of the role played by genetic factors in human health and disease will make it possible for us to discover better ways to approach the prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of pathological processes. it is thought that the science of genomics will soon explain the mysteries of the hereditary factors associated with heart disease, cancer, diabetes, schizophrenia, and many other chronic degenerative processes. it is also hoped that it will give us a better understanding of the genetic factors that influence our susceptibility and/or response to various infectious diseases. genomics holds the promise of individualized medicine that can be tailored to each patient's genetic profile. one of the challenging aspects of any analysis of the influence of an individual's genes on the development of certain diseases is ascertaining whether a particular disease is caused by a single gene or the interaction between several genes. it is also essential to understand how the environment influences the expression of such interactions. there are relatively few known diseases that are associated with mutations in a single gene. they include sickle cell anemia and cystic fibrosis. in the case of the gene that causes cystic fibrosis, over different mutations have been identified that affect the function of the protein it encodes. in normal cells, the protein produced by this gene acts as a channel that allows cells to release chloride and other ions. in people with cystic fibrosis, however, this gene has a mutated sequence, and the protein produced is defective so that the cells do not release chloride. the result is an improper salt balance. this gives rise to the production of an abnormally thick mucus which, among other things, obstructs the airways and leads to infections. however, the origin of most human diseases and of the variations in individual responses to drugs is more complex and involves the interrelation between multiple genetic factors, such as genes and the proteins they produce, and nongenetic factors, such as the influence of the environment. although all individuals share dna sequences that are . % the same, each person has a unique genome. the remaining . % is responsible for the genetic diversity between individuals. many differences are due to a variation in a single base pair in a gene. single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) are variations of a gene that occur because of a change in a single letter (nucleotide) in the dna sequence, for example, the substitution of "cta" for "cca." snps contribute to the differences between individuals. while most of these polymorphisms have no effect, others cause slight differences in certain characteristics that do not affect health, such as physical appearance. others, however, may increase or decrease the individual' s risk of developing certain diseases. this happens, for example, in the case of acquired immune deficiency syndrome (aids). we now know that not all individuals exposed to the type human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) become infected, and that the progression period from infection to aids is highly variable among infected individuals. some patients may develop the disease in years, while others remain asymptomatic for more than years. although the reasons for these differences are not entirely understood, it has recently been discovered that genetic factors play a very important role in the transmission of the virus and progression to disease. there must be co-receptors on the surface of a cell in order for the virus to attach itself effectively and later infect the host cell. the first of these is cd , the key receptor for t lymphocyte facilitators, and the second is one of the members of the chemokine family of receptors. c-c chemokine receptor (ccr ) is one of the main co-receptors used by the virus to penetrate macrophages and t lymphocytes, so that it plays a critical role in the pathogenic process of aids. several studies have demonstrated that the polymorphic allele ccr -delta (which contains a base pair deletion) has a powerful protective effect in the progression of the hiv infection. similar findings will probably emerge in relation to other diseases, so that in the future we will understand such enigmas as why not all smokers develop chronic obstructive pulmonary disease or lung cancer, or why not everyone who is exposed to avian antigens develops hypersensitivity pneumonitis. scientists have started to compile a catalogue of the common variations in the human population, which includes snps, small deletions and insertions in the coding dna, and other structural differences. part of this database is already available to the public. another important point is that sets of nearby snps on the same chromosome are inherited in blocks. these patterns of snps on a block are known as haplotypes, and certain snps can be used as tags to identify the haplotypes in a block. the elucidation of the complete human genome has given rise to a new project the aim of which is to develop a haplotype map of the human genome called the hapmap. the hapmap locates blocks of haplotypes, and the specific snps that identify them are called snp tags. the international hapmap project was started in and will be of fundamental importance in examining the genome in relation to phenotypes. it will also be a tool that will enable researchers to identify the genes and genetic variations that affect health and illness. in addition to its use in analyzing the relationship between genes and disease, the hapmap will be a powerful resource for studying the genetic factors that contribute to individual variations in our response to environmental factors, susceptibility to infection, adverse reactions, and response to drugs and vaccines. using only the snp tags, researchers will be able to identify regions on the chromosomes with different distributions of haplotypes in two groups of people, for example, those who suffer from a disease and those who do not. this will also facilitate the development of tests that can predict which medicines and vaccines might be more effective in individuals with particular genotypes for the genes that affect the metabolism of these drugs. the complete sequencing of the genome of an organism is only the first step in the quest to understand its biology. it is still necessary to identify all the genes and ascertain the function of the products expressed by these genes, that is, functional rna and proteins. functional genomics is based on the key premise of the central dogma of molecular genetics, which states that dna sequences are used as templates for the synthesis of rna, and this rna is subsequently used as a template for the synthesis of proteins. moreover, scientists still have to analyze and understand the noncoding regulatory regions and other functional elements of the human genome and of the genomes of other organisms. this has led to the creation of a project called the encyclopedia of dna elements-or encode. the goals of this new project are to identify and map the exact location of all the protein-encoding and non-protein-encoding genes, and to identify other functional elements encoded in the dna sequences, such as promoters and other transcriptional regulatory sequences, as well as determinants of chromosome structure and function, such as origins of replication. the aim is to provide a comprehensive encyclopedia of all these elements in order to help researchers better understand human biology and predict potential disease risks, and to stimulate the development of new therapies for the prevention and treatment of disease. it has been said that the basis for understanding the genome of a mammal is the characterization of the part that is transcribed (ie, the transcriptome) and the identification of the proteins it produces (ie, the proteome). many technologies have been developed to study functional genomics, and foremost among these are the cdna microarrays or dna chips, which have been widely used to explore the expression profiles of thousands of genes simultaneously. , this technology has been used to gain a greater understanding of the molecular mechanisms of various diseases, such as, for example, pulmonary fibrosis. idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis belongs to the category of idiopathic interstitial pneumonias and is characterized by the relatively rapid destruction of the lung parenchyma. as a result, some % of patients die within years. in a recent study, lung biopsy samples from patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis and other patients with normal lungs were analyzed using this technique of oligonucleotide microarrays. the results showed that gene expression patterns clearly distinguished normal from fibrotic lungs, and that many of the genes that were significantly increased in fibrotic lungs encoded proteins associated with the extracellular matrix and enzymes responsible for its replacement. this study, and others that have investigated various pathological processes, illustrates the analytical power of gene expression in the identification of the molecular pathways involved in disease. the identification of the different groups of genes involved in the pathogenic processes of human disease will also facilitate the discovery of new molecular targets that can eventually be used in the treatment of such diseases. for example, we have recently found in hypersensitivity pneumonitis, an inflammatory lung disease characterized by lymphocytic alveolitis, the exaggerated expression of a chemokine derived from dendritic cells known as ccl . this chemokine is a powerful attractor of t lymphocytes and, at least theoretically, blocking it for therapeutic reasons could reduce the lymphocyte infiltration that characterizes this disease. other new genomic technologies include: a) toxicogenomics, which studies the genetic basis of an individual's response to environmental factors, such as drugs and contaminants; and b) pharmacogenomics, which deals with the development of drugs designed for specific pathogenic processes that will target specific metabolic pathways. in general terms, the genomic sciences have been defined as those which study genes, their products, and their interactions. one of the earliest objectives of the hgp was to set up a program, called elsi, to analyze the ethical, legal and social implications of genomic sciences. in this context, unesco created the international bioethics committee, and in published a declaration that states, "recognizing that research on the human genome and the resulting applications open up vast prospects for progress in improving the health of individuals and of humankind as a whole, but emphasizing that such research should fully respect human dignity, freedom and human rights, as well as the prohibition of all forms of discrimination based on genetic characteristics, proclaims the principles that follow and adopts the present declaration." the articles of this declaration deal with the following topics: a) human dignity and the human genome; b) rights of individuals; c) research on the human genome; d) conditions for the exercise of scientific activity; e) solidarity and international cooperation, and f) the promotion of the principles set out in the declaration. article of this universal declaration on the human genome and human rights states: "the human genome underlies the fundamental unity of all members of the human family, as well as the recognition of their inherent dignity and diversity. in a symbolic sense, it is the heritage of humanity." the medical application of the information generated by genetics must be consistent with the general principals of medical ethics: a) beneficence, or acting for the good of individuals and their families; b) doing no harm; c) respecting the autonomy of the individual, that is, allowing individuals to make independent decisions after providing them with information; and d) individual and social justice. genetic information is confidential, and it is the responsibility of institutions and authorities not to interfere without prior consent. however, there are certain circumstances that could justify the intervention of the state, such as those related to public health issues, or the well-founded request of an authority in connection with a judicial investigation. how can we define the limits between what is permitted and what is prohibited, or between privacy and responsibility towards third parties? these are the kind of topics that must be discussed and analyzed by the ethics committees in each country, which should then inform their respective legislators on these issues. other aspects that need to be reported and considered include: privacy and justice in the use of genetic interpretation, nondiscrimination, and the need to distinguish between information that we individually prefer not to know and facts that must be revealed for family or social reasons. closely related to these ethical considerations is the problem of the privatization of knowledge and the granting of patents. for example, the last nucleotide in the genetic code of the coronavirus responsible for severe acute respiratory syndrome had hardly been read when the race had already begun to take control of the intellectual rights to the sequence. in private hands, a patent on a viral sequence could delay or increase the cost of developing a treatment or diagnostic tests for a particular disease. this question has caused concern among biomedical researchers, who are afraid that broad patents on genetic sequences will affect research work in universities and public institutions and will have a detrimental effect on future public health strategies. an example of this is the case of the predictive test for breast cancer, which uses the genes brca and brca . the curie institute in paris has been struggling for the right to continue analyzing these genes at a third of the price currently charged by the genome company myriad genetics (utah, usa), which was granted a european patent for these genes in . molecular biology has implicitly promised to transform medicine by elucidating the smallest details of the mechanisms of life. to the extent that the molecular processes of diseases are revealed, we will, in many cases, be able to prevent them or to design effective cures or individualized treatments. genetic tests will be able to predict an individual's susceptibility to a disease, and the diagnosis of many pathological processes will be much more detailed and specific than it is today. new drugs will be designed based on an understanding of the molecular mechanisms of common diseases, such as diabetes and systemic arterial hypertension, and it will be possible to treat these diseases by focusing on specific molecular targets. in the case of diseases such as cancer, for example, drugs can be adapted to the specific response of the patient and, within a few decades, it will be possible to cure many potential diseases at a molecular level before they develop. most probably these changes will not all occur in the immediate future. it will take us a long time to understand the human genome, the book of our species, with its chapters called chromosomes, each containing thousands of stories known as genes, composed of paragraphs called exons, interrupted by as yet indecipherable messages called introns, written in words called codons, made up of letters called bases. no doubt, access to the exact sequence of the genome will gradually modify, with increasingly greater impact, the practice of medicine in the coming decades, and in this context it is essential that this knowledge and these technologies be immediately incorporated into public and professional education; this is a priority and the task must begin today. prometheus stole fire from the gods for the benefit of mankind; it is up to us to ensure that our new promethean knowledge be used to throw light on many of the mysteries of biology. molecular structure of nucleic acids the genome of simian virus the human genome project: past, present, and future the international human genome sequencing consortium. initial sequencing and analysis of the human genome the sequence of the human genome a vision for the future of genomics research. a blueprint for the genomic era human genome sequencing available at the genome sequence of drosophila melanogaster genome sequence of the rematode c. elegans: a platform for investigating biology. the c. elegans sequencing consortium sequence and analysis of chromosome of the plant arabidopsis thaliana the male-specific region of the human y chromosome is a mosaic of discrete sequence classes abundant gene conversion between arms of palindromes in human and ape y chromosomes identification of the cystic fibrosis gene: cloning and characterization of complementary dna international meta-analysis of hiv host genetics. effects of ccr -delta , ccr - i, and sdf- 'a alleles on hiv- disease progression: an international meta-analysis of individualpatient data national human genome research institute. crick f. central dogma of molecular biology medical applications of microarray technologies: a regulatory science perspective chip genético (adn array): el futuro ya está aquí clasificación actual de las neumonías intersticiales idiopáticas gene expression analysis reveals matrilysin as a key regulator of pulmonary fibrosis in mice and humans uses of expression microarrays in studies of pulmonary fibrosis, asthma, acute lung injury, and emphysema ccl /dc-ck- /parc up-regulation in hypersensitivity pneumonitis universal declaration of the human genome and human rights key: cord- -y ev authors: magor, katharine e.; miranzo navarro, domingo; barber, megan r.w.; petkau, kristina; fleming-canepa, ximena; blyth, graham a.d.; blaine, alysson h. title: defense genes missing from the flight division date: - - journal: dev comp immunol doi: . /j.dci. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: y ev birds have a smaller repertoire of immune genes than mammals. in our efforts to study antiviral responses to influenza in avian hosts, we have noted key genes that appear to be missing. as a result, we speculate that birds have impaired detection of viruses and intracellular pathogens. birds are missing tlr , a detector for single-stranded rna. chickens also lack rig-i, the intracellular detector for single-stranded viral rna. riplet, an activator for rig-i, is also missing in chickens. irf , the nuclear activator of interferon-beta in the rig-i pathway is missing in birds. downstream of interferon (ifn) signaling, some of the antiviral effectors are missing, including isg , and isg and isg (ifits). birds have only three antibody isotypes and igd is missing. ducks, but not chickens, make an unusual truncated igy antibody that is missing the fc fragment. chickens have an expanded family of lilr leukocyte receptor genes, called chir genes, with hundreds of members, including several that encode igy fc receptors. intriguingly, lilr homologues appear to be missing in ducks, including these igy fc receptors. the truncated igy in ducks, and the duplicated igy receptor genes in chickens may both have resulted from selective pressure by a pathogen on igy fcr interactions. birds have a minimal mhc, and the tap transport and presentation of peptides on mhc class i is constrained, limiting function. perhaps removing some constraint, ducks appear to lack tapasin, a chaperone involved in loading peptides on mhc class i. finally, the absence of lymphotoxin-alpha and beta may account for the observed lack of lymph nodes in birds. as illustrated by these examples, the picture that emerges is some impairment of immune response to viruses in birds, either a cause or consequence of the host-pathogen arms race and long evolutionary relationship of birds and rna viruses. lymph node duck chicken major histocompatibility complex a b s t r a c t birds have a smaller repertoire of immune genes than mammals. in our efforts to study antiviral responses to influenza in avian hosts, we have noted key genes that appear to be missing. as a result, we speculate that birds have impaired detection of viruses and intracellular pathogens. birds are missing tlr , a detector for single-stranded rna. chickens also lack rig-i, the intracellular detector for singlestranded viral rna. riplet, an activator for rig-i, is also missing in chickens. irf , the nuclear activator of interferon-beta in the rig-i pathway is missing in birds. downstream of interferon (ifn) signaling, some of the antiviral effectors are missing, including isg , and isg and isg (ifits). birds have only three antibody isotypes and igd is missing. ducks, but not chickens, make an unusual truncated igy antibody that is missing the fc fragment. chickens have an expanded family of lilr leukocyte receptor genes, called chir genes, with hundreds of members, including several that encode igy fc receptors. intriguingly, lilr homologues appear to be missing in ducks, including these igy fc receptors. the truncated igy in ducks, and the duplicated igy receptor genes in chickens may both have resulted from selective pressure by a pathogen on igy fcr interactions. birds have a minimal mhc, and the tap transport and presentation of peptides on mhc class i is constrained, limiting function. perhaps removing some constraint, ducks appear to lack tapasin, a chaperone involved in loading peptides on mhc class i. finally, the absence of lymphotoxin-alpha and beta may account for the observed lack of lymph nodes in birds. as illustrated by these examples, the picture that emerges is some impairment of immune response to viruses in birds, either a cause or consequence of the host-pathogen arms race and long evolutionary relationship of birds and rna viruses. Ó elsevier ltd. all rights reserved. a survey of genomic resources demonstrates that the avian immune gene complement is reduced compared to mammals. an initial investigation of the immune genes in the chicken genome, a red jungle fowl, suggested that birds have a reduced immune gene repertoire (consortium, ) . as this sequence assembly and annotation has been improved, some of these missing genes have been identified, however others are clearly not present. as genomes are sequenced for other birds, including turkey (dalloul et al., ) , zebrafinch and duck (http:// pre.ensembl.org/anas_platyrhynchos/info/index), synteny along the chromosome allowed identification of genes. thus, immune genes could be identified even if significantly diverged. a comparison of immune genes between three species of birds, confirmed that immune genes show greater divergence between species than other genes, with higher dn/ds ratio than other parts of the genome and evidence of positive selection on specific codons within genes . the sequencing of cdna libraries as expressed sequence tags (ests) (carre et al., ) , and blast homology searches helped to identify the genes. nonetheless, some genes are still unaccounted for. this appears true for all birds, although species differences exist. for some of these genes missing from the avian defense arsenal, the evidence is overwhelming, while others are less certain. in all cases, the completion and quality of the genome sequence and annotation determines whether a gene can be identified or not. gaps exist in the genome sequences, and immune genes are often present in gene families, which are particularly prone to problems with assembly. est libraries are incomplete, and immune gene expression may be restricted to certain tissues or cell types, and most importantly, only following immune activation. thus, until genomes are complete and error-free it may be premature to say that a gene is not there. nonetheless, claiming that a gene is missing certainly inspires research aimed at confirming or disproving this, or demonstrating that another gene plays an analogous or compensatory role. thus, it is worth highlighting the genes that appear to be missing. the contracted immune gene repertoire of birds was discussed in recent review of the progress in avian immunology since the availability of the chicken genome (kaiser, (kaiser, , . in comparison with mammals, birds have partial repertoires of pattern recognition receptors including tlr receptors (boyd et al., ; brownlie and allan, ; cormican et al., ) and rig-like receptors (barber et al., ; karpala et al., ) . others have extensively examined the repertoire of avian cytokines (kaiser et al., ) and chemokines (hughes et al., ; kaiser et al., ) interferons (schultz et al., ) (schultz and magor, ) and defensins (lynn et al., ) noting the genes missing from these repertoires. the immunoglobulin locus been characterized in ducks (lundqvist et al., ) , and encodes just three antibody isotypes (magor, ) . finally, the chicken major histocompatibility complex (kaufman, ) is a minimal mhc, where only the most essential genes have been retained. these reviews of each system, although excellent, do not dwell on the genes not found. over the course of our analysis of immune systems of ducks, we have often invested significant effort to identify homologues of the chicken or mammalian immune system. despite our best efforts, some genes have eluded our search. here we will focus on components of three parts of the immune system that we are investigating in ducks (pattern recognition, antibodies and mhc) and identify the genes that are not there in the duck or the chicken or both. we will assess the strength of the data suggesting the absence of the gene, and consider the effect of the gene loss on the immune system of the animal. finally, we will speculate on the selective forces that may have led to the loss of the gene. innate immunity provides the first line of defense against pathogens. recognition of the pathogen through the molecular patterns of conserved pathogen components, or pattern recognition activates a signaling cascade to turn on genes for the effectors of the immune response. toll like receptors (tlrs) detect foreign invaders by sensing pathogen-associated molecular patterns. binding of agonists to tlrs on the cell surface, or within the endosomal compartment, activate signal transduction pathways to turn on antimicrobial peptides, cytokines, interferons and cellular killing mechanisms. birds possess genes for ten tlrs. these include two tlr genes, two tlr genes, tlr , tlr , tlr , tlr , tlr and tlr . several excellent reviews have been written recently on avian tlr genes (brownlie and allan, ; cormican et al., ) . two genes are missing in comparison to fish and mammals, tlr and tlr . tlr , which detects cpg, has been functionally compensated by tlr (brownlie et al., ; keestra et al., ) . tlr and tlr are phylogenetically related as the product of an ancient gene duplication and both can recognize single-stranded rna, oligoribonucleotides, and nucleic acid analogues in the endosomal compartment (reviewed by cervantes et al., ) . tlr , which is present in fish and mammals, is absent in birds. sequencing downstream of chicken tlr showed only fragments of tlr (philbin et al., ) . further, pcr evidence suggested that tlr was disrupted in all the galliform birds, but not anseriform birds, and there was speculation that this could account for the increased susceptibility of chickens to influenza relative to ducks (philbin et al., ) . to follow up on this observation, we cloned duck tlr cdna, and isolated a genomic clone for duck tlr , sequenced it, and examined the region downstream. as seen for chickens, we could identify only small fragments of tlr , and a cr element disrupted the gene in both ducks and chickens (macdonald et al., ) . tlr is also absent from the zebra finch (cormican et al., ) and turkey genome (ramasamy et al., ) . given the evolutionary distance of galliform birds and zebra finch, tlr is likely missing from the entire avian lineage. for several years, mouse tlr had been presumed non-functional, based on the lack of response to tlr / agonists in the tlr À/À mouse (hemmi et al., ) . however, when peripheral blood monocytes from mice are treated with selective tlr agonists, imidazoquinoline m and poly t oligonucleotides, mouse tlr activation is demonstrated while tlr is suppressed (gorden et al., ) . tlr is expressed in monocytes/macrophages and myeloid dcs, while tlr is expressed in pdcs and b cells (hornung et al., ) . tlr also plays a role in detecting bacterial rna, including rna from borrelia burgdorferi, the agent of lyme disease, inducing production of ifn-beta through irf (cervantes et al., ) . tlr is upregulated by the phagocytosis of mycobacterium, including the attenuated bcg vaccine strain, mycobacterium bovis, and mycobacterium tuberculosis (davila et al., ) . human tlr allelic variants are associated with increased susceptibility to pulmonary tuberculosis (davila et al., ) . the protective allele is associated with decreased translation of tlr , presumably resulting in a decrease in sensing and activation, and less inflammation (davila et al., ) . effectively, loss of tlr expression is protective against tuberculosis. it is not clear why the loss of tlr was selected for in birds. the simplest explanation is the similarity of function between tlr and tlr rendered the second gene non-functional. in this scenario, however, there is no selection for the deletion of the gene. alternatively, tlr became detrimental, perhaps by recognizing self-antigens and initiating autoimmunity. negative selection would then likely lead to the loss of this receptor. tlr has been implicated in induction of autoimmunity (mills, ) . early experiments used chickens to demonstrate thyroid autoimmunity (sundick et al., ; wick et al., ) but it is not known to what extent avian species suffer autoimmunity in nature. ironically, knockout of tlr in mice leads to autoimmunity through overexpression and disregulation of tlr (demaria et al., ) . intriguingly, nucleic acid sensing tlrs are implicated in preventing reactivation of host retroviral elements and consequent tumor production (yu et al., ) . tlr has been directly implicated in this immunosurveillance, as lack of antibodies against endogenous retroviral elements correlates with absence of tlr in knockout mice strains. this crucial role of tlr in immunosurveillance of endogenous retroviruses would provide the selective pressure to retain tlr in the genome, regardless of how tlr was lost. since tlr appears to have been inactivated by a cr repetitive element, it is tempting to speculate that tlr was lost in a hypothetical reactivation of endogenous retroviral elements that disrupted the genome in a distant avian ancestor. jim kaufman has alluded to such a catastrophic 'avian big bang' in describing the loss of several avian mhc genes (kaufman and wallny, ) . another theoretical possibility is that tlr became the target of a pathogen that subverted it for its own benefit (discussed in barber, ) . viral subversion of tlr is such that its absence increases host survival from many pathogens. tlr -induced host proinflammatory cytokines allow west nile virus to cross the blood brain barrier (wang et al., ) . tlr activity has also been implicated in influenza-induced pneumonia (le goffic et al., ) and morbidity from vaccinia infection (hutchens et al., ) . along these lines, we can envision a pathogen that subverted avian tlr for increased susceptibility. this could include viral targeting of tlr receptor for increased inflammation and pathology, or subversion of an endosomal tlr for entry of a mycobacterial pathogen into the cell. mycobacteria are initially engulfed by macrophages, but survive and multiply intracellularly. thus, bacterial or viral subversion of a prr may drive selection to disable the gene. whether cause or effect, the lack of tlr in avian monocytes/ macrophages likely does contribute to the susceptibility of birds to rna viruses (west nile virus, newcastle disease virus, influenza virus and others) and intracellular bacterial infections, including mycobacteria. mycobacterium avium is a significant pathogen of birds, particularly those raised in small flocks, while modern flock hygiene has reduced the incidence in commercial poultry. susceptibility to mycobacteriosis in birds varies, with chickens, pheasants, partridges being most susceptible, ducks and geese moderately resistant, and pigeons being very resistant (reviewed in tell et al., ) . rig-i is a cytoplasmic pattern recognition receptor for singlestranded -triphosphate rna with short double-stranded conformation, such as panhandle structures of viral genomes (hornung et al., ; pichlmair et al., ; schlee et al., ; yoneyama et al., ) . both rig-i, and the related pattern recognition receptor for intracellular rna, mda , share the same pathway signaling through mavs on the mitochondrion (fig. ). after detection of viral rna by rig-i, a conformational change releases the card domains (kolakofsky et al., ; kowalinski et al., ; luo et al., ; takahasi et al., ) . trim , an e ubiquitin ligase, interacts with the card domains of rig-i to activate it through attached (gack et al., ) or unanchored k -polyubiquitin chains (jiang et al., ; zeng et al., ) . the relative importance of these two mechanisms in the activation of rig-i is still controversial, but activation leads to oligomerization and rig-i translocation to the mitochondria. translocation of rig-i and trim to the mitochondrial membrane involves the mitochondrial chaperone - - e , allowing interaction with mavs at the mitochondrion. this interaction induces prion-like aggregates of mavs (hou et al., ) that initiate signaling leading to irf / translocation and the production of type i interferons and proinflammatory cytokines. the gene encoding rig-i, ddx , is not annotated in the chicken genome sequence, and is missing in some fish species, but mda homologues are present in all vertebrate families (zou et ). we demonstrated that ducks have a functional rig-i (barber et al., ) . in contrast, the ddx gene appears absent in chickens by analysis of the syntenic region of the z chromosome, although we can identify the flanking gene. we also cannot find rig-i in a search of the expressed sequence tag database for chickens. thus rig-i is missing in the genome of the ancestral chicken represented by the red jungle fowl, and the sequences from modern commercial chicken breeds. our southern blots show a duck rig-i probe cross-hybridizes with pigeon dna, but not with chicken dna (barber et al., ) . we also cannot detect the gene in dna of turkey or partridge, suggesting that the gene is missing in galliformes (barber, ) . furthermore, we showed that chicken df- cells cannot detect rig-i ligand, but if we transfect the cells with duck rig-i we can reconstitute the pathway (barber et al., ) . the loss of rig-i likely contributes to the susceptibility of chickens to infection compared to ducks to a variety of singlestrand rna viruses, including influenza a virus and newcastle disease virus, both of which cause more harm in chickens than ducks. the related rna detector, mda , can partially compensate and detect avian influenza in chicken cells to generate an interferon response (karpala et al., ; liniger et al., ) . it is difficult to speculate on the selective forces resulting in loss of rig-i in some birds. some have suggested the possible existence of a compensatory yet-to-be identified alternate receptor (karpala et al., ) , which could certainly facilitate the loss from the genome. rig-i was initially identified in a leukemia cell line upregulated by retinoic acid (liu et al., ) , and indeed it is upregulated by a variety of stress inducers. rig-i is implicated in a number of other biological events including cell proliferation, apoptosis, senescence, and acute and chronic inflammatory diseases (liu and gu, ) . it is possible that selection to eliminate rig-i from aberrant activation in one of these alternate roles had resulted in the loss of rig-i in galliform birds. finally, there remains the intriguing possibility that the rig-i receptor was the prey of one of the many single-strand rna viruses that infect birds, including influenza virus, newcastle disease virus, west nile virus, and coronaviruses, and was usurped for the virus' advantage. the tlr and rlr signaling pathways are targets for viral subversion (reviewed by es-saad et al., ; ramos and gale, ) . influenza virus interferes in the mammalian rig-i pathway in several places, through the action of ns protein (gack et al., ) . in a similar manner, paramyxoviruses make the v protein that interferes with signaling by the chicken mda receptor (childs et al., ) involving direct protein-protein interaction and preventing interaction with the rna ligand (motz et al., ) . while this interference renders the receptor non-functional during an infection, it would not necessarily lead to selection to eliminate the receptor. however, we can envision interactions with the rig-i receptor where regulation is aberrant, or excessive activation leads to death. in this scenario, loss of rig-i could provide a selective advantage to survive a lethal infection with an unknown pathogen. suggesting that rig-i is also involved in development in some capacity, rig-i knockout mice are embryonic lethal due to liver damage (kato et al., ) . aberrant or loss of expression of rig-i during development due to pathogen subversion, and associated embryonic lethality, could result in selective loss of this receptor. while this raises the question of how the birds without rig-i survived, we note that rig-i is not absolutely essential for development, since rig-i knockout mice have since been made on a different genetic background which are fertile and viable (wang et al., ) . given that rig-i expression is impaired in lethal infections (kobasa et al., ) , it is possible to envision a scenario by which aberrant expression of rig-i leads to death, and the gene is selectively lost in a common ancestor of chickens and turkeys. human rig-i is regulated through polyubiquitinylation, isgylation, sumolyation, and phosphorylation and alternate splicing (eisenacher and krug, ; loo and gale, ; maelfait and beyaert, ; oshiumi et al., ; wang et al., ) . a major on-off switch for human rig-i upon viral infection is polyubiquitination by host e ubiquitin ligase, tripartite motif protein (trim ) (gack et al., ) . sequences at the t residue implicated in interaction with trim and the site of attachment of polyubiquitin chains, k , are not conserved in duck or zebra finch rig-i (barber et al., ) or goose rig-i . thus activation of avian rig-i involves ubiquitination at alternate residues, or interaction with unanchored polyubiquitin chains, not attached to any protein, can activate rig-i (zeng et al., ) . given the lack of rig-i in chickens, the recent observation that knockdown of chicken trim impairs the interferon response of chicken cells is intriguing (rajsbaum et al., ) . perhaps trim is involved in the activation of chmda . the binding of unanchored k polyubiquitin chains can activate human mda in vitro (jiang et al., ) . a role for trim in generating or attaching ubiquitin chains to mda could explain the importance of chtrim in the interferon response of chicken cells. riplet/rnf is a cytoplasmic e -ligase identified by yeast two-hybrid as one of the proteins binding rig-i, and is essential for rig-i activation in human cell lines upon infection with an rna virus (oshiumi et al., ; oshiumi et al., ) . riplet shares . % identity with trim in humans (oshiumi et al., ) , and also has an n-terminal ring domain and c-terminal pry/spry domain. the ring domain confers ubiquitin e ligase activity (nisole et al., ) and also contributes to other protein-protein interactions (borden, ) . riplet also mediates k -polyubiquitination of rig-i (gao et al., ; oshiumi et al., ) . however, there is debate as to whether riplet interacts with the card domains of rig-i (gao et al., ) the c-terminal repressor domain of rig-i or both (oshiumi et al., ) . riplet is crucial for rig-i activation in cells regardless of expression of trim (oshiumi et al., ) . knockout of riplet (oshiumi et al., ) or trim (gack et al., ) impaired the rig-i dependent innate immune response, suggesting that both are required. knockout of riplet resulted in animals that were deficient in the production of interferon in response to rna, but not dna viruses (oshiumi et al., ) . riplet is present in zebra finch (taeniopygia guttata), but we were unable to find the ortholog in the chicken (gallus gallus) genome. in the duck, we have located a putative riplet coding region, but it lacks exon . in repeated race experiments, all clones recovered contain sequences that correspond to an intact open reading frame, but lack the expected ring domain. in mice, deletion of the ring domain prevents rig-i activation (oshiumi et al., ) therefore we hypothesize that deletion of the ring domain in ducks may render it functionally inactive. nonetheless, we saw upregulation of riplet and trim in duck lung at dpi with highly pathogenic avian influenza virus (fleming-canepa x. et al., unpublished data) . because riplet may not be functional in ducks, but still highly upregulated during influenza infection, we speculate that riplet is acting as a decoy for the viral ns . influenza a ns protein interacts with trim (gack et al., ) and riplet (rajsbaum et al., ) causing inhibition of innate immune signaling. alternatively, riplet may dimerize with other e ligases to function, as recently shown for trim (bell et al., ) . comparison of embryonic fibroblast cells from rig-i knockout and wild-type mice upon influenza infection, reveal genes that are downstream of rig-i signaling. these genes have been referred to as the rig-i bioset, the genes induced by influenza infection in a rig-i dependent manner. in mouse fibroblast cells, the genes include ifnb, irf , irf , stat , stat , pkr, oas, mx , ifit (isg ), ifit (isg ) and rsad (viperin) (loo et al., ) . while the overlap between rig-i and mda inducible genes downstream of mavs signaling in chicken cells is unknown, we used a microarray approach to examine the genes turned on by rig-i in chicken cells. using chicken df- cells, transfected with duck rig-i, the expression of the rig-i gene bioset in avian species is augmented (barber et al., ) . we noted that some essential genes of the mouse rig-i bioset are missing in avian species, including irf , isg , and ifit (isg ) and ifit (isg ). interferon regulatory factor- is a critical player in the induction of type i ifns following virus infection (au et al., ) . irf and irf have different and crucial roles in the induction of infa/b . irf is constitutively expressed, and is activated by c-terminal phosphorylation that allows dimerization and nuclear localization (lin et al., ) . this led to the suggestion that irf was responsible for the initial upregulation of the ifnb gene, followed by interferon dependent induction of irf . however, irf À/À knockout mice are severely impaired in interferon production upon infection with ssrna viruses (honda et al., ) , suggesting the contribution of irf is minor. although a gene has been named irf in chickens (grant et al., ) , it is interferon inducible and more similar to irf . others have noted the absence of irf in chickens (huang et al., ) and in avian species (cormican et al., ). it is not known which irf is translocating to the nucleus to activate interferon in the rig-i/mda pathway in avian species. we speculate that irf fulfills the nuclear translocation and activation of type i ifns in both tlr and rlr signaling, but this has not been experimentally examined. interferon stimulated gene (isg ) is highly up regulated by interferon treatment and was the first ubiquitin-like modifier identified. the amino acid sequence of isg is similar to a linear ubiquitin dimer (reviewed in zhang and zhang, ) . isg is conjugated to proteins like ubiquitin, through a process called isgylation. among the identified isgylated substrates are interferon-induced proteins like pkr, rig-i, mxa (zhao et al., ) . irf isgylation by herc (the main isg e ligase in human) increases stability of irf , exerting a positive regulation in the rig-i pathway . negative feedback on rig-i expression and signaling is mediated by isg conjugation to rig-i (kim et al., ) . isg is also involved in a direct antiviral mechanism where isgylation of influenza a virus ns protein impairs viral replication . no genes homologous to human isg have been annotated in any of the available avian genomes. in the chicken, genes located adjacent to human isg were predicted; including hes (homologous to human hes ) and agrn. within this syntenic region of the chicken genome no ubiquitin-like gene was present. similarly, homologs of hes and argn genes were found in the duck scaffolds (scaffold and , respectively) but synteny analysis cannot be performed because the scaffolds do not overlap. enzymes involved in the isgylation system (including ube l, ubch , herc and usp ) are present in the chicken and duck genomes, but there is not yet any functional evidence of isgylation in these species. usp , which is responsible for cleavage of isg from isgylated substrates, correlates with survival of influenza-infected chickens, indirectly suggesting some functionality of the isgylation system (uchida et al., ) . isg conjugation plays many roles in mammalian antiviral immunity, including isgylation of mx, pkr, rig-i, and irf , and influenza ns protein (reviewed in skaug and chen, ) . however, given the absence of several isg targets, including rig-i in chickens, irf in birds, and evidence that mx is non-functional in chickens (schusser et al., ) and ducks (bazzigher et al., ) , the absence of this ubiquitin modifier in birds would be less significant. it is not known whether ns is modified by isg in avian hosts. we cannot rule out the possibility that we have failed to identify the avian isg homolog because of low sequence conservation with human isg . it is also possible that another unknown ubiquitin-like modifier in birds plays the role of isg within the isgylation system. intriguingly, the most similar sequence to isg in the duck and chicken genome lies within the c-terminal end of , -oligoadenylate synthetase-like (oasl) gene. oasl has two tandem ubiquitin-like domains that share % amino acid identity to human isg . the antiviral activity of the human p protein, encoded by human oasl, is dependent on the c-terminal ubiquitin-like domain (marques et al., ) . however, the biological function of the oasl ubiquitin-like domains is not yet clear and its role as ubiquitin-like modifier has not been described. the interferon-induced proteins with tetratricopeptide repeats (ifit) genes are highly upregulated by type i ifns or by viral infection (bluyssen et al., ; levy et al., ; wathelet et al., ) . the human ifit gene family consists of ifit (isg ), ifit (isg ), ifit (isg ), and ifit (isg ), while the mouse ifit family lacks ifit and contains ifit , ifit , and ifit (bluyssen et al., ) . the ifit family appears to be limited to a single gene in marsupials, birds, frogs and fish (reviewed by zhou et al., ) . while these proteins have served as markers of viral infection, only recently have their functions in the innate antiviral response been elucidated (daffis et al., ; fensterl et al., ; mcdermott et al., ; pichlmair et al., ; schmeisser et al., ) . ifit proteins reside within the cytoplasm of cells, and all contain multiple tetratricopeptide repeats (tprs) (lamb et al., ) . the tprs within these proteins consist of a helix-turn-helix motif and facilitate protein-protein interactions (blatch and lassle, ) . ifit and ifit mediate their antiviral activity by a disruption of translation via an interaction with eukaryotic initiation factor (eif ) . ifit and ifit also inhibit the translation of viral mrnas lacking a -o methylation cap structure (daffis et al., ) . ifit and ifit have the ability to bind to, and sequester viral -triphosphate rna (pichlmair et al., ) . the crystal structure of ifit has revealed an rna binding domain that also may function in an antiviral context (yang et al., ) . the multi-functional ifit protein can also restrict the replication of human papilloma virus (hpv) by binding the viral helicase e , and restricting its function in viral replication (saikia et al., ) . interestingly, ifit has also been associated with negative feedback regulation of genes upregulated during viral infection, further demonstrating the diverse function of these genes . the ifit gene family represents a significant contributor to the broad-ranged antiviral activity of interferons, and plays an important role in the cellular, innate antiviral response. in avian species, the only identifiable ifit gene encodes a protein that aligns with other ifit proteins in a phylogenetic tree (fig. ) . the upregulation of ifit following viral infection of chicken cells expressing duck rig-i ( barber et al., ) or infection of ducks (vanderven et al., ) suggests ifit is an important antiviral effector in avian species. the apparent absence of an expanded ifit gene family in avian species suggests that several of the functions attributed to ifit proteins will be missing. indeed, the specific role of avian ifit during a viral infection is unknown. birds have only three antibody isotypes, igm, iga and igy. igy, the avian serum ig most similar to mammalian igg, is a precursor to igg and ige that has composite function of both isotypes (warr et al., ) . ducks make a truncated version of igy (magor et al., ) . in addition, birds use a single light chain gene of the k type (magor et al., a; reynaud et al., ) . ducks have three immunoglobulin heavy chain genes arranged in the gene order ighm, igha and ighy encoding the mu, alpha and upsilon chains for igm, iga and igy, respectively (lundqvist et al., ; magor et al., ) . the igha gene, encoding alpha is inverted in the locus, and ighd (delta) is absent. despite availability of chicken, zebrafinch and turkey genomes, no other avian immunoglobulin heavy chain locus has yet been assembled. from the limited analysis that has been published for chicken igh , it shares the same organization. the transposition of igha from the most position in the locus, to an inverted position downstream of ighm, may have also resulted in the loss of ighd. lack of ighd is evident from genomic sequencing for ducks. early studies reported a d chain in chickens (chen et al., ) , but it is generally accepted that there is no avian homologue of igd. since igd has been identified in teleosts (bengten et al., ; wilson et al., ) frogs (zhao et al., ) and reptiles (cheng et al., ; wei et al., ) the ighd gene was lost in birds. igd is an enigmatic antibody that exists in a wide variety of forms in different species, except birds. the function of igd is beginning to emerge from observations first made for fish, and subsequently for human igd. igd functions at the interface of innate and adaptive immune responses. in fish, igd specific b cells have been identified, and secreted igd lacks the variable region suggesting it functions more like a pattern recognition receptor (edholm et al., ) . igd is found on the surface of granulocytes in fish, which do not make the igd transcript, and involves a specific receptor (edholm et al., ) . in humans, circulating igd binds to basophils and activates antimicrobial and inflammatory factors . igd from igd+ igm-b cells binds to basophils, and can also bind to certain bacteria in the respiratory tract. the basophil binds igd through a specific receptor, and cross-link-ing of igd leads to the production of b cell activating factors (baff) and pro-inflammatory cytokines. serum igd is elevated in patients with chronic infections, and specific igd antibodies could be demonstrated in a number of these infections (reviewed by chen and cerutti, ) . this ancient surveillance system serves to instruct the b cells of the type of pathogens in the respiratory tract. as the specific functions of igd are elucidated, the consequences of the lack of igd antibody in birds will become evident. birds have basophils, but it is unclear whether a different ig isotype can bind to the basophil igd receptor to compensate, or whether the receptor exists in birds. indeed, it remains to be demonstrated that a homologous receptor is involved in the igd binding by basophils of humans and fish. duck igy is made in two secreted forms, a full-length form and a truncated form. the truncated form, called igydfc, lacks the fc region entirely. it arises from alternate splicing that adds an exon encoding just two amino acids after the ch and ch domains, and uses an alternate polyadenylation site (magor et al., ) (magor et al., b) . what controls the alternate splicing is unknown, but the truncated form predominates later in the immune response. the igydfc antibodies would be expected to be defective in several processes such as antigen internalization, which is required for appropriate presentation of antigens needed to generate t cell help. the truncated igy also does not participate in complement fixation, opsonization, precipitation reactions, and reportedly also cannot participate in hemagglutination inhibition (hi) (higgins et al., ) . of benefit to ducks, perhaps the truncated igy helps prevent viral internalization through receptor-mediated endocytosis and subsequent infection of macrophages and other leukocytes (magor, ) . the chicken ig-like receptor (chir) genes (dennis et al., ) are counterparts of the leukocyte immunoglobulin-like receptor family (lilr). the chir genes constitute a large and diverse family of genes in the chicken, with more than members located in a region syntenic to the mammalian leukocyte receptor complex fig. . a phylogenetic tree showing similarity of avian and mammalian ifit sequences. sequences were aligned and phylogenetic tree generated using a maximum likelihood estimation using a program called phyml using www.phylogeny.fr. (dereeper et al., ) . accession numbers for the ifit sequences were: chicken ifit (xm_ . ), turkey ifit (xm_ . ), zebra finch ifit (xm_ . ), human ifit (nm_ . ), mouse ifit (nm_ . ), human ifit (nm_ . ), mouse ifit (nm_ . ), human ifit (nm_ . ), mouse ifit (nm_ . ), human ifit (nm_ . ). note the duck ifit sequence is a partial sequence. (lrc) (laun et al., ; nikolaidis et al., ; viertlboeck and gobel, ; viertlboeck et al., ) and vast diversity within an individual (viertlboeck et al., ) . chir are expressed in a variety of myeloid and lymphoid cells, with individual receptors expressed in a cell-type restricted manner (viertlboeck et al., ) . receptor diversity includes variation within a hypervariable region, the putative binding region, alternate transcript splicing, and presence or absence of functional activation or inhibitory motif. the extensive expansion and diversification of this family in chickens, and leukocyte expression, suggests their evolution is in response to the pressure of pathogens, as suggested for human lilr and mouse pir genes (barclay and hatherley, ) . human lilr receptors are involved in self/non-self recognition and some engage mhc class i targets, as well as pathogen mimics of mhc proteins (anderson and allen, ; brown et al., ) . staphylococcus aureus targets the mouse inhibitory receptor pir-b for increased virulence (nakayama et al., ) . in turn, activating pir-a receptors may have evolved in response to the selective pressure from pathogens, as indicated by the relict itims in the pir-a gene suggesting it is derived from a pir-b ancestor (nakayama et al., ) . thus, counterbalance through inhibitory and activating chir proteins may have evolved in response to pathogen manipulation of immune signaling through these receptors. we have searched unsuccessfully for immunoglobulin superfamily members homologous to the chicken chir receptors in ducks. in high and low stringency southern blots, genomic dna from chickens shows an extensive pattern of hybridization, while dna from ducks shows no significant hybridization (macdonald et al., ) . all efforts to amplify these genes by polymerase chain reaction using several sets of degenerate primers are completely unsuccessful. our searches of the draft assembly of the duck genome, and , expressed tag sequences generated by sequencing, also find no evidence of chir homologues. we cannot rule out the possibility that we have simply missed the chir genes due to weak homology, if they have evolved to be quite different in ducks. this in itself is quite intriguing. the rapid species-specific divergence of primate lilr genes, with only some genes showing clear orthologous relationships between species (canavez et al., ) , while others have evolved to be unique in each species is thought to reflect their species-specific interactions with pathogens. alternatively, these genes are truly absent from ducks, despite their presence in chickens. there are several examples where different vertebrates have employed different families of leukocyte receptors (parham and moffett, ) . for example, cattle use kir as nk cell receptors, which have undergone expansion (mcqueen et al., ) while horses use ly (takahashi et al., ) . although there are hundreds of chir genes, the only chir with a known ligand is chir-ab , which functions as the chicken igy fc receptor (viertlboeck et al., ) . chickens have a large number of chir-ab genes that have varying specificities for igy . remarkably, we cannot find identifiable homologues of the chir-ab in ducks. duck full-length igy does not bind the chicken fc receptor (viertlboeck et al., ) . as noted above ducks also make a truncated igydfc that would be expected to not to bind fc receptor. göbel speculated that the loss of the igy fc fragment, and the duplication and divergence of the chicken chir-ab (fc receptor) family were both strategies to evade a pathogen interfering with the igy-fc receptor interaction in birds (purzel et al., ) . ducks evade this pathogen by production of an anti-body lacking the fc region, retaining the specificity for the antigen, as this truncated form predominates in the later immune response. in chickens, selection favored the duplication of the chir receptor family to make a large number of potential 'decoy receptors' for igy. while no known pathogen targets the fc-igy interaction in birds, this is a very interesting hypothesis. chickens may elude this pathogen through the binding of decoy receptors, while ducks may avoid the internalization of an intracellular pathogen through the production of the igydfc. the vertebrate mhc is the most dynamic part of the genome, showing repeated cycles of 'birth-and-death' evolution (kelley et al., ) . polygeny and polymorphism are hallmarks of the region, with varying numbers of genes between species (and sometimes between individuals). usually it is not possible to identify orthologous genes between species. the mhc class i and class ii genes are the most polymorphic genes in the vertebrate genome. the mhc of the chicken has been referred to as the 'minimal mhc' (kaufman et al., ) , fulfilling all the requirements of an mhc region, with a limited set of genes. the b locus, or genomic mhc region, contains just genes within kb (kaufman et al., ) . mhc class i genes flank either side of the transporters for antigen processing (tap) genes. they are referred to as the major (bf ) and minor (bf ) mhc class i loci. similarly, the mhc class ii genes (blb and blb ) are located on either side of tapasin (tap-bp), and in close proximity to the chaperones involved in mhc class ii loading (dma and dmb). several genes are notably absent, including the proteasome genes lmp and lmp , as well as genes encoding tnf alpha, and lymphotoxin alpha and beta. kaufman argues the mhc organization critically affects function because proximity of the genes involved in antigen transport and presentation, allows their encoded proteins to evolve to work together. indeed, tap and tap genes are also polymorphic, and using a peptide translocation assay, kaufman recently showed that tap determines specificity for the linked dominant mhc class i gene (walker et al., ) . the limitation to one mhc class i gene in chickens, impairs defense against viral pathogens, as ability to defend against a particular pathogen is completely dependent on whether or not it can load peptides from that pathogen. the best illustration of the consequences of limited mhc class i presentation is the ability of chickens of one genotype to defend against rous sarcoma virus, while other strains cannot (wallny et al., ) . the duck has a functionally similar mhc class i region, with mhc class i genes encoded adjacent to the tap genes (moon et al., ) . ducks predominantly express one gene, which is adjacent to the tap gene, which is also polymorphic (mesa et al., ) . in ducks, as in chickens, this is expected to have functional consequences for the defense against viruses. viruses can easily change the one or two epitopes that can be presented by alleles encoded by one mhc class i gene, and thus escape the cytotoxic t cells focused on these epitopes. we have been unable to identify the tapasin (tapbp) gene in the duck mhc. tapasin bridges the gap between the tap transporter and empty mhc class i molecules, bringing them into close proximity to the translocation core where peptides are loaded (sadasivan et al., ) . in the absence of tapasin, empty mhc class i molecules weakly associate with tap leading to binding and cell surface expression of less than optimal peptides (grandea et al., ). tapasin has been identified adjacent to mhc class ii in other birds, including chicken (frangoulis et al., ) , quail (shiina et al., ) , turkey (chaves et al., ) , pheasant and zebra finch and black grouse . also, the tapasin gene is polymorphic in chicken, turkey and pheasant (sironi et al., ) . through analysis of the unannotated duck genome (preensemble) we can identify the location of the duck mhc class ii genes, but a search for tapasin within proximity is unsuccessful. using primers based on the chicken sequence, or conserved regions identified in aligned avian tapasin sequences, our attempts to amplify tapasin from mallards or a domestic duck by rt-pcr or from genomic dna fail to yield a tapasin product. it is possible that failure to amplify tapasin from ducks is due to sequence divergence of tapasin between avian species. the galliform tapasin proteins are about % identical , but the human and chicken tapasin share only % amino acid identity (frangoulis et al., ) . in low stringency southern blot analysis, distinctive bands could be detected in chicken, however the probe does not hybridize to duck genomic dna (petkau, ) . although tapasin seems to play an important role in antigen presentation, certain human mhc class i alleles can function in a tapasin-independent manner (park et al., ; lewis et al., ) . a single amino acid substitution in hla-b from asp to tyr allows the latter to function in a completely tapasin independent manner (sieker et al., ) . it also appears that tapasin influences the peptide repertoire presented to mhc class i, favoring certain peptides over others. in the absence of tapasin antigen presentation is altered, rather than deficient, and is still sufficient to induce in an immune response (boulanger et al., ) . similarly, the absence of immunoproteasomes in mice, results in a change in % of the loaded peptide repertoire (kincaid et al., ) . we could speculate that loss of tapasin was advantageous in ducks. we presume that ducks, like chickens, already had constraints on presentation of antigens by mhc class i due to potential co-evolution of the tap transporters and adjacent mhc class i genes. evidence for this is that both tap and tap are polymorphic in ducks, and they express one dominant mhc class i gene (mesa et al., ) . perhaps the loss of tapasin permits closer interaction of the tap transporter and the specific mhc class i molecule intended for loading. proteins encoded by genes co-evolving along a haplotype reach a best fit. tapasin as the bridge between tap and mhc class i molecules could serve to bring the incorrect mhc class i into proximity of the tap transporters from the other haplotype, unless it was also evolving to keep step. the genes encoding tnf-alpha (tnf-a), and lymphotoxin-alpha and beta (lta and ltb) are missing from the avian mhc. extensive efforts by pcr, est mining, and hybridization to identify tnf-a in chickens and ducks have failed. similarly, the two genes encoding lta and ltb are missing in chickens (kaiser, ) , and a scan of the genome sequence shows they are also absent in ducks. lymphotoxin-alpha knockout mice lack lymph nodes (de togni et al., ) , and similarly chickens have no lymph nodes. primitive lymph nodes were previously described in ducks (berens von rautenfeld and burdras, ) and immunoglobulin transcripts were analyzed in lymphatic tissues isolated from ducks (bando and higgins, ; magor et al., a) . however, we question whether these tissues contain recognizable lymph nodes containing secondary lymphoid tissue, as we are unable to identify anything in the lymphatic tissue that resembles a lymph node, even tracking with injected india ink. we examined isolated lymphatic tissues in ducks for mrna expression of ccl and ccl , the two chemokines which are responsible for recruiting naïve t cells and dendritic cells to lymph nodes. we showed expression of these chemokines was negligible in lymphatic tissues, and abundant in spleen and influenza-infected lung tissues (fleming-canepa et al., ) . clearly, the lymphatic tissues of ducks are not sites of recruitment of lymphocytes and dendritic cells as expected for secondary lymphoid tissues. thus, ducks and chickens, like all other non-mammalian vertebrates (hofmann et al., ) , lack true lymph nodes. through comparison of the immune arsenal of ducks and chickens we highlight several immune genes that are 'mia or missing in action' from the flight divisions. we refer to these genes as mia, because we cannot say with certainty that these genes are not present, at least until the sequencing and annotation of avian genomes is more complete. if these genes are truly absent, what emerges is a picture in which chickens, missing tlr and rig-i, have less ability to detect rna viruses and intracellular bacteria than ducks, which lack only tlr . in addition, birds are missing components in the rig-i pathway, and interferon-responsive antiviral effectors. chickens have a large expanded family of leukocyte receptors, which are apparently missing in ducks, which include the igy fc receptors. notably, ducks make a truncated igy that is lacking the fc region as their most abundant serum antibody. by similarity to their human homologues, the lilr receptors, other members of the chir family are presumed to be involved in self/non-self recognition, and their expansion may somehow compensate for the deficit due to the minimal avian mhc. in contrast, ducks may have lost tapasin, and with it lost some of the constraint on antigen presentation due to co-evolving linked mhc class i and tap transporter genes. whether the host-pathogen arms race is cause or consequence of these gene losses, 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retinoic acid-induced differentiation of acute promyelocytic leukemia cells distinct rig-i and mda signaling by rna viruses in innate immunity immune signaling by rig-i-like receptors the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus of the duck. genomic organization and expression of d, j, and c region genes structural insights into rna recognition by rig-i avian betadefensin nomenclature: a community proposed update genomics of antiviral defenses in the duck, a natural host of influenza and hepatitis b viruses emerging role of ubiquitination in antiviral rig-i signaling. microbiol immunoglobulin genetics and antibody responses to influenza in ducks cdna sequence and organization of the immunoglobulin light chain gene of the duck, anas platyrhynchos one gene encodes the heavy chains for three different forms of igy in the duck opposite orientation of the alpha-and upsilon-chain constant region genes in the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus of the duck structural relationship between the two igy of the duck, anas platyrhynchos: molecular genetic evidence the p oligoadenylate synthetase-like protein possesses antiviral activity that requires the c-terminal ubiquitin-like domain identification and validation of ifit as an important innate immune bottleneck evolution of nk receptors: a single ly and multiple kir genes in the cow the dominant mhc class i gene is adjacent to the polymorphic tap gene in the duck, anas platyrhynchos tlr-dependent t cell activation in autoimmunity the mhc of the duck (anas platyrhynchos) contains five differentially expressed class i genes paramyxovirus v proteins disrupt the fold of the rna sensor mda to inhibit antiviral signaling inhibitory receptor paired ig-like receptor b is exploited by staphylococcus aureus for virulence origin and evolution of the chicken leukocyte receptor complex trim family proteins: retroviral restriction and antiviral defence riplet/rnf , a ring finger protein, ubiquitinates rig-i to promote interferon-beta induction during 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antiviral genes in duck lung and intestine complexity of expressed chir genes the chicken leukocyte receptor cluster the chicken leukocyte receptor complex: a highly diverse multigene family encoding at least six structurally distinct receptor types the chicken leukocyte receptor complex encodes a primordial, activating, high-affinity igy fc receptor the chicken leukocyte receptor complex encodes a family of different affinity fcy receptors the dominantly expressed class i molecule of the chicken mhc is explained by coevolution with the polymorphic peptide transporter (tap) genes peptide motifs of the single dominantly expressed class i molecule explain the striking mhc-determined response to rous sarcoma virus in chickens sequencing of the core mhc region of black grouse (tetrao tetrix) and comparative genomics of the galliform mhc mitochondrion: an emerging platform for host antiviral signalling tolllike receptor mediates west nile virus entry into the brain causing lethal encephalitis rig-i À/À mice develop colitis associated with downregulation of g alpha i igy: clues to the origins of modern antibodies the genome of a songbird molecular cloning, full-length sequence and preliminary characterization of a -kda protein induced by human interferons expression of igm, igd, and igy in a reptile, anolis carolinensis a review: the obese strain (os) of chickens: an animal model with spontaneous autoimmune thyroiditis a novel chimeric ig heavy chain from a teleost fish shares similarities to igd crystal structure of isg reveals a novel rna binding structure and potential functional mechanisms isolation of a -kb minimal essential mhc b locus from a new reverse- d bac library of the golden pheasant the rna helicase rig-i has an essential function in double-stranded rna-induced innate antiviral responses nucleic acid-sensing toll-like receptors are essential for the control of endogenous retrovirus viremia and erv-induced tumors reconstitution of the rig-i pathway reveals a signaling role of unanchored polyubiquitin chains in innate immunity interferon-stimulated gene and the protein isgylation system human isg conjugation targets both ifn-induced and constitutively expressed proteins functioning in diverse cellular pathways isg conjugation system targets the viral ns protein in influenza a virus-infected cells identification of igf, a hinge-region-containing ig class, and igd in xenopus tropicalis mapping of the chicken immunoglobulin heavy-chain constant region gene locus reveals an inverted alpha gene upstream of a condensed upsilon gene interferon induced ifit family genes in host antiviral defense origin and evolution of the rig-i like rna helicase gene family the idea for this review came from a conversation with martin flajnik in the beer tent at the comparative immunology workshop, held in waterloo, ontario in . key: cord- - r j t authors: zhong, ying; liu, dong-ling; ahmed, mohamed morsi. m.; li, peng-hao; zhou, xiao-ling; xie, qing-dong; xu, xiao-qing; han, ting-ting; hou, zhi-wei; zhong, chen-yao; huang, ji-hua; zeng, fei; huang, tian-hua title: host genes regulate transcription of sperm-introduced hepatitis b virus genes in embryo date: - - journal: reproductive toxicology doi: . /j.reprotox. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: r j t abstract hepatitis b virus (hbv) can invade the male germline, and sperm-introduced hbv genes could be transcribed in embryo. this study was to explore whether viral gene transcription is regulated by host genes. embryos were produced by in vitro fertilization of hamster oocytes with human sperm containing the hbv genome. total rna extracted from test and control embryos were subjected to smart-pcr, ssh, microarray hybridization, sequencing and blast analysis. twenty-nine sequences showing significant identity to five human gene families were identified, with csh , eif g , pcbd , psg and ttn selected to represent target genes. using qrt-pcr, when csh and pcbd (or eif g , psg and ttn) were silenced by rnai, transcriptional levels of hbv s and x genes decreased (or increased). this is the first report that host genes participate in regulation of sperm-introduced hbv gene transcription in embryo, which is critical to prevent negative impact of hbv infection on early embryonic development. hepatitis b is a potentially life-threatening liver infection caused by the hepatitis b virus (hbv). transmission of hbv through blood transfusion [ ] , body fluids [ ] , intrauterine infection [ ] , cell, tissue and organ transplantation [ ] , and others including hemodialysis units or intravenous drug injection or occupational exposure [ , ] have been documented. in recent years some studies reported a true vertical transmission of hbv via germline and found that hbv has a negative effect on sperm motility in vivo and that couples in which the male is infected with hbv have a high risk of a low fertilization rate after in vitro fertilization (ivf) [ ] . huang et al. provided direct evidence that hbv dna is able to integrate into the chromosomes of patient sperm, and that such hbv-carrying sperm can fertilize oocytes [ ] . after fertilization, the sperm-introduced hbv c, s and x genes retain their functions of replication and expression in embryonic cells [ , ] . subsequently, some studies showed that the hbv s protein can cause a series of apoptotic events resulting in reduced sperm motility, loss of sperm membrane integrity, sperm dysfunction, decreased fertility, and sperm death [ ] [ ] [ ] . hu et al. collected embryos from couples with at least one hbsag seropositive partner, and found that hbv dna was present in . % ( / ) of embryos [ ] . thus the effects of hbv infection on human reproduction and early embryonic development and their mechanisms have attracted the attention of researchers. sperm samples from healthy donors were divided into two groups: the test group was transfected with plasmid containing the full-length hbv genome (t), and the control group was non-transfected (c). zona-free hamster ova were fertilized by transfected or non-transfected sperm to obtain two-cell embryos. total rna was extracted from t-and c-sperm-derived embryos, respectively and then subjected to smart amplification, followed by ssh in both forward (t as tester) and reverse (c as tester) directions to enrich for up-regulated genes (t-c amplicon) or down-regulated genes (c-t amplicon). after t-a cloning and bacterial amplification, the forward and reverse libraries were cloned by pcr to obtain single insert-containing clones that were used for microarray assay. clones with a fold change value greater than or less than . when compared with the average cy /cy intensity ratio, the differential expression of which was statistically significant, were selected for sequencing. for the acquired sequences, blast was used to search for sequences homologous to human genes in the genbank nucleotide database. of the sequences, five were selected as the target genes and their expression in two-cell embryos was confirmed by rt-pcr. b: sperm in the test group was co-transfected with plasmid containing the full-length hbv genome and the target gene-specific shrna/sirna. sperm in the control group was transfected with plasmid containing the full-length hbv genome alone. the transcription levels of hbv s and x genes in the two-cell embryos were assessed by real time qrt-pcr to identify whether the target genes participated in regulation of hbv gene expression. same procedures listed above were hepatitis b infection and disease pathogenesis are known to be influenced by a number of factors, including host genetic factors [ ] . many cellular proteins that possibly regulate hbv gene transcription in hepatocytes have been identified, including liver-enriched proteins, such as hnf , hnf , c/ebp, and klf , ubiquitous factors, such as sp , rfx , nf-y, and ap , and members of the nuclear receptor superfamily, such as hnf , rxra, ppara and coup-tfs [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . hepatotropism is a prominent feature of hbv infection, and virus infection appears to be restricted to hepatocytes [ ] . because sperm-derived embryos differ from hepatic cells, this study was undertaken to explore whether host genes participate in regulation of hbv gene transcription in embryonic cells, which is critical to reveal the regulation mechanism of viral gene transcription in these cells and to prevent the negative impact of hbv infection on early embryonic development. although using embryo produced by fertilization of human oocyte with human sperm carrying hbv genes would be an ideal model, such a model presents major moral, ethical and legal problems. the interspecific ivf between human sperm and zona-free golden hamster ova is highly associated with human in vitro fertilization [ ] and has no the aforementioned problems, which has been included in "who laboratory manual for the examination and processing of human semen" [ ] and widely used in the research of reproductive biology and medicine [ ] [ ] [ ] , thus the interspecific ivf was employed to obtain two-cell embryos in the current study. as hbv dna has been detected in patient sperm [ , ] , donor sperm transfected with recombinant plasmid containing the fulllength hbv genome was used instead of patient sperm to explore whether host genes participate in regulation of sperm-introduced hbv gene transcription in embryos. three measures were taken to ensure reliable and accurate results (fig. ) . first, switching mechanism at end of rna template (smart) amplification was employed because, unlike cells from other tissues, limited number of two-cell embryos made recovery of significant amounts of rna very difficult. smart amplification allows the synthesis of highquality cdna for suppression subtractive hybridization (ssh) from sub-microgram levels of rna [ ] . combined with t-a cloning and bacterial amplification, we obtained sufficient subtraction products for array probe preparation, microarray assay and cdna sequencing. next, we combine ssh with microarray to obtain the cdnas highly enriched for differentially expressed genes of both high and low abundance and greatly reduce tedious work for screening of subtraction libraries, as well as the likelihood of false-positive clones enriched via ssh [ ] . finally, we silenced the target genes and a control gene by rna interference (rnai) to detect effects of the silencing of these genes on transcriptional level of hbv genes to determine whether host genes participate in regulation of hbv gene transcription. semen samples were obtained from healthy donors. written, informed consent was obtained from all study subjects who allowed their sperm samples to be used for research. all protocols used in the current study involving human subjects were approved by the institutional ethical review boards of chengdu jingjiang hospital for maternal and child health care (approval number: cjhmchc- ) and by the ethics committee of shantou univeralso used to isolate and identify a control gene with a fold change value greater than . and less than when compared with the average cy /cy intensity ratio, the differential expression of which was not statistically significant. sity medical college (approval no. sumc- - ) according to the world medical association declaration of helsinki: ethical principles for medical research involving human subjects [ ] . the animal protocol was designed to minimize pain or discomfort. the animals were acclimatized to laboratory conditions ( • c, h/ h light/dark, % humidity, ad libitum access to food and water) for two weeks prior to experimentation. all animals were euthanized by barbiturate overdose (intravenous injection, mg/kg pentobarbital sodium) for oocyte collection, and then their bodies were subjected to harmless treatment. all procedures involving animals were reviewed and approved by the medical animal care & welfare committee in shantou university medical college (iacuc protocol number: sumc - ) according to the recommended guide for the care and use of laboratory animals published by the national research council (us) [ ] . semen samples were incubated in a humidified incubator ( • c, % co in air) for min to allow liquefaction. motile sperm were selected using the swim-up method in biggers-whittem-whittingham (bww) medium supplemented with . % bovine serum albumin (bsa) [ ] . after washing, these sperm samples were used for subsequent experiments. recombinant plasmid pbr -hbv containing the full-length hbv genome was kindly provided by professor yi-ping hu (the open laboratory for molecular genetics, the second military medical university, china). construction and transfection of plasmid pires -egfp-hbv ( fig. ) was performed as described previously [ ] . briefly, a full-length cdna of hbv was isolated from pbr -hbv by digestion of the restriction enzyme ecori, and purified using purification extraction kit (takara biotechnology (dalian) co., ltd, china). plasmid pires -egfp vector (promega, madison, wi, usa) was linearized and mixed with the hbv cdna at : - : molar ratio in a ligation reaction and incubated at • c overnight. the ligation mixture was used directly to transform the ecoli competent cells dh ␣ according to the manufacturer's instruction (takara). the right orientation and authenticity of the hbv coding sequence were confirmed by restriction digestion. each sperm sample from a healthy donor was divided into two groups: a test group and a control group. a -l aliquot of a mixture comprised of l of plasmid pires -egfp-hbv ( . g/l) containing the full-length hbv genome, l of fugene hd, and l of hepes-buffered saline was incubated at room temperature for min, and then added to the sperm in the test group, which was incubated for . h. the sperm in the control group were not transfected. to measure the transfection efficiency, a nick translation kit (roche, basel, switzerland) and fluorescein- -dutp (thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa) were used. the plasmid was labeled with fluorescein- -dutp by nick translation according to the manufacturer's instructions. transfected sperm were detected by green fluorescence and counted under a fluorescence microscope. in our preliminary experiment, the transfection efficiency was . ± . %, and the proportion of embryos derived from hbv transfected sperm was . %. oocyte preparation and insemination were performed as described in reference [ ] . briefly, zona-free hamster ova were fertilized by sperm from the test and control groups and then incu- bated in a humidified incubator ( • c, % co in air) for h to obtain two-cell embryos. two-cell embryos exhibiting green fluorescence, derived from the hbv-transfected sperm (the test group), and those without green fluorescence, derived from the non-transfected sperm (the control group), were collected under a fluorescence microscope (dmil led, leica, germany). after washing, total rna from the two-cell embryos was extracted for cdna library construction by smart amplification. smart amplification and ssh were carried out using smarter tm pcr cdna synthesis kit and clontech pcr-select tm cdna subtraction kit (clontech laboratories, inc, ca, usa) according to the manufacturer's instructions. control mouse liver total rna (the positive group), deionized h o (the negative group) and the primers ( smart cds primer ii a and pcr primer ii a) were provided by the kit. briefly, . l ( ng) total rna extracted from two-cell embryos of the test and control groups were successively subjected to first-strand cdna synthesis, amplified by long-distance pcr, purified by column chromatography, digested with rsai, diluted to a final concentration of ng/l in x tne buffer, and subjected to adaptor ligation. ssh materials consisted of cdna from the test two-cell embryos as the tester and cdna from the control two-cell embryos as the driver for forward subtraction, and vice versa for reverse subtraction. after the first and second hybridizations, hybridized samples and were mixed and then incubated at • c overnight, followed by a primary pcr and a secondary pcr. after an agarose/ethidium bromide gel analysis, the products were used for dna ligation. the same procedures listed above were also performed for reverse subtraction and control subtraction. t/a cloning and amplification of subtraction products were performed using pgem ® -t easy vector system (promega) according to the manufacturer's instructions. briefly, ligation reactions containing pgem ® -t easy vector, x rapid ligation buffer, t dna ligase and the secondary pcr products of ssh were incubated overnight at • c. two microliters of ligation reaction was added into l of jm high efficiency competent cells, which was placed on ice for min followed by heat-shocking at • c for s, putting on ice for min, and then adding into l of luria-bertani (lb) medium and incubation at • c for . h with shaking. one hundred microliters of the transformation culture was plated onto lb/ampicillin/iptg/x-gal plates followed by incubation overnight at • c. the white (positive) colonies obtained were separately resuspended in . ml lb medium with ampicillin ( g/ml) and grown at • c for h. pcr amplifications were carried out using . l bacterial suspension and premix taq tm (takara), and l from each pcr reaction was subjected to % agarose gel electrophoresis. positive bands were detected for of colonies. microarray hybridization and data analysis were performed by takara biotechnology (dalian) co., ltd. briefly, the pcr products for differentially expressed genes from clones, obtained from the subtraction libraries, were purified using -propanol precipitation and then spotted in triplicate onto takara glass slides (takara) using an affymetrix arrayer (takara). the pcr products from the forward-and reverse-subtracted libraries ( g each) were labeled with cy and cy fluorescent dyes and separately used to probe the glass slides containing the pcr-amplified cdna. the slides were hybridized overnight at • c with labeled purified probes. quality control of the microarray chips was performed according to takara's method and standard. array slides were scanned using an affymetrix array scanner (affymetrix, buckinghamshire, uk). the measured intensities are expressed as a ratio of cy /cy intensities, which were background-corrected and normalized to the average cy /cy ratio. the ratios were log -transformed, and the following clones were selected for sequencing: . clones with a fold change value greater than or less than . when compared with the average cy /cy -intensity ratio, the differential expression of which was statistically significant, were used to select target genes; . a clone with a fold change value greater than . and less than , the differential expression of which was not statistically significant, was chosen as the control [ ] . dna sequencing and analysis were performed by beijing genomics institute shenzhen co., ltd. (shenzhen, china) using a xl dna analyzer (applied biosystems, ca, usa). sequencing reactions were carried out with bigdye v . mix and pop- tm polymer (applied biosystems). for the acquired sequences, basic local alignment search tool (blast) was used to search for sequences homologous to human genes in the genbank nucleotide database. of the sequences, five with statistically significant differential expression were selected as the target genes, and a non-statistically significant sequence without statistical significance of differential expression was selected as a control. the transcriptions of both target and control genes in the two-cell embryos were confirmed using rt-pcr. the extraction and reverse transcription of total rna was performed using an ambion cells-to-cdnatm ii kit (life technologies, ca, usa) according to the manufacturer's instructions. pcr amplification was performed in a l reaction mixture containing cdna ( l), premixed taq polymerase ( . l) (takara), forward and reverse primer ( m, . l each) and ddh o ( . l), and the ˇactin was co-amplified as an internal control [ ] . the gene-specific primers were designed using primer-blast (table ). cycling conditions were as follows: min at • c; cycles of s at • c and s at • c; and one cycle of min at • c. the amplified pcr fragments were subjected to . % agarose gel electrophoresis and stained with ethidium bromide. eighteen healthy donors were randomly divided into six groups, and their sperm samples were used to fertilize zona-free hamster oocytes in vitro and assess the effects of the silencing of five target genes (csh , eif g , pcbd , psg and ttn) and a control gene (esrrg) on transcription of hbv s and x genes by real-time quantitative (q)rt-pcr. the sperm samples from three donors were individually used for assaying each gene, and each assay was repeated three times. gene-specific short hairpin (sh)rna or short interfering (si)rna used for silencing the target and control genes, and non-interfering scrambled oligonucleotides used as the negative controls, were designed and synthesized by shanghai genepharma co., ltd. or qiagen china (shanghai) co., ltd, respectively (table s ). each sperm sample from a healthy donor was divided into two groups: a test group, which was co-transfected with plasmids containing the full-length hbv genome and the gene-specific shrna/sirna or a non-interfering scrambled oligonucleotide; and a control group, which was transfected with the plasmid containing the full-length hbv genome alone. real-time qrt-pcr was performed using an abi real-time pcr system (applied biosystems, ca, usa) to compare the transcriptional level of hbv genes in the two-cell embryos of the test and control groups, with gapdh as an internal control [ ] . total rna was extracted from the two-cell embryos and cdna synthesis was performed as described previously [ ] . a total volume of l of reaction mixture contained cdna ( l), x quantifast sybr green pcr master mix ( l) (qiagen, hilden, germany), forward and reverse primers ( m, . l each) for s and x genes and gapdh (table ) , and rnase-free water ( . l). cycling conditions were as follows: min at • c; cycles of s at • c and s at • c; and one cycle of s at • c, min at • c, and s at • c. the data was analyzed quantitatively using the − ct method. in the − ct analysis, individual data were converted to a linear form using the −ct calculation [ ] and then subjected to a paired-sample t-test using spss . software to determine a significant differences in average transcription levels of s and x genes between the test and control groups. a p-value of less than . was considered statistically significant. smart amplification showed that dispersed positive bands were detected in the test, control and positive groups, and not in the negative group, indicating successful amplification. after ssh, t/a cloning and bacterial amplification, white (positive) colonies from subtracted libraries ( from the forward and from the reverse ssh libraries) were amplified by pcr, resulting in positive insert-containing clones ( from the forward-and from the reverse-subtracted libraries). the insert sizes ranged from to bp, and the majority of insert sizes was approximately bp (fig. ) , in agreement with the statistical prediction of rsai digestion. table the primers were used to amplify the target genes, a control gene, an internal control genes and hbv s and x genes. forward reverse in the current study, the two-fold average ratio of cy /cy intensities was . , and the . -fold average ratio of cy /cy intensities was . . both are the thresholds for determining whether gene differential expression is statistically significant. of positive insert-containing clones, showed fold change values greater than or less than . , and exhibited fold change values greater than . and less than . these clones and one of the clones were selected for sequencing (table s ). blast analysis revealed acquired sequences showing significant identity to five human gene families (average identity = . %, ranging from % to %, e-value: . ) (table s ). of these, five representative genes (one from each family, identity: ≥ %, e-value: . ) were selected as target genes that were chorionic somatomammotropin hormone (csh ), eukaryotic translation initiation factor- ␥, (eif g ), pterin- ␣-carbinolamine dehydratase/dimerization cofactor of hepatocyte nuclear factor ␣ (tcf ) (pcbd ), pregnancy-specific - -glycoprotein (psg ) and titin (ttn) ( table ). the selection criteria were as follows: first, three sequences showed significant identity to three human gene families, and each gene family had one sequence only, thus they (eif g , psg and ttn) were chosen as representative genes in these gene families. next, seven sequences showed significant identity to two members (nadh and pcbd ) of a human gene fam-ily. because nadh is located within mitochondria and not within cytoplasm, it is difficult to determine entry efficiency of nadhspecific shrna into mitochondria and to evaluate its silencing effects, thus pcbd was chosen as representative gene in this gene family. finally, sequences showed significant identity to one human gene family, in which a sequence from the clone f with the highest ratio of cy /cy -intensities showed the highest identity ( %) to the members (csh and csh ) of this gene family, thus the csh was chosen as representative gene. in addition, a sequence (f ) from clones showed significant identity to human estrogen receptor-related receptor (esrrg) family and was chosen as a control gene ( table , table s ). their transcriptions in the two-cell embryos were confirmed by rt-pcr (fig. ) . the transcriptional levels of hbv s and x genes in two-cell embryos after the silencing of target genes and a control gene by rna interference (rnai) are shown in table . when csh and pcbd were silenced, s and x genes expression in two-cell embryos was down-regulated. csh knockdown reduced the transcription of s and x genes by . -and . -fold in two-cell embryos, respectively, as compared to those in the control group. knockdown of pcbd reduced s and x gene transcription by . -and . -fold, respectively. when eif g , psg and ttn were silenced, s and x genes expression in two-cell embryos was up-regulated between . -to . -fold. there was no significant difference in the levels table the clones were selected as the target genes and a control gene. both are the thresholds for determining whether gene differential expression is statistically significant. § identities: the extent to which two nucleotide sequences have the same residues at the same positions in an alignment, often expressed as a percentage [ ] . § e value: the expectation value or expect value represents the number of different alignments with scores equivalent to or better than s that is expected to occur in a database search by chance. the lower the e value, the more significant the score and the alignment [ ] . * the target genes. ¤the control gene. effects of the silencing of the target and control genes on transcriptional levels of hbv s and x genes in two-cell embryos. eighteen healthy donors were randomly divided into six groups, and their sperm sample were used to fertilize zona-free hamster oocytes in vitro and assess the effects of the silencing of five target genes (csh , eif g , pcbd , psg and ttn) and a control gene (esrrg) on transcription of hbv s and x genes in two-cell embryos using real time qrt-pcr and − ct method. the sperm samples from three donors were individually used for assaying each gene, and each assay was repeated three times. each sperm sample from a donor was divided into two groups: a test group (t), which was co-transfected with plasmids containing the full-length hbv genome and the gene-specific shrna or sirna; and a control group (c), which was transfected with plasmid containing the full-length hbv genome alone. the data were presented as a fold change value (fcv) in transcription of s and x genes in the test group normalized to internal control gene (gapdh) and relative to those in the control group. individual data were converted to a linear form using −ct calculation [ ] and then subjected to a paired-sample t-test using . software to determine a significant difference in average transcriptional levels of s and x genes between the test and control groups. a p-value of less than . was considered statistically significant. * p < . ; ¤p > . . of s and x gene transcription in two-cell embryos silenced for esrrg compared to non-silenced two-cell embryos (table ). in the current study, two non-interfering scrambled oligonucleotides (niso) were used as the negative controls. there was no significant difference in the levels of s and x gene transcription in the two-cell embryos between the test (niso treated) and control (niso non-treated) groups (table ). rnai is a biological process in which rna molecules inhibit gene expression or translation, by neutralizing targeted mrna molecules. oligonucleotides are short dna or rna molecules, of which sirna and shrna are central to rnai. it has been demon-strated that hamster and human sperm have a strong tendency to interact with exogenous dna and are able to transfer dna to oocytes [ ] . zhang et al. injected plasmid rnai-ready-psiren-retroq-zsgreen, which was constructed for interrupting the zfx gene, into testis in the test group mice, and then the male mice were mated individually with females, resulting in . ± . % of the male offspring, significantly higher than the offspring derived from the control groups (p < . ), suggesting that rnai could be as a tool to control the sex ratio of mouse offspring by interrupting zfx/zfy genes in sperm cells [ ] . in the current study, the two-cell embryos derived from sperm co-transfected with plasmids containing the full-length hbv genome and gene-specific shrna/sirna for interrupting the target genes were as the test group, and those derived from sperm transfected with plasmid containing the full-length table effects of the non-interfering scrambled oligonucleotides on transcriptional levels of hbv s and x genes in two-cell embryos. each sperm sample from a donor was divided into two groups: a test group (t), which was co-transfected with plasmids containing the full-length hbv genome and a non-interfering scrambled oligonucleotide (niso); and a control group (c), which was transfected with plasmid containing the full-length hbv genome alone. the data were presented as a fold change value (fcv) in transcription of s and x genes in the test group normalized to internal control gene (gapdh) and relative to those in the control group. individual data were converted to a linear form using −ct calculation [ ] and then subjected to a paired-sample t-test using . software to determine a significant difference in average transcriptional levels of s and x genes between the test and control groups. ap-value of less than . was considered statistically significant. ¤p > . . hbv genome alone were as the control group. the transcription levels of hbv genes between the test and control groups are significantly different (p < . ), which suggested that in the test group the target genes have been silenced by rnai and participated in transcriptional regulation of hbv genes, causing the change of hbv gene transcription levels. we found that csh , pcbd , eif g , psg and ttn to be involved in transcriptional regulation of hbv s and x genes in two-cell embryos. the protein encoded by csh is a member of the somatotropin/prolactin family of hormones and plays an important role in growth control [ ] . pcbd is a protein coding gene and associated with tetrahydrobiopterin biosynthesis [ ] . silencing of csh and pcbd by rnai decreased the levels of s and x gene transcription in two-cell embryos, indicating that both genes up-regulated transcription of s and x genes. the protein encoded by eif g is a subunit of eif f, a cap binding protein complex that mediates translation initiation by specific recognition [ ] . psg is a member of the carcinoembryonic antigen (cea) gene family and may play a role in regulation of the innate immune system [ ] . ttn encodes a large abundant protein that is a key component in the assembly and functioning of vertebrate striated muscles, and in non-muscle cells, seems to play a role in chromosome condensation and chromosome segregation during mitosis [ ] . when eif g , psg and ttn were silenced by rnai, the transcriptional levels of s and x genes in two-cell embryos increased, suggesting that these genes down-regulate s and x gene transcription. these results suggest that certain host genes participate in regulating hbv gene transcription in two-cell embryos. however, the interplay between the virus and host cells is complex, and it remains largely unknown how these genes interact with each other or act independently to allow differential transcription of hbv genes. some clues may help in understanding their interaction. first, certain previously identified host hbv-regulatory genes share high similarity in function and signaling pathways with genes (identified herein) that regulate hbv gene transcription. for example, sp is a ubiquitous factor that binds to gc-rich motifs in many promoters, can regulate transcription of hbv genes [ , ] , and is involved in many cellular processes, including cell differentiation, growth, and apoptosis. the protein encoded by csh also plays an important role in growth control and provides avenues for developmental regulation and tissue specificity. both genes function in the prolactin signaling pathway, suggesting possible regulation of hbv gene transcription by a similar mechanism. next, some host genes might indirectly participate in regulating hbv gene transcription through general activation of transcription regulators or factors. for example, hnf is a liver-enriched transcription factor that can regulate transcription of hbv genes [ , ] . pcbd , identified herein, regulates dimerization of hnf ␣ and enhance its transcriptional activity. finally, our identified genes might directly contribute to regulation of hbv gene expression. for example, eif g , besides down-regulating transcription of s and x genes, might repress viral rna translation by forming translationally inactive complexes [ ] . there are still significant questions. human embryonic genome activation (ega) occurs at the - cell stage [ , ] , why host genes can regulate hbv gene expression in two-cell embryos? some studies offered the useful clues, which may help shed light on this question. first, it has been demonstrated that ega in mouse occurs at the two-cell stage, which is controlled by maternally deposited rnas and proteins. yu et al. identified lately that oocyte-expressed yes-associated protein is a key activator of ega in mouse [ ] . in the current study, the two-cell embryos were produced by ivf of zona-free golden hamster oocyte with human sperm. ega in golden hamster also occurs at the two-cell stage [ ] , whether certain activator (s) deposited in golden hamster oocyte activate human genome? next, in development of human preimplantation embryo, there are four unique embryonic stagespecific patterns (essps) of gene expression [ ] . essp (maternally inherited oocyte mrnas) were expressed at high levels at the zygote stage and declined during development to the blastocyst stage. essp includes embryonic-activated genes, first transcribed at approximately the -cell stage. essp comprises genes not expressed until the blastocyst stage. essp includes persistent transcripts that maintained stable expression from the zygote to blastocyst stages [ ] . it is unknown whether the target genes identified in the current study are included in essp ? undoubtedly, clarification of these questions would explore many mysteries in early embryonic development. in addition to the above question, hbv s gene encodes hbsag, which packages the viral components. hbv x gene encodes hbx protein, whose activity is absolutely required for in vivo replication and spread of the virus [ ] . can the target genes affect virion assembly, or affect replication and spread of the virus through regulating viral transcription to block its transmission? moreover, outcome of hbv infection is markedly heterogeneous, varying from acute asymptomatic self-limiting infection to fulminant hepatic failure or to decompensated cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. it has been recognized that host genetic background influences the outcome of viral hepatitis infection [ ] . in the current study, we found that some host genes upregulate or downregulate transcription of s and x genes. can we assume that these host genes together function to maintain homeostasis? disturbance of such homeostasis could decrease or increase host susceptibility to hbv infection or allow infection to develop in different directions, leading to different clinical outcomes. these questions will be evaluated in future clinical studies. human embryo development is more fragile than that of many other species [ ] . human fecundity rates are relatively low, largely due to pre-and post-implantation embryo loss [ ] . in vitro, - % of ivf embryos fail to reach the blastocyst stage [ , ] . certain factors that may contribute to abnormal development before ega include inherited genetic mutations, aneuploidy, environmental insult to germ cells, events during fertilization and sperm-related factors [ ] . in our previous study, it was detected that hbv infection induces various chromosomal abnormalities in patient sperm, including aneuploidy, acentric fragment and deletion, ring chromo-some, triradial, dicentric chromosome and pulverization [ ] . sperm with these chromosomal abnormalities can achieve normal fertilization and introduce these aberrations into the embryo, which may increase the risk of abortion, stillbirth, or birth defects [ ] . in a recent clinical literature, hbv mrna was found in abandoned ivf embryos of hbv-infected fathers, which confirmed that hbv could not only enter early cleavage embryos via sperm but also replicate in embryos, resulting in early abortion [ ] . the aformentioned findings suggested that hbv may interfere with early embryonic development and thus affect pregnancy outcome. therefore it is very important to investigate hbv gene transcription and its regulation mechanism in embryos. this study, for the first time, provides experimental evidence that transcription of hbv genes occurs in early embryonic cells and is regulated by host genes. it is worth mentioning that, besides hbv, there are more emerging infectious diseases virus, such as hepatitis c virus (hcv), human immunodeficiency virus (hiv), severe acute respiratory syndrome virus (sars), ebola virus and zika virus (zikv), which pose a serious threat to human health [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . lately, some studies begin to investigate the true vertical transmission of hcv and hiv via germline [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , but the research on such transmission of sars, ebola and zika viruses is still a blank. to clarify whether the aforementioned viral genes are transmitted via germline and their expressional regulation in embryo would make a great contribution to exploring the interplay mechanism between the viruses and host cells and to maintaining human reproductive health. the authors declare no conflict of interest. the founding sponsors had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, and in the decision to publish the results. refining the risk estimate for transfusion-transmission of occult hepatitis b virus epidemiological and molecular features of hepatitis b and hepatitis delta virus transmission in a remote rural community in central africa # : hepatitis b in pregnancy screening, treatment, and prevention of vertical 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human sperm function the presence and expression of the hepatitis b virus in human oocytes and embryos host genetic factors in hepatitis b infection, liver cancer and vaccination response: a review with a focus on africa core promoter: a critical region where the hepatitis b virus makes decisions regulatory elements of hepatitis b virus transcription kruppel-like factor activates hepatitis b virus gene expression and replication genotype-dependent activation or repression of hbv enhancer ii by transcription factor coup-tf transcriptional regulation of hepatitis b virus by nuclear hormone receptors is a critical determinant of viral tropism correlation between the zona-free hamster egg sperm penetration assay and human in vitro fertilization world health organization, zona-free hamster oocyte penetration test, in: who cpg methylation participates in regulation of hepatitis b virus gene expression in host sperm and sperm-derived embryos the sperm penetration assay for the assessment of fertilization capacity sperm penetration assay as an indicator of bull fertility cdna amplification by smart-pcr and suppression subtractive hybridization (ssh)-pcr suppression subtractive hybridization world medical association declaration of helsinki: ethical principles for medical research involving human subjects guide for the care and use of laboratory animals world health organization, direct swim-up, in: who investigation of recombinant mouse sperm protein izumo as a potential immunocontraceptive antigen distributional fold change test − a statistical approach for detecting differential expression in microarray experiments both beta-actin and gapdh are useful reference genes for normalization of quantitative rt-pcr in human ffpe tissue samples of prostate cancer in vitro study on vertical transmission of the hiv- gag gene by human sperm analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative pcr and the (-delta c(t)) method sperm-mediated gene transfer into oocytes of the golden hamster: assessment of sperm function rnai as a tool to control the sex ratio of mouse offspring by interrupting zfx/zfy genes in the testis functional genomics of -to -cell stage human embryos by blastomere single-cell cdna analysis non-invasive imaging of human embryos before embryonic genome activation predicts development to the blastocyst stage oocyte-expressed yes-associated protein is a key activator of the early zygotic genome in mouse golden hamster embryonic genome activation occurs at the two-cell stage: correlation with major developmental changes x region mutations of hepatitis b virus related to clinical severity understanding the host genetics of chronic hepatitis b and c, semin does severe teratozoospermia affect blastocyst formation, live birth rate, and other clinical outcome parameters in icsi cycles? relationship between the mechanism of hepatitis b virus father-infant transmission and pregnancy outcome the impact of emerging infectious diseases on chinese blood safety sars-like wiv -cov poised for human emergence hepatitis delta and hiv infection effect of ebola virus disease on maternal and child health services in guinea: a retrospective observational cohort study model-informed risk assessment for zika virus outbreaks in the asia-pacific regions factors affecting sperm fertilizing capacity in men infected with hiv the integrated hiv- provirus in patient sperm chromosome and its transfer into the early embryo by fertilization research on the vertical transmission of hepatitis c gene from father-to-child via human sperm effects of hepatitis c virus infection on human sperm chromosomes this work was financially supported by the national natural science foundation of china (grant number ) and the applied basic research programs of sichuan province of china (grant number jy ). the authors thank professor stanley lin for his assistance in revising the final draft of manuscript and editing for english grammar and syntax. supplementary data associated with this article can be found, in the online version, at http://dx.doi.org/ . /j.reprotox. . . . key: cord- - b k v authors: murray, james l.; sheng, jinsong; rubin, donald h. title: a role for h/aca and c/d small nucleolar rnas in viral replication date: - - journal: mol biotechnol doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: b k v we have employed gene-trap insertional mutagenesis to identify candidate genes whose disruption confer phenotypic resistance to lytic infection, in independent studies using distinct viruses and several different cell lines. analysis of > , virus-resistant clones revealed > , candidate host genes, approximately % of which were disrupted in clones surviving separate infections with – viruses. interestingly, there were instances in which the insertional mutagenesis vector disrupted transcripts encoding h/aca-class and c/d-class small nucleolar rnas (snoras and snords, respectively). of these, snoras and snords reside within introns of genes (predominantly protein-coding), while appear to be independent transcription units. sirna studies targeting candidate snora/ds provided independent confirmation of their roles in infection when tested against cowpox virus, dengue fever virus, influenza a virus, human rhinovirus , herpes simplex virus , or respiratory syncytial virus. significantly, eight of the nine snora/ds targeted with sirnas enhanced cellular resistance to multiple viruses suggesting widespread involvement of snora/ds in virus–host interactions and/or virus-induced cell death. the goal of this study was to discover cellular genes required for viral replication with the aim of developing anti-viral agents. we employed gene-trap insertional mutagenesis, an approach utilizing a promoterless vector that randomly integrates into the host genome, thereby disrupting (trapping) host genes. there is an absolute requirement for a cellular-based promoter to drive expression of a vector-derived selectable marker conferring neomycin resistance. libraries of gene-trap insertional mutants [ ] were used to select for resistance to lytic infection with a variety of viruses. using this approach, we have identified over , candidate cellular genes whose disruption confer survival following exposure to otherwise lytic viral infections [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , or clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin [ , ] . candidate genes mediating viral infection are identified in surviving clones by sequencing across genomic integration sites with primers annealing to the u neosv vector used for insertional mutagenesis. while protein-encoding genes accounted for over % of the candidate genes identified, the gene-trap insertional mutagenesis vector also inserts into non-protein-encoding genes. these include small nucleolar rnas (snornas), which are involved in maturation processes of ribosomal rnas (rrnas), small nuclear rnas (snrnas), transfer rnas (trnas), and messenger rnas (mrnas) [ ] . results presented herein suggest the involvement of two novel classes of snornas in viral replication: snoras containing conserved h/aca boxes that participate in nucleotide pseudouridylation, and snords containing c/d boxes that participate in -o-methylation ( fig. ) [ ] . snoras and snords function by assembling into respective small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein complexes (snrnps), and serve as guide rnas to direct complimentary target rna nucleotide modification and aid translation (reviewed in [ ] ). snora/ds also regulate other cellular processes including alternative splicing, mrna editing [ ] , and mirna-like silencing [ ] . interestingly, a recent study utilizing a promoter trap to randomly inactivate cellular alleles revealed that snords a, , and a contribute to stress-induced apoptosis [ ] . potential roles for this novel rna class in viral replication are considered. [ , , , , ] . clonal library cells resisting lytic infection were selected in hep b cells (dfv ), tzm-bl cells (hrv and hrv ), and vero e cells (hsv , pv, and rsv), using a similar approach. briefly, gene-trap libraries, each harboring approximately gene entrapment events, were expanded to - % confluency until approximately daughter cells represented each clone. the indicated cell lines were infected fig. a snoras are composed of two nearly complementary hairpin loops and two single stranded regions with conserved h and aca boxes. the h box sequence is ananna, where n can be g, u, a, or c. bulging within the hairpin loops allow complementary base pairing with target rna sequences. snoras assemble into small nucleolar ribonucleoprotein (snrnp) complexes that catalyze isomerization of the first unpaired uridine in the bulge region to pseudouridine (w). pseudouridylation occurs - nucleotides upstream of either the h box, the aca box, or both. b c/d boxcontaining snords assemble into snrnps in complex with complimentary target rnas, and catalyze -o-ribose methylation. imperfect copies of the c and d boxes, termed c and d may be located internally. snords interact with target rnas via either of the - nucleotide antisense regions to guide snrnp-catalyzed -o-ribose methylation nucleotides upstream of the d or d box with dfv (moi = . ), pv (moi = . ), hrv or hsv (moi = . ), hrv (moi = . ), or rsv (moi = . ). infection proceeded until [ % of cells were dead ( - days), and then the medium was changed every - days until surviving clones were visible (generally - weeks). surviving clones were detatched with trypsin, expanded, and re-infected at a tenfold higher moi to confirm resistance. resistant clones showing [ % survival following re-infection were selected for expansion to identify trapped genes. genomic dnas from clonal virus-resistant cell lines were extracted using a qiaamp dna blood mini kit (qiagen, inc., valencia, ca, usa). shuttle vectors and genomic dna flanking the u neosv integration site were recovered by restriction enzyme digests of genomic dna, selfligation, transformation into escherichia coli, and sequencing the resultant carbenecillin-resistant plasmids to identify trapped genes, as described [ ] . rna interference and qrt-pcr studies snora/ds were screened by rnai for functional roles in viral replication against a panel of six viruses (cpv, dfv , flu, hrv , hsv , and rsv). inhibition of viral production was determined by measuring viral rna production in culture supernatants by quantitative real time pcr (qrt-pcr). the same cell lines used for gene-trap studies (table ) were used for rnai screens, with the exception that rnai screens against flu were performed in human hepg cells instead of canine mdck cells. cells were seeded in -well plates ( cells/well) and transfected in duplicate wells with nm sirnas (dharmacon, inc.) targeting candidate snoras or snords, along with relevant negative and positive control sirnas (n = independent experiments). allstars negative control sirna (qiagen, inc.) or a non-targeting sir-na (dharmacon, inc.) served as negative control sirnas. negative controls were used to normalize qrt-pcr results to %. sirnas targeting viral genes were used as positive controls, as follows: d r and d r (cpv), prm (dfv ), pa (flu), c and vp (hrv ), ul (hsv ), and the p gene (rsv). duplicate wells were seeded for uninfected and infected controls, lacking transfection reagents. hep b, hepg , and vero e cells were transfected with nm sirnas using lipofectamine (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa), whereas tzm-bl cells were transfected with sirnas using hiperfect (qiagen, inc.). cells were infected at h post-transfection, using mois of (cowpox and hsv ), . (flu), . (hrv and rsv), or . (dfv ). cells were infected for h at either °c (cpv, dfv , hsv , flu, or rsv) or °c (hrv ). following the -h incubation period, cells were washed with pbs and fresh medium was added. at days post-inoculation, culture supernatants were clarified by centrifugation and ll was lysed in preparation for rna extraction, using an epmotion workstation (eppendorf) and the purelink total rna purification kit (invitrogen). total rna was reverse transcribed using random hexamers (applied biosystems, foster city, ca, usa), and qrt-pcr was performed using an eppendorf mastercycler realplex system, with taqman assays developed that detect viral dnas. to generate standards curves, amplicons produced during real time pcr detection of each viral cdna were cloned into the pcrii vector (invitrogen). qrt-pcr was performed using freshly prepared standards, serially diluted over eight logs of copy numbers. we observed that candidate snora and snord genes were potentially disrupted in clonal cell lines surviving viral infection (table ) . most candidate snora/d genes ( / ) occur as intronic sequences encoded within host genes, although snora/ds: snora , snord b- , snord , and snord , are monocistronic. as indicated in table , over half of the host genes encoding snora/ds were disrupted at multiple independent integration sites with the insertional mutagen vector u neosv , and/or were identified in cell lines surviving selection with multiple ( - ) independent viruses. several snora/ds implicated in our gene-trap studies reside within genes that have been previously been shown to be important for viral infection. for example, bat [ ] , eif a [ ] , hspa [ ] , rps [ ] , and rps [ ] influence influenza a infection, and hiv infection may depend on rpl a [ ] . these data indirectly suggested that snora/ds might serve as a previously unknown class of cellular rnas important for viral replication. to test this hypothesis, we knocked down expression of a variety of snora/ds with sirna and examined the resulting cells for susceptibility to six different viruses ( table ). expression of nine snora/ds encoded within rcc (which also encodes the shorter non-coding snhg gene), or snhg were silenced with sirnas for days prior to infection with either cowpox virus (cpv), dengue fever virus (dfv), influenza a (flu), human rhinovirus (hrv ), herpes simplex virus (hsv ), or respiratory syncytial virus (rsv). following a -h inoculation, cells were washed to remove inocula, and viral production in culture supernatants was measured by quantitative real time pcr using taqman assays annealing to viral genomic sequences. snora/ds tested in sirna screens were found to limit the capacity of viruses to replicate, with, eight out of nine sirna-treated cells failing to support replication of three of more viruses (table ). while a previous study showed that rcc supports hsv replication [ ] , we did not observe that silencing rcc or the non-coding small nucleolar rna host gene (snhg ) inhibits hsv (data not shown), whereas inhibiting expression of the rcc encoded snora a did. rcc may be alternatively spliced to include some transcripts to contain snhg , and these data may be consistent with snhg serving minimal function in viral infection. as has been observed with snhg (gas ) [ ] , snhg is a non-coding gene whose intronic snords are stable and well-conserved between human and mouse, unlike their encoded exons [ ] . thus, silencing of snords encoded within snhg may be expected to account for the observed viral inhibition, rather than the associated transcript. in gene-trap experiments with multiple viruses, rcc -snhg , snhg , and taf d were the most frequently interrupted genes harboring snora/ds. gene-trap insertion sites within the rcc -snhg and snhg loci are shown in fig. . it should be noted that in non-biased selection of clones of murine embryonal stem cells infected with the same insertional vector (data not shown), rcc -snhg was not found to be a hot spot for insertional events. therefore, it is unlikely that hot spots for vector insertion is the sole process that lead to independently derived mutant rcc -snhg clones selected in cells surviving infection with five different viruses ( fig. ; table ). while sirna confirmation suggest a role for snora a, it may also be considered that the rcc gene shares exons with snhg , and disrupting snhg , perhaps in concert with disrupting snora a, may transmit the resistance phenotype. interestingly, the prominently represented genes snhg , snhg , and rcc -snhg are members of the -terminal oligopyrimidine gene ( top) family [ ] [ ] [ ] , which contain - oligopyrimidine tracts in their ends [ ] that regulate transcription and translation under conditions of growth arrest [ , ] . shng has recently been found to also be associated with glucocorticoid receptor transcriptional regulation [ ] , and inhibit cellular proliferation induced by the mammalian target of rapamycin (mtor) [ ] . thus, there may be processes that work in concert with translational repression that affect viruses capacity for replication. further work is needed to define whether a role in virus infection is unique for the shng genes selected in clones resistant to multiple viruses. given that snords are encoded within abundantly expressed genes, such as ribosomal genes (table ) , high expression may be critical for their normal biological roles and in viral infection. to our knowledge, this study is the first to show that disrupting or silencing expression of cellular c/d or h/aca-class small nucleolar rnas inhibits viral replication. however, emerging data is suggestive of their direct involvement in the process. for example, the epstein-barr viral genome encodes a snord (v-snorna- ), which is thought to target the viral polymerase [ ] . in addition, a recent study showed that several small nucleolar rnas are differentially expressed following severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus and influenza virus infection [ ] . indirect evidence suggests possible mechanisms whereby snoras and snords may support replication. several viruses including influenza, hiv- , hsv , and adenoassociated virus utilize the nucleolus (the cellular location of snoras and snords) during specific stages of their replication cycle [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . interestingly, snoras and snords are known to modify spliceosomal snornas by pseudouridylation or methylation [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , which can be important for rna splicing [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , and viral transcript a gattctctaactgcgcatgcttctgcgcacgcgcaatagacattccaggacttccgggcacttcgtaaggtttaaaaaggatgcttcgcgttttctctctcctttttggagacagattc gcagtggtcgcttcttctccttggtaagtgtgatccttggtaagtgtgatcagatgcttgccaccggagttgtgggtctaatgctatagatcagtagccgagcttccctaggaagatca tatagtattttatttatttactttttttttttttttgagacggagtcggtttgtcactcaggctggactgcagtgctcgttgcaacctccgcctgccgggttcaagcgattctcgtgcc 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ccactgtggacagggtggaaactcgtttgctttcttgtttaagatctgtagtaacatgaatggatgaaattgtttcctattggattctgtaaatttatgcgttacactgattgtccaac gtggatacacccgggaggtcactctccccgggctctgtccaagtggcgtaggggagcatagggctctgccccatgatgtacaagtccctttccacaacgttggaaataaagctgggcct cgtgtctgcgcctgcatattcctacagcttcccagagtcctgtcgacaattactggggagacaaaccatgcaggaaacagccttctagagcactgaatctggattgaagtctttttttt tttttttttttttggagatggagtcgctctgttgcccaggctggagtgcagtggcgcactccattgcctctgcctcccgggttcaagtgattatgctaagtgattctcctgccttggcc tcctgagtagctgggattacaggcccccgccaccacgccaggctaatttttgtatttttagtaaagacagggtttcaccatgttggtcaggctggtctcaaactcctgaccttgtgatc cgccagcctctggcctcccaaaatgttgggattacaggcgtgagccaccacacctggctggattgaagtcttaatacatgtttaagaaaaattggctaaaaagtagccaggcatgatga taggtagctggaggaaggagaatcgctggagcccaggagtgacctatactcaaacctatactccagtgccactgtactccaaccccaggcgatagcatgaggcccctcgttgaaaaagt ttagggttttgctgtactaatagattaatatcttgttttgcaggatttgttaaggattccaagtaactcttatttggtgagtaaatctgctaattgttttttgcttatcagctctttgt caatgatttctgtaatggaaataggattgaagagacttttattctagttggtcaggatttacctctgaggcatttaatcattctcagagcaatagccaaatatcgactttgctgcattt ttgtaggcatgttgacataacttcaacatatgctctgttctgtaaaaattgctttttttagtcagctcattaaaagtgcaaagtagtaaaagctgccctagtgaactgtaggaagccta attggctttatctacatgtgtagcctgagctgagaaagatactagcccttgaaaatactgtgggtgattagcaatattggatttgtcggttactccaattcctcactaatgagcattcc aacgtggataccctgggaggtcactctccccaggctctgtccaagtggcataggggagcttagggctctgccccatgatgtacagtccctttccacaacgttgaagatgaagctgggcc tcgtgtctgcgcctgcatattcctacagcttcccagagtcctgtggacaatgactggggagacaaaccatgcaggaaacatatctagtatactagattttaagttgaagtaggatcttc aggagtctaatcattatttcttttcttttaggagagaagacgatctgcacttcgcattttggcattgacatttaattttagggtcctttatatagaagggagagtaggtaaactgattt ttttttttaacagggagggtttgacaatctttggcagacttggagcaaaagattgaggtgcatttcatgcctccttttgagagtcttgctctgtcgcccaggctgtagtgcagtggcgc aatcttggctgcaacctcagcctcccaagtagctgggattacaaacataagccaccacgcccagccctcatacctcttttaaaagtcgacctgttttgcagaaagtctgctgtttttgt actaaaggctttggaatttggcatttagctaggaatgcacattctttcacctcattcatactttaagaaccacagaagtgactctgcttggccagaaggcacactgtgttggtggttat attaaaagtccttgagtattttgcttttcatgatcttgctcactgcaacttccgcctcccaggttcaggcgattctcctgcctcagcctcccaagtagctgcgactacaggcgtgtagc accacacctggctaatttttgtatttttagtagagatgaggtttcaccatattggccaggctgttctcaactcctgacctcgtgatccgcccacctcagcctcctaaagtgctgggatt acagctgtgagccaccctgcccggccacttttgtatgatttctaatgtatttgtaatttacctaacaaattgcctaatctgctatgttaatgtatttatgaattaaaataaatacgact gcatgtttgtggttcatttttgtggaggtggctgtggtgacatcagccaagaatctgaatggtactgttgaaggaaactagcatgatagcttcagttctaaaggccctgaaacctagtc tcaggtgggtcccccttgggttcactttatattggcagtttattgggaaaatggatattaggtcctgaccaataggaccgtaagtctgggttgagtgcaagatgagttagaccgattct ttagcttcctgcagtgtagtggaggaaaaatcgatggtagcaacgggaggttgtatccctagctgatgagttgtatgagcctctactacctggcgcacctccgcctgaagattgccaga attgcttgcctcatgacgtgagtcacaatggaaactttgtcaagccccctgcactggctgccaacataaatgttcagtaccctgaaggatgggactgaagggggatcatctagaaggta aagttacctactggcataggggaggtgggacagccgttaagccatttggaacttgatggagacaggtttgagggaggtgggtgagattggagtttggtggactgtagagcttgcttgcc aaggtgttgaggtcagggttggtttgagaatggaagctagttactagctatgattgtgggggaacacagcttgatttttcttacaagctaagaggagtgaggcagtgtttaagagggca tgttaaatgcagccaggcttggtggctcacacccgtaatcccagcacttaggctaaggcaggcggatcacaacatctagagatcctggccaacgcggtgaaaccctgtctgtactaaaa atacaaaataactgggcatggtggtgtgcacctgtgggaggctgaggcagaattgctggaacccgggagatggaggttgtactgagctgagaccttgccactgcgctccagcctggtga cagagttaagtctcaaaaaaaaggcatcttcctaaagcaattgtatttgtgcttacctgtgccaggcactgttctaggtaagcactaagtgggctttaatacagcatattccaatgggg aatcccaggaaccaaaagactaattgtccaagtccacaactagaagtggcacctctgcagaaacaagcatcaaattccctgctcaggaagaagccagatgagtcagccccattcgtctg tatgcccagtcccatccgtgtcctgctgtaactacatagatctcacctgagtaaagtgatttttttctgaa b tgacgtcatcaaaagaactcttatatacaggagcccaggcaccatactgtcttttcgaggtaggagtcgactcctgtgaggtatgttttatctttgcgaatgttgcgggttttggggcg ctccagcctttgtctgctaaggtcaccctgaattgactgggacttctaagccagtcgcgcgcctttgcagggcctacaagttgaggatggtgggggattgcacatatggtgcatgcgtg acctaagctgcgactatgttagagtagaactgcggagaagcctcggctctcgtgccctgcctctgatgaagcctgtgttggtagggacatctgagagtaatgatgaatgccaaccgctc tgatggtggcacatgccgagtcacccgagtaagctattgttaagggccgtgacccgagcctccatcagccgtccgctctcatgaaaggctgtcggtggtagtccacgtgcttaagtgcc tgcattccgcagtgtcaccaatatttccattagtgtttcttttttcttttttgagaccgagcctcgttctgtcacccaggctggaatgcagtggctcgacatcggttaatggcaacctc cgcgtcccgagttaagcagttctgcctcagcctcccaagtaactgggactacaggcgcgcgccaccatgctaggcttttatatttttagtagagacggggtttcaccatgttggcgaga ctggtcttgaactcctgacctcaggtgatccaccagccgtggtcccccaacatactgggattacaagccgtgagccaccgcgcccggccgccatcggtggttcttaactgcgggtgcag tgcttctttgtaacattaagtgtatcctttacctgtcgctagataatgaatggtatgttacctgcatcattggtttaaaaagacgaaccgtttttttaaagaacactctttaaaaaaaa gaaccgtggaacaatgaattaaaatctgtacctgatctctttaggtatggtgctgggtgcagatgcagtgtggctctggatagcaccttatggacaggtaagaattggggaaagtatgg tgggaagaatgaaatctaagaggtggtctcagcctgtgatgctttaagagtagtggacagaagggatttctgaaattctattctgaggctttaatgttaacagcatttatatttaacgt gactgctgtgaggttcattctcactgttttgcttgcatctttttgttttctagttgtgtccccaaggaaggatgagaatagctactgaagtaagttgaaaattccctctcaaaaaggtt taaagccattggatgtgccacaatgatgacagtttatttgctactcttgagtgctagaatgatgaggatcttaaccaccattatcttaactgaggcacccaaaatggtgagttggggaa catagagagtacacctaagttcacatgaagttgtttcttcccaggtcctaaagagcaagcctaactcaagccattggcacacaggtgagacacctctattttgtacttctcacttttaa gggattagaaaatagccaaagcaatgatgattatctatgttagtgcttctctcccctcttttcaaatgagaattttgctctcatattgatactaagtttaatactgaagaaaatgtgaa aacagatactatgatggttgcatagttcagcagatttaatcatgaagagatgtactatctgtctgatgtatctggggtagttgtggtttgctgttaatggttaagcagtgtaccaccaa tctaccattaaaatattttttgctgacaattttgtattaaaattacaggcattagacagaaagctggaagttgaaatgaatgcagcctggatgatgataagcaaatgctgactgaacat gaaggtcttaattagctctaactgactaaaggcatttgttagttttggcagggggtgaacactcatctgtggctattctaagaccactcttatttcttaggtggagtccaacttgcctg gaccagcttaatggttctggtaagtattaatgaaaacagtagatagacttaatgaaaatgctgatggtgatatgcttactgctgagctaatggcttaaggcttggctgatgaatactga ctgtattttccttgagcatgtctggaacagtgtttatgtgttttccttgagcatgtttggaacggggtttgtgtaatgatgttgatcaaatgtctgacctgaaatgagcatgtagacaa aggtaacactgaagaaccctgtgacagacaactttgaaaagagtttaatgatgtttagcattttaatggaagtcctcatttgtattccagctcctggtaacgtttttatccatggatga cttgcttgggtaaggacatgaagacagttcctgtcataccttttaaaggtacatgttttattgatgttaacgttaattgattgagctactgttagtgatgattttaaaattaaagcaga tgggaatctctctgagaaagaaaatggagattaatcttaaactgaaacagtagttgggaaatcttttagaaatccacctattactacctattggtaaaggagattaaatttctacaggt atggagagtcggcttgactacactgtgtggagcaagttttaaagaagcaaaggtatagcagttccaagtattttttttttttttttagacaagagtctagctcttgcccagaatggagt gcagcggcactatcagttcactgcaacctctgcctcccaggttcaaggaattctcctgcctcagcctcttgagtagctgggattacaggcatgtgacaccatgcctggctaattttgta cagctatgttgtccaggctggtctcgaactcttgacctcaagtgatactgcccgcactgacctcccaaagtgctgggattacaggcgtgagccaccatgccccgcctcaagtctggttt ttaagtgttgtaaagccgatacaatgatgataacatagttcagcagactaacgctgatgagcaatattaagtctttcgctcctatctgatgtatctggcggtaacattctagtttatgc cccgaaaaggggaatatagccattctataatgtttggagattttggattactcctaattgtatgcaagttgtcttactgtgtattgtcccttaatttcaggactcagaattcatgattg aagaaatgcaggttagtttaaactttgaaggaaatttttaaggtggcaaaaggttttggtggcatatacaccttaatctgtagatgggagtgattagctgtttaaaagttaaaatgtga ctgagaaggaaattgagtagggcaaattttaaatgggtattatttttcatcttcaaacaggcagacctgttatcctaaactaggtgagtcagcttttggtacatgtgatgattttcagt gtaaccaatgatgtaatgattctgccaaatgaaatataatgatatcactgtaaaaccgttccattttgattctgaggttactctactaacaagcatcacacatttgtattttgccctga ttaatatgttggcttcgctttcagggtttttaatgaccacaacaagcaagcatgcagcttactgcttgaaaggtgaggattggaaatgttgggactattataattgcagaatacatgat gatctcaatccaacttgaactctctcactgattacttgatgacaataaaatatctgatattctgcattcccatgtagcattttaattgaagtctgtaaatgtggctaaaagtcttgtct tattttttgagacagggtcttgcctcacccaagctagagtgcagtggcctttgaagcttactacagcctcaaacttctgggctcaagtgatcctcagcctcccagtggtctttgtagac tgcctgatggagtctcatggcacaagaagattaaaacagtgtctccaattttaataaatttttgcaatccatctggagtgtgtagtgtttacttaaaaaaggacagtgcttttcatctg tt splicing may depend upon host factors [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . thus, it is possible that snoras and snords activate spliceosomal snornas, which promotes the proper splicing and translation of essential viral proteins. an alternative, though not mutually exclusive, hypothesis is that snords may function in -cap viral rna maturation through -o-ribose methylation to promote initiation of viral protein translation. in support of this hypothesis are observations that west nile virus, vesicular stromatitis virus, and dengue fever virus encode their own -o-methyltransferases that modify -cap structures accordingly, and that methyltransferase mutations are known to impair their replication [ ] [ ] [ ] . influenza a lacks a -o-methyltransferase; however, it utilizes a ''cap snatching'' mechanism to acquire -caps from cellular mrnas [ ] , which are potentially methylated by snords. there are no reports that cellular methyltransferases effect -cap methylation. interestingly, the -omethyl group in the cap of cellular mrnas also strongly influences its ability to act as primer for influenza virus rna transcription [ ] . the discovery of these classes of non-coding genes prominently represented in the mutant clones selected in our virus surviving cell lines suggests an importance of snoras and snords in facilitating viral replication. however, this study is not exhaustive in terms of the role each particular snora/d may have in viral infection. it is possible that the sirnas used in our experiments inhibit not only the non-protein encoded rnas but also the gene in which they reside. selective in situ mutations in the encoding sequences will need to be performed in order to confirm each as the gene conferring the phenotype. it is anticipated that in future studies, the precise role that snoras and snords play will be identified to provide a deeper understanding of the complex interplay at work during the viral-host standoff. fig. a gene disruptions within the rcc , snhg , snora a, and snora b loci observed in clonal cell lines resisting lytic viral infection. the snhg gene is a non-coding transcript that shares exons with the protein-coding rcc gene (highlighted in green). introns are designated with black text, whereas snhg exonic sequences not shared with rcc are shown in red. snora a and snora b are shown as the first and second intronic sequences highlighted in yellow, respectively. gene-trap insertions were observed within introns, as well each of the above mentioned genes. insertion sites are shown with single letters highlighted in blue (human cell lines resisting dfv , flu, hrv , or hrv infection) or red (vero e monkey cells resisting hsv infection). b snhg and intervening snord sequences. gene-trap insertion sites conferring resistance to pathogens are highlighted in blue text. in some cases, identical clones were recovered from viral selection in independent studies with more than one virus (viruses shown in table ). color coding in to orientation: maroon-snord and snord ; light orange-snords - ; light blue-snhg coding sequence; black-snhg introns; green-adjacent and genomic sequence. three snords are within coding the sequence for gas , namely snords , , and (color identification of cellular promoters by using a retrovirus promoter trap identification of cellular proteins required for replication of human immunodeficiency virus type a functional role for adam in human immunodeficiency virus type- replication rab gtpase is required for replication of human immunodeficiency virus type , filoviruses, and measles virus inhibition of influenza a virus replication by antagonism of a pi k-akt-mtor pathway member identified by gene-trap insertional mutagenesis effects of transforming growth factor-alpha (tgf-alpha) in vitro and in vivo on reovirus replication discovery of mammalian genes that participate in virus infection mutations in the igf-ii pathway that confer resistance to lytic reovirus infection oligomerization of clostridium perfringens epsilon toxin is dependent upon caveolins and gene-trap mutagenesis identifies mammalian genes contributing to intoxication by clostridium perfringens epsilontoxin the expanding snorna world non-coding rnas: lessons from the small nuclear and small nucleolar rnas converting nonsense codons into sense codons by targeted pseudouridylation snorna, a novel precursor of microrna in giardia lamblia small nucleolar rnas u a, u , and u a are critical mediators of metabolic stress functional genomics in mice by tagged sequence mutagenesis cellular splicing factor raf- p /npi- /bat /uap interacts with the influenza virus nucleoprotein and enhances viral rna synthesis genome-wide rnai screen identifies human host factors crucial for influenza virus replication drosophila rnai screen identifies host genes important for influenza virus replication global analysis of host-pathogen interactions that regulate early-stage hiv- replication blocks to herpes simplex virus type replication in a cell line, tsbn , encoding a temperature-sensitive rcc protein classification of gas as a multi-small-nucleolar-rna (snorna) host gene and a member of the -terminal oligopyrimidine gene family reveals common features of snorna host genes a mammalian gene with introns instead of exons generating stable rna products the host gene for intronic u small nucleolar rnas in mammals has no protein-coding potential and is a member of the -terminal oligopyrimidine gene family top genes: a translationally controlled class of genes including those coding for ribosomal proteins comprehensive detection of human terminal oligo-pyrimidine (top) genes and analysis of their characteristics noncoding rna gas is a growth arrest-and starvationassociated repressor of the glucocorticoid receptor inhibition of human t-cell proliferation by mammalian target of rapamycin (mtor) antagonists requires noncoding rna growth-arrest-specific expression and processing of a small nucleolar rna from the epstein-barr virus genome integrative deep sequencing of the mouse lung transcriptome reveals differential expression of diverse classes of small rnas in response to respiratory virus infection nucleolin is required for an efficient herpes simplex virus type infection nuclear and nucleolar targeting of influenza a virus ns protein: striking differences between different virus subtypes ribozyme-mediated inhibition of hiv suggests nucleolar trafficking of hiv- rna the hiv tat protein affects processing of ribosomal rna precursor nucleolar factors direct the -o-ribose methylation and pseudouridylation of u spliceosomal rna rnomics: an experimental approach that identifies candidates for novel, small, non-messenger rnas in mouse a computational screen for mammalian pseudouridylation guide h/aca rnas modification of u spliceosomal rna is guided by other small rnas identification of novel human modification guide rnas protein-free small nuclear rnas catalyze a two-step splicing reaction the use of simple model systems to study spliceosomal catalysis the spliceosome: a ribozyme at heart? biological chemistry characterization of the catalytic activity of u and u snrnas mutations at alternative splice sites of m mrna negatively affect influenza a virus viability and growth rate functional association between viral and cellular transcription during influenza virus infection modulating hiv- rna processing and utilization processing of adeno-associated virus rna experimental investigation of herpes simplex virus latency analysis of a structural homology model of the -o-ribose methyltransferase domain within the vesicular stomatitis virus l protein mutagenesis of the dengue virus type ns methyltransferase domain structure and function of flavivirus ns methyltransferase the cap-snatching endonuclease of influenza virus polymerase resides in the pa subunit both the -methyl and the -o-methyl groups in the cap of mrna strongly influence its ability to act as primer for influenza virus rna transcription acknowledgments this work was supported by the red and bobby buisson foundation, and public health service small business innovation research (sbir) grant ai from the division of aids, national institute of allergy and infectious diseases. dhr was supported by gifts from maggie chassman, the red and bobby buisson foundation, inc., zirus, inc., and the public health service. none of the funding sources influenced the study design, the collection, analysis of interpretation of data, the preparation of this manuscript, or the decision to submit the article for publication. we also thank dr. h. earl ruley of vanderbilt university for critical review of the manuscript, and drs. natalie mcdonald and thomas hodge (zirus, inc.) for technical support. the authors declare no conflict of interest. key: cord- -vv gpldi authors: willemsen, anouk; zwart, mark p title: on the stability of sequences inserted into viral genomes date: - - journal: virus evol doi: . /ve/vez sha: doc_id: cord_uid: vv gpldi viruses are widely used as vectors for heterologous gene expression in cultured cells or natural hosts, and therefore a large number of viruses with exogenous sequences inserted into their genomes have been engineered. many of these engineered viruses are viable and express heterologous proteins at high levels, but the inserted sequences often prove to be unstable over time and are rapidly lost, limiting heterologous protein expression. although virologists are aware that inserted sequences can be unstable, processes leading to insert instability are rarely considered from an evolutionary perspective. here, we review experimental work on the stability of inserted sequences over a broad range of viruses, and we present some theoretical considerations concerning insert stability. different virus genome organizations strongly impact insert stability, and factors such as the position of insertion can have a strong effect. in addition, we argue that insert stability not only depends on the characteristics of a particular genome, but that it will also depend on the host environment and the demography of a virus population. the interplay between all factors affecting stability is complex, which makes it challenging to develop a general model to predict the stability of genomic insertions. we highlight key questions and future directions, finding that insert stability is a surprisingly complex problem and that there is need for mechanism-based, predictive models. combining theoretical models with experimental tests for stability under varying conditions can lead to improved engineering of viral modified genomes, which is a valuable tool for understanding genome evolution as well as for biotechnological applications, such as gene therapy. a large number of virus genomes have been engineered to carry additional sequences for a variety of purposes. viruses are often used as vectors for heterologous gene expression in cultured cells or the natural host. for example, the baculovirus expression system is widely used for expression work (chambers et al. ), lentiviruses show great promise for gene therapy (milone and o'doherty ) , and phage display allows for selection of desired epitopes (wu et al. ) . marker genes have also been built into viruses to facilitate tracking infection spread (dolja, mcbride, and carrington ) . as viruses evolve rapidly, including the incorporation of genome-rearrangements, it is therefore unsurprising that the insertion of sequences into viral genomes often goes hand in hand with the rapid occurrence of deletions (koonin, dolja, and morris ; pijlman et al. ; zwart et al. ). the inserted sequence, and sometimes parts of the viral genome, are then rapidly lost. this genomic instability can have economic ramifications, leading to decreases in heterologous protein expression (kool et al. ; de gooijer et al. ; scholthof, scholthof, v c the author(s) . published by oxford university press. this is an open access article distributed under the terms of the creative commons attribution non-commercial license (http://creativecommons.org/ licenses/by-nc/ . /), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. for commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com and jackson ) . it can also introduce limitations and complications to working with marker genes majer, darò s, and zwart ) . understanding the stability of inserted sequences therefore has value from an applied perspective, but it could also shed light on basic questions. first, how stable are natural virus genomes, and under what conditions do they become unstable? second, since horizontal gene transfer (hgt) plays an important role in virus evolution, under what conditions are transferred sequences likely to be retained? in this review, we consider the stability of inserted sequences and the dynamics of their removal from virus genomes from an evolutionary perspective. first, we provide an overview of empirical results which shed light on insert-sequence stability for viruses, based on the baltimore classification. second, we present some conceptual considerations pertaining to sequence stability, identifying important parameters for understanding and potentially predicting stability. we identify theory and experiments that point toward viable strategies for mitigating the rapid loss of inserted genes, and point out key questions that should be addressed in future research. we argue that virus genome organization has a large impact on the stability of inserted sequences, whilst stability is a complex trait that can depend on environmental conditions. we provide an overview of empirical results for the stability of natural and engineered inserted sequences, following the baltimore classification. our primary focus is on engineered viruses: studies where gene insertions are an addition to the viral genome (leading to an increase in genome size) and where the subsequent fate of these inserted sequences has been tracked. as inserted sequences can incur a fitness cost, these are often quickly purged from the viral genome. often these fitness costs are related to a disruption of the viral genome (e.g. gene order). we therefore also consider studies on genome rearrangements in wild viruses and introduce other relevant modifications that shed light on what the impact of genomic inserts can be. we provide an overview of the results and main conclusions of our review in table . several studies relating to the stability of double-stranded (ds) dna viruses have been published. the dsdna viruses have a wide range of genome sizes, from the small polyomaviridae and papillomaviridae ranging from . to . kbp, to the relatively table . we provide an overview of the main conclusions, for all viruses and for the different baltimore classification groups. viruses genera covered in relevant studies conclusions of this review all viruses • inserted sequences are often unstable and rapidly lost upon passaging of an engineered virus • the position at which a sequence is integrated in the genome can be important for stability • sequence stability is not an intrinsic property of genomes because demographic parameters, such as population size and bottleneck size, can have important effects on sequence stability • the multiplicity of cellular infection affects sequence stability, and can in some cases directly affect whether there is selection for deletion variants • deletions are not the only class of mutations that can reduce the cost of inserted sequences, although they are the most common i: dsdna alphabaculovirus, lambdavirus, mastadenovirus, orthopoxvirus, t likevirus, varicellovirus • large genomes that are readily engineered and also highly plastic, as exemplified by the 'genome accordion' in poxviruses • small insertions can be stable, but larger insertion are rapidly lost • classic studies with phages exemplify how lower limits to the size of packaged genomes can be used to increase insertion stability ii: the inverted terminal repeats of vaccinia virus undergo rapid changes in size due to unequal crossover events leading to stable and unstable forms (moss, winters, and cooper ) . the diversity in this region is needed for immune evasion and for the colonization of novel hosts and appears to be mainly regulated by recombination events. however, other processes such as mutation leading to accelerated rates of recombination cannot be ruled out. poxviruses, such as vaccinia, virus are classified as nucleocytoplasmic large dna viruses (ncldvs). these viruses have larger than average genome sizes and the more recently discovered giant viruses are also classified as such. the ncldvs appear to have undergone a dynamic evolution where gene gain and loss events go in parallel with host-switches between animal and protist hosts (koonin and yutin ) . interestingly, the phylogenomic reconstructions performed by koonin and yutin ( ) suggest that giant viruses (for which the host range appears to be restricted to protists) have evolved from simpler viruses (infecting animals) on many independent occasions. this again suggests that the host plays an important role in genome stability where in animals the pressure for smaller virus genomes is stronger than in protists (koonin and yutin ) . experimentally it has also been shown that vaccinia virus has a highly plastic genome. after deletion of one host range gene of vaccinia virus, another host range gene increases in copy number (elde et al. ) , leading to genomic expansion. the increased gene expression is in itself beneficial, but the high gene copy number also increases the supply of beneficial gain-offunction mutations. once these gain-of-function mutations are fixed in the population, the other copies of the gene are lost and thus the vaccinia genome size decreased (associated with the cost of an increased genome size) (elde et al. ), leading to accordion-like evolutionary dynamics (andersson, slechta, and roth ) . modified vaccinia virus ankara (mva) is used as a viral vector for the development of vaccines against infectious diseases such as malaria, influenza, tuberculosis, hiv/aids, and ebola (sutter and staib ; gó mez et al. ; gilbert ; stanley et al. ) the optimization of poxvirus promoters in this viral vector has proven to be an effective strategy for increasing the stability of antigen (inserted sequence) expression, and therewith the development of mva-based vaccines (alharbi ) . although live attenuated vaccines have substantially reduced rabies prevalence after oral-vaccination campaigns were conducted (lafay et al. ; macinnes et al. ) , such live vaccines are not efficacious in all rabies vector species. as an alternative, recombinant human adenovirus vaccine vectors expressing the rabies glycoprotein have been developed. the fitness of a replication-competent human adenovirus expressing the rabies glycoprotein was similar to that of the wild-type virus, as tested in vitro (knowles et al. ). moreover, the inserted rabies virus gene was stable during both in vivo and in vitro passaging (knowles et al. ), demonstrating the potential of this recombinant vaccine vector as an effective alternative. non-human adenoviruses can be used as alternative vaccine vectors, providing several advantages such as a limited host range and restricted replication in non-host species. by using bovine adenovirus type , a variety of antigens and cytokines were successfully expressed in vivo (ayalew et al. ) . the stability of bovine adenovirus type was tested by inserting the eyfp marker and subsequently passaging the recombinant virus in cell culture (ren et al. ) . although replication of this recombinant virus was less efficient than the wild-type virus, the inserted eyfp was stable. engineered alphabaculoviruses (infecting arthropods) are widely used as vectors for the expression of heterologous genes in insect cells. nonetheless, during serial passaging defective interfering (di) baculoviruses that lack large portions of the genome are rapidly produced, in what appears to be an intrinsic property of baculovirus infection (pijlman et al. ) . as a result of having a smaller genome size, these dis most likely have a replicative advantage (higher fitness). especially in bioreactor configurations where the cellular multiplicity of infection (moi, the number of virus particles infecting a cell) is high, fasterreplicating dis can rapidly reach high frequencies (kool et al. ) . the rapid generation of dis involves several recombination steps and prevents the development of stable baculovirus expression vectors, as inserted sequences are then also rapidly lost (pijlman et al. ) . the loss of sequences inserted into baculovirus genomes is not only due to the formation of dis. when an origin of replication that is enriched in di genomes was removed, baculovirus genomic stability at high mois increased as no dis were observed. strikingly, inserted foreign sequences were still rapidly lost (pijlman, van schinjndel, and vlak ) , showing that rapid di generation is not the only impediment to the stability of inserted genes. addition of endogenous viral sequences-homologous repeat regions important for baculovirus replication-to inserted sequences promoted the stability of insertions (pijlman et al. ) , highlighting the importance of the genomic context for insert stability. another study in which the importance of the genomic context was stressed involved the generation of infectious clones and determination of the stability of suid herpesvirus , the causal agent of aujeszky's disease. sequences inserted in infectious clones were genetically stable in escherichia coli. however, for the reconstituted viruses, the insertion at the gg locus was highly unstable, whereas the same insert was stable when inserted between the us and us genes (smith and enquist , ) . stability was only determined in a short-term experiment, but these results nevertheless emphasize the importance of the genomic context for stability, even in viruses with relatively large and stable genomes. bacteriophages were instrumental in the development of molecular cloning methods. among dsdna phages, lambdaviruses of e.coli were widely used as cloning vectors, and methods were developed to increase the stability and maximum size of inserts (chauthaiwale, therwath, and deshpande ) . one interesting approach made use of the fact that there is a minimum genome size for efficient packaging into virus particles. when endogenous genes that are non-essential for the lytic cycle are removed, not only can larger sequences be inserted, but there is also selection for maintaining the inserted sequences because they increase genome size and enable packaging (thomas, cameron, and davis ) . moreover, it has been shown that phage t engineered with a biofilm-degrading enzyme (dispersin b) was superior to unmodified phage at clearing short-term biofilms (lu and collins ) . although providing a 'public' benefit in the form of an exoenzyme that can degrade host defenses, surprisingly this insertion does not have a cost and is therefore stable (schmerer et al. ) . interestingly, the insertion of an endosialidase at the same locus was both beneficial and costly, although in this case evolutionary stability was not determined (gladstone, molineux, and bull ) . in summary, engineered dsdna viruses containing foreign gene insertions are relatively unstable and stability is only reached when the genomic context and demographic conditions (e.g. census population sizes, bottleneck sizes, and population structure) are optimal. contrarily, in natural conditions dsdna viruses appear to be highly plastic where increases and decreases in genome size occur on a relatively short evolutionary time scale. in particular, host-switches may play important roles in increased plasticity and stability of dsdna viral genomes. even though unstable viral genomes may help increase viral fitness by avoiding the hosts' immune system in natural conditions, it may also prevent the development of stable viral expression vectors in bioreactor configurations. the ssdna viruses have much smaller genome sizes as compared to the dsdna viruses (group i), ranging from . to . kbp genomes of the circoviridae to the . kbp genome of the spiraviridae. judging only by the small range in genome size, one would expect that ssdna viruses are less plastic compared their dsdna counterparts, and thus less likely to accept foreign genes in their genomes. although few studies have addressed genomic stability of ssdna viruses after an insertion, an example in wild viruses of frequent sequence insertions, duplications, and deletions are the geminiviridae, with genomes of about . - kbp (monopartite) or . - . kbp (bipartite). during the course of geminivirus infection in plants, shorter subgenomic dnas often arise. these subgenomic dnas can range in size and some result in defective dnas (stenger et al. ; stanley et al. ; patil et al. ) , that replicate at the expense of the full-length genome. these subgenomic dnas can lead to reduced symptom severity in plants and thereby act as modulators of viral pathogenicity. it is speculated that the (sometimes stepwise) deletion process leading to subgenomic dnas can also be the process leading to the reversion to wild-type full-length dna molecules with either insertions or deletions that make these bigger or smaller than the wild-type genome (martin et al. ). when inserting sequences into the genome of maize streak virus (msv, geminiviridae), the infection efficiency decreased as the size of the insert increased (shen and hohn ) . although, some of the msv mutants obtained deletions and reverted to the wildtype length, the frequency of the deletion process did not increase linearly with the size of the insert, but rather depended on the nature of the sequence (shen and hohn ) . deletion mutants of the african cassava mosaic virus (acmv) have also shown to revert back to the original wild-type genome length through recombination between the two components of the bipartite genome (etessami, watts, and stanley ) . the selection pressure on the reversion to wild-type genome length is probably a strong size constraint on encapsidation, where in the case of acmv the size of encapsidated dna determines the multiplicity of geminivirus particles (frischmuth, ringel, and kocher ) . the nanoviridae family includes ssdna viruses with a multipartite genome that are composed of six to eight circular segments. segmented ssdna viruses present unique challenges when thinking about the stability of inserted sequences, because the frequency of genomic segments is highly plastic for some of these viruses. these viruses might therefore downregulate segments for expression of the inserted sequence, even if downregulation of co-localized homologous genes is costly. a lower frequency would also entail a lower mutational supply, limiting evolvability, the capacity of the virus to generate beneficial variation and subsequently adapt. segmented viruses might therefore display rapid adaptive responses to inserted sequences, whilst simultaneously limiting their potential for longer-term evolution. to the best of our knowledge, this potentially interesting tradeoff has not been shown. inserted sequences can be unstable in ssdna phages, which like their dsdna counterparts also can have an upper limit to genome size. inserts of up to bp were stable in x , despite markedly reducing fitness (russell and muller ) . genomes with larger insertions were still infectious, although the insert was then rapidly lost. later, it was shown that short palindromic sequences could be inserted in x , but that these inserts become more unstable as the number of repeats is increased and when the identity of the repeats is identical (williams and mü ller ) . in other work, it has been shown that phage display (wu et al. ) can be used to select clones coding for peptides with high affinity for a particular target, although selection for m phages with no insert-due to their presumed faster replication-can hamper 'phage panning' (tur et al. ) . based on the little evidence we obtained there appears to be strong selection for genome streamlining in ssdna viruses. after a sequence insertion, reversion to the wild-type genome size is observed in both natural and laboratory conditions. interestingly, the nature of the insert appears to be more important than the size of the insert, indicating that the genomic context also plays an important role in the stability of ssdna viruses. the dsrna viruses have a range of genome sizes ( . - . kb) that is similar to the ssdna viruses. most of the dsrna viruses contain segmented genomes, where during replication, positivesense ssrnas are packaged into procapsids and serve as templates for dsrna synthesis. thus, the progeny particles contain a complete set of equimolar genome segments. proper recognition and stoichiometrical packaging of the ssrnas is indispensable for multi-segmented genome assembly. although, different dsrna viruses employ different mechanisms for this assembly, these all rely on proper recognition of the ssrnas in either specific rna-protein or rna-rna interactions (borodavka, desselberger, and patton ) . we therefore expect that dsrna virus genomes are highly streamlined, since most gene insertions will probably disturb the recognition and packaging process of the ssrnas. interestingly, for rotaviruses it has been observed that genome segments containing sequence duplications are preferentially packaged into progeny viruses relative to wild-type segments (troupin et al. ) , indicating that an increase in genome/segment size may not be a hard constraint. we hypothesize that few if any gene insertions will lead to viable genomes due to the perturbation of segmented genome assembly into virus particles. if a gene insertion happens to be viable, it will probably be rapidly purged from the viral genome. one exception to this hypothesis could be a gene insertion originating from a closely related virus, for example a virus with similar packaging signals, leading to a fitness advantage, such as increased packaging efficiency. only a small number of studies that test the stability of inserts in dsrna viruses are available, and these concern the generation of recombinant rotavirus expressing foreign genes. group a rotavirus, consisting of eleven segments, has been engineered to express fluorescent proteins (kanai et al. (kanai et al. , komoto et al. ) such as enhanced green fluorescent protein (egfp) and mcherry. however, segment in which these genes were introduced is expressed at low levels and is subject to proteasomal degradation ( based on limited evidence, we tentatively conclude that stoichiometric packaging of segmented genomes may form an impediment to engineering and insert stability. however, recent work also suggests that careful engineering of dsrna viruses may lead to stable sequence insertions. the generality of these conclusions for the dsrna viruses, and their dependence on environmental and demographic conditions, remain to be seen. the ssrna(þ) viruses range in genome size from . to kbp. it has been shown that both animal and plant ssrna(þ) viruses can express inserted foreign genes. however, the nature of the ssrna(þ) genomes poses several limitations to efficient expression and maintenance of the insert. most ssrna(þ) genomes used for the expression of foreign genes code for a polyprotein, a single orf that is further processed after translation into different mature peptides. the processing occurs through autocatalytic cleaving at specific cleavage sites located between the different proteins to be expressed. insertions should therefore be carefully engineered, including proper cleavage sites corresponding to the site of insertion. even when respecting these design rules, inserts may impose restriction on viral replication due to the failure of proper protease cleavage due to conformational constraints. in addition, the genomes of rna viruses tend to be composed of overlapping genes (belshaw, pybus, and rambaut ) , which limits their adaptive capacity (simon-loriere, holmes, and pagá n ). overlap can form an impediment to engineering, and perhaps to the likelihood an inserted sequence is maintained, as insertions will often affect multiple genes. we focus exclusively on engineered viruses, given that there are many examples for this virus group. poliovirus is a good candidate as a live viral vector for the expression of foreign genes, since the attenuated sabin strains of poliovirus elicit strong protective immune responses without causing disease (sabin ) . insertions of up to bp of the rotavirus vp gene into sabin poliovirus gave rise to infectious viruses that expressed portions of the vp outer capsid protein (mattion et al. ). this is promising as antibodies generated to vp are able to neutralize the virus. nevertheless the size of the insert in this construction is limited as only inserts of about bp or smaller were stable upon serial passages in tissue culture, whereas larger insertions failed to produce infectious viruses (mattion et al. ). one of the major limitations appears to be the polyprotein nature of the genome. the recombinant viruses expressing the inserted gene were found to be slower in the assembly of infectious virus particles, and showed smaller plaques and lower virus titers. this is possibly due to slow cleavage at the artificial cleavage sites around the insert (mattion et al. ) . sindbis virus, another ssrna(þ) virus genome that encodes for a single orf, accepted relatively large inserts of . kbp in the . kbp genome (pugachev et al. ) . however, the recombinant sindbis viruses appeared unstable and especially inserts at the end were rapidly lost during serial passages, suggesting a positional effect. for members of the flaviviridae family, such as west nile virus and hepatitis c virus (hcv), inserted reporter genes appear to be unstable. this instability is related to the size of the insert, and comes about because of the disruption of structural rna elements required for viral replication (ruggli and rice ; pierson et al. ) . to cope with these issues, recombinant flaviviridae viruses carrying the split-luciferase gene were generated (tamura et al. ), including dengue virus, japanese encephalitis virus, hcv and bovine viral diarrhea virus. in vitro, these recombinant viruses appear to be evolutionary stable and propagation was comparable to the wild-type virus, most probably due to the small amino acid insert size. to demonstrate the utility of the split reporter system-to determine in vivo viral dynamics and the efficacy of antiviral reagents-the recombinant hcv was tested in chimeric mice. chronic infection was established and the luciferase gene was stably maintained in the viral genome (tamura et al. ) . live attenuated vaccines for porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrsv) have failed to provide effective protection due to the genetic diversity of circulating prrsv strains. to improve the efficacy of prrsv vaccination, a recombinant virus expressing porcine interleukin- (a regulator of the immune response) was constructed (zhijun . this recombinant virus remained stable upon serial passaging in vitro, and induced higher ratios of interleukin- and cd þcd þ doublepositive t cells in vivo. despite the presumably better immune response of the host, the recombinant prrsv vaccine did not significantly improve protection efficacy (zhijun . in another attempt, granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (gm-csf) was inserted in a prrsv vaccine strain. the inserted gene was stably expressed upon serial passaging in vitro, and the presence of gm-csf led to increased surface expression of mhciþ, mhciiþ, and cd / þ (yu et al. ) . although evaluated solely in vitro, this recombinant strain is expected to elicit stronger immune responses and hereby improve vaccine efficacy against prrsv infection. it has been shown that many different plant viruses can express foreign genes, and they have the advantage being able to express these directly in vivo. as an initial strategy to express foreign genes in plants, on many occasions viral genes were replaced with the gene of interest (gene replacement instead of gene insertion). this strategy appeared to be (partially) successful in plant ssdna viruses (hayes et al. ; ward, etessami, and stanley ; hayes, coutts, and buck ) , as the replaced coat protein did not appear to play an essential role in virus spread throughout the plant host (ward, etessami, and stanley ) . however, viral ssrna(þ) genomes seem to be less plastic as the replacement strategy was mostly unsuccessful in plant rna viruses. although the rna viral vectors permitted the expression of replaced genes, either they were only viable in protoplasts and not in whole plants (french, janda, and ahlquist ; joshi, joshi, and ow ) , or they were unable to establish systemic infections (takamatsu et al. ; dawson, bubrick, and grantham ) . shortly after, studies showed that gene insertion-rather than gene replacement-was better suited for expressing foreign genes in ssrna(þ) viral genomes (dawson et al. ; donson et al. ; chapman, kavanagh, and baulcombe ) . the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (cat) gene (dawson et al. ) , and the dihydrofolate reductase (dhfr) and the neomycin phosphotransferase (npt) genes (donson et al. ) were successfully expressed in plants by using tobacco mosaic virus (tmv) as a vector. in addition, the bacterial gus gene has shown to successfully express when inserted into the viral genome of potato virus x (pvx) (chapman, kavanagh, and baulcombe ) . however, in all these cases the presence of a foreign gene leads to genomic instability resulting in the partial deletion of the gus and npt genes and a complete deletion of cat during systemic infection. this instability may result from the presence of the insert leading to lower accumulation levels of the genomic rna, as well as leading to mrna instability and/or interfering with synthesis of the viral proteins. sequence redundancy due to a promoter duplication can also lead to genomic instability and thus the subsequent deletion of the inserted sequence (dawson et al. ; chapman, kavanagh, and baulcombe ) . indeed, for tmv and pvx it has been shown that replacing one of the promoter sequences with that from related viruses (donson et al. ) together with further removal of additional sequence duplications (dickmeis, fischer, and commandeur ) , leads to increased stability of the insert. interestingly, as for the dna viruses, the site and size of the insert seems to be important for ssrna(þ) viruses. first, the positioning of the cat gene downstream (instead of upstream) of the tmv coat protein, resulted in a poorly replicating virus that was not able to systematically infect the host plants (dawson et al. ) . and second, the dhfr gene ( bp) inserted in a tmv background appears to be maintained stably through several passages, while the .  larger npt gene ( bp) in the same experimental setup was unstable during systemic movement of the virus. this may also be related to the nature of the insert, where sequences with a codon usage similar to that of the viral vector may be retained longer than those that have an opposite codon usage. interestingly, chung, canto, and palukaitis ( ) generated recombinant plant viruses with inserted genes of unrelated plant viruses and observed instability and variation in the rate of partial or complete loss of the insert depending on the inserted sequence itself, the host used, or the viral vector used (chung, canto, and palukaitis ) . also sequences with a high toxicity for the host, are more likely to become deleted faster or to impede viral replication. in a previous study we reported on experimental evolution of pseudogenization in virus genomes using tobacco etch virus (tev) expressing egfp (zwart et al. ), a gene known to be toxic in many expression systems. in this case egfp can be considered a non-functional sequence, as it does not add any function to the viral genome. we showed that egfp has a high fitness cost in tev, and the loss of egfp depended on the passage length, where longer passages led to a faster and assured loss. similarly, prolonged propagation of tev and plum pox potyvirus expressing gus (dolja, mcbride, and carrington ; dolja et al. ; guo, ló pez-moya, and garcía ) , and tmv expressing gfp (rabindran and dawson ) , led to the appearance of spontaneous deletion variants. due to the increase in genome size, viruses that carry an insert are unlikely to be as fit as the parental (ancestral) virus, even if they accumulate initially to similar levels. the tev-egfp genomes that had lost the insert had a within-host competitive fitness advantage, where the smaller the genome the higher the within-host competitive fitness. interestingly, although the size of the deletions varied, convergent evolution did occur in terms of fixed point mutations (zwart et al. ) . this result also suggests that a demographic 'sweet spot' exists, where heterologous insertions are not immediately lost while evolution can act to integrate them into the viral genome. in summary, in several studies passage duration has an effect on insert stability, with inserts being more stable in shorter passages. we explore these effects in the conceptual section presented at the end of this paper (see also box ). here we illustrate how demography can affect the observed stability of an inserted sequence, using a simulation model. this model is based on (willemsen et al. ) and incorporates logistic virus growth, deterministic recombination with a fixed rate, and population bottlenecks after a given number of generations. to describe virus growth and recombination in each generation, two coupled ordinary differential equations are used: here, i is the number of viruses with the insertion intact, d is the number of viruses with a deletion, x is initial growth rate of each virus variant, j is the carrying capacity, q is the rate at which i recombines to d, and w is a constant for determining the effect of each virus on the others replication, with the effect of d on i being w d ¼ x d =x i and vice versa w i ¼ =w d . the frequency of the deletion variant is at the start of each passage, to simulate the bottleneck we draw the number i from a binomial distribution with a size a and success probability f d from the previous time point, and then d ¼ a À i. to illustrate the effects of bottlenecks we chose the parameters in table , set the initial f d to zero, and considered various values of a. the difference in fitness between the virus with insertion and without is large (x i =x d ¼ : ). the simulation data illustrate how under these conditions narrow bottlenecks can lead to stable inserted sequence (fig. ) . during each round of passaging the frequency of the deletion variant comes up, but as it does not reach a frequency near /a this variant is not sampled during the bottleneck. only when the bottleneck is wider is the probability of sampling the virus variant with a deletion large enough for this to occur regularly. once a deletion variant has been sampled during the bottleneck, it rapidly goes to fixation as it has a much higher fitness than the full-length virus. figure provides a simple illustration of the same principle. when considering host species jumps using the same tev-egfp vector, we show that host switches can radically change evolutionary dynamics (willemsen, zwart, and elena ). after over half a year of evolution in two semi-permissive host species, with a large difference in virus-induced virulence, the egfp insert appears to remain stable. a fitness costs of egfp was only found in the host for which tev has low virulence. in the hosts for which tev has high virulence there was no fitness cost and viral adaptation was observed. this contradicts theories that suggest that high virulence could hinder between-host transmission. when considering the evolution of genome architecture, host species jumps might play a very important role, by allowing evolutionary intermediates to be competitive. the stability of an insert could change when considering insertions that might be beneficial for the virus. using the tev genome we simulated two hgt events, by separately introducing functional exogenous sequences that are potentially beneficial for the virus (willemsen et al. ). in one case, the insertion was rapidly purged from the viral genome, restoring fitness to wild-type fitness levels. in another case, the inserted gene-the b rna silencing suppressor from cucumber mosaic virus-did not seem to have a major impact on viral fitness and was therefore not lost when performing experimental evolution. interestingly this insertion duplicated the function of rna silencing suppression function of another gene in the genome. when mutating this functional domain of the tev gene, the inserted gene provided a replicative advantage. these observations suggest a potentially interesting role for hgt of short functional sequences in improving evolutionary constraints on viruses. besides hgt, another mechanism for evolutionary innovation is gene duplication. the effects in the stability on a genetically redundant insert might be variable. on one hand, one would expect the duplicated copy to be rapidly deleted from the genome as it does not confer an additional function. on the other hand, if a duplicated sequence is stable it may act as a stepping stone to the evolution of new biological functions. we have investigated the stability of genetically redundant sequences by generating (tev) viruses with potentially beneficial gene duplications (willemsen et al. ). all gene duplications resulted in a loss of viability or in a significant reduction in viral fitness. experimental evolution always led to deletion of the duplicated gene copy and maintenance of the ancestral copy. however, the stability of the different duplicated genes was highly divergent, suggesting that passage duration is not the main factor for determining whether the insert will be stable or unstable. the deletion dynamics of the duplicated genes were associated with the passage duration and the size of the duplicated copy. by developing a mathematical model we showed that the fitness effects alone are not enough to predict genomic stability. a context-dependent recombination rate is also required, with the context being the identity of the insert and its position. in summary, these experimental observations demonstrate the deleterious nature of gene insertions in ssrna(þ) viruses, where the highly streamlined genomes limit sequence space for the evolution of novel functions, and in turn adaptation to environmental changes. the ssrna(À) viruses are composed of genomes that range from to . kbp in size. these viruses are particularly attractive candidates as viral vectors. while in ssrna(þ) viruses inserts are subject to deletion, inserts in their ssrna(À) counterparts appear more stable (mebatsion et al. ; schnell et al. ) . one reason for this stability is that in general the genes in the ssrna(À) viral genomes are non-overlapping and are expressed as separate mrnas, thus consisting of a modular organization that can be easily manipulated for the insertion of foreign genes. if correctly engineered (e.g. without affecting any regulatory regions), one could expect that gene insertions are more stable in ssrna(À) viruses as compared to ssrna(þ) viruses, since the complexities surrounding correct processing of a polyprotein are not an issue here. moreover, if expressed as a separate mrna, the size of the insert is probably restricted only by the packaging limits of ssrna(À) viruses. the low rate of homologous recombination in ssrna(À) viruses can be another explanation for higher genomic stability (chare, gould, and holmes ; han and worobey ) . non-homologous recombination will probably rarely lead to variants with the insert deleted and other regions undisturbed, given it is less constrained than homologous recombination, and hence low homologous recombination rates could be a limiting factor on sequence evolution. however, genomic deletions that disrupt the inserted sequence will be subject to less constraints, as for example they can disrupt the reading frame of the insert without affecting the expression of virus genes. canine distemper virus (cdv), a species in the morbillivirus genus, is an important pathogen of a variety of animals, including the dog. this virus, however, has shown to be a promising expression vector for the development of vaccines. although the replicative fitness of a recombinant cdv carrying the rabies virus glycoprotein was slightly lower than the wild-type cdv, the insert was stably expressed during serial passaging in vitro and inoculation in vivo induced specific neutralizing antibodies against both rabies and cdv . similarly, genes expressing foreign antigens can be cloned into recombinant measles virus where measles virus proteins and inserted genes are coexpressed. this relatively small vector can accept large gene insertions, that in most cases are stably expressed (billeter, naim, and udem ; malczyk et al. ) . for example, for the development of a vaccine against middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), it has been shown that a recombinant measles virus expressing the spike glycoprotein of mers-cov is genetically stable in vitro and induces strong humoral and cellular immunity in vivo (malczyk et al. ) . vesicular stomatitis virus (vsv) is a commonly used vaccine vector that has been engineered to express surface proteins from diverse viruses, including ebola (garbutt et al. ), human immunodeficiency virus type (hiv- ) (johnson et al. ) , and influenza a (roberts et al. ) , which can stimulate protective immune responses against these pathogens (bukreyev et al. ). in addition, vsv has shown promise as a candidate for oncolytic virus therapy, as it replicates most efficiently in cells with diminished innate immunity such as cancer cells, which often have impaired production of and/or response to interferon (barber ) . mutations that attenuate vsv growth in healthy immune-competent cells can further enhance the safety of this anti-cancer therapy potential (barber ) . what is particularly interesting about the genome organization of vsv and other ssrna(À) viruses is that promoter proximal genes are more efficiently expressed than promoter distal ones (iverson and rose ; wertz, perepelitsa, and ball ; pesko et al. ) . the efficiency of expression of the inserted gene (and therewith the strength of the immune response) can be controlled (tokusumi et al. ; roberts et al. ). however, inserting a foreign gene close to the promoter also can also reduce the expression of downstream vector genes (skiadopoulos et al. ) , which in turn can negatively affect virus transcription and rna replication (wertz, moudy, and ball ; zhao and peeters ) . these empirical observations again show that the site of the insert plays an important role in recombinant vector stability. when considering the size of the insert and its stability, ssrna(À) viruses accept relatively large insert without drastically affecting virus replication. sendai virus, with a genome size of about . kbp, can carry and efficiently express gene insertions up to . kbp (sakai et al. ) . however, also here the insert size is limited, where the final virus titers in vitro are proportionally reduced as the insert size increases. while in vivo no such size-dependent effect was observed, an attenuated replication and pathogenicity were detected (sakai et al. ) . insertions up to . kbp in the $ . kbp genome of the human parainfluenza virus were viable and replicated efficiently in vitro (skiadopoulos et al. ) . nonetheless, the insertions longer than , bp reduced the robustness to environmental perturbation of the virus, as temperature sensitivity was augmented and replication was restricted to certain sites in vivo (skiadopoulos et al. ) . the ssrna(À) viruses seem promising expression vectors, where one can control gene expression and introduce relatively large inserts that, in many instances, appear to be stable. the constraints imposed on viral gene insertions seem to be the lowest in this group of viruses. yet, the ideal vector that accepts all types and sizes of foreign gene insertions without decreasing viral replication, has not been identified yet. retro-transcribing ssrna(þ) viruses, or retroviruses, are small viruses varying in genome size from to kbp and are classified in the retroviridae family. after entering a host cell, the retroviral rna genome is converted into dsdna by reverse transcription. the viral dna integrates into the host genome, where viral genes are translated. therefore, these viruses are often used for gene therapy. retroviruses frequently undergo genomic rearrangements, including gene insertions and deletions (indels). moreover, recombination can be common due to the combination of 'diploid' virus particles and high intrinsic recombination rates (jetzt et al. ) . therefore as a general observation this viral group appears to have a highly plastic genome, and should be relatively open to foreign gene insertions. as retroviruses integrate into the host genome, the stability of inserts does not necessarily depend solely on the retrovirus genome configuration and demographic conditions. as host genomes are in general less streamlined than those of viruses, one could expect that gene insertions are stable after integration into the host genome. however, the random integration of retroviruses in the host genome makes it hard to predict genomic stability. as a wild example, hiv- frequently undergoes genomic rearrangements, where indels are significant source of evolutionary change. these indels appear to have an impact on virus transmission and adaptation as for example indels in the hiv- pol gene are associated with drug resistance (rakik et al. ) , and indels in the gag and vif genes are associated with disease progression and infectivity (alexander et al. ; aralaguppe et al. ). the hiv- surface envelope glycoprotein contains five variable regions (v -v ) that can tolerate a higher rate of indels than the rest of the genome. interestingly, indel rate estimates vary significantly among variable regions and subtypes (from different hosts) (palmer and poon ). when introducing gfp into the five variable regions of hiv- , certain regions (v and v ) were more tolerant to foreign gene insertions than the other variable regions (v , v , and v ) (nakane, iwamoto, and matsuda ) . in particular, gfp insertions into the v region showed lower levels of expression (nakane, iwamoto, and matsuda ) , which is consistent with v having the lowest indel rate (palmer and poon ) , thus having a lower stability after gene insertions. this piece of empirical evidence again shows that the site of insertion plays an important role in determining expression levels and stability. retroviruses have a valuable potential as vectors for introducing therapeutic genes into cancer cells. murine retroviruses are the most commonly used vectors in clinical trials today, and seem promising candidates for human gene therapy as they target dividing cells with a high degree of efficiency and lead to stable gene transfer as they integrate into the chromosomes of the target cell (edelstein et al. ). however, we still have to deal with important safety issues when using retroviruses for gene therapy. the random integration of retroviruses in the host genome poses a risk, as the integration near the lmo proto-oncogene promoter can trigger the development of leukemia (hacein-bey-abina et al. ) . besides the risks related to retroviral gene therapy, the limited efficiency of in vivo gene transfer poses another obstacle. replication defective retrovirus vectors are often used in clinical trials but limited since they can only infect a fraction of solid tumor cells (rainov and ren ) . for the delivery of the transgene in all tumor cells, replication-competent retroviral vectors are a promising alternative. the suitability of murine leukemia virus (mlv)-based vectors for cancer gene therapy has been analyzed in vitro and in vivo by paar et al. ( ) . they found that the choice of the virus strain, the position of the insert, and the host cells used, can influence the replication kinetics, genomic stability, and transgene expression levels (paar et al. ) . concordantly, the egfp sequence was inserted into mlv under different configurations (i.e. site of insertion and flanking sequence), and the reporter gene was deleted upon extended cell culture (duch et al. ). the stability was improved by decreasing the length of sequence repeats flanking the inserted sequence, however, eventually egfp was always (partially or completely) deleted (duch et al. ) . in another study, transgenes of different sizes (gfp, hph, pac) were inserted into mlv. deletions were always observed, where the deletion dynamics depended on the size of the insert and preferred sites of recombination were detected (logg et al. ) . using retroviral vectors for the expression and transfer of foreign genes is central to the development of gene therapy. an advantage of using retro-transcribing ssrna(þ) viruses is that after reverse transcription a dsdna molecule stably integrates into the host genome. with careful design, testing, and engineering, the retroviruses are promising vectors for the treatment of diseases, such as cancer. the retro-transcribing dsdna (rt-dsdna) viruses have small genome sizes varying from to . kb, and include the viral families caulimoviridae and hepadnaviridae. as the name suggests, the rt-dsdna viruses replicate through an rna intermediate, and in some cases the pre-genomic rna is alternatively spliced. although genomic rearrangements appear to be frequent in rt-dsdna viruses, we hypothesize that gene insertions will often be unstable, because , they tend to have compact genomes, and , insertions can easily disturb a viral regulatory sequence or lead to incorrect processing of the alternative spliced products. a. willemsen and m. p. zwart | . . wild viruses in contrast to the retroviruses (group vi), the genome replication of the caulimoviridae is entirely episomal. however, fragmented and rearranged endogenous caulimovirus sequences have been found in a wide variety of plant species (teycheney and geering ) . for the hepadnaviridae, the viral genome can be integrated into the host genome, through a process that exploits ds breaks in the host genome. although this is an infrequent event, the integrated viral dna often contains deletion, inversions and duplications, often inactivating the virus. in the case of hepatitis b virus (hbv), integration into the human genome can cause genetic damage and chromosomal instability leading to hbv-induced liver cancer (shafritz et al. ; furuta et al. ). several studies in the s already reported the possibility of inserting foreign dna into specific sites of the cauliflower mosaic virus (camv) genome without greatly affecting viral infectivity or function (gronenborn et al. ; howell, walker, and walden ; dixon, koenig, and hohn ; brisson et al. ; lefebvre, miki, and laliberté ) . in two of these studies, functional bacterial genes were introduced into the camv genome, where a fragment of the lac operator (gronenborn et al. ) and the dhfr gene (brisson et al. ) were successfully expressed. in these studies, issues regarding the stability of the insert were raised, where the lac operator was lost after five successive transfers and extended growth of the plants, and deletions in the dhfr gene started appearing after the second and third transfers. on the contrary, an inserted mammalian metallothionein gene appeared to be stable and functional in the camv genome (lefebvre, miki, and laliberté ) . these studies suggest that the differences in stability of inserts in the camv genome depend on at least two factors. first, the site of the insert seems to be important as many inserts are lethal for the virus (gronenborn et al. ; howell, walker, and walden ; dixon, koenig, and hohn ) . second, the size of the insert is important, as camv can accept only small foreign genes due to viral encapsidation limits (gronenborn et al. ; lefebvre, miki, and laliberté ) . as described along this review, vectors containing the gfp as an insert are often designed to study the infection dynamics of viruses. however, the size of gfp is relatively large (around nt) and often leads to instability of vectors (zwart et al. ; nakane, iwamoto, and matsuda ) . to cope with the size limitation a split gfp system has been engineered (cabantous, terwilliger, and waldo ) , where only a small part of gfp is introduced in the viral vector and the other part is expressed using a transgenic host. when the two gfp fragments are together, spontaneous association leads the formation of a fluorescent molecule. in the camv genome this system allowed to track a camv protein in vivo (dá der et al. ). the partial gfp insertion was stable for ten or four serial passages, depending on the host plant species used, suggesting that the demographic conditions such as the host play an important role in stability. although the number of studies on insert stability in rt-dsdna viruses is limited, we reason that several constraints limit insert stability in these viruses. although small inserts will allow to track viral infection dynamics, the use of rt-dsdna viruses for gene therapy does not seem practicable as integration into the host genome is a rare event for these viruses. sequence loss is inherently an evolutionary process, at a minimum involving mutation and selection, and therefore needs to be framed in an evolutionary context. here, we consider how theory might help to better understand and ultimately predict this process. first, inspired by empirical results we consider the effects of virus population and bottleneck sizes on sequence loss. second, we consider whether there are different evolutionary trajectories that lead to a restoration of fitness following insertion of a sequence, and their implications for sequence stability. we understand demography to be a description of the size and structure of virus populations over time. in this discussion we will consider virus populations that are divided into demes at the host or cell level. theory suggests that demography could have major implications for the loss of inserted sequences, with small population sizes, narrow bottlenecks, and short time intervals between bottlenecks resulting in high sequence stability. hence, the stability of the inserted sequence cannot be viewed solely as a property of a genome, rather it is a phenotype and therefore depends on the environment. in this section, we motivate this argument and present a simulation model that highlights the effects of demography on the deletion of inserted sequences. at its core, the stability of genomic insertions in viral genomes depends on two key factors. first, the supply of mutations removing the insertion is crucial, because selection can only act on existing heritable variation. second, selection then acts to fix variants with the inserted sequence removed. all other things equal, the larger the supply of mutations that remove the insertion and the larger the selection coefficients of variants with the insert removed, the less stable the insertion will be. the interplay between mutation and selection will govern the stability of genomic inserts, and in many cases demography has an important role in shaping this interplay. for example, low fitness can lead to small population sizes, which in turn will limit the mutation supply (chao ; lynch and gabriel ) . a high-cost inserted sequence might therefore limit viral evolvability, thereby promoting its own stability. genetic drift can also play an important role in determining the stability of inserted sequences, as inserts can have high stability if a viral population regularly passes through population bottlenecks. this idea is inspired by the empirical observation that a group iv plant virus appears to be stable when shortduration passages are used, but not in long-duration passages zwart et al. ; willemsen et al. willemsen et al. , . viruses pass through bottlenecks at many points during infection, in vitro and in vivo (zwart and elena ) , it is therefore important to consider these effects. even if there is a large supply of deletions and strong selection for the deletion mutant, if deletion mutants fail to reach a frequency !/a, where a is the bottleneck size, they are unlikely to pass through the bottleneck (willemsen et al. (willemsen et al. , . this leads to a 'resetting' of the virus population by each bottleneck event (fig. ) , effectively resulting in high stability of the inserted sequences (box , see also fig. ). short passages shorten the time for deletion mutants to reach the frequency /a, making it more difficult for these variants to pass through bottlenecks and hereby promoting insert stability. it is important to remember that assays for detecting deletion mutants, such as deep sequencing or the polymerase chain reaction, do have limited sensitivity. deletions may therefore also be detected more readily in longer passages, whilst low frequency mutations that will be purged by bottlenecks may not be detected (bull, nuismer, and antia ) . demography can also modulate the strength of selection itself. the moi (cellular multiplicity of infection) is a key demographic parameter at the cellular level, as it describes the number of virus particles infecting a cell. if an inserted sequence affects viral fitness in trans at the within cell level-for example by being toxic-then the moi will determine whether there can be selection (miyashita and kishino ) . at high mois there will be no selection, because the toxin is produced in all cells and affects the replication of both producers and nonproducers of the toxin (fig. ). an interesting conundrum is that high mois also tend to promote the evolution of di viruses (huang ) due to within-cell selection, and hence these two effects must be weighed accordingly. in this review, we considered only a few cases in which inserted sequences potentially could have beneficial effects on a virus (thomas, cameron, and davis ; gladstone, molineux, and bull ; schmerer et al. ; willemsen et al. ) . beneficial effects could promote insertion stability and are therefore interesting from a bioengineering perspective, but demography can once again play a role in determining sequence stability. heterologous expression of endosialidase, an exoenzyme that degrades a key biofilm component after phageinduced cell lysis, lead to increased amplification of phage t in capsulated e.coli (gladstone, molineux, and bull ) . however, a phage that did not express the dispersin outcompeted the engineered virus, as it could reap the benefits of dispersin production whilst not bearing costs. this tragedy of the commons is a reversal of the situation sketched above for high mois (fig. ) . one proposed strategy to increase stability would be setting up culture conditions such that phages are growing in isolation or spatially structured environments (gladstone, molineux, and bull ) , other examples of demography-based approaches to increasing insert stability. it will certainly not always be possible to address issues of insert stability through demographic changes, but theory suggests this can be an interesting approach. some experimental protocols already exploit some of these principles, in particular strict adherence to low moi (fitzgerald et al. ) . one should caution against naive applications of evolutionary theory, as the details of each real-world system matter (schmerer et al. ). there are multiple, non-mutually exclusive mechanisms by which an inserted sequence can be costly for a virus. consequently, deletion of the inserted sequence may not be the only class of mutation that ameliorates the insert's effects on fitness, a possibility we explore in this section. we argue that alternative trajectories may sometimes play a role, but that due to mutation supply of different types of mutations, deletion of the inserted sequence is the most likely trajectory. a cost of the insert can arise because of the attributes of the inserted sequence (i.e. metabolic costs of expressing extra genes, toxicity of gene products), reorganization of the genome due to the insertion (i.e. disruption of the regulation of gene expression, polyprotein processing, and subgenomic rnas), or limitations on genome size imposed by virus-particle packaging. deletion of the inserted sequence is therefore not the only plausible class of mutation that can restore viral fitness, as other mutations can also affect fitness. these mutation types are , regulatory mutations (i.e. promoter mutations) that downregulate gene expression (van opijnen, boerlijst, and berkhout ) , , removal of immunogenic sequence motifs (fros et al. ) , , alteration of unfavorable secondary rna structures (mcfadden et al. ) , and , adopting a more favorable codon usage (carrasco, de la iglesia, and elena ; agashe et al. ; cladel et al. ) , as synonymous mutations can have marked effects on virus fitness. these different mutation classes are likely to have different mutation rates, and mutation bias might therefore drive the evolutionary route that is followed (stoltzfus and mccandlish ) . for example, consider that recombination rates are high for many viruses (tromas and elena ) , and there are many figure . in panel a, we illustrate how the cellular moi can have a direct effect on selection strength. consider a virus that expresses a product that is toxic and acts in trans within cells to lower replication levels, but deletions can remove the gene coding this gene. if there is a mixed virus population with variants with the insertion intact and deleted, at high moi all cells will be infected with both variants and the toxin will lower replication. the ubiquitousness of the toxin will limit selection against the virus variant with the deletion. when moi is low, due to genetic drift at the cellular not all cells will contain both variants, and virus variant with the deletion is selected because those cells infected only with this variant have higher replication. in panel b, the relationship between the cellular moi (ordinate) and the frequency of single-genotype infection (abscissa) for a virus population with genotypes a and b is given, for different frequencies of the two virus genotypes in the population (f a shown, f b ¼ -f a ). note that the frequency of single-genotype infections is given as the proportion of infected cells in which only virus genotypes a or b are present. as the moi increases, the frequency of single-genotype infections decreases, although it depends on the frequency of the two virus genotypes in the population. if genotype a expresses a gene that has fitness costs that act in trans (e.g. toxicity), then selection can only act against this genotype when there is an appreciable number of singlegenotype infections. possible recombination events that partially remove an insertion. in contrast, probably only a small fraction of point mutations will be beneficial (sanjuá n, moya, and elena ; carrasco, de la iglesia, and elena ) , e.g. in this case by lowering expression of the inserted gene or leading to more favorable codon usage. we therefore conjecture that mutation supply is likely to favor the evolution of deletions in the transgene over beneficial point mutations that affect fitness cost. consider the 'genomic accordion' observed in poxviruses (elde et al. ) : beneficial point mutations typically occur long after gene amplification by copy number variation. likewise we expect deletions that remove an insertion to be fixed before point mutations that also lessen its impact occur. nevertheless, the occurrence of alternative evolutionary trajectories could, depending on the exact mutation supply and effect sizes for different classes of mutations, contribute to making stability of genomic inserts less repeatable and predictable in some cases (de visser and krug ; bolnick et al. ). whereas some sequences inserted into viral genomes are stable, others are clearly not. although there are some factors that appear to explain these differences, at the end of the day there is still a great deal about the relatively simple question of stability that we do not understand. in contrast, these different outcomes are encouraging, because they suggest that if we understand the process well enough, we can design more stable insertions. for most viruses, strong selective constraints appear to exist against increasing genome size. in natural conditions, this is an impediment for evolutionary innovation by gene duplication or hgt. in laboratory conditions, this is an impediment for expressing a gene of interest by using engineered viral vectors. when stratifying by viral groups, we observe that the stability of viral genomes partially depends on the nature of the genome. viral genomes with separately expressed nonoverlapping orfs (group v: ssrnaÀ) appear to have less constraints imposed on sequence insertions as compared to genomes with genes encoded in one single orf (group iv: ssrnaþ). although the dsdna (group i) virus genomes are extremely plastic in natural conditions, this observation is not a good predictor for stability of engineered viral genomes as inserts are generally lost. in the case of ssdna (group ii) viruses, the varying frequency of genomic segments might lead to rapid adaptive responses to inserted sequences. while in the case of segmented dsrna (group iii) viruses, sequence insertions probably perturb segmented genome assembly. when comparing the retro-transcribing viruses, the rt-ssrna(þ) (group vi) viruses appear to successfully express sequences of interest after stable integration into the host genome, whilst the rt-dsdna (group vii) viruses are less stable and only rarely integrate into the host genome. multipartite viruses, represented in various groups, also present unique challenges when thinking about the stability of inserted sequences. when comparing all viral genome architectures, we conclude that that genomic stability is not a fixed, intrinsic property. although we show that insert stability depends on the nature of the genome, the site and size of the insert and the recombination rate, the host species and demographic conditions (i.e. population and bottleneck size) can radically change viral evolutionary dynamics. we have illustrated this idea with a simple simulation model that considers the effect of genetic bottlenecks (box ), where the observed stability of the viral genome decreases as the bottleneck is widened. the interplay between all factors affecting insert stability appears to be complex and unexpectedly sensitive to the exact conditions under which a virus population evolves. given these complexities, we think it may be challenging to develop predictive models of insert stability, for different types of virus genomes under different conditions. we hope to see developments in this area, possibly linked to resurging interest in preventing and exploiting di viruses. however, we think that experimental tests of the stability of viral constructs will remain important in the foreseeable future. experimental evolution can detect design problems in engineered genomes by looking at fitness and evolutionary stability (springman et al.) . as springman and collaborators suggest, experimental evolution may also prove useful for optimizing the stability of expression vectors by ameliorating constraints for which solutions are hard to predict because we lack a mechanistic understanding, such as codon usage (carrasco, de la iglesia, and elena ; agashe et al. ) . this approach can lead to improved engineering of viral genomes, which is also of interest for designing vectors with tags to follow viral infection, and for the use of viral vectors for gene therapy as well as for vaccine vectors. finally, for real-world applications it can be useful to determine quantitatively the impact of the loss of inserted sequences on the desired output. for example, models suggest that deletions in vector vaccines may not have a large impact on eliciting the desired immune response (bull, nuismer, and antia ) . we have noticed that a surprisingly large number of studies draw conclusions on the stability of inserted sequences in viral genomes based on experiments with either no or 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delgado-chaves, fernando m.; gómez-vela, francisco; divina, federico; garcía-torres, miguel; rodriguez-baena, domingo s. title: computational analysis of the global effects of ly e in the immune response to coronavirus infection using gene networks date: - - journal: genes (basel) doi: . /genes sha: doc_id: cord_uid: zrtixzgu gene networks have arisen as a promising tool in the comprehensive modeling and analysis of complex diseases. particularly in viral infections, the understanding of the host-pathogen mechanisms, and the immune response to these, is considered a major goal for the rational design of appropriate therapies. for this reason, the use of gene networks may well encourage therapy-associated research in the context of the coronavirus pandemic, orchestrating experimental scrutiny and reducing costs. in this work, gene co-expression networks were reconstructed from rna-seq expression data with the aim of analyzing the time-resolved effects of gene ly e in the immune response against the coronavirus responsible for murine hepatitis (mhv). through the integration of differential expression analyses and reconstructed networks exploration, significant differences in the immune response to virus were observed in ly e [formula: see text] compared to wild type animals. results show that ly e ablation at hematopoietic stem cells (hscs) leads to a progressive impaired immune response in both liver and spleen. specifically, depletion of the normal leukocyte mediated immunity and chemokine signaling is observed in the liver of ly e [formula: see text] mice. on the other hand, the immune response in the spleen, which seemed to be mediated by an intense chromatin activity in the normal situation, is replaced by ecm remodeling in ly e [formula: see text] mice. these findings, which require further experimental characterization, could be extrapolated to other coronaviruses and motivate the efforts towards novel antiviral approaches. the recent sars-cov- pandemic has exerted an unprecedented pressure on the scientific community in the quest for novel antiviral approaches. a major concern regarding sars-cov- is the capability of the coronaviridae family to cross the species barrier and infect humans [ ] . this, along with the tendency of coronaviruses to mutate and recombine, represents a significant threat to global health, which ultimately has put interdisciplinary research on the warpath towards the development of a vaccine or antiviral treatments. given the similarities found amongst the members of the coronaviridae family [ , ] , analyzing the global immune response to coronaviruses may shed some light on the natural control of viral infection, and inspire prospective treatments. this may well be achieved from the perspective of systems biology, in which the interactions between the biological entities involved in a certain process are represented by means of a mathematical system [ ] . within this framework, gene networks (gn) have become an important tool in the modeling and analysis of biological processes from gene expression data [ ] . gns constitute an abstraction of a given biological reality by means of a graph composed by nodes and edges. in such a graph, nodes represent the biological elements involved (i.e., genes, proteins or rnas) and edges represent the relationships between the nodes. in addition, gns are also useful to identify genes of interest in biological processes, as well as to discover relationships among these. thus, they provide a comprehensive picture of the studied processes [ , ] . among the different types of gns, gene co-expression networks (gcns) are widely used in the literature due to their computational simplicity and good performance in order to study biological processes or diseases [ ] [ ] [ ] . gcns usually compute pairwise co-expression indices for all genes. then, the level of interaction between two genes is considered significant if its score is higher than a certain threshold, which is set ad hoc. traditionally, statistical-based co-expression indices have been used to calculate the dependencies between genes [ , ] . some of the most popular correlation coefficients are pearson, kendall or spearman [ ] [ ] [ ] . despite their popularity, statistical-based measures present some limitations [ ] . for instance, they are not capable of identifying non-linear interactions and the dependence on the data distribution in the case of parametric correlation coefficients. in order to overcome some of these limitations, new approaches, e.g., the use of information theory-based measures or ensemble approaches, are receiving much attention [ ] [ ] [ ] . gene co-expression networks (gcns) have already been applied to the study of dramatic impact diseases, such as cancer [ ] , diabetes [ ] or viral infections (e.g., hiv) in order to study the role of immune response to these illnesses [ , ] . genetic approaches are expected to be the best strategy to understand viral infection and the immune response to it, potentially identifying the mechanisms of infection and assisting the design of strategies to combat infection [ , ] . the current gene expression profiling platforms, in combination with high-throughput sequencing, can provide time-resolved transcriptomic data, which can be related to the infection process. the main objective of this approach is to generate knowledge on the immune functioning upon viral entry into the organism, which means mean a perturbation to the system. in the context of viral infection, a first defense line is the innate response mediated by interferons, a type of cytokines which eventually leads to the activation of several genes of antiviral function [ ] . globally, these genes are termed interferon-stimulated genes (isgs), and regulate processes like inflammation, chemotaxis or macrophage activation among others. furthermore, isgs are also involved in the subsequent acquired immune response, specific for the viral pathogen detected [ ] . gene ly e (lymphocyte antigen family member e), which has been related to t cell maturation and tumorogenesis, is amongst the isgs [ ] . this gene is transcriptionally active in a variety of tissues, including liver, spleen, lung, brain, uterus and ovary. its role in viral infection has been elusive due to contradictory findings [ ] . for example, in liu et al. [ ] , ly e was associated with the resistance to marek's disease virus (mdv) in chickens. moreover, differences in the immune response to mouse adenovirus type (mav- ) have been attributed to ly e variants [ ] . conversely, ly e has also been related to an enhancement of human immunodeficiency viruses (hiv- ) pathogenesis, by promoting hiv- entry through virus-cell fusion processes [ ] . also in the work by mar et al. [ ] , the loss of function of ly e due to gene knockout reduced the infectivity of influenza a virus (iav) and yellow fever virus (yfv). this enhancing effect of ly e on viral infection has also been observed in other enveloped rna viruses such as in west nile virus (wnv), dengue virus (den), zika virus (zikv), o'nyong nyong virus (onnv) and chikungunya virus (chikv) among others [ ] . nevertheless, the exact mechanisms through which ly e modulates viral infection virus-wise, and sometimes even cell type-dependently, require further characterization. in this work we present a time-resolved study of the immune response of mice to a coronavirus, the murine hepatitis virus (mhv), in order to analyze the implications of gene ly e. to do so, we have applied a gcn reconstruction method called engnet [ ] , which is able to perform an ensemble strategy to combine three different co-expression measures, and a topology optimization of the final network. engnet has outscored other methods in terms of network precision and reduced network size, and has been proven useful in the modeling of disease, as in the case of human post-traumatic stress disorder. the rest of the paper is organized as follows. in the next section, we propose a description of related works. in section , we first describe the dataset used in this paper, and then we introduce the engnet algorithm and the different methods used to infer and analyze the generated networks. the results obtained are detailed in section , while, in section , we propose a discussion of the results presented in the previous section. finally, in section , we draw the main conclusions of our work. as already mentioned, gene co-expression networks have been extensively applied in the literature for the understanding of the mechanisms underlying complex diseases like cancer, diabetes or alzheimer [ ] [ ] [ ] . globally, gcn serve as an in silico genetic model of these pathologies, highlighting the main genes involved in these at the same time [ ] . besides, the identification of modules in the inferred gcns, may lead to the discovery of novel biomarkers for the disease under study, following the 'guilt by association' principle. along these lines, gcns are also considered suitable for the study of infectious diseases, as those caused by viruses to the matter at hand [ ] . to do so, multiple studies have analyzed the effects of viral infection over the organism, focusing on immune response or tissue damage [ , ] . for instance, the analysis of gene expression using co-expression networks is shown in the work by pedragosa et al. [ ] , where the infection caused by lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (lcmv) is studied over time in mice spleen using gcns. in ray et al. [ ] , gcns are reconstructed from different microarray expression data in order to study hiv- progression, revealing important changes across the different infection stages. similarly, in the work presented by mcdermott et al. [ ] , the over-and under-stimulation of the innate immune response to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) infection is studied. using several network-based approaches on multiple knockout mouse strains, authors found that ranking genes based on their network topology made accurate predictions of the pathogenic state, thus solving a classification problem. in [ ] , co-expression networks were generated by microarray analysis of pediatric influenza-infected samples. thanks to this study, genes involved in the innate immune system and defense to virus were revealed. finally, in the work by pan et al. [ ] , a co-expression network is constructed based on differentially-expressed micrornas and genes identified in liver tissues from patients with hepatitis b virus (hbv). this study provides new insights on how micrornas take part in the molecular mechanism underlying hbv-associated acute liver failure. the alarm posed by the covid- pandemic has fueled the development of effective prevention and treatment protocols for -ncov/sars-cov- outbreak [ ] . due to the novelty of sars-cov- , recent research takes similar viruses, such as sars-cov and middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov), as a starting point. other coronaviruses, like mouse hepatitis virus (mhv), are also considered appropriate for comparative studies in animal models, as demonstrated in the work by de albuquerque et al. [ ] and ding et al. [ ] . mhv is a murine coronavirus (m-cov) that causes an epidemic illness with high mortality, and has been widely used for experimentation purposes. works like the ones by case et al. [ ] and gorman et al. [ ] , study the innate immune response against mhv arbitrated by interferons, and those interferon-stimulated genes with potential antiviral function. this is the case of gene ly e, which has been shown to play an important role in viral infection, as well as various orthologs of the same gene [ , ] . mechanistic approaches often involved the ablation of the gene under study, like in the work by mar et al. [ ] , where gene knockout was used to characterize the implications of ly e in influenza a infection. as it is the case of giotis et al. [ ] , these studies often involve global transcriptome analyses, via rna-seq or microarrays, together with computational efforts, which intend to screen the key elements of the immune system that are required for the appropriate response. this approach ultimately leads experimental research through predictive analyses, as in the case of co-expression gene networks [ ] . in the following subsections, the main methods and gcn reconstruction steps are addressed. first, in section . , the original dataset used in the present work is described, together with the experimental design. then, in section . , the data preprocessing steps are described. subsequently in section . , key genes controlling the infection progression are extracted through differential expression analyses. finally, the inference of gcns and their analysis are detailed in sections . and . , respectively. the original experimental design can be described as follows. the progression of the mhv infection at genetic level was evaluated in two genetic backgrounds: wild type (wt, ly efl/fl) and ly e knockout mutants (ko, ly e ∆hsc ). the ablation of gene ly e in all cell types is lethal, hence the ly e ∆hsc strain contains a disrupted version of gene ly e only in hematopoietic stem cells (hsc), which give rise to myeloid and lymphoid progenitors of all blood cells. wild type and ly e ∆hsc mice were injected intraperitoneally with pfu mhv-a . at and days post-injection (d p.i.), mice were euthanized and biological samples for rna-seq were extracted. the overall effects of mhv infection in both wt and ko strains was assessed in liver and spleen. in total samples were analyzed, half of these corresponding to liver and spleen, respectively. from the organ-specific samples, samples correspond to mock infection (negative control), to mhv-infected samples at d p.i. and to mhv-infected samples at d p.i. for each sample, two technical replicates were obtained. libraries of cdna generated from the samples were sequenced using illumina novaseq . further details on sample preparation can be found in the original article by pfaender et al. [ ] . for the sake of simplicity, mhv-infected samples at and d p.i. will be termed 'cases', whereas mock-infection samples will be termed 'controls'. the original dataset consists of files, one per sample replicate, obtained upon the mapping of the transcript reads to the reference genome. reads were recorded in three different ways, considering whether these mapped introns, exons or total genes. then, a count table was retrieved from these files by selecting only the total gene counts of each sample replicate file. pre-processing was performed using the edger [ ] r package. the original dataset by pfaender et al. [ ] was retrieved from geo (accession id: gse ) using the geoquery [ ] package. additional files on sample information and treatment were also used to assist the modeling process. by convention, a sequencing depth per gene below is considered neglectable [ , ] . genes meeting this criterion are known as low expression genes, and are often removed since they add noise and computational burden to the following analyses [ ] . in order to remove genes showing less than reads across all conditions, counts per million (cpm) normalization was performed, so possible differences between library sizes for both replicates would not affect the result. afterwards, principal components analyses (pca) were performed over the data in order to detect the main sources of variability across samples. pca were accompanied by unsupervised k-medoid clustering analyses, in order to identify different groups of samples. in addition, multidimensional scaling plots (mds) were applied to further separate samples according to their features. last, between-sample similarities were assessed through hierarchical clustering. the analyses of differential expression served a two-way purpose, (i) the exploration of the directionality in the gene expression changes upon viral infection, and (ii) the identification of key regulatory elements for the subsequent network reconstruction. in the present application, differentially-expressed genes (deg) were filtered from the original dataset and proceeded to the reconstruction process. this approximation enabled the modeling of the genetic relationships that are considered of relevance in the presented comparison [ ] [ ] [ ] . in the present work mice samples were compared organ-wise depending on whether these corresponded to control, d p.i. and d p.i. the identification of deg was performed using the limma [ ] r package, which provides non-parametric robust estimation of the gene expression variance. this package includes voom, a method that incorporates rna-seq count data into the limma workbench, originally designed for microarrays [ ] . in this case, a minimum log -fold-change (log fc) of was chosen, which corresponds to four fold changes in the gene expression level. p-value was adjusted by benjamini-hochberg [ ] and the selected adjusted p-value cutoff was . . in order to generate gene networks the engnet algorithm was used. this technique, presented in gómez-vela et al. [ ] , is able to compute gene co-expression networks with a competitive performance compared other approaches from the literature. engnet performs a two-step process to infer gene networks: (a) an ensemble strategy for a reliable co-expression networks generation, and (b) a greedy algorithm that optimizes both the size and the topological features of the network. these two features of engnet offer a reliable solution for generating gene networks. in fact, engnet relies on three statistical measures in order to obtain networks. in particular, the measures used are the spearman, kendall and normalized mutual information (nmi), which are widely used in the literature for inferring gene networks. engnet uses these measures simultaneously by applying an ensemble strategy based on major voting, i.e., a relationship will be considered correct if at least of the measures evaluate the relationship as correct. the evaluation is based on different independent thresholds. in this work, the different thresholds were set to the values originally used in [ ] : . , . and . for spearman, kendall and nmi, respectively. in addition, as mentioned above, engnet performs an optimization of the topological structure of the networks obtained. this reduction is based on two steps: (i) the pruning of the relations considered of least interest in the initial network, and (ii) the analysis of the hubs present in the network. for this second step of the final network reconstruction, we have selected the same threshold that was used in [ ] , i.e., . . through this optimization, the final network produced by engnet results easier to analyze computationally, due to its reduced size. networks were imported to r for the estimation of topology parameters and the addition of network features that are of interest for the latter network analysis and interpretation. these attributes were added to the reconstructed networks to enrich the modeling using the igraph [ ] r package. the networks were then imported into cytoscape [ ] through rcy [ ] for examination and analyses purposes. in this case, two kind of analyses were performed: (i) a topological analysis and (ii) an enrichment analysis. regarding the topological analysis, clustering evaluation was performed in order to identify densely connected nodes, which, according to the literature, are often involved in a same biological process [ ] . the chosen clustering method was community clustering (glay) [ ] , implemented via cytoscape's clustermaker app [ ] , which has yielded significant results in the identification of densely connected modules [ , ] . among the topology parameters, degree and edge betweenness were estimated. the degree of a node refers to the number of its linking nodes. on the other hand, the betweenness of an edge refers to the number of shortest paths which go through that edge. both parameters are considered as a measure of the implications of respectively nodes and edges in a certain network. particularly, nodes whose degree exceeds the average network node degree, the so called hubs, are considered key elements of the biological processes modeled by the network. in this particular case, the distribution of nodes' degree network was analyzed so those nodes whose degree exceeded a threshold were selected as hubs. this threshold is defined as q + . × iqr, where q is the third quartile and iqr the interquartile range of the degree distribution. this method has been widely used for the detection of upper outliers in non-parametric distributions [ , ] , as it is the case. however, the outlier definition does not apply to this distribution since those nodes whose degree are far above the median degree are considered hubs. on the other hand, gene ontology (go) enrichment analysis provides valuable insights on the biological reality modeled by the reconstructed networks. the gene ontology consortium [ ] is a data base that seeks for a unified nomenclature for biological entities. go has developed three different ontologies, which describe gene products in terms of the biological processes, cell components or molecular functions in which these are involved. ontologies are built out of go terms or annotations, which provide biological information of gene products. in this case, the clusterprofiler [ ] r package, allowed the identification of the statistically over-represented go terms in the gene sets of interest. additional enrichment analyses were performed using david [ ] . for both analyses, the complete genome of mus musculus was selected as background. finally, further details on the interplay of the genes under study was examined using the string database [ ] . the reconstruction of gene networks that adequately model viral infection involves multiple steps, which ultimately shape the final outcome. first, in section . , exploratory analyses and data preprocessing are detailed, which prompted the modeling rationale. then, in section . , differential expression is evaluated for the samples of interest. finally, networks reconstruction and analysis are addressed in section . . at the end, four networks were generated, both in an organand genotype-wise manner. a schematic representation of the gcn reconstruction approach is shown in figure . general scheme for the reconstruction method. the preprocessed data was subjected to exploratory and differential expression analyses, which imposed the reconstruction rationale. four groups of samples were used to generate four independent networks, respectively modeling the immune response in the liver, both in the wt and the ko situations; and in the spleen, also in the wt and the ko scenarios. in order to remove low expression genes, a sequencing depth of was found to correspond to an average cpm of . , which was selected as threshold. hence, genes whose expression was found over . cpm in at least two samples of the dataset were maintained, ensuring that only genes which are truly being expressed in the tissue will be studied. the dataset was log -normalized with priority to the following analyses, in accordance to the recommendations posed in law et al. [ ] . the results of both pca and k-medoid clustering are shown in figure a . clustering of the log -normalized samples revealed clear differences between liver and spleen samples. also, for each organ, three subgroups of analogous samples that cluster together are identified. these groups correspond to mock infection, mhv-infected mice at d p.i. and mhv-infected mice at d p.i. (dashed lines in figure a ). finally, subtle differences were observed in homologous samples of different genotypes ( figure a ). organ-specific pca revealed major differences between mhv-infected samples for ly e ∆hsc and wt genotypes, at both and d p.i. these differences were not observed in the mock infection (control situation). organ-wise pca are shown in figure b ,c. the distances between same-genotype samples illustrate the infection-prompted genetic perturbation from the uninfected status (control) to d p.i., where clear signs of hepatitis were observed according to the original physiopathology studies [ ] . on the other hand, the differences observed between both genotypes are indicative of the role of gene ly e in the appropriate response to viral infection. these differences are subtle in control samples, but in case samples, some composition biass is observed depending on whether these are ko or wt, especially in spleen samples. the comparative analysis of the top most variable genes confirmed the differences observed in the pca, as shown in figure a . among the four different features of the samples under study: organ, genotype, sample type (case or control) and days post injection; the dissimilarities in terms of genotype were the subtlest. in the light of these exploratory findings, the network reconstruction approach was performed as follows. networks were reconstructed organ-wise, as these exhibit notable differences in gene expression. additionally, a main objective of the present work is to evaluate the differences in the genetic response in the wt situation compared to the ly e ∆hsc ko background, upon the viral infection onset in the two mentioned tissues. for each organ, log -normalized samples were coerced to generate time-series-like data, i.e., for each genotype, samples will be considered as a set, namely control samples, case samples at d p.i. and case samples at d p.i. both technical replicates were included. this rational design seeks for a gene expression span representative of the infection progress. thereby, control samples may well be considered as a time zero for the viral infection, followed by the corresponding samples at and d p.i. the proposed rationale is supported by the exploratory findings, which position d p.i. samples between control and d p.i. samples. at the same time, the reconstruction of gene expression becomes robuster with increasing number of samples. in this particular case, measuring points are attained for the reconstruction of each one of the four intended networks, since two technical replicates were obtained per sample [ ] . the differential expression analyses were performed over the four groups of samples explained above, with the aim of examining the differences in the immune response between ly e ∆hsc and wt samples. limma -voom differential expression analyses were performed over the log -normalized counts, in order to evaluate the different genotypes whilst contrasting the three infection stages: control vs. cases at d p.i., control vs. cases at d p.i. and cases at vs. d p.i. the choice of a minimum absolute log fc ≥ , enabled considering only those genes that truly effect changes between wt and ly e ∆hsc samples, whilst maintaining a relatively computer-manageable number of deg for network reconstruction. the latter is essential for the yield of accurate network sparseness values, as this is a main feature of gene networks [ ] . for both genotypes and organs, the results of the differential expression analyses reveal that mhv injection triggers a progressive genetic program from the control situation to the mhv-infected scenario at d p.i., as shown in figure a . the absolute number of deg between control vs. cases at d p.i. was considerably larger than in the comparison between control vs. cases at d p.i. furthermore, in all cases, most of the deg in control vs. cases at d p.i. are also differentially-expressed in the control vs. cases at d p.i. comparison, as shown in figure . regarding genes fold change, an overall genetic up-regulation is observed upon infection. around % of deg are upregulated for all the comparisons performed for wt samples, as shown in figure b . nonetheless, a dramatic reduce in this genetic up-regulation is observed, by contrast, in knockout samples, even limiting upregulated genes to nearly % in the control vs. cases at d p.i. comparison of liver ly e ∆hsc samples. the largest differences are observed in the comparison of controls vs. cases at d p.i ( figures a and a ). these deg are of great interest for the understanding of the immune response of both wt and ko mice to viral infection. these genes were selected to filter the original dataset for latter network reconstruction. the commonalities between wt and ko control samples for both organs were also verified through differential expression analysis following the same criteria (log fc > , p value < . ). the number of deg between wt and ko liver control samples ( ) and between wt and ko spleen control samples ( ) were not considered significant, so samples were taken as analogous starting points for infection. as stated above, the samples were arranged both organ and genotype-wise in order to generate networks which would model the progress of the disease in each scenario. gcns were inferred from log -normalized expression datasets. a count of was added at log normalization so the problem with remaining zero values was avoided. each network was generated exclusively taking into consideration their corresponding deg at control vs. cases at d p.i., where larger differences were observed. four networks were then reconstructed from these previously-identified deg for liver wt samples ( genes), liver ko samples ( genes), spleen wt samples ( genes) and spleen ko samples ( genes). this approach results in the modeling of only those relationships that are related to the viral infection. each sample set was then fed to engnet for the reconstruction of the subsequent network. genes that remained unconnected due to weak relationships, which do not overcome the set threshold, were removed from the networks. furthermore, the goodness of engnet-generated models outperformed other well-known inference approaches, as detailed in appendix b. topological parameters were estimated and added as node attributes using igraph, together with log fc, prior to cytoscape import. specifically, networks were simplified by removing potential loops and multiple edges. the clustering topological scrutiny of the reconstructed networks revealed neat modules in all cases, as shown in figure a . the number of clusters identified in each network, as well as the number of genes harbored in the clusters is shown in table a . as already mentioned, according to gene networks theory, nodes contained within the same cluster are often involved in the same biological process [ , ] . in this context, the go-based enrichment analyses over the identified clusters may well provide an idea of the affected functions. only clusters containing more than genes were considered, since this is the minimum number of elements required by the enrichment tool clusterprofiler. the results of the enrichment analyses revealed that most go terms were not shared between wt and ko homologous samples, as shown in figure . in order to further explore the reconstructed networks, the intersection of ko and wt networks of a same organ was computed. this refers to the genes and relationships that are shared between both genotypes for a specific organ. additionally, the genes and relationships that were exclusively present at the wt and ko samples were also estimated, as shown in figure a . the enrichment analyses over the nodes, separated using this criterion, would reveal the biological processes that make the difference between in ly e ∆hsc mice compared to wt ones. the results of such analyses are shown in figure a . finally, the exploration of nodes' degree distribution would reveal those genes that can be considered hubs. those nodes comprised within the top genes with highest degree (degree > q + . × iq), also known as upper outliers in the nodes distribution, were considered hubs. a representation of nodes' degree distribution throughout the four reconstructed networks is shown in figure . these distributions are detailed in figure a . this method provided four cutoff values for the degree, , , and , respectively for liver wt and ko, spleen wt and ko networks. above these thresholds, nodes would be considered as hubs in each network. these hubs are shown in tables a -a . figure . enrichment analyses performed over the main clusters identified in wt and ko networks of (a) liver and (b) spleen networks. gene ratio is defined by the number of genes used as input for the ernichment analyses associated with a particular go term divided by the total number of input genes. . boxplots representative of the degree distributions for each one of the four reconstructed networks. identified hubs, according to the q + . × iqr criterion, are highlighted in red. the degree cutoffs, above which nodes would be considered as hubs, were , , and , respectively for liver wt, liver ko, spleen wt and spleen ko networks. note degree is represented in a log scale given that the reconstructed networks present a scale-free topology. in this work four gene networks were reconstructed to model the genetic response mhv infection in two tissues, liver and spleen, and in two different genetic backgrounds, wild type and ly e ∆hsc . samples were initially explored in order to design an inference rationale. not only did the designed approach reveal major differences between the genetic programs in each organ, but also, between different subgroups of samples, in a time-series-like manner. noticeably, disparities between wt and ly e ∆hsc samples were observed in both tissues, and differential expression analyses revealed relevant differences in terms of the immune response generated. hereby, our results predict the impact of ly e ko on hsc, which resulted in an impaired immune response compared to the wt situation. overall, results indicate that the reconstruction rationale, elucidated from exploratory findings, is suitable for the modeling of the viral progression. regarding the variance in gene expression in response to virus, pca and k-medoid clustering revealed strong differences between samples corresponding to liver spleen, respectively (figure a ). these differences set the starting point for the modeling approach, in which samples corresponding to each organ were analyzed independently. this modus operandi is strongly supported by the tropism that viruses exhibit for certain tissues, which ultimately results in a differential viral incidence and charge depending on the organ [ ] . in particular, the liver is the target organ of mhv, identified as the main disease site [ ] . on the other hand, the role of the spleen in innate and adaptive immunity against mhv has been widely addressed [ , ] . the organization of this organ allows blood filtration for the presentation of antigens to cognate lymphocytes by the antigen presenting cells (apcs), which mediate the immune response exerted by t and b cells [ ] . as stated before, pca revealed differences between the three sample groups on each organ: control and mhv-infected at and d p.i. interestingly, between-groups differences are specially clear for liver samples (figure b) , whereas spleen samples are displayed in a continuum-like way. this becomes more evident in organ-wise pca (figure ) , and was latter confirmed by the exploration of the top most variable genes and differential expression analyses ( figure a ). furthermore, clear differences between wt and ly e ∆hsc samples are observed in none of these analyses, although the examination of the differential expression and network reconstruction did exposed divergent immune responses for both genotypes. the differential expression analyses revealed the progressive genetic response to virus for both organs and genotypes (figures a and ) . in a wt genetic background, mhv infection causes an overall rise in the expression level of certain genes, as most deg in cases vs. control samples are upregulated. however, in a ly e ∆hsc genetic background, this upregulation is not as prominent as in a wt background, significantly reducing the number of upregulated genes (figure b) . besides, the number of deg in each comparison varies from wt to ly e ∆hsc samples. attending at the deg in the performed comparisons, for both the wt and ko genotypes, liver cases at d p.i. are more similar to liver cases at d p.i. than to liver controls, since the number of deg between the first two measuring points is significantly lower than the number of deg between control and case samples at d p.i. (figure a,b) . a different situation occurs in the spleen, where wt cases at d p.i. are closer to control samples (figure c ), whereas ko cases at d p.i. seem to be more related to cases at d p.i. (figure d ). this was already suggested by hierarchical clustering in the analysis of the top most variable genes, and could be indicative of a different progression of the infection impact on both organs, which could be modulated by gene ly e, at least for the spleen samples. moreover, the results of the deg analyses indicate that the sole knockout of gene ly e in hsc considerably affects the upregulating genetic program normally triggered by viral infection in wild type individuals (in both liver and spleen). interestingly, there are some genes in each organ and genotype that are differentially expressed in every comparison between the possible three sample types, controls, cases at d p.i. and cases at d p.i. these genes, which we termed highly deg, could be linked to the progression of the infection, as changes in their expression level occur with days post injection, according to the data. the rest of the deg, show an uprise or fall when comparing two sample types, which does not change significantly in the third sample type. alternatively, highly deg, shown in table a , exhibited three different expression patterns: (i) their expression level, initially low, rises from control to cases at d p.i. and then rises again in cases at d p.i. (ii) their expression level, initially high in control samples, falls at d p.i. and falls even more at d p.i cases. (iii) their expression level, initially low, rises from control to cases at d p.i. but then falls at cases at d p.i., when it is still higher than the initial expression level. these expression patterns, which are shown in figure a , might be used to keep track of the disease progression, differentiating early from late infection stages. in some cases, these genes exhibited inconsistent expression levels, specially at d p.i. cases, which indicates the need for further experimental designs targeting these genes. highly deg could be correlated with the progression of the disease, as in regulation types (i) and (ii) or by contrast, be required exclusively at initial stages, as in regulation type (iii). notably, genes gm and gm are predicted genes which, to date, have been poorly described. according to the string database [ ] , gm is associated with gene lst (leukocyte-specific transcript protein), which has a possible role in modulating immune responses. in fact, gm is homologous to human gene piro (progranulin-induced-receptor-like gene during osteoclastogenesis), related to bone homeostasis [ , ] . thus, we hypothesize that bone marrow-derived cell lines, including erythrocytes and leukocytes (immunity effectors), could also be regulated by gm . on the other hand, gm is not associated to any other gene according to string. protein gm is homologous to human protein dhrs (dehydrogenase/reductase sdr family member ) isoform precursor. nonetheless and to the best of our knowledge, these genes have not been previously related to ly e, and could play a role in the immune processes mediated by this gene. finally, highly deg were not found exclusively present in wt nor ko networks, instead, these were common nodes of these networks for each organ. this suggests that highly deg might be of core relevance upon mhv infection, with a role in those processes independent on ly e ∆hsc . besides, genes hykk, ifit and ifit b; identified as highly deg throughout liver ly e ∆hsc samples were also identified as hubs in the liver ko network. also gene saa , highly deg across spleen ly e ∆hsc samples was considered a hub in the spleen ko network. nevertheless, these highly deg require further experimental validation. the enrichment analyses of the identified clusters at each network revealed that most go terms are not shared between the two genotypes ( figure ), despite the considerable amount of shared genes between the two genotypes for a same organ. the network reconstructed from liver wt samples reflects a strong response to viral infection, involving leukocyte migration or cytokine and interferon signaling among others. these processes, much related to immune processes, are not observed in its ko counterpart. the liver wt network presented four clusters ( figure a a ). its cluster regulates processes related to leukocyte migration, showing the implication of receptor ligand activity and cytokine signaling, which possibly mediates the migration of the involved cells. cluster is related to interferon-gamma for the response to mhv, whereas cluster is probably involved in the inflammatory response mediated by pro-inflammatory cytokines. last, cluster is related to cell extravasation, or the leave of blood cells from blood vessels, with the participation of gene nipal . the positive regulation observed across all clusters suggests the activation of these processes. overall, hub genes in this network have been related to the immune response to viral infection, as the innate immune response to the virus is the mediated by interferons. meanwhile, the liver ko network showed three main clusters ( figure a b ). its cluster would also be involved in defense response to virus, but other processes observed in the liver wt network, like leukocyte migration or cytokine activity, are not observed in this cluster nor the others. cluster is then related to the catabolism of small molecules and cluster is involved in acids biosynthesis. these processes are certainly ambiguous and do not correspond the immune response observed in the wt situation, which suggests a decrease in the immune response to mhv as a result of ly e ablation in hsc. on the other hand, spleen wt samples revealed high nuclear activity potentially involving nucleosome remodeling complexes and changes in dna accessibility. histone modification is a type of epigenetic modulation which regulates gene expression. taking into account the central role of the spleen in the development of immune responses, the manifested relevance of chromatin organization could be accompanied by changes in the accessibility of certain dna regions with implications in the spleen-dependent immune response. this is supported by the reduced reaction capacity in the first days post-infection of ly e ∆hsc samples compared to wt, as indicated by the number of deg between control and cases at d p.i for these genotypes. the spleen wt network displayed three clusters ( figure a c ). cluster , whose genes were all upregulated in ly e ∆hsc samples at d p.i. compared to mock infection, is mostly involved in nucleosome organization and chromatin remodelling, together with cluster . cluster would also be related to dna packaging complexes, possibly in response to interferon, similarly to liver networks. instead, in spleen ko most genes take part in processes related to the extracellular matrix. in the spleen ko network, four clusters were identified ( figure a d ). cluster is related to the activation of an immune response, but also, alongside with clusters and , to the extracellular matrix, possibly in relation with collagen, highlighting its role in the response to mhv. cluster is implied in protease binding. the dramatic shut down in the ko network of the nuclear activity observed in the spleen wt network, leads to the hypothesis that the chromatin remodeling activity observed could be related to the activation of certain immunoenhancer genes, modulated by gene ly e. in any case, further experimental validation of these results would provide meaningful insights in the face of potential therapeutic approaches (see appendix a for more details). the exploration of nodes memebership, depending on whether these exclusively belonged to wt or ko networks or, by contrast, were present in both networks, helped to understand the impairment caused by ly e ∆hsc . in this sense, go enrichment analyses over these three defined categories of the nodes in the liver networks revealed that genes at their intersection are mainly related to cytokine production, leukocyte migration and inflammatory response regulation, in accordance to the phenotype described for mhv-infection [ ] . however, a differential response to virus is observed in wt mice compared to ly e-ablated. the nodes exclusively present at the wt liver network are related to processes like regulation of immune effector process, leukocyte mediated immunity or adaptive immune response. these processes, which are found at a relatively high gene ratio, are not represented by nodes exclusively present in the liver ko network. additionally, genes exclusively present at the wt network and the intersection network are upregulated in case samples with respect to controls ( figure a a) , which suggests the activation of the previously mentioned biological processes. on the other hand, genes exclusively-present at the liver ko networks, mostly down-regulated, were found to be associated with catabolism. as for the spleen networks, genotype-wise go enrichment results revealed that the previously-mentioned intense nuclear activity involving protein-dna complexes and nucleosome assembly is mostly due to wt-exclusive genes. actually, these biological processes could be pinpointing cell replication events. analogously to the liver case, genes that were found exclusively present in the wt network and the intersection network are mostly upregulated, whereas in the case of ko-exclusive genes the upregulation is not that extensive. interestingly, the latter are mostly related to extracellular matrix (ecm) organization, which suggest the relevance of ly e on these. other lymphocyte antigen- (ly- ) superfamily members have been related to ecm remodelling processes such as the urokinase receptor (upar), which participates in the proteolysis of ecm proteins [ ] . however and to the best of our knowledge, the implications of ly e in ecm have not been reported. the results presented are in the main consistent with those by pfaender et al. [ ] , who observed a loss of genes associated with the type i ifn response, inflammation, antigen presentation, and b cells in infected ly e ∆hsc mice. genes stat and ifit , selected in their work for their high variation in absence of ly e, were identified as hub genes in the networks reconstructed from liver wild type and knockout samples, respectively. it is to be noticed that our approach significantly differs to the one carried out in the original study. in this particular case, we consider that the reconstruction of gcn enables a more comprehensive analysis of the data, potentially finding the key genes involved in the immune response onset and their relationships with other genes. for instance, the transcriptomic differences between liver and spleen upon ly e ablation become more evident using gcn. altogether, the presented results show the relevance of gene ly e in the immune response against the infection caused by mhv. the disruption of ly e significantly reduced the immunogenic response, affecting signaling and cell effectors. these results, combining in vivo and in silico approaches, deepen in our understanding of the immune response to viruses at the gene level, which could ultimately assist the development of new therapeutics. for example, basing on these results, prospective studies on ly e agonist therapies could be inspired, with the purpose of enhancing the gene expression level via gene delivery. given the relevance of ly e in sars-cov- according to previous studies [ , ] , the overall effects of ly e ablation in hscs upon sars-cov- infection, putting special interest in lung tissue, might show similarities with the deficient immune response observed in the present work. in this work we have presented an application of co-expression gene networks to analyze the global effects of ly e ablation in the immune response to mhv coronavirus infection. to do so, the progression of the mhv infection on the genetic level was evaluated in two genetic backgrounds: wild type mice (wt, ly efl/fl) and ly e knockout mutants (ko, ly e ∆hsc ) mice. for these, viral progression was assessed in two different organs, liver and spleen. the proposed reconstruction rationale revealed significant differences between mhv-infected wt and ly e ∆hsc mice for both organs. in addition we observed that mhv infection triggers a progressive genetic response of upregulating nature in both liver and spleen. in addition, the results suggest that the ablation of gene ly e at hsc caused an impaired genetic response in both organs compared to wt mice. the impact of such ablation is more evident in the liver, consistently with the disease site. at the same time, the immune response in the spleen, which seemed to be mediated by an intense chromatin activity in the normal situation, is replaced by ecm remodeling in ly e ∆hsc mice. we infer that the presence of ly e limits the damage in the above mentioned target sites. we believe that the characterization of these processes could motivate the efforts towards novel antiviral approaches. finally, in the light of previous works, we hypothesize that ly e ablation might show analogous detrimental effects on immunity upon the infection caused by other viruses including sars-cov, mers and sars-cov- . in future works, we plan to investigate whether the over-expression of ly e in wt mice has an enhancement effect in immunity. in this direction, ly e gene mimicking (agonist) therapies could represent a promising approach in the development of new antivirals. the authors declare no conflict of interest. q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q organ q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q genotype q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q sample type q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q q top most variable genes across liver samples row z−score top most variable genes across spleen samples table a . number of deg used as input to engnet for network reconstruction and their latter distribution in inferred networks. genes that were not assigned to a cluster (or were comprised in minoritary clusters) were not taken into consideration for enrichment analyses. input genes network genes cluster cluster cluster cluster figure a . enrichment analyses based on node exclusiveness of (a) liver and (b) spleen networks. wt refers to nodes exclusively present at those networks reconstructed from wt samples; ko refers to nodes exclusively present at networks reconstructed from ly e ∆hsc samples; both addresses shared nodes between wt and ko networks. gene ratio is defined by the number of genes used as input for the ernichment analyses associated with a particular go term divided by the total number of input genes. expression of highly deg across spleen ko samples (d) figure a . cpm-normalized expression values of highly deg identified across (a) liver wt samples, (b) liver ko samples, (c) spleen wt samples and (d) spleen ko samples. dashed lines separate samples from the three groups under study: controls, cases at d p.i. and cases at d p.i. note sample order within same group is exchangeable. the reconstruction method employed in this case study was validated against other thee well-known inference methods: aracne [ ] , wgcna [ ] and wto [ ] . the output of each reconstruction method, using default values (including engnet) was compared to a gold standard (gs), retrieved from the string database. four different gss were taken into consideration, since these were reconstructed from the deg that were identified in the comparison of control vs. case samples at d p.i., as shown in section . . these deg were mapped to the string database gene identifiers selecting mus musculus as model organism (taxid: ). a variable percentage of deg ( - %) could not be assigned to a string identifier, and were thus removed from the analysis. the interactions exclusively concerning the resulting deg in each case were retrieved from the string database. these interaction networks would serve as gss. the mentioned deg (without unmapped identifiers) would also serve as input for the four reconstruction methods to be compared. the aracne networks were inferred using the spearman correlation coefficient following the implementations in the minet [ ] r package. in this case, mutual information values were normalized and scaled in the range - . on the other hand, the wgcna networks were reconstructed following the original tutorial provided by the authors [ ] . the power was defined as . additionally, the wto networks were built using pearson correlation in accordance to the documentation. absolute values were taken as relationship weights. finally, engnet networks were inferred using the default parameters described in the original article by gómez-vela et al. [ ] . for the comparison, the receiver operating characteristic (roc)-curve was estimated using the proc [ ] r package. roc curves are shown in figure a . the area under the roc curve (auc) was also computed in each case for the quantitative comparison of the methods, as shown in figure a a . the auc compares the reconstruction quality of each method against random prediction. an auc ≈ corresponds to the perfect classifier whereas am auc ≈ . approximates to a random classifier. thus, the higher the auc, the better the predictions. on average, engnet provided the best auc results, whilst maintaining a good discovery rate. in addition, engnet provided relatively scarce networks compared to wgcna, as shown in figure a b . this is considered of relevance given that sparseness is a main feature of gene networks [ ] . hosts and sources of endemic human coronaviruses identification and characterization of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus replicase proteins an orally bioavailable 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transcriptional networks using mutual information a general framework for weighted gene co-expression network analysis proc: an open-source package for r and s+ to analyze and compare roc curves this article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the creative commons attribution (cc by) license key: cord- -gpzee f authors: parkinson, n.; rodgers, n.; head fourman, m.; wang, b.; zechner, m.; swets, m.; millar, j. e.; law, a.; russell, c.; baillie, j. k.; clohisey, s. title: systematic review and meta-analysis identifies potential host therapeutic targets in covid- . date: - - journal: nan doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: gpzee f an increasing body of literature describes the role of host factors in covid- pathogenesis. there is a need to combine diverse, multi-omic data in order to evaluate and substantiate the most robust evidence and inform development of future therapies. we conducted a systematic review of experiments identifying host factors involved in human betacoronavirus infection (sars-cov- , sars-cov, mers-cov, seasonal coronaviruses). gene lists from these diverse sources were integrated using meta-analysis by information content (maic). this previously described algorithm uses data-driven gene list weightings to produce a comprehensive ranked list of implicated host genes. , genes implicated in human betacoronavirus infection were identified from datasets. the top ranked gene was *ppia*, encoding cyclophilin a. pharmacological inhibition with cyclosporine in vitro exerts antiviral activity against several coronaviruses including sars-cov. other highly-ranked genes included proposed prognostic factors (*cxcl *, *cd *, *cd e*) and investigational therapeutic targets (*il a*) for covid- , but also previously overlooked genes with potential as therapeutic targets. gene rankings also inform the interpretation of covid- gwas results, implicating *fyco * over other nearby genes in a disease-associated locus on chromosome . pathways enriched in gene rankings included t-cell receptor signalling, protein processing, and viral infections. we identified limited overlap of our gene list with host genes implicated in ards (innate immune and inflammation genes) and influenza a virus infection (rna-binding and ribosome-associated genes). we will continue to update this dynamic ranked list of host genes as the field develops, as a resource to inform and prioritise future studies. updated results are available at https://baillielab.net/maic/covid . there are multiple sources of information that associate host genes with sars-cov- viral replication, the subsequent host immune response and the ensuing pathophysiology. integrating these sources of information may provide more robust evidence associating specific genes and proteins with key processes underlying the mechanisms of disease. this is needed in order to make informed judgements about new therapies for inclusion in model studies and clinical trials. the pace of new research into covid- pathophysiology, including host dependency factors, immune responses, and genetics, has made it nearly impossible to read every report. in addition, assessing the quality and relevance of new evidence is difficult, time-consuming, and requires a high level of expertise. information from diverse sources has varying quality, scale, and relevance to host responses to sars-cov- . computational approaches can aid data evaluation and integration. simple, intuitive methods have a conceptual advantage for translation to decision-making: if both the processes and results are easily comprehensible, then it is easier for human users to trust the conclusions. sars-cov- is a betacoronavirus with a kb single-stranded positive-sense rna genome, and is genetically similar to other human coronaviruses: sars-cov, mers-cov and the seasonal 'common cold' e, oc , hku and nl coronaviruses. like all viruses, sars-cov- relies on host machinery to replicate. host dependency factors represent an attractive target for new therapeutics, as evolution of drug resistance is expected to be slower for host-directed than viral-directed therapies. treatment directly targeting viral replication can target viral proteins (e.g. remdesivir ), or host proteins upon which the virus depends. host-targeted therapies may have an important role in infectious diseases in general, and the only treatment so far found to reduce mortality in covid- -dexamethasone -is likely to act by targeting host immune-mediated organ damage. other host-directed treatments (e.g. anakinra, tocilizumab, sarilumab, mavrilimumab), repurposed from other indications, are currently under investigation. , , , , , in this analysis we systematically identify and combine existing data from human betacoronavirus research to generate a comprehensive ranked list of host genes as a resource to inform further work on covid- . to identify existing literature which could provide informative datasets for host gene prioritisation, we conducted a systematic review of published studies and preprint manuscripts pertaining to host gene involvement in human betacoronavirus infection and associated disease. results from identified studies, in the form of lists of implicated host factor genes, were combined using meta-analysis by information content (maic), an approach we previously developed to identify host genes necessary for influenza a virus (iav) replication. we have previously demonstrated that the maic algorithm successfully predicts new experimental results from an unseen future experiment. our gene prioritisation results both recapitulate existing understanding of covid- pathophysiology and highlight key host factors and potential therapeutic targets that have to date been largely overlooked. maic allows the combination of data from diverse sources without prior assumptions regarding the quality of each individual data source. the maic approach begins with the following assumptions: . there exists a set of true positives: host genes involved in covid- pathogenesis. . a gene is more likely to be a true positive if it is found in multiple experiments. . a gene is more likely to be a true positive if it occurs in a list containing a higher proportion of genes with supporting evidence from multiple sources. . due to experimental biases, the evidence that a gene is a true positive is further increased if it is found across experimental types. with these assumptions, maic allows the quantification of the information content in a gene list by comparing that list to the results from other experiments that might reasonably be expected to find some of the same genes. input gene lists can be categorised by data type (table ) , allowing comparison both within and between methodologies. maic produces a weighting factor for each experiment, and this weighting is used to calculate a score for each gene. the analysis then produces a final ranked list of genes based on this score, which summarises the combined evidence from all input sources of that particular gene being involved in sars-cov- pathogen-host interaction. a full description of the maic algorithm can be found in our original report. inclusion and exclusion criteria are shown in table . to complement emerging data pertaining to the novel sars-cov- , we included studies of other human coronaviruses. included methodologies are shown in table . table candidate-gene human genetic studies < hosts in virus group or control group in patient studies meta-analyses, in silico anayses, re-analysis of data published elsewhere potentially relevant pre-print manuscripts were identified by screening all papers categorised as covid- -related in the biorxiv and medrxiv servers. titles and abstracts of all returned papers were first assessed for relevance and duplication by a single member of the review team. following this, full-length texts were obtained and an in-depth review was carried out by two further reviewers, independently, in order to confirm eligibility according to table and table . in cases where a consensus was not reached, a third reviewer appraised the paper. this method ensured each paper was assessed for eligibility by a minimum of three independent reviewers. relevant data, as shown in table , was extracted from each reviewed paper. table organism human, rodent, non-human primate cell / tissue type vero , a , serum peer reviewed or pre-print peer-reviewed, pre-print relevant gene lists were identified and extracted. datasets were excluded from the analysis where insufficient data were available to construct a meaningful unbiased gene list, for example where results for only a non-systematically selected subset of genes of interest were reported. gene lists were categorised based on methodology as shown in table . gene list rankings were preserved where possible, if sufficient numerical data were available. rankings were based on significance or magnitude of effect. adjusted measures of significance, usually adjusted !, were prioritised over raw ! and !"#$% to determine ranking where multiple values were available. for studies reporting comparisons at multiple time points, genes were ranked based on the minimum ! across all comparisons. to exclude irrelevant genes, a significance or effect size threshold was applied to all lists. this was either the threshold used by the authors for reporting, or where full data were provided this was determined as adjusted gene, transcript and protein names or identification numbers were converted to the associated hgnc gene symbol, or an equivalent ensembl or refseq symbol where no hgnc symbol existed. non-primate genes were mapped to their human homologues using the ncbi homologene database, or excluded from the analysis if no human homologue could be identified. rank-based gene set enrichment analysis was performed using the package fgsea in r version . . , with genes ranked by maic score. !-values were estimated using an empirical probability distribution based on permutations. gene set over-representation in the top genes was analysed by a fisher's exact test as implemented in enrichr. the benjamini-hochberg procedure was used to control the false discovery rate (!"# < . ) for both methods. we identified a total of studies with available data meeting our eligibility criteria ( pre-print manuscripts and peer-reviewed studies), yielding gene lists (supplementary figure , supplementary table ). the included gene lists comprised ranked and unranked lists, in experimental categories, with list lengths ranging from three to , genes (median ). the datasets included genetic perturbation screens (crispr, rnai and interferon-stimulated gene overexpression), genetic studies (of which were in humans), protein-protein interaction studies, proteomic and transcriptomic studies. is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted september , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint a single gene list only. beyond ranks around in this study, gene scores approach baseline, indicating they have little corroborative evidence. of , genes implicated in human betacoronavirus infection in these datasets, , are supported by a single paper only, had evidence from more than one source within the same experimental category, and are supported by data from multiple study types. although extensive within-category overlap was seen for transcriptomic studies, there was less concordance within categories such as proteomics and protein-protein interaction. as with our previous study of influenza, contributions from one crispr screen dominate the overall information content (figure b) . this was due in part to list length and hence contribution to scores for multiple lower-ranking genes. information contributions for the top genes are more balanced (figure c) . the maic score distribution (figure d) reflects the degree of cross-category overlap, with the highest ranked genes supported by data from three distinct experimental categories. the highest ranking genes and their contributing evidence sources are shown in figure a and supplementary table . top genes include il a and other components of the innate and adaptive immune systems (such as cxcl , cd and tlr ), which have previously been shown to contribute to covid- pathogenesis. other top genes have not previously received much attention in the context of coronavirus infection. these include ppia (cyclophilin a), and rybp (ring and yy binding protein), which play roles in protein folding, transcriptional repression, regulation of proteasomal degradation and apoptosis. an up-to-date prioritised list of implicated genes is available at baillielab.net/maic/covid . we will repeat the analysis regularly as new data become available. . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted september , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint death in severe covid- is usually a consequence of lung injury leading to ards (acute respiratory distress syndrome), a final common pathway that can occur in any severe acute respiratory infection. host susceptibility factors in covid- may be shared with other infections or ards. we compared the output from our analysis to our previous maic analysis of influenza a virus. among the top ranked genes from each output, we found overlapping genes (figure b) , including a large number of rna-binding, ribosome-associated and chaperone genes. unexpectedly few immune related genes overlapped. this is surprising as both viruses are single-stranded rna viruses and despite differing in sense, intracellular pathogen detection mechanisms are expected to be similar. to expand this analysis we manually curated genes associated with ards and determined the overlap with our maic output (supplementary table ). among the top ranked genes from the coronavirus maic output we found an overlap of genes with the ards list (consisting of genes) (figure c) . here we saw a number of genes associated with innate immunity and modulation of inflammation (tnf!, il , il , ccl , il b, tlr , il , nf!bia). . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted september , . . the inflammatory profile, including hyperferritinaemia, observed in covid- has led to the suggestion that a form of secondary haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (hlh), a hyper-inflammatory syndrome, could be occurring. we manually curated . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted september , . . genes involved in the familial form of this syndrome and compared these with our maic output, finding no overlap, although only eleven genes were found in the literature to be associated with familial hlh. to better understand the biological functions of the most strongly implicated genes, we performed gene set enrichment analysis in ten databases of functional annotations. we used two complementary methods, assessing enrichment either in terms of rank distribution across the whole dataset (permissive) or in overrepresentation in the top genes only (conservative). there was extensive overlap between these approaches (figure a and supplementary table ). . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted september , . . functional annotations that were significant using both methods and that were reflected in results from more than one database included terms related to cytokine, toll-like receptor and t-cell receptor signalling, protein processing, apoptosis, the complement system, vegf signalling, glucose metabolism and viral infections such as influenza a. as expected, the relative information contributions from different experiment types varied between pathways (figure b) . for example, terms related to complement and coagulation received relatively little contribution from crispr screen data (derived from epithelial cells) but more information from proteomics and experiments using serum or swab samples, whilst pathways related to protein processing had relatively greater contributions from protein interaction studies. in all cases, enriched pathways drew information from a range of experiment types. one of the principal applications of maic is in the interpretation of results of genome-wide association studies (gwas). genome-wide association studies often implicate a locus containing a number of candidate genes and the precise nature of the interaction between gene and disease may not be known. as an example, we applied our results to the locus in chromosome associated with hospitalisation due to covid- in the sole covid- gwas published to date (data from which was also included in this analysis). this locus contained six genes (sl a , ltzfl , ccr , fyco , cxcr and cxr ) that could all plausibly be linked to covid- pathophysiology on the basis of their known functions. of these, fyco , which encodes a protein involved in vesicle transport and autophagy, was highly ranked in our results (rank ). fyco is supported by sars-cov- -specific protein-protein interaction and transcriptomic data. ccr (rank ) had additional support from a single transcriptomic study, while sl a , ltzfl , cxcr and xcr had low ranks in our results, with no corroborating evidence in other studies. the interpretation of any meta-analysis is critically dependent on the criteria for inclusion. in this case, our objective is to cast the net wide, including a range of data sources that are both conceptually and methodologically divergent. experimental results bearing little relation to the composite of evidence from the other studies are downgraded by the maic algorithm, so the effect of irrelevant, noisy, or poorlyconducted experiments is minimal. by using permissive inclusion criteria, together with weighted meta-analysis, we have identifed key elements of the host-pathogen . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted september , . . interaction and promising therapeutic targets for further investigation and intervention. these include host factors involved in viral replication, and elements of the immune response, which have been overlooked in the contributing studies ( figure ) . coronaviruses hijack host endomembranes to facilitate anchoring of the replication/transcription complex. consistent with this, we observe an overrepresentaion of endoplasmic reticulum-related genes. genes related to the function of the endoplasmic reticulum (faf , ergic , tent c, tent a, cfl , stard ) and glycosylation (mogs, ugdh, uggt , pdia , pdia ) are observed along with a number of chaperone proteins (hspb , hspa , hspa , hsp aa , st ) . many of these genes are related to the unfolded protein response (upr), a stress response initiated by accumulation of misfolded proteins. fyco , implicated in published gwas results, has been suggested as a key mediator linking er-derived double membrane vesicles, the primary replication site for coronaviruses, with the microtubule network. viral entry via spike (s) protein-mediated membrane fusion is well characterised. the first step, spike activation, requires cleavage via host proteases such as cathepsin l (ctsl, rank ). in the wei et al. crispr screen, knockout of ctsl restricted viral production. cathepsin l inhibition has been suggested as a promising therapeutic strategy for covid- : specific small molecule inhibitors are in early stages of development, and direct or indirect inhibition is observed with a number of approved drugs including glycopeptide antibiotics, chloroquine and dexamethasone. atp a (rank ), encoding a subunit of the na+/k+ cotransporter, has similarly been shown to be necessary for membrane fusion and viral entry for a number of coronaviruses. inhibition of atp a by cardiac glycosides suppressed mers-cov infection in vitro. additional antiinflammatory effects of these drugs make them theoretically attractive therapeutic options, but adverse effects may limit their practical application. the interferon-stimulated gene ly e (rank ), which plays a key role in enhancing cellular entry by rna viruses including influenza a virus, was unexpectedly found to have a strong restricting effect on sars-cov- , sars-cov and mers-cov. such widely opposite differential effects on different viruses have been reported for other host genes, such as ifitm , rsad and axl (ranked , and respectively by maic), and for ppia (see below). consistent with the emerging understanding of the pathogenesis of covid- , key genes in the inflammatory response to sars-cov- infection are highly represented in the top genes. these include genes involved in recognizing the virus (tlr , ifih ), activating the innate immune system (oas , herc , s a ), chemotaxis (s a , cxcl , cxcl , ccl , saa ) and pro-inflammatory cytokines (il a, il ). . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted september , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint toll-like receptor (tlr ) is an endosome-associated pathogen-associated molecular pattern receptor, constitutively expressed in the respiratory tract and many immune cells. tlr detects double-standed viral rna and triggers production of type i interferons and other pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as il (rank ) and tnf! (rank ) via irf and nf-!b. the chemokine cxcl (rank ) is a key signalling molecule in viral immunity, which could contribute to pulmonary inflammation as well as aiding viral clearance. cxcl levels are associated with outcome in influenza and are thought to have a protective effect in sars, but a pro viral effect in hiv. cxcl has been proposed as a prognostic marker for the progression of disease in covid- , with continuously high levels of cxcl associated with worse outcomes. the high rankings of genes associated with activation and binding of t lymphocytes (cd , cd e, fgl , lck, sell) are also likely related to their prognostic significance, as lymphopaenia is strongly associated with poor outcomes in covid- . , absolute counts of cd +, cd + and cd + t lymphocytes have been proposed as a potential predictor of outcome in severe covid- patients with an increase in numbers of these cells observed during recovery. the highest-ranking gene is ppia, which encodes peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase a (ppia, also known as cyclophilin a, cypa), a cytosolic protein involved in protein folding and trafficking, cell signalling and t-cell activation via the calcineurin/nfat pathway. cypa is a pro-viral factor for hepatitis c virus (hcv), hiv- , and sars-cov, and an anti-viral factor for iav. , the cyclophilin inhibitor cyclosporine has in vitro antiviral activity against hcv. , , this was also observed in a hcv clinical trial, where cyclosporine combined with interferon-! was more efficacious in achieving sustained virologic response than interferon monotherapy. similar in vitro and clinical results were demonstrated for the cypa inhibitor alisporivir (debio- ). cypa is also a proviral factor for hiv- and alisporivir can inhibit hiv- replication in vitro. , a genome-wide protein-protein interaction screen identified an interaction between the sars-cov nsp protein and cypa. cyclosporine inhibits sars-cov replication in vero e cells, as well as hcov- e, hcov-nl , avian coronavirus and feline coronavirus. nsp also induced il- expression in hek cells through the calcineurin/nfat pathway, making inhibition of this pathway interesting from both an antiviral and immunomodulatory perspective. the high ranking of il a (encoding interleukin -!) is striking because monoclonal antibodies against interleukin receptor are a plausible therapeutic target for covid- . this pro-inflammatory cytokine, which is synergistic with tnf!, is constitutively expressed in epithelial cells and is upregulated after sars-cov- infection. interleukin- receptor blockade with anakinra is now being tested in a number of randomised clinical trials in covid- . . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted september , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint the principal advantage of the maic approach is that it allows integration of data from diverse sources. unlike other methods for gene list comparison such as vote counting or robust rank aggregation, maic applies a data-driven weighting to each dataset, accepts both ranked and unranked lists, and includes user-defined categories which prevent any single method from overwhelming the results. maic outperforms other methods for predicting antiviral genes. this meta-analysis is restricted to studies involving genome-wide hypotheses or screening data for large gene sets, and does not consider evidence from candidate gene genetic studies or single-gene perturbations. where a single gene has been investigated extensively but genome-scale studies are sparse, our approach may underestimate the relative strength of evidence for certain genes. single gene studies, however, are likely to focus preferentially on genes that fit pre-conceived ideas of disease pathogenesis and may be prone to other biases such as publication bias, something which we mitigated against in our inclusion criteria. genetic perturbation data are still relatively sparse for sars-cov- and other human betacoronaviruses: only one genome-wide crispr knockout screen and two other sub-genome-scale screens (kinome-wide rnai and interferon-stimulated gene overexpression screens) were included in the meta-analysis. limited data of this type could be responsible for the lower than expected rankings for ace (rank ), a major functional receptor for the sars-cov and sars-cov- spike (s) proteins, and tmprss (rank ), a serine protease required for s protein priming. , , while ace was identified as a host dependency factor in the crispr screen, tmprss was not, and as neither gene was included in the other two screens, the effects (or lack thereof) could not be confirmed. the only other supportive evidence for a role in disease pathophysiology, in studies included here, came from a single transcriptomic study for each; there was no evidence from protein-protein interaction, proteomics or genetics. , both of these genes have been proposed as possible therapeutic targets for covid- , and clinical trials are underway for the tmprss inhibitors nafamostat and camostat mesylate. systematic review and meta-analysis are routine elements in the assessment of clinical evidence and some fields in genomics, but have been less widely applied to mechanistic biology. using a flexible and intuitive method, we have systematically reviewed and meta-analysed host gene-level data from studies that address a range of complementary questions regarding human betacoronavirus infection. this provides external validation for numerous host genes implicated in both viral life cycle, and immune response, and identifies several plausible therapeutic targets with broad support from multiple sources. translational genomics. targeting the host immune response to fight infection genome-wide crispr screen identifies host dependency factors for influenza a virus infection dexamethasone in hospitalized patients with covid- -preliminary report & icecap tissue-specific tolerance in fatal gm-csf blockade with mavrilimumab in severe covid- pneumonia and systemic hyperinflammation: a single-centre, prospective cohort study interleukin- blockade with highdose anakinra in patients with covid- , acute respiratory distress syndrome, and hyperinflammation: a retrospective cohort study an algorithm for fast preranked gene set enrichment analysis using cumulative statistic calculation enrichr: interactive and collaborative html gene list enrichment analysis tool a dynamic immune response shapes covid- progression covid- : consider cytokine storm syndromes and immunosuppression sars-coronavirus replication is supported by a reticulovesicular network of modified endoplasmic reticulum unconventional use of lc by coronaviruses through the alleged subversion of the erad tuning pathway angiotensinconverting enzyme is a functional receptor for the sars coronavirus cathepsin l functionally cleaves the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus class i fusion protein upstream of rather than adjacent to the fusion peptide genome-wide crispr screen reveals host genes that regulate sars-cov- infection cathepsin l-selective inhibitors: a potentially promising treatment for covid- patients de atp a -mediated src signaling inhibits coronavirus entry into host cells screening of fda-approved drugs using a mers-cov clinical isolate from south korea identifies potential therapeutic options for digoxin and digoxin-like immunoreactive factors (dlif) modulate the release of proinflammatory cytokines. inflammation research : official journal of the european histamine research society ly e mediates an evolutionarily conserved enhancement of virus infection by targeting a late entry step ly e impairs coronavirus fusion and confers immune control of viral disease sensing of viral infection and activation of innate immunity by toll-like receptor covid : a clue from innate immunity progression of whole-blood transcriptional signatures from interferon-induced to neutrophil-associated patterns in severe influenza cxcl /ip- in infectious diseases pathogenesis and potential therapeutic implications the cytokine storm in covid- : an overview of the involvement of the chemokine/chemokine-receptor system lymphopenia in severe coronavirus disease- (covid- ): systematic review and meta-analysis lymphopenia predicts disease severity of covid- : a descriptive and predictive study characteristics of lymphocyte subsets and their predicting values for the severity of covid- patients cyclophilin a: a key player for human disease cyclosporin a inhibits the influenza virus replication through cyclophilin a-dependent and -independent pathways cyclophilin a restricts influenza a virus replication through degradation of the m protein essential role of cyclophilin a for hepatitis c virus replication and virus production and possible link to polyprotein cleavage kinetics cyclosporin a suppresses replication of hepatitis c virus genome in cultured hepatocytes suppression of hepatitis c virus replication by cyclosporin a is mediated by blockade of cyclophilins combined interferon alpha b and cyclosporin a in the treatment of chronic hepatitis c: controlled trial the cyclophilin inhibitor debio combined with peg ifnalpha a significantly reduces viral load in treatment-naïve hepatitis c patients inhibition of human immunodeficiency virus type replication in human cells by debio- , a novel cyclophilin binding agent the novel cyclophilin inhibitor cpi- - concurrently blocks hcv and hiv- infections via a similar mechanism of action von the sars-coronavirus-host interactome: identification of cyclophilins as target for pan-coronavirus inhibitors cyclosporine has a potential role in the treatment of sars comparative transcriptome analysis reveals the intensive early-stage responses of host cells to sars-cov- infection robust rank aggregation for gene list integration and meta-analysis sars-cov- cell entry depends on ace and tmprss and is blocked by a clinically proven protease inhibitor receptor recognition by the novel coronavirus from wuhan: an analysis based on decade-long structural studies of sars coronavirus upper airway gene expression differentiates covid- from other acute respiratory illnesses and reveals suppression of innate immune responses by sars-cov- . medrxiv : the preprint server for health sciences the authors would like to acknowledge prof. c. wiley and prof j. doench for sharing data and their helpful comments on the manuscript. key: cord- -oobbdgzh authors: campbell, allan title: the future of bacteriophage biology date: journal: nat rev genet doi: . /nrg sha: doc_id: cord_uid: oobbdgzh after an illustrious history as one of the primary tools that established the foundations of molecular biology, bacteriophage research is now undergoing a renaissance in which the primary focus is on the phages themselves rather than the molecular mechanisms that they explain. studies of the evolution of phages and their role in natural ecosystems are flourishing. practical questions, such as how to use phages to combat human diseases that are caused by bacteria, how to eradicate phage pests in the food industry and what role they have in the causation of human diseases, are receiving increased attention. phages are also useful in the deeper exploration of basic molecular and biophysical questions. bacteriophages (also known as phages) are viruses that infect bacteria. as with all viruses, phages are infectious particles that have at least two components: nucleic acid and protein. if a phage invades a susceptible bacterial cell, the phage (or at least its nucleic acid) enters the cell and triggers a cycle of phage production (fig. ) . during this cycle, the cell is reprogrammed to become a phage factory in which the components of the biosynthetic apparatus (such as ribosomes and atp generators) are diverted from their normal tasks in bacterial growth. the various pathways for reprogramming are initiated by phagespecified proteins, which are translated from phage mrna that is made after infection. the temporal programme is ordered and regulated. generally, nucleic-acid replication occurs first, followed by the synthesis of structural proteins of the phage particle. new phage particles are then assembled, and are later released from the cell. for most of the classically studied coliphages, release is effected by the disruption of the cell envelope and sudden lysis of the cell, the contents of which (including the new phage particles) spill out into the medium. the whole cycle can last ~ minutes and produce ~ new phages (fig. ) . this type of lytic cycle is the only mode of reproduction for many phages. other one reason that phages have been useful in research is the ease of synchronizing the lytic cycle in a population of cells, so that the progression of molecular events can be measured over the whole culture. synchronization might be achieved either by simultaneous infection or by the induction of phage development in lysogenic cells. a second reason is the ease with which mutations that affect specific stages of the cycle can be isolated and analysed. phages are as varied in size and form as the viruses that infect eukaryotes. several formal classification schemes have been proposed, but none is widely useful or known to reflect phylogeny. table summarizes basic information on common model phages and illustrates some of the diversity in phage morphology and lifestyle. the phylogeny of viruses has eluded generations of virologists. modern methods have redefined the questions rather than achieved definitive answers. in closely related groups, isolates can be arranged by the degree of similarity, but whether all viruses (or even all phages) constitute a monophyletic group remains uncertain. the development of ideas, starting in the pre-genome era, is illustrated by work on phages and their relatives. in the s, numerous temperate phages (lambdoids) were discovered that resembled the phage-λ morphologically and could recombine with it. electron microscopy of heteroduplexes, coupled with the results from genetic crosses, verified that the lambdoid phages have a common genetic map but show diverse after an illustrious history as one of the primary tools that established the foundations of molecular biology, bacteriophage research is now undergoing a renaissance in which the primary focus is on the phages themselves rather than the molecular mechanisms that they explain. studies of the evolution of phages and their role in natural ecosystems are flourishing. practical questions, such as how to use phages to combat human diseases that are caused by bacteria, how to eradicate phage pests in the food industry and what role they have in the causation of human diseases, are receiving increased attention. phages are also useful in the deeper exploration of basic molecular and biophysical questions. approximately years after their discovery in (ref. ), the use of phages to answer fundamental questions about the mechanisms of inheritance began, taking advantage of the ease with which they could be manipulated . between the years and , phage experiments laid much of the groundwork for the science of molecular biology. that science, once dubbed 'modern' as distinct from 'classical' biology, has long since been assimilated into the textbooks. however, recent research indicates that the historical contributions that phage studies have made to molecular biology might be overshadowed by their future influence on biology in general, and on genetics in particular. phages have important roles in global ecology and bacterial pathogenicity. these emerging roles, together with the increasing number of recent publications on phage genomics, highlight the need for a natural selection has preserved some benign combinations. this raises the question of how the parental phages that give rise to a new junction came to be so different from one another. however, before addressing this issue, we leave the myopic consideration of lambdoid phages to look at what genome analysis implies about phages that are essentially unrelated, even those that come from highly diverse hosts. on that level, the message is clear. natural phage genomes are frequently chimeric in origin and contain genes that have been transferred over great evolutionary distances . as with the genesis of new junctions among the lambdoid phages, the potential number of such transfers must greatly exceed what has passed through the sieve of natural selection. among the more marked examples of molecular chimerism is phage n . whereas most of its phage genes are related to, and in the same order as, the genes of a lambdoid phage, its prophage form persists as a linear plasmid that includes sequences that are related to the f plasmid of escherichia coli as well as to coliphages p and p (ref. ). this widespread chimerism forces us to believe that phage genomes collectively constitute a pool that is subject to continual mixing. this pool includes groups, such as the lambdoid phages, in which mixing is even more frequent. however, some gene blocks that are found in lambdoid phages might have resided elsewhere for much of their history, and have diverged over long periods during which they were not subject to frequent recombination with other lambdoid phages. it should be noted that molecular clock estimates indicate that some allelic variants of λ-genes diverged long before the existence of e. coli, which is the host of λ, perhaps even as long ago as the branching of bacteria from archaea and eukaryotes , . there are many reasons to question the accuracy of dating by molecular clocks . however, the antiquity of viral genes is also indicated by an independent line of evidence . there are marked examples (such as adenoviruses and reoviruses) in which the morphology of the viral capsid is similar in a group that includes animal viruses, plant viruses and bacteriophages. these similarities extend from the shapes of individual proteins to the overall morphology of the virus particle (composed of several protein species) and seem unlikely to represent evolutionary convergence. this indicates a common ancestry for reoviruses and phage φ , for example, although the rna and protein sequences show no significant similarities and, therefore, must have diverged anciently, perhaps before the separation of the main domains of the living world. hendrix offered the most comprehensive interpretation of these results. if different closely related phages, such as lambdoids, encounter one another in nature, they can recombine. the frequency of recombination depends on the degree of similarity of the two partners at the recombination points. so, between any two phages, shared segments of homology can serve as recombinational linkers, and even identities of oligonucleotide length can create preferred exchange points. none of this is new. however, breakage and joining sometimes occur even if there is no homology -which represents new ground -and over evolutionary time this happens often enough to generate the sharp boundaries between homology and non-homology that are observed in phages. most such new junctions should be lethal or deleterious, but specificities for properties such as integration, repression and host range. these studies also showed that any two lambdoid phages are similar in some segments of their genomes and dissimilar in others, with abrupt transitions from similarity to dissimilarity . extensive dna sequencing has confirmed this general picture. it has also shown that segments with altered specificity (such as repressor genes), although differing greatly in sequence, are nonetheless orthologous. comparing all the known lambdoid phages, there is little doubt that they have undergone extensive recombination in nature, mixing and matching heterologous specificity determinants. sequencing also verifies the sharpness of most boundaries between segments of close similarity and those of extreme dissimilarity. at the base of the natural food chain are the photosynthetic microbes: green algae and cyanobacteria. for both of these groups, a substantial fraction of their biomass is liberated as dissolved organic material by viral infection. heterotrophic consumers of dissolved organic matter are also frequently killed by viral infection. no account of the natural food web that omits bacteriophages is even close to being complete , . molecular machines. the focus of biochemistry has advanced from chemical catalysis by individual proteins to mechanical processes that are carried out by molecular assemblages. phage systems provide many instructive examples. the forces that drive dna injection during infection by the large-tailed dna phages have long eluded direct identification. for many common phages, such as λ and t , this remains the case. more progress has been made with phages, such as t , which inject their dna slowly. the initial step is the injection of t proteins from the phage particle to form a channel across the cell envelope that conducts dna into the cell by a process that is apparently enzymatic . next, the dna is pulled into the cell by transcription with an effectively stationary rna polymerase (first host then phage polymerase) that reels dna through itself , . the type i restriction enzyme eco ki can replace rna polymerase to reel in dna . in assembling large double-stranded dna (dsdna) phages, viral dna can be pulled into preformed heads by the portal protein that is located at one vertex of the icosahedron. detailed studies of the physical mechanism were made on bacillus phage φ (ref. ). the dodecameric portal protein rotates in the protein shell of the phage, in steps of °, which reel in phage dna and are powered by atp hydrolysis (fig. ) . the forces that act on individual dna molecules that are being packaged into the heads of φ have been accurately measured, and show that the φ portal protein generates one of the strongest known molecular motors . as well as such motors, phages use numerous molecular machines. the insertion of phage dna into the chromosome during lysogenization is a good example. several molecules of λ-integrase form an assemblage (the intasome) that binds to a specific segment of phage dna, recruits the bacterial insertion sites into the complex, then makes concerted single-strand cuts in the two dnas. the strand cutting proceeds through the covalent joining of a ′ phosphate to a tyrosine of the integrase protein. the terminal three bases of one characteristic of a phage family such as the lambdoids, is a common genetic map. the main determinants for structural and regulatory elements in the phage genome are present in the same order throughout the family. as discussed previously, these elements have sometimes been replaced by homologues or analogues from other phages. however, at some time in the past these genomes must have come into being, probably by the merging of smaller genomes with more limited functions. so, the original lambdoid phage might have derived its replication genes from one source, its lysis genes from a second source and its structural genes from a third. genes might have been added one at a time or in larger blocks , . the exciting point is that such gene addition is not just a long ago fait accompli but is an active continuing process. the hendrix group have identified segments of the genomes of lambdoid phages that seem to have been spliced into the phage genome recently. these segments (dubbed 'morons') typically include a single gene, which is often of unknown function, and generally differ in base composition from the rest of the phage genome. each moron is present in some lambdoid phages and absent from others. the incorporation by phages of toxin genes and longer pathogenicity islands might be an example of the same kind of process (see later). a complete understanding of the natural dynamics that underlie the recombinational origin of new phage types will require more specific information on the role of natural selection -not only the elimination of maladapted types (as mentioned earlier) but also active selection for the few superior variants. further efforts in this direction are desirable, not just for their intrinsic interest but also as models for viruses that infect eukaryotic hosts; for example, it is well documented that members of the coronavirus group, which has attracted attention recently through the emergence of a deadly new human pathogen that causes severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars), undergo frequent recombination in nature , . the long-held suspicion that phages are ubiquitous throughout the prokaryotic world has been confirmed as our knowledge has expanded to include more phages and phagerelated sequences in prokaryotic genomes. the numerical abundance of phage-like particles in aquatic ecosystems generally exceeds that of prokaryotic cells and might represent > % of the biomass of those cells. furthermore, as documented in recent reviews , , , there is increasing evidence to indicate that a large fraction of these visible particles comprises viable infectious phages. www.nature.com/reviews/genetics p e r s p e c t i v e s predicted by the finding that the repressor assembles to form octamers, as required for cooperative binding . our initial understanding of in vivo switching was incomplete in another respect. the earlier work showed that the or switch, by itself, is bistable. the ci gene, which encodes the repressor, is transcribed leftward from or, whereas the secondary repressor cro and other gene products come from the rightward message. both repressor and cro can bind to three sites in or and shut-off transcription in both directions. however, one or the other will eventually get the upper hand. if repressor synthesis is established, cro synthesis is shut off, and vice versa. the system, therefore, provides an elegant model for how switching events might be controlled in other contexts, such as in cell differentiation in multicellular eukaryotes , . as for the phage system, it might seem gratuitous to question whether the crucial events have been identified, as the simple model seems to provide a sufficient explanation. the shut-off of repressor synthesis by cro depends on cro binding to the or operator site, which could be the crucial step in activating the lytic cycle. in this view, the establishment of repression depends on a race between cro and the repressor. however, it has been known from early on that another protein, cii, which acts at the promoter site pre, is crucial in repressor establishment and that cro that is bound to the other or sites (or and or ) decreases cii production. this makes it equally possible that the decisive race is between cro and cii, with or having, at most, an ancillary role. the definitive experiments are yet to be done. a comprehensive modelling of the switch is available , which agrees with the published data on lysogenization frequencies as a function of average phage input . the complex regulation of the switch is shown in fig. . however, in this pioneering work most of the kinetic parameters are estimates rather than direct measurements. this work underscores the potential for modelling whole-cell physiology with the present high-throughput data on transcription rates and protein abundance. still lacking is a complete model that predicts the strong overshoot in repressor concentration that is observed during lysogenization . because the rate of repressor synthesis from cii-stimulated pre is much higher than that observed in a lysogen, it seems unlikely that cro that is bound to or can prevent repressor establishment if cii synthesis achieves its maximum rate. it was previously thought that holliday junctions were formed by re-ligation at the cutting site, followed by branch migration to the resolution site ( -bps removed). since then, important progress has been made on the nature of the initial dna-protein interactions gene regulation. in a series of incisive experiments, ptashne and colleagues defined the modus operandi of the lysis/lysogeny decision in phage as a model genetic switch that operates in the right operator sites (or) (fig. ) . this work has recently been extended by the discovery that the natural switch is strongly influenced by the simultaneous interaction of the repressor with the leftward operator (ol), which is more than -kb away [ ] [ ] [ ] ; this was the free ′ ends then rotate to exchange partners, followed by ligation with removal of the integrase protein from the ′ ends to form a holliday junction. the assemblage then undergoes a rearrangement (isomerization) and resolves the holliday structure by cutting the two previously uncut strands on the other side of the junction, which allows the exchange of partners by the freed ′ ends, followed by resealing . the reverse reaction (excision from the chromosome) requires a second phage-specified protein (excisionase) and proceeds by an analogous mechanism, which is, however, not a simple chemical reversal of the integration reaction . probably the most important recent breakthrough was the discovery that both initiation and resolution involve strand swapping of the free ′ ends, as described earlier . shown by a set of four blue spheres and one red sphere. the dna base that is aligned with the active connector monomer is also shown in red. a | the active prna-atpase i interacts with the adjacent connector monomer (a), which in turn contacts the aligned dna base. b | the narrow end of the connector has moved anti-clockwise by °, to place the narrow end of monomer c opposite atpase ii, the next atpase to be fired; this causes the connector to expand lengthwise by slightly altering the angle of the helices in the central domain (white arrow with asterisk). c | the wide end of the connector has followed the narrow end, as the connector relaxes and contracts (white arrow with two asterisks), thereby causing the dna to be translated into the phage head. for the next cycle, atpase ii is activated, which causes the connector to be rotated by another °, and so on. at present, phage therapy can be described as promising, but despite its long history its ability to deliver on the promise remains to be fully shown. however, there have been clear successes with experimentally infected animals , , and mathematical modelling corroborates the expectations of feasibility . much of the earlier work was relatively crude and less controlled, and the whole area was dismissed without a thorough evaluation (largely because of the availability and economy of antibiotic therapy). now, the numerous potential problems, such as the deleterious effects of the phages themselves, the inactivation of phages by neutralizing antibodies and the genesis of phage-resistant mutants, remain to be rigorously addressed. in other areas that require bacterial survival under conditions of incomplete sterility, such as industrial fermentation, phages are the enemy. phage lysis of lactic-acid bacteria has long been a nuisance in cheese factories. extensive studies on phages that infect lactic-acid bacteria are continuing in many countries [ ] [ ] [ ] . a long time 'holy grail' of research that is directed towards the elimination of the problem has been the isolation or engineering of stable bacterial mutants that are resistant to all of the phages that might attack a given culture , . there are many occasions on which molecular biologists would like to identify, from a large collection of proteins or peptides, those few that have some special property (such as binding to a low molecular-weight ligand or to a specific site on a protein or dna molecule). it is easy to fractionate the collection on the basis of its binding properties, but if a binding species is rare, it might be impractical to isolate enough material to determine its structure. in such cases, it is preferable to isolate not the protein or peptide, but rather the dna that encodes it and can easily be amplified. the simplest way to do this is in a system in which the fractionation process brings the dna along with the protein it encodes. surface antigens on bacterial cells can be treated in this way. a more powerful method is to display the protein or peptide on the surface of a phage. phage particles are much smaller than bacteria, so larger libraries can be screened. if the library is composed of translational fusions to a protein that is abundant on the surface of a phage particle, the sensitivity is high; under conditions of single infection, the binding properties of a phage particle are determined by the gene fusion in its dna. phage therapy. following their discovery, phages were regarded as possible agents to combat pathogenic bacteria (as discussed by merril et al. ). most early attempts at phage therapy were unsuccessful or inconclusive, apparently for trivial technical reasons such as the absence of placebo controls or the rapid clearance of injected phage from the bloodstream before it had time to reach its intended target , . with the advent of antibiotics, the development and use of phage therapy almost disappeared from the western world, although it continued in the soviet union and eastern europe . as the incidence of antibiotic resistance continues to rise, the field has been reactivated . phage therapy has some inherent advantages over antibiotics, in both the specificity and the ability of the agent to propagate in the desired location (advantages that were seldom realized in earlier work with impure phage preparations) . as with antibiotics, the efficiency is limited by bacterial mutation, which will doubtless be a great challenge to future development. (fig. ) , the phage can either enter the lytic cyle -in which it reproduces and then lyses its host -or the lysogenic cycle -in which the phage dna is incorporated into the host dna and is replicated indefinitely. dashed boxes enclose operator sites that comprise a promoter-control complex. the three operator sites o r - of the 'λ-switch' control the promoters p rm and p r . cro and ci dimers bind to the three sites with different affinities and in the opposite order to control the activation of the p rm and p r promoters . if protein n is available, transcribing rna polymerases (rnaps) can be anti-terminated at the nut r and nut l sites; the termination sites t r and t l are inoperative for anti-terminated rnaps. the ci dimer acts as either a repressor or activator of the promoter p rm , depending on its concentration. p and p are proteases that degrade the cii phage protein. ciii is a phage gene product that is also a substrate for p . by binding to p , ciii inhibits the degradation of cii. b | λ-decision-circuit dna organization. phage-encoded genetic elements of the decision circuit are located in a , -nucleotide region of the phage dna. genes are separated into leftward and rightward transcribed strands as indicated by the arrows. rightward extensions of the anti-terminated p r transcript transcribe the o and p genes that are essential for phage genome replication, and the q gene that controls the transcription of later genes on the lytic pathway. leftward extension of the anti-terminated p l transcript transcribes xis and int genes, which are essential for phage-chromosome integration and excision both into and out of the host chromosome. the locations of four termination sites are indicated by t r - and t l - . figure modified with permission from ref. . www.nature.com/reviews/genetics p e r s p e c t i v e s direct insertion of toxin genes into phage dna, which might be transposon mediated. the latter possibility is more likely if the toxin gene is not at a terminus of the prophage, but rather in the middle, as in the λ-related coliphage w, which encodes a shiga-like toxin . the evolution of bacterial pathogenicity can only be understood by including the role of phages and pathogenicity islands. prophages and pathogenicity islands seem to be closely related; however, assumptions about the nature of the relationship might be premature. pathogenicity islands belong to a broader category of dna known as specialization islands. specialization islands are blocks of contiguous genes that are distinguished by several criteria. first, they are dedicated to a common function, such as pathogenicity, which is not directly needed for simple survival. second, they differ from the surrounding dna in molecular statistics such as the g+c content, codon usage and neighbour relations. third, they are present in certain strains of a bacterial species and absent from others. their widespread occurrence has only come to light through whole genome sequencing, and their molecular statistics indicate that such elements have been derived in the relatively recent past from other bacterial species, to which they might be indigenous . their intercalation in only certain strains of the species in which they are now observed indicates the operation of an insertion mechanism, such as phage integration or transposition; also, some islands are flanked by phage-insertion sites, which technically qualifies the whole unit, whatever its historical origin, as a defective prophage , . this raises a host of questions for future research. one scenario (perhaps overly facile) is that the whole unit arose in the species of origin by rearrangements of host and phage dna, that it was introduced into the species in which we now find it by packing into a phage coat, followed by injection and lysogenization, and that, in its present host, it moves from one strain to another by infection and lysogenization. there is, at present, an extreme paucity of evidence to show that the transfer among strains happens by this method rather than by genetic recombination mechanisms that affect all chromosomal genes. at the other extreme, we might imagine that pathogenicity islands, similar to other genes that are scored as alien , could move between species by some other mechanism (perhaps transformation or conjugation) and become inserted into the recipient chromosome by transposition or some other pathogenicity islands that are potentially phage-related. so, a framework for incisive studies on phage-mediated diseases has developed , . it is easier to guess the future of the mechanistic studies than that of the evolutionary studies, in which many lines of inquiry converge. even from the vantage point of wholegenome sequencing, the prevalence of lysogeny might be underestimated because the identification of prophages requires homology to known phages. it has also long been known that complete prophages, which are able to generate plaque-forming particles, frequently deteriorate into incomplete (defective) prophages by changes that range from point mutations to extensive deletions and/or insertions. a particular type of defective phage -specialized transducing phages -can result from faulty excision from the chromosome, which replaces some phage dna by host dna adjacent to the insertion site . this is one mechanism whereby phages might have acquired toxin genes. another is recent examples include fusions of domains of surface antigens of the human pathogen neisseria meningitidis onto the surface protein of phage t , for possible use in vaccine construction, and fusions of random five amino-acid sequences to identify possible binding partners for a nuclease that cuts t dna for packaging , . it was discovered early on that in some important bacterial diseases, such as diphtheria and botulism , pathogenicity depends on the presence of certain prophages, which generally encode toxins. knowledge has accumulated gradually, but the area has recently blossomed for at least two reasons. first, advances in eukaryotic cell biology and bacterial gene regulation allow a more profound understanding of the interaction between pathogenic bacteria and the human cell. second, whole-genome sequencing of pathogenic bacteria has disclosed the prevalence not only of prophages, but also of glossary analogues genes (or their products) that are not of common ancestry, but which have equivalent functions. the protein-mediated prevention of the termination of rna synthesis. bistable having two steady states that are stable to small fluctuations. coliphage a bacteriophage that infects escherichia coli bacteria. conjugation the intercellular transfer of dna that is mediated by pili, which are surface appendages that are encoded by certain bacterial plasmids and transposons. heteroduplex a dna molecule that is formed by base pairing between strands that are derived from two dna molecules that are not identical in sequence. a point at which the strands of two double-stranded dna molecules exchange partners, which occurs as an intermediate in genetic recombination. homologues genes (or their products) that are descended from a common ancestral gene. intasome an assemblage of integrase molecules that are bound to their dna substrate. lambdoid belonging to a group of phages that are related to λ. ligand a molecule that binds non-covalently to another type of molecule. a bacterium that harbours phages in a latent form, from which it can be activated to produce infectious phage particles. a group that contains all the organisms that are descended from a common evolutionary ancestor. orthologue the form of a gene in one species that corresponds most directly to a similar gene in another species. prophage the latent form of phage dna that is present in lysogenic bacteria. a phage that is able to form lysogenic bacteria. transformation the uptake of exogenous dna that becomes permanently incorporated into the genome of a cell. an artificial construct in which the coding regions of two different proteins are juxtaposed so as to generate a single chimeric protein product if translated. transposition the transposon-mediated movement of a segment of dna. a bacterial enzyme that moves along dna to cleave it far from its specific site of entry. mechanism. in this picture, such foreign dna is frequently found inside prophages or defective prophages simply because, from a bacterial perspective, prophages constitute junk dna the disruption of which does not affect bacterial survival. insertion of island dna into a pre-existing prophage might seem to add an unnecessary step to the mechanism of origin, but that is not the case. the insertion of island dna into the surrounding phage-related dna must have happened somewhere sometime, and it frequently now bears no traces of known insertion processes such as transposition. further work should illuminate two outstanding questions. first, if this and other 'alien' dna came from some distantly related donor species of bacteria, what was the donor? the bacterial genomes that have been sequenced so far provide only a handful of examples of lateral transfer in which both donor and recipient might be inferredperhaps simply because not enough bacteria have yet been sequenced. second, is the potential mobility of the element in its present host a significant factor in the epidemiology of the diseases? a scientific field derives its interest less from what we know than from the unanswered questions that seem approachable by the available methods. i have tried to indicate some such questions here, many of which have been incubating for years and have been explored through more lines of evidence than could be discussed. however, the time is ripe to seek definitive answers with improved methods. future research should include the stochastic kinetics analysis of developmental pathway bifurcation in phage λ-infected escherichia coli cells lysogenization by bacteriophage-λ. i. multiple infection and the lysogenic response long-circulating bacteriophage as antibacterial agents bacteriophage therapy successful treatment of experimental e.coli infections in mice using phage is generally superior over antibiotics bacteriophage therapy rescues mice bacteremic from a vancomycin-resistant enterococcus faecium phage therapy revisited: the population biology of a bacterial infection and its treatment with bacteriophages and antibiotics comparative genomics reveals close genetic relationships between phages from dairy bacteria and pathogenic streptococci: evolutionary implications for prophage-host interactions phages of dairy bacteria characterization of six leuconostoc fallax bacteriophages isolated from an industrial sauerkraut fermentation bacteriophagetriggered defense systems: phage adaptation and design improvements broad-range bacteriophage resistance in staphylococcus thermophilus by insertional mutagenesis display of a pora peptide from neisseria meningitidis on the bacteriophage t capsid surface a bipartite bacteriophage t soc and hoc randomized peptide display library: detection and analysis of phage t terminase (gp ) and late σ-factor (gp ) interaction studies of the virulence of bacteriophageinfected strains of corynebacterium diphtheriae conversion of toxigenicity in clostridium botulinum type c a satellite phage-encoded antirepressor induces repressor aggregation and cholera toxin gene transfer bacteriophage control of bacterial virulence transduction and segregation in escherichia coli k- sequence of shiga toxin phage w from escherichia coli :h : shiga toxin as a phage late-gene product detecting alien genes in bacterial genomes pathogenicity islands of virulent bacteria: structure, function and impact on bacterial evolution comparative dna analysis across diverse genomes an investigation on the nature of ultramicroscopic viruses the growth of bacteriophage bacteriophages: evolution of the majority evolutionary relationships among diverse bacteriophages and prophages: all the world's a phage the plasmid prophage n : a linear dna with covalently closed ends ancient phylogenetic relationships nucleotide sequence of coliphage hk and the evolution of lambdoid phages evolution of viral structure evidence of natural recombination within the s gene of infectious bronchitis virus fundamental virology viroplankton: viruses in aquatic ecosystems viruses and nutrient cycles in the sea dynamics and distribution of cyanophages and their effect on marine synechococcus spp the significance of viruses to mortality in aquatic microbial communities viruses in marine planktonic systems no syringes please, ejection of dna from the virion is enzyme driven rna polymerasedependent mechanism for the stepwise t phage transport from the virion into e. coli rate of translocation of bacteriophage t dna across the membranes of escherichia coli translocation and specific cleavage of bacteriophage t dna in vivo by eco ki structure of the bacteriophage φ dna packaging motor the bacteriophage straight φ portal motor can package dna against a large internal force swapping dna strands and sensing homology without branch migration in λ-site-specific recombination sitespecific recombination intermediates trapped with suicide substrates architectural flexibility in λ-site-specific recombination: three alternate conformations channel the attl site into three distinct pathways analysis of higher order intermediates and synapsis in the bent-l pathway of bacteriophage λ-sitespecific recombination site-specific photo-cross-linking between λ-integrase and its dna recombination target arm-site binding for λ-integrase: solution structure and functional characterization of its amino-terminal domain phage and higher organisms four dimers of λ-repressor bound to two suitably spaced pairs of λ-operators form octamers and dna loops over long distances octamerization of λ-ci repressor is needed for effective repression of p(rm) and switching from lysogeny the primary self-assembly reaction of bacteriophage ci repressor dimers is to octamer control of λ-repressor synthesis the author thanks d. bamford, b. weisberg and three anonymous reviewers for helpful suggestions. key: cord- -u y bznk authors: jaluria, pratik; konstantopoulos, konstantinos; betenbaugh, michael; shiloach, joseph title: a perspective on microarrays: current applications, pitfalls, and potential uses date: - - journal: microb cell fact doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: u y bznk with advances in robotics, computational capabilities, and the fabrication of high quality glass slides coinciding with increased genomic information being available on public databases, microarray technology is increasingly being used in laboratories around the world. in fact, fields as varied as: toxicology, evolutionary biology, drug development and production, disease characterization, diagnostics development, cellular physiology and stress responses, and forensics have benefiting from its use. however, for many researchers not familiar with microarrays, current articles and reviews often address neither the fundamental principles behind the technology nor the proper designing of experiments. although, microarray technology is relatively simple, conceptually, its practice does require careful planning and detailed understanding of the limitations inherently present. without these considerations, it can be exceedingly difficult to ascertain valuable information from microarray data. therefore, this text aims to outline key features in microarray technology, paying particular attention to current applications as outlined in recent publications, experimental design, statistical methods, and potential uses. furthermore, this review is not meant to be comprehensive, but rather substantive; highlighting important concepts and detailing steps necessary to conduct and interpret microarray experiments. collectively, the information included in this text will highlight the versatility of microarray technology and provide a glimpse of what the future may hold. although, the principles behind microarray technology were conceived almost years ago and developed from southern blotting, they did not gain wide spread attention for nearly a decade when researchers were first able to utilize high quality slides with precision robotics resulting in reproducible results [ ] [ ] [ ] . for instance, a quick pubmed search with the words, 'microarray and ' results in total articles, of which are review articles. similar searches with the words, 'microarray and ' and 'microarray and ' result in total articles ( review articles) and total articles ( review articles), respectively. despite this relative surge in microar-ray-related articles, few recent publications address core issues regarding design, implementation, and subsequent data analysis. in covering these and related issues, the present text aims to illustrate the strengths, weaknesses, and application of microarrays, especially to those unfamiliar with the technology. today's arrays are vastly superior to their predecessors in terms of quality, probe density, and structural layout [ , ] . before dealing with these and other characteristics, it is important to discuss, at some length, what microarrays are as well as the fundamental concepts behind the technology. the term microarray is both descriptive and somewhat ambiguous as it is commonly used to describe a variety of platforms including protein microarrays and tissue microarrays [ , ] . a microarray is typically defined as a collection of microscopic spots arranged in an array or grid-like format and attached to a solid surface or membrane, hence the term [ , ] . these spots typically referred to as probes, are designed such that each probe binds a specific nucleic acid sequence corresponding to a particular gene through a process termed hybridization [ ] . the sequence bound to a probe, often referred to as the target, is labeled with some kind of detectable molecule or dye such as a fluorophore [ ] . the level of binding between a probe and its target is quantified by measuring the fluorescence or signal emitted by the labeling dye when scanned. this signal, in turn, provides a measure of the expression of the specific gene containing the target sequence [ , ] . although, there are several different types of dna microarrays, for the purposes of this text only two will be considered; spotted microarrays and oligonucleotide microarrays [ ] . details regarding these two platforms are highlighted in table . spotted microarrays are often referred to as dual-channel or two-color microarrays because two samples, each labeled with a different fluoro-phore, are hybridized onto a single slide [ , ] . as a result of combining two samples onto a single slide, only relative expression levels can be determined using spotted arrays [ ] . the probes in spotted arrays are oligonucleotides, complementary dna (cdna), or fragments of polymerase chain reaction (pcr) products; each type conferring different properties to the spotted array. despite these differences, all spotted arrays are similar in terms of: array construction, target preparation, and data analysis [ , ] . in contrast, oligonucleotide microarrays also referred to as single-channel microarrays are hybridized with only one sample and therefore generate absolute expression levels. these arrays utilize probes designed to complement mrna sequences and are produced using various methods including in situ synthesis, some type of deposition method, or photolithography [ , ] . as alluded to earlier, two important elements of microarray technology are target preparation and probe construction. depending on the type of microarray being used, different cellular components can be used for target generation including: rna, genomic dna, cdna, complementary rna (crna), and pcr products [ , ] . regardless of which of these are used, ensuring the quality, stability, and reproducibility of the generated targets is paramount for subsequent processing. similarly, probes can consist of any of the following: cdna, oligonucleotides, fragments of pcr products, restriction-enzyme digested fragments, oligomers, or expressed sequence tags (ests) [ , , ] . irrespective of the exact composition of the probes, they all serve the same basic function; binding very specific sequences. although, probes are constructed in a variety of ways, depending on the type of array and the specific application, the same public databases are referenced for sequencing information [ , , ] . typically, arrays are fabricated with duplicates of each probe, enhancing the likelihood of observing hybridization for each gene. a simple schematic of the entire process for a spotted cdna microarray experiment can be seen in figure a [ ] . briefly, total rna, once isolated from a sample, is reverse transcribed to produce cdna, labeled with fluorescent dyes, and then hybridized onto the spotted array [ , ] . hybridization is quantified using the intensities of the fluorescent dyes at particular wavelengths. by comparing fluorescence intensities, genes that are differentially expressed between the two samples can be identified, along with the direction of that difference (i.e. overexpression or under-expression relative to a control) [ , ] . for example, figure b illustrates the significance of each color when the test sample is labeled with cy and the control sample is labeled with cy . in this case, black represents no binding (i.e. no signal), green indicates greater binding of the control sample than of the test sample referred to as down-regulation, yellow indicates equal binding between the two samples, and red indicates greater binding of the test sample than of the control sample referred to as up-regulation. if the dyes are used in reverse (i.e. cy is used to label the control sample and cy is used to label the test sample) the colors would have the opposite representations [ , ] . although a multitude of microarrays are commercially available, each designed for a specific species or general family of organisms; these arrays are limited by the information available in genomics databases [ , ] . though, the genomes of only a few species have been entirely sequenced and made available to the public, microarrays for a large number of species are available [ , ] . for instance, checking the website for affymetrix reveals genome-wide arrays are available for the following microbes: bacillus subtilis, escherichia coli, pseudomonas aeruginosa, members of the genus plasmodium, staphylococcus aureus, and members of the genus saccharomyces. small, custom arrays can be designed for many more species as long as genomic sequences are available for a particular organism or family of organisms [ , , ] . continued genome exploration has resulted in the need for frequent updating and re-organization of spotted arrays. with more information constantly coming online, microarrays are continually refined to enhance reproducibility and detection levels of weak signals by modifying the positioning and sequences of the ests spotted [ , ] . as previously mentioned, ests are essentially unique segments of cdna identical to a portion of a gene, thereby acting as binding domain. in addition, valuable information can still be ascertained by hybridizing samples onto arrays designed for other species [ , ] . so, even without an entire genome being spotted onto commercially available arrays for a given species, microarray experiments can still yield important results. any discussion regarding microarray technology would be incomplete without a detailed examination of the various limitations and complexities inherently present. such a discussion is vital to properly conduct microarray experiments and analyze microarray data; overcoming technological limitations in the process. before conducting microarray experiments, the following questions need to be addressed: what are the goals of the experiment, what biological comparisons are most relevant to these goals, how should the experiments be designed and performed taking into account the various sources of variability, which platform should be used, what controls need to be in place, and how can the results be verified [ , ] . in approaching these and other relevant questions, a great deal of information regarding microarray technology can be ascertained. to answer the first two questions regarding goals and relevant comparisons, a number of resources can be referenced. several organizations such as the microarray gene expression data (mged) society and the european bioinformatics institute (ebi) have established guidelines to aid researchers in the design and implementation of microarray experiments [ , , ] . in general, narrowing the objectives of a microarray study can provide insight into which biological samples should be compared. clear and concise goals also help define the scope of the study, providing a framework within which subsequent experiments can be proposed and implemented. one of the most commonly sited proposals is the minimum information about a microarray experiment (miame) that includes a series of recommendations and standards on collecting and analyzing microarray data [ , ] . this document was designed to allow data generated by microarray experiments to be interpreted and reproduced with certainty. in addition, repositories such as the gene expression omnibus (geo) created by the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) and arrayexpress created by the ebi have been established to store and share gene expression data [ , ] . array even extending to other experiments as long as the same reference sample is used [ , ] . however, this setup can become costly if the goals of the experiment require multiple comparisons to be made. in contrast, the saturated design involves making every possible comparison exactly once [ ] . this approach is balanced and simple to establish, however, it is not applicable to all conditions and is not appropriate when a series of experiments are planned. ultimately, the design selected must address the goals and requirements of the experiment being conducted. without these and other considerations, errors in analysis including the identification of false positives can result, masking underlying patterns and incorrectly deciphering biological behavior. there are multiple sources of variability such as differences in: arrays, dye labeling, efficiency in reverse transcription, and hybridization [ , ] . some of these issues relate back to the actual production of arrays and how probes are prepared; elements of quality control on the part of the manufacturer. the remaining issues are best overcome by: incorporating replicates to generate statistical significance (i.e. averages and variance), performing dye-swapping experiments, and pooling samples to minimize biological variation [ , , ] . both technical and biological replicates are commonly employed, each with a different purpose in mind. technical replicates aim to quantify procedural variations such as sample preparation and handling [ ] . in contrast, biological replicates aim to identify variation in the biological system being studied [ ] . similarly, dye swapping involves switching the dyes used for labeling in a manner that prevents one type of sample from being labeled by a single dye. this setup helps account for the dye effect; an important systematic error that stems from differences in the properties of the dyes. the pooling of samples also reduces inherent variation in biological samples while at the same time generating sufficient sample quantities for subsequent processing [ ] . as discussed earlier, there are two main platforms to consider when designing microarray experiments; spotted microarrays and oligonucleotide microarrays. the advantages and disadvantages of each are outlined in table along with examples of when a particular platform is most beneficial [ , ] . for example, oligonucleotide microarrays are ideal for time-course experiments because each array is hybridized with only one sample, allowing any array to be compared to any other array. this translates into requiring a smaller number of total samples for the same number of duplicates while at the same time more accurately representing the control for a given condition. similarly, for static conditions in which a basic comparison between treated and untreated cell populations is needed, dualchannel microarrays may be the best fit. each application has its own set of criteria that should be carefully evaluated to determine the best platform to use [ , ] . for instance, if specific genes are to be investigated, it should be verified that the platform includes those particular genes with the desired number of replicates. a simple search online will reveal a multitude of companies that manufacture microarrays and allow customers to construct their own custom arrays using specialized software. in addressing the various sources of error, systematic or otherwise, proper controls need to be implemented. there are two types of controls, as they pertain to microarray technology; internal controls and external controls [ , ] . internal controls check for the quality of the printed microarray whereas external controls account for performance in terms of sensitivity and robustness. the internal controls often used include: hybridization controls, poly-a controls, normalization control sets, and housekeeping genes [ , ] . each type of control is commonly found in commercially available arrays and serves a distinct function relating to one specific aspect of microarray processing. in addition, samples can be spiked with particular agents to isolate or quantify detection limits, non-specific noise, and similar parameters [ ] . similarly, a number of approaches can be taken to minimize external variables such as discrepancies in: growing and preparing biological samples, isolating and purifying rna, cell synchronization, hybridization protocols, and target preparation [ , ] . in general, standardizing procedures can greatly reduce these errors introduced during the course of the experiment. although, the preparation of control samples used in a microarray experiment is typically not critical, the samples must be stable throughout the experiment and be reproducible. to verify the quality of purified rna and/or cdna gel electrophoresis and/or spectrophotometry should be used. with regards to cell synchronization, whole-culture methods such as serum starvation (a method in which cells are deprived of animal serum, a commonly used media supplement, to direct cells towards quiescence) and dna arrest (a general method of using chemical or pharmacological agents to prevent one or more phases of dna replication, suspending cells in a particular stage of the cell cycle) are typically used [ , ] . however, selective methods such as mitotic shake-off, a method that involves shaking a flask or plate to remove cells undergoing mitosis because these cells are loosely attached, have also been used due to questions about the validity of whole-culture methods [ , ] . whatever synchronization method is used should be applied to all of the biological samples to ensure a valid comparison is being made. typically to validate microarray results any one of a number of techniques such as rt-pcr, northern blotting, western blotting, and even the use of multiple microarray platforms can be employed [ , , ] . figure illustrates which of these methods are relevant to which aspects of microarray analysis. as mentioned earlier, verification is critical in order to assign distinct expression patterns to specific genes with certainty (i.e. statistical significance) because of the inherent variability present in microarray data. since a single microarray experiment evaluates the expression levels of tens of thousands of genes simultaneously, it would be extremely impractical to verify each and every gene using any of the methods listed above. instead, what is typically done is that a number of key genes are verified depending on the purpose and scope of the experiment [ , ] . in addition, not every gene can be assayed using each verification method because the necessary components may not be available such as monoclonal antibodies necessary for western blotting or labeled primers for rt-pcr. as a result, multiple methods are often used to verify the results of microarray experiments. as described previously, expression levels for a given gene are determined using intensity values. one distinction between dual-channel microarrays and single-channel common steps employed to ensure quality and validity of microarray results common steps employed to ensure quality and validity of microarray results. from a quality control standpoint, replicates should be performed using rna samples prepared at the same time under the same conditions. various features of the arrays being used should also be known, especially the controls. to verify the results generated from microarray experiments, a combinatorial approach is usually needed; checking the statistical significance associated with the expression levels of specific genes, reviewing the literature, and conducting additional experiments such as rt-pcr or northern blotting. microarray quality microarrays is that the former generates relative expression levels whereas the latter generates absolute expression levels [ , ] . this distinction stems from the fact that dual-channel microarrays are hybridized with two different samples; one considered the test sample and the other considered the control sample. as a result, the expression level determined for a specific spot or gene is dependent upon both samples and is a ratio of the form: therefore, the expression level for a gene in a dual-channel microarray is relative, not absolute. in contrast, singlechannel arrays are hybridized with only one sample and therefore the expression level for a given gene is absolute [ , ] . once a scanned image for a hybridized microarray has been generated, visual inspection of the data can proceed, prior to normalization. this entails using imaging software to exclude specific spots with poor signaling and adjust the size/shape of grids that encompass the spots [ , ] . next, normalization procedures can be applied to the data. essentially, normalization accounts for differences in labeling efficiencies and detection levels for the fluorescent dyes as well as differences in the quantity/ quality of rna samples [ , , ] . as such, normalization can be thought of as the first level of filtering applied to the data. advanced statistical software packages offered by companies such as partek and acuity are commonly used. private research institutes such as the institute for genomic research (tigr) and the sanger institute along with academic facilities around the world also provide free software for microarray analysis [ ] . although a number of normalization techniques can be applied to microarray data, the most commonly used are: total intensity, regression, and ratio statistics [ , , ] . all three of these techniques assume that for some group of genes on the array, the average expression ratio is equal to one [ ] . total intensity normalization assumes both samples (test and control) are comprised of the same amount of rna and the total amount of rna hybridized from each sample is the same. therefore, the total intensity calculated from all the spots on an array should be the same for both fluorescent dyes (channels) [ , ] . conversely, normalization using regression presumes that a significant number of genes are expressed to the same extent in both samples; a reasonable assumption for samples that are fairly similar [ ] . if the labeling and detection efficiencies for the two samples were equivalent, then the slope of the plot shown in figure would be one [ , ] . figure was constructed from unnormalized data obtained from a single, spotted cdna array. two dif-ferent samples were hybridized onto the array, each labeled with a different dye. the graph illustrates inherent differences between the dyes in terms of labeling and detection efficiencies due to the characteristics of each dye such as stability. using regression techniques, the best-fit slope is calculated and modified to be equal to one by adjusting gene intensities. lastly, normalization using ratio statistics assumes that there exists some subset of genes with the same expression levels in both samples [ , ] . these housekeeping genes, as they are often referred to, are used to calculate probability densities which in turn allow the mean expression ratio to be adjusted to one. each of these techniques calculates a normalization factor that is then used to scale the data, accounting for the variations previously mentioned [ , , ] . following normalization the data can be probed using a host of statistical techniques that evaluate and ultimately decipher microarray data. for the purposes of this text, only two types will be touched upon briefly; clustering and hypothesis testing [ ] . in general, both types of statistical methods strive to categorize, shape, and illuminate underlying patterns and therefore can be very useful in analyzing microarray data [ , ] . however, both methods rely on different underlying principles and assumptions that directly influence their employment. clustering algorithms rely on calculating some kind of 'distance metric' to position gene expression levels into a expression level test sample intensity control sample inten = s sity scatter plot of measured intensities for both fluorescent dyes on a log-log scale prior to normalization figure scatter plot of measured intensities for both fluorescent dyes on a log-log scale prior to normalization. the measured intensities are in arbitrary units. each point in the graph represents a single spot on a hybridized microarray. in addition, the red line shown is the best-fit line calculated for the data with a slope that is close to unity. matrix of sorts with a certain level of commonality [ ] . both differentially expressed genes and groups of genes with similar expression patterns can be highlighted using clustering techniques. the most widely used clustering algorithms include: hierarchical, self-organizing maps (soms), k-means, and principle component analysis (pca) [ , , ] . the mathematical formulations behind each of these methods are too complex and lengthy to be dealt with here, and so for the sake of brevity, very basic information will be covered in this text with a strong recommendation to consult specific references [ , , ] . typically, these and other algorithms are used to create a more accurate and meaningful interpretation of the data. figure illustrates how four different algorithms (when applied to the same data set) can generate vastly different groupings; each providing a different perspective on patterns present in the data. the data shown in figure was obtained by hybridizing human cell lines grown under varying conditions onto cdna microarrays. by applying clustering algorithms in sequence, one after another, synergy is possible, lessening the shortcomings in each individual method. for example, it is common to apply pca to data prior to analysis with either k-means clustering or soms in order to generate an estimate for the number of clusters to be formed [ ] . hierarchical clustering, quite possibly the most commonly used clustering algorithm, links every gene in an array to every other gene through a series of expanding brackets that collectively form a dendrogram [ ] . genes deemed to be closely associated, referring back to the concept of a distance metric which in fact can be computed using several different statistical frameworks, are connected by a node [ , ] . each node links to other nodes of various sizes, in a repetitive process until every possible pair of genes are linked, as illustrated in figure b . this type of clustering is popular due to its simplicity and ability to visualize the data. however, the statistical framework has several disadvantages including: not being able to account for multiple ways in which expression patterns can be similar, having difficulty assimilating large quantities of data, and forcing a hierarchical system upon a data set that does not truly exhibit a hierarchical lineage [ , ] . unlike hierarchical clustering, soms require initialization and are much less rigid in terms of structure while at the same time remaining robust and unique. initialization involves defining a particular geometry, typically a grid or ring, with a specified number of groups or nodes [ , ] . these nodes are mapped into a high dimensional space and successive iterations, usually tens of thousands, look to reduce the number of dimensions [ ] . the algorithm also makes use of weighted vectors to select and group similar data entries together, essentially training itself after each phase. the end result of this process is a selforganized network that can be visualized [ , ] . these and other features make soms a powerful tool in exploratory studies with an emphasis on visualization. similarly, k-means clustering aims to partition gene expression data into a specified number of disjoint clusters. again, a distance metric is used in these calculations and can be specified by the user. genes within a cluster are deemed similar to one another, but clusters are deemed dissimilar to one another producing a series of clusters that are not related or connected, opposite of the structure produced in hierarchical clustering [ , ] . essentially, each gene is placed in one of the clusters initially specified and distances between clusters are calculated. next, genes are moved from one cluster to another until a local stability is reached in which the distance between clusters is maximized while at the same time minimizing the distance between members of a given cluster [ , ] . this method is reliable and relatively simple and therefore is useful in analyzing data for which there is some prior knowledge such as classifying serotypes or strains. ensuring that the partitions constructed using k-means clustering have some type of real or actual significance is where the difficulty lies [ ] . pca is an algorithm that relies on visually highlighting similarities in data in a manner that reduces the number of dimensions. it can be applied to any number of data sets from a small group of genes within a single array to groups of experiments each with a number of arrays [ , , ] . as seen in figure a , the plot generated from pca allows patterns in data to be visualized by examining the proximity of clusters. the method implements a series of calculations to best separate the data and project that final analysis onto a or dimensional plot [ , ] . when combined with other clustering methods, pca can be a very useful tool, as described earlier. besides clustering algorithms another statistical approach typically used to analyze microarray data is hypothesis testing which aims to establish statistical significance associated with divergent findings. if a group of genes, perhaps genes that constitute a particular pathway, are differentially expressed between two samples, hypothesis testing can quantify the extent of those differences. hypothesis testing is comprised of the following steps: specify the null hypothesis and the alternative hypothesis, select a significance level, calculate a statistic analogous to the parameter designated in the null hypothesis, calculate the probability value (p-value), compare the p-value with the significance level, and finally accept or reject the null hypothesis [ , ] . at the end of these steps, an observed outcome is associated with a statistical likelihood indicating whether or not the observed outcome is the result of chance and not some real difference or phenomenon [ ] . application of hypothesis testing is most useful when evaluating microarray data with specific genes or groups of genes in mind as opposed to discovery or exploration. a large number of microarray-related studies in the past have aimed to either characterize diseased cells in comparison to healthy cells or highlight the genes involved in a particular biological pathway [ , ] . infrequently, studies were undertaken for other purposes such as gene discovery or examining distinct cellular properties [ , ] . however, in recent years, the number of studies utilizing microarrays in some capacity has increased greatly. more and more studies are relying on microarrays to provide insight into observed physiology, essentially using microarrays to further characterize biological systems [ , ] . in most of these cases, microarray analysis has generated interesting results, but also raised additional questions requiring further investigation, limiting its successful implementation. for instance, the application of bio-informatics tools such as microarrays to characterize microbial populations exposed to toxins and pollutants has been explored [ ] . being able to understand the catabolism of xenobiotics could enhance bioremediation processes with a direct impact on pollution control and environmental organization [ ] . in addition, the exploration of previously uncharacterized microbes using microarrays could identify novel genes with relevant functionality [ ] . in this context, a number of studies have focused on specific issues such as investigating how candida albicans, a human fungal pathogen, is able to protect itself from the toxic effects of nitric oxide produced by the immune system [ , ] . microarray analysis revealed a group of nine genes were over-expressed during exposure to nitric oxide. of these nine genes yhb , which produces a flavohemoglobin that detoxifies nitric oxide, was the most highly expressed [ ] . evolutionary studies using microarrays have also gained prominence with the use of species-specific arrays in parallel. for example, researchers hybridized dna from the progeny of two yeast strains, one with a particular evolved trait (i.e. mating discrimination) and the other without, onto oligonucleotide microarrays [ ] . the arrays used in this study were designed to detect a multitude of polymorphisms between the two strains. adaptive mutations were identified by linking polymorphisms to the evolved parental strain [ ] . investigators then mapped known genes and constructed a computer simulation capable of evaluating various parameters impacting mapping precision [ ] . finally, the researchers applied their method to yeast strains adapting to a changing glucose-galactose feed illustrating mutations in the same gene can lead to parallel adaptation [ ] . similarly, scientists compared community-acquired invasive staphylococcus aureus strains to isolates from healthy people using microarray constructed from previous sequencing projects [ ] . ten dominant lineages were identified; each with a distinct group of genes with potential functions related to virulence and resistence. subsequent analysis suggested a common ancestor could be traced back for all of the strains studied, but evolutionary divergence must have occurred early on [ ] . the development of therapeutics has also benefited from the implementation of microarrays as evidenced by a number of recent publications. for example, scientists examined gene expression profiles from patients with chronic drug abuse, intending to better understand addiction and therefore formulate better treatments [ ] . analysis of the array data revealed very little overlap in the expression patterns for heroin and cocaine users [ ] . these findings were contrary to widely held views regarding the shared effects of heroin and cocaine on dopamine, thus prompting reassessment of previous assumptions [ ] . another study, examined the mechanism behind acquired nisin resistance in bacteria [ ] . researchers found genes involved in the following pathways to be expressed differentially between resistant and non-resistant lactococcus lactis strains: cell wall biosynthesis, energy metabolism, fatty acid and phospholipid metabolism, regulatory functions, and metal/peptide transport and binding [ ] . using this information, the researchers established mutant strains that either had genes knocked down or over-expressed and found these mutants had varying levels of nisin resistance as compared to the parental, wild-type strains [ ] . in terms of disease characterization and detection, microarrays are also finding use. for instance, the pathogenicity of coxasackievirus b (cvb ) was examined; in humans this virus adversely affects the heart muscle [ ] . using cdna microarrays, researchers compared murine hearts infected with the virus against non-infected murine hearts. in addition, oligonucleotide microarrays were used to compare infected hela cells over time [ ] . together, these experiments identified a number of differentially expressed genes, providing clues as to the precise sequence of events following infection. similarly, the use of custom microarrays to characterize unknown samples from water treatment centers as part of a quality control measure was examined [ ] . the microarray was constructed to target s ribosomal rna (rrna) from several groups of nitrifying bacteria and tested against reference samples with some success [ ] . using microarrays in the capacity of diagnostics has also become relatively popular especially in the context of outbreaks for which rapid diagnostic tools are needed to quickly evaluate pathogens and identify specific strains or serotypes [ , , ] . for example, a microarray was constructed specifically to probe single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) for foot and mouth disease virus (fmdv) [ ] . the results were classified using statistical methods in order to develop a procedure to test for specificity with diagnostic application [ ] . similarly, a study combined the use of microarrays with reverse transcription-pcr to differentiate between two genetically similar enteroviruses; enterovirus (ev ) and coxsackievirus a (ca ) [ ] . this approach had a diagnostic accuracy of at least % for each of the two viruses as compared to reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr) and neutralization testing [ ] . currently, studies are being conducted to explore the feasibility and implementation of similar methods for other pathogens [ , ] . with advancements in software and robotics technology, microarrays are becoming inexpensive, robust, and reliable [ , ] . the availability of custom arrays designed to probe a small subset of genes (usually several hundred) or specific pathways have also enhanced the potential utilization of microarray technology [ , , ] . this section was designed to highlight the latest advances in the technology, speculate on novel applications of microarray technology, and outline areas of research that have just begun to use microarrays. together these aspects portray the potential of microarrays in terms of applications as well as from a technical standpoint. breakthroughs in various aspects of the technology from fabrication to commercialization are continually influencing the kinds of microarrays and techniques researchers are using. currently, microarray experiments are conducted in a series of steps with each step being distinct and in a particular order. however, newly developed chips equipped with electronic circuitry are circumventing a number of these steps particularly sample labeling [ , ] . in addition, a number of companies and research facilities now offer specialized arrays for detection, sequencing, and/or diagnostic purposes [ , ] . by commercializing such highly specific arrays, data gathering is being expedited for studies with explicit purposes. an integrated platform like the lab-on-a-chip (a system that combines multiple manipulations including sample mixing, labeling, and separation onto a single chip) is also influencing microarray technology. the miniaturization and automated techniques used to construct the lab-on-a-chip system are being applied to microarrays leading to arrays that can be readily used for high-throughput applications [ ] . one of the most promising areas of research includes classification; particularly in the context of diseases and/or pathogens [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . for instance, in researchers at the national cancer institute used microarrays to organize biopsy samples of diffuse large-b-cell lymphoma from more than patients [ ] . they identified subgroups with varying expression of distinct genes; constructing a model capable of predicting survival rates following chemotherapy [ ] . in another study, researchers used microarrays to confirm previous classifications of nonpathogenic, low-pathogenic, and high-pathogenic types for different yersinia enterocolitica strains [ ] . researchers identified clusters of genes as being representative of each type (i.e. being present in one group, but not in another) with functional implications [ ] . another arena in which microarrays may prove beneficial is discovery; primarily in the context of gene functions and the identification of novel organisms. for instance, in a recent study researchers analyzed an escherichia coli strain, a , with a mutation in the rnpa gene making it sensitive to temperature and therefore unable to grow at or above °c [ ] . under varying growth conditions, researchers found a number of genes differentially expressed. careful review of these genes revealed rnase p, the mutated gene product, may have more functions than what had been proposed previously, especially in the context of handling precursor rnas [ ] . researchers in constructed a custom array with highly conserved arrangements from every fully sequenced viral genome available in genbank [ ] . next, they hybridized a viral isolate from a severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) patient onto the array and found a previously unidentified coronavirus [ ] . subsequent work involving viral sequencing verified these findings and showcased the potential of custom arrays to expedite the identification of pathogens; a virtual necessity in combating future outbreaks [ ] . in terms of biological products, particularly vaccines and therapeutic proteins, microarrays may also find use. as detailed in various governmental regulations, slight variations in a biological process may result in distinct final products; requiring further testing and validation [ ] . microarrays may very well provide a means of avoiding these procedures by establishing criteria (i.e. expression patterns for a small set of genes) that can be used to verify consistency and reproducibility. extensive research would, however, be required to first establish the necessary criteria. in addition, it should be stressed that in this particular application, microarray results would have to be viewed in terms of patterns for a group of genes rather than the expression levels of individual genes [ , ] . this is because the variability associated with a single gene can exceed levels needed to verify or validate biological proc-esses, whereas the variability in groups of genes where an overall pattern is decoded is much less [ ] . another area that has and continues to find microarray technology beneficial is pathway probing; illumination of biological pathways. often, microarray data alone cannot decipher the sequential steps necessary for a particular mechanism to occur, however, it can provide insight into what genes or groups of genes should be investigated further [ , ] . for instance, a paper published in used microarrays together with other experimental techniques to decipher a pathway responsible for regulating the expression of cyclooxygenase- (cox- ), a pro-inflammatory protein associated with arthritis and pain [ ] . a continuation of this work was published in further illuminating the pathway and possible feedback mechanisms with important therapeutic implications [ ] . perhaps the greatest potential lies in combining two fields within the scope of bio-informatics; genomics and proteomics. genomics is the study of genes and their function whereas proteomics is the study of proteins and their functions [ , ] . by utilizing tools from each of these two disciplines, researchers may be able to construct more accurate and comprehensive models depicting specific biological processes. for example, in a recent study both two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and microarrays were used to identify genes involved in the acclimation of changing visible light in cyanobacteria [ ] . focusing on the organism fremyella diplosiphon, researchers found approximately proteins with different levels between cells grown in green light vs. red light as well as genes not previously thought to be regulated by light [ ] . further exploration revealed a number of these genes had homologs in other organisms, though their functionality had not been fully deciphered [ ] . in another study, both microarrays and proteomics were used to evaluate an escherichia coli mutant secreting more α-hemolysin (hlya) than the parent strain [ ] . the researchers found decreased levels of trna-synthetases in the mutant as compared to the parent strain [ ] . based on this information, the researchers designed a modified hlya gene to reduce the rate of translation by incorporating rare codons leading to the same amino acid sequence [ ] . when the parent strain was transformed with this modified hlya gene, it secreted even more hlya than the mutant [ ] . in other words, the study indicated it was possible to engineer cells using an approach that combined genomics and proteomics. microarrays are a powerful genomics tool, designed to illuminate differences in the expression of genes within cells. despite being a relatively new technology, the scientific community has quickly adopted its use in a variety of fields including drug development, evolutionary biology, and disease characterization [ , ] . the strength of the technology rests on the several factors including: ease of use, availability of platforms and lower cost relative to other exploratory methods such as northern blotting or ribonuclease protection assay (rpa), implementation of statistical methods for detailed analysis, and most importantly a global view of a gene expression encompassing an entire genome. as previously eluded to, the technological limitations associated with microarrays manifest themselves in terms of variability typically seen as systematic errors. improvements in robotics, array fabrications, and continued genome sequencing can certainly address these issues, but not entirely remove them. this places limits on what microarray technology can achieve, although a comprehensive understanding of microarrays can help establish meaningful and reproducible data. an effort to: properly design the experiment, establish quality control steps such as checking rna purity, analyze the data, and verify the results can also combat technological challenges [ , , ] . in addition, archiving databases and files is a consideration often overlooked, though quite important in being able to return to data with new leads and directions for subsequent research or simply cross-compare with new data. there are, of course, other limitations, inherently present that restrict the scope of microarray analysis just like any other tool. for example, microarrays only present a snapshot of the transcriptome which is continually changing and responding to cellular needs and signals. as such, microarrays only illuminate a part of what is going on inside a cell or a population of cells [ , ] . in addition, there does not necessarily have to be a tight correlation between the expression of a gene and the amount of translated protein. therefore, differentially expressed genes may not translate into varying protein levels with functional implications [ ] . furthermore, the complexity of microarray analysis makes it exceedingly difficult to ascertain meaningful data with real biological significance without clearly defined goals or targets. an intricate aspect of genomic analysis is the interplay between genes or groups of genes (i.e. mechanisms) and that information is not easily deciphered using microarrays. and finally, the functionality of a gene cannot be determined solely using microarrays [ , ] . indeed, other methods and experimental tools are needed to decipher the proteome, understand the varying interactions between genes and/or proteins, and develop a more complete picture of cellular behavior. ultimately, microarrays will continue to be used in a variety of research areas as more options in the design of custom arrays become available along with an increase in the assortment of species-specific arrays. technological advancements may help bring down the cost as well as enhance reproducibility and reliability promoting the applicaton of microarrays in new and diverse fields. in the end, the questions raised by microarray results are often just as vital as the answers they produce; a key to expanding the role of any scientific method to encompass new fields. exploring the new world of the genome with dna microarrays recent advances in dna microarrays dna microarrays: their use and misuse. microcirculation the use and analysis of microarray data microarray expression profiling: capturing a genome-wide portrait of the transcriptome microarray expression profiling: analysis and applications from patterns to pathways: gene expression data analysis comes of age bioinformatics in microbial biotechnology -a mini review 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antigenic variants of foot-andmouth disease virus: a bioinformatics quality assessment combining multiplex reverse transcription-pcr and a diagnostic microarray to detect and differentiate enterovirus and coxsackievirus a viral discovery and sequence recovery using dna microarrays mixed-genome microarrays reveal multiple serotype and lineage-specific differences among strains of listeria monocytogenes diagnostic oligonucleotide microarray fingerprinting of bacillus isolates brousseau r: the development of a dna microarray-based assay for the characterization of commercially formulated microbial products potential use of microarray technology for rapid identification of central nervous system pathogens the use of molecular profiling to predict survival after chemotherapy for diffuse large-b-cell lymphoma application of comparative phylogenomics to study the evolution of yersinia enterocolitica and to identify genetic differences relating to pathogenicity the effect of a single, temperature-sensitive mutation on global gene expression in escherichia coli shear-induced cyclooxygenase- via a jnk /c-jun-dependent pathway regulates prostaglandin receptor expression in chondrocytic cells konstantopoulos k: divergent responses of chondrocytes and endothelial cells to shear stress: cross-talk among cox- , the phase response, and apoptosis dna microarray technology for target identification and validation genomic dna microarray analysis: identification of new genes regulated by light color in the cyanobacterium fremyella diplosiphon engineering hlya hypersecretion in escherichia coli based on proteomic and microarray analyses genetic analysis and attribution of microbial forensics evidence quantitative oligonucleotide microarray fingerprinting of salmonella enterica isolates funding was provided by the intramural program at the national institute of diabetes & digestive & kidney diseases, national institutes of health.the authors would also like to thank members of the biotechnology unit for their input and willingness to proofread the manuscript. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. pj formulated the content, performed the literature search, and drafted much of the manuscript. kk contributed to revising the manuscript and adding content. mb contributed to formulating the content and layout. js contributed to formulating the content, revising the manuscript, and drafting portions of the manuscript. key: cord- -iz bo authors: shaw, dominick; portelli, michael; sayers, ian title: asthma date: - - journal: handbook of pharmacogenomics and stratified medicine doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: iz bo asthma is a common respiratory disease with a complex etiology involving a combination of genetic and environmental components. current asthma management involves a step-up and step-down approach based on asthma control with a large degree of heterogeneity in responses to the main drug classes currently in use: β( )-adrenergic receptor agonists, corticosteroids, and leukotriene modifiers. importantly, asthma is heterogeneous with respect to clinical presentation and the inflammatory mechanisms that underlie it. this heterogeneity likely contributes to variable results in clinical trials, particularly when targeting specific inflammatory mediators. these factors have motivated a drive toward stratified medicine in asthma based on clinical/cellular outcomes or genetics (i.e., pharmacogenetics). significant progress has been made in identifying genetic polymorphisms that influence the efficacy and potential for adverse effects of all main classes of asthma drugs. importantly an emerging role for genetics in phase ii development of newer therapies has been demonstrated (e.g., anti-il ). similarly, the stratification of patients based on clinical characteristics (e.g., blood and sputum eosinophil levels) has been critical in evaluating newer therapies (e.g., anti-il ). as a proof of concept, anti-ige is the latest therapy to be introduced into clinical practice, although only for severe, allergic patients (i.e., in a stratified manner). as new asthma genes are identified using genome-wide association, among other technologies, new targets (e.g., il /il receptor (il rl )) will emerge and pharmacogenetics in these development programs will be essential. in this chapter we review the current understanding of asthma pathobiology and its clinical presentation, as well as the use of stratified medicine, which holds great promise for maximizing clinical outcomes and minimizing adverse effects in existing and new therapies. umbrella definition will require integrating bench and bedside approaches using data from ongoing genomic and proteomic profiling studies of large, well-characterized asthma populations-such as the current eu-wide ubiopred study (formally, "unbiased biomarkers in prediction of respiratory disease outcomes")-with feedback to improved in vitro and in vivo animal models and human studies. the international consensus report on the diagnosis and treatment of asthma defines asthma as "a chronic inflammatory disorder of the airways in which many cells play a role, including mast cells and eosinophils. in susceptible individuals this inflammation causes symptoms which are usually associated with widespread, but variable, airflow obstruction that is often reversible either spontaneously or with treatment, and causes an associated increase in airway responsiveness to a variety of stimuli." the interaction of these features determines the clinical manifestations and severity of the disease and the response to treatment [ ] . how these features relate to each other, how they are best measured, and how they contribute to clinical manifestations of the disease remains unclear. age of disease onset also complicates understanding, although there are many shared features in the diagnosis of asthma in children and in adults, there are also important differences. the differential diagnosis, the natural history of wheezing illnesses, and the ability to perform certain investigations are all influenced by age [ ] . according to the world health organization (who), between and million people around the globe (roughly equivalent to the population of the russian federation) suffer from asthma. worldwide, deaths from asthma have reached more than , annually. overall, asthma affects - % of the population in many developed countries. one study found that the annual estimated incidence of physician-diagnosed asthma ranged from . - . per persons. risk factors for incident asthma among children include male gender, atopic sensitization, parental history of asthma, early-life stressors and infections, obesity, and exposure to indoor allergens, tobacco smoke, and outdoor pollutants. risk factors for adult-onset asthma include female sex, airway hyper-responsiveness, lifestyle factors, and work-related exposures. while the exact cost of asthma care is difficult to determine, a systematic review [ ] found eight national studies reporting a national total cost. the total costs in in u.s. dollars were high and varied widely: singapore, $ . m; canada, $ m; switzerland, $ m; germany, $ m; united states, $ m. although the costs of asthma care vary by country, it is estimated that worldwide the number of disability-adjusted life years (dalys) lost from asthma is about million per year. worldwide asthma accounts for around % of all dalys lost, which reflects the high prevalence and severity of asthma. the number of asthmacaused lost dalys is similar to that for diabetes, cirrhosis of the liver, and schizophrenia. costs are related to other factors, including asthma control, demographics, medical history, and doses of inhaled corticosteroid (ics) prescribed [ ] . improving asthma control is associated with decreased cost. asthma classically causes wheeze, cough, chest tightness, and breathlessness (dyspnoea). the pattern of symptoms can be a clue to the diagnosis. episodic symptoms worse at night and in the early morning, or in response to exercise, allergen and cold air exposure, or after taking aspirin or beta blockers are very suggestive of asthma. moreover, symptoms that are relieved by bronchodilators point toward asthma as the underlying cause. symptoms that lower the probability of asthma include those of prominent dizziness, light-headedness, and peripheral tingling (all point toward dysfunctional breathing); a chronic productive cough in the absence of wheeze or breathlessness (more likely bronchiectasis); a repeatedly normal physical examination of chest when symptomatic; and voice disturbance, symptoms with colds only, or a significant smoking history. taking a detailed patient history and recording spirometry when the patient is symptomatic is crucial to the accurate classification of the disease. there are several differential diagnoses that must be considered when making a diagnosis of asthma. these are outside the scope of this chapter. a good guide to the clinical diagnosis and management of asthma are the british thoracic society asthma guidelines, which are updated regularly and are available at www.brit-thoracic.org.uk/clinical-information/ asthma/. triggers for asthma symptoms include allergens (proteins) derived from, among others, house dust mite (hdm), cat and dog dander, cockroach, and fungi, especially aspergillus fumigatus. there are numerous other nonallergic symptom triggers, including weather and atmospheric change, air pollution, exercise, menstruation, emotion and laughter, viral infection, gastroesophageal reflux, and rhinitis. various occupations can both cause and worsen asthma (e.g., welding, baking, paint spraying). asthma symptoms often overlap with other allergies, including oral allergy syndrome and food allergies. delineating between causes of symptoms can be difficult. if a specific aeroallergen is identified that triggers asthma (classically tree or grass pollen), a course of either sublingual or subcutaneous desensitization can be undertaken to reduce symptoms on exposure to that specific allergen. there are multiple other symptom triggers that can include both allergic and non-allergic mechanisms; examples include exposure to chemicals, such as perfumes, paint and bleach, plants (e.g., ligustrum vulgare-privet hedges), salicylates, and sulphites. multiple factors have been shown to either directly cause or worsen symptoms of asthma [ ] . these are listed in box . . other factors not directly related to the disease can worsen symptoms and are associated with more frequent exacerbations. these include dysfunctional breathing, vocal cord dysfunction, psychosocial problems, and poor adherence to treatment regimes [ ] . other forms of asthma are recognized, among them occupational, exercise-induced, and pregnancy-related asthma. these subdivisions are somewhat arbitrary, but may have different causes, prognoses, and complexities. for example, occupational asthma includes that triggered by ige-mediated mechanisms, that due to specific agents with unclear pathophysiology, and that secondary to irritants (also known as rads-reactive airways dysfunction syndrome). underlying asthma can also be made worse by occupational exposure (work-aggravated). most experts regard exercise-induced asthma as a different disease, albeit one resulting in similar symptoms. exercise-induced asthma is often diagnosed with different investigations, including eucapnic voluntary hyperventilation or exercise testing. it is associated with certain sports (swimming and cross country skiing in particular) and has a unique pathophysiology directly related to damage of the airway epithelium. asthma control can deteriorate in pregnancy, due to both hormonal effects and the physical effects of a gravid uterus on diaphragm and respiratory muscle function. pregnancy can also impact treatment decisions. leukotriene modifiers are generally contraindicated, and the health of the fetus as well as that of the mother needs to be considered. poor adherence is probably the biggest single issue affecting asthma control. studies have shown that people with asthma over-report use of ics; one study found that although % of responders said they used their inhalers, only % actually did. adherence to ics therapy is associated with a lower rate of death, whereas increasing use of reliever (salbutamol/bricanyl) medication, which improves symptoms but does not treat underlying airway inflammation, is associated with increased mortality [ , ] . a report entitled evaluation of the scale, causes and costs of waste medicines: report of dh funded national project (trueman et al. york health economics consortium and university of london school of pharmacy, ) put figures to the possible cost benefits from improving asthma treatment adherence in the united kingdom. it estimated the resulting net benefit associated with compliance to be £ per patient, with a reduction in expected annual treatment costs of approximately £ per patient per year. based on an asthma point prevalence of . %, the findings suggest that there are almost . million asthmatics in the united kingdom who are noncompliant. if interventions were available to change the behavior of all partially compliant medicine users to raise the percentage to % or more, the report estimated that over £ million in treatment cost savings could be realized in the united kingdom alone. a more modest target of doubling current compliance rates would result in savings of approximately £ million per year. the aim of asthma treatment is to improve symptoms, maintain lung function, and prevent exacerbations. from a patient's perspective, these are simple aims, but for the purposes of study design and treatment trials they do not address the complexity of the disease process. accordingly, guidelines now specifically address asthma control (symptoms and lung function) and severity (need for treatment) separately. the current global initiative for asthma (gina) guidelines assess levels of control based on daytime symptoms, limitation of activities, nocturnal symptoms/awakening, need for reliever/rescue treatment, lung function (pef or fev ), and exacerbations [ ] ( treatment steps are defined by the treatment level required to maintain asthma control (table . ), with patients at steps - having well-controlled asthma requiring little treatment, and patients at step having poorly controlled asthma despite four or five different drugs. the step approach is similar to that used by the british thoracic society (bts) guidelines [ ] . asthma is a variable disease both temporally and clinically. there is also overlap between symptoms and exacerbations. this overlap was the subject of a recent consensus document that defined asthma exacerbations as "events characterized by a change from the patient's previous status." severe exacerbations are "events that require urgent action on the part of the patient and physician to prevent a serious outcome, such as hospitalization or death from asthma," and moderate asthma exacerbations are "events that are troublesome to the patient, and that prompt a need for a change in treatment, but that are not severe…clinically identified by being outside the patient's usual range of day-to-day asthma variation" [ ] . the most practical definition of an asthma exacerbation is probably an episode of worsening symptoms not responding to increasing bronchodilator therapy. this definition was employed in an elegant study on the time course of peak flow changes [ ] . for the purposes of clinical studies, most authors define exacerbation as the need for rescue courses of systemic corticosteroids (prednisolone/prednisone). although the majority of patients with asthma are treated and investigated in primary care settings, the main burden of asthma is due to its severe form (i.e., step ) and exacerbations. using the united kingdom as an example (population million), asthma is responsible for more than deaths per year and for over , hospital admissions, with an annual expenditure of £ million on pharmaceutical costs alone. it was recently estimated that a patient controlled at the mildest end of the spectrum (british thoracic society (bts) guidelines: step with no exacerbations) would cost times less to provide his or her package of care than would a patient at the worst end of the spectrum (bts guidelines: step with exacerbations) [ ] . it is also calculated that % of asthma patients are responsible for at least % of the total healthcare burden [ ] ; the most expensive individual cost is an icu admission (bts level ) due to a life-threatening exacerbation. in the u.s. more than half ( %) of asthma sufferers in had an asthma attack, and of these half of the children and one-third of the adults missed school or work because of it; on average, children missed four days of school and adults missed five days of work. exacerbation pathogenesis is not fully understood. although research has focused on infective agents, especially viral, there may be other explanations. asthma exacerbations are associated with both inflammatory and immunological cell infiltration. the inflammatory cell infiltrate is composed of varying numbers of eosinophils, neutrophils, and lymphocytes. this airway inflammation, combined with smooth-muscle hypertrophy step (intermittent) fewer than once/week; asymptomatic, normal pef between attacks two or fewer/month % or more less than % step (mild persistent) more than once/week, fewer than once/day; attacks may affect activity > times a month >/= % - % step (moderate persistent) daily; attacks affect activity more than once/week %- % more than % step (severe) continuous; limited physical activity frequent % or less more than % and thickening of the lamina reticularis, is accentuated by mucus plugs, serum protein deposition, inflammatory cell and cellular debris, leading to blockage of the airway (airflow obstruction) and wheeze. approximately % of exacerbations are associated with respiratory tract viral infections, with rhinovirus responsible for about two-thirds of cases [ ] . asthmatic subjects also have much more severe lower respiratory tract illness with rhinovirus infection than do healthy control subjects. the mechanism for this is not fully understood. infection induces inflammation, increasing levels of neutrophils, eosinophils, cd + cells, cd + cells, and mast cells through increased mrna expression and translation of il- , il- , il- , eotaxin, ifn-γ-induced protein (ip- ), chemokine (c-c motif) ligand (ccl /rantes), and other proinflammatory cytokines. other viruses implicated in exacerbations include enterovirus, coronavirus, influenza, parainfluenza, respiratory syncytial virus, metapneumovirus, adenovirus and bocavirus [ ] . although influenza vaccination is recommended for all individuals with asthma, there is currently no hard evidence that this improves outcomes. bacterial infection has also been implicated in asthma exacerbation. individuals with asthma have an increased risk of invasive pneumococcal disease [ ] , and an increased frequency of detection of chlamydophila pneumoniae [ ] . one study found mycoplasma pneumoniae infection in % of patients hospitalized for severe asthma [ ] . several trials have evaluated the role of macrolide antibiotics in treating and preventing asthma exacerbations. one study randomized adults with exacerbations to the ketolide antibiotic telithromycin or placebo; the telithromycin group had a small but significant improvement in symptoms and lung function from exacerbation to the end of treatment [ ] . further studies of macrolide antibiotics (which have immunomodulatory as well as antibiotic properties) are under way, but as yet macrolide antibiotics are not recommended by international asthma guidelines. new techniques for assessing the airway bacterial microbiota have established that the airways are not normally sterile, and may permit the role of bacterial infection in airways disease to be further delineated. a recent study found that pathogenic proteobacteria, particularly haemophilus species, were much more frequent in the bronchi of patients with asthma or copd than in controls [ ] . prolonged exposure to aeroallergens can result in chronic airway inflammation via th -driven ige mechanisms. this immunological reaction may intensify airway inflammation, increase inflammatory cell activation, and stimulate mucus glands to hypersecrete, leading to airway obstruction. studies of bronchoalveolar fluid before and after allergen challenge show eosinophilic inflammation as the major airway response, associated with late-phase responses of airflow obstruction. in addition, il and il are significantly raised. exposure to seasonal allergens has been implicated in sudden asthma-related deaths; hdm, cat, and cockroach allergen sensitization are risk factors for emergency treatment [ ] . grass pollen sensitization, or ''thunderstorm asthma,'' has also been associated with epidemics of exacerbations [ ] . fungal allergens are found both outdoors and indoors, and sensitivity to them is a risk factor for the development, persistence, severity, and mortality associated with asthma. individuals with asthma are often sensitized to fungi such as cladosporium species, alternaria species, penicillium species, and candida species [ ] . alternaria species sensitization and exposure are associated with symptoms and a -fold increased risk of respiratory arrest in subjects with asthma [ ] . fungal exposures may worsen disease by different mechanisms; fungalassociated proteases may lead to the development of allergic airway inflammation along with ige-mediated responses; fungal allergen-induced asthmatic reactions evoke an il response with increased eosinophil recruitment and degranulation [ ] . the relationship between fungal exposure and asthma is complicated by the degree of sensitivity to fungal allergens and the resultant allergy. a specific disease entity called allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (abpa) exists in which colonization of the respiratory tract with the ubiquitous aspergillus fumigatus is associated with an increased allergic response (both type and type ) and severe asthma exacerbations. trials in both abpa and a related disease, severe asthma with fungal sensitization (safs), have shown some benefit with the oral antifungal itraconazole [ ] , but good-quality trial data are lacking. unlike other chronic conditions, there is no gold standard for the diagnosis of asthma. although tests of airway function can be used to diagnose and study different aspects of airway disease (airway inflammation/airway hyper-responsiveness), diagnosis still depends on the presence of specific symptoms, which include wheeze, cough, chest tightness, and difficulty breathing. these symptoms are often variable, worse at night, or worse in response to triggers. they often respond to asthma therapy and may be associated with atopy/allergy and a family history of similar problems. the lack of a gold standard affects clinical provision and studies alike; most estimates suggest that asthma is wrongly diagnosed in approximately % of patients [ ] . the development of a cheap and reliable noninvasive test that can diagnose asthma is seen as the holy grail for diagnosisbased research. measurements of airflow limitation provide an assessment of the severity, reversibility, and variability of airflow obstruction, and can help confirm the diagnosis of asthma. spirometry (forced expiratory volume in second (fev ), forced vital capacity (fvc), and fev /fvc) is the preferred method of measuring airflow limitation, as it is more repeatable and less effort dependent than peak flow. a fev /fvc ratio of less than . is consistent with a diagnosis of airflow obstruction, and an increase in fev of > % (or > ml) after administration of a short-acting bronchodilator indicates reversible airflow limitation consistent with asthma [ ] . importantly, most asthma patients will not exhibit reversibility at each assessment, and repeated testing is advised to confirm a diagnosis. consequently, an absent response to bronchodilators does not exclude asthma. peak expiratory flow (pef) measurements can be used to monitor asthma. they are ideally compared to the patient's own previous best measurements using his or her own peak flow meter. an improvement of l/min (or > % of the prebronchodilator pef) after inhalation of a bronchodilator, or diurnal variation in pef of more than % (with twice-daily readings, more than %), suggests poorly controlled asthma. other approaches have been utilized to diagnose asthma, both to confirm a formal diagnosis and to identify corticosteroid response. these approaches include noninvasive measurements of airway inflammation or assessment of airway hyper-responsiveness. measuring airway inflammation is relatively easy, either using techniques to induce sputum and then counting the differential eosinophil and neutrophil cell numbers present, or by measuring the fraction of nitric oxide (no) present in the exhaled breath (f e no) using portable chemical analyzers. airway hyper-responsiveness can be assessed by several different methods. all are designed to provoke bronchoconstriction, which is measured using spirometry. the concentration (or dose) at which bronchoconstriction occurs is then used to categorize the degree of airway responsiveness and the presence or absence of asthma. although these tests are widely employed in research settings, their use in a clinical setting is hampered by their varying sensitivity and specificities for asthma diagnosis [ ] , as both airway inflammation and airway hyper-responsiveness can be present in healthy individuals without symptoms. the symptoms of asthma in children are recurrent wheezing, cough, difficulty breathing, and chest tightness. evaluation of these symptoms is critical to the diagnosis, treatment, and outcome measures used in clinical studies; however, asthma triggers and inflammatory cell type are increasingly used to define childhood asthma phenotypes. pediatric asthma is complicated by wide variations in symptom prevalence. the majority of children with asthma have mild or moderate disease; % of all asthmatic children have chronic symptoms and/or recurrent exacerbations, despite maximum treatment with conventional medications [ ] . asthma in childhood is heterogeneous in several ways, including etiology, clinical presentation, and response to treatment. several attempts have been made to stratify treatment on the basis of different asthma phenotypes in children, with varying degrees of success. stratifying treatments in pediatric asthma is more complicated because of patient age and the inability (dependent on age) to perform more complicated or invasive tests. in children, the onset and progression of asthma result from a complex interplay between genetic background and environmental exposures. the complexity is confounded by wheezing illnesses consisting of several distinct disease entities, with no general agreement on their number or underlying mechanisms [ ] . among the environmental factors that influence the risk of asthma are viral and bacterial respiratory infections. exposure to environmental tobacco smoke is also associated with increased rates of early viral illnesses. other factors associated with the risk of wheeze include physical factors associated with increased breathing (exercise, laughing, crying, and excitement) or allergens (aeroallergens and food allergens). there are considerable age-related changes in the relative importance of trigger factors for wheeze in children. human rhinovirus (hrv) has been implicated in both the etiology of asthma and exacerbations; infants who have hrv infections with wheezing are at a significantly increased risk for subsequent asthma, and over % of childhood asthma exacerbations are triggered by hrv. it is important to note that exposure to hrv does not lead to wheezing illness in all children, nor does wheezing illness result in asthma in all cases, suggesting that the host genotype also plays a role. a recent study of two cohorts of children with asthma found that variants at the q locus were associated with asthma in children who had hrv wheezing illnesses, implicating an interaction between hrv wheezing illness in early childhood and the q genotype (see section . . ). the presentation of asthma symptoms and exacerbations in childhood also varies. some children have frequent exacerbations with few daily symptoms, while others have recurrent symptoms without airway inflammation and exacerbations. other diseases coexist with childhood asthma, including gastroesophageal reflux disease, severe asthma with fungal sensitization, obesity, and vocal cord dysfunction. targeting these coexisting disorders has met with varying clinical success [ ] . an important component of the development of asthma is the inflammatory cascade. this involves the infiltration of a number of inflammatory cells, such as eosinophils, neutrophils, b-and t-lymphocytes, macrophages, mast cells, dendritic cells, and basophils, into the airway, and the release of inflammatory mediators (e.g., leukotrienes, histamine, cytokines, and chemokines) by airway, structural cells (including epithelial, smooth-muscle, endothelial, and fibroblast cells). however, since the degree of inflammation in asthma is not directly related to asthma severity, this suggests that other factors, such as structural changes in the airways, also play a role in disease modulation and progression. these structural changes have been termed airway remodeling and may exist in the presence or absence of inflammatory mechanisms in the airway [ ] . the inflammatory response in asthma is a result of excessive activation of mast cells in the airway, where in the early response to allergen challenge, degranulation of mast cells results in the release of a number of proinflammatory factors such as il , leukotrienes, and histamine. this causes an immediate hypersensitivity response that in turn leads to airway narrowing. the concomitant release of other inflammatory factors such as cytokines and chemokines from the same mast cells provides an optimal environment for recruitment to the airways of other inflammatory cells such as eosinophils, basophils, neutrophils, and t-lymphocytes. once in the airways, these cells act in tandem with allergen-activated macrophages, resulting in what is termed the late asthmatic response (occurring at - hours postchallenge). here, through the action of a number of released potent immunomodulators (e.g., tnfα, il , il , il , and il ), airway narrowing occurs. this may occur in periods that last more than hours. of the inflammatory cells involved in the asthmatic response, it is the infiltration of eosinophils that is considered characteristic of the asthmatic phenotype, particularly that of mild/moderate allergic asthma ( figure . ) . for a more extensive description of inflammatory mechanisms underlying allergic asthma see hodge & sayers [ ] . although inflammation in asthma has been extensively studied, the relationship between inflammation and clinical symptoms of asthma is still unclear. this may be partially explained by a possible link between airway inflammation and airway hyper-responsiveness [ ] . here, airways become more susceptible to sensitizing agents, which would otherwise be unable to trigger an airway response, because of (a) increased release of mediators such as histamine and leukotrienes, (b) abnormal smooth-muscle behavior, and (c) airway thickening. airway remodeling plays an important role in asthma pathogenesis. airway structural changes characteristic of airway remodeling occur because of prolonged airway inflammation. here, prolonged release of inflammatory factors results in: l thickening of the smooth-muscle bronchial walls, leading to airway narrowing l denudation of the bronchial epithelium l hyperplasia and hypertrophy of the airway smoothmuscle l hyperplasia and hypertrophy of the epithelial goblet cells, resulting in the formation of large mucus plugs liable to occlude the airway and increase airway hyper-responsiveness airway remodeling also involves changes occurring in the extracellular matrix and its constituent proteins (collagens i/iii/iv, fibronectin, and laminin) and structural changes such as angiogenesis, vasodilation, increased airway blood flow, and changes in autonomic neurological function [ ] . the development of asthma results in a degree of airway remodeling. the structural changes that define airway remodeling are an important feature in asthmatic airways, where even in newly diagnosed asthma patients, a degree of structural change can be identified in the bronchial wall [ ] . airway remodeling can be defined as a process of sustained disruption and modification of structural cells and tissues leading to the development of a new airway wall morphology [ ] . airway remodeling ( figure . ) is initiated either through various inflammatory pathways, highlighting the importance of the inflammatory pathway [ ] , or through bronchial hyper-responsiveness, where airway remodeling occurs independently of inflammation [ ] . our understanding of the extent and nature of genetic variation in the human genome has dramatically improved since the publication of the first draft genome sequence in , figure . asthma pathophysiology. exposure to allergens-for example, dermatophagoides pteronyssinus (der p ) and dactylis glomerata (dacg )-originating from various sources, including pollen, house dust mite, and mold, are taken up by dendritic cells, b-lymphocytes, epithelial cells, and macrophages, which present the antigens to t-lympocytes. this activates the t-lymphocytes to produce cytokines that regulate immunoglobulin e (ige) production by the b-lymphocytes. bound ige activates mast cells in the airways. activated mast cells initially release a number of factors, including il , leukotrienes, and histamine, that cause airway hyper-responsiveness and result in an early response to allergen stimulus via bronchoconstriction. the concurrent release of cytokines and chemokines from the mast cell recruits eosinophils, basophils, and t-lymphocytes to the airway. these cells, in association with t cell-activated neutrophils and with antigen stimulated macrophages, release chemokines and leukotrienes over an extended period of time, resulting in a late response to allergen stimulus via bronchoconstriction. prolonged stimulation of the late-response factors ultimately leads to the airway structural changes such as mucus hypersecretion, myofibroblast, and airway smooth-muscle proliferation, which are common to the asthmatic lung. and it continues to improve exponentially with initiatives such as the , genomes project, which aims to genome-sequence this number of uk subjects, and the encyclopedia of dna elements consortium (encode), an initiative to identify the genome's regulatory regions. recent figures suggest that more than . million singlenucleotide polymorphisms (snps) or single-base-pair changes exist in a genome consisting of billion base pairs. similarly there is a growing realization that deletions, insertions, and expansions of tandem repeats also represent significant variation. these genetic polymorphisms are found throughout the genome and have the potential to influence gene function in several ways leading to human disease: ( ) a coding-region nonsynonymous polymorphism can alter the amino acid sequence and structure/function of the protein; ( ) a polymorphism can introduce a stop codon leading to the production of a nonfunctional protein; and ( ) a polymorphism in a regulatory region can regulate the expression levels of a gene. it has long been known that atopic diseases such as asthma run in families. in , using atopic probands and nonatopic controls and their respective families, it was shown that . % of atopic probands had a family history of atopy, compared with . % in the control population [ ] . similarly, a study of families showed a very high concordance of asthma, hayfever, and eczema in parents and children [ ] . twin studies have been useful in identifying a significant concordance of asthma that is higher in monozygotic twins (identical genotype) versus dizygotic twins (on average sharing half of their genes). in the largest study to date, using , danish twin pairs, it was suggested that % of susceptibility to asthma was genetic, with a substantial environmental component [ ] . more recent studies suggest hereditability estimates of - % for asthma [ ] . therefore, asthma is considered a complex genetic disorder and, in contrast to single-gene disorders (e.g., cystic fibrosis), involves multiple genes, with expression influenced by both genetic and environmental factors. multiple environmental factors are important in asthma development, including tobacco smoke exposure, respiratory viral infections, antibiotic use, diet, and allergen exposure. gender and ethnic background also make a significant contribution. this complex mode of inheritance combined with the heterogeneity in the presentation of the disease has made gene discovery a challenge. early studies investigated inheritance through families containing multiple affected children, using linkage analyses and candidate gene approaches based on biology or location in the genome. however, the figure . asthmatic airway pathology. this schematic comparison of a normal airway with that observed in severe chronic asthma indicates histological changes that accompany recurring inflammation seen over time. unlike that from the unaffected individual, the bronchial mucosa from the severe asthmatic displays thickening of the basement membrane, airway smooth-muscle hypertrophy, leukocyte infiltration, epithelial cell desquamation, goblet cell hyperplasia in the epithelial lining accompanied by mucus hypersecretion, and plugging of the bronchial lumen, as well as edema and collagen deposition in the submucosal area. (not drawn to scale.) source: reproduced with permission from hodge and sayers [ ] . reproducibility of these findings was disappointing primarily because of inadequate power, subject heterogeneity (different phenotype definition), population stratification, and multiple testing without correction. more recently, hypothesis-free genome-wide association studies (gwas), which examine association with typically , + common (> % frequency) polymorphisms spanning the genome in cases and controls, using very stringent statistical thresholds ( figure . ), have been very successful. via these multiple approaches, over asthma genes have been described in more than publications. the major reproducible findings for asthma follow below (for more comprehensive reviews see [ , ] ). although this chapter focuses on the genetics of asthma diagnosis, subphenotypes in asthma (e.g., atopy, serum total ige levels, and lung function (e.g., fev )) have also been investigated for genetic influences. positional cloning involves linkage analyses (region or whole genome) followed by fine mapping using association. linkage analysis uses family data to follow the transmission of genetic information spanning the entire genome (commonly short tandem repeat markers) across generations. these data are used to determine if a genetic marker is close to, or linked with, a gene involved in a particular disease using families with multiple affected children. once a specific chromosomal region has been identified in this hypothesis-free approach, snps spanning the region are tested to see if they are more common in people with asthma compared to people without. the first gene to be identified with confidence using positional cloning was disintegrin and metalloprotease (adam ) [ ] . using a cohort of families, linkage was demonstrated to a locus on chromosome p for asthma, bronchial hyper-responsiveness (bhr), and total ige levels. subsequently, polymorphisms spanning adam were associated with asthma in the second stage. adam is thought to contribute to airway remodeling via its enzymatic functions. using positional cloning, multiple genes have been identified with functions varying from transcription factors to epithelial differentiation and tissue remodeling. these genes have provided a novel insight into potential mechanisms that are altered in asthma (table . ). polymorphisms spanning the urokinase plasminogen activator receptor (plaur or upar) were also associated with asthma susceptibility and were associated with rate of decline of lung function in asthma through linkage/association analyses on chromosome q [ ] . upar is a serine protease receptor involved in multiple mechanisms, including cell proliferation, migration, and extracellular matrix degradations via plasmin generation. these data suggest that genetic factors may be important in determining airway structural changes or "remodeling" in asthma [ ] . genotype for typically , + snps in large numbers of cases and controls using arrays compare differences to identify disease-specific snps using stringent correction for multiple testing candidate gene studies are hypothesis-driven and based on the suggested biology of a gene product or the location of the gene in a chromosomal region previously linked to asthma. such studies commonly employ asthma cases versus controls, although family-based association has also been used. for excellent reviews of candidate gene studies in asthma, see ober and hoffjan [ ] and undarmaa et al. [ ] . the primary highly reproducible genes identified using candidate gene approaches are multiple components of the interleukin / axis (see table . ), including the cytokine genes themselves (il /il ); related receptor (il ra) and downstream signaling effector signal transducers and activators of transcription (stat ) . the role of the il /il axis in the pathogenesis of asthma has been extensively documented [ ] . human studies have identified elevated numbers of cells expressing il mrna in the bronchial tissue of atopic and nonatopic asthmatic subjects [ ] ; administration of recombinant il in mouse lungs resulted in an increase in airway mucus secretion, development of subepithelial fibrosis, airway hyper-responsiveness (ahr), and eosinophilic airway inflammation-that is, several key features of the human disease [ ] . il is produced by a variety of cells, including th cd +, th cd +, cd + t cells, mast cells, basophils, and eosinophils. il mediates its effects by interacting with a complex receptor system comprising an il- rα/il rα heterodimer and the il rα receptor [ ] . the finding that genetic polymorphisms within il that determine levels and/or structure and are associated with the development of asthma make biological sense. the use of gwas approaches to identify asthma susceptibility genes has revolutionized our understanding of asthma genetics. while positional cloning showed great success with simple mendelian disorders, it did not perform well for complex diseases. similarly, candidate gene studies are useful but very inefficient. the capacity to interrogate the entire genome for , + common snps in cases and controls has provided an excellent platform for gene discovery. the first gwas for asthma used a discovery cohort of patients with childhood onset asthma and nonasthma controls, and identified significant association to a locus on chromosome q [ ] . this locus includes genes for zona pellucida binding protein (zpbp ), gasdermin b (gsdmb) and orm -like protein (ormdl ). the q locus has been reproduced as a locus associated with childhood onset asthma in many studies; however, the identification of the specific gene(s) underlying these effects remains to be resolved. zpbp , gsdmb, and ormdl have been implicated in gene transcription, cell apoptosis, and sphingolipid synthesis, respectively. this initial gwas has now been superseded by several larger-scale studies. in particular, the gabriel consortium study, involving , asthma cases and , controls, identified association between polymorphisms spanning il , il rl /il r , hla-dq, smad , and il rb [ ] . note: for candidate gene approaches, genes focused to replication in more than studies [ , ] . for gwas, genes focused to those meeting conventional genome-wide significance (p < × − ) and/or independent replication in the caucasian population. to date, two of the most reproducible association signals are to the il gene on chromosome p and the il receptor (il rl or st ) gene on chromosome , both of which highlight the significance of this ligand/receptor system in asthma. interestingly, these loci are associated with severe asthma as well [ ] . there is good evidence from biology that the il /st axis may be of relevance in asthma; mice induced to develop allergic airway disease were treated with an antibody that blocks il binding to its receptor. this treatment was shown to block many of the features of the disease, including reduced serum ige and airway eosinophil and lymphocyte counts. significantly, both induction and resolution of the disease were attenuated [ ] . in human studies, il has been shown to be elevated in the airways of asthma patients, particularly in the airway structural cells, including the bronchial epithelium, and is induced in these cells by relevant stimulations (e.g., hdm [ ] ). in addition, a soluble form of the st receptor has been shown to be elevated during asthma exacerbation [ ] . overall, it is thought that the il /st axis may be particularly important in attracting and activating inflammatory cells in the airways; however, the precise role(s) of this pathway remains to be resolved. as outlined in table . , other genes have been identified using gwas, including those involved in diverse roles such as inflammatory cell function and airway smoothmuscle contraction, again providing a unique insight into potentially altered mechanisms in asthma. however, most gwas determined single variants only confer a very modest odds ratio of . - . of developing asthma. for a more comprehensive review of gwas findings in asthma, see akhabir and sandford [ ] . over the last years, there has been great progress in identifying asthma susceptibility genes. current and future approaches include meta-analyses using cohorts of tens of thousands of asthma patients, the incorporation of gene expression/snp analyses (the expression quantitative trait loci (eqtl)), the investigation of asthma subphenotypes using gwas, and whole-genome sequencing. the real challenge is the translation of these genetic findings into a deeper understanding of the biology of asthma and the potential identification of therapeutic targets. already several of these newly identified genes (e.g., il and il receptor (il rl /st )) represent excellent pharmacological targets, and it is anticipated that genetics in these loci will be essential to identifying patients most likely to gain clinical benefit from targeting this pathway. the lack of concordance between approaches (e.g., linkage versus gwas) can be explained by the fact that the methodologies are designed to detect different types of variants, e.g., linkage analysis has good power to detect high-risk disease-causing alleles but is not effective at identifying common alleles of modest effect, as gwas does. it is reassuring that many of the genes identified in candidate gene approaches have been reproduced in gwas (e.g., the il /il locus on chromosome q , a region that has also been linked to asthma). while there has been much success in recent years in identifying genes for asthma using gwas, the overall genetic variation accounted for by these genetic polymorphisms is very small, leading to the concept of "missing hereditability." possible explanations for missing hereditability include: ( ) rare variants (< % frequency) with larger effect size not measured on existing platforms; ( ) structural variation (e.g., copy number variation); ( ) gene-environment contributions; ( ) gene-gene interactions; ( ) epigenetic mechanisms; and ( ) overestimation of initial hereditability. the aim of treatment is to achieve control of asthma and prevent exacerbations. most guidelines adopt a stepwise approach to the management of asthma and advise stepping up treatment as necessary and stepping down when control is achieved for at least three months. although there are several pharmacological options for asthma treatment (see figure . ), the two main classes remain bronchodilators (short-or long-acting) and corticosteroids. short-acting bronchodilators (e.g., salbutamol/terbutaline) are sympathomimetics (β -adrenergic receptor agonists) that relax airway smooth-muscle, enhance mucociliary clearance, decrease vascular permeability, and possibly modulate mediator release from mast cells. they are used for symptom control, acute exacerbations, and exerciseinduced asthma. frequent or regularly scheduled use of rapid-acting inhaled β agonists for long-term management of asthma does not adequately control symptoms, pef variability, or airway inflammation. long-acting bronchodilators (e.g., salmeterol/formoterol) activity is identical to that of short-acting β -adrenergic receptor agonists, but should be used in combination with inhaled corticosteroids because of concerns regarding increased mortality when used as a monotherapy. long-acting bronchodilators are normally introduced at treatment step . inhaled corticosteroids (ics) form the backbone of treatment for all but the very mildest asthma. ics improve lung function, symptoms, and quality of life, reduce exacerbations, and improve mortality. they have broad anti-inflammatory and immunosuppressive effects. corticosteroids enter the cell cytoplasm and bind with the inactive glucocorticoid receptor complex. the activated glucocorticoid receptor binds to dna at the glucocorticoid response element sequence and promotes synthesis of anti-inflammatory proteins (transactivation), and inhibits transcription and synthesis of many proinflammatory cytokines (transrepression). they also reduce the number of t-lymphocytes, dendritic cells, eosinophils, and mast cells in the airway, and reduce inducible nitric oxide production. ics (beclomethasone dipropionate/fluticasone propionate/budesonide/ flunisolide/ciclesonide/mometasone) all have side effects related to their transactivation properties, including local effects on the oropharynx (hoarseness, candidiasis, cough, and dysphonia) and systemic effects (cushing syndrome, osteoporosis, cataracts, dermal thinning and bruising, adrenal insufficiency, and growth suppression) in children [ ] . consequently, the lowest dose required to control symptoms and prevent exacerbations should be prescribed. other medications are normally reserved for second-or third-line treatment. these include methylxanthines (theophylline), leukotriene modifiers (montelukast), inhaled anticholinergics (ipratropium bromide/tiotropium), and sodium chromoglycate. a wide range of interventions have been assessed for both the primary prevention of asthma and the secondary prophylaxis of the disease once present. these treatments have varying effects, but may be recommended in individual cases. primary prevention measures include aeroallergen and food allergen avoidance, fish oil supplementation, avoidance of tobacco smoke and air pollutants, immunotherapy, and immunization. measures that have been assessed for secondary prophylaxis include hdm and allergen avoidance, smoking reduction, subcutaneous and sublingual immunotherapy, dietary manipulation, weight loss, breathing techniques, and exercise training. some investigators argue that severe asthma is an inflammatory condition separate from mild/moderate asthma, rather than simply the severe end of the disease spectrum. this is difficult to prove, as underlying asthma may be complicated by other aspects (obesity/reflux/smoking/poor adherence), making it more difficult to treat and control. there are different definitions of severe asthma, but all require high-dose inhaled corticosteroids or oral corticosteroids and include recurrent exacerbations and poor control. as high-dose ics and oral corticosteroids are associated with side effects attempts have been made to design treatments to either reduce the amount of corticosteroid prescribed (steroid-sparing agents) or treat the underlying asthma in a different manner. steroid-sparing agents trialled include methotrexate, gold, cyclosporin, and azathioprine. currently, none have been recommended in any asthma guidelines. box . lists other treatments used on an individual basis. the need for a stratified-medicine approach to asthma has become apparent over the last decade. this has followed the realization that the term asthma covers a whole range of disease phenotypes. as techniques for investigating and researching asthma have evolved, it has become clear that different disease processes are present that require different treatments and approaches. whether this represents disease phenotyping or just a better understanding of disease pathogenesis is unclear. over the years, research focus has moved from the airway smooth-muscle via airway inflammation to airway immunology, and on to the epithelial-mesenchymal trophic unit. future insight into disease pathogenesis and new treatment developments will follow with the use of the latest technologies, which include "omics" platforms and assessment of airway microbiota. improving our understanding of stratified medicine for asthma-targeting the right therapy to the right patientaims to reduce hospital admissions due to poorly controlled asthma and fatalities. although most asthma can be controlled by ics and bronchodilators, there remains a cohort of patients with persistent symptoms, recurrent exacerbations, and worse quality of life. the current stepwise management approach (see figure . ) is inefficient, particularly in light of heterogeneity in clinical presentation and response to existing therapies, making a stratified approach essential. early work conceptualized asthma as extrinsic (allergic) and intrinsic (nonallergic) [ ] . however, the recent use of unbiased approaches to classify disease using three large datasets and cluster analysis [ ] [ ] [ ] has highlighted the different types of disease under the umbrella term asthma ( figure . ). although these early studies were performed in different parts of the world and had statistical variations, their results were similar. age at disease onset was found to be a key differentiating factor; early-onset disease was associated with more atopic and allergic conditions, whereas later-onset disease was associated with eosinophilic inflammation and obesity. these studies were all limited by a cross-sectional design and by the fact that treatment may have determined clusters. longitudinal studies initiated in childhood are ongoing. for example, pacman (formally, "pharmacogenetics of asthma medication in children: medication and anti-inflammatory effects") aims to differentiate children with uncontrolled asthma, despite ics treatment, using a range of clinical and cellular markers [ ] . the role of allergy (an inappropriate and harmful immune response to a normally nonharmful substance which requires sensitization) and that of atopy (the tendency to develop ige antibodies to commonly encountered environmental allergens by natural exposure in which the route of entry is across intact mucosal surfaces) have been well studied in asthma. people with extrinsic asthma were thought to develop the disease earlier in life, be atopic, and have identifiable allergic triggers as well as other allergic diseases such as rhinitis or eczema. intrinsic asthma was thought to develop later in life (after years of age), and be associated with aspirin-exacerbated respiratory disease but not with allergic sensitization. when small studies in humans suggested that levels of th cytokines were similar in extrinsic anti-ige bronchial thermoplasty macrolide antibiotics antifungals (itraconazole/voriconazole) anti-il anti-il box . new and emerging therapies reserved for severe asthma and intrinsic asthma, and that treatment with ics was effective in the majority of mild to moderate asthma cases, the distinctions between extrinsic and intrinsic asthma fell out of favor [ ] . heterogeneity in response to existing medication is exemplified by malmstrom's study, which investigated individual response to leukotriene receptor antagonist (ltra) (montelukast mg once daily), and the inhaled steroid beclomethasone ( μg twice daily) over a -week period in chronic asthma patients [ ] . overall, there was a clear improvement in lung function (primary outcome fev ) for both treatments; however, when stratified based on individual patient data, there was a very large degree of heterogeneity for both treatment groups, with some patients showing up to % improvement in fev and others showing a decline in lung function with a % decrease in fev (figure . ). this interindividual variability, a component of clinical trials that is seldom appreciated, is thought to have a strong genetic component. the therapeutic regimen for the treatment of asthma has been well defined and was described earlier in this chapter. despite such well-defined treatment regimens, which are constantly updated and streamlined, as well as the availability of high-quality medications, in many cases asthma is still not sufficiently controlled. while current asthma therapeutics are able to successfully treat - % of the asthmatic population, around % still have daily symptoms and almost all patients report limitations of daily activities [ ] . this also leaves around - % of patients who do not respond to conventional treatments. this demonstrates that the current one-size-fits-all approach is not perfect, and emphasizes the need for a stratified medicine approach to asthma. variability in current therapy involves variation in drug efficacy and presentation of side effects, each of which presents challenges to successful maintenance of asthma. variability in drug efficacy, especially when occurring for β -adrenergic receptor agonists and glucocorticosteroids, and in the presentation of side effects, can result in patient therapy having to deviate from the standard therapeutic regimen for the treatment of asthma. this high degree of interpatient variability in treatment response and in side effects can be attributed to a number of factors: ( ) the interaction of genetic factors; ( ) individual patient characteristics, such as weight, gender, and pregnancy; and ( ) exposure to environmental insults, such as air pollution, allergens, and cigarette smoke. these factors interact, making the control of asthmatic episodes and the reduction of exacerbations more difficult. for example, asthma attacks can affect different age groups differently according to the season-children are more affected in summer while the older population suffers more in winter. when considering variation in treatment efficacy, one must also be mindful of individual patient factors such as inhaler technique and noncompliance (discussed earlier). currently asthma therapy is planned without consideration of genetic variance. however, genetic variance is arguably the most important of the factors listed previously-a claim supported by evidence gained from investigating the repeatability of response to therapy. this approach demonstrated that repeatability was between - %, with a substantial proportion of the variance due to genetic factors [ ] . one important form of variance in therapeutic efficacy is non-response. non-response is an important limitation in the maintenance and control of asthma, in that therapeutics expected to manage the disease at a certain level of severity fail outright, leading to the use of a trial approach in which different therapies are utilized with variable results until a suitable regimen is determined. a good example is severe asthma, where the patient is on permanent oral glucocorticosteroid therapy because of nonresponse to other therapies such as ics, leukotriene receptor antagonists, and β -adrenergic receptor agonists. non-responders present with longer duration of asthma exacerbations and worse morning lung function, as well as a more frequent family history of asthma, when compared to those individuals responsive to glucocorticosteroid therapy [ ] . the recognition that allergen specific ige activation of mast cells is central in driving allergic asthma lead to the discovery that the primary mast cell-signaling cascade could be inhibited by a monoclonal antibody toward the ige binding site to the high affinity receptor (fcer ). anti-ige (omalizumab) became the first specific biologic to be used in the treatment of severe allergic asthma. clinical trials revealed efficacy as well as almost total inhibition of early and late asthmatic responses to inhaled allergen [ ] . following a rigorous examination of trial data by the national institute for clinical excellence (nice), omalizumab is now recommended as an option for treating severe individual data persistent, confirmed allergic ige-mediated asthma as an add-on to optimized standard therapy in people aged six and older who need continuous or frequent treatment with oral corticosteroids (defined as four or more courses in the previous year) in the united kingdom. although the drug is prescribed for cases of therapy-resistant asthma associated with allergy, it is also licensed for patients with evidence of allergy but a normal ige. omalizumab represents the first stratified treatment for asthma, but there is evidence that its use can be further stratified by using biomarkers of th inflammation to predict response. in a recent paper studying the effect of omalizumab on uncontrolled severe persistent allergic asthma, treatment effect was analyzed in relation to f e no, blood eosinophils, and serum periostin (an epithelial protein that is induced by il ). after weeks of omalizumab, reductions in protocol-defined exacerbations were greater in high versus low subgroups for all three biomarkers, suggesting a potential prognostic ability [ ] . this biomarker approach has helped divide asthma into and th high and th low disease. asthma has traditionally been considered a th process linked to atopy and allergy, type i hyper-sensitivity reactions, eosinophilic inflammation, and response to corticosteroids. "th high disease," as evidenced by high f e no and a sputum eosinophilia of > %, has been associated with a better response to corticosteroids when compared to "th low disease" [ ] [ ] [ ] . studies on lebrikizumab, a novel monoclonal antibody to il [ ] , have suggested that serum periostin may be a biomarker for a more general th asthmatic phenotype. in one study a subgroup of individuals who had asthma and persistent elevation in serum periostin showed greater improvements in airway function and fewer exacerbations after lebrikizumab treatment than those with lower serum periostin. interestingly, levels of f e no, produced by inducible nitric oxide synthase, an enzyme induced in human airway epithelial cells by il , were as informative as periostin in identifying th -high individuals responsive to lebrikizumab. both the role of stratification based on phenotyping and the need for correct study end points in treatment trials have been informed by the salutary lesson of the anti-il antibody mepolizumab. although mepoluzimab effectively blocks eosinophilic inflammation, initial studies were disappointing in that no effect was demonstrated on spirometry or peak flow, despite a significant reduction in blood eosinophil numbers [ ] . when the effect of the drug was studied on an outcome measure related to eosinophilia, namely severe exacerbations, there were significantly fewer exacerbations with a concomitant improvement in asthma-related quality of life [ ] . tellingly, there were no significant differences with respect to symptoms, postbronchodilator fev , or airway hyper-responsiveness, suggesting that different physiological processes determine these asthma outcomes. the study also helps researchers reflect upon the need to measure the correct end point in a disease that has different pathological mechanisms that all respond differently to treatment. phenotyping asthma has led to the identification of new disease targets, but aside from the use of anti-ige, it has not yet led to a step change in management. other approaches assessing the separate aspects of asthma pathophysiologynamely, airway inflammation, airway hyper-responsiveness, and airflow obstruction have been trialled with differing results. the key determinant in the design of these stratified approaches was the recognition that although asthma is a disease defined by symptoms, with treatment response also assessed by symptom improvement, there is no clear correlation between pathophysiology and symptomatology/ exacerbation risk. in the facet study (designed to evaluate the benefits of adding a long-acting β -adrenergic receptor agonist to different doses of ics), higher-dose ics had a marked beneficial effect on exacerbation frequency, but relatively less effect on symptoms and peak expiratory flow. the opposite was true with the addition of long-acting β -agonists [ ] . this indicates that exacerbation frequency does not closely relate to symptoms and measures of disordered airway function, suggesting that the mechanisms responsible for these features are different [ ] . numerous studies have demonstrated that in asthma the features of airway inflammation, airway hyper-responsiveness, variable airflow obstruction and associated symptoms can overlap, occur independently or change over time, in response to treatment or other external factors such as allergen exposure, or viral infection. one obvious example of this is eosinophilic bronchitis, a condition characterized by corticosteroid-responsive cough and the presence of a sputum eosinophilia occurring in the absence of variable airflow obstruction or airway hyper-responsiveness [ ] . although asthma guidelines recommend the assessment of airflow obstruction (fev /pef) and related symptoms for their primary treatment response outcomes, the realization is that this approach looks only at one aspect of asthma pathophysiology which is not closely related to exacerbation risk. this has led to new approaches aimed at reducing asthma exacerbations and symptoms while maintaining corticosteroid burden at the lowest possible level. airway hyper-responsiveness is defined as increased sensitivity to an inhaled constrictor agonist and a steeper slope of the dose-response curve. two main forms of bronchoconstrictor stimuli exist: direct and indirect. direct bronchoconstrictors, such as histamine or methacholine, stimulate receptors on the airway smooth-muscle, while indirect ones cause bronchoconstriction by secondary release of bronchoconstrictor mediators from mast cells or activation of neural pathways. airway responsiveness is usually measured as the provocative dose of methacholine causing a % fall in fev by linear interpolation of the log dose-response curve (pc ). in the general population, the distribution of airway hyper-responsiveness follows a continuous unimodal log-normal distribution, with asthma sufferers representing the hyper-responsive part of the distribution curve. a pc is not usually measurable in non-diseased individuals, which suggests a large difference in airway responsiveness between non-diseased individuals and asthma patients. the cut-off used to identify asthma is normally a methacholine concentration of < mg/ml. this value had a sensitivity of %, a specificity of %, and a negative predictive value of % in a study on a population of college students with a diagnosis of current symptomatic asthma. the use of methacholine pc to diagnose asthma has been evaluated; one study demonstrated that when asthma is defined as consistent symptoms with objective evidence of abnormal variable airflow obstruction, a positive methacholine challenge is more sensitive than pef amplitude % mean and the acute bronchodilator response in diagnosis [ ] . the use of methacholine pc to guide treatment has also been assessed. although it was found that pc -guided treatment resulted in a reduction in asthma exacerbations, this was at the expense of increased inhaled corticosteroid use [ ] ; consequently, although pc is often used for asthma diagnosis, or as a study end point, it is not routinely used to guide treatment decisions. asthma has been traditionally viewed as a condition where airway inflammation causes airway hyper-responsiveness, which in turn leads to variable airflow obstruction and symptoms; however, cross-sectional and longitudinal studies of airway inflammation using sputum induction in large populations with a diverse range of presentations suggest that this hypothesis requires modification. a recent bronchoscopy study demonstrated that bronchoconstriction is independent of airway inflammation and can lead to airway remodeling [ ] . the development of noninvasive techniques to assess airway inflammation, including induced sputum and f e no, has made it possible to relate airway inflammation to objective measures of disordered airway function in larger and more heterogeneous populations than was possible with bronchoscopy studies. in general, these newer studies contradict findings in earlier studies and do not find a correlation between sputum eosinophil count and various markers of airway dysfunction. it has been observed that a subset of patients with symptomatic asthma do not have sputum evidence of eosinophilic airway inflammation [ ] . many have sputum neutrophilia. this sputum profile is evident in corticosteroid-naïve as well as corticosteroid-treated subjects, suggesting that it is not always an artifact related to treatment. importantly, patients with noneosinophilic asthma respond less well to inhaled budesonide than do a group with more typical sputum features [ ] . similar sputum findings have been reported in more severe asthmatics; a subgroup of patients with refractory asthma have been identified who have bronchoscopic evidence of neutrophilic airway inflammation, normal eosinophil counts, and a normal basement membrane thickness. these findings suggest the presence of a distinct asthma phenotype characterized by a predominantly neutrophilic airway inflammatory response and relative corticosteroid resistance. furthermore, there is evidence that neutrophilic asthma may result from activation of the innate immune system with the production of proinflammatory cytokines. the use of noninvasive measures to guide treatment decisions by stratification based on the presence or absence of airway inflammation has been assessed. the strongest evidence for effect relates to the use of induced sputum to guide corticosteroid dose in moderate to severe asthma. two studies have shown that using induced sputum differential counts to guide treatment results in fewer exacerbations for the same overall corticosteroid burden [ , ] . although the evidence is clear that this approach works, induced sputum is not widely employed, possibly because it is seen as time consuming, requiring expertise both to induce the sputum and to perform the differential counts. the discovery that levels of f e no, measured via a device similar to a breathalyzer, correlate well with sputum eosinophilia and relate to corticosteroid responsiveness, has driven the application of inflammometry (noninvasive measurement of inflammation in the airways). inflammometry using f e no measurements has also been used to guide and stratify treatment decisions. though one study was positive in patients with asthma in pregnancy, with a reduction in exacerbations, most have failed to show an improvement when compared to guideline-driven (fev /pef and symptoms) management. the hunt is still on for a reliable, inexpensive, and valid biomarker of airway inflammation. fev and pef measurements reflect changes in the caliber of the large airways. our knowledge of anatomical and physiological changes in the small airways of patients with asthma is based on small case series of resected lung tissue from patients with asthma undergoing surgery for cancer, or on cases of fatal asthma. these case series have demonstrated that there is significant inflammation present in the small airways (< mm diameter) in asthma. fatal asthma is associated with peripheral airway inflammation and differences in the number of activated eosinophils in the distal lung. other studies have revealed alterations in the epithelium and smooth-muscle, as well as mucous hypersecretion and distal airway plugging of the small airways. the presence of inflammation in the small airways in asthma may explain why small airways account for up to - % of total airflow resistance in asthma, but only % of airflow resistance in normal airways. recently, the development of "small-particle" ics, designed to target the peripheral lung, and the advent of new technologies-nitrogen washout, impulse oscillometry, and hyperpolarized noble gas magnetic resonance imaging, which allows assessment of peripheral lung function-have led to a resurgence of interest in the distal lung. studies of small-particle ics have been inconsistent; those comparing small-particle and standard-particle icss have failed to demonstrate improved asthma outcomes when administered in clinically comparable doses. future asthma treatment may yet be stratified by the presence or absence of small airway inflammation. there have been several attempts to base treatment decisions on measures of airway inflammation, including induced sputum and f e no in children. generally, they have been unsuccessful, although some experts do stratify treatment decisions on the response to oral or intramuscular steroids. while methods of stratifying asthma patients to specific treatments based on nongenetic factors such as clinical outcomes, cellular measures, or protein biomarkers have shown some success, a large body of work has investigated the potential of genetic markers as predictors of patient responses to existing therapies, i.e., pharmacogenetics. pharmacogenetics, the investigation of the effect of genetic polymorphisms on response to treatment or risk of adverse side effects, is one of the first steps in developing personalized prescribing. the use of genetic information to stratify patient prescribing is potentially more desirable compared to nongenetic stratification, as technology now allows a small amount of blood or saliva sample to be taken and a dna test can be completed within hours. to date, asthma pharmacogenetic studies have suffered from relatively small retrospective designs and a focus on only a few candidate genes; however, more recent, larger prospective studies have been completed that provide greater confidence in original findings and hypothesis-free approaches such as gwas. these studies are primarily focused on pharmacodynamic aspects (e.g., improvement in lung function post-treatment), and only limited information is available about the impact of pharmacogenetics on adverse effects. pharmacogenetics in asthma is relatively advanced compared to that for other diseases. genetic factors influencing the main treatment classes (i.e., β -adrenergic receptor agonists, corticosteroids, and leukotriene modifiers) have been identified with some confidence (table . ). an overview of these findings follows; however, for more in-depth analyses, see portelli and sayers [ ] . β -adrenergic receptor agonists carry out their function through the β -adrenergic receptor-a -amino-acid g-protein-coupled receptor encoded by an intronless gene (adrb ) located on chromosome q . . binding of agonists to the receptor activates adenyl cyclase through stimulatory gs proteins, which in turn activate protein kinase a. the latter phosphorylates several target proteins, resulting in a decrease in intracellular calcium that, importantly, causes smooth-muscle relaxation in the airways. it is not surprising that the majority of evidence of genetically driven effects on β -adrenergic receptor-agonist therapy stem from the adrb gene, which has therefore been extensively studied for pharmacogenetic effects on β -adrenergic receptoragonist responses. adrb is a highly polymorphic gene containing known and validated polymorphisms, of which are snps and are insertion/deletion variants. most studies have focused on the role of four nonsynonymous coding-region polymorphisms: arg gly (arginine-to-glycine substitution at position in the protein), gln glu, val met, and thr ile [ ] . in a caucasian population, the frequency of the polymorphisms at positions and were identified as % (arg glu) and %, (gln glu) [ ] . the remaining val met and thr ile polymorphisms are rare, having approximate frequencies of < . % and . %, respectively. the arg variant has been shown to have pharmacogenetic potential through association with; an enhanced acute response to β -adrenergic receptor agonists l a decline of asthma control following prolonged use of β -adrenergic receptor agonists l a subsensitivity of response for bronchoprotection by β -adrenergic receptor agonists however, several studies have failed to reproduce these effects, meaning that a common consensus on the contribution of arg has yet to be reached. this lack of consensus can be explained when we consider that there are at least different haplotypes (a specific combination of snps across the gene) in adrb . investigations into the effect of a genotype in isolation, without consideration of its haplotype, is likely to introduce confounding into the association. functional effects of coding-region polymorphisms in adrb have been identified through in vitro work carried out in cell lines. these have included the following: [ ] . in one of the larger studies, basu et al. identified an arg copy numberdependent increase in disease exacerbations in patients with asthma aged to years on daily exposure to β -adrenergic receptor agonist (regularly inhaled corticosteroid plus salbutamol on demand group, and regularly inhaled corticosteroid plus salmeterol and salbutamol on demand group) [ ] . it is important to note that this effect was driven by asthma patients who used salbutamol and/or salmeterol daily, supporting the suggestion that the arg polymorphism has an integral role in the effectiveness of β -adrenergic receptor-agonist therapy [ ] . however, as with other studies, study limitations did not allow a clear association to be made between the adrb gene (via its polymorphisms) and β -adrenergic receptor-agonist efficacy. namely, all participants were using β -adrenergic receptor-agonists as a reliever; a study arm of non-β -adrenergic receptoragonist reliever use would have provided a clearer interpretation of the detrimental effects of salbutamol/salmeterol in the arg subjects. large studies have failed to observe a clinically relevant effect of these polymorphisms. these include longitudinal studies of β -adrenergic receptor-agonist efficacy and the study of concomitant administration of corticosteroids. a good example is a study of asthma patients randomly assigned to: ( ) budesonide plus formoterol maintenance and reliever therapy; ( ) fixed-dose budesonide plus formoterol; or ( ) fixed dose fluticasone plus salmeterol for six months. no overall effect of the gly arg genotype on clinical outcomes was found [ ] . another contributing factor to the pronounced differences in the conclusions from different studies investigating these adrb polymorphisms is trial design variation. the majority of studies have focused on the adrb arg gly polymorphism; however, other potential pharmacogenetically relevant polymorphisms also affect β -adrenergic receptor-agonist efficacy. multiple polymorphisms in the gene's regulatory regions that have potential clinical relevance are present in adrb . by studying eight common haplotypes based on snps, a recent in vitro approach using "whole gene" transfection identified differential effects on receptor expression and downregulation that are haplotype-driven [ ] . this study identified four common haplotypes with elevated receptor expression and two haplotypes with enhanced receptor downregulation. another area recently investigated is polymorphisms occurring in the gene's untranslated regions, which may have an effect on gene expression and resultant drug efficacy. multiple genes are likely to be involved in the regulation of β -adrenergic receptor-agonist response and expression of side effects, due to the agonists' known complex and multifactorial mechanism of action. one gene that has been associated with patient response to these agonists is arginase (arg ), which was identified using a novel algorithm implemented in a family-based association test (fbat) [ ] . in this study of children and their parents, the arg snp, rs , was associated with bronchodilator response (bdr) when snps from candidate genes ( involved in β -adrenergic receptor-signaling/regulation, involved in glucocorticoid regulation, and from prior asthma association studies) were investigated for their association with acute response to inhaled β -adrenergic receptor-agonist in children and their parents. in agreement with this study polymorphisms spanning arg and influencing patient response to salbutamol have also been identified in a candidate gene study involving asthma subjects [ ] . the arg polymorphisms identified in both studies were in linkage disequilibrium (ld) (inherited together), suggesting a common causative mechanism involving potential transcriptional regulation due to the polymorphisms' location (predominantly ′ to the gene). this alteration in transcription has now been confirmed in promoter-reporter studies, which found that the key arg haplotype associated with improved bdr drives the highest level of arg promoter activity [ ] . in the study by vonk et al., arg snps were also associated with patient responses to salbutamol [ ] , suggesting an integral role for the arginase family in β -adrenergic receptor-agonist therapy. recently a s-nitrosoglutathione reductase (gsnor) snp (rs , promoter region) was associated with a decreased response to salbutamol in african-american children [ ] . in the same study, a post hoc multilocus analysis discovered that a combination of rs with adrb arg gly, gly glu, and the carbamoyl phosphate synthetase- (cps ) snp rs gave a % predictive value for lack of response to therapy [ ] , implying that pharmacogenetic regulation of β -adrenergic receptoragonist therapy may depend on several loci acting together via gene-gene interactions. in confirmation, / snps tested in gsnor were associated with asthma patient responses to salbutamol in puerto rican asthma patients [ ] . these snps were also associated with asthma susceptibility, and the key risk haplotype was associated with increased transcriptional activity based on promoter-reporter studies [ ] . gsnor is an alcohol dehydrogenase that breaks down gsno, an endogenous bronchodilator [ ] . in addition, gsno regulates nitrosylation of proteins, leading to alterations in function, including g-protein coupled receptor kinase (grk ), which phosphorylates and desensitizes the β -adrenergic receptor [ ] . other novel genes have recently been associated with β -adrenergic receptor-agonist therapy including the spermatogenesis-associated, serine-rich -like (spats l) and collagen (col a ) genes [ ] . the col a gene, through association with the intronic snp rs , was associated with acute bronchodilator response to inhaled salbutamol in a genome-wide association study in which ∼ , snps were tested in caucasian trios. this association was replicated in a pooled population of three asthma trial populations, as well as in three additional asthma populations [ ] . spats l was also identified as a modulator of β -adrenergic receptor-agonist function through a gwas. here, the snp rs , located near the spats l gene, was significantly associated with percentage change in baseline fev in caucasian asthma patients; this was replicated in two alternate caucasian populations (n ∼ each). molecular biology techniques confirmed these results and identified that spats l may be an important regulator of β -adrenergic receptor downregulation. the identification of patients at risk from potential adverse effects of β -adrenergic receptor-agonists remains a critical clinical question, as does the targeting of this class of drug to patients most likely to benefit from it. while there has been clear progress with respect to study design (e.g., examining haplotypes instead of genotypes in isolation) and adequately powered studies using thousands of individuals, there is still a need for large prospective studies of asthma patients with matched phenotypes and carefully controlled covariates that include environmental influences. similarly, these studies would benefit from gwa approaches and the identification of gene-gene interactions. while investigations of the effect of genetic polymorphisms on β -adrenergic receptor-agonist responses have predominantly focused on clinical end points (e.g., lung function parameters) in the different genotype groups, there has been recent interest in the real-life application of genetic knowledge. as outlined, the first-line treatment for asthma is a shortacting β -adrenergic receptor-agonist (e.g., salbutamol) as needed (step ); if symptoms persist, the addition of inhaled corticosteroid (e.g., beclomethasone) is considered (step ); for further control, a long-acting β -adrenergic receptor agonist (e.g., salmeterol) or a leukotriene receptor antagonist (ltra) (e.g., montelukast) is added (step ) (figure . ) . in a recent study, lipworth et al. set out to use genetic information on the adrb arg polymorphism to inform the choice of prescribing salmeterol or montelukast as addon therapy [ ] . children with persistent asthma and homozygous for the arg genotype (n = ) were randomized to receive salmeterol ( μg, bd) or montelukast ( or mg, once daily) as an add-on to inhaled fluticasone propionate for one year. the study tested whether carriers of the arg genotype were more prone to adverse effects (e.g., prolonged β -adrenergic receptor-agonist use associated exacerbations), and hence whether montelukast provided superior control for this preselected population. outcomes were school absences (primary outcome), exacerbation score, reliever use (salbutamol), morning dyspnoea, and asthma control questionnaire (acq) qualityof-life scores. montelukast provided superior benefit for all measures, with clinically relevant differences within three months. no significant difference in fev (% pred) was observed, providing further evidence of limited correlation between lung function and symptom-based scores [ ] . these results suggest that larger and longer prospective studies are warranted to provide more definitive data on the clinical utility of arg stratification including a gly study arm and the use of additional markers to define the population would provide clearer interpretation. as outlined, leukotriene synthesis inhibitors (ltsis) and leukotriene receptor antagonists (ltras) are commonly used as an add-on therapy in asthma to provide greater control or steroid-sparing effects. the cysteinyl leukotrienes (ltc , ltd , lte ) and dihydroxy leukotriene (ltb ) contribute to the inflammatory process in asthma and are synthesized from arachidonic acid via the -lipoxygenase pathway (figure . ) . cysteinyl leukotrienes have been implicated in bronchoconstriction, mucus secretion, vascular permeability, inflammatory cell infiltration and cytokine production. arachidonic acid is converted to -hydroperoxyeicosatetraenoic acid and leukotriene a (lta ) by -lipoxygenase ( -lo/alox ) and -lipoxygenaseactivating protein (flap/alox ap), which acts as an adaptor protein for this reaction. lta is then converted to leukotriene b (ltb ) by lta hydrolase (lta h) or, alternatively, is conjugated with reduced glutathione to form ltc via the actions of leukotriene c (ltc ) synthase (ltc s). ltc is next transported to the extracellular space via the multidrug resistance protein (mrp ) ( figure . ). leukotriene modifiers include ltsis, which act by targeting -lo (e.g., zileuton), resulting in a decrease in all leukotriene biosynthesis (ltc , ltd , lte , and ltb ) or ltras, which act by specifically blocking cysteinyl leukotrienes from binding to their primary receptor, cysltr , which is found on many cell types including inflammatory cells and airway smooth-muscle cells, (e.g., montelukast and zafirlukast). data demonstrating the large degree of heterogeneity of asthma patient responses to this class of drug are summarized in figure . . these data have led to extensive genetic studies investigating the roles of snps in a large number of candidate genes associated with leukotriene production and/or activity and acute responses to ltras and ltsis. associations have been described for polymorphisms in alox , alox ap, ltc s, cysltr , cysltr , and mrp ; however, many of these studies have been small and so have led to a lack of reproducibility in findings [ ] . more recent studies have looked at different aspects of leukotriene modifier functions, including the association of montelukast absorption (i.e., pharmacokinetics) with polymorphisms in oatp pb [ ] . however, others have failed to observe these associations [ ] . -lo (along with -lo-activating protein) is the major regulatory switch for leukotriene production, and extensive studies have demonstrated that the level of -lo can have dramatic effects on both cysteinyl and dihydroxy leukotriene production. -lo catalyzes the conversion of arachidonic acid to lta , one of the early stages in leukotriene production ( figure . ) . alox is found on chromosome q . and is a large gene composed of exons and introns; it spans approximately kb. multiple studies suggest that alox polymorphisms can influence clinical responses to ltras and ltsis-in particular, a functional repeat polymorphism in the promoter region (resulting in alterations in sp transcription factor binding) have been associated with altered gene transcription and with response to the ltsi, abt- [ , ] . these early studies have now been extended to investigate multiple polymorphisms, spanning the entire gene, and association with ltra and/or ltsi responses in asthma patients. for example, tantisira et al. observed an association between alox intronic snps-rs , rs , and rs -and change in fev post-ltsi(zileuton)-in a cohort of asthma patients [ ] . the rs snp was also a predictor of response to the ltra, montelukast, in a previous study of asthma subjects using percentage change in fev as the primary outcome [ ] . in both cases, the gg versus ga or aa genotype had the greatest improvement in lung function (fev ) post-drug [ ] . the lack of association for the rs , and rs snps in the montelukast study may be due to the reduced power of this study compared to the zileuton study. the functional significance of these snps remains to be resolved, and it is important to note that they may not be the causative genetic change, and that polymorphisms inherited at the same time (i.e., in ld) may be of relevance. two alox snps (rs (synonymous thr thr) and rs ( ′ region)) were also associated with improvement in pef on treatment with montelukast in a -week study in asthma patients. this further confirmed the relevance of alox snps and this key enzyme in leukotriene production [ ] . additional support for the relevance of alox in asthma control is provided by a recent study of children which found that the alox sp promoter polymorphism determined urinary lte levels and was associated with reduced lung function and, potentially, an acq score in non- copy carriers [ ] . in this study, there was an inverse relationship between urinary lte levels and fev . another important enzyme in the leukotriene pathway is leukotriene c synthase (ltc s), which specifically results in the generation of the first cysteinyl leukotriene, ltc , by conjugating glutathione to lta . there has been intense research into the role of ltc s in asthma susceptibility because this enzyme, like -lo, is thought to be a key regulatory switch for cysteinyl leukotrienes, which are thought to play a more prominent role in asthma (e.g., via bronchoconstriction) than the dihydroxy ltb . ltc s is relatively small, spanning . kb on chromosome q . in particular, a promoter polymorphism (a- c, rs ) has been intensely investigated for pharmacogenetic effects as it is thought to alter ltc s levels via transcription (higher levels in c allele carriers) and therefore alter ltc production [ ] . of the ten published studies investigating the role of ltc s- a>c, five showed an improvement in outcome measures, including fev post-ltra therapy for carriers of the c allele, as hypothesized, although results were not always statistically significant. in a more recent study of zileuton responses (fev change over time) in asthma subjects, the ltc s- polymorphism showed no effect; however, an alternative ltc s polymorphism (rs , intron ) was associated with improved response (mean fev ) [ ] . as these results were obtained in different populations and using different end points, the relative contribution of the ltc s polymorphism to ltra or ltsi therapeutic responses in asthma are still unclear. larger prospective studies using multiple ethnic groups are required. montelukast and other ltras target the cysteinyl leukotriene receptor , which is expressed in a variety of cells, including airway smooth-muscle and various inflammatory cells (e.g., eosinophils), therefore inhibiting the activation of this receptor by cysteinyl leukotrienes (figure . ) . cysteinyl leukotriene receptor is thought to be the main receptor mediating cysteinyl leukotriene receptor smooth-muscle contraction and inflammatory cell cytokine production in asthma. again, genetic variation in the target receptor for these compounds may influence how effective they are in carriers of these alleles by regulating receptor function/expression. the cysteinyl leukotriene receptor gene, cysltr , is intronless and found on chromosome xq - ; it generates a amino acid g-protein-coupled receptor (gpcr). a second receptor for cysteinyl leukotrienes has also been described and, while not the target of ltras, may modulate the effects of cysteinyl leukotrienes in vivo. the gene for cysteinyl leukotriene receptor is found on chromosome q and encodes for a amino acid gpcr. interestingly, in combination with several alox snps, polymorphisms spanning cysltr have been identified as determinants of responses to montelukast, suggesting snp-snp interactions may be important [ ] . however, direct evaluation of cysltr polymorphisms and responses to montelukast [ ] or zileuton [ ] have not identified a significant effect for them to date. studies of cysltr are limited; however, snps rs and rs ( ′utr) have been associated with an improvement in morning pef following administration of montelukast for weeks [ ] . while the majority of studies have focused on candidate polymorphism analyses in genes directly involved in leukotriene production or activity, several studies have identified additional genes of relevance to ltsi and ltra response. in addition to its effects on vasodilation and bronchoconstriction, the prostaglandin d receptor (gene: ptgdr) is thought to regulate, at least in part, levels of leukotriene c . in a study of asthmatic children prescribed montelukast ( mg/day), a modest effect of the ptgdr- t/c was observed. similarly, in a more extensive study of snps in candidate genes in asthma patients prescribed fluticasone, fluticasone propionate plus salmeterol or montelukast, a significant association between four snps in the cholinergic muscarinic receptor gene (chrm ) and montelukast response (change in fev ) over weeks was observed [ ] . chrm and chrm are thought to mediate airway tone via regulation of contractile/relaxation responses and targeting of chrm using antagonists; for example, tiotropium has shown clinical efficacy in multiple respiratory diseases. these data potentially suggest that the nature of the airway obstruction/tone determined by altered chrm expression and/or activity may influence responses to montelukast. while the majority of studies have investigated the association between gene polymorphisms and acute responses to asthma therapy, a recent study by mougey et al. identified that solute carrier organic anion transporter family, member b (slco b , alternative name: organic anion transported sb ; oatp b ), was able to mediate montelukast permeability using a model cell system engineered to express the oatp b protein [ ] . subsequently, the same group also showed that an alteration in the protein structure of oatp b that occurs naturallythat is, arg gln (rs )-was associated with reduced morning plasma concentrations of montelukast following an evening dose during one month or six months of treatment in asthma patients [ ] . more specifically, ga (arg/gln) genotype carriers had ∼ % lower montelukast concentration than the gg (arg) group at one month, and ∼ % lower concentration at six months, and of clinical relevance a allele carriers did not demonstrate benefit from montelukast using a symptom-based score [ ] . the same researchers have now replicated these findings on montelukast absorption [ ] ; however, another study did not replicate this finding and failed to identify any effect of the arg gln polymorphism on montelukast plasma concentrations, albeit in a different study design involving fewer subjects [ ] . these studies highlight the potential importance of genetic factors influencing drug transporters that may be anticipated to affect pharmacokinetics and the pharmacodynamics. similarly, several snps in another transporter protein, multidrug resistance protein (mrp ) (alternative name: atp binding cassette, subfamily c, member (abcc ))-for example, rs have been associated with montelukast response (change in fev % predicted) [ ] and zileuton response [ ] . this association potentially confirms the pharmacogenetic significance of this mrp snp marker. this snp is intronic, and the underlying functional mechanism, including which genetic variant explains these effects, remains to be resolved. overall, there has been good progress in the pharmacogenetics of leukotriene modifier therapy in asthma, with snps in multiple leukotriene-synthesising enzymes (e.g., alox ) showing robust association with lta and ltsi responses. multiple genes in the leukotriene synthesis pathway and/or receptors have polymorphisms that have been associated with asthma susceptibility, which implies that there may be a more leukotriene-driven asthma that is therefore more amenable to treatment with ltsis and ltras. of interest in this drug class, preliminary data suggest a significant contribution of snps in drug transporter genes, ultimately determining both the pharmacokinetics and the pharmacodynamics. these data set the scene for larger prospective studies to provide accurate effect sizes and determine clinical implications with greater confidence. corticosteroids are an important pharmacogenetic target in asthma. initial investigations into a pharmacogenetic approach for the corticosteroid element of asthma therapy focused on the glucocorticoid receptor gene (gr, alternative name: nuclear receptor subfamily , group c, member , nr c ), which maps to chromosomal region q -a region associated with multiple asthma phenotypes. as with other genes discussed in this chapter, several polymorphisms have been described in the gr gene that have functional consequences, such as a val asp polymorphism that has been shown to influence the binding affinity for dexamethasone. however, similar to most polymorphisms shown to have potential pharmacogenetic effects, several of these polymorphisms are rare and their functional significance is questionable [ ] . despite this, the gr remains a tantalizing target for asthma pharmacogenetics, and it is surprising that there have not been further recent investigations into the role of gr polymorphisms in corticosteroid responses. gr is not the only gene to be associated with geneticbased variance in corticosteroid efficacy in asthma treatment. a number of other genes have been implicated, including crhr , tbx , nk r, stip , dusp , and fcer , and these are discussed below. snps in the corticotrophin-releasing hormone receptor (crhr ) gene are associated with response to inhaled corticosteroid treatment, based on end point change in fev following weeks of treatment in three asthmatic cohorts using a candidate gene approach ( snps in genes, n = asthma subjects). for example, the intronic crhr snp rs exhibited genotype-specific changes in the percentage predicted change in fev in response to corticosteroid therapy in adult asthma subjects [ ] . this study was the first to show a pharmacogenetic effect for steroid efficacy in an asthmatic cohort, and it highlights the crhr gene to be at least one of a number of factors determining corticosteroid efficacy. crhr is thought to influence responses to exogenously administered corticosteroid through the regulation of endogenous levels of corticosteroid. the t box (tbx ) gene has been shown to be a predictor of improvement in bronchial hyper-responsiveness (bhr) ( year change) post-corticosteroid treatment in children, based on a genotype-dependant variation of the nonsynonymous snp rs (his gln), where the presence of the g allele gave greatest improvements [ ] . however, the association of this gene remains under question because of its low allele frequency in caucasians (maf ∼ . ), which resulted in only a few subjects (n = ) being available to contribute to this observation [ ] . additional data have given more confidence to the involvement of tbx because the his gln polymorphism was significantly associated with improved asthma control in the presence of corticosteroids, although the alternative allele to that described was associated with greater control in korean asthma patients during - weeks treatment [ ] . interestingly in the same study, ye et al. identified a novel gene, the neurokinin receptor (nk r), which was associated with improved asthma control in the presence of corticosteroids; the g allele (gly) of the nk r snp rs g/a, (gly glu) was associated with the greatest improvement. neurokinin a induces bronchoconstriction and inflammation, therefore modulation of the neurokinin receptor may influence the magnitude of these responses. multiple snps in the stress-induced phosphoprotein gene (stip ) were associated with variable fev responses to treatment with the inhaled corticosteroid flunisolide in asthma subjects [ ] . this study investigated snps spanning eight candidate genes and identified stip snps rs , rs , and rs as snps affecting percent change in fev in response to flunisolide at weeks and weeks [ ] . stip codes for an adaptor protein that coordinates functions with hsp and may be involved in formation of the glucocorticosteroid receptor heterocomplex. the dual-specificity phosphatase (dusp ) gene encodes a protein that has dual specificity for tyrosine and threonine and inactivates p mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk). recently, several snps including a ′ region snp, rs , were associated with ( ) bronchodilator responses and ( ) asthma control in the presence of corticosteroid in a cohort of asthma patients (n = ) [ ] . the mechanism underlying these effects is unclear; however, it was suggested that corticosteroid induces dusp expression, which may be altered in carriers of the rs ′-region snp. this influences the ability of dusp to target the p mapk signaling pathway. in a cohort of asthmatic children, the low-affinity ige receptor gene (fcer ) has been highlighted as putatively involved in corticosteroid (budesonide) regulation of exacerbation by virtue of an association between the snp t c (rs , intronic) and the relative risk of severe exacerbations while taking budesonide [ ] . interestingly, the c allele was also associated with elevated ige levels in the asthma patients [ ] . importantly, this pharmacogenetic association has now been replicated in two other asthma cohorts (n = and , respectively), with the c allele being associated with increased hospital visits and uncontrolled asthma in patients receiving ics [ ] . it is not surprising that this polymorphic variation in an ige receptor influences receptor expression, which alters ige levels and is associated with more severe forms of asthma. in turn, these subjects cannot be adequately controlled by corticosteroid treatment. the first gwas in asthma, published in , identified snps in the glucocorticoid-induced transcript gene (glcc ) as determinants of glucocorticoid response in asthma subjects [ ] . this study examined , snps using the human hap v beadchip to identify snps of interest in an initial cohort of parent-child trios. the primary outcome was change in fev . of interest was a snp in the glcc gene promoter region (rs c/t) that was associated with attenuation in fev improvement post-corticosteroid in three of four cohorts tested [ ] . a subsequent gwas identified the t-gene as a novel player in lung function response (fev ) to inhaled corticosteroids. analyses were carried out in caucasian asthmatics and replicated in a secondary asthmatic population (n = ), where out of successfully replicated snps were associated under the same genetic model in the same direction, including of the top snps ranked by p value. these snps (rs c/ t and rs a/c) were in strong ld with a variant located in the t-gene, suggesting that this gene is a novel player in the pharmacogenetic regulation of corticosteroid efficacy. this was confirmed by a follow-up association, where the t-gene variant was associated with lung function response to inhaled corticosteroids in the initial gwas analysis (an average - -fold increase in fev response for homozygous wild-type subjects; rs tt; and rs cc) [ ] . not all recent developments have been due to gwas. for example, a recent hypothesis-driven study implicated the cytochrome p a enzymes in glucocorticosteroid efficacy through modulations in corticosteroid metabolism. in this study, roberts et al. showed, through mrnadriven studies confirmed via microsomes and recombinant enzymes, that cyp a and cyp a metabolize corticosteroids (budesonide) into inactive metabolites [ ] . they suggested that differences in the expression or function of these enzymes in the lung and/or liver could influence corticosteroid efficacy in the treatment of asthma. to date, the majority of pharmacogenetic studies have focused on one class of asthma therapy. however, several recent studies have investigated combination therapy, which more accurately reflects the clinical situation. we have summarized the main findings regarding the influence of adrb polymorphisms, including arg gly, on combination therapies, particularly fluticasone/salmeterol and budesonide/formoterol in section . . . . however, it is clear that reports on associations between adrb arg and increased exacerbation in asthma patients using regular salbutamol in addition to their maintenance combination are mixed, with some studies failing to report the association, potentially because of differences in study design. more recently, additional genes have been investigated for snp associations with patient responses to combination therapy. in a study of asthma patients regularly using an ics/laba combination, it was shown that polymorphisms in the nitrous oxide synthase (nos ) gene involving an amino acid change (g t, glu asp), were associated with post-drug improvement in lung function (change in fev (% pred)) [ ] . nos codes for a key enzyme in the production of no in the airways, and f e no has been shown to be elevated in asthma and is considered a marker of ongoing inflammation. importantly, earlier data identified that the glu asp polymorphism is functional in nos and influences levels of f e no with the tt genotype associated with lower f e no levels. these data suggest that lower nos activity and potentially lower f e no levels identify patients more likely to respond to combination therapy; however, larger prospective trials are required to validate these findings because they are potentially counterintuitive if no is a marker of inflammation and ics target inflammation. a recent -week study on the effect of genetic determinants ( snps in candidate genes) on asthma patient response to combined fluticasone propionate/salmeterol therapy identified three snps in the cholinergic muscarinic receptor gene (chrm ) that are associated with asthma acq scores, and found a single snp, rs in heat shock kd protein (hspa ), to be associated with change in fev [ ] . of interest, chrm snps were also associated with responses (lung function) to montelukast (see earlier), suggesting that the "tone" of the airways as determined by muscarinic receptors is important for therapies that target airway contraction. hspa is involved in protein folding in the cell, but it is important to note that hspa snps previously were not associated with response to ics [ ] . drug development in asthma has been slow to generate new classes, and the major advances in patient care have come from new compounds and/or indications for existing drug classes (e.g., improved duration of action for labas). one potential explanation for this limited progress is the design of and recruitment to phase i and phase ii trials for the evaluation of new compounds. we have already outlined how initial trials of anti-il demonstrated disappointing effects on lung function and asthma symptoms. only after careful selection of patients, based on clinical and cellular parameters, were clinically relevant improvements observed. researchers now understand that asthma is heterogeneous and, particularly for strategies targeting specific mediators, careful selection of patients is necessary to fully understand the therapeutic potential of new drugs. recent approaches to the treatment of asthma [ ] include the following: the specific targeting of single mediators is unlikely to provide a therapeutic option for asthma in its broadest definition. however, targeting specific subpopulations has shown clinical efficacy. very recently, a study investigating a human il -neutralizing monoclonal antibody (tralokinumab) used a carefully balanced population of atopic and nonatopic asthmatics, with exclusions for additional respiratory pathology, cigarette smoking ≥ pack-years, recent infection, or treatment with immunosuppressive medication, in a randomized double-blind study [ ] . here, tralokinumab was associated with improved lung function based on an increase in fev and a decrease in daily β -adrenergic receptor-agonist use [ ] . these studies overall demonstrate that careful selection of asthma subjects, in this case based on phenotype, is critical in asthma drug development. as novel asthma genes are identified, it is paramount that their evaluation as potential drug targets, particularly in the context of phase ii trials, takes into account pharmacogenetic factors. preliminary data support genetic testing in phase ii trials of newer compounds, as shown in a recent report on a il /il dual antagonist (pitrikinra). polymorphic variation in the target receptor for this antagonist (i.e., il rα) significantly influenced outcomes in allergic asthma subjects [ ] . pitrikinra is a recombinant form of il differing at two amino acid residues (i.e., a mutein, r d/y d). this has been shown to reduce late-phase antigen responses (lar) to inhaled antigen as defined by changes in lung function (fev ) over - hours postantigen exposure. in one study, subjects had been following a four-week period of twice daily active treatment of nebulized pitrikinra or placebo, with an increased lar ratio correlating with a reduced fev [ ] . stratification of subjects (pitrikinra n = , placebo n = ) into genotype groups for the nonsynonomous il ra snp rs (gln arg) identified arg/arg carriers as having an attenuated lar (p < . ) following pitrikinra treatment compared to gln/gln or gln/arg genotypes. similarly, stratification based on rs (glu ala) showed an attenuated lar in the glu/ala group but not the glu/glu group [ ] . interestingly, the arg variant (when in combination with val ) was shown to be a risk factor for allergic asthma and to lead to enhanced il rα signaling post il stimulation [ ] . these preliminary data suggest that selecting a subgroup of patients with a particular genotype when it is anticipated that the receptor/pathway may have a more dominant role in that individual's asthma is critical to interpreting phase ii clinical trials. approaches to further define asthma subphenotypes (e.g., using cluster analyses) have been useful and further confirm this heterogeneity in clinical presentation. while current medications have been extremely successful in asthma management (e.g., ics), it is clear that individual responses to these medications and to therapies in development are heterogeneous, with large variation in clinical benefits and/ or detrimental effects. the stratification of asthma treatment using clinical and/or genetic approaches therefore shows great potential for maximizing clinical outcomes and minimizing adverse effects, leading to improvement in the management of asthma. there has been excellent progress in this area of research over the last five to ten years with the introduction of anti-ige (omalizumab) therapy into mainstay asthma treatment, but only for those patients with clinical indications (i.e., severe allergic asthma) with an elevated serum ige level. this stratification in prescribing for anti-ige shows proofof-concept by targeting this expensive biologic to those patients most likely to show clinical benefit. similarly, there is accumulating evidence that stratification of patients in phase ii trials of newer therapies-for example, anti-il (mepoluzimab) and anti-il (lebrikizumab), again based on clinical and cellular patient profiles, is essential to adequately evaluate these therapies and will be important if these therapies are introduced into clinical practice. clear progress in asthma pharmacogenetics has come with completion of newer studies that interrogate multiple snps in large prospective cohorts. to date, predominantly candidate gene/pathway approaches have been used, but several genetic variants have now been identified with confidence (e.g., alox and leukotriene modifier response; fcer and glucocorticoid response). importantly, these studies show independent replication (the gold standard in genetic studies, including specific snps and direction of effect). also importantly, several gwass have now been completed that provide integration of common variation spanning the entire genome (typically testing , snps) identifying novel gene variants in a hypothesis-free approach (e.g., the collagen (col a ) locus and spats l and response to albuterol/salbutamol). these more recent findings still need further replication and validation; however, they potentially pave the way for a "responder" and "nonresponder" profile based on multiple snps in multiple genes, all measured on the same platform. a key question is the relative contribution of common variation (measured on these platforms) and rare variation (not currently measured to these outcomes). another remaining question relates to the magnitude of changes in clinical measures between genotype groups in asthma patients (e.g., fev ). data so far suggests that these differences can be considered clinically relevant; however, further work with larger populations is required to accurately estimate effect sizes. similarly, the genetic variation identified to date accounts only for a modest proportion of the overall variation of the trait (e.g., a recent estimate suggests the hereditability of bronchodilator response at ∼ . %). it is likely that studies so far have been confounded by factors including snp/haplotype analyses, gene-gene interactions, and the relative contribution of snps in different ethnic backgrounds. therefore, while our knowledge has dramatically increased, there is a need for prospective trials of these current compounds that involve large numbers of subjects and hypothesis-free approaches including gwas. as with gwas approaches to identifying disease susceptibility genes, "missing hereditability" will be an important issue in pharmacogenetics studies. this small proportion of hereditability currently assigned to identified loci (e.g., crhr < %) of corticosteroid response needs to be addressed because asthma medications cannot be successfully personalized unless we resolve a larger degree of genetic variability and/or environmental factors. as with clinical/cellular approaches to stratifying phase ii trials of newer asthma therapies, it is clear that genetic stratification has a role to play. for example, the recent phase ii trials of the il /il dual antagonist (pitrikinra) suggests patient selection is critical to evaluating the clinical efficacy of this compound, with specific il rα genotypes identifying responder groups. more pharmacogenetic integration is required for phase ii trials, which represents a clear challenge for drug development pipelines. as our understanding of the genetic basis of asthma increases other therapeutic targets for asthma will become apparent (e.g., il receptor antagonists). it is clear that the genetic variation associated with asthma susceptibility in these genes will influence pathways targeting methods, as they essentially identify individuals in which the pathway may be particularly important. it is also likely that existing therapies may be influenced by the genetic factors that underlie asthma susceptibility, particularly therapies that have multiple targets (e.g., ics). the impact of our genetic knowledge on asthma management and prescribing practice is limited at this time, as there is a need to further define the complex genetic basis of responders and adverse effects in large prospective studies. however, preliminary "real-life" studies with related outcome measures (e.g., days from school) have provided proof of concept that genetic information can have important implications for disease management (e.g., informing second-line therapy in asthma using adrb arg ) [ ] . there remain many unanswered questions regarding the potential of stratified approaches in the management of asthma. while progress has been made in identifying patient subgroups based on clinical measures, cell counts, or marker expression, more work is required using very large studies to extensively characterize asthma patients not only cross-sectionally, but also longitudinally over many years to identify the natural progression of the disease. the field of genetics is rapidly progressing, with great technological developments moving at a dramatic pace, e.g., gwas comprising a million common snps or several million rare snps, gene expression studies, and wholeexome or targeted resequencing. these approaches will allow the interrogation of genetic variation effect in patient subgroups. it is likely that a drug-specific genetic profile involving several genes (e.g., receptors, signaling mediators, transcription factors) will be a step toward personalized medicine in asthma, with associated benefits including avoidance of adverse side effects and adequate control of the disease. we anticipate that through these approaches many novel common variants/genes will be identified as underlying responses to current asthma medication. as the cost of genetic analyses continues to fall, the potential of a relatively simple test that will have an impact on asthma management costs becomes a real possibility. if genetic or clinical information is going to 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moderate-to-severe asthma il- receptor alpha polymorphisms are predictors of a pharmacogenetic response to a novel il- /il- antagonist effect of an interleukin- variant on late phase asthmatic response to allergen challenge in asthmatic patients: results of two phase a studies v r il- receptor alpha is associated with allergic asthma and enhanced il- receptor function research in the authors' laboratory is funded by asthma uk, the medical research council, and the british medical association. we thank dr emily hodge for originally generating figure . . key: cord- -td wj authors: paszkiewicz, konrad h.; giezen, mark van der title: omics, bioinformatics, and infectious disease research date: - - journal: genetics and evolution of infectious disease doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: td wj bioinformatics is basically the study of informatic processes in biotic systems. actually what constitutes bioinformatics is not entirely clear and arguably varies depending on who tries to define it. this chapter discusses the considerable progress in infectious diseases research that has been made in recent years using various “omics” case studies. bioinformatics is tasked with making sense of it, mining it, storing it, disseminating it, and ensuring valid biological conclusions can be drawn from it. this chapter discusses the current state of play of bioinformatics related to genomics and transcriptomics, briefs metagenomics that finds use in infectious disease research as well as the random sequencing of genomes from a variety of organisms. this chapter explains the various possibilities of pan-genome, transcriptional reshaping and also enormous progress of proteomics study. bioinformatic algorithms and tools are crucial tools in analyzing the data. the chapter also attempts to provide some details on the various problems and solution in bioinformatics that current-day scientists face while concentrating on second-generation sequencing strategies. although bioinformatics is generally perceived to be a modern science, the term had been put forward over thirty years ago by paulien hogeweg and ben hesper for "the study of informatic processes in biotic systems" (hogeweg, ; hogeweg and hesper, ) . it is necessarily nebulous-bioinformatics spans many disciplines and can have many shades of meaning. indeed it can be argued that it is the collation and analysis of data from different disciplines that has provided some of the greatest insights. in the field of genomics and transcriptomics, bioinformatics is an incredibly diverse field. evolution, epidemiology, ecology, and the response of an organism to its environment are all fields that require bioinformatics to accurately process and place into context various sources of data. at the heart of genomics and transcriptomics is the generation and analysis of vast quantities of sequence data. dna sequencing took off in the late s when applied biosystems developed the first automated sequencing machine. the subsequent development of more efficient ways to sequence resulted in the phenomenal growth of the number of sequences deposited in genbank (figure . ). obviously, with over million sequences deposited in genbank, it is not feasible to do any serious manual work with such a large dataset. data obtained from modern secondgeneration sequencers is on the order of times greater than capillary-based sequencers. it is now possible to routinely generate many gigabases of sequence data. bioinformatics is tasked with making sense of it, mining it, storing it, disseminating it, and ensuring valid biological conclusions can be drawn from it. many of the recent high-throughput functional genomics technologies rely on a bioinformatics component, though bioinformatics is just one part of the process. for example, identification of proteins by mass spectroscopy, quantitative analysis of expression data, phylogenetics, and so on all make use of bioinformatics tools, methods, and databases. bioinformatics plays a key role at several steps in genomics, comparative genomics, and functional genomics: sequence alignment, assembly, identification of single nucleotide polymorphisms (snp), gene prediction, quantitative analysis of transcription data, etc. in this chapter, we will discuss the current state of play of bioinformatics related to genomics and transcriptomics and use relevant examples from the field of infectious diseases. the term "metagenomics" was originally used to describe the sequencing of genomes of uncultured microorganisms in order to explore their abilities to produce natural products (handelsman et al., , rondon et al., and subsequently resulted in novel insights into the ecology and evolution of microorganisms on a scale not imagined possible before (see cardenas and tiedje, ; hugenholtz and tyson, for an overview). however, metagenomics now finds use in infectious disease research as well as the random sequencing of genomes from a variety of organisms from, for example, patient material that could lead to the identification of the cause of disease. in a quite straightforward metagenomics approach to identify pathogens in sputa from cystic fibrosis patients, standard microbiological culture techniques were compared to molecular methods using s rdna pcr (bittar et al., ) . the well-known disadvantage of the microbiological methods is that they normally employ "selective" media that are designed to pick up those bacterial pathogens that are thought to be present. emerging pathogens will be missed using traditional culture techniques. indeed, bittar et al. identified bacteria using cultivation while bacterial species were detected using molecular methods (based on blast comparisons; altschul et al., ) , interestingly, % of the latter were anaerobes, organisms missed in the routine cultivation methods. many bacteria identified using the molecular methods are traditionally not thought to be associated with cystic fibrosis. whether these novel species are associated with the physiopathology of disease remains to be studied. bittar et al. ( ) also noted that the number of bacteria detected increased with increased numbers of clones sequenced, a well-known phenomenon in environmental sequencing that relates to sample depth (huber et al., ; huse et al., ) . however, with the increased use of next-generation sequencing methods in infectious disease research, the lessons learned from environmental studies relating to diversity and relative abundance of different microbes can be put to effective use. an example of the use of second-generation sequencing in a metagenomics approach of patient material is the study by nakamura et al. ( ) to identify viruses in nasal and fecal material. in this study, rna was isolated from patient material obtained during seasonal influenza infections and norovirus outbreaks. this rna was reverse transcribed into cdna, which was subsequently subjected to large-scale parallel pyrosequencing resulting in , reads on average per sample. although the influenza samples were mainly (. %) human in origin, it was nonetheless possible to identify the influenza subtypes in each sample (nakamura et al., ) . as the fecal samples were cleared of human and bacterial cells, yields were much better and the complete norovirus gii. subtype genome was sequenced with an average cover depth of up to . in addition to being able to identify the influenza and noroviruses, two recently identified human viruses were also identified: wu polyomavirus and human coronavirus hku (nakamura et al., ) . major bacterial species normally found in the respiratory tract were also identified. although nakamura et al. suggest that the high-throughput sequencing is more sensitive than standard pcr-based analysis and might result in the detection of additional possible pathogens, they also warn that the increased sensitivity might necessitate follow-up work to decide which of the detected pathogens is the actual cause of the disease. important results are expected from the human microbiome project (http:// www.hmpdacc.org/), which will obtain metagenomic information from various human microenvironments such as the gastrointestinal, nasooral, and urogenital cavities as well as the skin. understanding the human microbiome is thought to answer questions such as whether changes in the human microbiome are related to human health. however, large-scale metagenomics projects that include eukaryotic genomes have thus far been quite costly and laborious due to the generally large genomes of eukaryotes. the lowering of sequencing costs may alleviate part of the problem, but sequence data are still accumulating at a faster rate than developments in computational analysis (hugenholtz and tyson, ) . organisms that have attracted the attention of genome centers are those that cause disease followed by those from model organisms such as saccharomyces cerevisiae (goffeau et al., ) and caenorhabditis elegans (the c. elegans sequencing consortium, ), for example. indeed, the first bacterial genomes sequenced were those from pathogens fraser et al., ; tomb et al., ) , and these were preceded by many bacteriophage genomes such as bacteriophage ms (fiers et al., ) and ϕx (sanger et al., ) and viral genomes (fiers et al., ) . currently, pathogen genomes represent at least one third of all sequenced genomes. obviously, for comparative genomics two genomes are required, and indeed, when the second bacterial pathogen was sequenced (mycoplasma genitalium by fraser et al., ) , it was immediately compared with the first one (haemophilus influenzae by fleischmann et al., ) . interestingly, the h. influenzae genome was completed using a "bioinformatics" approach. unlike previous sequencing projects, the used shotgun approach relied on a computational justification that sufficient random sequencing of small fragments would result in a complete coverage of the whole genome. comparing the m. genitalium genome with the haemophilus genome suggested that the percentage of the total genome dedicated to genes is similar albeit that m. genitalium has far fewer genes (fraser et al., ) . although the genome of m. genitalium is about three times smaller than that of h. influenzae, its smaller genome has not resulted in an increase in gene density or decrease in gene size. detection of several repeats of components of the mycoplasma adhesin, which elicits a strong immune response in humans, suggests that recombination might underlie its ability to evade the human immune response. that this initial genome study was only the tip of the comparative genomics iceberg was already clear from fleischmann et al. ( ) last sentence: "knowledge of the complete genomes of pathogenic organisms could lead to new vaccines." a whole-genome effort at identifying vaccine candidates appeared some years later when pizza et al. ( ) employed bioinformatics to extract putative surface-exposed antigens by genome analysis. although effective vaccines against neisseria meningitidis, the causative agent of meningococcal meningitis and sepsis, did exist, these vaccines did not cover all pathogenic serogroups. serogroup b had evaded the development of a good vaccine as its capsular polysaccharide (against which the vaccines of the other serogroups were developed) is identical to a human carbohydrate. in order to identify putative candidates for vaccine development, pizza et al. decided to sequence the whole genome of a serogroup b strain. all potential open reading frames (orfs) were analyzed for putative cellular locations using blastx. those orfs likely to be cytosolic were excluded from further analysis. the remaining orfs were analyzed to determine whether they encoded proteins that contained transmembrane domains, leader peptides, and outer membrane anchoring motives using a variety of databases such as pfam (finn et al., ) and prodom (servant et al., ) . this resulted in orfs encoding putative exposed antigens. these putative genes were cloned in escherichia coli and pizza et al. successfully expressed orfs. these recombinant proteins were used to generate antisera that were tested in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa) and fluorescence-activated cell sorter (facs) analyses to test whether they detected proteins on the outer surface of serogroup b meningococcus strains. in addition, the sera were tested for bactericidal activity. of the proteins, reacted positively in at least one assay but only were positive in all three assays. these were subsequently tested on a large variety of strains to analyze their efficacy. a total of seemed able to provide protection against n. meningitidis strains and in addition, those proteins are À % similar to the homologous n. gonorrhoeae proteins, suggesting they might provide successful protection against that pathogen as well (pizza et al., ) . arguably the most striking aspect of this study is that in months the authors identified more vaccine candidates than in the preceding years using a novel genomics/bioinformatics approach (seib et al., ). this study resulted in a vaccine that is currently in phase iii clinical trials (giuliani et al., ) . protozoan infections are a major burden on developing nations; they take of the diseases targeted by the world health organization's special program for research and training in tropical diseases (http://www.who.int/tdr). over the last years or so, more than parasitic genomes have been sequenced in the hope that their sequences would reveal weak spots to target these pathogens. the trypanosomatids cause serious disease in africa and south america. trypanosoma brucei causes sleeping sickness in humans and wasting disease in cattle. trypanosoma cruzi is the causative agent of chagas disease and leishmania major leads to skin lesions. the completion of their genomes , el-sayed et al., a , ivens et al., and the comparative analysis of all three genomes (el-sayed et al., b) may be able to focus efforts toward obtaining vaccines, as current drugs have serious toxicity issues. although their genomes encode a different number of protein-encoding genes (around in t. brucei; in l. major; , in t. cruzi), comparative analysis resulted in the identification of about genes that entail the trypanosomatid core proteome. all protein coding genes were compared in a three-way manner using blastp (el-sayed et al., b) and the mutual best hits were grouped as clusters of orthologous genes or cogs ( figure . ). trypanosomatid specific proteins from these might be used in a broadscale vaccine. the remainder of the protein-encoding genes from each parasite ( % of the genes in t. brucei; % in l. major; % in t. cruzi) consists of species-specific genes. interestingly, a large proportion of these genes encode surface antigens and this might relate to the different mechanisms these parasites employ to evade the host immune system. in addition, it was noted that many genes encoding surface antigens are found at or near telomeres and that many retroelements seem to be present in these regions as well. this might be related to the enormous antigenic variation observed in both trypanosoma species. the presence of novel genes in these areas might suggest that their products play an unknown role in antigenic variation as well which warrants further studies into these uncharacterized genes (el-sayed et al., b) . detailed knowledge of well-studied pathogens might be successfully used to understand the biology of closely related emerging pathogens. this was the driving force for the sequencing of six candida species (butler et al., ) . candida species are the most common opportunistic fungal infections in the world and c. albicans is the most common of all candida species causing infection. however, c. albicans incidence is declining while other species are emerging. comparison of eight candida species indicated that although genome size was variable, gene content was nearly identical across all species. as the analysis included pathogenic and nonpathogenic species, butler et al. ( ) specifically studied differences between these two groups. of the over gene families analyzed, were significantly enriched in pathogenic species. many gene families known to be involved in pathogenesis were present in these families (e.g., lipases, oligopeptide transporters, and adhesins). more interestingly, several poorly characterized gene families were also identified, suggesting these might play an unexpected role in pathogenesis as well. this comparative study revealed a wealth of new avenues to explore, which, combined with the large body of work performed on c. albicans, will aid understanding the newly emerging pathogenic candida species (butler et al., ). although comparative studies using multiple species can reveal hitherto unknown features as evidenced from the mentioned trypanosomatid and candida studies, they can also reveal something unexpected. because the definition of a bacterial species has been debated for a long time, tettelin et al. ( ) set out to address this question by sequencing multiple strains from streptococcus agalactiae, the most common cause of illness or death among newborns. unexpectedly, despite the presence of a "core-genome" shared between all genomes, mathematical modeling suggested that each additional sequenced genome would add new genes to the "dispensable genome." an additional analysis using s. pyogenes also suggested that sequencing additional genomes would continue to add new genes to the pool resulting in a pan-genome that can be defined as the global gene repertoire of a species . this cannot be extrapolated ad infinitum, as a similar analysis of bacillus anthracis indicated that after the fourth genome, no additional genes were identified in agreement with its known limited genetic diversity (keim and smith, ) . subsequent analyses have confirmed the presence of pan-genomes for many bacterial species (hiller et al., ; lefébure and stanhope, ; rasko et al., ; schoen et al., ; lefébure and stanhope, ) and the ultimate gene repertoire of a bacterial species is much larger than generally perceived. whether this would be the case for eukaryotes remains to be shown. despite the apparently ever-expanding possibilities of the pan-genome, it has also resulted in a universal vaccine candidate for group b streptococcus (gbs). because various gbs serotypes exist, current vaccines only offer protection against a limited set of serotypes. eight genomes from six serotypes were compared resulting in the identification of a core-genome of genes and a dispensable genome of genes, which were not present in each strain . both genomes were analyzed for the presence of putative surface-associated and secreted proteins. of the identified genes, one third were part of the dispensable genome ( genes). the authors subsequently produced recombinant tagged proteins in e. coli that were used to immunize mice. ultimately, a combination of four antigens turned out to be highly effective against all major gbs serotypes. three of these antigens were part of the dispensable genome. in addition, this bioinformatics approach highlights the importance of not dismissing unidentified orfs on genomes (generally up to % of sequenced genomes) as all four antigens had no assigned function. because of their identification using this method, it became obvious they were part of a pilus-like structure that had never seen before in group b streptococcus (lauer et al., ) . the presence of antigens that provide protection on these pilus-like structures suggest that these might play a role in pathogenicity. genomic information is useful as a scaffold. however, in a given environment pathogens and hosts only express a subset of their genes at any one time. the presence of pan-genomes only complicates matters even more. to investigate the response of an organism to an environmental or other stress it is necessary to examine the expression pattern of proteins. at present, this is not possible to accomplish directly on a large scale, but a good approximation can be made by sequencing and counting mrna molecules. at present the process involves converting the rna to cdna, which can introduce biases but nonetheless sequencing has a great many advantages over traditional microarrays (ledford, ) . these include high specificity with little or no background noise and one also gains nucleotide level resolution of expression. despite such drawbacks, microarrays are still extremely powerful tools to understand levels of gene expression, and this is obvious from the study by toledo-arana et al., who discovered novel regulatory mechanisms in listeria (toledo-arana et al., ) . l. monocytogenes is normally harmless but can lead to serious food-borne infections. environmental change, from the soil through the stomach to the intestinal lumen and ultimately into the bloodstream, is thought to be responsible for the up-and downregulation of a plethora of genes. comparative genomics of the nonpathogenic l. innocua has resulted in the identification of a virulence locus (glaser et al., ) . using microarrays, transcripts of one strain grown at c in rich medium were compared to three different conditions: stationary phase, hypoxia, and low temperature ( c). in addition, knockout mutants in three known regulators of listeria virulence gene expression (prfa, sigb, and hfq) were compared to the control strain as well. rna was also extracted from the intestine of inoculated mice and from blood from healthy human donors that were both infected with three different strains (control and prfa and sigb knockouts). this analysis resulted in the discovery of massive transcriptional reshaping under the control of sigb when listeria enters the intestines. however, in the bloodstream, gene expression is under control of prfa. various noncoding rnas were uncovered, which show the same expression patters as virulence genes suggesting a potential role in virulence (toledo-arana et al., ) . because microarray data are based on a comparative difference in hybridization, high-throughput next-generation sequencing is seen as more quantitative as it based on number of hits for each sequenced transcript ( van vliet, ) . however, when making cdna for next-generation sequencing transcriptomics in prokaryotes, there are several difficulties not found in eukaryotes, such as high levels of rrna and trna molecules as well as a lack of poly-a tails, making extraction difficult. nontheless, it is possible to overcome these by either reducing the amount of rrna and trna using commercially available kits or by bioinformatic removal of such sequences postsequencing ( van vliet, ) . to date, some rna-seq style experiments have been performed on prokaryotes. to give an example of the sort of novel insights that can be gleaned using such technology, passalacqua et al. ( ) sequenced the bacillus anthracis transcriptome using solid and illumina sequencing and clearly showed the polycistronic nature of many transcripts on a whole genome scale. although known for individual operons, this had never been shown on a genome-wide scale. they were also able to test the current genome annotations and discovered that loci that were removed as nongenes showed significant transcriptional activity. in addition, nonannotated regions had clear levels of transcription and should therefore be considered as genes (passalacqua et al., ) . as internal methionines could have incidentally been identified as start codons, they also checked whether upstream regions were included in the transcribed region. in cases this proved to be the case suggesting the original start codons were incorrectly annotated. reassuringly, when comparing their data with microarray data, a strong correlation was observed. interestingly, because of the very high resolution of sequence-based transcriptomics studies, it is possible to identify novel regulatory elements. for example, when comparing expression levels under o -and co -rich conditions, the first gene of an eight-gene operon did not show a marked difference in expression level while all the others were significantly upregulated under co (passalacqua et al., ). indeed, a bioinformatics approach had suggested the presence of a t-box riboswitch between genes and of this operon (griffiths-jones et al., ) . a similar approach to study how burkholderia cenocepacia, an opportunistic cystic fibrosis pathogen, responds to environmental changes revealed several new potential virulence factors (yoder-himes et al., ). as b. cenocepacia is routinely isolated from soil, two strains (one isolated from a cystic fibrosis patient and one from soil) were analyzed in their response to changes from growth at synthetic human sputum medium and soil medium. although their overall nucleotide identity is . %, and homologous genes showed a significant difference in expression between the two strains when grown in synthetic sputum medium and soil medium, respectively. this suggests that despite the high level of relatedness, differential gene expression plays a large role in adaptation to their ecological niche (yoder-himes et al., ) . interestingly, similar to passalacqua et al. ( ) , several expressed noncoding rnas were uncovered with different expression levels depending on environmental condition. the significance of this needs to be investigated but highlights the ability of second-generation sequencing to unearth novel findings. despite the fact that a species' genome could well be larger than the actual genome content of one member of that species due to the pan-genome concept, an organism's proteome is by far much more complex. as discussed earlier, transcriptomics will reveal which subset of the genome is expressed under a given condition. however, posttranslational modifications of proteins make the actual proteome far more complex than the transcriptome. this is also the strength of proteomics, as can be seen in a study of the obligate intracellular parasite chlamydia pneumonia. c. pneumonia is the third-most-common cause of respiratory infections in the world, which, in part, is made possible due to the unique bi-phasic life cycle of this bacterial pathogen. chlamydia spread via a metabolically inert infectious particle called the elementary body. these elementary bodies enter the host cell where they differentiate into reticulate bodies. as the elementary body is the infectious phase, proteins presented on the outer membrane would be ideal candidates for vaccine development, especially as effective vaccines are lacking and treatment is via antibiotic therapy. a large-scale genomics-proteomics study by montigiani et al. ( ) systematically assessed putative exposed antigens for possible use in vaccine development. of the c. pneumonia genes, have assigned functions, of the latter are predicted to be peripherally located and were therefore selected for follow-up studies. in addition, the remaining orfs were subjected to a series of search algorithms aimed at identifying putative surface-exposed antigens. in total, orfs were identified as being possibly located on the cell surface. these were subsequently used to produce recombinant proteins in e. coli. because both his-tagged as well as gst-tagged versions were made, a total of recombinant proteins were produced and used for immunizations of mice. all antisera were used in facs analysis to test if they could bind to the c. pneumonia cell surface. this resulted in the identification of putative surface-exposed antigens. interestingly, apart from well-known antigens, antigens from unidentified orfs were part of this group of potential vaccine candidates. all candidates were tested on western blots whether they generated a clean band of the expected size or whether they cross-reacted with other proteins; of the were specific. finally, montigiani et al. conducted a proteomic analysis of total protein from the elementary body phase identifying spots using mass spectrometry. protein sequencing using maldi-tof identified putative surface-exposed antigens on the c. pneumonia d gels (montigiani et al., ) . a follow-up study by thorpe et al. ( ) clearly showed that one of the identified candidates, lcre, induced, amongst others, cd and cd t cell activation and completely cleared infection in a murine model. interestingly, lcre is homologous to a protein that is thought be part of the type iii secretion system of yersinia. the exposed nature of lcre on the c. pneumonia cell surface suggests that a type iii secretion system plays a role in chlamydia infection (montigiani et al., ) . the importance of exposed outer membrane proteins as potential vaccine candidates has prompted berlanda scorza et al. to assess the complement of outer membrane proteins from an extraintestinal pathogenic e. coli strain (berlanda scorza et al., ) . extraintestinal pathogenic e. coli is the leading cause of severe sepsis and current increases in drug resistance warrant the search for novel vaccine targets. in addition, current whole-cell vaccines suffer from undesired cross-reactions to commensal e. coli as well. the novel approach by berland scorza et al. is based on the observation that some gram-negative bacteria release outer membrane vesicles (omv) in the culture media, albeit in minute quantities. a tolr mutant appeared to release much more omvs than wild-type cells and subsequent large-scale mass spectroscopic analysis of its protein content resulted in the identification of proteins. the majority of these were outer membrane and periplasmic proteins. intriguingly, three subunits from the cytolethal distending toxin (cdt) were included. this toxin is unusual in that one of its subunits is targeted to the eukaryotic host cell, where it breaks doublestranded dna resulting in cell death (de rycke and oswald, ) . to check whether the presence of cdt in the omv was due to the tolr knockout, wild-type extraintestinal pathogenic e. coli was tested using western blotting. indeed, cdt was detected in wild-type omv as well (berlanda scorza et al., ) . this suggests that toxin delivery via vesicles might well be the key event in pathogenesis. interestingly, of the identified proteins were not predicted to be targeted to the periplasm or outer membrane by psortb (gardy et al., ) . we see here excellent opportunities to train protein targeting algorithms with new wetbench data as these algorithms generally have been trained on a limited set of model organisms that do not reflect the diversity encountered in real life. despite the enormous progress in genomics of infectious diseases, the discovery of new drugs has not kept equal pace. for example, no candidate drugs have been identified after high-throughput screens using validated bacterial drug targets (payne et al., ) . although broad-spectrum drugs might be more desirable, there has been a recent trend in targeting specific proteins from specific pathogens using structural biology. several structural genomics initiatives have been set up to target specific groups of pathogens. for example, the seattle structural genomics center for infectious diseases (http://ssgcid.org) and the center for structural genomics of infectious diseases (http://www.csgid.org) work on category a to c agents listed by the national institute for allergy and infectious diseases (niaid). other centers focus on specific organisms such as mycobacterium tuberculosis. examples are the mycobacterium tuberculosis structural proteomics project (http://xmtb. org) and the mycobacterium tuberculosis structural proteomics consortium (http://www.doe-mbi.ucla.edu/tb). the field of structural genomics aims to solve as many protein structures as possible from human pathogens with the aim to come up with new drug targets or vaccines (van voorhis et al., ) . obviously, correct selection of candidates for structural genomics projects is paramount and various criteria have been put forward (anderson, ; van voorhis et al., ) . if a protein is already a validated drug target obviously aids in selection. the proteins need to be essential for the pathogen and ideally, absent in humans. proteins involved in the uptake of essential nutrients are another target. classically, drug design has been focusing on substrate binding sites. more recently, small molecules interfering with subunit binding have started to attract attention. as eukaryotic and prokaryotic inorganic pyrophosphatases differ in composition (the former are homodimers, while the latter are homohexamers), efforts are aimed at compounds that interfere with the oligomeric state of the enzyme. in contrast, the highly conserved active site of inorganic pyrophosphatase would not have been a good target (van voorhis et al., ) . the sars outbreak that caught the infectious diseases community (if not the whole world) by surprise is one example where structural genomics has made enormous progress. despite knowing that coronaviruses caused serious diseases in animals, the fact that they only caused mild disease in humans meant that there was very little knowledge about coronavirus biology. the subsequent effort to understand viral assembly and replication/transcription, for example, has resulted in the elucidation of sars-cov solved protein structures. interestingly, the novel fold-discovery rate was nearly %, while it would normally be more close to % (bartlam et al., ) . in addition, one key protein, the sars-cov main protease, has since been at the center of structure-based drug discovery. because of the nature of the discipline, structural genomics is dependent on various other disciplines such as biochemistry, microbiology, structural biology, computational biology, and bioinformatics and can only foster in a truly interdisciplinary environment (anderson, ). it is now possible to sequence the entire genome of a bacterial pathogen, assemble the raw sequence reads, perform automated annotation, and visualize the results within weeks. at the same time (indeed even on the same sequencer) it is also possible to selectively sequence the transcriptome (rna-seq) regions of dna bound to protein (chip-seq) or for relevant species methylated dna to study epigenetic effects as well as small rna molecules. it is also possible to perform the very same sequencing on the host organism at the same time. bioinformatic algorithms and tools are a crucial tool in analyzing such unprecedented volumes of data. these data volumes have emerged as a result of secondgeneration sequencers such as the roche/ , illumina, and abi/solid systems. although useful information can be extracted by single researchers by targeted analysis of the sequencer output, to gain the most information out of such data, it is becoming increasingly common for multiple researchers or research groups with widely differing areas of expertise to collaborate. this collaboration is absolutely crucial if relevant insights are to be gained from large-scale datasets. as a result a vast array of data is generated, which is required to be annotated and curated as well as analyzed for information relevant to any particular experiment. in addition this information needs to be stored, shared, and distributed in a manner that enables reanalysis if and when new hypotheses are generated. platforms as produced by the gmod consortium (http://gmod.org), such as gbrowse, and underlying databases are excellent web-based tools for visualizing and comparing datasets. however, they currently offer limited scope for collaborative annotation or curation of datasets where relevant expertise can be brought to bear from a variety of different research groups. this problem is magnified with the advent of second-generation sequencers since much smaller groups of researchers tend to be involved, meaning that the expertise that large collaborations can muster (such as the influenza research database [fludb], http://www.fludb.org/) is much smaller. thus there is a need for integrated annotation and visualization pipelines to enable individual researchers to perform comparative genomics and transcriptomics. the broad institute offers a number of useful visualization tools to the individual researcher such as argo (http://www.broadinstitute.org/annotation/argo/) and the integrated genome viewer (igv) (http://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/). argo offers the ability to manually annotate and visualize a genome as well as provide a good graphical overview for comparative genomics and transcriptomics. currently, there is no one standard for bioinformatics pipeline development for next-generation sequencing. several efforts are underway or can be adapted from sanger sequencing pipelines. these include the prokaryote annotation pipeline xbase and the isga server (hemmerich et al., ) . these enable de novo sequenced prokaryote genomes to be annotated automatically and corrected manually at a later date. alternative sanger adaptations such as maker can also be used once an assembly has been generated. a large array of programs is now available to either align reads to a reference genome or to assemble them de novo (miller et al., ; paszkiewicz and studholme, ). they will not be listed in detail here as there are many considerations, including sequencing platform used, the read length in use, the expected genome size, length of longest repetitive elements, gc content, and whether paired-end reads are in use. the proprietary newbler software from roche is the most popular method of de novo assembly of reads (typically À bp). popular assemblers for short reads (i.e., mostly from illumina or solid platforms) are velvet (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/bzerbino/velvet) for the assembly of genomic dna or oases from the same group dealing with assembly of reads from transcriptomic cdna (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/bzerbino/oases) (zerbino and birney, ) . other assemblers such as abyss (simpson et al., ) , allpaths (butler et al., ) or soapdenovo (http://soap.genomics.org.cn/soapdenovo.html) are also popular. abyss enables assembly to be parallelized, thus speeding up assembly. allpaths has been shown to offer superior performance when multiple pairedend libraries are used. independent of read length, it is crucial that paired-end libraries are used when constructing de novo assemblies of any genome. note that the use of short-read sequences only can lead to significant gaps being left in the final assembly due to repetitive elements. however, for many analyses (especially for prokaryotic organisms) these gaps are generally not considered to be significant. in cases where closure of these gaps is more desirable than the addition of , sanger or long-range pcr data can often help. where significant quantities of long-and short-read data are available, then a joint assembly can be attempted. a recommended protocol is to assemble the short and long reads separately using their respective packages and to then merge the two assemblers using programs such as minimus (sommer et al., ) . another option is to use a template sequence from a related organism to help guide the assembly (note-this is distinct from remapping as described). the amoscmp package is useful for this purpose (pop et al., ) . finally, whatever assembly method is used, it is important to remember that a longer assembly is not necessarily a better one. examining the reads making up a contig (e.g., using the amos package (http://amos.sourceforge.net) or the tablet viewer (http://bioinf.scri.ac.uk/tablet) and alignment to a core-conserved group of genes should be standard practice to ensure that blatant errors are corrected. remapping of short reads to a reference genome is also a valid method of comparison. although software such as blat (kent, ) can be used with longer reads, it is not an ideal tool for shorter read technologies where data volumes are much greater. where such a genome is available, software such as maq, its successor, bwa, bowtie, soap, and others offer a wealth of tools to identify indels, snps, and other variants which may be of interest. crucially in these cases it is important to have sufficient depth of coverage to ensure snp calls are valid. paired-end data is also valuable to have to highlight the presence of indels. after remapping it is also common practice to assemble unmapped reads using the de novo assembly software to reveal any novel sequence variants, which may be absent in the reference. in the case where pathogens and hosts are sequenced together, if the sequence of at least one is known, then it is relatively straightforward to separate the two using bioinformatic techniques. to deal with transcriptomic data where a reference sequence is available, softwares, such as erange (http://woldlab.caltech.edu/rnaseq/), tophat (trapnell et al., ) , and cufflinks (http://cufflinks.cbcb.umd.edu/), are extremely useful. the cufflinks module in particular offers the ability to predict the most likely exon isoform expression pattern using a combination of bayesian statistics and graphbased algorithms. we are aware that our treatment of the use of "omics" and bioinformatics in infectious disease research is not exhaustive. as mentioned in the introduction, what constitutes bioinformatics is not entirely clear and arguably varies depending on who tries to define it. however, we have attempted to show the considerable progress in infectious diseases research that has been made in recent years using various "omics" case studies. in addition, the last section is an attempt to provide a brief overview of the problems and (bioinformatics) solutions that current-day scientists face who embark on second-generation sequencing strategies. this is a fast-moving field, but the provided references and websites should be a good first approach for those who wish to make further strides toward eradicating infectious diseases from our planet. basic local alignment search tool structural genomics and drug discovery for infectious diseases structural proteomics of the sars coronavirus: a model response to emerging infectious diseases proteomics characterization of outer membrane vesicles from the extraintestinal pathogenic escherichia coli Δtolr ihe mutant the genome of the african trypanosome trypanosoma brucei molecular detection of multiple emerging pathogens in sputa from cystic fibrosis patients allpaths: de novo assembly of whole-genome shotgun microreads evolution of pathogenicity and sexual reproduction in eight candida genomes new tools for discovering and characterizing microbial diversity cytolethal distending toxin (cdt): a bacterial weapon to control host cell proliferation? the genome sequence of trypanosoma cruzi, etiologic agent of chagas disease comparative genomics of trypanosomatid parasitic protozoa complete nucleotide sequence of bacteriophage ms rna: primary and secondary structure of the replicase gene complete nucleotide sequence of sv dna the pfam protein families database whole-genome random sequencing and assembly of haemophilus influenzae rd the minimal gene complement of mycoplasma genitalium psortb v. . : expanded prediction of bacterial protein subcellular localization and insights gained from comparative proteome analysis a universal vaccine for serogroup b meningococcus comparative genomics of listeria species life with genes rfam: annotating non-coding rnas in complete genomes molecular biological access to the chemistry of unknown soil microbes: a new frontier for natural products an ergatisbased prokaryotic genome annotation web server comparative genomic analyses of seventeen streptococcus pneumoniae strains: insights into the pneumococcal supragenome interactive instruction on population interactions microbial population structures in the deep marine biosphere microbiology: metagenomics ironing out the wrinkles in the rare biosphere through improved otu clustering the genome of the kinetoplastid parasite, leishmania major bacillus anthracis evolution and epidemiology blat-the blast-like alignment tool genome analysis reveals pili in group b streptococcus the death of microarrays? evolution of the core and pan-genome of streptococcus: positive selection, recombination, and genome composition pervasive, genome-wide positive selection leading to functional divergence in the bacterial genus campylobacter identification of a universal group b streptococcus vaccine by multiple genome screen the microbial pangenome assembly algorithms for next-generation sequencing data genomic approach for analysis of surface proteins in chlamydia pneumoniae direct metagenomic detection of viral pathogens in nasal and fecal specimens using an unbiased high-throughput sequencing approach structure and complexity of a bacterial transcriptome de novo assembly of short sequence reads identification of vaccine candidates against serogroup b meningococcus by whole-genome sequencing the pangenome structure of escherichia coli: comparative genomic analysis of e. coli commensal and pathogenic isolates cloning the soil metagenome: a strategy for accessing the genetic and functional diversity of uncultured microorganisms nucleotide sequence of bacteriophage phix dna whole-genome comparison of disease and carriage strains provides insights into virulence evolution in neisseria meningitidis the key role of genomics in modern vaccine and drug design for emerging infectious diseases prodom: automated clustering of homologous domains abyss: a parallel assembler for short read sequence data minimus: a fast, lightweight genome assembler genome analysis of multiple pathogenic isolates of streptococcus agalactiae: implications for the microbial "pan-genome genome sequence of the nematode c. elegans: a platform for investigating biology discovery of a vaccine antigen that protects mice from chlamydia pneumoniae infection the listeria transcriptional landscape from saprophytism to virulence the complete genome sequence of the gastric pathogen helicobacter pylori tophat: discovering splice junctions with rna-seq next generation sequencing of microbial transcriptomes: challenges and opportunities the role of medical structural genomics in discovering new drugs for infectious diseases mapping the burkholderia cenocepacia niche response via high-throughput sequencing velvet: algorithms for de novo short read assembly using de bruijn graphs we would like to acknowledge our colleague dr. david j. studholme for his suggestions and feedback. key: cord- -i z sf authors: neshat, sarah y; tzeng, stephany y; green, jordan j title: gene delivery for immunoengineering date: - - journal: curr opin biotechnol doi: . /j.copbio. . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: i z sf a growing number of gene delivery strategies are being employed for immunoengineering in applications ranging from infectious disease prevention to cancer therapy. viral vectors tend to have high gene transfer capability but may be hampered by complications related to their intrinsic immunogenicity. non-viral methods of gene delivery, including polymeric, lipid-based, and inorganic nanoparticles as well as physical delivery techniques, have also been widely investigated. by using either ex vivo engineering of immune cells that are subsequently adoptively transferred or in vivo transfection of cells for in situ genetic programming, researchers have developed different approaches to precisely modulate immune responses. in addition to expressing a gene of interest through intracellular delivery of plasmid dna and mrna, researchers are also delivering oligonucleotides to knock down gene expression and immunostimulatory nucleic acids to tune immune activity. many of these biotechnologies are now in clinical trials and have high potential to impact medicine. sarah y neshat , stephany y tzeng and jordan j green , , , , a growing number of gene delivery strategies are being employed for immunoengineering in applications ranging from infectious disease prevention to cancer therapy. viral vectors tend to have high gene transfer capability but may be hampered by complications related to their intrinsic immunogenicity. non-viral methods of gene delivery, including polymeric, lipid-based, and inorganic nanoparticles as well as physical delivery techniques, have also been widely investigated. by using either ex vivo engineering of immune cells that are subsequently adoptively transferred or in vivo transfection of cells for in situ genetic programming, researchers have developed different approaches to precisely modulate immune responses. in addition to expressing a gene of interest through intracellular delivery of plasmid dna and mrna, researchers are also delivering oligonucleotides to knock down gene expression and immunostimulatory nucleic acids to tune immune activity. many of these biotechnologies are now in clinical trials and have high potential to impact medicine. gene delivery is increasingly being used to engineer the immune system in the laboratory and the clinic. various biotechnologies have been developed for the delivery of nucleic acids to cells, both in vivo and ex vivo. to overcome challenges of in vivo manipulation, several ex vivo cell engineering technologies have advanced to the clinic [ ] ; however, delivery vehicles that can be administered directly to patients with delivery of the cargo efficiently to target cells in vivo also show great promise. various types of nucleic acid have been delivered for immune applications. here, we will discuss the delivery of plasmid dna (pdna) and mrna to overexpress a gene of interest; oligonucleotides such as small interfering rna (sirna) and micro rna (mirna), which can knock down gene expression; and immunostimulatory nucleic acids that elicit a specific immune response. differences in their physical, chemical, and immunological properties have been discussed in detail elsewhere [ ] . briefly, pdna, the largest of these and generally > kb in size, is double-stranded and relatively stable to chemical degradation, but it must enter the nucleus. mrna, while less chemically stable than pdna, is smaller and acts in the cytoplasm, therefore not requiring nuclear entry. sirna and mirnas are generally only bp and are also active in the cytoplasm, while immunostimulatory nucleic acids, which include cpg sequences in pdna and double-stranded rna structures, may be active in various intracellular locations, including the cytoplasm or the endosomal compartment. nucleic acids can activate the innate immune system, such as through sensing by toll-like receptors (tlrs), with single-stranded (ss) rna recognized by tlr- and - , double-stranded (ds) rna recognized by tlr- , and unmethylated cpg sequences in dna recognized by tlr- [ , ] . other mechanisms of immune sensing include the cyclic gmp-amp synthase (cgas)stimulator of interferon genes (sting) pathway and the absent in melanoma (aim ) pathway, which both detect cytosolic dna [ ] , and dsrna sensors like rig-i-like receptors, reviewed here in detail [ ] . examples below will show that nucleic acids may also be engineered to enhance or minimize this effect. as much of the recent progress in the field of gene delivery for immunotherapy has been for cancer applications, this review will focus on cancer immunotherapy but will also cover certain non-oncology applications. major strategies that have been explored for cancer immunotherapy [ ] center on increasing the immunogenicity of the tumor microenvironment, enhancing the ability of antigen-presenting cells (apcs) to be activated, improving the activation of t cells and other lymphocytes in the context of the tumor while lessening the effect of suppressive immune cells, and vaccinating the patient with a tumor-specific antigen in order to generate a tumor-targeted immune response ( figure ). broadly, an overarching goal of immunoengineering is often to shift the balance of the immune response between activation and suppression, or, more specifically, between the t h -type, including cell-mediated cytotoxic behavior that can be used to combat cancer; t h -type, which leads to a humoral response against extracellular pathogens and parasites; and t h -type, which is important for inducing inflammation. broad gene delivery strategies for cancer immunotherapy. gene delivery can be accomplished using viral, lipid-based, or polymeric vectors, or a combination of various materials. these can be used to genetically engineer immune cells ex vivo for adoptive transfer, or they can modify tumor cells or immune cells directly in vivo to promote immune activation against the tumor. some examples of gene delivery methods that can be used for tumor immunotherapy are shown here. viral vectors have historically been used for delivery of nucleic acids due to their effectiveness at transferring the nucleic acid payload to host cells. the most widely used vectors in recent years are retroviruses, including lentiviruses, which insert a gene of interest into the host genome; adenoviruses, which deliver an episomal, nonintegrating dna plasmid to cells; and adeno-associated viruses (aav), which can only replicate in coordination with a second virus [ ] . for instance, zhu et al. described an aav vector for the delivery of the cytokine il- , which inhibits t h and t h responses [ ] . in the b -f murine melanoma model, they found that this strategy depleted suppressive regulatory t cells (tregs), including at the tumor site, and led to enhanced efficacy of a cancer vaccine and anti-pd- checkpoint blockade therapy. importantly, however, viral vectors often elicit a strong immune response. not only can this have deleterious effects on the patient, but it may also reduce the efficacy of viruses, particularly upon repeated administration due to the formation of neutralizing antibodies. to address this, engineers have developed methods of coating viruses with polymers [ ] to prevent exposure of antigenic viral epitopes ( figure ). jung et al. used a hydrogel to encapsulate oncolytic adenoviruses, which are engineered to replicate only in tumor cells, and showed that encapsulation not only sustained the local release of virus in a hamster pancreatic cancer model but also reduced the animals' antiviral immune response, resulting in a > % lower tumor burden compared to treatment with the adenovirus alone [ ] . the use of polymer coatings can also improve viral transduction efficacy and allow codelivery of therapeutics: for instance, an adenovirus encoding the pro-t h cytokine il- was coated with a copolymer of b-cyclodextrin and the cationic polyethylenimine (pei) to enhance delivery up to -fold in vitro and co-deliver a small molecule inhibitor of the suppressive tgf-b in the b model [ ] . because of concerns about the safety of viral vectors, a wide range of non-viral delivery vehicles have been developed. state-of-the-art synthetic materials for gene delivery are reviewed in detail by lostalé -seijo et al. [ ] . lipid-based nanoparticles or lipoplexes have been extensively researched for gene delivery, particularly in the case of mrna and oligonucleotides. amphiphilic lipids can form liposomal structures that encapsulate nucleic acids within the core; cationic lipids can associate with the negatively charged nucleic acid to form nanostructures. in one case, three immune-stimulatory genes encoded in mrna were delivered directly to b -f melanoma or mc colorectal tumors in mice using lipid nanoparticles, which caused tumor regression and long-term immunity to the tumor [ ] . engineering the chemical structure of lipids can improve the efficiency to allow better and more specific delivery of sirna and small single-guide rna (sgrna) to cells that are normally hard to transfect, including t cells [ ] . specifically, lipids with conformationally constrained tails were fivefold to -fold more effective at gene delivery than similar lipids with unconstrained tails. several researchers have taken advantage of the immunestimulatory properties of nucleic acids delivered by lipid nanoparticles. among these are cyclic dinucleotides (cdns), such as cgamp agonists of stimulator of interferon genes (sting), which can increase the activity of apcs at the tumor site but, due to their high negative charge, require encapsulation to improve cellular internalization [ ] . some lipid structures, particularly those with amine-containing cyclic head groups, have also been found to intrinsically activate sting, and the use of these immune-stimulatory lipids to deliver tumor antigen-encoding mrna resulted in effective vaccination against b -f and ovalbumin-expressing b tumors, as lipids with cyclic head groups inducing nearly twofold higher antigen-specific cytotoxicity after injection [ ] . on the other hand, excessive activation of interferon type i (ifn i) via pathways like sting can be damaging if uncontrolled; therefore, some groups have engineered mrna constructs to prevent ifn i induction while using lipid nanoparticles to co-deliver an adjuvant like monophosphoryl lipid a (mpla) that triggers ifn i in a more controlled manner [ ] . given the intrinsic immunogenicity of some lipid carriers, polymers can serve as an alternative for nucleic acid delivery, though some polymers may also have adjuvant activity [ ] . in addition to mrna and small nucleic acids, cationic polymers are also used often for the delivery of pdna, usually forming nanoparticles via selfassembly with nucleic acids. the versatility of polymer chemical and physical structures provides a wide range of properties that can be optimized. for instance, ex vivo transfection of t cells with mrna and dna with up to % and % efficiency, respectively, has been accomplished by tuning the branching architecture of the delivery vehicle, a co-polymer of poly( -hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (phema) and poly( -dimethylaminoethyl methacrylate) (pdmaema) [ ] . in many cases, in vivo transfection is preferred in order to avoid ex vivo processing and cell culture steps. cationic pei has been studied for decades for gene delivery purposes, though modifications are often necessary to improve nanoparticle stability and biodistribution in vivo. for instance, a poly(ethylene glycol) (peg)-modified pei nanoparticle was complexed with pdna encoding small hairpin rna (shrna) to knock down expression of pd-l in tumor cells. local injection of hyaluronidase into the tumor improved nanoparticle accumulation after systemic administration by approximately twofold, leading to pd-l knockdown in the tumor [ ] . polyrotaxanes, consisting of fourarm peg threaded with the cationic polysaccharide rings a-cyclodextrin, can deliver il- pdna to mc tumor cells after systemic administration by taking advantage of the stealth properties of peg to achieve good pharmacokinetics [ ] . another peg-modified material, cationic trimethyl chitosan, delivered sirna against vegf and pigf to macrophages in breast cancer models, utilizing a mannose ligand to target macrophages and repolarize them to an immune-stimulatory phenotype [ ] . this led to > % tumor inhibition due to combination knockdown of both vegf and pigf in vivo. polymersomes, described as amphiphilic block co-polymers that self-assemble into liposome-like structures with an aqueous core, were also used to deliver cdn as a sting agonist and improved survival in a b -f model after intratumoral injection [ ] . the toxicity of high-molecular-weight pei is often limiting. less toxic low-molecular-weight pei can be crosslinked with degradable linkages to form a larger polymer with greater transfection efficacy while preserving the biocompatibility of the low-molecular-weight form. when functionalized with galactose to target the liver, a cross-linked pei co-polymer was able to deliver il- pdna to tumor cells with significantly lower polymermediated cytotoxicity and twofold to threefold higher gene delivery in vitro, leading to improved survival in an orthotopic murine ml- hepatocellular carcinoma model in vivo [ ] . in a similar vein, biodegradable polymers are commonly used to reduce toxicity. poly (beta-amino ester)s (pbaes) are cationic, hydrolytically degradable polymers that have been used to deliver cpg odns, agonists of toll-like receptor (tlr- ), which upregulates production of proinflammatory cytokines [ ] , or cdn as a sting agonist [ ] by local intratumoral delivery in mouse melanoma models. another pbae was also used to deliver pdna encoding tissue, cell and pathway engineering immune-stimulatory genes locally to tumors, resulting in slowed tumor progression and long-term survival in b -f and mc models [ ] . smith et al. further modified pbae/pdna nanoparticles by coating them with a targeting ligand, allowtransfection of t cells after intravenous injection. this led to in situ generation of leukemia-specific chimeric antigen receptor (car) t cells, with nearly % of the circulating t cells car + within days [ ] , and the same group showed that a similar strategy could be used to deliver mrna to t cells, inducing a memory phenotype in tumor-specific t cells as well as demonstrating proof-of-concept in situ gene editing [ ] . other biodegradable polymers, like chargealtering releasable transporters, deliver mrna encoding the ovalbumin antigen to a mouse along with cpg as an adjuvant, allowing for successful vaccination of the mouse against ovalbumin-expressing a lymphoma after subcutaneous or intravenous delivery [ ] , with up to % of mice considered cured of established tumors. the chemical tunability of synthetic polymers provides many opportunities to optimize their properties for gene delivery and immune engineering. lipid-based and polymer-based delivery systems can be combined to take advantage of properties from both materials. folate-modified methoxy poly(ethylene glycol)-poly(lactide) (mpeg-pla) and dioleoyl- -trimethylammonium propane (dotap) nanoparticles encapsulating pdna encoding the cc-motif chemokine ligand (ccl ) were designed to transfect folate receptorexpressing tumor cells in ct colon cancer models and induce expression of ccl to modulate dendritic cell (dc) and lymphocyte interactions [ ] . the authors describe advantages over certain car t therapies, such as augmenting the favorable anti-tumor immune response while avoiding the detrimental cytokine release syndrome (crs). a similar hybrid concept has been used in combination with chemotherapy drugs. in one particular design, oxaliplatin (oxp) chemotherapy is delivered systemically to cause immunogenic cell death (icd) in parallel with locally delivered dna encoding a pd-l trap fusion protein via lipid-protamine-dna (lpd) nanoparticles that function selectively within the tumor, thus resulting in minimized immune-related adverse effects, for ct , b -f , and t tumor models ( figure ) [ ] . the combination treatment with pd-l trap dna and oxp was significantly more effective than either treatment alone, with approximately % increase in median survival in ct -bearing mice. these lpd nanoparticles have also been implemented to simultaneously silence expression of hmga (high mobility group protein a ) to increase t lymphocyte infiltration twofold to fourfold and induce pd-l trap expression to improve checkpoint inhibitor therapy in ct and t models [ ] . alternatively, mckinlay et al. describe the generation of a combinatorial library to screen for hybrid-lipid chargealtering releasable transporters [ ] . these specific materials are primarily effective for mrna transfection in t-cell lines, primary t cells in vitro, and splenic in situ. the incorporation of oleyl and nonenyl lipid elements increased the transfection efficacy of t cells to - . % and that of b cells to %, while minimizing toxicity-mediated cell death compared to the previously published polymeric charge-altering releasable transporters, which have been reported to transfect < % and - % of t cells and b cells, respectively [ ] . inorganic or physical modifications can be applied to nanoparticles for increased stabilization or improved uptake by certain targeted cell populations. calcium phosphate (cap) has long been used for gene delivery due to its ability to encapsulate nucleic acid efficiently and dissolve intracellularly under the acidic conditions of the endolysosomal compartment, but it is limited by poor stability and lack of control in manufacturing, necessitating use of other materials to improve the properties of cap [ ] . lipid-coated calcium phosphate (lcp) nanoparticles functionalized with mannose have been developed to target delivery of mrna to dendritic cells (dcs) draining to the lymph node in triple negative breast cancer (tnbc) in vivo models as a nanovaccine [ ] . the mrna encodes the tumor-associated antigen mammary type mucin (muc ). transfected dcs express muc and present it to t tnbc-specific cytotoxic t cells, which expand and, in combination with anti-ctla- antibodies, leads to tumor infiltration, tumor growth inhibition, and memory [ ] . lcp nps have also been used to deliver mrna encoding tyrosine related protein (trp ) and pd-l sirna to b -f melanoma models [ ] , resulting in transfection of dcs to induce them to present a tumor antigen while also downregulating expression of a checkpoint molecule. alternatively, macrophages can be targeted using modified nanoparticles. cpg oligodeoxynucleotides (odn) can be targeted to macrophages using mannosylated carboxymethyl chitosan/protamine sulfate/caco /odn (mcmc/ps/ caco /odn), a polymer/inorganic nanoparticle hybrid whose features are designed to improve odn encapsulation, macrophage uptake, and ph-mediated intracellular release [ ] . cpg delivery to macrophages promotes expression of cd , an activating co-stimulatory signal to lymphocytes, therefore inducing the anti-tumor m phenotype in vitro with raw . cells [ ] , measured by approximately twofold higher secretion of il- and other inflammatory cytokines compared with macrophages treated with the common commercial transfection agent lipofectamine . another hybrid, peptide/hyaluronic acid/protamine/ caco /dna nanoparticles (phnp), was developed to target pdna to j a. macrophages and hela tumor cells in vitro [ ] . the fusion protein promotes recognition by fc receptors on macrophages internalization by tumor cells, while the hyaluronic acid (ha) interacts with cd found on both cell types. the pdna encodes il- to repolarize macrophages from anti-inflammatory m to anti-tumor m , in addition to downregulating the cd 'don't-eat-me' signal and upregulating co-stimulatory cd on tumor cells in vitro to reverse cancer-induced immunosuppression [ ] . arginine-coated gold nanoparticles (argnps) have also been used to target macrophages and deliver crispr-cas in order to edit out signal-regulatory protein a (sirp-a), the inhibitory receptor for cd , thus allowing fourfold greater phagocytosis of human bone osteosarcoma cells in vitro [ ] . the cationic arginine allowed binding to the single guide rna (sgrna) for sirp-a and the cas protein, which was engineered to include glutamic acid tags at the c-terminus and nuclear localization signal (nls) at the n-terminus. although many recent advances related to gene therapy have been focused on cancer, delivery technologies have been developed for other applications as well, including infection, autoimmune disorders, and allergy. genetic vaccines are particularly advantageous when compared to traditional peptide-based vaccines given the ability to stimulate at lower quantities, maintain antigen expression, bypass hla restriction, and expand to both humoral and cellular immunity responses [ ] . recent vaccine developments have incorporated gene delivery using both polymer and lipid nanoparticles. a zika virus (zikv) vaccine formulated with the full natural dna sequence of zikv premembrane and envelope protein (prm-e) within a tetrafunctional peo/ppo/ethylene diamine amphiphilic block copolymer np has elicited antigenspecific serum igg, neutralizing antibodies, and protection upon intramuscular challenge [ ] . similarly, an intradermal lnp vaccine contained n( )-methylpseudouridine mrna encoding viral surface antigens, such as zikv prm-e, influenza virus hemagglutinin (ha), and hiv- envelope (env) [ ] . the vaccine was shown to establish an antigen-specific cd + t-cell response in addition to an increase in b cells and plasma cells to generate humoral memory and high affinity neutralizing antibodies when compared to unmodified mrna tissue, cell and pathway engineering vaccines. interestingly, yan et al. describes a subcutaneously injected scaffold loaded with ovalbumin (ova) mrna-lipoplexes constructed from chitosan-alginate gel [ ] . while a more traditional vaccine formulation consisting of the ovalbumin protein elicited a stronger short-term humoral immune response, the mrna-lipoplex-based scaffold vaccine elicited greater t-cell proliferation within secondary lymphoid organs. ifn-g secretion as a result of the mrna-lipoplex scaffold was also greater than that due to protein, naked mrna, or mrna-lipoplex immunizations by two-to threefold [ ] . additionally, anti-viral vaccines have been engineered with self-amplifying mrna (sam) encapsulated in lipid nanoparticles and show an induced type ifn gene delivery for immunoengineering neshat, tzeng and green response locally when compared to tlr agonists [ ] . these studies have led to interest in exploring the use of sam mrna for nanoparticle-delivered immunotherapies [ ] . in addition to infectious diseases, gene therapies have been used to address autoimmune disorders. an aav vector (aav ) has been used for single dose intraarticular delivery of the human interferon-b (hifn-b) gene in patients with inflammatory arthritis, including rheumatoid arthritis (ra) [ ] . this therapy is unique in that there is local transcriptional control of the hifn-b transgene by an nf-kb promoter, therefore causing transgene expression only during states of flare-up inflammation. recently, allergy immunotherapy has expanded with goals of provoking biased antigen-specific t h responses. microneedles coated with model antigen ova co-formulated with sting agonist as an adjuvant induced the generation of ova-specific serum igg a, signifying an enhanced t h response [ ] . when challenged with ova, splenocytes produced higher il- and ifn-g t h cytokines when compared to subcutaneous injections or microneedle delivery of alum formulations. although the studies described above have been designed for viral vaccines and allergies, concepts can be applied to improve future developments of cancer immunotherapies. exciting translational methods and immune stimulation techniques are being investigated for clinical applications within the last few years, and some examples are shown in table . for instance, researchers at the national cancer institute have developed a potential treatment for heterogeneous metastatic cancer by retrovirally transduced autologous peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) to express neoantigen-reactive tcrs isolated from the patient to target shared oncogenes and multiple neoantigens with aims to address tumor escape [ , ] . additionally, a phase i trial led by modernatx, inc. outlines the safety and tolerability of lipid nanoparticles encapsulating genetic material encoding tumor neoantigens while inducing neoantigen-specific t cells in patients, whether given as a monotherapy or in combination with pembrolizumab, and it subsequently advanced to phase ii [ , ] . on the other hand, adenoviral-mediated delivery has been assessed in a completed phase i clinical trial with patients with malignant pleural mesothelioma to induce production of ifn-a in the pleural fluid and serum [ ] . although the results of this heterogeneous pilot study were variable, disease stability or regression via scans and serum measurements of soluble mesothelin-related peptides (smrp) was noted in five of the nine subjects described as younger patients with lower tumor burdens. for applications outside of cancer immunotherapy, a phase i clinical trial is currently ongoing to test aav as a vector to induce nf-kb-regulated hifn-b expression in patients with ra [ ] . in response to the recent covid- pandemic, modernatx, inc. in collaboration with the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) are developing a lipid nanoparticle/ mrna-based vaccine for the novel sars-cov- coronavirus infection, currently in phase i trials in healthy volunteers [ ] . immune responses can be engineered using gene delivery techniques to modulate the genetic composition of cells, enabling innovative cancer immunotherapy methods. nucleic acid cargos of varying size can be optimized for nanoparticle encapsulation to upregulate or downregulate gene expression, leading to productive antitumor immune responses. genetic material can be delivered via viral or non-viral approaches to immune cells, such as macrophages and dendritic cells, to activate or suppress activity. nanoparticles are diverse in formulation, with each type of delivery material conveying advantages and disadvantages, which may be combined in hybrid formulations consisting of multiple material types. in addition, new cargos, such as self-amplifying mrna, hold promise for efficient, next-generation vaccines, and nanostructures like polymersomes can allow for the delivery of combination immunotherapies. recent research has shown the expansive applications of gene therapy to various immune-related disorders and diseases, including tumors, infectious diseases, autoimmune disorders, and allergy. many of the current trials shown here are in early stages, but there are exciting developments that potentiate future clinical impact. it is important to note that gene-based therapies for immune engineering constitute a set of challenges that require further vetting of these platforms before entering further clinical stages, such as reproducibility, instability of genetic materials, production scale-up, transient off-target genotoxicity, and vector immunogenicity [ ] . however, with well-funded companies increasingly sponsoring nucleic acid therapeutics and immune engineering approaches, there is great hope for the necessary advances that can achieve clinical efficacy while minimizing toxicity. nothing declared. polymeric nucleic acid delivery for immunoengineering dna-based biomaterials for immunoengineering nucleic acid sensing in mammals and plants: facts and caveats dna sensing by the cgas-sting pathway in health and disease double-stranded rna sensors and modulators in innate immunity an update on immunotherapy for solid tumors: a review while viral gene delivery is of high interest in the laboratory as well as in the clinic, it still faces several hurdles, some of which can be solved by combining viruses with other materials. this review covers many of the challenges to viral gene therapy as well as methods of overcoming them il- gene therapy induces depletion of tregs and enhances the efficacy of cancer immunotherapy a hydrogel matrix prolongs persistence and promotes specific localization of an oncolytic adenovirus in a tumor by restricting nonspecific shedding and an antiviral immune response combined delivery of a tgf-beta inhibitor and an adenoviral vector expressing interleukin- potentiates cancer immunotherapy synthetic materials at the forefront of gene delivery durable anticancer immunity from intratumoral administration of il- , il- gamma, and ox l mrnas using lipid nanoparticles, the authors describe an antigen-agnostic combination immunotherapy via direct intratumoral injection of mrna encoding immunostimulatory genes, leading to anti-tumor effect even at sites distant from the local treatment site. this work also includes indepth analysis of the tumor microenvironment over the course of treatment constrained nanoparticles deliver sirna and sgrna to t cells in vivo without targeting ligands liposomal delivery enhances immune activation by sting agonists for cancer immunotherapy delivery of mrna vaccines with heterocyclic lipids increases anti-tumor efficacy by stingmediated immune cell activation this work highlights the importance of the immunological properties of the delivery vehicle itself, which is co-delivery of nucleoside-modified mrna and tlr agonists for cancer immunotherapy: restoring the immunogenicity of immunosilent mrna polymer nanoparticles as adjuvants in cancer immunotherapy cationic polymers for nonviral gene delivery to human t cells efficient pd-l gene silence promoted by hyaluronidase for cancer immunotherapy development of self-assembled multi-arm polyrotaxanes nanocarriers for systemic plasmid delivery in vivo combination antitumor immunotherapy with vegf and pigf sirna via systemic delivery of multifunctionalized nanoparticles to tumor-associated macrophages and breast cancer cells endosomolytic polymersomes increase the activity of cyclic dinucleotide sting agonists to enhance cancer immunotherapy a novel galactose-peg-conjugated biodegradable copolymer is an efficient gene delivery vector for immunotherapy of hepatocellular carcinoma polyplex interaction strength as a driver of potency during cancer immunotherapy biodegradable sting agonist nanoparticles for enhanced cancer immunotherapy in situ genetic engineering of tumors for long-lasting and systemic immunotherapy this article demonstrates the potential of biodegradable polymeric nanoparticles and combination dna delivery to program tumors and their microenvironment to activate a systemic cellular anti-tumor response without requiring a priori knowledge about the tumors or their antigens in situ programming of leukaemia-specific t cells using synthetic dna nanocarriers this article shows the advantages of using easily tailorable and functionalizable polymeric materials for gene delivery, and the in situ reprogramming of tumor-specific t cells has great potential for clinical application hit-and-run programming of therapeutic cytoreagents using mrna nanocarriers mrna vaccination with charge-altering releasable transporters elicits human t cell responses and cures established tumors in mice powerful anticolon tumor effect of targeted gene immunotherapy using folate-modified nanoparticle delivery of ccl to activate the immune system synergistic and low adverse effect cancer immunotherapy by immunogenic chemotherapy and locally expressed pd-l trap nanoparticle-mediated hmga silencing promotes lymphocyte infiltration and boosts checkpoint blockade immunotherapy for cancer enhanced mrna delivery into lymphocytes enabled by lipid-varied libraries of charge-altering releasable transporters lipid-coated calcium phosphate nanoparticle and beyond: a versatile platform for drug delivery combination immunotherapy of muc mrna nano-vaccine and ctla- blockade effectively inhibits growth of triple negative breast cancer mrna vaccine with antigen-specific checkpoint blockade induces an enhanced immune response against established melanoma functional polymer/inorganic hybrid nanoparticles for macrophage targeting delivery of oligodeoxynucleotides in cancer immunotherapy a multi-functional macrophage and tumor targeting gene delivery system for the regulation of macrophage polarity and reversal of cancer immunoresistance crispred macrophages for cell-based cancer immunotherapy a comparison of plasmid dna and mrna as vaccine technologies amphiphilic block copolymer delivery of a dna vaccine against zika virus nucleoside-modified mrna vaccines induce potent t follicular helper and germinal center b cell responses injectable biodegradable chitosan-alginate d porous gel scaffold for mrna vaccine delivery induction of an ifn-mediated antiviral response by a selfamplifying rna vaccine: implications for vaccine design weissman d: mrna vaccines -a new era in vaccinology preclinical potency and biodistribution studies of an aav vector expressing human interferon-beta (art-i ) for local treatment of patients with rheumatoid arthritis assessment of th /th bias of sting agonists coated on microneedles for possible use in skin allergen immunotherapy administration of autologous t-cells genetically engineered to express t-cell receptors reactive against mutated neoantigens in people with metastatic cancer enhanced detection of neoantigen-reactive t cells targeting unique and shared oncogenes for personalized cancer immunotherapy and immunogenicity of mrna- alone in subjects with resected solid tumors and in combination with pembrolizumab in subjects with unresectable solid tumors (keynote- ) an efficacy study of adjuvant treatment with the personalized cancer vaccine mrna- and pembrolizumab in patients with high-risk melanoma (keynote- ) a trial of intrapleural adenoviral-mediated interferon-alpha b gene transfer for malignant pleural mesothelioma a single dose clinical trial to study the safety of art-i in patients with arthritis safety and immunogenicity study of -ncov vaccine (mrna- ) to prevent sars-cov- infection advances in mrna vaccines for infectious diseases dose escalation and efficacy study of mrna for intratumoral injection alone and in combination with durvalumab for patients with advanced malignancies. u.s. national library of medicine dose escalation study of mrna- for intratumoral injection to patients with advanced malignancies phase trial of interleukin gene therapy for locally recurrent prostate cancer redirected high affinity gag-specific autologous t cells for hiv gene therapy risk prostate cancer trial using gene & androgen deprivation therapies gene-modified t cells in treating patients with locally advanced or stage iv solid tumors expressing ny-es - therapy improving the outcome of liver transplantation for advanced hcc the authors thank the n.i.h. for support (p eb , r ca , and r ey ). syn (dge- ) thanks the nsf graduate research fellowship program for support. syt thanks the american autoimmune-related diseases association (aarda) for support. the authors are also thankful for support from the bloombergkimmel institute for cancer immunotherapy. key: cord- -p ma akz authors: enjuanes, luis; almazán, fernando; ortego, javier title: virus-based vectors for gene expression in mammalian cells: coronavirus date: - - journal: new comprehensive biochemistry doi: . /s - ( ) -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: p ma akz publisher summary the coronavirus and the torovirus genera form the coronaviridae family, which is closely related to the arteriviridae family. both families are included in the nidovirales order. recently, a new group of invertebrate viruses, the roniviridae, with a genetic structure and replication strategy similar to those of coronaviruses, has been described. this new virus family has been included within the nidovirales. coronaviruses have several advantages as vectors over other viral expression systems: ( ) coronaviruses are single-stranded rna viruses that replicate within the cytoplasm without a dna intermediary, making integration of the virus genome into the host cell chromosome unlikely, ( ) these viruses have the largest rna virus genome and, in principle, have room for the insertion of large foreign genes, ( ) a pleiotropic secretory immune response is best induced by the stimulation of gut-associated lymphoid tissues, ( ) the tropism of coronaviruses may be modified by manipulation of the spike (s) protein allowing engineering of the tropism of the vector, ( ) non-pathogenic coronavirus strains infecting most species of interest (human, porcine, bovine, canine, feline, and avian) are available to develop expression systems, and ( ) infectious coronavirus cdna clones are available to design expression systems. within the coronavirus two types of expression vectors have been developed: one requires two components (helper–dependent expression system) and the other a single genome that is modified either by targeted recombination or by engineering a cdna encoding an infectious rna. this chapter focuses on the advantages and limitations of these coronavirus expression systems, the attempts to increase their expression levels by studying the transcription-regulating sequences (trss), and the proven possibility of modifying their tissue and species-specificity. the coronavirus and the torovirus genera form the coronaviridae family, which is closely related to the arteriviridae family. both families are included in the nidovirales order [ , ] . recently, a new group of invertebrate viruses, the roniviridae, with a genetic structure and replication strategy similar to those of coronaviruses, has been described [ ] . this new virus family has been included within the nidovirales [ ] . coronaviruses have several advantages as vectors over other viral expression systems: (i) coronaviruses are single-stranded rna viruses that replicate within the cytoplasm without a dna intermediary, making integration of the virus genome into the host cell chromosome unlikely [ ] ; (ii) these viruses have the largest rna virus genome and, in principle, have room for the insertion of large foreign genes [ , ] ; (iii) a pleiotropic secretory immune response is best induced by the stimulation of gut associated lymphoid tissues. since coronaviruses in general infect the mucosal surfaces, both respiratory and enteric, they may be used to target the antigen to the enteric and respiratory areas to induce a strong secretory immune response; (iv) the tropism of coronaviruses may be modified by manipulation of the spike (s) protein allowing engineering of the tropism of the vector [ , ] ; (v) non-pathogenic coronavirus strains infecting most species of interest (human, porcine, bovine, canine, feline, and avian) are available to develop expression systems; and (vi) infectious coronavirus cdna clones are available to design expression systems. within the coronavirus two types of expression vectors have been developed (fig. ) , one requires two components (helper-dependent expression system) (fig. a ) and the other a single genome that is modified either by targeted recombination [ ] (fig. b. ) or by engineering a cdna encoding an infectious rna. infectious cdna clones are available for porcine [ , ] (fig. b. and b. ), human ( fig. b. ) [ ] , murine [ ] and avian (infectious bronchitis virus, ibv) coronavirus [ ] , and also for the arteriviruses equine infectious anemia virus (eav) [ ] , porcine respiratory and reproductive syndrome virus (prrsv) [ ] , and simian hemorrhagic fever virus (shfv) [ ] . the availability of these cdnas and the application of target recombination to coronaviruses [ ] have been essential for the development of vectors based on coronaviruses and arteriviruses. this review will focus on the advantages and limitations of these coronavirus expression systems, the attempts to increase their expression levels by studying the transcription-regulating sequences (trss), and the proven possibility of modifying their tissue and species-specificity. coronaviruses comprise a large family of viruses infecting a broad range of vertebrates, from mammalian to avian species. coronaviruses are associated mainly with respiratory, enteric, hepatic and central nervous system diseases. in humans and fowl, coronaviruses primarily cause upper respiratory tract infections, while porcine and bovine coronaviruses (bcovs) establish enteric infections that result in severe economical loss. human coronaviruses (hcov) are responsible for - % of all common colds, and have been implicated in gastroenteritis, high and low respiratory tract infections and rare cases of encephalitis. hcov have also been associated with infant necrotizing enterocolitis and are tentative candidates for multiple sclerosis. in march , a new group of hcovs has emerged as the ethiological agent of the severe acute pneumonia syndrome (sars) affecting thousands of people, mostly in china, singapore, and toronto. in addition, human infections by coronaviruses seem to be ubiquitous, as coronaviruses have been identified wherever they have been looked for, including north and south america, europe, and asia and no other human disease has been clearly associated with them with the exception of respiratory and enteric infections. virions contain a single molecule of linear, positive-sense, single-stranded rna (fig. ) . the coronavirus genome with a size ranging from . to . kb is the largest viral rna known. coronavirus rna has a terminal cap followed by a leader sequence of - nucleotides and an untranslated region of - nucleotides. at the end of the genome there is an untranslated region of - nucleotides followed by a poly(a) tail. the virion rna, which functions as an mrna and is infectious, contains approximately - functional genes, four or five of which encode structural proteins. the genes are arranged in the order -polymerase-(he)-s-e-m-n- , with a variable number of other genes that are believed to be non-structural and largely non-essential, at least in tissue culture [ ] . about two-thirds of the entire rna comprises the rep a and rep b genes. at the overlap between the rep a and b regions, there is a specific seven-nucleotide ''slippery'' sequence and a pseudoknot structure (ribosomal frameshifting signal), which are required for the translation of rep b as a single polyprotein (rep a/b). the third of the genome comprises the genes encoding the structural proteins and the other non-structural ones. coronavirus transcription occurs via an rna-dependent rna synthesis process in which mrnas are transcribed from negative-stranded templates. coronavirus mrnas consist of six to eight types of varying sizes, depending on the coronavirus strain and the host species. the largest mrna is the genomic rna that also serves as the mrna for rep a and b, the remainder are subgenomic mrnas (sgmrnas). the mrnas have a nested-set structure in relation to the genome structure (fig. b ). coronaviruses are enveloped viruses containing a core that includes the ribonucleoprotein formed by the rna and nucleoprotein n ( fig. a) . the core is formed by the genomic rna, the n protein and the membrane (m) protein carboxyterminus. most of the m protein is embedded within the membrane but its carboxyterminus is integrated within the core and seems essential to maintain the core structure [ , ] . at least in the transmissible gastroenteritis virus (tgev) the m protein presents two topologies. in one (m ), both the amino and the carboxyl termini face the outside of the virion, while in the other (m) the carboxy-terminus is inside [ ] . in addition, the virus envelope contains two or three other proteins, the spike (s) protein that is responsible for cell attachment, the small membrane protein (e) and, in some strains, the hemagglutinin-esterase (he) [ ] . the replicase gene encodes a protein of approximately - kda which is co-translationally processed. several domains within the replicase have predicted functions based on regions of nucleotide homology [ ]. the coronaviruses have been classified into three groups ( , and ) based on sequence analysis of a number of coronavirus genes [ ] . helper-dependent expression systems have been developed using members of the three groups of coronaviruses ( fig. ). group coronaviruses include porcine, canine, feline and hcovs. expression systems have been developed for the porcine and hcovs since minigenomes are only available for these two coronaviruses. one expression system has been developed using tgev-derived minigenomes [ ] . the tgev-derived rna minigenomes were successfully expressed in vitro using t polymerase and amplified after in vivo transfection using a helper virus. tgev-derived minigenomes of . , . and . kb were efficiently used for the expression of heterologous genes [ , ] . the smallest minigenome replicated by the helper virus and efficiently packaged was . kb in length [ ] . using m minigenome, a two-step amplification system was developed based on the cloning of a cdna copy of the minigenome after the immediate-early cytomegalovirus promoter (cmv) [ ] . minigenome rna is first amplified in the nucleus by the cellular rna pol ii and then, the rnas are translocated into the cytoplasm where they are amplified by the viral replicase of the helper virus. the -glucuronidase (gus) and a surface glycoprotein (orf ), that is the major protective antigen of the prssv, have been expressed using this vector [ ] . tgevderived helper expression systems have a limited stability and minigenomes without the foreign gene replicate about -fold more efficiently than those with the heterologous gene [ ] . expression of gus gene and prrsv orf with these minigenomes has been demonstrated in the epithelial cells of alveoli and in scattered pneumocytes of swine lungs, which led to the induction of a strong immune response to these antigens [ ] . the hcov- e has also been used to express new sgmrnas [ ] . it was demonstrated that a synthetic rna including nt from the end plus nt from the end was amplified by the helper virus. most of the work has been done with mouse hepatitis virus (mhv) defective rnas (minigenomes) [ , ] . three heterologous genes have been expressed using the mhv system, chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (cat), he, and interferon (ifn-). expression of cat or he was detected only in the first two passages because the minigenome used lacks the packaging signal [ ] . when virus vectors expressing cat and he were inoculated intracerebrally into mice, he-or cat-specific sgmrnas were only detected in the brains at days and , indicating that the genes in the minigenome were expressed only in the early stage of viral infection [ ] . a mhv minigenome rna was also developed as a vector for expressing ifn-. the murine ifn-gene was secreted into culture medium as early as h posttransfection and reached a peak level at h post-transfection. no inhibition of virus replication was detected when the cells were treated with ifn-produced by the minigenome rna, but infection of susceptible mice with a minigenome producing ifn-caused significantly milder disease, accompanied by less virus replication than that caused by virus containing a control vector [ , ] . ibv is an avian coronavirus with a single-stranded, positive-sense rna genome of , nt. a defective rna (cd- ) derived from the beaudette strain of the ibv virus was used as an rna vector for the expression of two reporter genes, luciferase and cat [ ] . helper-dependent expression systems have a limited stability probably due to the foreign gene since tgev minigenomes of . , . and . kb, in the absence of the heterologous gene, are amplified and efficiently packaged for at least passages, without generating new dominant subgenomic rnas [ ] . the expression of gus, prssv orf , or cat using tgev-or ibv-derived minigenomes in general increases until passages three or four, expression levels are maintained for about four additional passages, and steadily decrease during successive passages [ ] [ ] [ ] ] . using ibv minigenomes cat expression levels between and mg per cells have been described. the highest expression levels ( - mg of gus per cells) have been obtained using a two-step amplification system based on tgev derived minigenomes with optimized trss [ , ] . using minigenomes derived from tgev and ibv expression was highly dependent on the nature of the heterologous gene used. luciferase expression with tgev and ibv minigenomes was reduced to almost background levels, while expression of gus or cat was at least - -fold higher than background levels, respectively. the construction of cdna clones encoding full-length coronavirus rnas has considerably improved the genetic manipulation of coronaviruses. the enormous length of the coronavirus genome and the instability of plasmids carrying coronavirus replicase sequences have hampered, until recently, the construction of a full-length cdna clone. infectious coronavirus cdna clones have been described for coronaviruses [ , , ] and for arteriviruses [ , ] . the strategy used to clone tgev infectious cdna was based on three points [ ] : (i) the construction was started from a minigenome that was stably and efficiently replicated by the helper virus [ ] . during the filling in of minigenome deletions a cdna fragment that was toxic to the bacterial host was identified. this fragment was reintroduced into the cdna in the last cloning step; (ii) in order to express the long coronavirus genome and to add the cap required for tgev rna infectivity, a two-step amplification system that couples transcription in the nucleus from the cmv promoter, with a second amplification in the cytoplasm driven by the viral polymerase, was used; and (iii) to increase viral cdna stability within bacteria, the cdna was cloned as a bacterial artificial chromosome (bac), that produces a maximum of two plasmid copies per cell. a fully functional infectious tgev cdna clone, leading to a virulent virus infecting both the enteric and respiratory tract of swine was engineered. the stable propagation of a tgev full-length cdna in bacteria as a bac has been considerably improved by the insertion of an intron to disrupt a toxic region identified in the viral genome (fig. ) [ ] . the viral rna was expressed in the cell nucleus under the control of the cmv promoter and the intron was efficiently removed during translocation of this rna to the cytoplasm. intron insertion in two different positions (nt and ) allowed stable plasmid amplification for at least generations. infectious tgev was efficiently recovered from cells transfected with the modified cdnas. the great advantage of this system is that the performance of coronavirus reverse genetics only involves recombinant dna technologies carried out within the bacteria. using tgev cdna the green fluorescent protein (gfp) gene of . kb was cloned in two positions of the rna genome: either by replacing the non-essential a and b genes or between genes n and . the engineered genome was very stable (> passages in cultured cells) and led to the production of high expression levels ( mg/ cells) when the gfp replaced genes a/b but was unstable when cloned between genes n and [ ] . in this case, the gfp gene was eliminated by homologous recombination between preexisting trs sequences and those introduced to express gfp. using the most stable vector, the acquisition of immunity by newborn piglets breast fed by immunized sows (lactogenic immunity) was demonstrated [ ] . gus expression levels using coronavirus based vectors are similar (fig. ) to those described for vectors derived from other positive strand rna viruses such as sindbis virus ( mg per cells) [ ] . a second procedure to assemble a full-length infectious construct of tgev was based on the in vitro ligation of six adjoining cdna subclones that span the entire tgev genome [ ] . each clone was engineered with unique flanking interconnecting junctions that determine a precise assembly with only the adjacent cdna subclones, resulting in a tgev cdna. in vitro transcripts derived from the full-length tgev construct were infectious. using this construct, a recombinant tgev was assembled that replaced orf a with the gfp gene, leading to the production of a recombinant tgev that grew with titers of pfu/ml and expressed gfp in a high proportion of cells [ ] . an infectious cdna clone has also been constructed for hcov- e, another member of group coronaviruses [ ] . in this case, the system is based on the in vitro transcription of infectious rna from a cdna copy of the hcov- e genome that has been cloned and propagated in vaccinia virus (fig. ) . briefly, the full-length genomic cdna clone of hcov- e was assembled by in vitro ligation, and then cloned into the vaccinia virus dna under control of the t promoter. recombinant vaccinia viruses containing the hcov- e genome were recovered after transfection of the recombinant vaccinia virus dna into cells infected with fowlpox virus. in a second phase, the recombinant vaccinia virus dna was purified and used as a template for in vitro transcription of hcov- e genomic rna that was transfected into susceptible cells for the recovery of infectious recombinant coronavirus (fig. ) . a coronavirus replicon has been derived from the hcov genome using the same procedure described for the full-length genome construction [ ] . this replicon included the and ends of the hcov- e genome, the replicase gene of this virus and a single reporter gene coding for gfp located downstream of a trs element for coronavirus mrna transcription. when rna transcribed from this cdna was transfected into bhk- cells, only . % of the cells showed strong fluorescence. this data shows that the coronavirus replicase gene products suffice for discontinuous sgmrna transcription, in agreement with the requirements for the arterivirus replicase [ ] . the expression of a heterologous gene (gfp) by a tgev replicon was increased between -and -fold when tgev n protein was in cis co-expressed [ ] . in addition, expression from a tgev replicon was also observed when n protein was in trans co-expressed using the venezuelan equine encephalitis virus vector [ ] . furthermore, expression from hcov based vectors also was significantly increased by co-expression of n gene. therefore, it seems that n protein either stabilizes coronavirus replicons or increases their replication, transcription or translation. reverse genetics in this coronavirus group has been efficiently performed by targeted recombination between a helper virus and either non-replicative or replicative coronavirus-derived rnas (fig. b. ). this approach, developed by masters' group [ , ] , was first applied to the engineering of a five-nucleotide insertion into the untranslated region ( utr) of mhv [ ] . this approach was facilitated by the availability of an n gene mutant, designated alb , that was both temperaturesensitive and thermolabile. alb forms tiny plaques at restrictive temperature that are easily distinguishable from wild-type plaques. in addition, incubation of alb virions at non-permissive temperature results in a -fold greater loss of titer than for wild-type virions. these phenotypic traits allowed the selection of recombinant viruses generated by a single crossover event following cotransfection into mouse cells of alb genomic rna together with a synthetic copy of the smallest subgenomic rna (rna ) tagged with a marker in the utr. an improvement of the recombination frequency was obtained between the helper virus and replicative defective rnas as the donor species. whereas between replication competent mhv and non-replicative rnas a recombination frequency of the order of À was estimated, the use of replicative donor rna yielded recombinants at a rate of some three orders of magnitude higher [ ] . this higher efficiency made it possible to screen for recombinants even in the absence of selection. in this manner, the transfer of silent mutation in rep a gene of a minigenome to wild-type mhv at a frequency of about % was demonstrated. targeted recombination has been applied to the generation of mutants in most of the coronavirus genes. thus, two silent mutations have been created so far in gene a [ ] . the s protein has also been modified by targeted recombination. changes were introduced by one crossover event at the end of the s gene that modified mhv pathogenicity [ ] . targeted recombination mediated by two cross-overs allowed the replacement of the s gene of a respiratory strain of tgev by the s gene of enteric tgev strain pur-c leading to the isolation of viruses with a modified tropism and virulence [ ] . in this case the recombinants were selected in vivo using their new tropism in piglets. a new strategy for the selection of recombinants within the s gene, after promoting targeting recombination, was based on elimination of the parental replicative tgev by the simultaneous neutralization with two mabs (i. sola and l. enjuanes, unpublished results). mutations have also been introduced by targeted mutagenesis within the e and m genes. these mutants provided corroboration for the pivotal role of e protein in coronavirus assembly and identified the carboxyl terminus of the m molecule as crucial to assembly [ ] . targeted recombination was also used to express heterologous genes. for instance, the gene encoding gfp was inserted into mhv between genes s and e, resulting in the creation of the largest known rna viral genome [ ] . an infectious mhv cdna clone has recently been assembled in vitro. a method similar to the one developed to assemble an infectious tgev cdna clone based on the in vitro ligation of seven contiguous cdna subclones has been applied to the construction of a cdna that spanned the . kb of the mhv a strain [ ] . the ends of the cdnas were engineered with unique junctions, which were directed to assembly with only the adjacent cdnas subclone, resulting in an intact mhv-a cdna construct. the interconnecting restriction site junctions that are located at the ends of each cdna are systematically removed during the assembly of the complete full-length cdna product, allowing reassembly without the introduction of nucleotide changes. rna transcripts derived from the full-length mhv-a construct was infectious, although virus recovery was enhanced - -fold in the presence of rna transcripts encoding the nucleocapsid protein, n. the infectious ibv cdna clone was assembled using the same strategy reported for hcov- e with some modifications [ ] . similarly to hcov- e, the ibv genomic cdna was assembled downstream of the t promoter by in vitro ligation and cloned into the vaccinia virus dna. however, recovery of recombinant ibv was done after the in situ synthesis of infectious ibv rna by transfection of restricted recombinant vaccinia virus dna (containing the ibv genome) into primary chick kidney cells previously infected with a recombinant fowlpox expressing t rna polymerase. engineered cdnas are having an important impact on the study of mechanisms of coronavirus replication and transcription and provide an invaluable tool for the experimental investigation of virus-host interactions. replication-competent propagation-deficient virus vectors based on tgev genomes deficient in the essential gene e that are complemented in packaging cell lines have been developed [ , ] . two types of cell lines expressing tgev e protein have been established, one with transient expression using the non-cytopathic sindbis virus replicon psinrep (fig. ) and another stably expressing e gene under the cmv promoter. the rescue of recombinant tgev deficient in the non-essential a and b genes, and the essential e gene reached high titers (>  pfu/ml) in cells transiently expressing the tgev e protein, while this titer was up to  pfu/ml in packaging cell lines stably expressing protein e. interestingly, virus titers were related to protein e expression levels [ ] . recovered virions showed the same morphology and stability at different ph and temperatures than the wild type virus. a second strategy for the construction of replication-competent propagationdefective tgev genomes expressing heterologous genes, involves the assembly of an infectious cdna from six cdna fragments that are ligated in vitro [ ] . the defective virus with the essential e gene deleted was complemented by the expression of e gene using the venezuelan equine encephalitis replicon expression vector. however, titers of recombinant tgev-Áe expressing the gfp were at least -or -fold lower (around pfu/ml) than with the system using stably transformed cells or the sin vector to complement deletion of the e gene [ ] . coronavirus minigenomes have a theoretical cloning capacity close to kb, since their rna with a size of about kb is efficiently amplified and packaged by the helper virus and the virus genome has about kb. in contrast, the theoretical cloning capacity for an expression system based on a single coronavirus genome like tgev according to current available knowledge is between and . kb taking into account that: (i) the non-essential genes a ( . kb), b ( . kb), and most of gene [ ] have been deleted leading to a viable virus; (ii) the standard s gene can be replaced by the s gene of a porcine respiratory coronavirus (prcv) mutant with a deletion of . kb; and (iii) both dna and rna viruses may accept genomes with sizes up to % of the wild type genome. this cloning capacity will probably be enlarged by deleting non-essential domains of the replicase gene. these domains are being identified by comparing the arterivirus replicase gene (i.e., for eav .  nt) and that of coronavirus (i.e., for tgev .  nt) [ ] . differences in size between these two replicase genes could correspond to nonessential domains in the coronavirus replicase that may be dispensable. to optimize expression levels it is essential to improve virus vector replication levels without increasing virulence, to optimize the accumulation of total mrna levels, and to improve mrna translation. these results can only be achieved by determining the mechanism involved in these processes. a brief review of the mechanism of mrna transcription in coronavirus and arterivirus is described to help achieve this goal. coronavirus rna synthesis occurs in the cytoplasm via a negative-strand rna intermediate that contains short stretches of oligo(u) at the end. both genome-size and subgenomic negative-strand rnas, which correspond in number of species and size to those of the virus-specific mrnas have been detected [ , ] . coronavirus mrnas have a leader sequence at their ends. at the start site of every transcription unit on the viral genomic rna, there is a trs that includes a highly conserved core sequence (cs) that is nearly homologous to the end of the leader rna. this sequence constitutes part of the signal for sgmrna transcription. the common leader sequence is only found at the very terminus of the genome, which implies that the synthesis of sgmrnas involves fusion of non-contiguous sequences. the mechanism involved in this process is under debate. nevertheless, the discontinuous transcription during negative-strand rna synthesis model is compatible with most of the experimental evidence [ ] [ ] [ ] . because the leader-mrna junction occurs during the synthesis of the negative strand within the sequence complementary to the cs (ccs) the nature of the cs is considered crucial for mrna synthesis. transcription levels may be influenced by many factors. the three that we [ ] consider most relevant are: (i) potential base pairing between the leader end and sequences complementary to the trs located at the end of each nidovirus gene (ctrs), that guide the fusion between the nascent negative strand and the leader trs. a minimum complementarity is needed between the leader-trs and the ctrss of each gene. extension of this complementarity increases mrna synthesis up to a certain extent, beyond a certain extension addition of or cs flanking sequences does not help transcription [ , , ] ; (ii) proximity of a gene to the . since the trss act as signals to slow down or stop the replicase complex, the smaller mrnas should be the most abundant. although this has been shown to be the case in the mononegavirales [ ] and in coronaviruses shorter mrnas are in general more abundant, the relative abundance of coronavirus mrnas is not strictly related to their proximity to the end [ , ] ; and (iii) potential interaction of proteins with the trss rna, and protein-protein interactions that could regulate transcription levels. the reassociation of the nascent rna chain with the leader trs is probably mediated by approximation of the leader trs through rna-protein and protein-protein interactions. the three factors implicated in the control of mrna abundance assume a key role for the trs. hence, in order to engineer vectors with high expression levels, it seems relevant to define the characteristics of the trs, including the size of the and trs sequences flanking the cs. the cs of coronaviruses belonging to groups i (hexamer -cuaaac- ) and ii (heptamer -ucuaaac- ) share homology, whereas the cs of coronaviruses belonging to group iii, like that of ibv, have the most divergent sequence ( -cuuaacaa- ). also, arterivirus css have a sequence ( -ucaacu- ) that partially resembles that of ibv. thus, the css of different coronaviruses are quite similar though slightly different in length. this cs is essential for mrna synthesis, and can be considered to be a defined domain in the trs because it is particularly conserved within a nidovirus family, while the flanking sequences, both at the ( trss) and at the ( trss) have a unique composition for each gene even within the same virus. the influence of the cs in transcription has been analyzed in detail in the arteriviruses [ , ] . using an infectious cdna clone of eav it has been shown that sgmrna synthesis requires base pairing interaction between the leader trs and ctrs in the viral negative strand. the construction of double mutants in which a mutant leader cs was combined with the corresponding mutant rna body cs, resulting in the specific restoration of mrna synthesis, suggested that the sequence of the cs per se is not crucial, as long as the possibility for cs base pairing is maintained. nevertheless, it has been shown that other factors, besides leader-body base pairing, also play a role in sgmrna synthesis and that the primary sequence (or secondary structure) of trss may dictate strong base preferences at certain positions [ ] . in addition, detailed analysis of the trs used in the arteriviruses [ ] , mhv [ ] , bcov [ ] , and tgev [ ] indicate that non-canonical cs sequences may also be used for the switch during the discontinuous synthesis of the negative strand during transcription in the nidovirales. the promotion of transcription from a given cs is also a function of the cs flanking sequences. data from different laboratories working with different nidoviruses have shown that cs flanking sequences can critically influence the strength of a given fusion site [ , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] . although approximations to the definition of the trs have been made, the precise length of the trs requires further work to optimize accumulation of mrna levels. studies on coronavirus transcription were performed using more than one cs to express the same mrna. the accumulated amounts of sgmrna remained nearly the same for constructs with one to three css, and transcription preferentially occurred at the -most trs [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . this observation is consistent with the coronavirus discontinuous transcription during the negative-strand synthesis model [ ] . driving vector expression to different tissues may be highly convenient in order to preferentially induce a specific type of immune response, i.e., mucosal immunity by targeting the expression to gut-associated lymph nodes. in addition, it seems useful to change the species specificity of the vector to expand its use. both tissue-and species-specificity have been modified using coronavirus genomes. group coronaviruses attach to host cells through the s glycoprotein by interactions with aminopeptidase n (apn) which is the cellular receptor [ , ] . group coronaviruses use the carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecules (ceacam) as receptors. engineering the s gene can lead to changes both in the tissue-and species-specificity [ , ] . tropism change in general leads to a change in virulence. certainly this is the case in porcine coronavirus with a virulence directly related to its ability to grow in the enteric tract [ ] . gene expression among the non-segmented negative-stranded rna viruses is controlled by the highly conserved order of genes relative to the single transcriptional promoter. rearrangement of the genes of vesicular stomatitis virus eliminates clinical disease in the natural host and is considered a new strategy for vaccine development [ ] . in coronavirus, genes closer to the end are in general expressed more abundantly than end distal ones and, in principle, gene order change can also lead to virus attenuation (p. rottier, personal communication). the arteriviridae include four members: eav, prrsv, shfv and lactate dehydrogenase-elevating virus of mice (ldhv). defective genomes of eav have been isolated and used to express a reporter gene (cat) in cell culture [ ] . more interestingly, infectious cdna clones have been obtained for eav [ ] , prrsv [ , ] and shfv [ ] creating the possibility of specifically altering their genomes for vector development and vaccine production. to insert genes in different positions a unique restriction endonuclease site has been introduced between consecutive eav genes [ ] . the viruses recovered expressed epitopes of nine amino acids from mhv within the ectodomain of the membrane (m) protein for at least three passages [ ] . foreign epitopes have also been expressed by using prrsv vectors [ ] . both helper-dependent expression systems, based on two components, and single genomes constructed by targeted recombination, or by using infectious cdnas, have been developed for coronaviruses. the sequences that regulate transcription have been characterized mainly using helper-dependent expression systems. these expression systems have the advantage of their large cloning capacity, in principle higher than kb, produce reasonable amounts of heterologous antigens ( - mg/ cells), show a limited stability (synthesis of heterologous gene is maintained for around passages), and elicit strong immune responses. in contrast, coronavirus vectors based on single genomes have at present a limited cloning capacity ( - . kb), expression levels of heterologous genes are -fold over those of helper dependent systems (> mg/ cells) and are very stable (> passages). furthermore, replication-competent propagation-deficient expression systems based on coronavirus genomes have been developed increasing the safety of these vectors. the possibility of expressing different genes under the control of trss with programmable strength, and engineering the tissue and species tropism indicate that coronavirus vectors are very flexible. thus, coronavirus-based vectors are emerging with a high potential for vaccine development and, possibly, for gene therapy. van regenmortel, m.h.v. virus taxonomy. classification and nomenclature of viruses virus taxonomy. classification and nomenclature of viruses proc. natl. acad. sci. usa the nidoviruses (coronaviruses and arteriviruses) proc. natl. acad. sci. usa proc. natl. acad. sci. usa proc. natl. acad. sci. usa this work has been supported by grants from the comisio´n interministerial de ciencia y tecnologı´a (cicyt), la consejerı´a de educacio´n y cultura de la comunidad de madrid, and fort dodge veterinaria from spain, and the european communities (life sciences program, key action : infectious diseases). key: cord- -il gs authors: jayapal, manikandan; tay, hwee kee; reghunathan, renji; zhi, liang; chow, kah kiong; rauff, mary; melendez, alirio j title: genome-wide gene expression profiling of human mast cells stimulated by ige or fcεri-aggregation reveals a complex network of genes involved in inflammatory responses date: - - journal: bmc genomics doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: il gs background: mast cells are well established effectors of ige-triggered allergic reactions and immune responses to parasitic infections. recent studies indicate that mast cells may play roles in adaptive and innate immunity, suggesting an innovative view of the regulation of immune responses. here, we profiled the transcriptome of human mast cells sensitized with ige alone, or stimulated by fcεri aggregation. results: our data show that among , genes examined, genes are differentially regulated in stimulated mast cells when compared with resting/unstimulated mast cells. the major functional categories of upregulated genes include cytokines, chemokines, and other genes involved in innate and adaptive immune-responses. we observed the increased expression of over gene-transcripts following ige-sensitization alone. our data was validated using real-time-pcr; elisa and western blot. we confirmed that ige alone does not trigger mast cell-immediate responses, such as calcium signals, degranulation or protein-phosphorylation. conclusion: this report represents a substantial advance in our understanding of the genome wide effects triggered by "passive sensitization" or active stimulation of human mast cells, supporting mast cells' potential involvement in a wide range of inflammatory responses. mast cells are best known for their role in immunoglobulin e (ige)-dependent allergic responses as one of the most powerful reactions of the immune system [ ] . recent studies suggest that mast cells may also be involved in innate and adaptive immunity by producing high levels of chemokines and cytokines [ ] [ ] [ ] . mast cells are derived from haematopoietic progenitor cells that enter nearly all vascularized tissues, where they complete their maturation and, in some cases, can migrate into epithelia [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . after appropriate activation, such as the aggregation of the high affinity ige receptor (fcεri), mast cells can produce a range of pro-inflammatory mediators, including cytokines and chemokines [ , ] . crosslinking of fcεri-bound ige with multivalent antigen initiates the activation of mast cells by promoting the aggregation of fcεri [ , ] . this fcεri-dependent cell activation process has three major outcomes: degranulation, secretion of preformed mediators stored in cytoplasmic granules -these granules contain vasoactive amines, neutral proteases, proteoglycans and some cytokines and growth factors; the de novo synthesis of pro-inflammatory lipid mediators (such as eicosanoids); and the synthesis and secretion of cytokines and chemokines [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . mast cells are regarded as key effector cells in ige-associated immediate hypersensitivity reactions and allergic conditions, as well as in certain immune responses to parasites [ ] . because the ige dependent release of proinflammatory mediators can begin within minutes of antigen challenge, the crucial role of mast cells in acute allergic reactions, such as anaphylaxis and acute attacks of atopic asthma, is now widely accepted [ , , , ] . on the other hand, the role of mast cells in chronic inflammation and other long-term tissue changes that are observed in some ige associated diseases, including asthma, still debated [ ] . however, in recent studies it is suggested that mast cells can markedly enhance antigen-dependent airway hyper reactivity, airway eosinophil infiltration, and the increased number of proliferating cells in the airway epithelium [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . these reports and other lines of evidence, suggest that a key role of mast cells in igeassociated immune responses is to amplify both acute and long-term local tissue responses to relatively weak biological signals [ , , , ] . moreover, through their ability to release immunoregulatory cytokines, and perhaps through other mechanisms, mast cells might also influence the development, strength and persistence of thelper cell-associated immunity. however, such immunoregulatory functions of mast cells have not been fully characterized. mast cells have also been proposed to play a role in mediating bacterial clearance by releasing cytokines, and by ingesting and killing opsonized bacteria, suggesting that mast cells have a physiological role in modulating host defenses against infectious agents [ ] . mast cell products, such as tryptase and histamine, can influence the immune-response by recruiting neutrophils or by activating other immune-effector cells [ ] . these previous findings show that mast cells, apart from being principal players in allergies, appear have effects in the initiation and regulation of innate immunity. there is increasing evidence demonstrating that the innate and adaptive immune systems cooperate through shared signaling mechanisms, and very recently it was shown that mast cells may regulate the recruitment of t-cells to lymph nodes [ ] . several groups have carried out limited gene expression profiles of mast cells, without any stimuli [ ] [ ] [ ] ; stimulated by cytokines [ ] ; triggered by antigens and in response to the inhibition of calcium-atpase [ ] ; or stimulated by tlr [ ] ; or focused on the cytokine/ chemokine profile triggered by fcεri aggregation [ ] [ ] [ ] . a recent study has shown that ige alone can induce the release of the interlukin- (il- ) and of the monocyte chemoattractant protein (mcp- ) [ ] . however, many aspects of the genetic responses triggered by ige-antigen on human mast cells are still unclear, such as the overall genetic responses to ige sensitization alone, or widegenome expression profile triggered by fcεri aggregation. thus, we decided to analyze the differential gene expression profile of , fully-annotated genes, after ige sensitization, and following fcεri aggregation. the data we present here show that, over genes were differentially regulated in the stimulated cells, when compared to unstimulated cells (basal). a substantial number of genes were regulated by ige sensitization alone; and following fcεri aggregation, a wide range of genes were triggered, including genes for cytokines, chemokines, transcription factors, anti-apoptosis, and several genes involved in innate and acquired immunity. some of the most prominent findings are the upregulation of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, involved in innate and adaptive immunity. we also observed the upregulation of several receptors involved in innate immune reactions. we confirmed that ige alone does not trigger mast cell-immediate responses, such as calcium signals, degranulation or protein-tyrosine phosphorylation, whereas fcεri aggregation did indeed trigger these immediate responses. thus, these results represent a substantial advance in our understanding of the genomewide effects triggered by the physiological "passive sensitization" or "active stimulation" of human mast cells, and suggest that mast cell activation may not only play a pivotal role in allergic responses, but may influence the regulation of other inflammatory immune responses. perhaps the most important factor for mast cell development, survival and proliferation is stem-cell factor (scf or c-kit ligand) [ ] , although several lines of evidence also indicate il- as a crucial factor for mast cell development, survival and proliferation [ ] . human mast cells are very difficult to isolate in numbers that would allow for wide-genome expression profiling studies: for that reason we isolated cd + progenitor hematopoietic cells from umbilical cord blood and differentiated them to mast cells by culturing with the cytokines scf and il- . after culturing cd + progenitor cells with cytokines for - weeks, cells were characterized as mast cells by flow cytometry as positive for the specific mast cell marker intracellular chymase; positive c-kit/cd + and fcεri + , and by toluidine blue staining ( figure ). purity was estimated at > %. our aim is to study the global gene expression pattern induced by ige sensitization and fcεri aggregation on human mast cells. gene expression analysis using cdna or oligo-dna microarrays has proven to be a sensitive method to develop and refine the molecular determinants of several human disorders, including cancer and autoimmune diseases. we analyzed the expression pattern of , transcripts from the stimulated mast cells, and compared the expression patterns with control/unstimulated samples. the complete gene expression data of our experiments, representing , probeid is available at the ncbis gene expression omnibus [ ] , and is accessible through geo series accession number gse ( ) . the microarray analysis revealed that genes (~ . %) were differentially expressed between resting and stimulated mast cells with statistical significance (p ≤ . ), which were hierarchically clustered ( figure ). because of the relatively large number of genes that were differentially regulated, we focused on genes that were upregulated by at least a -fold in any time point of mast cell stimulation. of the genes, genes were initially upregulated (at least -fold) by ige-sensitization alone (table. ), and a total of genes were overexpressed (by -fold or more in at least one time point), during the time course of mast cell activation by ige-alone or after crosslinking fcεri (table. ). in order to examine the global characteristics of these genes, we used the gene ontology consortium database for biological processes [ ] . using this database we analyzed the genes that were upregulated by at least fold, thus, allowing us to separate the genes, into the following functional families: (a) cytokines and cytokine receptors; (b) chemokines and chemokine receptors; (c) other immunoregulatory genes; (d) cell proliferation and anti-apoptosis; (e) adhesion and cytoskeleton remodeling; (f) transcription factors and regulators of transcription; (g) signal transduction; (h) genes involved in other cellular functions "others" (table & figure ) our study revealed that substantial changes in gene expression in response to monomeric-ige sensitization alone. in order to ensure that the human ige (ige, cat: -ai , lot number a , fitzgerald, concord, ma), used in this study was indeed monomeric ige, prior to each experiment; we run a sample of the ige through nondenaturing polyachrylamide-gel-electrophosys (nonreducing-page). no aggregates were observed at any time (data not shown). we focused the analysis of our data on genes that were upregulated by at least -fold, over basal levels, and identified genes that were increased by ige sensitization alone (table. ). we then separated them into different categories, based on their biological function (determined by public databases). among the most prominent findings was the upregulation of genes coding for the cytokines il- β ( . fold), il- ( . fold), and csf ( . fold); genes coding for the chemokines il- (cxcl ) ( . fold), mip β (ccl ) ( . fold), mcp (ccl ) ( . fold), groα (cxcl ) ( . fold) and groγ (cxcl ) ( . fold), were also upregulated. other than these, several genes coding for other receptors involved in immune-responses; immunoregulatory genes; adhesion and/or cytoskeleton remodeling; regulators of apoptosis; signal transduction; transcription factors; were also upregulated by monomeric ige (table. ). thus, these results suggest that "passive" sensitization of mast cells, with monomeric ige, may not only prime mast cells to be ready for the challenge to come, but that mast cells may also have the potential to purity of mast cells an interesting finding in our study was upregulation of genes coding for the pyrogenic and proinflammatory cytokines il- β, il- ( table. a). one of the key roles for il- β is to trigger the upregulation of key proinflammatory proteins [ ] . we also observed the upregulation of ptx (pentaxin-related gene) ( table. c): ptx is a protein involved in inflammation that is rapidly upregulated by il- β. other cytokine genes that were upregulated are csf (a growth promoting cytokine), and the cytokine receptors il r , il ra, tnfrsf , tnfrsf and il rn (table. a). we also found that the level of expression of genes coding for the chemokines il- (cxcl ), ccl (mcp ), ccl (mip β) and cxcl (groα) was increased (table b) . il- plays a major role in inflammatory responses mainly due to its ability to recruit and activate neutrophils. ccl , ccl and cxcl are known to recruit monocytes, nk, basophils, dendritic cells and th cells. moreover, our data also show that several other chemokine genes were upregulated during mast cell stimulation: these include ccl (rantes), cxcl (groγ), and the chemokine receptor ccrl (table. b). these data suggest a key role for fcεri in triggering an a wide range of inflammatory responses, as the over-expression of cytokines and chemokines is a prerequisite to triggering inflammation, including vascular permeability, and leukocyte and lymphocyte recruitment, differentiation and activation. several genes involved in innate and adaptive immuneresponse were upregulated at least by -fold during mast cell stimulation: these include the toll like receptor (tlr ), as well as several genes of the tnfα signaling pathways, including tnfaip (table. c). these findings support previous reports of the role of mast cells in innate immunity and antibacterial activity [ ] . transcripts of genes lif, cd , and cd were also upregulated, as were the major histocompatibility complex genes (hla-dqb , and hke ) and inhibitory receptor of igg, fcgr b (table. c). the generation of transcripts for such genes suggests that mast cells can acquire characteristics typical of cells involved in innate and adaptive immune responses. several genes involved in cell proliferation and survival, such as pdgfa (platelet-derived growth factor alpha polypeptide), pdgfb (platelet-derived growth factor beta polypeptide), pbef (pre-b-cell colony-enhancing factor), tieg (tgfb inducible early growth response), and insig (insulin induced gene ) were upregulated, as well as several anti-apoptosis genes including tnfaip changes in gene expression in human mast cells following ige sensitization and fcεri aggregation figure changes in gene expression in human mast cells following ige sensitization and fcεri aggregation. changes in expression over control of human cord blood derived mast cells that were activated by ige sensitization and fcεri crosslinking for different time points ( hr, hr and hr). labelled crna from cell of each time point were hybridized to human genome focus array and signals were scanned after fluidics. the data was analyzed as described in material and methods and analysis revealed differential expression of genes between resting and stimulated mast cells with statistical significance (p ≤ . ). agglomerative average-linkage hierarchical clustering of the five different experimental conditions was obtained for selected groups of genes using genespring . . each colored box represents the normalized expression level of a given gene in a particular experimental condition and is colored according to the color bar. the data represent average of four independent experiments. sensitised h h h fold change color bar table (table. d ). this supports the fact that, in the initial stages of mast cell activation, several mediators produced are mainly for cell proliferation and survival [ ] . thus, fcεri aggregation may enhance mast cell proliferation and survival, perhaps owing to the autocrine effects of the cytokines, growth factors, and antiapoptotic proteins, triggered by fcεri aggregation. nm_ . ccl chemokine (c-c motif) ligand . . . - . nm_ . cxcl chemokine (c-x-c motif) ligand . . . - . nm_ . ccl chemokine (c-c motif) ligand . . . . nm_ . cxcl chemokine (c-x-c motif) ligand . . . - . nm_ . ccl chemokine (c-c motif) ligand . . . . af ccrl chemokine (c-c motif) receptor- another functional characteristic of immune-cell activation is the coordinated expression of genes involved in cell adhesion and cytoskeleton remodeling (table. e). of particular importance are the genes coding for proteins involved in cell motility, cytokinesis, endocytosis and exocytosis. we found at least -fold upregulation of various genes coding for proteins involved in cell adhesion, such as flrt (fibronectin leucine rich transmembrane protein ), kal (kallmann syndrome sequence), cd (cd antigen), and alcam (activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule); as well as for several gene-transcripts involved in cytoskeleton remodeling, including rasal (ras protein activator like ), arhe (ras homolog gene family, member e), arf (adp-ribosylation factor ), and flnb (filamin b, β-actin binding protein ) (table. e). the expression of genes involved in cell adhesion and cytoskeleton remodeling is an essential step in immunecell activation. resting immune cells have cytoskeletal structures that sequester antigen, chemokine, and adhesion receptors in accessible regions of the plasma membrane. upon activation, reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton leads to the formation of supramolecular activation clusters, bringing receptors and costimulatory molecules together, as well as important adaptor proteins that promote the sustained activation of the cell. stimulation of immune-effector cells through their antigen receptors initiates cell cycle entry and changes the gene expression pattern, a response generally referred to as "activation". we found that the genes for several transcription factors were upregulated during ige-sensitization and fcεri aggregation, including the transcription factors most active during an immune response, such as nfκb and nfat (table. f). we observed an increase in the transcripts for the nuclear factor of kappa light polypeptide genes , alpha, and epsilon (nfκb , a, and e), and pie chart showing the percentage distribution of the upregulated genes figure pie chart showing the percentage distribution of the upregulated genes. a. percentage distribution of the total amount of genes upregulated. all the genes, observed to be upregulated at least -fold at any given time point, were distributed, according to their biological function described in b the nuclear factor of activated t cells, nfatc (table. f ). other transcription factors upregulated were the oncogenes myc (v-myc myelo-cytomatosis viral oncogene homolog), and maff (v-maf musculo-aponeurotic fibrosarcoma oncogene homolog f) ( table. f). interestingly, the activities of nfκb and nfat together are responsible for the transcription of many proinflammatory genes, including several genes coding for cytokines and chemokines [ , ] . during mast cell activation, many signaling molecules are engaged in diverse responses, ranging from calcium release from internal stores, degranulation, the generation of lipid-derived proinflammatory mediators and the production of cytokines and chemokines. in our study we observed that a substantial number of genes coding for intracellular signaling proteins were upregulated, by at least -fold ( (table. g ). moreover, we show here the upregulation of genes that code for oxidized low density lipoprotein receptor (olr ), and for the low density lipoprotein receptor (ldlr) ( table. g), indicating a potential role for mast cells in cholesterol homeostasis. of particular interest is the upregulation of the gene coding for the lipid kinase, sphingosine kinase (sphk ) ( table. g). we and others have previously reported that sphk plays a critical role in the intracellular signaling pathways triggered by fcεri in mast cells [ , ] , and coordinates several physiological responses triggered by activated mast cells. we confirmed our microarrays findings by real time pcr on selected genes such as il- β il , il- , mcp , rantes and sphk , utilizing an aliquot of the same rna sample that was used for the microarray experiments ( figure ) . the results showed that the messenger rna for the selected genes follows a similar pattern of expression to that observed with the oligo-dna microarray experiment, thus confirming the results and the quality of the data obtained with the high-density microarrays. mast cell activation also results in the sustained de novo production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and chemokines both of which may contribute to the inflammation and pathology underlying allergic disease as well as in innate and acquired immunity. the amounts of these cytokines were measured by elisa and depicted in figure a . fcεri-triggered generation of il- β, il- , il- , ccl (mcp ) and ccl (rantes), whereas ige sensitization alone triggered smaller amounts of il- β and mcp , high amount of il- , and very less amounts of il- and rantes ( figure a ). we verified the differential expression of sphk by western blot analysis ( figure b ). its levels of expression were found to be consistent with that of microarray as well as real time pcr results. thus, these data together with real time pcr data validate microarray results. mast cell activation via fcεri triggers exocytosis of granules containing pre-formed inflammatory mediators in a tyrosine kinase and calcium dependent manner. here we studied, whether monomeric-ige alone, may activate fcεri intracellular signaling pathways, leading to physiological responses of mast cells, by analyzing the overall tyrosine phosphorylation; fluctuations in cytosolic ca + concentration; and degranulation by measuring β-hexosaminidase release (fig. a,b & c) . we show here that in our experimental setting monomeric-ige alone is not able to trigger any changes on the overall protein-tyrosine phosphorylation patterns compared with resting cells; nor was it able to trigger calcium release from internal stores; neither degranulation. on the other hand fcεri-aggregation did indeed trigger all these responses (fig. a,b & c ). binding of ige to fcεri enhances the cell surface expression of fcεri, as a result, its ability to promote the stabilization/accumulation of fcεri on the mast cell surface in the presence of continued basal levels of protein synthesis [ , ] . it is possible that most of the enhanced ige dependent functions that are observed after antigen or anti-ige-induced fcεri aggregation, in cells that have been sensitized with ige, are a consequence of the higher level of fcεri expression. however, a controversial question remains as to whether monomeric ige can also have more direct effects on mast cell functions. many studies over the years have shown no evidence that the binding of monomeric ige can induce detectable signaling or production of mediators by mast cells. however, some groups have reported that monomeric ige can enhance mast cell survival and trigger cytokine production [ , , ] . in con- con sen h h h trast, a recent study by matsuda et al [ ] , fail to find any ability of ige to enhance mast cell survival on withdrawal of scf. interestingly, the study by matsuda et al, also showed that ige sensitization alone can induce the upregulation of cytokines and chemokines at the protein level, namely il- and mcp [ ] . in agreement to this, we show that il- is induced by ige alone at the mrna as well as at the protein level (table , and figures and ) , in contrast we could not detect any significant increment on mcp- levels, we can speculate that this difference could be due to the different amounts ige used ( µg/ml vs . µg/ml). however, we also show the upregulation of various chemokines, including the mcp- -related protein mcp- , which was also upregulated by ige alone (table , and figures and ) . in our present study, we found that several genes related to proliferation were upregulated by ige alone (table ) ; however, whether these genes, if fully transcribed, may be able to trigger mast cell proliferation in the absence of scf is not known. the observation that ige alone can induce the upregulation of a substantial number of genes encoding for cytokines and chemokines, has profound implications in our understanding of the role of mast cell in inflammation. cytokines and chemokines share many activities, including the ability to induce fever and shock syndrome in animal models [ ] . cytokine and chemokine production are universal components of a wide range of disease states, including immune-complex-mediated conditions such as nephritis [ ] , arthritis [ ] , and acute graft rejec- [ ] . these data suggest a potential role for mast cells in triggering, or at least contributing to, strong inflammatory responses. in is also interesting to mention that, several genes encoding for transcription factors were upregulated by monomeric-ige and fcεri aggregation. perhaps the most prominent of these transcription factors, is nfκb. nfκb represents a family of related proteins which dimerize to form transactivating complexes [ ] . nfκb dimmers are sequestered in the cytoplasm by interaction with inhibitory proteins (the iκbs). various stimuli activate kinase signaling cascades that result in the phosphorylation and degradation of iκb, thereby releasing nfκb to translocate to the nucleus, where it activates transcription of target genes. many studies have emphasized the role of this transcription factor in regulating genes at critical points in immune-cell development and activation [ ] . many nfκb targets are antiapoptotic [ ] , which may explain the importance of the nfκb pathway in oncogenesis and resistance to chemotherapy [ , ] . during an immuneresponse several genes are triggered by the nfκb, these include genes coding for the various proinflammatory molecules, such as mips, il- β, il- , il- , tnfα, groα and other cytokines, chemokines and cell adhesion molecules icam, vcam and selectins [ ] . as immune cells progress through development and respond to antigenic challenge, they trigger signal transduction pathways that alter their cellular functions and the activity of transcription factors, changing their effector functions and their gene expression profiles. during mast cell activation, many signaling molecules are engaged in diverse responses, ranging from calcium release from internal stores, degranulation, the generation of lipidderived proinflammatory mediators and the production of cytokines and chemokines. in our study we observed that a substantial number of genes coding for intracellular signaling proteins were upregulated, by at least -fold, during mast cell stimulation (table. g). interestingly, we observed a substantial upregulation of the mrna for sphingosine kinase (sphk ), even by ige alone, this upregulation was also confirmed at the protein level. sphingosine kinases are novel enzymes that phosphorylate sphingosine (a membrane lipid), to generate the bioactive molecule sphingosine- -phosphate (spp), which is implicated in several inflammatory responses. we and others have previously reported that sphk plays a critical role in the intracellular signaling pathways triggered by fcεri in mast cells [ , ] , and coordinates several physiological responses triggered by activated mast cells. we showed that sphk is involved in the calcium signals triggered by fcεri aggregation in human mast cells, as well as playing a critical role for mast cell degranulation [ ] . previously, we reported a pivotal role for mast cell activation: tyrosine phosphorylation, calcium sig-nals, degranulation figure mast cell activation: tyrosine phosphorylation, calcium signals, degranulation. a. analysis of overall protein phosphorylation on tyrosine residues. upper panel; overall tyrosine-phosphorylation pattern was analysed in cell extracts from: control unstimulated cells (basal); cells treated with ige alone for (ige) for min; and after fcεri crosllinking for min (xlfcεri). lower panel; the blots were probed for α-tubulin (control for equal loading). results shown are representative of four separate experiments. b. levels of intracellular free calcium. intracellular calcium measurements of mast cells following addition of ige alone (ige); and following the addition of the anti-human ige, to igesensitized cells (xlfcεri), the intracellular calcium levels were analyzed in a continuous reading for the timesstated in the graph. results shown are the mean plus the standard deviation of triplicate measurements and are representative of four separate experiments. c. degranulation. b-hexosaminidase release was determined from control-unstimulated mast cells (basal); following monomeric-igesensitization for minutes (ige); and following fcεri aggregation by addition of the anti-human ige to sensitized cells for minutes (xlfcεri). results shown are the mean plus the standard deviation of triplicate measurements and are representative of four separate experiments. [ , ] , showing that sphk is key in triggering calcium release from internal stores, and the activation of the phagocyte nadph oxidase. moreover, very recently we demonstrated the role of sphk in inflammatory responses triggered by the anaphylatoxin c a in human neutrophil and macrophages. these responses include: calcium signals, degranulation, cytokine production and chemotaxis triggered by c a [ , ] . the observation that the gene encoding for sphk is activated during ige-sensitization of mast cells, coupled to the findings above may indicate a key role for sphk in mast cell triggered responses. the significance of this research supports the notion that, activation of mast cells appear to be linked to a wide range of pathologies, not only in allergies (as is widely recognized), but potentially in other inflammatory conditions. the method of global gene expression analysis using cdna or oligo-dna microarrays has proven to be a sensitive method to identify and define/redefine the molecular determinants of several human disorders, including cancer and autoimmune diseases, and has provided us with signatures of the immune response [ ] . using this technology, complemented with powerful analytical methods, we compared the gene expression profiles of human mast cells stimulated by ige sensitization, and from a series of time points of fcεri aggregation, with unstimulated/control human mast cells. whether changes in gene expression, under these conditions, are representative of a pathological state is not currently known. it is also not known whether ige/antigen and fcεri aggregation will trigger the same set of genes in an organism, where a number of events may be activating mast cells at the same time. however, taken together, our data brings us better insights into the molecular basis of mast cell activation, and provides meaningful information, regarding the mechanisms by which mast cell activation may contribute to the overall activation of the immune response, having clinical implication for improving not only allergic conditions but potentially other inflammatory diseases, where mast cells may play a role. this study is an attempt to elucidate the molecular mechanisms which mast cells undergo during "priming" ige sensitization and full activation by fcεri aggregation in a global perspective. in conclusion, our present study provides information that mast cells, by generating a broad range of cytokines and chemokines, may be a potent contributor of the immune response by recruiting and/or activating other immune-effector cells including the activation of lymphocytes that may, in turn, continue the spreading of the inflammatory response. moreover, changes in the gene expression pattern of transcription factors, intracellular signaling molecules, and cytoskeletal remodeling and anti-apoptosis pathways occur, which would also contribute to the amplification of the inflammatory response. mast cells are well established innate immune-effector cells, and there is mounting evidence to, at least, suggest that mast cells may contribute to the development of acquired immunity [ , ] , whether in host defense or in allergic or autoimmune diseases. it will be pivotal to define in more detail whether and under which circumstances mast cells may influence the development and/or magnitude of acquired immune responses. unless specifically stated all materials and reagents were purchased from sigma-aldrich (singapore). human umbilical cord blood (cb) samples were collected from normal full-term deliveries of informed individuals with formal consents, meeting the universality institutional review board guidelines, for research using human samples. cd + haematopoietic progenitor-cells were harvested using macs cell isolation kit (miltenyi biotec), following the manufacturer's instructions. the isolated cd + haematopoietic progenitor-cells were cultured for - -weeks in the presence of ng/ml of stem cell factor (scf cat: - , peprotec, rocky hill, nj), and for the first week this was supplemented with ng/ml of interleukin- (il- cat: - , peprotec, rocky hill, nj). cells were shown to be differentiated by staining them for specific mast cell markers as follows: for mast cells chymase, with an anti-human chymase mab (igg -mab , chemicon, temecula, ca), and fitc-conjugated secondary antibody (anti-mouse igg-fitc, sigma-aldrich, singapore); for c-kit with anti-human c-kit mouse monoclonal pe-conjugated (cat. no. ; clone yb .b , bd biosciences -pharmigen, singapore), isotype control anti-mouse ige-pe (cat. no. ; clone mopc- , bd biosciences -pharmigen, singapore); and for fcεri cell-surface expression with antihuman fcεri polyclonal (rabbit-igg-ab ; abcam, cambridge, uk) and fitc-conjugated secondary antibody (anti-rabbit igg-fitc, sigma-aldrich, singapore) also used as isotype control, and analyzed immediately using a coulter epics-elite esp flow cytometer (beckman, germany). purity was estimated at > %. the differentiated mast cells were plated in well plates and allowed to rest for hr. after differentiation, mast cells were plated in well plates and allowed to rest for hr. cells in all wells, except the control well, were sensitized with human monomeric ige ( µg/ml, ige, cat: -ai , lot number a , fitzgerald, concord, ma) overnight. fcεri aggregation was carried out by incubating the cells with monoclonal mouse-anti-human ige ( µg/ml, anti-human-ige, cat: mca , clone c , serotec, oxford, uk) at °c, for hr, hr and hr. rna was extracted from all the samples using the qiagen rneasy mini kit (qiagen, valencia, ca). integrity of rna was checked by formamide gel electrophoresis; quantification of rna was carried out by measuring the a nm . labeling and hybridization was carried out as previously described [ ] . briefly, µg of total rna from each sample was used to synthesize double stranded cdna using t -(dt ) oligonucleotide primer and superscript reverse transcriptase (invitrogen). the resultant cdna was purified and µg of purified cdna was labeled with biotin by transcription in vitro. the labeled crnas were, fragmented in the presence of metal ions and then hybridized to hg-focus array (affymetrix), following hybridization the gene chips were washed and stained after which the chips were scanned by gene array scanner (agilent technologies). data collection and analysis was carried out using micro-array suite . (mas) (affymetrix). the absolute data (signal intensity, detection call and detection p-value) were exported into genespring v . (silicon genetics, redwood city, ca, usa) software for analysis by parametric test based on cross gene error model (pcgem). the anova approach has been used to find differentially expressed genes (p < . ). the benjamini and hochberg false discovery rate multiple testing correction was applied. agglomerative average-linkage hierarchical clustering of the five different experimental were obtained for selected groups of genes with gene spring . software (silicon genetics, redwood city, ca, usa) using standard correlation as similarity matrix. real-pcr was performed, as previously described [ ] , using µg of total rna from the same samples used for microarray experiments. pcr was performed for transcripts of il- β (primers: for amplicon detection, the light cycler rna master sybr green kit (roche) was used as described by the manufacturer. pcrs were performed in a lightcycler ® instrument (roche) as follows: reverse transcription at °c for min, initial denaturation at °c for min; amplification for - cycles of denaturation ( °c, s, ramp rate °c/s), annealing (optimal temperature, s, ramp rate °c/s) and extension ( °c, product length [bp]/ s, ramp rate °c/s). a single online fluorescence reading for each sample was taken at the end of extension step. quantitative results were expressed by identification of the second derivative maximum points, which marked the cycles where the second derivatives of the fluorescence signal curves are at maximum. these points were expressed as fractional cycle numbers. then, these cycle numbers were plotted against the logarithm of the concentrations of serially -fold diluted standard samples to obtain a standard curve. the concentrations of unknown samples were calculated by extrapolation from this standard curve. positive sample specificity was confirmed by determining the melting curve ( °c, s, ramp rate °c/ s; °c, s, ramp rate °c/s; °c, s, ramp rate . °c/s, continuous measurement). supernatants from control cells, cells sensitized, and cells following fcεri aggregation, were collected and stored at - c until use. il- β, il- , il- , mcp- and rantes levels in the supernatants were evaluated using elisa (r&d systems inc., mn, usa) following the manufacturer's instructions. western blots were carried out as previously done [ ] . briefly, µg of lysate for each sample was resolved on % polyacrylamide gels (sds-page) under denaturing conditions and then transferred to . µm nitrocellulose membranes. for overall tyrosine phosphorytaion, the blots were probed using a specific monoclonal anti-phosphotyrosine primary antibody (p-tyr, sc- , santa cruz, ca, usa), and an anti-mouse hrp-conjugated secondary antibody (anti-mouse igg-hrp, a- , sigma). bands were visualized using the ecl western blotting detection system (amersham, singapore). for sphk expression, the blots were probed using a rabbit polyclonal anti-sphk primary antibody (anti-sphk , x p, exalpha, ma, usa), and hrp-conjugated secondary antibody (anti-rabbit igg-hrp, sc- , santa cruz, ca, usa). for loading control the blots were probed with a monoclonal anti α-tubulin (anti-α-tubulin, sc- , santa cruz, ca, usa), and an anti-mouse hrpconjugated secondary antibody (anti-mouse igg-hrp, a- , sigma). bands were visualized using the ecl western blotting detection system (amersham, singapore), and quantified by densitometry analysis. cytosolic calcium was measured as described previously [ ] . briefly, cells were loaded with µg/ml fura -am (molecular probes, leiden, the netherlands) in pbs, . mm ca + and % bsa. after removal of excess reagents by dilution and centrifugation (in pbs), the cells were resuspended in pbs containing . mm ca + and % bsa, for min; or in pbs containing . mm ca + , % bsa, and human-monomeric ige ( µg/ml) for sensitization, for min. after removal of excess ige by dilution and centrifugation (in pbs), the cells were resuspended in . mm ca + supplemented pbs and warmed to °c in the cuvette; unsensitazed cells were placed in the cuvette and cytosolic calcium was measured before and after the addition of monomeric ige. ige-sensitized cells were placed in the cuvette and fcεri was crosslinked by addition of mouse-anti-human ige ( µg/ml). fluorescence was measured at and nm. degranulation was measured using as previously described [ ] . briefly, an aliquot of cells was resuspended in pbs containing . mm ca + and % bsa, and incubated with monomeric ige for min at °c. another aliquot of cells was resuspended in pbs containing human-monomeric ige ( µg/ml) for sensitization, . mm ca + and % bsa, for min. after removal of excess ige by dilution and centrifugation (in pbs), the cells were resuspended in . mm ca + supplemented pbs, and fcεri was crosslinked by addition of mouseanti-human ige ( µg/ml) to cells for min at °c. following the incubation, µl of supernatant, was incubated with µl of mm p-nitrophenyl n-acetyl-β-dglucosaminide for hr at °c. the total β-hexosaminidase concentration was determined by a : extraction of the remaining buffer and cells with % triton x- ; a µl aliquot was removed and analyzed as described. reactions were quenched by addition of µl of . m sodium carbonate buffer. the enzyme concentration was determined by measuring the od at nm. β-hexosaminidase release was represented as a percent of total enzyme. to analyze the expression of the intracellular mast cell chymase, × cells were washed with ice cold pbs, fixed and permeabilised using the fix and perm reagents from caltag (caltag laboratories, burlingame, ca) as follows: after washing, samples were resuspended in ul of reagent a (fixation medium) and incubated for min at rt. the cells were then washed twice with ice-cold pbs, and resuspended in ul of reagent b (permeabilization medium) and incubated for min at rt. cells were washed twice and resuspended in µl of pbs/ % fbs and µl of the anti-human chymase mab (igg -mab , chemicon, temecula, ca) was added and samples were incubated for min at rt. samples were washed twice in ice-cold pbs, then resuspended in pbs/ % fbs and µl of fitc-conjugated secondary antibody (anti-mouse igg-fitc, sigma-aldrich, singapore) was added, and incubated in dark for an min at rt. samples were washed twice with ice-cold pbs and resuspended in µl of pbs/ % fbs for immediate analysis. to analyze the cell surface expression of ckit and fceri, the samples were initially processed as above except that the permeabilisation step was omitted. for c-kit the primary antibody was an anti-human c-kit mouse monoclonal (mca , clone d , serotec, oxford, uk), and the secondary antibody was a fitc-conjugated (antimouse igg-fitc, sigma-aldrich, singapore). for fcεri cell-surface expression, the cells were labeled with the primary anti-human fcεri polyclonal (rabbit-igg-ab . abcam, cambridge, uk), and the secondary antibody was a fitc-conjugated (anti-rabbit igg-fitc, sigma-aldrich, singapore). all the samples were analyzed by flow cytometry was using a facscalibur machine (bd biosciences), and the data analysed using the cell quest™ pro software. mast cells in innate immunity mast cells to the defense mast cells in autoimmune disease mast cells the diverse potential effector and immunoregulatory roles of mast cells in allergic disease transcriptional response of human mast cells stimulated via the fcεri and identification of mast cells as a source of il- the receptor with high affinity for ige signalling through the high-affinity ige receptor fcεri roles of mast cells and basophils in innate and acquired immunity complexity and redundancy in the pathogenesis of asthma: reassessing the roles of mast cells and t cells mast cells can amplify airway reactivity and features of chronic inflammation in an asthma model in mice an essential role of mast cells in the development of airway hyperresponsiveness in a murine asthma model mast cells phagocytosis of fimh expressing enterobacteria histamine-induced activation of human lung macrophages mast cell-derived tumor necrosis factor induces hypertrophy of draining lymph nodes during infection human mast cell transcriptome project identification of novel mast cell genes by serial analysis of gene expression in cord blood-derived mast cells gene expression screening of human mast cells and eosinophils using high-density oligonucleotide probe arrays: abundant expression of major basic protein in mast cells comparative cytokine profile of human skin mast cells from two compartments strong resemblance with monocytes at baseline but induction of il- by il- priming gene expression profiling of ca + -atapase inhibitor dtbhq and antigen-stimulated rbl- h mast cells identification of specific gene expression profiles in human mast cells mediated by toll-like receptor and fcεri gene expression profiles for fcεri, cytokines and chemokines upon fcεri activation in human cultured mast cells derived from peripheral blood marked increase in cc chemokine gene expression in both human and mouse mast cell transcriptomes following fcε-receptor i cross-linking: an interspecies comparison monomeric ige enhances human mast cell chemokine production: il- augments and dexamethasone suppresses the response interleukin- induces a shock-like state in rabbits: synergism with tumor necrosis factor and the effects of cyclooxygenase inhibition monomeric ige stimulates signaling pathways in mast cells that lead to cytokine production and cell survival nf-kappa b and rel proteins: evolutionary conserved mediators of immune responses generic signals and specific outcomes: signaling through ca + , calcineurin, and nf-at dichotomy of ca + signals triggered by different phospholipid pathways in antigen stimulation of human mast cells minimal requirements for ige mediated regulation of surface fcεri karasuyama h: drastic up-regulation of fcεri on mast cells is induced by ige binding through stabilization and accumulation of fcεri on the cell surface increased il- release by monocytes in nephritic patients the physiological and pathophysiological role of chemokines during inflammatory and immunological responses differential roles of il- and tnf-α on graft versushost disease and graft versus leukemia rel/nf-κb transcription factors: key mediators of b-cell activation constitutive nfκb maintains high expression of a characteristic gene network, including cd , cd , and a set of antiapoptotic genes in hodgkin/reed-stemberg cells control of oncogenesis and cancer therapy resistance by the transcription factor nf-κb calcium mobilization via sphingosine kinase in signalling by the fcεri antigen receptor signatures of the immune response fcγri coupling to phospholipase d initiates sphingosine kinasemediated calcium mobilization and vesicular trafficking a molecular switch changes the signalling pathway used by the fcγri antibody receptor to mobilize calcium anaphylatoxin signaling in human neutrophils: a key role for sphingosine kinase antisense knockdown of sphingosine kinase in human macrophages inhibits c a receptordependent signal transduction, ca + signals, enzyme release, cytokine production and chemotaxis mast cells in the development of adaptive immune responses mast cells in allergy and autoimmunity: implications for adaptive immunity melendez aj: expression profile of immune response genes in patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome this work was supported by a bmrc-young investigator award (r- - - - ). we thank a-k fraser-andrews for proofreading the manuscript. mj carried out data analysis and prepared the microarraydata table and figures. hkt isolated the progenitor cells, differentiated the mast cells and carried out the receptor crosslinking. rr carried out the rna extraction, labeling and microarray hybridization. lz carried out rt-pcr. kkc and mr provided the cord blood. ajm designed the study and drafted the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- -mb ofh authors: ding, j.; hostallero, d. e.; el khili, m. r.; fonseca, g. j.; milette, s.; noorah, n.; guay-belzile, m.; spicer, j.; daneshtalab, n.; sirois, m.; tremblay, k.; emad, a.; rousseau, s. title: a network-informed analysis of sars-cov- and hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis genes' interactions points to neutrophil extracellular traps as mediators of thrombosis in covid- date: - - journal: nan doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: mb ofh abnormal coagulation and an increased risk of thrombosis are features of severe covid- , with parallels proposed with hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (hlh), a life-threating condition associated with hyperinflammation. the presence of hlh was described in severely ill patients during the h n influenza epidemic, presenting with pulmonary vascular thrombosis. we tested the hypothesis that genes causing primary hlh regulate pathways linking pulmonary thromboembolism to the presence of sars-cov- using novel network-informed computational algorithms. this approach led to the identification of neutrophils extracellular traps (nets) as plausible mediators of vascular thrombosis in severe covid- in children and adults. taken together, the network-informed analysis led us to propose the following model: the release of nets in response to inflammatory signals acting in concert with sars-cov- damage the endothelium and direct platelet-activation promoting abnormal coagulation leading to serious complications of covid- . the underlying hypothesis is that genetic and/or environmental conditions that favor the release of nets may predispose individuals to thrombotic complications of covid- due to an increase risk of abnormal coagulation. this would be a common pathogenic mechanism in conditions including autoimmune/infectious diseases, hematologic and metabolic disorders. hlh genes are significantly enriched within the sars-cov- host protein interactome in the case of the sars-cov- pandemic, with widespread impact across the world, there is an urgency that requires the adaptation of different strategies to understand covid- . in this paper, we exploited the knowledge existing within protein interaction networks to identify the molecular pathways underpinning thrombotic complications of covid- using advanced computational algorithms. as described in the introduction, a subset of patients suffering from severe complications of covid- present clinically with symptoms similar to hlh. therefore, we have assembled a list of candidate genes responsible for primary hlh and associated syndromes to explore their relationships with covid- , (supplementary table s ). the first question asked was whether these hlh genes had potential interactions with sars-cov- . we assembled a protein interaction network between the sars-cov- host interaction protein network recently published and the hlh genes using an algorithm that we created for this purpose, genelist covid . the algorithm establishes the shortest path between the candidate genes and the known host interacting proteins with sars-cov- and calculates an overall connectivity score for the network (a smaller value represents a greater connectivity) ( fig and supplementary table s ). we computationally validated the predictions of the genelist covid to identify significant interactions. to demonstrate that the method can assign significant connectivity scores to genes associated with covid- , we obtained a list of confirmed covid- related genes , which are differentially expressed in severe covid patients (supplementary table s ). we then calculated the "covid- " connectivity score for those genes (sa) as well as all the genes (sb) using genelist covid . we found that sa is significantly (p-value= . ) smaller than sb, which indicates that those covid- related genes are indeed "significantly connected" to sars-cov- proteins (fig. ) . to show the specificity of the method, we also calculated the "covid " connectivity score for randomly selected genes (sc) and compared it to the connectivity score of all genes (sb). we found that sc is not significantly smaller than b (the background) (p-value= . ) (fig. ) . in other words, those random genes are not "significantly connected" to sars-cov proteins, which reflects the fact that those genes were randomly picked. as an additional control, we repeated the analysis using genes linked to male infertility , a condition that has not been associated with covid- (supplementary table s ). the connectivity score was not significantly different from all other genes (p-value= . ), further demonstrating the specificity of the genelist covid , which is not restricted to random genes but can also discriminate gene lists associated with other conditions (fig. ) . after the method was validated, we compared the "connectivity" score for hlh genes listed above with all genes that connect to sars-cov- proteins through our assembled protein- protein interaction network (fig. ) . we found that the score for the hlh marker genes is significantly smaller compared to all other genes (p-value= . , one-sided rank sum test) (fig. ). as an additional control, we compared the hlh genes to a list of vascular angiogenesis genes linked to both h n and sars-cov- pulmonary infections (supplementary table s & fig. ). the hlh genes' connectivity score was smaller, which means that those genes had closer theoretical interactions to sars-cov- . this suggests that hlh genes and their associated pathways are of high interest in the study of sars-cov- infections. differential expression of hlh genes in health conditions related to covid- . we next investigated whether the expression of hlh genes in lung tissue were highly regulated (up condition. we hypothesized that hlh genes, that may play an active role in thrombotic complications of covid- , are more likely to be regulated in co-morbid conditions. rab a expression was found altered in all studied conditions, while ap b expression was also found altered in all conditions except one, lung cancer (fig ) . table s ). the majority of the genes were expressed in neutrophils and of them (unc d, lyst, ap b , magt , rab a, golga and g bp ) were significantly elevated in either inactive or active sjia compared to control neutrophils (fig. ) . it is worth noting that the most connected gene to sars- cov- , ap b that can directly interact with sars-cov- e protein, is in the list of up-regulated genes in neutrophils derived from sjia. an important message stemming from our discovery that nets may be drivers of coagulopathies in reactive hlh is the potential susceptibility of a subset of the pediatric population, identifying them as at risk of severe complication of covid- . this led us to the next step, predicting potential vulnerable populations to thrombolytics complications of covid- based on their susceptibility to release nets. identifying potentially vulnerable populations to covid- based on nets release. the world health organization has established that identifying vulnerable populations is an urgent public health priority in the context of the covid- pandemic . based on the analyses above, nets may play an important role in promoting thrombosis in covid- . the role of neutrophils in coagulopathies is becoming increasingly recognised and particularly that of nets . therefore, we hypothesized that health conditions associated with increased release of nets could be a predictive factor for thrombotic complications of covid- . based on this hypothesis and in order to identify vulnerable populations, we developed a method called forward (informative random walk for ranking diseases) to rank different diseases associated with nets based on their relevance to a gene set of interest (here genes in the hlh-sars-cov- network) (see methods for details). we obtained two net gene signatures from previous studies , and combined them to obtain a list of net-associated genes ( supplementary table s ). then, we obtained the list of diseases associated with these genes from the disgenet database . entries with gene-disease . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. (which was not certified by peer review) the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . association (gda) < . , were filtered out to arrive at a set of diseases. we used the set of genes in the hlh-sars-cov- interaction network ( fig. ) as the query set and used the humannet integrated network as the gene interaction network in forward. the full list of diseases, ranked using forward, is provided in supplementary table s . table illustrates the diseases with a normalized disease score (nds) greater than . , meaning that these diseases are enriched above the background probabilities. most of the top-ranked diseases associated with genes linked to nets can be sub-grouped in major categories -immune/infectious (alzheimer's disease, immunodeficiency ); -cardiovascular (myocardial reperfusion injury, hemolytic anemia due to g pi, bleeding disorder type; ); -metabolic (diabetes) and ) cancer (liver carcinoma). it is important to note that some of these diseases would be putatively associated with net-deficiency such as immunodeficiency , more often presenting clinically with bleeding. whether patients suffering from these diseases are protected from thrombotic- complications of covid- remains to be determined. however, diseases associated with increased net release are expected to yield greater risk of thrombosis and may identify vulnerable populations to severe thrombotic complications of covid- . discussion based on recent literature, we hypothesized that severe pulmonary thrombotic complications of covid- are associated with a hematologic cytokine storm that could be, in part, defined using genes causing hlh. the network-informed analysis presented in this paper, revealed that ) the top go biological function associated with hlh genes is neutrophil degranulation, consistent with a recent report highlighting the undervalued role of neutrophils in hlh ; ) hlh genes are significantly enriched with the sars-cov- human interactome; ) the top-ranked hlh gene, ap b , has roles in cargo loading of type ii pneumocytes, where it may interact with sars-cov- to disturb surfactant physiological functions to promote inflammation/pro-coagulation activities; ) diseases/syndromes-associated with increased release of neutrophil extracellular traps (nets) may predict vulnerable populations, including those affecting children. taken together, the network-informed analysis led us to propose the following model: the release of nets in response to inflammatory signals acting in concert with sars-cov- damage the endothelium and direct platelet-activation promoting abnormal coagulation leading to serious complications of covid- in susceptible individuals (fig. ) . the underlying hypothesis is that genetic and/or environmental conditions that favor the release of nets may predispose individuals to thrombotic complications of covid- due to an increase risk of abnormal coagulation. this would be a common pathogenic mechanism amongst numerous conditions including autoimmune/infectious diseases, hematologic and metabolic disorders. the role of neutrophils in coagulopathies is becoming increasingly recognised and particularly that of nets . interestingly, elevated neutrophils count is the best single leukocyte predictor of cardiovascular risk , bettered only by the combination of high neutrophils to low lymphocytes ratio , a clinical feature of covid- . net release can be triggered by various inflammatory mediators found elevated in severe covid- , including crp, il- b, il- and il- . there is also a positive correlation between circulating serum of il- , il- , crp and net levels . nets are found in a variety of conditions such as infection, malignancy, atherosclerosis, and autoimmune diseases with reports now emerging that describe their presence in covid- , - . amongst the known diseases associated with nets, several are related to children including . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . cystic fibrosis , meningococcal sepsis ; lyme neurobiellosis ; juvenile dermatomyositis and pediatric inflammatory bowel diseases . in pediatric sepsis, nets levels were elevated and correlated with disease severity, mirroring results in mice where higher nets levels in response to lipopolysaccharides are found in infant mice compared to adults . one of the quickest ways to decrease the burden of covid- on the health care systems throughout the world is to identify at-risk populations to emphasize the importance of infection prevention measures for those individuals. since these measures incur high personal, social and economic costs, a precise knowledge is essential. we presented a novel computational algorithm that enabled us to identify potential diseases linked with nets (table ) . interestingly, amongst the identified diseases, diabetes, a well-established comorbidity of covid- , is ranked th and th . our study provides additional insight into the potential mechanisms involved, with increase nets formation resulting from the underlying chronic inflammation as a key factor promoting coagulopathies in diabetics suffering from covid- . as for the top ranked disease, alzheimer's disease, whether nets in the brain can lead to an increased risk of systemic thrombosis looks less likely than the reverse, that sars-cov- infection may increase nets release in the brain that could exacerbate alzheimer's disease-driven pathology including a greater risk of stroke. this may be an important question for future studies due to the susceptibility and severity of the elderly to covid- and notably the extreme mortality seen in long-term care home arounds the world where cognitive impairment is highly prevalent , . it has been suggested that covid- should be added to this list of hyperferritinemic syndromes, which includes adult-onset still's disease, septic shock, catastrophic anti-phospholipid syndrome, and mas (reactive hlh) . collectively, these diseases may share similar underlying factors of complications, including an underappreciated role of nets leading to coagulopathies. it is possible that individuals can unfortunately contract sars-cov- infection in addition to other factors that underlie any of these conditions (other viruses for example), which may lead to further amplification loop. pcr-negative sars-cov- patients presenting with clinical symptoms of hyperferritinemic syndrome should be considered highly vulnerable and appropriate infection control measures should be put in place. disorders associated with bleeding should decrease the risk of thrombotic complications of covid- (however they may still lead to severe covid- via other mechanism). nevertheless, they can be informative on pathophysiology. the strongest connectivity to sars- cov- e protein was ap b (fig. ) . loss of function of ap b leads to hermansky-pudlak syndrome type that is associated with bleeding and coagulation defects , . the sars-cov ( therefore, both proteins have a coherent subcellular localization supporting their potential interaction. moreover, in post-mortem immunohistochemical analysis of lung tissue, the sars- cov- s (spike) and e proteins were found to localize with the respiratory epithelia, the interalveolar, and the septal capillaries . in addition, septal and intra-alveolar neutrophilia was observed , colocalizing some of the key players of a neutrophil-driven sars-cov- enhanced coagulation cascade in covid- (fig. ) . whether sars-cov- e protein can directly or indirectly penetrate neutrophils and/or platelets remains unknown, as these cells are not reported to highly express ace +/tmprss +, the two key host proteins for viral entry. however, both of these proteins are highly expressed on type ii pneumocytes , where ap b is important for cargo loading of lamellar bodies . a postmortem examination in a covid- patient who succumbed . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . to a sudden cardiovascular accident revealed sars-cov- -viruses present in pneumocytes despite pcr-negative nasal swabs , indicating a prolonged risk in the lower airways for complications. immunodeficiency , resulting from the loss of function of coronin- , also leads to bleeding. coronin- plays key functions in pmn trafficking in part via its interaction with the integrin β . β integrin-mediated systemic net release is a viral mechanism of immunopathology in hantavirus-associated disease such as kidney and lung damage , similar to the immunopathology in severe covid- . overall, diseases associated with a putative loss-of- function of nets suggest mechanistic roles for ap b , coronin- and integrin b in regulating net-mediated coagulopathies in the lung alveolar and peri-alveolar areas (fig. ) . the analysis in this study is based on a new algorithm that we develop (freely available at https://github.com/phoenixding/genelist covid ). genelist covid can systematically evaluate the connection of any given gene list to sars-cov- proteins both within-host proteins and between host-viral proteins. therefore, it can be used to study a wide variety of biological problems associated with covid- , especially in circumstances where experimental data on covid- (e.g. transcriptomics or genomics) is not yet available for the problems of interest. the algorithm was found effective, on positive (proven to be associated with covid- ) and negative (irrelevant to covid- ) gene lists. in terms of limitation, genelist covid is dependent on the prior knowledge of the protein interactome within the host, and between the host and virus. currently, we have a well-established protein-protein interactome for the human species. however, the interactome between the sars-cov- proteins and human proteins is relatively limited , since such an interactome is far from complete. for example, there are no reported interactions for ace and tmprss , which are critical to sars-cov- infection. we provided an option (-v) in genelist covid to utilize any new host-viral protein interactome data when it becomes available. while, genelist covid is good at telling whether an input gene list is associated with covid- , it cannot test the mechanistic hypothesis generated. it can provide the network that connects the genes in the list of the sars-cov- proteins, but it cannot determine which nodes/edges in the network is more critical (and when they are activated). at this stage, the most useful information is derived from considering the entire network. as the availability of covid- related "-omics" data increases, we will extend the method into a joint-model that integrates all those omics data for a more comprehensive, high-definition network model that can provide additional and more precise insights for the role of genes in covid- . the second computational algorithm provided, forward (https://github.com/ddhostallero/forward), is also limited by the requirement of known gene-disease associations. conditions. further studies in well-defined cohorts of covid- patients are mandatory to confirm the relevance of the observations highlighted in the present study. such knowledge may . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . be of importance in novel covid- severity biomarkers identification that will be needed in the management of individuals at risk of complications. methods datasets for this study we used the following datasets: the interactions between the sars-cov- proteins and host proteins , reporting interactions that involve sars-cov- proteins and human host proteins. each interaction in the map was assigned an interaction score that represents the strength of the interaction (a score between and ). we also collected the protein-protein interactions (with interaction scores) between all human host proteins from the hippie database we obtained a list of highly/lowly (h/l) expressed genes under different health conditions that potentially associated with covid , , . to identify the vulnerable populations using forward, the full list of genes associated with these diseases were downloaded from the disgenet for the analysis, we did not use the bootstrapping option, selected homo sapiens as 'species', and used default values for all other parameters. we obtained go terms with a "difference score" above . . this score represents the normalized difference between the query probabilities and the baseline probabilities in the rwr algorithm, with the best score observed as ( table ) . building the hlh-sars-cov- interaction network we first built a network that connects all the sars-cov- proteins and the human host proteins based on the collected protein interaction data. the edges connecting different proteins are weighted based on the interaction scores obtained from the original datasets above. next, we inferred the signaling paths from sars-cov- proteins down to a list of proteins (genes) of interest. a few key assumptions must be made before we can make such inference. first, since collected protein interactions within the host (and between the host and the sars-cov- virus) do not have directions, the reconstructed network graph is undirected. here, we assumed that the information (i.e., infection) flows from the sars-cov- proteins to the proteins that directly interact with sars-cov- proteins, next to other intermediate signaling proteins, and finally to the target genes (proteins) of interest. there might be multiple intermediate proteins residing . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint between the direct sars-cov- interacting proteins and the target proteins of interest. second, we did not allow loops in our path from sars-cov- proteins to the target proteins to reduce the computation complexity. although feedback loops have been reported in previous studies , they are still relatively rarely observed in the human protein-protein network . last, we assumed that the interaction score between two proteins is proportional to the strength (or the likelihood) of their interaction. a larger interaction score represents either a stronger or more likely interaction, which results in a "stronger" connection edge in both cases. the objective of the analysis was to find the strongest (or most likely) "connecting" path from sars-cov- proteins to the target proteins (genes) of interest in the constructed network, where the connection strength was quantified by a "connectivity score". we formulated the above problem as: problem denotes the "shortest path problem", which we solved using dijkstra's algorithm (with a quadratic time complexity in the number of vertices). the above optimization strategy relies heavily on the strong edges (interactions with high scores). the preference of high score edges may lead to over-sized paths, composed of only high score edges. to avoid oversized paths, we penalized/constrained the length of the path (# of edges in the path) while minimizing the connectivity score (a smaller connectivity score represents stronger connectivity). here, we revised the aforementioned optimization problem into a -pass strategy. in the first pass, we find all the shortest paths x(s,t) (with the same path length) that connect sars-cov- proteins to the target proteins of interest, without considering the edge . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint weights (interaction scores) in the graph. in the second pass, we find the path x(s,t) in x(s,t) that produces the minimal connectivity score connectivityconstrained (s,t) by taking the weight scores into considerations for only the selected candidate paths from the first run. we have packaged all the code into a tool named genelist covid , which is freely available for academic uses. ranking diseases using forward we developed forward to rank a set of diseases (with known associated genes) based on their relevance to a set of genes (here hlh genes). this method works on the principles of random walk with restarts (rwrs) for ranking genes and gene sets on heterogenous networks , , , and enables integration of gene-level interactions to rank a set of diseases, with known associated genes, based on their relevance. forward, requires three types of inputs (sup. fig. ): ) a set of diseases along with genes associated with each disease and the score of gene-disease associations (optional), ) a gene interaction network (e.g. co-expression, protein-protein interaction, etc.), and ) a set of query genes. using these inputs, forward first generates a heterogeneous network comprising of gene- gene edges and disease-gene edges, with normalized edge weights representing the strength of the gene-gene interaction and the strength of evidence for gene-disease interaction (e.g. from the disgenet database). then, the query set is superimposed on this network and is used as the restart set in an rwr algorithm. using rwr in this algorithm allows us to capture topological information within the network both locally (the neighborhood surrounding the query set) and globally. after the convergence of the rwr, the steady-state probabilities of the disease nodes represent their relevance to the query set. in order to correct for the network bias (i.e. to avoid diseases with a large number of associated genes be ranked highly independent of their relevance to the query set), we run the rwr one more time with all the genes in the network as the restart set, providing a background steady-state probability for each disease node. the difference between the steady state probabilities of these two rwrs are then normalized between and . more specifically, letrepresents the difference between the steady state probabilities of the two rwrs for disease , where = , , … , and is the total number of diseases to be ranked (note that − ≤ -≤ ). also, let , = max -(| -|). the normalized disease score (nds) for the -th disease is: it is important to note that nds above . reflect diseases whose similarity score with respect to the query set is larger than their similarity score with respect to all genes (i.e. background). the rwr (which we used in forward) is an algorithm for scoring the similarity between any given node of a weighted network and a query set of nodes. starting from some initial node, . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . at each step the random walker moves to an adjacent node with a probability proportional to the edge weight connecting the two nodes and with some probability (known as probability of restart) it jumps to one of the nodes in the query set (also known as the restart set). the restart probability controls the influence of the local topology of the network (surrounding the query set) and its global topology. we used = . to balance the influence of these two factors. software availability the software genelist covid is written in python, available as an open source tool at github (https://github.com/phoenixding/genelist covid ). an implementation of the software forward is available in python and is freely available on github (https://github.com/ddhostallero/forward). these github repositories include the source code as well as detailed instructions on how to install and use the methods. . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . contributions and to ensure that questions related to the accuracy or integrity of any part of the work, even ones in which the author was not personally involved, are appropriately investigated, resolved, and the resolution documented in the literature. . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . hemolytic anemia, nonspherocytic, due . (-) none . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . to glucose phosphate isomerase deficiency bleeding disorder, platelet-type, . (-) none abbreviations used: nets = neutrophil extracellular traps. a a "+" sign indicates demonstrated net release in the disease, a "-" sign a deficiency in nets. brackets "( )" around the "+" or "-" signs indicate prediction without published data. . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . network shows all the paths connecting the sars-cov- proteins to the hlh proteins (genes). the red nodes represent the sars-cov- proteins, the yellow nodes are the human host proteins that directly interact with sars-cov- proteins, the green nodes are the intermediate interacting host proteins, and the blue nodes denote the target hlh proteins (genes). the edge weights in the network represent the interaction strength (or probability). figure . hlh genes are significantly enriched within the sars-cov- host protein interactome. a connectivity score was calculated for each of the genes of interest (e.g. hlh genes in this work). we further analyzed the network connectivity of all genes to the sars-cov proteins (or randomly picked genes). with these two analyses, we ended up with two lists of connectivity scores: sa (for hlh genes) and sb (for all background genes). then, we calculated the statistical significance (p-value) using a one-sided mann-whitney rank test to determine whether sa is significantly smaller than sb (stronger connectivity). sa significant p-value implies that the list of proteins (genes) of interest is "significantly connected" to the sars-cov proteins. a) a list of known covid related genes (differential genes in severe covid patients) have statistically stronger connections to the sars-cov- proteins compared with all background genes (p-value= . ). b) a list of random genes does not "significantly" connect to the sars-cov- proteins. c) the male infertility genes do not "significantly" connect to the sars-cov- proteins. d) the hlh genes have statistically (p-value= . ) stronger connections to the sars-cov- proteins (compared with all background genes). e) a list of vascular angiogenesis genes linked to both h n and sars-cov- pulmonary infections significantly (p-value= . e- ) connect to the sars-cov- proteins. the hlh genes have the smallest mean/median connectivity score compared to all the gene lists analyzed. please note that the p-values here only indicate whether the input gene lists have significantly smaller connectivity scores than all the background genes, and they could be affected by the size of the gene list. to compare the strength of the "connectivity" of input gene lists to sars-cov- proteins, we should also look at the mean (represented by a green triangle) and the median (represent by a vertical line) connectivity scores. figure . differential expression of hlh genes in covid associated health conditions. gene on the log fold change (condition vs control). genes whose fold change was among the top % were classified as high (h) and those whose fold change was among the bottom % were classified as low (l). finally, the hlh genes were assessed to determine whether they are among the h or l genes in each condition. the red blocks represent hlh genes that were highly expressed (h, top %) in condition (vs. control) while the blue blocks represent hlh genes that were lowly expressed (l, bottom %) in condition (vs. control). we compared the hlh genes . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . and all background genes in terms of h/l expression under various conditions. we first counted the number of h/l (differentially expressed between the condition and control) for each of the hlh genes, and then for each of the background genes. next, we used a one-sided mann-whitney rank test to determine whether the hlh genes have larger absolute fold changes, (i.e, are differentially expressed), in covid associated conditions compared to all the background genes significantly (p-value< . ). the average number of h/l conditions for hlh genes (red or blue blocks) is . , which is significantly larger (one-sided rank-sum test p-value= . e- ) than the average number of h/l conditions for all genes ( . ). figure . expression of hlh genes in control, inactive sjia and active sjia neutrophils. gene expression of hlh-sars-cov- and positive covid- genes (supplementary table ) in sjia was calculated from geo series gse . data was mapped to the hg genome and normalized by reads per kilobase per million (rpkm). values for hlh genes were displayed for control and sjia patients that were either in remission (inactive sjia) or had active symptoms (active sjia). figure . model of net-mediated endothelial damage contributing to pulmonary vascular thrombosis in severe covid- . infection by sars-cov- in vulnerable population will lead to hyperinflammation either from underlying genetic mutations, specific epigenetic landscapes or external factors, that will result in the increase circulation of acute phase reactants such as crp and pro-inflammatory cytokines associated with neutrophilia like il- , il- a/f and cxcl (il- ). il- a activates the endothelium to induce neutrophil adhesion , where the increase in crp can trigger the release of nets, resulting in damage to the endothelium as well as aggregation and activation of platelets. additionally, the presence of sars-cov- e protein in type ii pneumocytes could disturb the surfactant cargo via its interaction with ap b , leading to impaired secretion of sp-d and greater net formation by septal and intra-alveolar neutrophils increasing the risk of thrombosis in the pulmonary microvasculature. in some predisposed patients the combinations of these mechanisms will lead to severe covid- complications. the identification of mediators of this pro- coagulation cascade is essential in achieving the two-fold task of identifying vulnerable populations and developing a personalized medicine approach. . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. (which was not certified by peer review) the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint figure . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. (which was not certified by peer review) the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. (which was not certified by peer review) the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. (which was not certified by peer review) the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. (which was not certified by peer review) the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint . cc-by-nc-nd . international license it is made available under a is the author/funder, who has granted medrxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. (which was not certified by peer review) the copyright holder for this preprint this version posted july , . . https://doi.org/ . / . . . doi: medrxiv preprint abnormal coagulation parameters are associated with poor prognosis in patients with novel coronavirus pneumonia clinical course and risk factors for mortality of adult inpatients with covid- in wuhan, china: a retrospective cohort study high incidence of venous thromboembolic events in anticoagulated severe covid- patients high risk of thrombosis in patients with severe sars-cov- infection: a multicenter prospective cohort study complement associated microvascular injury and thrombosis in the pathogenesis of severe covid- infection: a report of five cases large-vessel stroke as a presenting feature of covid- in the young imbalanced host response to sars-cov- drives development of covid- covid- : consider cytokine storm syndromes and immunosuppression neutrophil extracellular traps in covid- clinical course and risk factors for mortality of adult inpatients with covid- in wuhan, china: a retrospective cohort study clinical predictors of mortality due to covid- based on an analysis of data of patients from wuhan, china. intensive care weathering the covid- storm: lessons from hematologic cytokine syndromes hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis induced by severe pandemic influenza a (h n ) virus infection: a case report. case rep. med. , analysis of fatal cases of pandemic influenza a (h n ) virus infections in pediatric patients with leukemia hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis associated with pandemic influenza a (h n ) virus infection report of a fatal pediatric case of pulmonary vascular endothelialitis, thrombosis, and angiogenesis in adult haemophagocytic syndrome an outbreak of severe kawasaki-like disease at the italian epicentre of the - epidemic: an observational cohort study outbreak of kawasaki disease in children during covid- pandemic: a prospective observational study in kawasaki-like disease: 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knowledge-guided analysis of 'omics' data using the knoweng cloud platform string v : protein-protein association networks with increased coverage, supporting functional discovery in genome-wide experimental datasets humannet v : human gene networks for disease research mechanisms of action of ruxolitinib in murine models of hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis neutrophil extracellular traps in immunity and disease covid- and kawasaki disease: novel virus and novel case enhanced formation of neutrophil extracellular traps in kawasaki disease neutrophil extracellular traps induce aggregation of washed human platelets independently of extracellular dna and histones an emerging role for neutrophil extracellular traps in noninfectious disease neutrophil cytoplasts induce th differentiation and skew inflammation toward neutrophilia in severe asthma role of c-reactive protein at sites of inflammation and infection secondary hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis in pediatric patients: a single center experience and factors that influenced patient prognosis neutrophils in pediatric autoimmune disease the role of extracellular histones in systemic-onset juvenile idiopathic arthritis neutrophils from children with systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis exhibit persistent proinflammatory activation despite long-standing clinically inactive blueprint and covid- global substrate profiling of proteases in human neutrophil extracellular traps reveals consensus motif predominantly contributed by elastase neutrophil extracellular traps contain calprotectin, a cytosolic protein complex involved in host defense against candida albicans the disgenet knowledge platform for disease genomics which white blood cell subtypes predict increased cardiovascular risk? crp induces netosis in heart failure patients with or without diabetes targeting potential drivers of covid- : neutrophil extracellular traps primary tumors induce neutrophil extracellular traps with targetable metastasis promoting effects neutrophil extracellular traps sequester circulating tumor cells and promote metastasis fibrosis lung disease from childhood to adulthood: neutrophils trap (net) formation, and net degradation neutrophil extracellular traps in tissue and periphery in juvenile neutrophil extracellular traps in pediatric inflammatory bowel disease neutrophil extracellular traps (nets) exacerbate severity of infant sepsis association of blood glucose control and outcomes in patients with covid- and pre-existing type diabetes dementia care during covid- epidemiology of covid- in a long-term care facility in king storm, typhoon, cyclone or hurricane in patients with covid- ? beware of the same storm that has a different origin identification of a homozygous deletion in the ap b gene causing altered trafficking of lysosomal proteins in hermansky-pudlak syndrome due to mutations in the β a subunit of the ap- adaptor subcellular location and topology of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus envelope protein coronavirus envelope protein: current knowledge sars-cov- receptor ace is an interferon-stimulated gene in human the alveolar epithelium determines susceptibility to lung fibrosis in pathological evidence for residual sars-cov- in pulmonary tissues of a ready-for-discharge patient coronin a, a novel player in integrin biology, controls neutrophil trafficking in innate immunity β integrin mediates hantavirus-induced release of neutrophil extracellular traps complement activation contributes to severe acute respiratory high level of neutrophil extracellular traps correlates with poor prognosis key: cord- -fgn rps authors: miller, laura c; fleming, damarius; arbogast, andrew; bayles, darrell o; guo, baoqing; lager, kelly m; henningson, jamie n; schlink, sarah n; yang, han-chun; faaberg, kay s; kehrli, marcus e title: analysis of the swine tracheobronchial lymph node transcriptomic response to infection with a chinese highly pathogenic strain of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus date: - - journal: bmc vet res doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: fgn rps background: porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv) is a major pathogen of swine worldwide. emergence in of a novel highly pathogenic prrsv (hp-prrsv) isolate in china necessitated a comparative investigation into the host transcriptome response in tracheobronchial lymph nodes (tbln) days post-infection with hp-prrsv rjxwn , prrsv strain vr- or sham inocula. rna from each was prepared for next-generation sequencing. amplified library constructs were directly sequenced and a list of sequence transcripts and counts was generated using an rnaseq analysis pipeline to determine differential gene expression. transcripts were annotated and relative abundance was calculated based upon the number of times a given transcript was represented in the library. results: major changes in transcript abundance occurred in response to infection with either prrsv strain, each with over differentially expressed transcripts. the largest increase in transcript level for either virus versus sham-inoculated controls were three serum amyloid a acute-phase isoforms. however, the degree of up or down-regulation of transcripts following infection with hp-prrsv rjxwn was greater than transcript changes observed with us prrsv vr- . also, of significantly altered transcripts within the hp-prrsv rjxwn library were up-regulated and were down-regulated more than -fold, whilst in the us prrsv vr- library only transcripts were up-regulated and were down-regulated more than -fold. conclusions: the magnitude of differentially expressed gene profiles detected in hp-prrsv rjxwn infected pigs as compared to vr- infected pigs was consistent with the increased pathogenicity of the hp-prrsv in vivo. porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv), the causative agent of prrs in swine, is a member of the arteriviridae family in the order nidovirales. prrsv causes highly significant economic losses to the swine industry worldwide [ ] as a result of both reproductive failure (late-term abortions and stillbirths) in pregnant sows and respiratory disease (pneumonia) in nursery and grower/finishing pigs [ ] . infection with prrsv also predisposes pigs to infection by bacterial pathogens as well as other viral pathogens [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , as such, prrsv is a key etiological agent of the porcine respiratory disease complex (prdc). clinical disease caused by prrsv is highly variable, ranging from mild, subclinical infection to acute death of adult animals [ ] . differences in virulence have been attributed to numerous factors including host genetics, management practices, and virus strain heterogeneity [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . relatively little is known about the interactions of prrsv and host cells. the lymph node is an anatomic site where the innate immune response and adaptive immune system interface. tracheobronchial lymph nodes (tbln) in swine drain the lung field and provide the focal structure that can reproducibly be identified. although the tbln contains a number of cell types, sampling this tissue allows study of direct and indirect effects of an infectious agent on the lung and cells within the lymph node. in a unique syndrome with high morbidity and mortality was recognized in growing pigs in china that was originally known as porcine high fever disease (phfd) due to its uncertain etiology [ ] . experimental infection of pigs in china with these novel viral isolates reproduced the clinical disease providing strong evidence for the role of prrsv as the causal agent of phfd. however, there was still a question as to whether there was some unknown agent in the prrsv preparations that increased the severity of the clinical disease over what was expected for a "routine" prrsv infection. this question was resolved when phfd was reproduced in china with virus derived from an infectious clone of the jx prrsv isolate [ ] demonstrating that prrsv isolates with a common genetic motif had a causal role in phfd leading to this lineage of virus being called highly pathogenic prrsv (hp-prrsv). we imported a plasmid containing a full-length clone of the jxwn hp-prrsv isolate [ ] from which infectious virus (rjxwn ) was rescued. an animal study was conducted comparing the pathogenicity of hp-prrsv isolate rjxwn with the north american prototype strain vr- prrsv [ ] . the objective of this report was to investigate gene expression profiles in porcine tracheobronchial lymph node (tbln) during viral infection with hp-prrsv rjxwn strain alongside of us prrsv strain vr- at a snapshot of days post-infection using bioinformatics. mapping short rna-seq reads and estimating transcript expression levels genomic short-read nucleotide alignment program (gsnap) was used for alignment and genome construction, and cufflinks to determine if differential expression and changes in transcript abundance were statistically significant [ , ] . the rnaseq yielded , , reads for the control, , , reads for the hp-prrsv, and , , for vr- libraries after quality trimming and excluding any reads less than bp. cufflinks was used to measure transcript abundances in fragments per kilobase of exon per million fragments mapped (fpkm). the cuffdiff output contained normalized fpkm for comparison between libraries (additional file ). these values were used to calculate the fold change (log transformed) in expression between the experimental unit and the control. examination of the rnaseq data indicated that there were major changes in transcript abundance occurring in the prrsv-infected tbln-based unique transcripts [cuffdiff output (additional file )]. of these total transcripts, were found to be significant hits in the hp-prrsv rjxwn library and were significant in the us prrsv vr- library (table ) . of those significant hits within the hp-prrsv rjxwn library hits were up-regulated and were down-regulated more than -fold whilst in the us prrsv vr- library hits were up-regulated and were downregulated more than -fold. this derived catalog of expressed genes represents the first comparative analysis of the hp-prrsv rjxwn and vr- -infected tbln transcript abundance profiles and provides a database that informs us of genes involved in normal tbln physiology, as well as genes whose abundance is altered by prrsv infection. gene annotation of all significant hits (additional files and ) was then carried out using a mysql database matching the ensmbl (sscrofa . ) chromosome location of aligned transcripts to gene names. gene ids and log fold-change expression values for significant hits, that had fpkm values in both the control and the infected differential expression testing for transcripts (cuffdiff output files), were then analyzed using the ingenuity pathway analysis software. when comparing the tbln transcriptome from sham-inoculated controls vs. the hp-prrsv rjxwn -infected pigs, of the gene ids mapped to the ingenuity knowledge base and were up-regulated while were down-regulated. in the tbln of control vs. vr- -infected pigs, of the gene ids mapped to the ingenuity knowledge base and only were up-regulated while were down-regulated. table lists the top ten genes (named by the hugo gene nomenclature committee (hgnc) [ ] ) we detected that had a significant value in both hp-prrsv rjxwn and vr- -infected tbln rnaseq cuffdiff output and a fold-change increase or decrease of greater than . transcripts up-regulated in both hp-prrsv rjxwn and vr- -infected tbln by > -fold and > -fold vs. control tbln, respectively, were three serum amyloid a (saa ) acute-phase isoforms, as well as gene enssscg f s c _pig serum amyloid protein (no hgnc annotation), that are expressed in response to inflammatory stimuli ( table ). other annotated genes ( table ) that were up-regulated in hp-prrsv rjxwn tbln vs. control were resistin (retn) which is secreted by immune and epithelial cells and participates in the immune response by increasing transcriptional events that increase expression of several proinflammatory cytokines [ ] ; three members of the s family (s a , s a , s a ) of calcium-binding proteins localized in the cytoplasm and/or nucleus of a wide range of cells, involved in the regulation of a number of cellular processes such as cell cycle progression and differentiation, and mediators of inflammatory and protective anti-infection responses [ ] ; xanthine dehydrogenase (xdh) a generator of reactive oxygen species and possible cause of hypoxia-mediated lung injury [ ] ; and peptidylarginine deiminase, type iv, (padi ) which may play a role in granulocyte and macrophage development leading to inflammation and immune responses [ ] . also in the top ten up-regulated transcripts were two genes without a hgnc symbol, trem _pig (enssscg ) trigger receptor, which is expressed on myeliod cells, and the interleukin- receptor, type ii gene (il r ) which is associated with host responses to subdue inflammation as a consequence of disease. down-regulated in hp-prrsv tbln vs. control tbln were diacylglycerol oacyltransferase (dgat ) which catalyzes triglyceride synthesis which is critical for formation of adipose tissue [ ] ; perilipin- (plin ) an important regulator of lipid storage; a member of the cytochrome p monooxygenases (cyp b ) of unknown specific function; soluble galactosebinding lectin (lgals ), cell death-inducing dffalike effector c (cidec), tumor suppressor candidate (tusc ), protein phosphatase , regulatory (inhibitor) subunit a (ppp r a), c-type lectin domain family , member g, that encodes a glycan-binding receptor and a member of the c-type lectin family which plays a role in t-cell immune responses (clec g). also in the top ten down-regulated transcripts were the following genes without projected hgnc symbols: ces liver carboxylesterase (enssscg ) and f sty _pig thyroid hormone-responsive protein (enssscg ). in vr- -infected pig tbln vs. control tbln, transcript abundance was down-regulated to a lesser extent and featured genes linked to metabolism in adipose tissue and regulation in neuronal activity functions including dermatopontin (dpt) extracellular matrix protein with possible functions in cell-matrix interactions and matrix assembly which enhances transforming growth factor beta (tgfb ) activity; beta- adrenergic receptor (adrb ); solute carrier family , facilitated glucose transporter member (slc a ); uncharacterized mlx interacting protein-like protein (mlxipl); basic helix-loop-helix transcription factor (tcf ); forkhead box transcription factor protein c (foxc ); protein phosphatase regulatory subunit b also known as dopamine-and camp-regulated neuronal phosphoprotein (ppp r b); potassium voltage-gated channel, kqt-like subfamily, member (kcnq ) that is thought to play a critical role in the regulation of neuronal excitability; plexin domain containing (plxdc ); and adenosine a receptor (adora ). analysis of the genomic data in the context of gene ontology, by ingenuity pathway analysis (ipa), allowed us to ascribe biological functional networks to the differentiated transcript abundance dataset. the top functions identified with the ingenuity canonical pathway list, filtered to apoptosis, cellular immune response, cytokine signalling, humoral immune responses and pathogeninfluenced signalling, based on differentially expressed genes were: granzyme a signalling, crosstalk between dendritic cells and natural killer cells, il- signalling, role of pattern recognition receptors in recognition of bacteria and viruses, il- signalling and production in macrophages, complement system, interferon signalling, communication between innate and adaptive immune cells, il- a signalling in fibroblasts, granzyme b signalling, production of nitric oxide and reactive oxygen species in macrophages, differential regulation of cytokine production in macrophages and t helper cells by il- a lgals and il- f that were above the threshold of p value < . , as calculated by fischer's test representing the ratio of number of genes from the dataset that map to the pathway and the number of all known genes ascribed to the pathway. the genes up-regulated in the hp-prrsv rjxwn infected pigs' tbln were associated in networks: from biological networks with functions associated with cell death, antimicrobial responses and cancer, with the highest network score of , i.e. the likelihood of genes in this network would have approximately a - chance of occurring randomly, and focus molecules, i.e. the starting points for generating biological networks; to networks with functions associated with nervous system development and function, organ morphology and reproductive system disease with a score of and focus molecule. many of the upregulated networks related to cell death and inflammatory response functions fit with the results previously reported [ , ] where hp-prrsv strain rjxwn caused severe disease, resulted in up to x higher abundance of virus and produced an exacerbated release of cytokines, including pro-inflammatory cytokines, when compared to type prototype strain vr- . wide spread tissue damage [ ] and cell death were observed as predicted by up-regulation of celldeath associated genes (circled in orange in figure ) in the network representation of the mostly highly rated network for hp-prrsv rjxwn by ipa. the downregulated network functions in the hp-prrsv rjxwn infected tbln included activities associated with cellular function and maintenance, tissue morphology, metabolic disease, organismal development, carbohydrate metabolism, lipid metabolism, small molecule biochemistry, post-translational modification, protein folding, developmental disorder, which may be associated with cell death and reflects a severe disease state. similarly, the down-regulated network functions in the vr- infected tbln were associated with cellular function, maintenance, development and organization. this study produced transcriptional profiles of tblns from non-infected, hp-prrsv rjxwn and us prrsv vr- -infected pigs that provides insight into immune figure ingenuity pathways analysis summary. to investigate possible interactions of differently regulated genes, datasets representing genes with altered expression profile obtained from the rnaseq data for hp-prrsv rjxwn were imported into the ingenuity pathway analysis tool and the following data is illustrated: the network representation of the most highly rated network (gene expression, cell death, lipid metabolism). the genes that are shaded were determined to be significant from the statistical analysis. the genes shaded red are up-regulated and those that are green are down-regulated. the intensity of the shading shows to what degree each gene was up or down-regulated. a solid line represents a direct interaction between the two gene products and a dotted line means there is an indirect interaction. genes associated with cell death are circled with orange color. dysregulation elicited by the virus on host transcript abundance levels necessary for a effective immune response. this rna-seq compendium extends the analyses of previous gene expression atlases performed using affymetrix genechip technology and provides an example of new methods to accommodate the increase in transcriptome data obtained from next generation sequencing [ , , ] . it is well established that many pathogens cause changes in expression of specific genes that act to protect the host and clear the infection. prrsv strains differ in their dysregulation of the immune response to infection and delay in development of a protective immune response in vaccinated pigs [ , ] . a higher number of significantly differentially expressed gene instances were detected in hp-prrsv rjxwn than vr- when normalized to control samples at a snapshot of days post inoculation (dpi). as anticipated, some of the genes (e.g., resistin) and pathways identified would be expected to be involved in the host response to a severe disease. in the case of resistin, it would be expected that adipose tissue stores are being mobilized as part of the host response to infection, which includes a high fever typical of infection with hp-prrsv. there are specific cellular proteins that regulate a protective immune response, for example the pro-inflammatory genes that were upregulated to a greater extent in hp-prrsv rjxwn than vr- when normalized to control samples as observed when comparing the pathogenicity of hp-prrsv isolate rjxwn with the north american prototype strain vr- prrsv. at dpi hp-prrsv rjxwn inoculated pigs had an interstitial pneumonia that was significantly more severe than thevr- inoculated group which appeared to be convalescing [ ] . future studies of these differentially expressed genes, their transcript abundance, protein level, and protein function will enhance our understanding of the interaction of prrsv with the host. identification of new virulence mechanisms of prrsv may improve the prospects for rational design of more effective vaccines to limit viral replication and shedding. marc- cells were cultured in minimum essential medium (emem, safc c) with % fetal bovine serum at °c, % co . wild-type (wt) type prrsv strain vr- (genbank u ), passage on marc- cells, was titrated and used for the swine study. virus (rescued jxwn ; rjxwn ) was rescued from a cloned cdna of chinese highly pathogenic type prrsv strain jxwn [pwsk-jxwn; genbank ef , [ ] ] and passaged times on marc- cells for use in the swine study. the animal use protocol was reviewed and approved by the institutional animal care and use committee (iacuc) of the national animal disease center-usda-agricultural research service. thirty-two -week-old cross-bred pigs were obtained from a u.s. high-health herd and were found to be free of prrsv and influenza virus antibodies using commercially available enzymelinked immunosorbent assay (elisa) kits (herdchek prrs xr; idexx laboratories, westbrook, maine) and np elisa (multis elisa, idexx, westbrook, maine), respectively. pigs were also confirmed negative for porcine circovirus type by quantitative real-time pcr [ ] . one day prior to starting the experiment, pigs were bled, weighed and randomly assigned to one of four groups. group (n = ) consisted of negative control pigs, which received an intranasal ml sham inoculum of minimum essential media (mem) on dpi. group pigs (n = ) were challenged intranasally with ml of × % tissue culture infective dose (tcid )/ml of chinese prrsv strain rjxwn in animal biosafety level- -agriculture (absl- -ag) housing, where they remained for the duration of the experiment. group consisted of naïve pigs (n = ) that were placed in contact with group swine on dpi. group pigs (n = ) were challenged intranasally with ml of × tcid /ml of type prototype strain vr- . groups and were housed in separate isolation rooms in an absl facility. animal care and euthanasia were conducted in accordance with the report of the avma panel on euthansia and under the supervision of iacuc of nadc. serum and bronchoalveolar lung lavage fluid (balf) were tested for infectious virus as described previously [ ] . lungs were scored for gross lesions [ ] and sections fixed for histopathology. swabs were collected from balf, and various sites for bacterial isolation [ ] . following humane euthanasia, tracheobronchial lymph nodes (tbln) from in vivo hp-prrsv rjxwn (n = ), us prrsv vr- (n = ), or sham-infected pigs (n = ) were harvested at days post-infection and total cellular rna was prepared as follows. one gram of tbln from each pig was collected immediately upon necropsy, minced and stored in rnalater (life technologies, grand island, ny) at − °c until homogenized for extraction of total rna with magmax ™ - for microarrays total rna isolation kit (applied biosystems, carlsbad, ca) using the manufacturer's protocol. the integrity of the rna was confirmed with a bioanalyzer and rna nano-chip (agilent, santa clara, ca). the samples used had an average rna integrity number (rin) value of . and s: s rrna ratio of . . cdna library construction cdna libraries were constructed from pooled total cellular rna from the tbln in each treatment group using truseq sample prep kits (illumina inc., san diego, ca) and sequenced by × paired-end sequencing on an illumina hiseq instrument. in order to analyze the illumina reads, a series of bioinformatics methods were used to investigate gene expression profiles in tbln during prrsv infection with hp-prrsv rjxwn and us prrsv vr- at a snapshot of dpi. this was carried out with the construction of a rnaseq analysis pipeline ( figure ) comprised of gsnap for alignment and genome construction, and cufflinks to determine if differential expression and changes in transcript abundance were statistically significant. three files of transcriptome data from the sham, hp-prrsv rjxwn and us prrsv vr- inoculated groups were aligned to the ucsc pig genome build using the gsnap alignment program in preparation for differential expression analysis. the next step in the pipeline was to put the gsnap output into the cufflinks program and run it through three separate utilities or tools within the software package; cufflinks, cuffmerge, and cuffdiff. first the three files were run through cufflinks in order to assemble the aligned rna sequence reads into transcripts and estimate the abundances in fpkm of the paired-end reads. the cufflinks q-value was the false discovery rate (fdr)-adjusted p-value of the uncorrected test statistic. the q-value used in this study was . . the significance status was "yes" when p was greater than q after benjamini-hochberg correction for multiple-testing (additional file ). cuffmerge was then used to create a single transcript dataset from the multiple reconstructions. two runs were then conducted using the hp-prrsv rjxwn vs. control and the us prrsv vr- vs. control datasets using the cuffdiff program to test for differential expression and regulation amongst the two disease states. gene annotation of all significant hits was then carried out using a mysql database matching to the ensembl sscrofa . reference genome currently supported by the integrative genomics viewer (broad institute). datasets representing genes with altered expression profile derived from rnaseq analyses were imported into the ingenuity pathway analysis tool (ipa tool; figure computational pipeline. rnaseq analysis pipeline comprised of gsnap for alignment and cufflinks to determine if differential expression, and changes in transcript abundance were statistically significant (adapted from [ ] ). ingenuity w systems, redwood city, ca, usa; http:// www.ingenuity.com). in ipa, differentially expressed genes were mapped to genetic networks available in the ingenuity database and then ranked by score. the basis of the ipa program consists of the ingenuity pathway knowledge base (ipkb) that is derived from known functions and interactions of genes published in the literature. thus, the ipa tool allows the identification of biological networks, global functions within the host and functional pathways of a particular dataset. the program also gives the significance value of the differentially expressed genes, the other genes with which it interacts, and how the products of the genes directly or indirectly act on each other, including those not involved in the microarray analysis. the networks created are ranked depending on the number of significantly expressed genes they contain and also list diseases that were most significant ( figure ). assessment of the economic impact of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome on swine production in the united states general overview of prrsv: a perspective from the united states porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome: clinical disease, pathology and immunosuppression in utero infection by porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus is sufficient to increase susceptibility of piglets to challenge by streptococcus suis type ii pathogenesis of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus infection in gnotobiotic pigs synergism between porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv) and salmonella choleraesuis in swine laboratory investigation of prrs virus infection in three swine herds a brief review of procedures and potential problems associated with the diagnosis of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome genetic, geographical and temporal variation of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus in illinois associations between genetics, farm characteristics and clinical disease in field outbreaks of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus comparison of the pathogenicity of two us porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus isolates with that of the lelystad virus comparative pathogenicity of nine us porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv) isolates in a five-week-old cesarean-derived, colostrumdeprived pig model reproductive failure of unknown etiology genetic perspectives on host responses to porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrs) heterogeneity of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus: implications for current vaccine efficacy and future vaccine development lelystad virus and the porcine epidemic abortion and respiratory syndrome emergence of fatal prrsv variants: unparalleled outbreaks of atypical prrs in china and molecular dissection of the unique hallmark an infectious cdna clone of a highly pathogenic porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus variant associated with porcine high fever syndrome the -amino-acid deletion in the nsp of highly pathogenic porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus emerging in china is not related to its virulence experimental infection of united states swine with a chinese highly pathogenic strain of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus de novo assembly and analysis of rnaseq data transcript assembly and quantification by rna-seq reveals unannotated transcripts and isoform switching during cell differentiation genenames.org: the hgnc resources in cloning and characterization of porcine resistin gene porcine s a and s a : molecular characterizations and crucial functions in response to haemophilus parasuis infection effect of hypoxia and reoxygenation on the formation and release of reactive oxygen species by porcine pulmonary artery endothelial cells citrullination by peptidylarginine deiminase in rheumatoid arthritis identification of a gene encoding an acyl coa: diacylglycerol acyltransferase, a key enzyme in triacylglycerol synthesis aberrant host immune response induced by highly virulent prrsv identified by digital gene expression tag profiling hp-prrsv challenge of and -week-old pigs indepth global analysis of transcript abundance levels in porcine alveolar macrophages following infection with porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus molecular characterization of transcriptome-wide interactions between highly pathogenic porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus and porcine alveolar macrophages in vivo lymphoid hyperplasia resulting in immune dysregulation is caused by porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus infection in neonatal pigs infection with porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus stimulates an early gamma interferon response in the serum of pigs effect of vaccination with selective bacterins on conventional pigs infected with type porcine circovirus in vivo growth of porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus engineered nsp deletion mutants coinfection of pigs with porcine respiratory coronavirus and bordetella bronchiseptica uncovering the complexity of transcriptomes with rna-seq submit your next manuscript to biomed central and take full advantage of: • convenient online submission • thorough peer review • no space constraints or color figure charges • immediate publication on acceptance • inclusion in pubmed, cas, scopus and google scholar • research which is freely available for redistribution we thank the following members of the virus and prion research unit at the national animal disease center: j. huegel, j. crabtree, a. burow, d. adolphson, s. anderson, m. kappes and a. vorwald for technical assistance. we also gratefully acknowledge d. alt of the genomics unit at the national animal disease center, and a. severin of iowa state university ngs bioinformatics, for assistance in data analysis. mention of trade names or commercial products in this article is solely for the purpose of providing specific information and does not imply recommendation or endorsement by the u.s. department of agriculture. additional file : cuffdiff output of all significant hits for comparison, using the hp-prrsv rjxwn vs. control and the us prrsv vr- vs. control datasets, to test for differential expression and regulation amongst the two disease states. gene annotation (symbol) was carried out using a mysql database matching to the ensembl sscrofa . reference genome currently supported by the integrative genomics viewer (broad institute). location (row.names); gene annotation (symbol); entrez gene name; treatment (sample_ , sample_ ); status; abundance in fpkm (value_ , value_ ); differential expression (log _fold_change); test statistic (test_stat); p-value (p_value); false discovery rate (fdr)-adjusted p-value of the uncorrected test statistic (q_value); significance status after benjamini-hochberg correction for multiple-testing (significant).additional file : transcript sequences of all significant hits inthe hp-prrsv rjxwn vs. control and the us prrsv vr- vs. control datasets. the authors declare that they have no competing interests.authors' contributions lcm: study conception, data collection and analysis, research design, manuscript writing. df: research design, data analysis. aa: data analysis. dob: rnaseq interpretation discussions and data analysis. bg: infectious clone and production of virus stocks. kml: study conception, animal study execution, virus stocks, data collection, and manuscript preparation and writing. jnh: data collection. sns: data collection. h-cy: infectious clone of hp-prrsv strain jxwn . ksf: study conception, rescue of hp-prrsv infectious clone, and production of virus stocks. mek: study conception and manuscript preparation and writing. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- - juhmjaj authors: hou, wei; liu, fei; van der poel, wim h.m.; hulst, marcel m. title: rapid host response to an infection with coronavirus. study of transcriptional responses with porcine epidemic diarrhea virus date: - - journal: biorxiv doi: . / . . . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: juhmjaj the transcriptional response in vero cells (atcc® ccl- ) infected with the coronavirus porcine epidemic diarrhea virus (pedv) was measured by rnaseq analysis and hours after infection. differential expressed genes (degs) in pedv infected cells were compared to degs responding in vero cells infected with mammalian orthoreovirus (mrv). functional analysis of mrv and pedv degs showed that mrv increased the expression level of several cytokines and chemokines (e.g. il , cxcl , il a, cxcl [alias il ]) and antiviral genes (e.g. ifi , ifit , mx , oasl), whereas for pedv no enhanced expression was observed for these “hallmark” antiviral and immune effector genes. pathway and gene ontology “enrichment analysis” revealed that pedv infection did not stimulate expression of genes able to activate an acquired immune response, whereas mrv did so within h. instead, pedv down-regulated the expression of a set of zinc finger proteins with putative antiviral activity and enhanced the expression of the transmembrane serine protease gene tmprss (alias mspl) to support its own infection by virus-cell membrane fusion (shi et al, , viruses, ( ): ). pedv also down-regulated expression of ectodysplasin a, a cytokine of the tnf-family able to activate the canonical nfkb-pathway responsible for transcription of inflammatory genes like il b, tnf, cxcl and ptgs . the only cytokine genes found up-regulated by pedv were cardiotrophin- , an il -type cytokine with pleiotropic functions on different tissues and types of cells, and endothelin , a neuroactive peptide with vasoconstrictive properties. furthermore, by comprehensive datamining in biological and chemical databases and consulting related literature we identified sets of pedv-response genes with potential to influence i) the metabolism of biogenic amines (e.g. histamine), ii) the formation of cilia and “synaptic clefts” between cells, iii) epithelial mucus production, iv) platelets activation, and v) physiological processes in the body regulated by androgenic hormones (like blood pressure, salt/water balance and energy homeostasis). the information in this study describing a “very early” response of epithelial cells to an infection with a coronavirus may provide pharmacologists, immunological and medical specialists additional insights in the underlying mechanisms of coronavirus associated severe clinical symptoms including those induced by sars-cov- . this may help them to fine-tune therapeutic treatments and apply specific approved drugs to treat covid- patients. the lack of knowledge for treating hospitalized sars-cov- infected patients is one of the pressing problems of the current covid- pandemic. the sars-cov- virus shows a close genetic similarity to the in april identified sars virus (sars-cov- ) and to other sars-related coronaviruses isolated from humans and bats. sars-cov- induces clinical respiratory symptoms familiar to the virus, mostly in persons with underlying diseases like copd, heart failure, diabetes and obesity ( : wu et al. ) . despite the sars-cov- virus has been extensively studied in the last two decades, there are no vaccines available yet, neither there are effective prophylactic and therapeutic treatment regimens with drugs that work equally well for each individual patient with sars-induced respiratory problems. such treatments might prevent development of severe disease patterns like "acute respiratory distress syndrome" (ards) and other, often fatal complications, and may decrease the case-fatality rate of sars-cov- infections. in our lab we study the alpha-coronavirus pedv. pedv was first detected in pig herds in in europe ( : pensaert and de bouck ) . however, this virus reemerged in the spring of in north america causing a massive outbreak among pig herds, resulting in the death of about % of the suckling piglets due to severe diarrhea and dehydration ( although several studies concluded that these clinical symptoms were caused by mrv itself, in concordance with the co-existence of mrv in pedv infected piglets, also other mrv serotypes were isolated from hospitalized patients with airway problems diagnosed positive for sars-cov- ( : cheng et al. , : duan et al. , : zuo et al. . recently, a cross-family recombinant coronavirus was isolated in china from bat faeces in which an rna sequence originating from the s segment of mrv was inserted in the coronavirus genome between the n and ns a genes, indicating that both viruses were replicating simultaneously in a single cell in bats ( : huang et al. ) . a prevalence study showed that this cross-family recombinant coronavirus circulated in an isolated bat colony in a cave in china ( : obameso et al. ). this cooccurrence of mrv with coronaviruses raised the questions whether a synergistic effect between both viruses exists and if such coexistence plays a role in viral pathogenesis. therefore we studied the host response in cultured cells early ( and hours) after pedv and mrv infection using rnaseq. our original goal was to identify early factors and processes induced by pedv or mrv that could stimulate or influence the replication and pathogenesis of the other virus. the host, tissue and cell tropism of pedv differs from sars-cov- and - . however, the genomic organization, replication strategy and function of a part of the viral nonstructural proteins share common features among all coronaviruses ( : brian and baric ) . this applies particularly for interactions in infected cells of nonstructural coronavirus proteins with specific host proteins. host proteins that are recruited or silenced to support virus replication, assembly and release. in our experiment we used vero cells (cercopithecus aethiops epithelial kidney cell line; atcc® ccl- ) because these cells support efficient infection and replication of both mrv and pedv. vero cells are susceptible for many coronaviruses, including sars-cov- and - ( : chu et al. ). they originate from epithelial tissue, in part resembling nasal and bronchial epithelium cells, the prime target cells infected by sars-cov- in the airways of humans. recent research showed that sars-cov- is also able to replicate in epithelial cells of human small intestinal organoids ( : lamers et al. ) . a disadvantage of vero cells is a deletion in the type i interferon (ifn) gene cluster on chromosome ( : osada et al. ). therefore, these cells lack expression of type i ifns important for activation of antiviral defense mechanisms. however, research has shown that vero cells by-pass this ifnactivation route and could mount an antiviral response mediated by interferon regulatory factor ( : chew et al. ). single infections with pedv or mrv alone and simultaneous (double) infections of vero cells with both viruses were performed using a maximum multiplicity of infection (moi) to achieve a synchronized infection of all cells. by rnaseq measured expression levels of mrna transcripts/genes in infected cells were compared to rnaseq profiles measured from similar treated mock-infected cells harvested at the same time point after infection. the detected sets of differential expressed genes (degs) for pedv and mrv were analyzed by gene set enrichment analysis (gsea) using functional bioinformatic programs to retrieve biological processes (pathways and gene ontology terms [go-term]) and associations with chemical compounds, including drugs. in addition, we searched the literature for functional information of the pedv-degs to find possible associations with sars-cov- pathogenesis. because of the covid- pandemic we gave priority to publish the results of this functional bioinformatical analysis and datamining for the single infected vero cells with pedv separate from the results of the double infections with mrv . in this report we focused on the "very early" host response of epithelial cells to an infection with the coronavirus pedv and pay less attention to the role of specific viral proteins in this host response to pedv. in part our results were in agreement with results of a previous rnaseq study comparing sars-cov- and influenza host responses by rnaseq ( : blanco-melo et al. ). but we also found associations with biological processes, and pivotal genes/proteins acting in these processes, that had not been recognized before. this information may contribute to the search for novel or alternative preventive or therapeutic drugs and treatment protocols for this devastating covid- disease. a time-dependent infection experiment was performed with cultured vero cells. details are described in supplementary file (material and methods) and visually displayed in this file. briefly, overnight cultured vero cells grown in cm wells were mock-infected, infected with mrv strain wbvr ( : hulst et al. ) or pedv strain cv ( : pensaert and de bouck , : rasmussen et al. ] ) with a multiplicity of infection of ≥ for min at °c. for pedv and corresponding mockinfected cells, µg/ml of trypsin in serum-free medium was used to facilitate infection of vero cells during the whole experiment. all virus and mock-infected timepoints were performed in quadruplicate. after incubation for min at °c, virus was discarded and cells were washed twice and supplied with fresh culture medium. cells were incubated for , , , , and h at °c and % co . after incubation for the indicated times, cells were placed on ice before total rna was isolated from three of the quadruplicate wells. the replication of both viruses in vero cells was monitored using virus-specific rt-qpcr tests ( fig. : methods and primers used for pcr are provided in supplementary file ). in addition, cells in one of the quadruplicate wells incubated for h were fixated and stained with antibodies directed against the s spike protein of pedv and the s attachment protein (α ) of mrv . a decrease in ct-values for pedv was not observed before h post inoculation ( h.p.i), indicating that replication in pedv infected cells started later than was observed for mrv (at h.p.i). staining of the cells after h indicated that nearly all vero cells were infected with mrv and more than % with pedv. also more than % of the cells in hwells appeared as fused cells (syncytia), confirming that more than % of the cells were infected with pedv. quality control of the total rna isolated from infected cells using an agilent bioanalyzer showed that rnas isolated from pedv infected wells at h.p.i. were partially degraded (rin values below ), making them unsuitable for rnaseq analysis. therefore, only , and h timepoints were analyzed using rnaseq. stained with a monoclonal antibody directed against the s spike protein. mrv and mock infected cells were stained with a polyclonal rabbit serum raised against a peptide sequence of the s -attachment protein of mrv serotype . nuclei were stained blue with the hoechst, ', -diamidino- -phenylindole dye. equal amounts of total rna isolated from triplicate wells were pooled and subjected to rnaseq analysis by genomescan b.v.(leiden, the netherlands) using next generation sequencing (ngs) (see supplementary file a for details). mapping of ngs reads to the cercopithecus aethiops reference genome and preparation of datafiles with calculated fold change (fc) of expression levels of mapped mrnas, were performed for each comparison at , , and h by genomescan (see supplementary file b). from these datafiles we extracted lists of degs with a fc> and p-value of < . . after accessing the ncbi, panther or kegg databases for human orthologs, not annotated cercopithecus aethiops degs were annotated with an hugo official gene symbols (http://www.genenames.org). in supplementary file sheet "pedv-mrv degs fc> ", lists of all annotated pedv and mrv degs are presented with their fc. in a separate sheet "pedv-degs functional info" all individual degs regulated by pedv at and h.p.i. are presented with their fc, information about their function and the types of human cells in which expression of the gene is relatively high compared to other human cells (retrieved from the "primary cell atlas" dataset of biogps: http://biogps.org/). note that all tables in these excel sheets of supplementary file are sortable using the headers. in all results paragraphs beneath information about the biological function of degs was retrieved by consulting the "genecards" (weizmann institute of science: https://www.genecards.org/) and ncbi gene reports (entrez gene: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene/), and literature linked to these reports (for references about these biological functions of genes/proteins we refer to publications cited in these reports: "genecards" weblinks are provided in supplementary file ). sets of pedv and mrv degs were analyzed using the gsea program geneanalytics (lifemap sciences, inc.) and pathways (for mrv and pedv), go-terms (not for mrv), and associations with compounds/drugs (not for mrv) with a high or medium score (p-value < . ) were retrieved and listed in separate sheets in supplementary file (sheets "mrv-pedv pathways", "pedv g -terms" and "pedv compounds"). similar and related pathways retrieved for both pedv and mrv, and remarkable pedv pathways, go-terms and compound associations are summarized in table . for pedv all degs within these pathways are provided with their regulation, up (green) or down (red). for mrv only degs in common with pedv-degs were listed in table (see sheet "mrv-pedv pathways" in supplementary file for all mrv-degs acting in these pathways). subsets of pedv-degs were selected matching the terms "chemokines-cytokines", "antiviral" , and terms related to the pathogenesis of covid- (explained below) using the genotyping program varelect (lifemap sciences, inc.) and displayed in supplementary file in separate sheets: "chemokines-cytokines", "(anti)-viral", etc. based on these selections we prepared a set of pedv key-degs consisting of genes regulated with a fc of > (up) or <- (down) or playing an important role in biological processes induced by pedv and related to covid- pathology. in beneath results sections we tried to give as much as possible meaningful information about the function of key-degs for which we found an association with sars-cov- infections. we emphasize that further dedicated experimental and in-silico research is necessary to confirm the involvement of the proteins encoded by these genes for pathogenesis of this viral disease. table . enriched pathways, go-terms and compound associations of pedv-degs. *pedv enriched pathways (a), go-terms (b), and associations with compounds and drugs (c) with a high and medium score and with at least matching genes were retrieved from geneanalytics. common pathways for mrv were included in table a . a full list of pathways with degs, retrieved for mrv at and h, is provided in supplementary file (sheet mrv-pedv pathways). a possible function or process related to specific degs, pathways, go-term, or compounds/drugs is provided in blue text between brackets. $ official gene-symbols (hugo abbreviations) are listed for degs. down-regulated degs were colored red and up-regulated degs were colored green. in section a the number of degs regulated by mrv in a pathway and the common degs are provided between brackets. degs regulated by both pedv and mrv are underlined. compared to mrv, only a few genes involved in "cytokine/chemokine signaling" were regulated at and h by pedv. in fig. a the regulation of cytokines/chemokines in pedv and mrv infected vero cells are displayed. this indicated that mrv increased the transcription of a broad set of cytokines/chemokines, including interferonmediated cytokines like cxcl and cxcl (alias il ), already at h.p.i., whereas pedv did not, even not when replication of pedv rna was detected by rt-qpcr at h.p.i.. for mrv, this cytokine/chemokine response at h.p.i. was followed by high up-regulation of "hallmark" antiviral genes at h.p.i. (see fig. b : e.g. interferoninduced genes [ifi] and oasl) and chemokines that attract t cells, monocytes, granulocytes, including basophils (e.g. cxcl , cxcl and ccl ). pedv infection up-regulated only a few genes coding for proteins with cytokine activity (ctf and edn ), and also did not elevated gene expression of these "hallmark" antiviral genes. in contrast, pedv down-regulated expression of genes (out of in total) coding for zinc finger proteins (out of in total), all with an antiviral activity towards herpes simplex virus ( fig c) binding of thrombin to f rl reduces inflammation, activates platelets and increases vasodilation and permeability of the vascular wall (see also below in the section "platelets activation"). csf r is a receptor for the cytokine colony stimulating factor , a cytokine that regulates differentiation and function of macrophages, and in the cns, the density and distribution of microglia cells. the blnk gene codes for a cytosolic protein that passes on b-cell receptor signals in the signaling cascade that activates b-cell development and function. gene expression of genes coding for essential components of this b-cell signaling, like "spleen associated tyrosine kinase" (syk) and "lyn proto-oncogene"(lyn) were not regulated by pedv, nor by mrv. genes involved in amino acid, protein translation and metabolism of immuno-active compounds. pedv degs coding for enzymes involved in the metabolism of the non-essential amino acids histidine, phenylalanine, tryptophan and proline were found enriched in the pedv dataset (see supplementary file , sheet pedv-compounds). remarkable were the degs coding for amine oxidases involved in the catabolism of the biogenic amines histamine, tryptamine and phenylethylamine, their derivates and related substrates/products of these enzymes (fig. , aoc , maoa, il i ). none of these amino oxidase genes were regulated by mrv. using the genotyping program varelect, pedv-degs with an association with these biogenic amines were retrieved (supplementary file , sheet "biogenic amines"). three enzymes clustered in the "histidine metabolism" pathway (https://www.kegg.jp/keggbin/show_pathway?hsa + ) with histamine and reaction products generated from this biogenic amine (fig. ) . also most association of pedv-degs were found by varelect for histamine. the gene coding for the amine oxidase "interleukin induced " (il i ) was strongly down-regulated ( -fold) h after infection with pedv. besides catalysis of l-phenylaniline into phenylpyruvate (fig. ) , il i also fulfills an important role in signaling in "synaptic clefts" formed between antigen presenting cells (apc) and t cells (so-called "immune cleft": see also below) ( expression of the prostaglandin-endoperoxide synthase (ptgs ) gene was upregulated by mrv at h p.i. ptgs synthesizes prostaglandin endoperoxide h (pgh ), an compound with a short half-life and the precursor of many biological active prostaglandins: e.g. thromboxane-a (mediates activation of platelets), pgi and pge . in contrast, pedv increased the expression of the gene coding for prostaglandin e synthase (ptges) which converts pgh into pge . pge is a direct vasodilator, but does not inhibit platelet aggregation. pge also suppresses t cell receptor signaling. pedv decreased expression of the gamma-glutamyltransferase gene (ggt ) after h ( -fold), but increased expression of this gene hours later to a -fold level compared to mock infected cells. ggt synthesizes leukotriene d (ltd ) from ltc . ige-activated mast cells may secrete ltd and ltc , together with histamine and platelets activating factor (paf). this vesicle mediated secretion by mast cells (degranulation) results in stimulation of mucus production, and similar to histamine, increases the permeability and smooth muscle contraction of the vascular wall. in persons suffering from asthma this degranulation leads to an immediate allergic response (bronchospasm, airflow obstruction and forming of edema). genes involved in "cilia and synaptic cleft" formation. gsea detected "axon guidance" as the go-term with the highest score for pedv (see table ). in addition, pedv-degs were enriched coding for proteins involved in calcium ion-dependent exocytosis from vesicles into the "synaptic clefts" between two cells (e.g. between axons and dendrites), and degs coding for proteins involved in formation of cilia. cilia protruding from cells are found in many forms. they can have a static (structural) function, e.g. in forming of clefts between two cells (see fig. ), or a motile function. motile cilia on the surface of ciliated cells lining up the epithelial layers in the nose, trachea and bronchia sweep out superfluous mucus containing dirt from the airways. pedv degs matching the terms "cilia" and "synaptic cleft" retrieved form the genotyping program varelect were further examined by consulting functional information in the ncbi gene and genecards reports in order to evaluate their association with these processes (see supplementary file , sheet "cilia and synaptic cleft"). based on this analysis we identified genes in the set of pedv degs which can i) negatively regulate cell adhesion (rnd and sema a), ii) inhibit formation of cilia (kinases mak and cdk , highly up-regulated at h), and iii) regulate cytoskeleton rearrangements that facilitate axon growth and growth and stabilization of dendritic spines (f rl , regulation of genes involved in histamine/biogenic amines (see above) and formation of cilia/clefts suggested that gene expression related to this intersynaptic signaling between immune cells could be affected in response to infection with pedv (fig ) . in particular, the highly down-regulated gene il i ( -fold at h p.i.) is of interest (see also above). il i is believed to be secreted from apc's (e.g. dc's) in the immune cleft formed with t cells ( : molinier-frenkel et al. ). the mechanism how il i transmits its signal to t cells is not completely understood. it could bind to a receptor that concentrates this amino oxidase in the cleft, resulting in elevated h o and ammonia production, phenylalanine depletion and phenylpyruvate production in the cleft space. these alteration in the concentration of these chemicals in the cleft are sensed by the t cell. the paralog of il i , amino oxidase maoa (down-regulated -fold by pedv) could also play a similar role in this signaling process. remarkable was also the strong down-regulation of genes coding for the olfactory receptor family subfamily a member (or a ; -fold at h) and anoctamin (ano , alias cacc; -fold at h). ano is a calcium-activated chloride channel imbedded in the basal membranes of neurons that harbor apical membrane receptors like or a that sense odorants. by importing chloride ions into the cytosol ano contributes to the depolarization of these neurons (https://www.kegg.jp/kegg-bin/show_pathway?hsa + ). loss of smell and taste is one of the first noticeable symptoms of covid- . genetic defects in the ano gene are associated with von willebrand disease, a bleeding disorder due to defective platelet aggregation ( . also disease incidence in adult males is significantly higher than in females of the same age. to assess whether pedv-degs relate to these pathological symptoms, the genotyping program varelect was used to identify genes matching the terms "ards", "cardiomyopathy", "obesity (diabetic)", and "platelets activation". detailed information about all matching degs is provided in supplementary file in separate sheets for all queried terms. degs matching to more than one query term are displayed in fig. . remarkable associations of degs with these terms are mentioned in sections beneath. . edn and agt are vasoactive peptides and binding of edn and agt to their receptors on granular cells of the juxtaglomerular apparatus in the kidney raises free calcium levels in the cytosol, leading to inhibition of camp-mediated secretion of the aspartylprotease renin (ren), the key regulator of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (raas) (https://www.kegg.jp/kegg-bin/show_pathway?hsa + ). ren converts pre-angiotensinogen (agt) to the endocrine peptide-hormone agt (https://www.kegg.jp/kegg-bin/show_pathway?hsa + ). agt is further cleaved to variants with specific endocrine activity by angiotensin i converting enzymes (e.g. ace and ace : ). on the surface of bronchial epithelial cells ace was identified as entry receptor for sars-cov- and - ( : hoffmann et al. ). the octamer peptide agt stimulates secretion of the mineralocorticoid hormone aldosterone by the adrenal glands. aldosterone, and the agt and edn peptide hormones regulate an array of physiological processes in the body, e.g. vascular smooth muscle contraction, blood pressure, fluid and electrolyte homeostasis ( : agapitov et al. ) . all processes that are important for proper functioning of the vascular system, heart muscles and kidneys. ctf is directly involved in the pathology of numerous cardiovascular diseases by promoting cardiac myocyte hypertrophy ( : wollert et al. ) , which may lead to the onset of heart-diseases like "hypertrophic cardiomyopathy" or "dilated cardiomyopathy", and eventually, to (lethal) heart failure. pedv induced a strong down-or up-regulation of several other genes directly involved in the function of cardiomyocytes. sodium voltage-gated channel subunit (scn b) was strongly upregulated ( -fold) and mylk (see above), citrate synthase (cs; down-regulation -fold) and ankyrin repeat domain (ankrd ) were strongly down-regulated. down-regulation of cs may reduce oxidative capacity in cardiomyocytes. gene expression of ankrd was down-regulated -fold in response to mrv infection at h.p.i, but reverted to a -fold up-regulation h later. ankrd is a putative transcription factor involved in regulation of gene expression in hypertrophic myocytes (https://www.wikipathways.org/index.php/pathway:wp ) regulation of cytosolic calcium levels in the cytosol of cardiomyocytes, e.g. by binding of col a and col a (up-regulated by pedv, see above) to integrin subunit alpha on the surface of cardiomyocytes or after import of calcium ions mediated by calcium voltage-gated channels (e.g. by cacna h; down-regulated -fold at h by pedv) may also trigger myocyte hypertrophy. pedv strongly down-regulated gene expression of a potassium voltage-gated channel (kcnq ; -fold). this in contrast to a strong up-regulation of the sodium symporter scn b. for the potassium channel cacna h (alias kv . ) it was reported that this channel regulates the membrane potential and ca + permeability of mitochondria located in the vicinity the sarcoplasmic reticulum in rat cardiomyocytes ( : testai et al. ). all three above mentioned ion channels are also involved in the process of excitation, contraction/relaxation and repolarization of cardiac myocytes. mrv also downregulated gene expression to -fold for the potassium (kcnq ) and calcium channel cacna h, but did not increased expression of the sodium symporter gene scn b or orthologs of this gene. chronic hypertension and heart disease/failure is a complication frequently observed in obese/diabetic patients. in accordance with this, out of the pedv degs matching the term "obesity" also matched with the term "cardiomyopathy" (see additional remarkable pedv-degs. highly up-or down-regulated pedv-degs not mentioned in the text, and to our opinion interesting with regard to coronavirus infection, are briefly described in table . among these degs several genes coding for transcription factors and genes transcribed in antisense rna's that inhibit translation of their coding counterparts. for more functional information about these degs we refer to the weblinks provided in supplementary file , sheet "pedv key degs". table . remarkable pedv-degs not mentioned in the text. in this report we measured the transcriptional response of vero cells shortly after infection with the coronavirus pedv. the function of the responding host genes and the biological processes in which they act were studied in detail by us to find plausible relations to covid- pathology. because of the differences in genomic organization and expression of viral proteins between sars-cov- and pedv, we paid less attention to couple the response of specific host genes to the function of specific coronavirus proteins. we were able to infect the majority of vero cells (> %) with pedv and mrv synchronically. this resulted in a unique set of highly up-and down-regulated degs for pedv. not more than % of the pedv-degs (n= ) were similar to mrv-degs (total of mrv-degs). in contrast to mrv, we observed no typical response of antiviral genes and related cytokine/chemokine genes in vero cells within h.p.i. for pedv. for mrv these processes started already before h.p.i.. we have to notice that pedv replication started h later than mrv replication, which could in part be the reason for not detecting transcriptional regulation of specific cytokine, chemokine and antiviral genes for pedv. longer incubation times than h were not planned in the original design of our experiments and would have resulted in a set of pedv-degs dominated by genes involved in syncytia forming and apoptotic/necrotic cell death. nevertheless, at h replication of pedv rna was detected by rt-pcr, indicating that dsrna was present in the cells and could have be sensed by cytosolic pattern recognition receptors of the rig-i-like family to initiate an antiviral and related cytokine/chemokine response. similar as observed in another study with pedv and vero cells, and in analogy with sars-cov- and - , we observed a high up-regulation of the transmembrane serine protease gene (tmprss ) that acts as a co-factor in the infection process of cells ( we observed a reduced expression of eef a , as part of a transcription factor-complex that binds and activates the promotor of ifnγ, and of the cytokine eda and its receptor (edaradd) involved in activation of canonical-nfkb transcription of antiviral cytokine-chemokine genes like cxcl (alias il ) an cxcl . this reduced expression of eef a and eda and its receptor may play a crucial role in delaying or downgrading an ifn-mediated antiviral and cytokine/chemokine response in our vero cell system. the elevated transcription of many cytokine and chemokine genes in vero cells by mrv suggests that replication of this rna virus in epithelial cells induces secretion of these immune effectors (more information about the genes/processes that responded to mrv infection will be published elsewhere). pedv, and also the mrv strain we used both replicate in enterocytes lined up in the intestinal mucosal layer. in the intestinal and bronchial epithelial layer, microfold (m) cells are imbedded between these lined up epithelial cells. m-cells sense and engulf foreign pathogens/antigens from the lumen to present them to residing immune cells. according to pathway analysis, most t cell related immune genes regulated in response to mrv infection were part of the pathways "t-helper (th ) differentiation/activation" and "il signaling". antigen presentation by m cells to th cells in the submucosal layers stimulate secretion of different types of il cytokines (il a-d, il and il f) resulting in activation of different types of innate immune cells and t cells, including th /th cells. dysregulation of this pathogen-induced il response may disturb the balance between th /th -cell mediated immune responses, resulting in excessive inflammation, damage to the epithelial layer and on the long term, to autoimmune reactions. tf rorc (or specific isoforms of this tf, see above) plays a pivotal in controlling il expression and secretion by th cells. pedv strongly up-regulated gene expression of rorc in vero cells whereas mrv down-regulated expression of this tf. this difference in regulation of tf rorc suggests that virus-induced activation or suppression of il secretion by th cells in submucosal layers of airway epithelium can be an important mechanism to dysregulate the activation of t cell responses. therefore, tf rorc might be a potential target for drug treatment/development. drugs affecting expression of rorc, like the fluorinated steroid "dexamethasone" and the synthetic tetracycline derivative "doxycycline" (http://ctdbase.org/basicquery.go?bqcat=gene&bq=rar+related+orphan+receptor +c) are already under investigation in relation to sars-cov- pathogenesis. transcriptional regulation of a set of genes coding for enzymes involved in biogenic amine metabolism was unique for pedv, and not observed for mrv. most associations of these pedv-degs were found with histamine, a compound produced by mast cells and basophils, and released by these cells in response to allergens and pathogen-induced inflammation. the -fold up-regulation of the enzyme aoc suggests that histamine is converted to imidazole-acetaldehyde (see fig. ). however, without data of intra-and extracellular concentrations of the chemicals this remains speculative. recent reports indicated that submucosal mast cells in the lungs were triggered by sars-cov- infection to release pro-inflammatory cytokines (il , il and tnf-alpha) . mdscs infiltrate these tumors and inflamed tissues to suppress the local activity of specific immune cells. therefore, the role of infiltrating mdscs at inflammatory sites in the lungs of covid- patients, as part of an sars-cov- immune-evading strategy, and the role of il i in this process, is worthwhile to investigate in more detail. expression of genes that promote or inhibit the formation and motility function of cilia were time-dependently regulated by pedv. the -fold up-regulation of fez gene expression at h ( -fold) descended within h to a moderate -fold upregulation. this descend occurred simultaneously with elevation of gene expression of the kinases mak and cdk , both involved in inhibition of cilia formation. because pedv efficiently replicates in enterocytes that carry ciliated membrane protrusions (microvilli) on their luminal surface, regulation of these genes could be related to structural changes in the cytoskeleton of cells imposed by virus replication (e.g. syncytia forming in pedv infected vero cultures). likewise, sars-cov- replication could also impose structural changes in cilia protruding from the surface of upperairway epithelial cells (nose, trachea) and bronchi. based on our results we cannot pinpoint a specific process in which these cilia-regulating genes act. possible processes can either be formation of an immune cleft, a virological cleft to promote more effective infection of neighboring cells, or cytoskeleton rearrangements to support virus replication, morphogenesis and budding from cells. interestingly, two recent studies revealed a high level of expression of the sars-cov- entry receptor ace and its co-receptor tmprss in ciliated airway epithelial cells ( . these processes deserve more attention, and may also be considered as possible target-processes for interference with drugs. within our set of pedv-degs, and the biological processes deduced from this set, we found associations with diverse aspects of covid- pathogenesis, i.e. "ards", "cardiomyopathy", "obesity (diabetic)", and "platelets activation". however, it is unknown whether the proteins encoded by these pedv-degs indeed play a role in the biological processes underlying the symptoms and complications observed in hospitalized persons infected with sars-cov- . nevertheless, a part of these genes/processes may be starting points for further dedicated research. research to fine tune drug treatment protocols that are already applied for covid- patients, or research that provides new insights for treatments with alternative prophylactic and therapeutic approved drugs. in table . we summarized the pedv-degs that are, to our opinion, of interest for modulation of the biological processes underlying the pathogenesis of covid- . table . possible target genes for covid- therapy. colophon. the overwhelming amount of data published recently made it impossible for us to oversee all (novel) facts about the sars-cov- virus and pathology of the covid- disease. some important genes and related processes imbedded in our set of pedv-degs may have been overlooked by us. therefore, we encourage researchers, especially medical, immunological and pharmaceutical specialists, to study this set of degs in detail. the users-friendly supplementary file with functional information about degs and related biological processes can be down-loaded from the web. by publishing these pedv data ahead of our complete study, we hope that some of the gene targets and cognate processes we have identified for the coronavirus pedv will contribute to a better understanding how hospitalized covid- patients can be treated and cured. a more condensed version of this manuscript, focusing on the original goal of our study, 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excel file with sortable tables in separate sheets. please, first read the sheet "read me" for an explanation and instructions for the use of the tables. excel sheets contain tables with i) pedv and mrv degs extracted from rnaseq data files, ii) functional information about the pedv-degs, iii) gsea extracted pathways (for mrv and pedv), go-terms (only for pedv) and compound associations (only for pedv), and iv) associations of pedv-degs with the terms "cytokines-chemokines", "(anti)-viral", "biogenic amines", "cilia and synaptic clefts", and the disorders "ards, "cardiomyopathy", "obesity", and "platelets activation" (a-c-o-p). the authors declare that they have no competing interests.authors' contributions. key: cord- -ye nqj authors: huang, yuxiang; tan, hexin; yu, jian; chen, yue; guo, zhiying; wang, guoquan; zhang, qinglei; chen, junfeng; zhang, lei; diao, yong title: stable internal reference genes for normalizing real-time quantitative pcr in baphicacanthus cusia under hormonal stimuli and uv irradiation, and in different plant organs date: - - journal: front plant sci doi: . /fpls. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ye nqj baphicacanthus cusia (nees) bremek, the plant source for many kinds of drugs in traditional chinese medicine, is widely distributed in south china, especially in fujian. recent studies about b. cusia mainly focus on its chemical composition and pharmacological effects, but further analysis of the plant's gene functions and expression is required to better understand the synthesis of its effective compounds. real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (rt-qpcr) is a powerful method for gene expression analysis. it is necessary to select a suitable reference gene for expression normalization to ensure the accuracy of rt-qpcr results. ten candidate reference genes were selected from the transcriptome datasets of b. cusia in this study, and the expression stability was assessed across samples representing different tissues and organs under various conditions, including ultraviolet (uv) irradiation, hormonal stimuli (jasmonic acid methyl ester and abscisic acid), and in different plant organs. by employing different algorithms, such as genorm, normfinder, and bestkeeper, which are complementary approaches based on different statistical procedures, s rrna was found to be the most stable gene under uv irradiation and hormonal stimuli, whereas ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme e was the best suitable gene for different plant organs. this novel study aimed to screen for suitable reference genes and corresponding primer pairs specifically designed for gene expression studies in b. cusia, in particular for rt-qpcr analyses. baphicacanthus cusia (nees) bremek (figure s ), widely distributed in southern china, is the only plant belonging to the family acanthaceae. its roots are used as a traditional chinese medicine, named "nan-ban-lan-gen" (national pharmacopoeia committee, ) , for its antibacterial, antiviral, and immunoregulatory effects in treating colds, fever, and influenza, and especially severe acute respiratory syndrome (sun et al., ) . its leaves and stems are used to extract indigo naturalis (qingdai) . previous studies have shown that qingdai is used to treat leukemia hu et al., ) , ulcerative colitis (suzuki et al., ; fan et al., ) , oral cancer (lo and chang, ) , and psoriasis (lin et al., ) . numerous active compounds have been identified from b. cusia to date, such as indole alkaloids, quinazolinone alkaloids, monoterpenes, triterpenes, flavonoids, sterols, anthraquinones, benzoxazinones, and lignans. of these ingredients, the pharmaceutical activities of indole alkaloids are most frequently reported for their leukocyteinhibitory, anti-inflammatory, and antiviral activities (li et al., ; wu et al., ; huang et al., ) . recently, indirubin, tryptanthrin, and isorhamnetin were successfully characterized, and their anti-leukemia effects were validated . these compounds are secondary metabolites synthesized during normal plant growth or in response to environmental stresses (borowski et al., ) . the stress response mechanism of b. cusia to harsh environmental conditions needs to be explored to better understand its role in producing active ingredients. at present, the genetic information of b. cusia for molecular biology research is limited in public databases, which makes further in-depth studies more difficult. the mrna has recently been sequenced, and the partial contigs have already been deposited into the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) database (srr ) to accelerate genetic studies in b. cusia. plants have established exceedingly complex molecular mechanisms to survive adverse environmental conditions, and the primary mechanism is induced at a transcriptional level when stresses are present (nakashima et al., ; tran et al., ) . moreover, studies show that most hormones can regulate plant physiological activities, and exogenous plant hormones can improve plant resistance to variable environments (bari and jones, ) . for example, abscisic acid (aba) is called "stress hormone" in plants because it plays an important role in resisting drought, salinity, and heat (tuteja, ) . jasmonic acid methyl ester (meja) plays a key role in plant defense and growth (zhang m. et al., ) . moreover, ultraviolet (uv)-b and meja were applied in combination for their synergistic effects on the expression levels of key genes in the biosynthetic pathway . rna sequencing (rna-seq), a transcriptome-based nextgeneration sequencing technique, has revolutionized the genome-wide gene expression analysis in various species (wang et al., ; stone and storchova, ) . the main outcome of rna-seq data is the identification of differentially expressed genes. it is also used to search for reference genes. real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (rt-qpcr) is a sensitive, specific, and reproducible technique widely used to analyze the expression of genes in different organisms and tissues under different conditions (bustin, ; andersen et al., ; caldana et al., ) . consequently, it has become the method of choice for validating candidate genes with a large sample of individuals and replicates. however, it is necessary to select suitable reference genes as internal controls under different experimental conditions for accurate rt-qpcr evaluation because of the variability in initial material, rna integrity, rt-pcr efficiency, and rt-qpcr efficiency (derveaux et al., ) . further, gene expression can be highly tissue specific and differentiated based on the physiological status of the organism or experimental treatments. many recent studies (exposito-rodriguez et al., ; liu et al., ) have proved that it is necessary to verify the expression stability of a candidate reference gene in each species prior to its use for normalization. in this regard, several free excel-based statistical algorithms such as genorm (vandesompele et al., ) , normfinder (andersen et al., ) , and bestkeeper (pfaffl, ) permit the identification of the best internal controls from a set of candidate normalization genes in a given series of biological samples. they have been successfully employed to identify the most stable reference genes in animals, microorganisms, human diseases, and various plant species, such as parsley (li m. y. et al., ) , chrysanthemum morifolium (qi et al., ) , camellia sinensis , oxytropis ochrocephala , and gentiana macrophylla (he et al., ) . besides these software programs, the best suitable reference gene should be evaluated with target genes associated with experimental conditions to obtain reliable results. b. cusia is still a less-studied species at the molecular level. terpenoid indole alkaloids (tias), derivatives of shikimate and terpenoid pathways, are important medicinal ingredients in b. cusia, and they are activated in response to hormonal stresses (schluttenhofer et al., ; . shikimate kinase and -deoxy-d-xylulose -phosphate reductoisomerase (dxr) are the main enzymes involved in the synthesis of tias (veau et al., ; kasai et al., ) . therefore, the genes coding for them are interesting target genes that may be able to testify the reliability of the reference genes under different experimental conditions. the stability of commonly used reference genes based on the transcriptome datasets of b. cusia was evaluated by rna-seq (unpublished data) in this study to identify potential reference genes suitable for transcript normalization in experiments under uv irradiation and hormonal stimuli (meja and aba), and also in different plant organs. moreover, the expression of two target genes, bcsk and bcdxr, was investigated to demonstrate the suitability of the selected reference genes. field-grown samples of b. cusia were collected from perennial dominant shufeng farm in fujian, china ( • n • c). the organ-specific series of samples (root, stem, leaf, and flower) were collected from flowering plants. stress treatments were applied to -month-old plants before flowering. for uv irradiation, plants with soil were transferred into flowerpots and placed under a uv-b transilluminator ( . mw cm − ) for h, and then the viable leaves were selected. the overground parts were sprayed with a solution containing either µm meja or µm aba. then, tissue samples, mainly comprising viable leaves, were collected at , , , , , , and h after treatment. all samples were separately collected in three biological repeats. so, a total of samples were analyzed, consisting of organspecific samples (root, stem, leaf, and flower) and stresstreated samples (meja-, aba-, and uv-treated leaves). after collection, the samples were immediately frozen in liquid n and stored at − • c until further use. the frozen samples were ground to a fine powder in liquid n using a pestle and mortar. the total rna was extracted from all plant tissue samples using a column plant total rna kit (transgen biotech, china) following the manufacturer's recommendations. the concentration of rna samples was determined using a nanodrop spectrophotometer (thermo, america) at nm, whereas its purity was assessed based on absorbance ratios at / nm. samples with an optical density absorption ratio at od / between . and . and od / < . were used for cdna synthesis. the integrity of purified rna was confirmed using agarose gel electrophoresis and ethidium bromide staining. genomic dna was isolated from young leaves ( mg) using the cetyltrimethyl ammonium bromide method and checked by agarose electrophoresis. first-strand cdnas were synthesized using the transscript one-step gdna removal and cdna synthesis supermix (transgen biotech, china), by adding oligo (dt) primer, gremover, e-mix, and r-mix to µg of total rna. rnase-free water was added to the prior mixture, and the total volume ( µl) was incubated at • c for min according to the manufacturer's protocol. reverse transcriptase was inactivated by incubating the mixture at • c for min, and the cdna solution was stored at − • c. transcriptome sequencing of different b. cusia organs (root, stem, and leaf) was performed using the illumina hi-seq platform (illumina, america). after assembly and annotation, (li and dewey, ) was used to analyze the read counts, which were then converted into fragments per kilobase of exon per million reads mapped (fpkm) values, a commonly accepted estimate for the expression level of unigenes (trapnell et al., ) . on the basis of previous studies, candidate reference genes ( table ) belonging to different functional classes were selected to avoid possible co-regulation of the genes. this group of genes comprised several classical housekeeping genes commonly used as internal control for expression studies. the sequences of candidate reference genes were obtained from the transcriptome database. the open reading frame sequences of these genes were cloned ( figure s ). the full-length cdna sequences of the candidate reference genes are provided in data s . moreover, a "tblastx" (ncbi) was run with the candidate gene sequences on non-redundant database using the default settings of the online program to identify b. cusia homologs. the candidate reference genes tested are listed in table with their respective reference(s) where they were first described. the amplification primers for real-time pcr were designed using the primer software (http://www.simgene.com/primer ) (rozen and skaletsky, ) as a criterion to amplify products from to bp with a temperature of - • c (primer sequences are shown in table ). amplification primers were targeted to different exons to control genomic dna contamination. the performance of the designed primers ( table ) was tested by pcr using either b. cusia cdna or genomic dna templates ( figure s ) . the presence of spurious products of amplification caused by genomic dna was also continuously checked by verifying rt-qpcr dissociation profile. a template-free control reaction was run to ensure the absence of contamination or primer-dimer formation for each primer pair. the pcr amplification efficiency was determined for each primer combination using the slope of the standard curve obtained by plotting the fluorescence versus a given concentration of a mixture of all sample cdnas (ranging from : to : , dilution of the cdna mixture sample) using the equation: e = (− /slope) - (ruijter et al., ) , and the values were used in all subsequent analyses ( table ) . real-time amplification reactions were performed using sybr green detection chemistry and run in -well plates with the thermal cycler dice tp (takara, japan). reactions were performed in a total volume of µl containing . µl of template, . µl of each amplification primer, . µl of × top green qpcr suppermix (transgen biotech, china), and . µl of ddh o. all reaction components without template were used as a negative control. the amplification program was set as follows: initial denaturation step of • c for s to activate the dna polymerase, followed by cycles of denaturation at • c for s and annealing at frontiers in plant science | www.frontiersin.org • c for s. the amplification process was followed by a melting curve analysis, ranging from to • c. ampliconbased fluorescence thresholds were used to obtain the ctvalues. all rt-qpcr reactions were carried out in triplicate, both technically and biologically. the final quantification cycle (cq) values were the mean of nine values (biological triplicate, each in technical triplicate). melting curve analysis of the amplification products and gel electrophoresis analysis confirmed that the primers amplified only a single product (data not shown). the expression of target genes bcsk and bcdxr, which were important in the synthesis of compounds in b. cusia, was analyzed using the selected reference genes to validate the reference gene selection. the changes in relative expression levels were calculated using the ct method (pfaffl, ) . furthermore, the expression levels of both were compared with the fpkm values in rna-seq data in some samples (table s ). the suitability of candidate control genes across all the experimental sets was evaluated using three statistical algorithms, genorm (version . ) (vandesompele et al., ) , normfinder (andersen et al., ) , and bestkeeper (pfaffl, ) programs, according to their respective protocols. for genorm and normfinder, the raw ct-values of each gene were converted into the relative quantities using the formula − ct ( ct = each corresponding ct-value -lowest ct-value). for bestkeeper, the ct-value in the program was used directly. genes with standard deviation (sd) > were considered to be unacceptable as reference genes. the pairwise variation (v n /v n+ ) was calculated additionally using the genorm software to determine the optimal number of reference genes needed to normalize; additional control gene was not required for normalization when v was < . (vandesompele et al., ) . the samples were divided into experimental sets and analyzed individually to achieve a more accurate expression analysis. set comprised samples from the meja-induced b. cusia leaves, set comprised samples from the aba-induced b. cusia leaves, set comprised samples from the uv-irradiated b. cusia leaves, set comprised samples from different organs (root, stem, leaf, and flower) of b. cusia, and set which was defined as the stress group comprised samples from sets , , and . also, the overall stability among the five sets and every variety was analyzed. a total of genes were selected as candidate genes with their fpkm values, as shown in table . they were glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh), malate dehydrogenase (mdh), ubiquitin (ubq), ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme e (ubc), actin (act), s rrna ( s), elongation factor -alpha (efa), cyclophilin (cyp), alpha-tubulin (tuba), and beta-tubulin (tubb) housekeeping genes, and these genes have all been reported as stable genes in other species. the sequences of the reference genes were obtained from the transcriptome database (data s ). gene characteristics are shown in table . the full-length unigene sequences from transcriptome database, which were used to design the specific primers for rt-qpcr, could be obtained in ncbi (accession number srr ). the specificity and efficiency of each primer pair were assessed by amplification and dissociation curve analysis. first, the performance of the amplification primers was tested by realtime pcr using cdna and gdna as templates, respectively. a single band with the expected size ( table ) was obtained in each case without signs of primer-dimer formation (figure s ) , and four primer pairs yielded amplicons longer than those obtained with a cdna template (figure s ), whereas primers for other genes were unable to amplify genomic sequences. second, the melting curve analysis of the amplification products was performed by qpcr after cycles of amplification. the presence of a single peak indicated that the expected amplicons were amplified ( figure s ) . the amplicons were also examined by % agarose gel electrophoresis using ethidium bromide staining, and a single band of the expected size for each primer pair was observed. the correlation coefficients (r ) ranged between . and . , and pcr amplification efficiencies between . and . % ( table ) ; both were results of three technical replicas. no signals were detected in no-template controls. real-time rt-pcr was conducted on the cdna samples with primer pairs. the candidate control genes displayed a relatively wide range of expression level with mean ct-values between . (cyp) and . (tubb) (figure ) , suggesting that these reference genes were expressed at different levels in b. cusia. the genes with higher sd of ct-values indicated more variable expression compared with those with lower sd, as shown in table . the genorm program classifies the stability of gene expression by calculating the average expression stability (m). stably expressed genes have values below . , and an m-value more than . indicates lower expression stability (vandesompele et al., ) . the ranking order according to the m value is depicted in figure . as determined by genorm, s and efa were the most stable reference genes in total samples. in contrast, gapdh and ubc were the least stable reference genes. under each subset, the two best reference genes in meja stress were cyp and ubq with the lowest m-value. the most preferred genes for normalization in the aba stress were mdh and tuba. the two most stable reference genes in uv stress were cyp and mdh. as for the various organs, s and tubb were the most stable reference genes. furthermore, the best stable control genes in the stress group (set ) were s and efa. the optimal number of reference genes required for accurate normalization was determined by the pairwise variation (v). the v n /v n+ values were below . under all experimental conditions (figure ) , indicating that one stable reference gene was enough to obtain accurate results. the normfinder program is another visual basic application tool for microsoft excel used to determine expression stabilities of reference genes. it ranks genes based on the stability value for each reference gene. more stable gene expression has the lower stability value. moreover, this algorithm suggests the best pair of genes among the candidate reference genes analyzed using the intra-and intergroup variance. the stability values of reference genes were calculated by normfinder, as shown in table . in the subset of meja stress, s and efa were the most stable. in aba stress, mdh and gapdh were the most stable. in uv stress, the top two stably expressed genes were cyp and mdh. in different normal organs (non-stress group), ubc and efa were the top two stably expressed genes. in set , efa and ubq were the most highly ranked. when evaluating the total experimental samples, ubq and s were the top ranked genes ( table ). in contrast, gapdh was the least stable reference gene under meja stress, tubb was the least stable under aba stress, and tuba was the least stable under uv irradiation and normal organs. tuba was also the least stably expressed gene in set and the second least stably expressed in total samples. the rank in normfinder was slightly different from that in genorm. genes considered as the most stable by genorm ( s and efa) ranked second and third by normfinder, respectively. the bestkeeper algorithm evaluates the stabilities of candidate reference genes based on the cv ± sd values. in the meja stress set, s ( . ± . ) and ubq ( . ± . ) with lowest cv ± sd values were somewhat similar to the results of genorm and normfinder. in the aba stress set, mdh ( . ± . ) and ubq figure | pairwise variation (v) of candidate reference genes calculated by genorm to determine the optimal number of reference genes for accurate normalization. the threshold is . . ( . ± . ) were considered as the most stable genes. in the uv stress treatment, s ( . ± . ) and efa ( . ± . ) were identified as the best reference genes for normalization. as for the subsequent three subsets, s was the best stable gene, which was consistent with the result of genorm ( table ) . the comprehensive rankings of the candidate reference genes were determined using the reffinder program online (http://fulxie. fees.us/?type=reference). data generated by the three programs across different experimental sets were further compared, as shown in table . the top-and low-ranked candidate reference genes were selected for normalizing two target genes bcsk and bcdxr under different experimental conditions. the result (figure ) showed that the expression level of bcsk and bcdxr in b. cusia under meja treatment increased with the increase in induction time when s was used as a control but attained a different expression pattern with the least stable gene gapdh. in aba stress, the expression level of bcsk and bcdxr reached the highest at h when using the most stable reference genes ( s) as the internal control, while the expression level was overestimated when the least stable genes were used (gapdh). similarly, the relative expression level of bcsk increased when normalized using the most stable genes ( s) in normal organs, while the expression level was overestimated when normalized using the least stable combination (gapdh). the relative expression patterns of bcdxr were opposite when the foregoing two genes were used as controls. meanwhile, ubc and tuba, which showed the most and least stable genes, respectively, in different organs subset were used as the reference genes, and the expression levels of bcdxr and bcsk were generally identified with the expression profile in rna-seq (figure ) . the result showed that ubc was more suitable for organs in b. cusia. rt-qpcr has become a broadly accepted method of choice for accurate expression profiling of target genes in the gene expression analysis (nolan et al., ; vanguilder et al., ) . the accurate expression level of a selected gene requires appropriate internal controls, which are commonly called housekeeping or reference genes (derveaux et al., ) . the ideal control genes should be stably expressed under each experimental condition, independent of organs, tissues, developmental stages, and different treatments (bustin et al., ) . however, no universally suitable control genes are available, since numerous studies have reported that the expression of reference genes can also vary considerably with experimental conditions and different species (reid et al., ; wan et al., ; galli et al., ; li j. et al., ) . therefore, a set of potential housekeeping genes must be previously validated in each particular experimental subset. to date, few studies have compared and selected housekeeping genes in b. cusia. this has hindered the characterization of genes involved in different organisms and stress responses in b. cusia. this novel study performed the first large-scale transcriptome data analysis for b. cusia (unpublished), consisting of , unigenes, which were used for reference gene selection. the rna-seq data were useful sources for screening candidate housekeeping genes and represented an important strategy for large-scale reference gene selection for non-model plants (zhuang et al., ) . traditional genes, which are involved in cytoskeleton structure (act, tuba, and tubb), protein synthesis (efα and s), biological metabolic processes (gapdh and ubq), and multifunctional proteins (cyp and mdh), are usually used as reference genes. in this study, the foregoing common internal control genes of b. cusia were cloned ( figure s ) for expression normalization in different samples, including uv irradiation, hormonal stimuli (meja and aba), and different organs. this novel study reported a systematic analysis of reference genes that could be used in different treatment samples of b. cusia. the result demonstrated that each species might have its own suitable reference genes, which should be determined for each subset of experimental conditions. three different, yet complementary, statistical programs were used to identify the most suitable internal controls for the normalization of gene expression studies in b. cusia to minimize bias entrapped by the statistical approach. the results obtained from genorm, normfinder, and bestkeeper were not completely identical due to the different calculation programs (jacob et al., ) , especially under specific individual conditions. similar findings were reported in other studies on rice (kim et al., ) , coffee (cruz et al., ) , tobacco (delaney, ) , and parsley (li m. y. et al., ) . furthermore, the reffinder program (xie et al., ) was used to generate a comprehensive ranking of candidate reference genes. as a result, s rrna was the most stable gene in all subsets except aba stimuli and uv irradiation, while gapdh, tuba, and tubb yielded poor values in this study. reference genes varied in different tissues, organs, and experimental conditions in most previous studies. in rice, ubq and efa were the most stable genes in all the tissue samples, while s and s rrnas were the most stable genes under various treatment conditions (jain et al., ) . however, another study showed that s and s rrnas had the least stable expression at different developmental stages and in different varieties of rice (li et al., ) . moreover, the selections of reference genes were not consistent in various species. act and tubb in carrot (tian et al., ) were the most suitable reference genes under "abiotic stress" and "hormonal stimuli, " but they were not suitable choices in the present study. moreover, gapdh showed a good performance in "hormonal stimuli" in parsley (li m. y. et al., ) but was the least stable in carrot. also, gapdh was the least stable gene in eucalyptus spp. (boava et al., ) and petunia hybrida (mallona et al., ) . the results demonstrated that each species might choose its own stably expressed genes for each subset of experimental conditions. s rrna is frequently used as the control gene for normalizing because it is independent of developmental stages and external stimuli (gantasala et al., ) . moreover, the reports (real-time rt-pcr carried out on barley; published in the period of january to march ) examined indicated that s rrna was the most frequently used gene ( times) among the different reference genes used (kozera and rapacz, ) . the expression of bcsk and bcdxr genes was quantified in this study. bcsk and bcdxr were found to play important roles in the indole and carotenoid biosynthesis pathways, respectively. genorm is used in most studies because of its capacity to determine the number of genes necessary for normalization (kozera and rapacz, ) . the pairwise variation (v) was analyzed in this study to determine the optimal number of genes required for normalization; the v n /v n+ values were below . under all subset conditions (figure ) , indicating that one stable reference gene was enough to obtain accurate results. therefore, s rrna and gapdh were used to testify the expression levels of bcsk and bcdxr under stress conditions and different plant organs. the expression levels of bcsk and bcdxr increased with induction time in the meja treatment subset, verifying that tias are also induced by meja in b. cusia. moreover, the more the expression of bcsk, which participates in the shikimate pathway, the higher the production of indigo ( figure s ) . however, it decreases later because of branching to other aromatic compounds. both the target genes had a peak expression at h in the aba stimuli subset as a result of the plant resistance to stress, conforming to the phenomenon that aba not only promoted withering of an organism but could also improve disease resistance in plants. the expression pattern of both genes was generally identified with the expression profile in rna-seq in different plant organs. in general, s rrna is the best gene among all samples, whereas ubc is the most suitable gene for plant organs, thereby facilitating future studies on gene expression in b. cusia. however, normalization with multiple reference genes has become the commonly used method to avoid erroneous data that may be triggered by using a single reference gene. therefore, based on transcriptome datasets, more novel and stable reference genes can be identified from other b. cusia samples in further studies. yh, ht, lz, and yd conceived and designed the study. yh, jy, gw, and yc collected the tissue material and performed the experiments. yh, jc, zg, and qz performed data analysis. yh wrote the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. the supplementary material for this article can be found online at: http://journal.frontiersin.org/article/ . /fpls. . /full#supplementary-material data s | the full-length cdna sequences of candidate 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ochrocephala bunge using transcriptome datasets under abiotic stress treatments the authors thank professor wansheng chen, dr. qing li, and dr. ying xiao for their kind suggestions and help in the study. key: cord- -nu ib h authors: dong, dong; lei, ming; hua, panyu; pan, yi-hsuan; mu, shuo; zheng, guantao; pang, erli; lin, kui; zhang, shuyi title: the genomes of two bat species with long constant frequency echolocation calls date: - - journal: mol biol evol doi: . /molbev/msw sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nu ib h bats can perceive the world by using a wide range of sensory systems, and some of the systems have become highly specialized, such as auditory sensory perception. among bat species, the old world leaf-nosed bats and horseshoe bats (rhinolophoid bats) possess the most sophisticated echolocation systems. here, we reported the whole-genome sequencing and de novo assembles of two rhinolophoid bats – the great leaf-nosed bat (hipposideros armiger) and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat (rhinolophus sinicus). comparative genomic analyses revealed the adaptation of auditory sensory perception in the rhinolophoid bat lineages, probably resulting from the extreme selectivity used in the auditory processing by these bats. pseudogenization of some vision-related genes in rhinolophoid bats was observed, suggesting that these genes have undergone relaxed natural selection. an extensive contraction of olfactory receptor gene repertoires was observed in the lineage leading to the common ancestor of bats. further extensive gene contractions can be observed in the branch leading to the rhinolophoid bats. such concordance suggested that molecular changes at one sensory gene might have direct consequences for genes controlling for other sensory modalities. to characterize the population genetic structure and patterns of evolution, we re-sequenced the genome of great leaf-nosed bats from four different geographical locations of china. the result showed similar sequence diversity values and little differentiation among populations. moreover, evidence of genetic adaptations to high altitudes in the great leaf-nosed bats was observed. taken together, our work provided a useful resource for future research on the evolution of bats. bats (order chiroptera) are one of the largest monophyletic clades in mammals (order chiroptera), and constitute nearly % of living mammalian species. they can perceive their surroundings using a wide range of sensory systems, and have long been regarded as the most unusual and specialized species of all mammals. most bats are sophisticated echolocators and rely on their echolocation systems for navigation. however, old world fruit bats have no laryngeal echolocating ability, and navigate largely by vision. based on overwhelming molecular genetic evidence, it has been proposed that echolocating bats are paraphyletic (teeling, et al. ) . old world fruit bats and some laryngeal echolocators (including rhinolophidae, hipposideridae, craseonycteridae, megadermatidae, and rhinopomatidae families) are a natural group -the suborder yinpterochiroptera, and the remaining laryngeal echolocating bats are grouped to another suborder yangochiroptera . two distinct navigation approaches can be employed by echolocating bats: low duty cycle (ldc) echolocation and high duty cycle (hdc) echolocation (teeling ). ldc echolocators can separate pulse and echo in time to avoid forward masking, whereas some species of hdc echolocators separate pulse and echo in frequency. it has been documented that rhinolophoid bats might possess the most sophisticated echolocation systems (jones and teeling ) . recently, results from some hearing-related genes suggested sequence convergence in laryngeal echolocating bats (li, et al. ; davies, et al. ) . we attempted to investigate whether similar patterns can be detectable in other hearing-related genes. furthermore, a sensory trade-off between investment in vision and echolocation has been identified (dechmann and safi ) . loss-of-function in short-wave sensitive opsin (sws gene) occurred in rhinolophoid bats, which use hdc echolocation and can emit long constant frequency calls (zhao, et al. ). although several bat genomes have been sequenced (zhang, et al. ) , the evolutionary mechanisms of the rhinolophoid bats remains unclear. comparative genomics will provide us opportunities to investigate whether similar patterns can be detectable in other sensory genes. the great leaf-nosed bat (hipposideros armiger) and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat (rhinolophus sinicus) are two important species of rhinolophoid bats. first, these are model organisms with remarkable hdc echolocation ability and can emit continuous ultrasonic calls of long constant frequency with remarkable acoustic features (doppler-shift compensation) (schnitzler, et al. ) . we can comprehensively explore how rhinolophoid bats evolved a specialized form of echolocation. second, they are important reservoir hosts of emerging viruses, and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat has been suggested to carry the direct ancestor of severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) coronavirus (ge, et al. ) . in this work, we presented the genomes of the great leaf-nosed bat and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat using the next generation sequencing platform (illumina hiseq ). the result revealed the adaptation of auditory sensory perception in hdc echolocators, and showed an extensive contraction of olfactory receptor gene repertoires as well as pseudogenization of some vision-related genes. furthermore, we performed genome re-sequencing to analyze the population genetic structure of the great leaf-nosed bats. the genomic data provide genetic evidence of adaptive evolution in rhinolophoid bats. a female great leaf-nosed bat (hipposideros armiger) and a female chinese rufous horseshoe bat (rhinolophus sinicus) were captured from a cave (n ° . ′ genomic dna was extracted from bat muscle using the qiagen dneasy blood and tissue kit. six paired-end libraries with insert size of bp, bp, bp, k bp, k bp and k bp were constructed and sequenced for the great leaf-nosed bat and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat, respectively. the libraries were sequenced using illumina hiseq platform, which has a read length of bp. low quality sequencing reads were filtered out and potential sequencing errors were removed. the following filtering criteria were carried out: ) filter reads with > % unidentified nucleotides; ) filter reads with > nucleotides aligned to the adapter sequence, allowing < mismatches; ) remove putative pcr duplicates generated by pcr amplification in the library construction process. finally, we generated . gb and . gb of sequences for the great leaf-nosed bat and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat, respectively. the genome sequences were assembled using allpaths software (butler, et al. ). briefly, contigs were generated by constructing a de bruijin graph with the sequencing reads from short-insert library data. the graph was simplified to generate the contigs by removing tips, merging bubbles and solving repeats. the sequencing reads were mapped to the assembled contigs, and the scaffolds were constructed by weighting the rates of consistent and conflicting paired-end relationships. at last, we retrieved the read pairs with one end that uniquely mapped to the contigs and the other end located in the gap region, a local assembly for these collected reads was performed to fill the gaps. a more detailed genome assembly method is provided in supplementary methods. total rnas of the two bats were extracted from brain, cerebellum, heart, liver, stomach, kidney, lung and muscle tissues for the generation of transcriptome data. paired-end libraries for rna sequencing were constructed using the illumina mrna-seq prep kit. the quality and integrity of the rna samples were determined using the agilent bioanalyzer. poly(a) mrnas were isolated using oligo(dt) beads, fragmented, and converted to cdnas followed by end repair, adaptor ligation, and pcr amplification. the libraries thus generated were sequenced using the illumina hiseq platform as described above. we searched for tandem repeats across the genomes using tandem repeats finder. transposable elements were predicted in the genomes by homology search against the known transposable elements (te) in repbase (jurka, et al. ) (version ) using repeatmasker version . . (tarailo-graovac and chen ). the protein-coding genes of the bat genomes were annotated by combining homology-based, ab initio and rna-seq gene prediction methods. at first, rna-seq data were assembled using the trinity package (trapnell, et al. ) . pasa (version r - - ) (haas, et al. ) was then used to map the assembled transcripts. based on the set of gene models, a training set was constructed for de novo predictors by selecting the genes with complete structures and at least % mapping rate for uniprot vertebrate proteins. for the ab initio prediction, augustus (stanke and waack genes with the training set generated by pasa. for homology-based gene prediction, the protein sequences of human, mouse, dog, cow, little brown bat and large flying fox were downloaded from ensembl release and mapped onto the repeat-masked genome using genblasta (she, et al. ). rna-seq data were mapped to the genome using tophat (trapnell, et al. ), and the transcription-based gene structure were generated by cufflinks (trapnell, et al. ) . the final gene set was generated by merging all genes predicted using glean software (http://sourceforge.net/projects/glean-gene/). to infer gene function, it was based on the best match of the alignment to the swissprot and translated embl nucleotide sequence data library databases using blastp. interproscan (mulder and apweiler ) was used to determine motifs and domains in the final gene set. to evaluate completeness of the genomes and annotations, cegma method (parra, et al. ) was employed. we used the treefam methodology (li, et al. ) to define gene families in mammalian genomes (human, macaque, mouse, rat, dog, cat, horse, rhinoceros, cow, pig, little brown bat, large flying fox, great leaf-nosed bat and chinese rufous horseshoe bat). the protein sequences of other mammalian species were obtained from ensembl database (release ). gene family expansion and contraction analysis was performed by cafÉ software (de bie, et al. ) . a random birth and death model was proposed to study gene gain and loss in the gene families across a user-specified phylogenetic tree. a global parameter λ (lambda), which described both gene birth (λ) and death (μ = -λ) rates across all branches of all gene families was estimated using the maximum likelihood method. a conditional p-value was calculated for each gene family, and families with conditional p-values less than . were considered to have a significantly accelerated rate of expansion and contraction. protein sequences of the aforementioned mammals were aligned using muscle software (edgar ) . all orthologous genes were concatenated to one super gene for each species. raxml (stamatakis ) was applied to build phylogenetic trees. we partitioned the data by coding genes, and evaluated the model parameter independently for each partition. in all partitioned analyses, the empirical base frequencies and the evolutionary rates were estimated independently for every partition. bootstrap support was obtained by repeating the original partitioned ml raxml analysis on bootstrap replicates for each dataset using different random number seeds in each repetition. next, we inferred the species tree using coalescent method: maximum pseudo-likelihood estimation of species tree (mp-est) (liu, yu, et al. ) . individual gene tree for each gene was estimated using the maximum-likelihood method and rooted by an outgroup (human). species trees were estimated from the rooted gene trees in the program mp-est with bootstrap replicates. the results supported that bats are member of scrotifera (chiroptera + carnivores + perissodactyla + cetartiodactyla) with bat lineage diverging from fereuungulata (carnivores + perissodactyla + cetartiodactyla). the values of ka, ks, the ka/ks ratio were estimated for each gene using the codeml programs nested in the paml package (yang ) . in order to detect positively selected genes, optimized branch-site likelihood model (zhang, et al. ) was used. we separately explored the positively selected genes in the great leaf-nosed bat and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat. for each analysis, only one bat species was selected as foreground branches, and all other species were regarded as the background branches. the revised branch-site model a was employed, which attempts to identify positive selection acting on some sites on the "foreground branches". using an likelihood ratio test (lrt), the alternative hypothesis that positive selection occurs on the foreground branches (ka/ks > ) is compared with the null hypothesis (ka/ks= ). bayesian empirical bayes values were used to identify sites under positive selection. then, branch two-ratio model was applied to detect accelerated evolved genes in specific lineage. the one-ratio model assumed an equal ka/ks ratio for all lineages in the phylogeny, and the two-ratio model assumed two ka/ks ratios: one branch for the background, one for the foreground branch leading to the specific species. then, clade model c was employed to test for positive selection along the rhinolophoid bats. the two clades were assumed to share sites under purifying selection and neutral evolution, but to differ at a third site partitions under divergent selection. the null model used for the clade model c was m a_rel (weadick and chang ) , whose lrt has a relatively lower false-positive rate. go annotations were downloaded from ensembl databases and were assigned to these orthologous genes. the binomial test was used to identify go categories with more than gene that had an excess of non-synonymous changes in bat lineages. next, we used the program mapp (multivariate analysis of protein polymorphism) (stone and sidow ) to evaluate the physicochemical impact of these convergent amino acid substitutions on bats. physicochemical variations can be used to predict how these particular convergent amino acid substitutions might affect protein function. in this work, we performed a probabilistic analyses of the sequence convergence in echolocating bats. a maximum likelihood approach, implemented in the software package codeml ancestral, was used. we compared the pair-wise branches of two echolocating bat in the phylogeny, and posterior probabilities of all possible amino acid substitutions were calculated. the probabilities of divergent and convergent substitutions were calculated as the sum of joint probabilities of substitutions between the two branches of echolocating bats. convergence and divergence estimates were based on posterior distributions of ancestral states and substitutions. the same state (same amino acid) represents convergent substitutions, and the different state represents divergent substitutions. finally, to further validate that the convergence between two branch pairs of echolocating bats was significant, we performed the simulation analysis to compare the observed probabilities against that of the null hypothesis. simulated sequences were generated using evolver, another package from paml package (yang ) . the branch-wise convergence probabilities were calculated with , replicates. we used the similar in silico method as previously reported in dong et al. (dong, et al. ). at first, we used previously published or genes in vertebrates as query sequences (niimura and nei ) and conducted a tblastn search against the genome sequences with a cutoff e value of e- to identify the or gene repertoires. here, we totally identified or gene repertories from eight mammalian genomes (the site (http://genome.ucsc.edu). then, the non-redundant blast-hits were extended to the ' and ' directions along the genome sequences, and the potential coding regions were extracted from these sequences. the chemosensory receptor genes in mammals have high sequence similarity. here, we re-performed a tblastn against the genome sequences using or coding genes identified from each species, and the non-redundant blast-hits were used to identify the or pseudogenes containing interrupting stop codons or frameshifts. to identify partial or genes from these sequences, we extracted the sequences that did not have any nonsense or frameshift mutations. we then constructed a multiple alignment of these sequences together with functional or genes by the program e-ins-i in mafft version . (katoh, et al. ) . from those alignments, we extracted partial or sequences that meet the following criteria. when the c-terminal region of an or gene is missing from the genome sequence, the n-terminal region should contain an initiation codon at a proper position and should not contain any nonsense mutations, frameshifts, or long gaps. when the n-terminal region is missing, the c-terminal portion should have a stop codon at a proper position and should not contain any nonsense mutations, frameshifts, or long gaps. we also identified and sequences with nonsense stop codon in the great leaf-nosed bat and chinese rufous horseshoe bats, which miss both a start and stop codons. however, these sequences were removed because they have relatively short sequence length (~ bp) and have strong sequence similarity with bitter taste receptor genes. to assign identified or genes into distinct or gene families, a collection of protein sequences from horde database version (safran, et al. ) was used. to detect the extensive gain and lose of or gene repertories, we employed the reconciled tree method (nam and nei ) , in which the topology of a gene tree is reconciled with that of a species tree. an in-house program was applied. briefly, based on the phylogenetic tree of or genes, we compared the condensed gene tree and the species tree under the parsimony principle. the number of ancestral genes can be estimated, and the information of the past occurrence of gene expansion and contraction. here, we used a % condensed tree of or genes for analyses. a list of vision-related genes were obtained from go category of visual perception (go: ). we subjected human vision-related proteins to tblastn against the genomes with cutoff threshold of e-value e- . we found that best-hits for each human protein by using the criteria that more than % of the aligned sequences showed an identity above %. genewise algorithm was employed to identify potential pseudogenes with parameters -genesf -for -quiet. those genes with frame shifts or pre-mature stop codons were considered as candidates. we then filtered them as follows: ) we aligned all human proteins to their corresponding genomic loci, and those genes with frameshifts or premature stop codons in human-to-human alignments were removed; ) as for the human-to-human alignments, those genes with obvious splicing errors near their frameshifts or premature stop codons were removed; ) candidate pseudogenes with a low number of sequencing reads covering their frameshift or premature stop codon sites were regarded assembly error. those genes with a number of reads containing genotype variations at these sites were considered as heterozygous and were also removed. we used a method based on ka/ks to identify go categories that significantly above average in the great leaf-nosed bat genome and chinese horseshoe bat genome. at first, the ka and ks rates are calculated by paml package from all aligned bases with quality score larger than in orthologs, using the f x codon frequency model and the rev substitution matrix. in order to examine the evolution function catalog, we downloaded the go annotation of human gene from the ensembl biomart database (release- ). we estimated the average ka and ks values for those genes which have annotated go as following equations (s , s ). where t is the number of annotated genes within go categories, i a and i a are the numbers of non-synonymous substitutions and sites, i s and i s are the numbers of synonymous substitutions and sites in gene i, as estimated by paml, respectively. the expected proportion of non-synonymous substitutions a p in a go category was then calculated (s ). for a given go category c, the probability c p of observing an equal or higher number of non-synonymous substitutions and synonymous substitutions was calculated assuming a binominal distribution (s ). where c a and c s are the total number of non-synonymous and synonymous substitutions in go category c, respectively. we applied an approach to the binomial test described above to identify go categories that have an excess of non-synonymous changes on one lineage. for lineages x and y, the average proportion of non-synonymous substitutions were calculated by the following formula (s ). x is the total number of non-synonymous substitutions in the x lineage, y is the total number of non-synonymous substitutions in the y lineage, and the divergence of the proportion of non-synonymous substitution numbers in different lineages between the observed and expected obeys binomial distribution, the formula is as in the following equation (s ). as described for the absolute rate tests, we then computed this statistic for every go category, as well as for every category in , randomly permuted data sets. we sampled a total of great leaf-nosed bats distributed in four different locations. genomic dna was extracted from wing membranes of each individual. paired-end sequencing library with an insert size of bp was constructed for each sample, and sequenced on the illumina hiseq platform with × bp mode. duplicate sequencing reads were filtered out according to the following criteria: ) any reads with > % unidentified nucleotides; ) reads with > nt aligned to the adapter sequence, allowing < % mismatches; ) reads with % bases having phred quality < . the filtered reads were mapped to the genome using bwa, and samtools were used to call snps. then, we filtered snps using vcftools and gatk under the following criteria: ) coverage depth > and < ; ) root mean square mapping quality > ; ) the distance of adjacent snps > bp; ) the distance to a gap > ; ) read quality value > . to estimate phylogenetic relationships, the genetic distances were calculated among all samples to generate a neighbor-joining (nj) tree using phylip. we performed a principal component analysis using the package gcta. the population structure was inferred using frappe (v . ) with a maximum likelihood method (tang, et al. ) . sliding-window approach ( kb window sliding in kb step) was employed to quantify polymorphism levels (θ π , pairwise nucleotide variation as a measure of diversity) and genetic differentiation (fst) between the high altitude region (dq) and low altitude regions (tw, jx and gz). to detect significant signatures of selective sweep, z-transformed fst values was calculated. next-generation genome sequencing was carried out, generating . gb and . gb of sequences for the great leaf-nosed bat and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat (supplementary table s ), respectively. the genome size was estimated to be . gb and . gb for the great leaf-nosed bat and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat ( supplementary fig. supplementary fig. ). known transposon-derived repeats account for . % and . % of the genomes in the great leaf-nosed bat and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat, respectively, which are lower than other non-bat mammalian species (supplementary table s ). to facilitate the genome annotation, we generated a high-depth transcriptome data from these two rhinolophoid bats. with repeats masked, the genome was annotated by integrating the homologous prediction, ab initio prediction and transcription-based prediction methods. as a result, a non-redundant reference gene set of , and , protein-coding genes were generated for the great leaf-nosed bat and the chinese rufous horseshoe bat ( supplementary fig. ) , respectively. we employed cegma method to evaluate the completeness of genome annotation. the result showed that the vast majority of the core genes were present in our predicted gene sets ( . % for the great leaf-nosed bat and . % for the chinese rufous horseshoe bat), indicating the completeness of gene sets identification. next, we aligned the transcriptome sequencing reads to the predicted genes, and the result showed that approximately % of exons are accurately covered ( . % for the great leaf-nosed bat and . % for the chinese rufous horseshoe bat). comparative analysis showed a high gene sequence similarity between them ( %, supplementary fig. ). we next examined the level of homology between our predicted genes and sequences in the uniprot database. the result showed that > % of the genes were functionally annotated ( % for the great leaf-nosed bat and . % for the chinese rufous horseshoe bat). compared with the gene families in other three mammalian species -the little brown bat, large flying fox and human, we identified , homologous gene families shared by five species. a total of gene families were specific to the rhinolophoid bats ( fig. ) . further functional annotation indicated that the rhinolophoid bats specific gene families were significantly over-represented in two major functional categories: atp binding ( genes, f.d.r.= . ) and immunity and host defense ( genes, f.d.r.= . ; supplementary table s ) . until now, the relationship of bats to other members of superorder laurasiatheria has proven difficult to resolve. some studies insisted that bats belong to the clade of pegasoferae which comprises chiroptera, carnivores and odd-toed ungulates (lindblad-toh, et al. ; meredith, et al. ; mccormack, et al. ) , whereas others proposed that bats are a sister group to the clade comprising carnivores and euungulata (pumo, et al. ; murphy, et al. ; murphy, et al. ; song, et al. ; zhang, et al. ) . to determine the phylogenetic position of bats within the superorder laurasiatheria, a total of , single-copy : orthologous genes were fig. ). the result based on nucleotide data was in line with previous analysis that bats are a sister group to odd-toed ungulates, whereas the result based on amino acid data supported that bat bats are sister group to the fereuungulata (carnivores + perissodactyla + cetartiodactyla). to account for the tree discordance among loci, coalescent method was applied. coalescent trees were highly consistent with the result inferred from amino acid data using partitioned method ( supplementary fig. ) . to dissect the phylogenetic signal, previously published eight different phylogenetic hypotheses ( supplementary fig. ) were proposed (waddell, et al. ; murphy, et al. ; nishihara, et al. ; prasad, et al. ; lindblad-toh, et al. ; meredith, et al. ; mccormack, et al. table s , supplementary fig. ). the result is consistent after incorporating the data from eulipotyphyla group ( supplementary fig. ) . we subsequently estimated the divergence time among these mammalian species. the bat lineage seems to be diverged from fereuungulata around million years ago, and the rhinolophoid bats seem to be diverged from the old world fruit bats around million years ago. comparative genome analyses were carried out to assess the evolution and innovation within the rhinolophoid bats. we next determined the expansion and contraction of gene orthologous clusters during evolution. the result identified significantly expanded and significantly contracted gene families in the great leaf-nosed bat, significantly expanded and significantly contracted gene families in the chinese rufous horseshoe bat (fig. ) . functional annotation showed that gene family contraction mainly included many olfactory receptor gene families in both rhinolophoid bat lineages (supplementary table s ), which is consistent with the result that the olfactory system is aberrant in some echolocating bats. many of the expanded gene families in both rhinolophoid bats are significantly enriched in immune-related functional categories (supplementary table s ). moreover, we identified , and positively selected genes in the great leaf-nosed bat, the chinese rufous horseshoe bat and the large flying fox, (supplementary tables s , , ), respectively. olfaction is of great importance in the lives of bats. many bats can use olfaction for mother-pup recognition, find food and avoid danger. in old world fruit bats, olfaction appears to be of particular importance, and fruit bats can find food from scent cues. animals that rely heavily on the sense of smell tend to have large numbers of or genes, while species that always use other senses have fewer functional or genes (niimura and nei ) . it has been suggested that bats displayed a diverse olfaction abilities. in order to describe the diversity of bat or gene repertoires, we identified the entire set of or genes of four bat species (supplementary methods, supplementary table s ). in line with previous work (hayden, et al. ) , we observed that echolocating bats have less fraction of or pseudogenes ( % for the great leaf-nosed bat, % for the chinese rufous horseshoe bat and % for the little brown bat) than non-echolocating bats ( % for the large flying fox). however, further analysis showed that the large flying fox and little brown bat have more than intact or genes while these two rhinolophoid bats only have < intact or genes. this finding is consistent with the result that rhinolophoid bats have a relatively small olfactory epithelium than the frugivorous pteropodidae (neuweiler ) . next, we reconstructed a protein neighbor-joining tree of all newly identified intact or genes in bats (fig. a) . it is obvious that or genes can be classified into two distinct classes based on sequence similarity: class i, postulated to bind to water-borne molecules, and class ii, hypothesized to bind to airborne molecules. the exact number of or genes in each class/or family are shown (supplementary table s , table s ). it seems that four bat species contain similar number of or genes in class i, while or gene contraction occurred in two rhinolophoid bats in class ii . previous works have documented that the number of or genes varies extensively among mammalian species, and extensive gains and losses of or genes have been observed (niimura and nei ) . to further understand the evolutionary changes of or gene repertoires, we estimated the gains and losses of the or genes in a diverse range of mammals (supplementary methods). evolutionary changes in the number of or genes in mammals have been shown in fig. b . we can clearly identify an extensive or gene contraction events occurred to the branch leading to the common ancestor of bats. further extensive gene contractions can be observed in the branch leading to the rhinolophoid bats. this finding also suggests massive "birth-and-death" of or genes in the bat species. table s ). since high omega may be due to stochastic effect caused by extremely small sample size, we removed these genes with omega value of . the result is also stable that more positively selected genes were detected in the branches leading to echolocating bats ( genes, great leaf-nosed bat, p = . e- ; genes, chinese rufous horseshoe bat, p = . e- ; genes, little brown bat, p = . ). next, branch model (two-ratio model) was carried out with the attempt to detect genes with accelerated evolution in the bat species. the result further indicated that more hearing-related genes have higher ɷ values on the branches leading to echolocating bats than all other lineages (supplementary table s ) . clade model c implemented in paml was employed (weadick and chang ) , and the result also persisted that more positively selected genes were detected in the branches leading to echolocating bats (supplementary table s ). moreover, a significant association between the average number of non-synonymous substitutions for all the hearing-related genes leading to each mammalian species and the estimated frequency of best hearing sensitivity for that species (r = . , p = . , fig. ) was observed. no significant correlation between such hearing frequencies and number of synonymous changes was observed (p = . ). a significant association between the number of non-synonymous changes between sister taxa was observed (r = . , p = . ). it is obvious that echolocating bats have typically undergone many more non-synonymous changes in the hearing-related genes than non-echolocating mammals. these results indicated the evolution of ultrasonic hearing in the rhinolophoid bats has involved in adaptive amino acid replacements in the hearing-related genes, which provided evidence conferring greater auditory sensitivity to ultrasonic frequency. previous works have documented that seven hearing-related genes underwent convergent evolution in echolocators (li, et al. ; liu, cotton, et al. ; davies, et al. ; shen, et al. ). here, genome-wide signatures of convergent evolution were examined in laryngeal echolocating bats. except for the previously reported seven hearing-related genes, we totally identified genes examined in the sound of perception category containing potential sequence convergent loci (site-wise convergence posterior probabilities > . ). to confirm our result, we amplified and sequenced these hearing-related genes from another two echolocating bats (eptesicus fuscus and miniopterus natalensis). the result also showed that these genes have higher convergence probabilities occurred in echolocating bats from a wider range of taxa, and the convergence probabilities between branches were significant based on simulations (supplementary table s ). however, maximum likelihood trees recovered the topology that all laryngeal echolocating bats formed a monophyletic clade for only four genes (col a , icam , bsnd and strc, supplementary fig. ). further analyses showed that echolocating bats are paraphyletic based on synonymous substitutions, whereas the non-synonymous trees revealed monophyly of laryngeal echolocators for only one hearing-related genes (strc gene, supplementary fig. ). next, multivariate analyses of protein polymorphism (mapp) was employed to detect the physicochemical impact of convergent substitutions in echolocating bats. mapp scores were estimated for the amino acid variants nested in the strc gene, and the result showed that these replacements had important functional effects (mapp score = . , p = . e- for h q; mapp score = . , p = . e- for a t; mapp score = . , p = . e- for v i). we further measured the number of sites with convergent amino acid substitutions along the branches as a direct measurement of sequence convergence, and found that the number of convergent sites in the branch pairs is proportional to the number of divergent sites ( supplementary fig. ). the number of convergent sites in the laryngeal echolocating bats does not significantly exceed that between the branch pair of the little brown bat and large flying fox, given their numbers of divergent sites (supplementary table s ). no significant differences was observed in the total number of sites that have experienced convergent substitutions from hearing-related genes. this result indicated that there is no exceptional genomic signature indicative of adaptive convergence between laryngeal echolocating bats, and genes with adaptive convergent substitutions might confine to few specific genes. bats are nocturnal mammals. the eyes of most echolocating bats are relatively small and poorly developed, whereas old world fruit bats often have excellent eyesight . rhinolophoid bats have the most sophisticated echolocation ability, and have been proposed that some genes involved in visual perception may have undergone relaxed selection (zhao, et al. ). we next examined the molecular basis for the poor visual perception in the echolocating bats. of bats have long been regarded as important reservoir hosts of emerging viruses (calisher, et al. ) . to examine population dynamics and understand evolutionary processes, we sampled great leaf-nosed bats from major distributed locations in china, including one group from high-altitude region (fig. a, table s ) are located at the intergenic regions. in order to resolve their phylogenetic relationships, we constructed a neighbor-joining (nj) tree based on pairwise genetic distances (fig. b) . this result showed that the great leaf-nosed bats formed separate groups according to the different locations. principal component analysis clearly divided these samples into four groups (dq, gz, jx and tw, fig. c) . these results suggested that there were significant population structures among the great leaf-nosed bat populations. furthermore, we performed population structure analysis. when k= , all these four populations were clearly separated (fig. d) . next, we measured the genetic diversity values (θ π ) of four populations, and found similar sequence diversity values (dq: . , gz: . , jx: . and tw: . , supplementary fig. s ). we further observed that the population differentiation statistic (fst) between populations, and the result showed little differentiation among populations (fst ranging from . between jx and tw to . between tw and dq, supplementary table s ) , which suggests universal inter-region gene flows. since the method of population differentiation has been widely used to detect selective sweeps (akey, et al. ; axelsson, et al. ; gou, et al. table s ). the result showed that genes related to catabolic process are likely to have been targets of recent positive selection. interestingly, we found that five genes (epas , plxnd , gja , sell and chdh) belong to hypoxia response related go categories (pugh and ratcliffe ; storz and moriyama ) , including 'angiogenesis', 'blood coagulation', 'blood vessel morphogenesis' and 'oxidoreductase activity'. epas can respond to the changes in available oxygen in the cellular environment under the high-altitude conditions. our work suggested that epas is involved in a selective sweep during the move of bats from low to high altitude. although hypoxia go categories are not over-represented, these highlighted hypoxia-related genes gave us a clue that genetic adaptations might be associated with high altitude. using deep sequencing and de novo assembly, we generated two genomes of rhinolophoid bats. rhinolophoid bats can perceive the world by using a wide range of sensory mechanisms, some of which have become highly specialized. these genome data provided useful resources to decipher the molecular adaptations of phenotypic traits. rhinolophoid bats arguably possess the most sophisticated echolocation systems, and can emit relatively long calls adapted to detect and classify the wing beats of insects. they are heavily reliant on hearing for a variety of ecologically important roles. previous works have documented that hearing-related genes are predominantly evolutionarily conserved in mammals (kirwan, et al. ) . here, we found evidence that some hearing-related genes have undergone darwinian selection associated with the evolution of specialized constant frequency echolocation. positive selection acting on hearing-related genes in rhinolophoid bats might result from the extreme selectivity used in auditory processing by these bats. many previous works have reported the sequence convergence of some hearing-related genes reuniting echolocating bats (li, et al. ; liu, et al. ; davies, et al. ; . we found no genome-wide sequence convergence for echolocation, indicating erroneous phylogenetic grouping are still rare it has been suggested that the enlargement of one area of brain might be associated with the reduction in size of other brain area (harvey and krebs ) . the auditory cortex and the inferior colliculus are extremely enlarged in the volume in laryngeal echolocating bats (especially in rhinolophoid bats), while visual brain areas are relatively enlarged in old world fruit bats (dechmann and safi ). the trade-off has been proposed in investment in brain tissues because of the extreme energetic demands imposed by neural processing. our result showed more visual perception genes have become pseudogenes in rhinolophoid bats, and it is reasonable to speculate that some visual perception gene may have undergone relaxed natural selection in echolocating bats. meanwhile, positive selection acting on some hearing-related genes was identified. such concordance suggests that some genes are impacted by natural selection, which raised the possibility that changes at the sensory genes will have direct consequences for those genes controlling for other sensory modalities, perhaps via trade-offs. this finding supports the longstanding but weakly supported assumption that bats are experiencing trade-off between vision and audition . olfaction is of great importance in the lives of bat species. previous works have identified olfactory receptor (or) gene repertoire in the little brown bat and the large flying fox using the profile hidden markov model (hayden, et al. ; hayden, et al. in specific gene family. a possible explanation is that the little brown bat has no well-developed olfaction ability, but tends to recognize specific odorants after recent or gene duplication. these comparative analyses have provided great insights into adaptation to their specialized sensory mechanisms. in this work, we re-sequenced the genome of great leaf-nosed bats from four distributed locations. the genome re-sequencing analysis has been performed based generally on the following considerations: ) to characterize the genetic diversity and patterns of evolution; ) to understand the genetic bases of adaptation to high altitude in the great leaf-nosed bats. efforts for the conservation measures will benefit from the knowledge of population genetic structure of the great leaf-nosed bats. here, we found very little differentiation among populations, which suggests universal inter-region gene flows or incomplete lineage sorting. a broader geographical scale analysis is needed in the future. furthermore, we provided evidence of genetic adaptation in the great leaf-nosed bat that are associated with high altitude. selective sweep mapping was conducted for populations from different altitudes, and identified several hypoxia-related genes with a high extent of differentiation on the genome scale. epas is transcription factor that respond to the changes in the available oxygen in the cellular environment under high-altitude conditions, and mutations at epas are tightly associated with hematologic phenotypes (van patot and gassmann ). previous works have documented that epas polymorphisms are associated with tibetan people with lower hemoglobin concentrations (beall, et al. ) . a loss-of-function role of epas might exist in high-altitude adaptation. so, our result indicated potential high-altitude hypoxia adaptation mechanisms of the great leaf-nosed bat. our work is based on a limited genome re-sequencing resource, and data from more samples are necessary for future work. however, false positives notwithstanding, the results provided valuable staring points for experimental follow-up, and suggested an initial evolutionary scenario of bats in adaptation to high-altitude hypoxia. to the best of our knowledge, it is the first time to report the de novo assembled genome and genome re-sequencing of bats with long constant frequency echolocation calls. these data 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coalescent model raxml version : a tool for phylogenetic analysis and post-analysis of large phylogenies gene prediction with a hidden markov model and a new intron submodel physicochemical constraint violation by missense substitutions mediates impairment of protein function and disease severity mechanisms of hemoglobin adaptation to high altitude hypoxia estimation of individual admixture: analytical and study design considerations using repeatmasker to identify repetitive elements in genomic sequences hear, hear: the convergent evolution of echolocation in bats? a molecular phylogeny for bats illuminates biogeography and the fossil record differential analysis of gene regulation at transcript resolution with rna-seq tophat: discovering splice junctions with rna-seq hypoxia: adapting to high altitude by mutating epas- , the gene encoding hif- alpha towards resolving the interordinal relationships of placental mammals an improved likelihood ratio test for detecting site-specific functional divergence among clades of protein-coding genes paml : phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood comparative analysis of bat genomes provides insight into the evolution of flight and immunity evaluation of an improved branch-site likelihood method for detecting positive selection at the molecular level the evolution of color vision in nocturnal mammals this project is supported by key construction program of the national ' ' project of east china normal university to dong dong ( ), and the national natural science foundation of china (no. ) to shuyi zhang. we thanks shanghai majorbio bio-pharm biotechnology co., ltd. for genome sequencing and dr.chao-hung lee for providing valuable advices.. dd designed the study, and dd, ml, ph, yp, sm, gz, ep, kl and sz carried out the data analysis. dd wrote the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. the authors declare no competing financial interests. key: cord- -o d kaw authors: shahabi, vafa; berman, david; chasalow, scott d; wang, lisu; tsuchihashi, zenta; hu, beihong; panting, lisa; jure-kunkel, maria; ji, rui-ru title: gene expression profiling of whole blood in ipilimumab-treated patients for identification of potential biomarkers of immune-related gastrointestinal adverse events date: - - journal: j transl med doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: o d kaw background: treatment with ipilimumab, a fully human anti-ctla- antibody approved for the treatment of advanced melanoma, is associated with some immune-related adverse events (iraes) such as colitis (gastrointestinal irae, or gi irae) and skin rash, which are managed by treatment guidelines. nevertheless, predictive biomarkers that can help identify patients more likely to develop these iraes could enhance the management of these toxicities. methods: to identify candidate predictive biomarkers associated with gi iraes, gene expression profiling was performed on whole blood samples from advanced melanoma patients at baseline, and weeks after the start of ipilimumab treatment in two phase ii clinical trials (ca and ca ). overall, patients developed grade or higher (grade +) gi iraes during the course of treatment. a repeated measures analysis of variance (anova) was used to evaluate the differences in mean expression levels between the gi irae and no-gi irae groups of patients at the three time points. results: in baseline samples, probe sets showed differential mean expression (≥ . fold, p ≤ . ) between the gi irae and no-gi irae groups. most of these probe sets belonged to three functional categories: immune system, cell cycle, and intracellular trafficking. changes in gene expression over time were also characterized. in the gi irae group, and probe sets had a ≥ . fold change in expression from baseline to and weeks after first ipilimumab dose, respectively. in particular, on-treatment expression increases of cd and ceacam , two neutrophil-activation markers, were closely associated with gi iraes, suggesting a possible role of neutrophils in ipilimumab-associated gi iraes. in addition, the expression of several immunoglobulin genes increased over time, with greater increases in patients with grade + gi iraes. conclusions: gene expression profiling of peripheral blood, sampled before or early in the course of treatment with ipilimumab, resulted in the identification of a set of potential biomarkers that were associated with occurrence of gi iraes. however, because of the low sensitivity of these biomarkers, they cannot be used alone to predict which patients will develop gi iraes. further investigation of these biomarkers in a larger patient cohort is warranted. ipilimumab, a fully human monoclonal antibody that blocks cytotoxic t-lymphocyte antigen- (ctla- ) [ ] , has been approved by the u.s. food and drug administration (fda) and several other regulatory agencies for the treatment of advanced metastatic melanoma (mm). the efficacy of ipilimumab has been demonstrated in a number of phase ii and two phase iii clinical trials in mm patients, where a significant prolongation of overall survival has been reported [ , ] . treatment with ipilimumab is associated with a spectrum of aes which are immune mediated and called immune-related adverse events (iraes). gastrointestinal (gi) iraes such as diarrhea and colitis are among the most common ipilimumab-associated iraes [ ] . in most cases the onset of gi iraes occurs after the second or third dose of ipilimumab [ ] and these iraes are managed according to established treatment guidelines. in a previous report, examination of colon biopsies in a safety-focused clinical trial (ca ) revealed abundant focal neutrophilic cryptitis and neutrophilic infiltration in the lamina propria of affected tissues from patients experiencing gi iraes. although administration of high doses of steroids often leads to successful and safe management of the majority of these iraes [ ] [ ] [ ] , identification of biomarkers that may predict (before or soon after the start of the treatment) these iraes might improve patient care. in this context, peripheral blood biomarkers would be preferred, since collection of peripheral blood is less invasive than a colonic biopsy. to understand the underlying causes of ipilimumabassociated gi iraes and identify potential predictive biomarkers, gene expression profiling was performed on whole blood samples collected from metastatic melanoma patients before and during ipilimumab treatment in two phase ii clinical trials, ca and ca [ , ] . a number of cell cycle-and immune-related genes were found to have higher expression at baseline and post-baseline in those patients who experienced gi iraes. in particular, increases in expression of neutrophil activation markers, cd and ceacam , were found to be associated with the occurrence of gi iraes. in addition, greater increases in the expression of immunoglobulin-related genes were detected at weeks and in patients with gi iraes than in those without. these results are consistent with our understanding of the mechanisms underlying ipilimumab-associated gi iraes and provide a list of potential peripheral blood biomarkers for early prediction of these iraes. the multicenter, phase ii clinical trial ca enrolled previously-treated or untreated patients with stage iii (unresectable) or iv melanoma, randomized : into arms to receive up to intravenous infusions of either or mg/kg ipilimumab every weeks in an induction phase. in trial ca , treatment-naïve or previously treated patients with stage iii (unresectable) or iv melanoma (n = ) received open-label ipilimumab ( mg/kg every weeks for four doses) and were randomized to receive concomitant blinded prophylactic oral budesonide ( mg/d with gradual taper through week ) or placebo ( ) . exclusion criteria included the use of any immuno-suppressing treatments including corticosteroids (patients on stable doses of hormone replacement therapy were exempt), cyclosporine, mycophenolate mofetil (cellcept w ), as well as chemotherapy and radiation, within weeks prior to the first ipilimumab dose. complete study design, patient characteristics and endpoint reports of these trials were described elsewhere [ , ] . gene expression profiles from twenty patients in ca [ ] who were treated with ipilimumab monotherapy at mg/ml were used as a confirmation data set for the present analysis. these studies were conducted in accordance with the ethical principles originating from the current declaration of helsinki and consistent with international conference on harmonization good clinical practice and the ethical principles underlying european union directive / /ec and the united states code of federal regulations, title , part ( cfr ). the protocols and patient informed consent forms received appropriate approval by all institutional review boards or independent ethics committees prior to study initiation. all participating patients (or their legally acceptable representatives) gave written informed consent for these biomarker-focused studies. safety was evaluated using the national cancer institute common terminology criteria for adverse events, based on adverse events (aes), physical examinations, and clinical laboratory assessments. drug-related gastrointestinal aes consistent with immune-mediated events and the intrinsic biological activity of ipilimumab were examined and reported. adverse events were recorded based on meddra v . system organ class and preferred terms. clinical activity (ca) was defined as confirmed complete response, confirmed partial response, or stable disease ending not earlier than weeks from date of first ipilimumab dose. a complete description of irae and ca evaluations for these trials has been reported elsewhere [ , ] . neutrophils were quantified as a component of the standard hematology panel. absolute neutrophil counts were available at various time points for most patients. whole blood samples for gene expression profiling were collected just prior to first dose of ipilimumab (baseline), and and weeks after first ipilimumab dose. total rna was extracted from whole blood samples using the paxgene blood rna mdx kit with a biorobot universal system (qiagen, valencia, ca), and purified by rneasy minelute cleanup kit using qiacube (qiagen, valencia, ca). rna concentration was measured by nanodrop spectrophotometer and rna integrity was evaluated on the agilent bioanalyzer (agilent technologies, santa clara, ca). complementary dna preparation and hybridization on ht-hg-u a -array plates followed manufacturer' s protocols (affymetrix, santa clara, ca). affymetrix raw data (.cel files) were normalized with the robust multi-array analysis (rma) algorithm, obtained from www.bioconductor.org, version . . . appropriate affymetrix control probe sets were examined to ensure quality control for the cdna synthesis and hybridization steps. principal component analysis (pca) was subsequently performed to detect outlier samples (single samples that account for a high degree of variation in the data). no sample was removed as an outlier. anti-log rma values were used in subsequent statistical analyses. for the combined data from studies ca and ca , of the noncontrol probe sets had maximum expression level (rma normalized) of less than . these probe sets, with low expression levels across all samples, were excluded from further analysis. gene expression data analyses gi irae status was available for all treated patients. gene expression data were available for of these patients. for of the patients, expression data were available for at least of the time points. only these patients were included in subsequent analyses. of these patients, were classified in a no-gi irae group, which included patients with a worst-grade gi irae of or . a total of patients with grade or greater (grade +) gi iraes were classified in a gi irae group. for the no-gi irae and gi irae groups, respectively, baseline expression data were available for and patients, week data were available for and patients, and week data were available for and patients. a repeated measures analysis of variance (anova) model was fit in partek genomics suite . (www. partek.com), with anti-log normalized expression level as dependent variable. explanatory variables included patient, time point within patient as a -level factor, and binary gi irae status, with no time-by-status interaction. because gi iraes were observed in all treatment arms, and because of the relatively small sample sizes in individual trials, data from patients in the two trials were combined to increase statistical power to detect associations. statistical inference based on this model focused on two hypothesis tests: a test of the null hypothesis that mean gene expression (averaged over time) was the same in the two gi irae status groups, and a test of the null hypothesis that mean gene expression (averaged over gi irae status) was the same for the three time points. an uncorrected p value of . was used as a cutoff to select probe sets with mean expression differences between comparison groups. the qvalue package (v . . ) in the r statistical computing environment (v . . , http://www.r-project.org) was used to estimate false discovery rates (fdrs). expression of selected genes was confirmed by quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qpcr) as described previously [ ] using pre-designed probes. functional interpretation of differentially expressed genes was computed using ingenuity pathway analysis (ipa) software (ingenuity systems), as described previously [ ] . expression of each of non-control probe sets was analyzed individually. genes associated with gi irae status (grade + vs. not) were selected by assessing the difference in mean pre-treatment expression between the gi and no-gi irae groups. two selection criteria were applied: a p value ≤ . for the hypothesis test comparing the gi and no-gi irae groups, and a minimum mean pre-treatment expression ratio of . . for these tests, the p value threshold of . corresponded to an estimated fdr of . . a set of probe sets representing unique genes met these criteria (additional file : table a ). this list included a number of immunerelated genes, such as cd e, il rg [ ] , cd [ ] , cd , il [ ] , and rac [ ] ; cell cycle-and proliferation-associated genes such as sptan [ ] , banf [ ] , bat [ ] , pcgf [ ] , fp l [ ] , and wdr [ ] ; and genes involved in intracellular vesicle trafficking such as picalm [ ] , snap [ ] , and vamp [ ] . some of these molecules such, as il , snap and rac , have been reported either to be present in neutrophils or to regulate their function [ , , ] . to identify early on-treatment predictors of ipilimumabassociated gi iraes, post-baseline expression levels of the non-control probe sets were compared between the gi irae and no-gi irae groups. thirty five and probe sets were identified to have a mean expression ratio of at least . for the week and samples, respectively, and a p value ≤ . (fdr = . ) for the hypothesis test comparing the gi and no-gi irae groups. since most ipilimumab-associated gi iraes occur after the second or third dose of ipilimumab, the probe sets differentially expressed at week are of particular interest, as they might serve as early predictors to help identify patients who experience gi iraes after the second dose, given at week (additional file : table b ). the probe set that exhibited the largest differential expression corresponded to the neutrophil-specific marker, cd , a glycosyl-phosphatidylinositol (gpi)linked cell surface molecule [ ] . there was no difference in baseline expression of cd between patients in the gi and no-gi irae groups. however, significantly higher cd expression was found after only one dose of ipilimumab in the gi irae group [ . fold higher in the gi irae group than in the no-gi irae group at week (p = . e- )]. in addition, increase in mean expression of cd from baseline to week was much greater in the gi irae group than in the no-gi irae group (additional file : table ). the mean increase in cd expression was not associated with clinical activity (ca) of ipilimumab (p = . ) ( figure a ). expression levels of cd in these samples were confirmed by quantitative pcr, showing statistically significant differences between the gi irae and no-gi irae groups (unadjusted p < . ) or changes over time (unadjusted p < . ). these data suggest that cd was not only a potential early predictor of gi iraes but that increase in cd gene expression might also be a consequence of treatment with ipilimumab independent of its clinical activity. since cd is a neutrophil surface marker, we examined the relationship between pbanc and expression levels of cd . mean pbanc increased gradually with ipilimumab treatment, with the largest apparent increases occurring between weeks and in patients with higher-grade gi irae ( figure b predictor of gi iraes associated with ipilimumab treatment than pbanc. expression of cd at week had large inter-individual variability, with considerably higher values in patients than in the rest ( figure c ). all seven patients with high levels of cd expression (rma-normalized expression level ≥ ) at week had grade + gi iraes during the course of treatment, suggesting high specificity of this biomarker above this threshold. however, many patients with grade + gi iraes had a normalized expression level < for cd at week , suggesting low sensitivity of the biomarker in predicting gi iraes (additional file : figure s ). in week post-baseline samples, high expression levels of cd were found in both the gi irae and no-gi irae groups. many patients with grade + gi iraes had already discontinued treatment before this time point, so the data from week might be biased by informative drop-out. we also explored the timing of the onset of gi iraes in individual patients to establish the value of cd expression as an early predictor. out of patients with grade + gi iraes who had matching gene expression data at week , patients reported the first gi irae before or on day ± days (the nominal date of blood sample collection), whereas the other patients had gi iraes reported after this date ( figure d ). the four highest values of cd expression were detected in patients who reported the first grade + gi irae between days ( - days after blood sample collection) and after receiving the first dose of ipilimumab. of note, one of the patients who had high cd expression at week reported a grade gi irae on day ( figure d , marked in gray shade circle), but progressed to a grade which ultimately led to fatal gi perforation. these data suggest that, although considerable increase in cd gene expression was closely associated with the onset of gi iraes, early increases might also predict gi iraes that could develop much later. however, since cd had low sensitivity, this biomarker could not identify most future gi iraes. association between expression of cd and other neutrophil-associated genes cd is a glycoprotein expressed by neutrophils, neutrophilic metamyelocytes, and myelocytes, but not by any other blood cells [ , ] . therefore we specifically searched for other neutrophil-associated genes, to better understand the implication of this granulocyte subtype as an early predictor of gi iraes. these included genes encoding for granuleassociated proteins such as olfactomedin (olfm ) [ ] , azurocidin (azu ), lactoferrin (ltf) [ ] , cathelicidin (camp), myeloperoxidase (mpo) [ ] , bactericidal/permeability increasing protein (bpi), defensin (defa ) [ ] , neutrophil elastase (elane) [ ] , cathepsin g (ctsg) [ ] , ceacam , ceacam [ ] , and ceacam (which mediates neutrophil adhesion to endothelial cells and facilitates their transmigration into tissues) [ ] . the genechip ht-hg-u a includes probe sets for many of these genes additional file : table s . although an apparent greater expression of each of these genes was found in those samples with high levels of cd expression (figure a) , only the expression of ceacam was significantly linearly correlated with that of cd at week (r = . , p = . e- between _at, probe set for cd , and _s_at, probe set for ceacam ). consequently, the pattern of mean gene expression of ceacam over time was similar to that for cd ( figures a and b ). fifty-eight and probe sets were identified as having at least a . -fold change from baseline in week and samples, respectively, and p ≤ . (fdr = . ) for the test of a time effect on expression (additional file : tables and s ). we performed a pathway analysis using the ipa software on the differentially expressed probe sets since the size of this gene set was amenable to such analysis. the top biological processes that exhibited changes during ipilimumab treatment included pathways of cell proliferation and metabolism, and immune-related pathways such as il- signaling, il- signaling, and b cell development figure a ). while cd exhibited the largest change from baseline at both time points, immunoglobulinrelated genes dominated both lists, including igha , igha , ighg , and ighv - , all of which showed significant increases in expression weeks after baseline. slight increases in expression of some of these genes were already apparent in week samples, suggesting an early onset of antibody response with much larger expansion at later time points (additional file : table and figure b ). notably, increases in expression of these genes over time were more prominent in the gi irae groups than in the no-gi irae group. there was no corresponding increase in b-cell marker genes (such as cd ), suggesting that the cell types responsible for the increased expression of immunoglobulin genes may not have been b-cells, but later-stage b-lineage cells such as plasma cells [ ] . whole blood samples from the clinical study ca were independently analyzed using the same statistical model. in this study, patients were treated with ipilimumab monotherapy at mg/kg every weeks for doses. the mean cd expression ratio comparing gi irae and no-gi irae groups at week and was . and . , respectively, with no significant difference at baseline. in the gi irae group, the mean fold change from baseline to week and was . and . , respectively. by contrast, in the no-gi irae group, these changes were negligible ( . and . , respectively). expression changes similar to those seen in the other two studies were observed for ceacam and most of the granule-associated genes, with significant changes from baseline to week in the gi irae group but not in the no-gi irae group (additional file : table s ). treatment with ipilimumab has been shown to prolong overall survival in advanced melanoma patients in phase trials [ , ] . gastrointestinal iraes such as diarrhea and colitis are among the most common and sometimes severe forms of adverse events associated with ipilimumab. these adverse events are currently managed following treatment guidelines. however, identification of predictive biomarkers is important as it may enhance the management of these toxicities and improve patient care. the present study was undertaken to identify such biomarkers in peripheral blood. in a previous report of the ca trial in which colonic biopsies were collected, changes in the colonic mucosa following onset of diarrhea appeared more severe than those observed in the pre-specified biopsies following the first dose of ipilimumab. histopathologic examination of the biopsies revealed active colitis with marked neutrophilic infiltration into lamina propria to be the most striking characteristic of the affected tissue. in these biopsies, foci of neutrophilic cryptitis, crypt abscesses, glandular destruction, and erosions of the mucosal surface were also apparent early after the start of treatment in those patients who presented with gi irae symptoms [ ] . however, collection of colonic biopsies is considered an invasive procedure and therefore, peripheral-blood surrogate markers would be preferred. gi irae onset is most commonly observed after the second or third doses of ipilimumab. gene expression profiling using pre-treatment blood samples identified a few immune-related genes with higher baseline expression in patients who developed gi iraes than in those who did not, including cd e, il rg, cd , cd and il- . interleukin (natural killer protein- ) might be the most interesting gene from this list, as this cytokine has been reported to play a central role in acute flares of inflammatory bowel disease [ ] , as well as other autoimmune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis [ ] . il is selectively expressed by activated cytotoxic t and natural killer (nk) cells [ ] , potentiates the effect of il- and il- and activates the innate immune system (monocytes and macrophages) to secrete chemotactic factors such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha (tnf-α), cxcl ( ) in a number of studies [ , ] . in the current study, although treatment-induced changes in the expression of il- were not significant, pathway analysis found il- signaling to be one of the top pathways changed during treatment ( figure a ). an increase in expression of neutrophil-associated genes was noticeable shortly after the start of treatment. in particular, significantly greater mean expression of the neutrophil surface marker cd was detected in a subset of patients who experienced gi iraes of grade or greater. neutrophil granulocytes are the most abundant type of white blood cells in mammals and form an essential part of the innate immune system. during the acute phase of inflammation, particularly as a result of bacterial infection, environmental exposure [ ] , and some cancers [ , ] , neutrophils are among the firstresponders of inflammatory cells to migrate towards the site of inflammation. they transmigrate through the blood vessels, then through interstitial tissue, following chemical signals such as il- , c a, and leukotriene b in a process called chemotaxis [ ] . cd is a unique marker for neutrophils [ , ] and is up-regulated upon neutrophil activation during acute inflammatory responses toward stimuli such as bacterial infections [ ] . significant increase in the mean expression of this marker was detected in patients who experienced moderate to severe gi iraes, independently from their clinical response to ipilimumab. indeed, the seven patients with the highest expression levels of cd (normalized expression level > ) at week were those who already had or would experience gi iraes within a few days to three weeks after that time point. currently, gi iraes during ipilimumab treatment are managed, according to treatment guidelines, by cessation of ipilimumab in combination with treatment with corticosteroids or tnf-α blockade. ca was one of the earlier ipilimumab monotherapy trials, where these guidelines were not yet fully in place. in that trial, two patients died of severe gi iraes and intestinal perforation. one of these patients provided both baseline and week blood samples for gene expression analysis. a . -fold increase in cd expression from baseline to week was apparent almost days before the onset of the first gi irae episode, suggesting the early predictive value of this biomarker for severe gi iraes. cd has been shown to recognize an endothelial cell junction molecule, platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule- (pecam- ), which contributes to interactions between neutrophils and endothelial cells, mediating trans-endothelial migration in the context of inflammatory cell recruitment [ ] . another marker expressed by activated neutrophils, ceacam , also showed a consistent increase in mean expression from baseline to or weeks after first ipilimumab dose, with a greater increase in the gi irae group. whereas cd is mostly an activation marker for neutrophils, ceacam mediates adherence of activated neutrophils and other hematopoietic cells (nk and t cells) to cytokine-activated endothelium, [ , ] and has been suggested to play a role in immune-mediated diseases of the intestine. elevated ceacam expression has been reported in t cells of the lamina propria of small intestine in patients with celiac disease and in the large intestine of those with inflammatory bowel disease (ibd) [ ] . the apparent association between neutrophil count, cd gene expression, and ipilimumab-associated gi iraes led us to search for other neutrophil-associated genes in the microarray data. degranulation is the process by which neutrophils release an assortment of proteins [ ] such as mpo, defa [ ] and elane [ ] into the extracellular space. most of these genes were included in a neutrophil module reported by chaussabel et al. [ ] . although a trend for greater expression of these genes was found in those samples with the highest levels of cd expression (figure a) , there was no statistically significant linear correlation between their expression and that of cd (data not shown). in fact, the mean expression of most of these genes in week samples was lower than baseline (additional file : table , left panel), when the greatest increase in cd was detected in some patients, suggesting that their expression might be repressed during the early neutrophil activation event. conversely, a significant increase in the mean expression of these genes was observed at week (additional file : table s ), supporting the notion that the degranulation process follows that of the neutrophil activation event. these observations were also confirmed in another data set from an independent ipilimumab clinical trial, ca , in which higher mean expression of cd and ceacam were found in the gi irae group. in addition, our list of potential early predictors of gi iraes shared a number of common elements with sets of genes reported to confer resistance to intravenous corticosteroid therapy in children with ulcerative colitis [ ] . genes shared between the two studies included cd , ceacam , olfm , mmp , bpi, clc, hp, and lcn . in that study, post-baseline samples were collected only three days after the start of the corticosteroid treatment with significant differential expression of these genes between the steroid-resistant and sensitive patients. in our study, the earliest post-baseline blood samples were collected weeks after the first dose of ipilimumab, and the major changes in gene expression occurred within this time period, suggesting that it might be possible to detect this predictive profile at an even earlier time within this period. in any event, these changes tended to precede significant increases in the number of peripheral neutrophils, suggesting that the proliferation of neutrophils occurs after the activation event and that changes in gene expression may serve as more sensitive biomarkers than increase in peripheral blood absolute neutrophil count (pbanc). another interesting finding in our analysis was the considerable increase in the number and expression of immunoglobulin-related genes at and weeks after first dose of ipilimumab in patients who had gi iraes. this is in accordance with previous reports on the inhibitory effects of ctla- on immunoglobulin and cytokine production by plasma cells [ ] or its inhibitory effect on cd + t cells that mediate t cell help to b cells during antibody production. ctla- blockade by ipilimumab is likely to reduce this inhibition. in healthy people, the humoral response to enteric flora is maintained in homeostasis. dysregulation of this homeostasis, manifested as increasing antibody levels to select enteric microorganisms, is characteristic of gastrointestinal disorders such as ibd but not acute gi inflammation (i.e., diverticulitis/infection) ( ) ( ) ( ) . in a previous report from the ca trial, ipilimumab was found to induce antibody responses to selected enteric flora such as pseudomonas anti-i , saccharomyces cerevisiae, and cbir flagellin. however, no strong association between a positive level of antibody responses toward these specific bacteria and gi iraes was observed. although gene expression profiling could not provide information regarding the specificity of the induced antibodies, it still indicates that in patients experiencing gi iraes, the immunoglobulin production machinery had been turned on. in the absence of infections by external pathogens, this response may well be due to the generation of antibodies to self antigens or those expressed by the intestinal flora. we have identified early changes in gene expression in patients treated with ipilimumab that in some patients might predict the incidence of later gi iraes. these gene expression changes, together with prior histopathologic examination of the affected tissue, point to an important role of neutrophils in the onset of gi iraes in these patients. high expression of cd at week was a very specific biomarker for grade + gi iraes, as all patients who had no such event displayed expression levels below a certain threshold (normalized expression level = ). however, because of its low sensitivity as a biomarker, cd expression alone cannot be used to predict which patients will develop gi iraes, which may occur in patients with low cd expression. the earliest on-treatment sample collection was weeks after first ipilimumab dose. therefore it is not clear how much increases in cd expression preceded the onset of gi iraes. this study identified potential biomarkers of ipilimumab toxicity that have biological plausibility. however, validation in a larger controlled trial is needed to assess potential clinical utility. additional file : table . lists of potential predictive or earlypredictive biomarkers. (a) probe sets with ≥ . -fold greater mean baseline expression in blood samples from patients with grade + gi iraes than in those from patients with no grade + gi irae (highlighted column). mean expression ratio in the post-baseline samples as well as p values for the test of a difference at baseline in mean expression between the two gi irae groups also are shown. (b) probe sets with a mean expression ratio of at least . for the comparison of the gi irae and no-gi irae groups at week (highlighted column). mean expression ratio at other time points as well as p values for the test of a difference in week mean expression between the two gi irae groups also are shown. mean expression ratio: positive values give (mean expression in the gi irae group)/(mean expression in the no-gi irae group); negative values give negative of (mean expression in the no-gi irae group)/(mean expression in the gi irae group). table . lists of potential pharmacodynamic biomarkers. probe sets with ≥ . -fold change in mean gene expression from baseline to week (left panel) or week (right panel; only the top probe sets shown) in the gi irae group (highlighted columns). fold changes in the no-gi irae group as well as p values for the test of a difference between baseline and post-baseline expression also are shown. mean fold change: positive values give mean of (post-baseline expression)/(baseline expression); negative values give negative mean of (baseline expression)/(post-baseline expression). table . granule-associated gene expression profiles. (a) mean expression ratio comparing the gi irae and no-gi irae groups for granule-associated genes at each time point. p value for the test of a difference in mean expression between the two gi irae groups (averaged over the three time points) also is shown. (b) mean fold change from baseline (bl) in the gi irae and no-gi irae groups for granule-associated genes. p value for the test of a difference in mean expression among the three time points (averaged over the two groups) is shown. for definitions of "mean expression ratio" and "mean fold change", see legends for tables and , respectively. table s . complete list of potential pharmacodynamic biomarkers. probe sets with ≥ . -fold mean change in gene expression from baseline to week in the gi irae group (highlighted column). fold changes in the no-gi irae group as well as p values for the test of a difference between baseline and post-baseline expression also are shown. mean fold change: positive values give mean of (post-baseline expression)/(baseline expression); negative values give negative mean of (baseline expression)/(post-baseline expression). table s . granule-associated gene expression profiles in ca . (a) mean expression ratio comparing the gi irae and no-gi irae groups for granuleassociated genes at each time point. p value for the test of a difference in mean expression between the two gi irae groups (averaged over the three time points) also is shown. (b) mean fold change from baseline (bl) in the gi irae and no-gi irae groups for granule-associated genes. p value for the test of a difference in mean expression among the three time points (averaged over the two groups) is shown. mean expression ratio: positive values give (mean expression in the gi irae group)/(mean expression in the no-gi irae group); negative values give negative of (mean expression in the no-gi irae group)/(mean expression in the gi irae group). mean fold change: positive values give mean of (post-baseline expression)/(baseline expression); negative values give negative mean of (baseline expression)/(post-baseline expression). additional file : figure s . roc curve of cd expression at week as a predictor of gi irae. the plot included patients with known gi irae status and cd expression values. authors' contributions db, zt, sdc, mjk designed the two biomarker focused clinical trials. lw, bh, lp performed the pcr assays and prepared rna for affymetrix microarray analysis. mjk assisted in data analysis and interpretation. vf, sdc, zt, rj performed the data analysis and interpretation, and prepared the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. checkpoint blockade in cancer immunotherapy improved survival with ipilimumab in patients with metastatic melanoma overcoming immunologic tolerance to melanoma: targeting ctla- with ipilimumab (mdx- ) enterocolitis in patients with cancer after antibody blockade of cytotoxic t-lymphocyte -associated antigen blockade of cytotoxic t-lymphocyte antigen- by ipilimumab results in dysregulation of gastrointestinal immunity in patients with advanced melanoma a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase ii study comparing the tolerability and efficacy of ipilimumab administered with or without prophylactic budesonide in patients with unresectable stage iii or iv melanoma infliximab in the treatment of anti-ctla antibody (ipilimumab) induced immune-related colitis a prospective phase ii trial exploring the association between tumor microenvironment biomarkers and clinical activity of ipilimumab in advanced melanoma assessment of pharmacokinetic interaction between ipilimumab and chemotherapy in a randomized study. th esmo congress abstract an immune-active tumor microenvironment favors clinical response to ipilimumab structure of the quaternary complex of interleukin- with its alpha, beta, and gammac receptors targeting cd -positive lymphoid malignancies with a novel engineered small modular immunopharmaceutical interleukin- : a cytokine and inducer of tnfalpha human neutrophils coordinate chemotaxis by differential activation of rac and rac human alpha spectrin ii and the fanconi anemia proteins fanca and fancc interact to form a nuclear complex baf: roles in chromatin, nuclear structure and retrovirus integration the bat gene in the mhc encodes an evolutionarily conserved putative nuclear rna helicase of the dead family polycomb group and scf ubiquitin ligases are found in a novel bcor complex that is recruited to bcl targets molecular signature of clinical severity in recovering patients with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) aip /wdr supports mitotic cell rounding clathrin assembly lymphoid myeloid leukemia (calm) protein: localization in endocytic-coated pits, interactions with clathrin, and the impact of overexpression on clathrinmediated traffic identification of a cellubrevin/vesicle associated membrane protein homologue in human platelets nb , a new neutrophil-specific antigen involved in the pathogenesis of neonatal neutropenia analysis of the expression of nb antigen using two monoclonal antibodies biochemical characterization of the neutrophil-specific antigen nb pdp , a novel glycoprotein secreted by mature granulocytes, is regulated by transcription factor pu immunocytochemical localization of lactoferrin in human neutrophils. an ultrastructural and morphometrical study neutrophil granules in health and disease antibiotic proteins of human polymorphonuclear leukocytes neutrophil elastase, proteinase , and cathepsin g as therapeutic targets in human diseases subcellular localization and mobilization of carcinoembryonic antigen-related cell adhesion molecule in human neutrophils interdependency of ceacam- , - , - , and − induced human neutrophil adhesion to endothelial cells a modular analysis framework for blood genomics studies: application to systemic lupus erythematosus ipilimumab plus dacarbazine for previously untreated metastatic melanoma epithelial overexpression of interleukin- alpha in inflammatory bowel disease interleukin- , ccl , pf f and gfd are the only cytokine/chemokine genes differentially expressed by in vitro cultured rheumatoid and osteoarthritis fibroblast-like synoviocytes quiescent phenotype of tumor-specific cd + t cells following immunization mechanisms of inflammatory liver injury: adhesion molecules and cytotoxicity of neutrophils interleukin- and markers of neutrophil degranulation in pleural effusions subclinical responses in healthy cyclists briefly exposed to traffic-related air pollution: an intervention study the potential role of neutrophils in promoting the metastatic phenotype of tumors releasing interleukin- the interleukin- pathway in cancer human neutrophil migration into skin chambers is associated with production of nap- /il and c a neutrophil cd (nb gp, hna- a) expression is increased in severe bacterial infections and polycythaemia vera the neutrophil-specific antigen cd is a counter-receptor for platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule- (cd ) ceacam : contact-dependent control of immunity two new synthetic peptides from the n-domain of ceacam (cd a) stimulate neutrophil adhesion to endothelial cells dissection of the inflammatory bowel disease transcriptome using genome-wide cdna microarrays neutrophils: molecules, functions and pathophysiological aspects gene expression changes associated with resistance to intravenous corticosteroid therapy in children with severe ulcerative colitis inhibitory receptors cd j, lair- , and cd down-regulate immunoglobulin and cytokine production by human b lymphocytes gene expression profiling of whole blood in ipilimumab-treated patients for identification of potential biomarkers of immune-related gastrointestinal adverse events submit your next manuscript to biomed central and take full advantage of: key: cord- -b yikvj authors: giotis, efstathios s.; robey, rebecca c.; skinner, natalie g.; tomlinson, christopher d.; goodbourn, stephen; skinner, michael a. title: chicken interferome: avian interferon-stimulated genes identified by microarray and rna-seq of primary chick embryo fibroblasts treated with a chicken type i interferon (ifn-α) date: - - journal: vet res doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: b yikvj viruses that infect birds pose major threats—to the global supply of chicken, the major, universally-acceptable meat, and as zoonotic agents (e.g. avian influenza viruses h n and h n ). controlling these viruses in birds as well as understanding their emergence into, and transmission amongst, humans will require considerable ingenuity and understanding of how different species defend themselves. the type i interferon-coordinated response constitutes the major antiviral innate defence. although interferon was discovered in chicken cells, details of the response, particularly the identity of hundreds of stimulated genes, are far better described in mammals. viruses induce interferon-stimulated genes but they also regulate the expression of many hundreds of cellular metabolic and structural genes to facilitate their replication. this study focusses on the potentially anti-viral genes by identifying those induced just by interferon in primary chick embryo fibroblasts. three transcriptomic technologies were exploited: rna-seq, a classical ′-biased chicken microarray and a high density, “sense target”, whole transcriptome chicken microarray, with each recognising – regulated genes (curated for duplication and incorrect assignment of some microarray probesets). overall, the results are considered robust because of the compiled, curated list of regulated genes were detected by two, or more, of the technologies. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article (doi: . /s - - - ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. the interferon (ifn) response is one of the most important arms of host innate immunity against virus infection [ , ] . infected cells are able to recognise foreign nucleic acids and induce the synthesis and secretion of type i ifn (ifn-α and ifn-β) and type iii ifn (ifn-λ), which bind to receptors on the surface of neighbouring cells and trigger the transcriptional regulation of genes involved in the antiviral state. studies in mammals have demonstrated that there are several hundred such ifn-regulated genes (irgs). because the vast majority are up-regulated they are overwhelmingly referred to as ifn-stimulated genes (isgs) so, hereafter, they will be referred to generically as isgs (or specifically as chicken isgs, chisgs), except where the more generic term avoids confusion. induction of isgs involves the jak/stat signalling pathway: stat is either recruited directly to target promoters for a relatively weak activation or, more commonly, is recruited in a complex called isgf in association with stat and irf [ , ] . isgs are the focus of considerable current attention with regard to: (i) their antiviral activity, (ii) an increasing appreciation of the complexity of their regulation and (iii) their targeting by virus-encoded modulators of ifn-induced responses [ , , ] . these studies require comprehensive catalogues of the isgs, especially where system-wide approaches are undertaken. even though many key mammalian isgs have been known for some time, it is with the relatively recent advent of transcriptomic technologies that the full complement has been catalogued (mainly using microarrays [ ] ; see also schoggins et al. [ ] ). in contrast to the mammalian ifn system our equivalent knowledge of the avian system has lagged behind. although ifn was discovered in chickens in [ ] the first chicken ifn gene was characterised in [ ] and the key chicken isg, pkr, was identified in [ ] . the derivation of the chicken genome sequence, first drafted in [ ] , did not greatly advance our understanding of chicken isgs because of the incomplete nature of the gallus gallus genome assembly, even at v (galgal ), which might be partly due to the fact that the chicken karyotype has six pairs of macrochromosomes (but pairs of microchromosomes), and the difficulties in annotating immunity genes, which are some of the most divergent between mammals and birds [ ] . however, it has become apparent that key genes of the innate immune system, such as the transcription factors irf and one member of the irf /irf dyad [ , ; unpublished] , are absent from avian species, indicative of significant functional differences between them and mammals. moreover, for reasons that are not understood, the cytosolic pattern recognition receptor, rig-i, appears to have been lost from chicken as well as other galliformes [ , ] . to generate a chicken isg database we have compared data from three transcriptomic technology platforms: (i) the classical ′-biased genechip chicken genome array ( k; affymetrix, high wycombe, uk), (ii) the chicken gene . sense target (st) whole transcriptome array (affymetrix) and (iii) illumina (little chesterford, uk) rna-seq. this three-way comparison allowed a high level of cross-validation of data from each technology, beyond what would normally be achieved by qrt-pcr. it also allows subsequent studies, constrained to use any particular technology, to be more broadly compared. we monitored irg expression in chicken embryo fibroblast (cef) induced for h with units recombinant chicken ifn-α (rchifn ; hereafter routinely referred to as ifn), a time chosen to reflect predominantly primary signalling targets. the expression data for selected genes were also validated by pcr and qrt-pcr. overlapping data show generally high degrees of concordance in the identity of the irgs and their relative levels of regulation by ifn, with disparity mainly where multiple microarray probes exist for single genes. the study was presented in a preliminary form as a poster at the international cytokine and interferon society (icis) meeting ("cytokines "; october - , ) in bamberg, germany [ ] . freshly isolated cef were provided by the former institute for animal health (compton, uk, now the pirbright institute, pirbright, uk). cells were seeded in t flasks (greiner bio one, kremsmünster, austria; . × cells/flask) and cultured overnight in . ml media (gibco thermo fisher scientific, paisley, uk) supplemented with % heat-inactivated newborn bovine serum (nbcs; gibco), % tryptose phosphate broth (tpb; sigma-aldrich, gillingham, uk), % nystatin (sigma-aldrich) and . % penicillin streptomycin (gibco). recombinant chicken ifn-α (rchifn ) was prepared as previously reported [ ] and was added in culture media to a final concentration of units/ml. confluent cells were treated with ifn or mock-treated and incubated for six hours before harvesting. cells were stored at − °c in rnalater (sigma-aldrich) until rna extraction. the experiment was repeated in triplicate with three different batches of cef. total rna was extracted from cells using an rneasy kit (qiagen, crawley, uk) according to the manufacturer's instructions. on-column dna digestion was performed using rnase-free dnase (qiagen) to remove contaminating genomic dna. rna samples were quantified using a nanodrop spectrophotometer (thermo fisher scientific, paisley, uk) and checked for quality using a bioanalyzer (agilent technologies, wokingham, uk). all rna samples had an rna integrity number (rin) ≥ . . rna samples were processed for microarray with the genechip ® chicken genome array (affymetrix) using the genechip ® ′ ivt express kit (affymetrix) or for microarray with the chicken gene . st array (affymetrix) using the ambion (paisley, uk) wt expression kit for affymetrix genechip ® whole transcript (wt) expression arrays (ambion) and the genechip wt terminal labelling and controls kit (ambion), following the manufacturers' instructions, as described previously [ ] . total rna ( ng) was used as input and quality checks were performed using the bioanalyzer at all stages suggested by the manufacturer. rna samples were processed in two batches of but batch mixing was used at every stage to avoid creating experimental bias. hybridisation of rna to chips and scanning of arrays was performed by the medical research council's clinical sciences centre (csc) genomics laboratory (hammersmith hospital, london, uk). rna was hybridised to genechip chicken genome array chips (affymetrix) in a genechip hybridization oven (affymetrix), the chips were stained and washed on a genechip fluidics station (affymetrix), and the arrays were scanned in a gene-chip scanner g with autoloader (affymetrix). cdna was synthesised from rna samples from untreated and ifn-treated cef using the quantitect ® reverse transcriptase system (qiagen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. the glyceraldehyde -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh) was used as a reference gene. all target gene expression levels were calculated relative to gapdh expression levels and the target gene expression level in − h uninfected cef using the comparative c t method (also referred to as the −ΔΔct method). triplicate untreated (control) and ifn-treated cef were processed for transcriptome analysis by rna-seq. the cell samples used were identical to those used for the microarray analyses. total rna was extracted as for microarrays (above) and rna libraries were prepared for deep sequencing using the truseq rna sample preparation kit (illumina) according to the manufacturer's instructions. total rna ( . μg) was used as an input for each library. a total of six rna adapter indices were randomly assigned to the samples to allow multiplexing of libraries. at the end of the protocol, libraries were quantified using a nanodrop spectrophotometer and checked for quality using a bioanalyzer high sensitivity dna chip (agilent technologies). rna library qpcr quantification, multiplexing and sequencing was performed by the medical research council's clinical sciences centre (csc) genomics laboratory, hammersmith hospital, london, uk. libraries were quantified using the kapa biosystems (london, uk) library quantification kit (kk ) on an abi fast qpcr machine (applied biosystems). libraries were then diluted to a nm stock solution, pooled for multiplexing, denatured and diluted to a final molarity of pm. libraries were loaded on to the flow cell ( - pm per lane) for clustering and cluster generation was performed by the illumina cbot using version kits. sequencing of the flow cell was then carried out on the illumina hiseq using the version kits. data were processed using microarray data were processed using workflows in genespring ™ (agilent) and partek ™ (partek inc., st louis, mo, usa) commercial software suites. data (.cel files) were analysed and statistically filtered using either partek genomic suite . (partek gs) or genespring version . (agilent technologies) software. input files were normalized with either gcrma or genespring algorithms for gene array on core metaprobesets. a one-way anova was performed using either software across all samples. statistically significant genes were identified using mixed model analysis of variance with a false discovery rate (benjamini-hochberg test) of p < . . fold-change values <± . were removed. rna-seq data were imported into clc bio's genomics workbench (clc bio, aarhus, denmark; now qiagen), quality-controlled and thereafter processed using that package (versions and ). after quality control, the reads were subjected to quality trimming then mapped against ensembl galgal annotated genes (release [ ] ) for quantitative analysis of expression. fold change and false discovery rates (fdr) were calculated using kal's z test [ ] , with pooled data, or baggerly's test [ ] , using separate triplicates. initially, we used the k genechip ® chicken genome array (affymetrix) because, as well as displaying probes for chicken transcripts, it displays probes for transcripts from different viral pathogens of chickens, which offers advantages to those studying virus infections in a chicken background. subsequently, we used the more refined chicken gene . st array (affymetrix) because it offers a higher probe density against chicken genes and should allow detection of transcript isoforms, including non-polyadenylated and alternatively polyadenylated, though it does not include probes for viral genes. separate weekly batches of cef, produced from pools of eggs from the same flock (rhode island red) held in spf-like conditions at the former compton laboratory of the institute for animal health (now the pirbright laboratory) served as biological replicates. principal component analysis of the microarray data (data not shown) indicated limited variation between batches so, thereafter, biological triplicates were used routinely. irgs were identified from expression analysis data determined using the k genechip following ifn treatment ( units, h) of cef. after quantile normalization, significant hits were identified with genespring using an unpaired t test with asymptotic p-value computation and benjamini-hochberg multiple testing correction to generate false discovery rates (fdr). a matrix of fdr (from < . to ) plotted against fold change (fc; from . to > ) is shown in table . a relatively conservative fdr of < . returned differentially expressed probesets. overlaying this with a value for fc for which changes in expression might reasonably be expected to be readily and reliably assayed using other technologies, namely > , reduced the number of selected, significant probesets to a manageable ( up, down). these settings were therefore chosen for further analysis. for of these probe sets, no currently recognised genes were automatically assigned. of the remaining probe sets, were assigned to genes recognised in duplicate by other probe sets. consequently recognised genes were identified as differentially expressed (the down-regulated transcript was not, at that time, assigned to a recognised gene). with the chicken gene . st array, probe sets demonstrated differential expression ( up, down) at the same settings (fc > , fdr < . ). amongst these, there were five duplicated probe sets and that were not automatically assigned to recognised genes therefore recognised genes were uniquely identified as differentially regulated. illumina rna-seq yielded a total of million reads ( bases; paired) for the mock-treated cef triplicate samples and million for the ifn-treated samples. upon quality trimming and mapping to ensembl galgal annotated genes (release ), using clc bio's genomic workbench, recognised genes were identified as differentially regulated ( up, down) using kal's proportion-based z test [ ; as implemented in the clc bio package] at the same settings (fc > , fdr < . ). kal's is performed on the pooled reads from ifn-treated and untreated samples. it is perhaps, therefore, more widely applicable; it also returned a number of irgs comparable to those returned by the microarrays. triplicate-based analysis using baggerly's proportionbased beta-binomial test [ ; as implemented in the clc bio package] at the same settings (fc > , fdr < . ) returned an additional up-regulated genes. comparison of the complete raw gene lists from the three technologies using the most compatible identifier (essentially the gene symbol) with an online venn diagram tool (venn diagram generator; [ ] ) demonstrated that recognised genes were identified as differentially regulated. of these, were identified in common by all three technologies and a further were identified by two out of three technologies, meaning that were identified by at least two technologies. a total of were therefore each identified only by individual technologies ( figure a) . as well as comparing the identities of the differentially regulated genes, the correlation of expression of the genes identified by the different platforms was examined in terms of both level and rank of fc (figures a and b) . for instance, comparing rna-seq data with the k genechip data, spearman correlation values were . for fc level and rank. considering the current state of assembly and annotation of the chicken genome, the correlation of isgs in terms of gene identity as well as the level and rank of induction as indicated by all three technology platforms is reassuring. nevertheless the platform transcriptomic data were validated for selected genes by rt-pcr (data not shown) and by qrt-pcr ( figure a) . a h time point was chosen for microarray and rnaseq analysis of ifn treatment as it has been widely used and is known to result in significant levels of a broad range of isgs in mammals, making it suitable for defining the chicken interferome. use of this single time point does not, however, provide unequivocal insight into mechanistic interpretation of isg induction; for instance, it does not discriminate between strictly isre-dependent induction of isgs and isre-independent induction of isgs by mechanisms that might include immediate high-level induction of irf , which has been observed in mammalian systems [ ] [ ] [ ] . kinetic analysis of the induction of expression of a subset of isgs was therefore conducted at , , and min post application of ifn (see figure b ). even among highly-induced isgs, different temporal profiles were observed, from the rapid accumulation of ifit ( -fold by min) and rsad (which remain at steady levels to min) to the steadier, sustained accumulation of mx and the more modestly induced stat ; with lgp and trim peaking at min. although differences in mrna stability and turnover will influence the profiles, this identification of the isgs will allow detailed analysis of their promoters to investigate elements (and the factors that bind them) that contribute to the complexity of the observed induction patterns. of the irgs initially identified by all three technologies, ). this suggests either that the mammalian equivalents are isgs but that they are not included as such in interferome or that they are not isgs in mammals. the raw lists were refined by manual "curation", allowing for synonyms of recognised genes (for instance isg - versus isg ( )) and, after bioinformatic analysis using blast, etc., assigning recognised gene identifiers to probe sets that previously lacked them. at the end of this process ( figure b ; additional files , ), it was apparent that some (n = ) differentially regulated genes identified by the microarrays were also identified as differentially regulated by rna-seq but that they fell outside of the strict fc > and fdr < . parameters, reflecting unsurprising disparity in the sensitivity of the three technologies. those genes that were expressed down to fc > . or with an fdr up to < . were, therefore, also incorporated to produce a final list ( figure c ; additional files , ). it is obvious that this manual curation of the data, to allow for alternative gene id nomenclature used by the three technologies and for differences in sensitivity, introduced minor changes to the figures from the automatic comparisons cited above (figure ; additional files , ). curation, therefore, reduced the number of irgs from to . it also increased the number of differentially expressed genes detected by two out of three technologies from to (compare figures a and b) . relaxing the criteria for detection of differentially regulated genes by rna-seq (to fc > . and/or fdr < . ) further increased the number of genes detected by all three technologies from to (representing %) or by at least two of the technologies from to ( %), leaving genes detected by single technologies (compare figures b and c) , with of those detected by rna-seq alone (using the kal's test, at fc > . and fdr < . ; additional files , ). of the additional isgs identified by rna-seq as significant (fc > fdr < . ) by the more sensitive baggerly's test but not by kal's (table ) , two were also identified as significant by kal's using the relaxed criteria (fdr < . ). baggerly's, therefore, identified isgs additional to those described in the above analyses using rna-seq (kal's analysis) and the microarrays (table ) analysis of rna-seq data depends directly on the extant annotated genome sequence. perhaps not surprisingly therefore, rna-seq identified the largest proportion of genes amongst the set of unique irgs that we compiled ( ; %). nevertheless, the microarrays each identified % of the genes ( and ) . congruence was highest, and almost identical, between rna-seq and each microarray ( and ; ± %; all percentages referring to the total of unique irgs). between microarrays it fell to % ( ). for two-way-only comparisons, the distribution of unique genes between the microarrays was symmetrical ( and ; %). between rna-seq and each microarray, unique genes were biased > -fold towards rna-seq: ( %) versus ( %) against the genechip and ( %) versus ( %) against the st array. clearly in simple terms of numbers of irgs identified, rna-seq outperforms the microarrays. this is probably attributable to the historic nature of the array design based on earlier genome assemblies and annotations, with consequent effects on overall coverage (which might disproportionately affect conditionally expressed genes such as those of the innate immune responses). nevertheless, the ability of microarrays to quantify expression of % (about ) of such a large pool of important genes will often prove sufficient for the experimental objectives where other considerations might affect the choice of technology (see below). moving away from actual numbers of genes, it is worth noting that deeper analysis (in the form of validation by alternative approaches) will, by definition, be required to determine which of the genes identified uniquely as irgs by individual technologies are actually irgs. genomic loci for each of the predicted isgs were visually inspected using genomic workbench's genome browser, displaying tracks showing: gene, transcript, exon and orf annotations for the current chicken genome build as well as read-mapping for control and ifn-treated reads [ ] . on occasions, such inspection revealed the presence of non-annotated, inducibly-transcribed regions, representing exons, whole genes or even gene families. examples include those previously described at the chicken ifitm locus [ ; data not shown], at the herc locus (described below) or downstream of ccl (loc ; "c-c motif chemokine -like"; figure ). systematic analysis of these isgs is outside the scope of this manuscript but the data deposited from this study (european nucleotide archive (ena) study number prjeb [ ] ) will facilitate ongoing study and improved annotation. in some cases, although not currently annotated on the ensembl chicken genome, the genes have ids in ncbi and were identified as isgs by one of the microarrays. examples of these include loc , loc ("guanylate-binding protein -like") and loc ("hect domain and rld -like", a member of the herc family, discussed below). about % of the reads from cefs did not map to the current chicken genome. the unmapped reads combined from the control and ifn-treated samples were assembled into contigs using the de novo assembly function of genomic workbench. the rna-seq function of genomic workbench was then used to quantitate expression of the contigs in control and ifn-treated samples. one of the most highly-expressed contigs was one which, when analysed by blast, proved to represent a homologue of stat , which is missing from the current ensembl annotated reference chicken genome in (b) pyurf shows -fold suppression by ifn but the sequence surrounding pyurf shows -fold induction from the right-hand end of the unannotated, antisense loc and considerably higher upregulation from the left-hand end (due to its lower uninduced levels), consistent with these representing homologues of ifn-inducible human genes herc and herc . assembly (galgal ; release ), though at ncbi it has recently been placed as a refseq gene on chromosome in the new assembly galgal (an annotated form of which has not yet been released and is currently not scheduled for release). the de novo assembled contig sequence was used to derive primers for rt-pcr; characterisation of chicken stat will be reported elsewhere. the data on differential expression showed an overwhelming over-representation of genes up-regulated by ifn. for each of the technologies, only one gene was detected as down-regulated. corresponding geneids were pyurf (pigy upstream reading frame; ensgalg ) for rna-seq and pigy (phosphatidylinositol glycan anchor biosynthesis, class y; ncbi geneid: ) for the st array. the down-regulated k genechip probe (gga. . .s _at), though not mapped to a known gene at the time of initial processing, according to the affymetrix netaffx ™ analysis center [ ] is now also assigned as pyurf. in humans, pigy and pyurf represent different open reading frames on the same spliced transcript of a gene on hs chromosome located downstream of herc then herc . the pyurf/pigy gene is overlapped on the opposite strand by herc , which extends downstream to be followed by fam a. similarly, the chicken pigy (ncbi) and pyurf (ensembl) genes map to a locus lying upstream of herc then fam a on gg chromosome (see figure ) , with herc-like loc ("hect domain and rld -like") starting upstream but spanning and extending downstream of the chicken pyurf. our rna-seq data ( figure ) indicate that this locus is poorly annotated and demonstrates complex regulation of the component genes by ifn. thus, although the pigy/ pyurf transcript is down-regulated by ifn, as recorded by all three technologies, it appears to be closely flanked upstream and downstream by still unannotated multiple exons that are clearly strongly induced by ifn (figure ). sequences within these upstream and downstream regions (which are represented by the single ncbi refseq (gal-gal ) gene, loc , but appear as though they may represent two separate genes, figure ) bear homology with genes of the herc family, consistent with the fact that herc neighbours the human pigy/pyurf gene and that herc neighbours the chicken pigy/pyurf gene. the chicken herc gene shows no evidence of induction by ifn. description of the interferon-inducibility of the chisgs serves as the first step in understanding the regulation of their expression and their role in anti-viral (and potentially broader anti-microbial) activities. there is considerable current interest in the antiviral responses of particular cell types, particularly those of the lymphoid, myeloid and dendritic lineages. however, the definition of a wide variety of these cell types is not so advanced in avian species so we felt it best to produce baseline data for readily available, primary cells, namely chick embryo fibroblasts (cef) as they are highly responsive to ifn. they also remain important for commercial production of vaccine viruses (including human vaccines) as well as for the routine isolation and diagnosis of avian pathogens. given the currently incomplete nature of the chicken genome assembly (even at galgal ) and of its annotation (as currently available for galgal and even as awaited for galgal ) it is inevitable that updates will continue to be released but the primary data reported here, and publicly-available, for microarrays and rna-seq, can always be applied to updated microarray assignments as well as to subsequent genome assemblies and annotations. all things being equal, rna-seq would seem to be the method of choice for transcriptomic analysis of chicken ifn responses, particularly given its ability to produce high-resolution quantitative and qualitative data. moreover the data are readily portable and can be easily mined by others with different research focus. they can also be applied immediately to newly released genome assemblies and annotations (whether global or local), whereas microarray analysis must await the generation of annotation updates for each technology. however, although the cost of sequencing has fallen, and will probably continue to do so, there remain considerable overheads to handling large data sets from extensive, complicated experiments, especially in terms of computing and data storage capacity, as well as speed of processing and archiving. for such experiments, microarrays continue to offer a tractable approach, capable of quickly quantifying and comparing the expression of the central core of irgs producing relatively compact data for rapid analysis and easy archiving. induction of innate responses with pamps will trigger different or broader ranges of responses by virtue of the fact that they will trigger other or more pathways than just the ifn-pathway. for instance we (giotis et al. unpublished) and others [ ] have begun to analyse the responses induced by the dsrna analogue poly[i:c]. regulation of isg expression might affect the innate responses observed in different cell lines or tissues so it will be important to understand the mechanisms involved. additionally, we have observed suppression of isg induction in the spontaneously immortalized chicken fibroblast cell line, df- [ ] , due to their enhanced basal expression of the regulatory isg, socs (giotis et al., unpublished) . identification of the isgs means that their promoters, enhancers and other regulatory elements can be systematically analysed to help understand the complex kinetics of expression of their expression (figure ). several studies have investigated changes in host gene expression in response to infection in vivo or in culture with particular avian viruses [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . although many of these genes will represent innate (and potentially antiviral) host responses, the majority will be involved in the metabolic, cell cycle and ultrastructural changes that the virus has to induce to facilitate replication. furthermore, it is not unusual for viruses to modulate the expression of signalling molecules key to the antiviral responses or of antiviral effectors themselves. for instance, we have shown that even an attenuated strain of fowlpox virus blocks induction of ifn-β (chifn ) and is highly resistant to the antiviral activity induced by ifn [ , ] . the results of existing and future studies of infection in vivo or in culture with particular avian viruses can now be compared with data presented here for isg induction by ifn to look for evidence of modulation of isg expression by viruses, whether that be modulation of individual isgs, subsets [ ] or the complete set. for instance, fowlpox virus blocks essentially all isg expression but a mutant defective in the fpv ankyrin repeat/f-box protein identified by laidlaw et al. [ ] induces modest levels of a subset of the isgs (giotis et al., unpublished) . such analyses can be extended to important avian zoonotic viruses and pathogens with huge impact on the global poultry industry. although this study relates to type i ifn, extensive comparison with the effects of type iii ifn could now be conducted, extending on the qrt-pcr comparison made by masuda et al., who looked at induction of mx and oas by ifn-β, ifn-γ and ifn-λ [ ] . interferons and viruses: an interplay between induction, signalling, antiviral responses and virus countermeasures inborn errors of anti-viral interferon immunity in humans interferon-stimulated genes: a complex web of host defenses pathogenic influenza viruses and coronaviruses utilize similar and contrasting approaches to control interferon-stimulated gene responses functional classification of interferon-stimulated genes identified using microarrays a diverse range of gene products are effectors of the type i interferon antiviral response virus interference. i. the interferon chicken interferon gene: cloning, expression, and analysis characterization of the chicken pkr: polymorphism of the gene and antiviral activity against vesicular stomatitis virus international chicken genome sequencing c ( ) sequence and comparative analysis of the chicken genome provide unique perspectives on vertebrate evolution evidence of the adaptive evolution of immune genes in chicken functional analysis of chicken irf in response to dsrna analog poly(i:c) by integrating overexpression and knockdown defense genes missing from the flight division innate sensing of viruses by pattern recognition receptors in birds id: : transcriptomic analysis of the chicken interferome genetic screen of a library of chimeric poxviruses identifies an ankyrin repeat protein involved in resistance to the avian type i interferon response species difference in anp a underlies influenza a virus polymerase host restriction dynamics of gene expression revealed by comparison of serial analysis of gene expression transcript profiles from yeast grown on two different carbon sources differential expression in sage: accounting for normal between-library variation involvement of the irf- transcription factor in antiviral responses to interferons constitutive expression of an isgf /irf transgene leads to interferon-independent activation of interferon-inducible genes and resistance to virus infection ifn regulatory factor- bypasses ifn-mediated antiviral effects through viperin gene induction interferome v . : an updated database of annotated interferon-regulated genes chicken interferon-inducible transmembrane protein restricts influenza viruses and lyssaviruses in vitro the df- chicken fibroblast cell line: transformation induced by diverse oncogenes and cell death resulting from infection by avian leukosis viruses transcriptomic profiling of virus-host cell interactions following chicken anaemia virus (cav) infection in an in vivo model molecular responses to the influenza a virus in chicken trachea-derived cells early host responses to avian influenza a virus are prolonged and enhanced at transcriptional level depending on maturation of the immune system transcriptional analysis of host responses to marek's disease viral infection analysis of the early immune response to infection by infectious bursal disease virus in chickens differing in their resistance to the disease a comparative analysis of host responses to avian influenza infection in ducks and chickens highlights a role for the interferon-induced transmembrane proteins in viral resistance analysis of the crow lung transcriptome in response to infection with highly pathogenic h n avian influenza virus integrated analysis of microrna expression and mrna transcriptome in lungs of avian influenza virus infected broilers differential expression of micrornas in marek's disease virus-transformed t-lymphoma cell lines genetic screen of a mutant poxvirus library identifies an ankyrin repeat protein involved in blocking induction of avian type i interferon biological effects of chicken type iii interferon on expression of interferon-stimulated genes in chickens: comparison with type i and type ii interferons we are grateful for the skilled support of laurence game, nathalie lambie and adam giess of the medical research council's (mrc) clinical sciences centre's (csc) genomics facility in conducting microarray analysis and illumina sequencing. we gratefully acknowledge sarah butcher and geraint barton of the bioinformatics support service at imperial college london for their advice. the datasets supporting the conclusions of this article are available from the following repositories: european bioinformatics institute (ebi) arrayexpress accession numbers e-mtab- (for the k genechip; [ ] ) and e-mtab- (for the st array; [ ] ). european nucleotide archive (ena) study number prjeb (for illumina rna-seq; [ ] ). additional file . table of additional file . detailed information on chisgs identified by rna-seq, and microarray technologies ( ). technologies identifying significant irgs are listed as " " rna-seq (using kal's z test); " " affymetrix k genechip chicken genome array and " " chicken gene . st array' . chisgs significant by one or both microarrays and rna-seq using kal's z test under relaxed criteria (fc > . or fdr < . ) are indicated by "( )". "+" after the technology identifier indicates that ifn-induced rna-seq read density was observed at the location of the unannotated gene. ( ) interferome status [ ] . ( ) human homologue data (hugo) [ ] . ( ) mouse orthologue data (mgi) [ ] . ifn: interferon; irgs: ifn-regulated genes; isgs: ifn-stimulated genes; cef: chicken embryo fibroblasts; rchifn : recombinant chicken ifn-α; rin: rna integrity number; qrt-pcr: quantitative real-time pcr; gapdh: glyceraldehyde -phosphate dehydrogenase; fc: fold change; fdr: false discovery rate. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. esg and rcc design of the study, data acquisition and analysis, drafting the manuscript. ngs data compilation and analysis, drafting the manuscript. cdt design, production, curation and maintenance of chisg browser website. sg design of the study, critically reviewing the manuscript. mas design of the study, data analysis, finalizing manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- -xta e j authors: nan title: deutsche gesellschaft für experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie e.v. date: - - journal: naunyn schmiedebergs arch pharmacol doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: xta e j nan nucleoside diphosphate kinases (ndpks) are multifunctional enzymes involved in a variety of cellular processes including cancer metastasis and heart diseases. the plasma membrane content of the three major ndpk isoforms ndpk a, b and c is increased in human heart failure. we have previously shown that the ndpk b isoform regulates camp levels and cardiac contractility through a receptor-independent gprotein activation involving direct g protein β subunit phosphorylation. the precise role of ndpk c in the heart is unknown and was the object of this study. ndpk c function was assessed in neonatal (nrcm) and adult (arcm) rat cardiomyocytes with real-time pcr, immunoblotting, and quantification of camp content. heart failure was induced by chronic treatment with isoproterenol (iso, . mg/kg/d days) via minipumps. chronic iso increased mrna levels of ndpk c by . ± . -fold and its protein levels by . ± . -fold. immunoprecipitation of the g protein β subunit resulted in coimmunoprecipitation of ndpk c and the stimulatory gαs subunit: iso enhanced this interaction. upon iso stimulation, ndpk c translocated from the cytosol to the plasma membrane within hours in both nrcms and arcms. adenoviral overexpression of ndpk c in nrcms caused a . -fold increase in basal and iso induced camp synthesis, whereas sirna mediated knockdown of endogenous ndpk c decreased camp levels by ~ %. our results establish ndpk c as a novel and critical regulator of camp synthesis and gs signaling in the heart. the up-regulation of ndpk c and the increased responsiveness to iso in failing hearts point to ndpk c as a potential counterregulatory factor in the onset of heart failure. uptake and metabolism of methylated myricetin derivatives: studies in cell culture and c. elegans ackermann d. , , büchter c. secondary plant compounds like flavonoids that are ubiquitary present in fruits and vegetables are believed to exert health protective effects in terms of lowering the incidence of widespread diseases such as cardiovascular diseases and cancer. besides their antioxidative effects, flavonoids may also modulate cell signaling pathways and thereby performing their disease-protective actions. though this class of dietary polyphenols has become increasingly popular as dietary supplements, only little is known about their metabolic fate in vivo. therefore, we investigated the absorption and metabolism of several flavonoids such as myricetin and its methylated derivatives laricitrin, syringetin, and myricetin- ', ', '-trimethylether in the human colon carcinoma cell line hct and the human hepatoma cell line hepg as well as the model organism caenorhabditis elegans. all flavonoids were rapidly taken up by both cell lines as shown by hplc analyses. the intracellular amount of myricetin and laricitrin did not increase with time and was only half of that of syringetin and myricetin- ', ', '-trimethylether. interestingly, no metabolites of these flavonoids could be detected which might at least in part be due to their low intracellular amounts. absorption as well as intracellular distribution was also evidenced by using the fluorescent dye "naturstoff reagent a" nsra) . fluorescence microscopy indicated a predominant cytosolic distribution of the employed flavonoids. in the model organism caenorhabditis elegans, the flavonoids were exclusively distributed in the intestine as visualized by nsra. the antioxidative capacity of the four flavonoids (measured by using the cell free teac assay and the h dcf-da assay in hct cells) decreased with increasing methyl groups in the b-ring. myricetin- ', ', '-trimethylether (three methyl groups) was the least effective radical scavenging flavonoid in both the cell free system and in hct cells compared to myricetin (no methyl groups). in conclusion, for exerting their biological effects, uptake and distribution as well as metabolism of flavonoids in certain organs such as liver and gut are important and more research in that field is warranted. munich heart alliance, münchen, germany signaling through g protein-coupled receptors is affected by receptor polymorphisms, yet the molecular basis for the functional differences of individual receptor variants is unclear. to investigate the impact of the frequent gly arg variant of the β -adrenergic receptor (β ar) on receptor conformation we used β ar-sensors capable of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (fret). these sensors retained the pharmacological and functional characteristics of the native receptors. upon stimulation of the sensors we determined the activation characteristics of the polymorphic receptors in real time and in living cells. we found the β ar variants to behave similar upon a single stimulation with an agonist, but to differentially respond with a change of their activation kinetics during subsequent stimulations. while the arg -β ar did not show altered activation kinetics after prestimulation, the gly -β ar became slower compared to the initial stimulation suggesting that β ars possess a memory of previous activation. we then permeabilized β ar-sensor-expressing cells with saponin to remove soluble cytosolic factors. upon permeabilization the β ar variants did not display receptor memory, suggesting that the β ar memory depended on the interaction of the receptors with soluble cytosolic factors upon their initial activation including the phosphorylation of agonist-bound receptors by protein kinase a or g protein-coupled receptor kinases. our findings suggest an intrinsic, polymorphism-specific property of βars that alters activation kinetics upon continued stimulation and that might account for individual drug responses. micro-rna replacement therapy: nanoparticle-mediated in vivo delivery of mirna- or mirna- a exerts antitumor effects in colon carcinoma xenograft mouse models weirauch u. micro-rnas (mirnas) control the expression of various genes, and under pathological conditions several mirnas are up-or downregulated. previous in vitro studies have established a pro-apoptotic and anti-proliferative role of mir- , which shows decreased levels in colon carcinoma. in contrast, while mir- a is only weakly expressed in several tumors as well, its role in cancer has not been analysed so far. in this study, we demonstrate the tumor-relevance of mir- a and identify the protooncogenic kinase pim- as a target of mir- a. pim- harbours a highly conserved mir- a binding site within its '-utr, and seed mutagenesis of this target sequence abolishes the mir- a-mediated downregulation of pim- . the knockdown of pim- by rnai or mirna transfection inhibits proliferation in leukemia and in colon carcinoma cells by decelerating cell cycle progression, thus establishing a tumor inhibitory function of mir- a. we furthermore introduce polyethylenimines (peis) for the therapeutic application of mirnas in vivo, which is critically dependent on the development of appropriate delivery tools. peis are able to form non-covalent complexes with mirnas, leading to mirna protection after systemic application in combination with an attractive biodistribution profile and the efficient uptake in target organs/cells. therapeutic effects of pei-mediated mirna delivery were demonstrated in subcutaneous colon carcinoma xenograft mouse models. the in vivo application of mirna- through systemic or local injection of pei/mirna complexes resulted in efficient mirna delivery and in antitumor effects, based on the concomitant repression of erk . likewise, tumor growth inhibition was observed upon treatment of tumor-bearing mice with pei-complexed mir- a. this is due to the mir- a-mediated downregulation of pim- expression and resembles the pim- knockdown through rnai / pim- sirnas. taken together, in tumor xenograft mouse models we establish mirna replacement therapy through the pei-complexation of mirnas as a novel therapeutic strategy and demonstrate that mir- and mir- a may be promising mirnas in colon carcinoma therapy. md , a hybrid of chloroquine and primaquine, is a potential drug against infectious diseases such as malaria. since one moiety of the hybrid, the known antimalarial drug chloroquine, is a known intercalator, the potential of md to intercalate into dna was determined. due to the ability of intercalators to cause frame shift mutations, the mutagenic potential of md was also investigated. the potential of md to intercalate into dna was investigated by means of fluorescence based micro plate assay using ethidium bromide (eb) and isolated calf thymus double stranded dna. as a positive control chloroquine was used. the potential of md to cause gene mutations was determined using the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (hprt) test in chinese hamster v lung fibroblasts (v cells). v cells were treated with . µm, . µm and . µm md or the positive control, the direct mutagen -nitroquinoline-n-oxide (nqo, µm) for h. on day , mutants exhibiting loss of hprt function were selected with -thioguanine . whereas at µm chloroquine, a % decrease in fluorescence intensity of eb (indicating dna intercalation) was observed, µm md were needed to observe a similar decrease ( %) in fluorescence intensity of eb. therefore, md is fold less potent to intercalate into dna than its moiety chloroquine. the frequency of spontaneous -tg resistant mutants per colony-forming cells was ± . as expected, µm nqo caused a significant increase in the mutant frequency (mf, ± ) . in contrast, mf was not significantly affected by treatment with md at both noncytotoxic ( . µm: ± ) and cytotoxic ( . µm: ± ) concentrations. in conclusion, md is a less potent intercalator than the known antimalarial drug chloroquine. furthermore, md does not cause gene mutations in the hprt test. since current studies show that various metabolites of md are formed in vitro, their mutagenic potential is currently under investigation as well. -conducting channels but depends critically on the membrane potential. trp channels form cation entry channels thereby either contributing to ca + entry or depolarisation. recently, we showed that trpm acts as a ca + -activated non-selective cation channel and critically determines the driving force for ca + influx in mast cells following fcεri-stimulation ( ) . in addition to trpm we also identified the expression of other trp transcripts in bone marrow derived mast cells (bmmc) including those encoding trpc , trpc , trpc , trpc and trpm . in peritoneal mast cells (pmc), rt-pcr indicated expression of trpc , trpc , trpc , trpc , trpm , trpm and trpm . to identify the functional role of those trp channel proteins for mast cell activation we analysed ca + signaling using microfluorimetry in bmmcs and pmcs after stimulation with substances known to activate trpc channels in other cell systems such as the diacylglycerol analogue oag, the hyperforin analogue hyp- and flufenamic acid (ffa), but could not evoke a rise in the [ca + ]i in both pmc and bmmc. sphingosine phosphate and lysophosphatidylcholine, which were reported to activate trpc channels, induced only minor rise in [ca + ]i in bmmcs, respectively. here, we will present our analysis of ca + signaling following stimulation of the fcεri receptor and application of secretagogues that are supposed to affect ca + -dependent mast cell activation such as adenosine, endothelin- , substance p and compound / in bmmcs and pmcs derived from mouse lines with inactivation of trpc , trpc , trpc , trpc or trpc since specific antagonists are still lacking for these trp channels. the α a-ar is the main ar in the central nervous system and it plays a crucial role in regulating norepinephrine (ne) release from nerve terminals via presynaptic feedback inhibition. it is also associated with a number of physiological effects, including hypotension, pain perception, sedation and modulation of mood. ne, once released in the synaptic space, binds to α a-ars and induces a rearrangement of the receptors from the inactive state into an active conformation. this allows the binding and activation of the cognate gi-protein and, hence, the transduction of the transmembrane signal to the downstream effectors. generally, α a-ar activation has been deduced from the stimulation of a receptor-mediated biological response that could be easily followed experimentally. however, most of these approaches do not employ living cells and are normally applied under equilibrium conditions that need prolonged incubation periods incompatible with the physiological temporal dynamics of ne. here, we monitored the ne-mediated α a-ar and gi-protein activation by using a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (fret)-based approach in living cells. to examine the effects of increasing concentrations of ne on the speed and extent of α a-ar activation with very high temporal resolution, we took advantage of the previously described α a-ar flash/cfp sensor [ ] . the results indicate that in our system the efficacy of ne in eliciting α a-ar flash/cfp activation increases in a time-dependent way and reaches the maximum with a half-life of ~ ms. the ec values decrease in an exponential manner and arrive at ~ µm with a half-life of ~ ms. next, we analyzed the ability of increasing concentrations of ne to trigger a downstream intracellular response after α a-ar stimulation by monitoring the kinetics and amplitude of gi activation in living cells. we applied the previously well characterized gi cfp/yfp sensor [ ] . the results show that both the efficacy and the potency of ne in inducing gi activation reach the steady state slower compared to receptor activation (half-life ~ ms and ~ , ms respectively). in conclusion, we were able to monitor ne-mediated events occurring in the millisecond time scale and reaching the equilibrium in a time interval compatible with physiological conditions. sphingosine- -phosphate (s p) is an immune modulator produced by sphingosine kinase (sphk ) and sphingosine kinase (sphk ) and de-phosphorylated or degraded irreversibly by s p phosphatases and a lyase, respectively. we recently showed that tlr -induced il- p is selectively counter regulated by sphk , s pr and its extracellular ligand s p. on the other hand, spiegel et al. have demonstrated that specific, sphk -dependent, binding of s p to traf enhances the tnf-alpha signaling. therefore we were interested whether the tlr/tir and tnf-alpha-signaling pathways are interfered with each other and are modulated by s p. in a first approach we focused our investigations on sphk effects on both traf and traf stimulatory signals and cytokines produced downstream. experimentally, with gm-csf expanded, bone marrow-derived dcs we first desensitized the lps-tlr or cpg-tlr signal by a defined time period of costimulation with tnf-alpha. the initial results showed a partial decrease of il- p secretion in tnf-alpha-co-stimulated dcs in contrast to lps stimulation alone. this might indicate that traf activated via tnf-alpha interacted with the traf pathway to reduce il- p . further series with dcs derived from sphk -deficient mice confirmed our former results that il- p in contrast to other cytokines is specifically sensitive to sphk -s p feedback, but did not change the effects of tnf-alpha on wt dcs il- p release. in comparison, cpg-tlr -induced il- p release reached only % of lps-induced il- p levels and was less sensitive to tnf-alpha costimulation. however, sphk -deficiency strongly augmented cpg-dependent il- p production. in ongoing experiments we started to analyze the details of traf /rip and traf /tak activation by ubiquitination blots in wt, sphk -and s plyase-deficient dcs. in conclusion, we hope to unravel possible mechanisms of the observed differential effects of s p and its enzymes on inflammation and cancer-relevant cytokines. identification of the kh type splicing regulatory protein (ksrp) as a new important mediator of the anti-inflammatory effects of resveratrol art j. , besche v. , bros m. , li h. , handler n. , bauer f. , erker t. , behnke f. , mönch b. , förstermann u. , dirsch v. m. , werz o. , kleinert h. , pautz a. university of vienna department of pharmacognosy, althanstr. , wien, austria resveratrol, a polyphenol derived from different plants, possesses multiple pharmacological functions such as anti-oxidative, anti-diabetic, cardioprotective, anticancer, neuroprotective and anti-inflammatory properties. many of these effects have been attributed to its anti-oxidative activity but resveratrol also modulates signal transduction pathways like the p mapk pathway or the activity of different transcription factors like nf-κb redox-independently. moreover, the histone deacetylase sirtuin (sirt ) is an important mediator of resveratrol effects. nevertheless the direct molecular target of resveratrol remains unclear. in target fishing experiments we identified the rna-binding protein ksrp as direct resveratrol binding partner. ksrp is an rna-binding protein that controls proinflammatory gene expression on the post-transcriptional level by modulation of mrna stability. moreover, it is involved in the biogenesis of mirnas. resveratrol treatment of human dld- cells resulted in a decreased mrna expression of a number of well known ksrp target mrnas and enhanced mirna- function. downregulation of ksrp expression by sirna prevented the mrna destabilizing effect of resveratrol. as the activity of ksrp is mainly regulated on the post-translational level by phosphorylation of different serine and threonine residues we analyzed whether resveratrol changes ksrp activity by altering the phosphorylation of the protein. indeed, our immunoprecipitation experiments demonstrated that resveratrol reduces the p mapk-mediated phosphorylation of threonine residues in the ksrp protein and thus leads to an increase of ksrp activity. interestingly, resveratrol does not block p mapk activation or activity. in addition we have evidence that sirt is not involved in the resveratrol mediated activation of ksrp. so we believe that activation of ksrp by resveratrol is the major mechanism mediating the anti-inflammatory effects of resveratrol. in vitro testing of oecd reference nanomaterials (nm-series) in rat precision cut lung slices aumann a. the oecd has defined reference nanomaterials (nm) to be tested in different endpoints concerning human health and environmental safety ( ) in order to evaluate if the toxicity of nanomaterials can be linked to their physico-chemical properties. for nanomaterials, inhalation presents the major exposure route of concern and can be assessed using acute inhalation toxicity studies in rodents. however, these in vivo studies are resource intensive and animal consuming. the oecd working party on nanomaterials has named several alternative methods as being of particular interest for testing of nanomaterials; among them is the precision-cut lung slices model (pcls) to estimate respiratory toxicity. we have tested all nm in pcls measuring cytotoxicity, apoptosis, oxidative stress and inflammatory response of the tissues as well as observing them histological. for in vitro exposure of pcls the test material was dispersed in medium. since it is the nature of these materials to change their surface characteristics and agglomeration state in different environments, a standardized dispersion method (nanocare) using bovine serum albumin as a stabilizing agent, was used. particle size-distributions of the nanomaterial dispersions were characterized via analytical ultracentrifugation and found the nanomaterials well dispersed. silver and zinc oxide but none of the other nm showed cytotoxicity to the lung tissue in the tested concentrations. however, differences in cytokine profiles among the nm were observed and showed several correlations to the results obtained in in vivo inhalation or instillation studies. universität des saarlandes institut für molekulare zellbiologie, gebäude , homburg, germany tmem proteins show similarities in their primary sequence to motifs that are conserved amongst various members of the trp protein family. based on hydropathy analysis these proteins exhibit to membrane spanning domains. in contrast to trp channels there is no evidence that these proteins form ion channels in the plasma membrane following overexpression of their cdna in hek cells. tmem -/mice are viable and show no obvious signs of disease, but exhibit increased pancreatic amylase and lipase plasma levels. microfluorimetric measurements using fura- revealed that the elevation of the cytosolic ca + concentration after stimulation with carbachol and the cholecystokinin analogue caerulein is unchanged in tmem -deficient acinar cells. tmem is expressed in several cell types including pancreatic acinar cells, cardiac myocytes, cardiac fibroblasts, but their subcellular localization is still unkown. we generated several constructs encoding tmem fusion proteins with fluorescence protein tags by fusing eyfp, mcherry and tagrfp-t to the n-and c-terminus of the protein, respectively. based on western blot experiments and expression in hek cells the tmem -eyfp construct was most suitable for further colocalisation analysis and generation of viral vectors including adenovirus and semliki forrest virus. in contrast to the prediction by the psort ii algorithm tmem -eyfp could not yet be identified in the plasma membrane of fibroblasts, cardiac myocytes or acinar cells but showed a vesicular subcellular localization pattern. we localized tmem -eyfp in acidic compartments and predominantly in lysosomes (pearson coefficient (pcc) , ± , , n= using lysotracker ® dye). analysis of subcellular localization with independent tmem fusion constructs and additional vesicular markers will be presented as a framework to get insights towards the cellular function of tmem and to reveal the mechanisms underlying increased amylase release from acinar cells of tmem -/mice. the small molecule bcl- /mcl- inhibitor tw- shows single-agent cytotoxicity in neuroblastoma cell lines bachmann h. s. , akdeli n. high-risk neuroblastoma (nb) remains a therapeutic challenge in paediatric oncology. pro-survival bcl- family proteins critically regulate apoptosis, and may represent important therapeutic targets in nb. primary nb tumours heterogeneously express mcl- or bcl- , with high expression correlating to high risk phenotype. co-expression can be detected in approximately % and is correlated to reduced survival. recent studies with two inhibitors that predominantly target bcl- and other proteins, but not or to a lesser extend mcl- , elucidated the importance of mcl- inhibition for cytotoxicity in nb. tw- is a small molecule inhibitor that showed almost equal affinity to bcl- and mcl- . to explore the effect of combined bcl- /mcl- inhibition on neuroblastoma cells, four cell lines (sk-n-as, imr- , sy y and kelly) were treated with tw- and changes in growth properties were determined. furthermore, nude mice with kelly (human neuroblastoma cell line) xenografts were treated with tw- . using sirna, we investigated the functional relevance of mcl- and bcl- in kelly cells. for in vitro cell viability we observed ic values of . ± . µmol/l. on treatment with µmol/l dose of tw- , all neuroblastoma cell lines analyzed showed significantly reduced proliferation and increased apoptosis rates. bcl- as well as mcl- knockdown induced apoptosis in kelly cells. interestingly, tw- was able to reduce, but not to abrogate growth of kelly neuroblastoma xenografts in nude mice. in conclusion, combined inhibition of bcl- and mcl- using tw- exhibits strong single-agent antitumor activity on human neuroblastoma cells in vitro, but limited single-agent activity in vivo. therefore, inhibition of bcl- /mcl- may represent an interesting therapeutic strategy, most likely in combination with conventional chemotherapy and other specific inhibitors. localization and functional characterization of membrane transporters for sulfated steroid hormones in the human testis bakhaus k. , wapelhorst b. circulating sulfated steroid hormones like estrone sulfate (e s) or dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (dheas) are delivered to the testis via membrane uptake carriers such as the sodium-dependent organic anion transporter (soat). inside the cell these sulfated steroids can be metabolized to active steroid hormones by the catalytic activity of the steroid sulfatase (sts), which shows high enzymatic activity in the testis ("sulfatase pathway"). in addition to soat, other candidate carriers like the organic solute carrier protein (oscp ) and the organic anion transporting polypeptides oatp a and oatp c are predominantly expressed in the human testis and demonstrate transport activity for sulfated steroids. we aimed to evaluate the cellular expression of soat and the other steroid sulfate carriers and their co-localization with the steroid sulfatase (sts) in human testis. furthermore we want to perform functional transport studies with the steroid sulfate carriers in stably transfected hek cells. we detected soat by rt-pcr and western blot analysis in the human testis. single cell analysis and in situ hybridization revealed pachytene primary spermatocytes to express the soat mrna. soat expression in specimens showing maturation arrest at the level of early round spermatids seems to be severely reduced or absent. sts mrna was detected by rt-pcr in testis homogenates. preliminary immunohistochemical data showed that sts may be expressed in germ cells and interstitial leydig cells. hek cells stably expressing the soat carrier protein showed significant transport activity for dheas. this was demonstrated by using a radiolabeled [ the hepato-intestinal induction of the detoxifying enzymes cyp a and cyp a by the xenosensing pregnane x receptor (pxr) constitutes a key adaptive response to oral drugs and dietary xenobiotics. in contrast to cyp a , cyp a is additionally expressed in several, mostly steroidogenic organs, which creates potential for induction-driven disturbances of the steroid homeostasis. using cell lines and mice transgenic for a cyp a promoter we demonstrate that the cyp a expression in these organs is noninducible and independent from pxr. instead, it is enabled by the loss of a suppressing yin yang (yy )-binding site from the cyp a promoter which occurred in haplorrhine primates. this yy site is conserved in cyp a , but its inhibitory effect can be offset by pxr acting on response elements such as xrem. taken together, the loss of yy binding site from promoters of the cyp a gene lineage during primate evolution may have enabled the utilization of cyp a both in the adaptive hepato-intestinal response to xenobiotics and as a constitutively expressed gene in other organs. our results thus constitute a first description of uncoupling induction from constitutive expression for a major detoxifying enzyme. they also suggest an explanation for the considerable tissue expression differences between cyp a and cyp a . serum albumin adducts as biomarkers for systemic bioavailability of active metabolites of various glucosinolates in animal models and humans barknowitz g. , engst w. glucosinolates (gls) are natural pesticides of brassicales, which comprise many important food and feed plants. upon physical damage to the plant, the enzyme myrosinase can convert gls to reactive metabolites (e.g. isothiocyanates). the same reaction can also be catalyzed by enzymes of the intestinal microbiota. modification of sensor proteins (e.g. keap- ) by some gls metabolites leads to adaptive responses, resulting in enhanced detoxification of reactive metabolites and other protective reactions. at least in experimental models, this mechanism can be exploited for chemoprevention of carcinogenesis induced by various chemical carcinogens. however, own research revealed that certain reactive gls metabolites can covalently bind to dna in vitro and in vivo, involving possible genotoxic and carcinogenic risks. animal models are useful for studying beneficial and adverse effects of gls. however, it has to be taken into account that the toxicokinetics of gls may differ between rodent and humans and that the active metabolites are short lived and thus difficult to detect and quantify. likewise, exposure of humans to gls and their breakdown products may enormously vary depending on (i) food preferences, (ii) cultivars, growth conditions and preparation of plants consumed and (iii) variations in human xenobiotic metabolizing system and composition of intestinal microbiota. in order to estimate individual levels of systemic exposure to reactive gls metabolites, blood protein adducts may be useful. we have developed lc-ms/ms methods for quantifying serum albumin adducts formed by glucoraphanin, glucotropaeolin and neoglucobrassicin. the method involves digestion of the protein to amino acids and the usage of isotope-labelled amino acid adducts as internal standards. serum albumin adducts were detected in mouse models after feeding broccoli and pak choi respectively, as well as after administration of purified gls and breakdown products. likewise, gls adducts were detected in human blood plasma after consumption of broccoli or cress. this work was financially supported by the bundesministerium für bildung und forschung (grant d) . barlow s. harrington house, harrington road, brighton, bn re, great britain values for cancer endpoints for the application of the ttc approach have been derived by linear extrapolation of results from animal carcinogenicity studies to calculate "virtually safe doses" (vsds). a vsd is defined as an exposure that represents an estimated upper bound increase in risk of in a million of developing cancer during a lifetime. in , from consideration of a range of vsds for carcinogens, the us food and drug administration (fda) proposed and adopted a value of . micrograms/kg of diet ( . ppb) as a threshold of regulation to be used for substances present in food contact materials. the fda considered that if exposure to a substance in the diet was below this value, consumers would be protected "with reasonable certainty of no harm" and no toxicological data on the substance need be submitted. the value of . ppb is equivalent to . micrograms/person per day, assuming that g of food and g of fluids diet might be consumed daily. this value was subsequently incorporated into the ttc approach to be used for assessment of substances without a structural alert for genotoxicity. in , kroes and colleagues further explored cancer as an endpoint and recommended a lower ttc value of . micrograms/person per day for substances with a structural alert for genotoxicity and exclusion from the ttc approach of certain groups of high potency carcinogens (with vsds below this value). in this presentation, the data underpinning these ttc values will be discussed from the perspective of their reliability for risk assessment of substances with low exposures, for which there are no toxicity data, but which may in fact be genotoxic or non-genotoxic carcinogens. stable conjugates which are recognized by the immune system. in the current investigations, the ability of chemical pre-treatment to interfere with antibody-protein binding has been investigated using ovalbumin (ova) as the model protein and naturally occurring anti-ova igg from healthy human donors. preparation of conjugates: ova ( mg/ml) was dissolved in sodium borate buffer ( . m, ph . ) . for chemical treatment various amounts ( - mg) of -fluoro- , dinitrobenzene (dnfb; sensitizer) or , -dichloro- -nitrobenzene(dcnb; non-sensitizer) was added and stirred for hrs at room temperature. unbound compound was removed by consecutive dialysis against phosphate buffered saline (pbs) and distilled water. inhibition elisa: plates were coated with µg/ml ova and blocked with % fcs in pbs. ova samples (native or conjugated; . - µg/ml) were pre-incubated with polyclonal antibodies (ab) from pooled normal human serum for min and then added to the plates. human anti-ova igg abs were detected by colorimetric analysis using ortho-phenylendiamine as a substrate. the concentration of soluble native ova or conjugate required to displace % of ab to plate-bound ova (ic ) was calculated (minimum of n= independent experiments). treatment of ova with the chemical sensitizer and protein reactive dnfb resulted in increased ic value, whereas mock treatment resulted in comparable ic values to native ova. treatment with dcnb showed that the presence of a chemical per se (and possible denaturation) was not sufficient to alter the ic value; conjugation of the compound to the protein was required. the analysis is not test chemical specific (specific ab against compound-protein conjugates are not required) and the colorimetric analysis is unaffected by absorbance of the compound itself. thus, this method may have utility for the identification of chemical sensitizers which are directly protein reactive. ´-deoxy-camp in human cell lines: another second messenger? beckert c. , hinz c. we have shown that ´-deoxy-camp (dcamp) is synthesized by recombinant human soluble adenylyl cyclase (sac). here, we report that dcamp can be detected and quantified by liquid chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry (lc-ms) in various human cell lines. in most cells a ratio of camp : dcamp of ~ was observed. as a remarkable exception, in hl- promyelocytic leukemia cells, the dcamp concentration exceeded the camp concentration more than -fold. a differential regulation of camp versus dcamp was determined upon replacement of the incubation medium (proliferating condition with serum / serum-free resting condition). for example, camp was dramatically reduced in hek cells after hours under resting conditions whereas dcamp was significantly increased. in cellular subfractions of hek cells ac assays (mn + /forskolin-or mn + /bicarbonate-stimulated) with either atp or datp as substrate revealed that comparable amounts of camp and dcamp accumulated. in addition to sac, membranous acs such as ac v were capable of forming dcamp with vmax and km values for datp comparable to those for atp. we also analyzed the substrate-specificity for several human phosphodiesterases. pde and pde hydrolyzed dcamp more effectively than camp. taken together, these data point to a putative second messenger role of dcamp in human cells. we are currently investigating the regulatory role(s) of camp and dcamp in apoptosis of hek cells. as a novel tool for these studies, we will use the cellpermeant dcamp-acetoxymethylester which penetrates the plasma membrane and releases dcamp intracellularly. the biogenic amine histamine is recognized by target cells via four different histamine receptors subtypes (h r -h r), which all belong to the family of g-protein-coupled seven-transmembrane receptors. histamine plays a crucial role in allergic reactions such as rhinitis or conjunctivitis and also in allergic asthma. previously, we showed an interaction of the effects of antagonists at the h r and h r in a mouse model of allergic asthma. however, not much is known about the signaling pathway activated by murine h r and h r. in order to analyze these signaling pathways, we established a cellular model using transfected hek cells which stably express recombinant mh r or mh r. proper expression of the receptors was verified by western blot analysis and flow cytometry. in functional assays we demonstrated that histamine stimulation results in the increase of intracellular ca + concentration ([ca + ]i) in cells expressing either of both, mh r (pec = . ) or mh r (pec = . ). as a second readout, we analyzed the modulation of forskolin-induced camp-accumulation. in mh r-expressing cells the intracellular camp concentration was increased by stimulation with histamine, while in mh r-expressing cells forskolin-induced camp accumulation was reduced. the histamine-induced effects in h r-expressing cells were blocked by the h r antagonist mepyramine ([ca + ]i: pkb = . ) and those in the h r-expressing cells by the h r antagonist jnj ([ca + ]i: pkb = . ) or by pertussis toxin, which selectively blocks receptor gi-protein coupling. jnj , which behaves as a partial mh r agonist in the steady-state gtpase assay using membranes of infected sf cells, was without effect on [ca + ]i and forskolin-induced camp-accumulation in the mh r-expressing cells. currently, we are investigating mitogen-activated protein (map)-kinase pathways activated by the h r and the h r. using a phospho-map-kinase array, histamine dependent phosphorylation of erk / , p , jnk, creb, pkb (akt), and mkk / were detected in cells expressing either of both, mh r and mh r. in summary, the hek cell lines stably expressing selective histamine receptors are very useful tools to investigate hxr signaling pathways in-vitro. enhanced fibroblast motility in the absence of the β regulatory subunit of voltage-activated calcium channels belkacemi a. cavβ subunits of voltage-activated ca + channels are required for trafficking the poreforming cavα subunit to the plasma membrane and modulate the kinetics of its current. mouse embryonic fibroblasts (mefs), acutely isolated cardiac fibroblasts (cfs) and nih t fibroblasts do express cavβ and cavβ subunits, but we could not detect any voltage-activated ca + influx. whereas in mouse cardiomyocytes or hek cells coexpressing cavβ and cavα subunits a dihydropyridin-sensitive voltage-activated ca + influx was readily detectable. apparently, cavβ subunits serve functions in fibroblasts unrelated to voltage-activated ca + influx. among the proteins potentially interacting with cavβ are the inositol , , -trisphosphate receptors (ip rs) [ , ] . we therefore coexpressed mouse cavβ and mouse ip r type , or in cos- cells and found coimmunoprecipitation of ip rs using an antibody for cavβ and vice versa. to study the release of ca + from ip -sensitive stores we performed fura- measurements on fibroblasts isolated from wild type and cavβ -deficient mice either in the presence of thapsigargin or after stimulation of gq-coupled receptors by par- , lpa or bradykinin. receptor-activated ca + release was more pronounced in β -deficient mefs and cfs, whereas thapsigargin-induced ca + release was the same in cells from both genotypes. in addition, ip production measured by a radioreceptor assay was already increased in β -deficient cells under basal conditions. fibroblasts are migrating cells and involved in various physiological and pathophysiological processes. we therefore started in vitro assays for proliferation, migration and angiogenesis as well as in vivo assays for skin wound healing. angiogenesis and proliferation were apparently not different in both genotypes but migration (measured as transwell migration and in scratch assays) and wound healing were affected in different ways. fluorescent staining of cytoskeleton and quantification of the f-actin/g-actin ratio show similar results in both genotypes, suggesting that the increased migration rates and wound repair in β knockout may result, in part, from the increased amount of ip -releasable ca + . [ ] berggren, yang, murakami, et al., removal of ca channel β subunit enhances caoscillation frequency and insulin exocytosis. cell , ( ) - . [ ] müller, haupt, bildl, et al., quantitative proteomics of the cav channel nanoenvironments in the mammalian brain. pnas , ( ) - . bender-sigel j., closs e. i. universitätsmedizin mainz institut für pharmakologie, obere zahlbacher straße , mainz, germany human cationic amino acid transporters (hcat) are a family of multimembrane spanning proteins that mediate the transport of cationic amino acids through the plasma membrane. our earlier results have demonstrated that activation of either protein kinase c (pkc) by pma or cdc by egf leads to an internalization of these transporters. in addition, in a recent collaboration with the group of alexander sorkin (university of colorado denver) we found that ubiquitination and clathrin-dependent endocytosis are necessary for the down regulation of hcat- -mediated arginine transport by pma (vina-vilaseca et al, j biol chem : ) . this mechanism requires nedd e ligases, but hcats do not contain a ppxy motif to bind the ligases, suggesting that an adaptor protein takes part in this process. however, an involvement of the adaptor protein beta-arrestin in this mechanism could be excluded. using sirna against pkc alpha we now show that pkc alpha is the major isoform that induces the reduction of arginine transport in human u glioblastoma cells overexpressing hcat- a-egfp. in addition, sirna-mediated knock down of cdc prevented the decrease of hcat- amediated transport induced by pma. taken together pkc seems to negatively influence the constitutive cycling of cats by activation the ubiquitination machinery and clathrinmediated endocytosis. cdc is part of this pathway. converging of the classical mitochondria-related pathway in parkinson and nuclear dna-repair signaling? scherr a. -l. parkinson disease is the second most neurological disorder worldwide. despite the fact that most cases are idiopathic and only few can be traced back to specific genes, general progression between both tracks of the disease is comparable. the variety of clinical symptoms in motor control like tremor, rigor and postural problems all originate from loss of dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra pars compacta of the brain. several proteins mutated in pd are involved in surveillance pathways, monitoring functionality and integrity of proteins and organelles either by the proteasome degradation machinery or by clearance of mitochondria via autophagy (mitophagy). disturbed calcium-and redox-homeostasis seems to play a major role in susceptibility to cell death signals in dopaminergic neurons, but if this is a preceding or successive event in cell death related to pd progression is not known. on the other hand, experimentally elicited parkinsonism by oxidative stress inducers like paraquat or rotenone and mptp (inhibitors of mitochondrial complex i) lead to damage in nuclear dna and activation of the dna repair protein poly(adp-ribose) polymerase . by consuming substantial amounts of its substrate nad + , this enzyme can drastically decrease energy levels and disturb the redox balance within a cell, also sensitizing it to stress induced cell death. inhibition of poly(adp-ribose) polymerase has been proven to be beneficial to some extent in cell culture models as well as in experimental pd in mice. our research focuses on a putative crosstalk mechanism we recently discovered between the two pathways of experimentally induced cell death in culture models, i.e. mitochondrial signaling and parp -dependent poly(adp-ribosyl)ation. both converge on two mitochondrial chaperones, mortalin and trap . whereas mutations in mortalin have been reported recently to be responsible for some parkinson disease cases in humans, trap is a specific target of the kinase pink (pten induced putative kinase), which is often mutated in autosomal-recessive forms of the disorder. pink is a central regulator of the mitophagy process, tagging mitochondria with dissipated membrane potential for destruction. we could show now that both chaperones bind to short-chain poly(adp-ribose) specifically synthesized by poly(adp-ribose) polymerase . we will present our most recent findings about regulation of these two chaperones after application of parkinson-inducing toxins. aldrich). the effect was reversible within ten minutes when cells were re-incubated in regular cell culture medium. stimulatory effects were not due to osmolarity or cell stress due to medium exchange. analysis of different components of both media (table ) revealed that bicarbonate stimulates accumulation of ccmp and cump besides cgmp and camp in a time-and concentration-dependent manner. bicarbonate is known to activate soluble adenylyl cyclase (sac) and particulate guanylyl cyclase g (pgc-g), regulating sugar metabolism, sperm motility and olfaction by synthesis of camp and cgmp, respectively. in order to identify a responsible cyclase for ccmp and cump generation after bicarbonate treatment, we are currently analyzing transiently and stably transfected hek cells overexpressing various known adenylyl and guanylyl cyclases (sac, mac , mac , mac , soluble guanylyl cyclase, pgc-g, pgc-a, and pgc-d) for their pyrimidinyl and purinyl cyclase activity in vivo and their regulation by bicarbonate. in addition, cell fractions will be analyzed for the detection of specific cyclase compartments. question: long term ventricular pacing, especially at the right ventricle (rv), results in left ventricular (lv) failure. there are several lines of evidence that disturbed ca + homeostasis is involved in the pathophysiology of human heart failure. in this study we examined if ventricular pacing affects the na + -and ca + -channels and the expression of ca + -handling proteins and investigated if there is a differential effect between right ventricular free wall (rvfw) pacing and left ventricular apex (lva) pacing. methods: after av-node ablation minipigs underwent ventricular pacing at beats/min (ddd mode) for one year. minipigs were paced from the rvfw and minipigs from the lva, respectively. minipigs with normal sinus-rhythm served as control group. patch-clamp-experiments were studied to measure na + -and ca + currents. western-blots were carried out to investigate the expression of the ca +handling proteins l-type ca + -channel, serca and phospholamban. results: both rvfw-and lva-pacing led to significant decreased ca + -currentdensities in cardiomyocytes of the lv compared to the control group. the plateau phase of the action potential was significantly shortened after ventricular pacing in relation to control minipigs. furthermore cardiomyocytes of rvfw-and lva-paced minipigs had significant lower na + -current-densities than control minipigs. the action potential amplitude was significantly decreased after rvfw-and lva-pacing whereas the diastolic potential remained unchanged. the expression of the l-type ca + -channel was significantly reduced after ventricular pacing, regardless of the pacing site. in contrast rvfw-and lva-paced minipigs showed significant increased serca -expression. the expression of phospholamban remained unchanged after rvfw-and lva-pacing compared to control minipigs. conclusion: in a chronic animal model ventricular pacing leads to remodeling of ionchannels and ca + -handling-protein-expression, regardless of the pacing site. investigation on metabolic competence of dermal systems: native human skin, in vitro skin models and keratinocytes blatz v. the implementation of reconstructed human skin equivalents (rhes) as an alternative method for dermal toxicity testing became very prominent in the last decades. their advantages are e. g. the human cell origin and an organ-like d structure. already regulatory accepted methodologies are widely in use for testing the skin corrosion (oecd ) and irritation (oecd ) within rhes. but there are still some questions open, one of them the metabolic competence of such dermal systems. in this context, enzyme activities of oxidizing (cyp; fmo; adh; aldh) and conjugating enzymes (nat; ugt) were investigated in subcellular fractions of in vitro systems such as keratinocytes and rhes (epidermis model epiderm tm (mattek), full-thickness skin models epiderm tm ft (mattek) and phenion ® ft (henkel ag)) and compared to those of native human skin. activities of cyp a, b and a isoenzymes were measured fluorometrically by oxidative desalkylation of alkoxyresorufines. fmo / activities were evaluated by hplc/fld detection of n-oxygenated product of benzydamine [ ] . adh and aldh activities were investigated by photometrical detection of nadh generation during ethanol (adh) [ ] or propanal (aldh) oxidation [ ] . nat activity was followed by hplc/uv detection of acetylated p-aminobenzoic acid. ugt activity was quantified fluorimetrically by glucuronidation of methylumbelliferone [ ] . during the course of this study the following results were observed: (loq = limit of quantification) since the metabolic competence of rhes is confirmed, these in vitro systems are estimated as suitable for further toxicity tests (e. g. genotoxicity by comet assay), where metabolic activation of substances may play a crucial role. however, for the data assessment, the determined metabolic profiles should be taken into account. we acknowledge bmbf funding this project ( d). signalling pathway indicates that in b cells the adenine receptor couples to a gqprotein followed by activation of phospholipase c pathway. these findings represent a new signalling pathway of the adenine receptor and allow the assumption that different adenine receptor subtypes exist in the rat brain. in the scope of the project lexukon ("foodborne exposure to environmental contaminants -data analysis to support and standardise exposure assessments based on nvs ii") exposure to the heavy metals cadmium (cd), lead (pb) and mercury (hg) via food consumption has been assessed for the german adult population based on the national nutrition study ii ( the updated intake assessments show that especially foods regularly consumed such as vegetables and grain contribute mainly to exposure of cd that is about . µg/kg body weight (bw) per week for average consumers over all food groups. this corresponds to % of the tolerable weekly intake (twi) of . µg/kg bw for cd defined by the european food safety authority (efsa) in . beverages and vegetables are the food groups most relevant for exposure to pb. about . µg pb/kg bw is taken up by average consumers that is below the benchmark dose for renal toxic effects ( . µg/kg bw) defined by efsa for the weekly pb intake. for hg the intake amounts for all population groups examined were significantly below the toxicological reference values. for average consumers the weekly intake of hg is . µg/kg bw that is primarily taken up by eating fish and fishery products. however, individual population groups and high consumers reach and/or exceed the toxicological reference values for the daily intake amounts for cd and pb. high consumers almost reach the twi for the cd with %. for pb a weekly intake of µg/kg bw was estimated for high consumers that exceeds the benchmark dose for renal toxic effects for the weekly pb intake. the results show that data collection should also focus on highly consumed and not only on highly contaminated foods. further, uncertainties in concentration levels should be reduced e.g. by lowering and standardizing the analytical limits. it's recommended to consider further measures in view of the reduction of contents of environmental contaminants in foods. however, other sources can also contribute to the intake of the mentioned heavy metals (e.g. smoking). major cell biological processes are regulated by rho-gtpases, actin-mediated processes in particular. amongst others, rho-gtpases are stimulated by the receptormediated activation of gα / and gαq via specific rhogefs. the p rhogef is activated by gαq and plays a major role in the acute response of vascular smooth muscle cells to angiotensin ii treatment. the aim of the present study was to establish a fret-assay between gαq-cfp and venus-p rhogef and characterize the dynamics of p rhogef-gαq-interaction in single living cells. the fusion of p rhogef with venus resulted in a functional gαq-regulated p rhogef-protein as determined by means of rho-luziferase-assays. whereas no specific fret signal was observed between the two interaction partners in the absence of receptor stimulation, a robust and rapid fret signal developed in response to stimulation of histaminergic h and cholinergic m -recptors. the onset of this signal after rapid application of agonist paralleled gαq activation kinetics. similar to the kinetics of gαq-protein deactivation the dissociation of p rhogef and gαq after withdrawal of agonist was slow (tens of seconds). the specificity of the fret signal between gαq-cfp and venus-p rhogef was verified by introducing point mutations rendering p rhogef unable to bind to active gαq. furtehrmore we observed a robust acceleration of the dissociation of p rhogef and gαq upon cotransfection of rgs , suggesting a very short lifetime of the p rhogef-gαq-complex or the ability of rgs to bind to p rhogef-associated gαq. taken together, fret-based imaging of the interactions between p rhogef and gαq revealed fast interaction kinetics closely resembling g-protein activation kinetics, both of which can be regulated by rgs . toxicity of silver nanoparticles in intestinal cells boehmert l. the rapid development of nanotechnology has been accompanied by an increased concern for the safety of nanomaterials. especially silver nanoparticles are used in many manufacturer identified consumer products including silver coated food contact materials or hydrosol silver supplements. these products lead to an intentional or unintentional oral uptake of silver nanoparticles and hence to a contact with the intestinal barrier. the human cell line caco- is a well established model system in studying effects on human enterocytes. although these cells are colon carcinoma cells and exhibit typical features of cancer cells when they are kept sub confluent, these cells have the capability to differentiate into polarized cells with morphological and biochemical properties of small enterocyte cells. we investigated the effects of silver nanoparticles on these colon carcinoma (proliferating) and small intestinal epithelium like (differentiated) caco- cells. the silver nanoparticles agpure were commercially available from rent-a-scientist gmbh. the behaviour of these silver nanoparticles in cell culture medium were characterised using asymmetric flow-fild flow fractionation (a f), small ankle x-ray scattering (saxs) and dynamic light scattering (dls). we investigated the particle toxicity on both cell states using cell titer blue assay, xcelligence impedance measurements, annexin-v and caspase measurements, diclorofluorescein assay and antioxidant pre incubated cells. the agpure stock solution is an aqueous suspension of silver particles with a metal core radius of . nm stabilised with tween- und polyoxyethylenglycerol trioleate. agpure silver nanoparticles were toxic for proliferating as well as differentiated caco- cells in a time and concentration depending manner. the presence of foetal calf serum in the incubation medium has a minor influence on the toxicity. prior to cell death, morphological abnormal adherence characteristics and morphological changes in the cells were observed using microscopy and quantified by xcelligence impedance measurement. it is concluded that cell death is caused by an oxidative stress related mechanism rather than apoptosis. the release of sphingosine- -phosphate from human platelets during acute coronary syndrome is attenuated by aspirin böhm a. , polzin a. in addition to atherosclerosis ttp knock out mice develop more cardiovascular dysfunctions. in tail vein bleeding assays we monitored a significant difference in the bleeding times of ttp deficient mice in comparison to wildtype mice, triggered by a stronger granulopoeisis. our results leed us to the assumption that the chonic inflammation seems to be more improtant for the development of cardiovascular diseases in ra patients than the traditional risk factors. differentially expressed cardiac genes in a mouse model with heart-specific overexpression of pp a bollmann p., makarova e. a., gergs u., neumann j. institute for pharmacology and toxicology medical faculty, magdeburger str. , halle (saale) , germany in transgenic (tg) mice with cardiac myocyte-specific overexpression of the catalytic subunit of protein phosphatase a (pp a) reduced cardiac protein phosphorylation, cardiac hypertrophy and impaired cardiac contractility were noted compared to wild type (wt) littermates. the hearts of tg mice also suffered from ventricular dilatation and a diminished response to β-adrenergic stimulation. analyses of mrnas expressed in tg and wt hearts (n= ) using affimetrix mouse genome microarray chips resulted in several candidate genes possibly differentially regulated. in this study, we focussed on verifying the mrna data of selected genes important for stress response and signal transduction on protein level in cardiac homogenates by western blotting. hearts from wt littermates were used as control. compared to wt heat shock protein (hsp ) and calcium calmodulin dependent protein kinase type ii (camkii) mrnas were upregulated in tg but only hsp protein was increased (p< . , n= - ) but not camkii (p> . ). protein phosphatase type (pp ) and superoxide dismutase (sod) were downregulated on mrna level in tg but on protein level this could be found only for sod (p< . , . in contrast, pp protein was upregulated (p< . , in tg compared to wt. for comparison the regulatory a-subunit of pp a and hsp were studied. both genes were unchanged on mrna level in tg: western blotting revealed the same results for the corresponding proteins. in summary, mrna expression data could only partially be confirmed on protein level elucidating the importance of western blotting studies. these data indicate that increased pp a activity is associated with modified gene expression in tg hearts possibly affecting stress response and regulation of cell signalling. (supported by the deutsche forschungsgemeinschaft) center for regenerative therapies, technische universtität, dresden, germany cell therapy in the form of beta cell replacement to cure diabetes has been practiced for decades without become a routine clinical therapy. more widespread clinical application is hindered by the scarcity of suitable organ donors, a dramatic loss of transplanted cells within the first days post-transplant, the requirement of long term immunosuppression to maintain graft survival, and despite this, a loss of graft function from a recurrence of autoimmunity in some patients. research is currently dedicated to overcome each of these limitations. additional beta cell sources investigated include embryonic stem cell derived insulin producing cells, human insulin producing cells lines, and xenogeneic beta cells. parallel to these efforts are the development of encapsulation devices to protect these sources from immune and inflammation mediated destruction, and transplantation into new sites such as the muscle and bone marrow to infuse beta cells. additional therapy to reduce immune suppression includes the infusion of t regulatory cells to control autoimmune and alloimmune response, and cytokine and chemokine receptor directed compounds aimed at blocking early inflammation or autoimmunity. these efforts are likely to lead to an expansion of clinical activity to replace beta cells in diabetes, and to novel pharmaceutical therapies that may be more generally applicable in patients with diabetes. pdgf-bb induces the h s producing enzyme cystathionine-γ-lyase via a rosdependent mechanism in rat renal mesangial cells boosen m. , hassan m. there is increasing evidence that hydrogen sulfide (h s) that is endogenously produced in several cell types serves as a potent gasotransmitter in a wide variety of physiological processes involving vascular homeostasis and inflammation. in the present study we investigate the expression and the regulation of the hydrogen sulfide synthesizing enzyme cystathionine γ-lyase (cse) in cultured rat renal mesangial cells. as demonstrated by qpcr and western blot experiments, mesangial cells showed a marked time-and dose-dependent upregulation of cse mrna and protein levels after treatment with platelet-derived growth factor (pdgf-bb). the cse upregulation by pdgf-bb is accompanied by a marked increase in reactive oxygen species (ros) formation. interestingly, co-administration of the ros scavenger n-acetylcysteine, the glutathione peroxidase mimetic ebselen and the nadph oxidase inhibitor diphenylen iodonium chloride (dpi) drastically reduced pdgf-induced cse expression, indicating a role for endogenously produced ros in mediating regulation of cse. as demonstrated by electrophoretic mobility shift (emsa) experiments pdgf-bb induces binding of the redox-sensitive transcription factor nf-e -related factor (nrf ) to a consensus antioxidant response element and this effect was also diminished by co-administration of antioxidants (dpi, nac, ebselen) . furthermore, lps/ifnγ-as well as pdgf-bb-induced cse upregulation was nearly completely abolished in nrf -/spleen macrophages and mesangial cells, respectively. as a consequence of the elevated cse levels we could demonstrate increased h s levels and a higher cse enzyme activity in mesangial cells after stimulation with pdgf-bb by using the colorimetric methylenblue method and a cse activity assay. importantly, in a rat model of anti-thy- -induced proliferative glomerulonephritis we observed a marked upregulation of cse protein during the course of the disease paralleled by a stabilization of nrf protein. from our data, we hypothesize that pdgf-bb-mediated regulation of cse via a redox-mediated activation of nrf may constitute a protective mechanism during glomerular inflammatory disease. rac knockout protects from acute hepatic damage following doxorubicin treatment bopp a., wartlick f., fritz g. heinrich-heine-universität institut für toxikologie, universitätsstr. , düsseldorf, germany rac belongs to the best characterized members of the ras-homologous (rho) family of small gtpases, which are key regulators of the actin cytoskeleton. furthermore, rac is part of the activation of the nadph oxidase, which produces reactive oxygen species and regulates the activity of stress kinases (e.g. sapk/jnk) and transcription factors such as nf-κb and ap . anticancer drugs cause dna damage, which in turn stimulates the dna damage response (ddr) regulating dna repair, cell cycle progression and, in case of non-repairable dna damage, triggers apoptosis. so far, a role of rac in the ddr has not been reported. based on its exceptional function as a regulator of transcription and because of its recently found ability to translocate to the nucleus, we hypothesize that rac may be involved in the ddr. to study the in vivo function of rac we used an inducible cre-based knockout mouse model (rac flox/flox/mxcre ). mice were treated with different doses of doxorubicin for different periods of time. we monitored gh ax foci formation as a marker of dna strand breaks, used the masson-goldner staining for the detection of collagen accumulation, analyzed phosphorylated histone as a marker of mitotic events and performed a tunel assay to detect apoptotic cells. in the absence of rac the basal mrna expression of pro-fibrotic ctgf was decreased. collagen levels were increased and mmp mrna expression was reduced in the liver of rac -/animals as compared with rac proficient animals. in addition we found more apoptotic cells in rac -/mice. hours after treatment with the anthracycline derivative doxorubicin the number of gh ax foci in rac -/animals was reduced in comparison to rac +/+ animals. we also found lower level of ctgf mrna expression and reduced amount of collagen in rac -/mice. none of these protective effects resulting from rac deficiency could be detected after administration of three consecutive doxorubicin injections over a time period of days. there were no significant differences in the number of gh ax foci or collagen accumulation. the mrna expression of ctgf was even higher in rac -/animals. furthermore the number of mitotic events was almost two times higher in the rac -/mice compared to the rac +/+ mice. summarizing, our findings show that impaired hepatic expression of rac protein is hepatoprotective against acute damage following doxorubicin exposure, but does not protect against doxorubicin-induced subacute toxicity. in vitro cytotoxicity of tbhq (tert-butyl-hydroquinone) braeuning a., vetter s., schwarz m. institut für experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie toxikologie, wilhelmstrasse , tübingen, germany at high concentrations, tert.-butyl-hydroquinone (tbhq), a phenolic antioxidant frequently used as a food preservative, exerts cytotoxic effects, which are closely linked to its ability to form reactive oxygen species as a consequence of redox cycling processes. here we describe that treatment of murine t cells with tbhq in -well culture plates induces the death of untreated cells in neighboring wells on the same plate. the mechanisms underlying that effect were investigated. death of the seemingly untreated neighboring cells was caused by a more toxic and volatile tbhq oxidation product which was formed in a non-enzymatic process involving metal ions and oxygen. the unexpected perturbation of cytotoxicity testing by the volatile tbhq metabolite shows that not only metabolic processes, but also non-enzymatic mechanisms have to be considered as important parameters for in vitro assays. furthermore, our data show that even cells several wells distant from the site of treatment do not necessarily constitute proper "untreated" controls when cells are treated with tbhq, e.g. in assays aimed to analyze the activity of the tbhq-inducible nrf pathway. s angiotensin ii causes oxidative stress and dna damage in mouse kidneys via the angiotensin ii type receptor brand s. , amann k. , schupp n. universität würzburg institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, versbacherstr. , würzburg, germany universität erlangen-nürnberg institut für pathologie, krankenhausstraße , erlangen, germany angiotensin ii (ang ii), the reactive peptide of the renin-angiotensin-system, causes vasoconstriction and, in higher levels hypertension, which is connected with an increased cancer risk in the kidney. treatment of male c bl/ mice with ang ii results in the formation of superoxide radicals and dna damage in the kidney as well as in the heart. to answer the question if the dna damage is caused by hypertension or by elevated ang ii concentrations, mice were treated with different compounds: the angiotensin-converting-enzyme blocker ramipril, the ang ii receptor blocker ramipril, the ang ii receptor candesartan, the antioxidant tempol and the vasodilator hydralazine. the effect on blood pressure and renal function of ang ii-treated c bl/ mice was examined. treatment with ang ii led to a significant increase in blood pressure. candesartan and hydralazine led to a decrease, whereas intervention with ramipril and tempol had no effect. equal conditions could be found by examining renal function regarding the excretion of urinary albumin, which was ameliorated by candesartan and hydralazine. in addition, histopathological changes were investigated. there was significant glomerular damage and tubulointerstitial damage in ang ii-treated animals compared to control animals, which was significantly improved by candesartan and tempol. hydralazine and ramipril mitigated the observed renal damage but were less effective than candesartan. furthermore, the ang ii-induced formation of superoxide radicals in the kidney and the heart was slightly affected by all interventions. genomic damage, in the form of double strand breaks was prevented by the ang ii receptor antagonist candesartan and the antioxidant tempol. to sum up, the results from this study show that ang ii induces the elevation of markers of kidney failure and dna damage, which is prevented by substances lowering blood pressure like candesartan, showing the receptor responsibility for the induction of dna damage. actually by substances not lowering blood pressure like tempol, the oxidative stress and dna damage was ameliorated, showing the involvement of reactive oxygen species. optimization of the balb/c- t cell transformation assay by coupling a drug metabolizing system brauneis m. d., steinberg p. stiftung tierärztliche hochschule hannover institut für lebensmitteltoxikologie und chemische analytik, bischofsholer damm , hannover, germany the analysis of the carcinogenic potential of chemicals plays an important role in toxicology. up to now the acquisition of such data requires a large amount of animal experiments. the aim of this study is to reduce the number of experimental animals being used by further optimizing the balb/c- t cell transformation assay, an already well-established in vitro method. this method, which is also well suited for high throughput screening applications, allows a quantitative analysis of the aforementioned carcinogenic potential. the incubation of balb/c- t cells (murine embryonic fibroblasts) with mutagenic compounds leads to a loss of contact inhibition between these cells, which results in the development of so-called foci. these foci can be distinguished by characteristic changes in cell growth behaviour, a result of the treatment with carcinogenic compounds, and their number is therefore directly related to the genotoxic potential of the latter. a major disadvantage of the "classic" balb/c- t cell transformation assay is that a number of compounds initially require a metabolic transformation to gain their full genotoxic potential. hence, without prior metabolic transformation many chemicals are not detected as carcinogenic in the abovementioned test system. to overcome this drawback the balb/c- t cell transformation assay has been coupled to a drug metabolizing system, in this case the so-called liver s . in a first step the well-known genotoxic agents benzo[a]pyrene, aflatoxin b and nnitrosodimethylamine were tested in this assay. all three compounds led to a concentration-dependent increase in the number of foci formed, whereby this concentration-dependent increase was observed in a non-cytotoxic concentration range. in a next step the balb/c- t cell transformation assay will be coupled to further drug metabolizing systems as well as to the soft agar assay. this study is being financially supported by the stiftung set and the doerenkamp-zbinden foundation. adenylyl cyclases (acs) synthesize the second messenger camp. the family of acs consists of nine membranous and one soluble isoforms with ac and ac being the predominantly expressed isoforms in the heart. in the heart, acs integrate β-adrenergic (β-ar) signaling as the main physiological mechanism to improve cardiac performance. although ac and ac share high sequence homology, opposing effects on cardioprotection have been reported, where disruption of ac , as well as overexpression of ac both exerting beneficial effects in heart failure. prospective pharmacological treatment of heart failure on the level of ac is under investigation. our study explored the impact of ac ko on ac-activities in the heart at a functional level. complementary, mrna expression studies of the β-ar-g-protein-ac signaling cascade were performed to detect possible compensatory alterations. hearts from - week old homozygote ac knockout and wild-type male littermates were examined in this study. ac activities where measured in cardiac membrane preparations from left ventricles. ac activities were assessed under β-ar and g-protein (g s) stimulation by isoproterenol, guanosine '-triphosphate (gtp) and '-o-( thiotriphosphate) (gtpγs) as well as for direct activation by forskolin. relative mrna expressions for ac - , gs-, gi-a and β -, β -ar where measured by quantitative realtime pcr. surprisingly, assessment of basal, β-ar and g-protein-mediated ac-stimulation as well as direct activation by forskolin revealed no changes in ac activities. besides from detection of the ac knockout, mrna expressions analysis of ac - , gs-, gi-a and β -, β -ar did not detect any compensatory alteration. these findings suggest that proximal adrenergic signaling in the heart does not necessarily require ac . whether physiological integration of beta adrenergic signaling in the heart is mediated by both isoforms ac and ac , or can be attributed to one main isoform remains to be elucidated. melanocortin-promoted pka activation decreases ampk activity via erk- / and lkb- in hypothalamic gt - cells breit a., ellen d., gudermann t. goethestrasse , münchen, germany α-melanocyte stimulating hormone (α-msh)-induced activation of the melanocortin- receptor (mc r) in hypothalamic neurons increases energy expenditure and inhibits food intake. intrahypothalamic injection of melanocortins decreased food intake due to the inhibition of amp-activated protein kinase (ampk) that has recently been reported to enhance food intake in rodents. until now, it is not clear if α-msh affects ampk via direct intracellular signaling cascades or if the release of paracrine factors is involved. herein, we used a murine, hypothalamic cell line (gt - cells) and monitored ampk phosphorylation at thr which has been suggested to increase ampk activity. we found that α-msh dephosphorylated ampk at thr and consequently decreased phosphorylation of the established ampk substrate acetyl-coa-carboxylase at ser . inhibitory effects of α-msh on ampk were blocked by specific inhibitors of protein kinase a (pka) or extracellular-regulated kinases- / (erk- / ), pointing to an important role of both kinases in this process. since α-msh-induced activation of erk- / was blunted by pka inhibitors, we propose that erk- / serves as a link between pka and ampk in gt - cells. furthermore, down-regulation of liver kinase b- (lkb- ), but not inhibition of calcium-calmodulin-dependent kinase kinase-β or transforming growth-factor-beta-activated kinase- decreased basal phosphorylation of ampk and its dephosphorylation induced by α-msh. thus, we propose that α-msh inhibits ampk activity via a linear pathway including pka, erk- / and lkb- in gt - cells. given the importance of the melanocortin system in the formation of adipositas detailed knowledge about this pathway might help to develop drugs targeting obesity. autism spectrum disorder (asd) is a complex neurodevelopmental disorder with dysfunction of social interaction and communication. a hitherto unknown complexgenetic principle of origin probably underlies asd. so far, more than candidate genes were identified in literature. the patients affected with the monogenic timothy syndrome show multiorgan dysfunction including lethal arrhythmias, immune deficiency, skeleton-dysplasia, syndactylia and autism. this single gene disorder serves as a model disease for asd, giving insights in a possible pathophysiology. here, a point mutation in a highly-conserved region of the pore-forming subunit of the voltage-dependent calcium channel (ca v) cav . gene (cacna c) results in incomplete inactivation of the l-type calcium currents (splawski et al., cell ; : - ) . functionally similar biophysical effects can be induced by structural variation β -and β -subunits of the voltagedependent calcium channels (herzig et al., faseb j. ; : - ; jangsangthong et al., pflugers arch. ; : - ) . supported by findings in a meta-analysis of linkage data of asd patients (trikalinos et al., mol psychiatry. ; : - ) , we are investigating a function-based candidate gene hypothesis linking the β subunit gene (cacnb ) with asd. we performed a case control study sequencing all exons and flanking intronic regions of cacnb in patients with asd. we found three rare missense mutations in asd patients, but not in unaffected controls. all three mutations occur at highly conserved positions and might alter protein function; additionally results one amino acid substitution highly probable in a post-translational modification by phosphorylation. so far, we characterized two of these mutations and also a phosphorylation-mimicking mutant in electrophysiological studies. all variants show a decelerated and incomplete time-dependent inactivation of the co-transfected cav . subunit. furthermore, two variants exhibit a significant increased slope factor of voltage-dependent steady-state inactivation. we here present mutations in the β subunit gene of asd patients that result in a retardation of inactivation behavior, thus phenocopying the monogenic timothy syndrome mutations of cav . . β subunit mutations may influence neuronal function or development in some asd patients. jangsangthong, w., kuzmenkina, e., khan, i.f., matthes, j., hullin, r., and herzig, s. ( ) . inactivation of l-type calcium channels is determined by the length of the n terminus of mutant beta ( ) subunits. pflugers arch , - . herzig, s., khan, i.f., grundemann, d., matthes, j., ludwig, a., michels, g., hoppe, u.c., chaudhuri, d., schwartz, a., yue, d.t., et al. ( ) . mechanism of ca(v) . channel modulation by the amino terminus of cardiac beta -subunits. faseb j , - . splawski, i., timothy, k.w., sharpe, l.m., decher, n., kumar, p., bloise, r., napolitano, c., schwartz, p.j., joseph, r.m., condouris, k., et al. ( ) . ca(v) . calcium channel dysfunction causes a multisystem disorder including arrhythmia and autism. cell , - . trikalinos, t.a., karvouni, a., zintzaras, e., ylisaukko-oja, t., peltonen, l., jarvela, i., and ioannidis, j.p. ( ) . a heterogeneity-based genome search meta-analysis for autism-spectrum disorders. mol psychiatry , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] background: brain serotonin ( -ht) has been implicated in the regulation of food-intake. the ingestive effects of -ht are mediated by a number of different receptor subtypes under which the -ht a-receptor plays a central role. former in vivo studies have shown an increased intake of food, elicted by -ht-receptor agonists. the aim of this behavioural pharmacologic project was to determine if the hyperphagic effect is mediated by presynaptic -ht a autoreceptors in the raphe nuclei or by postsynaptic -ht a heteroreceptors in serotonergic terminal structures. methods: the effect of the -ht a receptor agonist -oh-dpat ( . , . or . mg/kg) was investigated on feeding behaviour in non-food-deprived young-adult and adult nmri and transgenic l mice. l mice are characterized by an overexpression of postsynaptic -ht a receptors. results: the administration of the -ht a receptor agonist induced hyperphagia in all groups of mice, except for the adult transgenic mice which showed no drug effect. conclusion: the results confirm a key role of the -ht a receptor in food intake. further, we make the assumption that the hyperphagic effect of -oh-dpat is mediated by presynaptic -ht a autoreceptors in the raphe nuclei which decreases -ht function in the central nervous system. it can be speculated that the aberrant feeding behaviour of the adult transgenic mice refers to a possible opposite role of the postsynaptic -ht a receptors. these receptors might affect the release of neuropeptides in the hypothalamus. the efflux transporter abcc (mrp ) expressed at different compartment barriers is important for the elimination of various endogenous and exogenous compounds. with some evidence inflammatory processes regulate abcc expression and cause changes of absorption, distribution and clearance of a number of xenobiotics. the investigation of the influence of interleukin (il) β on abcc mrna and protein expression in various cell lines representing specific tissues is the aim of our study. a further aim is to characterize the signaling pathways regulating abcc expression while inflammation. three different cell lines a) hepg cells (liver tissue) and b) caco (colon tissue) both without naïve il β expression and c) skhep cells representing physiological liver tissue with naive il β expression, were stimulated with different concentrations of il β (range pg/ml to ng/ml). over a period of h samples were taken at defined time points. abcc mrna and protein expression were quantified by qrt-pcr and western blot analysis, respectively. by using small molecule kinase inhibitors for signal transduction proteins (p mapk, akt, erk and jnk) we analysed the signal transduction pathways associated with il β-mediated transcriptional abcc regulation. on abcc mrna level an up-regulation in caco cells ( , fold) and hepg cells ( , fold) within the first hour after stimulation with ng/ml il β was shown. in contrast skhep cells demonstrated a decreased abcc mrna expression ( , - , fold) in comparison to unstimulated controls. the abcc protein expression exhibited a time and il β dependent regulation as well. the analysis for the signal transduction showed for p mapk a moderat time dependet down regulated phosphorylation ( %) in hepg cells whereas it showed no effect in caco cells. concluding, the expression of abcc is regulated moderately by il b in a concentration and time-dependent manner. interestingly, the effects are strongly tissue-dependent concerning abcc expression and signal transduction pathways and show partly contradictory results. the regulation of the different signaling pathways is currently subject of ongoing investigations. introduction: despite the remarkable success of imatinib treatment of chronic myeloid leukemia (cml), therapy resistance emerged as a major clinical problem. the aim of this study was to identify micrornas, which may serve as biomarkers for therapy response or predict pathways involved in pharmacoresistance of imatinib treatment. methods: blood was collected from cml-patients, ten of whom responded to imatinib therapy. after rna extraction from leukocytes, we performed a taqman low-density array screen to determine the expression of micrornas. statistical analysis using the -∆ct method was performed. micrornas showing a p-value< . and a fold change> were considered to be significantly differently expressed. in addition, by using microrna target prediction databases (targetscan , mirdb , pictar , microcosm , diana microt ), selected putative target genes were further functionally investigated by the david bioinformatics database . results: comparing treatment-naïve responders and non-responders four micrornas were identified to be deregulated that were predicted to target genes, especially transcription regulators ( %). pathway analysis showed that six of the predicted genes are relevant in cancer pathways, four of which play a role in cml (smad , nras, rb , raf ). when comparing patients' expression profiles before and under treatment, seven micrornas were identified to be deregulated in responders and five micrornas in nonresponders. ninety-nine targets of the latter include transcription regulators ( %), but also cellular transporters ( %, especially uptake transporters of the slc-family). most target genes are involved in mapk signalling or endocytosis pathways. conclusion: analysis of microrna expression profiles revealed four micrornas involved in imatinib-response and micrornas deregulated during imatinib treatment. predicted target genes code mainly for transcription factors as well as oncogenes relevant for cml and are involved in transporter expression and endocytotic processes. dissociations in the effects of beta -adrenergic receptor agonists on camp formation and superoxide production in human neutrophils brunskole i. , buschauer a. activation of the β -adrenergic receptor (β ar), a classically gs-coupled receptor, in neutrophil granulocytes results in an inhibition of inflammatory responses [ ] , which could be further therapeutically exploited. the aim of the present study was to evaluate the effects of various β ar ligands on cyclic adenosine ', '-monophosphate accumulation (camp assay) and n-formyl-l-methionyl-l-leucyl-l-phenylalanine (fmlp)induced superoxide anion production (o •assay) in isolated human neutrophils, which are a physiologically relevant native test system. camp concentration in neutrophils was determined by hplc/tandem mass spectrometry, and o •formation was assessed by monitoring the superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of ferricytochrome c. (-)-isoproterenol, (-)-adrenaline, salbutamol and dobutamine were more potent in inhibiting fmlp-induced o •production than in stimulating camp accumulation. (-)-ephedrine and dichloroisoproterenol were devoid of any agonistic activity in the camp assay, but could partially inhibit fmlp-induced o •production at higher concentrations. moreover, (-)-adrenaline and dobutamine were equi-efficacious in both assays whereas the efficacy of salbutamol was more than two fold higher in the o •assay. this suggests that salbutamol is able to stabilize a different receptor conformation than the other two ligands. thus, ligand-directed signaling via β ar can also occur in human neutrophils. in addition, differences between the data from neutrophils and recombinant test systems [ , ] were noticed, pointing to the problem of insufficient comparability of effects in recombinant and native test systems. the investigation of β ar antagonists on neutrophil granulocytes is subject of ongoing work, in order to find out whether pkb values of β ar antagonists in the camp assay and the o •assay are different. such differences were previously reported for β ar antagonists in other test systems [ ] . moreover, studies with protein kinase a inhibitors should give deeper insight into the signaling events in neutrophils that result in inhibition of fmlp-stimulated o •production and clarify how camp increase interferes with this events. agonist-selective internalization of the human -ht a receptor buchborn t., kahl e., höllt v., koch t. otto-von-guericke-universität magdeburg institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, leipziger straße , magdeburg, germany the serotonin a ( -ht a) receptor is a g protein coupled receptor and the molecular target of lsd-like hallucinogens. downregulation of -ht a receptors is an adaptive process considered relevant for the therapeutic action of diverse serotonergic antidepressants, such as ssris. since the antidepressant targeting of -ht a receptors, however, is largely restricted to indirect agonists and/or antagonists, little is known about the mechanisms and implications of their regulation by direct agonists. in the present study we, therefore, investigated the capacity of various agonists to regulate the human ha-tagged -ht a receptor by internalization. using immunocytochemical techniques in stably transfected hek cells, we show that agonists differ in their capacity to internalize the receptor. serotonin, quipazine and doi are the agonists most efficaciously internalizing the receptor, dmt and methysergide, on the other hand, hardly internalize; other agonists like psilocin, ergotamine and lsd induce low to intermediate internalization. the specificity of the agonistic effect was demonstrated by the -ht a selective antagonist ketanserin, which blocked the agonist-induced internalization. in additional experiments, we show that the internalized -ht a receptors colocalize with a -labelled transferrin receptors, and that the internalization can be blocked by high molar sucrose; these results are indicative of a clathrin associated sequestration of -ht a receptors in recycling endosomes. also, we demonstrate that the proteinkinase c activator pma efficaciously induces -ht a internalization in the absence of an agonist, and that the doi-induced internalization can be blocked by the proteinkinase inhibitor staurosporine. we, thus, confirm previous findings that the activation of proteinkinases seems to be necessitated for the -ht a internalization to occur. overall, we conclude that the internalization of the human -ht a receptor is agonist-selective, and employs a proteinkinase (possibly pkc) dependent, clathrincoated endosome associated pathway. as there is recent evidence that the regulation of -ht (a) receptors by agonists might have antidepressant (-like) properties, knowledge about the agonist-selective processing of -ht a receptors could help to identify agonists most promising for future (pre-)clinical research. non-clinical safety assessment of homeopathic medicinal products: criteria for establishing a first safe dilution buchholzer m. -l., werner c., knoess w. bfarm bundesinstitut für arzneimittel und medizinprodukte zulassung , kurt-georg-kiesinger-allee , bonn, germany like all human medicinal products the homeopathic medicinal products for human use must demonstrate adequate safety. in general, they are regulated according to the analogue non-clinical safety principles (points to consider on non-clinical safety of homeopathic medicinal products of botanical, mineral and chemical origin, adoption by hma ). one particular approach is the recently introduced concept of a first safe dilution (fsd; introduction to the list of first safe dilutions, adoption by hma ) . this contribution summarizes the first experiences in establishing fsds of a selection of given homeopathic preparations by bfarm. for a given preparation the major toxicological concern and available data set is identified. this determines the safety assessment route: food regulation, permitted daily exposure (pde), threshold of toxicological concern (ttc) or lowest human recommended dose (lhrd/ ). finally the acceptable amount/tolerable daily intake is derived and the respective fsd is calculated. for example the draft evaluation for reserpinum (ph. eur. method . . ) and for atropine (ph. eur. method . . or . . ) based on lhrd leads in each case to a suggested fsd of d related to g of preparation. furthermore, the draft evaluation for potassium iodide (ph. eur. method . . or . . ) based on food legislation emerged a proposed fsd of d related to g of preparation. the concept of fsd combines a scientific and at the same time pragmatic approach in differentiated risk assessment of homeopathic medicinal products. impact of myricetin and its methylated derivatives laricitrin, syringetin and myricetin- `, `, `-trimethylether in c. elegans büchter c. , ackermann d. polyphenolic compounds ubiquitously present in herbal food are discussed to contribute to the health beneficial effects of a diet rich in vegetables and fruits. additional to a strong antioxidative activity of various flavonoids, most of these substances display a variety of other pharmacological properties. we investigated the flavonoid myricetin found in several species of berries, as well as the methylated derivatives laricitrin, syringetin and myricetin- `, `, `-trimethylether. in this study caenorhabditis elegans was used as a model to explore the impact of myricetin and its methylated derivatives in vivo and to investigate molecular modes of action. myricetin ( µm) caused an increase in mean and median adult lifespan of c. elegans. this longevity effect was associated with a decrease of the aging marker lipofuscin as well as a decrease in ros induction, measured by using the h dcf-da assay. however, myrictin failed to improve heat stress resistance, an attribute often associated with longevity in c. elegans. the methylated myricetin derivatives ( µm) showed a decrease in lipofuscin accumulation and ros induction and they further improved the heat stress resistance. in order to elucidate the basis of the life prolonging action of myricetin, we investigated its influence on factors known to have important functions in stress response and the regulation of aging, namely the foxo homologue daf- , the nad + -dependent protein deacetylase sir- . and the heat-shock transcription factor hsf- , respectively. lifespan extension by myricetin disappeared in daf- and sir- . loss of function mutant strains, showing the effect is at least partially dependent on these signaling molecules. by using a hsf- loss of function mutant strain of c. elegans, it was further shown that the life prolonging effect of myricetin is independent of hsf- . in conclusion, our results indicate that the life prolonging effect of myricetin is at least in part dependent on daf- and sir- . , probably due to a modified expression of target genes. stimulatory and inhibitory control of phospholipase c-gamma bühler a., walliser c., becker l., gierschik p. universität ulm institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, albert-einstein-allee , ulm, germany activation of phospholipase c-γ (plcγ ) upon b cell antigen receptor (bcr) stimulation has been implicated to be a critical step in the bcr-mediated calcium signaling. therefore it is important to understand the mechanisms of how the activity of plcγ is stimulated and inhibited. the mammalian plcs are divided into six subfamilies, designated β, γ, δ, ε, ζ, and η. within the plcγ subfamily, the two plcγ isoforms share a number of features that are distinct from those of the other plc subfamilies. the most striking difference is the insertion of additional domains between the catalytic subdomains x and y. this specific array (sa) contains a second, split pleckstrin homology (spph) domain, consisting of two halves separated by two src homology (sh ) domains and one src homology (sh ) domain. there is abundant evidence in the literature that plcs are autoinhibited in their basal state by structural elements within their x/y linker, pointing to a conserved role of the x/y linker in autoinhibitory regulation of plc isozymes. data from our group show that plcγ is also regulated by autoinhibitory elements within its specific array (walliser et al., ; everett et al., ) . our recent data demonstrated that plcγ is negatively regulated by its sa. specifically, within the sh domain tandem, the c-terminal sh (sh c) and the sh domain in combination, but not either one alone, cause the strongest autoinhibitory control of plcγ . plcγ has been shown to be phosphorylated at tyrosine residues and upon bcr stimulation (kim et al., ) . both tyrosines are located in the linker between the sh c and the sh domain, which we have shown to be the major elements involved in autoinhibitory regulation of plcγ . interestingly, a novel phosphorylation site in plcγ was found in non-small cell lung cancer (nsclc) tissue which is located at tyrosine residue (rikova et al., ) . in this work, we demonstrate, for the first time, the activation of plcγ by phosphomimetic mutations in these three positions and the functional interplay of the three tyrosine phosphorylation targets. most interestingly, mimicking phosphorylation of tyr is critical to fully activate the enzyme. the results not only point to a crucial role of plcγ in pulmonary tumorigenesis, but also prompt and stimulate the search for the protein kinase involved in phosphorylating plcγ at tyr . molecular characterization of hepatotoxic effects of perfluorooctanoic acid (pfoa) buhrke t., scharmach e., lampen a. bundesinstitut für risikobewertung (bfr) lebensmittelsicherheit, max-dohrn-str. - , berlin, germany perfluorooctanoic acid (pfoa) is an industrial chemical that is used for the fabrication of numerous products with oil-, dirt-and water-repellent properties. pfoa is resistant to chemical, thermal and biological degradation and has become a global contaminant of soil, water, air and food in the meantime. the toxicological data of pfoa give cause for concern as the substance was shown to damage the liver of rodents and to impair embryo development. currently, the hazard potential of pfoa for humans is controversially discussed. in this study the human liver cell line hepg was employed to analyse the hepatotoxic effects of pfoa on the cellular and on the molecular level. pfoa was shown to stimulate cellular proliferation at concentrations in a range between µm and µm. at concentrations higher than µm the substance was cytotoxic to the cells (ic µm). cytotoxicity was not due to apoptotic mechanisms as no increase of caspase activity was detected up to a level of µm pfoa. on the molecular level pfoa is known to act as an agonist of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (pparα), and the observed hepatotoxic effects in rodents are associated with pfoa-mediated pparα activation. here we show that pfoa has the capacity also to activate the human isoform of pparα. additional human nuclear receptors were tested for activation by pfoa, and pparγ as well as the pregnane x receptor (pxr) were shown to be activated at high concentrations of pfoa whereas pparδ and the liver x receptor alpha (lxrα) were insensitive to activation by pfoa. notably, we observed a significant inhibition of the activity of the hepatocyte nuclear factor α (hnf α) by incubating the cells already with moderate concentrations of pfoa at a level of about µm. these findings indicate that additional, pparα-independent mechanisms may contribute to the observed hepatotoxicity of pfoa. the elucidation of novel modes of action of pfoa is relevant for the ongoing risk assessment of the substance. s human breast stem cells as a toxicological model for endocrine disruptors, such as soy isoflavones stempin s. , bumke scheer m. (kao et al., ) . two daughter cell lines were developed from m sv after x-ray irradiation (m sv r ) and an additional transfection with a mutated erbb oncogene (m sv r -n ), resulting in high and low tumorigenicity respectively and showing a change in estrogen response after growth in minimal media (wang et al., ) . isolated isoflavones are currently widely used in the treatment of postmenopausal symptoms of women. according to the stem cell theory of carcinogenesis, breast stem cells are the ideal target for the proposed research. however, the epidemiological data to the effect of isoflavone intake on breast cancer is contradictory. therefore, we want to develop a toxicological model using these human breast stem cell lines to test the effect of endocrine disruptors, such as soy isoflavones in a human relevant model. in the present study we analyzed the effect of the phytoestrogen genistein, the most intensively studied soy protein, on the differentiation of the hbec lines. the expression of different luminal epithelial cell markers, estrogen receptors and stem cell markers was measured on the mrna level by quantitative real time pcr. the analysis of several of these markers was also performed on the protein level using western blot. additionally, a broad number of genes related to breast cancer and estrogen receptordependent signal transduction were studied using a commercial pcr-array. in parallel we are also analyzing the changes on the protein level using d gel electrophoresis. we want to use this panel of different markers to establish a toxicological model that can be used in the future to analyze a wide range of different endocrine disruptors. kao cy, nomata k, oakley cs, welsch cw, chang cc. ( ) bronchial asthma is a common inflammatory disease of the airways whose occurrence has increased dramatically over the past decades. histamine plays an important role in mediating the inflammatory response leading to characteristic symptoms like wheezing, coughing, chest tightness, and shortness of breath. since antagonizing the histamine h -receptor (h r) shows no ameliorating effects on asthmatic symptoms, h r antagonists may be new drugs for asthma therapy. in addition to the h r-and h rselective antagonist thioperamide, the selective h r antagonist -[( -chloro- h-indol- yl)carbonyl]- -methylperazine (jnj ) is used in pharmacodynamic studies. a correct interpretation of the collected data requires the detailed knowledge of the pharmacokinetics of the applied substances. for this reason, we developed a fast and robust method based on high performance liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (hplc-ms/ms) which allows the simultaneous quantitation of thioperamide and jnj as well as the selective h r antagonist -({ - [ -(piperidin- -yl) propoxy]phenyl}methyl)piperidine (jnj ) in murine plasma and lung tissue. the treatment of plasma samples based on protein precipitation performed with a mixture of methanol and . m znso using µl of plasma. analyte extraction from lung tissue was achieved by treating - mg of tissue with a mixture of ethanol and water followed by rigorous mixing using a fastprep-system. ten µl of the extracted samples were transferred to a synergy polar-rp a mercury column ( x mm; µm) connected to a polar-rp security guard. chromatographic separation was performed via a gradient using an acetate buffer (ph ) and methanol at a flow rate of . ml/min. the analytical run-time was minutes. for plasma samples the assay was linear over a concentration range of . - µg/ml for jnj and jnj , and . - µg/ml for thioperamide, respectively. in tissues, thioperamide could be quantified in a concentration range of . - µg/sample, jnj and jnj in a range of . - µg/sample. our results show that the developed hplc-ms/ms method is suitable for the quantitation of all tested histamine-receptor ligands in murine plasma and lung tissue. the functionality of the heart greatly depends on strict homeostasis and interplay of a range of signalling cascades. deregulation of either one is always harmful and eventually detrimental for life. some of the most relevant signals in the adult heart are triggered by the stimulation of g protein-coupled receptors such as adrenergic or angiotensin receptors. those in turn are modulated by a small subset of kinases, the g protein-coupled receptor kinases (grks). interestingly, grks, which for the longest time were believed to regulate only g protein-coupled receptors were shown to modulate also non-receptor-mediated signalling pathways. by now it is well documented that grk plays important roles in both the physiological as well pathological setting of the adult heart. in spite of the important functions of grks in the adult heart, it must be assumed that grk , one of the two main cardiac grks, may also be involved in signal modulation in the course of heart development. deregulation of grk -dependent pathways may very well be causal for impaired cardiac development up to congenital heart disease. in fact, grk is already expressed during embryogenesis and we can detect it in the developing heart. however, grk has not been studied yet for a potential function during embryonic development in general or heart formation in particular. we have established zebrafish as a very time and cost efficient vertebrate model to investigate the role of grk on cardiac signalling and development. tools for grk specific loss-as well as gain-of-function analyses have been developed in our lab. we revealed an unexpected role of grk in the development of left-right asymmetry in zebrafish. clinically, this has been associated with disorders such as heterotaxy and other syndromes linked to ciliary dysfunction. many of those disorders are known to affect proper heart development resulting for example in septum defects or in detrimental translocation of the outflow tract. precisely, depletion of the close homolog of human grk in zebrafish mirrors the human syndrome called heterotaxy by displaying randomized placement of inner organs, aberrant heart looping and disrupted valve formation in the heart. in addition, loss of zebrafish grk results in a lower heart rate as well as dilatation of the embryonic heart at later stages of development. therefore, we believe that grk may potentially serve as a candidate gene for congenital heart disease. identification of a hcn interacting protein in mouse brain cao-ehlker x., hammelmann v., zong x., fenske s., biel m. department of pharmacy, center for drug research ludwig-maximilians-universität, munich center for integrated protein science cipsm, butenandtstr. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] münchen, germany hyperpolarization activated cyclic nucleotide-gated cation channels (hcn) pass a depolarizing current (ih) that is involved in cardiac pacemaking and the control of numerous basic functions in neuronal circuits. the four hcn channel types (hcn - ) display specific expression pattern in brain suggesting that each channel fulfills a distinct physiological function. while hcn , hcn and hcn channels have been studied in quite some detail there is only little information on the particular role of the hcn channel. as an important step towards achieving a better understanding of hcn function we set out in this study to identify proteins that are assembled with hcn in brain tissue. to this end we performed a yeast two hybrid screen with a mouse cdna library using the hcn c-terminal domain as bait. several proteins were obtained and confirmed for interaction with hcn using heterologous coexpression in hek cells. here, we provide an in-depth analysis of the functional interaction between hcn and one of the identified interacting proteins (hip . ). we show that hip . physically binds to hcn channels in vitro and in vivo. still several open issues remain to be clarified i.e. the precise function of tpc and its tissue-specific and subcellular distribution. therefore we established a mouse model with a general deletion of tpcn and generated a series of tpc antibodies. using these tools we investigate the closer molecular and vesicular environment by different biochemical approaches i.e. affinity purification from native tissue derived from wild-type and as a control from knock-out mice, density gradient based vesicle separation, fluorescence activated organelle sorting (faos), total internal reflection fluorescence (tirf) and confocal microscopy. so far, we confirmed the tpc knock-out model by our self-generated tpc antibodies. tpc knockout mice are viable and do not show any obvious deficits. to isolate tpc containing vesicles or protein complexes, tissue or cell culture derived material was prepurified by sucrose density gradient centrifugation. for a subsequent mass spectrometric analysis this preparation was taken as a source material for coimmunoprecipitation or faos respectively. in another approach the migration pattern of tpc containing endosomes on linear density gradients was compared with a series of endolysosomal markers i.e. different rab-, er-, golgi-and lysosomal antibodies. potentially interesting markers were then in turn analyzed for their co-localization with tpc by confocal microscopy/tirf. by combining these results with that from mass spectrometric analysis of faos samples we collect data to get detailed information on the precise endolysosomal distribution pattern of tpc . foxos are involved in a wide spectrum of cellular functions, including cell proliferation, apoptosis and regulation of oxidative stress. in order to identify novel target genes of foxo transcription factors and to achieve further insight into their role in cancer cells, dna microarray analysis was performed using wild type mcf- breast cancer cells and mcf- cells overexpressing foxo. we found that several genes involved in the tnf receptor/nf-κb pathway were differentially regulated. one of the genes that was identified to be up-regulated in foxo overexpressing cells was a a negative regulator of nf-κb signaling pathway. at both mrna and protein level foxo -dependent up-regulation of this ubiquitin modifying enzyme was confirmed. to determine whether a is a direct target of foxo , a luciferase reporter containing a . kb of the a promoter was co-transfected with different amounts of foxo wild-type expression construct. foxo induced a dosedependent increase in a promoter activity, supporting the assumption that a is a direct transcriptional target of foxo . overexpression of foxo led to decreased activity of nf-kb signaling pathway as confirmed by reporter gene and nf-kb specific elisa assays. in addition, mcf- cells can be sentisized to tnf-α mediated cytotoxicity which is assocciated with a dimineshed activation of nf-κb. altogether, we identified a , an ubiquitin modifying enzyme, as a novel foxo target gene. our data implicate that sustained foxo expression may be involved in regulation of tnf receptor/nf-κb pathway and leading to reduced cell survival. trpm is a bi-functional protein consisting of a transient receptor potential ion channel segment linked to an α-type protein kinase domain. trpm is essential for motility, proliferation and cell growth. up-regulation of trpm function is involved in anoxic neuronal death, cardiac fibrosis and tumor cell proliferation. recently, we have demonstrated that the recombinant trpm channel is inhibited by the known modulators of sk - channels such as antimalarial plant alkaloid quinine, cyppa, dequalinium, ns , ska , ucl . the most potent of these compounds, ns (ic . µm), interferes with the regulation of trpm by cytosolic mg + . here we show that ns ( µm) fully and reversibly inhibits native trpm -like currents in hek cells, freshly isolated smooth muscle cells, primary podocytes and ventricular myocytes. furthermore, we examined whether targeting of the native trpm currents by ns would impact cellular processes known to be affected by a genetic inactivation of trpm . we found that ns ( - µm) suppressed motility of hek cells without a detectable effect on cell viability. taken together, our findings indicate that ns is a potent and reversible inhibitor of endogenous trpm currents and may be a good candidate drug for pharmacological targeting of trpm . sulfur mustard ( , '-dichlorodiethylsulfide; sm) is a highly toxic and mutagenic warfare agent classified as a weapon of mass destruction. as soon as sm was first used as a warfare agent, research aimed at the development of an effective antidote was launched. early studies with first-generation inhibitors of poly(adp-ribose) polymerases (parp) have revealed promising therapeutic potential in sm-induced skin injury, but the underlying mechanism remains elusive. the current renaissance of parp inhibitors in cancer chemotherapy has revived the discussion on their use for treatment of sm injury. thus we established a comprehensive study aiming the elucidation of the role of parp in sm pathology based on model substance -chloroethyl ethyl sulfide (cees), which is not classified as warfare agent. we have recently demonstrated that parp becomes rapidly activated in living human keratinocytes (hacat) after treatment with cees. the maximal parp activity was observed minutes after treatment with mm cees. the activation was transient and dose dependent. to our knowledge this is the first demonstration of parp activation after treatment with mustards in the context of live cells. an important question is how parp- becomes activated upon treatment with mustards. parp- is a first-line protein involved in the cellular response to dna strand breaks. however, mustards do not directly induce large numbers of such lesions. one possibility is that parp- is activated by dna breaks incorporated as base excision repair (ber) or nucleotide excision repair (ner) intermediates. thus, we performed knockdown experiments of ape and ercc , i.e. endonucleases involved in ber and ner, respectively. the reduction of ape expression had no effect on parp activity. surprisingly, the knockdown of ercc almost completely abolished the cellular par production after cees treatment. the functional consequence of the errc -parp cross-talk with regards to adduct removal is under investigation. however, our present data indicate that parp activity is not obligatory for the survival of cells upon cees treatment, as revealed by the lack of effect of the potent parp inhibitor abt- . expression and activity of g protein coupled receptor kinase (grk ) are elevated in several conditions of compromised heart function. although grk inhibition has been characterized as a promising therapeutic strategy in heart failure, a specific grk inhibitor is not available. raf kinase inhibitor protein (rkip) inhibits raf but it also acts as a physiological inhibitor of grk upon phosphorylation by pkc at serine . a detailed understanding of the rkip/grk interaction may help to identify inhibitory compounds for grk . since phosphorylation often induces homo-oligomerization of proteins, we investigated whether this could be implicated in switching rkip from a raf -into a grk -inhibitor. co-immunoprecipitation assays showed that rkip self-association was substantially increased after pkc-mediated phosphorylation of rkip. rkip mutants either lacking or mimicking s phosphorylation confirmed that this phosphorylation is indeed a prerequisite for rkip/rkip association. cross-linking experiments with myc-tagged rkip in living cells or with purified rkip revealed that rkip phosphorylation by pkc promotes rkip dimers -not oligomers. to test whether dimerization is a critical step for the association of rkip with grk , we generated a peptide to inhibit rkip dimerization. intriguingly, the peptide did not only prevent rkip dimerization but also attenuated rkip/grk association. this implicates, that dimerization of rkip is essential to bind grk . to determine whether rkip dimers consequently inhibit grk activity, we established rkip mutants with high tendency to form dimers. subsequent functional analyses demonstrated that enhanced dimerization of rkip indeed translates into increased grk inhibition. we conclude that pkc-mediated phosphorylation of rkip is important for dimerization and that these dimers are essential for grk binding and inhibition. our results reveal new insights in the molecular mechanism of rkip/grk interaction and will help to develop specific grk inhibitors. expression and function of trpm ion channels in epithelial mdck cells dembla s., meiser j., philipp s. university of saarland institute for experimental and clinical pharmacology and toxicology, kirrberger str. , homburg, germany trpm proteins build ca + permeable cation channels [ ] activated by steroids [ ] and sensitive to increased temperatures [ ] . trpm channels are expressed in pancreatic ßcells as well as neurons of the dorsal root ganglion, where they act as mediators of insulin release [ ] or as nociceptors of noxious heat, respectively [ ] . however, northern blots and in situ hybridization experiments revealed that trpm is also expressed in epithelial cells of the choroid plexus and the ciliary body [ ] as well as in the kidney. pcr analysis of different epithelial cell lines indicated that trpm is also expressed in madin-darby canine kidney (mdck) cells. quantitative analysis of trpm expression by qrt-pcr revealed a ~ fold upregulation in mdck cells grown in confluency compared to well separated, proliferating cells. in contrast the level of expression of trpm , a related ion channel described as regulator of proliferation in other cell types, remained constant. hek cells overexpressing trpm channels did not proliferate in the presence of the trpm agonist pregnenolone sulphate. however, as indicated by impedance analysis, the proliferation of mdck cells in the presence pregs was only slightly affected. when we analysed the transepithelial resistance (ter) of mdck epithelial cells in transwells as a measure for the formation of tight junctions, we found that the ter of cells grown in the presence of pregs was reduced. interestingly, ca + imaging experiments using fura revealed that pregnenolone sulphate induces ca + entry in well separated mdck cells but not in cells growing in confluency. we hypothesize that trpm might act as a regulator of cell proliferation and/or the formation of tight junctions in mdck cells. inhibition of grk by rkip improves cardiac contractility and structure in a transgenic mouse model of heart failure denzinger s., schmitt j. p., lohse m. j., lorenz k. institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie pharmakologie, versbacher str. , würzburg, germany the raf kinase inhibitor protein (rkip) has been identified as a physiological inhibitor of g-protein coupled receptor kinase (grk ). grk initiates g protein coupled receptor (gpcr) desensitization. since expression and activity of grk are upregulated in human heart failure, it has been proposed that grk inhibition may resensitize badrenergic receptor activity in heart failure patients. in this study, we evaluated chronic grk inhibition by rkip as a potential strategy to improve cardiac function in heart failure. to analyse the effect of rkip on heart failure, rkip transgenic mice were crossed with mice carrying a mutation in phospholamban (pln r c ). pln r c causes severe heart failure and premature death in humans and transgenic mice. cardiac function was significantly improved in the presence of rkip as shown by left ventricular catheterization and echocardiography. expression of heart failure marker genes anf and bnp was indistinguishable between wild-type mice and mice co-expressing rkip and pln r c . in line with these findings, the life span of double transgenic mice was significantly prolonged compared to pln r c transgenic mice. slow calcium transport into the sarcoplasmatic reticulum was characterised as cause for dilatated cardiomyopathy of pln r c transgenic mice. since western blot analyses of rkip transgenic heart lysates showed increased phosphorylation of important regulators of cardiomyocyte relaxation, we analysed calcium transients and contractility of isolated cardiomyocytes as possible mechanism of the rkip mediated rescue. in the presence of rkip, calcium reuptake into the sarcoplasmatic reticulum was accelerated and cardiomyocyte relaxation improved. furthermore, coexpression of rkip significantly attenuated pathological cardiac remodelling. interstitual fibrosis and apoptotic cells were quantified in histological sections after sirius red-and tunel-staining. this study revealed a protective function of rkip in a genetic mouse model of human dilated cardiomyopathy by improving cardiac contractility and attenuating interstitial fibrosis and apoptosis. a detailed understanding of this rescue may help to find a new therapeutic strategy to improve cardiac contractility in heart failure. gαi-proteins comprise a group of three highly related members characterized by specific expression patterns. based on previous work of gi-mediated signaling pathways in cardiomyocytes and platelets, we checked gαi expression in mouse heart and platelets. the analysis revealed the presence of gαi and gαi with gαi as the predominant isoform. gene-targeted mice lacking either gαi or gαi were analyzed to unravel the physiological role of gαi-proteins in the cardiovascular system. extraordinarily prolonged bleeding times in gαi -deficient animals were an obvious phenomenon. detailed analysis using isolated platelets gαi -deficient mice exhibited reduced platelet activation and attenuated aggregation in response to stimulation by various agonists accompanied by reduced thrombus formation and diminished stability on a collagen-coated surface. employing in vivo injury/thrombosis models revealed abrogated thrombus formation selectively in gαi -deficient mice. comparable results were obtained in experiments using mice with megakaryocyte/platelet-specific gαi deficiency. to assess the pathophysiological consequences of platelet gαi function, we challenged these mice in experimental models of myocardial and cerebral ischemia. the results clearly show that platelet-gαi -deficient mice were protected from both, myocardial and cerebral ischemia. in contrast, conventional gαi -deficient mice subjected to the heart ischemia/reperfusion model exhibited a significantly increased susceptibility to ischemic injury as compared to wild type controls. in contrast, gαi deficient mice were strongly protected from injury. thus we suggest that gαi and gαi play distinct roles in major cardiovascular disorders pointing to specific, non-redundant functions of these two highly related gαi isoforms. the cgmp signaling pathway is activated by nitric oxide (no), natriuretic peptides (anp, bnp & cnp), and cgmp-elevating drugs. it regulates several physiological functions such as smooth muscle relaxation, platelet inhibition, and cell growth and differentiation. recent studies indicate that cgmp signaling might also play a role in tumorigenesis, but the cellular and molecular mechanisms of cgmp's potential pro-and/or anti-tumor activities are not well understood. this study has examined the expression and function of components of the cgmp pathway in melanoma cells of murine and human origin. we have found that mouse b melanoma cells specifically express the alpha isoform of the cgmp-dependent protein kinase type i (cgkialpha) but not the beta isoform. treatment of intact cells with the membrane-permeable cgmp analog -br-cgmp induced the phosphorylation of cgki substrates, vasodilator stimulated phosphoprotein and phosphodiesterase . anp and cnp, ligands of the membrane-bound guanylyl cyclase gc-a and gc-b, respectively, did also activate the endogenous cgmp/cgki pathway. however, b melanoma cells did not respond to dea-no, which stimulates no-sensitive soluble guanylyl cyclases. interestingly, activation of cgmp/cgkialpha signal transduction was associated with an increase in erk / and p phosphorylation, growth and migration of b melanoma cells. similar results were obtained with wm human melanoma cells. in conclusion, we have identified a gc-a/gc-b/cgmp/cgkialpha pathway in melanoma cells, which stimulates tumor cell growth and migration in vitro. pharmacologic inhibition of cgmp signaling may offer a promising strategy for the treatment of melanoma. an increasing body of evidence supports important roles for voltage-gated calcium channels in idiopathic generalized epilepsies (iges), however which calcium channels participate in ige pathogenesis and how has yet to be fully understood. recently, it has been proposed that cav . (r-type) and t-type calcium channels jointly contribute to oscillatory bursting in the reticular thalamus (rt) , which is associated with absence epilepsy. cav . is one of the two t-type calcium channels known to be expressed in the rt . it has been demonstrated that ablation of either cav . or cav . reduces susceptibility to experimentally induced epilepsy ; and in addition that both channels share several pharmacological properties [ ] [ ] [ ] . to gain further insight into interacting mechanisms of these two channels in epilepsy, we tested cav . (-|-), cav . (-|-) and cav . (-|-)xcav . (+|-) mice side-by-side in the kainic acid model of epilepsy. we provide first in vivo data supporting a synergistic mode of action for cav . and cav . calcium channels in epileptogenesis. the deubiquitinase cyld regulates mechanisms of rip /rip -dependent necroptosis in neuronal cells diemert s. , krieg s. vivo model of cerebral ischemia, we found, that cyld -/-mice exhibit significantly reduced infarction volume compared to control littermates. overall, these data reveal a role for cyld in rip / -dependent mechanisms of necroptosis in a model of glutamate toxicity in neuronal cells and further suggests cyld-mediated mechanisms of neuronal cell death as a potential therapeutic target after acute brain injury in vivo. cyanamide-mediated inhibition of n-acetyltransferase dierolf d., bonifas j., blömeke b. university trier department of environmental toxicology, universitätsring , bldg. n, trier, germany cyanamide has been used for decades for medical purposes in the treatment of alcoholism and for agricultural purposes as a plant growth regulator and bud-breaking agent. its therapeutic effect is mediated by reversible inhibition of aldehyde dehydrogenase and it was reported to be metabolised in vivo mainly via coenzyme a dependent n-acetylation by n-acetyltransferases. reported to be a substrate for n-acetyltransferases, cyanamide has a different molecular structure to arylamines and hydrazines, the preferred substrates for nacetyltransferases. therefore a more detailed investigation of its interrelations with nacetyltransferases was performed. we analysed nat enzyme activities after incubation of thp- cells with cyanamide for h, and found that the metabolic conversion of the classic substrate para-aminobenzoic acid was significantly reduced at physiologically relevant concentrations. in detail a significant dose-and time-dependent nat protein inhibition was observed for and µm cyanamide using over-expressed human recombinant nat (insect cell cytosol containing recombinant human nat * ). however, no inhibition was found in the presence of recombinant nat * . as we also provide evidence that cyanamide is not metabolised via coenzyme a dependent nacetylation in vitro by human nat or nat cytosol, by thp- cells or by human liver cytosol, we can conclude that this inhibition is not based on substrate-dependent downregulation of nat . further mechanistic and kinetic studies indicated that cyanamide reacts with the active site cysteine residue of nat , leading to its rapid inhibition. since the presence of the reduction agent dithiothreitol did not reverse the results it could be that it is possibly not caused by oxidative processes. in sum these data indicate that cyanamide is able to interact with cysteine residues of human nat , which causes its inhibition but not by a substrate-dependent mode of action. taken together our results show, that cyanamide is not n-acetylated by human nats, but might modulate nat dependent detoxification and activation of arylamines. dissecting the signal transduction pathway of acute hypoxic vasoconstriction (hpv) in precapillary pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells ( low levels of oxygen in the pulmonary airways induce acute hypoxic pulmonary arterial vasoconstriction (acute hpv) redirecting blood flow to normoxic areas of the lung to assure optimal uptake of oxygen during ventilation. acute hpv lasting several minutes occurs predominantly in the precapillary region of the pulmonary vascular tree [ ] . therefore, precapillary pulmonary arterial smooth muscle cells (pasmc) have been suggested as sensor as well as effector cells and trpc a member of the classical transient receptor potential (trpc) ion channel family was identified to be essential for the initiation of ca + influx and the subsequent contraction of pasmc [ ] . however, the underlying oxygen sensor and the exact signal transduction pathway(s) in pasmc have not been fully elucidated yet. by using gene-deficient mouse models as well as downregulation of potential candidate proteins by specific small interfering rnas (sirnas), we aim to dissect signaling cascades of trpc channel activation in acute hpv. for pasmc isolation and culture from mice we use a technique based on magnetic separation of intrapulmonary arteries originally developed in rats [ ] . trpc-expression in freshly isolated and passaged pasmc cultured in low ( %) and high fetal bovine serum ( %) was analyzed. interestingly higher passage numbers resulted in a significant down-regulation of trpc and trpc the most predominantly expressed channel monomers in pasmc, while different serum concentrations resulted in no significant changes in their expression rates. sirnas were designed, transfected and successfully tested in hek cells and pasmc. initial results of the dissection of the signal transduction pathway activating trpc and inducing acute hpv in pasmc will be presented. references [ ] staub, n. c. ( ) . site of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, chest , s- s. [ ] weissmann, n. et al. ( ) . classical transient receptor potential channel (trpc ) is essential for hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and alveolar gas exchange, proc. natl. acad. sci. u.s.a. , - trpv is a highly selective calcium channel expressed in various tissues amongst others in placenta. the channel may be involved in transcellular calcium transport in epithelial tissues thereby playing some role in calcium homeostasis of the body. in the placenta trpv is assumed to contribute to the maternal-fetal calcium transport. most probably trpv is part of a multiprotein channel complex but most of the components of this complex are unknown so far. our aim is to find interaction partners of the trpv protein in the placenta that might contribute to the regulation of the trpv protein function. therefore we expressed the intracellularly located n-and c-terminal parts of trpv (aa - and - ) as trpv -gst (glutathione-s-transferase)-fusion proteins and used the purified recombinant proteins for pulling down proteins from human placenta cell extracts. the proteins pulled down by this approach were analysed by mass spectrometry. we identified several potential trpv interacting proteins which were not associated with the gst protein only. one of the proteins which was highly enriched with the n-terminal part of the trpv protein is calpain . in contrast to the classical calpains (calcium activated cystein proteases), calpain is unique in that it lacks the cysteine residue in the active site. calpain is mainly expressed during embryogenesis and is reported to be involved in cytoskeleton stabilisation but with unknown function in placenta. the interaction between trpv and calpain was confirmed in reciprocal pulldown experiments and the trpv binding region for calpain was narrowed down by using overlapping n-terminal trpv -gst fusion proteins. after injection of trpv crna into xenopus laevis oocytes calcium uptake into the oocytes was measured; this uptake was largely reduced after co-injection of the calpain crna. in further experiments we want to study potential regulatory effects of the trpv protein on the calpain function in cell culture models. comparative studies on the effects of the human carcinogen inorganic arsenite and its recently identified thiolated metabolite thio-dma v on human urothelial cells ebert f., leffers l., unterberg m., schwerdtle t. universität münster institut für lebensmittelchemie, corrensstr. , münster, germany it has been demonstrated that chronic ingestion of - µg/day inorganic arsenic is associated with an increased risk for cancers of the skin, the lung and the bladder, but until now the underlying toxic modes of action are still under debate. in this context, in the last five years one main focus has been given to the role of human inorganic arsenic metabolism and nowadays it is generally accepted that human biomethylation contributes to inorganic arsenic induced carcinogenicity. due to further improvements in arsenic speciation techniques recently a new thiolated arsenite metabolite, the thio analogue of the well known metabolite dimethylarsinic acid (dma v ), the so called thiodimethylarsinic acid (thio-dma v ), has been discovered in human biological samples. after synthesizing and analytically characterizing this metabolite (bartel et al. , j toxicol. we investigated its toxic effects in direct comparison with ias iii in human urothelial cells. thereby cell cycle studies revealed a g /m-and s-phase arrest as well as subg peak formation in case of thio-dma v . moreover, thio-dma v induced apoptosis (subg , caspase activity) at lower concentrations and earlier time points as compared to ias iii . most likely this is partly due to the higher cellular bioavailability of thio-dma v (aas/icp-ms). regarding genotoxicity, a generation of dna single strand breaks (alkaline unwinding technique) as well as an increased formation of reactive oxygen species (ros, dcfh-da-fluorescence) occurred only at high cytotoxic concentrations. however, thio-dma v strongly increased h o induced ros formation at very low nanomolar concentrations, which might result in cogenotoxic effects. since our earlier studies have shown a strong inhibition of h o induced poly(adp-ribosyl)ation especially by trivalent methylated arsenic metabolites, actual studies investigate the impact of thio-dma v on cellular poly(adp-ribosyl)ation, parp- gene expression, protein level and cellular cleavage, which might hopefully give further hints regarding the mode of action behind thio-dma v induced apoptosis. mitochondrial dysfunction in models of alzheimer´s disease eckert a. universitäre psychiatrische kliniken basel neurobiology laboratory, wilhelm klein strasse , basel, switzerland the histopathological characteristics of alzheimer's disease (ad) are amyloid-ß (aß) containing plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (nfts) as well as neuronal and synaptic loss. until today, the underlying mechanisms of the interplay of plaques and tangles remained unresolved. there is increasing evidence that mitochondrial dysfunction might be a possible link, as revealed by studies in several app and tau transgenic mouse models. recently, we examined mitochondrial function in a novel triple transgenic mouse model (pr /app/ps ) -triplead mice -that combines both pathologic features of the disease in brain. using comparative, quantitative proteomics (itraq) and mass spectroscopy we found a massive deregulation of proteins, of which one-third were mitochondrial proteins mainly related to complexes i and iv of the oxidative phosphorylation system (oxphos). remarkably, deregulation of complex i was related to tau, whereas deregulation of complex iv was aß dependent, both at the protein and activity levels. the triplead mice showed synergistic effects of aß and tau already at the age of months, resulting in a depolarized mitochondrial membrane potential. at months, the strongest defects on oxphos, synthesis of atp and reactive oxygen species were exhibited in the triplead mice, again emphasizing synergistic, ageassociated effects of aß and tau in impairing mitochondria. evidences from ad post-mortem brain as well as cellular and animal ad models indicate that aß and tau protein trigger mitochondrial dysfunction through a number of pathways, such as impairment of oxidative phosphorylation, elevation of reactive oxygen species production, alteration of mitochondrial dynamics, and interaction with mitochondrial proteins. moreover, recent reports indicate that aß may also interact directly with intracellular proteins such as the mitochondrial enzyme abad (aß binding alcohol dehydrogenase) in executing its toxic effects. mitochondrial dysfunction occurs early in ad, and aß's toxicity seems to be in part mediated by inhibition of abad. in total, a vicious cycle as well as several vicious circles within the cycle, each accelerating the other, can be drawn emphasizing the synergistic deterioration of mitochondria by tau and aß. olesoxime is a novel mitochondrial-targeted compound that is orally active and crosses the blood brain barrier. the cholesterol-oxime targets proteins of the outer mitochondrial membrane and represents a promising drug candidate for neurodegenerative diseases . we evaluated olexoxime's neuroprotective effects against mitochondrial dysfunction in an animal model for alzheimer`s disease (ad). dissociated brain cells (dbc) and mitochondria were isolated from brains of c /bj -thy -appsl (ad-mice) mice that were fed with mg olesoxime/kg feed for months. drug plasma levels reached approx. ng/ml. respiration of isolated mitochondria were significantly diminished in ad-mice due to reduced complex i, i+ii and cox activities. consequently, mitochondrial membrane potential (mmp) was significantly reduced in dbc from ad-mice. olesoxime normalized respiration chain complex activities and the mpp. to further evaluate the beneficial effects of olesoxime on complex i activity, we challenged dbc with rotenone ex vivo and observed that olesoxime treatment was protective. to further clarify the mode of action, we analyzed the ability of olesoxime to prevent opening of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore (mptp) in vitro using energized brain mitochondria by measuring ca + -and atractyloside (atr) induced swelling. the opening of mptp precedes apoptosis and can be induced by mitochondrial dysfunction due to calcium overload, oxidative stress, elevated phosphate concentrations or adenine nucleotide depletion. olesoxime prevented ca + -as well as atr induced mitochondrial swelling. atr inhibits the adenine nucleotide translocase (ant) that requires appropriate membrane properties to mediate mitochondrial permeability transition (mpt). since cholesterol (cho) and its derivates represent potent modulators of membrane viscosity, we related the effects of cho and olesoxime on mptp opening to membrane properties. both, cho and olesoxime reduced the flexibility of membrane acyl-chains in energized mitochondria and prevented atr induced mptp opening. however, cho didn`t prevent ca + -induced mptp opening, indicating a different mode of action for olesoxime. our data confirm olesoxime as drug candidate against mitochondrial dysfunction, which is considered to play a pivotal role in neurodegenerative diseases. the work was supported by the european union under the th framework program for rtd -project mitotarget -grant agreement health-f - - . several inflammatory glomerular kidney diseases are accompanied with a massive production of reactive oxygen species (ros) that may attack the glomerular filtration barrier by affecting podocyte function and may contribute to apoptotic or necrotic cell death of mesangial cells. otherwise, ros also trigger fine-tuned signaling processes that may result in cell proliferation or cell migration. to define such redox-driven signaling devices, we performed a non hypothesis-driven proteomic approach, to identify homo-or heteromeric protein complexes induced by ros. to this end, protein lysates of human podocytes were treated with or without hydrogen peroxide ( µm) for min. thereafter, the cell lysates were subjected to diagonal d gel electrophoresis and putative redox-affected proteins were analyzed by ms/ms-analysis. by this approach, we could identify a series of proteins that form interprotein-disulfide bonds in a redoxdependent manner. one of those proteins could be characterized as the regulatory subunit of protein kinase a (r-subunit of pka), which belongs to the family of serine/threonine kinases. to evaluate whether ros is capable to activate pka also in a more physiological setting, we treated rat mesangial cells with pdgf-bb to induce ros formation and we could demonstrate that pdgf-bb induces dimerization of r-subunits in a redox-dependent manner. to demonstrate whether pdgf-bb induces pkadependent pathways, we analyzed the effects of pdgf-bb on phosphorylation of serine of vasodilater stimulated protein (vasp) a classical target of pka. in fact, pdgf-bb induced vasp phosphorylation independently of intracellular camp levels. moreover, elevating camp levels via activation of adenylate cyclase with forskolin did not change the dimerization state of r-subunits. pdgf-bb-induced dimerization of the r-subunits and subsequent phosphorylation of vasp was blocked by diphenyljodonium (dpi), indicating activation of a nadph oxidase is essential for pka activity. taken together, we demonstrate a redox-dependent activation of pka by pdgf-bb and this may hint also for a probably protective role of ros in rat mesangial cells. testing the potential sensitizing capacity of chemicals is currently done by using the murine local lymph node assay (llna). animal welfare and eu cosmetics directive demands alternative methods to animal tests. the purpose of this study was to establish an in vitro assay for the prediction of skin sensitizers. based on the finding that the majority of skin sensitizers are electrophilic or have the potential to be metabolized to electrophilic substances, it is assumed that they can activate the nrf -keap -antioxidant response element (are) regulatory pathway. here, we report the results obtained from the lusens assay that detects electrophilic chemicals using the nrf pathway. the cell line lusens was derived from immortalized keratinocyte hacat cells and carries a luciferase reporter gene under the control of an are-element from the rat nadph quinone reductase nq . the lusens assay was in house validated with a panel of chemicals and cosmetic ingredients including the performance standard substances of the local lymph node assay. the predictivity of this assay was compared to the predictivity of the murine llna and to human patch test data and can be considered as reliable screening approach (accuracy of % compared to human data). however, in order to cope with the complex multi-step mechanism of skin sensitization, an integrated approach of in vitro assays mimicking several steps was designed; thereof, the are-dependent gene activation represents one module. time-resolved fluorescence ligand-binding assays for parathyroid hormone receptors emami-nemini a. ligand-binding studies represent essential tools for pharmacological research on g protein-coupled receptors. in recent years, time-resolved fluorescence gained significant relevance as readout for ligand binding studies. however, ligand-binding assays for parathyroid hormone receptors (pthrs) utilizing fluorescent parathyroid hormone (pth) were missing. therefore, we generated various fluorescent pth analogues which exhibit properties of native pth in terms of affinity, potency and internalization. for the purposes of academic and commercial research, we utilized labeled pth to set up three time-resolved fluorescence assay formats: (i) classical separation binding assay, based on time-resolved fluorescence and suitable for native receptors; (ii) homogeneous timeresolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (htrf) based on tag-lite technology for high through-put screening; (iii) htrf based on antibodies, a synergistic approach using htrf with minimized receptor modification. this work will facilitate the development of new drugs directed to the pthr as well as fundamental research on the pthr. anandamide production in eosinophilic granulocytes is independent of il- and eotaxin stimulation engeli s., reinke j., zörner a., tsikas d., jordan j. medizinische hochschule hannover institut für klinische pharmakologie, carl-neuberg-straße , hannover, germany introduction: some animal and in vitro studies suggest that endocannabinoids exert anti-inflammatory effects. specifically, inhaled anandamide reduced the obstructive effect of leukotrien d in airways, and a specific cannabinoid receptor agonist significantly reduced pulmonary inflammation in guinea pigs. we have recently shown that segmental bronchial allergen challenge is associated with significant increases of anandamide concentrations in bronchoalveolar fluid of patients with asthma. the concomitant increase in eosinophilic counts, eotaxin and il- concentrations in bronchoalveolar fluid led us to hypothesize that anandamide is produced by eosinophilic granulocytes in response to chemotactic stimuli. peripheral eosinophilic granulocytes were isolated from whole blood by means of percoll gradient centrifugation and magnetic separation employing cd antibodies conjugated to magnetic beads. isolated cells were counted and anandamide measurements were typically performed in whole cell lysates of . x eosinophils. we stimulated eosinophils with varying concentrations of il- , eotaxin- (ccl ), eotaxin- (ccl ), and eotaxin- (ccl ). to prevent anandamide degradation, a specific fatty acid amide hydrolase (faah) inhibitor (oloxa) was employed. anandamide concentrations and faah activity were determined by stable isotope dilution using lc-ms/ms protocols. results: first, we confirmed the ability of eosinophilc granulocytes to synthesize anandamide. however, cellular anandamide content could only be measured when faah was effectively blocked with oloxa, and strong faah activity was demonstrated in eosinophils. with oloxa, typical anandamide concentrations were in the range of - pm/ . x eosinophils. neither il ( - pg/ml), nor any of the eotaxins ( ng/ml either alone or in varying combinations) did stimulate anandamide production after min of incubation. our results suggest that chemotactic molecules like eotaxin and il- are not responsible for increased anandamide formation in eosinophils during allergen challenge. in a next step, the effects of anandamide on eosinophils and bronchial epithelial cells need to be determined. the suprisingly high faah activity in eosinophils may point to an alternative pathway facilitating prostaglandin and leukotriene synthesis by production of arachidonic acid. screening methodology for estimatation of dermal absorption in vitro fabian e., goth c., guth k., mehling a., van ravenzwaay b., landsiedel r. basf se experimentelle toxikologie, carl-bosch-strasse , ludwigshafen, germany dermal absorption is used in the evaluation of the effectiveness of pharmaceutical or cosmetic formulations, but often dermal absorption is a critical parameter in risk assessment of pesticides or chemicals. therefore, knowledge of dermal absorption is e.g. helpful in formulation development. skin absorption is routinely measured in vivo or in vitro following oecd tg or . however, these tests are complex, time consuming and expensive. therefore, a method was developed to allow simple and rapid screening. the experiment uses dermatomized skin in modified franz type diffusion cells. µl of test substance preparation are applied to the skin preparation. after h, the skin is washed and the amount of penetrated substance is quantified. the receptor fluid and the washing solutions are optimized for subsequent analyses by lc-ms. we performed dermal absorption screenings in parallel to our routine guideline studies and demonstrated a good correlation of the results of both study types: the total recovery found in the screening studies is somewhat lower than in the corresponding guideline studies but is always in an acceptable range above %. the efficacy of the skin washing procedure is lower than under routine conditions, most probably due to the change to an lc-ms-compatible washing solution. overall, the dermal absorption screening is an easy, fast and cost-effective screening method for the estimation of dermal absorption of a wide variety of test substances and formulations. the p tumor suppressor protein is frequently inactivated in human cancers by diverse mechanisms. owing to its fundamental role in the maintenance of genomic stability and cancer prevention, p is an attractive target in cancer therapy and several approaches were pursued to restore p function in tumor cells. polyamidoamine (pamam) dendrons are positively charged molecules with a systematically branched structure that interact with the negatively charged cell membrane, inducing cellular uptake via endocytosis. in the present study, biotin-labeled p protein was attached to a dendronized streptavidin nanocarrier to facilitate its internalization into different tumor cell lines. first, biotin-substituted pamam dendrons were conjugated with streptavidin to allow formation of the dendronized streptavidin nanocarrier. the nanocarrier displayed uptake into hela cervix carcinoma and a lung adenocarcinoma cells without detectable cytotoxicity. biotin-labeled p was then conjugated to the dendronized streptavidin, preserving its specific dna-binding in vitro. immunoblot analysis revealed efficient internalization of biotin-p into hela cells in the presence of dendronized streptavidin. in line with this finding, specific cellular uptake of biotin-p was observed by confocal microscopy, which showed a cytoplasmic and peri-nuclear localization in hela, a and saos osteosarcoma cells. the internalized biotin-p also partially co-localized with early endosomes. importantly, the delivery of biotin-p into p -deficient saos cells resulted in impaired cell viability and upregulation of caspase / activity, demonstrating its biological functionality. this study intriguingly demonstrate the efficient delivery of functional biotin-p into different tumor cell lines using the novel streptavidin nanocarrier, which can be further modified to allow cell-type specific targeting and combined with cytotoxic drugs such as doxorubicin. identification of novel ahr target genes in rat liver oval cells faust d. , vondracek j. the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (ahr) is a transcription factor involved in physiological processes, but also mediates most, if not all, toxic responses to , , , tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (tcdd), some polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (pahs) and dioxin-like polychlorinated biphenyls (pcbs), such as pcb . activation of the ahr by these ligands leads to its dimerization with arnt and transcriptional activation of several phase i and ii metabolising enzymes. while it is generally accepted that many pahs are thereby transformed to genotoxic metabolites, this classical signalling pathway so far failed to explain the tumour promoting effects of the nongenotoxic compounds tcdd and pcb . thus, there is an urgent need to define genetic programmes orchestrated by ahr to unravel its role in physiology and toxicology. we have recently shown that treatment of rat liver oval cells with tcdd or pcb leads to a release from contact-inhibition involving activation of the ahr, elevation of jund protein levels and transcriptional activation of cyclin a ( , ) . loss of contact-inhibition is one hallmark of tumour promotion. to better understand ahr-driven pathways we identified the transcriptional programme using high density microarrays in response to pcb . already h after treatment, genes were found to be upregulated and genes downregulated indicating that these are direct ahr-dependent target genes. david analysis revealed that these genes are involved, for instance, in drug and lipid metabolism, cancer pathways, tgf-b signalling and cell-cell communication. ten of the genes were selected for confirmation by semi-quantitative rt-pcr. using the ahr inhibitor ch- and sirna directed against ahr and arnt, we further demonstrated that ahr-and arnt-function is required for transcriptional activation of the selected genes. finally, we identified the transcription factor foxq as a novel ahr target protein in rat liver oval cells. although the function of foxq is poorly understood, it has been shown very recently that foxq is overexpressed in colorectal cancer and is involved in epithelial-mesenchymal transition in breast cancer cells. its function in ahrmediated tumour promotion, however, remains to be determined. the practical relevance of histamine h and h receptors in the brain can be easily deduced since h receptor antagonists of the first generation have a sedative effect and an inverse h agonist, pitolisant (close to its introduction to the market), is active against excessive daytime sleepiness associated with narcolepsy. in this context the question arises whether also h and h receptors possess a practical relevance in the brain. to this end, we examined whether the electrically evoked h-noradrenaline release in superfused human cerebral cortex slices is affected by agonists at the above receptors. the h agonist impromidine µm failed to affect noradrenaline release in human cortex slices although it facilitated noradrenaline release in guinea-pig cortex slices; the maximum extent of facilitation was %, the pec was . and the pa of the h antagonist ranitidine against impromidine was . . with respect to h receptors there is some controversy in the literature whether they occur in the brain at all. however, we were able to detect h receptor mrna in the human and mouse cortex by the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction. in cortex slices of either species, noradrenaline release was not affected by the h agonist -methylhistamine - µm but inhibited by histamine µm via h receptors by and %, respectively. in mouse cortex membranes, -methylhistamine µm also failed to affect s-gtpγs binding although r-α-methylhistamine µm, acting via h receptors, increased it by %. in conclusion, h receptors facilitating noradrenaline release are detectable in the isolated guinea-pig but not human cortex. despite the presence of h mrna in the brain, functional readouts of this receptor, i.e. modulation of noradrenaline release (humans, mice) and modulation of s-gtpγs binding (mice), could not be shown. murine cx promoter activity is dependent on the transcription factor creb fels b., nunes f., schmitz w., müller f. u. westfälische wilhelms-universität münster institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, domagkstraße , münster, germany connexin (cx ) is a gap junction protein expressed in atrial myocytes and the ventricular conduction system, mediating the electrical intercellular communication in the myocardium. alterations in cx function were linked to the pathophysiology of atrial fibrillation and heart failure. in the heart, camp dependent gene transcription is regulated by members of the creb/crem/atf family which bind to camp responsive elements (cres). similar to the human cx gene promoter, the murine promoter contains one cre. cardiomyocyte-specific overexpression of a crem-isoform (crem-ib∆c-x) led to cx down-regulation, suggesting that creb related transcription factors are involved in cx gene regulation. in order to study the functional role of creb in the regulation of the cx promoter we have generated a luciferase based murine cx promoter reporter gene construct and monitored its activity in a permanent cell line upon overexpression of constitutive-active creb (cacreb) and a non-phosphorylatable dominant-negative creb (dncreb) isoform. surprisingly, overexpression of cacreb and dncreb both lead to a reduction of cx promoter activity (cacreb % ± % vs control % ± %; p< . vs control , n= ), dncreb % ± % vs control % ± %; p< . vs control, n= ). the activity of the murine connexin promoter is modulated by creb. both cacreb and dncreb led to cx down-regulation, which could be explained by induction of inhibitory transcription factors creb/crem/atf transcription factor family, which in turn could suppress cx promoter activity. (supported by the dfg) results: fxa increased par- mrna, protein and cell-surface expression and augmented par- -mediated mitogenesis. par- expression was not influenced. the regulatory action of fxa on par- was concentration-dependent and mimicked by a par- selective activating peptide. the thrombin inhibitor argatroban or par- gene silencing did not influence fxa-stimulated par- expression. fxa increased oxidative stress and expression of the nadph oxidase subunit nox- in smc. nox- gene silencing prevented fxa-stimulated par- regulation, as did ebselen and catalase. exogenous hydrogen peroxide increased par- expression and mitogenic activity. fxa induced nuclear translocation and par- dna binding of nuclear factor kb (nfkb). inhibition of nfkb prevented fxa-stimulated par- expression. in separate studies, fxa promoted par- mrna stabilisation through increased human antigen r (hur)/par- mrna binding and cytoplasmic shuttling. hur gene silencing abolished fxa-stimulated par- expression. conclusion: expression and mitogenic activity of vascular par- , but not par- , is upregulated by fxa. this action involves transcriptional and post-transcriptional mechanisms mediated through nox- -containing nadph oxidase and its downstream effectors hydrogen peroxide, nfkb and the mrna stabilising protein hur. continued generation of fxa by the mural thrombus, and the autoregulatory feedback control of par- may maintain the inflammatory and proliferative state of the injured vessel, thereby promoting vascular remodeling. the mrna stabilising factor hur is a critical regulator of human proteaseactivated receptor aim: we recently reported that functional expression of par- thrombin receptors is induced in human saphenous vein smc exposed to high glucose. this effect could be attributed in part to transcriptional mechanisms mediated through nfkb but the contribution of post-transcriptional effects such as mrna stabilisation is not known. this study explored the potential role of the mrna stabilising factor human antigen r (hur) in the regulation of par- . methods: human saphenous vein smc were serum-deprived prior to study. gene expression was determined by realtime pcr, protein expression by western blotting. gene silencing utilized commercially available sirna. hur binding to par- mrna was determined by immunoprecipitation ("pull-down") pcr. results: high glucose ( mm vs . mm) slowed par- mrna degradation in the presence of actinomycin d. par- mrna decay was not affected. hur binding to par- mrna and nucleo-cytosolic shuttling was enhanced by high glucose, total hur protein expression was not affected. hur sirna abolished the high glucose-stimulated induction of par- mrna. hydrogen peroxide (h o ) also induced cytosolic hur shuttling and increased par- mrna and total protein expression. the role of endogenously generated h o in the regulatory effect of high glucose on par- expression was investigated with the nadph oxidase inhibitors apocynin/diphenyliodonium (to prevent h o generation) and cell-permeant catalase (to degrade cellular h o ). both approaches prevented the stimulatory effect of high glucose on par- expression. cyclic amp has been reported to suppress hur activation and in the present study, the cyclic amp stimuli forskolin and cicaprost (prostacyclin analog) suppressed basal hur shuttling and par- transcript stability. cicaprost also attenuated high glucose-induced hur binding to par- mrna and as a consequence normalised par- expression and inflammatory signalling in high glucosetreated cell. conclusion: the regulation of par- thrombin receptors in human vascular smc is critically dependent on the mrna stabilising actions of hur. through activation of hur, high glucose and other hur stimuli such as ang ii and exogenous h o , increase par- expression, while cyclic amp agonists such as prostacyclin oppose this effect. such interactions could potentially represent a fine-tuning mechanism to control par- expression and ultimately also the mitogenic and inflammatory actions of thrombin in the vessel wall. nucleoside diphosphate kinase b (ndpk b) is a member of a family of ubiquitously expressed enzymes required for nucleoside triphosphate synthesis. thus, they are involved in the regulation of a variety of cellular processes, e. g. g protein mediated signal transduction. however, whether ndpk b has a specific role in the regulation of angiogenic processes in endothelial cells is unknown. therefore, we studied the function of ndpk b in the vasculature in a developmental, an ischemia-induced and an in vitro model of angiogenesis. firstly, depletion of ndpk b expression was achieved by morpholino-mediated knockdown in zebrafish embryos in which the developing vasculature can be visualized by egfp expression in the endothelium. h post fertilization, ndpk b knockdown larvae showed a dramatic inhibition of intersegmental and dorsal longitudinal anastomatic vessel formation compared to control injected fish. this phenotype could be rescued by early re-expression of ndpk b. secondly, ischemia driven angiogenesis was studied in ndpk b-depleted mice and wildtype littermates after excision of the left femoral artery. hind limb blood flow was assessed by laser doppler perfusion imaging immediately before and after ligation (day ) and on postoperative days , , , , , and . a significant reduction of recovery was observed in the ndpk b depleted mice at days and . thirdly, in vitro-sprouting angiogenesis was analyzed in human umbilical vein endothelial cell (huvec) spheroids with and without sirna-mediated ndpk b knockdown. vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf)induced sprouting was significantly attenuated by ndpk b knock down by more than % in comparison with control transfected huvec. we conclude from these results that ndpk b is an essential regulator of angiogenesis. the loss of ndpk b may specifically interfere with the vegf-induced migration and proliferation during endothelial sprouting. ethylene oxide in blood of ethylene-exposed volunteers ethylene (et) is a commercially important high volume industrial chemical. inhaled and endogenous et is metabolized in mammals to ethylene oxide (eo), which is carcinogenic in rats and mice. until now, no data on the oxidation of et in et-exposed humans has been published. in the present study, we investigated the formation of eo in four male adult volunteers exposed for hours to constant atmospheric et concentrations of , , or ppm by means of a breathing mask. during exposure, et concentrations were measured in inhaled and exhaled air by gc/fid and eo concentrations in venous blood by gc/ms. rates of et metabolism were obtained from the product of the differences in the et concentrations with the pulmonary ventilation. in each subject, linear correlations were found between the et exposure concentration and the rate of et metabolism or the eo concentration in blood. mean rate of et metabolism was . ± . nmol/h/ppm/kg body weight. steady-state concentrations of eo in blood differed by a factor of between the volunteers. these inter-individual differences likely reflect the polymorphism of glutathione s-transferase theta, the main eo metabolizing enzyme in human liver. mean eo concentration in blood at steady state was . ± . nmol/l blood per ppm of et. the data will be used for validating a physiological toxicokinetic model which will describe the et related eo tissue burdens in rodents and humans. the model predictions will support risk evaluations of et. financially supported by the lower olefins sector group of cefic. in vitro effect of stw on human dendritic cells fink c. , bonaterra g. a. extracts of echinacea (purple coneflower) are used in the prevention and therapy of infectious diseases. the medicinal product stw contains the extract from purple coneflower, and in addition, extracts of monkshood, venom of honey bee and bushmaster snake in homeopathic dilutions. previous studies showed a stimulation of the cellular and humoral immune response. dendritic cells (dcs) are antigen presenting cells that act at the interface of the innate and adaptive branches of the immune system. during stages of dc differentiation, the ability to internalize antigens varies and decreases during maturation. in this study, we determined the influence of stw on the expression of maturation related genes (cd a, cd ), cytokines (tnfα, il- , il- ), chemokines (ccr ), major histocompatibility complex ii(mhc-ii) and toll-like receptors (tlr , tlr ). in mature (mdc) and immature dc (idc) using real-time rt-pcr. peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) were isolated from buffy coats of human volunteers by densitygradient (ficoll ® ) and seeded in well plates. non-adherent cells were eliminated. to induce idc development, ng/ml il- and ng/ml granulocyte macrophagecolony stimulating factor (gm-csf) were added. at day , maturation was induced by addition of lipopolysaccharide (lps) at a final concentration of µg/ml and cultured for additional days. after incubation with different concentrations ( . in idc, compared to control, we found a significantly increased expression of cd ( . - . fold) and tnfα ( . - . -fold) genes after treatment with . - % stw , respectively, but no effect was found on the expression of cd a, il- , il , adam , cd c, cd ,tlr , tlr , mhc-ii and ccr . in summary, these data demonstrate a stimulatory effect of stw in idc and especially in mdc, concerning an increase of various genes related to maturation (cd ), immunomodulation (tnfα, cd ), adhesion (ccr ) and antigen presentation (mhc-ii) and are in accordance with the therapeutic use in infectious diseases. waterproofing sprays are widely used consumer products containing for example fluorinated polymers or silicon based compounds dissolved in alcohols or volatile petroleum distillates. there have been repeated reports on cases of severe acute respiratory disorders especially when using products that newly entered the market. it is hypothesized that impairment of the pulmonary surfactant by deposition of inhaled respirable particles of the active compound is one of the main causes of the acute lung injury. since the inhalation toxicity cannot be predicted a priori based on the physical and chemical properties of the formulation, proper test strategies are required to ensure consumer safety. we propose to combine screening tests addressing both, exposure and acute lung toxicity. the exposure potential of the spray product is characterized by determining the release fraction of the active compound in the respirable particle size range under conditions relevant for the product application. this is carried out by spraying defined quantities of the product into a control volume and measuring the concentration of health related size fractions. this procedure takes into account spray ageing, especially size reduction of the droplets due to solvent evaporation. the isolated perfused lung is used as a model for testing acute toxicity. ventilated rat lungs are exposed to aged aerosols with proper particle size of approximately µm mmad generated from the liquid spray formulation. lung compliance and lung resistance are continuously monitored during exposure. dose dependent deviations from the normal values (without exposure) are used as read-out parameters. using the combined procedure, different sprays could be ranked according to their realistic exposure risk and, most importantly, sprays with known lung toxicity could be uniquely distinguished from those that have been shown to be safe. in its current stage of development the simple test method is recommended for screening of substances only. induction of oxidative damage in calf thymus dna by the fusarium mycotoxin zearalenone after metabolic activation with liver microsomes fleck s. c., pfeiffer e., metzler m. kit -institute of applied biosciences chair of food chemistry, adenauerring a, karlsruhe, germany zearalenone (zen) is an estrogenic mycotoxin produced by fusarium species. the adverse effects of zen and its reductive metabolite zearalenol (zel) are often compared to those of -beta-estradiol (e ) and estrone (e ). these endogenous estrogens are associated with an increased risk for cancer, which may be mediated by two mechanisms, i.e. (i) hormonal activity and (ii) genotoxic effects by p -catalyzed metabolic activation to catechols (wang et al., chem res toxicol , . like e and e , zen and zel exhibit marked estrogenicity and also undergo aromatic hydroxylation to catechol metabolites (pfeiffer et al., mol nutr food res , . the aim of the present study was to examine the formation of catechol metabolites of zen by liver microsomes of various species and their potential for redox cycling. catechol metabolites are frequently associated with the generation of reactive oxygen species and subsequent oxidative damage of dna, for which -oxo- , -dihydro- 'deoxyguanosine ( -oxo-dg) is a common biomarker. the propensity of the catechol metabolites of zen and zel to cause the formation of -oxo-dg in isolated calf thymus dna was determined using a lc-esi-ms/ms method. to this end, zen was incubated with microsomes from human, rat, mouse, bovine and porcine liver as well as with human cyp a , and the incubations were extracted with ethyl acetate. the extract was analyzed with lc-ms and then added to a solution of calf thymus dna in the presence of copper(ii) ions and nadph. the formation of -oxo-dg could be demonstrated with each extract. the levels of -oxo-dg correlated directly with the extent of catechol formation, which increased from steer to swine to human to mouse to rat microsomes. -hydroxylated zen/zel, which is the major catechol, was more reactive than -hydroxylated zen/zel to form -oxo-dg. in conclusion, our study has shown that the catechol metabolites of zen are highly reactive and give rise to oxidative dna damage in vitro. in addition, recent research from our laboratory revealed that the catechols of zen are less efficiently inactivated by catechol-o-methyl transferase than the catechols of e and e . the genotoxic potential of zen may constitute another biological activity in addition to the well-known estrogenicity. supported by deutsche forschungsgemeinschaft (grant me / - ) and "food and health" of kit. thrombin regulates expression of sphingosine kinase- (sphk- ) in human vascular smooth muscle cells -inhibition by dabigatran reduces vascular sphk- expression and atherosclerotic burden in vivo flößer a. results: thrombin induced a time-and concentration-dependent ( - nmol/l) increase in sphk- mrna and protein expression in human saphenous vein smc, n= - . this was mimicked by a synthetic par- ligand. inhibition of sphk- attenuated thrombin-induced smc proliferation but not smc migration (n= ). the regulatory action of thrombin on sphk- expression was suppressed by sirna against the mrna stabilisiserhur. in thrombin-stimulated smc, hur binding to sphk- mrna and subsequent nucleo-cytosolic shuttling was enhanced. accordingly, thrombin induced sphk- mrna stabilisation in smc in the presence of actinomycin d. in apoe-deficient mice, long-term treatment with the direct thrombin inhibitor dabigatran significantly reduced aortic sphk- expression by % (n= ) and plaque size by % compared to control animals (n= ). conclusions: thrombin induces sphk- expression and s p synthesis in vascular smc via the mrna stabilising protein hur. this leads to increased smc proliferation. inhibition of thrombin by dabigatran treatment in vivo attenuates progression of plaques possibly by reducing sphk- expression. mycotoxin contamination and cytotoxicity of grain mill products typical grain mill products from north-rhine westphalia, i.e. grains, flour, wholemeal flour and bran (from wheat, rye and spelt) as well as typical by-products (outsourced fractions) from the milling process were analysed for their mycotoxin content by lc-ms/ms. the cytotoxicity of sample extracts with known mycotoxin composition was then assessed in v cell cultures by means of the neutral red uptake assay, in parallel with pure reference mycotoxin mixtures. extracts from flour and wholemeal flour samples with low levels of deoxynivalenol and enniatin b (from not detectable to . µg/g don and . µg/g ennb) induced no measurable cytotoxicity. on the other hand, although mycotoxin contamination levels were also rather low in bran, these samples induced strong cytotoxicity: extracts of bran derived from rye and spelt were more cytotoxic than those of wheat bran. the cytotoxic effects of the bran samples cannot be related to their mycotoxin content as comparable concentrations of pure mycotoxins and mycotoxin combinations tested in parallel were not cytotoxic. by-products from certain stages of the milling process (sorting and waste fractions) were found to contain mycotoxins at rather high levels: enniatin b was detected in nearly all samples, and also t- toxin, ht- toxin, ergotamine, ergocornin and deoxynivalenol were present. waste sample extracts with notable mycotoxin levels (up to µg/g don, µg/g ennb, µg/g ergotamine, ng/g ht- toxin) exert pronounced cytotoxicity in v cells. the cytotoxicity of these samples was somewhat stronger than expected when compared with mixtures of reference mycotoxins tested in parallel. in summary, the tested flour and wholemeal flour extracts contained only low levels of mycotoxins and were not cytotoxic. in contrast, bran samples showed cytotoxicity which cannot be explained solely by their mycotoxin content. this unexpected observation in real samples and combination effects of mycotoxin mixtures require further studies. the ahr is a ligand-activated transcription factor that mediates the toxicity of dioxins and related compounds. upon ligand binding the ahr translocates into the nucleus and dimerizes with arnt to modulate gene expression, e.g. of cyp a . recently, we have shown that uvb irradiation of human keratinocytes results in activation of the ahr and associated egfr signaling leading to an enhanced expression of cyp a and proinflammatory cox- , respectively. the initial step is the uvb induced intracellular formation of the tryptophan photoproduct -formylindolo [ , b] carbazole (ficz), a high affinity ahr ligand. thus, the ficz activated ahr is an important mediator of the dna damage independent part of the uvb response. our current study aims to identify further aspects of ahr mediated uvb responses. therefore, we analysed changes in protein expression, proliferation and apoptosis in ahr+/+ and ahr-/-keratinocytes (nctc ) by western blot, flow cytometry and brdu incorporation. uvb exposure of nctc cells led to a dose-dependent increase in apoptosis. compared to ahr+/+ cells, ahr-/-cultures exhibited an increased amount of apoptotic cells. this finding was confirmed in irradiated ahr+/+ cells, pretreated with the ahr antagonist 'methoxy- '-nitroflavone. moreover, the proliferation of sham as well as uvb irradiated ahr-/-cells was significantly decreased. in ahr-/-cells we found a reduced expression of checkpoint kinase (chk ), an important cell cycle regulator that arrests the cell in g /m upon dna damage. interestingly, uvb exposure led to a higher net phosphorylation of chk in ahr-/-cells, indicating that this pathway is responsible for the observed ahr-dependent differences in proliferation and apoptosis. further expression analyses of chk client proteins emphasize our hypothesis. in conclusion our study identifies the ahr as an anti-apoptotic player in uvb irradiated human nctc cells. therefore, we propose that the ahr is a suitable target to prevent uvb induced skin diseases. synthetic progestins exert divergent effects on thrombosis in a murine model of atherothrombosis background: medroxyprogesterone acetate (mpa), a synthetic progestin often used in postmenopausal hormone replacement therapy, has previously been described to be pro-thrombotic in a murine model of accelerated atherosclerosis. however, nothing is so far known about effects of progestins with receptor profiles different from mpa (i.e. agonism or antagonism of mineralocorticoid-or androgen-receptors), such as drospirenone, levonorgestrel and norethisterone acetate. methods: apo -/mice were bilaterally ovariectomized (ovx) and substituted subcutaneously with mpa, drospirenone, levonorgestrel and norethisterone acetate as well as the respective placebo pellets for days on a western-type diet. subsequently, thrombosis was induced by photochemical injury to the right carotid artery using rose bengal and a green light laser. results: compared to placebo, animals substituted with mpa showed significantly shortened times to occlusion of the right carotid artery (placebo mpa: . ± . min. vs. mpa: . ± . min., n = - , p < . ). in contrast, drospirenone, levonorgestrel or norethisterone acetate did not alter thrombotic responses. however, at least drospirenone (placebo drospirenone: . ± . min. vs. drospirenone: . ± . min., n = - ) and levonorgestrel (placebo levonorgestrel: . ± . min. vs. levonorgestrel: . ± . min., n = ) showed a trend towards shorter times to stable occlusion. furthermore, analysis of aortic gene expression revealed that in aortas of mpa-treated mice expression of matrix-metalloproteinase (mmp- ) was induced as compared to placebo-treated mice. conclusion: mpa, a progestin with glucocorticoid effects, exerts a pro-thrombotic effect that is either progesterone-or glucocorticoidreceptor-dependent while progestins with receptor profiles different from mpa do not show a significant pro-thrombotic effect. furthermore, the pro-thrombotic effect exerted by mpa may be associated with increased expression of mmp- , a metalloproteinase being known to destabilize atherosclerotic plaques and make them more prone to rupture. rapid screening for mitochondrial toxicity in vitro using an oxygen-sensitive phosphorescent probe freyberger a. bayer healthcare bph gdd ged toxikologie -p & cp, aprather weg , wuppertal, germany impaired mitochondrial function has been implicated with disease, aging, and druginduced toxicities. analyzing mitochondrial respiration (mr) rates is one of the most informative ways to assess mitochondrial function as it provides information on the the bioenergetic capacity of a tissue, however, previously measurements using polarography (clark electrode) were cumbersome with only low throughput. in this work we explored luxcel's water-soluble phosphorescent oxygen-sensitive probe mitoxpress tm for the assessment of mitochondrial toxicity in freshly isolated male rat liver mitochondria (rlm) in a -well plate format using glutamate/malate ( mm/ . mm) and succinate ( mm) as respiratory substrates. inhibition of mitochondrial complexes i to iv, adenosine triphosphate synthetase and the adenosine diphosphate (adp) / adenosine triphosphate (atp) antiporter by rotenone, thenoyltrifluoracetone (ttfa), antimycin a, potassium cyanide, oligomycin, and atractyloside was readily detected in adp-stimulated rlm. use of the two different substrates in parallel allowed to discriminate complex i inhibition by rotenone from complex ii inhibition by ttfa, whereas downstream of these complexes inhibition by the other model inhibitors occurred independent of the substrate used. decoupling of mr from oxidative phosphorylation by carbonylcyanid-p-trifluormethoxyphenylhydrazone (fccp) was detected best in the absence of adp. compared to polarographic measurement, the use of an oxygen-sensitive probe is superior with regard to assay cycle time and sample throughput and offers new opportunities to characterize and screen for mitochondrial toxicity, but also to support studies on mitochondria-mediated modes of action of new chemical entities. the murine local lymph node assay (llna) and the guinea pig maximization test (gpmt) have been used to study the sensitization potential of a series of unsaturated compounds by kreiling et al. ( ) . we have examined the same substances in the loose-fit coculture-based sensitization assay (lcsa), developed by our working group (schreiner et al., ) . eight unsaturated compounds [oleic acid (oa), linoleic acid (la), linolenic acid (lna), undecylenic acid (ua), fumaric acid (fa), maleic acid (ma), squalene (sq), -octyn- -ol (oc)] and succinic acid (sua) were investigated using a coculture of keratinocytes and dendritic cell-related cells (dcrc). sensitization potential was quantified by flow cytometry measuring the increase of cd expressed on dcrc (ec = half maximal effective concentration). a pronounced induction of cd at low concentrations was seen with la, lna and oa (ec : , and µmol/l, respectively). ua exhibited an intermediate response (ec : µmol/l). with oc and ma, we observed effects at higher concentrations only (ec : and µmol/l). no significant increase of cd was observed with fa, sua and sq. because of poor solubility, sq could not be studied adequately. induction of cd was generally observed at concentrations which did not cause a major impairment of cell viability. our results show a high degree of concordance with those obtained by the gpmt, except for oa. in comparison with the results of the llna, those compounds which showed a strong effect in the llna (oa, la, lna) also induced an increase of cd at low concentrations, whereas those with low stimulation indices in the llna induced no significant increase of cd (fa, sua) or only at higher concentrations (ua). we observed a discrepancy between the tests with ma and oc, causing a strong stimulation of the murine lymph nodes, while the expression of cd was increased at high concentrations only. we assume that ma and oc might be false-positives in the llna, because they were also negative in the gpmt. background: the first step in elimination of many cationic drugs is their uptake from the blood into hepatocytes and renal proximal tubular cells by the organic cation transporter (oct ) and oct , respectively. the pivotal role of octs in the excretion of cationic drugs raises the possibility of drug-drug interactions in which one drug reduces octmediated elimination of a second drug. although many psychoactive drugs are cationic at ph . and some of these have already been recognized as oct inhibitors, a systematic screen of this class of compounds is missing. methods: we screened a drug library of most frequently prescribed psychoactive drugs (inpatient prescriptions in germany, at least million ddd each) for their inhibitory interaction with oct and oct . human embryonic kidney (hek) cells stably overexpressing oct or oct and the prototypical oct substrate -methyl- phenylpyridinium (mpp+) were used as a test system. cells transfected with the empty vector were used as controls. results: at µm, % and %, respectively, of the tested compounds significantly decreased oct -and oct -mediated uptake of mpp+. the most potent inhibitors (inhibition > %) of oct were chlorprothixen and clomipramine, whereas olanzapine, clomipramine and doxepin were the most potent inhibitors of oct . in contrast, neither at µm nor at µm carbamazepin, haloperidol, lithium, moclobemide and valproic acid did significantly inhibit mpp+ uptake into hek-oct or hek-oct cells. there was a significant correlation between the degree of oct and oct inhibition (p conclusions: our results demonstrate that inhibition of oct function by psychoactive drugs has to be considered as a potential mechanism underlying drug-drug interactions. considering estimated peak sinusoidal concentrations e.g., of chlorprothixen and clomipramine between and µm in humans, inhibitory interactions of these compounds with hepatic oct have to be taken in account. our data will help to create a chemoinformatic model to predict potential oct-dependent interactions of psychoactive drugs with the hepatic or renal elimination of coadministered drugs. this project is supported by the german federal ministry of education and research (bmbf), project grant no. ex b. cardiac gene expression is altered during the development of hypertrophy and heart failure compared to the healthy heart. the molecular mechanisms controlling gene expression in cardiac failure are only partially known. dna methylation is one epigenetic mechanism that regulates long-term changes in gene-expression. to elucidate whether dna methylation is altered during the development and progression of chronic heart failure, genome-wide dna methylation profiles were determined in myocardial biopsies from control patients and patients with cardiac hypertrophy or failure. cardiac biopsies were obtained from patients with aortic aneurysm who served as control and did not show clinical signs of chronic heart disease (ef: ± %, n= ) and from patients with aortic stenosis. the latter group was subdivided according to the ejection fraction into hypertrophic (ef: ± %, n= ) and failing patients (ef: ± %, n= ). after bisulfite conversion of extracted dna, the methylation status of genomic dna was quantified using the infinium® humanmethylation beadchip (illumina). this microarray allows analysis of more than , methylation-sites throughout the whole genome at single-base-pair resolution. these experiments identified cpg sites in hypertrophic samples and cpg sites in failing samples which were differentially methylated compared to control specimens (delta > %; p< . ). cpg sites were significantly altered in both aortic stenosis groups compared with control hearts. from these cpgs, sites were altered concordantly in hypertrophic and failing samples. analysis of regions harbouring distinct cpg densities revealed that most changes occured in shelf regions of cpg islands whereas the methylation status in the cpg islands was more stable. further analysis showed that differences in methylation were most frequent in gene body, enhancer and `utr regions. specifically probes spanning a cpg-island at the promotor region of the muscle-specific serine kinase (srpk ) showed diminished cpg-methylation in hypertrophic (- . ± . %) and failing (- ± . %) as compared to control biopsies. remarkably, no alterations of dna-methylation were observed in loci of classic marker genes of chronic heart failure like nppa, serca, ctgf, myh or myh . these results indicate that dna methylation is specifically altered in chronic heart disease but does not affect classic marker genes of chronic heart failure. gliomas are the most abundant type of primary brain tumor in the central nervous system in adults. the current standard of glioblastoma multiforme (gbm) therapy is surgery followed by radiotherapy and chemotherapy. however the morbidity and mortality of gbm remain very high and the median survival period is only months even with treatment. therefore it is important to identify novel drugs to reduce gbm cell proliferation. purine-analogues (pa) are well known for their anti-proliferative effects on eukaryotic cells. in this study novel pa were synthesized and the library of substance-derivatives was tested using different gbm cell lines namely ln , u -mg and gl . the effect on proliferation and viability was assessed by using brdu and resazurin assays. using these in vitro methods we were able to identify several compounds with cytotoxic and anti-proliferative effects in vitro showing ic values in the deeper µm range. cytotoxicity of selected compounds was further analyzed by assessment of caspase and propidium iodide based cell cycle facs analysis to discriminate between apoptosis and cell cycle arrest. based on these data purine-derivatives might inhibit proliferation and induce apoptosis in glioma cells. as a result we hypothesize that these compounds could be potentially interesting for the drug-development of gbm therapy and therefore a clue for chemical modifications. further studies are required to identify the exact underlying mechanism of action of the tested purine-analogues. the biological role of adenosine receptors in brown adipose tissue gnad t. brown adipose tissue (bat) is responsible for basal and inducible energy expenditure in mammals. bat contains large amounts of mitochondria and is highly vascularized. bat lipolysis and thermogenesis are stimulated by sympathetic neurons. importantly, recent findings indicate that adult humans possess metabolically active bat . here, we analyzed the expression and function of adenosine receptors in bat. adenosine receptors (ador) are members of the superfamily of g protein-coupled receptors. there are four subtypes of adors in humans referred to as adora , a a, a b and a . they are widely expressed in tissues and mediate a variety of cellular functions, mostly due to their regulation of camp levels within cells. interestingly, it has been shown that adenosine can either inhibit or stimulate lipolysis in white adipocytes through adora or a a, respectively . however, the role of adenosine in the differentiation of brown preadipocytes to adipocytes and in bat function is not clear. to analyze the role of adors in bat, we use preadipocytes isolated from bat of newborn mice and subjected them to a differentiation protocol. abundance of adora , a a, a b and a mrna was measured using qpcr. all four receptor subtypes are present in preadipocytes with adora b being the most abundant. adora , adora a and adora are significantly transcriptionally upregulated -albeit at varying degree -during differentiation. adora is upregulated . fold (+/- . fold) and fold (+/- . fold) at day and at day , respectively, as compared to preadipocytes (n= ). adora a is fold (+/- . fold) upregulated at day and fold upregulated (+/- . fold) at day , respectively (n= ). adora was found upregulated . fold (+/- . fold) at day (n= ). in contrast to this, ador b was downregulated to . fold (+/- . fold) at day and to . fold (+/- . ) day compared to preadipocytes (n= ). to investigate the functional role of ador in bati cells, we analyzed lipolysis in mature cells after acute treatment with specific agonists and antagonists. we observed that adora a activation by cgs significantly increased lipolysis by % (+/- . %) compared to untreated control. moreover, adora antagonist psb increased lipolysis by % (+/- . %) (n= ). in conclusion, ador are highly regulated during brown fat cell differentiation. lipolysis of mature brown fat cells is significantly increased by adora a agonist or adora antagonist, respectively. munich heart alliance, münchen, germany activation of the sympathetic nervous system and the subsequent activation of βadrenergic receptors (βars) through catecholamines represents the strongest mechanism to increase cardiac function. however, long-term activation of cardiac βars is clearly detrimental and β-blockers have been introduced as an effective treatment modality in cardiac failure. despite their central role in cardiac physiology and disease, our knowledge about the intracellular mechanism of βar stimulation is confined to a few targets and is likely incomplete. here, we report a functional proteomics approach to directly assess the entire phosphoproteome of βar-stimulated mouse hearts in vivo. to identify proteins that are phosphorylated in response to β-adrenergic stimulation in vivo, we treated mice with isoproterenol or, as a control, with propranolol. after lysis of hearts and tryptic digest, phosphopeptides were enriched by tio or immobilized metal ion affinity chromatography (imac). subsequent analysis of eluated peptides by tandem mass spectrometry (ms/ms) mapped several phosphopeptides to cardiac proteins, among which known mediators of βar signaling such as phospholamban, troponin i and myosin binding protein c. we then employed multiple reaction monitoring (mrm) as a quantitative approach to assess changes of phosphorylation after βar stimulation. using this combination of ms approaches, we identified peptides with pka consensus phosphosites that were more abundantly detected under βar stimulation. among those, we found myozenin- (myoz ) and g protein signaling modulator (gpsm , also termed ags ) as proteins previously not related to βar signaling. we validated the βar-dependence of phosphorylation at these sites in isolated cardiomyocytes by in vivo labelling or phosphoepitope-specific antibodies. current efforts aim at the functional characterization of these novel candidate mediators of βar signaling in the heart. taken together, we report the β-adrenergic phosphoproteome of the mammalian heart in vivo. we have identified several new targets of βar signaling that may represent essential factors in cardiac physiology and disease. background: drug measurement in autopsy material is normally used to investigate the cause of death. in our study it was possible to measure concentrations of drugs that were part of a regular treatment without connection to the cause of death. metamizole is used as an analgetic and spasmolytic agent. the active metabolite maa ( -methyl-aminoantipyrin) is metabolized by the liver and eliminated by the kidney. hepatic and renal dysfunction can therefore influence maa clearance. methods: maa concentrations were measured in different samples of the autopsy material (heart blood, venous blood, urine, liver, kidney and brain) using an hplc-ms/ms method. information about the dosage and time of drug application as well as information about existing renal or hepatic disorders were taken from the corresponding patient records. because of the low number of cases an explorative single-case study was necessary. results: cases with oral intake of metamizole in a customary continuous dosage could be indentified. the maa distribution into body liquids and organs depended on the time between last oral intake and death. in two cases without renal or hepatic diseases maa blood levels were below µg/ml. five cases with combined renal and hepatic disorders showed either increased blood levels of - µg/ml or prolonged maa elimination half-life of up to hours. in one case with manifest hepatic insufficiency an maa concentration of more than µg/ml was measured in venous blood. two cases with renal insufficiency alone had maa venous blood levels of less than µg/ml. (pet) . pet detects the positron emission of neutron-deficient radioactive nuclides and allows their external localization in vivo. fet, a modified amino acid, is not incorporated in proteins but accumulates in glioblastomas. one pathway responsible for its accumulation is the preferential transport into the tumor cells, probably via amino acid transporters. we investigated in more detail (a) which individual, cloned amino acid transporters accept fet as substrate and (b) which transporter is responsible for the major fet transport into glioblastoma cells. studies with xenopus laevis oocytes, expressing individual human amino acid transporters, revealed that system l, y + l and b + amino acid transporters recognize fet as substrate (lat and , y + lat , and b + at, respectively). in contrast, y + lat and atb ,+ did not transport fet. rna expression studies using qrt/pcr revealed that lat is the dominant amino acid transporter in all glioblastoma cells investigated (ln /u /u mg/u /a /t g). a strong lat expression was also shown on the protein level. to find out whether lat is the main transporter responsible for fet accumulation, we first studied transport of the parent amino acid l-tyrosine in ln glioblastoma cells. [ h] tyr uptake was completely na + -independent and inhibited by leu, phe and trp, but not by arg, pro or ser. sirna-mediated down-regulation of lat in ln cells led to a concomitant decrease of lat mrna and tyr transport (down to % and %, respectively). these results indicate that tyr is exclusively transported by lat in ln cells. we are currently performing transport studies using [ f]fet to investigate whether fet transport is also exclusively mediated by lat in glioblastoma cells. a further question is if lat , a sodium-independent transporter, can be responsible for the accumulation of fet observed in glioblastoma cells. if true, other amino acid derivatives that are lat substrates might also proof useful in cancer diagnosis. telmisartan reduces adipose tissue inflammation and biglycan accumulation in diabetogenic ldl-receptor knockout mice grandoch m., nagy n., fischer j. w. institut für pharmakologie und klinische pharmakologie, universitätsklinikum der heinrich-heine-universität düsseldorf, moorenstraße , düsseldorf, germany in addition to lowering blood pressure some of the angiotensin ii at receptor antagonists (arb) such as telmisartan have additional beneficial effects on the onset of type diabetes mellitus and obesity. this was contributed mainly to peroxisome proliferator activated receptor (ppar)γ modulating activity. hyaluronan (ha), a high molecular weight polysaccharide and the small leucine rich proteoglycans, decorin and biglycan, are known to be involved in atheroprogression. mechanistically these matrix components contribute to inflammatory processes via toll-like receptor-signalling and are supposed to modulate lipid retention. the aim of this study was to elucidate the effects of telmisartan in comparison to valsartan, an arb without pparγ activity, on extracellular matrix remodelling and inflammation in atherosclerosis and the interrelationship with adipose tissue inflammation using the ldlr-/-model of accelerated atherosclerosis. male ldlr-/-mice were fed either a diabetogenic diet alone or in combination with telmisartan ( mg/kg), valsartan ( mg/kg) or valsartan ( mg/kg) from weeks of age for weeks. all treatment groups except of the lower valsartan dose showed significant effects on reducing the aortic plaque score. the content of ha, collagen and decorin in the aortic root were not changed. however, telmisartan reduced the content of biglycan in the aortic root significantly in contrast to valsartan. in addition, a trend towards decreased mac -positive macrophages in abdominal adipose tissue was detectable after telmisartan treatment as well as a strong reduction in the adipose tissue mrna expression of biglycan. finally, telmisartan reduced the expression of hyaluronan catabolizing enzymes potentially leading to an increase of high molecular weight ha in the adipose tissue, which is thought to be homeostatic and antiinflammatory. in summary, the results of this study underline the pronounced anti-inflammatory capacity of telmisartan on atherosclerosis and adipose tissue inflammation in comparison to valsartan and strongly suggest that biglycan might be an additional target of telmisartan not only concerning matrix composition of atherosclerotic lesions but also concerning the structure of adipose tissue and metabolic effects of the compound. human primary malignant cancer cells derived from peritoneal effusions of a patient with colorectal carcinoma, as assessed by comet assay. the primary cancer cells were more efficient in dsb repair than ht- cells, and their doxorubicin ic was four times higher. comparative protein expression levels showed that the primary cells had less rad and as well as less topoiiα, while ku and levels were similar. another very interesting protein is the mrn (mre -rad -nbs ) complex that initializes the phosphorylation of atm and thereby starts the signalling cascade. the newly described mrn-atm pathway inhibitor mirin interrupts mrn activity by inhibiting the exonuclease activity of mre . the toxicity of mirin in ht- cells was measured using a luminescence-based assay detecting the amount of atp, which is correlated with cellular viability. mirin did not show any toxic effects up to a concentration of µm and incubation times of hours, indicating that mirin can be used under these conditions without detrimental effects. we are currently investigating the effect of mirin on the toxicity of topoiiα inhibitors. the inhibition of dna repair may be a valuable strategy to enhance the effect of dnadamaging anticancer drugs. since tumours (even of the same entity) are not only heterogeneous, but also polyclonal, a broad selection of response modifiers of anticancer drugs would be helpful to individually enhance chemotherapeutic effectiveness. evidence has been provided that diet and environmental factors directly influence epigenetic mechanisms associated with cancer development in humans. epigenetics play an important role in the control of gene expression. epigenetic mechanisms comprise modulation in dna methylation, histone modification and non-coding rna. several polyphenols have been reported to possess histondeacetylase (hdac) inhibitory properties [ ] . histone deacetylation is generally linked to transcription repression. furthermore, hdac belongs to the group of small ubiquitin-related modifier (sumo) substrate proteins. sumoylation of hdac is associated with a modulation of its biological activity [ ] . little is known so far about the mechanism by which hdac sumoylation mediates inhibition of gene transcription. we addressed the question whether sumo e and hdac expression and whether potential hdac-sumoylation will be affected by polyphenols such as chlorogenic acid, genistein and (-)epigallocatechin- -gallate (egcg). chlorogenic acid, genistein and egcg decreased sumo e protein level in the human colon carcinoma cell line ht after h of incubation measured with western blot analysis. egcg exhibited the most pronounced effect at concentrations ≥ µm. hdac expression was also affected by these polyphenols. the direct impact of polyphenols on the hdac sumoylation is detected by co-immunoprecipitation experiments with the respective antibodies against hdac- and sumo e . these experiments are still under investigation. in conclusion, chlorogenic acid, genistein and (-)-epigallocatechin- -gallate influenced the sumo and hdac expression in vitro. in further studies the direct impact on subtract-sumoylation will be investigated. these studies contribute to a better understanding of potential chemopreventive effects of dietary polyphenols on specific epigenetic alterations may provide chemopreventive strategies for reducing cancer risk. the no/cgmp cascade is thought to be essential for penile erection. within the smooth muscle of corpus cavernosum, nitric oxide activates the no-sensitive guanylyl cyclase (no-gc) which raises the intracellular concentration of cgmp. this second messenger activates the cgmp-dependent protein kinase i (pkgi) and subsequent phosphorylation of target proteins leads to relaxation of cavernosal smooth muscle. knock out of key enzymes of the no/cgmp cascade has led to discrepant results: the deletion of pkgi in the mouse has been shown to lead to erectile dysfunction whereas mice lacking neuronal no synthase are fertile. to investigate the role of the no receptor in fertility we have generated mice lacking no-gc (gcko), a bottleneck enzyme of the no/cgmp cascade. we have shown that lack of no-gc resulted in arterial hypertension concomitant with a totally abolished no responsiveness of vascular and gastrointestinal smooth muscle. in addition, we generated a mouse line in which no-gc was specifically deleted in smooth muscle cells (sm-gcko). using these ko strains we here examined the role of no/cgmp signaling with regards to the smooth muscle relaxation of corpus cavernosum. no failed to affect corpus cavernosum from gcko in organ bath experiments: neither exogenously produced no by no donors nor endogenous no release from neurons induced by electrical field stimulation led to relaxation. similar results were observed in the corpus cavernosum of sm-gcko mice. to our surprise, the gcko animals were fertile and produced offspring albeit at a reduced rate compared to wt animals. our data show that interruption of no/cgmp signaling results in complete absence of no-induced relaxation of penile corpus cavernosum in mice and reduces the ability to produce offspring but does not abolish fertility. novel modes of invasive cell motility regulated by the formin class of actin nucleators khan j., grosse r. philipps-universität marburg, pharmakologisches institut, karl-von-frisch-str. , marburg, germany pathological invasive cell migration essentially reqires actin polymerization. formins are the largest group of rho-gtpase effectors involved in actin nucleation and assembly as well as microtubule dynamics. here we studied the role of formins in cytoskeletal regulation during homotypic cancer cell invasion. we identified the actin-dependent steps and structures involved for this process. using live cell analysis we characterize the distinct actin dynamics controlled by formin-like and rho function. the specific involvement of this signaling module will be discussed. formin-driven nuclear actin assembly controls mal/srf activity baarlink c., wang h. polymerization of actin in the cytoplasm is tightly linked to transcriptional activation of the srf cofactor mal (also known as mrtf-a) through release of actin/mal interactions and subsequent nuclear accumulation of mal. formins directly promote assembly of actin filaments thereby efficiently regulating mal-dependent transcription for cell shape, adhesion and motility. here we show that formins assemble f-actin and promote mal activation inside the mammalian nucleus. the rho-gtpase effector mdia rapidly enters the nucleus in a signal-dependent fashion and an active mdia confined to the nucleus potently promotes release of g-actin from mal to specifically activate srf. live cell imaging reveals formin-mediated nuclear actin dynamics. moreover, using actin assembly assays we find that inhibition of endogenous mdia formins controls f-actin turnover in isolated nuclear extracts. thus, formin activity is dynamically compartmentalized to the mammalian nucleus to potently regulate actindependent mrtf function. in women the placenta becomes the main source of maternal estrogens during pregnancy. placental estrogen biosynthesis is located in the syncytiotrophoblast, a syncytium that builds the main part of the placental barrier and limits the transfer of substances between the fetal and maternal compartment. since the human placenta is unable to convert cholesterol into -oh-pregnenolone, the placenta tissue highly depends on the supply of c- steroids for their conversion into c- estrogens. in contrast to lipophilic unconjugated steroids that penetrate the cell membrane passively via diffusion, circulating sulfated steroid hormones are delivered to the placenta via carrier-mediated transport, followed by their reactivation via the catalytic activity of the steroid sulfatase (sts). dheas of maternal and fetal origin contributes about equally to the placental formation of estrone (e ) and estradiol (e ), while αoh-dheas supplied by the fetus contributes to over % of placental estriol (e ) synthesis. soat, a member of the slc family with highest expression in hormone-responsive tissues such as testis, placenta, and mammary gland has been shown to transport the sulfoconjugated steroid hormones dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate (dheas), estrone sulfate (e s), and pregnenolone sulfate (pregs) [ ] . aim of this project is to investigate the role of soat for placental estrogen synthesis by means of the choriocarcinoma cell line jeg- as in vitro model for the human syncytiotrophoblast. therefore, we characterized a jeg- cell line that transformed dhea into e and αoh-dhea into e . by qrt-pcr we found expression of sts and aromatase, both essential for estrogen synthesis in these cells. upon transient transfection of soat the carrier was located in the cell membrane of transfected jeg- cells. currently we investigate the transformation of dheas of these soat-jeg- cells by lc-ms-ms. we could demonstrate transport of αoh-dheas for stably transfected soat-hek cells. in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry showed coloured syncytiotrophoblasts and vascular endothelial cells in late term placenta. in conclusion, soat-mediated transport of sulfated steroids could play a pivotal role for placental estrogen synthesis from sulfated steroid hormones. developing non-animal test systems for evaluation of toxicity was important in the past and will remain essential in the future. here we present a toxicity test using the chicken yolk sac area vasculosa (cav) of fertilized white leghorn chicken eggs [ , ] and compare it to hen's egg test on chorioallantoic membrane (het-cam) [ ] for polymer toxicity testing. fertilized chicken eggs were incubated and after h explanted shell less into sterile petri dishes. test substances were applied on the cav and the appearance of different effects (vascular lysis, haemorrhage, aggregation of blood components, lethality) was determined by light microscopy after - h (fig. ). these effects were combined to a cav test score based on the irritation score calculation used for het-cam evaluation. different polymers like poly(ethylene glycol) (peg; neutral), poly(ethylene imine) (pei; cationic) and dextran sulphate (ds; anionic), as well as guideline-conform (recommended het-cam protocol from the interagency coordination committee on the validation of alternative methods) negative ( . % nacl) and positive controls ( % sodium dodecyl sulphate (sds) and . n naoh) were investigated. additionally ld values for different cationic polymers have been determined. within the selected incubation times ( - h) , effects such as vessel lysis and blood component aggregation could be detected. additionally to het-cam, lethality as well as recovery of the cav could be observed. differences between neutral, positively and negatively charged polymers were obtained. pei showed strong vessel lysis and aggregation of blood components whereas ds and peg showed none of these effects. lethality was found to increase from peg < ds < pei and is concentration and time dependent. the results demonstrate that differences, regarding the toxicity of the used polymers, can be shown with this test. these findings in the cav test can be well correlated with already existing data. in summary, the cav test provides same data (testing control substances) and more information (recovery and lethality) compared to het-cam and could be a suitable model for toxicity testing of polymers. risk characterisation of chemicals consists of three steps ( ) hazard identification and characterisation, based on substance-specific toxicological hazard data, ( ) estimates of the level of exposure toward the substance and ( ) the comparison between the toxicologically safe level and the exposure level. in contrast to the classical risk assessment approach, the threshold of toxicological concern (ttc) approach is developed as a tool to assess the risk of substances without toxicity data. its application requires ( ) information on human exposure, for which it is essential that exposure is fully captured and ( ) knowledge of the chemical structure to assess whether the chemical is not excluded from the application of the ttc concept. instead of chemical specific no observed (adverse) effect levels (noels/noaels), the ttc approach utilises knowledge on the empirical distribution of several hundreds of noels/noaels, originally , based on toxicological testing in animals (munroe et al., ) . with the basis on noaels, the ttc concept builds on the fundamental principle of toxicology, that toxicity is a function of dose and that a dose exists, below which no adverse effects of the substance can be detected. it is assumed that exposures below this level will not result in health risks. three separate ttcs were derived (munroe et al., ) by classifying the chemicals into three toxicity classes using a decision tree based on a series of questions related to chemical structure, and on natural occurrence in food and in the body (cramer et al., ) . the ttc values are derived from empirical distribution of the noels/noaels in the class taking the th percentiles and dividing them by the default uncertainty factor of . it is assumed that the probability is very low that the unknown noael of a not tested chemical will be lower than the value of the th percentile in the distribution of the known noels/noaels. hence, at exposures below the ttc values, the probability of adverse effects on human health is considered to be very low. introduction: kibra, mainly expressed in kidney and brain tissue, is involved in brain development and memory formation as a postsynaptic scaffold protein. in podocytes, kibra is proposed to regulate cell motility as a linker between components of the cytoskeleton and polarity protein complexes (duning et al, jasn ) . furthermore, kibra has been identified as key regulator of the hippo pathway, which is involved in organ size control and tumorigenesis. in the current study, we focused on the identification of kibra gene expression regulation and functional promoter characterization. methods: serial promoter deletion constructs were generated by cloning bp of the 'flanking region of kibra into the pgl -vector system. deletion constructs were transiently transfected into human neuroblastoma cells (sh-sy y) and immortalized human kidney epithelial (ihke) cells. potential transcription factors (tfs) were investigated in cotransfection experiments. transcriptional start sites (tss) were determined by rapid amplification of 'cdna ends ( 'race) . tss utilization between cell lines was assessed by semiquantitative pcr. transcriptional activity (ta) of the kibra promoter p was separated by ~ bp into two distinct regions, promoter p a and p b. deletion constructs harbouring promoter p b were transcriptionally active only in ihke cells. 'race revealed two alternative tss in both cell lines upstream of the annotated tss (nm_ ). exclusively in ihke cells, two additional tss were detected in intron , resulting in two alternative exons. deletion constructs harbouring the putative regulatory regions (p and p ) of both exons were transcriptionally active only in ihke cells. overexpression of full length tcf l (transcription factor -like [t-cell specific, hmgbox]) resulted in a ~ -fold increase of promoter p a and intron promoter p ta. kibra gene expression is driven by a complex alternative promoter system comprising the constitutional promoter p and three alternative promoters p b, p and p . the tss utilization is cell type-specific. subsequent usage of an alternative translation start site within exon could result in truncated kibra protein isoforms. tcf l is involved in the differential kibra gene expression regulation. resulting kibra protein isoform and their cellular function will be assessed in further studies. skin absorption in vitro based on the study of human/animal skin ex vivo or reconstructed human epidermis, respectively, is an alternative method which is accepted by the oecd. guideline tg and a corresponding technical guidance document (gd ) give technical guidance how to perform valid experiments , . the requirements include integrity evaluation tests for the skin samples. different tests are proposed to ensure an exclusively use of undamaged skin. to decide which test suites best to our routine test strategy, we investigated the correlation between integrity test results and absorption profiles of various penetrants (logp range: - . - . ). finite dose experiments using rat and human skin were performed with c-labeled testosterone, caffeine, mcpa ( -chloro- -methylphenoxyacetic acid) and its -ethylhexyl-ester mcpa- ehe. for each experiment at least three of the five following integrity tests were conducted: transepidermal electrical resistance (teer), transepidermal water loss (tewl), transepidermal tritiated water flux (³h o), transepidermal absorption of methylene blue (blue) , transepidermal absorption and flux of a ³h-labeled internal standard (istd); ³h-testosterone or ³h-mannitol was used as istd. the applied radioactivity of the ³h-istd was selected to show no analytical interference with the c-penetrants. teer, tewl and ³h o represent pre-study, istd concurrent and blue post-study tests. calculated maximal permeability constants (kp) and absorbed doses (ad) of the penetrants were compared to the results of the integrity tests. individual linear regression analysis was used to evaluate the correlation the correlations varied over a wide range for all five methods and four penetrants. the best correlations in average were achieved with the istd. no inverse correlations were obtained for the istd, but partly for tewl, teer, ³h o and blue. in conclusion, the istd represents best the achieved absorption profiles of the test compounds and is based on that the most suitable integrity test for our dermal absorption studies. we will further confirm its effectiveness and generate a sufficient historical database in order to include the istd in our routine test protocol. investigation of mirna expression and dna methylation in focal and non-focal brain tissue of therapy-resistant epilepsy patients haenisch s. background: resistance to anticonvulsants affects one third of all epilepsy patients. limited bioavailability of the drug at the target site caused by increased expression of efflux transporters on the blood brain barrier or alterations of target genes are potential mechanisms for therapy resistance. however, these mechanisms alone cannot completely explain the observed resistance and it is likely that multifactorial alterations lead to pharmacoresistance. there is increasing evidence that expression of micrornas probably caused by dna modifications is deregulated in many neuronal diseases. we hypothesize that mirna regulation of target genes is involved in drug resistance in epilepsy. methods: hippocampal focal and cortical non-focal brain tissue samples from patients diagnosed with mts (mesial temporal sclerosis) who underwent neurosurgery have been screened for mirna expression using taqman low density arrays. in silico approaches for both a hypothesis-based (efflux-transporter and target gene) as well as a hypothesis-free approach were used to identify potential phenotype-relevant target genes. using the program r (bioconductor) a mann-whitney-u test was performed to compare mirna expression between brain regions. pyrosequencing was performed to investigate methylation status '-upstream of dna regions encoding for selected candidate mirnas. results: out of mirnas, were detected in both tissue types. the expression of one mirna was . fold higher (q= . ) and another was . fold lower (q= . ) in the hippocampus relative to the cortex. evidence could be found that down-regulation of the latter is possibly caused by hypermethylation of '-flanking region of its encoding dna locus. bioinformatic analysis has identified eight genes important for neuronal regulation and signal transmission (e.g. sox , mecp , bsn), as well as one abc effluxtransporter, as potential targets for these differentially regulated mirnas. conclusion: differential regulation of two mirnas could contribute to an altered function of several genes resulting in an imbalance between neuronal excitation and inhibition that is independent from mechanisms presently targeted by anticonvulsants. this work was supported by a fellowship from dfg and nih grant gm . recently, it has been reported that human b cells express and secrete the cytotoxic protease granzyme b (grb) after the combined stimulation of the il- -and the b cell receptors. grb produced by b cells is enzymatically active and b cells deliver grb to sensitive cancer cell lines, thereby inducing apoptosis. to date, there is little experimental evidence on the mechanisms involved in grb expression, or its function in b cell biology. as experimental transgenic murine systems should enable us insights into these issues, we assayed for grb in c bl/ b cells using an extensive array of physiologically relevant stimuli, but were unable to detect either grb expression or its proteolytic activity, even when antigen specific transgenic b cell receptors were cross-linked. similar results were also obtained with b cells from dba/ , cba or balb/c mice. in vivo, infection with either influenza virus or murine γ-herpesvirus induced the expected expression of grb in cytotoxic t lymphocytes, but not in b cell populations. we also investigated a possible role of grb on the humoral immune response to np-klh, but grb-deficient mice produced normal amounts of antibody with typical affinity maturation and heightened secondary response, demonstrating conclusively the redundancy of grb for antibody responses. our results highlight the complex evolutionary differences that have shaped the immune systems of mice and humans and demonstrate the need to develop novel in vivo systems to study human humoral immune responses. investigations of the cholinergic neurotransmitter system in dyt mice hamann m. early-onset torsion dystonia is an autosomal dominant inherited movement disorder associated with the dyt gene defect with deletion of a glutamic acid residue in the protein torsina. despite the gene defect, the pathophysiology is poorly understood. animal models can help to understand the underlying mechanisms and thereby to develop new therapeutic strategies. sharma et al. ( , j. neurosci. [ ] , - ) initially described a transgenic mouse model (dyt mice) with overexpression of mutant torsina. previous studies in these mice pointed to alterations in the cholinergic system. to investigate the functional relevance of these in-vitro findings, we carried out pharmacological in-vivo experiments and determined the density of striatal cholinergic interneurons as well as the expression of choline acetyltransferase in different brain regions. the acute intraperitoneal administration of the cholinomimetic drug pilocarpine ( , and mg/kg) as well as a long-term treatment over days ( mg/kg/d) did not induce pronounced effects in dyt mice compared to wildtype controls. the higher incidence of epileptic seizures in dyt mice compared to controls after repeated local striatal applications of pilocarpine ( and µg/ . µl/hemisphere) let presume an altered synaptic plasticity in dyt mice. the immunohistochemical investigations revealed a moderately reduced density of striatal cholinergic interneurons in the dorsomedial subregion of dyt mice compared to wildtype controls, while significant differences in other striatal subregions were not detected. western blot analysis did not show clear differences in the expression of choline acetyltransferase between dyt and wildtype control mice. these results indicate that the cholinergic system seems not to play a key role in this line of dyt mice. ongoing receptor autoradiographic analysis of binding to different muscarinic receptors subtypes have to further clarify the existence of possible alterations within the cholinergic system of these dyt mice. inhibitors direct against cell cycle-regulatory kinases are being tested in clinical trials as anti-proliferative agents. thus, the atp-competitive kinase inhibitor pd which inhibits cdk and cdk is currently tested in patients with solid tumors such as glioma. we found that pd suppressed il- -induced expression of il- suggesting that cdk or cdk may have unknown anti-inflammatory properties. to study the effects of cdk on the il- -signaling network, we established a bidirectional doxycyline-inducible system to express a constitutively active mutant of cdk , cdk s p, in asynchronized hela cells. cdk -expressing cells were identified by gfp which was expressed from the same promoter, isolated by laser-microdissection and analysed for mrna expression using a down-scaled rt-qpcr assay. compared to the uninduced state, cdk s p enhanced il- -induced il- and il- mrna expression. moreover, shrna-mediated suppression of endogenous cdk confirmed a role of this kinase in regulation of maximal il- -induced gene expression of il- . these data also revealed that the contribution of cdk to inflammatory gene expression is highest in g , when activity of endogenous cdk is activated by d-type cyclins. these findings were corroborated in hela cells expressing fluorescent ubiquitin-dependent cell cycle indicator (fucci) proteins. hela-fucci cells from g , g /s, g or mitotic states were isolated by laser-microdissection and analyzed by rt-qpcr for tnf-inducible gene expression. stable knockdown of cdk in hela fucci or inhibition by pd suppressed inducible il- expression. microarray experiments identified many additional genes that required active cdk for maximal il- -or tnf-inducible gene expression. we also found that cdk co-immunoprecipitated with p nf-κb, colocalized with p in the nucleus and was recruited together with the p subunit to the proximal il- promoter as assessed by chip and re-chip experiments. collectively, these results suggest an unexpected control of inflammatory gene expression through a classical cell cycle regulatory pathway. these results also imply that pharmacological targeting of cdks may have effects and side-effects on the immune system in addition to inhibition of cell cycle progression. trp channels form a heterogeneous family of calcium-permeable channels, which play major roles in physiological functions ranging from sensory reception to cellular signal transduction. members of the trpc subfamily (classic transient receptor potential channels) are downstream targets of hormone receptors. of particular interest is the biological role of trpc channels. they are directly activated by diacylglycerol due to phospholipase c-driven signalling pathways which are involved in smooth muscle contractility, neuronal plasticity, keratinocyte differentiation and renal function. their impact in renal function became evident from analyzing patients suffering from familial forms of focal segmental glomerolusclerosis (fsgs) which could be linked to trpc mutations. since the first descriptions at least different pathogenic mutations have been identified in humans to cause fsgs. in order to study the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of trpc mutations, we have analysed all mutated trpc channels known to date heterologously expressed cells. one set of mutations showed a gain-of-function phenotype which has been previously suggested to cause an increased intracellular calcium load and subsequent cell death. hence, gain of function mutations fit to the current paradigm of fsgs pathophysiology. however, another set of mutations found in the patients showed a loss-of-function phenotype. our results enable a change in the current paradigm for the role of trpc in renal pathophysiology and may provide a basis for our understanding of the pathophysiology of loss-of-function mutations in familial focal segmental glomerolusclerosis. karlsruher institut für technologie (kit) institut für angewandte biowissenschaften, abteilung lebensmittelchemie und toxikologie, adenauerring a, karlsruhe, germany risk assessment for genotoxic carcinogens is an important challenge in toxicology. even though manifold attempts have been made to substitute carcinogens and to reduce exposures, their complete elimination appears to be not possible. thus, low concentrations of known or suspected genotoxic carcinogens are present at workplaces, in the environment and in food. in order to deal with this situation and to set priorities for risk management, different concepts have been established such as the alara principle (as low as reasonably achievable) and the margin of exposure (moe), based on the ratio between concentrations being carcinogenic in experimental animals and the actual exposure of humans for example via foodstuff. while usually linear doseresponse-relationships have been used as default assumption, analytical methods are now available to assess the induction and repair of dna lesions on low exposure conditions, including environmental background exposure, and to relate the extent of exposure-induced dna lesions to endogenous dna damage. this may be an important prerequisite to establish health-based limit values for selected genotoxic carcinogens. within this workshop, different examples will be discussed and research need will be identified. dendritic cells from h r-deficient mice lose their ability to properly stimulate t lymphocytes hartwig c., seifert r., neumann d. mhh pharmakologie, carl-neuberg str. , hannover, germany the incidence of allergic airway diseases is increasing throughout the world, especially in western countries. although histamine (ha) is found at high concentrations in asthmatic lungs, a role for ha in bronchial asthma is still a neglected topic in clinical research. in particular, the capacity of ha to modulate the underlying immune reaction is far from being understood. the histamine h -receptor (h r) is involved in acute inflammation and th cytokine production. consequently, we intended to analyze the role of h r in a murine th lymphocyte transfer-based model of asthma. specifically the ability of h r expressed on dendritic cells (dcs) to modulate t cell function was analyzed. ova-specific cd + t cells were polarized in vitro under th -favoring conditions with ova peptide-pulsed dcs, obtained either from wild-type or h r -/mice. analysis of the polarized t cells after in vitro restimulation revealed a marked decrease of il- production in t cells polarized in the presence of h r -/-dcs compared to those polarized in the presence of wild-type dcs. thus, on dcs, the h r is essential for proper stimulation of spleen t cells and for directing their polarization towards a th phenotype. the transfer of in vitro polarized t cells into recipient mice and subsequent provocation elicited an asthma-like disease. the h r on dcs not only affects in vitro polarization of t cells, but also the in vivo function of the obtained polarized t cells. a parameter indicating allergic inflammation is the enhanced influx of inflammatory immune cells into the lung tissue, mainly driven by eosinophils, which are virtually absent in non-asthmatics. when analyzing the number of eosinophils, a dramatic difference due to the polarizing conditions of t cells occurs. in bal fluids of mice that received t cells polarized in the presence of wild-type dcs, about % eosinophils were detected. in contrast, the transfer of t cells polarized in the presence of h r -/-dcs yielded only about - % eosinophils in bal fluids. in summery, the h r on dcs plays an important role for t cell polarization and consequently affects the allergic reaction during sensitization. since the lack of the h r on dcs reduced their ability to stimulate proper th polarization of cd + t cells, we conclude that ha via the h r significantly affects the manifestation of asthmatic inflammation. antioxidant polyphenols and their effects on nrf (skn- ) signalling in a cell culture system and the model organism c. elegans havermann s., wätjen w. heinrich-heine-universität düsseldorf institut für toxikologie, p.o. box , düsseldorf, germany oxidative stress has been connected with a variety of diseases, (e.g. alzheimer`s and parkinson´s disease), cancer and ageing over the last years. certain polyphenols were shown to have an antioxidant capacity as well as being able to activate the protective nrf signalling pathway. compared to direct radical scavengers modulators have the advantage of building up a permanent defense against oxidative insults whereas scavengers do not protect any more after consumption or may even cause stress due to redox cycling. we have employed cell culture based assays (dcf, western blot, gfp reporters) to analyse the effects of polyphenols. further we tested the coumpounds in vivo in the nematode c. elegans where skn- is the nrf homologue. baicalein and caffeic acid phenethylester (cape) protected cells and the nematode from ros accumulation after application of stress (shown by dcf assay). activation of nrf signalling is correlated with translocation of the transcription factor into the nucleus. in both systems nrf ::gfp accumulation in the nuclei could be observed after incubation with baicalein (fluorescence microscopy). but while cape is a potent activator of nrf in cells, it has no effect on skn- localisation. further the effect on the nrf protein amount was investigated by western blot analysis. the expression of target genes can be investigated by differing means: while pcr methods and western blotting are standard for in vitro studies, the vast number of available gfp reporter strains offers opportunities for research using c. elegans. we have performed congruent assays in a cell culture system and the model organism c. elegans to compare antioxidative capacity and effects of polyphenols on nrf signalling. therefore, depending on the substance tested, c. elegans is a suitable model system to investigate effects of natural compounds in an organism. being associated with adverse health effects, the human exposure to dehp is subject to concern. quantifying the population's exposure and determining the contributions of different exposure routes is a key task of environmental health risk assessment. the study presented comprises a review of the available data on dehp levels in foods, consumer products, and house dust. extensive survey data, e.g. from the current national nutrition survey ii and the eu rapex system were processed for modeling the exposure by the oral, inhalative and dermal path of the population in germany. the study also included analytical analyses of dehp levels in selected foods and consumer goods (incl. migration rates for mouthing). probabilistic techniques allowed elucidating the exposure's variation and the relevance of different routes. mean exposure estimates for german children and adults to dehp are and µg/(kg d), resp. for children, food accounts for % of the total exposure, followed by mouthing ( %) and house dust ( %). the adult exposure is almost entirely ( %) due to food. as dietary exposure is a result from concentration and consumption, foods exhibiting high contamination e.g. butter ( %) and dressings (mayonnaise) ( %) as well as highly consumed foods e.g. bread and bakery ( %) and vegetables ( , %) contributed significantly. the mean estimate of children's dehp exposure via mouthing revealed , µg/(kg d). high exposures were estimated ( th percentile) up to , µg/(kg d). on average people in germany are exposed to dehp below the current tdi of µg/(kg d). however, individual exposures exceeding the tdi still cannot be excluded. current data on dehp and other plasticizers in foods are scarce, which warrants broader monitoring. our findings highly facilitate further exposure modeling focusing on dehp substitutes and risks of combined exposure. this study was funded by the federal ministry for the environment, nature conservation and nuclear safety in the frame of the environmental research plan (umweltforschungsplan, förderkennzeichen (ufoplan) ). on the basis of the available measurements of dehp, the exposure assessment has been focused on food categories characterising a selection of the most important food groups covering all major food classes of the german population. based on an extensive literature survey, the analysis considered the available data of dehp measurements in food, as well as the official german food control data taken from the national food consumption survey. the high amount of considered data allowed the consideration of several exposure assessment tiers (deterministic and probabilistic by using monte carlo simulation). a quantitative evaluation of the uncertainties of the estimate of the food categories groups has been performed by means of a sensitivity analysis by using the methodology proposed within the who ipcs guidance document of characterising and communication uncertainty in exposure analysis. qualitative uncertainty analysis (tier ) was applied to determine the most important sources of uncertainty, i.e. concentration of dehp in all food categories. the probabilistic monte carlo simulation (tier ) was then used to rank the cumulative probability distributions of the exposure assessments of food categories on the basis of the food categories that appear to dominate. sensitivity analyses were applied to prove the impact correlation of food groups for uncertainties. by a scenario based concept, the aggregation of the food groups to groups has been evaluated, as well as the sensitivities by characterising particular scenarios. for this purpose, particular "meals" have been described as fixed combined scenarios and. the aggregation leads to a considerable higher exposure estimate which can be explained by the combination of high contaminated foods with others of high consumption. the evaluation confirms the considerable role of possibly high contaminated foods e.g. fats, or mayonnaise. the evaluation shows that quantitative probabilistic sensitivity analysis is a suitable and pragmatic tool for uncertainty analysis in exposure assessment. the transcription factor camp response element (cre)-binding protein (creb) plays a critical role in regulating gene expression in response to activation of the campdependent signaling pathway, which is implicated in the pathophysiology of heart failure. we observed creb knock-out cardiomyocytes to be larger than wildtype cardiomyocytes (cell area in µm ; mean±sem; creb-ko ± vs. wt ± ; n= / cells, n= mice, p< . vs. ctr.). the nuclear factor of activated t-cells c , nfatc , is another transcription factor involved in the development of heart failure and also a known positive regulator of hypertrophy. hence, we investigated whether inhibition of the cre-dependent transcriptional activation has an impact on the nfatc signaling pathway. we first studied the effects of an overexpression of a dominant negative creb mutant (dncreb) or of nfatc on the activity of a nfat-dependent model promoter in a permanent cell line. overexpression of dncreb evoked an . ± . fold increase of the nfat model promoter activity (n= ; n= transfections), but had no impact on kv . promoter activity which is known to be regulated by nfatc ( . ± . fold; n= ; n= ; p< . vs. ctr.). nfatc overexpression led to a . ± . fold increase of the nfat-dependent model promoter activity (n= ; n= ) and to an inhibition of kv . promoter activity ( . ± . fold; n= ; n= ; p< . vs. ctr.). we conclude that creb is a negative regulator of nfat-mediated gene transcription and that activation of nfatc might contribute to the observed hypertrophy of creb-ko cardiomyocytes. neuroleptika der perazin-klasse sind potente modulatoren des p x -rezeptors -perazine-type neuroleptic drugs are potent modulators of p x receptors hempel c., nörenberg w., urban n., sobottka h., schaefer m. universität leipzig rudolf-boehm-institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, härtelstraße - , leipzig, germany p x receptors belong to a family of atp-gated, non-selective cation channels, which play an important role in immune cell activation, inflammatory hyperalgesia and neuropathic pain. they differ from other p x family members by the low atp affinity, and by the ability to form or recruit dilated pores in the sustained presence of atp. owing to its involvement in many diseased states, p x is a promising target for pharmacological intervention. accordingly, p x blockers are currently tested in phase ii clinical trials. in an attempt to identify p x -modulating properties of approved drugs or natural compounds, we performed a medium-throughput screen, using an appropriate compound library (spectrum collection) and a stably transfected hek hp x cell line. with ic values of - µm, the tricyclic antipsychotics prochlorperazine and trifluoperazine showed a high potency and efficacy to block the atp ( mm)-triggered increases in the intracellular ca + concentration ([ca + ]i) that was mediated by human p x (hp x ). the closely related phenothiazine-class neuroleptic drugs, such as chlorpromazine or triflupromazine did not have an appreciable effect on hp x mediated ca + influx. whole-cell inward currents, measured at - mv, were blocked by more than % by - µm prochlorperazine. the inhibitory effects of perazines developed within about ms, hinting to a direct mode of action by binding to the p x protein. prochlorperazine added intracellularly via the patch pipette did not substitute for the extracellularly applied drug, indicating that its binding site is accessible from the extracellular side. in addition, both compounds blocked yo-pro- uptake when preincubated before p x stimulation with mm atp or when applied subsequent to the agonist. interestingly, when added to a hek cell line expressing the rat p x , perazines potentiated the atp-induced increase in [ca + ]i. measurements in human monocyte-derived macrophages confirmed the ability of prochlorperazine and trifluoperazine to inhibit atp-evoked increases in [ca + ]i, changes in yo-pro- permeability and whole cell currents. taken together, we conclude that perazine-type neuroleptics impede on p x activity in a species-specific manner, presumably by binding to an extracellularly accessible binding site of recombinant or natively expressed p x . similarly, pre-treatment with lov also lowered dox-induced stabilisation of p and phosphorylation of chek and sapk/jnk. while lov had no influence on ir-induced initial dna damage formation in huvec and rat cardiomyoblasts (h c ), it decreased dox-and eto-induced phosphorylation of histone h ax, which is a surrogate marker of dna-double strand breaks. this indicates that lov specifically protects against the genotoxicity of topoisomerase type ii poisons. in an acute and subacute balb/c mouse model lov protected from ir-induced toxicity. this effect rested on inhibition of pro-inflammatory and pro-fibrotic processes as measured via quantification of mrna levels of il , ctgf and tnfα. the same was true for dox-induced toxicity, i.e. heart and liver damage. similar to the in vitro experiments, dox-induced hepatic dna-damage was attenuated by lov treatment. overall, liver and heart toxicity were reduced by lov as mirrored by the serum levels of gldh/gpt and ctn-i, respectively. both in liver and in heart we observed collagen rich perivascular areas following dox treatment. under situation of lov-co-treatment these areas occurred more rarely and were less pronounced, pointing to a lowered level of fibrosis. pcr-array-based mrna analyses showed inhibitory effects of lov on dox-triggered expression of genes involved in oxidative stress response, drug transport, dna repair, cell cycle progression and cell death. for instance, up-regulation of p , wee , cjun/fos and hmox- following dox administration was attenuated by lov. altogether, we suggest that including lov in current cancer therapeutic regimen might widen the therapeutic window of anticancer therapeutics by lowering normal tissue damage. the p values. in addition, array data underwent cluster analysis for identification of substantial differences of gene regulation among the three different types of biopsies. results: of particular interest in our study was the expression of genes coding for metabolism and transport proteins. therefore genes from the significant differentially regulated genes, were selected for the qrt-pcr analysis. genes coding for abcb and abcg transport proteins showed higher expression in the jejunal tissue one year after surgery compared to the duodenal tissue (fold change . and . ). moreover, cyp a mrna involved in metabolic processes is higher expressed in postoperative jejunum than in the jejunum tissue taken during the surgery (fold change . ). in conclusion roux-en-y gastric bypass operation leeds a change of mucosal gene expression profile in the jejunum during one year. there was also a significant differential gene expression between the original duodenum and jejunum one year after surgery. these results give strong evidence that jejunum not exposed to pancreatic but only to gastric fluids may change its gene regulation. background. numerous genome-wide association studies (gwas) identified polymorphisms located in transporter genes such as slc a , abcg , npt , and urat as predicitive for the serum levels of urate . these genes encode membrane proteins expressed in the apical membrane of human kidney proximal tubule cells and are assumed to facilitate tubular exchange of urate , , , . importantly several single nucleotide polymorphisms (snp) located in vicinity of slc a have been identified as highly associated with serum urate levels. little is known about the transcriptional regulation of slc a . therefore, the aim of our study was to investigate which sequences in the slc a gene harbour ciselements and regulate its gene expression. we also asked whether intronic snps influence gene expression at the transcriptional level. methods and results. performing dual luciferase reporter gene assays we found gene regulating modules in the slc a gene. dna from human kidney samples was then genotyped for rs being part of this region. next total slc a mrna-expression levels of the samples were determined using real-time quantitative rt-pcr assay. male samples with two minor alleles of snp rs showed lower slc a mrna levels than samples with the wild type alleles. the effect was not seen in females. reporter gene constructs with either minor or major allele of rs were then used in luciferase assays, however showing no significant difference in activity. furthermore mrna-expression levels of other urate transporter genes were determined in kidney samples. after linear regression a positive correlation of mrna-expression of slc a , urat , npt , and oat , respectively was observed. conclusion. our data suggest that the slc a snps rs and rs might influence slc a mrna-level without controlling the transcriptional activity. it needs to be elucidated whether those snps alter mrna stability. however, the mrna coexpression of slc a and other urate transporter might be attributed to a common gene regulating pathway of an "transportosome" controlling urate homeostasis. sulfotransferases mediate the bioactivation of methyleugenol to a reactive sulfate ester binding to dna in vitro and in vivo herrmann k. methyleugenol (me) is a secondary metabolite occurring in many herbs and spices. although me is hepatocarcinogenic in rodents, standard genotoxicity tests were negative. this may be due to the lack of critical activating enzymes responsible for the terminal bioactivation of me to a genotoxicant. me is initially hydroxylated by cytochrome p enzymes yielding ´-hydroxymethyleugenol ( ´-ohme). this alcohol can be further activated by sulfotransferases (sults) to an electrophilic sulfate ester that can be easily attacked by dna. the dna adducts formed could lead to mutation and further carcinogenicity observed in animals. the aim of the present study was to clarify whether individual human (h) and murine sult forms are involved in the activation of me to a genotoxicant. in order to identify critical sults, mutagenicity tests including bacteria expressing different sult forms were conducted. (±)- ´-ohme (separated into its enantiomers) served as test compound. we could show that hsult a , standing out due to its high expression level in many tissues, can efficiently activate both enantiomers even at low concentrations. furthermore, dna adduct formation in hsult a -proficient and sult-deficient bacteria was examined after incubation with µm of (+)-or (-)- ´-ohme. for selective detection and quantification of me-derived ´-deoxyadenosine (da) and ´-deoxyguanosine (dg) adducts we developed a sensitive tandem mass spectrometry method including stable isotope dilution analysis. adduct formation was only observed in bacteria expressing hsult a . the concentration dependence of adduct formation in hsult a -proficient bacteria was examined for (+)- ´-ohme. both adducts turned out to be concentrationdependent. to check the extent and organ specificity of adduct formation in vivo we administered mg/kg bw (±)- ´-ohme (i.p.) to mice carrying the hsult a / a gene cluster. mice getting only the vehicle served as controls. animals were sacrificed and dna from eight organs was extracted. by means of tandem mass spectrometry adducts were measured and quantified. da and dg adduct formation was observed in all tissues studied, but not in untreated animals. furthermore, adduct levels were higher than in experiments using wild-type mice. altogether, we herein could show that sulfo conjugation leads to bioactivation of me to a dna-binding intermediate in vitro and in vivo. this work was financially supported by bundesinstitut für risikobewertung. objective: the soluble adenylyl cyclase (sac) activates the na + /k + -atpase in renal epithelial collecting duct cells. nuclear sac constitutes a functional complex with camp response element binding protein (creb), suggesting a more general role of sac in overall gene regulation. we determined the chromatin binding capacities of sac at cre sequences and its influence on genes, which play a role in aldosterone signalling. furthermore, we functionally characterised expression relevant promoter portions of sac and the influence of aldosterone and camp mediated signalling pathways on sac gene regulation. design and methods: in vascular endothelial cells (ea.hy ) and in human kidney cell lines (hek t; ihke), we performed chromation immunoprecipitation (chip) assay with antibodies against sac and creb. we conducted transfection with a cre luciferase reporter vector and sac promoter constructs, following treatment with sac inhibitors and aldosterone. total rna of ea.hy cells, which were treated with sac inhibitors and aldosterone, was isolated and subsequently analysed by real-time pcr for expression of genes involved in aldosterone signalling. in vivo binding of sac at cre motifs was shown using cre consensus sequences in chip experiments. specific pharmacological inhibition of sac led to a significant decrease of transcriptional activity of the cre control vector in endothelial and kidney cell lines. furthermore, we were able to show the different effects of sac on the expression of downstream targets of aldosterone signalling, e.g. mineralocorticoid receptor and na + /k + -atpase alpha and beta and sac itself. regulation of sac itself is mediated by two different promoter portions, which are influenced by aldosterone and inhibition of sac and differentially accessed in kidney and endothelial cells. sac has transcriptional trans-acting properties as it interacts with cre sites and potentially influences the expression of genes, which play a role in aldosterone signalling. transcription of sac is regulated via aldosterone and camp. the location of promoter ta is cell type-and stimulation-specific. the role of the sodium-calcium exchanger (ncx ) in cardiac pacemaking herrmann s., stieber j., ludwig a. friedrich-alexander-universität erlangen-nürnberg institut für experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie, fahrstrasse , erlangen, germany the mammalian heart is driven by the sinoatrial node, the primary cardiac pacemaker. the unique feature of sinoatrial node (sn) cells is the ability to generate a spontaneous diastolic depolarization that periodically initiates action potentials which set the heart rhythm. the molecular origin of this cardiac pacemaker activity is still a matter of debate. recent findings point to a coordinated interplay between intracellular ca + -cycling processes and plasma membrane-localized ion channels which determines the origin, periodicity and rate modulation of pacemaker potentials. in this study, we investigated the contribution of the cardiac sodium-calcium exchanger (ncx ) to pacemaking. ncx is a key sarcolemmal protein for the maintenance of calcium homeostasis in the heart. it was speculated that the membrane depolarizing current incx, whose activity is dependent on intracellular ca + -fluctuations, represents a main determinant of the spontaneous diastolic depolarization. we used an inducible and sinoatrial node-specific cre-transgene to delete ncx in the murine pacemaker system. the successful creation of a cardiac pacemaking and conduction system specific ncx knockout (cpncx ko) was demonstrated by transcript quantification as well as immunofluorescence experiments. telemetric ecg recordings of cpncx ko displayed a distinct cardiac phenotype. mutant animals were deeply bradycardic and lost their capability of maintaining a stable heart beat as demonstrated by various ecg abnormalities like sn arrhythmia, sn pauses, av block and ventricular tachycardia. analysis of the spontaneous activity of isolated sn preparations showed a slower and arrhythmic contraction rate of the mutant tissues strips confirming that the bradycardia and arrhythmia induced by deletion of ncx results from a slower and arrhythmic intrinsic pacemaker activity. a battery of experiments using different heart rate lowering as well as increasing drugs revealed an altered heart rate modulation in cpncx ko animals as compared to controls. in conclusion, these initial results establish ncx as a major contributor to cardiac pacemaking. a wide variety of contaminants are ingested through food, among them the procarcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon benzo[a]pyrene (bp) which is resorbed and partially metabolized in the enterocytes of the small intestine. previous in vitro studies revealed that bp phenols are excreted as phase ii metabolites including bp glucuronides and bp sulfates. this export is mediated by the breast cancer resistance protein (bcrp/abcg ). the ultimate carcinogenic phase i bp metabolite anti-bp- , dihydrodiol- , -epoxide (bpde) can be detoxified by glutathione conjugate formation catalyzed by various glutathione s-transferases. in the present study, differentiated human intestinal caco- cells were used as a model for the human small intestine to investigate the detoxification of bpde and the subsequent transport of the stereoisomeric glutathione conjugates in the presence of an inhibitor (acivicin) of the glutathione-cleaving enzyme gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (ggt) at the surface of the cells. the results indicate that the glutathione conjugates of bpde are formed and excreted mainly to the apical and to a minor extent to the basolateral side of the polarized caco- monolayer. to stimulate the transport rate several inducers known to enhance gene expression of xenobiotic-metabolizing enzymes as well as transport proteins were used (quercetin, oltipraz, butyrate). however, solely oltipraz substantially increased the efflux of bpde glutathione conjugates after inhibition of ggt. inhibition studies revealed that the multidrug resistance-associated proteins (mrps/abccs) are involved in the transport of the bpde glutathione conjugates. stable abcc , abcc and abcc knockdown cell lines were generated allowing to demonstrate that abcc mediates the basolateral, abcc the apical excretion of the bpde glutathione conjugates. in conclusion, the ultimate carcinogen bpde is detoxified via glutathione conjugation and subsequently excreted by caco- cells in both apical and basolateral directions. .this finding is equivalent to a transport into the feces as well as blood system in the in vivo situation. signaling via irag regulates store operated calcium entry (soce) in aortic vsmc hieke b., hüttner j., schlossmann j. university of regensburg department of pharmacology and toxicology, universitätsstr. , regensburg, germany the mechanisms involved in the activation of store operated calcium entry (soce) through depletion of intracellular stores and their regulation are not yet fully understood. we examined the effect of inositoltriphosphate-receptor associated cgmp-kinase substrate (irag) on soce. aortic vascular smooth muscle cells (vsmc) from wild type (wt) and irag-knock-out (ko) mice were loaded with the calcium indicator fura -am and soce was measured as a change in the intracellular calcium concentration. in experiments with vsmc from wt mice soce was attenuated by the application of -br-cgmp. this effect was not observed in vsmc isolated from irag-ko mice. these differences in the strength of the soce-signal were abolished by the replacement of extracellular sodium with n-methyl-d-glucamine. the observed sodium dependence of the soce regulation via irag suggests, that an alternated sodium conductance might be responsible to some extent for the differences detected in wt and irag-ko vsmc. as a change in sodium conductance might result in a changed membrane potential we tried to track these changes with the flipr membrane potential assay kit while executing the soce protocol with and without -br-cgmp. no significant differences in membrane potential could be detected in the various stages of soce. in conclusion, our results indicate that irag exhibits a dual action on calcium regulation as it inhibits not only the intracellular calcium release but also the extracellular calcium influx through soce. induction of the icer promoter in vascular smooth muscle cells hildebrandt i. tokyo metropolitan institute of gerontology, tokyo japan several transcription factor isoforms are encoded by the crem (camp response element modulator) gene. one prominent isoform is the inducible camp early repressor (icer), which acts as a transcriptional repressor on so called camp responsive elements (cres) in its target gene promoters. the icer mrna expression is regulated by an intronic promoter of the crem gene. in vascular smooth muscle cells (vsmcs) crem/icer is involved in the regulation of cell proliferation and apoptosis with physiological consequences in vivo. for instance crem-knockout mice, in which none of the known isoforms can be expressed, exhibit an increased neointima formation after carotid ligation as well as an increased atherosclerotic plaque formation after high fat diet on an apoe background. these observations were associated with an increased proliferation rate in isolated crem deficient vsmcs. on this background we wanted to clarify the specific role of icer isoforms in the vasculature. in first experiments we examined the inducibility of icer in primary vsmcs and smooth muscle cell lines. reporter luciferase assays showed that the activity of the icer promoter is induced at the maximum of fourteen fold after hours of stimulation with forskolin (fsk) in immortalized rat vsmcs ( . ± . ; n= from isolations). in a r rat smooth muscle cells the icer promoter showed a maximum stimulation of . ± . fold after two hours of fsk stimulation (n= from isolations). these pilot experiments showed that the icer promoter is inducible in vsmcs by camp dependent pathways. further experiments have to be carried out to elucidate the role of icer in the vascular system for example by stimulation of primary vsmcs and analysis of icer knockout mice. (supported by the dfg) overexpression of transmembrane channel-like proteins (tmcs) uncouples receptor-mediated calcium mobilisation hill k., urban n., straub i., schaefer m. universität leipzig -universitätsmedizin rudolf boehm-institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, härtelstr. - , leipzig, germany the family of transmembrane channel-like proteins (tmcs) consist of members (tmc -tmc ) all tmc genes are predicted to encode transmembrane proteins with at least six membrane-spanning helices. mutations of tmc cause deafness in human and mice whereas tmc and tmc (also referred to as ever and ) are linked to epidermodysplasia verruciformis (ev), a skin disorder, which is characterised by an enhanced susceptibility towards cutanous infections by human papillomaviruses. the cell biological and physiological functions of tmc proteins still remain elusive. we have overexpressed tmc and tmc in hek cells to get insights into their physiological function. all tmcs were located within the endoplasmic reticulum (er) after overexpression of yfp or cfp-tagged constructs. ratiometric calcium imaging revealed that after overexpression of tmc or tmc , stimulation of gq-coupled receptors with carbachol and atp resulted in a greatly reduced amount of calcium release from the er. moreover, challenging tmc -or tmc -expressing cells with the serca pump inhibitor thapsigargin was also not followed by a release of er-based calcium within the cell. to test whether the lack of calcium release was caused by a reduced calcium content within the er, we investigated calcium dynamics within the er using an er-targeted fret-based calcium indicator (d er cameleon). the experiments revealed that the amount of calcium within the er was reduced upon overexpression of tmc or tmc . recently, it has been reported that tmc and tmc might influence intracellular zinc distribution in human keratinocytes. we could confirm the presence of tmc and tmc mrna in a human keratinocytes cell line (hacat). upon overexpression of tmc , hacat cells revealed the same phenotype as described above for the hek cells with an uncoupling of the receptor-mediated calcium mobilisation due to a depletion of the er calcium store. the mechanism by which overexpression of tmc proteins causes a reduced calcium concentration within the er remains unclear. considering that the presumed topology of the tmc proteins distantly resembles those of other ion channel superfamilies such as anoctamins, one might speculate that a conductance through the tmc protein itself leads to a calcium leak from the er. terahertz radiation is defined as radiation between . thz and thz. a number of applications are currently being developed using radiation in this frequency range. these applications will lead to exposure of the general public, making it very important to study potential effects on biological systems. historically, only a few studies on effects caused by terahertz radiation have been conducted because of the lack of suitable generators and detectors. during the last decade, a number of studies on effects caused by radiation with frequencies around ghz have been published. the present study investigated the genotoxic potential of terahertz radiation at three different frequencies, . thz, . thz and . thz. two skin cell types were used, primary human dermal fibroblasts (hdf) and a keratinocyte cell line (hacat). the cells were irradiated applying different exposure times and different power intensities. two genotoxicity tests were applied: the comet assay quantifies dna strand breaks as well as alkali-labile sites whereas the micronucleus test quantifies chromosomal damage. all experiments were performed and evaluated under blinded conditions as three independent replicate experiments. positive (mms-treated) and negative (untreated, sham-exposed) controls were included. in the comet assay no dna damage was observed as a consequence of the exposure under all experimental conditions. the same was true for the chromosomal damage investigated with the micronucleus test. the latter finding was particularly interesting for the experiments at . thz, because this type of radiation had been reported to cause mitotic disturbances. therefore these experiments were extended, applying higher power intensities and longer exposure periods. also with these modifications, no genomic damage was observed in the form of micronucleus formation. all in all, terahertz radiation did not induce genomic damage under the applied experimental conditions. this result is in line with published findings on genotoxicity of low-frequency terahertz radiation around . thz. the question, why the reported mitotic disturbances do not lead to manifest genomic damage remains open and requires further research. introduction: tea flavonoids derived from camomile and green tea such as apigenin and epigallocatechin gallate (egcg) can inhibit intestinal neoplasia. recurrences of adenomas and cancers were reduced in patients with resected colorectal cancer by treatment with tea bioflavonoids after tumor operation [ ] . to clarify the biomolecular pathway for suppression of neoplasia we investigated the anti-inflammatory effect of a nutritional supplement flavo natin® (fn) which had been used in the clinical study on tertiary tumor prevention and of egcg in a colon tumor cell line. the aim of our study was to investigate if tea flavonoids are capable to suppress the inflammatory markers produced by tumor cells after cytokine stimulation. method: we studied the cytotoxicity of fn in the colon cancer cell line t- by resazurin fluorescence and compared it with the placebo supplement. additionally, the t- cells were incubated with fn, egcg or placebo and stimulated with tnf-alpha, if-gamma and il- -beta. after the cytokine stimulation the mrna expression of ip- , il- and tnf-alpha was measured by quantitative real-time pcr (qrt-pcr). results: stimulation of t- cells increased the expression of ip- (gamma-interferon inducible protein ), tnf-alpha and il- . by preincubation with fn at µm the mrna expression of ip- was strongly reduced (log -ratio - ). the tnf-alpha mrna was also but less decreased by fn. egcg displayed an inhibition pattern similar to fn. placebo did not influence the mrna expression of the chemokines and tnf-alpha. discussion & conclusion: clinically useful dietary tea bioflavonoids inhibit the expression of inflammatory genes in a colon cancer cell line. down-regulation of inflammatory gene products could be achieved in vivo by botanicals without clinically relevant side effects. [ ] h. hoensch, b. groh, l. edler, w. kirch ( ) . prospective cohort comparison of flavonoid treatment in patients with resected colorectal cancer to prevent recurrence. world j gastroenterol, , - . the cxcr c-terminal domain mediates efficient cxcl uptake and degradation hoffmann f., müller w., schütz d., schulz s., stumm r. universitätsklinikum jena institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, drackendorfer str. , jena, germany cxcl -signaling mediated by the g protein-coupled cxcr receptor plays a key role during embryonic development and disease states including cancer and inflammation. the second cxcl -receptor cxcr modulates cxcl /cxcr -signaling by acting as a cxcl -scavenger. given the distinct functions of cxcr and cxcr , we hypothesized that trafficking and receptor stability are differently regulated by the distinct c-terminal domains. here, we examined epitope-tagged wild type and c-terminal mutant receptors expressed in human embryonic kidney cells (hek ) with respect to trafficking, stability, i-cxcl radioligand degradation, and g protein-coupling. we found that the c-terminal residues of cxcr were sufficient for cxcr to undergo rapid spontaneous internalization. replacement of the cxcr c-terminal domain with that of cxcr (cxcr - tail mutant) abolished spontaneous internalization but permitted ligand-induced internalization in conjunction with c-terminal phosphorylation. conversely, replacement of the cxcr c-terminal domain by that of cxcr caused ligand-independent internalization of cxcr . receptor-mediated i-cxcl -uptake, release of i-cxcl -degradation products, and degradation of the receptor protein itself were accelerated with receptors bearing the cxcr c-terminus. while the cxcr c-terminus was sufficient to abolish g protein coupling in the cxcr - tail mutant, replacement of the cxcr c-terminus, cxcr second intracellular loop or both domains with the corresponding cxcr domain did not generate a g protein-coupled cxcr chimera. taken together, we provide evidence that the cxcr c-terminal domain influences the ligand-uptake/degradation rate, g protein-coupling, and stability of the receptor. this suggests that heterologous regulatory pathways targeting the cxcr -c-terminal domain may effectively control cxcr functions. soluble guanylyl cyclase is a key mediator of brown adipocyte differentiation hoffmann l. s. brown adipose tissue (bat) uses energy to produce heat by inducible thermogenesis. recent studies show that active bat is present in adults and involved in human energy balance, suggesting that the energy consuming property of bat might be exploited to fight obesity and related diseases. the no/cgmp signaling pathway is a key player in diverse physiological processes. recently, we have shown in bat that cgmp signaling is connected with insulin signaling and abrogation of cgmp signaling leads to impaired bat differentiation and function (haas, b. et al., sci signal, ). here we investigated the role of the cgmp generating enzyme soluble guanylate cyclase (sgc) in bat differentiation in vitro. mesenchymal stem cells isolated from bat of newborn sgcβ -/mice and wt littermates were differentiated in vitro into brown adipocytes in the presence or absence of cgmp. abundance of sgc isoforms was determined by qrt-pcr and western blotting. bat differentiation was assessed by redo staining of accumulated intracellular lipids, measurement of triglyceride (tg) content, determination of expression of bat marker proteins pparγ, c/ebpα, ap and bat marker genes ucp , pgc α, cidea. the α and β isoforms of sgc were highly expressed in bat whereas α sgc could not be detected. redo staining of wt brown adipocytes showed basal differentiation which was increased upon addition of -pcpt-cgmp. in contrast, staining was lower in sgcβ -/cells compared to wt under control conditions and increased in the presence of cgmp. tg measurement showed that sgcβ -/brown adipocytes contain approximately % less lipids than wt cells under basal conditions. addition of cgmp doubled tg content in both genotypes. similar results were observed for marker protein expression. deletion of sgc resulted in - % decrease in c/ebpα, pparγ and ap expression compared to wt. again, cgmp roughly doubled protein expression in sgcβ -/and wt cells compared to control. under basal conditions, bat marker gene expression was decreased by approximately % in sgcβ -/cells compared to wt cells. this decrease was prevented by addition of cgmp. these results show that sgc deletion leads to dysfunctional bat differentiation and emphasize the central role of cgmp signaling in bat differentiation. further investigation of sgc/cgmp signaling in bat might reveal new drugable targets bringing bat-dependent pharmacological therapy to treat obesity and related disease into closer reach. comparative inhalation toxicity of carbon-nanomaterials (multi-wall carbon nanotubes, graphene and carbon black) hofmann t. carbon black is a spherical carbon anomaterial whereas multi-wall carbon nanotubes (mwcnt) are cylindrical and graphene is a laminar allotrope of carbon. processing and handling as well as abrasion processes can set free inhalable cnt particles. results of rodent studies collectively show that regardless of the process by which cnts were synthesized and the types and amounts of metals they contained, cnts were capable of producing inflammation, epithelioid granulomas, fibrosis, biochemical and or toxicological changes in the lungs (lam et al. , muller et al. , ma-hock , pauluhn . graphene possess similar physical properties as cnt but may different toxicological property. we performed short-term inhalation studies in rats to compare the toxic potency of four different cnt, two graphenes and one carbon black. the materials are characterized thoroughly according to the oecd list. the four mwcnt caused morphological changes as descriped above. several biochemical and cytological parameters in the broncho-alveolar lavage fluid were strongly increased consistent with the histological findings. two mwcnt exhibited a higher toxic potency than two other mwcnts and findings caused by one graphene typ were even less severe. the graphene with lower surface area as well as low surface area carbon black did not cause any adverse effects up to mg/m . the short-term inhalation studies were able to descriminate different toxic potencies of carbon-based nanomaterials and is hence used for the selection of less toxic materials for further product development as well as to define and prioritize higher-tier toxicological testing of nanomaterials. synthesis and analytical assessment of possible dna adducts formed after activation of the tobacco alkaloid myosmine högg c., zwickenpflug w., gudermann t. walther-straub-institut abt.: toxikologie, nußbaumstraße , münchen, germany myosmine represents one of the minor tobacco alkaloids and its effective uptake from smokeless tobacco or tobacco smoke, as well as by consumption of food is not understood in detail. myosmine can be activated by peroxidation and n-nitrosation yielding -hydroxy- -( -pyridyl)- -butanone (hpb) which is well known as reactive intermediate during activation of a variety of tobacco specific n-nitrosamines (tsna). therefore, myosmine may be a potential candidate for possible mutagenic or carcinogenic risk to human health. furthermore, myosmine n-nitrosation yields the tobacco specific nitrosamine n-nitrosonornicotine (nnn), which is classified as carcinogenic to humans. considerable efforts have been undertaken, especially in organic synthesis, to verify and elucidate the significance of the hpb precursor the pyridyloxobutyl (pob) intermediate and its dna-adducts, which were analysed only in animal experiments till now. the formation of -pyridylmethanol was observed under myosmine peroxidation and identified as a metabolite in rat urine after application of myosmine to rats. the formation of the -pyridylmethanol intermediate, might provide for the reactive electrophilic picolinium ion which could interact with dna. these possible adducts might be of special interest to elucidate the role of myosmine concerning its uptake by smokers and passive-smokers in contrast to non smokers ingesting the substance by consumption of food. dna adducts may help to obtain more information about possible risk assessment of myosmine and to differentiate between the activation from the other nicotinoids and tsna. the specific dna adducts, -methyl- , -bispyridin- -ylmethyl- h-pyrimidin- , -dion and -( ''-picolyl)thymidine have been synthesised as reference substances. the former was prepared by addition of diisopropylazodicarboxylate (diad) to a mixture of -pyridylmethanol, thymine and triphenylphosphine. the reaction product was identified using nmr ( h, c, cosy, hmqc, hmbc). for synthesis of -( ''-picolyl)thymidine the hydroxyl groups of thymidine were initially acetylated using acetic acid anhydride and dimethylaminopyridine (dmap). the existence of this thymidine adduct was confirmed using nmr. this adduct was labelled with -([ , ,-dichlorotriazin- -yl]amino)fluorescin (dtaf) to enhance the sensitivity using hplc-fluorescence chromatography and used as reference substances for analysis of dna samples from biological tissue. supported by dfg grant (ty / - ). cancer and cardiovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis are the most important causes of death in western societies. common to both diseases is a deregulation of cell death, with significant contribution of inflammatory processes. enhanced oxidative stress plays a dominant role in such events as it forms a vicious cycle with inflammation and controls multiple forms of cell demise. therefore, anti-oxidative enzyme systems gained considerable interest since control of reactive oxygen species (ros) has the capacity to regulate cell death in either direction. the human enzyme family of paraoxonases consists of three members, known as pon , pon and pon . while pon is found predominantly in the circulation, pon and pon are intracellular enzymes with established anti-oxidative functions. it has been shown that both pon and pon are protective against atherosclerosis. underlying mechanisms of their protective and antioxidative functions however remained elusive. here we demonstrate that both enzymes locate to the endoplasmic reticulum (er) and mitochondria where they fulfill vital functions in the control of ros generation. in particular, pon and pon were shown to interact with coenzyme q which diminishes mitochondrial ros formation. as a consequence, these enzymes reduce execution of mitochondrial apoptosis, such as cardiolipin peroxidation, cytochrome c release and caspase activation. moreover, pon and pon reduced er stress-triggered cell death, i.e. by diminishing jnk signaling and chop expression. while these results elucidate their protective role in cardiovascular diseases, it also establishes a relevant function in survival of tumor cells. in accordance, we demonstrate that both enzymes are frequently found overexpressed in various tumors. in cancer cell culture studies, overexpression of both enzymes granted considerable resistance against chemotherapeutics. in turn, knock-down of pon caused spontaneous apoptosis of several cancer cell lines. finally, our analyses also revealed that pon -knockout mice show severe alterations of the hematopoetic stem cell compartment, which implies a significant role in leukemias where these enzymes are frequently found overexpressed. together, our results propose pon and pon as new putative anti-tumor candidates and demonstrate the efficacy of interventions targeting cellular redox-balance. steigerwald arzneimittelwerk gmbh wissenschaftliche abteilung, havelstr. , darmstadt, germany stw (iberogast ® ), a multi-component herbal drug, is successfully used in the therapy of functional dyspepsia and irritable bowel syndrome (ibs). previous studies revealed effects of stw on disturbed motility and inflammatory processes. although the antiinflammatory properties of stw are well examined, the contribution each of the individual herbal constituents to the anti-inflammatory effect remains unclear. therefore, we studied the effects of stw and its components on inflammation-induced cell death and on the release of the pro-inflammatory cytokine tnf-α. the aim of these investigations was to analyse additive or synergistic effects of the components. the experiments were carried out on caco- cells after stimulation with lps ( ng/ml) for hours. cytotoxicity was evaluated using a commercially available ldh (lactate dehydrogenase)-assay. furthermore, the release of tnf-α after lps ( ng/ml) stimulation of differentiated thp- cells was measured using a commercially available elisa. stw ( . - . µg/ml) reduced lps ( ng/ml)-induced cell death in a concentration-dependent manner with a maximum inhibition of . %. the herbal components in equivalent concentrations contributed to the inhibitory effect of stw to different extents. the maximum inhibition differed in a wide range between the components. stw ( . µg/ml) reduced significantly the release of tnf-α by % in lps ( ng/ml)-stimulated differentiated thp- cells while having no effect in untreated cells. in concentrations equivalent to stw caraway, milk thistle, lemon balm and greater celandine had no effect on the lps-induced increase in tnf-α release. bitter candytuft, peppermint, chamomile, liquorice and angelica reduced the tnf-α release, though less pronounced as compared to stw , indicating a possible synergistic effect. our results indicate a multi-target effect of stw . the anti-inflammatory effect may be due to a reduction of the cytotoxic effect on intestinal mucosa cells and to an inhibition of the release of the pro-inflammatory cytokine tnf-α from immune cells. the individual herbal components seem to contribute by different mechanisms of action to the overall effect of stw . immune cell-induced local steroidogenesis in the lung: implications for asthmatic disease and therapeutic intervention hostettler n. , brunner t. glucocorticoids are steroid hormones with potent anti-inflammatory properties. synthetic glucocorticoids are frequently used for the therapeutic treatment of inflammatory disorders, such as asthma. endogenous glucocorticoids are predominantly produced in the adrenal glands in response to emotional, physical and immunological stress. recent years, however, revealed several alternative sources of these immunoregulatory steroid hormones. thus, we have found that the intestinal epithelium is a rich source of glucocorticoids and intestinal glucocorticoids contribute to the maintenance of local immune homeostasis ( ) . as the intestinal and the pulmonary epithelium have much in common, i.e. barrier functions and transport of nutrients, resp. gases, we wondered whether the lung mucosa is also capable of synthesizing immunoregulatory glucocorticoids in response to immune cell activation. the murine lung was found to expresses all enzymes required for the synthesis of corticosterone from cholesterol. while most enzymes where expressed in a constitutive manner, cyp a , encoding p ssc, was strongly induced in response to immunological tress. treatment of mice with t cell-activating anti-cd antibody of macrophage-activating lipopolysaccharides induced strong local glucocorticoid synthesis, which was effectively blocked by the corticosterone synthesis inhibitor metyrapone, indicating that glucocorticoids measured were produced bona fide in the lung tissue. surprisingly, allergen-induced allergic airway inflammation failed to trigger local glucocorticoid synthesis despite the massive infiltration of neutrophils, eosinophils and t cells. in contrast to that in the intestinal epithelium local glucocorticoid synthesis in the lung was found to be dependent on the presence of adrenal glands as adrenalectomy abolished pulmonary steroidogenesis. in line with the notion that the lung metabolizes steroid precursors we found that ex vivo cultured lung tissue metabolized h- during the last decade small rna molecules has been identified as important regulators for gene expression. these micrornas (mirna) are single-stranded transcripts, which are expressed in many cell types, where they modulate rna stability and translation and, therefore, controlling various cellular mechanism and tissue development. against this background, in the present study the mirna expression and potential target genes were studied in the human placenta as a tissue demonstrating various developmental changes in a limited period of time. taqman®array microrna cards for profiling of mirnas in placentas of different gestation times revealed a significant expression of mirnas by comparing placentas of early gestation (< .week), preterm (< .week) and term (> .week). when comparing the analyzed groups, of these mirnas expose a continuous up-(including mir- a, mir- ) or downregulation (including mir- , mir- a). while comparing placentas of early gestation to term placentas, % (e.g. mir- , mir- ) were up-and % (e.g. mir- , mir- ) were downregulated. by focusing on the latter group with early preterm placentas the ratio is opposed. here, % of mirnas showed higher (e.g. mir- ) and % lower expression (e.g. mir- , mir- ). with emphasize on these mirnas, a computational prediction algorithm using the mirò database predicted a potential interaction between corticotropin-releasing hormone (crh) and the mirnas mir- and mir- . specific expression analyses validate an inverse expression between mirnas and target with a reduced expression of mir- ( %) and mir- ( %) in term placentas, while crh is upregulated fold. this interaction was verified on functional level by reporter gene assay. a significantly suppressed luciferase activity of the reporter plasmid containing the ´-utr sequence complementary to crh was exhibit for the predicted mir- binding site. here, the mirna-mrna-interaction reduces the luciferase activity by ~ %, whereas the decreased luciferase activity for the predicted mir- binding site is not significant. the results demonstrate a gestation dependent expression of placental mirnas, which may help to explain gestational changes in gene expression and highlight the potential of mirnas as biomarker for pregnancy-related pathologies. since homo sapiens era wound treatment by early civilizations was based on the use of local flora. scilla indica knuth liliaceae (s.i) is a perennial herb with a pear shaped, tunicated bulb, bearing fibrous roots, white flowers and leaves on the stem resembling u. maritima. it is used as cardiac tonic, against inflammation, ulcers and sinus diseases. traditionally the powdered bulb is used topically for warts treatment, while roasted and crushed bulbs are applied to corns of the feet soles. the plant contains steroid glycosides (bufadienolides - %), glucoscillarene a, proscillaridine a, scillarene a, scillcyanoside ,scilliglaucoside ,mucilage and alkyresorcinol derivatives exerting skin healing properties similar to wheat bran products. the study is focused on the investigation of the restoration quality of a skin dorsal incision wound in wistar rats in three groups, control (a ) and experimental (a ,a ) of rats weighing - g local application of dichloromethane extract of s.i in vehicle olive oil preparations of and mg were used. animals were anaesthetized ( ether pro narcosi ), trauma cm long and mm deep was performed by lancet on depilated dorsal area skin until the muscular aponeurosis and were treated for days with λ of each preparation. group a showed increased remodelling of trauma area (limited width). granulomatous tissue was more pronounced in length, width and surface in group a . the macroscopic ulcus dimensions were better in group a while the microscopic view were similar in a and a and better in comparison to control a . a tendency to trauma remodelling was observed, without statistical significance (t = . ) in recent years, it has been suggested that nanoparticles generated from combustion processes (e.g. diesel engine exhaust particles), may contribute to the pathogenesis of neurodegenerative diseases such as alzheimer's disease (ad). the aim of our current study was to investigate the effects of subchronic exposure to diesel engine exhaust (dee) in the xfad mouse model, which is characterised by progressive behavioural deficits as well as amyloid plaque formation and neuron loss. ten weeks old female xfad mice and their nontransgenic littermates were exposed by whole body inhalation to diluted dee (~ mg particles/m ) or clean air (controls) for or weeks ( days/week and hour/day). subsequently, all animals were subjected to a series of behavioural tests. at ten days post-exposure, mice were sacrificed to investigate lungs and brain tissues for pathological and biochemical and molecular-biological changes. in line with the expectations, the xfad mice displayed typically age-dependent behavioural deficits and amyloid plaque formation in cortex and hippocampus. a significant dee exposure-related effect was observed for the string suspension test, representing a measure of motor coordination/grip strength. dee exposure was also associated with mrna expression changes of markers of inflammation and oxidative stress in specific brain regions, including the olfactory bulb. histopathology of plaqueload in cortex and hippocampus (from a limited number of animals investigated so far) did not reveal clear evidence for increased plaque formation due to the dee exposures. further research is needed to evaluate the effects of long term exposure to nanoparticles in the central nervous system. this work is supported by funds from the research committee of the medical faculty of the university of düsseldorf ( - ), the dfg graduate school grk and the rivm -centre for environmental health, bilthoven, netherlands. mono-glucosylation of (h/k/n)ras by clostridium sordellii lethal toxin (tcsl) blocks critical survival pathways, including the pi k/akt, the ralgef/ral, or the raf/erk, and results in apoptosis. in this study, ras glucosylation is presented to result in expression of the cell death-regulating small gtpase rhob based on transcriptional activitation. rhob expression depends on k-ras inhibition, as sirna-mediated knock-down of specifically k-ras (neither h-ras nor n-ras) provokes rhob expression. rhob expression further depends on inhibition of pi k/akt, as activation of pi k/akt using a pi k activator prevents rhob expression downstream of inactivated ras. newly synthesized rhob is gtp-loaded and rapidly degraded in a proteasome-and a caspase-dependent manner, providing first evidence for caspase-dependent degradation of a rho family protein. although often characterised as a pro-apoptotic protein, rhob suppresses caspase- activation in tcsl-treated fibroblasts. conclusions: . rapid and efficacious ras inactivation by tcsl turns out to be particularly useful in the characterisation of ras inactivation-induced rhob expression as an immediate-early gene response. . the finding on the cytoprotective activity of rhob in tcsl-treated cells re-enforces the concept that rhob exhibits cytoprotective rather than pro-apoptotic activity on cellular background of inactive ras. the activity of the rhob promoter is suppressed by rhoa (through a not yet identified pathway or ras (through the pi k/akt pathway. ras glucosylation by tcsl results in de-suppression of the rhob promoter and rhob expression. the calcium-binding protein annexin a (anxa ) is involved in diverse cellular processes including e.g. vesicular transport, ion channel regulation and transcriptional regulation. upon ca + binding anxa undergoes conformational changes, which lead to oligomerization of anxa to homotrimers and cause an increased affinity for membrane phospholipids, which in turn provokes the translocation from the cytosol and the nucleoplasm to plasma and nuclear membranes. in order to examine the effect of anxa on cre-and creb-(camp response element-binding protein) dependent transcription, a series of transient transfections using a luciferase reporter gene driven by the creb target promoter of the inducible camp early repressor (icer) was carried out. when the luciferase reporter construct was co-transfected with anxa , there was significant reduction of basal (dmso) luciferase activity ( the implantation of drug eluting stents (des) after coronary artery intervention was an important step treating coronary artery disease. indeed, cytotoxic compounds like sirolimus used on des are responsible for reduced in-stent restenosis in comparison with bare metal stents. pimecrolimus, a potent anti-inflammatory drug has also been investigated for its efficacy on des. preclinical studies in pigs revealed promising antiproliferative effects of pimecrolimus on neointima formation. however, in humans, pimecrolimus coated stents exerted adverse effects. we hypothesize that compared to the highly active sirolimus, pimecrolimus may influence additional cellular processes leading to the worse outcome. in order to identify those processes we conducted in vitro studies in human coronary artery endothelial cells (hcaec) and smooth muscle cells (hcasmc). brdu in vitro assays of hcaec treated with pimecrolimus examined an ic value of . µm [ . to . ] which is much higher than ic values of sirolimus described in literature [ . nm to nm]. genechip array analysis comparing gene expression in pimecrolimus and sirolimus treated hcaec and hcasmc showed significant induction of several genes involved in interferon signaling. in detail, the expression of ifnβ activated genes like irf and ifitm was up regulated in cells treated with pimecrolimus while no or oppositional effects were observed with sirolimus. gene regulatory effects were validated by real time pcr. incubation with ifnβ itself showed similar effects in up regulation of genes involved in interferon signaling. furthermore, we were able to demonstrate a significant increase of ifnβ secretion in hcasmc and hcaec treated with pimecrolimus. however, comparison of ifnβ and pimecrolimus on proliferation of hcaec and hcasmc revealed different cellular responses. while ifnβ significantly decreased hcasmc and increased hcaec proliferation, treatment with pimecrolimus lead to anti-proliferative effects on both cell types. in conclusion, pimecrolimus activates pathways involved in interferon signaling but exerts different pharmacological effects, compared to the endogenous compound suggesting that infβ secretion is not the major factor contributing to the difference in pimecrolimus function. identification of novel phospho acceptor sites of the mu opioid receptor regulating receptor internalization illing s., just s., doll c., schulz s. uniklinikum der fsu jena pharmakologie und toxikologie, drackendorfer straße , jena, germany the opioid alkaloid morphine is among the most potent clinically used analgesics. however, the clinical utility of morphine to treat chronic pain is limited by its rapid development of tolerance and dependence. the stimulation of the mu opioid receptor (mor) with damgo or morphine results in different patterns of receptor phosphorylation and trafficking. so far, the three major phosphorylation sites of the mu opioid receptor namely serine (s ) threonine (t ) and serine (s ) have been identified using phosphosite-specific antibodies. however, mutations of these three residues to alanine (s a/t a/s a) did not prevent agonist-dependent internalization. in the present study, we have constructed a series of phosphorylationdeficient mutants showing that mutation of at least six residues (s a/t a/s a/t a/t a/t a) was required to completely block agonistdriven endocytosis. consequently, we generated phosphosite-specific antibodies to t and t which enabled us to provide direct evidence for agonist-dependent phosphorylation of these sites. our analysis of time-and dose-dependent phosphorylation of mor revealed that s was the primary phosphorylation site, whereas t , t and t were secondary sites. moreover, the partial agonist morphine induced only the phosphorylation of s but not of t , t of t . our results show, that mor phosphorylation occurs in a hierarchical and agonist-selective manner directly regulating receptor sequestration. assessment of mda effects from toxicity studies with regard to endocrine modulation jäger r. methylene dianiline (mda; cas no. - - ) is on the usepa list for endocrine disruption screen testing. in a yeast androgen screening (yas) assay (in vitro assay on receptor binding or blocking) mda revealed a significant anti-androgenic activity at a concentration of . mm. to assess the biological relevance of this observation under in vivo conditions the existing data from animal toxicity studies with mda were reviewed for indications of possible endocrine modulating (em) effects (weight-of-evidence approach). in addition, literature was searched for relevant studies on mda and structural analogues using the american chemical society scifinder client-server software. structural analogues indicated several drivers for em activity, notably the diphenolic ring structure. however, in vitro receptor binding assays showed mda had no androgenic or anti-estrogenic activitiy. one report described a weak estrogenic binding at . mm mda, while another described no effect at similar concentrations and a rat estrogen receptor binding study found no effect at . mm. overall it is concluded that mda does not bind to the estrogen receptor. endocrine related effects of mda were investigated in several species and dose routes in unvalidated research-type protocols. guideline subchronic and chronic toxicity studies with rodents revealed neither adverse organ weight changes nor histopathological alterations of sex organs. the main systemic effects from the oral -week studies were body weight reduction and histopathological changes of the thyroid and bile duct (lowest loael: . mg/kg bw). mda was carcinogenic to rats and mice (thyroid and liver) after oral administration over years. non-neoplastic effects in the thyroid (rats and mice) were observed (lowest loael for systemic toxicity: mg/kg bw). mda inhibits iodide oxidation which with concomitant decreased thyroid hormone formation is known to induce thyroid tumors. in summary, in vitro screening tests revealed no consistent endocrine related effects of mda. in vivo, there was an effect on the thyroid gland, possibly by enzyme inhibition. there were no histopathological changes of gonads and accessory sex organs and no evidence of sex hormone related em. the evidence from the full dataset on mda does not indicate androgenic or estrogenic effects. overall, based on a weight of evidence assessment there are insufficient alerts for em activity to suggest further testing should be done. the gtpase arfrp controls the assembly of apoa-i to and the lipidation of chylomicrons in the golgi of intestinal epithelium jaschke a. background: the uptake and processing of dietary lipid by the small intestine is a multi-step process that involves luminal digestion, cellular uptake of fatty acids by the mucosa, and subsequent synthesis and export of chylomicrons. the gtpase adpribosylation factor related protein (arfrp ) is a member of the arf-family and controls the arf-like (arl )-mediated golgi recruitment of grip domain proteins which in turn bind several rab-gtpases. the aim of the study was to define the role of arfrp in intestinal nutrient absorption. methods: for the generation of intestine-specific null mutants arfrp flox/flox mice were crossed with mice expressing the cre recombinase under the control of the intestinespecific villin promoter (vil-cre) and arfrp expression was suppressed by sirna in caco -cells. the phenotype in respect to lipid absorption and chylomicron production in the intestinal epithelium and in caco -cells, respectively, was analyzed. results: arfrp vil-/mice were viable but showed an early postnatal growth retardation (mean body weight of arfrp vil-/was . ± % lower than that of control mice at the age of days) arfrp vil-/mice displayed reduced triglycerides, free fatty acids and glucose plasma levels indicating that the growth retardation is the result of a malabsorption. uptake of glucose and amino acids were unaffected by the deletion of arfrp . in contrast, lipid uptake as elucidated by oral fat tolerance tests was impaired in arfrp vil-/mice. arfrp vil-/enterocytes as well as arfrp mrna depleted caco- cells absorbed fatty acids normally but secreted chylomicrons with a markedly reduced triglyceride content. in addition, while the release of apolipoprotein a-i (apoa-i) was dramatically decreased apoa-i accumulated in the arfrp vil-/epithelium and was predominantly colocalized with rab . our results demonstrate that the growth retardation of arfrp vil-/mice is a consequence of impaired intestinal fatty acid absorption. we suggest that arfrp is required for the assembly of aopa-i to the chylomicrons and for the further lipidation of chylomicrons in the golgi of intestinal epithelial cells. this finally leads to an secretion of chylomicrons with a markedly reduced triglyceride content. rhoa influences adhesion and spreading of cardiac fibroblasts via complex regulation of cytoskeletal proteins jatho a. the monomeric gtpase rhoa is thought to be involved in the pathology of heart diseases, however, its role in cardiac cells is not well defined. therefore we intended to analyze the effect of rhoa in cardiac fibroblasts by using a lentivirus-based knockdown approach. by doing so, we could show that the knockdown of this gtpase by about % resulted in a massive change in cell morphology, but displayed no effect on cell viability. the appearance of the cells in the d-culture changed from a fibroblast-typical stretched morphology with intracellular stress fibers to a more epithelial-like cell morphology. by morphometrical analyses we demonstrate that fibroblasts with reduced rhoa expression display an increase in cell surface by . -fold and in perimeter by . fold. moreover, the depletion of rhoa significantly influences the adhesion velocity, as within the first hour after cell detachment about % of the rhoa knockdown cells reattach, but only % of the respective control cells. based on these findings, we investigated the distribution and composition of different cytoskeletal proteins by immunofluorescence stainings and immunoblot analysis. we found, that the amount of b-actin is not reduced in rhoa knockdown cells, however, the distribution is markedly changed. in these cells internal star-shape bundles of actin could be found instead of the commonly appearing stress fibers in control cells. in contrast, the cortical actin fibers, mainly consisting of g-actin, were not affected. in addition, smooth muscle-actin, which is characteristic for myofibroblasts, was clearly reduced in rhoa knockdown cells compared to control cells by %. this reduction might be responsible for the more relaxed cell shape. in summary, the knockdown of rhoa influences cell adhesion and the morphological characteristics of cardiac fibroblasts, without obviously affecting cell proliferation and viability. using site-specific fluorescence labeling to study uptake of pasteurella multocida toxin into eucaryotic cells jehle d., aktories k., orth j. institut für experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie abteilung , albertstraße , freiburg, germany pasteurella multocida is an opportunistic pathogenic bacterium living in the nasal pharyngeal space of animals. p. multocida is of particular importance in the livestock management of pigs. under special conditions infection of pigs with p. multocida leads to an atrophic rhinitis, which is characterized by the atrophy of nasal turbinate bones accompanied by a shortening and twisting of the snout. the causative agent of the atrophic rhinitis was found to be the bacterial protein toxin pmt (pasteurella multocida toxin). after entering the cell the -kda toxin activates various signal transduction pathways by stimulating heterotrimeric g proteins of the gαq, gα and gαi family. the underlying mechanism of the activation of heterotrimeric g proteins is a deamidation of an essential glutamine residue leading to a constitutive activation of the g protein. the uptake of pmt into cells is not comprehensively understood. therefore, we utilized a recently described technique, called "sortagging" (popp mw et al. nat chem biol. ; : ) , to specifically couple fluorescence tags to the n-or c-terminus of pmt. the enzyme sortase a (srta) from staphylococcus aureus attaches proteins to the bacterial cell wall. the substrates are recognized by an lpxtg motif. srta cleaves the peptide bond after the threonine and adds a glycine-containing nucleophile. we introduced these motifs into pmt to express srta-recognized toxin and coupled the toxin with fluorescence tags, respectively. fluorescently labeled pmt was used to study the uptake of the toxin into eucaryotic cells by laser scanning microscopy. munich heart alliance, münchen, germany cells within the myocardium communicate by secreted factors and this has been suggested to contribute to cardiac remodeling. to identify novel factors secreted by the myocardium, we have previously reported a genetic yeast screen which led to the identification of protease inhibitor (pi ). here we report the generation of a mouse line where pi can be deleted globally or conditionally using the cre/loxp system. after electroporation of the pi floxneo targeting vector in embryonic stem cells and injection into murine blastocysts we gained a mouse line that carried the targeted modification of the pi allele. global pi deficiency (pi lox/lox ) per se did not lead to a cardiac phenoytpe (hw/bw (mg/g): pi +/+ = . ± . (n = ), pi lox/lox = . ± . (n = ), p > . ; fibrosis (%): pi +/+ = . ± . (n = ), pi lox/lox = . ± . (n = ), p > . ; fractional shortening (%): pi +/+ = . ± . (n = ), pi lox/lox = . ± . (n= ), p > . ). in addition we carried out an immunohistochemical analysis of pi expression using pi -deficient mice as negative controls. pi localized to cardiac fibroblasts, to the epididymis and the trachea. in the failing heart we detected accumulation of pi preferentially in fibrotic areas. we are currently applying cardiac stress models to gain a broader understanding of the function of pi and its potential as a therapeutic target molecule. enantioselective determination of r-and s-hyoscyamine in mammalian plasma and urine samples john atropine (atr) is the racemic mixture of the tropane alkaloids s-and r-hyoscyamine (hyo). s-hyo acts as a competitive acetylcholine antagonist at the muscarinic receptors (eutomer) inducing mydriasis, excitations, hallucinations, coma and ultimately death, whereas r-hyo does not (distomer). atr is used for clinical intervention of poisoning with organophosphorus (op) pesticides or nerve agents. despite well known differences in pharmacological behavior, individual pharmacokinetics of both atr enantiomers have rarely been addressed in the literature [ , , ] . therefore, we initially developed a nonchiral liquid-chromatography-electrospray tandem mass spectrometric method (lc-esi ms/ms) that allows quantification of atr and additional natural and synthetic tropane alkaloids from plasma after simple deproteinization [ ] . to discriminate both atr enantiomers the sample preparation step was expanded by an enzymatic pretreatment. samples were incubated either with diluted human serum (not containing atropinesterase, atre, procedure a) or with diluted rabbit serum (procedure b). rabbit serum contains atre (ec . . . ) which is suitable for stereospecific hydrolysis of shyo into tropine and tropic acid while r-hyo remains unaffected. after sample precipitation, hyoscyamines were quantified by the lc-esi ms/ms method. following procedure a the concentration of total hyo and following procedure b remaining r-hyo were determined. s-hyo was calculated by the difference between these concentrations [ ] . the impact of potential matrix ingredients that may appear in samples from oppoisoned patients under atr therapy were evaluated (oximes, op agents, carbamates) [ ] . the assay was applied to diverse toxicological and pharmacological samples. i) measurement of natural s-hyo in an extract of atropa belladonna leaves as well as in plasma and urine of a female patient who was poisoned after ingestion of such leaves revealed that no biotransformation to r-hyo occurred. ii) analysis of plasma obtained from an op-poisoned female patient under atr therapy revealed faster elimination of shyo when compared to r-hyo [ ] . iii) in contrast, no enantioselective differences were obvious in healthy anaesthetized swine after intravenous injection of atr [ ] . data indicate that the enzymatic enantioselective procedure represents a useful tool to characterize in vivo behavior of r-and s-hyo allowing to reveal individual kinetics. failing hearts are unable to adequately supply the body with blood and oxygen. common therapeutic strategies interfere with cardiac remodelling, reduce cardiac preand afterload or aim at direct improvement of cardiac contractility. cardiac contractility is mainly controlled by β -adrenergic receptors. resensitization of b-adrenergic receptors by inhibition of g-protein coupled receptor kinase (grk ) is discussed as a potential strategy to treat heart failure. we characterized raf kinase inhibitor protein (rkip) as a physiological inhibitor of grk and found rkip to increase contractility of neonatal cardiomyocytes. the present study evaluated the role of rkip in heart failure. we assessed its effects on cardiac function in pressure overload induced heart failure and determined the expression patterns of rkip in failing hearts of humans and mice. transverse aortic contriction (tac) was performed on -week-old c /bl mice to induce heart failure by pressure overload of left ventricles. after three weeks of tac, echocardiography showed distinct signs of decreased cardiac function in wild-type mice. fractional shortening was reduced and left ventricular diameters were increased. histological analyses revealed increased interstitial fibrosis, caspase-and tunelassays indicated myocyte apoptosis. western blot analysis showed significant upregulation of rkip expression in failing hearts compared to non-banded control hearts. interestingly, this upregulation of rkip expression was also detected in failing human hearts and in samples of patients with aortic valve stenosis but not in healthy control samples. to assess the effects of rkip overexpression on heart failure, we analysed heart function and structure of rkip transgenic mice and wild-type mice weeks after tac. while left ventricular hypertrophy was increased to similar extents in wild-type and rkip trangenic mice, rkip mice did neither develop dilatation of the left ventricle nor a decrease in fractional shortening. in contrast to wild-type mice, the expression of the heart failure markers bnp and anp was not upregulated in banded rkip transgenic mice after weeks of tac. taken together, cardiac overexpression of rkip prevented left ventricular dilatation and loss of contractile function in a mouse model of pressure overload induced heart failure. therefore, increased rkip expression may be an interesting target to prevent detrimental effects from increased left ventricular pressure. the main focus of this study was the chromatographic separation. the most frequently prescribed antibiotic drugs clarithromycin, erythromycin, clindamycin, cefuroxim, doxycyclin, amoxicillin, levofloxacin, and ciprofloxacin were selected for the screening method. method: a relatively short operation time and a sufficient separation were reached by column, eluent, and gradient optimization with poplc (phase optimized liquid chromatography). in the first step columns with the five stationary phases c eps , c sh , phenyl , cn , and c were used to determine the retention times of the drugs in an isocratic mode. the stationary phases, the column length and the retention times were fed in the poplc software and the optimal column was calculated. this column contained different stationary phases and was compared with customary columns. results: using the optimal column a sufficient chromatographic separation of the eight antibiotic drugs was reached. that was not possible with the customary columns. with the optimal column the time of measurement was too long. using a mobile phase gradient the measuring time could be reduced. discussion: with lc-ms/ms a complete chromatographic separation of all analytes is not necessary. but when measuring many transitions in a biological matrix two problems should be excluded: ion suppression and a too small number of measurement points per peak. especially when using positive and negative ionization in the ms a good separation is mostly necessary. to determine only the eight antibiotic drugs an optimized column is not necessary, but for a screening method with more than twenty drugs the poplc system is very helpful. we have investigated the uptake mechanism of cdt and in particular the intracellular membrane translocation of cdta. our data indicate that cdt requires acidification of the endosomal lumen for translocation of cdta across endosomal membranes into the cytosol. bafilomycin a , an inhibitor of endosomal acidification protects vero (african green monkey kidney) cells from intoxication with cdt. consistently, translocation of cdta was observed when the acidic conditions of the endosomal lumen were mimicked at the cytoplasmic membrane of intact cells. next, we tested whether host cell factors are involved in membrane translocation of the toxin. radicicol, a specific pharmacological inhibitor of the chaperone heat shock protein hsp as well as cyclosporine a, an inhibitor of cyclophilins delayed the intoxication of cells with cdt but not with toxins a and b [ ] . this result was confirmed by analyzing the adp-ribosylation status of actin from such cells in the presence or absence of the inhibitors. in addition, we excluded that the inhibitors of hsp and cyclophilins have any effect on receptor binding, endocytosis or enzyme activity of cdt. the data strongly suggest that the participation of hsp and cyclophilin is crucial for translocation of cdta into the cytosol. comparable results were obtained for the related binary iota toxin of c. perfringens. in vitro purified immobilized hsp and cyclophilin a specifically bound to the enzyme components of cdt and iota toxins. in conclusion, the results imply a common hsp /cyclophilin a-dependent translocation mechanism for the family of binary actin-adp-ribosylating toxins. our current investigations focus on the participation of fk -binding proteins (fkbps), another group of peptidyl-prolyl cis/trans isomerases in the membrane translocation step of these toxins. [ ] kaiser, e., kroll, c., ernst, k., schwan, c., popoff, m. r., fischer, g., buchner, j., aktories, k. and barth, h. ( ) . complex multicellular in vitro coculture models represent a promising tool regarding e. g. cellular interactions with nanoparticles, since they more closely mimic the cellular composition of the body. therefore, we used our developed coculture model of the alveolar-capillary barrier composed of lung epithelial cells (nci h ) on top and microvascular endothelial cells (iso-has- ) on the bottom side of a filter-membrane to study nanoparticle cytotoxicity and cellular uptake. with a coculture period of about days the cells achieve a more differentiated and polarized state and develop a tight barrier, which can be measured via ter (transepithelial electrical resistance). regarding cellular uptake of fluorescently labeled amorphous silica nanoparticles (asnps, nm) the coculture took up much less asnps than conventional monocultures. besides, we could not verify a specific uptake mechanism (e. g. clathrin-, caveolae-mediated endocytosis) via immunofluorescence staining of the cells. however, we detected asnps incorporated in flotillin- and - labelled vesicles. former studies concerning cytotoxicity (lactate dehydrogenase assay) of amorphous silica nanoparticles (asnps, nm) revealed that our coculture behaved much more robustly compared to conventional monocultures. however, regarding inflammatory responses (e. g. sicam, il- increase) the coculture responded more sensitively than conventional monocultures. in a further development we added a third cell type, the alveolar macrophage (am), to our coculture. since ams embody the front-line of alveolar defense against inhaled pathogens and particles, they play a central role in regulating lung immunity. as model we applied the human acute monocytic leukemia cell line, thp- (prestimulated with nm pma for d) apically to the epithelial monolayer of the coculture. our preliminary studies concerning inflammatory responses of the tripleculture (h /iso-has- with thp- ) revealed a higher sensitivity of the triple-culture compared to the double coculture. the triple-culture responded with an increased il- release upon lps or tnf-a stimulation. in conclusion, this triple-culture model offers a promising prospect to mimic more closely realistic cell interactions with nanoparticles in the distal lung. ethanol is a component of many herbal fluid preparations [ ] , since it is an excellent extraction solvent for the phytochemical components of herbal drugs and contributes to the stability of these medicines. toxicological and pharmacokinetic evaluations [ ] have shown that the small amounts of ethanol applied with therapeutic doses are safe even in children. despite that these medicines have been used safely since many decades, they have occasionally been subject of discussion in the public, triggered by the increasing problem of recreational abuse of alcoholic beverages by children and young persons [ , ] . therefore, there is a growing need of a systematic evaluation of pharmacovigilance data on these medicines. for evaluating the experience gained from the therapeutic use of these medicines, pro-and retrospective studies with herbal medicinal products containing ethanol at doses of to mg per single dose, depending on the age group, have been analyzed, covering patients of - years of age. in these studies, altogether adverse drug effects have been described, none of which was attributable to the ethanol content of the medicines. in a survey of the worldwide use of these and other herbal medicinal products it was shown that during the past few years, more than mio daily doses have been sold, corresponding to more than mio of patients (data obtained from manufacturers; figures available partly from onwards, partly from / onwards). from the packages sold in germany in the years between and , . mio were attributable to self-medication, . mio to prescriptions reimbursed by health insurance (ims, frankfurt). as non prescription medicines are reimbursed in germany only in children, at least the latter part of the prescriptions can be attributed mainly to children. all of these medicines are registered or licensed by regulatory authorities. adverse effects are covered by the pharmacovigilance system, and no adverse effects attributable to the ethanol content have been reported. this set of data supports the conclusion drawn from the experience of a safe use over decades, i.e. that the ethanol content of herbal medicinal products does not give any causes for concern regarding their safety even in children. dedication: this contribution is dedicated to prof. dr. hilke winterhoff, institute for pharmacology and toxicology, university of münster, who died on may . she has initiated this work. prucalopride was introduced as a new selective -ht receptor agonist that is approved for treating obstipation. whereas one could expect -due to the fact that -ht receptors are functionally expressed in the human heart -in clinical trials prucalopride did not show cardiac effects. this is quite surprising because other -ht receptor agonists have been withdrawn from the market just for that reason. in this study we used prucalopride for in vitro studies with atrial preparations from transgenic (tg) mice with cardiac myocyte-specific overexpression of the human -ht a receptor. isolated electrically driven ( hz) left and spontaneous beating right atria of tg mice were compared with those of wild type (wt) littermates. moreover, we used isolated electrically driven ( hz) human right atrial preparations from patients undergoing cardiac surgery. finally gr , a -ht receptor antagonist, was added. prucalopride exhibited a dose dependent positive inotropic effect in left atria and a positive chronotropic effect in right atria of tg mice with a logec of - . and - . , respectively (p< . vs. wt, n= ). in human atrial tissue prucalopride also acts as an agonist, leading to an inotropic effect. all effects could be antagonized by µm gr . we could demonstrate that prucalopride acts as an agonist at the -ht receptor in our transgenic mice model and also in human right atrial preparations. these findings suggest that tachycardia and arrhythmias are possible side effects, which should be carefully looked for. the involvement of psychological factors, especially stress, are known to play an important role in functional gastrointestinal diseases ( , ) probably by affecting the brain-gut axis. based on the good correlation between stress & functional dyspepsia (fd), many animal models for fd have been developed where animals are subjected to various kinds of psychological stress either during the neonatal period or in adulthood. this stress was found to induce gastric motor dysfunction resembling symptoms of fd. two models for stressinduced fd were performed in order to choose the more adequate one for studying sensitivity changes of the fundus to various mediators as well as changes in some relevant hormone levels in the blood for subsequently testing the efficacy of treatment with stw (a component herbal preparation of proven clinical efficacy in fd and in irritable bowel syndrome ( , ) ). in one model, maternal separation ( ) was performed on weanling rats starting from postnatal day for h each day for weeks. rats were then allowed to mature to an adult age. the other model was that of restraint stress (rs) ( , ) . adult animals were restrained for min/ day for week. the animals of both models were eventually sacrificed, the stomach fundus was isolated and its sensitivity in vitro to carbachol, potassium chloride, serotonin and adrenaline was tested. blood samples were taken to assess levels of ghrelin, corticosterone releasing factor (crf) and corticosterone. the sensitivity of fundus strips from restrained rats towards the agents tested, partly representing autonomic responsiveness, was more depressed than those from maternally separated ones. levels of ghrelin, crf and corticosterone were also more elevated in the rs model. that model was therefore chosen to test the efficacy of stw in restoring the deranged parameters. a group of animals received stw orally once daily starting treatment week before exposing them to rs and continuing treatment for a further week during subjection to rs. stw was effective in normalizing the depressed stomach fundus responses exhibited by animals subjected to rs and to normalize to a large extent the deranged blood levels of ghrelin, crf and corticosterone. the findings lend further evidence to the role of the brain-gut axis in fd and gives supportive evidence for the first time for the clinical usefulness of stw in this condition. there is good evidence that oxidative damage to dna leads to down-regulation of transcription of affected genes and epigenetic gene silencing in a mechanism dependent on the -oxoguanine dna glycosylase (ogg ), which generates harmful repair intermediates [ , ] . we have recently shown that the magnitude of inhibition of transcription of an egfp reporter gene by single -oxo- , -dihydro-deoxyguanosine ( -oxodg) varies between the opposing dna strands of the gene [ ] . we now have addressed the question, to which extent the transcription inhibitory potential of -oxodg depends on its position in the gene and on the dna microsequence surrounding the modified nucleobase. to investigate the effect of position, we produced plasmid vectors containing single -oxodg or dg (underlined) in the second position of an agc trinucleotide. measurements of egfp expression in transfected mammalian host cells showed that a single -oxodg caused a strong inhibition of gene transcription. the magnitude of this effect for -oxodg situated in the transcribed dna strand of the gene was the same as in the non-transcribed dna strand. similarly, there was no quantitative difference between the effects of -oxodg present in the ′-versus ′-utr of the gene. the results thus indicate that inhibition of transcription by this base modification does not depend on the position in the gene. further comparisons were done between the effects of -oxodg nucleobases localised in the same dna strand but within different sequence contexts. gene expression analyses in the repair proficient host cells showed that the degree of inhibition of transcription caused by single -oxodg was dependent on the neighbouring nucleotides. among three tested sequence motifs, the minimal effect on the gene transcription was found to correlate with a significantly less efficient base excision by the purified human ogg protein. the results thus support the initiatory role of ogg in the mechanism of transcriptional repression. in addition, the finding of the effect of dna sequence on the base excision activity of ogg suggests that repair rates of single base modifications in genome could also be heterogeneous. allgayer j., kitsera n., epe b., khobta a. johannes gutenberg university of mainz institute of pharmacy and biochemistry, staudingerweg , mainz, germany interference of dna base modifications with gene transcription is an important biological consequence of genotoxic damage [ ] . an efficient method for incorporation of a single -oxo- , -dihydroguanine ( -oxog) at a defined position in the egfp gene in a plasmid vector was recently developed in our lab. the method relies on the availability of adjacent sites for a sequence-specific nicking endonuclease, which allow the insertion of a synthetic oligonucleotide containing -oxog in a chosen position. we further showed that this single lesion inhibits transcription after excision by ogg [ ] . in order to determine to which extend the observed effect depends on the position of the modified base in the gene, we constructed several new plasmid vectors which allow incorporation of the same dna oligonucleotide containing -oxog or g in different positions in different dna-strands. dna sequence cassettes were designed to contain a ′-cattgcttcgctagcacg nucleotide sequence in different orientations, which was flanked by two unidirectional bsrdi recognition sites ( ′-gcaatgnn). adapters containing the restriction sites for directional cloning into the ′-or the ′-utr of the plasmid-borne egfp gene were added. the produced plasmid vectors thus allow the insertion of a single -oxog in the same sequence context into opposing dna strands in the 'utr and in the 'utr. keratinocytes are the major cell type of epidermis and are responsible for the formation of an outer barrier, the statum corneum, to protect an organism against harmful environmental influences. for generation of this barrier, keratinocytes pass through a complex differentiation program that is accompanied by synthesis of lipids, like cholesterol and ceramides. finally, the differentiation of keratinocytes leads to apoptosis. another function of keratinocytes is to sense environmental factors, some of which are decoded by members of the transient receptor potential (trp) ion channel family. trpv , for example, is predominantly expressed in keratinocytes, and decodes different chemical and physical stimuli like the terpenoid-derived ligands camphor and thymol or temperatures above °c. less is known about the influence of cholesterol on trpv signalling. we modified the cholesterol content of hek cells stably transfected with trpv and performed flipr-based calcium measurements. these experiments revealed that cholesterol enrichment robustly potentiates trpv by sensitizing it to lower agonist concentrations. we verified these results with whole-cell patch-clamp measurements. in contrast, trpv , another heat-sensing channel, was not affected by cholesterol modification. since former studies showed a defective formation of epidermal barrier in trpv -/mice, our results imply that a cholesterol-regulated trpv signalling may contribute to the progression of differentiation or initiation of apoptosis of keratinocytes. ischemia-reperfusion injury causes severe problems in the early period after lung transplantation. since transient receptor potential (trp) channels are important regulators of vascular permeability and tone, we investigated the influence of a trpc blocker on pulmonary function after simulated transplantation, using an ex vivo model of isolated perfused and ventilated rabbit lungs. to this end, heart-lung blocks were excised and mounted in an artificial thorax chamber. negative pleural pressure ventilation was initiated, and lungs were perfused with albumin-containing tyrode-solution ( ml min - ). after equilibration in a stable perfusion and ventilation mode for min, lungs were flush-perfused with perfadex ® solution, followed by an ischemic storage for h on ice. subsequently, ventilation and perfusion were re-initiated to simulate a transplantation situation. in the oxygenated group, pulmonary artery po was adjusted to mmhg, in the deoxygenated group, the perfusate inflow was gassed with nitrogen to achieve a pulmonary artery po of mmhg. both transplantation conditions were conducted in the absence or in the presence of the trpc blocker larixol acetate ( µm). hemodynamic and ventilatory parameters were continuously monitored. the weight of deoxygenated lungs steadily increased during h of reperfusion from . ± . g to . ± . g. this weight gain was inhibited by supplementation of the trpc blocker (from . ± . g to . ± . g h after reperfusion). in contrast, oxygenated lungs showed no marked weight gain after reestablishment of perfusion (from . ± . g to . ± . g h after reperfusion), and the trpc blocker had no additional effect (initial . ± . g, h reperfusion . ± . g). we conclude that a trpc -blocking compound to the lung perfusate during simulated transplantation counteracts the endothelial permeability increase and the resulting post transplant weight gain. the results indicate a role for trpc in the regulation of pulmonary vessel permeability and support the concept that perfusion of donor lungs with trpc blockers may prevent edema formation caused by ischemiareperfusion injury shortly after lung transplantation. regulation of human inducible nitric oxide synthase (inos) expression by noncoding rnas (ncrnas) kleinert h., schmitz k., koch k., hahn s., pautz a. universitätsmedizin der johannes gutenberg-universität mainz institut für pharmakologie, obere zahlbacher str. , mainz, germany the transcriptome analyses of human cells showed that additionally to the . protein coding sequences the human dna codes for much more ( . ?) non-coding rnas . beside the ribosomal, and transfer rnas (rrna and trna) involved in the mechanism of translation there are also short (snrna, sorna, mirna) and long noncoding rnas (ncrnas) implicated in regulation of gene expression (splicing, translation, chromatin packaging etc.). matsui et al. described regulation of il- β-induced inos expression by an antisense rna (as- -utr-rna) in rat hepatocytes . a promoter located on the antisense strand ' to the last exon (exon ) of the rat inos gene drives the expression of an as-rna complementary to the '-utr of the rat inos mrna. using different sense primers with homology to the '-utr sequences of the human inos gene for specific rt-pcr reactions (detecting only an as-rna) we were not able to detect such an as- -utr-rna in human cells. in addition, transient transfection analyses using constructs containing a . kb fragment of the '-flanking genomic sequences (as used by matsui et al. in the rat system) of the human inos gene in front of a luciferase reportergene into dld- cells revealed no promoter activity of these sequences. korneev et al. described the expression of a kb anti-inos-ncrna in different brain tumors and showed reciprocal expression to the inos mrna in human embryonic stem cells . analyzing the expression of this anti-inos-ncrna in cytokine-treated dld- cells also showed a basal expression of this as-rna and an enhancement of the expression by cytokine-treatment. downregulation of the anti-inos-ncrna by sirnas reduced whereas overexpression enhanced cm-induced inos expression in human dld- cells. this indicates that this anti-inos-ncrna regulates cytokine-induced inos expression in a positive manner. rna , rna , - rna , ( . using directed evolution to improve functional expression of class b g-protein coupled receptors klenk c., scott d. j., plückthun a. universität zürich institut für biochemie, winterthurerstrasse , zürich, switzerland the class b of g-protein coupled receptors (gpcrs) comprises peptide hormonebinding receptors which regulate important endocrine and neuroendocrine functions of the human body. several of these receptors are implicated in the pathogenesis of severe diseases such as diabetes, osteoporosis, growth disorders and depression, which makes them attractive targets for drug therapy. to develop new compounds targeting these receptors a detailed understanding of the molecular structure is required which has not been succeeded to date. structural studies of proteins by x-ray crystallography or nmr spectroscopy generally require large and homogenous quantities of protein. for gpcrs this prerequisite is difficult to achieve as the vast majority of gpcrs exhibits low endogenous expression and is very unstable in solution. therefore, improved expression conditions are necessary for the efficient characterization of new gpcr structures. here we present a method to optimize class b gpcrs for improved heterologous expression and increased thermostability by means of directed evolution. libraries of class b gpcrs were obtained by random mutagenesis and were expressed in a heterologous expression system in which functional gpcr is targeted to the inner membrane of e. coli. mutants that display increased receptor expression levels and ligand binding were selected by flow cytometry using fluorescently labeled ligands. repetitive cycles of randomization and selection allow to gradually increasing the level of protein expression and stability. with this evolutionary approach key residues within the receptor sequence can be identified rapidly that are responsible for improved biophysical properties without affecting the pharmacological features of the receptor. such gpcr mutants will become a valuable tool on the way to express high quantities of stable receptor protein for subsequent structural studies. pasireotide (som ) is currently under clinical evaluation as a successor compound to octreotide for the treatment of acromegaly, cushing's disease and carcinoid tumors. whereas octreotide acts primarily via the sst somatostatin receptor, pasireotide was designed to exhibit octreotide-like sst activity combined with enhanced binding to other somatostatin receptor subtypes. somatostatin and octreotide stimulate the complete phosphorylation of at least six carboxyl-terminal serine and threonine residues namely s , s , t , t , t and t , which in turn leads to a robust endocytosis of the sst receptor. surprisingly, pasireotide failed to phosphorylate the four threonine residues and induced only a detectable phosphorylation of s and s . somatoprim and ke are recently developed somatostatin analogs capable of binding to four of five somatostatin receptor subtypes. here, we performed an in vitro study comparing the effects of pasireotide, somatoprim and ke on sst somatostatin receptor binding, phosphorylation, internalization and signaling. further somatostatin, octreotide, pasireotide, somatoprim and ke were tested for functional selectivity at sst receptor mutants, which possess a carboxyl-terminal sst tail. this approach allows detection of receptor activation by phospho-specific sst antibodies. compared to octreotide, somatoprim activates sst but has a higher activity on sst . ke and pasireotide are partial agonists at the sst receptor. pasireotide, ke and somatoprim show comparable effects on sst receptor. however, none of these new pan-somatostatin analogs behaves like natural somatostatin on the sst receptor. cadmium modulates ahr-associated gene expression in the rat intestine after oral exposure kluxen f. m. , , höfer n. cadmium has been shown to mimic steroid estrogen effects in vivo and in vitro. we have recently identified cross-talk of estrogen receptor (er) and aryl hydrocarbon receptor (ahr) in the rat uterus where beta-estradiol (e ) and cdcl modulate ahrassociated genes via er after i.p. injection in a similar fashion (kluxen et al., arch toxicol doi . /s - - -x). however, the predominant route of exposure to cadmium in non-smokers is via diet. moreover, uterus expresses mainly the receptor subtype eralpha, whilst small intestine and colon express mainly erbeta. thus, we now investigated by real-time rt-pcr the effects of cadmium ( mg/kg b.wt cdcl (cd )) or steroid estrogen ( . mg/kg b.wt. alpha-ethinylestradiol (ee )) on ahrassociated gene expression (i.e., ahr, cyp a , gsta , nqo ) in the small intestine of rats after oral exposure ( days gavage). the animals were also co-treated with cd and pure anti-estrogen ( . mg/kg b.wt zk (zk)) or ee , to asseess whether ermediated processes are involved. we also measured cyp a mrna expression in two estrogen receptor negative colon cancer cell lines (ht- and caco ) treated for days with cdcl ( µm) and e ( . µm). the dose-dependency of cadmium induced ahr target gene modulation was studied in a second animal experiment, with administration of cadmium in drinking water for days ( . - mg/kg b.wt cdcl equivalent to , , and ppm) and ee ( . mg/kg b.wt) as steroid reference. in summary we present two major results: the metalloestrogen cadmium modulates dose-dependently the ahr-associated gene expression in the intestine after oral exposure. yet, since the cadmium induced modulation of ahr target genes was not antagonized by anti-estrogen in the small intestine in vivo and was also found to occur in er-negative colon cells in vitro, we propose that er-independent mechanisms might play a role in this effect. meg) is the most cytotoxic lesion. if not repaired by o -methylguanine-dna methyltransferase (mgmt), o meg/t mismatch is recognized by the mismatch repair system (mmr) that performs futile repair cycles. during this process secondary lesions (i.e. dna single-strand brakes) are formed, which block dna replication in the next replication cycle, leading to dna double-strand breaks (dsbs). these dsbs eventually signal to apoptosis and other genotoxic endpoints. here, we wished to address the question whether autophagy is part of the cellular response triggered by o meg. we also assessed whether autophagy influences apoptosis induced by tmz in glioma cells. we show that tmz induces autophagy in u- mg and ln- glioma cell lines. the maximum amount of autophagy was observed several days ( h) after tmz treatment and mgmt proficient cells did not display significant autophagy. thus, the data show that mgmt protects against tmz induced autophagy, pointing to o meg as the critical lesion responsible for induction of autophagy. using colon cancer cell lines proficient and deficient in mmr, we show that mmr is required for tmz-induced autophagy. because dsbs, which emerge during the processing of o meg, are repaired preferably by homologous recombination (hr) ln- cells stably down-regulated for hr were tested for autophagy induction. the data indicate that dsbs are involved in tmz-induced autophagy. because autophagy following tmz treatment occurs earlier than apoptosis we hypothesize that autophagy protects glioma cells against apoptosis. using an early stage autophagy inhibitor -methyladenin we have shown, that autophagy inhibition sensitized glioma cells to tmz-induced apoptosis. taken together our data point out that tmz induces autophagy in glioma cells and that autophagy protects glioma cells against tmz-induced apoptosis. o meg is the lesion responsible for autophagy induction. furthermore, the data also shows that mmr and dsbs are involved in the induction of autophagy after tmz treatment. work was supported by bmbf ( nuk ). retinitis pigmentosa (rp) is a severe human retinal disease characterized by a progressive degeneration of rod photoreceptors and a secondary loss of cone function. in most cases, rp finally leads to legal blindness. mutations in the regulatory subunit of the rod cyclic nucleotide-gated (cng) channel (cngb a) have been found in patients suffering from rp. we used cngb -deficient (cngb -/-) mice to establish a gene replacement therapy as a potential treatment for rp by means of recombinant adenoassociated viral (raav) vectors. the packaging limitations of raav vectors required a capacity-optimized vector of the large cngb a cdna (approx. kb). therefore, we replaced regulatory elements within the expression cassette and used a short mouse rhodopsin promoter element for rod-specific expression. after injection of therapeutic raavs (serotype ) into the subretinal space of -week-old cngb -/mice, we assessed the restoration of vision by analyzing i) protein expression and localization, ii) retinal function and morphology and iii) vision guided behavior. we found that treated cngb -/mice expressed full-length cngb a and cnga , which were previously downregulated. both proteins co-localized in rod outer segments and formed regular cng channel complexes in the treated area of the cngb -/retina. using electroretinography (erg) we observed a distinct rescue of rod-driven responses. moreover, cngb replacement significantly preserved outer segment morphology and delayed retinal degeneration. finally, treated cngb -/mice performed significantly better than untreated mice in a modified water maze task designed to test for rod-mediated, vision-guided behavior. in summary, this work provides a proof-of-concept for the treatment of rod channelopathyassociated retinitis pigmentosa by raav-mediated gene replacement. most endocrine disruptors interact with hormone receptors or steroid biosynthesis and metabolism, thereby modifying the physiological function of endogenous hormones. here, we present an alternative testing paradigm for detection of endocrine modes of actions that replace and reduce animal testing through refinement. receptor mediated endocrine effects were assessed using the yeast based receptor mediated transcriptional activation yes/yas assays and effects on steroid hormone biosynthesis were assessed using the human cell line h r in the steroidogenesis assay. in our testing paradigm we propose to complement the in vitro assays with a single in vivo repeated dose study in which plasma samples are analyzed for their metabolome profile. the combination of these methods does not only contribute to refinement and reduction of animal testing, but also has significantly increased the efficient allocation of resources and allows for a sound assessment of the endocrine disruption potential of compounds. thus, this proposal constitutes a potentially attractive alternative to epa's endocrine disruptor screening program. data on reference substances for which the in vitro yes/yas and steroidogenesis assays and the in vivo metabolome analysis were performed to assess their putative endocrine mode of action is presented here. the bovine corneal opacity and permeability (bcop) test has been adopted by oecd for the identification of corrosive and severe ocular irritants (ghs category ) for single component substances and multi-component formulations. eye irritation tests (eit) using human reconstructed tissue models (such as epiocular) have been described to predict ocular non-irritants (ghs no category). thus the ultimate repaltement of the draize rabbit eye irritation test (oecd tg ) by a combined or tiered testing strategy could be possible. the purpose of this study was to evaluate whether the bcop with additional corneal histology together with the eit could be used to predict eye irritancy of agrochemical formulations according to different classification schemes including un ghs and epa systems. we have performed the bcop (plus histology) and the eit of agrochemical formulations for which in vivo eye irritation data were already available (for registration purposes). using the oecd tg guideline evaluation scheme for opacity and permeability in the bcop was not predictive for the agrochemical formulations assessed here, while corneal histology grades and the epiocular tissue viabilities were useful predictors of eye irritancy potencies and could be applied for the different classification schemes. the nanomaterials offers extraordinary opportunities. the nano-structure can change the physical and chemical properties, and often also alters the biological effects. hence the toxicity of a nanomaterial can differ from its larger-scale material; but as of today, no new quality of a general nano-specific toxic effect has been observed. therefore the established testing methods are generally suitable. it is, however, difficult to apply the nanomaterials to in vitro test systems, since it is the nature of these materials to change their surface properties and agglomeration stateand the uptake and distribution in the body may differ from their larger-scale materials. while the methods for topical effects may be used for nanomaterials without further modification, the in vitro methods for genotoxicity testing require the dispersion in culture media. the use of reproducible and well-documented dispersion protocols andthe characterization of its particle size distribution is de rigueur . [ ] . for many nanomaterials published genotoxicity studies did not give a consistent picture [ ] and therefore there are rather effects of individual nanomaterials than nano-genotoxicity per se. modern toxicology is based on the insight into toxic pathways. for nanomaterials a testing strategy will include testing for their primary effects (which might be only a handful: particle effects, catalyzing the formation of reactive molecules and ion release) and their uptake, distribution and clearance. the use of dermal penetration studies in vitro for the risk assessment of sunscreen nanomaterials has been demonstrated [ ] . in vitro methods for specific effects (such as inflammation, pulmonary toxicity, sensitization) are currently awaiting validation (for both chemicals/molecules as well as nanomaterials). in the meantime alternative short-term in vivo studies with optimized biological readouts can deliver information on the toxic pathways as well as the biokinetics and dose-response relation of nanomaterials in the body. a short-term inhalation test for nanomaterials has already been used successfully [ ] . testing strategies based on those methods engage less animals and provides more significant data than classical testing. moreover data from these methods will serve as a benchmark and a validation for the in vitro models under evaluation. nanoparticles (np) are increasingly used in various field of industry which necessitates evaluation of their safety. also in the food industry, nps have gained strong interest, for example as food additives or to improve food packing. however, the potential risks of ingested np have been rarely investigated. inhalation studies have revealed that inflammation and oxidative stress may represent unifying mechanism for the induction of adverse health effects of toxic np. in the present study, a co-incubation model of human polymorphonuclear neutrohils (pmns) and caco- human intestinal epithelial cells was used as a model to address potential genotoxic effect of np during intestinal inflammation. oxidative dna damage induction (measured by the fpg-modified comet assay) was induced in the caco- cells by activated pmn and this effect increased with increasing pmn to caco- cell ratio. the crucial involvement of the phagocyte nadph oxidase complex could be demonstrated using treatment of caco- cells with bone marrow-derived pmn from nadph oxidase deficient mice. dna damage by pmn as well as h o was increased in buthionine sulphoximine (bso) pre-treated caco- cells, illustrating the importance of the cellular glutathione (gsh) status in these target cells. gsh depletion in caco- cells could also be shown upon treatment with various types of np. our data suggests that ingested np may increase the susceptibility of the colon mucosa to genetic damage during the occurrence of intestinal inflammation. the ingestion of seafood contaminated by acute toxic doses of the marine toxin okadaic acid (oa) is responsible for diarrhetic shellfish poisoning. it is recently known that both the rat and the human hepatic cytochrome p monooxygenases (cyp) are able to metabolize this toxin. currently, there is a lack of data about the toxicity and mode of action of oa after xenobiotic metabolism. the aim of our study was the measurement of the toxicity and oxidative stress status in hepg cells incubated with oa in the absence and presence of s mix. pure oa, as well as oa pre-activated with liver homogenisates (s mix) were used to treat human hepg cells that have nearly undetectable levels of functional cyp but express phase ii enzymes. the experiments were performed with both human and rat s fraction plus cofactors of phase i enzymes. the cell viability was measured after h using mtt-test and xcelligence real time cell monitoring system. furthermore, levels of intracellular reactive oxygen species (ros) were detected by ´, ´-dichlorofluorescein diacetate and additionally by measuring the intracellular glutathione content. in the presence of both human and rat s mix oa showed a higher toxicity than the parental substance. oa pre-incubated in rat s mix was toxic at nm oa. strong effects could be observed when oa was pre-activated with human s -mix at a concentration of nm oa. pure oa was non-toxic in that concentration range. we could also detect an increase of oxidative stress in hepg cells treated with oa in the presence of all investigated s -mix. these results suggest that oa is activated after oxidative xenobiotic metabolism into metabolites which possess a higher cytotoxic activity and increase the amount of intracellular ros in hepg cells. ballast water treatment -emerging health risks werschkun b., banerji s., krätke r. bundesinstitut für risikobewertung, max-dohrn-strasse , berlin, germany the introduction of invasive marine species into new environments by ships' ballast water, via ships' hulls and other vectors has severe impacts on the oceans. in the international maritime organisation (imo) launched the international convention for the control and management of ships ballast water and sediments which requires ballast water to be treated in order to eliminate alien aquatic species. ballast water treatment may include mechanical, physical or chemical measures. any ballast water management system using active substances needs imo approval. therefore identification of active substances, relevant chemicals and submission of specified datasets on their physical, chemical and toxicological properties is required in order to assess the safety for the aquatic environment and for human health. the bfr is the german federal agency responsible for health risk assessment and has been involved in more than twenty assessment and approval processes so far. the majority of imo approved systems are based on oxidative principles such as chlorination and ozonation. these methods can generate disinfection by-products (dbps), which are a mixed group mostly of halogenated organic substances like trihalomethanes, haloacetic acids and haloacetonitriles. the formation of dbps is well known from the disinfection of drinking water. some dbps are regulated under drinking water directives because of their long-term toxicity but many are unregulated and have unknown toxicological properties. the formation of dbps may vary significantly depending on the treatment system as well as on environmental parameters like temperature, ph and composition of the organic matter within the aquatic environment. in sea water, sources for dbp formation besides ballast water treatment are aquaculture and the cooling systems of coastal power plants. in order to address possible health and environmental risks from dbps formed during ballast water treatment a conference on emerging risks from ballast water treatment was held at bfr in october . here we summarise the main conference findings and identify areas for future research. two presentations corroborated that significant amounts of dbps can be formed in sea water and a presentation on the toxicological properties of dbps pointed out that many have genotoxic properties. accordingly, the determination of dbp species and generated concentrations under different ballast water treatment conditions was seen as a mayor task. different approaches for health and environmental risk assessments were also discussed. appropriate human exposure scenarios and methods for exposure assessment, taking into account common approaches used in risk assessment were presented during the conference. a suitable approach based on derived pec-values for exposure quantification was proposed in order to improve the procedure available for risk assessment of chemical agents used for ballast water treatment. agonist-selective signaling of µ-opioid receptors in t lymphocytes kraus j., börner c., lanciotti s., koch t., höllt v. inst. für pharmakologie und toxikologie, leipzigerstr. , magdeburg, germany opioids are the most potent analgesics and irreplaceable for the treatment of severe pain. in addition to their central effects, opioids modulate a great variety of immune effector cell functions, which may result in unwanted side effects during opioid treatment. the effects of most of the commonly used opioids are mediated by µ-opioid receptors, which belong to the superfamily of g protein coupled receptors. recent data support the concept that g protein coupled receptors function as dynamic entities, which may occupy multiple conformations and activate multiple signaling pathways in a ligand-dependent manner. consequently, different ligands activating the same receptor may have different cellular effects, which has been termed "agonistselective signaling". little is known about agonist-selective signaling of µ-opioid receptors in immune effector cells. in a first attempt to understand if and why such different profiles among different opioids occur we investigated effects of different opioids in human jurkat t cells. we report that the µ-opioid receptor ligands fentanyl, methadone, loperamide and betaendorphin induce internalization of a µ-opioid receptor-green fluorescent reporter construct, whereas morphine and buprenorphine did not induce internalization. the internalization was dependent on p mapk and phospholipase d . in line with this, we observed marked phosphorylation of p mapk and activation of phospholipase d induced by the internalizing opioids, but no or little such activity by morphine and buprenorphine. as a physiological result, fentanyl, methadone, loperamide and betaendorphin treatment of primary human t cells and jurkat t cells resulted in a strong, up to fold induction of il- , which was dependent on p . in contrast, morphine and buprenorphine only showed a weak, approximately one order of magnitude lower induction of il- . by inducing il- opioids significantly modulate the t helper cell balance into the type direction, which influences various immune responses, e. g. the antiviral, t helper cell type -mediated response. considering the vital necessity of opioid use in humans, it is an intriguing goal to identify analgetically feasible opioids that have little or no immunosuppressive or -modulatory effects. modulation of cgmp signals by phosphodiesterases in smooth muscle cells krawutschke c., koesling d., russwurm m. ruhr-universität bochum pharmakologie und toxikologie, universitätsstrasse , bochum, germany within the cardiovascular system, cgmp mediates smooth muscle relaxation and inhibition of platelet aggregation. cgmp is formed by particulate guanylyl cyclases and nitric oxide-sensitive guanylyl cyclases, that are activated by natriuretic peptides or nitric oxide (no), respectively. besides the cgmp-forming enzymes, the cgmp-degrading phosphodiesterases strongly determine amplitude and shape of cgmp signals. in vascular smooth muscle cells, three phosphodiesterases are considered to be responsible for cgmp degradation: pde , the cgmp-specific phosphodiesterase is activated directly by cgmp binding to its gaf domains; this activation if further stabilized by cgmp-dependent protein kinase-mediated phosphorylation. pde , the ca +/calmodulin-stimulated pde constitutes the majority of cgmp-hydrolyzing activity in smooth muscle cells at least in the presence of high intracellular ca + concentrations. and lastly pde , the cgmp-inhibited pde displays some cgmp-degrading activity, although cgmp binding to its catalytic domain is primarily thought to inhibit the campdegrading activity of pde . cgmp signals measurable in radioimmunoassays require stimulation with cgmpincreasing vasodilator concentrations that are orders of magnitudes higher than those required for relaxation. thus, we developed fluorescent sensors for real-time measurement of cgmp signals in single cells. by using these indicators, we analyzed the contribution of different cyclic nucleotide-degrading phosphodiesterases to the modulation of cgmp signals elicited by physiologically relevant vasodilator concentrations. hyaluronan (ha) is a major component of extracellular matrices and is thought to control cellular phenotypes such as proliferation and migration. therefore, ha synthesis may play an important role in the pathophysiology of atherosclerosis. there are three major ha-synthase isoenzymes (has - ). the has gene is alternatively spliced. has transcript variant (has v ) encodes the smallest has isoenzyme which has a different c-terminus and contains only two transmembrane domains compared to has transcript variant . the aim of the present study was to investigate whether has v is expressed by vascular cells, how it is regulated and where it is localized in cells and whether it indeed synthesizes ha. has v mrna expression was monitored by quantitative real-time rt-pcr. protein expression was determined by western blotting using a polyclonal antibody that was raised in rabbit. an n-terminal eyfp-has v fusion protein and a ddk-tagged has v construct were expressed for subcellular localization studies and co-immunoprecipitation (co-ip). endogenous has v mrna was expressed in both vascular smooth muscle cells (vsmc) and endothelial cells. furthermore, western blotting revealed has v protein expression in vsmc and platelets. in vsmc has v mrna expression was strongly up-regulated in response to interleukin- β (il- β, ng/ml) whereas stimulation with interleukin- ( ng/ml), platelet-derived growth factor-bb ( ng/ml), transforming growth factor β ( ng/ml), tumor necrosis factor α ( ng/ml) and interferon-γ ( ng/ml) had no effect. transfection of hek cells with eyfp-has v fusion protein revealed localization to the endoplasmic reticulum but not to the plasma membrane. furthermore, co-ip experiments showed that tagged has v proteins were precipitated together suggesting formation of multimeric has v complexes. transfection of has v did not cause increased secretion of ha into the cell culture supernatant in hek cells. in conclusion, has v is present in vascular cells and responds to inflammatory cytokines such as il- ß. because of the intracellular localization and the lack of ha secretion in has v transfected cells, has v may serve intracellular functions apart from ha synthesis. the tubulin antagonist pretubulysin shows strong vascular-disrupting properties in vitro several epidemiological studies indicate a correlation of human exposure to ultrafine particulate air pollution caused by incomplete combustion processes and an increase in the incidence of pulmonary immune diseases like asthma. as a possible mechanism behind this pathological phenomenon, the adjuvant effect of lung inflammation induced by poorly soluble environmental particles has been hypothesised. the aim of our study was to investigate the causal link between carbon nanoparticle-induced lung inflammation and modulations of immune cell populations during processes leading to sensitization, and allergic immune responses of the airways. therefore mice were treated with ovalbumin (ova) alone or in combination with carbon nanoparticles (cnp) by pharyngeal aspiration. the induction of inflammation and the immune adjuvant activity were studied in the lungs and lung draining peribronchial lymph nodes (pbln) at the level of sensitization, and at the level of the immune response. ova-specific ige antibodies were measured in blood serum, and the development of allergic airway inflammation was studied after ova challenge. results at the level of sensitization showed that cnp-induced immediate airway inflammation had immune adjuvant activity resulting in an increase of specific cell populations in pbln and in a stimulation of asthma-specific th cytokines. a specific reduction of the neutrophilic lung inflammation by application of the compatible solute ectoine significantly reduced the adjuvant effects of cnp. in ova-sensitized mice, application of cnp hours prior to allergen challenge, led to a significant increase in inflammatory cell infiltrate and respective cytokines in broncho-alveolar lavages. coapplication of mm ectoine together with cnp reduced the particle-induced effects. our data show a link between neutrophilic lung inflammation and adjuvant effects of cnp. a specific reduction of neutrophils by the application of ectoine attenuated this np induced adjuvant effect, indicating that particle-induced lung inflammation rather than the direct interaction of nanoparticles with immune cells is the critical step in environmentally modulated pulmonary immune diseases like asthma. introduction: drug-eluting stents (des) are commonly used in the treatment of acute artery occlusion. however, even if released cytotoxic drugs reduced neointimal proliferation significantly there is still the risk of in-stent thrombosis. it is presumed that this is due to reduced reendothelialization. it has been suggested that coating the stent with biomolecules may provide a new approach to circumvent the lack of healing of the endothelial layer. one approach would be the use of biomolecular signals, such as (poly)peptides and growth factors. rgd and redv are peptide motifs, known to enhance cell attachment and spreading. aim: the aim of our study was to evaluate the efficacy of proteins, derived from elastin-like proteins (elp) and artificial modified by incorporating with the amino acid motifs rgd,redv and p , in terms of endothelial healing on stents and other cardiovascular devices. results: in this work, we generated vectors encoding for different biopolymers consisting of various bioactive signal molecule sequences. the peptides, e.g. based on the elastinlike matrix (vpgig) -vpgkg-(vpgig) , were synthesized using heterologous expression. after optimizing culture conditions and extraction procedures their biological activity was assessed using human umbilical vein endothelial cells (huvec). elastin like proteins with differently incorporated bioactive signals (redv, rgd and a small p peptide) were linked covalently via carbodiimide coupling to poly(l-lactide) (plla) films. huvec growth was determined on these modified surfaces using the brdu assay (cell proliferation) and resazurin assay (cell viability). the chemically modified plla surfaces conferred higher cell viability after h adhesion ( %) and an enhanced proliferation ( %, h adhesion, h cultivation) in comparison to the unmodified plla. these results indicate that the synthesized elp incorporated with amino acid motifs promote an accelerated endothelialization of the biodegradable stent material plla. discussion: in summary, we were able to generate elastin-like proteins modified by bioactive sequences. those sequences enhanced endothelial cell proliferation and adhesion. further studies are warranted to determine the activity on smooth muscle cells of these peptides. ( ) the failing heart is characterized by excessive extracellular matrix production by myofibroblasts (myocfs) causing fibrosis and myocardial stiffening. myocfs represent phenotypically transformed cardiac fibroblasts (cfs) and are characterized by the expression of contractile proteins like a-smooth muscle actin (α-sma) and enhanced secretion of growth factors (e. g. ctgf). identification of intracellular enzymes that modulate this transformation process is desired to therapeutically modulate pro-fibrotic progression in heart failure. we show that pde a, a phosphodiesterase isoform, that is able to hydrolyse cgmp and camp, is markedly upregulated in failing hearts from patients with end-stage heart failure ( - -fold, p< . , n= ). notably, pde a protein abundance is -fold higher in myocfs compared to cardiomyocytes from neonatal rat hearts (p< . , n= ). to this end we tested whether pde a modulates the transformation of cfs isolated from neonatal rat hearts to myocfs. indeed, as assessed by immunoblotting and fluorescent microscopy (α-sma, phalloidin, dapi), adenoviral pde a overexpression induced α-sma expression ( . -fold p< . , n≥ ) and to a lower extent ctgf synthesis ( . -fold, p< . , n≥ ). mechanistically, pde a showed preferential subsarcolemmal localisation with diminished total cgmp levels (- %, p< . , n≥ ). consistently, parallel stimulation with atrial natriuretic peptide (anp), a selective activator of membrane-bound guanylyl cyclase, normalized ctgf synthesis indicating that pde a controls cgmp in a discrete subdomain near the plasma membrane. moreover pde a overexpression diminished the protein levels of vasodilator-stimulated phosphoprotein, a membrane cytoskeletal component (- %, p< . , n≥ ). these data implicate pde a-dependent subsarcolemmal cgmp regulation in myofibroblast formation and potentially cardiac fibrosis. therefore, targeting pde a may lead to regression of the fibrotic remodeling associated with heart failure. several anorganic nanoparticles (np) causedhigher inhalation toxicity than the corresponding coarse particles (oberdoerster et al. ) . we examined an organic pigment and a polymer dispersion each as nanomaterial and as the chemical identical coarse material in short-term inhalation studies in malerats. the polymer was an anionic acrylic ester copolymer containing free carboxylic groups. three different particle sizes were synthesized by varying polymerization conditions: , or nm. although polymeric acrylic ester was reported to be irritating to the respiratory tract at mg/m , all three tested polymers -including the np ( and nm) -did not cause any changes in lavage fluid and in histopathology at mg/m . the organic pigment was a poorly soluble pyrrol with an intense orange color. the np ( to nm width and to nm length) and the coarse pigments ( to nm width and . to µm length) are both needle-like. they were tested at , , and mg/m for the np and , and mg/m for the coarse materials. mild and partly reversible morphological changes were observed in lung and lymph nodes at the highest concentrations, but the more pronounced effect were found in rats exposed to the coarse material. likewise there was an increase of lavage parameters in rats exposed to thecoarse material but not to the np. these data demonstrate that inhalation of finer np is not necessarily associated with higher toxicity compared to the coarse material. the results were obtained with two organic particles of rather different size and composition but are in contrast to the more severe effects seen with several anorganic np when compared to the corresponding coarse particles. within the nanocare project a standard short-term inhalation test to examine the toxicity of inhaled aerosols from nanomaterials has been developed. the inhalation toxicity of nano-andpigmentary materials was studied: baso , zno, ceo , al-doped ceo , zro , amorphous silica, surface-coated amorphous silica, titania, carbon black and three multi-wall carbon nano tubes, all with complete phys-chem-characterization as planned for the oecd sponsorship program. quartz dust tio and zno were tested as pigmentary materials. rats were exposed nose-only to three concentrations of one of these materials, h a day for five consecutive days. positive controls were exposed to quartz dust or pigmentary zno, negative controls to clean air. a wide range of endpoints for pulmonary toxicity were evaluated immediately after the last exposure and after days and weeks after the last exposure. among these parameters, polymorphnuclear granulocyte count in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid is the most sensitive early parameter indicating inflammation process in lung, while histological examination reveals the type and localization of inflammation. among these substances, we identified baso as having the lowest toxicity. all mwcnts were most potent in producing progressive inflammation in the lung; granulomas in lung and lung associated lymph nodes were observed without indication for fibrosis. the noaecs of the substances ranged between < . and > mg/m . generally the material was only found in the lung (surface and macrophages) and in the draining lymph nodes. surface modified amorphous silica was also found in the spleen. the data demonstrate that the method is able to differentiate the toxic potential of different nanomaterials and to indicate regression or progression of the effects effects. moreover the lung burden and potential translocation to other tissues was detecable. comparing the material properties and effects of the materials, no general relationship between the toxicity and either particle size, specific surface area or aerosol particle number concentration was found. hence we must not expect to find a gerneral "nanotoxicology" or a unifying dosimetry for all nanomaterials. we must rather be prepared to test individual nanomaterials for their effects. and to develop grouping concepts not only based on material properties but also on biopersistence, biokinetics and biological effects. part of this studes has been sponsored by bmbf (nanocare). endpoint-centric search for toxicological information and data to support the information retrieval for regulatory programs landsiedel r. , wächter t. the eu reach regulation no / requires industry to ensure the safety of chemical use and manufacturing. all substances manufactured or imported in quantities above one tonne per year must be registered. information requirements for the dossiers increase with increasing tonnage or once hazards are suspected. searching for substance specific literature and the compilation of hazard data for safety assessments are highly challenging procedures. the novel web-based search engine go r, accessible free of charge at www.go r.org, has been created to allow quickly finding relevant hazard information and data. go r provides an endpoint-centered literature search to all scientists and regulatory authorities seeking for toxicological information. furthermore, go r specifically highlights information on animal testing alternatives. search results are presented automatically linked to an "intelligent table of contents" which enables the user to sort the literature listed in pubmed or the toxicology data network (toxnet) in a fast and comprehensive manner. retrieved documents are automatically organized in categories relating to the iuclid chapters. hereby, the user can browse directly through the entire million documents without even having to start the search with an initial query. the semantically enriched platform supports the user during query formulation, allows for bibliographic analysis, and specifically highlights information related to the replacement, reduction, and refinement of animal experiments. search results in go r are shown in an dynamic table of contents (left) making them browsable for the contained information on animal testing alternatives and toxicologogical endpoints. towards a differentiation therapy of acute myelogenous leukemia with histamine h -receptor agonists laue s., burhenne h., seifert r. hannover medical school institute of pharmacology, carl-neuberg-str. , hannover, germany acute myelogenous leukemia (aml) is a devastating malignancy characterized by a differentiation block of myeloid progenitor cells. recently, histamine dihydrochloride in combination with interleukin has been approved as orphan drug for the consolidation treatment of aml ( ) . it is assumed that histamine exerts its effects by activating the histamine h -receptor (h r) in human neutrophils, resulting in improved anti-tumor function of t killer cells by inhibiting nadph oxidase-catalyzed superoxide formation. previous studies had shown that histamine also induces myeloid differentiation ( ) . considering the fact that all-trans-retinoic acids constitutes a powerful differentiation therapy of acute promyelocytic leukaemia, a specific subtype of aml ( ), we initiated a study to explore the possibility that h r-mediated myeloid differentiation provides an alternative or complementary strategy to treat leukemias associated with differentiation blocks. as model system, we used hl- cells. in hl- cells, histamine and various h -receptor agonists induced concentrationdependent increases in camp levels. interestingly, ligands differentially increased cytosolic calcium concentration and extracellular receptor kinase (erk) pathways, indicative for ligand-specific h r conformations. h r activation resulted in myeloid differentiation as assessed by enhanced formyl peptide receptor-mediated increases in cytosolic calcium concentration. h r agonists showed no signs of cytotoxicity. intriguingly, following h r activation, the majority of the formed camp was exported into the extracellular space via multi-drug resistance protein (mrp) , indicating that export is a more important pathway for signal termination than cleavage of camp by phosphodiesterases. despite effective camp export, even a short-term exposure ( minutes) of cells was sufficient to induce expression of functionally active formyl peptide receptors. these data indicate that in contrast to previously held dogma, induction of myeloid differentiation does not require continuous presence of a camp signal. from a therapeutic point of view this is very important since "spike" therapy with campincreasing substances may be sufficient to induce a therapeutic effect in aml, thereby also reducing toxic side effects. currently, we are systematically exploring the effects of h r agonists on signal transduction pathways and differentiation in various myeloid cell types to identify highly efficacious compounds. introduction. activation of gαq/ protein-coupled receptors of postsynaptic neurons can elicit the production of endogenous cannabinoids (endocannabinoids), which in turn inhibit transmitter release from axon terminals by activating presynaptic cb receptors. the aim of the present experiments was to study the mechanism of the endocannabinoid production. specifically, we wanted to clarify the role of ca + release from intracellular stores in triggering endocannabinoid production. methods. patch-clamp-and ca + imaging experiments were performed on purkinje cells in mouse cerebellar brain slices. glutamatergic excitatory postsynaptic currents (eepscs) were elicited by electrical stimulation of parallel fibers. the gαq/ proteincoupled metabotropic glutamate receptor (mglur ) was activated by superfusion of (rs)- , -dihydroxyphenylglycine (dhpg) or -more physiologically -by burst stimulation of the parallel fibers. results. both dhpg superfusion and burst stimulation of parallel fibers elicited an increase in intracellular ca + concentration in the postsynaptic purkinje cells. dhpg superfusion and burst stimulation suppressed eepscs, and this suppression was abolished in the presence of the mglur antagonist cpccoet. the suppression of the eepscs was also sensitive to the cb receptor antagonist rimonabant, pointing to involvement of endocannabinoids and cb receptors. the suppression of the eepscs was attenuated after depletion of the endoplasmic reticulum ca + stores by thapsigargin, cyclopiazonic acid and ip . the results indicate that after activation of the gαq/ protein-coupled metabotropic glutamate receptor (mglur ) of the postsynaptic neuron ca + is released from the endoplasmic reticulum. this ca + release significantly contributes to the production of endocannabinoids. the endocannabinoids diffuse in the synaptic cleft retrogradely to the terminals of afferent axons and inhibit transmitter release there through presynaptic cb receptors. the guanine nucleotide exchange factor dock controls reelin dependent cdc effects on radial migration pichler m. the regulation of blood glucose levels is under tight control of a complex system including hormone and neurotransmitter signalling. many of these cellular signalling pathways are initiated by binding of the ligand to a g-protein coupled receptor (gpcr), e.g. noradrenaline inhibits insulin secretion upon binding to a gi-coupled receptor. upon gpcr activation the heterotrimeric g-protein is activated and both the α-subunit and βγdimers are released and interact with their specific target proteins. by the usage of bordetella pertussis toxin (ptx) as a common gαi inhibitor gαi-dependent signalling pathways are interrupted which leads to increased insulin secretion, and significantly improves glucose tolerance. since the gαi-isoform specific roles in the regulation of glucose homeostasis are still debated we studied the glycemic control in gαi -deficient mice. surprisingly and in contrast to the ptx data, glucose tolerance was unchanged in the gαi -deficient mice compared to wild type controls. however, the plasma insulin levels were significantly reduced upon glucose challenge. these findings point to disturbed islets function and improved peripheral insulin sensitivity. analysing gαi deficient islets we show that islet size and number of nuclei are reduced. nevertheless, in vitro insulin secretion is improved at low ( mm) and high ( mm) glucose concentrations and can be further stimulated upon ptx-treatment. these data indicate that gαi proteins influence islet development and inhibit insulin secretion. in addition, these findings support our hypothesis that gαi -deletion influences peripheral insulin sensitivity. therefore, we investigated glucose homeostasis and pakt-levels after two hours feeding ad libitum in gαi -deficient mice. under feeding conditions no differences in plasma insulin levels were visible although blood glucose levels were significantly reduced in gαi -targeted mice. pakt-levels of liver and skeletal muscle were unaltered, whereas akt phosphorylation in white adipose tissue was significantly increased, indicating improved glucose uptake of adipocytes. in conclusion, gαi is a negative regulator of both insulin secretion and peripheral insulin sensitivity and important for the maintenance of glucose homeostasis. , ) in a radioligand binding test and to determine their functional effects with a membrane potential test using the dye r (molecular probes, . mg/ml, excitation nm, emission nm). the affinity of compounds in radioligand binding was slightly higher in sur b than in sur a-type channels, but the enantiomeric ratio in sur a channels matched that one determined for the sur b-type indicating some conformity of the binding pockets of sur a and sur b-proteins. surprisingly, however, the membrane potential tests revealed that the ( r, s)-enantiomer acted as agonist (a) whereas the ( s, r)-enantiomer acted as antagonist (b): ( r, s)-bms- induced membrane hyperpolarisation whereas ( s, r)-bms- repolarised cells prestimulated with submaximally effective concentrations of diazoxide. concluding, bms- is not selective for sur a as compared to sur b-type k atp channels. its enantiomers activate and block sur -type katp channels in a stereospecific manner. thieno-thiadiazine derivatives with full agonistic activity at sur b-type katp channels act as partial agonists at cardiac sur a-subtypes oldenhage c., grittner d., schmidt c., lemoine h. heinrich-heine universität, inst. für lasermedizin, mol. wirkstoff-forschung, universitätsstr. , düsseldorf, germany new potassium channel openers (kco) of the thieno-thiadiazine(ttd)-type initially developed as agonists for the sur -type katp channels (nielsen et al., j med chem : , ) were characterized in sur b-type katp channels as agonists and antagonists, if r contains a quaternary (methyl-cycloalkyl) and a tertiary (r = cycloalkyl) carbon, respectively (lemoine et al., this journal , r , ) . to investigate the selectivity of ttd-derivatives for myocardial katp channels the membrane potential actions of compounds were tested in hek (kir . /sur a)-cells and compared to hek (kir . /sur b)-cells as a model for smooth muscle-type katp channels. membrane potential was measured by fluorescence (excitation nm, emission nm) using . mg/ml of the dye r (molecular probes). standard-kco induced hyperpolarisation with ~ -fold smaller potency (pec ) in sur a. ttd-compounds with ch -cycloalkyl residues not only lost potency but also intrinsic activity for channel activation (emax) in sur a. possibly, this loss of emax would be much greater in native heart cells with a normal channel density. in contrast, ttd-compounds with cycloalkyl residues acted as antagonists of cells pre-hyperpolarized with diazoxide with similar affinity in sur a and sur b-type katp channels. concluding, selectivity of kco for katp channel-subtypes cannot only be achieved by a different affinity but also by a selective stimulation of the channel of interest. small-conductance calcium activated potassium (kcnn/sk/kca ) channels maintain neuronal calcium homeostasis, shape synaptic functions and prevent excitotoxic neuronal death. so far, little is known about the function of kca channels in nonneuronal cells. the aim of this study was to investigate the expression of kca channels in microglial cells and their potential function in microglial activation and maintenance. expression of kca channel subtypes in microglial cells was assessed by mrna analysis, western blots and immunocytochemistry. lipopolysaccharide (lps)-induced microglial proliferation was evaluated by the xcelligence impedance-based system and mtt assays, and immunogenic activation of microglia was determined by measuring cytokines and nitric oxide (no) release into the cell culture medium. the kca . and kca . channel activator cyppa ( µm) and specific inhibitory peptides ( µm) were applied to distinguish effects mediated by the kca channel subtypes. all kca channel subtypes were detected on mrna and protein levels in resting and in lps-activated microglial cells. xcelligence real-time measurements and mtt assays demonstrated that lps ( ng/ml) induced microglial proliferation. the kca . /kca . channel activator cyppa reduced lps-induced microglial proliferation in a concentration-dependent manner. specific peptide inhibitors of kca . channels, but not of kca . channels, reversed the cyppa-effects on lps-induced microglial proliferation. cyppa alone did not alter the production of tnf-alpha or il- , but strongly reduced the lps-dependent cytokine production. interestingly, chelation of extracellular calcium by edta induced differential cytokine kinetics by decreasing lps-dependent il- production while tnf-a production was not affected. moreover, using inhibitory sk /kca . channel peptides, we demonstrated that sk /kca . channels modulate lps-induced cytokine il- production in a calcium-dependent manner, while the tnf-a release was independent of extracellular calcium. in summary, the present study revealed that kca . channel stimulation reversed microglial activation. thus, kca . channels may serve as a therapeutic target for reducing microglial activity and related inflammatory responses in cns diseases. ( r, s)-( s, r)- intracellular amyloid beta (aß) oligomers and extracellular aß plaques are key players in the progression of sporadic alzheimer disease (ad). still, the molecular signals triggering aß production are largely unclear. we asked whether mitochondria-derived reactive oxygen species (ros) are sufficient to increase aß generation and thereby initiate a vicious cycle further impairing mitochondrial function. complex i and iii dysfunction were induced in a cell model using the respiratory inhibitors rotenone and antimycin resulting in mitochondrial dysfunction and enhanced ros levels. both treatments lead to elevated levels of aß. presence of an antioxidant rescued mitochondrial function and reduced formation of aß demonstrating that the observed effects depended on ros. conversely, cells overproducing aß showed impairment of mitochondrial function such as comprised mitochondrial respiration, strongly altered morphology, and reduced intracellular mobility of mitochondria. again, the capability of these cells to generate aß was partly reduced by an antioxidant indicating that aß formation was also ros-dependent. moreover, mice with a genetic defect in complex i, or ad mice treated with a complex i inhibitor, showed enhanced aß levels in vivo. several lines of evidence show that mitochondria-derived ros result in enhanced amyloidogenic amyloid precursor protein processing, and that aß itself leads to mitochondrial dysfunction and increased ros levels. we propose that starting from mitochondrial dysfunction a vicious cycle is triggered that contributes to the pathogenesis of sporadic ad. comparison of methods to derive health-based guidance or limit values for chemicals licht o., voss j. -u., mangelsdorf i. fraunhofer item chemikalienbewertung, nikolai-fuchs-str. , hannover, germany health-based guidance or limit values are derived for chemicals to compare measured or estimated exposure concentrations with these values. if the exposure is below the limit value, adverse effect for human health can be regarded as negligible, e.g. the exposure is expected to be tolerable. in germany such values have been derived since years for chemicals that can be found in soil, water and air as well as human blood and urine (biomonitoring). in a research project sponsored by the german umweltbundesamt several methods used by the agency are compared to the method laid in reach guidance document r. to derive a derived no effect level (dnel). the aim was to identify possibilities for standardization as well as to figure out specific elements in individual methods. in addition to extrapolation factors the public availability of guidance and specific derivations as well as procedures for consensus on the limit value were evaluated. the comparison of extrapolation factors revealed that, although they are named differently such as extrapolation, safety or assessment factors, they are used in a comparable manner. factors for interspecies and intraspecies extrapolation are presented in more detail. the standard factor for such extrapolation is in most cases. in the reach guidance this factor consists of a part for allometric scaling and remaining differences. other factors are only defined in some methods, like a factor for extrapolation from loael to noael, data quality or data gaps. a factor for data quality is not laid down in the basic scheme for setting of indoor air guidance values, but is used in some of the recent derivations of limit values. also the who guidelines for drinkingwater quality use comparable factors to account for adequacy of studies or database and nature and severity of effect. a transparent and documented derivation is necessary for acceptance of the value. the derivation methods as well as the evaluation document on a specific substance are available through publications or the internet in nearly all cases. for the dnel only the numeric value is available at the echa website, but not any information on starting point and extrapolation factors. although all guide or limit values are derived in a comparable way, differences, however, exist in some details. in most cases detailed explanation is lacking when deviating from standard or default assumptions. often such deviation is based on expert judgement. hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) is the fifth most common cancer in the world and has a poor prognosis with limited therapeutic options. up to now, no curative systemic therapy exists emphasizing the high clinical importance of new therapies for hcc. therefore, the identification and characterization of novel drugable targets is a relevant goal. cyclin-dependent kinase (cdk ) is well characterized for its function in cns development and disease. recently, few reports indicate functions of cdk in cancer. cdk was shown to regulate tumor growth, and our group discovered that cdk regulates angiogenesis. since hcc is a highly vascularized tumor and anti-angiogenic treatment (sorafenib) has shown some therapeutic benefit, we hypothesize that cdk is an interesting target for hcc therapy. the aim of this study was to characterize the function of cdk in hcc. histology of tissue micro arrays indicates an increased expression of cdk in human hcc tissue in comparison to healthy liver tissue of the same patient. to investigate the function of cdk in hcc, we analyzed the impact of both pharmacological inhibition of cdk and specific downregulation of cdk with rna interference on hcc cells. pharmacological inhibition of cdk with the small molecule roscovitine (r-roscovitine, seliciclib) decreased proliferation and clonogenic survival, induced g /m cell cycle arrest and cell death, and reduced motility of huh and hepg cells. transient downregulation (sirna) and stable knockdown (shrna) of cdk also reduced proliferation, clonogenic survival, migration and invasion of huh cells. in a subcutaneous hcc xenograft model, treatment with roscovitine reduced tumor growth and angiogenesis, indicated by decreased tumor weight and volume, and reduced vessel density. moreover, cotreatment of hcc cells with roscovitine and tumor necrosis factor related apoptosis inducing ligand (trail) resulted in an over-additive additive effect on the induction of apoptosis. this coincided with reduced phosphorylation and activity of the anti-apoptotic transcription factor stat at ser that is directly phosphorylated by cdk , and tyr . in line with this, the expression of the antiapoptotic protein mcl- is reduced by inhibition of cdk . our results point to an important function of cdk in hcc and suggest cdk as an interesting pharmacologically druggable target for hcc therapy. delivery of mono-biotinylated rnasea into macrophages with streptavidinconjugated clostridium botulinum c toxin lillich m. , chen x. clostridium botulinum produces the adp-ribosyltransferase c , which modifies and thereby inactivates exclusively the small gtp binding proteins rho-a,-b and -c. recently, we discovered a specific endocytotic internalization of c toxin in macrophages and myeloid leukaemia cells, but not in epithelial cells [ ] . thus, c toxin provides a tool to target cells of the monocyte/macrophage lineage, which are involved in various diseases and are of great clinical interest. we used a biochemical crosslinking approach to design a delivery system based on an enzymatic inactive c bot mutant (c mut) and streptavidin. the c portion mediates uptake of the transporter into monocytes/macrophages and streptavidin allows for binding of biotinylated cargo molecules to the transporter. in vitro, the generated c mut-streptavidin bioconjugate showed specific and concentration dependent binding to biotinylated oligonucleotides as demonstrated by electrophoretic mobility shift assay. cell fractionation experiments indicated an uptake of the bioconjugate into the cytosol of j a. macrophages. in the next step, mono-biotinylated bovine pancreatic ribonuclease a (rnasea) was used as a model cargo for the delivery of macromolecules by the bioconjugate. rnasea is a highly stable, well studied protein which catalyzes the degradation of rna. mono-biotinylated rnasea interacts in a specific and concentration dependent manner with the c mut-streptavidin bioconjugate in vitro as analysed with dot blot technique. the c mut-streptavidin bioconjugate efficiently mediates the internalization of biotinylated rnasea into j a. macrophages as analyzed with laser scanning microscopy in fixed cells. this finding was also confirmed by live cell imaging. furthermore, cell fractionation showed a cytosolic delivery of biotinylated rnasea in the presence of c mut-streptavidin. as expected we could not observe a cytotoxic effect of biotinylated wild-type rnasea on j a. macrophages, which is attributable to the presence of ribonuclease inhibitor protein in mammalian cells. in summary, the c mut-streptavidin bioconjugate mediates the efficient internalization of biotinylated (macro)molecules into macrophage like cells, and therefore represents a useful tool for the transduction of exogenous molecules into macrophages. in addition, cytotoxic rnasea mutants are available and will be used in further studies. organometal compounds such as cisplatin or the second generation complexes carboplatin and oxaliplatin have become more and more important as antitumor agents. nevertheless there is still an increasing demand for novel metal-based compounds. this is necessary due to severe side effects and the occurence of resistent tumour cells. in this context we investigated the cytotoxic effects of imidazole-based phosphane gold(i) complexes as potential agents for cancer treatment. initially we have used the mtt-assay to examine the toxic potential of the gold complexes in h iie rat hepatoma cells. in this context cw (a diphosphane ligand with azoyl substituents r p(ch ) pr , r= thiazol- -yl) turned out to be the compound with the highest cytotoxic potential with an ic value of , mm ( h incubation). further investigations revealed that cw induced an apoptotic cell death in h iie demonstrated by the activation of caspase / ( h incubation with mm cw ). in addition the induction of apoptosis was confirmed by the dna ladder formation ( h incubation with mm cw ). in connection with the molecular mechanisms of apoptosis induction we used the comet assay to analyse the generation of dna strand breaks as well as the dcf-assay to detect the formation of reactive oxygen species. however neither dna strand breaks nor increased levels of reactive oxygen species were detected after h of incubation. furthermore we analysed if the compound influences intracellular signalling pathways such as the jnk pathway and the pi k/akt but after h of incubation neither pakt nor jnk were influenced. the imidazole based phosphane gold (i) complex cw shows strong toxic effects in h iie cells and turned out to be a promising compound as a potential agent for cancer treatment. the high and inappropriate intake of loop diuretics in hypertensive elderly reported in former studies has again been confirmed. remembering that inappropriate intake of loop diuretics can lead to exsiccosis and electrolyte loss especially in elderly, better medical education has to follow these alarming results to improve the pattern of diuretic prescription. furthermore, our results lead us to assume a high estimated number of unreported cases of torasemide use in uncomplicated arterial hypertension in elderly. this loop diuretic agent shows a longer duration of action compared with furosemide (elimination half-life: - hrs vs. hr) and is effective in decreasing blood pressure in subdiuretic doses. it must be pointed out that loop diuretics are still frequently inadequately prescribed because current guidelines recommend loop diuretics only in complicated arterial hypertension. the role of cgmp/cgki signaling and trpc channels in regulation of vascular tone loga f., domes k., hofmann f., wegener j. pharmakologie und toxikologie for , biedersteiner str , münchen, germany signaling by intracellular cgmp and cgmp-dependent protein kinase i (cgki) is the major pathway in vascular smooth muscle, by which endothelial no regulates vascular tone. recent evidence suggests that trpc channels are targets of cgki in smooth muscle and mediate, at least partially, the relaxant effects of cgmp. we tested this concept by investigating the role of cgmp/cgki signaling on vascular tone and peripheral resistance using cgki-, trpc -, and trpc -, and trpc /c -double knock-out mice. we found larger contractile responses to α-adrenergic stimulation in intact aorta from cgki-, trpc -, and trpc /c -double knock-out mice as compared to aorta from ctr and trpc -knock-out mice indicating a functional link between cgki and trpc channels. no differences were found if the vasodilator tone, provided by the no generation in the vascular endothelium, was inhibited by l-name. likewise, no differences were observed in the increase in peripheral resistance by α-adrenergic stimulation using the hind limb perfusion system. activation of cgki by -br-cgmp diminished aortic tone and peripheral resistance to a similar extent in control, trpc -, trpc -, and trpc /c -double knock-out mice. no effect of -br-cgmp was observed in preparations from cgki -/mice. to test the co-localization of cgki and trpc channels, we performed immunocytochemistry on isolated smooth muscle and endothelial cells from aorta of ctr, trpc -, and trpc -knockout mice. trpc could be detected in both smooth muscle and endothelial cells whereas trpc was only detected in endothelial cells. the results suggest that absence of cgki or trpc impairs the vasodilator tone induced by endothelial no production but that cgki and trpc channels are not functionally coupled in vascular smooth muscle. we thank profs birnbaumer (nih) and freichel (homburg) for providing us with trpc -/-, and trpc -/mice and prof. flockerzi (homburg) for the antibodies against the trpc channels. whole genome microarray analysis of the effects of tcdd and pcb in human hepatic cell models lohr c. , neser s. after the treatment with tcdd, however, a total of genes were more than -fold up regulated in hepg e.g. cytochrome p a (cyp a ) ( -fold) a sensitive marker for ahr activation. additional up regulated genes in hepg were; arylhydrocarbon receptor repressor (ahrr) -fold, aldehyde dehydrogenase a (aldh a ) -fold, and cytochrome p b (cyp b ) -fold. genes were more than -fold down regulated in hepg cells e.g. -proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type . markedly different findings were obtained in hheps, i.e., genes were up regulated, the highest up regulated gene was cyp b with a -fold increase in gene expression, followed by cyp a ( -fold) and aldh a ( -fold). only a small group of genes were significantly down regulated ( in total), e.g., solute carrier family (facilitated glucose transporter). comparing both human cell types, there was an unexpected small overlap of genes being up or down regulated. interestingly, in both cell types, only in common genes were up regulated, including cyp a , cyp a , cyp b and aldh a . only platelet-derived growth factor receptor, beta polypeptide, was down-regulated in both hepg and hheps. in conclusion, our data indicate pronounced differences in the patterns of tcdd-regulated genes between hepg cells and hheps. detection of redox modified proteins in nociceptive processing lorenz j. e. , kallenborn-gerhardt w. recent data indicate that redox modifications of proteins induced by reactive oxygen species (ros) contribute to sensitization of pain pathways during persistent pain. however, little is known about the targets of ros in pain processing, because the relatively unstable nature of many reversible protein oxidation states hampers the reliable detection and identification of modified proteins. here, we used the quantitative thiol trapping technique termed oxicat to identify proteins which are redox modified during nociceptive processing. we investigated spinal cords of untreated mice, after zymosan injection into a hindpaw (inflammatory pain model) and after spared nerve injury (neuropathic pain model). we identified several proteins with marked changes in their redox states after nociceptive stimulation. our results show that the oxicat method is an efficient method to detect redox modifications in proteins and that redox modifications seem to play a role in pain processing. supported by the deutsche forschungsgemeinschaft (sfb /a ). additive antinociceptive effects of a combination of vitamin c and vitamin e after peripheral nerve injury lu r., kallenborn-gerhardt w., geisslinger g., schmidtko a. pharmazentrum frankfurt/zafes institute of clinical pharmacology, goethe university, frankfurt am main, germany accumulating evidence indicates that increased generation of reactive oxygen species (ros) contributes to the development of exaggerated pain hypersensitivity during persistent pain. in the present study, we investigated the antinociceptive efficacy of the antioxidants vitamin c and vitamin e in mouse models of inflammatory and neuropathic pain. we show that systemic administration of a combination of vitamins c and e inhibited the early behavioral responses to formalin injection and the neuropathic pain behavior after peripheral nerve injury, but not the inflammatory pain behavior induced by complete freund's adjuvant. in contrast, vitamin c or vitamin e given alone failed to affect the nociceptive behavior in all tested models. the attenuated neuropathic pain behavior induced by the vitamin c and e combination was paralleled by a reduced p phosphorylation in the spinal cord and in dorsal root ganglia, and was also observed after intrathecal injection of the vitamins. moreover, the vitamin c and e combination ameliorated the allodynia induced by an intrathecally delivered ros donor. our results suggest that administration of vitamins c and e in combination may exert synergistic antinociceptive effects, and further indicate that ros essentially contribute to nociceptive processing in special pain states. - , - and - ) replaced by leucine residues. both amino acids are comparable in terms of hydrophobicity, volume and the preference for forming α-helices, but only methionine is oxidizable to a sulfoxide, in contrast to leucine. in the present study we examined the protein-protein interaction (ppi) of recombinant ac , expressed in sf insect cell membranes, with cam, cam- , - , - and - by measuring the catalytic activity of ac . cam-mutants show a - -fold lower potency than cam, but they are more efficacious than cam. most prominently, cam- was % more efficacious than cam. such striking differences between cam and cam-mutants have not yet been observed for other mammalian effector proteins. as a result of the exchange of all methionine against leucine residues in cam- , it is more hydrophobic than cam and this leads to a better ppi with ac . in future studies we will examine the effects of cam inhibitors, antidepressants and antipsychotics on cam/ac interaction. furthermore we will analyze the effects of oxidized cam and cam-mutants on the catalytic activity of ac . because oxidative stress is of great importance in aging, it is important to know more about the abovenamed interaction in view to the demographic change. taken together, our data point to a unique cam/ac interaction that may be selectively targeted by small molecules. in particular, enhancers of these interaction could be useful to improve memory and learning. gender differences in fat distribution and diabetes prevalence in nzo mouse lubura m., scherneck s., zucker a., schürmann a. deutsches institut für ernährungsforschung experimentelle diabetologie, arthur-scheunert-allee - , potsdam, germany background: excessive fat accumulation in visceral but not subcutaneous fat depots as well as ectopic fat storage in liver, skeletal muscle and pancreas are associated with an increased risk for the development of type diabetes in humans. in this study we aimed to examine the influence of early fat distribution on onset of type diabetes in mice. methods: nzo mice are regarded as insulin resistant model in which only males become diabetic. we used male and female mice fed with high-fat and standard diet. we determined fat distribution by computed tomography for three times and conducted oral glucose tolerance tests on two different time points. besides we assessed body weight and blood glucose levels on weekly basis. results: contrary to previous findings, we observed that not only male nzo mice on high-fat diet develop diabetes. blood glucose levels at the th week of age and total pancreatic insulin content indicated diabetes prevalence of % in males and % in females these results lead to the conclusion that high-fat diet counteracts protective action of estrogens against diabetes. inversely to the findings in humans, female mice tend to store more fat in abdominal region than males. there was no relationship between early accumulation of fat in abdominal region and onset of type diabetes. however, visceral fat was associated with liver fat in males as well as in females. furthermore, at the age of ten weeks hepatic fat content correlated with blood glucose levels (r² = . ) indicating that the early hepatosteatosis is a predictor for hyperglycemia. however, there was no correlation between hepatic insulin sensitivity (indicated by quantitative insulin sensitivity index-quicki) and amounts of hepatic fat we conclude that early hepatosteatosis does not predict for glucose intolerance in nzo mice. in the nzo mouse, the amount of liver fat but not the early fat distribution predicts for the later onset of type diabetes. further experiments are needed to examine the gender dependent differences in the diabetes prevalence of this mouse strain. with a prevalence of about - % non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (nafld) represents the most common liver disorder in europe. nafld manifestation ranges from steatosis through steatohepatitis (nash) to fibrosis and cirrhosis, followed in some cases by liver failure and hepatocellular carcinoma. fatty degeneration of liver cells, increased oxidative stress with concomitant lipid peroxidation and an induction of pro-inflammatory cytokines are proposed as possible causes for developing inflammation and fibrosis, but the exact pathogenesis of the progression of nafld into nash is still unknown. thus, besides life style modifications and weight reduction interventions, no established pharmacological therapy exists so far. to gain further insights into the pathogenesis of nafld and nash and to develop new therapeutic strategies, appropriate animal models are essential. thus, in the present study three different dietary animal models for nafld were evaluated and compared to the biochemical and metabolic alterations seen with nafld and nash in man. male adult lewis rats were given standard food or one of three different diets: fatty liver diet [fld] , methionine/choline deficient diet [mcd] or methionine/choline deficient plus high fat diet [mcd+hf] . after , , , or weeks of treatment, animals were sacrificed and body and liver weights, laboratory parameters (asat, alat) as well as histopathological changes in the livers and different parameters indicating oxidative stress or representing the biotransformation capacity of the livers were analyzed. with fld and mcd+hf a normal body weight gain was observed, whereas with mcd body weight gain was strongly impaired. liver weights were mainly increased after mcd+hf. elevation of asat and alat values and hepatic steatosis were more pronounced after mcd and mcd+hf than after fld. all three diets caused an increase in the oxidative stress in liver tissue, but especially with mcd a tremendous elevation in the hepatic levels of lipid peroxidation products was seen. with regard to liver biotransformation capacity, with all three diets mainly an induction of the cytochrome p e and a isoforms expression and activity was observed, which was most pronounced after mcd and mcd+hf. in summary, the changes induced by mcd or mcd+hf most closely resemble the alterations described in literature for nafld in man and thus should be preferred over fld in future investigations on nafld and nash. ep receptors for prostaglandin e convey stimulatory and inhibitory effects. e.g., their stimulatory effect leads to vasoconstriction in the human pulmonary artery and their inhibitory activity to reduction of neurotransmitter release from neuron endings. the aim of our study was ( ) the pharmacological characterization of ep receptors in human pulmonary arteries and ( ) the examination of the involvement of these receptors in the regulation of the neurogenic tachycardia in pithed rats. l- served as the ep antagonist. experiments were performed in human pulmonary arterial rings isolated from patients undergoing lobectomy during resection of lung carcinoma and in pithed and vagotomised rats. the ep /ep agonist sulprostone ( nm - mm) concentrationdependently contracted human pulmonary artery rings (pec and emax; . ± . and . ± . %, relative to the contraction induced by kcl mm). the concentrationresponse curve of sulprostone was not affected by the ep antagonist sc ( µm) but shifted to the right by l- ( µm) (apparent pa . ). extending the exposure time to l- from . to h increased its antagonistic potency to . (schild plot-based pa ; concentrations . , and µm). in pithed rats electrical stimulation ( . hz, ms, v for s) of the preganglionic sympathetic nerve fibers or intravenous isoprenaline ( . nmol/kg) increased heart rate (hr) by beats/min. sulprostone ( - nmol/kg) did not affect the isoprenaline-induced increase in hr but inhibited the neurogenic tachycardia dose-dependently, maximally by %. l- ( µmol/kg) diminished the inhibitory effect of sulprostone nmol/kg on the neurogenic tachycardia by %. in conclusion, ep receptors ( ) located postsynaptically strongly contract human pulmonary arteries and ( ) located presynaptically on sympathetic nerve fibres supplying the heart of rats strongly inhibit the neurogenic tachycardia. - -bromo-n- [ -( - voltage-gated ca + channels of the central nervous system control a multitude of ca + dependent processes such as neurotransmitter release, neuronal excitability, neurite outgrowth, synaptogenesis, plasticity and neuronal survival. the cav . ca + channelalso known as p/q-type channel -belongs to the subfamily of high voltage activated ca + -channels. ca + influx via cav . ca + channels located at presynaptic nerve terminals triggers vesicle fusion and transmitter release at brain synapses and at the neuromuscular junction. thus, cav . ca + channels play a crucial role in synaptic transmission. the global cav . knock-out phenotype is characterized by severe ataxia, dystonia and lethality during the first postnatal weeks and is therefore an unsuitable model to analyze the importance of cav . ca + channels for learning and memory. therefore, we crossed a floxed cav . mouse line with nex-cre transgenic mice to establish a viable, forebrain specific knock-out mouse line (fbko-mice). results from western blot analysis confirmed an efficient knock out of cav . in hippocampal and cortical preparations, whereas the expression level in the cerebellum was not altered. to investigate the specific role of cav . channels in hippocampus and neocortex dependent behavior, we performed tests for motor functions and sensory abilities and in particular learning and memory tasks. mice with a forebrain specific cav . knock-out show significant deficits in spatial learning & reference memory and a significant reduced recognition memory as revealed by the morris water maze and an object recognition task. the fbko-mice exhibit no obvious locomotor deficits during behavioral tasks in the open field test and elevated plus maze. some fbko-mice demonstrate episodes of seizures in the morris water maze and during different rotarod tasks. to assess motor-function of fbko-mice in a stress reduced environment, we performed home cage based running-wheel motor-learning tasks. in summary, the diverse phenotypes of the forebrain specific knock-out mouse line emphasize the critical importance of cav . for learning and memory. helicobacter hepaticus-infected rag -/mice emulate many aspects of human inflammatory bowel disease (ibd), including the development of colitis and colon cancer [erdman et al., , pnas : - . toward the goal of elucidating mechanisms of inflammation-induced carcinogenesis and developing biomarkers of inflammation, we undertook a comprehensive analysis of macromolecular damage products during disease progression in h. hepaticus-infected rag -/mice. infected mice developed severe colitis and hepatitis, accompanied by infiltration of myeloperoxidase-positive neutrophils and f / -positive macrophages, by wks postinfection (pi), progressing into colon carcinoma by wks pi. qpcr array-based gene expression profiling revealed that pathophysiological changes were associated with characteristic alterations in the expression of genes related to inflammation, dna repair, and oxidative stress response. to study inflammation-related macromolecular damage, colon and liver tissues were analyzed by isotope-dilution chromatography-coupled mass spectrometry to quantify a battery of different dna, rna and protein damage products thought to represent the full spectrum of inflammation-related chemistries. our data revealed a significant predominance of chlorinated dna-, rna-, and protein damage products by weeks pi. in contrast, levels of damage products arising from oxidation, nitration and nitrosation changed only modestly or remained unchanged. our analyses also revealed higher levels of damage products in rna than in dna and demonstrated organ-specific differences of oxidative damage products, such as -oxo-dg and its oxidation products spiroiminodihydantoin and guanidinohydantoin. collectively, these results suggest that neutrophil and myeloperoxidase-induced chlorination chemistry may serve as a biomarker of ibd and may play important roles in the pathophysiology of ibd and colitis-associated cancer. characterization of a membrane protein expressed in mouse heart and brain mannebach s. recently, a novel membrane protein in drosophila was shown to be localized in presynaptic vesicles. it appears to mediate a ca influx after vesicle fusion with the plasma membrane. disruption of the corresponding gene leads to endocytic defects in drosophila [ ] . apparently, this protein plays a role in exo-and endocytosis and could serve as a ca channel supplying ca required for endocytosis. we have identified a protein in mouse, c rf , which shares , % amino acid sequence identity with the drosophila protein. it covers amino acid residues. using rt-pcr the full length transcripts could be identified in brain, kidney, pancreas, heart, spleen, thymus and mast cells. coexpression of c rf and the ca v . channel in xenopus oocytes reduced the amount of the α b and cavβ subunits of the ca + channel in the plasma membrane but did not affect the gating properties of the cav . channel. expression of c rf alone did not yield any channel activity. we therefore started to produce recombinant protein using the his-sumo-prokaryotic expression vector. the protein was efficiently expressed as his-sumo-c orf -fusion in e.coli (yield mg at mg/ml). we are currently preparing the c orf part of the his-sumo-c orf fusion protein by ulp -protease digestion followed by various chromatographic steps. the purified recombinant protein will be used to immunize rabbits to get antibodies. in parallel we generated antisera by immunizing rabbits with peptide fragments derived from the c orf sequence. we could not identify any homologues of c orf in the mouse genome and to analyze its function we are currently generating c orf deficient mouse lines by gene targeting. we have chosen a strategy for conditionally inactivation of the gene with the option to study the cellular localization of c orf by expression of the bgalactosidase gene under the control of the endogenous c orf promoter. by southern blot analysis we´ve already identified homologous recombinant embryonic stem cell clones out of analyzed ones and we will proceed with blastocyst injection to get chimeric mice and finally mice carrying the introduced mutations in the c rf gene. parps are involved in various biological processes such as regulation of dna repair, cell cycle progression, and cell death. consequently, several parp inhibitors are currently in clinical development as chemo-and radiosensitizers as well as monotherapeutic agents following the concept of synthetic lethality. pharmacological and toxicological studies call for an accurate analysis of parp activity in terms of a detailed knowledge of the structure of par and a reliable method for its quantification. we have developed a sensitive, precise, and accurate bioanalytical method based on liquid chromatography coupled to electrospray tandem mass spectrometry (lc/ms-ms) to characterize and quantify par with femtmol sensitivity: par is extracted from cells and hydrolysed to specific monomeric units, i.e., ribosyladenosine, which is characteristic for linear par, diribosyladenosine, which is characteristic for branching points, and adenosine, which represents the terminal part of the polymer. using this method, we are currently analyzing par levels in different cell lines and in primary human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) both under physiological conditions as well as upon genotoxic stress and in the presence of potent parp inhibitors. we expect that after completing method validation this assay will be useful for a wide range of applications in pharmacology and toxicology. gene mutagenic potential and metabolite profile of β-estradiol in cultured v cells expressing human cytochrome p a martínez jaramillo d., lehmann l. university of wuerzburg, institute of pharmacy and food chemistry section of food chemistry, am hubland, wuerzburg, germany oxidative metabolism of the female sex hormone β-estradiol (e ) is considered to play a major role in the initiation of hormone-induced carcinogenesis. in extrahepatic tissues, e undergoes metabolic activation by cytochrome p -dependent monooxygenase (cyp) isozyme a to -hydroxy-( -ho) and to a lesser extent to -ho-e . if not conjugated, these catecholestrogens (ce) can further oxidize to electrophilic quinones (q), which may react with dna and induce thereby mutations. conjugation of these ce in extrahepatic tissues is mainly catalyzed by catechol-omethyltransferase. in order to identify possible mutagenic metabolites (i) the induction of gene mutations by e was determined in male chinese hamster lung fibroblasts (v cells) expressing human (h) cyp a and (ii) the metabolite profile of e in these cells was analyzed via gas chromatography/mass spectrometry after solid phase extraction of the cell suspension in the culture medium. (i) gene mutations were assessed using the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase assay. the promutagen benzo[a]pyrene (bap) served as positive control requiring metabolic activation by hcyp a and dimethylsulfoxide as solvent control. v hcyp a were treated with nm e for weeks and the resulting -thioguanine ( -tg) resistant mutants selected at weeks (w) and . the frequency of spontaneous -tg resistant mutants per colony-forming cells ranged from ± (w ) to ± (w ). as expected, . µm bap induced a significant increase in mutant frequency (mf, ± , w and ± , w ) . treatment with nm e resulted in a -fold ( ± , w ) and a -fold ( ± , w ) increase in mf, suggesting slight mutagenic activity. in culture medium of v hcyp a treated with nm e , -ho-e , -methoxy-(meo)-e , -o-methyl- ho-e and -meo-e (suggesting intracellular formation of -ho-e ) were detected. while -meo-e concentration remained constant over the exposure period, the concentration of the other metabolites increased in a timedependent manner. the maximum concentration increase was reached at w for methylcatechols and at w for -ho-e , correlating with the maximum increase in mf, observed after weeks as well. in conclusion, e possessed a slight mutagenic potential after hcyp a -mediated activation to -, -ho-e and their corresponding methylcatechols. cumulative effects of three triazole fungicides in a broad dose range in vitro rieke s., kneuer c., bumke scheer m., lampen a., hirsch-ernst k., marx-stoelting p. bundesinstitut für risikobewertung chemikaliensicherheit, max-dohrn-str., berlin, germany consumers are exposed to multiple residues of different pesticides via the diet. this raises questions concerning potential cumulative effects, especially for substances causing toxicity by a common mode of action. the aim of this work was to investigate potential combination effects of the three triazole fungicides epoxiconazol, tebuconazol and flusilazol for selected parameters in a broad dose range in vitro. parameters investigated were cytotoxicity, hormone synthesis ( -β estradiol, progesterone and β-hcg), expression of a panel of androgen-or estrogen-responsive genes in the human placental choriocarcinoma cell-line jeg- and transactivation via estrogen receptors α and β in stably-transfected hek cells. the ability to inhibit steroidogenesis was analysed by measuring the concentrations of β-estradiol and progesterone in cell culture supernatants of jeg- cells. additionally, the placental peptide hormone β-hcg was measured. while no change in β-hcg and β-estradiol concentrations were observed, all triazoles induced a dose-dependent decrease in progesterone concentration and a cumulative effect was observed implying dose additivity at individual doses of > . µg triazole/ml. significant activation of erβ by the three triazoles, especially by flusilazol, was observed at µg triazole/ml and combined exposure showed additive effects, while no significant activation of erα was observed. based on the data, our findings suggest dose-additivity of triazole pesticides with the same mode of action for selected parameters in vitro. no significant effects were observed at lower doses [ ng - µg triazole/ml] neither for substances applied individually nor in combination. transient receptor potential channels as mediators of catecholamine release mathar i. trp proteins form cation channels that are regulated through strikingly diverse mechanisms. recently, genetic association studies identified many trp genes including trpm as risk factors for disease states such as arrhythmias, hypertension and cardiomyopathy. the melastatin trp channels trpm and trpm have distinct properties within the trp channel family; they form non-selective cation channels activated by intracellular calcium ions and are expressed in heart, aortic endothelial cells, kidney and adrenal gland. disruption of the trpm gene in mice leads to increased basal blood pressure without evidence for impairment of endothelium-or smooth muscle-dependent regulation of contractility of peripheral resistance vessels, the renin angiotensin aldosterone system, basal cardiac output or body fluid homeostasis. instead, trpm -deficient chromaffin cells exhibit increased acetylcholine-induced exocytosis of catecholamines which is associated with elevated level of epinephrine in the plasma and its metabolites in the urine. this indicates that trpm serves as an inhibitory regulator of exocytotic catecholamine release, at least in chromaffin cells. whether catecholamine release is also regulated by trpm in other cells of the sympathetic nervous system such as perivascular neurons still needs to be clarified as well as the molecular mechanism underlying how trpm regulates catecholamine release. besides trpm we recently identified transcripts encoding additional trp channels including trpc and trpc in chromaffin cells isolated by laser capture microdissection but their functional role in these cells is still unknown. measurements of the time course of the intracellular calcium concentration before and during acetylcholine stimulation ( µm) of catecholamine release as well as the analysis of the number of released vesicles in chromaffin cells relvealed no changes in trpc /c /c triple knock out mice compared to wildtype controls. although it seems that these trpc proteins are not directly involved in catecholamine release from chromaffin cells induced by acetylcholine application in our hitherto existing experiments, their contribution to the modulation of catecholamine release by agonists of gq-coupled receptors still needs to be analysed. aims: sulfonylureas (sus) are among the most widely used oral hypoglycaemic drugs that stimulate insulin secretion. in addition, sus have pleiotropic effects on other tissues. regarding the effects of sus on adipocytes conflicting findings were reported. we have now investigated the actions of glimepiride and glibenclamide (=glyburide) in primary human adipocytes. methods: primary cultured human white pre-adipocytes were differentiated in vitro according to a standard protocol. lipid accumulation was assessed by oil red o staining and determination of triglyceride content; gene expression was measured by real-time pcr and western blotting. results: we initially characterized the genes regulated during human preadipocyte differentiation by a global microarray analysis. treatment with glimepiride and glibenclamide caused a strong accumulation of lipid droplets and an increase in triglyceride content. genes involved in lipid metabolism were induced, chemokine expression was decreased. interestingly, the effects of sus were over all qualitatively and quantitatively similar to pioglitazone. in direct comparison glibenclamide was more potent than glimepiride in respect to the induction of fabp (ec . vs. . µm), an important adipocyte marker gene. su-induced differentiation was virtually completely blocked by the pparγ-antagonist t but not affected by diazoxide, indicating pparγ activation by sus. repaglinide, causing insulin liberation like sus but being structurally different, had no effect on adipocytes. conclusions: in primary human pre-adipocytes, glibenclamide and glimepiride strongly induced differentiation, apparently by activating pparγ . thus, sus but not repaglinide may be used to influence insulin resistance beyond their effect on insulin liberation. the role of at a and at b receptors as mechanosensors in myogenic vasoconstriction blodow s. , schneider h. arterial myogenic tone denotes the intrinsic property of vascular smooth muscle cells to constrict in response to an elevated intraluminal blood pressure. this physiological reaction is more distinct in small resistance arteries than in large conduit arteries. understanding the underlying mechanisms should provide useful information for the treatment of diseases like anaphylactic shock and systemic hypertension in which this reaction is altered. whereas the underlying signaling cascade has been extensively studied, the molecular identity of the mechanosensory elements still remains elusive. recent studies at the cellular level suggest a sensory function for a subgroup of gprotein coupled receptors (gpcrs) coupling to gq/ -proteins. by determining mrnaexpression levels of selected gpcrs in consecutive pairs of resistance and conduit vessels, we could identify a subset of gq/ -coupled receptors such as angiotensin ii at b, vasopressin v a, endothelin eta and etb and α a adrenoceptor significantly enriched in resistance vessels. by pharmacological blocking of those highly expressed gpcrs by different antagonists and inverse agonists, we evaluated their influence on the formation or the intensity of myogenic tone, as measured in isolated murine mesenteric arteries ex vivo. while blocking of v a receptor and α a and α ab adrenoceptors showed no differences of myogenic tone, blocking of at a and at b receptors by losartan and candesartan, eta receptor by bq and α a adrenoceptor by prazosin caused significant reductions of the vascular response. analyzing the myogenic response of at a -/mice with and without additional blocking of at b receptors by candesartan suggested that especially at b receptors play a dominant role for mechanosensitivity in mice. this was further supported by investigating the myogenic response of at b -/mice. these findings suggest that mechanosensitive gq/ -protein coupled receptors, especially at b receptors, play a dominant role for the development of myogenic vasoconstriction. trpm ion channels are activated by steroidal compounds and noxious heat and are considered to be involved in insulin secretion and pain perception. the expression of the trpm gene generates a variety of different transcripts which arise by alternative splicing and the use of different promoters [ ] . they encode a substantial variety of isoformes and so far we have identified more than distinct trpm proteins in mouse and rat each varying in exons , , , , , and . these variants differ enormously in their biophysical properties. for example splicing within exon affects the channel pore and causes significant changes of the ionic selectivity of trpm channels [ ] , whereas splicing of nucleotides encoded by exon leads to dormant trpm proteins. however, the frequency of these different isoformes in trpm expressing tissues is completely unknown. to get insight into the significance of the different trpm isoformes we investigated the abundance of alternative trpm transcripts in different tissues and cell types by reverse transcription quantitative pcr (rt-qpcr). we found that the frequency of splicing within exon ranges from up to % in different cell types and tissues. furthermore we analyzed the trpm transcriptome in the choroid plexus of the brain and the pituitary gland, tissues in which trpm transcripts are most abundant. for that purpose we sequenced more than clones, each. corresponding to our rt-qpcr result, we found a significant number of transcripts lacking exon . in cells of the choroid plexus nearly all ( / clones) carried the short ca + permeable pore. furthermore, we identified seven variants spliced in exon encoding truncated trpm proteins. however, the composition of the trpm transcriptome in the choroid plexus and pituitary gland differed enormously, indicating the importance of alternative splicing for trpm function in different tissues. the concept of "thresholds of toxicological concern" (ttc) defines tolerable dietary intakes for chemicals without toxicity data and is widely applied to chemicals present in food in low concentrations such as flavorings. based on a statistical evaluation of the results of many toxicity studies and considerations of chemical structures, the ttc concept derives a maximum daily oral intake without concern of , or µg/person/day for non-genotoxic chemicals depending on the allocation to so-called cramer classes i, ii or iii. for substances with a structural alert for genotoxicity a ttc value of . µg/person/day might be used. recently, it has been investigated, whether the ttc values, which were derived based on mostly chronic oral dietary rodent studies would cover all relevant toxicities (neurotoxic, repeated dose, reproductive and developmental, immune effects and endocrine-related effects). several authors using different specific databases have confirmed that the ttc values derived using cramer classes are also covering immunotoxic, neurotoxic, reproductive and developmental effects. a respective decision tree is going to be presented, also considering substances or substance classes which shall be excluded from the ttc approach. there are several areas in which the ttc concept is already used, or a ttc approach is considered useful, to assess low-level human exposures, or help in prioritizing toxicological testing; as for example the assessment of plant metabolites and degradates of pesticide active substances, feed and food additives, chemicals with a low exposure profile under reach, residues, metabolites and impurities in plants, chemicals, plant protection products or pharmaceuticals. if no structural alert for genotoxicity is given or standard genotoxicity tests are negative the cramer class iii value of µg/person/day, which corresponds to a dose of . µg/kg bw is considered to represent a chronic tolerable daily intake of the test substance. examples for current and future uses of the ttc concept in regulatory toxicology are presented. objective: hyaluronan (ha), synthesized by three ha-synthases (has , - , - ), is a prominent matrix component of atherosclerotic lesions. the aim of the present study was to identify the has isoenzyme that is associated with ha-matrix remodeling in inflammatory regions of atherosclerotic plaques. furthermore the underlying regulatory pathways were determined and functional aspects of this regulation in vascular smooth muscle cell (vsmc) were addressed. methods and results: during atherosclerosis in apoe deficient mice the peak of macrophage invasion at weeks coincided with ha deposition and induction of has in aortic root plaques. in human symptomatic carotid artery plaques has was by far the most prominent has isoenzyme as determined by quantitative real time rtpcr. in vitro, in human vascular smooth muscle cell (vsmc) has was specifically induced via activation of nfkb by interleukin- β (il- β) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnfa) as shown by chip assay and utilization of nfkb inhibitor bay - . has was also upregulated in a co-culture system by activated macrophages via paracrine release of tnfa and il- β as verified by neutralizing antibodies. in human atherosclerotic lesions nfkb positive vsmc were frequently detected in close proximity with ha and f / positive macrophages as shown by immunohistochemistry. to study the effects of has mediated ha synthesis in human coronary vsmc, lentiviral overexpression and knockdown of human has were employed. overexpression of has resulted in increased migration and proliferation whereas knock down had the opposite effect. the effects of has were mediated by both pi k signaling and mapk signaling via hyaluronan receptors cd and rhamm. conclusion: the present results suggest that has -dependent ha synthesis is induced in human vsmc by inflammatory cytokines released from activated macrophages. moreover, has -mediated ha production induced phenotypic activation of vsmc. pulmonary inflammation and airway remodeling are major features of chronic obstructive lung disease (copd). in addition, pulmonary hypertension is a common comorbidity, which is associated with a poor prognosis of the disease. recent studies in a guinea pig model of allergic asthma have shown that increased arginase activity, which converts larginine into l-ornithine and urea and competes with nitric oxide synthases for the common substrate, contributes to allergen-induced airway inflammation, hyperresponsiveness and remodeling. there is evidence that cigarette smoke and lipopolysaccharide (lps), both involved in the pathogenesis of copd, increase the expression of arginase, however, its role in the pathogenesis of copd is currently unknown. this study aimed to investigate the role of arginase in pulmonary inflammation and remodeling, using a guinea pig model of lps-induced copd. to this aim, guinea pigs were instilled intranasally with lps or saline twice weekly for weeks and were pretreated by inhalation of the arginase inhibitor ( )s-amino-boronohexanoic acid (abh) or pbs. repeated lps exposure increased lung arginase activity, resulting in increased lornithine/l-arginine and l-ornithine/l-citrulline ratio's. both ratio's were reversed by abh treatment. repeated lps exposure also induced increased il- levels, neutrophils, goblet cells, hydroxyproline and airway collagen content in the lung, which were all abrogated by abh. moreover, repeated lps exposure increased right ventricular mass, indicative of pulmonary hypertension, which was similarly prevented by abh. in conclusion, increased arginase activity contributes to pulmonary inflammation, airway remodeling and right ventricular hypertrophy in a guinea pig model of copd, indicating that arginase inhibitors may have therapeutic potential in the treatment of this disease. (supported by msd). behavioral abnormalities in hcn -deficient mice michalakis s., schöll-weidinger m., mader r., cao-ehlker x., fenske s., wahl-schott c., biel m. center for integrated protein science munich (cipsm) department of pharmacy -center for drug research, ludwig-maximilians-universität münchen, butenandtstr. - , münchen, germany hcn encodes a hyperpolarization-activated and cyclic nucleotide-gated channel, which is expressed in various brain regions including thalamic, hypothalamic and habenular nuclei as well as brain stem and olfactory bulb. in this study we performed a comparative analysis of hcn -/and hcn +/+ mice using a battery of behavioral tests and telemetric biopotential measurements to evaluate a potential role of hcn in central nervous system function. in general, the knockout mice showed normal motor function as assessed by the rotarod and open field tests. telemetric home cage activity and core body temperature measurements confirmed a normal circadian behavior, but revealed a lower basal activity that concurred with decreased body temperature during the light phase and the light-dark transition phase. hippocampus-dependent spatial learning was normal. by contrast, hcn knockout mice showed more immobility than control mice on day two of the porsolt forced swimming test, which could reflect increased depressionlike behavior. however, center exploration in the open field test as well as performance in the light-dark transition and the elevated-plus maze tests was normal in hcn -/mice. this suggests that general anxiety was not changed in the knockout mice. in addition, hcn knockout mice were less active on the second day of the open field test, which supports a habituation phenotype. finally, hcn -/mice had higher burying scores in the marble-burying test, which is a test for certain aspects of obsessive compulsive disorder in rodents. taken together, genetic deletion of hcn in mice results in distinct behavioral abnormalities related to behavioral despair and expression of repetitive behaviors in response to mild stressors. mielke h. , gundert-remy u. alcohol consumption when breast feeding is discussed controversially. some groups recommend breast pumping before alcohol consumption and feeding the stored milk instead of breast feeding after drinking alcohol. this study was performed to simulate the blood concentration in the breastfed baby and to assess the health impact. method: we established a physiologically based kinetic model. its parameters were calculated (partition coefficients tissue/blood ; schmitt, ) silva et al., ) . we simulated . the alcohol concentration in a breastfed neonate and a -month-old suckling infant after the nursing mother had consumed alcohol, . the alcohol concentration in utero/fetal compartment during pregnancy assuming the identical alcohol consumption of the pregnant woman . the alcohol concentration during infant´s treatment of bloating by an approved herbal drug containing alcohol. results: peak maternal alcohol concentration was . ‰ after consuming . l of wine, peak concentration was . ‰ in the newborn, . ‰ in the -month-old infant and . ‰ in the utero/fetal compartment. the peak concentration after herbal drug treatment was . ‰ in the neonate and . ‰ in the -month-old infant, respectively. we discuss the results of the simulations and compare it with doses and published concentrations measured in experimental animals or in vitro studies. conclusions: we conclude that the recommendation " to glasses of wine on occasion" (agence nationale d'accréditation et d'Évaluation en santé, assante ) is in accordance with the simulation results presented here whereas stricter rules are not scientifically sound. ( ) http://www.has-sante.fr/portail/upload/docs/application/pdf/ breastfeeding_guidelines.pdf da silva et al. ( ) adenylyl cyclases (ac) mediate physiological responses in virtually all cells, where their regulation through receptors and g proteins results in the modulation of camp. in the present study we focused on the kinetics of interactions between the alpha-subunit from inhibitory g protein type (gαi ) and adenylyl cyclase type v (ac ). these proteins were labeled with cfp and yfp, respectively. the dynamics of their interactions was monitored by means of high temporal resolution fret imaging in hek cells expressing unlabeled a a-receptor and gβg subunits. to activate the signaling pathway, we applied agonist using a rapid superfusion device. application of norepinephrine resulted in the development of a fret signal, indicating interaction between gai -cfp and yfp-ac . after withdrawal of agonist the fret signal recovered with a remarkably slow time course compared to the deactivation kinetics of gi proteins reported previously (bünemann et al. ) . to further analyze the properties of the dissociation between gai and ac we measured in parallel the offset kinetics of the interaction between gai -yfp and gβg-cfp (gi -fret) after agonist withdrawal under comparable conditions. in addition we tested to what degree the coexpression of rgs accelerated the deactivation of gi proteins and the dissociation of gai -cfp from yfp-ac . these experiments revealed that in the absence of rgs the dissociation of gai from ac after agonist withdrawal takes about times longer than the deactivation of gi proteins. in the presence of rgs this difference is even larger due to the pronounced acceleration of g protein deactivation. the dissociation of gai from ac was only marginally accelerated by rgs . these observations lead us to hypothesize, that ac might trap activated g protein-subunits and thereby affect the g protein cycle by shifting the equilibrium towards activated g proteins. if this hypothesis is true, it should result in a left-shifted dose response curve compared to g protein activation dose response. in support of this hypothesis we found that the concentration response curve for gai -ac interaction was several-fold leftward-shifted compared to the concentration-response curve of gi-protein activation under very similar conditions. influencing the dynamics of the g protein cycle by effectors may represent a novel and powerful mechanism for finetuning the sensitivity of receptor evoked responses in an effector-specific manner. obesity, the excessive accumulation of white adipose tissue (wat), has reached pandemic dimensions. the factors that determine fat mass are not fully understood, but adipocyte hypertrophy and adipokine secretion are thought to be important. in present study, we investigated the role of the cyclic gmp (cgmp) signaling pathway focusing on cgmp-dependent protein kinase i (pkgi) in white adipocytes. pkgi is expressed in wat, preadipocytes and differentiated adipocytes as demonstrated by real-time pcr, western blot and immunochemistry. differentiation of pkgifl/fl preadipocytes, using an optimized protocol, resulted in an enhanced lipid accumulation as evidenced by oil red o staining. deletion of pkgi in pkgifl/fl adipocytes infected with a cre lentivirus (lv-cre, pkgi / ) exhibited reduced differentiation. analysis of the triglyceride (tg) content revealed a significant decrease of tg levels by % ± % in pkgi / as compared to pkgifl/fl adipocytes. western blot analysis of white adipocytes showed a significant decrease of c/ebpalpha ( % ± . %), ppargamma ( % ± . %) and ap ( % ± . %) expression in pkgi / cells as compared to pkgifl/fl. treatment of t -l cells with cgmp resulted in increased lipid accumulation and enhanced expression of fat marker genes. lentiviral overexpression of pkgi further increased differentiation. importantly, pkgi significantly induced mitochondrial biogenesis in t -l cells. concomitant activation of pkgi in t -l preadipocytes and treatment with the demethylating agent -aza-deoxycytidine significantly increased expression of uncoupling protein- (ucp- ) -a unique protein of brown fat cells. we found rhoa as major target of pkgi signaling with increased phosphorylation of rhoa at ser- in pkgi overexpressing cells. moreover, pkgi-dependent phosphorylation counteracts the effects of rhoa on insulin signaling as well as adipokine expression. taken together, pkgi is a key player in white adipocyte differentiation that regulates cell size and has an anti-inflammatory effect. pkgi decreases the secretion of proinflammatory adipokines via inhibition of rhoa signaling. in addition, activation of pkgi can establish a brown fat cell like phenotype during white adipocyte differentiation if the ucp- promoter is accessible. the rag gtpases, raga, ragb, ragc, and ragd form a subfamily gtpases of the ras-related superfamiliy. rag proteins are characterized by a modified ras-like gtpbinding domain and a unique c-terminal region lacking a lipid modification motif. interestingly, rag proteins have been proposed to function as heterodimeric complexes consisting of raga or ragb associated with ragc or ragd. rag gtpases have been implicated in the control of mammalian target of rapamycin (mtor) function, in particular in regulation of the nutrient-stimulated and/or hormone-regulated mtor activity. the protein kinase mtor is found as the catalytic subunit of two larger protein complexes referred to as mtor complex and , mtorc and . under amino-acidrich conditions, activated mtorc promotes protein synthesis and inhibits autophagy, while under starvation autophagy inhibition is released. increasing evidence suggests that activation of rag gtpases contributes to mtorc function. thus, rag proteins were found to be associated with a protein complex termed ragulator, a major regulatory protein of mtorc function and guanine nucleotide exchange of rag gtpases within the rag-ragulator-complex were described to promote mtorc translocation to its functional lysosomal compartment. however, the guanine nucleotide exchange properties of rag proteins are poorly characterized, and it is currently unknown, how amino acids promote rag proteins to facilitate the formation of the active, raptor-binding state of the rag heterodimers. to characterize the guanine nucleotide exchange properties of the rag gtpases as momomers or heterodimers in more detail, recombinant rag proteins were expressed in bacteria and purified from this source to near homogeneity. first, the parameters of gdp/gtp exchange of each of these proteins were compared using the non-hydrolysable gtp analogon gtpgs. the results showed that the rag isoforms are distinct in their guanine nucleotide exchange activities. in particular, nucleotide exchange on raga and ragc, but not on ragb and ragd, was only observed at low concentrations of gdp and mgcl in extraction and assay buffers, i.e. conditions favoring the gdp/gtp exchange. these findings may indicate that guanine nucleotide exchange on raga and ragc is controlled by guanine nucleotide exchange factors and suggest specific functions of the individual rag gtpases within individual rag heterodimers. in in-vitro studies on rat and canine mast cells and human mast cell leukemia cells hmc . bz at micromolar concentrations inhibited mediator release which appeared to be related to an inhibition of the intracellular camp pathway. in order to identify potential targets on/in mast cells at which bz may cause an inhibitory effect on mast cell activation, the , -bz flunitrazepam (flu), clonazepam (clo) and chlorodiazepam ( -cd) were selected because of their different affinity and selectivity to/for the gaba-a-receptor and the translocator protein (tspo): flu and clo bind with nanomolar affinity to gaba-a receptors, whereas -cd is a selective ligand at tspo with nanomolar affinity to tspo but only micromolar affinity to gaba-a receptors. flu also possesses nanomolar affinity to tspo, whereas clo has no or only micromolar affinity to tspo. after incubation of hmc . cells with -cd, flu and clo for , and hours up to genes were significantly differently expressed in a substance-specific and timedependent manner. comparison of the genes differently expressed at hours revealed that the expression of genes was regulated by both flu and clo but only genes were regulated by both -cd and flu suggesting that flu and clo induce gene expression by acting at a target site different from that of -cd. the difference between the gene regulation by flu and clo on the one hand and that of -cd on the other hand is also reflected in pathway analysis. since it was conceivable that the beneficial effects of the , -bz could be mediated by the recognition sites targeted by the , -bz, i.e. the gria -encoded ionotropic glutamate receptor ampa , we investigated by quantitative pcr whether hmc . cells express gria , tspo, the genes encoding the subunits of the gaba-a receptor and the gaba-forming enzyme glutamic acid decarboxylase. tspo, gabra , gabrb , gabre and gabrd were moderately expressed. in addition, there was a week or very week expression of gabra , gabra , gabrb , gabrg and gabrr . expression of gria was not detectable. taken together, it cannot be decided yet from our data whether the inhibitory effect of benzodiazepines on mast cell activation is due to an action at tspo or at gaba-a receptors of a novel subunit composition. monien b. h., glatt h. german institute of human nutrition (dife) department of nutritional toxicology, arthur-scheunert-allee - , nuthetal, germany -hydroxymethylfurfural (hmf) and furfuryl alcohol (ffa) are common constituents of foodstuffs in which they are formed by heat-and acid catalyzed reactions from carbohydrates. hmf and ffa have been reported to induce the formation of hepatocellular adenomas in female mice and renal tubule neoplasms in male mice, respectively. we studied whether the carcinogenic effect of these hydroxymethylsubstituted furans may originate from sulfotransferase (sult)-catalyzed formation of electrophilic esters. hmf was inactive in in vitro mutagenicity tests using standard activating systems. in contrast, it was mutagenic in v cells genetically engineered for expression of human sult a suggesting that hmf is converted into the reactive sulfooxymethylfurfural (smf). following incubation of mutagenic smf with porcine liver dna in vitro, specific methylfurfural adducts were detected using liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (lc-ms/ms), i.e., n -(( -formylfuran- -yl)methyl)- 'deoxyadenosine (n -ffmda) and n -(( -formylfuran- -yl)methyl)- '-deoxyguanosie (n -ffmdg). these adducts were also detected in dna from v -sult a cells incubated with hmf. in order to determine sulfo conjugation of hmf in mice in vivo, we conducted pharmacokinetic measurements showing that about ppm of the hmf dose was converted to smf and reached the circulation. like hmf, ffa was negative in the standard ames test and various other in vitro genotoxicity tests. we showed that ffa is mutagenic in salmonella typhimurium ta engineered for expression of human sult a . the putative mutagen -sulfooxymethylfuran was synthesized and incubated with porcine liver dna, in which various nucleoside adducts were found. the main adducts, -mfda were detected in dna of ffa-exposed salmonella strain ta -sult a and in dna of liver, lung and kidney of fvb/n mice that had received about mg ffa/kg body weight per day via the drinking water for days. in summary, both furan derivatives form mutagenic sulfate esters in vitro and in vivo. in the future, we will use genetically engineered mice to characterize the role of single murine and human sult forms in the bioactivation of the furan derivatives and the contribution to tumor induction. background: micrornas are small non-coding rnas that can negatively regulate gene expression on a post-transcriptional level and have been shown to interact with epigenetic mechanisms like dna methylation. mecp (methyl cpg binding protein ) is a protein that binds methylated dna cpgs in the promoter region of genes and can thus regulate their expression. otherwise, mecp is known to be a target gene for several micrornas including the cluster mir- / in the brain. recently, our group could show that mecp expression is downregulated in human heart failure suggesting that mecp might be involved in cardiac pathogenesis. the aim of this project is to study the upstream regulation of mecp by the cluster mir- / in the heart during cardiac hypertrophy in-vitro and in-vivo. methods and results: to test whether hypertrophic stimuli can induce mir- / expression, we treated cultured nrcms with µm norepinephrine for hours. this induced cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and expression of the hypertrophy marker nppa, but also of mir- ( . ± . -fold of untreated cells, p< . ) and of mir- - p ( . ± . -fold of untreated cells, p< . ) and downregulated mecp mrna and protein levels ( . ± . -fold of untreated cells, p< . ). to check whether mecp downregulation also occurs by direct mir- / activation we increased levels of mir- and mir- in cardiac myocytes by transfecting precursor mir- and mir- - p molecules. again, we observed nrcm hypertrophy, nppa mrna upregulation and mecp mrna and protein downregulation ( . ± . -fold of control, p< . ) after mir- overexpression. similar results were obtained by overexpression of mir- - p. to test the effects of adrenoceptor activation on the mir- / -mecp axis in-vivo, wild-type mice received isoprenaline and phenylephrine via osmotic minipumps ( mg/kg/day each). after days, cardiac ventricles were analyzed. nppa gene expression ( . ± . -fold of control animals), mir- and mir- - p levels ( . ± . and . ± . -fold of control animals, p< . and p< . , respectively) were increased while mecp protein levels decreased to % (p< . ) conclusion: these results suggest that in-vitro and in-vivo adrenoceptor stimulation leads to the activation of mir- / expression and to downregulation of mecp in cardiac myocytes in-vitro and in-vivo. leopold-franzens-universität, innsbruck, austria at- receptor antagonists block the angiotensin ii-enhancing effect on noradrenaline release from sympathetic neurons. in a cell-free assay the binding affinity of the at- receptor antagonists telmisartan and valsartan to the gamma peroxisome proliferatoractivated receptor (pparγ) is close to that of the pparγ selective agonists thiazolidinediones (tzds). we tested whether the tzds rosiglitazone and pioglitazone would also modify the prejunctional facilitatory effect of angiotensin ii. left ventricular slices of rats were incubated with tritiated noradrenaline, perifused and electrically stimulated. the negative logarithm of the drug concentration that caused a % increase of control (pec %) was calculated. angiotensin ii caused a concentration-dependent increase of tritium overflow induced by electrical stimulation [pec %= . ± . (mean±sem, n= ); maximum increase= ± %]. neither rosiglitazone nor pioglitazone ( . - µm) had a direct effect. the concentrationresponse to angiotensin ii in the presence of fixed concentrations of rosiglitazone was shifted to the left with increase of the maximum (pec %= . ± . , . ± . and . ± . ; maximum increase= ± %, ± % and ± %, in the presence of . , and µm of rosiglitazone, respectively, n= - , each). in contrast, pioglitazone in concentrations up to µm had no effect on the release-enhancing effects of angiotensin ii. results show that rosiglitazone but not pioglitazone potentiates the noradrenalinerelease enhancing effect of angiotensin ii. this action might contribute to the risk for myocardial infarction from rosiglitazone use but not from pioglitazone use. deleted in liver cancer (dlc ) is a tumor suppressor whose allele is lost in % of liver, breast, lung and % of colon cancers. despite its significance, the molecular mechanisms that drive cancerous transformation upon dlc loss remain unclear. we found that the transcriptional coactivators megakaryoblastic leukemia and (mkl / ) are constitutively localized to the nucleus in hepatocellular and mammary carcinoma cells that lack dlc . moreover, dlc loss and mkl nuclear localization correlated in primary human hepatocellular carcinoma. nuclear accumulation of mkl in dlc -deficient cancer cells was accomplished by activation of the rhoa/actin signaling pathway and concomitant impairment of erk-mediated mkl phosphorylation. dlc loss led to constitutive activation of the mkl-dependent, tumor-relevant target genes ctgf, cyr , myl and myh . furthermore, we identified a novel target gene, integrin a , with a key role in cell migration and metastasis, that exhibited a dlc -and mkldependent regulation. depletion of mkl / suppressed not only cell migration, but also cell proliferation and anchorage-independent cell growth induced by dlc loss. our data provide insight into the mechanism by which dlc loss initiates tumorigenesis. as mkl and have a key role in this process, this pathway may provide promising pharmacological targets for cancer therapy. universität bonn, pharma-zentrum bonn pharmazeutisches institut, pharm. chemie i, an der immenburg, bonn, germany membrane receptors activated by purine and/or pyrimidine nucleotides ("p receptors") are widely distributed in the body and constitute novel (potential) drug targets. they are subdivided into g protein-coupled p y receptors (p y , , , , , , , ) , and homo-or heterotrimeric ligand-gated ion channel or p x receptors (subunits: p x - ). we have been interested in the identification and development of potent and subtype-selective ligands -as tool compounds and potential drugs -for the various p y and p x receptor subtypes. our strategy involves (i) establishment of a proprietary compound library consisting of synthetic small molecules and natural products; (ii) development of screening assays suitable for medium throughput screening; (iii) careful analysis of structure-activity relationships at each target and systematic optimization of the lead structures; (iv) pharmacological evaluation of selected compounds. this approach has led to new biological tools for several targets, including p y and p x receptors [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . fine particles in particulate matter (pm) are effective vehicles to transport toxicants into the lung; depending on their size, smaller particles may reach the bronchiolar or alveolar space. in recent years the pm fraction pm . has especially been correlated with both pulmonary and cardiovascular diseases. in order to better characterize pm emission and distribution of environmental tobacco smoke (ets) from cigarettes (reference cigarette (rc), brand cigarette (bc)) we have developed an ets emitter to simulate human smoking emission and measured pm . concentration in a telephone booth ( , m volume) as an example for small indoor spaces like cars. fine particulate matter was measured using an aerosol spectrometer with sec time resolution; laser scatter allowed a size resolution from , µm to µm. for the pm . concentration the following values were calculated: cumulative pm . concentration as auc-pm . (µg/m /sec), peak pm . concentration as cmax-pm . (µg/m ) and average pm . concentration cmean-pm (µg/m ). in closed door condition both cigarettes produced particulate auc-pm . values of ± µg/m /sec (rc) to ± µg/m /sec (bc after myocardial infarction (mi) inflammatory cells and cardiac fibroblasts (cf) determine the remodeling response. interleukin- (il- ) is induced in the ischemic myocardium and is known to stimulate the differentiation of fibroblasts to myofibroblasts. hyaluronan (ha) is an extracellular matrix component synthesized by ha-synthase isoenzymes (has - ) and is also known to control fibroblast phenotypes. however, it is presently unknown whether il- participates in the remodeling of the ha-matrix or whether the ha-matrix modulates the responses to il- . therefore, the aim of the present study was to elucidate whether il- regulates the expression and function of ha-matrix in cfs. cells were isolated from c bl/ j mice and used during passage - for experiments. cfs were stimulated with il- or hyper-il- which is a fusion protein of il- and soluble il- receptor (sil- r). after and min signal transducer and activator of transcription (stat ) was phosphorylated in response to hyper-il- but not in response to il- . rt-pcr revealed rapid upregulation of has ( . ± . fold of unstimulated control, h) in response to hyper-il- . has was induced to a lesser degree ( . ± . fold of unstimulated control, h) whereas has was not responsive ( . ± . fold of unstimulated control, h). in contrast, il- had no effect on transcript levels of has isoenzymes. in turn, expression of has and has in response to hyper-il- was inhibited by ag , which indicates the involvement of stat signaling. interestingly, despite induction of has and has the amount of secreted ha as determined by an elisa-like assay was not affected by hyper-il- . this may indicate that il- regulates the cell surface associated ha-matrix of cfs. in conclusion, the present data demonstrate that cardiac fibroblasts respond to il- trans-signaling (hyper-il- ) via the soluble il- r and subsequent stat signaling with increased ha-synthesis. the fact that il- had no significant effect suggests that the expression of the non-signaling membrane-bound il- α-receptor (il- r) in cultured murine cardiac fibroblasts is not sufficient to induce has and - gene expression. therefore, il- trans-signaling mediated by il- and the circulating sil- r might be necessary to mediate the il- -induced has expression in vivo. mrgprd receptor endogenously expressed in dorsal root ganglia: evidence for an activation by -aminoisobutyric acid müller s., hoffmann k., von kügelgen i. universität bonn institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, sigmund-freud-straße , bonn, germany the gpcr mrgprd (mrgd) is highly expressed in small diameter dorsal root ganglion (drg) neurons and has been implicated to play a role in nociception. the receptor was previously shown to respond to β-alanine. in the present study we searched for agonistic activity of structural analogues of β-alanine. for further characterization of the receptor we used fura- fluorimetry, a nfat luciferase reportergene assay and the determination of the inhibition of forskolin-induced camp production ([ h]-camp affinity assay). first, we confirmed the activation of the receptor by β-alanine and gaba. in reportergene experiments we then identified -dlaminoisobutyric acid as an agonist, with similar potency but weaker affinity when compared to β-alanine (ec µm). fura- fluorimetry showed an increase in intracellular ca + levels by -dl-aminoisobutyric acid ( µm). moreover, -dlaminoisobutyric acid reduced the forskolin-induced camp production by up to % (ec µm). in addition to -dl-aminoisobutyric acid, we identified -dl-aminobutyric acid as a weak agonist acting at the mrgprd. other closely related substances failed to show significant responses. next to the agonists we further characterized antagonists inhibiting the response to βalanine mediated by mrgprd. chlorpromazine shifted the concentration-response curve of β-alanine to the right with an apparent pkb of . (nfat assay), thioridazine with an apparent pkb of . (nfat assay) and . (camp assay) and rimcazole with an apparent pkb of . (nfat assay) and . (camp assay). in conclusion we show for the first time that -dl-aminoisobutyric acid is an agonist at the mrgprd and that the structure-activity relationship of agonists at mrgprd is very close. the sdf- -chemokine receptor cxcr plays a key role during embryogenesis and regulates functions of immune and stem cells in adult life. furthermore, cxcr is involved in disease states including inflammation and cancer. it is well established that sdf- -stimulated cxcr receptors activate gi protein-dependent signal transduction pathways and undergo c-terminal phosphorylation and internalization. because the cxcr c-terminal domain contains serine and threonine residues, it is incompletely understood which of the potential phosphorylation sites contribute to homologous and heterologous regulation of cxcr . here, we analyzed the phosphorylation pattern of cxcr at c-terminal sites after stimulation of the receptor with sdf- and after pma-induced activation of the pkc pathway as a model for heterologous receptor phosphorylation. using phospho-specific antibodies against s / , s / and s / in immunoblot analyses, we showed that the sites were phosphorylated after stimulation with sdf- or pma. stimulation with egf or forskolin did not induce phosphorylation at these sites. sdf- -induced phosphorylation at s / , s / and s / was reversible after wash out of the ligand. time course analyses revealed that phosphorylation occurred first at s / and then at s / and s / . taken together, these results indicate that the c-terminus of cxcr is phosphorylated at multiple sites by homologous and heterologous pathways and that phosphorylation at the different sites may be hierarchically organized. human milk represents the best form of nutrition for infants early in life. however, it can also contain toxic contaminants that may adversely affect infant's development. the nephrotoxin ochratoxin a (ota) is present in human milk (tab. in [ ] ), but information on transfer from maternal blood to milk is scarce: published data [ ] indicate that levels of ota in milk are roughly one tenth ( . ) of those in blood. but, the efficiency of the ota-transfer at various stages of breastfeeding may vary since studies in animals revealed that transfer of ota is apparently time-and dose-dependent. thus, the aim of this study was to assess the ota transfer from blood to milk at different stages of breastfeeding in humans. in a small chilean cohort, lactating women were asked to provide blood and milk on the same day. these samples were collected on four different occasions within the first months after delivery and analyzed using hplc with fluorescence and/or tandem mass spectrometric detection [ ] . the transfer of ota from blood to milk was quantitatively assessed by measuring the milk to plasma ratio (m/p). the average ota level in blood plasma was ± ng/l, and no major variations were observed over time (p = . ). on the other hand, ota levels found in colostrum ( ± ng/l) were higher than in mature milk (p < . ). in line with these data, higher m/p ratios (table) were obtained with samples collected in the first six days after delivery. this study showed that the transfer of ota from blood to milk was more efficient with colostrum (m/p . ± . ) than with mature milk. thus, a higher exposure to ota can be expected for neonates than for infants at later stages of breastfeeding. moreover, the lactating women have lower average ota levels in plasma than non lactating women from chile [ ] , indicative of milk as additional excretion route. acknowledgement: this work has been supported by a stipend from conicyt/daad to km. exposure of infants to ochratoxin a (ota) deserves particular attention since ota is nephrotoxic, and one of the most potent rodent renal carcinogen studied to date [ ] . moreover, infants may be more vulnerable to the toxic effects of contaminants than adults. ota-levels in plasma of infants are indicative of an early exposure in life [ ] . but blood sampling is an invasive method not readily applicable for breastfed infants. thus, the aim of this study was to implement a non invasive biomonitoring method to assess ota-exposure in this group. to assess the exposure to ota, breast milk and infants' urine specimens were collected, from two different cohorts: chile (n= ) and turkey (n= , only urine). analysis of the samples was performed using enzymatic hydrolysis prior to extraction and hplc-ms/ms [ ] . the magnitude of infants' exposure was assessed by calculating the ota-daily intake with human milk and relating it also to urinary ota levels. calculations of the daily intake with human milk [ ] showed that infants may be exposed to ota at high levels, exceeding the tolerable daily intake (tdi) of ng/kg-bw/day set for adults [ ] . in both cohorts, most of the urine samples tested positive for ota (chile %, turkey %). ota levels observed in urine samples from the turkish infants (range: - , ng/l) were fold higher than levels found in chilean samples (range positive samples: - ng/l). further analysis of phase ii metabolites in urine confirm the excretion of ota as conjugate (glucuronide) in highly exposed infants. in conclusion, ota exposure of infants early in life was documented. given that otaintake by several infants exceeded the tdi for adults, further biomonitoring in this vulnerable group is advised including also suitable biomarkers of effect. a mixture of (e)-and (z)-clomiphene citrate is the first line therapy of female infertility. however, up to % of patients do not respond. (e)-clomiphene is structurally closely related to another selective estrogen receptor modulator, tamoxifen which is frequently used for the treatment of hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. like tamoxifen, clomiphene is extensively metabolised by the cytochrome p system. using the estrogen receptor response assay (e)- -hydroxyclomiphene and (e)- -hydroxy-n-desethylclomiphene (ec : . and . nm, respectively) turned out to be times more active at the er compared to the parent drug isomers and de-ethylated metabolites. using recombinant expressed human cyp isoforms and inhibitory antibodies, cyp d revealed to be the major isoenzyme involved in the formation of -hydroxlated metabolites. n-deethylation was catalysed by cyps a / , d , c and c . rates of -hydroxylation in microsomes from human liver donors correlated with the number of functional cyp d genes. these in vitro results were confirmed in a pharmacokinetic study with female healthy volunteers receiving a single dose of clomiphene. in carriers of two non-functional cyp d genes (poor metabolizers) cmax of (e)- -hydroxyclomiphene and -hydroxy-ndesethylclomiphene was and times lower, respectively, when compared with subjects with at least one fully functional cyp d allele. in contrast, half-life of (e)-clomiphene and (e)-n-desethylclomiphene was and -fold higher, respectively, in poor metabolizers. our data provide first evidence of a pharmacogenetic rational for the variability in the response to clomiphene treatment. among the tested compounds, compound proved to be the most active derivative, showing a significant toxicity at a concentration of , µm. compounds and showed significant toxic effects at a concentration of µm. the compound showed no toxicity up to a concentration of µm. all derivatives , and have a ec between and µm. we further proved the induction of apoptosis by apo-one assay (caspase / activity) and life/dead-assay (fluorescence microscopy). in conclusion, these gold complexes exhibit an example of interesting potential candidates for future anticancer pharmaceuticals due to relatively high cytotoxicity. gene regulating effects in mouse liver subsequent to treatment with selected dioxin-like compounds and pcb using whole genome microarray analysis neser s. , lohr c. , van ede k. i. , andresen k. interaction with the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (ahr), with , , , -tetrachlorodibenzo-pdioxin (tcdd) being the most potent congener amongst the ahr agonists. recent risk assessments have employed the toxic equivalency factor (tef) concept. the current eu-project systeq aims at developing, validating, and implementing human systemic tefs as indicators of toxicity for dl-compounds. at present, the best known parameter of ahr mediated effects is the induction of cytochrome p isoenzymes (cyps), i.e., cyp a , a , and b . one of the major objectives of the systeq project is the identification of novel quantifiable biomarkers. in a three day study, female c bl/ mice were treated with single doses of six dl-congeners (tcdd, pcb , pcb , and pcb ) , and the 'non-dioxin-like' (ndl) pcb . quality tested (agilent ® bioanalyzer) mrna isolated from livers was analyzed using the agilent ® mouse whole genome array ( x k) system. the quantity of genes affected (≥ fold) was highly heterogeneous amongst the dl-compounds. whereas tcdd-treatment upregulated genes, and down-regulated , -pncdf-treatment had impact on (up), and (down). treatment with pcb led to marginal numbers of up and down-regulated genes. with (up), and (down) genes shared, the most extensive overlap occurred between tcdd-and -pncdd-treatment. no overlap was found due to treatments with the ndl pcb ( up, down) and tcdd. when comparing the effects of all dl-congeners, minor numbers of genes of up, and down-regulated remain, most of them being related to drug metabolism. while pcb regulated only genes involved in drug metabolism, omission of pcb -regulated genes resulted in consistently (up), and (down) regulated among dl-compounds. in conclusion, our findings suggest that the pattern of gene regulation in mouse liver elicited by pcb was strictly different from tcdd, while a very limited coincidence of genes was found even among dl-compounds. comparison of these 'core' genes with data from human models is required with respect to determination of novel biomarkers. introduction: proper use of antibiotics is essential with regard to effective treatment of bacterial infections. providing adequate information for patients can contribute to achieve this aim. materials and methods: data was collected from the relational database of the drug information service at dresden university of technology. the patients, who used the service, were interviewed concerning socio-demographic characteristics, reason for enquiry, number and kind of drugs taken, and diseases. possible contact paths were phone, e-mail or letter. in the present evaluation, all enquiries from the years and were analyzed descriptively focussing primarily on systemic antibiotics as reason for the enquiry. results: in the evaluated period, enquiries were registered in total. in . % of those enquiries systemic antibiotics were named with a total number of drugs. . % of those antibiotics were found to be the direct reason for the enquiry. most common information requested by patients corresponded to adverse drug reactions ( . %), diagnosis/treatment ( . %), drug application ( . %) and drug-druginteractions ( . %). the majority of the requesting patients ( . %) was born before . a correlation between incidence of enquiries especially concerning antibiotics and quarterly statistics could not be detected. conclusion: mainly patients aged years or more seem to need or search for further information about antibiotic medication. advice is required especially regarding adverse drug reactions and diagnosis or treatment. in order to this, the advisory service can help patients to lose their insecurity and to gain more confidence in handling antibiotic drugs. colon cancer is one of the most frequent cancers in the industrialized nations. epidemiological studies show a correlation between highly processed meat and the development of colorectal tumours. it is assumed that the risk of developing colorectal cancer, among various different factors, is related to the uptake of toxic substances contained in food such as heterocyclic aromatic amines that arise during the processing of fish and meat. phip is the most abundantly formed heterocyclic compound, and therefore has the biggest impact. in a previous study, we measured the absorption of phip in different intestinal segments of the rat. in the present study we focussed on the potential mechanisms by which phip is reabsorbed. the unidirectional phip transport from the mucosal to the serosal compartment (j ms) and in the opposite direction (jsm) was examined using the ussing chamber technique and c-phip as a radiotracer. the proximal jejunum and distal colon of male fischer rats in short-circuit current chambers was clamped, so that mucosal and serosal compartments were built. the phip flux rates were determined at defined intervals over min. the experimental conditions were selected in such a way that negative net flux rates (jnet = jms-jsm) were indicative of an active secretion. both intestinal segments showed large differences. while in the jejunum jms and jsm of phip were not significantly different, there was an active secretion in the colon. in a next step the transport proteins involved in this process should be examined. introduction: human organic anion transporter , oat (slc a ), is abundantly expressed in kidney and liver and mediates the sodium-independent uptake of clinically relevant drugs like -fluorouracil, paclitaxel, bumetanide, tetracycline, and zidovudine. while immunohistochemical studies have localized human oat to the basolateral membrane of kidney proximal tubules, its hepatic localization is currently unknown. we, therefore, firstly determined oat localization in human liver. because interindividual variability of oat expression may affect hepatobiliary drug uptake and elimination, we next systematically investigated the influence of genetic and non-genetic factors on hepatic oat expression. methods: an expression profile of oat for human tissues was determined by realtime quantitative polymerase chain reaction (taqman). oat mrna expression was analyzed in well-characterized human liver samples from caucasians that were accompanied by detailed demographic and clinical data. oat was localized in human liver cryosections using a commercial rabbit polyclonal antibody and hepatic oat protein levels were determined. resequencing, matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry, and genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism microarray technology served to genotype variants in the slc a gene region. results: oat mrna was expressed in several human tissues, including liver. moreover, a new alternatively spliced variant of oat was identified in human liver. hepatic expression of full-length oat mrna and oat protein varied -fold and fold, respectively. oat mrna and protein levels did not correlate with each other. oat was localized to the sinusoidal membrane of human hepatocytes. no novel variants in the exons, the '-flanking region, or the '-untranslated region of the slc a gene were identified. univariate analysis showed that oat mrna is reduced in patients diagnosed for cholestasis (p= . ) and is affected by genetic variants. whereas the influence of genetic variants on hepatic oat expression appears to be limited, cholestasis significantly contributes to the variable interindividual oat expression. this indicates consequences for hepatic drug elimination of and response to oat drug substrates such as paclitaxel or tetracycline. the life threatening toxicity of organophosphorus (op) nerve agents is caused by the inhibition of the acetylcholine esterase (ache). oximes were shown to be potent reactivators of inhibited ache, but in poisoning by some compounds, e.g. soman, they have only a small therapeutic effect. for such cases, an alternative new strategy may be the intervention at nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nachr). previous studies with the bispyridinium non-oxime mb demonstrated therapeutic effects against soman in vitro and in vivo which was partly attributed to its direct interaction with nachrs [ ] . we investigated the interaction of mb and several structure analogous at the orthosteric binding site of human α nachr (hα nachrs), a subtype which appears to be widespread in the human body, and compared the results with data obtained from torpedo-nachrs, which show a high degree of homology with human muscle-type nachrs. interaction of compounds with the orthosteric binding site of hα nachrs were investigated with radioligand binding experiments performed as high-throughput method [ ] . membrane preparations of gh c cells stably expressed hα nachrs were incubated with the nachr agonist [³h] epibatidine and appropriate concentrations of the unlabelled competitors e.g. bispyridinium compounds. after incubation, bound and free [³h] epibatidine were separated by rapid vacuum filtration. ki values of the competing compounds were calculated with nonlinear regression. three bispyridinium compounds, mb , mb and mb exhibited ki values at micromolar concentrations while three other compounds, mb , mb and the pharmacological inactive mb (negative control) did not show any interaction with the orthosteric binding site of hα nachrs. with torpedo-nachrs, ki values were in similar orders of magnitude -except mb which indicated significant subtype selectivity. interestingly, the affinity of monomeric pyridinium derivates did not correlate with their bispyridinium structure analogues. obviously, no correlation between the affinity to the orthosteric binding site and the functional improvement of neuromuscular transmission exists, although species-related differences cannot be excluded. in this study, we analysed the cytotoxic and clastogenic effects of the anticancer drug nimustine (acnu) in cells deficient in repair proteins involved either in homologous recombination (hr) or non-homologous end-joining (nhej). we show that hr mutants are extremely sensitive to acnu as measured by the induction of apoptosis and colony formation as well as the induction of chromosomal aberrations. the nhej mutants were slightly sensitive to acnu and differed in their sensitivity, with the ku mutants being moderately sensitive and the dna-pkcs mutant resistant, comparable to the wild-type (wt). cell death was mostly executed via the caspase-dependent apoptotic pathway with involvement of caspase- and - , and necrosis was also induced. further, we investigated the kinetics of dna double-strand break (dsb) formation that resulted from the repair of acnu-induced interstrand cross-links by means of γh ax and bp foci analysis in wt and mutant cells. cells mutant in hr did not repair dsb and went into the apoptotic or necrotic pathway, whereas wt cells were able to repair most of the dsb. cells deficient in ku formed at early times after acnu treatment less γh ax and bp foci compared to the corresponding wt, which might be due to a reduced capacity of recognising dsb. at later times after treatment, ku mutant cells show foci levels similar to the wt indicating restitution of h ax phosphorylation. we also analysed whether dsb formation after acnu treatment was replication-dependent using synchronised cells. we determined the formation of γh ax and other dsb marker in wt cells that passed through the first cell cycle after demecolcine synchronization. the level of γh ax foci increased significantly in the s-phase and remained at a high level during g where a fraction of cells remained arrested. rad , atm, mdc- and rpa- foci were also formed and shown to co-localize with γh ax. these foci were ameliorated significantly in s-and g -phase, which was similar to the time course of γh ax foci formation. in western blots, we confirmed a higher phosphorylation level of atm and chk and less phosphorylation of chk in hr mutants. the data indicate that acnuinduced dna cross-links give rise to cyto-and genotoxicity via the formation of dsbs that activate the cellular dna damage response. the endocannabinoid system has been established as a mediator of numerous central and peripheral biological functions. cannabinoids have emerged as attractive alternatives or supplements to therapy with opioids for chronic pain states. however, in human the activation of cannabinoid receptors is associated with side effects. for clinical exploitation of the analgesics properties of cannabinoids, a major challenge is to devise strategies that reduce or abolish their adverse effects on cognitive, affective and motor functions without attenuating their analgesics effect. in animal studies, the anti-nociceptive efficacy of cannabinoids has been unequivocally demonstrated in several models of inflammatory and neuropathic pain. however, there are marked inconsistencies between different reports with respect to the locus of these pain-protective effects. we are working towards establishing the contribution of cb receptors expressed on the peripheral terminals of nociceptors to cannabinoid-induced analgesia. using cb globally knock-out animal as background, we induce the expression of cb specifically in nociceptive neurons localized in the peripheral nervous system and test the analgesic effects of cannabinoid systemical delivery in these mice. our results support the development of peripherally acting cb analgesic agonist with reduced central side effects. furthermore, we are utilizing proteomics approach to identify protein complexes that interact with cb receptor which hold promise in understanding cannabinoid signaling in health and disease. most chemoattractants, including chemokines, complement c a, fmlp, and leukotriene b are signaling through heterotrimeric g proteins of the pertussis toxin (ptx)-sensitive gi family. the functional inactivation of all gαi proteins with ptx leads to a fulminant decompensation of the immune system, whereas the constitutive inactivation of a single gαi coding gene results in mild phenotypes in mice. we are mostly interested in the nonneuronally found gαi and gαi isoforms and their redundant and specific roles in immune function and infection. for this purpose cellular in vivo and ex vivo models and in vivo infection model with listeria monocytogenes are being used. macrophages were isolated from the peritoneal cavity of wild type (wt) and gαi-deficient mice days after i.p. injection of % thioglycolate that induces peritonitis in vivo. we confirmed previous observations that in gαi -deficient mice the migration of macrophages into the peritoneal cavity was reduced after induction of peritonitis. regarding the expression levels of gαi and gβ isoforms in the lavage samples, the predominant gαi isoform gαi was upregulated in gαi -deficient macrophages. vice versa gαi was upregulated in gαi -deficient macrophages. concerning gβ isoforms, both gβ and gβ were strongly reduced in the gαi -deficient macrophages which resulted in a reduced total amount of gβ. surprisingly, the gαi -deficient macrophages showed reduced gβ protein levels only which caused a change in the gβ / gβ quotient in favour of gβ . we are currently establishing an in vivo infection model with l. monocytogenes in gαi and gαi -deficient mice. our previous in vitro infection studies in mice embryonic fibroblasts provided us with information about possible distinct roles of these two isoforms as far as the uptake of l. monocytogenes in the cells is concerned. challenging the immune system of gαi-deficient mice with this pathogenic organism will give us new insights into the systemic immune response in these mice upon bacterial infection. our data indicate that we may surmount the redundancy between these two isoforms and focus on their distinct and specific roles in pathogen defense. fret-based β-arrestin biosensors reveal conformational changes upon binding to the β -adrenergic receptor in real time and living cells nuber s., zabel u., ziegler n., hoffmann c., lohse m. j. institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie pharmakologie, versbacherstr. , würzburg, germany β-arrestins are multifunctional adapter proteins that regulate seven transmembranespanning receptor ( tmr) signaling and initiate also alternative signaling pathways. studies have shown that β-arrestins undergo conformational changes upon receptor stimulation, which are thought to be necessary for its downstream actions. to investigate these conformational changes in living cells we constructed fret based biosensors of β-arrestin , in which cfp was fused to the c-terminus and the flashbinding motif (ccpgcc) was inserted to different positions within the n-or c-domain of β-arrestin . upon β -adrenergic receptor (β ar) stimulation we observed a decrease of the intramolecular fret signal between cfp and flash at the n-domain (β-arrestin flash ), indicating a conformational change moving the c-terminus and the ndomain of β-arrestin relative to each other. kinetic analysis revealed that this conformational change immediately follows β-arrestin /β ar interaction on a timescale of seconds. a β ar mutant that was previously shown not to interact with β-arrestin was utilized as control and did not induce a conformational change in the β-arrestin molecule. our data provide evidence that β-arrestin changes it`s conformation upon binding to the activated β ar in living cells. the β-arrestin flash sensor could serve as universal biosensor for gpcr activation. studies on the physiological role of annexin a in the heart nunes f. the calcium binding protein annexin a has been examined in the context of heart failure in the past. annexin a expression level was found to be elevated in ventricles of human failing heart in comparison to expression levels in non-failing ventricles. furthermore the intracellular localization pattern in atrial cardiomyocytes was found to be altered in the failing human heart (moravec and matteo, cardiovasc res ). in order to gain insight into the possible physiological significance of these findings we utilized an annexin a gene trap model (gt) in which the annexin a protein content was not detectable in ventricles and atria. measurements of sarcomere shortening and calcium transient kinetics in isolated ventricular cardiomyocytes revealed a prolonged calcium transient decay at stimulation frequencies of . hz, hz and hz as well as an increased sarcomere shortening at hz and hz in anxa gene trap animals in comparison to wild type (wt) ( the effects of the β-adrenoreceptor agonist isoprenaline (iso) on the shortening of ventricular cardiomyocytes was increased in gt as compared to wt ( , ± . vs. . ± . , *=p< . vs. wt; n= - / ). western blot analyses indicated that the expression of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (sr) ca + -atpase (serca a) and the phosphorylation status of its regulator protein phospholamban (plb) did not differ between groups (n= ). however, co-immunoprecipitation experiments suggest, that anxa is able to interact with hax , which acts as a repressor of serca a (n= ). we performed force measurements in isolated and electrically stimulated left atria in response to rising isoprenaline concentrations ( - m- - m). the positiv inotropic effect of isoprenaline was significantly increased in gt atria (rel. force at - m iso [%]: wt: ± ; gt: ± *= p< . vs wt; n= - ). in conclusion, annexin a contributes to the regulation of cardiomyocyte contractility. the anxa up-regulation might therefore contribute to diminished cardiac performance in heart failure. matteo rg, moravec cs. immunolocalization of annexins iv, v and vi in thefailing and non-failing human heart. cardiovasc res. mar; ( ) background: pregnane x receptor (pxr) is considered the most important sensor of natural and anthropogenic xenobiotics in vertebrates. in contrast, the amphibian ortholog is involved in neural development and irresponsive to xenobiotics. instead, the xenopus laevis constitutive androstane receptor (car) was recently found to possess pxr-like properties, featuring low basal activity and a pronounced ligand spectrum. thus a structural and functional characterisation of x. laevis car may provide further insights into human car basal and ligand-induced activity. methods: the time-point of origin of car genes was determined by macrosynteny analyses of car, pxr, and vdr (vitamin d receptor) gene loci, which form the nr i subfamily of nuclear receptors. based on a -dimensional protein model of xenopus laevis car, docking studies with structurally diverse agonists were conducted. proteinligand-interactions as well as sequence comparisons were performed in order to select amino acids to be mutated towards human car. the organ response to car activators was determined in xenopus laevis using rna microarrays. results: car emerged together with pxr and vdr from an ancestral nr i gene in early vertebrates via two whole-genome duplications. this was followed by losses of car from the fish lineage and of pxr from sauropsida (reptiles and birds). amino acids important for ligand binding were identified. structural features responsible for the pronounced basal activity in human constitutive androstane receptor are not present in x. laevis car. in human pxr the inter-helical loop in front of helix is part of the ligandbinding pocket and supposed to be responsible for the wide substrate spectrum. in amphibian car this inter-helical loop plays no role in ligand binding. car agonists resulted in a pronounced induction of antimicrobial peptides in the ovary. conclusions: car emerged already in early vertebrates and it is conserved in land vertebrates, whereas xenosensing pxr is found only in the fishes and mammals. we provide a comprehensive modeling and mutational analysis of this first reported amphibian xenosensor. the induction of antimicrobial peptides by car activators suggests a link between xenosensing and innate immunity. the latter one may play a previously unrecognized role in the amphibian reproduction. background: retigabine belongs to a novel class of potent anticonvulsant drugs and is currently being investigated in clinical routine. the therapeutic range of retigabine serum concentration is unknown. a therapeutic drug monitoring (tdm) is used for most other anticonvulsant drugs. the aim of this study was to develop a method for the determination of retigabine in serum of patients and to compare the effect and the side effects of retigabine with the blood levels of the drug. method: a hplc method with tandem mass spectrometric detection for the sensitive determination of retigabine was developed. solid-phase extraction (spe) of µl serum with oasis hlb cartridges allowed a reliable quantification down to ng/ml. in order to develop an assay with high sample throughput and to obtain maximum response for the analytes we required the shortest possible retention time. to implement the determination of retigabine in a second step in the routine tdm of anticonvulsant drugs the corresponding hplc method was selected: a purospher rp column ( mm x mm; µm, merck) and a mobile phase with a steep acetonitrile gradient. results: the great advantage of having analytes with different molecular masses and similar retention times in combination with ms/ms detection enabled us to aim at a minimum separation that might remove some salts or matrix components that can suppress or interfere with the analyses from the target components, while maintaining good sample throughput. the method was validated. the assay is precise, accurate, fast, sensitive, and selective. discussion: the developed method is suitable for therapeutic drug monitoring of retigabine. the correlation of the serum concentration and the effect of the drug and thus the necessity of tdm have to be tested. targeting inflammatory t lymphocytes with conditional chemokine receptor antagonist expression for a tissue-specific therapy of chronic inflammatory disorders ogrissek n., giegold o., pfeilschifter j., radeke h. h. uniklinikum der goethe-universität pharmazentrum / zafes, theodor-stern-kai , frankfurt am main, germany chemokines and their receptors are known to be involved in the pathogenesis of chronic inflammation and autoimmune diseases. several approaches tried to use chemokine receptor antagonists as therapeutics to reduce exagerrated immune response, however, due to compensation and systemic side effects clinical trials often failed. in previous experiments our group identified three promising antagonists. cxcl ( - ) has antagonistic function for cxcr , cxcl (p g ) is able to inhibit cxcr and the herpesvirus encoded protein vmip-ii interferes with ccr , - and - as well as with cxcr , - and cx cr . their expression and secretion was confirmed in pichia pastoris and antagonistic function has been proven by a reduction of t cell migration. the aim of this project is to develop a cell-based therapy for chronic inflammation with a treatment that is based on the collective effect of cxcl ( - ), cxcl (p g ) and vmip-ii. with targeting of stable transduced memory t cells these antagonists should be conditional expressed and secreted directly in the centre of inflammation, resulting in inhibition of further inflammatory t cell accumulation. to realize this project we first cloned constitutive lentiviral constructs containing these antagonists and optimized transduction of t cells, such as the ova-specific memory th- cell clone if with the potential to initiate antigen specific nephritis in scid mice. next we investigated expression and secretion of cxcl ( - ), cxcl (p g ) and vmip-ii with pcr, western blot and elisa. at the moment we want to measure the inhibition efficiency of t cell migration in vitro with chemotaxis and flow chamber assays. construction of an inducible lentiviral vector plasmid to ensure expression of the antagonists only upon t cell activation, is also part of our current work. finally we would like to test the chemokine receptor antagonists in vivo in two relevant mouse models of type- -diabetes and contact dermatitis. small heterodimer partner (shp- ) is a member of the superfamily of nuclear receptors (nrs). in contrast to other nrs this orphan receptor lacks the dna binding domain. however, shp- is known to inhibit activity of several nrs by direct proteinprotein interaction. importantly several of the interacting nrs have been shown to directly regulate shp- expression, suggesting that shp- is involved in negative feedback loops of various metabolic pathways, such as cholesterol-, bile acid-and drug metabolism and glucose homeostasis. recently binding sites for nrs were identified in the promoter region of shp- , including hnf α, lrh , lxr, fxr, srebp c and pparγ. the aim of our study was to identify single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) in the promoter region of shp- and to determine their impact on the transactivation of shp- . dna samples from subjects of the population based cohort study of health in pomerania were analyzed by sanger sequencing, thereby we identified four snps namely - t>c (rs ), - g>c, - c>t (rs ) and del- ctga (rs ). subsequently those polymorphisms were tested for their functional consequence performing cell based reporter gene assays testing all above mentioned modulators (lrh , lxr, fxr, srebp c and pparγ) of shp- expression. only the transactivation by hnf α was decreased in the presence of the - c>t polymorphism to % and the - g>c polymorphism to %. in conclusion we described snps with impact on transactivation. it will be aim of future studies to determine the potential impact on physiological processes or disease development. autosomal recessive polycystic kidney disease (arpkd) is a rare genetic disease, afflicting about in . individuals. arpkd is characterized by cystic fusiform dilatations of the renal collecting ducts leading to massive enlargement of the kidneys and ultimately loss of renal function. in addition, the patients suffer from congenital hepatic fibrosis (chf), possibly leading to portal hypertension and liver enlargement. so far, there is no cure for arpkd. therapy is focussing on controlling the disease symptoms [ ] . mutations in the pkhd gene cause arpkd. more than different mutations in this gene have been reported, all leading to the same phenotype, though there are differences regarding the severity of the disease [ ] . in animal models of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (adpkd) as well as arpkd elevated levels of camp were shown [ ] [ ] [ ] . in isolated kidney cells camp stimulates cl-secretion and activates the b-raf /mek/erk pathway. these both are important factors for cyst development and disease progression [ , ] . intracellular camp regulation is based on conversion of atp to camp by adenylyl cyclases (acs) and degradation by phosphodiesterases . referring to this, we asked the question if there are differences in the activation and expression pattern of acs in pck rats, an animal model of arpkd [ ] and in sprague dawley rats. therefore, we examined membranes in a radioactive ac activity assay using various stimulatory compounds, e.g. forskolin, a direct ac activator, or hormones like glucagon and vasopressin to characterize acs. furthermore, we examined ac isoform expression on the mrna level via rt-pcr. we observed that in pck rats ac activity was decreased in general in comparison to sprague dawley rats. in future experiments we are aiming to obtain further knowledge about the influence various hormones exhibit on pck rat acs and to biochemically characterize acs. the major pathogenicity factors tcda and tcdb from clostridium difficile monoglucosylate and thereby inactivate small gtp-binding proteins of the rho subfamily after entering host cells via receptor-mediated endocytosis. although the intracellular mode of action of the toxins is well understood, far less is known about binding structure and internalization pathway of tcda and tcdb. since antibodies directed against the c-terminal located clostridial repetitive oligopeptides (crops) are able to neutralize toxin cytotoxicity the crop domain is acknowledged to mediate receptor binding. however, we recently demonstrated that crop deletion mutants of tcda (tcda - ) and tcdb (tcdb - ) enter host cells and exhibit full cytopathic potency though lacking the proposed receptor binding domain. we therefore refute the accepted opinion of a solely crop-mediated toxin uptake and re-evaluate the role of the crops in toxin endocytosis. tcda - and tcdb - induced time and concentration dependent cell rounding and rac -glucosylation. however, depending on the cell line, truncated toxins exhibit up to -fold reduced potency towards host cells compared to the respective full length toxin. the observed difference in toxin potency might reflect the recognition of different receptor structures or the use of various endocytotic routes. interestingly, pre-incubation of cells with the isolated crop domain enhances binding as well as cytotoxicity of subsequent applied truncated tcda indicating that the crops primarily determine toxin uptake. in fact, competition experiments revealed that tcda and tcda - predominantly use different receptor structures corroborating the notion of alternative internalization processes utilized by tcda. different routes for cellular uptake might enable the toxins to enter a broader repertoire of cell types leading to the observed multifarious pathogenesis of c. difficile. thus, characterization of alternative endocytotic pathways used by the c. difficile toxins might therefore be the basis to investigate the opportunity of toxin uptake inhibition as therapeutic option. in neurodegenerative diseases, such as alzheimer´s disease and parkinson´s disease, mitochondrial pathways of apoptosis are considered as major features of the underlying neuronal cell death. such mitochondrial mechanisms of apoptosis are mediated by the bh -only protein bid, a member of the bcl- family that triggers mitochondrial permeabilization and the subsequent release of death-promoting proteins into the cytosol. the pivotal role of bid in apoptotic cascades of neuronal cells has been shown in our previous studies showing a neuroprotective effect of bid sirna and small molecule bid inhibitors such as bi c in vitro. in vivo, however, the available bidinhibitors failed to protect brain tissue likely because the compounds were not bioavailable or did not cross the blood brain barrier. therefore, chemical modifications of bi- c were generated resulting in new structures and molecules with different pharmacophors. the aim of the present study is to identify novel potent bid inhibitors available for applications in model systems of brain damage in vivo. for the first screening of compounds we used a model of glutamate toxicity in immortalized mouse hippocampal neurons (ht- cells). in this model system, glutamate induces a decrease of intracellular glutathione levels resulting in lipoxygenase activity and enhanced formation of toxic reactive oxygen species (ros). to investigate the compounds' ability to prevent glutamate induced cell death, we first analyzed the cell viability by the mtt assay. in addition, we examined the cell survival by using real time monitoring of cell impedance (xcelligence system) to determine the neuroprotective potency of the new structures. using these assays, we identified novel molecules that significantly prevented glutamate-induced toxicity in ht- cells. further we were able to express and to purify recombinant bid in a high amount. in the ongoing study the purified bid protein will be used for co-crystallization with the identified neuroprotective structures for further optimization of novel bid inhibitors for therapeutic applications in experimental models of neurodegenerative diseases in vivo. polymorphic enzymes, urinary bladder cancer risk and structural change in the local industry ovsiannikov d. , selinski s. in the s, an uncommonly high percentage of glutathione s-transferase m (gstm ) negative bladder cancer cases ( %) was reported in the greater dortmund area (golka et al., ) . the question arose whether this uncommonly high percentage of gstm negative bladder cancer cases was due to environmental and occupational exposure decades ago. thus, years later, another study on bladder cancer was performed in the same area after the coal, iron and steel industries had finally closed in the s. in total bladder cancer patients from the st.-josefs-hospital dortmund-hörde and controls with benign urological diseases were investigated by a questionnaire and genotyped for gstm , gstt and the n-acetyltransferase (nat ) tag snp rs . the frequency of the gstm negative genotype was % in bladder cancer cases and thus much lower, compared to a previous study performed from - in the same area ( %). nat genotypes were distributed equally among cases and controls ( % slow acetylators). less gstt negative genotypes were present in cases ( %; controls %). apoptosis inducing factor (aif) has been identified as a key factor in intrinsic pathways of caspase-independent neuronal death in model systems of acute brain injury and neurodegenerative diseases, such as alzheimer's disease and parkinson's disease. aif is a mitochondrial intermembrane flavoprotein with the capacity to translocate to the nucleus where it induces chromatin condensation and large-scale dna fragmentation. previous studies revealed that aif deficiency leads to protective effects in different models of neuronal death in vitro and in vivo. however, aif also plays an important physiological role for the integrity and function of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. thus, aif deficiency may significantly alter mitochondrial functions and metabolic homeostasis thereby preconditioning the cells to tolerate subsequent stress stimuli. the present study addresses this hypothesis and investigates whether neuroprotection by aif depletion was attributed to a preconditioning effect, i.e. protecting mitochondrial function and integrity. as model system we use glutamate induced oxytosis in immortalized mouse hippocampal ht- neurons. silencing of aif expression by sirna ( nm) protected mitochondrial morphology and integrity against glutamate induced damage. microscopy analysis of the mitochondrial morphology revealed that aif sirna prevented mitochondrial fission. furthermore, facs analysis confirmed that mitochondrial membrane potential was stable in cells with aif silencing. this protection of mitochondrial morphology and integrity by aif depletion was associated with preserved atp levels and inhibition of cell death as detected by an mtt assay. pronounced formation of lipidperoxides as another indicator of mitochondrial damage was also attenuated in cells preconditioned by aif sirna. these protective effects of aif sirna were highly similar to effects obtained with low doses of rotenone ( nm), which was applied as an inhibitor of complex i and mediated comparable preconditioning effects in the ht- cells. overall, these findings support the conclusion that aif depletion mediates a preconditioning effect protecting neuronal cells from a subsequent glutamate toxicity. in order to link these preconditioning effects to complex i functions, protein expression and functional analysis of complex i are being analysed to identify the molecular mechanisms of aif dependent control of neuronal life and death. -dependent inactivation and display very slow voltage-dependent inactivation. both properties are of crucial importance in ribbon synapses of retinal photoreceptors and bipolar cells, where sustained ca + influx through cav . channels is required to couple slowly graded changes of the membrane potential with tonic glutamate release. mutations in the gene coding for cav . cause severe impairment of retinal circuitry function and have been linked to congenital stationary night blindness type a (csnb ), aland island eye disease (aied) and cone-rod dystrophy type (cordx ). the clinical phenotypes of these eye diseases vary substantially regarding the ratio of rod to cone functional impairment. the reasons for this variability are not known. to gain more insights into the pathophysiology caused by loss of cav . function we analyzed the visual phenotype of cav . -deficient mice. to this end, we combined immunohistochemistry, electroretinography (erg) and vision-dependent behavioral testing. immunohistochemical analysis using synaptic and postsynaptic markers revealed severe synaptic defects in cav . -deficient mice. heterozygous cav . mice showed mosaic synaptic defects most probably caused by random x-chromosomal inactivation of the healthy allele. electroretinography revealed a loss of scotopic and photopic photoreceptor function. this loss of retinal network function resulted in impaired performance of cav . knockout mice in a water maze-based behavioral test of rod and cone function. in conclusion, loss of cav . channels strongly impairs rod and cone retinal function and vision in mice. lsr is the host cell receptor for clostridial iota-like toxins papatheodorou p., aktories k. albert-ludwigs-universität freiburg institut für experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie, albertstr. , freiburg, germany the human enteric pathogen clostridium difficile is the most serious cause of antibioticassociated diarrhea and pseudomembranous colitis. hypervirulent strains of the pathogen, associated with more severe disease and increased death rates, produce the binary actin-adp-ribosylating toxin cdt (c. difficile transferase) in addition to the rho glucosylating toxins a and b. cdt is member of the family of clostridial iota-like toxins, including c. spiroforme toxin (cst) and the eponym c. perfringens iota toxin. the toxins induce depolymerization of the actin cytoskeleton and the formation of microtubulebased cell protrusions that increase adherence and colonization of clostridia. using a haploid genetic screen, we identify the lipolysis-stimulated lipoprotein receptor (lsr) as the target molecule for entry of cdt into host cells. in addition, we present evidence that lsr is shared as a cell entry point by all members of the iota-like toxin family. identification of the toxin receptor provides a most valuable basis for antitoxin strategies. bisphenol a (bpa) is a chemical of high interest due to its endocrine activity. controversy exists concerning the blood concentration due to normal exposures. some authors claimed to have measured concentrations in the ng/ml range which is in contrast to kinetic properties of bpa. bpa is excreted in the urine as glucuronide and sulfate metabolites. recently, data on the in vitro metabolism of bpa by recombinant udpglucuronyltransferase b enzymes (ugt b ) revealed that ugt b . and ugt b . had markedly lower intrinsic clearance as compared to ugt b . (hanioka et al., ) . using the in vitro metabolism data, we scaled the kmand vmaxvalues in an established human physiologically based toxicokinetic (pbtk) model (mielke and gundert-remy, , mielke et al., ) to the values of the variants. for oral doses at relevant exposure levels, the maximum blood concentration (cmax) for the ugt b . variant (v ) was fold and those of the ugt b . variant (v ) was fold higher than that of the ugt . variant. with dermal exposure at a relevant exposure level, the cmax values were . (v ) and . fold (v ) of ugt . variant. a combined exposure of oral and dermal exposure, an exposure scenario, which occurs in daily life, resulted in . fold (v ) and . fold (v ) higher cmax values as compared to ugt . variant. the values for the area under the blood concentration time curve (auc) were for a relevant oral dose . fold (v ) and . fold (v ), for relevant dermal exposure . fold (v ) and . fold (v ), and for combined exposure . fold (v ) and . fold (v ) of ugt . variant. from the results we conclude: ( ) polymorphism of udpglucuronyltransferase ( b . and b . ) has an impact on the blood concentrations which, however, is less than fold for cmax and for auc. the effect is more pronounced for oral as compared to dermal or combined exposure. ( ) polymorphism of metabolism does not explain the blood/plasma concentrations in the ng/ml range measured by some authors. hanioka n, oka h, nagaoka k, ikushiro s, narimatsu s. effect of udpglucuronosyltransferase b polymorphism on bisphenol a glucuronidation. arch toxicol. , ( ) : - . mielke h, gundert-remy u. bisphenol a levels in blood depend on age and exposure. toxicol lett. ; ( ) : - . mielke h, partosch f, gundert- the heart responds to maladaptive pro-hypertrophic stimuli by stimulating intrinsic signals that contrast and dampen the onset and development of hypertrophy. cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cgmp) and its downstream effector cgmp kinase i (cgki) have been suggested to be an important anti-hypertrophic signaling pathway ( ) . intracellular levels of cgmp can be raised by the action of nitric oxide (no) and natriuretic peptides (anf, bnf), or by inhibiting cgmp-degrading phosphodiesterases (pde). a growing body of evidence suggests that the pde specific inhibitor sildenafil (sil) prevents and reverses hypertrophy and chamber remodelling in the heart of mice subjected to thoracic aorta constriction (tac) by elevating cgmp levels and cgki activation ( ) . in contrast, using a mouse model that lacks cgki expression in every cell type except smooth muscle cells (βres mice; see ref. ), we recently showed that the absence of this kinase does not alter the onset of hypertrophy induced by tac or isoproterenol infusion ( ) . sil is believed to increase cardiac cgmp levels, although it is unclear, if its target (pde ) is expressed in cm ( ). sil may act on other pdes, such as pde c which is abundant in cms. it is also unclear if sil effects are mediated by other cardiac cell types, in particular by cardiofibroblast. to answer these questions, we are currently investigating whether sil is able to prevent hormone induced cardiac hypertrophy in the absence of cgki in cm. preliminary results on βres mice show that even in the case of chronic angii infusion, lack of cgki in cm does not alter the induction of hypertrophic response, at least in the initial phase ( days of angii infusion at mg/kg/day). interestingly, βres mice showed impaired cardiac function, as indicated by decreased fractional shortening. sil was able to partially block the onset of cardiac hypertrophy in wt animals, but not in βres mice, indicating a requirement of cgki in this process. in particular, sil was able to block the transcription of pro-fibrotic genes such as tgfβ, ctgf, collageni and fibronectin. the overexpression of the somatostatin receptors sst and sst in neuroendocrine tumors provides the molecular basis for therapeutic application of the stable somatostatin analogs octreotide and pasireotide. whereas the phosphorylation of the carboxyl-terminal region of the sst receptor has been studied in detail, little is known about the agonist-induced regulation of the human sst receptor. here, we have generated phosphosite-specific antibodies for the carboxyl-terminal threonines (t ) and (t ), which enabled us to selectively detect either the t -or the t -phosphorylated form of sst . we show that agonist-mediated phosphorylation occurs at t , whereas t is constitutively phosphorylated in the absence of agonist. we further demonstrate that the pan-somatostatin analog pasireotide and the sst -selective ligand l- , but not octreotide or ke were able to promote a clearly detectable t phosphorylation. however, none of these compounds was able to stimulate t phosphorylation and sst internalization to the same extent as the natural somatostatin. agonist-induced t phosphorylation was dose-dependent and selectively mediated by g protein-coupled receptor kinase (grk ). like that observed for the sst receptor, phosphorylation of sst occurred within seconds. however, unlike that seen for the sst receptor, dephosphorylation and recycling of sst were complete within minutes. we also identify protein phosphatase g (pp g) as sst receptor phosphatase. together, we provide direct evidence for agonist-selective phosphorylation of carboxyl-terminal t . in addition, we identify grk -mediated phosphorylation and pp g-mediated dephosphorylation of t as key regulators of rapid internalization and recycling of the human sst receptor. termination of signaling of activated g protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs) is essential for maintenance of cellular homeostasis. although the regulation of agonist-induced phosphorylation has been studied in detail for many gpcrs, the molecular mechanisms and functional consequences of receptor dephosphorylation are far from understood. recent studies have shown that phosphatase inhibitors, such as okadaic acid and calyculin a, can block the dephosphorylation of a number of gpcrs including the ß adrenergic receptor, d dopamine receptor, parathyroid hormone receptor , thromboxane a receptor and the vasopressin receptor . however, a specific phosphatase has not been identified so far. in present studies, we have examined the mechanism and function of receptor dephosphorylation using the sst a somatostatin receptor and the µ-opioid receptor (mor) as models. within those analyses, we have identified protein phosphatase beta (pp ß) as the phosphatase for the cluster of phosphorylated threonines ( ttetqrt ) within the sst a somatostatin receptor carboxylterminus using sirna knock down screeening. those phosphorylation sites mediate ß-arrestin binding. we have also identified protein phosphatase gamma (pp γ) as mor phosphatase that catalyzed t and s dephosphorylation at or near the plasma membrane within minutes after agonist removal. here, we show the different activated phosphatases with functional selective mutants. we examined tailswap mutants which specify the different phosphatase activities. therefore we produced a mor-rsst a chimera with the rsst a c-terminal tail and a rsst a-mor chimera with a mor c-terminal tail. detoxification by conjugation of glutathione? formations of dna adducts of patulin activated by glutathione pfenning c., lehmann l. university wuerzburg, institute of pharmacy and food chemistry section of food chemistry, am hubland, wuerzburg, germany as a frequent contaminant in apple juice, the mycotoxin patulin (pat) has shown mutagenic potential in cultured mammalian cells at concentrations which are equivalent to those found in marketable foods. this fact is in contrast with the assumption that conjugation to the major intracellular nucleophile glutathione (gsh) leads to detoxification of the electrophile pat. although pat reacts readily with gsh, previous studies showed that co-incubation of pat with model thiols and amine compounds increased the reactivity of pat towards amines forming mixed-type adducts. thus, we hypothesise that the potential to react with dna bases after being activated by gsh might contribute to the mutagenicity of pat. adduct formation of dna bases (adenine, guanine or cytosine) with pat in the presence and absence of gsh was studied under neutral conditions. liquid chromatography coupled with electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry was applied for identification and structure elucidation of putative adducts. besides published as well as hitherto unknown pat-gsh adducts, several pat-dna base adducts were formed both in presence and absence of gsh. in addition, with each of the three dna bases one product exhibiting a mass to charge ratio and fragmentation pattern suggesting a mixed thiol-amine adduct was detected. based on the fragment ions of adducts formed with gsh and chemically modified derivatives, we postulate a cyclic structure of the pat-gsh-dna base adducts, resulting from the reaction of the α-amino group of the glutamic acid residue with the c -carbonyl function of pat. the exocyclic amino group of the dna base is linked to c of the pat backbone by an amid bond. thus, the present study demonstrates the reactivity of pat towards dna bases and the participation of gsh in adduct formation. the postulated structures of dna adducts could be used as biomarkers for the determination of the internal exposure to pat in humans. prescribing information detailed in the summary of product characteristics (spc) forms the officially approved basis for safe prescribing of drugs. in a project funded by the german federal ministry of education and research (bmbf) we aimed to derive an internationally valid data set for safe prescribing of psychiatric drugs and therefore analyzed and compared the content of internationally available prescribing information. a team of pharmacists and clinical pharmacologists performed an in-depth comparison of the german, swiss, british and us-american spcs of top prescribed psychiatric drugs. for drugs (of identical pharmaceutical form) the spcs from the same manufacturer were available for all countries, whereas for three drugs spcs were only available from different companies. in these cases the most recent prescribing information from each country was included in the comparison. in spcs individual data points ( . ± . per individual spc) were compared. between countries the timeliness of prescribing information for an individual drug varied by a median of . (range: - ) months. the respective spcs covered on average . ± . % (range: . - %) of all mentioned indications and . ± . % (range . - %) of all mentioned contraindications. the warnings and precautions section of an individual spc covered on average . ± . % (range: . - . %) of all mentioned warnings and precautions for that drug. the variation observed was only marginally improved when restricting the analysis to the spcs of the drugs available in all four countries from the same manufacturer. across countries, the summary of product characteristics of individual psychiatric drugs show substantial variation in crucial prescribing information. as different manufacturers are unlikely to explain much of the observed variation, these data argue for a better international cooperation and standardization of the content of summary of product characteristics. this project is supported by the german federal ministry of education and research (bmbf), project grant no. ex b. protein kinase ck (former name 'casein kinase ') is a highly conserved serine/threonine kinase, which acts as a component of regulatory networks implicated in many cellular processes but is also linked to various types of human cancer [ , ] . elevated ck activity has been associated with aggressive tumor behavior and results in growth advantage, enhanced survival and dynamic adaption to stress of cancer cells [ ] . ck is a heterotetramer consisting of two catalytic subunits (ck α) attached to a dimer of regulatory subunits (ck β) [ ] . ck β stabilizes ck α against denaturation and modulates the substrate specificity of the catalytic subunit [ ] . due to the relatively small and hydrophobic ck α-ck β interface ( Ų) [ ] , low molecular weight inhibitors are able to interfere with the ck subunit interaction and thus affect the kinase activity [ ] . such inhibitors might exhibit an increased specificity in comparison to those compounds interacting with the conserved atp binding site [ ] . we have developed an elisa-based ck α-ck β binding assay using recombinant human ck subunits. different blocking reagents were analyzed to minimize nonspecific binding. the optimized binding assay was then applied to screen for inhibitors of the ck subunit interaction. primary hits were further characterized by determination of the parameters ic and ki as well as by comparing the results from the binding assay with literature-known or recently obtained crystal structures. numerous epidemiological studies have shown associations between exposure to ultra fine particles and an increase in cardiovascular diseases such as atherosclerosis, coronary heart disease and myocardial infarction. ultra-fine particles have an aerodynamic diameter of < . µm and are highly diverse with impurities of transition metals and organic compounds (e.g. polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons). posttranslational modification (ptm) of proteins, particularly phosphorylation, is a key element in the regulation of cell function and any disturbance can lead to multiple diseases. the present study focused on the proteomic-based identification of phosphorylated proteins to understand the mechanism behind ultrafine particle exposure and cardiovascular disease development. as one of the major sources for ufp emissions are diesel exhaust, therefore to mimic the diesel particles, carbon black (cb) and benzo[a]pyrene loaded carbon black (cb+) were used in the present study. cells of the endothelial cell line ea.hy were exposed for days to ng/ml cb and cb+. phosphoprotein extraction of whole cell lysates was carried out by the method developed in our lab . the obtained proteins were then separated by two-dimensional gel-electrophoresis followed by maldi-tof-ms (matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry) analysis of differently expressed proteins. to further validate the results invasive potential of cells were monitored by plating exposed cells for hrs on top of matrigel-coated inserts. differential expressions of phosphoproteins were found in cb-treated cells while an altered expression of phosphoproteins was observed in cb+-treated cells. the maldi-tof analysis revealed proteins involved in the regulation of the endothelial permeability and the cellular plasticity such as vimentin, actin and transitional endoplasmic reticulum atpase. further, the invasion assay supported these results as the cb-exposed cells showed a high invasive potential as compared to control. [ ] pink m. et. al. , precipitation by lanthanum ions: a straightforward approach to isolate phosphoproteins, j.protomics, , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] application of the ttc approach in cosmetics platzek t. bundesinstitut für risikobewertung, max-dohrn-straße - , berlin, germany regulatory toxicologists in europe have been discussing the ttc approach since more than a decade, e.g. the previous scientific committee on food in . since then, the concept was further developed and is now applied in the eu for the assessment of flavouring substances by efsa. two committees are discussing possible applications: the efsa scientific committee prepared an opinion exploring options for the application in food and feed, e.g. for impurities of food additives, thermal reaction products, food contact materials, contaminants etc. in addition, an eu non-food expert committee consisting of members of sccs, scher and schenir discussed the ttc concept in general as well as additional possible fields of application with the focus on cosmetics and an opinion was already published for public consultation. the proposal to apply the ttc approach also for cosmetic ingredients was introduced by a paper published in by a colipa (the european cosmetics association) supported working group. major aspects to be considered are the following: . applicability domain. the chemical space of the ttc dataset (> compounds) has to be compared with that of cosmetic ingredients (> compounds). route to route extrapolation. since no adequate dermal toxicity database is available both data on oral intake used in the ttc approach and on dermal exposure to cosmetic ingredients have to be transfomed to internal exposure figures. gastrointestinal and dermal bioavailability as well as route specific differences in metabolism have to be integrated. exposure. the reliability of exposure estimation is the second pillar of the ttc approach. compared to food, data on exposure to substances in cosmetics and consumer products is scarce. a pragmatic step forward is the comparison of ttcs and noael-derived safe exposure levels for cosmetic ingredients. this work was already done with substances in food contact materials and chemicals from the elincs list. for cosmetic ingredients a similar european project is ongoing. further refinement of the ttc approach is needed taking into account the up-to-date toxicological knowledge. with cosmetics specific problems may arise in praxi: according to the new eu cosmetic legislation the safety of cosmetic products available on the market has to be assessed by the manufacturer or importer and also assessors with limited toxicological experience may apply the ttc approach, e.g. by running the toxtree software. plöttner s., marczynski b., käfferlein h. u., welge p., groth h., engelhardt b., schmitz k., erkes a., brüning t. institut für prävention und arbeitsmedizin der deutschen gesetzlichen unfallversicherung -institut der ruhr-universität bochum (ipa) toxikologie, bürkle-dela-camp-platz , bochum, germany polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (pahs) comprise several hundred compounds with different carcinogenic potentials, typically occurring in complex mixtures. due to a lack of data risk estimations for pah mixtures are usually based on those for benzo[a]pyrene (b[a]p). the aim of our present study was to explore the suitability of a permanent human lung cell line as tool for future studies on genotoxicity of pah mixtures. in this pilot study we investigated the time-and concentration-dependent generation of specific anti-benzo[a]pyrene - , -diol- , -epoxide (anti-bpde)-dna adducts as well as cytochrome p (cyp) a / b enzyme activities after b[a]p-incubation in vitro. we used metabolically competent a lung carcinoma cells which display several characteristics of alveolar epithelial type ii cells. after h and h incubations with different b[a]p-concentrations cytotoxic effects were assessed with the neutral red assay and cyp a / b activities using luminescent tests. the formation of specific anti-bpde-dna adducts was determined by hplc with fluorescence detection. a time-and concentration-dependent formation of anti-bpde-dna adducts was observed with maximum rates of . ± . and . ± . anti-bpde/ nucleotides after incubation with µm ( h) and µm b[a]p ( h), respectively. however, the mean adduct rates decreased at higher b[a]p-concentrations. the reduction was more pronounced after h than after h. increased cyp a / b activities were observed at > . - µm ( h) and > . - µm ( h). a clear decrease of enzyme activities was observed at higher concentrations for both incubation times. in the neutral red assay no more than % cytotoxicity in relation to the negative control were found after h incubation with ≥ µm b[a]p and after h with ≥ µm b[a]p. overall, incubation of a cells with b[a]p resulted in a time-and concentration-dependent increase of cyp-activities and anti-bpde-dna adducts. this clearly shows that a cells are able to generate mutagenic dna-adducts. thus, the in vitro model used in the present work appears suitable for genotoxicity studies of individual pahs and pah mixtures, and therefore may be a useful tool for research on syncarcinogenesis. the β subunit of the cav . channel complex has been shown to play a key role in cav . channel trafficking and channel characteristics like opening probability. furthermore, the last exon of the cacnb gene coding for cavβ , exon , contains several potential phosphorylation sites, e.g. for protein kinase a or ca + /calmodulin dependent camkii. pka-dependent phosphorylation mediates β-adrenergic stimulation of cav . . potential phosphorylation sites are ser and ser (in the β subunit in rat, perez-reyes et al. a ) and ser in the c-terminus of the poreforming α c subunit (lemke et al. b ) . in cardiomyocytes camkii regulates ca + release and reuptake from and into the sr and is involved in the facilitation of the calcium channel. potential interaction sites between the cav . channel complex and camkii are thr in the β subunit (in rat, grueter et al. c ) and ser and ser in the cterminus of the α c subunit (blaich et al. d ) . however, the exact pathways remained widely unclear up to now. to clarify these mechanisms and to identify the relevant phosphorylation sites for pka and camkii we established a mouse line carrying a stop codon in exon after aa pro . this mutation prevented translation of the cavβ c-terminus containing the corresponding potential phosphorylation sites mentioned above (cavβ stop mouse). these mice were viable, showed unaltered expression of the truncated of cavβ protein and unchanged ecg and echocardiography. electophysiological analysis of isolated cardiomyocytes showed no differences in current density, the effect of isoproterenol, the time course of inactivation and the facilitation property when compared to cells isolated from littermate controls. for further investigations we bred the cavβ stop mice with s a mice (lemke et al. b ) lacking the pka phosphorylation site s in the α c subunit (s aβ stop mouse) or with sf mice (blaich et al. d ) lacking the camkii phosphorylation sites s and s in the α c c-terminus (sfβ stop). both mouse lines were viable and showed unchanged echocardiography recordings compared to their control littermates and unaltered ecg for s aβ stop mice. electrophysiological investigations on cardiomyocytes of s aβ stop mice showed unchanged β-adrenergic stimulation with isoproterenol compared to littermate controls. these results suggest that β adrenergic regulation of the cardiac cav . channel is not mediated by these phosphorylation sites. introduction. chronic atrial fibrillation (caf) is marked by increased fibrosis which contributes to the perpetuation of the disease. in addition to the role of fibrosis in structural remodeling of cardiac tissue, fibroblasts can couple with cardiomyocytes via gap junction thereby altering the electrophysiological properties of the later and potentially participating in atrial electrical dysfunction. in order to understand the importance of fibroblasts in the pathophysiology of caf, we compared the electrical properties of atrial fibroblasts isolated from patients in sinus rhythm (sr) and caf. methods. fibroblasts were isolated by outgrowth culture from right atrial biopsies and cultivated in medium containing % fetal calf serum. we used whole-cell patch clamp techniques to investigate ion currents and membrane potential. results. sr and caf fibroblasts showed similar capacitance (sr: . ± . pf, n= ; caf: . ± . pf, n = ) and membrane potential (sr: - . ± . mv, n = ; caf: - . ± . mv, n = ) . in both groups, we observed fast activating outward currents with a mean threshold at - mv. interestingly, current amplitude was significantly larger in sr than caf cells (sr: . ± . pa/pf, n = ; caf: . ± . , n = ; p < . ). when maintained in culture for - weeks, cells from both groups developed na + currents. surprisingly, the fraction of caf cells displaying such currents was larger than the sr counterpart (caf: %; sr: %). furthermore, na + current amplitude was significantly larger in caf fibroblasts (sr: . ± . pa/pf, n = ; caf: . ± . pa/pf, n = ; p < . ). na + currents were not altered by nm tetrodotoxin (ttx), but µm ttx reduced current amplitude to % of control, suggesting that the channel involved is the cardiac ttx-resistant isoform nav . . conclusion. in the context of caf, fibroblasts undergo electrophysiological changes which need to be thoroughly described. understanding whether those changes contribute to the af substrate might provide new therapeutic targets for the treatment of caf. the initial recruitment of gi to the alpha a-adrenergic receptor is affected by gprotein-coupled receptor kinases and arrestins prokopets o. s., krasel c., marburg, germany most g-protein-coupled receptors undergo homologous desensitization after agonist stimulation. in this process, agonist-activated receptors are phosphorylated by gprotein-coupled receptor kinases (grks), followed by binding of arrestins to the still agonist-occupied, phosphorylated receptors. it is assumed that arrestin competes with heterotrimeric g-proteins for the receptor molecule and thereby causes desensitization of g-protein-mediated responses. we tested this idea by investigating the effect of grks and arrestins on the recruitment of g-proteins by the alpha a-adrenergic receptor. hek t cells were transfected with yfp-tagged alpha a-adrenergic receptor and the three subunits of gi . the g(beta) subunit was cfp-tagged. upon stimulation with noradrenaline, a very rapid, robust increase in fret between the receptor and the g(beta) subunit was observed, confirming previous observations that the alpha aadrenergic receptor recruits gi with a half-life of around milliseconds. when arrestin and grk were also co-transfected, the half-life of gi recruitment was substantially delayed, increasing to around seconds. there seemed to be no effect of grk +arrestin cotransfection on a second stimulation; neither the kinetics nor the extent were altered compared to the first stimulation. interestingly, grk alone seemed to cause a similar but slightly less pronounced delay of g(beta) recruitment to the alpha a-adrenergic receptor. in corresponding experiments, we measured the recruitment of arrestin -cfp to yfp-tagged alpha a-adrenergic receptors in the presence of grk . upon stimulation with noradrenaline, we observed a robust increase in fret between the receptor and arrestin , confirming previous observations that the alpha a-adrenergic receptor recruits arrestin . co-transfection of the three subunits of gi had no effect on the kinetics of arrestin binding to the alpha a-adrenergic receptors. based on previous results with other receptors, an attenuation of gi recruiting to the alpha a-adrenergic receptor is quite unexpected. our data suggest that the relation between receptors, g-proteins, grks and arrestins may be more complex than previously postulated. introduction: human urinary bladder expresses mrna of the three known badrenoceptor (b-ar) subtypes (b , b , b ) in detrusor and urothelium. we have shown previously that only b -ar is involved in human detrusor relaxation. to investigate the urothelium-induced modulation of b-ar-mediated relaxation, we have examined systematically whether other b-ar subtypes are involved. human detrusor tissue samples were obtained from patients undergoing radical cystectomy for the treatment of bladder cancer. detrusor strips were studied with and without an intact mucosa layer. muscle strips were precontracted with µm carbachol and relaxation was studied in response to the b-ar agonist ne. a-ar mediated processes were blocked with the a-ar antagonists phentolamine and prazosin. selective b-ars antagonists were used to investigate b-ar mediated relaxation. at the end of each experiment µm forskolin was used to determine maximum camp-mediated relaxation. the presence of intact urothelium reduces potency but not effectivity of ne indicating involvement of urothelium-mediated processes not only during detrusor contraction but also during relaxation. ne-mediated detrusor relaxation is mediated through b -ar in the absence of urothelium. but in intact detrusor strips b -ars seem to have an additional inhibitory effect. affinity of the selective b -ar antagonist l , is unchanged, therefore the intact urothelium does not interact with the function of b -ars. aldosterone causes oxidative stress and dna damage independent of blood pressure in vivo queisser n., schupp n. universität würzburg institut für toxikologie, versbacherstr. , würzburg, germany background: an inappropriate increase of the mineralocorticoid aldosterone (ald) can be induced by a stimulated renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system. epidemiological studies exploring the connection between hypertension and cancer found higher cancer mortality and an increased risk to develop kidney cancer in hypertensive individuals. we recently showed that ald produces oxidative stress, activates transcription factor nf-kb and is genotoxic in kidney tubule cells. objectives: this study investigated the capacity of ald to induce oxidative/nitrosative stress, dna damage, dna repair, apoptosis, cell proliferation and the activation of nf-κb in rat kidneys. methods: mineralocorticoid-dependent hypertension was induced by ald/salt in sprague dawley rats. dna damage and oxidative/nitrosative stress markers were detected immunohistochemically. results: ald/salt treatment caused increased blood pressure compared to untreated rats. tempol, an antioxidant, and hydralazine, a vasodilator acting independent of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system, could lower the blood pressure, while the mineralocorticoid receptor (mr) antagonist spironolactone was administered in a subtherapeutical dose not lowering the blood pressure. ald/salt treatment caused oxidative and nitrosative stress, structural dna damage, double strand breaks, dna repair and nf-κb activation. spironolactone decreased these markers significantly. tempol was also able to reduce these markers, while hydralazine had no effect. ald/salttreated kidneys showed a tendency to lower apoptosis and to increased cell proliferation compared to control rat kidneys. discussion: this study provides a first hint of blood pressure-independent effects of ald. the mr and the production of ros seem to be crucial for the damaging effects of ald. an aberrant or long-term activation of nf-κb by persistently high ald levels could support resistance to apoptosis and the survival of cells with damaged dna, and increase cell proliferation. these actions could contribute to the increased cancer incidence in hypertension by initiating carcinogenesis. grant support by the dfg is gratefully acknowledged. creb regulating transcriptional coactivator (crtc ) is a transcriptional coactivator of the transcription factor creb. we have recently shown its expression in cardiomyocytes and its activation by beta-adrenergic signaling. beta-adrenergic signaling contributes to the pathogenesis of cardiac hypertrophy, leading to heart failure, as evidenced by the therapeutic success of the beta-adrenoceptor antagonists. in order to investigate if crtc is involved in this process, we investigated the expression of crtc in hypertrophied myocardium from mice and humans. methods: protein lysates from mouse and human samples were investigated for crtc protein expression. we distinguished between an acquired and an inherited form of cardiac hypertrophy. acquired cardiac hypertrophy is an adaptation of the heart to an increased cardiac workload and can be found in patients with an aortic valve stenosis. in mice this kind of hypertrophy can be evoked by transverse aortic constriction (tac). the inherited form of cardiac hypertrophy is caused by mutations in genes coding for proteins of the sarcomeric apparatus and is referred to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (hcm). as a model for hcm, transgenic mice with a mutation in the mybpc gene, coding for the sarcomeric protein cardiac myosin-binding protein c (cmybp-c), were used. these transgenic mice were characterized by a hypertrophied heart. in case of human samples we distinguished between patients with an acquired form of hypertrophy due to an aortic valve stenosis, and patients with a hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (hocm), a special form of hcm. results: in the tac mice and in the myppc mutant mice the expression of crtc was significantly higher than in the controls ( . -and . -fold, respectively; n= ). in both forms of human hypertrophy, we found a significantly -fold upregulation of crtc protein level in comparison to human samples from non-failing myocardium or samples from patients with a dilatative or ischemic cardiomyopathy (n= - for each group). conclusions: crtc is upregulated in cardiac hypertrophy with acquired or geneticbased origin. the evaluation of the role of crtc in the heart may help to elucidate the role of beta-adrenergic signaling in the development of cardiac hypertrophy. microarray gene expression profiling reveals up-regulation of the cardiac lipid metabolic process at the onset of heart failure fu x., abd alla j., quitterer u. eth zürich molekulare pharmakologie, winterthurerstrasse , zürich, switzerland atherosclerosis and chronic pressure overload are major cardiovascular risk factors for the development of heart failure in patients. to mimic those risk factors in experimental models we used atherosclerosis-prone apolipoprotein e (apoe)-deficient mice, and chronic pressure overload was imposed by abdominal aortic constriction (aac). cardiac function was monitored by echocardiography. severe atherosclerosis in aged apoedeficient mice or chronic pressure overload induced signs of heart failure as evidenced by a significantly reduced cardiac ejection fraction (< %). to investigate pathomechanisms underlying the development of heart failure, microarray gene expression analysis and qt-rt-pcr were performed of failing heart tissue relative to age-matched controls. gene ontology analysis of the microarray data revealed that the onset of heart failure, in two different experimental models, was characterized by a strong up-regulation (≥ -fold) of the cardiac lipid metabolic process and lipid overload. lipid metabolism genes were involved in lipid synthesis, storage and oxidation. the major palmitate-synthesizing enzyme, fatty acid synthase, was causally related to the development of cardiac dysfunction by enhancing cardiomyocyte apoptosis. taken together the data support that the onset of experimental heart failure is characterized by a dysfunction of the cardiac lipid metabolism promoting cardiomyocyte death. at -receptor blockers (arbs) are established for the treatment of high blood pressure and new onset of diabetes is reduced by arbs. in the past years evidence increased that body weight may also be lessened particularly in rats and mice. however, less data are available whether arbs still reduce weight, when treatment was initiated not until animals became obese by diet. prior to drug treatment, spontaneously hypertensive rats were fed for months with chow but also with a cafeteria diet (cd) to develop obesity. controls received only chow (conchow). cd-fed shr were treated for months with telmisartan (tel mg/kg/d) or amlodipine (aml, mg/kg/d), whereas controls received vehicle (concd). systolic blood pressure (sbp), feeding behaviour, body weight, abdominal fat mass (by mrt) and energy expenditure (by indirect calorimetry) was monitored. leptin sensitivity was assessed by measuring energy intake and expenditure after repetitive injections (s.c.) of leptin. insulin sensitivity was functionally determined by glucose and insulin tolerance tests. due to cd feeding body weight was increased after months by more than g. tel normalized sbp whereas it remained > mmhg in concd and conchow. tel additionally reduced cd-induced increase of body weight and abdominal fat mass. food intake was diminished during the first weeks, but raised beyond control levels during the last weeks of treatment. the shift of the respiratory index to lower levels indicated improved energy expenditure. in response to exogenous leptin, the food intake of concd was higher compared to conchow, indicating a leptin resistance. this assumption is further supported by high triglyceride concentrations of concd. after tel, leptininduced food intake was reduced and energy expenditure was increased compared to concd, indicating that leptin sensitivity was at least partially restored. accordingly, triglycerides were reduced. compared to concd, the insulin sensitivity was improved by tel since maximal increases in plasma concentrations of glucose and insulin in response to glucose challenge were reduced, but glucose response to insulin challenge was diminished. even though reduction in blood pressure was almost similar between tel and aml, metabolic and antiobese efficacies of aml were markedly attenuated. we conclude that telmisartan reveals wide efficacies in improving all symptoms of the metabolic syndrome. the pleiotropic effects are not related to the hypotensive action of tel. a β -adrenoceptor -camp mediated, immediate stimulation of β -adrenoceptor gene expression in human lung fibroblasts is opposed by a delayed up-regulation of inhibitory factors racké k., lamyel f., kämpfer n., schütz i., warnken m. univ. bonn dept. pharmacol. &toxicol., bonn, germany based on their bronchodilatory effects, β -adrenoceptor agonists constitute essential elements in the treatment of bronchial asthma and copd. however, treatment with long-acting β -adrenoceptor agonists has been associated with possible worsening of airway hyper-reactivity, possibly because of loss of β-adrenoceptor function. therefore, the molecular regulation of β -adrenoceptor expression was addressed here. mrc- human lung fibroblasts were cultured for up to h in absence or presence of test substances, followed by β -adrenoceptor mrna determination by qpcr. β -adrenoceptor mrna decreased with a half-life of min after inhibition of mrna synthesis with actinomycin d ( µm), but increased by ± %, ± % and ± % (means±sem) within . , and . h, resp. after inhibition of protein synthesis by cycloheximide ( µm). the β -adrenoceptor agonists formoterol and olodaterol ( - nm) induced a rapid increase in β -adrenoceptor mrna (maximally within h by ± % and ± % at nm, resp.). however, after h exposure to nm formoterol or olodaterol a reduction in β -adrenoceptor mrna by ± % and ± %, resp., was observed. both, the stimulatory and inhibitory effects of β adrenoceptor agonists were mimicked by forskolin ( µm, increase by ± % and inhibition by ± %) and cholera toxin ( ng/ml, increase by ± % and inhibition by ± %). the formoterol-induced up-regulation of β -adrenoceptor mrna was blocked by actinomycin d, but not by cycloheximide. moreover, in presence of cycloheximide, β adrenoceptor agonist induced inhibition was converted into a marked stimulation. in conclusion, expression of β -adrenoceptors in human lung fibroblasts is highly regulated at transcriptional level. the observations with cycloheximide indicate that the β -adrenoceptor gene is under strong inhibitory control of short-living, not yet identified suppressors. although both, the time-dependent up-and down-regulation of the β adrenoceptor gene expression by β -adrenoceptor activation appears to be mediated via adenylyl cyclase -camp signalling, only the stimulatory effect appears to be a direct action on the β -adrenoceptor gene. et- appears to be involved in the pathogenesis not only of pulmonary hypertension, but also in fibrotic remodeling associated with chronic obstructive airway diseases. since human lung fibroblasts (hlf) are a source of et- and have been shown to be controlled by muscarinic receptors and β-adrenoceptors, a possible muscarinic and βadrenergic modulation of et- expression in hlf was explored. mrc- hlf were cultured for up to h in absence or presence of test substances, followed by prepro-et- (ppet- ) mrna determination by qpcr. the muscarinic agonist oxotremorine ( µm) induced an increase in ppet- mrna by %, an effect prevented by nm tiotropium. the β -adrenoceptor agonist olodaterol (up to nm) caused a reduction of ppet- mrna expression by %. the effect of nm olodaterol was prevented by ici , ( µm), but not affect by cgp ( µm) . the pka agonist -bnz-camp ( µm) caused a reduction in ppet- mrna expression by %, whereas the epac agonist -cpt- '-o-me-camp ( µm) caused only a marginal inhibition by %. olodaterol ( nm) strongly opposed the stimulatory effect of µm oxotremorine. an increase in ppet- mrna expression by % caused by . ng/ml tgf-β was effectively opposed by and nm olodaterol, resulting in an inhibition comparable to that in absence of tgf-β. however, the increase in ppet- mrna caused by a maximally effective concentration of tgf-β ( ng/ml, increase by %) was not significantly affected by or nm olodaterol. likewise, the pkaagonist -bnz-camp ( µm) opposed the increase in ppet- mrna expression caused by . ng/ml tgf-β, but not that caused by ng/ml tgf-β. tgf-β caused, with an ic of . ng/ml, a marked down-regulation of β -adrenoceptor mrna expression, maximally by % within h. et- expression in hlf is stimulated by muscarinic receptors and inhibited by β adrenoceptors. the effect of β -adrenoceptors may be mediated via pka. et- expression in hlf is markedly up-regulated by tgf-β, but only effects of sub-maximally effective concentrations of tgf-β are opposed by the β -adrenoceptor -pka pathway, in part because of tgf-β-induced down-regulation of β -adrenoceptors. since et- can promote pro-fibrotic features in hlf, inhibition of et- expression could contribute to long-term beneficial effects of long-acting β -adrenoceptor agonists such as olodaterol and long-acting muscarinic antagonists such as tiotropium. cardiac hypertrophy leads to up-regulation of dipeptidyl aminopeptidase-like proteins in human and rat radicke s., hutschenreuther a., schaefer m. universität leipzig rudolf-boehm-institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, härtelstr. cardiac hypertrophy is a major risk factor for heart failure and associated morbidity and mortality. functional down-regulation of k + currents is a prominent feature of cells isolated from failing ventricles. a marked decrease in the transient outward potassium current ito has been shown in various models. changes in the k + channel expression differ depending on the species, and the mechanism of induction of heart failure. to study the regulation of ito channel subunits we compared the hypertrophic responses in human ventricular tissues from failing hearts with doxorubicin-induced hypertrophy in rats and in h c embryonic rat cardiac cells. specifically, we quantified mrna expression of the pore-forming subunits kv . and kv . , the cytosolic β-subunit kchip and the transmembrane subunits dpp and dpp using rt-pcr. treatment with doxorubicin ( µm) induced hypertrophy and increased the mrna expression of the hypertrophy marker genes anf, bnp and beta-mhc in h c cardiac myoblasts. while kv . was detected in h c cells and hearts from human and rat, kv . mrna was only expressed in adult rats. during hypertrophy kv . was downregulated in human tissue as well as in doxorubicin-treated h c cells compared to the controls. in rat hearts kv . expression was increased after doxorubicin treatment. interestingly, kv . was also found to be up-regulated in rat heart tissues and h c cells after treatment with doxorubicin. as previously shown, kchip mrna expression was significantly reduced in tissues of failing hearts. in contrast, kchip mrna was upregulated in hypertrophic rat hearts and h c cells. the expression of dpp and dpp was observed only in human hearts. but mrna levels of both were significantly increased in failing tissues. dpp and dpp were not expressed in the adult rat heart or h c cells, whereas in rats with doxorubicin-induced cardiac hypertrophy and in doxorubicin-treated h c cells, the mrna of dpp and dpp was up-regulated. h c cells showed almost identical hypertrophic responses to those observed in human ventricles and rat hearts. this finding validates h c cells as a model for in vitro studies of cardiac hypertrophy. in further studies we will investigate the consequences of a knock-down of dpp and dpp in doxorubicin-induced hypertrophic h c cells. in preliminary experiments specific short-hairpin rna, targeting dpp and dpp , has been designed and tested in heterologous expression systems. the nonsynonymous c. t>c germline genetic variation in the liver-specific organic anion transporter slco b is associated with methotrexate pharmacokinetics in pediatric acute lymphoblastic leukemia radtke s. background: methotrexate (mtx) plasma concentration is related to its clinical effect. transport proteins, such as abcc , slco a , and slco b , have been implicated in the disposition of mtx. here we investigated whether common reduced-function variants in abcc , slco a , and slco b contribute to the interindividual variability in methotrexate pharmacokinetics in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia (all). we analyzed mtx pharmacokinetics (mtx plasma concentration at the end of infusion c h, mtx auc - h, and mtx clearance cl) in an unselected population of children with all from the all-bfm trial (clinicaltrials.gov: nct ) who received courses of mtx at g/m as h infusions. the contribution of genes (genetic component, rgc) to the interindividual variability in mtx pharmacokinetics was estimated according to the method of kalow et al. ( ) . abcc c.- c>t (rs ), slco a c. g>a (p.his arg, rs ), slco b c. t>c (p.val ala, rs ) and slco b a>g (p.asn asp, rs ) genotypes were analyzed by taqman polymerase chain reaction. there was substantial interpatient variability in average (± sd) mtx c h ( . ± . µmol/l), auc - h ( . ± . h*mg/l), and cl ( . ± . ml/min/m²). the rgc values of c h, auc - h, and cl ranged from . - . suggesting that variation in mtx pharmacokinetics has a substantial genetic component. after adjustment for age and sex by multiple regression, the slco b c. t>c snp was significantly associated with c h (p< . ), auc - h (p< . ), and cl (p= . ) of mtx. compared with the wildtype genotype, in patients with the tc genotype c h and auc - h increased by % (p= . ) and % (p= . ), respectively, whereas cl significantly decreased by % (p= . ). pharmacokinetic variables significantly changed with increasing number of variant c. t>c alleles (p< . , jonckheere-terpstra), suggesting a per allele effect consistent with a co-dominant model of association. in contrast, the abcc c.- c>t, slco a c. g>a, and slco b a>g polymorphisms did not show an association with mtx pharmacokinetics. conclusions: the nonsynonymous c. t>c polymorphism in slco b contributes to the variability of mtx pharmacokinetics in this study of high-dose mtx in pediatric all. this project is supported by the johannes und frieda marohn-stiftung. the antitumorigenic mechanism of the selective cyclooxygenase- (cox- ) inhibitor celecoxib is still a matter of debate. using human lung cancer cell lines (a , h , h ), the present study investigates the contribution of cox- and peroxisome proliferator activated receptor γ (pparγ) to apoptosis elicited by celecoxib. celecoxib was found to cause apoptotic cell death in a concentration-dependent manner ( - µm), whereas structurally-related cox- inhibitors (etoricoxib, rofecoxib, valdecoxib) were inactive in this respect. apoptotic cell death by celecoxib was suppressed by preincubation of tumor cells with the selective cox- inhibitor ns- , the pparγ antagonist gw- and by sirna targeting cox- or pparγ. celecoxib-induced apoptosis was paralleled by a time-and concentration-dependent upregulation of cox- and pparγ at both mrna and protein level. using an established cox- activity assay monitoring immediate conversion of exogenously added arachidonic acid to the respective prostaglandins (pgs), ns- was shown to suppress celecoxib-induced cox- activity when added prior to arachidonic acid. among the cox- -dependent pgs analyzed, pgd and its dehydration product -deoxy-∆ , -pgj were found to induce cytosol-to-nucleus translocation of pparγ as well as pparγ-dependent apoptosis. celecoxib-elicited translocation of pparγ was inhibited by preincubation of cells with ns- which itself did not alter celecoxib-induced total pparγ protein expression. finally, a cox- -and pparγ-dependent proapoptotic mechanism of celecoxib was confirmed in primary tumor cells obtained from brain metastases of two lung cancer patients. together, our data demonstrate a proapoptotic mechanism of celecoxib involving initial upregulation of cox- and pparγ and a subsequent nuclear translocation of pparγ by cox- -dependent pgs. uncoagulated ppp contained - nm thrombin throughout. fxa was initially measured in clots at nm. this level declined over time while clot-conditioned pbs accumulated fxa. exposure of human aortic smc to clots or native unclotted ppp for h only marginally influenced smc apoptosis but increased mitogenesis over -fold. this was reduced by all inhibitors. clot-stimulated induction of tnfα and interleukin- mrna was also attenuated by the inhibitors. denatured ppp (no protease activity) increased smc mitogenesis to a level seen in smc exposed to clot and combined hirudin + dx a, reflecting the well-known mitogenic actions of serum alone. conclusion: coagulation of human plasma generates nanomolar amounts of thrombin and fxa, sufficient to stimulate the proliferative and inflammatory properties of adjacent smc. our observations validate the use of purified thrombin and fxa at nanomolar concentrations for in vitro studies, and support the individual and coagulationindependent roles of these proteases in cell proliferation and inflammation. antithrombotic therapy with argatroban or rivaroxaban may limit the cellular effects of clot-derived thrombin and fxa, while normal anti-platelet therapy would not. this aspect should be considered in the clinical use of these agents, specifically in healing processes after vessel injury. rhogef mediates cgmp/cgk induced adherence and relaxation of vascular smooth muscle cells rauch j. , stephan-schnatz k. the guanine nucleotide exchange factor rhogef is the only gef known so far to be directly activated by cgmp-dependent kinase. it is expressed in various types of smooth muscle cells and has been shown to play a role in the regulation of cell integrity. in a previous investigation we showed that the knockdown of rhogef by a shrna approach caused a loss of actin stress fibers and a subsequent change of smooth muscle cell morphology that finally resulted in cell rounding. we now provide evidence that the expression level of rhogef influences the re-attachment of cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells (rasmc) to a surface after detachment. although rhogef depleted rasmc were still able to adhere and spread, their cell surface area remained considerably smaller than that of control cells in the first hours after seeding. cell counting revealed that to hours after seeding the percentage of adherent cells was significantly lower in the rhogef knockdown group compared to the control group. these data indicate a delay in attachment. interestingly, the knockdown of rhogef was paralleled by a loss in rhoa and cadherine expression. as rhogef mediated a cgmp-induced activation of the small gtpase rhoa in rasmc, we studied the effect of a stable cgmp analogon ( -pcpt-cgmp) on the adhesion process. in accordance with previously published data, cgmp treatment accelerated the attachment of rasmc to the surface within the first hours. in contrast, the adhesion of rasmc after rhogef knockdown was no longer stimulated by cgmp. as these data indicate that rhogef mediates cgmp-dependent signalling in a physiological process we wondered whether this protein might also play a role in the regulation of cgmpdependent relaxation of vascular smooth muscle cells. thus, we performed a collagenbased contraction assay with rhogef depleted rasmc. while the contraction in response to serum was not affected by the depletion of rhogef , we observed a slight decrease in basal contractility. interestingly, cgmp was not able to counteract the serum-driven contraction of rhogef knockdown cells. there was no cgmp-induced relaxation in these cells. we conclude that rhogef is involved in the cell adhesion of vascular smooth muscle cells and likely promotes the expression of specific proteins. its activation is required to mediate cgmp-induced signalling in terms of vascular smooth muscle cell adherence and relaxation. human eosinophil and neutrophil granulocytes are cells of the innate immune system. they both express formyl peptide receptors (fpr) und histamine h receptors (h r). activation of fpr leads to a release of reactive oxygen species (ros). h r activation results in an increase of intracellular '- '-cyclic adenosine monophosphate (camp) concentration and inhibition of fpr-mediated ros release via adenylyl cyclase activation. in this study we compared the effects of various h r ligands on camp accumulation and formyl peptide n-formyl-l-methionyl-l-leucyl-l-phenylalanine (fmlp)induced ros release in isolated eosinophils and neutrophils. camp concentration was determined by hplc/tandem mass spectrometry, and ros release was assessed by monitoring superoxide dismutase-inhibitable reduction of ferricytochrome c. in eosinophils, histamine, amthamine and -methylhistamine exhibited similar potencies and efficacies with regard to camp accumulation and inhibtion of ros release. in marked contrast, in human neutrophils, we observed dissociations in potencies and efficacies of ligands at increasing camp accumulation and inhibition of ros production. our data suggest that in human eosinophils, but not neutrophils, camp mediates inhibtion of ros production. in a broader context our data provide a compelling example of the context-dependency of the pharmacological properties of g-proteincoupled-receptors. specifically, one has to be cautious when extrapolating experimental observations from one cell type to another, even when they are very closely related to each other. comonomers and monomers are used as dental restorative materials (e.g. in dental composites). unconverted compounds can be released from dental composites and can enter the body in humans. comonomers can induce various side effects in humans. this study was evaluated to qualify and to quantify eluted compounds from various dental composites. following composites were tested (producer in parentheses): els extra low shrinkage (saremco), synergy duo shade (coltène), grandio (voco), tetric evo ceram (vivadent), venus (kulzer), gradia (g.c.), and premise (kerr).polymerized composites ( mg) were incubated in gc vials with ml dest. water or ml methanol, each at °c for hours. aliquots were taken, and eluted compounds were analyzed with the method of gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (gc-ms) and liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry (lc-ms).from all composites different compounds were found. following comonomers were quantified (µg/ml; mean ± s.d.; n= )( fig. ).following range of the eluted and detected comonomers from dental composites was found (dest. water; decreasing elution): venus > gradia > synergy duo shade > tetric evo ceram premise > grandio > els extra low shrinkage. * n.d. = not detectable (below limit of detection). triphenylstibane was detected in tetric evo ceram ( ± µg/ml). reimann c., lupp a., schulz s. institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie universitätsklinikum jena, drackendorfer str. objective: cxcr is a plasma membrane chemokine receptor which is involved e.g. in organogenesis, hematopoesis and inflammation. in the adult organism cxcr is physiologically expressed on various cell types, in particular on lymphocytes. with respect to neoplastic tissues, in the current literature an over-expression of cxcr is described in different types of tumors, especially in breast and prostate cancer. additionally, an involvement of cxcr in tumor metastasis is discussed. subsequently, detection of cxcr expression in a given human tumor sample would provide a valuable predictive information on disease prognosis and possible therapeutic intervention. however, previous attempts to localize cxcr using poorly characterized mouse monoclonal or rabbit polyclonal antibodies have yielded predominant nuclear and occasional cytoplasmic staining, but did not result in the identification of cell surface receptors. thus, the aim of the present study was to reassess the cxcr expression in a panel of formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded human normal and neoplastic tissue samples by means of immunohistochemistry using the well characterized novel rabbit monoclonal anti-cxcr antibody umb- . methods: in comparison to negative and positive control samples (cxcr -knockout and wild-type mouse embryos) the extent of staining in the different normal and neoplastic tissue specimens was scored from zero (no expression) to three (high expression). results: cxcr was found to be expressed in all neoplastic tissue entities analyzed. in many cases, the receptor was predominantly localized at the plasma membrane of the tumor cells. however, in all cxcr -expressing tumor entities a huge interindividual variability both in the percentage of positive cells and in the intensity of staining was noted which strongly differed also between the various types of cancer. the most intense (score three) staining was found in the samples of (small cell) lung cancer, ovarian cancer and of pheochromocytoma. additionally, lymphatic organs such as lymph nodes, spleens and tonsils were cxcr positive, with mainly b cells displaying a distinct staining of the plasma membrane. the rabbit monoclonal antibody umb- may prove to be of great value in the assessment of cxcr expression in different human tumor entities and of the mechanisms underlying the formation of metastases, thus helping to find new targets and strategies in cancer therapy. link between β -adrenoceptor-mediated inhibition of formyl-peptide-induced o β -adrenoceptor (adrb )-agonists are in daily use for asthma therapy. although most cases of asthma are controlled by standard medication, a subpopulation of asthmatics remains difficult to treat. the adrb gene contains a total of polymorphisms. this variability could cause part of the ~ % genetically-determined differences in therapy response. genetic and corresponding functional data on adrb can help to understand the complex disease and, in cases of severe asthma, optimize therapy with adrb agonists for each individual. (ortega et al. ; chung et al. ) our present study connects sequence data with pharmacological data of prototypical adrb -ligands, namely, (r)-isoproterenol, (r,r)-and (s,s)-fenoterol, (r)-and (s)salbutamol and (r,r)-formoterol. as a pathophysiologically relevant cell type, we analysed human neutrophils from peripheral blood of healthy volunteers. formyl-peptide-induced o .production and its inhibition by the agonists are examined in a -well cytochrome-c assay. characteristic pharmacological values (pic , emax) are obtained for each individual. the data-set for each individual is supplemented by a differential blood cell analysis and an asthma-related questionnaire. most importantly, each volunteer's adrb -sequence variant is determined by sanger-sequencing. complete determination of a , bp sequence, including the entire adrb exon and part of the flanking '-and '-untranslated regions, allows mapping of the most common, but also of new or rare polymorphisms. first data demonstrate the inter-day and intra-individual robustness of the functional data. in the next step, we will link sequence variants and functional differences within a population of sixty volunteers with sufficient statistical power. collectively, this study represents a straightforward approach to link functional and genetic data of a clinically relevant receptor. cyclic nucleotide phosphodiesterases (pdes) are classified into eleven families and are essential for second messenger metabolism in human cells. recently, we have shown that several human pdes possess a much broader substrate-specificity than previously assumed, being capable of hydrolyzing not only the purine nucleotides cyclic adenosine ', '-monophosphate (camp) and cyclic guanosine ', '-monophosphate (cgmp), but also pyrimidine nucleotides such as cyclic uridine ', '-monophosphate (cump). these data were obtained using a highly sensitive hplc mass spectrometric assay which is quite expensive and whose technical requirements are available only in few laboratories. in our present study we developed a fluorimetric pde activity assay using '-o-(n'methylanthraniloyl) (mant)-substituted cyclic purine and pyrimidine nucleotides that can be used more broadly in the scientific community. human pde a is important for the regulation of platelet aggregation, oozyte maturation, vascular smooth muscle relaxation and contractility of cardiac myocytes. moreover, this pde shows a broad substrate-specificity, hydrolyzing camp, cgmp, cump and cyclic inosine ', '-monophosphate (cimp). using this enzyme, here, we demonstrate that various mant-substituted cyclic nucleotides are substrates of pde a and undergo a significant change in fluorescence whilst being hydrolyzed, thus allowing a quantitative analysis of catalysis via fluorescence detection. in fact, not only native cump but also mant-cump is a substrate of pde a. this finding is consistent with data published by hardman and sutherland who described a cump-degrading pde activity in homogenates from beef and dog heart, leading to the assumption that the pde activity described there could be attributed to pde a. as cump has furthermore been proven to be present in mammalian cells , to differentially activate camp-and cgmp-dependent protein kinases and to be synthesized from utp by mammalian soluble guanylyl cyclase , our present study supports the hypothesis that this cyclic nucleotide could play an important role in cell metabolism. the newly established fluorescence assay with mant-cump facilitates future studies on pde a and the assumed second messenger function of cump. rhoa is reportedly involved in stat-dependent transcription. however, the pathway connecting the gtpase and stat signaling has not been characterized. we made use of bacterial toxins, which directly activate rho gtpases to analyse this pathway. cytotoxic necrotizing factors (cnfs) are produced by pathogenic escherichia coli strains and by yersinia pseudotuberculosis. they activate small gtpases of the rho family by deamidation of a glutamine, which is crucial for gtp hydrolysis. we show that rhoa activation leads to phosphorylation and activation of stat and identify signal proteins involved in this pathway. rhoa-dependent stat stimulation requires rock and junkinase activation as well as ap -induced protein synthesis. the secretion of one or more factor/s activate/s the jak-stat pathway in an auto/paracrine manner. we identify ccl /i- as an essential cytokine, which is produced and secreted upon rhoa activation and which is able to activate stat -dependent signaling pathways. the knowledge about the connection between rhoa and stat signaling is crucial for understanding several deseases, especially cancer. acid sphingomyelinase-deficient mice are protected from the lethal cardiovascular effects in tnf-induced septic shock reiss l. k. christian-albrechts universität institut für immunologie, michealisstrasse , kiel, germany introduction: the cytokine tumor necrosis factor (tnf) is a mediator of septic shock. sepsis is a major cause of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards), a heterogeneous lung disease with a mortality of about %. the present study was designed to investigate the effects of high systemic tnf-levels on the lung and on the systemic circulation in wildtype and acid sphingomyelinase-deficient (asm -/-) mice. the enzyme acid sphingomyelinase generates the signaling molecule ceramide that plays a critical role in edema formation and vasodilatation. material and methods: asm -/and wildtype mice were ventilated mechanically at vt= ml/kg and f= min - with fio = . and peep= cmh o while lung mechanics were followed. half of the mice received µg of murine tnf intravenously. blood pressure was stabilized by intra-arterial fluid support and body temperature was kept at °c to prevent lethal shock and to allow investigation of blood gases, lung histopathology, pro-inflammatory mediators and microvascular permeability hours after tnf application. results: tnf induced septic shock in wildtype mice, as indicated by metabolic acidosis, high serum levels of the sepsis marker procalcitonin, decreasing blood pressure and reflex tachycardia. interestingly, asm -/mice were protected from the tnf-induced cardiovascular effects and mortality. in the present study, circulating tnf failed to cause lung injury. lung mechanics stayed stable during ventilation in all groups and also pulmonary histopathology, cytokine levels and microvascular permeability were unaffected. conclusion: circulating tnf alone is not sufficient to cause acute lung injury. we conclude that the cardiovascular effects in tnf-induced septic shock are partly mediated by acid sphingomyelinase. cyclophilin a sirna provides mitoprotection and prevents aif-dependent neuronal cell death reuther c. cyclophilin a (cypa) is a peptidyl-prolyl-cis-trans isomerase which is localized in the cytosol. recent data suggested that neuronal cell death involved cytosolic cypa translocation to the nucleus, where it formed a pro-apoptotic complex with apoptosis inducing factor (aif). this cypa-aif complex induced caspase-independent chromatin condensation, dna degradation and cell death in various paradigms of apoptosis. on the basis of these data, the selective inhibition of the aif-cypa complex was proposed as a potential strategy to prevent aif-dependent cell death in neurons. therefore, the aim of this study was to determine effects of cypa silencing in a model of glutamate toxicity in immortalized hippocampal ht neurons. first, we addressed the interaction of aif and cypa by immunoprecipitation and their translocation to the nucleus by immunohistochemistry and confocal fluorescence microscopy. after exposure of ht- cells to glutamate the translocation of aif and cyp a occurred prior to cell death. cypa sirna attenuated glutamate-induced cell death as detected by the mtt-assay, impedance measurements (xcelligence system), and by facs analysis after annexin v/ propidium iodide staining. most intriguingly, cypa sirna also preserved the mitochondrial membrane potential as shown by facs analysis after tmre staining. further, confocal microscopy showed that cypa silencing prevented mitomorphology alterations and blocked the release of mitochondrial aif to the nucleus. the inhibition of the aif translocation to the nucleus was also shown by western blot analysis. in summary this study demonstrates that silencing of cypa prevents mitochondrial disruption and attenuates glutamate toxicity in vitro. thus, cypa is a promising target for mitoprotection as a basis for novel strategies of neuroprotection. up to now the question is unresolved how the ingested dose influences the absorption and metabolism of chlorogenic acids (cga) from food. so far no studies have been performed on the impact of the dose on cga absorption, circulation and excretion. recently we performed a dose-response study in a randomized, double-blinded, crossover design with five ileostomy subjects. in three trials the volunteers consumed after a two day polyphenol free diet coffee with varying cga content (high µmol; medium µmol; low µmol). the cga concentrations in plasma, ileal effluent and urine were subsequently identified and quantified by hplc-esi-ms, hplc-esi-ms/ms and hplc-dad. the results showed that the consumption of higher cga concentrations lead to a faster ileal excretion measured in the ileal effluents. this corresponded to the renal excretion of . ± . % (high), . ± . % (medium) and . ± . % (low) of total cga and metabolites. we found that cgas with a caffeic acid moiety are predominantly sulphated and those with a ferulic acid moiety are predominantly conjugated via glucuronidation prior renal excretion. furthermore, in the ileal effluents, sulphation of both structural units dominated. in plasma samples (after enzymatic deconjugation) the auc values were determined by the major cga classes in coffee, the caffeoylquinic acids: . ± . nm*h - (high); . ± . nm*h - (medium) and . ± . nm*h - (low). no major differences in the metabolic pattern were observed. additionally, we were able to identify new metabolites of cga in urine and ileal fluids. we conclude that the consumption of high concentrations of cga via coffee might influence the gastrointestinal transit time and consequently affect cga bioavailability. this study was supported by the nestlé research centre (lausanne, switzerland). interaction of antagonists with the atp binding pocket at the human p x ion channel helms n., riedel t., illes p. rudolf-boehm-institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, härtelstraße - , leipzig, germany the homomeric p x receptor (p x r) is a rapidly activating and desensitizing cation channel, gated by extracellular atp. it consists of three homomeric subunits. this representative of the p x receptor family is highly expressed on sensory afferent neurons and plays a significant role in chronic pain, bladder reflexes and taste sensation. therefore, the development of selective antagonists for p x receptors and knowledge about the binding of these antagonists are of great significance for future pain therapy and therapy of urge incontinence. to simulate the shape of the rapidly desensitizing agonist-induced current responses via p x receptors, we created a specific markov model to describe the binding of agonists and competitive antagonists. this model can be used to prove the competitive character of inhibition and to calculate the association and dissociation constants of the antagonists. furthermore we use this model to fit current responses at p x wild type receptors and their mutants to α,βmethylene atp in the presence of different antagonists. whole-cell patch-clamp recordings were performed on hek cells, heterologously expressing the human p x receptor, to determine the concentration-response relationship of different antagonists. by applying increasing concentrations, differences of antagonist potency could be observed at the wild type receptor. afterwards, we chose amino acid residues for replacement by alanine, which seem to be important for agonist binding and should be so for competitive antagonist binding as well, based on our homology model, developed from the zebrafish p x r crystal structure and previous mutagenesis studies. we intend to identify those amino acids which are important for competitive antagonist binding by monitoring the altered antagonist potency on the mutated receptor when compared with the wild-type receptor. analysis of the p x agonist binding site by double mutant cycles riedel t., wiese s., illes p. rudolf-boehm-institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, härtelstraße - , leipzig, germany purinergic p x receptors belong to the family of ligand-gated ion channels. they are non-selective cation channels, activated by extracellular atp. one of the seven members of the p x receptor family, the p x receptor, is localized at the plasma membrane of sensory neurons and is involved in pain perception. therefore, this receptor is a possible target for new drugs in pain treatment. the development of such drugs can be supported by an exact knowledge of the receptor structure and function. there are many hints to the atp binding site, but the interaction of the p x receptor with its agonists and antagonists remains still unknown. in this study, we investigated the effects of single alanine substitutions of amino acid residues in the supposed atp binding site of the homomeric human p x receptor on the effect of nucleotide analogues. the mutant receptors were expressed in hek cells and the nucleotide effects were measured by means of the whole-cell patch-clamp method. modifications in the receptor binding site changed the concentration-response dependency as well as the current kinetics during fast pulsed agonist applications. based on this fact, we were able to distinguish binding from gating, conductance, and desensitisation, using a markov model that describes the complete channel behaviour by a matrix of rate constants. the results were also checked for consistency with a structural hp x model that we developed from the known zebra fish p x crystal structure in the closed state. voltage-dependent modulation of alpha a adrenergic receptor signaling rinne a., birk a., bünemann m. philipps-universität marburg institut für pharmakologie und klinische pharmazie, karlvon-frisch str. , marburg, germany g protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs) are proteins that regulate numerous signaling pathways by activation of intracellular g proteins. gpcrs are activated by extracellular stimuli, such as light, hormones and neurotransmitters. recent evidence suggests that some gpcrs exhibit voltage-sensitivity leading to a modulation of their activity by the membrane potential (vm). we used a fret-based biosensor of the α a adrenergic receptor to analyze receptor activation at defined membrane potentials in hek cells by means of voltage-clamp recording. the biosensor was stimulated either with the partial agonist clonidine or with the full agonist norepinephrine (ne) and receptor activation was measured as decrease in the ratio of acceptor-/donor-fluorescence. receptor stimulation by ne was inhibited at depolarizing membrane potentials but enhanced by hyperpolarization. inhibition of ne activated receptors was strong at low concentrations ( nm: % inhibition) but almost absent at saturating agonist concentrations ( µm: % inhibition). both agonist-induced and hyperpolarizationinduced receptor activation exhibited a similar monoexponential time course and speed of activation was primarily dependent on agonist concentration for both activation modes. the latter indicates that depolarization lowers the apparent affinity of the ne receptor interaction and thus causes receptor deactivation by means of ne release. application of clonidine ( µm, vm=- mv) resulted in a fret response that was inhibited by % at + mv. in contrast to ne, strong receptor inhibition at + mv was present even at super-saturating concentrations of clonidine ( µm), suggesting that voltage alters the equilibrium between active and inactive conformations of the receptor. voltage-dependence of the a a adrenergic receptor also modulated downstream receptor signaling: g protein activation or the recruitment of arrestins, which we determined in fret assays that directly detect gαi protein activation or receptor-arrestin interactions, were both substantially inhibited at vm = + mv. therefore we conclude that negative membrane potentials promote active conformations of the a a adrenergic receptor, increase affinity of full agonists and enhance receptor signaling. in conclusion the present data show that scc cells extrude more ha, possibly related to increased levels of has , in comparison to keratinocytes. increased amounts of ha appear to be essential for the uvb induced tumourgenesis of sccs in mice. this effect might be related to the pro-proliferative property of high molecular weight ha. furthermore biological active ha fragments derived from ha degradation by hyaluronidases (hyal , ) are thought to be pro-angiogenetic, anti-apoptotic and proinflammatory, thus possibly also promoting tumour growth and malignancy. estradiol induced paracrine release of egf from keratinocytes protects the dermal hyaluronan/versican matrix during photoaging röck k. , meusch m. hyaluronan (ha) and versican are key components of the dermis and are responsive to uvb induced remodeling. the aim of the present study was to investigate the molecular mechanisms of estrogen (e ) mediated effects on ha-rich ecm during actinic aging. weeks of uvb irradiation ( x med ( mj/cm ), weekly) of hairless skh- mice caused a marked decline of dermal ha, which was aggravated by ovariectomy (ovx). subcutaneous substitution of estrogen (e ) by means of controlled release pellets abolished these effects confirming the stimulatory role of e . the increase of dermal ha correlated with induction of ha synthase has by e . in addition the ha-binding proteoglycan versican was induced by uvb and further increased by e . however in cultured skin fibroblasts e reduced the expression of versican and had no effect on has . therefore, direct upregulation of has and versican in fiborblasts by e was excluded. however, e increased the expression of egf in uvb irradiated skin in vivo and in keratinocytes in vitro. egf in turn upregulated the expression of has and versican in dermal fibroblasts. furthermore the supernatants of estradiol treated keratinocytes led to the same effects in dermal fibroblasts, which could be abolished by previous treatment of the supernatant with neutralizing egf antibody or treatment of the fibroblasts with egf receptor blocker erlotinib. functionally, dermal ha and versican induction by e correlated positively with proliferation and negatively with accumulation of inflammatory macrophages in the dermis. collectively these data suggest that e treatment increases the amount of dermal ha and versican via paracrine release of egf which may be implicated in the pro-proliferative and anti-inflammatory effects of e during photoaging. differential pro-and eukaryotic toxicity of silver released from nanocomposite surfaces increases the therapeutic window of silver in antibacterial treatments röhl c. , hrkac t. silver has been used since ancient times as antimicrobial agent. recently, silver gained new attention due to its higher effectiveness in its nanoform. this led to new developments of silver nanomaterials, e.g., for medical devices and consumer products. though, it is generally assumed that silver is less toxic for eukaryotes than for prokaryotes, concern is raised, if nanosilver at the same time might also increase mammalian cytotoxicity. in our study we examined the toxicity of silver released from nanocomposite surfaces with that of silver from agno solutions for adherent bacteria and mammalian cells. therefore, we established an in vitro reference system which enabled us to compare the therapeutic window between prokaryotic toxicity and eukaryotic integrity in both exposure settings. we focussed especially on the comparability of the bacterial and mammalian cell systems and the development of characterized ag/tio nanocomposite coatings with well-defined silver filling factors and silver surface release, which could be varied over a wide concentration range. as reference cells the e. coli sar strain and human dermal fibroblasts, which are of special relevance in the context of medical devices like implants or wound dressings, were chosen. bactericidal effects were determined by direct growth visualization of the gfp-producing e. coli strain by epifluorescence microscopy. mammalian cell growth and toxicity was determined by the mtt assay, protein measurements and phase contrast microscopy. the ag/tio samples were prepared by sputter co-deposition from two separate magnetron sources. the silver surface concentration release was determined by xps and the silver release by icp-ms. in solution a concentration-dependent constant silver concentration could be determined between and at least hours at the surface. while lowest bactericidal and cytotoxic concentrations of ag + from agno solutions with . and . mg/cm , respectively, differed only slightly, the therapeutic window increased significantly if ag + was released from the nanocomposite surface. while the toxicity on the fibroblasts was unchanged the bactericidal potency increased at least one order of magnitude. taken together, it can be concluded that local exposure factors i) can be modulated by silver nanocomposites and ii) play an important role for the differential toxicity of surface silver on bacteria and mammalian cells. charite -universitätsmedizin institut für integrative neuroanatomie, funktionelle zellbiologie, philippstr. , berlin, germany c exoenzyme (c bot) a clostridial adp-ribosyltransferase does not possess a cellbinding/-translocation domain. nevertheless, c is able to efficiently enter intact cells, including neuronal cells but the mechanism of uptake is not yet understood. in the present work, binding of c bot to the hippocampus-derived ht cell line was characterized by means of binding and blot overlay assays as well as mass spectrometry analysis to identify binding partners of c bot. the binding assays established that c bot bound in a concentration-dependent manner to ht cells. in the overlay assay we detected one clear band of kda. to elucidate whether glycosylation is important for the c bot-protein interaction, ht cells were incubated with glycosidase f resulting in a decreased binding of c to the kda band. to explore the involvement of phosphorylation in the binding of c to the putative binding protein, blot was pre-treated with cip (calf intestinal phosphatase) before overlay with c bot. pretreatment greatly reduced the c bot-protein interaction. moreover, inhibition of dephosphorylation by vanadate before in intact cells showed an increased level of c botprotein interaction in the following overlay. thus, interactions between c bot and ht cell proteins may require phosphorylation. to further characterize the kda band as binding target of c bot, the kda band was digested with trypsin and then subjected to lc-orbitrap mass spectrometry analysis. from this kda single gel band proteins were identified. further analysis of the identified proteins will provide a possible interaction partner of c bot. in sum, protein overlay assays revealed that phosphorylation and glycosylation are critical for efficient c bot-protein interaction. s solvent effects on enzyme kinetics in vitro rokitta d., pfeiffer k., gerwin h., streich c., fuhr u. uniklinik köln institut für pharmakologie, gleueler str. , köln, germany kinetic parameters provide essential quantitative information for characterisation of drug metabolising enzymes. such enzymes are located in an a partially queous environment, but to solve potential lipophilic substrates for in vitro measurements organic solvents are regularly needed. to preserve the enzymes from denaturation and other solvent related effects, the concentration of these solvents must be kept low. data on nature and extent of such solvent effects is sparse. in this study, we investigated the effects of methanol, ethanol, acetonitrile and dimethylsulfoxide ( % to %) on the assessment of k m, vmax and clint with regard to the -hydroxylation of midazolam via cyp a and the cyp a catalyzed metabolism of caffeine to paraxanthine in vitro. the presence of acetonitrile showed the highest vmax value for paraxanthine formation but the lowest values for -hydroxymidazolam formation. the km value for midazolam showed no systematic effects of organic solvents, while for caffeine km was up to eightfold lower for solvent free samples compared to solvent containing samples. the present example suggests that the presence of organic solvents may considerably influence enzyme kinetic parameters beyond a mere change in apparent activity. these effects are differing between enzyme-substrate systems and solvents. it remains to be determined to which extent such effects compromise in vitro -in vivo extrapolations, and which solvents are most appropriate. atrial remodeling and arrhythmia induced by the transcription factor er rommel c. , rösner s. introduction: the transcription factor er (ets related ) belongs to the large family of ets-transcription factors that are involved in developmental processes and in the pathogenesis of cancer. er is activated by gq-and gs-coupled receptors leading to a phosphorylation of the transcription factor by map-kinases and protein kinase a, respectively. cardiac er mrna expression is increased in failing human hearts. however mechanical unloading by a left ventricular assist device leads to normalization of er expression. thus, the aim of the present study was to investigate the cardiac function of er in genetically modified mouse models. we previously generated transgenic mice overexpressing er under control of the cardiomyocyte-specific α-myosin heavy chain gene (αmhc) promoter by pronuclear injection and established independent transgenic lines. electrocardiography (ecg) was assessed in mice at day after birth (p ) and in adult mice ( months) during isoflurane anesthesia and by ecg telemetry in awake mice, respectively. ecg analysis revealed no differences between the genotypes at day after birth. however, we found a decreased heart rate, a replacement of regular p-waves by an undulating baseline and frequent supraventricular extrasystoles in adult er αmhc transgenic mice. next, isometric contractile force measurements on isolated left atria were carried out in organ baths. while wt left atria responded to increasing concentrations of isoprenaline, nkh and calcium with an increase in contractility, the maximal positive inotropic responses to these substances were severely blunted in er αmhc atria. we performed western blots to identify potential aberrations of calcium handling and regulatory proteins. phosphorylation of serine of phospholamban (pln) was reduced in er αmhc mice. in addition, protein phosphatase (pp ) expression was significantly increased in er αmhc mice, which is consistent with the increased dephosphorylation of phospholamban. furthermore, we found a decreased expression of calsequestrin and serca a protein in er αmhc atria. electron microscopy revealed the significant structural remodeling of er αmhc atria at months of age. conclusion: increased cardiac expression of the ets-transcription factor er leads to structural and electrical remodeling of the atria. thus, er may play an important role in the pathogenesis of cardiac arrhythmias in chronic heart failure. signal transduction pathway of atp and utp in neonatal rat cardiac myocytes rothkirch d., gergs u., neumann j. institute for pharmacology and toxicology medical faculty, magdeburger str. , halle (saale), germany extracellular atp and utp can be released from the heart during pathological conditions such as ischemia or hypoxia. in humans, atp and utp levels are increased during myocardial infarction. atp and utp can act via p -purinoceptors which are further divided in p x - and p y - -receptors. as previously shown atp and utp can induce inotropic effects in cardiac preparations of mice and man. for rat articular chondrocytes and human intestinal cells it has been demonstrated that the mapk cascade can be activated by atp and utp. therefore, the cardiac effects of atp and utp on force of contraction probably occur via the mapk pathway. to investigate the signal transduction pathway involved, we studied the effects of atp and utp on mapk phosphorylation in isolated neonatal rat cardiac myocytes using phosphorylation-specific antibodies. µm atp as well as utp transiently increased phosphorylation of erk / and p mapk with a maximum effect at to minutes after application of atp and utp in neonatal cardiac myocytes (n= preparations each). the maximum phosphorylation of p increased with atp to % ± % (p< . ) at minutes and with utp up to % ± % (p< . ) at minutes. the phosphorylation with erk / mapk increased with atp to % ± . % (p< . ) at minutes and to % ± % (p< . ) with utp at minutes of basal values, respectively. after minutes, predrug values of mapk phosphorylation were reached again. in summary, we noted an atp-and utp-induced phosphorylation of erk / and p mapk in isolated neonatal rat cardiac myocytes. the involved receptor subtype(s) and the link between mapk phosphorylation and inotropic effect of atp and utp need to be elucidated. hameel: use of elearning in teaching pharmacology and toxicology -the halle experience rulf k. , gergs u. introduction: during the past three years, our faculty has started to integrate items of elearning into the standard curriculum of a classical medical school: the "hallesches medizinisches elearning -hameel". our hypothesis was that these new elearning tools would improve the willingness of students to spend more time into learning and this would lead to an improved outcome (in multiple choice tests). methods: hence, we offered medical students ( th or th semester) additional learning environments. the courses for students (experimental pharmacology and toxicology or clinical pharmacology) were existed of a weekly lecture and in addition tutorials (problem-based-learning style, paper cases) or classical seminars. furthermore, we offered the possibility to use an online multiple choice quiz (involving - previously used tests) and/or an online module on heart failure each week. we used the learning management system ilias software in combination with the content management system stud.ip. all students were subjected to an introductory test (to assess knowledge prior to our teaching section and allowing us to exclude a conceivable bias due to previous knowledge, involving basic items from prior teaching opportunities), a mid-term test and a final test to assess gain of knowledge. a maximum of points could be obtained as a sum of both tests. results: in the means % of students used the new elearning tools (quizzes, heart failure module). however, there was no association between the use of self-assessment quizzes and examination results. the usage of the online quizzes increased in the periods before the exams. however, usage of the heart failure module was accompanied by significantly increased scores in exams. moreover, in a formalized evaluation system, students positively commented on our elearning efforts. conclusions: while usage of our quizzes did not improve test marks, another more sophisticated clinically oriented elearning module seemed to be improving test outcomes marginally. targeting of erk thr phosphorylation attenuates cardiac hypertrophy but preserves the anti-apoptotic effects of erk / ruppert c., vidal m., lohse m. j., lorenz k. institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie pharmakologie, versbacher str. , würzburg, germany background and aims: the extracellular regulated kinases and (erk / ) play an important role in cardiac hypertrophy and cell survival. erk / are phosphorylated at the so-called tey motif, which in turn activates erk / . hypertrophic stimuli lead to an additional autophosphorylation threonine (thr ). this autophosphorylation of erk / stimulates activation of nuclear erk targets, which are known to induce hypertrophy. the aim of this study is to investigate whether specific targeting of erk thr phosphorylation affects both erk functions -erk mediated hypertrophy and cardioprotective cell survival. methods and results: for the analysis of cardiomyocyte hypertrophy in vitro, we stimulated cardiomyocytes with phenylephrine and measured the incorporation of tritiated isoleucine. cardiac hypertrophy was assessed by echocardiography before and after transverse aortic constriction (tac). for analysis of cell survival, caspase activity and dna fragmentation was determined upon hydrogen peroxide stimulation in vitro and in response to tac in vivo. to differentiate between inhibition of erk / activity and prevention of erk thr phosphorylation, we either inhibited erk activity with pd or overexpressed a mutant of erk , which cannot be phosphorylated at thr phosphorylation. while inhibition of overall erk activity with pd attenuated cell survival and hypertrophy in vitro, specific targeting of erk thr phosphorylation by overexpression of the phosphorylation deficient mutant (erk t a ) attentuated phenylephrine induced hypertrophy, but preserved the anti-apoptotic effects of erk. cardiac overexpression of erk t a significantly reduced tac-induced hypertrophy compared to wild-type erk overexpressing mice. in line with the in vitro experiments, erk thr inhibition only prevented hypertrophy in the tac model without promoting apoptosis. conclusions: these results show that blockade of erk thr phosphorylation attenuates cardiomyocyte hypertrophy but preserves anti-apoptotic effects of erk / . therefore, specific targeting of erk thr phosphorylation might be a promising strategy for the treatment of pathological hypertrophy. intracellular camp levels are determined by interplay of camp formation by adenylyl cyclases and camp degradation by phosphodiesterases (pde). eleven families of pdes are known. one of the most recently identified pdes is pde , a pde in principle capable of hydrolysing camp as well as cgmp. pde contains a tandem of so called gaf domains in its n-terminal regulatory domain that mediate activation by camp. because current knowledge about the tissue distribution of pde was mostly based on the analysis of mrna distribution, we generated antisera against pde to analyze tissue distribution of the protein level. using these antibodies, we found a prominent occurrence of the enzyme in testis and in brain, where it was confined to the striatum. thus, pde displays a comparably restricted tissue distribution which is in contrast to that of many other pdes. low camp levels in so called medium spiny neurons of the striatum have been implicated in schizophrenia. furthermore, studies using the nonspecific pde inhibitor papaverine as well as specific pde inhibitors suggest pde as a target for the treatment of schizophrenia. here we set out to analyze the contribution of pde to camp degradation in striatum, to identify the physiological pathways pde is involved in and to clarify the functional impact of the proposed phosphorylation of the enzyme. identification of cgmp-dependent kinase i substrate complexes salb k., schlossmann j. universität regensburg lehrstuhl pharmakologie, universitätsstrasse , regensburg, germany the cgmp-dependent kinases (cgks) are components of the no/cgmp/cgk-signalling pathway and have a great physiological importance in a multitude of tissues and organs such as smooth muscles and platelets. two isoforms of the cgki and the cgkii are known. cgkiα and cgkiβ differ only in their first ~ amino acids which constitute the leucine zipper and the autoinhibitory domains. the n-terminal leucine zipper domains mediate homodimerization of the kinase and the interaction with diverse substrate proteins. since cgkiα and cgkiβ express different n-termini they interact with different substrates. the cgkiβ isoform is assembled in a macrocomplex at the endoplasmic reticulum (er) with the intracellular calcium release channel inositoltrisphosphate receptor i (insp r-i) and the inositol-trisphosphate receptor associated cgmp kinase substrate (irag). we investigated, whether irag also interacts with the insp r-ii and the insp r-iii in murine platelets and tissues. additionally, we analyzed the interaction between the amino acid peptide phospholamban (plb), which is also located at the er and regulates the er calcium reuptake by the sarco/endoplasmic reticulum ca + -atpase (serca), and the two cgki isoforms. we performed cgmp-agarose experiments with murine wt and irag-ko platelets to examine the irag-insp r interactions. the insp r-ii isoform was neither bound to cgmp-agarose nor detected in the anti-irag immunoprecipitate. on the other hand, insp r-iii from wt but not from irag-ko platelets was bound to cgmp-agarose. hence, insp r-iii interacts directly with irag but not with cgkiβ in murine platelets. however, in colon smooth muscle lysate, insp r-iii not only interacted with the irag protein but was also detected in the anti-cgkiα-immunoprecipitate. phospholamban from wt and irag-ko platelets was also bound to cgmp-agarose. subsequent immunoprecipitation experiments with the respective antibodies against the two cgki isoforms revealed that plb interacted both with cgkiβ and cgkiα. these results were supported by analysis of colon smooth muscle tissue from wt and irag-ko mice. in conclusion, irag interacts with insp r-i and insp r-iii but not with insp r-ii in murine platelets and colon smooth muscle tissue. moreover, phospholamban is an interacting partner of both the cgkiα and the cgkiβ isoform. the human immunodeficiency virus type enhancer binding protein (hivep ) is regulated by proinflammatory stimuli and statins salomon a. , , schmitz b. objective: hivep binds nf-ĸb and other proinflammatory consensus sequences, and is suggested to be involved in inflammatory processes. we recently identified two tagging snps, one positioned kb upstream (rs ) and another in exon (rs ) of the hivep gene, to be replicatively associated with venous thrombosis in gwas and follow-up studies (ajhg, ; plos one, ) . methods: total rna isolation was performed after treatment of vascular endothelial cells (ea.hy ) with proinflammatory cytokines or statins ( h). serial hivep promoter deletion constructs were cloned into the pgl -basic vector, a potential enhancer fragment, harbouring rs c/t, into the pgl -promoter vector. in ea.hy cells and thp monocytes, reporter gene assays were performed by transient transfection and overexpression of transcription factors. chip and bandshift assays were performed to identify candidate transcription factors. results: in ea.hy cells, endogenous hivep expression was increased by proinflammatory cytokines tnfα and il- β. simvastatin ( . and . µm) and atorvastatin ( µm) -but not pravastatin or aspirin -both dose-dependently decreased basal and tnfα-stimulated hivep expression. the construct harbouring rs t exerted significantly higher transcriptional activity (ta) compared to rs c (p< . ). for an intronic modulator, reporter gene assays demonstrated a regulatory effect on hivep expression in ea.hy and thp cells. cotransfection of sp and egr led to an increase in ta, while wt exclusively upregulated ta of constructs comprising the intronic modulator. chip and bandshift assays combined with specific antibody detection revealed binding of sp to the '-flanking region and the intronic modulator of hivep . conclusion: increased hivep expression during inflammatory conditions can be repressed by simvastatin and atorvastatin, and not by pravastatin or aspirin. basal hivep expression is regulated by sp combined in a transcription factor module with egr and wt under basal and/or inflammatory conditions. the rs site harbours potential activational capacity for hivep gene transcription and may communicate with the sp /egr /wt module. to date, the treatment of various movement disorders of the central nervous system is still insufficient. in most cases this is due to the sparse knowledge of the pathophysiology. l-dopa-induced dyskinesias (lid) represent a severe complication of long-time pharmacotherapy in parkinson's disease that deserves novel therapeutics. an increased activity of striatal projection neurons, which express kv . / channels, seems to be involved in the pathophysiology of these spontaneous involuntary dystonic and choreatic movements. previous studies demonstrated an antidyskinetic effect of the kv . - . channel opener retigabine after acute and chronic treatment in a rat model of lid. in order to clarify if this effect was based on the modulation of kv . / channels, we examined the acute effects of the preferred kv . / channel opener ica on lid in this animal model. four weeks post -ohda lesioning of the left forebrain bundle, dyskinesia was induced by chronic treatment with mg/kg l-dopa and mg/kg benserazide for days. three subtypes of dyskinesia (limb, axial and orolingual) were rated according to a score system from to over min. for drug testing, ica ( , and mg/kg) was administered intraperitoneal additionally to l-dopa (or vehicle). effects of drug action in comparison to vehicle controls were detected by adding up the severity scores of each observation time. additionally, effects on parkinsonian symptoms were examined min after drug administration using the block and the stepping test. ica reduced the severity of dyskinesia significantly at all doses while no negative impact on the antiparkinsonian effect of l-dopa was observed. whereas the antidyskinetic effect was restricted to the first min after the application of mg, it lasted up to min in rats treated with mg ica . a higher dose of mg did not further enhance the antidyskinetic effect. the results of our study suggest that the antidyskinetic effect of the k v channel opener retigabine was based on its action on striatal kv . / channels. in line with the results of previous studies with retigabine, this action does not seem to interfere with the antiparkinsonian effect of l-dopa. this study was supported by the micheal j. fox foundation. background: skeletal muscle toxicity is the major side effect of hmg-coa-reductase inhibitors (statins) and can be simulated in engineered skeletal muscle. statins are known to exert "pleiotropic" effects, e.g. reducing endothelial dysfunction by inducing no synthases and no production. the role of no synthases in skeletal muscle under statin treatment is largely unknown. interestingly, some skeletal muscle pathologies (e.g. duchenne muscular dystrophy) may be exacerbated by increased inos activity. here we tested whether or not statin-induced skeletal muscle toxicity would be associated with enhanced no synthesis. we generated engineered skeletal muscle (esm) from rat skeletal muscle cells, matrigel and collagen. esms displayed typical skeletal muscle properties (differentiated muscle fibres, tetanic contractions). under baseline conditions esm expressed enos most abundantly, followed by inos and nnos (n= - ). myotoxic cerivastatin ( . , . , µm for days) caused a concentration-dependent decrease of contractile force (p< , , n= - ) paralleled by an increase in inos transcript (mean±sem: . µm ± . -fold, n= p< . ; . µm . ± . -fold, n= p< . ) and protein ( . µm . ± -fold, n= p< . ; . µm . ± . -fold, n= p< . ). mevalonic acid fully prevented the inos increase suggesting that the induction is hmg-coa reductase-dependent. to test whether inos may contribute to the decrease in contractile force we co-treated esm with w, a specific inos inhibitor. we applied µm of w, a concentration found to potently reduce lipopolysaccharide (lps)induced no-production in cultured myotubes. however, we did not observe a rescue effect (n= - ). also, l-name ( mm), an unspecific nos inhibitor, did not improve contractile function, instead we observed increased myotoxictiy (n= - , p< . ). to further investigate the role of no for muscle function we treated the esms with increasing concentrations of the no-donor snp. only high concentrations of snp ( µm) caused a reduction of contractile force. combined treatment with cerivastatin and . µm snp showed a tendency towards improved force development in esm. conclusions: statins increase inos activity in our skeletal muscle model (esm). however, this does not seem to functionally contribute to myopathy in esm. increased production of no may in fact be a protective measure. esm may help to dissect clinically relevant functional changes in statin myotoxicity. characterization of primary skin fibroblasts of patients with m syndrome and mutations in the cul gene meyer k., hieber m., engelhardt s., sarikas a. technische universität münchen institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, biedersteiner str. , münchen, germany m syndrome is an autosomal-recessive disorder characterized by pre-and postnatal growth retardation (< - sd), facial dysmorphism and skeletal anomalies. the majority of patients harbor missense mutations of the cul ( %) or obsl ( %) gene, respectively. cul constitutes an e ubiquitin ligase that is involved in the regulation of the insulin-like growth factor (igf- ) signaling pathway via ubiquitin mediated degradation of insulin receptor substrate (irs- ). to investigate the role of cul mediated irs- degradation in the pathogenesis of m syndrome. primary skin fibroblasts of seven m syndrome patients (six with cul mutations, one with a obsl mutation) and control fibroblasts were analyzed for proliferation rate (cell counter), cell cycle profile (facs), cell morphology and cellular senescence (histochemistry), irs- protein concentrations and activation of the igf- signaling pathway (western blot). the proliferation rate of m patient fibroblasts was significantly increased when compared to control cells. in contrast, irs- protein levels and activation of the pi k/akt and erk mapk pathway were only increased in a subset of m cells that carried cul mutations, but not in cells from a patient with the obsl mutation. no significant differences in cell cycle profile, cell morphology or cellular senescence were observed in m patient fibroblasts when compared to control cells. to determine the pathogenetic contribution of increased irs- levels to the observed phenotype, human imr fibroblasts were stably transfected with retroviral vectors encoding irs- . despite -fold overexpression of irs- compared to empty vector controls, no significant effect of igf- stimulation on proliferation rate or pi k/akt and erk mapk signaling was observed. skin fibroblasts of m patients with cul mutations displayed an increased proliferation rate and enhanced activation of the igf- signaling pathways. despite accumulation of irs- in fibroblasts from a subset of m patients with cul mutations, no pathomechanistic role for irs- could be demonstrated. collectively, our data indicate that a dysregulated igf- signaling may contribute to the pathogenesis of m syndrome, yet in an irs- independent manner. pharmacases.de -a student-centered elearning project of clinical pharmacology zollner b., berg c., gros n., muß n., oestreicher d., engelhardt s., sarikas a. technische universität münchen institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, biedersteiner str. , münchen, germany pharmacases.de is a novel e-learning website of clinical pharmacology that presents clinically relevant aspects of pharmacology and toxicology in an interactive and multimedial manner. the aim of the project pharmacases.de was to develop an innovative concept for creating high quality elearning content that i) integrates and promotes the theoretical and cooperative skills of final year medical students and ii) is easily adoptable by cooperating institutes and hospitals. a peer-teaching concept was developed in which final year medical students with the elective pharmacology (pj wahlfach pharmakologie) independently researched and wrote elearning lessions ("pharmacases"). subject-specific expertise was acquired by consulting elective students of other disciplines. at present ( / ) , this "peer network" consists of elective students of nine cooperating institutions (pathology, microbiology, radiology, cardiology, psychiatry, dermatology, neurology, ophthalmology, pediatrics) at the technische universität münchen. the average time for the generation of one elearning lession by the peer network was days. to date, the website consists of pharmacases that are available to all students online (http://www.pharmacases.de). the website also contains a discussion forum and evaluation form for direct feedback. on average, pharmacases.de has visitors per month with the following evaluation results: "excellent": %, "good": % and "satisfactory": % (n= ). the didactic concept of pharmacases.de enabled the efficient generation of high quality elearning content in a student-centered and interdisciplinary manner. the peer-teaching approach supports the collaborative skills of final year medical students and facilitates the transfer of theoretical pharmacological knowledge into clinical practice. improved glucose tolerance, less chronic adipose tissue inflammation and reduced adipose tissue mass in mice with adipocyte-specific loss of tak sassmann a., offermanns s., wettschureck n. max-planck-institut für herz-und lungenforschung pharmakologie, ludwigstr. , bad nauheim, germany tgf-β activated kinase (tak ) is known to be involved in numerous inflammatory processes by linking receptors for inflammatory stimuli like lps, interleukin- or tnfa to ikk, p and jnk activation. chronic inflammation of white adipose tissue is one of the major causes for the development of insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance in states of obesity. to investigate the role of tak in white adipose tissue, we crossed the tamoxifen-inducible white adipocyte-specific cre mouse line adipoqcreer t with animals carrying floxed alleles of the tak gene. adipoqcreer ; tak fl/fl animals and cre negative control littermates are viable and fertile and do not show any developmental defects. after tamoxifen induction and high fat diet feeding adipocytespecific tak knockout mice show improved glucose tolerance and lower fasting insulin levels compared to control animals. in line with this, serum levels of the adipose tissuespecific hormone resistin are reduced in adipocyte-specific tak knockout mice. these findings are accompanied by a lower state of chronic inflammation of adipose tissue as indicated by a dramatic reduction of adipose tissue macrophage number and lower serum levels of tnfα and interleukin- . stimuli like tnfα, interleukins and tgf-β released from macrophages and adipocytes are known to promote obesity-related adipose tissue inflammation. when stimulated with these substances tak deficient adipocytes show reduced activation of jnk and p which both play an important role in the development of insulin resistance. interestingly, we observe a lean phenotype in adipocyte-specific tak knockout mice when fed a high fat diet which reflects a reduction of white adipose tissue mass. currently we are investigating the molecular mechanisms underlying the reduced adiposity and lower state of chronic inflammation in adipose tissue. growth of small cell lung cancer (sclc) cells is regulated via the autocrine stimulation of g protein coupled receptors (gpcrs), i. e., neuropeptide and muscarinic acetyl choline (ach) receptors. the activation of gq/ and calcium-dependent gpcr pathways results in the stimulation of erk signaling which is necessary for the mitogenic effects of neuropeptides or ach on sclc cells. in contrast, the role of calcium-independent gpcr signaling and its interplay with gq/ -regulated pathways in sclc cells are less well defined. the aim of our studies was to characterize the molecular make-up and the interaction of these pathways, and to delineate the phenotypic effects of calciumdependent and -independent signaling cascades in sclc cells. using a panel of sclc cell lines, we found that the stimulation of neuropeptide receptors led to an increase of calcium which was independent of extracellular calcium and could be prevented by depleting internal calcium stores. this calcium increase was sufficient to activate the tyrosine kinase pyk and subsequently the erk / cascade. the role of pyk for the growth of sclc cells was further supported by the fact that inhibition of pyk using a sirna approach or a novel specific inhibitor, pf , exerted pronounced cytotoxic effects on sclc cells, whereas non-sclc cells were less sensitive. interestingly, the inhibition of g / signaling by sirna-mediated g(alpha) or g(alpha) knockdown also markedly reduced the growth of sclc in vitro or in subcutaneous tumor xenografts, and increased the sensitivity of sclc cells towards certain cytostatics. to further define the role of calcium-dependent signaling via pyk versus the role of calcium-independent signaling via g / , we tested the effect of pyk inhibition in cells with impaired g / signaling. notably, pyk and g / double inhibition led to an even increased proliferation. thus, we propose that dysbalanced g protein signaling favoring either pyk activation or g / -dependent cascades inhibits the growth of sclc cells, whereas the parallel inhibition of both pathways restores again the balance and the growth capacity in this tumor entity. dendritic cells (dcs) are essential for the initial immune response and for the defence against inhalated pulmonary toxins and carcinogens in lung. to differentiate dcs, the cell line thp- were used for days and stimulated with various cytokines (il- , gm-csf, tnf-a, ionomycin). the dcs were characterized by flow cytometry with different typical dendritic cell markers (for example cd c, cd , cd ) and by immunfluorescence compared to monocytes. the bronchial tract contains up to dcs per mm² and therefore we established a triple culture model to mimic the situation in vivo. the triple culture consists out of primary human epithelial cells from small bronchi (hbec) and lung fibroblasts which are cultured under air-liquid conditions on filter membranes for weeks and dcs which were added after the differentiation phase of the bronchial cells. during the cultivation time the hbec formed an epithelial layer expressing both tight and adherens junctions. they also produced mucus, formed functional cilia with a beat frequency of between to hz and the transepithelial resistance values were stable between to Ω·cm². pathomechanisms of pulmonary toxicity in vivo are difficult to investigate, so the tripleculture model is the basis for investigations of the toxic effects at cellular level. lungtoxic substances such as organophosphates are usually absorbed through inhalation. organophosphates are dangerous nerve agents for the human organism. at high concentrations organophosphates damage in the coculture without dcs the cell-cell contacts of the epithelial layer. in the triple culture dcs firstly respond to inhaled organophosphates and seem to compensate effects on the other cells. in summary, it is very important to understand the pathogenic mechanisms of lung injury in relation to the role of dendritic cells in lung. they could play an essential role in therapy against damage of organophosphates in the lung. co-purification of arf gtpase-activating protein git and cavb schalkowsky p., wissenbach u., fecher-trost c., flockerzi v. universität des saarlandes institut für experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie, kirrbergerstraße, homburg, germany high-voltage activated ca channels are assembled from pore-forming α subunits and two distinct types of auxiliary subunits, cavβ -β and, maybe, α δ -δ . by a cavβ -specific antibody based affinity chromatography the cavβ protein was highly enriched from rat brain microsomal membranes. proteins associated with cavβ were identified by mass spectrometry (lc-esi-ms/ms) and include α -subunits, α δ-subunits and β-subunits. in addition to these expected interacting proteins additional proteins were co-purified with the cavβ protein, including the g protein-coupled receptor kinase-interactor (git ). the aa git is a ubiquitously expressed multidomain protein which may serve as a scaffold to bring together molecules to form signaling modules controlling, for example, vesicle trafficking, cytoskeletal organization and cell migration. in rat brain lysates the git and cavβ proteins were co-immunoprecipitated by the antibodies for cavβ and git, respectively. we cloned the git cdna from mouse brain and co-expressed it with the cavβ subunit in hek cells. like in brain lysates the git protein was retained by cavβ precipitated by the antibody for cavβ and cavβ was retained by the git protein precipitated by the antibody for git . both proteins, cavβ and git are endogenously co-expressed in mouse embryonic fibroblasts (mef). we could not observe potassium-induced voltage-activated ca influx in these acutely prepared cells. accordingly, mefs can be used as a model system to study the impact of cavβ -git interaction in the absence of functional cav channels. in addition, using mefs from cavβ -deficient mice enables us to control the impact of cavβ on git function. vice versa down-regulation of git by specific sirnas might allow to control the impact of git on cavβ function. as read-outs we use cell migration assays and monitor receptor-dependent and receptor-independent calcium signaling in these cells. effects of sphingosine- -phosphate and fty on epidermal hyperproliferation and inflammation in an imiquimod induced mouse model of psoriasis the sphingolipid sphingosine -phosphate (s p) is a mediator that modulates various physiological functions of skin cells. s p has distinct direct effects on keratinocytes as it diminishes proliferation and induces differentiation which is a classical goal of psoriasis therapy. furthermore, s p modulates the function of various immune cells, mainly to an anti-inflammatory direction. thus, the strategy of targeting immune cells with locally acting s p was explored in an experimental animal model of psoriasis vulgaris, the recently established imiquimod induced psoriasis mouse model and in the mouse tail test. topical administration of imiquimod onto back and ear skin led to a distinct inflammatory response characterized by epidermal hyperproliferation, scaling and redness which was scored with a modified pasi (psoriasis area and severity index). the positive control diflorasone diacetate and s p, but not fty reduced the epidermal hyperproliferation by topical administration onto ear skin, indicating a mode of action for s p via the s p receptor, which is not activated by fty . there was also a moderate reduction of inflammatory cell influx and edema formation in ear skin by s p treatment, which was even more pronounced by treatment with diflorasone diacetate. the pasi determined on back skin was, however, only significantly reduced by diflorasone diacetate. the discrepancy between outcome on ear and back skin remains elusive. in the mouse tail assay, the influence of s p in stratum granulosum formation (orthokeratosis) was tested compared to the positive control calcipotriol. whereas topical administration of calcipotriol led to the expected significant increase of stratum granulosum in mouse tail epidermis, s p lacked such an effect, indicating a different mode of action in epidermal differentiation. taken together, these results imply that topical administration of s p might be a new option for the treatment of mild to moderate psoriasis lesions. inhalation of toxicants such as sulphur mustard (sm), an alkylating chemical warfare agent, cause pulmonary complications like respiratory failure, pulmonary edema and secondary pneumonia. in order to investigate pathomechanisms of pulmonary toxicity, an in vitro alveolar-capillary co-culture model has been established recently by our group. in this model the human lung adenocarcinoma epithelial cell line (h ) is mimicking the epithelial site of the alveoli while the human hemangiosarcoma cell line (iso-has) represents the endothelial site. acute respiratory injuries are accompanied by disruption of the alveolar-capillary barrier that can be detected by the use of biochemical markers (e.g. ldh) and electrochemical indicators (e.g. transepithelial resistance). sm-mediated pulmonary injury is characterized by the increased secretion of proinflammatory mediators (e.g. il- ). a shortcoming of this model is the missing inflammatory component in the lung. aim of the present project is the addition of macrophages to the established co-culture model to improve the model and to investigate the relevance of inflammatory processes in toxic lung injury. the effect of sm on this triple-culture model is characterized with special regard to the interaction of epithelial cells and macrophages. the human acute monocytic leukemia cell line (thp- ) was stimulated to allow differentiation into macrophages. validation of the cellular differentiation was checked by specific clusters of differentiation (e.g. cd ) using flow cytometric analysis. after successful differentiation into macrophages, these inflammatory cells were added to the co-culture model before and after exposure with sm, respectively. the cytotoxicity of sm on the triple-culture model was evaluated by xtt assays and ter measurements. furthermore, immunohistochemical staining of tight junction proteins (e.g. zo- ) and of adherens junction proteins (e.g. e-cadherin) was conducted to enhance the knowledge of the function of the intercellular junction in injured and rejuvenated regions as well as the interaction of epithelial cells and macrophages. for the contact allergen para-phenylenediamine (ppd) we showed that concentrations above µm are accompanied with inhibition of nat activity in human keratinocytes [ ] . in the following we investigated the impact of ppd on nat activity in antigenpresenting cells using dendritic cell-like cells, namely the monocytic thp- cells. measured nat activity of thp- was comparable to those found in primary keratinocytes. a h treatment of thp- cells with physiologically relevant concentrations of ppd ( - µm) led to a % reduction of nat activity. comparable results were found for mono-acetylated ppd (mappd) whereas di-acetylated ppd demonstrated no inhibition. time-dependent studies found a significant decrease in enzyme activity already h after application of ppd or mappd while nat mrna levels were not modified. these results are indicative for a substrate-dependent inhibition. further investigations concentrated on the restoration of nat activity after treatment with ppd or mappd. here we found that n-acetylation capacities were restored after h cultivation of the treated cells in fresh medium. independent of the enzymatic activity, certain compounds are known to oxidise the catalytic cysteine or form adducts with the nat protein. therefore we studied whether ppd and/or oxidised ppd including the trimer bandrowski´s base interact additionally with recombinant nat protein itself in the absence of acetyl-coenzyme a. we found that all compounds but mappd bind to nat protein after h. the greatest inhibition was found for oxidised ppd (up to %). due to the greater inhibition by oxidized ppd we propose that oxidation products interact with the protein whereas ppd itself modulates nat enzyme activity in a substrate-dependent mode of action. overall we demonstrated that ppd can inhibit nat in two different ways. the work was partially financed by federal office of public health (foph), switzerland and stiftung zur förderung begabter studierender und des wissenschaftlichen nachwuchses objective: fabry's disease is a rare progressive multisystem disorder resulting from deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase a (gla, ec . . . ). we hypothesize that genetic gla variants, especially those in its promoter region are of pathophysiological relevance for the development and progression of fabry's disease phenotypes. this study focuses on the characterization of the gla promoter, identification of functional genetic variants and impact of transcription factor eb (tfeb), a regulator of lysosomal genes. we screened bp of the '-flanking region of gla in patients with fabry's disease and controls for genetic variants. serial promoter deletion constructs for reporter gene assays were designed and identified genetic variants were introduced by site-directed mutagenesis. constructs were transiently transfected into immortalized human kidney epithelial (ihke) cells and human vascular endothelial cells (ea.hy ) to determine transcriptional promoter activity (ta). sequencing of patients' dna revealed five genetic variants in the 'flanking region of gla, significantly more frequent in fabry's patients compared to control group (rs ; rs ; rs ; rs ; rs ; all minor alleles p< . ). we identified two regions, a proximal one between - and - and a distal region between and - with significant ta, in both cell lines. cotransfection with tfeb activated ta of both regions significantly up to . -fold (p< . ). in ihke cells, insertion of the minor t allele (rs ) significantly enhanced basal ta of the proximal promoter region (p= . ), while insertion decreased basal ta (p< . ) of the distal promoter portion. the combined insertion of the minor c alleles (rs ; rs ), which were in complete linkage disequilibrium, significantly increased basal ta of the distal promoter region (p= . ). our results indicate that three genetic variants, overrepresented in fabry's patients, are located within transcriptionally active regions, possibly altering tf binding sites and therefore, affecting gla expression. future analysis will assess the impact of gla promoter variants and gla regulation by tfeb with respect to fabry's phenotypes. multiple sclerosis (ms) and its animal counterpart experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (eae) have a major inflammatory component that drives and orchestrates both diseases. ceramides (cer) are known as mediators of inflammatory processes, but until now their role in ms was not elucidated. we measured the ceramide levels in the cerebrospinal fluid of ms patients and control patients using lc-ms/ms. interestingly, the c : -cer levels were . fold increased in ms patients. this translates into the finding that c : -cer levels were also significantly elevated in the lumbar spinal cord of eae mice. the raised c : -cer levels in the lumbar spinal cord were caused by a transiently increased expression of ceramide synthase (cers) in macrophages. nitric oxide (no) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnf-α) secreted by interferon gamma (infγ ) induced macrophages play an essential role in the development of ms. astonishingly, rnai experiments reveal that cers and its product c : -cer are mediators of inf-γ induced no/tnf-α release in raw macrophages. moreover, treatment of eae mice with l-cycloserine prevented the increase of c : -cer and of inos/tnf-α expression and caused a remission of the disease. in summary, cers plays a critical role in the initial phase of ms, most likely by regulating the no and tnf-α synthesis. this let us speculate, that a substance designed to inhibit cers and therefore to limit the inflammatory effects of c : -cer may represent a new drug in ms therapy. role of cgmp-dependent protein kinase i for kidney fibrosis schinner e. cgmp is synthesized via nitric oxide-or natriuretic peptide-stimulated guanylyl cyclases and exhibits pleiotropic regulatory functions also in the kidney. hence, the integration of cgmp signaling via cgmp-dependent protein kinases (cgk) might play a critical role for renal physiology. both isozymes were detected in arterioles, mesangium and within the cortical interstitium. in contrast to cgkiα, the β isoform was not detected in the juxtaglomerular apparatus and medullary fibroblasts. here, we focused on the function of cgki in the renal interstitium emphasizing a functional differentiation of both isoforms. the interstitium exists mainly of fibroblasts playing a prominent role in the interstitial fibrosis. accordingly, cgki could also be involved in this pathophysiological process. therefore, we studied whether cgki influences renal fibrosis which was induced by unilateral ureter obstruction (uuo). at first we analysed the role of the no/cgmp signaling by application of cgmp increasing yc or isdn. thereby we detected antifibrotic effects of these substances. subsequently we tested whether these effects are mediated by cgki by using mutant mice. on the one hand we examined αsm-rescue mice (expressing cgkiα only in smooth muscle under the control of the sm promotor with a cgki-ko background) and cgki-ko mice (expressing no cgki). on the other hand we used tgtg mice expressing more cgkiα in smooth muscle than wt mice (transgenic cgkiα under the control of the sm promotor). due to the steeply increased use of nanomaterials for commercial and industrial applications, toxicological assessment of their potential harmful effects is urgently needed. moreover, the continuous development of novel materials requires the implementation of hazard-predicting models to prevent potential health effects resulting from human exposure. in the present study, we studied the toxic potential of a set of nanoparticles (np) with varying physicochemical properties in human a lung epithelial cells, hepg liver epithelial cells and hk- proximal tubule epithelial cells. the used nanomaterials incorporated five tio samples, two zno samples (i.e. uncoated and coated), two multi-walled carbon nanotube (mw-cnt) samples and a nanoparticulate ag sample. cells were treated with np at doses ranging from . to µg/cm for cytotoxicity and from to µg/cm for genotoxicity. dna damage was evaluated using the alkaline comet assay while concurrent cytotoxicity was determined by the wst- assay. marked contrasts in cytotoxic and dna damaging properties were observed among the different materials. the overall strongest responses were observed with the uncoated zno-np sample and with ag-np, although effects were found to depend on the cell type. notably, the dna damaging effect of ag-np could at least partly be attributed to its dispersant. present results form part of a growing data set which are generated in the framework of the eu fp project enpra (fp -nmp) to establish dose-response relationships and a mathematical model to predict the hazard of nanoparticles. increased spontaneous hprt mutant frequency in v cells expressing human cytochrome p b schlechtweg a., esch h. , martínez jaramillo d., lehmann l. university of wuerzburg/institute of pharmacy and food chemistry section of food chemistry, am hubland, wuerzburg, germany the hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (hprt) assay in chinese hamster v lung fibroblasts (v cells) represents a widely-used mammalian test system to detect gene mutations. since v cells do not express any cytochrome-p dependent monooxygenase (cyp) isozymes, usually an activating system has to be added. therefore, v cells expressing human (h) cyp isozymes have been commercialized. to test these v cells for their use in the hprt test, v h a and h b cells were characterized regarding (i) spontaneous frequency of -thioguanineresistant clones per clonable cells (smf), (ii) the stability of which over weeks (w), and (iii) the mutational spectrum (ms) of cdna from mutant clones. ms of cdna was determined by isolation of total rna, reverse transcription/amplification of the coding region by polymerase chain reaction and sanger sequencing of the amplification product. activity of cyp isozymes was verified by ethoxyresorufin-o-deethylase (erod) assay. (i)/(ii) whereas the smf of v cells (w : ± ; w : ± ) and v h a (w : ± ; w : ± ) only varied within the range of historical controls, smf of v h b increased continuously over time (w : ± ; w : ± ). (iii) although the smf of v and v h a were similar, the mutational spectrum of v cells was characterized by as many transversions as transitions and deletions of exon or exon + , whereas the mutational spectrum of v h a was characterized exclusively by transversions and deletion of exon + . surprisingly, with out of cdnas derived from v h b mutant clones, no amplification product was detected. first results indicate that there is at least one gene mutation in the untranslated region before and behind the coding region precluding amplification with the original primers. (ii)to reduce the smf of v h b , cells with wildtype hprt activity were cloned and one clone with an erod activity which did not differ significantly from the original cell population was further characterized. initially, smf of the clone varied between . ± . and . ± . . yet its smf was unstable reaching up to ± . in conclusion, the mutational spectrum differed between the v cell lines. furthermore, h b expression seemed to enhance smf in v cells. even though a temporary reduction of the smf by cloning was possible, smf of v h b cells was unstable. we wanted to investigate the possible antithrombotic effects and elucidate the chemical identity of the active principles involved in inhibitory effects against adp-induced aggregation of human platelets by wild garlic, allium ursinum l. method: bioassay-guided isolation procedure was used followed by spectrometric identification of pure active compounds. for the bioassay, blood was taken from healthy human volunteers and platelet rich plasma (prp) was prepared for turbidimetric platelet aggregation tests. prp, stimulated with µm adp, was treated with extracts of different polarities, fractions and isolated single compounds from allium ursinum. the extracts were investigated by thin layer chromatography, hplc, mass spectroscopy, esi-ms and d/ d h/ c-nmr spectroscopic techniques. for references the adt-antagonist mes-amp was used. result: fresh allium ursinum leaves were extracted with ethanol, which was the potent form that effectively inhibited adp-induced aggregation of human platelets. this ethanolic extract was subjected to liquid-liquid partition. whilst the aqueous phase containing the moiety of cysteine sulphoxide and thiosulphinate derivatives showed only weak activity on platelet aggregation, the ethyl acetate and especially the chloroform partitions showed highest aggregation inhibiting potency. thus, in our bioassay effects of alliins/allicins could be neglected. the chloroform phase, possessing the strongest activity, was separated into fractions by gradient elution open cc on silica gel. the most active fractions - were separated again yielding subfractions. this afforded , -di-o-α-linolenoyl- -o-β-d-galactopyranosyl-sn-glycerol and β-sitosterol- -o-β-dglucopyranoside, the structures of which were determined by esi-ms and d/ d h/ c-nmr spectroscopic techniques. furthermore, the diminutive amounts of volatile oil of a.ursinum leaves obtained by steam distillation according to ph.eur. could be evaluated as a third aggregation inhibiting principle. conclusions: at the first time two active, non-sulphur-containing constituents of wild garlic, namely a galactolipid and a phytosterol, could be identified exhibiting inhibitory action on adp-induced aggregation in human blood platelets. as a major constituent, the galactolipid , -di-o-α-linolenoyl- -o-β-d-galactopyranosyl-sn-glycerol, not yet found in allium spec., appears as a new, highly useful marker substance for a.ursinum drugs, or their pharmaceutical preparations. in recent years, public attention focused more and more on risk factors which may impair sperm quality and thereby human reproduction. in this context, for example pesticides, alcohol, cigarettes, and even mobile phones are discussed. a variety of parameters exists including sperm counts as well as sperm motility, which are considered to be two of the most important parameters to evaluate sperm quality in animal models with the final aim to assess human risk. in recent years computer assisted sperm analysis (casa) devices mostly replaced the formerly used manual counting and manual motility assessment. however, although casa offers multiple opportunities and can allow for an objective and more detailed evaluation, several pitfalls exist which can alter the results profoundly and consequently compromise the quality of the data and ultimately the validity of a study. the aim of the present study was to establish and validate the casa device tox ivos sperm analyzer from hamilton thorne and thereby to gain detailed knowledge about the practical advantages but also intricacies which may alter the obtained results. in this regard healthy adult male rats ( - weeks old) were used. ultrasonic sound resistant sperm heads were isolated from the testis and in addition, sperms were isolated from the cauda epididymis. testicular sperm head counts and sperm motility were assessed using different isolation procedures and/or instrument settings. results different instrument settings modulate both -sperm motility and testicular sperm counts. in this regard, a wide range of results including slight changes as well as false positive/negative results were obtained. in addition, the modification of the isolation procedure can lead to variable results especially for sperm motility. conclusion isolation procedures as well as instrument settings can alter the results. consequently, in an experimental setting, potential adverse effects can be confounded with methodologically mediated apparent findings exerted via inappropriate use of the device -depending on the respective conditions in the test laboratory. this study demonstrates the relevance of standardization of testing conditions adopted for computer assisted sperm analysis and the need for a robust validation prior to use in experimental settings. orai and stim proteins have been identified as central components of the highly ca + selective, store-operated current in immune cells (icrac). the molecular basis of selective orai-mediated activation of the calcineurin/nfat pathway and the crosstalk with other channel and scaffold molecules of the trpc family are still incompletely understood. using patch clamp recordings complemented by fluorescence and tirf microscopy we investigated interactions between orai and trpc in plasma membrane microdomains of rbl- h mast cells. orai -mediated crac currents, activated by passive store depletion, were found significantly reduced by over-expression of trpc . this negative impact of trpc on icrac was independent of channel function as the trpc pore dead mutant (e k) inhibited icrac to a similar extent as wild type trpc . importantly, despite a reduction in icrac, nfat translocation in trpc overexpressing rbl cells remained unchanged, or was even slightly promoted. store depletion-induced nfat translocation in rbl cells was as well unaffected by trpc e k but substantially reduced by trpc mutants with either i) eliminated fkbp /calcineurin binding (p q) or ii) deficiency in pkc phosphorylation (s a). moreover, inhibition of pkc phosphorylation by (gfx x; µm) strongly suppressed nfat signaling. we suggest trpc as a scaffold that links orai-mediated ca + -entry to nfat/calcineurin signaling within plasma membrane microdomains. neurally-induced bronchoconstriction in human and guinea pig precision-cut lung slices schlepütz m. , rieg a. d. introduction: precision-cut lung slices (pcls) are well suited to study peripheral airway responses in different species. airway tone is under close control of the autonomic nervous system and dysregulation may contribute to airway hyperresponsiveness as observed in human lung diseases such as asthma. hence, the aim of the present study was to characterize neurally induced bronchoconstriction (bc) in guinea pigs (gp) and to compare the results with those in human pcls. methods: pcls were prepared from gp or human lung tissue. nerve endings in pcls were activated by electric field stimulation (efs) or capsaicin addition. cholinergic nerve responses were proven by atropine. capsaicin was used to show excitatory nonadrenergic non-cholinergic (enanc) responses. ruthenium red or skf were used to confirm transient receptor potential (trp) channel contributions upon enanc activation. results: gp and human pcls were both sensitive to efs and airways contracted to ± % of the initial airway area (%-iaa) and ± %-iaa, respectively. in frequency response curves half maximal response was found at . ± . hz for guinea pig pcls and . ± . hz for human pcls. efs-induced bc was inhibited by atropine in both species. capsaicin contracted gp to ± %-iaa. % of human pcls were responsive to capsaicin and airways contracted to ± %-iaa, respectively. in gp ruthenium red and skf blocked capsaicin-as well as efs-induced bc. conclusion: gp and human pcls contain atropine sensitive cholinergic and capsaicin sensitive enanc nerve endings. since gp pcls were sensitive to trp channel inhibitors, the involvement of those channels can be characterized with respect to lung diseases. in conclusion, gp pcls resemble the human distal lung innervation and represent a useful model to study neural airway pharmacology. the erk / -pathway is involved in pkc-induced nox up-regulation schlufter f., xia n., förstermann u., li h. universitätsmedizin mainz institut für pharmakologie, obere zahlbacher straße , mainz, germany nadph oxidases (nox) are major producers of reactive oxygen species in the vascular wall and nox is the most abundant nox isoform in human endothelial cells. we have previously shown that treatment of human ea.hy endothelial cells with phorbol myristate -acetate (pma) for h leads to an up-regulation of nox expression. this effect of pma is mediated by protein kinase cα, because it is preventable by the pkc inhibitor gö and by pkcα-sirna. the present study is aimed to investigate the signal transduction cascade downstream of pkcα. pma-induced nox up-regulation can be attenuated by pd , (an erk / inhibitor), but not by sp (a jnk inhibitor), indicating in the involvement of erk / . consistently, pma treatment leads to a sustained activation of erk / , and sirnamediated knockdown of erk / markedly reduces the pma-induced nox up-regulation. h , an inhibitor of the mitogen-and stress-activated protein kinases (msks) has no effect on the pma-stimulated nox expression, indicating that msks are not the target molecules of erk / in this scenario. on the contrary, knockdown of the transcription factor elk- by sirna significantly reduces the pma-induced nox up-regulation. in conclusion, erk / and elk- are involved in the pkcα-induced nox up-regulation. determination of spontaneous mutation frequencies in normal human mammary gland tissue using the random mutation capture technique schmalbach k., lehmann l. university of wuerzburg section of food chemistry, am hubland, wuerzburg, germany annually, over , women develop breast cancer in germany. the accumulation of genetic mutations in mammary gland tissue during lifetime may be reasonable for developing breast cancer. in particular mutations in tumor suppressor genes, e.g. p , seem to play an important role in developing cancer. up to now, lack of a method sensitive enough to determine the expected very low spontaneous mutation frequency (smf) in normal mammary gland tissue precluded the investigation of the role of spontaneous mutations acquired in the p gene in epidemiological studies. the only test with the potential to determine low smfs was the random mutation capture (rmc) assay, a genotype selective method which detects mutants that render the mutational sequence non-cleavable by the taqi restriction enzyme after accumulation of the target sequence. therefore, the suitability of the rmc assay to determine smf in p gene in normal human mammary gland tissue was evaluated. thus, the rmc assay was optimized concerning (i) dna isolation, (ii) pcr conditions, and (iii) amount of mammary gland tissue. (i) genomic dna from normal human mammary gland tissue, obtained from healthy women who underwent mamma reduction surgery for cosmetic reasons, was isolated using an extended proteinase k digestion prior to chloroform extraction. (ii) the target sequence in intron of p gene was captured by hybridization with a complementary uracil-containing dna-probe synthesized via polymerase chain reaction (pcr), followed by magnetic separation from the remaining genomic dna. the copy number of the target sequence was quantified by competitive pcr. the number of mutants was detected after cleavage of the target dna with taqi by means of pcr with a primer set flanking the restriction site. (iii) with g of normal mammary gland tissue a smf of . ± . x - per base pair was determined indicating the rmc assay suitable for smf determination. in conclusion, the smf in the p gene in normal human mammary gland tissue was determined for the first time, enabling the future investigation of factors influencing the smf during breast cancer development. cigarette smoke-induced release of pro-inflammatory cytokines including interleukin- (il- ) from inflammatory as well as structural cells in the airways, including airway smooth muscle (asm) cells, may contribute to the development of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (copd). despite the wide use of pharmacological treatment aimed at increasing intracellular levels of the endogenous suppressor cyclic amp (camp), little is known on its exact mechanism of action. we report here that next to the β -agonist fenoterol, direct and specific activation of either exchange protein directly activated by camp (epac) or protein kinase a (pka) reduced cigarette smoke extract (cse)-induced il- mrna expression and protein release by human asm cells. cse-induced iκbαdegradation and p nuclear translocation, processes that were primarily reversed by epac activation. further, cse increased extracellular signal-regulated kinase (erk) phosphorylation, which was selectively reduced by pka activation. cse decreased epac expression, but did not affect epac and pka expression. importantly, epac expression was also reduced in lung tissue from copd patients. in conclusion, epac and pka decrease cse-induced il- release by human asm cells via inhibition of nf-κb and erk, respectively, pointing at these camp effectors as potential targets for antiinflammatory therapy in copd. however, cigarette smoke exposure may reduce antiinflammatory effects of camp elevating agents via down-regulation of epac . polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (key marker substance benzo[a]pyrene (bap)) have been assumed to play a role in the development of bladder cancer. the objective of the present study was to unravel cellular and in particular cytoskeletal response to bap. to follow the sequential steps of chemical carcinogenesis the differential proteomic profile was analyzed at early and late time points. the study was carried out in a superficial human bladder cancer cell line (rt ) exposed to . µm bap, a subacute concentration based on results of proliferation (brdu) and dna damage (tunel) tests. cells of a human bladder cancer cell line (rt ) were exposed to . µm bap for h (n= ), wk (n= ) and wk (n= ). proteins of whole cell lysate were separated by twodimensional electrophoresis (fig. ) . differentially expressed proteins were identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight analysis. cortactin, actin and tubulin were immunohistochemical stained. changes in migration and colony forming ability were assessed by scratch wound-healing assay and soft-agar colony formation. results: by using several databases (uniprot, reactome, panther) the identified proteins were categorized into different functional classes such as mrna processing, translation, protein metabolic process, or several areas associated with the organization of the cytoskeleton. % of the differentially expressed proteins after h of treatment are involved in the processing of pre-mrna ( %) and protein metabolism ( %). this pattern changed after wk of treatment. then, % of the proteins affected the cytoskeleton whereas still % were categorized to protein metabolism and only % to pre-mrna processing. in the immunhistochemical staining, the treated cells appeared after wk of exposure larger and rounder predominantly due to the modifications of the actin cytoskeleton. merged images of actin and cortactin revealed that both proteins colocalized in invadopodiae. after wk, a higher number of treated cells moved toward the centre of the wound and they formed more soft-agar colonies compared to vehicle conditions, suggesting a transformation of the cells. in conclusion, bap exposure causes in an early phase an activation of the spliceosome which can led to an epithelial-tomesenchymal transition. two coordinators of a cell-type-specific splicing program, epithelial splicing regulatory proteins and , are currently being validate by pcr. fused master gel : representative -de gel of rt cells exposed to . µm bap for wk. protein spots which were differentially expressed compared to control and identified were marked. cannabinoids stimulate mesenchymal stem cell migration via a mitogen-activated protein kinase pathway schmuhl e. , ramer r. mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) are known to be involved in various regenerative processes such as cardiac, ocular, skin and bone tissue healing. however, little is known about the pharmacotherapeutical options aiming at tissue healing steps such as the mobilization and homing of mscs. here, we show that cannabidiol (cbd), a nonpsychoactive cannabinoid, stimulates the migration of human adipose-derived mscs in both boyden chamber and in vitro scratch wound assays. in boyden chambers cbd ( . - µm) was shown to promote cell migration in a time-and concentration dependent manner. this promigratory action was inhibited by am- (cb receptor antagonist) and by o- (g protein-coupled receptor [gpr] agonist). moreover, cbd activated the mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk) pathway as evidenced by increased phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinase (erk) / . blockade of erk activation by pd prevented cbd-stimulated msc migration, whereas inhibition of p mapk by sb was inactive in this respect. furthermore, am- and o- were found to attenuate cbd-induced erk activation. an erk-dependent promigratory action was likewise demonstrated for the phytocannabinoid ∆ tetrahydrocannabinol and for the hydrolysis-stable anandamide analogue r(+)methanandamide. we conclude that cbd promotes msc migration via receptordependent erk activation, possibly contributing to tissue healing. the duffy antigen receptor for chemokines (darc) binds promiscuously many inflammatory chemokines without showing intracellular signal transduction. it is mainly expressed on endothelial cells of postcapillary venules and on red blood cells, where it acts as a transendothelial transporter of chemokines and as a chemokine sink, respectively. surprisingly, as shown for human and mouse brain, darc is also expressed at high density in the cerebellum. however, nothing is known about the function of darc in this location. we addressed this question by subjecting c bl/ wildtype and darc-deficient mice to a series of behavior experiments including morris water maze-, elevated plus maze-, rotarod-and actometer tests. while the results from the water maze experiments are ambiguous, elevated plus maze trials show a strong aversion of darc -/mice to walk to the end of the open arm, which is consistent with anxiety-like behavior. moreover, darc -/mice show greatly reduced locomotor activity, which is at least partly caused by episodes of reduced mobility occurring more frequently than in the corresponding wildtype controls (elevated plus maze, actometer). finally, darc -/mice spend a significantly reduced time on the rotating rod compared to c bl/ wildtype controls, which may indicate an impaired cerebellar function. we conclude that darc in fact modulates brain function. surprisingly, this appears to be happening under homeostatic conditions, although darc binds for the most part to inflammatory chemokines. it remains to be elucidated, how this effect can be caused by a non-signaling chemokine receptor. it may be an indirect consequence of altered brain chemokine concentrations or of as yet unknown signaling pathways activated by darc. transporter gene expression in human head-neck squamous cell carcinoma and epigenetic regulation mechanisms schnepf r. hals-nasen-ohren-klinik, kopf-und halschirurgie, friedrich-alexander-universität erlangen-nürnberg, waldstraße , erlangen, germany background: membrane transporters may affect the disposition and thereby treatment efficiency of anticancer drugs in human head-neck squamous cell carcinoma (hnscc). the gene expression profile of transporters in hnscc, however, is unknown and was evaluated in this study. moreover, we evaluated mechanisms by which transporters are regulated in hnscc. we focused on the role of the nuclear pregnane x receptors (pxr, nr i ) and epigenetic mechanisms. methods and results: real-time rt-pcr revealed a significantly increased mrna expression of slco a and slco b and a significantly decreased expression of transporters such as slco b , slco a and abcc in human hnscc tissue samples compared to adjacent normal mucosa. moreover, an association between slco b mrna levels in tumor tissues and five-year survival of hnscc patients was observed (χ = . ; p= . ; n= ). bisulfite sequencing revealed that promoter cpg islands of abcc and slco a were not methylated and thus these genes were not epigenetically silenced in hnscc tissues. in the hnscc-derived umscc- and scc- cell lines, transcript expression of transporters (e.g., abcc , slco a ; p< . ) and pxr (nr i ; p< . ) was markedly induced by the dna methyltransferase inhibitor decitabine. cotreatment with the prototypical pxr activator rifampicin significantly reversed decitabine-induced abcc and slco a expression. conclusions: transporter expression profiles significantly differed between hnscc and normal mucosa and expression levels of slco b may serve as a marker for prognosis. modulation of the epigenome with the anticancer drug decitabine substantially affects transporter expression in umscc- and scc- cells, suggesting epigenetic regulation mechanisms. moreover, interactions between epigenetic and nuclear receptor-mediated mechanisms in transporter regulation occur. this work was in part supported by the johannes und frieda marohn foundation. the role of hcn in neuropathic and inflammatory pain schnorr s. , eberhardt m. the pacemaker current ih is carried by hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotidegated cation channels (hcn - ) and contributes to cellular excitability in the heart and the nervous system. hcn and hcn are the two most abundant hcn subunits in peripheral sensory neurons with hcn being the prevalent isoform in nociceptive small sized c-fibre dorsal root ganglion (drg) neurons. we examined the role of hcn for peripheral sensitization and spontaneous neuronal activity in neuropathic and inflammatory pain. we generated a conditional deletion of hcn by using a nociceptor specific cre-transgene driven by the nav . promoter. the nociceptor-specific knockout of hcn in drg neurons (nosphcn ko) was confirmed by quantitative rt-pcr and western blot. immunohistochemical staining revealed that the deletion of hcn was mainly restricted to small sized drg neurons. the conditional loss of hcn resulted in a significant reduction of ih positive small diameter drg neurons pointing to a central role of this isoform to the hcn current in nociceptive neurons. behavioral studies showed that the lack of hcn did not influence basal pain responses but led to a significant reduction in mechanosensation in both neuropathic and inflammatory pain models. however, thermosensation of the mutants was only decreased in neuropathic pain conditions. in wild-type animals, intraperitoneal, intraplantar and even intrathecal injection of the hcn channel blocker zd nearly eliminated tactile allodynia caused by inflammation in contrast to thermal hyperalgesia which remained unaffected. in contrast, pain thresholds in nosphcn ko mice did not significantly increase after pharmacological block of ih. additionally, experiments revealed that the inflammatory condition induced an upregulation of hcn protein in the spinal dorsal horn compared to saline injected mice. our results suggest that hcn might be a new target in the treatment of neuropathic and inflammatory pain. the proper functioning of the central, as well as the peripheral nervous systems is of outstanding importance to the survival and well-being of humans. yet, the integrity of neuronal systems is constantly challenged by a plethora of environmental and occupational toxins. some of these toxins preferentially target neural cells. these neurotoxins can exert their devastating effects by very different modes of action. neurotoxins may induce apoptosis or necrosis of neurons, or interfere with axon growth and elongation. these processes can be identified by specialized in vitro tests. furthermore, neurotoxins have been described to alter glial function which may compromise the viability of surrounding neurons. as another important mode of action, several neurotoxins act on neurotransmitter receptors, thereby altering signal propagation within neuronal networks. countless natural and synthetic substances have been characterized for their effects on neurotransmitter receptors and today can be used for detailed studies of receptor function. however, environmental toxins of anthropogenic origin and occupational toxins that both represent constant sources for human exposure are still poorly studied with respect to their effects on neurotransmitter receptors. thus, the need for a better understanding of the susceptibility of neurotransmitter systems for toxic effects exerted by these substances is of outstanding importance for the protection of human health. here, we introduce an imaging-based approach for the screening of the effects of potential and known neurotoxins on neurotransmitter receptors of intact cells in vitro. different neuronal cells were tested for their sensitivities for classical neurotransmitters using life-cell imaging experiments. in more detail, we examined the proportion of responding cells and determined the ec values for the most prominent neurotransmitters in cell lines widely used for in vitro neurotoxicity studies on the one hand, namely sh-sy y and lumes cells, and primary mouse neurons on the other hand. with these data at hand, we are now able to identify and characterize the effects of neurotoxins on receptor function in chronic, as well as acute exposition paradigms. the use of an in vitro imaging-based physiological test system is at the interface between non-functional in vitro approaches and in vivo toxicity tests, thus, giving mechanistic insight into neurotoxic processes without requiring animal experiments. apomorphine acts on trpa channels scholze a., schaefer m., hill k. universität leipzig -universitätsmedizin rudolf boehm-institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, härtelstr. - , leipzig, germany apomorphine is a non-narcotic derivative of morphine which acts as a dopamine agonist and is clinically used to treat "off-states" in patients suffering from parkinson´s disease. adverse effects of apomorphine treatment include dopaminergic effects such as nausea, but also ulceration and pain at the injection site. we wanted to test whether an activation of trp (transient receptor potential) channels in sensory neurones contributes to the perception of pain after apomorphine injection. while the warm/heat receptors trpv , trpv , trpv , and trpv and the cold receptor trpm were insensitive towards apomorphine treatment, trpa could concentration-dependently be modulated by apomorphine. low micromolar apomorphine concentrations potently activated heterologously expressed trpa channels in a stably transfected cell line (hek -trpa ), as well as natively expressed trpa in cultured dorsal root ganglion neurones. on the other hand, when using higher concentrations of apomorphine, we observed inhibition of trpa activity. previous studies have shown that subcutaneously administered apomorphine produces a biphasic dose response relationship in rats, inducing hyperalgesia at low doses whereas high doses of the substance cause antinociception. from our studies we conclude that such in vivo effects of apomorphine are presumably mediated by activation/inhibition of trpa expressed in sensory neurones agonist binding to a g protein-coupled receptor (gpcr) induces a conformational change of the receptor protein, which results in the activation of receptor-associated heterotrimeric g proteins [ ] . in radioligand binding studies, conducted to investigate ligand binding to specific gpcrs, receptors are usually probed with radioantagonists. as in other gpcrs [ ] , agonists of the muscarinic m receptor exhibit biphasic kinetics and biphasic competition curves with radioantagonists, indicating a more complex situation probably caused by g protein interactions. here, we present a detailed study of the binding of agonists to muscarinic m receptors including the novel super-high affinity agonist iperoxo and a differential chemical knockout of g proteins. in addition to membrane homogenates living cells were employed. we demonstrate that the high affinity fraction in biphasic curves does not differ between selected full agonist and is sensitive to pertussis toxin, thus indicating that this receptor population is associated with gi proteins. however, despite promiscuous signalling properties of m receptors, the low affinity fraction is not associated with any other g protein, since low affinity binding is insensitive to high concentrations of guanylnucleotides and cholera toxin. moreover, high affinity agonist binding appears solely in membrane homogenates but not in experiments conducted with living cells, probably due to their high intracellular concentration of guanylnucleotides. taken together the chemical knock-out of g proteins revealed that the high affinity binding of agonists in membrane homogenates is associated with the interaction of the muscarinic m receptor with gi proteins. the low affinity binding cannot be related to another g protein, although the muscarinic m receptor exhibits promiscuous g protein signalling properties. interestingly data obtained with living cells do not reveal any high affinity binding of agonists. prolonged stress leads to a dysregulation of the hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal (hpa)axis and may affect the sensitivity of pain perception. however, it is not yet known whether the alterations of hpa-axis and increased pain sensitivity are related. to create a long lasting stressful situation, male wistar rats were exposed to a restraint-stress for h daily over a period of two weeks. the effect of stress on the hpa-axis was determined by adrenal morphology and stress hormone levels, the influence on mechanical pain sensitivity was evaluated by the randall-selitto paw pressure test. on day the animals exhibited a significant mechanical hyperalgesia. they also showed increased acth and corticosterone plasma levels and an enlarged zona fasciculata of the adrenal gland, indicating a dysregulation of the hpa-axis. for testing the correlation of hpa-axis dysregulation and hyperalgesia a persistent increase in plasma corticosterone in wistar rats was generated by the administration of corticosterone via the drinking water for two weeks. these animals also showed an increased mechanical nociceptive sensitivity with an accompanied decrease of the adrenal glands and reduced acth levels. the results show that chronic stress leads to a dysfunction of the hpa-axis with an accompanied mechanical hyperalgesia which can be mimicked by oral administration of corticosterone. thus, this in-vivo test system may provide a new animal-friendly pharmacological model for stress-related pain disorders. the alternaria mycotoxins aoh and ame induce cyp a and apoptosis in murine hepatoma cells dependent on the aryl hydrocarbon receptor mycotoxins are secondary metabolites of fungi including the genus alternaria (black mold). alternaria fungi are known to infest different types of foodstuffs and produce diverse toxins amongst them the mycotoxins alternariol (aoh) and alternariol methyl ether (ame) which are potential carcinogens. as planar compounds, aoh and ame are preferentially metabolized by cytochrome p (cyp) a and a . the most prominent regulator of cyp a is the dimeric transcription factor complex ahr/arnt, which is activated by planar ligands. therefore we studied the activation of ahr/arnt by aoh and ame and monitored cyp a induction in murine hepatoma cells (hepa- c c ). indeed, aoh and ame enhanced the levels of cyp a in hepa- c c cells but not in cells with inactivated ahr (hepa- c c ) or arnt (hepa- c c ). furthermore, we studied the cytotoxicity of aoh and ame. by using a fluorescence-based microscopic readout we measured effects on cell counts, apoptosis, senescence and micronuclei formation. both aoh and ame reduce the cell number and the cell nuclei show drastic morphological changes e.g. enlargement after aoh treatment or micronuclei formation. the observed effects where, except for the induction of apoptosis, independent of ahr/arnt. in summary, aoh and ame activate the ahr/arnt pathway to induce cyp a expression and apoptosis. however, the predominant cytotoxic effect of aoh and ame in hepatoma cells is a profound reduction in cell numbers, which is independent of the ahr/arnt pathway. special purpose databases are the first place for researchers in the life sciences to obtain expert curated data. naturally, such resources are limited in terms of timeliness and comprehensiveness. the literature database pubmed alone lists more than , , scientific abstracts, and , are newly added every year. the protein sequence database uniprotkb stores over , , sequences, a hundred times more than ten years ago. turning these data into meaningful information and making it accessible to both humans and computers have become an essential part of biological discovery and biomedical research. text mining techniques have proven useful to extract the missing links in areas such as drug-target and drug-disease prediction, the extraction of mutation-phenotype associations, or the prediction of protein-protein and protein-ligand interactions. by systematically extracting information from available literature, reports or patents, text mining techniques can help to refine existing categorical knowledge stored in databases, and hence will support drug repositioning, the discovery of novel cancer biomarkers, or help to understand causes of hereditary diseases. in the area of regulatory toxicology we developed go r, the first knowledge-based search engine for alternative methods to animal experiments. the system not only helps retrieving information on the availability of alternative methods that allows for replacing, reducing or refining animal experiments, but also provides an endpoint-centered literature search to all scientists and regulatory authorities seeking for toxicological information and data. the up-to-date taxonomicstructured "table of contents" provided by go r allows for search in the literature listed in pubmed or the toxicology data network (toxnet) in a fast and comprehensive manner. the semantically enriched platform supports the user during the query formulation, allows for bibliographic analysis, and reveals existing relations to replacement, reduction, and refinement of animal experiments. impaired cardiac excitation-contraction-coupling in mice with complete inactivation of the crem gene schulte j. s., tekook m., schmitz w., müller f. u. westfälische wilhelms-universität institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, domagkstraße , münster, germany the structurally related transcription factors camp response element binding protein (creb) and camp response element modulator (crem) mediate a regulation of gene transcription in response to camp and are expressed in the heart. mice with complete inactivation of crem display impaired cardiac contraction and relaxation, decreased expression of serca and down-regulation of β -adrenoceptors. to elucidate the underlying functional mechanisms on the cellular level we here investigated cellular electrophysiology and ca + -cycling in ventricular cardiomyocytes from crem ko mice (ko). adult ventricular cardiomyocytes were isolated from ko and wildtype (wt) mice (age - weeks) and subsequently used for experiments within hours after isolation. action potentials (aps) were recorded from ventricular cardiomyocytes (perforated patch, whole cell current clamp inactivation of crem seems to have no consequences for ap duration and possibly associated ion channels but leads to impairment of ca + cycling and sarcomere shortening under basal conditions well explaining the previous findings in vivo. our results show that crem is essential for a regular excitation-contraction coupling in the mouse heart. (supported by the izkf münster) new mechanistic insights in no/cgmp actions in the vasculature schulte k., koesling d., universitätsstr. , bochum, germany hypertension, a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, is associated with vascular changes resulting in increased vascular contractility und vascular peripheral resistance. a prominent factor in the development and maintenance of hypertension is the reninangiotensin-aldostrerone system. angiotensin ii (ang ii) is the main mediator of this system and a powerful vasoconstrictor. ang ii increases the intracellular ca + concentration thereby activating myosin light chain (mlc) kinase, which enhances mlc phosphorylation and subsequent vascular contraction. opposite to angii-induced vascular contraction, no/cgmp pathway promotes vascular relaxation by decreasing ca + concentration and lowering mlc phosphorylation. responsible for mlc dephosphorylation is the mlc phosphatase (mlcp), whose activity is regulated by different phosphorylations. phosphorylation of mlcp via rhoa-activated rho-kinase enhances phosphatase activity while phosphorylation via the cgmp-dependent protein kinase has been proposed to decrease enzymatic activity. to investigate the interplay of angii with the no/cgmp pathway, we treated wild-type and ko mice lacking the cgmp forming no receptor, no-gc , with angiotensinii ( . mg / kg bw / d) for two weeks. in addition to various cardiovascular parameters, physiological changes in vascular reactivity of aortic rings of angii-treated wt and no-gc ko mice were assessed in organ bath experiments and correlated with biochemical parameters as the phosphorylation state of mlc, mlcp and rho-kinase activities examined by immunoblot analysis. analysis of cgmp levels revealed that angii treatment decreased cgmp in wt mice to levels comparable to those of the ko mice which were unaltered by the treatment. our study will provide further mechanistic insights in the molecular interactions between constrictor and dilator stimuli in the vasculature. nanomaterials are already used today and offer even greater use and benefits in the future. the progress of nanotechnology must be accompanied by investigations of their potential harmful effects. for airborne nanomaterials, lung toxicity is a major concern and obviously the particle size is discussed as a critical property directing adverse effects. while standard toxicological test methods are generally capable of detecting the toxic effects, the choice of relevant methods for nanomaterials is still discussed. we have investigated two genotoxic endpoints -alkaline comet assay in lung tissue and micronucleation in polychromatic erythrocytes of the bone marrow -in a combined study hours after a single instillation of µg gold nanoparticles (np) into the trachea of male adult wistar rats. the administration of three test materials differing only in their primary particle size ( -, -and -nm) did not lead to relevant dna damage in the mentioned tests. the measurement of clinical pathology parameters in bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (balf) and blood indicated neither relevant local reactions in the animals' lungs nor adverse systemic effects. minor histopathology findings occurred in the lung of the animals exposed to -nm and -nm sized nanomaterials. in conclusion, under the conditions of this study the different sized gold np tested were non-genotoxic and showed no systemic and local adverse effects at the given dose. platelet dense granule secretion mediates platelet-dependent enhancement of tumor cell transmigration and formation of metastases schumacher d., strilic b., wettschureck n., offermanns s. mpi für herz-und lungenforschung offermanns, ludwigstr. , bad nauheim, germany tumor cell metastasis to distant organs is the primary cause of mortality in cancer patients. tumor cells leave the primary tumor, intravasate, survive in the circulation and extravasate through the endothelial cell layer to grow in the target organ. it has long been known that blood platelets play an important role in tumor cell survival and dissemination, but the mechanism by which platelets promote metastasis remained unclear. given that platelets are found closely associated with tumor cells shortly after vascular arrest, we explored whether platelets can facilitate the transmigration of tumor cells through the endothelium and thereby promote extravasation of tumor cells into the organ parenchyma. the ability of various mouse and human tumor cells like lewis-lung carcinoma cells (llc ), b f melanoma cells or human neuroblastoma cells (sh-sy y) to transmigrate through an endothelial cell layer was strongly enhanced by seeding tumor cells together with mouse or human platelets onto the endothelial cell layer. this indicates that platelets facilitate tumor cell transmigration in vitro. we found that platelet granule secretion is involved in this process as supernatant from platelets incubated with tumor cells but not from resting platelets was sufficient to enhance tumor cell transmigration. additionally, no platelet-mediated increase of tumor cell transmigration was observed in dense granule secretion-defective platelets of munc - deficient mice. thus, dense granule secretion is required for platelet-dependent tumor cell extravasation in vitro. while the growth and weight of primary tumors after subcutaneous injection of llc and b cells was indistinguishable between wild-type mice and animals lacking munc - , the number of metastases in the lung was strongly reduced in munc - -deficient animals. the strong decrease in formation of metastases in munc - deficient mice was also observed after i.v. injection of llc and b f cells. thus, platelet dense granule secretion plays a critical role in tumor cell metastasis by enhancing tumor cell transmigration through the endothelial cell layer. formation of dna adducts in mouse tissues by the brassica ingredient methoxy- -indolylmethyl glucosinolate and its break-down product -methoxy- indolylmethyl alcohol schumacher f. , engst w. glucosinolates are secondary metabolites present at substantial levels in cruciferous vegetables, such as broccoli and cabbage. after injury of plant tissue they are activated by the enzyme myrosinase to form various electrophilic degradation products like isothiocyanates. we previously showed that -methoxy- -indolylmethyl ( -mim) glucosinolate (or neoglucobrassicin) is a potent genotoxicant in bacterial and mammalian cells after activation by myrosinase. the induction of mutations could be correlated with the formation of dna adducts [ ] . we have identified and synthesized the major dna adducts n -( -mim)-dg and n -( -mim)-da. moreover, we developed a highly sensitive uplc-esi-ms/ms method for selective mrm quantification of these adducts using stable-isotopic labeled adducts as internal standards. while the plant enzyme myrosinase is probably almost completely inactivated after cooking the vegetables, the glucosinolates reach the gut mostly intact due to their good heat and ph stability. enzymes of individual intestinal bacteria are able to cleave the glycosidic bond of the glucosinolates, which leads to the formation of reactive metabolites within the gut lumen. we were able to detect significant levels of n -( -mim)-dg and n -( -mim)-da in a dose-dependent manner in the large intestine of mice treated orally with isolated -mim glucosinolate. the peak levels of n -( -mim)-dg and n -( -mim)-da in the murine large intestine were reached h after a single administration of µmol -mim glucosinolate/ kg body weight. the oral application of the relatively stable metabolite -mim alcohol to mice led to the formation of identical dna adducts. this benzylic alcohol can be activated by sulfotransferases to an electrophilic sulfo conjugate. in contrast to the intact glucosinolate the orally administered -mim alcohol generated significant levels of n -( -mim)-dg and n -( -mim)-da not only in the large intestine but also in other tissues, such as the liver, of mice. [ ] h. glatt, c. baasanjav-gerber, f. schumacher, b. h. monien, m. schreiner, h. frank, a. seidel, w. engst, chem.-biol. interact., ( ) human pregnane x receptor genotype of the donor but not of the recipient is a risk factor for delayed graft function after renal transplantation schwab m. , , schaeffeler e. delayed graft function (dgf) is an important immediate complication in renal transplantation significantly contributing to decreased long-term allograft survival. in addition to donor-and recipient-related risk factors altered renal excretion of xenobiotics by membrane transporters may influence dgf as well. using recipients' and donors' dna, we assessed the impact of genetic variants on dgf for the transporter proteins, pglycoprotein (abcb ) and multidrug resistance protein (abcc ), and the nuclear pregnane x receptor (pxr/nr i ), regulating the transcription of drug metabolizing enzymes and membrane transporters. in our local cohort of transplant patients (n= ) dgf occurred in . %. logistic regression analysis using four different genetic models (i.e. co-dominant, dominant, recessive and log additive) indicates that only the donor's pxr rs tt genotype was significantly associated with dgf (recessive model: or, . ; %ci, p= . unadjusted) , even after correction for multiple testing (p= . holm-adjusted). when we performed multivariate analysis including genetic and clinical co-variates (i.e. age, gender, hla mismatches, panelreactive antibodies, immunosuppression using cni, t cell-depleting agents, anti-il- receptor antibody and steroids, cold or warm ischemia time, living vs deceased donors or graft loss) again dgf was significantly associated only with the pxr rs tt genotype of the donor (recessive model: or, . ; % ci, . - . ; p= . unadjusted) which held true after correction for multiple testing (p= . ). for abcc variants only the donor rs t>a genotype correlated with dgf by univariate (or, . ; %ci, p= . unadjusted) as well as by multivariate analysis (or, . ; %ci, p= . ; table ) but not after correction for multiple testing (p= . ). for variants in the abcb gene no significant associations with dgf were detected for both the donor's and the recipient's genotype. in summary, our findings suggest for the first time that pxr may be a risk gene for the development of dgf independently from previously identified risk factors. supported by the robert-bosch foundation, stuttgart, germany, the bmbf grant is c (berlin, germany) and by the ferdinand eisenberger grant of the german society of urology (id krs /fe- ). formation, morphology and structural requirements for formation of microtubule protrusions by clostridium difficile toxin cdt schwan c., kruppke a. s., nölke t., aktories k. institut für experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie i, albertstr. , freiburg, germany clostridium difficile is an anaerobe, gram-positive pathogen. it causes antibioticassociated diarrhoea and pseudomembranous colitis by production of the rho gtpaseglucosylating toxins a and b. recently emerging hypervirulent clostridium difficile strains additionally produce the binary adp-ribosyltransferase toxin cdt (clostridium difficile transferase). cdt is taken up via receptor-mediated endocytosis after binding to the lipolysis stimulated lipoprotein receptor (papatheodorou et al., pnas ) . in the cytosol, cdt adp-ribosylates actin at arg , thereby actin polymerization is blocked, resulting in disruption of the f-actin network. cdt and other binary actin-adp-ribosylating toxins induce redistribution of microtubules in the cell interior and formation of long (> µm) microtubule-based protrusions at the surface of intestinal epithelial cells which increase bacterial adherence (schwan et al., plos pathog ). the clostridial actin-adp-ribosyltransferases influence the dynamicity of microtubules and their capture at the cell cortex by indirectly affecting different microtubule regulating proteins like clasp and acf . besides the influence of cdt on microtubule regulatory proteins, the formation of protrusions depends on plasma membrane composition. depletion of cholesterol, the breakdown of sphingomyelin or inhibition of sphingolipid-synthesis reduce the formation of microtubule-based protrusions. surprisingly, most of the cdt-induced processes contain membrane-tubules derived from the endoplasmatic reticulum (er). the remodeling of the er is microtubule dependent and is mainly mediated by stim that usually functions as a calcium sensor in the er and activates the store operated orai calcium ion channels in the plasma membrane. the data suggest that toxin-induced changes of the microtubule system including alterations of the er, may affect trafficking and er-dependent signalling. bilobalide is a neuroprotective constituent of ginkgo biloba with an unknown mechanism of action. in the present study, we first used microdialysis in mice to evaluate changes in the extracellular fluid of the brain during and after stroke. microdialysis probes were implanted into the striatum of cd- mice, and dialysates were obtained while a monofilament was inserted for min via the common carotid artery (cca) to block perfusion through the middle cerebral artery (mca). while glucose levels dropped immediately upon middle cerebral artery occlusion (mcao), glutamate concentrations in the microdialysates -as measured with a cma analyzer -rose extensively during ischemia to more than % of baseline level. both glucose and glutamate levels recovered rapidly when mcao was terminated after min. when bilobalide ( µm) was perfused into the striatum through the microdialysis probe during mcao, glucose levels dropped but the neurotoxic rise of glutamate was significantly attenuated and reached only % of baseline level (p< . ). in the following experiments, we investigated the activity of mitochondria in ischemic brain. ischemia was induced by mcao, and ischemic as well as "healthy" tissue from the opposite hemisphere was obtained. mitochondria were isolated and mitochondrial respiration was monitored using the oroboros ® oxygraph. significant deficits of respiration were observed after ischemia. in the healthy hemisphere, the respiratory states (leak i+ii, complex i+ii+iv, oxidative phosphorylation (oxphos) and electron transport system (ets) capacity) showed a decrease of oxygen consumption to - % of sham-operated mice. in the ischemic hemisphere, several values were lower at % of sham-operated mice (leak i+ii, complex ii+iv,oxphos and ets) whereas complex i showed a remarkably low respiratory capacity of % of baseline. direct addition of bilobalide ( µm) to post-ischemic mitochondria caused a -fold increase of complex i activity in vitro. pretreatment of mice with bilobalide ( mg/kg i.p.) one hour before mcao caused a significant, -fold improvement of complex i respiration when measured ex vivo. these data clearly indicate that bilobalide targets mitochondrial processes within the respiratory chain, preserving complex i function during ischemia. this action likely explains its neuroprotextive activity in vivo. unreacted resin monomers such as -hydroxyethyl methacrylate (hema) are environmental stressors released from dental composites after incomplete polymerization. the production of reactive oxygen species (ros) is a major response of cells to monomer exposure. moreover, adverse effects of monomers including delayed cell differentiation or mineralization processes, dna damage or apoptosis are associated with increased ros production. the intracellular redox homeostasis is controlled by the major non-enzymatic antioxidant glutathione (gsh), and antioxidant enzymes. here, we hypothesized that cells exposed to hema responded by a differential expression of antioxidant enzymes such as superoxide dismutase (sod- ), catalase (cat) or glutathione peroxidase (gpx / ). raw . mouse macrophages were exposed to hema ( - mm) for h, and protein expression was analyzed by western blotting. to study the influence of intracellular gsh on enzyme expression, gsh synthesis was reduced by the inhibitor buthionine sulfoximine ( µm bso), or enhanced by -oxothiazolidine- -carboxylate ( mm otc) and n-acetyl cysteine ( mm nac). expression of sod- found in untreated cultures was decreased in the presence of hema and even further reduced by bso. in contrast, nac counteracted hemainduced inhibition of sod- expression. cat expression was not detected in untreated cells, however, the enhanced expression of cat in cells exposed to hema indicated the decomposition of abundant levels of hydrogen peroxide. the minor influence of bso or otc showed that expression of cat was independent of gsh levels while a decrease of hema-induced cat expression in the presence of nac indicated reduced oxidative stress. gpx / was expressed in untreated cultures, and its down-regulation by bso indicated that this enzyme was primarily responsible for h o decomposition. the inhibitory effect of hema on gpx / expression was enhanced by bso but counteracted by otc or nac. these findings indicate that h o is the predominant reactive oxygen species generated in the presence of dental resin monomers like hema. abundant h o production leads to the activation of cat expression and a feed-back inhibition of sod- expression. the hema-induced reduction of gpx / expression is most likely a consequence of reduced gsh levels because of the formation of glutathione disulfide (gssg) or by gsh-hema adducts. the life-threatening effects of certain organophosphorus compounds such as soman or fenamiphos cannot be antagonized adequately by the treatment with atropine and oximes. alternative approaches are necessary. since the adequate restoration of disturbed muscle function is considered to be life-saving, a model is needed for screening of potentially therapeutic substances. an established model for the development of such new therapies is the diaphragm preparation. however, this model requires a large number of animals and experimental available time frame is limited to some hours. here, the organotypic nerve-muscle co-culture may be an appropriate alternative, because a large number of specimens with low numbers of animals and a long period of investigation over several days is possible. in the present study, the restoration of vx paralysed muscle function with obidoxime was investigated by using both models. slices of spinal cord and muscle tissue were dissected from mice embryos (e - ) , fixed to coverslips and incubated in roller tubes for about - weeks. spontaneous muscle activity was recorded by video microscopic techniques and was quantified offline. muscle force production in mice diaphragm preparations was elicited by indirect field stimulation technique in a chamber organ bath and quantified as time-force diagrams (auc) that were expressed as relative changes of the muscle force compared to the control data. application of the nerve agent vx ( . µm) resulted in a strong reduction of muscle activity in the co-culture and of muscle force production in the diaphragm muscle. after obidoxime ( µm) was added spontaneous muscle activity in the co culture recovered from . ± . hz to . ± . hz (control . + . hz) . muscle force remained stable over the next days. the vx-blocked muscle force of diaphragm was restored to . ± . % by obidoxime compared to control. muscle force production after indirect stimulation was stable for hours only. our results suggest that the organotypic nerve-muscle co-cultures may be an appropriate tool for the screening of new therapeutic approaches in restoration of blocked neuromuscular transmission. moreover, the model offers an additional advantage as long-term experiments may be performed and pre-and postsynaptic effects may be assessed directly. additionally, the number of experimental animals could be reduced. the modulation of gene expression by the transcription factor crem (camp responsiveelement modulator) represents a fundamental mechanism of gene control in response to elevation of intracellular camp levels. in vascular smooth muscle cells (vsmcs) crem is involved in the regulation of cell proliferation and apoptosis supporting its relevance for vascular proliferative diseases. mice with a global inactivation of crem (cko) showed a significant increase in neointima formation after ligation of the carotid artery and an increase of atherosclerotic plaque formation after high fat diet on an apoe knockout background compared to wildtype controls (wt). on the cellular level a crem deficiency was associated with a . fold increased proliferation rate of primary vsmcs after stimulation with the platelet-derived growth factor (pdgf; n= from isolations). microarray analysis and subsequent realtime-rt-pcr validation revealed that the alpha-type platelet-derived growth factor receptor (pdgfra) the regulator of g-protein signaling (rgs ) and peptidylprolyl isomerase a (ppia) were . - . fold upregulated in pdgf treated cko vsmcs compared to wt vsmcs (n= ). transcripts of rgs ( . fold, ) and ppia ( . fold, were also upregulated in the carotid artery of cko mice in comparison to wt mice (n= - ). we conclude that crem deficiency is associated with transcriptional changes of rgs , pdgfra, ppia, which might explain the increased proliferation rate in cko vsmcs and the increased responsiveness to pathophysiological conditions. (supported by the izkf münster). the role of non-catalytic p and p subunits in regulating phosphoinositide kinase γ by gβγ and h-ras shymanets a. phosphoinositide -kinase γ (pi kγ) controls a plethora of cellular responses. pi kγ, a heterodimer formed by non-catalytic p or p and catalytic p γ subunits, is regulated by gβγ and ras. earlier we speculated that p binds to gβγ to translocate cytosolic pi kγ to the plasma membrane, enabling direct activation of p γ (brock et al., j. cell biol. ) . however, the p subunit does not function as gβγ adapter (kurig et al., pnas ) . since the impact of each non-catalytic subunit in regulating p γ by gβγ and ras still remains elusive, we studied their role in detail. gβ γ variants harbouring mutations in positions involved in interaction with gα subunit were purified from sf cells and tested for their ability to activate pi kγ. we observed that p , but not p , was able to rescue the stimulatory activity of gβ γ mutants incapable to activate p γ (shymanets et al., biochem. j. doi: . /bj ). to further study the functional impact of the non-catalytic subunits on pi kγ regulation, we have designed phospholipid vesicles containing similar amounts of recombinant pi kγ variants. although p /p γ exhibited stronger sensitivity to gβ γ than p γ, the activity of vesicles-associated p /p γ was significantly higher as compared to vesicles-associated p /p γ or p γ in the absence and in the presence of gβ γ . to study an effect of ras proteins on pi kγ variants, recombinantly expressed h-ras was purified from sf cells. the posttranslational processing and lipidation of the protein was verified by mass spectrometry analysis. the impact of h-ras on regulation of p /p γ and p /p γ differed, which may explain integration of pi kγ variants in different signalling pathways. taken together, p and p subunits implement discrete functions in respect to (i) membrane recruitment of pi kγ and (ii) regulation of enzymatic activity by gβγ and h-ras. preparation of consolidated exposure scenarios for mixtures under reach sica m., dorn s., mostert v. dr. knoell consult gmbh, marie-curie-str. , leverkusen, germany under reach, formulators of mixtures need to include substance-related information into extended safety data sheets (esds), if mixtures are classified as dangerous according to the dangerous preparation directive (directive / /ec). one way to add information on substances into esds of mixtures is to generate exposure scenarios (ess) for mixtures. in order to fulfil this task, two approaches have been developed for the identification of the risk-determining substances (lead substances) in the mixtures: the critical component approach (cca) relies on dnels and pnecs for all substances, their concentrations in the mixtures as well as substance and use-specific availability parameters (echa, ) . in contrast, the dpd+ method is based on the legislation for classification of preparations (directive / /ec). the dpd+ method defines a lead substance for each route of human exposure and for the aquatic environment (cefic, ) . however, each of these methods has certain limitations. the aim of the present work is to improve the preparation of consolidated ess for a number of mixtures and provide information about their safe use. to this end, we first adopted information on risk management measures (rmms) and operational conditions (ocs) of the lead substances using the dpd+ methodology. at the same time, we considered the specific conditions of use of the mixtures (e.g. spraying, brush painting). we then conducted risk assessments by deriving dnels for the mixtures and using exposure modelling tools recommended under reach (e.g., ecetoc tra, riskofderm, art). we compared the outcome of these assessments with results obtained from the application of the dpd+ methodology. the work presents the results of application of dpd+ approach and the cca and indicates possible improvements for the risk assessment of mixtures. to check for seasonal and weather dependent influences in the prescription rate of drugs used to treat cardiovascular and respiratory diseases (atc codes c and r) a survey covering all prescriptions of a specimen german general regional health insurance (aok plus, data for saxony, largest health insurance service, approx. % of all saxonian citizens are inscribed to this service) for the years to was analysed on a monthly basis. the number of prescriptions for cardiovascular drugs changed approximately +/- % around the mean for the different month without a clear seasonal pattern. for respiratory drugs only the systemic anticholinergics and drugs used to treat obstructive lung disease displayed a distinct seasonal pattern with a - % above average prescription figure during spring time (february to may) and a to % trough in late summer/autumn (july to october). the data have to be analysed for further cofounders (e.g. influenza prevalence, environmental conditions etc.) to fully understand the fluctuations observed. the prescription rate for cardiovascular drugs and respiratory drugs seems to be influenced by multiple factors aside seasonal influences. pasteurella multocida toxin prevents osteoblast differentiation by activation of heterotrimeric g proteins siegert p., aktories k., orth j. institut für experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie abt. i, albertstr. , freiburg i. br., germany pasteurella multocida toxin (pmt) is a major virulence factor of pasteurella multocida causing pasteurellosis in man and animals and is responsible for atrophic rhinitis in pigs. the toxin modulates various signaling pathways by acting on the heterotrimeric g proteins gαq, gα / and gαi. pmt activates gq to increase inositol phosphate production via phospholipase cβ and alteration of gene expression via the jak/stat pathway. the toxin also activates rhoa via gαq and gα / family proteins. we showed that the underlying mechanism of the activation of heterotrimeric g proteins is a deamidation of an essential glutamine residue leading to a constitutive activation of the g protein. because pmt is the causative agent to induce progressive atrophic rhinitis in pigs, which is characterized by loss of nasal turbinate bones leading to a twisting and/or shortening of the snout, we studied the effect of pmt on bone cells. here we studied the effect of the toxin on osteoblast differentiation in st- cells and in primary osteoblasts from rat calvaria. st- cells are stromal derived cells, which can be differentiated into osteoblasts or adipocytes. the toxin inhibits the differentiation of st- cells into osteoblasts studied by determination of specific osteoblast markers. additionally, pmt represses the induction of transcription factors essential for osteoblast differentiation. moreover, the principal pathways activated by pmt to induce these effects were investigated. ventilator-induced lung injury (vili) is a serious problem in intensive care medicine. its mechanisms are only incompletely understood, although it is widely accepted that ventilation-induced inflammation (biotrauma) makes an important contribution. the isolated perfused mouse lung (ipl) is a valuable tool to investigate the mechanisms of vili. several studies have shown considerable differences between various mouse strains with respect to lung mechanics and inflammatory responses. therefore, we hypothesized that the pulmonary responses to mechanical ventilation differ between c bl/ and balb/c mice. in addition, this study introduces the novel half lung technique that allows to obtain lung tissue from the same mouse at two different time points. isolated perfused mouse lungs from c bl/ or balb/c were subjected to high ( cmh o) or low pressure ( cmh o) ventilation for minutes. after minutes the left lung was removed and used for western blot analysis. the right lung was ventilated for another minutes. by the end of experiment the right lung was removed and qrt-pcr performed. during the whole experiment perfusate sample were taken from the venous catheter and used for protein quantification by elisa. it was possible to remove half of the lung and to further ventilate the other half without acute changes in lung mechanics. in both strains high pressure ventilation elicited a significantly higher cytokine release than low pressure ventilation. c bl/ mice showed higher tnf, il- β and amphiregulin levels after high pressure ventilation, whereas balb/c exhibited increased production of cxc chemokines (cxcl- , cxcl- ) and il- . kinase activities (jnk, akt, erk / , p map kinase) were increased in high pressure ventilated animals, but were strain independent. the novel half lung technique builds on the well established ipl method. it permits to separately analyze the left and the right lung at different time points during continual ventilation. this method reduces animal numbers by % and allows statistical within subject analysis. using this method, the present study showed that inflammatory response to mechanical ventilation differ between c bl/ and balb/c. these findings show that the biotrauma response in mice depends on the strain that is studied. macrophages play an important role as an integral part of the first line of immune defense. two different macrophage populations have been described. m macrophages produce proinflammatory cytokines and are involved in inflammatory processes. by contrast, m macrophages release anti-inflammatory cytokines and extracellular matrix components. they can enhance wound repair and angiogenesis, but they can also promote tumor progression. recently, industrial nanoparticles have raised concerns because of their putative toxic effects. on the other hand, specifically designed nanoparticles can be used as clinical diagnostics and as drug carriers for pharmacotherapy. thus, investigations on the interactions of engineered nanoparticles with living cells and organisms are of great importance. macrophages as phagocytosing cells scavenge nanoparticles circulating in the bloodstream. therefore, we analyzed how nanoparticles with different surface functionalization might affect functions of human macrophages. monocytes were isolated from buffy coats and differentiated to macrophages with macrophage colony-stimulating factor. carboxy-(ps-cooh) and amino-(ps-nh ) functionalized polystyrene nanoparticles were produced by the miniemulsion polymerization process and the average particle size, the polydispersity index and their zeta potential were determined by dynamic light scattering. the macrophages were cultured in the presence or absence of different concentrations of ps-cooh and ps-nh nanoparticles for up to days. analysis of cell viability revealed that ps-nh but not ps-cooh concentration-and time-dependently reduced the macrophage viability. by annexin v/propidium iodide double staining we could show that ps-nh trigger apoptosis in macrophages. we further polarized macrophages to either m or m using ifn-γ and lps or il- , respectively. these macrophage populations were characterized by their expression of extracellular markers by flow cytometry and their production of cytokines by elisa. the effects of functionalized polysterene nanoparticles on the cytokine production and surface marker expression of m and m macrophages were analyzed. our data indicate that surface functionalization is a critical parameter in the nanoparticle-induced toxicity in human macrophages. this work was supported by the dfg spp . loos c., lunov o., syrovets t., simmet t. ulm university institute of pharmacology of natural products & clinical pharmacology, helmholtzstr. , ulm, germany nanoparticles are currently used for various medical applications including imaging, diagnosis and drug delivery. due to particle size and surface area, their fundamental properties differ significantly from those of corresponding bulk materials. nanoparticles circulating in the blood are mainly sequestrated by the reticuloendothelial system that consists predominantly of phagocytic macrophages. macrophages express a variety of cellular receptors for sensing and internalizing particular material like viruses, microorganisms, and foreign particulate matter including nanoparticles. therefore, a detailed understanding of the intracellular fate and processing of the nanoparticles by macrophages is indispensable for controlled biomedical applications of nanoparticles. introducing distinct surface modifications, one might control nanoparticle uptake by different cell types and thereby target specific tissues and cellular compartments. tumor cell lines are frequently used as models for primary cells to analyze the effect of nanoparticles on cells. here we show that carboxy-(ps-cooh) and aminofunctionalized (ps-nh ) polystyrene nanoparticles of ~ nm in diameter are internalized by human macrophages, thp- monocytic leukemia cells, and by pmadifferentiated thp- cells via different mechanisms. in buffer, macrophages and thp- rapidly internalize both types of nanoparticles, yet, the carboxy-functionalized particles were taken up to a higher extent. the uptake of both nanoparticles was drastically reduced in media containing serum. using pharmacological and antisense in vitro knockdown approaches, we showed that the specific interaction between cd receptors and the particles determines the macrophage uptake of particles by phagocytosis, whereas particle internalization by thp- cells occurred via dynamin iidependent endocytosis. by contrast, pma-differentiated thp- cells took up the particles via macropinocytosis. in line with the in vitro data, more intravenously applied ps-cooh particles accumulated in liver tissue, whereas ps-nh were preferentially targeted to tumor tissue. these data show that the amount of particle internalization, the uptake mechanisms, and kinetics differ significantly among primary cells and model tumor cells, whether differentiated or not, and that they are further critically dependent on the particle opsonisation by serum proteins. this work was supported by the dfg spp . specifically designed and functionalized nanoparticles hold great promise for a variety of biomedical applications. to ensure their safe application, such particles require a rigorous analysis of their effects on cell functions. here we demonstrate that aminofunctionalized polystyrene nanoparticles (ps-nh ) of ~ nm in diameter in contrast to carboxy-(ps-cooh) and nonfunctionalized (ps) particles induce an nlrp inflammasome activation and the subsequent release of il- β in human macrophages. amino-functionalized ps nanoparticles induced time-dependent lysosomal destabilization followed by release of lysosomal enzymes. this resulted in mitochondrial damage and formation of reactive oxygen species. accumulation of mitochondrial reactive oxygen species was accompanied by oxidation of thioredoxin, a protein playing a central role in maintaining the cellular redox balance. upon oxidation, thioredoxin dissociated from the thioredoxin-interacting protein (txnip). liberated txnip, in turn, interacted with the nlrp protein resulting in a conformational change of the pyrin domain of the nlrp protein as predicted by molecular modeling. txnip interaction with nlrp led to assembly of the nlrp inflammasome complex, to caspase- activation, and release of il- β. using an in vitro knockdown approach, we showed that ps-nh induced activation exclusively of nlrp , whereas other inflammasomes remained unaffected. treatment of macrophages with n-acetyl-l-cysteine, a scavenger of reactive oxygen species, abolished both, the caspase- activation and the subsequent release of il- β caused by ps-nh nanoparticles. these data reveal a novel mechanism of the nlrp activation induced by amino-functionalized nanoparticles and provide a strategy as to how such an effect can be functionally antagonized by supplementation with a radical scavenger. this work was supported by the dfg spp . the semi-permeable barrier of the endothelial cell lining of the blood vessels has important synthetic and metabolic functions including transport of cells and biomolecules, regulation of vascular smooth muscle tone, and control of hemostasis. plasmin is a serine protease, which is generated from its zymogen plasminogen under physiological and pathological conditions. small amounts of plasmin are produced in the context of contact activation during inflammation. consistently, increased generation of plasmin has been reported during atherosclerosis. we have shown previously that plasmin, in addition to its role in fibrinolysis, could induce proinflammatory activation of various cells including monocytes, macrophages, and dendritic cells. therefore, we analyzed how plasmin might affect the functions of endothelial cells, which could be relevant during inflammation and atherosclerosis. using flow cytometry, western immunoblotting and fluorescent microscopy, we show that endothelial cells of different origin express the plasmin receptor complex composed of annexin a and s a . addition of plasmin to human umbilical vein endothelial cells (huvec) induced timeand concentration-dependent cytotoxic effects in the cells. in addition, within min plasmin triggered a rapid and prolonged expression of free radical oxygen species (ros) in endothelial cells as analyzed by microscopy and fluorometry using the rossensitive dye carboxy-h dcfda. the ros production in endothelial cells was accompanied by cell detachment. fluorometric and western blot analysis of caspase activation in the cells treated with plasmin showed that plasmin induced apoptotic cell death in endothelial cells, which was evident already several hours after exposure to plasmin. thus, plasmin might induce production of ros in endothelial cells, their detachment and apoptosis, events which might be relevant for the development of atherosclerosis. this work was supported by the dfg. sesquiterpene lactones (stl) comprise a large group of secondary plant metabolites that constitute the active principle of a number of traditional anti-inflammatory phytomedicines. specifically helenalin and parthenolide have recently gained considerable attention as lead compounds or putative therapeutics for the treatment of inflammation and possibly cancer. both compounds have been shown to interfere with the signal transduction through inhibition of the nuclear factor κb (nf-κb). whereas the inhibitory effects of the stl on nf-κb are undisputed, their molecular mechanism of action remains a matter of debate. surface plasmon resonance (spr) analysis allows label-free measurement of molecular interactions. yet, analysis of the interaction of immobilized recombinant proteins with small molecular ligands remains a technically challenging task. in the present study we used spr technology to investigate the molecular interaction of the stl helenalin with putative intracellular target proteins such as the nf-κb protein p /rela, the catalytic subunits of the ikk complex, namely ikkα and ikkβ, and the intracellular antioxidant glutathione (gsh). at physiological ph . , helenalin interacts with rela (k d = . µm), yet it failed to bind either ikkα or ikkβ. hence, when dna with nf-κb binding consensus sequence was immobilized on sensor chips, the binding of rela was inhibited by helenalin with an ic of . µm. moreover, we provided several lines of evidence that stl may modify rela on cysteine by a michael-type addition. this interaction was confirmed by molecular docking that identified the best matching interaction between rela and helenalin with predicted hydrogen bonding interactions between helenalin and residues arg , lys , gly and ile of rela. consistent with our hypothesis that helenalin interacts with sulfhydryl groups at ph . , helenalin was also able to interact with reduced, but not oxidized, glutathione with a kd of µm, though no significant interaction was observed at ph . . thus, we showed that the sesquiterpene lactone helenalin interacts with the nf-κb protein rela but not with ikkα or ikkβ. moreover, at physiological ph, helenalin does not interact with glutathione to any significant extent. direct interaction of helenalin with rela leading to inhibition of rela-dna binding and transactivation might present the molecular mechanisms underlying the anti-inflammatory effects of stls. although nanosized materials are quickly taken up by macrophages, our understanding of the involved processes is still rather limited. therefore, we analyzed the uptake of diagnostically used carboxydextran-coated iron oxide nanoparticles of two different sizes, superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles of nm (spio) and ultrasmall superparamagnetic iron oxide nanoparticles of nm (uspio), by human macrophages. by pharmacological and in vitro knockdown approaches, the principal uptake mechanism of macrophages for both particles was identified as clathrin-mediated, scavenger receptor a-dependent endocytosis. further, we created a mathematical model of the nanoparticle uptake by macrophages that permitted determination of key parameters of endocytotic process, such as the uptake rate, the mean uptake time, the number of particles taken up by a cell, and the correlation between the number of internalized particles and their extracellular concentration. the model also provided information on the individual and collective wrapping time of the nanoparticles and described the relation between biophysical parameters such as cytoskeletal forces, membrane elasticity, and the uptake time. finally, we gained information on the minimal linear spacing between simultaneously acting neighboring endocytotic pits that contain single nanoparticles and govern the collective uptake process. the calculated parameters were further confirmed experimentally using spinning disc confocal microscopy. thus, the new model provides important insights into the biophysical processes involved in endocytosis of nanoparticles by human macrophages. this work was supported by the dfg spp . prostaglandins (pg) are hormones which are formed during inflammatory processes from arachidonic acid by cyclooxygenases and prostaglandin synthases [ ] . in the subsequent metabolism, in which the five-membered ring is dehydrated, α,β-unsaturated carbonyl compounds are generated [ , ] . these come along with mercapto groups of amino acids in a michael addition reaction associated with activation of cellular enzyme cascades [ ] that potentially contribute to their possessed antiinflammatory, antineoplastic and antiviral effects [ ] . however little is known so far about possible adverse health effects.we addressed the question whether selected cyclopentenone prostaglandins (cypg) exhibit potential mutagenic and genotoxic properties in the hamster lung fibroblast cell line v . induction of dna damage was investigated by single cell gel electrophoresis assay (scge). the impact of cypg on cellular redox status was detected by total glutathione (tgsh) assay. the induction of micronuclei and apoptosis was determined by staining with ', -diamidino- -phenylindole (dapi). furthermore the hypo-xanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (hprt) assay was used for mutagenicity testing. , followed by prostaglandin a (pga ), showed the most distinctive genotoxicity, i.e., induction of micronuclei, and apoptotic effects. furthermore, the dpgj and pga -induced significant decrease in the tgsh level in v may contribute to the observed increase in oxidative dna-damage. however, none of the tested cypg exhibited mutagenic properties in the hprt assay. in conclusion, a potential in vitro genotoxicity of cypg has been observed which may be involved in carcinogenesis associated with chronic inflammation. parabens and methylisothiazolinone are used as preservatives in personal care products. sensitization to parabens and methylisothiazolinone is relatively rare considering their wide use in cosmetics, but only few quantitative or clinical data exist. therefore, we have tested methyl-, ethyl-, propyl-, isopropyl-, butyl-, isobutyl-, pentyl-, phenyl-and benzylparaben , and methylisothiazolinone in the loose-fit coculture-based sensitization assay (lcsa) developed by our working group. the coculture of primary human keratinocytes and allogenic dendritic cell-related cells (dc-rc) in this assay emulates the in vivo situation of the human skin. sensitization potential of the test substances was determined by flow cytometric analysis of the dc-rc maturation marker cd . determination of the concentration required to cause a half-maximal increase in cd -expression (ec ) allowed a quantitative evaluation. the irritative potential of the substances was assessed by -aad ( -amino-actinomycin d)-staining. the concentration required to devitalize % of the examined cells compared to a zero control was termed ec %. parabens exhibited weak (methyl-, ethyl-, propyl-and isopropylparaben) or strong (butyl-, isobutyl-, pentyl-and benzylparaben) sensitizing potential, phenylparaben was found to be a moderate sensitizer, with ec -values ranging from . µmol/l (pentylparaben) to . µmol/l (methylparaben). due to a pronounced cytotoxicity (ec % = . µmol/l), we could not estimate an ec -value for methylisothiazolinone. sensitization potential of parabens correlated with side chain length. parabens showed no (methyl-and ethylparaben) or weak irritative potential (propyl-, isopropyl-, butyl-, isobutyl-, phenyl-and benzylparaben) , only pentylparaben was rated to be irritative. apart from phenyl-and benzylparaben, irritative potential also correlated with side chain length but did not correlate strictly with the sensitization potential. overall, we were able to demonstrate and compare the sensitizing potential of parabens in this in vitro test. it was weak for methyl-and propylparaben, the most commonly used parabens. furthermore, we showed an irritative potential for most of the perservatives. thus the lcsa is a useful in vitro test to compare the sensitizing potential of xenobiotics. phosphorylation of the neurodegeneration-related septin by protein kinase dyrk a at serine affects protein stability soppa u. septins are gtp-binding proteins forming heterooligomeric complexes and filaments by interactions of the family members. these complexes have important functions by building scaffolds for proteins involved in cell cycle or cell polarity but their subcellular distribution as well as their regulation remain largely unclear. septin (sept ) was found in neurodegeneration related protein aggregates and is associated with migration of cortical neurons. here we first describe a potential mechanism for regulation of sept by phosphorylation via dual specificity tyrosine-phosphorylation-regulated kinase a (dyrk a). dyrk a is overexpressed in down syndrome and supposed to be involved in neurodevelopment and neurodegeneration. by site directed mutagenesis of flag tagged mouse sept and overexpression in hela cells we identified serine as the major phosphorylation site of dyrk a and generated a phosphospecific antibody. transient coexpression of sept and dyrk a in hela cells increased phosphorylation of serine by % in relation to basal phosphorylation. in contrast, cotransfection of the kinase deficient dyrk a mutants k r and d n did not increase serine phosphorylation. moreover we could show, that inhibition of kinase activity by the dyrk a inhibitor harmine reduced phosphorylation of exogenous sept at serine about % in hela cells. furthermore, down regulation of dyrk a by rna interference lead to decreased phosphorylated serine . these results indicate that endogenous dyrk a contributes to sept phosphorylation in hela cells. finally we analyzed protein stability of wild type sept compared to the phosphorylation resistant s a mutant in hela cells by inhibition of translation with cycloheximide. we found that in living cells the sept s a mutant is more stable than wild type sept . in summary, our results suggest phosphorylation at serine by dyrk a as a novel mechanism to regulate sept stability and indicate a possible link of these proteins in cellular processes. is formaldehyde a good example for a "genotoxic carcinogen" with a threshold mode of action? speit g. institut für humangenetik, universität ulm, ulm, germany formaldehyde (fa) induces toxic and genotoxic effects in directly exposed cells (site of contact). several studies in which fa was administered to rats by inhalation showed evidence of tumor induction in nasal epithelium. there is also some epidemiological evidence that fa causes nasopharyngeal cancer in humans. although fa is a known mutagen, it is still a matter of discussion whether carcinogenesis is primarily mediated via a mutagenic mode of action. there is evidence that cytotoxicity and induced proliferation are the main causes for tumor formation. however, a decisive role of mutagenesis cannot be excluded and a mutagenic mode of action has to be considered for risk estimation. the basic assumption is that mutagens have a non-threshold mode of action. a threshold mode of action for a chemical is likely when a substance with a known mutagenic potential does not induce mutations at low concentrations due to a specific type of reaction with the genetic material and / or physiological protective mechanisms. because fa is a directly acting dna-reactive substance, a threshold mode of action may only be considered because of physiological protective mechanisms. after inhalation, pre-lesion protection occurs by unspecific binding to mucus, cellular proteins and glutathione. furthermore, fa is efficiently inactivated by enzymatic pathways. if fa reaches and damages the nuclear dna, dna repair mechanisms act as efficient postlesion protection mechanisms. in vivo inhalation studies with rats indicated that fa induces primary dna damage in the nasal epithelium but increased mutation frequencies were not measured. data are now available to show the relative distribution of endogenous versus exogenous dna adducts in different locations of the nose and other organs. considering the fa concentrations present in every living cell and the background levels of endogenous dna adducts, appropriate risk assessment and the identification of practical thresholds for fa-induced genotoxicity become feasible. fraud and misconduct in clinical trials steffen c. formerly federal institute for drugs and medical devices clinical trials unit, kurt-georg-kiesinger-allee , bonn, germany plagiarism in scientific publications has been the subject of public ("guttenplag") and scientific debate. plagiarism violates, however, "only" the intellectual property of its authors. in clinical trials, misconduct may also endager the health of patients. the suppression or falsification of data in clinical trials may mislead patients and doctors to use worthless treatments. clinicians may be provoked to repeat these trials, thereby wasting time and money. in clinical trials, misconduct includes everything from suppression or their repeated publication, the "correction" of unwanted results to the complete invention of the data, their intentional or negligent misinterpretation leading to the publication of biased conclusions from otherwise correctly performed clinical studies. the peer review system cannot protect against fraud, as few reviewers will have the means and the time to reevaluate original data. they will have to rely on these data, the calculations and statistics that are presented to them. some kinds of fraudulent behavior, such as double publications, can be found in the review process, but this is also time-consuming and depends on a helpful librarian. other kind of fraud, as the suppression of patient data in clinical trials (the deletion of "non-responders", according to cinderella: the good ones go into the pot, the bad ones go into your crop) can only be detected by the national competent authorities performing an inspection according to good clinical practice. even if the results of such an inspection become public as in the case of ukrain (gansauge et al. ) , there is no institution that will further analyze and publish the misconduct or initiate the retraction of the incriminated paper. a german agency similar to the us office of scientific integrity could foster good clinical practice in germany. although it is sometimes very difficult to decide whether improper results arise from fraud or error, a bias for the source of funding is obvious. trials funded by for-profit organizations were significantly more likely to recommend the experimental drug as treatment of choice (als-nielsen et al. ) . medicinal products with disputed efficacy such as orally applied enzymes for systemic action, bacterial preparations for irritable bowel syndrome and food supplements are to be reviewed with special attention. further examples from the author's experience will be presented. ]i favors further kca opening, kca may establish a feed-forward regulation of ca + influx. in the present study we analyzed whether kca channels of sk and bk type play a role in sustaining ca + oscillations at g -to s-phase transition of primary mouse tumor cells and in human breast cancer cells, aiming towards a better understanding how kca modulate tumor cell proliferation. methods: kca expression was quantified by qpcr in human breast cancer biopsies, transgenic mmtv/c-neu + mouse mammary tumors and primary tumor cells derived thereof. the identity of the tumor cells was verified by gliolan staining. proliferation of the primary mammary tumor cells in the presence or absence of bk and sk modulators was tested using a real time cell monitoring system. the cellular dna content as a measure for cell ploidity was determined by propidium iodide staining and flow cytometry. changes in [ca + ]i oscillations and peak amplitude were determined using ca + indicator fura- am. results: sk , but not bk, expression is detectable in human and mouse breast cancer biopsies and in primary tumor cells derived from the mmtv/c-neu + mouse model. sk inhibition by tram- dose-dependently ( , to µm) inhibits the growth of primary mammary tumor cells probably by a g cell cycle arrest. ca + oscillations in proliferating mmtv/c-neu + tumor cells were ablated upon pharmacologic inhibition of sk channels. -dependent cell cycle progression is dependent on sk activity. blocking sk disrupts a feed-forward loop that coordinates ca + influx via trp or crac channels in tumor cells. the consequences of sk inhibition in mammary tumors in vivo will be discussed. synthesis of a triphenylphosphonium substituted derivative of -hydroxymethyl- -methylpyrroline n-oxide stolze k. esr combined with spin trapping is a well-known analytical approach to detect free radicals formed in various biological systems, e.g. superoxide, hydroxyl and a series of carbon-centered free radicals, which are involved in oxidative stress. our aim was to modify the established spin trap , -dimethyl-pyrroline n-oxide (dmpo) with a functional side chain, which can be used further as anchor for moieties enabling the spin trap to penetrate mitochondrial membranes, such as the positively charged triphenylphosphonium substituent. several synthetic routes were tested to introduce a -carboxybutyltriphenylphosphonium-substituent to the spin trap -hydroxymethyl- -methylpyrroline noxide (hmmpo). while the activation of the carboxy group via the corresponding chloride was not successful, the use of a mixed anhydride with acetic acid appeared to be a promising way, although the reaction is considerably slower. preliminary spin trapping experiments have been performed with model systems generating superoxide, hydroxyl-, and carbon-centered radicals. othman e. m., stopper h. universität würzburg toxikologie, versbacher str. , würzburg, germany type diabetes mellitus (dm ) is a growing health problem affecting more than million people worldwide. it is associated with severe acute and chronic complications that negatively influence both the quality of life and survival of affected individuals. epidemiological studies clearly indicate that the risk of several types of cancer (including pancreas, liver, breast, colorectal, urinary tract and female reproductive organs) is increased in diabetic patients. diabetic patients are exposed to oxidative stress which plays a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of both micro-and macro-vascular complications. this is due to a decreased antioxidant capacity and chronic exposure to increased levels of reactive oxygen species (ros). since the insulin resistance in dm leads to hyperinsulinemia we studied the cellular consequences of the elevated insulin level and showed that it generates superoxide anions (o -) and dna damage by a nadph oxidase dependent mechanism in cultured cells. in addition, we found elevated genomic damage in the lymphocytes of diabetic patients as well as oxidative stress and genomic damage in kidneys of diabetic rats. this effect of insulin may contribute to the pathogenesis and progression of dm complications including the elevated cancer risk. the classical transient receptor potential (trpc) channel subfamily is regarded as nonselective, calcium permeable cation channels involved in a wide range of physiological events that require calcium signaling. until now, the specific roles of trpc channels in neuronal function are still elusive. given that trpc is able to form receptor-operated heterotetrameric channel complexes with other trpc channel subunits, we investigated the role of trpc for receptor-operated calcium influx in the heterologous expression system as well as in neurons. for this electrophysiological whole-cell measurements, fluorimetric calcium measurements, mn + quenching and qpcr analysis were applied. furthermore, the effect of trpc knock-down on neuronal migration was monitored performing scratch assays, videomicroscopy and g-actin/f-actin assays. employing these techniques, we found that recombinant trpc was not able to function as a homomeric channel. instead, trpc subunits formed functional receptor-operated heteromeric channel complexes with trpc , , , , and . heteromers containing trpc subunits showed significantly decreased calcium permeation in heterologous cell systems. mutation of amino acids in the putative pore forming region of trpc further reduced calcium permeability. in gnrh neurons endogenously expressing trpc , , , and , downregulation of trpc by shrna resulted in increased basal cytosolic calcium concentrations and elevated calcium permeability. trpc was not involved in store-operated cation influx in gnrh neurons. moreover, trpc suppressed the migration of gnrh neurons without affecting cell proliferation. these findings suggest a novel regulatory mechanism relying on the expression of trpc and the subsequent formation of heteromeric trpc channel complexes with reduced calcium permeability, thereby fine-tuning neuronal migration. the transient receptor potential melastatin- (trpm ) is a calcium permeable nonselective cation channel that can be activated by the neurosteroid pregnenolonesulfate (pregs) or heat. trpm is expressed in various tissues, including insulin-secreting βcells and a subset of sensory neurons from dorsal root (drg) and trigeminal ganglia. the ability of pregs to evoke trpm -like currents in pancreatic β-cells and to induce insulin secretion indicated its involvement in blood glucose regulation. however, trpm -/mice show so far no metabolic deficits but further investigations are recommended to evaluate its function in insulin secretion. further studies showed that trpm is a nociceptor channel involved in sensing heat and inflammatory thermal hyperalgesia. we performed a calcium-based screening of a compound library (spectrum collection) that identified several natural compounds as trpm blockers. the most potent blockers were the citrus fruit flavonoids hesperetin and naringenin as well as ononetin, a chalcon from ononis spinosa. the ic values of the substances are in the low micromoles ranges. electrophysiological whole cell measurements as well as calcium measurements confirmed the potency of the trpm blockers. furthermore, we could show that these blockers are effective on endogenous trpm in drg neurons from mice and isolated β-cells. by drinking grapefruit juice naringenin could be consumed in concentrations that are sufficiently high enough to block trpm activity in vivo. in sensory neurons, trpm may exert similar functions as trpv . thus, trpm blocker could bear a therapeutic potential for analgesic treatment. xtt-based cell viability assay was used to determine the half-maximum effect concentration (ec ) for the investigated composite components in hgf. following concentrations of substances were used to determine the induced double strand dna breaks (dsbs): / × ec , / × ec , / × ec , and × ec . each experiment was performed at least four times. hgf were incubated with various concentrations of substances for a period of hours. induced dna double-strand breaks (dsbs) were tested by the γh ax focus assay, which is a direct marker for dsbs using anti γh ax antibodies. for quantitative γh ax analysis foci in cell nucleus were counted by eye down using a fluorescence microscope. each experiment was performed at least four times. in the xtt test following ec values of substances were found (mmol/l;mean +/-sem): tmp(eo) ta a, b . ± . ; , -hddma b, c . ± . ; etma a, c ; . ± . ; a significantly (p < . ) differently to , -hddma, b significantly (p < . ) differently to etma, c significantly (p < . ) differently to tmp(eo) ta. after six hours of exposure with tmp(eo) ta at . mm there were induced . γ-h ax foci-formations in hgfs, at . mm . foci, at . mm . foci and at . mm . foci. after exposure with , -hddma at . mm there were induced . γ-h ax foci, at . mm . foci, at . mm . foci and at . mm . foci. after exposure with etma at . mm there were induced . γ-h ax foci, at . mm . foci, at . mm . foci and at mm . foci. the negative controls dmso and medium cultures displayed . - . γ-h ax foci/cell. it was found that the induction of foci/cell were concentration-dependet for all xenobiotics in the order of: , -hddma > tmp(eo) ta > etma. these results show that dental composite components can induce dsbs in primary oral cells and therefore these substances demonstrate a genotoxic potential. effects of antioxidants on the dna-toxicity of dental (co)monomers in human gingival fibroblasts styllou p. , scherthan h. unreacted (co)monomers can be released from restorative dental materials and may show biologic activity after ingestion in the human organism. in previous studies the mutagenic/carcinogenic effect of dental monomers/co-monomers (e.g. methacrylates) on the human dna was demonstrated. in this study the effects of the antioxidants vitamin c and n-acetylcysteine on the dna toxicity of the (co)monomers triethylenglycol-dimethacrylate (tegdma) and -hydroxyethyl methacrylate (hema) was investigated. the induction of dna double-strand breaks with (co)monomers alone and in combination with antioxidants was investigated in human gingival fibroblasts (hgf). hgf were incubated with substances without or with antioxidants for a period of hours. induced dna double-strand breaks (dsbs) were tested by the γh ax focus assay, which is a direct marker for dsbs using anti γh ax antibodies. for quantitative analysis of the γ-h ax test, foci were counted by the same investigator by eye down the fluorescence microscope. each experiment was performed at least four times. the halfmaximum effect concentration ec (mmol/l) of triethylenglykol dimethacrylat (tegdma) and -hydroxyethyl methacrylat (hema) was taken from of a previous study after using xtt-based cell viability assay. tegdma induced significantly (p < . ) higher dsbs compared to hema ( . ± . vs . ± . ). the mean number of cells scored and the standard deviation (sd) were calculated. when cells were exposed to tegdma in combination with the antioxidant vitamin c an increase of dsbs was observed ( . ± . ), compared to tegdma alone. when cells were exposed to hema in combination with vitamin c an increase of dsbs was observed ( . ± . ), compared to hema alone. when cells were exposed to tegdma in combination with the antioxidant nacetylcysteine a decrease of dsbs was observed ( . ± . ), compared to tegdma alone. when cells were exposed to hema in combination with n-acetylcysteine a decrease of dsbs was observed ( . ± . ), compared to hema alone. these results show that dental (co)monomers can induce dsbs in primary oral cells. it also shows for the first time that the genotoxic potential may be reduced by the addition of the antioxidant n-acetylcysteine. purpose: we aimed to investigate the role of superoxide and peroxynitrite generated by genetically destabilized enos for the development of endothelial dysfunction and vascular remodelling. methods: a mutant of bovine enos in which cys was replaced by ala (c a) resulting in destabilization of enos has been generated (enos-c a). transgenic mice carrying c a were generated on a c bl/ background using the endotheliumspecific tie- promoter. by breeding these mice with enos knockouts (enos-ko), mice that express enos-c a (enos-ko/enos-c a-tg) exclusively in the endothelium were obtained. unilateral common carotid artery ligation experiments were performed in c bl/ , enos-ko, and enos-ko/ enos-c a-tg to study a role of destabilized enos for vascular lesion formation. results: western blot analysis confirmed the expression of enos in enos-ko/enos-c a-tg in aorta ( . ± . %, n= ), skeletal muscle ( . ± . %, n= ) and myocardium ( . ± . %, n= ) and revealed an increased phosphorylation of enos on ser / ( ± %) as compared to c bl/ (p< . , n= ). endothelium-specific overexpression of destabilized enos induced a large increase in superoxide and peroxynitrite formation in the aorta and the heart of enos-ko/enos-c a-tg (p< . , n= - ), which was abolished by nos-inhibitor l-nitroarginine (l-na) suggesting enos-c a as a source of elevated radical generation. endothelium-specific introduction of enos-c a at ~ % of c bl/ level almost completely restored aortic endotheliumdependent relaxation. experiments with l-na, soluble guanylyl cyclase inhibitor odq, peg-catalase and no-scavenger fe(detc) indicated that endothelium-dependent relaxation in enos-ko/enos-c a-tg is nos-and cgmp-dependent and nomediated. four weeks after the carotid artery ligation, neointima formation, media thickening and luminal narrowing were observed in the ligated arteries of all studied genotypes (p< . , n= - ). consistent with vasoprotective roles of enos, neointima formation was accelerated in enos-ko (n= - , p< . ). despite significantly higher vascular levels of nitrotyrosine and peroxynitrite, neointima formation in enos-ko/enos-c a-tg was substantially lower then in enos-ko and tended to be similar to c bl/ . conclusions: increased vascular superoxide and peroxynitrite formation caused by destabilization of enos does not induce endothelial dysfunction in healthy mice and has negligible effect on neointima formation. fenton reactivity as a determining parameter for the interaction of manganese oxide nanoparticles with lung epithelial cells sydlik u. , bieschke c. nanoparticles consisting of manganese oxide have been suggested for several innovative technological approaches, including the use in nanomedicine and diagnostics. therefore, the interaction of such nanoparticles with human target cells is of particular interest for the success of nanomedical approaches but also with regard to unintended side effects. to address this problem, we tested different kinds of manganese nanoparticles (mnnp) in an in vitro system which we earlier evaluated for proliferative, apoptotic, and pro-inflammatory endpoints induced by carbon nanoparticles (cnp). mnnp were synthesized by hydrothermal treatment of manganese salt solutions. the particles were subsequently characterized by scanning electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering. biological and toxic effects of the generated particles were studied in comparison to carbon nanoparticles (cnp) in experiments with rat and human lung epithelial cells (rle- tn and hbe o-). cytotoxicity was determined as measures of membrane damage (lactate dehydrogenase release) and metabolic activity (water soluble tetrazolium conversion). the oxidative capacity of the particles as well as the generation of intracellular oxidative stress was monitored using dichlorofluorescein diacetate in cell free experiments and flow cytometry assays (facs), respectively. the particle-specific phosphorylation of src family kinases (sfk) and mitogen activated protein kinases erk / were investigated using western blot techniques. after physico-chemical characterization, a set of three mnnp consisting of mn o or mno with significant differences in size and shape were selected. according to the different oxidation stages of manganese, the particles showed significant differences in fenton reactivity in the cell free system. these data did not reflect the capacity of the particles to induce intracellular oxidative stress. the characteristic to trigger membranedependent signaling processes, however, was correlated to the intrinsic oxidative capacity of mnnp than to the ability to induce intracellular ros. furthermore, the metabolic activity (wst) was negatively correlated with intracellular ros, indicating a link between mitochondrial activity and ros generation. none of the particles had effects on the membrane integrity of the cells. the data demonstrate that mnnp, unlike other poorly soluble nanoparticles (e.g. cnp), mainly trigger adverse health effects through ros production via the fenton reaction. acute ozone induced airway inflammation does not effect resting human sympathetic nerve traffic tank j. numerous mediators released in inflammatory and neuropathic pain states activate gprotein-coupled receptors (gpcrs) and modulate nociception via activation of gs, gi/o, g / , or gq/ g proteins. each of the g protein-coupled receptor pathways is involved in nociceptive modulation and pain processing, but the relative contribution of the individual signaling pathways in vivo has not yet been worked out. the gq/ signaling branch is of particular interest in pain research because it leads to the activation of phospholipase c, protein kinase c, and the release of calcium from intracellular stores. using a conditional gene-targeting approach we generated double-deficient mice lacking gaq and ga selectively in nociceptors to investigate the contribution of the entire gq/ signaling pathway in nociceptors towards the regulation of pain. we observed that mice lacking gq/ in nociceptive neurons show normal development of the nociceptive circuitry. the nociceptor-specific loss of gq/ results in reduced pain hypersensitivity following paw inflammation or spared nerve injury. surprisingly, our behavioral and electrophysiological experiments also indicated defects in basal mechanical sensitivity in gq/ deficient mice, suggesting a novel function for gq/ in tonic modulation of acute nociception. patch-clamp recordings revealed changes in voltagedependent tetrodotoxin-resistant and tetrodotoxin-sensitive sodium channels in nociceptors upon a loss of gq/ , whereas potassium currents remained unchanged. our results indicate that the functional role of the gq/ branch of g-protein signaling in nociceptors in vivo not only spans sensitization mechanisms in pathological pain states, but is also operational in tonic modulation of basal nociception and acute pain. provocation of arrhythmic events in single primary isolated adult mouse ventricular cardiomyocytes tekook m., fehrmann e., schulte j. s., schmitz w., müller f. u. westfälische wilhelms-universität institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, domagkstraße , münster, germany ap duration and ca + cycling are altered in cardiomyocytes of different genetic mouse models. here, we systematically tested various protocols to study the inducibility of arrhythmic events in mouse cardiomyocytes. adult ventricular cardiomyocytes were isolated from wildtype (wt) mice by enzymatic digestion and subsequently tested to trigger arrhythmic events within hours after isolation. in patch clamp experiments (perforated patch, whole cell current clamp) aps were stimulated for second ( hz; hz; hz + s -stimulus after - ms) followed by a s rest period. the resting-membrane-potential (rmp) was observed over cycles. we observed rmp-fluctuations of different length (amplitude < mv; % of observed cardiomyocytes, mean events/cell; < s: %, . ; < s: %, . ; > s: %, . ), spontaneous depolarizations (> mv; %, . ) and spontaneous aps ( %, . ). intracellular ca + transients and sarcomere shortening were measured after loading cardiomyocytes with indo- /am. after preconditioning ( min/ hz) cells were measured under basal and continuous isoprenaline ( - m) stimulation (iso). a min pacing period was followed by a min interval of no pacing. pacing frequency was reduced after each cycle ( hz, . hz, . arrhythmic events were provocable with stimulation/rest protocols both by field stimulation and direct stimulation via patch pipette. however, low stimulation frequencies seem to lead to distinct destabilization of cardiomyocytes probably due to ca + overload. we conclude that the tested stimulation protocols are able to provoke arrhythmic events even in wt single adult mouse ventricular cardiomyocytes and may serve as a tool to test for the relevance of potential proarrhythmic substrates in mouse models. ruhr-universität bochum pharmakologie ma nord , bochum, germany cgmp is a second messenger involved in many (patho-)physiological processes such as smooth muscle relaxation, platelet inhibition, and the development and plasticity of the nervous system. however, it is not fully understood how cgmp regulates these and other processes on a mechanistic level. in particular, the existence and functional relevance of global and local cgmp signaling domains is not clear. recently, highly specific genetically-encoded optical biosensors for cgmp have been developed. these cgmp indicators are either based on fluorescence resonance energy transfer (fret), with cgmp-binding domains sandwiched between fluorescent proteins with overlapping spectra, or they consist of a single fluorescent protein fused to cgmp-binding domains. with these cgmp indicators, the spatiotemporal dynamics of cgmp signals, which result from the interplay between cgmp-producing guanylyl cyclases, cgmp-binding effectors, and cgmp-degrading phosphodiesterases (pdes), can be monitored in living cells. here, we report the generation of transgenic mice expressing the fret-based cgmp indicators cgi and cgi with apparent cgmp affinities of nm and nm, respectively. one mouse line expresses cgi driven by a cmv promoter in neural cells. fret experiments were performed with isolated cerebellar granule neurons, hippocampal neurons, and astrocytes. we observed nitric oxide (no)-induced cgmp transients and analyzed the capability of other agents (natriuretic peptides, glutamate) to induce cgmp responses. in another mouse line, the sm alpha promoter directs cgi expression specifically to smooth muscle cells (smcs). fret experiments have been performed with smcs isolated from aorta, bladder and colon, as well as with intact vessels in the retina and cremaster muscle of transgenic animals. in primary smcs we studied responses to no, atrial and c-type natriuretic peptide (anp,cnp). in different smc types we observed differences in the overall ability to react to these stimuli and in the kinetics of the induced cgmp transients. we also studied the effects of pde inhibitors on the no-, anp-, and cnp-induced cgmp signals. importantly, we were able to detect cgmp transients upon no stimulation in intact vessels of the retina and cremaster. we conclude that the cgi transgenic mouse lines are valuable tools to visualize cgmp signals in living cells in vitro and, possibly, also in vivo in the intact animal under physiological and pathophysiological conditions. current research data dealing with pharmacotherapy of α-ama intoxication shows a particularly high variability regarding the protective effect of silibinin. the aim of this study was therefore to evaluate the influence of the frequently used clinical antidotes benzylpenicillin, silibinin and their combination in human hepatocyte culture intoxicated with α-ama. cytotoxicity and apoptosis testing were performed after two and five days of simultaneously exposure to α-ama and/ or tested antidotes. to quantify apoptosis, necrosis and cell viability, we used cell death detection elisa plus®, toxilight® bioluminescence assay and cell proliferation kit ii (xtt). furthermore, we analysed the ways of apoptosis by using immunohistochemistry (differential detection of caspase , and , activated caspase , and aif). exposure of hepatocytes to α-ama at concentrations of , µm, , µm and µm resulted in disorder of cell cultures, apoptosis and reduction in cell viability compared with unexposed hepatocytes. in hepatocyte cultures treated with benzylpenicillin at concentrations of µm and mm, silibinin at µm and µm and a combination of both ( µm benzylpenicillin and µm silibinin, mm benzylpenicillin and µm silibinin), toxilight® values in the supernatant and xtt values were not significantly different from untreated cultures. simultaneous exposure to α-ama (at all tested concentrations) and benzylpenicillin, silibinin or combination of both showed higher cell viability and lower values of necrosis compared to the cultures exposed to α-ama alone (exept µm silibinin at , µm α-ama); however, in both groups dosed with benzylpenicillin the highest hepatocyte viabilitiy was observed. this protective effect was particularly revealed at high α-ama concentrations ( , µm and µm). in conclusion, our data suggest that benzylpenicillin in monotherapy is more effective than in combination with silibinin or silibinin alone. glucocorticoids (gcs) are important hormones in the regulation of metabolic homeostasis. synthetic gcs, such as dexamethasone (dex), play a fundamental role in the treatment of inflammatory diseases. there are numerous side effects of a dex therapy, e.g. the development of hypertension. in the pathogenesis of hypertension oxidative stress is a crucial factor. glucocorticoid-induced hypertension has been shown to be associated with an imbalance between nitric oxide (no) and superoxide. however, the source of this elevated superoxide production is unknown. we hypothesize that an uncoupling of the no synthase (enos), a key mediator of vascular homeostasis, may contribute to dex-induced oxidative stress. incubation of human endothelial cells (ea.hy ) with dexamethasone led to a decrease in enos expression at mrna and protein levels. this effect of dex was timeand concentration-dependent. since the major cause of enos uncoupling is a deficiency of its co-factor tetrahydrobiopterin (bh ), we analyzed the amount of bh in ea.hy by hplc. a concentration-dependent reduction of bh and also bh (dihydrobiopterin) could be demonstrated in response to treatment with dexamethasone. bh can be synthesized endogenously by two different pathways -the de novo pathway (from gtp with gtp cyclohydrolase i, gch , acting as the rate-limiting enzyme) and the salvage pathway (conversion of sepiapterin to bh involving dihydrofolate reductase, dhfr). treatment of ea.hy cells with dex decreased mrna and protein expression of both gch and dhfr. because bh is the major "coupling switch", an enos uncoupling is likely to occur in dex-treated cells. in summary, we showed that dex treatment led to a reduced availability of the important co-factor bh which could lead to enos uncoupling. the uncoupled enos may possibly contribute to glucocorticoid-induced vascular oxidative stress. the cellular oncoprotein c-fos is a major component of the heterodimeric transcription factor ap- and has been commonly found over-expressed in tumors and cancer cells of different origin. previous work showed that mouse cells lacking the immediate-early gene c-fos are hypersensitive to ultraviolet (uvc) light. here we demonstrate that in human telomerase-immortalized vh tert foreskin fibroblasts (behaving like primary cells) and sv -immortalized gm fibroblasts, uvc-triggered induction of c-fos protein is a delayed and long-lasting event. sustained up-regulation of c-fos went along with transcriptional stimulation of the nucleotide excision repair (ner) gene xpf, carrying an ap- binding site in the promoter. c-fos mrna was induced in a biphasic manner. an immediate c-fos mrna expression ( - min after exposure) was not translated into the protein, the second wave of transcription ( - h after uvc exposure) resulted in c-fos protein expression, - h post-uv. the stress-activated/mitogen-activated protein kinases (jnk, p k and erks) were immediately induced upon uvc exposure and stayed active for at least h. inhibitor experiments revealed that c-fos was phosphorylated by erks and jnk. the activation of c-fos preceded re-synthesis and the induction of xpf mrna, which was observed - h post-uvc, resulting in the increased expression of the xpf protein. cells over-expressing c-fos showed an accelerated induction of xpf mrna, and consequently a faster repair of cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers (cpds). sirna-mediated silencing of c-fos (transient c-fos knockdown) resulted in abrogated uvc-triggered induction of xpf, attenuated repair of cpds and increased apoptosis. finally, we observed that the removal of cpds but not of photoproducts was significantly faster when cells were pre-exposed to a low uvc dose, indicative of an adaptive response to dna damage. the work was financed by deutsche forschungsgemeinschaft (dfg ch / - ). the addition of clopidogrel to aspirin reduces ischemic events in patients with acute coronary syndrome and in those undergoing percutaneous coronary intervention (pci). however, recurrent ischemic event occurrence during dual antiplatelet therapy remains a major concern. variability in the pharmacodynamic response to clopidogrel is well recognized, and patients with higher platelet reactivity while receiving clopidogrel are at increased risk of ischemic cardiovascular events. clopidogrel is an inactive prodrug requiring biotransformation to form the platelet inhibiting metabolite. interindividual differences in clopidogrel metabolism are the major source of variability in antiplatelet response. polymorphically expressed cytochrome p (cyp) enzymes play a critical role in the metabolism of clopidogrel. these findings gave rise to the concept of personalized antiplatelet therapy -i.e. individual platelet function testing and correction of insufficient platelet inhibition to reduce ischemic events in patients with high on-clopidogrel platelet reactivity (hcpr). gravitas was the first study to test this concept by comparing double-dose clopidogrel to standard-dose clopidogrel in patients with hcpr. gravitas failed to correct hcpr consistently in the study arm, which coupled with a low overall event rate precluded demonstrating a substantial benefit from improved platelet inhibition. the trigger-pci trial tested the effectiveness of the more potent thienopyridine prasugrel versus clopidogrel in patients with hcpr after elective pci with implantation of drug-eluting stents (des). switching from clopidogrel to prasugrel in patients with hcpr afforded effective platelet inhibition. however, given the low rate of adverse ischemic effects using contemporary des after pci in stable ischemic heart disease, the clinical utility of this strategy could not be demonstrated and the study was terminated prematurely for futility. multiple studies have shown that both heterozygotes and homozygotes for loss-offunction cyp c alleles have higher rates of adverse cardiovascular events as compared with noncarriers on approved maintenance dosing of clopidogrel ( mg qd), albeit carriage of cyp c loss-of-function alleles accounted for only a minor proportion of the variability in on-clopidogrel platelet reactivity. results of ongoing studies with antiplatelet treatment stratified by cyp c genotyping are awaited to assess the clinical benefit of this approach. the organic cation transporter novel type (octn /slc a ) represents a high affinity uptake system for carnitine. besides metabolic disease like severe system carnitine deficiency, genetic variants within the slc a gene have been associated with inflammatory diseases like colitis ulcerosa. against this background, we characterized octn expression in peripheral blood cells thereby identifying its expression in all cell types. in the present work we studied octn expression in monocytes and thp- cells as an in vitro model for this cell type. in addition we examined transcriptional regulation of the carnitine transporter in lps activated thp- and investigated the effect of carnitine and its analog mildronate on the respective cytokine response. octn expression was characterized on monocytes and thp- cells on mrna and protein level. transporter mrna expression could be shown in both cell types by realtime pcr. however, the protein expression was analyzed by western blot, flow cytometry and immunofluorescence microscopy demonstrating octn specific signals as well as a localization in the plasma membrane. following thp- cells were activated using lps ( ng/ml) for up to h, thereby indicating the expected cytokine response as demonstrated by increased tnfα ( fold induction) and il- β ( fold induction) mrna levels. in addition, octn expression was analyzed identifying an initial reduction of around % compared to untreated cells. in parallel activated thp- cells were coincubated with increasing concentrations of the octn substrate carnitine or its analog resulting in reduced cytokine release as shown by elisa for tnfα. here, the tnfα effect was diminished by % in the presence of mm carnitine. this effect does not rely on a direct neutralization of lps by carnitine since it was also present in cells only preincubated with carnitine. in the present work we could show that thp- cells represent a useful model to study octn expression and function. in addition, we demonstrate immunosuppressive effects of octn substrates like carnitine. further experiments will be necessary to identify the underlying mechanism of this observation. castor oil has been used for more than years for its laxative effects and also to induce labor in pregnant women. despite its wide-spread use, the mechanism of action remained unknown. the active metabolite of castor oil is ricinoleic acid which is released from castor oil by intestinal lipases. we have found that exposure of meg- cells to ricinoleic acid caused an increase in [ca + ]i, an effect which was dose-dependent and abolished by pretreatment of cells with pertussis toxin, suggesting the involvement of a g-protein coupled receptor. to search for a putative receptor, we determined ricinoleic acid-induced [ca + ]i increases in cells transfected with a sirna library directed against human gpcrs. in this way, we identified prostaglandin e receptors ep and ep as mediators of ricinoleic acid-induced effects. to test if ep and ep receptors mediate pharmacological effects of castor oil in vivo, we analyzed laxative effects induced by castor oil in wild-type (wt) mice, ep -deficient (ep -/-) or ep -deficient mice (ep -/-). while ep -/mice responded similarly to the wt mice, ep -/animals were totally insensitive to castor oil-induced laxation. moreover, mice lacking the ep receptor only in the smooth muscle cells did not respond to castor oil, in contrast to mice which lack ep receptor only in epithelial cells of the intestinal mucosa. similarly, ricinoleic acidinduced contractions of isolated ileal segments were absent in segments lacking ep , consistent with a preferential expression of the ep receptor in the longitudinal muscle layer of the intestine. also, ricinoleic acid-induced contractions of isolated uteri were dependent on the expression of ep receptor in the myometrium. these findings identify the cellular and molecular mechanism underlying the effects of castor oil and indicate a role of the ep receptor as a pharmacological target to induce laxative effects. introduction: patients seek health information from various sources. they are facing the challenge to differentiate between reliable and untrustworthy sources and at the same time identify the best drug therapy for them. furthermore generalised health information confuses more than they benefit or rather unsettle. patients are not necessarily qualified to assess the evidence of statements properly. there is thus a need for providing competent drug information, which is offered by the independent drug information service at the institute of clinical pharmacology in dresden, germany. for the present descriptive evaluation we selected drugs (arimidex ® , cipralex ® pentalong ® , onbrez ® and pradaxa ® ), that were affected by new referenceprice formation, generic registration, warnings or directions in . in specified time frames we assessed the increase in and the cause of enquiries. deductively we draw conclusions for a perspicuous presentation of patient information. since generic registrations of the aromatase inhibitor arimidex ® enquiries on side effects of this drug were stable, but additional consultations were held on generic changeovers. the antidepressant cipralex ® as well as the long-acting β-agonist onbrez ® were assigned to reference-price groups, which resulted in an -times (cipralex ® : → ) and -times (onbrez ® : → ), respectively, increase in enquiries. main aspect was to give background information on reference prices and point out therapeutic alternatives (cipralex ® : of ; onbrez ® : of ). an additional amount of conversations were carried on the fictive registered drug pentalong ® after health insurance companies advised practitioners to avoid recourse by not prescribing this organic nitrate. notable insecurity was aroused by media reporting on lethal bleeding after taking pradaxa ® for anticoagulation. every tenth enquiry in the evaluation period was focussing on these instigative reports ( of ). patients are confronted by current changes, but often do not get enough background information from their health care providers to become acquainted with the tidings. health seekers may find eligible data from media coverage. however the individual assessment as well as the risk-benefit-relation may not be feasible for them. the drug information service for patients is a convenient helpline to reduce lack of knowledge and uncertainties and therefore support shared decision making. insulin effects on hyaluronan production -a possible link between diabetes and cancer? twarock s., fischer j. w. institut für pharmakologie und klinische pharmakologie, universitätsklinikum der heinrich-heine-universität düsseldorf, moorenstraße , düsseldorf, germany background: epidemiological studies have shown an elevated incidence of certain tumor entities in diabetes type and type patients. to reveal the underlying mechanisms we focused on the effects of increased glucose uptake in cancer cells with respect to matrix production. abundant production of hyaluronic acid (ha) in the vicinity of gastrointestinal cancer cells is a hallmark in tumor development. esophageal cancer is a rare but severe kind of gastrointestinal cancer which is differentiated in adenocarcinoma and squamous cell carcinoma (scc) of the esophagus. we studied the effects of increased glucose levels on ha production in an scc cell line (osc ). in starving and full media, elevated glucose concentrations increased the production of ha secreted to the medium in h as measured by an ha-binding protein linked assay (starved, g/l glucose: ± . %; g/l: . ± . %; g/l: . ± . %; full medium ± . %; . ± . %; . ± . %). surprisingly, total ha concentrations were about . - . fold higher under starved conditions. to investigate whether this effect might be due to insulin actions, starved cells were treated with mg/l insulin for h. we observed a dosedependent decrease in ha production following insulin treatment (control vs insulin, g/l glucose: ± . % vs . ± . %; g/l: ± . % vs . ± . %). this finding might suggest that insulin directs glucose usage to the glycolytic pathway thereby diminishing ha synthesis. a premise to this assumption is the ability of osc cells for insulin independent glucose uptake. to verify this thesis, mrna expression levels of insulinindependent and insulin-dependent glucose transporters (glut , glut ) were analyzed by qrt-pcr. the relative abundance was . ± . in favor of glut indicating the presence of insulin-independent glucose transport. conclusion: in osc the absence of insulin actions caused increased ha production which might be due to diminished insulin driven glycolysis, thus leading to the use of early glucose metabolites for ha production instead of energy gain. this finding could be important in the context of diabetes type , where insulin actions are also diminished because of insulin resistance. since increased ha production is of critical importance for cancer growth and spread, the cellular shift in glucose usage from glucose catabolism to ha anabolism could therefore indicate a possible link between diabetes type and cancer progression. schwarz m., unterberger e. universtität tübingen, institut für klinische und experimentelle pharmakologie und toxikologie abteilung toxikologie, wilhelmstraße , tübingen, germany chemical hepatocarcinogenesis is a multi-stage process triggered by an intitiating mutation in a gene encoding an important cell-regulatory protein. tumour initiation may be caused by genotoxic substances which directly interact with the dna, causing mutations. cells carrying permanent mutations experience clonal expansion which may be accelerated by exposure of the experimental animals to tumour promoters during the following step of tumour promotion. it has been shown that substances which constantly activate certain nuclear receptors act as tumour promoters in rodent liver, such as the model tumour promoter phenobarbital which, amongst others, activates constitutive androstane receptor (car). since these tumour promoters do not seem to directly interact with dna causing mutations they can be regarded as non-genotoxic carcinogens. however, the molecular mechanisms of non-genotoxic carcinogenesis are still widely unknown which also poses a major problem in preclinical drug-development. the aim of the marcar (biomarkers and molecular tumour classification for nongenotoxic carcinogenesis) project is to establish early biomarkers for non-genotoxic carcinogenesis by creating a comprehensive molecular profile of tumours generated by a regimen including model tumour promoters such as phenobarbital. the ultimate aim is to differentiate spontaneous liver tumours from tumours generated by non-genotoxic carcinogens. this molecular profile includes mutational analyses, immunostaining for known tumour-specific markers, phospho-proteome analyses, genome wide and promoter-specific dna methylation analyses, as well as mirna analyses. mutation analyses were carried out with mouse and rat tissue from phenobarbital promoted liver tumours to identify mutations which phenobarbital provides a growth advantage for. furthermore, real time pcr measurements show that the expression of a particular non-coding rna and mirna precursor is up-regulated in tissue isolated from phenobarbital promoted mouse liver tumours. additional in-situ-hybridisation experiments demonstrated the localisation of this transcript in ctnnb -mutated tumours. larch-derived diterpenes are potent and selective trpc blockers urban n. , kübler w. the transient receptor potential channel trpc is a poorly ca + -selective cation channel that is activated by the membrane-resident second messenger diacylglycerol (dag). consistent with the major sites of trpc expression, its activation has been implicated in pulmonary and renal diseases, such as pulmonary hypertension, lung edema, chronic obstructive lung disease, allergic airway disease, and focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. amongst various plant extracts, conifer oils and resins are traditionally used to treat pulmonary ailments. therefore, we reasoned that they may contain constituents with a biological activity to modulate trpc activity. the true turpentines, oils and resins of various coniferous genera were tested with respect to a possible inhibition of dag-or receptor-induced activation of trpc and trpc . indeed, turpentines and resins, but not coniphere oils blocked trpc and trpc in a concentration-dependent manner. interestingly, the larch-derived turpentine exerted a trpc -prevalent inhibition. we identified larixol and its mono-and diacetates as the specific compounds that are contained in larch resin and give rise to a trpc -selective block. larixol acetates displayed an ic towards the dag-or receptor-stimulated trpc activity of about . - µm, but did not strongly inhibit a number of other trp channels, including trpv , trpm , trpm , trpm , or trpa . selectivity for trpc compared to its closest relative, trpc , was about -fold. unlike conipherous oils, which contain toxic pinenes, the resin constituent larixol ant its acetates exerted no significant cellular toxicity at concentrations that are required to block trpc . electrophysiological analysis confirmed the highly potent block, which was voltageindependent and reversible. in a murine hypoxia-induced pulmonary vasoconstriction (hpv) model, larixol acetate abrogated the euler-liljestrand mechanism and, thus, mimicked the phenotype of trpc -/mice. we conclude that trpc blockers and, more specifically, larixol-related derivatives may provide novel therapeutic strategies to treat or prevent pulmonary diseases. dioxin is an environmental contaminant, believed to affect basic biological equilibria such as calcium and iron homeostasis. however, the molecular mechanisms underlying these effects are still largely unknown. this strongly hampers the estimation of the hazard to humans associated with dioxin exposure and necessitates further studies aimed at the clarification of these mechanisms. it has been suggested that nearly all biological and biochemical processes are mediated by protein complexes. the most commonly used technology for monitoring changes in the expression of complex protein mixtures is still d gel electrophoresis, but this method suffers from poor expression of low or moderately abundant proteins. blue native page and subcellular fractionation form an ideal partnership when it comes to enrichment and analysis of intracellular organelles and low abundant multiprotein complexes. the aim of the study is to identify and characterize multiprotein complexes by blue native page to elucidate the network of protein-protein interactions that regulate protein function after dioxin exposure. sample preparation and subcellular fractionation rt cells were cultured in mccoy's a medium. cells at confluence were harvested and fractionated into cytosolic, membrane/organelle and nuclear fraction by using the proteoextract subcellular proteome extraction kit. first dimension (bn-page) mg of protein sample was mixed with % of coomassie blue g- (cbb g- ) and loaded in each lane of - % polyacrylamide native gradient gels. the lanes from the first dimension were cut into individual strips and were placed into a % sds gel. the gels were stained with coomassie and the spots were picked up for mass spectrometry. bn/sds-page combined with ms led to the identification of proteins involved in the regulation of both calcium and iron homeostasis in dioxin-exposed cells. these results demonstrate for the first time that dioxin exposure simultaneously affects calcium and iron metabolism. since important iron and calcium requirement changes occur during the regulation of cell growth, the protein expression changes observed in our study may be associated with dioxin-dependent cell-fate decisions. the murine protease inhibitor serpina n inhibits mechanical allodynia in a model of neuropathic pain vicuna l. , , simonetti m. several chronic diseases are accompanied by strong, long-lasting pain. a majority of chronic pain diseases are not well understood yet and cannot be controlled by conventional analgesics or non-pharmacological approaches. therefore, there is a major need to develop novel therapeutic principles. using a genetic screen, we identified serpina n, a serine protease inhibitor, which is homologous to human a -antichymotrypsin, to be a determinant of low neuropathic pain. we found that serpina n is expressed in the dorsal root ganglia (drg) and spinal cord and that it is upregulated in these tissues in mice developing neuropathic pain. importantly, we observed that spinal delivery of recombinant serpina n inhibits mechanical allodynia in a mouse model of neuropathic pain. we identified a novel serine protease substrate for serpina n, which is upregulated in the spinal cord in mice undergoing neuropathic pain ('enzyme e'). recombinant enzyme e delivered intrathecally to the spinal cord of mice elicited rapid and long-lasting allodynia, which was fully blocked by concomitant administration of serpina n. our results suggest that serine protease-serpin signaling modulates spinal neuronal and glial cell networks involved in processing pain and that activity-induced spinal release of serpina n constitutes an endogenous defence mechanism against establishing chronic pain hypersensitivity. these data have important implications for the pathophysiology of pathological pain and potentially hold therapeutic relevance. gβγ subunits are involved in β-adrenergic receptor induced cardiac hypertrophy vidal m., lohse m. j., lorenz k. institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie pharmakologie, versbacher str. , würzburg, germany introduction. activated β -adrenergic receptors and their g protein gαs induce the development of cardiac hypertrophy. however, the hypertropic effects of direct activation of downstream effectors, such as adenylyl cyclase, camp or pka, are controversely discussed. recently, a hypertrophic pathway involving a g protein βγ subunit induced phosphorylation of the mitogenic kinases erk / at threonine (erk thr phosphorylation) has been described to mediate erk-induced hypertrophy. this study aims to investigate whether erk thr -phosphorylation is involved in cardiac hypertrophy triggered by β-adrenergic receptors. -phosphorylation was detected in hek cells overexpressing β -receptors, murine hearts and neonatal rat cardiomyocytes after isoprenaline treatment. we performed [ h]-isoleucine incorporation assays to assess cardiomyocyte hypertrophy in vitro. neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (nrcms) overexpressing wild-type erk showed a significant increase in [ h]-isoleucine incorporation after isoprenaline treatment. in contrast, nrcms transfected with erk thr -phosphorylation deficient mutants (erk t a and erk t s ) or pretreatment with the erk inhibitor, pd , significantly attenuated cardiomyocyte hypertrophy. for in vivo studies, isoprenaline was given subcutaneously for days to wild-type mice and transgenic mice overexpressing either wild-type erk t t or erk t s . echocardiography and histological analyses revealed that erk t s mice developed less left ventricular hypertrophy than control mice. hypertrophic target proteins of erk (e.g. elk ) are located in the nucleus. western blot and confocal microscopy analyses showed that overexpressed erk t a or erk t s are retained in the cytosol and prevented elk -phosphorylation after isoprenaline stimulation. co-immunopreciptation assays in hek cells and nrcms underlined the direct involvement of g protein βγ/erk interaction upon isoprenaline stimulation. in line with this finding, direct activation of adenylyl cyclase by forskolin did not lead to gβγ induced erk thr -phosphorylation. conclusion. taken together, gβγ-subunits participate in β -adrenergic receptor mediated hypertrophy by enhancing erk thr -phosphorylation. these findings add important insight to the molecular signaling of g proteins in cardiac hypertrophy. the protein tyrosine kinase src and its role upon alpha-toxin stimulation of human platelets vogel k. , burke m. introduction: alpha-toxin, a kda calcium pore forming exotoxin, is a major virulence factor in the pathogenesis of staphylococcus aureus infections. alpha-toxin affects human blood cells such as platelets and induces aggregation that is accompanied by multiple changes in platelet protein tyrosine phosphorylation and dephosphorylation ( ). in the present paper, we focused our interest on the protein tyrosine kinase src, the most abundant member of the src-family kinases present in platelets ( ) . by the use of various inhibitors, we studied src and its role in α-toxin-induced platelet aggregation. methods: isolated human platelets from healthy volunteers were stimulated with α-toxin in the presence or absence of the src-family member inhibitors pp , pp or su (referred as src inhibitors). src and autophosphorylation of src were analyzed by sds-page and western blotting using specific antibodies against src and tyr- -phospho-src from calbiochem and cell signaling, respectively ( ). furthermore, calpeptin, an inhibitor of the calcium-dependent protease calpain, was used. platelet aggregation was measured by the method of born. staphylococcal α-toxin induced platelet aggregation in a concentration-dependent manner ( . - . µg/ml of toxin). pre-incubation with src inhibitors (pp , pp or su ) reduced α-toxin-induced platelet aggregation by about %. similar inhibitory effects have been observed by the use of calpeptin that acts as an inhibitor of the src degrading protease calpain. with respect to src itself, a-toxin induced autophosphorylation at tyr- followed by a fast and complete dephosphorylation within min. while calpeptin modified the time course of dephosphorylation, only little effect of the src inhibitors has been seen on tyr- phosphorylation/dephosphorylation. the typical calpain-dependent degradation of src can be blocked by calpeptin ( µm), but also by depletion of extracellular calcium indicating that it is a calcium-dependent process. conclusion: taken together, our data demonstrate that α-toxin of staphylococcus aureus induces platelet aggregation accompanied by src degradation and autophosphorylation at tyr- typically observed in activated platelets. inhibition of the cellular tyrosine kinase src as well as the protease calpeptin reduces aggregation indicating an important role of src and/or other src-family members in α-toxin-induced platelet stimulation. the five subtypes of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors belong to the superfamily of gprotein coupled receptors. the even-numbered subtypes m and m prefer coupling to gi proteins, whereas the odd-numbered receptors m , m and m prefer coupling to gq proteins. with respect to ligand binding and m receptor activation, the conserved epitope trp . at the beginning of tm displays remarkable functional features. it is located at the junction between the orthosteric and the allosteric binding site of the m receptor [ ] . in the inactive m receptor, it provides subtype-independent baseline affinity for allosteric antagonists [ ] . in the active receptor, m trp . affords binding affinity for the full agonist acetylcholine and intrinsic efficacy for the partial agonist pilocarpine [ ] . to study the role of trp . for m receptor activation, agonist-induced formation of dmyo-inositol-monophosphate was measured in cho-cells transfected with the respective human receptor-cdna. surface receptor expression measured by radioligand binding was similar in hm wild-type-cells and hm trp . →ala-cells, amounting to . and . x receptors per cell, respectively. the intrinsic efficacy of acetylcholine was not influenced at m trp . →ala relative to m wild-type, whereas potency was reduced about tenfold. these findings resemble those made previously in m and the corresponding mutant. in the case of pilocarpine, replacement of trp . by alanine in m did not reduce intrinsic efficacy. this finding is in contrast to m , where the corresponding mutation induced a loss of pilocarpine's intrinsic efficacy. the potency of pilocarpine was diminished about tenfold at the m trp . →ala mutant relative to m wild-type. this finding is also in contrast to m , at which pilocarpine's potency was not sensitive to the trp . →ala mutation. taken together, the diverging sensitivity of pilocarpine to the trp . →ala mutation between the m and the m receptor suggests that the role of this epitope for receptor function may differ between even-and odd-numbered muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. in vivo experiments for inhalation toxicity are time and animal consuming. thus several in vitro methods aim to replace or reduce and refine the in vivo experiments. human dtissue models are commercially available reconstructed from different donors (normal, smokers, chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases), which show a normal human bronchiole tissue that reveals a pseudostratified epithelial structure, numerous microvilli and cilia on the apical surface of the cultures. the presence of tight junctions and mucus secretion has also been confirmed comparable to the in vivo situation. these d-models are cultured on a porous membrane as air-liquid interface. test substances can be applied apically, either as solution or with an aerosol-inducer. in our in house validation to test the strengths, handling and reproducibility of such dmodel systems as well as determining the correlation between in vivo inhalation data, we have assessed the epiairway tm model from mattek, usa. a set of substances were selected with known in vivo toxicity data and mode of action. the substances were tested in the epiairway model an in parallel, in t and a cell lines to assess putative unspecific cytotoxic effects of the test substances. a comparison of toxicity data from the d-model and the in vivo data revealed, that the model is only predictive of respiratory toxicity in vivo for a subset of substances with specific modes of action. the epiairway tm model has proven to be robust, showing high reproducibility between pre-and main-tests as well as in the concurrent controls but it will need a strict definition of its applicability domain or further development of the test protocol to achieve a wider applicability. remodeling of intracellular ca + handling and cyclic amp-dependent signaling in atrial myocytes from patients with chronic atrial fibrillation. voigt n. background: in atrial myocytes ca + entry through l-type ca + channels (ica,l) triggers a larger ca + release (ca + transient,cat) from the sarcoplasmic reticulum activating contractile myofilaments. reduced ica,l is a hallmark of atrial remodeling in chronic atrial fibrillation (caf) and is supposed to contribute to action potential shortening and contractile dysfunction. however, the coupling efficiency between ica,l and cat and its regulation by camp-dependent signaling in caf patients are unexplored. methods: ica,l (voltage-clamp) and cat (fluo- ) were measured simultaneously in rightatrial myocytes from sinus-rhythm (ctl) or caf patients. a saturating concentration of the non-selective β-adrenoceptor (ar) agonist isoprenaline (iso, µm) and the nonselective phosphodiasterase (pde) inhibitor -isobutyl- -methylxanthine (ibmx, µm) were used to increase cellular camp content. camp content was assessed with immunoassay. results: in caf amplitudes of ica,l ( . ± . pa/pf, n= / [myocytes/patients] vs . ± . pa/pf, n= / , p< . ) and cat ( . ± . nm vs . ± . nm, p< . ) were lower than in ctl myocytes, whereas diastolic [ca + ]i levels were unchanged (caf, . ± . nm; ctl, . ± . nm). the coupling efficiency between ica,l and cat was similar in ctl and caf. application of iso increased ica,l amplitude to . ± . pa/pf (n= / ) in caf and to . ± . pa/pf (n= / ) in ctl. the corresponding cats increased to . ± . nm in caf and to . ± . nm in ctl. although the amplitudes of ica,l and cat also increased after pde inhibition with ibmx, the magnitude of these increases was smaller than the iso-induced enhancements. both iso and ibmx had no effect on diastolic [ca + ]i and coupling efficiency. however, the relative iso-induced increases in ica,l (caf, + . ± . % vs ctl, + . ± . %, p< . ) and cat (caf, + . ± . % vs ctl, + . ± . %, p= . ) were significantly higher in caf compared to ctl myocytes and a similar tendency was found for ibmx. basal camp levels were higher in caf compared to ctl (caf, . ± . pmol/mg, n= vs ctl, . ± . pmol/mg, n= , p< . ), pointing to an increased camp-dependent signaling in caf patients. conclusions: these data point to remodeling of camp-dependent signaling in caf patients which likely contributes to the stronger relative increases of ica,l and cat amplitudes after β-ar stimulation and pde inhibition. remodeling of camp-dependent signaling might be a novel contributor to af pathophysiology. direct visualisation of g-protein-coupled receptors and heterotrimeric g-proteins using single-molecule microscopy wagner j. g-protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs) form the largest family of membrane-bound receptors and mediate the effects of several extracellular stimuli. although the basic mechanisms of gpcr signalling have been extensively studied, a full characterization of the involved protein-protein interaction is still missing, largely due to technical limitations. in this study, we developed new methods for labelling gpcrs and g-protein subunits based on snap-and clip-tags and visualise them with single-molecule sensitivity. the snap-tag is a mutant of the dna repair protein o -alkylguanine-dna alkyltransferase that reacts with fluorescent benzylguanine derivatives, whereas the clip-tag is reacting specifically with o -benzylcytosine derivatives. these tags allow labelling proteins directly in living cells with very high specificity and low background. snap/clip-tagged receptors and g-proteins were covalently labelled with small organic fluorophores and visualised by total internal reflection fluorescence microscopy, which allows to selectively illuminate only fluorescent molecules located on or immediately underneath the cell surface. particles were automatically analysed with previously published as well as newly developed algorithms. the results indicated that both receptors and gproteins, although diffusing with high speed on the cell surface (diffusion coefficients: receptors ~ . mm /s, g-proteins ~ . mm /s), can be visualised and correctly tracked. a variable fraction of receptors and g-proteins are immobile or show hop movements, possibly suggesting their interaction with cytoskeletal or other membranebound proteins. our data also suggest the feasibility of performing two-colour analyses with snap-and clip-tagged proteins aimed at directly visualizing transient interactions between receptors and g-proteins or among g-protein subunits. in-vitro screening systems are particularly well suited to preclinical toxicology testing at an early stage of drug development as they have the advantage of being fast and requiring only a small amount of test substance. the demands for in-vitro screening assays for systemic toxicity are multiple and include the need of organ specific cell systems, the use of optimal cell numbers, cell passages and incubation times. even minimal changes in the conditions of the test system may lead to significant changes of the biological system. therefore a reliable normalization compensating biological variability is crucial prior to any interpretation of results generated from a biological system. basf has developed an in-vitro metabolite profiling assay and a subsequently tuned normalization strategy allowing the prediction of specific organ toxicity. the in-vitro assay consist of exposing cells lines to test substances and to determine the metabolite profile using chromatography coupled to mass spectrometry systems. herein, we compare five different normalization strategies referring to their suitability in the application to in-vitro metabolite profiling data. the strategies comprise statistical approaches, approaches referring to reference values from each individual sample or samples generated in dependent batches. best results were achieved by an individual strategy using a new reference value correlating well over a large range of cell counts previously used for generating corresponding cell extracts. statistical analysis revealed the normalization based on the new reference value greatly improved the quality of the results compared to non-normalized samples as well as to all remaining strategies. generation and application of this new reference value and the corresponding normalization strategy will be presented the first time. validation will be featured on the basis of extracts of the human hepatocellular carcinoma cell line hep g . molecular mechanisms of the inhibitory function of rhoh in phospholipase cmediated signalling walliser c., löschmann y., ziegler v., kühne e., schilling p., rasonabe z., bühler a., vatter p., gierschik p. universitätsklinikum ulm institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, albert-einstein-allee , ulm, germany rho gtpases are a subfamily of ras gtpases regulating diverse signalling pathways, for example those regulating the reorganisation of the actin cytoskeleton. among them, rac and rhoh show an expression restricted to the hematopoietic lineage. rhoh is constitutively active, because it carries mutations in two positions (s and n ) known to be important for gtp hydrolysis. hence, rhoh is controlled on the level of protein expression and, possibly, by tyrosine phosphorylation. rhoh has been implicated in human malignancies, since the gene is subject to somatic hypermutation in its noncoding regions and to translocation to the gene encoding laz /bcl or to other genes in human b-cell lymphomas. furthermore, rhoh is overexpressed in primary human chronic lymphocytic leukemia (cll) cells. these findings suggested that rhoh is involved in the initiation and/or progression of cll. we previously showed that rhoh acts as a potent inhibitor of both rac -mediated phospholipase c-β (plcβ ) and plcγ activation in intact cells. the aim of this study was to elucidate the molecular mechanisms of the inhibitory effect of rhoh on plc activity. the results showed that rhoh directly inhibited the activity of constitutively active variants of plcγ , plcβ , and plcδ , but that it had little or no effect on the activity of plcγ and plcε. the amino acid residues s and n , likely to be the cause for the gtpase-deficiency of rhoh, are not required for the inhibitory function of rhoh. furthermore, the switch-i and switch-ii regions of rhoh are not necessary for the inhibitory effect of rhoh, since rhoh mutants carrying switch-i or switch-ii regions of rac caused inhibitory effects on rac -mediated plcβ and plcγ stimulation indistinguishable from wild-type. interestingly, rhoh seems to interact with regions of plcγ distinct from those which are necessary for rac interaction, as the split pleckstrin homology domain of plcγ , which is essential for its interaction with activated rac , is dispensable for the inhibitory effect of rhoh. in summary, our results indicate, that rhoh acts as a plc-isozyme-specific negative regulator of the activity of plcβ and plcγ , both of which are specifically expressed in hematopoietic cells. these findings suggest a novel mechanism of plc isozyme regulation by rhoh. the results also suggest that rhoh plays an important role in b cell maturation, function, and leukemogenesis by modulating b-cell-receptor-mediated plcγ activation. effect of rac inhibition on doxorubicin mediated cell response wartlick f., fritz g. heinrich-heine-universität düsseldorf institut für toxikologie, universitätsstrasse , düsseldorf, germany background: the small gtpase rac is a well characterized member of the rashomologous (rho) family. rac is not only a key regulator of the actin cytoskeleton but also regulates the activity of nadph oxidase, stress kinases and transcription factors (e.g. nf-κb, ap ). furthermore, rac can translocate into the nucleus and interacts with topoisomerase type ii (topo ii). yet the general nuclear function of rac is still unclear. here, we address the question how rac influences the genotoxicity of the topo ii poisons doxorubicin and etoposide. methods: to study the function of rac , human hepatoma cells were pretreated with the rac -inhibitor eht before they were exposed to doxorubicin, etoposide or, for control, ionizing radiation (ir). to check the influence of rac inhibition on the outcome of genotoxin treatments, cell viability and cellular stress response were analyzed by the wst-assay, western blot (wb), co-immunoprecipitation experiments, facs-analysis and the alkaline comet-assay. results: as compared to the control, cells that have been pretreated with the rac inhibitor showed a higher viability, less phosphorylation of h ax (s ) and a reduced dna damage formation (measured by alkaline comet-assay) after treatment with doxorubicin and etoposide but not after treatment with ir. furthermore inhibition of rac resulted in a reduced phosphorylation of topo iiα (s ) and an increased interaction of topo iiα with hsp in doxorubicin treated cells. the data indicate that inhibition of rac protects human hepatoma cells against topo ii poisons due to interference with topo iiα function. the presence of drugs or other potential toxic substances in milk has enormous toxicological and nutritional consequences for consumers of dairy products. the atpbinding cassette (abc) transport protein breast cancer resistance protein (bcrp; abcg ) is expressed in alveolar epithelial cells of the mammary gland in cows, sheeps and goats. bcrp is known to play a major role in the active secretion of a variety of xenobiotics into human milk. so far there is little information about the transport activity and substrate specificity of dairy bcrp. therefore we aimed to establish a mdck cell in vitro model expressing bcrp of dairy animals. bcrp mrna was isolated from bovine, caprine and ovine mammary gland. full-length clones were generated using race (rapid amplification of cdna ends) pcr. the final full-length bovine, ovine and caprine abcg cdna-clone sequences were submitted to the ncbi genebank (eu , gq and gq ). stable transfection of bcrp in mdck cells was performed and the subcellular localization of bcrp at the apical plasma membrane was identified by confocal laser scanning microscopy. bcrp-mediated transport of the substrate hoechst was measured and the selectivity was determined by the bcrp inhibitor ko . inhibition studies using hoechst identified various drugs including the antibiotic enrofloxacin or anthelmintic agents like oxfendazole as substrates of bovine, caprine and ovine bcrp. to further characterize bcrp carrier activity, bidirectional transport studies were performed with transwell® filter inserts that allow studying drug transport between an apical and basolateral compartment. cell monolayer integrity was checked by measuring teer values as well as by measuring the paracellular flux marker atenolol by lc/ms. bidirectional transport studies with enrofloxacin were performed to characterize the bcrp transporter activity. our results may contribute to increase the understanding of carrier associated drug transport into the milk of dairy cattle and therefore enlarge consumer protection. acrolein and acrylamide: excretion of mercapturic acids after consumption of potato chips watzek n., scherbl d., berger f., feld j., eisenbrand g., richling e. technische universität kaiserslautern fachbereich chemie; fachrichtung lebensmittelchemie & toxikologie, erwin-schrödinger-str. , kaiserslautern, germany acrolein (ac) and acrylamide (aa) may be formed from food constituents during heating of food. ac is supposed to be generated via heat induced formation from glycerides/glycerol, aa is known to arise during the maillard reaction from asparagine and reducing carbohydrates. ac also has also been suggested to be formed by endogenous metabolism as a side product of carbohydrate and/or amino acid turnover or by oxidative desamination of polyamines [ ] . as an α,b-unsaturated aldehyde, ac forms , -michael-adducts with biomolecular nucleophiles, such as sulfhydryl and amino groups. in the organism, ac and aa are preferentially conjugated to glutathione and are excreted as mercapturic acids (ma), n-acetyl-s-( -hydroxypropyl)-cysteine , n-acetyl-s-(carboxyethyl)-cysteine (cema), (n-acetyl-s-( -carbamoylethyl)-cysteine (aama), and (n-acetyl-s-( -hydroxy- -carbamoylethyl)-cysteine (gama). data on human exposure to ac and its occurrence in the diet are scarce. in general, contents in heat treated foods are considered to be in the low ppb range (µg/kg) [ ] . nevertheless, in a pilot study in humans urinary -hpma excretion of non-smokers was reported to be about three fold higher, as compared to aama [ ] . in the present human intervention study we monitored the excretion of mas in five healthy volunteers (male) after ingestion of commercially available potato chips ( g), equivalent to an uptake of µg aa (absolute amount), together with an as yet unknown amount of acrolein [ ] . urinary ma contents were monitored by hplc-ms/ms following solid phase clean-up of urine for up to h after test meal uptake. the results demonstrated kinetics of -hpma and cema excretion in human urine to be clearly related to ingestion of the potato chip meal. on the basis of auc values, total excretion of -hpma plus cema exceeded that of aama plus gama by a factor of about four. the results confirm earlier findings on urinary mas, suggesting markedly higher human exposure to dietary ac / potential ac precursors than to aa. it is an as yet unresolved question, whether and to what extent concomitant substantial ac exposure may influence toxicology of such dietary heat-induced toxicants. [ ] stevens, j.f. and maier, c.s. ( ) molecular nutrition & food research ; [ ] osorio, v. m. and de lourdes cardeal, z., ( ) journal of chromatography a ; [ ] schettgen, t., musiol, a., and kraus, t., ( ) rapid communications in mass spectrometry ; [ ] ewert, a., granvogl, m., and schieberle, p., ( ) lebensmittelchemikertag protective effects of increased nad + levels in human peripheral blood mononuclear cells exposed to dna damaging agents weidele k., beneke s., bürkle a. university of konstanz molecular toxicology group, department of biology, jacob-burckhardt-str. , konstanz, germany the dna damage-activated enzyme poly(adp-ribose) polymerase (parp- ) acts as a nick sensor and modifies target proteins by covalent attachment of poly(adp-ribose) [par] using nad + as substrate. the intracellular levels of par and nad + are important parameters for biological responses to genotoxic stress and influence diverse cellular functions including dna repair or maintenance of genomic stability. notably, loss of genomic stability is a hallmark of both carcinogenesis and the ageing process. here we analysed the impact of elevated nad + levels in human blood peripheral mononuclear cells (pbmc) with regard to (i) poly(adp-ribose) formation, (ii) cell death, (iii) initial dna damage and subsequent repair, as well as the influence on (iv) genomic stability under genotoxic stress. after ex vivo supplementation of pbmc with low concentration of nad + precursor nicotinic acid (na) intracellular nad + level significantly increased up to fold in unstimulated [ ] and . fold in mitogen-stimulated cells. after dna damage infliction, parp activity was dramatically increased in supplemented cells, necrotic cell death was reduced and dna strand break repair was significantly affected. furthermore the frequency of micronuclei decreased significantly after irradiation damage, emphasizing the fundamental role of adequate nad + levels in maintaining genomic integrity. the cyclic purine nucleotides adenosine ': ' monophosphate (camp) and guanosine ': ' monophosphate (cgmp) are well-examined second messengers with many proven biological functions. in a recent study, using a highly sensitive and specific mass spectrometry method, we have shown that cyclic ': ' cytidine monophosphate (ccmp), a pyrimidine nucleotide, is naturally occurring in several mammalian cells [ ] . ccmp activates both camp-and cgmp-dependent protein kinases with low potency [ ] but the physiological function of ccmp is still very poorly understood. in an effort to delineate the function of ccmp, we analyzed expression of the early response gene egr . we chose this gene because it is regulated by numerous stimuli including camp [ ] . in our first study, we showed that dibutyryl-ccmp and ccmp failed to increase egr gene expression levels after stimulation of kb cells under various experimental conditions using real-time pcr (taqman®). we have now changed the experimental set-up using hela cells and the new ccmp analogue, ccmp-acetoxymethyl ester (ccmp-am), still focusing on gene expression of egr . esterification of the negatively charged cyclic phosphate of ccmp allows better transport of the nucleotide across the cell membrane, thus augmenting possible intracellular effects. hela cells were stimulated in cell culture medium with extracellularly applied ccmp-am ( , , , µm) over to min h after seeding. analysis of real time pcr (taqman®) experiments, using β-actin as a housekeeping gene, showed a significant increase of egr expression in a time and concentration dependent manner. these effects were specific for stimulation with ccmp-am but not the control phosphate trisacetoxymethyl ester. hela cells were also cultured in serum free resting medium (mcdb , sigma) that induces growth arrest, one to eight hours prior to stimulation. here, even higher egr expression levels through ccmp-am stimulation could be seen. these results suggest that ccmp could function as a second messenger just as camp and cgmp do. studies are in progress to further examine the mechanisms of the ccmp-am effects on egr expression in hela cells. methyl-cpg-binding protein (mecp ) recognizes methylated dna, it is involved in chromatin remodeling and it acts as a transcriptional repressor or activator. we have previously shown that expression of mecp is diminished in murine and human heart failure. prevention of mecp downregulation in transgenic mouse models aggravated cardiac hallmarks of heart failure. in patients with rett syndrome, which is caused by mutations in the mecp gene, mitochondrial function was found to be altered in the central nervous system. as the impact of mecp on mitochondrial function in the heart is unknown, the aim of the present study was to characterize the significance of mecp of cardiac mitochondria in mouse models with cardiac myocyte-specific expression or ablation of mecp . in order to investigate the cardiac function of mecp , two genetically modified mouse models were previously generated, including mice with inducible transgenic expression of mecp in cardiac myocytes under control of the tetracycline-system (mecp -tg) and mice with targeted ablation of mecp in myocytes (mecp mlccre ). these mice were analyzed under basal conditions and after chronic transverse aortic constriction (tac). at baseline, cardiac-specific overexpression of mecp did not cause any difference in cardiac function as compared to control mice using millar catheterization. isolated interfibrillar mitochondria showed a decrease in citrate synthase activity. after chronic pressure overload, the decrease in cardiac mecp expression could be completely prevented by the mecp transgene. cardiac contractility and relaxation were significantly decreased in mecp -tg animals. upon electron microscopical investigation, transgenic mecp expression was associated with a significant reduction of interfibrillar mitochondria, clustering of mitochondria in the perinuclear region and smaller mitochondrial cross sections as compared with control specimens. in contrast, cardiac myocyte-specific ablation of mecp caused a rightward shift in the size distribution of mitochondria as compared with mecp -tg hearts. epigenetic processes, including the recognition of dna methylation by mecp , may play an important role in the control of mitochondrial gene expression, structure, subcellular localization and function in the heart. thus, precise control of mecp expression and function is essential to prevent deterioration of metabolic function during chronic heart failure. normalisation of blood pressure does not prevent angiotensin ii-induced dna damage in kidney and heart of ren rats weissenberger s., hey v., lau d., schupp n. universität würzburg institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, versbacher strass , würzburg, germany increased activity of the renin angiotensin system (ras) with enhanced levels of angiotensin ii (angii) leads to oxidative stress with endothelial dysfunction, hypertension and atherosclerosis. epidemiological studies revealed a higher cancer mortality and an increased kidney cancer incidence in hypertensive patients. we could show in vitro and in vivo that angii causes structural dna damage dose-dependently in kidney cells and in the kidney. elevated angii levels therefore might contribute to carcinogenesis of the kidney. in a model of high angii organ levels, the transgenic ren rat, carrying an additional renin gene, dna damage in the kidney was analysed in animals of and weeks. untreated ren rats exhibit increased blood pressure from the age of weeks on. therefore, the line is kept on angiotensin i converting enzyme inhibitor therapy, which normalizes blood pressure and kidney function to values of control sprague dawley rats. despite this normalized blood pressure of the ren animals, a significant higher superoxide production could be observed in kidneys already in week old animals. also a higher frequency of structural dna damage and double strand breaks could be detected in the comet assay and with an antibody against the double strand break marker γ-h ax in kidneys. further, fittingly, an increased dna repair activity exists in kidneys of ren rats compared to control rats. as another organ affected by hypertension the heart of the ren animals was analysed for oxidative dna damage. although only a marginal increase of superoxide production could be found, also in the heart a significant higher frequency of dna double strand breaks and cells positive for dna repair activity could be observed. our data let us conclude that normalization of blood pressure in a state of activated ras is not sufficient to prevent angii-induced genotoxicity. this further implies that also patients with treated hypertension still might suffer from endorgan-damaging effects of elevated angii levels. the d a pore mutation leads to complete inactivation of trpv channels in epididymis weißgerber p. , kriebs u. replacement of aspartate residue by alanine (d a) in the pore of trpv channels in mice disrupts ca + absorption by the epididymal epithelium resulting in abnormally high ca + concentrations in epididymal luminal fluid and in a dramatic but incomplete loss of sperm motility and fertilisation capacity raising the possibility of residual activity of channels formed by trpv d a proteins (sci signal , ra , ) . it is known from other cation channels that introducing pore mutations even if they largely affect their conductivity and permeability can evoke considerably different phenotypes compared to the deletion of the corresponding protein. to gain insights whether the trpv d a pore mutant still contributes to residual channel activity and/or channelindependent functions in vivo, we compared important fertility-parameters between trpv -/and trpv d a/d a mice: the fertilization rate observed in permanent matings, the in vivo fertilization rate as judged by the rate of embryos isolated from plug positive females of matings with males homozygous for either trpv mutation as well as the motility, in vitro fertilization capacity and viability of sperm were reduced to the same extent in both genotypes. also, no differences were observed in copulatory behavior between trpv -/and trpv d a/d a males. the profound reduction in ca + uptake by the epididymal epithelium was identical in trpv -/and trpv d a/d a males. this direct comparison of these parameters indicate that deleting trpv does not further aggravate the phenotype observed in trpv d a/d a mice, and -in our opinion -allows the conclusion that the d a pore mutant of the trpv protein leads to complete inactivation of the trpv channel activity or channel-independent scaffolding functions in epididymal epithelium. characterization of a naturally occurring c-terminal mutation (n i) on herg channel function in hek cells sellmaier v. , moretti a. long-qt-syndromes (lqts) are acquired or inherited disorders which predispose patients to cardiac arrhythmias and sudden death. in affected individuals, the electrocardiogram shows a prolongation in the qt interval, due to an unstable repolarization of the action potential. acquired forms of lqts are often the result of treatment with medications that block cardiac potassium channels, such as class iii antiarrhythmic drugs or antihistamines. inherited lqts are caused by mutations in cardiac ion channels. congenital long qt syndrome (lqt ) is caused by loss-offunction mutations in the human ether-á-go-go-related gene herg (also known as kcnh or kv . ). herg encodes the pore-forming α-subunit of the rapid delayed rectifier potassium current i kr, whose physiological role is to repolarize the late phase of cardiac action potentials. herg channel α-subunits exist as isoforms ( a and b) that are identical except for structurally divergent n termini. native cardiac ikr channels are tetraheteromers containing of each α-subunit types. a loss-of-function can be due to either defects in a) channel opening (gating), b) ion permeation or c) protein maturation and trafficking. we have identified a so far uncharacterized dominant missense mutation in the herg gene (n i) in a patient with lqt. both herg a and herg b subunits were cloned from a human heart cdna library and the specific n i mutation introduced by site directed mutagenesis. hek cells were transiently transfected with equal amounts of mutated herg a and wild type (wt) herg b cdnas and the resulting potassium current compared to herg a/b wt. whole-cell patch-clamp analysis showed similar current densities for wt versus mutated channels. also the voltage-dependence of activation was unchanged with a halfmaximal activation at - mv for wt and - mv for the mutated channel assembly. differences were found for the deactivation and inactivation kinetics. the deactivation was faster in the mutated channels with t fast = ms and tslow = ms versus tfast = ms and tfast = ms in wt channels, determined from the tail current at - mv after a -second pulse to + mv. the half-maximal steady-state inactivation of the tail current was shifted by mv to the depolarizing direction in the mutated channel compared to the wt. a defect in channel gating appears to be the most likely explanation. background: abcc is adjacent to p-glycoprotein the most important efflux transporter for various endogenous and exogenous compounds and is expressed at several compartment barriers. by increasing evidence it is shown that the abcc polymorphisms are of clinical significance. the aim of our study is to analyze the epigenetic regulation of distinct abcc haplotypes by the influence of micrornas. methods: abcc cdna clones containing five distinct haplotypes were generated by site-directed mutagenesis, cloned into pires-zsgreen expression vectors and transfected into different cell lines for further functional analysis. one modified vector set contained a short 'utr sequence of abcc whereas the other contained the full length (fl) sequence. mirnas potentially interacting with abcc were identified form an mirna array after rifampicin stimulation of hepg cells. results: we could demonstrate that there is no difference in the basal protein expression level comparing the two vector types (fl 'utr vs. mod. 'utr) concerning the - c/ g/ c (cgc) abcc wt in hepg cells. using the fl vector construct, the expression level of cac haplotype protein was increased ( , % ± %). transfection assays with the mir- , which was identified as a candidate mirna targeting abcc mrna, and the two different vector constructs harboring the cac or the cgc (wt) haplotype, confirmed that mir- was able to down regulate the abcc protein expression. there was no significance in downregulation for one abcc haplotype, respectively (modified 'utr: cgc - %; cac - %, fl 'utr: cgc - %; cac - % down regulation compared to mir-negative control). discussion: differences of abcc protein expression level are due to the epigenetic regulation of abcc haplotypes. to further characterize the effect of mir- on tcg, tgt and cgt abcc haplotypes, transfection assays are currently performed using cell cultures as well human primary leukocyte cultures. sex differences affect the pathophysiology and pharmacology of leukotriene biosynthesis werz o. friedrich-schiller-university jena, institute of pharmacy, philosophenweg , jena, germany inflammatory diseases affect more females than males. thus, women suffer more often from asthma, rheumatoide arthritis, alzheimer´s disease, and many autoimmune diseases than men. of interest, sex differences also exist in drug responses, with respect to both pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics. we have recently discovered a sex bias in the biosynthesis of pro-inflammatory leukotrienes (lts) due to testosterone, which may represent a molecular basis for gender differences in inflammation and asthma. interestingly, testosterone downregulates lt biosynthesis and also causes a sex bias in the efficiency of lt synthesis inhibitors, which demands for the clinical evaluation of a gender-tailored therapy with anti-lts. we found that certain inhibitors of lt biosynthesis were more efficiently in females than in males, and that androgens are responsible for these gender differences. in fact, the flap inhibitor mk effectively reduced ltb pleural levels in female but not in male rats treated with carrageenan, and mk increased survival only of female mice in the lt-related disease model of paf-induced lethal shock. administration of testosterone to female mice abolished the protective effects of mk . in view of the current active development of lt synthesis inhibitors as therapeutics in respiratory and cardiovascular diseases, our data prompt for consideration of gender issues in the development and use of such drugs, in order to optimize medical therapy both for men and women. considering the complexity of deposition and kinetics of air-borne nanomaterials in the lung, potential pulmonary toxicity of biopersistent nanomaterials should be evaluated by inhalation studies. those studies demand special equipment and large quantities of test material. intratracheal instillation appears as a simple and low substance-consuming alternative, although bolus dosing and the more central distribution of the particles in the lung are a well known trade-off. we compared the inflammatory response of the lung to amorphous silica (as) after instillation and inhalation. for inhalation the established short-term protocol for nanomaterials was employed (ma-hock et al. inhalation toxicology, : , ): male wistar rats were exposed to the test items for h/day on five consecutive days. the lungs were evaluated by analysis of bronchoalveolar lavage fluid (balf) and by histopathology three days and three weeks after the end of the exposure. in a parallel study, rats were intratracheally instilled and equally evaluated three days after instillation. assuming a deposition rate of %, the instilled dose corresponded to the aerosol concentration of mg/m used for inhalation. results show that inhalation and instillation of nominally equal mounts of amourphous silica elicit different results in the lung with inhalative treatment being less harmfull. this difference may be due to the bolus effect inevitable linked to instillation. instillation stuldies with amorphous silica may, therefore, be of limited value with respect to doseresponse assessment. sunscreen products containing uv filters protect consumers from the harmful effects of uv exposure. pigmentary grades of metal oxides like zno result in an opaque whiteness as a result of scattering visible light, whereasnanoparticles result in transparent products for better consumer acceptance and thus improved protection of human skin against uv-induced damage. in addition scatter uv light is most efficiently reflected at a nanosize of - nm. in the last years the toxicological properties of nanozno in comparison with pigmentary zno were examined, the results of these comprehensive studies are presented. all tests were performed according to oecd guidelines, which were modified, especially in regard of substance preparation where appropriate. nanosized zno showed no acute toxicity after dermal application, in the bcop assay as well as in the epiderm assay it showed no corrosion / irritation potential. nanosized zno does not penetrate the intact as well as the sunburned skin. a dermal absorption test in rats (oecd ) with zn-labelled test item as well as penetration tests in weanling pigs after uv radiation did not show a penetration of the zno nanoparticles through the skin. genotoxicity was tested in vitro in the ames test, in the chromosomal aberration test in v cells, both showing negative results whereas the mouse lymphoma mutation test / l y/tk+/-cells was positive. in vivo no mutagenic effect was detected in two mouse micronucleus tests, on with intraperitoneally application and another after repeated inhalation. nanosized zno was tested in -days, -days and -days inhalation studies, in all studies the predominant effects were reversible local inflammatory changes in the nasal cavity and lungs, with a noaec of . mg/m in the -day study. in a prenatal developmental toxicity study according to oecd tg , with repeated inhalation exposure to female wistar rats from gestation day through , maternal toxicity was observed by increase lung weights and inflammations in the lungs. but no substance-related effects on reproductive parameters (conception rate, corpora lutea, implantation sites, preimplantation loss, postimplantation loss, resorptions, dead fetuses) and no increase in external and soft tissue malformations and variations could be detected. the overall result of all the toxicological studies with nanosized and pigmentary zno is that the toxicological profile of both is very similar. studies were sponsored partly by cefci lri and partly by basf se. use of reach registration data for improving thresholds of toxicological concern (ttc) wieneke n., dorn s., jakupoglu c., schäfer c., sica m., wiegand c., mostert v. dr. knoell consult gmbh, marie-curie-str. , leverkusen, germany the threshold of toxicological concern (ttc) concept is utilised to identify human exposures that are so low that in-depth toxicological investigations are expendable. this is called "exposure-based waiving". exposure-based waiving serves to focus available resources on substances with relevant human exposure potential. important work into establishing ttc values has been published by munro et al. ( ) . the initial report used a database of organic substances compiled from publicly available sources. in total, noels were collected in this fashion. the munro concept used the cramer classification to categorise substances according to their hazard potential. we broadened the ttc database by including noaels published on the echa website as per november , containing data for more than registrations. only nongaseous mono-constituent substances with oral noaels were included in the ttc database. organophosphates and genotoxic substances were excluded from the database as well as noaels obtained for surrogate substances. noaels for all systemic endpoints (general toxicity, developmental toxicity, fertility, neoplasia) were taken into account. where appropriate, default assessment factors of up to were used to establish chronic noaels for each substance. for every eligible substance, we collected the published clp category for acute oral toxicity as a potential predictor of overall hazard potential. this gives rise to five categories of acute oral toxicity. a ttc is calculated from the th percentile of noaels in each of these categories using the reach rules for establishing dnels for workers and the general population. this poster presents the preliminary results for more than substances. the results indicate that the ttc concept becomes more robust when using the very broad echa database. it also suggests that acute oral toxicity categories can be used as a predictor for the overall hazard potential of a substance. comparison of different in-vitro models for inhalation toxicology with respect to the effects of cigarette smoke total particulate matter wiese j. , schumann b. b-and l-moc can be cultivated up to days without loss of viability, as determined by resazurin-assay. viability of cell cultures was determined by mtt-assay after incubation with increasing doses of tpm. exposure of h to tpm ( mg/l) reduced viability to % or % after or h, respectively. in a viability was % after h with tpm ( mg/l). the same dose of tpm lead to a decrease in viability to % ( h) or % ( h) in nhbec and to % ( h) or % ( h) in plc. as a marker of oxidative stress the level of intra-cellular glutathione (gsh) was determined by hplc. in both the tumor cell lines analysed gsh-level was increased by tpm ( mg/l). in h the induction was . and . fold after or h, respectively. while in a it was . ( h) and . fold ( h). in nhec and plc tpm ( mg/l) did not have a significant effect on gsh-levels after h. in n-moc tpm ( mg/l) also did not modulate gsh after h, but it diminished gsh-level by . fold upon prolonged contact ( h). in b-moc gsh concentrations also decreased to . or . fold the level of controls after or h incubation. the results presented show that in-vitro models of varying complexity and origin within the respiratory tract clearly differ in their response to tpm, which was used a model inhalative toxicant. the tumor cell lines used seem to be better adapted to chemical stress, while the models closer to the in-vivo situation are more vulnerable. the nongenomic effects of the mineralocorticoid receptor in transgenic mouse heart winter s. , schreier b. within the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (raas), the mineralocorticoid receptor (mr) is important for the regulation of fluid and electrolyte balance in the kidney, salivary glands, sweat glands and colon. however, survival of patients with severe heart failure is increased when mr blockage is combined with standard therapy suggesting aldosterone, the mr ligand, as a key factor in the development of cardiovascular diseases, but the mechanism is not yet fully understood. in recent years, evidence accumulated that besides its function as a hormone-activated transcription factor the mr also functions via nongenomic pathways. to investigate the function of the nongenomic effects of the mr in cardiovascular dysfunction, we generated a transgenic (tg) mouse model expressing a truncated human mr lacking the dna-binding site (hmr def ) under control of the cardiac specific α myosin heavy chain promoter (αmhc), a model for nongenomic effects of the mr in the heart. in this mouse model no enhanced mortality could be observed. body weight (bw), heart weight and relative heart weight were not different compared to wild type (wt) while left atrial weight/bw was increased by % (wt , ± , mg/g vs. tg , ± , mg/g, p< . , n= ). compared to wt mice neither surface electrocardiographic experiments nor echocardiographic experiments revealed modified parameters for tg mice under basal (i.e. unstimulated) conditons as well as under β-adrenergic stimulation by isoproterenol (iso, µl mm iso intraperitoneally applied). to uncover the role of aldosterone in the development of cardiovascular diseases treatment with aldosterone and high-salt diet ( %) was performed. after days cardiac function and heart dimensions were analyzed, surface electrocardiographie uncovered increased p duration ( ± . ms vs. ± . ms, p< . ) and qtc interval ( ± ms vs. ± ms, p< . ) in tg (n= ) compared to wt (n= ) animals. these findings probably indicate more sensitive conduction pathways to aldosterone in tg mice. oligomerization is important for regulation of phospholamban activity wittmann t., lohse m. j., schmitt j. p. institut für pharmakologie und toxikologie, versbacher straße , würzburg, germany phospholamban (pln) is a heart specific protein located in the membrane of the sarcoplasmic reticulum. it inhibits the ca + -atpase serca a, thereby decelerating cytosolic ca + clearance during diastole of the cardiac cycle. upon phosphorylation the inhibitory activity of pln on myocyte ca + transport is attenuated. further, it is believed that phosphorylation favors the formation of (rather inactive) pentamers and that pln pentamers itselves were an inferior substrate for phosphorylation compared to monomers. this would suggest an important role of pln oligomerization in the regulation of pln activity. to prove this hypothesis, we are investigating the patterns and kinetics of pln phosphorylation in the context of alterations in pln structure. the introduction of specific point mutations into the transmembrane region of pln yielded mutants that are purely monomeric (l a, i a and c f) or favor pentamer formation (i a, v a). transfected hek cells expressing these mutants or wildtype pln were stimulated with forskolin to induce pln phosphorylation before lysis of cells and western blot analysis using antibodies directed against phosphorylated pln. surprisingly, phosphorylation was increased for both monomeric and pentameric pln after stimulation with . µm forskolin for less than one minute. at increasing forskolin concentrations phosphorylation signals increased in parallel for monomers and pentamers. for measurement of phosphorylation kinetics stimulation of cells with . µm forskolin was stopped at different time points. we found phosphorylation of both pln monomers and pentamers within seconds of stimulation. differences in phosphorylation patterns became more pronounced when assays were performed at low temperature ( °c). intriguingly, preliminary analyses suggest that pka dependent phosphorylation occurs first in pentamers and that phosphorylation of monomers may catch up only after pentamer phosphorylation is almost complete. our data suggest that both pln pentamers and monomers are suitable substrates for pka dependent pln phosphorylation. unlike the prevalent assumption, kinetics of pentamer phosphorylation seem to be at least as fast as that of pln monomers in transfected hek cells suggesting an important role of pln pentamers in the regulation of pln activity. regulation of cardiac contractility by nucleoside diphosphate kinases in zebrafish wolf n. m. , , abu-taha i. in the heart, nucleoside diphosphate kinases (ndpks) can interact with heterotrimeric g proteins, thus regulating camp synthesis in a receptor independent manner and thereby influencing contractility in cardiomyocytes. we further investigated the interaction of ndpk isoforms with heterotrimeric g proteins in the heart in vivo and in vitro using zebrafish embryos and embryonic fibroblast from ndpk a/b double knockout mice (ndpk a/b ko mefs). in zebrafish the morpholino-mediated knockdown of ndpk a did not lead to an obvious phenotype, although the total ndpk activity was reduced. depletion of ndpk b caused a cardiac phenotype characterized by severely impaired atrial and ventricular contractility and insufficient blood flow. the depletion of ndpk b was associated with a significant decrease of protein levels of the heterotrimeric g protein subunits gβγ, gα s and gαi. the knockdown of ndpk c led to a more restricted cardiac phenotype with markedly reduced pumping function of the ventricle, while the atrium was unaffected. in accordance to the reduced cardiac pumping function, camp levels were significantly diminished in the ndpk b and ndpk c morphants. similar findings were obtained in ndpk a/b ko mefs. the absence of ndpk a and b resulted in a decrease of the plasma membrane content of gβ and gαs and a significant reduction in camp synthesis. the protein expression of the isoform ndpk c was also significantly reduced in the ndpk a/b ko mefs. the re-expression of ndpk b but not ndpk a rescued the basal camp production and the membrane content of g proteins. interestingly, the overexpression of ndpk c led to a -fold enhancement of the camp level and a significant increase of the membrane content of gβ and gα, and thus rescued the knockout phenotype. our data indicate, that the ndpk isoforms b and c are essential for cardiac contractility, most likely by forming a signaling complex at the plasma membrane including ndpk b, ndpk c and heterotrimeric g proteins. the isoform ndpk c, with its n-terminal hydrophobic region, might serve as a membrane anchor for the ndpk/g protein complex. induction of apoptosis via pka-dependent and pka-independent pathways by cyclic purine and pyrimidine nucleotides in mouse lymphoma cell lines wolter s. camp is a second messenger that plays an important role in intracellular signal transduction of various hormones and neurotransmitters. a major function of camp in eukaryotes is the activation of camp-dependent protein kinase a (pka). pka is involved in the control of a variety of cellular processes. pka exists as an inactive tetramer of a dimeric regulatory (r ) and two catalytic (c) subunits that releases the active c-subunits upon binding of camp. stimulation of the mouse t-lymphoma cell line s wild-type (wt) with dibutyryl (db)-camp induces apoptosis by an intrinsic, mitochondria-dependent mechanism. apoptosis induced by db-camp occurs via a pka-dependent mechanism, since s kincells lacking the catalytic subunit of pka are resistant to db-camp-mediated cell death. db-camp is cleaved by esterases into the biologically active compound n -mb-camp and into '-o-mb-camp. other cyclic nucleotides (cnmps) in addition to camp, like ccmp and cump can also function as second messengers and activate pka and cgmp-dependent protein kinase (pkg) . therefore, we investigated the effects of a series of membrane-permeable analogues of camp, cgmp, ccmp and cump in s wt und s kincells on apoptosis. stimulation with db-ccmp or db-cgmp induced neither apoptosis in s wt nor in s kincells. interestingly, we observed apoptosis in s wt and s kin cells after incubation with membrane-permeable nucleotide acetoxymethyl ester (am)-analogues of cgmp, ccmp, cump and also camp. induction of apoptosis occurs via pkadependent and also pka-independent pathways. a potential role of pkg and of the exchange protein activated by camp (epac) in the induction of apoptosis is unsolved and will be explored by specific pkg-and epac-activators in this system. investigations are on the way to identify the targets, the involved signal transduction pathways and the mechanisms of pro-apoptotic actions mediated by cnmp-ams. ( ) wolter s, golombek m, seifert r ( ) differential activation of camp-and cgmpdependent protein kinases by cyclic purine and pyrimidine nucleotides. biochem biophys res commun. in press apoptosis in s cells : induction of apoptosis in s wt and in s cells lacking the catalytic subunit of pka (s kin-) with a) db-cnmps and b) cnmp-ams for h. nebivolol reduces vascular inflammation in spontaneously hypertensive rats wu z., xia n., förstermann u., li h. institut für pharmakologie, obere zahlbacher str. , mainz, germany nebivolol is a third generation β receptor blocker with additional effects on endothelial nitric oxide production. the aim of the present study is to investigate the antiinflammatory effects of nebivolol in vivo. spontaneously hypertensive rats (shr) were divided into two groups: control or nebivolol treatment group. nebivolol treatment ( mg/kg/day for days) significantly reduced the blood pressure and the heart rate in shr. the drug had no effect on coagulation. aorta from nebivolol-treated rats showed significantly improved endothelial function. nebivolol did not change the expression levels of aortic nf-kb, but significantly reduced its dna binding activity. furthermore, nebivolol decreased the expression of adhesion molecules (e.g. icam- , vcam- ) and pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g. il- ). in conclusion, nebivolol reduces vascular inflammation in experimental hypertension. it inhibits nf-kb activity, decreases the expression of adhesion molecules and pro-inflammatory cytokine, and improves endothelial function. characterization of the cellular activity of pde inhibitors using two novel pde reporter cell lines wunder f., quednau r., barg m., tersteegen a. bayer pharma ag lead discovery wuppertal, aprather weg a, wuppertal, germany cyclic nucleotide-specific phosphodiesterases (pdes) play an essential role in cellular signal transduction by regulating the intracellular levels of camp and cgmp and, therefore, are important pharmacological targets. we report here the generation and pharmacological characterization of two novel pde reporter cell lines. plasmid constructs encoding human pde b or pde d were stably co-transfected with the beta -adrenoceptor in a parental camp reporter cell line expressing a cyclic nucleotide-gated (cng) cation channel, acting as the biosensor for intracellular camp. in this reporter cell line, camp levels can be monitored in real-time via aequorin luminescence stimulated by calcium influx through the cng channel. by using different pde and non-pde inhibitors, we could show that our novel pde b and pde d reporter cell lines specifically monitor pde inhibition with high sensitivity. pde -selective inhibitors alone did not increase basal luminescence levels in this experimental setting. however, these inhibitors induced concentration-dependent luminescence signals in combination with the adrenoceptor agonist isoproterenol. in contrast, in a stable beta -adrenoceptor reporter cell line with no recombinant pde expression, pde inhibitors had no effect on isoproterenol-stimulated luminescence signals. we compared the cellular activity of different pde inhibitors with the in vitro inhibition of full-length and truncated (catalytic domain) pde d from cell lysates. two different groups of pde inhibitors could be identified. the first group, including the allosteric inhibitors pmnpq and d , showed high cellular activity and much better inhibition of full-length versus truncated pde d . the second inhibitor group, including classical competitive inhibitors like roflumilast, cilomilast and piclamilast, showed comparably lower cellular activity and similar inhibitory activity on full-length and truncated pde d . the results imply that these novel pde reporter cell lines are well-suited for the characterization of the cellular activity of pde inhibitors and may also support a better understanding of the complex pde pharmacology. plexin-b is required for kidney regeneration after acute renal failure xia j. , gröne h acute renal failure is a common clinical problem with unsatisfactory therapeutic options and high mortality in humans. therefore, unraveling the mechanisms that promote kidney regeneration and repair may provide new therapeutic strategies for acute renal injury. plexin-b belongs to a family of transmembrane receptors which mediate the cellular effects of semaphorins. while plexins have first been described in the context of axon guidance, several recent studies have established them as key regulators of organogenesis, the immune system and cancer. we have recently found that plexin-b is highly expressed in the adult kidney, particularly in tubular epithelial cells which are most sensitive to acute ischemic injury. to study the role of plexin-b during kidney regeneration we generated mice lacking plexin-b specifically in tubular epithelial cells. under physiological conditions, these mice displayed normal kidney morphology and function. in contrast, following ischemia/reperfusion injury, plexin-b conditional knockout mice exhibited severely impaired kidney regeneration. while the renal function of control mice fully recovered within weeks after injury, plexin-b knockout mice had strongly elevated serum creatinine and urea levels associated with increased morbidity and mortality. this was accompanied by hyperproliferation of tubular epithelial cells and obstruction of tubular lumina. we conclude that plexin-b is required for regeneration after acute ischemic renal injury and that pharmacological interventions activating plexin-b might represent a new therapeutic strategy in acute renal failure. the nadph oxidase enzyme complex consists of two membrane-bound catalytic subunits (a nox protein and p phox) and several cytosolic regulatory components including p phox, p phox, p phox and the small gtpase rac . we have previously shown that treatment of apolipoprotein e knockout mice with resveratrol led to a downregulation of nox and nox in the heart. our recent data demonstrated that resveratrol also reduced the enzymatic activity of cardiac nadph oxidase. because activation of nadph oxidase enzyme complex is induced by translocation of the regulatory subunits, we studied whether the reduced enzymatic activity is due to an inhibition of such a translocation. indeed, resveratrol treatment prevented rac membrane translocation from cytosol. resveratrol is known as an activator and expression enhancer of the longevity gene sirtuin (sirt ). we then wanted to find out whether the effect of resveratrol on rac was mediated by sirt . sirt is a histone/protein deacetylase. in vitro incubation of rac with sirt led to a reduction of lysine acetylation. deacetylation of rac on lysine could be identified by mass spectrometry analyses. the lysine lies within the p phox-binding region of rac . consistently, in vitro incubation of rac with sirt markedly reduced its binding activity to p phox. in conclusion, we provide evidence that rac is a direct target molecule of sirt . sirt deacetylates rac on lysine and thereby inhibits its interaction with p phox. this is a novel mechanism of nadph oxidase inhibition by sirt /resveratrol. mutational analysis of the effects of the cardioprotective drug dexrazoxane on topoisomerase ii beta in vitro yan t., deng s., frensch i., gödtel-armbrust u., wojnowski l. universitÄtsmedizin der johannes gutenberg-universität mainz institut für pharmakologie, obere zahlbacher straße , mainz, germany dexrazoxane (drz, icrf- ) is the only approved drug shown to protect against anthracycline-induced heart failure. the protection is usually ascribed to the ironchelation by drz, which is thought to reduce anthracycline-induced oxidative stress. however, similarly to anthracyclines, drz is also an inhibitor of the anthracycline target topoisomerase ii (top ). we hypothesized that the cardioprotective effects of drz are mediated by the prevention of the anthracycline-induced dna damage mediated by top b, the dominant cardiac top isoform. this was investigated using top b mutants resistant to drz, which were expressed in cells depleted of wild-type top isoforms. top b-mediated double-strand dna breaks were assessed as γ-h ax. the levesl of dsb generated by the top b mutants in response to the anthracycline doxorubicine (dox) was indistinguishable from that mediated by a wild-type top b. preincubation with drz depleted wild-type top b and this was accompanied by a decrease in the dna damage following a subsequent exposure to dox. in contrast, neither top b depletion nor the reduction of dsb by drz was seen in drz-resistant top b mutants. furthermore, the cardially ineffective drz analog icrf- , capable of iron chelation but not of top binding, affected neither the stability of top b, nor the dox-induced dna damage mediated by this enzyme. these results indicate that drz may exert its cardioprotective effects by reducing the dna damage mediated by doxpoisoned top b rather than by iron chelation. they also suggest a cardioprotective function of top b, which is currently under investigation using cardiomyocyte-specific top b mouse knockouts. aminoglycosides are important antibiotics in the treatment of life-threatening infections, especially those caused by gram-negative bacteria. their nephrotoxic and ototoxic potential is well-known, but little is known about the effects of aminoglycosides on the male reproductive system. we studied the effects of four aminoglycosides on sertolicells in vitro. rat sertoli-cells from the cell line serw were cultivated for , , and days in dmem supplemented with three different concentrations of amikacin, streptomycin ( mg/l, mg/l, mg/l), gentamicin or tobramycin ( mg/l, mg/l, mg/l). we determined the expression of two junctional proteins (connexin , ncadherin) and one protein of the cytoskeleton (vimentin) by western blot. cells were solubilized in lysis buffer. lysates were separated by sds-page and electroblotted on a pvdf-membrane. after incubation with primary antibodies overnight and horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibody the visualization was achieved by a chemiluminescence-detection system. in addition, proteins were detected by immunohistochemistry. after three days in culture amikacin caused the most pronounced effect. at the lowest concentration tested ( mg/l) connexin and n-cadherin were reduced to ± % and ± % of the controls (n= ). no change was recognized for vimentin ( ± %). effects obtained with streptomycin were less pronounced for these these proteins ( ± %, ± %, and ± %, respectively). similar, but less pronounced effects were observed with gentamicin and tobramycin at a concentration of mg/l (connexin : ± % and ± %; n-cadherin: ± % and ± %; vimentin: ± % and ± %) and mg/l (connexin- : ± % and ± %; n-cadherin: ± % and ± %; vimentin: ± % and ± %). after incubation for and days the effects occurred in the same range. the substances showed no influence on the viability of serw sertoli-cells up to mg/l in the mtt assay. by immunohistochemistry we showed that the localisation of the proteins -connexin and n-cadherin at the cell membrane and vimentin in the cytoplasm -was not influenced by the aminoglycosides. large conductance calcium-and voltage-gated potassium (bk) channels play an important role in controlling membrane potential and calcium influx, and are strongly modulated by protein kinases at multiple sites. the stress-regulated exon (strex) adds to the bk channel c terminus a cysteine-rich insert of amino acids that inverts the channel regulation by protein kinase a (pka) from excitatory to inhibitory. here we investigated the mechanisms by which the strex insert influences bk channel regulation by protein kinase c (pkc). activity of bk channels without strex insert (bk-zero), transiently expressed in hek cells, was inhibited by pkc in inside-out membrane patches (~ % inhibition). bk channels with strex insert (bk-strex), however, were insensitive to pkc. phosphomimetic mutation of a pkc phosphorylation site (s e) in bk-strex, resulted in a ~ % reduction of basal channel activity, whereas the s a mutant retained normal activity. to examine whether palmitoylation, and thus association of the strex domain with the plasma membrane, prevents pkc inhibition of bk channel gating, palmitoylation was abolished by either site-directed mutagenesis (c : a) or by pharmacological inhibition of palmitoyl transferases with -bromopalmitate ( -bp). both, mutation and pretreatment with -bp resulted in the expression of bk-strex channels which were sensitive to pkc (~ % inhibition of channel activity). no inhibitory pkc effect was observed in patches of the bk-strex s a channel mutant pretreated with -bp. in a clonal rat somatomammotroph pituitary cell line (gh b ), in which pcr products without (zero) and with the bp strex exon could be identified, the pkc activator pma blocked channel activity by ~ %. this inhibition was increased to over % when gh b cells were pretreated with -bp, indicating that both channel isoforms were functionally active. in summary, the present study demonstrates that palmitoylation of strex prevents bk channel regulation by pkc, which is mediated by phosphorylation of ser , probably by steric hindrance. our results provide further evidence for a cross-talk between palmitoylation and phosphorylation as a crucial mechanism underlying the dynamic regulation of ion channels. human pleural mesothelial met- a cells are a limited in vitro model system in determining potential asbestos-like genotoxic effects of multiwall carbon nanotubes ziemann c. , reamon-büttner s. multiwall carbon nanotubes (mwcnt) are nanomaterials with important technological impact. depending on their diameter, length, and biopersistence, however, some mwcnt seem to exhibit a fiber-like cytotoxic and genotoxic potential, similar to asbestos. thus, a project funded by the german federal ministry of education and research (bmbf contract no. x a) focuses on potential adverse biological effects of different types of mwcnt to enlarge the knowledge base about toxicity determining parameters. this project comprises both in vitro (rat) and in vivo endpoints with long amosite asbestos as a positive control. as mesothelial cells are target cells for adverse effects of asbestos, in particular mesothelioma development, the human sv transformed, non-malignant pleural mesothelial cell line met- a was chosen as the main in vitro model in this project. in the present study part, met- a cells were characterized concerning their usefulness as an in vitro model to study potential asbestos-like cytotoxic and genotoxic effects of different mwcnt varieties. using an mwcnt-optimized lactate dehydrogenase liberation assay and proliferation parameters derived from cell counts, concentration-dependent cytotoxicity of long amosite asbestos ( , , and µg/cm ) was demonstrated in met- a cells. cells also showed asbestosinduced increase in dna-strand breaks and oxidative dna-damage in the hogg modified comet assay. thus, met- a cells were responsive to asbestos treatment. owing to asbestos potential to induce aneugenic effects and spindle fiber damage, micronucleus induction, determination of numerical chromosome aberration, and altered meta-, ana-, and telophase morphology were planned as in vitro endpoints. met- a cells were thus initially characterized in this regard and were found to exhibit highly variable chromosome numbers with lower than % cells exhibiting a normal diploid chromosome set, an up to twentyfold higher spontaneous micronucleus frequency, as compared to polychromatic bone marrow erythrocytes in rodents, and a profound number of aberrant meta-, ana-and telophases with bridges, lagging chromosomes and multipolar divisions. in conclusion, met- a cells are of only limited value as an in vitro model system to study potential asbestos-like effects of mwcnt and also biopersistent fibers. the cells are indeed responsive to asbestos, but unfortunately demonstrate marked genomic instability and thus limited significance concerning genotoxic effects. waixenicin a inhibits cell proliferation through magnesium-dependent block of trpm channels zierler s. transient receptor potential melastatin (trpm ) channels represent the major magnesium-uptake mechanism in mammalian cells and are key regulators of cell growth and proliferation. they are abundantly expressed in a variety of human carcinoma cells controlling survival, growth and migration. these characteristics are the basis for recent interest in the channel as a target for cancer therapeutics. we screened a chemical library of marine organism-derived extracts and identified waixenicin a from the soft coral sarcothelia edmondsoni as a strong inhibitor of overexpressed and native trpm . waixenicin a activity was cytosolic and potentiated by intracellular free magnesium (mg + ) concentration. mutating a mg + -sensitive site on the trpm kinase domain reduced the potency of the compound, whereas kinase deletion enhanced its efficacy independent of mg + . waixenicin a failed to inhibit the closely homologous trpm channel and did not significantly affect trpm , trpm , and crac (calcium release activated calcium) channels. therefore, waixenicin a represents the first potent and relatively specific inhibitor of trpm ion channels. consistent with trpm inhibition, the compound blocked cell proliferation in human jurkat t-cells and rat basophilic leukemia cells. based on the compound's ability to inhibit cell proliferation through mg + -dependent block of trpm , waixenicin a or structural analogs may have cancer-specific therapeutic potential, particularly since certain cancers accumulate cytosolic mg + . release of metals from different sections of domestic drinking water installations zietz b. p., richter k., laß j., suchenwirth r., huppmann r. governmental institute of public health of lower saxony division of environmental medicine and environmental epidemiology, roesebeckstraße - , hanover, germany different metals were used as important piping materials in the drinking water supply for a long time. due to corrosion metals can leach into the tap water. of special importance is the toxic element lead. however other heavy metals in drinking water such as copper, nickel and cadmium can also give reason for health concerns. in this study it was investigated in which amount relevant metals were released from different parts of domestic installations into the cold water. for the spatial allocation of the emission sources a sequential water sampling protocol was used after three hours of stagnation time representing the first litre of the water column. after stagnation ten sample volumes were collected in series. existing facilities of domestic installations constructed with different plumbing materials were examined predominantly from residential buildings. the elements al, as, cd, cr, cu, fe, mg, mn, ni, pb, sb, se, u and zn were detected by means of icp-ms. in total water pipe strands of domestic installation systems were examined. they comprised single water samples and single parameters. depending upon the type of plumbing different courses and concentration ranges of the elements could be measured in the tap water samples. terminal taps or installation parts were frequently responsible for a release of nickel and in several cases of cadmium. the concentration courses of the element zinc proved as a good indicator for the allocation of the emission source to a brass containing section of the installation (zinc as an alloy component of brass). one can conclude that an investigation by means of a sequential water sampling protocol and multi-element detection can be a valuable non-destructive method for drinking water-hygienic investigations of domestic installations. novel interaction partners of the murine trpc protein zimmermann j., beck a., flockerzi v. universität des saarlandes experimentelle und klinische pharmakologie und toxikologie, kirrberger str. , homburg, germany in this work novel interaction partners of the murine protein transient receptor potential canonical (mtrpc ) were identified. the trpc protein is the major subunit of a cation channel, residing in the plasma membrane. it comprises six trans-membrane domains and cytosolic amino and carboxyl termini. two major splice variants of the trpc gene exist, trpc a ( aa) and trpc b ( aa), trpc b lacks aa to of the trpc a variant. both trpc variants are co-expressed in endothelial cells, intestinal smooth muscle and brain. to identify trpc -interacting proteins a yeast two-hybrid system, cytotrap®, which allows identification of protein-protein interactions within the cytosol was used. a premade mouse brain cdna library was screened by the cytosolic amino and carboxyl terminal parts of mouse trpc a (aa to ; aa to ). for the carboxyl terminal part fourteen proteins were identified. to independently prove the interaction, the fulllength cdnas of all fourteen proteins were cloned, fused to a flag-tag and coexpressed with trpc in hek cells. co-immunoprecipitations were performed for all candidates using both the anti-flag-antibody and the antibody for trpc . in addition, changes of cytosolic calcium were monitored and trpc currents were recorded in hek cells expressing the candidate cdnas and stably expressing the trpc a or trpc b and the muscarinic receptor type cdnas. the tarbp protein, one of the candidates shown to interact with trpc , changed calcium influx when coexpressed with trpc . in order to identify the domains of trpc responsible for its interaction with the tarbp protein, six trpc -gst-fusion proteins covering the carboxyl terminal aa of trpc a were expressed in e. coli and used for pull-down experiments. by this approach two domains of trpc could be identified to interact with tarbp . one of these domains is well conserved within the trpc protein, corresponding to the result, that trpc and tarbp effectively co-immunoprecipitate, too. the tarbp protein has been shown to be a component of the risc loading complex, also known as the micro-rna loading complex which is composed of dicer , eif c /ago and tarbp (chendrimada et al. ) . by its interaction it may link trpc to pre-microrna processing. increased levels of angiotensin ii provoke dna damage and have influence on dna repair in mouse kidneys zimnol a., brand s., schupp n. universität würzburg institut für toxikologie, versbacherstr. , würzburg, germany the renin-angiotensin system (ras) plays a crucial role concerning the blood pressure, electrolyte balance and cardiovascular homeostasis. angiotensin ii (ang ii), the active hormone of the ras, in higher concentrations leads to vasoconstriction, oxidative stress and hypertension. hypertensive patients have an increased risk to develop cancer, especially kidney cancer. we have shown in vitro and in vivo, that ang ii is capable to cause an elevation of blood pressure as well as dna damage dose-dependently. to investigate whether the high blood pressure or the enhanced levels of ang ii are responsible for dna damage, male c bl/ -mice were equipped with osmotic minipumps, delivering ang ii in a concentration of ng/kg · min during days. additionally they were treated with ramipril, an angiotensin-converting-enzyme blocker, with the ang ii receptor antagonist candesartan, the vasodilator hydralazine, and the antioxidant tempol. dna damage was analysed with the comet assay. we measured the base excision repair (ber)-related dna repair in the kidney with a comet-based in vitro repair assay. furthermore, the distribution and expression of the ang ii-type (at ) receptor in the kidney was analyzed by immunohistochemistry. treatment with ang ii led to a significant increase of blood pressure, whereas the medication with candesartan decreased the systolic blood pressure. the intervention with hydralazine lowered the blood pressure only for a short time. the other substances had no effect at all on the blood pressure. genomic damage, quantified with the comet assay, was augmented by ang ii and improved by all interventions, particularly by candesartan and tempol. beyond that, ang ii showed a tendency to reduce dna repair. treatment with candesartan, hydralazine and tempol increased the repair capacity. furthermore, ang ii tended to result in a downregulation of the at receptor in kidney tubule cells. candesartan and ramipril, especially were able to augment the expression of the at receptor, whereas hydralazine achieved the opposite. these results demonstrate that ang ii leads to dna damage in the kidney independent of blood pressure. apparently elevated levels of ang ii affect dna repair and expression of at receptor. to confirm these findings we are going to examine more precisely the manifestation of other enzymes, which are implicated in dna repair. regulation of hcn channel activity by cyclic cytidine ´, ´-monophosphate zong x., krause s., chen c. -c., gruner c., cao-ehlker x., fenske s., wahl-schott c., biel m. lmu münchen, department pharmazie, pharmakologie für naturwissenschaften center for integrated protein science munich (cipsm), butenandtstr. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] münchen, germany hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated (hcn) channels play a key role in controlling cardiac pacemaker activity and are essential for normal function of neuronal circuits. hcn channels are principally gated by voltage but are coactivated by the cyclic nucleotides camp and cgmp which directly bind to a c-terminal binding domain. recently, cyclic cmp (ccmp) was shown to be present in various cell lines and tissues at concentrations that are comparable to cellular cgmp levels. moreover, there is recent evidence that ccmp can activate camp-and cgmp-dependent protein kinases in vivo. here, we examined whether ccmp exerts effects on hcn channels. to this end, we recorded hcn channel-mediated currents (i h) in hek cells that stably express hcn , hcn , hcn or hcn , respectively. currents were measured either with a standard patch-clamp setup or by employing the planar patch-clamp technology. in hcn and hcn channels, ccmp shifted the membrane potential for half maximal activation (v . ) to more positive values. in addition, ccmp accelerated activation while it slowed down deactivation kinetics. the ec for ccmp was µm which is about times higher than the ec of cgmp. cyclic cmp is a partial agonist of hcn channels since it activates only % of the maximal current obtained with camp or cgmp. to identify in vivo effects of ccmp we recorded ih of murine sinoatrial node (san) cells in the presence and absence of mm ccmp. like for heterologously expressed hcn channels, ccmp shifted v . of ih by about + mv. importantly, the steepness of the diastolic depolarization of san pacemaker potentials which is mainly determined by the amplitude of ih was profoundly increased by ccmp, compared to control conditions. as a consequence of the upregulation of ih the frequency of san pacemaker potentials was increased by about % in the presence of ccmp. our results suggest that ccmp is a physiological regulator of hcn channel activity. a d actinic keratosis like construct for assessment of innovative tumour therapeutics zoschke c. the incidence of actinic keratosis (ak) has increased dramatically in the last decades and it is considered the most frequent carcinoma in situ today. especially immunosuppressed patients are at high risk to develop invasive squamous cell carcinoma (scc) [ ] which asks for most efficient and well-tolerated ak therapy. yet, current measures do not fit with these demands. nucleotide analogues, recently identified by molecular modelling [ , ] , outperformed the current standard for the therapy of actinic keratosis, -fluoruracil, when tested in the tumour cell line scc , in normal human keratinocytes and fibroblasts [ ] . as next step in pre-clinical drug assessment, we aimed to characterise the effect of the most selective nucleotide analogue oxbu in reconstructed human tumour skin. based on the d construct of scc developed by höller and co-workers [ ] for start we introduced several adaptations with respect to keratinocyte, fibroblast and scc seeding to grow an aklike construct with scc cells forming nests in particular in the epidermis. in addition, first experiments with the oxbu on the ak like constructs showed promising results for an efficient treatment of actinic keratosis. efficacy was derived from immunohistology (marker for proliferation: ki- , marker for scc: cytokeratin- , axl, marker for invasion: mmp , marker for apoptosis: caspase- , nuclei were stained with dapi) as well as the effects on the secretion of cytokeratin- and its caspase-induced cleavage product into the culture medium following drug exposure for up to days. efficacy of a . % oxbu solution proved close to or even better when compared to both a . % fluorouracil and . % aphidicolin solution. the former being the gold standard of current ak therapy, the latter is a frequently used inhibitor of human polymerase alpha and delta, however, failed to be introduced into clinical use. -in fact, in monolayer cultures aphidicolin proved most toxic for normal human keratinocytes which was not true with oxbu [ ] . -therefore, these d tumour constructs offer a new approach to pre-clinical drug assessment and may be added to other d models of skin diseases currently gaining increased interest as test platforms. ima , a multi-peptide cancer vaccine for advanced colorectal cancer, induces multiple cd + and cd + t-cell responses associated with improved survival walter s. , kuttruff s. ima is a novel peptide-based vaccine consisting of hla-a* and hla-dr binding synthetic peptides that were identified based on natural presentation on human colorectal cancer (crc) samples. ima was characterized in a phase i/ii trial in advanced/metastatic crc patients being at least clinically stable after weeks of first-line oxaliplatin-based therapy. all patients received a single application of low-dose cyclophosphamide for immunomodulation. this was followed by repeated ima vaccinations in combination with low-dose gm-csf (cohort ; n= ) or ima / gm-csf plus topically applied imiquimod (cohort ; n= ). before and post vaccination, patients were analyzed by hla-multimer assay and intracellular cytokine (ics) assay for cd + t-cell responses and by ics assay for cd + tcell responses. as immune status biomarkers, phenotypically defined myeloid derived suppressor cell populations (mdsc - ) were analyzed prior to immunotherapy. tumor status of patients was monitored repeatedly by ct/mri according to recist and corresponding tumor scans were reviewed centrally. clinical assessment included disease control rate (dcr), time to progression (ttp), progression-free survival (pfs) and overall survival (os). ima overall was immunogenic in / ( %) evaluable patients, with % and % of patients mounting multiple cd + and cd + t-cell responses, respectively. patients that received the immunomodulator imiquimod presented with significantly more multiple cd + cell responses as detected by ics (p= . ). multiple cd + and multiple cd + responses were individually associated with significantly better clinical outcome. the association was most pronounced for patients with both multiple cd + and multiple cd + responses. these patients had significantly higher dcr at months (p= . ), improved ttp (p= . ) and improved pfs (p= . ) than other patients. most importantly, a trend for prolonged os was also observed in these patients (p= . , hazard ratio . ). in the study population, levels of different mdsc phenotypes were significantly increased as compared to age/gender matched controls. high mdsc levels were associated with fewer immune responses and for mdsc and mdsc high frequencies were associated with shorter os (p= . and p= . , respectively). to summarize, both hla-a* and hla-dr restricted peptides in ima were immunogenic. a significantly better clinical outcome of multi-tumap responders in comparison to patients with one/no tumap response strongly indicates clinical activity of ima . acrylamide (aa), a genotoxic carcinogen (iarc class a) is formed in food by thermal treatment from different precursors. after oral ingestion, aa is metabolically epoxidized in the liver by cyp e into glycidamide (ga). ga binds to dna, forming covalent adducts, primarily at n of guanine (n -ga-gua). both, aa and ga undergo conjugation to glutathione (gsh) to be excreted via urine as mercapturic acids (ma), namely nacetyl-s-( -carbamoylethyl)-cysteine (aama), and n-acetyl-s-( -hydroxy- carbamoylethyl)-cysteine (gama). in a dose response study, encompassing the dosage range from human dietary exposure levels up to mg/kg bw, female sprague dawley (sd) rats on a diet devoid of detectable aa content were gavaged with single doses of aa. formation of urinary mas and of n -ga-gua dna adducts in liver, kidney and lung was measured h after application, a time point where cmax of n -ga-gua was reached. the untreated control group was found to excrete about . nmol (aama plus gama) in the urine ( h), indicating a background of endogenous aa formation. compared to untreated control, the lowest dosage of . µg aa/kg bw neither resulted in significantly enhanced ma excretion, nor in a detectable n -ga-gua adduct levels in any organ tested (limit of detection, lod, . adducts/ nucleotides). at the tenfold higher dose ( µg/kg bw), adducts were found in kidney (about adduct/ nucleotides) and lung (< adduct/ nucleotides), but not in liver. at and µg/kg bw, adducts were found in all three organs, at levels not significantly different to those found at µg aa/kg bw (about - adducts/ nucleotides). the results of this in vivo study and of further recent research on aa toxicology will be discussed with respect to risk assessment. exposure of rats to single doses of aa in the range of human dietary exposure ( . - µg/kg bw ) leads to n -ga-gua adduct levels in the tissues monitored obviously not exceeding the range of steady state background dna lesions associated with endogenous/exogenous exposure to various genotoxic electrophiles. thus, the question of significant impact on human background dna damage resulting from exposure to a given genotoxic carcinogen, and on potentially ensuing biological consequences may become a highly relevant issue in risk assessment. pharmaco-economic impact of price, volume and demographic development böcking w., kirch w. institut für klinische pharmakologie, medizinische fakultät der tu dresden, fiedlerstr. , dresden health insurance costs in germany have grown by % p.a. over the last ten years and amount to approx. bn eur in . while costs for stationary treatment as the largest cost category have been intensely analyzed over the past years, pharmaceutical expenses have been analyzed in less detail, mostly focusing on the statutory health insurance side, even though pharmaceutical expenses have grown almost twice as much as costs for ambulant treatments. therefore, the question was asked how pharmaceutical expenses in a large german private health insurance company are allocated with respect to age and indication groups, and how those have developed from to . the data of a private health insurance company with more than . customers was split into price and volume effects per age group to understand if price or volume drives the cost development. additionally, the two largest indication groups are analyzed in detail. as a result, both price and volume effects drive an overall cost increase. these effects are even stronger in older age groups. this cost increase is not sustainable for the german health insurance system over a longer period of time and will even further increase due to the ageing of the german population. a novel animal replacement system for the detection of endocrine disruptive capabilities in sexual development scheider j. , , winter p. alternatives to animal testing for prediction of local toxicity and genotoxicity have been recently established. however, currently these methods are not suitable for measuring endocrine effects in developing organs such as e.g. embryonic gonads. here we present a phenotypic anchoring of a comprehensive study on sex-specific gene expression analysis accompanied by histological analysis of endocrine disruption in chicken embryo gonads, having the potential for an animal replacing system for endocrine disruptive toxicologic and ecotoxicologic examinations of chemicals. chicken embryos were inoculated with different amounts of tributyltin (tbt) and bisphenol-a (bpa). embryos were incubated and their gonads analyzed histologically d prior to hatching. from identically treated embryos right and left testes and ovaries were separated and genome-wide transcription profiles generated using supertag digital gene expression (st-dge, supersage) profiling. male and female gonadal tissues both revealed histological aberrations in response to tbt and bpa. female gonads became masculinized in response to tbt and, viceversa, bpa-treated male gonads underwent feminization whereas in female gonads clearly visible structural aberrations occurred. in both chemicals mortality increased especially in the most affected sex (tbt: females, bpa: males). the expression profiles of more than million mrnas revealed massive effects of both chemicals, tbt and bpa, on important cellular signaling pathways. gene expression differences were most pronounced in the phenotypically most affected sex. our results demonstrate that endocrine disruptive chemicals exert their effects on several levels including but not restricted to known hormone-based pathways. together with an ongoing study of gene expression differences in very young life stages and different chemicals these data will form the base for a blow-by-blow analysis of sexspecific gene expression of embryonic development. the project builds on already existing and further to generate data with the aim of the development of an in vitro method for testing chemicals at chicken eggs for ) replacement of tests on juveniles and (sub-) adult rodents, ) stages with impossibility of sensation of pain in the individuals, ) highly sensitive prospects of modes of action of chemicals, which ) might show consequences in the next generations. channels are critical for oscillatory burst discharges in the reticular thalamus and absence epilepsy differential distribution of three members of a gene family encoding low voltage-activated (t-type) calcium channels hippocampal seizure resistance and reduced neuronal excitotoxicity in mice lacking the cav . e/r-type voltage-gated calcium channel transcriptional upregulation of cav . mediates epileptogenesis in the pilocarpine model of epilepsy structure and functional expression of a member of the low voltage-activated calcium channel family a molecular determinant of nickel inhibition in cav . t-type calcium channels histidine residues in the is -is loop are critical for nickel-sensitive inhibition of the cav . calcium channel substrate recognition and translocation by polyspecific organic cation transporters proton pump inhibitors inhibit metformin uptake by organic cation transporters (octs) structural determinants of inhibitor interaction with the human organic cation transporter oct (slc a ) functional characterization of the human organic cation transporter variant p. ala>ser extra-adrenal glucocorticoid synthesis in the intestinal epithelium: more than a drop in the ocean? local glucocorticoid production in the mouse lung is induced by immune cell stimulation biomimetic materials in tissue engineering biomaterials offer cancer research the third dimension synthetic biomaterials as instructive extracellular microenvironments for morphogenesis in tissue engineering injectable self-assembling peptide nanofibers create intramyocardial microenvironments for endothelial cells directed growth of fibroblasts into three dimensional micropatterned geometries via selfassembling scaffolds novel pcl-based honeycomb scaffolds as drug delivery systems for rhbmp- tissue engineering spatio-temporal vegf and pdgf delivery patterns blood vessel formation and maturation presentation of rgds epitopes on self-assembled nanofibers of branched peptide amphiphiles controlling mammalian cell interactions on patterned polyelectrolyte multilayer surfaces langmuir avintegrins as receptors for tumor targeting by circulating ligands heparin binding nanostructures to promote growth of blood vessels tirrell endothelial cell adhesion to the fibronectin cs domain in artificial extracellular matrix proteins design and bioproduction of a recombinant multi(bio)functional elastin-like protein polymer containing cell adhesion sequences for tissue engineering purposes stimuli-responsive thin coatings using elastin-like polymers for epac as a novel effector of airway smooth muscle relaxation ) camp inhibits airway smooth muscle phenotype modulation functional roles of epac and pka in human airway smooth muscle phenotype plasticity assessment of the sensitizing and irritative potential of preservatives by loose-fit coculture-based sensitization assay (lcsa) sonnenburg a nsc- (ukrain) in the palliative treatment of pancreatic cancer. results of a phase ii trial association of funding and conclusions in randomized drug trials: a reflection of treatment effect or adverse events a general method for the covalent labeling of fusion proteins with small molecules in vivo robust single-particle tracking in live-cell time-lapse sequences correlation of structural class with no-observed-effect levels: a proposal for establishing a threshold of concern trbp recruits the dicer complex to ago for microrna processing and gene silencing index a , , , , objective: hypertension and arterial stiffness is influenced by environmental and genetic factors. high plasma sodium concentration leads to mechanical stiffening of endothelial cells resulting in endothelial dysfunction and elevated blood pressure. here we investigated whether endothelial cell stiffness of ex vivo preparations of human arteries is linked to plasma sodium concentrations and functional genetic variants of the mineralocorticoid receptor (nr c ), rs modulating blood pressure, renin, and aldosterone levels, and rs , which alters a mirna binding site. design and methods: twenty patients were enrolled after a vein stripping procedure and collateral arterial blood vessels were prepared for atomic force microscopy (afm). plasma sodium concentration was routinely determined and dna for genotyping was extracted from edta blood samples. sodium levels > mmol/l were defined as 'high'. after application of µm amiloride, a specific blocker of the endothelial sodium channel (enac) changes in endothelial cell stiffness, were defined as 'weak' (≤ %), or 'strong' (> %). statistical analyzes were performed by anova. results: in ex vivo artery preparations of patients with high sodium levels (n= ), mechanical stiffness of endothelial cells was tend to increase (∆ amiloride) (p= . ). both nr c variants were associated with a change > % in endothelial stiffness after amiloride treatment. the rs c allele was significantly associated with a strong amiloride response (p= . ), while the rs a allele only showed a trend towards stronger amiloride effects (p= . ). conclusion: our findings indicate that high plasma sodium concentration results in an increased endothelial amiloride response and thus influencing mechanical stiffness, modulated by functional nr c variants. our novel approach linking patients' sodium levels and genetic status to endothelial stiffness by afm will be further evaluated in larger clinical settings. protein expression changes in bap-exposed human bladder cancer cells from spliceosome activation towards redistribution of the cytoskeleton after long-term exposure to subacute concentration schmitz-spanke s., pink m., jeske e., stempelmann k., rehn s., verma n., rettenmeier a. w. universitätsklinikum essen institut für hygiene und arbeitsmedizin, hufelandstr. , essen, germany deregulation of the β-catenin signaling pathway plays an important role in the development of hepatocellular tumors. activating mutations in ctnnb (encoding β-catenin) are frequently observed in murine and human liver tumors (e.g. human hepatoblastomas). activation of β-catenin signaling induces an overexpression of several cytochrome p (cyp) enzymes, including cyp e . cytotoxicity of acetaminophen (aap) is based on its cyp e -catalyzed metabolism to the electrophilic compound n-acetyl-p-benzo-quinone imine, which forms covalent adducts with cellular macromolecules if depletion of glutathione occurs. treatment with aap should therefore lead to a selective damage of cyp e -overexpressing ctnnb mutated hepatoma cells. mice were injected with a single dose of the liver carcinogen n-nitrosodiethylamine (den) and subsequently treated with the tumor promoter phenobarbital to select for ctnnb -mutated tumors. administration of a single dose of aap ( mg/kg of body weight) followed the tumor promotion protocol. two days after treatment immunohistological analysis of the livers showed about % necrotic tissue in the larger tumors which were positive for glutamine synthetase (gs), a marker for ctnnb -mutated tumor cells. by contrast, gs-negative tumors remained unaffected. at later time points we observed regeneration processes with infiltration of the necrotic tissue by inflammatory cells followed by fibrotic cells. proliferation of normal hepatocytes surrounding the damaged areas could also be observed. however, repopulation of parts of the former tumor areas by remaining gs-positive tumor cells was also detected. these results suggest that treatment with aap might serve as a future therapeutic possibility to selectively poison cyp e -overexpressing hepatoma. release of , -epoxyeicosatrienoic acid ( , -eet) upon neuronal activity induces trpa -dependent mechanical pain hypersensitivity sisignano m. , epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (eets) are cyp-epoxygenase (cyp ) derived metabolites of arachidonic acid (aa) which act as endogenous signaling molecules in multiple biological systems. we investigated the specific contribution of , -eet to transient-receptor potential-(trp)-channel activation in nociceptor neurons, and its consequence for nociceptive processing. we found that during capsaicin-induced nociception , -eet-levels increased in the drg and it is released from activated sensory neurons in vitro. , -eet potently induced a calcium flux [ nm] in cultured drg-neurons which was completely abolished when trpa was deleted or inhibited. in spinal cord slices , -eet dose-dependently enhanced the frequency, but not the amplitude of spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents (sepsc) in lamina ii neurons that also respond to mustard oil (aitc), indicating a presynaptic mechanism. furthermore, , -eet-induced enhancement of sepsc frequency was abolished in trpa null mice, suggesting that , -eet pre-synaptically facilitates spinal cord synaptic transmission via trpa . finally, intrathecal injection of , -eet caused mechanical hyperagesia in wild type but not trpa null mice. we conclude that , -eet is synthesized upon acute activation of nociceptors and leads to mechanical hypersensitivity via trpa at central afferent terminals in the spinal cord. sisnaiske j. , hardelauf h. introduction: neurite outgrowth and plasticity of neuronal networks are essential processes e.g. during brain development and learning. thus, morphological readouts of neuronal connectivity are thought to be important endpoints to assess neurotoxic effects of environmental chemicals as well as when discovering new drugs. to analyze neurite outgrowth and connectivity level rapidly and easily in vitro we developed the network formation assay (nfa) (pct/ep / ). this platform requires a spatially standardized hexagonal array for culturing neuronal networks with no need to fix or stain the cells to visualize neuritic processes. methods: to demonstrate the feasibility of the nfa we performed experiments in which we disrupted mature neurite networks or inhibited generating networks of human sh-sy y cells with different concentrations of acrylamide (acr). we also observed the counteracting effects of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (bdnf) and calpeptin in these systems. to create the hexagonal array we used a poly(dimethylsulfoxide) bilayer stencil comprising through holes for adhesion spots and interconnecting tracks. plasma stencilling a peg-coated glass substrate produces adhesive nodes for the neurons and micron-scale-tracks for guiding neurite outgrowth and connectivity. results: in both systems, the developing and mature network, we found not only a concentration dependant effect of acr and bdnf but also a time dependant effect with a limited capability of the developing system to regenerate, even in the presence of acr. the co-treatment of the cells showed that inhibition of calpains by calpeptin might reduce the effect of intracellular elevated ca +, a known neurotoxic mechanism of acr. moreover, the neurothrophin bdnf acts via trkb receptors on pathways stimulating neurite outgrowth and thereby counteracting the adverse effect of acr. conclusion: with the nfa we provide a rapid and simple way to analyze neurite outgrowth and connection formation in real time. by spatially standardizing the array we provide assay coordinates to streamline the analysis process and bring it towards high throughput testing. furthermore preliminary data showed that modification of the surface with biomolecules allows cell adhesion of other neuronal celltypes (e.g. primary mouse neurons) and extracellular matrix proteins (e.g. laminin) stimulate neurite outgrowth via integrins. transcriptional regulation of nox by histone deacetylases siuda d. , , zechner u. , prawitt d. nox is a member of the nadph oxidase family, which represents a major source of reactive oxygen species (ros) in the vascular wall. nox -mediated ros production mainly depends on the expression levels of the enzyme. the present study is aimed to investigate the regulation mechanisms of nox transcription by histone deacetylase (hdac). in cultured human ea.hy endothelial cells, treatment with the pan-hdac inhibitors (scriptaid, trichostatin a, tsa, and suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid, saha) leads to a drastic decrease in nox mrna expression. a similar down-regulation of nox mrna expression can be achieved with sirna-mediated knockdown of hdac . hdac inhibition in endothelial cells is associated with enhanced histone acetylation in the human nox promoter region, with no significant changes in dna methylation. consistently, scriptaid-treated cells show increased chromatin accessibility in nox promoter. in addition, we provide evidence that c-jun plays an important role in controlling nox transcription. knockdown of c-jun with sirna leads to a marked downregulation of nox mrna expression. in response to scriptaid treatment, the binding to c-jun to the nox promoter region is reduced despite the open chromatin structure. in parallel, the binding of polymerase iia to the nox promoter is significantly inhibited as well, which may explain the reduction in nox transcription. in conclusion, hdac inhibition decreases nox transcription in human endothelial cells by preventing the binding of transcription factor(s) and polymerase(s) to the nox promoter. this is very likely because of a hyperacetylation-mediated steric inhibition. cyclopentenone prostaglandins induce oxidative dna-damage in hamster lung fibroblast v cells solecki g. m. key: cord- -denczc t authors: salipalli, sandeep; singh, prafull kumar; borlak, jürgen title: recent advances in live cell imaging of hepatoma cells date: - - journal: bmc cell biol doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: denczc t live cell imaging enables the study of dynamic processes of living cells in real time by use of suitable reporter proteins and the staining of specific cellular structures and/or organelles. with the availability of advanced optical devices and improved cell culture protocols it has become a rapidly growing research methodology. the success of this technique relies mainly on the selection of suitable reporter proteins, construction of recombinant plasmids possessing cell type specific promoters as well as reliable methods of gene transfer. this review aims to provide an overview of the recent developments in the field of marker proteins (bioluminescence and fluorescent) and methodologies (fluorescent resonance energy transfer, fluorescent recovery after photobleaching and proximity ligation assay) employed as to achieve an improved imaging of biological processes in hepatoma cells. moreover, different expression systems of marker proteins and the modes of gene transfer are discussed with emphasis on the study of lipid droplet formation in hepatocytes as an example. microscopy has contributed immensely to our understanding of cellular structure and morphology. however, traditional microscopic tools provide only limited information in terms of dynamical processes occurring in a living cell which are of great interest for biomedical researchers. advances in optical methods, in vitro culture systems and molecular biology led to the advent of live cell imaging techniques. this non-invasive technique provides better insight into the biological role of target molecules by allowing researchers to investigate the dynamic processes occurring in living cells in real time. the technique has many potential applications in various fields of biomedical science including developmental biology, cell biology and tumor biology and provides opportunity to study the dynamic behaviour of living cells in context to gene expression, protein-protein interaction, co-localization, cell division, chromosomal dynamics and intracellular transport of bio-molecules. the success of live cell imaging relies on various factors including the specific imaging system, climate controlling devices for cultured cells under investigation, construction of recombinant plasmid dna, transfer and expression of candidate genes and/or fluorescent proteins in mammalian cells. these factors greatly influence the fluorescent/bioluminescent signals obtained from the cultured cells. the gene transfer methods should not only be efficient in delivery and in ensuring stable expression but at the same time should exert minimum toxic effects to the cultured cells. furthermore, the chosen fluorescent or bioluminescent markers should be minimally phototoxic to the cells at their highest expression levels. amongst the bioluminescent markers, atp dependent and independent luciferases from various sources have been extensively used in imaging experiments [ , ] . the use of bioluminescent markers is not only limited to in vitro assays or live cell imaging but is also applied to in vivo molecular imaging experiments. various lines of luciferase expressing transgenic mice and cells have so far been developed and are frequently employed in biomedical research, and a major breakthrough in the field of fluorescent protein imaging was the discovery of green fluorescent protein (gfp) by osamu shimomura who received the nobel prize in chemistry in together with martin chalfie und roger tsien [ , ] . after the advent of gfp the technique of live cell imaging has taken a leap in understanding the detailed and complex cellular dynamics. apart from gfp and its variants, many other fluorescent proteins have been isolated from a variety of sources and are successfully used in imaging experiments of various cell types and their organelles. in this regard, live cell imaging has been employed to study functional genetics of liver specific diseases including steatosis, which results from accumulation of lipid droplets in hepatocytes [ ] . efficient gene delivery in mammalian cells is another aspect of our review with appropriate choices of cell type specific promoters and their use for targeted gene delivery to hepatoma lines such as hepg and hep b. nonetheless, the concept of gene transfer through plasmids started in bacteria via both, physical and chemical methods. similar approaches have been used in hepatoma cells and other higher eukaryotes and mammalian cells and include lipofection, deae-dextran, calcium-phosphate, viral vectors, peptides and electroporation [ ] . lipofection has been used to achieve transient as well as steady transfection in hepatoma cells resulting in an improved and stable expression of transgenes even after several passages [ ] . to develop protocols for cell type specific reporter activity, we discuss the use of alternate promoters and vectors for stable expression in actively dividing cells. bioluminescence is the phenomenon of the production of light by a chemical reaction within a living organism. it was first discovered in firefly (lampyridae species) and since then has been used for various screening and staining activities with an advantage of observing the cells under a compound microscope. firefly luciferase (fluc) emits luminescence (up to nm) without the requirement of any external light excitation and uses atp for the conversion of its substrate luciferin to oxyluciferin in a luciferase enzyme catalyzed oxidation reaction. initially, fluc was used only in luminometery based reporter assays using cellular lysates. later luciferase expressing cells and mouse lines were developed for noninvasive imaging of rodents. injection of the luciferin substrate in mice produces luminescent signals that can be easily detected by in vivo imaging modalities. apart from beetle, luciferase has been isolated from members of the coelenterazine species, i.e. gaussia, renilla, pleuromamm and oplophorus. the luciferase from renilla sp. (rluc) uses a different substrate "coelenterazine" and produces a higher and stable luminescent signal as compared to the fluc [ ] . rluc has an added natural advantage of being an atp independent enzyme, and thus requires less energy to produce luminescence. however, a major limitation of fluc and rluc is their short life span and therefore these luminescent proteins cannot be used for long duration imaging assays. this led to the development of a more photostable and robust luciferase in the form of an enhanced beetle luciferase (eluc) which again uses luciferin as the substrate and is an atp dependent enzyme [ ] . a comparison between eluc and fluc showed phenomenal differences in the intensity and photostability of the two luciferases. however, the km values (michaelis constant) of the enzymes in regard to atp consumption were found to be almost equal, and it was concluded that the atp use is not the reason for a better performance of eluc. moreover, eluc was tested in cell lines such as nih/ t using various promoters, and it was shown that the luciferase primarily localizes in nucleus, cytosol and in peroxisomes. certain vectors and promoters also play an important role for their suitable expression namely pcmv vector used in mice cells along with the astrocyte specific promoter mper which outperformed fluc by a factor of -and -fold in cell extracts and live cells, respectively [ ] . in contrast to bioluminescence where the enzyme catalyzed reaction initiates the excitation of luminescent molecule, fluorescence is triggered when photons from an external source excites the light absorbing pigments. green fluorescent protein (gfp) was the first fluorescent protein to be discovered in jelly fish (aequorea victoria). wild type gfp (wtgfp) is a . kda protein with a major and a minor excitation peak ( and nm, respectively) and a single emission peak at nm. the chromophore of this fp is formed by three amino acid residues consisting of ser -tyr -gly and held by a single αhelix surrounded by β-barrel sheets to prevent its quenching by water [ ] . several modifications have been made to wtgfp to enhance its fluorescence intensity as well as stability by minimizing photobleaching. in the year , heim et al. [ ] introduced a single point mutation at the s t residue that resulted in enhanced fluorescence at the same emission spectra but with a shift in excitation peak from nm to nm. the mutation also significantly reduced the time required for formation of the fluorophore from hours to . hours. several additional mutations in the protein helped the molecule to fold optimally at °c while the protein expression was improved by codon optimization of the wtgfp according to the host organism [ ] . additional mutants were generated replacing the serine with threonine, alanine, glycine, cysteine or leucine leading to a protein with a single absorbance peak at~ nm [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . expression of gfp at high concentrations in the cells posed the problem of dimerization which was resolved by side directed mutations at a k, l k or f r residues [ ] . the enhanced gfp (egfp) was developed with the modification and mutations described above at various positions of wtgfp. proteins tagged with enhanced gfp can be visualized in cells with low light intensities causing less photobleaching to enable imaging and quantification of intracellular proteins and its pathways effectively [ ] [ ] [ ] . to tackle the problem of mixed chromophores in live cell imaging experiments, several mutants of wtgfp including enhanced gfp (egfp) and emrald gfp were generated which retained its fluorescent properties but with non-overlapping spectral properties [ ] . neutral chromophore gfp has also been generated with a shift in the excitation and emission wavelengths to uv and green light, respectively [ , ] . the proteins were again mutated to create sapphire which displays increased emission at °c [ ] . the new mutant of sapphire called turbo sapphire has better ph-stability with uv excitation and thus has a larger separation between the excitation and emission wavelengths. table summarizes the development of different variants of fps and their physical properties. several fluorescent proteins from different species have been discovered with various excitations and emission spectra ranging from ultraviolet to far-red or infrared [ ] . these have been used in several cells and organelles, and some of them are discussed in this review. development of different variants of gfp with different absorption and emission spectra provided the opportunity for simultaneous multi-color staining of the cells. early variants included the blue fluorescent protein (bfp), developed by introducing a point mutation (y h) to shift the absorbance and emission spectra to nm and nm, respectively, and cyan fluorescent protein (cfp) which was discovered from mutants of a.victoria [ ] . since the spectra of bfp and egfp are distinguishable, a combination of these two fps was first used for multicolor imaging in cells and fluorescent (förster) resonance energy transfer (fret) analysis [ , , ] . however, a major drawback of bfp was its low intensity and faster photobleaching [ ] . therefore, enhanced bfp (ebfp) was developed by using codon optimisation for human cells [ ] . notably, azurite, an ebfp, was developed by the dauherty's group and was reported to be -fold more photostable and brighter than the conventional bfp. ebfp was generated by incorporation of two additional point mutations (f l and s t) in the bfp and was considered to be the brightest bfp for the time until further improvements were made [ ] . subsequently, ebfp . was developed based on mutations at s r, y n, t s, s a, n t, i v, n s and a v in ebfp and was -fold brighter than ebfp [ ] . further modifications of ebfp . led to the development of ebfp . which was more photostable than its predecessor ebfp . but with no increase in fluorescence. azurite, as previously mentioned, had increased photostability as compared to ebfp . and ebfp . due to the mutations at v i and v r, respectively. however, this caused a decrease in the fluorescence by % [ ] . screening of a library of mutants generated by random mutagenesis identified ebfp with enhanced fluorescence and photostability when compared to ebfp and azurite. ebfp was reported to be fold brighter and -fold more photostable than ebfp and . -fold brighter and . -fold more photostable than azurite [ ] . however, both ebfp and azurite tend to dimerize when expressed in cells at higher concentrations. this was overcome by replacing the alanine residue at position by valine [ ] . bfp was further modified to develop a stable red fluorescent protein (rfp). site directed and random mutagenesis of rfp generated mtagbfp with a shift in excitation spectrum and blue emission [ ] . although mtagbfp is the brightest among all the bfps produced, it is . -fold less photostable than ebfp [ ] . therefore, mtagbfp was mutated at i a to give rise to mtagbfp , i.e. a . fold more photostable bfp with a similar spectral profile and maturation half time as that of the parent protein [ ] . cfp and yellow fluorescent protein (yfp) were developed as a multi-color pair. cfp was also brighter and more photostable when compared to bfp [ ] and was created by a point mutation (y w) with a spectra intermediate between bfp and egfp. further improvements were also made to increase the stability and intensity of cfp [ , ] . mutation at t position of wild type gfp with an aromatic amino acid resulted in shifting of excitation and emission over nm into yellow wavelength. this led to the development of enhanced yellow fp (eyfp). although eyfp is a dimer and sensitive to chlorine, three variants of eyfp were developed namely citrine (monomer), venus -a fast maturing fp at °c and the yellow fluorescent protein for energy transfer (ypet)used in fret along with cyan fps [ , , ] . red fluorescent protein (rfp) was first isolated from an anthozoan, diascoma, with excitation and emission of and nm, respectively [ ] . the major advantage of rfps over gfps is their longer excitation wavelength causing less damage to the cells and much less auto fluorescence in cells at the red spectrum. also the maturation of fps obtained from anthozoan is more efficient as compared to that of jelly fish fps at °c. native rfp has the disadvantage of forming tetramers which at times tends to aggregate in the cells and also cause false oligomerization of target proteins to hinder their native function [ ] . dsred, the common rfp available, has prolonged maturation time often taking days to turn red from a greenish complex; this feature has been used to observe aggregate formation in target cells [ ] . monomeric rfps have also been developed from dsred through a series of mutations, and the resultant proteins exhibited different maturation rate as well as fluorescent properties, i.e. morange, mko, mstrawberry, mcherry, tag rfp, mplum, mkate and tdtomato [ ] . due to its fast maturation rate, high photostability and wide ph tolerance mcherry is a widely used long wavelength fp. however, it tends to dimerize that limits its experimental use. later the protein was modified to prevent its dimerization in the cells. it is considered to be the brightest rfp with enhanced photostability, and it has only a nm longer excitation and emission wavelengths compared to its predecessors [ ] . similarly, tag rfp was developed from wtrfp isolated from sea anemone entacmaea quadricolo by introducing mutations at five different sites (r e, q d, s n, f v and f y) [ ] . as of today, live cell imaging has advanced mainly due to the advent of fps tagged biomolecules with specific functions in the cell. fps have successfully been cloned into bacteria to mammalian cell lines either alone as a marker or along with a gene of interest as a fusion protein [ , ] . several organic dyes have been tagged to cell organelles to visualize the dynamics under a microscope, however, not all dyes are readily accepted by the cell organelles and in such conditions fp tagged proteins are used to target the organelle. multi-color live cell imaging is an effort to observe multiple organelles, their spatial organisation, interactions between organelles and their constituent components. therefore, the successful application of the technique demands fps and dyes with non-overlapping emission spectra [ ] . in recent developments organelle staining dyes such as hoechst , mitored, dioc , syto and rhodamine b were tested along with several other dyes for imaging of various organelles in live cells and for the study of host pathogen interactions [ ] . in this regard, lipid droplet staining has been done since a long time but only with organic dyes such as oil red, and none of the fps mentioned earlier have been used for successful imaging of lipid droplets. the different fluorescent proteins widely used for staining of different organelles of a live cell are listed in table . fluorogen activating proteins (fap) are proteins/peptides such as bovine serum albumin and igg that can bind and activate the fluorescence of target fluorogen molecules and may also alter their spectral properties. conjugation of -( -carboxy- -cyanoviny )julolidine (ccvj) fluorogen to either bsa and/or igg not only improved its solubility but also the fluorescence intensity by . -fold when compared to the unconjugated molecule [ ] . the use of larger fps such as gfp in reporter assays hinders the function of the fusion proteins in the cells. therefore, small tag systems such as tetracysteine motif (ccxxcc) were genetically inserted into the target proteins that can bind with high specificity to biarsenical dyes, resorufin arsenical helix binder (reash) and fiash (fluorescein arsenical helix binder) in live cells and lead to an enhanced fluorescent signal [ ] . of note, flash, a derivative of ' , '-bis (acetoxymercuri) fluorescein, is a cell permeable non-toxic ligand that binds specifically to four cysteine residues (i, i + , i + and i + ) of the target proteins α helical structure to emit fluorescence [ ] . out of the fourteen different flash ligands screened, flash-edt showed strong affinity for hexamer peptides and positive emission at nm. fret studies in hela cells with fiash-edt genetically fused to the cooh-terminus of an enhanced cyan fluorescent protein (ecfp-fiash) evidenced a -fold increase in fluorescence at nm when compared to the ecfp alone transfected cells [ , , ] . however, emission of ecfp at nm declined to about % in fiash-edt transfected cells due to fret interactions. reash-edt , a resorufin based fluorescent complex with excitation and emission maxima of nm and nm, respectively, was successfully tested for fret studies with gfp and yfp probe pairs in hela cells [ ] . similar protein-ligand complexes were synthesized and used namely crash-edt , sflash-edt , f flash-edt , choxash-edt , splash-edt -alexa , cag flash-edt and ascy -edt . several modifications have been carried out to improve the quantum yield, tetracysteine binding affinity and to reduce the cytotoxicity of these complexes. specifically, malachite green (mg) and thiazole orange (to) derived intercalating faps were developed which bind to rna aptamer and dna, respectively, and lead to enhanced ( , -and -fold, respectively) and bleaching stable fluorescent signal from the fluorogens [ ] [ ] [ ] . several unique membrane permeant and impermeant faps were developed by screening a library of human single-chain antibodies (scfvs) using derivatives of thiazole orange and malachite green. the screened clones have comparatively smaller size (the smallest being amino acids long that is almost half the size of gfp) and thousands-fold higher brightness as compared to the typical fps. moreover, different spectral variants of mg and to could be easily generated by different combination of the screened fluorogens and faps. the fluorescence and differential interference contrast imaging microscopy was performed in nih t cells with the membrane impermeable (mg- p) and membrane permeable (mg-ester) forms of mg fluorogens and fap hl -mg scfv tagged to membrane protein plateletderived growth factor receptor (pdgfr). the mg-ester signal was detected from the plasma membrane while mg- p emitting fluorescence inside the cells suggested a localization near endoplasmic reticulum [ ] . figure illustrates the uses of membrane permeable and impermeable mg fap fluorogens and their application with a fluorescent tagged protein to study trafficking of a transmembrane protein. additionally, these faps were also tagged along with gfp and other fluorescent proteins to study plasma membrane and transporter proteins such as the insulin regulated glucose transporter (glut ), β adrenergic receptor (β ar) and cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (cftr). these genes were designed such that the fap and gfp were present as intracellular and extracellular reporters and the fluorogens, being membrane permeable and impermeable, were used to observe the mobility and placement of the target proteins tested in nih t , c c and hek cells [ ] . faps have been tested and proved to be reliable fluorescent markers for detecting and imaging various activities in a cell like protein motility studies and even for transmembrane protein activity. faps provide wide scope in developing alternatives to traditional fluorescent proteins where size hinders the activity of the target proteins. bacterial transformations have led to the expression of various genes in the prokaryotic system with certain [ , ] limitations as compared to the eukaryotic cells. however, the transfer of genes in the mammalian cells requires much more sensitive approaches, and several methods have been developed for effective transfer and stable expression of genes in these cells. with the advent of viral vectors much progress has been made in the field of gene transfer. the use of cell type specific promoters allows greater control over the expression of foreign genes. liver cell specific promoters such as glycerol- -phosphate acyltransferase (gpat i and gpat ii) and phosphoglycerate kinase (pgk- ), albumin, human alpha -antitrypsin and hemopexin are shown to be active in hepatocytes of human and mice origin [ , , ] . similarly, viral promoters and vectors have been tested in different cell lines for their specificity and stability of expression. pcns and pcns-d vectors were reported to express cloned genes in cell lines and can also act as a shuttle vector between bacteria and mammalian cell lines to facilitate an easy cloning process. this vector system has been tested for stable expression of luciferase in hepg , hep b, hela, snu and snu cell lines. the luciferase expression was higher in hepg and snu cells as compared to other cell lines. cytomegalovirus (cmv) and simian virus are known to infect human and other primate cells and have been shown to induce a stable expression of transgene in various cell lines [ ] . during the study of cmv promoter systems, a ' untranslated region ( ' utr) was identified which was shown to boost the expression of viral proteins facilitating the rapid propagation of viral particles in the host cell. incorporation of utr regions in the promoter of viral vectors boosted the expression of genes of interest in host cells such as cho or hepg . notably, the use of two copies of the utr regions further improved the expression of target genes in actively dividing cells [ ] . later, the utr regions were found to be the internal ribosome entry sequence (ires) being responsible for uninterrupted expression of genes. ires were first discovered in rna of poliovirus in by pelletier and sonenberg [ ] and facilitate the viral replication machinery by providing means for viral rna to bind with the s subunit of the host ribosomal complex thus eliminating the need for eukaryotic translation factors [ , ] . since then, several viral vectors have been developed including the recently explored corona virus of the sars virus family. this rna based vector provides a stable and prolonged expression for more than passages in different cell types [ ] . insertion of ires site in expression vectors also offers the possibility of separate expression of the cloned genes under a single promoter ( figure ) [ ] . table summarizes the list of various promoters and plasmids that have been used extensively in mammalian cell lines. among all promoters used cmv and sv are most efficient in a wide range of cell lines. apart from these cell specific promoters such as pgk and gpat enhance expression levels in hepatoma cell lines. a variety of methods have been developed for a robust and efficient gene transfer without causing toxicity to the host cell. earlier physical methods such as electroporation and microinjections [ , ] were primarily used for gene transfer studies but have been sidelined gradually due to the obvious disadvantages of being time consuming and the associated technical difficulties. more advanced methods have come into place for gene transfer according to the need for expression as a plasmid entity or as an integrated system in genome which also can be used for gene knockouts. non-pathogenic viral vectors are commonly used for gene transfer studies. baculovirus of the autographa californica multicapsid nucleopolyhedrovirus (acmnpv) and bombyx mori nucleopolyhedrovirus (bmnpv) genus provide a safe and efficient means of gene delivery to target cells [ ] . baculoviral vectors have been modified to infect mammalian cell lines either as the whole baculovirus or as a helper cell mediated gene delivery in cells. adenovirus terminal repeats were used for the replication of the target gene, and the whole plasmid was packed into the baculoviral vector bac-b for transfer in cell lines such as b b . the transfected cells showed not only stable expression but also a -fold increase in the vector titer during subsequent passages [ ] . of note, dna fragments of approximately kb were efficiently transferred into different cell lines using such a vector. direct incubation of oligodendrite and chicken muscle cells with baculoviral vector showed a transfection efficiency of % [ ] . further increase in transfection and expression efficiency was achieved by additional modifications in baculoviral vectors such as an introduction of the metallothione promoter (bac-me). the bac-me vector showed a transfection efficiency of % with low leaky expression and reduced cytotoxicity in hela cells. the expression efficiency of these vectors was further enhanced by treating the transfected cells with znso [ ] . although the baculoviral vectors were successfully used for gene transfer experiments in several mammalian cell lines they were replaced by other viral vectors and methods due to the associated cytotoxicity specifically at higher cell to virus ratio. hence, non-viral vectors were developed for transfection of viral sensitive mammalian cell lines [ ] . bacterial based transfection has also been employed by cloning sequences belonging to the pathogenic bacteria e.coli. the modified genes from pathogenic bacteria like listeria monocytogenes have also been used where the bacteria with its intracytoplasmic capabilities propagate into the host. likewise, e.coli was modified so that selflysis genes become activated as soon as the bacteria enter the host cell to release the vector into host cytoplasm [ ] . other bacterial methods involve t ss, a bartonella sp., for the introduction of single strand dna into the host cell. thus, after entry the bacteria releases ssdna into cytosol and along with the enzyme relaxase or integrase, which is bound to target dna, starts to replicate to finally produce plasmid dna as a whole by joining the loose ends present [ ] . this mode of transfer is considered to be hazard free and is employed for a variety of cell lines. further methods of nonviral based gene transfer have been developed for higher efficiency and less toxicity to the cells. as mentioned earlier for efficient transfection the gene has to be integrated into the genome (constitutively) or is continuously expressed in the presence of a specific inducer reagent for the chosen promoter (inducible). owing to variable results the need remains to develop efficient methods as has been attempted in the form of a dual plasmid approach using the mice myogenic c c cell line. according to this method t-rex plasmid system is first transfected into the cell line using a lipid based method with an efficiency of % and is activated by tetracycline. thereafter, a modified t-rex plasmid became available. after days of initial transfection a second plasmid can be introduced with % efficiency that permits the study of complex biochemical reactions involving different factors [ ] . in table the various transfection efficiencies of different methods are summarized. bactofection seems to be an effective mode of transfection in cells without the risk of cytotoxicity as compared to some viral methods but much improvement has to be made for application of bactofection for a wide variety of cell lines. lipofection involves formation of a positively charged lipid-nucleic acid complex by suspending negatively charged dna/rna molecules with cationic lipids for a short duration of time. the positive charge on the complex facilitates attachment to the cell membrane and entry via endocytosis [ ] . a comparative study concluded that lipofection is the safest method to transfer puast sv expressed genes in yeast [ ] genes into in mammalian cells amongst the various transfer methods [ ] . different commercially available kits with a broad range of efficiency on different cell lines are available. the transfection efficiency of methods varies depending upon the cell type, cell number and ratio of dna and reagent used. using lipofection and as determined with a gfp marker an efficiency of about % was obtained in cho-k cell lines [ ] . the major challenge faced by most of the non-viral delivery systems is the degradation of the transfected nucleic acid in the endosomes and/or lysosomes as they are mainly internalized by endocytosis. lysosomotropic agents like chloroquine and polyvinylpyrolidone (pvp) have been used effectively to increase the transfection efficiency of different delivery methods by reducing the lysosomic degradation of the transfected nucleic acid [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, the cytotoxicity of these agents raises concerns against their use. chloroquine is known to increase the intracellular ph leading to cytotoxicity and degradation of transfected dna at higher concentrations and at prolonged exposure times (> hours). amongst the two variants of pvp, pvp was reported to be cytotoxic at all concentrations while pvp showed negligible cell toxicity and even improved the transfection efficiency. pvp has been used for transfection studies in macrophages and hepatocytes [ ] . sucrose is also known to cause intracellular swelling of vesicles in endosome and lysosomes due to osmotic pressure [ , ] . sucrose in conjunction with lipid-dna complex or lipofection reagents was shown to increase their transfection efficiency in fibroblast cell. furthermore, no toxicity has been reported using sucrose as lysosomotropic agent and a concentration range of to mm was safe in various cell lines such as cho, cos and hek t cells. beneficial effects of these lysosomotropic agents were compared against lipofectamine in cos , cho and hek cell lines. essentially, the transfection efficiency of lipofectamine was increased by -and -fold when used in conjunction with pv and sucrose, respectively. chloroquine, although being toxic showed an increase of to -fold when used at a concentration range of . to . mm as compared to lipofectamine alone [ ] . poly(ethyleneimine) is another cationic polymer transfection reagent frequently used in a variety of cell lines. however high cytotoxicity is the major drawback associated with pei and therefore several changes in its molecular structure have been done to reduce its cytotoxicity and this includes pegylation and the introduction of carbohydrate, lipid and peptide moieties [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . a recent study showed the improved transfection efficiency and low cytotoxicity of an anionic glycopolymer derivative of pei in hepg and hek t cells [ ] . modified lipids were developed to enhance the transfection efficiency of vectors. specifically, cationic oligopeptide lipids are charged lipids with a linker molecule to provide cations and are said to be more efficient in the presence of the serum containing medium [ ] . different ratios of nucleic acid and lipids were tested ranging from : to : and the ratio of : was found to be optimum in terms of cell viability and transfection efficiency [ ] . other synthetic vectors have been tested for gene transfer in various cell lines. polyspermine imidazole- , amide complex (psia) was employed with hepg as well as cos cell lines for gene targeted therapy. psia transfection efficiency is of only - % in hepg . apart from the risk of psia degradation that hinders complex formation with plasmid dna the process of psia synthesis requires strict environmental (ph and temperature) conditions before dna can be introduced [ ] . to improve transfection efficiency in various hepatoma cell lines like huh- , hepg and hep b different strategies were employed including lipofection, electroporation and microinjection. microinjection ( μg/ml) and cationic lipids - % - % % % - [ , ] non-viral --- % - [ , ] e.coli (modified salmonells/listeris sp.) t ss (bartonella sp.) - % % > % > % - % [ ] [ ] [ ] lipofection ( μg) methods were used for transfection of plasmid encoding fluorescent protein (pegfp and peyfp) tagged to human and mouse adrp genes in huh- cells as to study the pathways of lipid droplet metabolism. a transfection efficiency of % was achieved, and none of the methods affected the expression or the interaction of proteins in cells proving their reliability and safety. however, the transfection efficiency of these methods varied inversely with the size of the plasmid [ ] . in this regard, adenoviral vectors have been employed in hepg cells to study the function of genes such as the cytochrome p monooxygenases in drug induced hepatotoxicity. notably, cyp a , cyp d , cyp c , cyp c and cyp a were transfected in hepg cells using recombinant adenoviral vector with a transfection efficiency of approximately % [ , ] . in most cases transfection or transduction of primary cells proof to be difficult for several reasons like the stable state of non-dividing or quiescent cells. however, some viral vector-based methods have been used successfully such as the murine retroviral vector that can transfect primary hepatocytes stimulated by mitogens (epidermal or hepatocyte or keratinocyte growth factors). moreover, the associated high costs and varying efficiency of the growth factors make these transfection methods unfavorable [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . lentiviral vectors are capable of transfecting quiescent cells [ ] [ ] [ ] and have been successfully used for gene transfer experiments in various hepatoma cell lines [ , , ] . although the discussed methods and markers are compatible with various if not all cell lines, the cell lines chosen have to be noted to select the right kind of vector and promoter system. an overview of the various transfection methods in different cell lines is given in figure . research in recent years significantly advanced an understanding of the molecular causes of fatty liver disease, and live cell imaging of hepatoma cells proved to be extremely valuable for studying lipid droplet formation. lipids are primarily stored in adipocytes as lipid droplets; however, under stressed conditions hepatocytes can also produce lipid droplets leading to pathological conditions like fatty liver disease [ , ] . lipid droplet staining requires cell permeable dyes/fluorochromes which can bind specifically to the components of the lipid monolayer of droplets. the most commonly used dyes for lipid staining are oil red o, nile red and bod-ipy with an excitation-emission spectrum in the range of - nm and - nm, respectively. figure depicts oil red o staining of lipid droplets in cultured human hepatocytes treated with palmitic acid (pa) and oleic acid (oa) and the cardiovascular drug amiodarone which is known to cause steatosis and steatohepatitis in patients. fps and dyes with non-overlapping fluorescence spectrum are required for differential staining of multiple biological molecules involved in lipid droplet metabolism. to address this issue, a long wavelength fp and a short range dye monodansyl pentane (mdh) was developed for lipid droplet staining with excitation and emission in the range of and nm [ ] . such an approach allowed the study of perlipin interactions on the lipid droplet as defined by the mdh stain. notably, in the early works of niemann et al. ( ) the use of mdh as a mean to study lipid droplets was reported [ ] . mdh was also found to be photostable when compared to nile red and bodipy with a light emission of more than minutes wherein the latter dyes were stable up to minutes only [ ] . mdh has a potential use for lipid droplet staining to facilitate an understanding of the formation of lipid droplets and their interaction with various proteins within hepatocytes. the lipid droplet monolayer has many associated proteins namely adipocyte differentiation-related proteins (adrp also known as perilipin /plin ) and perilipins (plins) which interact with other organelles in the cell. simultaneous detection of lipid droplets and adrp was achieved by transfecting huh- cells with adrp-gfp encoding plasmid and staining of lipid droplets with oil red o. although this method was useful in observing the cytoplasmic interaction of adrp/plin with lipid droplets the precise localization of gfp-adrp/plin at the surface of lipid droplet was distinctly observed only after incubating the cells with bodipy / dodecanoic acid, a fatty acid sequestered in lipid droplets as evidenced by imaging by confocal microscopy in live and fixed cells conditions [ ] . while this study was one of the first reports on lipid-protein interactions investigated by live cell imaging the use of bodipy hindered clear imaging due to background signals. to overcome these obstacles fret and frap methods were used as a means to study these complexes. moreover, mdh stain provides an efficient stain for lipid droplets which allows proteins to interact with the droplets to be tagged with longer wavelength fluorescent proteins and also mdh provides a more stable and robust stain for lipid droplets as compared to the traditionally used oil red o and nile red stains. fret is an approach to study protein-protein interaction and co-localization of organelles on the principle of energy transfer between two chromophores situated in close proximity ( - nm). the pair of fluorescent probes used has an overlapping spectral profile, and the emission wavelength of the donor probe (gfp) provides the required energy for the excitation of the acceptor probe (cfp). acceptor bleaching can be used to demonstrate whether the organelles are within the fret-distance (i.e. - nm), thus demonstrating true association on a molecular scale. fret was used to observe motility of certain proteins as well as organelles [ ] . notably, laser scanning confocal microscopy based fret assays have been employed to study the co-localization of lipid droplets and mitochondria in porcine oocytes using the mitotracker green (mtg) and nile red (nr) fluorochromes. fret acceptor bleaching methods have also been used to examine mitochondria-lipid droplet co-localization [ ] . to study protein-lipid interactions on the surface of the lipid droplets, perilipin was tagged with cfp and followed by cyan fluorescence. since it forms a strong fret interaction with the lipid stain -(n-( -nitrobenz- -oxa- , -diazo) aminostearic acid (nbd), the colocalized protein-lipid gave a signal of yellow-to-orange. the mouse perilipin gene was cloned into the mammalian expression vector pecfpn and was stably expressed in mouse l fibroblast cells. subsequently, nbd was used to stain phosphatidyl choline to form nbd-pc complex, and a confocal microscopy based fret assay was employed to determine the interaction between lipids and proteins in the cell. similarly, co-localization of perilipin and sphingomyelin (sm) near plasma membrane was demonstrated using nbd-sm and plin -cfp vector constructs [ ] . although cfp and yfp are most widely used probes yfp has the disadvantage of having low quantum yield and poor signal to noise ratio hampering the process of individual cfp intensity measurement. to counter this problem, two ecfp molecules were fused; however, the result was a further decrease in the intensity due to multiple excited states causing interconversion of excited states by homotransfer. notably, multiple excited states are due to two different crystal structure conformations of ecfp [ ] . this problem was resolved by site directed mutagenesis of the his residue to aspartate, and the fluorescence intensity of the mutant was further increased by a factor of . as compared to ecfp. further mutations at s a and y a residues boosted the extinction coefficient of the monomer but caused a decrease in the quantum yield. the modified ecfp is known as cerulean and is proved to be a better fret donor than the conventional ecfp [ ] . figure depicts a basic understanding on how fret analysis can be done using ecfp and eyfp particularly for lipid droplet studies. fluorescent recovery after photobleaching (frap) is used to study single membrane bound structures, single cells and protein-lipid interactions. frap uses the concept of activating a fluorescent protein observing its intensity and subsequent bleaching by excess light to finally measure the bleached region for binding activity to the surface of the secondary structure or membrane. cfp and yfp have been commonly used to study the interactions of perilipin (plin ) and perilipin (plin ) with adipocyte triglyceride lipase (atgl) and its corresponding activator α-β-hydrolase domain-containing (abhd ). on the basis of frap studies in cos cells, it was concluded that plin interacts with atgl but not plin [ ] . adrp/plin is shown to be located at the surface of cytoplasmic lipid droplets [ ] , and localization studies for dna fragments encoding human and mouse adrp were ligated in-frame to the ' end of egfp, thereby generating gfp-hadrp (expressed by plasmid pla ) and gfp-madrp fusion products. to examine whether the gfp-adrp products for both species retained the capacity to associate with these structures, constructs expressing the fusion proteins were transfected in huh- cells. after stimulation with fatty acid, the formation of lipid droplets in huh- cells can be identified by staining with lipophilic dyes and by antisera raised against adrp/ plin . the signal from gfp-madrp was detected from the surface of spherical intracellular structures while egfp was seen throughout the huh- cells. the localization of endogenous hadrp and the gfp-madrp products coincided, indicating that gfp-madrp was located at the surface of lipid droplets therefore demonstrating that it is possible to detect tagged and untagged adrp on the same lipid droplet. to verify the localization of gfp-madrp, cells expressing the fusion protein were incubated with bodipy / dodecanoic acid, a fluorescent fatty acid analogue that is sequestered in lipid droplets. the dye was selected because of its spectral properties which allow differentiation from egfp and a better cell permeability as compared to oil red o. results in both live cells and paraformaldehyde fixed cells showed localization of gfp-madrp at the surface of lipid droplets stained with the bodipy dye. attempts to fuse egfp to the c terminus of adrp/plin yielded few cells that produced fluorescence of the chimeric protein but in this case the signal did not derive from the surface of lipid droplet. consequently, egfp fused to the n terminus of human and mouse forms of adrp/plin was used in further studies [ ] . it is well recognized that caveolins are found on lipid droplets, but the functional significance of this association is poorly understood. adenovirus mediated transfer of cav -gfp in nih t cells demonstrated that caveolin- -coated lipid droplets can grow larger than caveolin- devoid lipid bodies suggesting the importance of caveolins in determining the size of lipid droplets. this study provided the first detailed characterization of the impact of caveolins on molecular composition and the size of lipid droplets [ ] . the most frequently employed tools (elisa, western blot, fret, frap co-immunoprecipitation) to study protein expression or protein-protein interactions rely on the use of antibodies tagged with either fluorophores or enzymes. the sensitivity of these techniques differs significantly, and the detection of proteins at low expression levels still remains challenging. the proximity ligation assay is a relatively inexpensive quantitative technique with high sensitivity. the technique is developed on the principles of antibody targeted assay, split reporter assay and polymerase based amplification of oligonucleotides. in this assay, the target proteins are recognized by specific antibodies (two or more) conjugated with short oligonucleotide strand. in case these probes are in near figure fret studies to determine interaction between plin and the atgl protein on lipid droplet in adipocytes [ ] . plin ( ) and atgl ( ) proteins were tagged with fret probes cfp ( ) and yfp ( ), respectively. the emission spectra of cfp act as excitation wavelength for the yfp. detection of yellow fluorescence after activation of cfp ( nm) suggest possible interaction of the two tagged proteins. proximity, the oligonucleotides can be ligated by addition of complementary oligonucleotide and ligase enzyme and subsequently amplified using pcr or rolling circle amplification. this leads to the formation of more than copies of the complement of bp in one hour using the phi polymerase [ ] . the incorporation of multiple fluorescently labeled oligonucleotides in the polymerase catalyzed reaction causes amplification of the signal resulting in high sensitivity. apart from protein expression and proteinprotein interaction, this highly versatile technique can also be adapted to detect post-translational modifications, colocalization and interaction of proteins with other biomolecules ( figure ). pla was recently used to demonstrate that the myc inhibitor -f could prevent mycn/max interaction in situ and caused accumulation of lipid droplets in tumor cells [ ] . the availability of a wide range of fluorescent proteins and organelle specific stains provides unprecedented opportunities for microscopic studies of diverse cellular processes including protein-protein interactions. however, for the visualization of certain cell components in live cells such as lipid droplets options are currently limited to organic dyes, i.e. bodipy, nile red and oil red o. the emission spectrum of these dyes overlaps with that of gfp and rfp; thus, it is not feasible to use them in combination for multi-color imaging. there is unmet need for the development of a new lipophilic dye which can be spectrally resolved from commonly used fluorophores. monodansylpentane, a cadaverin family dye with blue emission spectra, is the appropriate substitute for the red dyes for lipid staining. furthermore, this can be used along with far wavelength fluorescent proteins to obtain better insight into the lipid metabolism. discovery of novel proteins involved in the lipid droplet metabolism and their fusion with fluorescent proteins that can be spectrally resolved will help researchers to delineate the process of biogenesis of lipid droplets under live cell conditions. the advancements in culture systems to ensure long term metabolic activity of hepatocytes, the development of suitable transfection methods and reporter assays will be instrumental for the success of live cell imaging experiments. 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enables design of a novel "gold" class of green fluorescent proteins adipophilin is a specific marker of lipid accumulation in diverse cell types and diseases lipid droplet analysis in caveolin-deficient adipocytes: alterations in surface phospholipid composition and maturation defects proximity ligation assays: a recent addition to the proteomics toolbox myc inhibition induces metabolic changes leading to accumulation of lipid droplets in tumor cells recent advances in live cell imaging of hepatoma cells we gratefully acknowledge support from the virtual liver network (grant ) of the german federal ministry of education and research (bmbf) to jb. the funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, the authors declare that they have no competing interests.authors' contributions jb initiated the review. all authors contributed to the writing and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- - de r h authors: vandewege, michael w; sotero-caio, cibele g; phillips, caleb d title: positive selection and gene expression analyses from salivary glands reveal discrete adaptations within the ecologically diverse bat family phyllostomidae date: - - journal: genome biol evol doi: . /gbe/evaa sha: doc_id: cord_uid: de r h the leaf-nosed bats (phyllostomidae) are outliers among chiropterans with respect to the unusually high diversity of dietary strategies within the family. salivary glands, owing to their functions and high ultrastructural variability among lineages, are proposed to have played an important role during the phyllostomid radiation. to identify genes underlying salivary gland functional diversification, we sequenced submandibular gland transcriptomes from phyllostomid species representative of divergent dietary strategies. from the assembled transcriptomes, we performed an array of selection tests and gene expression analyses to identify signatures of adaptation. overall, we identified an enrichment of immunity-related gene ontology terms among genes evolving under positive selection. lineage-specific selection tests revealed several endomembrane system genes under selection in the vampire bat. many genes that respond to insulin were under selection and differentially expressed genes pointed to modifications of amino acid synthesis pathways in plant-visitors. results indicate salivary glands have diversified in various ways across a functional diverse clade of mammals in response to niche specializations. bats (order chiroptera) make up % of mammalian diversity and several groups have been alluded to as examples of extreme phenotypic and genomic changes leading to species diversity (ray et al. ; pritham and feschotte ; dumont et al. ; hayden et al. ; platt et al. ; phillips and baker ; sotero-caio et al. ) . in particular, the leaf-nosed bats (phyllostomidae) include > extant species, representing the most ecologically diverse mammal family with their wide range of dietary strategies practiced cirranello et al. ) . morphometric and the bat family phyllostomidae is one of the most ecologically diverse families of mammals. salivary glands are hypothesized to facilitate adaptation to novel diets because their secreted products are the first to come in contact with food and pathogens. we sequenced expressed transcripts from phyllostomid salivary glands and found strong signals of selection among immune-related genes. selection and gene expression signals among specific lineages were less clear but pointed to modifications of the endomembrane transport system and metabolic pathways. although we could not strongly link gene evolution to dietary adaptations, results indicated diversification in response to niche specializations. evolutionary models suggest the ecological and phenotypic diversity among lineages and species are associated with strong selection on dietary specialization features (monteiro and nogueira ; rojas et al. ; dumont et al. ; rossoni et al. ; hedrick et al. ) . bats exhibit several characteristics rendering them interesting to examine, most obviously their ability to fly and echolocate. furthermore, bats act as vectors for zoonotic diseases including sars coronavirus, ebola, nipah virus, and rabies (calisher et al. ; smith and wang ; olival et al. ) . a lesser examined characteristic thought to be directly linked to their dietary multiplicity and adaptation is the anatomical diversity of their salivary glands tandler et al. ) . in mammals, there are typically three major pairs of salivary glands: the submandibular, parotid, and sublingual glands, and all use intracellular processes that involve the synthesis, modification, packaging, and secretion of proteins in membrane-bound granules. these glands are considered part of the digestive system as they secrete digestive enzymes, however, their products perform additional functions including antimicrobial resistance and biochemical communication (dobrosielski-vergona ; talley et al. ; bloss et al. ; safi and kerth ; vandewege et al. ) . tandler and phillips ( ) have shown that among species of bats, secretory products were correlated with diet, especially in insectivorous species. further, phillips et al. ( ) found evidence that salivary glands play a role in lipid metabolism in myotis lucifugus. because of this wide variation and their direct link to immunity, diet, and reproduction, submandibular glands (smgs) and their products are hypothesized to play an important role in the adaptive radiation of mammals (phillips and tandler ) . linking genetic variation and gene products to selection and adaptation is still a challenge in evolutionary biology. more recently, the implementation of next-generation sequencing has facilitated the search for signatures of adaptation through dna and/or rna comparative analyses. indeed, sequencing transcriptomes offers an in-depth, data-rich method to identify selective pressures that have influenced the evolution of tissue-specific genes. of interest are genes that have undergone positive selection to adapt physiological, immunological, and ecological processes to new environments (daugherty and malik ; hawkins et al. ) . selection analyses among bat genes have generally been limited to few species for specific purposes (shen et al. ; zhang et al. ) . hawkins et al. ( ) analyzed orthologs from different bat genomes and transcriptomes and found most genes under selection were related to immunity and collagen production. here, phyllostomidae was examined specifically because of their extensive and relatively rapid radiation to new feeding strategies. we sequenced the smg transcriptomes of nine phyllostomid bats representing different subfamilies and different diets, and through analysis of orthologs characterized how selection on coding sequence and expression differences have shaped smgs. nine species from seven out of the recognized subfamilies were chosen to maximize representation of the phylogenetic and dietary diversity of phyllostomidae ( fig. ). we also included two insectivorous bats, m. lucifugus from vespertilionidae and pteronotus parnellii from mormoopidae, as outgroups. tissues were extracted and frozen in liquid nitrogen within min after euthanasia. additional details from tissue loans provided by the natural science research laboratory (nsrl) of the museum of texas tech university can be found in supplementary table s , supplementary material online. rna isolation, sequencing, and assembly rna was extracted from smgs of each bat using trizol (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa) following manufacturer protocols. oligo-dt magnetic beads were used to enrich for mrna strands with poly-a tails and a strand-specific pairedend cdna library was prepared using a scriptseq kit (epicentre, madison wi usa). libraries were sequenced on illumina platform (see supplementary table s , supplementary material online). for each species, pairedend reads were filtered for quality using trimmomatic . (bolger et al. ) putative open reading frames and translated peptide sequences were identified using transdecoder (haas et al. ) and the resulting peptide sequences were processed through the trinotate pipeline to identify functional properties and gene ontology (go) annotations associated with biological processes, molecular functions, and cellular components. to summarize, peptide sequences were queried against the swissprot database (dimmer et al. ) using blastp (altschul et al. ) and the pfam (finn et al. ) database using hmmer . . (eddy ) . peptides were also scanned for a signal peptide using signalp (petersen et al. ) , and transmembrane domains using tmhmm . (krogh et al. ). orthology assignment is still a major challenge in bioinformatics and evolutionary biology. here, we developed a process to filter out similar transcripts produced by trinity. the first step was to assume similar sequences would have similar trinotate annotations. we parsed the trinotate output to identify the best sequence representative for each unique swissprot annotation. to choose the best gene representative among multiple coding sequences (cdss) with the same swissprot annotation, we multiplied the length of the cds to the percent identity of the swissprot hit. this metric correlated with e value, but effectively acted as a bit score when e values were identical. the cds with the highest metric was chosen to represent the annotation. if a cds did not have a swissprot annotation, it was removed. we then ran combined best sequences from all species, and ran this data set through the orthomcl (li et al. ) pipeline to identify orthologous groups. only single gene ortholog groups were used in downstream selection tests. poor ortholog assignment can influence sequence relationships in a phylogeny, and because the relationships among phyllostomids are robust, a reasonable test of ortholog assignment would be to reconstruct a phylogenetic tree and determine if the resulting tree reflects previously described relationships. therefore, we reconstructed a phylogenetic tree from randomly sampled single gene orthologs shared among all individuals. each orthologous group was translated, aligned using linsi parameters in mafft (katoh and standley ) and reverse translated to construct a codon alignment. resulting alignments were concatenated and we used raxml (stamatakis ) to find the best tree from the unpartitioned data set using the ml and rapid bootstrapping algorithm, a gtrgamma model of nucleotide substitution, and bootstrap replicates. single gene orthologous groups that were found in seven or more phyllostomids were tested for evidence of selection using the maximum likelihood approach described by goldman and yang ( ) . codon alignments were constructed as above and the best tree for each gene was estimated using raxml. we used codeml in paml (yang ) to estimate the role of selection on gene evolution by comparing the rate of nonsynonymous substitution per nonsynonymous site (d n ) to the rate of synonymous substitution per synonymous site (d s ). the d n /d s ratio can be used as a sensitive measure of selective pressure; however, in most cases, the overall d n /d s is < and only a few amino acid sites are evolving quickly. therefore, to determine whether a gene was evolving adaptively, we calculated the likelihood of models that allow d n /d s to vary among codon sites (m a, m a, m , and m ). for all genes, we used likelihood ratio tests (lrts) to compare nested models that allow and disallow codon site d n /d s to be > (m a v m a, m v m ), and to test for significant differences between nested models (yang ) . if both models that allow d n /d s rates to be > (m a and m ) were significantly better fits to the data (lrt, p < . ), we inferred these genes were evolving under positive selection. we performed a false discovery rate (fdr) correction on the p values resulting from the m a v m a and m v m lrts. fdrs were estimated using the qvalue function in the "qvalue" r module (storey and tibshirani ; storey ) . we also conducted branch-site selection tests in codeml (yang and nielsen ; zhang et al. ) for ortholog groups that were present among all species. alignments were constructed as previously described, but we used the species tree generated above ( fig. ). the branch-site test for positive selection divides branches of a phylogenetic tree into foreground and background branches. the null model (model a) restricts positive selection among codons in both foreground and background branches. the alternative (model b) allows positive selection to occur among codon in foreground branches. likelihoods between model a and model b were compared using a lrt. the fdr was also estimated from the distribution of p values. we conducted independent branch-site tests where the d. rotundus branch was the foreground, a second test with trachops cirrhosus as foreground, and a third test that included the entire plant-visitors clade as foreground ( fig. ). we mapped quality filtered paired-end rnaseq reads back to reference sequences using bowtie . . (langmead et al. ) and default parameters of rsem (li and dewey ) . only ortholog groups that were present in four or more species were present in reference sequences. ortholog groups with < mapped reads across all samples were removed prior to analyses. normalization of raw read counts was performed using the estimatesizefactors and estimatedispersions functions in deseq v . (love et al. ) . patterns of species variation in expression levels were assessed by performing a phylogenetically corrected pca using the phytools r package (revell ) based on the blind variance stabilizing transformed data. we also conducted a differential expression analysis from the normalized count data between plant-visitors versus others (see fig. ) and determined statistical significance when the adjusted p value was < . . we repeated this analysis examining only nectarivores. for all single gene orthologs tested for selection, we counted the number of reoccurring go terms. we then used the go term proportion to summarize the general function of genes tested in the smgs of phyllostomids using revigo (supek et al. ), which nests redundant and similar terms from long go term lists by semantic clustering. we repeated the same analysis using go terms described from orthologs under positive selection. to test for go term enrichment for the genes under selection, panther (mi et al. ) was applied to identify statistically overrepresented go terms from the list of genes under positive selection using the genes tested as the reference list. we used the fisher's exact test and applied the fdr correction and statistical significance was determined below an adjusted p value < . . we estimated whether a protein was membrane bound, a receptor, immune related, or secreted by searching for specific go terms. if "secretion," "extracellular space," or "extracellular region" was present among go terms, we annotated the gene as secreted. if "immune," "defense," or "antimicrobial" was present, the gene was annotated as an immune. if "membrane" was present we called the gene membrane bound and if "receptor" was present, we called the gene a receptor (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). we also used david . (huang et al. ) to map kegg pathways to differentially expressed genes. to investigate putative proteins underlying the evolution of smgs, we performed rnaseq on chiroptera species: nine phyllostomids with varying dietary strategies, and two outgroups representing the bat ancestral state of strict insectivory ( fig. ). among the samples, between , and , transcripts were assembled per species. over % of the paired-reads mapped back to each assembly indicating most reads were used. among the transcripts, we predicted between , and , orfs, and among the orfs, we found between , and , unique hits to the swissprot database (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). the most similar isoform to the reference sequence was chosen to represent the annotation. swissprot annotations were not used a priori for ortholog clustering. however, if after clustering there were multiple swissprot annotations in a single gene ortholog group, the most common annotation was used to describe the ortholog group. in all, orthomcl grouped , annotations into , orthologous groups that included between and members (supplementary fig. s a , supplementary material online). among the ortholog groups, , were single gene families represented in four or more species and , were found in all species (supplementary fig. s b , supplementary material online). among these , groups, , ( %) had the same swissprot annotation among orthologs, suggesting overall consistency between orthomcl clustering and trinotate annotations. in the remaining groups, there was one dominant gene annotation and the outliers were likely a result of improper classification by trinotate, given blast hits are often closely related paralogs and not true orthologs, in which case annotations were manually corrected. to additionally test if the ortholog predictions were generally accurate and dna sequences largely reflected species relationships, we generated a phylogenetic tree from the concatenated alignments of randomly sampled orthologs that were present in all species. although individual gene trees may not reflect a species trees, we expected that a consensus would emerge from a large volume of dna sequences if orthologs were accurately predicted and aligned. we found that the resulting concatenated tree accurately reflected previous species trees generated by dumont et al. ( ) , baker et al. ( ) , and rojas et al. ( ) , with high bootstrap support at each node ( fig. ). among the , orthologs, , were single gene orthologs present in seven or more phyllostomids, and , had alignments with enough shared sites to produce output from codeml. after correcting for fdr, we found genes where models of evolution allowing positive selection were significantly better fit to the data than neutrality in both m a and m tests (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). to contrast background salivary gene functions to those under selection, we summarized the go terms of the , tested genes using the revigo server ( fig. a) . overall, most of these gene products were localized to the cytosol, but many were also positioned in the plasma membrane and extracellular region. common biological processes identified were related to transcription regulation, cell death, and protein synthesis and transport. by contrast, the biological process and cellular component terms of genes under selection were fairly different from those obtained in our global assessment of protein function ( fig. b) . these proteins had more terms related to the extracellular exosome or plasma membrane and were involved in the immune response ( fig. b) . interestingly, no terms related to diet or metabolism (i.e., carbohydrate or lipid metabolism) were associated with genes under positive selection. we used panther's overrepresentation test to determine whether any go terms were significantly overrepresented among genes under selection. there were no molecular function terms enriched among the genes under selection (supplementary fig. s , supplementary material online). the most enriched biological process term was innate immune response, but all enriched biological process terms were related to the defense against other organisms ( fig. c ). consistent with receptor-like proteins under selection, terms associated with membrane surfaces were enriched in the cellular component category ( fig. c ). upon survey of the multiple go terms assigned to each gene, we found that eight of the genes were involved in the immune response (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). moreover, % of immunity-related loci had secretory annotations although a binomial test did not suggest secretion among immune proteins was enriched (p ¼ . ). of the remaining genes, genes were membrane bound, two were secreted, and two had terms for both membranes and secretion. site tests can inform about positive selection on a protein among all species, but they cannot inform about episodic selection on specific lineages. therefore, we conducted branch-site tests using the species tree as a reference on the most unique lineages, namely the plant-visitors, d. rotundus, and t. cirrhosus, and the plant-visiting species. we identified , single gene orthologs that were present among all species and , had enough shared sites to be successfully tested in codeml. after correcting for fdr, we found , , and genes under positive selection in the plant-visitors, d. rotundus, and t. cirrhosus, respectively (supplementary table s , supplementary material online) making up between . % and . % of genes tested. bpia (bpi fold-containing family a member ), an immune response gene, was the only gene found to be under selection in both the plant-visitors and d. rotundus and approaching statistical significance in t. cirrhosus (supplementary table s we measured the expression of , orthologs among all species. we performed a phylogenetically corrected pca on the variance stabilizing transformed expression data and found that all species except d. rotundus, t. cirrhosus, and hsunycteris thomasi had relatively correlated expression profiles where most of the insectivores and plant-visitors clustered together ( fig. a ). as there were not any biological replicates and few dietary replicates among our samples, the most robust approach to identifying relevant differentially expressed genes was to compare the plant-visitors to the remaining species to identify expression differences that could explain how plant-visitors have adapted to a diet with a different macromolecular profile. sixteen genes were differentially expressed in plant-visitors, eight were upregulated, and eight were downregulated ( fig. b) , and no go terms or kegg pathways were significantly enriched among these genes. however, the most common pathways associated with these differentially expressed genes were metabolic pathways (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). we performed another differential expression experiment by just examining the nectarivores. interestingly, out of differentially expressed genes were downregulated in nectarivores ( fig. c ), many of these genes were also involved in metabolic pathways (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). salivary glands secrete products that have important biological roles in diet/digestion, oral health, and communication, as well as display the most varied cellular ultrastructure in distinct taxa . the great morphological variation observed in the ultrastructure of phyllostomid bat salivary gland granules led phillips and tandler ( ) to speculate that adaptation to novel niches drives salivary gland evolution. smg acinar cells are responsive to a variety of extracellular signals which can affect gene expression, protein synthesis, and protein modifications, and this responsiveness can be driven by the density and distribution of cell surface receptors . salivary proteins are among the first to directly encounter food and introduced pathogens, which lends biological importance in the context of adaptive evolution. however, their role in the adaptation of mammals to novel niches has been largely under investigated. here, we sequenced the smg transcriptomes of nine phyllostomid bats with varying feeding strategies to illuminate the role of salivary glands in this adaptive radiation. interestingly, the percentage of genes under selection expressed in phyllostomid salivary glands was not necessarily greater than genes under selection among bats a whole (hawkins et al. ) . further, links to dietary changes were not strongly apparent, but signatures of selection did reveal modification of smg functions. among the sequenced transcriptomes, we were able to annotate between , and , expressed proteins, which were successfully clustered as , single gene orthologs. about , were present in seven or more phyllostomids and tested for selection among codon sites. using codon selection models, we found only a small proportion ( . %) of genes demonstrated signatures of positive selection. consistently, hawkins et al. (hawkins et al. ) yielded the same frequency of genes under selection from the transcriptomes and genomes of bat species using multiple tissue sources (e.g., spleen, trigeminal ganglia, inner ear, and embryos transcriptomes). this suggests that overall, the genes expressed in smgs phyllostomids are not necessarily subjected to stronger selective pressures in coding regions than genes expressed in other tissues among bats. salivary glands are known to function in immunity through the localized function of immune cells (f abi an et al. ) and immunity was the only enriched term among genes under selection ( fig. c ). eight of the proteins inferred to be affected by positive selection were linked to immunity and defense, and five of these had a secretory component (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). these eight genes had common functions associated with the innate and humoral immune response and stimulate the activation of immune cells to viral infected sites. for example, bpia (bpi fold-containing family a member ) and bpia are secreted and known to localize to upper airways and prevent biofilm formation by gram-negative bacteria (liu et al. ; prokopovic et al. ) . a high exposure to pathogens unique to bats could explain this result, but positive selection among immune genes is not uncommon in animals (roux et al. ; xiao et al. ; van der lee et al. ; hawkins et al. ) . defense and immunity genes typically have a high evolutionary rate attributed to a continuous arms race between pathogens and host immune response (jiggens and kim ; kosiol et al. ; viljakainen et al. ), and our data provide insight about how positive selection has shaped bat oral tract defense against introduced pathogens. an unexpected facet of our results was a general paucity of genes under selection with roles related to metabolism among site tests. therefore, to identify lineage-specific trends, we used branch-site models and tested for episodic selection in groups that exhibit the most divergence from the ancestral insectivorous trait: the common vampire bat d. rotundus, the frog-eating bat t. cirrhosus, and all plant-visitors. there was a similar frequency of genes under positive selection as site tests, between . % and . %, and no go terms were enriched among these genes. most go terms were not redundant among the three tests, except for associations with the golgi body, which is expected given the importance of proper secretory function of salivary glands. the golgi body is the central organizer of the membrane trafficking system. it is where proteins are sorted into vesicles and trafficked out of the cell. however, it is noteworthy that the vampire bat displayed an overrepresentation of golgi-related ontology terms and genes under selection, when compared with the other two tested groups. apparent adaptation or specialization of the golgi body and endomembrane system was present in the vampire bat d. rotundus. the common vampire bat belongs to the subfamily desmodontinae, the only obligate sanguivores among amniotes, which may be the most ecologically divergent among the phyllostomids. francischetti et al. ( ) previously performed a transcriptomic analysis of vampire bat salivary glands and found a diversity of anticoagulants, antiinflammatory proteins, and neural disruptors hypothesized to enhance the efficiency of parasitizing animals for blood meals. thus, unlike other phyllostomids, secreted proteins may not only be helpful to digestion but effective adaptations to blood-feeding with minimal death risk for the bat and its prey. branch-site tests in d. rotundus identified genes under selection (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). notable go terms among these genes pointed to the regulation of protein trafficking, that is, golgi organization, protein n-linked glycosylation, trans-golgi network, and positive regulation of secretion (supplementary fig. s , supplementary material online). the genes linked to these terms were golgi phosphoprotein -like (glp l), vesicleassociated membrane protein-associated a (vapa), and nsfl cofactor p (nsf c). vapa can mediate vesicle transport from the endoplasmic reticulum (er) to the golgi body (lehto et al. ) . glp l is generally expressed in secretory tissues, localizes to golgi, is required for efficient anterograde trafficking, and knocking out glp l causes golgi dispersal and impairs secretion (ng et al. ) . nsf c seems to be relevant for golgi reassembly after mitosis (p echeur et al. ) . lastly, a gene under selection in the n-glycan biosynthesis pathway was pmm (phosphomannomutase ). pmm specifically catalyzes the isomerization of mannose -phosphase to mannose -phosphate. deleterious mutations in pmm tend to cause defects in protein glycosylation and subsequent congenital disorders (matthijs et al. ) . vampire bats diverged from an insectivorous ancestor and subsequently underwent a rapid transition from insectivory to sanguivory (datzmann et al. ; dumont et al. ) . given our results, it is plausible the endomembrane system was modified during this transition. moreover, given that some golgi body-related genes appeared under selection in all branch-site tests, this organelle played some role in the adaptive radiation of phyllostomids. another interesting result from branch-site tests was a response to insulin stimulus in the plant-visitors. two genes under selection, ubiquitin-conjugating enzyme e b (ube b) and casp and fadd-like apoptosis regulator (cflar), were specifically associated with this term. cflar regulates downstream genes involved in lipid metabolism, glucose uptake, and oxidative stress. in mice, cflar was shown to reverse nonalcoholic steatohepatitis liver disease (wang et al. ) that can be caused by insulin resistance and high blood sugar among other metabolic factors (liu et al. ) . the exact function of ube b is a little less clear but appears to be linked to muscle atrophy. ube b becomes more expressed in fasting rats and atrophying muscle cells, but becomes suppressed in response to insulin (wing and banville ; polge et al. ) . the plant-visitors make up a collection of frugivorous and nectarivorous species that ingest high amounts of sugars at once (laska ). interestingly, the phyllostomid great fruit-eating bat (artibeus lituratus) exhibits no difference in serum insulin levels between fasted and fed states (protzek et al. ) . moreover, serum insulin levels observed in a. lituratus were higher than those observed in mice (fujiwara et al. ) and obese humans (yassine et al. ). we can speculate physiological changes, that is, constantly high concentration of insulin, may have caused a selective response in insulin associated pathways. selection pressures may not only occur at the sequence level but also the expression regulation level. therefore, we paired selection tests with gene expression analyses. the distinct natural histories represented by t. cirrhosus and d. rotundus were reflected in the pca. in fact, the only way t. cirrhosus stood out in this study was in the expression pca. trachops cirrhosus specializes on frogs (tuttle and ryan ) which is a unique feeding strategy in phyllostmids, but data from the vespertilionid nyctalus lasiopterus suggests the transition from insects to carnivory may not require any major adaptations (ib añez et al. ) . consistently, selection pressures, given branchsite tests, were weakest in t. cirrhosus (supplementary table s , supplementary material online). the most remarkable observation from overall gene expression profiles was a general correlation among insectivores and plant-visitors. even the distantly related m. lucifugus and p. parnellii were included in this cluster ( fig. a ). hsunycteris thomasi slightly deviated from the other plant-visitors, albeit this deviation was not as extreme as t. cirrhosus and d. rotundus. morphological and genetic data suggest nectar-feeding derived independently in glossophaginae and lonchophyllinae (datzmann et al. ) . this independence may also have been captured by our pca. given overall similarity of expression profiles between plant-visitors and insectivores, few genes were differentially expressed ( fig. b ), but more genes were differentially expressed when we examined just the nectarivores ( fig. c ) and many of these proteins were in amino acid metabolic pathways. the strength of differential expression among genes in amino acid pathways was not enough to be significantly enriched, but given carbohydrates are in higher abundance in plantvisitor diets, amino acid synthesis is linked to the products of glycolysis and the citric acid cycle, it is plausible this group has modified these pathways as adaptive responses. we examined the evolutionary history of genes expressed in smgs to test for links between genetic variation and signatures of selection. given the ecological variation of these species, we expected to find strong selection signals and greater expression diversity. indeed, we identified a strong selection signal among immune-related genes in phyllostomids, but lineage-specific adaptations were less clear, that is, fewer genes under selection among a wide array of pathways and few differentially expressed genes. from our data, we inferred modifications of the endomembrane system with a focus on the golgi body, most apparent in the vampire bat. further, lineage-specific adaptations have occurred in response to insulin changes and modifications of metabolic pathways in the plant-visitors, signaling unique, and lineage-specific adaptations have occurred in phyllostomids with diverse feeding strategies. supplementary data are available at genome biology and evolution online. we would like to thank robert baker and carleton phillips for previous work that inspired this research. this work was not possible without the previous efforts of ttu students, faculty, and staff toward sample collection and curation. therefore, we are thankful for nict e ord oñez-garza, maria sagot, heath garner, robert bradley, and the texas tech university natural science research laboratory (ttu nsrl) for tissue loans. we also acknowledge the high performance computing center (hpcc) at texas tech university at lubbock for providing hpc resources. url: http://cmsdev.ttu.edu/hpcc. c.g.s.c. was supported with a fellowship (pde) by conselho nacional de desenvolvimento cient ıfico e tecnol ogico (cnpq), and by a postdoctoral fellowship (pnpd) from coordenac¸ão de aperfeic¸oamento de pessoal de n ıvel superior (capes), brazil during the development of this study. these funding agencies had no role in any experimental aspect of this study. gapped blast and psi-blast: a new generation of protein database search programs higher level classification of phyllostomid bats with a summary of dna synapomorphies potential use of chemical cues for colony-mate recognition in the big brown bat, eptesicus fuscus trimmomatic: a flexible trimmer for illumina sequence data bats: important reservoir hosts of emerging viruses morphological diagnoses of higher-level phyllostomid taxa (chiroptera: 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enzyme: structure of the rat gene and regulation upon fasting and by insulin transcriptome analysis revealed positive selection of immune-related genes in tilapia likelihood ratio tests for detecting positive selection and application to primate lysozyme evolution paml : phylogenetic analysis by maximum likelihood codon-substitution models for detecting molecular adaptation at individual sites along specific lineages effects of exercise and caloric restriction on insulin resistance and cardiometabolic risk factors in older obese adults -a randomized clinical trial comparative analysis of bat genomes provides insight into the evolution of flight and immunity evaluation of an improved branch-site likelihood method for detecting positive selection at the molecular level associate editor: naruya saitou key: cord- -fmb nyxu authors: liu, junli; wang, fangfang; du, liuyang; li, juan; yu, tianqi; jin, yulan; yan, yan; zhou, jiyong; gu, jinyan title: comprehensive genomic characterization analysis of lncrnas in cells with porcine delta coronavirus infection date: - - journal: front microbiol doi: . /fmicb. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: fmb nyxu porcine delta coronavirus (pdcov) is a novel emerging enterocytetropic virus causing diarrhea, vomiting, dehydration, and mortality in suckling piglets. long non-coding rnas (lncrnas) are known to be important regulators during virus infection. here, we describe a comprehensive transcriptome profile of lncrna in pdcov-infected swine testicular (st) cells. in total, , annotated and , novel lncrna candidate sequences were identified. gene ontology (go) and kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) analysis revealed that these lncrnas might be involved in numerous biological processes. clustering analysis of differentially expressed lncrnas showed that annotated and novel lncrnas were regulated after pdcov infection. furthermore, we constructed a lncrna-protein-coding gene co-expression interaction network. the kegg analysis of the co-expressed genes showed that these differentially expressed lncrnas were enriched in pathways related to metabolism and tnf signaling. our study provided comprehensive information about lncrnas that would be a useful resource for studying the pathogenesis of and designing antiviral therapy for pdcov infection. long non-coding rnas (lncrnas), which are transcripts larger than nt in length that lack protein-coding ability, have previously been described in mammalian cells (kapranov et al., ; mattick and rinn, ) . most of them have a structure similar to mrna; they have a methylguanosine cap and are usually spliced and polyadenylated at their termini. notably, lncrna expression shows significant cell and tissue specificity (mercer et al., ; derrien et al., ) . emerging evidence shows that non-coding rnas have a regulatory role in multiple cellular processes, such as genomic imprinting, chromatin modification, and alternative splicing of rna (mercer et al., ) . moreover, some diseases such as cancer and neurological disorders are also related to the dysregulated expression of lncrna (qureshi et al., ; tsai et al., ) . numerous studies have been conducted to ascertain their functional role during viral infection. for example, nrav can promote influenza virus replication and virulence through negatively regulating the initial transcription of varieties of interferonstimulated genes (isgs) (ouyang et al., ) . lncrna-acod , named by its neighboring coding gene aconitate decarboxylase , significantly reduces virus multiplication by directly interacting with the metabolic enzyme glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase (wang et al., ) . neat , one of the lncrnas induced by hiv- infection, is retained in the nucleus and serves as a scaffold for the nuclear paraspeckle substructure. importantly, neat deficiency enhances hiv- replication (zhang et al., ) . although large amounts of data have proved that several lncrnas are involved in different kinds of virus infection, the mechanisms by which they act are still largely unknown. porcine delta coronavirus (pdcov), a novel emerging pathogenic enterocytetropic virus, was first discovered from the feces of pigs in hong kong in . it is an enveloped, single-stranded positive-sense rna virus. it belongs to the genus deltacoronavirus in the family coronaviridae of the order nidovirales (woo et al., ) . the genome length of pdcov is approximately . kb. it is similar in structure to other coronaviruses, with shorter non-coding regions ( -utr and -utr) at both terminals. the / genome from the end contains two overlapping open reading frames, orf a and orf b, encoding the pp a and pp b, respectively. the downstream of the genome encodes structural protein spike (s), envelope (e), membrane (m), accessory proteins ns , structural protein nucleocapsid (n), and accessory proteins ns and ns a. a total of non-structural proteins are encoded by the terminal of the genome (fang et al., ) . pdcov mainly causes acute, watery diarrhea, vomiting, dehydration, and mortality in suckling piglets, including lesions in the stomach and lungs (ma et al., ) . the first outbreak of pdcov infection was reported in the united states in early and, to date, it has been detected in canada, south korea, china, thailand, and vietnam, thus posing huge threat to the swine industry and attracting a great deal of attention (lee and lee, ; dong et al., ; lorsirigool et al., ; ajayi et al., ; saeng-chuto et al., ) . during infection, the accessory and non-structural proteins of pdcov usually perform multiple functions to promote replication in infected cells. a previous study showed that ns interaction with rig-i/mda attenuated the binding activity between rig-i/mda and double-stranded rna, resulting in a reduced level of ifn-β production (fang et al., ) . also, the non-structural protein nsp , a c-like protease, is an important molecule in suppressing type i ifn signaling (zhu et al., b) . in addition, nemo, an essential modulator of nf-κb, can also be cleaved by nsp , causing inhibition of ifn-β production (zhu et al., a) . though there are many reports of immune evasion by pdcov, the precise pathogenic mechanism of pdcov is largely unclear. based on the increasing number of reports on host lncrnas associated with virus infection, we are interested in investigating whether host lncrnas were involved in pdcov infection. in this study, genome-wide profiling of lncrnas in swine testicular (st) cells infected with pdcov was performed using rna-seq. we identified differentially expressed lncrnas from pdcovinfected cells. an integrative analysis of lncrna alterations suggested their putative role in regulating the expression of several key genes in metabolic and tnf signaling pathways during infection. in conclusion, this work supports the role of lncrnas as important regulators of pdcov infection. swine testicular cells and porcine jejunum intestinal epithelial cells (ipec-j ) were grown in dmem supplemented with % (vol/vol) fbs (gibco, carlsbad, ca, united states) at • c in a humidified % co atmosphere. the pdcov-ch-ha - (mk ) strain, stored in our laboratory, was propagated in st cells. for rna-seq, st cells were infected with pdcov at a multiplicity of infection (moi) of ; the medium for pdcov infection was dmem containing . ug/ml trypsin that had been tpcktreated (millipore sigma, st. louis, mo, united states) for h. mock-infected cells were placed in the same volume of dmem, with the same concentration of tpck-treated trypsin. total rna was isolated from each group using superfectri tm total rna isolation reagent (pufei, shanghai, china) according to the manufacturer's instructions. the rna quality was checked by % agarose gel electrophoresis. the purity and concentration of rna were measured by nanophotometer r spectrophotometer (implen, münchen, germany) and qubit r rna assay kit in qubit r . fluorometer (life technologies, camarillo, ca, united states). rna integrity was assessed using the rna nano assay kit of the bioanalyzer system (agilent technologies, santa clara, ca, united states). for quantitative rt-pcr (rt-qpcr), st and ipec-j cells were infected or mock-infected with pdcov at an moi of and harvested at the indicated time. all experiments were conducted in triplicate. sequencing libraries were generated using the rrna-depleted rna with a nebnext r ultra tm directional rna library prep kit (new england biolabs, ipswich, ma, united states). after determining the quality of the library, rna-seq was performed using an illumina hiseq tm (illumina, san diego, ca, united states) to generate raw reads. after removing poly-n sequences, adapters, and low-quality reads, clean reads were obtained and the paired-end reads were aligned to ensemble pig genome (release ). lncrnas were identified using tophat (v . . ), and reads that were mapped to the pig genome were assembled using cufflinks v . . (trapnell et al., ) . cuffdiff (v . . ) was used to calculate the fpkms of both lncrnas and coding genes in each sample. gene fpkms were computed by summing the fpkms of transcripts in each gene group, and differentially expressed (de) transcripts were assigned where there was a statistically significant level of expression (p < . ). rna-seq and data analysis were completed by novogene. gene ontology (go) enrichment analysis of differentially expressed genes or lncrna target genes was conducted with respect to biological process, molecular function, and cellular component with the goseq r package, in which gene length bias was corrected. kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (kegg) was used to perform pathway enrichment analysis . kobas software was used to test the level of statistical significance of enrichment of differentially expressed genes and/or lncrna target genes in kegg pathways (mao et al., ) . to determine the reliability of the rna-seq data, differentially expressed lncrnas were randomly selected to test the expression by rt-qpcr. total rna was extracted from st and ipec-j cells using superfectri tm total rna isolation reagent (pufei, shanghai, china). first-strand cdna was synthesized with a reverse transcriptase kit (vazyme, nanjing, china). rt-qpcr was performed with a sybr green master mix (vazyme, nanjing, china) on the lightcycler (roche, basel, switzerland). the pdcov m gene was detected by rt-pcr. all the primers are presented in table . relative expressions were calculated using the − ct method with gapdh as the internal control. comparisons between groups were made using two-way http://www.genome.jp/kegg/ table | primers used for rt-qpcr validation. sequence ( - ) amplicon anova. the data reported are the mean ± sem. differences were considered statistically significant when p < . . for each lncrna, the pearson correlation coefficient of its expression value with that of each protein-coding gene was calculated. under the conditions of an absolute value of the pearson correlation coefficient > . and p < . , the interaction network of the differentially expressed lncrnas and protein-coding gene co-expression pairs was then constructed using cytoscape (v . . ) (shannon et al., ) . to identify the lncrnas in pdcov-infected cells, we sequenced the transcriptomes of the st cells with or without pdcov infection using high-throughput rna sequencing. robust and reproducible data were obtained from all samples, and more than × clean reads per sample were retained after removing reads containing adapter or poly-n sequences and reads with low quality. afterward, all clean reads were aligned onto the pig reference genome (release ) using tophat and were compared and assembled with cuffcompare and cufflinks, respectively, and coverage analysis was performed on those clean reads on different annotated gene types. the distribution of each type of gene was counted according to the expression level. in total, eight categories of rna were identified, according to database annotation of those transcripts, in which the protein-coding genes were highly represented ( . % in ps and . % in st, respectively) ( figure a) . next, four software tools, cnci, cpc, phylocsf, and pfam, were used to calculate the protein-coding potential of assembledtranscripts to screen lncrnas, then taking the intersection of transcripts with no coding potential in these software products as the novel lncrna ( figure b) . in total, , annotated and , novel lncrna candidates were identified (supplementary tables s , s ). it has been reported that lncrnas, in comparison with protein-coding genes, usually share some common genomic features to their sequences. they are generally shorter in length, have fewer but longer exons, and there is lower evolutionary sequence conservation, with only ∼ % of mouse lncrnas having homologs in humans. lncrnas also demonstrate low expression levels (the median is ∼ % of that of protein-coding genes) (heward and lindsay, ) . to further determine the characteristics of the lncrnas identified in the present study, we compared the transcript length, exon number, and degree of conservation between protein-coding genes and lncrnas. conservation analysis of exons, introns, and promoters of lncrnas and protein-coding genes showed that the exons of protein-coding genes were the most conserved and the exons of lncrna were far less conserved ( figure c) . furthermore, fewer exons and shorter orfs were found in lncrnas, which was also consistent with the reported lncrnas (figures d,e) . long non-coding rnas sequences are poorly conserved and do not appear to form large homologous families, so it is difficult to infer their common ancestors by sequence similarity (ponting et al., ) . therefore, it is challenging to predict the functions of a type of lncrna on the basis of its sequence or structure. there have been reports of using genome-wide association analysis between lncrnas and the co-expressed and/or co-regulated protein-coding genes to characterize the function of the lncrna (huarte et al., ) . to investigate the putative role of lncrnas, we first analyzed the whole rna-seq profiles to identify target proteincoding genes whose location or expression was significantly correlated with the candidate lncrna. for co-located target gene prediction, we searched coding regions k upstream and downstream of lncrna. in total, , pairs of lncrna-proteincoding genes, containing , lncrnas and , proteincoding genes, were identified (supplementary table s ). for co-expressed target gene prediction, the expression correlation between lncrnas and protein-coding genes was evaluated. when the required pearson correlation coefficient was set above . , , , pairs of lncrna-protein-coding genes, containing , lncrnas and , protein-coding genes, were obtained (supplementary table s ). we next performed go and kegg pathway analysis for the target genes of lncrnas. the top go and kegg pathways with the highest representation of each term are reported (figure and supplementary tables s , s ) . kegg enrichment analysis revealed that pathways related to the immune system and metabolism were preferentially targeted. the go-term analysis was divided into three main categories: cellular component, biological process, and molecular function. significantly, a large number of biological processes, like protein-dna complex assembly, dna packaging and transcription, and the cellular macromolecule metabolic process, were enriched. furthermore, protein binding and nucleic acid binding and the nucleosome and organelles, belonging to molecular function and cellular component, respectively, were also enriched. go and kegg pathway enrichment analysis of target genes revealed that lncrnas may act in cis or trans to participate in the regulation of expression of multiple important genes in different processes including protein binding, dna transcription, metabolism, and immune response. to identify the pdcov-associated lncrnas, cuffdiff software was used to investigate the differentially expressed (de) lncrnas in pdcov-infected cells. the hierarchical clustering heat map in figure a shows the de lncrna expression profiling data. out of the , annotated and , novel lncrnas, we obtained annotated de lncrnas ( up-regulated and down-regulated) and novel de lncrnas ( up-regulated and down-regulated) after pdcov infection (p < . ; supplementary table s ) . importantly, we observed lncrnas whose expression levels were decreased to fpkm = after pdcov infection, while the fpkms of another lncrnas, all novel lncrnas, were before pdcov infection (supplementary table s ). this suggests that these lncrnas, though they have very low expression levels, might be strongly associated with the viral infection. furthermore, to evaluate the reliability of rna-seq data analysis, lncrnas were selected for rt-qpcr analysis in pdcov-infected cells. as shown in figure b , the expression levels of the selected lncrnas, though exhibiting no significant differences at h post-infection (hpi), were all significantly changed at hpi in st cells. also, different expression patterns of lncrnas were detected in ipec-j cells. as shown in figure c , out of the selected rna were significantly altered at hpi, and all of them were differently expressed at hpi. for both st and ipec-j cells, they had a strong expression pattern consistent with the rna-seq results ( table ) . the lncrna in the genome is not randomly distributed, so locus classification will be an effective first step in analyzing its regulatory functions at the genome level (luo et al., ) . in general, lncrnas function either in cis or in trans to affect the transcription of genes within or far from the same genomic locus (clark and blackshaw, ) . to understand the potential functional association between lncrnas and cognate genes, we investigated their genomic distribution pattern relative to protein-coding loci and classified all de lncrnas to ascertain their potential biological roles. all de lncrnas were classified into six categories comprising sense-upstream lncrna, sense-downstream lncrna, sense-overlapping lncrna, antisense-upstream lncrna, antisense-downstream lncrna and antisense-overlapping lncrna. as shown in figure a , % of de lncrnas were located in the same strand but upstream of protein-coding genes and % were located downstream, while antisense-upstream and antisense-overlapping comprised and %, respectively, and the remaining % were antisensedownstream lncrnas. next, in order to define the lncrna functions more precisely, go enrichment analysis of the colocated genes of up-and down-regulated lncrnas were analyzed independently. the results showed that protein-coding genes associated with de lncrnas were mainly enriched in terms of molecular function and cellular component, primarily under the category of nucleic acid binding and intracellular membranebounded organelle ( figure b) . notably, by analyzing the relative expression level, we found that antisense lncrna and proteincoding genes were specifically co-expressed, in which two pairs showed a positive and three pairs showed a negative correlation in their expression patterns ( figure c and supplementary table s ). we speculated that these antisense lncrnas act in cis to modulate the expression of their cognate genes. the functional association between regulatory lncrna and protein-coding gene transcripts can be determined by performing expression correlation analysis coupled with ascertaining their putative role in related physiological processes. to further investigate the potential mechanism of action of the pdcov-associated lncrnas, the de lncrnas and their predicted target de protein-coding genes were investigated by delineating lncrna-protein-coding gene functional interactions. here we identified , , pairs of de lncrna-de proteincoding genes, containing lncrnas and , protein-coding genes (p < . ). next, kegg pathway analysis was repeated once again (figure a) , and we found that metabolic and tnf signaling pathways were significantly enriched. the interaction network involving the metabolic and tnf signaling pathways was then constructed. several key genes in metabolism were positively or negatively regulated by lncrnas ( figure b ). of the significantly enriched genes, atp l and atp f , two of the mitochondrial membrane atp synthase subunits, were regulated by lnc- , lnc- , aldbssct , and aldbssct . in addition, three lncrnas, lnc- , lnc- , and aldbssct , might regulate acyl-coenzyme a thioesterase four expression. these results suggest that these lncrnas might be involved in the regulation of metabolic processes particularly involving energy and lipid metabolism. meanwhile, an inducible program of inflammatory gene expression is central to antiviral defense. many of them, i.e., ccl , ccl , cxcl , cxcl , map k , nf-κb , and interleukin (il- ), were protein-coding genes known to have roles in the inflammatory response. in the network (figure c ), eight lncrnas have putative regulatory roles in il- expression. six of them, lnc- , lnc- , lnc- , lnc- , aldbssct , and aldbssct , might exert positive regulation, while lnc- and aldbssct showed the opposite effect. this suggests that these lncrnas might act as the regulatory module of the circuit that is involved in the inflammatory response. numerous studies have shown that lncrnas play a key role during viral infection. the lncrnas thril, nest, neat, and lincrna-cox can participate in immune responses against viral infection mainly through regulating the expression of tnf-α, ifn-γ, il , and inflammatory response, respectively (carpenter et al., ; gomez et al., ; imamura et al., ; li et al., ) . pdcov is an important enteric virus mainly causing diarrhea in suckling pigs. infection with pdcov causes changes in the expression levels of several host cell proteins of host innate immune response, but little is known about the critical roles of lncrnas in these processes. here, we performed rna-seq to identify the lncrnas involved in pdcov infection. the results of comparing clean reads to the genome showed that more than % of reads are protein-coding genes, and no lncrna classifications were identified due to the limited lncrna database annotation in pig. in our results, , novel lncrnas were identified. further analysis showed that the basic characteristics of these novel lncrnas are consistent with the known ones. our rna-seq results further enrich the pig lncrna database. in total, we found annotated and novel lncrnas that were differentially expressed during pdcov infection. these lncrnas were classified as sense-upstream lncrna, sense-downstream lncrna, sense-overlapping lncrna, antisense-upstream lncrna, antisense-downstream lncrna, and antisense-overlapping lncrna. many antisense-overlapping lncrnas have inverse expression patterns with their sense transcript counterparts. this suggests that these antisenseoverlapping lncrnas may have a negative regulatory effect on them. in contrast, many lncrnas that do not contain overlapping sequences display expression patterns correlated with their neighboring protein-coding gene transcripts. in the present study, two out of five antisense overlapping lncrnas were found to have high consistency in their expression (figure ) . similarly, the lncrna evx as, which initiates within the first exon of the gene evx , has an overlap of eight nucleotides with the evx mrna and promotes transcription of its neighbor gene by increasing the binding affinity of histone h lysine tri-methylation (h k me ) and histone h lysine acetylation (h k ac) at the promoter region. considering that most lncrnas might function through their secondary structure rather than the primary one, this suggests that the regulation of antisense transcripts by antisense-overlapping lncrna may not be mediated through base-complementary pairing. correlation analysis of de lncrna and protein-coding genes identified a number of de lncrna-de protein-coding gene pairs. the main enriched kegg pathways of these protein-coding genes were in metabolism and oxidative phosphorylation. in a recent report, -day-old neonatal pigs were infected with pdcov, and transcriptome profile and kegg pathway enrichment analysis were performed at different stages of infection (wu et al., ) . in our study, we found that the lncrna targeted genes enriched in those pathways that were perturbed during the late stage of infection. in addition, the expression level of transglutaminase (tgm ) and apolipoprotein a- (apoa ) in a wu et al. ( ) study were significantly changed. similarly, we also found that tgm was up-regulated, and apoa , apoa , and apoa were down-regulated during pdcov infection (data not shown). moreover, our data show that many cytokines and chemokines, which elicit an inflammatory response, were differentially expressed in the infected cells compared to mock cells. the inflammation causes injury to the intestinal tissues, resulting in diarrhea or even death. raised ccl and cxcl levels were associated with the severity of virus infection (betakova et al., ; masood et al., ) . here, we identified a number of lncrnas that may regulate the expression of these inflammatory molecules. to the best of our knowledge, this is the first study focusing on the expression profile of cellular lncrnas after pdcov infection. our data show the expression landscape of lncrnas, with special emphasis on the lncrna-protein modules operating in response to pdcov infection. moreover, this study provides a comprehensive genome-wide resource for exploring the molecular and cellular regulatory functions of lncrnas. this study will also be useful for identifying lncrnas as potential biomarkers for the diagnosis of pdcov infection and designing better prophylactic and therapeutic tools against virus infection. in the present study, the expression profiles of lncrnas were determined in pdcov-infected st cells. in total, , novel lncrnas were identified. a total of lncrnas were differentially expressed between pdcov-infected or mockedinfected st cells. kegg pathway analysis of de lncrna coexpressed genes revealed that they might be primarily involved in regulating metabolism and tnf signaling pathways. our study systematically characterizes lncrna expression during pdcov infection and provides a useful resource for identifying and functionally characterizing the cognate gene products of those lncrnas. this study will also be useful for assigning lncrnas as potential biomarkers of pdcov infection and designing better preventive and therapeutic measures against the virus infection, which would be economically beneficial for the pig farming community. the raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation, to any qualified researcher. jll, jg, and jz conceived and designed the experiments. fw, ld, and jl performed the experiments. jll, yy, yj, and ty analyzed the data. jll drafted the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. herdlevel prevalence and incidence of porcine epidemic diarrhoea virus (pedv) and porcine deltacoronavirus (pdcov) in swine herds in ontario cytokines induced during influenza virus infection a long noncoding rna mediates both activation and repression of immune response genes long non-coding rna-dependent transcriptional regulation in neuronal development and disease the gencode v catalog of human long noncoding rnas: analysis of their gene structure, evolution, and expression isolation, genomic characterization, and pathogenicity of a chinese porcine deltacoronavirus strain chn-hn- discovery of a novel accessory protein ns a encoded by porcine deltacoronavirus porcine deltacoronavirus accessory protein ns antagonizes interferon beta production by interfering with the binding of rig-i/mda to double-stranded rna the nest long ncrna controls microbial susceptibility and epigenetic activation of the interferon-gamma locus long non-coding rnas in the regulation of the immune response a large intergenic noncoding rna induced by p mediates global gene repression in the p response long noncoding rna neat -dependent sfpq relocation from promoter region to paraspeckle mediates il expression upon immune stimuli rna maps reveal new rna classes and a possible function for pervasive transcription complete genome characterization of korean porcine deltacoronavirus strain kor/knu - the long noncoding rna thril regulates tnfalpha expression through its interaction with hnrnpl the genetic diversity and complete genome analysis of two novel porcine deltacoronavirus isolates in thailand in divergent lncrnas regulate gene expression and lineage differentiation in pluripotent cells origin, evolution, and virulence of porcine deltacoronaviruses in the united states automated genome annotation and pathway identification using the kegg orthology (ko) as a controlled vocabulary role of tnf alpha, il- and cxcl in dengue disease severity discovery and annotation of long noncoding rnas long non-coding rnas: insights into functions specific expression of long noncoding rnas in the mouse brain nrav, a long noncoding rna, modulates antiviral responses through suppression of interferon-stimulated gene transcription evolution and functions of long noncoding rnas long non-coding rnas in nervous system function and disease retrospective study, full-length genome characterization and evaluation of viral infectivity and pathogenicity of chimeric porcine deltacoronavirus detected in vietnam cytoscape: a software environment for integrated models of biomolecular interaction networks transcript assembly and quantification by rna-seq reveals unannotated transcripts and isoform switching during cell differentiation long intergenic noncoding rnas: new links in cancer progression an interferon-independent lncrna promotes viral replication by modulating cellular metabolism discovery of seven novel mammalian and avian coronaviruses in the genus deltacoronavirus supports bat coronaviruses as the gene source of alphacoronavirus and betacoronavirus and avian coronaviruses as the gene source of gammacoronavirus and deltacoronavirus expression profile analysis of -day-old neonatal piglets infected with porcine deltacoronavirus neat long noncoding rna and paraspeckle bodies modulate hiv- posttranscriptional expression porcine deltacoronavirus nsp inhibits interferon-beta production through the cleavage of nemo porcine deltacoronavirus nsp antagonizes type i interferon signaling by cleaving stat the supplementary material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/ . /fmicb. the authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.copyright © liu, wang, du, li, yu, jin, yan, zhou and gu. this is an openaccess article distributed under the terms of the creative commons attribution license (cc by). the use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. no use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms. key: cord- - qgzulgj authors: moni, mohammad ali; liò, pietro title: network-based analysis of comorbidities risk during an infection: sars and hiv case studies date: - - journal: bmc bioinformatics doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qgzulgj background: infections are often associated to comorbidity that increases the risk of medical conditions which can lead to further morbidity and mortality. sars is a threat which is similar to mers virus, but the comorbidity is the key aspect to underline their different impacts. one uk doctor says "i’d rather have hiv than diabetes" as life expectancy among diabetes patients is lower than that of hiv. however, hiv has a comorbidity impact on the diabetes. results: we present a quantitative framework to compare and explore comorbidity between diseases. by using neighbourhood based benchmark and topological methods, we have built comorbidity relationships network based on the omim and our identified significant genes. then based on the gene expression, ppi and signalling pathways data, we investigate the comorbidity association of these infective pathologies with other diseases (heart failure, kidney disorder, breast cancer, neurodegenerative disorders, bone diseases, type and type diabetes). phenotypic association is measured by calculating both the relative risk as the quantified measures of comorbidity tendency of two disease pairs and the ϕ-correlation to measure the robustness of the comorbidity associations. the differential gene expression profiling strongly suggests that the response of sars affected patients seems to be mainly an innate inflammatory response and statistically dysregulates a large number of genes, pathways and ppis subnetworks in different pathologies such as chronic heart failure ( genes), breast cancer ( genes) and bone diseases ( genes). hiv- induces comorbidities relationship with many other diseases, particularly strong correlation with the neurological, cancer, metabolic and immunological diseases. similar comorbidities risk is observed from the clinical information. moreover, sars and hiv infections dysregulate genes (anxa , gns, hist h c, rasa ) and genes (hba , tfrc, ghitm) respectively that affect the ageing process. it is notable that hiv and sars similarly dysregulated genes and pathways. only significantly dysregulated genes are common between sars-cov and mers-cov, including nfkbia that is a key regulator of immune responsiveness implicated in susceptibility to infectious and inflammatory diseases. conclusions: our method presents a ripe opportunity to use data-driven approaches for advancing our current knowledge on disease mechanism and predicting disease comorbidities in a quantitative way. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article (doi: . / - - - ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. the term "comorbidity" refers to the coexistence of multiple diseases or disorders in relation to a primary disease or disorder in an individual [ ] . a comorbidity relationship between two diseases exists whenever they appear simultaneously in a patient more than chance alone [ ] . it represents the co-occurrence of diseases or presence http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (copd) [ , ] , obesity [ ] , mental disorders [ ] , immune-related diseases [ ] , cancer [ ] etc. comorbidity can be attributed to the disease connections on the molecular level, such as dysregulated genes, ppis (protein-protein interactions), and metabolic pathways as potential causes of comorbidity [ , , , ] . from a genetic perspective, a pair of diseases is connected because they have both been associated with the same dysregulated genes [ , ] , whereas from a proteomics perspective phenotypically similar diseases are related via biological modules such as ppis or molecular pathways [ , ] . population-based disease association is important in conjunction with molecular and genetic data to uncover the molecular origins of diseases and disease comorbidities. patient medical records contain important clarification regarding the co-occurrences of diseases affecting the same patient [ ] . during the last few years, several researchers have been conducted the disease comorbidity analysis to understand the origins of many diseases [ , , ] . goh, cusick, valle, childs, vidal, barabasi et al. and feldman, rzhetsky, vitkup et al. built networks of gene-disease associations by connecting diseases that have been associated with the same genes [ , ] , whereas lee, park, kay, christakis, oltvai and barabási et al. constructed a network in which two diseases are linked if metabolic reactions are associated between them [ ] . disease association studies from proteomic point of view have been studied by rual, venkatesan, hao, hirozane-kishikawa, dricot, li, berriz, gibbons, dreze, ayivi-guedehoussou et al. and stelzl, worm, lalowski, haenig, brembeck, goehler, stroedicke, zenkner, schoenherr, koeppen et al. [ , ] . rzhetsky, wajngurt, park and zheng et al. inferred the comorbidity links between disorders from the disease history of . million patients [ ] . however, all of these efforts have focused on the role of a single molecular or phenotypic measure to capture disease-disease relationships. in our work we have used disease-gene associations, ppis, molecular pathways and clinical information to obtain statistically significant associations and comorbidity risks among diseases. inflammation is a hallmark of many serious human infectious diseases associated to a wide variety of infections, such as hiv- [ ] . uk doctor max pemberton says "i'd rather have hiv than diabetes" as life expectancy among diabetes patients is lower than that of hiv [ ] . however, hiv has a comorbidity impact on the diabetes. also the flu can cause complications, including bacterial pneumonia, or the worsening of chronic health problems. asthma is the most common comorbidity in patients hospitalized for swine influenza (h n ) infection [ ] . dengue can cause myocardial impairment, arrhythmias and, occasionally, fulminant myocarditis [ ] . chronic medical conditions, such as heart disease, lung disease, diabetes, renal disease, rheumatologic disease, dementia, and stroke are risk factors for influenza complications [ ] . common chronic infections such as periodontitis or infection with helicobacter pylori may also increase stroke risk [ ] . moreover, the severity of pneumonia in patients coinfected with influenza virus and bacteria is significantly higher than in those infected with bacteria alone. the incidence of flu is higher in children and younger adults than in older individuals, but influenzaassociated morbidity and mortality increase with age, especially for individuals with underlying medical conditions such as chronic cardiovascular diseases [ ] . during the ageing process the immune system becomes compromised and it causes an increasing inflammation [ ] . in particular, chronic inflammation (inflammageing) and metabolic function are strongly affected by the ageing process [ ] . the ageing of populations is leading to an unprecedented increase different diseases like cancer and fatalities. it is reported that % of the elderly population has three or more chronic conditions [ ] . on the other hand, respiratory viruses are an emerging threat to global health security and have led to worldwide epidemics with substantial morbidity and mortality [ ] . coronaviruses (covs) cause respiratory and enteric diseases in human and other animals that induce fatal respiratory, gastrointestinal and neurological disease. severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) is an epidemic human disease, is caused by a coronavirus (cov), called sarsassociated coronavirus (sars-cov) [ ] . sars patients may present with a spectrum of disease severity ranging from flu-like symptoms and viral pneumonia to acute respiratory distress syndrome and death [ ] . most of the deaths were attributed to complications related to sepsis, ards and multiorgan failure, which occurred commonly in the elderly for comorbidities [ ] . age and comorbidity (e.g. diabetes mellitus, heart disease) were consistently found to be significant independent predictors of various adverse outcomes in sars [ ] . children with sars have better prognosis than adults [ ] . advanced age and comorbidities were significantly associated with increased risk of sars-cov related death, due to acute respiratory distress syndrome [ ] . mild degree of anaemia is common in the sars infected patients and patients who have recovered from sars show symptoms of psychological trauma [ ] . another novel coronavirus mers-cov, which is a new threat for public health, has similar clinical characteristics to sars-cov, but the comorbidity is the key aspect to underline their different impacts [ , ] . mers-cov causes respiratory infections of varying severity and sometimes fatal infections in humans including kidney failure and severe acute pneumonia [ ] . despite sharing some clinical similarities with sars (eg, fever, http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / cough, incubation period), there are also some important differences such as the rapid progression to respiratory failure, which we have studied on comorbidities point of view. infection with the human immunodeficiency virus- (hiv) and the resulting acquired immune deficiency syndrome (aids) affects cellular immune regulation [ ] . hiv infection severely impacts on the immune system causing phenotypic changes in peripheral cells and dysregulates the innate immune system [ ] . significant number of hiv- infected patients exhibits osteopenia and osteoporosis, leading to higher incidence to develop weak and fragile bones during the course of disease [ ] . hiv has also been associated with an increased risk of developing both diabetes and cardiovascular disease [ ] . infection with hiv weakens the immune system and reduces the body's ability to fight infections that may lead to cancer [ , ] . people infected with human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) have a higher risk of some types of cancer (kaposi sarcoma, non-hodgkin lymphoma, cervical cancer, anal, liver, lung cancer, and hodgkin lymphoma) than uninfected people [ ] . many people infected with hiv are also infected with other viruses that cause certain cancers [ , ] . hiv infection even when controlled by highly active antiretroviral therapy (haart) is being linked to chronic inflammation [ ] . people with hiv- infection appear to have a markedly higher rate of chronic kidney disease than the general public [ ] . it is because some of the risk factors associated with hiv- acquisition are the same as those that lead to kidney disease because of the virus itself and some therapies (e.g. haart therapy). antiretroviral therapy for hiv may increase the risk of developing metabolic syndrome (abdominal obesity, hyperglycaemia, dyslipidaemia and hypertension) and thus predispose to type diabetes and cardiovascular disease. many of the biologic factors thought to be causally associated with inflammation in hiv disease are also thought to be causally associated with the inflammation of ageing [ ] . infections (acute and chronic conditions) are often associated to comorbidity that increases the risk of medical conditions which can lead to further morbidity and mortality. comorbidities related to flu have been recently investigated [ ] . comorbidities for tuberculosis have also been studied recently [ , ] . to understand the overall mechanism we have studied the comorbidity associations of sars and hiv infections. both hiv and sars are emerging infectious diseases in the modern world; each of these diseases has caused global societal and economic impact related to unexpected illnesses and deaths [ ] . sras is a significant public health threat and hiv is a long term chronic infection. since these two infections are associated with high mortality rates and there are no clinically approved antiviral treatments or vaccines available for either of these infections, we have selected these two infections for our study. centred on the sars and hiv- infections we have investigated highly heterogeneous disease comorbidity networks using the disease-gene associations, ppi subnetwork, molecular pathways and clinical information. we have presented a systematic and quantitative approach to discover human disease comorbidities using different sources of available mrna expression, protein-protein interactions, signalling pathways, disease-gene associations, disease-disease associations and disease-drug associations data. it has been shown that sars coronavirus infects and replicates in a wide variety of host cells in susceptible animals and human beings [ , ] . to understand the host response to this pathogen, we analysed the gene expression patterns of sars infected patients, compared to normal subjects using oligonucleotide microarrays from the ncbi geo (http://www. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=gse ) [ ] . we analysed the microarray gene expression data of over , genes from the pbmcs of sars patients, and compared with healthy control samples. we found that genes (p < . , > . fold change) were differentially expressed as compared to healthy controls in which genes were significantly up regulated and genes were significantly down regulated (see additional file : table s ). on the other hand, monocytes are the key immune responsive cells whose function is adversely impacted by hiv- . hiv- infection radically alters the monocyte phenotype, which is reflected in an hiv- induced gene expression analysis. monocyte gene expression microarray data were collected for control and hiv patients from the ncbi geo (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/ acc.cgi?acc=gse ) [ ] . to find out the significant dysregulated genes during the hiv- infection, we have performed global gene expression analysis. we found that genes (p < . , > . fold change) were differentially expressed as compared to healthy controls in which genes were up regulated and genes were down regulated (see additional file : table s ). considering the significantly dysregulated genes of sars ( genes) and hiv- ( genes) infections, and gene-disease associations information, we have constructed two gene-disease associations networks (gdn), which are used to explore the shared genetic associations and disease comorbidity. starting from the bipartite graph we generated biologically relevant network projections and constructed multi-relational gene-disease network in which nodes are diseases or genes, and edges indicate association between gene and disease. this bipartite http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / graph consists of two disjoint sets of nodes, where one set corresponds to all known genetic disorders and the other set corresponds to all of our identified significant genes for sars and hiv- infections. the list of disorders, disease genes, and associations between them were obtained from the online mendelian inheritance in man (omim) [ ] , a compendium of human disease genes and phenotypes (see details in the methods section). we classified each disorder into one of disorder categories based on the physiological system affected as introduced in goh, cusick, valle, childs, vidal, barabasi et al. [ ] . in the gdn, nodes represent diseases class or genes, and two disorders are connected to each other if they share at least one gene in which mutations are associated with both diseases groups (figures and ). the number of interlinked genes between sars infection and other diseases indicates that immunological, hematological, neurological, metabolic and dermatological diseases categories are strongly associated with the sars infection (see figure and additional file : table s ). few genes are also shared between more than categories of diseases i.e those disease groups are also associated through at least that genes. for an instance, the gene atm shared among sars infection, cancer and immunological diseases. therefore, cancer and immunological diseases are also interrelated through the gene atm. among all these disease classes immunological diseases class is tightly correlated with the sars infection due to the highest number of genes ( genes) shared between them. on the other hand, the number of associated genes between hiv infection and other diseases indicates that neurological, metabolic, cancer and hematological diseases categories are strongly correlated with the hiv infection (see figure and additional file : figure the gene-disease association network centred on the sars infection is constructed based on the different categories of diseases that are connected and showed comorbidities with the sars infection through the different genes. red colour represents different categories of disorders and green colour represents different genes that are common with the other categories of disorders. the size of a disease node is proportional to the number of dysregulated genes shared between the infections/disorder groups. a link is placed between a disorder and a disease gene if mutations in that gene lead to the specific disorder. http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / figure the gene-disease association network centred on the hiv infection is constructed based on the different categories of diseases that are connected and showed comorbidities with the hiv- infection through the different genes. red colour represents different categories of disorders and green colour represents different genes that are common with the other categories of disorders. the size of a disease node is proportional to the number of dysregulated genes shared between the infections/disorder groups. a link is placed between a disorder and a disease gene if mutations in that gene lead to the specific disorder. table s ). few hiv dysregulated genes are also shared between more than categories of diseases such as the gene tgfb is shared among hiv infection, cancer and skeletal diseases. it is notable that significant genes ( upregulated and downregulated) are similarly dysregulated in the both sars and hiv infections. to observe the association of sars and hiv infections with other important diseases (chronic heart failure, kidney disorders, breast cancer, parkinson, osteoporosis, type and type diabetes), we have collected mrna microarray raw data associated with each disease from the gene expression omnibus (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) accession numbers are gse , gse , gse , gse , gse and gse [ ] . after several steps of statistical analysis we have selected the most significant over and under expressed genes for each infection and disease. we also performed cross compare analysis to find the common significant genes between each disease and sars/ hiv- infection. we observed that sars infection shares , , , , , , and genes corresponding to the chronic heart failure, kidney disorders, breast cancer, parkinson, osteoporosis, hiv- infection, type and type diabetes. on the other hand, hiv- infection shares , , , , , , and genes corresponding to the chronic heart failure, kidney disorders, breast cancer, parkinson, osteoporosis, sars infection, type and type diabetes. then we built disease-disease relationships network for sars and hiv- infection with other diseases (see figures (a) and (b) and additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). since genes do not function alone and they coordinate their activities in the form of complexes or molecular pathways. therefore two diseases are potentially inter-correlated to each other if they share at least one commonly associated pathway. for this http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / reason we have used reactome pathway database [ ] and selected the pathways related to these diseases as well as sars and hiv- infections. we have observed that diseases and infections shared pathways between them as shown in figures (a) and (b) and additional file : table s and additional file : table s . dysregulation in a protein subnetwork may yield the dysfunction of multiple protein subnetworks. therefore, multiple diseases may be caused by the malfunction of a protein complex. so, two diseases are potentially related to each other if they share one or more commonly associated protein subnetwork. to identify the association between diseases based on the ppi subnetwork, we used significantly associated disease protein pairs data from the hprd data base [ ] . to find statistically significant associations among diseases, we built disease networks centred on the sars and hiv infections in which two diseases are comorbid if there exists one or more protein subnetwork that are associated with both diseases. the disease similarity network and the protein-protein interaction network are integrated systematically and comprehensively in a simple and compact manner to formulate the disease comorbidity for the sars and hiv- infections as shown in figures and . we showed that sars and hiv infections shared ppi subnetworks with the other diseases or infections similar to the gene-disease and pathway-disease associations as shown in figures and . based on the gene expression, protein-protein interaction and molecular pathways data, we have found that both sars and hiv- infections have a strong association with other diseases or infections (chronic heart failure, kidney disorders, breast cancer, parkinson, osteoporosis, hiv/sars infection, type and type diabetes). these diseases and infections are also strongly correlated among them. we present the correlation strength and distance between a pair of these diseases and infections in figure . we show that some diseases (such as kidney disorders, breast cancer, osteoporosis and heart failure) are more associated with the sars infection (see figure ). kidney disorder is also tightly connected with the hiv- infection. the probability of occurring comorbidities between the more tightly connected diseases is more than that of others. it is notable that the patient medical records contain important evidence regarding the co-occurrences of diseases affecting the same patient. so, we constructed a phenotypic disease comorbidity network using million medical records of patients data from medpar and analysed its structural properties to better understand the connections among diseases and infections. nodes are unique diseases and edges indicate co-morbidity of the diseases. we included edges between disease pairs for which the co-occurrence is significantly greater than the random expectation based on population prevalence of the diseases. as pointed out in [ ] , the relative risk (rr ij ) overestimates relations involving rare infections and diseases, and underestimates relationships between very common disorders or infections. on the other hand, φ-correlation underestimates comorbidity between rare and frequent diseases, and discriminates associations between disorders of similar appearances. thus, we built a network by selecting only the statistically significant network edges having rr ij ≥ and φ ij ≥ . . figure summarises the set of all comorbidity associations among all diseases expressed in the study population by constructing a phenotypic disease network (pdn). in the pdn, nodes are disease phenotypes identified by unique icd- -cm (the international classification of diseases) disease codes, and links connect phenotypes that show significant comorbidity according to the relative risk rr ij ≥ and the correlation φ ij ≥ . . our phenotypic disease network consists of unique diseases nodes and co-morbidity relationships. sars-associated coronavirus icd- -cm diagnosis code is . , which is under the group of "viral and chlamydial infection in conditions classified elsewhere and of unspecified site" and icd- -cm diagnosis code . moreover, the icd- -cm code . is for the pneumonia due to sars associated coronavirus. so we have considered both icd- -cm codes . and . for our phenotypic sars comorbidity study. in our digit code data we have considered and for digit code data we have considered . . considering the relative risk rr ij ≥ between the disease group and other disorder categories, we have constructed the pdn as shown in figure (a), and considering the relative risk rr ij ≥ between the disease group . and other disorder categories, we have constructed the pdn as shown in figure (b). we presented only the most significant relative risk associations (see additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). the icd- -cm diagnosis code for the human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) infection is to , which is under the group of "infectious and parasitic diseases" and icd- -cm code ( - ). so we have considered both digit and digit icd- -cm codes for our phenotypic comorbidity studies related to hiv infection. considering the relative risk rr ij ≥ between the disease group and other disorder categories, we have constructed the pdn as shown in figure (a) and considering the relative risk rr ij ≥ and φ-correlation φ ij ≥ . between the disease groups under the sub categories of and other disorder categories, we have constructed the pdn as shown in figure (b). only the most significant relative risk association is represented (see additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). to observe the trend of phenotypic relative risk corresponding to the number of shared genes between http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / diseases, we have computed the number of shared genes between two diseases and their corresponding phenotypic relative risk of the occurrence of comorbidities as shown in figure . we observed that with increasing number of shared biomarker genes between diseases, the phenotypic relative risk is also increased. we may predict existing diseases of a patient and the prospective disease comorbidities through the identification of highly up and down dysregulated genes. so based on the available data we could predict the disease comorbidities and the level of the comorbidities using the regression model as figure . it is notable that ageing is also a "disease", not a natural process, for which age-related diseases increase exponentially with chronological time. so, to understand the impact of ageing on the disease comorbidities for sars and hiv infections we have considered the ageing data from the genage database (http://genomics.senescence. info/genes/human.html) [ , ] . after cross comparing http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / human lung epithelial cells are likely among the first targets to encounter invading severe acute respiratory syndrome-associated coronavirus (sars-cov) [ ] . thus, a comprehensive evaluation of the complex epithelial signalling to sars-cov is crucial to better understand sars pathogenesis. since both of the sars-cov and mers-cov infections cause severe lung pathology we compare and contrast the genes expression level of sars-cov infection and mers-cov infection. to compare between sars-cov and mers-cov infections, and the affect on the disease comorbidities, we have performed the time series microarray data analysis for the both types of infections on lung compared to controls. we have considered gene expression microarray data from the ncbi geo (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/ acc.cgi?acc=gse ) [ ] . from the analysis of sars-cov vs mock-infected controls (treated the same way except without the virus) we have found genes are highly significant and from the analysis of mers-cov vs mock we have found gens are highly significant (see details in the additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). interestingly, only genes (nfkbia, egr , ddit and ifit ) are common between these two infections (see figure ). however, only genes (nfkbia and egr ) play an important role and differentially expressed among the both infections in lung and also in sars infected pbmcs. then from the hierarchical cluster analysis of the differentially expressed genes of the lung infection by sars-cov and mers-cov, we observed distinct groups of genes that were significantly changed over time (see additional file : figure s and additional file : figure s , and additional file : table s and additional file : table s ). the log fold changes of the common genes (nfkbia, egr , ddit and ifit ) expression level for the infection of mers-cov and sars-cov are presented in the figures and . we observed that the log fold changes of nfkbia genes expression level is sharply upregulated in the both types of infections corresponding to time point. so nfkbia is an important bio-marker for the both mers-cov and sars-cov infections. it is also observed that the inflammatory genes nfkbia is a highly over expressed in the both pbmcs and lung cells for the infection of sars and also for the infection of mers in the lung cells (see figure ). indeed, the immune system plays a pivotal role in the outbreak of the inflammatory state. so in case of sars infection, the nfkbia gene plays an important role for the disease comorbidities. on the other hand, similar diseases share common genes and could be treated by the same drugs [ ] , which may allow us to make predictions for new uses of existing drugs. for an instance, the anti-diabetic drug metformin plays a major protective effect against cancer development and increases significantly higher survival rate of the cancer patients [ ] . the finding is that the earlier the metformin regimen was initiated, the greater the http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / preventive benefit for the cancer patient. there is an evidence that the antiviral medication, ribavirin, does not work in case of sars infection [ ] . to this end, we used connectivity map (cmap), which is a database of more than , drug transcriptional signatures in several cell lines [ ] . this database allows to identify of molecules that induce similar or opposite transcriptional changes relative to the query signature, based on their connectivity enrichment scores. as a query signature we used our highly dysregulated genes for the sars infection. we generated the connectivity score value ranges between + and - , where a highly positive score indicates that the drug induces changes similar to those induced by viral infection, while a highly negative score indicates that the drug reverses the expression of the sars signature. based on the connectivity score we have selected most potential positive and negative regulators of sars viral response (see details in the additional file : table s ). potential negative regulators indicate that drugs reverse the sars signature gene expression. among the negative potential regulator, the drug molecule tetracycline, zalcitabine, gibberellic acid, prestwick- and sulfaquinoxaline are more potential for the mcf cell line and vorinostat for the hl cell line. based on the data demonstrate the efficacy of different drug against sars virus can be predicted effective drug treatment for the emergent viruses. furthermore, immunomodulatory drugs that reduce the excessive host inflammatory response to respiratory viruses have therapeutic benefit to reduce the sars infection as well as disease comorbidities. we presented and analysed multi-relational disease comorbidity relationships of sars and hiv- infections with other diseases or infections based on the associations of genetics, proteomics, molecular signalling pathways and phenotypic disorders. the combination of molecular biology, genetics and clinical medicine has greatly facilitated understanding of how different diseases relate to each other. based on the combined genetics, ppis, pathways and clinical data, our disease networks can disclose potentially novel disease relationships that have not been captured by previous individual studies. the underlying hypothesis behind this line of research is that once we catalogue all disease-related genes, ppi complex and signalling pathways, if we do not consider environmental changes, we will be able to predict the susceptibility of each individual to future diseases using various molecular biomarkers and it will help us to enter an era of predictive medicine. our results indicate that such a combination of molecular and population-level data could help to build novel hypotheses about disease mechanisms. furthermore, if two or more diseases have associated comorbidity, the occurrence of one of them in a patient may increase the likelihood of developing the other diseases. we have also studied the differences between mers-cov and sars-cov in the host response. this enables rapid assessment of viral properties and the ability to anticipate possible differences in human clinical responses to mers-cov and sars-cov and their impact on comorbidities with respect to the general comorbidities conditions. we used this information to predict potential effective drugs against sars-cov, a method that could be more generally used to identify candidate therapeutics in future disease outbreaks. these investigation approach may also help to generate hypotheses and make rapid advancements in characterising the new viruses. we also found that patients' response of sars appears to be mainly an innate inflammatory response using nfk-bia, rather than any specific immune response against a viral infection such as hiv. however, hiv infection and highly active antiretroviral therapy (haart) also increase the immune reconstitution inflammatory syndrome (iris) and inflammation through the nf-κb pathways [ ] . moreover we have studied before about the impact of hiv infection on bone diseases and infection (e. g. osteoporosis and osteomyelitis). we observed that genes (e.g. rankl) and pathways (e.g. nf-κb) that are dysregulated by hiv infection also impact on the bone remodelling and bone related diseases. it is also recognised that inflammation plays a role in cancer aetiology, and various studies have found that inflammation may causes iris, obesity and tumour-promoting effects [ ] . moreover, inflammation is an important concomitant cause of many major age-associated pathologies such as cancer, neurodegeneration and diabetes [ ] . our study provides important evidence to associate diseases with the ageing process at the system level and helps to understand more about the comorbidities of the complex diseases. the ageing process itself is accompanied by a chronic low-grade inflammation, which is termed "inflammageing". the combination of metabolic-driven and age-driven inflammatory pathways plays a pivotal role in disease progression. this observation suggests that inflammageing and meta-inflammation can share stimuli and pathogenic mechanisms for comorbidities. we suppose that what is happening for the comorbidities we investigate is similar to what found for prions [ , ] . similar to most infectious agents, prion causes inflammatory responses by activating innate immunity through glial cells in the brain. the complete transcriptome of the prion brain at different time points is observed during the -week period [ , ] . at the beginning of the disease, both normal and diseased mouse networks were the same. although the disease started in the most unique network of prion accumulation and replication it is progressed to the other networks. based on this approach we may propose a pathway model for comorbidities how hubs genes dysregulate several other pathways to influence comorbidities. the number of dysregulated pathways could be proportional to the amount of dysregulation of hub genes. our pathway model may states that the hubs that are over turned on, may direct the signal to the different pathways creating comorbidities as shown in figure . for the infection, one of the pathways related to the inflammation starts dysregulation. with increasing time, both confidence level of inflammation and the number of dysregulated pathways are increased. moreover, with the increasing of inflammation the number of diseases for the comorbidities may increase. so initially infection dysregulates one signalling pathway of any cells and that causes other pathways may be dysrupted. in this way disrupting pathways increase more diseases in the same patient and make multimorbidity. disease genes play a central role in the human interactomes. overlapping component genes serve as bridges across the relatively independent functional modules or pathways. so perturbation in one pathway, such as the nf-κb signalling pathway, could be propagated throughout the other relevant pathways. we found sars and hiv- infections share significantly dysregulated genes as well as molecular pathways. both sars and hiv- viruses may infect and find an already existing comorbidity or generate a new comorbidity through the perturbation of the infected pathways. furthermore, it may provide us an opportunity to investigate the role of other http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / genes from the same pathway in the disease space. therefore, pathways could be used to represent the underlying biology of diseases and make prediction of disease comorbidities. in most of the cases, the correlativeness among genes, pathways and diseases are many-to-many, e.g. a disease is associated to many different genes and pathways; and a pathway is associated to many different diseases. this study suggests that a single pathway can be involved in many diseases whereas a disease may have dysregulation in many biological processes. hence, if a drug is already available to treat a disease through modulating the activity of a pathway, then it could potentially be used to treat other diseases that are strongly linked with the same pathway. on the other hand, when a disease shows dysregulation in multiple pathways, a pathwayguided combined drug may be employed in the treatment. moreover, the protein subnetwork-based approach to diseases may aid in drug discovery, in fact it can potentially be used to treat other diseases that are linked to the same protein complex. thus, our findings not only potentially help us to understand how different diseases are related based on their underlying molecular mechanisms but also provide insights into the design of novel, protein complex-guided therapeutic interventions for diseases. extending the concept of subclassifying patient cohorts to the single patient level refers to as personalised medicine. during the last few years, acceptance level of the personalised medicine is sharply increased as it has been apparent that standard treatment approaches are rarely efficient across the entire patient population. advances in highthroughput molecular assay technologies in the fields of genomics, proteomics and other "omics" is increasing the diagnostic and therapeutic strategies for personalised treatment. as a result, declining per-sample cost has given rise to numerous public repositories of biomolecular data. in particular, the availability of these data sets for many different diseases presents a ripe opportunity to use data-driven approaches to advance our current knowledge of disease relationships in a systematic way. the identified disease patterns can then be further investigated with regards to their diagnostic utility or help in predicting novel therapeutic targets. medicine will focus on each individual patient. it will become intrinsically proactive and will increasingly focus on wellness rather than disease. proactive and personalised medicine will bring fundamental changes to healthcare, taking carefully http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / targeted preventative or therapeutic action at the earliest indications of risk or disease comorbidities. we are entering into the genomic era of medicine, where a patient's genetic/genomic data is becoming important for clinical decision making, including disease risk assessment, disease diagnosis and subtyping, drug therapy and dose selection, risk assessment for adverse drug reaction, and family planning [ ] . today multi-scale and complex biomedical data are gathered and analysed to uncover combinations of predictive disease profiles. our genome, as well as multiple proteomes, multiple transcriptomes, multiple metabolomes, and other personalised data sets obtained at different points in our lives, will be readily available at affordable prices for each individual. in the near future, clinicians will have to consider genetic/genomic implications to patient care throughout their clinical workflow, including electronic prescribing of medications. therefore, for the implementation of the personalised medicine system, a model could be developed that will take individual genetic data. dysregulated biomarker genes will be identified from this genetic data and disease will be identified from the gene-disease association database. based on the information of the existing disease, the model will predict disease comorbidities using the disease-disease associations database. this will provide us to detect many diseases at the earliest detectable phase, even weeks, months, or maybe years before the symptoms appear and it will afford crucial insights into optimizing of our wellness. thus, personalised medicine will give fundamental new insights into disease mechanisms, and hence will open new opportunities for diagnosis, therapy and prevention from the disease comorbidities. in this study, we have considered all available categories of omics and phenotypic data to quantify the sars and hiv- infections centred comorbidity associations. we have shown that the phenotype disease network (pdn) has a heterogeneous structure where some diseases are highly connected while others are hardly connected at all. our findings showed that disease progression can be represented and studied using network methods, offering the potential to enhance our understanding of the origin and evolution of human diseases. detecting comorbidity in a large population is of clinical interest due to the fact that it may reveal new information useful for cause of diseases as well as for new treatment strategies. this study demonstrates the value of an integrated approach in revealing disease relationships and new opportunities for therapeutic applications. so we can say that this kind of approach will be helpful for making evidence-based recommendations about disease comorbidities. moreover, considering environmental factors (such as physiological stress, diet), ethnic group and gender discriminations are important factors in the comorbidity analysis. our network approach could be extended as a comorbidity map by integrating diet, exercise and other factors as in [ ] . the gene-disease associations data used in this study were collected from the online mendelian inheritance in man (omim) database (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ omim/). this omim database is the best-curated repository of all known disease genes and their associated http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / figure progressive temporal activation of pathways. a schematic view of networks becoming disease comorbidities increased for the perturbation of the pathways dysregulation advances with time. the red circles indicate increased levels of dysregulated gene expression relative to control and the red linked indicate dysregulated pathways that have been increased from infection as compared with normal control. the green indicated transcripts that are the same in control and infection condition. the four panels represent the network with time intervals of the infection progression. with time the inflammation confidence level is increased which is indicated by confidence interval. disorders [ , ] . genotype-phenotype relationships, as summarised in the omim database, contained more than human disease-genes associations involving diseases and disease associated genes. each entry of the omim is composed of four fields, the name of the disorder, the associated gene symbols, its corresponding omim id, and the chromosomal location. we selected the entries with the "( )" tag, for which there is strong evidence that at least one mutation is cause of the disorder. omim initially focused on monogenic disorders but in recent years has expanded to include complex traits and the associated genetic mutations that confer susceptibility to these common disorders [ ] . subsequently we classified each disorder into primary disorder classes based on the physiological system affected as introduced in goh, cusick, valle, childs, vidal and barabasi et al. [ ] . disorders having distinct multiple clinical features are assigned to the "multiple" class. this classification scheme reflects the phenotypic similarities among diseases in the same class and has been successfully used in the recent studies of systematic disease analysis [ ] . the gene expression data used in this study was obtained from the ncbi gene expression omnibus (geo) (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) [ ] . we have considered different data sets for our analysis (accession numbers are gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse and gse ) [ , , , , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . these data sets contain data from the patients of different age and sex. after several rounds of filtering, normalization and statistical analysis, we had microarrays representing sars, mers, hiv- infections and other human diseases (heart failure, kidney disorders, breast cancer, parkinson, osteoporosis, type and type diabetes). http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / the protein-protein interaction (ppi) data for human was obtained from the human protein reference database (hprd) [ ] . hprd contains the maximum number of ppi data among all publicly available literature-derived databases for human ppi [ ] . we have used the reactome knowledge base of human biological pathways database for our pathways association analysis [ ] . for the cross compare analysis between the sars and hiv infections, and ageing process we have download ageing data from the human ageing genomic resources (http://genomics.senescence.info/ download.html) [ , ] . they have collected human ageing genes after an extensive review of the literature. these genes are commonly dysregulated during the ageing process. to test the validity of the proposed disease associations, we examined the disease co-occurrence information at the population level. we obtained statistically significant pairwise comorbidity associations reconstructed from over million medical records in the us medicare claims database recorded in the icd- -cm format (http://www. icd data.com), which are frequently used for epidemiological and demographic studies and collected from [ ] . we used medpar records from to , where the dates and reasons for all hospitalizations were reported in icd- -cm format and it contains the diagnoses of elderly patients. each record consists of the date of visit, a primary diagnosis and up to secondary diagnosis. all diagnoses are specified by icd codes of up to digits. the first three digits specify the main disease category while the last two are used to give additional information about the disease. in total, the icd- -cm classification consists of different categories at the digit level and , categories at the digit level [ ] . to determine whether some existing drug compounds can reverse the sars infection signature, we used the publicly available connectivity map (cmap) database [ ] . cmap provides associations among genes, chemicals and disease or infection conditions. it is a collection of genome-wide transcriptional data from cultured human cells treated with , different compounds. the method of global gene expression analysis using oligonucleotide microarrays has proven to be a sensitive method to develop and refine the molecular determinants of human disorders [ ] . using this technology, we compared the gene expression profiles of sars, hiv and other diseases. to avoid the problems of comparing microarray data of different platforms and experimental systems, we normalized the gene expression data in each microarray sample (disease state or control) using the z-score transformation (z ij ) for each disease gene expression matrix using z ij = where sd is the standard deviation, g ij represents the expression value of gene i in sample j. this transformation allows for the direct comparison of gene expression values across various microarray samples and diseases. to combined more than one data series or experiments for a given disease, we employed a linear regression approach to obtain a combined t-test statistic between two conditions. data were log -transformed and we calculated expression level for each gene using a linear regression model : where y i is the gene expression value and x i is a disease state (disease or control). the coefficients β and β are the parameters of this model and were estimated by least squares. the t-test statistic, when estimating the value of β , is the same as the standard t-test statistic between disease and control states. time series microarray gene expression data analysis was divide into two steps: pre-processing and identification of statistically significant points by t-test, anova and regression analysis to find differently expressed gene profiles in different time points. in the first step, we preprocessed the experimental data using different statistical methods and finally followed by post less normalization, recommended by the golden spike project [ ] . in the second step, we have used a most suitable method "masigpro" (microarray significant profiles) to identify differentially expressed genes in time-course microarray experiments, which is a two step regression method successfully applied on more than one groups of time-series [ , ] . this two steps regression strategy is used to find genes with significant temporal expression changes and significant differences between experimental groups. this procedure first adjusts this global model by the leastsquared technique to identify differentially expressed genes and selects significant genes applying false discovery rate control procedures. then stepwise regression is applied as a variable selection strategy to study differences between experimental groups and statistically significant profiles. after finding differentially gene expression profiles among the group of experiments, the next step is to cluster them according to their profile similarities. the hierarchical clustering and the median gene expression profiles of clusters are performed according to the "masigpro" package in r [ ] . student's unpaired t-test was performed to identify genes that were differentially expressed in patients over normal samples and significant genes were selected. a threshold of at least . fold change and a p value for the t-tests of less than . were chosen. in addition, a two-way anova with bonferroni's post-hoc test was used to establish statistical significance between groups (< . ). pathways and functional categories were considered as over-represented when fisher's exact test p value was < . . for presenting the signalling and http://www.biomedcentral.com/ - / / interaction pathways of the different significant genes, we used cytoscape for data integration and network visualization [ , ] and reactome functional interaction (fi) cytoscape plugin for knowledge base of human biological pathways and network processes [ ] . for the gene disease association, we have considered the neighbourhood based benchmark and topological methods, which are better suited to our networks [ ] . in this case, topological refers to methods that rely only on the structure of the network to draw conclusions. we construct a gdn from gene-disease associations where the node in the network can be either a disease or a gene. this network can also be regarded as a bipartite graph. diseases are connected when the diseases share at least one significant dysregulated genes. let a particular set of human diseases d and a set of human genes g, genedisease associations attempt to find whether gene g ∈ g is associated with disease d ∈ d. if g i and g j , the sets of significant up and down dysregulated genes associated with diseases i and j respectively, then the number of shared dysregulated genes (n g ij ) associated with both diseases i and j is as follows: the co-occurrence refers to the number of shared genes in the gdn. the common neighbours is the based on the jaccard coefficient method, where the edge prediction score for the node pair is as: where e is the set of all edges. the number of shared pathways and protein subnetwork that links between diseases i and j are calculated using the equation and the link prediction score is measured using the equation . to estimate the correlation starting from disease cooccurrence, we need to quantify the strength of disease association for comorbidities by dipicting a distance between two diseases. for the analysis of the phenotypic data, we used the relative risk (rr ij ) as the quantified measures of comorbidity tendency of two disease pairs and checked φ-correlation (φ ij ) to measure the robustness of the comorbidity associations. the rr ij is observing in a pair of diseases i and j affecting the same patient. when two diseases co-occur more frequently than expected by chance, we will get rr ij > and φ ij > . however, rr ij and φ ij are not independent of each other and each carries unique biases that are complementary [ , ] . so, we used both measures of comorbidity to ensure the robustness of our investigations. the rr ij allows us to quantify the co-occurrence of disease pairs compared with the random expectation which is calculated as: ( ) where n is the total number of patients in the population, p i is the incidences/prevalences of disease i, p j is the incidence of disease j and c ij is the number of patients that have been diagnosed with both diseases i and j. for rr ij >= comorbidity is larger than expected by chance and for rr ij < comorbidity is smaller than expected by chance. to calculate the significance of the relative risk rr ij , we used the katz, baptista, azen and pike et al. method to estimate confidence intervals [ ] . according to their estimation, the % confidence interval for the rr ij between two diseases i and j is calculated by: lower bounds of the confidence interval (lb) = rr ij * exp(− . * σ ij ) and upper bounds of the confidence interval (ub) = rr ij * exp( . * σ ij ), where σ ij is given by: disease pairs within the % confidence interval are only considered if the lb value is larger than when rr ij is larger than , or if the ub value is smaller than when rr ij is smaller than . relative risk measure is intrinsically biased towards overestimation of relationships between rare diseases and underestimates the co-morbidity of more frequent diseases [ ] . this bias can be reduced by introduction of a φ-correlation measure. we can quantify the strength of comorbidities by calculating the correlation coefficient associated with a pair of diseases i and j as: where c ij is the number of patients affected by both diseases, n is the total number of patients in the studied population, and p i and p j are the morbidity or incidence of the i th and j th diseases respectively. the φ-correlation is the pearson's correlation for the variables which only take or values [ ] . for φ ij > comorbidity is larger than expected by chance and for φ ij < comorbidity is smaller than expected by chance. we can determine the significance of φ = by performing a t-test. this consists of calculating t according to the formula: t = φ √ n− √ −φ , where n is the number of observations used to calculate φ. to predict the comorbidities considering the primary or index disease we have calculated the conditional relative risk (conditional rr ij ) as follows: for all possible disease pairs i and j, for the cases that one index disease (i) is present (k = true) or absent (k = false). (p = . ). we have weighted the edges using a mutual information metric which quantifies how much greater the edge relationship is with respect to co-occurrence. the mutual information weight between two diseases i and j is defined as w ij = c ij p i + p j − c ij ( ) where c ij is the observed co-occurrence and p i and p j are the morbidity or prevalence of the i th and j th diseases respectively. to compare between sars-cov and mers-cov, a gene set enrichment analysis was undertaken using gsea [ ] . to find out the correlation (similarities) and distance (dissimilarities) among the diseases from the integrated analysis of multidimensional data (gene expression and protein protein interaction), we have applied euclidian distance measurement and metric multi-dimensional scaling (mds) using majorization [ ] . mds is a set of methods for discovering hidden structures in multidimensional data. based on a proximity matrix derived from variables measured on objects as input entity, these distances are mapped on a lower dimensional spatial representation. optimization problem is used to find mapping in target dimension of the data based on given pairwise proximity information while minimize the objective function. the particular objective function (or loss function) we used in this work is a sum of squares, commonly called stress. we used majorization to minimize stress and this mds solving strategy is known as smacof (scaling by majorizing a complicated function). stress majorization is an optimization strategy used in multidimensional scaling (mds) where, for a set of nm-dimensional data items, a configuration x of n points in r(<< m)-dimensional space is sought that minimizes the stress function σ (x). here r is that means the (r × n) matrix x lists points in -dimensional euclidean space. we have applied the cost function σ to measures the squared differences between ideal (m-dimensional) distances and actual distances in r-dimensional space as follows: x of dimension n × p as the individual's or judge's configuration, and x of dimension n × p as the object's configuration matrix. the least squares metric multidimensional scaling or mds problem is the minimization of σ and over all m × p configurations x. here w ij are given non-negative weights and d ij are given non-negative dissimilarities. the d ij (x) are the euclidean distances between rows i and j of x. thus d ij (x , x ) = p s= x is − x js ( ) where w ij ≥ is a weight for the measurement between a pair of points (i, j), d ij (x) is the euclidean distance between i and j, and δ ij is the ideal distance between the points (their separation) in the m-dimensional data space. note that w ij is used to specify a degree of confidence in the similarity between points (e.g. can be specified if there is no information for a particular pair). a configuration x which minimizes σ (x) gives a plot in which points that are close together correspond to points that are also close together in the 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at the -digit category level. only statistically significant links with high relative risk rr ij are considered. additional file : table s . phenotypic disease association for sars infection based on the icd codes at the -digit category level. only statistically significant links with high relative risk rr ij are considered.additional file : table s . phenotypic disease association for hiv infection based on the icd codes at the -digit category level. only statistically significant links with high relative risk rr ij are considered. additional file : table s . phenotypic disease association for hiv infection based on the icd codes at the -digit category level. only statistically significant links with high relative risk rr ij are considered.additional file : table s . highly statistical significant differentially expressed genes between sars-cov and reference group (mock) in lung epithelial cells.additional file : table s . highly statistical significant differentially expressed genes between mers-cov and reference group (mock) in lung epithelial cells.additional file : figure s . median expression profile of sars-cov vs mock using hierarchical clustering (ward method, pearson correlation) of statistical significantly differential expressed genes (p < . ). the information regarding each of the clusters and genes is described in additional file : table s .additional file : figure s . median expression profile of mers-cov vs mock using hierarchical clustering (ward method, pearson correlation) of statistical significantly differential expressed genes (p < . ). the the authors declare that they have no competing interests.authors' contributions mam and pl designed and mam implemented the analysis of the paper. mam and pl wrote the manuscript. both authors contributed to and approved the manuscript. key: cord- -ttrcmtu authors: de oliveira, luisa abruzzi; breton, michèle claire; bastolla, fernanda macedo; camargo, sandro da silva; margis, rogério; frazzon, jeverson; pasquali, giancarlo title: reference genes for the normalization of gene expression in eucalyptus species date: - - journal: plant cell physiol doi: . /pcp/pcr sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ttrcmtu gene expression analysis is increasingly important in biological research, with reverse transcription–quantitative pcr (rt–qpcr) becoming the method of choice for high-throughput and accurate expression profiling of selected genes. considering the increased sensitivity, reproducibility and large dynamic range of this method, the requirements for proper internal reference gene(s) for relative expression normalization have become much more stringent. given the increasing interest in the functional genomics of eucalyptus, we sought to identify and experimentally verify suitable reference genes for the normalization of gene expression associated with the flower, leaf and xylem of six species of the genus. we selected genes that exhibited the least variation in microarrays of e. grandis leaves and xylem, and e. globulus xylem. we further performed the experimental analysis using rt–qpcr for six eucalyptus species and three different organs/tissues. employing algorithms genorm and normfinder, we assessed the gene expression stability of eight candidate new reference genes. classic housekeeping genes were also included in the analysis. the stability profiles of candidate genes were in very good agreement. pcr results proved that the expression of novel eucons , eucons and eucons genes was the most stable in all eucalyptus organs/tissues and species studied. we showed that the combination of these genes as references when measuring the expression of a test gene results in more reliable patterns of expression than traditional housekeeping genes. hence, novel eucons , eucons and eucons genes are the best suitable references for the normalization of expression studies in the eucalyptus genus. for cellulose pulp has resulted in wood shortages in recent years (steane et al. , foucart et al. , grattapaglia and kirst . hence efforts in many fields of research are being made to improve forest productivity including molecular approaches such as whole-genome sequencing and high-throughput analysis of gene expression. with such objectives in mind, the eucalyptus genome network (eucagen) was created (http://www.ieugc.up.ac.za), representing one example of a valuable database platform for genome research in e. grandis and other species (rengel et al. ). with the recent availability of eucalyptus genome and transcriptome data, many efforts are and will be made to assess eucalyptus gene expression with conventional or highthroughput techniques. independently of the method employed, the use of reference genes as internal controls for gene expression measurements is absolutely essential. such validated reference genes for eucalyptus are still scarce. dna macro-and microarray hybridizations and partial or whole transcriptome sequencing linked to digital transcript counting (rna-seq), among other techniques, allow the expression analysis of thousands of genes simultaneously, employing differentially labeled rna or cdna populations. these techniques have the advantage of speed, highthroughput and a high degree of potential automation compared with conventional quantification methods such as northern blot analysis, rnase protection assays, or competitive reverse trnascription-pcr (rt-pcr; rajeevan et al. , czechowski et al. . reverse transcription followed by real-time, quantitative pcr (rt-qpcr) is the most sensitive and specific technique commonly used to assess gene expression levels (aerts et al. ). it allows more in-depth studies of smaller sets of genes across many individuals, treatments or cell/tissue types to be performed. rt-qpcr is the technique of choice to validate gene expression results derived from the above-mentioned high-throughput methods (rajeevan et al. , czechowski et al. . as mentioned previously, only good internal reference genes will allow confident comparison of gene expression results. internal control genes are used to normalize mrna fractions and are often referred to as housekeeping genes which should not vary their expression during development, among tissues or cells under investigation, or in response to experimental treatments. the most common housekeeping genes employed in plant gene expression studies are those encoding actin (bas et al. , barsalobres-cavallari et al. ), tubulin (schmidt and delaney , yang et al. ), glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh) (tong et al. , maroufi et al. , rrna (guénin et al. , schimidt and delaney , yang et al. , polyubiquitin (libault et al. , barsalobres-cavallari et al. ) and elongation factor a (silveira et al. , tong et al. ). many studies make use of these housekeeping genes without proper validation of their presumed stability, based on the assumption that they would be constitutively expressed due to their role in basic cellular processes. considerable amounts of data show that most studied housekeeping genes have expression that can vary considerably depending on the cell type or experimental condition (thellin et al. , hruz et al. . with the increased sensitivity, reproducibility and large dynamic range of the rt-qpcr methods, the requirements for proper internal control genes have become increasingly stringent. in recent years, large numbers of reference gene validation attempts have been reported for plants, most of them covering model, crop or ornamental species such as rice , jain et al. , arabidopsis thaliana (remans et al. , hong et al. , dekkers et al. , tobacco (schmidt and delaney ) , sugarcane (iskandar et al. ) , potato (nicot et al. ) , brachypodium sp. (hong et al. ) , soybean (jian et al. , libault et al. , hu et al. , kulcheski et al. , tomato (coker and davies , expósito-rodríguez et al. , løvdal and lillo , dekkers et al. , brachiaria sp. (silveira et al. ), coffee (barsalobres-cavallari et al. ), peach (tong et al. ), wheat (paolacci et al. ), chicory (maroufi et al. ) , cotton (artico et al. ) , cucumber , lolium sp. (martin et al. ) , orobanche sp. (gonzález-verdejo et al. ) and cyclamen sp. (hoenemann and hohe ) . few studies have focused on woody plants such as poplar (brunner et al. , grape (reid et al. ) and longan tree (lin and lai ) . reference genes for gene expression studies in eucalyptus have been recently presented. de almeida et al. ( ) , working with e. globulus microccuttings rooted in vitro, have indicated histone h b and a-tubulin as the most suitable reference genes during in vitro adventitious rooting, in the presence or absence of auxin. boava et al. ( ) , working with clonal seedlings of the hybrid plant (e. grandisÂe. urophylla) exposed to biotic (puccinia psidii) or abiotic (acibenzolar-s-methyl) stresses, concluded that genes encoding the eukaryotic elongation factor (eef ) and ubiquitin were the most stable, and ideal as internal controls. both studies tested a small number of genes ( and , respectively) selected according to literature data concerning other plant systems and experimental conditions. given the increasing interest in the functional genomics of eucalyptus and the need for validated reference genes for a broader set of species and experimental conditions, we sought to identify the most stably expressed genes in a set of , genes assayed by microarray developed to compare stem vascular (xylem) and leaf tissues of e. grandis and e. globulus adult trees. best candidate genes were then validated by rt-qpcr in assays with rnas from xylem and leaves of six eucalyptus species and flowers of e. grandis. seven traditional housekeeping genes most employed in expression studies in plants were also included in our analysis. the eucalyptus species selected in the present study are among the most planted trees in the tropics and the most employed in breeding programs in brazil (e. grandis, e. urophylla, e. globulus, e. saligna, e. dunnii and e. pellita). most importantly, they exhibit highly contrasting phenotypes, especially in growth rate, biotic and abiotic resistance and wood quality (fao , coppen , which, in principle, would make the search for general reference genes for the genus difficult. as a result, genes selected as the least variable among all conditions tested have not yet been described in the literature. this set of genes may represent an important molecular tool to analyze accurately the expression of eucalyptus genes in different tissues/organs and in different species via array hybridization or rt-qpcr. data from microarray hybridizations conducted within the project 'genolyptus: the brazilian research network on the eucalyptus genome' (http://genoma.embrapa.br/genoma/genolyptus) were analyzed in order to select the most stably expressed eucalyptus genes. the microarray study was conceived with nine -mer oligoprobes covering the length of each one of the , unique sequences derived from the genolyptus expressed sequence tag (est) data set (genbank accession nos. ho -ho and hs -hs ). nine oligoprobes were also designed for cdnas encoding known human proteins as negative controls. oligoprobes were synthesized 'on-chip' in duplicate, randomly distributed in two blocks of identical slides. leaf blades and vascular (xylem) tissue samples were taken from two e. grandis clonal trees, i.e. derived from the same matrix tree and harboring the same genotype. two additional xylem samples were collected from two other e. grandis clonal trees of a different genotype and from two e. globulus clonal trees. therefore, cy -labeled cdna samples and identical chips were produced at roche nimblegen for the microarray assays, with a total number of , features per slide [microarray results were submitted to gene expression omnibus (geo) under accession nos. gsm -gsm ]. the most stably expressed genes were mined in the microarray data by employing two statistical algorithms named significance analysis of microarrays (sam) (tusher et al. ) and standard deviation microarray analysis (sdma; see materials and methods), that allow the representation of results in three-dimensional ( d) graphs. the input data to sam were gene expression measurements from the set of microarray experiments, as well as the response variable from each experiment. according to tusher et al. ( ) , sam computes a statistic d(i) for each gene 'i', measuring the strength of the relationship between gene expression and the response variable. it uses repeated permutations of the data to determine if the expression of any gene is significantly related to the response. the cut-off for significance is determined by a tuning parameter delta, chosen by the user based on the false-positive rate. one can also choose a fold change parameter, to ensure that called genes change at least a pre-specified amount. in the present study, the value of delta was set to . so that we could mine the genes whose expression exhibited the lowest variation among the three conditions assessed in the microarrays, i.e. e. grandis leaves and xylem and e. globulus xylem (fig. a) . a ranking of genes whose fold change values were approximately equal to were selected as reference candidate genes, since they presented the lowest variation of expression among the leaves and xylem of e. grandis and xylem of e. globulus (table ) . sdma is a novel and simpler algorithm based on the comparison of the average gene expression in relation to the global average of expressed genes in microarrays and the overall standard deviation, allowing the presentation of results in graphical mode (see materials and methods). sdma allowed us to generate a d graph that evidenced genes expressed in a position equivalent to their overall average expression among the three conditions analyzed in the microarrays (fig. b) . the average value of gene expression by sdma should be as similar as possible to the global average of expression, and the overall standard deviation should tend to zero when the scope of the analysis is the selection of genes whose expression is stable. using the same criteria applied in sam, we selected genes whose standard deviations were close to zero, indicating the similarity between the values of mean and mean global gene expression ( table ). an sdma d graphic is presented in fig. c where the mean expression values of the most stable genes selected under the conditions studied are plotted. note that points representing selected genes tend to form a straight line, indicating that their means of expression when compared with the global average have a standard deviation tending to zero. we were pleased to note that the employment of either sdma or sam allowed us to identify the same group of genes as the most stably expressed, confirming the robustness of the analysis performed by both algorithms. nevertheless, the ranking of the two methods differed, as shown in table . since none of the sequences selected presented molecular or biochemical identities similar to previously described eucalyptus genes or proteins, we named them eucons to eucons , according to the ranking generated by sdma, as stated in the first column of table . selected sequences were annotated using blastx (altschul et al. ) against the available non-redundant protein sequences (nr), and their functional categories were determined by the blast go software (conesa et al. ) . although some sequences exhibited expected (e) values too high for a confident annotation, approximately half of them ( %) showed similarity to known proteins. the other half of the sequences corresponded to hypothetical proteins ( %) or returned a 'no hit' ( %) result ( table ) . the gene ontology analysis of the selected genes by blast go allowed the functional classification of ( %) of the sequences, as represented in fig. . most of the sequences were classified in functions related to cellular ( ) or metabolic ( ) processes, among six other functional categories. the remaining ( %) sequences were classified as 'no hit', and were not represented in fig. . in order to validate the results further by rt-qpcr, we selected candidate genes with the least variation in expression and whose annotation matched a known plant protein according to sdma (eucons , , , and ) and sam (eucons , , , and ) . selected genes are highlighted in gray in table . in order to check their true expression stability, primers for rt-qpcr validation of the eucalyptus sequences selected as potential reference genes were designed and are presented in table . in addition to them, we also designed primers for five genes traditionally employed as references, based on their housekeeping function, including a sand family protein (remans et al. ) , gapdh (dambrauskas et al. ) , histone h b, ribosomal protein l a (ribl a) and tubulin (tua ) (czechowski et al. ) , as presented in table . reference genes previously recommended for the analysis of gene expression during e. globulus rooting in vitro and named euc and euc (de almeida et al. ) were also evaluated, and the primers employed in rt-qpcr are also presented in table . where the observed relative difference is identical to the expected relative difference with a delta set to . . solid and dotted red and green lines represent genes whose observed relative differences were lower or higher than the expected relative differences, i.e. whose expression varied among tissues tested. (b) three-dimensional graph generated with the standard deviation microarray analysis (sdma) method showing genes (open circles) expressed in positions equivalent to their overall average expression among the three conditions analyzed in the microarrays, i.e. leaves (egrl, z-axis) and xylem (egrx, x-axis) of e. grandis and xylem of e. globulus (eglx, y-axis). the higher concentration of circles around the main diagonal line proved that most genes exhibited very similar expression values in the analyzed tissues. the most differentially expressed genes appeared proportionally far from the main diagonal line. (c) sdma d graph representing the most invariable eucalyptus genes according to microarray data. points representing selected genes tend to form a straight line since their means of expression are similar to the global average, with a standard deviation tending to zero. gene names and the identity of e. grandis genomic (eucagen) scaffolds where sequences are located, as well as the embl or genbank accession codes (gene id) and putative functional identity of sequences based on blast analysis are indicated along with the estimated (e) value. results of the statistical analysis performed are indicated: standard deviations (sd) for the sdma method, and fold change and final score (d) of the sam method. genes were ranked from highest to lowest stability for both methods. lines shaded in gray represent genes selected for validation via rt-qpcr analysis. total rna samples were prepared from six eucalyptus species, distributed as follows: flower, leaf and xylem of e. grandis, leaf and xylem of e. dunnii, e. pellita, e. saligna and e. urophylla, and xylem of e. globulus. rt-qpcr evaluations were conducted with biological duplicates and experimental quadruplicates. results were analyzed using the software genorm . (vandesompele et al. ) and normfinder (andersen et al. ) in order to generate comparable rankings of genes based on their stability of expression. the cq data collected for all samples were transformed to relative quantities using the ÀÁÁct method developed by livak and schmittgen ( ) . we did not succeed in obtaining satisfactory single-peak dissociation curves after rt-qpcr with primers designed for eucons and eucons (data not show), and both candidate genes were discarded from the analysis. with genorm, the average expression stability (m-value) of all genes was first calculated. m-values are defined as the mean variation of a certain gene related to all of the others. the genorm software recommends an m-value below the threshold of . in order to identify genes with stable expression, although . has been used as the threshold limit by many authors (radonić et al. , allen et al. , coll et al. , de almeida et al. , taylor et al. . as shown in fig. a , all candidate genes examined showed a very high stability of expression, with thresholds < . , independently of the tissues/organs evaluated. according to the genorm analysis, eucons , eucons and eucons were the most stably expressed genes and should be considered as the best reference genes for rt-qpcr normalizations. in order to evaluate the optimal number of reference genes for reliable normalization, genorm allows calculation of the pairwise variation vn/vn + between the sequential ranked normalization factors nfn and nfn + to determine the effect of adding the next reference gene in normalization. the normalization factor is calculated based on the geometric average among the two most stable gene relative quantities and the stepwise inclusion of the other genes in the order of their expression stability. a large pairwise variation implies that the added reference gene has a significant effect on normalization and should be included for calculation of a reliable normalization factor. considering the cut-off value of . , below which the inclusion of an additional reference gene is not necessary (vandesompele et al. ) , the use of the two most stably expressed genes, eucons and eucons , was sufficient for accurate normalization (< . ) in all organs studied (flower, leaves and xylem) from the six eucalyptus species (fig. a, b) . the same applies when analyzing xylem and leaves separately, with eucons and ribl a genes (leaves) and eucons and eucons genes (xylem; data not show). in addition to genorm, the expression stability of candidate reference genes assayed by rt-qpcr was also analyzed with the normfinder software. this program takes into account the intra-and intergroup variations for normalization factor calculation and the results are not affected by occasionally co-regulated genes. the best candidate will be the one with the intergroup variation as close to zero as possible and, at the same time, having the smallest error bar possible. hence values are inversely correlated to gene expression stability, which avoids artificial selection of co-regulated genes (andersen et al. ). according to the normfinder analysis of gene expression in leaves, xylem tissues and among species, the stability values of the genes studied were < . , with error bars no greater than . ( fig. c ; table ). when we analyzed the gene expression in all tissues/organs and species, the stability value was in the range between . and . , proving again that all genes elected are good references for rt-qpcr studies in eucalyptus. the ranking of the genes and their respective stability values are shown in table . according to the normfinder analysis and in agreement with the results of genorm, the three most stable genes were eucons , eucons and eucons when considering all tissues/organs and species. when the expression in leaves is considered separately, the stability values were in the range between . and . , and the three most stable genes in these organs were eucons , eucons and eucons . in xylem vascular tissues, the stability values were in the range of . - . , and the genes eucons , eucons and eucons were the most stable ( table ) . the algorithm ranked eucons as the most stably expressed gene in all samples regardless of whether the samples were collected into one main group or divided into two groups. nonetheless, just one housekeeping gene is determined to all samples using normfinder when no groups are defined. so, a different group was created to analyze the most stable couple ( table ) . when leaves and xylem were tested as different groups, the stability values were in the range between . and . . eucons exhibited the lowest stability value. normfinder identified eucons and eucons as the most appropriate combination of genes, showing a stability value of . . fig. functional classification of the most stable eucalyptus genes according to microarray hybridization data analysis through sam and sdma. gene ontology hits registered for the most constitutive genes that could be assigned a putative function based on swiss-prot query. only known genes are shown. validation of the stability of eucalyptus reference genes via dxr differential gene expression analysis terpenoids are all derived from two common precursors, isopentenyl diphosphate (ipp) and dimethylallyl diphosphate (dmapp). in higher plants, ipp and dmapp are synthesized through two distinct pathways in separate cellular compartments, the cytosolic mevalonate (mva) pathway and the -c-methyl-d-erythritol -phosphate (mep) pathway that takes place in plastids. the mep pathway, through which diterpenes are synthesized, has two important initial steps: (i) the formation of -deoxy-d-xylulose -phosphate (dxp) from pyruvate and glyceraldehyde -phosphate through the action of the dxp synthase (dxs), followed by the conversion of dxp into mep by the action of the dxp reductoisomerase (dxr). as dxs and dxr are key enzymes catalyzing the two committed steps for isoprenoid biosynthesis, genes coding for dxs and dxr may play important roles in controlling the plastidic synthesis of isoprenoids and the downstream diterpene products (carretero-paulet et al. , liao et al. , wu et al. , yan et al. ). it is known that the expression patterns of the dxr enzyme and its encoding gene vary quite consistently according to the plant and organ being assessed. this enzyme and its encoding mrna show increased expression in inflorescences and leaves of a. thaliana (carretero-paulet et al. ) and salvia miltiorrhiza (yan et al. ), but decreased levels were reported in stems and roots. in rauvolfia veticillata, on the other hand, gene name abbreviations, genbank, embl or tair accession codes and the putative functional identity of genes based on blast analysis are indicated. the eucagen scaffolds containing the genome sequences of the referred genes are presented. based on the eucalyptus sequences, primers were designed as shown along with amplicon lengths (bp). eucalyptus reference genes (continued) higher levels of dxr mrna were reported in fruits and roots, with the lowest levels in flowers (liao et al. ). in order to confirm the constitutive expression of the three best eucalyptus genes selected as references (eucons , eucons and eucons ), we tested them by normalizing the patterns of dxr gene expression in eucalyptus and compared the results with those normalized by the traditional reference genes ribl a and gapdh. therefore, the expression of dxr and the reference genes was measured by rt-qpcr in the same set of tissues/organs and eucalyptus species previously tested. dxr expression values were then normalized against the expression values of two reference genes, as shown in fig. . in order to allow comparisons among reference genes, the average value of the pairwise reference gene relative expression in the different organs/tissues tested was set to and taken to normalize the dxr relative expression. as expected, steady-state mrna levels for the dxr gene were much higher in leaves, followed by flowers, with lower values observed in xylem tissues of e. grandis (fig. a) . as shown in fig. , the pairwise combination of eucons , eucons or eucons allowed more confident results than the ribl a/gapdh pair. the relative expression of the dxr gene was much less variable when normalized with eucons genes and, most importantly, much more concordant if compared with results normalized by the ribl a/gapdh pair. this is more evident in fig. b where no statistical difference was observed in dxr relative expression values among the xylem from e. grandis, e. globulus and e. pellita when ribl a/gapdh were used as references, but was quite different when normalized with any two of the eucons genes. essentially the same conclusions were assumed by the analysis of dxr relative expression obtained with leaves and xylem tissues from e. dunnii, e. pellita, e. saligna and e. urophylla (results not shown). real-time qpcr and cdna microarray measurements are highly reproducible techniques to assess gene expression at the steady-state mrna level (yue et al. , stankovic and corfas , stahlberg et al. ). however, in comparison with classical rt-pcr, the main advantages of rt-qpcr are its higher sensitivity, specificity of measurements, and broad quantification range of up to seven orders of magnitude (bustin , gachon et al. ), besides being a great aid to study expression in genes whose transcript levels are known to be very low (higuchi et al. ) . the analysis by rt-qpcr has become the most common method for validating whole-genome microarray data or of a smaller set of genes, and molecular diagnostics (giulietti et al. , chuaqui et al. . accurate normalization is an absolute prerequisite for correct measurement of gene expression, and the most commonly used normalization strategy involves standardization to a single constitutively expressed control gene. therefore, the ideal reference gene should exhibit invariable expression levels among all different cell types, tissues, organs, developmental stages or treatments that are submitted to the test organism (vandesompele et al. , andersen et al. ). however, it has become clear that no single gene is constitutively expressed in all cell types and under all experimental conditions. it has been shown extensively that the expression of the so-called 'housekeeping' genes, although constant under some experimental conditions, can vary quite considerably in other cases, implying that the expression stability of the intended control gene has to be verified before each experiment (thellin et al. , volkov et al. , czechowski et al. relative expression of the isoprenoid biosynthetic gene dxr in different tissues/organs of eucalyptus by rt-qpcr and normalization with different reference gene pairs. gene pairs employed as references are indicated at the bottom of the graphics. average values of the relative expression of the reference genes in the different tissues were set to in order to normalize the expression of dxr. (a) expression patterns of the dxr gene in flowers, leaves and xylem tissues of e. grandis. (b) expression patterns of the dxr gene in xylem tissues of e. grandis, e. globulus and e. pellita. , guénin et al. , hruz et al. ). normalization with multiple reference genes is becoming the gold standard for the technique, but reports that identify such genes in plant research are limited, especially for woody species (rajeevan et al. , coker and davies , brunner et al. , iskandar et al. , nicot et al. , jain et al. , reid et al. , expósito-rodriguez et al. , gonzález-verdejo et al. , hong et al. , jian et al. , libault et al. , martin et al. , remans et al. , hu et al. , løvdal and lillo , paolacci et al. , silveira et al. , tong et al. , de almeida et al. , artico et al. , boava et al., , hong et al. , kulcheski et al. , lin and lai , maroufi et al., , schmidt and delaney , yang et al. , hoenemann and hohe . in the present work, we evaluated the results of microarray data concerning , eucalyptus genes and selected the most stably expressed genes in leaves of e. grandis and the xylem of e. grandis and e. globulus. to do so, two statistical algorithms were employed, sam and sdma, and the same candidate genes were pointed out as the most invariably expressed genes in microarrays, although the ranking of the genes was different (table ) . while sam is a well established and popular program to analyze microarray data, with almost , citations in pubmed (tusher et al. ) , sdma is here presented as a novel algorithm developed to better represent, in d graphs, the results of the most stably expressed genes in microarrays. it is based on the principle that gene expression values with lower standard deviations are supposed to be the most similarly expressed among the samples being tested. by rt-qpcr, the expression stability of eight of the best candidate genes selected by sam and sdma was addressed in different organs (leaves and flowers) and vascular tissues (xylem) derived from six species of eucalyptus. besides these eight novel genes, seven other genes previously tested as references in eucalyptus or other plants were also evaluated, including classic housekeeping genes such as those encoding tubulin (tua ), histone h b, gapdh and the ribosomal protein l a (ribl a). genes encoding tua , gapdh, histones, ribosomal proteins and rnas are the most employed and tested housekeeping genes in plants (thellin et al. , rajeevan et al. , volkov et al. , iskandar et al. , czechowski et al. , barsalobres-cavallari et al. , de almeida et al. , lin and lai , maroufi et al. . according to our rt-qpcr results and data analysis by genorm and normfinder, all these housekeeping genes showed quite consistent stability in expression in eucalyptus, especially ribl a (fig. , table ). nevertheless, the employment of the pair gapdh/ribl a to normalize the expression of the isoprenoid biosynthetic gene dxr proved that, at least together, these genes are not suitable as references for eucalyptus gene expression studies. indeed, the combination of any pair of the three best reference genes here presented, eucons , and , to normalize the results of dxr gene expression was intrinsically consistent, leading to a quite different interpretation of the dxr gene expression in xylem tissues of three eucalyptus species, as shown in fig. b . the stability of the tua gene has often been used to normalize rt-qpcr expression data (brunner et al. , gonzález-verdejo et al. , de almeida et al. . analysis of the eucalyptus microarray and rt-qpcr data revealed that, indeed, it has a quite stable expression. nevertheless, this gene is far from being the best reference for eucalyptus among those tested (fig. , table ). tua has been shown to be a suitable normalization gene during plant development in orobanche ramosa (gonzález-verdejo et al. ) , for comparison of gene expressions among species of populus (brunner et al. ) , and during e. globulus adventitious rooting in vitro (de almeida et al. ), but it was unstable during seedling development in a. thaliana (volkov et al. , hong et al. , zhou et al. , in different tissues or under biotic and abiotic stresses in potato (nicot et al. ) and cucumber . similar results were also obtained by artico et al. ( ) in cotton, silveira et al. ( ) in brachyaria brizantha, and expósito-rodríguez et al. ( ) and dekkers et al. ( ) for a. thaliana and tomato seeds. like tua , the gapdh gene was shown to reach stability values consistent enough to be considered a reference in our studies with eucalyptus (fig. , table ), although much better candidates were pointed out. according to , the relative expression of gapdh in rice varied up to -fold. in brachypodium distachyon, results of rt-qpcr showed that the gapdh gene was stably expressed under various abiotic stresses, without considerable variation in response to growth hormones, although it exhibited less stability according to the tissue type being evaluated (hong et al. ) . in tomato, gapdh was poorly ranked as a good reference gene based on the analysis of est data (coker and davies ) and rt-qpcr assays during plant development (expósito-rodríguez et al. ) or under abiotic stress (løvdal and lillo ) . similar results were obtained with peach, where gapdh was not among the best reference genes in the experimental groups (tong et al. ). according to tong et al. ( ) , the reasons for the observed discrepancies may be that gapdh not only acts as a component of the glycolytic pathway but also takes part in other processes. therefore, the expression profile of gapdh might fluctuate according to the corresponding experimental conditions. the gene encoding histone h b also exhibited levels of steady-state mrna quite constant in the different eucalyptus organs/tissues evaluated in this study (fig. , table ). however, like the other traditional housekeeping genes, its stability was overcome by the novel eucons genes discussed later. during e. globulus adventitious rooting in vitro, h b, along with tua , was among the most stably expressed genes (de almeida et al. ) . the gene encoding histone h in chicory was also indicated as a good reference for rt-qpcr assay normalization (maroufi et al. ). nevertheless, czechowski et al. ( ) , based on the analysis of a large amount of data derived from microarray studies, showed that genes encoding histones were not among the best reference genes for a. thaliana. similar results were obtained by lin and lai ( ) when studying synchronized longan tree embryogenic cultures at different developmental stages and temperatures. genes encoding ribosomal proteins and rrnas are often viewed as a homogeneous collection of housekeeping genes and were employed as references in many works (thellin et al. , volkov et al. , iskandar et al. , barsalobres-cavallari et al. , de almeida et al. . nevertheless, members of this gene family were shown to have extraribosomal functions with strong variations in the pattern of their expression (wool , mcintosh et al. . for instance, these genes were shown to be specifically induced or repressed in particular tissues during different stages such as tuber (taylor et al. ) and root (williams and sussex ) development; or in response to stresses such as genotoxicity (revenkova et al. ) and cold (saez-vasquez et al. , kim et al. ). volkov et al. ( ) specifically evaluated the tissue-specific changes in the ribl a mrna levels in different organs of a. thaliana. compared with leaves, the level of ribl a mrna was increased in flowers and reduced in stems and siliques. these observations are in accordance with the idea that ribosomal protein genes in plants are transcriptionally up-regulated in actively growing tissues and down-regulated in metabolically inactive tissues (marty et al. , moran . interestingly, among the traditional housekeeping genes tested in the present work, ribl a was the most stable, only outperformed by the eucons genes discussed later. one of the eucons genes tested in the present work is orthologous to at g . , originally identified as one of the best reference genes for a. thaliana gene expression analysis by czechowski et al. ( ) , both by microarray and by rt-qpcr analysis. the orthologous eucalyptus sequence was tested by de almeida et al. ( ) during in vitro adventitious rooting, proving it to be one of the best reference genes for rt-qpcr under the conditions assayed. the at g . sequence putatively encodes a sand family protein member, a membrane protein related to vesicle traffic (cottage et al. , czechowski et al. . considering eucalyptus leaves, xylem and flowers tested in the present work, the at g . gene was among the least stable genes (fig. , table ). similar results were obtained for euc and euc genes. both sequences were previously identified as strong reference gene candidates for e. grandis vs. e. globulus xylem and leaf gene expression studies (unpublished results). de almeida et al. ( ) proved that euc is indeed a good reference gene for rt-qpcr studies during e. globulus in vitro rooting. in the present work, both genes exhibited acceptable stability values (fig. , table ), but were outperformed by the eucons genes. ecualyptus grandis sequences for euc and euc were derived from at g . (encoding an unknown protein) and at g . (encoding a putative rna-binding protein) from a. thaliana, also pointed out by czechowski et al. ( ) as the best reference genes based on both microarrays and rt-qpcr. the analysis of the eucalyptus microarray data allowed us to identify the most stable genes in the xylem of e. grandis and e. globulus and leaves of e. grandis (table ) . we named these potential reference genes eucons after 'eucalyptus constitutives'. rt-qpcr analysis of eight of the selected genes proved that these genes were indeed very reliable references for the normalization of gene expression in different eucalyptus organs and tissues, especially those named eucons , and . analysis of the function of the putative encoded proteins revealed that these genes may also belong to the so-called housekeeping class of genes. eucons putatively encodes a protein highly similar to cyclin-dependent protein kinases (cdks) such as r. communis cdk and cdks from a. thaliana (menges et al. ) . these types of proteins are able to phosphorylate protein target amino acids in different metabolic pathways and, most notably, in cell cycle control (umeda et al. ) . eucons is similar to r. communis and a. thaliana genes possibly encoding the transcription elongation factor sii (tfiis). sii is considered one of the numerous elongation factors that enable rna polymerase ii to transcribe faster and/or more efficiently. it engages transcribing rna polymerase ii and assists it in bypassing blocks to elongation by stimulating a cryptic, nascent rna cleavage activity intrinsic to rna polymerase (wind and reines ) . eucons encodes a protein with significant sequence similarity to a putative r. communis aspartyl-trna synthetase. aminoacyl-trna synthetases catalyze the addition of amino acids to their cognate trnas. in the case of aspartyl-trna synthetase, the amino acid bound to trnas is aspartate. in plants, all aminoacyl-trna synthetases are nuclear encoded and are post-translationally targeted to the compartments where protein synthesis takes place, i.e. the cytoplasm, mitochondria or plastids (duchêne et al. ) . according to the analysis of the rt-qpcr data performed with the software normfinder, eucons and eucons are the best reference genes pairwise when assessing test gene expression exclusively in leaves, or in leaves along with xylem tissues. if only xylem tissues are analyzed, eucons and eucons would be the best references (table ) . eucons encodes a protein similar to a member of the abc transporter family from arabidopsis lyrata while eucons putatively encodes a factor related to peroxisome biogenesis. interestingly, an abc transporter atpase-encoding gene was indicated as one of the best reference genes for rt-qpcr analysis of embryogenic cell cultures of cyclamen persicum (hoenemann and hohe ). kamada et al. ( ) , analyzing expression profiles of genes encoding peroxisomal proteins in a. thaliana, showed that these genes are expressed in all plant organs, suggesting that they play a role in metabolic pathways of unidentified plant peroxisomes and may have a constitutive expression in plants. it is important to mention that, when considering all organs/ tissues of all eucalyptus species evaluated by rt-qpcr, the stability values of eucons , and are not statistically different from those observed for h b, ribl a and eucons according to the normfinder analysis, as can be observed in fig. c and table . nevertheless, the algorithm genorm also indicated eucons , and as the best reference genes for the group of variables evaluated. although outperformed by eucons and as reference genes, the remaining eucons , and genes also presented consistently constant stability values in our analysis. eucons putatively encodes a plastidic atp/adp-transporter, while eucons and encode a nitrogen regulatory protein and a serine/threonine-protein kinase, respectively. to our knowledge, none of these sequences was previously indicated as a potential reference to normalize studies of gene expression by rt-qpcr. based on the microarray expression analysis of > , eucalyptus genes, we identified the most stably expressed genes in leaves (e. grandis) and xylem tissues (e. grandis and e. globulus). we proved by rt-qpcr that eight representatives of these reference genes are indeed very stable in different organs/tissues and species of eucalyptus, outperforming traditional housekeeping genes. considering that two statistical programs allowed us to reach similar interpretations of the microarray results, and that potential discrepancies should be expected, the good agreement of our results with the independent approaches strongly suggested that eucons , eucons and eucons should be regarded as tne most suitable reference genes for normalization of gene expression studies in eucalyptus species. although the selected reference genes were tested only in six species of a genus with > species, these six species represent some of the most widely planted trees in the tropics (fao ) and exhibit quite a large variation in growth rate, stress resistance and wood quality (coppen ) . to our knowledge, the present work represents the widest in-depth study developed to validate optimal reference genes for the evaluation of transcript levels in different eucalypt organs and species. in summary, these findings provide useful tools for the normalization of rt-qpcr experiments and will enable more accurate and reliable gene expression studies related to functional genomics in eucalyptus. for microarray studies, xylem tissues were collected from -year-old, field-grown e. grandis and e. globulus trees located at hortoflorestal barba negra (aracruz celulose s.a., today's fibria) in barra do ribeiro, rs, brazil. xylem was collected by scraping the exposed vascular tissue after the removal of the . - cm thick stem bark. two lines of genetically unrelated matrixes were chosen and each line was represented by two clones (biological duplicates), therefore totalling eight xylem samples. from both clones of one of the e. grandis lines, mature leaves were also collected. to minimize the proportion of primary xylem mainly located in the main veins of leaves, only leaf blades without the central vein were used for this study. tissue samples were immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at À c. for rt-qpcr studies, the same e. grandis and e. globulus trees were sampled, along with xylem and leaves of field-grown e. dunnii, e. pellita, e. saligna and e. urophylla. eucalyptus grandis flowers were also collected under the same conditions. harvested organs/tissues were immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at À c until further analysis. total rna was extracted using the purelink plant rna purification (invitrogen) reagent according to the manufacturer's instructions for small-scale rna isolation. about mg of total rna was sent to nimblegen systems inc. (reykjavik, iceland) for cdna synthesis and microarray hybridizations. microarray experiments were carried out by roche nimblegen. in total, , unigenes were selected from the genolyptus est data set to make up a basic chip. ten cdnas encoding known human proteins were also included in chips as negative controls. nine oligonucleotides, bp long, distributed throughout each sequence and with close melting temperatures were designed and synthesized for each sequence consensus or singleton. probes were randomly distributed on two blocks of each chip in duplicated form, adding up to , features per chip. therefore, each chip was composed of two blocks (technical replicates) containing the same collection of randomly distributed probes, and hybridization values were collected for each gene from every chip. a total of identical chips were produced. two chips were hybridized with cdna samples from e. grandis mature leaves, and eight chips were destined to xylem cdna hybridizations. after submission of total rna samples to nimblegen, prepared as described above, cdnas were labeled with cy , and hybridizations, washing, scanning, data collection and initial data normalization were performed according to nimblegen's standard protocols. microarray expression data were normalized into log intensity values. afterwards, we carried out three distinct analyses. in the first one, we compared hybridizations from e. grandis leaf and xylem. in the second one, we compared e. grandis xylem and e. globulus xylem. in both previous analyses, the aim was to find the most similarly and the most differentially expressed genes. in the third analysis, we looked for the most similarly expressed genes in hybridizations from the three organs/tissues. in each analysis, data were mean-centered as follows. a reference set was generated by averaging the expression of each gene over all hybridizations. each piece of hybridization data was subtracted from the reference data set, generating new mean-centered data. in the next step, the 'relative difference' in gene expression was computed. the relative difference score was used to identify the most similarly and the most differentially expressed genes. we have performed the two class unpaired sam (tusher et al. ) when comparing two tissues, and a multiclass sam when comparing the three organs/tissues. in order to perform the experiments, we have used sam version . and r . . tools and the sdma v . tool as described next. in this paper we propose a new approach, called sdma, for finding the most similarly expressed genes in microarray studies. sdma is the acronym for standard deviation microarray analysis. the formal statement of sdma can be defined as follows: let g = {g , g , g ,. . ., g m } be a set of genes. let h = {h , h , h ,. . ., h o } be a set of hybridizations, where o ! . let m = {t , t , t ,. . ., t n } be a set of tissues, where n ! and each element t contains a set of hybridizations such that t & h, and t x t ty = Ø for any x ¼ y. let e hp = {e hp_g , e hp_g , e hp_g ,. . ., e hp_gm } be a set of expressions levels of m genes in hp hybridization, where p o.let avg(t p g q ) be the average of expression levels of gene q over all hybridizations from tissue p. let sd(g q ) be the standard deviation of gene q considering avg(t g q ), avg(t g q ), avg(t g q ),. . . and avg(t n g q ). sdg can assume any value from until . sd gq is equal to zero when avg(t g q ) = avg(t g q ) = avg(t g q ) = . . . = avg(t n g q ), i.e. the gene q has exactly the same expression level in all tissues. the value of sd gq increases proportionally to growth of difference among avg(t g q ), avg(t g q ), avg(t g q ),. . . and avg(t n g q ). so, sdma can rank the n most similarly expressed, i.e. those n genes for which sd g is closer to zero. when viewing sdma graphs, a main diagonal line is supposed to exist since it contains every possible data point where avg(t g) = avg(t g) = avg(t g) = . . . = avg(t n g). although it is rare to find a gene obeying this restriction when comparing similar tissues, a concentration of data points around the main diagonal line is supposed to exist. otherwise, when comparing very dissimilar tissues, data points are supposed to be dispersed in space. regarding the eucalyptus microarray analysis, a set of , genes was considered, i.e. g = {g , g , g ,. . ., g , }. there were three tissues evaluated, i.e. m = {t , t , t }, where t represents e. grandis leaf, t represents e. grandis xylem and t represents e. globulus xylem. there was a set of hybridizations, i.e. h = {h , h , h ,. . ., h }, where t = {h , h , h , h }, t = {h , h ,. . ., h } and t = {h , h ,. . ., h }. we also considered sd g as the standard deviation of expression levels of a gene g in t , t and t . moreover, microarray expression data were scaled into log intensity values. it resulted in values for expression levels from . to . . the sdma approach ranked the genes according to their similarities in expression levels in the three distinct tissues. so, genes with minor standard deviation are supposed to be the most similarly expressed gennes. otherwise, genes with higher standard deviation are supposed to be the most differentially expressed ones. primer pairs for rt-qpcr were designed using the program primerquest (http://www.idtdna.com/scitools/applications/ primerquest) and are listed in table . the relative transcript abundance was detected by sybr green, and pcrs were carried out in a total volume of ml using a thermocycler real time pcr system (applied biosystems). reaction conditions included one initial cycle of denaturation at c for min followed by cycles of c for s (denaturation), c for s (annealing) and c for s (elongation). pcrs were followed by a melting curve program ( - c with a heating rate of . c s À and a continuous fluorescence measurement). a negative control was run without a cdna template in all assays to assess the overall amplification specificity. the gene ontology functional annotation tool blast go (conesa et al. ) was used to assign go identities and enzyme commission numbers. this tool also enabled statistical analysis related to over-representation of functional categories based on a fisher exact statistic methodology. selection of appropriate control genes to assess expression of tumor antigens using real-time rt-pcr reference gene selection for real-time rt-pcr in human epidermal keratinocytes gapped blast and psi-blast: a new generation of protein database search programs normalization of real-time quantitative reverse transcription-pcr data: a modelbased variance estimation approach to identify genes suited for normalization, applied to bladder and colon cancer data sets identification and evaluation of new reference genes in gossypium hirsutum for accurate normalization of real-time quantitative rt-pcr data identification of suitable internal control genes for expression studies in coffea arabica under different experimental conditions utility of the housekeeping genes s rrna, beta-actin and glyceraldehyde- -phosphate-dehydrogenase for normalization in real-time quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction analysis of gene expression in human t lymphocytes selection of endogenous genes for gene expression studies in eucalyptus under biotic (puccinia psidii) and abiotic (acibenzolar-s-methyl) stresses using rt-qpcr validating internal controls for quantitative plant gene expression studies quantification of mrna using real-time reverse transcription pcr (rt-pcr): trends and problems expression and molecular analysis of the arabidopsis dxr gene encoding -deoxy-d-xylulose -phosphate reductoisomerase, the first committed enzyme of the -c-methyl-d-erythritol -phosphate pathway post-analysis follow-up and validation of microarray experiments selection of candidate housekeeping controls in tomato plants using est data natural variation explains most transcriptomic changes among maize plants of mon and comparable non-gm varieties subjected to two n-fertilization farming practices blast go: a universal tool for annotation, visualization and analysis in functional genomics research molecular characterisation of the sand protein family: a study based on comparative genomics, structural bioinformatics and phylogeny genome-wide identification and testing of superior reference genes for transcript normalization genes encoding two essential dna replication activation proteins, cdc and mcm , exhibit very different patterns of expression in the tobacco by- cell cycle reference gene selection for quantitative reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction normalization during in vitro adventitious rooting in eucalyptus globulus labill identification of reference genes for rt-qpcr expression analysis in arabidopsis and tomato seeds dual targeting is the rule for organellar aminoacyl-trna synthetases in arabidopsis thaliana selection of internal control genes for quantitative real-time rt-pcr studies during tomato development process mean annual volume increment of selected industrial forest plantation species. by l. ugalde and o. pérez. forest plantation thematic papers, working paper . forest resources development service, forest resources division transcript profiling of a xylem vs phloem cdna subtractive library identifies new genes expressed during xylogenesis in eucalyptus real-time pcr: what relevance to plant studies? an overview of real-time quantitative pcr: applications to quantify cytokine gene expression selection of housekeeping genes for normalization by real-time rt-pcr: analysis of or-myb gene expression in orobanche ramosa development eucalyptus applied genomics: from gene sequences to breeding tools normalization of qrt-pcr data: the necessity of adopting a systematic, experimental conditions-specific, validation of references the lack of a systematic validation of reference genes: a serious pitfall undervalued in reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr) analysis in plants towards a systematic validation of references in real-time rt-pcr kinetic pcr analysis: real-time monitoring of dna amplification reactions selection of reference genes for normalization of quantitative real-time pcr in cell cultures of cyclamen persicum identification and testing of superior reference genes for a starting pool of transcript normalization in arabidopsis exploring valid reference genes for gene expression studies in brachypodium distachyon by real-time pcr refgenes: identification of reliable and condition specific reference genes for rt-qpcr data normalization evaluation of putative reference genes for gene expression normalization in soybean by quantitative real-time rt-pcr comparison of reference genes for quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction analysis of gene expression in sugarcane validation of housekeeping genes as internal control for studying gene expression in rice by quantitative real-time pcr validation of internal control for gene expression study in soybean by quantitative real-time pcr functional differentiation of peroxisomes revealed by expression profiles of peroxisomal genes in arabidopsis thaliana normalization of reverse transcription quantitative-pcr with housekeeping genes in rice molecular cloning of low-temperature-inducible ribosomal proteins from soybean selection of optimal internal controls for gene expression profiling of liver disease the use of micrornas as reference genes for quantitative polymerase chain reaction in soybean a new -deoxy-d-xylulose -phosphate reductoisomerase gene encoding the committed-step enzyme in the mep pathway from rauvolfia verticillata identification of four soybean reference genes for gene expression normalization reference gene selection for qpcr analysis during somatic embryogenesis in longan tree analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative pcr and the (-delta delta c(t)) method reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr normalization in tomato subjected to nitrogen, cold, and light stress validation of reference genes for gene expression analysis in chicory (cichorium intybus) using quantitative real-time pcr evaluation of reference genes for quantitative rt-pcr in lolium perenne growthrelated gene expression in nicotiana tabacum mesophyll protoplasts the two ribosomal protein l a genes are differentially transcribed in arabidopsis thaliana global analysis of the core cell cycle regulators of arabidopsis identifies novel genes, reveals multiple and highly specific profiles of expression and provides a coherent model for plant cell cycle control characterization of the structure and expression of a highly conserved ribosomal protein gene, l , from pea housekeeping gene selection for real-time rt-pcr normalization in potato during biotic and abiotic stress identification and validation of reference genes for quantitative rt-pcr normalization in wheat reference gene selection for quantitative real-time pcr analysis in virus infected cells: sars corona virus, yellow fever virus, human herpesvirus- , camelpox virus and cytomegalovirus infections validation of array-based gene expression profiles by real-time (kinetic) rt-pcr an optimized grapevine rna isolation procedure and statistical determination of reference genes for real-time rt-pcr during berry development normalisation of real-time rt-pcr gene expression measurements in arabidopsis thaliana exposed to increased metal concentrations a new genomic resource dedicated to wood formation in eucalyptus involvement of arabidopsis thaliana ribosomal protein s in mrna degradation triggered by genotoxic stress accumulation and nuclear targeting of bnc , a brassica napus ribosomal protein corresponding to a mrna accumulating in response to cold treatment stable internal reference genes for normalization of real-time rt-pcr in tobacco (nicotiana tabacum) during development and abiotic stress selection of reference genes for quantitative real-time pcr expression studies in the apomictic and sexual grass brachiaria brizantha properties of the reverse transcription reaction in mrna quantification real-time quantitative rt-pcr for low-abundance transcripts in the inner ear: analysis of neurotrophic factor expression higher-level relationships among the eucalypts are resolved by its-sequence data differential expression and sequence analysis of ribosomal protein genes induced in stolon tips of potato (solanum tuberosum l.) during the early stages of tuberization a practical approach to rt-qpcr-publishing data that conform to the miqe guidelines housekeeping genes as internal standards: use and limits selection of reliable reference genes for gene expression studies in peach using real-time pcr significance analysis of microarrays applied to the ionizing radiation response control of cell division and transcription by cyclin-dependent kinase-activating kinases in plants accurate normalization of real-time quantitative rt-pcr data by geometric averaging of multiple internal control genes heat-stressdependency and developmental modulation of gene expression: the potential of house-keeping genes as internal standards in mrna expression profiling using real-time rt-pcr selection of appropriate reference genes for gene expression studies by quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction in cucumber developmental regulation of ribosomal protein l genes in arabidopsis thaliana transcription elongation factor sii extraribosomal functions of ribosomal proteins cloning and characterization of the -deoxy-d-xylulose -phosphate reductoisomerase gene for diterpenoid tanshinone biosynthesis in salvia miltiorrhiza (chinese sage) hairy roots molecular characterization and expression of -deoxy-d-xylulose -phosphate reductoisomerase (dxr) gene from salvia miltiorrhiza characterization of reference genes for quantitative real-time pcr analysis in various tissues of salvia miltiorrhiza an evaluation of the performance of cdna microarrays for detecting changes in global mrna expression normalization with genes encoding ribosomal proteins but not gapdh provides an accurate quantification of gene expressions in neuronal differentiation of pc cells we acknowledge m.sc. marta dalpian heis for her guidance and review of the statistical tests. we are grateful to the staff of aracruz celulose s.a. (today's fibria) for providing the biological material, and genolyptus project members that selected the eucalyptus material. key: cord- -b aqwubh authors: futas, jan; oppelt, jan; jelinek, april; elbers, jean p.; wijacki, jan; knoll, ales; burger, pamela a.; horin, petr title: natural killer cell receptor genes in camels: another mammalian model date: - - journal: front genet doi: . /fgene. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: b aqwubh due to production of special homodimeric heavy chain antibodies, somatic hypermutation of their t-cell receptor genes and unusually low diversity of their major histocompatibility complex genes, camels represent an important model for immunogenetic studies. here, we analyzed genes encoding selected natural killer cell receptors with a special focus on genes encoding receptors for major histocompatibility complex (mhc) class i ligands in the two domestic camel species, camelus dromedarius and camelus bactrianus. based on the dromedary genome assembly camdro , we characterized the genetic contents, organization, and variability of two complex genomic regions, the leukocyte receptor complex and the natural killer complex, along with the natural cytotoxicity receptor genes ncr , ncr , and ncr . the genomic organization of the natural killer complex region of camels differs from cattle, the phylogenetically most closely related species. with its minimal set of klr genes, it resembles this complex in the domestic pig. similarly, the leukocyte receptor complex of camels is strikingly different from its cattle counterpart. with kir pseudogenes and few lilr genes, it seems to be simpler than in the pig. the syntenies and protein sequences of the ncr , ncr , and ncr genes in the dromedary suggest that they could be human orthologues. however, only ncr and ncr have a structure of functional genes, while ncr appears to be a pseudogene. high sequence similarities between the two camel species as well as with the alpaca vicugna pacos were observed. the polymorphism in all genes analyzed seems to be generally low, similar to the rest of the camel genomes. this first report on natural killer cell receptor genes in camelids adds new data to our understanding of specificities of the camel immune system and its functions, extends our genetic knowledge of the innate immune variation in dromedaries and bactrian camels, and contributes to studies of natural killer cell receptors evolution in mammals. due to production of special homodimeric heavy chain antibodies, somatic hypermutation of their t-cell receptor genes and unusually low diversity of their major histocompatibility complex genes, camels represent an important model for immunogenetic studies. here, we analyzed genes encoding selected natural killer cell receptors with a special focus on genes encoding receptors for major histocompatibility complex (mhc) class i ligands in the two domestic camel species, camelus dromedarius and camelus bactrianus. based on the dromedary genome assembly camdro , we characterized the genetic contents, organization, and variability of two complex genomic regions, the leukocyte receptor complex and the natural killer complex, along with the natural cytotoxicity receptor genes ncr , ncr , and ncr . the genomic organization of the natural killer complex region of camels differs from cattle, the phylogenetically most closely related species. with its minimal set of klr genes, it resembles this complex in the domestic pig. similarly, the leukocyte receptor complex of camels is strikingly different from its cattle counterpart. with kir pseudogenes and few lilr genes, it seems to be simpler than in the pig. the syntenies and protein sequences of the ncr , ncr , and ncr genes in the dromedary suggest that they could be human orthologues. however, only ncr and ncr have a structure of functional genes, while ncr appears to be a pseudogene. high sequence similarities between the two camel species as well as with the alpaca vicugna pacos were observed. the polymorphism in all genes analyzed seems to be generally low, similar to the rest of the camel genomes. this first report on natural killer cell receptor genes in camelids adds new data to our understanding of specificities of the camel immune system and its functions, extends our genetic knowledge of the innate immune variation in dromedaries and bactrian camels, and contributes to studies of natural killer cell receptors evolution in mammals. keywords: camelid, leukocyte receptor complex, natural killer complex, snp, microsatellites introduction camels (camelus spp.) represent an important genus for a number of reasons. due to their adaptation to desert or semidesert regions, old world camels tolerate harsh conditions, which are inhospitable for many livestock species, including extreme temperatures and prolonged periods without access to food and water (reviewed in jirimutu et al., ) . as a result, they are of socioeconomic importance across the middle east, northern africa, and much of asia, where they are used for meat, milk, hides, transportation, and sport. the significance of camels as a sustainable livestock species is likely to continue, as many regions face increased temperatures and desertification as a result of climate change (megersa et al., ; watson et al., ) . concurrently, recent trends towards intensive production and the movement of camel production to peri-urban settings are altering the pathogen pressures to which these animals are exposed (abdallah and faye, ) . camels are also of importance with respect to a number of specific infectious diseases. for example, dromedaries (camelus dromedarius) are a natural host of middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus, and transmission of the virus from camels to humans has been confirmed (gossner et al., ; hemida et al., ) . interestingly, significant differences exist between dromedaries and bactrian camels (camelus bactrianus) with regard to their susceptibility to foot and mouth disease (fmd), one of the most costly diseases of production animals worldwide; i.e., dromedaries are not susceptible to fmd and do not transmit infection (wernery and kinne, ) . furthermore, the immune system of camels has several unusual features. notable among these is the presence of homodimeric heavy chain antibodies (hamers-casterman et al., ) , not known to occur in any other mammalian family, which have both potential and realized applications in a variety of research, diagnostic, and therapeutic settings (muyldermans et al., ; de meyer et al., ; steeland et al., ) . the persistence of uniquely organized ileal peyer's patches into adulthood of the dromedary (zidan and pabst, ) is another example. additionally, productively rearranged dromedary t-cell receptor delta variable (trdv) (antonacci et al., ) and t-cell receptor gamma variable (trgv) (vaccarelli et al., ) genes undergo somatic hypermutation to generate a diversified repertoire of these genes. this mechanism has not been documented for t-cell receptor genes in other mammalian species and appears to compensate the more limited repertoire of trdv and trgv genes found in camels relative to other artiodactyls (ciccarese et al., ) . a further atypical aspect of the camelid immunogenome is the unusually low genetic diversity of the major histocompatibility complex (mhc) of the three species of old world camels in both class i (plasil et al., ) and class ii genes (plasil et al., ) . the immunological characterization of cellular components of the camel immune system is scarce mainly due to the small number of cross-reacting monoclonal antibodies raised against leukocyte antigens of humans (hussen et al., ) , bovines, and/ or other related species (mossad et al., ) available. this is also one of the reasons why natural killer cells and their functions in camelids have not been studied so far. natural killer (nk) cells constitute a heterogeneous lymphocyte population (allan et al., ) involved primarily in innate immune responses against intracellular pathogens and tumor cells. they also influence adaptive immune responses via the production of cytokines (vivier et al., ) and crosstalk with dendritic cells (hamerman et al., ) , play a role in placentation (parham and moffett, ) , and contribute to the recognition of allogeneic cells. the diversity of the nk cell receptor repertoire is essential to the performance of these multiple functions. the integration of activating and inhibitory signals originating from various surface receptors determines the activation status of an individual nk cell, providing the capacity to discriminate between self and non-self or altered self (lanier, ) . characterization of genes underlying receptors on the nk cell surface can significantly contribute to our understanding of the functional heterogeneity of nk cells. among them, nk cell receptors (nkr) of several gene families bind polymorphic mhc class i or mhc class i-like molecules to mediate nk cell function. due to functional relationships between mhc and nkr molecules, the underlying genes and genomic regions represent an important biological model in terms of their co-evolution in the context of pathogen pressures, disease, and survival (guethlein et al., ; carrillo-bustamante et al., ) . however, the current knowledge of mammalian nkr genes, in comparison with that of mhc regions, is rather fragmentary. two major genomic complexes encoding nkr, the natural killer complex (nkc) and the leukocyte receptor complex (lrc), have been identified in mammalian genomes. genes in the nkc represent receptors with c-type lectin-like extracellular domains; genes in the lrc code receptors with extracellular ligand-binding domains belong to the immunoglobulin superfamily (trowsdale et al., ) . despite these structural differences, some receptor families of both complexes are able to fulfil the same functions in terms of mhc class i recognition, downstream signaling, and mediation of nk cell activation/inhibition. to accomplish these ends, different nkr gene families expanded and diversified in different mammalian species, representing an example of convergent evolution in mammals (kelley et al., ; guethlein et al., ) . two immunologically well-defined species, humans and mice, have expanded structurally unrelated receptor families: humans use the killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (kir) and leukocyte immunoglobulin-like receptors (lilr), both encoded within the lrc, whereas in mice the killer-cell lectinlike receptor (klr) genes of one family (klra, formerly ly ) are expanded in the nkc. a common sign of these expanded gene families, along with allelic variation of members, is haplotypic variation in the number of genes and pseudogenes in populations/ strains of same species (marsch et al., ; schenkel et al., ) . the gene content of the lrc (human vs. primates) and nkc (mouse vs. rat) is known to vary even between closely related mammalian species and families; as a result, knowledge of nkr genes in a number of important species remains fragmentary or missing. significant differences have been shown to exist within artiodactyls, as for example between cattle and pigs (sanderson et al., ; schwartz et al., ; schwartz and hammond, ) , but knowledge of the genes underlying camel nkr is lacking. in the context of our work on the camelid immunogenome, the objective of this study was to characterize the genomic content of nkc and lrc with special focus on genes encoding natural killer cell receptors for mhc class i ligands in the two domestic camel species, c. dromedarius and c. bactrianus. based on our new assembly camdro of the c. dromedarius genome , we characterized the nkc and lrc genomic regions and three natural cytotoxicity receptor genes (ncr , ncr , and ncr ). their gene contents and organization were compared to the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) reference genomes for c. dromedarius (ncbi genome accession code gca_ . ) assembly prjna _ca_dromedarius_v . , c. bactrianus (gca_ . ) assembly ca_bactrianus_mbc_ . , and vicugna pacos (gca_ . ) assembly vicugna_pacos- . . . the selected orthologous genes were searched in two genomes of domesticated artiodactyl species, cattle bos taurus (gca_ . ) assembly bos_taurus_umd_ . . and pig sus scrofa (gca_ . ) assembly sscrofa . . various individual genomes for c. dromedarius (ncbi bioproject accessions: prjna , prjna , and prjna ) and c. bactrianus (prjna and prjeb ) were searched in publicly available whole-genome shotgun contigs for candidate microsatellite markers. likewise, individual whole genome sequencing reads for v. pacos (prjna and prjna ) were used to estimate single-nucleotide polymorphism (snp) variability in selected genes of alpacas. alongside automatic computational annotation of genes in camdro (see elbers et al., ) , selected unrecognized genes for nk receptors were manually annotated in the nkc and lrc genomic regions. first, we searched the c. dromedarius ncbi reference genome by tblastn algorithm of ncbi's blast ® for orthologous protein sequences to killer-cell lectin-like receptors recently identified in cattle as klr genes (schwartz et al., ) . second, the ab initio messenger rna (mrna) models complementary dna (cdna) for corresponding genes of all klr gene lineages in the dromedary reference genome were inspected for completeness using ncbi's conserved domain database cdd search and tmhmm server v. . for prediction of transmembrane helices in predicted proteins. the cdna for klre was incorrect; thus, the cattle sequence (schwartz et al., ) was used instead. these cdna models were aligned against the camdro chromosome sequence using ncbi's splign algorithm and also blast ® searched in our full genomic assembly camdro . identified genes were annotated accordingly. the splign algorithm was also used on scaffolds for the dromedary, bactrian camel, and alpaca ncbi reference genomes. the killer-cell immunoglobulin-like receptor kir genes and leukocyte immunoglobulin-like receptor lilr genes were searched on camdro chromosome by the tblastn algorithm . individual immunoglobulin-like (ig-like) domains and the cytoplasmic tail of bactrian -domain receptor lilr (xp_ ) served as query sequences. orthologous and paralogous sequences were found. the corresponding genomic and predicted cdna sequences were retrieved from the ncbi reference genomes for both camel species. the full length kir and lilr cdnas were cross-aligned with adequate scaffolds of reference genomes using splign . the predicted protein sequences were screened with cdd and tmhmm server v. . search . the gene sequences were blast ® searched in camdro . identified full-length genes were annotated, and gene fragments were recorded. the natural cytotoxicity receptor genes ncr , ncr , and ncr were blast ® searched in the full assembly camdro based on annotation of the dromedary ncbi reference genome. although there exist numbers of alternatively spliced variants for each gene/protein, we focused on cdna models of the longest variant ( table ) . the predicted dromedary, bactrian camel, and cattle cdna for ncr were incomplete; therefore, we used the sequence predicted from the white-tailed deer odocoileus virginianus texanus instead. during the process of manual annotation, we also characterized the nkc and lrc regions, and comparisons were made between c. dromedarius, c. bactrianus, and v. pacos. to allow comparisons with other studies and identification of orthologues, a standardized systematic nomenclature of nkr genes (schwartz et al., ) was used. however, when referring to original reports on human or mouse genes, both the original and standard gene names and symbols were used. the gene-specific primers encompassing full-length genes with flanking sequences were designed on ncbi c. bactrianus gene sequences using primer-blast and checked for specificity against reference genomes of both camel species. the list of primer pairs used is available in supplementary table . various compositions of pcrs and adequate thermal profiles used are summarized in supplementary table . pcr products were checked by . % agarose gel electrophoresis and quantified by invitrogen ™ qubit ™ fluorometer using qubit ™ dsdna br assay kit (thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa). they were kept frozen at − °c until massive parallel sequencing. each individual's long-range amplicon of genes under study was indexed separately during library preparation using the nexteraxt dna library preparation kit (illumina, san diego, ca, usa) and sequenced on a miseq ™ system (illumina, san diego, ca, usa) platform using the miseq ™ reagent kit v ( cycles) according to manufacturer's protocol in different runs. the quality of the raw sequencing reads was checked using fastqc . low quality read ends were removed by trimmomatic (bolger et al., ) (slidingwindow: : ) . only reads longer than bp were used for the mapping by bwa-mem (li, ) . the alignment was post-processed using samtools (li et al., ) (sorting and conversions), gatk (depristo et al., ) (indel realignment), and picard (pcr duplicates removal). further, only mappings with the minimal mapped length of bp, a maximum of % soft-clipping, and a maximum of % mismatches were kept using ngsutils (breese and liu, ) and bbmap . the repetitive sequences of di-, tri-, and tetra-nucleotides were searched in the nkc and lrc of the bactrian camel ncbi reference genome by repeatmasker . candidate microsatellites (msats) were identified by blast ® search of repetitions flanked with bp sequences in whole-genome shotgun contigs from three dromedaries and two bactrian camels. the most diverse sequences with unique occurrence in genome were chosen, and primers were designed in oligo primer analysis software v. . (molecular biology insights, colorado springs, co, usa). primer specificity was verified against the ncbi reference genomes of both camel species using ncbi's primer-blast . the pcr conditions were optimized for six msats, finalizing in one -plex (czm -czm ) and one single (czm ) pcr protocol. reaction compositions were as follows: . μl × taq buffer (top-bio, prague, czech republic), . u combitaq dna polymerase (top-bio, prague, czech republic), µm each http://www.bioinformatics.babraham.ac.uk/projects/fastqc/ http://broadinstitute.github.io/picard/ https://sourceforge.net/projects/bbmap/ http://repeatmasker.org/cgi-bin/webrepeatmasker dntp (thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa), . μl of each primer of concentration μm ( table ) , and ng of genomic dna. pcr reaction mix was supplemented with pcr grade h o (top-bio, prague, czech republic) to a final volume of . μl. the thermal cycler abi verity well (applied biosystems, foster city, ca, usa) was used for amplification. the thermocycling conditions consisted of initial denaturation at °c for min; cycles of denaturation at °c for s, annealing at °c ( °c for czm ) for s, and elongation at °c for s; and final elongation at °c for min and holding at °c. all markers were then tested by fluorescent fragment analysis using applied biosystems ® abi prism and sized with genescan ™ liz ® size standard (thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa). the data obtained from the fragment analyzer were evaluated using the genemapper ® software v. . (thermo fisher scientific, waltham, ma, usa). the dromedary dna samples in this study were transferred from previous projects [austrian science fund (fwf)p -b and p -b ; pi: p. burger] and originated either from plucked hair, ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (edta) blood collected commensally on whatman fta ® cards (sigma-aldrich, vienna, austria) during routine veterinary controls, or from dna extracts sent by collaborators under bilateral agreements. samples were imported with permits from the austrian ministry of labour, social affairs, health and consumer protection. all the bactrian camel samples were collected commensally during veterinary procedures for previous research projects (gacr / / ; pi: p. horin). details about the samples are provided in the supplementary table . selected genes of the nkc and lrc regions were genotyped by targeted resequencing of long-range pcr amplicons in both camel species. for comparison, individual genotypes in the same batch of genes except lilr genes were acquired for alpacas by data mining. two panels of animals were created from collections of samples originating from various populations. the c. dromedarius panel encompassed individuals coming from jordan (irbid), iran, saudi arabia (magaheem and wadda), canary islands, uae (dubai), kenya, sudan, nigeria, and kazakhstan. the genomic dna was previously isolated by phenol-chloroform extraction and kept frozen at − °c. the c. bactrianus panel consisted of individuals from three mongolian regions (bayan ovoo, galshar, and norovlin). the genomic dna was isolated from frozen archived whole blood samples by nucleospinblood © kit (macherey-nagel, düren, germany) according to the manufacturer's protocol. the genes of interest were isolated by pcrs on genomic dna, obtained amplicons were indexed to track individual samples, and then were sequenced in multiple illumina next-generation sequencing (ngs) runs and mapped to adequate reference sequence for amplicon (see above). a panel of four alpacas was created from publicly available whole-genome sequencing projects. the raw data of illumina ngs runs were downloaded from the european nucleotide archive database (ena accession numbers srr - , srr , srr , and srr ). the quality was checked using fastqc and kraken package (davis et al., ) . adapter and quality (phred < ) trimming was performed by cutadapt (martin, ) . bwa-mem (li, ) was used for the alignment, and the alignments were post-processed by samtools (li et al., ) (sorting and conversions), gatk (depristo et al., ) (indel realignment), and picard (pcr duplicates removal). alignments were further filtered using ngsutils (breese and liu, ) and bbmap for maximum soft-clipping ( %), maximum number of mismatches ( ), minimum mapped length ( bp), maximum soft-clipping ( %), and minimum mapping quality (mapq ). the reference sequences for mapping were retrieved from the v. pacos ncbi reference genome. most v. pacos sequences were framed by the primer sequences used in camels. https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena the alignments of reads to the reference sequence were inspected using igv software . the variable positions (variant in homozygous state) and confirmed sequence variants (variant detected in heterozygous state) were treated as snps. they were written to consensus sequences for each animal using iupac nucleotide ambiguity codes in bioedit, version . . . (hall, ) along with insertions/deletions, and sequences from same animal species were manually aligned. the number of snps was counted using dnasp version . program (librado and rozas, ) , and frequency was calculated as percentage. the cdna sequences were in silico extracted in bioedit v. . . , based on mrna models for each gene ( table ) and checked by splign for completeness. haplotypes of each diploid individual were reconstructed for every panel and gene (cdna) separately using phase (stephens and donnelly, ) algorithm in dnasp v. . . the coding sequences were extracted in bioedit v. . . . the number of snps was counted in dnasp v. . , and the percentage of coding sequence length calculated. amino acid sequences were deduced from coding sequences in bioedit v. . . . the manually aligned predicted protein sequences were compared. sequences differing in at least one amino acid position were numbered and designated as different alleles of a particular gene. a phylogenetic analysis of sequences obtained by long-range pcr or data mining was done separately for nkc (c-type lectinlike) and lrc (immunoglobulin-like) genes. the nucleotide coding region sequences were aligned by clustalw multiple alignment algorithm in bioedit v. . . . one haplotype per gene was chosen for each species to represent the respective loci of the dromedary, bactrian camel, and alpaca. corresponding cattle and pig sequences retrieved from ncbi's genbank were used for a comparison. the maximum likelihood phylogenetic trees were constructed in mega (tamura et al., ) based on the tamura -parameter model and the partial deletion method ( % cutoff) with bootstrap repetitions (tamura, ) . | characteristics of microsatellite markers in natural killer complex (nkc) and leukocyte receptor complex (lrc) regions. type of repetition c. dromedarius amplicon size forward primer reverse primer the general organization of the two genomic regions, the natural killer complex (nkc) and the leukocyte receptor complex (lrc), containing genes and gene families encoding the nk cell receptors annotated based on the dromedary genome assembly camdro , was established and is represented in figure . the phylogenetic trees of the genes analyzed are shown in figures and for nkc and lrc genes, respectively. a summary of the allelic variants of the predicted proteins for the genes genotyped in dromedaries and bactrian camels is given in the nkc region encompassing approximately . mbp was localized on chromosome of camdro . twenty-six genes encoding receptors with the c-type lectin-like domain (ctld) of different lineages were identified in this region. no expansion of any klr gene family was observed in the dromedary genome. most klr genes clustered at one end of the region. this cluster contains five functional genes (klra, klrd, klre, klri, and klrk), two functional members of the klrc family, and two pseudogenes (klrh and klrj). klrc is the only gene family with two members sharing the same ctld but signaling oppositely: klrc codes for an inhibitory receptor, while klrc encodes an activating receptor. members of three families (klrb, klrf, and klrg) are located at the opposite end of the nkc region, separated from each other by a group of c-type lectin (clec) genes. two members of each of these families were found in the camdro dromedary genome. the genes klrb and klrb b have the standard structure of inhibitory receptors with a cytoplasmic tail containing an immunoreceptor tyrosinebased inhibitory motif (itim). genes encoding their putative ligands (clec d and clec f, respectively) were found in the vicinity. similarly, the genes klrf (nkp ) and klrf (nkp ) encoding activating receptors are located in close proximity of genes coding for their predicted ligands, aicl and kacl (clec b and clec a, respectively). klrg encoding an inhibitory receptor marks the boundary of the nkc. klrg was found outside of nkc, on chromosome . while in the c. dromedarius ncbi reference genome the nkc is split into two scaffolds (nw_ , nw_ ), it is contained within a single scaffold (nw_ ) in the c. bactrianus ncbi reference genome. the gene content and gene orientations are the same in both genomes. the only exception is the presence of a premature stop codon in the bactrian klrc sequence, which thus seems to be a pseudogene. since no expansion of klr gene families was observed, we focused on the allelic variation of inhibitory receptors supposed to recognize mhc class i ligands. due to their poor quality, some samples were not successfully amplified by long-range pcrs. because of an apparent mixed ancestry (c. dromedarius x c. bactrianus) of one c. dromedarius, heterozygous sequences of mixed origin were removed. consequently, different numbers of genotypes were retrieved for different genes as indicated in supplementary table . despite polymorphisms existing in the genomic and predicted mrna sequences (supplementary table ) , none of the tested genes were found to have more than three protein variants. five of the eight tested genes in c. bactrianus were monomorphic on the protein level. klra encodes an inhibitory receptor with one itim signaling motif in its cytoplasmic tail and a relatively long extracellular stalk region (over amino acids). two variants of this receptor molecule were predicted in c. dromedarius, sharing the same ctld but differing by one amino acid residue in the cytoplasmic tail. a klra variant with the same ctld occurs frequently in c. bactrianus. a second variant of bactrian klra differs by nine amino acids (one in the cytoplasmic tail, four in the stalk, and four in the ctld). klrc codes for an inhibitory receptor with two itims. three variants of the klrc protein were identified in each camel species. one klrc variant was shared by both camel species, and two additional variants in each species differed by only one amino acid. only two different ctld variants were present in each species. klrc codes for an activating receptor with a charged amino acid residue (lysine) in the transmembrane domain. in c. dromedarius, klrc appears to encode two variants of a functional receptor. in c. bactrianus, this gene seems to be monomorphic with a premature stop codon shortly after the origin of translation. the klrd gene product consists of a ctld with a short stalk and a transmembrane domain with no signaling motif. for klrd, one protein sequence common to both camel species was observed, with two additional variants found in c. dromedarius, differing by one amino acid each. all three camel genes, klrc , klrc , and klrd, have codons for cysteine residues in the stalk region of the protein, allowing formation of disulfide links and of heterodimers klrd/klrc and klrd/klrc . another pair of presumably interacting receptors forming noncovalent heterodimers is klre/klri. the striking features of old world camelid klre are the presence of sequence for an itim in the cytoplasmic tail of the protein and the existence of a second variant in c. dromedarius with a duplication of six amino acid residues in the ctld. in c. bactrianus, klre encodes only one variant of the protein sequence. the klri gene showed very limited polymorphism in both camel species at the genomic level, encoding only one protein variant with only one functional itim (and one mutated motif) in the cytoplasmic tail of the molecule. the predicted protein product of the klrj gene was identical in both camel species. another sequence variant in the dromedary camel differed by only one amino acid in the stalk region. according to the adopted mrna model, all these sequences contain a premature stop codon in the ctld of the protein. figure | organization of genomic regions encoding nk cell receptors in dromedary camel. the nkc was delineated by styk and klrg genes on chromosome (cdr ) of camdro between . and . mb. klr genes are represented as solid color triangles, klr pseudogenes as empty color triangles, and lectin-like clec or non-lectin genes as solid grey triangles. the lrc was found between the oscar and il genes on chromosome (cdr ) in the region . - . mb. lilr genes are represented as solid orange triangles, lilr pseudogenes as empty orange triangles, immunoglobulin-like domains or cytoplasmic domain gene fragments as orange rectangles, kir pseudogenes as empty blue triangles, other types of ig-like genes as solid color triangles, and different types of flanking genes as solid grey triangles. green rectangles mark positions of newly developed microsatellite markers czm -czm . july | volume | article frontiers in genetics | www.frontiersin.org figure | phylogeny of nucleotide coding sequences for nkc c-type lectin-like genes analyzed by long-range pcr/data mining. the percentage of trees (out of bootstrap replicates), in which the associated sequences clustered together is given at branch nodes. branch lengths are expressed as the number of substitutions per site. clusters of genes are highlighted according to the color scheme used in figure . haplotypes generated in this study were chosen (one per gene) to represent loci of camelus dromedarius (dromedary), camelus bactrianus (bactrian), and vicugna pacos (alpaca). comparisons were made to bos taurus (cattle) sequences retrieved from genbank (accession numbers: kx , kx , kx , kx , nm_ . , nm_ . , nm_ . , and nm_ . ) and sus scrofa (pig) sequences (accession numbers: nm_ . , nm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , and xm_ . ). july | volume | article frontiers in genetics | www.frontiersin.org figure | phylogeny of nucleotide coding sequences for lrc immunoglobulin-like genes analyzed by long-range pcr/data mining. the percentage of trees (out of bootstrap replicates) in which the associated sequences clustered together is given at branch nodes. branch lengths are expressed as the number of substitutions per site. haplotypes generated in the study were chosen (one per gene) to represent loci (colored) of camelus dromedarius (dromedary), camelus bactrianus (bactrian), and vicugna pacos (alpaca). the nomenclature for the camelid lilr gene family is provisional and will change when a complete assembly of this region is available. some alpaca lilr genes were not included due to an incomplete resolution of this family in the reference genome. the alpaca's lilra -ig sequence was retrieved from genbank (accession number xm_ . ). a selection of bos taurus (cattle) sequences (accession numbers: nm_ . , nm_ . , nm_ . , nm_ . , nm_ . , nm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , and xm_ . ) and all functional sus scrofa (pig) sequences (accession numbers: nm_ . , nm_ . , nm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , xm_ . , and xm_ . ) were used for comparison. july | volume | article frontiers in genetics | www.frontiersin.org klrk in both camel species codes for a functional activating receptor with a charged amino acid (arginine) in the transmembrane region. two proteins with variant ctld were recognized in c. dromedarius, while two proteins in c. bactrianus share the same ctld as one of the dromedary klrk. in the phylogenetic trees obtained, all nkc genes sequences of both camel species clustered with their putative orthologues in alpaca, cattle, and pig (figure ) . the lrc region of approximate length . mbp was localized to chromosome of camdro . fifteen full-length genes encoding receptors containing immunoglobulin-like (ig-like) domains of various lineages were identified in the lrc region. besides two kir pseudogenes containing itim domains and an expanded lilr gene family, a singular ig-like receptor was found in the vicinity of fcar and ncr , located between nlrp and nlrp . it comprises two ig-like domains different from those of the lilr and the kir genes and has a long cytoplasmic tail with two itims. it is a novel type of lrc gene, similar to a gene recently identified in pigs (schwartz and hammond, ) . based on its structure, this inhibitory type of receptor gene may be functional, similarly to pigs. the expanded family of lilr genes is organized in two distinct clusters. the first region spanning approximately kb is located between the genes rps and cdc ep . this region contains three putatively functional genes, lilrb , lilrb , and a lilrb -like sequence. lilrb codes for an inhibitory receptor with three ig-like domains. lilrb and lilrb -like each encode four ig-like domains and a cytoplasmic domain with itims. several fragmented sequences containing ig-like domains were identified within this region as well. the second lilr region spanning approximately kb is located between lair and the two kir pseudogenes. three full-length lilr genes and a pseudogene were identified in this region. lilrb codes for an inhibitory receptor; it comprises four ig-like domains, a transmembrane region, and a cytoplasmic tail with two intact itims. lilrb also codes for an inhibitory receptor, but with only two ig-like domains. in addition, there are a potentially functional activating lilra gene and a lilrb pseudogene (containing an itim sequence) located in the same region. the predicted lilra contains four ig-like domains in its extracellular region but has no signal peptide sequence. the cytoplasmic domain is short and contains no itims. several fragments with complete or partial ig-like domains were also found in this region. in the current c. dromedarius ncbi reference genome, the lrc is split amongst at least four scaffolds (nw_ , nw_ , nw_ , and nw_ ). they matched our camdro assembly in terms of the number and orientation of orthologous non-ig-like genes recognized by automatic annotation. single ig-like genes and two kir pseudogenes, but not expanded lilr genes, were unraveled. the bactrian lrc of ncbi reference genome is contained within a single scaffold (nw_ ), but assembly of the expanded lilr genes is not resolved and lilrb -like is missing. the overall lrc organization in the c. bactrianus reference genome is the same as that of the lrc of dromedaries (figure ) . based on pcr and resequencing of representative panels of c. dromedarius and c. bactrianus, individual genotypes could be successfully identified for most of the genes analyzed. however, the amplification of kir dl sequences in bactrian camels provided only limited numbers of sequences (supplementary table ) . similar to nkc genes, some sequences from one c. dromedarius individual were removed due to their mixed origin. the kir dl gene contains a -bp deletion in the exon for the third ig-like domain, causing a frameshift and a premature stop codon. this deletion is identical in both camel species. the locus kirdp contained sequences with premature stop codons and frameshift mutations in both camel species. the same was found in ncbi reference genomes. therefore, we assigned kirdp and kir dl sequences provisionally as pseudogenes in both species. in contrast to the low polymorphism of the nkc receptors, higher numbers of variable amino acid sites were found within kir dl. an in silico -bp insertion resulted in three and seven predicted fulllength protein variants in bactrian camels and dromedaries, respectively ( table ) . lilrb encodes a protein of similar structure to kir dl, with three constant-type ig-like domains and two functional itims in its cytoplasmic tail. unlike other members of the lilr family coding for receptors with four ig-like domains, lilrb has no variable-type ig-like domain between its first and second domains. nevertheless, in c. dromedarius, only three variants with minor changes in their amino acid sequences were found, and in c. bactrianus, this gene appears to be monomorphic. the gene lilrb of c. dromedarius encodes a functional inhibitory receptor with four ig-like domains and two itims. six variants recognized in the panel of dromedaries share the same ig-like domains and differ only by two amino acids in the transmembrane region and one in the cytoplasmic tail. all lilrb -like sequences obtained by pcr were identical to lilrb sequences retrieved from the same dromedaries' dnas. in c. bactrianus, lilrb encodes two mrnas with a premature stop codon in the first ig-like domain and differs by - amino acid positions from its dromedary counterparts. no pcr products were obtained for lilrb -like from the bactrian camel panel. lilrb encodes a receptor with % identity ( % similarity) to lilrb in c. dromedarius. all four protein variants had only two different ig-like domains (the second and third) with one amino acid change each. five variants of the bactrian lilrb had inter-species specific positions with another amino acids differing within species. sequences of two activating lilra genes were retrieved by pcr. one of them, containing two ig-like domains, arginine in the transmembrane region, and a long cytoplasmic tail, but with the first itim deleted and the second mutated, was provisionally named as lilra -ig. both camel species shared one variant of the lilra -ig protein, and two additional variants were present in the dromedary. the second activating gene was designated lilra -ig as it contained four ig-like domains, arginine in its transmembrane region, and a short cytoplasmic tail with no signaling motif. three variants of the dromedary and four variants of the bactrian camel lilra -ig protein are very similar, differing in only six amino acid positions. one specific variant with an in-frame deletion of amino acids in the third ig-like domain was shared between species. the phylogenetic tree constructed for the coding regions of the camel lrc genes (figure ) and their homologs in alpaca, cattle, and pig revealed three main clusters of genes characterized by the overall structure of the encoded receptor. the first cluster grouped genes with four ig-like domains receptors (lilrs). the second group was a cluster of genes coding for receptors with three or two ig-like domains (kirs and lilrb ). the third cluster was formed by genes encoding receptors with two ig-like domains (ncr and lilra -ig). within the first cluster, three distinct camel genes, lilrb , lilrb , and lilra -ig, clustered with various cattle and pig lilr genes. likewise, various cattle and pig kir genes formed a cluster with camelid kir dl genes. this cluster was related with the cluster of camelid lilrb genes, while the cluster containing ncr gene sequences was related to the camelid lilra -ig genes. as no cattle and/or pig homologs of camelid lilrb and lilra -ig genes could be identified in the reference genomes of these two species, they did not appear in the trees constructed. the predicted proteins of the ncr , ncr , and ncr genes were studied as potentially activating immunoglobulin-like receptors for various ligands different from mhc class i. the ncr gene is located within the lrc, and the structure of camelid ncr is similar to the structure of this gene's products in other species, with two extracellular ig-like domains and a charged residue (arginine) in the transmembrane domain, which allows its interaction with activating adaptor proteins. two allelic variants were identified in each camel species that differed from each other by only one or two amino acids. c. bactrianus possessed one additional variant containing a premature stop codon in the first ig-like domain. the ncr gene is located on chromosome of camdro . it encodes a functional receptor with one extracellular ig-like domain and a charged residue (lysine) in the transmembrane domain. one allelic variant of the receptor is shared by both camel species. another variant, found only in c. dromedarius, has a premature stop codon in the stem region of the putative molecule. two additional variants were identified in c. bactrianus, differing by one amino acid each. the ncr gene is also located on chromosome , within the mhc region. all sequences in both camel species contained the same two premature stop codons; this gene thus seems to be nonfunctional in camels. the alpaca is evolutionarily the most closely related species to the old world camels. the v. pacos ncbi reference genome contains two scaffolds (nw_ and nw_ ) with clec and klr genes. the gene content and organization of the alpaca nkc region was found to be very similar to that of the camel nkc, with similarities of amino acid sequences ranging from % to %. based on publicly available alpaca genomes, the extent of polymorphism of genomic as well as of protein sequences was higher than in either of the camel species. five protein variants were predicted for klra, klrc , klrc , and klre. the amino acid changes were concentrated in the ctld and the stem of klra and in the ctld in klrc . in contrast, they were evenly distributed throughout klrc . klre coded for four functional protein variants with only three different ctlds, and amino acid changes were concentrated mostly in the cytoplasmic tail. one allele had a -bp insertion leading to frameshift and a premature stop codon in the ctld part of the receptor. the same itim motif as in camels was recognized in all five variants. the three variants of klrd identified differed by one amino acid each in the stem region of the receptor and thus shared the same ctld. klri also coded for three variants with the same ctld, differing only in the cytoplasmic tail. due to a non-synonymous substitution, a second itim was recreated in one of the variants. the five protein variants predicted for klrj differed in their ctlds, although all of them contained the same premature stop codon according to the mrna model. klrk haplotypes coded for a potentially functional activating receptor (arginine in the transmembrane region). only one amino acid difference was observed in two ctld types shared by the four klrk protein variants. the alpaca lrc region is fragmented amongst numerous scaffolds of the ncbi reference genome. one of them (nw_ ) contains a four-domain lilrb gene, kirdp, kir dl, fcar, ncr , gp , and a novel ig-like gene, while another scaffold (nw_ ) contains lilrb , comprising three ig domains, and lilrb, with four ig domains. only fragments of lilr genes could be found in the rest of the relevant scaffolds. like in camels, kirdp contains various frameshifts. in contrast, kir dl has retained an intact genomic sequence and is thus likely to encode a functional inhibitory receptor, but with only one functional itim. the second itim is mutated in all protein variants. seven variants of kir dl were identified, differing in amino acid positions in total. these sites are equally distributed throughout the molecule. lilrb also codes for a potentially functional inhibitory receptor with three ig-like domains and seven identified variants. they differed in positions located in two of the ig-like domains, the stem and the cytoplasmic tail. the protein homology in comparison with dromedary camel kir dl and lilrb counterparts reached %. the gene ncr of the alpaca encodes a functional activating receptor with a charged amino acid residue (arginine) in the transmembrane region. the three detected allelic variants differed only in the stem and transmembrane regions. ncr codes for a functional activating receptor (lysine in the transmembrane region) as well. three protein variants with minor changes in the signal peptide and the cytoplasmic tail not affecting their potential function were identified. all identified ncr sequences have premature stop codons in the ig-like domain. the amino acid sequence similarity to camel sequences was %. in contrast to the rather conservative organization of the mammalian major histocompatibility complexes, natural killer cell receptor genes and their complex genomic regions are evolutionarily flexible. several different types of genomic organization of the nkr regions have been recognized in mammals (martin et al., ; hao et al., ; guethlein et al., ) , and sometimes striking differences have been observed between related taxa (kelley et al., ; sanderson et al., ; schwartz et al., ; schwartz and hammond, ) . therefore, studies of genes encoding nk cell receptors may contribute to our understanding of the heterogeneity of nk cell functions in particular mammalian species. at the same time, these genes and especially complex genomic regions such as nkc and lrc represent a relevant model for evolutionary biology. characterization of nkr genes in so far poorly studied species and/or families can bring new information on evolutionary mechanisms governing this part of the mammalian immunogenome. despite the importance of camels as a model for immunogenetic studies (ciccarese et al., ) , virtually nothing is known about nk cells in camels in terms of their morphology, functions, their surface receptors, and/or underlying genes. in this context, this study represents the first report on the nkc and lrc genomic regions and on ncr genes in old world camels and their comparison with a new world camelid, the alpaca. whole genome sequences of old world camels, c. dromedarius, c. bactrianus, and camelus ferus (jirimutu et al., ; wu et al., ; fitak et al., ) and of the alpaca v. pacos (ncbi genome accession gca_ . ) are currently available. however, their annotation is rather fragmentary and largely composed of predicted sequences generated in silico, based on homologies and sequence similarities with other mammalian species. taking into consideration the quality of resources including the availability of biological material, we focused on the two domestic camel species, c. dromedarius and c. bactrianus. even for these species, however, the current status of whole genome assemblies proved to be insufficient for a correct annotation of nkr genes, especially of the lrc, containing multiple copies of sometimes highly similar sequences and exhibiting copy number variations. therefore, the major resource for our analyses was a new genome assembly of the c. dromedarius genome obtained by a combination of several long-read sequencing techniques and bioinformatic approaches . in all genes selected for sequence analyses, the genomic sequences of nkr genes were highly similar in both camel species studied as well as to available alpaca sequences. such a high sequence similarity was observed for a number of other genes and was also characteristic for mhc class ii sequences (plasil et al., ) . therefore, it seems that pcr failures observed in some cases probably do not indicate polymorphisms in the primer binding site. taking also into consideration the generally low polymorphism of the camel genomes (fitak et al., https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/genome ), the occurrence of a putative polymorphic variant on both chromosomes is not too likely. moreover, the pcr failures concerned mostly the loci klrc and kir dl in the bactrians, which seem to be both pseudogenes, so we have not explored them further for the purposes of this study. nevertheless, both loci merit to be further investigated in the future. information that the monomorphic status of the bactrian klrc could be explained by allelic drop-out or existence of copy number variation, i.e., partial/total deletion of klrc from some bactrian nkc haplotypes, and that polymorphic amino acid positions within the kir dl sequences were concentrated in the second immunoglobulin-like domain, known to interact with mhc class i ligands in mammals and in the stalk region of the molecule, need to be explored. another potential technical problem is the use of long-range pcrs for amplifying related members of a gene family, which may produce chimeric products. the nkc genes analyzed here were in majority single (not duplicated) genes with characteristic sequences. the lrc genes analyzed, with only lilr genes as members of expanded gene family/families, were different to such an extent that we could distinguish them. in addition, both types of phylogenetic trees clearly supported the individuality of each gene. moreover, sequences successfully amplified as a whole matched the reference sequences. the remaining ones were amplified in two pieces, and again, they matched the reference sequences. although we have checked the overlapping sequences of two-piece pcrs and they did not indicate more polymorphisms, we cannot strictly exclude the possibility that such a sequence could be composed of pieces of two different yet highly homologous loci, taking also into consideration numerous fragments of lilr genes observed in camdro . the genomic organization of the nkc region of camelids differs from cattle, the phylogenetically most closely related species, whose nkr genes have been studied so far. while in cattle an expansion of klrc and klrh genes was reported (schwartz et al., ) , the minimal set of klr genes observed in camelids resembles the genomic organization of the nkc of the domestic pig. similarly, the leukocyte receptor complex of camels is strikingly different from the cattle lrc containing expanded kir (sanderson et al., ) and lilr genes (hogan et al., ) . in camels, the lrc with non-expanded kir genes and several pseudogenes seems to be even less complex than in the pig (schwartz and hammond, ) . within the natural killer complex, all types of klr genes identified in mammals (hao et al., ) were found. none of them apparently expanded into a large family; the maximum number of members within a family was two. similar to other mammalian species, the klra gene codes for a homodimeric type ii inhibitory receptor (ly ) (dimasi and biassoni, ) , klrc encodes an inhibitory receptor with two itims motifs (nkg a) (vance et al., ) , klrc encodes an activating receptor (nkg c) , and klrg codes an inhibitory receptor for cadherin molecules (ito et al., ) . these data suggest that the function of these molecules could be very similar to human and other mammalian nk receptors, especially in terms of their capacity to form heterodimers cd / nkg a (klrd/klrc ), cd /nkg c (klrd/klrc ) (braud et al., ) , and/or klre/klri (saether et al., ) . in humans, the heterodimers cd /nkg a (klrd/klrc ) and cd /nkg c (klrd/klrc ) recognize a relatively low polymorphic non-classical mhc class i ligand hla-e, and their polymorphism is also rather low (braud et al., ) . contrary to rats, in which klrh recognize mhc class i ligand (daws et al., ) , camelid klrh sequences represent only remnants of a full gene sequence. although mrna for bovine klrj was described (storset et al., ) , the precise splicing of camelid klrj and possible expression as a functional receptor remains to be verified. the low polymorphism of camelid klrk is comparable to the limited polymorphism of this gene in humans and mice encoding an activating receptor nkg d for diverse ligands (reviewed in lanier, ) . the genomic organization of the nkc is similar in both domestic camel species and in v. pacos. the functionally important polymorphism of nkc genes is limited, with one monomorphic gene and six genes with two to three allelic protein variants in c. dromedarius. an even higher number of monomorphic klr genes (three functional and two potential pseudogenes) was observed in c. bactrianus, and its klrc seems to be a pseudogene. it is not clear how this low nkc variation can be related to the fact that no "hla-e-like" molecule has been found to date outside of simians and rodents and to our recent finding that the mhc gene cluster containing hla-e in humans has been lost in camels, similarly to cattle and pigs (plasil et al., ) . interestingly, v. pacos seems to be more polymorphic in nkc, at both the genomic and protein levels, despite the limited number of individual genomes analyzed. within the lrc region, no kir genes have expanded, while lilr genes expanded both activating and inhibitory family members. as for the nkc, the same overall organization of the lrc with fcar, ncr , kir, and lilrb genes, three lilrb genes encoding a -ig-like domain receptor, low variable kir dl and lilrb , and unresolved lilr gene fragments was observed in c. bactrianus. the polymorphism of kir dl was similar in the dromedary (seven possible protein variants) and the alpaca (seven functional protein variants), while the alpaca seems to be more variable in the lilrb gene (seven vs. three protein variants, respectively). unfortunately, we were unable to analyze further alpaca lilr genes, mainly due to a lack of correct fulllength gene reference sequences and/or to a low coverage of ngs reads available in public databases. ncr , ncr , and ncr are the major activating receptors on human nk cells (reviewed in koch et al., ) . the ncr gene is located within the lrc; ncr and are located on the human chromosome , with ncr mapping within the mhc (lanier, ) . the chromosome location of ncr , ncr , and ncr genes in the dromedary corresponds to the human homologues, suggesting an orthologous nature of the ncr sequences retrieved. however, only ncr and ncr have a structure of functional genes, while ncr appears to be a pseudogene. the ncr , ncr , and ncr genes of c. bactrianus and v. pacos are very similar in terms of their genomic locations, sequence homologies, and genomic variation. we are aware of the limitations due to the quality of the current assembly; however, the clusters of the lilr sequences identified in the phylogenetic trees indicated, similarly to nkc genes, the individuality of each of the genes. although the purpose of this study was to outline the general organization of the two nkr complexes in terms of major gene families represented, and their location within nkc and lrc, further work is needed to definitively resolve the complex structure of lrc region, and a detailed characterization of individual lilr genes and pseudogenes is needed. taken together, this first report on nkr genes in camelids revealed features characteristic for nkc and lrc of tylopoda. despite close phylogenetic relationships to cattle, important differences in the nkc and lrc genomic organization and their polymorphism were observed. on the other hand, many similarities with pigs were found. the data presented here increase our genetic knowledge of the innate immune variation in dromedaries and bactrian camels and contribute to studies of nkr evolution in mammals. the results of this project add to our understanding of specificities of the camel immune system and its functions and represent a prerequisite for future investigations on mhc/nkr interactions in health and disease. the camel datasets generated for this study can be found in the ncbi´s genbank ® . the sequences obtained for nkc genes have accession numbers mk -mk . the lrc gene sequences for both camel species have accession numbers mk -mk . the ncrs sequences have accesion numbers mk -mk . the dromedary dna samples in this study were transferred from previous projects [austrian science fund (fwf) p -b and p -b ; pi: pb] and originated either from plucked hair, edta blood collected commensally on whatman fta cards (sigma-aldrich, vienna, austria) during routine veterinary controls or from dna extracts sent by collaborators under bilateral agreements. samples were imported with permits from the austrian ministry of labour, social affairs, health and consumer protection. all bactrian camel samples were collected commensally during veterinary procedures for previous research projects (gacr / / ; pi: ph). all samples were collected by a licensed veterinarian in compliance with all ethical and professional standards. jf made nkc annotation, designed primers, carried out pcr for nkr genes, and analyzed data. jo made all ngs mappings. aj made lrc annotation and carried out pcr for lilrb . je provided camdro whole genome sequence and annotation. jw made microsatellite definition and analysis. ak designed the microsatellite project. pb designed the project. ph designed the typology of camel farming system in saudi arabia cattle nk cell heterogeneity and the influence of mhc class i expression and genomic analyses of camelus dromedarius t cell receptor delta (trd) genes reveal a 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camelids: a review camelid genomes reveal evolution and adaptation to desert environments unique microanatomy of ileal peyer's patches of the one humped camel (camelus dromedarius) is not age-dependent project and the nkr study. jf and ph drafted the manuscript. jo, aj, and jw wrote paragraphs. je and pb edited the manuscript. all authors read, commented on, and approved the final version of the manuscript. key: cord- -kog kk authors: ferrari, stefano; geddes, duncan m; alton, eric w.f.w title: barriers to and new approaches for gene therapy and gene delivery in cystic fibrosis date: - - journal: adv drug deliv rev doi: . /s - x( ) -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: kog kk clinical trials of gene therapy for cystic fibrosis suggest that current levels of gene transfer efficiency are probably too low to result in clinical benefit, largely as a result of the barriers faced by gene transfer vectors within the airways. the respiratory epithelium has evolved a complex series of extracellular barriers (mucus, lack of receptors, immune surveillance, etc.) aimed at preventing penetration of lumenally delivered materials, including gene therapy vectors. in addition, once in the cell, further hurdles have to be overcome, including dna degradation, nuclear import and the ability to maintain long-term transgene expression. strategies to overcome these barriers will be addressed in this review and include the use of: (i) clinically relevant adjuncts to overcome the extra- and intracellular barriers; (ii) less-conventional delivery routes, such as intravenous or in utero administration; (iii) more efficient non-viral vectors and ‘stealth’ viruses which can be re-administered; and (iv) new approaches to prolong transgene expression by means of alternative promoters or integrating vectors. these advances have the potential to improve the efficiency of gene delivery to the airway epithelium, thus making gene therapy a more realistic option for cystic fibrosis. clearly an urgent need for a novel therapeutic approach. cystic fibrosis (cf) is the most common reces-preclinical studies carried out soon after the sively inherited lethal disease among caucasian isolation of the gene showed that both viral and population, affecting approximately one in non-viral gene transfer agents (gtas) were able to newborns. cf is caused by mutations in the cystic correct the chloride ion transport defect in cf fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator transgenic mice. the success of these studies led (cftr) gene, and to date around different several groups to initiate clinical trials of gene mutations have been identified. the underlying gene transfer in cf patients and three classes of gtas mutation leads to defective production of the cftr have been used so far: adenovirus, adeno-associated protein, a camp-regulated chloride (cl ) channel virus (aav) and cationic lipids. although the lung located in the apical membrane of epithelial cells. remains the most medically relevant target, many although the organs affected in cf also include the investigators chose to start their clinical studies by pancreas, gut, liver and reproductive tract, the clini-looking at gene transfer to the nasal mucosa. nasal cal picture is dominated by pulmonary disease, with airway epithelia have a similar histology and the recurrent cycles of infection leading to inflammation, same cf-associated abnormalities in ion transport as bronchiectasis and, in greater than % of patients, pulmonary epithelia, but compared to lung, the nasal death from respiratory failure. the isolation of the cavity has an easier access for both gene transfer and gene responsible for cf in suggested the safety measurements and represents a reduced risk to feasibility of new therapeutic treatments based on the patient in case of the occurrence of side effects. cftr gene transfer to patients with cf. the nine clinical trials using recombinant adenovirus rationale for the development of gene therapy proto-as a gta have been published so far [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , with five cols relies on the fact that heterozygotes appear to be involving administration of the virus to the lung phenotypically normal, expression of cftr is low epithelium [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . the results reported are not and the dysfunctional epithelial lining cells in the always consistent and of the noses assessed most affected organ, the lung, are accessible through following a single application, approximately onenon-invasive techniques. furthermore, although con-third showed some changes in chloride transport. no ventional treatments have increased life expectancy functional measurements were assessed in the lung of cf patients to approximately years, there is studies, although some evidence of vector-derived cftr mrna was found. common findings in all be different in cf subjects. more importantly, it is the studies published include (i) a dose-dependent now generally accepted that the efficiency of in vivo mild local inflammation and (ii) the progressive lack gene transfer with currently available vectors needs of expression following repeated administration. to be increased. we will here review the progress two phase i, single administration, dose escalation made in improving gtas and the hurdles to efficient trials using aav as a gta have been reported so far. transgene expression, which any vector has to over-aav-cftr was delivered to the maxillary sinus [ ] come before entering the airway epithelial cells. or nebulised to the lungs of cf subjects [ ] . in both cases aav delivery was shown to be safe and vector dna was found by pcr, up to days in the . extracellular barriers maxillary sinuses [ ] and - days in the airways [ ] . when delivered to the maxillary sinus, some the respiratory epithelium presents a particular degree of dose-dependent chloride transport correc-challenge for gtas, since one function of the upper tion was observed. however, in both studies no respiratory tract is to keep foreign particles out of the vector-derived mrna was detected. lung. airway epithelia have evolved a complex cationic lipids have been used in eight clinical series of barriers to prevent penetration of lumenally trials [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , with two of them involving nebulisa-delivered materials (including both viral and nontion of the lipoplexes to the lower airways [ , ] . viral gtas) into the cell or interstitial compartment. different lipoplexes were used including dc-chol-these barriers consist of: (i) a well-defined mucus dope [ , , ] , dotap [ ] , gl- [ , , ] layer that may bind inhaled vectors and remove them and edmpc-cholesterol [ ] , with dna doses via mucus clearance mechanisms, (ii) a glycocalyx ranging from mg to . mg when administered to that may bind vectors and prevent binding to cell the nose and up to . mg when nebulised to the surface receptors and perhaps most importantly, and lungs [ ] . results were similar to those reported (iii) an apical cell membrane that is relatively devoid with adenoviral vectors and a correction towards of viral receptors and growth / tropic receptors (fig. normal values of the chloride defect was observed ). this series of barriers is complemented by both in the nose (about %) [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] and in the epithelial tight junctions that are 'moderately leaky' lung ( %) [ ] , lasting between days and weeks to ions but quite 'tight' for larger solutes, thereby [ ] . interestingly, in one study naked dna was preventing penetration by current vectors from the reported to be as efficient as lipoplexes [ ] . unlike lumenal surfaces into the interstitium. in addition, viruses, it has been reported that lipoplexes can be cf lungs are characterised by the presence of a successfully re-administered without apparent loss of discontinuous barrier of purulent secretions, which efficacy [ ] . however, mild flu-like symptoms were contain exogenous actin, dna and inflammatory noted in both lung trials following aerosolisation of products that can modify the integrity of a lipoplex liposome-dna complexes and are probably related and limit gene delivery to the airways. cf sputum to the presence of unmethylated cpg motifs in has been shown to retard the movement of particles bacterially derived plasmid dna [ , ] . having a size comparable with lipoplexes and to in summary, within years of the cloning of the almost completely block -nm particles [ ] . cftr gene tremendous progress has been made and furthermore, binding of negatively charged cf proof-of-principle for correction of the basic chloride mucus components to the gene complexes may defect has been established within the target organ in change their surface charge and size, resulting in a vivo in cf subjects. however, in none of the clinical decreased transport of the lipoplex through the trials cited, has sodium hyperabsorption been altered. mucus and therefore in a decreased cellular uptake each of the three gtas used has achieved limited [ ] . success, with none outshining the others. interesting-using an ex vivo sheep trachea model, we demonly, despite non-viral vectors being arguably less strated that cationic lipid-mediated gene transfer, but efficient than viruses in animal models and labora-not adenoviral vectors or recombinant sendai virus tory studies, clinical trials have shown that this might [ ] , was inhibited by normal mucus, with removal extracellular barriers include the presence of infected mucus and sputum, mucociliary clearance and tight junctions between the cells, which limit the access of viral vectors to receptors localised on the basolateral membrane. alternatively, gene transfer agents could be delivered intravenously (i / v route), even if it is unlikely that airway epithelial cells will be targeted. inflammation, ctl-mediated degradation of transduced cells and neutralizing antibodies can further limit transgene expression or re-administration of the gene transfer vectors. hidden stem or progenitor cells could be targeted by lentiviral vectors. once inside the cell, the genetic material has to overcome endosome and cytoplasmic degradation and to get into the nucleus. ce, ciliated cell; b, basal cell; g, goblet cell; tj, tight junctions; c, capillary; smg, submucosal gland. of this layer significantly increasing transgene ex-nant human dnase has been shown to reduce sputum pression [ ] . similar results were obtained when viscoelasticity, facilitate the transport of nanospheres cationic polymers, such as pei, were used. however, though cf sputum [ ] and, when mixed with we have recently shown that the mucus barrier can, lipoplexes or polyplexes, not to alter their ability to in part, be overcome by treatment with mucolytic mediate gene delivery [ ] . agents, such as nacystelyn, when either a cationic recent findings have suggested that the glycocalyx lipid (gl- or edmpc:chol) or a cationic polymer may also represent another major obstacle to gene (pei) are used to deliver genes to airway epithelium transfer to the airway epithelium. the glycocalyx is [ ] . composed of many carbohydrate-bearing structures, similarly, sputum and bronchoalveolar lavage including glycoproteins, glycolipids and proteoglyfluid (balf) recovered from cf patients have been cans. treatment with agents to remove components shown to inhibit liposome- [ ] , adenovirus- [ ] of the glycocalyx, such as neuroaminidase, has been and aav-mediated gene transfer efficiency [ ] . shown to enhance the susceptibility of polarised cells however, when cf sputum was treated with recom-to transduction by ad or aav vectors [ ] . binant human dnase, an increased liposome-me-attempts have been made to circumvent barriers at diated gene delivery was observed [ ] . recombi-the mucosal surface by delivering transgenes via the bloodstream. the intravenous route may make it . cell surface barriers possible to access the basolateral membrane of airway epithelial cells, characterised by a higher rate the early studies with model systems that emof endocytosis and an increased density of viral ployed poorly differentiated airway epithelial cells receptors. however, the difficulties in overcoming suggested that gene transfer efficiency for a variety the large number of barriers between the vascular of vectors would be high. however, with the advent compartment and airway epithelial cells (endothelial of well-differentiated culture systems it became clear cells, endothelial cell basement membrane, inter-that (i) the airway lumen-facing columnar cell, the stitium and epithelial basement membrane) make this predominant cell type that must be transduced in route challenging. a large number of studies have vivo, is relatively resistant to viral and nonviral gene been conducted to identify which cells in the lung transfer and (ii) the apical surfaces of well-differenare transduced after intravenous (i.v.) injection of tiated airway epithelial cells have a low basal and liposome-dna complexes. most of these have stimulated rate of endocytosis. in contrast, currently concluded that the majority of the cells transfected available cell cultures are composed of basal or are the pulmonary endothelial cells, with some poorly differentiated cells that are highly transducstudies reporting transfection of type i / ii alveolar ible, but do not mirror the airway lumen in vivo [ ] . epithelial cells [ ] . only a few studies have reported airway epithelial cell transfection after i.v. . . both synthetic and viral vectors are unable to injection of cationic lipid-dna complexes [ , ] . decreased progressively as the cells became more this may have been due to properties of this specific polarised and differentiated [ ] . similar reports formulation (such as a longer circulation time) since demonstrated that much of the reduction in gene similar results were not obtained when other gtas delivery was due to a decrease in binding of the such as dotap-dope, dc-chol-dope. gl- a cationic lipid to the surface of mature airway epiand kda pei were administered [ ] . thelial cells [ ] and also to a decline in the rate of independently from the route of administration, internalisation of the bound complexes into these innate immune defence mechanisms and pre-existing cells [ ] . the hypothesis is that reduction in binding immunity are likely to play a crucial role in defend-may be due to differences in surface charge between ing the lung from foreign particles, including gene poorly and well-differentiated cells. while poorly therapy materials. airway macrophages are known to differentiated cells exhibited receptor-mediated endoreduce the amount of gta able to reach the epitheli-cytosis, pinocytosis and phagocytosis, well-differenal cells either via a direct mechanism (phagocytosis) tiated cell were only capable of receptor-mediated or, since they are antigen presenting cells, through endocytosis [ ] . some reports have indicated that stimulation of the host immune system. pre-existing cell proliferation may influence cationic lipid-meimmunity from antibodies to wild-type viruses, such diated transfection activity, either by making epias adenovirus and aav, could hinder their ability to thelial cells themselves more susceptible to transfectarget epithelial cells efficiently. a survey of normal tion or by temporary disruption of the tight junctions and cf subjects has shown that virtually all subjects [ ] . this would allow the lipoplexes to either access had antibodies to ad and to aav (the two most the basolateral surface of well-differentiated cells or used viral vectors so far), although only and %, to access more immature, less differentiated cells. respectively, were neutralising antibodies [ ] . it has with regard to viral vectors, it has been demonalso been observed that individuals with a higher strated that the receptors for adenovirus [ ], aav- baseline anti-ad neutralising antibody titre mounted [ ] and retrovirus are localised to the basolateral a higher neutralising antibody response after vector membrane, and are therefore not accessible when administration [ ] . these vectors are delivered topically. first examples reported is the p y -purinoreceptor, which is highly expressed on the apical surface of in principle, four general strategies may improve epithelial cells and is stimulated to internalise upon gene transfer efficiency to airway epithelia. utp activation. an increase in gene transfer efficiency was observed when adenoviral vectors . . . tight junctions conjugated to biotinylated utp ligands were used to the barrier function of epithelial tight junctions target the endogenous p y -purinoreceptor on well- can be transiently disrupted so that vectors can differentiated human airway epithelial cells, known access the basolateral membrane of target cells, to be refractory to adenovirus-mediated gene transfer which are rich in viral receptors and have a higher [ ] . similar results were obtained when gtas were rate of endocytosis. this can be achieved by using retargeted to bind to the bradykinin receptor [ ] , the ca chelator agents, such as egta [ , ] , non-urokinase plasminogen activator receptor [ ] and ionic detergents, such as polidocanol [ ] , and the serpin enzyme complex receptor (sec-r), all of antibodies able to block the function of proteins which are expressed on the apical surface of airway involved in the tight junction-complex, such as e-epithelial cells. administration of plasmid dna cadherin [ ] . in addition, medium-chain fatty acids, carrying the cftr cdna condensed with poly-lsuch as sodium caprate, have been shown to be lysine sec-r ligand to cf mice produced a correction better agents for enhancing gene transfer than of the cl efflux, a more normal sodium channel egta, via disruption of claudin- , a major structural activity and a reversal of nitric oxide synthase- component of the tight junctions [ ] . croyle et al. downregulation [ ] . recently found that a blend of sucrose, mannitol and investigators are currently trying to characterise pluronic f enhances adenoviral-mediated gene new ligands to target receptors present on the apical expression in both large and small lung airways. this surface of airway epithelia. one method is to use a formulation was shown to increase tight junction phage display library screened for peptides binding permeability and allow the use of / log lower viral with high affinity to airway epithelial cells. this has dose [ ] . airway instillation of perfluorochemical been mainly done in vitro and several promising (pfc) liquid can also transiently open tight junc-candidates have already been identified [ ] , but tions, enhancing adenoviral-[ ], aav [ ] and attempts to identify more relevant molecules by in cationic lipid-mediated gene transfer [ ], although vivo bio-panning are currently under evaluation. this procedure can increase inflammation. an attractive alternative strategy is to evaluate systematically glycoproteins from other enveloped . . . modification of the host viruses for their ability to efficiently infect airway the apical membrane can be modified so that it epithelia and to use these glycoproteins to pseudobinds vectors. one approach has been to incorporate type recombinant viral vectors. some viruses have unnatural sugars into membrane glycoproteins and already been shown to infect the polarised airway use them as a molecular handle on which a novel epithelium from the apical surface, including respirareceptor is constructed. the artificial receptor en-tory pathogens, such as human coronavirus e hanced adenoviral binding and gene transfer to cells [ ] , h n , h n and h n influenza a virus that were normally relatively resistant to adenovirus strains [ ] and viruses from the filoviridae family infection [ ] . this suggests the feasibility of a gene such as marburg and ebola virus. by using an transfer strategy in which the biosynthetic machinery ebola-pseudotyped hiv vector, kobinger et al. of the cell is used to engineer novel receptors on the showed efficient and stable transduction of intact cell surface. airway epithelium from the apical surface in vivo [ ] . the modification of the vector can also be non-the gta can be modified in order to target a specific. given the low density of ad-receptors on receptor on the apical membrane that has the capaci-the apical membrane, several strategies to increase ty to both bind and internalise a vector. one of the cell binding via a non-fibre-dependent pathway have been developed. complexing ad vectors with poly-using fusogenic lipids or peptides, such as gala cations [ ] or incorporating ad in calcium phos-and ha- from influenza haemagglutinin, to disrupt phate precipitates [ ] have been shown to enhance the endosome membrane. the neutral lipid dioleoylgene transfer to airway epithelia in vitro and in vivo. phosphatidylethanolamine (dope) is generally em-these strategies are thought to neutralise the adverse ployed as a fusogenic helper lipid in a cationic charge interaction between negatively charged ad lipid-dna complex. the second approach involves particles and the negatively charged cell surface, using a dna delivery system with a high buffering resulting in improved binding and uptake of ad capacity and the flexibility to swell when protonated. vector. the rationale that endosomes can be ruptured if the furthermore, it has been reported that both syn-ph drop in the late endosome is inhibited by the thetic [ ] and viral vector [ ] mediated gene buffering capacity of the formulation led to the use transfer to differentiated airway epithelia can be of ph-sensitive liposomes and polyethylenimine as increased by a prolonged contact time. gene transfer agents [ ] . because of the great number of secondary amines, pei behaves as a . . . identification of new viral vectors 'proton sponge', able to buffer the low ph in the improved binding and entry from the apical endosomes, resulting in the inhibition of the low surface have been reported with both new viral ph-activated nucleases. this leads to a large increase vectors and new serotypes of existing vectors. it has in the ionic concentration inside the endosome, recently been shown that, in contrast to aav , aav finally resulting in osmotic swelling due to water serotype is able to infect human airway epithelia entry and rupture of the organelle [ ] . from the lumenal surface, suggesting that , -linked in contrast to plasmid dna, viral vectors have sialic acid is either a receptor for aav or a evolved mechanisms to escape endosome degradanecessary component of a receptor complex [ ] . tion and for some of them it is a prerequisite for recombinant sendai virus, a single-stranded rna subsequent nuclear localisation of the virions. hanparamyxovirus, is also able to infect airway epitheli-sen et al. have shown that the passage through the al cells from the lumenal surface. its envelope endosome acidic component exposes aav to conproteins, f (fusion) and hn (haemagglutinin), have ditions that modify the capsid, allowing the virus to been shown to interact with cholesterol and sialic use the cytoskeleton for subsequent trafficking events acid, respectively, both molecules known to be to the nucleus [ ] . sendai virus uses the f protein to present on the apical membrane of airway epithelial fuse its envelope with the cell plasma membrane, cells [ ] . similarly, a recombinant respiratory allowing the genetic material to be released directly syncytial virus has recently been developed because into the cytoplasm and thus avoiding endosome of its ability to infect ciliated cells via the lumenal degradation. this led to the use of hvj-liposome as membrane [ ] . a new gene transfer agent in which uv-inactivated sev particles are mixed together with lipids in a liposome formulation in order to allow the plasmid . intracellular barriers dna to be introduced into the cytoplasm of the transfected cell [ ] . viral and nonviral vectors enter cells through endocytosis, a normal process for the internalisation . . cytoplasm-based degradation pathways and degradation of extracellular material. viral vectors and some synthetic vectors, such as . . endosome pei and hvj-liposome, are characterised by the ability to escape endosome degradation. however, plasmid-based vectors are quite susceptible to once released in the cytoplasm and before entering endosomal degradation and attempts have been made the nucleus, other hurdles are encountered. synthetic to enhance transgene escape from the endosome-vector-based strategies are characterised by low gene lysosome pathway (fig. ) . one approach involves transfer efficiency because plasmid dna is quickly degraded by ca -sensitive cytosolic nucleases, with several approaches have been taken to improve an apparent half-life of - min [ , ] . duan et nuclear entry of pdna, including the electrostatic al. showed that in polarised epithelial cells aav binding of pdna to nls-containing proteins, such capsid is ubiquinated after endocytosis and that this as hmg- , and the covalent attachment of nlsprocess is a barrier to raav transduction. motifs to double-stranded dna. with regard to the proteasome-dependent degradation of ubiquinated latest approach, most of the studies published so far molecules represents a major pathway for disposal of have used the nls of the simian virus (sv ) both endogenous and foreign proteins. in vivo appli-large t antigen because its trafficking to the nucleus cation of proteasome inhibitors in mouse lungs is well characterised and has also shown to mediate augmented raav-mediated gene transfer from unde-nuclear import of non-karyophilic proteins. by using tectable levels to a mean of . . % of the this 'piggyback' approach, sebestyen et al. demonepithelial cells in large bronchioles [ ] . strated nuclear accumulation in digitonin-permeabilised cells, but failed to show uptake of the modified . . nuclear import dna in nuclei of intact cells. this suggests that covalent modification of pdna with a signal peptide once within the cytoplasm, the transgene must be may alter its behaviour and interaction with other imported into the nucleus to be transcribed. for cellular factors [ ] . by capping a luciferase gene plasmid-based expression, nuclear import is a rate-with a single nls peptide, zanta et al. showed a limiting step and intracellular trafficking of pdna, - -fold increase in gene transfer efficiency either naked or complexed to synthetic vectors, is [ ] . however, the major drawback of this technique largely uncharacterised (fig. ) . during non-viral is the relatively low amount of nls-pdna that can gene transfer, entry of exogenous dna into the be produced. nucleus occurs only in cells that are actively divid- the development of peptide nucleic acids (pnas), ing, i.e., when the nuclear envelope breaks down. oligonucleotide analogues in which the sugar phos-this is consistent with the observation that well-phate backbone of nucleic acid has been replaced by differentiated, non-dividing airway epithelial cells a synthetic peptide backbone, has led to further show very low transfection efficiency. pollard et al. developments in this field. pna is capable of showed that less than / naked cdna copies sequence-specific recognition of dna and rna microinjected in the cytoplasm were effectively following the watson-crick hydrogen-bonding trafficked to the nucleus [ ] . scheme and can be used to link peptides, such as these results may be largely due to the inability of nls-motifs, to plasmid dna. the advantage over pdna to effectively translocate through the nuclear the other strategies is that the nls peptide can be pore complexes (npcs). each npc is comprised of a linked to very specific regions of plasmid dna, with large family of proteins (nucleoporins) forming a no effects on the transcription of genes located structure in which a central channel is surrounded by elsewhere on the plasmid. furthermore, a precise eight peripheral channels. it is thought that the number of nls-motifs can be attached and large peripheral channels, about - nm diameter, allow quantities of the modified pdna obtained [ ] . small solutes and proteins up to - kda to freely however, up to now, none of the strategies described diffuse in an out the nucleus. larger proteins need a has been used to enhance nuclear import and gene nuclear localisation signal (nls) in order to be transfer expression in airway epithelial cells in vivo. actively transported through the central channel of in addition to this, there are reports suggesting that the pore. under physiological conditions, a super-some polycations, such as pei [ ] and lactosylated coiled pdna has a diameter of nm or larger if in poly-l-lysine [ ] , may facilitate the nuclear uptake a relaxed conformation, thus suggesting that passive of pdna and that, unlike lipoplexes, the complexes diffusion of pdna through the npc is highly remain intact during nuclear translocation. this unlikely [ ] . therefore, targeting of pdna to might suggest the existence of nuclear import pathnuclear 'shuttle' proteins has become part of the ways distinct from the conventional nls one. design of gtas developed to transfer non-dividing unlike plasmid-based approaches, viral vectors cells, as in cf gene therapy. have evolved efficient ways to enter the nucleus. the cytoplasmic movement of viral dna towards the directed at adenoviral capsid proteins present during nucleus is facilitated by the interaction of viral vector delivery, resulting in the production of neuproteins, such as polymerase or capsid proteins, with tralising antibodies (nab) that limit repeated vector the microtubular network [ ] . it has recently been administration. shown that adenovirus type docks at the can / several approaches have been taken to reduce nup protein of the nuclear pore, then hijacks expression-limiting immune responses in recipients histone h and specific h -import receptors to effect of virus-based gene therapy. a targeted uncoating of its nucleocapsid at the (i) immunosuppressant drugs such as cyclophosnuclear pore. consequently, the viral dna is liber-phamide, cyclosporine and fk have been reated near the opening of the pore and positioned for ported to prolong transgene expression and facilitate translocation into the nucleus [ ] . repeated gene transfer in the lung [ ] . however, the for most of the viral vectors, but not retroviruses, potential to induce severe systemic side effects may nuclear import does not depend on the mitotic status limit the clinical application of these drugs. furtherof the cell. it has recently been reported that a more, prolonged general immunosuppression of cf polypurine tract (cppt) present in the hiv- genome patients, where lungs are colonised by pathogenic leads to the formation of a triple-stranded dna bacteria, could be injurious. structure, the hiv- flap, which is recognised by the (ii) topical corticosteroids, such as budesonide, nuclear import machinery of the host cell. this have allowed successful re-administration of adenoultimately results in the transport of the hiv- virus, at least twice. compared to saline-treated genome into the nucleus across the nuclear pore animals, budesonide treatment resulted in significomplex [ ] . introduction of the cppt sequence in cantly higher transgene expression and lower recombinant lentiviral vectors has been shown to amounts of nab both in balf and serum. howenhance nuclear import and, therefore, transgene ever, these differences disappeared after five previexpression [ ] . for other viruses, such as sendai ous exposures to the virus [ ] . virus, nuclear import is not a rate-limiting step since (iii) co-administration of interferon-g (ifn-g) or replication and transcription both occur in the cyto-interleukin- (il- ) has been shown to diminish plasm. the activity of t cells and formation of nab, h allowing efficient re-administration (at least once) of recombinant virus [ ] . a potential drawback of this . host immune responses approach is that t cells are inhibited at the h expense of increased t activation. thus, both ifn-h as transgene expression is transient, and unless g and il- , while capable of inhibiting humoral lung-resident stem cells are targeted, the treatment of immunity, might enhance the elimination of adeno-cf by gene therapy will require repeated administra-virus-transduced cells by ctls. tions throughout the lifetime of the patient. the (iv) both ctl and b cell responses require prevent the activation of humoral and cellular imbe overcome in order to re-administer the vector. mune response to viruses, thus causing prolonged these include: (i) an antigen-nonspecific, cytokine-transgene expression and efficient re-administration. dependent response resulting in acute inflammation; several strategies have been adopted including the (ii) a cytotoxic (cd ) t-lymphocyte (ctl)-depen-use of non-depleting monoclonal antibodies to the dent response directed at cells expressing viral or cd molecule [ ] and the blockade of either cd transgene proteins, resulting in chronic inflammation cd ligand [ ] or cd -b (with ctla -ig) and lack of persistent transgene expression; and (iii) [ ] , co-stimulatory signals necessary for complete a helper (cd ) t lymphocyte-dependent response t-cell activation. these treatments have resulted in suppression of cellular and humoral responses, pro-shortened version of the cftr gene ('mini-gene') longed transgene expression and, in some cases, [ ] . another approach is to expand raav packaging vector re-administration up to four times [ ] . how-capacity with trans-splicing or overlapping vectors. ever, in non-human primates, treatment with an anti- the first reconstitutes gene expression from two cd ligand monoclonal antibody did not prevent independent raav vectors, each encoding unique, the elicitation of a virus-specific antibody response non-overlapping halves of a transgene. the overlapupon secondary challenge with vector [ ] . it is ping vector approach uses homologous recombinapossible that a combination of blocking agents may tion between overlapping regions in two independent provide a more complete abrogation of t-and b-cell vectors [ ] . preliminary results seem to indicate that immune responses. the trans-splicing approach is - -fold more effi-(v) antibody neutralisation of the virus can be cient than the overlapping approach [ ] . reduced by coating the vector particle with polyethylene glycol (peg) [ ] , gl -dope-peg [ ] . . plasmid-based delivery and poly-l-lysine or deae-dextran [ ] . these treatments have the added advantage of providing a plasmid-based gene delivery strategies are genermeans to retarget the vector through ligands coupled ally regarded as safer and less immunogenic alterto the coating polymer. another potential strategy for natives to viral vectors. repeated administration of effective repeated delivery is 'serotype switching' lipoplexes in mice [ ] and cf patients [ ] resulted where gene therapy is initiated with one virus in similar levels of transgene expression as observed serotype, then switched to a virus derived from a after a single delivery, thus suggesting that lipoplexsecond serotype for subsequent administration, there-es can be re-administered without apparent loss of by avoiding neutralising antibodies induced by the efficacy. however, the efficacy of repeated adminisfirst serotype. however, transgene expression may be trations is dependent on the dose used and the time limited by cross-reactive ctls that can also target interval between administrations. lee et al. reported cells infected by the second virus serotype [ ] . that very little or no loss in efficacy was observed if the use of these strategies were to be combined provided the dose of lipoplexes was low or if the with adenovirus vectors that are devoid of all viral time interval between successive instillations was sequences ('gutless' or helper-dependent adenoviral sufficiently long [ ] . it appears that the inflammavectors), thereby avoiding a cell-mediated immune tion elicited by the complexes may affect the efficacy response, it might be possible to repeatedly deliver of repeat administration. the virus. the use of these 'stealth' adenoviruses non-viral gene delivery agents can indeed have could eliminate the requirement for systemic im-inflammatory and toxic effects in vivo. scheule et al. munosuppression with repeated administration [ ] . observed a dose-dependent pulmonary inflammation recombinant aav (raav) vectors are generally characterised by infiltrates of neutrophils and, to a less immunogenic in the airways and beck et al. lesser extent, macrophages and lymphocytes when have recently suggested that aav can evade immu-the cationic lipid gl- was administered to mouse nological surveillance and can be repeatedly de-lungs in vivo. associated with this were elevated livered to rabbit airways, because they are unable to levels of the pro-inflammatory cytokines il- , tnftransduce antigen presenting cells (dendritic cells) a and ifn-g that peaked at day - post-instillation, [ ] . however, this possibility has recently been but resolved to normal limits by day [ ] . ruled out unless different serotypes [ ] or some histopathological analysis of lung sections from form of immunosuppression [ , ] is used. further-mice treated with the individual components of the more, the small packaging size limit of the virion has lipoplex suggested that the cationic lipid was the restricted the use of genetic control elements that can major mediator of the observed inflammation. howdrive cftr expression compared to the relatively ever, results of clinical studies in which cf patients weak promoter activity of the native viral inverted were subjected to either aerosolised liposomes alone terminal repeat (itr) sequence. recent progress to [ ] or cationic lipid-pdna complexes indicated overcome this problem has included the use of a that bacterially derived pdna may also be inflam-matory [ , ] . each of the cationic lipid-pdna-tion, scaria et al. showed that by using an adenovirus treated patients, but not the liposome-treated con-co-expressing both human cftr and icp (a gene trols, exhibited mild flu-like symptoms (including shown to block the transporter associated with mhc fever, myalgia and a reduction in fev of approxi-class i-mediated antigen presentation to cd t mately %) over a period of h. cells) a prolonged expression (up to days) was one possible explanation for this response may be observed in monkey lungs, even though natural killer related to the presence of unmethylated cpg di-cell activity was enhanced [ ] . nucleotide sequences in bacterially derived pdna. however, several lines of evidence suggest that compared with dna of eukaryotic origin, bacterial attenuation of promoter function may be the most genomic dna contains a -fold higher frequency significant factor in the lack of persistence of transof the dinucleotide sequence cpg. further, unlike gene expression. the transcriptional activity of the eukaryotic dna, in which approximately % of the widely used cytomegalovirus immediate early gene cytosines are methylated, bacterial dna is relatively promoter (cmv) is highly robust, but prone to unmethylated. instillation of bacterial dna or oligo-inactivation over time. cytokines induced by adenonucleotides containing immunostimulatory cpg virus-or plasmid-mediated gene delivery have been motifs into mouse lungs resulted in inflammation of shown to down-regulate cmv-driven expression. for the lower respiratory tract [ ] . several strategies this reason, many investigators have evaluated alterhave been employed to decrease the immuno-native promoters, with many showing increased stimulatory properties of pdna, including (i) meth-persistence. these include the polyubiquitin c proylation of cpg sequences [ ] , (ii) reduction of the moter (high-level transgene expression for up to cpg frequency by eliminating non-essential regions weeks and still detectable after months), the or by site-directed mutagenesis [ ] and (iii) the elongation factor a promoter (expression up to use of inhibitors of the cpg signalling pathway, such weeks) [ ] and the cmv-ubiquitin b hybrid as chloroquine or quinacrine [ ] . independent of promoter (expression up to months, with % of the strategy used, the cpg-reduced pdnas were day levels remaining at day ) [ ] . similar found to be less pro-inflammatory. however, meth-prolonged transgene expression was obtained when ylation of the cpg motifs can severely reduce the the e region from adenovirus or simply the open expression of the transgene [ ] . reading frame (orf ) of e were cloned upstream of the cmv promoter on a plasmid backbone [ ] . however, a potential disadvantage of this approach . expression of the therapeutic gene is the immunogenicity of the e orf product once expressed in the transfected cell, thereby limiting its one of the main obstacles to the development of usefulness in vivo. in addition, there is growing gene therapy for the airways is the inability of evidence that genomic sequences, either within or current viral and nonviral gene transfer vectors to flanking the gene, might be essential to provide in direct sustained expression of a therapeutic trans-vivo long-term expression [ ] . gene. this may be due to several causes including an alternative approach to achieve prolonged loss of the vector (especially if present in an episom-transgene expression is to use artificial chromosome al form), transcriptional silencing of the transgene vectors or integrating viruses, since they are stable promoter, loss of the transfected cell through cell over time and will propagate to daughter cells should turnover, or the generation of an immune response to cell division occur. huertas et al. have recently the transgene product or the transfected cell itself. developed a circular yeast artificial chromosome several approaches have therefore been taken to (yac) carrying the human cftr sequence and the achieve longer-term expression following each gene orip and ebna- genes from epstein-barr (ebv) transfer treatment. as outlined in section . , im-virus [ ] . plasmids carrying these two ebv genes munosuppressant drugs have been reported to have been shown to allow long-term episomal prolong transgene expression [ ] , because of their maintenance of the dna, being able to replicate and ability to block t cell-mediated response. in addi-segregate in the daughter cells. however, unless lung-resident stem cells are targeted, these vectors integrated in the host genome will eventually be lost are unlikely to have greater advantages over conven-due to cell turnover. tional plasmids, since the airway epithelium is an alternative would be to target lung resident mainly composed of non-dividing cells. furthermore, stem cells so that the integrated transgene is continutheir size makes in vivo delivery and subsequent ously propagated to the daughter cells when cell nuclear trafficking quite difficult. division occurs. there has been a long-standing with regard to integrating viruses, aav and, more debate regarding the identity of airway epithelial recently, lentiviruses have been considered as good stem cells and two theoretical models of cell lineage candidates for prolonged expression. wild-type aav in the pseudostratified airway epithelium have been persists by site-specific integration into human chro-suggested. the 'stem cell niche' model suggests that mosome . however, recombinant aavs persist airway epithelial stem cells are localised to distinct predominantly in an episomal form and integrate and potentially inaccessible compartments of the randomly in the host genome at a much lower lung. however, there is evidence for great plasticity frequency than wild-type aav, probably because of in growth and differentiation potential of airway the lack of rep gene products [ ] . furthermore, epithelial cells and earlier studies showed that both results demonstrate that, at least in the liver extra-basal and non-basal cells could regenerate a comchromosomal, not integrated genomes, are the pri-plete mucociliary epithelium in tracheal grafts. this mary source of raav-mediated gene expression observation led to an alternative 'unlimited plastici- [ ] . ty' model where many non-terminal cells with ample lentiviral vectors from different strains including progenitorial capacity are scattered throughout the human, feline and equine immunodeficiency virus epithelium [ ] . a better understanding of this issue have been used to transduce airway epithelial cells is also likely to benefit any gene therapy strategy because of their potential to provide long-term using integrating vectors, considering the different expression through the integration of the provirus accessibility of stem cells in the two models. into the host cell genome. kobinger et al. recently used an hiv-based vector pseudotyped with the envelope from the ebola (eboz) virus to efficiently . how many and which cells should be transduce airway epithelia in vivo. animals receiving corrected to achieve clinical benefit? eboz-pseudotyped hiv vector demonstrated minimal expression at day , but strong expression in the a key issue is to distinguish between two conairway epithelium, including submucosal glands, by cepts: 'percent of cells corrected' and 'level of cftr day that persisted at day . on average, % of transduced / cell'. the entire tracheal epithelium was transduced by the vector at day and % at day [ ] . . . percent of cells corrected despite these results, integrating vectors still have some problems. the first is that chromosomal posi-an in vitro study has shown that approximately tion and structure can negatively affect transgene - % of 'corrected' cells are needed to restore expression, thus leading to host shut-off of the normal cl transport function [ ] . the amplifica- transferred expression cassette, a problem that has tion of functional correction reflects the fact that cl plagued retrovirus gene transfer vectors. this effect, can move via gap junctions from non-corrected cells known as transcriptional silencing, can be mitigated into adjacent corrected cells for secretion. an in vivo through the use of chromatin insulators, which are study has shown that % of the normal level of cftr protein-binding dna elements that lack intrinsic gene expression can correct the chloride abnormality promoter / enhancer activity, but shelter genes from ( % of normal) and, importantly, the intestinal transcriptional influence of surrounding chromatin. pathology seen in mice with cf [ ] . however, the second problem is that the majority of the different levels of correction may be required to epithelium is comprised of differentiated cells that restore the various functions of cftr. the relationare replaced every few months, so that a transgene ship between efficiency of gene transfer and normali-sation of sodium transport is likely to be linear, gene, will have to be used to drive cftr expression. reflecting the fact that cftr directly regulates enac to produce more physiological cftr expression channels within individual cells. this suggests that other approaches such as the use of (i) genomic virtually every affected cell ( %) should be cor-context vectors in which cftr expression is driven rected [ ] . the level of transfection required for by its natural promoter and regulatory sequences and other functions of cftr to be restored, e.g., sulpha-(ii) 'gene targeting' molecules, such as rna-dna tion / sialylation defects or transport of other mole-chimeric oligos and small dna fragments for cules, remains unknown and appears to depend on homologous replacement may be needed. this latter the cell type transduced and the gta used. zhang et strategy would allow the mutation within the cftr al. showed that cationic liposome-mediated cftr gene to be 'surgically' modified without altering the transfer achieved very low transgene expression with promoter and the regulatory sequences of the cftr insignificant correction of the chloride defect, but gene. mucus sulphation was reduced to levels seen in non-cf airways. the converse was seen with adenovirus that, despite higher levels of expression, did not . non-conventional approaches transduce goblet cells [ ] . in addition, the route of administration itself seems to have a role with regard because of the hurdles encountered by gtas in to the localisation of the delivered gene. instillation getting into airway epithelial cells, many less conof gtas into the mouse lungs results predominantly ventional strategies than those described above have in transfection of the alveolar and terminal bronchial been developed and will be reviewed here. cells, while, when they are aerosolised, a higher level of transfection is observed in the airway epithelium . . oligonucleotide-mediated strategies [ ] . aerosolisation is more likely to lead to a more even deposition of the gtas throughout the lung because of their size, oligonucleotides have the than could be attained by instillation, which pre-potential to enter the cell and the nucleus much more sumably primarily deposits the complexes in the easily than plasmid dna. goncz et al. have deparenchyma. veloped a new strategy based on gene targeting by small fragment homologous replacement (sfhr). specific genomic sequences are targeted with small fragments of exogenous dna ( - bp) that are a delivered gene would ideally be expressed in a homologous to the targeted endogenous dna semanner similar to the normal pattern of the defective quences except for the particular base pairs that gene that it is replacing. to counterbalance the poor encode the desired modification. gene targeting is gene transfer efficiency with current gtas, very thought to have several advantages over classic gene strong non-specific viral promoters such as rsv and complementation, including long-term and tissue cmv have been used to drive transgene expression. specific expression of the functional gene, no intro-however, because the number of cftr molecules duction of foreign sequences and no immune reper respiratory epithelial cell is low ( - channel sponse. for the first time, goncz et al. showed the proteins / cell) and that the cftr protein regulates modification of specific genomic sequences in exon other ionic channels implicated in water and salt of the mouse cftr after small dna fragments secretion, it is possible that high levels of cftr were delivered to the lungs of normal mice [ ] . expression may perturb the function of other proteins recently, conversion of wild-type cftr to the or alter physiological properties of the cell. it has g d mutation in primary rat hepatocytes has been been reported that a high level of cftr expression reported by using a different molecule, rna-dna can cause growth arrest and increased cell volume chimeraplasts [ ] . [ , ] , thus suggesting that either regulatable another strategy is to use oligonucleotides as expression cassettes [ ] or epithelium-specific antisense molecules. friedman et al. used antisense promoters, such as that for the human cytokeratin oligoribonucleotides to correct the cftr splicing mutation kb c → t in human and mouse uptake. the feasibility of these methods is very epithelial cells [ ] . in another report, antisense organ-and tissue-specific and for the lung represents inhibition of b cell antigen receptor-associated pro-a challenge with many unknown aspects. gersting activated cl currents in [dphe ]cftr-expressing fected with plasmid dna mixed with superparamag-cho cells [ ] . antisense strategy might suggest a netic nanoparticles (magnetofection) resulted in more new way to correct the defects present in cf, such as than -fold increase in gene transfer [ ] . the mucin production or sodium hyperabsorption. challenge is now to see whether this very promising technique [ ] can be applied to the airway epi- . . spliceosome-mediated rna trans-splicing thelium in vivo. (smart) . . in utero gene transfer a very recent technology developed by mitchell and collaborators takes advantage of the cell's because of the hurdles and barriers involved with endogenous splicing machinery as a strategy for conventional gene transfer, several groups have modifying pre-mrna. the smart process uses begun to look into in utero gene delivery as a new pre-therapeutic rna molecules (ptms) that are way potentially to increase the efficacy and duration designed to base pair with the intron of a targeted of transgene expression. cf is a particularly inviting pre-mrna to suppress target cis-splicing while target disease for the development of in utero gene enhancing trans-splicing between the ptm and therapy because amniotic fluid circulation provides target. the aim is to repair mutant pre-mrna vector exposure to pulmonary, gastrointestinal and molecules and generate full length repaired mrna sinus epithelia, all primary sites of cf pathology. that is translated and processed into mature cftr viral vector introduced into amniotic fluid of mice, protein [ ] . in an in vivo model of df cf rats, sheep and rabbits results in reporter gene airway epithelia, liu et al. showed that human cf expression in both pulmonary and gastrointestinal bronchial xenografts infected with a recombinant epithelia. transgene expression was also demonadenovirus encoding a ptm targeted to cftr intron strated in pulmonary epithelia after intratracheal demonstrated partial correction of cftr-mediated instillation of vector in utero. persistence of trans- cl permeability to % of that seen in non-cf gene expression in the lung ranged from to xenograft [ ] . this strategy would allow a more days post-infection. most of these studies have been physiological expression of cftr, as previously carried out with adenoviral vectors, and many have discussed. furthermore, as ptm expression cassettes led to substantial inflammation and subsequent foetal can be much smaller than those encoding full-length loss. fewer adverse events have been observed when cdnas, smart also allows for the use of smaller aav is used. retroviral vector use for applications and less immunogenic vectors, such as raav with in utero has been limited because the amniotic fluid limited packaging capacity. however, the very high reduces infectivity (see ref. [ ] for an extended titres required to achieve correction and the potential overview). of trans-splicing into non-cftr mrnas are dis- the potential advantage of in utero gene transfer advantages which should not be ignored. over other approaches is that, as the host immune system is not fully developed, it may be possible to . . physical methods tolerise the organism to viral vectors. however, recent reports have ruled out the possibility of because of the inefficiency of currently available successful repeated administration of viral vectors gtas, newer ways of increasing gene transfer have during adult life despite previous in utero exposure to be developed. physical methods such as magnet- [ ] . in humans this approach would be even less ism, electroporation and ultrasound have been em-successful since the immune system becomes responployed by several groups as a means to enhance gene sive by midgestation. larson et al. have recently presented an interesting future a feasible option to detect gene expression in a and controversial report, showing that treatment of non-invasive way in human airways. primate foetuses with an adenovirus expressing the cftr gene resulted in accelerated differentiation of the lung [ ] . furthermore, after in utero gene transfer . conclusion with an adenovirus containing the cftr gene, a permanent reversion of the lethal phenotype in cf in conclusion, in the years since the cloning of knockout mice was observed [ ] . this might the cftr gene and after about clinical trials, suggest that cf is a developmental disease that could some of the crucial barriers limiting gene transfer be prevented by transient in utero cftr gene expreshave become clearer. the combination of newly sion at the proper time of lung and intestine differendeveloped gtas and technologies, better models to tiation. test gene-based therapies and new detection systems will hopefully allow these barriers to be overcome. clinical trials have shown that there is clearly a this work was supported by the cystic fibrosis requirement for newer approaches to improve deliv-research trust (sf) and a wellcome trust senior ery and efficiency, increase duration of expression clinical fellowship (ewfwa). the authors are and permit repeated administration of gtas. in members of the uk cystic fibrosis gene therapy addition there is an increasing need by the scientific consortium (www.cfgenetherapy.org.uk). community that all these new gtas and technologies are tested on relevant airway test systems (i.e., only highly differentiated epithelial cells in r eferences vitro and a spectrum of in vivo systems) before entering clinical trials. cf mice have been a great cationic liposome mediated cftr gene transfer to the nasal r aerosol administration of a recombinant chadadenovirus expressing cftr to cystic fibrosis patients: a wick cationic lipid-mediated cftr crystal, gene transfer to the lungs and nose of patients with cystic airway epithelial cftr mrna expression in cystic fibrosis fibrosis: a double-blind placebo-controlled trial, lancet patients after repetitive administration of a recombinant a phase i study of adenovirus-mediated webb, d.r. gill, repeat administration of dna / liposomes transfer of the human cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductto the nasal epithelium of patients with cystic fibrosis, gene ance regulator gene to a lung segment of individuals with ther safety and biological efficacy of a lipid-aerosol and lobar administration of a recombinant adeno-cftr complex for gene transfer in the nasal epithelium of virus to individuals with cystic fibrosis. ii. transfection adult patients with cystic fibrosis rosentransfer of aav-cftr in maxillary sinus a clinical inflammatory syndrome attributable to aerosolised lipid-dna administration in cystic fibrosis simoens, administration of tgaavcf to cystic fibrosis subjects with f. de baets structural alterations of gene complexes by cystic geddes, liposome-mediated cftr gene transfer to the nasal fibrosis sputum efficient gene transfer dna alone for gene transfer to cystic fibrosis airway to airway epithelium using recombinant sendai virus, nat. epithelia in vivo the extra-and intracellular barriers a placebo-controlled study of liposomenative sheep airway epithelium a low rate adjuncts for nonviral gene transfer to airway epithelium, of cell proliferation and reduced dna uptake limit cationic gene ther the effect of mucolytic r.c. boucher, limited entry of adenovirus vectors into agents on gene transfer across a cf sputum barrier in vitro, well-differentiated airway epithelium is responsible for in-gene ther inhibitory effect of cystic fibrosis polarity influences the efficiency of recombinant adenoassputum on adenovirus-mediated gene transfer in cultured sociated virus infection in differentiated airway epithelia, epithelial cells increas-(raav) transduction by bronchial secretions from cystic ing epithelial junction permeability enhances gene transfer to fibrosis patients polyethylenimine shows properties of interest for cystic fibrosis gene therapy egta enhancement of adenovirus-( ) - . mediated gene transfer to mouse tracheal epithelium in vivo retargeting the coxsackievirus and adenovirus receptor to the apical surface of polarized epithelial cells enhanced in vivo airway gene transfer via transient modireveals the glycocalyx as a barrier to adenovirus-mediated fication of host barrier properties with a surface-active agent, gene transfer epithelial integrity resulting from e-cadherin dysfunction l.c. tsui, comparison between intratracheal and intravenous predisposes airway epithelial cells to adenoviral infection, administration of liposome-dna complexes for cystic fi-am systemic gene expres-enhanced epithelial gene transfer by modulation of tight sion after intravenous dna delivery into adult mice, science junctions with sodium caprate targeting transgene ment of novel formulations that enhance adenoviral-mediated expression for cystic fibrosis gene therapy, mol. ther. gene expression in the lung in vitro and in vivo immune responses to adenovirus and adeno-associated virus liggitt, perfluorochemical liquid-enhanced adenoviral vector in humans variability of human systemic humoral immune halbert, perfluorochemical liquid enhances adeno-associated responses to adenovirus gene transfer vectors administered to virus-mediated transgene expression in lung use of perfluorocarbon (fluorinert) to adenovirus-mediated gene transfer to basal but not columnar enhance reporter gene expression following intratracheal cells of cartilaginous airway epithelia, hum. gene ther. instillation into the lungs of balb / c mice: implications for ( ) - . nebulized delivery of plasmids engineering novel cell surface reand differentiated airway epithelial cells in vitro and in vivo, ceptors for virus-mediated gene transfer of binding and entry of liposome-dna complexes decreases g-protein-coupled receptors as targets for gene transfer transfection efficiency in differentiated airway epithelial vectors using natural small-molecules ligands adeno-associated virus ing ad fibers to bradykinin receptors expressed on the type -mediated gene transfer: altered endocytic processing lumenal surface of human airway epithelium, pediatr. pulenhances transduction efficiency in murine fibroblasts targeting the urokinase sugimachi, k. sueishi, hvj (sendai virus)-cationic lipoplasminogen activator receptor enhances gene transfer to somes: a novel and potentially effective liposome-mediated human airway epithelia molecular conjugate mediated cftr gene transfer in cf mice affects secondary coutelle, a potential barrier to gene transfer a novel peptide, thalwht, for the targeting - . of human airway epithelia mccray nucleases prevent efficient delivery to the nucleus of injected jr., human coronavirus e infects polarized airway epiplasmids l. processing limits gene transfer to polarized airway epithelia infection of human airway epithelia with h n , by adeno-associated virus polyethylenimine but not cationic lipids pseudotyped lentiviral vector can efficiently and stably promotes transgene delivery to the nucleus in mammalian transduce airway epithelia in vivo wood-quantitative studies on the nuclear transport of plasmid dna worth dna vector chemistry: the covalent attachment of signal peptides incorporation of adenovirus in calcium phosphate precipitates enhances gene transfer to airway ( ) single nuclear localization signal peptide is sufficient to carry - . dna to the cell nucleus adenovirus-mediated gene transfer to ciliated airway epithelia peptide nucleic acids: versatile tools for gene requires prolonged incubation time ( ) virus type to , -linked sialic acid is required for gene - . transfer nuclear import and export of viruses and virus genomes respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) infects ciliated cells of airway import of adenovirus dna involves the nuclear suppl. ( ) abstr. . pore complex receptor can / nup and histone h a versatile vector for montagnier, gene and oligonucleotide transfer into cells in culture and in p. charneau, hiv- genome nuclear import is mediated by a vivo: polyethylenimine eponge a protons: un moyen d'entrer dans une gene transfer by lentiviral vectors is limited by nucleaŕc ellule auquel les virus n'ont pas pense cyclophosphamide di transient immunosuppression allows transgene exminishes inflammation and prolongs transgene expression pression following readministration of adeno-associated viral following delivery of adenoviral vectors to mouse liver and vectors successful readministration of adeno-associated virus vectors budesonide enhances repeated gene transfer and expression to the mouse lung requires transient immunosuppression in the lung with adenoviral vectors efficient expression of cftr function prevents formation of blocking iga antibodies to recombiwith adeno-associated virus vectors that carry shortened nant adenovirus and allows repeated gene therapy to mouse cftr genes repeated administracapacity with trans-splicing or overlapping vectors: a quantion of adenoviral vectors in lungs of human cd transgenic titative comparison expanding aav packaging ( ) - . capacity with trans-splicing and overlapping vectors: a antibody to cd ( ) abstr. . ligand inhibits both humoral and cellular immune responses to mouse airway blunting of immune second dose of a cftr cdna-liposome complex is as responses to adenoviral vectors in mouse liver and lung with effective as the first dose in restoring camp-dependent ctla ig readministration of adenovirus vector in nonhuman primate lungs by blockade of cd -nichols pegylation of adenotions of cationic lipids for efficient gene transfer to the lung, virus with retention of infectivity and protection from hum basis of complexed with polyethylene glycol and cationic lipid is pulmonary toxicity associated with cationic lipid-mediated shielded from neutralizing antibodies in vitro, gene ther. gene transfer to the mammalian lung circumvention of anti-adenovirus neutralizing safety of a single aerosol administration of escalating doses immunity by administration of an adenoviral vector of an of the cationic lipid gl- / dope / dmpe-peg alternate serotype sponses against the virus and allow for significant gene a.m. krieg, cpg motifs in bacterial dna cause inflammaexpression upon readministration in the lung contribugino, repeated delivery of adeno-associated virus vectors to tion of plasmid dna to inflammation in the lung after the rabbit airway gelhardt, vector-specific complementation profiles of two . independent primary defects in cystic fibrosis airways transplant immunosuppression increases and waldrep, transgene expression in mouse airway epithelium prolongs transgene expression following adenoviral-mediby aerosol gene therapy with pei-dna complexes, mol. ated transfection of rat lungs cheng, biosynthetic and growth abnormalities are associ adenoviral vector expressing icp inhibated with high-level expression of cftr in heterologous its adenovirus-specific cytotoxic t lymphocytes in cells expression of the human cftr gene in epithelial cells sion of df cftr in normal lung after site-specific high and sustained transgene expression in vivo from modification of cftr sequences by sfhr, gene ther. plasmid vector containing a hybrid ubiquitin promoter conversion of wild-type cftr to the g d increased duration of transgene expression in the lung with mutation in primary rat hepatocytes using rna / dna plasmid dna vectors harbouring adenovirus e open oligonucleotides epstein-barr virus / human vector provides silverman, r. kole, correction of aberrant splicing of the high-level, long-term expression of a -antitrypsin in mice cftr) gene by antisense oligonucleotides expression of the human cftr gene from episomal orip-ebna control of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator expression by bap repair of cftr epithelial cell line, gene ther. ( ) - . mrna by spliceosome-mediated rna trans-splicing virus vector genomes are primarily responsible for stable zhou partial correction of endogenous df cftr in human cystic fibrosis airway epithelia by spliceosome evidence for stem-cell niches in the - . tracheal epithelium magnetofection of permanent and primary efficiency of gene transfer for of parts) ( ) abstr. . restoration of normal airway epithelial function in cystic fibrosis fection: enhancing and targeting gene delivery by magnetic a force in vitro and in vivo utero aav-mediated gene transfer to rabbit enpulmonary epithelium development of reexpression following readministration of an adenoviral a ferret model of the cystic fibrosis, pediatr. pulmonol. vector in adult mice after initial in utero adenoviral towards an ovine model of cystic fibrosis gene transfer into the a. fetal primate: evidence for the secretion of transgene delsing cftr modulates lung secretory cell prolifer-abstr. . ation and differentiation key: cord- -i h csb authors: xu, yi; zhou, wenwu; zhou, yijun; wu, jianxiang; zhou, xueping title: transcriptome and comparative gene expression analysis of sogatella furcifera (horváth) in response to southern rice black-streaked dwarf virus date: - - journal: plos one doi: . /journal.pone. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: i h csb background: the white backed planthopper (wbph), sogatella furcifera (horváth), causes great damage to many crops by direct feeding or transmitting plant viruses. southern rice black-streaked dwarf virus (srbsdv), transmitted by wbph, has become a great threat to rice production in east asia. methodology/principal findings: by de novo transcriptome assembling and massive parallel pyrosequencing, we constructed two transcriptomes of wbph and profiled the alternation of gene expression in response to srbsdv infection in transcriptional level. over million reads of high-quality dna sequences and different unigenes were generated using illumina technology from both viruliferous and non-viruliferous wbph. wbph has a very similar gene ontological distribution to other two closely related rice planthoppers, nilaparvata lugens and laodelphax striatellus. microsatellite loci were also predicted which could be useful for further evolutionary analysis. furthermore, comparative analysis of the two transcriptomes generated from viruliferous and non-viruliferous wbph provided a list of candidate transcripts that potentially were elicited as a response to viral infection. pathway analyses of a subset of these transcripts indicated that srbsdv infection may perturb primary metabolism and the ubiquitin-proteasome pathways. in addition, . % ( out of ) of the genes in cell cytoskeleton organization pathway showed obvious changes. our data also demonstrated that srbsdv infection activated the immunity regulatory systems of wbph, such as rna interference, autophagy and antimicrobial peptide production. conclusions/significance: we employed massively parallel pyrosequencing to collect ests from viruliferous and non-viruliferous samples of wbph. different unigenes have been obtained. we for the first time described the direct effects of a reoviridae family plant virus on global gene expression profiles of its insect vector using high-throughput sequencing. our study will provide a road map for future investigations of the fascinating interactions between reoviridae viruses and their insect vectors, and provide new strategies for crop protection. rice viral diseases are major threats to rice production and have been distributed worldwide across regions depending on rice cultivation [ ] . the most prevalent rice viruses are plant-infecting reoviruses in the genera phytoreovirus, fijivirus and oryzavirus of the family reoviridae. southern rice black streak dwarf virus (srbsdv), commonly known as rice black-streaked dwarf virus (rbsdv ), is a novel member of the fijivirus [ ] . since its first observation in in guangdong, china, srbsdv has spread rapidly and now causes large yield losses throughout southern and central china, northern vietnam, and recently has been identified in northern china [ , ] and japan [ ] . when infected with srbsdv, rice often develops stunted stems, dark green, twisted leaves, and white waxy swellings along veins on the abaxial surface of the leaves. when infected in seedling stage, rice shows more severe stunting and occasionally dried necrotic leaves. with infections after tillering, stunting is usually not so obvious, but disrupted head development and shrunken grains are apparent in many fields. srbsdv is non-enveloped and has an icosahedral capsid (t = ) composed of an outer and inner protein shells, similar to other known fijiviruses. virions contain ten linear genomic segments (named s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s , s ) of double-stranded rna (dsrna), which range from approximately . to . kb in size [ , ] . sequence comparisons and phylogenetic analyses show that srbsdv has a high sequence similarity with rbsdv, and that segments s and s have the highest relatedness [ ] . although the p - protein of srbsdv was recently reported to induce the formation of tubular structures in insect cells and may be a virus movement protein [ ] , the molecular functions of the translated proteins have not been documented. srbsdv is transmitted by the delphacid member white-backed planthopper (wbph), sogatella furcifera (hemiptera: delphacidae), in a persistent-propagative manner [ ] . wbph is one of the most economically important insect pests in asian countries [ ] and as an oligophagous plant-feeder, wbph can cause great harm by direct feeding or vectoring srbsdv to crops, such as rice, wheat and maize [ , ] . wbph is known for its long-distance migratory habits, the areas affected migration have been regarded to be the central and southeastern part of china, and vietnam, and these areas are consistent with spread and emergence of srbsdv during the past years [ , ] . the ecological and physiological perspectives of wbph and other hemipteran insect pests have been extensively studied [ , ] , but molecular mechanisms whereby the insect causes crop damage and yield losses are poorly understood. recently, transcriptomes of the planthoppers nilaparvata lugens and laodelphax striatellus were reported using next-generation dna sequencing techniques [ , ] . transcriptional response of whitefly to a geminivirus was also reported [ ] . these papers provide considerable information relevant to the genomics of planthoppers and whiteflies, and also generate some insight into the molecular mechanisms of insect defense against virus infection. however, the genomic resources available for wbph are still scarce and searches in genbank identified only about wbph ests. hence, this limited amount of data provides little information for transcriptional, proteomic, and gene functional analysis of wbph and almost no information is available to dissect the complicated interactions between the newly emerged srbsdv and its vector wbph. however, next-generation high-throughput dna sequencing technique has provided unprecedented fascinating opportunities for gene discovery of wbph and detection of the global transcription responses to srbsdv infection. here, we constructed two transcriptomes of wbph and profiled the alternation of gene expression in response to srbsdv infection at the transcriptional level. as a whole, distinct unigenes have been identified and the results indicated that srbsdv infection can potentially perturb primary metabolism and the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway of wbph and activate immune regulatory systems, such as rna interfering, autophagy and antimicrobial peptide production. to our knowledge, this is the first report to define the wbph transcriptome. illumina sequencing and reads assembly as described in the methods, viruliferous and non-viruliferous wbph whole body cdna libraries were subjected to illumina sequencing platform, resulting in , , and , , reads, respectively. after cleaning and quality checks, short sequences were assembled, resulting in and contigs and data are archived at the ncbi sequence read archive (sra) under accession number srp (http://www. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sra). using paired end-joining and gap-filling methods, these contigs were further assembled into , scaffolds with a mean length of base pair (bp). after clustering the scaffolds with the nucleotide sequences available at ncbi, sequence data from the two libraries were combined, and unigenes were finally obtained with a mean length of bp ( table ). the length distribution of total unigenes had similar patterns between viruliferous and non-viruliferous wbph samples, suggesting there was no bias in the construction of the cdna libraries ( figure ). however, some unigenes were obtained only from viruliferous or non-viruliferous samples (data not shown) and we believe these differences may be caused by distinctions that arise from long-term ecological adaptation to virus infection. all files of the assembled contigs and scaffolds from viruliferous, nonviruliferous wbph, and the combined est libraries are available upon request. to annotate the unigenes, we searched reference sequences using blastx against the non-redundant (nr) ncbi protein database with a cut-off e-value of . a total of ( . % of all distinct sequences) unigenes provided a blast result (table s ). the species distributions of the best match result for each sequence were shown in figure and table s . the sequences of wbph had a . % matches with the red flour beetle (tribolium castaneum) sequences, followed by . % and . % with honey bee (apis mellifera) and the pea aphid (acyrthosiphon pisum), respectively. it was surprising that wbph shared the highest similarity with the red flour beetle in the blast annotation. a similar pattern has also been reported in the brown planthopper (nilaparvata lugens) with the transcriptome of n. lugens having a similarity of . % matches with the red flour beetle sequences, . % with the body louse (pediculus humanus corporis) and . % with the pea aphids, respectively [ ] . we used the go assignment to classify the functions of predicted wbph unigenes. go is a gene functional classification system which offers a dynamic-updated controlled vocabulary and a strictly defined concept to comprehensively describe properties of genes and their products in any organism [ ] . go has three ontologies: molecular function, cellular component and biological process. among , annotated unigenes, approximately ( . %) of the unigenes could be annotated in go based on sequence homology (table s ) . when compared with the other two rice planthoppers (n. lugens and l. striatellus), wbph had a very similar go distribution ( figure ). this distribution is quite reasonable given that the three sap-feeding planthopper species not only belong to the same family delphacidae in the evolutionary level, but also have similar ecological niches in the rice eco-system. in addition, go analysis also showed a similar distribution of gene functions for non-viruliferous and viruliferous wbph (figure ), indicating that the number of genes expressed in each go category was not significantly affected by srbsdv infection. molecular markers are widely applied in the study of insect evolution and differentiation. as mentioned before, wbph is well known for its yearly migration across asian countries, resulting in the spread of srbsdv in east asia. a critical problem in the study of wbph migration is lack of an effective molecular marker, which would be helpful for define of migration pathways. by using de novo assembly of transcriptome sequences, we have identified simple sequence repeats (ssrs) or microsatellites in wbph. according to predictions, about . % of protein-coding sequences possessed such repeats, of which . % were trinucleotide repeats, with (aag) n being the most frequent motif ( . %), followed by . % dinucleotide and . % tetranucleotide repeats ( figure , table s ). the results are consistent with the recent reports indicating that trinucleotide repeats are the most abundant microsatellites in coding ests [ , ] . previous work revealed that (aac) n is the most frequent motif in l. striatellus [ ] . the different predicted trinucleotide repeats in the two transcriptomes defined for the two available rice planthopper genomes may reflect distinct adaptive behaviors of these related insects. the large numbers of potential molecular markers found in our study will be particularly useful for future genetic mapping, parentage analysis, genotyping and gene flow studies of these species. to identify differentially expressed genes in response to srbsdv infection, the numbers of clean tags for each gene were calculated, and then individual sets of reads were mapped back to the previously assembled transcript and counted as a proxy for gene expression. the differentially expressed transcripts between the two samples were identified using an algorithm developed by audic et al [ ] . the expressed transcripts were assigned into groups according to their functions, such as biological process ( sequences, figure a , table s ), cellular component ( sequences, figure b , table s ) and molecular function ( sequences, figure c , table s ), and the distribution of every ontology was shown in figure . totally, % of the differentially expressed genes were up-regulated in the viruliferous wbph ( figure and figure a ). the detected fold changes (log ratio) of gene expression ranged from to + , and more than % of the genes were up-or down-regulated between . to . fold ( figure b ). among the molecular function assignments, a high percentage of genes were assigned to cellular and metabolism process genes ( . %), and . % were related to biotic stimulus genes ( figure ). to validate the digital gene expression (dge) result, we compared the expression profiles of the non-viruliferous and viruliferous wbph using qrt-pcr. we selected unigenes randomly, of which demonstrated a concordant direction of change for both dge and qrt-pcr (table s ) . of the selected unigenes, nine were inconsistent between dge and qrt-pcr. this difference might be caused by a lower sensitivity of qrt-pcr than dge, and read coverage may be uneven across the transcript length, owing to sequencing biases [ , ] . nevertheless, qrt-pcr analysis confirmed the direction of change detected by dge analysis, indicating that our results are reliable. as mentioned above, viral infections cause dramatic changes in cellular and metabolic processes. for the primary metabolism analyses, out of genes ( . %) were down-regulated in viruliferous wbph, most of which were involved in translation, amino acid metabolism, and biosynthesis of ribosomes, spliceosomes and aminoacyl-trnas (table and figure ). these results suggest that protein synthesis and amino acid metabolism of viruliferous wbph were inhibited by srbsdv infection, which are consistent with previous reports in wasps (campoletis sonorensis) and whiteflies [ , ] . in wasps, when infected by a polydnavirus, translation of specific growth-associated host proteins was inhibited [ ] ; and in whiteflies, the primary metabolism genes were dramatically down-regulated by tomato yellow leaf curl china virus (tylccnv) infection [ ] . in addition, our results indicated that a large percentage of the genes involved in lipid metabolism and lipogeneic compound metabolism were upregulated (table and figure ). in contrast to whiteflies, tylccnv infection causes the down-regulation of lipid metabolism. a possible explanation for this phenomenon is the differences in replication styles of the two viruses. srbsdv, a typical dsrna virus, replicates their genomes strictly in the cytoplasm, and the lipid biosynthesis and related pathways are necessary for membrane proliferation that occurs in infected cells. tylccnv is a dna virus that enters nucleus directly for its genome replication, membrane proliferation is less extensive. effects on lipid metabolism have also been reported in other virus infections, for instance, human cytomegalovirus (cmv) infection resulted in increases in the flux of the fatty acid biosynthesis pathway genes that were essential for optimal viral growth in fibroblasts [ ] . furthermore, hepatitis c virus has been shown to co-opt the prenylation pathway to promote the efficient replication of its genome and possibly encapsidation [ , ] . all of these observations together with our data suggest that perturbation of lipid metabolism in a range of virally infected cells is a hallmark of cellular changes associated with viral infection. viruses depend on host's machineries to replicate and express their genomes, and replicating cells have large pools of deoxynucleotides and high levels of key enzyme activities that viruses exploit during replication [ ] [ ] [ ] . so viruses have developed strategies to regulate the host cell cycle to facilitate their replication. our results indicated that out genes ( . %) related to cell cycle were altered (table ) . compared with the mitotic (m) phase, there were more up-regulated genes during inter-phase according to our dge results (data not shown). meanwhile, pathway enrichment analyses also showed that gene expression patterns in the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway were significantly altered. the proteasome is the major non-lysosomal proteolytic machine in eukaryotes [ ] . in animals and plants, perturbation of the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway has already been shown to be caused by many viruses [ , ] . for example, adenovirus e a protein can directly interact with the s proteasome regulatory components (s and s ), that are involved in regulation of the activities of s proteasome [ ] . inhibition of the proteasome by different chemical compounds not only impairs entry but also affects rna synthesis and subsequent protein expression in coronavirus infections [ ] . ubiquitination and deubiquitination of the nucleoprotein (np) were also reported to regulate the replication of influenza a virus rna [ ] . in the plant phyla, the geminivirus bsctv c protein was reported to attenuate the degradation of samdc and suppresses dna methylation-mediated gene silencing by inhibiting s proteasome pathway in arabidopsis [ ] . also in arabidopsis, perturbation of ubiquitin-proteasome system affects accumulation of turnip yellow mosaic virus (tymv) rna-dependent rna polymerase during viral infection [ ] . in our work, out of differentially expressed genes were related to the ubiquitinproteasome pathway, and a majority of these were down-regulated (table and figure ). the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway is involved in regulation of metabolic adaptation and immune responses and may function by degrading numerous short-lived proteins, such as regulatory proteins [ ] [ ] [ ] . indeed, all of these pathways were significantly affected in viruliferous wbph. among the differentially expressed genes in the viruliferous wbph, . % ( out of ) genes related to cytoskeleton organization were altered, including microtubule cytoskeleton organization genes and actin cytoskeleton organization genes. cytoskeleton-dependent intracellular transport is a common strategy for virus transport to intracellular destinations [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . for example, association with microtubules is necessary for the release of rice gall dwarf virus (rgdv) from cultured insect vector cells [ ] ; the pns of rice dwarf virus (rdv) induces tubular structures that facilitate virus spread in the vector nephotettix cincticeps [ ] . rgdv and rdv, together with srbsdv that we studied in this work, all belong to the reoviridae family, so a potential similar cytoskeleton regulatory pathway may exist among these viruses. meanwhile, according to a recent work using a recombinant insect baculovirus expression system, the srbsdv p - protein formed tubular structures in insect cells [ ] . by integrating these data with our transcriptome results, it is reasonable to believe that the dynamics of cytoskeleton has a major role in virus infection. cellular and humoral responses are major response systems used by insects against microbial infection [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . among the differentially expressed genes in viruliferous wbph, many genes related to cellular and humoral immune response were upregulated (table and figure ). for example, % ( out ) of the unigenes were up-regulated in the lysosome pathway. b-cell lymphoma protein (bcl- ), an important regulation factor in humoral immune responses, is believed to be involved in germinal center b-cell functions and the immune response [ , ] . this protein acts as a sequence-specific repressor of transcription, and has been shown to modulate the transcription of startdependent il- responses of b cells and altered expression of bcl- leads to modulated il- levels and increases in the immune response [ ] . also, among the differentially expressed genes, antimicrobial peptide and melanization-related product synthesizing genes were also up-regulated in the wbph. phospholipase a products are considered to interfere with viral infection and it has been found that several phospholipases a can efficiently protect host cells from hiv- replication [ , ] . down-regulation of the phospholipase a inhibitor subunit b (table ) may be helpful for the releasing of active phospholipases a , and thus improve host defenses against virus attacks. rna interference (rnai) silences gene expression through small interfering rnas (sirnas) and micrornas (mirnas) [ , ] . the rnai system was initially described in plants, and in recent years, some work has revealed that rnai is a major mechanism to target viruses in some insects [ , ] . in d. melanogaster, dicer- produces sirnas, whereas dicer- recognizes precursors of mirnas. in these cases, the small rnas are assembled with an argonaute (ago) protein into related effector complexes, such as the rna-induced silencing complex (risc), to guide specific rna silencing [ , , ] . in our transcriptome data, we found records of genes ( agos, dicers, dsrna binding proteins) involved in the rna interference pathway. in the dge results (table ) , some involved genes were up-regulated in viruliferous wbph, such as dicer and dicer , but no substantial difference in the expression levels of putative rnai related genes was found in the l. striatellus after infection with rice table . expression profiles of genes in the ubiquitin-proteasome and cell cycle pathways. stripe virus (rsv), a tenuivirus [ ] . these differences may be caused by the diversity among the replication cycles of the two viruses or the host defense systems. the latter hypothesis is supported by recent findings that rsv and rdv (both plant reoviruses) caused different effects in the rice rna interference pathway [ ] . we employed massively parallel pyrosequencing to collect ests from viruliferous and non-viruliferous samples of wbph. in total, we obtained different unigenes, and have provided a major genomic resource that will be useful for subsequent investigations of the biology of wbph and generation of new insecticide targets. we for the first time described the direct effects of a reoviridae family plant virus on global gene expression profiles of its insect vector using high-throughput sequencing. the genes involved in primary metabolism, ubiquitin-proteasome, cytoskeleton dynamics and immune responses were up regulated in viruliferous wbph. in addition, we found that an rnai pathway exists in wbph, and this pathway may play an important role in virus defenses. our study will provide a road map for future investigations of the fascinating interactions between reoviridae viruses and their insect vectors, and provide new strategies for crop protection. the wbph culture used in this study originated from jiangsu province, china. srbsdv-infected and un-infected rice (oryza sativa cv. nipponbare, k ) plants were used to feed wbph in all experiments. for viruliferous wbph, srbsdv-infected rice seedlings were collected from fields and then moved to a beaker after discarding the old leaves. then wbph second instar nymphs were swept into the beaker, and the beaker was enclosed with nylon mesh. after two days of feeding, the rice seedlings were gently turned upside-down, and the juvenile planthoppers were swept onto healthy rice seedlings. all plants were grown in soil at uc, % relative humidity in a growth incubator, under a long day photoperiod of h in light and h in darkness. sample preparation and rna isolation after two days of feeding on srbdv infected rice, wbph were maintained on uninfected rice seedlings for more than days (viral circulative period). pcr was then used to ensure that viral rnas were present in the individual wbph. during this time, non-viruliferous wbph, as the control group, were treated identically. approximately non-viruliferous and viruliferous wbph nymphs and adults were collected for rna extraction. total rna was isolated using the trizol reagent (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca, usa) according to the manufacturer's protocol. the concentration and quality of total rna were determined by a nano-drop spectrophotometer (thermo fisher scientific, wilmington, de, usa). cdna library preparation and illumina sequencing for transcriptome analysis rna was purified from mg of pooled total rna using oligo (dt) magnetic beads and fragmented into - nucleotides length sequences in the fragmentation buffer. the cleaved poly-(a) rna was transcribed using oligo (dt) (takara, japan), and then second-strand cdna synthesis was performed. after end repair and ligation of adaptors, the products were amplified by pcr and purified using qiaquick pcr purification kit to create a cdna library. the cdna library was sequenced on the illumina sequencing platform (hiseq ). the raw reads from the images were generated by solexa ga pipeline . . after removal of low quality reads, processed reads were assembled using short oligonucleotide analysis package (soap) de novo software and clustered with tigr gene indices (tgi) clustering tools [ ] . all raw transcriptome data have been deposited in the sra database (ncbi). the generated unigenes larger than bp were analyzed by searching the genbank and swissprot databases with the blastx algorithm. (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/). gene ontology annotations and cog classfication of the unigenes were determined with the blast go (http://www.blast go.org/) and inter-proscan software (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/tools/pfa/ iprscan/). ssrs were identified with the microsatellite identification tool (misa) (http://pgrc.ipk-gatersleben.de/misa/). misa is based on perl script designed to allow the identification and characterization of microsatellites in a comparative genomic context. detection criteria were constrained to perfect repeat motifs of - bp and a minimum repeat number of , , , , and , for mono-, di-, tri-, tetra-, penta-and hexa-nucleotide microsatellites, respectively. a rigorous algorithm was developed to identify differentially expressed genes (degs) between the non-viruliferous and viruliferous wbph as described [ ] . short-read sequence data from non-viruliferous and viruliferous wbph were mapped separately against the reference set of assembled transcripts with burrows-wheeler aligner (bwa) . . a [ ] , relative transcript levels were output as rpkm (reads per kilobase of exon model per million mapped reads) values, which were taken into account the transcript abundance. the false discovery rate (fdr) was used to determine the threshold p-value in multiple tests. a fdr, . and an absolute value of the log ratio . provided thresholds to determine significant differences in gene expression. the differentially expressed genes were used for go enrichment analyses as described [ ] . the correlation between two libraries was statistically assessed by calculation of the pearson correlation coefficient (data not shown). to confirm the results of pyrosequencing analysis, the expression levels of randomly selected genes were measured in non-viruliferous and viruliferous insects by qrt-pcr. total rnas from each sample were extracted using trizol reagent (invitrogen) and treated with dnase i (invitrogen) according to the manufacturer's protocol. the concentration of each rna sample was adjusted to mg/ml with nuclease-free water and total rna was reverse transcribed in a ml reaction system using the amv rna pcr kit (takara). qpr-pcr was carried out on the lightcycler @ ii with lightcycler @ sybr i master (roche applied science, basel, switzerland) under the following conditions: uc for min; and cycles of uc for s, uc for s, and uc for s, followed by melting curve generation ( uc to uc). primers used in qrt-pcr for validation of differentially expressed genes were shown in table s . each gene was analyzed in triplicate, after which the average threshold cycle (ct) was calculated per sample, and an endogenous s rrna gene of wbph was used for normalization. a no template control sample (nuclease free water) was included in the experiment to detect contamination and determine the degree of dimer formation (data not shown). biology and epidemiology of rice virus southern rice blackstreaked dwarf virus: a new proposed fijivirus species in the family 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conserved cellular microrna precursors de novo assembly of human genomes with massively parallel short read sequencing fast and accurate short read alignment with burrows-wheeler transform we thank tong zhou, fenfen wang, yanyuan bao for assistance in feeding and collecting insects, jian xue for advice on data analysis, and xiaoying chen and chuanxi zhang for supplying the gene ontology data of l. striatellus and n. lugens. conceived and designed the experiments: xz jw. performed the experiments: yx. analyzed the data: yx wz. contributed reagents/ materials/analysis tools: yx yz jw. wrote the paper: yx xz jw. key: cord- -rjseio s authors: sim, winnie h; wagner, josef; cameron, donald j; catto‐smith, anthony g; bishop, ruth f; kirkwood, carl d title: expression profile of genes involved in pathogenesis of pediatric crohn's disease date: - - journal: j gastroenterol hepatol doi: . /j. - . . .x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: rjseio s background and aim: expression profiling of genes specific to pediatric crohn's disease (cd) patients was performed to elucidate the molecular mechanisms underlying disease cause and pathogenesis at disease onset. methods: we used suppressive subtractive hybridization (ssh) and differential screening analysis to profile the mrna expression patterns of children with cd and age‐ and sex‐matched controls without inflammatory bowel disease (ibd). results: sequence analysis of clones enriched by ssh identified functionally annotated human genes, represented by clones. the genes have potential involvement in gene networks, such as antigen presentation, inflammation, infection mechanism, connective tissue development, cell cycle and cancer. twenty‐eight genes were previously described in association with cd, while were new genes not previously reported in the context of ibd. additionally, of the genes have been previously implicated in bacterial and viral infections. quantitative real‐time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction performed on ileal‐derived rna from cd and nine non‐ibd patients confirmed the upregulation of extracellular matrix gene mmp (p = . ), and cell proliferation gene reg a (p = . ) in our pediatric cd cohort. conclusion: the retrieval of genes previously reported in association with adult cd emphasizes the importance of these genes in the pediatric setting. the observed upregulation of reg a and mmp , and their known impact on cell proliferation and extracellular matrix remodeling, agrees with the clinical behavior of the disease. moreover, the expressions of bacterial‐ and virus‐related genes in our cd‐patient tissues support the concept that microbial agents are important in the etiopathogenesis of cd. crohn's disease (cd) is a chronic inflammatory disorder of the bowel. the cause of cd is unclear and a complex interplay between genetic, environmental and immune components has been implicated. the prevailing hypothesis for the pathogenesis of cd is that an aberrant immune response, generated against microbial agents in genetically susceptible hosts, results in chronic intestinal inflammation. thus far, genes have been implicated in cd based on genome-wide association studies, and include genes involved in autophagy, maintenance of mucosal barrier integrity and immune regulation. , the nod /card on chromosome was the first locus implicated, mutations of which are thought to affect bacterial recognition. subsequently, four genes, il ra, il rb, psmg and tnfrsf b, have been linked to pediatric cd. , the polygenic nature of cd suggests that direct targeting of individual disease susceptibility genes is unlikely to be therapeu-tically effective. key molecules in pathophysiology, downstream of regulatory events induced by different causative factors are more likely targets for therapeutic interventions. insights into key gene-environmental interactions relevant to disease pathogenesis could help identify causative stimuli (e.g. infectious agents) based on molecular signatures of the host response. to date, microarray studies carried out on intestinal tissue of cd patients have identified several molecular biomarkers relating to inflammation, abnormal immunoregulation and cell biology, metabolism, signaling, transcription, electrolyte transport and extracellular matrix structure. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the suppressive subtractive hybridization (ssh) technique provides a complementary, non-biased approach to the identification of new genes or pathogens associated with cd. in ssh, suppression pcr normalizes the representation of rare and abundant cdna within the target population, and the subtraction step removes common nucleic acid sequences between the target specimen and its matched control. this results in an enriched pool of sequences specific to the target population. the advantage of this approach is that no assumed knowledge of gene identity is required, as it does not rely on a defined set of gene library or conserved sequence signatures as probes for gene identification. hence ssh complements microarray studies by identifying potentially important genes that may not be represented on the array platforms utilized by inflammatory bowel disease (ibd) microarray studies. ssh has been successfully used in the discovery of novel viruses, and the transcriptome profiling of human hepatoma and bone regeneration. [ ] [ ] [ ] in the present study, we used ssh to analyze the differential expression profile in ileal biopsies from children with cd compared with age-and sex-matched non-ibd control children. the purpose of this study was to examine the initial events occurring during cd pathogenesis. tissue selection. ileal biopsy specimens ( - mm ) were obtained from patients (aged - ) with symptoms suggestive of ibd and undergoing initial diagnostic endoscopy at the royal children's hospital, melbourne, australia. all tissue specimens were stored in rnalater (ambion, melbourne, australia) at - °c until nucleic acid extraction. the diagnosis of cd was established using standard clinical endoscopic and histopathological criteria according to the montreal classification. patients with esophagitis, mild non-specific gastritis or no known pathological diagnosis were used as non-ibd controls. none of the patients had received antibiotics or immunosuppressive drugs prior to endoscopy. demographic and clinical details of patients assayed by suppressive subtractive hybridization and real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr) are presented in tables and , respectively. each biopsy was mechanically homogenized, the supernatant harvested, and rna extracted using the allprep dna/rna mini kit (qiagen, melbourne, australia) according to the manufacturer's protocol. all extractions were conducted in a biological safety cabinet class ii. the cdspecific subtractive library was constructed using the pcr-select cdna subtraction kit according to the user manual provided (clontech, palo alto, ca, usa). an overview of the ssh technique is described in figure s . ileal rna were obtained separately from four cd and four non-ibd patients, then pooled into cd and non-ibd groups for the ssh assay. the patient groups were matched based on sex, mean age and common genotypes associated with cd, to minimize heterogeneity. differential screening. the library of differentially expressed cdna specific to the cd population was constructed using the topo ta cloning kit (invitrogen, melbourne, australia). five thousand randomly selected clones from the cd-specific subtractive library were spotted onto hybond nylon membrane endoscopic presentation of ileal region where biopsy is taken. where two biopsies taken from separate ileal locations of a patient differ in presentation, both are described here. § genotyping of patients based on single-nucleotide polymorphism were performed for an earlier study. major alleles are del, c, g, g, c and a; for nod leu fsinc, arg trp, gly arg; il , atg l and tlr respectively. cd, crohn's disease; ssh, suppressive subtractive hybridization. (amersham biosciences, sydney, australia) in ¥ by arrays by the australian genome research facility (agrf), melbourne. cd-specific sequences were detected by reverse hybridization with digoxigenin (dig)-labeled probes (roche, sydney, australia) synthesized directly from cdna of the cd and non-ibd subtractive library, according to manufacturer's protocol (dig applications manual for filter hybridization, roche). clones with greater than three times hybridization affinity to the cd-library-specific probes as compared to non-ibd-library-specific probes were selected for sequencing. the primers used are detailed in table s . quantification of cdna by real-time pcr was performed using the sybr greener qpcr super mix for abi prism (invitrogen), in accordance with manufacturer's instructions. analysis of real-time rt-pcr reactions and quantification of rna was determined using the system sequence detection software version . (applied biosystems). each sample was analyzed in triplicate. gene expression levels for individual patient samples were normalized relative to the expression of ribosomal protein l (rpl ) housekeeping gene. calculations were based on the pfaffl method, a mathematical method based on the real-time pcr efficiencies. the origene clone cdna ( fg) of each gene was used as the calibrator in every assay to allow for direct comparison of gene expression for all samples analyzed across multiple assays. statistical analysis. the mann-whitney u-test was used to compare the difference in median values between gene expression in cd and non-ibd patient samples. a p-value of less than . was considered statistically significant. all statistical tests were performed using sigmastat, version . (systat software inc., san jose, ca, usa). this study received ethics approval from the human ethics committee of the royal children's hospital (ehrc no. ). written and informed consent was obtained from each individual, parent or guardian prior to enrolment in the study. sequence analysis of differentially expressed clones from the cd subtraction library identified clones with high homology to genbank sequences. these included clones, which had matches to human mrna sequences representing annotated genes. the remaining clones had sequence similarity to mitochondrial and ribosomal genes, hypothetical proteins, expressed sequence tag (est), human chromosomes, bacterial and animal genes. the annotated genes were assigned to eight functional clusters based on information obtained from the ucsc genome browser and ncbi entrez gene database. the map location, gene function and frequency of ssh clone representation for each gene is listed in table s . we noted an enrichment of immune function genes and inflammatory mediators (cluster i and ii); extracellular matrix, remodeling, and ion transport coding genes (cluster iii); metabolic enzymes and signal transducers (cluster iv); genes involved in cell-cycle regulation (cluster v); cancer-related genes (cluster vi); transcription factors and post-transcription modifiers (cluster vi) and genes with unknown function (clusters viii). to assess the quality of the ssh data, genes representing different clone abundance levels were selected for real-time rt-pcr quantification on ileal biopsies. three genes were selected based on their representation of the ssh detection frequency range (high: > ; moderate: - ; low: < ), and also on potential functional interest with respect to cd pathogenesis. reg a ( clones) was selected based on its cell proliferative function and earlier reports of upregulation in colonic tissue of adult cd patients. , mmp ( clones) is involved in wound healing and has been proposed to have a protective role in colitis by regulating barrier function and vascularisation. anpep ( clones) has previously been reported to be a receptor for coronavirus. real-time rt-pcr analysis of the three genes was conducted on ileum-derived rna from cd and nine non-ibd patients, in triplicate. for cd patients cd , cd and cd , biopsies taken from both endoscopically affected and unaffected ileal locations were used in the analysis. individual gene expression levels for each sample were represented as fold change ratios relative to the expression of positive controls (origene clones for mmp , anpep and reg a). the individual expression levels (fold change value) of each gene for the biopsy samples of the cd and nine non-ibd patients are depicted in figure . using the mann-whitney statistical test for non-parametric and unpaired populations, the transcript expression levels of mmp were found to be significantly higher in cd ileal biopsies as compared to non-ibd ileal biopsies (p = . ). the cd population had a trend towards a higher level of reg a transcript expression, although the difference was not statistically significant (p = . ). there was no significant difference in anpep transcript expression between cd and non-ibd patient samples (p = . ). the real-time rt-pcr results validated that genes represented by > clones enriched by subtractive hybridization were expressed in higher abundance in cd as compared with non-ibd ileal biopsies. reg a, mmp and anpep expression. analysis of reg a, mmp and anpep gene expression across the cd patient samples revealed interesting patterns of expression. using a fold change ratio of as reference, four cd ileum samples (cd , cd , cd , cd un) with high levels of mmp expression, had low or negligible reg a and anpep expression (fig. ) . this inverse pattern of expression was also observed in the cd ileum samples where mmp gene expression was high. to contextualize our ssh findings, we compared our results with the data tables from seven microarray studies published previously, that had reported differential expression of genes between inflamed biopsies of cd and non-inflamed biopsies of non-ibd controls. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] of the annotated genes, genes have been previously analyzed by microarray ( table ) . the genes were either reported to be upregulated (n = ), downregulated (n = ) or variable (n = ) depending on biopsy site assayed. there were genes identified in this study that have not been previously described in the context of ibd investigations. to identify biological and functional networks based on potential gene interactions among the ssh enriched genes, we utilized the "core" program of the ingenuity pathway analysis software. the majority of the genes were classified into six networks comprising the following functions: (i) antigen presentation, inflammatory response, cancer; (ii) cancer, cell cycle, cellular compromise; (iii) connective tissue development and function, tissue morphology, developmental disorder; (iv) infection mechanism, genetic disorder, nutritional disease; (v) cell signaling, cellular assembly and organization, cellular function and maintenance; and (vi) amino acid metabolism, molecular transport, small molecule biochemistry (table ). network contained the highest number of ssh genes. interestingly, / genes in this network have been previously reported in microarray studies. the five newly identified genes within this network are cathepsin (ctss), dopa decarboxylase (ddc), integrin beta (itgb ), poly adp-ribose polymerase (parp ) and prothymosin alpha (ptma). figure depicts a schematic representation of this gene network. ctss and itgb appear to be involved in multiple pathways, including several direct and indirect associations with the previously reported genes. to elucidate evidence for microbial pathogenesis, the functionally annotated genes were individually searched against the ncbi entrez gene database for reported functional associations with viral or bacterial infections. a total of genes associated with microbial pathogenesis were identified (table ). the pathogenesis of cd is thought to involve a complex interplay between the microbiome, the environment and multiple genetic factors. to gain further insights into the gene regulation processes involved, several gene array analyses have been performed using surgical resections or endoscopic biopsies of the colon obtained during treatment of adults with known ibd. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] however, the chronicity of the disease process and variability of treatments used are likely to have influenced gene expression profiles in these patients. our study used tissue obtained at initial diagnosis in treatment-naive children with early onset disease. to date, there have been very few studies of events at the genetic level during early disease onset in children. a recent study examining the genome-wide expression profile of pediatric ibd patients was conducted using colonic tissue. our study extends these initial gene expression profile studies by comparing ileal biopsies from a pediatric cohort of cd and non-ibd patients. ssh analysis led to the identification of functionally annotated genes, specific to the cd cohort. comparison of our ssh data with existing microarray studies revealed that of these genes are novel and genes have been previously identified by microarray to be either upregulated or downregulated in the cd population. gene networks. the antigen presentation, inflammatory response and cancer gene network (network ) comprise one-third figure the relative expression levels of reg a, mmp and anpep in ileal biopsies from crohn's disease (cd) and nine non-inflammatory bowel disease (ibd) patients. the relative expression ratio of each gene was calculated based on real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr) efficiency and the crossing point deviation of the target patient sample versus the internal rpl control, according to pfaffl. of the genes identified by ssh, with a high proportion of genes previously identified to be differentially expressed in cd. this is partially attributable to acute inflammation of the biopsies of cd patients as compared with the non-inflamed biopsies of non-ibd controls. differences in gene expression profiles between inflamed and non-inflamed cd terminal ileum have been recently described. relative to non-ibd controls, the gene expressions of il- and saa were reportedly much higher in inflamed cd terminal ileum as compared to non-inflamed cd terminal ileum. new genes identified within this network include ctss, ddc, itgb , parp and ptma. based on the molecular interactions depicted in this network, ctss and itgb appear to be involved in , and with other genes previously reported as upregulated in cd population. ctss is mainly expressed in antigen-presenting cells and is required for the degradation of mhc-class-iiassociated invariant chains, necessary for proper mhc class ii antigen presentation. , integrins, which include itgb , are membrane receptors involved in cell adhesion and several processes, including immune response. itgb is expressed during hypoxic conditions, and can serve as an indicator of intestinal wound repair, which occurs only in a hypoxic environment. the reg a gene is involved in regulation of cell proliferation, and has been proposed to function as a mitogenic and/or an anti-apoptotic factor in ulcerative colitis (uc)-colitic cancer progression. its high expression levels have been correlated with the severity of intestinal inflammation in patients with uc, and microarray studies have reported its upregulation in the colon of adult ibd patients. , , similarly, we identified an upregulation of reg a in the terminal ileum of pediatric cd patients. this was however contrary to a recent study comparing the expression of reg a in the terminal ileum of adult cd and non-ibd controls, which reported a downregulation in reg a expression. the difference in reg a expression could indicate a distinction between the pathogenesis of early onset cd and adult-onset cd. based on the knowledge that reg a gene expression is associated with cancer development, the high level of reg a expression in the terminal ileum of some cd pediatric patients could indicate an increased risk for colorectal cancer development. individuals with early onset cd have been previously described to have an increased risk of developing colorectal cancer. the increased levels of mmp observed in cd ileum are consistent with previous studies conducted on colonic tissue where mmp is highly expressed in the intestinal epithelia during ibd. , other studies have suggested the involvement of mmp in the regulation of epithelial barrier function. since epithelial barrier dysfunction plays a central role in the pathogenesis of intestinal inflammation, the increased expression of mmp may serve as a response to counteract tissue damage, hence protecting against colitis. the fluctuation in reg a and mmp gene expression between ileal biopsies of different patients and also between biopsies taken at different ileal locations of the same patient, suggest a spatialtemporal nature of gene regulation during early cd pathogenesis. this finding is consistent with the clinical nature of cd, with its patchy distribution. glycoprotein processing (man a ); packaging (tgoln , eef a ) and possibly release (canx). evidence of response to bacterial infection is reflected by the enrichment of receptors for adherent invasive escherichia coli and helicobacter pylori (ceacam , cd ). , the enrichment of mmp , serpina , otud , macf , pls , muc and clca transcripts suggests the presence of infectious agent(s) early in disease pathway as these genes have previously been reported to be upregulated during bacterial or viral infections. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the involvement of slc a and sf b gene products in the impairment of intestinal glucose absorption and apoptosis due to hiv- -induced glucose channel mis-sorting and cell cycle arrest suggest the occurrence of viral activities in early cd pathogenesis. , the psme , ptma, hla-dra, lrrc and xrn genes or gene products have been previously reported to be associated with defense against viral and bacterial infections. [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] it is possible that these genes are differentially expressed in cd patients in response to infectious triggers. our study recognizes the limitation of the ssh technique whereby the cd subtraction library contained clones that are not differentially expressed, as shown by the anpep expression data. this limitation was also observed in previous studies. preliminary ssh data presented in this study were verified either by real-time pcr quantification or comparison to microarray data from studies performed on individuals with and without ibd. several of the genes anecdotally identified in the context of cd by our study have roles in microbial pathogenesis, promoting inflammation, epithelial remodeling, vesicular transport or cell differentiation and proliferation. these processes are relevant to cd pathogenesis, hence future investigations into the association between these novel gene candidates and cd could contribute to the understanding of the disease. suppressive subtractive hybridization method. restriction endonuclease-digested tester dna was split into two pools and ligated with adaptor or adaptor r. two successive rounds of hybridization with excess restriction endonuclease-digested driver dna followed. thereafter, single-stranded components of the adaptors were filled in. exponential amplification of tester-specific sequences is used to enrich for potential differentially expressed genes. type a molecules are significantly enriched, differentially expressed sequences, while cdna that are not differentially expressed form type c molecules with the driver. the concentration of high-and low-abundance sequences is equalized, whereby highly abundant molecules re-anneal to form type b and d molecules. during the second hybridization, remaining equalized and subtracted single-stranded tester cdna reassociate to form type e hybrids, with different ends corresponding to sequences of adaptor and adaptor r (adapted from clontech pcr-select cdna subtraction kit user manual [bd biosciences]). primers used for real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction quantification of anpep, reg a, mmp and rpl table s differentially expressed genes specific to crohn's disease (cd) ileum. genes within each functional category are listed in order of clone abundance please note: wiley-blackwell are not responsible for the content or functionality of any supporting materials supplied by the authors. any queries (other than missing material) should be directed to the corresponding author for the article. wh sim et al. mechanisms of disease: pathogenesis of crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis genome-wide meta-analysis increases to the number of confirmed crohn's disease susceptibility loci the genetics of crohn's disease mapping of a susceptibility locus for crohn's disease on chromosome loci on q and q are associated with pediatric-onset inflammatory bowel disease inflammatory bowel disease and mutations affecting the interleukin- receptor new technologies, human-microbe interactions, and the search for previously unrecognized pathogens activation of an il- :stat -dependent transcriptome in pediatric-onset inflammatory bowel disease dissection of the inflammatory bowel disease transcriptome using genome-wide cdna microarrays analysis of mucosal gene expression in inflammatory bowel disease by parallel oligonucleotide arrays regulation of gene expression in inflammatory bowel disease and correlation with ibd drugs: screening by dna microarrays ulcerative colitis and crohn's disease: distinctive gene expression profiles and novel susceptibility candidate genes characterization of intestinal gene expression profiles in crohn's disease by genome-wide microarray analysis genome-wide gene expression differences in crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis from endoscopic pinch biopsies: insights into distinctive pathogenesis suppression subtractive hybridization: a method for generating differentially regulated or tissue-specific cdna probes and libraries identification of herpesvirus-like dna sequences in aids-associated kaposi's sarcoma transcriptional profiling of bone regeneration. insight into the molecular complexity of wound repair differentially profiling the low-expression transcriptomes of human hepatoma using a novel ssh/microarray approach toward an integrated clinical, molecular and serological classification of inflammatory bowel disease: report of a working party of the montreal world congress of gastroenterology interaction of crohn's disease susceptibility genes in an australian paediatric cohort source: a unified genomic resource of functional annotations, ontologies, and gene expression data the ucsc genome browser database: update primer on the www for general users and for biologist programmers a new mathematical model for relative quantification in real-time rt-pcr selective ablation of matrix metalloproteinase- exacerbates experimental colitis: contrasting role of gelatinases in the pathogenesis of colitis aminopeptidase n is a major receptor for the entero-pathogenic coronavirus tgev human coronavirus e: receptor binding domain and neutralization by soluble receptor at degrees c ceacam acts as a receptor for adherent-invasive e. coli, supporting ileal mucosa colonization in crohn disease integrin alpha beta (cd c/ ) is a cellular receptor for kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (kshv/hhv- ) entry into the target cells helicobacter pylori binds to cd on gastric epithelial cells and stimulates interleukin- production cellular protein ttrap interacts with hiv- integrase to facilitate viral integration gp promotes transcytosis of human immunodeficiency virus type in genital tract-derived cell lines and primary endocervical tissue hiv- -mediated apoptosis of neuronal cells: proximal molecular mechanisms of hiv- -induced encephalopathy genetic and pharmacologic alteration of cathepsin expression influences reovirus pathogenesis htlv type i tax activation of the cxcr promoter by association with nuclear respiratory factor activity of lysosomal exoglycosidases in saliva of patients with hiv infection the hepatitis delta virus rna genome interacts with eef a , p (nrb), hnrnp-l, gapdh and asf/sf human herpesvirus- induces mvb formation, and virus egress occurs by an exosomal release pathway the measles virus (mv) glycoproteins interact with cellular chaperones in the endoplasmic reticulum and mv infection upregulates chaperone expression hiv- interaction with human mannose receptor (hmr) induces production of matrix metalloproteinase (mmp- ) through hmr-mediated intracellular signaling in astrocytes helicobacter pylori infection and short-term intake of low-dose aspirin have different effects on alpha- antitrypsin/alpha- peptidase inhibitor (alpha -pi) levels in antral mucosa and peripheral blood hiv- promotor insertion revealed by selective detection of chimeric provirus-host gene transcripts single-nucleotide polymorphisms associated with symptomatic infection and differential human gene expression in healthy seropositive persons each implicate the cytoskeleton, integrin signaling, and oncosuppression in the pathogenesis of human parvovirus b infection investigating the human immunodeficiency virus type -infected monocyte-derived macrophage secretome two atypical enteropathogenic escherichia coli strains induce the production of secreted and membrane-bound mucins to benefit their own growth at the apical surface of human mucin-secreting intestinal ht -mtx cells lps-induced mucin expression in human sinus mucosa can be attenuated by hclca inhibitors adenovirus infection inactivates the translational inhibitors e-bp and e-bp inhibitory effect of hiv- tat protein on the sodium-d-glucose symporter of human intestinal epithelial cells cleavage of poly(a)-binding protein by poliovirus c proteinase inhibits viral internal ribosome entry site-mediated translation human immunodeficiency virus type vpr induces g checkpoint activation by interacting with the splicing factor sap the role of the proteasome activator pa in mhc class i antigen processing novel function of prothymosin alpha as a potent inhibitor of human immunodeficiency virus type gene expression in primary macrophages hla and hepatitis b infection s rna narnavirus defies the antiviral activity of ski /xrn in saccharomyces cerevisiae human cathepsin s, but not cathepsin l, degrades efficiently mhc class ii-associated invariant chain in nonprofessional apcs essential role for cathepsin s in mhc class ii-associated invariant chain processing and peptide loading selective induction of integrin beta by hypoxia-inducible factor: implications for wound healing possible role of reg ialpha protein in ulcerative colitis and colitic cancer reg a expression is a prognostic marker in colorectal cancer and associated with peritoneal carcinomatosis increased risk of large-bowel cancer in crohn's disease with colonic involvement matrix metalloproteinase levels are elevated in inflammatory bowel disease genes expressed in pediatric crohn comparable expression of matrix metalloproteinases and in pouchitis and ulcerative colitis matrix metalloproteinases in inflammatory bowel disease: boon or a bane? upregulation of reg alpha and gw in the epithelium of inflamed colonic mucosa stability of housekeeping genes in alveolar macrophages from copd patients we would like to thank the children and families for their participation in this study. this project was supported by research grants from the murdoch children's research institute, the cass foundation, the lynne quayle charitable trust, equity trustees ltd, glaxosmithkline australia, the victorian government's operational infrastructure support program, and by a national health and medical research council (nhmrc) research grant. dr kirkwood is supported by an nhmrc rd wright research fellowship ( ). key: cord- -if jycd authors: whitehead, kathryn a.; langer, robert; anderson, daniel g. title: knocking down barriers: advances in sirna delivery date: journal: nat rev drug discov doi: . /nrd sha: doc_id: cord_uid: if jycd in the years that have passed since the nobel prize-winning discovery of rna interference (rnai), billions of dollars have been invested in the therapeutic application of gene silencing in humans. today, there are promising data from ongoing clinical trials for the treatment of age-related macular degeneration and respiratory syncytial virus. despite these early successes, however, the widespread use of rnai therapeutics for disease prevention and treatment requires the development of clinically suitable, safe and effective drug delivery vehicles. here, we provide an update on the progress of rnai therapeutics and highlight novel synthetic materials for the encapsulation and intracellular delivery of nucleic acids. rna interference (rnai) gained international attention in when fire, mello and colleagues discovered the ability of double-stranded rna to silence gene expression in the nematode worm caenorhabditis elegans . three years later, tuschl and co-workers published their celebrated proof-of-principle experiment demonstrating that synthetic small interfering rna (sirna) could achieve sequence-specific gene knockdown in a mammalian cell line . the first successful use of sirna for gene silencing in mice was achieved for a hepatitis c target shortly thereafter . since that time, the biotechnology sector has made considerable efforts in the advancement of sirna therapeutics for the treatment of various disease targets, including viral infections , and cancer [ ] [ ] [ ] . rnai is a fundamental pathway in eukaryotic cells by which sequence-specific sirna is able to target and cleave complementary mrna . rnai is triggered by the presence of long pieces of double-stranded rna, which are cleaved into the fragments known as sirna ( ) ( ) ( ) nucleotides long) by the enzyme dicer . in practice, sirna can be synthetically produced and then directly introduced into the cell, thus circumventing dicer mechanics (fig. ) . this shortcut reduces the potential for an innate immune interferon response and the shutdown of cellular protein expression that can occur following the interaction of long pieces (> nucleotides) of doublestranded rna with intracellular rna receptors . once sirna is present in the cytoplasm of the cell, it is incorporated into a protein complex called the rnainduced silencing complex (risc) . argonaute , a multifunctional protein contained within risc, unwinds the sirna, after which the sense strand (or passenger strand) of the sirna is cleaved . the activated risc, which contains the antisense strand (or guide strand) of the sirna, selectively seeks out and degrades mrna that is complementary to the antisense strand (fig. ) . the cleavage of mrna occurs at a position between nucleo tides and on the complementary antisense strand, relative to the ′-end . the activated risc complex can then move on to destroy additional mrna targets, which further propagates gene silencing . this extra potency ensures a therapeutic effect for - days in rapidly dividing cells, and for several weeks in non-dividing cells . eventually, sirnas are diluted below a certain therapeutic threshold or degraded within the cell, and so repeated administration is necessary to achieve a persistent effect. theoretically, when using appropriately designed sirna, the rnai machinery can be exploited to silence nearly any gene in the body, giving it a broader therapeutic potential than typical small-molecule drugs. indeed, it has already been reported that synthetic sirnas are capable of knocking down targets in various diseases in vivo, including hypercholesterolaemia , liver cirr hosis , hepatitis b virus (hbv) , , human papillomavirus , ovarian cancer and bone cancer . in order for these advances to be implemented in a clinical setting, safe and effective delivery systems must be developed. while 'naked' , chemically modified sirna has shown efficacy in certain physiological settings such as the brain and the lung , there are many tissues in the body that require an additional delivery system to facilitate transfection. this is because naked sirna is subject to degradation by endogenous enzymes, and is too large (~ kda) and too negatively charged to cross cellular membranes. the strand of the sirna molecule that is complementary to the target mrna, which activates risc and has an important role in target mrna identification and destruction. the process of delivering nucleic acid material into the cell. the issue of effective and non-toxic delivery is a key challenge and serves as the most significant barrier between sirna technology and its therapeutic application. the ease of sirna delivery is partly dependent on the accessibility of the target organ or tissue within the body. localized sirna delivery -that is, application of sirna therapy directly to the target tissue -offers several benefits, including the potential for both higher bioavailability given the proximity to the target tissue, and reduced adverse effects typically associated with systemic administration. by contrast, systemic delivery, meaning the intravenous injection of delivery particles that then travel throughout the body to the target organ or tissue, requires that particles have the ability to avoid uptake and clearance by non-target tissues (fig. ) . there are several tissues that are amenable to topical or localized therapy, including the eye, skin, mucus membranes, and local tumours [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] (table ) . local sirna delivery is particularly well-suited for the treatment of lung diseases and infections. the direct instillation of sirna into the lung through intranasal or intratracheal routes enables direct contact with lung epithelial cells. these cells play a part in a myriad of lung conditions and infections, including cystic fibrosis, asthma, influenza and the common cold . it has been reported that respiratory syncytial virus (rsv) replication can be inhibited by nasally administered sirna formulated with or without transfection agents in mice , . progress in the treatment of rsv continues with phase ii clinical trials using an aerosolized sirna delivery system . intratracheal administration of sirna has also been reported to offer prophylactic and therapeutic effects in the treatment of severe acute respiratory syndrome . another example of local delivery is direct intratumoral injection of sirna delivery complexes into various mouse xenograft models. sirna complexed with the delivery agent polyethyleneimine (pei) was shown to inhibit tumour growth upon intratumoral injection in mice bearing glioblastoma xenographs . niu and co-workers have also reported naked sirna efficacy up on direct injection into a subcutaneous cervical cancer model in mice . in contrast to the direct accessibility of localized targets, many tissues can only be reached through the systemic administration of delivery agents in the bloodstream. sirna formulations for systemic application face a series of hurdles in vivo before reaching the cytoplasm of the target cell (fig. ) . post-injection, the sirna complex must navigate the circulatory system of the body while avoiding kidney filtration, uptake by phagocytes, aggregation with serum proteins, and enzymatic degradation by endogenous nucleases . phagocytosis serves as a significant immunological barrier, not only in the bloodstream but also in the extracellular matrix of tissues. phagocytic cells such as macrophages and monocytes remove foreign material from the body to protect against infection by viruses, bacteria and fungi. unfortunately, phagocytes are also highly efficient at removing certain therapeutic nanocomplexes and macromolecules from the body, and steps must be taken to avoid opsonization when designing drug delivery vehicles . egress from the bloodstream and across the vascular endothelial barrier poses a significant challenge for delivery of sirna to many tissues within the body. in general, molecules larger than nm in diameter do not readily cross the capillary endothelium, and therefore will remain in the circulation until they are cleared from the body. there are certain tissues, however, that allow the entry of larger molecules, including the liver, spleen, and some tumours. these organs allow the passage of molecules up to nm in diameter, which can accommodate a typical drug delivery nanocarrier . is introduced into the cytoplasm, where it is cleaved into small interfering rna (sirna) by the enzyme dicer. alternatively, sirna can be introduced directly into the cell. the sirna is then incorporated into the rna-induced silencing complex (risc), resulting in the cleavage of the sense strand of rna by argonaute (ago ). the activated risc-sirna complex seeks out, binds to and degrades complementary mrna, which leads to the silencing of the target gene. the activated risc-sirna complex can then be recycled for the destruction of identical mrna targets. after an sirna complex leaves the bloodstream, it must diffuse through the extracellular matrix, which is a dense network of polysaccharides and fibrous proteins that can create resistance to the transport of macromolecules and nanoparticles . this can slow or even halt the drug delivery process and create an additional opportunity for nanoparticles to be taken up by resident macrophages. having been taken up by the target cell, particles must then escape the endosome to reach the cytoplasm . if the sirna nanocomplex is unable to exit the endosome, it will be trafficked through endomembrane compartments of decreasing ph and be subject to degradative conditions in the lysosome . finally, if formulated with delivery agents, sirna must be released from the carrier to the cellular machinery. modified sirna for improved delivery humans have evolved a number of host-defence mechanisms against sirna, as it is a feature of certain viral infections. however, chemical modifications can be introduced into the sirna molecule to evade immune defences in vivo. for example, many non-modified sirnas can induce nonspecific activation of the immune system through the toll-like receptor (tlr ) pathway , . this effect can be reduced by the incorporation of ′-o-methyl modifications into the sugar structure of selected nucleotides within both the sense and antisense strands , (fig. a) . ′-o-methyl modifications have also been shown to confer resistance to endo nuclease activity and to abrogate off-target effects when incorporated into the seed region, which corresponds to nucleotides - on the antisense strand . other common modification approaches to mitigate enzymatic degradation include the introduction of phosphorothioate backbone linkages at the ′-end of the rna strands to reduce susceptibility to exonucleases. it is also possible to incorporate alternative ′ sugar modifications (for example, a fluorine substitution) to increase resistance to endonucleases . another strategy to improve the therapeutic efficacy of sirna involves the conjugation of small molecules or peptides to the sense strand of the sirna. several small molecules have been reported to increase target-gene knockdown in vitro, including membrane-permeant peptides and polyethylene glycol (peg) . of particular note are cholesterol-modified sirnas, which have demonstrated increased binding to serum albumin, resulting in improved biodistribution to certain targets including the liver (fig. b) . cholesterol-modified sirna were capable of silencing apolipoprotein b (apob) targets in mouse liver and jejunum, and of ultimately reducing total cholesterol levels . another study by difiglia and co-workers details the ability of a cholesterol-modified sirna to knockdown a gene associated with huntington's disease. a single intrastriatal injection was able to delay the abnormal behavioural phenotype observed in a rapid-onset mouse model of this disease . given the success of cholesterol-modified sirna in vivo, wolfrum and co-workers attempted to identify alternative lipid-like molecules to serve as rna conjugates for improved delivery of sirna . specifically, fatty acids and bile-salt derivatives were conjugated to sirna and injected into mice and hamsters in order to elucidate how modified sirna conjugates interact with the high-density lipoprotein (hdl) and low-density lipoprotein (ldl) receptors that enable delivery to the liver. it was found that shorter fatty-acid chain lengths ( and adj-p value < . . we have identified significantly dysregulated genes and of these genes, ifit , ifitm , irf , isg , mx , and oas were highly upregulated. the genemania webserver was used to predict interactions between these degs genes in the network using the go term "biological process" and source organism homo sapiens as additional parameters. the gene enrichment of theses degs highlighted go terms including response to virus, ribonucleotide binding and ifn-related signalling pathway (fig. c) . overall, the analysis demonstrated that the upregulated genes are mainly linked to the host response to sars-cov- infection, type i interferon signaling and the cytokine-mediated signaling pathway. j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f we used the ppi network analysis to construct the interactome of the degs for covid- . for this, we used the string plugin of cytoscape tool [ ] , and obtained a ppi network with nodes and edges from the dysregulated genes (fig. a) . the proteins are ranked based on their degree connectivity and betweenness centrality scores (supporting information table ). among these, stat , irf , ifih , mx , isg , ifit , oas , and ddx has high degree and betweenness centrality values. to obtain a more in-depth understanding of the interactome, go function and kegg pathway analysis were applied using david (fig. b and supporting information table ). go analysis results showed that in the biological process, the interacting genes were mainly enrichment in the regulation of defence response to virus, innate immune response, inflammatory response, and also played an important role in complement activation, and response to nutrient and extracellular stimulus (fig. b) . the cellular components are significantly located in the extracellular region and membrane fraction, etc. molecular functions were mainly enriched in chemokines or cytokine activity, rna binding, transferase activity, and calcium ion binding. kegg pathway enrichment analysis revealed the role of interacting genes in complement and coagulation pathways, rig- -like receptor signalling pathways, and chemokine signalling pathways (supporting information table ). overall, the network analysis indicates that sars-cov- targets the proteins in the ifn signaling pathway to evade the immune system. this highlights the key role of the ifnmediated antiviral responses. predict viral targets [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in this regard, two topological features, degree (number of connections) and betweenness (the fraction of all shortest paths that include a node within a network), were calculated to identify candidate hub nodes using the cytoscape's network analyzer tool. collectively, we have identified top nodes with high degree of connectivity and betweenness value and was subsequently considered as hub genes in the network ( table ) . biological process enrichment analysis of hub genes using genemania webserver and go analysis revealed their role in defence mechanism to viral response, cellular response to type i interferon, regulation of viral genome replication, double-stranded rna binding, type i interferon signaling pathway, and regulation of innate immune response ( fig. and these identified hub genes belong to the family of interferon stimulating genes (isgs). isgs including ifit and ifitm, isg , ifih , mx , irf , oas - and stat are known to potentiate ifn signaling and thus exert antiviral activity. these isgs fall into two categories, one that is direct effectors of the innate immune response including: mx , ifitm , isg , ifih , and irf- , and the other includes the induction of viral rna sensors such as ddx and the oas - genes. in addition to antiviral activity, isgs may exert diverse functions including rna and nucleotide binding, ifn regulation and inflammation regulation. mx , oas - , ifih , ifitm - , isg etc. are highly expressed in respiratory airways [ , ] and are associated with viral entry-associated ace gene, as shown in single-cell rnasequencing data from various tissues from human [ , ] . given the high expression of the viral entry-associated genes, it is reasonable that these nasal epithelial cells are trained to express these immune-associated genes to decrease viral susceptibility. further, we used enrichr [ ] , a web-based server for gene-set enrichment analysis and provides different summaries of collective functions of gene lists. interestingly, disease enrichment analysis demonstrated that the signature was highly associated with other viral diseases like west nile encephalitis, tick-borne encephalitis, dengue fever, chikungunya, and sars. also, these hub genes are involved in the mammalian phenotype including increased susceptibility to viral infection induced morbidity/mortality, decreased interferon secretion, increased igg level, abnormal t cell activation, and decreased interleukin- secretion. overall, these results clearly showed that the signatures are largely involved in innate immune response following sars-cov- infection (supporting information table ). further using drugbank database [ ] and comparative toxicogenomics database (ctd) [ ] , we identified the possible drugs which are known to have possible interaction with the hub genes (supporting information table ). in total, we have identified drug molecules which are known to interact with the hub genes (supporting information fig. ) . apart from protein-drug interaction, we also looked for drug-disease interaction, i.e. which drug is used in which disease. based on the drug-gene interaction results, we used stitch database [ ] for final categorization of drug-gene interaction network based on interaction score which is ≥ . . interestingly, we found five proteins mx , oas , stat , ddx , and isg were highly correlated to rare disease phenotype as well as to sars in enrichr database. these five proteins were also the most common influential proteins according to go analysis. the stitch drug-protein interaction network analysis of these five proteins has shown j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f significant interaction with drugs/compound (fig. ) . as shown in figure , mx gene interacts with mitomycin-c, an antitumor and imiquimod, an immune response modifier. ifih interacts with polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid (poly i:c), which is an immunostimulant. oas showed significant interaction with s-carbamidomethylcysteine (cysteine-s-acetamide) and with mgatp. stat interacts with vanadium oxide and mgatp whereas, ddx and isg interact with mgatp. some of these identified drugs are used for induction of ifns and thus play a key role in the body defence against sars-cov- s infection. here, we generated a comprehensive human-sars-cov- interactome from transcriptome studies of a lung cell infected with covid- . the ppi network analysis indicates that the pathways are enriched in host response to virus infection, type i interferons signaling, and cytokine activation. network topology analyses identified high-value targets of sars cov- , which belongs to a subset of canonical isgs. these isgs are largely involved in regulation of defence response to virus, innate immune response, inflammatory response, and rna binding [ , ] . an interferon-inducible protein, mx dynamin like gtpase (mx ) is associated with influenza and viral encephalitis infection [ , ] . also notable is the role of the interferon induced protein with tetratricopeptide repeats (ifit ) and dexd/h-box helicase (ddx ) as an antiviral activity. in hepatitis e virus infection, polymerase binds to ifit protecting the viral rna from translation inhibition mediated by ifit that boosts the interferon response in murine macrophage-like cells [ ] . recently, the significant upregulation of ifit - , and ddx gene expression under covid- viral infection has been reported [ ] . in response to viral infections, several genes of host such as oas - , j o u r n a l p r e -p r o o f irf , irf , stat and ifih are highly expressed and are highly correlated with host response to viral infections [ ] [ ] [ ] . studies shows that covs are equipped with strategies to antagonize the ifn signaling pathway that facilitates the virus to escape host immune response. sars-cov escapes the host ifn signalling as its orf protein blocks the expression of stat -activated genes [ ] . similarly, in mers-cov orf b inhibits irf and irf to antagonize the antiviral ifn-β response [ ] . additionally, papain-like proteases (plps) are expressed in both sars-cov and mers-cov that enables to delay the host immune response. coronaviruses engages in interactions with ifn stimulated gene (isg ) and antagonizing the ifn-mediated antiviral response [ , ] . the antiviral activity of isg has been shown in several viruses including human cytomegalovirus [ ] , hiv [ ] , west nile virus [ ] , swine fever virus [ ] , mers-cov [ ] , and sars-cov [ ] . ifns play a key role in the body defence against viral infections, and in this regard, we here showed some candidate drugs for repurposing. one of these drugs is poly (i:c) (polyinosinic:polycytidylic acid), a synthetic double-stranded rna immune-stimulant, which is used as adjuvant in vaccine production [ ] . it is agonist for toll like receptor (tlr ) which induces the expression of ifns. many studies demonstrated that the tlr agonists, poly iclc and poly (i:c) increases the production of ifn-α, -β, and -γ, which inhibited cov replication and minimized the inhibitory effects of cov on ifn signaling pathways [ ] [ ] [ ] . interestingly, chloroquine, a recently proposed drugs for covid- [ ] , inhibits poly (i:c)mediated ifn-β induction [ ] . therefore, tlr agonists can be a considered as potential drugs for repurposing in covid- . in addition to tlr- agonists tlr agonists such as imiquimod [ ] , can induce ifn production in the human body as well. imiquimod is a strong inducer of ifn-α and several proinflammatory mediators, including tnf-α, il- , and chemokines [ ] . the other drug predicted to bind mx and oas, mitomycin c is a cancer drug that is used in the treatment of bladder, colon, and breast cancers. it functions as an alkylating agent that causes cross-linking of dna and inhibits rna as well as protein synthesis [ , ] . at high concentration, mitomycin c inhibits the replication of influenza virus by blocking the rna synthesis [ ] . mitomycin c has also been shown to inhibit b cell, t cell, and macrophage proliferation in vitro and impair antigen presentation, as well as the secretion of ifn-γ, tnfα, and il- . vanadium oxide, an activator of stat- , involved in immune-regulating mechanisms, including immune suppression and inflammation downregulation by stimulating and activating b/t cells. [ , ] in summary, our integrative interactome and network topology analyses showed that sars-cov- induced a strong ifn response, marked by the increased expression of several isgs, including mx , oas - , ifih , isg , irfs, and ifitms etc. these isgs exert antiviral activity and could protect the host cells from the infection. this protective action of isgs might account for the lesser percentage of severe cases and the lower fatality rate in covid- . however, the extent of protection or damage to the host cell depends on stage of infection, types of cells, sars clade [ ] [ ] [ ] and other factors like co-infection, age, and comorbidities. recently, zou et al. [ ] reported high sars-cov- loads very early during infection, suggesting that the virus may have developed arsenals that is able to delay the ifn response by inhibiting innate immune signaling. thus, ifn induction in the incubation period and at the very early stages of the infection could be the key to prevent covid- associated mortalities. administration of interferon-inducing agents, such as poly (i:c) and imiquimod could reduce the mortality of sars at the very early stages of the disease (fig. ) . on the other hand, at the later stages of the disease, the balance of the immune system becomes impaired, leading to inflammatory over-reactions, cytokine storm, and possible autoimmune induce the production of ifns and isgs, which will reinstate the impaired immune responses. in the late stage of infection, there is a proinflammatory cytokine storm, which can be theoretically targeted by immunosuppressors, like mitomycin c, and vanadium oxide. a new coronavirus associated with human 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middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection fda-approved selective estrogen receptor modulators inhibit ebola virus infection a screen of fda-approved drugs for inhibitors of zika virus infection a sars-cov- protein interaction map reveals targets for drug repurposing network-based drug repurposing for novel coronavirus -ncov/sars-cov- drug repurposing against covid- : focus on anticancer agents fast identification of possible drug treatment of coronavirus disease- (covid- ) through computational drug repurposing study boosting the arsenal against covid- through computational drug repurposing optimizing hydroxychloroquine dosing for patients with covid- : an integrative modeling approach for effective drug repurposing sars-cov- launches a unique transcriptional signature from in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo systems : a major update to the drugbank database for the comparative toxicogenomics database: update sars-cov- launches a unique transcriptional signature from in vitro, ex vivo, and in vivo systems bioinformatics enrichment tools: paths toward the comprehensive functional analysis of large gene lists cytoscape: a software environment for integrated models of biomolecular interaction networks stitch: interaction networks of chemicals and proteins systematic and integrative analysis of large gene lists using david bioinformatics resources the sars-coronavirus-host interactome: identification of cyclophilins as target for pancoronavirus inhibitors a physical and regulatory map of host-influenza interactions reveals pathways in h n infection network-guided discovery of influenza virus replication host factors common nodes of virus-host interaction revealed through an integrated network analysis a cellular census of human lungs identifies novel cell states in health and in asthma a single-cell atlas of the human healthy airways sars-cov- entry factors are highly expressed in nasal epithelial cells together with innate immune genes sars-cov- receptor ace is an interferon enrichr: a comprehensive gene set enrichment analysis web server update interferon-stimulated genes: a complex web of host defenses emerging roles of interferon-stimulated genes in the innate immune response to hepatitis c virus infection interferon-inducible protein mx inhibits influenza virus by interfering with functional viral ribonucleoprotein complex assembly host genetics of severe influenza: from mouse mx to human irf hepatitis e virus polymerase binds to ifit to protect the viral rna from ifit -mediated translation inhibition polymorphisms of interferon-inducible genes oas- and mxa associated with sars in the vietnamese population early endonuclease-mediated evasion of rna sensing ensures efficient coronavirus replication differential regulation of the oasl and oas genes in response to viral infections severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus orf antagonizes stat function by sequestering nuclear import factors on the rough endoplasmic reticulum/golgi membrane middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus orf b protein inhibits type i interferon production through both cytoplasmic and nuclear targets structural insights into the interaction of coronavirus papain-like proteases and interferon-stimulated gene product from different species isg : it's complicated consecutive inhibition of isg expression and isgylation by cytomegalovirus regulators innate antiviral response targets hiv- release by the induction of ubiquitin-like protein isg isg facilitates cellular antiviral response to dengue and west nile virus infection in vitro antiviral activity of isg against classical swine fever virus replication in porcine alveolar macrophages via inhibition of autophagy by isgylating becn mers-cov papain-like protease has deisgylating and deubiquitinating activities structural basis for the ubiquitin-linkage specificity and deisgylating activity of sars-cov papain-like protease targeting poly(i:c) to the tlr -independent pathway boosts effector cd t cell differentiation through ifn-alpha/beta intranasal treatment with poly(i*c) protects aged mice from lethal respiratory virus infections prophylactic and therapeutic intranasal administration with an immunomodulator, hiltonol((r)) (poly ic:lc), in a lethal sars-cov-infected balb/c mouse model evaluation of immunomodulators, interferons and known in vitro sars-cov inhibitors for inhibition of sars-cov replication in balb/c mice breakthrough: chloroquine phosphate has shown apparent efficacy in treatment of covid- associated pneumonia in clinical studies toll-like receptor agonist poly(i:c)-induced antiviral response in human corneal epithelial cells the systemic response to topical aldara treatment is mediated through direct tlr stimulation as imiquimod enters the circulation cellular requirements for cytokine production in response to the immunomodulators imiquimod and s- mitomycin c: mechanism of action, usefulness and limitations mitomycin c inhibits ribosomal rna: a novel cytotoxic mechanism for bioreductive drugs influence of mitomycin c on the replication of influenza viruses role of vanadium in cellular and molecular immunology: association with immune-related inflammation and pharmacotoxicology mechanisms vanadium carcinogenic, immunotoxic and neurotoxic effects: a review of in vitro studies dysregulated type i interferon and inflammatory monocyte-macrophage responses cause lethal pneumonia in sars-cov-infected mice pathogenic human coronavirus infections: causes and consequences of cytokine storm and immunopathology ifn-i response timing relative to virus replication determines mers coronavirus infection outcomes sars-cov- viral load in upper respiratory specimens of infected patients authors sincerely thank to the department of science and technology, government of india.the authors extend their appreciation to the deanship of scientific research at king saud university for funding this work through research group no. rg- - . no potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors. key: cord- -gzivtsho authors: lee, albert k.; kulcsar, kirsten a.; elliott, oliver; khiabanian, hossein; nagle, elyse r.; jones, megan e.b.; amman, brian r.; sanchez-lockhart, mariano; towner, jonathan s.; palacios, gustavo; rabadan, raul title: de novo transcriptome reconstruction and annotation of the egyptian rousette bat date: - - journal: bmc genomics doi: . /s - - -x sha: doc_id: cord_uid: gzivtsho background: the egyptian rousette bat (rousettus aegyptiacus), a common fruit bat species found throughout africa and the middle east, was recently identified as a natural reservoir host of marburg virus. with ebola virus, marburg virus is a member of the family filoviridae that causes severe hemorrhagic fever disease in humans and nonhuman primates, but results in little to no pathological consequences in bats. understanding host-pathogen interactions within reservoir host species and how it differs from hosts that experience severe disease is an important aspect of evaluating viral pathogenesis and developing novel therapeutics and methods of prevention. results: progress in studying bat reservoir host responses to virus infection is hampered by the lack of host-specific reagents required for immunological studies. in order to establish a basis for the design of reagents, we sequenced, assembled, and annotated the r. aegyptiacus transcriptome. we performed de novo transcriptome assembly using deep rna sequencing data from distinct tissues from one male and one female bat. we observed high similarity between this transcriptome and those available from other bat species. gene expression analysis demonstrated clustering of expression profiles by tissue, where we also identified enrichment of tissue-specific gene ontology terms. in addition, we identified and experimentally validated the expression of novel coding transcripts that may be specific to this species. conclusion: we comprehensively characterized the r. aegyptiacus transcriptome de novo. this transcriptome will be an important resource for understanding bat immunology, physiology, disease pathogenesis, and virus transmission. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article (doi: . /s - - -x) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. and pteropus whereas yangochiroptera includes the family myotidae and genus myotis [ ] . unlike most mammals, bats can fly and this ability enabled their wide geographical range and increased metabolism [ ] . interestingly, bats have recently come to the forefront of zoonotic disease research with vast number of pathogens identified in a wide variety of bat species [ ] . upwards of different viruses, primarily rna viruses, have been detected and/or isolated from bats [ , ] . amongst these are emerging viruses that cause lethal disease in humans and nonhuman primates including nipah virus [ , ] , hendra virus [ ] , severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars)-like coronavirus [ ] , middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) [ ] , marburg virus (marv) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , and ebola virus (ebov) [ ] [ ] [ ] . despite the severe virulence of these viruses in humans, infected bats are often asymptomatic [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . nipah virus and hendra virus interactions with their natural reservoir hosts, pteropus vampyrus and pteropus alecto, respectively, are well characterized. experimental infections of bats with high doses of henipaviruses have shown virus replication and shedding with little to no disease [ ] [ ] [ ] . remarkably, the only viruses known to have induced any observable pathology in bats are rabies virus and australian bat lyssavirus [ , ] . understanding mechanisms of disease and differential responses to infection in asymptomatic reservoir host species compared to species that exhibit severe pathology will help inform the development of novel therapeutics and disease prevention approaches. rousettus aegyptiacus, commonly known as the egyptian rousette bat, has been identified as a natural reservoir host for marv through ecological, epidemiological, and experimental studies [ , , , , , ] . furthermore, it has been speculated this bat could host ebola virus [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] , although recent experimental infection studies have shown ebola virus does not replicate well in r. aegeyptiacus [ ] . the majority of human outbreaks due to marv have been associated with caves inhabited by r. aegyptiacus. furthermore, epidemiological surveillance of the r. aegyptiacus colony located in the python cave in uganda revealed a biannual spike in marburg virus prevalence. this pattern correlated strongly with spillover transmission events in humans [ ] . initial studies in captive bats evaluated clinical signs, virus dissemination, and virus shedding patterns during experimental infection with a marv isolate derived from wild bats [ ] . consistent with a natural reservoir host, the bats showed little to no evidence of disease even though the virus disseminated throughout their body and was actively shed [ ] . these results were confirmed when bats were infected with marv angola, a strain isolated from a lethal human case [ ] . in the absence of genetic and transcriptomic information for r. aegyptiacus and with limited available reagents, studying this reservoir host animal model has been challenging. the rapid expansion in genomic knowledge for different bat species has facilitated comparative studies that rely on the identification of genes and gene families, and has established a framework for developing necessary reagents. full genome annotations for pteropus vampyrus ( . x, [ ] ), myotis lucifugus ( . x, [ ] ) pteropus alecto ( x, [ ] ), myotis davidii ( x, [ ] ), and myotis brandtii ( . x, [ ] ) are now available. additionally, transcriptomic annotations for pteropus alecto [ ] and artibeus jamaicensis [ ] have been published. in particular, the complementary genome and transcriptome annotations for p. alecto has aided studies on henipavirus infections in its reservoir host [ , ] . the host transcriptional response to different viruses was also recently assessed in a kidney cell line derived from p. vampyrus utilizing the previously annotated genome [ ] . in this manuscript, we report the transcriptomic annotation of r. aegyptiacus from a de novo assembly of rna sequencing data from tissues isolated from a male and a female bat. we identified , canonical coding transcripts whose expression profiles were consistent with the corresponding tissues of origin. in addition, we identified and validated novel coding transcripts that do not have any homology with the known sequences. furthermore, we evaluated the annotation for immune-related genes and assessed the presence and expression of genes associated with a variety of immune functions. we employed a de novo assembly approach to generate a comprehensive transcriptome without relying on a genome reference. first, we generated rna-seq libraries consisting of tissue types (table , fig. a ) each collected from one male and one female r. aegyptiacus bat, which yielded approximately . billion reads. we then assembled the high quality reads using trinity [ ] (fig. b) . this process generated , , contigs. the assembly had high continuity and coverage with a median number of , contigs and median n of , [ ] , which leverages the homology of known sequences of related species. we assigned gene symbols to contigs when this information was available. this process clustered the contigs into isoform groups (fig. c) . we compared our assembly to the transcriptomes of three related bat species --m. davidii, p. alecto, and m. brandtii. using blast, we recovered . tissue-specific transcriptome assemblies contained different numbers of contigs, due to their different levels of expression and sequencing depth. without a common ground for comparison, it was difficult to perform downstream comparative analyses such as differential gene expression analysis; therefore, we combined contigs from all tissues into one unified, nonredundant reference transcriptome (fig. d) . to this end, we iteratively merged the assemblies two at a time, similar to the approach employed in [ ] (fig. d) . we obtained , , nonredundant contigs. among the nonredundant contigs, , ( . %) of the sequences were annotated by bat sequences, , ( . %) by primate sequences, and , ( . %) by sequences in nt database (fig. a) . the nonredundant contig set had slightly lower sensitivity, though it still remained high; . % of m. davidii, . % of m. brandtii, and . % of p. alecto transcripts were recovered. the resulting annotated contigs were assigned gene names and combined using the longest annotated orf as the transcript. this resulted in an annotation for r. aegyptiacus that contained a total of , genes. to determine the efficiency of using the msa pipeline, we determined that % ( , genes) of the contigs were annotated using the bat database and % ( , genes) were subsequently annotated using the primate database. these data show that the msa pipeline, which utilizes known transcripts from related species only, is a sensitive and efficient method for de novo transcriptome annotation. we evaluated biological validity of the reconstructed transcriptome by analyzing global expression patterns across the different tissues. if the transcriptome assembly and annotations were accurate, the expression profiles of a given tissue should cluster with those of the same tissue origin and segregate from those of different origins [ , ] . a gene can result in more than one transcript isoform; therefore, to capture the highest amount of information, for each gene, we focused on the transcript with the longest open reading frame (orf) (fig. a) . after normalizing the expression values, we performed multidimensional scaling (mds) to determine the relationships between the gene expression patterns in different tissues. as expected, mds showed a clear separation of the samples according to the tissue of origin (fig. a) and explains % of the variance in the data. to examine the evolutionary relationship among tissues, we performed hierarchical clustering of the gene expression profiles (fig. b ). the brain, which has a different developmental pathway compared to the other organs, was classified as an outgroup. the spleen, lymph node, and bone marrow are all organs of the immune system and, as expected, clustered near each other. the peripheral blood contains some of the same cell types as the immune organs, thus, clustered near these tissues. lastly, the gonads and kidney, which develop from the intermediate mesoderm, were grouped as neighbors in the tree. these results suggest that our transcriptome captured sufficient heterogeneity of gene expression to distinguish individual tissues while preserving their developmental relationships. we further assessed biological validity of our transcriptome assembly through gene ontology (go) analysis of tissue-specific expression profiles. we compared expression profile of each tissue with the average expression in the whole dataset, and identified the top most differentially expressed genes based on a generalized linear modeling framework. using this list, we examined the enriched go biological process (bp) terms. figure shows the top go bp terms from the bone marrow, spleen, lymph nodes, and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs). (for other tissues, see additional file ). terms enriched for each tissue are consistent with their expected physiological functions. r. aegyptiacus is a natural reservoir host for marv, allowing for virus replication and dissemination with little to no pathological consequences [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . one important aspect of reservoir host biology is how their immune response compares to that of animal species that experiences severe disease, such as humans. therefore, we examined the transcriptome for the presence of immune-related genes. we associated the r. aegyptiacus gene set with go terms based on the human-specific gene ontology annotation. this resulted in , genes that mapped to , go terms. we used categorizer [ ] and applied the immune class goslim terms to identify immune-related genes from this set. similar to previous studies in p. alecto and a. jamaicensis, we found that out of , go terms, approximately . % were associated with immune response [ , ] . amongst the most represented go terms were cytokine production, lymphocyte activation, t cell activation, regulation of apoptosis, and regulation of lymphocyte activation (fig. ) . we next searched for specific genes related to various aspects of the immune response in other mammals, primarily mice and humans. we first evaluated the annotation of the transcriptome for the presence of anti-viral genes. a multitude of pattern recognition receptors were identified including toll-like receptors (tlrs) - , rig-i, mda , and lgp along with the important scaffold and signaling molecules myd and mavs. a variety of antiviral molecules were also found, including mx and mx , pkr, sting, irf , irf , irf , members of the ifit and ifitm families, and isg . we also looked for the presence of type i, ii, and iii interferons (ifn). we were able to identify ifngamma, ifngamma , and ifnalpha. transcripts corresponding to the ifn receptor subunits ifnar and ifnar were also identified. ifnalpha and ifnbeta have been previously characterized by cloning from stimulated cells [ ] . we, however, did not find any contigs corresponding to ifnb. to eliminate the possibility of an impaired assembly, we aligned the processed rna-seq reads to the ifnb sequence from p. alecto [ ] (additional file and additional file ). we detected only reads from r. aegyptiacus,which did not provide sufficient coverage to construct the transcript. these data suggest that ifnb expression in healthy tissues of r. aegyptiacus is low, consistent with other mammals in which ifnb is primarily expressed after exposure to a stimulus. we also searched the transcriptome for genes associated with innate immune cells. we found the transcripts for the cd and cd c genes, which are commonly used for phenotyping macrophages and dendritic cells, as well as transcripts for the cd and cd genes, which are useful for evaluating the activation status of these cells. genes associated with natural killer (nk) cells, however, were less evident. we were able to identify transcripts of co-receptor gene cd , but not cd . transcripts of genes encoding for molecules in the killer cell lectin-like receptor (klr) family, including nkg a and nkg d, were also not found. in other bat transcriptomes, such as p. alecto and a. jamaicensis, coverage of nk cellrelated genes was more sparse than that of other mammals [ , ] . a similar observation was made in the genome of m. davidii [ ] . the absence of nk cell-related genes in the r. aegyptiacus transcriptome further strengthens the theory that bats might contain a different nk cell receptor repertoire than other species. next, we examined the repertoire of genes associated with adaptive the immune response. we identified a variety of transcripts associated with t cell identification, activation, inhibition, and differentiation including cd , cd , cd a, cd , cd , ccr , pd- , ctla , gata , foxp , and tbet. interestingly, we were able to identify transcripts for the tcrα and tcrβ chains, but were unable to find transcripts for the tcrδ and tcrγ chains. the transcriptome annotation for p. alecto included these genes, but they were present at low levels [ ] . this supports the notion that αβ t cells are the predominant t cell subset in bats. we also looked at genes associated with b cells and were able to find transcripts for cd , cd , cd , as well as transcripts that were similar to the frequency shown is the percent of immune class go slim terms associated with that particular pathway out of all the go terms that were identified the immunoglobulin heavy chains a, e, g, and m and the immunoglobulin light chains κ and λ. future analysis of the r. aegyptiacus genome is required to fully evaluate the immunoglobulin gene repertoire. finally, we studied the cytokine and chemokine repertoire, important for shaping both innate and adaptive immune responses. we found a variety of transcripts corresponding to a wide array of both pro-inflammatory and anti-inflammatory cytokines. these included il- , il- , il- , il- , il- a, il- b, il- a, il- , il- , tgfβ, tnf, ifnγ , il- β, ccl , ccl , and cxcl . altogether, the reference transcriptome generated for r. aegyptiacus provides an excellent foundation for investigating reservoir host immunology in bats. there were , , unannotated contigs from the nonredundant contig set (fig. b) . of those, . % ( , , contigs) did not have an orf suggesting the majority of these contigs may be noncoding transcripts. to determine if the unannotated contigs were real or artifacts from the assembly, we used blast to align this set of contigs to the p. alecto genome and found that % ( , , contigs) were aligned. to evaluate the possibility of an incomplete or impaired assembly, we grouped the aligned contigs into a total of , , clusters based on the presence of overlapping sequences. this reduction suggests that multiple isoform expression patterns between different tissues may have affected our assembly or that our short read assembly may have been incomplete. nonetheless, the number of unannotated contigs that aligned to the p. alecto genome suggests that these contigs, either coding or noncoding, may be novel transcripts shared within the order pteropodinae. future studies evaluating the conservation and possible functions of these sequences are essential to determine the importance of these genetic elements. to validate novel contigs in r. aegyptiacus that appeared to be coding we utilized pcr. primers were designed to produce amplicons for eight highly expressed, unannotated contigs that contained orfs longer than bp. using rna isolated from the spleen, we were able to produce amplicons of the expected size from at least one bat ( fig. and additional file ). the sequences of these amplicons were found to fig. unannotated, novel transcripts from r. aegyptiacus were validated of by rt-pcr. rna from the spleen of both bats was reverse transcribed to make cdna. the cdna was amplified using primers specific for one of novel transcripts that were unannotated in the assembly, but contained a complete orf larger than nucleotides. the expected product sizes were: transcript , bp; transcript , bp; transcript , bp; transcript , bp; transcript , bp, transcript , bp; transcript , bp; and transcript , bp match the expected sequence from the assembled orf of the unannotated contig. these contigs also showed high sequence similarity to the p. alecto genome. in particular, six of the validated transcripts showed sequence similarity higher than % at a query coverage greater than %. the other two validated transcripts had a query coverage of with . % identity (transcript in fig. ) and a query coverage of with . % identity (transcript in fig. ) (additional file ); therefore, we hypothesize that these transcripts might be specific to r. aegyptiacus. further investigation is needed to fully understand the characteristics and biological functions associated with the proteins these contigs encode. in this paper, we presented the comprehensively annotated of transcriptome of r. aegyptiacus and assessed its quality and biological validity. this transcriptome will be an important resource to study bat immunology. in particular, it will facilitate the process of investigating differences in host responses between asymptomatic reservoir host species and species that exhibit severe pathology. it will also pave the way for the development of novel therapeutics and prevention approaches against emerging zoonotic virus outbreaks. tissues and blood were collected from one male and one female adult r. aegyptiacus bats that were bred and housed at the colony established at the center for disease control and prevention, atlanta, ga, usa (amman et al. [ ] ). approximately mg of the following tissues were collected and homogenized in ml of trizol ls (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca): liver (bat id:bat , bat ), lung (bat , bat ), heart (bat , bat ), kidney (bat , bat ), brain (bat , bat ), axillary lymph nodes (bilateral, pooled) (bat , bat ), spleen (bat , bat ), bone marrow (bat , bat ), and gonad (bat , bat ). pbmcs (bat , bat ) were isolated from the blood and stored in trizol ls as well. rna was extracted using the purelink rna mini kit (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca). cdna was synthesized using the truseq stranded total rna sample prep kit (illumina, san deigo, ca) according to the manufacturer's protocol. the libraries were evaluated for quality using the agilent bioanalyzer (agilent, santa clara, ca). after quantification by real-time pcr with the kapa qpcr kit (kapa biosystems, woburn, ma), libraries were diluted to nm. cluster amplification was performed on the illumina cbot and libraries were sequenced on the illumina hiseq . eight of the female bat libraries were single-end, while the remaining tissues from the female bat and all tissues from the male bat were paired-end. all of the libraries sequenced were bp in length. the average library depth was m reads (minimum m and maximum m). all experimental procedures were conducted with approval from the centers for disease control and prevention (cdc, atlanta, ga, usa) institutional animal care and use committee, and in strict accordance with the guide for the care and use of laboratory animals (committee for the update of the guide for the care and use of laboratory animals ). the cdc is an association for assessment and accreditation of laboratory animal care international fully accredited research facility. no human patient-derived clinical materials were used in these studies. we first examined the quality of the reads using fastqc v . . [ ] . we also preprocessed the reads to remove the adapter sequence using cutadapt v . [ ] . we removed "agatcggaagagcacacgtctgaactcc agtcac" from the forward strand and "agatcggaa-gagcgtcgtgtagggaaagagtgt-agatctcgg-tggtcgccgtatcatt" from the reverse strand. we performed strand-specific de novo transcriptome assembly using trinity r p [ ] with the parameters: "-normalize_reads" and "-ss_lib_type fr", along with its default parameters for all of our samples. for annotation of contigs and clustering them into a gene model, we used multiple species annotation pipeline, an nucleotide-based annotation approach that is more efficient and faster than blastx [ ] . to make a blast [ ] database for bats, we started with the complete "nucleotide collection" (nt) database. we exported all accession numbers of the bat sequences at ncbi and made a subset database from nt using "blastdb_aliastool -db nt -dbtype nucl -gilistbats.sequence.gi.txt -title bats -out bats". using the same type of query, we also created a database for primates including humans due to their extraordinarily well-annotated transcriptomes, which will maximize the power of our annotation pipeline. we then used blast to iteratively align the contigs to the bat db, the primate db, and finally nt using a subtractive approach: what did not align to the bat db was aligned to the primate db, and what did not align to the primate db was aligned to nt. to assess the coverage of our transcriptome, we downloaded the m. davidii, p. alecto, and m. brandtii transcriptomes from ncbi eukaryotic genomes annotations [ ] . we generated a blast index out of union of all contigs from our samples, and aligned the three bat contigs to our blast databases. we chose the alignment with % of sequence identity with maximum evalue of e- . to generate a nonredundant set of contigs, we iteratively merged individual assemblies using the the methods similar to the [ ] employed to merge the kmers. using cd-hit-est v . [ ] with sequence identity threshold of . , we merged the first two pairs of contig sets (of sample i and sample i + ) upto the final sample n. after each iteration, we merged the resulting merged contig sets using a similar approach until only one contig set remained. for the expression profiling, we generated a reference transcriptome consisting of transcripts each representing a gene model according to the following method: we first used transdecoder (r p ) [ ] to find the orf of all transcripts. then, based on the msa pipeline, we chose a transcript with gene symbols and the longest orf in each gene cluster to capture the most information for downstream expression analysis. we did not consider the contigs mapped to nt database in this manuscript because obtaining feature files for all sequences as required by the msa pipeline was computationally impractical, and a majority of the gene symbols ( , ) are captured in the bat and primate databases. after a canonical transcript set was obtained, we used this as a transcriptome reference for expression analysis. we mapped the preprocessed reads to this reference using rsem v . . [ ] and obtained a gene-to-count matrix. we removed the transcripts with expression variance equal to zero or with low expression (count <= ). for mds plot, we used the spearman correlaton as a distance measure and "cmdscale" from the "stats" package in r [ ] . to explore the biological processes in each gene expression profile, we employed a oneto-all sample comparison using the edger generalized linear model framework [ , ] . for each tissue, we compared individual gene expression within the tissue versus the average expression of all other tissues. with each tissue having differently ranked gene lists, we then selected top genes and ran gene ontology analysis using topgo [ ] with human-specific gene ontology annotation [ ] . we used blast [ ] to align unannotated contigs to the genome of p. alecto with the evalue of e- and query coverage of %. to cluster the aligned contigs into groups, we used bedtools [ ] setting the distance threshold parameter at . for transcripts that did not align with any similarity to bat, primate, or nt blast databases, we applied a series of filters to select for the coding transcripts to be validated. we used the following criteria: an orf that was complete with both a start and stop codon, an orf that was at least bp in size, and a transcript that was expressed (a read count > ). we further selected for the novel transcripts with usuable primers using primer-blast [ ] . using these criteria, the number of novel transcripts was narrowed down to a total of . the primers and expected amplicon size are listed in additional file . for validation, rna was extracted from the spleen tissue of both the male and female bats using trizol ls (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca). cdna was synthesized from . μg of rna using the superscript iii first-strand synthesis supermix (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca). amplicons for each of the primer sets were generated using phusion hotstart flex dna polymerase (new england biolabs, ipswitch, ma) and run on a . % agarose gel for visualization. the correct size amplicon was gel extracted, quantified, and sanger sequenced on the applied biosystems × dna analyzer. bats and zoonotic viruses: can we confidently link bats with emerging deadly viruses? memórias do instituto oswaldo cruz microbat paraphyly and the convergent evolution of a key innovation in old world rhinolophoid microbats bats: important reservoir hosts of emerging viruses serologic evidence for the presence in pteropus bats of a paramyxovirus related to equine morbillivirus identifying hendra virus diversity in pteropid bats nipah virus: a recently emergent deadly paramyxovirus bats are natural reservoirs of sars-like coronaviruses middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov): announcement of the coronavirus study group studies of reservoir hosts for marburg virus marburg virus infection detected in a common african bat isolation of genetically diverse marburg viruses from egyptian fruit bats oral shedding of marburg virus in experimentally infected egyptian fruit bats (rousettus aegyptiacus) fruit bats as reservoirs of ebola virus investigating the zoonotic origin of the west african ebola epidemic seroepidemiological prevalence of multiple species of filoviruses in fruit bats (eidolon helvum) migrating in africa experimental inoculation of plants and animals with ebola virus lack of marburg virus transmission from experimentally infected to susceptible in-contact egyptian fruit bats virological and serological findings in rousettus aegyptiacus experimentally inoculated with vero cells-adapted hogan strain of marburg virus transmission studies of hendra virus (equine morbilli-virus) in fruit bats, horses and cats experimental hendra virus infectionin pregnant guinea-pigs and fruit bats (pteropus poliocephalus) experimental nipah virus infection in pteropid bats (pteropus poliocephalus) australian bat lyssavirus infection in a captive juvenile black flying fox seasonal pulses of marburg virus circulation in juvenile rousettus aegyptiacus bats coincide with periods of increased risk of human infection ebola haemorrhagic fever. the lancet large serological survey showing cocirculation of ebola and marburg viruses in gabonese bat populations, and a high seroprevalence of both viruses in rousettus aegyptiacus ebola virus antibodies in fruit bats experimental inoculation of egyptian rousette bats (rousettus aegyptiacus) with viruses of the ebolavirus and marburgvirus genera comparative analysis of bat genomes provides insight into the evolution of flight and immunity genome analysis reveals insights into physiology and longevity of the brandt's bat myotis brandtii the immune gene repertoire of an important viral reservoir, the australian black flying fox transcriptome sequencing and annotation for the jamaican fruit bat (artibeus jamaicensis) transcriptome profiling of the virus-induced innate immune response in pteropus vampyrus and its attenuation by nipah virus interferon antagonist functions full-length transcriptome assembly from rna-seq data without a reference genome transcriptome reconstruction and annotation of cynomolgus and african green monkey de novo assembly and analysis of rna-seq data the evolution of gene expression levels in mammalian organs categorizer: a web-based program to batch analyze gene ontology classification categories induction and sequencing of rousette bat interferon α and β genes cutadapt removes adapter sequences from high-throughput sequencing reads gapped blast and psi-blast: a new generation of protein database search programs cd-hit: a fast program for clustering and comparing large sets of protein or nucleotide sequences rsem: accurate transcript quantification from rna-seq data with or without a reference genome r: a language and environment for statistical computing edger: a bioconductor package for differential expression analysis of digital gene expression data differential expression analysis of multifactor rna-seq experiments with respect to biological variation topgo: topgo: enrichment analysis for gene ontology gene ontology: tool for the unification of biology bedtools: a flexible suite of utilities for comparing genomic features submit your next manuscript to biomed central and take full advantage of: • convenient online submission • thorough peer review • no space constraints or color figure charges • immediate publication on acceptance • inclusion in pubmed, cas, scopus and google scholar • research which is freely available for redistribution we thank thomas kepler, stephanie d'souza, adam hume, elke muhlberger, jenna kelly for comments and discussion on the project. we also thank ahhyun kim for the illustration of a bat in fig a. this work was funded by the defense threat reduction agency (dtra) grant hdtra - - - and the training program in computational biology t gm - . the findings and conclusions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of the centers for disease control and prevention or the u.s. army. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. rr and gp designed the study. akl assembled the sequence data and constructed the assembly. akl and oe annotated the assembly. akl and hk examined the assembled data and assessed the quality. kak and ern performed and interpreted the molecular studies. akl and kak analyzed and interpreted the expression studies. mebj, bra and jst provided biological material for analysis. akl and kak wrote the manuscript. all authors read, edited, and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- -l rupmi authors: wang, tzu-hao; chao, angel title: microarray analysis of gene expression of cancer to guide the use of chemotherapeutics date: - - journal: taiwanese journal of obstetrics and gynecology doi: . /s - ( ) - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: l rupmi summary the beauty of microarray analysis of gene expression (mage) is that it can be used to discover some genes that were previously thought to be unrelated to a physiologic or pathologic event. during the period from to , applications of mage in cancer investigation have shifted from molecular profiling, identifying previously undiscovered cancer types, predicting outcomes of cancer patients, revealing metastasis signatures of solid tumors, to guiding the use of therapeutics. the roles of cancer genomic signatures have evolved through three phases. in the first phase, genomic signatures were described in stored cancer specimens and dubbed as molecular portraits of cancer. when gene expression profiles were carefully correlated with sufficient clinical information of cancer patients, new subgroups of cancers with distinct outcomes were revealed. in studies of the second phase, validation of cancer signatures was emphasized and commonly performed with independent groups of cancer specimens or independent data set. in the third phase, cancer genomic signatures have been further expanded beyond depicting the molecular portrait of cancer to predicting patient outcomes and guiding the use of cancer therapeutics. cancer genomic signatures have become an essential part of a new generation of cancer clinical trials. it is advocated that, in future clinical trials of cancer therapy, the cancer specimens of each participant should be tested for currently available predictor genomic signatures, so that the most effective treatment with the least adverse effects for each patient can be identified. then, participants can be triaged to an appropriate study group. a dna microarray is an orderly arrangement of dna on solid support, providing a medium for matching known and unknown dna samples [ ] . the types of dna microarrays and relevant methodologies are reviewed by chao et al [ ] . in this article, we briefly review the current advances in microarray analysis of gene expression (mage), focusing on recent reports of the microarray quality control (maqc) project and the shift of mage usage from molecular cancer profiling to clinical cancer therapeutics. gene expression profiling has generated and continues to generate extensive information on the molecular mechanisms of cellular function in particular tissues during physiologic or pathologic events. microarray analysis technology is a high throughput platform for gene expression profiling. the beauty of mage is that we can usually discover some genes that were previously not linked to certain physiologic or pathologic events. for instance, we have gained insight into the host response to sars infection [ ] , tumor biology of various cervical cancer types [ ] , molecular mechanisms in paclitaxel treatment of ovarian cancer [ ] , and the intrinsic difference among the mesenchymal stem cells derived from distinct origins [ ] . when dna microarrays are used to analyze similar tissues, gene expression profiles obtained from different studies used to be notoriously varied [ ] , sometimes even conflicting. possible causes for the discrepancy include different assay platforms using different sequences to represent a particular gene, non-uniform coverage of gene sets, distinct data filtering strategies, various statistical stringency, as well as data complexity and variability [ ] [ ] [ ] . the identification of differentially expressed genes in a studied condition with dna microarray analysis is often determined by the criteria set by the investigators. therefore, concerns have been raised regarding the reliability of microarray results due to the varied and often conflicting reports [ , ] . to address this concern, a collaborative effort led by the united states food and drug administration that included scientists from organizations representing academia, industry, and the us government has completed the maqc project [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . in this project, identical specimens were aliquoted and assigned to participating laboratories to analyze using different microarray platforms, including those manufactured by applied biosystems, affymetrix, agilent, and ge healthcare. to validate the quantitative capability of microarrays, microarray results were compared with real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (pcr). the correlation between affymetrix gene expression results and taqman real-time quantitative pcr results has shown good linearity (r = . ) [ ] . a fold-change ranking method with a p-value cutoff < . has recently been shown to be reproducible in selecting the signature gene list from results using different microarray platforms [ ] . these selection on criteria have been shown to more reproducible than t-test p value or significance analysis of microarrays [ ] . we have applied this method in selecting the signature gene expression profiles with ease; after filtering using p < . , we ranked genes by fold change and chose the top genes that were upregulated in each group of mesenchymal stem cells derived from amniotic fluid, amniotic membrane, cord blood, and adult bone marrow [ ] . collectively, because of the remarkable improvement of microarray technology and the aforementioned critical evaluations, the majority of microarray researchers recognize the reliability and consistency of well-designed and carefully conducted microarray results. even in the years before the publication of the maqc project, the clinical and biologic findings derived from microarrays were regarded to be "remarkably robust, with a high level of quantitative precision" [ , ] . the recent maqc results further demonstrate that microarray gene expression analysis itself is suitable as a stand-alone quantitative comparison [ ] . nevertheless, we should not ignore potential flaws. all the encouraging results of the maqc project only establish that microarray technology is robust, but they do not imply that the technology is foolproof. quoted from a commentary in the november , issue of cell, "you can learn to do pcr well in a month. but with microarrays, it can take years." [ ] . to evaluate how mage can help to make a diagnosis or choose a therapy, researchers use one set of patients to identify a gene-expression pattern called a genetic signature that can correspond to a clinical issue, such as a -year survival rate, the response to a treatment, or the induction of side effects by a drug. the power of microarray technology is its ability to use changes in multiple genes as the pattern of gene expression rather than to choose thresholds of individual markers [ ] . this genetic signature is then validated on other groups of patients [ ] . during this trial period, it is critical that investigators understand how to minimize expression noise and bias through effective design. expression noise can be defined as gene expression variation that does not correlate with the biology or behavior being studied and is introduced by both the technology itself and/or during tissue processing [ ] . bias is not inherent to microarray analysis but is easily introduced by faulty experimental design [ ] . a series of sophisticated analytical strategies to address these problems have been discussed [ , , ] , as summarized in table . an unsupervised analysis does not use any a priori class definition, but it simply seeks to determine what structure is inherent in the data [ ] . a commonly used example of unsupervised analysis is hierarchical clustering, i.e. letting the data define its own patterns by clustering genes that are most similar in expression profile [ ] . a supervised analysis is more likely to reveal putative associations between genes and the cytogenetic class, but it may bias the outcome by forcing a model onto the data, i.e. the "overfitting" risk [ ] . to extract robust profiles from multiple data sets, a meta-analysis has been done on independent data sets derived from more than , array experiments, identifying cancer signatures that were activated in cancer relative to the normal tissue from which the cancer arised [ ] . a meta-analysis of these signatures further identified genes that were activated in or more signatures, suggesting a common transcriptional program pervading most types of cancer [ ] . in functional enrichment analysis, a series of external functional information has been used to interpret and summarize large cancer signatures milestones [ ] . databases of external functional information include gene ontology (www.geneontology.org) [ ] , kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes (www.genome.jp/ kegg/), biocarta (www.biocarta.com), and genmapp (www.genmapp.org). commercially maintained integrative databases and softwares include metacore by genego (www.genego.com/metacore.php) and ingenuity systems (www.ingenuity.com). we have recently used the metacore suite to analyze the signature profiles of mesenchymal stem cells of various origins and obtain insights into biologic processes of each group [ ] . the goal of transcriptional network analysis is to simplify a complex cancer signature to a small number of activated transcriptional programs that may shed light on neoplastic mechanisms and further point to potential targets of therapeutic intervention [ ] . in addition to the aforementioned functional enrichment analysis, in which many of the downstream effectors are transcription factors, chromatin immunoprecipitation coupled with promoter microarrays (chip-chip assays) allow for genome-wide identification of transcription factor-binding sites [ , ] . with hundreds of consensus binding sequences for transcription factors, which have been defined by sequence-based methods, it is feasible to perform a large-scale integrative analysis of binding-site profiles and cancer signature expression profiles [ ] . analysis of expression modules, in which functional pathways (i.e. gene modules) are used as gene modules, was proposed to extend the investigation of cancer gene expression from individual genes to biologic processes [ ] . when this concept of higher-level modules was applied to examine the joint behavior of differentially expressed genes in diabetic muscle, a significant change in the whole set of genes was noted, even though the expression of individual genes was not significantly different [ ] . segal et al used this module-level analysis to obtain a global view of the shared and unique molecule modules underlying human cancer [ ] . they demonstrated that activation or repression of some modules (e.g. cell cycle) was shared across multiple tumor types and could be regarded as a general tumorigenesis, whereas others (e.g. growthregulatory modules) were more specific to tissue origin or progression of particular tumors [ ] . applications of mage in clinical cancer investigation have shifted from molecular profiling in the year [ , ] , identifying previously undiscovered subgroups of particular type of cancer [ ] , predicting outcomes of cancer patients in [ , ] , and revealing a metastasis signature of solid tumors [ ] , to guiding the use of therapeutics in [ ] , as summarized in table . the use of mage as the guide of cancer therapeutics has also been compared in meta-analyses in large b-cell lymphoma [ ] . in a leukemia data set of bone marrow samples ( acute lymphoblastic leukemia and acute myeloblastic leukemia), golub et al tested whether gene expression monitoring by dna microarray could be to assign tumors to known classes (class prediction) [ ] . using a supervised learning classification algorithm, golub et al first constructed class predictors and then evaluated them using cross-validation with the same collection of specimens with known outcomes. their results suggested a general strategy for discovering and predicting cancer classes, which proved useful in predicting outcomes in patients with other tumor types [ ] . as a proof of principle, perou et al used cdna microarrays to identify genes of differential expression between in vitro cultured human mammary epithelial cells and breast tumor specimens [ ] . their results supported the feasibility and usefulness of this systematic approach for studying variations in gene expression patterns in human cancers as a means to dissect and classify solid tumors [ ] . then, surgical specimens of human breast tumors from patients were analyzed for gene expression profiles [ ] . they identified a set of co-expressed genes for which variation in mrna levels could be related to specific features of physiologic variation. molecular portraits of cancer with gene expression profiles were thus proposed [ ] . diffuse large b-cell lymphoma (dlbcl) is one disease in which further subgrouping by histology is difficult because of inter-and intra-pathologist irreproducibility [ ] . using hierarchical clustering for mage profiling, dlbcl specimens could be divided into two distinct groups: cases of germinal center b-like dlbcl, and cases of activated b-like dlbcl [ ] . statistically, patients with germinal center b-like dlbcl had a better overall survival than those with activated b-like dlbcl. the molecular classification of tumors based on gene expression profiles has thus proved its ability to identify previously undetected and clinically significant subtypes of cancer [ ] . even in the same stage of disease, breast cancer is notorious for its unpredictable response to chemotherapy and variable overall outcome. chemotherapy [ ] or hormonal therapy [ ] reduces the risk of distant metastasis by about a third. however, because of the lack of an accurate patient triage strategy to determine who should or should not undergo adjuvant therapy, many patients who might not develop cancer metastasis at all have unnecessarily undergone adjuvant therapy. to develop patient-tailored therapy strategies for breast cancer, van't veer et al used supervised classification to analyze dna microarray data on primary breast tumors of young patients [ ] . van't veer et al identified a poor prognosis signature, by which they could predict a short time interval to distant metastasis. therefore, these results provide a strategy to select patients who would benefit from adjuvant therapy. in search of the molecular metastasis signature of cancer, ramaswamy et al compared gene expression patterns between primary tumors and metastases [ ] . they identified a gene expression signature that distinguished primary from metastatic adenocarcinomas. however, the authors found that a subset of primary tumors resembled metastatic tumors, and they further confirmed this finding by applying the expression signature to data on primary solid tumors of diverse types. notably, ramaswamy et al analyzed whole tumor tissues including surrounding stromal cells, instead of pure cancer population that could be isolated using laser capture microdissection. in the -gene metastasis signature identified in that study, two collagen genes and one lamin gene were upregulated, suggesting that malignancy is the product of the tumor-host microenvironment [ ] . two articles about the prognostic usefulness of gene expression profiles in acute myeloid leukemia (aml) [ , ] . these studies also demonstrated the ability of microarray technology to use somewhat imprecise patterns of gene expression rather than exact thresholds of individual markers [ ] . currently, many prestigious journals, such as science and nature series, ask authors to deposit their microarray data in a minimal information about a microarray experiment (miame)-compliant form to one of two public repositories: gene expression omnibus at national center of biotechnology and informatics (http://www. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/) and array express at european bioinformatics institute (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress) as a prerequisite of publication of microarrayderived research articles. therefore, many large-scale microarray data sets became available for re-analyses by other researchers worldwide. for instance, multiple important papers of breast cancer gene expression profiles [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] have been derived from the same comprehensive microarray data set with sufficient clinical information [ ] . using several microarray data sets [ , , ] , lossos et al did a meta-analysis of dbcl and selected genes for further analysis with real-time quantitative pcr on independent samples of lymphoma from patients [ ] . six genes that showed the strongest predicting power were lmo , bcl , fn , ccnd , scya , and bcl . after testing these genes in two additional independent microarray data sets, lossos et al concluded that measurement of the expression of these six genes to be sufficient in predicting overall survival in dbcl [ ] . the use of microarray gene expression profiles in predicting outcomes of cancer patients has been validated in the aforementioned studies. however, even if the same group samples were analyzed, distinct prognostic profiles have been derived for outcome prediction [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . to resolve this paradox, fan et al compared the prediction powers of the gene sets for the same group of specimens by applying five geneexpression-based models: intrinsic subtypes, -gene profile, wound response, recurrence score, and the two-gene ratio [ ] . by performing kaplan-meier survival analyses of patients with breast cancer, fan et al found that four of the five models tested showed significant agreement in the outcome prediction for individual patients. the only exception was the model using two-gene ratio, which could not result in a reliable prediction [ ] . the explanation for the surprising concordance among the four different models in predicting breast cancer outcomes is likely to be as follows: there was a large group of genes, which behaved differently and were related to biologic phenotypes of cancer, and ultimately, the patients' outcomes. in this large list of genes, each of the four models might have used only some of them to construct the signature profiles used for predicting outcomes. to dissect oncogenic pathway signatures in human cancer, bild et al used adenoviral vectors to express various oncogenic activities, such as myc, ras, e f , src, and β-catenin in otherwise quiescent cells. applying this strategy, they were able to specifically isolate the subsequent events as defined by the activation/deregulation of that single oncogenic pathway, and analyze these events with affymetrix oligonucleotide microarrays [ ] . in clinical samples of lung, breast and ovarian cancers, bild et al combined signature-based predictions across several pathways and identified coordinated patterns of pathway deregulation that distinguish between specific cancer and tumor subtypes [ ] . using pathway-specific inhibitors such as ras pathway inhibitors, either farnesyltransferase inhibitor (l- ) or farnesylthiosalicylic acid, and the src pathway inhibitor (su ), bild et al could predict drug sensitivity of tested breast cancer cell lines according to their pathway deregulation. in summary, predictions of pathway deregulation in cancer cells can also predict the sensitivity to therapeutic agents that target components of the pathway. these results pave the path of using these oncogenic pathway signatures to guide the use of target therapeutics. because of the enormous complexity of cancer and a frequent inability to properly guide the use of available therapeutics, chemotherapy for solid tumors often results in marginal success. most people with advanced solid tumors will relapse and die of their disease [ ] . furthermore, oncologists have always had to face the challenge of matching the right therapeutic regimen with the right individual, balancing relative benefit with risk to achieve the best outcome. with the goal of using genomic signatures to guide the use of chemotherapeutics, potti et al systematically extracted gene expression profiles from the following microarray data sets: nci- cancer cell lines [ ] , additional cancer cell lines [ ] , the authors' previously reported breast, ovarian and lung cancer specimens [ ] , and their newly analyzed ovarian cancer cell lines and advanced (figo stages iii or iv) serous epithelial ovarian cancers [ ] . potti et al demonstrated patterns of predicted sensitivity of three human solid cancers (breast, lung, ovary) to seven common chemotherapeutic drugs ( -fluorouracil, paclitaxel, docetaxel, adriamycin, topotecan, cyclophosphamide, etoposide). to evaluate how individual signatures respond to a combination of drugs, potti et al also analyzed breast cancer patients who were in a breast neoadjuvant treatment study that used a combination of paclitaxel, -fluorouracil, adriamycin and cyclophosphamide (tfac). the predicted response that was based on a combined probability of sensitivity built from the individual chemosensitivity predictions yielded a statistically significant distinction between responders and nonresponders [ ] . as summarized in the figure, the roles of cancer genomic signatures have evolved through three phases. in the first phase, genomic signatures were described in stored cancer specimens and dubbed as molecular portraits of cancer [ ] . when gene expression profiles were carefully correlated with sufficient clinical information of cancer patients, new subgroups of cancers with distinct outcomes were revealed [ ] . in studies of the second phase, validation of cancer signatures was emphasized and commonly done with independent groups of cancer specimens or independent data sets [ , , , ] . in the third phase, cancer genomic signatures have been expanded beyond depicting the molecular portrait of cancer to predicting patient outcomes [ , ] , including metastasis [ ] . it has become a rule, in the third phase, that all of the prognostic genomic signatures be validated in additional data sets. potti et al further demonstrated the role of cancer genomic signatures as a guide to the use of cancer therapeutics [ ] . a new generation of cancer clinical trials was proposed, in which the cancer specimens of each participant should be tested for currently available predictor genomic signatures so that the most effective treatment and the least adverse effects for each patient could be identified. then, participants can be triaged to an appropriate study group (figure) . in fact, successful examples in treating patients with early-stage non-small cell lung cancer were reported by potti et al [ ] and in treating those with advanced-stage ovarian cancer by dressman et al [ ] . it is commonly argued against microarray results by the fact that a transcriptome does not necessarily reflect the corresponding proteome, the collection of proteins that execute the majority of cellular functions. indeed, mrna expression is only a coarse surrogate for protein activation levels. for many genes, however, mrna expression is a useful surrogate [ ] . as documented in many studies, when one finds strong signals of differential expression, these are typically reflected later at the protein levels. the latter can be validated by protein assays such as enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays [ ] or immunohistochemistry [ ] . at the current developmental pace of genomic technology, the clinical trend towards personalized medicine is almost certain (figure) . many biomedical researchers and clinicians predict that microarray technology will be incorporated into clinical laboratories in hospitals in the near future. as extrapolated from the results of the studies discussed in this article, the use of a "focused array" to measure the expression of to genes in the signature profile for a selected disease would help clinicians predict the patient's response to a drug, triage patients into a chemo-responsive versus chemo-resistant group, and evaluate a panel of risk three phases of genomic signatures in cancer therapy and a new generation of clinical trials. this schema is adapted from herbst and lippman [ ] and potti et al [ ] . factors that may result in comorbidity of the patient. to achieve this practical 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non-small-cell lung cancer: sobering results chemosensitivity prediction by transcriptional profiling gene expression profiling of cancer cell lines predicts resistance towards anticancer drugs at clinically achieved concentrations molecular signatures of lung cancer-toward personalized therapy a genomic strategy to refine prognosis in early-stage non-small-cell lung cancer an integrated genomic-based approach to individualized treatment of patients with advanced-stage ovarian cancer the authors like to thank dr yun-shien lee key: cord- -bpg dg authors: greenaway, hui yee; kurniawan, monica; price, david a; douek, daniel c; davenport, miles p; venturi, vanessa title: extraction and characterization of the rhesus macaque t cell receptor β-chain genes date: - - journal: immunol cell biol doi: . /icb. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: bpg dg rhesus macaque models have been instrumental for the development and testing of vaccines prior to human studies and have provided fundamental insights into the determinants of immune efficacy in a variety of infectious diseases. however, the characterization of antigen-specific t cell receptor (tcr) repertoires during adaptive immune responses in these models has previously relied on human tcr gene assignments. here, we extracted and characterized tcr β-chain (trb) genes from the recently sequenced rhesus macaque genome that are homologous to the human trb genes. comparison of the rhesus macaque trb genes with the human trb genes revealed an average best-match similarity of . %. furthermore, we confirmed the usage of most rhesus macaque trb genes by expressed tcrβ sequences within epitope-specific tcr repertoires. this primary description of the rhesus macaque trb genes will provide a standardized nomenclature and enable better characterization of tcr usage in studies that utilize this species. the rhesus macaque is widely used as a non-human primate model to study infection and immunity due to the close genetic relationship with humans (∼ % average humanmacaque sequence identity ) and the homology between human and rhesus pathogen genomes , . indeed, rhesus macaques have been used to study fundamental aspects of immunology, including the development and maintenance of t cell memory , immunodominance and the aging immune system . there have also been many studies of users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms immune responses in rhesus macaque models of human infections such as human immunodeficiency virus (hiv) , influenza virus , , tuberculosis , epstein-barr virus (ebv) , , cytomegalovirus (cmv) , - , smallpox , measles and severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars) . furthermore, rhesus macaques have been instrumental in the design and testing of vaccines against infections such as hiv and smallpox . the various roles of t lymphocytes in adaptive immune responses to infection, which include the provision of helper functions to other immune cells and cytolytic control of infected cells, require that t cell populations recognize a large variety of foreign peptides bound to major histocompatibility complex (mhc) molecules. this recognition is facilitated by a diverse repertoire of t cell receptors (tcrs). the tcr repertoires that respond to different peptide-mhc epitopes can vary greatly. indeed, diversity estimates range from ∼ to > different tcrs responding to a specific epitope - . moreover, some epitope-specific tcr repertoires can feature biased usage of tcr vβ (trbv) or jβ (trbj) genes, or distinct patterns of amino acid usage within the third complementarity-determining region (cdr ) . studies of the tcr repertoire can provide valuable information about the molecular evolution of an immune response and the factors that shape clonotype selection in vivo . furthermore, it is becoming increasingly apparent that the clonotypic structure of an epitope-specific t cell response can have important implications for the immune control of some viral infections. for example, one issue of current debate that has important consequences for the rational design of immunotherapeutic and vaccination strategies , is whether a restricted tcr repertoire responding to a highly variable pathogen could be associated with the emergence of viral mutants that escape t cell recognition at this epitope - . many studies of t cell immunity in rhesus macaque models of infection have utilized tcr repertoire data to gain additional insights , , , - . in particular, a large number of studies have characterized the tcr repertoires of target cd + t cell populations or cd + t cell populations involved in the control of simian immunodeficiency virus (siv) in rhesus macaques , , - , - . most of these studies have relied on human tcr gene homology to identify v and j gene usage. although the rhesus macaque tcr dβ (trbd) and trbj genes have previously been sequenced , the trbv genes were not previously available. here, we present the trbv, trbd and trbj genes extracted from the rhesus macaque genome on the basis of their homology with the human trb genes. in addition, we demonstrate extracted trb gene usage in expressed tcrβ sequences by using an existing database of tcrβ sequences involved in cd + t cell responses specific for the immunodominant mamu-a* -restricted sl /tl (s/ttpesanl; tat, residues - ) and cm (ctpydinqm; gag, residues - ) epitopes derived from siv , . the trb genes extracted from the rhesus macaque genome will enable more accurate characterization of rhesus macaque tcrβ repertoires. trbv gene corresponding most precisely to each rhesus macaque trbv gene was identified on the basis of the highest percentage match between the nucleotide sequences for the trbv genes (i.e. v-gene in the imgt standarized labels). the percent similarity between the nucleotide sequences for the rhesus macaque and the best-match human trbv genes ranged between . % and . %, with an average similarity of . %. we could not identify a one-to-one correspondence between all rhesus macaque and human trbv genes ( figure ). in many cases, one human trbv gene was found to be the best match to more than one of the trbv genes extracted from the rhesus macaque genome. for example, the human trbv - gene had the highest percent similarity of all human trbv genes to five of the rhesus macaque trbv genes; in contrast, the human trbv - gene was not the best match to any of the rhesus macaque trbv genes. for five of the trbv genes, only partial sequences were available from the rhesus macaque genome (table s in supporting information) and only two of these partial trbv genes were incomplete at the ' end, which would influence their use in analysis of the cdr . the human trbv subgroup, consisting of just one gene, was the only one for which no corresponding trb gene was found in the rhesus macaque genome (using a cutoff of % similarity). we also compared the trbv exons (i.e. l-part +v-exon in the imgt standardized labels) between the rhesus macaque and best-match human trbv genes ( table ). the percent identities between the nucleotide sequences for the rhesus macaque and human trbv exons ranged between . % and . %, with an average of . %. the similarities between the rhesus macaque and human trbv exons at the amino acid sequence level ranged between . % and . %, with an average of . %. the two trbd genes extracted from the rhesus macaque genome were found to have . % and . % agreements at the nucleotide level with the corresponding human trbd genes ( table and rhesus_macaque_trbd.fsa in supporting information). the percent similarities between the rhesus macaque and human trbd exon (i.e. d-region in the imgt standardized labels) nucleotide sequences were . % and . %. the rhesus macaque trbd genes have been sequenced in a previous study . the trbd gene extracted from the rhesus macaque genome does not differ from that reported in this previous study. a . % difference was found between the trbd gene reported here and that reported previously, with a single nucleotide difference occurring in the ' spacer. thus, there are no differences in the trbd d-region extracted from the rhesus macaque genome compared with that reported previously . for each of the human trbj genes, there was one corresponding trbj gene found on chromosome of the rhesus macaque genome (table and rhesus_macaque_trbj.fsa in supporting information). the percent similarities between the rhesus macaque trbj genes and the corresponding human trbj genes are shown in table (range: . % and . %; average: . %). a comparison of the rhesus macaque and human trbj exons (i.e. j-region in the imgt standardized labels) revealed percent similarities of nucleotide sequences ranging between . % and %, with an average similarity of . % (table ). the similarities between the translated trbj exons of the rhesus macaque and human genes ranged between . % and %, with an average similarity of . % (table ) . we compared the trbj genes extracted from the rhesus macaque genome with those reported in a previous study . the only differences found were in the trbj - and trbj - genes, which differed by . % and %, respectively. a single nucleotide difference in the th nucleotide position of the trbj - exon resulted in a difference of a single amino acid (i.e. the trbj - exon from the rhesus macaque genome contained h in the th amino acid position instead of y). in the trbj - gene, a single nucleotide difference in the st nucleotide position of the exon did not result in any amino acid differences between the trbj - exon extracted from the rhesus macaque genome and that reported by cheynier et al. to demonstrate the use of the trb genes extracted from the rhesus macaque genome by expressed tcrβ sequences, we used an existing database of tcrβ sequences involved in cd + t cell responses specific for the immunodominant mamu-a* -restricted siv-sl /tl and siv-cm epitopes in rhesus macaques , . each of these tcrβ sequences was aligned with the trb gene exons to determine the most likely trbv, trbj and trbd gene usage. in table and table we show the rhesus macaque trb genes that were found to be most likely used by at least one of the tcrβ sequences. the genes used by the tcrβ sequences included of the trbv genes, both trbd genes, and of the trbj genes. the highest percent homology and longest match between each trb gene and a tcrβ sequence is also shown. of the rhesus macaque trbv genes not used by the tcrβ sequences, either didn't begin with a start codon or contained stop codons when translated ( table ). the rhesus macaque trbj - p gene, which is homologous to the human trbj - p gene (qualified by imgt as having an "open reading frame" functionality), was the only trbj gene not used by the tcrβ sequences. deviations between the rhesus macaque trb genes and tcrβ sequences were mostly attributed to the full-length genes not being used by the tcrβ sequences, owing to nucleotides being cleaved during tcr gene recombination. however, allelic differences could also exist between the single rhesus macaque sequenced in the genome project and the siv-infected macaques from which the tcrβ sequences were obtained. possible allelic variants of the trb genes used by the tcrβ sequences were not identified due to the level of uncertainty associated with distinguishing allelic variants from sequencing errors, in either the rhesus macaque genome or tcrβ sequences, when there were often small numbers of tcrβ sequences per rhesus macaque using a particular trb gene. however, we investigated whether the nucleotide sequence variants of the trbj - and trbj - genes reported by cheynier et al. were used in our collection of epitopespecific tcrβ sequences. the previously reported variant of the trbj - gene was found to be used by some tcrβ sequences, suggesting that this is an allelic variant of the trbj - gene extracted from the rhesus macaque genome. the trbj - gene variant was not used by any of the tcrβ sequences. this trbj - gene variant may be an allelic variant that was not present in any of the rhesus macaques in which the mamu-a* -restricted siv-sl /tl -and siv-cm -specific tcrβ repertoires were studied but it is also possible that the single nucleotide difference in the trbj - gene reported cheynier et al. is due to sequencing error. the assembly of reference tcr gene data sets for many species has often relied on the ad hoc sourcing of different tcr genes from various studies over time. here, we report a reference set of trb genes extracted from the rhesus macaque genome, most of which were expressed by tcrβ sequences in our extensive database of tcrβ repertoires involved in cd + t cell responses to the immunodominant mamu-a* -restricted sl /tl and cm epitopes derived from siv. although there is a high degree of similarity ( . %) between the exons of the rhesus macaque and human trb genes, important interspecies differences exist. these interspecies differences are emphasized by the lack of a one-to-one correspondence between the rhesus macaque and human trbv genes, and could potentially limit the accuracy of studies that rely on human tcr genes to characterize rhesus macaque tcr repertoires. the rhesus macaque trb genes described herein will not only aid in the identification of the trbv and trbj genes used by tcrβ sequences, they will also improve the accuracy of studies that aim to characterize the v(d)j recombination mechanisms that produce tcrβ repertoires. indeed, several of the extracted rhesus macaque trb genes have already been used in a study of tcrβ sequence sharing between macaques in the siv-sl /tl -specific and siv-cm -specific cd + t cell responses . this study required predictions of the potential v(d)j recombination mechanisms involved in producing the observed epitopespecific tcrβ repertoires, which were more reliable using the rhesus macaque trb genes instead of the human trb genes. rhesus macaques are frequently used to study fundamental aspects of immunology and investigate vaccine efficacy in a variety of infectious diseases. increasing evidence, much of which has come from studies conducted with this non-human primate model, indicates that the clonotypic architecture of antigen-specific t cell populations is a fundamental determinant of immune control and disease outcome , . thus, the rhesus macaque trb genes presented here provide a valuable tool for dissecting the molecular features of tcrβ repertoires that underlie such associations in this model. the published rhesus macaque (macaca mulatta) genome is available from the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) rhesus macaque genome resources website (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/genome/guide/rhesus_macaque/). the trb gene locus is located on chromosome (accession number: nc_ . ). the rhesus macaque chromosome sequence was queried against all human trb reference genes (obtained from the ncbi human resources website http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/genome/guide/ human/) using blast (basic local alignment search tool) to identify regions in the rhesus macaque sequence that resembled human trb genes. results were filtered to those with e-value ≤ . , total alignment length ≥ % of the human reference gene, and total percent identity ≥ % with the human reference gene. these parameters were chosen to minimize false positive search results. overlapping regions were merged and all regions were extended in both the ' and ' directions to account for regions missed in blast's local alignment search. sequence alignments using clustalw were then performed to compare each region of the rhesus macaque genome with each human trb gene from the ncbi human reference set. the best human match to each macaque region was identified and then used as a guide to determine the exact length and terminal ends of the rhesus macaque trb gene sequences, as well as intron and exon positions. we assessed the similarity between the rhesus macaque and the ncbi human trb reference gene sequences (or the imgt human trb reference gene if the ncbi reference gene sequence was partial) by identifying the human trb gene that had the highest overall percentage identity with each rhesus macaque trb gene using a clustalw alignment. we encountered the following scenarios: (i) a clearly identifiable one-to-one correspondence between a rhesus macaque and a human trb gene; (ii) a rhesus macaque trb gene with reasonable similarity to a group of human trb genes; and, (iii) a human trb gene with no reasonable correspondence to a rhesus macaque trb gene. we therefore adopted the following approach to labelling the rhesus macaque trb genes. for each rhesus macaque trb gene, we first identified the group of human trb genes to which it was most similar (e.g. trbv ). we then numbered all rhesus macaque trb genes which were most similar to this same group of human trb genes according to the order in which the trb sequences were found in the rhesus macaque genome (e.g. trbv - , trbv - , etc.). the immunogenetics (imgt) nomenclature for tcr genes was used throughout. for all mamu-a* -restricted siv-sl /tl -specific and siv-cm -specific tcrβ sequences, we performed a complete alignment analysis using the identified rhesus macaque trb genes. this analysis determined for each epitope-specific tcrβ sequence the bestpercentage-match trbv, trbd and trbj genes over the longest alignment length by initially aligning the trbv gene at the ' end of the tcrβ sequence and then aligning the trbj gene at the ' end of the tcrβ sequence. a minimum percentage match of % over an alignment length of at least nucleotides was required for alignment of the trbv genes. for alignment of the trbj genes, a minimum percentage match of % was required over the length of the trbj exon. the trbd genes were then aligned to the sequence interval between the identified trbv and trbj regions. a match to a string of two or more nucleotides was considered to originate from the trbd gene. exons, introns and recombination signal sequences have been included and gene families consisting of multiple genes are highlighted. all trbv gene sequences were aligned using clustalw and the tree was constructed in clustalw using the neighbour-joining method and bootstrapped times. branches with bootstrap values > % are indicated with a black dot and branch lengths are those assigned by clustalw. the tree was visualized using the interactive tree of life (available at http://itol.embl.de/). note that the tree has been rotated about the mid-point of the most distant nodes to assist visualization. greenaway et al. comparison of the rhesus macaque trbv genes and their best human homologues. the best human homologue had the highest percent identity with the rhesus macaque gene nucleotide sequence. the alignment length is the total length across both the aligned rhesus macaque and human gene/exon sequences. the exon amino acid sequence was translated in the frame that yielded a start codon at the ' end of the exon. comparisons of the exon amino acid sequences were omitted for trbv genes in which no start codon was found. for partial rhesus macaque exons missing a portion of sequence at the ' end, the sequences were translated in the frame in which the start codon was found in the human homologues. the rhesus macaque gene is a partial sequence, with a missing portion of sequence at the ' end of the gene. the percent identities between rhesus macaque and human genes and exons are calculated with the missing portion of rhesus macaque gene excluded. the rhesus macaque gene is a partial sequence, with a missing portion of sequence at the ' end of the gene. the percent identities between rhesus macaque and human genes and exons are calculated with the missing portion of rhesus macaque gene excluded. table comparison of the rhesus macaque trbj genes and their human homologues. the alignment length is the total length across both the aligned rhesus macaque and human gene/exon sequences. the trbj exons were translated in the frame that yielded the characteristic fgxg or lgxg motif. the alignments were performed over the total length of the trbd or trbj exon. evolutionary and biomedical insights from the rhesus macaque genome complete nucleotide sequence of the rhesus lymphocryptovirus: genetic validation for an epstein-barr virus animal model complete sequence and genomic analysis of rhesus cytomegalovirus development and homeostasis of t cell memory in rhesus macaque analysis of tcralphabeta combinations used by simian immunodeficiency virus-specific cd + t cells in rhesus monkeys: implications for ctl immunodominance dramatic increase in naive t cell turnover is linked to loss of naive t cells from old primates current concepts in aids pathogenesis: insights from the siv/macaque model preclinical study of influenza 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the recognition of mutant simian immunodeficiency virus variants clonal focusing of epitope-specific cd + t lymphocytes in rhesus monkeys following vaccination and simian-human immunodeficiency virus challenge the role of production frequency in the sharing of simian immunodeficiency virus-specific cd + tcrs between macaques contributions of cd +, cd +, and cd +cd + t cells to skewing within the peripheral t cell receptor beta chain repertoire of healthy macaques the disruption of macaque cd + t-cell repertoires during the early simian immunodeficiency virus infection maintenance of cd + t cell tcr vbeta repertoire heterogeneity is characteristic of apathogenic siv infection in non-human primate model of aids contribution of t-cell receptor repertoire breadth to the dominance of epitope-specific cd + t-lymphocyte responses sequence of the rhesus monkey t-cell receptor beta chain diversity and joining loci public clonotype usage identifies protective gag-specific cd + t cell responses in siv infection basic local alignment search tool clustal w: improving the sensitivity of progressive multiple sequence alignment through sequence weighting, position-specific gap penalties and weight matrix choice imgt, the international immunogenetics database the neighbor-joining method: a new method for reconstructing phylogenetic trees interactive tree of life (itol): an online tool for phylogenetic tree display and annotation we thank dr mark tanaka for assistance with the phylogenetic analysis and associate professor andrew collins for helpful discussions. refer to web version on pubmed central for supplementary material. key: cord- - sfyz authors: xia, hongyue; li, xibao; zhao, wenliang; jia, shuran; zhang, xiaoqing; irwin, david m.; zhang, shuyi title: adaptive evolution of feline coronavirus genes based on selection analysis date: - - journal: biomed res int doi: . / / sha: doc_id: cord_uid: sfyz purpose: we investigated sequences of the feline coronaviruses (fcov), which include feline enteric coronavirus (fecv) and feline infectious peritonitis virus (fipv), from china and other countries to gain insight into the adaptive evolution of this virus. methods: ascites samples from cats with suspected fip and feces samples from healthy cats were screened for the presence of fcov. partial viral genome sequences, including parts of the nsp -nsp , s, n, and b genes, were obtained and aligned with additional sequences obtained from the genbank database. bayesian phylogenetic analysis was conducted, and the possibility of recombination within these sequences was assessed. analysis of the levels of selection pressure experienced by these sequences was assessed using methods on both the paml and datamonkey platforms. results: of the cats investigated, two suspected fip cats and one healthy cat tested positive for fcov. phylogenetic analysis showed that all of the sequences from mainland china cluster together with a few sequences from the netherlands as a distinct clade when analyzed with fcov sequences from other countries. fewer than recombination breakpoints were detected in the nsp -nsp , s, n, and b genes, suggesting that analyses for positive selection could be conducted. a total of , , , and positively selected sites were detected in the nsp -nsp , s, n, and b genes, respectively, with the previously described site of the s gene, which distinguishes fipv from fecv, being a positive selection site. conversely, , , , and negative selection sites in the nsp - , s, n, and b genes, respectively, were identified. conclusion: our study provides evidence that the fcov genes encoding replicative, entry, and virulence proteins potentially experienced adaptive evolution. a greater number of sites in each gene experienced negative rather than positive selection, which suggests that most of the protein sequence must be conservatively maintained for virus survival. a few of the sites showing evidence of positive selection might be associated with the more severe pathology of fipv or help these viruses survive other harmful conditions. feline coronaviruses (fcov) belong to the genus alphacoronavirus within the subfamily coronavirinae of the family coronaviridae in the order nidovirales [ ] . fcov include the feline enteric coronavirus (fecv) and the feline infectious peritonitis virus (fipv) [ ] . similar to other coronaviruses, such as the sars and mers viruses, fipv infections are distributed worldwide and can cause a fatal pathogenic disease fip in their hosts, thus, seriously endangering the life and health of cats [ ] . however, the more common variant, fecv, causes an asymptomatic or mild enteric infection [ ] . fipv and fecv are antigenically divided into two types (i and ii) based on a difference in the nucleotide sequence of the s gene, which encodes the spike protein [ ] . most natural cases of feline coronavirus infection are type i fcov; however, these viruses poorly propagate in cell culture, whereas type ii fcov viruses can grow in several different cell lines [ ] . the pathogenesis of fip is not yet completely understood. it has been suggested that large viral quasispecies of fcov, which are due to copying errors of its rna genome, may destroy a weak immune system found in some individuals leading to fip [ , ] . the coronavirus spike (s) glycoprotein is a typical class viral fusion protein and plays a central role in receptor binding and viral entry [ ] . in addition to the s gene, there are several other genes in the fcov genome. nonstructural protein nsp encodes the rna-dependent rna polymerase protein, nsp encodes the helicase protein, and nsp encodes the exoribonuclease protein, which are all essential for genome replication. the n gene encodes the nucleocapsid, which is commonly used in phylogenetic analysis [ ] . the b gene is a small orf that is located downstream of the n gene and is important for virulence [ ] . compared to the more predominant type i fcov, type ii fcov viruses are only found in - % of infections [ ] . at present, a high incidence of type i fcov occurs in europe, japan, australia, korea, and the usa.however, fipv cases in japan and taiwan are more frequently associated with type ii fcov [ , ] , suggesting a difference in the geographical distribution of the different serotypes of fcov. to date, almost all fcov strains isolated from china are type i [ ] . the goal of our study is to increase the sampling of fcov in china and to also examine the selective pressures acting on the genes of these viruses isolated from different parts of the world. to study this, we obtained ascites samples from cats with suspected fip as well as feces samples from healthy cats. these samples were collected at several pet hospitals in liaoning province, china, during the period october to may . of these samples, were found to be positive for fcov. the adaptive evolutionary properties of fcov, including selective pressure, were systematically analyzed using paml and datamonkey for the key fcov functional proteins involved in viral entry, replication, and virulence. the aim of this study was to provide insight into the adaptive evolution of fcov, which might provide insight into their pathogenic mechanisms. . . sampling. samples were collected from veterinary hospitals in liaoning province, china, between october and may . a total of samples were obtained, with being from cats with suspected fip, as they had clinical symptoms such as loss of appetite and weight and increased abdominal girth with peritoneal effusion and/or pleural effusion [ ] that are associated with this disease. some, but not all, of the cases were examined for clinical hematologic and biochemical analysis. effusions were collected by needle and syringe puncture guided by ultrasound. in addition, fresh feces samples were collected from healthy cats using anal swabs, which were suspended in pbs and then stored at - °c. . . viral rna and reverse transcription. viral rna was extracted from μl of effusion or feces suspension with the qiaamp viral rna minikit (qiagen, shenyang, china), following the manufacturer's instructions, and stored at - °c. extracted rna was used as the template for cdna synthesis with primescript™ ii st strand cdna synthesis kit (takara, china) with random hexamers, following the manufacturer's instructions. . . pcr, cloning, and sequencing. to amplify the s gene, we designed primers based on available feline coronavirus sequences. the partial s gene was divided into two segments, with primers designed separately for each part. the best primers and reaction conditions for each pcr reaction were selected using gradient pcr. primer pairs s b -f and s b -r and sc -f and sc -r were used to amplify the ′ and ′ ends of the s gene, respectively. pcr was performed using μl of cdna in a μl reaction containing mmol/l concentration of each primer and μl of x es taq mastermix (beijing comwin biotech co., ltd.). to amplify partial nsp , nsp , and nsp gene sequences, we designed primer pairs b f and b r and b f and b r. to amplify part of the n gene, primer pair n and n was used [ ] . to amplify the b gene, the previously designed primer pair b-f and b-r was used [ ] . all pcr reactions had the same preheating temperature of °c and an extension temperature of °c. annealing temperatures of the different amplifications are listed in table . products of the amplifications were separated by electrophoresis, with dna from appropriate bands extracted, cloned, and sequenced (sangon biotech, shanghai, china) to confirm virus detection. as previously described [ ] , type i fcov is entirely a feline virus; however, type ii fcov is a recombinant of type i fcov and a canine coronavirus (ccov) that resulted in a fcov genome containing the s gene and parts of the adjacent genes from ccov. this results in the recombinant type ii fcov s gene having a different size from the type i s gene. thus, amplification of the s gene allows typing of the fcov virus. studies. in addition to the fcov genomes sequenced in this study, genome sequences that contained all of the , bases that we amplified in our sequences and represent the diversity found in several select countries (united states, united kingdom, netherlands, and belgium) were downloaded from the genbank database for analysis. the accession numbers for these sequences are listed in supporting information table s . to establish the phylogenetic relationships of these viruses, conserved regions of the nsp , nsp , nsp , s, b, and n genes were concatenated into a single sequence. from the fcov sequences from mainland china and other countries, an alignment of , bases was generated using clustalw as implemented in mega . . bayesian phylogenetic trees, based on the nucleotide sequences, which were constructed using mrbayes . with , , generations, sampled every generations, using the commands mcmcp samplefreq= , a burnin of , generations, chains, and the best-fit substitution model gtr+i+g applied, which had been selected using jmodeltest [ ] . canine cov (ccov) sequences (accession numbers kc . and jq . ) were used as the outgroup to root the trees. since recombination can influence the detection of positive selection, we assessed whether recombination had occurred within our aligned dataset using the gard (genetic algorithm for recombination detection) method [ ] . a model selection procedure was run for each gene (the nsp , nsp , and nsp genes were considered to be a single gene), which sifts through all possible timereversible models in a hierarchical testing procedure combining nested lrt tests with aic selection to pick a single "bestfitting" rate matrix, with site-to-site rate variation accounted for by the β-Γ distribution [ ] . the best-fitting substitution models for the s gene was trn model; however, there was no name of best model for the other three genes, and serial number of the best-fitting substitution models for nsp - , n, and b gene was ( ) with aic of . , ( ) with aic of . , and ( ) with aic of . , respectively. to detect the presence of positive selection in the fcov sequences from the different countries, we applied the branch, site, and branch-site tests from the paml suit [ ] . values of ω (the nonsynonymous/synonymous rate ratio) greater than suggest positive selection. the p values can be calculated through likelihood ratio tests (lrt), where the null hypothesis would be rejected if the p value is < . when the model allows positive selection. the branch model detects positive selection acting on particular lineages [ , ] . a variety of models, including one ratio, free ratio, and two ratios (where the foreground lineages should be labeled), were analyzed. comparing the free ratio and one ratio models examines whether the ω ratios differ among lineages. comparing the two ratio and free ratio examines whether the ω ratios are different between the foreground and background lineages. the site models allow different ω ratios among sites [ , ] . the one ratio model m assumes that the same ω exists for all sites across the phylogeny, while the nearly neutral model m , positive selection model m , discrete model m , beta model m , and beta and ω model m assume , , , , and classes of codons, respectively, with different ω values, including some that suggest positive selection. if a site class with ω greater than one is found, which suggests positive selection, then sites with evidence of positive selection and a posterior probability p > % level were identified. posterior probabilities were calculated by naïve empirical bayes (neb) and the bayes empirical bayes (beb) [ ] . selection pressure was also analyzed through the datamonkey suite of programs, including fixed effects likelihood (fel; p < : ), random effects likelihood (rel; bayes factor > ), and mixed-effects model of evolution (meme; p < : ). we considered a site to be under positive or negative selection when detected as such by at least two different methods. fcov. these three positive cats were derived from different households. all of the positive cases were classified as type i fcov, as the amplified s gene products had a size that was expected for type i, rather than type ii fcov. symptoms such as fever, anorexia, loss of weight, panting, and abdominal extension were observed in the suspected cases, and the two fip-positive cats subsequently died within days of admission to the hospital, while the healthy cat remained asymptomatic. nsp , nsp , nsp , s, b, and n gene clones were obtained from these three positive samples for sequencing and were used in the following analyses. accession numbers for the fcov sequences obtained in this study are provided in supporting information table s . analysis. an alignment of , bases, containing the partial nsp , nsp , nsp , s, and n genes and the complete b gene sequence, was used for the phylogenetic analyses, with canine sequences used to root the tree. this analysis showed that our new fcov sequences from mainland china clustered together previously characterized sequences from china, as well as a few sequences from the netherlands as a distinct clade, separate from those of other countries (figure ). the analysis identified two additional clades, one composed of sequences only from the united kingdom and a second composed of sequences from belgium, united states, and the netherlands (figure ) . apart from the clustering of the sequences from the united kingdom, no clear geographic separation of fcov sequences can be observed for the other two clades. [ ] , we tested our fcov sequences for evidence of recombination using gard with kh testing [ ] . the results of this analysis for each gene is shown in table . gard detected evidence for one breakpoint within the nsp -nsp genes and within each of the s, n, and b genes. however, of these potential breakpoints, only those at locations (nsp -nsp ), and (both n), and ( b) were significant supported by the kh test, with p values < . . as only a few recombination breakpoints were reliably detected by gard, this suggests that recombination has little effect on our sequences and should not affect the detection of sites under positive selection [ ] . . . measurement of selection pressure. we used methods to identify sites within the fcov sequences with evidence for positive selection. the results of these analysis are shown in table . for the nsp -nsp gene region, four positively selected sites ( , , , and ) were identified by at least two methods showing significance at p < : , bayes factors > , or posterior probabilities > % (table ). site in the nsp -nsp genes showed evidence of positive selection with methods from both paml and datamonkey, while the three remaining sites in this gene fragment were only detected by two or more methods from datamonkey. a total of twelve positively selected sites ( , , , , , , , , , , , and ) were found in the s gene that were identified by at least two methods. sites , , , and showed evidence for positive selection from methods using both paml and datamonkey (table ) , while the other eight sites were detected by methods from only one platform (either paml or datamonkey) ( table ) . for the n gene, only one positively selected site, position , was identified by methods from both paml and datamonkey, while three others ( , , and ) were identified only with methods from paml (table ). three positively selected sites ( , , and ) in the b gene were detected by methods from both paml and datamonkey (table ) , with one site ( ) showing evidence for positive selection only with methods from paml (table ). in addition to positive selection, the fel and rel methods can both identify sites with evidence of negative selection sites. using these methods, we identified , , , and negative selection sites in the nsp - , s, n, and b genes, respectively, which had significant evidence by both methods (supporting information tables s -s ). when the branch and branch-site models of paml were applied to the alignments, no evidence for positive selection was found for any branch in the phylogenies. to study the evolution of feline cov (fcov) in china, we collected a total of samples from cats, with of these samples testing positive for type i fcov. the identification of type i fcov in cats in liaoning province, china, is in line with a previous study that showed that type i fcov is most prevalent in cats in china [ ] . as the occurrence of fip is associated with fecv, which results from fecv mutating into fipv [ ] [ ] [ ] , we selected both fipv and fecv sequences from several other countries for our phylogenetic analysis of our fcov sequences. phylogenetic analysis of the concatenated gene sequences obtained in this study yields some insight into the regionalism of type i fcovs. all fcov sequences from mainland china cluster together with a few sequences from the netherlands. the biomed research international clustered together with other fipv sequences of china; however, it was an early diverging lineage in this clade ( figure ) ; thus, the other fipv sequences from china possibly contain additional disease-causing mutations. sequences from the united kingdom cluster together as a separate clade. the third cluster of fcov sequences include isolates from belgium, united states, and the netherlands. apart for the united kingdom clade, an obvious geographical separation of the fcov sequences is not observed, which might be a consequence of the trade in cats and tourism between countries. our analysis shows that fcov can be transmitted from one country to another, although a particular geographic position, such as the united kingdom locates in an island, might limit its spread. the datamonkey suite of programs can identify codons under selection as well as the presence of recombinant sequences within a dataset [ ] . ideally, we should first determine whether recombination has occurred among the gene sequences, which can be assessed using gard [ ] . although a breakpoint was identified within the nsp - gene segment and more within the other three genes examined, the number of breakpoints is less than three and thus likely would have little effect on the identification of sites experiencing positive selection by empirical bayes methods [ ] . in addition, it is known that the type ii fcov emerged via double recombination between type i fcov and type ii ccov and that recombination events in type i fcov have rarely been reported [ ] . previous studies have shown that the transmission of natural recombinant strain rarely occurs; thus, we should be cautious in concluding putative recombination event based on these computational analyses [ ] . although none of the branches of the fcov phylogeny from different countries investigated here showed evidence of positive selection, when site models were applied, four sites in nsp - , ten sites in the s gene, sites in the n gene, and sites in the b gene were detected as having evidence for positive selection. site of the s gene, which previously had been shown to distinguishes fipv from fecv [ ] , was found to be a positive selection site. both the fel and rel methods, from the datamonkey suite of programs, can identify sites experiencing negative selection. from our analyses, , , , and negative selection sites were identified by both fel and rel in the nsp - , s, n, and b genes (supporting information tables s -s ). viruses can experience both positive and negative selection. positive selection leads to an increase in the abundance of a specific genetic variant, while negative selection results in genetic conservation [ ] [ ] [ ] . a larger number of sites experiencing negative rather than positive selection were found for all of the genes that we analyzed, which suggests that most sites are conservative, and only a few can be adapted. the proteins encoded by the nsp - genes are responsible for viral genome replication, with the s gene product responsible for viral entry into host cells, the n gene product responsible for the virus nucleocapsid protein, and the b gene product is responsible for viral virulence. negative selection in these genes indicates that they are essential to the virus. the few positively selected changes that have occurred likely help these viruses survive and adapt under harmful conditions, with the change at site of the s gene due to positive selection potentially related to the highly virulent fipv of the virus [ ] . positive selection at other sites may contribute to the entry into host cells and enhanced virulence of viruses. by analyzing the selective pressure experienced by genes in the fcov genome involved in replication, entry, and virulence, we have identified a few sites that potentially experienced adaptive evolution. as negative selection occurs at a higher rate than positive selection within the fcov genes, this suggests that only a few sites can beneficially adapt to allow greater infectivity in the host and that most sites are under strong negative selection to conserve function. a few of the positively selected sites in fcov might be associated with the occurrence of fipv and lead to these viruses causing a more fatal disease. additional experimental analysis needs to be conducted to better understand the consequences of the positively selected changes identified here. all virus data obtained or analyzed during this study are included in this published article. sequences of the obtained viruses have been uploaded in genbank with accession numbers in supplementary materials table s . the authors declare that they have no conflict of interests. the ministry of science and technology of the people's republic of china (the national key research and development program, number yfd ) and the educational department of liaoning province of china (climbing scholar). table s : other coronavirus isolate sequences used in this study. table s : accession numbers of the coronavirus isolate sequences obtained in this study. table s : negative selection sites for the nsp , nsp , and nsp genes based on rel analysis. table s : negative selection sites for the s gene based on rel analysis. table s : negative selection sites for the n gene based on rel analysis. table s : negative selection sites for the b gene based on rel analysis. table s : negative selection sites for the nsp , nsp , and nsp genes based on fel analysis. table s : negative selection sites for the s gene based on fel analysis. table s : negative selection sites for the n gene based on fel 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we thank the staff in the petmate pet hospitals, without whose help, the samples could not be successfully obtained for this study. we also thank dr. xianchun tang for the technological support. this work was supported by grants from hx contributed to the design of research and participated in the analysis and interpretation of data. hx, xl, wz, sj, and xz performed the experiments. hx wrote the draft manuscript and dmi modified the manuscript. sz designed the study and supervised the work. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- -god qzw authors: mao, kaimin; geng, wei; liao, yuhan; luo, ping; zhong, hua; ma, pei; xu, juanjuan; zhang, shuai; tan, qi; jin, yang title: identification of robust genetic signatures associated with lipopolysaccharide-induced acute lung injury onset and astaxanthin therapeutic effects by integrative analysis of rna sequencing data and geo datasets date: - - journal: aging (albany ny) doi: . /aging. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: god qzw acute lung injury (ali) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) are life-threatening clinical conditions predominantly arising from uncontrolled inflammatory reactions. it has been found that the administration of astaxanthin (ast) can exert protective effects against lipopolysaccharide (lps)-induced ali; however, the robust genetic signatures underlying lps induction and ast treatment remain obscure. here we performed a statistical meta-analysis of five publicly available gene expression datasets from lps-induced ali mouse models, conducted rna-sequencing (rna-seq) to screen differentially expressed genes (degs) in response to lps administration and ast treatment, and integrative analysis to determine robust genetic signatures associated with lps-induced ali onset and ast administration. both the meta-analyses and our experimental data identified a total of degs in response to lps administration, and core degs (timp , ly i, cxcl , irf , cxcl , ccl , isg , saa , saa , tgtp , and gbp ) were identified to be associated with ast therapeutic effects. further, the core degs were verified by quantitative real-time pcr (qrt-pcr) and immunohistochemistry (ihc), and functional enrichment analysis revealed that these genes are primarily associated with neutrophils and chemokines. collectively, these findings unearthed the robust genetic signatures underlying lps administration and the molecular targets of ast for ameliorating ali/ards which provide directions for further research. acute respiratory distress syndrome (ards) is an acute inflammatory lung injury, associated with increased pulmonary vascular permeability, increased lung weight, and loss of aerated lung tissue [ ] . its less severe form is acute lung injury (ali). most patients need mechanical ventilation for support. the initial acute or exudative phase of ali/ards is characterized by the rapid onset of dyspnea, hypoxemia, respiratory failure, and bilateral infiltrates on chest radiographs that are consistent with pulmonary edema [ ] . ali/ards is common and has been associated with several clinical disorders, such as sepsis; pneumonia; aspiration of gastric contents, aging saltwater, or freshwater; major trauma; transfusion of blood products; acute pancreatitis; and drug reactions (for example, reactions to lipopolysaccharide) [ ] . in the past years, considerable progress has been made in understanding the epidemiology, pathogenesis, and pathophysiology of ards. however, ards is being increasingly recognized as a heterogeneous syndrome, generating momentum for the identification of clinical and biological features for classifying patients into subphenotypes that might be more responsive to specific therapies. lipid a (endotoxin), the hydrophobic anchor of lipopolysaccharide (lps), is a glucosamine-based phospholipid that makes up the outer monolayer of the outer membranes of most gram-negative bacteria [ ] . in recent years, lps, which has been most widely used in drug-associated ali models, can effectively induce a neutrophilic inflammatory response accompanied by an increase in intrapulmonary cytokines. many studies have shown that oxidative stress plays a major role in the pathogenesis of lung injury in a murine model of ali induced by lipopolysaccharide (lps) [ ] [ ] [ ] . in response to the increased formation of reactive oxygen species (ros), thioredoxin interacting protein (txnip) detaches from thioredoxin (trx), binds to the nucleotide-binding domain-like receptor protein (nlrp ), and then activates nlrp inflammasome [ ] . the activation of the nlrp inflammasome results in the maturation and release of pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin- β (il- β), which further aggravates the production of inflammatory cytokines (tumor necrosis factor-α (tnf-α), il- , inducible nitric oxide synthase (inos), and cyclooxygenase- (cox )) and induces oxidative stress [ ] [ ] [ ] . astaxanthin (ast) is a lipid-soluble, red-orange-colored xanthophyll carotenoid synthesized by many microorganisms and various types of marine life. the main producers of natural ast are microalgae and fungi. aquatic animals such as salmon, red seabream, shrimp, lobster and crayfish, which feed on ast-producing organisms, are significant dietary sources of ast for humans [ ] [ ] [ ] . it has been revealed that ast can prevent inflammatory processes by blocking the expression of pro-inflammatory genes as a consequence of suppressing nuclear factor kappab (nf-κb) activation [ ] . some studies also suggested that ast has a dosedependent ocular anti-inflammatory effect, through the suppression of no, pge , and tnf-alpha production, which is achieved by directly blocking nos enzyme activity [ ] . furthermore, ast has great therapeutic value for lung disease, such as an antifibrotic effect against the promotion of myofibroblast apoptosis based on dynamin-related protein- (drp )-mediated mitochondrial fission in vivo and in vitro [ ] and anti-inflammatory effect against lps-induced ali, as mentioned above [ , ] . however, at the transcriptional level, the mechanism of action of ast in the treatment of ali-/ ards-remains unclear. therefore, we hope to explore the molecular targets of ast against ali-/ ards-through further research, with the purpose of providing a new alternative for the clinical treatment of this acute lung disease. to determine the common molecular signatures underlying lps-induced mouse ali initiation, five microarray datasets were obtained from corresponding independent studies. the characteristics of the studies composing the five gene expression compendiums are listed in table and supplementary table . we extracted and annotated the five microarrays, which yielded a collection of unique genes from samples, including control and lps-induced ali mice. before the meta-analysis study, we comprehensively analyzed the five datasets by identifying the differentially expressed genes in each data set and evaluated overlapping significant genes. the overlapping results were used to generate a venn diagram (figure ), and three genes (ccl , zbp , and cxcl ) were identified in the common region, suggesting that these three genes were significantly correlated with lps management in mice in the five datasets. then, we performed a meta-analysis using networkanalyst (http://www.networkanalyst.ca), which is a comprehensive web-based tool designed to perform meta-analyses of gene expression data [ ] . an overview outlining the procedure of the analysis is presented in figure a . using three meta-analysis approaches, namely fisher's method, fixed effect model and voting count, , and differentially expressed genes, respectively, were identified. among these genes, were identified by all three methods ( figure b ), with ( . %) genes being upregulated and ( . %) being downregulated in the lps group compared with the control group. a full list of the common genes identified by the three meta-analysis methods is presented in supplementary table . a heat map of the top common degs across the five datasets is displayed in figure c . of note, the top upregulated genes (p< . ) were junb, vcam , ehd , ifrd, adm, cd , nadk, litaf, tubb , and ctps. the most significantly downregulated genes (p< . ) among the top common degs were acss and abcd . the merged data from this meta-analysis are listed in supplementary data . to further identify the robust expression signatures in lps-induced ali and investigate the transcriptional changes resulting from treatment of ali with ast, we divided mice into three groups, including the control group, lps group, and ast group. rna-sequencing (rna-seq) was performed to profile differentially expressed genes (degs) associated with lps-induced ali initiation and ast treatment. a total of degs were identified in the lps-induced ali group compared with the control group. among these genes, were table . then, we compared these genes with the degs obtained from the above meta-analysis, and generated two heat-maps of the common degs across the meta-analysis results and our experimental aging data, which are displayed in figure c and supplementary figure . in total, degs were detected in both published data and our experimental data, including upregulated and downregulated degs. to explore the therapeutic effect of ast against ali at the genetic level, we also compared the gene expression profile of the lps-induced ali group with that of the ast treatment group. in total, degs were identified after ast treatment ( figure b table ). we subsequently integrated the rna-seq and microarray meta-analysis data, and core degs (timp , ly i, cxcl , irf , cxcl , ccl , isg , saa , saa , tgtp , and gbp ) that were upregulated in ali models and downregulated significantly after ast treatment were identified ( table ) . to understand the function of the core degs, go enrichment analysis including molecular function (mf), biological process (bp) and cellular component (cc) categories (supplementary table ) was performed using the 'clusterprofile' package in r [ ] . in bp terms, the upregulated genes were associated with "cell chemotaxis," the "chemokine−mediated signaling pathway," and "neutrophil migration" ( figure a ). several studies have shown that neutrophil migration and related chemokine network regulation in the lung play roles in the pathogenesis and development of ali/ards [ ] [ ] [ ] . in the mf category, the core degs were associated with "glycosaminoglycan binding," "chemokine activity," and "receptor-ligand activity" ( figure b ). since glycosaminoglycan-cytokine interactions have been reported to support cellular mechanisms that cause acute inflammation [ ] , ast may affect these interactions by downregulating the genes involved to exert an anti-inflammatory effect. moreover, degs were enriched in the cc category involved in "high−density lipoprotein particles," "symbiont−containing vacuole membranes," and "plasma lipoprotein particles" ( figure c ). to further confirm the differences in the expression of the core degs (timp , ly i, cxcl , irf , cxcl , ccl , isg , saa , saa , tgtp , and gbp ) among the control group, lps group, and ast group, we divided mice into three groups and conducted qrt-pcr and ihc verification ( figure a - k, supplementary figure ). the results demonstrate that the relative expression levels of all genes were significantly upregulated in the lps group compared to the control group. more importantly, the expression levels of the above degs, as analyzed by qrt-pcr, were significantly inhibited after the application of ast. of the core genes, were tested by ihc, and the results were consistent with the qrt-pcr results, which further verifying the data (supplementary figure ) . overall, the rt-qpcr and ihc results were consistent with our integrative rna-seq analysis and metaanalysis, suggesting the critical role that the core dges might play in the mechanism by which ast alleviates ali/ards. as a life-threatening condition, ali/ards is an underrecognized condition, and its treatment is an unmet medical need. it is thought that inflammatory storm is the key factor in the occurrence of ali [ ] , and anti-inflammatory and antioxidant therapy should be the primary objective in ali/ards [ ] . to find the conserved genes responsible for lps-induced ali initiation and the effects of ast treatment, we identified robust changes in gene expression related to ali by meta-analysis and rna-seq using the gene expression omnibus (geo) database and mice, respectively. moreover, we performed functional enrichment analysis of core genes using the gene ontology (go) database to explore the possible molecular mechanisms that mediate the therapeutic effect of ast. before the meta-analysis of the five microarray datasets, we compared the differentially expressed genes in each dataset, and common differentially expressed genes (degs) were found in all five datasets: cxcl , zbp , and ccl . cxcl is abnormally expressed in the lung tissues of patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (ipf), and its circulating concentration is also highly correlated with the clinical manifestations and disease progression of individual patients. in the lung tissues of patients with ipf, cxcl may promote focal infiltration of nonproliferating b cells through the cxcl -cxcr axis [ ] . zbp is a host protein that was shown to be an innate sensor of viral infection, regulating cell death, inflammasome activation, and proinflammatory responses in a variety of situations, including infection and embryonic development [ ] . a previous study indicated that zbp is abnormally expressed in h n induced pneumonia associated with acute respiratory distress syndrome in mice [ ] . ccl (mcp ), which is elevated in pulmonary fibrosis, has been reported to mediate fibroblast survival through il- [ ] . since fibroproliferation is initiated early in lung injury, it has been observed that ccl is highly expressed in ards statistical analysis of significant differences between groups was achieved with one-way anova using prism software. ****p < . , ***p < . , **p < . , and *p < . were considered statistically significant. aging induced by severe sepsis [ ] . to reduce the study bias and increase the statistical power of individual microarray data, we performed a meta-analysis of five microarray gene expression profiles to assess the differentially expressed genes between lps-induced and control groups. consequently, differentially expressed genes (degs) were identified using three meta-analysis approaches. to further identify the robust expression signature related to lps-induced ali and investigate the transcriptional changes in response to the treatment of ali by ast, we performed rna-seq on three groups of mice and integrated the data with the results of the above mentioned meta-analysis. ultimately, we identified core degs that were significantly associated with ast treatment. saa , ly i, saa , irf , cxcl , ccl , timp , isg , gbp , tgtp , and cxcl were found to be overexpressed in the lps group compared with the control group but relatively downregulated in the ast group. our qrt-pcr and ihc verification of the core genes in the mice suggested that these genes might be the key mediators of the therapeutic effect of ast in ali/ards. among the core genes that were differentially expressed in response to ast mediation, two genes are members of the serum amyloid a (saa) family. saa is a critical acute-phase protein that is often increased by infection, trauma, cancer, or other causes of inflammation and plays an important role in the regulation of inflammatory responses [ ] . recent studies have indicated that an increased level of saa is positively correlated with the disease progression of covid , and can thus be a sensitive indicator for assessing the severity and prognosis of covid- [ ] . in our study, saa was the most significantly inhibited gene by ast application in lps-induced ali mice, and its downregulation was further confirmed by qrt-pcr and ihc. saa , the one of three isoforms of saa expressed in mice, is stimulated intensely in lps-induced acute systemic inflammation, which is consistent with our findings [ ] . high expression of saa in response to acute inflammation may be repressed by an interaction with noncoding rnas. it has been confirmed that mir- b- p may target saa to protect against lps-induced ali [ ] . additionally, lncrna malat can also target saa directly or indirectly to cause many diseases such as inflammation, diabetes and septic cardiomyocytes [ , ] . saa , another member of the saa gene family, is believed to have a pro-inflammatory effect, and its expression may aggravate tissue inflammation and damage [ ] . removing the n-and c-terminal sequences of saa can switch the protein to an anti-inflammatory role [ ] . however, other research has suggested that mice induced to express genetically modified human saa have a partial protective effect against the inflammatory response and lung injury caused by lps [ ] . moreover, saa is the direct target of mir- , which can protect nucleus pulposus cells from tnfainduced apoptosis in intervertebral disc degeneration [ ] . considering that saa might act as a biomarker of inflammatory disease, it is possible, that its downregulation induced by ast may partly indicate the antiinflammatory effect of ast. the deeper molecular mechanism underlying saa action in response to ast application deserves further exploration. interferon regulatory factor (irf ) is considered the master regulator of ifn-α against pathogenic infections [ ] . the excessive activation of irf promotes the development of acute lung injury (ali) caused by influenza a virus (iav), and attenuating irf activity can significantly prevent the progression of iavinduced ali in model mice [ ] . thus, the present finding that irf was upregulated by lps and downregulated in response to ast treatment may suggest that of ast protects against ali. regarding how irf regulates ifn production, mirna may act as an important mediator. previous research has shown that mir- c can downregulate irf and irf expression to mediate influenza a virus-induced ifnβ expression [ ] . additionally, mir- was shown to reduces the antiviral response by attenuating the traf -irf pathway to alter the cellular antiviral transcriptional landscape [ ] . however, whether mirna-irf interactions are involved in the pharmacological mechanism of ast remains to be further investigated. tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase- (timp ), a member of timp family, is primarily recognized to regulate the degradation of the extracellular matrix by inhibiting the activity of matrix metalloproteinases (mmps) [ ] . it has been reported that an imbalance between mmp and timp plays a pivotal role in the pathogenesis of ards mainly through participating in airway remodeling, thus indicating the function of the mmp /timp ratio in the evolution of pulmonary fibrosis in ards [ ] . indeed, increased systemic levels of timp were proven to be associated with increased -day mortality in ards patients according to a large, prospective, multicenter study [ ] . additionally, other research has demonstrated that increased timp expression promotes an immune response, has a pro-inflammatory effect in the lungs after influenza infection and facilitates an injurious phenotype [ ] . the above observations not only support our present results regarding timp but also provide a considerable explanation for the increase in timp expression after lps application. intriguingly, given that timps are highly expressed in liver fibrosis and that the imbalance of mmps/timps promotes the progression of fibrosis, shen et al. found that astaxanthin is able to repress the activation of hepatic stellate cells (hscs) to ameliorate liver fibrosis through downregulating the expression of nf-κb and tgf-β and preserving the balance between mmp and timp [ ] . hence, it is reasonable to further investigate whether there is a similar mechanism by which ast downregulates the expression of timp to mitigate lps-induced ali. interferon-stimulated gene (isg ), which encodes the ubiquitin-like protein isg , which is primarily induced by type i interferons, is an essential player in regulating host signaling pathways such as damage repair responses and immune responses. isg can be induced by various pathogenic stimuli such as viral and bacterial infections, lipopolysaccharide (lps), retinoic acid, or certain genotoxic stressors [ ] . in accordance with our findings, previous studies have observed increased levels of isg conjugates in macrophages in response to lps treatment [ ] . moreover, research has found that systemic isg (mx , isg , ifit , and ifit ) expression within the first days of ards onset is associated with disease severity and prognosis. this response should be considered along with other identified genetic, environmental, and complex demographic factors as the cause of heterogeneity in ards prognosis [ ] . nevertheless, no data has been reported on the association between isg and ast in the literature. since the excessive recruitment of leukocytes appears to be a central contributor to the pathogenesis of ali, the elevation of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines is considered the most important factor [ ] . similarly, we found that the expression of chemokines such as ccl , cxcl , and cxcl were increased after lps instillation but decreased after ast treatment. previous reports have documented an increased level of ccl in a mouse model of acute lps-induced lung inflammation [ ] . moreover, the expression of cxcl is also rapidly induced in ali murine models after lps administration [ ] . however, no data has on cxcl expression in ali models has been reported. therefore, we report for the first time the induction of cxcl after lps administration, which provides insights into the role of cxcl in the pathogenesis of ali. furthermore, the observation of decreased expression of ccl , cxcl , and cxcl may hint at the antiinflammatory properties of ast. although the roles of other degs (ly i, gbp , and tgtp ) have been described in many other diseases in detail, their regulatory mechanisms in ali-/ ards-are not fully understood. our results show that these degs are overexpressed to varying degrees in the lps group and that ast can effectively prevent this overexpression. further studies on the roles of these three genes in ali initiation and progression are need. to determine the functional mechanisms of these degs, go enrichment analyses were further conducted. according to the results, terms in biological process category, in cellular component category and in the molecular function category were enriched. the most significantly enriched terms in the bp category were associated with chemokines and neutrophils, indicating the dominant role of neutrophils and related chemokines in the pathogenesis and progression of lps-induced ali. in ali, the excessive recruitment of inflammatory cells and their mediators results in injury to endothelial and epithelial barriers [ ] . thus, agents such as ast, which can exert robust anti-inflammatory effects, may provide potential treatment prospects. despite this, several limitations of the current study need to be addressed. first, our research did not use the ali mouse models induced by other agents; thus, it did not address heterogeneity of ali initiation. second, given that findings in animal models of lps-induced lung injury may depend on the time point at which samples are obtained and physiological data are captured, the dynamic changes in lps-induced ali models may have been ignored to a certain extent [ ] . finally, in-depth research into the underlying mechanisms using knockout-gene mice for each differentially expressed gene will help further our understanding of the role of ast in ameliorating ali/ards. in conclusion, many genes were dysregulated in ali/ards. we not only identified genes that consistently differed in expression in the lps group compared to the control group but also revealed that ast can alleviate the abnormal expression of these genes and thus confer a certain therapeutic effect against ali/ards, suggesting the potential for ast to become a novel treatment for ali/ards. to identify the genes related to lps-induced acute lung injury in mice, five datasets (gse , gse , gse , gse , and gse ) were obtained from geo (gene expression omnibus, http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . lps and control treatments were used in this study. the detailed information (experimental design, transcriptome analysis, array information, data processing, and platform id) for these datasets can be obtained from the geo repository, and this information is partly aging summarized in table and is described in more detail in supplementary table . then, we conducted a microarray meta-analysis using networkanalyst . (https://www.networkanalyst.ca) [ ] . networkanalyst is a visual analytics platform for comprehensive gene expression profiling and metaanalysis. all gene probes were converted to a common entrez id using the gene/probe conversion tool in networkanalyst. following quantile normalization, all datasets were preprocessed through a log transformation and variance stabilizing normalization (vsn). each dataset was visualized in box plots to ensure an identical distribution among the samples. differential expression analysis was performed independently for each dataset using networkanalyst, with an fdr of . and a significance of p < . . the moderated t-test was based on the limma algorithm. for the meta-analysis, we used fisher's method, the fixed-effect model, and vote counting (combined p < . or vote counts ≥ were considered significant) to identify the differentially expressed genes (degs) and we selected the common degs identified by these three methods as the final degs. male c bl/ j mice ( - g, ~ -weeks-old) were purchased from beijing vital river laboratory animal technology co., ltd. (beijing, china). the mice were housed per cage under a h light/dark cycle in a laboratory at ± °c and % humidity. all experiment protocols conformed to the guidelines of the china council on animal care and use. these animal studies were approved by the institutional animal research committee of union hospital. the mice were randomly allocated into three groups: ( ) the control group (n= ), which was exposed to pbs alone and received an intraperitoneal injection of sterile saline; ( ) the lps group (n= ), which was exposed to pbs containing . mg/ml lps; and ( ) the ast group (n= ), which was intraperitoneally injected with ast ( mg/ml, dissolved in pbs) at a dosage of mg/kg body weight every day before one week of exposure to lps to evaluate its preventive and protective effects [ , ] , and intraperitoneally injected with mg/kg ast ( mg/ml, dissolved in pbs) hours after lps exposure in order to confirm the therapeutic effect of ast [ ] . ast was obtained from sigma-aldrich (st louis, mo, usa). for acute lps exposure, mice were exposed to an aerosol of phosphate buffer saline (pbs) alone or pbs containing . mg/ml lps for h, in a custom-built cuboidal chamber. the lps solution was aerosolized with a constant output ultrasonic nebulizer (model: b, yuwell, china) at a flow rate of ml/h. lps was purchased from sigma-aldrich (extracted from escherichia coli o : b , l ). the chamber was cm long, cm wide and cm high. total rna was extracted from mouse lung tissue samples with trizol® reagent (invitrogen, ca) following the manufacturer's protocol. the concentration and purity of the rna were measured by a nanodrop spectrophotometer (nanodrop technologies, technologies, wilmington, de, usa), the rna integrity was detected by agarose gel electrophoresis, and the rin was determined using an agilent bioanalyzer (agilent technologies, santa clara, ca, usa). the construction of a single library required a total of μg rna with a concentration of ≥ ng/μl and an od / ratio between . and . . then, oligo (dt) magnetic beads were subjected to capture mrnas that contained poly-a tails from the total rna. the resulting mrnas were subsequently randomly broken into small fragments of approximately bp by adding fragmentation buffer. the mrna fragments functioned as the templates for double-stranded cdna (dscdna) synthesis using the superscript double-stranded cdna synthesis kit (invitrogen, ca, usa). under the action of reverse transcriptase, a strand of cdna was synthesized by using random primers with mrna as a template, which was followed by two-strand synthesis to form a stable double-stranded structure. since there was a cohesive terminus in the double-stranded cdna structure, end repair mix was added to patch it into a blunt end, and an a base was added at the 'end to connect the yshaped adaptor. to purify and enrich the dscdna, cycles of pcr were performed, and clean dna beads were used to screen - bp bands. after quantification by tbs (picogreen, invitrogen, ca usa), high-throughput sequencing of the resulting libraries was performed on the illumina hiseq xten/novaseq sequencing platform (san diego, ca, usa), and the sequencing read length was pairedend (pe) . to ensure the accuracy of the subsequent biological information analysis, the raw sequencing data generated from rna-seq was firstly filtered to obtain high-quality sequencing data (clean data) to ensure the smooth progress of the subsequent analysis. quality control of the raw reads was performed using seqprep (https://github.com/jstjohn/seqprep) and sickle (https://github.com/najoshi/sickle). the processes were as follows. the first step was to remove the adapter aging from the reads and the reads that did not insert the fragment due to the self-connection of the adapter. second, bases with a low quality (quality value less than ) at the end of the sequence ( ' end) were trimmed. if there was still a quality value of less than for the remaining sequence, the whole sequence was discarded; otherwise, it was retained. third, reads with n ratios over % and sequences with lengths less than bp after quality trimming were also removed. finally, the error rate (%), q and q values, gc-content (%), and sequence duplication levels of the generated clean reads were assessed [ ] . after filtering the raw data, the clean data were aligned to the mouse reference genome grcm by 'bowtie ' software [ ] . then, read summarization was calculated by the 'feature count' tool. differently expressed genes (degs) between the lps samples and control samples were identified by t-test using the 'deseq ' r package, as were degs between the ast samples and lps samples [ ] . the raw p-value was adjusted to the false discovery rate by the benjamini method, and a false discovery rate (fdr) ≤ . and |log fc|≥ was chosen as the threshold. based on the hypergeometric distribution algorithm, go (gene ontology, http://www.geneontology.org/) biological process (bp), molecular function (mf) and cell component (cc) pathway enrichment analyses were performed using the 'clusterprofler' r package [ ] . a p-value ≤ . was set as the cutoff criterion. to validate the combined findings from rna-seq and microarray meta-analysis, the expression of core degs in the three groups was confirmed. rnaiso plus reagent (takara, tokyo, japan) was employed to extract total rna from mouse lung tissues from each group, and reverse transcription was performed to obtain cdna using primescript™rt master mix (takara, tokyo, japan) along with the gdna eraser kit (takara, tokyo, japan). relative mrna expression levels were determined using rt-pcr performed on bio-rad cfx maestro (bio-rad, usa) with tb green® premix ex taq™ ii (takara, tokyo, japan). all the above experimental steps were performed according to the manufacturer's instructions for the corresponding kit. glyceraldehyde- -phosphate dehydrogenase (gapdh) was selected as the reference, and the primer sequences are presented in supplementary table . qrt-pcr was performed under the following conditions: °c for min, followed by cycles at °c for s, °c for s, and °c for s. each analysis was implemented in triplicate, and the relative expression levels of the target genes were calculated by employing the -ΔΔct method [ ] . inmex and networkanalyst were applied for the network-based microarray meta-analysis. for qpcr data, statistical analysis of differences between groups was achieved by one-way anova using prism software (graphpad software inc., san diego, ca, usa). a twotailed test was used for all data, and differences with a p-value < . were considered significant. first of all, we used the search formula of lps[all fields] and ("lung"[mesh terms] or lung[all fields]) and ("mus musculus"[organism] and "expression profiling by array" [filter] ) to obtain results in geo datasets. by eliminating datasets of mirna sequencings, datasets not related to acute lung injury, and datasets that only researching on rna sequencing of specific cells such as macrophages and type ii alveolar epithelial cells, there were articles remained (gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse , gse and gse ). continuing to check the specific description of the sample in articles, we found some datasets were grouped with sample of n< and some mainly studied ali or ards induced by excessive ventilation or non-lps chemicals. in the end, there were datasets (gse , gse , gse , gse and gse ) that met the requirements of integrated analysis. we conducted a microarray meta-analysis using networkanalyst . combined three well-established meta-analysis approaches --fisher's method, fixed effect model, and vote counting. the features and main characteristics are given below (https://www.networkanalyst.ca). ( ) fisher's method (- *∑log(p)) is known as a 'weight-free' method and combines p values from multiple studies for information integration. ( ) effect size is the difference between two group means divided by standard deviation, which are considered combinable and comparable across different studies. in the fixed effects models (fem), the estimated effect size in each study is assumed to come from an underlying true effect size plus measurement error. ( ) vote counting is the simplest method in metaanalysis. differentially expressed gene is first selected based on a threshold to obtain a list of de genes for each study. the vote for each gene can then be calculated as the total number of times it occurred in all de lists. the final de genes can be selected based on the minimal number of votes set by the user. after the mice were sacrificed, the lung tissues were collected. immediately, the tissue was fixed in % paraformaldehyde for hours and embedded in paraffin. the embedded tissue was sliced into µm sections for staining. after the tissue sections were deparaffinized and rehydrated, they were heated in citrate buffer at °c for minutes to restore antigen activity. the sections were then incubated with . % hydrogen peroxide in methanol for minutes to inhibit endogenous peroxidase activity. after blocking nonspecific reactions with % normal bovine serum, the sections were incubated with rabbit polyclonal antibodies specific for ccl ( : , abcam), saa ( : , ab , abcam), ly i ( : , abcam), saa ( : - : , thermo), lrf ( : , thermo), timp ( : , thermo), isg ( : , thermo) and cxcl ( : , abcam). the treated samples were placed at °c for hours. the sections were then washed with pbs and incubated with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated secondary antibodies at °c for hours. the stained sections were imaged under an inverted phase contrast microscope. acute respiratory distress syndrome acute respiratory distress in adults. the lancet, saturday the acute respiratory distress syndrome lipopolysaccharide endotoxins cordycepin inhibits lps-induced acute lung injury by inhibiting inflammation and oxidative stress xanthohumol ameliorates lipopolysaccharide (lps)-induced acute lung injury via induction of ampk/gsk β-nrf signal axis linarin prevents lps-induced acute lung injury by suppressing oxidative stress and inflammation via inhibition of txnip/nlrp and nf-κb pathways curcumin and allopurinol ameliorate fructose-induced hepatic inflammation in rats via mir- a-mediated txnip/nlrp inflammasome inhibition troxerutin protects kidney tissue against bde- -induced inflammatory damage through cxcr -txnip/nlrp signaling astaxanthin: a review of its chemistry and applications astaxanthin, a carotenoid with potential in human health and nutrition biorefinery approach and environmentfriendly extraction for sustainable production of astaxanthin from marine wastes astaxanthin inhibits nitric oxide production and inflammatory gene expression by suppressing i(kappa)b kinase-dependent nf-kappab activation effects of astaxanthin on lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammation in vitro and in vivo astaxanthin prevents pulmonary fibrosis by promoting myofibroblast apoptosis dependent on drp -mediated mitochondrial fission astaxanthin alleviated acute lung injury by inhibiting oxidative/nitrative stress and the inflammatory response in mice astaxanthin prevents against lipopolysaccharideinduced acute lung injury and sepsis via inhibiting activation of mapk/nf-κb networkanalyst . : a visual analytics platform for comprehensive gene expression profiling and metaanalysis clusterprofiler: an r package for comparing biological themes among gene clusters inflammatory cytokines in patients with persistence of the acute respiratory distress syndrome neutrophils in the initiation and resolution of acute pulmonary inflammation: understanding biological function and therapeutic potential evidence for chemokine synergy during neutrophil migration in ards fernández-botrán r. modulation of acute inflammation by targeting glycosaminoglycan-cytokine interactions contribution of neutrophils to acute lung injury antiinflammatory activity of a novel family of aryl ureas compounds in an endotoxin-induced airway epithelial cell injury model c-x-c motif chemokine (cxcl ) is a prognostic biomarker of idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis zbp : innate sensor regulating cell death and inflammation dynamic gene expression analysis in a h n influenza virus mouse pneumonia model the cc chemokine ligand (ccl ) mediates fibroblast survival through il- complement inhibition decreases early fibrogenic events in the lung of septic baboons the cytokine-serum amyloid achemokine network serum amyloid a is a biomarker of severe coronavirus disease and poor prognosis serum amyloid a is a high density lipoprotein-associated acute-phase protein exosomes derived from microrna- b- p-overexpressing mesenchymal stem cells protect against lipopolysaccharide-induced acute lung injury by inhibiting saa long non-coding rna malat regulates hyperglycaemia induced inflammatory process in the endothelial cells il- induced lncrna malat enhances tnf-α expression in lps-induced septic cardiomyocytes via activation of saa emerging functions of serum amyloid a in inflammation suppression of lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammatory response by fragments from serum amyloid a serum amyloid a promotes lps clearance and suppresses lps-induced inflammation and tissue injury knockdown of mir- protects nucleus pulposus cells from tnf-a-induced apoptosis by targeting serum amyloid a irf : activation, regulation, modification and function attenuation of interferon regulatory factor activity in local infectious sites of trachea and lung for preventing the development of acute lung injury caused by influenza a virus mir- c mediates influenza a virus-induced ifnβ expression by targeting nf-κb inducing kinase mir- attenuates the host response to influenza virus by targeting the traf -irf signaling axis cytokine functions of timp- imbalance between matrix metalloproteinases (mmp- and mmp- ) and tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (timp- and timp- ) in acute respiratory distress syndrome patients serum mmp- and timp- in critically ill patients with acute respiratory failure: timp- is associated with increased -day mortality timp- promotes the immune response in influenza-induced acute lung injury isg in antiviral immunity and beyond lipopolysaccharide activates the expression of isg -specific protease ubp via interferon regulatory factor extremes of interferon-stimulated gene expression associate with worse outcomes in the acute respiratory distress syndrome role of chemokines in the pathogenesis of acute lung injury proteinaseactivated receptor- , ccl , and ccl regulate acute neutrophilic lung inflammation extracellular atp mediates the late phase of neutrophil recruitment to the lung in murine models of acute lung injury molecular dynamics of lipopolysaccharide-induced lung injury in rodents modulation of lipopolysaccharideinduced gene transcription and promotion of lung injury by mechanical ventilation bpifa regulates lung neutrophil recruitment and interferon signaling during acute inflammation altered gene expression profiles in the lungs of benzo[a]pyreneexposed mice in the presence of lipopolysaccharideinduced pulmonary inflammation effects of age on the synergistic interactions between lipopolysaccharide and mechanical ventilation in mice clara cells attenuate the inflammatory response through regulation of macrophage behavior astaxanthin suppresses cigarette smokeinduced emphysema through nrf activation in mice fastp: an ultra-fast all-inone fastq preprocessor fast gapped-read alignment with bowtie moderated estimation of fold change and dispersion for rna-seq data with deseq analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative pcr and the (-delta delta c(t)) method the authors declare that they have no conflicts interest. please browse full text version to see the data of supplementary tables to key: cord- -jvl authors: juranic lisnic, vanda; babic cac, marina; lisnic, berislav; trsan, tihana; mefferd, adam; das mukhopadhyay, chitrangada; cook, charles h.; jonjic, stipan; trgovcich, joanne title: dual analysis of the murine cytomegalovirus and host cell transcriptomes reveal new aspects of the virus-host cell interface date: - - journal: plos pathog doi: . /journal.ppat. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: jvl major gaps in our knowledge of pathogen genes and how these gene products interact with host gene products to cause disease represent a major obstacle to progress in vaccine and antiviral drug development for the herpesviruses. to begin to bridge these gaps, we conducted a dual analysis of murine cytomegalovirus (mcmv) and host cell transcriptomes during lytic infection. we analyzed the mcmv transcriptome during lytic infection using both classical cdna cloning and sequencing of viral transcripts and next generation sequencing of transcripts (rna-seq). we also investigated the host transcriptome using rna-seq combined with differential gene expression analysis, biological pathway analysis, and gene ontology analysis. we identify numerous novel spliced and unspliced transcripts of mcmv. unexpectedly, the most abundantly transcribed viral genes are of unknown function. we found that the most abundant viral transcript, recently identified as a noncoding rna regulating cellular micrornas, also codes for a novel protein. to our knowledge, this is the first viral transcript that functions both as a noncoding rna and an mrna. we also report that lytic infection elicits a profound cellular response in fibroblasts. highly upregulated and induced host genes included those involved in inflammation and immunity, but also many unexpected transcription factors and host genes related to development and differentiation. many top downregulated and repressed genes are associated with functions whose roles in infection are obscure, including host long intergenic noncoding rnas, antisense rnas or small nucleolar rnas. correspondingly, many differentially expressed genes cluster in biological pathways that may shed new light on cytomegalovirus pathogenesis. together, these findings provide new insights into the molecular warfare at the virus-host interface and suggest new areas of research to advance the understanding and treatment of cytomegalovirus-associated diseases. the cytomegaloviruses, classified within the betherpesvirinae subfamily, are a group of species-specific herpes viruses that establish life-long infection of their hosts. human cytomegalovirus (hcmv) can cause devastating disease and death in congenitallyinfected infants, and long-term neurological complications in survivors. in adults, hcmv can cause a spectrum of diseases in immune compromised patients involving multiple organs and tissues and is a primary cause of graft loss in transplant patients [ , ] . in recent years, hcmv has been linked to lung injury in trauma patients [ ] and is also postulated to act as a cofactor in atherosclerosis and some cancers [ , ] . for these reasons, there is an urgent need for an effective vaccine and new antiviral intervention strategies that mitigate the toxicity and drug resistance shortcomings of current antiviral drugs [ , ] . there exist a number of challenges to our understanding of cmv pathogenesis as well as progress in vaccine and antiviral drug development. two outstanding challenges are the gaps in our knowledge of viral genes and how these gene products interact with host cellular gene products to cause disease. despite the publication of the first sequence of the hcmv genome in [ , ] , and the first sequence of the murine cytomegalovirus (mcmv) genome in [ ] , there are still important questions regarding the nature and number of genes for these viruses. mcmv is the most widely used model to study hcmv diseases and recapitulates many of clinical and pathological findings found in human diseases. our understanding of mcmv viral genes and genomes has evolved with the technology used to study them. a major milestone in understanding mcmv came with decoding the first mcmv complete genome sequence by rawlinson and colleagues [ ] . the authors identified a kb genome predicted to encode genes. subsequent refinements in the annotation of the mcmv were introduced by classical molecular and biochemical studies that are reflected in the current ncbi reference sequence. the application of new technologies to study the mcmv genome emerged in the last decade and include proteomic [ ] , in silico [ ] , and gene array [ , ] approaches that have led to major revisions in gene annotation. more recently cheng and colleagues [ ] proposed additional changes after sequencing isolates to measure genome stability after in vitro and in vivo passage. also, lacaze and colleagues [ ] extended the microarray approach to include probes specific to both strands of the genome, leading to the discovery of noncoding and bi-directional transcription at late stages of mcmv infection. finally, a recent transcriptomic analysis of newly synthesized rna in mcmv infected fibroblasts [ ] applied rna-seq technology to study regulation of viral gene expression and identified a very early peak of viral gene transcriptional activity at - hours post infection followed by rapid cellular countermeasures but did not attempt to re-annotate mcmv genome. altogether, these new technologies have refined and advanced our knowledge of viral genes and the mcmv genome. nevertheless, we still lack definitive annotation for the standard lab strains of mcmv and specific knowledge of how many of these genes function during natural infection and disease. currently, two annotations of mcmv genomes are used -the original rawlinson's annotation with minor modifications (genbank accession no. gu . ) where open reading frames (orfs) are identified and the ncbi reference sequence annotation (genbank accession no: nc_ . ) with orfs. we previously used a transcriptomic approach to analyze gene products of hcmv [ ] . this was the first report to characterize abundant antisense and noncoding transcription in the hcmv genome showing that there is greater complexity of herpesvirus genomes than previously appreciated. using rna-seq technology, gatherer et al. [ ] showed that most protein coding genes are also transcribed in antisense but are generally expressed at lower levels than their sense counterparts. a more recent analysis of translational products of hcmv [ ] by ribosomal footprinting indentified translated orfs, further underscoring the complexity of herpes virus genomes. we describe mcmv transcriptional products that differ from predicted orfs, novel spliced transcripts, and novel transcripts derived from intergenic regions of the genome. additionally, we found that the most abundant viral transcript (mat) is a spliced transcript recently identified as a noncoding rna that limits accumulation of cellular mirnas [ , ] . here we report that this transcript also specifies a novel protein and to our knowledge, this is the first viral transcript that functions both as a noncoding rna and mrna. analysis of the host transcriptional response to infection revealed many unexpected host genes that are regulated by virus infection, including many noncoding rna genes. correspondingly, many host genes regulated by virus infection cluster in unexpected biological pathways that may shed new light on the pathogenesis of cytomegalovirus-associated diseases. together, these findings suggest important revisions are required for mcmv genome annotation and emphasize numerous aspects of mcmv biology and the host response to this infection that are unknown and require further study. in this study, we set out to complete a transcriptomic analysis of mcmv infection. we analyzed viral transcripts through classical cdna cloning and sequencing and through next generation sequencing of cdna generated from total cellular rna (rna-seq). analysis of cdna libraries is a well-proven approach to analyze viral transcripts based on isolation of long transcripts, molecular cloning of the transcripts, and traditional sanger-based sequencing of the cdna clones. traditional cloning has many advantages, including isolation of novel transcripts that may not be identified by probe-based technologies, as well as precise analysis of transcript splice sites and transcript ends. the introduction of massively parallel sequencing techniques represents a major new technology to study gene expression. basically, rna (total or fractionated) is converted to a library of smaller cdna fragments. adaptors are added to the fragments, and the shorter fragments are sequenced in a high-throughput manner using next generation sequencing technology. this rna-sequencing (rna-seq) approach is free of selection biases associated with traditional cloning or probe-based methods and allows for the entire transcriptome to be analyzed in a quantitative manner (reviewed in [ ] ). first, cdna libraries representing the major temporal classes of viral gene expression were generated by collecting rna from infected mouse embryonic fibroblasts (mefs) at time points after infection. for rna-seq analysis, rnas collected at the same time points were pooled, converted to cdna, and sequenced on the illumina genome analyzer iix. of the , , reads that passed the filter from infected cells, % aligned to mcmv genome indicating a -fold coverage of the viral genome. a total of cdna clones were included in the final analyses [ from the immediate early (ie) library, from the early (e) library, and from the late (l) library]. generally, temporal assignment of cdna clones in this study agrees with previous studies and a detailed comparison, including discrepancies to earlier studies is provided in dataset s . as shown in figures and , transcriptomic data generated using these two experimental approaches were compared to currently available genome annotation (the ncbi reference sequence, genbank accession. no. nc_ . , and a more recent sequence analysis of the smith strain, genbank accession no. gu . ). using this schematic overview, current anno- we have conducted a comprehensive analysis of the murine cytomegalovirus and host cell transcriptomes during lytic infection. we identify numerous novel spliced and unspliced transcripts of mcmv. unexpectedly, the most abundantly transcribed viral genes are of unknown function. we found that the most abundant viral transcript, recently identified as a noncoding rna regulating cellular micrornas, also codes for a novel protein. to our knowledge, this is the first viral transcript that functions both as a noncoding rna and an mrna. infection alters expression of many unexpected host genes, including many noncoding rna genes. correspondingly, many cluster in unexpected biological pathways that may shed new light on cytomegalovirus pathogenesis. together, these findings provide new insights into the molecular warfare at the virus-host interface and suggest new areas of research to advance the understanding and treatment of cytomegalovirus-associated diseases. figure . comparison of cdna cloning and rna-seq data in relation to current genome annotation. comparison of poly(a) cdna library (green arrows) and rna-seq analysis of murine cytomegalovirus (gray histograms). the longest clone from each group of clones in the cdna library is shown. eland alignments of rna-seq reads were loaded in integrative genomics viewer and compared to nc_ . , (red arrows) and gu . (blue arrows). the data range for rna-seq data was set to - . data is shown in kb ranges with kb overlap. data is shown for the first kb of the mcmv genome and the figure legend is shown in figure . doi: . /journal.ppat. .g tations (red and blue arrows) largely agree. the mcmv transcripts identified through our classical cdna cloning and sequencing (green arrows) and the rna-seq expression profiles (gray histograms), showed complementary results to each other but diverged dramatically from current annotations. a summary of the cdna clones relative to genes annotated in the ncbi reference gu . (blue arrows). the data range for rna-seq data was set to - . data is shown in kb ranges with kb overlap. data is shown for genomic region spanning - kb of the mcmv genome. doi: . /journal.ppat. .g table s , and a complete list of the cdna clones isolated in this study and their characteristics are presented in table s . a detailed comparison of transcripts cloned in this study compared to current annotations (gu . and nc_ ) is presented in table s , and includes estimated relative expression measured as reads per kilobase per million mapped reads (rpkm) derived from rna-seq analysis. analysis of the cdna clones revealed many novel transcripts with the following characteristics: ( ) novel antisense transcripts. excluding cdna clones that mapped to intergenic regions, ( %) of cdna clones were in the sense (s) orientation, ( %) were antisense (as), and ( %) overlapped more than one gene in both s and as orientations relative to original annotation provided by rawlinson and colleagues [ ] . these designations were reevaluated according to the current ncbi reference sequence (nc_ ) in which as transcripts to hypothetical or putative proteins were revised as s transcripts due to lack of evidence for the predicted sense transcript. if as transcripts that overlapped hypothetical proteins also overlapped s transcripts in this library, the as designation was preserved. according to these criteria, ( %) transcripts were in s orientation, only ( . %) were in as orientation, and ( %) overlapped more than one gene in both s and as orientations. ( ) transcripts overlapping more than one currently annotated genes. several cdna clones were isolated that overlap more than one currently annotated gene. for example, four cdna clones in our library overlapped both the m and m genes. the longest of these clones specifies a bp transcript, whereas current annotation predicts two genes of bp (m ) and bp (m ). these data suggest the possibility that several orfs are translated from unexpectedly long or polycistronic transcripts. unusually long and polycistronic transcripts have recently been shown to be a feature of hcmv transcriptome [ ] . ( ) the absence of transcripts in currently annotated regions. several gene regions were not well represented in the cdna cloning study. for example, no cdna clones overlapping m or m were found in this study, and these regions had the lowest rpkm reads by rna-seq of and , respectively (gray histograms in figures and and table s ), consistent with earlier gene array-based studies [ ] . for comparison, the well-defined mcmv genes m and m , both represented with multiple clones in our cdna library, have rpkm values of , and , respectively. because some viral transcripts with higher rpkm reads were not represented in the classical cdna library (for example, an rpkm of for the m gene), we conclude the cdna library cloning did not capture all viral transcripts. nevertheless, the failure to identify clones in regions poorly represented by rna-seq data suggests that further attention is required to prove or disprove the existence of genes predicted by in silico (orf) analysis. ( ) novel spliced transcripts. one of the most striking aspects of the cloning study was the abundance of novel spliced transcripts. a total of novel spliced transcripts were cloned in this study as well as spliced transcripts reported by others. a complete list of spliced transcripts identified in this and other studies is provided in table s . one of the most abundant novel spliced transcripts identified in this study maps to the m gene ( cdna clones). current annotation for m predicts a protein of aa, whereas the clones in this study predict a novel truncated protein product. splicing results in a change of open reading frame at amino acid residue of the currently annotated m protein and introduction of a new stop codon at position (dataset s ). by far the most abundant novel spliced transcript is that overlapping m in the s orientation, and m in the as orientation and is discussed in detail below. approximately % of the viral cdna clones and % of all viral reads from the rna-seq analysis mapped to the novel spliced transcript at the right end of the genome. the structure of this transcript relative to current gene annotation is shown in figure a and the spliced nature of this transcript is also apparent in the rna-seq profile (gray histogram). the longest predicted orf extends into the second exon and predicts a protein of aa, of which the first residues matches the predicted m protein sequence ( figure b ). to determine if this transcript is translated, an antibody was prepared to the protein sequence predicted for m . this antibody was used in immunoblot analysis of cell lysates prepared from mock-infected cells and cells infected with wild-type (wt) bac-derived smith strain virus, or various multi-gene and single-gene mutant virus strains. this antibody reacted with a protein of approximately the expected size ( kda) ( figure d ) in cells infected with wt virus and mutant viruses that express most or all or the mat transcript as determined by northern blot analysis ( figure c ). while the mat protein is first detected hrs after infection, maximal amounts are observed at and hrs after infection ( figure e ). mat protein was also detected in fibroblasts exposed to five different strains of mcmv isolated from wild mice, indicating that the coding region of the gene is conserved in laboratory and wild strains of mcmv ( figure g ). most remarkably, these findings demonstrate that the mat gene generates a single transcript with both noncoding [ , ] and protein coding functions. we also investigated the possibility that mat protein accumulation is directly related to control of the mat transcript levels by cellular mir- [ ] . marcinowski and colleagues have shown that when the binding site for mir- is mutated (m -mut virus), mat transcript levels were increased twofold in comparison to levels obtained in cells infected with wt mcmv at hours after infection due to loss of transcript regulation by the microrna. the difference in mat transcript abundance between wt and the m -mut virus was lost by hours after infection. however, we observed that mat protein levels were similar in cells infected with the wt and m -mut viruses at and hrs after infection ( figure h ). we conclude that the noncoding function of the mat transcript (regulation of cellular mir- ) is unrelated to mat protein accumulation. in addition to providing valuable insight into transcript structure, rna-seq analysis revealed several new facets of the viral transcriptome. first, accumulation of individual viral transcripts varies by several orders of magnitude. figure a depicts the number of rna-seq reads mapped against the mcmv genome in which rows , and visualize the data with the maximum number reads set to , , , and , respectively. validating the classical cloning study, the most abundant transcript identified by rna-seq is the mat transcript. enumeration (rpkm) of the most abundant transcripts is presented in figures b and c , and shows that after the mat transcript, the most highly expressed genes are m , m , and m , all genes without assigned functions. also highly expressed are the immune evasion genes m and m , m (glycoprotein b), and additional genes of unknown functions (m and m ). second, as shown by comparing figure b to c, both the overall magnitude of expression and the ranking of the abundance of different transcripts vary according to annotation used for the rpkm analysis. third, analysis of reads mapped at the highest resolution ( figure a , row ) indicates that most of the viral genome is transcribed to some degree. remarkably, or % of the reads mapped to intergenic regions, depending on annotation ( figure d ). this percentage is reduced to % when annotation is modified to reflect the correct mat gene structure identified in this study. rna-seq also detected significant transcription in m -m ( figure s ), m -m and m -m ( figure e ) intergenic regions. in contrast, the transcriptional profile of the annotated m shows less transcriptional activity than the adjacent intergenic regions. similarly, rna-seq identified transcription from genes that were not isolated in the classical cdna library or in previous studies using microarray technology [ , ] . a detailed analysis of the sensitivity of this rna-seq study to previous studies is provided in supplemental datasets s a-c. we also compared our rna-seq data to a recent rna-seq analysis of the mcmv transcriptome using bac-derived wt virus on nih- t fibroblasts [ ] . as shown in supplemental figure s , the profiles obtained from these two different rna-seq experiments are remarkably similar despite using different sequencing platforms and library generation approaches. also, either seven or eight of the most abundant genes were identical in both datasets (supplemental dataset s c). minor differences in abundance of some transcripts can be attributed to differences in the time points analyzed in these two studies as well as the fact that our analysis achieved an order of magnitude greater sequencing depth (compare reads analyzed for each histogram set in figure s ). together these findings demonstrate that rna-seq analysis is a highly sensitive method for detection of viral gene expression during infection. moreover, these findings highlight numerous incongruencies with current annotation for the mcmv genome. finally, rna-seq analysis revealed that many of the most abundantly expressed viral genes are of unknown function. because cdna cloning and rna-seq identified significant differences between the mcmv transcriptome and current annotations, we performed an in depth analysis of several genomic regions by northern analyses ( figure , figures s , s , s , s ) using our cdna clones to generate strand specific riboprobes ( table ) . to investigate genomic regions where transcripts overlapping more than one gene were detected, we analyzed transcription in m - and m - regions. in both regions multiple transcripts were detected with different temporal expression patterns. smaller transcripts tended to accumulate at later time points, a feature previously reported for certain transcripts in both hcmv and mcmv [ ] [ ] [ ] . in the m -m region transcripts were cloned, all of which overlapped the predicted m and m genes, and one transcript was spliced ( figure a ). the rna-seq profile figure . verification of new transcripts by northern blot. balb/c mef cells were infected with bac derived smith virus and harvested at indicated times post infection. total rna was separated by denaturing gel electrophoresis, transferred to nylon membrane and incubated with probes specific for s and as transcripts. rna integrity and loading was evaluated by inspecting s (not shown) and s rrna bands under uv light after transfer to membrane. transcripts in the m - (a), m -m (b), m (c) and m -m (d) gene regions were analyzed (due to smiling effects during gel electrophoresis for the image shown in a and c, the ladder was not accurate for inner lanes of the gel and the position of the ribosomal bands was therefore used to estimate the band sizes). predicted genes (rawlinson's annotation) are depicted as empty arrows, while thin black arrows show longest transcripts cloned in our cdna library as well as clones used to generate probes (marked with *). ends of transcripts are marked with arrowheads. the nucleotide coordinates relative to smith sequence (nc_ . ) of isolated transcripts are given below thin arrows, while the names of the clones are written above. thin gray lines show isolated transcripts that cannot be detected with the probe. gray histograms showrna-seqreads aligned to mcmv genome. maximal possible exposure times were used to ensure even low abundance transcripts are detected and are noted on the blots. doi: . /journal.ppat. .g ( figure a , gray histogram) also strongly indicated transcription that spans both predicted genes. consistent with our cdna library, no antisense transcripts were detected while the sense probe detected transcripts ( figure a , bands - ). the end of all cdna clones end at or close to nucleotide position (supplemental table s ) and rna-seq data alignment to mcmv genome indicates a sudden drop in reads around this nucleotide position. assuming that transcripts in this region are coterminal, band sizes predict transcript initiation sites in m , m , m or m , and m ( figure a , bands - ). similar results were found in this region in cells infected with wild isolates of mcmv (alec redwood, personal communication). while the smallest band observed by northern analysis ( figure a , band ) corresponds in size to the novel spliced transcript, e ( bp), we could not confirm splicing by pcr using intronflanking primers (data not shown). therefore, it is likely this spliced transcript represents an aberrant transcript or a result of intramolecular template switching during reverse transcription [ ] . the m gene region also diverged substantially from current annotation. similar to m - region, in the m region transcripts with differential temporal expression patterns were detected by northern analyses using clone ie as a probe ( figure b ). no transcript was detected using an as probe derived from clone ie or l , indicating that m is not transcribed in the sense orientation ( figure b and figure s ). we therefore propose that m should be removed from mcmv genome annotation. this is consistent with our cloning study where transcripts have been isolated in this region and none overlap m in the sense orientation (supplemental table s ). evidence from the cdna library and rna-seq alignment (table s and figure b ) indicates that bands detected in northern are co-terminal, with the end located close to nucleotide position . the largest band at kb ( figure b , band ) is detectable at and hours pi and we predict that this transcript initiates in m . we failed to detect transcripts between the m and m genes consistent with previous studies [ ] and northern analyses using mutant viruses lacking genes in this region (data not shown). the lack of cdna clones can be explained by low abundance and size of this transcript, as well as by propensity of cdna libraries to enrich ends. the band slightly smaller than kb ( figure b , band ) shows a peak accumulation at hours pi and is consistent with a transcript overlapping m -m (approx locations - , . kb). the band of approximately kb ( figure b , band ) shows peak accumulation hours pi. based on the rna-seq profile this band could represent transcripts that initiate at nucleotide position . finally, the late time points are dominated by smaller transcripts of approximately kb ( figure b , band ; predicted start site at ) which correspond in size to the cdna clones detected in our study. in short, northern analyses support the conclusion that transcripts overlapping multiple genes in the m -m region and m -m region accumulate in infected cells and indicate that additional, larger transcripts are transcribed in these regions which have yet to be characterized. next we analyzed gene regions in which we detected novel spliced transcripts. the m region was chosen as an example of a highly abundant spliced transcript of unknown function in addition to m - transcript. current annotations predict an orf of . kb whereas rna-seq profiles and cdna study both detected a slightly shorter ( . kb) transcript with an bp intron. northern blot analysis ( figure c ) identified a strong band of appropriate size ( . kb) that starts to accumulate at ie times and peaks at e and l times after infection. due to the small intron and high abundance of this transcript, unspliced transcripts could not be definitively resolved by northern analysis but were confirmed by pcr using primers flanking the intron ( figure s ) . additionally, northern analysis detected another less abundant band of approximately kb. leatham and colleagues [ ] have detected a band of similar size in the homologous region in hcmv of . kb that encompasses ul - genes. while we failed to isolate cdna clones overlapping m region, we predict the larger, less abundant kb band observed initiates in m , though additional northern or race studies are needed to confirm the start site of the larger transcript. the m -m region was previously shown to have a very complex transcriptional profile [ , ] . cdna library data, rna-seq data and results of northern analyses with l as a probe all are in agreement with the findings of scalzo et al. [ ] of multiple spliced transcripts that share exon . bands - ( figure d ) correspond to previously reported m , m and m . spliced transcripts. in our cloning study four isolated clones correspond to m . transcripts (represented by the longest clone, l ) and one to m (l ) (supplemental table s ). transcripts corresponding to m were not isolated in the cloning study, however the rna-seq profile in the region corresponding to m exon shows active transcription ( figure s d ). we have also detected a . kb band ( figure d , band ) that corresponds to longer m and m transcripts, and bands corresponding to unspliced transcripts of m and m . (approx. kb, figure d , band ). in addition to these previously published transcripts, we have also cloned one novel spliced transcript from this region, e . in accordance with work in the m region [ ] , we propose m s as a designation for this novel gene. like other spliced transcripts from this region, e shares exon with other transcripts while its splice donor site is located at . the spliced nature of this transcript has been confirmed by pcr ( figure s c) , however more analyses are needed to determine its exact start site. northern analysis revealed a band of . kb ( figure d , band ) that corresponds in size to the e spliced transcript whereas the unspliced version is detected around kb ( figure d, band ) . in addition, a band of similar size ( . kb) transcribed from the plus genomic strand detected by the l probe ( figure figure s b ) could correspond to the unspliced version of e . all probes used in this region detected bands transcribed from negative genomic strand that correspond to those previously reported by rapp et al. [ ] . based on additional northern blots using cdna clones l (as to m ) and l (as to m ) ( figure s a and b) as well as previous reports [ , ] we conclude that the kb transcript starts in m and ends in m and corresponds to transcript encoding gh while the kb transcript starts in m and ends in m and corresponds to transcript encoding dutpase (supplemental figure s ). additional very large transcripts transcribed from plus or minus genomic strands detected by the l and l probes, respectively, have yet to be characterized but underscore the complex transcriptional patterns in this region. last, we set out to confirm novel antisense transcripts detected in the cdna library. analysis of transcription in m -m region confirmed previously published findings. we have detected single m transcript from plus genomic strand as described by scalzo [ ] ( figure s a) . a probe derived from m detected a single transcript from negative genomic strand corresponding to m [ ] , and from the positive genomic strand that correspond to those described by cranmer et al. [ ] and are in line with our cdna and rna-seq analysis ( figure s b) . the presence of sense and antisense transcripts in this gene region corresponds to findings for hcmv [ ] . finally, in the m gene region we detect transcripts from plus genomic strand that correspond to those described by lyons et al [ ] (figure s c ). temporal expression of transcripts detected by northern in this region is in line with our cdna analysis and previously published data [ , ] . based on northern analyses of regions, we conclude that our cdna and rna-seq analyses faithfully represents the mcmv transcriptome in infected primary fibroblasts and confirms the presence of novel transcripts. moreover, the distribution of clones in the ie, e and l cdna libraries accurately reflected the accumulation of transcripts detected by northern analyses. rna-seq analysis also enabled us to investigate changes in the host transcriptome. differentially expressed (de) murine genes in mcmv-infected cells compared to mock-infected cells were identified by calculating rpkm. this analysis identified , statistically significant (p, . ) genes altered by infection ( table s ) . the top induced, upregulated, repressed and downregulated genes are presented in tables - , (genes associated with characterized biological pathways are in bold). interferon b (ifnb ) and the interferon-inducible pyhin (a.k.a. ifi- , ifix) were among the top induced genes, consistent with the expected host response to virus infection. also congruous with expected host responses to infection were two highly induced genes associated with apoptosis induction (hrk and tnfsf [a.k.a. trail]). interestingly, transcription factors (foxa , en , insm , tbx , [a. k.a t-bet], and tp ) were among the most strongly induced by mcmv infection. chemokine ligands dominated the group of the top upregulated genes. genes encoding proteins with roles in intrinsic cellular defense were also highly upregulated, including oas , mx , gpb and rsad (a.k.a. viperin). there were also a surprising number of genes involved in development, differentiation, and stem cell renewal strongly induced or upregulated by infection, including foxa , spint , lin b, en , gabrq, esx , trim , trp , cpne , cdh , cited , pou f , and jag . the relevance of these genes, as well as others including art , ugt , and trank to infection is not clear. we analyzed protein levels of several induced and upregulated transcripts whose relevance to mcmv infection is unknown (figure ) including the notch ligand jagged , the homeobox-containing transcriptional factor engrailed , and the e ubiquitin-protein ligase trim . protein levels of all proteins tested correlated with their transcript levels in infected balb/c fibroblasts. interestingly, the top repressed and downregulated genes are primarily of unknown relevance to infection, though many are receptor or cell surface molecules (npy r, rxfp, mc r, cd r , antxrl, scara , il r , agtr , gpr , the olfactory receptor genes, olfr and olfr , and the lectin or lectin-like genes clec b and reg a). mcmv infection also caused repression or downregulation of noncoding (nc)rnas including the small nucleolar rna gene, snord a and genes of unknown function including long intergenic noncoding rnas (lincrnas), the miscellanous rna, b rik, and antisense transcripts (gm , gm ). to summarize, while many of the top upregulated genes are associated with host responses to infection, the function of many of cxcl chemokine (c-x-c motif) ligand . ccl chemokine (c-c motif) ligand , rantes . trank tetratricopeptide repeat and ankyrin repeat containing . cxcl chemokine (c-x-c motif) ligand ; mig . genes and their products do not work in isolation but rather form pathways and networks. even small perturbations in gene expression in a pathway can exert profound influences on eventual processes or functions. therefore, we analyzed gene lists for shared common pathways. as expected, the top scoring gene networks for all differentially expressed (de) genes included (i) infectious disease, antimicrobial response, inflammatory response ( focus molecules); (ii) inflammatory response, cellular development, cellmediated immune response ( focus molecules) and (iii) cell morphology, hematological system development and function, inflammatory response ( focus molecules) ( table s a) . these were also top networks when the subset of up-and down-regulated genes were evaluated (table s b) . also identified were networks associated with cell morphology and hematological system development and function. when this analysis was conducted with only induced and repressed genes, the top networks included cellular development, cell-mediated immune response, cellular function and maintenance, gene expression and embryonic development ( table s c ). the relationships among the molecules in top networks for differentially regulated and induced/ repressed genes are shown in figures figure s and figure s . thus, an unexpected outcome of this analysis is that mcmv infection influences a subset of networks controlling development.. the biological functions and/or diseases that were most significant to the molecules in the mcmv-regulated networks are shown in figure a . immunological disease, cardiovascular disease, genetic disorders, and skeletal and muscular disorders ranked as the top bio-functions connected with genes altered by mcmv infection. among molecular and cellular functions, cell growth and proliferation were the top ranked perturbed functions, consistent with known effects of lytic mcmv infection of cells. nervous system development and function is at the top of the list of physiological and developmental biofunctions, followed by organismal and tissue development and, surprisingly, behavior with associated genes. de genes were also evaluated for canonical pathways in the ingenuity library ( figure b) . the pathways most affected by mcmv included g-protein coupled receptor signaling followed by pathogenesis of multiple sclerosis and gaba receptor signaling. together, these analyses point to known and expected consequences of infection at the cellular level (i.e., cell growth and proliferation, g-protein coupled receptor signaling) and physiological level (i.e. nervous system development) but also highlight unexpected cell and molecular functions, as well as physiological systems and disorders that may advance the understanding of cmv pathogenesis. gene ontology (go) enrichment using gorilla ranked lists analysis [ , ] was also used to analyze de genes. the full list of enriched go terms long with associated genes is shown in table s . gorilla analysis highlighted processes associated with upregulated genes including cell differentiation, neuron differen- tiation, regulation of ion transport, and the g-protein coupled receptor signaling pathway. genes downregulated during mcmv infection were associated with many processes, including regulation of cell shape, adhesion, motility, and the extracellular matrix. altogether, gorilla analyses support results of the ingenuity pathway analysis and suggest novel processes regulated in infected cells, notably suggesting that infection leads to a restructuring of the extracellular environment of the infected cells. we report a comprehensive analysis of the mcmv transcriptome during lytic infection derived from cloning and sequencing of viral transcripts and next generation sequencing (rna-seq). by combining the approaches of rna-seq and traditional cdna cloning as well as northern and rt-pcr analyses in certain complex regions, we were able to construct a comprehensive profile of viral and host transcription during lytic infection. we also investigated the host transcriptome using rna-seq combined with differential gene expression analysis, pathway analysis, and gene ontology analysis. the major findings are as follows: ) the mcmv transcriptome diverges substantially from that predicted by current annotation; ) the identification of a novel viral protein specified by the mat transcript indicates that this transcript functions as an mrna and a non-coding rna; ) the majority of the most abundantly transcribed viral genes are of unknown function; and ) the host response to infection includes regulation of many host genes and gene networks of unknown relevance to infection. there are four major findings from the analysis of the mcmv transcriptome. first, we demonstrate novel transcripts of mcmv including novel splice variants, transcripts that map to noncoding regions, and transcripts overlapping multiple genes. earlier, we reported similar novel transcripts of hcmv through analysis of a classical cdna library [ ] . this study revealed a dramatic increase in the complexity of viral gene products compared to currently available predictions and its findings were later on confirmed by rna-seq analysis [ ] . a more recent analysis of hcmv translational products [ ] by ribosomal footprinting identified over translated orfs -a strikingly high number compared to annotated genes. this discrepancy is, at least in part, a consequence of the polycistronic nature of hcmv transcripts which appear to code for many more orfs than previously predicted (internal in frame or out-of-frame orfs, uorfs) as well as orfs coming from antisense or dedicated short transcripts. our analysis demonstrated that the mcmv transcriptome is similarly complex: we identified several regions where multiple co-terminal transcripts expressed in different temporal phases are being transcribed. such transcripts have the potential to code for truncated protein forms or even completely new proteins as described for hcmv, suggesting that the size and complexity of the mcmv proteome, like the mcmv transcriptome, is currently underestimated. accumulation of ncrnas is also a prominent feature of the cytomegalovirus transcriptomes. our rna-seq analysis shows intense transcription in previously described stable mcmv introns and in intergenic regions, consistent with abundant ncrnas reported for hcmv and mcmv [ , , ] . these findings have a profound implication for understanding studies of cmv genes functions and underscore the need for transcriptomic maps in addition to genomic maps depicting only orfs. the functions of many mcmv genes have been elucidated by using deletion mutants [ ] . however in a transcriptionally complex region of the genome any deletion will likely impact multiple transcripts and possibly multiple proteins resulting in complex phenotypes. in line with previous studies [ ] , we identified novel as transcripts of mcmv. interestingly, preliminary estimates in our cloning study indicate that as transcripts occur at much lower frequency than reported for hcmv [ ] . there are likely to be additional as transcripts of mcmv. because we did not capture every known sense transcript of mcmv, we may presume that the cdna cloning study did not capture all as transcripts. in addition, the rna-seq analysis performed in this study was limited by the fact that the methods employed did not provide strand-specific information and could not identify novel as transcripts. as transcripts, even those expressed at low levels, may possess noncoding rna functions and contribute to complexity of the proteome as has described for hcmv [ ] . therefore, further studies are needed to determine the number and nature of as transcripts derived from mcmv and will be critical to generating definitive transcriptome and proteome maps of this virus. the cdna library analysis does suggest that the extent of mcmv as transcription is lower than that described for other herpesviruses, including hcmv. these results are consistent with a strand-specific rna-seq experiment performed by dölken group [ ] that also show poor as transcription in comparison to sense counterparts. very little antisense transcription was also noted for the anguillid herpesvirus (anghv ) infecting eels [ ] , though extensive antisense transcription was reported for other herpesviruses, including kshv and mhvc [ , ] . we conclude that different members of the herpesviridae family differ in the extent of antisense transcription during lytic infection. second, we observed similar inconsistencies between transcriptomic data and gene annotation for mcmv as previously reported for hcmv [ ] . these discrepancies can profoundly impact future studies related to the quantitative analyses of gene expression, interpretation of microarray studies, comparisons to newly sequenced virus strains, and studies using deletion mutant virus strains. the results presented here represent an important first step in re-annotation of the mcmv genome and underscore the utility of transcriptome studies in validating and refining genome annotation for microbial pathogens. third, analysis of the mcmv transcriptome revealed the striking abundance of the spliced mat transcript. this gene is also largely conserved in wild isolates of mcmv (alec redwood, personal communication and [ ] ) and the protein is expressed by wild isolates tested in this study. mat abundance may reflect its multiple functions. the untranslated region (utr) of this transcript facilitates degradation of murine mir- , establishing that this transcript functions as a noncoding rna molecule [ , ] . members of the alpha, beta, and gamma herpes virus subfamilies all encode for abundant, largely enigmatic noncoding rnas including the latency associated transcript (lat) of herpes simplex virus (hsv), ebna rnas of esptein-barr virus (ebv), the b . transcript of hcmv, the pan rna of kaposi's sarcoma herpes virus (kshv) and the hsur transcripts of herpesvirus samiri (hvs) which also downregulates the cellular mir (reviewed in [ ] ). in addition to the noncoding function of the mat, we demonstrate that this transcript also encodes for a novel small protein of approximately kda. to our knowledge, this is the first herpes virus transcript we know of that functions both as a noncoding rna, and an mrna that specifies a novel viral protein. fourth, a somewhat startling finding from the quantitative rna-seq analysis was that after mat, the most abundant viral transcripts in infected cells are derived from genes without known functions, including m . we report that m is a novel spliced transcript predicted to specify a much smaller protein compared to current annotation. these results highlight fundamental gaps in our understanding of basic mcmv biology. we found that the cdna library and rna-seq approaches yielded remarkably complementary data including identification of novel transcripts and new insights into transcript abundance, despite different biases in each of these methods. for example, while there may be selection bias for isolating transcripts with long tracts of adenosines during cdna library construction [ ] , gc content, bias in the sites of fragmentation, primer affinity and transcript-end effects may influence rna-seq results [ ] . future rna-seq studies may also facilitate novel gene identification as rna-seq has now been applied to ab initio reconstruction of gene structure [ ] using only rna-seq data and the genome sequence. however, currently available algorithms are unable to cope with highly dense genomes, such as mcmv and other viral genomes. until such tools are developed for very dense genomes, rna-seq data relies upon comparison to existing gene annotation and other experimental methods for gene structure prediction. in this study, we compared rna-seq to currently used annotations but also to the cdna library study, northern analysis, and rt-pcr studies to identify and validate numerous novel transcripts. we also report that lytic infection elicits a profound cellular response in fibroblasts. this study identified , differentially regulated genes. as the number of mouse genes is estimated to be , [ ] we estimate that over % of mouse genes are altered in response to infection. many of the top upregulated and induced genes and gene networks were associated with immune responses to infection, including interferon and interferon-inducible genes such as phyin , a potential activator of p [ ] , the inflammasone regulator gpb [ ] and rsad (a.k.a. viperin), also known to be induced by hcmv [ ] . inflammatory chemokine ligand genes are also highly upregulated during infection. mcmv encodes virally-derived chemokine homologs specified by the m /m genes [ , ] and at least one chemokine receptor homolog, m [ ] . numerous host chemokine receptors are also upregulated by infection, suggesting a remarkably complex interplay between mcmv-derived and host derived chemokine signaling during infection. induction of inflammatory gene networks by mcmv also lends credence to the hypothesis that inflammatory responses link cmv infection to chronic diseases, such as chronic allograft rejection, cardiovascular disease, and cancer [ , , ] . numerous transcription factors are also induced or upregulated by infection including insulinoma-associated (insm ). recently, insm was found to be strongly upregulated by hsv- infection and shown to promote hsv gene expression, probably by binding the hsv infected cell protein (icp) promoter. [ ] . this raises the intriguing possibility that insm plays a similar role in promoting virus gene expression during mcmv infection. another induced transcription factor induced at the transcript and protein level is engrailed- (en ). this transcription factor is key to patterning cerebellar foliation during development [ ] . we previously described a profound dysregulation of cerebellar development in brains of neonatal mice infected with mcmv [ ] , suggesting a possible physiological link to regulation of this gene. another top induced gene was the gaba receptor, gabrq. glutamate receptor signaling was also identified as significantly impacted canonical pathways in our dataset. in the developing brain gaba and glutamate receptors influence neuronal proliferation, migration, differentiation or survival processes [ ] . whether and how these observations relate to our previous findings that mcmv infection of neonates results in decreased granular neuron proliferation and migration [ ] are important areas for future study and may impact our understanding of neurological damage and sequelae associated with hcmv in congenitally-infected infants. perhaps most importantly, many top regulated genes, especially downregulated and repressed genes, are associated with functions whose roles in infection are obscure, including many genes of unknown function. many downregulated or repressed genes are cell surface molecules, host lincrnas, antisense rnas, or small nucleolar rnas. regulation of lincrnas was recently observed during infection with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov) and influenza virus, and have been suggested to impact host defenses and innate immunity [ ] . further studies to identify the functions of these downregulated and repressed genes and noncoding rnas during mcmv infection may well provide novel insights into the virus-host molecular interface as well as possible therapeutic targets. this analysis also revealed immunological disease, cardiovascular disease, genetic disorders and skeletal and muscular disorders as top bio-functions connected with genes altered by mcmv infection. while mcmv involvement in cardiovascular disease is a subject of intensive research, potential involvement in skeletal and muscular disorders is not well documented but may be relevant to the novel observation that mcmv infection of mice with a heterozygous trp mutation develop rhabdomyosarcomas at high frequency [ ] . a primary caveat of rna-seq analysis is determining whether changes in gene transcript levels are also reflected at the protein level. this is particularly important as herpesviruses can control protein accumulation at the post-transcriptional, translational, and post-translational levels [ ] [ ] [ ] . we confirmed that the notch ligand, jagged , is highly upregulated by infection at both the transcript and protein level. notch signaling is a highly conserved signaling pathway that plays important roles in development, including neurogenesis and differentiation of immune cell subsets [ ] . jagged is also upregulated by the alphaherpesviruses, hsv- and psuedorabies viruses [ ] . kshv and ebv also exploit the notch signaling pathway to facilitate aspects of their life cycle [ ] and notch signaling is proposed to influence hsv- -induced interferon responses [ ] . we show for the first time that the betaherpesvirus, mcmv, also influences notch signaling. dysregulation of jagged as a consequence of mcmv infection is highly interesting since it plays a role in important processes affected by cmv including inner ear development [ , ] , generation of motor neurons [ ] and differentiation of immune cell subsets [ , ] . to summarize, this study has refined the understanding of mcmv gene expression and identified new areas of research to advance our understanding of the host response to these ancient viruses. we describe what is to our knowledge, the first herpes virus transcript that functions as both a noncoding rna that limits accumulation of cellular mirnas, and an mrna that specifies a protein. this study also revealed novel features of the host response to infection. perhaps most importantly, this study identified many virus and host genes of unknown function that are regulated during infection. it is highly likely that further study of these genes may lead to breakthroughs in the understanding and treatment of cytomegalovirus-related diseases. primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts (mefs) from balb/c or balb.k mice were prepared and maintained as described [ ] and used between passages - . immortalized murine balb.k mefs, (mef.k) [ ] and svec - (atcc crl- ) were used for immunoblot studies. mcmv smith strain (atcc vr- ) was propagated and titrated on primary balb/c mef by standard plaque assay as described in detail in [ ] . wild type mcmv isolates k (genbank acc no: am . ), c d, k and wp b (genbank acc no: eu . ) [ ] were a kind gift from a. redwood (university of western australia, australia). construction of the d s , dm , dm , dm , dm , and m -mut mutant viruses were previously described and were generated by et-cloning [ ] using the full-length mcmv bac psm fr [ ] . the double deletion mutants (dm dm and dm dm ) were constructed exactly as described previously [ ] . primers for construction of the double deletion mutants are also as described [ ] using the forward primer for the first gene and reverse primer for the second gene. all infections were conducted by exposing cells to . pfu/cell followed by centrifugal enhancement for minutes at g, as described in [ ] . smith mcmv infected cbalb/c mefs were harvested h post infection and viral dna was isolated as described [ ] . rna was extracted from smith mcmv infected balb/c mef at , and hrs after infection (ie library); , and hrs after infection (e library); and , and hrs after infection (l library). no drug was used to select for different temporal classes of transcripts and equal amounts of rna from each time point were pooled prior to library construction. cdna libraries were generated as described previously for hcmv [ ] by following the instruction manual for the superscript plasmid system with gateway technology for cdna synthesis and cloning (invitrogen) with some minor modifications. briefly, total rna was isolated using the trizol reagent (invitrogen, ca, usa). a poly(t)-tailed paci primer-adapter was used for first-strand cdna synthesis ( -gcggccgcttaattaacc(t) - ) . after sec-ond-strand synthesis, an ecori-pmei adapter was added to the end and cdnas were cleaved with ecori and paci. the ecori-pmei adapter was generated by annealing following oligonucleotides: -aattcccgcgggtttaaacg- and -pho-cgtttaaacccgcggg- . cdna fragments were inserted into a modified pcdna . (+) previously digested with ecori and paci and transformed into xl -blue supercompetent e. coli cells (stratagene, ca, usa). positive selection of viral cdna clones was performed as described previously [ ] . mse i-digested genomic mcmv dna was labeled using a dig high prime dna labeling detection starter kit ii (roche applied science) and used to identify virallyderived cdna clones. plasmids harboring cdna clones that reacted with probe were isolated and sequenced from the end using t primer for pcdna . (+) or the ends using primer ( gcaccttccagggtcaaggaag) or standard poly (t) primers at the osu plant-microbe genomics facility. sequences were compared to the mcmv smith strain genome [genbank accession no. nc_ ] using mega blast. total rna was extracted from balb/c mef cells cultured in mm petri dishes and exposed to . pfu/cell of the mw . strain of murine cytomegalovirus or mock-infected. at , , , , , , , and hours after infection, rna was isolated using trizol reagent. rna integrity was assessed on agilent bioanalyzer and only samples with rna index values of at least were used. equal amounts of rna from each time point were pooled ( . mg of rna per time point) and treated with dnasei. libraries were prepared with illumina truseq rna kit according to manufacturer's instructions and sequenced on illumina genome analyzer iix as single-end bp reads. the illumina truseq rna kit employed does not allow for strandspecific information to be derived from the sequence data. datasets are available at the national center for biotechnology information (ncbi) sequence read archive (sra) accession no. srr (sequence reads from mcmv-infected mefs) and accession no. srr (sequence reads from mockinfected mefs). reads were aligned to mouse (ncbi /mm assembly) and mcmv genome (genbank acc.no. nc_ . ) using eland aligner or bowtie aligner (for comparison with data provided by lars dölken). it is important to note that both eland and bowtie aligners do not map splice junctions and thus give concordant results. alignments were visualized using integrative genomics viewer (http://www.broadinstitute.org/igv/) [ ] . differential gene expression was assessed by calculating rpkm (reads per kilobase of million mapped reads (rpkm) using sammate . . . release with edger (http://sammate. sourceforge.net/) [ ] . gene ontology (go) enrichment analysis was performed on filtered lists of differentially expressed genes (p, . ) using gorilla ranked lists analysis [ , ] . ingenuity core analysis (ingenuity systems, www.ingenuity.com) was used for gene interaction network and canonical pathway analysis. gene lists were filtered for statistically significant differentially expressed genes (p, . ) and a fold change cutoff of was set to identify molecules whose expression was significantly differentially regulated. for network generation, these molecules (network eligible molecules), were overlaid onto a global molecular network developed from information in the ingenuity knowledge base based on their connectivity. the functional analysis of a network identified the biological functions and/or diseases that were most significant to the molecules in the network. right-tailed fisher's exact test was used to confirm that biological functions and/or disease assigned to data sets were not due to chance. the nature of individual de genes was also investigated using the mouse genome informatics databases (http://www.informatics.jax.org/) [ ] and entrez gene (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gene) [ ] . rna was isolated using trizol reagent from mock or mcmvinfected balb/c mef at hours (mat) or , and hrs after infection. rna ( mg/lane or mg/lane (mat)) was separated by formaldehyde agarose gel electrophoresis and transferred to positively charged nylon membrane and crosslinked by uv irradiation. membranes were reacted to dig-labeled probes overnight at uc. for mat detection, a dig labeled double-stranded dna probe was made using fragments corresponding to the mat gene sequences derived from cdna library clones e , e and e using roche's dig-high prime dna labeling and detection starter kit i. for all other northern blots, single-stranded dig-labeled rna probes were used generated using roche's dig northern starter kit. antisense probes were generated by in vitro transcription from t promoter present in pcdna . plasmids containing cdna clones that harbor the desired gene fragments (table ) . therefore antisense probes are identical to transcripts cloned in cdna library and can detect transcripts antisense to cdna clones. to generate sense probes, t promoter was added to end of complimentary strand of the gene fragments used for antisense probes by pcr ( table ). the pcr fragments were then in vitro transcribed and dig labeled using t rna polymerase. care was taken to generate sense probes of length comparable to corresponding antisense probes. the m gene sequence was amplified by pcr using viral dna isolated from mcmv bac psm fr using following primers: f: -tttttggatccatgagcaacgcggtcccgttc- and r: -tttttctgcagtcatcacggggggcacc-tacc- , reacted with bamhi and hindiii (new england biolabs), inserted into pqe expression vector and introduced to e.coli bl prep strain (qiagen). the protein was induced according to manufacturers' instructions and purified on a his-tag column. purified protein was used for immunization of balb/c mice and antibody titer in blood serum was measured by elisa. when antibody titer in serum reached adequate levels, animals were sacrificed, their spleens isolated and fused with sp /o cells. supernatants from motherwells were tested by immunoblot blot on purified mat protein and positive wells were rescreened by immunoblot using lysates from mefs infected with wt, d s , d - , d - , dm , dm and dm mutants as described below. rna from mock-or mcmv-infected cells isolated for northern blots was also reverse transcribed using oligo-dt primers (proto-script m-mulv taq rt-pcr kit, new england biolabs). no reverse transcriptase (-rt) controls were run in parallel. splicing was then verified by pcr amplification using primers that flank putative introns (m ; f: cttcatcggattcggaggc; r: tgttgttgtcgacgtctgatgtg; m -m ; f: atc-tcctctgcctccgacctc, r: cgatgtcatcttggaa-tccgacga; m -m ; f: ccggatacgaccgtcagc, r: cgatgtcatcttggaatccgacga) using phusion high fidelity polymerase (new england biolabs). mock-infected or mcmv-infected primary mefs, or murine cell lines (mef.k, svec - ) were lysed in ripa buffer. protein lysates were separated by sds-page and transferred to pvdf. mat protein was detected with anti-m antibody described above, jag with antibody n- (santa cruz), engrailed with en pa - antibody (thermo scientific), trim with pa - (thermo scientific), and actin with antibody c (millipore) followed by peroxidase-labeled secondary antibodies (jackson immunoresearch or abcam). proteins were visualized using amersham ecl prime western blotting reagent (ge healthcare) and quantified using imagej software (http://rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/). dataset s comparison of sensitivity and temporal gene expression data from this study to previous microarray studies of mcmv (s a and s b) and comparison of rpkm values in and this rnaseq experiment (s c). dataset s spliced cdna clone overlapping m and comparison of predicted protein to current annotation. (pdf) figure s rna-seq profiles comparison. rna-seq data from total rna obtained from mcmv infected nih- t fibroblasts from and hrs pi sequenced by dölken group (gse ) was aligned against mcmv genome (gb acc no nc_ . ) using bowtie aligner and visualized in igv in comparison to our rna-seq data. the view of the complete genome is shown at the top with areas magnified below (labeled a-d) and the number of reads displayed are noted on the side. since viral genes display a wide range of expression levels, the whole genome view is shown in wide data range (upper panel) more suitable for displaying highly transcribed regions and a narrowed data range (lower panel) that is more suitable for less transcribed regions. as can be seen, the profiles of the compared alignments are remarkably similar, the only differences being abundance of certain transcripts which are due to different time points analyzed in comparison to the pooled data of our rna-seq and significantly greater depth of at least one order of magnitude of our data in comparison to marcinowski data. (tif) figure s analysis of the m - region. balb/c mef cells were infected with bac derived smith virus and harvested , and hrs post infection. total rna was separated by denaturing gel electrophoresis, transferred to nylon membrane and incubated with probe generated by in vitro transcription from t promoter of l [a; probe should detect predicted m (s) transcripts] or probe generated by in vitro transcription from t promoter of ie transcript [probe should detect m (s)-m (as) transcripts]. rna integrity and loading was evaluated by inspecting s (not shown) and s rrna bands under uv light after transfer to membrane. predicted genes (rawlinson's annotation) are depicted as empty arrows, while thin black arrows show longest transcripts cloned in our cdna library as well as clones used to generate probes (marked with *). ends of transcripts are marked with arrowheads. the nucleotide coordinates relative to smith sequence (nc_ . ) of isolated transcripts are given below thin arrows, while the names of the clones are written above. gray histograms showrna-seqreads aligned to mcmv genome. maximal possible exposure times were used to ensure even low abundance transcripts are detected and are noted on the blots. (tif) figure s verification of m splicing by pcr. schematic of the m gene region and clone l (a) and pcr analysis of the splice site (b). in (a) predicted genes (rawlinson's annotation) are depicted as empty arrows, while the thin black arrow depicts clone l with red arrows depicting the primers used in (b). the ends of transcripts are marked with arrowheads. the nucleotide coordinates relative to smith sequence (nc_ . ). gray histograms showrna-seq reads aligned to mcmv genome. rna isolated from wt infected balb/c mef used in northern blots was reverse transcribed with oligo-dt primers, and then amplified with primers specific for m that flank the putative intron (marked by red arrows). no rt controls were run in parallel. spliced cdna clones and viral dna were used as spliced and unspliced amplification controls, respectively. (tif) figure s analysis of the m -m region spliced transcripts by northern blot and pcr. balb/c mef cells were infected with bac derived smith virus and harvested at indicated times post infection (a and b). total rna was separated on denaturing gel electrophoresis, transferred to nylon membrane and incubated with probes specific for s and as transcripts. rna integrity and loading was evaluated by inspecting s (not shown) and s rrna bands under uv light after transfer to membrane. predicted genes (rawlinson's annotation) are depicted as empty arrows, while thin black arrows show longest transcripts cloned in our cdna library as well as clones used to generate probes (marked with *). images of northern blots are shown using probes derived from the m region in (a) and the m in (b). the ends of transcripts are marked with arrowheads. the nucleotide coordinates relative to smith sequence (nc_ . ) of isolated transcripts are given below thin arrows, while the names of the clones are written above. thin gray lines show isolated transcripts that cannot be detected with the probe. gray histograms showrna-seqreads aligned to mcmv genome. maximal possible exposure times were used to ensure even low abundance transcripts are detected and are noted on the blots (a and b). in (c), the m - spliced transcript and one of two possible m - spliced transcripts were verified by pcr amplification using primers that flank their putative introns. rna isolated from wt infected balb/c mef used in northern blots was reverse transcribed with oligo-dt primers, and then amplified with primers specific to m -m or m -m spliced transcripts (marked by red arrows). no rt controls were run in parallel. spliced cdna clones and viral dna were used as spliced and unspliced amplification controls, respectively. in (d), the position of exon of m reported by scalzo et. al. [ ] , is compared to rna-seq data for this genomic region. (tif) figure s northern blot analysis of the m -m region. balb/c mef cells were infected with bac derived smith virus and harvested at indicated times post infection. total rna was separated on denaturing gel electrophoresis, transferred to nylon membrane and incubated with probes specific for s and as transcripts overlapping m (a), m (b) and m (c) genes. rna integrity and loading was evaluated by inspecting s (not shown) and s rrna bands under uv light after transfer to membrane. predicted genes (rawlinson's annotation) are depicted as empty arrows, while thin black arrows show longest transcripts cloned in our cdna library as well as clones used to generate probes (marked with *). ends of transcripts are marked with arrowheads. the nucleotide coordinates relative to smith sequence (nc_ . ) of isolated transcripts are given below thin arrows, while the names of the clones are written above. thin gray lines show isolated transcripts that cannot be detected with the probe. gray histograms showrna-seqreads aligned to mcmv genome. maximal possible exposure times were used to ensure even low abundance transcripts are detected and are noted on the blots. (tif) figure s graphical representation of top genetic networks for differentially regulated genes. upregulated genes are shown in red, while downregulated are shown in green. level of differential expression is represented by color saturation with most dramatically changed genes being shown in the most saturated color (strong red or green). these overlapping genetic networks are associated with (i) cell-mediated immune response, cellular development, cellular function and maintenance ( focus molecules); (ii) infectious disease, antimicrobial response, inflammatory response ( focus molecules) and (iii) antimicrobial response, inflammatory response, gene expression ( focus molecules) (see supplemental table s ). (tif) figure s graphical representation of top genetic networks for genes induced or repressed by infection. induced genes are shown in red, while repressed are shown in green. level of differential expression is represented by color saturation with most dramatically changed genes being shown in the most saturated color (strong red or green). these overlapping genetic networks are associated with various developmental processes (see supplemental table s ). 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cytomegalovirus encodes a stable intron that facilitates persistent replication in the mouse strategies for the identification and analysis of viral immune-evasive genescytomegalovirus as an example genome-wide gene expression analysis of anguillid herpesvirus redefining the genetics of murine gammaherpesvirus via transcriptome-based annotation the lytic transcriptome of kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus reveals extensive transcription of noncoding regions, including regions antisense to important genes laboratory strains of murine cytomegalovirus are genetically similar to but phenotypically distinct from wild strains of virus noncoding rnps of viral origin local and global factors affecting rna sequencing analysis ab initio reconstruction of cell type-specific transcriptomes in mouse reveals the conserved multi-exonic structure of lincrnas the mouse genome database (mgd): from genes to mice-a community resource for mouse biology stabilization of p in human cytomegalovirus-initiated cells is associated with sequestration of hdm and decreased p ubiquitination gbp promotes nlrp inflammasome assembly and immunity in mammals human cytomegalovirus directly induces the antiviral protein viperin to enhance infectivity cytomegalovirus mck- controls mobilization and recruitment of myeloid progenitor cells to facilitate dissemination spliced mrna encoding the murine cytomegalovirus chemokine homolog predicts a beta chemokine of novel structure functional analysis of the murine cytomegalovirus chemokine receptor homologue m : ablation of constitutive signaling is associated with an attenuated phenotype in vivo herpes simplex virus induces the marked up-regulation of the zinc finger transcriptional factor insm , which modulates the expression and localization of the immediate early protein icp the engrailed homeobox genes determine the different foliation patterns in the vermis and hemispheres of the mammalian cerebellum altered development of the brain after focal herpesvirus infection of the central nervous system glutamate and gaba receptor signalling in the developing brain unique signatures of long noncoding rna expression in response to virus infection and altered innate immune signaling cytomegalovirus infection leads to pleomorphic rhabdomyosarcomas in trp +/ mice the virion-packaged endoribonuclease of herpes simplex virus cleaves mrna in polyribosomes getting the message direct manipulation of host mrna accumulation during gammaherpesvirus lytic infection regulation of translation initiation by herpesviruses notch: control of lymphocyte differentiation in the periphery transcriptional response of a common permissive cell type to infection by two diverse alphaherpesviruses notch and wnt signaling: mimicry and manipulation by gamma herpesviruses inhibition of gammasecretase cleavage in the notch signaling pathway blocks hsv- -induced type i and type ii interferon production notch signaling regulates the pattern of auditory hair cell differentiation in mammals notch signaling and the developing inner ear jagged controls the generation of motor neuron and oligodendrocyte progenitors in the ventral spinal cord the notch ligands jagged , delta , and delta induce differentiation and expansion of functional human nk cells from cd + cord blood hematopoietic progenitor cells expression of notch receptors and ligands on immature and mature t cells a mouse model for cytomegalovirus infection. current protocols in immunology ly p recognition of cytomegalovirus-infected cells expressing h -dk and cmvencoded m correlates with the nk cell antiviral response dissection of the antiviral nk cell response by mcmv mutants mutagenesis of viral bacs with linear pcr fragments (et recombination) systematic excision of vector sequences from the bac-cloned herpesvirus genome during virus reconstitution integrative genomics viewer sammate: a gui tool for processing short read alignments in sam/bam format the mouse genome database (mgd): comprehensive resource for genetics and genomics of the laboratory mouse entrez gene: genecentered information at ncbi we thank corinna benkartek and martin messerle for the mutant viruses and alec redwood for the gift of the wild mcmv viruses and for generously sharing unpublished data. we thank lars dolken for kindly providing their rna-seq data for comparison. we also thank andrea henkel, misel satrak and guojuan zhang for help with the cdna library. key: cord- - h fk qt authors: kaur, rajwinder; yadav, bhoomika; tyagi, r.d. title: microbiology of hospital wastewater date: - - journal: current developments in biotechnology and bioengineering doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: h fk qt the study of hospital wastewater (hww) microbiology is important to understand the pollution load, growth of particular pathogenic microbes, shift and drift in microbial community, development and spread of antibiotic resistance in microbes, and subsequent change in treatment efficiencies. this chapter investigates the potential microbes such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites present in hww along with the diseases associated and methods of treatment used. due to the indiscriminate release of antibiotics from hospitals, hww serves as a hotspot for emergence of antibiotic-resistance genes (args) and antibiotic-resistance bacteria. this chapter discusses the args occurrence in hww, their prevalence in the environment, the molecular tools used for identification, and different mechanisms of horizontal gene transfer. thus better understanding of the microbiology of hww could further help in development of advanced treatment technologies for effective removal of microbes and their bioproducts (toxins and infectious nucleic acid) from hww and contaminated water. wastewater includes any type (e.g., from agriculture, domestic means, industries, human excretion, commercial sectors, pharmaceuticals, healthcare units) of water which quality has been deteriorated under anthropogenic influence [ ] . hospital wastewater (hww) is quite different from the wastewater discharged from other sources and is hazardous and infectious. it consists of wide range of several micro-and macropollutants, discharged from operation (surgery) rooms, wards, laboratories, laundry, polyclinics, research units, radiology, and medicine and nutrient solutions used in microbiology laboratories [ ] . the micro-and macropollutants include radioactive isotopes, pharmaceuticals, stock cultures, heavy metals, media, pathogens, drugs, cotton particles, disinfectants, and chemical compounds [ ] . the contraceptive-rich pharmaceuticals present in hww were reported to be associated with effects of endocrine disruption, for instance, exposure to pharmaceutical waste containing estrogen or androgen caused sex reversals in fishes and thus, reproductive impairment [ ] . the hospital effluent discharged directly into the ponds has caused eutrophication, which is evident by oxygen depletion, dense algal blooms, and death of aquatic animals [ ] . the discharge of wastewater depends upon the capacity of hospital and generally water varying from to l/day/bed is consumed by the hospitals [ ] . the hww with many microbes and emerging infectious particles such as prions, viroids, and toxins is hazardous for the environment, and ultimately human health. however, in many countries, hww is directly discharged into sewage water without pretreatment, it then undergoes treatment along with the municipal wastewater but the treatment could not be sufficient to remove micropollutants from hww [ ] . moreover, the pharmaceutical compounds present in hww undergo biological transformation and form conjugate compounds, those toxicity could be even higher than the present metabolite [ ] . thus wastewater pretreatment methods designed for municipal wastewaters are not able to remove the pharmaceutical-related micropollutants or conjugate compounds, which are generally present in low concentration than other macropollutants (chemical oxygen demand, biological oxygen demand, phosphorus, and nitrogen) and thus, could not be removed using conventional wastewater treatment plant (wwtp) operations [ ] . moreover, the pathogens present in hww could cause microbial population imbalance in existing and operating municipal wwtp and metals or heavy metals present in the hww can affect the biological processes like nutrient removal. the heavy metals are in fact nonbiodegradable as compared with other organic pollutants and thus move to other pollutant sources [ ] . the hww can act as an ideal growth medium for various pathogenic microbes including bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasites. the wastewaters from hospitals also consist of several resistant bacteria and antibiotic residues as well, which could inhibit the growth of susceptible bacteria, thereby increasing the population of resistant bacteria in the receiving water. resistant bacteria discharged into environment either act as vectors to carry a transmissible gene or as the reservoirs for antibiotic-resistance genes (args) that could pose a threat to public health [ ] . in addition, fungi which have capability to grow at faster rate and can spread their spores to external environment also pose a serious threat to environment and human health [ ] . the absence of specific pretreatment technologies for hww also increased the frequency of gastroenteric viruses in aquatic bodies [ ] . the direct discharge of hww into municipal wastewater containing disease-causing parasites has also increased the risk of skin infections and other harmful diseases in humans [ ] . the specific and advanced technologies are required to be developed for hww treatment to prevent the release of harmful contaminants into the environment. therefore the microbial community analysis of hww is utmost importance to assess the pollution load and to develop the specific treatment methods for protection of the environmental health. thus authors explain about the various pathogens present in hww, args, and tools used to study the args. moreover, metagenomics, a recent approach used to study different microbial communities and gene-specific identification, are also explained in this chapter. in addition, horizontal gene transfer (hgt) approach, which can efficiently contribute to spreading of args, is discussed briefly. the hww poses a serious threat to humans with respect to contagiousness and drastic spread of infective diseases in healthcare units, society, hospital employees, and environment [ ] . different solvents, pharmaceuticals, and radionuclides are used in hospitals for purpose of diagnostics, disinfection, and research. after the drug consumption, various drugs remain nonmetabolized or partially assimilate in the human body and thus excrete as such and end up into wastewater. the residual quantities of disinfectants used for treatment of skin microbial infection and to disinfect instruments and surfaces of hospitals, also end up in the hww, resulting in an increase in the population of pathogenic microbes. the pathogenic microflora present in hwws also come from medical devices, atmosphere, and water used in the hospital practice, and the pathogens are released mainly in the form of excreta of patients [ ] . therefore hww consists of a mixture of pathogenic microbes including bacteria, fungi, yeasts, algae, viruses, protozoa, parasites, and bacteriophages. the effluent from hospitals is usually discharged and treated with domestic wastewaters without any prior treatment [ ] . the pathogens in the receiving water, if untreated, survive for a long time in soil or water and enter into the food chain causing infectious diseases and health risks to human beings [ ] . due to the economic reasons and lack of resources for analysis of actual pathogens, certain bacteria have been used as indicators for contamination of water since decades [ ] (box . ). however, it has to be considered that removal of coliforms, which is indicator of fecal contamination, could not be directly correlated with removal of viruses, pathogens, fungi, protozoa, or other bacteria from water (samples) [ ] . in addition, the indicator bacteria such as escherichia coli and clostridium perfringens when compared with pathogenic bacteria, protozoa and viruses are more sensitive to inactivation through processes such as natural competition, wastewater treatment, and high temperature [ ] . traditional detection of pathogenic bacteria involves selective culture media and biochemical characterization methods. these techniques are inexpensive and simple; however, sampling error, time consumption ( À days), tedious, and monospecific detection (detection of only one type of pathogen) are the major limitations [ ] . the enzyme-linked immuno sorbent assay (elisa) is used for laboratory diagnostics of different pathogens. the polymerase chain reaction (pcr) has been adapted in many ways: nested pcr, multiplex pcr, real-time pcr, fluorescence, and digital pcr [ ] (box . ) for analysis of waterborne pathogens. criteria for selection: • should be present only in contaminated water, not in uncontaminated ones • should not be able to grow and proliferate in water • should be present in intestinal tract of warm blooded animals • should have similar survival pattern as pathogens present outside the host • should be easily detectable • should be useful for all types of water • should be relatively cheap to use total coliforms are higher in number than any other pathogens. the subgroup fecal coliforms indicate fecal contamination of water and thus, indicate the presence of other pathogens as well, which are lower in number, hard to detect. however, lower number of pathogens are enough to cause morbidity and mortality to humans. they are detectable by inexpensive cultural methods and do not pose any health risk to laboratory workers. however, there are few limitations of fecal indicator bacteria, which have been discussed in the text. biochemical tests, pcr, and sequencing [ ] (continued) bed-linens, or through infected patients [ ] . the hospital-acquired infections resulted in increase of methicillin-resistant s. aureus (mrsa) isolates. the mrsa is associated with infections of skin and soft tissues and has been a global threat for human health. in the united states, , cases of mrsa infections were reported in [ ] . e. coli and pseudomonas aeruginosa are also commonly found in hww along with other nosocomial pathogens including candida albicans, klebsiella proteus, and enterobacter species [ ] . most of the times, e. coli is harmless and is important part of human intestinal tract, but some of the strains are pathogenic to humans. the e. coli :h is related to many outbreaks of water and food-borne illness and also responsible for , hemorrhagic colitis (bloody diarrhea) cases in the united states annually [ ] . a study reported on hww of brazil also confirmed the presence of other bacterial species including citrobacter freundii, klebsiella ornithinolytica, proteus mirabilis, pantoea agglomerans, and serratia rubidacea [ ] . many c. freundii infections have been reported in bloodstream such as septic shock, pneumonia, hypothermia, oliguria, and thrombocytopenia [ ] . another bacterium p. mirabilis, which is found in hww, is responsible for urinary tract infections and is further accompanied by development of kidney stones [ ] . p. agglomerans mostly affects plants but also causes opportunistic infections in immunocompromised individuals causing skin infections [ ] . an important prospect about fluctuations of pollution was discussed [ ] , according to which, the microbial load present in wastewater was directly correlated to several hospital activities. the higher microbial load was present in hww during the day period as compared with evening and early morning. another study [ ] was also conducted on hww collected during early hours (eh) and late hours (lh) of the day in abia state, nigeria. the microbiological analysis revealed the presence of higher total bacterial count ( . cfu/ ml) at lh as compared with that ( . cfu/ml) at eh of the day. the similar results were also observed for total coliform count, which was also higher ( . cfu/ml) at lh as compared with that ( . cfu/ml) at eh due to the fact that hospital activities at night time were more restricted than day time. according to the recent study, the hww samples were collected from three hospitals in different cities of romania [ ] . three hospitals (h , h , and h ) were having different numbers of beds and inhabitants. the microbial community analysis results revealed that wastewater from h was dominant by . % of the proteobacteria phylum, while from h was dominant by . % of proteobacteria phyla followed by firmicutes ( . %), bacteroidetes ( . %), and actinobacter ( . %) and from h was dominant by . % of proteobacteria, bacteroidetes ( . %), and firmicutes ( . %) [ ] . the similar taxonomic composition was also reported in various studies using wastewater collected from different hospital facilities, nonhospital medical facilities, and municipal treatment plant [ , , ] . the dominant nature of proteobacteria was correlated to their presence in human feces, long-term survival ability in wastewater, and exposure to several antibiotics present in hww. moreover, the dominant nature of firmicutes could be correlated to their capacity to survive in extreme environmental conditions and high contaminant levels [ ] . in buelow et al. [ ] detected abundant bacterial taxa to be different from urban and suburban wwtp influents and comprised of camphylobacteraceae, aeromonadaceae, and carnobacteriaceae. hww also consisted of several different members of human gut microbiota such as of genus streptococcus and family ruminococcaceae due to the sampling location in close proximity of the hospital sanitation areas as compared with wwtp influent. these microbes are not well suited to survive in such complex environment, which results in progressively decreased levels of these bacteria in urban wwtp influent [ ] . another study compared the relative abundances of the most abundant bacterial orders in wwtp for years and showed that the wwtp environment was dominated by phyla actinobacteria, bacteriodetes, and proteobacteria, and the wastewater community was highly stable and unique to its environment [ ] . hospital sewage also contained high levels of anaerobic bacteria including genera such as bifidobacteriales, clostridales, bacteroidales that were likely to originate from the human gut [ ] . the release of antibiotics from hospitals results in creating a selection pressure on bacteria and as a result, effluents from hospitals contain high numbers of resistant bacteria as well as antibiotic residues. prevalence and spread of antibiotic-resistance bacteria (arb) in the environment are a major problem worldwide due to improper antibiotic usage and lack of effective hww management systems. therefore arb and args are particularly studied among the hospital contaminants. for example, one study reported e. coli from hospital effluent to be multiresistant toward ampicillin, streptomycin, sulfamethoxazole, cephalosporin, ciprofloxacin, and tetracycline [ ] . the hospital water environment includes potable water, faucets, wastewater drainage systems, and effluents can be the reservoir of nosocomial pathogens (arb such as mdr enterobacteriaceae, acinetobacter baumannii, and pseudomonas species), thus, increasingly dominating the hww microbiome [ ] . commonly found isolates such as p. aeruginosa, a. baumannii, and enterobacteriaceace in hospital effluents have shown carbepenem resistance and have disseminated around the globe [ ] . baricz et al. [ ] reported antimicrobial effect of a crude bacterial extract of janthinobacterium lividum against mdr bacteria of both clinical and environmental origin, for example, mrsa, methicillin susceptible s. aureus, enterococci, and enterobacteriaceae [ ] . such studies not only help to provide promising candidates for development of new antimicrobials but also to propose new or improved treatment technologies to reduce the burden of antimicrobial resistance (amr) in environment. the microbiological analysis of several hwws showed the prevalence of fungal species along with bacterial and coliform species. the fungi have simpler nutritional requirements and have higher capability to grow at lower water activity as compared with bacteria [ ] . moreover, the fungal populations can easily spread their spores to external environment, hence affecting the human beings directly [ , ] . this is the reason for its prevalence in hospital and clinical environment because if healthcare facilities are even considered free from fungus, but nature and environment factors such as temperature, moisture, and nutrients could provide easy and favorable conditions for the extensive growth of fungal species in storage containers holding clinical waste. the fungal infections could range from moderate to fatal depending upon the infection site as well as immune system of the affecting individual [ ] . the prevalence of invasive fungal species has been reported to increase since three decades, due to increase in number of immunocompromised patients. the moderate fungal infections include athlete's foot and ring worm infections (cutaneous infections) in immunocompetent patients and life-threating infections include mucosal and systemic infections [ ] . the fungal isolates, associated diseases, and treatment methods reported in various studies are presented in table À . the study reported by neely and orloff [ ] stated the prevalence of aspergillus species in the hospital waste collected from the united states and even worse than that, this species was capable enough to survive for more than a month on the hospital waste. the longer survival of aspergillus can result in reoccurrence of fungi and has higher chance to cause disease. moreover, many spores have capacity to remain dormant under adverse conditions and then again develop into fungi, when conditions become favorable. the other fungal species were also detected but the survival capacity of mucar ( . days), paecilomyces ( days), and fusarium ( days) species was lower than that of aspergillus species. the survival efficiency of different fungal species is related to the presence of specific structure of spores. the spores of aspergillus species are spiny and rough and thus capable enough to adhere to any type of waste and can survive longer time. however, spores of fusarium species are smooth and thus have less capability to adhere and survive. the wastewater collected from nigeria revealed the presence of total fungal count of . cfu/ml during the day time activities in the hospital [ ] . the most prevalence fungal species in the hww were aspergillus ( . %), followed by candida ( . %), cryptococcus ( . %), and penicillium ( . %) species. the fungal diversity ( species) was reported to be higher for waste samples collected from hematology section of malaysia hospital [ ] . moreover, gloves waste consisted of the highest number of fungal species ( species) among all the different types of waste collected from hospital. the high fungal count of cfu/ml was also reported in soil collected from hospital dumpsite, which was correlated with the presence of high organic material present in the hospital waste. the fungi are heterotrophic microorganism, which have capacity to consume organic compounds from the surrounding environment [ ] . the common fungal species identified in hospital waste were penicillium rubrum, penicillium viricadum, trichothecium roseum, rhizopus nigricans, aspergillus flavus, aspergillus parasiticus, microsporum canis, and aspergillus niger. among them, a. niger was found to be dominant fungal species with . % due to the fact that it released variety of enzyme such as amylases, pectinases, and proteases and had capacity to utilize number of organic compounds as a substrate [ ] . a. flavus and a. niger can cause disease named as aspergillosis and are considered as pathogens for both humans and animals. they can cause either bronchopulmonary (coughing and wheezing) or invasive aspergillosis (affects the lungs and could spread to throughout the body) [ ] . more than , cases and %À % mortality rate have been reported for aspergillosis infections worldwide. the nonpathogenic black bread mold called r. nigricans was also found in abundance with . %. m. canis can cause infection in upper and dead layer of skin of domestic animals, including dogs and cats and later on the humans can also get affected by the infection [ ] . other fungal species including t. roseum, p. viricadum, and p. rubrum are nonpathogenic fungus, which can only affect the humans with weak immune system. the curvularia species have also been reported to be present in hospital waste and can cause rare infections in the respiratory tract and cornea of human beings. curvularia lunata is also responsible for eumycetoma disease caused in farmers of chandigarh and rajasthan. most of the agricultural regions use azole fungicides (imidazole, metalaxyl, tebuconazole, and propiconazole). therefore the farmers responded poorly to antifungal treatment and were referred for long-term therapies [ ] . the few fungal species of fusarium ( . %) and trichoderma ( . %) have also been reported in hospital waste, but infection caused by these fungal species is difficult to cure [ ] . over . billion people worldwide are reported to be suffered from several fungal infections and . À million people die due to fungal infections each year, which are far superior than malaria or tuberculosis death rate [ ] . antifungal drugs are mostly used for treatment of fungal infections as they target plasma membrane, sterol biosynthesis, dna biosynthesis, and β-glucan biosynthesis of different fungi. however, since past decades, the increased use of antifungal drugs resulted in development of resistance, leading to increase in morbidity and mortality. the drug resistance could be due to several reasons such as alterations of the drug target site, increased efflux of drugs, and biofilm formation. although several studies have reported, antifungal drugs resistance is not at the same level as resistance in bacteria against antibiotics. other reasons of high mortality rate with fungal infections include availability of limited treatment options against invasive fungal diseases and less susceptibility of immunocompromised patients to antifungal drugs [ ] . for instance, in the united states, until , there were reports of , organ transplants, which resulted in increased susceptibility to fungal infections in immunocompromised patients [ ] . in addition, adverse effects of antifungal drugs and lack of effective antifungal therapies are the other reasons, which necessities the development of novel treatment strategies and next-generations of antifungal drugs. the development of ultrahigh-throughput screening techniques could help in advent of novel antifungal drugs by providing rapid, effective, and economical drug screening. presently, the viral infections are in forefront as compared with pathogenic diseases caused by bacteria, fungi, and parasites (table À ) . moreover, the detection, analysis, characterization, and epidemiology of virus is entirely different from bacteria because the bacterial indicators used to represent water contamination cannot actually represent viral contamination. it has been reported that each of the material present in the hospital waste can carry viruses, and thus, viruses are able to survive for À days [ ] . the viral hepatitis is very common and leading disease. moreover, human immunodeficiency virus infections, hepatitis b, and hepatitis c are among the deadly infectious diseases, transmitted by direct contact of blood from infected to another. however, these are yet easy to prevent, once detected at early stages and obligatory precautions are followed by patients [ ] . the samples collected from different wwtps have been analyzed for detection and characterization, and even research has been focused on removal of viruses from wastewater [ ] . however, in spite of all the health risks associated with viruses, very few research [ ] has been conducted specifically for hww, and thus, requires special attention due to the fact that, it is one of the main sources to spread the pathogenic and deadly viral diseases. the modern techniques of molecular biology including pcr assays offer several advantages such as specificity, sensitivity, and wider data analysis for easy and faster detection of viruses. the occurrence of rotavirus a, norovirus genogroup i and ii, human adenovirus (hadv), and hepatitis were detected in samples collected from two different hospital wwtps. the load of rotavirus and hadv present in hospital wwtp was log cycle higher as compared with that present in urban sewage wwtp [ ] . the hadv consists of double-stranded linear dna (fig. À ) and comes under category of nonenveloped viruses, which makes them resistant to heat, dry, and acidic conditions [ ] . the adenovirus consists of outer capsid and inner core with several histone proteins. the elongated fiber proteins on the surface of the virus interact with receptor of host cell such as coxsackie and adenovirus receptor and mcp and start infection in the host cells. after interaction between virus fiber proteins and host cell receptors, uncoating of virus particles takes place resulting in dissolution of viral protein in the endosome. ultimately, the translocation of adenovirus takes place with microtubules through cytoplasm toward the nucleus [ ] . hadv is mostly profound in patients with weak immune system and acute lower respiratory disease [ ] . seventy-nine types of hadv have been reported [ ] , and out of them, hadv / is mostly prevalent in aquatic systems such as sea water, sewage, rivers, surface water, and drinking water [ ] . the hadv is placed among the contaminant candidate list for drinking water by u.s. environment protection agency and is a real factor of concern for the human health [ ] . it can cause several diseases in humans including ocular infections, conjunctivitis, genitourinary infections, pharyngoconjunctival fever, hemorrhagic cystitis, exanthema, encephalitis, and pneumonia [ ] . the hadv is more frequently found in wastewater than any other enteric virus. the hadv is reported to be transmitted through fecal-oral transmission, aerosol droplets, and contaminated materials. it can survive for the extended period of À weeks in the environment without host. due to its stable and persistence nature in aquatic systems, it could also be considered as an indicator of fecal contamination as suggested by various studies [ , ] . the prevalence of hadv species varies according to the hospital environment. according to prado et al. [ ] , the hadv / (species f) was among the most prevalence genotype found during molecular characterization of viruses, detected during analysis of samples collected from two different hospital wwtps. the species f come from the hospitalized children reported with acute gastroenteritis disease. the other reported hadv strains include species c and d, which are associated with conjunctivitis and respiratory tract infections [ ] . the frequency of hadv has also been tested for the samples ( in number) collected throughout year from hospital wwtp located in tunisia city, tunisia and % samples were detected positive for hadv and most prevalent species were species f (hadv / ) [ ] . in the similar way, the prevalence of hadv was detected in samples collected from different regions of the world such as . % in poland, . %À . % in greece, % in norway, and % in brazil, while samples collected from morocco ( . %), italy ( . %), and taiwan ( . %) consisted of low prevalence of hadv [ ] . the high and low prevalence of hadv reported in various countries could be collaborated by the fact that the circulation of virus varied according to the geographical regions and epidemiological community profile. however, whether it was high or low prevalence, still presence of hadv questions the ability of wwtps to remove the gastroenteric viruses and highlights the urgency for development of effective environmental control programs and innovative hww treatment plants before discharging the hww into the sewage system. the detection of hadv includes cell culture method, antigen detection, and pcr method. serology is also used sometimes to detect adenovirus-specific antibodies. there is no effective treatment against hadv, essential precautions should be taken to control infections, which include washing of hands, disinfection of instruments as well as application of infection control protocol in hospitals against adenovirus to prevent outbreaks [ ] . the rotavirus consists of segmented double-stranded rna and its surface is surrounded by three layers: the outer capsid, inner capsid, and central core. there are seven rotavirus groups that have been reported from a to g and studies have revealed that groups a, b, and c affect both humans and animals, while d to g are reported to cause infection mainly in animals. the dual (binary) classification system has been used for detailed classification of rotavirus on the basis of two outer capsid proteins; the glycoprotein vp and protein vp (fig. À ) , where the glycoprotein vp defines for the stereotype g and protein vp defines for stereotype p [ ] . the viral attachment to the host cell surface is by glycoprotein vp or surface protein vp . after interaction with host cell, calcium-dependent endocytosis takes place and thus, uncoating of the particle occurs, resulting in release of double layer of the viral particle into cytoplasm. further, transcription and translation takes place in the cytoplasm and viral proteins are synthesized by cellular ribosomes. after assembly, virus particle is released from the infected cell through cell lysis, and infection is further spread into the host [ ] . rotavirus is associated with around million cases of acute gastroenteritis in the newborn babies and children across the world, and , À , deaths have been reported for children with age of , years globally. after infection and replication, rotavirus is discharged into surface water, groundwater, drinking water, and wastewater, able to transmit effectively through water due to its stable and resistant nature under adverse environmental conditions [ ] . the rotavirus can survive at ambient temperature of cÀ c and can exist on inanimate objects for days without host. the rotavirus is mostly prevalent in humans and %À % of positive samples are associated with group a rotavirus [ , ] . the detection methods of rotavirus include electron microscopy, elisa, passive particle agglutination tests, polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, and rt-pcr. the vaccination with safety and efficacy profile for rotavirus a has been developed and licensed in after the withdrawn of first ever vaccination, which was associated to cause intestinal intussusceptions in children [ ] . the prevalence of rotavirus in different seasons (summer, autumn, and winter) was detected by collecting different samples in the period of months from hww located in shiraz, iran. enzyme immunoassays (eias) were performed and positive specimens were further investigated with nested-pcr by various primers. moreover, the virus concentration method such as the pellet and two-phase is reported to enhance the concentration of virus by -to -fold before applying eia. about samples ( %) were found to be positive for rotavirus a and the highest prevalence was detected in autumn with frequency of . % followed by . % and % of prevalence in winter and spring, respectively [ ] . other studies also confirmed the prevalence of rotavirus a in cold weather as compared with other seasons [ ] . the molecular characterization of rotavirus further revealed the predominance of g genotype during various clinical investigations followed by mixed genotype of g g , which is associated with frequent water contamination and further generation of novel strains by genetic reassortment. moreover, various studies have reported the prevalence of rotavirus in treated wastewater as well, which is a real concern for public health [ ] . the studies on rotavirus highlight the significance of environmental surveillance tools for detection of novel genotypes and to further analyze the distribution and treatment of the hazardous effects caused by rotavirus in human beings. the norovirus belongs to the family caliciviridae, and is reported to be nonenveloped and contains a positive sense, single-stranded rna, which is organized into three open reading frames (orfs). the three orfs encode three different proteins; orf is of size kb and encodes nonstructural (ns) polyproteins, orf is having . kb size and encodes structural capsid protein vp , while orf with size of . kb encodes a vp protein to maintain the stability of capsid protein [ ] . the norovirus life cycle has been presented in fig. À . the interaction of norovirus with the host cell surface takes place through histoblood group antigens. after release of the vpg-linked rna genome of the virus into cytoplasm of host cell, the viral rna translation takes place. once the translation of the orf polyprotein is done, further co-and posttranslation processing occurs by ns protease of virus, which results in the release of ns proteins for the formation of replication complex. thereafter the viral replication takes place by rna-dependent rna polymerase using de novo and vpg-dependent mechanism. furthermore, the replicated genomes are translated and further packed into the capsid for assembly of virion and exit [ ] . the norovirus is divided into seven genotypes, among them three genotypes gi, gii, and giv are responsible for infection in humans, and gii with genotype (gii. ) is a predominant infectious virus associated with % of the diarrheal diseases and gastroenteritis infections around the world. in addition to gii. , various other non-gii. containing viral strains are also responsible for gastroenteritis infections, for instance, the gastroenteritis emerged in southeast asia in À was associated with g . viral strain. norovirus is associated with million gastroenteritis cases and , deaths annually around the world [ ] . the emission of waterborne norovirus is caused by contamination of water systems including drinking water, surface water, mineral water, and groundwater [ ] . as the infectious individuals shed the virus into the water system, the samples collected from hww are considered useful for study of norovirus epidemiology at population level [ ] . the transmission of norovirus is through fecalÀoral route from person to person or animal to person by contamination food or water intake. depending on the surface temperature and conditions, the norovirus can survive for longer period outside the host. it has capacity to survive for weeks on the hard surface, until days on contaminated fabrics and for years in the contaminated still water [ ] . the norovirus infection in humans can be detected by real-time pcr, multiplex gastrointestinal platforms, eias, and genotyping as well. the development of real-time pcr for detection of norovirus is considered as significant advancement with various environmental applications. the prevalence of norovirus was studied by ibrahim et al. [ ] , where samples were collected form different basins of hospital wwtp located in tunisia. the % of the samples were positive for norovirus gii followed by norovirus g , which was detected in % of the samples collected from wastewater, while frequency of norovirus was lowered moving from one basin to another. however, there is requirement of tertiary wastewater treatment before recycling of water for bathing and other purposes. different studies have revealed the prevalence of norovirus in different seasons, for instance, studies on hww collected from italy and sweden have showed occurrence of norovirus gii in spring and summer seasons [ , ] . however, the study from china has revealed the prevalence of norovirus in winter conditions, which could be explained by variability in temperature during different seasons, immunity level of the host, humidity as well as socioeconomic conditions of different countries [ ] . the emerging recombinant norovirus has been analyzed by illumine miseq and sanger sequencing technique by collecting different clinical and wastewater samples within australia and new zealand. the prevalence of pandemic variant (gii.pe/gii. ) was found in sydney during and , while decline in pandemic virus was observed in with emergence of five new recombinant strains. these new viruses were held responsible for emergence of gastroenteritis outbreaks during november [ ] . the use of new generation sequencing tools has advanced and reformed the genome sequencing of different pathogens present in wastewater. the norovirus has been responsible for , deaths per year. in world health organization (who) identified norovirus as a priority disease for vaccine development. however, several vaccines are still in trails phase and preclinical stages and no licensed vaccine has been available for norovirus infection treatment. the cost effectiveness, target population, and public acceptance are the major considerations for vaccine development [ ] . the public awareness about the norovirus and prevention measurement should be spread for protection of people from norovirus infection due to lack of treatment available. hepatitis a virus (hav) is a nonenveloped virus, belongs to the picornaviridae family, and has positive sense single-stranded rna (fig. À ) . the rna consists of only one orf, which encodes a large polyprotein [ ] . there are six genotypes of the virus reported and genotype i, ii, and iii are infectious to human population and are further subgrouped into a and b, while iv, v, and vi affects other primates than human beings [ ] . there is a genetic nucleotide variation of . % in each of the subgenotypes, which has been evaluated with pcr by vp /vp a junction present in nucleotide fragment [ ] . the interaction of the hav with host cell involves endocytic pathway. the host cell receptor involved in interaction with virus is tim- (havcr ) and it is reported to cycles between plasma membrane and lysosome of host cell with calthrin-mediated endocytosis. the replication, translation, and assembly of virus occurs inside the cytoplasm of host cell [ ] . the genetic analysis of hav could be correlated with the outbreaks of viral infections and transmission mode as well. the main transmission mode for the virus is fecalÀoral route, which could be directly transmitted through one human to another or indigestion of contaminated food as well [ ] . the hav has capacity to survive for months outside the host body, it can survive through freezing temperature but can be killed, when exposed to high temperature of . c. the geographical distribution of the virus has been mainly present in india, africa, middle east, central america, and south america. the hav is considered as one of the most important food-borne pathogens and is a major cause of hepatitis in humans with reported cases of around . million globally. it has been estimated that half of the hepatitis cases are related to hav. the wastewater coming from the hospital could be emerging source of hav due to the fact that human excretion contains enormous amount of virus; moreover, virus is highly resistant to harsh environmental conditions and is able to survive for longer periods [ ] . the hav is also detected in rivers, raw or treated water, and dam water as well [ ] . these viruses are a real cause of concern for human health; moreover, there are no strict regulations in existence related to monitoring of these viruses in environment and water resources [ ] . the consumption of contaminated food has also been directly linked with outbreak of hav at several places. for instance, there were reported cases of hav in michigan between august to october with fatalities and hospitalization. the outbreak was linked to consumption of raw scallops served in sushi chain. in another case at hawaii, cases suffering with hepatitis a infections were reported between june and october , which were linked to contaminated frozen strawberries [ ] . the prevalence of hav was detected in different clinical samples collected over a period of years from patras and alexandroupolis located in greece. the nested real-time pcr revealed the presence of % genotype- and particularly subgenotype a [ ] . the predominance of genotype- and subgroup a has also been reported in wastewater samples collected from brazil [ ] . the prevalence of virus was also reported to be higher during the lower number of cases reported for hepatitis a, which could be directly correlated to the shedding of virus into feces. the detection of igm antibodies and anti-hav in blood is related to hepatitis a infection. the presence of anti-hav in blood indicates infection or past vaccination. the hav vaccination within weeks of infection is the prevention method for hav infection and includes two-dose series for individuals above age of months. the vaccination includes inactivated virus and is safe for immunocompromised persons [ ] . the hww is heavily loaded with pathogens and discharged directly into aquatic bodies could be directly evident by skin infections and intestinal parasites. around the globe, millions of people are affected by deadly parasites infections, for instance, . million suffer from giardiasis, million from amebic dysentery, million affected by hookworm infections, million detected with trichuriasis, and . billion are infected with ascariasis [ ] . these parasites are mostly transmitted through fecalÀoral route under poor hygienic conditions, contaminated water and food sources, and poor wastewater disposal practices. the parasites in their ineffective stages such as cysts, eggs, and oocysts survive under environmental adverse conditions and through many wastewater treatments processes due to the presence of protective outer layer. therefore parasites have capability to survive in wastewater for extended time period in comparison to viruses and bacteria [ ] . the samples collected from hospital sewage treatment plant located in zaria, nigeria contained several eggs, cysts, and oocytes of various parasites. about eggs, cysts, and oocysts were present per liter of wastewater. ascaris lumbricoides was the common parasite found in hww with eggs per liter ( . %) of wastewater followed by eggs ( . %) of taenia spp., eggs ( . %) of schistosoma spp., eggs of toxocara spp., eggs ( . %) of ancylostoma spp., eggs ( . %) of cryptosporidium parvum, and eggs ( . %) of giardia lambila. moreover, eggs ( . %) of trichuris and hymenolepis spp. were also found in hww. the cysts of entamoeba histolytica and a. lumbricoides were found in many studies and remained viable for longer period of time in pond effluents that was further used to irrigate raw vegetables, thus, entering the food chain and then directly to humans [ ] . c. parvum causes the disease cryptosporiadiasis and g. lambila causes giardiasis, both could be life threatening if found in persons with weak immune system. the children diarrhea in many cases is caused by the cryptosporidium species [ ] . taenia species can cause cysticerocosis in humans that can infect muscles, brain and can ultimately cause onset seizures in adults, while it can also cause bovine cysticerocosis in cattle after consumption of contaminated water. the main symptoms of parasitic infection include nausea, vomiting, malabsorption, diarrhea, and stomach cramps [ ] . therefore the wastewater should be treated before discharge into water bodies otherwise they could be a great risk to public health. antibiotics are one of the most successful and important drugs used in therapeutic applications and the indiscriminate use of these compounds has made their way into the environment. the overuse and misuse of antibiotics not only in human therapeutics but also in veterinary, agriculture, and aquaculture applications [ ] has led to the emergence of args and arb compromising or decreasing the effect of antibiotic compounds as they are becoming resistant to multiple drugs thus, causing a major concern. some studies have shown that resistant bacteria can also be present where antibiotic concentrations are low, saying that subinhibitory concentrations can also promote resistance among bacteria as similar to concentrations found in some aquatic and soil environments [ ] . just as natural antibiotics have existed for billions of years, args are also ancient [ ] . there have been occurrences of args in places where anthropogenic activities are minimal such as genes encoding for β-lactamase in a remote alaskan soil suggesting the environment to be a reservoir of args [ ] . antibiotic-resistant bacteria have been reported from lechuguilla cave, new mexico which has been isolated for more than million years including some strains which were resistant to over different antibiotics [ ] and in ancient permafrost samples where communities harbored resistance mechanisms minimum years ago [ ] . such studies improve our understanding of the prevalence of resistance genes in environments much prior to human use of antibiotics. within past years, pieces of evidence have shown mobilization of these resistance genes from the environment into pathogenic bacteria causing health risks to humans and animals and also, demonstrating a link between environmental and clinical resistance [ ] . moreover, due to the introduction of antibiotics from various human activities, the environment has turned into a reactor of arb and args contributing to the evolution and spreading of resistant genes. the phenomenon of emergence and spread of args has increased so intensely that % of all hospital-acquired infections show resistance toward at least one family of antibiotics. hww represents an important source of args and arb and such effluents are highly hazardous due to its infectious and toxic features [ ] . traditionally, resistance was viewed as a healthcare problem but now nonclinical environment has also been reported as an important factor in the dissemination of resistance genes [ ] . a wide range of antibiotics and args are being released from the hospitals and urban wastewaters which are received by wwtps [ ] . the wwtp also serves as a hotspot in the emergence and spreading of args and arb in the ecosystem [ ] . even after the treatment, some of the antibiotics and args are still not completely removed and being released into the receiving water bodies making aquatic ecosystems an ideal place for acquisition and spread of such genes. commensal bacteria of humans and animals also constitute a reservoir of such resistance genes which can enter the environment through sewer systems or use of animal manure [ , ] . other than wwtp effluents, args can reach the soils, sediments, surface water and groundwater bodies including drinking water systems [ , ] by surface runoff or infiltration of water that has been used for agricultural purpose [ ] . it has been estimated by who that arbs are responsible for , , , , and , deaths per year in european union, the united states, and thailand, respectively [ ] . there has been increasing resistance in many human pathogens such as e. coli, a. baumannii, enterococcus sp., klebsiella pneumonia, s. aureus, p. aeruginosa, serratia marcesens, citrobacter sp., and other enterobacter species, and there have been a great number of growing reports concerning the prevalence and dissemination of these pathogens into various environmental settings [ À ]. knapp et al. [ ] reported args from different major classes of antibiotics tested from to had significantly increased since , along with tetracycline args around times more abundant than in the s [ ] . the resistant gene can be specific to one antibiotic, for example, ciprofloxacin or a group of antibiotics such as β-lactums and as a result, hundreds of args are being detected [ ] . genes resistant to antibiotics are commonly observed for aminoglycoside (aac, aad, aph), chloramphenicol (cat, cml), sulfonamide (suli, sulii, suliii, sula), trimethoprim (dfra, dfrb), quinolone (qnra, b, s), tetracycline (teta-e, g, h, j, y, z, etc.), vancomycin (vana, vanb), macrolide (erma-c, e, f, t, v, x), β-lactum, and penicillin (bla, meca, pena) antibiotics in different environments [ , , ] . infections caused by resistant strains are difficult to deal and have led to increasing rates of infections, higher hospital costs, and high rates of morbidity and mortality, for example, strains producing extended-spectrum β-lactamase (esbl) are responsible for higher rates of mortality [ ] . there is a widespread occurrence of args originating from different settings that has contributed to a web of resistance among humans, animals, and the environment and, even after their treatment, they can be still present and can contribute to their spread in the environment. furthermore, there still exists an unexplored pool of genes that may have the potential to be used as args and may be passed to pathogenic bacteria. various hypothesis have been given for the mechanisms of resistance genes to traverse wwtp and their influence by the treatment process [ ] (fig. À ) . thus antibiotic resistance development includes a broader impact on the environment and human health rather than just a local health issue and has to be addressed. the current risk assessment is inadequate and requires advanced biological risk assessment evaluations to detect the proliferation of args and antibiotics. this includes minimizing the resistance emergence and spread in the environment and their transmission to humans. to achieve this, it is necessary to achieve goals such as defining resistance in environmental samples and standardizing testing in those samples which will further require establishment of more comprehensible databases to combine both environmental and clinical metadata. it would help to understand relationships between resistomes of different settings and would improve the risk assessment of args and arb to further develop control strategies [ ] . the need for screening of args present in bacteria is important for the optimal antimicrobial therapy to treat infections in patients and this need is increasing with increasing resistance among bacteria. detection will also predict the spread of resistant organisms and genes throughout the environment. a diversity of detection methods is available for both phenotypic as well as genotypic determination of args in isolates. antibiotic resistance is a selectable phenotype and can be detected using growth inhibition assays using disc diffusion method, broth dilution, gradient strips, or other methods to determine the minimum inhibitory concentration (mic) of antibiotics [ ] . the mic is calculated for each isolate and based on the results, isolate can either be susceptible or resistant to the antibiotic [ ] . however, there remain certain problems associated with this method, such as gradation of resistance, time-consuming (can take several weeks for slow-growing bacteria such as mycobacterium tuberculosis), and culture-dependent method, relate to only concentration of antibiotics (difficult to detect low-level resistance), and give no information about dissemination of resistance via mobile genetic elements (mges) [ , ] . to overcome these disadvantages, genotypic or molecular characterization methods such as pcr, hybridization techniques including microarray, and whole genome sequence (wgs) are used extensively to determine specific resistance genes and providing results within hours. genotypic characterization has led to the identification of args in fastidious bacteria which expresses few phenotypic features, for example, tropheryma whipplei, that causes whipple's disease showed mutations in gyra and parc gene owning to fluoroquinolones resistance [ ] . the wwtp compartments like influent, activated sludge, effluent consist of contrasting conditions including different concentrations of metals, antibiotics, etc. changing stress concentrations may act as drivers for microbial community and resistomes thus, changing biomass per volume and persistence/enrichment of arb this can result in a strong shift in the whole microbial community composition and antibiotic-resistance subset these changes are expected to correlate with the changes of resistome. contigs analysis allows further identification of marker genes for mobile genetic elements finally, horizontal gene transfer may help in the transfer of resistance genes and may act on evolutionary timescales the use of a plethora of pcrs such as standard, real-time, multiplex pcr to detect the presence of genes encoding resistance to aminoglycoside, chloramphenicol, macrolide, β-lactum, penicillin, trimethoprim, and tetracycline in bacteria is quite common [ , , ] . isothermal amplifications using loop-mediated isothermal amplification [ ] pcrs are very rapid, performed at one constant temperature and have been developed to detect esbls genes and carbapenemases genes in bacteria but they cannot be used in multiplex to detect several genes simultaneously. very recently, a paper-based chip which is integrated with lamp and a switch molecule for fluorescent detection of args has been developed to allow more convenient and efficient detection especially in resource-limited conditions [ ] . many other detecting and genotyping techniques based on the pcr have been developed to identify args such as restriction fragment length polymorphism-pcr, mismatch amplification mutation assay-pcr, or pcr-single strand conformation polymorphism that have been used to detect gyra mutations in quinolone-resistant isolates [ ] . schwartz et al. [ ] used pcr technique to detect vana (vancomycin-resistance gene), meca (methicillin-resistant gene), and ampc (ampicillin-resistant gene) in wastewater, surface water, and drinking water biofilms [ ] . recently both pcr and rt-pcr have been used across europe for detection of plasmid-mediated mcr- genes harboring resistance against colistin [ À ] (table À ) . multiplex rt-pcr has been used to identify staphylococci from blood samples by targeting meca and other species-specific genes [ ] . another example of using multiplex pcr is in the detection of prevalent esbls genes in e. coli that encoded mainly bla shv , bla tem , bla ctx-m , and bla oxa [ ] . it is also possible to devise and use multiplex pcr to detect genetically diverse resistance genes for [ ] tetracycline thus, making it one of the most widely used techniques [ ] . however, these methods have low-throughput, sometimes gives false results, mostly ignore potential reservoirs of resistance that are nonculturable bacteria, and depend on primers that leave less room for discovery of novel genes. molecular hybridization is one of the oldest molecular techniques that have been used to detect the presence of specific args and meanwhile several improvements have been done on probe designs and synthesis. southern hybridization demonstrated tet and class-i integrons can be cotransferred from isolates present in soil to e. coli and/or pseudomonas putida [ ] . pcr-southern blot assays were used frequently and reported tetracycline (tet ) and sulfonamide (sulii) resistance genes in acinetobacter species from fish farms in thailand [ ] . probes can be labeled with a variety of reporters including radioactive and nonradiolabeled systems. one nonradiolabeled method is fluorescence in situ hybridization that has been used for rapid detection of macrolide, clarithromycin, linezolidresistances [ ] . high-throughput dna microarray is another technique that has been successfully used to detect args in the test organism in comparison to a reference strain and works with high speed and high delicacy. in this technique, probes specific to the particular gene are spotted on a solid substrate (e.g., glass slide). dna is labeled and hybridized, and the specific targetprobe duplexes are detected. comparison of genomic diversity in a large number of test isolates can be done for which wgs is not available [ ] . it enables detection of a large number of single genes, mutations, mges and also can characterize strain at the molecular level [ ] . it has been used for antimicrobial genes detection in a diverse range of bacteria [ ] . glass-based microarray has been developed for the detection of tetracyclineresistance genes and one β-lactamase gene in multiple bacteria that used microarray probes c. -base pair pcr products [ ] . perreten et al. [ ] developed a rapid and efficient screening of gram-positive bacteria using microarray for the presence of args which was further improved by additional oligonucleotides for detecting args [ , ] . similarly, alere microarrays have been developed capable of detecting clinically relevant antibiotics and can be used in routine diagnostics laboratories [ ] . some of its disadvantages include, low detection limit, high cost (due to use of platforms with probes of short oligonucleotides or pcr products as well as fluorescent dyes) and problems in dealing with complex samples [ , ] . just like pcr and microarray, wgs is another potential method to detect genes and mutations conferring antibiotic resistance. the main advantage is its ability to use and detect different targets simultaneously and to subtype-specific gene variants. one can possibly add new targets to the database for analysis and can perform rapid in silico reanalysis of sequenced isolates. the presence of args within the wgs data has to be determined for which, comprehensive databases containing relevant target dna is required along with the use of appropriate bioinformatics methods for obtaining information about the wgs data. some of the databases that have been used for detection of args in curated wgs data are resfinder, which is a web server and uses blast for identification of args [ ] , comprehensive antibiotic-resistance database that uses blast and resistance gene identifier as two analysis options [ ] , antibiotic-resistance gene-annotation that gives user an opportunity to use local blast in bio-edit software and analysis can be done without web interface [ ] , and antibiotic-resistance gene database that is a manually curated database unifying publicly available information on args such as resistance profile, ontology, mechanism of action, and much more [ ] . other knowledge resources of amr include antibioticresistance genes online, collection of antimicrobial peptides, database of antimicrobial activity and structure of peptides, antimicrobial peptide database, and bacmet which differ from each other on the basis of the knowledge on molecular level of args they reflect and the scope of resistance mechanism they cover [ ] . however, one major drawback of using molecular techniques for arg detection is that new emerging resistances against some antibiotics may be overlooked as observed for ndm- gene encoding resistance to carbapenem antibiotics which was first isolated using phenotypic methods and then characterized on the basis of genotype [ ] . thus, within the number of both phenotypic and genotypic methods, there are limitations involved with each one and one can perform a combination of these screening methods to monitor resistance. thus the use of all these techniques helps in predicting the resistance genes, setting up control measures in hospital infections, adapt to a specific therapy and using them routine detection tools [ ] . the molecular analysis tools such as pcr, quantitative pcr, and s rrna analysis have provided the in-depth knowledge about microbial communities present in wastewater since decades [ ] . however, requirement of gene-specific primers, and species-specific approach used by these tools limit their activity for detection of certain targeted microbes providing incomplete information about microbial communities present in wastewater [ ] . recently, metagenomics analysis has been introduced, which overcomes the limitations related with conventional molecular analysis tools and is able to generate hundreds to thousands of sequences, providing complete profile of microbial communities present in unknown samples, thus high abundance of potential microbes are detected [ ] . the metagenomics analysis consists of four steps; genetic material isolation followed by genetic material cloning, construction of library, and the analysis of genetic material from the metagenomics library. metagenomics along with search engine for amr [ ] can analyze the unknown samples collected from environment and can provide full-length arg data. the hww has been reported to have two overexpressed β-lactam-resistance genes (bla ges and bla oxa ) as compared with the water collected from other aquatic bodies, which could be correlated with antibiotic usage over the time in hospitals and discharge of the residues of antibiotics in the wastewater [ ] . the hww that is derived from clinical speciality ward is determined to be major spot for the amr. the wastewater derived from different wards of the hospital and the final effluent of hospital was tested and compared for resistance genes. the wastewater has a high abundance of class a β-lactamase resistant genes (i.e., bla kpc , bla ctx-m , bla shv , bla tem ) and the wastewater from clinical ward also consists of high level of bla kpc- genes ( , x/gb), encoding for carbapenem resistance. moreover, there was presence of assembled scaffolds of incq and incf plasmids having quinolone-resistance genes (qnrs , qnrs ) and the class a β-lactamase gene (bla tem- ) in wastewater, which further helps in proliferation of amr [ ] . metagenomic functional selection has been integrated with deep metagenomic sequencing to trace validated args in different environments. studies have identified wwtp resistome consisting of novel args thus, throwing the limelight on wwtp reservoir of uncharacterized resistance genes using these selections. using such metagenomic methods relates the number of clinically relevant resistant genes to overall functional resistant genes and thus, helps in improving the risk classification in environments [ ] . metagenomics strategy also revealed the association of isolated p. aeruginosa from hww with amr frequency. the isolated strain was selected as a bio-indicator, due to its ability to survive and colonize in harsh environments and it was used to assess its viability, antibiotic susceptibility, and diversity in hww. the samples collected during different treatment steps of hww revealed that each treatment step was able to decrease the bacterial population by four logarithm cycle; however, the antibiotic resistance profile did not decrease at each treatment level, while, on the contrary, there was increase in amr microbes and genes as well. the microorganism was able to remain survived in the spore form during different treatment steps and again transform into vegetative form when released into surviving environment [ ] . the healthcare clinics and hospitals, where antibiotic use is more common among the major contributor to disseminate the pathogenic microorganism into the environment. in addition, shortgun metagenomics analysis of hww collected from turkey revealed the presence of more than antibiotic resistance determinants and most common genes belongs to aminoglycosides and β-lactameses. the prediction of high resistome diversity in hww raises an alarm for health concern of human population. an important step in coping with the serious problem of emergence and dissemination of args is to understand the pathways for resistance gene spread. the ability of bacteria to respond to selective pressures and new environments can be explained by the acquisition of new genes by cells using horizontal transfer methods. studies have shown around % of the genes in each genome have been transferred by hgt during evolution [ ] . many resistance genes are located on mges such as plasmids, transposons also known as jumping genes, and integrons that are capable of capturing and expressing gene cassettes [ ] , which are responsible for antibiotic resistance that functions as vectors for their dissemination [ ] . horizontal acquisitions might be neutral or have deleterious effects in the chromosome or confer a selective advantage to the host. other than mutations, hgt has been one of the methods which are most responsible for the dissemination of args among different bacterial species. it has caused the spread of antibiotic resistance from commensal and environmental bacteria to pathogenic species. the args transfer by hgt exists much back before the use of antibiotics by humans, for example, oxa β-lactamase genes that confer resistance against β-lactam antibiotics mobilized from chromosomes to plasmid millions of years ago [ ] . but the rate of the resistance gene transfer has increased tremendously due to selective pressure caused by antibiotic use by humans in the last few decades. bacteria employ three mechanisms for hgt, that is, conjugation, transformation, and transduction (fig. À ) . conjugation is said to have the greatest influence over the spread of args. conjugation requires a physical contact between two cells via pili or adhesions to transfer the genetic material. this mechanism has been found in bacterial cells with an exception of agrobacterium species that uses hgt in plants. the conjugative machinery encoded by the genes on plasmids or by integrative conjugative elements on chromosomes facilitates this process. args are mostly associated with conjugative elements like plasmids and transposons, and the transfer of these elements is most likely to occur by conjugation because it provides a more efficient way to enter the recipient cell and gives better protection in the environment [ ] . conjugation can be of various types such as ( ) transfer of a selftransmissible conjugative plasmid, for example, rp plasmid of e. coli. ( ) mobilization of nonself-transmissible plasmids by the action of conjugative plasmid, for example, incq plasmid rsf . ( ) cointegration of two different circular plasmids to fuse to become one. ( ) conjugated transposons which may facilitate mobilization of plasmids or cointegration. the mges conferring agrs transfer have been found in bacteria ranging from soil, water ecosystems to food, and human pathogens [ ] . the transfer of the conjugative elements between bacteria over distant phylogeny indicates the emergence of multiresistance between different reservoirs [ ] . bla ctx-m esbl genes have been disseminated to various plasmids within enterobacteriaceae and other pathogens and can be found in various geographical locations [ ] . the conjugation of plasmids has caused dissemination of args worldwide that encode resistance to β-lactamases, carbapenemases, quinolones, aminoglycosides, colistin, sulfonamide, tetracyclines, and other classes of drugs. conjugation has been also reported between bacteria and eukaryotic cells and is observed in various environments such as soil, aquatic, marine sediment, wastewater, and activated sludge [ ] . the second mechanism is transformation, in which the cells take up the naked dna from the environment. for transformation to take place, there are certain prerequisites like release and persistence of extracellular dna in the environment, the recipient cells must be competent, and the dna translocated must be stabilized by integration into the genome or by recircularizing into self-replicating plasmids [ ] . the process takes place in two steps: first, the dna substrate is transferred from surface to the cytoplasmic membrane which is mediated by type ii secretion system, type iv secretion system, and type iv pili; and second, is the transport of dna across the cytoplasmic membrane using cytoplasmic membrane channels [ ] . with an exception of neisseria gonorrhoeae that is a naturally transformable bacteria which responds to environmental conditions [ ] , most species develop competence under autoinducers, peptides, or stressful conditions, for example, aminoglycoside and fluoroquinolone antibiotics sublethal concentrations induce competence in streptococcus pneumoniae and legionella pneumophila [ ] . mao et al. [ ] developed a method to extract extracellular and intracellular dna from water and sediments. they obtained a higher concentration of extracellular dna than intracellular dna in sediments from a river basin that serves as a major arg reservoir that could be transferred to indigenous bacteria through natural transformation [ ] . also, it has been shown in pneumococcal genome that the conjugated transposon disseminates via transformation in addition to conjugation [ ] . transduction is the process by which dna is transferred with the help of bacteriophages. bacteriophages can transfer dna sequences like chromosomal dna, mges such as plasmids, transposons and genomic islands that are advantageous to their bacterial hosts as well as serves in improving the survival of bacteriophages [ ] . transduction can be generalized where random host dna is incorporated during cell lysis and specialized, where the prophage excises itself from the host genome and also incorporates flanking host dnas [ ] . args transfer by transduction has also been reported in various bacteria, for example, β-lactamase gene transfers by p -like bacteriophages in e. coli [ ] , erythromycin resistance transfer by phage between clostridium difficile strains [ ] , tetracycline and gentamycin resistance between enterococci [ ] , or transfer of resistance plasmids in msra [ ] . bacteriophages can have broad host range, that is, between different species or among different taxonomic groups [ ] thus, indicating dissemination of args via transduction in the environment, a common mechanism. other mechanisms such as gene transfer agents (gtas) and cell fusion have also been described. gtas are delivery systems that carry random pieces of host genome in capsids and get integrated into the host chromosome. the amount of dna that gta contain is insufficient to encode their proteins counterparts, unable to self-propagate thus, they do not necessarily carry gta-encoding genes that is an important distinction from transduction mechanism [ ] . the first gta discovered was in rhodopseudomonas capsulate called as rcgta and they were able to transfer antibiotic resistance to bacteria by a mechanism similar to transduction which does not require cells contact and was resistant to dnases [ ] . apart from the evidence of gta shown in various members of rhodobacterales, for example, ruegeria pomeroyi which contain a complete rcgta-like cluster of these genes, roseovarious nubinhibens and ruegeria mobilis also showed rates of transfer of antibiotic resistance around -fold higher than rates of transformation and transduction when added to microbial communities [ ] . mcdaniel et al. [ ] reported gta frequencies to be much higher, around a million times higher the frequency of transformation and transduction measured previously in the marine environment [ ] . there are several advantages of gtas over other mechanisms such as protection of dna from environmental factors, transfer not constrained to cellÀcell contact, and they contain random dna from host rather than most of the bacteriophage dna as observed in transduction. another mechanism, cell fusion has been observed in haloferax and sulfolobus species [ , ] . symmetric and bidirectional cell fusion has been observed in haloferax volcanii. studies have shown interspecies gene exchange in halophilic archaea where cells fuse forming a diploid state containing two different chromosomes of parental cells thus, facilitating genetic exchange and recombination followed by separation of hybrid parental cells [ ] . although new mechanisms are continuously being developed by bacteria and identification, mapping of these resistance mechanisms provides us with knowledge of sources of resistance and helps in designing new antimicrobial drugs. the prions are infectious protein particles present in brain, which are responsible for degenerative neurological disorders. in humans, the prnp gene present on chromosome produces the prp protein and prions results in transformation of prp protein into abnormal disease causing isoform [ ] . these pathogenic prions cause the functional disruption of neural cells resulting in cell death and leading to memory problems, trouble with movement and personality changes as well. the prions can result in many infectious diseases such as creutzfeldtjakob disease (cjd), variably protease-sensitive prionopathy, gerstmann-sträussler-scheinker disease, scrapie, variant cjd, fatal insomnia, and kuru. these transmissible disease impacts number of mammalian species, including sheep and goats, cattle, deer, moose, elk, and humans. the scrapie and cjd are of particular concern because they can be transmitted horizontally and they remain infectious in the environment for very long time [ ] . for instance, the scrapie infection was persistent even after burial in soil for years. the cjd disease is most common and deadly human prion disease and can cause infection in three ways: sporadic, genetic, and acquired. most of the times ( %À %), cjd occurs sporadically and approximately À . million people are affected annually, because there is no cure available for cjd and other prion diseases [ ] . the recently developed methods for detection of prion infectivity include protein misfolding cycling amplification, quake-induced conversion, and quantitative tandem mass spectrometric techniques [ ] . however, the study of prions is highly challenging due to the fact that the high-resolution structure of prion isotherm is still to be determined and change in structure directly affect infectivity and pathology of disease. prions are likely to enter through live, infected hosts, and can be shred through saliva, urine, feces, mucus, and blood; and they enter in wastewater through hospital effluents, research facilities, homes, slaughterhouses, and mortuaries [ ] . the wwtps are not able to treat prions, for instance, after entering into municipal wwtp, the prions bind to sewage sludge, survive through anaerobic digestion and are further present in treated biosolids. these biosolids are further used for land application, which results in their introduction into environment. thereafter they can be swept by wind and contaminated water with prions could further migrate into lakes, rivers, and oceans and thus, directly affecting the humans, aquatic life, and animals as well [ ] . viroids are small (b À nucleotides), single stranded, circular rna particles, which are distinguished from viruses by smaller size, lack of capsid and also they do not encode any protein. they have capacity to reproduce and are mostly known to cause infection in plants; however, hepatitis δ, which cause infections in humans, has many similar properties with viroids and could be related to viroids [ ] . a total of viroids species has been identified, which are grouped into avsunviroidae and pospiviroidae. the viroids are mainly infectious for plants such as tomatoes, cucumber, avocados, potatoes, apples, coconut palms, and chrysanthemums and are responsible for million dollars' loss in agriculture revenue each year. the most commonly reported viroid plant diseases caused by viroid include apple fruit crinkle, tomato chloric dwarf, and chrysanthemum chlorotic mottle [ ] . the yellowish curled leaves of plants are due to pairing of viroid rna with messenger rna of plants resulting in interference of proper translation. some of the viroids cause devastating effects, for instance, coconut cadongÀcadong viroid has caused lethal effects in coconut palms in philippines, resulting in loss of million coconut palm [ ] . other reported effects of viroids include epinasty, rugosity, necrosis, chlorosis, stem shortening, color alteration of fruits, flowering, and ripening delays. the microarrays are identified as a significant tool for detection of many viroids simultaneously and even has ability to detect emerging or established viroid in new host. potent protein toxins such as tetanus and botulinum toxins, anthrax toxin, epsilon-toxin, and enterotoxin can cause some most significant diseases in humans and animals. these protein toxins are most common virulence factors encoded by plasmids in clostridium and bacillus species, for example, tetanus toxin plasmid and conjugative toxin plasmid of c. perfringens. extracellular vesicles (evs) are also infectious particles said to be produced by all types of microorganisms. these evs can contain nucleic acids, toxins, lipoproteins, adhesins, nutrient scavenging factors, and enzymes that can play major role in pathogenicity in hww. such vesicles from gram-positive bacteria, mycobacteria, and fungi contain virulence factors that can elicit host immune responses. for example, crytococcus neoformans evs have glucuronoxylomannan (capsular polysaccharide) which is a virulence factor [ ] . evs from gramnegative bacteria originate from outer membrane and are called outer-membrane vesicles which have been associated with cytotoxicity, virulence, invasion of host cells, and antibiotic resistance proteins. in addition to these particles, certain factors and conditions may further increase the virulence of evs, for example, a study indicated the role of iron-limiting conditions in the virulence of mycobacterium evs. these emerging infectious particles are not easily removed by conventional treatment technologies. thus there is a requirement of more novel methods and techniques to deal with such infectious particles. therefore these particles have to be readily analyzed for their presence and have to be studied for their removal from hww due to their potential negative effects on human and animal life. the recent years have witnessed the emphasis toward management of hww and various studies focused on the microbial communities present in wastewater have increased immensely. the pathogenic microbes present in hww have affected the human health since decades and antibiotic resistance microbes are also increasing significantly with time. the development of resistance toward antibiotics has been observed worldwide and has challenged both public and animal health. the use and release of various antibiotic agents in different settings have not only led to the prevalence of args in the environment but also spread and emergence of resistant bacteria. this has caused increased resistance in human pathogens and thus, making infections caused by them difficult to deal with, leading to higher mortality rates. however, the surveillance of its spread and prevalence in environment is limited and has to be expanded more due to the broad impact of antibiotic resistance on human health. various culture-dependent 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viroid (cccvd) in oil palm by reverse transcription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (rt-lamp) key: cord- - nlbu e authors: robinson, elektra k.; covarrubias, sergio; carpenter, susan title: the how and why of lncrna function: an innate immune perspective() date: - - journal: biochim biophys acta gene regul mech doi: . /j.bbagrm. . sha: doc_id: cord_uid: nlbu e next-generation sequencing has provided a more complete picture of the composition of the human transcriptome indicating that much of the “blueprint” is a vastness of poorly understood non-protein-coding transcripts. this includes a newly identified class of genes called long noncoding rnas (lncrnas). the lack of sequence conservation for lncrnas across species meant that their biological importance was initially met with some skepticism. lncrnas mediate their functions through interactions with proteins, rna, dna, or a combination of these. their functions can often be dictated by their localization, sequence, and/or secondary structure. here we provide a review of the approaches typically adopted to study the complexity of these genes with an emphasis on recent discoveries within the innate immune field. finally, we discuss the challenges, as well as the emergence of new technologies that will continue to move this field forward and provide greater insight into the biological importance of this class of genes. this article is part of a special issue entitled: ncrna in control of gene expression edited by kotb abdelmohsen. one of the most profound discoveries from the sequencing of the human genome is that over % of the genome is transcribed, yet < % encodes protein-coding genes [ ] . large consortiums such as encode and fantom have embarked on attempting to characterize all functional coding and noncoding elements in the genome and have compiled important regulatory data for these elements [ ] [ ] [ ] . long noncoding rnas (lncrnas) represent the largest group of non-coding rnas produced from the genome. lncrnas are defined as transcripts > nucleotides in length, lacking protein-coding potential. in the most recent gencode v release, there are , annotated lncrnas in the human genome [ ] . additionally, there are over , pseudogenes, that could fall under the description of long noncoding rnas which is simply based on them being nucleotides or greater in length. less than~ % of annotated lncrnas have ascribed functions. hence this class of rnas is greatly in need of further investigation [ ] . from those that have been characterized, it is clear that lncrnas can function through a variety of mechanisms to regulate gene expression both at the transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels [ ] . as we will discuss through this review lncrnas can mediate their functions through interactions with proteins, rna, dna, or a combination of these. furthermore, the function of lncrnas can often be dictated by their localization, sequence and/or secondary structure. there are many categories and sub-categories of lncrnas, but some of the major classifications include: antisense [ ] , bi-directional [ ] , enhancer-associated [ ] , intergenic lncrnas (lincrnas) [ ] , pseudogenes [ ] , while a full review of all classifications can be obtained from the recent review by jarroux et al. [ ] . lncrna function cannot be determined simply based on the lncrna classification. however, the classification can sometimes provide insight into its mechanism of action, such as antisense lncrnas impacting their neighboring genes. however, this same classification can also lead to erroneous assumptions about how the lncrna regulates gene expression. recently, some lncrnas have been demonstrated to actually encode small peptides indicating that these genes are misclassified as noncoding, although it is possible that they could also have functions as a noncoding rna in addition to their peptide coding capacity [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . it is therefore, important to have a logical methodology to study the biological importance of these genes. the innate immune system functions as a rapid initial response against specific pathogens, while also promoting the activation and development of the adaptive immune system [ ] . macrophages and dendritic cells are important innate immune cells that initiate the immune response through recognition of specific pathogen-associated molecular patterns (pamps) through their germline-encoded pattern recognition receptors (prrs) [ ] . these receptors couple pathogensensing to activation of downstream signaling cascades resulting in upregulation of numerous inflammatory pathways [ ] . while a robust immune response is crucial for eliminating pathogens, prolonged activation can be detrimental to the host [ ] . not surprisingly, many aspects of the inflammatory response are tightly regulated at both transcriptional and post-transcriptional levels allowing for a transient antimicrobial response while subsequently promoting a return to homeostasis [ ] . perturbations in this regulation can have significant consequences that can manifest in diseases, such as arthritis [ ] , multiple sclerosis [ ] and cancer [ , ] . while the role of coding genes in immune cell function has been well characterized, the role of lncrnas in these processes is just beginning to emerge [ ] (fig. ). here, we use the biological model system of macrophage activation as a framework to demonstrate how we approach the study of lncrna biology. we provide a step-by-step guide to consider when studying lncrnas. furthermore, we discuss the challenges, as well as the emergence of new technologies that are helping evolve the ways we study these genes. the lncrna field is in its infancy yet from what we do know we find that lncrnas play critical roles in a wide variety of biological processes and diseases from cell differentiation, tissue organ development, flowering in plants, to cancer metastasis to name just a few [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . we believe that lncrnas play regulatory roles in many biological processes and diseases. therefore, no matter what your research area is, there is a rich source of information to be obtained from the study of lncrnas in your field of interest. the bulk of lncrna studies to date have focused on the cancer field [ ] [ ] [ ] . meanwhile, studies of lncrnas in the context of innate immunity have lagged, making up only~ % of all lncrna papers to date (fig. ) . the innate immune system provides one of the first lines of defense against infection through the induction of inflammation [ , ] . the inflammatory response of murine macrophages offers a powerful system for applying genomic approaches for studying novel lncrnas within the framework of a pathway that has been studied for decades. macrophages are important mediators of inflammation and initiate this response through recognition of specific pathogen-associated molecular patterns (pamps) through their germline-encoded pattern recognition receptors (prrs). these receptors couple pathogensensing to activation of downstream signaling cascades resulting in activation of numerous transcription factors, including nf-kappab (nf-κb) and interferon regulatory factors (irfs) that can act in combination to both positively and negatively regulate the expression of thousands of genes [ , ] . there are different tlr genes in the human genome and tlr genes in mice [ ] [ ] [ ] , each binding a different pamp [ ] . using this extensively studied biological system, we identified the first example of a tlr-stimulated lncrna, lincrna-cox , which was capable of positively and negatively regulating distinct types of innate immune genes [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . knockdown of lincrna-cox resulted in impaired production of proinflammatory genes (i.e., il- ), while ifnrelated genes were hyperactivated in the absence of lincrna-cox [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . numerous other studies have made use of the tlr-signaling biological system, uncovering and characterizing dozens of novel lncrnas that act in a wide range of mechanisms to either positively or negatively regulate this pathway as reviewed in carpenter et al. and hadjicharalambous et al. [ , ] . as mentioned lncrnas are categorized into five main classes of long noncoding rnas based on their genomic location: antisense, bidirectional, intronic, enhancer-associated, and intergenic. intergenic and enhancer lncrnas contain their own promoters and are distinct from protein-coding genes. bidirectional lncrnas share a promoter and are transcribed from the opposite strand of a protein-coding gene, while intronic lncrnas are transcribed within an intronic region of a proteincoding gene ( fig. a) [ , ] . the specific class of lncrnas can often provide significant insight into how it may regulate gene expression. for example, lncrnas antisense to a coding gene have been demonstrated to be involved in transcriptional interference, negatively affecting the expression of their coding gene [ ] . while all categories of lncrnas will no doubt be important in various biological processes, the most targetable lncrnas are intergenic lncrnas. a benefit to studying an intergenic lncrna (lincrna) is the immense variety of molecular techniques that would not apply to other types of lncrnas, such as antisense, bidirectional and intronic lncrnas, which often overlap coding genes and their targeting could lead to possible unwanted interference of that coding gene. numerous studies have established that lncrnas can regulate the expression of their neighboring coding genes (cis regulation) [ ] . a recent study by engreitz et al. demonstrated that a significant portion of lncrnas had cis effects on their neighboring genes [ ] . interestingly, in most cases, the cis effect did not require the production of the lncrna transcripts themselves, but instead required the processes associated with their production, such as transcription and splicing [ ] . there are many examples of lncrnas that regulate their neighboring coding genes, for example: lnc-marcks, lnc-tnfaip , as-il α, lnc-il r, and il- β-erna [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . recently we used genetic mouse models to show that lincrna-cox can function as an enhancer rna in cis to regulate its neighboring gene ptgs [ ] . for these reasons, one aspect to consider when selecting a candidate, no matter the class, is to investigate the effect of the transcriptional expression on neighboring coding genes. this candidate selection approach is sometimes referred to as "guilt by association" [ , ] . this bioinformatic approach drives an initial hypothesis that the lncrna could be involved in the similar biological pathway as their neighboring protein-coding gene due to their co-expression. a large number of studies to date have also shown that lncrnas can regulate gene expression on different chromosomes (trans regulation) [ ] (fig. c ). the majority of lncrnas studied in immunity were initially identified following rna-sequencing to examine their expression profiles in specific cell lines or tissues during inflammatory activation. for example, lincrna-cox was initially identified as an up-regulated lncrna in murine dendritic cells following tlr stimulation [ ] , as well as murine bone marrow derived macrophages (bmdms) following tlr -depedent stimulation [ ] . studies have also highlighted the functions of lncrnas that are highly downregulated post inflammatory activation, such as lincrna-eps [ ] and lnc [ ] . both lincrna-cox and lincrna-eps were discovered in bmdms post tlr inflammatory activation and were chosen for further characterization based on their extreme expression profile. lincrna-cox is rapidly upregulated and regulates a large number of interferon stimulated genes (isgs) and nf-κb regulated genes [ ] . meanwhile, lincrna-eps is rapidly down-regulated during inflammation and acts as an inflammatory brake on all isgs during periods of homeostasis [ ] . these are just two examples of lncrnas that have provided critical insights into the roles of lncrnas in immunity. for more information on specific lncrnas that are involved in innate immunity we direct you to the following recent reviews on this topic [ , , ] . in addition to these bulk rna sequencing studies, a small number of single cell rna sequencing studies have been performed in both human and mouse that can be utilized to examine differential expression of lncrnas in basal versus treatment conditions or between cell types [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . numerous rna-seq (both bulk and single cell) datasets are available for a variety of primary cells, cell lines or tissues of interest either basally or under a multitude of inflammatory or cellular differentiation treatments. these datasets outlined in table [ , , - , , , , - ] and table [ , , - , - , - ] provide a rich source of lncrnas for further investigation. evlncrnas [ ] , noncode [ ] , or lncipedia [ ] are databases that categorize published information on all annotated lncrnas. these databases can be utilized to determine if a lncrna is experimentally validated within one or more studies. additionally, these databases can provide information on whether a lncrna possesses multiple isoforms, secondary structure, cross-species conservation and/or disease-association via presence of single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps). multiple studies have demonstrated that lncrna expression is more cell type specific compared to protein-coding genes [ ] [ ] [ ] . such specific expression patterns can often provide important clues into the specific biology that the gene could be involved in [ ] (tables and ) . a variety of consortiums exist for both human and mouse and can be utilized to determine cell type specificity of a lncrna candidate further. for instance, gtex [ ] and xena [ ] are two websites that include rna sequencing on healthy primary human tissue samples, in addition to samples from patients with diagnosed cancers. this will further assist the initial understanding of the expression of the lncrna in specific tissues as well as obtaining information on whether a lncrna is involved in cancer. in contrast, if a researcher is studying a mouse candidate lncrna, the mouse cell atlas (mca) [ ] , as well as tabula muris [ ] are excellent tools to assess specificity in cellular expression, as well as differential splicing isoforms amongst differentiated cell types. additional websites for mouse and human expression datasets can be found at the encode project [ ] , the european bioinformatics institute expression and the fantom projects [ ] . these sites are filled with raw and analyzed data sets from either single cell or bulk rna sequencing from primary cells, tissues or immortalized cells ready to use to determine the statistical significance of expression for any annotated lncrna candidate. transcriptional activation is depicted basally 'part i', as well as during inflammatory activation 'part ii' following stimulation of a pattern recognition receptor (prr). three lncrna examples genes are shown a, b and c. part iii depicts how a lncrna can undergo differential isoform expression which is regulated co-transcriptionally. during active transcription a lncrna can either undergo differential splicing or utilize a new transcriptional start site post inflammatory stimulation, such as lipopolysaccharides (lps). post-transcriptional regulation of a lncrna is broken up into three parts: iv, v and vi. after transcription is completed there is several processes that a lncrna can undergo. part iv depicts rna modifications, which can change the structure of a lncrna molecule. these modifications can be added or removed depending on the inflammatory state of a cell. part v depicts the process of mirna biogenesis, where a lncrna can be processed to a mature mirna. part vi shows that a lncrna can also be translated if it has a small open reading frame (smorf). (c) the lower right panel of the figure illustrates the regulatory function of a lncrna in the nucleus and the cytoplasm. during active transcription (basally 'part i' or inflammatory 'part ii'), a lncrna can function to repress genes (mrna gene a and c) or activate genes (mrna gene a and b). a lncrna can either be a scaffold for transcription factors to enhance activation, or a scaffold for chromatin remodeler proteins to open or close chromatin. a lncrna can also regulate a mrna transcript co-transcriptionally 'part iii' by affecting either the stability, change the splicing activity, editing of modifications, or even the capping of the mature mrna. finally, post-transcriptionally a lncrna can function to regulate the mrna in several ways. a lncrna can affect the stability of a mrna transcript: 'part iv and part v.' alternatively, a lncrna can function as a mirna sponge which indirectly de-represses the expression of a mrna that would be targeted by the mirnas. lastly, a lncrna can modulate the translation of a mrna by binding to ribosomes or mrna transcripts during translation. genome-wide association studies (gwas) have revolutionized the study of complex diseases by allowing quantitative disease-association of thousands of genetic loci [ ] . these studies include evaluation of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) or deletions and determination of their association with a disease phenotype. diseases studied range from inflammatory bowel disease (idb) to schizophrenia [ , ] . until recently, most gwas studies focused on proteincoding genes, even though % of disease-associated snps lie in noncoding regions of the genome [ ] . there are several databases that summarize the plethora of published human sequencing studies, including uk biobank [ ] and gwas catalog -embl-ebi [ ] . other databases specifically focus on snps within lncrnas, such as lncrnasnp [ ] and lnc catlas [ ] . to date, a couple of studies have clearly shown how snps from gwas studies can be used to identify clinically relevant lncrnas. castellanos-rubio et al. identified a snp rs associated with celiac disease and showed it was located within a novel lncrna, lnc [ ] . lnc regulates inflammatory genes and mediates its function via an interaction with an hnrnp protein [ ] . furthermore, they showed that the snp disrupted the rna-protein interaction, thus making the lncrna dysfunctional [ ] . another fascinating study began by mining gwas for atherosclerosis disease-associated snps, which led to the discovery of a novel lncrna, lin , that had snps that were associated with atherosclerosis all located within an intronic region [ ] . the group went on to characterize linc in human primary and immortalized monocytes as a promoter of inflammation through activating the aryl-hydrocarbon receptor repressor (ahrr) -nf-κb pathway by directly binding to lipocalin- interacting membrane receptor (limr), acting as a scaffold to promote the interaction between limr and ahrr [ ] . both of these studies started by investigating clinically relevant snps that led to the discovery of disease-associated lncrnas, providing the groundwork for future studies on potential biomarkers or the development of novel therapeutic targets for a variety of inflammatory diseases. additionally, as previously mentioned, xena or lnc catlas are databases that combine rna sequencing of tissue samples from healthy and cancer patients, these tools can also be adapted to assess age, gender, tissue or even disease association of splice variants [ , ] . these disease-associated snps or splice variants will help guide further studies to determine therapeutic or biomarker potential. in summary, assessing disease association by a variety of databases can provide insight into the function of a lncrna [ ] . unlike lncrnas, coding genes are highly conserved across distal and related species. the requirement of coding genes to encode functional peptides likely constrains the variation within the open reading frame (orf) sequence [ ] . lncrnas by definition are not translated and often have poor sequence conservation across related species. many lncrnas display species-specific expression. thus, inferring function based on sequence similarity is a challenge (reviewed in [ ] ). a more useful conservation metric is to assess whether the lncrnas have conservation of synteny (location relative to flanking coding genes), along with expression conservation [ ] . the databases lncipedia and noncode have user-friendly interfaces, allowing assessment of both conservation of synteny and sequence for lncrnas. additionally, expression conservation can be useful to assess whether the specific lncrna has the same biological role in similar and divergent species [ ] . conservation of lncrna expression can also be indicative of conservation of regulatory regions, such as transcription factor binding sites within promoters [ ] . however, conservation of expression does not necessarily mean the rna product is important for lncrna function. enhancer rnas (ernas), for example, are thought to predominantly function by creating a localized, active transcriptional state, which can activate neighboring genes [ ] [ ] [ ] . it is unclear to what extent the specific rna sequence of ernas is important for their function [ ] . nevertheless, a couple of studies have provided examples of ernas for which the transcript sequence was necessary for their function [ , ] . to further investigate conservation of a candidate, blast (basic local alignment search tool) on ncbi (national center for biotechnology information) can be utilized to explore conservation across species [ ] or lncrnadb v . [ ] , by inputting the entire sequence of a lncrna of interest. if a lncrna has a known structure, inputting the shorter structured rna sequence can enhance conservation results. one can also, view the conservation track of the ucsc genome browser [ ] to assess if this specific sequence within the lncrna transcript is conserved across species. in summary, conservation of a lncrna is complicated to assess using current bioinformatic methods. however, understanding if there is a functional motif (therefore a shorter starting input sequence) within a lncrna can allow for an increased assessment of functional conservation across species. activation of inflammatory pathways result in both up and down regulation of specific lncrnas, which in turn can have either positive or negative regulatory effects on the pathway, such as activation of sequestered transcription factors [ , ] or enhanced or repressed expression of specific inflammatory cytokines [ , , ] . genes that are immediate regulators of immunity are poised for transcriptional activation, which can be assessed by defining the openness of promoter regions of a lncrna pre-and post-inflammatory stimulation. common methods for assessing chromatin accessibility of promoters include dnase-hyper-sensitivity (dnasehs) [ ] and the assay for transposase-accessible chromatin (atac) [ ] . dnase hs-seq and atac-seq datasets are available from a variety of tissues on encode for both mouse and humans (tables and ). if the promoter is open (accessible), this is indicative of either a poised or actively transcribed gene. accessibility of promoter regions in the hematopoietic cell lineage was assessed by lara-astiaso et al. through performing atac-seq for all cells in the hematopoietic lineage [ ] . this dataset provides insight into a gene's promoter accessibility, as well as cell type specificity. for instance, if the promoter is open in all cell types, it shows that it is ubiquitously accessible and possibly expressed, while if a promoter is only accessible in myeloid cells or terminally differentiated macrophages this provides insight into the cell type that could be most biologically relevant for a particular lncrna. another interesting data set from tong et al. have provided atac sequencing from bone marrow derived macrophages (bmdms) pre-and post-inflammatory time course stimulation [ ] . this dataset assesses both poised genes and genes that undergo promoter remodeling during inflammatory activation. if a promoter of a lncrna is inaccessible or accessible during inflammatory stimulation, this could provide insight to its regulation and biological significance during an immune response. once the accessibility of a promoter region is determined, defining post-translational modifications of histones on promoter regions will assess promoter activity in specific cell types or inflammatory states [ ] [ ] [ ] . a histone modification is a covalent post-translational modification (ptm) to histone proteins which includes methylation, phosphorylation, acetylation, ubiquitylation, and sumoylation (reviewed in [ ] ). posttranslational histone modifications do not affect dna nucleotide sequence but can modify chromatin availability to the transcriptional machinery [ ] . identifying the types of epigenetic histone marks will add additional layers of understanding if the candidate is active, poised, silenced or an enhancer. many publicly available datasets provide this information outlined in tables and . while the examples we outlined here are immune focused there is a vast array of additional primary and immortalized cell line for every histone mark available through the easily accessible encode database [ ] . finally, the transcriptional regulation of a lncrna can be defined by analyzing the transcription factor (tf) motif's that lie within the predicted promoter region [ ] [ ] [ ] . rnareg . [ ] or homer [ , ] are useful tools to predict tf binding sites by motif analysis. tf motifs can be indicative of biological pathway regulation indicating when a gene is expressed. these findings of predicted tf can then be put into a gene ontology tool (panther or david) to assess how a candidate lncrna is transcriptionally regulated. for instance, the presence of pioneering transcription factors could provide information on the cell type specificity of a lncrna. on the other hand, if the promoter motifs are enriched for p , interferon response factors (irfs) or activating transcription factors (atfs) this would be indicative of inflammatory specific expression. this finding can be further supported by chromatin immunoprecipitation (chip) sequencing data sets from a multitude of labs, as well as data from the encode project (outlined in tables and ). the categorization of lncrnas as "noncoding" is initially determined bioinformatically using the arbitrary cut-off of < codons [ ] . this leaves the possibility that some lncrnas may be mrnas. therefore, one of the first steps in characterizing a candidate lncrna is to confirm that it is noncoding. for example, in drosophila, a gene annotated as a lncrna fbgn , was shown to encode multiple small~ten amino acid peptides critical for development [ ] . the discovery of these germline-encoded biologically active peptides has opened the door into new and exciting levels of regulation. however, this discovery also shows that we should be cautious when characterizing a lncrna to confirm that indeed they are noncoding. several bioinformatic tools exist for predicting small orfs (smorf) but have noted that the predictive ability for smaller orf size is in general very poor [ ] . phylocsf uses codon substitution frequency, together with conservation across multiple species, to provide a score metric that can be used to determine the presence of a conserved orf [ ] . other approaches have sought to identify novel small peptides using mass spectrometry. however, a major challenge is determining whether the peptides identified correspond to novel smorfs or represent degraded intermediates of larger proteins [ ] . the development of ribosomal foot-printing coupled to next-generation sequencing (ribo-seq) has provided a powerful quantitative method for assessing global translation [ , ] . while ribosome profiling allows for ribosome nuclease-protected rna fragments to be mapped to transcripts to enable quantitative measurement of the translation efficiency [ ] . in addition, to mapping orfs, ribo-seq can be performed with a drug that stalls ribosomes at the start codon to globally map translation start sites-this revealed significant numbers of non-canonical translation initiation from ctg codons [ ] . riboseq has also found that many lncrnas appear to be translated, raising the possibility that some of these transcripts could be producing small peptides [ ] . guttman et al. developed the ribosome release score metric as part of the ribosome profiling analysis pipeline to more accurately predict translational efficiency. their findings show that ribosome occupancy of lncrnas and ′utrs does not always equate to translation [ ] . furthermore, guttman et al. concluded that most noncoding transcripts are not translated into peptides. several additional studies have examined lncrnas binding to ribosomes and have concluded that ribosome binding may not be functional and may serve as a quality control process to degrade transcripts with low coding potential via the nonsense-mediated decay (nmd) pathway [ , ] . a recent study by jackson et al. used ribo-tagging in lps-stimulated mouse macrophages to identify ribosome footprints within hundreds of annotated lncrnas, raising the possibility that they may be producing functional peptides [ ] . they characterized an aa peptide located within a previously annotated lncrna aw and showed it was produced by non-canonical "ctg" translation initiation [ ] . they demonstrated that this small peptide had a critical role in mucosal immunity in mice and was specifically required for the expression of il mrna [ ] . the exact mechanism of how this peptide drives il expression is yet to be elucidated. the laborious process of functionally characterizing lncrnas has remained a major limitation to lncrna functional discovery. for example, while~ , long noncoding rnas (lncrnas) have been identified in the human genome, only % of all validated lncrnas have an ascribed function [ , , ] . for more than two decades since its discovery, rna interference (rnai) has been the method of choice for loss of function studies. the ease and versatility of rnai make it appealing for use, requiring short complementary small rnas transfected into cells that can then utilize the endogenous cellular machinery to target specific transcripts [ , ] (fig. a) . additionally, short hairpin rnas (shrnas) can be expressed in a lentiviral context to accomplish stable rnai in cells [ ] . rnai is most active in the cytoplasm, which makes it most useful for targeting mrnas and lncrnas that reside in the cytoplasm [ ] . success in knocking down some lncrnas, for example lincrna-cox , has been attributed to the fact that this lncrna is expressed both in the cytoplasm and the nucleus (perhaps cycling between both compartments) and hence is susceptible to rnai [ ] . however, many lncrnas are thought to be nuclear-restricted where rnai has been demonstrated to have limited efficiency [ ] (fig. ) . antisense oligonucleotides (asos) can be either rna or dna-based and can be used to target complementary sequences within a transcript. unlike rnai, asos do not engage the cellular rnai machinery [ ] . instead, asos function by hybridizing to the target rna and inhibiting its function by either inducing the rnase h pathway or by steric inhibition. the rnase h enzyme is part of a cellular pathway that normally functions to resolve unwanted dna: rna interactions that can occur during replication and/or transcription [ ] . one of the most widely used types of asos for targeting lncrnas are gapmers which contain a "hybrid" modified/unmodified configuration consisting of nt dna core flanked by ′-o-methyl or lna-modified synthetic nucleotides (fig. b) . gapmers offer the benefit of modifications for stability and reduced toxicity, while still allowing engagement of the rnase h pathway (fig. b) [ ] . efficient depletion of nuclear lncrnas has been demonstrated using modified dna anti-sense oligonucleotides [ ] . ilott et al. used gapmers to successfully knock-down tlr-induced enhancer rna, as they were unable to knock-down these same ernas with different sirnas [ ] . recent in vivo applications for dna oligonucleotides have also proven successful as a possible treatment of a neural degenerative disease called angelman's syndrome. angelman's syndrome is a monogenic disorder caused by mutations in the e ubiquitin ligase a (ube a) [ , ] . as ube a is a paternally-imprinted gene, a mutation in the maternal allele is sufficient to lead to disease [ , ] . paternal imprinting of ube a requires the expression of an antisense lncrna called ube a-ats. therefore, targeting the paternal lncrnas ube a-ats using asos leads to de-repression of expression of paternal ube a, allowing the rescue of the defective maternal copy [ ] . in a mouse model, they showed that even partial restoration of the ube a protein expression ameliorated some cognitive deficits associated with the disease [ ] . mechanistically, it is important to dissect what features of a lncrna are important for its functionfor example, determining whether the lncrna transcript is required or whether the mere act of transcription is the important feature needed to mediate its function (discussed further below). sirnas and asos are thought to inhibit gene expression at the posttranscriptional level, albeit by different mechanisms [ , ] . nevertheless, there are examples of sirnas (reviewed in [ ] ) mediating transcriptional inhibition. targeting sequences near the ′ end of the transcript can induce the "torpedo-effect," resulting in pre-mature termination of transcription [ , ] . therefore, when targeting lncrnas with asos or sirnas, it's important to consider where along with the transcript you are targeting to ensure biological interpretation of the ablation is correct. the introduction of crispr/cas technology has revolutionized the field of functional genomics by providing a novel tool for interrogating gene function. crispr/cas is a deoxyribose nuclease (dnase) that can be specifically targeted to genomic regions via a guide rna (grna) [ , ] . targeting of cas to a region results in a blunt doublestranded dna break that engages the cellular non-homologous end-joining (nhej) dna repair pathway, which promotes imprecise repair, yielding small deletions in the repaired sequence. these small deletions result in a frame-shift that disrupts the orfs within coding genes, thereby disrupting protein synthesis. lncrnas do not contain orfs and span tens of kilobases of sequence in size. as such, targeting them with a single grna is thought to be insufficient to disrupt their function [ ] . an alternative application of cas that has proven effective for targeting lncrnas involves using two grnas flanking the lncrna region of interest to induce deletion of the entire locus (fig. e ). the main advantage of deleting lncrnas is obtaining complete loss-of-function, as demonstrated in a recent study that performed a crispr-mediated deletion-screen to identify lncrnas that positively and negatively regulate cancer growth [ ] . on the other hand, deletion of the dna sequence may result in an inability to resolve whether a phenotype is due to loss of lncrna production or loss of dna sequence (discussed below) [ ] . in an alternative approach, liu and colleagues recently performed a crispr screen targeting the splice sites of over -thousand lncrnas and identified lncrnas that proved essential for viability (fig. d) [ ] . targeting of splice sites has also been shown to induce exon skipping within coding genes [ ] . lncrnas have many of the same regulatory elements as coding genes. hence future studies may opt to target tf binding sites, secondary structure and/or polyadenylation sites as a way to more finely dissect the functional portions of lncrnas. the ease in which cas can be targeted to specific genomic regions sparked the development of a modified (catalytically inactivated) version of the protein fused to the krab (krüppel associated box) chromatin-silencing domain termed crispri [ , ] (fig. c) . crispri can be used to target both coding and noncoding genes (such as lncrnas), triggering localized heterochromatin-silencing at the transcription start site (tss) [ ] . unlike rnai, the transcription-based inhibition by crispri offers the ability to efficiently target lncrnas regardless of their localization in the cell. gilbert et al. have shown maximum knock-down efficiency when targeting regions + to + nucleotides relative to the transcription start site (tss) [ ] . however, crispri is limited by the availability of an accurately annotated tss, particularly for lncrnas. incorporating cage-seq, gro-seq and/or chip-seq data into grna design may improve efficient targeting of a lncrna of interest [ ] . nevertheless, a recent study from the weissman and lim groups utilized crispri to target , lncrna loci in diverse cell lines and identified hundreds of lncrnas required for cell growth [ ] . therefore, despite its caveats, it appears that crispri can be a useful and powerful tool for interrogating lncrna biology. an alternative approach to gene ablation is overexpression, gain-offunction. plasmid-based overexpression systems have been used for decades to overexpress specific coding genes [ ] . plasmid-based over-expression of lncrnas is possible but is limited by the size (max size: - kb) of the specific lncrna (unpublished observations). however, because lncrnas can function in cis, it's important that there is the significant mechanistic characterization of the candidate lncrna to justify its cloning into a plasmid. the same catalytically inactivated cas has also been fused to a transcriptional activation domain, for example, the vp , a strong transcriptional activator derived from herpesviruses [ , ] . this strategy allows crispr-based transcriptional gene activation that can be used to study gain-of-function phenotypes. the zhang group recently performed a crispr activation screen targeting over -thousand lncrnas [ ] . they identified lncrnas that upon activation, mediated braf inhibitor resistance in melanoma cells [ ] . one of the advantages of using a crispra library is that the same library can be used across different cell types, which makes it more cost effective. nevertheless, several caveats to the crispra system, include the possibility that high expression of lncrnas may create non-physiological conditions leading to incorrect conclusions of specific biology. lncrnas have been shown to mediate functions via binding to specific proteins. hence over-expression of lncrnas, without its protein partner, may result in the inability to identify important biology. in conclusion, it's important to understand the advantages and disadvantages of the loss-or gain-of-function methods used to modulate lncrna expression. all methods have their caveats, and these are important to consider when deciding which method to use. lncrnas can span large stretches of dna sequence and can contain important regulatory regions, such as enhancers, that are functionally independent of the lncrna product [ ] . lncrna promoters have been proposed to also function as enhancers, promoting the recruitment of transcriptional-activating factors that can affect the local nucleosome environment and ultimately the expression of neighboring genes [ , , ] . nevertheless, in vivo assessment of lncrna function has predominantly relied on assessing the consequence of deleting entire lncrna loci [ , ] . numerous studies involving deletion of lncrna loci have been unable to rescue the deletion phenotype using a transgene approach, making it difficult to attribute the phenotype to the lncrna product itself [ , ] . while deleting the entire lncrna is a useful first step to establish a phenotype, this approach can make it difficult to identify which component of the lncrna is important for the observed phenotype [ , , [ ] [ ] [ ] . there are many approaches to generating a lncrna knockout/ knockdown mouse. for instance, the complete knockout is the easiest first step to take, which can be designed to remove the entire gene. after this approach, one can use a more fine-tuned approach to reveal exactly how the gene is working, including deleting specific regions of the gene or inserting a poly-adenylation cassette before the exon of the gene. a well-documented example of this phenomena is fendrr, which was shown to have a lethal phenotype in two independent studies, but the importance of the lncrna in development differed due to the mouse ablation strategy. one in vivo study generated a knockout mouse by removing the genomic loci completely and replacing it with lacz while leaving the native promoter intact [ ] . this study identified fendrr as a key regulator of lung development and mesenchymal differentiation. however this study did not attempt to rescue the ablated fendrr allele via a transgene [ ] . an additional group generated a fendrr knockdown mouse using an alternative approach. instead of disrupting the chromatin architecture or removing any possible dna enhancer regions, they inhibited the transcription of fendrr through the insertion of a poly-a cassette into exon [ ] . using this lncrna knockdown mouse design, the scientists determined that loss of fendrr led to heart and body wall defects, which is slightly different from the phenotype in the ko mouse study. importantly, the heart and body wall defects caused by the terminator insertion were rescued by a transgene of fendrr in vivo, further confirming that the phenotype is due to the rna while the ko phenotype could be due elements within the genomic dna [ ] . fendrr is located~ kb downstream of foxf and~ kb upstream of irf . the observed phenotype of the ko mouse is possibly due to the deletion of an enhancer element that could impact the expression of protein-coding genes, which could have roles in lung development [ , ] . we recently used multiple genetic mouse models to dissect both cis and trans functions of lincrna-cox in vivo [ ] . working with a complete lincrna-cox knockout [ ] , in which the gene is replaced with a lacz cassette, we observed a strong cis defect on the neighboring protein-coding gene ptgs . from these studies, we concluded that lincrna-cox functions in cis through an enhancer rna mechanism to regulate its neighboring gene ptgs [ ] . in order to determine how lincrna-cox functions in trans to regulate genes independent of its cis effects, we generated a mutant/intronless mouse by targeting the splice sites of lincrna-cox using crispr/cas . this mouse represents a knockdown mouse, and because there is a low level of transcription of lincrna-cox , ptgs levels are the same as wt. lincrna-cox is not inducible in the mutant mouse, probably because of transcript instability due to the lack of splicing, enabling us to study its trans regulatory roles. similar to our early in vitro work we observed using an lps shock model that many genes are both up and downregulated in the serum of mutant mice indicating that lincrna-cox can indeed function in trans to regulate immune genes in vivo [ ] . to prove genetically that a lncrna is functioning in trans, a trans rescue experiment can be performed using transgenic mice that constitutively express a lncrna. this rescue strategy has been utilized in some studies including evf [ , ] , jpx [ ] , as well as pnky [ ] which both demonstrate successful rescue experiments where the phenotype from germline ablation of a lncrna is rescued through generation and crossing with a transgenic animal. understanding the mechanism of action of a lncrna lncrnas are immensely adaptable molecules that are capable of working through rna-rna, rna-dna, or rna-protein interactions. rna-directed technologies such as chromatin isolation by rna purification (chirp) [ , ] or rna antisense purification (rap) [ , ] , will help uncover lncrna interactomes for rna, genomic or protein partners for highly expressed candidates. if a candidate is lowly expressed, one can exogenously introduce a biotinylated form of the lncrna using the rna pull-down method, which we have successfully used to identify binding partners for lincrna-cox . this has been performed for many lncrnas [ , , ] . functions of lncrnas are associated with their subcellular fates. web servers can assist in quickly assessing experimentally determined or predictive rna-rna interactions [ ] or even rna-protein interactions [ , ] . depending on the subcellular or extracellular compartmental localization of a lncrna, this patterning will elude to the regulatory role of the gene, as well as how a lncrna might execute its function [ ] [ ] [ ] . some lncrnas that are localized to the nucleus or chromatin have been experimentally shown to function in cis to regulate the transcriptional expression of a neighboring gene, or in trans to regulate the transcriptional regulation of a subclass of genes through the interactions between heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnrnps) [ , , , ] . in the cytosol, some lncrnas have been shown to interact with rnas and proteins to carry out their molecular functions [ , , , ] . cellular localization of lncrnas can be predicted using a publicly available user-friendly web server established at http://lin-group.cn/ server/iloc-lncrna [ ] . this can be the first step by a researcher to attempt to predict the localization of your candidate based off of its sequence. iloc-lncrna predicts subcellular location of a lncrna by utilizing the -tuple nucleotide features into the general pseknc (pseudo k-tuple nucleotide composition) and rigorous tests show the overall accuracy achieved by the new predictor is . %, which is over % better than previous algorithms [ ] . in addition to prediction methods, there are also publicly available sequencing datasets that have performed rna sequencing on fractionated cells. bhatt et al. utilized murine bone marrow derived macrophages, with and without inflammatory stimulation, and fractionated these cells into chromatin, nuclear, and cytoplasmic compartment to determine rna localization [ ] . this data set can now be utilized to investigate the localization of any murine candidate expressed in macrophages. a recent study took this question a step further by performing rna sequencing on nine separate locations with a cell including: nucleus, nucleolus, nuclear lamina, nuclear pore, cytosol, endoplasmic reticulum membrane (erm), outer mitochondrial membrane (omm), mitochondrial matrix (mito), and endoplasmic reticulum lumen [ ] . this exciting study utilized an apex-sequencing method, where the peroxidase enzyme apex was localized to these nine separate locations in nine separate human embryonic kidney (hek) t cell lines. apex can biotinylate nearby rna molecules allowing for streptavidin-based immunoprecipitation and rna sequencing. the apex-seq datasets will provide a powerful resource for referencing localization of specific lncrna candidates that are expressed in hek t cells [ ] . there are a few commonly used experimental approaches that can be used to validate and determine the localization of a lncrna. subcellular chromatin, nuclear and cytoplasmic fractionations of any primary or immortalized cells can be prepared using previously published procedures [ , ] , followed by rna isolation and rt-qpcr to assess the localization. if additional compartmental fractionation is desired other compartments can be enriched, such as mitochondria [ , ] . another standard gold technique is to visually determine cellular localization by rna fish [ ] . rna localization can also be directly visualized by microscopy [ ] . seqfish techniques have recently been pioneered for imaging thousands of cellular rnas at once using barcoded oligonucleotides [ ] . the drawbacks of these in-situ fluorescence hybridization (fish) based approaches, however, are the need for cell fixation and permeabilization, which can re-localize or extract cellular components [ ] . in addition to the difficulty of assigning rnas to specific organelles or cellular landmarks due to spatial resolution limits, some of these difficulties can be overcome with the addition of stains for markers of specific organelles. conventionally, lncrnas display poor sequence conservation across species, with the exception of finite regions of conserved bases surrounded by large seemingly unconstrained sequences [ ] . while sequence conservation does not constrain lncrna genes, lncrna function is found to be conserved across species when identifying motifs or structure. a great example of this phenomena is represented in the study of human maternally expressed gene (meg ), which utilized the computer program mfold and multiple ex vivo and in vitro chemical probing techniques to identify common motifs critical for retained function in orangutan, rat, mouse and pig [ , ] . another study highlighting the marsupial rsx lncrna was initially found to have no linear sequence similarity with the lncrna xist. however, it shared substantial levels of non-linear conservation within k-mer repeats that share functionally analogous protein-binding domains [ ] . publicly available web servers can be utilized to determine the rna structure of a lncrna depending on the size. the caveats to these web servers are they do not work efficiently with large transcripts. to overcome this, one can attempt to identify the critical sequence within the lncrna that could be functional using rip-sequencing databases, which allow you to input a gene id to identify possible rna binding proteins (rbps). additionally, if a lncrna has already been identified to bind to a protein (s), rip-sequencing databases can elucidate the specific binding location(s). knowing the location of rna-protein interaction narrows down the sequence input, that can be used for many web servers, which could enhance the elucidation of a predictive structure. if there is no information about potential protein binding partners, then these rna structure webservers will be of little use. an alternative approach to further investigate structure is to utilize bioinformatic tools which now include parameters for covariation. covariation analysis identifies the positions in an rna molecule that have similar patterns of variation and the purpose of this covariance is due to structural constraints initially shown for ribosomal rna [ ] and now also for lncrnas [ , ] . this study predicts structures for malat , using over vertebrate sequences, as well as lncrnas repa and hotair [ ] . these powerful tools allow scientists to predict structures in an rna molecule based on covariance, which in turn drive the next steps of experimentally validating these findings. fortunately, there are several in vitro and in vivo experimental techniques used to assess rna structure for any size, even up to , nt (xist). dimethyl sulfate (dms) probing uses a base-specific reagent that can bind and alter the methylation state of unpaired adenosine and cytosine nucleotides [ , ] . dms "footprinting" is optimized for structural analysis of rna. protein binding to rna will generate a "footprint" that can be traced due to alterations in the rna structure. the transcript size that can be evaluated is rather small (< nt) but this method can be performed both in vitro and in vivo as dms can easily penetrate the cell membrane, shown to work for lncrnas from nt, braveheart (brvht) [ ] . xue et al. utilized dms and shape to determine the multiple smaller order structures of brvht, including an agil motif and a -degree turn [ ] . this agil motif is critical for transcription factor binding, which specifies the cardiovascular lineage. targeting structure-seq relies on rna methylation by dma being performed in vivo. using this method, structural models of elements within xist were developed [ ] . shape (selective ′hydroxyl acylation by primer extension), as well as the modified shape-map [ ] , in-cell shape-seq [ ] and icshape-seq [ ] , can interrogate the rna structure both in vitro and in vivo using the chemical nmia and its derivatives to detect flexible regions in rna secondary structure [ , ] . this method has been proven valuable for xist [ ] , repa [ ] , and rox / [ ] . paris (psoralen analysis of rna interactions and structures) was recently developed to determine both rna structure and interactions in vivo [ ] . using this approach, a model for the higher order structure of xist was interrogated [ ] . these approaches are critical for identifying structural motifs and enhance conservation studies, as well as these identified elements, can be used as novel targets for further exploration in precise intervention suitable for therapeutic applications. alternative splicing (as) significantly impacts the diversity of rna isoforms produced, which in turn impacts the protein isoforms produced and can affect many aspects of the protein's biology including binding, intracellular localization, enzymatic activity, stability, posttranslational modifications [ ] . as also impacts lncrna genes which can have multiple isoforms depending on the cell/tissue, age, and disease state [ ] [ ] [ ] . the ucsc genome browser [ ] , as well as noncodev [ ] , have all the annotated isoform transcripts for each gene. these tools will identify annotated transcript isoforms while rna sequencing will provide information on which of these splicing events is utilized in a given cell or biological state. to date, there have only been a small number of papers focusing on the role that alternative splicing plays in controlling the immune system. one recent global study has shown that widespread shortening of ′ untranslated regions and increased exon inclusion are evolutionarily conserved features of innate immune responses in primary human macrophages following listeria monocytogenes and salmonella typhimurium infection [ ] . this is a transformative study for mrnas but can be reanalyzed to examine as and possible contributions from lncrnas. publicly available tools for tissue isoform expression specificity is available on gtex [ ] and xena [ ] for human genes. tabula muris [ ] , a murine specific dataset, is now available as a ucsc genome browser track on mm and can be used to view cell-type specific splicing events and isoform expression. in order to identify isoforms in illumina rna sequencing datasets, several tools can be utilized. miso (mixture of isoforms) is software for a probabilistic model for rna seq will identify specific the ′ splice sites used for each isoform [ ] . two other tools highly used for splicing analysis are juncbase [ ] , majiq-spel [ ] , and drimseq [ ] . these tools can be used to define if your candidate gene undergoes any alternative splicing (alternative start site, exon inclusion/exclusion or alternative last exon) during a specific biological process for example following inflammatory activation. these tools are limited because of their dependence on a fully annotated transcriptomes. therefore if a lncrna is unannotated or has unannotated transcriptional isoforms, these events will not be captured. to overcome the limitations of incomplete transcriptomes, researchers can perform de novo transcriptome assembly using short rna-seq reads [ ] [ ] [ ] . the future of rna sequencing is headed towards long read sequencing, which is being met by pacific biosciences single molecule real time sequencing technology (pacbio) and oxford nanopore technology (ont) [ , ] . while both powerful technologies perform long read sequencing, their platforms are very different. pacbio technology is dependent on sequencing-by-synthesis. a dna polymerase incorporates nucleotides that each have a corresponding conjugated fluorescent dye. the dna polymerase works at a rate of bp/s, which is beyond the capabilities of current technologies. however, by circularizing the dna pacbio has overcome this limitation through continuous long read sequencing, resulting in ability to generate k- million reads at an error rate of below % [ , ] . on the other hand, ont's approach relies on a pore embedded in a membrane. as a long cdna or rna strand translocates through the nanopore at single nucleotide precision from enzymatic regulation, the ionic current across the membrane is recorded. this technology can sequence full-length transcripts and can yield up to million reads on the minion or up to million reads on the promethion for cdna [ , ] . an initial limitation of ont was the - % per read error rate, which has been overcome with a new technology called rolling circle to concatemeric consensus (r c ) bringing the error rate down to . % by increasing the read coverage. overall, both of these technologies have overcome the transcriptome assembly and isoform identification limitations of short-read illumina sequencing [ ] . as stated above, ont and pacbio can perform long read cdna sequencing [ ] and even more exciting, both technologies can perform direct long read rna sequencing [ , ] . the beauty and simplicity that ont and pacbio offers is the ability to sequence the full expressed isoform (cdna and direct rna), without worries of misidentifying a complex splicing pattern, rna cleavage events and also not relying on transcript annotation files will lead to the identification of novel isoforms which are problems faced using short-read illumina sequencing. for lncrnas there have been a couple of studies that focus on isoform specificity and function for a given lncrna. neat [ ] and lncrna-pxn-as [ ] are two studies that show how one gene can have different functions depending on the rna isoform expressed. while these studies are not immunology specific, this field is still at the early stages and we anticipate it becoming more prevalent in future studies. rna modifications are widespread and diverse in chemical nature, as well as highly conserved in their occurrence and function throughout species. rna modifications function to affect rna stability, localization, alternative site of poly-adenylation, and more [ ] . since lncrnas can function as decoys and scaffolds, which are highly dependent on rna structure, a single modification can enhance or eradicate this rna-protein interaction. as you study a lncrna, the mechanism of this molecule could be dependent on a modified nucleotide. there are many techniques used to determine a single rna modification in a cell type and biology of choice. site-specific cleavage and radioactive-labeling followed by ligation-assisted extraction and tlc (scarlet) technology give scientists the ability to probe for n -methyladenosine rna (m a) modification status at single nucleotide resolution in mrna and long noncoding rna [ ] . the significance of rna modifications to the control of the immune response is beginning to be appreciated. a study by winkler et al. showed that m a modification controls the innate immune response to infection by targeting type i interferons [ ] . a few recent studies have shown that lncrnas do have rna modifications such as malat containing m a modifications [ , ] , hotair containing m c and m a [ , ] and xist containing ψ, m a and m c modifications [ ] . a study by zhou et al. showed that the rna modification, m a, acts as a structural 'switch' in malat . when there is a modification at site , it results in an increased ability to bind hnrnpg, while a modification at leads to an increase in binding to hnrnpc [ ] . in clinical research, lncrna rp - j . is highly expressed in colorectal cancer cells (crc), and this specific upregulation was controlled by m a methylation [ ] . the study showed that m a could regulate the lncrna, which in turn triggered the dissemination of crc cells via post-translation upregulation of the protein zeb . this novel study, connecting the interplay of rna modifications and lncrnas, has paved the way for a novel predictive biomarker or therapeutic target in crc [ ] . there are over identified rna modifications, while only a few have been studied to any extent [ ] . of these rna modifications, the way they are enriched for in analysis is through an assortment of techniques including methylated rna immunoprecipitation (merip), merip-iclip (crosslinking and immunoprecipitation), suicide enzyme trap and clickable chemicals (reviewed in [ ] ). these techniques have many limitations and biases, but hopefully, future studies using direct rna nanopore sequencing will overcome all these pitfalls. in a recent study, direct rna sequencing using nanopore technology showed detection of m a modifications with a % accuracy with the design of synthetic sequences [ ] . as the performance of the algorithm increases, use of this tool will be extremely insightful when the flow-chart provides a "beginning to end" guide to study lncrnas. not all suggested databases will be appropriate for all lncrnas being studied. a. selection of candidate lncrnas should factor in changes in expression, type of lncrna and nearby coding genes. b. bioinformatic characterization of lncrnas can be done using a variety of online databases including: lncipedia to assess conservation or using the mouse cell atlas (mca) to assess tissue specific expression. c. expression validation: this includes validation of expression and confirming that the lncrna is in-fact non-protein coding. d. functional validation dives into the final stage of mechanistic characterization of a lncrnas, which involved manipulating its expression, as well as uncovering the specific cis-elements within the transcript important for its function. analyzing myeloid or lymphoid primary cells with and without a treatment to understand how rna modifications are regulated in innate immunity and specifically as it relates to our long noncoding transcriptome. lncrnas, including xist and h , have been studied intensely for decades [ , ] . at the time we had no idea that these genes would represent the largest family of rna genes produced in the genome. as louis pasteur once said, "chance favors the prepared mind," and this is especially true following the development of next-generation sequencing. rna-sequencing provided an unprecedented insight into the human genome. we did not identify new proteins, instead we found a wealth of noncoding rna transcripts. the lncrna field is growing at a blistering pace with labs from all aspects of biology, and now immunology branching out to include questions about the regulatory impact of these pervasive long noncoding gene species. as detailed in this review, there are many publicly available datasets and web servers that will streamline how to begin a lncrna project, from how to pick a lncrna candidate by interrogating published rna-sequencing data, to determine the best tools to use to study the function and mechanism of a candidate (fig. ) . since this field is still at an early stage in its development, there are some shortcomings, including poorly annotated lncrna transcripts. however, this will be overcome with direct rna sequencing using ont and pacbio technology. these technologies will enable us to determine the exact isoforms of transcripts expressed in a particular cell and begin to catalog the different rna modifications that exist basally and during a biological process such as activation of inflammation. since lncrnas are cell-type specific in their expression patterns continued development of single-cell sequencing technologies will provide a complete catalog of lncrnas in the genome. as the list of annotated lncrnas grows, characterizing the function of all these genes has become a definite bottle-neck in the field. however, highthroughput crispr screening provides an approach to quickly identify functional lncrnas in a particular biological system. utilizing all the tools outlined here should enable researchers to develop this field rapidly. for our research focus, gaining a better understanding of the role of lncrnas in regulating immune responses will provide novel insights into the molecular mechanisms governing inflammation. this data will be critical for identifying new avenues for therapeutic intervention for infectious and inflammatory disease. the transparency document associated with this article can be found, in the online version. pervasive transcription of the human 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non-coding rna rna interference-significance and applications molecular mechanisms of antisense oligonucleotides, nucleic acid ther rna interference in the nucleus: roles for small rnas in transcription, epigenetics and beyond transcriptional termination in mammals: stopping the rna polymerase juggernaut, science ( -. ) dicer promotes transcription termination at sites of replication stress to maintain genome stability cutting it close: crispr-associated endoribonuclease structure and function expanding the biologist's toolkit with crispr-cas targeting non-coding rnas with the crispr/cas system in human cell lines genome-scale deletion screening of human long non-coding rnas using a paired-guide rna crispr-cas library considerations when investigating lncrna function in vivo genome-wide screening for functional long noncoding rnas in human cells by cas targeting of splice sites frameshift indels introduced by genome editing can lead to inframe exon skipping genome-scale crispr-mediated 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putative imprinting control element the rox genes encode redundant male-specific lethal transcripts required for targeting of the msl complex loss of the abundant nuclear non-coding rna malat is compatible with life and development targeted disruption of hotair leads to homeotic transformation and gene derepression the tissue-specific lncrna fendrr is an essential regulator of heart and body wall development in the mouse genomic and epigenetic complexity of the foxf locus in q . : implications for development and disease transcription factor irf plays a critical role in the development of murine basophils and mast cells balanced gene regulation by an embryonic brain ncrna is critical for adult hippocampal gaba circuitry evf (dlx as) lncrna regulates ultraconserved enhancer methylation and the differential transcriptional control of adjacent genes lncrna jpx induces xist expression in mice using both trans and cis mechanisms the long noncoding rna pnky is a trans-acting regulator of 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pacific biosciences sequel third-generation sequencing platforms in identification of agricultural and forest pathogens pacbio sequencing and its applications an evaluation of the pacbio rs platform for sequencing and de novo assembly of a chloroplast genome nanopack: visualizing and processing long-read sequencing data rna and gene expression analysis using direct rna and cdna sequencing improving nanopore read accuracy with the r c method enables the sequencing of highly multiplexed full-length single-cell cdna transcriptome-wide analysis of a baculovirus using nanopore sequencing native molecule sequencing by nano-id reveals synthesis and stability of rna isoforms transcriptome profiling using single-molecule direct rna sequencing approach for in-depth understanding of genes in secondary metabolism pathways of camellia sinensis structural analyses of neat lncrnas suggest long-range rna interactions that may contribute to paraspeckle architecture the mbnl splicing factor promotes hepatocellular carcinoma by increasing pxn expression through the alternative splicing of lncrna-pxn-as a majority of m a residues are in the last exons, allowing the potential for ′ utr regulation probing n -methyladenosine rna modification status at single nucleotide resolution in mrna and long noncoding rna m a modification controls the innate immune response to infection by targeting type i interferons n( )-methyladenosine modification in a long noncoding rna hairpin predisposes its conformation to protein binding m a modification of non-coding rna and the control of mammalian gene expression topology of the human and mouse m a rna methylomes revealed by m a-seq comprehensive analysis of mrna methylation reveals enrichment in ′ utrs and near stop codons m a-induced lncrna rp triggers the dissemination of colorectal cancer cells via upregulation of zeb modomics: a database of rna modification pathways. update detecting rna modifications in the epitranscriptome: predict and validate accurate detection of m a rna modifications in native rna sequences a gene from the region of the human x inactivation centre is expressed exclusively from the inactive x chromosome the product of the h gene may function as an rna support from : national institute of health ar and the tobacco related disease research program ip- h to susan carpenter. key: cord- -lthz oc authors: kurreck, jens title: rna interference: from basic research to therapeutic applications date: - - journal: angew chem int ed engl doi: . /anie. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: lthz oc an efficient mechanism for the sequence‐specific inhibition of gene expression is rna interference. in this process, double‐stranded rna molecules induce cleavage of a selected target rna (see picture). this technique has in recent years developed into a standard method of molecular biology. successful applications in animal models have already led to the initiation of rnai‐based clinical trials as a new therapeutic option.[image: see text] only ten years ago andrew fire and craig mello were able to show that double‐stranded rna molecules could inhibit the expression of homologous genes in eukaryotes. this process, termed rna interference, has developed into a standard method of molecular biology. this review provides an overview of the molecular processes involved, with a particular focus on the posttranscriptional inhibition of gene expression in mammalian cells, the possible applications in research, and the results of the first clinical studies. the term rna interference (rnai) refers to a cellular process by which a double-stranded rna (dsrna) sequence-specifically inhibits the expression of a gene. this very efficient process of posttranscriptional gene silencing (ptgs), which involves numerous cellular proteins besides the rna, is strongly conserved in eukaryotes and presumably serves as a protection against viruses and genetic instability arising from mobile genetic elements such as transposons. it was originally observed in plants, [ ] but correctly described for the first time in the late s for the nematode caenorhabditis elegans. [ ] for this achievement andrew fire and craig mello were honored with the nobel prize for medicine or physiology. [ , ] as measured by the number of publications, rnai belongs, along with proteomics, to the most dynamic fields of biotechnology. [ ] . in their key publication, fire and mello introduced a long double-stranded rna into c. elegans and observed that, as a result, the expression of the homologous gene was blocked. [ ] since then, the basic processes involved have been determined in detail. in a first step, the endonuclease dicer processes the long dsrna into small or short interfering rnas (sirnas) which are around nucleotides long, of which nucleotides form a helix and nucleotides on each of the ' ends are unpaired (figure a) . the actual effector of the rnai is the ribonucleoprotein complex risc (rnainduced silencing complex), which is guided by the sirna to the complementary target rna. as a result, the target rna is cleaved at a specific site in the center of the duplex, nucleotides from the ' end of the sirna strand. [ ] the catalytic component that cleaves the target rna (slicer activity), has been identified as the protein designated argonaut (ago ). [ ] an analysis of its crystal structure showed that ago contains a domain which resembles rnase h, [ ] a long-known protein that cleaves the rna component of a dna/rna duplex. after cleavage, the target rna lacks those elements which are typically responsible for stabilizing mrnas, namely the ' end cap and the poly-a tail at the ' end, so that the cleaved mrna is rapidly degraded by rnases and the coded protein can no longer be synthesized. it is assumed that the loading of the sirna into the risc is accomplished by the risc-loading complex (rlc), which consists in drosophila melanogaster of dicer- and r d , and in mammalian cells of dicer and the tar rna binding protein (trbp). furthermore, it has been shown that during the activation of the risc, the strand designated the passenger (or sense) strand is cleaved, while the other strand, the guide (or antisense) strand, remains in the risc. [ , ] recent investigations with reconstituted human rlc demonstrated that ago dissociates from the rest of the complex after loading with the double-stranded rna. [ ] . . rna interference in mammalian cells the technique of turning off the expression of specific genes by dsrnas could, initially, be applied to a large number of eukaryotes, such as plants, c. elegans or d. melanogaster, but could not be applied to mammals since long dsrnas trigger an unspecific interferon (inf) response in mammalian cells. the dsrna is interpreted by these cells as a pathogen, and protein kinase r is activated, which terminates protein synthesis in the affected cells. [ ] furthermore, enzymes are induced which produce '- '-linked oligoadenylates and thereby cause an rnase l-dependent unspecific degradation of single-stranded rna. [ ] since the inf response is only triggered by dsrnas which are longer than nucleotides, [ ] the realization that rnai is induced by rnas of approximately nucleotides [ , ] provided a solution to the problem: with their groundbreaking work that chemically synthesized -mer sirnas trigger rnai in mammalian cells, tuschl and co-workers opened the way to use rnai for experiments in mammalian cells. [ ] this created new opportunities, not only for research, but also for therapeutic treatments. the presynthesized sirna is phosphorylated on its ' end by the kinase clp after entering the cells [ ] which is then followed by the rnai pathway described above (figure b) . rnai expanded the repertoire of the already well known oligonucleotide-based strategies of ptgs. antisense oligo-nucleotides have been employed for the last years to inhibit the expression of genes at the mrna level. antisense and rnai strategies have many things in common, such as the necessity to identify suitable binding sequences on the target rna, the stabilization of the oligonucleotide by chemical modification, or the transport of the negatively charged polymer across the cell membrane. experience in the antisense field allowed for very rapid progress to be made with the new rnai strategy. [ ] there are, however, important differences between the two technologies: antisense oligonucleotides are single-stranded (modified) dna molecules, which primarily induce the cleavage of the target rna in the cell nucleus by activation of rnase h. in contrast, rnai is triggered by double-stranded rna, which functions primarily in the cytoplasm. ago , the most important component of the risc, is localized in the p bodies. [ ] as a result, the central steps of rnai appear to take place in these discrete structures of the cytoplasm. in the case of rnai, an endogenous cellular pathway is followed, which could explain the high efficiency with which sirnas are able to inhibit the expression of their target genes. they can be up to times as efficient as traditional antisense oligonucleotides against the same target molecule. [ , ] while no particularly important region could be determined for the normally - nucleotide long antisense oligonucleotides, the seed region (positions - of the antisense strand, figure a) is of great importance for sirnas, since it is presumably here that the interaction with the target rna begins. the effects of sirnas are transient. the degradation of the target rna usually begins immediately after the sirna enters the cell; however, the decrease in the amount of protein depends on the half-life of the target protein. normally a pronounced inhibitory effect can be observed in cell culture within h of transfection of an sirna; however, there are proteins with a very slow rate of turnover, which can be stable for much longer. also one must keep in mind that in most cases the target gene is not completely shut off, which is why rnai is referred to as a knockdown technology as opposed to knockout in the case of transgene animals created by homologous recombination. the inhibition of the expression of the target gene usually lasts for five to seven days both in vitro [ ] and in vivo. [ ] interestingly an sirna can work for different lengths of time in different species: an sirna against apolipoprotein b was active in mice for only a few days and after nine days was back to % of its initial starting level, whereas the knockdown in nonhuman primates was still effective after days. [ ] the duration of action of an sirna presumably depends on numerous factors, such as the target organ, the target gene, and the species. intracellularly expressed short hairpin rnas (shrnas) can be used instead of chemically synthesized sirna to extend gene silencing (see figure b and section ). rnai is primarily a process of ptgs, that is, gene expression is inhibited by a selective blockade of an mrna. it has also been reported that rnai can alter the chromatin structure in the nucleus and thereby influence transcription. [ ] this has been observed in particular for yeast, plants, and fruit flies. the importance of rnai for transcriptional deoxythymidine is often used as the overhangs in chemically synthesized sirnas. the position at which the complementary target rna is cleaved is indicated with an arrow, and the seed region, through which the interaction with the target rna begins, is indicated. b) simplified model of the rnai mechanism in mammalian cells. after uptake of the chemically synthesized sirnas into the cells, they are loaded onto the risc by the rlc, in the course of which the sense strand is removed. the antisense strand guides the risc to the complementary target rna, which is cleaved by the ago protein. a longer term inhibition of gene expression can be accomplished when an shrna is expressed intracellularly instead of by the exogenous application of an sirna. (figure adapted from ref. [ ] .) gene silencing in mammals has, in contrast, not yet been clearly demonstrated. besides the previously described sirnas, which can be employed as research tools and potential therapeutics for the artificial regulation of gene expression, the importance of endogenous short rnas which do not code for proteins is becoming increasing clear. the role of the approximately nucleotide long micro-rnas (mirnas) in the posttranscriptional regulation of genes has been investigated very intensively in the last few years. [ ] in version . of the mirbase data base (http://microrna.sanger.ac.uk) from april there are over mirnas listed from animals, plants, and viruses; for humans alone over mirnas are predicted. in the nucleus, mirna precursors (pri-mirnas) are formed by special mirna genes or as introns from proteincoding polymerase ii transcripts. they are processed by the rnase iii drosha to approximately nucleotide long pre-mirnas, which are transported out of the nucleus by exportin- and are cleaved there by dicer to become the functional mirnas ( figure ). similar to sirnas, they also form a ribonucleoprotein complex with argonaut proteins and bind to their target rnas. however mirnas preferentially recognize target sequences in the '-untranslated region ( '-utr) of mrnas, and binding often takes place with an incomplete homology, although a perfect base pairing in the previously mentioned seed region (positions - of the mirna) forms the core of the interaction. depending on the degree of homology between the mirna and mrna, the result can be an irreversible cleavage of the target molecule or merely repression of translation. the precise mechanism of the mirna-dependent posttranslational repression of gene expression is currently the subject of intense research. [ ] according to the two most important models, either translation is blocked or the mrna is destabilized. the inhibition of translation could take place at the level of initiation. in this process it is assumed that the ago /mirna complex interacts with the cap structure at the ' end after binding to the '-utr of an mrna and thereby prevents the binding of the initiation factor eif e. as a result, the initiation complex cannot be formed. alternatively, translation could be slowed after initiation or the ribosomes could dissociate prematurely. according to the alternative model, the mrna is de-adenylated by the mirna, which makes '! ' degradation possible or the cap is removed, which would enable degradation in the '! ' direction by exonucleases. possibly there are other mechanisms through which mirnas could work. it is assumed that mirnas control the activity of about % of all protein-coding genes in mammals. since every mirna regulates numerous mrnas, and in turn mrnas can be influenced by numerous mirnas, this results in an extremely complex regulatory network. so it is hardly surprising that mirnas are involved in all cellular processes that have been investigated and play an important role in numerous diseases, such as cancer, [ ] viral infections, [ , ] and genetic diseases. [ ] for further information concerning the activity and function of mirnas the reader is referred to recent review articles. [ , ] a further class of short regulatory rnas are associated with piwi proteins and are thus referred to as pirnas. [ ] these rnas, at around - nucleotides in length, are slightly longer than typical sirnas or mirnas. they are presumably processed from single-stranded precursors and are found principally in germ cells. besides their importance in the control of mobile genetic elements, a function in spermatogenesis is also suspected. recently, endogenous sirnas (esirnas) were found by comprehensive sequencing of short rnas in mammalian cells (mouse oocytes). [ , ] it was previously assumed that an rna-dependent rna polymerase activity was required for the production of esirnas, but this is not found in mammals. it has now been shown that other double-stranded rnas, such as long hairpin structures or complementary sequences, can serve as the starting point for the production of esirnas. the esirnas derive from retro-transposons and apparently function as their inhibitors. in addition, esirnas from figure . mirna pathways in mammalian cells. rnas are transcribed in the nucleus in the form of a precursor (pri-mirna), which is processed by the rnase iii drosha to pre-mirna. in this process, the drosha complexes with the dgcr protein. the pre-mirna is exported out of the nucleus and into the cytoplasm by exportin- and cleaved there by dicer (complexed with trbp) to form the functional mirna, which in turn combines with an argonaut protein (ago) to form an mirna-ribonucleoprotein (mirnp) complex. the mirna can either cause endonucleolytic cleavage of the target mrna through ago or block translation in the case of partial complementarity. (figure adapted from ref. [ ] .) pseudogenes have been found, which could be of significance for the regulation of protein-coding transcripts. the first important step for the successful application of rnai is the design of efficient sirnas. the original assumption, that it is not necessary to search for suitable target sequences in the target rna, [ ] proved to be too optimistic. in practice, the efficiency of different sirnas against the same target rna varies drastically. [ ] apparently factors intrinsic to the sirna itself and the characteristics of the target rna both play a role in silencing. [ ] the probability of identifying a very efficient sirna was significantly increased after it was discovered that both strands of an sirna or mirna are not equally likely to be incorporated into a risc. instead, the strand with a lower thermodynamic stability (namely, a higher a/t content) at its ' end is preferred. [ , ] thereafter, the molecular basis for this strand asymmetry could be determined. [ ] in d. melanogaster, risc is loaded by a heterodimer of dicer- and the dsrna-binding protein r d . here, r d binds to the more thermodynamically stable end of the double-stranded rna and thus determines which strand associates with the risc as the guide strand. in a detailed study with sirnas against two different rna targets, besides the relative stability of the two ends, additional criteria (preference for special bases in certain positions) were identified which are common among the functional sirnas. [ ] in these experiments, however, the significance of each parameter was determined independently of one another. to also take into account synergistic influences of multiple linked parameters, an artificial neuronal network was trained with a dataset of over sirnas against different mrnas (biopredsi-algorithm). [ ] an extensive survey of the activity of published sirnas has shown, however, that there are a number of very active sirnas which do not correspond to the proposed criteria, while numerous other carefully designed sirnas are inactive. recently, even the hypothesis that the relative stability of the two ends has an influence on their efficiency has been called into question. [ ] neither in an experimentally investigated set of different sirnas nor in a comprehensive analysis of published sirnas or sirnas posted to databanks could a correlation between the terminal stability of the sirna and its silencing activity be found. other characteristics of the sirna also possibly play a role. for example, it has been shown that sirnas whose antisense strands form stable helices at their ends only show a low level of activity. [ ] the authors advise, therefore, designing sirnas such that the antisense strand is as unstructured as possible. besides the sirna itself, the target rna could also play an important role in silencing. this could help to explain why the expression of some targets is easily inhibited, while the knockdown of others is more difficult. in a study with several thousand sirnas, which were conceived for different genes according to the biopredsi algorithm, % of the investigated kinase genes were easy silenced (defined as two of two tested sirnas working), while % of the genes could not be down-regulated by up to different sirnas. [ ] studies with antisense oligonucleotides have already shown that the accessibility of the binding region on the target rna of oligonucleotides is of great importance for the efficiency of silencing. a correspondence between the accessibility for antisense oligonucleotides and sirnas has been demonstrated. [ ] in a more comprehensive analysis, the accessibility of target rnas was predicted by an iterative bioinformatic approach and by experimental rnase h mapping. [ ] the results showed that sirnas against predicted highly accessible areas were more efficient than those whose target sequence was inaccessible. the relative thermodynamic stability of the two ends of the sirna proved, in contrast, not to be a suitable criterion for the prediction of the efficiency of an sirna. we analyzed the influence on silencing of the thermodynamic design of the sirna and the accessibility of the target rna more closely with the help of artificial target structures. [ ] we were able to confirm in reporter assays the strand asymmetry, namely, that the target sequences in the natural orientation led to a stronger silencing than the other way around. on the other hand, there was a clear correlation between the local free energy of the sirna binding region and silencing. we therefore proposed a two-step model to describe the inhibitory efficiency of sirnas ( figure ): initially the thermodynamic characteristics of the sirna, that is, the relative stability of the two ends, determine the asymmetric incorporation of the two strands into the risc. in a second step the accessibility of the binding region of the . two-step model to explain the efficiency of sirna (s: sense strand, as: antisense strand): ) depending on the relative stability of the two ends of an sirna, one of the two strands is preferentially assembled into the risc. the retention of the strand complementary to the target rna can be achieved through the selection of a suitable sequence. ) an antisense strand assembled into the risc can, however, be unsuitable for silencing when the complementary sequence of the target rna is inaccessible. the local structure of the target region thus also influences silencing significantly. (figure adapted from ref. [ ] with permission from elsevier.) sirna on the target rna affects the strength of the silencing. this model was confirmed in an analysis of around sirnas and shrnas against over different human genes. [ ] according to this study, the accessibility of the target rna for the sirna is of greater importance than the duplex asymmetry for efficient knockdown. in a further report it was shown that the accessibility of the ' end of the target rna is particularly important. [ ] as already mentioned in section , the interaction between the sirna or mirna and the target rna begins in the seed region. some algorithms for the design of sirnas, such as the sfold web server, [ ] take into account not only the thermodynamic characteristics of the duplex but also the predicted secondary structure of the target rna. it must be emphasized that none of the models proposed so far can guarantee a successful prediction of the activity of an sirna. there must, therefore, be other factors which still need to be identified, in particular synergistic effects, which influence the efficiency of rnai experiments. conventional sirnas consist of a -mer duplex and two nucleotide long overhangs on each of the ' ends. it has, however, been reported that longer sirnas can be more efficient. in an experiment with sirnas of various lengths, mers had an efficiency up to times higher than the conventional mers. [ ] in a further study, -mer shrnas were proven to be especially potent. [ ] the long duplexes were initially processed to mers by dicer and were thus presumably more efficiently assembled into the risc by the rlc. the problem of the design of individual sirnas can be bypassed by the use of enzymatically synthesized sirna pools. [ ] first, long dsrnas are generated which can be processed with bacterially synthesized rnase iii or recombinant dicer to endoribonuclease-prepared sirnas. this mix of sirnas can harbor the risk of increased off-target effects (see section ); on the other hand, each individual sirna is present at a very low concentration so that the undesirable side effects are apparently diluted out. with this method, inexpensive comprehensive libraries against the complete human and mouse genome have been manufactured. although unmodified sirnas can be used in cell cultures, it can be advantageous to build modified nucleotides into the sirna so as to specifically inhibit the expression of a gene. the primary reason for the chemical modification of sirnas is the increase in resistance to nucleolytic degradation. in fact, although sirnas have an unexpectedly long life, it is usually necessary to stabilize them further by the use of modified nucleotides for in vivo applications. modifications can often lengthen the half-life of the sirna in plasma and improve its pharmacokinetic characteristics. furthermore, new functionalities can be introduced, fluorescent markers or lipophilic groups, for example, which improve cellular uptake. the rapid successful incorporation of chemically modified components can be attributed to the experience gained in the field of antisense technologies. a multitude of modified nucleotides have been employed in the past years for sirnas, of which several selected examples will be explained here. further details have been explained extensively in comprehensive review articles. [ ] [ ] [ ] the incorporation of unnatural nucleotides into sirnas presents a particular challenge, since the modifications must not affect the silencing activity of the sirna. in this context it is important to remember that the two strands of the sirna have different functions: while the guide strand is assembled into the risc and leads the complex to the target rna, the passenger strand is discarded in loading the risc. the passenger strand is, therefore, more likely to tolerate modifications, but the guide strand can also have modified nucleotides built into suitable positions. of particular importance is the hydroxy group at the ' end of the guide strand, which must be phosphorylated for entry of the sirna into the rnai pathway. correspondingly, an sirna whose ' end is blocked-for example, by an amino linker-loses its inhibitory activity. [ ] comparatively simple, in contrast, is the incorporation of functional groups on the ends of the passenger strand. in this way it is possible to follow the localization of an sirna with a fluorophore on the ' end of the passenger strand without having a grave influence on its silencing activity. [ ] furthermore, the cellular penetration of the sirna can be improved with a lipophilic component such as -hydroxylauryl acid or cholesterol (see also section . . ). [ ] the most common modification for the stabilization of antisense oligonucleotides is phosphorothioate dna, in which an unlinked oxygen atom is substituted by a sulfur atom. phosphorothioates are very stable with respect to nucleases and are comparatively simple to manufacture. rna variants of the phosphorothioates ( figure ) have therefore also been built into sirnas. these modifications are fundamentally tolerated by the rnai machinery; however, toxic side effects have been observed when the phosphorothioate content is high. [ ] nucleotides have also been used whose ribose was modified at the '-position, for example, '-o-methyl rna chemie and '-fluoro-modified nucleotides ( figure ). the fluoro substituent is very small, and does not seriously influence the functionality of the sirna. [ ] [ ] [ ] the significantly larger methyl group, in contrast, inhibits the rnai function when the entire sirna consists of '-o-methyl-substituted nucleotides. [ ] therefore, modification types are sought which increase the stability of sirna without reducing their silencing activity. blunt-ended sirnas proved to be suitable when the rna units and '-o-methyl nucleotides alternate in both strands, so that a modified nucleotide is opposite an unmodified one. [ ] such modified sirnas were injected into mice as components of lipoplexes (see section . . ). [ ] the sirnas were taken up by vascular endothelial cells and reduced the level of the target mrna and of the target protein. a further modification commonly used in past years is the locked nucleic acid (lna, figure ). [ ] [ ] [ ] lnas have numerous desirable characteristics such as high nuclease stability and high affinity for the target structure; their incorporation into an rna duplex, however, causes serious structural changes. a complete modification of an sirna with lnas is therefore impossible, but a few lna monomers can be built into the sirna without loss of its silencing ability. [ ] in a systematic study, the positions of the antisense strand were identified which tolerate the substitution of the rna nucleotides by an lna component without loss of activity. [ ] the incorporation of lnas into sirnas not only increases the nuclease stability, it can also reduce the off-target effects of an sirna (see section ) by inactivating the sense strand and increase the efficiency of sirnas by improved loading of the risc. corresponding lna-modified sirnas showed favorable characteristics in systemic use in vivo compared to unmodified sirnas. [ ] we used the method of inactivating a strand of an sirna by the incorporation of lnas to analyze in detail the mechanism of rnai-induced inhibition of the coxsackie virus. [ ] these cardiotropic viruses, which belong to the family of the picornaviridae, possess a single positive-stranded genome, from which during replication a negative strand is copied as an intermediate. the selective inactivation of one of the two strands by lnas showed that only sirnas against the genomic positive strand possess an antiviral activity. in a further study, a triple-stranded sirna construct was employed, in which the antisense strand was hybridized with two shorter - nucleotide long complementary strands. [ ] these so-called small internally segmented interfering rnas (sisirna) were modified at various positions with lnas and had a very high serum stability and silencing activity. the fact that the various modifications in different positions of the sirna could be built into the sirna without a drastic loss of activity suggested the possibility of combining various types of rna analogues. in this way all of the oh groups of an sirna could be substituted successfully: all the pyrimidines were replaced by '-fluoro-modified nucleotides, the purines of the sense strand by deoxyribonucleotides, while '-o-methyl-rnas were used for the purines of the antisense strand. [ ] furthermore, the ends were protected by inverted abasic sugars and a phosphorothioate bond. these completely modified sirnas had a half-life in human serum of several days, as opposed to several minutes for their unmodified forms, and were significantly more efficient than the starting sirna in a vector-based in vivo model of hepatitis b virus (hbv) infection. a great disadvantage of chemically synthesized sirnas is that their activity is transient and only lasts several days, because the sirnas degrade over time and are diluted out by cell division. it was, therefore, a major advance when in several research groups simultaneously developed expression systems in which the sirna is continuously generated in cells. [ ] in the most common system the sirna is converted into a dna sequence which codes for the sense strand, a loop, and the antisense strand. this dna template is transcribed from a vector under the control of polymerase iii promoters. these promoters are optimized for the generation of large amounts of precisely defined rnas. the most commonly used are the promoter of the u component of the spliceosome as well as the h promoter of the rna component of rnase p. during transcription, a self-complementary rna is created, which is referred to as an shrna. the shrna is processed intracellularly by dicer into sirna, which mediates silencing. the shrna expression systems led to the creation of new applications for rnai. usually a vector-expressed shrna works significantly longer than chemically synthesized sirna. plasmids equipped with a resistance gene can be used to select transfected cell lines in which the target gene can be down-regulated for several months. [ ] in addition, transgenic animals can be generated in which the gene of interest is permanently inhibited by using shrna expression vectors. for example, the shrna expression cassette can be incorporated into embryonic mouse stem cells by electroporation [ ] or lentiviral transfer [ ] (see section . . ). a problem of this method is that integration of the transgene is random, so the silencing efficiency can vary considerably depending on the integration site. furthermore, important cellular genes can be destroyed. for this reason a locus was sought that guaranteed a strong and predictable shrna expression. the rosa locus fulfils these requirements and is used to integrate the transgene homologously by recombinase-mediate cassette exchange (rmce). the knockdown was - % when there was a single copy of the shrna-expression cassette in most analyzed organs. [ ] an advantage of this procedure relative to conventional knockout techniques is the immense saving in time: the shrna-expressing animals are available for investigation in around three to four months, while with knockout animals back-crosses that can take up to several years are often necessary before the gene can be deleted from both chromosomes in a genetically defined background. surprisingly, we have recently observed phenotypic differences between knockout and shrna-expressing animals. [ ] in this study, the function of the vanilloid receptor trpv , which plays an important role in pain perception, was investigated in detail. while the reaction of the shrnaexpressing animals was in accordance with published data from trpv -knockout animals in most tests, such as capsaicin-induced hypothermia and colitis, and their reaction to a heat stimulus, they showed pronounced differences in the perception of neuropathic pain. while the knockout of trpv had no impact on the perception of neuropathic pain, the mechanical hypersensitivity and allodynia in the shrna-expressing animals was significantly reduced in comparison to wild-type animals. this finding agrees with results from small molecule receptor antagonists. [ ] the cause for the differences in the behavior of knockout and shrnaexpressing animals is not yet fully understood; however, a complete knockout and a partial knockdown appear to lead to differences in compensation mechanisms. one should keep in mind that small molecule pharmacological substances also only partially inhibit their targets, so that the partial knockdown in an rnai experiment may better reflect the outcome of a medicinal therapy with substances directed against that target. a further advantage of the rnai technology is its broad applicability. while classical knockouts by homologous recombination are only routinely done with mice, shrna vector technology allows genes to be turned off in other species, such as rats. [ ] a further development of this idea is the creation of disease-resistant domestic animals with the help of rnai. in goat foetuses and bovine blastocysts, rnai shut off the prion protein (prp), which aggregates in transmissible spongiform encephalopathy (tse). [ ] in this way it was possible to generate domestic animals which are resistant to bse and related diseases. cattle could be made resistant to foot-and-mouth disease by using a similar method. the creation of transgenic domestic animals, however, not only results in technological challenges, but also has ethical and social implications which must not be neglected. while the shrnas in the systems described so far are expressed under the control of polymerase iii promoters, modern systems can also employ polymerase ii promoters. this results in transcripts with a cap at the ' end and a poly-a tail at the ' end, which are not compatible with the rnai machinery. nevertheless, to use polymerase ii promoters, the expression of mirnas is simulated. these alternatives are usually components of longer pre-mrnas which are transcribed under the control of polymerase ii promoters. a naturally occurring mirna can be replaced with an artificial shrna in the sequence context of the mirna. [ ] the rna polymerase ii first generates a long primary transcript, from which drosha cuts out the pre-mirnas. these are exported into the cytoplasm where dicer processes them into sirnas, which are assembled into risc. comparative studies with conventional and mirna-type shrnas against hiv have shown that the latter are up to % more efficient. [ ] besides their high efficiency, the mirna-type shrnas have other advantages relative to classical shrnas. for one thing, they allow the simultaneous expression of a protein-coding sequence upstream of the mirna segment. in this way, a reporter such as gfp or a relevant functional protein can be expressed with the shrna at the same time. secondly, polycistronic expression becomes possible, that is, more than one microrna-type shrna can be expressed at the same time from a single transcript. [ ] in this manner, either several genes can be silenced at once or a target gene can be very efficiently inhibited by several shrnas. a third advantage is the option of using cell-typespecific promoters. while polymerase iii promoters mediate a strong and ubiquitous expression, there are a large number of different polymerase ii promoters which are only active under certain conditions or in specific cell types. for example, an mirna-type shrna against the transcription factor wilms tumor was expressed under the control of the proximal promoter of the murine gene rhox . this specifically inhibited the expression of the target gene in nurse cells of the testis. [ ] the vector systems also provided the opportunity to regulate rnai by pharmacological substances. these systems may be differentiated into reversible and irreversible types. in reversible systems, expression of the shrna is "turned on" by the addition of an inducer. when the inducer is taken away, transcription of the shrna ceases and the target gene of the sirna is once again expressed. in irreversible systems, shrna expression can be induced, but cannot be turned off again. this form of regulation is widely employed when genes which are essential for embryonic development are to be investigated in adult organisms. the most common reversible shrna expression system is based on tetracycline (tet) controlled transcription. [ ] for tet control, the promoter is usually modified by the addition of a tet operon, to which a repressor protein binds. the addition of an inducer-such as tetracycline or its more commonly used structural analogue doxycycline (dox)-results in a structural change in the tet repressor being induced such that it is released from the tet operon, which opens the way for transcription of the shrna. the tet system functions in vitro as well as in vivo. for example, an shrna against the polo-like kinase (plk ) was dox-dependently expressed to study the importance of the target gene for the proliferation of cancer cells. [ ] it was shown by inoculating these cells into immunodeficient nude mice that the rnai-mediated silencing could be modulated in a dox-dependent manner in vivo. in a further study, transgenic animals were generated according to the previously described rmce procedure, in which the shrna expression could be reversibly induced by dox. [ ] in this way, the target gene, which codes for the insulin receptor, could be down-regulated for a chosen period of time. the tet system combines numerous advantages: it has a low background activity in the absence of an inducer, is strongly inducible, and quickly reversible after removal of the inducer, and the inducers tetracycline and doxycycline are nontoxic, well-characterized pharmacological substances. besides the described system, there are numerous other variants of tet control and other reversible regulation systems, which are explained in a recent review article. [ ] the cre-lox system has been widely used for many years for conventional knockouts and has also been employed as an irreversible method for conditional rnai. in this system, transcription of the functional shrna is destroyed by the insertion of an additional dna segment into the expression cassette. for example, a neomycin (neo) resistance gene flanked by two loxp sites can be integrated into the shrnacoding region. [ ] cre recombinase removes the interrupting sequence when expressed in the same cell and induces the synthesis of the shrna. alternatively, the stuffer sequence can also be inserted in the promoter region. cre-lox systems allow temporal control of rnai suppression, for example, induction after embryonic development as well as tissuespecific silencing when cre recombinase is expressed in certain cell types. small molecular pharmacological substances which typically bind to proteins and inhibit their catalytic cores or block membrane-bound receptors usually bind to their target molecules through spatial interactions. this often results in undesirable side effects when the substance also binds to other structurally similar proteins. since rnai applications are based on watson-crick base pairing between an oligonucleotide and an rna, there was hope that undesired side effects played no role when a target sequence that only appears once in the genome was used. in practice, a single mismatch can lead to a complete loss of silencing. [ , ] more extensive microarray analyses, with which global profiles of gene expression can be created, showed, however, that sirnas are not completely specific. while initial studies suggested that the so-called off-target effects of sirnas are dose-dependent and can be avoided by the use of lower concentrations of sirna, [ ] other studies showed that the unspecific effects have a similar dose response to the intended knockdown of the target gene. [ ] the identity of as few as eleven nucleotides between the antisense strand of the sirna and an mrna can result in the down-regulation of an mrna which is not the intended target. these off-target effects can have effects on the phenotype, for example, the viability of cells. [ ] more recent investigations have shown that it is not the overall identity of an mrna with the sirna, but rather the perfect correspondence between parts of the '-utr and the seed region (positions - or - ) of the antisense strand of the sirna which determines whether gene expression is influenced ( figure ). [ ] in a systematic study the frequency of all possible hexamers in the '-utr of the transcriptome was investigated. [ ] it was shown that some hexamers are rare while others are considerably more common. it became clear in a microarray analysis that sirnas with common seed regions trigger stronger offtarget effects than those for which there are only a few complementary sequences. this means that off-target effects can be reduced by clever design of the sirna. furthermore, the specificity of sirnas can be reduced through the incorporation of modified nucleotides. it is comparatively easy to completely inactivate the sense strand by modifications so that the danger of off-target regulation can be reduced to a minimum. changes to the antisense strand are, on the other hand, more challenging since the inhibitory effects on the expression of the target gene must not be influenced. a single '-o-methyl substitution on the ribose of the second nucleotide was shown to be enough to significantly reduce off-target effects while maintaining silencing activity ( figure ). [ ] besides the regulation of partially homologous mrnas, sirnas can surprisingly also trigger an interferon (inf) response, although it was originally assumed that these responses are only induced by double-stranded rna molecules greater than nucleotides in length. a complete analysis of the inf-stimulated genes revealed, however, that sirnas can also activate the interferon system, presumably mediated by protein kinase r. [ ] this effect is not specific for sirnas, but has also been observed for vector-expressed shrnas. [ ] presumably the toll-like receptors (tlr) and the helicases rig- and mda , in addition to protein kinase r, also play an important role in the recognition of sirnas by the immune system. three members of the tlr family recognize rna and can trigger an immune response through a complex signaling pathway ( figure ). it could be shown for plasmacytoid dendritic cells that sirnas induce inf-a via tlr . [ ] the activating effects of the sirnas on endosomal tlrs is dependent on the sequence of the sirna. [ ] as a result, motifs could be identified which led to a strong induction of the immune response. this means that immunostimulation can be circumvented by avoiding the use of these motives in an sirna. for special applications, such as the treatment of viral infections or cancer, strongly immunomodulatory sirnas which have two functions, knockdown of the target gene and induction of interferons, could be used deliberately. [ ] in a recent publication it was reported that unspecific effects of sirnas can also be mediated by tlr . the investigation of the anti-angiogenetic effects of sirnas, which are used, for example, in the treatment of age-related macular degeneration (see section . . ), showed in an animal model that unspecific sirnas without homologous sequences in the mammalian genome were just as efficient as sirna against the vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) or its receptor. [ ] these effects were not dependent on a sequence-specific silencing of the target, nor were offtarget rnai nor inf-a/b activated. instead, choroidal neovascularization was blocked by tlr- and its adaptor trif, which are localized in various cell types of the cell surface, as well as the induction of inf-g and interleukin- . further undesirable side effects can come about by crossreactions with the endogenous mirna pathway. as explained in the introduction, sirnas and mirnas function by very similar mechanisms. for this reason it is hardly surprising that sirnas can act as mirnas. this means that sirnas can interact with the '-utr of mrnas by partial homology and can inhibit their translation without triggering their degradation. [ , ] furthermore, expressed shrnas can block the endogenous mirna pathway. a pronounced liver toxicity was observed after a high dose of viral vectors carrying an shrna expression cassette was injected into mice. [ ] of the shrnas tested, caused liver damage, which in cases was fatal. presumably, the cellular mirna pathway was disturbed by, among other things, over-saturation of exportin- , which is responsible for transporting mirna precursors out of the nucleus and into the cytoplasm. no side effects were observed at a lower concentration of the vector, in contrast, and protection from hbv was achieved in an animal model for up to a year. in response to this work, a recently published study investigated whether chemically synthesized sirnas have an influence on cellular mirnas. [ ] liposomal delivery of the sirnas resulted in the expression of hepatocyte-specific genes being inhibited by around %. the level and the function of several investigated mirnas were not influenced by the sirna treatment. in conclusion, it is clear that rnai applications will never be completely specific. by suitable design of the sirnas as well as the use of modified nucleotides, however, the unspecific effects can be minimized. in addition, the dose of the sirnas or shrnas should be as low as possible. the reliability of the results of functional analyses can be increased by verifying the phenotype with multiple independent sirnas. for therapeutic applications, it must be remembered that small molecular substances usually also have numerous (toxic) side effects. for this reason, the same safety standards should apply to the preclinical development of rnai applications as for other substances. oligonucleotides are multiply negatively charged macromolecules which cross the hydrophobic cell membrane with difficulty. the delivery of the sirnas into cells presents one of the greatest challenges to the development of rnai applications. for cell-culture applications, transfection reagents are commonly used, which often have toxic side effects in animals or humans. previous work from the antisense field established that a certain amount of oligonucleotides are spontaneously taken up by cells in vivo. thus, sirnas also work without a carrier when locally applied, such as through intranasal delivery [ ] or intrathecal injection. [ ] it should be remembered in this case that local application can create a high concentration of the sirna in a spatially restricted area. additional measures are required for efficient systemic delivery. basically, the approaches can be divided into nonviral delivery of chemically synthesized sirnas and viral delivery of shrna expression cassettes. the preferred method depends on the application: for temporary diseases such as acute infections, the short-acting sirnas can be sufficient, while for chronic diseases, such as hiv infection or metabolic diseases, the vector-based method is presumably more advantageous to avoid repeated dosing. in the first in vivo applications of rnai free sirnas were applied by hydrodynamic injection in to the tail vein. [ ] this involves injection of a relatively large volume of the sirna solution in a short time at high pressure. in this way the sirnas are preferentially taken up by the liver, and proof of principle was demonstrated in practice by the knockdown of target genes in this target organ. this method is, however, very harsh and not viable for humans. for this reason, intensive work on the development of biocompatible procedures for the delivery of sirnas has been going on for many years. in vivo systemic application of sirnas requires that they overcome numerous barriers to unfold their activity: [ ] free oligonucleotides are rapidly filtered from the blood by the kidneys and subsequently excreted. in addition, unmodified sirnas are rapidly degraded by nucleases (see section . ), and foreign macromolecules are phagocytized by the reticuloendothelial system and deposited in the liver and spleen. the half-life of the sirnas in the bloodstream can be extended by hydrophobic polymers such as polyethylene glycol (peg). the sirnas must then overcome the capillary endothelium and diffuse into the extracellular matrix of the target tissue. uptake into the cells normally occurs by endocytosis, during which an important step is the release of the sirna from the endosomes into the cytoplasm, where they manifest their activity. there are numerous methods to aid these processes, of which the most important will be discussed here. many substances are packed into liposomes to improve their pharmacokinetic characteristics. liposomes form a phospholipid bilayer surrounding an aqueous compartment, in which polar substances can be stored, and mediate uptake of the substances into the cells by some form of vesicular transport, for example, through endosomes. cationic lipids are particularly well suited for the delivery of negatively charged nucleic acids. most commercially available transfection reagents form lipoplexes with the oligonucleotides; in these lipoplexes the sirna is not contained in the inner compartment. however, numerous new, less-toxic formulations have been developed for in vivo applications. usually lipoplexes and liposomes are surrounded by peg (figure a,b) to achieve longer circulation in the blood stream and to reduce the toxicity. in addition, fusogenic lipids can be added, which improve the release of the sirnas from the endosomes. while free sirnas are rapidly excreted by the kidneys after intravenous injection, an sirna labeled with the fluorescent dye cy that was administered as an sirna lipoplex could be detected in many organs. [ ] the sirnas remained, unfortunately, primarily in the endothelial cells of the blood vessels and, therefore, barely penetrated into the tissues themselves. liposomal delivery of the completely modified sirna against hbv described in section . increased both the efficiency and duration of action in a mouse model. [ ] the sirna was encapsulated in stable nucleic acid-lipid particles (snalps), which consist of a cationic and a fusogenic lipid and are also pegylated (figure b) . snalps were subsequently used to test an sirna against apolipoprotein b in primates. [ ] the level of the mrna in the liver was reduced by more than % after a single injection, and as a result the protein, the serum cholesterol, and the level of low-density lipoprotein (ldl) was reduced. this showed that liposomemediated sirna delivery could be successfully tested in a clinically relevant context. the knockdown of apolipoprotein b demonstrates two further aspects: first, a partial reduction of the target protein is sufficient to reach a relevant therapeutic benefit, namely reduction of ldl to a normal level. for the use of rnai against tumors or viral infections, however, the greatest possible knockdown of the target gene must be reached to prevent a relapse of the disease. secondly, figure . nonviral delivery of sirnas. a) lipoplex: cationic lipids (gray) form complexes with the negatively charged sirnas (red). peg (yellow) is frequently attached to improve the pharmacokinetic characteristics. b) liposomes in which the cationic lipids enclose the sirna. c) sirna coupled to cholesterol to increase its lipophilicity. d) specific delivery by coupling of sirnas on the antigen-binding fragment of an antibody through positively charged protamine. e) direct coupling of an sirna to an aptamer for tumor-cell-specific delivery. f) neuronal delivery by a peptide of the rabies virus glycoprotein (rvg) with an arginine nonamer ( r) at its carboxy terminus to bind the sirna. g) receptor-mediated delivery by coupling of a ligand (f: folate) to a dna oligonucleotide (blue), that hybridizes with sirna (sense strand: green, antisense strand: red). further details are described in the text. the advantages of rnai technology lies in the fact that any chosen gene can be inhibited, not just the so-called drugable targets, against which traditional small-molecule substances can be directed. besides the lipid-based systems, various other polymers have been employed for the delivery of sirnas. one of the most intensively investigated polymers for the delivery of nucleic acids is polyethyleneimine (pei). the linear or branched pei polymers are strongly positively charged and can therefore form complexes with sirnas and electrostatically interact with the cell surface. the complexes are taken up by endocytosis, and pei improves the release of the sirna by destroying the endosomes. pei-sirna complexes can be employed successfully to limit influenza infections in mice, for example. [ ] nanoparticles from completely different substances have also been developed. for example, medarova et al. used nanoparticles, which after systemic application allow the delivery and proof of sirna uptake at the same time. [ ] the samples consisted of magnetic nanoparticles labeled with a dye which absorbs in the near-infrared region so that accumulation in tumors could be observed by magnetic resonance imaging (mri) and near-infrared in vivo optical imaging (nirf). the nanoparticles were equipped with a myristoyl-coupled polyarginine peptide for translocation across the membrane. in an alternative system, carbon fiber nanotubes were used, which facilitated entry of sirnas into t cells and primary cells, which are otherwise difficult to transfect with liposomal systems. [ ] an alternative strategy is to couple lipophilic molecules directly to the sirna. of a series of tested groups, cholesterol and -hydroxylauric acid coupled to the ' end of the sense strand proved to be the best suited to ensure efficient uptake by the cells and knockdown of the target gene. [ ] as a result, a cholersterol-coupled sirna (figure c) was injected into the tail veins of mice. [ ] cellular uptake and silencing of the target protein (apolipoprotein b) could be shown in the liver and the jejunum (a section of the small intestine). in addition to lipophilic groups, cell-penetrating peptides (cpp) can improve the cellular uptake of oligonucleotides. [ ] interestingly, phosphorothioate oligonucleotides which are not covalently attached to an sirna improve the uptake by a caveolin-mediated mechanism. [ ] this resulted in the expression of lamin in primary huvec endothelial cells being inhibited. the development of systems that allow specific delivery of sirnas to their target cells represents a great advance. this approach allows the applied doses to be smaller and possible side effects in other tissues can be avoided. an elegant possibility consists of coupling the sirna to an antibody which recognizes a protein on the surface of special cells. in a ground-breaking study, the antigen-binding fragment of an antibody against the hiv glycoprotein, which was fused to protamine, was used (figure d) . [ ] this positively charged protein can assemble with approximately six (negatively charged) sirnas in a noncovalent manner. with this construct it was possible to inhibit an hiv infection of primary t cells, which are difficult to transfect with lipidbased strategies. the authors succeeded in vivo with their antibody strategy in delivering the sirnas to tumor cells which presented the ligand proteins of the antibodies on their cell surface. to avoid the need to combine two classes of molecules (proteins and nucleic acids) sirnas have been coupled to aptamers-ligand-binding, in vitro selected nucleic acids. in a first effort, a streptavadin bridge was used to bind an sirna against lamin to an aptamer against the prostate-specific membrane antigen (psma), [ ] a membrane receptor which is expressed in prostate cancer cells and the vascular endothelia of tumors. this conjugate made efficient silencing possible, but is relatively complex because of the biotinstreptavadin bridge. for this reason, the sirna was coupled directly to a different aptamer against psma in a further study (figure e) . [ ] once in the cell, the sirna is removed from the aptamer by dicer. in an animal model it was possible to inhibit the growth of a tumor from human prostate carcinoma cells with an aptamer-coupled sirna against plk . the treatment of neurological diseases is complicated by the need to pass through the blood-brain barrier, which often prevents the entry of drugs from the bloodstream into the brain. to overcome this barrier, a amino acid long peptide from the rabies virus glycoprotein was coupled with an arginine nonamer to an sirna (figure f) . [ ] the peptide bound to the acetylcholine receptor, which is expressed by neuronal cells, so that the conjugate specifically penetrates neurons. in vivo, an intravenously injected sirna with the peptide succeeded in getting into brain cells, and protected mice from an infection with japanese encephalitis virus. a further possibility for cell-type-specific delivery is the coupling of a receptor ligand (such as folate) to a dna oligonucleotide (figure g) . [ ] this dna oligonucleotide hybridizes with the ' extended end of the antisense strand of the sirna, and the ligand mediates the uptake into the cells of the construct, which consists of two rna molecules and a dna oligonucleotide. presumably, dicer or an rnase h then produces the mature sirna. further details concerning nonviral delivery of sirnas are described in recently published reviews. [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] viruses belong to the most dangerous pathogens for humans, and therapies against them are often inadequate or not available. for the last years, however, a concept has been pursued to introduce therapeutically useful genes into patients with the help of viral vectors. in the process, the viruses are usually changed such that essential components for replication are missing so that they cannot produce progeny viruses and therefore cannot harm the patient or others (figure ). although worldwide over genes have been transferred in almost clinical trials, [ ] the real breakthrough in gene therapy has not yet been accomplished. high hopes were placed on combining the new and very efficient rnai technology with the experience of gene angewandte chemie therapy. [ , ] this involves getting the shrna expression cassettes into the cells by means of viral vectors. this form of gene transfer is usually significantly more efficient than the nonviral delivery of sirnas. three types of vectors are primarily used: retroviral vectors, adenoviral vectors, as well as vectors based on the adeno-associated virus (aav). the most important advantages and disadvantages of the three vector types are summarized in table . past experience has shown that it is impossible to find a vector which is optimal for all indications, instead the choice of vector type depends on the intended specific therapeutic use. retroviruses have an rna genome, which is copied into a double-stranded dna, which in turn is integrated into the host genome as a proviral dna. this characteristic is maintained in therapeutically used retroviral vectors so as to permanently express the transgene. the immune response to these vectors is weak and the viruses are modified such that they can no longer leave the cells and cause damage. the family of the retroviridae are divided into the subgroups onco-retroviruses and lentiviruses. onco-retroviruses can only transduce proliferating cells. they are primarily used ex vivo, that is, the cells-for example hematopoietic stem cells-are removed from the patient which are transduced with the retrovirus vector in tissue-culture dishes and are later re-administered to the patient. in this manner children have been treated who suffer from x-scid (severe combined immunodeficiency disorder), which is caused by a mutation in the gc interleukin receptor gene located on the x chromosome. [ ] the presumed advantage of long-term expression by stable integration into the host genome proved to be a disadvantage, however, since several of the children developed leukemia as a consequence of the treatment. [ ] the retroviral vector integrated in the proximity of the lmo proto-oncogene promoter and led to the anomalous transcription and expression of lmo . this finding shows that the safety of the vectors must be improved; at the same time, however, one must remember that diseases such as scid are frequently untreatable by any other means and lead to the early death of the affected children. lentiviral vectors can, for example, be derived from the human immunodeficiency virus (hiv). they have the ability to transduce quiescent as well as proliferating cells, thus increasing their therapeutic range. furthermore, their oncogenic potential is presumably less. the g glycoprotein of the vesicular stomatitis virus can be used as the coat protein for lentiviral vectors, which allows the transduction of almost any cell type. after the demonstration that retorviral vectors are in principle suited to sirna-mediated gene silencing by inhibiting the reporter gene egfp, [ ] they were employed for medically relevant purposes. the specific knockdown of the oncogene k-ras v allele in human tumor cells caused them to lose their tumorgenicity. [ ] in addition, lentiviral vectors were used to introduce shrna expression cassettes against viruses or their receptors into host cells. a lentivirus vector proved to be particularly efficient for the inhibition of hepatitis c virus (hcv). this vector produced several shrnas against the virus genome and the host cell receptor immune reaction, cytotoxicity cytotoxicity cd at the same time and thereby blocked hcv replication, cd expression, and cell binding of the hcv surface protein e . [ ] the intensive efforts to use lentiviral vectors for the transfer of shrna expression cassettes for the treatment of hiv infection and an ongoing clinical trial for this purpose will be described in section . . . adenoviruses have a linear, double-stranded dna genome and most often cause respiratory problems in humans. the genomic dna of adenoviruses remains episomal in the infected cells, so that no risk of insertional mutagenesis exists. unfortunately, they do cause a powerful immune reaction, which led to a fatal reaction in a clinical study. [ ] parts of the early genes were removed in the first generation of adenoviral vectors. the early genes e and/or e were deleted in the second generation adenovirus vectors to further reduce the immunogenicity and to create additional space for transgenes. in the newest vectors, which are referred to as gutless, all coding sequences are deleted, so that besides the transgene, only the inverted terminal repeats (itrs) and the packaging signal y remain. [ ] this approach drastically reduces the toxicity and immunogenicity of the vectors, and enables the long-term expression of a transgene. adenoviral vectors have already been employed in different medical areas for the knockdown of damaging genes. for example, both guinea pigs and pigs were protected from infection by foot-and-mouth disease by an shrna-expressing adenovirus vector. [ ] the adenovirus vector mediated delivery of shrna expression cassettes has also been developed for the treatment of heart diseases. the disruption of the calcium balance is an important cause of heart failure. with rnai-mediated inhibition of phospholamban, an inhibitor of the serca a (sarcoplasmic reticulum ca + pump), it was possible to improve the calcium uptake into the sacroplasmic reticulum in primary neonatal rat cardiomyocytes. [ ] adeno-associated viruses (aavs) belong to the family of the parvoviridae and possesses a comparatively small linear single-stranded dna genome. aavs are attractive vectors for gene transfer, since they efficiently transduce target cells and are nonpathogenic for humans. while natural aavs integrate into a specific region in chromosome , the genes required for this are usually deleted from the recombinant vectors, so that they remain primarily episomal. despite this, aav vectors are noteworthy for their long-term, stable expression of transgenes. for gene therapeutic uses, the aav serotype was first developed as a vector. since it inefficiently transduced many cell types such as muscle cells, other serotypes have been used in the past few years to expand their tropism. the genome of the aav- vector can be packed in capsids of other serotypes. this leads to the creation of so-called pseudotype vectors, with which cells of practically any given tissue can be transduced. [ ] a further disadvantage of the conventional single-stranded vectors-the delayed start of the expression of the transgene-could also be eliminated. maximal gene expression is achieved after only a few days with selfcomplementary double-stranded aav vectors. [ ] aav vectors are intensively employed in rnai experiments because of their numerous advantages. for example, the dopamine-synthesizing enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase was down-regulated in the midbrain neurons of mice with shrna-expressing aav vectors in one of the first in vivo studies. [ ] as a result, behavioral changes such as a motorperformance deficit and altered reaction to a psychostimulant were seen. the faster acting self-complementary aav vectors proved useful for cell-culture experiments: the mrna of the target gene was reduced by up to % after transduction of a culture of rat-lung fibroblasts for h. [ ] . applications of rna interference the sequencing of the human genome as well as those of many other eukaryotic model organisms rates as one of the most important developments of the last few decades in the life sciences. in many cases, however, only the sequence is known, while the function of the coded protein remains unknown. determination of gene function has become one of the most important tasks of present research. at about the same time as the completion of the major sequencing projects, rnai was established as a method to allow the creation of loss-of-function phenotypes in a comparatively rapid and simple manner. this led to the adoption in only a few years of rnai as a standard method of molecular biological research that is employed in a very large number of biochemical laboratories. since silencing is based on the pairing between the mrna of the gene of interest and the sirna guide strand, gene functions can be investigated significantly faster than they can be with small-molecule inhibitors, which must first be identified in laborious high-throughput screens. in addition, closely related isoforms of proteins can be selectively turned off by suitable selection of target sequences to investigate their specific functions, [ ] which is almost never possible with pharmacological substances. even when the goal of a pharmaceutical project is the development of a traditional drug, rnai offers a rapid method to validate the target. [ ] the unspecific effects of rnai applications discussed in section must, however, be kept in mind; thus controls were already laid down with which the specificity of an rnai experiment should be proven in the early stages of the research. [ ] these include, among other things, suitable controls of the knockdown at the mrna and protein levels, dose-response curves of the sirna, as well as the use of multiple sirnas against the same target. besides the analysis of the function of individual genes, many genes can also be investigated at the same time by using angewandte chemie sirna libraries. in a first example, every member of the family of de-ubiquitinating enzymes was selectively turned off with shrnas. [ ] this approach led to the discovery that the knockdown of familial cylindromatosis tumor suppressor (cyld) led to an increase in the activity of the transcription factor nf-kb after tnf-a stimulation (figure ). interestingly, the activation could be prevented by an aspirin derivative. as a result, patients with cylindromatosis, mostly benign tumors of the skin appendages, were treated with salicylic acid, which in some cases led to a full remission. [ ] this example illustrates how rnai has led to new indications for well-known drugs. a number of libraries of sirnas, endoribonucleaseprepared sirnas, and shrna-expressing retrovirus vectors have now been developed which cover the entire human genome. genome-wide screens are primarily used in virological or oncological studies. in this way over cellular factors necessary for hiv- infection could be identified in a comprehensive screen with sirnas against each of the approximately human genes. [ ] this led not only to additional information about the viral life cycle but also identified new potential therapeutic targets. in a screen of retroviral vectors with mirna-type shrnas against around genes, proteins were identified that are involved in the proliferation of cancer cells. [ ] in a further genome-wide screen, potential tumor suppressors were found which were required to block the proliferation of fibroblasts and melanocytes that contained an activated mutant of the braf proto-oncogene. [ ] . . therapeutic applications the decades-long experience with the clinical development of antisense oligonucleotides [ ] and ribozymes [ ] was utilized in the therapeutic application of sirnas. only this can explain how the first rnai treatments were started on humans just three and a half years after sirnas were first used in mammalian cells. antisense oligonucleotides and sirnas differ from conventional substances by their size, and large-scale synthesis of these oligomers causes considerable difficulties and high costs. furthermore, the two strands of the sirnas must be synthesized separately and subsequently hybridized. this process has to guarantee the formation of a uniform drug that must, in the end, satisfy the requirements of the regulatory authorities. local application was selected for the first proof-of-concept studies because of the previously discussed delivery problems. table shows the most advanced, rnai-based clinical trails. the eye is a spatially well-defined organ with low nuclease activity in which the active agent can be injected intravitreally (directly into the vitreous body) comparatively easily. the only two oligonucleotides which have been approved by the american food and drug administration (fda) are for the treatment of eye diseases. the antisense oligonucleotide fomivirsen is directed against cytomegalovirus, which causes retinitis in aids patients; macugen is an aptamer for the treatment of age-related macular degeneration (amd), one of the most common eye diseases among the elderly. the first rnai-based clinical studies were started at the end of with an sirna against vegf. inhibiting the expression of vegf should block neovascularization in patients with amd. the sirna has since been tested under the name bevasiranib in a phase iii trial by the company opko health. sirna therapeutics (since bought by merck & co. inc., usa) initiated the first clinical studies with a chemically modified sirna. the sirna with the code sirna- was stabilized by unpaired deoxythymidine with a phosphorothioate bond and inverted abasic sugar residues on the ends of the antisense and sense strand, respectively, and is directed against the vegf receptor- . this approach also enabled the treatment of patients with amd. an intravitreal injection of the sirna reduced the area of neovascularization by as much figure . function of the tumor suppressor cyld, which was identified by means of an rnai screen. cyld works as an inhibitor in the nf-kb signaling pathway. the loss of the cyld function leads to uncontrolled growth. the pathway can also be inhibited by using sodium salicylate or prostaglandin- (pga ). traf: tnf-receptorassociated factor; ikk: ikb kinase complex. scheme adapted from ref. [ ] . as % in a mouse model for choroidal neovascularization. [ ] the study of kleinmann et al. [ ] already discussed in section called the mechanism of action of the sirnas against vegf or its receptor into question. the authors came to the conclusion that the antiangiogenic effect was not due to the knockdown of the target genes, but was based on the extracellular activation of tlr- . in a further clinical study, the sirna rtp i- against the hypoxia-induced gene rtp was used for the treatment of amd according to quark pharmaceuticals. this approach is possibly safer and more efficient than the anti-vegf substances. viral infections present an increasingly pressing medical problem. the number of chronic infections associated with hiv- , as well as hbv and hcv, are continually increasing. furthermore, new variants of viruses, such as the influenza virus h n , or new viruses, such as sars coronavirus, emerge as additional threats. intensive global travel and the fact that humans and animals live closely together in some regions of the world mean that new dangers from viruses must be expected. despite the enormous need for antiviral agents, there are only relatively few approved drugs for the treatment of viral diseases. this demonstrates the necessity for the development of new antiviral strategies. rnai is based on the complementary base pairing of a target rna and the guide strand of the sirna which, as a result, allows for the rapid adaptation of this technology to any given variant of a virus or to new types of virus. this is a great advantage of rnai relative to conventional approaches, which require time-consuming optimization of small-molecule substances. since the first reports about the antiviral effects of sirnas against respiratory syncytial virus (rsv), [ ] other successful rnai applications against most classes of medically relevant viruses, including hiv- , hbv, hcv, sars-coronavirus, influenza virus, polio virus, and coxsackie virus, have been published. [ ] an important role in rnai approaches against viruses is played by the choice of suitable target sequences. viral rnas often contain significant secondary structure, which can seriously impede the efficiency of inhibition by an sirna (see section . ). for example, hiv- tar rna is inaccessible for the risc and could only be cleaved after the secondary structure was broken open by '-o-methyl-rna oligonucleotides directed against regions neighboring the sirna binding site. [ ] one of the biggest problems for the long-term use of rnai against viruses is viral escape. for both the polio virus [ ] and hiv, [ ] cases have been described in which viral replication can at the beginning be blocked efficiently, but after a while the virus titer increases again, because of the selection of mutants which can overcome the inhibition. nonessential genes-for example, the nef gene of hiv- -can be deleted. [ ] usually, however, viruses overcome rnai-mediated silencing with point mutations in the target sequence. a comprehensive analysis of hiv- mutants showed that certain positions are preferentially mutated. [ ] to avoid viral escape, sirnas should be directed against strongly conserved regions of the virus. nonstructural proteins will be more severely affected by mutations than capsid proteins. it has, however, been reported that substitutions often result in silent mutations which do not affect protein function. [ ] this escape route of the virus can be hindered by selecting conserved regions with a structural function which is destroyed by the mutations. in this way, the coxsackie virus could be inhibited over a long period by an sirna against the conserved cis-acting replication element (cre), while an sirna targeted against structurally unimportant regions led to viral escape. [ ] even with the careful selection of target sequences, however, rnai approaches will require the development of combination therapy, similar to those already employed in the conventional treatment of viral infections. in analogy to highly active antiretroviral therapy (haart), in which several small-molecule active drugs are used against hiv- , several sirnas or shrnas could be used against the virus. the combination of four shrna expression cassettes in a lentiviral vector led to the viral escape of hiv- observed for a single shrna being avoided. [ ] the alternative to the use of sirnas against the virus is to down-regulate cellular factors which the virus requires to enter the cell and to replicate. the chance of viral escape by mutation is drastically reduced with cellular genes. the critical factor, however, is that the corresponding protein is not essential for the cell. this is, for example, the case for the hiv- co-receptor ccr . mutations in the ccr gene have no consequences for the health of the individual but protect the person from infection with hiv- . hematopoietic stem cells were protected against hiv- by the rnai-mediated knockdown of ccr . [ ] this approach is not, however, restricted to hiv- -silencing of the coxsackie virus adenovirus receptor led to a significant reduction in the replication of cvb- . [ ] [ ] [ ] a recently begun clinical trial for the treatment of hiv- infected patients combined several targets and rna-based strategies to get the best protection against escape mutants: a single lentiviral vector expresses an shrna against the hiv- genes rev and tat, a hammerhead ribozyme against ccr , and a decoy oligonucleotide against the transactivation response (tar) element. [ , ] the gene transfer occurs in this case ex vivo, that is, haematopoetic stem cells are removed from the patient, transduced in tissue culture with the vector, and then re-infused. in a therapeutic program for the treatment of hbv infections, the company nucleonics inc. is developing a vector with four shrnas against different segments of the viral genome. this approach should prevent viral escape. a phase i clinical study with vectors designated nuc b started in . the lung is one of the organs in which sirnas are relatively easy to apply; rnai approaches are thus promising for the treatment of respiratory diseases. infections with rsv could be inhibited by intranasal application of sirnas in a mouse model. [ ] as a result, a clinical study was initiated to test how well the sirna aln-rsv were tolerated in healthy volunteers. according to the recently published chemie results, no serious side effects were observed, and the systemic bioavailability of the intranasally applied sirna was minimal, as expected. [ ] the subsequent phase ii study investigated the safety and antiviral effects of aln-rsv in infected adults. the sirna was, according to alnylam pharmaceuticals, tolerated well and showed statistically significant antiviral activity. a further field in which great hope is placed on rnai is cancer research. [ ] it does not require a great deal of imagination to expect that the inhibition of factors such as oncogenes could block the uncontrolled proliferation of tumor cells. the expression of genes which lead to angiogenesis within the tumor to create new blood vessels to supply the tumor with oxygen and nutrients can also be blocked. in addition, targets may be chosen which are responsible for metastasis, since in most cases primary tumors can be surgically removed and the metastases represent the real problem. finally, rnai can be employed to resensitize resistant tumor cells to treatment with chemotherapeutic agents or radiotherapy. the most important way in which tumor cells become resistant to chemotherapeutic agents is through the expression of the multidrug resistance (mdr) gene. if mdr expression is suppressed by sirnas, the cells again become vulnerable to chemotherapeutics. [ ] there are many published studies which show that tumor growth could be slowed in animal models by rnai. for example, sirnas against cd inhibit the growth of tumors in various xenograft mouse models. [ ] the sirnas penetrate into the tumor endothelial cells as lipoplexes and block angiogenesis. a further interesting option involves increasing the antitumor activity of oncolytic viruses by rnai. while viral vectors are usually modified such that after their creation they can no longer replicate (see section . ), oncolytic adenoviruses replicate selectively in cancer cells and destroy the cells by cell lysis. when such a virus is augmented with an shrna expression cassette (for example, against the mutated k-ras v oncogene) the inhibitory effect on tumor growth is increased. [ ] in a first clinical rnai cancer trial, patients with glioblastoma multiforme were treated. [ ] these brain tumors are almost untreatable by currently available means and the prognosis for the affected patients is very poor. the rnai approach was directed against tenascin-c, which is strongly expressed in this tumor tissue. the rnai treatment was successful in preventing the re-emergence of operatively removed glioblastomas in many patients. this product is currently being developed further by senetek plc. calando pharma employed an unmodified sirna against the m subunit of the ribonucleotide reductase in a phase i study for the treatment of solid tumors, whereby the sirna was delivered by a special nanoparticle. the company silence therapeutics is planning a clinical study with an sirna lipoplex (atu ). the liposomal formulated '-o-methylmodified sirna (atuplex) is directed against the expression of protein kinase n (pkn ). other companies have announced clinical trials of rnai approaches against various forms of cancer for the near future. [ ] in a further clinical study, rnai is being employed as a therapeutic strategy against acute kidney failure. it has been shown that the temporary inhibition of the tumor suppressor p can prevent cell damage. [ ] this will be exploited since the sirna akli- will inhibit the expression of p for a limited period of time. the safety of akli- is to be tested in a phase i trial in patients for whom a high risk of kidney failure exists because of a major cardiovascular operation. in january , transderm inc. began a clinical study for the treatment of the autosomal-dominant genetic disease pachyonychia congenita, a disruption of keratinization. the sirna was intradermally injected and specifically inhibited the expression of the keratin mutation k a, which is responsible for the disease. [ ] in addition, the blockade of an endogenous mirna is being tested as a therapeutic strategy. in experiments with nonhuman primates, the liver-specific mirna- could be inhibited by a complementary lna oligonucleotide. [ ] the lna was systemically (intravenously) administered and did not trigger any apparent toxic side effects. the level of plasma cholesterol could be reduced by inhibiting mirna- . this mirna is an interesting target molecule for a further indication, since it is also required by hcv for replication. according to a press release from the danish company santaris pharma, a clinical trial with the lna inhibitor of the mirna- began in may . since rnai is a technology which is strongly applicationoriented, it is of great commercial significance. the practical application of rnai rests on several fundamental patents, the most important of which include patents known as tuschl i and ii as well as kreutzer-limmer i. while the tuschl ii patent, which refers to the typical - base pair long sirnas with ' overhangs, has already been granted, the decision regarding the tuschl i patent remains open. the kreutzer-limmer i patent has been granted in europe (but not yet in the us), however its precise extent is not yet decided. [ ] a strong patent position is held by the us biotech alnylam pharmaceuticals. besides the named core patents on rnai, they also hold patents on the chemical modification and delivery of the sirnas. as a result, alnylam has made several major deals, for example, an extensive research cooperation with novartis in . in july , roche ag received from alnylam a non-exclusive licence for $ million for the therapeutic use of sirnas under alnylam ip and their european research unit. much attention was generated by the take over of sirna therapeutics by merck & co., usa, for $ . billion at the end of . these transactions show that the major pharmaceutical companies have recognized the potential of rnai and are prepared to invest a great deal in this new technology. further details regarding the patent situation as well as related business in the rnai field have been brought together in a recent review. [ ] . summary and outlook rna interference has developed into one of the most important technologies of biomedical research within just a few years. the simple and efficient possibility to inhibit the expression of a specific gene makes possible the elucidation of the functions of proteins which are so far unknown. however, rnai has not only become a standard method of molecular biology-it has already made its way into the clinic. around a dozen clinical studies based on rnai are already running, and the first results are promising. basically, knockdown technologies can be used against any disease in which a deleterious gene is over-expressed (for example, cancer, viral infections, inflammation). two major obstacles must, however, be overcome before it can become a broadly applicable standard therapy: the question of their specificity and efficient delivery to the target cells. as already explained, sirnas can cause unspecific side effects and activate the immune system. these undesired effects can be minimized by the clever selection of the sequence and the use of modified nucleotides. immense efforts have been undertaken to develop carrier systems with which sirnas can be delivered to their target cells. despite the advances of the last years, further developments are still required to get systemically applied sirnas to their required site of action. here, viral vector systems for shrna expression cassettes offer additional options for efficient and organ-specific delivery. this approach must, however, first overcome the reservations based on the negative experience with gene therapy. then the two strategies-the delivery of chemically synthesized sirnas and the vector-mediated expression of shrnas-can complement each other, and either of the approaches can be chosen depending on the requirements of a given application. with the anticipated advances in the next few years in solving these problems, the vision of many rnai researchers could become reality: the use of genome-wide screens with sirna libraries will allow targets for diseases such as cancer to be identified, which then can be functionally investigated and validated with the sirna employed in the screening. afterwards, the same molecule can be optimized with chemical modifications in a standard manner and tested in animal models with special delivery agents, before the sirna (or a corresponding shrna) can be employed directly for testing in humans. this approach will enable an unprecedented acceleration of the development of new therapy options to be achieved. with sirnas, the specific inhibition of a single target gene is usually attempted; however, experience in the antisense field has shown that this can, under some circumstances, be inadequate for complex diseases such as cancer. in contrast, mirnas affect many target rnas, so that more comprehensive regulation can be achieved with the inhibition of a mirna. the clinical studies on the inhibition of mirnas, which have already begun or are planned for the near future, will possibly show the greater therapeutic effect. the coming years will show whether rnai, after its success in the research laboratories, will also live up to the promise of the antisense strategies to offer a new medical option for a molecular-based therapy. my special thanks go to my co-workers, whose tireless efforts contributed to the advances of my research group. i would like to thank volker a. erdmann for the continuing support during my habilitation. i thank henry fechner, jörg kaufmann, harry kurreck, hans-peter vornlocher, and denise werk for their critical reading of the manuscript, and erik wade for translating the text with great care. financial support of my research efforts by the dfg (ku- / , sfb/tr tp c ), the bmbf/rna netzwerk, and the fonds der chemische industrie is gratefully acknowledged. proc. natl. acad. sci proc. natl. acad. sci proc. natl. acad. sci kurreck in therapeutic oligonucleotides proc. natl. acad. sci uhlmann in therapeutic oligonucleotides proc. natl. acad. sci panzner in therapeutic oligonucleotides drug discovery today rossiin therapeutic oligonucleotides key: cord- -js l fh authors: zhou, ping; zhai, shanli; zhou, xiang; lin, ping; jiang, tengfei; hu, xueying; jiang, yunbo; wu, bin; zhang, qingde; xu, xuewen; li, jin-ping; liu, bang title: molecular characterization of transcriptome-wide interactions between highly pathogenic porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus and porcine alveolar macrophages in vivo date: - - journal: int j biol sci doi: nan sha: doc_id: cord_uid: js l fh porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus (prrsv) infects mainly the porcine alveolar macrophages (pams) and causes porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrs). previous studies have analyzed the global gene expression profiles of lung tissue in vivo and pams in vitro following infection with prrsv, however, transcriptome-wide understanding of the interaction between highly pathogenic prrsv (hp-prrsv) and pams in vivo has not yet been established. in this study, we employed affymetrix microarrays to investigate the gene expression patterns of pams isolated from tongcheng piglets (a chinese indigenous breed) after infection with hp-prrsv. during the infection, tongcheng piglets exhibited typical clinical signs, e.g. fever, asthma, coughing, anorexia, lethargy and convulsion, but displayed mild regional lung damage at and dpi. microarray analysis revealed that hp-prrsv infection has affected pams in expression of the important genes involved in cytoskeleton and exocytosis organization, protein degradation and folding, intracellular calcium and zinc homeostasis. several potential antiviral strategies might be employed in pams, including upregulating ifn-induced genes and increasing intracellular zinc ion concentration. and inhibition of the complement system likely attenuated the lung damage during hp-prrsv infection. transcriptomic analysis of pams in vivo could lead to a better understanding of the hp-prrsv-host interaction, and to the identification of novel antiviral therapies and genetic components of swine tolerance/susceptibility to hp-prrs. porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome (prrs), caused by prrs virus (prrsv) which belongs to the genus arterivirus of the family arteriviridae, is the most economically significant disease effecting commercially bred pigs world-wide [ ] . this disease is characterized by anorexia, increased late-term ivyspring international publisher abortions, increased number of stillborn pigs, mummified fetuses, weak live-born piglets, increased pre-weaning mortality, and delayed return to estrus [ ] . in vivo, prrsv productive infection occurs predominately in alveolar macrophages of the lung [ ] , followed by viremia and subsequent interstitial pneumonia within days [ ] . it was hypothesized that respiratory pathology, especially lung damage during prrsv infection, results from an overproduction of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the lungs [ ] . genome-wide transcriptional responses of lungs of landrace×yorkshire crossbred piglets to a classical north american type prrsv strain infection was analyzed by solexa/illumina's digital gene expression (dge) system, which is a tag-based high-throughput transcriptome sequencing method [ ] . this systematic analysis of the pulmonary gene expression profiles suggested that upregulation expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines, chemokines, adhesion molecules and inflammatory enzymes and inflammatory cells, antibodies, complement activation were likely to result in the development of inflammatory responses during prrsv infection processes [ ] . another high-throughput deep sequencing was performed focusing on the pulmonary gene expression profiles after a highly pathogenic-prrsv (hp-prrsv) strain infection [ ] . the system analysis of the pulmonary gene expression provides a comprehensive basis for better understanding the pathogenesis of hp-prrsv [ ] . because prrsv infection occurs predominately in porcine alveolar macrophages (pams) [ ] , the interaction between prrsv and pams have been studied systematically by high-throughput research methods in vitro. pams, lavaged from six piglets, were challenged with the lelystad prrsv strain in vitro, and the gene expression of the pams was investigated using affymetrix microarrays [ ] . the result suggested that the expression of beta interferon (ifn-β), but not of ifn-α, was strongly upregulated in the early stage of prrsv infection [ ] . besides microarray, serial analysis of gene expression (sage) was also employed to examine the global expression of genes in prrsv-infected pams in vitro [ ] . these studies have provided global gene expression profiles of lung tissue in vivo and pams in vitro following infection with prrsv; however, transcriptome-wide understanding of the interaction between prrsv and pams in vivo has not yet been established. in , an unparalleled large-scale outbreak of highly pathogenic prrs (hp-prrs) occured in many areas of china. this outbreak affected more than millions pigs and produced approximately . million fatal cases [ ] . in this study, laboratory infection was performed in tongcheng piglets (a chinese indigenous breed living in tongcheng county of hubei province) using prrsv stain wuh [ ] , a highly pathogenic prrsv isolated in china during the pandemic period of hp-prrs in . we also employed affymetrix microarrays to investigate the gene expression patterns of pams isolated from the piglets after infection. the current study aims at better understanding the interaction between hp-prrsv and the host pams, which may lead to the identification of key host factors for tolerance/susceptibility to the virus and the finding of novel targets for antiviral therapies. all animal procedures were performed according to protocols approved by the biological studies animal care and use committee of hubei province, china. piglets used in this study were free from prrsv, pseudorabies virus (prv) and porcine circovirus type (pcv ) determined by elisa test for serum antibodies. twelve -week-old tongcheng boars (a chinese indigenous breed) were obtained from three litters (four piglets per litter), and raised in pathogen-free facilities. to perform a paired experiment, individuals within a full-sib litter were separated into two groups: one infected group and one control group with piglets in each group. the infected groups were challenged with prrsv-wuh ( ml/ kg, - tcid /ml) by intramuscular inoculation. slaughters were carried out at day post-infection (dpi) for uninfected (control) groups, and at or dpi for infected groups. rectal temperature and clinical signs were recorded daily during the experiment. the serum samples for viremia detection were collected daily from all animals (one ml blood per sampling point). the pams for microarray analysis were collected by bronchoalveolar lavage from three uninfected pigs and three infected pigs at dpi. post-mortem examinations were performed on all pigs. macroscopic lung lesions were given a subjective score to estimate the percentage of the lung affected by pneumonia, following a scoring system described previously [ , ] . for histopathology analysis, samples of the apical segment of the lower lung lobes were collected and fixed in % paraformalclehyde for h. fixed samples were dehydrated, embedded in paraffin, sectioned into μm and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. sections were examined by light microscopy. for viremia detection, serum samples were collected daily from all pigs. total viral rna was extracted from μl serum using trizol reagent (invitrogen, carlsbad, ca). cdna was synthesized using oligo(dt) primer, m-mlv reverse transcriptase (promega, madison, wi) in μl reaction mixture according to the manufacturer's instructions. absolute quantitative-pcr (q-pcr) was performed using primers specific to the orf of prrsv (sense: '-tca gct gtg cca aat gct gg- '; antisense: '-aaa tgg ggc ttc tcc ggg ttt t- '). for absolute quantification, the pet- m plasmid of the known copy number containing the orf fragment generated standard curve. viral copies per ml of the unknown samples were determined by linear extrapolation of the ct value plotted against the standard curve [ ] . trizol (invitrogen) was used for rna extractions following the manufacturer's instructions. rna integrity and concentration were evaluated by denaturing formaldehyde gel electrophoresis and agilent bioanalyzer. the rna samples were sent to genetech biotechnology limited company (shanghai, china) for hybridization to the porcine affymetrix genechip (affymetrix, santa clara, ca). a total of microarray analyses were conducted using the procedure described previously [ ] . the raw data (affymetrix genechip scanner ) was converted to gene signal files by mas . (microarray suite version . , affymetrix). the data points were normalized between slides using the quantile normalization method used by bolstad et al. [ ] . the differentially expressed genes were selected using the sam (significance analysis of microarrays) package (http://www-stat.stanford.edu/~tibs/ sam/), and the false discovery rate (fdr) values were generated using permutations of the repeated measurements to estimate the percentage of genes identified by chance. in the experiment, sam settings were adjusted for a two class paired analysis, using one hundred permutations to calculate the differentially expressed gene list. the fold-change of . and a false discovery rate of approximately % were set as a threshold. all data are miame compliant and have been deposited in ncbi's gene expression omnibus and are accessible through geo series accession number gse (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov /geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=gse ). differential gene expressions were performed for hierarchical cluster (ver. . ) and treeview (ver. . ) analyses [ ] . the functional annotation of differentially expressed genes was performed by the david (the database for annotation, visualization and integrated discovery) gene annotation tool (http://david.abcc.ncifcrf.gov/) [ ] , as well as by referring to a previous work [ ] . the rna samples prepared for microarray analysis were also used for q-pcr verification. reverse transcriptions were performed using m-mlv reverse transcriptase (promega) according to the manufacturer's instructions. the primers were designed with the primer premier . program. the rpl gene was used as the internal control [ ] . the primer sequences, melting temperatures and product sizes are shown in table . q-pcr was performed on the lightcycler Ⅱ (roche, basel, sweden) using sybr green realtime pcr master mix (toyobo co., ltd, japan) as the readout. data was analyzed by the -ΔΔct method [ ] . the data analysis procedure was performed as described previously [ ] . after infection with prrsv-wuh , the piglets presented typical clinical signs, e.g. fever, asthma, coughing, anorexia, lethargy and convulsion. the average rectal temperature rose to above . ºc at dpi and seemed to peak at dpi. the two piglets surviving at dpi showed a slight decrease of rectal temperature in the following two days ( figure a ). to assess the replication and spread of hp-prrsv, the viral copy number/ml in serum was determined by absolute real-time quantitative-pcr ( figure b ). the level of viremia increased rapidly during the first two days post-infection, then increased slowly from to dpi, and approached the plateau phase at or dpi. pathologic examination was carried out on the animals. macroscopic examination detected a mild lung lesion at the apical segment of the lower lobes at and dpi ( figure c ). for estimating the severity of the pneumonia, gross lung lesion scores were made based on the method described previously [ , ] . the low scores indicated a mild regional lung damage at and days after hp-prrsv infection ( figure d ). as compared with the uninfected group ( figure e) , microscopic examination detected a certain extent of congestion as well as interstitial infiltration of leukocytes in the lungs of infected piglets ( figure f ). pams samples collected from three infected piglets at dpi and three uninfected piglets were analyzed. a total of , transcripts ( % of all probesets) were expressed in infected and non-infected pams (supplementary table ). after quantile normalization, genes were identified as differentially expressed (de) genes, with being upregulated and being downregulated, under the threshold of fold change (fc) of . or greater and a false discovery rate (fdr) of approximately % (figure a and supplementary table ). based on the database for annotation, visualization and integrated discovery (david), of the de genes were classified into categories, many of which shared the same genes, according to their functional correlation (figure b and supplementary table ). the majority of the genes related to the virus-host cell interaction could be assigned into the categories including cell death and apoptosis related, response to wounding, response to unfolded protein, response to oxidative stress, response to virus, innate immune response, response to cytokine stimulus, and endoplasmic reticulum (er) overload response. other de genes that were not classified by david were taken into account for further analysis below. in macrophages, prrsv entry into the host cell is mediated by heparan sulphate proteoglycans and the receptor sialoadhesin. upon a ph drop, prrsv is uncoated and its genome is released from the endosomes into the cytoplasm, which allows virus replication [ ] . after hp-prrsv infection the atp v b gene, which encodes a component of vacuolar atpase (v-atpase) that mediates acidification of endosomal organelles [ ] , was upregulated ( figure ). sarm , a negative regulator of trif-dependent toll-like receptor (tlr) signaling [ ] and mapk phosphorylation [ ] , was significantly downregulated (figure ). sbno , a potent inhibitor of nf-κb [ ] , and socs which limits nf-κb signaling by decreasing p stability within the cell nucleus [ ] , were upregulated ( figure ). upon hp-prrsv infection, irf was found to be upregulated in pams at dpi ( figure ) , however, no type-i ifn or ifn-γ induction was observed. a number of ifn-induced genes (ifi , ifi , ifih , ifit , ifit , ifitm , gbp , gbp , mx , gzmb, gzmh, isg , usp , rsad , nmi) were upregulated (table ) . jak-stat pathway seemed to be positively (stat and nmi) as well as negatively (socs ) regulated during hp-prrsv infection (figure ). nine genes (s a , marcks, cacybp, cct a, arhe, cct , ptpn , cct , and twf ) related to actin and tubulin cytoskeleton organization were upregulated and three (rassf , elmo , and kif ) were downregulated (table ). in addition, several exocytosis related genes (rsad , gsk b, lman l, exoc , sels, copz , sec l , and sec l ) were differentially expressed in pams after hp-prrsv infection (table ) . rsad , encoding an ifn-induced protein which inhibits influenza a virus release from the plasma membrane of infected cells by affecting the formation of lipid rafts [ ] , was upregulated significantly. vesicle trafficking between the golgi apparatus and er seemed to be restricted, because copz , a member of the copi coat which helps vesicles transport proteins from the cis end of the golgi complex back to the rough er [ ] , and sec l , a component of the copii vesicle coat that mediates vesicular traffic from the rough er to the golgi apparatus [ ] , were both downregulated. during hp-prrsv infection, homeostasis of isgylation, an ubiquitin-like modification, seemed to be re-established in pams by enhancing the expression of isg , an ubiquitin-like protein, and usp , which is an isg deconjugating protease (table ) . three e ubiquitin ligase genes (cacybp, herc , cul ) were upregulated, and two (herc , g e ) were downregulated ( table ) . as expected, a large set of chaperone genes were upregulated, including heat shock kda protein (hsp ) (dnaja , dnaja , dnajb , dnajb , and dnajb ), hsp (hspd ) , hsp (hspa b, hspa , hspa , and hspa ) , hsp / (hsph ), and subunits of chaperon in containing t-complex polypeptide (cct , cct , and cct a) , as well as npm , a molecular chaperone in the cell nucleus (table ) . upon hp-prrsv infection, several de genes were involved in the intracellular calcium homeostasis in pams (table ) . after hp-prrsv infection, zinc ion concentration in pams seemed to be increased, through upregulating the expression of slc a which encodes a zinc influx transporter [ ] (table ) . several zinc finger protein encoding genes (zdhhc , zfand a, zcchc , zcwpw , zfp , znf ) were also identified as de genes, and all of them were upregulated, except znf (table ) . during hp-prrsv infection, a set of de genes involved in the dynamic regulation of the extracellular matrix and vascular permeability was identified ( table ). infiltration of leukocytes into pulmonary alveoli, as a sign of inflammation, was modulated by upregulating a small number of genes (ccl , ccl l, ccr and csf ) ( table ). three genes, mpp , pf , and ppbp involved in neutrophil infiltration or activation [ ] [ ] [ ] , were all downregulated (table ) . during hp-prrsv infection, complement activation seemed to be inhibited, as expression of c and pfc, a positive regulator of complement activation, were downregulated, and clu, encoding for a complement inhibitor, was upregulated ( table ). seven genes (ccl , slc a , atp v b , c , ddit , glrx and tnf) were selected for q-pcr assay to validate the changes in gene expression observed by microarray analysis. ccl was the main upregulated chemokine gene in this study (table ) . two upregulated genes, slc a and atp v b , were involved in intracellular zinc homeostasis and endosome acidification, respectively. the downregulated c gene is the core member of the complement system which seemed to be inhibited, according to our study ( table ). the q-pcr gene list also contained two de genes (ddit , glrx ) which were not referred to in the discussion, and tnf, an important cytokine gene, which was not differentially expressed in tongcheng pams in response to hp-prrsv infection. the changes of these genes, detected by microarray analysis, was in agreement with the q-pcr validation (figure ) . the results of this study showed that tongcheng piglets exhibited typical clinical signs following infection with hp-prrsv wuh strain. the lung damage caused by the infection was regional and mild at and dpi ( figure c and d), but further observation for a longer period of time was not performed in this study. the slow reproduction rate of the virus (viremia) at to dpi ( figure b ) suggested a near balance between the viral replication and the defense mechanisms in the pams. transcriptomic analysis of the pams at dpi identified de genes under the filter of . -fold change, and the number of upregulated genes ( ) was greater than that of downregulated genes ( ). in comparison, an in vitro transcriptomic analysis of pams revealed that only small numbers (no more than ) of de genes (threshold of . -fold change) were identified at to hours post prrsv infection, and the overall effect of prrsv on the host transcription machinery was downegulation [ ] . it is not sure whether there is a conversion of the overall effect of prrsv on host transcription machinery from downregulation to upregulaton as time goes on, or the change is only the effect of the difference between in vitro and in vivo assays. as compared with the number of de genes in this study, some thousands of de genes (threshold of almost . -fold change) were identified in lung tissues at and dpi following both prrsv and hp-prrsv infection, by high-throughput deep sequencing assays [ , ] . this great number of de genes might result from the huge amount of data obtained by the deep-sequencing method and from the many cell types in lung tissues. prrsv is considered to inhibit the synthesis of type-i ifns and its signaling by blocking stat /stat nuclear translocation [ ] . however, it is also reported that prrsv can phosphorylate ifn-regulatory factor (irf- ) and weakly activate the ifn-β promoter in marc- cells in early infection, but the activations of irf- and ifn-β promoter are rapidly inhibited in the following infection [ ] . the induction of ifn-β mrna, but not ifn-α mrna, is observed in monocyte-derived dendritic cells and primary alveolar macrophages infected by prrsv at dpi [ , ] . in some cases, even the expression of ifn-α can be detected in the lung [ ] or serum [ ] of pigs infected with prrsv during the early days. interestingly, in this study, no induction of type-i ifn was detected in pams at dpi (figure ) , whereas a series of ifn induced genes that are critical for the cell to defend itself against viral infection, were upregulated (table ) . similar results were shown in lung tissues at and dpi following both prrsv and hp-prrsv infection [ , ] , and it was speculated that the ifn induced genes were predominantly expressed by the uninfected cells [ ] . here, another possibility is suggested that a certain amount of type-i ifn might be induced at the early stage of the infection before dpi. during hp-prrsv infection, several aspects of the pams' function were under regulation, such as actin and tubulin cytoskeleton organization, exocytosis, protein degradation, protein folding, intracellular calcium and zinc homeostasis ( table ) . increasing of intracellular zinc concentration impairs the replication of a variety of rna viruses, including poliovirus, influenza virus, coronavirus, arterivirus, rhinovirus, and respiratory syncytial virus [ ] [ ] [ ] . recently, zinc ion has been reported to efficiently inhibit the rna-synthesizing activity of the multiprotein replication and transcription complex of both sars-coronavirus and equine arteritis virus [ ] . upregulation of slc a (also known as zip ) (table ) , a member of the slc (zip) family which transports zinc from the extracellular space or organellar lumen into the cytoplasm [ ] , might be a defense mechanism in pams during hp-prrsv infection. nevertheless, none of the slc family genes was identified as a de gene in a microarray assay of pams infected with prrsv in vitro [ ] . furthermore, the expression of slc a , another member of the slc family, was downregulated in the lungs of landrace×yorkshire crossbred piglets at dpi following hp-prrsv infection [ ] . it has been shown in this study, that modulated inflammatory reaction, with a few proinflammatory cytokines upregulated (ccl , ccl l and its receptor ccr , and csf ) ( table ) , might contribute to the mild regional lung lesion observed at and dpi ( figure c and d) . besides, the complement system is one of the key players in the defense against infections. however, excessive activation of the complement can also exaggerate the disease induced by viral or bacterial infection. in , a new h n influenza a virus caused severe disease in naive middle-aged human individuals with preexisting immunity against seasonal strains, and this disease is reported to be induced through high titers of low-avidity nonprotective antibody and immune complex-mediated complement activation in the respiratory tract [ ] . excessive complement activation can contribute to organ damage in combination with the cytokine storm in the later stages of sepsis caused by bacterial infection [ ] . it is reported that blocking complement activation can ameliorate hepatic inflammation mediated by the hepatitis c virus core protein [ ] . likewise, inhibition of complement with a potent c inhibitor (compstatin) in a baboon model of late-stage sepsis markedly improves organ preservation and other clinical parameters [ ] . as it has been shown here, inhibition of the complement system might also be a contributor to the mild regional lung damage during hp-prrsv infection. interestingly, infection of hp-prrsv in six-week-old crossbred weaned pigs (landrace × yorkshire) induces complement activation accompanied by severe lung damage [ ] . in summary, the data presented in this study suggested that during infection with hp-prrsv tongcheng piglets exhibited typical clinical signs, but displayed mild regional lung damage at and dpi. microarray analysis revealed that hp-prrsv infection has affected pams in vivo in expression of the important genes involved in cytoskeleton and exocytosis organization, protein degradation and folding, intracellular calcium and zinc homeostasis. several potential antiviral strategies might be employed in pams, including upregulating ifn-induced genes and increasing intracellular zinc ion concentration. furthermore, inhibition of the complement system likely attenuated the lung damage during hp-prrsv infection. this system analysis could lead to a better understanding of the hp-prrsv-host interaction, and to the identification of novel antiviral therapies and identifying genetic 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key system for immune surveillance and homeostasis hepatic inflammation mediated by hepatitis c virus core protein is ameliorated by blocking complement activation complement inhibition decreases the procoagulant response and confers organ protection in a baboon model of escherichia coli sepsis the porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome virus requires trafficking through cd -positive early endosomes, but not late endosomes, for productive infection we would like to thank tinghua huang and lijie su in our lab for their help with microarray data analysis. we are grateful to dr. xiao zhang (uppsala university, sweden) for valuable discussions and improving the manuscript. we thank our lab members for sample collections. the authors have declared that no conflict of interest exists. supplementary key: cord- -qqohijqi authors: smith, jacqueline; sadeyen, jean-remy; cavanagh, david; kaiser, pete; burt, david w. title: the early immune response to infection of chickens with infectious bronchitis virus (ibv) in susceptible and resistant birds date: - - journal: bmc vet res doi: . /s - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: qqohijqi background: infectious bronchitis is a highly contagious respiratory disease which causes tracheal lesions and also affects the reproductive tract and is responsible for large economic losses to the poultry industry every year. this is due to both mortality (either directly provoked by ibv itself or due to subsequent bacterial infection) and lost egg production. the virus is difficult to control by vaccination, so new methods to curb the impact of the disease need to be sought. here, we seek to identify genes conferring resistance to this coronavirus, which could help in selective breeding programs to rear chickens which do not succumb to the effects of this disease. methods: whole genome gene expression microarrays were used to analyse the gene expression differences, which occur upon infection of birds with infectious bronchitis virus (ibv). tracheal tissue was examined from control and infected birds at , and days post-infection in birds known to be either susceptible or resistant to the virus. the host innate immune response was evaluated over these days and differences between the susceptible and resistant lines examined. results: genes and biological pathways involved in the early host response to ibv infection were determined andgene expression differences between susceptible and resistant birds were identified. potential candidate genes for resistance to ibv are highlighted. conclusions: the early host response to ibv is analysed and potential candidate genes for disease resistance are identified. these putative resistance genes can be used as targets for future genetic and functional studies to prove a causative link with resistance to ibv. electronic supplementary material: the online version of this article (doi: . /s - - - ) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users. infectious bronchitis (ib) is a highly contagious respiratory disease of chickens first described in the usa in the 's [ ] [ ] [ ] . clinical signs include: coughing, sneezing, rales and nasal discharge. the disease can also affect the reproductive organs, which leads to a decrease in egg quality and production, thus making it a major cause of economic losses within the poultry industry [ ] . the causative virus, infectious bronchitis virus (ibv) is a coronavirus, which is an enveloped virus with a single positive-stranded rna genome, which replicates in the host cell cytoplasm [ ] . proteins encoded by ibv include the viral rna polymerase, structural spike proteins, membrane and nucleocapsid and various other regulatory proteins. the spike glycoprotein mediates cell attachment and plays a significant role in host cell specificity [ ] . the existence of many different ibv serotypes, which are not cross-protective means that control of ib, is very difficult. mortality is usually fairly low (~ %), however some strains of the virus can also cause nephritis meaning that, depending on strain, mortality can be greater than % [ , ] or even up to % with some australian isolates [ ] . ibv infection leaves birds more susceptible to colibacillosis [ ] and subsequent bacterial infections can also lead to a high level of mortality [ ] . currently, attenuated live vaccines are used in broilers and pullets, and killed vaccines are used in layers and breeders [ ] . however, virus control is very difficult, as there are only a few vaccine types and many different strains of ibv. the virus also continues to mutate rapidly, generating more virulent strains of the disease [ ] [ ] [ ] . coronaviruses have now also been detected in other avian species such as turkey, duck, goose, pheasant, guinea fowl, teal, pigeon, peafowl and partridge [ ] . the extent to which the virus affects the host is highly dependent on the chicken breed [ ] and the mhc b locus is known to play a role in susceptibility to the virus [ ] . in this study we attempt to identify non-mhc genes, which may be involved in resistance to ibv. no genetic analyses have thus far been undertaken in order to try and do this and no quantitative trait loci or genes associated with resistance have been determined, so far. based on differential gene expression in susceptible and resistant lines of chickens, we identify potential candidate genes for disease resistance towards ibv (virulent m strain). building on the previous work by dar et al. [ ] and wang et al. [ ] we used affymetrix wholegenome chicken microarrays to examine the tracheal gene expression profiles of a line of birds known to be susceptible to ibv infection (line i) and a line known to show resistance (line n). we determined the early host response to infection and propose possible candidate genes for involvement in disease resistance towards ibv. understanding how coronaviruses infect the host and identifying genes involved in resistance is important not only for the poultry industry but also has important implications for human health, as diseases such as sars are also caused by coronaviruses [ , ] . all animal work was conducted according to uk home office guidelines and approved by the roslin institute animal welfare and ethical review body. the lines used in these experiments are an ibv susceptible lineline i (inbred white leghorn strain) [ ] and an ibv resistant lineline n (non-inbred cornell strain). line i was developed at east lansing in the usa in the s [ ] and line n at cornell, usa in the s [ ] . the lines have since been maintained at the institute for animal health in compton, uk. twoweek-old chicks from each line ( i and n) were separated into two experimental rooms, with ad libitum access to food and water. in one room, birds ( from each line) were infected with log cid ( cid ) of virulent ibv-m strain in a total of μl of . % bsa in pbs equally by intra nasal and ocular routes. in the other room, control birds ( from each line) received ul pbs via the same route. trachea samples (upper half ) were collected at , and days postinfection ( individual birds from each line at each time point). the trachea of infected and control birds from each line were analysed for viral load using taqman real-time quantitative rt-pcr assays. tissue samples (~ mg) were stabilized in rnalater (ambion, life technologies, paisley, uk) and disrupted using a bead mill (retsch mm , retsch, haan, germany) at hz for min. total rna was prepared using an rneasy kit (qiagen, crawley, uk) extraction method as per the manufacturer's protocol. samples were resuspended in a final volume of μl of rnasefree water. concentrations of the samples were calculated by measuring od and od on a spectrophotometer (nanodrop, thermo scientific, paisley, uk). quality of the rna was checked on a bioanalyser (agilent technologies, south queensferry, uk). an rna integrity number (rin) > proved the integrity of the rna. biotinylated fragmented crna was hybridized to the affymetrix chicken genome array. this array contains comprehensive coverage of , transcripts corresponding to over , chicken genes. the chicken genome array also contains probe sets for detecting transcripts from avian viruses. for each experimental group (control and infected birds in each of the two lines at each of , and dpi), three biological replicates ( rna pools from birds) were hybridized. thus, arrays were used in total. hybridization was performed at °c for hours in a hybridization oven with constant rotation ( rpm). the microarrays were then automatically washed and stained with streptavidin-phycoerythrin conjugate (sape; invitrogen, paisley, uk) in a genechip fluidics station (affymetrix, santa clara, ca). fluorescence intensities were scanned with a genearray scanner (affymetrix, santa clara, ca). the scanned images were inspected and analyzed using established quality control measures. array data have been submitted to array express (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress/) under the accession number e-tabm- . gene expression data generated from the genechip operating software (gcos) was normalised using the plier (probe logarithmic intensity error) method [ ] within the affymetrix expression console software package. this normalised data was then analysed using the limma and farms [ ] packages within r in bioconductor [ ] . probes with a false discovery rate (fdr) value < . and a fold change ≥ . were deemed to be biologically significant. in order to determine which biological pathways are involved in the responses to viral infection, we analysed our differentially-expressed (de) genes using pathway express [ , ] which uses kegg pathways [ ] to pictorially display up/down regulation of genes. (nb. these diagrams are based on the human pathways and so are not completely representative of the chicken pathways). genes differentially expressed during the host response (fdr < . ) were analysed against a reference background consisting of all genes expressed in the experiment. factors considered by pathway express include the magnitude of a gene's expression change and its position and interactions in any given pathway, thus including an 'impact factor' when calculating statistically significant pathways. anything with a p-value < . is deemed significant when using this software. use of the ingenuity pathway analysis (ipa) program [ ] revealed which canonical pathways are being switched on by ibv infection in the host (with benjamini-hochberg multiple testing correction) and allowed us to analyze the gene interaction networks involved in the host response. genes were clustered by similar expression pattern and analysed for enriched go-terms and transcription factor binding sites (tfbs) using expander (v . ) [ ]. normalised expression data from control samples were compared with infected samples to examine the host response to ibv infection. enrichment analysis of particular go terms or tfbs within clusters was done using the tango and prima functions, respectively, within the expander package. taqman real-time quantitative rt-pcr (qrt-pcr) was used to quantify viral rna levels and for confirmation of the microarray results for the mrna levels of selected genes. this was performed on replicate pools of samples ( birds). primers (sigma) and probe (pe applied biosystems, warrington, uk) ( table ) were designed using primer express (pe applied biosystems). briefly, the assays were performed using μl of total rna and the taqman fast universal pcr master mix and one-step rt-pcr mastermix reagents (pe applied biosystems) in a μl reaction. amplification and detection of specific products were performed using the applied biosystems fast real-time pcr system with the following cycle profile: one cycle at °c for min and °c for sec, followed by cycles at °c for sec and °c for sec. data are expressed in terms of the cycle threshold (ct) value, normalised for each sample using the ct value of s rrna product for the same sample, as well described previously [ ] [ ] [ ] . final results are shown as -ct using the normalised value, or as fold-change from uninfected controls. taqman real-time quantitative rt-pcr analysis was used to measure viral load in trachea samples from both control and infected birds from both lines i and n. tracheal tissue was chosen for examination in this study as the target of ibv is the epithelial surface of the respiratory tract. viral rna was detected in infected birds, but no significant difference in viral load was detected between lines at any of the days , or post infection (fig. ) . this would indicate that the resistance to the virus seen in line n is due to how the birds respond to the virus once it has entered the body and is not a measure of how the birds can prevent initial infection by the virus itself. when resistance to ibv infection was originally determined in these lines, it was noted that they were equally susceptible to infection, but a variation in outcome was seen. in line n, % of birds showed air sac lesions whereas % of i birds presented lesions. mortality was in line n, but % within line i birds. it was hypothesized that the different lines were producing different immunological responses upon infection [ ] . gene expression differences found in the susceptible i line between infected and control birds over days , and post infection were analysed, with a view to examining the innate host response to infection by ibv. genes seen to be induced during the host response to infection include c s, irf , stat , mx , tlr and ctss as previously recognised by guo et al. [ ] . we also identified ifit , oasl, sca , lyg , isg - , ddx , ifih , irf , table s . to elucidate which biological pathways are being perturbed during the host response to ibv infection, we analysed our data using pathway express [ ] . the resulting pathway diagrams are extremely useful in establishing which gene networks are involved in a particular experimental response. as seen in fig. , genes involved in antigen presentation and the toll-like receptor (tlr) pathway are up-regulated. tlrs identify pathogen associated molecular patterns (pamps) and are crucial to the innate immune system. in this study tlr is shown to be induced at dpi. tlr recognizes double-stranded rna intermediates produced during viral replication and has previously been shown to be induced in the trachea at this time after ibv infection [ ] . another pathway involved is the phosphatidylinositol signalling pathway (table ) . phosphatidylinositol kinases are known to play an important role in the viral life cycle after infection of the host and pi kb is known to be exploited by coronaviruses for viral entry. the product of pi kb catalysis is phosphatidylinositol -phosphate (pi p) and coronavirus entry into the host is mediated by the pi p lipid microenvironment [ ] . genes involved in the complement system are also highlighted as being up-regulated in response to ibv infection. complement-mediated lysis of viruses is an important facet of the host innate immune system and its role in defence against viral infection [ ] as reflected in the induction of these genes in this study. use of ingenuity pathway analysis (ipa) software also allowed us to determine which biological systems are active during the host response. up-regulated genes are seen to be part of the canonical biological pathways shown in fig. a . biological processes involving pattern recognition receptors and interferon signalling feature heavily. the interferon response is a powerful antiviral mechanism, which has previously been shown to be involved in the host response after ibv infection. a very early induction of ifn-γ has been reported in splenocytes [ ] , and in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) and lung leukocytes [ ] . ifnb expression has also been reported in trachea between and dpi [ ] . we do not see this increase in expression of interferon genes (due to the absence of data earlier than dpi), but we do see the downstream effects, with increased expression of many interferon-induced genes. specific physiological processes activated upon ibv infection can also be seen in fig. b . the stimulation of various different immune cells is seen along with the indication of reproductive abnormality, which would reflect the problems seen with egg-laying upon ibv infection. in order to cluster genes seen to be involved in the host response to infectious bronchitis into groups with similar expression profiles and probably sharing similar functions or gene regulatory pathways, we utilised the click algorithm within the expander program [ ] . figure a shows the expression profile of genes upregulated during the response to virus. the expander program was also used to analyse the gene ontology (go) functional annotations of the genes being differentially expressed. figure b shows the biological process terms, which are significantly enriched in the genes responding during the host response to infection. as would be expected, these include terms like 'innate immune response' and 'antigen processing and presentation'. 'nad + adp-ribosyltransferase activity' and 'phosphoinositide binding' are also highlighted. transcription factor binding sites present in de genes which are significantly over-represented were also predicted. figure c shows that genes up-regulated during the host response have a high proportion of irf and isre binding sites. irf is a transcriptional activator, which binds to the interferon-stimulated response element (isre) in ifn promoters and functions as a molecular switch for antiviral activity. analysis of the gene expression differences between infected and control birds across the two lines has provided us with information on how these lines differ in their response to infection. examination of the gene expression profiles in the control birds of the two different lines also allowed us to identify genes, which are inherently different between the susceptible and resistant birds. it can be seen that there are numerous genes, which show large expression differences between the two lines, even before infection. dramatic differences in gene expression of certain genes, including ddt, sri, blb , hscb, bf , bf , suclg , mx and sri, which are more highly expressed in the resistant n line table s shows all de probes) so, it can be seen that these are genes which have inherently different expression levels between susceptible and resistant birds, even before infection occurs. we therefore postulate that some of these genes may play an important role in disease resistance. the potential interactome of ibv has recently been investigated by stable isotope labelling with amino acids in cell culture (silac) coupled to a green fluorescent proteinnanotrap pull-down methodology [ ] . host proteins, which bind to the ibv n protein were identified, some of the genes for which, we see as being inherently expressed at higher levels in susceptible birds in this study. these genes include myh , caprin , dhx , hnrnph , rpl a, fmr , c orf , hnrpdl, sfrs , rpl , npm and rpsa. this may therefore be one of the reasons why line i is more susceptible to ibv infectionthere are more host proteins to which the virus binds, compared with the resistant line n. upon infection, differences in response are also seen between the two lines. interestingly, apart from cd and cd at dpi and fkbp at dpi, all other differential gene expression between the lines is seen at dpi in this study (additional file : table s ). cd is a glycoprotein found on the surface of many immune cells including cd +, cd +, b lymphocytes and natural killer cells and is a marker of cell activation. it functions in cell adhesion, signal transduction and calcium signalling. cd is found on the surface of immune cells such as t helper cells, monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells. it is a membrane glycoprotein which interacts with mhcii antigens. the protein functions to initiate or augment the early phase of t-cell activation. the protein encoded by fkbp is a member of the immunophilin protein family, which play a role in immuno-regulation and basic cellular processes involving protein folding and trafficking. early defence by the host is a key mechanism for combatting viral infection, and induction of ifnb and other innate genes in response to ibv infection has been shown to peak around - hr post infection [ ] . in this study, genes more highly expressed (or less down-regulated) in the resistant n line at dpi include a number of collagen genes (col a , col a , col a , col a , col a and col a ) and other genes such as acan, fstl , comp, eif a, stat and igfbp . genes seen to be more highly expressed (or less down-regulated) in the susceptible i line include rbm , mafb, nnk , ccn , mgat and thrap . one consequence of ibv infection is the production of poor quality, misshapen eggs by infected birds [ ] . some of the genes previously identified as being important for the creation of a healthy eggshell are seen to be more highly expressed by the resistant n line birds after infection in this study. these genes include col a , creld , hsp b , p hb and erp [ ] . for a full list of genes differentially expressed between the two lines in trachea ( de probes) see additional file : table s . ipa analysis of genes showing different inherent expression between lines i and n shows that the molecular functions of these genes is primarily concerned with their involvement in cell death and cell adhesion (fig. ) , two processes previously shown to be significant in infected kidneys [ ] . when the differential host responses to infection are examined, it is seen that genes involved in proliferation of t-lymphocytes and genes concerned with cell attachment and cytoplasmic organization are more highly expressed in the resistant line n. other processes significantly involved are apoptosis and necrosis (fig. a) , which have been previously documented in ibv-infected vero cells by liu et al. [ ] . one of the most perturbed biological networks noted in this analysis is that involving genes related to connective tissue disorders and involve many collagen genes. these genes are more highly expressed in susceptible line i birds compared to resistant line n birds (fig. b) suggesting that ibv infection might cause more disorder of eggshell formation in this line [ ] . the production of poor quality eggs by ibv infected birds may, in part be a reflection of the expression of these kinds of gene networks compared to that seen in resistant birds. twenty-one genes were selected for qrt-pcr validation ( table ) . these genes were chosen based on their involvement in the host response and whether they were differentially expressed between the susceptible and resistant lines (either inherently or during the course of infection). of the genes tested, showed comparable higher expression in response to infection in the resistant than in the susceptible line c inherently higher expression in the resistant line differential expression to that determined by the arrays. however, the results for ifnar and igfbp were not confirmed (additional file : figure s ). besides knowing that the mhc b locus has a bearing on disease resistance, the lack of any genetic information or identified qtl meant that we had to rely upon the gene expression differences we saw between susceptible and resistant lines to give us clues as to genes potentially involved in resistance to ibv infection. identifying genes which were expressed at different levels in the two lines of birds highlighted b-locus genes (blb , bf , bf , b-g) as well as bringing to our attention various other non-mhc genes which, due to their known biology, could be candidates for being involved in resistance to ibv infection (table ) . mx , c s, irf , tlr , c r, ccli , isg - and ifitm are all strongly induced during the host response to ibv infection. they are all innate immune genes which could potentially have a role in determining susceptibility to the virus. mx and ifitm are already established as anti-viral molecules [ ] [ ] [ ] . cd , cd , fkbp and stat all show a higher level of expression during the host response in the resistant birds compared to that of the susceptible birds, indicating their involvement in the host defence mechanism. cd and cd , with their role as receptors on immune cells, as described above, are obvious candidates, along with fkbp as an immune-regulator. stat is activated by various cytokines and growth factors and functions in cellular processes such as cell growth and apoptosis. even before infection, many genes are seen to be highly differentially expressed between lines i and n. oasl is an interferon-induced molecule known to have anti-viral activity against certain viruses such as hepatitis c virus. ddt is highly homologous to the macrophage migration inhibition factor, mif. we have also shown it to be highly differentially expressed in other chicken lines, which are susceptible or resistant to marek's disease virus [ ] . ifnar is an obvious candidate prediction, as the interferon response is central to the host's defence against ibv infection. tpd l , bcl l , faim and ciapin are all known to be involved in regulation of apoptosis, a process seen to be important during ibv infection. hscb, sri, and suclg , although not having an obvious potential biological role in disease resistance, are highly differentially expressed between susceptible and resistant lines and should thus be considered as potential candidates. resistance to ibv infection is brought about by the immune response after the virus has entered the host and is not due to prevention of initial viral infection. there is a small initial innate response at dpi, with much more gene expression seen at and dpi. analysis of genes being activated or inhibited upon infection shows that the biological pathways primarily affected during ibv infection include mapk signalling, those involved in the interferon response and those involving pattern recognition receptors. susceptible and resistant lines show a differential host response mostly at dpi. there are also genes which are inherently different between the two lines studied, including many genes, which control the apoptotic potential of the host. these differences seen in gene expression levels, allow us to postulate on many candidate genes for disease resistance. some potential candidates for involvement in disease resistance include genes already known to confer resistance to other viral infections (mhc-b locus genes, mx , oasl and ifitm ), genes involved in apoptotic processes (tpd l , bcl l , faim and ciapin ) and others which could be potential candidates due to their known biology (e.g. ddt and cd ). array data have been submitted to array express (http://www.ebi.ac.uk/arrayexpress/) under the accession number e-tabm- . additional file : table s . gene expression seen during the host response to ibv infection in the trachea of susceptible birds. (xlsx kb) additional file : table s . gene expression differences found to be inherent between susceptible and resistant lines in the trachea. (xls kb) additional file : table s . genes found to be differentially expressed between susceptible and resistant lines in response to ibv infection in the trachea. 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research council (bbsrc), as part of grant numbers bb/d / , bb/ d / and bb/d / . the authors would like to thank alison downing (edinburgh genomics, edinburgh, uk) for excellent technical assistance with the affymetrix microarray experiments. authors' contributions js performed the arrays, analysed the results and wrote the manuscript; dc carried out challenge experiments, j-rs prepared rna, measured viral load and performed qrt-pcr; db and pk conceived and supervised the project and revised the manuscript. all authors read and approved the final manuscript. key: cord- -o sy zi authors: baric, ralph s.; crosson, sean; damania, blossom; miller, samuel i.; rubin, eric j. title: next-generation high-throughput functional annotation of microbial genomes date: - - journal: mbio doi: . /mbio. - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: o sy zi host infection by microbial pathogens cues global changes in microbial and host cell biology that facilitate microbial replication and disease. the complete maps of thousands of bacterial and viral genomes have recently been defined; however, the rate at which physiological or biochemical functions have been assigned to genes has greatly lagged. the national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) addressed this gap by creating functional genomics centers dedicated to developing high-throughput approaches to assign gene function. these centers require broad-based and collaborative research programs to generate and integrate diverse data to achieve a comprehensive understanding of microbial pathogenesis. high-throughput functional genomics can lead to new therapeutics and better understanding of the next generation of emerging pathogens by rapidly defining new general mechanisms by which organisms cause disease and replicate in host tissues and by facilitating the rate at which functional data reach the scientific community. m icrobial genome sequencing efforts continue at an increasing rate, resulting in an expanding catalogue of genes of unknown function for important pathogens (fig. ) . in some cases, up to % of the annotated genes in fully sequenced microbial genomes have no known or predicted function. in many cases, these uncharacterized genes are highly conserved and are implicated in the pathogenic process through either their timing of expression or requirement for microbial replication. such data indicate that these genes execute important, general biological functions. the interpretation of existing and emerging microbial genomics data will require the scientific community to uncover new paradigms hidden within these sequences. this point is highlighted by a recent publication by hutchison et al. focused on building a minimal genome of mycoplasma mycoides ( ) . the genes in this genome include many required for known essential functions, such as dna replication, transcription, and translation, but the genome also contains genes (~ %) of unknown function. likewise, the known coding capacity of dna viruses has been doubled over the past few years, an achievement made possible by using novel high-throughput sequencing and proteomic methods. the discovery of these genes of unknown function not only promises to affect our understanding of microbial pathogenesis but also provides an undiscovered wealth of new therapeutic targets for antibiotic, antiviral, and vaccine development for improved global and economic health. unlike large-scale genome-sequencing or structural-genomics efforts, the functional annotation of uncharacterized genes is not well developed technologically, and therefore, the scientific community cannot rely on a well-defined, mature set of experimental approaches. simple deletion or overexpression of an uncharacterized gene often fails to yield any discernible phenotype in standard laboratory contexts. in the same vein, a purely biochemical approach that relies on purification and in vitro biochemical characterization of uncharacterized genes often fails to yield fruitful functional data. furthermore, while sequence-based bioinformatic analyses and computational models may provide clues about functional genetic interactions, such predictions are often limited by our current biological knowledge and databases. as a consequence, functional annotation is incorrect in many cases because unvalidated information is propagated across species. in cases where gene function is experimentally assigned and validated, the information is often not broadly propagated or may not apply to another organism. therefore, a successful functional annotation endeavor requires a multipronged approach that involves open collaboration among scientists with expertise in genetics, bioinformatics, molecular biology, biochemistry, cell physiology, host-microbe interactions, and data management. such a program is outside the scope of traditional funding mech- anisms and requires integrated teams of experts and new highthroughput experimental methodologies. the niaid has implemented a program aimed at assigning functions to open reading frames (orfs) and small noncoding rnas (ncrnas) that have been discovered by large-scale sequencing efforts to begin addressing this gap in our understanding of bacterial and viral gene function. this timely initiative from the niaid is highly significant because it is the institute's first attempt to incorporate functional annotation into its genomics and advanced technologies program, which is focused on developing genomics, proteomics, and bioinformatics resources to advance our understanding of infectious and immune-mediated diseases. the niaid functional genomics (fg) program builds on previous functional annotation efforts, such as combrex ( ) , and brings together multidisciplinary groups to work on shared goals. its mission is to probe new biology in pathogenic bacteria and viruses by assigning functions to new genes. the fg program is unique in its approach in that it enables principal investigators to follow up on "omics" and phenotypic screening data with targeted experiments to establish gene function. most pathogens are evolving constantly, and such an integrated approach will provide the database to allow us to work toward predicting new emerging infectious diseases and respond to new pandemics. projects across the niaid fg program are driven by the idea that the assignment of gene function must be rooted in experimentation in vivo and in vitro. the challenge to the experimentalist is to develop systematic approaches to gene function discovery that have a reasonable chance of success over a large number of genes. fg centers are taking a variety of approaches to uncover the functions of protein-coding genes and small ncrnas. some approaches, which perhaps will have the highest yield, require at least some prediction of function, while others presuppose no specific functional knowledge. current state-of-the-art technologies, such as genome synthesis, next-generation nucleic acid sequencing, ribosomal profiling, high-resolution mass spectrometry, metabolomics, and molecular and systems modeling, enable high-throughput approaches to characterize genes of unknown function. though these technologies are clearly valuable, they are most effectively leveraged when combined with functional assays, such as measurements of microbial permeability and antimicrobial susceptibility or assays of host response to infection, which have been scaled up through recent developments in robotics, whole-genome synthesis, and high-content cellular imaging. in this commentary, we provide an overview of our coordinated efforts that are aimed at filling the gaps in our understanding of microbial gene function. these efforts are restricted to a few organisms and technologies but could be attempted on a much larger scale. such functional analyses could provide the scientific basis for rational approaches to the development of new therapeutic products to combat future and current gaps in the treatment of bacterial and viral infection. improving the quality of genome maps. most protein-coding genes are annotated by either their similarity to known genes or generalized guidelines for identifying translational start sites. such predictions are often incorrect. for example, we have demonstrated that a protein highly homologous to a secreted bacterial amidase is actually an intracellular regulator of peptidoglycan synthesis ( ) . moreover, predictive algorithms to define the locations of non-protein-coding genes (e.g., small ncrnas, out-of-frame orfs, etc.) are generally poor. defining the boundaries of genes of unknown function is an important component of experimental functional annotation. we are using combinations of directed biochemical, computational, and next-generation-sequencing approaches to produce improved maps of gene boundaries in bacterial and viral pathogens. these efforts enable improved functional genetic and biochemical experiments. leveraging existing protein structure data. molecular structure data can provide tremendous insight into the biochemical functions of proteins. a high-quality structural model enables one to map conserved residues on the molecule and to develop hypotheses regarding active-site chemistry, ligand binding sites, protein docking sites, etc. we are taking advantage of the large amount of structural data available in the pdb to build homologybased protein models. in addition, we are using hidden markov model (hmm)-based approaches to build predictive structural models in cases where homology in the pdb is low. experimental structures and high-confidence structural models generated by the fg program are available to the community and have been used to develop and test specific functional hypotheses in vitro and in vivo and to define protein function ( ). high-throughput protein production for functional biochemical analysis. structural models of proteins of unknown function are informing functional biochemical hypotheses that are being tested in vitro. specifically, we are leveraging existing high-throughput structural genomics infrastructure to produce expression clones of proteins of unknown function. this approach is yielding milligram quantities of many targets of unknown function, which are being assayed for a range of biochemical activities and are being used to produce antibodies for cellular studies. one specific use for these purified proteins is in activitybased metabolomic profiling ( ), an unbiased approach to finding substrates and products for putative enzymes. defining gene function by biochemical association. a wellestablished approach to define function is to test for physical associations of proteins and rnas with other proteins or transcripts of known function. we are employing such biochemical association strategies. for protein-coding genes, we are measuring protein-protein associations using quantitative proteomic methods. for example, using a proteomics approach, we reported that kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus (kshv) viral interferon regulatory factor (virf ) can bind the cellular interferonstimulated gene (isg ) e ligase, herc . interaction of virf with herc inhibits the conjugation of isg to cellular proteins, thereby dampening the ifn response to the virus ( ). using a functional genomics screen, coupled with synthetic genome design, we demonstrated that the s glycoprotein genes of several severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus (sars-cov)-like bat coronaviruses can bind human receptors for entry and replicate efficiently in primary human airway epithelial cells and that they are resistant to existing sars vaccines and immunotherapeutics ( , ) . our early results suggest that an efficient way to discover function using this approach is to target protein complexes of known function and define associated proteins of unknown function. these efforts have required us to develop new bioinformatics methods to understand the complex data produced by these experiments. prediction of ncrna targets. ncrnas represent a particular challenge in bacterial and virus research, as they can vary tremen-perspective dously among different bacterial species and viruses and little is known about their functions. we have generated catalogues of the ncrnas for the organisms (for example, in mycobacteria) ( ) that we study and are applying large-scale methods to identify their targets. these methods start with bioinformatics, though the predictive algorithms are not yet particularly robust. in addition, we are applying cross-linking-, ligation-, and sequencing-based approaches to systematically link small ncrnas of unknown function to their transcript targets. thus, while many of our approaches to investigating ncrnas are still at the developmental stage, defining catalogues of ncrnas provides the community with a road map of targets for downstream studies and analyses. we are also using next-generation-sequencing technologies, such as transcriptome sequencing (rnaseq) and selective =hydroxyl acylation analyzed by primer extension (shape) analysis of rna, to investigate rna structure-function correlations. paired with these analyses, we are investigating the rna transcriptome to correlate conserved and unique rna structure elements with pathogen virulence factors, identify previously uncharacterized and/or rare translation initiation sites, and associate protein structure elements with virus biology, pathogenesis, and host range. genetic approaches: identifying phenotypes. we are using multiple strategies to identify phenotypes that are associated with the deletion or overexpression of target genes of unknown function. for bacterial pathogens, we have initially focused on genes that, when disrupted, produce measurable growth phenotypes or alterations in cellular barrier function under specified conditions, including antibiotic treatment. these assays are facilitated by wholegenome-mutant defined mutant libraries that allow more efficient high-throughput screening for specific phenotypes ( ) . we are assaying the growth of mutant strains in axenic culture and in cell and animal infection models. the biolog screening platform provides a high-throughput approach to phenotype identification. we are growing individual deletion strains in parallel with wild-type control strains under~ , defined conditions. differences between strains identify specific medium conditions under which a particular gene is required for wild-type growth and have provided clues for target gene function ( ) . in a particular case, a functional genetic study of mutants harboring deletions of genes of unknown function is informing the development of a new live attenuated brucella abortus vaccine strain ( ) . in addition, we are applying genome-wide screening approaches to find genes that interact genetically to modify phenotypes. in our studies of viral pathogens, we have developed a highthroughput, multiarmed screening program to investigate both rna and dna virus-encoded host evasion functions. to accomplish this, we are applying modular cloning technology to easily shuttle candidate genes of unknown function into replicon expression and/or lentiviral vectors for alternate applications, such as the expression of toxic or otherwise challenging proteins and antibody generation. using these screening assays, we are defining viral counterdefense mechanisms mediated by known, novel, and noncanonical viral orfs and ncrnas, whose products modulate the host innate immune response and cellular defense machinery to the virus's advantage. screening assays include assessments of beta interferon (ifn-) antagonism, nf-b, toll-like receptor, and apoptosis modulation, inflammasome signaling, cgas-sting and p pathway modulation, cellular localization, global protein synthesis, and mtor inactivation. for example, we have reported multiple herpesviral proteins that modulate the cgas-sting dna sensing pathway and middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus (mers-cov) and closely related bat merslike virus phosphodiesterase proteins that antagonize rnase l activation during infection ( ) ( ) ( ) . in parallel, we also seek to identify viral entry proteins that program efficient infections across multiple species ( , ) . our synthetic approach allows us to rapidly test hypothetical proteins-proteins whose expression has not yet been verified in the context of infection. genes of interest are then deleted or mutated using reverse genetic platforms, and virus mutant growth is examined both in primary human targets, such as airway epithelial cells and various immune cells, and during infection. although the four centers funded by the fg program have different specific goals, we share approaches and are experiencing common challenges, which we are working to solve together. shared solutions drive research forward. for example, each center includes a small rna (srna) discovery project. there is no generally agreed upon approach to elucidating srna gene function. it has been useful to compare experiences and potential solutions across centers. srna discovery projects as a group are converging on approaches that may work generally in bacteria. in addition, the data management groups at the four centers share common priorities for public dissemination of data and were able as a group to begin the process of defining new priorities for updating capabilities for the patric and vipr brc public resources. an example of this collaboration is the specification of the mode and format for transfer of transposon-sequencing (tn-seq) experimental data and biolog phenotyping data to patric, along with the computational tools to analyze these data ( ) . this effort will standardize the process of data transfer from independent centers and will define the format for public display of these and other data sets generated by fg centers. another interaction is occurring with the seattle structural genomics center for infectious diseases and the center for structural genomics of infectious diseases. using validated overexpression platforms and novel uncharacterized and/or hypothetical orfs, the collaboration is designed to determine the structures of high-priority candidate proteins that antagonize host antimicrobial defense pathways in the host. it is likely in the future that the data we generate will be used by the systems biology centers to further create more complex models of host-pathogen interactions. as described above, we have used a multipronged investigation strategy to directly evaluate unknown and hypothetical genes from a diverse array of pathogens to characterize the biological functions encoded by these genes (table ) . a particular strength of this approach is that this systematic workflow, which can be adapted to all pathogens with sequenced genomes, can ensure rational, directed, and rapid response times for vaccine and therapeutic design in answer to emerging and reemerging epidemics. the work of this program is defining a future blueprint to perform functional analysis of new pathogens as they emerge and to more rapidly respond to the need for knowledge of emerging organisms. design and synthesis of a minimal bacterial genome the combrex project: design, methodology, and initial results a cytoplasmic peptidoglycan amidase homologue controls mycobacterial cell wall synthesis structural asymmetry in a conserved signaling system that regulates division, replication, and virulence of an intracellular pathogen activity-based metabolomic profiling of enzymatic function: identification of rv c as a mycobacterial -hydroxy- -oxoadipate synthase kaposi's sarcoma-associated herpesvirus viral interferon regulatory factor interacts with a member of the interferon-stimulated gene pathway a sars-like cluster of circulating bat coronaviruses shows potential for human emergence sars-like wiv -cov poised for human emergence leaderless transcripts and small proteins are common features of the mycobacterial translational landscape resources for genetic and genomic analysis of emerging pathogen acinetobacter baumannii wrpa is an atypical flavodoxin family protein under regulatory control of the brucella abortus general stress response system brucella abortus ⌬rpoe confers protective immunity against wild type challenge in a mouse model of brucellosis modulation of the cgas-sting dna sensing pathway by gammaherpesviruses evasion of innate cytosolic dna sensing by a gammaherpesvirus facilitates establishment of latent infection middle east respiratory syndrome coronavirus ns b protein inhibits host rnase l activation transit-a software tool for himar tnseq analysis r.s.b. and b.d. were supported by nih grant ai , s.c. was supported by nih grant ai , s.i.m. was supported by nih grant ai , and e.j.r. was supported by nih grant ai . this work, including the efforts of ralph s. baric and blossom damania, was funded by hhs | nih | national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) (ai ). this work, including the efforts of sean crosson, was funded by hhs | nih | national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) (ai ). this work, including the efforts of samuel miller, was funded by hhs | nih | national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) (ai ). this work, including the efforts of eric j. rubin, was funded by hhs | nih | national institute of allergy and infectious diseases (niaid) (ai ). key: cord- -ieb upi authors: papenfuss, anthony t; baker, michelle l; feng, zhi-ping; tachedjian, mary; crameri, gary; cowled, chris; ng, justin; janardhana, vijaya; field, hume e; wang, lin-fa title: the immune gene repertoire of an important viral reservoir, the australian black flying fox date: - - journal: bmc genomics doi: . / - - - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: ieb upi background: bats are the natural reservoir host for a range of emerging and re-emerging viruses, including sars-like coronaviruses, ebola viruses, henipaviruses and rabies viruses. however, the mechanisms responsible for the control of viral replication in bats are not understood and there is little information available on any aspect of antiviral immunity in bats. massively parallel sequencing of the bat transcriptome provides the opportunity for rapid gene discovery. although the genomes of one megabat and one microbat have now been sequenced to low coverage, no transcriptomic datasets have been reported from any bat species. in this study, we describe the immune transcriptome of the australian flying fox, pteropus alecto, providing an important resource for identification of genes involved in a range of activities including antiviral immunity. results: towards understanding the adaptations that have allowed bats to coexist with viruses, we have de novo assembled transcriptome sequence from immune tissues and stimulated cells from p. alecto. we identified about , genes involved in a broad range of activities with the most highly expressed genes involved in cell growth and maintenance, enzyme activity, cellular components and metabolism and energy pathways. . % of the bat transcribed genes corresponded to immune genes and a total of about immune genes were identified, providing an overview of both innate and adaptive immunity. a small proportion of transcripts found no match with annotated sequences in any of the public databases and may represent bat-specific transcripts. conclusions: this study represents the first reported bat transcriptome dataset and provides a survey of expressed bat genes that complement existing bat genomic data. in addition, these data provide insight into genes relevant to the antiviral responses of bats, and form a basis for examining the roles of these molecules in immune response to viral infection. bats make up approximately % of the extant mammalian diversity and are the second most species rich mammalian lineage after rodents [ ] . the order chiroptera is divided into two suborders: the megachiroptera and microchiroptera. these two lineages are estimated to have diverged approximately million years ago [ ] . megachiroptera consists of a single family, the old world fruit bats, while microchiroptera includes families of echolocating bats. bats have a wide geographic distribution and exploit a variety of environmental niches, being absent only from the polar regions. bats are also hosts to numerous viruses, many of which are highly pathogenic to humans and other mammals yet appear to cause no clinical consequences in bats [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . this group of mammals also shares a variety of unique characteristics that likely facilitate the persistence and spread of the viruses they carry. highly social species, bats live at much higher densities than other mammals. they are the only mammals capable of powered flight and have long lifespans relative to their body size [ ] . despite their diversity, unique characteristics and role as natural reservoirs for viruses, bats are also the least studied of all mammalian taxa and there is little information available on antiviral immunity in any bat species. bats are the natural reservoir hosts of more than viruses, with new viruses or viral sequences of bat origin being discovered each year [ , ] . rna viruses account for the overwhelming majority of known bat viruses, many of which are among the most deadly known to man, including ebola, hendra, nipah and sars-like coronaviruses [ ] . many of these viruses, which cause severe morbidity and mortality in humans and other mammals, appear to cause no clinical diseases in bats under natural or experimental infection. the most studied example is the henipaviruses (hendra and nipah viruses) which are members of the family paramyxoviridae. nipah virus has a mortality rate of - % in humans and close to % in experimental animal models (cats and hamsters). yet, infection of pteropus vampyrus (the natural reservoir host of nipah virus in malaysia) and p. poliocephalus (a related bat species native in australia) by a high dose of nipah virus, failed to result in clinical signs of disease [ , , ] . other examples of experimental infections of bats including ebola zaire, japanese encephalitis and st. louis encephalitis viruses have not resulted in any symptoms of disease despite the presence of viral rna in tissues [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . experimental infections of p. poliocephalus with nipah virus have demonstrated the presence of serum antibody and viral shedding in the absence of clinical symptoms of disease [ ] . the only viruses that have been demonstrated to cause clinical symptoms of disease in bats are rabies virus and the closely related australian bat lyssavirus [ , ] . however, results of experimental infections are inconsistent with only a small proportion of bats succumbing to infection, and rates of sero-conversion and virus recovery from tissues were reported to be very low [ ] . the long co-evolutionary history of bats with viruses has likely resulted in the adaptation of the bats immune system to cope with viral infection. one hypothesis is that the innate immune system rapidly controls viral replication to very low levels that cause no clinical consequences to bats, but still results in viral shedding and subsequent spillover to other species. however, as little information currently exists on any aspect of bat immunology and few bat-specific reagents exist, this hypothesis remains untested. recent years have seen a surge in the availability of whole genome sequence data. bats were among the organisms sequenced as part of the us national institutes of health (nih)-funded mammalian genome project. these genomic resources are an important step forward in identifying the genes that are involved in antiviral immunity in bats and in providing insights into other unique life history characteristics. there are currently two publicly available bat genome sequences: one from the megabat p. vampyrus and a second from the microbat myotis lucifugus. both bat genomes were initially sequenced to low coverage ( . x for p. vampyrus and . x for m. lucifugus, though a draft quality assembly of the m. lucifugus genome based on x coverage sequencing is now available). additionally, the annotations were predominantly based upon comparative data. despite these shortcomings, these projects have an important role to play in revealing the mechanisms that have evolved to allow bats to remain asymptomatic to so many viral diseases. in order to understand bat-virus interactions, we are developing the australian black flying fox, p. alecto, as a model bat species. p. alecto belongs to the family pteropodidae and is closely related to p. vampyrus [ ] . these two species are reservoirs for a variety of closely related viruses, the most important of which include the henipaviruses, hendra virus in p. alecto and nipah virus in p. vampyrus [ ] . a number of important resources have now been developed for p. alecto, including cell lines from a variety of tissues [ ] . we have also begun to identify some of the genes involved in immune responses in this species and carry out functional studies in bat cells [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . to begin to characterise the immune gene repertoire of p. alecto, we sequenced the transcriptome of bat immune tissues and mitogen-stimulated cells using the illumina platform. to our knowledge, this study represents the first analysis of the transcriptome of any species of bat. our analysis of the p. alecto transcriptome provides information on a variety of immune genes not previously identified in any bat species and represents an important starting point for examining the antiviral activity of these molecules. overview of the bat transcriptome two separate transcriptomic datasets were generated and raw sequences from each database were submitted to the sequence read archive [sra: srr . and srr . ]. the first was obtained using total rna extracted from a juvenile male flying fox thymus. due to its role in central tolerance, the thymus expresses a large proportion of the proteome and therefore allows for the identification of a broad range of genes, including those involved in the immune response. to enrich for sequences corresponding to cytokines and innate immune genes, the second dataset was derived from pooled total rna obtained from mitogen-stimulated spleen, white blood cells and lymph node and unstimulated thymus and bone marrow obtained from one pregnant female and one adult male flying fox. cells were stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (lps) and ionomycin, which stimulate the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines; polyic, a tlr ligand; pha, which triggers t cell activation and pma, which activates t and b cells. about . million bp long reads were obtained from the thymus dataset, while . million bp long reads were generated from the stimulated pooled sample. prior to assembly, the raw reads were trimmed of low quality sequence and polya/t tails, uninformative strings of 'n' and primer/adapter contaminants were cleaned. the filtered dataset consisted of , , reads from the thymus (between - bp) and , , reads from the stimulated pooled dataset (between - bp). the filtered reads were de novo assembled using the software packages velvet and oases. the resulting oases assemblies consisted of , contigs (n bp) from the thymus and , contigs (n bp) from the pooled samples. the largest contigs in the thymus and pooled samples were . kb and . kb respectively, both of which correspond to the dna-dependent protein kinase catalytic subunit (dna-pkcs) which is represented by a . kb transcript in other species, including horse. for comparative purposes, an assembly using mira was also generated. summary statistics from the velvet, oases and mira assemblies are listed in additional file : table s . all subsequent analyses were performed using the oases assemblies. to identify orthologues of known mammalian protein coding genes, the bat contigs were used to search the kegg and ncbi non-redundant (nr) protein databases with blastx (e-value < . ). of the , contigs longer than bp in the thymus sequence assembly, about % matched annotated proteins in the nr database. for the pooled dataset, about % of the , loci matched proteins in nr. similar results were obtained for both assembled libraries against the kegg database. of the assembled thymus transcripts annotated using kegg, % of all transcripts were more similar to horse sequences than to any other species, followed by dog ( %) and cow ( %) (figure ). similar results were obtained for the pooled tissue dataset (not shown). this result is consistent with the now generally accepted view that bats belong within laurasiatheria, which includes carnivora, cetartiodactyla (whales and even toed ungulates), eulipotyphla (moles and shrews), pholidota (scaly anteater) and perissodactyla (odd toed ungulates) [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, until recently, the phylogenetic relationships within laurasiatheria have been controversial. conflicting results have been reported using complete mitochondrial genome sequences to infer phylogenetic relationships with support for a sister relationship between chiroptera and fereungulata (carnivora, pholidota, perissodactyla and cetartiodactyla) or a relationship between chiroptera and eulipotyphla [ ] [ ] [ ] . analysis of the nuclear gene, protamine p , as well as large genomic datasets, has provided evidence that bats are sister to a clade containing perissodactyla, carnivora, and cetartiodactyla [ , ] . the volume of sequence data generated by transcriptome sequencing provides the opportunity for larger scale sequence comparisons than previously possible using the few full length bat genes available or by comparison with the limited whole genome sequence data. our results support the comparative analysis of retroposon loci which has also demonstrated that bats share a sister relationship with horses, forming a clade with carnivora [ ] . alignment of contigs from the thymus and pooled datasets to the kegg database identified , and , contigs respectively with homology to , and , unique human proteins. to explore gene function, gene ontology (go) terms were used. of contigs that matched proteins in the kegg database, % were assigned go terms and % could be mapped to go slim terms using go term mapper (additional file : figure s ). genes with go slim terms were further classified into twelve selected classes ( figure ). the most abundant go terms found in the thymus dataset were involved in cell growth and maintenance ( . %), enzyme activity ( . %), cellular components ( . %) and metabolism and energy pathways ( . %). similar results were obtained for the pooled tissue dataset (data not shown). the go classification demonstrates that a diverse range of genes were identified in each of our two datasets providing a broad survey of bat genes. a goal of the present study was to identify immune transcripts, particularly those that may play a role in antiviral immunity. only . % of the bat transcribed genes from each of the datasets showed homology to genes associated with immune function. this represents about different immune-related genes ( figure ). the bat immune transcripts were further categorised using go terms to annotate the transcripts into immune categories. represented in the datasets were genes involved in a broad range of immune activities with lymphocyte activation, cytokine production and t cell activation making up the largest proportions of immune transcripts ( figure ). using kegg codes to identify immune genes, our data revealed genes involved in toll-like receptor (tlr) cascades, genes involved in b cell activation, involved in t cell activation, involved in natural killer cell cytotoxicity and involved in antigen presentation. additional immune genes not identified in the kegg database were obtained by searching sequences from the nr database. the sequences of all genes described in the text are provided in the additional file . one hypothesis for the ability of bats to resist the pathological effects of viral infection is that they are able to rapidly control viral replication early in the immune response through innate antiviral mechanisms. the bat transcriptome contained representatives of a variety of immune genes including pattern recognition receptors, interferons, interferon stimulated genes and natural killer cell receptors. pattern recognition receptors (prr) including tlrs, rig-i like helicases (rlhs) and nucleotide oligomerisation domain (nod) like receptors (nlrs) recognise conserved molecular patterns associated with a broad range of pathogens. both tlrs and rlhs initiate signalling pathways that result in the induction of similar immune and inflammatory responses but are expressed in different locations within the cell and differ in the pathogens they recognise. tlrs are transmembrane proteins expressed by the plasma membrane or endosome and recognise a broad range of pathogens including viruses, bacteria and fungi. of eleven previously identified p. alecto tlr genes [ ] , only tlr was absent from the oases assemblies, however it was present in the mira assembly, which used a lower coverage cut-off and is useful for identifying genes with low expression levels. rlhs are expressed in the cytoplasm where they recognise viral rna and dna [ , ] . three bat rlh genes, retinoic-acid-inducible protein i (rig-i), melanoma-differentiation-associated gene (mda ) and laboratory of genetics and physiology (lgp ) were identified in our transcriptome datasets and have recently been described in p. alecto [ ] . these results provide further evidence that bats are able to recognise a broad range of pathogens, similar to other species. nlrs are a diverse family of cytoplasmic prrs involved in the activation of a variety of signalling pathways. nlrs are primarily involved in bacterial recognition, although more recently, evidence for recognition of viral rna and dna by some members of the nlr family has been reported [ ] [ ] [ ] . the only nlrs identified in the bat transcriptome datasets were nod-like receptor family card domain containing (nlrc ) and nlr family, pyrin domain containing (nlrp ). nlrc is a recently identified nlr proposed to function as a positive and negative regulator of antiviral immune responses [ ] . nlrp (also known as nalp ) is activated by a variety of danger signals including viral and bacterial infections and environmental irritants. activation of nlrp in turn activates caspase- in the inflammasome which proteolytically cleaves the cytokines il- β and il- into active mature peptides [ ] . the identification two nlrs with associations with antiviral immunity in the bat transcriptome is remarkable and provides a starting point for understanding the role of nlrs in antiviral immunity in bats. the interferon (ifn) response is a key component of the innate immune system and the first cytokines induced against viral infection. since the ifn response is important in the control of viral replication in other mammals, we searched the bat transcriptome for ifns and ifn stimulated genes (isgs) that may be critical to the ability of bats to remain asymptomatic to viral infections. type i (including ifnα and β) and iii (ifnλ) ifns are induced directly in response to viral infection and play a role in the earliest stages of the innate immune response. type i (α) ifn and its receptor (ifnar and ifnar ) were identified in the bat transcriptome datasets (additional file ). although type iii ifns, ifnλ and ifnλ are upregulated in stimulated bat cells [ ] , neither of these genes were identified in our datasets, likely reflecting a low expression level in our samples. the il- r chain of the type iii ifn receptor was present in the bat transcriptome, but its partner chain ifnlr was not found. both il- r and ifnlr were recently described in p. alecto and ifnlr was demonstrated to act as a functional receptor for ifnλ [ ] . the induction of type i and type iii ifns results in the transcription of hundreds of isgs including prrs that detect viral rna, transcription factors that result in the amplification of the ifn response and a small number of proteins that are directly responsible for inducing an antiviral state. the isgs, myxovirus resistance (mx) gtpases, protein kinase r (pkr), '- ' oligoadenylate synthetases (oas), ribonuclease l (rnasel) and isg are among the proteins with confirmed antiviral activity in other mammals [ ] . the bat transcriptome datasets contained genes orthologous to mammalian mx , mx , oas , oas , oas , oas-like (oasl), pkr, rnasel and isg consistent with the presence of an isg repertoire in bats that is similar to that of other species. these results provide the first evidence that the pathways activated by the ifn response are likely similar in bats to those described in other mammals. the mx gene family is among the best characterised isgs, first identified as antiviral proteins following the observation that the sensitivity of many inbred mouse strains to orthomyxovirus was solely due to mutations within the mx locus [ ] . the mx family of gtpases trap essential viral components, and in so doing prevent viral replication at early time points. although the full spectrum of mx antiviral activity is unknown, representatives of both rna and dna viruses have been shown to be sensitive to the effects of mx [ ] . a full length transcript, encoding a amino acid protein was identified in our bat transcriptome datasets and found to be orthologous to mx based on comparison with known mammalian mx and mx family members (figure a and data not shown). bat mx contained the highly conserved tripartite gtp-binding domain found in all mammalian mx proteins. in addition, a dynamin family signature and putative leucine zipper motif were found near the c terminal end, represented by a stretch of evenly spaced leucine residues. the bat protein was also conserved in the region identified as the stalk of human mxa including loop which is associated with antiviral activity. consistent with other species, loop of the mxa stalk is the least conserved region of the bat mx protein [ ] . loop has been reported to be proteinase k sensitive and may play a role in lipid binding [ , ] (figure b ). bat mx does not contain the stretch of basic amino acids (k/r) near the c terminal end associated with nuclear localisation of mouse mx , consistent with the bat protein remaining localised within the cytoplasm [ ] . the conservation of key residues important in antiviral activity is consistent with the bat mx playing a role in antiviral immunity similar to other species. the identification of the sequences of important isgs will now allow us to determine whether functional differences in the initiation and regulation of these proteins account for the differences in susceptibility of bats to viral infections compared to other mammals. natural killer (nk) cells are an important component of the innate immune response, providing a first line of defence against viruses and tumours. to our knowledge, no investigations of nk cell receptors from any species of bat have been reported previously. nk cells express cell surface receptors that recognise major histocompatibility complex (mhc) class i or class i like molecules on the surface of cells and lyse infected or abnormal cells by cytotoxicity. two families of nk receptors that bind classical mhc class i ligands have been identified: the killer immunoglobulin like receptors (kirs), which are encoded by genes in the leukocyte receptor complex (lrc), and the killer cell lectin like receptors (klrs), which are encoded by genes in the natural killer complex (nkc). different lineages of mammals make use of genes from the two different superfamilies to carry out analogous functions. kirs are used preferentially by primates, cattle, domestic cats, dogs and pigs [ , ] . similarly, the kir-like receptors, marsupial immunoglobulin-like receptors (mairs) and chicken immunoglobulin-like receptors (chirs), have expanded in marsupials and chickens respectively [ , ] . although chir-ab binds igy, the ligand for the majority of chirs is unknown and the presence of a charged transmembrane residue and a cytoplasmic immunoreceptor tyrosine-based inhibition motif (itim), are consistent with the possibility that they play a role in nk activity [ ] . rodents, horses and platypus are the only species so far described that have expanded the klrs, represented by the ly family [ ] [ ] [ ] . in the bat transcriptome dataset, no transcripts with homology to kirs or ly receptors were identified. in bony fish, novel immune type receptors (nitrs) which contain an n terminal variable domain and a c terminal ig domain have been identified as the primary activating and inhibitory receptors expressed by nk cells [ ] . nitrs were also used to search the bat transcriptome but failed to identify any orthologous transcripts. the failure to find kir or ly like receptors in the bat transcriptome may reflect low expression levels of these genes resulting in their absence from our datasets. however, blast searches of the publicly available whole genome sequence of the closely related pteropid bat, p. vampyrus revealed no evidence of kirs or ly receptors. as this is a low coverage genome ( . x), further work is required to determine whether pteropid bats have kir and/or ly receptors. overall, the absence of these important nk receptors from our datasets warrants further investigation into the nature of nk cells in bats. nk cells in a wide range of mammalian species additionally express cd /nkg (also called klrd / klrc) lectin-like receptor heterodimers. unlike the kir and ly receptors, which bind (classical) mhc class ia ligands, the cd /nkg heterodimer binds the (non-classical) mhc class ib ligands hla-e and qa- in humans and mice respectively [ ] . the cd / nkg a heterodimer generates inhibitory signals whereas the cd /nkg c heterodimer generates activating signals within nk cells. both cd and nkg a were identified in the bat transcriptome, however nkg c transcripts were not identified, possibly reflecting the low abundance of transcripts of this gene in our datasets. two and nkg a transcripts were identified in the thymus and pooled datasets respectively and six transcripts corresponding to cd were identified in the pooled dataset. two of the longest nkg a sequences were aligned with nkg a and nkg c sequences from human and mouse. as shown in figure a , the bat genes display highest conservation with other nkg a genes including the presence of conserved itim motifs in their cytoplasmic domains, designated by i/v/l/sxyxxl/v indicating that they are likely functional inhibitory receptors [ ] . the more divergent nkg d, which binds mhc class i chain-related genes, mica/b, and the ul binding proteins (ulbps) in human [ ] , was also detected. two distinct bat cd contigs were identified, one of which is missing two conserved cysteines in the stalk region, the first of which forms an interchain disulfide bond with nkg and the second which forms an intrachain disulphide bond. the second bat cd sequence is missing a conserved cysteine in the extracellular domain that forms an intrachain disulphide bond (figure b ). the absence of key cysteines in both of the bat cd sequences may have implications for the formation of heterodimers with nkg and for the unique folding of the cd chain. combined with our failure to detect kirs or ly receptors, our data may provide the first evidence for the presence of atypical nk cell responses in bats. however, confirmation of the nature of the nk response and the composition of receptors used by bat nk cells awaits further investigation. other nk receptors were also identified in our datasets including cd which acts as an activating or inhibitory receptor on human and mouse nk cells respectively [ ] and the natural cytotoxicity receptors expressed by nk cells. co-receptors including cd and cd expressed by subsets of nk cells in other species were also identified in the bat transcriptome. identification of nk cell receptors and co-receptors provides information for the development of reagents to identify bat nk cells and paves the way for further studies of nk cell function during viral infection in bats. genes involved in the adaptive immune system, including mhc class i and ii genes and t and b cell receptors and co-receptors were highly represented in both the thymus and pooled datasets providing evidence that bats have all of the components necessary to mount an adaptive immune response. mhc class i molecules play an important role in the initiation of the adaptive immune response through recognition of endogenously-derived peptides from viruses and other pathogens. in the thymus dataset, contigs had homology to mammalian mhc class i proteins, while were homologous in the pooled data. other transcripts in the mhc class i antigen-loading and presentation pathway were also identified, including beta- -microglobulin, transporter associated with antigen processing (tap ), calnexin and tapasin. class irelated genes were also present in the bat transcriptome dataset including cd a, cd b, cd d, mr , hfe, fcrn and ulbps, which have a variety of immune and nonimmune functions. the presence of ulbps is consistent with the expression of nkg d, but orthologues of mica/b or mill were not observed. the presence of nkg d suggests bats should have a mic homologue, but these may not be detected possibly due to low or tissue-specific expression. to our knowledge, these sequences provide the first class i and class i-associated transcripts from any species of bat. of the contigs with homology to mhc class i genes in the thymus dataset, contained in-frame stops. these may be expressed pseudogenes, represent assembly or sequencing errors or result from reading frame shifts due to the presence of unprocessed transcript. as the sequences were obtained from multiple individuals, it is not possible to confidently distinguish between alternative isoforms, alleles and in some cases, loci. however, clustering the remaining contigs with open reading frames (orfs), there are clearly at least distinct mhc class i genes expressed. the majority of class i contigs contained the α or α domain or partial sequence corresponding to both domains and were used for further sequence analysis. the deduced amino acid sequence of contigs with the most complete α or α domains were aligned with human hla-a ( figure ). all of the bat class i sequences contained a unique three amino acid insertion in the α domain that appears to be bat specific. as shown in figure , the bat transcripts display amino acid variation in their α and α domains, corresponding to the peptide binding region. however, they appear to be remarkably conserved from residues to of the α domain. these results may indicate that bats contain a very closely related class i gene repertoire that have coevolved with the specific viruses they carry. some of the class i transcripts represented in the thymus and pooled datasets contained an bp insertion at the end of the α domain. the longest of these transcripts corresponded to the leader peptide through to amino acids of the α domain and is shown in figure . the insertion at the end of the α domain is not present in class i sequences from other mammals and includes two in frame stop codons that would prevent translation beyond the α domain ( figure ). this sequence was figure a. alignment of deduced amino acid sequences of bat nkg with human and mouse nkg a and nkg c. sequences are divided into cytoplasmic, transmembrane, stalk, and lectin domains. the predicted itim motifs in the cytoplasmic domain are shaded. the conserved cysteine residue in the stalk predicted to be involved in interchain disulphide bond formation with cd is shaded and indicated with an asterisk. dashes indicate similarity and dots indicate gaps. b. alignment of the deduced amino acid sequences of bat cd with the human and mouse orthologues. sequences are divided into cytoplasmic, transmembrane, stalk, and lectin domains. conserved cysteines predicted to be involved in disulphide bond formation are shaded. cysteine pairs are indicated by identical numbers below the cysteine. the cysteine predicted to form a disulphide bond with nkg is indicated with an asterisk. confirmed by race pcr and transcripts were detected in a variety of tissues including lymph node, spleen, liver, lung, heart, kidney, small intestine, brain and salivary glands, thus providing evidence that they are not an artefact of the transcriptome assembly (data not shown). comparison with the closely related p. vampyrus whole genome sequence available in ensembl revealed that the bp insertion is identical to the beginning of intron of a p. vampyrus class i gene. mhc class i splice variants that retain intron sequence and result in the translation of a truncated protein have been identified in other mammals, including soluble splice variants of human hla-g that plays a role in immunoregulation at the feotal-maternal interface [ ] . further investigation will be required to determine whether the bat gene encodes a soluble protein corresponding only to the α domain or whether it represents a transcribed pseudogene. however, given the abundance of this transcript in our datasets it is possible that it plays a role in immune regulation in p. alecto. unlike class i molecules, which are ubiquitously expressed, class ii molecules are expressed only by antigen presenting and b cells and present exogenously derived peptides to t cells. the mhc class ii molecules are composed of an α and a β chain encoded by a and b genes respectively [ , ] . eutherians have three main classical class ii gene clusters: dp, dr, and dq, as well as the nonclassical dm and dn/do gene clusters [ , ] . sequences corresponding to exon of mhc class ii drb genes have been described in four species of microbats [ ] [ ] [ ] . however, prior to the present study no class ii genes have been reported from any species of megabat. sequences corresponding to genes involved in the class ii antigen processing and presentation pathway were also identified in our datasets including the class ii invariant (cd ) chain and cathepsin s (additional file ). in the p. alecto thymus and pooled datasets we identified and contigs respectively that were homologous to class ii sequences. phylogenetic analysis revealed that the alpha chain sequences were homologous to dma, doa, dqa and dra from other mammals (figure a ) and the beta chain sequences were homologous to dmb, dob, dqb and drb (figure b ). these results are consistent with orthologous relationships between the bat class ii genes and those from other mammals. t cell receptor (tcr) genes corresponding to all four chains of the t cell receptor were present in our datasets, consistent with bats having both αβ and γδ t cells. sequences corresponding to the constant and variable domains of the tcr were identified including many tcrα related contigs, tcrβ related contigs, a few tcrγ and tcrδ chain related contigs. in humans and mice approximately % of circulating t cells express the αβ t cell receptor. in contrast, γδ t cells account for up to % of circulating t cells in young ruminants, rabbits and chickens [ , ] . the low abundance of tcrγ and tcrδ related transcripts in our datasets is consistent with the possibility that αβ t cells may be the predominant tcr present in bats. in addition, a variety of t cell co-receptors, including the accessory tcrζ chain, cd , cd , cd and cd were identified in our datasets. we previously described the immunoglobulin heavy chain diversity of p. alecto, revealing the presence of a highly diverse variable region gene repertoire [ ] . sequences encoding the variable and constant domains of immunoglobulin heavy and light chains were represented in our datasets. these included heavy chain genes encoding iga, igg, igm and ige, which have previously been described in the megabat, cynopterus sphinx. no evidence for the transcription of igd was observed in the p. alecto transcriptome, a result which is consistent with c. sphinx [ ] . the two light chain subtypes, kappa and lambda and a variety of b cell co-receptors including cd , cd , cd , cd a and cd b were also identified in our datasets (additional file ). many of the bat immune transcripts showed high levels of sequence similarity compared to homologues from other mammals. among the most conserved bat innate immune genes were the prrs; the tlrs, rig-i helicases and nlrs, which displayed > % amino acid identity with homologues. this likely reflects their roles in the recognition of conserved pathogen motifs. members of the oas family were also highly conserved, in particular oas which shared % amino acid identity with the dog oas sequence. in addition, the nk co-receptor, cd shared % amino acid identity with mouse, hamster, guinea pig and human sequences. among the adaptive immune genes, mhc associated proteins, calnexin, tap and cathepsin s shared - % identity with corresponding sequences from other mammals reflecting their conserved roles in the antigen processing and presentation pathway. several members of the mhc class i and ii families were also highly conserved, including cd b and cd d which shared and % amino acid identity with horse and chimp sequences respectively. the bat mhc class ii doa and dra shared and % amino acid identity with orthologous sequences in other mammals. the t cell co-receptor, cd shared % identity with the rhinoceros cd sequence and the constant domain of igm shared % identity with camel igm. there were > , unannotated contigs in the thymus and pooled datasets. only about % of these contigs matched predicted cdnas from the p. vampyrus genome sequence, which are annotated using orthologous sequences from other species [ ] . the unannotated contigs contained a total of open reading frames (orfs) longer than bp. of these, . % (e-value < - ) aligned to the closely related p. vampyrus whole genome sequence and represent highly divergent homologues or bat specific genes. the remaining loci represent either misassembled contigs or bat-specific transcripts that are located in sequencing gaps in the low coverage p. vampyrus genome sequence. the long (> nt) orfs were searched for conserved domains using profile hidden markov models with hmmscan (hmmer v ; http://hmmer.org/) obtained from the pfam database [ ] . this identified orfs containing unique domains, including several defensins, antimicrobial peptides and dna-binding domains. searches using domain models from the pfam-b database, identified a further unique, predicted-conserved domains in orfs. a further orfs remained unannotated. a high proportion of these were rich in cysteine, tryptophan and proline, and prolines frequently appeared in low complexity regions (additional file : figure s a and b) . further characterisation of these unannotated transcripts will provide insight into whether they are functionally significant and in particular whether any unique bat specific transcripts are involved in the antiviral immune response. bats are a highly diverse, species rich group of mammals that have evolved a variety of distinctive characteristics since their divergence from other mammals [ ] . despite the central importance of bats in harbouring a variety of viruses with the potential to spillover to other species, very little is known about antiviral immunity in bats. next generation sequencing provides the opportunity to survey genes that are conserved between distantly related species as well as to provide insights into novel adaptations through the identification of previously unidentified transcripts. to identify genes involved in the immune response, we carried out a transcriptome analysis of thymus and immune cells and tissues of the australian black flying fox, p. alecto. this study represents the first survey of expressed bat immune genes and complements existing low coverage bat genome sequences. our analysis provides a broad overview of the bat transcriptome and contains representatives of all of the major classes of immune genes. the results are consistent with bats having all of the components of the immune system present in other mammals. the majority of these correspond to genes that have not previously been described in any species of bat and thus represent an important resource for future investigations into antiviral immunity in bats. animals p. alecto bats used in this study were wild caught from east brisbane, queensland, australia. bats were handled and euthanised as previously described [ ] . all experiments were approved by the australian animal health laboratories animal ethics committee (protocol aec ). the thymus was removed from a juvenile male bat and immediately stored in rnalater (ambion) for rna extraction. the spleen, lymph nodes (ln), thymus, bone marrow and peripheral blood were collected from one adult male and one pregnant female bat. single cells were extracted from the spleen, thymus and ln by tissue extrusion through a μm sterile sieve (bd biosciences) in the presence of dmem supplemented with mm l-glutamine, units/ml penicillin and units/ml streptomycin (invitrogen). splenocytes and peripheral blood lymphocytes (pbmls) were isolated by density centrifugation over lymphoprep (nycomed, oslo) as described previously [ ] . cells were resuspended in dmem with % fcs, mm l-glutamine, units/ml penicillin and units/ml streptomycin and cell numbers were determined using a haemocytometer with trypan blue exclusion. the thymus and bone marrow cells were stored in rnalater (ambion) for rna extraction and the spleen, thymus and ln were cultured with a variety of stimulants. the isolated splenocytes, ln and pbmls from each bat were pooled and were then seeded at x cells per well in well tissue culture plates (nunc) with pha ( ug/ml; sigma) and lps ( μg/ml; sigma); pma ( μg/ml; sigma) and ionomycin ( nm/ml; sigma); or polyic ( μg/ml; invivogen) and incubated in a humidified atmosphere of % co in air at °c. cells were harvested in rlt buffer (qiagen) at , , and hours and homogenised using a qiashredder (qiagen) following the manufacturer's instructions. the lysate was then stored at − °c and total rna extracted the next day ( , , and hours) or processed immediately ( hours). rna extraction was carried out as previously described using the rneasy mini kit (qiagen) with removal of genomic dna with dnase i digestion [ ] . total rna from the thymus of a juvenile male bat was used for illumina sequencing separately from all other samples. total rna obtained from the stimulated and unstimulated cells from the two adult bats was pooled as follows: % thymus total rna ( % from each bat) and % pooled total rna from the rest of the mitogen stimulated and unstimulated cells/tissues (~ . % for each sample; total of samples). sequencing mrna isolation from total rna, library preparation and single-end read sequencing was performed by geneworks pty ltd, thebarton south australia using the illumina genome analyser iix sequencing platform. library preparation was performed as per illumina's mrna sequencing sample preparation guide (part # rev. d) except μg of total rna was used for mrna selection using poly-t oligo-attached magnetic beads. the thymus library was run on a single lane of a flow cell resulting in more than . million -base sequences for a total of about . gigabases (gb) of sequence. the pooled library consisted of lanes resulting in million bp sequences for a total of about . gb of sequence. sequence pre-processing and de novo assembly the quality of the sequences were evaluated using fastqc [ ] . sequences were pre-processed in two stages. first, all bases at the ' end of the reads with quality scores of or lower were removed. second, poly a/t tails, uninformative sequences (ns) and primer/adaptor contaminants were trimmed using snowhite (version . . ) [ ], a cleaning pipeline for next-generation cdna sequences, which includes seqclean [ ] and tagdust [ ] . we ran snowhite with two runs of seqclean and one run of tag-dust and a final minimal length cutoff of bp was used. the pre-processed sequences were de novo assembled using two different approaches. ( ) the reads were assembled with velvet (version . . ) [ ] using individual kmers from bp to bp. next, the contigs produced by velvet were processed using oases (version . . ) [ ] . oases loci were then merged using cd-hit-est (version . ) [ ] with a global sequence identity threshold of . . finally, a length cutoff was set to bp and the default coverage cutoff of was used. we term the final result of this process a contig ( ) . the reads were also assembled using mira (v . . rc ) [ ] with default setting for est and illumina reads assembly, i.e. maximum front and end gap clip is bp, maximum length of the possible vector leftover allowed is bp, minimum quality score, window length and read length were all set to , allowed to clip poly a/t at ends, and minimum read coverage per contig was . the bat contigs were firstly annotated by using the best hits of blastx [ ] search against nr protein database and kegg pathway database with an e-value cutoff of . for annotating the protein coding contigs that were conserved with other species. then the unannotated contigs were further annotated by using blastn search against refseq_rna database with an e-value cutoff of - for the contigs containing conserved utrs and without significant protein coding regions. the contigs not annotated by the above two steps were further analysed by using blastn against the cdnas from megabat (p. vampyrus) and microbat (m. lucifugus). we translated the un-annotated transcripts into protein sequences from frames, extracted the orfs longer than bp. this was performed separately for the datasets. these orfs were searched against pfam-a and pfam-b databases to identify conserved domains. the two sets of long orfs were pooled and clustered based on cd-hit with sequence identity of % [ ] . the amino acid compositions were further analysed for the nonredundant longer orfs with composition profiler [ ] . all the kegg ids of the human proteins identified by the blastx searches were extracted from the annotation process and were mapped to uniprot ids. then the go analysis for the uniprot proteins (uniprotkb-goa: gene_association.goa_human) was used to assign the go terms for the transcripts. the number of genes in categories of the go slim database was counted using the go term classification counter, categoriser [ , ] and the immune category of the bat genes was annotated using the generic gene ontology term mapper [ ] . the go classifications were further grouped into twelve broad categories as follows: cell death and apoptosis go: ; extracellular matrix go: ; cell, go: and nucleoplasm, go: ). binding (binding, go: ; protein binding, go: go: ; nucleotide binding go: ; actin binding, go: ; calcium ion binding, go: ; chromatin binding, go: ; carbohydrate binding, go: and rna binding, go: ). reproduction and development (development enzyme activity (catalytic activity go: ca), based on the protein alignment to retain codon positions. based on the nucleotide and protein alignments, phylogenetic trees were constructed by the neighbour joining method [ ], maximum parsimony and minimum evolution using the mega program the genbank accession numbers for sequences used in the sequence and phylogenetic analysis are as follows: mhc class i: (cap ) hla-a; mhc class iia: human, homo sapiens (hosa) dma (nm_ ) dqa (m ), dra (u ) dra (nm_ ), dma (nm_ ) gallus gallus (gaga) b-la (ay ) mhc class iib: hosa dqb (m ), drb (nm_ ), dob (l ), dpb (m ), dmb (u ) rattus norvegicus (rano) dqb (x ) equus caballus (eqca) dqb (l ) dmb (dq ), drb (ay ) ovis aries (ovar) dqb (l ) mumu (nm_ ) hosa (af _ ) avian mx: gaga (np_ ) mammal species of the world: a taxonomic and geographic reference in the timetree of life human ebola outbreak resulting from direct exposure to fruit bats in luebo, democratic republic of congo swanepoel r: fruit bats as reservoirs of ebola virus studies of arthropod-borne virus infections in chiroptera. iv. the immune response of the big brown bat (eptesicus f. fuscus) maintained at various environmental temperatures to experimental japanese b encephalitis virus infection experimental inoculation of plants and animals with ebola virus transmission studies of hendra virus (equine morbillivirus) in fruit bats, horses and cats experimental hendra virus infection in pregnant guinea-pigs and fruit bats (pteropus poliocephalus) bats: important reservoir hosts of emerging viruses bats as a continuing source of emerging infections in humans experimental nipah virus infection in pteropid bats (pteropus poliocephalus) australian bat lyssavirus infection in a captive juvenile black flying fox pathogenesis studies with australian bat lyssavirus in grey-headed flying foxes (pteropus poliocephalus) a phylogenetic supertree of the bats (mammalia: chiroptera) establishment, immortalisation and characterisation of pteropid bat cell lines immunoglobulin heavy chain diversity in pteropid bats: evidence for a diverse and highly specific antigen binding repertoire molecular characterisation of rigi-like helicases in the black flying fox, pteropus alecto molecular characterisation of toll-like receptors in the black flying fox pteropus alecto interferon production and signaling pathways are antagonized during henipavirus infection of fruit bat cell lines type iii ifn receptor expression and functional characterisation in the pteropid bat, pteropus alecto type iii ifns in pteropid bats: differential expression patterns provide evidence for distinct roles in antiviral immunity complete mitochondrial genome of a neotropical fruit bat, artibeus jamaicensis; and a new hypothesis of the relationships of bats to other eutherian mammals parallel adaptive radiations in two major clades of placental mammals molecular phylogenetics and the origins of placental mammals resolution of the early placental mammal radiation using bayesian phylogenetics molecules consolidate the placental mammal tree pegasoferae, an unexpected mammalian clade revealed by tracking ancient retroposon insertions the phylogenetic position of the talpidae within eutheria based on analysis of complete mitochondrial sequences monophyletic origin of the order chiroptera and its phylogenetic position among mammalia, as inferred from the complete sequence of the mitochondrial dna of a japanese megabat, the ryukyu flying fox (pteropus dasymallus) maximum likelihood analysis of the complete mitochondrial genomes of eutherians and a reevaluation of the phylogeny of bats and insectivores confirming the phylogeny of mammals by use of large comparative sequence data sets characterization and phylogenetic utility of the mammalian protamine p gene differential roles of mda and rig-i helicases in the recognition of rna viruses shared and unique functions of the dexd/h-box helicases rig-i, mda , and lgp in antiviral innate immunity function of nod-like receptors in microbial recognition and host defense regulation of immune pathways by the nod-like receptor nlrc nlrp inflammasome activation: the convergence of multiple signalling pathways on ros production? interferon-inducible antiviral effectors transgenic mice with intracellular immunity to influenza virus the mx gtpase family of interferon-induced antiviral proteins. microbes and infection the interferon-induced mx protein of chickens lacks antiviral activity stalk domain of the dynamin-like mxa gtpase protein mediates membrane binding and liposome tubulation via the unstructured l loop structural basis of oligomerization in the stalk region of dynamin-like mxa transport of the murine mx protein into the nucleus is dependent on a basic carboxy-terminal sequence natural killer cell receptors in cattle: a bovine killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor multigene family contains members with divergent signaling motifs comparative genomics of natural killer cell receptor gene clusters characterization of the opossum immune genome provides insights into the evolution of the mammalian immune system the leukocyte receptor complex in chicken is characterized by massive expansion and diversification of immunoglobulin-like loci the chicken leukocyte receptor complex encodes a family of different affinity fcy receptors the ever-expanding ly gene family: repertoire and signaling natural killer cell receptors in the horse: evidence for the existence of multiple transcribed ly genes identification of natural killer cell receptor clusters in the platypus genome reveals an expansion of c-type lectin genes the phylogenetic origins of natural killer receptors and recognition: relationships, possibilities, and realities nk gene complex dynamics and selection for nk cell receptors signaling pathways engaged by nk cell receptors: double concerto for activating receptors, inhibitory receptors and nk cells of mice and men: different functions of the murine and human b (cd ) receptor on nk cells biology and functions of human leukocyte antigen-g in health and sickness* nomenclature for factors of the hla system three-dimensional structure of the human class ii histocompatibility antigen hla-dr sequence organisation of the class ii region of the human mhc evolutionary relationships of class ii majorhistocompatibility-complex genes in mammals class ii drb polymorphism and sequence diversity in two vesper bats in the genus myotis non-neutral evolution of the major histocompatibility complex class ii gene drb in the sac-winged bat saccopteryx bilineata mhc class ii drb diversity, selection pattern and population structure in a neotropical bat species, noctilio albiventris prominence of gamma delta t cells in the ruminant immune system characterization of avian t-cell receptor γ genes the two suborders of chiropterans have the canonical heavy-chain immunoglobulin (ig) gene repertoire of eutherian mammals the pfam protein families database a molecular phylogeny for bats illuminates biogeography and the fossil record tagdust-a program to eliminate artifacts from next generation sequencing data velvet: algorithms for de novo short read assembly using de bruijn graphs oases: de novo transcriptome assembler for very short reads cd-hit: a fast program for clustering and comparing large sets of protein or nucleotide sequences using the miraest assembler for reliable and automated mrna transcript assembly and snp detection in sequenced ests gapped blast and psi-blast: a new generation of protein database search programs composition profiler: a tool for discovery and visualization of amino acid composition differences categorizer categorizer: a web-based program to batch analyze gene ontology classification categories generic gene ontology (go) term mapper multiple sequence alignment using clustalw and clustalx the neighbor-joining method: a new method for reconstructing phylogenetic trees mega : molecular evolutionary genetics analysis (mega) software version . statistics of local complexity in amino acid sequences and sequence databases accuracy of protein flexibility predictions the universal protein resource (uniprot) submit your next manuscript to biomed central and take full advantage of: • convenient online submission • thorough peer review • no space constraints or color figure charges • immediate publication on acceptance • inclusion in pubmed, cas, scopus and google scholar • research which is freely available for redistribution we thank craig smith, carol de jong, deborah middleton low complexity regions in protein sequences were detected with the seg program with default parameters [ ] . the transcription of a bat mhc class i gene was examined using quantitative pcr (qpcr) as described previously [ ] . briefly, total rna was prepared from lymph node, spleen, liver, lung, heart, kidney, small intestine, brain and salivary glands using the rneasy mini kit (qiagen) as described above. cdna was generated using a quantitect reverse transcription kit for rt-pcr (qiagen). qpcr primers were designed using primer express . (applied biosystems) with default parameter settings ( '-acgactcctattccccaggatag-f and '-gaaagc cactggtacctgtgaga-r). reactions were carried out using express sybr w greener tm qpcr supermix universal (invitrogen) and an applied biosystems fast real-time qpcr instrument. additional file : table s . summary of additive multiple-kmer velvet/ oases/mira assembly.additional file : figure s . overview of the bat transcriptome. the distribution of , and , transcriptome sequences that have mapped to human orthologues from p. alecto thymus and pooled tissue datasets based on go slim terms. sequences within the three areas of gene ontology: molecular function, biological process and cellular component are further divided into subgroups at the go slim level.additional file : sequences of all genes described in the manuscript.additional file : figure . amino acid composition of large unannotated orfs. the horizontal axis shows amino acids sorted by flexibility index [ ] .a. amino acid composition of large unannotated non-redundant orfs relative to proteins in the swissprot database [ ] . the amino acids trp, cys and pro have twice the abundance in unannotated orfs compared to swissprot proteins.b. amino acid composition of low complexity regions in unannotated orfs relative to unannotated non-redundant orfs. prolines are abundant in low complexity regions, but trp and cys are not. the authors declare that they have no competing interests. key: cord- -dc n ni authors: jitobaom, kunlakanya; phakaratsakul, supinya; sirihongthong, thanyaporn; chotewutmontri, sasithorn; suriyaphol, prapat; suptawiwat, ornpreya; auewarakul, prasert title: codon usage similarity between viral and some host genes suggests a codon-specific translational regulation date: - - journal: heliyon doi: . /j.heliyon. .e sha: doc_id: cord_uid: dc n ni the codon usage pattern is a specific characteristic of each species; however, the codon usage of all of the genes in a genome is not uniform. intriguingly, most viruses have codon usage patterns that are vastly different from the optimal codon usage of their hosts. how viral genes with different codon usage patterns are efficiently expressed during a viral infection is unclear. an analysis of the similarity between viral codon usage and the codon usage of the individual genes of a host genome has never been performed. in this study, we demonstrated that the codon usage of human rna viruses is similar to that of some human genes, especially those involved in the cell cycle. this finding was substantiated by its concordance with previous reports of an upregulation at the protein level of some of these biological processes. it therefore suggests that some suboptimal viral codon usage patterns may actually be compatible with cellular translational machineries in infected conditions. the genetic code is degenerate. there are triplet codons coding for amino acids and stop codons [ ] . therefore, each amino acid is encoded by several codons, with the exception of two amino acids (methionine and tryptophan). this codon redundancy results in synonymous codon usage, whereby one amino acid is encoded by , , or codons [ ] . several previous studies have revealed that synonymous codons are utilized with different frequencies and are not randomly used by different genomes or genes. this non-randomness is referred to as codon usage bias [ , ] . each species preferentially uses different synonymous codons [ ] . this results in a species-specific codon usage bias. similarly, there are several trna species that carry the same amino acid. these trna species are called isoacceptors [ ] . codons and anti-codons in trna do not interact in a one-to-one fashion [ ] . base pairing at the third codon position is wobble; for example, g can pair with both cytosine (c) and uracil (u) [ ] . it has been demonstrated that trna modification directly affects trna and mrna wobble base pairing [ , ] . both the available trna isoacceptors and trna modification change with the cell cycle, and they can be altered by cellular stresses [ , ] . for efficient protein translation, the codon usage pattern should correlate with the population of available trna isoacceptors [ ] . in the cellular stress-response, the alteration could enhance the expression of stress-response genes, with the codon usage patterns compatible with the changed trna modifications. those genes shown to be regulated by this codon-specific manner are called modification tunable transcripts (motts) [ , ] . two major models have been proposed to explain the causes of codon usage bias: mutation pressure, and translational selection [ ] . as to mutation pressure, it is believed that gc content is the major factor driving codon usage bias [ , ] . the high mutation rates of some nucleotides or codons result in nucleotide substitution that might contribute to lower frequencies of some nucleotides and codons [ ] . mutation pressure has been suggested to be the most important factor determining the codon usage bias in human rna viruses [ , , ] . however, there are correlations between the codon usage bias and other factors related to translation efficiency (such as available trnas, mrna secondary structure, translation elongation rate, and the intragenic and intergenic codon bias) that cannot be explained by mutation pressure. this suggests that translational selection also influences codon usage bias [ ] . the translational selection acts on codon usage bias to achieve efficient and accurate translation. the use of codons correlates with abundant trnas, resulting in a higher translation rate [ , , ] . a correlation between codon usage bias and abundant trnas has been found in prokaryotes (such as e. coli [ ] ) and in some eukaryotes (such as s. cerevisiae [ ] , c. elegans [ ] , drosophila [ ] , and human [ ] ). however, rare codons are preferred to encode some specific sets of genes or regions of genes, for instance, to enable protein oscillation in different phases of the cell cycle, slow down protein translation across the membrane, and reduce ribosome jamming and mrna secondary structure at the end of coding sequences [ , , , ] . therefore, the translational selection acting on the optimization of frequent and rare codon utilization is important in appropriate gene translation. viral replication is dependent on the cellular machineries of the host cells. thus, one would intuitively think that the codon usage of a viral genome should match that of its host in order to be efficiently expressed. surprisingly, however, most viruses have codon usage patterns that are different from the codon usage preference of their hosts [ , , , ] . a previous study indicated an alteration in the cellular trna level after the infection of human immunodeficiency virus type (hiv- ) [ ] . in contrast, the cellular trna level was found to be unchanged following vaccinia and influenza a virus (iav) infection, whereas an alteration in the polysome-associated trna population was observed, particularly the population of polysome trna isoacceptors correlated with viral codon usage [ ] . these findings suggest that the codon usage pattern and the regulation of translational machineries may influence gene expression in some viruses. in this study, we investigated the relationship between the codon usage bias of human genes and human rna viruses. it is generally believed that the codon usage bias of viruses differs from that of human genes; however, various human genes possess various codon usage patterns [ , ] . in addition, intragenic codon biases had previously been reported in humans and mice [ ] . a comparison of the codon usage at the genome level is therefore too generalized; a more precise comparison at the single-gene level may provide a better insight into the viral codon usage bias. a total of , major transcript variants of human protein coding sequences were recruited from the gencode database (version ). the protein coding sequences of human rna viruses were downloaded from the ncbi database. the open reading frames (orfs) of the protein coding sequences were rechecked by orffinder (ncbi) before performing the rscu calculation. the rscu is a simple parameter that represents the codon usage bias of synonymous codons in a coding sequence. in our analysis, the rscu was calculated from the protein coding sequences of the human and rna viruses. the rscu of each gene consists of values corresponding to synonymous codons; thus, the pca was performed to simplify the data to a smaller number of principal factors as a summary feature of the codon usage pattern of each gene. the pca successfully reduced the values of each rscu into two significant components. the rscus of the human genes and rna viruses were represented by the coordinates of principal component (pc , x-axis) and principal component (pc , y-axis) plotted on the pca of an rscu graph ( figure ). the rscu and pca of the rscus of the human genes and human rna viruses are shown in supplementary file . in figure , the pcas of the rscus of the human genes were represented with a transparent black dot; genes with a similar rscu were located in the same area of the graph. the number of human gene located in each quadrant was counted: upper left, , genes; lower left, , genes; upper right, , genes; and lower right, , genes. interestingly, many human genes were located densely in the right quadrants, specifically, between (x ¼ . to . ) and (y ¼ - . to . ). most rna viruses were also located in the right quadrants. additionally, negative sense-single strand rna viruses (-ssrna), ambisense rna viruses (ambi), and hiv- viruses were located in the area of the right quadrants figure . the pca of the rscu. the rscu of human genes and rna viruses were subjected to pca. then, the simplified rscu values of human genes and rna viruses were plotted on the graph as the coordinates of component (x) and (y). the color keys indicate the groups of rna viruses. human genes are represented using transparent black dots. where the human genes were densely located. however, a great variation was observed in some groups of rna viruses, especially positive-sense single strand rna viruses (þssrna), doubled strand rna viruses (dsrna), and retroviruses (retro). the relationship between the pca of the rscu analysis and the codon adaptive index (cai) was investigated. cai is a common parameter used to assess the codon usage bias of a gene. it is calculated from the frequency of the overall codons in a given protein coding sequence with respect to a reference set of genes [ ] . in our analysis, the human codon usage table, which is the average codon frequency of a human genome, was used as the reference set. from the results (figure ), the pca of the rscu of the human codon usage table was plotted near the x and y intercepts, showing the average codon usage pattern of all human genes. a number of human genes in the pca of the rscu graph were selected and subjected to the cai calculation. the graphs of pc and cai, of pc and cai, were plotted; the linear regression and pearson correlation coefficient (pcc) were subsequently analyzed. from figure a , it was found that the cai of genes gradually decreased with an increase in pc (r ¼ . , pcc ¼ - . , p-value < . ), while a positive correlation was observed between cai and pc (r ¼ . , pcc ¼ . , p-value < . ). the percentages of the gc content at the third position of the codon (%gþc( )) of the human genes were also determined. in a similar way to cai ( figure b ), %gþc( ) gradually decreased with an increase in pc (r ¼ . , pcc ¼ - . , p-value < . ). a weak correlation between pc and %gþc( ) was observed (r ¼ . , pcc ¼ . , p-value < . ). thus, the pca of the rscu analysis could be used to characterize the heterogeneity of the codon usage bias in the human genome, in which genes in the left-upper quadrant contain more optimal codon usage for high expression, whereas those in the right quadrants near or below the x-axis have less optimal codon usage. the pcas of rscus of the human genes that coded for highly expressed proteins were plotted on a graph. the highly expressed proteins of humans had been previously identified using the proteomic approach (figure ; see the gene list in supplementary table ). [ ] . from figure , most of the highly expressed proteins were located in the left quadrants. this is in agreement with our analysis showing the relationship between pca and cai, and it supports the validity of using pca to predict cai. from the pca of the rscu graph (figure ) , it was demonstrated that most of the human rna viruses were located in the right quadrants. the degree of difference in the codon usage pattern varied among the groups of viruses. this feature was also observed intragroup. the highest pc (x) belonged to rotavirus, indicating a high degree of difference in codon usage pattern compared to human genes and other rna viruses. in particular, there were a number of human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses (figure ), especially -ssrna, ambi, and hiv viruses, which were located in the right quadrants, where human genes were also located densely. to investigate the kinds of human genes with codon usage patterns similar to rna viruses and the contributions of those genes in important biological processes, the human genes plotted in the same area with each subgroup of rna viruses were retrieved. the criteria for selection of the human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses are described in the methods section. figure represents the selected human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses. these human genes were subjected to gene ontology (go) enrichment analysis using go-termfinder to identify the overrepresented go terms in biological processes [ ] . revigo was then used to categorize the redundant go terms [ ] . the number of human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses are listed in table . the results ( figure ) show the significant go terms in the biological processes of human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses. only human genes retrieved from six subgroups of rna viruses resulted in significant enrichment, namely, þssrna (subgroups , ), -ssrna (subgroups , ), retro (hiv- ), and ambi (subgroup ), where the human genes recruited from þssrna (subgroups , ), -ssrna (subgroup ), retro (hiv- ), and ambi (subgroup ) were in the same or adjacent area. the human genes with rscus similar to þssrna (subgroup ), -ssrna (subgroup ), retro (hiv- ), and ambi (subgroup ) shared similar go terms in biological processes, including the cell cycle, the regulation of the cell cycle process, cell division, microtubule cytoskeletal organization, chromosome segregation, dna repair, macromolecule catabolism, and cellular localization ( fig. a , b, d, e, and f), while human genes with rscus similar to þssrna (subgroup ) were related to rna processing ( figure c ). the list of enriched go terms in biological processes is shown in supplementary file . from the previous section, we demonstrated that human genes in the go terms of the cell cycle and the regulation of the cell cycle process adopt codon usage patterns similar to those of þssrna (subgroups , ), -ssrna (subgroup ), retrovirus (hiv- ), and ambisense (subgroup ) viruses. to confirm that the codon usage patterns of these rna viruses are similar to human genes in the cell cycle and the regulation of the cell cycle process, the cell cycle codon score (cccs) was used to evaluate the similarity of the codon usage pattern between that of viral genes and a set of cell cycle-regulated human genes (top- set) [ ] . the cccs of human rna viruses had been calculated and is detailed in table . a positive cccs indicates that a gene has a codon usage pattern similar to the top- set. the results revealed that most of the þssrna viruses had a negative cccs score. only some þssrna viruses had a positive cccs score (such as dengue viruses [denvs], mers-coronavirus, sars-coronavirus, human coronaviruses, human enterovirus , and the hepatitis a virus), whereas most of the -ssrna, dsrna, hiv- , hiv- , and ambisense viruses had a positive cccs score. however, htlv- and htlv- in the retrovirus group gave a negative cccs. a previous study by frenkel-morgenstern et al. also demonstrated that the codon usage pattern of the cell cycle regulated genes (ccrs) influence the cell cycle-dependent protein expression [ ] . thus, the similarity of the codon usage pattern of the ccr genes and rna viruses was investigated. ccr genes cycling at the protein level and non-cycle regulated genes (nccrs) that were found not to cycle at the protein level were selected from previous studies ( table ). the rscus of the ccr and nccr genes were plotted on a graph and compared with the rscus of rna viruses ( figure ). the results showed that the ccr genes were located with -ssrna, dsrna, and some þssrna viruses, indicating similar codon usage patterns, while the rscus of the nccr genes were distributed all over the graph with no resemblance to rna viruses. this result corresponds with the cccs of rna viruses ( table ). from the previous section, we demonstrated that human genes with codon usage patterns similar to rna viruses contributed to some important biological processes, such as the cell cycle, the regulation of the cell cycle process, cell division, microtubule cytoskeletal organization, chromosome segregation, dna repair, macromolecule catabolism, cellular localization, and rna processing ( figure ). when coupled with the fact that some viral infections can manipulate host cellular pathways (especially the translation machineries), this finding suggests that human genes with codon usage patterns similar to rna viruses may be upregulated during viral infection [ ] . to substantiate this hypothesis, sets of proteomics data of rna virus infection were reanalyzed. the lists of upregulated protein profiles upon hiv- [ ] , iav [ ] , zika virus (zikv) [ ] , and dengue virus serotype (denv- ) [ ] infections were obtained from previous studies. the lists of upregulated proteins upon viral infection were submitted to go-termfinder (supplementary file ) , and the enriched go terms were compared to the enriched go terms of human genes with codon usage patterns similar to rna viruses from every subgroup. several enriched go terms of upregulated protein profiles during viral infections were found to be identical to the go terms of human genes with codon usage patterns similar to rna viruses ( figure ). in the case of hiv- and zikv, the identical go terms included the cell cycle, the regulation of the cell cycle process, the mitotic cell cycle, organelle organization, cell division, microtubule-based process, and cellular localization. the identical go terms of iav and denv- included macromolecule metabolic processes, nucleic acid metabolic process, chromosome organization, cellular stress response and rna processing. synonymous codons are distributed unequally and in a non-random fashion, which is referred to as codon usage bias [ ] . moreover, there are significant variations of codon usage bias among different species, and even among genes in the same organism [ , ] . theoretically, two major factors shape the codon usage bias: mutation pressure and translational selection [ ] . mutation pressure can result in uneven frequencies of nucleotide content, which can in turn influence codon usage bias [ , ] . as to translational optimization, the frequent codons are usually found correlated with the population of trna isoacceptors [ , ] . thus, the frequent or optimal codons would result in more rapid protein translation due to the greater availability of trnas corresponding to the frequently used codons [ ] . although the replication of viruses relies on the host cell machinery, several viruses possess different a codon usage pattern to the codon usage preferences of their host [ ] . for instance, the hiv- genome has been found to be a-rich [ ] . the g-to-a hypermutation in the hiv- genome has been attributed to viral reverse transcriptase (rt), which lacks to exonuclease proofreading activity, leading to the misincorporation of nucleotides [ , ] . in addition, the function of host enzymes of the apobec (a ) family has been found to partially contribute to a g-to-a mutation [ , ] . furthermore, a difference in codon usage has been observed among individual genes of hiv- [ ] . the hiv- gag gene, encoded for structural protein, adopts a great difference in codon usage pattern compared to human host cells. in contrast, the hiv- genes involved in the regulation of the replication cycle, tat and rev genes, have been demonstrated to be more similar to human codon usage bias [ ] . in this analysis, the pca of rscu represented codon usage patterns of human genes and rna viruses as a coordinate of pc (x) and pc (y) on a graph. we demonstrated that the pca of rscu analysis is compatible with a well-established index, cai. this suggested that the pca of rscu could be used in assessing codon usage bias and comparing the difference in codon usage pattern. in particular, the pca of rscu allowed a comparison to be made of individual genes in the whole genome scale. human genes possess various, different codon usage patterns, as observed in each quadrant of a graph. as mentioned earlier, there are a number of human genes located densely in the right quadrants; these genes adopt a non-optimal codon usage pattern similar to ccr genes. although most of the rna viruses have a non-optimal codon usage pattern, a great variation in codon usage patterns was observed among the groups of þssrna, dsrna, and retroviruses. the greatest difference in the codon usage patterns belonged to rotavirus, as seen in the graph. by comparison, the rubella virus exhibited a more similar codon usage pattern to humans. these results correspond with those of another study which demonstrated that the codon usage patterns of þssrna viruses are closer to human than other rna viruses, and that the lowest cai belongs to dsrna viruses. in more detail, rubella virus (þssrna) had the highest cai at . , and rotavirus had the lowest cai at . [ ] . a number of human genes with codon usage patterns similar to that of rna viruses were found by the present study ( figure ). the human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses were retrieved and subjected to gene ontology enrichment analysis. interestingly, it was found that only human genes similar to groups of viruses in the right quadrant resulted in significant enrichment, namely, the cell cycle, the cell cycle regulation process, cell division, microtubule cytoskeletal organization, chromosome segregation, dna repair, macromolecule catabolism, and cellular localization. the number of human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses retrieved from each subgroup varied from only seven to a thousand genes (table ) . however, the number of retrieved genes did not affect the significance level or the number of enriched go terms in figure ; for instance, genes for the -ssrna subgroup resulted in only enriched go term, whereas genes for the þssrna subgroup resulted in go terms. this suggests that the enriched go terms did not result from a bias from the different numbers of retrieved genes among the virus groups. it is also possible that some virus groups with a limited number of retrieved genes might not have had sufficient statistical power to enable the detection of enriched go terms. among the retrieved human genes, only the genes that adopted a non-optimal codon usage pattern retrieved from the area where they were located densely in the right quadrants gave significant overrepresented go terms. this suggested that the difference in codon usage bias in human genes might have specific functions. the contribution of non-optimal codon usage bias in human genes on the regulation of protein expression has been investigated in previous research [ , , ] . one study on ccr genes revealed that the non-optimal codon usage pattern generates the oscillation in protein expression during cell cycle progression [ ] . we demonstrated that the rscus of rna viruses were similar to the rscus of ccr genes, using both the cccs calculation and the pca of rscu. the wars tryptophanyl-trna synthetase results showed that -ssrna, dsrna, hiv- , hiv- , ambisense viruses, and a few viruses in the þssrna group exhibited non-optimal codon usage similar to that of the ccr genes. this suggests that despite having a non-optimal codon usage bias, viral genes might be efficiently expressed during the specific phase of the cell cycle correlated with the available trna population in that period. the trna population is tissue specific and varies with cellular conditions [ ] . alteration of the trna population depends on the level of aminoacyl trna synthetase and cellular atp concentration [ ] . in yeast cells, oscillation of the aminoacyl trna synthetase and atp during the cell cycle has been found to result in an increase in trna levels in the g /m phase, but a low trna level was observed toward the end of the g phase [ ] . therefore, with a low-charged trna concentration, the genes expressed during g prefer optimal codon usage bias, whereas the genes with non-optimal codon usage bias are highly expressed in the other phases of the cell cycle with a high-charged trna concentration [ ] . the availability of charged trnas during the cell cycle may regulate protein translation in a codon usage-specific manner. several studies have revealed viral subversion of the cell cycle by arresting via various mechanisms to generate the resources and favorable environment for viral replication and viral protein production [ ] . cell cycle arrest has been observed in both dna and rna virus infections. in some rna viruses, cell cycle arrest at a specific phase may lead to an increase in viral protein translation [ ] . during the g /m phase, the expression of many proteins has been found to fluctuate by arresting at g /m, viruses may use this mechanism to regulate protein expression [ ] . another study found that hiv- was more transcriptionally active during the g phase, and that arresting of the cell cycle may help limit the host immune response [ ] . moreover, an hiv- infection also causes an alteration at the cellular trna level [ ] . as to avian coronavirus infections, g /m arrest has been found with an increased viral protein expression [ ] . furthermore, rotavirus infection arrests the cell cycle in the s/g phase, favoring viral protein expression [ ] , while influenza a virus infection arrests the cell cycle in the g /g phase, resulting in increased viral protein expression [ , ] . these findings suggest that viruses may manipulate the cell cycle and cellular translation machinery to create available trna population favoring the viral codon usage pattern. several go terms of human genes with codon usage patterns similar to rna viruses have been found by previous studies to be identical to the go terms of upregulated protein profiles in viral infections. global proteomic and phosphoproteomic changes in hiv- infected cd þ t cells revealed that hiv- affected transcriptional and translational regulation, and targeted rna or protein degradation in order to modulate biological processes (including signal transduction, cell cycle, metabolic processes, and the immune system) [ ] . in addition, a study of zikv infected human neurospheres also found an upregulation profile of proteins involving cell cycle arrest. this resulted in an alteration of the cell cycle in order to regulate the transcription and translation of the host cells [ ] . iav infection targeted several cellular pathways to favor its replication, including aminoacyl-trna biosynthesis, glycolysis, fatty acid biosynthesis, and spliceosome [ ] . moreover, regulated proteins and phosphoproteins in denv-infected cells were related to cellular macromolecule biosynthesis, rna splicing, chromatin modification, and cell stress response, and these regulations help facilitate viral protein expression [ ] . this suggests that human genes with codon usage patterns similar to that of viruses may be upregulated at the translational level in a viral infection. it is unclear whether viruses evolved to regulate the translational machinery in order to accommodate the codon usage pattern that had already been shaped by mutational pressure, or whether they adapted their codon usage pattern to match the cellular translational machinery condition in infected cells. these two possibilities are not mutually exclusive. further studies are required to gain more insight into this new aspect of the virus-host interaction. the protein coding sequences of human genomes were downloaded from the gencode database (version ) in fasta format [ ] . the data set provided the nucleotide sequences of the coding transcripts on the reference chromosomes, including multiple transcript variants for each gene. thus, only the major transcript variants were selected for analysis. the major transcript variant is the longest transcript variant of the gene with a complete orf. for each gene, one representative as a major transcript variant with the longest sequence length was selected using a custom python script (supplementary file ) . the orfs of the protein coding sequences were rechecked by the orffinder tool at the website https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/orffinder (ncbi) before performing further analysis. the transcript variants with an incomplete orf were excluded and substituted by alternative variants. a list of the selected major transcripts variants is given in supplementary file . the data set for the sequences of the human rna virus genome utilized by a previous study was used [ ] . a total of rna viruses that can cause diseases in humans were selected. the protein coding sequences of those rna viruses were downloaded in fasta format from the nucleotide database (refseq, ncbi). for each virus species, the protein coding sequences from different isolations of the same virus species were downloaded. the sequences were selected based on their availability in the database (some viral protein coding sequences were only available in a few numbers). any coding sequence with unidentified nucleotides that could not be translated or with an incomplete orf was excluded. the selected human rna viruses were categorized by their family, genus, and genome polarity. they comprised positive-sense single strand rna (þssrna) viruses; negative-sense single strand rna (-ssrna) viruses; double strand rna (dsrna) viruses; retroviruses (retro); and ambisense (þ/-, ambi) viruses. supplementary file presents a list of the human rna viruses used in this study, the accession numbers of the sequences, and the number of coding sequences of each virus. the rscu is the ratio of the observed frequency of the codon in a gene to the expected frequency of the codon under the condition that all the synonymous codons are equally used. the three stop codons (taa, tag, tga), met (atg), and trp (tgg) were excluded from the analysis. the observed frequency of the codons in the genes was counted. the fasta sequences were parsed, and the codons of the coding sequences for each transcript variant were counted by a python script and the biopython library (python version . . , with biopython version . ; for the scripts, see supplementary file ). then, the rscu was calculated as follows: where n is the number of synonymous codons ( n ) for the amino acid, and x i is the number of occurrences of codon i. the synonymous codons with rscu values greater than . had a positive codon usage bias and were defined as abundant codons, while those with rscu values less than . had a negative codon usage bias and were defined as lessabundant codons. in the case of rscu values that were exactly . , it meant that there was no codon usage bias, and the codons were chosen equally [ ] . the rscu of human rna viruses were calculated using the caical server, which is available at http://genomes.urv.es/caical [ ] . the multiple protein coding sequences from different isolations of the virus in the same species were submitted to the caical server for the rscu calculation. after that, the average rscu was calculated to represent the rscu of each rna virus species. the rscus of the human genes and rna viruses are provided in supplementary file . the cai of a specific gene was calculated using the cai calculator on the caical server [ ] . the reference human codon usage table was obtained from the codon usage database (http://www.kazusa.or. jp/codon/) [ ] . the rscus of the protein coding sequences of , human genes and human rna viruses were input to the pca. the pca was performed using pasw statistics for windows, version (spss inc., chicago, ill., usa). the kaiser-meyer-olkin measure of sampling adequacy test (kmo-msa) was also analyzed. the overall kmo-msa was . , which was greater than a cut off of . , indicating that the sample size was adequate. the principle components were successfully extracted using covariance matrix and quartimax rotation, which reduced the high dimensions of the dataset to a smaller number of dimensions. the selection of the significant components was based on a scree plot and the proportions of variance. the scree plot was a plot of the component numbers and eigenvalues; only the first two components had eigenvalues greater than , and they accounted for . % of the total variance. the rscu of the gene was represented by the coordinate of pc and pc (x, y) on the graph. the pcas of the rscu graphs were plotted and analyzed using graphpad prism (graphpad software, inc., ca). the cccs of a gene evaluates the similarity of the codon usage between that of a specific gene and a set of cell cycle regulated human genes. the calculation has been previously described [ ] . briefly, the cccs is the sum of the codon preference (cp) values of the cell cycle regulated human genes (top- set) over all codons in the coding sequence of a gene, normalized by the length of the cdna. the cccs of a specific gene was calculated as follows: cccsðgÞ ¼ x codonðgeneÞ cp topÀ ðcodonÞ , lengthðgÞ where g is every codon of a gene, and cp top À (codon) is the cp in the top- gene set (see cited reference, table ). on the pca of the rscu graph, the human genes located in the same area of rna viruses were taken as human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses. to select these human genes, the average rscu of each group of rna viruses was initially calculated. however, a great variation of rscu was observed in each group of rna virus categorized by the nucleic acid types of their genomes. hence, the viruses in each group were divided into subgroups by their rscu before calculation of the average pc (x) and pc (y); these rna-virus subgroups are listed in table . subsequently, the average rscu of the rna viruses in each subgroup (mean vrscu, coordinate [a, b]) were set as the circle center of a circle with a radius of . units (figure ). the radius was calculated to be minimal, to not exceed the standard deviation of the distance between the circle center and the human genes, and to cover most of the viruses in each subgroup. the human genes located within the circle were taken as the human genes with rscus similar to rna viruses. the distance (r) from the circle center (a, b) was measured as follows: (a-x) þ (b-y) ¼ r where a and b are the coordinates of the mean vrscu of each subgroup of rna viruses, while x and y are the coordinates of the rscus of the human genes. the human genes with an rscu similar to each group of rna viruses were analyzed for go enrichment using go-termfinder, and revigo was used to categorize the redundant go terms [ , ] . the whole genome of homo sapiens was used as a background list. the overrepresented go terms in the biological process were investigated in both analyses, with p . taken as a significant enrichment. the simple linear regression analysis and pearson correlation coefficient (pcc) were determined using graphpad prism with p < . was taken as significant. kunlakanya jitobaom: conceived and designed the experiments; performed the experiments; analyzed and interpreted the data; contributed reagents, materials, analysis tools or data; wrote the paper. supinya phakaratsakul: conceived and designed the experiments; performed the experiments; analyzed and interpreted the data; contributed reagents, materials, analysis tools or data. thanyaporn sirihongthong: conceived and designed the experiments; performed the experiments; analyzed and interpreted the data. sasithorn chotewutmontri, prapat suriyaphol: performed the experiments; analyzed and interpreted the data; contributed reagents, materials, analysis tools or data. ornpreya suptawiwat: analyzed and interpreted the data; contributed reagents, materials, analysis tools or data. prasert auewarakul: conceived and designed the experiments; analyzed and interpreted the data. general nature of the genetic code for proteins rna codewords and protein synthesis vi. on the nucleotide sequences of degenerate codeword sets for isoleucine, tyrosine, asparagine and lysine pav e, codon catalog usage and the genome hypothesis codon frequencies in individual genes confirm consistent choices of degenerate bases according to genome type codon usage tabulated from international dna sequence databases: status for the year isoacceptor trna's codon-anticodon pairing: the wobble hypothesis the g x u wobble base pair. a fundamental building block of rna structure crucial to rna function in diverse biological systems c -substituents of uridines and -thiouridines present at the wobble position of trna determine the formation of their keto-enol or zwitterionic formsa factor important for accuracy of reading of guanosine at the ΄-end of the mrna codons accurate translation of the genetic code depends on trna modified nucleosides genes adopt non-optimal codon usage to generate cell cycle-dependent oscillations in protein levels trna modifications regulate translation during cellular stress codon usage and trna content in unicellular and multicellular organisms codon-biased translation can be regulated by wobble-base trna modification systems during cellular stress responses codon bias as a means to fine-tune gene expression codon usage between genomes is constrained by genome-wide mutational processes a simple model based on mutation and selection explains trends in codon and amino-acid usage and gc composition within and across genomes causes and implications of codon usage bias in rna viruses the extent of codon usage bias in human rna viruses and its evolutionary origin mutational pressure in zika virus: local adar-editing areas associated with pauses in translation and replication codon bias and gene expression synonymous codon usage, accuracy of translation, and gene length in caenorhabditis elegans effects of codon usage on gene expression: empirical studies on drosophila codon usage determines translation rate in escherichia coli correlation between the abundance of yeast transfer rnas and the occurrence of the respective codons in protein genes: differences in synonymous codon choice patterns of yeast and escherichia coli with reference to the abundance of isoaccepting transfer rnas the action of selection on codon bias in the human genome is related to frequency, complexity, and chronology of amino acids causes and effects of n-terminal codon bias in bacterial genes translation efficiency is determined by both codon bias and folding energy local slowdown of translation by nonoptimal codons promotes nascent-chain recognition by srp in vivo analysis of synonymous codon usage in h n virus and other influenza a viruses impact of the biased nucleotide composition of viral rna genomes on rna structure and codon usage hiv- gag expression is quantitatively dependent on the ratio of native and optimized codons unusual codon usage of hiv hiv- modulates the trna pool to improve translation efficiency vaccinia and influenza a viruses select 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tissue-specific differences in human transfer rna expression cell cycle variations of dinucleoside polyphosphates in synchronized cultures of mammalian cells cell cycle regulation during viral infection rotavirus replication is correlated with s/g interphase arrest of the host cell cycle g /m cell cycle arrest in the life cycle of viruses human immunodeficiency virus type vpr induces dna replication stress in vitro and in vivo cell cycle perturbations induced by infection with the coronavirus infectious bronchitis virus and their effect on virus replication influenza a virus replication induces cell cycle arrest in g /g phase influenza a virus ns induces g /g cell cycle arrest by inhibiting the expression and activity of rhoa protein gencode: the reference human genome annotation for the encode project an evolutionary perspective on synonymous codon usage in unicellular organisms a new and updated resource for codon usage tables, bmc bioinf dynamic proteomics in individual human cells uncovers widespread cell-cycle dependence of nuclear proteins variability and memory of protein levels in human cells cyclebase.org: version . , an updated comprehensive, multi-species repository of cell cycle experiments and derived analysis results cyclebase.org-a comprehensive multi-organism online database of cell-cycle experiments identification of genes periodically expressed in the human cell cycle and their expression in tumors the authors declare no conflict of interest. supplementary content related to this article has been published online at https://doi.org/ . /j.heliyon. .e . key: cord- -fk um nw authors: farver, carol f.; zander, dani s. title: molecular basis of pulmonary disease date: - - journal: molecular pathology doi: . /b - - - - . - sha: doc_id: cord_uid: fk um nw pulmonary pathology includes a large spectrum of both neoplastic and non-neoplastic diseases that affect the lung. many of these are a result of the unusual relationship of the lung with the outside world. every breath that a human takes brings the outside world into the body in the form of infectious agents, organic and inorganic particles, and noxious agents of all types. although the lung has many defense mechanisms to protect itself from these insults, these are not infallible; therefore, lung pathology arises. damage to the lung is particularly important given the role of the lung in the survival of the organism. any impairment of lung function has widespread effects throughout the body, since all organs depend on the lungs for the oxygen they need. pulmonary pathology catalogs the changes in the lung tissues and the mechanisms through which these occur. this chapter presents a review of lung pathology and the current state of knowledge about the pathogenesis of each disease. it suggests that a clear understanding of both morphology and mechanism is required for the development of new therapies and preventive measures. pulmonary pathology includes a large spectrum of both neoplastic and non-neoplastic diseases that affect the lung. many of these are a result of the unusual relationship of the lung with the outside world. every breath that a human takes brings the outside world into the body in the form of infectious agents, organic and inorganic particles, and noxious agents of all types. although the lung has many defense mechanisms to protect itself from these insults, these are not infallible and so lung pathology arises. damage to the lung is particularly important given the role of the lung in the survival of the organism. any impairment of lung function has widespread effects throughout the body, since all organs depend on the lungs for the oxygen they need. pulmonary pathology catalogs the changes in the lung tissues and the mechanisms through which these occur. what follows is a review of lung pathology and the current state of knowledge about the pathogenesis of each disease. we believe that a clear understanding of both morphology and mechanism is required for the development of new therapies and preventive measures. lung cancer is a major cause of morbidity and mortality throughout the world. the most recent estimates available from the surveillance, epidemiology, and end results (seer) program of the national cancer institute are that in over , people in the united states were diagnosed with cancer of the lung and bronchus, and over , will have died due to this disease [ ] . however, in the past decade incidence and mortality rates have begun to move in a more positive direction, particularly in men. overall, men show a decline in lung cancer incidence, while in women, although lung cancer rates grew from through , they stabilized from through [ ] . similarly, cancer death rates due to lung cancer have declined for men and have slowed for women. although, for women, lung cancer death rates have increased since , the rate of increase has slowed to . % annually from to [ ] . these trends parallel changes in the prevalence of tobacco smoking, the most important risk factor for development of lung cancer. given the tremendous societal and individual impacts of this disease, it is not surprising that the molecular biology of lung cancer is a major focus of investigation. elucidation of the molecular pathogenesis of these neoplasms has progressed significantly, offering insights into new, targeted therapies, and predictors of prognosis and therapeutic responsiveness. recognition of precursor lesions for some types of lung cancers has been facilitated by our expanded understanding of early molecular changes involved in carcinogenesis. the world health organization (who) classification scheme is the most widely used system for classification of these neoplasms (table . ) [ ] . although there are numerous histologic types and subtypes of lung cancers, most of the common malignant epithelial tumors can be grouped into the categories of nonsmall cell lung cancers (nsclcs) and small cell carcinomas (sclcs). nsclcs include adenocarcinomas (acs), squamous cell carcinomas (sqccs), large cell carcinomas, adenosquamous carcinomas, and sarcomatoid carcinomas. sclcs include cases of pure and combined small cell carcinoma. common pulmonary symptoms associated with these tumors include cough, shortness of breath, chest pain or tightness, and hemoptysis (coughing up blood). since some tumors cause airway obstruction, they predispose to pneumonia, which can be an important clue to the existence of a tumor in some patients. constitutional symptoms can include fever, weight loss, and malaise. some neoplasms will declare themselves with symptoms related to local invasion of adjacent structures such as chest wall, nerves, superior vena cava, esophagus, or heart. sclcs are known for early and widespread metastasis and are therefore particularly prone to being discovered through presentations as metastases in distant sites. some tumors are discovered due to pathophysiologic changes triggered by the release of soluble substances from tumor cells. endocrine syndromes due to elaboration of hormones are well recognized, and include cushing syndrome, syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone, hypercalcemia, carcinoid syndrome, gynecomastia, and others. hypercoagulability commonly occurs with lung cancers, leading to manifestations of venous thrombosis, nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis, and disseminated intravascular coagulation. hematologic changes can include anemia, granulocytosis, eosinophilia, and other abnormalities. other paraneoplastic syndromes such as clubbing of the fingers, myasthenic syndromes, dermatomyositis/polymyositis, and transverse myelitis are noted in subsets of patients. when lung cancer is suspected, evaluation of the patient includes a thorough clinical, radiologic, and laboratory assessment, with collection of tissue or cytology samples to establish a pathologic diagnosis of malignancy and to classify the tumor type. fiberoptic bronchoscopy is often performed to collect samples for diagnosis. sample types can include transbronchial and endobronchial biopsies, bronchial brushings, bronchial washings, bronchoalveolar lavage samples, and transbronchial needle aspirates. submission of sputum samples for cytologic malignant epithelial tumors examination can provide a diagnosis in some cases, particularly for centrally located tumors such as sqcc and sclc. tumors arising in a peripheral location can also be sampled, in many cases, by fine needle aspiration or core needle biopsy performed under radiologic guidance. if a pleural effusion is present in combination with a lung parenchymal tumor, analysis of the pleural fluid cytology often allows one to establish a diagnosis. pleural biopsy, mediastinoscopy with biopsy, and wedge biopsy can also be performed, depending on the clinical and radiologic findings. for tumors with apparent distant metastasis, biopsy of the metastasis focus can both establish a pathologic diagnosis and determine the stage of the tumor. the prognosis of lung cancers is closely related to tumor stage. for nsclcs, the american joint commission on cancer tnm staging system is widely used (table . ) [ ] , and for sclcs, disease is classified as limited (restricted to one hemithorax) or extensive. overall, for lung cancers, the -year survival is . % for men and . % for women [ ] . an important factor leading to this relatively poor survival is the late stage at which many lung cancers are diagnosed. information from the seer database, from - , indicates that %, %, %, and % of patients were diagnosed with localized, regional, distant, or unstaged disease, respectively [ ] . the corresponding -year survival rates are . %, . %, . %, and . %, and year survival rates are . %, . %, . %, and . % [ ] . for patients with nsclcs, treatment depends on stage and comorbid conditions [ ] . surgical resection is the preferred approach to treatment of localized nsclcs, provided there is no medical contraindication to operative intervention. lobectomy or more extensive resection (depending on tumor extent) is usually recommended rather than lesser surgeries, unless other comorbid conditions preclude these procedures. tumor cm in greatest dimension, surrounded by lung or visceral pleura, without bronchoscopic evidence of invasion more proximal than the lobar bronchus t tumor with any of the following features of size or extent: > cm in greatest dimension, involves main bronchus ! cm distal to the carina, invades visceral pleura, associated with atelectasis or obstructive pneumonitis that extends to the hilar region but does not involve the entire lung t tumor of any size that directly invades the chest wall, diaphragm, mediastinal pleura, parietal pericardium; or lies < cm distal to the carina but without involvement of the carina; or is associated with atelectasis or obstructive pneumonitis of the entire lung t tumor of any size that invades the mediastinum, heart, great vessels, trachea, esophagus, vertebral body, carina; or has separate tumor nodule(s) in same lobe; or is associated with a malignant pleural effusion. regional lymph nodes (n) nx regional lymph nodes cannot be assessed n no regional lymph node metastasis n metastasis in ipsilateral peribronchial and/or ipsilateral hilar lymph nodes, including intrapulmonary nodes involved by direct extension of the primary tumor n metastasis in ipsilateral mediastinal and/or subcarinal lymph node(s) n metastasis in contralateral mediastinal, contralateral hilar, ipsilateral or contralateral scalene or supraclavicular lymph node(s). mx distant metastasis cannot be assessed m no distant metastasis m distant metastasis; includes separate tumor nodule(s) in a different lobe. occult t n m stage tis n m stage ia t n m stage ib t n m stage iia t n m stage iib t n m t n m stage iiia t n m t n m t n m t n m stage iiib any t n m t any intraoperative mediastinal lymph node sampling or dissection is also recommended for accurate pathologic staging and determination of therapy. subsets of patients also benefit from chemotherapy and radiotherapy. for more advanced nsclc and for sclc, chemotherapy and radiotherapy are the primary treatment modalities [ ] . rare patients with limited-stage sclcs can be considered for surgical resection with curative intent. development of lung cancer occurs with multiple, complex, stepwise genetic and epigenetic changes involving allelic losses, chromosomal instability and imbalance, mutations in tumor suppressor genes (tsgs) and dominant oncogenes, epigenetic gene silencing through promoter hypermethylation, and aberrant expression of genes participating in control of cell proliferation and apoptosis [ ] . there are similarities as well as type-specific differences in the molecular alterations between nsclcs and sclcs, and between sqccs and acs [ ] [ ] [ ] . oncogenes that play a part in the pathogenesis of lung cancer include myc, k-ras (predominantly acs), cyclin d , bcl , and erbb family genes such as egfr (epidermal growth factor receptor) (predominantly acs) and her /neu (predominantly acs) [ , ] . also, lung cancers often display abnormalities involving tsgs including tp , rb, p ink a , and new candidate tsgs on the short arm of chromosome (dutt , fhit, rasff a, fus- , bap- ) [ , ] . as research advances, these lists continue to grow, and as knowledge has expanded about the roles of these genes in carcinogenesis and tumor behavior, new targeted therapeutic agents have been designed to treat this disease ( figure . and table . ) [ ] . many other agents are under investigation. in cancers, chromosomal regions harboring tsgs and oncogenes are often deleted or amplified. allele loss involving loci in p - is a consistent feature of lung cancer pathogenesis [ , ] . wistuba et al. reported allelic losses of p, often multiple and discontinuous, in % of the lung cancers studied and in % of the precursor lesions [ ] . larger segments of allelic loss were noted in most sclcs ( %) and sqccs ( %) than in acs ( %) and preneoplastic/preinvasive lesions [ ] . there was allelic loss in the -kb p . deletion region in % of the lung cancers; % of the normal or reneoplastic/preinvasive lesions associated with lung cancers; and % of the normal, mildly abnormal, or preneoplastic/ preinvasive lesions found in smokers without lung cancer, but no loss was seen in the samples from people who had never smoked [ ] . p - deletions are also frequent and early events in the pathogenesis of lung carcinomas [ ] , and other common alterations include loh at q, q, q, and p [ ] . allelic losses that are more frequent in sqccs than acs include deletions at p (tp ), q (rb), p (p ink a ), p - , and several regions of p [ , , , ] . a recent study utilizing a bacterial artificial chromosome array to perform high-resolution whole genome profiling of sqcc and ac cell lines showed that regions of frequent amplification shared by both types of tumors included p; chromosome , q, q , q, and q; and common regions of deletion included p, q, p, p, q; chromosome ; and chromosome [ ] . however, acs appeared to have higher frequencies of deletion of chromosome ; p, q, q; and chromosome than sqccs, and possess small regions of amplification on chromosomes and not seen in sqccs. chromosome arms q and q were frequently deleted in ac but amplified in sqcc cell lines. both types of tumors showed deletion of chromosome arm p, but it was more frequent in the sqcc cell lines, while amplification of chromosome p was more frequent in acs. amplification of chromosome q was common to both types of tumors but showed frequent alteration at q - q in the sqcc lines and at q in the ac lines. inactivation of recessive oncogenes is believed to occur through a two-stage process. it has been suggested that the first allelic inactivation occurs, often via a point mutation, and the second allele is later inactivated by a chromosomal deletion, translocation or other alteration such as methylation of the gene promoter region [ ] . inactivating mutations in the tsg tp , which encodes the p protein, are the most frequent mutations in lung cancers. these mutations are found in up to % of nsclcs and over % of sclcs, and are largely attributable to direct dna damage from cigarette smoke carcinogens [ ] . tp mutational patterns show a prevalence of g to t transversions in % of smokers' lung cancers versus only % of lung cancers in nonsmokers [ ] . p protein is a transcription factor and a key regulator of cell cycle progression; cellular signals induced by dna damage, oncogene expression, or other stimuli trigger p dependent responses including initiating cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, differentiation, and dna repair [ ] . loss of p function in tumor cells can result in inappropriate progression through the dysregulated cell cycle checkpoints and permits the inappropriate survival of genetically damaged cells [ ] . the p ink a -cyclin d -cdk -rb pathway, which plays a central role in controlling the g to s phase transition of the cell cycle, is another important tumor suppressor pathway that is often disrupted in lung cancers. it interfaces with the p pathway through p arf and p waf/cip . thirty percent to % of nsclcs contain mutations of p ink a , including homozygous deletion or point mutations and epigenetic alterations, leading to p ink a inactivation [ ] . almost % of sclcs and smaller numbers of nsclcs, on the other hand, display loss of rb expression [ ] , and mutational mechanisms usually responsible include deletion, nonsense mutations, and splicing abnormalities that lead to truncated rb protein [ ] . p ink a leads to hypophosphorylation of the rb protein, which causes arrest of cells in the g phase. the active, hypophosphorylated form of rb regulates other cellular proteins including the transcription factors e f , e f , and e f , which are essential for progression through the g /s phase transition. loss of p ink a protein or increased complexes of cyclin d-cdk - or cyclin e-cdk lead to hyperphosphorylation of rb with resultant evasion of cell cycle arrest and progression into s phase [ , ] . cell cycle progression is inhibited by p waf/cip through its inhibition of the cyclin complexes. the %- % of nsclcs lacking detectable alterations in p ink a and rb may have abnormalities of cyclin d and cdk , which cause inactivation of the rb pathway [ ] . figure . provides an overview of the p and retinoblastoma (rb) pathways, showing the complex interactions between the components [ ] . epigenetic alterations (hypermethylation of the cpg island) of tsgs are also frequent occurrences during pulmonary carcinogenesis, and methylation profiles of nsclcs show relationships to smoke exposure, histologic type, and geography. methylation rates of p ink a and apc and the mean methylation index (mi) (a reflection of the overall methylation status) in current or former smokers were significantly higher than in never smokers; the mean mi of tumors was highest in current smokers; methylation rates of apc, cdh , and rarbeta were significantly higher in acs than in sqccs; methylation rates of mgmt and gstp in cases from the united states and australia significantly exceeded those from japanese and taiwanese cases; and no significant gender-related differences in methylation patterns were found [ ] . proto-oncogene activation and growth factor signaling are important in pulmonary carcinogenesis. the tyrosine kinase epidermal growth factor receptor (egfr) is frequently mutated in nsclcs, particularly in acs, and the mutational status is important in determining response to tyrosine kinase inhibitors. a related pathway, the phosphoinositide -kinase (pi k)/akt/mammalian target of rapamycin (mtor) pathway, is frequently deregulated in pulmonary carcinogenesis. as reviewed by marinov et al., this pathway has been reported to mediate the effects of several tyrosine kinase receptors, including egfr, c-met, c-kit, and igf-ir, on proliferation and survival in nsclc and sclc [ ] . clinical trials are ongoing, investigating the efficacy of the mtor inhibitor rapamycin and its analogues on lung cancer [ ] . her /neu is another related receptor tyrosine kinase that is upregulated in approximately %- % of nsclcs [ , ] , but unlike the situation with her /neu-positive breast cancers, treatment with anti-her /neu antibody (trastuzumab) does not seem to yield comparable benefits for nsclc when used alone or in combination with chemotherapy [ , ] . point mutations of ras family proto-oncogenes (most often at k-ras codons , , or ) are detected in %- % of lung acs and %- % of all nsclcs [ ] . although farnesyl transferase inhibitors prevent ras signaling, these agents have not shown significant activity as single-agent therapy in untreated nsclc or relapsed sclc [ ] . myc family genes (myc, mycn, and mycl), which play roles in cell cycle regulation, proliferation, and dna synthesis, are more frequently activated in sclcs than in nsclcs, either by gene amplification or by transcriptional dysregulation [ ] . vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) is a homodimeric glycoprotein that is overexpressed in many lung cancers and directly stimulates endothelial cell proliferation, promotes endothelial cell survival in newly formed vessels, and induces proteases involved in the degradation of the extracellular matrix needed for endothelial cell migration [ ] . its angiogenic effects are mediated by three receptors: vegfr- , vegfr- , and vegfr- ; ligand binding leads to tyrosine kinase activation and activation of the signaling pathways required for angiogenesis [ ] . monoclonal antibodies to vegf (bevacizumab) and tyrosine kinase inhibitors to vegfrs have been developed and show promise for treatment of nsclc. a phase iii trial of bevacizumab showed significantly improved overall and progression-free survival when this agent was used in combination with standard first-line chemotherapy in patients with advanced nsclc, and several smallmolecule vegfr tyrosine kinase inhibitors have yielded favorable results in phase i and ii trials in nsclc [ ] . micrornas are a recently discovered class of nonprotein-coding, endogenous, small rnas which regulate gene expression by translational repression, mrna cleavage, and mrna decay initiated by mirna-guided rapid deadenylation [ ] . some micrornas such as let- have been suggested to play roles in carcinogenesis by functioning as oncogenes or tumor suppressors, negatively regulating tsgs and/or genes that control cell differentiation or apoptosis [ ] . investigations of the therapeutic potential of micrornas are also under way. in the version of the who classification scheme, ac is defined as "a malignant epithelial tumour with glandular differentiation or mucin production, showing acinar, papillary, bronchioloalveolar or solid with mucin growth patterns or a mixture of these patterns" [ ] . ac has become the most frequent histologic type of lung cancer in parts of the world. it occurs primarily in smokers, but represents the most common type of lung cancer in people who have never smoked and in women. a small subset of these tumors arise in patients with localized scars or diffuse fibrosing lung diseases such as asbestosis and interstitial pneumonia associated with scleroderma [ ] . these neoplasms usually arise in the periphery of the lung, and are more likely to invade the pleura and chest wall than other histologic types of lung cancers. radiologic studies can show one or more nodules, ground-glass opacities, or mixed solid and ground-glass lesions. on gross examination, the neoplasms are often solitary gray-white nodules or masses, sometimes with necrosis or cavitation, which pucker the overlying pleura. mucin-producing tumors can have a glistening, gelatinous appearance. other presentations include a pattern of consolidation resembling pneumonia (usually bronchioloalveolar carcinoma) ( figure . ), multiple nodules, diffuse interstitial widening due to lymphangitic spread, endobronchial lesions with submucosal infiltration, and diffuse visceral pleural infiltration and thickening resembling mesothelioma. common histologic patterns displayed by acs include acinar ( figure chapter molecular basis of pulmonary disease mixtures of these patterns are very frequent. less common histologic subtypes include fetal ac, mucinous (colloid) ac, mucinous cystadenocarcinoma, signet ring ac, and clear cell ac [ ] . acs usually exhibit differentiation toward clara cells or type ii pneumocytes or, less often, goblet cells. they manifest a range of differentiation extending from very well-differentiated tumors with extensive gland formation and little cytoatypia, to poorly differentiated, solid tumors that cannot be categorized as acs unless one orders a mucin stain (figure . ) . however, most examples include readily identifiable glands. invasiveness is reflected by the presence of neoplastic glands that infiltrate through stroma or pleura, stimulating a fibroblastic (desmoplastic) response ( figure . ) , or by cells in the lumens of blood vessels or lymphatics. in recent years, atypical adenomatous hyperplasia (aah) has been recognized as a precursor lesion for peripheral pulmonary acs. this lesion is defined as "a localized proliferation of mild to moderately atypical cells lining involved alveoli and, sometimes, respiratory bronchioles, resulting in focal lesions in peripheral part iv molecular pathology of human disease alveolated lung, usually less than mm in diameter and generally in the absence of underlying interstitial inflammation and fibrosis" (figure . ) [ ] . aah exists on a histologic continuum with bronchioloalveolar carcinoma (bac), which is defined as an in situ (noninvasive) form of ac, in which the neoplastic cells grow along alveolar septa (lepidic growth) without invasion of stroma or vasculature ( figure . , figure . ) [ ] . most bacs exceed cm in diameter and consist of cells with greater degrees of cytoatypia than aah. although aah is found in approximately % of patients without lung cancer at autopsy [ ] , it has been reported in %- % of lung resection specimens with all types of primary lung cancer and %- % of lung resection specimens with ac [ ] . the progenitor cell for bac and aah is believed to be an epithelial cell located at the junction between the terminal bronchiole and alveolus, termed the bronchioalveolar stem cell [ ] . a recently published large-scale study of primary lung acs, using dense single nucleotide polymorphism arrays, described significantly recurrent copy-number alterations in these tumors (table . ) [ ] . twenty-six of autosomal chromosome arms showed consistent large-scale copy-number gain or loss, and recurrent focal events, including amplifications and homozygous deletions, were found. although some of the alterations involved regions known to harbor a proto-oncogene or tsg, these genes remain to be identified in some of the other regions affected. amplification of chromosome q . was the most common event noted, found in % of samples. this region includes nkx - , which encodes a lineage-specific transcription factor (thyroid transcription factor- [ttf- ]) that activates transcription of target genes including the surfactant proteins, and may be an important proto-oncogene involved in a significant fraction of lung acs. immunohistochemical staining for ttf- can be performed to detect expression of this factor in most lung adenocarcinomas, aiding in the determination of the lung as the site of origin of the tumor (figure . ). additional work using small interfering rna (sirna)mediated knockdown of this gene in lung cancer cell lines with amplification led to reductions in tumor cell proliferation, through both decreased cell cycle progression and increased apoptosis, suggesting that gene amplification and overexpression contribute to lung cancer cell proliferation rates and survival [ ] . egfr and k-ras mutations are mutually exclusive mutational events in ac of the lung, which suggests the existence of two independent oncogenic pathways [ , ] . egfr is a receptor tyrosine kinase whose activation by ligand binding leads to activation of cell signaling pathways such as ras/mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk) and phosphatidylinositol- -kinase, which in turn propagates signals for proliferation, blocking of apoptosis, differentiation, motility, invasion, and adhesion [ ] . tumor-acquired mutations in the tyrosine kinase domain of egfr, often associated with gene amplification, have been found in approximately %- % of nsclcs in the united states, and are associated with ac histology, never-smoker status, east asian ethnicity, and female gender [ , , ] . egfr mutations are frequently in-frame deletions in exon , single missense mutations in exon , or in-frame duplications/insertions in exon , and occasional missense mutations and double mutations can also be detected [ , ] . egfr mutation has an inverse correlation with methylation of the p ink a gene and sparc (secreted protein acidic and rich in cysteine), an extracellular ca þ-binding glycoprotein associated with the regulation of cell adhesion and growth [ ] . egfr status is an important predictor of response to egfr kinase inhibitors: patients with egfr mutations are most likely to have a significant response to egfr tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy, and egfr amplification and protein overexpression have been reported to correlate with survival after egfr tyrosine kinase inhibitor therapy [ , ] . k-ras is a member of the ras family of proteins, which function as signal transducers between cell membrane-based growth factor signaling and the mapk pathways [ ] . k-ras mutations are associated with smoking, male gender, and poorly differentiated tumors [ ] . her (also known as egfr or erbb ), a member of the egfr family of receptor tyrosine kinases, is mutated in less than % of nsclc, and does not occur in tumors with egfr or k-ras mutation [ ] . the her mutations are in-frame insertions in exon and are significantly more frequent in acs ( . %), never smokers ( . %), asian ethnicity ( . %), and women ( . %), similar to egfr mutations [ ] . alterations in dna methylation appear to be important epigenetic changes in cancer, contributing to chromosomal instability through global hypomethylation, and aberrant gene expression through alterations in the methylation levels at promoter cpg islands [ ] . this lesion, which has been defined as a precursor lesion for peripheral pulmonary adenocarcinomas, consists of a wellcircumscribed nodule measuring several millimeters in diameter, in which alveolar septa are lined by mildly moderate atypical cells. epigenetic differences exist between egfr-mediated and k-ras-mediated tumorigenesis, and may interact with the genetic changes. a recent study showed that the probability of having egfr mutation was significantly lower among those with p ink a and cdh methylation than in those without, and the methylation index was significantly lower in egfr mutant cases than in wild-type. in contrast, k-ras mutation was significantly higher in p ink a methylated cases than in unmethylated cases, and the methylation index was higher in k-ras mutant cases than in wild-type [ ] . sqcc is defined as "a malignant epithelial tumour showing keratinization and/or intercellular bridges that arises from bronchial epithelium," in the who classification scheme [ ] . it is a common histologic type of nsclc that is closely linked to cigarette smoking. in most patients, this tumor arises in a mainstem, lobar, or segmental bronchus, producing a central mass on imaging known tumor suppressor genes and proto-oncogenes defined as found in either cosmic , cgp census , or other evidence; if there is more than one known proto-oncogene in the region, only one is listed (priority for listing is, in order: known lung adenocarcinoma mutation; known lung cancer mutation; other known mutation (by cosmic frequency); listing in cgp census). @myc is near, but not within, the peak region. ksingle gene deletions previously seen, this study provides new mutations as well. part iv molecular pathology of human disease studies. many of these tumors have an endobronchial component that can cause airway obstruction, leading to postobstructive pneumonia, atelectasis, or bronchiectasis. not infrequently, it is the pneumonia that prompts evaluation of the patient and leads to discovery of the tumor. less often, sqccs develop in the periphery of the lung. gross examination reveals a tan or gray mass that usually arises in a large bronchus and often includes an endobronchial component (figure . , figure . ). partial or complete airway obstruction can be associated with changes of pneumonia, bronchitis, abscess, bronchiectasis, or atelectasis. necrosis and cavitation are very common in these tumors. involvement of hilar lymph nodes by tan-gray tumor can be visible in some resected specimens. microscopically, the key features of this tumor are its keratinization, sometimes with formation of keratin pearls, and intercellular bridges ( figure . ). as is true of acs, the degree of differentiation of this tumor varies from very well differentiated cases, in which there are abundant keratinization and intercellular bridges and little cytoatypia, to very poorly differentiated cases, in which keratinization and intercellular bridges can be quite inconspicuous and the tumor consists of sheets of large atypical cells with marked cytoatypia and frequent mitoses. however, most cases fall more toward the middle of the spectrum. invasiveness is reflected by the presence of irregular nests and sheets of cells that infiltrate through tissues, stimulating a fibroblastic response, or by cells inside vascular or lymphatic spaces. invasive sqccs are often accompanied by sqcc in situ and dysplasia, their precursor lesions. these lesions arise in the bronchi and may be contiguous with the invasive tumor or exist as one or more separate foci. these precursor lesions can also be observed without coexisting invasive carcinoma. like sqcc, tobacco smoking is the main predisposing factor for sqcc in situ and dysplasia. unlike invasive sqcc, however, these lesions are not invasive-they do not extend through the basement membrane of the bronchial epithelium. grossly, they may be invisible or appear as flat, tan or red discolorations of the bronchial mucosa, or tan wart-like excrescences. microscopically, these lesions encompass a chapter molecular basis of pulmonary disease range of squamous changes that include alterations in the thickness of the bronchial epithelium, the maturational progress of squamous differentiation, cell size, and nuclear characteristics ( figure . , figure . ) [ , ] . as dysplasia increases from mild to moderate to severe, the epithelium thickens, and maturation is increasingly impaired. the basilar zone expands with epithelial cell crowding, the intermediate zone shrinks, and there is reduced flattening of the superficial squamous cells. cell size, pleomorphism, and anisocytosis usually increase, and there is coarsening of the chromatin and appearance of nucleoli, nuclear angulations, and folding. in carcinoma in situ, although the epithelium may or may not be thickened and the cell size may be small, medium, or large, there is minimal or no maturation from the base to the superficial aspect, and the atypical nuclear features are present throughout the entire thickness of the epithelium. mitoses appear in the lower third (mild or moderate dysplasia), lower two-thirds (severe dysplasia), or throughout the full thickness of the epithelium (carcinoma in situ). basal cells in the bronchial epithelium are believed to represent the progenitor cells for invasive sqcc, and the sequence of events leading to sqcc is believed to include basal cell hyperplasia, squamous metaplasia, squamous dysplasia, carcinoma in situ, and invasive sqcc (figure . ) [ , [ ] [ ] [ ] . regression of lesions preceding invasive sqcc can occur, particularly the earlier lesions [ ] . however, severe dysplasia and carcinoma in situ are associated with a significantly increased probability of developing invasive sqcc in patients followed over time with surveillance bronchoscopy [ ] . wistuba and colleagues evaluated sqccs and precursor lesions for loss of heterozygosity (loh) at chromosomal regions ( p , p . , p . - . , p , p - , p , q , p , q rb, and p tp ) part iv molecular pathology of human disease frequently deleted in lung cancer and found multiple, sequentially occurring allele-specific molecular changes in separate, apparently clonally independent foci, early in the pathogenesis of sqccs of the lung, suggesting a field cancerization effect [ , ] . they observed clones of cells with allelic loss at one or more regions in % percent of histologically normal epithelium and % of specimens with hyperplasia or metaplasia; increasing frequency of loh within clones with increasing histopathologic lesional severity; the most frequent and earliest regions of allelic loss at p , p - , p , and p ; increasing size of the p deletions with progressive histologic changes; and tp allelic loss in many histologically advanced lesions (dysplasia and cis) [ ] . an overview of the sequential molecular events leading to invasive sqcc is shown in figure . [ ] . large cell carcinoma is an undifferentiated nsclc without light microscopic evidence of squamous or glandular differentiation, although squamous or glandular features may be detectable by ultrastructural examination (figure . ) [ ] . histologic subtypes of large cell carcinoma include large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (lcnec), combined lcnec, basaloid carcinoma, lymphoepithelioma-like carcinoma, clear cell carcinoma, and large cell carcinoma with rhabdoid phenotype [ ] . clinical signs and symptoms resemble those of other types of nsclc. most tumors develop as peripheral lung masses, except for basaloid carcinomas, which usually form centrally located masses. histologically, large cell carcinomas consist of sheets and nests of large cells with vesicular nuclei, prominent nucleoli, and moderate or abundant amounts of cytoplasm. lcnecs demonstrate neuroendocrine architectural features and immunohistochemical or ultrastructural evidence of neuroendocrine differentiation. basaloid carcinomas display nests of small, monomorphic, rounded or fusiform tumor cells with little cytoplasm, numerous mitoses, comedo-type necrosis, and hyaline or mucoid stromal degeneration. clear cell carcinoma consists of large tumor cells with clear cytoplasm. precursor lesions are not currently recognized for any of the subtypes of large cell carcinoma. however, basaloid carcinoma is associated with squamous dysplasia in about one-third of cases [ ] . large cell carcinomas are poorly differentiated carcinomas that can demonstrate features of ac (most frequent), sqcc, or neuroendocrine differentiation when examined by immunohistochemistry, electron microscopy, or molecular methods [ ] . these tumors often demonstrate losses of p, q, p, q, q, and p, and gains of q and p, more closely resembling acs than other histologic types of lung cancer [ ] . common molecular abnormalities include tp mutation, c-myc amplification, and p promoter hypermethylation, while k-ras mutation is less common [ ] . egfr tyrosine kinase domain mutation is not characteristic of large cell carcinomas, and egfrviii (deletion mutations in the extracellular domain of egfr) is uncommon [ , ] . the major categories of pulmonary neuroendocrine (ne) neoplasms include small cell carcinoma (sclc), large cell neuroendocrine carcinoma (lcnec), typical carcinoid, and atypical carcinoid. sclc and lcnec are high-grade carcinomas, typical carcinoid is a low-grade malignant neoplasm, and atypical carcinoid occupies an intermediate position in the spectrum of biologic aggressiveness. in one large series, the -year and -year survival rates for typical carcinoid were % and %, % and % for atypical carcinoid, % and % for lcnec, and % and % for sclc, respectively [ ] . by light microscopy, these tumors display ne architectural features including organoid nesting, a trabecular arrangement, rosette formation, and palisading. these patterns are more prominent in carcinoids than in lcnecs and may or may not be visible in individual sclcs. typical carcinoids contain fewer than mitoses per mm ( hpf) and lack necrosis ( figure . ), while atypical carcinoids show - mitoses per mm ( hpf) or necrosis, which is often punctate [ ] . sclc consists of small, undifferentiated tumor cells with scant cytoplasm and finely granular chromatin and absent or inconspicuous nucleoli ( figure . ). nuclear molding is characteristic, necrosis is common, and the mitotic rate is typically high, with a mean of over mitoses per mm [ ] . combined differences also exist in the characteristics of patients with carcinoids, as compared to patients with sclc and lcnec. patients with carcinoids are typically younger and less likely to smoke than those with sclcs and lcnecs, the vast majority of whom have a current or previous history of tobacco smoking [ , ] . rare patients with carcinoids have the multiple endocrine neoplasia (men ) syndrome, an association that is not seen with sclcs and lcnecs. in addition, an association with diffuse idiopathic pulmonary neuroendocrine cell hyperplasia (dipnech) has been noted for carcinoids but not for sclcs and lcnecs, leading to classification of dipnech as a preinvasive lesion in the most recent version of the who classification scheme [ ] . dipnech is a diffuse proliferation of single cells, small nodules (ne bodies), and linear proliferations of pulmonary ne cells that may reside in the bronchial and/or bronchiolar epithelia ( figure . ) , and may be accompanied by extraluminal proliferations part iv molecular pathology of human disease (tumorlets and carcinoids) [ ] . however, morphologically identifiable precursor lesions for sclc and lcnec have not been established. molecular markers of pulmonary ne tumors include chromogranin a, synaptophysin (figure . ) , and n-cam (cd ). these markers are expressed by all categories of ne tumors, with higher frequencies observed in the carcinoids and atypical carcinoids than in small cell and large cell neuroendocrine carcinomas. gastrin-releasing peptide, calcitonin, other peptide hormones, the insulinoma-associated (insm ) promotor and the human achaete-scute homolog- (hash ) gene have also been reported as overexpressed by these tumors [ , ] . thyroid transcription factor- (ttf- ) is expressed by %- % of sclcs, %- % of lcnecs, and %- % of carcinoids [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . sclcs [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . more than % of sclcs and sqccs demonstrate large, often discontinuous segments of allelic loss on chromosome p, in areas encompassing multiple candidate tumor suppressor genes, including some of those listed previously [ , ] . atypical carcinoids show a higher frequency of loh at p, q, p , and p than typical carcinoids, but not as high as the high-grade ne tumors [ ] . some typical and atypical carcinoids possess mutations of the multiple endocrine neoplasia (men ) gene on chromosome q or loh at this locus [ ] , while these abnormalities occur with lower frequencies in sclcs and lcnecs, supporting separate pathways of tumorigenesis [ ] . men encodes for the nuclear protein menin, which is believed to play several roles in tumorigenesis by linking transcription factor function to histone-modification pathways, in part through interacting with the activator-protein- family transcription factor jund, modifying it from an oncoprotein into a tumor suppressor protein [ ] . oncogenes frequently amplified in sclcs include myc ( q ), mycn ( p ), and mycl ( p ), and additional amplified genes that represent candidate oncogenes include the antiapoptotic genes tnfrsf ( p ), dad ( q ), bcl l ( q ), and bcl l ( q ) [ ] . the myc proteins are transcription factors that are important in cell cycle regulation, proliferation, and dna synthesis, and can induce p arf , leading to apoptosis through p if cellular conditions do not favor proliferation [ ] . tsgs are inactivated in the majority of sclcs. eighty percent to % of sclcs demonstrate tp mutations, as compared to more than % of nsclcs, fewer atypical carcinoids, and virtually no typically carcinoids [ , ] . most of the tp mutations in sclcs are missense point mutations that result in a stabilized p mutant protein which can be easily detected by immunohistochemistry [ ] . p protein overexpression occurs frequently in high-grade ne carcinomas, but is unusual in typical carcinoids and intermediate in atypical carcinoids [ , ] . dysregulation of p produces downstream effects on bcl- and bax. antiapoptotic bcl- predominates over proapoptotic bax in the high-grade ne carcinomas, while the reverse is true for carcinoids [ ] . lcnecs resemble sclcs in their high rates of tp mutation and predominance of bcl- expression over bax expression [ ] . alterations compromising the p ink a /cyclin d /rb pathway of g arrest are consistent in high-grade pulmonary ne carcinomas ( %), primarily through loss of rb protein, but are less frequent in atypical carcinoids ( %) and are uncommon in typical carcinoids [ ] . mutations in the rb gene exist in many sclcs, with associated loss of function of the gene product [ , , ] . in another study, % of the ne carcinomas (excluding carcinoids) versus % of the non-ne carcinomas exhibited loh and loss of rb-protein expression [ ] . the hypophosphorylated form of rb protein functions as a cell cycle regulator for g arrest; cyclin d overexpression and p ink a loss produce persistent hyperphosphorylation of rb with consequent evasion of cell cycle arrest [ ] . recent data also suggest that in sclcs, overexpression of mdm (a transcriptional target of p ) or p arf loss leads to evasion of cell cycle arrest through the p and rb pathway ( figure . ) [ ] . the transcription factor e f- appears to play a role in cellular proliferation by activating genes required for s phase entry. e f- product is overexpressed in % of sclcs and % of lcnecs, and is significantly associated with a high ki index and bcl- :bax ratio > [ ] . a mediator of the proteasomal degradation of e f- , the s phase kinase-associated protein (skp ) f-box protein accumulates in high-grade ne carcinomas ( %), and its overexpression has been associated with advanced stage and nodal metastasis in pulmonary ne tumors [ ] . in the high-grade ne tumors, skp appears to interact with e f- and stimulate its transcriptional activity toward the cyclin e promoter [ , ] . telomeres play an important role in the protection of chromosomes against degradation. telomerases, the enzymes that synthesize telomeric dna strands, serve to counterbalance losses of dna during cell divisions. high telomerase activity has been noted in over % of sclcs and lcnecs [ ] [ ] [ ] versus % or fewer typical carcinoids [ , ] . expression of human telomerase mrna component (hterc) and human telomerase reverse transcriptase (htert) mrna were reported, respectively, in % and % of typical carcinoids; and in % and % of atypical carcinoids, lcnecs and sclcs, and telomere length alterations in lcnecs and sclcs were greater than in typical carcinoids [ ] . aberrant methylation of cytosine-guanine (cpg) islands in promoter regions of malignant cells is an important mechanism for silencing of tsgs (epigenetic inactivation). methylation of dna involves the transfer of a methyl group, by a dna methyltransferase, to the cytosine of a cpg dinucleotide [ ] . rassf a is a potential tsg that undergoes epigenetic inactivation in virtually all sclcs and a majority of nsclcs through hypermethylation of its promoter region [ , ] . ne tumors have lower frequencies of methylation of p , apc, and cdh (h-cadherin) than nsclcs [ ] . sclcs have higher frequencies of methylation of rassf a, cdh (e-cadherin), and rarb than carcinoids [ ] . promoter methylation of casp , which encodes the apoptosis-inducing cysteine protease caspase , was also found in % of sclcs, % of carcinoids, and no nsclcs, suggesting that casp may function as a tsg in ne lung tumors [ ] . although histologically defined precursors for sclc are lacking, a higher incidence of genetic abnormalities is found in the normal or hyperplasic airway epithelium of patients with sclc than nsclc [ ] . by extension, it has been suggested that sclc may arise directly from histologically normal or mildly abnormal epithelium, rather than evolving through a sequence of recognizable histologic intermediary changes [ ] . relatively little is known about molecular abnormalities in precursors of carcinoids. although carcinoids have been viewed as arising from tumorlets, q (int- ) allelic imbalance is significantly more common in carcinoids ( %) than in tumorlets ( %), and may represent an early event in carcinoid tumor formation [ ] . the int- gene lies in close proximity to men , a tumor suppressor gene frequently mutated in ne tumors [ ] . the molecular pathology of dipnech remains to be elucidated. mesenchymal neoplasms included in the who classification scheme (table . ) encompass a spectrum of malignant and benign proliferations that show differentiation along multiple lineages. overall, these tumors are much less common in the lung than are epithelial neoplasms. information about molecular pathogenesis has emerged for some of the mesenchymal neoplasms. pulmonary inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor (imt) is a lesion composed of myofibroblastic cells, collagen, and inflammatory cells that primarily occurs in individuals less than years of age, and is the most common endobronchial mesenchymal lesion in childhood ( figure . ) [ ] . synovial sarcoma is usually a soft tissue malignancy, but uncommonly arises in the pleura or the lung and often takes an aggressive course [ ] . pulmonary hamartomas are benign neoplasms consisting of mixtures of cartilage, fat, connective tissue, and smooth muscle, which present as coin lesions on chest radiographs and are excised in order to rule out a malignancy ( figure . ). many imts demonstrate clonal abnormalities with rearrangements of chromosome p and the anaplastic lymphoma kinase (alk) gene [ ] . the rearrangements involve fusion of tropomyosin (tpm) n-terminal coiled-coil domains to the alk c-terminal kinase domain, producing two alk fusion genes, tpm -alk and tpm -alk, which encode oncoproteins with constitutive kinase activity [ ] . like their soft tissue counterparts, more than % of pulmonary and pleural synovial sarcomas demonstrate a chromosomal translocation t(x; ) (syt-ssx) [ , ] . detection of this translocation can be very helpful for confirming the diagnosis of synovial sarcoma in this unusual location. most pulmonary hamartomas show abnormalities of chromosomal bands p , q - , or other regions [ ] , corresponding to mutations of high-mobility group (hmg) proteins, a family of nonhistone chromatin-associated proteins that serve an important role in regulating chromatin architecture and gene expression [ ] . malignant mesothelioma (mm) is an uncommon, aggressive tumor arising from mesothelial cells on serosal surfaces, primarily the pleura and peritoneum, and less often the pericardium or tunica vaginalis. the most important risk factor for mm is exposure to the subset of asbestos fibers known as amphiboles (crocidolite and amosite) [ ] . the incidence of this tumor in the united states peaked in the early to mid- s, and appears to be declining, likely related to decreases in the use of amphiboles since their peak period of importation in the s [ ] . these tumors are characterized by long latency periods between asbestos exposure and clinical presentation of the tumor, with a mean of - years [ ] . radiation, a nonasbestos fiber known as erionite, and potentially other processes associated with pleural scarring have also been implicated in the causation of smaller numbers of cases of malignant mesothelioma [ ] , and a role for simian virus (sv ) in the genesis of this tumor has been suggested by some, but remains controversial [ , ] . pleural mm most commonly arises in males over the age of . presenting features typically include a hemorrhagic pleural effusion associated with shortness of breath and chest wall pain. weight loss and malaise are common. by the time the tumor is discovered, patients usually have extensive involvement of the pleural surfaces. with progression, the tumor typically invades the lung, chest wall, and diaphragm. lymph node metastasis can cause superior vena caval obstruction, and cardiac tamponade, subcutaneous nodules, and contralateral lung involvement can also occur. from the time of diagnosis, the median survival is months [ ] . treatment may include surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy, or other treatments, often in combination [ ] . the intent of surgery is usually palliative. whether extrapleural pneumonectomy with chemotherapy and radiotherapy can lead to cure is unclear [ ] . new agents are currently under investigation for their potential to improve the life expectancy and quality of life in patients with this aggressive malignancy. gross pathologic features of mm include pleural nodules which grow and coalesce to fill the pleural cavity and form a thick rind around the lung. a firm tan appearance is common, and occasionally the tumor can have a gelatinous consistency (figure . ). extension along the interlobar fissures and invasion into the adjacent lung, diaphragm, and chest wall are characteristic. further spread can occur into the pericardial cavity and around other mediastinal structures, and distant metastases can also develop. histologically, mm manifests a wide variety of histologic patterns. the major histologic categories include epithelioid mesothelioma, sarcomatoid mesothelioma, desmoplastic mesothelioma, and biphasic mesothelioma [ ] . epithelioid mesothelioma consists of round, ovoid, or polygonal cells with eosinophilic cytoplasm and nuclei that are usually round with little cytoatypia (figure . ). these cells most often form sheets, tubulopapillary structures, or gland-like arrangements, and some tumors can have a myxoid appearance due to production of large amounts of hyaluronate. sarcomatoid mesothelioma is composed of malignant-appearing spindle cells occasionally accompanied by mature sarcomatous components (osteosarcoma, chondrosarcoma, others). desmoplastic mesothelioma can be a diagnostic challenge due to its frequently bland appearance and resemblance to organizing pleuritis. it consists of variably atypical spindle cells in a dense collagenous matrix ( figure . ). helpful features for separating figure . malignant mesothelioma. the tan/white tumor involves the entire pleura surrounding and compressing the underlying parenchyma, which appears congested but relatively unremarkable. chapter molecular basis of pulmonary disease this tumor from organizing pleuritis include invasion of chest wall muscle or adipose tissue and necrosis. biphasic mesotheliomas include both epithelioid and sarcomatoid elements, each comprising at least % of the tumor [ ] . pathologic diagnosis of mm has been greatly assisted by the expanded availability of antibodies for use in immunohistochemistry [ ] . mesothelial differentiation can be supported by immunoreactivity with cytokeratin / , calretinin ( figure . ), hbme- , d - , and other antibodies. histologic distinction of epithelioid mesotheliomas from metastatic acs is a common need in practice, and a panel approach using calretinin and cytokeratin / , with other antibodies reactive with acs (cea, moc- , ber-ep , leu m , b . , and others) will usually be successful. electron microscopy can also be helpful in difficult cases by demonstrating long thin microvilli in many mms with an epithelioid component. pan-cytokeratin staining is helpful for supporting a diagnosis of sarcomatoid or desmoplastic mm as opposed to sarcoma, since most (but not all) sarcomas will not stain for pan-cytokeratin. other mesothelial and mesenchymal markers can also be useful for assisting in the differentiation of mm from histologically similar sarcomas. precursor lesions for mm have not been clearly defined from a histologic standpoint, although it is likely that an in situ stage exists [ ] . the term atypical mesothelial hyperplasia has been recommended for surface (noninvasive) proliferations of mesothelial cells of uncertain malignant potential [ ] . exposure to asbestos fibers is believed to trigger the pathobiological changes leading to the majority of mms. currently, it is believed that asbestos may act as an initiator (genetically) and promoter (epigenetically) in the development of mms [ ] . the degree to which tumorigenesis results from direct interactions of the fibers with the mesothelial cells, or through other mechanisms involving oxidative stress (or both), is unresolved [ , ] . multiple chromosomal alterations are often noted in mms, and inactivation of tsgs plays an important part in the pathogenesis of mm [ ] . a variety of genetic abnormalities have been reported including deletions of p - , p , p, q, q, p , q - , q, and proximal q, monosomy , and gains of q, p, p, q - , and q - part iv molecular pathology of human disease [ , ] . the most common genetic abnormality in mm is a deletion in p encompassing the cdkn a locus encoding the tumor suppressors p ink a and p arf , which participate in the p and rb pathways and inhibit cell cycle progression ( figure . ) [ , ] . recent studies have shown that sv large t antigen (present in some mms) inactivates the tsg products rb and p , raising the possibility that asbestos and sv could act as co-carcinogens in mm and suggesting that perturbations of rb-and p -dependent growth-regulatory pathways may be involved in the pathogenesis of mm [ ] . other common findings include inactivating mutations with allelic loss in the tsg neurofibromin (nf ), found at chromosome q [ ] , and inactivation of cdkn a/p arf and gpc (another tsg) by promoter methylation [ ] . loss of cdkn a/ p arf also results in mdm -mediated inactivation of p [ ] . however, in mms, unlike many other epithelial tumors, mutations in the tp , rb, and ras genes are rare [ ] . the wnt signal transduction pathway is also abnormally activated in mms and appears to play a role in pathogenesis [ ] . activation of the pathway leads to accumulation of b-catenin in the cytoplasm and its translocation to the nucleus. interactions with tcf/ lef transcription factors promote expression of multiple genes including c-myc and cyclin d. the mechanism of activation does not appear to involve mutations in the b-catenin gene, but may instead involve more upstream components of the pathway, such as the disheveled proteins [ ] . recent evidence also suggests that the phosphatidylinositol -kinase (pi -k/akt) pathway is frequently activated in mms, and that inhibition of this pathway can increase sensitivity to a chemotherapeutic agent [ ] . the wilms' tumor gene (wt ) is also expressed in most mms, but its role in the pathogenesis of mm is unclear [ ] . finally, egfr signaling in mms has recently become a focus of greater attention, and there are some data showing that the egfr is an early cell membrane target of asbestos fibers and is linked to activation of the mapk cascade [ ] . unfortunately, a phase ii clinical trial of gefitinib treatment in patients with mms did not show effectiveness, despite egfr overexpression in over % of cases [ ] . another study found that common egfr mutations conferring sensitivity to gefitinib are not prevalent in human malignant mesothelioma [ ] . further investigation continues into new, potentially efficacious agents for the treatment of mm. non-neoplastic pulmonary pathology comprises inflammatory and fibrosing diseases of the conducting airways, alveoli, vessels, and lymphoid tissue. this pathology may be localized or diffuse, may either have an obvious etiology or be idiopathic, and may cause injury that is reparable or irreparable. most importantly, an understanding of non-neoplastic lung pathology plays a vital role in the clinical management of these diseases. this section covers the major types of obstructive and interstitial diseases, the vascular lesions, the pneumonias, the occupational diseases, the major histiocytic conditions, and the most common developmental anomalies. this list does not include all of the non-neoplastic diseases that can affect the lung, but it represents those that are responsible for the majority of illness. also, the conditions highlighted within each of these categories are those about which we best understand the molecular biology of the disease mechanisms. obstructive lung diseases are characterized by a reduction in airflow due to airway narrowing. this airflow reduction occurs, in general, by two basic mechanisms: (i) inflammation and injury of the airway, resulting in obstruction by mucous and cellular debris within and around the airway lumen; and (ii) destruction of the elastin fibers of the alveolar walls, causing loss of elastic recoil and subsequent premature collapse of the airway during the expiratory phase of respiration. there are four major obstructive lung diseases: asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and bronchiectasis. asthma is a chronic inflammatory disease of the airways that affects more than million people worldwide. the prevalence of disabling asthma has increased over % since , ranging from as low as % in rural ethiopia to over % among children in parts of central and south america [ ] . in the united states, asthma affects approximately %- % of the population and is the leading cause of hospitalization among children less than years of age [ ] . clinically, the disease is defined as a generalized obstruction of airflow with a reversibility that can occur spontaneously or with therapy. it is characterized by recurrent wheezing, cough, or shortness of breath resulting from airway hyperactivity and mucus hypersecretion. the hyperresponsiveness is a result of acute bronchospasm and can be elicited for diagnostic purposes using histamine or methacholine challenges. the key feature of these symptoms is that they are variable-worse at night or in the early morning, and in some people worse after exercise. it has previously been assumed that these symptoms are separated by intervals of normal physiology. however, evidence is now accumulating that asthma can cause progressive lung impairment due to chronic morphologic changes in the airways. the treatment strategies for this complex disease are myriad. in atopic individuals, allergen avoidance should be the primary therapy. for example, in children, reducing exposure to house dust mites early in life decreases sensitization and the incidence of disease. for those who do develop the disease, avoidance of allergens later in life improves symptom control. established treatments for asthma flairs include inhaled corticosteroids, and short-acting and long-acting b -adrenoceptor agonists. phosphodiesterase (pde) inhibitors such as theophylline have been used for decades to treat asthmatic bronchoconstriction, but both cardiac and central nervous systems side effects have limited their use. newer pde inhibitors without side effects include non-xanthine drugs such as rofumilast. the pathologic changes to the airways in asthma are very similar to those seen in chronic bronchitis. they consist of a thickened basement membrane with epithelial desquamation, goblet cell hyperplasia, and subepithelial elastin deposition. in the wall of the airway, smooth muscle hypertrophy and submucosal gland hyperplasia are also present ( figure . ). in acute asthma exacerbations, a transmural chronic inflammatory infiltrate with variable amounts of eosinophilia may be present, resulting in epithelial injury and desquamation that can become quite pronounced. one sees clumps of degenerating epithelial cells mixed with mucin in the lumen airway. these aggregates of degenerating cells are referred to as creola bodies and can be seen in expectorated mucin from these patients. also present in these sputum samples are charcot-leyden crystals, rhomboid-shaped structures that represent breakdown products from eosinophil cytoplasmic granules ( figure . ). the changes seen in the walls of these airways represent long-term airway remodeling caused by prolonged inflammation. this remodeling may play a role in the pathophysiology of asthma. the amount of airway remodeling is highly variable from patient to patient, but remodeling has been found even in patients with mild asthma. currently, the effect of the treatment on this chronic pathology is unclear [ ] . the pathogenesis of asthma is complex, and most likely involves both genetic and environmental components. most experts now see it as a disease in which an insult initiates a series of events in a genetically susceptible host. no single gene accounts for the familial component of this disease. genetic analysis of these patients reveals a prevalence of specific hla alleles, polymorphisms of fc erib, il- , and cd [ , ] . asthma can be classified using a number of different schema. most commonly, asthma is divided into two categories: atopic (allergic) and nonatopic (nonallergic). atopic asthma results from an allergic sensitization usually early in life and has its onset in early childhood. nonatopic asthma is late-onset and, though the immunopathology has not been as well studied, probably has similar mechanisms to atopic asthma. although this nosology is convenient for purposes of understanding the mechanisms of the disease, most patients manifest a combination of these two categories with overlapping symptoms. th pathogenetic mechanisms of both types encompass a variety of cells and their products. these include airway epithelium, smooth muscle cells, fibroblasts, mast cells, eosinophils, and t-cells. the asthma response includes two phases: an early response comprising an acute bronchospastic event within - minutes after exposure, and a late response that peaks approximately - hours and that can have prolonged effects. if one wants to understand this complex response, it is best to divide it into three components: (i) a type hypersensitivity response, (ii) acute and chronic inflammation, and (iii) bronchial hyperactivity. type hypersensitivity in general, human asthma is associated with a predominance of type helper cells with a cd þ phenotype. these th -type cells result from the uptake and processing of viral, allergen, and environmental triggers that initiate the episode. the processing includes the presentation of these triggers by the airway dendritic cells to naive t-cells (th ), resulting in their differentiation into populations of th and th . the th differentiation is a result of il- release by the dendritic cells, and the th cells then part iv molecular pathology of human disease further propagate the inflammatory reaction in two ways. first, they release a variety of cytokines such as il- , il- , and il- that mediate a wide variety of responses. il- and il- stimulate b-cells and plasma cells to produce ige, which, in turn, stimulates mast cell maturation and the release of multiple mediators, including histamine and leukotrienes. second, these th cells secrete il- that, together with il- , also stimulates mast cells to secrete histamine, tryptase, chymase, and the cysteinyl leukotrienes causing the bronchoconstrictor response that occurs rapidly after the exposure to the allergen. il- from these lymphocytes also recruits eosinophils to the airways and stimulates the release of the contents of their granules, including eosinophil cationic protein (ecp), major basic protein (mbp), eosinophil peroxidase, and eosinophil-derived neurotoxin. these compounds not only induce the bronchial wall hyperactivity but are also responsible for the increased vascular permeability that produces the transmural edema in the airways. the cells can differentiate into th cells as a result of il- produced by dendritic cells. these th cells produce interferon-gamma (ifn-g), il- , and lymphotoxin, which play a role in macrophage activation in delayedtype hypersensitivity reactions as seen in diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and tuberculosis [ ] . these th cells are predominantly responsible for defense against intracellular organisms and are more prominent in normal airways and in airways of patients with emphysema than in asthmatics. however, in severe forms of asthma, th cells are recruited and have the capacity to secrete tumor necrosis factor (tnf)-a and ifn-g, which may lead to the tissue-damaging immune response one sees in these airways (figure . ) [ , ] . acute and chronic inflammation the role of acute and chronic inflammatory cells, including eosinophils, mast cells, macrophages, and lymphocytes, in asthma is evident in the abundance of these cells in airways, sputum, and bronchoalveolar samples from patients with this disease. the number of eosinophils in the airways correlates with the severity of asthma and the amount of bronchial hyperresponsiveness. proteins released by these cells including ecp, mcp, and eosinophil-derived neurotoxin cause at least some of the epithelial damage seen in the active form of asthma. neutrophils are prominent in the more acute exacerbations of asthma and are probably recruited to these airways by il- , a potent neutrophil chemoattractant released by airway epithelial cells [ ] . these cells also release proteases, reactive oxygen species (ros), and other proinflammatory mediators that, in addition to the epithelial damage, also contribute to the airway destruction and remodeling that occurs in the more chronic forms of this disease. the susceptibility of the epithelium in asthma to this oxidant injury may be increased due to decreased antioxidants such as superoxide dismutase in these lungs [ ] . finally, mast cells are activated to release an abundance of mediators through the binding of ige to fceri, high-affinity receptors on their surface. allergens bind to ige molecules and induce a cross-linking of these molecules, leading to activation of the mast cell and release of a number of mediators, most notably histamine, tryptase, and various leukotrienes, including leukotriene d (ltd ), and interact with the smooth muscle to induce contraction and the acute bronchospastic response [ ] . allergen bronchial hyperactivity the cornerstone of asthma is the hyperactive response of the airway smooth muscle. the mechanism by which this occurs combines neural pathways and inflammatory pathways. as stated, the inflammatory component of this response comes predominantly from the mast cells. the major neural pathway involved is the nonadrenergic noncholinergic (nanc) system. although cholinergic pathways are responsible for maintaining the airway smooth muscle tone, it is the nanc system that releases bronchoactive tachykinins (substance p and neurokinin a) that bind to nk receptors on the smooth muscle and cause the constriction that characterizes the acute asthmatic response [ ] . in addition to these acute mechanisms, the airway also undergoes structural alterations to its formed elements. in the mucosa, these changes include goblet cell hyperplasia and basement membrane thickening. within the submucosa and airway wall, increased deposition of collagen and elastic fibers results in fibrosis and elastosis, and both the smooth muscle cells and the submucosal glands undergo hypertrophy and hyperplasia. these irreversible changes are a consequence of chronic inflammatory insults on the airways through mechanisms that include release of fibrosing mediators such tgfb and mitogenic mediators such as epidermal and fibroblast growth factors (egf, fgf). the exact mechanisms by which this occurs are not clearly defined, but the similarity of these factors with those involved in branching morphogenesis of the developing lung has led to a focus on the effect of inflammation on the interaction of the epithelium with the underlying mesenchymal cells [ ] . the term chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (copd) applies to emphysema, chronic bronchitis, and bronchiectasis, those diseases in which airflow limitation is usually progressive, but, unlike asthma, not fully reversible [ ] . the prevalence of copd worldwide is estimated at %- % in adults over the age of [ ] . though there are different forms of copd with different etiologies, the clinical manifestations of the most common forms of the disease are the same. these include a progressive decline in lung function, usually measured as decreased forced expiratory flow in second (fev ), a chronic cough, and dyspnea. emphysema and chronic bronchitis are the most common diseases of copd and are the result of cigarette smoking. as such, they usually exist together in most smokers. chronic bronchitis is defined clinically as a persistent cough with sputum production for at least months in at least consecutive years without any other identifiable cause. patients with chronic bronchitis typically have copious sputum with a prominent cough, more commonly get infections, and typically experience hypercapnia and severe hypoxemia, giving rise to the clinical moniker blue bloater. emphysema is the destruction and permanent enlargement of the air spaces distal to the terminal bronchioles without obvious fibrosis [ ] . these patients have only a slight cough, while the overinflation of the lungs is severe, inspiring the term pink puffers. the pathologic features of copd are best understood if one considers the whole of copd as a spectrum of pathology that consists of emphysematous tissue destruction, airway inflammation, remodeling, and obstruction [ ] . the lungs of patients with copd usually contain all of these features, but in varying proportions. the pathologic features of chronic bronchitis include mucosal pathology that consists of epithelial inflammation, injury, and regenerative epithelial changes of squamous and goblet cell metaplasia. in addition, the submucosa shows changes of remodeling with smooth muscle hypertrophy and submucosal gland hyperplasia. these changes are responsible for the copious secretions characteristic of this clinical disease, although studies have reported no consistent relationship between these pathologic features of the large airways and the airflow obstruction [ ] . the pathology definition of emphysema is an abnormal, permanent enlargement of the airspaces distal to the terminal bronchioles accompanied by destruction of the alveolar walls without fibrosis [ ] . the four major pathologic patterns of emphysema are defined by the location of this destruction. these include centriacinar, panacinar, paraseptal, and irregular emphysema. the first two of these are responsible for the overwhelming majority of the clinical disease. centriacinar emphysema (sometimes referred to as centrilobular) represents % of the cases and is a result of destruction of alveoli at the proximal and central areas of the pulmonary acinus, including the respiratory bronchioles ( figure . ). it predominantly affects the upper lobes the remaining two types of emphysema, paraseptal and irregular, are rarely associated with clinical disease. in paraseptal emphysema, the damage is to the distal acinus, the area that abuts the pleura at the margins of the lobules. damage in this area may cause spontaneous pneumothoraces, typically in young, thin men [ ] . irregular emphysema is tissue destruction and alveolar enlargement that occurs adjacent to scarring, secondary to the enhanced inflammation in the area. though this is a common finding in a scarred lung, it is of little if any clinical significance to the patient. though the emphysema in these lungs plays the dominant role in causing the obstruction, small airway pathology is also present. respiratory bronchiolitis refers to the inflammatory changes found in the distal airways of smokers. these consist of pigmented macrophages filling the lumen and the peribronchiolar airspaces and mild chronic inflammation and fibrosis around the bronchioles (figure . ). the pigment in these macrophages represents the inhaled particulate matter of the cigarette smoke that has been phagocytized by these cells. the macrophages in turn release proteases, which destroy the elastic fibers in the surrounding area, resulting in the loss of elastic recoil and the obstructive symptoms. in general, copd is a result of inflammation of the large airways that produces the airway remodeling characteristic of chronic bronchitis as well as inflammation of the smaller airways that results in the destruction of the adjacent tissue and consequent emphysema. the predominant inflammatory cells involved in this process are the alveolar macrophages, neutrophils, and lymphocytes. the main theories of the pathogenesis of copd support the interaction of airway inflammation with two main systems in the lung: the protease-antiprotease system and the oxidant-antioxidant system. these systems help to protect the lung from the many irritants that enter the lung via the large pulmonary surface area that interfaces with the environment. in the protease-antiprotease system, proteases are produced by a number of cells, including epithelial cells and inflammatory cells that degrade the underlying lung matrix. the most important proteases in the lung are the neutrophil elastases, part of the serine protease family, and the metalloproteinases (mmps) produced predominantly by macrophages. these proteases can be secreted in response to invasion by environmental irritants, most notably infectious agents such as bacteria. in this setting, their role is to enzymatically degrade the organism. however, proteases can also be secreted by both inflammatory and epithelial cells in a normal lung to repair and maintain the underlying lung matrix proteins [ ] . to protect the lung from unwanted destruction by these enzymes, the liver secretes antiproteases that circulate in the bloodstream to the lung and inhibit the action of the proteases. in addition, macrophages that secrete mmps also secrete tissue inhibitors of metalloproteinases (timps). a delicate balance of proteases and antiproteases is needed to maintain the integrity of the lung structure. an imbalance that results in a relative excess of proteases (either by overproduction of proteases or underproduction of their inhibitors) leads to tissue destruction and the formation of emphysema. this imbalance occurs in different ways in the two major types of emphysema: centriacinar and panacinar. in centriacinar emphysema, caused primarily by cigarette smoking, there is an overproduction of proteases primarily due to the stimulatory effect of chemicals within the smoke on the neutrophils and macrophages. though the exact mechanism is not completely understood, most studies support that nicotine from the cigarette smoke acts as a chemoattractant, and ros also contained in the smoke, stimulate an increased release of neutrophil elastases and mmps from activated macrophages, leading to the destruction of the elastin in the alveolar spaces [ ] . this inflammatory cell activation may come about through the activation of the transcription factor nfkb that leads to tnfa production [ ] . in addition, the elastin peptides themselves may attract additional inflammatory cells to further increase the protease secretion and exacerbate the matrix destruction [ ] . unlike centriacinar emphysema, panacinar emphysema is most commonly caused by a genetic deficiency of antiproteases, usually due to alpha- anti-trypsin (aat) deficiency, a condition that affects approximately , people in the united states [ ] . aat deficiency is due to a defect in the gene that encodes the protein aat, a glycoprotein produced by hepatocytes and the main inhibitor of neutrophil elastase. the affected gene is the serpina gene (formerly known as p ), located on the long arm of chromosome ( q - . ). the genetic mutations that occur have been categorized into four groups: base substitution, in-frame deletions, frame-shift mutations, and exon deletions. these mutations usually result in misfolding, polymerization, and retention of the aberrant protein within the hepatocytes, leading to decreased circulating levels. aat deficiency is an autosomal codominant disease with over allelic variants, of which the m alleles (m -m ) are the most common; these alleles produce normal serum levels of a lessactive protein [ ] . individuals who manifest the lung disease are usually homozygous for the alleles z or s (zz and ss phenotype) or heterozygous for the m alleles (mz, or sz phenotype) [ ] . an aat concentration in plasma of less than % of normal confers a risk for emphysema [ ] . in individuals with the zz genotype, the activity of aat is approximately one-fifth of normal [ ] . the second system in the lung involved in the pathogenesis of emphysema is the oxidant-antioxidant system. as in the protease system, the lung is protected from oxidative stress in the form of ros by antioxidants produced by cells in the lung. ros in the lung include oxygen ions, free radicals, and peroxides. the major antioxidants in the airways are enzymes including catalase, superoxide dismutase (sod), glutathione peroxidase, glutathione s-transferase, xanthine oxidase, and thioredoxin, as well as nonenzymatic antioxidants including glutathione, ascorbate, urate, and bilirubin [ ] . the balance of oxidants and antioxidants in the lung prevents damage by ros. however, cigarette smoke increases the production of ros by neutrophils, eosinophils, macrophages, and epithelial cells [ ] . evidence that damage to the lung epithelium and matrix is a direct result of ros includes the presence of exhaled h o and -isoprostane, decreased plasma antioxidants, and increased plasma and tissue levels of oxidized proteins, including various lipid peroxidation products. in addition to this direct effect, ros may also induce a proinflammatory response that recruits more inflammatory cells to the lung. in animal models, cigarette smoke induces the expression of proinflammatory cytokines such as il- , il- , tnfa, and il- from macrophages, epithelial cells, and fibroblasts, perhaps through activation of the transcription factor nfkb [ , ] (figure . ) . finally, there is some evidence that cigarette smoke further disturbs the oxidant-antioxidant balance in the lung by depleting antioxidants such as ascorbate and glutathione [ ] . bronchiectasis represents the permanent remodeling and dilatation of the large airways of the lung most commonly due to chronic inflammation and recurrent pneumonia. these infections usually occur because airway secretions and entrapped organisms cannot be effectively cleared. this pathology dictates the clinical features of the disease, which include chronic cough with copious secretions and a history of recurrent pneumonia. the five major causes of bronchiectasis are infection, obstruction, impaired mucociliary defenses, impaired systemic immune defenses, and congenital. these may produce either a localized or diffuse form of the disease. localized bronchiectasis is usually due to obstruction of airways by mass lesions or scars from previous injury or infection. diffuse bronchiectasis can result from defects in systemic immune defenses in which either innate or adaptive immunity may be impaired. diseases due to the former include chronic granulomatous disease (cgd), and diseases due to the latter include agammaglobulinemia/hypogammaglobulinemia and severe combined immune deficiencies. defects in the mucociliary defense mechanism that is responsible for physically clearing organisms from the lung may also cause diffuse bronchiectasis. these include ciliary dyskinesias that result in cilia with aberrant ultrastructure and cystic fibrosis (cf). congenital forms of bronchiectasis are rare but do exist. the most common include mounier-kuhn's syndrome and williams-campbell syndrome, the former causing enlargement of the trachea and major bronchi due to loss of bronchial cartilage, and the latter causing diffuse bronchiectasis of the major airways probably due to a genetic defect in the connective tissue [ , ] . the pathology of bronchiectasis is most dramatically seen at the gross level. one can see dilated airways containing copious amounts of infected secretions and mucous plugs localized either to a segment of the lung or diffusely involving the entire lung as in cystic fibrosis (figure . ) . microscopic features include chronic inflammatory changes similar to those of chronic bronchitis but with ulceration of the mucosa and submucosa leading to destruction of the smooth muscle, and elastic in the airway wall and the characteristic dilatation and fibrosis. these enlarged airways contain mucous plugs comprising mucin and abundant degenerating inflammatory cells, a result of infections that establish themselves in these airways following the loss of the mucociliary defense mechanism. bacteria may be found in these plugs, most notably p. aeruginosa. the pathogenetic mechanism of bronchiectasis is complex and depends on the underlying etiology. in general, the initial damage to the bronchial epithelium is due to aberrant mucin (cystic fibrosis), dysfunctional cilia (ciliary dyskinesias), and ineffective immune surveillance (defects in innate and antibody-mediated immunity), leading to a cycle of tissue injury, repair, and remodeling that ultimately destroys the normal airway. the initial event in this cycle usually involves dysfunction of the mucociliary mechanism that inhibits the expulsion from the lungs of organisms and other foreign substances that invade the airways. this may be due to defects in the cilia or the mucin. ciliary defects are found in primary ciliary dyskinesia, a genetically heterogeneous disorder, usually inherited as an autosomal recessive trait that produces immotile cilia with clinical manifestations in the lungs, sinuses, middle ear, male fertility, and organ lateralization [ ] . over proteins make up the axoneme of the cilia, but mutations in genes, dnai and dnah , which encode for proteins in the outer dynein arms, most frequently cause this disorder [ ] . in cf the main defect affects the mucin. in patients with this autosomal recessive condition, there is a low volume of airway surface liquid (asl) causing sticky mucin that inhibits normal ciliary motion and effective mucociliary clearance of organisms. this is due to a defect in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (cftr) gene, located on chromosome that encodes a camp-activated channel which regulates the flow of chloride ions in and out of cells and intracellular vacuoles, helping to maintain the osmolality of the mucin. this protein is present predominantly on the apical membrane of the airway epithelial cells, though it is also involved in considerable subapical, intracellular trafficking and recycling during the course of its maturation within these cells. this genetic disease manifests in multiple other organs that depend on chloride ion transport to maintain normal secretions, including the pancreas, intestine, liver, reproductive organs, and sweat glands [ ] . the genetic mutations in cf influence the cftr trafficking in the distal compartments of the protein secretary pathway, and various genetic mutations produce different clinical phenotypes of the disease. over mutations of the cftr gene have been found. however, only four of these mutations occur at a frequency of greater than %. these mutations are grouped into five classes according to their functional deficit: group i, cftr is not synthesized; group ii, cftr is inadequately processed; group iii, cftr is not regulated; group iv, cftr shows abnormal conductance; group v, cftr has partially defective production or processing. approximately % of cf patients are in group ii and have the same mutation, f d cftr, a deletion of phenylalanine at codon [ ] . in these patients, most of the cftr protein is misfolded and undergoes premature degradation within the endoplasmic reticulum, though a small amount of the cftr protein is present on the apical membrane and does function normally. cf patients may have a combination of genetic mutations from any of the five groups. however, those patients with the most severe disease involving both the lungs and pancreas usually carry at least two mutations from group i, ii, or iii [ ] . systemic immune deficiencies cause bronchiectasis through the establishment of persistent infection and inflammation. there are four major categories of immune deficiencies. the first category consists of a number of genetic diseases that cause either agammaglobulinemia or hypogammaglobulinemia. these include xlinked agammaglobulinemia (xla) and common variable immunodeficiency (cvi). xla is caused by a mutation of the bruton's tyrosine kinase (btk) gene that results in the virtual absence of all immunoglobulin isotypes and of circulating b lymphocytes. in cvi there is a marked reduction in igg and iga and/or igm, associated with defective antibody response to protein and polysaccharide antigens. as expected, both of these diseases increase susceptibility to infections from encapsulated bacteria. the second category of immune deficiency is hyper-ige syndrome, a disease with markedly elevated serum ige levels that is characterized by recurrent staphylococcal infections. the third category is chronic granulomatous disease (cgd), a genetically heterogeneous group of disorders that have a defective phagocytic respiratory burst and superoxide production, inhibiting the ability to kill staphylococcus spp. and fungi such as aspergillus spp. finally, severe combined immune deficiency (scid) comprises a group of disorders with abnormal t-cell development and b-cell and/or natural killer cell maturation and function, predisposing these patients to pneumocystis jiroveci and viral infections [ ] . after the initial insult, the subsequent steps in the development of bronchiectasis include destruction of the epithelial cells and bronchial wall connective tissue matrix by the proteases and ros secreted by the neutrophils. this proinflammatory milieu is produced by multiple factors. first, infections can persist in these lungs due to defective host immune systems and mechanisms certain organisms have developed to evade these immune defenses. for example, pseudomonas aeruginosa, changes from a nonmucoid to a mucoid variant and also releases virulence factors to protect against phagocytosis [ ] . second, in the case of cystic fibrosis, neutrophils are directly recruited by proinflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin- (il- ), released from the bronchial epithelial cells as a result of the defective cgft protein [ ] . finally, the necrotic cellular debris and other breakdown products act as chemoattractants that recruit more inflammatory cells to the airway wall, further exacerbating the damage. the final phase of the repair and remodeling begins when macrophages invade and recruit fibroblasts that secrete collagen, leading to the fibrosis seen in the pathology. however, in the absence of effective airway clearance mechanisms, these ectatic airways remain a reservoir of infection that continues the cycle of inflammation and tissue destruction. the idiopathic interstitial pneumonias (iips) comprise a group of diffuse infiltrative pulmonary diseases with a similar clinical presentation characterized by dyspnea, restrictive physiology, and bilateral interstitial infiltrates on chest radiography [ ] . pathologically, these diseases have characteristic patterns of tissue injury with chronic inflammation and varying amounts of fibrosis. by recognizing these patterns, a pathologist can classify each of these entities and predict prognosis. however, the pathologist cannot establish the etiology, since these pathologic patterns can be seen in multiple clinical settings. the pathologic classification of these diseases, originally defined by liebow and carrington in [ ] , has undergone important revisions over the past years with the latest revision by the american thoracic society/european respiratory society in [ ] . the best known and most prevalent entity of the iips is idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (ipf), which is known pathologically as usual interstitial pneumonia (uip). uip is a histologic pattern characterized by patchy areas of chronic lymphocytic inflammation with organizing and collagenous type fibrosis. these patients usually present with gradually increasing shortness of breath and a nonproductive cough after having had symptoms for many months or even years. imaging studies usually reveal bilateral, basilar disease with a reticular pattern [ ] . therapy begins with corticosteroids, advancing to more cytotoxic drugs such as methotrexate and cytoxan, but most current therapies are not effective in stopping the progression of the disease. the current estimates are that / , males and / , females have the disease, most of whom progress to respiratory failure and death within years [ ] . the pathology is characterized by a leading edge of chronic inflammation with fibroblastic foci that begin in different areas of the lung at different times. these processes produce a variegated pattern of fibrosis, usually referred to as a temporally heterogenous pattern of injury [ ] . because it occurs predominantly in the periphery of the lung involving the subpleura and interlobular septae, the gross picture is one of more advanced peripheral and basilar disease (figure . ) . the progression from inflammation to fibrosis includes interstitial widening, epithelial injury and sloughing, fibroblastic infiltration, and organizing fibrosis within the characteristic fibroblastic foci. deposition of collagen by fibroblasts occurs in the latter stages of repair. the presence of the abundant collagen produces stiff lungs that are unable to clear the airway secretions, leading to recurrent inflammation of the bronchiolar epithelium with eventual fibrosis and breakdown of the airway structure. this remodeling produces mucousfilled ectatic spaces giving rise to the gross picture of honeycomb spaces, which is seen in the advanced pathology ( figure . ) [ ] . theories of the pathogenesis of ipf have evolved over the past decade. early theories favored a primary inflammatory process, while current theories favor the concept that the fibrosis of the lung proceeds independently of inflammatory events and develops from aberrant epithelial and epithelial-mesenchymal responses to injury to the alveolar epithelial cells (aecs) [ ] . the aecs consist of two populations: the type pneumocytes and the type pneumocytes. in normal lungs, type pneumocytes line % of the alveolar wall, and type pneumocytes line the remaining %. however, in lung injury, the type cells, which are exquisitely fragile, undergo cell death, and the type pneumocytes serve as progenitor cells to regenerate the alveolar epithelium [ ] . though some studies have suggested that repopulation of the type cells depends on circulating stem cells, this concept remains to be fully proven. according to current concepts, the injury and/or apoptosis of the aecs initiates a cascade of cellular events that produce the scarring in these lungs. studies of aecs in lungs from patients with ipf have shown ultrastructural evidence of cell injury and apoptosis as well as expression of proapoptotic proteins. further, inhibition of this apoptosis by blocking a variety of proapoptotic mechanisms such the fas-fas ligand pathway, angiotensin, and tnfa production, and caspase activation can stop the progression of this fibrosis [ ] . the result of the aec injury is the migration, proliferation, and activation of the fibroblasts and myofibroblasts that leads to the formation of the characteristic fibroblastic foci of the uip pathology and the deposition and accumulation of collagen and elastic fibers in the alveoli (figure . ). this unique pathology may be a result of the increased production of profibrotic factors such as transforming growth factor-a (tgfa) and tgfb, fibroblastic growth factor- , insulin-like growth factor- , and platelet-derived growth factor. an alternative pathway might involve overproduction of inhibitors of matrix degradation such as timps (tissue inhibitors of matrix production) [ ] . in support of the former mechanism, fibroblasts isolated from the lungs of ipf patients exhibit a profibrotic secretory phenotype [ ] . multiple factors, such as environmental particulates, drug or chemical exposures, and viruses may trigger the initial epithelial injury, but genetic factors also play a role. approximately %- % of patients with ipf have a family history of the disease with an inheritance pattern of autosomal dominance with variable penetrance. two genetic mutations have been implicated in this familial form of ipf. one large kindred has been reported with a mutation in the gene encoding surfactant protein c, and six probands have been a b reported with heterozygous mutations in genes htert or htr, encoding telomerase reverse transcriptase and telomerase rna, respectively, resulting in mutant telomerase and short telomeres [ ] . adult respiratory distress syndrome (ards) represents a constellation of clinical, radiologic, and physiologic features in patients with acute respiratory failure that can occur after a variety of insults. ards is defined by clinical criteria that include a rapid onset of severe hypoxemia that is refractory to oxygen therapy, the presence of abnormal chest radiographs with evidence of bilateral alveolar filling and collapse, increased pulmonary artery occlusion pressure, and a resistance to improved oxygenation regardless of mechanical ventilation therapy [ ] . treatment of ards includes eliminating the underlying cause, protective ventilation strategies that improve oxygenation, and supportive treatment that may include administration of corticosteroids. the pathology of ards is diffuse alveolar damage (dad), whose histologic picture is one of inflammation and fibrosis that diffusely involves all of the structures of the alveolus and is similar throughout the affected areas of the lung [ ] . dad is divided into three major phases that follow each other chronologically after the original insult. these are exudative, proliferative, and fibrotic dad. the initial injury primarily involves the epithelium of the alveolar wall and the endothelium in the capillary, causing the destruction and sloughing of the type pneumocytes into the alveolar space and a breakdown of the tight junctions of the endothelium. in combination, these two events result in the loss of the epithelial-endothelial barrier of the alveolus and leakage of plasma from the capillary into the alveolar space. this flooding of the airspace with fluid markedly decreases oxygen exchange and causes the hypoxia that these patients experience. in addition, acute inflammatory changes of the endothelium also cause thrombi to form in vessels, adding to a decreased amount of blood circulating through the lung and further compromising gas exchange. as air is brought into the alveoli, the positive pressure within the alveolar space forces the plasma against the alveolar wall, producing a membranous morphology referred to as hyalin membranes characteristic of the first phase of dad, referred to as exudative dad (figure . ) . this initial injury is followed by a sequence of events that represent the lung's efforts to repair itself. first, type pneumocytes undergo hyperplasia and re-epithelialize the alveolar wall after the loss of the type cells. this re-establishes the epithelial barrier and, because these cells secrete surfactant, results in increased surfactant production, which lowers the surface tension of the alveolus and inhibits its collapse. because of the increased numbers of type pneumocytes, this is known as the proliferative phase of dad (figure . ) . in the final phase of dad, fibrotic dad, fibroblasts migrate in from the adjacent interstitium to the alveolar space and produce organizing and irreversible fibrosis within both the alveolar space and the interstitium. in addition to this mechanism, fibrosis may also occur in those areas where alveolar walls collapse when surfactant is decreased during the initial insult. the histopathologic picture during this fibrotic phase is one of thickened alveolar septa, intra-alveolar granulation tissue, microcyst formation, and areas of irregular alveolar scarring. in rare cases, these microcysts progress to large cysts, an adult equivalent of bronchopulmonary dysplasia. the cellular events of dad are complex and incompletely understood. in general, the disease can be broken down into two phases. in the first, a large influx of neutrophils and plasma enter the alveolar space. the role the neutrophils play in the initial cellular injury and death is unclear, but it is known that they are necessary for this injury to occur. in addition, clinical studies have shown that within the peripheral blood and bronchoalveolar lavages (bal) of these patients, neutrophils are present along with a myriad of proinflammatory cytokines, such as il- , il- , and tgfa, all of which are capable of recruiting them to the lung. also present in these fluids are mediators that recruit fibroblasts such as tgfb. all of these mediators are probably the result of upregulation of nfkb, a proinflammatory transcription factor, in alveolar macrophages. the adherence of neutrophils to the capillary endothelium in the lung occurs through adhesion molecules such as selectin, integrin, and immunoglobulins. neutrophil adherence and subsequent transmigration through the endothelium of the lung capillaries may cause some endothelial damage. however, most speculate that ros and reactive nitrogen chapter molecular basis of pulmonary disease species (rns) secreted by the neutrophils modulate the majority of this injury [ ] . this is supported by the finding that patients with ards have products of oxidative damage such as hydrogen peroxide (h o ) in the exhaled breath and myeloperoxidase and oxidized aat in the bal. the cell injury and death of the type pneumocytes most likely occurs via two mechanisms: lipopolysaccharide (lps)-induced caspase-dependent apoptosis and hyperoxia-induced cell death through apoptosis and nonapoptotic mechanisms [ ] . in the former, lps, an immunogenic component of the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria, may trigger innate immune and inflammatory responses via toll-like receptors that bind fas-associated death domain protein and caspase- , leading to epithelial cell death. in hyperoxia-induced cell death, hyperoxia may induce the expression of angiopoietin (ang ) in lung epithelial cells. ang is an angiogenic growth factor that can activate caspase pathways and lead to apoptotic cell death [ ] . cell death in ards is not limited to these mechanisms, and further study of many of pathways by which this can occur is needed. lymphangioleiomyomatosis (lam) is a rare systemic disease of women, usually in their reproductive years (average age of years), that is characterized by a proliferation of abnormal smooth muscle cells giving rise to cysts in the lungs, abnormalities in the lymphatics, and abdominal tumors, most notably in the kidneys. in addition to sporadic cases (denoted as s-lam), lam also affects % of women with tuberous sclerosis (denoted as tsc-lam), a genetic disorder with variable penetrance associated with seizures, brain tumors, and cognitive impairment [ , ] . global estimates indicate that tsc-lam may be as much as -fold to -fold more prevalent than s-lam, though at least some suggest that tsc-lam may have a milder clinical course than s-lam [ ] . clinically, lam patients usually present with increasing shortness of breath on exertion, obstructive symptoms, spontaneous pneumothoraces, and chylous effusions or with abdominal masses consisting of either angiomyolipomas and/or lymphangiomyomas. chest imaging studies characteristically reveal hyperinflation with flattened diaphragms and thin-walled cystic changes. mortality at years from the onset of symptoms is %- % [ ] . lam appears as small, thin-walled cysts ( . - . cm) randomly throughout both lungs [ ] (figure . ) . microscopically, lam lungs contain a diffuse infiltration of smooth muscle cells, predominantly around lymphatics, veins, and venules. most notably, one finds smooth muscle cells in the subpleural with hemosiderin-laden macrophages in the adjacent field, and the macrophages are also seen on bronchoalveolar lavage specimens from these patients. the hemosiderin pigment in these lungs is thought to be secondary to microhemorrhages from the obstruction of the veins ( figure . ) [ ] . the smooth muscle cells in lam react to antibodies to hmb- , a premelanosomal protein. other melanosome-like structures are also found in lam cells, suggesting that these cells have characteristics of both smooth muscle and melanosomes [ ] . the lesional cells in lam are smooth muscle-like with both spindled and epithelioid morphology [ ] . these cells are the same in both s-lam and tsc-lam part iv molecular pathology of human disease and are a clonal population although they lack other features of malignancy [ ] . molecular studies reveal that the abnormal lam cell proliferation is caused by mutations in one of two genes linked to tuberous sclerosis: tuberous sclerosis complex or (tsc or tsc ). these two genes control cell growth and differentiation through the akt/mammalian target of rapamycin (mtor) signaling pathway [ ] . in this pathway, a growth factor receptor (such as insulin or pdgf receptors) becomes phosphorylated when an appropriate ligand binds, resulting in activation of downstream effectors and ultimately akt. the gene products of tsc and tsc are hamartin and tuberin, which act as dimers to maintain rheb (a member of the ras family) in a gdp-loaded state via statins, acting as a break to the akt/mtor pathway, thereby retarding protein synthesis and cell growth. in lam cells, loss-of-function mutations in these two genes remove this inhibition, leading to enhanced rheb activation, mtor activation (with raptor), and subsequent phosphorylation of downstream molecules which result in uncontrolled cell growth, angiogenesis, and damage to the lung tissue ( figure . ) [ ] . the abnormal proliferation of lam cells is thought to damage the lung through overproduction of matrix metalloproteinases (mmps), which degrade the connective tissue of the lung architecture, destroy the alveolar integrity, and result in cyst formation with air trapping [ ] . these destructive capabilities of the lam cells are enhanced by their secretion of the angiogenic factor vegf-c, which is thought to cause the proliferation of lymphatic channels throughout the lung [ ] . sarcoidosis is a multisystemic disease that involves the lung in over % of the cases [ ] . it is most common in the - -year age group and among females. in the united states, african americans are more commonly affected than caucasians [ ] . the clinical picture of sarcoidosis is variable, but most patients present with systemic symptoms including fatigue, weight loss, and fever. the most common finding on chest imaging studies is bilateral hilar lymph node enlargement and reticular, reticulonodular, and focal alveolar opacities within the lung parenchyma [ ] . pulmonary sarcoidosis is characterized by granulomas which consist of activated histiocytes, called epithelioid histiocytes that form nodules ranging in size from - microns (figure . ) [ ] . unlike infectious granulomas that usually contain areas of central necrosis, the granulomas in pulmonary sarcoidosis are predominantly non-necrotizing [ ] . also, the granulomas in sarcoidosis follow a distribution along the lymphatics, which includes the area in the subpleural, along the interlobular septae and around the bronchovascular area containing the bronchiole and branch of the pulmonary artery (figure . ). the granulomas occur much more commonly in the upper lobes, leading to the predominant upper lobe fibrosis and bronchiectasis that can be seen in longstanding sarcoidosis [ ] . despite over years of research on sarcoidosis, the etiology remains unknown. most agree that the disease is probably a result of environmental triggers acting on a genetically susceptible host [ , ] . a genetic basis of sarcoidosis has been suggested by studies that demonstrate familial clustering and racial variation [ , ] . further, complex inheritance patterns for the disease suggest that more than one gene may be involved [ ] . several genes of the major histocompatibility complex (mhc) region of the genome have been implicated. most are clustered on the short arm of chromosome that encompasses the human leukocyte antigen (hla) domain. the hla class i mhc molecules associated with sarcoidosis are the hla-b and hla-b class i alleles [ , ] . hla class ii molecules implicated in susceptibility include the hla-dr alleles [ , ] . genes other than mhc genes thought to regulate the susceptibility to sarcoidosis include those for chemokines such as macrophage inflammatory protein- a and rantes (ccr and ccr ) [ , ] . environmental factors that have been implicated are those that are aerosolized. therefore, these environmental agents have a mode of entry into the lungs and can cause granulomas in the lung, similar to sarcoidosis. these factors can be divided into two major categories, which include infectious and noninfectious agents. the mycobacteria have been the most extensively studied organisms. however, their role in this disease remains controversial due to the difficulty in identifying them by either culture or histochemical stains in sarcoid tissue. recently, molecular techniques have been able to demonstrate mycobacterial nucleic acid in sarcoid tissue [ , ] . however, even studies using this technology have not produced consistent results, and the role of these organisms in the disease requires further study. the immune response in sarcoidosis has two major features: (i) the initial event leading to granuloma formation and (ii) the progression of this granulomatous response to either resolution or fibrosis [ ] . the formation of the granulomas, triggered by activation of tcells and antigen-presenting dendritic histiocytes, results in a release of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, and recruitment, activation, and proliferation of mononuclear cells, predominantly t-cells. these activated t-cells are predominantly cd -expressing t-helper (th) cells, which release ifn-g and il- . alveolar macrophages at the site release tnfa, il- , il- , and other growth factors. this results in the granuloma formation and alveolitis, the characteristic morphologic features of the disease [ ] . the second phase of this immunologic response that leads to either resolution of the disease or persistence of the granulomas and fibrosis is less well characterized. ongoing granuloma formation and inflammation may be a result of the persistent presence of antigens, the excessive synthesis of chemotactic factors, or the part iv molecular pathology of human disease persistence of the mononuclear cells within the granulomas. importantly, the role of the t-cells in these granulomas is to secrete cytokines that attract, stimulate, and ultimately deactivate the fibroblasts that are responsible for the fibrosis that is seen in the chronic disease. the balance between the profibrotic mediators such as tgfb, insulin-like growth factor-i, platelet-derived growth factor (pdgf), and the antifibrotic mediators, such as ifn-g, probably dictates the natural history of sarcoidosis in the lung [ ] . genes involved in macrophage-derived cytokines, chemokines, and mediators of fibrosis are all possible candidates for the underlying genetic cause of this complicated disease. pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (pap) is a rare disease of the lungs characterized by accumulation of surfactant in the alveolar spaces. the names alveolar proteinosis, lipoproteinosis, or perhaps most accurately phospholipoproteinosis, apply equally to this entity. pap takes three forms clinically: (i) congenital ( %), (ii) secondary ( %- %), and (iii) idiopathic or primary ( %- %) [ ] [ ] [ ] . pap arises in previously healthy adults with the median age at diagnosis of approximately years and a male-to-female ratio of . : . the clinical presentation is variable and usually includes an insidious onset of slowly progressive dyspnea, a dry cough, and other symptoms of respiratory distress, including fatigue and clubbing. however, almost one-third of patients are asymptomatic and are found clinically by abnormal chest x-rays [ , ] . the secondary form of pap can be found in patients with environmental exposures, including fine silica, aluminum, titanium dioxide, and kaolin dust [ ] . also, secondary pap may be found in patients with malignancies, most commonly hematologic malignancies such as myelogenous leukemia [ , ] . chest imaging studies in both the idiopathic and secondary forms most commonly show fine, diffuse, feathery nodular infiltrates, centered in the hilar areas, sparing the peripheral regions [ ] . on chest computerized tomographs, the infiltrates may have a geometric-type shape, sometimes referred to as crazy paving [ ] . the most prominent microscopic feature of both idiopathic and secondary pap is the filling of the alveoli with finely granular period acid-schiff-positive diastaseresistant (pasd) acellular material (figure chapter molecular basis of pulmonary disease material consists of phospholipids ( %); surfactant proteins a, b, c, and d ( %); and carbohydrate (< %) [ ] . alveolar macrophages (ams) with prominent foamy cytoplasm are commonly seen, while alveolar septa are remarkably normal in appearance. in some alveolar spaces there are denser, more solid clumps of pas-d-positive material. definitive pathologic differences between the idiopathic and secondary forms of pap have not been well documented [ , ] . the etiologies of the two adult forms of pap have been well studied with the most known about the idiopathic variant. theories of the pathogenesis of this form have focused on the abnormal accumulation of the surfactant-like material within the alveolar spaces. since the regulation of surfactant levels in the alveoli depends on appropriate synthesis, recycling, and catabolism, the two opposing hypotheses have included overproduction versus decreased degradation of this material. in normal hosts, surfactant is essential to maintaining the low surface tension needed for proper alveolar inflation and gas exchange. the critical role of maintaining the proper composition and amount of surfactant in the alveoli is performed by two cell types: type pneumocytes and alveolar macrophages [ ] . the type pneumocytes synthesize surfactant in the endoplasmic reticulum and golgi, and store it as lamellar bodies [ ] , which are then delivered to and fuse with the apical plasma membrane, secreting the surfactant into the airways [ ] . catabolism of surfactant is carried out by type pneumocytes and ams. in pap, most evidence suggests that the clearance of surfactant by the am is decreased [ , ] . the first clue as to the underlying mechanism for this defect in am function came in when studies revealed that knockout mice deficient in granulocytemacrophage colony-stimulating factor (gm-csf) develop lung lesions similar to those in patients with pap [ ] . this rather serendipitous finding prompted explorations centered on the am and the effect diminished gm-csf might have on its cellular functions. subsequent studies from humans with pap revealed an autoimmune mechanism by which a circulating neutralizing antibody to gm-csf blocked its binding to the gm-csf receptor, depressing the effect of gm-csf on the ams [ ] [ ] [ ] . neutralizing antibodies to gm-csf have most often been identified in the idiopathic variant of pap. however, recently these antibodies have also been reported in patients with secondary pap [ ] . genes that control many functions in the am are controlled by signaling pathways initiated by gm-csf binding to the am. one pathway is mediated through a transcription factor pu. that controls genes involved in surfactant degradation, among other bactericidal functions [ , ] . another transcription factor, peroxisome-proliferator-activated receptor g (pparg), is also part of a pathway activated by gm-csf. pparg controls the expression of genes involved in intracellular lipid metabolism. ams from patients with pap have a deficiency of this transcription factor, which is correctable by gm-csf therapy [ ] . overall, the lack of gm-csf-initiated signaling in ams from patients with pap leads to inhibition of both pparg and pu. pathways. this results in decreased surfactant catabolism, intracellular lipid metabolism, and the accumulation of surfactant in the alveoli (figure . ). pulmonary hypertension consists of a group of distinct diseases whose pathology is characterized by abnormal destruction, repair, remodeling, and proliferation of all compartments of the pulmonary vascular tree, including arteries, arterioles, capillaries, and veins. the classification of these diseases has undergone a number of revisions. the most recent revision (in ) groups these diseases based on both their pathologic and clinical characteristics [ ] . there are five major disease categories in the current classification system: (i) pulmonary arterial hypertension (pah); (ii) pulmonary hypertension with left heart disease; (iii) pulmonary hypertension associated with lung disease and/or hypoxemia; (iv) pulmonary hypertension due to chronic thrombotic and/or embolic disease; and (v) miscellaneous causes, including sarcoidosis, histiocytosis x, and lymphangioleiomyomatosis. the clinical course of most patients with pulmonary hypertension begins with exertional dyspnea, and progresses through chest pain, syncope, increased mean pulmonary artery pressures and, eventually, right heart failure. the rate of this clinical progression varies among patients, from a few months to many years [ ] . treatment of these diseases focuses on blocking the mediators involved in the pathogenesis of the diseases. however, current therapies rarely prevent progression of the disease, and lung transplantation provides the only hope for long-term survival. the major group of this classification, pah, can be subdivided into familial pah, idiopathic pah, pah associated with other conditions (such as connective tissue diseases, hiv, congenital heart disease), and pah secondary to drugs and toxins (such as anorexigens, cocaine, and amphetamines). in these diseases, the primary pathology is localized predominantly in the small pulmonary arteries and arterioles. however, two other diseases in this group, pulmonary veno-occlusive disease and pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis, involve predominantly other components of the pulmonary vasculature, the veins, and the capillaries, respectively. the pathologic changes seen in the pulmonary vessels of these patients primarily reflect injury to and repair of the endothelium. early pathologic changes include medial hypertrophy and intimal fibrosis that narrows and obliterates the vessel lumen. these are followed by remodeling and revascularization, producing a proliferation of abnormal endothelial-lined spaces. these structures are known as plexogenic lesions and are the pathognomonic feature of pah (figure . ) . in the most severe pathologic lesions, these abnormal vascular structures become dilated or angiomatoid-like and may develop features of a necrotizing vasculitis with transmural inflammation and fibrinoid necrosis. though the exact pathogenetic mechanism of pah remains unknown, research over the past years has begun to offer some clues. the familial form of pah, with a : female-to-male prevalence, has an autosomal dominance inheritance pattern with low penetrance. the genetic basis for this has been found to be germline mutations in the gene encoding the bone morphogenetic protein receptor type (bmpr ). these mutations account for approximately %- % of familial pah and %- % of patients with sporadic pah [ ] . approximately bmpr mutations have been identified in familial pah, each resulting in a loss of receptor function, either through alteration in transcription of the gene through missense, nonsense, or frameshift alterations in the codon or by rna spicing mistakes [ ] . the mechanism by which a single mutation to the bmpr gene induces vascular smooth muscle proliferation and decreased apoptosis that is not completely understood, but it most likely involves defects in the bmpr signaling pathway. bmpr is a receptor for a family cytokines (bmps) that are members of the tgfb superfamily of proteins that play a role in the growth and regulation of many cells, including those of the pulmonary vasculature. in the vascular smooth muscle cells of the lung, tgfb signaling causes a proliferation of smooth muscle in pulmonary arterioles, while bmpr signaling causes an inhibition of the proliferation of these cells, favoring an apoptotic environment. the bmpr signaling occurs through an activation of a receptor complex (bmpr and bmpr ) that leads to phosphorylation and activation of a number cytoplasmic mediators, most notably the smad proteins (mothers against decapentaplegic). these smad proteins, especially the smad , smad , and smad complex with smad , translocate to the nucleus where they target gene transcription that induces an antiproliferative effect in the cell. in familial pah, the bmrpr gene mutation may lead to insufficient protein product and subsequent decreased protein function, in this case decreased bmpr receptor function, decreased smad protein activation, and decreased antiproliferative effects in the vascular smooth muscle cells. the imbalance between the proproliferative effects of the tgfbs and the antiproliferative effects of the bmps results in the formation of the vascular lesions of pah (figure . ) [ , ] . despite these advances, questions regarding the pathogenesis of pah remain. most notably, why do only %- % of patients with the mutation develop clinical disease? some speculate that genes confer susceptibility but a second hit is required to develop the clinical disease, such as modifier genes or environmental triggers, perhaps drugs or viral infections [ , ] pulmonary vasculitides present as diffuse pulmonary hemorrhage and are usually caused by one of three major pulmonary vasculitis syndromes: wegener's granulomatosis, churg-strauss syndrome, and microscopic polyangiitis. all three diseases have similar clinical presentations and considerable overlap in their pathologic features as small vessel systemic vasculitides that affect the lung as well as other organs, most notably the kidney. wegener's granulomatosis (wg) is an unusual disease that affects the upper and lower respiratory tract and the kidneys. it usually presents between and years of age and is slightly more common in men than women. the clinical presentation depends on the affected organ, but when the lung is involved, hemoptysis is the major presenting symptom. chest imaging studies may show a variety of patterns, most commonly bilateral ground glass opacities with masses, usually in the lower lobes that may cavitate. immunologic testing of peripheral blood or end organ tissue can be helpful in revealing characteristic immunofluorescent staining patterns for antineutrophilic cytoplasmic antibody (anca), an antibody that targets two substances: proteinase (pr ) and myeloperoxidase (mpo). when present in either the blood or the tissue, the pattern of immunofluorescent staining can be cytoplasmic (canca) or perinuclear (panca). the former pattern is more commonly seen in wegener's granulomatosis, and the latter is more commonly seen in microscopic polyangiitis and churg-strauss syndrome (css). css is a systemic disorder defined by the presence of asthma, peripheral blood eosinophilia, and systemic vasculitis. similar to wg, it usually presents between and years of age, and a clinical diagnosis requires a history of asthma, a peripheral blood eosinophilia, neuropathy, an abnormal chest imaging study, and sinusitis. other organs involved include the heart, the central nervous system, kidneys (though less commonly than wg), gastrointestinal tract, and skin. chest imaging usually shows patchy, multifocal infiltrates; masses and cavitation are rare. laboratory tests reveal positive panca tests in % of patients. microscopic polyangiitis (mpa) is similar to both wg and css in that it is a systemic vasculitis that involves the lung and usually presents in the fourth or fifth decade of life. the clinical onset is usually sudden with fever, weight loss, myalgias, and arthralgias. the kidney is the main organ involved, and mpa is the most common cause of pulmonary-renal syndrome. lung involvement occurs in approximately % of the patients, and skin and upper respiratory tract are other common sites. similar to wg and css, anca testing is helpful with positive panca in % of patients. chest imaging usually shows bilateral infiltrates without masses, similar to css. treatment for all three diseases is immunosuppression with glucocorticoids or cyclophosphamide, and all three usually respond well, although wg has a greater relapse rate after treatment than either css or mpa [ ] . the pathology of wg, css, and mpa have overlapping features of an acute and chronic vasculitis that involves medium-and small-sized vessels in the lung. the inflammatory cell infiltrate that destroys the blood vessels is both lymphocytic and neutrophilic, and areas of fibrinoid necrosis are seen. however, in wg, there are characteristic areas of microabscesses that lead to masses of geographic necrosis with basophilia. scattered multinucleated giant cells are present, but no wellformed granulomas are seen. this helps to distinguish it from other vasculitides and infection (figure . ) . similarly, the pathology of css has distinguishing features, with the early pathology characterized by an eosinophilic pneumonia with areas of loosely formed granulomas with central necrosis containing degenerating eosinophils (figure . ). the infiltrate is predominantly eosinophils, but neutrophils, lymphocytes, and plasma cells are also present. capillaritis can be seen in wg, csg, and mpa, and all three have hemosiderin deposition present, both within alveolar macrophages and deposited in the connective tissue of the interstitium and the vessel walls. the pathogenesis of these three pulmonary hemorrhage syndromes is similar to the mechanisms of these diseases in the kidney. in general, these diseases in the lung and the kidney represent immune-mediated these lesions are thought to be the early form of the larger areas of geographic necrosis that produces the mass-like nodules found in these lungs. chapter molecular basis of pulmonary disease necrotizing vasculitides that have few or no immune deposits in the vessels but exhibit the presence of anca autoantibodies to myeloperoxidase (mpo) and proteinase (pr ), the components of primary granules of neutrophils. mpa and css are primarily diseases of mpo antibodies, and wg is primarily a disease of pr antibodies. the mechanism by which the ancas are induced is not known but may be part of an autoimmune response to environmental exposures early in life. these autoantibodies then inflict damage on the vessels through a mechanism that is not yet completely understood. one theory suggests that circulating ancas bind to pr and mpo on the surface of neutrophils and initiate a respiratory burst, degranulation, and apoptosis. ros and proteases are released and inflict endothelial and tissue damage on the adjacent vessel. the anca binding may also induce the release of proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines such as il- and tnfa that further contribute to the vascular inflammation. the second theory postulates that circulating immune complexes of excess anca antigen (mpo or pr ) and anca autoantibodies attach to the vascular endothelium and activate complement that results in the chemotaxis and adhesion of inflammatory cells, causing these cells to undergo a respiratory burst and, as in the first theory, release of ros and proteases that cause the vascular endothelial damage. in both theories, it is important to remember that mpo and pr are also present in monocytes and that anca autoantibodies may be involved with monocytes in similar ways to release inflammatory mediators [ ] . infectious diseases of the lung are a common cause of pulmonary disease given the constant exposure of the lungs to the environment. various organisms are capable of causing these infections, including common viruses and bacteria, as well as more uncommon fungi, parasites, and protozoa. the diagnosis of the specific etiologic agent can be challenging given that most have similar clinical features and many are difficult to identify in the lung tissue. this brief overview of the defense mechanisms the lung uses to protect itself will serve to introduce the pathology of these lung infections. the lung has multiple anatomic mechanisms by which it defends itself against invasion by various pathogens. first, the upper nasal cavities and respiratory tract serve as anatomic barriers to inhaled organisms. the ciliated epithelium and torturous cavities of the sinuses screen large organisms (typically larger than microns). for those particles that venture further down the respiratory tract, the cough reflex that the upper trachea elicits serves to expel them up and out. second, the mucociliary tree of the upper respiratory tract captures organisms that evade these two mechanisms. the bronchial epithelium contains cilia of up to microns in length that extend into the air surface liquid (asl). the asl is a bilayer of - microns in thickness consisting of a low-viscosity or watery lower layer that is covered by a high-viscosity or gel upper layer secreted by adjacent goblet cells. this sticky upper layer serves to trap organisms, and the coordinated beating of the cilia moves these entrapped invaders up this mucociliary escalator to the larynx, where they can be expectorated. present in the secretions of the large airways and within the surfactant lining the alveolar walls are soluble mediators secreted by various cells. these mediators include lysozyme and lactoferrin, which lyse bacteria and inhibit their growth; the defensins and cathelicidins, small peptides both with microbicidal properties; and surfactant proteins a and d at the alveolar level, which bind to microorganism and enhance phagocytosis and also have direct bactericidal activity [ ] . the major cells of the innate immune response of the lung are the alveolar macrophages (am) and the polymorphonuclear leukocytes (pmn). neutrophils phagocytize and destroy bacteria such as s. aureus, s. pneumoniae, and h. influenzae through a respiratory burst that generates nadph oxidase-dependent ros. in some instances, ams may ingest but not kill an organism. this occurs with such organisms as mycobacterium spp., nocardia spp., and legionella spp. because of the ability of these organisms to continue to replicate within part iv molecular pathology of human disease the am, cell-mediated immunity is required for their complete elimination. patients with defects in nadph oxidase are especially prone to respiratory infections by such organisms as s. aureus, nocardia spp. and aspergillus spp. bronchial epithelial cells are important in innate immunity through secretion of cytokines and molecules including il- , il- , il- , il- , and granulocytemacrophage colony-stimulating factor (gm-csf). these molecules attract macrophages as well as neutrophils and other inflammatory cells to the area to enhance the inflammatory response to the organism [ ] . bronchial epithelial cells also serve an important role in recognizing pathogens through patternrecognition receptors (prrs). natural killer (nk) cells are involved in the innate immune response with surface receptors that recognize cells infected with viruses such as rsv, influenza, parainfluenza, and rhinovirus. the nk cells release ifn-g, which recruit other immune cells to add to the antiviral response. dendritic cells are tissue histiocytes positioned around the airways and lymphatics in the lung that recognize pathogens and their antigens and trigger the proliferation and amplification of antigen-specific tcells. this immune response bridges the innate immune response to the adaptive immune responses and is especially important in fungal infections. this mechanism is mediated through toll-like receptors (tlrs) that are able to distinguish pathogens from self-components by triggering cytokine production through nfkb and ap- and expressing co-stimulatory molecules necessary for this t-cell activation [ ] . for those organisms that evade the basic, innate immunity of the lung, there are adaptive immune mechanisms that encompass both humoral and cellular immune mechanisms. humoral immunity is an important defense against encapsulated bacteria, most notably s. pneumoniae, and for other pyogenic bacteria such as h. influenzae, and staphylococci spp., and resolution of these infections requires the production of igg antibodies to the organisms. cellular immunity is especially important against such respiratory viral infections as influenza, rsv, cmv, varicella, and also against opportunistic infections. these viruses induce a cd þ and cd þ t-cell response that clears the lung of these viruses within - days post infection. granulomas are a common inflammatory response to both pathogens and foreign material. the most notable granulomatous infections in the lung are due to mycobacteria and fungal organisms. activation of cd þ t-cells by these organisms leads to proliferation and differentiation of these cd þ t-cells into t-helper- cells. the release of ifn-g by the th- cells activates lung macrophages to form epithelioid macrophages that have an increased ability to kill the microorganisms and express surface molecules that promote cell-to-cell fusion into giant cells. in addition, activation of these macrophages results in the release of numerous cytokines including ifn-g and tnfa. in patients who are deficient in cd þ t-cells or ifn-g, granuloma formation is very poor, altering the pathologic picture of these infections. this effect is most obvious in the nontuberculous mycobacterial infections, which have numerous patterns of injury depending on the immune status of their host. pneumonias can be broadly categorized into one of five major clinicopathologic categories, including (i) community-acquired pneumonias (acute and atypical), (ii) nosocomial pneumonias, (iii) aspiration pneumonias and lung abscess, (iv) chronic pneumonias, and (v) pneumonias in immunocompromised hosts. each type presents with a characteristic clinical pattern and may be caused by any of several pathogens so that treatment is many times empiric. the first category comprises community-acquired pneumonias (cap). these represent the majority of the lung infections that receive medical treatment, usually on an outpatient basis, with low (< %) mortality. patients hospitalized for these infections typically have other comorbidities. the responsible organisms include respiratory syncytial virus (rsv); rhinovirus, parainfluenza, and influenza virus; bacteria, including mycoplasma pneumoniae and rickettsia; and most notably chlamydia pneumonia. chlamydia causes what is termed atypical pneumonia with a clinical course characterized by a progressive onset of fever without chills, a dry cough, and chest imaging that reveals focal infiltrates. acute or typical cap presents abruptly with high fever, chills, productive cough, and radiographs with lobar or segmental consolidation. the most common pathogens are streptococcus pneumoniae, haemophilus influenza, staphylococcus aureus, and moraxella catarrhalis. the second category, nosocomial pneumonias, consists of infections acquired within the hospital or from healthcare associated facilities. these infections are usually found in patients with predisposing risk factors and are a major source of morbidity and mortality, with some studies reporting a mortality range of %- %. the most common risk factors include respiratory ventilation, artificial airways, nasogastric tubes, supine positioning, and medications that alter gastric emptying. the responsible organisms include klebsiella spp., legionella spp., staphylococcus aureus, and pseudomonas aeruginosa. the third category includes aspiration pneumonias and lung abscesses. these infections occur in the setting of patients with aberrant swallow or gag reflexes that allow gastric or oral contents into the airways. the organisms where necrosis and cavity formation occurs include s. aureus, k. pneumoniae, the anaerobic oral flora, and mycobacteria. clinically, these infections may have an acute course with fever and dyspnea or a more insidious course, many times with patients first presenting with lung cavities, empyemas, or necrotizing pneumonias. the fourth category, chronic pneumonias, includes indolent infections that cause a localized mass-like lesion in an otherwise healthy host. nocardia and actinomyces spp. are the most common pathogens, but mycobacteria and fungi may also cause these pneumonias. the fifth category includes pneumonias that occur in the setting of an immunocompromised patient. these include a number of organisms that otherwise would not act as pathogens such as the viruses cmv and hsv, the fungi aspergillosis and pneumocystis pneumonia, and the bacterium mycobacterium avium complex. streptococcus pneumoniae streptococcus pneumoniae, a gram-positive diplococcus also known as pneumococcus or diplococcus pneumonia, is a common cause of bacterial pneumonia in infants and elderly patients, alcoholics, diabetics, and patients with immunosuppression. this pneumonia usually presents abruptly with chills, a cough with rust-colored sputum and pleuritis, with high fevers, tachycardia, and tachypnea. the characteristic gross pathology is a lobar pneumonia that progresses from a red acute phase to a gray organizing phase. a fibrinous pleuritis is common, which eventually organizes to entrap the lung parenchyma in a fibrous capsule [ ] . the microscopic examination reveals abundant fibrin, neutrophils, and extravasated red blood cells within the alveolar space and congested capillaries. hemophilus influenzae hemophilus influenzae is a gramnegative bacillus that inhabits the upper respiratory tract and can cause otitis media, epiglottitis, and meningitis, and usually enters the lung through aspiration or hematogenous spread. six serotypes are defined based on their capsular antigens, with type b the most common cause of pneumonias. this type of pneumonia is most commonly found in children or in the elderly with underlying chronic lung disease such as emphysema, cystic fibrosis, bronchiectasis, in patients with hiv infection, or in alcoholics. this bacterial pneumonia is usually preceded by a viral or mycoplasma infection that damages the mucociliary elements in the airways and allows for colonization by h. influenzae. the symptoms include fever; a productive, purulent cough; and myalgias. the incidence of this pneumonia as a common community-acquired pneumonia in children is quite low due to the advent of effective vaccines. however, it is increasing in incidence as a nosocomial infection [ ] . like pneumococcal pneumonia, the pathology of h. influenzae pneumonia is in a lobar distribution with a neutrophilic-rich infiltrate and a pleural effusion. necrosis and empyema may occur but are uncommon. staphylococcus aureus staphylococcal pneumonia is caused by staphylococcus aureus, gram-positive cocci that usually spread to the lung through the blood from other infected sites, most often the skin. though a common community pathogen, it is found twice as frequently in pneumonias in hospitalized patients. it often attacks the elderly and patients with cf and arises as a co-infection with influenza viral pneumonia. the clinical course is characterized by high fevers, chills, a cough with purulent bloody sputum, and rapidly progressing dyspnea. the gross pathology commonly reveals an acute bronchopneumonia pattern (figure . ) that may evolve into a necrotizing cavity with congested red/purple lungs and airways that contain a bloody fluid and thick mucoid secretions. the histologic pattern is characterized by a bronchopneumonia that spreads distally from the small airways into to the alveolar spaces (figure . ) to form abscesses that connect with the pleural surface and may result in empyemas. the treatment of this organism has become increasingly problematic due to antibioticresistant strains, most notably methicillin-resistant s. aureus. legionella pneumophila legionella are gram-negative bacilli found predominantly in aquatic habitats such as lakes, rivers, and ponds. standing pools of water from humidifiers and other water outlets may be other sources. approximately % of air conditioners contain these bacilli. though serogroups of legionella have been identified, cause the overwhelming majority of human pneumonia. the clinical disease takes two forms: (i) legionnaires' disease, named after the outbreak of pneumonia at the american legion convention in philadelphia; and (ii) pontiac fever, a self-limiting flu-like disease with nonspecific symptoms. legionella pneumonia presents as a severe infection of the lung with chills and rigors with a nonproductive cough. it can progress rapidly to systemic symptoms of nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea and can lead to renal failure and death without immediate antibiotic therapy. the infected lungs are remarkably red and congested and appear to be distended with fluid. the microscopic picture reveals fibrinopurulent exudates that fill the alveolar space mixed with a necrotic, cellular infiltrate of degenerating neutrophils and monocytes (figure . ). hyaline membranes may form in the periphery of the lesions, and pleural effusions consisting of fibrinoserous exudates are common. pseudomonas aeruginosa pseudomonas aeruginosa is a gram-negative bacillus that is found throughout the environment and in % of the airways of hospitalized patients. it usually enters the body through a disruption of the epithelial surface by cuts, burns, or therapeutic devices such as mechanical ventilators or intravascular catheters. pneumonias caused by this organism are usually found in intensive care units of hospitals and burn units, in patients with underlying chronic lung diseases including cystic fibrosis, emphysema, and in patients with prolonged hospitalization. the pathology is necrosis with a bronchopneumonia pattern that usually consists of an area of congestion and hemorrhage that is surrounded by a halo of tan/white consolidation (figure . ) . a necrotizing vasculitis with abundant organisms in vessel walls can be seen, and cavitation is common ( figure . ). in treated lungs, healed cavities or pneumatoceles may appear as smooth-walled fibrous cysts. other gram-negative bacilli gram-negative bacilli such as klebsiella pneumoniae, acinetobacter, and various enterobacteriaceae spp. are common nosocomial pathogens. similar to p. aeruginosa, these pathogens colonize the oropharynx and are usually introduced into the lung by inhalation or aspiration of oral contents. the most notable of these is friedlander's pneumonia caused by k. pneumoniae, the most common cause of gramnegative bacterial pneumonia. this typically occurs in men over years of age, usually in the setting of alcoholism, diabetes mellitus, or chronic lung disease. these patients produce large amounts of thick, bloody sputum, a product of the viscous mucopolysaccharide capsule of the organism, and present with severe systemic symptoms of hypotension and generalized weakness. the pathology of these pneumonias is similar to pseudomonas pneumonia with marked cavitation and abundant organisms on microscopic examination. nocardia spp. nocardiosis of the lung is caused by nocardia asteroides, a gram-positive rod found in the soil or organic matter. this infection is most common in immunocompromised adult patients and can be seen in the setting of pulmonary alveolar proteinosis, chronic lung diseases, and mycobacterial and other granulomatous diseases that affect the lung. its clinical course is indolent and usually begins - weeks before the patient presents for medical therapy. cough is common, often with thick, purulent sputum. in the immunocompromised setting, fever, chills, dyspnea, and hemoptysis are common, and weight loss may occur as the disease progresses. the pathology is remarkable for suppurative abscess formation with multiple cavities filled with green, thick pus. the inflammatory infiltrate consists of neutrophils, macrophages, and abundant necrotic debris with epithelioid histiocytes and giant cells within the wall of the cavity (figure . ). empyema and pleura involvement occur in the majority of cases. mycoplasma and rickettsia pneumonias mycoplasma pneumoniae pneumonia is among the most common infections of the lower respiratory tract and usually occurs in small epidemics in closed populations. it often presents with atypical features of a progressive onset, fever without chills, a dry cough, diffuse crackles on physical examination, and chest imaging studies that reveal patchy interstitial infiltrates. the pathologic features are a result of the attachment of the organisms to the bronchiolar epithelium where they cause epithelial injury and ulcerations through secretion of peroxide [ ] . in cases of severe infection, diffuse alveolar damage may be present. chlamydial pneumonia chlamydia spp. causes pneumonia in a variety of clinical settings. chlamydia trachomatis is an infection found predominantly in the postnatal period, chlamydia psittaci is the result of direct transmission from infected birds, including parakeets, parrots, and pigeons. chlamydia pneumoniae is the most common of the three and is a frequent cause of community-acquired pneumonia. it typically causes a very mild or asymptomatic infection with fever, sore throat, and nonproductive cough. the course of this infection may be severe in the elderly. chest imaging studies show alveolar infiltrates, and pleural effusions are present in the majority of cases. the pathology has not been well defined since the infection is usually self-limited. however, in experimental animal models there is a neutrophilic response in the early stages, and an interstitial, peribronchiolar, and perivascular infiltrate of lymphocytes, macrophages, and plasma cells in the latter stages of the infection. mycobacteria, a major cause of lung infections, are nonmotile, aerobic, catalase-producing, acid-fast bacilli. clinically significant lung infections can be caused by m. tuberculosis and by a group of nontuberculous mycobacteria (ntm). the latter group consists of over species, of which three cause the overwhelming majority of pulmonary disease. these are m. avium-intracellulare (m. avium complex), m. kansasii, and m. fortuitum-chelonae. throughout history, tuberculosis (infection with m. tuberculosis) was the major disease caused by these organisms and was responsible for worldwide morbidity and mortality. however, over the past two decades lung diseases caused by ntm have become much more common and now represent the majority of the pulmonary mycobacterial disease. mycobacterium tuberculosis pulmonary tuberculosis is spread by interpersonal contact through aerosolized droplets. once in the alveoli, the bacteria cause a cell-mediated inflammatory response that is capable of inducing granuloma formation and necrosis. as in all infections, the extent of the disease is a function of the host's immune response. the most susceptible part iv molecular pathology of human disease patients are those with certain conditions that include immunosuppression, diabetes, malignancy, renal failure, among others. clinically, an infected patient has a productive cough, fever, and weight loss, and may develop hemoptysis as the cavitation progresses and erodes into the pulmonary vessels. extensive involvement of the lung can produce significant dyspnea and pleuritic chest pain. the pathology of tuberculosis is primarily that of granuloma formation and acute pneumonia. the granulomas are predominantly necrotizing, and the pneumonia usually contains abundant fibrin and neutrophils that fill the alveolar spaces. the gross lesions are referred to as caseous or cheese-like, because of the amount of necrosis present. this caseous material can extend into airways and is commonly coughed up during the active disease. in chronic forms of the disease, the area can undergo fibrosis and involute into a firm, hard scar. there are three major clinicopathologic variants of the disease: (i) primary tuberculosis, (ii) postprimary or reactivation tuberculosis, and (iii) progressive fibrocavitary disease. primary tuberculosis. in this form of the disease, the initial site of infection can be anywhere in the lung, but is usually in the lower lobe or anterior segment of the upper lobe, the areas that receive the most ventilation. the lesion usually consists of a dense consolidation with acute pneumonia and necrotizing granulomas. cavitation may occur, especially in the setting of immunocompromised hosts. from these foci, the organisms may spread through the lymphatics to elsewhere in the lung, the hilar lymph nodes, and the bloodstream, and lay dormant for long periods of time. the combination of the primary site of infection and the involved hilar lymph nodes is known as a ghon complex [ ] . postprimary tuberculosis. this form of tuberculosis represents reactivation of old, scarred primary lesions long after the initial insult. the lesion can occur anywhere in the lung where the bacteria from the primary lesion have spread, but is usually apical. it consists of a focus or organizing pneumonia and fibrosis with central caseation. in an active lesion, the typical parenchymal pattern is an acute pneumonia with cavitation that expands to include the surrounding lung with aggregates of granulomas. the controversy surrounding this lesion arises as some evidence suggests that these lesions represent exogenous reinfection. the pathology of reactivation or reinfection may be indistinguishable, although reactivation tuberculosis may appear to arise out of a fibrotic, calcified chronic lesion [ ] . progressive fibrocavitary disease. this form of the disease may arise out of either primary or postprimary tuberculosis. however, the latter is the more common scenario. the cavities that develop in this form of the disease begin as a slowly progressive, necrotizing pneumonia with abundant granulomas (figure . ). the active disease may spread through the airways, causing ulceration, necrosis, and fibrosis of the surrounding bronchi and bronchioles. the extension of the disease in this way depends on the host, and patients with depressed immune systems can have large areas of the lung involved with massive pulmonary necrosis. usually, a fibrous capsule develops in the area of the cavitation, although inspissated necrotic material into the adjacent airways remains a continuous source of inflammation that can lead to reinfection and ongoing scarring [ ] . nontuberculous mycobacteria the nontuberculous mycobacteria (ntm) are ubiquitous inhabitants of our environment, isolated from soil, fresh and brackish water, house dust, birds, animals, and food, and are increasingly important in causing pulmonary disease. there are currently more than ntm species known. those organisms thought to be pathogenic to the lung include the clinical presentation of these lung infections can vary from minimally symptomatic small lesions discovered by routine radiography to sudden hemoptysis from advanced disease with severe cavitation (table . ). the two most characteristic lesions are those of diffuse infiltrates in an immunocompromised patient, seen most commonly in the hiv-positive population and an viruses most pulmonary infections are due to viruses from four major groups: influenza, parainfluenza, respiratory syncytial virus (rsv), and adenovirus (table . ) [ ] . the clinical presentations of these infections have some common features, including insidious onset, nonproductive cough, fever, and chest pain. chest imaging studies usually reveal bilateral, multifocal infiltrates, most without evidence of cavitation or pleural involvement. these infections are mild, self-limiting, and require no more than supportive therapy except in immunocompromised hosts, where the clinical course can be much more serious. also, immunocompromised patients are susceptible to other viruses such as herpesvirus and cytomegalovirus pneumonias, which are not common pathogens in normal hosts [ ] . since the s, a subset of pulmonary viral infections has emerged with a much more aggressive clinical course, most notably sars, coronavirus, and hantavirus. these viruses present with systemic symptoms of headache, myalgias, and weakness followed by a deteriorating clinical course with respiratory distress, shock and, in over % of the cases, death [ , ] . therapy for most respiratory viral infections is supportive, although antivirals are available for some viruses, mostly used in the setting of immunocompromised patients. ribavirin, a guanosine analogue, is the main antiviral used for rsv; m inhibitors or adamantanes (amantadine and rimantadine) are used against influenza a and neuraminidase inhibitors (oseltamivir and zanamivir) are used against both influenza a and b [ ] . cytomegalovirus is treated with ganciclovir, foscarnet, or cidofovir, while herpesvirus is treated with acyclovir [ ] . the pathologic patterns of injury for most viruses are similar, making morphologic distinctions among them difficult. however, some characteristic patterns emerge, most notably in those viruses that cause cytopathic changes. influenza, adenovirus, sars, coronavirus, and hantavirus all cause an acute lung injury pattern with diffuse alveolar damage, and in the case of the latter two viruses, evidence of hemorrhage and edema. influenza and adenovirus will also cause a necrotizing bronchiolitis due to their preferential infection of bronchial epithelial cells. finally, some viral infections can be distinguished by their characteristic cytopathic inclusions. adenovirus can be identified by characteristic smudge cells that present in advanced stages of the disease and represent adenovirus particles in the nucleus of an infected cell (figure . ). cytomegalovirus has both nuclear owl's eye inclusions, as well as cytoplasmic inclusions (figure . ). herpesvirus has glassy intranuclear inclusions and can also have multinucleation (figure . ). fungi are larger and more complex than bacteria, and their patterns of injury in the lung are different and in general more destructive. these pathogens are common in our environment and enter the lungs through inhalation. though many fungi are capable of causing pulmonary disease, most only inhabit the lung as colonizers. those of most concern for causing clinical disease include the endemic fungi of north america-histoplasma capsulatum, blastomyces dermatitidis, and coccidioides immitis-and two fungi that are commonly seen in immunocompromised hosts-aspergillus fumigatus and pneumocystis jiroveci. histoplasma capsulatum histoplasma capsulatum is a dimorphic fungus most prevalent in the middle portion of the united states from the great lakes to tennessee. the fungus is present in soil that has been contaminated with guano and other debris by nesting birds, most commonly blackbirds and chickens, and by bats. the organism lives in the environment as spores or conidia and germinates to form hyphae. these structures divide to create the yeast forms, which, when inhaled, induce granuloma formation in the lung. approximately % of people have skin tests that are positive for exposure to h. capsulatum, but most exposures do not cause clinical disease. disease typically occurs in people exposed to large amounts of organisms, such as construction workers who move large volumes of dirt or spelunkers who venture into bat-ridden caves. the acute disease has flu-like symptoms which are self-limiting. healed disease may leave behind calcified granulomas in the lung that appear as buckshot on chest imaging studies. the most chronic forms of this disease may slowly progress, giving rise to cavitating and fibrous lesions. in the immunocompromised host, disseminating histoplasmosis can be seen, although reactivation is uncommon [ ] . the pathology reveals characteristic necrotizing granulomas distributed around the airways (figure . ), which contain silver-positive yeast forms of - microns. these granulomas may resolve into scarred nodules, which can calcify and produce the characteristic chest images. cavities may form in the apices with progression of the disease, and the disseminated form of the disease has an abundance of organisms both within macrophages in the lung and throughout many organs in the body. blastomyces dermatitidis blastomyces dermatitidis is also endemic to the middle united states, including the ohio and mississippi river valleys. it is found in wooded terrain, usually during the wet seasons, putting campers and outdoorsmen at risk. the clinical disease takes two forms, cutaneous and systemic, the latter beginning in the lungs through inhalation. the acute pulmonary infection takes a nonspecific form with fever, malaise, and chest pain. imaging studies may show either infiltrates or a mass-like infiltrate. thus, blastomyces infection may mimic other diseases, and the diagnosis may be delayed. some patients go on to chronic disease with cavitation or progressive pulmonary blastomycosis, which manifests as acute respiratory distress syndrome, cavitary lesions, and a poor prognosis [ ] . the pathology of blastomyces infection is similar to histoplasmosis with necrotizing granulomas. however, the lesions are larger, showing more neutrophilic necrosis. the organisms are also larger ( - microns), with prominent broad-based budding, and are apparent on routine hematoxylin and eosin staining (figure . ). coccidioides immitis coccidioides immitis is found in the semi-arid desert climate of the southwestern united states. the organisms are inhaled as spores, causing an acute disease characterized by fever, chills, chest pain, dyspnea, and hemoptysis. chest imaging studies typically show consolidation and cavitation, and hilar lymphadenopathy is common. reactivation and dissemination are possible in patients with previous infection, whether or not they are immunocompromised patients [ ] . the pathology of pulmonary coccidioidomycosis is neutrophilic, suppurative, and granulomatous. the organisms appear as large spherules containing endospores, visible on silver stains. the spherules are - microns in diameter and the endospores that are released into the surrounding tissue proceed to mature into new spherules (figure . ) . as in histoplasmosis, cavitating lesions may have hyphal forms that begin to germinate. aspergillus fumigatus aspergilli are asexual mycelial fungi that are ubiquitous in the environment as airborne aspergillus spores. they are weak pathogens that produce invasive infections predominantly in immunocompromised hosts or in those with significant chronic lung diseases. in tissue, aspergilli form septate hyphae, - microns in diameter, with characteristic acute-angle, dichotomous branching (figure . ) . these organisms affect the lung in three major ways: (i) saprophytic growth in bronchi or pre-existent cavities; (ii) as an allergic or hypersensitivity reaction, predominantly in asthmatics; and (iii) invasive aspergillosis in immunocompromised hosts [ , ] . as a saprophyte, aspergillus produces surface growths or minute masses of hyphae, usually in bronchiectatic cavities, emphysematous bullae, or scars from previous lung diseases such as tuberculosis or sarcoidosis. the pathology is usually that of a fibrous-walled cavity containing degenerating hyphae (figure . ). in this setting, hyphae do not invade into the lung tissue, but surface erosion of a vascularized cavity may cause hemoptysis. aspergillus causes an immunologic response resulting in mucoid impaction or eosinophilic pneumonia in asthmatics, an entity known as allergic bronchopulmonary aspergillosis (abpa). pathologically, one sees mucoid plugs and superficial erosions of the airways with histiocytic inflammation, with only rare hyphal fragments present. the final form of the disease, invasive pulmonary aspergillosis, is found in severely immunocompromised, neutropenic patients. the hyphae, which disseminate through the blood, invade the blood vessels causing thrombosis, hemorrhage, and infarction to form typical targetoid lesions. this form of the disease has a poor prognosis despite aggressive antifungal therapy. pneumocystis jiroveci the taxonomy of pneumocystis jiroveci (formerly pneumocystis carinii) has changed over the past decade. previously thought to be a protozoan based on the histological characteristics of its trophozoite and cyst life forms, it has recently been placed in the fungal kingdom after ribosomal rna was found to have sequences compatible with the ascomycetous fungi [ ] . the inability to culture pneumocystis jiroveci has slowed the understanding of this organism. animal models have helped in defining the antigenic and genotypic differences among the various pneumocystis organisms, which has led to the proposal for species-specific strains, with p. jiroveci found in human infections [ ] . the molecular methods used for the typing these species examine a number of gene loci. most importantly, sequence analysis of the thymidylate synthase (ts) and superoxide dismutase (soda) gene loci, the epsp synthase domain of the multifunctional arom gene, and the mitochondrial small subunit ribosomal rna (mtssu rrna) locus have been used to distinguish the various pneumocystis species that infect different mammalian hosts [ ] . clinically, p. jiroveci causes disease predominantly in the immunocompromised setting. pneumocystis pneumonia (pcp) has been found during recent times most commonly in the aids population, but prior to this epidemic, it was found in malnourished infants and other severely immunocompromised hosts. because this organism has not been cultured, the diagnosis of pcp continues to be challenging. the clinical characteristics are nonspecific and vary with the patient's immune status. in the hiv population, patients typically develop a subacute onset of progressive dyspnea, a nonproductive cough, malaise, and a low-grade fever. in the non-hiv population, the presentation is more acute, with fulminant respiratory failure associated with cough and fever, and usually requiring mechanical ventilation [ ] . chest imaging studies typically show bilateral, symmetric, fine reticular interstitial infiltrates involving the perihilar area, which spread to involve the entire lung. figure . aspergillosis. aspergillus fumigatus grows within necrotizing cavities of the lung as branching septated fungal hyphae, as seen on this grocott methenamine silver stain. figure . aspergilloma. fungal hyphae from aspergillus fumigatus can colonize chronically inflamed lungs with cavities and may grow to form fungal balls with a dark, green color that are treated by surgical resection, as seen in this case of a lobectomy specimen. treatment is usually with trimethoprim/sulfamethoxazole and intravenous pentamidine. survival is %- % even in severely immunocompromised patients. the life cycle of p. jiroveci consists of three stages: trophozoite, cyst, and sporozoite. the trophozoite form, which adheres to the type epithelium, replicates and enlarges through three precyst stages before maturing into a cyst form that is found in the alveolar space. sporozoites develop within immature cysts through meiosis and mitosis. the mature cyst contains eight haploid sporozoites. the rupture of the cyst wall releases sporozoites into the surrounding environment where they mature into trophozoites. the pathology of the infection is predominantly due to the interaction of the organism with the epithelium. the attachment of the organism to the lung epithelium is via glycoprotein a present on the surface of the organism. the binding of the organism to the type cell occurs via surface receptors on the type cell that include macrophage mannose receptors. these interact with glycoprotein a and activate pathways in the organism that induce genes encoding for pathways that induce mating and proliferation responses, and for the formation of pheromone receptors, transcription factors, and heterotrimeric g-protein subunits [ ] . in addition to these genetic effects, the cyst wall contains chitins, polymers, and other substances, in particular, , -glucan, that maintain its integrity and induce the inflammatory response of the host. the , -glucan in the wall of the organism stimulates the release by the macrophages of reactive oxidant species and the generation of potent proinflammatory cytokines, such as tnfa, which bind to the organism and exert a toxic effect. once inside the macrophage, the organism is incorporated into the phagolysosome and degraded. tnfa also directly recruits other inflammatory cells including neutrophils, lymphocytes, and circulating monocytes, and induces the release of il- and ifn-g that recruit and activate inflammatory cells [ ] . in aggregate, the recruitment of these inflammatory cells and the mediators they release is responsible for the damage to the lung epithelium and endothelium that is seen in this disease [ ] . the pathology of pcp has typical and atypical variants. typically, the lung contains a dense interstitial plasma cell pneumonia that expands alveolar walls. the epithelium consists predominantly of type pneumocytes, and the alveolar spaces contain an eosinophilic, frothy exudate, which contains fine, hemoxylin-stained dots that represent a thickening in the cyst wall (figure . ) . in this form of the disease, the organisms are abundant and the diagnosis can usually be made by bronchoalveolar lavage. atypical pathologic variants include a necrotizing variant that has a pattern similar to the typical form with exudative alveolar infiltrates, but which undergoes necrosis and cavity formation. these cavities heal into fibrous-walled cysts, similar in gross appearance to those found in pseudomonas pneumonia. a third variant has wellformed granulomas involving the airways, a pattern common to histoplasmosis and tuberculosis. in this form, the organisms are rare and very difficult to find, even with tissue organismal stains. in general, the pathologic pattern of injury depends on the host's immune status, with the typical pathology found in severely immunocompromised hosts as the aids population and the atypical forms found in hosts with immune systems that are less compromised. pulmonary langerhans cell histiocytosis (plch) and erdheim-chester disease are histiocytic diseases that primarily affect the lung. other histiocytic diseases may affect the lung, such as niemann-pick disease, gaucher disease, hermansky-pudlak and rosai-dorfman disease, but these are not considered primarily lung histiocytic diseases. pulmonary langerhans' cell histiocytosis (plch) is a disease of the dendritic histiocytes of the lung referred to as langerhans' cells (lcs). this disease is part of a group of diseases that are characterized by a proliferation of langerhans cells in organs throughout the body that range from a malignant systemic disease as is seen in children [ ] to the pulmonary variant that is seen in adolescents and adults. plch is usually the result of inflammatory or neoplastic stimuli in lungs of smokers or in lungs involved by certain neoplasms [ ] . chest radiographs from patients with plch usually reveal bilateral nodules, predominantly in the upper lobes, which are worrisome for metastatic disease. treatment involves smoking cessation and steroid therapy. typically, the disease undergoes spontaneous regression. approximately %- % of patients will progress to irreversible end-stage fibrosis [ ] . the pathology of plch consists of airway-based lesions with a proliferation of lcs. the early cellular lesions contain a mixture of cells including langerhans' cells, lymphocytes, plasma cells, and eosinophils ( figure . ). though it was previously referred to as eosinophilic granuloma, eosinophils are not the major cell type present, and the lesion is, at best, a loosely formed granuloma. immunohistochemistry reveals the lcs to be diffusely, strongly immunoreactive to s- protein and cd a. ultrastructural analysis reveals intracytoplasmic organelles called birbeck granules, a normal constituent of langerhans' cells, in greater numbers in plch [ ] . the pathogenetic mechanisms of plch focus on defects in the homeostasis of dendritic cells (dcs) in the lungs of smokers and the role tobacco smoke may play in stimulating the proliferation of these cells [ ] . some studies suggest that stimulation of alveolar macrophages by chemicals in smoke results in secretion of such cytokines as gm-csf, tgfb, and tnfa [ ] . in transgenic mice, accumulation of dcs around airways may be a result of excess gm-csf [ ] . other theories suggest that cigarette smoke stimulates the secretion of bombesin-like peptide by the neuroendocrine cells in the bronchiolar epithelium and leads to a similar stimulation of alveolar macrophages and a cytokine milieu that promotes the proinflammatory proliferative changes [ ] . not all smokers get plch, leading to the suggestion that only smokers with an underlying genetic susceptibility will develop the disease. studies have established that in some cases the lcs in plch are clonal, suggesting that cellular abnormalities must play some part in the pathogenesis of the diseases [ ] . to support this, studies have shown genetic mutations and allelic loss of tumor suppressor genes in smokers with plch [ ] . the mechanisms by which this proliferation of lcs leads to the destruction of the bronchiolar epithelium and the other observed pathology are unclear. lcs in normal lungs have little ability to interact with t-cells or act as effective antigen-presenting cells, but the lcs of plch have a mature immunophenotype, expressing b - and b - , the co-stimulatory molecules needed for lymphostimulatory activity [ ] . whether this more mature immune phenotype leads to an unregulated immune response and destruction of the bronchial epithelial cells is not known. however, some studies have shown that bronchiolar epithelial cells may induce the expression of this mature phenotype by secreting cytokines in response to environmental stimulants such as cigarette smoke or viral infections, or by the development of hyperplastic or dysplastic lesions that express new foreign antigens [ ] . erdheim-chester disease (ecd) is a systemic non-langerhans' cell histiocytosis of adults that most commonly involves the long bones. involvement of other organs, including the lung, has been reported. lung involvement occurs in approximately %- % of the cases, and the patients usually present with cough, dyspnea, rhonchi, and pleuritic pain. radiographically, the lungs reveal infiltrates in a lymphatic distribution, predominantly upper lobe, with prominent interstitial septal markings that can mimic sarcoidosis [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . pulmonary involvement by ecd may have an unfavorable prognosis, and the fibrosis that ensues is one of the most frequently reported causes of death [ , ] . the treatment of ecd is variable with corticosteroids, chemotherapy, surgical resection, and radiation therapy reported [ ] . non-langerhans' cell histiocytes of dendritic cell phenotype are the main cells present in this disease. this infiltrate contains foamy histiocytes with scattered giant cells, a scant number of lymphocytes or plasma cells, and some fibroblasts. the histiocytes express cd (macrophage antigen) and factor xiiia (dendritic cell antigen), but express s- protein weakly or not at all, and do not express cd a. ultrastructural analysis reveals phagolysosomes, but no birbeck granules are present [ ] . this infiltrate that involves the lung is usually present in the pleura and subpleura, within the interlobular septa and around the bronchovascular structures. the remainder of the lung parenchyma is unremarkable, though fibrosis and paracicatricial emphysema can appear in the late stages of the disease [ ] . the etiology of ecd is not known, but this rare disease has been established as primarily a macrophage disorder [ ] . these histiocytes have abundant phagolysosomes and express the antigen cd a and are consistent with a phagocytic cell, most likely closely related to alveolar macrophages. the peripheral monocytosis and the proinflammatory cytokine profile that is found in these patients might suggest that the histiocytic infiltrate is a result of systemic monocytic activation and invasion of circulating monocytes into the tissues throughout the body [ ] . recently, an ecd patient was successfully treated by an agent toxic to monocytes, supporting the theory that these cells play a part in the disease [ ] . alternatively, end organ cytokine production by local inflammatory cells resulting in proliferation and differentiation of resident immature histiocyte populations may produce a similar picture. another interesting observation is that erdheim-chester has been reported to occur in patients with langerhans' cell histiocytosis [ ] , which may suggest that this is a disease where macrophages transition between two different phenotypes along the differentiation spectrum of tissue dendritic cells [ ] . whether this is a benign or malignant proliferation has not been established. of patients studied, clonality has been demonstrated in by polymerasechain reaction [ ] . environmental exposures are a major cause of lung disease and can cause a wide spectrum of both acute and chronic pathology. many organic and inorganic materials can cause lung damage, and because of their similar patterns of injury and long latent periods, it can be difficult to isolate the exact offending agent without a thorough clinical history. the two occupational lung diseases presented here-asbestosis and silicosis-represent pneumoconiosis, which are defined as diseases which result in diffuse parenchymal lung injury due to inhaled inorganic material. both have many pathologic patterns of injury that depend on the amount and length of time of exposure, and both can also cause neoplastic diseases of the lung. asbestos fibers are naturally occurring silicates that are commonly used in construction materials such as cement and insulation and in many textiles. they can be separated into two groups based on their mineralogic characteristics. serpentine fibers, named as such because they are long and curly, include chrysotile asbestos. amphibole fibers, more straight and rodlike, include predominantly amosite and crocidolite asbestos. in the united states most of the asbestos is chrysotile. the amphiboles are more pathogenic and are responsible for most of the neoplastic and non-neoplastic pulmonary diseases associated with asbestos exposure. by definition, asbestosis is bilateral diffuse interstitial fibrosis of the lungs that can be attributed to asbestos exposure. the disease, which mostly affects textile and construction workers, is usually the result of direct exposure over - years. the latency to clinical disease is inversely proportional to the level of exposure. the symptoms are a gradual onset of shortness of breath, a cough with dry rales at the bases on inspiration, and digital clubbing. in the early disease, the chest x-ray shows basilar disease that begins predominantly as thickening of the subpleural, but progresses as infiltrates and fibrosis that involve the middle zone, eventually leading to thickening of the airways and traction bronchiectasis. the apex of the lung is usually spared. the clinical findings are nonspecific and have considerable overlap with uip, so the diagnosis is usually made only when a history of significant exposure is discovered. the gross picture includes a bilateral lower lobe gray/tan fibrosis with honeycomb changes in late disease. microscopically, asbestosis can cause many patterns of injury in the lung, but the most common is collagenous deposition in the areas of the lymphatics where the fibers are in the highest concentration. these areas include the subpleural, interlobular septae, and around the bronchovascular areas that contain a bronchiole and a branch of the pulmonary artery. hyalinized pleural plaques are a common manifestation of asbestos exposure but are not specific for asbestos and can be found in the absence of pulmonary parenchymal disease. eventually, the fibrosis involves the alveoli beyond the bronchioles and causes distortion of the lung architecture to form remodeled, dilated airspaces similar to those seen in uip. distinguishing this fibrosis from other forms of fibrosing lung disease can be difficult, but the presence of ferruginous bodies, asbestos fibers coated by iron, proteins, and a mucopolysaccharide coat are indicative of significant asbestos exposures and support this diagnosis (figure . ) [ ] . figure . asbestosis. this cytopathologic preparation from a bronchoalveolar lavage specimen illustrates an asbestos fiber coated by an iron-protein-mucopolysaccharide substance and appears as a golden brown, beaded structure known as a ferruginous body. silicosis results from chronic, high-dose exposure to crystalline silica, which consists of silicon and oxygen with trace amounts of other elements, usually iron. the most common silica is quartz, which is present in large amounts in such rocks as granite, shale, and sandstone and is among the more fibrogenic of all silica types. thus, occupations most at risk for silicosis include sandblasting, quarrying, stone dressing, and foundry work where exposure to quartz is high. the disease takes three major clinical and pathologic forms that have different clinical characteristics. simple or nodule silicosis is marked by the presence of fine nodules cm, on chest imaging studies, usually in the upper lobes. patients with this condition are typically asymptomatic, with normal respiratory physiology. the pathology in these lungs reveals discrete, hard nodules that have a green/gray color, centered either on the small airways or in the subpleura. microscopically, these nodules have an early stellate shape that eventually transforms to a more whorled appearance with dustladen macrophages scattered throughout it. polarized light examination reveals weakly birefringent material. complicated pneumoconiosis represents similar pathologic findings only with larger and more circumscribed nodules, which coalesce into a large upper lobe mass, a condition known as progressive, massive fibrosis ( figure . ) . these patients are symptomatic with a productive cough and mixed pulmonary function tests with a reduced diffusing capacity as the fibrosis increases. diffuse interstitial fibrosis may occur; however, unlike asbestosis, this pattern is found in pneumoconiosis. when complicated pneumoconiosis is found with rheumatoid nodules in the setting of a patient with rheumatoid arthritis, this is known as caplan's syndrome. the pathogenesis of both asbestosis and silicosis depends upon inflammation and fibrosis caused by the inhaled fibers. in humans, the amount of fiber needed to cause fibrosis varies from person to person. this may be related to a difference in fiber deposition based on the size of the lungs or to the efficacy with which the lung clears these fibers [ ] . some studies have also suggested that fiber length determines the amount of pathology. however, this association has not been confirmed in humans for either asbestosis or silicosis. in both diseases, it is known that other factors increase the risk of developing disease. for example, smokers exhibit worse disease than nonsmokers with similar exposures to asbestosis. the mechanism for this effect is unclear, although speculation centers on the inhibition of fiber clearance in smokers. also, it is known that smoking enhances the uptake of fibers by pulmonary epithelial cells and in this way may increase the fibrogenic and inflammatory cytokine production by these cells. the cellular mechanisms by which both asbestos and silica fibers induce the inflammation and fibrosis are mediated predominantly through alveolar macrophages. in the case of silica, it is known that the uptake of these fibers into the alveolar macrophages is by way of a scavenger receptor expressed on the surface of the cell known as marco (macrophage receptor with a collagenous structure). once inside the cells, the fibers activate the release of ros that can lead to cellular and molecular damage through a number of pathways. first, ros can directly cause lipid peroxidation, membrane damage, and dna damage. second, silicainduced free radicals can trigger phosphorylation of cellular proliferation pathways through mitogen-activated protein kinases (mapks), extracellular signal regulated kinases (erks), and p . these pathways are also involved in the proliferation of fibroblasts in asbestosis and of mesothelial and epithelial cells in the neoplastic diseases associated with the inhalation of these fibers [ ] . in addition, these fibers can activate proinflammatory pathways controlled by such transcription factors as nuclear nfkb and activator protein (ap- ). these pathways result in the activation of the early response genes c-fos and c-jun and the release of proinflammatory cytokines such as il- as well as fibrogenic factors such tnfa [ ] . tnfa plays a prominent role in both diseases, and its regulation has been studied in animal models exposed to silica. it is now known that a transcription factor labeled nuclear factor of activated t-cells (nfat) plays a key role in the regulation of tnfa. figure . complicated pneumoconiosis/ progressive massive fibrosis. this sagittal cut section of lung reveals a large gray/black mass that extends from the apex to include the majority of the lung. the patient had a long history as a coal mine worker, and the microscopic sections revealed abundant anthracotic pigment and scarring in this area. binding sites for nfat have been found in the promoter region of the tnfa gene. the mediation of silica-induced tnfa transcription is probably via o -but not h o [ , ] . atresia of the lung represents a premature closure of the airway at any level of the bronchial tree including the lobar, segmental, or subsegmental airways. clinically, these children usually present between and years of age for symptoms of dyspnea, wheezing, recurrent pneumonias, or for incidental findings on a chest imaging study. these lesions are more common in the proximal segmental bronchi, right more often than left. when atresia is associated with anomalies of the vascular supply to the affected airway, the lesion represents a separate, aberrant segment of lung known as a sequestration, either intralobar or extralobar type. the pathology of bronchial atresias and sequestrations represents sequelae of chronic inflammation due to the accumulation of secretions in these blind-end airways. these features consist of cystically dilated airways with mucus and parenchymal fibrosis with honeycomb changes. in intralobar sequestrations (ils), the anomalous vessel is a muscular artery that enters through the pleura from an aortic source, usually from the thoracic area. ils are separate, isolated areas of lung invested with the normal visceral pleura without bronchial or arterial connections (figure . ). extralobar sequestrations (els) are pyramid-shaped accessory pieces of lung that have their own pleura with an artery from the lung but without airway connections. the category of congenital pulmonary cystic diseases represents the majority of congenital pulmonary disease and includes foregut cysts and cystic adenomatoid malformations. foregut cysts include bronchogenic, esophageal, and thymic cysts that form from defects in the foregut branching. clinically, these cysts are usually incidental findings on chest imaging studies, but they can present with complications due to infection or hemorrhage. pathologic features of these cysts include subtle differences that are usually only apparent after microscopic examination. grossly, these cysts usually arise proximally either within the mediastinum (over %) or in the proximal regions of the lungs, right more commonly than left, along the esophagus, and rarely within the lung parenchyma or below the diaphragm [ ] . microscopically, each cyst contains a simple cuboidal or columnar epithelium, ciliated or nonciliated, that may undergo squamous metaplasia. distinguishing among the three types of cysts requires the presence of other elements. bronchogenic cysts have submucosal glands and/or hyaline cartilage within their walls, and thymic cysts may contain residual thymus. congenital cystic adenomatoid malformations (ccam), now more commonly referred to as congenital pulmonary airway malformations (cpam), are segments of lung with immature airways and alveolar parenchyma. these are usually classified by their predominant cyst size into types - . type cysts, which contain a main large cyst of up to cm, are the most common. these cysts are distinguished from foregut cysts upon the recognition in the cpam of immature alveolar duct-like structures connecting to the surrounding lung parenchyma. this type of cpam is also notable, as it is known to undergo malignant transformation, usually to mucinous bronchioloalveolar cell adenocarcinomas. these anomalies arise due to defects during the various stages of development and are best considered within these developmental stages. the embryonic stage occurs within the first - weeks of life when the ventral wall of the foregut separates into the trachea and esophagus and branches to form the left and right lungs. the splanchnic mesenchyme that surrounds this foregut forms the vascular and connective tissues of the lungs. defects in this phase result in complete lack of lung development known as pulmonary agenesis and incomplete separation of the trachea and esophagus, causing tracheal-esophageal atresias and fistulas. the pseudoglandular stage, between weeks - of development, is a time of rapid development of the conducting airways including the bronchi and bronchioles and the expansion of the peripheral lung into the acinar buds. the mesenchymal tissue figure . intralobar sequestration. the tan and white mass involving this left lower lobectomy specimen represents chronic pneumonia and fibrosis in the sequestered area of the lung. the dilated airways are features of an endstage fibrosis that is commonly found in this entity. part iv molecular pathology of human disease that surrounds these buds begins to thin, becomes vascularized, and forms the cartilage that surrounds the more proximal branching airways. during the canalicular (week [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , saccular (weeks [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] , and alveolar (weeks to maturity) stages of development, the acinar buds continue to expand, and the mesenchyme surrounding this continues to thin. during the canalicular stage, the pulmonary vascular bed begins to organize, the distance between the blood in the vascular spaces and the air in the alveoli narrows, and the respiratory epithelium begins to form. the gas exchange unit of the alveolus becomes functional during the saccular stage with further differentiation of the respiratory epithelium to include clara cells, ciliated and nonciliated cells, and type cells with the first production of surfactant occurring during this period. this gas exchange unit continues to mature during the alveolar stage with the growth and septation of the alveoli. this process continues postnatally through - years of age. the different types of cpams arise at different stages of development. cpams , , and are a result of defects during the early embryonic and pseudoglandular stages of development, producing pathology with features of primitive alveolar buds and immature and abnormal airway cartilage structures. cpams and result from abnormal formation of the more distal airways and pulmonary parenchyma during the canalicular, saccular, and alveolar phases, causing pathology with immature alveolar, or alveolar simplification with enlarged alveoli [ ] . various genetic defects in the pathways that control lung morphogenesis have been associated with these congenital lung diseases. two major transcription factors are responsible for the normal branching morphogenesis. the first, thyroid transcription factor- (ttf- ), is a member of the nkx . family of hemeodomain-containing transcription factors. this factor plays a role in the lung epithelial-specific gene expression and proper lung bud development in the embryonic stage, as well as in the maturation of the respiratory epithelium. the second major factor is somatic hedgehog (shh)/gli, expressed by endodermally derived cells and required for branching morphogenesis. the development of the lung bud from the foregut endoderm depends on the appropriate expression of these lung-specific genes at the correct time in development. in the presence of genetic defects, aberrant lung development may occur. for example, mutations of various types in the shh/gli gene have been found to cause tracheoesophageal fistulas, anomalous pulmonary vasculature, and aberrant airway branching. also, deletions in the ttf- gene are associated with tracheoesophageal fistulas and a variety of forms of lung dysgenesis [ ] . finally, factors present in the surrounding mesenchyme play a role in inducing the proper development of the pulmonary endoderm. a prominent mesenchymal factor in this process is fibroblast growth factor (fgf), which modulates both the proximal and distal lung branching morphogenesis. deletions in this gene may cause lung agenesis and tracheal malformations [ ] . surfactant dysfunction disorders represent a heterogenous group of inherited disorders of surfactant metabolism, found predominantly in infants and children. pulmonary surfactant includes both phospholipids and surfactant proteins, designated surfactant proteins a, b, c, and d (sp-a, sp-b, sp-c, sp-d), synthesized and secreted by type cells beginning in the canalicular stage of lung development. damage to type cells during this time period can lead to acquired surfactant deficiencies. however, more commonly these deficiencies are the result of genetic defects of the surfactant proteins themselves. the major diseases are caused by genetic defects in the surfactant protein b (sftpb, chromosome p -p . ); surfactant protein c (sftpc, chromosome p ); and adenosine triphosphate (apt)-binding cassette transporter subfamily a member (abca , chromosome p . ). defects in sftpb and abca have an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern, and defects in sftpc have an autosomal dominant pattern. sp-b deficiency is the most common. it presents at birth with a rapidly progressive respiratory failure and chest imaging studies showing diffuse ground glass infiltrates. the gross pathology in these lungs consists of heavy, red, and congested parenchyma with microscopic features that range from a pap-like pattern to a chronic pneumonitis of infancy (cpi) pattern. in sp-b deficiency, the pap pattern predominates with a histologic picture of cuboidal alveolar epithelium and eosinophilic pas-positive material within the alveolar spaces that appears with disease progression. in the late stages of the disease, the alveolar wall thickens with a chronic inflammatory infiltrate and fibroblasts. this alveolar proteinosis-type pattern of injury can be confirmed with immunohistochemical studies that establish the absence of sp-b within this surfactant-like material. diseases due to abca or sftpc deficiency may present within a week of birth or years later; the former has a poor prognosis, but the latter has a more variable prognosis with some patients surviving into adulthood. indeed, sp-c mutations have also been recognized in some families as a cause of interstitial pneumonia and pulmonary fibrosis in adults [ ] . the pathology of sp-c deficiency has more cpi features and less proteinosis. in contrast, abca deficiency can have either pap or cpi features, with the former present early in the disease and the latter present in more chronically affected lungs [ ] . the sp-b gene (sftpb) is approximately kb in length and is located on chromosome . there are over recessive loss-of-function mutations associated with the sftpb gene. however, the most common mutation is a gaa substitution for c in codon , found in about % of the cases. the lack of sp-b leads to an abnormal proportion of phosphatidylglycerol and an accumulation of a pro-sp-c peptide, leading to the alveolar proteinosis-like pathology. sp-c protein deficiency is due to a defect in the sftpc gene localized to human chromosome . there are approximately dominantly expressed mutations in sftpc that result in acute and chronic lung disease. approximately % of them arise spontaneously, and the remainder are inherited. the most common mutation is a threonine substitution for isoleucine in codon (i t), found in % of the cases, including both sporadic and inherited disease [ ] . this mutation leads to a misfolding of the sp-c protein, which inhibits its progression through the intracellular secretory pathway, usually within the golgi apparatus or the endoplasmic reticulum [ ] . the absence of sp-c within the alveolar space causes severe lung disease in mouse models. infants with documented mutated prosp-c protein, the larger primary translation product from which sp-c is proteolytically cleaved, can have respiratory distress syndrome (rds) or cpi. in older individuals, pathologic patterns observed in the lungs with these mutations include nonspecific interstitial pneumonitis (nsip) and uip. in this affected adult population, the pathology and age of disease presentation vary even within familial cohorts, suggesting the involvement of a second hit, perhaps an environmental factor [ ] . the abca protein is a member of the family of atpdependent transporters, which includes the cftr, and is expressed in epithelial cells. mutation in this gene results in severe respiratory failure that is refractory to surfactant replacement. the cellular basis for the lack of surfactant in patients with this genetic mutation is not known. the presence of abnormal lamellar bodies within the type cells by ultrastructural analysis suggests a disruption in the normal surfactant synthesis and packaging in this disease. there is some evidence that this gene contains promoters that share elements consistent with their activation by the 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cord_uid: nzoiv pj although an increasing number of phylogenetic data sets are incomplete, the effect of ambiguous data on phylogenetic accuracy is not well understood. we use -taxon simulations to study the effects of ambiguous data (i.e., missing characters or gaps) in maximum likelihood (ml) and bayesian frameworks. by introducing ambiguous data in a way that removes confounding factors, we provide the first clear understanding of mechanism by which ambiguous data can mislead phylogenetic analyses. we find that in both ml and bayesian frameworks, among-site rate variation can interact with ambiguous data to produce misleading estimates of topology and branch lengths. furthermore, within a bayesian framework, priors on branch lengths and rate heterogeneity parameters can exacerbate the effects of ambiguous data, resulting in strongly misleading bipartition posterior probabilities. the magnitude and direction of the ambiguous data bias are a function of the number and taxonomic distribution of ambiguous characters, the strength of topological support, and whether or not the model is correctly specified. the results of this study have major implications for all analyses that rely on accurate estimates of topology or branch lengths, including divergence time estimation, ancestral state reconstruction, tree-dependent comparative methods, rate variation analysis, phylogenetic hypothesis testing, and phylogeographic analysis. phylogenetic analysis has become well established as an important research tool in the biological sciences (harvey et al. ; avise ) , with applications spanning broad fields of research, including evolution (murphy et al. ; bowers et al. ; mckenna and farrell ) , ecology (armbruster ; webb ) , and medicine (bush et al. ; hillis ; eickmann et al. ) . numerous studies have demonstrated that model misspecification can affect the accuracy of phylogenetic estimates (kuhner and felsenstein ; yang et al. ; sullivan et al. ; lockhart et al. ; lemmon and moriarty ). an important, but unresolved, question is whether ambiguous data affect the accuracy of phylogenetic estimates (kearney ; de queiroz and gatesy ; wiens a, and references therein) . the answer to this question is becoming increasingly relevant as more studies combine data sets. with partial sequences of more than taxa now available in large sequence databases, such as gen-bank, embl, or ddbj, an increasing number of studies will use large-scale combinations of sequences from these databases in meta-analyses. incomplete sequences and sampling biases in these databases have led researchers to build phylogenetic data sets that have large numbers of ambiguous characters and gaps (driskell et al. ) . the effects of ambiguous data are unclear, at least in part, because the terminology used to describe the problem has neither been defined carefully nor used consistently across studies. consequently, we begin by clarifying our terminology. we define the data as a matrix of cells with rows and columns corresponding to sequences and homologous sites, respectively. the value in each cell represents the character state for the corresponding sequence and site. the state of each character is unambiguous (taking the state "a," "c," "g," or "t"), partially ambiguous (taking the state "b," "d," "h," "v," "s," "w," "r," "y," "k," or "m"), or ambiguous (taking the state "?" or "n"). ambiguous character is used to refer to a character with an ambiguous state. note that unless explicitly modeled, a gap (represented by the state "-" and resulting from an insertion or a deletion) will have the same effect as an ambiguous character. also note that partially ambiguous character states are not considered here for simplicity. we use the term ambiguous site to refer to a site containing or more ambiguous characters and the term ambiguous sequence to refer to a sequence containing or more ambiguous characters. last, we use invariable site to refer to a site in which all unambiguous characters have the same state. to ensure clarity, we henceforth avoid using the term "missing data," although the reader may think of ambiguous or gap characters as missing data. because of the complexity of the problem and the fact that conclusions from simulation studies are conflicting, the potential impact of ambiguous characters is still unclear. early evidence suggested that ambiguous characters can reduce phylogenetic accuracy, especially when taxa have large numbers of ambiguous characters (platnick et al. ) . subsequent studies of the effects of ambiguous characters disagree in their conclusions. for example, wiens ( wiens ( , a wiens ( , b argued that adding ambiguous sequences or sites to a phylogenetic analysis has no detrimental effect and that the addition of more of these sequences increases accuracy, even if it means adding ambiguous characters. this argument seems counterintuitive because adding in-group taxa will decrease the average length of internal branches and thus make the estimation of phylogenetic relationships more difficult (jermiin et al. ) . his analyses also suggest that even highly ambiguous sequences have little impact on the phylogenetic relationships of the unambiguous sequences (wiens a (wiens , b ). in contrast, other studies (huelsenbeck ; hillis et al. ; bull et al. ; wiens and reeder ; dragoo and honeycutt ) found that ambiguous characters resulted in reduced phylogenetic accuracy, although the severity of the effect was variable. this variation was attributed to the number of ambiguous characters (huelsenbeck ; hillis et al. ; bull et al. ; wiens and reeder ) , the type of data (e.g., dna vs. restriction sites; wiens and reeder ) , the taxonomic distribution of the ambiguous characters (dragoo and honeycutt ) , or the topological information in the data set (dragoo and honeycutt ; wiens b; philippe et al. ) . most of the past research into the effects of ambiguous characters focused on maximum parsimony analysis (huelsenbeck ; platnick et al. ; wiens ; kearney and clark ; wiens b) . more recently, studies also have considered the effects of ambiguous characters on neighbor joining (wiens a) , maximum likelihood (ml) (dunn et al. ; wiens a wiens , gouveia-oliveira et al. ) , or bayesian (wiens ; wiens and moen ) analyses. although wiens ( ) concluded that adding ambiguous sequences or sites to a data set increased phylogenetic accuracy for maximum parsimony, neighbor joining, ml, as well as bayesian analyses, dunn et al. ( ) found a % reduced accuracy for maximum parsimony and no reduction in accuracy for ml when ambiguous characters were added. there are conflicting views on how ambiguous characters affect accuracy. some authors argue that reduced accuracy is due to a lack of information (i.e., not enough unambiguous characters) rather than due to the ambiguous characters per se (kearney and clark ; wiens a) . they view ambiguous character states simply as representing the unknown, with little impact on the outcome of a phylogenetic analysis (kearney and clark ) . the practical implication of this view is that all available data, including ambiguous sequences and sites, should be used in a phylogenetic analysis to maximize the available information. in contrast, other studies suggest that ambiguous characters bias the resulting phylogeny to an extent that goes beyond the lack of information (huelsenbeck ) . the recommendation in this case would be to reduce the data set in an effort to eliminate as many ambiguous characters as possible. even though rarely stated explicitly, this latter strategy is widely used, either by setting arbitrary limits for including ambiguous sequences into an analysis (kearney and clark ) or by excluding the leading and trailing ends of sequences in a data set. though some researchers are careful to remove ambiguous characters, others disregard their potential effects and use largely ambiguous matrices in an effort to maximize the number of taxa and genes sampled. because simulation studies have drawn conflicting conclusions regarding the effects of ambiguous characters, and the exact mechanism by which ambiguous characters may affect phylogenetic accuracy remains unknown (wiens ) , further investigation is needed. previous studies conflict because the approaches taken by authors have confounded the effects of ambiguous characters with the effects of phylogenetic information (due to nucleotide substitutions). more specifically, authors have manipulated data sets by either adding sites containing more than unambiguous characters or by changing the state of characters from unambiguous to ambiguous. in either case, authors have inadvertently manipulated the amount of phylogenetic information along with the number of ambiguous characters. furthermore, different simulation studies varied widely in their assumptions. for example, wiens ( wiens ( , a wiens ( , b assumed that all characters evolved at the same rate and that branch lengths were equal. in contrast, dunn et al. ( ) assumed that characters and lineages evolved at different rates and allowed for different branch lengths. to determine the consequences of including ambiguous characters in phylogenetic analyses, it is necessary to separate these confounding variables and explore the effects of ambiguous characters across a wide range of parameter space. the goals of this study are ) to determine whether ambiguous characters bias estimates of phylogeny, and if they do, ) to understand the mechanism by which this bias is introduced, and ) to identify the factors that contribute to the direction and magnitude of the bias. our approach differs from previous studies in that we only introduce ambiguous sites that should be topologically uninformative if ambiguous characters have no effect. in this way, we are able to remove the confounding factors described above and arrive at a clear understanding of the effects of ambiguous characters. we show that at least factors determine the direction and magnitude of bias resulting from ambiguous characters: the number and taxonomic distribution of ambiguous characters, the strength of topological support from unambiguous characters, the degree of among-site rate variation, and the method and assumptions of the analysis (including the priors assumed in a bayesian analysis). although we focus on ambiguous characters, we expect gaps due to insertions and deletions to have the same effect, unless they are explicitly modeled. we conclude by discussing the implications of this work and introduce several possible solutions to the problem. in the following section, we outline the simulation conditions and the general conditions under which the analyses were conducted. in the results, we present the specific conditions under which the analyses were systematic biology vol. conducted along with the result to which they pertain. the factors found to contribute to the effects of ambiguous characters are presented with increasing complexity, beginning with individual factors and ending with combinations of factors. in this way, the reader can more easily understand the effect of each factor as well as the interactions among the factors. in order to gain a clear understanding of the effects of ambiguous characters on estimates of phylogeny, our analyses incorporated the following properties: first, we primarily used simulated data (instead of empirical data) in order to gain control over the factors affecting our phylogenetic estimates and to vary those factors independently. second, we simplified the simulations as much as possible, focusing on variables that were of immediate interest. consequently, our analyses were based on -taxon simulations under simple models of evolution. third, our simulated data sets contained regions (sets of nucleotide sites). the first region, which was of fixed length, contained only unambiguous characters and provided a baseline amount of support for the true topology. the second region was of variable length and may have contained ambiguous characters. fourth, we were careful to include ambiguous characters in such a way that we could eliminate other confounding factors. more specifically, ambiguous sites provided no topological information because only of the characters had unambiguous states. in this way, we were able to remove the effects of substitutions in the ambiguous sites that could affect support for the true topology. in order to determine the effects of bayesian priors, we also compared results from ml and bayesian analyses (hillis et al. ; felsenstein ) , when possible. we first generated alignments, each comprising nucleotides, using a -taxon tree (in which each branch length was equal to . my) and the jukes-cantor (jc) model of evolution (jukes and cantor ) . the types of data differed in that they were simulated under different rates of evolution: . , . , . , . , . , and . substitutions per site per my (refer to fig. ; note that . is not a typographical error). these rates were chosen, based on preliminary simulations, to produce data sets containing a range of phylogenetic information, resulting in posterior probabilities (given unambiguous sites) for the true topology of / , / , , , / , and / , respectively. the lowest rate of evolution produced data sets that were invariable at all sites and the highest rate produced data sets that were saturated. all data sets were simulated with seq-gen . . (rambaut and grassly ) . to introduce among-site rate variation, we produced types of combined data sets by concatenating pairwise combinations of the rate types outlined above. each of the combined data sets thus contained sites. we refer to the first sites as gene a and the remaining sites as gene b. to vary the taxonomic distribution of ambiguous characters across data sets, we replaced all characters in gene b with ambiguous characters (taking the state "?") for of the taxa (either sister or nonsister on the -taxon tree) or none of the taxa (gene b unambiguous). last, we varied the length of gene b by removing between and of the sites at the end of gene b (in increments of ). one hundred replicates of each of the types were created for a total of data sets ( rate combinations × replicates× ambiguous character distributions × lengths). two types of ml analyses were performed. the first type was performed to identify the effect of ambiguous characters on estimates of topology. to identify the ml topology for a given -taxon data set, each of the possible topologies was scored using paup* v. . b (swofford ) under the jc model of evolution. branch lengths were optimized using default settings, which include collapsing short branches (< − substitutions per site) to polytomies. the topology with the highest likelihood after optimization was chosen as the ml topology. we also computed the likelihood of the data, given topologies with fixed branch lengths (see description below). in order to accommodate rate heterogeneity in data sets with rate variation across genes, we conducted additional ml analyses using treefinder (jobb ) . the second type of ml analysis was performed to identify the effect of ambiguous characters on estimates of branch lengths. because we simulated the data using an ultrametric tree, we expect the tips of the estimated phylogeny to be equidistant from the root if ambiguous characters have no effect. therefore, a molecular clock test can be used to determine whether relative branch lengths are significantly affected. we first computed the likelihood of the data given the true topology and branch lengths optimized under the jc model. we then computed the likelihood of the data given the true topology and branch lengths optimized with a molecular clock assumption enforced (also under the jc model; the root is assumed to be between the internal nodes). the molecular clock assumption forces the tips to be equidistant from the root. the ratio of these likelihoods was then computed to assess whether any departure from a clock-like evolutionary process was significant (χ test with df; felsenstein felsenstein , . the type i error rate was computed as the proportion of replicates in which the clock model was rejected. bayesian analyses were performed to assess the effect of ambiguous characters on estimates of topological support in the form of bipartition posterior probabilities. posterior distributions were estimated figure . simulation design. among-site rate variation was simulated using rates of evolution (chosen to produce the desired pp for the true tree with sites) combined across genes to form rate combinations. gene a contained unambiguous sites, whereas gene b contained ambiguous sites. ambiguous characters were present for either sister or nonsister taxa. although gene a always contained sites, the length of gene b varied from to sites. note that gene b contained no topological information, regardless of the rate of evolution. pp = posterior probabilities. using mrbayes v. . . (ronquist and huelsenbeck ) with incrementally heated chains (temperature = . ). unless specified otherwise, we assumed the following priors. for the topology, a uniform prior (across all possible resolved topologies) was assumed (the default in mrbayes v. . . ). note that this prior places a zero prior probability on polytomies. for the branch lengths, the exponential prior with mean equal to . was assumed (the default in mrbayes v. . . ). note that this prior penalizes long branch lengths and requires branches to take lengths greater than (i.e., does not allow polytomies). markov chains were sampled every generations. mrconverge v . b (written by a.r.l.; http://www.evotutor.org/mrconverge) was used to assess burn-in and convergence of independent runs (see brown and lemmon [ ] for details). each data set was analyzed under the jc model of evolution. in addition, different models of amongsite rate variation were considered: gamma-distributed rates with discrete categories ( ) (steel et al. ; yang yang , , invariable sites (i) (gu et al. ; waddell and penny ) , and unlinked rates across partitions (p) (ronquist and huelsenbeck ) . the priors assumed for these models of rate variation were uniform( , ), uniform( , ), and dirichlet( , ), respectively. the latter model was used by partitioning the sites according to the gene to which they belong (note that in this case, the partition boundaries are known). in addition, we also enforced a strong prior at the true values for the jc + i and jc + p models to assess the effect of the flat priors on the posterior distribution. to confirm that the biases caused by ambiguous characters in our simulated data sets could also affect estimates of topology derived from empirical data sets, we manipulated an empirical data set that originally contained very few ambiguous characters. an -taxon, single-gene ( s) subset of data was taken from mueller et al. ( ) . to the original data set, we appended up to additional sites in different schemes. in the first scheme (referred to as sister variable), we randomly chose sites in which the character states of sister species (hydromantes italicus and hydromantes brunus) differed, appended copies of them to the original matrix, and changed the character states of the other species at all appended sites to ambiguous ("?"). in the second scheme (referred to as distant invariable), we randomly chose sites in which the character states of nonsister species (desmognathus fucus and ensatina eschscholtzii) did not differ, appended copies of them to the original matrix, and changed the character states of the other species at all appended sites to ambiguous ("?"). phylogenetic trees were then inferred from each of these new data sets using ml and bayesian methods (settings were the same as described above, except that the unpartitioned gtr + i + model was assumed). because the appended sites in both types of manipulated data sets contain unambiguous characters for only taxa, they should carry no topological information (i.e., their addition should not affect topological support values). effectively invariable data.-we begin by describing the results from analyses of effectively invariable data sets (i.e., rate = . substitutions per site per my). we use the term "effectively invariable" because the vol. rate of evolution was so low that all simulated data sets were completely invariant at all sites. here, the jc model is assumed (no rate heterogeneity). in this simple case, we expect the support for each of the possible topologies to be equal, regardless of the length of gene b or the distribution of ambiguous characters. this expectation is met in the ml framework (fig. a) . in contrast, the expectation of equal support is not met in the bayesian framework (fig. b) . in this case, support for the true topology increases if gene b is ambiguous for sister taxa, but decreases if gene b is ambiguous for nonsister taxa. the magnitude of the bias (deviation from the expectation) increases as the length of gene b increases. when gene b is ambiguous for none of the taxa (the control), support for the true tree remains at the expected value. one interesting pattern is that the bias caused by the ambiguous data is asymmetric, with the positive bias (gene b ambiguous for sister taxa) being approximately twice that of the negative bias (gene b ambiguous for nonsister taxa). this asymmetry is due to the fact that the posterior probability estimate is positively biased for tree and negatively biased for each of the other trees. because the posterior probabilities of all trees must sum to , the magnitude of the bias observed for each of the negatively biased trees is less than the magnitude of the bias observed for the single positively biased tree (supplementary table s , http://www.sysbio.oxfordjournals.org). one possible factor that could lead to the difference between the ml and the bayesian results (fig. a,b) is the fact that branch lengths may be collapsed to polytomies in the ml analyses but not in the bayesian analyses. branch lengths are not collapsed in the bayesian analyses because the prior on topologies gives a / probability to each of the possible (resolved) topologies. this prior places a zero probability on a branch length of (i.e., a polytomy), which can lead to the star tree problem (suzuki et al. ; cummings et al. ; lewis et al. ; yang and rannala ; kolaczkowski and thornton ; steel and matsen ; yang ) . thus, branch lengths are forced to take small but nonzero values. to investigate whether the ability to collapse polytomies could be responsible for the difference between the ml and the bayesian results, we conducted ml analyses with branch lengths constrained to small but nonzero values. our results show that this factor indeed drives the misleading posterior probabilities in the bayesian framework (fig. c) . as in the bayesian case, support for the true topology changes with the length of gene b, and the direction of the change depends on the distribution of ambiguous characters. note that neither the ambiguous characters nor the prior alone produces substantial bias in topological support. instead, it is the interaction between ambiguous characters and the prior that produces the bias. in the supplemental material (http://www.oxfordjournals.org/our journals/sysbio/), we present a mathematical argument suggesting that when polytomies are given a zero prior probability (only nonzero branch lengths are allowed), topological figure . the effect of ambiguous characters on topological support when both genes are effectively invariable (rate = . substitutions per site per my). on each graph, we plot the support for the true tree as a function of the length of gene b. each point represents the mean across replicate data sets. in an ml framework (a), ambiguous characters do not affect topological support (pr: calculated as the proportion of replicates in which the true tree was chosen, with a value of / given to replicates with equal support across topologies) when branch lengths can be collapsed to polytomies. in a bayesian framework (b), topological support (pp) changes as a function of the length of gene b and whether gene b is ambiguous for sister (black) or nonsister (dark gray) taxa. when gene b is unambiguous (light gray), topological support is unaffected by the length of gene b. when branch lengths are forced to take a small but nonzero value ( − substitutions/site) in an ml framework (c), ambiguous characters bias topological support (measured as the ratio of likelihood scores for the true to one of the false trees) in the manner seen in the bayesian framework. note that in a bayesian framework, the flat prior on bifurcating topologies requires branch lengths to take a nonzero value. pp = posterior probability; pr = probability. variable data.-here, we describe the results of analyses of simulated data in which the rate of evolution was sufficient to produce variable sites but remained the same for ambiguous and unambiguous sites. again, the jc model is assumed (no rate heterogeneity). recall that the rate of gene a determines the baseline level of support for the true topology. gene b should not provide topological information when present in just taxa. if ambiguous characters have no effect on topological support, then we expect support for the true topology to vary systematically with the rate of evolution but not with the length of gene b. this expectation is met in the ml framework (fig. a) . although some stochastic error is present when the sequences have evolved under very high rates, this error would disappear if the number of replicates was increased. in contrast, this expectation is not met in the bayesian framework (fig. b) , where topological support changes as a function of the length of gene b, the distribution of ambiguous characters, and the rate of evolution. the observed bias is highest when the rate of evolution produces either effectively invariable or saturated data and lowest when the rate of evolution is intermediate. no bias is observed when gene a provides strong support for the true topology (fig. , center columns) . interestingly, the direction of bias is opposite for low and high rates of evolution. when the rate is low, support for the true topology is positively biased when sister taxa have ambiguous characters. conversely, when the rate is high, support for the true topology is negatively biased when sister taxa have ambiguous characters. one factor that could lead to bias in the bayesian framework when the rate of evolution is high is the branch-length prior. recall that an exponential branchlength prior (with mean equal to . ) was assumed in the bayesian analyses presented in figure b . under this prior, the density decreases as the length of the branch increases, thus favoring short branches over long branches. if the exponential branch-length prior does not contribute to the bias in topological support, we expect the posterior probability of the true tree to be the same when a different prior is assumed. to determine whether this expectation is met, we estimated the posterior distributions assuming a uniform (flat) prior ( , ) on branch lengths. as expected, the bias disappears under a flat branch-length prior (fig. c) , suggesting that the combination of the exponential branch-length prior and the ambiguous characters produces the bias. note that changing the prior has no effect on the bias observed for data sets that evolved under low rates of evolution because zero length branches are currently not allowed under any branch-length prior (as described above). we also computed the likelihood of the saturated data assuming each of the possible topologies with branch lengths fixed at an arbitrary value that is large ( . substitutions/site) but still smaller than the true value ( . substitutions/site). this has the effect of mimicking the bayesian exponential prior, which negatively biases the branch-length estimates. as in the bayesian analyses, support for the true topology decreases with the length of gene b when sister taxa have ambiguous characters but increases with the length of gene b when nonsister taxa have ambiguous characters (fig. d) . as expected, no bias is present when gene b is ambiguous for none of the taxa. this result demonstrates that constraining branch lengths to values lower than their optimum in an ml setting has the same effect as assuming a prior that favors short branches in a bayesian setting. misspecification here, we describe results from the analyses in which the rate of evolution is different for ambiguous and unambiguous sites. in this case, the correct model of evolution is the jc model with separate rates for the genes. we used this model by partitioning the data set by gene (i.e., with known boundary) in both ml and bayesian analyses. in the bayesian analysis, the rate prior was set to dirichlet( , ). the magnitude and direction of bias in topological support are a function of the relative rates of the ambiguous and unambiguous sites in bayesian (fig. ) but not in ml ( supplementary fig. s ) analyses. for the bayesian analyses, substantial bias is observed when the rate of evolution of gene a is low (fig. , left columns) or when the rates of evolution at both genes are high (fig. , lower right corner). this suggests that weakly supported bipartitions are more sensitive to the effects of ambiguous characters. the rate of evolution of gene b can affect support for the true topology when the baseline support (from gene a) is weak. support for the true topology is strongly biased when gene b is evolving faster than gene a. when gene a is evolving faster, a much smaller bias is typically observed. the magnitude of the bias caused by ambiguous characters also differs depending on the assumed model of among-site rate variation. this is shown in figure , which presents results from bayesian analyses of data sets in which gene a is variable and gene b is effectively invariable. if rate priors do not interact with ambiguous characters to produce biased topological estimates, then we expect the posterior probability estimates not to vary with the assumed model of rate variation, as long as that model matches the simulation conditions. to test this expectation, we compared results for models of rate variation (fig. ) : discrete gamma ( ), invariable sites (i), and partitioned with variable rate prior (p). in principle, the latter models should match the simulation conditions. the direction and magnitude of bias are similar for the discrete gamma and invariable sites systematic biology vol. figure . the effect of ambiguous characters on topological support when both genes are evolving at the same rate. axes and shades of gray are the same as in figure . note that the graphs in the left column of (a), (b), and (d) are identical to those presented in figure . in an ml framework (a), ambiguous characters do not lead to a systematic bias in topological support, regardless of the rate of evolution (increasing from left to right columns). in a bayesian framework (b), however, the magnitude and direction of the bias are a function of the rate of evolution. this bias is strongest when the rate of evolution is low or high and weakest when the rate of evolution is intermediate (e.g., when gene a provides strong support for the true tree). when the rate of evolution is high, the bias exists when an exponential branch-length prior is assumed (b) but is absent when a uniform branch-length prior is assumed (c). the type of bias seen in the bayesian framework can be demonstrated in the ml framework (d) if branch lengths are fixed at an arbitrarily low value (results for − substitutions per site per my are shown in the lower left graph) or a very high value (results for . substitutions per site per my shown in the lower right graph) data set. note that in the bayesian framework, the flat topological prior prohibits zero-length branches and the exponential branch-length prior penalizes long branches. models. surprisingly, the bias is much more substantial for the partitioned model when the rate of gene a is low but much less substantial when the rate of gene a is high. results from the ml analyses largely support these conclusions ( supplementary fig. s ), although systematic bias was only observed when gene a was evolving at a high rate. in order to study the effect of the priors on the rate variation parameters, we performed additional analyses in which we used strong priors to effectively fix parameters at their true values for the invariable sites and partitioned models. the prior on the proportion of invariable sites (uniform from to ) has a small effect on the bias (compare second and third rows of fig. ) , despite the fact that the proportion of invariable sites is only accurately estimated when gene b is ambiguous for none of the taxa (supplementary table s ). in contrast, the prior on the relative rates in the partitioned model appears to have a substantial effect (compare the fourth and fifth rows of the left column in fig. ). when the prior is set such that strong weight is placed on the true values (i.e., dirichlet( , )), the bias for effectively invariable data sets (left column) approximates the bias seen when the jc model was assumed (fig. ) . because the ratio of rates of evolution is infinity when gene a is variable and gene b is effectively invariable, the rate prior could not be fixed at the true values for some of the rate conditions. figure . the effect of ambiguous characters on bayesian posterior probabilities when rates differ between unambiguous (a) and ambiguous (b) genes. in each graph, the average posterior probability of the true tree (y-axis) is plotted as a function of the length of gene b (x-axis), pattern of ambiguous characters (shade of gray), rate of gene a (column), and rate of gene b (row). graphs show results from analyses in which rate variation was modeled in a partitioned analysis (partitioned by gene) with a dirichlet( , ) rate prior. therefore, the model of evolution is overparameterized along the diagonal (equal rates; analogous to figure b ) and correctly parameterized off the diagonal. note that the magnitude and direction of bias are a function of the relative rates of the ambiguous and unambiguous genes. also note that in some cases, the bias is strongest when the number of ambiguous sites is low. if ambiguous characters have no effect on branchlength estimates, then we would expect estimated trees to be ultrametric and the type i error rate for a molecular clock test to be independent of the number of am-biguous sites. our analyses demonstrate that this is not the case: ambiguous characters can substantially inflate the type i error rate for the molecular clock test (fig. ) . in some cases, the type i error rate can increase rapidly (from % to %) with the addition of very systematic biology vol. figure . the effect of ambiguous characters on bayesian posterior probabilities under different models of among-site rate variation. axes and shades of gray have the same meaning as in figure b . each row corresponds to the top row of figure (gene b is effectively invariable). results for models of rate variation are shown: discrete gamma with rate categories ( ), invariable sites (i), and partitioned with variable rate prior (p). the subscript f indicates that the rate variation parameter was fixed at the true value, removing the effect of the prior on that parameter. note that in each case, the light gray lines show the results from analyses of data sets in which both genes a and b were completely unambiguous (i.e., the control). under the (incorrect) gamma model of rate heterogeneity, the posterior probabilities were slightly biased even for the unambiguous data sets. few ambiguous sites (e.g., ). inflation of the type i error rate is greatest when genes a and b are evolving at very different rates. note, however, that when the genes are evolving under the same rate (graphs along the diagonal in fig. ) or when gene b is unambiguous for all taxa (light gray lines in fig. ) , the type i error rate is independent of the length of gene b. these results suggest that the interaction between ambiguous characters and rate variation among sites can lead to estimates of trees that are significantly nonultrametric. also note that we are assuming the jc model of evolution (no rate heterogeneity), so the results displayed in the off-diagonal cells of figure are, in fact, underparameterized. thus, we cannot say whether the bias figure . the effect of ambiguous characters on the probability of incorrectly rejecting a molecular clock model of evolution in an ml framework. the proportion of replicates in which the clock model was rejected in a χ test (df = ; y-axis) is plotted against the length of gene b (x-axis), distribution of ambiguous characters (shade of gray), the rate of gene a (columns), and the rate of gene b (rows). because rate heterogeneity was not accommodated in these analyses (see text), the model of evolution was underparameterized in analyses presented off the diagonal. note that substantial inflation of type i error requires both rate variation (off diagonal) and ambiguous characters (black or dark gray points). would disappear if rate heterogeneity were properly modeled (though we expect the bias would disappear). recall that in both schemes (sister variable and distant invariable), the appended sites contained unambiguous characters for only of the taxa, so topological support should remain the same as sites are appended if ambiguous characters have no effect. our results clearly demonstrate, however, that ambiguous characters in empirical data sets can strongly bias estimates of topological support and branch lengths (fig. ) . in particular, when variable sites are added (fig. a) , sister taxa are systematic biology vol. figure . the effect of ambiguous characters on estimates of an empirical phylogeny estimated in a bayesian framework. in (a), we present results based on an empirical data set with up to variable sites appended. the character state at each appended site was unambiguous but different for the sister taxa hydromantes brunus (hb) and hydromantes italicus (hi) and was ambiguous ("?") for the other taxa: aneides flavipunctatus (af), aneides hardii (ah), desmognathus fucus (df), desmognathus wrighti (dw), ensatina eschscholtzii (ee), and phaeognathus hubrichti (ph). the number of appended sites is given above each phylogeny, and the bipartition posterior probability estimate is given at each internal branch. in (b), we present results based on the same empirical data set but with up to invariable sites appended. here, the character state at each appended site was identical for the distant taxa df and ee and was ambiguous for the other taxa: af, ah, dw, hb, hi, and ph. note that when variable sites are added, taxa with unambiguous characters are pushed apart on the phylogeny, whereas when invariable sites are added, taxa with unambiguous characters are pulled together. topologies estimated in an ml framework matched those estimated in a bayesian framework. pushed apart on the phylogeny. for example, when the data set contains no ambiguous sites, h. brunus and h. italicus are sister taxa supported by a posterior probability of . . when the data set contains ambiguous sites, however, these taxa are on opposite sides of the phylogeny (the branches separating them are supported by posterior probabilities of . , . , and . ). conversely, when invariable sites are added (fig. b) , distant taxa are pulled together. for example, when the data set contains no ambiguous sites, d. fucus and e. eschscholtzii are separated by branches with posterior probabilities equal to . , . , and . . when the data set contains ambiguous sites, however, these taxa are only separated by internal branch. in both cases, the result is strong support for bipartitions that do not appear in the topology estimated without the ambiguous sites. trees inferred using the ml criterion produced the same pattern of bias. ambiguous characters can strongly bias estimates of topology and branch lengths in ml and bayesian phylogenetic inference. gaps due to insertions or deletions will have the same effect unless explicitly modeled (note that most software, including mrbayes, treat gaps as ambiguous characters because explicit models of indels are rarely implemented). we have shown that the magnitude and direction of the bias vary as a function of the number of ambiguous characters, the topological position of ambiguous sequences, the relative rates of evolution for ambiguous and unambiguous sites, and the model of sequence evolution assumed. furthermore, topological bias is likely to be most pronounced in a bayesian framework due to the additional interaction between the ambiguous characters and the priors. even so, estimates of branch length and topology can be biased in an ml framework when rate variation across sites is not properly modeled. these results are in sharp contrast to recent opinions that the effects of ambiguous characters are overstated in the literature (e.g., de queiroz and gatesy ). bipartitions that are strongly supported by unambiguous sites are likely to remain strongly supported with the inclusion of ambiguous sites (e.g., fig. , columns and ). false bipartitions that would otherwise be weakly supported, however, may become strongly supported with the inclusion of even a few ambiguous sites. in practice, therefore, it may be difficult to distinguish between true bipartitions that are strongly supported by real signal and false bipartitions that are strongly supported because of the effects of ambiguous characters. note that although we focused our analyses on the -taxon case, we expect our conclusions to hold for weakly supported bipartitions in larger phylogenies, although the effects are expected to be more complex due to the interactions with additional bipartitions. in contrast to several previous simulation studies that attributed a reduced phylogenetic accuracy to a lack of information in the ambiguous sites (leading to low resolution; wiens wiens , a ), our study clearly shows that ambiguous characters actively produce misleading estimates of phylogeny through interaction with other factors: bayesian priors and model misspecification. interaction with bayesian priors can be understood by considering a bayesian analysis of an invariable -taxon data set. priors on topology (uniform over strictly bifurcating topologies) and branch lengths (typically uniform or exponential) result in sampled branch lengths that are small but nonzero. for a particular site in the data set, the conditional likelihood score is equal to . for any subtree containing only taxa with ambiguous character states (i.e., "?"). in effect, these portions of the tree are pruned out (ignored). thus, the site likelihood is calculated only along branches connecting the sequences that are unambiguous for that site. for sites in which of the sequences have unambiguous character states, this score is not identical across the topologies. one of the topologies groups these unambiguous taxa as sister, whereas the other topologies position them in a nonsister arrangement. two branches separate sister taxa, whereas branches separate nonsister taxa. given that branch lengths are nonzero and the site is invariable (i.e., both taxa with unambiguous characters have the same state), the likelihood under the topology placing the unambiguous taxa as sister is greater than that under the topologies placing them as nonsister (the likelihood is greater when fewer branches separate taxa with the same character state). the priors ensure that only nonzero branch lengths are sampled and thus that the posterior probability of placing the unambiguous taxa as sister is greater than / . this posterior probability increases with an increasing number of such sites. a similar line of reasoning will lead to the opposite conclusion for saturated data sets. this explanation predicts the pattern of topological error seen in our analyses and is confirmed by the mathematical argument shown in the supplemental material. ambiguous characters can also interact with model misspecification to produce misleading estimates of phylogeny. in order to understand this interaction, consider a -taxon data set in which gene a is evolving at a slower rate than gene b (refer to fig. ). suppose that a pair of sister sequences contain ambiguous characters for all sites in gene b. under this scenario, the lengths of the branches connecting this sister pair will be estimated based only on the sites in gene a, whereas the lengths of the branches connecting the other sister pair will be estimated based on all the sites (both genes). if amongsite rate variation is not properly modeled, the branches connecting the sister pair with ambiguous characters in gene b will be shorter than those connecting the other sister pair because gene a is evolving at a slower rate than the average rate across all sites (both genes). as a result of this interaction, rate variation across sites is manifested as rate variation across branches, resulting in biased branch-length estimates (in fact, variation across sites in any model parameter could be manifested as systematic biology vol. figure . ambiguous characters interact with model misspecification to produce misleading branch-length estimates. a data set is simulated using an ultrametric tree. some sites evolve under a slow rate, whereas others evolve under a fast rate. ambiguous characters are introduced nonrandomly with respect to rate and taxon. if rate variation is correctly modeled, the estimated tree is ultrametric. if rate variation is not correctly modeled, the estimated tree is nonultrametric. the interaction between ambiguous characters and model misspecification causes among-site rate variation to be manifested as among-branch rate variation. note that the pattern of branch lengths inferred depend on the taxonomic distribution of the ambiguous characters, even though the ambiguous sites contain no topological information. parameter variation across branches through the same process). bayesian priors introduce additional factors that may then interact to bias topological support. the accuracy of many analyses may be jeopardized by the effects of ambiguous characters on branch-length estimates. for example, we have shown that ambiguous characters may increase the propensity to incorrectly reject a molecular clock (fig. ) . other branch lengthdependent analyses that may be affected include divergence time estimation, ancestral state reconstruction, tree-dependent comparative methods, rate variation analysis, phylogenetic hypothesis testing, and phylogeographic analysis. future studies are needed to determine the indirect effects of ambiguous characters on the accuracy of each type of analysis. many interesting problems stem from the potential for topological bias due to ambiguous characters; we outline several of them here. the rogue taxon problem, wherein taxon is particularly labile in what is otherwise a well-supported tree, could result from the inclusion of ambiguous characters. related to the rogue taxon problem is conflict among gene trees. although unambiguous sites might support the same, true topology, genes with a large proportion of ambiguous characters may support alternative topologies due solely to misinterpretation of the ambiguous characters. a researcher could be deceived into believing that multiple phylogenetic signals exist across genes (interpreted as hybridization, horizontal gene transfer, or incomplete lineage sorting), when in fact all support for alternative topologies is due to the presence of ambiguous characters. one of us (k.s.-h.) has come across such an example of discordance among gene trees in empirical data from north american fireflies. once ambiguous sites were excluded from the analysis, gene tree congruence increased substantially (stanger-hall et al. ) . last, statistical approaches to phylogenetic hypothesis testing (e.g., bayesian posterior probabilities and ml bootstrap proportions) may also be rendered inaccurate by this bias. hypothesis testing is of particular concern because changes in posterior probabilities or bootstrap proportions of only a few percent can alter conclusions of significance, even when the bias is not strong enough to alter the preferred topology. the results of this study carry serious implications for the practice of combining data when inferring phylogenies, particularly when rates of evolution vary across data sets. for instance, consider the situation in which data are gathered from a large number of species for genes: slower-evolving nuclear gene is included to resolve deep relationships and faster-evolving mitochondrial gene is included to resolve shallow relationships (note that this approach is increasingly common). due to monetary or time constraints, not all species are sequenced for both genes. our -taxon simulations suggest that the ambiguous characters will cause the taxa sequenced for only the fast gene to be pushed apart on the phylogeny, whereas the taxa sequenced for only the slow gene will be pulled together. analyses of simulated -taxon data sets ( supplementary fig. s ) , as well as a manipulated empirical data set (fig. ) , confirm these predictions. supermatrix-style approaches that do not have nearly complete overlap in taxon sampling across data sets will be particularly prone to this type of error. although we expect no systematic error if the effects of priors are weak and rate variation across sites is correctly modeled, ensuring these properties may be difficult in practice. for example, the branch-length prior is expected to have strong effects on any branch for which no substitutions have been observed, regardless of the dimensions of the data set. correct modeling of rate variation across sites may be even more difficult. ambiguous characters may appear in an alignment for a variety of reasons, such as monetary constraints, desire to publish quickly, poor alignments, or technical difficulties with sequencing. given these various causes for the inclusion of ambiguous characters, rates of evolution are unlikely to be discretely different between ambiguous and unambiguous sites. determining a proper method for modeling rate variation is likely to be extremely difficult, especially as the proportion of ambiguous characters at each site increases. heterotachy (changes in rates of evolution within a site across the tree), which has already proven problematic with complete data sets (kolaczkawski and thornton ; philippe et al. ; spencer et al. ; steel ; lockhart et al. ; matsen and steel ) , may also interact with ambiguous characters to produce effects that may be difficult to avoid. one possible effect, for example, is for heterotachy to be manifested as among-site rate variation, thereby biasing estimates of among-site rate heterogeneity parameters. we have not investigated the effectiveness of particular methods for correcting for the ambiguous character bias, although we suggest several here. the first (and most obvious) solution is to use only completely unambiguous data matrices when inferring phylogenies. to do so, either ambiguous characters should be filled in (through additional sequencing) or ambiguous sites should be removed from the alignment. a second potential solution is to use a technique known as statistical imputation (kalton and kish ; ford ; david et al. ; little and rubin ; marker et al. ) . to impute data, each ambiguous site is filled in using characters from a randomly selected unambiguous site that has the same site pattern as the ambiguous site when cells containing ambiguous characters are ignored. drawbacks of this approach include the need to account for the uncertainty associated with the filled data and the fact that imputing some sites may be impossible (due to lack of a matching unambiguous site), especially when the matrix contains a large number of sequences or a small number of sites. the third potential solution is to evaluate the effects of ambiguous characters on a data set-specific basis to see if a correction is needed. one approach is to analyze the data set with and without ambiguous sites and look for variation in the results. note that in many cases, this approach may yield an unclear conclusion because the ambiguous sites could also contain true phylogenetic signal; this is the reason the ambiguous character problem is difficult to study using empirical data. the fourth and final solution we offer is to estimate the ambiguous character states as free parameters. in an ml framework, this would entail identifying the state for each ambiguous character that maximizes the likelihood of observing the unambiguous characters. in a bayesian framework, a prior would be placed on the distribution of character states and the posterior distribution of character states for each ambiguous character would be estimated. the difficulty with this approach is that the number of parameters that would need to be estimated would be quite large for data sets containing a large number of ambiguous characters. this list of solutions is certainly not exhaustive; we look to future studies to identify the relative merits of various solutions. we have demonstrated the potential for ambiguous characters to positively mislead ml and bayesian phylogenetic inference. however, we have not investigated all possible variables that affect the magnitude of this bias (e.g., tree shape), and we leave such analyses for future studies. much additional work is also needed to identify powerful and robust diagnostics for assessing when ambiguous characters may affect a particular data set as well to determine priors and models that minimize their effect. until the costs of including ambiguous characters in empirical data sets can be more fully elucidated and methods for eliminating their effects can be developed, extreme caution should be taken when including ambiguous characters or indels in ml or bayesian phylogenetic analyses. phylogeny and the evolution of plant-animal interactions evolutionary pathways in nature: a phylogenetic approach unravelling angiosperm genome evolution by phylogenetic analysis of chromosomal duplication events the importance of data partitioning and the utility of bayes factors in bayesian phylogenetics experimental molecular evolution of bacteriophage t . evolution predicting the evolution of human influenza a comparing bootstrap and posterior probability values in the four-taxon case alternative methods for cps income imputation the supermatrix approach to systematics systematics of mustelid-like carnivores prospects for building the tree of life from large sequence databases molecular phylogenetics of myliobatiform fishes (chondrichthyes: myliobatiformes), with comments on the effects of missing data on parsimony and likelihood evolutionary trees from dna sequences: a maximum likelihood approach phylogenies from molecular sequences: inference and reliability inferring phylogenies an overview of hot deck procedures maxalign: maximizing usable data in an alignment maximum likelihood estimation of the heterogeneity of substitution rate among nucleotide sites new uses for new phylogenies experimental phylogenetics: generation of a known phylogeny molecular systematics when are fossils better than extant taxa in phylogenetic analysis? the biasing effect of compositional heterogeneity on phylogenetic estimates may be underestimated available from: url www editor. mammalian protein metabolism two efficient random imputation procedures fragmentary taxa, missing data, and ambiguity: mistaken assumptions and conclusions problems due to missing data in phylogenetic analyses including fossils: a critical review performance of maximum parsimony and likelihood phylogenetics when evolution is heterogeneous is there a star tree paradox? a simulation comparison of phylogeny algorithms under equal and unequal evolutionary rates the importance of proper model assumption in bayesian phylogenetics polytomies and bayesian phylogenetic inference statistical analysis with missing data evolution of chlorophyll and bacteriochlorophyll: the problem of invariant sites in sequence analysis heterotachy and tree building: a case study with plastids and eubacteria large-scale imputation for complex surveys phylogenetic mixtures on a single tree can mimic a tree of another topology molecular phylogenetics and evolution of host plant use in the tropical rolled leaf "hispine" beetle genus cephaloleia (chevrolat) (chrysomelidae: cassidinae) morphological homoplasy, life history evolution, and historical biogeography of plethodontid salamanders inferred from complete mitochondrial genomes molecular phylogenetics and the origins of placental mammals phylogenomics of eukaryotes: impact of missing data on large alignments heterotachy and long-branch attraction in phylogenetics on missing entries in cladistic analysis seq-gen: an application for the monte carlo simulation of dna sequence evolution along phylogenetic trees mrbayes : bayesian phylogenetic inference under mixed models likelihood, parsimony, and heterogeneous evolution phylogeny of north american fireflies (coleoptera: lampyridae): implications for the evolution of light signals should phylogenetic models be trying to "fit an elephant"? the bayesian "star paradox" persists for long finite sequences a complete family of phylogenetic invariants for any number of taxa under kimura's st model among-site rate variation and phylogenetic analysis of s rrna in sigmodontine rodents overcredibility of molecular phylogenies obtained by bayesian phylogenetics paup*: phylogenetic analysis using parsimony (*and other methods), version . b evolutionary trees of apes and humans from dna sequences exploring the phylogenetic structure of ecological communities: an example for rain forest trees does adding characters with missing data increase or decrease phylogenetic accuracy? incomplete taxa, incomplete characters and phylogenetic accuracy: is there a missing data problem? missing data, incomplete taxa, and phylogenetic accuracy missing data and the design of phylogenetic analyses missing data and the accuracy of bayesian phylogenetics combining data sets with different numbers of taxa for phylogenetic analysis maximum-likelihood estimation of phylogeny from dna sequences when substitution rates differ over sites maximum likelihood phylogenetic estimation from dna sequences with variable rates over sites: approximate methods fair-balance paradox, star-tree paradox and bayesian phylogenetics comparison of models for nucleotide substitution used in maximum-likelihood phylogenetic estimation branch-length prior influences bayesian posterior probability of phylogeny associate editor: lars jermiin supplementary material can be found at http://www. sysbio.oxfordjournals.org. the authors thank david bryant, gavin naylor, and the computational phylogenetics group at the university of texas at austin for useful discussions. we are also grateful to matt morgan, tracy heath, lars jermiin, and anonymous reviewers for comments on a previous version of this manuscript. key: cord- -atbjwpo authors: nan title: poster sessions date: - - journal: febs j doi: . /febs. sha: doc_id: cord_uid: atbjwpo nan ** each poster has been given a unique number beginning with the letter p; the next part relates to the session in which the poster will be presented. moreover, klf is also acting on cellular processes such as cell migration, apoptosis, inflammation, angiogenesis and differentiation. previous studies showed a novel role for klf as a regulator of proliferation and differentiation in skeletal muscle stem cells. detecting klf at the protein level harbored technical obstacles. commercially available antibodies exhibited low affinity, low specificity and failed to recognize post-translationally modified forms that are directly relevant to the function. thus, these obstacles prevent further functional protein studies such as western blots, protein co-immunoprecipitation and chromatin immunoprecipitation (chip) assays. therefore, we used crispr/cas system to establish a stable cell line which carry v epitope tag into the n-terminal of klf gene. insertion into the target side of klf gene via crispr-cas system provided an opportunity to overwhelm the above mentioned obstacles. v epitope tag would not interfere with the function of the klf and also enable us to recognize endogenous klf via anti-v antibody in the mouse myoblast cell lines (c c ). we confirmed the targeted insertion into the exon of the klf gene both at the dna and protein levels. the conformational dynamics of structural domains plays an important role in functioning of many proteins. the reca proteins from e. coli are known to be the central catalyst of homologous recombination and repair in bacteria. it forms a helical filament on ssdna capable to bind homologous dsdna and catalysis of the exchange of the complementary strand. significant mobility if its c-terminal domain has been observed experimentally by cryo-electron microscopy. however its potential significance for reca protein activities still remains unclear. in this work we investigated this question by construction of a mutant reca protein with artificial disulfide bridge between central and c-terminal domains. the wild type protein has no disulfide bonds, and therefore its native mobility can be restored in vitro, by addition of b-mercaptoethanol. our data suggest that the s-s bridge decreases both the rate of atp hydrolysis in vitro and the e. coli resistance to uv in vivo. thus, our experimental results indicate that the flexibility of the c-terminal domain significantly affects recombination activity of reca protein in vivo and in vitro. hydroxiurea (hu) is an inhibitor of ribonucleotide reductasethe enzyme that catalyzes the process of free dntps synthesis in living cells. treating cells with hu causes diminishment of the nucleotide pool. as a result, single-stranded dna regions are generated, which leads to s-phase checkpoint activation. the progression of replication forks is blocked and the completion of dna replication is prevented. this results in s-phase cell arrest. nevertheless, our results demonstrate that after prolonged hu treatment, the saccharomyces cerevisiae cells seam to escape the arrest and continue the progression of their cell cycle. we show that when cells re-enter the cell cycle, mrc , but not ctf is detached from chromatin. our data also shows that meanwhile, rad checkpoint activity is diminished in order to allow s-phase checkpoint escape and completion of the cell cycle. moreover, cells not only continue the cell cycle, but steadily surmount in the presence of hu. all this data indicates that cells have made the decision to compromise s-phase checkpoint and to adapt to the novel environmental conditions in order to survive. as both mrc and ctf are known to be responsible for polymerase and helicase harmonization during replicative arrest, our data indicates that mrc has a more specific role in the process of adaptation. our data demonstrates that mrc is a leading protein to regulate the stability of s-phase checkpoint arrested replication forks. zinc finger domain is the most common dna binding domain in metazoa. almost drosophila proteins with c h zinc fingers also have zinc finger associated domain (zad). several proteins with zad (zw , pita and zipic) were found to interact with cp and act as insulator proteins. for some of the zad-containing proteins (for example, weekle and grauzone) it was shown that their zad domains can form dimers with each other. the ability of these proteins to dimerize appears to be especially important in the light of the model suggesting that dna-binding insulator proteins can support genome looping and organization of chromatin structure via interaction with each other. in this work we aimed to understand the role that zadmediated protein-protein interactions play in maintenance of dna loops, focusing on proteins: zw , pita, zipic and cg . first, we performed co-precipitation and yeast two hybrid assays to confirm dimerization of isolated zads in vitro. we observed that only zads from the same protein can specifically interact with each other (homodimerization) and they are unable to interact with zads from different proteins (heterodimerization). we confirmed homo-but not heterodimerization of zads in vivo with coimmunoprecipitation experiments in s cells. furthermore, we found that zad proteins can support longdistance interactions in transgenic constructs in flies. using model system with cg protein, we demonstrated that zad is essential for these interactions. proteins without zad cannot maintain loop formation. finally, analysis of chip-seq experiments for zw , pita, zipic and cg revealed that binding sites of zad proteins often overlap with regions of inter-chromosomal contacts known from hi-c experiments. we conclude that zad-containing proteins can support longdistance genomic interactions and dimerization of zads is necessary for these interactions. this study was supported by the russian science foundation (project № - - ). over the years a large body of clinical knowledge has accumulated on pharmacological effects of drugs on thyroid function. antipsychotics are administered over long periods in humans; therefore their possible adverse side effects should be taken into consideration. the aim of this study is to evaluate the effects of haloperidol and clozapine on plasma t and t concentrations in adult male wistar rats. fifty rats aged between and weeks ( ae g) were divided into five groups (n = in each group), and drugs were administered each day intraperitoneally (ip) for days. the first group was a sham group. the other four groups were considered as low and high treatment doses of the drugs. after a one-week habituation period, animals was administered haloperidol ( . mg/kg, n = and mg/kg, n = ) and clozapine ( . mg/kg, n = and mg/kg, n = ). the rats were anesthetized with ether, and bloods were collected by direct cardiac puncture hours after the last injection. the t and t plasma concentration levels were analyzed with chemiluminescent immunoassay. statistical analysis was performed with ibm spss v . . kruskal-wallis and bonferroni tests were used. t plasma concentration levels significantly differ between sham (median= . mg/kg) and haloperidol ( mg/kg) (median= . mg/kg), haloperidol ( . mg/kg) (me-dian= . mg/kg) and clozapine ( mg/kg) (median= . mg/ kg), haloperidol ( mg/kg) (median= . mg/kg) and clozapine ( mg/kg) (median= . mg/kg) groups (p < . ). however, no significant differences between the groups regarding to t plasma levels were observed. in conclusion, haloperidol and clozapine increased the t plasma concentrations, but didn't have any significant effect on t plasma concentrations. p- . . - isolation of lipase producing strains of bacillus obtained from olive wastewater and screening for substrate specificity in this work, wastewater samples of an olive factory from yusufeli (artvin, turkey) were collected carefully. after a centrifugation period of samples, supernatants were applied to a . lm filter and incubated on lb agar medium for hours. based on differencies of colony morphologies, isolates were selected and purified for identification. s lipase activity assay was carried out by rhodamine b. all of the strains exhibited lipase activity. for determining the substrat specificity of isolates, different substrates were used; nitrophenyl-butyrate, -nitrophenyl-caprylate, -nitrophenyl-laurate, -nitrophenyl-myristate, -nitrophenyl-palmitate. results were measured spectrophotometrically at nm. all of the strains hydrolyzed -nitrophenyl-butirat, while there was no activity with -nitrophenyl-palmitate. bacillus sp. l was the most efficient strain that hydrolyzed all of the substrates. the gene encoding for lipase of bacillus sp. l will be cloned and expressed for more analyses and industrial applications. p- . . - some quantitative aspects of hair follicle layers differentiation e. vsevolodov , , v. golichenkov , a. mussayeva , , i. latypov llc "kazcytogen", almaty, kazakhstan, "institute of general genetics and cytology" sc mes, almaty, kazakhstan, lomonosov's moscow state university, moscow, russia in the course of stable hair growth the differentiation of hair bulb cambium cells to several layers with dissimilar cytochemistry and morphology takes place. this means the activation of different genes in the cells of different layers. depending upon the hair diameter some layers may be absent (medulla in the thin hairs). the hair diameters of the carpet sheep breeds vary widely even within the same square mm of the skin. we compared the different layers thicknesses proportions for the follicles with varying hair diameters. the follicle layers were measured on microphotos of transverse histological sections of the follicles made under the standard magnification. all follicles belonged to the same skin biopsy. the measurements were made at the levels just below the fissure separating the hair and inner root sheath appeared. the empirical regressions of the layers thicknesses and of ratios of different layers against hair diameters were counted. the computer model was made on the basis of these regressions which allowed to obtain the absolute parameters of the layers as well as ratios of these parameters for every chosen hair diameter. using this model we found an essential trend in changing the proportions in relative layers dimensions as we choose the follicles with more and more thick hair. when we change the follicles with mcm hair diameter for those with the hair diameter mcm the ratio of hair medulla diameter to hair diameter increases from . to . . the ratio of hair diameter to the diameter of inner root sheath increased from . to . . it means that the thicker is the hair the higher proportion of cells produced by cambium are spent to build innermost layers (medulla layer within the hair or hair within the complexinner root sheath + hair). these data may throw some light on positional information mechanism of layers differentiation. lignin is a heterogeneous polymer that constitutes % of woody plant cell walls. microorganisms that degrade lignin are fungi, actinomycetes and to a lesser extent, bacteria. in case of industrial applications, the use of fungi is not feasible due to the structural hindrance caused by fungal filaments, requirement of particular culture conditions such as humidity, aeration which are not compatible with industrial processing environments. bacteria are worthy of being studied for their ligninolytic potential due to their immense environmental adaptability. environmental concerns and increasingly stringent emissions standards have led the pulp and paper industry to devise ways to decrease the level of chlorinated lignin residues in its effluents through both production process changes and improved treatment technologies. bleaching with the enzymes is the most promising because the enzymes may be very efficient, and can be used under industrial conditions. the main objective of this study was to investigate the adequency of klebsiella pnuemonia gst (glutathione-s-transferase) pretreatment for bleaching of calabrian pine kraft pulp. for this purpose the following conditions were investigated: enzyme loadings from to u/g pulp basis and the consistecy of the pulp was between and %. enzyme at the desired concentration was added to the pulp and the mixture was incubated at °c for hours. after the enzymatic pretreatment to determine the optimum conditions the kappa number of all reactions were analyzed according to tappi standarts. as a result of this study we determine the optimum conditons as % pulp consistecy, u/g enzyme for pulp treatment. after the enzymatic treatment carried out under optimum conditions we are planning to submit a short bleaching sequence and analyze for physical properties such as viscosity and brightness. owing to this bleacing sequence we are going to able to compare the enzymatic and chemical treatments of pulp in bleaching prosess. p- . . - biochemical characterization of lipase from bacillus subtilis strain a from olive waste water f. ay sal, m. kac ßagan, s. c ß anakc ßi, a. o. beld€ uz karadeniz technical university, trabzon, turkey lipases (triacylglycerol acyl hydrolases, ec . . . ) are regarded as mild and environment-friendly biocatalysts for triacylglycerols hydrolysis. in addition to this hydrolytic reaction, they also catalyze reverse reactions of esterification, transesterification, and interesterification in non-aqueous environments. substrate, stereo-, regio-and enantio-specificities, and chiral selectivity are certain unique attributes of lipases that make them industrially attractive. these properties are often exploited in the manufacturing of detergent formulations, synthesis of fine chemicals, useful esters and peptides, food processing, paper manufacturing, degreasing of leather as well as in bioremediation. in this study, lipase from bacillus subtilis strain a is partially purified and characterized. bacillus subtilis strain a is isolated from olive factory from soke (aydin, turkey) and identified with s rrna analysis. lipase activity is screened on petri supplemented with rhodamine b. bacteria was grown in lb medium supplemented with % olive oil (vol/vol) for hour at °c. after incubation, cells were harvested by centrifugation at , rpm for minutes, resuspended in mm tris-hcl (ph . ) buffer, followed by sonication with sartorius labsonic m to release intracellular proteins. q-sepharose is used as ionexchange column chromatography for lipase purification. effects of temperature on activity and stability were determined spectrophotometrically using p-nitrophenyl laurate as the substrate. effects of ph on activity and stability were also determined. the effects of various metal ions and other reagents on the hydrolytic activity were assayed at °c. the enzyme was active and stable in the broad ph range of . - . and temperature range of - °c. bacillus subtilis strain a have high lipolytic activity. after cloning this enzyme to an expression vector and detailed characterization, this may suggests its usefulness in industrial applications. p- . . - investigation of pin as a nuclear factor one binding partner s. saritas, a. e. yilmaz, a. kumbasar department of molecular biology and genetics, istanbul technical university, istanbul, turkey the nuclear factor one (nfi) proteins are important regulators of gene expression in the developing embryo and in adult stem cell niches. this transcription factor family has four members: nfia, nfib, nfic, and nfix. nfi proteins bind a consensus sequence on gene regulatory regions as homo or heterodimers. each member of nfi family has a highly conserved n-terminal dna binding and dimerization domain and a diverse proline rich c-terminal transcriptional activation/repression domain. as knockouts of nfi genes display distinct developmental phenotypes, we hypothesized that specificity of nfi protein function may arise from their interactions with binding partners. a yeast-two hybrid screen identified protein interacting with never in mitosis a (pin ) as a potential nfib interactor. pin is a ubiquitously expressed protein that specifically recognizes and binds to a phospho-serine or a phospho-threonine followed by a proline (ps/pt-p motif), and catalyzes isomerization of peptidyl-prolyl bonds. interestingly, both n-terminal and c-terminal domains of four nfi isoforms contain several conserved putative ps/pt-p motifs and some of these are reportedly phosphorylated. we looked for nfi pin interactions in vitro by gst-pulldown and co-immunoprecipitation assays. while gst-pin fusion protein interacts with all of four nfi isoforms, it binds nfib most strongly, nfia and nfic moderately, nfix most weakly. moreover, deletion of the cterminal domain leads to loss of nfi affinity for pin implicating this domain in nfi-pin interactions. co-immunoprecipitation assays where we co-expressed various epitope tagged nfi and pin proteins in hek t cells showed that pin precipitates nfib, as well as other nfi isoforms and nfib can, in turn, precipitate pin . we are currently carrying out site-directed mutagenesis on nfib to identify the specific residues that pin recognizes. we will further explore if this interaction regulates nfi function during embryonic development. that pre-adapt migrating fish to the life in seawater. among others, smoltification induces intense growth of fish that enter the ocean at a size where risk of predation is significantly reduced. skeletal muscle growth depends on a tightly controlled balance between protein synthesis and degradation. protein synthesis driven by hormone regulation is well studied in smoltified atlantic salmon; while less is known on protein degradation occurring via a number of pathways including cytosolic ubiquitin-proteasome system and calcium dependent calpains. the aim of this study was to compare calpain and proteasome enzymatic activities in the skeletal muscles of s. salar parr, pre-smolts and smolts. calpain and proteasome activities were determined by casein or suc-llvy-amc hydrolysis in the skeletal muscles of s. salar from indera river (kola peninsula, russia). our results demonstrated the significant differences in studied protease activity levels between parr and smolts. calpain and proteasome activities in s. salar smolt muscles showed a significant drop compared with that of parr. the negative correlation between proteases activity levels in the muscle tissue and overall fish growth rate was shown. so, our data indicated life stage specificity in skeletal muscle protein degradation capacity in migrating fish. we suppose that intense muscle growth in s. salar pre-smolts is supported by various mechanisms including accelerated muscle protein accretion through the reduction of protease activities. obtained results enhance our knowledge in the mechanisms of atlantic salmon smoltification. the work was supported by the russian scientific foundation, project no. - - . p- . . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the sociodemographic characteristics of the pregnant women who double and triple prenatal screening test h. d€ ulger, s. yabanci€ un meram medical faculty, n.e.university, konya, turkey double and triple prenatal screening tests which are applicable during first and second trimesters of pregnancy predict existent abnormalities at early stage. the aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between positive results of double and triple tests, further confirmatory tests during prenatal phase, postnatal status of babies and maternal age. in this study, double and triple test results of pregnant women who were admitted to meram faculty of medicine during - period were scanned from archive and test results indicating risk were detected. from these results, those which were above cut-off values for down syndrome, trisomy , open spina bifida were determined. a questionnaire was carried out with voluntary participants by reaching to these individuals. positive-negative result ratio of all double and triple test results and sociodemographic features such as age, occupation, presence of consanguineous marriage were investigated. all data from archive and answers from survey questions were assessed statistically. participants of the study were to years old and their average age was . ae . . ofthem ( . %) were under years of age whereas of them ( . %) were above years of age. number of pregnancies were scaling between to with an average of . ae . . of mothers ( . %) were not undergone amniocentesis, whereas babies with chromosomal abnormalities were detected among mothers who were undergone amniocentesis. in conclusion, there may be regional, sociological and such that reasons for those who were not undergone amniocentesis despite positive double and triple test results. ( . %) chromosomal abnormalities were detected among pregnancies with increased risk assessment with positive double and triple results. p- . . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the effects of oil on the growth and development of amphibians l. sutuyeva, t. shalakhmetova, a. ondassynova al-farabi kazakh national university, almaty, kazakhstan currently, the pollution of ecosystems by oil and oil products is increasing everywhere. the oil gets into water and ground during oil production, transportation and accidents. as a result, terrestrial animals and hydrobionts are exposed to oil contamination. thus, populations of animals decline. it can be assumed that the most sensitive to the effects of pollutants are animals in early stages of development. amphibians have established themselves as the most convenient bioindicator species. since lake frog (rana ridibunda) and green toad (bufo viridis) are the bioindicator species in kazakhstan, the study of the effects of oil on their larvae was carried out. we used water-soluble fraction of the oil from zhanazhol field (aktobe region) in our test. the larvae of control group were kept in pure water, and larvae of test groupsin aquariums with . , . and % concentrations of the oil fractions. the concentrations were chosen in accordance with the level of pollution of kazakhstan's water bodies with oil. mortality of larvae, morphometric parameters and morphogenesis were studied. it was found that high mortality of larvae is the most visible reaction when exposed to oil. this indicator rose noticeably depending on the doses ( . , . % and %) in both species with percentages %, % and % in r. ridibunda and %, % and % in b. viridis, respectively, while in the control group it was about %. furthermore, delayed larval development was detected. thus, the larvae from the control and . % oil group reached gosner stage (gs) , tadpoles from . % and % groups were at gs- and gs- , respectively, by the th day of life. moreover, behavioral abnormalities (sluggish movements) and decreased sensitivity to mechanical stress (touch) were observed under the influence of high concentrations of oil fractions. thus, oil in low concentrations alters the growth and development of tadpoles of anurans, and causes their increased mortality in high concentrations. p- . . - effect of catechin loaded plga nanoparticles on glioma cell line histone h t is a linker histone which binds to dna and contribute in chromatin condensation as well as regulation of specific genes through spermatogenesis. replacement of this histone h subtype and hyperacetylation of histone h tail, facilitate the replacement of histones with sperm chromatin condensing proteins of tnps and prms. ethical approval and informed patient consent was gained from infertile men referred to royan institute. testicular biopsies were collected from patients through assisted reproductive techniques (art) procedure. based on pathological results samples were classified into the following three subgroups: obstructive azoospermia (as positive control), complete maturation arrest and sertoli cell only syndrome (negative control). chromatin of tissues evaluated for presence/absence of histone h t protein in regulatory regions of tnps and prms genes using chip-real time pcr. results showed lower incorporation of h t protein on regulatory regions of tnps and prms genes in two spermatogenic failure group versus positive control. in this study, it can be concluded that the decreased levels of h t histone variant in testis tissues and failure in chromatin condensation have significant association with male infertility. p- . . - serum dickkopf- levels in obese children and adolescents that obesity is detrimental to bone health despite potential positive effects of mechanical loading conferred by increased body mass on bones. the wnt/b-catenin pathway is essential for normal osteogenesis. serum dickkopf- (dkk- ) is one of the most important inhibitors of the wnt//b-catenin pathway. the aim of this study was to investigate the serum dkk- levels in obese and non-obese children and adolescents. materials and methods: the study included obese children and adolescents ( males and females) aged from to years and healthy normal-weight controls ( males and females) aged from to years. serum dkk- levels were measured by elisa method using commercially available kit. results: body mass index of the obese children was significantly higher than that of non-obese children (p = . ). however, there was no significant difference between dkk- levels of the groups. (these results are preliminary and the study is continuing). discussion and conclusion: our result showed that serum dkk- levels were not changed in obese children and adolescents. p- . . - transcriptional regulation of cdo by nuclear factor one proteins b. kutay, c. lektemur, v. g€ uler, a. kumbasar department of molecular biology and genetics, istanbul technical university, istanbul, turkey nuclear factor one (nfi) transcription factors play important roles in regulation of central nervous system development. three of the four members of nfi family, nfia, nfib, and nfix are expressed in neural progenitors, as well as neurons and glia in the embryo. inactivation of these genes in mice show that they function in development of neocortex and hippocampus in the forebrain, cerebellum, spinal cord and precerebellar nuclei of the hindbrain, regulating neurogenesis, gliogenesis, as well as neuronal migration, axonal outgrowth and guidance. all three neural specific nfis are expressed in precerebellar neuroprogenitors, however, only deletion of nfib leads to a delay in development of precerebellar neurons. investigation of misregulated genes in nfib À/À precerebellar neuroprogenitors identified cell adhesion associated, oncogene regulated (cdo) as a potential downstream target of nfib. interestingly, this gene has been reported to be upregulated in nfia À/À hippocampus as well. cdo, a cell surface glycoprotein of the ig superfamily, has been found to regulate neurogenesis in vivo, is highly expressed in the developing brain and can induce neural differentiation by promoting heterodimerization of basic helix loop helix transcription factors with e proteins. bioinformatic analysis of the kb human cdo promoter region identified five nfi binding sites: one cluster in the first kb region, another in the . kb upstream region. electrophoretic mobility shift and supershift assays showed that nfib binds to all five sites. furthermore, nfib, along with the other neural nfis, inhibits the proximal cdo promoter driven luciferase activity by up to % in hek t cells. preliminary data indicate that nfis bind to sites in both clusters in human neural stem cells (hnscs) suggesting that these sites are functional in vivo. we are currently investigating this possibility through nfi overexpression and silencing experiments that will examine regulation of cdo in hnscs. differentiation. the aim of this study is to investigate bdnf and drd /ankk gene variants in eos development. in this study, eos patients and healthy controls were used. genomic dna extraction was performed from peripheral blood leukocytes. drd /ankk taq a (rs ) and bdnf val met (rs ) polymorphisms were determined by real-time polymerase chain reaction (rt-pcr). positive and negative syndrome scale (panss) was used to determine eos severity. for drd /ankk rs polymorphism, there was a significant difference in the genotype frequencies between patients and controls for the co-dominant model (p = . , or = . ; % ci: . - . ). however, no significant relationship was observed in the genotype frequencies of bdnf val met polymorphism between eos patients and controls (p = . ). these results indicate that, drd /ankk rs genotypes may affect eos development. however, bdnf val met polymorphism may not be associated with eos. lack of association of bdnf val met polymorphism may be due to limited number of patients. our findings need to be confirmed by further studies. various dyes used in the textile industry are discharged in large quantities to the receiving environment in the manufacturing process. this is the beginning of a process that is difficult to compensate for environmental and human health. therefore, contaminated areas should be cleaned. in addition, technologies with high polluting potential should be integrated with biological approach and thereby the impurities consisting of dyes should be reduced. in this experiment; burdirect black meta konz (c.i. direct black ) was intended to decolorization using laccase. firstly, enzymatic decolorization of the dye was determined using spectrophotometry. the wavelengths of maximum absorption of burdirect black meta konz (c.i. direct black ) was determined between and nm. then, optimization studies have been done. for optimization studies; dye concentration, laccase activity, ph, buffer concentration, temperature, mediator effect, mediator concentration and time parameters were determined. lastly, in optimal conditions, atr-ftir and gc-ms analyzes of ensuring decolorization of dye were analyzed. decolorization of burdirect black meta konz (c.i. direct black ) was performed successfully and the absence of any metobolite in the decolorization medium has been provided by atr-ftir and gc-ms analyzes. assessing in terms of application, it can be easily applied by provided the reaction conditions in textile factories. laccase is a tool of decolorization of dyes in environmental friendly process. thus for the development of spermatids into mature sperm able to fertilize the oocyte.one of the causes of male infertility is in fact impaired sperm fertilization capacity due to sperm chromatin abnormalities and aberrant protamine replacement.recent research has focused on protamine biology,including protamine gene and protein structure,mechanisms of protamine expression regulation and involvement of the protamines in male fertility.various studies reported abnormal expressions of protamine (prm) genes in sperm of infertile men.the aim of the study is to investigate the gene expression of prm , prm and their relationship with defective spermatogenesis. materials and methods: this study has been performed on infertile and fertile turkish men.total rna was extracted from the sperm pellet using trizol reagent.after rna extraction and cdna synthesis,real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (rt-qpcr) was used to determine the expression of prm and prm . results: distinct levels of spermatozoal prm and prm mrna were found in infertile patients compared to fertile control groups.we found that the mrna levels of prm was reduced in (% ), and the mrna levels of prm was reduced in (% ) out of infertile patients.in the current study,we found statistical significant association between the prm expression and infertility (p < . ).although prm gene expression was decreased in most of infertile patients compared to fertile control groups,the differences between the groups were statistically insignificant (p > . ). discussion: the results of the study suggested that, the protamine expressions which were associated with spermatogenesis may be important in infertility treatment. further studies are required in a large series of different populations to clarify the role both prm and prm themselves and their mrna expression on male fertility. the study was conducted to characterize the processes of muscle growth in atlantic salmon (salmo salar l.) of different ages inhabited rivers indera and varzuga (kola peninsula, russia) in summer and autumn. the expression levels of genes myosin heavy chain myhc, myostatin (mstn), and myogenic regulatory factors myf , myogenin) in white muscle were studied in salmon parr of age groups +, +, + in june and october. the changes in expression levels of mrfs, myhc and mstn indicating the extent of hyperplasia, hypertrophy, and restriction of muscle growth at different ages of parr were revealed. the pattern of age-related changes differed between seasons. especially, the expression of genes myod, myogenin and myhc peaked in yearling parr ( +) in summer, that indicated the high rate of hyperplastic and hypertrophic muscle growth in yearlings ( +). at the same time, the mstn expression level, the negative regulator of muscle growth, was highest in parr at age +. possibly, it is the necessary regulation mechanism to attenuate hyperplasia and hypertrophy and control muscle growth. in autumn, the expression level of myhc and myogenin were higher in salmon of age + and + then in +, indicating the higher intensity of hypertrophy in parr at both first ages in comparison to +. there was no differences in expression level of myod, myf and mstn between age groups in autumn. moreover, the expression levels of genes studied were lower in autumn than in summer. thus, it indicated the decrease of muscle protein synthesis and muscle growth rate in autumn. these findings expand knowledge on age-and season-related features of muscle development in young atlantic salmon in their natural habitat. the study was supported by the grant of the russian science foundation no. - - . p- . . - lmp and lmp gene polymorphisms in the southeastern anatolia population of turkey d. mihc ßioglu , f. ozbas gerceker sanko university, gaziantep, turkey, gaziantep € universitesi, gaziantep, turkey introduction: the low molecular weight polypeptide (lmp ) and low molecular weight polypeptide (lmp ) genes are located in the class ii region of the major histocompatability complex (mhc) locus on chromosome . these genes encode peptides forming the large components of the proteosome complex which degrades short-lived cytoplasmic proteins. due to the significant role of lmp products antigen presentation, these genes can be accepted as strong candidates of susceptibility factors for different diseases. population genetic studies can also contribute to understanding of the possible role of lmp gene polymorphisms. the aim of this study was to determine the allele and genotype frequencies of the lmp and lmp gene polymorphisms in southeastern anatolia population and to compare these with the frequencies in other populations previously reported. material and methods: a total of healthy and unrelated individuals participated in this study. polymorphism analyses were done by polymerase chain reaction (pcr)-restriction fragment length polymorphism (rflp) method and allele/ genotype frequencies of lmp and lmp genes were determined. results: a deviation from the hardy-weinberg equilibrium (v = . ,p < . ) was found for the genotype distribution of lmp gene polymorphism, while the lmp genotypes found to be distributed (v = . ,p > . ). discussion: available allele frequency data for different populations were used to calculate genetic distances and to construct a neighbor-joining tree. among the included populations, nahuas (mexico) population was found to have the lowest genetic distance from the southeastern anatolia-turkey population. conclusion: it can be concluded that, more studies using different types of genetic markers are needed to clarify the filogenetic relationships of southeastern anatolia population with other populations and also the number of population studies on lmp and lmp genes should be increased to understand their effects as a genetic marker. p- . . - investigation of in vitro antioxidant activity of quercetin loaded plga nanoparticles pharmacological effects. but its usage is restricted because of low aqueous solubility, poor bioavailability, poor permeability and instability in physiological medium. these problems can be overcome with encapsulation of quercetin into nanocarriers such as biodegradable plga based nanoparticles. polymeric nanoparticles which have - nm particle size and providing controlled released of biological active agent are prepared by using biodegradable and biocompatible polymers. in this study, encapsulation of quercetin molecules into plga nanoparticles was carried with using the single emulsion (w/o) solvent evaporation method. size measurements of the obtained nanoparticles were performed by zetasizer and their size were found . ; . ; . nm respectively. the morphological features were examined by sem images. antioxidant activities of q , q ve q nanoformulations have been investigated by dpph and no (nitric oxide) methods. it is thought that the nanoparticular formulations that is developed in this study can be useful model for the other antioxidant molecules and will provide a significant contribution to the food and pharmaceutical industry. "this research has been supported by yıldız technical university scientific research projects coordination department. project number: - - -gep ". p- . . the effect of environmental enrichment on spatial memory and certain nmdars, and ht a expressions in rat pups introduction: the aim of the study was to investigate the effect of environmental enrichment exposed during whole childhood on spatial learning and memory and certain nmdars, and ht a in the hippocampi of pups. materials and methods: four-weeks old, male, weaning rats were randomised into groups as enviromental enrichment (ee, n = ) and standard cage control (scc,n = ) groups. eeg housed in an enriched environment and sccg were kept in standard cages for weeks. following the experiment the rats were trained and tested in the morris water maze (mwm) , open field test (oft) and forced swim test (fst) in order to assess the neurobehavioural effects of ee. nr a, nr b, ht a protein levels were analyzed by western blotting from hippocampi of rats. results: the positive effect of ee was seen at the learning phase in the mwm as 'latency to locate the hidden platform' between groups thoughout the training days showed that eeg located the hidden platform significantly earlier than sccg on days , (p = . , p < . ). also eeg significantly spent lower time in the outer zone of the maze on days , which was the sign of low anxiety level (p = . , p = . ). the parameters of oft which indicated increased locomotion, exploration and low anxiety were significantly higher in eeg (p < . ), in fst comparison of groups showed no difference (p > . ). the levels of nr b and ht a were significantly increased as compared to sccg as well (p < . , p = . ). discussion & conclusion: these findings showed that exposure to ee throughout the whole childhood causes several neurobehavioural effects like increased exploration and low anxiety. these effects may lead to improvement in speed of learning. increase in the nr b and ht a concentrations which are the receptors that are related to learning and memory in the hippocampi accompanied these changes which may be basis of the neurobehavioural improvements or may provide contribution to positive neurobehavioural effects. p- . . - effects of monosodium glutamate exposure during prepubertal term on several biochemical parameters in rats h. i. b€ uy€ ukbayram, d. kumbul doguc ß, i. ilhan, a. y. ismail s€ uleyman demirel university, isparta, turkey monosodium glutamate, which is commonly used in processed foods as flavor enhancer, is considered 'generally recognised as safe' by fda; however many studies have revealed the negative effects of msg.we aimed to evaluate the effects of msg in childhood on several serum parameters. sixty-six rats, ( weeks old) were divided into groups as control (cg, n = ; + , male+female) , experiment (msg-low dose, e g, n = ; + , male+female) and experiment (msg-high dose, e g, n = ; + ) groups. msg was administered at mg/kg/d to e g, . g/kg/d to e g for weeks by oral gavage. the rats were sacrified and blood samples were collected from aorta. the blood samples were centrifuged, the serum samples were separated and glucose, alt, total protein, albumin, creatinine, cholesterole and triglyceride levels were analysed by beckmann au autoanalyser. level of total protein was significantly increased in e g and e g groups when compared to cg (p < . ). level of alb€ umine was also increased in both egs but significant difference was seen in e g as compared to cg. creatinine levels were significantly increased in egs when compared to cg (p < . ). although the glucose levels in both egs were increased, the increase in e g was statistically significant (p < . ). the alt levels of in egs were also increased but the significant increase was seen in e g (p < . ). the effect of msg seem to be dose dependent and especially effect on carbonhydrate metabolism. increasing doses caused increase in glucose level, and tendency to glucose intolerance. increasing doses of msg also caused increase in creatinine and urea. another apparent effect of msg was detected on alt activity. in conclusion the negative effect of msg on glucose level, liver and kidney functions depends on daily dose intake. consumption of msg seem to be inevitable it has to be restrained in children otherwise early metabolic problems may be future problems for these children. ( mg/kg) + tartrazine ( mg/kg) + brilliant blue fcf ( mg/kg) + ponceau r ( mg/kg) + azorubine ( mg/kg) + indigotine ( mg/kg) + erythrosine ( mg/kg). artificial food color mixture were administered to g and g and drinking water was applied simultaneously to g by oral gavage per day for weeks. after application all rats were sacrificed, the total oxidant (tos)/antioxidant (tas) capacity were analyzed in rats' brain, liver, kidney homogenate and serum with rel tos-tas diagnostics assay kit.the statistical analysis was carried out by using kruskal wallis test. tas and tos levels in liver homogenate were not found significantly different between all groups (p > . ). in serum and kidney and brain homogenate, tas levels were not significantly different between all groups. tos levels in g were higher than g and g in serum and kidney and brain homogenate (p < . ). exposure to synthetic food colors may increase oxidative stres in vitale organs such as brain, kidney in female rats. these alterations differ according to organ and dose. parallel with increasing trends on healthy eating habits, consumption of prebiotics and probiotic microorganisms have been popular due to their benefits on human health. functional dairy foods such as probiotic yoghurt and cheese are the most common foods including probiotic microorganisms. due to some considerations such as standardization and quality in bulk production, starter cultures are used in industrialised fermentative food production to start fermentation. starter culture basically refers the microorganisms which induce and maintain fermentation of the fermentative foods and starter cultures including probiotic microorganisms are called as probiotic starter cultures. in this study, probiotic cheese starter cultures as a microbial community were investigated using computational systems biology tools. a metabolic network model of probiotic cheese starter culture was reconstructed using microbial community network modeling approach. literature-based genome-scale metabolic models of commonly used lactic acid bacteria were used for the microbial community metabolic model. the microbial community metabolic model simulated metabolic interactions of the microorganisms in the probiotic starter culture. metabolic flux values computed by the metabolic network model also predicted the metabolic pattern of the glycolysis (conversion of lactose), lipolysis (conversion of fat) and especially amino acid catabolism which are associated cheese flavor metabolism. simulations obtained by metabolic network-based analysis of cheese starter cultures can also be used for other fields like genetic engineering, upstream processing of the functional cheese production. p- . . - er quality control protein network in cf to modulate f del-cftr rescued phase ii xenobiotic metabolizing enzymes convert parent compounds into more hydrophilic metabolite by catalyzing conjugation reactions including glutathione and amino acid conjugation, glucuronidation, sulfation and acetylation. this study was aimed to describe the best cell line model for studying phase ii xenobiotic metabolizing nqo and gst-pi enzymes. for this purpose, mrna and protein expression of nqo and gst-pi enzymes were analyzed in ht and sw (colon); hepg and huh (liver); pnt a and pc (prostate) cell lines by qrt-pcr and western blotting techniques, respectively. protein expression analysis revealed that nqo protein was expressed in all cell lines and relative protein expression is highest in the hepg ( %) and pnt a ( %) while huh ( . %) showed relatively low expression of nqo . in addition, nqo mrna expression was relatively high in ht ( . fold) and pnt a ( . fold) when compared with liver cell line hepg ( . fold). gst-pi protein expression was found very high in huh ( %) while there was no expression in hepg . gst-pi mrna expression was relatively higher in pnt a ( . fold) and ht ( . fold) when compared with huh ( . fold). according to these results, choosing the best cell line as model depends on the purpose of the research. for studying metabolism of a chemical by nqo and gst-pi or effect of a chemical on translational regulation of these enzymes, it is better to consider protein expression of the cell lines for choosing best model. however, if the aim is to study effect of a chemical on transcriptional regulation of these enzymes, it is better to choose a cell line that expressing highest mrna of gene of interest. in conclusion, considering both mrna and protein expression levels together, the best model cell lines for studying phase ii xenobiotic metabolizing nqo and gst-pi are ht and huh , respectively. p- . . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the studies on the pancreatic cells' surface glycoconjugates profiles in rats fed with high fat with lectin labelling methods by flouresans microscopy y. mater, s. beyhan ozdas gebze technical university, kocaeli, turkey in this study, the backbone of the cellular adhesion-recognition mechanism, located in the cell membrane. the study material selected pancreas tissue, has a privileged structures. the pancreas is one of the main organs to aid in digestion. the pancreas functions as an exocrine gland and role in digestion. in addition, the pancreas also functions as an endocrine gland, secreting several hormones into the blood that control the blood levels of glucose and other nutrients. due to the pancreas have been selected for this unique feature. thus, different types of cells in the same sample will be able to study the structure of the surface glycoconjugates. generally researches about determination of carbohydrates in the cell, glycoproteins or/and glycolipids are cut with enzymes. next step, the oligosaccharide mixture obtained, than establishing the complete structure of oligosaccharides and polysaccharides requires determination of branching positions, the sequence in each branch, the configuration of each monosaccharide unit, and the positions of the glycosidic links. this is a more complex problem than protein and nucleic acid analysis. these processes are indispensable for the understanding of the chemical structure of the sugar. whereas in cells using labeled lectins specific sugars, it is possible to accurately determine. in this study, was used triticum vulgaris (wga) labeled with fluorescein (fitc). thus, the cells located on the cell surface and neu ac (sialic acid) for wga sugar residues were investigated. according to preliminary results of this study, wga labeled with fitc is specifically binding of these sugars. when this study is completed, the differences of sugar on the surface of different type of cells in the pancreas can be distinguished in micrographs. thus, in the cells of the pancreas, the sugar units involved in adhesion-recognition can be possible to determine specifically. large scale gene networks could be topologically analyzed in order to obtain possible global system-level structure cancer gene co-expression networks can have lower connectivity as compared to normal samples. using colorectal tissue gene expression datasets, we observed that tumor specific networks are less connected than normal networks. functional enrichment analysis suggested that cell cycle genes and methylation-associated cell adhesion genes can specifically play a role in the connectivity loss of carcinoma samples. literature confirmation provided a gene network including significant genes playing roles in the intersections between cell cycle, cell adhesion, and cell skeleton dynamics. this network can provide novel insight to our understanding of the molecular mechanisms of colorectal cancer. p- . . - tf-mirna circuits specific to epithelial cancers y. oztemur, a. aydos, b. gur dedeoglu ankara university biotechnology institute, ankara, turkey cancer is the most common cause of death in the world but there are still a lot of uncertainties about the exact mechanism taking roles in regulation of it. cancers can be classified according to cell type; in which they start. carcinomas are the most prevalent types of cancer and start in epithelial tissues. they are also named as epithelial cancers (ecs) and make up about out of every cancers. over the past few years, many studies are concentrated on mirnas, which have emerged as important regulators of gene expression like transcription factors (tfs). tfs are regulators at transcriptional level while mirnas are post-transcriptional regulatory key-elements. otherwise the transcription of mrnas and mirnas are known to be regulated by tfs and tfs are the targets of mirnas. therefore, it is crucial to characterize the relation of tfs, mirnas and their targets by building circuits in diseases such as in ecs. for this study, mirna and mrna expression studies including epithelial tumors and normal samples searched in geo and array express microarray databases. mrna studies and mirna study, which were designed for different ecs (breast, lung, ovary and colorectal) were selected to be analyzed. differentially expressed (de) mrnas and mirnas between epithelial tumors and normal samples were extracted (p ≤ . , fold change). among de genes, transcription factors and mirnas were identified and listed for epithelial tumor vs. normal comparison. circuit analysis resulted with remarkable circuit, which was common for all the types of ecs that includes klf transcription factor and hsa-mir- . in the literature hsa-mir- and klf are known as important regulators in different types of cancer, which indicated that the motifs involving tfs and mirnas might be useful for understanding the regulation of ecs. as a conclusion finding out new and common circuits may aid us in predicting new or alternative diagnostic and/or prognostic biomarkers for ecs. mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) are multipotent stromal cells that can differentiate into a variety of cell types which are used in cell therapy. although they are the most attractive cell type for cell therapy studies, primary mscs lose their differentiation potential with increasing time in culture and passage so they are of limited use. due to this disadvantage, msc lines are more suitable for in vitro researches owing to their immortality. in this study we compared primary bone marrow-derived msc (bm-msc) with bone marrow derived msc line (rcb ) in terms of cell characteristics and gene expression profiles to determine the functional differences among mscs types. firstly, mscs were identified by using cd , cd , cd and cd as positive markers and cd as a negative marker. gene expression profilling was investigated using affymetrix hg-u -plus arrays. the significant go biological process terms and kegg pathway enrichment analyses of the identified degs were performed using david (p < . , fold change≥ ). the analysis showed similar pathway clustering in both cell types. the resulting quantitave transcriptome of genes were identified that differentially expressed in msc line versus primer mscs ( upregulated and down-regulated). functional classification of changed genes was mainly clustered in cell cycle, cell death and mismatch repair. kegg pathway analysis revealed that the genes were significantly enriched in pathways including "cell cycle, dna replication and focal adhesion" pathways. in conclusion, our results indicate that msc lines can be used instead of primary mscs. these quatitative results provide an important basis to adapt cell lines to more closely resemble physiological conditions as oppossed to animal experimentation. this could help to minimize the use of animals in research. p- . . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] association between loss of q , gain of q . and progression in sporadic colorectal cancer n. belder , b. savas , m. a. kuzu , i. pak , h. s€ umer c ß elebi , a. ensari , h. € ozdag biotechnology institute, ankara university, ankara, turkey, school of medicine, ankara university, ankara, turkey, ankara oncology training and research hospital, ankara, turkey colorectal cancer (crc) is one of the most diagnosed cancer and the third leading cause of cancer deaths throughout the world. identifying of copy number variation (cnv) profiles between early and late stage cancers can be useful to understand the progression and aggressiveness of cancer. the main goal of this study was to construct a comprehensive insight of association between cnv and sporadic crc stages in order to identify novel candidate targets which may contribute to tumor progression. affymetrix . genechip snp arrays were used for characterization of cnvs in tumor and matched normal formalin-fixed, paraffin-embedded (ffpe) tissues from stage i, stage ii and stage iii samples. paired cnv analyses were performed using partek genomic suite . and genomic segmentation algorithm was performed using a minimum of markers per segment, a signal-to-noise ratio of . and the cut-off value for the gain and loss was set of ae . . the adjusted p-value ≤ . were considered to be significant. whole genome cnv analysis revealed that amplification of q . with genes was found the most frequent ( . %) in stage ii tumors. the most frequent ( %) amplifications were q . and p . in stage iii tumors. while deletion of chromosome q . in stage iii with a frequency of % was found the most frequent loss, deletion of q . was seen the most frequent ( . %) in stage ii tumors. two tumor suppressor genes smad and smad which are found in these deletion regions were common genes between stage ii and stage iii. our results showed that gain of q . might have a significant role in the progression of cancer. loss of q comprising two tumor suppressor genes is also another important finding. q loss can be a significant prognostic value in colorectal cancer even though validation of target genes requires additional study and larger sample size. this work was supported by tubi-tak project no: s . p- . . - meta-analysis based mirna signature discriminates cervical cancer from normal samples a. yucel polat, y. oztemur, a. aydos, b . gur dedeoglu biotechnology institute, ankara university, ankara, turkey gynaecological cancers are common problems in female health. squamous cell carcinoma (scc) is a type of these malignancies. this tumor type is derived from pre-cancerous lesions, which is called cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (cin). cin is classified as cin , cin and cin according to their dysplasia grade in the cervical tissues. mirnas are small non-coding rnas that were shown to have important roles in the development and progression of various cancers. the aim of this study is identifying mir-nas, which are playing a part in progression of cervical lesions by a ranking based meta-analysis approach. two mrna and three mirna expression studies, which include normal, cin , cin and scc samples were selected from arrayexpress and gene expression omnibus (geo) databases. three mirna studies were combined with anova dependent ranking based meta-analysis program which was developed in our laboratory to find out a mirna signature that can discriminate cin , cin and scc samples from normal samples. the top five mirnas with the highest ranks in meta-list were selected for further analysis. predicted targets of these mirnas were identified by mirdb target prediction tool. additionally two mrna datasets were selected for mirna-target validation studies. common genes, which were obtained from meta-mirna targets and differentially expressed genes between normal and cin , cin and scc groups from two independent studies, were identified and they were subjected to pathway enrichment analysis. pathway enrichment analysis that was performed with common genes showed that these targets were significantly enriched (p < . ) in especially cell proliferation, cell survival and cell cycle pathways, which are the key players of cancer development and progression. the meta-analysis results together with validation analysis of their targets may point out the potential roles of mirnas as biomarkers for the diagnosis and the treatment of cervical cancer. p- . . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] the hypoglycaemic and regenerative activity of thymbra spicata in alloxanized-diabetic rats thymbra spicata (labiatae), a carvacrol and thymol containing plant, is one of the medicinal herbs used by diabetic individuals to reduce blood glucose in turkey. we investigated the hypoglycaemic and anti-lipemic effects of the aqueous extract prepared from dried leaves and flowers of this plant in alloxanized-diabetic rat model. rats were divided as: diabetic control (group ), dia-betic+glibenclamide (group ), diabetic+plant extract (group ), untreated control (group ) and control+plant extract (group ) groups (n = for each group). serum glucose, lipid levels and body weight changes were mesasured and pancreas and liver histology of the rats were examined. each rat in all groups were administered the plant extract ( mg), and the reference drug glibenclamide ( mg/kg) by gastric gavage every day for weeks. in group , blood glucose, serum alt, ast, triglyceride, cholesterol and ldl cholesterol levels increased while body weights decreased. in group , serum glucose, alt, ast, triglyseride and hba c levels decreased compared to group while cholesterol and ldl levels were high. in group , serum alt, ast, trigliserit, cholesterol, ldl levels decreased significantly but serum glucose and hba c were higher compared to group . body weights increased except group and hdl levels were not altered. histologically degenerative changes observed on pancreas of group were decreased in groups and . there was no difference on liver histology of the groups. in conclusion, thymbra spicata showed a protective and regenerative effect on diabetic pancreas. the hypo-lipidemic effect of the plant extract was also more effective than glibenclamide possibly due to the flavonoids, saponins and triterpenoids contents in the extract. its hypoglycaemic and protective activity should be tested for different doses and extract preparations and for longer periods. our study suggests that thymbra spicata is an excellent candidate for future studies on diabetes mellitus. with three different transcriptome data sets from the public gene expression omnibus database: time dependent data of dphop mutant, dargr mutant and wild type strain. the dynamic data spanned both primary and secondary phases of the metabolism. statistical results of transcriptome data were used for reporter metabolite analysis and reporter pathway analysis, which identify the metabolites (or pathways) with a significant coordinated transcriptional change in response to gene deletion perturbation in phosphate and nitrogen metabolisms. further, the production of actinorhodin, a pharmaceutically important compound, was modeled in the two deletion strains by calculating the metabolic fluxes subject to transcriptional level constraints on enzyme-coding genes. the metabolic switch from primary to secondary metabolism was highlighted in terms of the activity of pathways and fluxes as a result of the computational analyses in this work, leading to a better understanding of the role of phosphate and nitrogen metabolisms in increasing production levels. introduction: as a member of legume family licorice (glycyrrhiza glabra l.) has been widely used by human kind for many years as food constituent. especially by folks in rural sites licorice consumed widely. beside food constituent licorice has been used for medical purposes as well. licorice found effective with scientific datas on peptic skin infections, ulcers, inflammation, eczema, alzheimer disease, liver disease, and cancers. it also has been used as natural sweetener and food additive for preparing candies, chewing gum and beverage since ancient times. like all other medicine it has not been free of adverse event or toxicological effects. material and methods: alcoholic extracts of plant obtained by maceration process. for in vitro examination of anti-oxidant profile of licorice dpph free radical scavenging, abts cation radical scavenging and cupric ion reducing antioxidant capacity assay applied. application of extract made by oral route to rats for a week. anti-oxidant profile has been evaluated by myeloperoxidase (mpo), arylesterase (ares), total oxidative stress (tos) and total antioxidant status (tas) of serum levels. determination of toxicological effects alt, ast, ldh and alp values studied. histological investigation applied on liver and kidney tissues. results and discussion: results compared with control and standarts. antioxidant potential of licorice has been observed by in-vitro assays. serum mpo and ares values also compared with in-vitro results and correlation between them has evaluated. toxicological investigations made after evaluation of ast, alt, ldh and alp values. conclusion: in vitro assays has showed that licorice has potential anti-oxidant effect. investigation revealed that a mild toxic effect of licorice by biochemical tests. toxicological profile compared with control group and alt, ast values found slightly decreased and a mild elevation has been seen in ldh and alp values. for further and detailed investigation is needed. p- . . - on the applications of a metabolic network model of mesenchymal stem cells h. fouladiha, s. a. marashi, m. a. shokrgozar, m. farokhi mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) have several applications in tissue engineering and regenerative medicine. mscs can be very useful in stem cell therapy, because they can be isolated bone marrow or adipose of an adult. these cells have also been used as gene or protein carriers. therefore, maintaining them in a desire metabolic state has been the subject of several studies. here, we have used a genome scale metabolic network model of bone marrow derived mscs for exploring the metabolism of these cells. then, we try to validate the computational results by experimenal tests. we analyzed metabolic fluxes in order to increase stem cell proliferation using the metabolic model. consequently, the experimental results were in consistency with computational results. in the present work, the applicability of the metabolic model was successfully approved. therefore, this metabolic model can be useful in biomedical researches of stem cells. p- . . - qtl analysis for body weight and fatness in bxd recombinant inbred mouse strains a. dogan , c. neuschl , r. alberts , g. a. brockmann school of medicine, istanbul kemerburgaz university, istanbul, turkey, department for crop and animal sciences, humboldt-universit€ at zu berlin, berlin, germany, helmholtz-zentrum f€ ur infektionsforschung, braunschweig, germany genetic variation in body weight and composition is under the influence of many genes and have different genetic architectures. in the present study, the genetic factors contributing to body weight and fatness were examined under energy rich feeding conditions. growth traits, lean and fat weight, fat mass gain were analyzed to map qtls in a set of bxd ri strains. genome-wide analyses were revealed several genomic loci that control body weight and associated bodily changes in a sex and age-specific manner. the genetic data provided evidence for significant qtls on chromosome (chr) , , , and . most likely candidate genes within or near the regions with the highest significance levels were identified. the genes f rik, gbe , a n , and four genes cenpc , stap , uba , gnrhr for example, are suggested as most likely positional candidates accounting for the qtl effects on chr for fat mass, on chr for fat mass gain and on chr for lean weight, and chr for body weight, respectively. our results showed that body composition and fatness are highly complex that many genetic factors regulating and suggested candidate genes, which may help for studies of human fatness. related to serotonergic and gaba systems in response to hormonal changes. the nutrients involved in neurotransmitter synthesis may be the cause of relationship between diet and premenstrual syndrome. therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the effect of various nutrients and premenstrual syndrome. this study was conducted to healthy women aged - years. participants were asked to fill in premenstrual assessment form. dietary intakes (three days in each phases) were recorded during premenstrual, menstrual and postmenstrual phases. energy, protein, amino acids, iron, calcium, and magnesium intakes were estimated. statistical analyses were performed using the spss software. friedman tests were conducted and differences were considered to be statistically significant for p-values lower than . . . % of the participants reported premenstrual symptoms and premenstrual symptoms related nutrient intake were increased in these women. it was determined that energy (p = . ) and protein (p = . ) intakes were higher in the premenstrual phase. during premenstrual phase; tyrosine (p = . ), isoleucine (p = . ), leucine (p = . ), lysine (p = . ), methionine (p = . ), cysteine (p = . ), tryptophan (p = . ), and glutamic acid (p = . ) intakes were higher than other phases. likewise, iron intake was higher on premenstrual phase (p = . ). on the other hand, intake of other potential premenstrual syndrome related nutrients like fat, cholesterol, calcium, magnesium, and vitamin b were not significantly different within the menstrual phases. amino acids including tyrosine, tryptophan, glutamine, and vitamin b are involved in neurotransmitter synthesis and might be related to premenstrual symptoms. consequently, elevated intakes of dietary protein and some amino acids during premenstrual phase may be related to premenstrual syndrome symptoms. until now far uv cd spectra of only two potexviruses were published. the papaya mosaic virus (papmv) spectrum, measured by leclerc and co-authors contained no obvious anomalies and was similar to the spectrum of isolated papmv coat protein (cp). but measured years earlier by homer and goodmanfar uv cd spectrum of potato virus x (pvx) itself had anomalous character and differed strongly from the spectrum of isolated pvx cp. in the present work we measured far uv cd spectra for two more members of potexvirusgenus: alternanthera mosaic virus (altmv) and potato aucuba mosaic virus (pamv) and their free cps. the altmv virion and altmv cp spectra were similar to each other and to the spectra of papmv and its cp. the pamv spectrum resembled the pvx spectrum in anomalously low ellipticity of the negative band at nm, but in contrast to pvx, did not have additional peak at nm. homologous modeling showed that cp of the three viruses is very similar in the core structure, and the observed difference may be explained by differences in disordered parts of proteins. possible reasons of potexvirus structural variability are discussed and it is suggested that the intravirus potexvirus cps may assume different conformations in different virions of the same preparation or even along the length of one virus particle. this work was supported by the russian science foundation (grant - - ). the antimicrobial potential of different phenolics was tested on pectobacterium in search of possible mode of action. in this respect, biofilm formation, exoenzyme activity, gene expression and virulence on its natural host (potato, cabbage, calla lily) were performed. also computational approach to show interaction between phenolic compounds and target protein was carried out using docking tools. the virulence determinants of pectobacterium were significantly impaired, at compound concentrations that did not affect bacterial cell growth. these observations suggested a mechanism which specifically interferes with bacterial virulence. since, these virulence determinants in pectobacterium are controlled by quorum sensing (qs), we focused on the effect of phenolics on the qs system in pectobacteria. the study revealed an inhibiting effect of the tested compounds on the expression level of central qs system and controlled genes, using qrt-pcr. also, there was a prominent reduction in the level of qs signal molecules n-acyl-homoserine lactone (ahl) accumulation. in addition infection capability was also practically blocked, which was completely recovered by application of exogenous-ahl. these results were supported by a potential interaction of plant phenolics with qs targets, as shown by molecular docking tool. collectively, results suggest the potential interference of phenolic compounds with qs central components (expi/expr proteins). moreover, it holds potential for future development of control measures against pectobacterium, and possibly other pathogens with similar mode of virulence. saccharomyces cerevisiae has been a key experimental organism for the study of infectious diseases, including double-stranded rna (dsrna) viruses. the l-a dsrna virus family of s. cerevisiae is widely distributed in nature. several versions of l-a virus are described and new ones continue to be discovered. some s. cerevisiae strains along with l-a dsrna possess smaller dsrnas, called m satellites. these dsrnas encode a sole secretable protein, known as k , k , k and k-lus toxin. l-a genome encodes the gag major structural protein and gag-pol fusion protein, formed by ribosomal frameshifting. gag-pol has transcriptase and replicase activities are necessary for maintenance of both l-a and m satellite dsrnas. so far, it's not known whether certain l-a virus has evolved to maintain a distinct type of satellite dsrna or this phenomenon lacks inherent specificity. we developed universal strategy to obtain full length l-a and m dsrna genomes from s. cerevisiae. complete viral dsrna genomes can now be cloned, as evidenced by l-a- dsrna, analyzed and sequenced directly from any yeast strain by means of enzymatic manipulations on total or fractioned rna content. we have identified previously undescribed l-a variant from different yeast strains specifically associated with certain type of m satellites. moreover, we identified for the first time full -utr and -utr sequences of m satellite. highly conserved sequence regions along with variable fragments were discovered at protein level, revealing clear trend to form clusters among different l-a gag-pol proteins. the obtained data suggest that each l-a virus variant can specifically maintain a distinct type of satellite dsrna. p- . . - physic-chemical characterization of plga adjuvants for immunization per os t. chudina, d. kolybo palladin institute of biochemisry of the national academy of sciences of ukraine (nasu), kyiv, ukraine antibodies against diphtheria toxin play the most important role in the immunity against corynebacterium diphtheriae. all current diphtheria vaccines have parenteral route of administration. undoubtedly, oral administration of antigens would be the most patient-friendly way of immunization. however, the efficacy of free antigens oral administration is limited by their degradation in the gastrointestinal tract and poor absorption by m-cells. biodegradable and biocompatible polymers, like poly (d,l lactide-co-glycolide) (plga), are widely used for the design of mucosal immunizing agents. importantly, that the way of particle preparation plays an important role in plga biodegradation and antigen release. the aim of this work was to characterize the main physic-chemical properties of two types of plga particles: with immobilized antigen (plga ) and with encapsulated antigen (plga ) . we have prepared two types of plga particles containing egfp-sbb proteins (non-toxic recombinant fragment b of dt fused with egfp). the antigen loading efficiency of particles was determined based on the ratio of protein concentration in solution before and after loading and shown better results for plga particles (plga - . %, plga - . %). the flow cytometry results demonstrated that % of plga particles conjugated with egfp-sbb, and only . % of plga particles conjugated with protein.the particle sizes had the slight difference by the results of two different techniques (ntanumber based, the software tracks individual particles; dls -scattering intensity weighted), however demonstrate similar patterns. dls data showed that the mean plga particles size was . nm and plga - . nm. nta data also showed that mean plga particles size a little smaller than plga ( . nm and . nm respectively) . demonstrated differences in the properties of synthesized particles may have an influence on the immunogenicity of the used for oral immunization antigen. p- . . - a suitable system for studying the functionality of a plasmodial protein in mammalian cell lines cho-mt , a mutant cell line was proved to be an appropriate tool for investigating intracellular function of cct. in this cell line, the endogenous cct activity decreases dramatically at °c, blocking membrane synthesis and ultimately leading to apoptosis. we have studied the rescuing potential of pfcct in cho-mt cells with the isogenic cho-k cells as a control. cells after transient transfection were incubated at °c and then analysed by facs using the fluorescence of egfp fused to pfcct. the proportion of cells undergoing apoptosis was determined by propidium-iodide staining. we have demonstrated for the first time that heterologously expressed pfcct is able to complement endogenous cct activity in mammalian cells. thus, a suitable system has been established for functional investigation of structural elements of pfcct. in order to reveal the role of different protein sequences in enzymatic function, we redesigned the structural gene of pfcct obtaining a modular system where different domains are easy to be removed or exchanged. here we designed a series of different truncation and deletion constructs to reveal the role of plasmodium specific sequences. in parallel, heterologous expression experiments of different constructs in the mutant cho-mt and the wild type control cell lines are performed to validate the reported model system. p- . . - host-pathogen interactions: is there a relationship between tlr polymorphisms and tuberculosis in a group of turkish patients? introduction: tuberculosis (tb) is a global health problem and according to world health organization (who) each year more than million individuals die from tb and each year , cases of tb are notified in turkey. malatya is the third largest city in east anatolian region of turkey and tb incidence rate is higher ( . / , ) comparing to the general population of the country. for this reason it is important to determine the factors that lead to tb in this population. disease agent can stay in the latent phase for long periods of time after infecting the individuals. while some infected individuals show the symptoms some others never do and even % of these never develop clinical disease. various mechanisms take place during the host response to infectious agents. toll-like receptor (tlr) genes are shown to be candidate genes in these responses. materials and methods: in this study tb patients and healthy controls were included. tlr genotyping for rs , rs was performed by using a commercial taqman snp genotyping assay kit. data were summarized by count and percent. hardy-weinberg equilibrium was tested by chi-square distribution with df. differences between groups due to allelic and genotypic distributions were analyzed by pearson's exact or fisher's exact tests. in all comparisons significance level was considered to be . . results: the single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) which were subject of this study haven't been screened in turkish population earlier. no significant association was found between tb and the snps we screened in our group of patients. discussion and conclusion: unlike other populations results we couldn't find a significant association between the disease and the genotypes of our patients. the study should be performed in bigger populations in order to confirm the results. p- . . - lytic action of bacteriophages as a tool for the obtaining of images p. boltovets , r. radutny , t. shevchenko institute of semiconductor physics nas of ukraine, kyiv, ukraine, scientific and technical center of advanced technologies nas of ukraine, kyiv, ukraine, taras shevchenko national univercity of kyiv, kyiv, ukraine obtaining of images by different types of bacteria now became a very special branch of skill at the interface between science and art. however the authors did not found any scientific article, where bacterial lawn was used as the background and the image was formed by the lytic action of the virus (bacteriophage). whereas the mentioned approach could be used not only with artistic aims but for the practical use. the aim of this work was to demonstrate a possibility to obtain the image on the bacterial lawn by the lytic action of the bacteriophage. the bacterial lawn was obtained by the standard metod using the . % agar with the nutrient medium and the . % agar containing escherichia coli culture. stencils with the preparation of the bacteriophage t were applied. samples were incubated during the twenty-four hours at + °c. after that stencils were removed and the samples were stained by coomassie blue r- or fuchsine (with further fixation by the % acetic acid). several approaches to obtain the image by the lytic action of the virus were applied. first of all stencils made from printing paper and filter paper were compared. it was demonstrated, that the use of filter paper stensil allows to obtain more accurate and controllable images, than the use of the printing paper stensil. in the next series of the experiment the possibility of the reversed stencil use (where the image is formed not by the lytic zone but by the zone of bacterial growth) was demonstrated. also the possibility of the partial staining of the obtained image was explored. it gives an opportunity to obtain polychrome images using available colorants. summarizing the above it should be noted, that it was the first time when the graphical image was obtained by the lytic action of the virus on bacteria. this approach could be used not only for the artistic aims but as well for the practical use, for example, for the restriction of the action of microorganisms in out-of-theway places. burgdorferi the identification and characterization of possible antigens is essential for the improvement of current laboratory diagnostics for lyme disease and vaccine development. in this study, several recombinant b. burgdorferi outer surface proteins have been obtained and their antigenic properties have been evaluated in an effort to characterize novel immunodominant antigens. because b. afzelii and b. garinii are the most prevalent species in latvian ticks, proteins with conserved domains were included in this study. a panel of serum samples of lyme disease patients with early and disseminate disease stage was used. the controls were matched by age and sex to the patients and represented the same geographic area. the results show that proteins of several b. burgdorferi gene families have properties with respect to their candidacy as a subunit assay for a novel lyme disease immunodiagnostic. especially, the difference in their size in a range on the western blot assay may provide good discrimination between protein bands. however, they have potential for diagnosis if used in combination with other antigens but not as a "stand alone" test. in conclusions, this study showed the existing challenges in serological testing of early lyme disease. the conservation of the sequence of antigen between species of b. burgdorferi complex is essential for the most successful serodiagnostic marker candidate. the presence of homologous proteins in treponema species could lead to the cross reactivity in syphilis patients, and should be carefully evaluated. antimicrobial resistance is one of the greatest challenges in modern medicine. there is a pressing need for better understanding of the specific mechanisms that contribute to resistance to optimize existing therapies. in in georgia extended-spectrum beta-lactamase (esbl)-producing e. coli strain was isolated from the post-surgical sample obtained from gallbladder of the patients with chronic calculous cholecystitis which belongs to the sequence type (st ) complexes with ctx-m gene. is this strain characterized by other differences on a proteome level? are antibiotics against which the strain is resistant inducing the changes in bacterial proteome? the present work was aimed (i) to study the differences on a proteome level (i) between e. coli - / -g and attc e. coli-reference strain and (ii) to compare the proteomes of strain at two conditions: with and without antibiotics. strain was grown in the presence of three antibiotics: rocephin (ceftriaxone), fortum (ceftazydym) and claforan (cefotaxime sodium) together. proteomic expression was analyzed using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and mass spectrometry. significant differences were found for several proteins, including putative abc trnsporter arginine protein , cystine-binding periplasmic protein, fkbp-type peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase, outer membrane protein a, d-galactose binding periplasmic protein and some others. the importance of these differences for anti-microbial resistance will be discussed. p- . . - molecular characterization of resistance and virulence features in staphylococcus aureus clinical strains isolated from cutanaeus lesions in patients with drug adverse reactions i. lupu , i. gheorghe , , m. popa , , a. ion , m. mihai , v. lazar , , m. c. chifiriuc , carol davila" university of medicine and pharmacy, bucharest, romania, research institute of the university of bucharest-icub, bucharest, romania, faculty of biology, university of bucharest, bucharest, romania patients treated with epidermal growth factor inhibitors often experience cutaneous adverse reactions. however, the infectious complications of these toxic effects and the contribution of specific pathogens, such as the community emergent methicillin resistant staphylococcus aureus strains. the present study was aimed to identify the types of sccmec and virulence genes profile in clinical s. aureus isolated from cutaneous lesions of different severity degrees in patients with dermatologic toxic effects. this study was conducted on a total of s. aureus clinical strains isolated in from acneiform reactions pustulae and periungual lesions in patients with drug cutaneous adverse reactions. multiplex pcr was performed on genomic dna from isolates in order to identify the sccmeccentral elements and the virulence genes: bbp (bone bound sialoprotein), ebps (elastinbinding protein), fnbb, fnba (fibronectin-binding proteins), fib, clfa, clfb (clumping factors a and b), cna (collagen-binding protein), luk-pv (panton-valentine leucocidin), hlg (haemolysin), tst (toxic shock toxin). the mrsa phenotype was genetically confirmed by the presence of meci gene in case of . %, meca in . %, sscmec type ivd element in . %, ccrb in . % and sccmec types i, iii, iv in . % of the studied s. aureus strains. regarding the virulence genes encountered in s. aureus strains, the most frequent was clfa ( . % of the isolates), followed by clfb ( . %), fib ( . %), hlg ( . %) and bbp ( . %). these results confirm the high prevalence of mec i and sscmec type iv elements, usually encountered in communityacquired mrsa strains, in cutaneous isolates from patients with dermatologic toxic effects. more data on the virulence and genetic background of these local strains are needed to appropriately assess the risk of such infections and avoid the inappropriate administration of beta-lactams. p- . . - analysis of toxicogenic properties of staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from cows with subclinical form of mastitis in the central area of russian federation. pore-forming toxins and enterotoxins), which are present in s. aureus strains isolated from clinically healthy cows. staphylococcus strains were isolated from cow's milk. disk diffusion method was used to determine the sensitivity to antibiotics. pcr analysis was used for detection of meca, mecc genes and genes of toxins. investigated strains were resistant to oxacillin ( %), vancomycin ( %) . it was found that all strains, which contain meca and mecc genes, showed resistant to more than antibiotics. it was determined that among the investigated strains % contained meca, % -mecc, % contained both meca and mecc. some strains contained genes of panton-valentine leukocidin (pvl) or alpha-hemolysin and several strains contained both types of genes. enterotoxin a (sea) gene was detected in . % of cases, sed - %, seg - %, sei - %. genes of staphylococcal toxins b, c, e, h were not found. the presence of phenol soluble modulin biosynthesis genes was determined: genes of alpha peptide synthesis were found in % of strains, beta peptide toxin genes in %, delta toxin gene in %. it was determined, that clinically healthy animals are carriers of s. aureus strains that cause mastitis. high level of antibiotic resistance was found in strains containing meca and mecc genes. the major part of the strains carried genes of phenol soluble modulin biosynthesis. the role of phenol soluble modulins as well as of pvl and alpha-hemolyzin in the development of mastitis is not completely clear. we conclude that pore-forming toxins have dominant role in the latent form of mastitis. p- . . - impact of lactoferrin on the hydrophobicity and adherence to the inert substratum of staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from patients with cutaneous drug reaction skin healing is a complex biological process that requires the involvement of different cell types and humoral effectors. one of the main factors are aggravating and delaying the healing process is represented by the supra-infection with pathogenic or opportunistic microorganisms that grow in specialized consortia embedded in a self-produced extracellular polymeric matrix, called biofilms, which are extremely resistant to any antimicrobials and host immune response. lactoferrin (lf) is an ironbinding glycoprotein which promotes skin healing by enhancing the initial inflammatory phase, but also by inducing an overabundant immune response. the aim of this study was to investigate the influence of lf, one of the main components of innate, humoral anti-infectious immunity on some microbial features, involved in the first steps of the infectious process, such as hydrophobicity and adherence of staphylococcus aureus strains isolated from maculo-pustular lesions in patients with adverse reactions to epidermal growth factor inhibitors. for hydrophobicity measurement the bacterial suspensions were grown in the presence or absence of lf, and then, the "microbial adherence to hydrocarbons test" (math) was performed. the capacity to develop biofilms on inert substrata and the influence of lf on this feature was spectrophotometrically quantified using an adapted microtiter method, after crystal violet staining. our results showed that lf decreased the hydrophobicity and limited the biofilm development of all s. aureus tested strains, in a dose and time dependent manner. the decreasing effect on the microbial hydrophobicity was accompanied by a lowering effect on the adhesion of microbial strains to the inert substratum. in conclusion these observations indicate that lf exhibits a wound pro-healing effect, by limiting the microbial colonization and biofilm formation and thus, the occurrence of infectious complications of skin lesion. p- . . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] host-specificity determinants of bacteriophage vb_ecom_fv considered vehicles of s.aureus intoxication in humans throughout the world. the objective of the present study was to assess the presence of enterotoxigenic and methicillin-resistant s. aureus in water buffalo milk and dairy products. a total of water buffalo milk and dairy products ( water buffalo cream and water buffalo cheese) were collected from different dairy farms, smallholders and local bazaars in samsun, turkey. all samples were analyzed using the standard procedure en iso - and isolates were confirmed for the presence of the s rrna and nuc gene by polymerase chain reaction. s. aureus was identified in of water buffalo milk ( %), of water buffalo cream ( %), and of water buffalo cheese ( %). a total of isolates were confirmed as s. aureus by pcr. genotypic methicillin resistance was evaluated using pcr for the meca gene. out of isolates, ( %) were found to be methicillin resistant (meca gene positive) by pcr. the enterotoxigenic s. aureus was identified in out of ( %) isolates by the mpcr technique. five isolates produced staphylococcal enterotoxins sea ( / ; . %), two isolates produced sec ( / ; . %), one isolate produced ( / ; . %) sed, one isolate produced ( / ; . %) see and three isolates produced sec+sed ( / ; %) . none of samples were positive for seb. in conclusion, the presence of enterotoxigenic and methicillin-resistant s. aureus in milk and dairy products is of significant for public health concern and also these enterotoxin genes sea and sed are predominant toxins that can cause staphylococcus intoxication in humans. this study was funded by ondokuz mayıs university, samsun, turkey, scientific research project programs (project no: pyo. vet - . . ) and this article was part of a phd thesis. p- . . - identification and biochemical characterization of an immune modulating protein from helicobacter pylori b. kaplan t€ urk€ oz faculty of engineering, department of food engineering, ege university, izmir, turkey helicobacter pylori is able to achieve persistent infection with minimal immune response. the first line of defence during h.pylori infection is through gastric epithelial cells which present toll like receptors (tlr). a family of bacterial proteins which share homology with the toll/il- receptor (tir) domain were identified. the structure of btpa from brucella showed that bacterial tir proteins (btp) mimick human tir domain proteins and act on myd signaling pathways to suppress tlr signaling. h.pylori might also produce a similar protein. a putative h. pylori tir protein was found based on sequence homology and the corresponding gene; hp ; was cloned in fusion with an n terminal cleavable his-tag. the recombinant protein, his- was purified using nickel affinity chromatography. was subjected to limited proteolysis and the bands were analyzed by peptide mass fingerprinting (pmf). oligomerization of was investigated by in vitro pull-down and size-exclusion chromatography. , a amino acid protein, has a predicted c terminal tir domain similar to other btps and sequence alignments verified the presence of tir domain signature regions. recombinant his- was produced with a yield of mg/l culture. a structurally stable kda fragment was obtained from limited proteolysis which contained the tir domain as verified by pmf. in vitro pull down assays showed interacts with itself forming dimers as shown by size-exclusion chromatography. tir domain proteins function by interacting with themselves and other tir domains. our results showed that also form dimers, supporting that it is a btp. current research is focused on solving the structure of and investigating its interaction with myd . might play a direct role in reduced immune response against h.pylori by binding to myd analogous to other btps. further characterization of will provide the first solid evidence of presence of a tir domain protein in h.pylori. p- . . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] lipopolysaccharides with different lipid a acylation status from vibrio cholerae and campylobacter jejuni contribute differently to il production by bone marrow-derived macrophages k. korneev , , e. sviriaeva , lipid a is a biologically active part of lipopolysaccharide (lps) from gram-negative bacteria that is responsible for the activation of the innate immunity through interaction with toll-like receptor (tlr ) and subsequent production of proinflammatory cytokines. bacteria frequently transform their lipid a so that its recognition by tlr is not sufficient for induction of effective antibacterial immune response. we compared biological activity of various lps from pathogenic bacteria vibrio cholerae and campylobacter jejuni. we purified r-form lps for each strain by hydrophobic chromatography. the biological activity of lps preparations was evaluated by their ability to activate production of proinflammatory cytokine il by bone marrow-derived macrophages from c bl/ mice, using tlr -deficient macrophages to control for specificity of tlr signaling. lps from e. coli and inactive lps from f. tularensis were used as positive and negative controls. lps from v. cholerae demonstrated biological activity similar to that of lps from e. coli, consistent with the presence of highly acylated lipid a in both strains. however, the former was a slightly weaker activator than the latter, because lipid a from v. cholerae had on average shorter acyl chains. lipid a from c. jejuni had on average longer acyl groups than in e. coli, while degree of acylation was lower, and as a result its lipid a displayed significantly lower biological activity. our study demonstrates importance of functional groups of lipid a in the ability of lps to activate production of il by macrophages. in line with our previous reports, we confirmed a direct correlation between biological activity of various lps species with their lipid a acylation status: the biological activity increases with increase in the length and in the number of the acyl chains. excess proinflammatory cytokine production through tlr activation can cause sepsis, while inefficient activation may result in the failure to clear bacteria. clostridium perfringens phospholipase c (cpplc) is the most toxic extracellular enzyme produced by this bacterium and it is an essential virulence factor in the pathogenesis of gas gangrene. cpplc may lead to cell lysis at concentrations that causes extensive degradation of plasma membrane phospholipids. however, at sublytic concentrations it induces cytotoxicity without causing evident membrane damage. the results of this work demonstrated that the cytotoxic effect of cpplc requires its internalization and the activation of the mek-erk pathway. cpplc internalizartion occurs through a dynamin-dependent mechanism and in a time progressive process: first, cpplc colocalizes with caveolin both at the plasma membrane and in vesicles, and later it colocalizes with early and late endosomes and lysosomes. the results also showed that cpplc requires endocytosis in order to activate mek-erk, because treatment with the dynamin inhibitor, dynasore, prevents cpplc endocytosis, erk / activation and cytotoxcity. cholesterol sequestration as well as inhibition of actin polymerization also prevents cpplc internalization and cytotoxocity, involving endocytosis in the signaling events required for cpplc cytotoxic effect. once internalized, cpplc induces reactive oxygen species production through the activation of pkc, mek/erk and nfjb dependent pathways. inhibition of either of these signaling pathways prevents cpplc's cytotoxic effect. in addition, it was demonstrated that nfjb inhibition leads to a significant reduction in the myotoxicity induced by intramuscular injection of cpplc in mice. these data provide new insights about the mode of action of this bacterial phospholipase c, previously considered to act only locally on cell membrane. understanding the role of these signaling pathways could lead towards developing rational therapeutic strategies aimed to reduce cell death during a clostridial myonecrosis. p- . . - apoptosis induced by clostridium perfringens phospholipase c is mediated by reactive oxygen species m. flores-d ıaz , l. monturiol-gross , m. j. pineda padilla , c. araya-castillo , a. alape-gir on bacterial phospholipases are lipolytic esterases surface associated or secreted by a wide variety of bacterial pathogens. clostridium perfringens, the most broadly distributed pathogen in nature, secretes a prototype phospholipase c (plc), also called a-toxin, which plays a key role in the pathogenesis of gas gangrene. this toxin causes death to cultured cells and extensive myonecrosis when injected intramuscularly in experimental animals. the results of the present study showed that c. perfringens plc ( - ng/ml) induces morphological and biochemical changes characteristic of apoptosis in cultured cells, as determined by scanning electron microscopy. nuclei condensation and fragmentation were observed by fluorescence microscopy and a typical ladder fragmentation pattern of genomic dna was detected by dna in agarose gels. cell death was prevented by the caspases inhibitors z-devd-fmk and z-vad-fmk. c. perfringens plc induces oxidative stress in cultured cells as determined by fluorescence microscopy and flow cytometry using the membrane permeable probe dcfda. different antioxidants including the gluthation precursor nac, several iron chelators and the free radical scavengers tiron and edaravone prevent cell death induced by c. perfringens plc in cultured cells or in mice challenged intramuscularly with . lg of that toxin. thus, this work provides compelling evidence that superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and the hydroxyl radical are involved in the cytotoxic and myotoxic effects of c. perfringens plc. furthermore, the data demonstrated that edaravone, a clinically used hydroxyl radical trap, reduced the myonecrosis and the mortality caused by c. perfringens in a murine model of gas gangrene, induced by intramuscular bacterial injection of bacteria. this knowledge provides new insights for the development of novel therapies to reduce tissue damage during clostridial myonecrosis. lectins are ubiquitous proteins able to recognize mono-and oligosaccharides with high specificity and low affinity. lectins do not have any catalytic activity, unlike enzymes, and they are not products of the immune system in contrast to antibodies. lectins play a crucial role in cell interactions on molecular level showing their importance in various physiological and pathophysiological processes as well as both mutualistic and parasitic interactions between microorganism and hosts. photorhabdus luminescens is a gram-negative bacterium from the family enterobacteriaceae. the bacteria have a complex life cycle that involves mutualistic and pathogenic interaction with two different invertebrate hosts. it is highly pathogenic towards insect larvae. in addition, p. luminescens lives in the intestine of infective juveniles of nematode heterorhabditis bacteriophora, together forming an effective entomopathogenic complex. we have identified several soluble lectins produced by p.luminescens. in this study, we focus on proteins from p. luminescens, which show a high sequence homology with each other. a wide range of methods was used for structural and functional studies of photorhabdus lectins, e.g. surface plasmon resonance, isothermal titration calorimetry, analytical ultracentrifugation and x-ray crystallography. all lectins from p.luminescens recognize l-fucose and d-mannose. despite being closely related, they differ in fine binding specificities. to determine their biological function, knock-out mutants of p. luminescens are being prepared to study its interaction with axenic nematodes and insect larvae. breast cancer is the major disease of women in developed countries occuring predominantly after the age of . triple negative breast cancer (tnbc) is a typical subtype of epithelial breast cancer which lacks estrogen receptor (er), progesterone receptor (pr) and human epidermal growth factor receptor (her ) all together. although various researches have been focused on characterizing tnbc and enlightening different molecular markers with the aim of improving the overall outcome, currently the sole affective therapy action for tnbc is chemotherapy. thus chemoresistance is the main clinical challange and accounts for % of failures in terms of treating the disease. multidrug resistance (mdr) is defined as simultaneous resistance towards the drugs which do or do not demonstrate structural resemblance and have different effects on their molecular targets. p-glycoprotein (p-gp) is a membrane protein coded by abcb (mdr- ) gene. p-gp is an atp-dependent pump which pumps a wide range of drugs out of the cells including chemotherapeutic agents such as doxorubicin (dox) and pactilaxel. in the present study, tnbc cell line mda-mb- was treated with increasing doses of dox, cell viability was examined with srb assay and development of mdr was investigated through mdr assay and rt-pcr. results demonstrated that cell viabiliy decreased significantly with the treatment of higher doses. mdr was shown to be increased when cells were treated with , and nm of the drug respectively along with lm of p-gp inhibitor verapamil. rt-pcr results were obtained to be consistent with mdr assay results and indicated increased mdr- gene expression with the treatment of dox. especially after nm of dox treatment, mdr- was overexpressed to be fold when compared to control. in conclusion, it was demonstrated that mda-mb- cells have shown to display elevated resistance to higher doses of dox. p- . . - targeting dna damage response pathway in cancer cells under heat stress and the mechanical effect of ultrasound y. furusawa , t. kondo toyama prefectural university, imizu-shi, japan, university of toyama, toyama, japan ultrasound (us) has been widely utilized for diagnosis and therapy in many medical fields. the biophysical modes of us are divided into three classes, thermal, cavitation and non-thermal non-cavitation effects. in clinical use for cancer therapy, the thermal effect was utilized for hyperthermia therapy with focusing us on cancer to rise the temperature from °c to °c, or further which could induce thermal ablation of cancers. cavitation leads to a variety of mechanical stress such as shear stress, shock wave, high pressure, and chemical stress such as free radical formation, both of which have been inferred to act simultaneously on all biological materials. it has been indicated that us induces cell killing, cell lysis, loss of viability, and loss of clonogenicity. recently, we found that heat stress as well as us without thermal effect induce not only dna single-strand breaks but also dna double-strand breaks, a most cytotoxic region of dna, in chromatin dna detected by both gammah ax staining and neutral comet assay. in response to the stresses which induce dna damage, the dna damage sensor protein kinase, ataxia telangiectasia mutated (atm), atm and rad related (atr), and dna-dependent protein kinase (dna-pk) become activated form to initiate signal transduction pathways activating cell-cycle checkpoints, dna repair, and apoptosis. the molecules consisting of dna damage response pathway were expected as therapeutic targets because defects in the response to dna damage agents can be lethal. this work was designed to explore the possible therapeutic targets of the molecules in dna damage response pathways for future us-aided therapy. finally, several kinases (e.g., checkpoint kinase) on dna damage response pathway seems to be the targets for hyperthermia and us therapy. (ural branch) , ekaterinburg, russia, shemyakin and ovchinnikov institute of bioorganic chemistry, russian academy of sciences, moscow, russia based on the recently synthesized (s)-( -aminopurin- -yl) amino acids (gly, ala, val, phe, pro), we obtained a series of novel modified nucleosides using the transglycosylation reaction. for the first time, it has been demonstrated that the corresponding nucleobases are good substrates for the genetically engineered recombinant e. coli purine nucleoside phosphorylase (conversion to nucleosides reached - %). nucleosides, such as ribosides, -deoxyribosides, and arabinosides were obtained in high yields ( - %). it has been found that yield in the transglycosylation reaction does not depend on the structure of the amino acid fragment. the nucleosides synthesized are considered as potential inhibitors of intracellular adenosine deaminase (ad), the increasing activity of which is observed in hepatitis, cirrhosis, hemochromatosis, obstructive jaundice, prostate and bladder cancer, hemolytic anemia, rheumatic and typhoid fever, gout, and cooley's anemia. cytotoxicity of the synthesized nucleosides was tested in the jurkat (model of human t-lymphoblastic leukemia) and el- (model of mice t-lymphoblastic leukemia) cell lines. the compounds studied did not exhibit cytotoxic activity compared to the activity of the known antitumor agent nelarabin. the work was financially supported by the russian science foundation (grant - - ). p- . . - dna binding, dna cleavage, antimicrobial activities, antimutagenic and anticancer studies of a schiff base and its complexes n. yildirim , n. demir , m. yildiz health services vocational school, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, turkey, department of biology, faculty of arts and sciences, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, turkey, department of chemistry, faculty of arts and sciences, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, turkey schiff bases are considered as favored and the most widely used ligands, due to their metal complexes having variety of applications as antibacterial and anticancer agents. the rational design and synthesis of new schiff bases and their metal complexes have been drawing great interest because of their diverse biological and pharmaceutical activities. so, exploring and designing novel molecules that have biological activities and capable of interacting with nucleic acids has a great significance for disease defence and to discover new dna-targeted anticancer drugs for chemotherapy. in this study, we report the synthesis and characterization of a novel schiff base and its ni(ii) and cu(ii) complexes. the minimal inhibitory concentration (mic) of the compounds was screened in vitro against bacteria and yeast cultures using broth micro dilution test. dna binding and dna cleavage activity of the compounds were investigated by uv-vis spectroscopy and agarose gel electrophoresis. antimutagenic activity of compounds were tested in the absence of microsomal enzymes (s -). also, cytotoxicity of the compounds against hepg cell lines was assayed by the mtt ( -( , -dimethylthyazolyl- )- , -diphenyltetrazolium bromide) method. consequently, uv-vis spectroscopy studies indicated that the compounds interact with calf thymus dna (ct-dna) via intercalative binding mode. dna cleavage activity studies showed that the cu(ii) complex can effectively cleave pbr plasmid dna. compounds inhibited the base pair mutation with high inhibition rate in the absence of s . also, schiff base complex had cytotoxic activity towards hepg cell line, that it was found to be more potent than the control cisplatin. p- . . - single particle electron tomography of rnap elongation complex, stalled at position + genome in vivo is constantly exposed to the damaging effects of the environment. single-strand breaks (ssbs) are the most frequently occurring dna lesions. accumulation of unrepaired ssbs can interfere with the cells metabolism and increase genomic instability. in vivo, ssbs are repaired in specific pathway, but, in eukaryotic nuclei, dna is organized in chromatin that could affect the accessibility of lesions to sensor proteins. breaks in a template strand induce arrest of rna polymerase ii (polii) in vitro and in vivo and can be revealed in a transcription-dependent manner. our recent biochemical studies identified two key intermediates formed during transcription through a nucleosome by rnap that are nearly homogeneous, active and stable by biochemical criteria (complexes stalled after entering or bp into the nucleosome; ec+ or ec+ , respectively). hear we produced two complexes, both stalled in the + position, one without break in the dna, and the other with introduced ssb at position + of a non-template dna strand. complexes were purified using affinity chromatography and applied to a carbon-coated, glow-discharged em grid. tomographic studies were performed at ae °in a jeol microscope at kv accelerated voltage. images were recorded using a gatan ccd camera. image analysis was performed using the imod software. the resulting structure of the ec+ complex with no break in dna consist of two domains, connected by a single dna string. the complex with a break introduced into the dna has a more compact appearance and its two domains were connected by two dna strings, thus forming an intranucleosomal dna loop. our data suggest that ssbs in a non-template strand can induce the formation of stable non-productive transcription intermediate. the inhibitory effect of ssbs onto transcription may suggest a possible mechanism for their recognition in vivo with a transcription-dependent pathway. this work has been supported by the rsf grant # - - . colorectal cancer (crc) is one of the leading causes of cancerrelated deaths in the developed countries. according to who report new incidence rate of crc in turkey is . % among other cancer types. owing to difficulty of the low allele frequency variations detection, genetic association profiles of crc have not been entirely identified. low allele frequency variations mlh À g>a (rs ) promotor substitution, mlh g>c (rs ) exonic substitution, mthfr c t (rs ) and apc t>a (rs ) were investigated in this study. these snps "rs , rs , rs , rs " are located on p . , q , p respectively. colonoscopic investigations were performed on both cancer and control group. the snps were genotyped using kompetitive allele specific pcr technology in cases and healthy controls. statistical analysis was carried out with cochran-armitage chi-square test. in this study these of the snps in mlh , mthfr genes were examined for the first time in turkish sporadic crc cases. statistical analysis showed no significant association within our turkish sporadic crc population. percentage of mlh À aa genotype in group aged ≥ was found to be . % in cancer versus % in control group. moreover apc a, mlh c alleles were detected only and allele respectively. previously, apc a allele was determined in . % of a turkish cohort. however in the present study apc a allele was detected on allele only. studies showed mlh À promoter variation as a risk factor for microsatellite instabile crc but for the current study this data is not available. in spite of literature mthfr c t and mlh g>c snps were not found to be associated with sporadic crc in turkish population. this research demonstrates that importance of population based studies in multifactorial disease. p- . . - excision of damaged bases from transcription intermediates by fpg/nei superfamily dna glycosylases k. makasheva, d. zharkov sb ras institute of chemical biology and fundamental medicine, novosibirsk, russia oxidative lesions are abundant due to constant presence of reactive oxygen species in living cells. repair of oxidative base lesions is initiated by dna glycosylases. for example, bacterial fpg and nei dna glycosylases excise oxidized purines and pyrimidines, respectively, from dna. their human homologs, neil and neil , have been reported to show preference towards oxidized lesions in dna bubbles. from these observations, it had been hypothesized that neil proteins may be involved in the repair of lesions in dna bubbles generated during transcription. however, it is not presently clear how neils would behave on bubbles more closely resembling transcription intermediates (e. g., containing the rna strand), and bacterial homologs fpg and nei had never been investigated with bubble substrates. we have studied excision of either -oxoguanine ( -oxog) or , -dihydrouracil (dhu) by e. coli fpg and nei and human neil and neil from single-strand oligonucleotides, perfect duplexes, bubbles with different number of unpaired bases ( to ), d-loops with dna or rna and from complexes with rna polymerase. fpg, neil and neil efficiently excised dhu located inside a bubble. fpg and neil was generally more active than neil in excision of -oxog from ssdna and bubbles. nei, on the other hand, was active only on dhu located in dsdna (either perfect duplex or dna/dna d-loop). fpg and neil also have shown activity in d-loops with rna. the presence of an additional unpaired -tail of the third strand of d-loops didn't affect the glycosylases activity. the activity of fpg was observed in pre-assembled transcriptional complexes with e. coli rna polymerase and depended on the position of the lesion in the transcription bubble, possibly reflecting local accessibility of the lesion within the elongation complex. this work was supported by rsf ( - - ). nucleotide excision repair (ner) is a multistep process that eliminates a wide range of lesions in dna, including uv photoproducts and base modifications by many carcinogenic and chemotherapeutic agents. one of the advanced approaches to ner process investigation is based on reproducing the repair reaction by mixing protein extracts from mammalian cells with model linear dnas, bearing lesions. long linear dnas ( bp) containing efficiently recognized and processed by ner system lesions (fluoro-azidobenzoyl photoactive lesion fab-dc, nonnucleoside lesions nflu and nant) in both strands have been synthesized. we have demonstrated that dnas containing closely positioned lesions in the both strands represent difficult-to-repair (fab-dc/nflu(+ ), fab-dc/nflu(À )) or unrepairable (nflu/nflu (+ ), nflu/nflu(À ), nant/nflu(+ ), nant/nflu(À )) structures. besides, it has been shown that model dnas bearing bulky lesions in opposite positions (fab-dc/nflu( ), nflu/nflu( )) represent unrepairable structure as well. the model substrates with increasing distance between lesions in the duplex demonstrated the full recovery of substrate properties in ner process (fab-dc/nflu(+ ), fab-dc/nflu(À ), fab-dc/nflu(À ), nflu/nflu (+ ), and nant/nflu(+ )), whereas the level of specific excision from nflu/nflu(À ), nflu/nflu(À ) and nant/nflu(À ), nant/nflu(À ) was approximately % of the nflu/dg or nant/dg dna respectively. it has been shown that modified dna-duplex ( bp) with fab-dc has decreased structurally dependent affinity for xpc-hr b compared to duplexes containing lesions in both strands being analyzed (fab-dc/dg, fab-dc/nflu(+ ), fab-dc/nflu (À ), fab-dc/nflu(+ ), fab-dc/nflu(À ), fab-dc/nflu(- )) and increased compared to umdna. the data provide an argument that the ner system of higher eukaryotes recognizes and eliminates injured dna fragments on a multi-criteria basis. it is well known that dna plays crucial role in the biological system because of including all the genetic information for cellular function. therefore, the interaction of molecules with dna has gained interest in the medicinal chemistry to explore new anticancer agent. photodynamic therapy which is alternative cancer treatment method depends on free radicals and singlet oxygen to destroy tumor tissue via necrosis and apoptosis. phthalocyanines (pcs) are used for photodynamic therapy because of their absorption of high wavelength light ability and they have high triplet quantum state yields and long lifetimes in triplet states. also they do not have any toxic effect without light. in this study the novel synthesized - [ -( morpholin- -ylethoxy) ethoxy]phthalonitrile substitued zinc(ii), manganese(ii) and copper(ii) phthalocyanines were used. the potential properties of phthalocyanine compounds for photodynamic therapy were purposed to reveal by the preliminary work. for this aim, the mode of dna binding, photocleavage and topoisomerase i inhibition of these compounds were investigated. - [ -( -morpholin- -ylethoxy) ethoxy]phthalonitrile substitued zinc(ii), manganese(ii) and copper(ii) phthalocyanine compounds have been synthesized. the interaction of novel pcs compounds with calf thymus (ct) dna was investigated by using uv-vis spectroscopy, thermal denaturation studies and viscosity measurements. additionally, dna photocleavage and topoisomerase i inhibition studies were performed to pbr dna by using agarose gel electrophoresis. the interaction studies indicated that pcs compounds powerfully bound via an intercalation mechanism with ct-dna. these compounds showed efficiently dna photocleavage under irradiation at nm. the all of pcs inhibited topoisomerase i in a dose-dependent manner. all the experimental studies showed that pc compounds might be used agents for photodynamic therapy. p- . . - target search by base excision repair dna glycosylases e. dyatlova, g. mechetin, d. zharkov institute of chemical biology and fundamental medicine, novosibirsk, russia the problem of rapid target search in dna is faced by transcription factors, restriction endonucleases, dna repair enzymes and other sequence-or structure-specific dna-binding proteins. theoretically, the fastest target search in dna can be achieved by combining one-dimensional diffusion along the dna contour (processive search) and three-dimensional diffusion (distributive search). the balance between these search modes depends on many factors affecting dna-protein interactions, such as the presence of mono-and divalent cations, competing proteins, crowding effect, etc. presently, the mechanisms of target search are understood only for a handful of enzymes. we have recently developed an assay to study target search by dna repair enzymes, based on cleavage of oligonucleotide substrate containing two targets. thus, the distance between the targets can be precisely controlled, and any modification can be introduced into dna. subsequently, the probability of correlated cleavage (p cc ) is estimated, reflecting the efficiency of enzyme transfer between the specific sites. in this work, we have investigated five repair enzymes: e. coli endonuclease viii (nei), its human homologs neil and neil , and uracil-dna-glycosylases (ung) from e. coli and vaccinia virus. as expected, p cc of all enzymes depended on the ionic strength of the solution and the presence of mg + . ung from vaccinia virus was the most sensitive to these factors, raising questions about its proficiency as a suggested processivity factor of viral dna polymerase. nei, neil and neil showed a peak of p cc at low but non-zero ionic strength indicating that nonpolar interactions contribute to binding of these proteins to nonspecific dna. this conclusion was also supported by analyzing amino acid conservation in the catalytic core of nei. introduction of bulky fluorescent group between two specific sites greatly reduced the ability of glycosylases to slide along dna. this work was supported by rsf ( - - ). p- . . - does causes mhz magnetic field application kras and p mutations in colon?: occurences histopatologically and microbiologically changes in colon determination of kirsten rat sarcoma (kras) and p gene mutations in colon. materials and methods: in this study, three groups were prepared as control,sham and electromagnetic field (emf) group. mhz radiofrequency (rf) radiation was produced by using an electromagnetic energy generator.the emf group rats were exposed to electromagnetic field for weeks as minutes per day.at the end of experiments, rats were sacrificed under ethyl ether anesthesia and the rat colons were dissected.fecal speciments were collected.fecal dna (for detection of fusobacterium and bacteroides) and colonic dna (for detection of kras and p mutations) were isolated.rt-pcr tchnique was used for detection of bacterias and mutations. results: no any differences was observed histopathologically between control and sham groups.erosions and partial losses were observed at mucosal epitelium in the emf group.the corrupted gland structure, the mucosal edema and the inflammatory cell infiltration were observed.the amout of collagen was increased and fibrosis was detected in emf group.goblet cell number decreased statistically significant when compared to control and sham groups (p < . ).the amount of fusobacterium increased significantly in emf group compared to controls.the difference was not detected between groups in the amount of bacteroides.all the samples analysed for kras and tp mutations in the colon tissue were found to be wild type.no significant difference was observed between the control group and the emf applied group. discussion and conclusion: in conclusions,for weeks minute/day exposure to mhz emf caused histopatological damage in rat colon.the amount of fusobacterium is increased.emf exposure did not caused to kras and p mutations in colon tissue. p- . . - synthesis, antimicrobial activity, genotoxicity, dna binding and dna cleavage studies of new glycine methyl ester derivative schiff base there has been an increasing focus on the binding study of small molecules to dna during the last decades, since dna is an important genetic substance in organisms. therefore, the current growing interest in small molecules that are capable of binding and cleaving dna is related to their utility in the design and development of synthetic restriction enzymes, new drugs, dna agents, and also to their ability to probe the structure of dna itself. in recent years, schiff bases have found increased application in pharmaceutical research, organic synthesis, and bio-processes. schiff bases are considered as favored and the most widely used ligands, due to their metal complexes having variety of applications as antibacterial and anticancer agents. in this study, we report the synthesis and characterization of a novel glycine methyl ester derivative schiff base. the minimal inhibitory concentration (mic) of the compound was screened in vitro against bacteria and yeast cultures using broth micro dilution tests. antimutagenic activity of compound was tested in the absence of metabolic activation. also, dna binding and dna cleavage were investigated of compound by uv-vis spectroscopy and agarose gel electrophoresis respectively. consequently, this compound differs significantly in its activity against tested microorganisms. this difference may be attributed to the fact that the cell wall in gram-positive bacteria is a single layer, whereas the gram-negative bacteria cell wall is a multilayered structure, and the yeast cell wall is quite complex. the compound inhibited the base pair mutation in the absence of s with high inhibition rate. uv-vis spectroscopy studies of the interactions between the compound and calf thymus dna (ct-dna) showed that the compound interacts with dna via intercalative binding. to date a large number of the sequences in the human genome (g motifs) with the potential to form a spatial structure, gquadruplexes is known. g motifs were found in the promoter regions of most of the known oncogenes. recent experimental studies have shown that genome instability directly related to the non-canonical dna structures, including g-quadruplexes. in this work we study the distribution of somatic snvs within the g motifs in tumor samples with the aim to identify involvement of the motifs in the process of mutagenesis in pancreatic cancer. using the access kindly provided by the international icgc consortium to the database, we analyzed samples of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma and samples of pancreatic endocrine neoplasms. we considered only the promoter regions as the richest with g-quadruplex motifs. we found that quadruplex sequences have the ability to focus somatic snvs. this could be explained by the errors of polymerase during replication through secondary dna structures. furthermore, the snvs occur much more often in loops of g motifs than in g blocks, without changing the motive. in addition, t>g(a>c) and t>c(a>g) substitutions occur significantly more likely in loops which in turn stabilize the g-quadruplex structure. the cancer-related mutations tend to increasing the length of g blocks. the conservation of g motifs may indicate an important functional significance of g-quadruplex structures in human genome. supported by project no. - - of the russian science foundation. background: multiple myeloma (mm) is a rare, leading to bone destruction and marrow failure, largely incurable malignant disease of plasma cells. anemia (mostly normocytic normochromic) is seen in most patients. mean platelet volume (mpv) is a laboratory marker of platelet function and activity, the most accurate measure of platelet size. the aim of this study was to investigate the mean platelet volume (mpv) values in this disease. materials and methods: whole blood samples were collected from healthy controls and patients with mm. the mean age for controls and patients were . ae . and . ae . years, respectively. mpv levels were calculated with cancer is a chronic disease in the world which is the second leading cause of death, after cardiovascular diseases. benzimidazoles have been known to act as antiproliferative or anticancer agents in chemotherapeutic drug research area. in this regard we aimed to investigate the cytotoxic and apoptotic properties of novel benzimidazole derivatives bearing pyridyl/pyrimidinyl piperazine moiety against a lung adenocarcinoma cells. a lung adenocarcinoma cell lines were used in the studies. the cytotoxic activities of the tested compounds were determined by mtt assay. detection of apoptosis was performed using annexin v-fitc apoptosis detection kit bd, pharmingen according to the manufacturer's instruction. all measurements were performed on a facs-calibur cytometer. the ic values of the compounds were determined for a cell line. compounds , and which were including -chlorophenyl, -nitrophenyl on pyridine ring; -fluorophenyl on pyrimidine moiety, had significant cytotoxic activity with ic values lower than . ae . lg/ml. compound showed the highest cytotoxic activity with a ic value of . ae . lg/ml, whereas cisplatin ic values were . ae . lg/ml lg/ml against a cells. cytotoxic activity of compound and with a ic value were . ae . and . ae . lg/ml, respectively. also, compound showed the highest population of early apoptotic cells ( . %) of the tested compounds which was . -fold higher than for cisplatin. compound produced a comparable population of apoptotic cells with a percentage of . %, respectively according to cisplatin's percentage of . %. it was determined that synthesized compounds , and had considerable anticancer activity against a cell lines compared to cisplatin. compound including -florophenyl on pyrimidine ring was the most cytotoxic compound against the a cell line. our study results demonstrated that compound , also induced apopototic pathway on a cells. p- . . in vitro/in vivo antimitotic activity and structure-activity relationships of new glaziovianin a isoflavone series glaziovianin a (gva), isolated from the leaves of the astelia glazioviana, demonstrated cytotoxicity, disrupting microtubule structure and dynamics of hl- cells. the aim of the present work was to devise a concise synthetic route toward gva and its derivatives in order to expand structure-activity relationship studies and to investigate their anti-mitotic effect. a concise six-step protocol for the synthesis of gva and its alkoxyphenyl derivatives starting with readily available plant metabolites from dill and parsley seeds was developed. the sea urchin embryo tests confirmed that gva directly affects tubulin/ microtubule dynamics and structure. the b-ring substitution pattern of gva derivatives exhibited strong effects on activity. according to the assay results, the anti-mitotic activity decreased in the following order: gva > myristicin ≥ , , -trimethoxyphenyl = -methoxyphenyl > dillapiol > -methoxyphenyl> , dimethoxyphenyl > , , , -tetramethoxyphenyl derivatives. a methylenedioxy moiety was essential for the activity of compounds substituted with four b-ring alkoxy groups. the mts assay of the limited panel of cancer cell lines shows that gva displayed the highest inhibitory activity, with ic values ranging from . (a cells) to . lm (mda-mb- cells). compounds, containing , , -trimethoxy and apiol-derived b-rings, respectively, were less active. other isoflavones did not affect cancer cell growth up to lm. anti-proliferative effects of isoflavones observed in both the sea urchin embryo model and human cancer cell lines correlated well. importantly, none of the synthesized isoflavones demonstrated cytotoxicity in human pbmcs, up to lm. in summary, gva and its analogues were synthesized via a scalable six-step reaction sequence. the gva and its analogues containing , , -trimethoxy and apiol-derived b-rings were found to be promising anti-mitotic microtubule destabilizing agents with low toxicity against human pbmcs. bag- is a multifunctional protein which has interactions with a number of cellular proteins; nuclear hormone receptors, bcl- , hsp /hsc family, growth hormone receptors, raf- , ubiquitin machinery and dna to regulate cell survival. for this reason, bag- is a critical molecular player in the regulation of cell survival signaling and apoptosis mechanism. elevated expression levels of bag- are associated with progression of cancer. in the treatment of breast cancer, silencing tools as a promising combined therapy strategies in the presence of classical chemotherapeutics gain importance to investigate interaction networks of cell death and survival signaling pathways. therefore, we aim to understand potential role of bag- silencing in the treatment of breast cancer cells with apoptotic agents; cisplatin or paclitaxel. our results showed that, silencing of bag- enhanced cisplatin or paclitaxel-induced apoptosis in mcf- cells by down-regulating antiapoptotic and upregulating proapoptotic bcl- family proteins, changes on cell cycle, upregulation on subg phase, activating caspases and cleavage of parp. in addition, knockdown of antiapoptotic bag- has a suppressive role in pi k and akt signaling pathway in mcf- breast cancer cells through inhibition of akt phosphorylation and downregulation on pi k. investigation targets of akt pathway showed that mtor cell survival pathway also affected through bag- silencing. bag- silencing inhibited mtor signaling via downregulating both rictor and raptor proteins which are the members of rapamycininsensitive mtorc and rapamycin-sensitive mtorc complexes, respectively. knockdown strategies of bag- is important to enlighten the network interactions of bag- and clarify its interaction partners in the cells. therefore utilization of bag- targeted strategies might further increase therapeutic efficiency of drugs through inhibiting cell survival machinery in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer. p- . . - biological activity evaluation of new , , trisubstituted triazine derivatives bearing different heterocyclic rings against lung cancer cell lines l. yurttas, g. akalin c ß iftc ßi, h. e. temel, b. demir anadolu university, eskisehir, turkey cancer is one of the major death causing disease worldwide. among the various cell types occurs on different organs, lung cancer is one leading cause of cancer death accounting for approximately % of all female and % of all male cancer deaths in . the resistance development, cytotoxicity and inadequacy are the main encountered problems by the treatment with existing chemotherapeutic agents. therefore, there is continuous need to discover new active and non-toxic molecules. -[ -( , -bis( -substituted phenyl)- , , -triazin- -yl)piperazin- -yl]- -[benzimidazole/benzoxazole/benzothiazole- -yl)thio]ethanone ( - ) derivatives were synthesized with a four-step synthetic procedure using toluil, anisil and -chlorobenzil as starting materials. the anticancer activity of the compounds was evaluated using the methods mtt ( -( , -dimethylthiazol- -yl )- , -diphenyltetrazolium bromide), brdu (bromodeoxyuridine) assays and flow cytometric analysis against lung cancer cell lines. the lipoxygenase enzyme inhibition activity of the compounds were also investigated using the method described by baylac and racine. compounds was found to have (inhibition concentration) ic values between - lg/ml. the early and late apoptotic cell percentage was determined as . for compound by flow cytometric analysis. the lox inhibition activity was found . ae . for compound . compound bearing -chlorobenzil and benzoxazole moieties was found as the most active compound when we evaluate anticancer potential of all compounds. the lox enzyme inhibition was indicated for the compound including methyl substituent on phenyl rings. the dna synthesis inhibition of the compounds has been still studied at the concentrations ic / , ic and ic x . p- . . - single amino acid substitutions and deletions modulate the drp-lyase activity of human dna polymerase iota n. miropolskaya, i. petushkov, a. kulbachinskiy, a. makarova institute of molecular genetics, moscow, russia dna polymerase iota (pol ι) is a y-family dna polymerase that possesses an unusual combination of properties. due to the special organization of the active site pol ι has a very low accuracy of dna synthesis but possesses an ability to bypass a variety of dna lesions. in addition to the dna polymerization activity, human pol ι also possesses an intrinsic -deoxyribose phosphate (drp)-lyase activity. removal of the drp group is a pivotal step in base excision repair (ber) in vivo. although pol b plays a key role in the drp group cleavage and dna synthesis during ber, pol ι was shown to complement the in vitro single-nucleotide ber deficiency of pol b null cell extracts and was suggested to be involved in ber under oxidative stress. the drp-lyase active site in pol ι is still not known. to address the mechanism of the drp-lyase activity of pol ι we obtained a series of pol ι mutant variants including point mutations of conserved lysine residues and deletions in different locations. we purified human pol ι variants from yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae and tested the effect of mutations on the cleavage of an internal -drp group in oligonucleotide dna substrates in the presence or absence for me + ions. the experiments revealed several point amino acids substitutions that significantly affected the drp-lyase activity of pol ι, thus suggesting a possible location of the drp-lyase active site. furthermore, we showed that deletions in the n-terminus of pol ι and metal ions modulate its drp-lyase activity, which may play an important role in the regulation of pol ι activities in vivo. this work was supported by russian foundation for basic research grants - - -a and - - -mol-a-mos and by the russian academy of sciences presidium program in molecular and cellular biology. rosmarinus officinalis, commonly known as rosemary, is an aromatic plant belongs to lamiaceae family. from past to now, rosemary have been used as a traditional medicine to cure for various illnesses such as diabetes, rheumatism and cancer. recent studies have shown that rosemary is effective for various cancer types. in this study we aimed to investigate the effect of rosemary in glioblastoma cells (gbm) by comparison with etoposide and the effect of rosemary by concurrent application with the etoposide. gbm cells (u mg) were seeded into the well plates and cultured with dmem supplemented with % fetal bovine serum. rosmarinus officinalis tea was prepared just as traditional usage and filter sterilized. at the second day of the culture rosemary in / (v/v) dilution ratio was given to first group, lm etoposide was given to second group, / (v/v) diluted rosemary and lm etoposide together were given to third group. after one day incubation cell viability was measured by neutral red assay. it was observed that rosemary reduced the viability of gbm cells by nearly % , etoposide reduced the viability by nearly % and rosemary with the etoposide reduced the viability by nearly % . the results showed that rosemary was able to reduce the viability of gbm cells but hadn't got an increasing or inhibiting potential over the etoposide's cytotoxic effect. from our previous studies we know that rosemary increases the proliferation of mouse embryonic fibroblasts. it is considered that rosemary might have a protection potential from dna damages and when rosemary is used with etoposide during the cancer treatment, it might reduce the side effects on healthy cells. in conclusion rosemary promises hope for developing new cancer treatment strategies and reducing the side effects of chemotherapeutics. for further studies it is aimed to examine the effects of rosemary with other chemotherapeutics and if rosemary has got a protection potential from the genotoxic stress. morpholine moiety has been found to be an excellent pharmacophore in medicinal chemistry and a number of molecules possessing morpholine skeleton are the clinically approved drugs. in this present study, we aimed to investigate the possible underlying apoptotic mechanism for the cytotoxicity of new morpholine dithiocarbamate derivatives bearing -( -aryl- -oxoethyl)- -substituted benzimidazole moiety on c glioma. c glioma cell lines were used in the studies. the cytotoxic activities of the tested compounds were determined by cell proliferation analysis using standard ( -( , -dimethylthiazol- -yl)- , diphenyltetrazolium bromide (mtt) assay. detection of apoptosis was performed using annexin v-fitc apoptosis detection kit bd, pharmingen according to the manufacturer's instruction. all measurements were performed on a facs-calibur cytometer. the ic values of the compounds were determined for c cell line. compounds , , , , and , which were including hydrogen, -methyl, -methoxy, -chloro and -floro substituents on phenyl acetyl moiety, had significant cytotoxic activity with ic values lower than lg/ml. compound showed the highest cytotoxic activity with a ic value of lg/ml, whereas cisplatin ic values were lg/ml against c cells. cytotoxic activity of compound , , , and with a ic value were , , and lg/ml, respectively. compound , and showed the highest population of early apoptotic cells as . , . , and . % respectively compared to cisplatin ( . %). also, compounds caused dna synthesis inhibition depend on their ic values by brdu assay. conclusions: it was concluded that synthesized compounds had considerable anticancer activity against c cell lines. however, compound , and including -methyl, -chloro and -floro substituents were the most active compounds against the c cell line. also our study results showed that compound , , induced apoptosis in c glioma cells. rutin is a glycosided flavonoid and known to have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties.trail induces the apoptosis of tumor cells and has no significant toxic effect on normal cells. although trail is a promising anticancer agent, trail resistance is a major barrier to effective cancer therapy. this study was conducted to examine the utility of the combined use of rutin and trail in prostate cancer cells. pc- and du prostate cancer cells were treated with rutin ( - um) and/or trail ( ng/ml), cell viability and migration were examined. cell viability was determined by trypan blue exclusion and mtt assay. cell migration was determined by wound healing assay. furthermore, lactate dehydrogenases (ldh) levels of medium were determined as biochemical markers of cell viability. pc- and du- prostate cancer cells were treated with rutin for and hours incubation and ic doses for hours incubation were determined um and um respectively. treatment with rutin, pc- cells is more sensitive than du cells. rutin and rutin plus trail inhibit prostate cancer cell growth in a dose-dependent manner. treatment with trail has no effect at inhibiting growth of pc- and du prostate cancer cells. the combination of rutin and trail elicit a synergistic antitumor effect on pc- and du prostate cancer cells. there is a significant increased in rutin and rutin+trail treatments group of ldh activities with respect to control and trail group. conclusion: present data show that rutin efficiently enhanced trail effects in prostate cancer cells. combined treatment with rutin and trail is more effective than the individual treatments of trail at inhibiting growth of prostate cancer cells. p- . . - determination of antigenotoxic, proliferative and cytotoxic properties of ellagic acid since ancient time, people use plant for traditional treatment. plants or fruits are produced different type of secondary metabolites. particularly phenolic phytochemicals from plants play an important role in the prevention and treatment of radical damage by inactivating the reactive oxygen compounds due to their antioxidant properties. however, the structure and the activities of many herbal products are not fully elucidated yet and there are several studies about the toxicity of herbal antioxidants and their possible risks to human health. ellagic acid, phenolic compounds, is an important substance. ellagic acid is a naturally occurring plant phenol found in numerous fruits, including blackberries, raspberries, strawberries, cranberries, walnuts, pecans, pomegranates and wolfberries. different researchers give some information about the biological activities of ellagic acid. in this study, we aimed to determine the cytotoxic, proliferative and antigenotoxic effects of ellagic acid, which is phenolic compounds found in natural products. cytotoxic effects of ellagic acid on huvec is investigated by lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) and cell proliferation (wst- ) methods; and antigenotoxic effects against ccl on human lymphocytes is investigated by single cell gel electrophoresis (comet) methods. the rusults showed that high concentration ( and lm) of ellagic acid has cytotoxic and mutagenic effects, but showed antiproliferative effects. on the contrary, low concentrations ( , , . lm) of ellagic acid has anticytotoxic and antimutagenic effects. as a conclusion, low concentrations of ellagic acid might be use treatment of some disease. but high concentrations of ellagic acid constitute a risk factors for people. keywords: cytotoxicity, antiproliferation, wst- , ldh, rtca-sp the constitutive nuclear factor kappa b (nf-kb) activation is widely found in diverse types of hematologic malignancies such as acute myeloid leukemia (aml) and chronic myeloid leukemia (cml) as well as solid tumors. inhibition of nf-kb signaling via proteasome inhibitors such as bortezomib can induce apoptosis in myeloid leukemia cell lines. however it is not clear whether the cytotoxic effects of bortezomib on myeloid leukemia cell lines is due to direct inhibition of nf-kb or another pathway, such as dna damage. in this study, cml cell line k and aml cell line hl- were treated with bortezomib (bor) , etoposide (eto) and camptothecin (cpt) alone or in dual combination with these drugs, following by measuring the effects on cell viability, apoptosis and signal pathways. the effect on cell viability was determined using the mtt assay. the data were used in combination index and isobologram analysis. the expression levels of apoptototic genes (bcl , bax and caspase ), the related dna damage genes (atm and atr) and the involved genes in nf-kb signaling (rela and p ) were determined by real time rt-pcr. we showed that combinations of bor with topoisomerase inhibitors (cpt and eto) exhibited synergistic cytotoxic effect in k cell line but not in hl- cell line. the combination treatment increased apoptosis and dna damage response. dnadamage-sensing kinases were detected in k and hl- cells following treatment with bor as similar as topoisomerase inhibitors. bor increased the mrna levels of atm and atr dramatically, which indicated active dna damage in the myeloid cell lines. furthermore, bor induced apoptotic cell death by decreasing bcl and increasing bax and caspase levels. these effects of bor were observed to correlated with increasing the p expression levels. this study on the mechanism of action of bor indicates that this compound affects several pathways involved in the control of cell cycle progression, apoptosis and dna damage. p- . . - analysis of molecular cytogenetic alterations in gastric and colon carcinoma by array-based comparative genomic hybridization (array cgh) introduction: genomic dna regions are frequently lost or gained during tumor progression. we aimed to evaluate tumor samples of patients with gastric cancer and colorectal carcinoma to show these genetic alterations by array-based comparative genomic hybridization (array cgh) method. materials and methods: dna isolation was performed from the tumor samples obtained from sixteen patients with primary gastric adenocarcinoma and twelve patients with colon adenocarcinoma. then, agarose gel electrophoresis was performed in those dna samples. following electrophoresis of dna, array cgh procedure was performed to four patients with gastric adenocarcinoma and three patients with colon adenocarcinoma who had dna breaks with - kb. results: after array-cgh study, many common genetic changes in gastric and colon cancer genome were determined. in gastric cancer dna samples, common losses were detected in chromosome p . , p . , q , q , p . , q . , q . , q . , q . , p , q . , q . , q . , q . , q . , q . , and q . , and also common gains were detected in chromosome p . , q , q . , q . and xq . in colon cancer dna samples, common losses were detected in chromosome p . , q , p . , p . , q . , q . , q . , q . , p . , p . , q . , and q . , and also common gains were detected.in chromosome q . , xp . , xp . , xp . , xp . and xq . both in gastric and colon cancer dna samples, common losses were detected in chromosome q . , q . , and p . , and common gains were detected in xq . discussion and conclusion: we think that these common changes, generally in dna loss areas harboring tumor suppressor genes and dna gain areas harboring oncogenes, may important in gastrointestinal tumorigenesis. the dna of every cell is under a constant attack by various mutagenic factors which damage the dna and can cause cell cycle arrest and even cell death. accumulation of dna damage is the basis for cancer development and one of the reasons for aging of the organisms. in order to preserve the integrity of its dna cells have evolved an impressive array of dna repair pathways, which are precisely coordinated with the progression of the cell cycle. one of the first events at the site of dna damage is poly(adp-ribose) polymerase (parp ) recruitment which is a sensor for single strand breaks in dna. parp catalyzes the synthesis of poly(adp-ribose) or par which is needed for the recruitment of many other dna repair proteins by means of par-binding domains. we used high speed confocal spinning-disk microscopy of living cells to obtain precise kinetics of recruitment of par-dependent proteins to the sites of laser induced dna damage. our results show that the investigated par-dependent proteins are recruited to dna damage sites in the matter of seconds, they reach peak intensities for to seconds after damage infliction and start dissociating. the recruitment of the proteins is entirely dependent on par because addition of parp inhibitor abbrogated their recruitment. the use of spinning-disk microscopy of living cells allowed us to obtain the kinetics of recruitment of the studied proteins to the sites of dna damage. the results are consistent with the fact that parp and par-dependent proteins are quickly recruited to damage sites and generation of par is essential for other dna repair protein recruitment. the precise kinetic curves may serve as a basis for investigating how they will change or if they will change at all when cells are put in different conditions or treated with various chemical substances affecting dna metabolism and repair. introduction: chronic myeloid leukemia (cml) is a myeloproliferative disease associated with reciprocal translocation between chromosomes and . bcr-abl fusion gene which exhibits constitutively active tyrosine kinase activity has a main role in cml. the tyrosine kinase inhibitor imatinib is used as a first line treatment in cml patients, but imatinib resistance leads to failure in therapy. the application of imatinib in combination with other anticancer agents may be a strategy to increase the antileukemic effect of imatinib. in this study, we have investigated the antiproliferative effect two novel agents: a benzamide derivative xt and a benzoxazole derivative xt b in combination with imatinib. these molecules were investigated in imatinib-sensitive (k s) and imatinib-resistant (k r) cml cell lines. materials and methods: antiproliferative and apoptotic effects were assessed by mtt assays and flow-cytometry, respectively. we also evaluated the effects of these compounds on the expression of apoptosis-related genes bax, bcl- , bad, bim, bcl-xl and mcl by real-time quantitative pcr. results: treatment of k cells with xt increased the expression levels of the pro-apoptotic genes bax, bad and bim in both sensitive and resistant cells. however, xt b was not found to have similar effects on k r and k s cells. combined application of xt increased cell death in the mtt assay. mtt assay demonstrated that ic for xt treated cells in k r with imatinib (ic = . ) is lower than k r without imatinib (ic = . ). discussion and conclusion: our results showed that combining xt with imatinib has more antiproliferative and apoptotic effect on a cml cell line. as a result combination of xt with imatinib can be an alternative approach to overcome imatinib resistance. introduction: the mmr(mismatche repair) system recognizes base-base mismatches and insertion or deletion loops in doublestranded dna, and it degrades the error-containing region of the newly synthesized strand, allowing the polymerase to correctly resynthesize the second strand according to the template sequence. the human mmr system includes the mlh and msh . alteration in expression or a defect in mlh or msh can cause resistance to anti-cancer drugs used in chemotherapy. the attempt of the mmr system to detect drug induced dna damage, triggers the activation of apoptosis, a mechanism which may enhance the cytotoxicity of chemotherapy. loss of the mmr system would make the neoplastic cell less able to initiate apoptosis. inability to initiate apoptosis could be a mechanism of resistance to drugs. chronic myeloid leukemia (cml) is a clonal disease originating from aberrations in hematopoietic stem cell. imatinib, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor has significantly improved clinical outcome for cml patients. however, patients develop resistance when the disease progresses to the blast phase (bp) and there are several mechanisms involved in imatinib resistance. in this study we investigated the role of mmr system in imatinib resistance. materials and methods: k s (sensitive) and k r (resistance) were grown in rpmi- . k r cells were maintained in rpmi- medium supplemented with lm imatinib rna isolation, cdna synthesis, rt-pcr was performed respectively. results: the results demonstrated that expression of mlh in k r cells is dramatically lower than equal amount of imatinib treated k s cells, whereas msh expression level did not change in both cell lines. conclusion: it can be suggested that alteration and down-regulation of mlh genes leads to imatinib resistance. p- . . - characterization of interaction between rad inhibitor dids and human serum albumin d. velic, s. henry, c. charlier, m. popova, p. weigel, j. masson, i. nabiev, f. fleury cnrs/university of nantes, nantes, france -diisothiocyanostilbene- , -disulfonic acid (dids) has been largely used during the last years for its inhibitory effect on anion transporters and channels. more recently, ishida and colleagues have described a possible mechanism by which dids inhibits rad -mediated homologous pairing and strand exchange, key processes in dna repair by homologous recombination. thus, dids could act as a potential revertant of radioand chemo-resistance in cancer cells, which is the major cause of failure during therapeutic protocols. new drugs targeting rad protein have since been developed with potential use for medical applications. in this context, we attempted to determine the behaviour of dids towards blood and plasma proteins such as serum albumins. firstly, we analysed the effects of several environmental factors such as solvent polarity, which may affect the stability of the molecule. secondly, we analysed the spectroscopic properties of dids in the presence of human or bovine serum albumin proteins. uv-visible absorption, circular dichroism, fluorescence spectroscopy and isothermal calorimetry were used. here we show for the first time that dids can interact with both serum albumins. we have also determined the characteristics of these interactions. the comparison of several dids derivatives led us to identify the essential chemical moiety of this compound involved in the interaction. moreover, by using site competition approaches we show that the main binding site for this molecule is in subdomain ib of the protein. these findings show that the binding of dids to serum albumin proteins may change the equilibrium between the free and bound dids forms, thereby affecting its bioavailability and efficiency against the rad recombinase protein. p- . . - mechanism of tap beta-mdm autoregulation p is a transcription factor which is the member of a p family. it regulates many cellular processes, such as apoptosis, cell cycle, and senescence. in contrast to p , p is rarely mutated in tumors and elevated p expression is observed in many types of cancers including hepatocellular carcinoma, neuroblastoma, and lung. defining regulatory mechanisms which control p protein abundance and activity will be crucial for the development of new therapeutic strategies for cancers. mdm is known as the key player in regulation stability and activity of p . in addition, p induces mdm transcriptional activity, and caspase- , activations which cleave mdm n-terminal at asp . cleaved form of mdm binds p and promotes its stabilization. mdm suggested as a candidate to modulate p activity and stability too. however, an interaction between p and mdm has not defined well. in this study, we aimed to analyze the role of mdm in p stability. to define this relationship, firstly, we overexpressed the tap beta isoform using trex system in hep b. tap beta and mdm protein levels were determined by western blot. to examine whether mdm mediate tap beta protein degradation by the proteasomes, cells were treated with proteasome inhibitor, mg for hours prior to analysis. previous studies showed that p -induced caspase- and caspase- activation cleaves mdm . considering this, we firstly examined caspase- activation by western blot in hep b tap beta cells. then we analyzed expression of cleaved mdm and tap beta levels following caspase inhibitor, z-vad-fmk treatment. as a conclusion, tap beta-induced full-length mdm- expression. furthermore, tap beta enhanced cleavage of mdm via increased caspase- activation. in addition, inhibition of caspase- activation caused a decrease in cleaved-mdm levels in parallel with tap beta expression repression. our results suggested positive regulation between mdm -tap beta. hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) is one of the most common type of liver cancer and third leading cause of cancer related deaths in worldwide. discovery of new targets is important in survival of hcc patients. p is a transcription factor which is the member of p family. it has two promoters; while p promoter expresses apoptotic ta isoforms, p promoter expresses anti-apoptotic dn isoforms. in addition, alternative splicing in c terminal creates many isoforms of ta and dn p . it has been shown that both tap and dnp isoforms are expressed in hcc patient tissue and cell lines. the ratio between tap and dnp affects the apoptotic response, drug response and prognosis. accordingly, identification of the role of p and its targets are important in discovery of new treatment strategies in hcc. to understand the role of p isoforms in hcc, firstly we performed mtt assays following dna-damaging drugs and multikinase inhibitor, sorafenib treatment to categorize hcc cell lines as resistant or sensitive. after that, we analyzed the expression levels of tap isoforms via western blot in all hcc cell lines. then we overexpressed the tap beta isoform using trex system in hep b and snu cells. these two clones were analyzed for dna damaging drug response by mtt, cell cycle and apoptosis by flow cytometry, and tumor formation by in vitro and in vivo experiments. in scope of our study; . only tap alpha isoform is expressed in a few hcc cell lines. . there is no correlation between basal expression of p isoforms and drug responses in hcc cell lines. . there is no change in expression of p isoforms after treatment of drugs. . we showed that the ectopic expression of tap beta in hep b arrested the cell cycle in g / s and decreased the colony formation. therefore, the capacity of tumor formation of the cells dramatically decreased in scid mice. as a result, we revealed that tap beta play role in tumor formation, cell cycle arrest, dna damage responses in hcc. p- . . - biochemical characterization of exonuclease iii-family ap endonuclease point mutants reveals role of conserved amino acid residues in the nir-specific enzymes a. mursalimov, z. koshenov, t. yeleussizov, m. redrejo-rodriguez, a. ishchenko, b. t. matkarimov, m. saparbaev national laboratory astana, astana, kazakhstan oxidative dna damage caused by reactive oxygen species is believed to be a major type of endogenous cellular damage. oxidatively damaged dna bases are substrates for two overlapping repair pathways: dna glycosylase-initiated base excision (ber) and apurinic/apyrimidinic (ap) endonuclease-initiated nucleotide incision repair (nir). in the ber pathway, an ap endonuclease cleaves dna at ap sites and -blocking moieties generated by dna glycosylases, whereas in the nir pathway, the same ap endonuclease incises dna to a number of oxidized bases. majority of characterized ap endonucleases possess classic ber activities and about half of them are able to catalyze nir activity. at present, the molecular basis of dna substrate specificities of various ap endonucleases remains unclear. here, we examined amino-acid sequence requirement of the nir activity of human major ap endonuclease (ape ). amino acid sequence alignment of various ap endonucleases including e coli exonuclease iii (xth), human ape and archaeal mth revealed conserved amino acid residues in the nir-specific ap endonucleases ape , mth and exoa that are absent in xth. based on these data, we constructed four ape point mutants y h, n q, g s and t d and examined their dna substrate specificities. results obtained from biochemical characterization of ape mutants are discussed in the light of the evolutionary conserved dna repair functions of ap endonucleases and whether these functions can be mutationally separated from. since its discovery some years ago, cisplatin has evolved for its efficacy in one of the most used drugs in treatment of various cancer types. huge effort was invested in understanding the action of cisplatin and development of more potent drugs. they target mainly neighboring purine bases of nuclear dna forming covalent intra-or inter-strand cross-links that affect inhibition of replication and transcription, cell cycle arrest, and attempted repair of the damaged nucleotides. if such damage cannot be removed the cell dies. we have studied the details of the binding site of the short oligonucleotide modified by a platinum compound using complementary solution techniques used in modern structural biology, including raman spectroscopy with dft calculations aided interpretation of the obtained vibrational spectra. moreover, the calculated structure of the dna duplex was verified using saxs (small angle x-ray scattering) curve. in our contribution, we will present an nmr structure of a dna cross-linked with a cisplatin derivative containing a cyclohexane ring. at this atomic level resolution, structural features probably influencing cytostatic effects are described and compared with previously published structures. common structural features of previously determined structures are: a significant roll ( - °) of the guanine bases involved in the cross-link, bending and unwinding of the double helix at the site of cross-link and orientation towards the major groove. also, the platinum-guanine plane angle varies between and °. although the experimental structures were often used as the starting models for molecular dynamics (md) simulations, results of these md still leave many questions unresolved. the results of this research have been acquired within ceitec (lq ) project with financial contribution made by the ministry of education, youths and sports of the czech republic within special support paid from the national programme for sustainability ii funds. p- . . - ercc /xpd polymorphisms and colorectal cancer risk: a case control study in a north eastern iranian population j. mehrzad islamic azad university, neyshabur, iran excision repair cross-complimentary group (ercc ) is one of the important dna repair genes.ercc codon and polymorphisms has been shown to modulate cancer risk. we therefore assessed the relationship between the ercc polymorphisms and the susceptibility to colorectal cancer in a case-control study. there were lung cancer cases and matched healthy controls in this study. information concerning demographic and risk factors was obtained, each person donated ml blood for biomarker testing. ercc genotypes were determined by t-arms-pcr method. all of the statistical analyses were performed with spss (v . ). there was significant difference between the frequencies of ercc polymorphism in cancer cases and controls (p < . ). the frequencies of ercc gln allele were . % in controls and . % in cancer cases. the individuals with lys/gln+gln/gln combined genotype were at an increased risk for lung cancer as compared with those carrying the lys/lys genotype (adjusted or= . , %=ci . À . ). the above findings indicate that the genetic polymorphism in the ercc codon is associated with the risk of colorectal cancer in an iranian population (neyshabur citizenship). peptide pore blockers are potent tools to study structure and function of potassium voltage-gated channels (kv). kcsa-kv .x chimeras, in which a ligand-binding site of eukaryotic kv-channel is inserted into bacterial kcsa channel, mimic properly the pore domain of kv-channels. a fluorescence-based approach to study the binding of peptide blockers with kcsa-kv . -kcsa-kv . chimeras was developed by us. this approach rested on high-level expression of kcsa-kv .x chimeras in e.coli inner membrane, binding of fluorescently-labeled toxin at the surface of the spheroplast and analysis of competitive binding of studied ligands by laser scanning confocal microscopy (lscm). here we report on a new analytical system for search and study of kv . -channel blockers that combines bl (de ) cells expressing kcsa-kv . and rhodamine-labelled agitoxin (rh-agtx ) as a fluorescent probe. by tuning cultivation conditions, the high-level of membrane expression of kcsa-kv . was achieved. it was found that lowering both the growth temperature and the concentration of inducer resulted in significant increase in membrane-embedded kcsa-kv . . for system validation, wellknown kv channel blockers were studied by the method of competitive binding, and equilibrium dissociation constants were estimated for agtx , osk , and kaliotoxin. a new system was applied to study molecular determinants of peptide-kv . channel binding using a number of agtx mutants constructed by us, whose affinities to kcsakv . were measured. a new bioengineering fluorescent system is a robust and sensitive assay for assessing the binding activity of kv . channel blockers. it can be used to study interaction interfaces of toxinchannel complexes, to search for novel peptide blockers and to develop new potent and selective kv . -blockers for scientific and medical purposes. the work was supported by the grant - - from russian science foundation. asparagus racemosus root extracts (ar) have been exhibited to show a wide range of pharmacological benefits. in this study, liposomes of ar were developed and assessed their physicochemical properties and anti-inflammatory activity in monocytic leukemia cell line (thp- ). liposomes containing ratios of ar to lipid and phosphatidylcholine to cholesterol ratio were synthesized by thin-film hydration (tf), reverse-phase evaporation (rev), and polyol dilution (pd). the in vitro anti-inflammatory activity was assessed in terms of inhibition of tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnf-a) in lipopolysaccharide activated thp- by elisa. the size of ar liposomes prepared by tf were larger, whereas those prepared by rev and pd were smaller. ar to lipid ratio was shown to have no influence on particle size, whereas zeta potential enhanced with increasing ar to lipid ratio. ar liposomes with lipid ratio of : achieved the highest value of entrapment efficiency and were at the highest with polyol dilution method. ar was found to have no toxic effects on thp- cells. the anti-inflammatory activities of ar and ar liposomes in terms of tnf-a in thp- cells were was exhibited to possess the highest values of around % at ar concentration of lg/ml and % tnf-a inhibition tended to decline with the increasing amount of ar. this result may be attributed to the increased amount of liposomal particles being uptaken into the cells as a result of the increasing ar concentrations. it can be suggested that ar liposomes could be an alternative choice of topical/transdermal drug delivery for anti-inflammatory activity. p-mis- inhibition of ire signaling enzyme increases the expression of tumor suppressor genes and modifies their hypoxic regulation in u glioma cells d. tsymbal, o. minchenko palladin institute of biochemistry of the national academy of sciences of ukraine (nasu), kyiv, ukraine gliomas constitute one of the most aggressive groups of malignant neoplasms with poor survival prognosis and scarce therapeutic options. plentiful studies have proven the connection between endoplasmic reticulum stress and malignant growth. we have studied the effect of inhibition of ire (inositol requiring enzyme ), which is a central mediator of endoplasmic reticulum stress and controls cell proliferation and tumor growth, on hypoxic regulation of the expression of different proliferation related genes in u glioma cells. it was shown that inhibition of ire leads to up-regulation of the expression of krt , cd , mest, cenpu, myl , ing , ing , mybl , and mybl genes at the mrna level in u glioma cells, with more profound changes for mest, mybl , and cd genes. hypoxia leads to up-regulation of the expression of cd , ing , and ing genes and to down-regulationof krt gene in glioma cells. at the same time, inhibition of ire modifies the effect of hypoxia on the expression of all studied genes: suppresses effect of hypoxia on ing gene, eliminates hypoxic regulation of krt , cd , and ing genes in glioma cells. the present study demonstrates that inhibition of ire enhances the expression of all studied genes and modifies the hypoxic regulation of these gene expressions in gene specific manner and thus possibly contributes to slower glioma cell proliferation, but several aspects of this regulation remain to be further clarified. amplification and clonig of dna polymerase (pol ) of thermus scotoductus k isolated from an armenian goethermal spring a. saghatelyan, h. panosyan, a. trchounian, n. birkeland yerevan state university, yerevan, armenia the most important enzyme ''mined'' from thermophilic microorganisms is dna polymerase, which widely used in molecular biological studies. although dna polymerase produced by thermus aquaticus (taq polymerase) was launched into the market long back, isolation of more processive, reliable and stable dna polymerases from other species is a demand. the purpose of this work was to amplify and clone the pol gene of t. scotoductus strain k recently isolated from an armenian geothermal spring. the draft genome sequence of strain k was deposited under accession number ljjr . . genomic dna was isolated using genelute bacterial genomic dna kit. primers for the pol gene were designed manually. the gene was amplified using pfu polymerase, and amplicons (~ . kb) were ligated into the pet- b(+) vector (novagen) and transformed into chemically competent top escherichia coli. inserts were sequenced with t prom and t term primers, which showed that the gene sequence was correct and in the right reading frame and could be expressed in mesophilic e.coli. dna polymerases patented form different species of thermus are mostly comparable, suggesting that only limited natural variations in taq-like dna polymerase may be discovered. the pol gene from k shares % and % similarity with pol of t. scotoductus sa- ( . kb) and t. aquaticus, respectively. although the difference is not huge at sequence level, possible functional differences (e.g. stability, proofreading activity, resistance to different pcr inhibitors etc.) may occur. therefore, it is important to express and purify dna polymerase from strain k for further investigations. peptide ligands of the immunoglobulin g fc region identified by screening phage libraries and site-directed mutagenesis n. kruljec, p. molek, t. bratkovic young researcher, ljubljana, slovenia affinity chromatography based on immunoglobulin (ig)-binding proteins, such as staphylococcal protein a and streptococcal protein g, typically represents the initial step in therapeutic antibody purification process. however, this approach suffers from high cost, poor ligand stability and the requirement for relatively harsh elution conditions that can negatively impact activity and immunogenicity of antibodies. compared to protein ligands, peptides represent an interesting alternative due to higher stability and less expensive production. furthermore, the expected lower affinity for immunoglobulins should allow for elution under milder conditions. the aim of our research was to identify short peptide ligands for the fc region of human iggs. we have screened three commercially available phage display libraries of random cyclic and linear peptides for binding to human fc region in solution using an optimized biopanning approach. five non-homologous linear peptides were shown to specifically interact with the fc portion of immunoglobulins as verified by a set of phage elisa assays. individual phage-displayed peptides were able to recognize specific subclasses of igg. the highest-affinity peptide ( l- fc), which competed for fc binding with protein a, was subjected to mutagenesis studies. we displayed on phage several variants of l- fc with individual amino acid residues exchanged for alanine as well fragments of the parent peptide of different lengths and evaluated binding to fc with phage elisa to identify the minimal binding motif. binding characteristics of the minimized peptide were further analyzed using spr biosensor. the details will be disclosed at the meeting. diverse effects of ganoderma lucidum in combination with tamoxifen citrate and doxorubicin in mcf- breast cancer cells ganoderma lucidum, an edible medicinal fungus, has been known with its anti-metastatic, anti-carcinogenic bioactivities and widely used in asian countries in complementary and alternative medicine. however, there is no information regarding its combined usage with tamoxifen and doxorubicin in breast cancer treatment. we investigated the interactions between ganoderma lucidum and tamoxifen or doxorubicin in mcf- human estrogen receptor positive breast cancer cell line. anti-proliferative properties of six extracts were assessed by wst- method. the most effective extract in inhibition of mcf- cell viability was then evaluated in terms of its anti-metastatic activity by boyden chamber assay. apoptosis and cell cycle assays were performed by flow cytometry. ganoderma lucidum ether extract (g.ether) was the most effective extract on inhibition of cell viability among others with ic ( ) values of lg/ml and . lg/ml at h. and h. respectively. we found that g.ether is capable of inducing apoptosis and changing cell cycle dynamics. however, incubation with g.ether did not affect mcf- cell motility significantly. we then assessed the interactions between g.ether and tamoxifen or doxorubicin in mcf- cells. the interactions between g.ether and cancer therapeutics were examined by combination index analysis and macsynergy ii software. interestingly, g.ether increased the anti-proliferative effect of tamoxifen although exhibited strong antagonism with doxorubicin in mcf- cell line. testing the best matrix/analyte combination for maldi tof mass spectrometric detection of steroid hormones, amino acids, vitamins and carbohydrates in spite of numerous advantages, there are serious drawbacks of the application of matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (maldi tof ms) for smallmolecule analyses (below da) and quantification. the main problem is the background interference from commonly used maldi matrix materials. the aim of this work is to evaluate maldi tof mass spectra of physiologically relevant small molecules: steroid hormones, vitamins, amino acids and carbohydrates, acquired with several organic, traditional matrices. small volume, . ll, of each sample solution (testosterone, progesterone, estradiol, l-cysteine, l-alanine, dl-methionine, glutathione, d-(+)-glucose, d-(+)-maltose, vitamin a, vitamin e) was mixed on the sample plate with the same volume of organic matrix solutions (dhb, thap, chca, -aa). for each molecule/matrix pair, we determined quantitative and qualitative parameters of ms analysis. to calculate within day and day-today variation we used excel tools (anova tests). in addition, homogeneity of the sample/matrix distribution on the target was also calculated and expressed as the coefficient of variation of a series of measurements. our results show selectivity of the detection of individual molecules related with the matrix applied. the statistical analysis of certain molecule/matrix pairs gave within and day-to-day variations less than %. additionally, homogeneity of the sample/ matrix mixture distribution on the target plate was with some matrices, also less than %. some of the used matrices have a great potential for the analysis of small molecules with good analytical parameters, with low variations and high homogeneity of samples on the maldi target plate. these results hold potential for quantification of metabolically-significant small molecules and are very promising for future applications of maldi tof ms analyses. stress causes different expression of mitochondrial biogenesis markers in rat steroid-producing cells of adrenal gland and testes i. starovlah, s. radovic, t. kostic, s. andric faculty of science univeristy of novi sad, novi sad, serbia functional mitochondria of steroid producing cells of adrenal cortex and leydig cells of testes are essential for steroid hormones biosynthesis and regulation. the aim of this study was to determine transcriptional profile of mitochondrial biogenesis markers in adrenal cortex and leydig cells by applying in vivo and in vitro studies. immobilization stress (imo), was performed for hours daily for one ( ximo), two ( ximo) or ten ( ximo) consecutive days. in in vitro studies, primary cultures of purified leydig cells from undisturbed rats were stimulated with stress hormone adrenaline, propranolol (nonselective b-adrs-blocker) and prazosin (the selective a -adrs antagonist). rq-pcr results showed that the transcription of the main regulator of mitochondrial biogenesis, ppargc a and ppargc b, significantly decreased in adrenal cortex of ximo rats. oppositely, the significant increase of the same transcript was registered in leydig cells from the same rats. in parallel, transcription of ucp , the mediator of regulated proton leak, decreased in adrenal cortex, but increased in leydig cells of the same group of rats. incubation of leydig cells with adrenaline, increased transcription of the main markers of mitochondrial biogenesis (ppargc a, ppargc b, nrf and nrf a). nonselective b-adrsblocker attenuated this effect. the selective a -adrs antagonist did not change adrenaline-induced stimulation of ppargc a, ppargc b, nrf and nrf a transcription in leydig cells, indicating that the most of the effects are probably mediated by b-adrenergic receptors, not by a -adrs of leydig cells. in summary, the results suggest that reduction of transcription of mitochondrial biogenesis markers could be a possible mechanism that protects body from excessive glucocorticoid production from adrenal glands in stress conditions, while at the same time stimulation of mitochondrial biogenesis markers transcription in leydig cells could serve as mechanism to preserve testosterone production. p-mis- generation of new mitochondria is possible protection mechanism of basal steroidogenesis in leydig cells s. radovic, i. gak, t. kostic, s. andric faculty of science, university of novi sad, novi sad, serbia mitochondria are the most important component of stress response in all cells and for steroid-hormones-producing cells they are the starting point for steroid biosynthesis. here we investigated the parameters of mitochondrial biogenesis in these cells from rats exposed to the psychophysical stress by immobilization (imo). imo stress was applied for hours daily for one ( ximo), two ( ximo) or ten ( ximo) days.hormone levels were measured employing eia, elisa kit or ria. mitochondrial membrane potential (Δwm) was measured by tmre fluorescence, mitochondrial mass was detected by quantitative analysis of mitotracker-green fluorescence as well as relative intensity of fluorescence, since number of mitochondria and mitochondrial architecture were defined using transmission electron microscopy. relative gene expression and proteins analyses were performed by rq-pcr and western blot. there was positive correlation between Δw m of leydig cells and androgens production of leydig cells. both of them were reduced in all stressed rats but partially recovered in ximo group. the mitochondrial mass in leydig cells from ximo group was increased. transmission electron microscopy analyses showed that acute and two times repeated stress altered architecture of mitochondrial cristae, while ximo increased number of mitochondria and recovered mitochondrial architecture. there was significant increase in the expression of the all markers of mitochondrial biogenesis in leydig cells from ximo rats compared with other groups. accordingly, stress-triggered mitochondrial biogenesis represents an adaptive mechanism and does not only correlate with but also is an essential for testosterone production, being both events depend on the same regulators. supporting the evidence that stress, a constant factor in life of humans, induces mitochondrial biogenesis in leydig cells, our results indicate this mechanism probably protects the basal steroid production in stress conditions. targeting survival pathways in leukemic cells through synergism of metformin and thymoquinone u. glamoclija, m. suljagic international university of sarajevo, sarajevo, bosnia and herzegovina generation of resistance to current treatment options is common problem in the therapy of many hematological malignancies. combined therapies utilizing compounds with low toxicity that act synergistically, are proposed to overcome this problem. metformin and thymoquinone (tq) are two molecules which have proven safety profile and represent potential candidates for treatment of hematological malignancies. there are more than clinical trials, at different stages, exploring metformin anticancer activity. metformin activates amp activated protein kinase (ampk) leading to inhibition of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mtor) and induction of apoptosis in different cancers. however, human leukemic cells with increased basal protein kinase b (akt) phosphorylation were shown to be resistant to metformin-induced apoptosis. it was found that activity of metformin can be enhanced by combination with akt and/or nuclear factor 'kappa-lightchain-enhancer' of activated b-cells (nf-jb) inhibitors. tq is phytochemical compound that has shown inhibitory capacity on both of these targets. wst- assay was used to evaluate the effects of metformin and tq in dhl (b cell lymphoma) and k (chronic myelogenous leukemia) cell lines. compusyn software was used in order to calculate the combination index (ci). the ci value indicates whether two drugs have synergistic (ci< ), additive (ci= ) or antagonistic effects (ci> ). we have shown that separately, metformin and tq, exhibit dose dependent inhibition of dhl and k cells. in combinatorial study with fixed constant ratio and simultaneous drug exposure, in dhl and k cell lines, ci values were . and . , respectively. to our knowledge, this is the first report showing synergistic effects of metformin and tq in lymphoma and chronic myelogenous leukemia derived cell lines. these promising data are currently being investigated in order to obtain the insight into their molecular mechanisms. for the last decade many methods of calculating and analysing the physical characteristics of dna has been developed. these methods allow to estimate distributions of free energy, propensity to bend, stress-induced duplex destabilization (sidd), electrostatic potential (ep) etc. and most of them have been used for prediction of genomic regulatory site positions. the main idea of such approach is that proteins recognize genome regulatory sites by these physical and chemical properties, so the physical characteristics are used to predict the location of regulatory sites. most of the characteristics mentioned above describe properties of dna at equilibrium or steady state, but we propose to use characteristics of internal dna dynamics. in this work we used the coarse-grained model of dna, developed recently, to simulate dynamics of the dna open states. with this model we were able to calculate trajectories of the open states moving along the molecule and their dynamical characteristics, such as: open state activation energy, size, half decay time and sound velocity in dna. we use distribution of four dynamical characteristics around transcription start site of experimentally found e.coli promoters taken from regulon db to organise them in stable clusters. clusterization was made with ward method and consensus clustering technique was applied to clusterization results for analysis of its consistency. the same procedure was applied to equilibrium dna characteristics for comparison. distribution of go functions among clusters was also analysed. stable promoter clusters obtained with different physical properties share some similarity. it was not surprise that clusters obtained with dynamical characteristics of dna more similar to sidd clusters then to ep clusters. the data highlights the possible role of dna dynamical properties in transcription initiation and its applicability to promoter identification together with other physical and textual properties of dna. chromium complex with -hydroxyflavone acts on metabolic pathways the development of novel therapeutic strategies for obesity treatment are urgently required as obesity is currently the main leading cause in type ii diabetes and insulin resistance. among natural compounds, flavonoids have recently gained interest due to their positive role in maintaining blood glucose levels and insulin secretion. their association with trace elements, wellknown for their capacity in increasing the efficiency of insulin, might potentiate flavonoids biological effects. in this context, the aim of our study was to investigate the in vitro changes in energetic metabolism related genes expression profile in the presence of a chromium complex with -hydroxyflavone. dna microarray technology was used for a large scale screening of differentially expressed genes in human adipose stem cells (hascs) after weeks of adipogenic induction in the presence of the chromium complex with -hydroxyflavone. moreover, perilipin expression was assessed by flowcytometry. the chromium complex with primuletin negatively regulates the expression of key genes involved in adipogenesis and also modulates the expression of the genes associated with triglyceride synthesis and subsequent fat storage in mature adipocytes. consequently, the chromium complex with -hydroxyflavone can be further employed in studies on animal models to investigate the possible improvement of metabolic disorders. deinococcus radiodurans is a highly radioresistant and stress-resistant bacterium. despite extensive studies, the mechanisms of transcription regulation that contribute to the stress-resistance are still poorly understood. d. radiodurans encodes multipe stress-related proteins including three members of the gre-family of transcription factors: grea, gfh and gfh . while grea is a universal bacterial factor that stimulates rna cleavage by rna polymerase (rnap), the functions of lineage-specific gfh proteins remain unknown. we cloned, expressed and purified d. radiodurans rnap and gfh factors and their mutant variants and analyzed their properties using various in vitro transcription approaches. we tested gfh effects on rnap activity in promoter, elongation and termination complexes assembled on natural and synthetic dna templates under different conditions. we found that the gfh factors strongly enhance site-specific pausing and intrinsic transcription termination by d. radiodurans rnap but do not act on active transcription complexes and do not compete with the grea factor. uniquely, the pause-stimulatory activity of gfh is greatly enhanced by manganese ions, which are accumulated in d. radiodurans cells under stress conditions, and is modulated by the secondary rna structure. we revealed functionally important regions in the gfh factors and the rnap active site involved in transcriptional pausing. we propose that gfh factors inhibit rna extension in paused complexes through binding within the secondary rnap channel, coordinating metal ions in the rnap active site and stabilizing an inactive enzyme conformation. this may serve as a sensitive mechanism to regulate transcription under stress conditions and coordinate it with dna repair and replication. our data suggest that gre and gfh proteins target different structural states of the transcription elongation complex and reveal functional diversity of the factors that bind within the secondary channel of rnap. from planktonic to biofilm state of growth, flagella formation is turned off, and the production of fimbriae and extracellular polysaccharides is activated. bola protein is widespread in nature and has been associated with several cellular processes. using high-troughput techniques we showed that bola protein is a new bacterial transcription factor, which regulates the switch between motile and sessile lifestyle. it negatively modulates flagellar biosynthesis and swimming capacity in escherichia coli. moreover, bola overexpression favors biofilm development, involving fimbriae-like adhesins and curli production. our recent results show that bola action in these pathways is related with cdi-gmp a relevant intracellular signaling molecule involved in biofilm formation. we demonstrate that bola contributes to a fine-tuned expression of different diguanylate cyclases and phosphodiesterases and c-di-gmp has a negative influence in the bola mrna transcription. herein we propose that bola is a key player in motile/adhesive transcriptional switch, contributing to a fine-tuned regulation of these important pathways. background: deep venous thrombosis (dvt) is an important health problem worldwide. its pathophysiology is multicausal and involves environmental, genetic and acquired factors. factor v leiden (fvl), prothrombin g a (pt g a), and methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (mthfr) gene mutations are to predispose to venous thrombosis. the aim of this study was to compare the frequency of fvl, pt g a and mthfr polymorphisms between patients with dvt and healthy controls. methods: this study was conducted at the bozok university hospital. total participants were included in this study, patients with dvt and healthy blood donors. in order to identify fvl, pt g a, mthfr c t and mthfr a c, the polymerase chain reaction (pcr) method was utilized combined with the amplification refractory mutation system. results: in patients fvl was present in ( . %) patients while in controls fvl was present in only ( . %). frequency of fvl was significantly higher in cases as compared to controls (p < . ). pt g a mutation was present in patients ( . %) and in healthy participants ( . %). mthfr c t and mthfr a c polymorphisms were almost equally distributed among patients and healthy participants. however, the concomitant presence of fvl and double heterozygous polymorphisms of mthfr c t/a c was found in patients ( . %) and in healthy controls ( . %), showing significant association with deep venous thrombosis. conclusion: in this study, the frequencies of fvl and pt g a polymorphisms were found significantly higher in patients with dvt than those in healthy participants. thus, fvl and pt g a polymorphisms have a contributory role on the development of dvt in contrast, mthfr c t and mthfr a c genotypes were not associated with a predisposition to development of dvt. but, a combination of double heterozygous polymorphisms of mthfr c t/a c with fvl may be associated with increased risk of dvt. p-mis- self-assembling micellar clusters comprising drugs, nanoparticles and fluorescent compounds for bilogical applications when designing drug carriers, the drug-carrier ratio is an important consideration, because the use of wrong drug-carriers relation can result in toxicity as a consequence of poor metabolism and elimination of the carriers. solubility problem of various substances also plays an important role in many aspects of fundamental science and practical field. specifically, it is an important parameter as well as bioavailability, which determines the required concentration of drug in the body needed to achieve a pharmacological response. among the variety of solubilization methods micellar solubilization is widely used as an alternative to the dissolution of poorly soluble drugs. here, we show a specific approach based on sequential selfassembly of nonionoc detergent micelles (t , tx ) followed by enacpsulation of various nanoparticles (noble metals, magnet etc.), drugs, fluorescent compounds leads to the formation of stable micellar nano-amd microcomplexes. we propose ways of micellar clusterisation. in the first one micelles are modified by semi-hydrophobic chelator followed by addition of metal ion to make cross-linking. the second way is similar to the first one and suggests application of the metal complex with incresed denticity instead of naked metal ion, and the third one involves micelles clusterisation by semi-hydrophobyc metal complex directly. therefore, one can stabilize micellar network by means of 'interactions on interface': semi-hydrophobyc metal complexes are embedded inside micelle due to hydrophobyc interactions. hydrophobic fluorescent compounds-loaded micellar complexes demonstrates better optical response in aqueous media without crystallization. such obtaining clusters are also very flexible and can be modified by nanoparticles to obtain various nanocomposites, such as fluoromagnetic clusters. this work was supported by russian foundation of basic research grants no. - - r_center_a ( no. - - r_center_a ( - no. - - r_center_a ( ) and - - mol_a_ved ( no. - - r_center_a ( - . lamellipodia and membrane blebs utilize different signalling pathways to induce directional movement of walker carcinosarcoma wc cells in a physiological electric field clear if those reactions are mediated by similar mechanisms. to establish that, we performed proteomic analysis and subsequent investigation of the role of differential signalling pathways in electrotaxis of cells representing various strategies of movement. cells were exposed to ef in galvanotaxis apparatus and their reaction was recorded. in some experiments cells were pre-incubated with erk / or btk- inhibitors. the phosphorylation of erk / and btk- was determined by western blot analysis. proteomic analysis was performed by ultimate rs lc nanosystem coupled with a q-exactive mass spectrometer. both blebbing (bc) and lamellipodial (lc) cells show cathodal migration in a physiological ef ( v/cm). comparative analysis of bc and lc cells proteomes revealed about differential proteins. functional analysis in ingenuity analysis pathway allowed to determine the statistically significant signalling pathways in which these proteins are engaged. among the most distinctively regulated pathways are tec kinase and erk/ mapk signalling activated in lc but not bc. it was found that btk- is required for directional movement of lc but not for bc cells. moreover, ef induced stronger and faster btk- phosphorylation in lc than bc cells. in contrast erk / activity was not necessary for electrotaxis of lc cells and ef did not induce erk / phosphorylation. our results reveal that both lamellipodia and membrane blebs can efficiently drive electrotactic migration of wc cells but it is mediated by different signalling pathways. this work was supported by a grant from the national science centre / /b/nz / , poland. newborn screening for congenital hypothyroidism in turkey: a regional evaluation € o. demirelce , n. y. saral , f. b. aksungar , , a. coskun , , m. serteser , , i. unsal , acibadem labmed, istanbul, turkey, acibadem university, istanbul, turkey congenital hypothroidism (ch) is the most common congenital endocrine disorder and the most important cause of preventable mental retardation. it is important to begin the treatment within weeks before the development of brain damage. tsh based newborn screening programs are shown to be useful for implementing early treatment of ch. in this study, regional results of ch screening program in turkey between and were assessed retrospectively. we have evaluated the results of marmara, central anatolia, aegean and mediterranean regions in which our laboratories are located. screening was based on tsh determination in dried blood spot specimens. tsh limits determined to be lu/ml for cut off point and lu/ml for clinical decision point. tsh was measured using enzyme immune assay (eia). blood spot tsh data for newborns during this time period were evaluated. permanent or transient ch was determined according to the results of thyroid function tests. confirmed ch cases were based on local endocrinologists' report and initiation of thyroxine treatment. the frequency of neonatal tsh levels were found to be under the cut off level of lu/ml in ( . %), between and lu/ml in ( . %) and above the level of lu/ml in ( . %) babies, respectively. recall rate was . %. ch cases of neonatal tsh levels greater than lu/ml were . the incidence of ch of this group was : . there were no significant differences in the number of congenital hypothyroidism between males and females (p > . ). the preliminary results of our study indicate that the incidence of ch in our region is higher than the worldwide reports as has been proved by preceding studies. iodine deficiency, dyshormonogenesis, highly consanguineous population, may contribute to the high incidence of ch in turkey. newborn screening of ch must be developed for detecting true cases and tsh cut off point must be reviewed for decreasing redundant recall rate. in silico analysis of the first complete genome sequence of lactobacillus acidipiscis species k. papadimitriou , m. kazou , v. alexandraki , b. pot , e. tsakalidou agricultural university of athens, athens, greece, institut pasteur de lille, lille, france introduction: lactic acid bacteria (lab) constitute a significant group of microorganisms for the food industry, as they play a key role in food fermentation and consequently in human health. lactobacillus acidipiscis aca-dc is a gram-positive, motile, rod-shaped lab isolated from traditional greek kopanisti cheese. here we present the in silico analysis of the first complete genome sequence of l. acidipiscis in order to explore the biology of the species. materials and methods: sequencing of l. acidipiscis genome was performed using the hiseq and pacbio rsii sequencing platform technologies and the genome assembly was validated against an nhei optical map of the l. acidipiscis genome. protein-coding sequences were predicted by glimmer, rrna genes by rnammer and trna genes by the trnascan-se server. potential genomic islands were detected using the island-viewer software tool, prophage regions by phast and the subsystem-based annotation by rast server. finally, the circular representation of l. acidipiscis genome keyed to the cog groups was constructed by cgview server. results: the sequencing analysis resulted in one continuous genomic scaffold of , , bp with a g+c content of . %. the genome contains , protein-coding genes on the chromosome covering up to . % of the genome sequence, trna and rrna. according to the subsystem-based annotation, , protein-coding genes were assigned to metabolic subsystems. the most abundant of the subsystems are related to carbohydrates (n = , . % of total protein-coding genes) and protein metabolism (n = , . % of total protein-coding genes). furthermore, three prophage regions were detected; one intact ( . kb), one incomplete ( . kb) and one questionable ( . kb). discussion and conclusion: the whole genome analysis of l. acidipiscis aca-dc provided interesting information about a not well-studied species. investigation of serum irisin levels of patients with metformin taking new onset type diabetes mellitus increases glucose tolerance and energy expenditure and improves carbohydrate homeostasis. metformin is a biguanidine class antidiabetic drug which inhibits liver gluconeogenesis and decreases insulin resistance and is frequently recommended in treatment of new onset type diabetes mellitus (t dm). irisin has a role in the regulation of energy metabolism pathways and its level in blood of persons with t dm has been reported to decrease. regarding this relationship, it was aimed to reveal the effect of metformin on serum irisin levels. patients with impaired oral glucose tolerance test were included to this investigation. they were recommended to take metformin and to change their life style, such as exercise and diet. their blood were taken at the beginning and after month. also, a healthy control group (n = ) was formed from persons with similar age and sexual distribution as the patient group. irisin levels of their sera were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa) method. statistical evaluation of the measurements showed no significant difference (p = . ) between the irisin levels of the patients at the beginning and after month treatment. a similar result was found between the control and the treated groups (p = . ), while a significant difference (p = . ) was observed between the control and untreated patients groups. the results obtained from this study do not show a clear and significant change in the blood irisin levels of the patients with new onset t dm taking metformin together with life style change. a longer period of treatment and a higher number of patients may be needed for more reliable results. thermodynamics of dna ligands binding at specific sites of telomeric g-quadruplex dna g-quadruplexes are a perspective target for anticancer therapy. for example stabilization of the telomeric g-quadruplex dna formed by single-stranded ends of the chromosomes leads to inhibition of telomerase, which is active in % of cancer cells. similarly, small molecules targeted to a specific g-quadruplex would inhibit various cellular processes. stoichiometry and affinity of interaction of these compounds to dna is determined by specific structural motifs within a g-quadruplex. rational design of novel chemical compounds requires an in depth knowledge of interactions between known ligands and g-quadruplex structures. experimental methods that are used for determination of thermodynamic binding parameters, such as isothermal titration calorimetry, differential scanning calorimetry, ultraviolet absorption and circular dichroism spectroscopy provide a collective characteristic for all of the ligand molecules bound to dna, while the information on ligand affinity to individual dna binding sites is lost. we propose a complimentary method for detailed analysis of thermodynamic parameters of ligand binding based on the introduction of fluorescent probes in the structure of g-quadruplex. monitoring fluorescence quenching of the fluorescent labels allows to derive binding constants of the dna-ligand interaction at a specific binding site. temperature dependence of the fluorescence quenching determines the thermodynamics of the dnaligand complex formation. since only a proximal ligand is able to quench the fluorescence, this method allows characterization of the ligand binding to a particular site the g-quadruplex structure. the study was supported by project no. - - of the russian science foundation. the correlation between biochemical and dynamic surface tension parameters of calves blood serum during the animal ontogenesis, as well as by various pathologies or poor diet, the imbalance of protein, mineral, lipid components is observed (the changes in all parameters of biological liquids are accompanied of these metabolism peculiarities). the dynamic surface tension (dst) of serum essentially depends on these factors and (in combination with the biochemical parameters) can provide the valuable information for evaluation of the physiological and biochemical status of the organism (can be used as an express test for animal diagnostics in future). the aim of the work was to study dst and biochemical parameters of calve serum, as well as their correlations, as the main indicators of the animals. ) of calve serum were in the range of the normal values for healthy animals and can be considered as reference data for animal science and practice. the obtained results enable us to establish correlations between the dst and biochemical parameters of calves serum. this work was supported by the russian scientific foundation (grant - - ). the middle strong correlations of dst values of calves serum with the level of total protein, albumin, billirubin, some enzymes and cholesterol, whereas only weak correlations with the other biochemical parameters (urea, calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, etc.) were found. in the veterinary science and practice such correlations are important for the estimation of the organism physiologicaland biochemical status, for general inspections of cattle before vaccination (immunization) or slaughter, for "quick separation" of healthy and ill animals in the case of infection, etc. role of protein kinase c in the regulation of astrocytic glutamine transporter sn in ammonia-exposed mouse cortical astrocytes (bisi; lm). total pkc activity was analyzed by a direct pkc assay and phosphoserine detection by western blot (wb) analysis. protein level of sn and sn , second astrocytic gln transporter belonging to system n, in a membrane fraction was also analyzed. the total uptake and system n-mediated (l-ala and l-leu-inhibitable) gln uptake was tested. treatment of astrocytes with ammonia resulted in a decrease of pkc activity, whereas pma treatment increased pkc activity in ammonia-independent way. bisi treatment reversed fully, and ammonia partially, the pma-induced pkc activity. pma treatment resulted in only a slight decrease in sn protein level in both control and ammonia-treated astrocytes, while a decrease of total and system n-mediated gln uptake were noted in control astrocytes, an effect not exacerbated by ammonia. in turn, cotreatment with pma and bisi reversed the decrease of total gln uptake and showed tendency towards increase in system nmediated gln transport. the results suggest that: a) ammonia changes the dominating direction of system n transport from release to uptake, which may be related to decreased phosphorylation or to alterations in relative phosphorylation by different pkc isoforms. this inference remains to be verified in further studies; b) changes in system n transporter function induced by ammonia appear to involve mechanisms other than changes in transporter expression. evidence for human ghrelin ghs-r a and orexin ox heteroreceptor complex formation in a heterologous system ghrelin and orexin are two peptides implicated in the regulation of energy balance and modulation of food-related motivation at the level of the midbrain dopamine reward system. their function in the hypothalamic arcuate nucleus and the ventral tegmental area (vta) has already been described, but the modulation at the level of receptors remains unclear. the action of these peptides is mediated by g-protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs): ghrelin a and b (ghs-r a , ghs-r b ) for ghrelin, and orexin and (ox , ox ) for orexin. traditional approaches to know the mechanism of neurotransmission of dopaminergic neurons in the mesolimbic system have focused on targeting neuronal receptors as single entities. from the discovery that gpcrs for neuromodulators may form heteroreceptor complexes, our hypothesis is that ghrelin and orexin receptors may interact and form novel functional units that may specifically participate in the central regulation of food intake and energy balance. as a proof of concept we have investigated the potential of human ghs-r a and ox receptors to form heterocomplexes. formation of ghs-r a -ox receptor heteromers in transfected hek t cells was detected by bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (bret) and proximity ligation (pla) assays. furthermore, a negative crosstalk was identified in cells co-expressing both receptors by assessing mitogen-activated protein kinase (mapk) and adenylyl cyclase (camp) pathways, and by a label-free dynamic mass redistribution assay. experiments in sources endogenously expressing ghs-r a and ox receptors are needed to know the functional relevance of the heteromer. from the negative crosstalk here identified, it is tempting to speculate that ghs-r a -ox receptor heteromers are important players in mediating the response to the combination of different orexigenic signals. lysosomal storage diseases which are related to deficiency of specific lysosomal hydrolases resulted to clinical aspects due to accumulation of substrates in different tissues. since dried blood spot (dbs) is non-invasive, low-cost, easy transportable, acceptable enzyme stability compared to leucocyte and/or fibroblast culture, it's recommended as a first screening test. however the false positive rate with dbs sample is higher compared to other samples. we aimed to investigate any possible effect of leucocyte number on enzyme activity in dried blood samples in a retrospective study. we re-evaluated the lysosomal enzyme activity results in regard to leucocyte number among data within last year. enzyme activities had measured by using fluorometric and lc msms method. we determined the correlations between the lysosomal enzyme activities of alpha glycosidase, glycocerebrosidase, alpha galactosidase, sphingomyelinase, galactocerebrosidase and alpha-l-iduronidase in healthy population (n = ). while glycocerebrosidase and galactocerebrosidase positively correlated with the number of neutrophils, alpha galactosidase, sphingomyelinase and alpha-l-iduronidase positively correlated with the number of lymphocytes. alpha glycosidase activity showed a correlation both lymphocytes and neutrophils. the patients having the glycocerebrosidase enzyme activity which was lower than . nmol/ml/hour (which is accepted as the cut off value to recall the patients) existed significantly lower number of leukocyte, lymphocyte and neutrophil compared to those of patients having higher enzyme activity than . . our data indicated that the enzyme activity in dried blood samples including low leucocyte number might be found lower than reference intervals resulting in false positive diagnosis. therefore we suggest that the laboratory scientists should evaluate the number of leucocyte levels while they were interpreting data. using dna-markers for estimation of genetical variability of two kazakh sheep breeds a. mussayeva , , b. bekmanov , , a. amirgalieva , k. dosybaev , , z. orazymbetova , , r. zhapbasov , a. zhomartov , n. zumadillaev , n. zumadillaev llp "kazcytogen", almaty, kazakhstan, "institute of general genetics and cytology" sc mes, almaty, kazakhstan, branch "scientific research institute of sheep" llp "kazakh research institute of animal husbandry and feed", almaty, kazakhstan to compare the frequencies of different microsatellite loci in sheep breeds subpopulations genomic structure of edilbay and kazakh archaromerinos was investigated. different methods for homogeneity testing of two breeds were elaborated. inter simple sequence repeats (issr) pcr analysis of the breeds studied displayed species and breed specific fragments with different frequencies (population frequency more than . ) there were found rarely met fragments (frequency lower than . ). the combinations of these fragments present the specific issr-spectra which arrange genofond profiles of breeds. using panels of microsatellits (recommended by isag) breeds ( populations) were characterized. informative value and resolving capacity of the sum of str-loci were estimated. wide polymorphism of alleles length was demonstrated both when the breeds were compared and within the breeds. informative markers were chosen for both two breeds, markers being used for both breeds, while other markers were informative for one of the breed only. when the animals of one breed were compared unique alleles which were met only within one of populations were of much interest. for example the allele of bm was met in birlik population of edilbay breed as often as in % of animals while in two other populations there were no this allele. in kumtekey population one can meet % animals having particular locus (dyms ), while in the other population (cf ablay) this locus was not met at all. basing on genetical distances obtained using fragment analysis phylogenetic relationships between populations were estimated. so for example edilbay population of cf ajar has the larger distance from two other populations (birlik and bayserke-agro) than each of them from one another. two subpopulations of kazakh arkharomerinos breed (cf kumtekei and cf ablay) also have the genetical difference. how preeclampsia affects oxidant status and antiinflammatory potential of breast milk? preeclampsia is a pregnancy syndrome associated with hypertension, proteinuria and edema, leading to maternal morbidity/mortality and preterm delivery. in this study we aimed to investigate if the breast milk of preeclamptic mothers is effected in oxidative status and anti-inflammatory activity in comparison to the breast milk of mothers with healthy pregnancies. for the aim of the study, hyaluronidase and myeloperoxidase activities (mpo), total oxidant status (tos), total antioxidant status (tas), oxidative stress index (osi) and tbars levels were measured in breast milks of preeclamptic mothers and mothers with healthy pregnancies as control group. when the control group and preeclamptic group were compared, hyaluronidase activity, tas, tos and osi levels showed statistically significant differences in the preeclamptic group. hyaluronidase activity was significantly higher in the preeclamptic mothers' breast milk ( vs u/ml, p = . ). while tos levels were significantly higher in the preeclampsia group ( . vs . lmol/l, p = . ), the tas levels were significantly higher in the control breast milks ( . vs . mmol/l, p = . ). as expected osi levels (tos/tas ratio) were significantly higher in the preeclampsia group. even though the mean levels were higher in preeclamptic group, the difference in mpo activities and tbars levels did not show statistic significance. oxidant status parameters also suggest that preeclampsia effects in both ways by increasing oxidant status and also decreasing antioxidant capacity shifting the balance to the increased oxidant stress side. as the results showed that the preeclampsia group had higher hyaluronidase activity, this can be interpreted as preeclamptic mothers' milk have higher inflammatory potential as this enzyme enhances inflammation by catalyzing the depolymerization of certain acidic glycosaminoglcans. p-mis- investigation of relationship between postprandial lipemia and erythrocyte membrane cholesterol level postprandial lipemia is a metabolic condition related to an increase in plasma triglycerides. remnant-like lipoprotein particles are predominant in postprandial phase and they play an important role in development of atherosclerosis. cholesterol is a prominent component of erythrocyte membranes and regulates the membrane functions such as viscosity and permeability. free cholesterol derived from erythrocytes is thought to participate in the atherosclerotic plaque formation. in the current study, it was aimed to investigate the relationship between postprandial lipemia and erythrocyte membrane cholesterol level in healthy subjects. study group included subjects ( female and male with age range of - years). then these individuals were divided into three groups according to the values of area under curve (auc) calculated by using triglyceride levels at the fasting state and at nd, th and th hours after the high fat diet (ottt). lipid and erythrocyte membrane cholesterol (emc) values were compared between groups with low and high ottt response. while tc, tg, ldl-c and emc were significantly higher, hdl-c was significantly lower in high ottt response group than low ottt response group. it was not observed any statistically significant difference when compared emc values between women and men study groups. on the other part, it was seen positive correlation between emc and auc (r = . , p = . ), tg (r = . , p = . ), tc (r = . , p = . ), ldl-c (r = . , p = . ) in the total study group. it was concluded that, postprandial lipemia may show atherosclerotic tendency not only with atherogenic lipid profile but also with increasing emc. p-mis- eu-openscreen: the european infrastructure for chemical biology b. stechmann, p. gribbon eu-openscreen, fmp leibniz institute for molecular pharmacology, berlin, germany small molecules that can be applied as chemical 'tool' compounds (or 'probes') have become indispensable in basic research for the elucidation of fundamental biological mechanisms. they act directly with the protein-of-interest and often allow for the interrogation of biological processes that cannot be properly studied with traditional genetic or rna interference approaches. eu-openscreen (www.eu-openscreen.eu) is the largest emerging academic chemical biology research infrastructure initiative in europe and will provide access for molecular and cell biologists to screening infrastructure, well-characterized highquality chemical libraries, and facilities for medicinal chemistry services for compound optimization. molecular biologists who have a robust and suitable biological assay and are interested in collaboratively developing chemical tool compounds to validate their targets-of-interest are welcome to work with eu-openscreen. selected assays are screened against a collection of more than , compounds, incl. confirmatory and counter screening, ic/ec determination, sar (structure-activity relationships) and qc of confirmed hit compounds. eu-openscreen will start operations in , but it can already look back on a growing number of transnational activities: joint screening projects, exchange of local compound libraries, development of new design principles for its compound collection; exchange of experimental data through its pilot database etc. steps towards an arthrobacter nicotinovorans based biotechnology for production of hidroxy-nicotine as the archetypal agonist of nachr, nicotine stands up as a powerful scaffold for developing new alzheimer disease therapeutic agents in form of nicotine derivatives. in this context, arthrobacter nicotinovorans pao and its wide range of nicotinederivatives produced when grown on nicotine have a huge biotechnological potential. indeed, the metabolic intermediate -hydroxy-nicotine ( hnic) produced by a. nicotinovorans pao was shown to bind to the nachrs, and by modulating their function, to sustain spatial memory formation in a rat model of ad. the current work presents the first attempts to produce and isolate hnic by using a genetically engineered a. nicotinovorans strain. the growth and the hnic accumulation were compared for two strains: . a. nicotinovorans pao wild type strain and . a genetically engineered a. nicotinovorans pao strain (part ndh) containing the nicotine-dehydrogenase (ndh) genes cloned in the nicotine inducible part vector. the growth curves were followed spectrophotometrically. the consumption of nicotine and accumulation of hnic were monitored by hplc using a mn nucleodur - c ec column and . m sulfuric acid at a flow rate of ml/minute. the growth curve of the part ndh strain shows that the bacteria grow slower when compared with the wt. as a result, in the wt strain, the nicotine is quickly depleted from the medium and only low amounts of hnic are observed. although the sds-page analysis of the total protein extracts from the part ndh strain did not show clear signs of ndh overexpression, the enzyme is produced and is active, allowing a fold accumulation of hnic in the growth medium. the first attempts to purify ndh from the part ndh strain using imac were nevertheless unsuccessful. in conclusion, using the part ndh strain for hnic production is feasible. further improvements of the growth condition and strain are envisioned (i.e. knocking the ndh downstream genes; adding inhibitors for the downstream enzymes). studies on the impact of butyrylcholinesterase (bche) on the symptoms and progression of cognitive impairments like alzheimer's disease (ad) or other neurodegenerative disruptions speak in favour of selective bche inhibitors as a new approach in future ad pharmacotherapy. some derivatives of quinine and quinidine, present in the cinchona species bark, have already been identified as selective bche inhibitors with respect to acetylcholinesterase (ache); therefore, further investigation of these compounds might result in promising leads for enhanced anti-ad drugs. we synthesised ten quaternary derivatives of cinchonines and their corresponding pseudo-enantiomeric cinchonidines. quaternization of quinuclidine moiety was carried out with groups diverse in size: methyl and differently meta and para substituted benzyl groups. all of the compounds were prepared in good yields, characterized by standard analytical spectroscopy methods, and were tested for their bche and ache inhibition potency. the inhibition potency of the compounds was defined by the dissociation constants of the enzymeÀinhibitor complex (ki). all of the tested compounds reversibly inhibited both human bche and ache. the compounds inhibited bche with ki constants in the range of . - lm, and ache in the range . - lm. five cinchonidines displayed a - times higher inhibition selectivity to bche over ache, and four of them were potent bche inhibitors with ki constants up to nm. bche affinity toward the studied compounds depended on the size of the substituent on the nitrogen of the quinuclidinium part of the molecule and on the resonance stabilization of the substituent at the quaternized nitrogen. based on the presented results, cinchonidine cd-(pbr) can be pointed out as a potent and selective bche inhibitor that could be considered for further research in alzheimer disease pharmacotherapy. exposure to nmda ( lm) for h increased the expression of kir . mrna and decreased that aqp -and gs mrna. the expression of kir . was decreased by h exposure to glu ( mm) and tnfa ( ng/ml). at h incubation, nmda induced a decrease of kir . expression in the presence but not in the absence of calcium in the medium. nmda did not alter the expression of nmda receptor subunits. tnfa increased the expression of the nr subunit, and decreased that of nr b mrna. glu decreased the expression of out of subunits. the study demonstrates, to our knowledge for the first time, that prolonged exposure of astrocytes to nmda alters the expression of mrna coding for critical astrocytic proteins. the dependence of the decrease of kir . mrna expression on extracellular calcium suggests the ionotropic nature of nmda receptor stimulation. the effects of nmda receptor stimulation occurred by a mechanism bypassing changes in subunit composition of the nmda receptor. experiments are under way to establish whether the tnfa-induced changes in the expression of nmda receptor subunits contribute to modulation of nmda receptor stimulation by inflammation. the importance of education in reducing preanalytical errors the preanalytical phase includes the request of test, the preparation of patient, the obtaining of sample from the patient, the transport of the sample to the laboratory, and the pretreatment of sample. the preparation of patient and the obtaining of sample are considered as the most common error sources. in order to reduce preanalytical errors, we aimed to provide training for phlebotomists and to also determine their knowledge level about the preanalytical phase before and after these training. it was given the training related with preanalytic phases to pediatric nurses and adult nurses, other phlebotomists in march. the surveys which are made before and after the training were consisted of questions that are related with demographyic features and preanalytic phases. in order to determine the effects of training to the preanalytic phase, the preanalytic error rates before (in february) and after (in april) traning was calculated with the formula of: (the number of rejected samples/the number of total samples)x . the average age of participants was ae years. it was not found significant difference between their correct answers rate before the training and the education degree of the participants. the correct answer rate before the training was % and after the training it was %, which showed an increase of %. the preanalytic error rates which were . % in february were decreased to . % in april. in our study, the positive results were obtained through the training aimed to reduce the preanalytical errors. by providing regular training to the phlebotomists and also providing pretraining to the beginners, the updating of their information about preanalytic phase can be achieved. in this way, the loss of labor and economic related to preanalytical errors can be avoided and the accurate results can be obtained in short time. curcumin, the active compound of turmeric (curcuma longa) has antiinflammatory, antioxidative and antitumour effects. unfortunately, curcumin has a poor absorption and low stability. both can be solved by encapsulation of curcumin using a proper technique like electrospray. it was reported that piperin, the active compound of black pepper, enhances the intestinal absorption of curcumin and thus its bioavailability. due to these facts it was aimed in this study to nanoencapsulate turmeric extract in order to enhance its absorption and stability. for that purpose, it was encapsulated with the maize protein zein, chitosane and black pepper extract by varying the voltage and flow rate of electrospray and the concentration of the compounds. the nanocapsules were characterised by measuring their particle size and with help of sem photographs. the particle size of the final nanocapsule formulation was nm and had a sufficient stability over a period of months, visually determined. by encapsulating turmeric extract into double layer nanocapsules with help of black pepper extract, zein and chitosane, the turmeric extract could be protected from degradation, which was observed for the pure turmeric extract in form of clearing its yellow colour. analysis of the human genome reveals that potential g-quadruplex sequences are enriched in promoters of the oncogenes. growing body of evidence suggests that g-quadruplexes (g ) may play putative roles in various biological processes, such as the regulation of gene expression. consequently, targeting the oncogenic g-quadruplexes using small molecules is an alternative strategy for the potential treatment of cancers. porphyrin derivatives are promising class of drug in this respect, being nucleic acids binders and generators of reactive oxygen species under visual light irradiation. interaction between porphyrin derivatives and g dna from oncogene promoter region has been studied in vitro. we applied chemical probing, circular dichroism spectroscopy and uv melting techniques in order to map the oxidized bases, monitor structural rearrangements and evaluate stability of the resulting dna structures. specifically, we observed that g dna is considerably more susceptible to lightinduced modification than duplex dna; -terminal tetrads of the g dna are preferably oxidized; structural changes induced by oxidation result in decrease of the thermodynamic stability of the g dna. irreversibility of these effects on dna make porphyrin derivatives perspective lead compounds for rational design of ligands targeting human oncogenes. the study was financially supported by project no. - - from the russian science foundation. resistin levels in denervated obese rats n. saglam , t. ahmedi rendi , c. kahraman , a. alver department of medical biochemistry, faculty of medicine, karadeniz technical university, trabzon, turkey, school of health, d€ uzce university, d€ uzce, turkey the sympathetic nervous system is an important factor affecting the metabolic and secretory function of the white adipose tissue. resistin is mainly expressed by mononuclear cells, also it is expressed by adipocytes, pancreatic cells, and muscle. resistin induces insulin resistance and glucose intolerance in mice. resistin plasma levels depend on fat depots size and sex. resistin levels decrease in short-term fasting in mice, then it increase refeeding. also, it increase as a response to fed with the high fat diet. in our study we aimed to determination of the effect of high-fat diet and denervation on serum resistin levels in rats. in this study experimental groups were formed each consisted of rats. during weeks, first two groups are fed with high-fat diet and other two groups are fed with standart diet which they purchased from research diets company. at the beginning of the feeding periods, retroperitoneal fat tissiues of animals assigned to the first and the third groups were denervated. second and fourth groups were not denervated. at the end of the week feeding periods, blood collected from rats and blood resistin concentration was determinated by elisa. in denervated and fed with high fat diet groups serum resistin levels higher than control groups (p < . ). according to our literature research, there are no studies demonstrating the relationship between resistin and the sympathetic nervous system. also, denervation may lead to increase in serum resistin levels. the amount of resistin is possibly reduced by b -adrenergic activation. in conclusion, it was concluded that there is differences on serum resistin levels depending on diet in bilateral denervation of retroperitoneal fat tissues of rats. stress activated protein kinases regulates the ribosomal frameshift rate in est gene, encoding subunit of telomerase s. t€ urkel, s. sarica uludag university, bursa, turkey est gene (ever shorter telomere) of s. cerevisiae encodes one of the essential subunits of telomerase enzyme. expression of est gene is regulated at the translation level by + programmed ribosomal frameshift (prf). it is known that the physiological stresses affect telomere length. in this study, we have investigated the effects of stress activated protein kinases snf p (ampk) and gcn p (eif kinase) on the prf rate in est gene. prf rate of est gene was quantified in plasmid based expression system. expression vectors were transformed in to the wild type and mutant yeast strains that deleted for snf , or gcn genes. yeast cells were grown in normal conditions or subjected to acid stress, osmotic stress, or glucose limitations to activate protein kinases gcn p, and snf p, respectively. prf rate of est gene was measured as % in the normal growth conditions in the wild type cells. but, the prf rate of the wild type strain grown in glucose limited conditions decreased more than -fold, giving less than % prf rate. contrary to glucose limitation, osmotic or acid stress activated frameshift rate by -fold in the wild type cells and prf rate increased to %. when the prf rate was analyzed in gcn and snf mutants, frame shift rate of est was - % in normal growth conditions. when these mutants were subjected to acidic or osmotic stress, prf rate activated slightly. we have also shown that gcn p and gcn p, positive regulator of gcn p, is also essential for the regulation of prf in est in response to stress conditions. it is clear that the basal level expression of est is highly dependent on the gcn p kinase complex. gcn p is also associates with ribosomes, indicating that gcn p might have a significant function in connecting the stress signals to biosynthesis of the full length est peptide. this regulation might also link the biosynthesis of functional telomerase and telomere replications to cell physiology through protein kinases such as snf p and gcn p. inflammation might have a role in erosive esophagitis but not in non-erosive reflux disease the relationship between inflammatory activation mechanisms and acid-peptic injured esophageal tissue is not clear. we evaluated whether there are differences between inflammation and tight junctional proteins such as e-cadherine among subtypes of gastroesophageal reflux disease. the aim of this study was to investigate any possible role of inflammation in pathologic mechanism of reflux disease by determining the inflammatory markers in injured esophageal tissue as well as serum of patients. three groups (erosive-ee, n = ; nonerosive-nerd, n = ; healthy controls-hc, n = ) were evaluated with upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. the esophageal biopsies and blood samples were collected. serum e-cadherine levels, nfkb, chitotirosidase (chit), myeloperoxidase (mpo) activities in serum and homogenized tissues were determined. nkfb levels in tissue was significantly higher in subjects with ee ( . ae . ng/mg.prt) versus hc ( . ae . ng/mg.prt, p = . ). mpo tissue activities in ee group were significantly lower ( . ae . u/mg.prt) than hc ( . ae . u/mg.prt, p = . ) while mpo serum levels were higher in ee ( . ae . ul) versus hc ( . ae . ul, p = . ). tissue chit levels were three fold increased in ee versus hc (p = . ). none of these measurements showed any differences in nerd group. nfkb and mpo levels had a negative correlation (r=À . , p = . ) in tissue. nfkb and ecad levels had a positive correlation in serum (r = . , p < . ). inflammatory process might play a pivotal role in injured mechanism only in erosive esophagitis but not in nerd. noninflammatory mechanisms might be responsible such as hypersensitivity in patients with non-erosive reflux disease. d-dimer (a fibrin degradation product) test is used to aid in the diagnosis of intravascular coagulation. the aim of this study is to investigate the correlation between d-dimer levels and other inflammatory markers including procalcitonin. anonymized data on d-dimer, fibrinogen, hscrp, wbc, neutrophil% (neut%) and procalcitonin levels from , patients (mean age ae sd, . ae . ) were used for the correlation (excel analyze-it v . . ) and linear regression (pasw statistics v . ) analysis between the measured parameters. there was a significant (p < . ) age-dependent increase in d-dimer levels between different age groups. patients with the highest d-dimer levels were also found to have an increased frequency of hscrp levels. d-dimer levels showed a significant correlation with hscrp, wbc and neut%. a model describing the positive association between these parameters were built. the resulting equation is as follows: d-dimer = (hscrp* . ) + ( . *age) + ( . *wbc) + ( . *neut%)À . . correlation analysis between procalcitonin and d-dimer levels gave pearson's correlation coefficient of . . our results suggest that the age-dependent variations should be taken into account while interpreting d-dimer test results. in addition, neut% ratio was found to be the most important parameter for estimating d-dimer levels. our equation can be used when the d-dimer test is not available or for control purposes only. in the field of cancer research great hope lies in finding more powerful and selective way for the direct elimination of cancer cells. this task can be solved by means of nanobiotechnology. recent progress in this field has arisen interest in a carbon nanostructurefullerene c . fullerene exhibits not only unique physico-chemical properties and biological activity but also a significant potential to serve as a nanocarrier for selective drug delivery into cancer cells. the aim of this study is to analyze a unique tool for cancer therapy. the main idea is realized by the non-covalent conjugation of c with the well-known anticancer drug -doxorubicin (dox). two types of conjugate with different c -dox ratio ( : and : ) were studied. conjugates absorbance and fluorescence, size distribution as well as a mass data were recorded utilizing optical and analytical equipment (microplate reader, zetasizer, lc-ms/ms and maldi-tof). in vitro studies were performed including evaluation of c -dox conjugate effects on human leukemic cells (jurkat, ccrf-cem, thp ad molt- ) viability. conjugates accumulation and distribution within cancer cells was monitored using fluorescent microscopy accompanied with fluorescence-activated cell sorting. it was evidently proven that both c -dox conjugates were stable and could be used as reliable candidates for biological application. cellular accumulation and distribution studies showed that conjugation of dox with fullerene promoted its entry into leukemic cells. accumulation of dox in the form of conjugates within cancer cells was intensified compared to the free drug. the results show that conjugated dox is more cytotoxic and the value of its ic are lower compared with the free dox. obtained results confirm nanocarrier function of fullerene c and the perspective of its application for optimization of doxorubicin efficiency against leukemic cells. comperative investigation of protective effects of tea and tea-related wastes on reducing potaential of h o -induced erythrocytes tea processing waste (tpw) formed during the tea production process in tea factories is up to , tones/year in turkey. tpw is one of the abundant available phenolic biomass among plantal wastes. in this study, black and green teas and their wastes were used. the aim of the study is to determinate the phenolic content and the radical scavenging activities of the samples, and to measure their effects on hydrogen peroxide-induced erythrocyte damage due to analyzing the reducing potential of erythrocyte involving glutathione reductase (gr), glutathione peroxidase (gpx) activities and reduced glutathione (gsh) content. total polyphenol content of samples was determined as mg catechine per dry mass by using folin-ciocalteau reactive and dpph radical scavenging activity was estimated by cuendet method as equivalent catechine standard. in erythrocyte, gsh level was measured by method of sedlak and lindsay while gr and gpx activities were assayed by the methods of bergmeyer and beutler, respectively. the highest phenolic content was observed in green tea and its wastes (p < . ) whereas black fiber waste had the lowest phenolic content. therefore, the highest radical scavenging activity and gsh level were detected in green tea and its wastes (p < . ). erythrocyte with the extracts of the teas and their wastes had the similar enzyme activities for both gpx and gr. in sum, the teas and wastes have antioxidant activity but, green tea and its leaf waste hade higher antioxidant activity than other samples. the tea wastes might be evaluated as many of protective health products, particularly in cosmetic fields thus, these by-products no application for any area is expected to become an economical value. fluorouracil ( -fu) is a chemotherapeutic drug classified as an "antimetabolite". it works through irreversible inhibition of thymidylate synthase. chemical derivatization of -fu with carbohydrtates is being investigated widely in order to enhance its bioavailability, therapeutic efficiency and to reduce its toxicity. however, water solubility of the newly derived compounds is usually very low. so, in order to obtain a pharmaceutically relevant formulation they need to be formulated appropriately. in this study, we prepared micellar delivery system for the new tetra-o-acetylglycose derivative of -fu synthesized via "click reaction", namely f -[{ -( ″, ″, ″, ″-tetra-o-acetyl-b-dglycopyronosyl)- h- , , -triazole- -yl}methyl] -fluorouracil. since the water solubility of this compound is very limited, we tested its solubility in several pharmaceutically relevant solvents by visual estimation after stiring increasing amount of the compound in ml of solvent for h. to estimate the carcinogenic potential of this compound, salmonella/microsome mutagenicity assay (ames test) was performed in four histidine-requiring strains of s. typhimurium, tester strains ta , ta (for the detection of frameshift mutations) ta and ta (for detection of base pair substitutions) according to the oecd guideline . the drug was solubilized ( lg/ml) with no precipitation in lutrol Ò -f /ethanol/water ( . : . : . , wt/wt) micelles ( . ae . nm). the results of ames test were negative so the compound neither produced frame shift mutations nor base pair mutations in s. typhimurium strains. the results imply that the new compound can be dissolved in aqueous micellar delivery system in order to be used for further studies, and that it was not mutagenic in the tested s. typhimurium strains. in conclusion, the formulation of the newly synthesized compound is not carcinogenic, and can be evaluated for anticancer activity in vitro and in vivo. integral metabolism parameters of dairy goats during reproductive cycle periods d. solovyeva, e. zarudnaya, s. zaitsev moscow savmb, moscow, russia study of the goat metabolism at different periods of the reproductive cycle allows to correct feeding ration, to increase the age of the productive use of animals and to receive high-quality products. the aim of the work was to determine the metabolic parameters of blood serum of goats, expressed in terms of biochemical parameters and interfacial tensiometry and study their relationship to metabolic processes in the body goats depending on the age and the period of the reproductive cycle. the healthy goats were divided into groups. the dynamic surface tension (dst) parameters were obtained from dependences of a surface tension (r) vs. time (t): at t? (r ), at t = . s (r ), t = s (r ) and t?∞ (r ). this work was supported by the russian scientific foundation ( - - ). all animals had - % fat content. the contents of total protein ( . %), albumin ( . %) and urea ( . %) are higher for the lactating animals as compared to the normal goat values. the levels of total cholesterol ( . %) and creatinine ( . %) are higher for the lactating animals. in lactating animals have the highest level of, which along with high phosphorus level talks about the intensification of energy processes during lactation. the correlations were found between the biochemical and dst parameters of the goat blood: lipids or cholesterol levels with r (r = À . ), r (r = À . ), r (r = À . ); total protein or albumin levels with r (r = À . ), r (r = À . ), r (r = À . ); aminotransferase activity with r (r = À . ), r (r = À . ). the correlations were found between the total protein and albumin levels with k (r = . ), k (r = . ); glucose levels and r (r = . ), r (r = . ). thus, the dst and biochemical parameters of goats have strong correlation relationships that are important for biomedical and veterinary applications. the relation of the severity of atherosclerotic disease with oxidative stress in patients with stable coronary artery disease h. sezen harran university, sanliurfa, turkey introduction: because, to the best of our knowledge, the relationship of total oxidant status (tos) and total antioxidant status (tas) with the severity of stable coronary artery disease (cad) has not been investigated in the literature so far, the present study was conducted to address this issue. materials and methods: this study consisted of consecutive patients and controls who underwent coronary angiography. for each patient, the total gensiniscore (gs) was calculated andthose with a gs of > were classified as the high gs group (hgg), and those with a gs less than were defined as the low gs group (lgg). the total oxidant status (tos) and total antioxidant status (tas) levels were measured using the erelmethod. the osi, which is an indicator of the oxidative balance, was calculated as the percentage ratio of tos to tas. results: the tas was lower in the hgg than lgg. the tos and osi were higher in the hgg than lgg. the correlation analysis showed that gs was negatively associated with the tas and positively with the tos and the osi. the multivariate analysis showed that age, tos, and hdl-c were independent variables for a high gs. the cut-off level of . lmol h o equiv./ l for serum tos levels predicted high gs with a sensitivity of % and a specificity of %. discussion: information on the severity of atherosclerosis is requiredtopredicttheprognosis of an individualpatientandtodetermine the proper treatment modality. the gs system has beenproventodemonstratethe severity of atherosclerotic disease. inthepresentstudy, thepatientswith a high gs had increasedlevels of oxidants. inaddition, tos was an independentindicator of theseverity of atherosclerosis. the optimal cut-offvaluefor tos topredict high-gens score was . (sensitivity % and specificity %). conclusions: the results suggest that the severity of atherosclerosis in stable cad is associated with increased oxidative status. evaluation of roemerine as a multidrug resistance pump inhibitor f. g. avci , c. velioglu , e. recber , c. unsal , g. gulsoy , b. sariyar akbulut marmara university, istanbul, turkey, istanbul university, istanbul, turkey efflux by multidrug resistance (mdr) pumps is a common defense mechanism used against antimicrobials. by pumping the drugs out, these pumps significantly reduce the efficacy of drugs. one approach to overcome this limitation is offered by the combinatorial therapies where drugs are co-administered with together with pump inhibitors. by simply preventing the efflux of the drug, the presence of inhibitors enhance drug efficacy. (-)-roemerine is an aporphine type alkaloid with significant antibacterial (against bacillus cereus, escherichia coli) and antifungal (against candida strains) activities. interestingly, (-)-roemerine was also found to enhance the cytotoxic response mediated by vinblastine in multidrug-resistant kb-v cells. in the same study, this finding was linked to its possible interaction with p-glycoprotein, a eukaryotic mdr pump. taking this finding as the starting point, the current study investigates the potential of roemerine as an inhibitor of the p-glycoprotein homologue pump, bmra, in bacillus subtilis . the antimicrobial agent berberine was used as the model agent since its efficacy is reduced by efflux through mdr pumps. to this end, bacillus subtilis cells were subjected to lg/ml berberine, a value well below the mic. this concentration only slightly retarded growth for hours but then cells resumed their regular growth. upon addition of lg/ml (-)-roemerine to the bacillus subtilis cells treated with berberine, growth pattern changed, indicating possible interaction with bmra. further investigation for the change in the expression of bmra was achieved with real time pcr analysis. glucose oxidase is an enzyme that catalyzes the oxidation of glucose to d-glucono- , -lactone and hydrogen peroxide. we hypothesized that enzyme would cause a double negative effect on cancer cells, by reducing the presence of glucose in cancer microenvironment and producing reactive oxygen species. to increase enzyme stability and enhance cellular uptake we encapsulated the enzyme with a thin acrylamide layer. the purpose of this work was to optimize the synthesis of these glucose oxidase nanoparticles and investigate their effect on cancer cells. nanoparticles containing single glucose oxidase were synthesized in two steps; first by introducing the vinyl groups onto the surface of enzyme by acyloylation followed by polymerization step with acrylamide monomers. encapsulated enzymes are approximately nm in size and retain most of their activity. after the optimization of nanoparticles, the anticancer potency of these nanoparticles was in vitro tested in mcf- breast cancer cell line. according to results, both nanoparticles and free enzyme are capable of inhibiting viability of cancer cells in a similar manner at very low concentrations. currently we are investigating mechanisms involved in this viability inhibition. initial results demonstrated that glucose supplement does not rescue cells from death induced by the activity of glucose oxidase, suggesting an oxidative stress related cause of inhibition. further studies are required to elucidate the exact mechanism. until now there is no determined advantage of glucose oxidase encapsulation against proteolysis. however, encapsulation may induce the accumulation of enzyme in cancer microenvironment. furthermore results suggest that glucose oxidase has a high effect on the viability of mcf- breast cancer cells indicating that this enzyme may have a potential use in cancer treatment. studies on the interaction of human phospholipid scramblase with c-terminal domain of topoisomerase iia u. sivagnanam, s. n. gummadi applied and industrial microbiology lab, bhupat and jyoti mehta school of biosciences, indian institute of technology madras, chennai, india human phospholipid scramblase (hplscr ) is a multifunctional protein that plays key roles in several cellular processes including apoptosis, tumorigenesis, anti-viral defense, cell signalling and several protein-protein interactions. it has been shown that hplscr interacts with the c-terminal domain of topoisomerase iia (topo iia) and enhances its decatenation activity in vitro. the interacting region in topo iia was identified but till date, no reports exist on the binding region in hplscr . this study aims to identify the region of hplscr that interacts with topo iia. to identify the topo iia interacting sites in hplscr , nterminal deletion constructs of hplscr viz Δ -hplscr , Δ -hplscr , Δ -hplscr , Δ -hplscr and Δ -hplscr were generated by pcr, cloned, overexpressed and purified to homogeneity using ni + -nta purification. the cterminal domain (ctd) of topo iia was cloned in pgex p- and was expressed as a gst fusion protein. gst pull down assays will be performed with the deletion constructs of hplscr and the gst-ctd-topo iia. the binding region in hplscr will be confirmed by peptide competition assays. our initial results show that the decatenation activity of topo iia was enhanced when the topo ii was pretreated with hplscr . Δ -hplscr did not show any enhancement of the decatenation activity compared to full length hplscr . hence, the binding region could be in the - region of hplscr . further deletions were done in the - region of hplscr as described earlier. gst-pull down assays and decatenation assays will be performed for the deletion constructs to narrow down the region of hplscr that binds to topo iia. we conclude that hplscr interacts with and enhances the activity of topo iia and the - region of hplscr is critical for enhancement of decatenation activity. further work is under progress to identify the exact topo iia binding region of hplscr and the physiological relevance of this interaction in the cell. a. ugur kurtoglu , v. aslan , e. kurtoglu department of biochemistry, antalya education and research hospital, antalya, turkey, department of hematology, antalya education and research hospital, antalya, turkey beta-thalassemia is a common autosomal recessive disorder resulting from over different mutations of the beta-globin genes. our aim was to creat a mutation map of beta thalassemia in province of antalya, turkey. in this study, mutation analysis of a total of beta-thalassemia patients followed up at the thalassemia center of the antalya education and research hospital, antalya, turkey, were included. according to our results, the ivs . is the most frequent mutation type in our province same as other geographical regions of turkey. the most frequent mutations in heterozygous or homozygous patients are ivs . , ivs . , ivs . and ivs . . our results indicate the importance of micromaping and epidemiology studies of thalassemia, which will assist in establishing the national prevention and control program in turkey. keywords: beta-thalassemia, beta-globin gene, mutation p-mis- investigation of the in vitro effects of some antibiotics on the purified beta-glucosidases from the rat liver n. t€ urkmen , h. kara karadeniz technical university medical biochemistry department, trabzon, turkey, balikesir university veterinary faculty biochemistry department, balikesir, turkey beta-glucosidases catalyzes the hydrolysis of the glycosidic bonds to terminal non-reducing residues in b-d-glucosides and oligosaccharides.b-glucosidases are widely distributed in the living world.b-glucosidases which in mammals, primarily found in the liver and kidneys;lysosomal b-glucosidase (gba ),non-lysosomal b-glucosidase (gba ), cytosolic b-glucosidase (gba ),intestinal lactase-phloriz the hydrolase (lph). liver tissues of wistar-albino rats were homogenized with homogenizer in the extraction buffer and crude extract was obtained after centrifugation.ammoniumsulfate precipitation range designated crude extract was purified by sepharose b-ltyrosine- -naphthylamine hydrophobic gel.commercially availabled antibiotics were prepared with substrate buffer.it was investigated inhbition effects of cefuroximesodium, ampicillin-sulbactam, amoxicillin trihydrate/potassium clavulanate, cefazolin sodium, gentamicin sulfate and ceftriaxone disodium antibiotics onto gba .inhibition types and k i values of related antibiotics were determined with p-npg substrate.lineweaver-burk plot was used for that purpose. rat liver gba was purified at . -fold with . % yield.gba was illustrated and kda at sds-page.ic value of ampicillin/sulbactam antibiotic for gba was found . mg/ml with competitive type inhibition and other antibiotics didn't inhibit. purfication methods are being used in the literature for the purified b-glucosidase from different sources.purified gba was illustrated and kda at sds-page.about molecular weight of bglucosidases is presented different information in the literat€ ure. this has been reported because of acid beta glucosidases are abnormal migration at the acrylamide or agarose gels.it was investigated inhbition effects of various antibiotics onto purified gba .ampicillin/sulbactam antibiotic inhibited to purfied gba at the competitive type.similiar antibiotics studies have been made in the literature for different enzymes. effect of glutamine on insulin resistance and endoplasmic reticulum stress g. aydogdu , p. b. sermikli , a. abbasi taghidizaj , e. yilmaz ankara university, institute of science, ankara, turkey, ankara university, biotechnology institute, ankara, turkey obesity and diseases are one of the most important public health problems of the world.excess fat storage in adipocytes leads to the release of increased amounts of non-esterified fatty acids, glycerol, hormones, cytokines, which are factors involved in the development of insulin resistance that cause type diabetes. one of the major differences between obese and lean individuals is the amino acid concentration in the circulation. although there are many studies about the amino acid metabolism associated with insulin resistance in obese individuals, the effect of glutamine metabolism in insulin resistance mechanisms are not well understood yet. glutamine can be used as fuel and its levels in tissues and circulation can regulate cell responsiveness to insulin and cellular metabolism. therefore, glutamine is a potentially important factor that might help us better understand insulin resistance and type diabetes. to determine whether glutamine effect on insulin resistance and endoplasmic reticulum stress, t -l cell is treated with different concentration of glutamine and analyzed by western blot for er stress markers. our results indicated that glutamine reduced endoplasmic reticulum stress and related with that attenuated insulin resistance. in case of transport of amino acids, insulin resistance, how it is affected when we have the information about the important tips on energy requirements and metabolism reach insulin resistance and type- diabetes treatment is likely to reveal a possible new targets. how does different lead levels affect tsh, ft , ft , vitamin b and folate? e. ozkan ankara occupational disease hospital, ankara, turkey exposure to heavy metals is increasing with the industrialization of society. one of the most intense exposure to heavy metals is pb on this issue. this study was aimed to determine the relationship between different blood pb levels and serum thyroid hormones (th), vit b , folate. the cases were - years old, male individuals who admitted to our hospital between april -march for periodic inspections because of occupational exposure to pb. the parameters of the cases were retrospectively retrieved. according to their pb levels, exposed workers (n: ) were divided into four subgroups; group (g) : - . lg/dl, g : - . , g : - . , g : ≥ . from these, the number of cases whose th levels were measured (n: ) given respectively; g : , g : , g : , g : cases. also the number of cases whose vit b and folate levels were measured (n: ) given respectively; g : , g : , g : ,g : cases. levels of pb were determined by icp-ms. th, vit b , folate were determined by cmia. between the groups formed according to pb levels, there was no significant difference in terms of average t , tsh and vitamin b (p > . ). on the other hand there was statistically significant difference between t and group , , (p < . ) but there was no difference between group (p > . ). the average folate belongs to the first group was about % higher than the other groups, and found that the difference was statistically significant (p < . ). there are many publications which have various results between pb levels and t ,t , tsh. but this study is important to compare the effect of different levels of pb. up to day there was no publication about the relation between different pb levels and vit b , folate. it was seen that there was no significant clinical relation between different pb levels and thyroid parameters, vit b . but the low levels of folate in the high pb levels groups shows us that we need further studies about this relationship. fluorescent study of in meso crystallization of membrane proteins with the introduction of membrane protein in meso crystallization years ago by landau and rosenbusch, a new era of membrane protein structural research has emerged ( ). since that time this method became associated with a number of major breakthroughs in the field ( ) including exceptional successes in structural studies of microbial rhodopsins and g-protein coupled receptors ( ) . here we used fluorescence microscopy to study in meso crystallization process of bacteriorhodopsin. several observations provide new insights into the in meso crystallization process. the crystallization starts with formation of microcrystals, followed by growth of a dominating crystal at the expense of smaller ones and formation of a depletion zone around it. these observations demonstrate an ostwald ripening mechanism of the in meso crystal growth. the depletion zone formed around the growing crystal is consistent with the previously proposed analogy relating in meso crystallization with the crystallization in a microgravity convection-free environment. this work is supported by rsf - - . ( ) landau, e. m.; rosenbusch, j. p. proc. natl. acad. sci. u. s. a. , , À . ( ) caffrey, m. acta crystallogr., sect. f: struct. biol. commun. , , - . ( ) katritch v., cherezov v., stevens r.c. ( ) . annu rev pharmacol toxicol , - . p-mis- stamp is critical for both ar and mtor signaling in prostate cancer cells x. sheng, y. jin, f. saatcioglu university of oslo, oslo, norway androgen receptor (ar) signaling plays a central role in the initiation and progression of prostate cancer (pca), including when the disease progresses to castration-resistant pca (crpc). the second central signaling pathway in pca, similar to various other cancers, is the pi k-akt-mtor signaling. importantly, these two oncogenic pathways cross-regulate each other in pca cells by reciprocal feedback, thereby maintaining tumor cell survival even when one is suppressed. we have previously identified that the six transmembrane protein of prostate (stamp ) promotes pca cell proliferation as well as inhibits apoptosis through, at least in part, regulating the erk mapk signaling. human pca cell lines lncap and vcap were used in the study. colony formation, soft-agar growth, prostatosphere formation assays were performed. for in vivo xenograft experiment, the cells were implanted subcutaneously into the flanks of nude mice. here, we show that stamp knockdown caused defects in colony formation, anchorage-independent growth and prostatosphere formation in lncap and vcap cells both in vitro, as well as tumor formation and growth in vivo. this may be due to the impaired ar and mtor signaling in these cells upon stamp knockdown. interestingly, in the crpc cell line rv , where-stamp knockdown did not affect mtor signaling, there was a remarkable repression of tumor take rate and growth. these results clearly indicate that stamp is essential for both ar and mtor signaling, and is crucial for pca growth in vitro and in vivo. however, the detailed molecular mechanism requires further investigation. taken together, these data unveil a critical role for stamp in coordinating the ar and mtor signaling pathways in pca cells, solidifying the basis for its pro-survival effects in pca, including in advanced disease. quantification of d thin layer chromatograms using d gel analysis software and gel documentation system o. kaynar, m. ileriturk, d. kaynar, s. kurt ataturk university, erzurum, turkey introduction: thin layer chromatography (tlc) is an important chromatographic technique that is widely used as a cost-effective method for rapid-sensitive analysis of compounds in plants, animals, and humans. however, one dimentional ( d) tlc is not sufficient for the separation of complex compounds. therefore, two-dimentional ( d) tlc was developed. the quantitative evaluation of plates are performed with tlc scanners or documentation systems. however, these systems specific for d plates, and cannot be adapted to quantitative evaluations of d plates. in this study, the applicability of the gel documentation systems and d analysis software for the analysis of d tlc plates were examined. material and method: d tlc of lipids: st dimension: methyl acetate/n-propanol/chloroform/methanol/ . % kcl ( / / / / v/v); nd dimension: chloroform/methanol/acetic acid/ water ( / / / v/v); detection: charring. d tlc of aminoacids: st dimension: . % (v/v) formic acid; nd dimension: toluene/glacial acetic acid ( : v/v); detection: uv. phospholipid and aminoacid standards, each include different classes were developed by d tlc. plates visualized with biorad geldoc xr, and band volumes on plates were calculated with biorad pdquest d gel analysis software. for the method validationa) plates containing same lipid classes were developed in the same day, and results were used for the calculation of intra-assay cv;cv% = average of each sample standard deviation/mean of sample b) plates containing same lipid classes were developed in different days, and results were used for the calculation of interassay cv; cv% = standard deviation of each sample average/mean of the plates results: volume of each phospholipid and aminoacid had less than % intra and inter-assay cv. conclusion: gel documentation system with d gel analysis software can be used for the quantitative analysis of the d tl plates both at uv and visible light. the role of na + k + atpase activity in the vasodilatory effect of n-acetylcysteine introduction: spasm occurred at the stage of and after the preparation of arterial grafts used in coronary artery bypass surgery (cabg) is effective on morbidity and mortality in the first hours of postoperative patients. n-acetyl cysteine (nac) that vasodilatory effect is known,may be considered as a suppressor agent for vasospasm developing during cabg. however, for the prevention of complications that may arise during or after cabg mechanism of these vasodilatory effects should be described. this study was aimed to investigate the role of atpase enzyme on the vasodilatory effect of nac. materials and methods: in this study, adult male wistar albino rats were used. rats were separated into four groups as control rats (g ), mm nac (g ), mm nac (g ) and mm nac (g ). a portion of the thoracic aorta isolated from rats was used for the relaxation response recording, and the other portion was used for measurement of nakatpase activity. isolated smooth muscle rings are suspended in the ml organ bath containing krebs solution for relaxation responses. in all groups, level of smooth muscle contraction were allowed to reach a plateau by adding mm kcl to the organ bath. then, in the first minutes of application relaxation responses which created by adding nac to the medium were recorded and the maximum relaxation responses were measured. nak atpase activity was determined using the mazzanti method. groups means were compared by one-way analysis of variance (anova). the threshold for statistical significance was set at . . results: the contraction force decreased in all nac dose groups compared to control group and this reduction was statistically significant (p < . ). similarly, nak atpase activity is also decreased in a dose dependent manner (p < . ). the findings obtained in this study suggest that vasodilator effect of nac formed in thoracic aortic smooth muscle was associated with the activity of the enzyme na k atpase. in the presented study, we isolated and characterized a novel feather-degrading bacterium that shows keratinolytic activity. a bacillus uk , which was isolated from the soil samples taken from farmland on kahramanmaras sutcu imam university campus, showed high keratinolytic activity when cultured on feather meal medium. the enzyme activity was studied in the ph range of . - . . the optimum temperature for keratinase activity was investigated by varying the incubation temperature between °c and °c. optimum keratinolytic activity was observed at °c and ph . . the enzyme was stable at °c. the activity was investigated in the presence of some chemicals, including sds, tween , dmso, triton x- , edta, nacl, zncl , cacl , glucose. the keratinolytic activity was inhibited by all chemicals tested to some degree. the molecular weight of keratinase was determined by polyacrylamide gel ( %) using standard molecular weight marker and estimated about kda by sds-page. the keratinase isolated from bacillus uk could be used in biotechnological processes i.e. feather degradation, wastewater treatment and in industrial processes, such as detergent, food and leather industries. introduction: hemoglobinopathies, including thalassemia, abnormal hemoglobins, constitutes a major group of inherited disorders of hemoglobin synthesis. the reduced or absent of the beta (b) or alpha (a) globin chains of the adult human hemoglobin molecule results beta or alpha thalassemias, leading to imbalanced a-globin/non a-globin chains. the aim of this study was to give a quik desicion with a/b-globin mrna ratio for sequencing of a or b gene, when the anemia is not detectable. materials and methods: mrna and cdna extraction of bthalassemia and a-(including two of . kb del./hbs) thalassemia subjects and normal controls were accomplished using the high pure rna isolation kit and transcriptor first strand cdna synthesis kit, respectively, following the manufacturer's instructions. we used cdna as a template in the real-time pcr amplification using primers specific for a, b globin genes. amplification was performed in a lightcycler Ò instrument. the a/b-globin mrna ratio of each sample was calculated based on the Àddct method. results: a/b-globin mrna ratios calculated in a-thalassemia subjects relative to normal control as a result of numbers of defective a-globin genes. the a/b-globin mrna ratio was found higher in b-thalassemia subjects. coinheritance of a-thalassemia in hb s subjects concluded a stabile a/b-globin mrna ratio as per a-thalassemia or b-thalassemia subjects. discussion and conclusion: instability in a/b-globin chains is a significant factor of thalassemia disease severity and can be used before deciding type of gene sequencing when the anemia is not detectable. this study indicates that imbalance in globin gene expression could be demonstrated by measuring a/b-globin mrna ratio, which was conveniently and accurately determined by qrt-pcr and give an information about globin gene function which gene should be correct to investigate an individual for globin gene mutation. p-mis- self-assembling peptides mimic supramolecular biochirality r. garifullin , , m. o. guler bilkent university unam, institute of materials science and nanotechnology, ankara, turkey, kazan federal university, institute of fundamental medicine and biology, kazan, russia supramolecular chirality is rooted in asymmetric spatial arrangement of structural elements (e.g. molecules or units with higher hierarchy). self-assembled systems giving rise to this kind of chirality are of great importance because they closely resemble natural biological systems and potentially can lead to new advanced functional materials. in the process of self-assembly, both molecularly chiral and achiral structural units can organize into chiral nanostructures. chiral arrangement of chromophore molecules in space is known to result in emergence of chiroptical properties of a chromophore. organization of pigment-protein complexes into macrodomains in green plants gives rise to biochirality emanating from long-range chiral order of complexes. owing to this order, macrodomains start to absorb circularly polarized light intensively and thus exhibit huge circular dichroism (cd) signal. in our study, a simple approach which was aimed at mimicking the biochirality phenomenon makes use of self-assembling peptide amphiphiles and their interactions with pyrene chromophore. designed peptide amphiphiles are capable of self-assembly into nanofibers with chiral interior, which in principle gives an opportunity to achieve long-range chiral order. two modes of interactioncovalent and noncovalentwere utilized in order to induce supramolecular chirality. covalent interaction mode included direct covalent attachment of pyrene to peptide sequence. upon self-assembly of peptide amphiphile into nanofibers intense circular dichroism phenomenon was observed. noncovalent interaction mode envisioned encapsulation of pyrene molecules in the hydrophobic core of nanofibers of another peptide amphiphile. co-assembly of peptide amphiphile and pyrene molecules led to chiral order and intense cd signal. in addition, it was possible to control the sign of cd signals by using either of peptide isomers, l or d. p-mis- pon activity in hdl subgroups of obese, overweight and normal weight subjects objective: the aims of this study were isolation of hdl-c subgroups by using precipitation method, determination of pon- activity in both total and hdl subgroups, and evaluation of performance characteristics of pon- activity measurement method in newly diagnosed obese, overweight and normal subjects. material and methods: the study population consists of newly diagnosed obese, overweight and normal subjects. fasting morning blood samples were taken from all study groups. hdl subgroup was obtained by heparin-mn-dextran sulphate precipitation method and cholesterol was measured with direct (homegenous) hdl-c method. hdl -c concentrations were calculated with the subtraction of hdl -c from total hdl-c. hdl -c and total pon- activity were determined by using eckerson method. non-hdl pon- activitiy was calculated with subtraction of hdl pon- activity from total pon- activity. results: total hdl-c, hdl -c and hdl -c concentrations and the activity of total pon- and hdl pon- were found lower in obesity according to overweight and normal subjects (p < . ). negative correlations were found between body mass index and hdl -c, total pon- and hdl pon- (r = À . , p < . ; r = À . , p < . ; r = À . , p < . , respectively). conclusion: our findings indicated that hdl-c metabolism and lipoprotein associated antioxidant defense mechanisms were adversely affected with obesity. in conclusion we think that precipitation method using for separating hdl subgroup, is simple and cost effective for routine applications in clinical laboratories. besides hdl -c measurements, pon activity, measurement of total and hdl -c subgroup might be helpful to evaluate the atherosclerotic process in obese subjects. keywords: obesity, body mass index, paraoxonase, hdl subgroup, cholesterol p-mis- hepatitis e virus antibody prevelance among persons who work with animals in north cyprus introductions: hepatitis e infection is a major cause of viral hepatitis in many developing countries. the objectives of the present study was to determine the seroprevelance of hev infection in peoples who work with animals in northern cyprus. materials and methods: prevelance of hev infection were determined in study group population: persons without occupational exposure to animals; persons who work with animals; veterinarian and butcher. a total of blood samples were collected. all serum samples were tested elisa using a commercially available kit according to the manufacturer's instructions. ti-test were used for istatistical analyses. p > . was accepted as significant value. results: in a study of blood donors ( male, female), the overall prevelance of anti-hev igg antibodies were . %. the blood samples were collected different areas. the prevelance of anti-hev igm antibodies was . % and he was years and acting a butcher during years. the prevelance of anti-hev igg of women were approximately two fold higher than men. no significant difference in anti-hev prevelance was observed between the age of the blood donors. according to the anti-hev igg prevelance, the without occupation expose to animal animal were %, the animal husbandry were % and the veterians and the butcher were % were found. discussion: the prevelance of anti-hev in the north cyprus ( %) was found low such as the prevelance of the turkey ( %). the prevelance of anti-hev igg in animal husbandry were higher that the other groups because of they may be more spend of time and contact with animals. the prevelance of igm results suggested that the possibility of outbreaks may be low in north cyprus. conclusion: this study was the first seroprevelance analysis of north cyprus according to the population number.the further studies could be included the seroprevelance of anti-hev from the animals. most errors in the clinical laboratory occur in the preanalytical phase the aim of this study was to investigate the causes and rates of rejected samples, regarding to certain test groups in our laboratory. this study was designed on the rejected samples between january and january . clinical chemistry, coagulation, hormone, cardiac markers, total urine evaluation and other (ethanol level, hba c, hb electrophoresis, neonatal bilirubin, drug level, blood gas, fecal occult blood) test groups were included. the total number of specimen and rejected samples was obtained from the hospital information system retrospectively. types of inappropriateness were evaluated as follows: erroneous coding, clotted specimen, hemolysis, insufficient volume, incorrect patient, incorrect tube and inappropriate specimen. it was determined that blood samples were sent to our laboratory in one-year period. . % of them were rejected because of preanalytical errors. erroneous coding was found as the most common rejection cause ( %). rejection rates of clotted specimen, hemolysis, insufficient volume, incorrect patient, incorrect tube and inappropriate specimen were found to be %, %, %, %, % and % respectively. in our study, erroneous coding was the most common cause of preanalytical errors. education of medical secretaries is relevant and important as can be seen in the decrease of sample errors and the resulting quality improvement. glycosylated hemoglobin test (hba c) is important for screening, diagnosing, and monitoring diabetes and prediabetes. however, hba c levels may dependent on patient ethnicity suggesting that the diagnostic cut-offs should be evaluated for specific populations. therefore, our aim in this study was to evaluate the efficiency of hba c for predicting diabetes in comparison to oral glucose tolerance test (ogtt) results for turkish population. the study included anonymous lab results (acibadem labmed laboratories in turkey) of patients ( female, male) aging . ae . years ( - ) who had an initial diagnosis of diabetes. glucose and insulin levels during ogtt were measured after the initial administration of g sugar ( hour), -hour and -hour. these parameters were statistically analyzed in comparison to simultaneous hba c results. glucose measurements at hour had better distinction power (p < . ) between these individual groups than initial and -hour glucose measurements. the average hba c (%) levels for healthy, pre-diabetic and diabetic individuals were . ae . , . ae . and . ae . , respectively. roc curve analysis showed . % sensitivity and . % specificity for the clinically accepted hba c cut-off value of . %. hba c cut-off value of . % had a higher sensitivity of . % and comparable specificity of . %. the highest discrimination power between healthy, pre-diabetic and diabetic individuals was observed at glucose concentration at -hour after sugar administration in ogtt test as opposed -hours generally used for diagnosis. low sensitivity was observed for the clinically adapted . % cut-off value of hba c. the cut-off value of . % for hba c was found to be more sensitive with comparable specificity than the . % cut-off values for diabetes screening in our population. our results suggest that . % for hba c should be considered for diabetes cutoff value for turkish population. induction of the glutathione-dependent detoxification capacity is involved in the hepatoprotective effect of silymarin against acetaminophen-induced hepatotoxicity y. kim, d. kwon, c. ahn seoul national university, seoul, south korea recent findings in this laboratory showed that silymarin was capable of promoting hepatic glutathione (gsh) synthesis via a modification of the transsulfuration reactions in the liver. to investigate its pharmacological significance, we examined the hepatoprotective effect of silymarin against liver injury induced by acetaminophen (apap). adult male mice were treated with silymarin ( mg/kg, po) every hours for a total of doses prior to an apap challenge ( mg/kg, ip). the apap-induced liver injury was assessed by histopathological examination and measurement of changes in plasma enzyme activities, lipid peroxidation and formation of nitrotyrosine protein adducts in the liver. plasma levels of apap and its major metabolites were monitored for hours to estimate the metabolic transformation of apap. also protein and activity of the major cyp subtypes involved in the metabolic activation of apap into a toxic metabolite were determined in liver of the mice treated with silymarin only. silymarin pretreatment attenuated the apap-induced liver injury significantly when determined hours later. plasma concentrations of apap, apap-glucuronide or apap-sulfate in plasma were not changed, but thiol conjugates of apap, such as apap-glutathione, apap-cysteine and apap-n-acetylcysteine, were elevated significantly in the mice pretreated with silymarin. however, silymarin treatment did not affect protein expression of cyp e , cyp a , or cyp a in the liver. also hepatic microsomal enzyme activities measured using p-nitrophenol, ethoxyresorufin and erythromycin as substrates, were not increased by silymarin, indicating that the elevation of apap-thiol conjugates should be attributed to an augmentation of the gsh conjugation capacity. it is suggested that silymarin may protect the liver against an electrophilic substance-induced toxicity by increasing gsh availability which would enhance the detoxifying capacity of liver cells. prostate cancer (pca) is the second leading cause of death among men in western countries. we have previously found that the six transmembrane protein of prostate (stamp ) promotes pca cell proliferation as well as inhibits apoptosis through, at least in part, regulating the erk/mapk signaling. we also found that stamp is highly mobile in pca cells and shuttles between the plasma membrane and the golgi, often found in vesiculotubular structures in the cytosol. using advanced imaging techniques, we have now characterized the trafficking of stamp from the plasma membrane to early endosomes in lncap cells, by analysing its dynamic targeting to the three main endocytosis pathways: clathrin-mediated endocytosis, caveolae/lipid rafts, and the arf -dependent pathway. we found that stamp fused to cyan fluorescent protein (cfp-stamp ) is present at the plasma membrane where it accumulates in punctate structures. live cell confocal imaging showed that these puncta were dynamic over time indicating that stamp may be constitutively delivered to the plasma membrane and removed from it by endocytosis. co-expression of cfp-stamp with various fluorescent protein markers revealed that cfp-stamp puncta corresponded to lipid rafts that were labelled with caveolin- -rfp or antibodies against flotillin. live cell imaging showed that cfp-stamp and caveolin- -rfp disappeared at the same time from the same region of the plasma membrane suggesting that lipid rafts are likely to be responsible for stamp internalization. notably, stamp was absent from other endocytosis structures such as clathrin-coated pits/vesicles. further work is needed to determine whether stamp internalization is required for its function, such as its link to erk signaling, and whether interference with lipid rafts influences stamp effects on pca cell proliferation and survival. antithrombin-iii, mpv and plasma total homocysteine levels in behcet's disease introduction: behcet's disease is a multi-systemic and chronic inflammatory vasculitis of unknown etiology characterized by recurrent oral and genital ulcers, uveitis, arthritis, arterial aneurysms, venous thrombosis and skin lesions. platelet indices such as mean platelet volume (mpv) is a standart indicator of platelet function in disease pathophysiology. antithrombin, a glycoprotein synthesized in the liver, is the major plasma inhibitor of thrombin thus modulating blood coagulation. antithrombi-iii (at-iii) is a enzyme even moderate deficiency significantly increases the risk of thrombosis. homocysteine (hcy), that is formed during the metabolism of methionine. several clinical studies have clarified that elevated blood hcy levels are related to atherosclerotic disease. in our study, we investigated ovocystatin is one of the best characterized members of cystatin superfamily of protease inhibitors, and it has been frequently used for pathophysiological studies as the model protein, representative for this superfamily. its application has been supported by high structural similarity to human cystatin c as well as several common biological activities. as regard to biological activity, cystatins, including ovocystatin, are best characterized as inhibitors of cysteine proteases of papain family (c ), such as cathepsins b, h, l and s. these inhibitors participate in intra-and extracellular control of proteolytic events, both in physiological and pathological states. in the recent decade also new activities of cystatins, not assigned to inhibition of papain-like cysteine cathepsins, were found. these activities are associated with an alternative active center for legumain-type proteases in the molecule. here we report a chemical modification of ovocystatin that disables the anti-papain activity of the inhibitor but does not affect its anti-legumain activity. the chemical knockout has been obtained by reaction with -hydroxy- -nitrobenzyl bromide (hnbb) that covalently modifies the trp residue in the molecule. the reaction has been monitored by uv-vis and fluorescence spectroscopy. the anti-papain activity of the inhibitor has been measured colorimetrically against bana as a substrate. the anti-legumain activity was assessed fluorometrically using z-ala-ala-asn-amc. the reacted inhibitor exhibited an additional, characteristic for hnbb, band at nm in uv-vis scan. accordingly, an ablation of trp fluorescence was also observed. the molecule fully retained the anti-legumain activity, while only residual antipapain activity ( %) was observed. the modified ovocystatin can be a useful molecular tool for studying the physiological and pathological processes specifically associated with legumain activity. departments of medicine (hematology/oncology) and biochemistry and molecular biology, university of louisville, james graham brown cancer center, louisville, ky, united states -phosphofructo- -kinase/fructose- , -bisphospatase (pfkfb) family of enzymes are responsible for the conversion of fructose- -phosphate (f p) to fructose- , -bisphosphate (f , bp) and vice versa, and f , bp is an allosteric activator of phosphofructokinase- (pfk ), a rate-limiting enzyme of glycolysis. among the four identified pfkfb isozymes (pfkfb - ), pfkfb is the least studied isozyme in human cancers. there exists two different splice variants of pfkfb , variant- and variant- , coding two different isoforms, isoform a and b, respectively. in this study, we first analyzed the effect of k-ras(g d)induced oncogenic transformation on pfkfb expression in pancreatic duct cells. we found that oncogenic k-ras induction in immortalized pancreatic duct cells (ipde) was associated with decreases in total pfkfb mrna and protein expressions (mrna; ipde: ae . ; ipde+kras: . ae . and protein; ipde: ipde+kras: . ). we then, checked individual expressions of splice variants and observed that while pfkfb splice variant- (p -v ) expression was reduced by k-ras induction (ipde: ; ipde+kras: . ), pfkfb splice variant- (p -v ) expression was increased (ipde: ; ipde+kras: . ). then, we checked effects of p -v and p -v on glycolytic phenotype of ipde and ipde+kras cells. over-expression of pfkfb variants increased f , bp concentration (p -v : . ; p -v : . fold; compared to empty vec), glucose uptake (p -v : %; p -v : %) and glycolysis (p -v : %; p -v : %) in ipde+k-ras cells. we next analyzed the subcellular localizations of pfkfb isoforms and observed that both pfkfb isozymes localize to the nucleus, with more prominent nuclear localization of p -v compared to p -v . also, nuclear localization ratio of p -v increases after oncogenic transformation with mutant k-ras. taken together, these results suggest that pfkfb may have a role in the glycolytic phenotype of pancreatic cancers characterized with hyperactive k-ras signaling. effects of p map kinase inhibitors on mda-mb- cell line introduction: p mapk phosphorylates serine and/or threonine residues of the target proteins. the activation of p mapk leads to cell growth, differentiation, survival or apoptosis. in this study, we tested the effect p mapk sb and sb on mda-mb- cells to further elucidate the controversial role of p mapk on cell proliferation or cell migration. materials and methods: mda-mb- cancer line was cultured in rpmi- supplemented with % fbs. the cytotoxic and cell migration effects of sb and sb inhibitors were tested by mtt assay and wound assay, respectively. the effects of both inhibitors on proliferation and adhesion of md-mb- cells were determined by icelligence system. results: it was found that sb p map kinase inhibitor was more effective than sb . however, no significant effects of low doses of lm and lm of both inhibitors were seen on cell proliferation as compared to the dmso-treated control cells for up to hours as determined by icelligence system. on the other hand, both sb and sb significantly prevented cell proliferation at a concentration of lm. both sb and sb significantly reduced cell migration in a time-dependent manner at a concentration of lm. then, we tested whether each p mapk inhibitors have any effect on cell adhesion during a treatment period of hours using icelligence system. only lm concentration of sb reduced cell adhesion for about . hour (p < . ). conclusion: p mapk inhibitors sb and sb differentially affect cell proliferation, survival and migration. acknowledgements: this study is financially supported by dumlupınar university, scientific research project no - . mutagenicity of a series efficacious benzoxazine derivativesa new approach to evaluate ames test data e. foto , f. zilifdar , s. yilmaz , t. sarac ßbasi , i. yalc ßin , n. diril hacettepe university, ankara, turkey, ankara university, ankara, turkey testing safety of drug candidates is as crucial as evaluating their efficacy in early drug development. we previously synthesized a series of , -benzoxazine- -one derivatives showing significant antimicrobial, in vitro anticancer, topoisomerase i inhibitory activities and studied their several mechanisms of action. in this present study, we have evaluated mutagenic activities of these compounds and their potential metabolites. moreover, we aimed to develop a new statistical algorithm available for structureactivity relationship analysis to identify the regions responsible for the activity. to evaluate mutagenicity of the compounds, ames salmonella/microsome test was used. salmonella typhimurium ta and ta strains were used to detect for frameshift and basepair substitution mutagens, respectively. additionally, mutagenicity of potential metabolites of them were evaluated by adding metabolic activation system (s ) which was prepared from a pool of male sprague dawley rats. results were evaluated with student's-t test. following regression model estimation analysis, we detected minimum mutagenic doses of all tested compounds for generating a d-common features pharmacophore model with hiphop method. according to the results, only bs , bs , bs and bs exhibited strong mutagenic effects on both strains in the presence and absence of s . additionally bs , bs , bs and bs (in the absence of the s ), bs , bs and bs (in the presence of the s ) showed weak mutagenic effects on ta . hiphop analysis results revealed that mutagenicity was increased in the presence of aromatic desactivating groups which might form hydrogen bonds at the position of r and hydrophobic groups at the position of r of the benzene ring in the structure of benzoxazine. the new statistical approach developed in this study can be useful for assessing the ames test data available for structure activity relationship analyses. background: recently more than thirty different diseases can screen simultaneously with expanded newborn screening (nbs) programs by tandem ms.expanded nbs with tandem ms is performed routinely at akdeniz university hospital central laboratory since .the aim of this study was to evaluate our nbs results with some second-tier and confirmatory tests. materials and methods: nbs results (n = ) were evaluated in dried blood samples which sent to our laboratory for the study between august and august . electrospray ionisation (esi)triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (shimadzu lc-ms/ms ,japan) was used for nbs analysis,acylcarnitine and amino acid profile were screened with mrm (multiple reaction monitoring) spectrum within minutes.second-tier tests were performed as urine organic acid analysis by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (gc-ms),plasma and urine quantitative amino acid analysis by high pressure liquid chromatography (hplc).pathological nbs results were assessed in three separate groups as amino acid metabolism disorders, fatty acid oxidation defects and organic acidemias. results: metabolic diseases were found in ( . %) patients by the second-tier tests performed.there were detected amino acid metabolism disorders in ,organic acidemia in ,fatty acid oxidation defects in patients. conclusions: the reason of high positive results in our laboratory could explain that our study includes both screening and monitoring of previously diagnosed metabolic patients.nbs is performed in only a few centers in turkey although there were the national screening programs included nbs in many foreign countries.more expanded nbs programmes in our country is required to start treatment of patients before irreversible damage is not occured. although many reports indicate the involvement of calpain in several human pathologies, it is not yet clarified how the protease can recognize the substrates to digest and how can escape to its natural inhibitor calpastatin. answers to these questions have been obtained by identifying specific intracellular localizations of calpain and its substrates and analyzing the interactions of the protease with calpastatin. these studies were carried out using human sknbe neuroblastoma cells. protein-protein interactions and intracellular localization of calpain and the related proteins were determined by immunoprecipitation and isolation of membrane microdomains. we have observed that small amounts of calpain- are localized in lipid rafts microdomains together with n-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (nmdar) containing nr /nr b subunits. immunoprecipitation experiments have demonstrated that nmdar containing nr /nr b subunits, calpain- , hsp and neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nnos) but not calpastatin and calpain- are present in specific protein complexes. thus, in this localization calpain activity is regulated by hsp that reduces the affinity for ca + of the protease. cell stimulation with nmdar agonists induces calpain activation that specifically cleaves the subunits nr b of the receptor promoting changes in lipid rafts organization and internalization of nmdar without affecting cell viability. moreover, in these conditions, also nnos is digested and converted in the active form by calpain- . our data suggest a physiological role of calpain- at specific cell sites. the protease inserted in lipid rafts microdomains is in strict contact with its targets and escapes to calpastatin which is not inserted in these structures. following an increase in ca + influx, the activated protease regulated by hsp , promotes the removal of nmdar from the plasma membranes, decreasing ca + entrance through this receptor-channel and protecting cells from ca + overloading. tissue transglutaminase (tg ) is a multifunctional protein complex that can act as a crosslinking enzyme, gtpase/atpase, protein kinase and protein disulfide isomerase. at the cell surface, tg was shown to be involved in adhesion, migration, invasion, growth, epithelial mesenchymal transition and hence implied in the metastatic development of many different tumor types. renal cell cancer (rcc) is one of the most common type of cancer in adult males that generally grows as a single tumor within a kidney. our previous findings indicate that the increased expression of tg in rcc results in tumor metastasis with a significant decrease in disease-and cancer-specific survival outcome. herewith, the role of tg in cell migration of rcc was investigated in this study by transducing the model rcc mouse cell line renca with a series of tg mutant constructs. renca cells were transduced by lentiviral particles encoding wttg , transaminase-defective tg -c s form with low gtpbinding affinity, gtp-binding deficient form tg -r a, and transaminase-inactive tg -w a. in order to investigate the role of tg transamidating and gtpase activity in cell migration, scattering assay was used where colonies for each mutant clone was followed for a time interval of hours. our results showed that non-transduced control and tg -c s mutant renca cells demonstrated a similar migration pattern with a % of scatter activity. on the other hand, % colonies formed by renca cells overexpressing wttg and tg -w a mutant scattered away from each other. a small insignificant increase in scattering was seen in % of the total number of colonies for renca cells overexpressing tg-r a construct. data from this study supports that gtp-binding activity of tg is the drive force in migration driven scattering of renca cells, suggesting that inhibitors targeting the gtp-binding activity of tg may serve as a new therapeutic approach in the treatment of rcc. background: in this study, we aimed to investigate the relationship between level of vitamin d with subclinical hypothyroidism and subclinical hyperthyroidism. material and metod: study groups planned as three groups such as euthyroid (n = ), subclinical hypothyroid (n = ), subclinical hyperthyroid (n = ). serum tsh, free t (ft ) and free t (ft ) levels were determined by chemiluminescence immunoassay and serum -hydroxy (oh) vitamin d (oh) d level were determined by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. euthyroidism was defined as a normal level of tsh (range, . to . miu/l), ft (range, . to . ng/dl) and ft (range, . to . ng/dl). subclinical hypothyroidism is defined as an elevated serum tsh level associated with normal total or free t and t levels. subclinical hyperthyroidism is defined as low serum tsh levels associated with normal free t and free t levels. results: subclinical hyperthyroid group had significantly higher (oh) vitamin d levels compared to the euthyroid and subclinical hypothyroid groups (p < . ). (oh) vitamin d levels in subclinical hypothyroid group was not statistically significant when compared with the euthyroid group. food processing wastes provide carbon sources in high amounts for fermentative microorganisms to produce energy. converting carbon-rich biomass into bioethanol through fermentation by microorganisms both provides energy requirement for humankind and also decrease pollutant gases like co , no x and so x (ghorbani et al., ) . fermentation processes for bio-ethanol production could be achieved by saccharomyces cerevisiae, zymomonas mobilis, and escherichia coli. bacterial hemoglobin (vitreoscilla hemoglobin, vhb) is the first and best characterized prokaryotic hemoglobin molecule. the function of vhb is supporting the cellular respiration through binding to oxygen at microaerobic environment, transferring it to the terminal respiration oxidases (geckil et al., ) and thus improving growth and productivity of the microorganisms. in this study, e.coli strains fbr , ts and ts were used as ethanologenic microorganisms. expression of vhb in ts is lower than in ts strain. for the efficient ethanol production effect of different inoculum sizes, sugar species and sugar concentrations in the growth medium were investigated. vhb expression increased effectively the viability of ts strain by up to . x cfu per ml of fructose ( %, w/v) supplemented lb medium starting with small inoculum for fermentation. this indicates that vgb expression should be at the certain level to maintain sufficient the cell growth for ethanol production. geckil h, gencer s ( ) . production of l-asparaginase in enterobacter aerogenes expressing vitreoscilla hemoglobin for efficient oxygen uptake. applied microbiology and biotechnology : - . ghorbani, f., younesi, h., sari, a. e., najafpour, g. ( ) . cane molasses fermentation for continuous ethanol production in an immobilized cells reactor by saccharomyces cerevisiae. ethanol production from dairy industry by product using bacterial hemoglobin t. sar, g. seker, a. g. erman, m. yesilcimen akbas gebze technical university, depertment of molecular biology and genetics, kocaeli, turkey bioethanol production from biomass has a great potential to reduce greenhouse gases emissions. ethanol has several applications in industries (chemical, medical, pharmaceutical, food etc.) in the form of raw material, solvent and fuel. one of the most abundant liquid wastes is cheese whey generated from dairy industries. whey powder is concentrated form of whey and contains lactose and also protein, lipid, minerals and vitamins. vitreoscilla hemoglobin (vhb) is the first bacterial hemoglobin. the main function of this molecule is to improve oxygen transfer to cellular oxidases and thus supporting cellular growth and productivity at low oxygen levels (kallio et al. ) . in this work, e. coli strains fbr , ts (low level vhb expressing) and ts (high level vhb expressing) were used as ethanol producing microorganisms. fermentation medium containing whey powder supplemented with lb material was inoculated with these strains and incubated for hours at °c and rpm in a ml erlenmayer flask. the ethanol production was improved over % by using lower vhb expressing strain. the ethanol levels (v/v, %) were determined as . , . and . for fbr , ts and ts strains respectively. it is shown that the certain levels of vhb could be useful tool to increase the growth and productivity of ethanol from dairy industry wastes. kallio p.t., kim d.j., tsai p.s. and bailey j.e. ( ) . bioethanol is usually produced from cellulose, hemicellulose and lignin. the lignocellulosic wastes should be hydrolysed into fermentable sugars by using enzymes or dilute acids before microbial fermentation. acidic hydrolysis methodology is cheaper than enzymatic hydrolysis but it can cause production of some inhibitors like aliphatic acids, which affect the growth of microorganisms. vitreoscilla hemoglobin (vhb) is the first described prokaryotic hemoglobin. the recombinant strains carrying vgb gene (e. coli, p. aureginosa) which encodes vhb showed increased bacterial growth, productivity of metabolites compared to untransformant counterparts under low oxygen concentrations [nasr et al., ; geckil et al., ] . in this study, ethanologic e. coli strains fbr , its derivative strains ts (vgb+) and ts (vgb+) were used. ts was constructed in such that it could express more vhb than ts . bioethanol production by these strains in presence of lignocellulosic hydrolysates derived inhibitors was investigated. different acetic acid concentrations ( . - mm) were used as inhibitors from lignocellulose hydrolysate. . mm acetic acid was used as an inhibitor. the growth of vhb expressing ts and ts strains was inhibited about % after hours fermentation time. strain fbr was inhibited as high as % by using the same inhibitor including growth medium. it was shown that the expression of vhb could improve growth and productivity in presence of lignocellulosic inhibitors. differentiation of preadipocyte, also called adipogenesis, leads to the phenotype of mature adipocyte. however, excessive adipogenesis is closely linked to the development of obesity. thus, any drug or chemical that can inhibit adipogenesis may have preventive and/or therapeutic potential against obesity and related diseases. azd , an inhibitor of the family of pim kinases, is known for anti-cancer activity. here we investigated the effect of azd on adipogenesis in t -l preadipocytes. notably, azd treatment led to a concentration-dependent inhibition of both lipid accumulation and triglyceride (tg) synthesis during the differentiation of t -l preadipocytes into adipocytes with no cytotoxicity. on mechanistic levels, azd strongly reduced not only the expression levels of ccaat/enhancer-binding protein-a (c/ebp-a), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-c (ppar-c), fatty acid synthase (fas), and perilipin a but also the phosphorylation levels of signal transducer and activator of transcription- (stat- ) during adipocyte differentiation. furthermore, azd largely decreased leptin, but not adiponectin, mrna expressions during adipocyte differentiation. collectively, these results demonstrate that azd inhibits adipogenesis in t -l preadipocytes and the inhibition is largely attributable to the reduced expression and/or phosphorylation levels of c/ebp-a, ppar-c, fas, perilipin a, and stat- . effect of intrauterin exposure to artificial food colourings on dna damage in rats in many research genotoxic potential of food additives has been investigated. however there are few findings about the effect of artificial food colourings (afc) on dna. in this experimental study, we aimed to analyze whether in utero exposed artificial food colourings would have effect on dna and cause damage.thirteen female rats were included to the study which were equally divided into two groups as control (cg, n = ) and food colouring (fcg, n = ) groups. a mixture of nine food colours were given daily to fcg by oral gavage from preconception to birth. no adverse effect level (noael) of artificial food colourings for each colouring was administered to fcg. three months after the birth, offspring from each group were selected randomly as control (cg) and experiment (eg) groups. then they were sacrified under anesthesia. for performing the alkaline comet comet assay leukocytes were seperated from whole blood samples. the alkaline comet assay was performed. the extent of dna damage was assessed from the length of dna migration derived by subtracting the diameter of the nucleus from the total length of the image and graded into categories and these grades were converted into arbitrary unit (au). differences between the means of data were compared by independent samples t test. the results were given as the meanaesd, p values of less than . were considered as statistically significant. although the extent of dna damage was higher in eg, the comparison of experiment ( . ae . ) and control ( . ae . ) groups showed no statistical difference (p = . ). relationship between glucocorticoid receptor gene polymorphisms and recurrent depression l. aydogan, i. benli, z. c. ozmen, i. butun gaziosmanpasa university medical faculty, department of biochemistry, tokat, turkey objective: sensitivity to glucocorticoids varies between individuals and these differences have been implicated in the etiology of psychiatric diseases such as depression. recent studies have found relationship between common glucocorticoid receptor (gr) gene (nr c ) polymorphisms and unipolar or bipolar depression. the nr c gene is a candidate gene affecting depressive disorder risk and management. the aim of the present study was to evaluate the relative distribution of specific polymorphisms of nr c (bcl and rs ) in recurrent depressive disorder (rdd) patients. methods: our study included volunteers with recurrent depressive disorder and healthy individuals without any mental illness. depression was assessed by hamilton and madrs depression scale. nr c gene polymorphisms were detected by real-time pcr, with hybridization probe method. allele and genotype frequencies at two loci (bcli and rs ) were investigated in rdd patients and controls. results: genotype distribution among rdd patients and the control group for bcl- (g/c) were as follows: cc % and %, gc % and %, gg % and %, respectively. there was not a significant difference when the frequency of the allele (p = . ) and genotype frequency (p = . ) were compared between the patients and the control. genotype distribution in the rs region (a/t) of the patients and controls were tt % and %, ta % and %, aa % and %, respectively. allele frequency (p = . ) and the genotype frequencies (p = . ) were not significantly different among the groups. conclusion: numerous nr c gene polymorphisms were previously reported in association with modification of depressive disorders. the results of our study showed no association between gr genotype and recurrent depressive disorder. nr c polymorphism does not play a role in the development of recurrent depressive disorder. thymoquinone (tq) has been shown to supress the proliferation of various tumor cells, while it is minimally toxic to normal cells. the aim of this study is to investigate the potential therapeutic effects of tq on cell proliferation, apoptosis, invasion, migration, colony formation and wound-healing in sh-sy y human neuroblastoma cell line. sh-sy y cell line treated with - lm tq by solving medium for , and h considering a time-and dose-dependent manner. the cytotoxic effect of tq was determined by mtt method. total rna was isolated by trizol reagent. cdna synthesis was performed by using commercial kit. mdm , p , p , akt, pten, cdk , cyclin d , caspase- , - , - , - , bcl- , bax, parp, bcl-xl, bid, dr , dr , puma, noxa, mmp- , - , timp- , - and gapdh gene expression profiles were analysed by real-time pcr method. effects of tq in sh-sy y cells on invasion, colony formation and cell migration were detected by matrigel-chamber, colony formation assay and woundhealing assay, respectively. statistical analysis were performed with rt profiles array data analysis by using student's t test. ic value of tq in sh-sy y cells was detected as lm at th hours. by rt-pcr results, it was determined that tq caused a decrease in the expression of mdm , akt, cdk , cyclin d , bcl- and mmp- . it is also observed that tq caused a significant increase in the expression of p , pten, caspase- , - , bid, dr , puma, noxa and timp- . it was also found that tq in sh-sy y cells suppressed invasion, migration and colony formation by using matrigel invasion chamber, wound healing and colony formation assay, respectively. in conclusion, we demonstrate that tq significantly effect cell cycle, apoptosis, invasion, migration and colony formation of sh-sy y cells. tq may be a potential candidate as chemotherapeutic agent for the treatment of neuroblastoma. more studies have to be performed to profile the mechanisms and genome wide effects of tq to prove its therapeutic potential. dna aptamers can achieve a very high affinity to the target due to the potential of developing broad target-binding interface. however, classic strategy selection of aptamer binders is a challenging task requiring multiple rounds of panning and post-selection optimization. we have developed fast and convenient technique for the selection of dna aptamers based on the offrate selection and tandem affinity purification (tap). we constructed and produced in e.coli recombinant chimeric protein, comprising two affinity tags (his and gst) separated from each other and from the target protein (anthrax protective antigen domain iv, padiv) by sumo protease recognition polypeptide and synthetic cleavage site for the anthrax lethal factor (lf). the protein bound to aptamer library is first captured by imac resin, cleaved by sumo protease, captured by gst resin and eluted by lf following the lines of the tap method. the gst-captured aptamer-target complexes were subjected to the off-rate selection using soluble padiv as the competitor. multiple selection rounds are cumbersome and can result in carryover. high abundance of moderate affinity aptamers in the resulting pools obtained by classic selection approaches suggests that the procedure to counter-select them at the beginning of panning is needed. reduction of the contact duration between the aptamer library and the target was crucial for efficient selection of high-affinity binders. on the other hand, tap prevents contamination, and bundled with the off-rate selection, allows for clean isolation of high-affinity binders with affinity in the low nanomolar range. the developed technique is applicable for efficient selection of high affinity dna binders to soluble recombinant proteins and their fragments. dna aptamers obtained will be further used for the development of diagnostic and therapeutic tools for the detection and treatment of anthrax. the work was supported by russian science foundation research grant no. - - . the role of macab efflux pump in protection of serratia marcescens against antibiotics and oxidative stress the emergence of bacterial multi-drug resistance is a growing problem of public health worldwide. bacterial drug efflux pumps are membrane protein complexes that function to expulse drugs from the cell. they play a crucial role in the rising rates of antibiotic therapy failures. the homolog of macrolide-specific pump macab was identified in opportunistic pathogen serratia marcescens and was used in this study to characterize its role in protection against antimicrobials and other processes beyond the active efflux of antibiotics. here we used method of serial dilutions to determine minimum inhibitory concentration (mic) for s. marcescens sm wild type (wt) and its isogenic Δmacab mutant strains. we also used h o survival assay to evaluate the ability of wt and the mutant strain to withstand an oxidative stress. finally, we used b-galactosidase assay to evaluate macab promotor activation in the reporter strain and followed macab expression by western blotting analysis using macab- xhis strain. we show that in contrary to its e. coli homolog, macab pump in s. marcescens is not involved in the protection against macrolides but instead it is required for protection against aminoglycosides. we further show that similar to its salmonella typhimurium homolog, s. marcescens macab is essential for protection of bacteria against h o . transcriptional analyses demonstrate that while low level of macab promotor activity can be detected after hours of growth in lb-broth there is at least -fold increase in expression in response to the presence of h o . on the protein level macab can be detected starting from hours of growth in lb-broth and it reaches maximum expression on hour of growth. our data suggest that macab pump in s. marcescens is involved in protection of bacteria against aminoglycoside antibiotics and is crucial for protection against reactive oxygen species. we are currently working on identification of macab substrate with anti-h o properties. antiproliferative and apoptotic effects of noscapine on mcf- and mda-mb- human breast cancer cell lines approximately - % of breast cancers are negative for estrogen receptor, progesterone receptor, and human epidermal growth factor receptor . these are most aggressive tumor and a clinical problem because of lack of targeted therapies. noscapine is an alkaloid from opium. noscapine is a microtubule-interfering agent. it causes mitotic arrest, induces apoptosis. in this study, we aimed to investigate the effects of noscapine in mcf- and mda-mb- human breast cancer cell lines. the cytotoxic effects of docetaxel, tamoxifen, and noscapine on the mcf- and mda-mb- cell lines were analyzed by roche xcelligence system. the cells were cultured in % fetal bovine serum containing dulbecco's modified eagle medium at °c in a humidified atmosphere containing % co . h after seeding, the cells were treated with different doses of docetaxel ( . to nm), tamoxifen ( . to lm), and noscapine ( . to lm). cultured cells were harvested, fixed with % formalin, and centrifuged. pellet was blocked, fixed, and embedded in paraffin. paraffin-embedded cells blocks were sectioned at lm thickness and stained with h&e, ki- , bcl- , cyclin-d , and bax. sides were assessed under a light microscope. quantification of the analyzed proteins were evaluated by the percentage of positive cells. all drugs showed cytotoxic effects on both cell lines. all drugs inhibited the proliferation of breast cancer cells, but effects were dependent on time and dose. all drugs were especially more effective on mcf- cells. immunohistochemical examinations revealed that tamoxifen was more effective on mcf- cells, hovewer docetaxel and noscapine were more effective on mda-mb- cells. tamoxifen has more apoptotic and antiproliferative effects on mcf- cells. docetaxel and noscapine showed more apoptotic and antiproliferative effects on mda-mb- cells. noscapine may be an effective anticancer agent due to antiproliferative and apoptotic effects on breast cancer cells. negative selection of dna aptamers to reduce non-specific binding in solid-phase-based selection procedures carryover by binders specific to the components of the selection system can be a serious issue in hampering the aptamer selection campaign. solution-or "mass"-based techniques still cannot substitute classic phase-separation strategies. one approach to prevent selection of "passenger" phase-specific (plastic, beads) or blocking agent specific aptamer species is their depletion from the initial library pool. our aim was to develop the universal technique for removal of such aptamers exemplified by bsa-and casein-specific binders, while preserving the initial library complexity. the dna aptamer library was subjected to three rounds of depletion using magnetic beads with covalently attached casein and bsa. to ensure high depletion efficiency, beads were pelleted in a -ml centrifuge tube by a neodymium magnet through a -cm cushion of % sucrose, thus preventing weakly bound aptamers from re-populating the library. high complexity of the input library helped to avoid pcr amplification after depletion rounds preventing the library bias introduced by dna amplification. the depletion effciency was confirmed by real-time pcr. resulting oligonucleotide sub-library was analyzed for binding to the targets using solid-phase real-time pcr assay. we have shown that three rounds of panning under the conditions employed provided full depletion of the initial dna pool from nucleic acid structures capable of binding to protein competitors and hampering the process of aptamer selection. we compared selection efficiency of aptamers specific to type a botulinum neurotoxin light chain in depleted vs undepleted library. the yield of the target-specific aptamers was -fold higher in the library subjected to the depletion procedure. removal of undesired binders from aptamer libraries appears an important step of solid-phase selex procedure. it can become a useful approach in optimizing solid-phase selex. the work was supported by russian science foundation research grant no. - - . epithelial mesenchymal transition (emt) is a critical trans-differentiation program driving cancer metastasis. patients showing signs of emt or presence of distant metastasis have poor prognosis. another well-known feature of decreased cancer-associated survival is the lack of anti-cancer immune responses. thus we hypothesized that the emt and anti-tumor response should be linked via altered secretion of soluble factors by metastatic cells. all cell lines were grown in dmem. emt status of crc cell lines were assessed by investigating canonical markers of emt. cytokine/chemokine expression of crc cells was performed using r&d systems antibody arrays and validated using ccl sandwich elisa and rt-pcr. the mechanism of action of zeb / on ccl promoter has been studied by luciferace assay and chip. ccl coding region was cloned into pcdna . and stably transfected into dld- cells. ccl deficient ct cells were generated using lentivirual shrna transduction. cells overexpressing or knock/down ccl were injected orthotopically into mice. t lymphocyte (til) infiltration in respect to ccl and sip expression was studied using ihc or flow cytometry. emt status catagorised crc cell lines into epithelial, intermediate epithelial, intermediate mesechymal and mesenchymal. cytokine/chemokine antibody arrays showed a significant increase in ccl in induced dld-sip cells. elisa, multiplex assays and rt-pcr confirmed a significant increase of secreted ccl in the induced dld-sip cells as well as mesenchymal crc cells as compared to epithelial ones (p = . ). promoter studies showed that zeb / bind to ccl promoter and and activate ccl gene expression. no metastasis was observed for dld- cells overexpressing ccl but significant alterations of tumour associated lymphocytes were identified in syngeneic orthotopic crc models. our data shows that ccl is up-regulated by emt inducing transcription factor sip , and mesenchymal (metastatic) crc cells secrete significantly more ccl compared to epithelial (non-metastatic) ones. ccl did not induce emt per se but abundant secretion of ccl by metastatic crc cells was a crucial regulator of immune infiltrate in crc. inhibiting ccl in metastatic crc may have a therapeutic potential. barley (hordeum vulgare l.) belongs to the grass family, poaceae (gramineae). it is the fourth most important cereal crop after wheat, maize and rice and is among the top ten crop plants in the world. talbina was used to be recommended for the sick and for one who is grieving over a dead person. talbina is made by adding one or two tablespoon of barley flour (must be percent wholegrain barley flour) to one-and-a-half cups of water and placed on low heat for - minutes (optional: add milk or yoghurt and sweeten with honey). the main objectives of this investigation were determine the a-tocopherol contents and antimutagenicity activity of talbina (hordeum vulgare l.). our results showed that the total tocopherol content was in the range of . to . lmol/g fw. talbina extract was shown to have greater antimutagenic activity observed in the lg/plate concentration s. typhimurium ta . at all the doses antimutagenic response was significant at (p < . ) against both the strains with a percent mutagenicity decrease from to for ta followed by ta with percent antimutagenicity from to . the results of the study concluded that talbina is a better antimutagenic agent than vitamin e and combination of vitamins did not produce any synergistic activity. the compounds containing thiadiazoles have diverse applications as antifungals, anticancer agents, antibacterial, antiinflammatory drugs, antidepressants and carbonic anhydrase inhibitors according to literature. in this study some novel thiadiazole compounds [( , , , )-tetrathia[ . ] ( , )- , , -thiadiazolophane; ( , )dioxo- , , , )-tetrathia[ . ]( , )- , , -thiadiazolophane; ( , , , )-tetraoxo- ( , , , )-tetrathia[ . ]( , )- , , -thiadiazolophane and ( , , , , , )-hexaoxo- ( , , , )-tetrathia [ . ] ( , )- , , -thiadiazolophane] were used to evaluate the cytotoxicity on healthy human lymphocytes and the antibacterial activities. cytotoxicity tests were perfomed using mts assay and the trypan blue test. cells were incubated with the compounds for hours. at the end of the each hour, cell vitality was assessed by measuring the absorbance ( nm) of each well using a microplate reader for mts assay. in addition, viability percents of the cells were determined after trypan blue test. as a result, the compounds showed cytotoxicity in a dose dependent manner. for the concentrations of : of . mg/ml, the cytotoxic effect was eliminated. also, antioxidant capacity was determined using , -diphenyl- -picrylhydrazyl (dpph) reagent. moreover, the antibacterial activities of the compounds were analyzed using a microdilution test against e. coli and s.aureus. compounds having various concentrations showed different antibacterial effects against these two bacteria. arabidopsis thaliana ecotypes vary in their ability to utilize organic p substrates insufficient quantity of inorganic phosphorus in soil is an evergrowing problem that affects many fields of agriculture. unlike inorganic phosphates, organic phosphorus compounds are very common in many soil types, but plants are often unable to efficiently utilize them. to better characterize the extent of natural variation in the ability of the model plant arabidopsis thaliana to grow on organic phosphorus compounds, we grew arabidopsis ecotypes on several organic and inorganic sources of phosphorus. plants were grown in liquid or solid media containing naphosphate, phytate and atp as the sole supply of phosphorus or in absence of any phosphorus source. after several weeks of growth, plants were assayed for changes in their morphological and physiological characteristics. phytate was shown to be the least preferred source of phosphorus compared to inorganic phosphate and atp. the rate of biomass accumulation in all ecotypes decreased in the following order from inorganic phosphate to atp to phytate. lateral root formation was markedly reduced in the absence of any phosphorus source or in the presence of phytate. we also showed that phosphomonoesterase activity in intact roots increased when plants were grown on atp and phytate. overall phosphorus content in leaves and roots was similar when plants were grown on atp or inorganic phosphate, but it was markedly reduced on phytate. substantial differences between ecotypes were also observed in root length, p content in ash and phosphomonoesterase activity in intact roots. our analysis of the ability of arabidopsis ecotypes to grow on several different phosphorus sources provides a unique opportunity to investigate the degree of natural variation in this plant's ability to adapt to different nutritional environments. analysis of many important morphological and physiological changes observed in these plants can further extend our understanding of the full range of plant responses to phosphorus availability. laboratory tests are important in terms of confirmation of diagnosis given by clinics and implementation of appropriate treatment protocols for patients. laboratory tests used by the clinics have been increased in parallel with time.there are many reasons for increased use of the test such as increase of elderly population, increase in standard of care, lack of information and shortening of turn around time. unnecessary laboratory testing also constitute one of the reasons for increased use of laboratory tests. in our study we aimed to investigate the unnecessary laboratory testing for fpsa test. fpsa tests which are ordered with total psa tests that values of less than ng/ml or greater than ng/ml were accepted as inappropriate initial testing. fpsa tests were evaluated as unnecessary laboratory testing. the clinic which ordered the maximum unnecessary laboratory testing with was urology within all the clinics. although to the restrictions about the ordering of total psa and fpsa tests there were no decrease in the number of unnecessary laboratory testing. unnecessary usage of laboratory testing may cause increase of false positive results, increase in the use of invasive testing, unnecessary drug consumption and increase of healtcare costs. some precautions may be effective in reducing unnecessary tests such as to inform clinicians about the cost of laboratory tests, to increase the clinician education programs and to develop usage of disease specific diagnostic algorithms about test ordering. local clinical validation of blood collection tubes although the tubes with gel and clot activator are widely used due to the advantages, there are ongoing discussions about the effects of the blood collection tube on clinical outcomes in the analysis of biochemical parameters. therefore, we aimed to prove the local clinical validation of the new produced blood collection tubes with low-volume. the blood samples of patients who referred to the hospital phlebotomy unit were collected using holder into the different tubes. first tube was ml glass tube and with no additive, second was ml tube with gel separator, third was ml tube with gel separator. serum was separated and immediadiately analysed for biochemical parameters. the difference between the analyte amounts in the different tubes was evaluated using paired t-test. the clinical significance was evaluated using significant change limit. bias (%) between the other tubes with the reference tube was also evaluated according to the ''allowable total error". when we compared the other test tubes to a glass tube which was assumed reference tube, total protein, albumin, amylase, calcium, triglyceride, cholesterol, hdl-cholesterol, total and direct bilirubin, iron, gamma glutamyl transferase, magnesium, phosphorus results were statistically significant. but the results of all the analytes were within the significant changes limit and the allowable total error was not significant. while a biochemical parameters have analysed, it may be absorbed into the gel and this may caused from factors such as the chemical structure of the gel, analyte itself, the residence time in the gel, storage temperature and volume of the sample e.g. as well as the leaking of gel material to the sample was reported to be another factor for affecting the analysis. despite these factors, we observed that neither gel-clot activator tube with low nor high volume affect the clinical results. the research of the frequency of interference in thyroid function tests interference is defined as the effect of substance in the sample which changes the correct value of laboratory results. the frequency of interference in immune techniques is varied. the frequency of interference depends on population of the study, technique for detecting the reaction and researcher's method. unexpected or inconsistent results with clinical findings should suggest the possibility of interference. in this study it is aimed to investigate the frequency of interference in thyroid function tests (tsh, ft , ft ) which are the most common requested laboratory tests. thyroid function tests of patients are analyzed in ankara numune education and research hospital in october -may . five samples which had the incompatible results with clinical findings are re-evaluated just because of the suspicion of interference. the detection of interference included; repetition of test via different immune techniques, serial dilution, polyethylene glycol (peg) precipitation and incubation with heterophilic blocking tubes (hbt). the results of two different immune techniques and before/ after incubation with hbt showed no significant difference. linear curves had observed in serial dilution. after peg precipitation; below % of recovery had obtained in one sample, therefore it is interpreted as macro-tsh. the frequency of interference in thyroid function tests for -month study period was . %. no information is found about the best test for defining the cross reaction. it is also aforethought that interference should not be excluded by using any single procedure. p-mis- development of polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies against fatty acid binding protein (fabp /ap ) a. abbasi taghidizaj, g. aydogdu, b. p. sermikli, e. yilmaz ankara university, ankara, turkey recombinant proteins and antibodies can be use for therapeutic or diagnostic purposes which produced in many different host organisms. the technique for the production of immortal cell making single antibody, fusing target antibody-forming b lymphocyte precursor with a suitable myeloma cells. the fused hybrid cells (called hybridomas), as a cancer cell will reproduce rapidly and will produce large amounts of the desired antibodies. fatty acid binding protein (fabp ) is a well characterized intracellular lipid transport protein and plays a key role in the intracellular fatty acid transport and adipose tissue metabolism. fabp as a adipokine that regulates glucose homeostasis and has various features for metabolic syndrome associated with obesity. in this study, production of monoclonal antibodies against immunogenic fabp protein made by recombinant dna technology. recombinant his-fabp was expressed in e.coli and purified. balb/c mice used for immunization and serum anti-fabp antibodies determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa). hybridoma cells created by fusion of splenocytes and myeloma partner cells. after selection of antibody producing cell clones, injecting hybridomas into the peritoneal cavity in balb/c mice ascites fluids was obtained. we have selected fifteen hybridoma clones that produced antibodies specific for fabp , as shown by western blotting and immunocytochemistry. as a result we produced mabs that will be useful for the scientific community working on fatty acid binding proteins and lipid metabolism. in near future, therapeutic approach for this antibody maybe a possibility in metabolic syndrome. thioridazine, an anti-psychotic drug, inhibits migration, invasion and epithelial mesenchymal transition in breast cancer cell lines thioridazine (thz), an antipsychotic drug, exhibits anti-angiogenic effects on breast cancer cell lines. however the mechanistic insight in exerting antiangiogenic effect is not clearly understood. the objective was to investigate the role of thz in epithelialmesenchymal transition (emt) by using cell migration assay, scratch assay, western blot (wb) and immunocytochemistry. thz treatment reduced cell viability on mda-mb- , mcf- and cd + /cd -cells and ic values of thz were found to be lm, . lm and lm respectively, at hours. invasion potency of mcf- , cd + /cd -and mda-mb- cells were determined as %, %, . % when compared to relevant treatment controls. migration potency of mcf- , cd + /cd -and mda-mb- cells was determined as . %, . %, % respectively. among the three cell lines mda-mb- cells display enhanced invasive and migration ability when compared to other cell lines. western blotting results demonstrate that thz significantly increases e-cadherin, cytokeratin- , b-catenin, while inhibiting n-cadherin, vimentin, fibronectin. immunocytochemistry studies revealed decrease in e cadherin and a concomitant increase in vimentin level for all three cell lines upon treatment with thz. moreover thz significantly inhibited the cell migration, invasion and emt in mda-mb- , mcf- and cd + /cd cell lines by suppressing mesenchymal markers. in conclusion, these data suggest that thz might be a novel anti-proliferative and anti-metastatic agent for treatment of breast cancer. effect of seasonal temperature and humidity on urine density in children environmental heat and humidity are important factors affecting hydration status in childhood. hereby, we aimed to investigate the effects of seasonal climate changes on urine density of children living in mediterranean climate, cyprus. healthy - year children's ( girls, boys) age, sex and urine density results were collected retrospectively for three consecutive years. the correlation of urine density with each seasonal and months' average temperature and humidity has been analysed. the urine density results had a positive correlation with temperature (r = . , p = . ) and a negative correlation with humidity (r= À . , p = . ). mean urine density in spring was higher than that of autumn (p = . ) and winter (p = . ). mean value of summer was higher than autumn (p = . ) and winter (p = . ). - months age group had lower urine density. evaluation of urine density based on gender and puberty revealed no statistically significant difference. seasonal mediterranean climate changes have an impact on urine density in children which may affect hydration status especially in infants < yrs of age. during high temperature seasons ensuring adequate water intake is essential in this age group in mediterranean climate. p-mis- implementation related to the use of antibiotics and data sources by community pharmacists in north cyprus as the resistance to antibiotics is gaining importance in today's world;the solution to this problem is possible through a common consciousness of the doctor who prescribes antibiotics,the pharmacist who sells and the patient who consumes antibiotics. irrational use of drugs is an economic and medical problem in many developed and developing countries around the world.the aim of this study is to determine the sales ratio of non-prescription antibiotics in pharmacies which is the biggest category of the antibiotic group sold as well as the indications that lead to its' prescription. eighty-four pharmacies out of pharmacies located in north cyprus were involved in the study with %stratified systematic sampling, questionnaires were filled and a consent form was signed by the participating pharmacists. the pharmacists involved in the study stated that non-prescribed antibiotics were demanded from the pharmacists and all except two ( . %),responded positively to this demand. it has also been identified in the study that . % of the daily sale of antibiotics in the first half of the year was non-prescribed. the most purchased antibiotics either with or without prescription was found to be the penicillin and its derivatives with . % and upper respiratory tract with . %. when the level of selfawareness of the pharmacists was examined, the rate is found in north cyprus to be ( . %),compared with the studies conducted in greece,italy,malta and spain % and egypt . %that designated the non prescribed antibiotics purchased from the public pharmacies. the rate of sale of non-prescribed antibiotics in north cyprus has been found to be at a higher level compared to the rates in many developed and developing countries. furthermore, the upper respiratory tract infections are amongst the most common viral causes which lead to a high consumption of both prescribed and non-prescribed antibiotics. this study was supported by turkish viral hepatitis prevention society. acrylamide has cytotoxic, antiproliferative and apoptotic effects on human lung adeno carcinoma cell line a acrylamide (aa), a widespread substance in many fields, forms in foods during high temperature processing such as baking, roasting, frying. aa is a potent neurotoxic, genotoxic and clastogenic agent being a strong electrophile and forming adduct with biological molecules or potent nucleophiles. up to now, several studies confirmed the toxicity of acrylamide to several organs. on the other hand, aa is reported to have inhibition effects both on proliferation and differentiation of different cancer cells in a time and dose-dependent manner. in addition, natural and synthetic acrylamide derivatives are also used as potent anti-cancer agents. moreover, inhibition concentration (ic ) values of aa against these cancer cells have not been investigated in detail yet. thus, the goal of this study is to investigate the cytotoxicity of aa on a cells including with ultrastructural and morphological effects. ic value of aa on a cells for h was detected with mtt ( -( , -dimethyl- -thiazolyl)- , -diphenyl- h-tetrazolium bromide) colorimetric assay. we evaluated morphological changes under confocal microscopy and ultrastructural changes under transmission electron microscopy (tem). our results demonstrate that aa inhibits the proliferation of a cells in dose-dependent manner and ic on a cells was found to be . mm for hours. confocal microscopy evaluations showed that aa caused nuclear condensations, fragmentations, cytoskeleton lacerations and membrane blebbing. tem results revealed membrane blebbing, chromatin condensations and cell shrinkage. although aa is a probable carcinogen substance, it drastically inhibited cell viability in dose-dependent manner. from microscopic assessments, aa is suggested to induce apoptosis in a cells. in conclusion, the present study confirms the high potential of aa for cytotoxic, antiproliferative and apoptotic activity on a cells. however, appropriate aa dose is critical to prevent its possible adverse effects. effect of hemolysis and lipemia on some immunochemical tests in beckman coulter unicell dxi immunoassay analyzer c. yilmaz, s. yildiz, m. senes, v. fidanci, d. y€ ucel ankara training and research hospital, ankara, turkey the aim of the study was to investigate the effects of in vitro hemolysis and lipemia on immunoassays studied by the beckman coulter unicell dxi immunoassay analyzer. we prepared a serum pool without hemolysis, lipemia and icterus. baseline serum pool concentrations of tests were measured by the beckman coulter unicell dxi . d _ ifferent serum pools, six for hemolysis and five for lipemia, were spiked with increasing concentrations of hemoglobin ( . , . , . , . , . and . g/l hemoglobin) and intralipid ( . , . , . , and g/l intralipid). the hemolysate was prepared by osmotic shock method. intralipid ( %, baxter, deerfield, il) was used to mimic the effect of lipemia. the hemolysis (h), lipemia (l) and icterus (i) indices were measured on beckman coulter au . after spiking the pools, the tests were measured again in duplicate on beckman-coulter dxi analyzer. a change of % from baseline results was taken as evidence of interference and the interfered tests were also evaluated according to total analytical error based on analytical imprecision and intraindividual biological variation. we observed a positive interference due to hemolysis for folat, vitamin b , testosterone and by lipemia for cortisol. there was a negative interference of hemolysis for ca . , ca , ca . , insulin, pth and e , and of lipemia for progesterone, ca . , vitamin b and pth. we found clinically significant effect (>total analytical error) of hemolysis on folate and insulin, and lipemia on cortisol. investigation of the effect of two different p mapk inhibitors in rats subjected to isoproterenol-induced acute myocardial injury: an experimental study objective: acute myocardial infarction is a serious acute condition. in the current study, we aimed to investigate the possible effect of two different mitogen-activated protein kinase (p mapk) inhibitors in rats subjected to isoproterenol (iso)induced myocardial injury. materials and methods: a total of male wistar-albino rats were equally and randomly seperated into four groups as follows: control, iso, iso plus sb andiso plus tak- . treatment agents were orally administered and myocardial injury was induced by subcutaneous injection of iso. serum cardiac troponin-i (ctni), ischemia modified albumin (ima), heart fatty acid binding protein (hfabp) levels and paraoxonase- (pon- ) activity, tissue tos (total oxidant status), tas (total antioxidant status), tt (total thiol), tumor necrosis factor-a (tnf-a) levels, superoxide dismutase (sod) and glutathione peroxidase (gsh-px) activity levels were measured. tissue mrna levels of nf-jb, p mapk and nuclear factor erythroid -related factor (nrf ) were analyzed. heart tissues were also immunohistochemically and histopathologically evaluated. results: both compounds have led to a decrement in myocardial damage, apoptosis, ctni, ima, hfabp, tos, and tnf-a levels, nf-jb, p mapk, phosphorylated c-jun n-terminal protein kinase (pjnk / ) expressions. on the other hand, the applied treatment increased sod, gsh-px, tas and tt levels, as well as phosphorylated extracellular signal-regulated kinase (perk / ) and nrf expressions. conclusion: data established from the current study suggest that administered agents have protective effect against cardiac injury induced by iso, which was more prominent in rats received sb treatment. p mapk inhibitors may constitute a useful choice as cardioprotective agents due to their antiinflammatory, antioxidant and anti-apoptotic effects. keywords: _ isoproterenol, myocardial infarction, myocardial ischemia, p mitogen-activated protein kinases, sb , tak- . silicosis composes the vast majority of occupational lung diseases. silicosis, caused by inhalation of crystalline silica, is a chronic lung disease characterized by parenchymal nodules and pulmonary fibrosis. the susceptibility of patients with silicosis to infection is thought to be due to toxic effects of silica on pulmonary macrophages. ada activity is considered as a nonspecific marker of t cell activation and cellular immunity. this study aimed to compare the serum ada activity in silicosis patients with spirometric values. in this study there were males in each groups which contained patients with silicosis (group ), individuals having similar symptoms with silicosis from same occupational area (group ) and healthy subjects (group ). routine hematological and biochemical parameters were also measured. the serum ada activity and spirometric values (fev , fev %, fev /fvc, fev / fvc%, fef - and fef - %) were compared. the average age of group , and are . ae . , . ae and ae . years, respectively. there was a significant difference between group and in terms of the ada level (p < . ). there was a negative correlation between ada activity and fev , fev %, fev /fvc, fev /fvc%, fef - values. elevated serum ada activity has been shown in many diseases with induced cellular immunity. despite initially toxic effects were lead to a little immunological reaction in patients with silicosis, continuation of this immunological response is important in some chronic manifestations of silicosis. the release of chemotactic factors and inflammatory mediators cause the migration of polymorphonuclear leukocytes, t lymphocytes and macrophages. in this study, the ada activity was significantly higher in patients with silicosis than others. increased immunity in patients with silicosis is being considered, increasing ada activity might be help of earlier recognition of these patients and to take better quality of life. atlantic salmon (salmo salar l.) is an important model system in evolutionary and conservation biology that provides fundamental knowledge into population persistence, adaptive response and the effects of anthropogenic change. the role of behavioral and body size variation in environmental adaptation of atlantic salmon is well known, by contrast, the underlying biochemical mechanisms are largely unknown. intracellular proteases, such as cathepsins b and d in lysosomes and calpains and proteasome in cytosol, due to their metabolic and regulatory role may contribute to phenotyping speciation of salmon young. we examined the activity of intracellular proteolytic enzymes in skeletal muscles of atlantic salmon parr from two local habitats of the varzuga river (the main channel and small tributaries) differing in hydrological and feeding parameters. calpain and proteasome activities were determined by casein or suc-llvy-amc hydrolysis in the skeletal muscles of s. salar from varzuga river (kola peninsula, russia). it is known that salmon parr originated from a common hatch became phenotypically divergent during the settle in the biotopes. reliable difference in studied enzyme activities in the salmon parr from two local habitats was found; furthermore, calpain and cathepsin b proteolytic activities were found to negatively correlate with parr body size. muscle proteolytic activity data support an idea on protease contribution to environmentally-driven adaptation and speciation process in fish. the work was supported by the russian scientific foundation, project no. - - . the phylogenetic analyses of anthriscus (apiacea) species from turkey based on non-coding "trn" regions of chloroplast genome p. yilmaz sancar , m. tekin , s. civelek firat university, elazig, turkey, cumhuriyet university, sivas, turkey anthriscus pers. (apiaceae) species belongs to apiaceae family and is represented by genus on the world and by genus in turkey. anhriscus species are used extensively for treatment various disease such as asthma, alzheimer and show anti-tumoral, anti-microbial, antioxidant features. for determining exact species which treat disease it is necessary sorting species correctly with molecular markers to support morphological features. anthriscus species were defined by examining insufficient quantity of samples in turkey flora. besides, no detailed study was found in our country after flora study. for this reason a revision study was made with the aim of solving some systematical problems in by tekin. the result of the study provided important contribution to the systematic of the species in turkey. however a molecular study was also required for building the obtained results on a more solid ground. in this study, the aim to reveal systematic and phylogenetic relationship among species of anthriscus in turkey, by using trnl-f region in chloroplast genome. dna was isolated by ctab method and amplified in pcr by using e-f primaries. the obtained data was evaluated by mega . program and phylogenetic tree was prepared by using maximum likelihood method. according to the phylogenetic tree that we prepared by using the sequence line up of trnl-f section, it was observed that a. cerefolium, a. caucalis and a. tenerrima species completed their speciation and an isolation with other species in terms of speciation was provided. it was also observed that a. kotchi, a. sylvestris subs. sylvestris, a. sylvestris subs. nemarosa and a. lamprocarpa'nın provided hybridization among themselves but they did not complete their speciation. it was determined that a.lamprocarpa var. chelikhii which is one of the two different varieties of a. lamprocarpa is actually a new sub-species. this fact was supported by molecular data obtained from the study we made after morphologic data. introduction: excessive production of androstenedione can becaused by defects of adrenal steroid biosynthesis, tumors of ovarian and adrenal origin, polycystic ovarian syndrome, increased peripheral sensitivity to androgens, and increased peripheral production of androgens. most epidemiologic studies use enzyme-linked immunosorbentassay (elisa) to measure sex steroid hormones because they have acceptable turnaround times and arerelatively inexpensive. mass spectrometry-based methods are currently the most specific quantitative analytical methods for steroid determination. mass spectrometry methods are independent of matrix effects or cross-reactivity. in this study, a new liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (lc-ms/ms) method was developed. materials and methods: for serum androstenedione measurement, ll of internal standard (d - deoxycortizol) in methanol was added to ll standart or serum and centrifuged at . rpm for minutes to remove the precipitated proteins. supernatant was transferred to clean tubes and this procedure was performed twice. the supernatant was collected and dried under a nitrogen gas flow at • c and dissolved in mobile phase. ll was injected in to the ultra performance liquid chromatography analytical column for chromatography. elisa study was conducted with drg (lot. no. k ) brand kit. results: method comporison between lc-ms/ms and elisa was found slope value , , intercept value À . and r² value . . the regressione quation was elisa= À . + . lc-ms/ms. discussion and conclusion: method comparison study presented higher results in elisa compared to lc-ms/ms. in our opinion, this might due to the interference in elisa systems. our lc-ms/ms method allows rapid, sensitive and specific determination of androgens in plasma and serum.the specificity of liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (lc-ms/ ms) offers advantages over immunoassays. heparins play an important role in cell growth, differentiation, migration and invasion. however, the molecular mechanisms of heparin mediated cellular behaviors are not well defined. to determine the effect of heparin on gene expression, we performed a cdna microarray in a hepatocellular carcinoma cell line and found that heparin regulates transcription of genes involved in glucose metabolism. in this study, we showed a new role of heparin in the regulation of thioredoxin interacting protein, which is a major regulator of glucose metabolism, in hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines. we determined the importance of a unique carbohydrate response element located on its promoter for the heparin-induced activation of thioredoxin-interacting protein and the modulatory role of heparin on nuclear accumulation of carbohydrate response element associated proteins. we showed the importance of heparin mediated histone modifications and downregulation of enhancer of zeste polycomb repressive complex expression for heparin mediated overexpression of thioredoxininteracting protein. when we tested biological significance of these data; we observed that cells overexpressing thioredoxininteracting protein are less adhesive and proliferative, however they have a higher migration and invasion ability. interestingly, heparin treatment increased thioredoxin-interacting protein expression in liver of diabetic rats. in conclusion, our results show that heparin activates thioredoxin-interacting protein expression in liver and hepatocellular carcinoma cells and provide the first evidences of regulatory roles of heparin on carbohydrate response element associated factors. this study will contribute future understanding of the effect of heparin on glucose metabolism and glucose independent overexpression of thioredoxin-interacting protein during hepatocarcinogenesis. prolidase activity in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and asthma t. g€ uc ßl€ u , h. s€ urer , g. bilgin , d. y€ ucel ankara training and research hospital, medical biochemistry department, ankara, turkey, ankara training and research hospital, chest diseases department, ankara, turkey chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (copd) is a consequence of an underlying chronic inflammatory disorder of the airways that is usually progressive and causes dysregulation in the metabolism of collagen. and asthma is a disease where there is an accumulation of collagen in the reticular basal membrane of the airway leading to chronic inflammation. prolidase has an important role in the recycling of proline for collagen synthesis and cell growth. we measured and compared prolidase activity in healthy individuals with copd and asthma patients to find out that whether its activity might reflect disturbances of collagen metabolism in the patients. patients with copd, patients with asthma and healthy control subjects with similar age range and sex were included in our study. the patient and control groups do not have any other chronic disease. serum prolidase activity was measured in the patient and control groups. ferritin and alpha- antitrypsin concentrations were also compared. there was no significant difference between serum prolidaz activities of asthma and copd patients. serum prolidase activities of both copd and asthma patients were significantly lower than those of the control subjects (p < . ). there was no significant difference for ferritine and alpha- antityripsin levels between the groups. the prolidase activity is significantly lower in asthma and copd patients comparing with control subjects. the collagen metabolism may be undergone to a change in these patients. hence, there may be an effect on the accumulation of collagen in the reticular basal membrane. the results suggest that collagen turnover are altered by the development of copd and asthma in human lungs, and prolidase activity may reflect disturbances of collagen metabolism in these pulmonary diseases. monitoring serum prolidase activity may be useful in evaluating fibrotic processes and in the chronic inflammatory lung diseases in human. acyclovir molecule in the active site of e. coli purine nucleoside phosphorylase (on the basis of x-ray study) i. kuranova , , v. timofeev , , n. zhukhlistova , y. abramchik , t. muravieva , r. esipov shubnikov institute of crystallography of fsrc "crystallography and photonics" ras, moscow, russia, national research centre "kurchatov institute", moscow, russia, shemyakin-ovchinnikov institute of bioorganic chemistry, russian academy of sciences, moscow, russia e. coli purine nucleoside phosphorylase (pnp), which catalyzes the reversible phosphorolysis of purine ribonucleosides, belongs to the family i of hexameric pnps. due to key role in the purine sulvage pathway pnps are attractive targets for drug design against some pathogens. they also used widely in biotechnology for the synthesis of nucleoside analogues as well as for the activation of the prodrugs in anti-cancer gene therapies. the acyclovir (acv), acyclic derivative of guanosine, is antiviral drug for the treatment of some human viral infections. the crystalline complex of e. coli pnp with acyclovir was prepared by co-crystallization using counter diffusion in capillary through the gel layer. the set of x-ray data at k from single crystal grown in space (sp. group p ) was collected on the spring- synchrotron-radiation facility (japan) and the structure was solved at . a resolution, using the molecular replacement method (pdb id i c). acv molecule was located in the nucleoside binding pocket of the enzyme in two conformations. the phosphate binding site was occupied by so ion. the hydrogen bonds network and hydrophobic interactions stabilising acv molecule in the active site as well as the conformational changes upon ligand binding were described. the comparison of e. coli pnp/acyclovir complex and the similar complexes of bacillus subtilis pnp (pdb id da ) and human pnp (pdb id pwy) allowed to establish the peculiarities of acv binding of in the e. coli enzyme. gonadotropins are glycoprotein hormones that regulate normal growth, sexual development, and reproductive function. these are large, up to kda proteins, which are synthesized and secreted by the gonadotropic cells of the anterior pituitary gland. these hormones may vary in the level of glycosylation depending on the tissue and the metabolism cycles. follicle-stimulating hormone (fsh) and upon binding to fsh receptor, a g-protein coupled receptor (gpcr), regulates the development, growth, pubertal maturation, and reproductive processes of the body. human chorionic gonadotropin (hcg) and luteinizing hormone (lh) act via a shared gpcr (lh receptor) and regulate mechanisms essential for ovulation, early pregnancy and placental function in females as well as spermatogenesis and testosterone production in males. activation of gpcrs by these hormones can be measured by monitoring formation of cellular cyclic adenosine monophosphate (camp). the level on camp was measured using a f€ orster resonance energy transfer (fret)-based biosensor tepacvv (h ) kindly provided by dr, kees jalink. the biosensor was expressed using the developed bacmam gene delivery system (recombinant baculoviruses carrying the transgene under a strong mammalian promoter). kgn cells expressing the fsh receptor and cos cells expressing the lh receptor served as study objects. monitoring of specific gpcr activation in living cells, allows detection of only the biologically active agonists, which has real impact in quantification of large hormones. differences in levels of hormone glycosylation may affect their biological function. investigation of this phenomena is planned for near future. detection of biological activity of gonadotropins is of importance for pharmaceutical industry, where today the concentration of recombinant proteins is mostly estimated using immunological assays only. development of a colorimetric aptasensor for the detection of peanut allergen protein ara h in food samples b. bora ege university, izmir, turkey food allergy, especially peanut allergy is a life-threatening problem, and severe reactions against these foods can be observed. since unintnded consumption of non-labeled foods is the most dangerous risk, any residual allergen protein should be tested and labeled by the manufacturers. an aptamer based colorimetric test is a powerful alternative to commercially available rt-pcr and elisa test kits. the main objective of this study is to develop an aptamer based colorimetric test fort he detection of major peanut allergen protein ara h . ara h aptamer was used to recognize any residual peanut major allergen protein ara h in food samples. recombinant ara h protein was produced and puirifed to be used as a target. ara h aptamer was used in combination with a blocking sequence, to prevent non-specific binding event, a biotinylated complementary strand to the blocking sequence, and finally strp-hrp interaction in order to facilitate colorimetric reaction. optimal blocking sequence length was optimized and introduced to the site of aptamer sequence to construct an aptamer-hairpin structure. liberation of the blocking sequence allows biotinylated complementary strand to bind to the blocking sequence and consequently str-hrp conjugate to achieve color development that is proportional to the target concentration. since, the aptasensor will be used for the detection of ara h in food samples, total protein extraction from chocolate samples was also optimized. in order to lower the detection limit of aptasensor, aptamer coupled magnetic bead based pre-enrichment assay was aslo optimized for the total protein extraction. as a result, a sensitive, fast and reliable aptamer based colorimetric assay was developed for the detection of peanut allergen protein from food samples. moreover, the assay has the advantages like ease of application and low cost which makes the assay a promising and a powerful alternative to commercially available rt-pcr and elisa tests. the association between lipid parameters and waist circumference in female university students in turkey s. ozen, a. cort sanko university, department of nutrition and dietetics, gaziantep, turkey a high waist circumference is associated with an increased risk for type diabetes, dyslipidemia, hypertension, and cvd in patients with a bmi in a range between and . kg/m . monitoring changes in waist circumference may be helpful, in addition to measuring bmi, since it can provide an estimate of increased abdominal fat even in the absence of a change in bmi. objective of the study was to find an association between plasma lipid profile and anthropometric parameters (waist circumference percentage of body fat and body mass index (bmi)) in abdominal obesity in turkish university students. lipid profile and anthropometric parameters of obesity were studied in a sample of women. students with high bmi (> ) had higher values of low-density lipoprotein (ldl), triglycerides (tg) and cholesterol (c) than students with low bmi (< ) but these differences were not significant. high-density lipoprotein (hdl) levels were non-significantly higher in low bmi (< ) student group. waist circumference, percentage of body fat was higher in high bmi (> ) group than low bmi (< ) group. waist circumference, percentage of body fat was positively correlated with bmi in both samples (bmi (> ) and bmi (< )). students were grouped depend on their waist circumference. healty individuals who had lower than cm waist circumference had decreased tg levels compared to cardiovascular risk group who had higher waist circumference than cm. this study shows an association between waist circumference, percentage of body fat, body mass index and lipid parameters in young female university students. with regard to the relationship, the screening females for central obesity to prevention of cardiovascular disease are recommended. a new biotechnological product from propolis with low allergen: anti-inflammatory effect propolis is extensively used in food industry due to its special medical properies (antioxidant, antimicrobial, antiseptic, antibacterial, anti-inflammatory and antimutagenic effects). even these positive properties it may cause some allergic reactions in consumers with allergic predispositons. previously, we demonstrated that biotransformation of propolis by some special strains of lactobacillus plantarum ( , , aatc strains) might decrease the allergenic molecules in propolis. in this study, we aimed to investigate the effect of biotransformation of popolis on it's antiinflammatory activities. before biotransformation, propolis samples were treated with different solutions ( % ethanol and polyethylene glycol -peg %) and different method (ultrasonic treatment w/ o c/ minutes) in order to facilitate solvation of solid samples which are very dense and not suitable for fermentation. fermantations were performed at o c/ hours under constant agitation conditions. the anti-inflammatory activity was determined in-vitro conditions using hyaluronidase's analysis and the xanthine oxidase activity. the highest inhibition (%) of radicals produced by xanthine oxidase was determined in solid samples treated by peg prior to biotransformation and using of l.plantarum strain during fermentation ( . %), followed by liquid samples treated by ultrasonic method prior to transformation ( . %). concernig the results of hyaluronidase activity (%) inhibitions, the best value were determined in the solid sample treated by peg prior to biotransformation and using of l.plantarum strain during fermentation ( . %). results indicated that the anti-inflammatory activities of analysed samples are quite high and depending of used extraction methods prior the biotransformation and used specific strain of l.plantarum could be optimized in terms of other required parameters. faceanti-mullerian hormone is not predictive for poor neonatal outcome aim: anti-mullerian hormone (amh) is a growth factor specific to ovaries. it is commonly used to predict ovarian reserve and outcomes of fertility treatments. recently, low levels of amh have been shown to be related to hypertensive diseases of the pregnancy and the risk of preterm labor. the aim of this study was to investigate the diagnostic performance of amh levels of mothers to predict poor neonatal outcome in term pregnancies and the relationship between amh and birthweights of the newborns. materials and methods: patients, having delivery beyond weeks, and who did not have any other medical problems were included in the study. the patients had normal g. oral glucose tolerance test results. they were divided as groups, based on their newborns' birthweight as " g. and g.". level of amh was determined by elisa method. results: there was not any relation with the amh of the mothers and the poor neonatal outcome of the newborns, in all groups. also no siginificant difference was observed in amh levels of the patients having delivery in early term and late term periods. when the patients of the same group were evaluated; amh levels were irrelevant to age, gravidy, delivery week, body mass index, the weight gain during pregnancy, and poor neonatal outcome. conclusion: amh is not a predictive factor for poor neonatal outcome and it is not a determinant of the weight of the newborn. objectives: the aim of the study was to investigate the effects of differing amounts of hemolysis on serum high sensitvity troponin i (hs-tni), ck-mb mass and myoglobin measurements. materials and methods: we prepared serum pools having troponin i, ck-mb and myoglobulin concentrations at low ( . ng/l, . ng/ml and . ng/ml respectively), normal ( . ng/l, ng/ml, . ng/l respectively) and high ( ng/l, ng/ml, g/ml respectively) values. the osmotic shock method was utilized to prepare a hemolysate. hemolysate was added into serum pools increasing concentrations of hemoglobin ( . , . , . , , . and . g/l hemoglobin). troponin i, ck-mb (mass) and myoglobin concentrations were measured in duplicate by beckman coulter access analyzer. the hemolysis indices were measured on beckman coulter au . a change of % from baseline results was taken as evidence of interference and the interfered tests were also evaluated according to total analytical error based on analytical imprecision and intraindividual biological variation. results: we found a positive interference due to hemolysis for ck-mb (mass) at low concentrations ( . ng/ml), and a negative interference for myoglobin at low concentrations ( . ng/ml) and high concentrations ( ng/ml). conclusions: ck-mb increase and myoglobin decrease in hemolyzed samples with hemoglobin ≥ . g/l, but the bias might not be clinically significant (< total analytical error) in samples. a retrospective study to determine a reliable marker for selective screening of pompe disease lysosomal storage diseases (lsd) are rare inherited metabolic disorders caused as consequence of a deficiency in a specific enzyme required for lysosomal function. pompe disease is one of these disorders with deficiency of a- , glycosidase enzyme with an incidence of : , - : , . as enzyme replacement therapies are available nowadays, early diagnosis is crucial and selective screening is a rational method to reach pompe patients among people who administer to healthcare with lsd suspected symptoms. this study aims to examine the relationship between basic biochemistry parameters and a- , -glycosidase activities retrospectively, in order to find a key parameter for selective screening of pompe disease. for this reason a- , glycosidase, creatine kinase (ck), creatine kinase-mb (ck-mb) activities calcium, phosphate levels of those who had been suspected to be lsd patients and administered to our laboratory for analysis are examined retrospectively. out of patients's examined, of them were diagnosed with pompe disease depending on clinical findings & low a- , glycosidase activity. enzyme activities of pompe patients were . nmol/ml/hour as lsd suspected patients'activities had a mean of . nmol/ml/hour (p = . ).comparison of ck activity was compared results showed significant difference between pompe patients and lsd suspected patients. even though ck activity levels of the lsd suspected patients were much higher ( vs - u/l) than reference interval, the levels of the pompe disease patients' were still more than twice of the lsd suspected group ( vs u/l, p = . ). ck-mb, ca, p levels didn't show a significant difference. a strong (-) correlation (p = . r=À . ) was observed between a- , -glycosidase and ck activities (n: ). selective screening is a rational way to diagnose rare diseases. this study's results show that ck activity can be used as a key parameter to determine patients for selective screening of pompe disease within lsd suspected population. the functional effect of stem cells on the reproductive organs infertitility is considered as a major health problem of recent century. importance of stem cell is increasing so it is searched new features and supposed to be involved in the infertitility treatment where oxidative stress and apoptosis play importany role. we aimed to investigate the beneficial effect of the stem cells related to free radicals and cell death on testis and ovary. biopcy model of wound healing was created in the rat testis and ovary with ppd syringe where stem cells were delivered by injection. rats were divided into four groups including controls, sham, wound healing and wound healing with stem cell. after the creation of the wound, bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells from the tibia of the mature rats and medium were administered to ovaries and testes. following the applications, ovary and testis samples were investigated for oxidative stress and apoptosis by immunohistochemistry. in comparison with the medium and stem cell applications without a medium support, it was meaningfully determined that healing effect in testicles and ovaries were spotted specifically on the seven day. tissues were analysed for these staining by h-score and h-score results were determined using one-way anova test statistically. our results show the positive effects which clinic applications can bring by displaying the great contribution of the stem cell application in the treatment of testicle and ovary damage. these findings suggest that transplantation of the mesenchymal stem cells may help to promote better enviroment for the reproductive organs by the effect on oxidative stress and apoptosis. the further studies of these results in the molecular level can lead the way to solve the problem of infertility, to increase the percentage of success in the ivf and icsi techniques and more importantly to perform a differentiation from a somatic cell to a germ cell. the antimicrobial activity of ( h)-furanone derivative on staphylococcus aureus nosocomial infections caused by methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus strains are known to be a reason of many infectious diseases like osteomyelitis, endocarditis, sepsis etc. being organized in biofilms these bacteria become extremely resistant to antimicrobials and host immune system leading to difficulties in treatments. here we report the effect of ( h)-furanone derivative possessing sulfonyl group and l-menthol moiety (f ) on biofilms formed by s. aureus atcc and mrsa cells. while exhibiting relatively high minimal inhibiting concentration -mic ( mg/l), clear synergy with a number of antibiotics was found in the checkerboard assay. thus, in the presence of mg/l of f the mic of kanamycin was decreased -fold, and the mics of both erythromycin and ampicillin were lowered -fold. at the concentration of mg/l f also completely inhibited the biofilm formation by s. aureus; the cell growth was suppressed by two orders of magnitude as judged by differential fluorescent staining with syto and propidium iodide. the addition of f to preformed h-old biofilms increased the fraction of red-stained (dead) cells of both s. aureus atcc and mrsa strains uniformly throughout the whole profile of the biofilm. the quantitative analysis of clsm microphotographs revealed that f at concentration of mg/l led to death of up to % of biofilm-embedded cells. this fact suggests that f efficiently penetrates into the biofilm matrix and kills the cells without visible damage of biofilm structure. in summary, furanone f seems to be a promising compound for drugs design to treat biofilm-embedded s. aureus. this work is supported by the russian science foundation, project № - - and the german academic exchange service (№ ). pneumonia is an inflammatory lung disease which can be associated with inadequacy of host defense system and the proliferation of various pathogenic microorganisms into the lower respiratory tract. community acquired pneumonia (cap) is one of the leading causes of death in elderly. the incidence of pneumonia in people aged and over is - times more than young adults. creactive protein (crp) is an acute-phase protein of hepatic origin that increases following interleukin- secretion by t cells and macrophages. procalcitonin (pct) is a peptide precursor of the hormone calcitonin, the latter being involved with calcium homeostasis. it is composed of amino acids and is produced by parafollicular cells (c cells) of the thyroid and by the neuroendocrine cells of the lung and the intestine. the level of pct rises in a response to a proinflammatory stimulus, especially of bacterial origin. the aim of this study was to compare crp and pct levels in young and elderly patients with pneumonia. recently diagnosed young and elderly patients with pneumonia and their respective aged matched controls (n = , n = ) were enrolled this study. crp and pct levels were by immunoturbidometric and by elisa methods respectively. crp and pct levels for young control and patients and elderly control and patients respectively are . ae . mg/l, . ae . ng/ml, . ae . mg/l, . ae . ng/ml, . ae . mg/l, . ae . ng/ml and . ae . mg/l, . ae . ng/ml. young patients with pneumonia have significantly higher crp and pct levels than their controls (p < . and p < . ). elderly patients with pneumonia have significantly higher crp levels than their controls (p < . ). crp and pct are important markers in the diagnosis of pneumonia. effect of serum albumin concentration on total and ionized calcium z. adiyaman, c. yilmaz, s. a. peker, d. y€ ucel ankara training and research hospital, ankara, turkey objective: the aim of the study is to investigate in vitro effect of albumin concentration on total and ionized calcium concentrations. materials and methods: a serum pool with low albumin ( . g/dl) and normal calcium ( . mg/dl) concentrations was prepared from leftover sera. from this serum pool, two parts, each of ml were aliquoted. purified albumin, . g, was added to one of these pools and albumin concentration was determined as . g/dl. the low and high albumin pools were mixed at different ratios and pools with . , . , and . g/dl albumin concentrations. total calcium and albumin concentrations of these pools were measured at a beckman-coulter au analyzer and ionized calcium was measured at a radiometer abl blood gas analyzer in triplicate. total and ionized calcium concentrations were evaluated as compared to those of the original pool with an albumin concentration of . g/dl. results: total calcium concentrations are increased with the increasing albumin concentrations: . %, . %, . %, and . %, respectively. whereas, ionized calcium concentrations were decreased with increasing albumin: . %, . %, . %, and . %, respectively. conclusions: when total allowable error limits based on biological variation were considered, total calcium concentrations are significantly increased at > g/dl albumin concentrations. ionized calcium is significantly affected by . g/dl and over albumin concentrations. a regression equation based on albumin concentration may be useful for corrected ionized calcium concentrations. relationship between lipoprotein (a) and hba c in patients with type ii diabetes , is a complex lipoprotein consisting of ldl and apolipoprotein(a). lp(a) is a risk factor for coronary artery disease and stroke. the relationship between lp(a) and diabetes mellitus is not clear. in this study, the relationship between lp(a) and glycemic parameters such as hba c and fasting glucose concentration was investigated. lp(a), hba c, fasting glucose, triglyceride, total cholesterol, ldl-and hdl-cholesterol concentrations were screened retrospectively from july to july . there were patients with these test results at the same time. the patients were grouped according to hba c values: group i < . % (n = ), group ii . - . % (n = ), and group iii > . % (n = ). the relationship between these parameters were statistically within each group and all groups. there was not a statistically significant difference between the lp(a) concentrations of group i and group ii. lp(a) concentrations of group i and ii were significantly higher than those of group iii.. _ in total, lp (a) was negatively correlated with hba c (r = . ; p < . ), but there was not a significant correlation with fasting blood glucose. _ in groups, there was a significant and negative correlation between lp(a) and fasting glucose in only group i. the negative correlation between lp(a) and glycemic parameters is interesting in patients with diabetes. despite lp(a) is an independent risk factor for cardiovascular diseases, on the contrary to expectations, lp(a) concentrations are decreased in diabetes. effect of blood collection through intravenous lines on hemolysis erroneous results are one of the most important causes of medical errors and may lead to unnecessary investigations or inappropriate interventions. total testing process consists of preanalytical, analytical and postanalytical phases. hemolyzed specimens that one of the most common source of preanalytical errors are frequently observed in laboratory practice and associated with incorrect laboratory results. blood collection through intravenous lines frequently results in hemolysis especially at eds and icus. in this study, we aimed to compare the effect of blood drawing by using bd luer-lock adapters and injector on the hemolysis rates at the ed. patients who has been admitted to the ed were included in this study. all samples were drawn from newly inserted iv lines. the first blood sample was drawn with injector and the second one was drawn with luer-lock adapters to vacuum tubes. after the centrifugation routine chemistry tests and hemolysis indices were analysed on a beckman coulter au analyzer for each serum tube. the statistical significance of differences between two tubes was calculated with paired samples t test and statistical significance was accepted as p < . . there were statistically significant differences between the two groups of tubes for the following parameters: ldh, ck, ast, k + , total bilirubin, protein, albumin, alp, calcium and hemolysis index (p < . ). the use of luer-lock adapters instead of injector could reduce the hemolysis rate. because of it reduces false results and unnecessary investigations, this approach will be more appropriate and cost-effective in ed. hemolysis and test rejection: are we following a reliable process? introduction: in laboratories, some blood samples are rejected due to hemolysis. we usually cancel only some of the tests that are affected by hemolysis. however, the frequency of the test cancellation may be relative. each test is affected in different degrees of hemolysis; some of them are not even affected at all. in this study, we aim to investigate unnecessary cancellations and explain the relationship between hemolysis and test results according to their kit inserts. materials and methods: we measured hemoglobin levels of hemolyzed serum using drabkin method (abbott). interference studies are conducted using clsi protocol nccls ep -p is written in kit inserts. target values ( %) and their change due to different degree of hemolysis have been defined. results: hb concentration ranges of hemolyzed sera were found from to mg/dl. according to kit inserts, aspartate aminotransferase (ast) test results deviate . % from the target when the degrees of hb are mg/dl. when the degree of hemoglobin is mg/dl, the test strays about . %. potassium levels increase ( %) at mg/dl hb while this increase reaches to . % at mg/dl hb. sodium, calcium, ck, crea, total bil, lipase are not significantly affected even at mg/dl. in lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) tests, test reporting is not allowed at any hemolysis level. alt increases %, at the mg/dl hb. ast and potassium results were excluded from patients' reports even though those samples had low hb. some of them were reported despite of excess hemolysis. some tests are even blocked without ever being studied. discussion: prior to the approval of the lab specialist, technicians decide whether to cancel the tests affected by the hemolysis according to the visible hemolysis based on their personal knowledge. conclusion: we should use the hemolysis index, in which standards would be defined via guidelines. this way, all technicians and specialists could know which results are false. the dna-binding hu-proteins are present in all bacteria and belong to the family of nucleoid-associated proteins. these proteins can be considered precursors to eukaryotic histones. gene knockout of hu-proteins partially inhibits the growth of bacteria, their ability to resist various stressing factors and in some cases leads to their death. since the spatial structure of hu-proteins is highly conserved it is possible to create inhibitors that will affect them in a broad spectrum of pathogenic bacteria. in the present work the preparation of the recombinant hu protein from mycoplasma gallisepticum, crystallization of this protein, and x-ray diffraction study of this protein has been reported. the crystallization conditions for studying protein were found by the hanging-drop vapor-diffusion method. found conditions have been adapted to the counther-diffusion method in the capillary. the x-ray diffaction dataset from grown crystals have been collected using synchrotron radiation. d-structure of the hu protein from mycoplasma gallisepticum have been determined with a resolution. structural features of the investigated protein are described. this work is supported by russian scientific fund ( - - ). a novel sensitive disposable indium tin oxide (ito)-based electrochemical immunosensor was developed for simple, rapid and sensitive biomonitoring of sox . sox is a cancer biomarker and used for detecting of small cell lung cancer, lung adenocarcinoma, squamous cell carcinoma, skin cancer, prostate cancer, and breast cancer. in this study, indium thin oxide (ito) thin film was used as working electrode. carboxyethylsilanetriol was also used for electrode modifying so as to obtain self-assembled monolayers. the formed self-assembled monolayers were activated with -ethyl- -( -dimethylaminopropyl) carbodiimide (edc)/n-hydroxysuccinimide (nhs) chemistry. edc was used as a heterobifunctional crosslinker. nhs was used in conjunction with the crosslinker edc. anti-sox antibody was used as a biorecognition element and it was covalently immobilized onto the ito electrode modified with carboxyethylsilanetriol. immobiliztion steps were characterized by cyclic voltammetry (cv), electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (eis), and scanning electron microscopy (sem). the optimal immobilization conditions for the best sensitivity of the new immunosensor were investigated. under optimal conditions, this immunosensor demonstrated a wide linear range ( . - pg/ml) with a detection limit as low as . ng/ml sox . furthermore, the developed sox immunosensor had good storage stability, repeatability and reproducibility. in this work, we successfully fabricated disposable ito thin film based electrodes for sensing the interaction between sox antigen and anti-sox antibody by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry. and our developed immunosensor has an acceptable performances for the detection of sox antigen, exhibits low detection limit, has selective and reproducible results in immunoreaction analysis. we are thankful for the support from t € ub _ itak (the scientific and technological research council of turkey, project number: z ). applying multiple linear regression model to determine the relationship between anti mullerian hormone with age, luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone and estradiol: a data mining study introduction: anti mullerian hormone (amh) has a widely used in our life because it is a good indicator of reproductive age to estimate the time of menopause. the purpose of this retrospective data mining study is the estimate of ovarian reserve by using amh and determines relationship between other indicators which are luteinizing hormone (lh), follicle stimulating hormone (fsh), estradiol and age. materials and methods: . women members were included this retrospective data mining study who were applying to acıbadem labmed laboratory. multiple regression analysis of age related changes of amh ( - ) and lh, fsh and estradiol were investigated. beckman gen ii elisa kit was used for amh and the technique of electrochemiluminescence and roche elecsys cobas analyzer were used for the measure of other hormones. results: amh shows meaningful correlation between lh, fsh, estradiol and age but also seen there is no correlation between progesterone. after the multiple linear regression analysiz amh= . -( . age)À( . fsh) + ( . lh)À( . estradiol) is detected and the model's r = . is also detected. conclusion: nowadays there are lots of methodology were developed the estimate the function of ovary and biological age of ovarian. age, fsh, lh and estradiol show ovarian reserve by indirectly. this study shows the mathematical relationship between amh and the other indicators and results are thought to lead to future developments. antioxidant and anticancer effect of artemisia absinthium extract on colon and endometrium adenocarcinoma cells plants have always been among the common sources of medicines that have many phytochemicals with various bioactivities, including antioxidant and anticancer activities artemisia absinthium (ar) has been used as an antipyretic, antiseptic, anthelmintic, tonic, diuretic, and for the treatment of stomachaches in turkish folk medicine. this study aimed to investigate antioxidant, cytotoxic, genotoxic and apoptotic effect of methanol extracts of ar activities on the human colon (dld- ) and endometrium (ecc- ) adenocarcinoma cell line. total phenolic, flavonoid content, and antioxidant activities were determined using suitable methods (abts, cuprac i.e). cytotoxic effects of ar on cells were determined by mtt and neutral red uptake assays. genotoxicity was evaluated by comet assay and, apoptosis induction were detected by apoptosis elisa and acridine orange staining methods at the half maximal inhibitory concentrations (ic ) levels. it was determined that extract have shown antioxidant activity in all tests and that they could be considered as a source of natural antioxidants. cytotoxic effects were concentration-time dependent. specifically, apoptotic and genotoxic effect increased at and lg/ml concentrations by hours. we found that ar extract had antiproliferative, genotoxic and apoptotic effects on the human cancer cell lines dld- and ecc- . however, further studies at molecular level are required to support our findings and to elucidate chemopreventive and chemotherapeutic effects of ar on colon and endometrium cancers. keywords: artemisia absinthium, antioxidant, anticancer, apoptosis, genotoxicity introduction: colorectal cancer is considered as a major gastrointestinal. this cancer is the second cancer related cause of death after lung cancer in worldwide. we designed a vaccine chimeric including cea and ca - against colorectal cancer (ce-ca). materials and methods: the construct were analyzed by bioinformatics softwares. in this study, the ce-ca gene was optimized using the codon bias of e.coli and synthesized by biomatik company. then construct (ce-ca) was cloned into an expression vector and recombinant constructs transferred to e.coli bl de bacterium and desired recombinant protein was expressed. recombinant protein was purified using ni-nta affinity chromatography. the content of secondary structures was obtained by circular dichroism (cd) spectrum. then recombinant protein was confirmed using western blot analysis and indirect elisa method. results: sds-page analysis showed that the recombinant protein was highly expressed and purified. western blot analysis confirmed recombinant protein. also cd spectrum confirmed predicted structures by bioinformatics tools. the elisa results showed significantly high affinity toward recombinant ce-ca protein. discussion: based on many studies, cea as potential immunogenic candidate could be considered in vaccine studies. also ca - is a cell-surface antigen that has significant increase of expression in colorectal cancer, thus as marker of colorectal cancer. based in available data, these two antigens, in combination can provide specificity for production of colorectal cancer vaccine. conclusion: these findings suggest that ce-ca as potential immunogenic candidate which could be considered in future vaccine studies and detection of colorectal cancer. flow cytometric cell cycle and apoptosis analyses of some wild animal species a. tas, e. koban bostanlar tubitak, marmara research center (mrc), genetic engineering and biotechnology institute (gebi), animal genetic and reproductive biology laboratory, kocaeli, turkey cell biobanking; more specifically cryopreservation of biological diversity, is promising as a tool to preserve wild animals as well as domestic ones via nuclear transfer. in this study, we investigated the viability and cell cycle characteristics of wild animal species (fallow deer, red deer, wild sheep, wolf, wild goat). auricular tissue samples were maintained in pbs+ %psa. tissues were seeded on mm petri dishes containing dmem/high glucose supplemented with % (v/v) fcs and incubated %co in air at % relative humidity and at °c. after seeding, the medium was unchanged for days and then it was changed in every days for days at maximum. once the cells were obtained; flow cytometric cell cycle and apoptosis analyses were done. in terms of apoptosis, all the groups showed high viability rates (over %) in culture when compared with the negative control ( %). the cell cycle comparisons were made between serum-starved cells and roscovitine treated cells, both for which untreated cells were used as control, which revealed different results for different species. there was no difference found between serum-starved cells and roscovitine treated cells for red deer and wolf. the serum-starved cells resulted in higher g /g phase for fallow deer and wild goat. on the contrary, roscovitine treated cells resulted in higher g /g phase for wild sheep. as a result; the cells obtained from wild animals had high viability and g /g phase rates. therefore, they may serve as a donor cell source for nuclear transfer studies.(grant: tubitak kamag, turkey, g ). the interaction of different types of antibiotics with endothelial cells in the presence of nanoparticles the interaction of nanomaterials with cells and lipid bilayers is critical in many applications such as phototherapy, imaging, and drug/gene delivery. the aim of this study was to investigate the interaction of nanoparticles (fe o ) or nanoparticles fused with different antibiotics with cell membranes in order to reveal changes in the membrane organization. endothelial cells were used to determine the effect of different antibiotics (gentamicin, kanamycin, amikacin, penicillin, polymyxin, neomycin, cefotaxime, bacitracin, moxicillin, erythromycin, streptomycin and vancomycin) on the membrane organization. for recording the anisotropy of cell suspensions treated with antibiotics or nanoparticles fused with antibiotics we used - -trimethyl- -phenyl , , hexatrien p-toluenesulfonate (tma-dph). we decided to use nanoparticles fused with antibiotics because they contain small amounts of antibiotics which makes them less toxic than simple antibiotics,which is very important in patients with genetic diseases such as cystic fibrosis, that should be treated with antibiotics for a long time. our results showed that at temperatures between and °c simple nanoparticles decreased the membrane fluidity. at physiological temperatures ( - °c) nanoparticles fused with antibiotics (gentamicin, vancomicin, cefotaxim, bacitracin, amoxicillin) increase more the membrane rigidity compare with simple antibiotics or nanoparticles.erythromycin, polymyxin and penicillin increase the membrane rigidity at °c, and at °c the same effect was obtained in the presence of nanoparticles fused with these antibiotics,suggesting that the nanoparticles are dependent to temperature for penetrating the membrane. in conclusion the membrane fluidity does not depend on antibiotics types, the modification are present in many antibiotics irrespective of class type.the presence of nanoparticles fused with antibiotics is very important for long term treatment. objectives: hypertension is an important cardiovascular risk factor for the development of atrial fibrillation (af). increased atrial electromechanical coupling time interval measured by tissue doppler is accepted as an important factor for prediction of af development in hypertensive patients. monoamine oxidases (maos), are enzymes which catalyze the oxidation of monoamines. -isoprostane is considered as an indicator of oxidative stress. mao activity and -isoprostane levels were measured in some diseases. however, there are no information on -isoprostane levels and mao activity in newly diagnosed patients with stage hypertension has not been observed in a study of literature. aim: this is the first study, we aimed to evaluate the levels of mao and -isoprostane in newly diagnosed patients with stage hypertension. the study included newly diagnosed stage hypertensive patients with no other systemic disease. patients were selected as randomized ( women, men; range of age - years) and healthy individuals as control ( women, men; range of age - years). all the underwent tissue doppler echocardiographic examination. blood samples were taken from patients and controls and, the levels of mao and -isoprostane in serum samples were measured by elisa. results: baseline blood pressures, electrocardiographic and echocardiographic findings, and atrial electromechanical coupling were similar in both groups (p > . ). compared to the control group, the activity of mao and -isoprostane levels were found significantly higher in patients (p < . ). conclusion: increased -isoprostane level indicate that there is oxidative stress in newly diagnosed patients with stage hypertension. also, increased mao activity may be biochemical biomarkers for the diagnosis of hypertension. keywords: hypertension, monoamine oxidase, -isoprostane p-mis- determining the indirect reference intervals for complete blood count parameters in bursa, turkey reference intervals (ris) for laboratory test results are defined as the most commonly used diagnostic tool in medicine. therefore, careful determination of ris by the laboratory for use is a very important task. although c -a guideline recommends the direct ris (dris) calculated from healthy subjects, ris can be calculated from laboratory data which are called as indirect ris (iris). the study was carried out at the central laboratory for clinical chemistry, teaching and research (uludag university, bursa, turkey) . the results of the laboratory analyses from , males, , females, stored for approximately one year, were used for statistical analysis. data for hospitalized patients and for ambulatory patients from the intensive care unit were eliminated. furthermore, we used evidence based criteria to enrich the health-related values. a modified bhattacharya procedure was used to estimate the iris from hospital patient data. the nested anova was used to evaluate variations among genders and ages. cell dyn analyzer (abbott diagnostics, il, us) was used for the measurements of complete blood count. the obtained iris were also compared the dris determined in our previous ri study and the ris suggested by the manufacturer. we found that the ris of rbc, hb and hct required strong gender partition and calculated the ris of rbc, hb and hct separately. the observed iris for wbc, sub-fractions of wbc and plt in both genders are in good accordance with the dris reported in previous study. age-related changes were noted for rbc, hb, and hct. the calculated iris for rbc, mcv and rdw are different from the ris suggested by the manufacturer. we believe that, using this relatively easy technique, every laboratory can produce its own iris, divided, where possible, according to sex and age and according to local conditions. these ranges can be complementary to dris obtained for reference individuals according to the ifcc recommendations. the principal sigma subunit, involved in transcription of most house-keeping genes in escherichia coli, was also shown to induce rnap pausing during transcription elongation, by interacting with promoter-like motifs in the transcribed dna. such pauses were proposed to play important roles in the regulation of phage and cellular genes. e. coli contains six alternative s subunits but little is known about their ability to induce transcriptional pausing. we expressed and purified alternative s subunits of the sigma family and tested their effects on transcription elongation in vitro on natural and synthetic dna templates containing consensus promoter motifs. the structure of the paused complexes was analyzed by dna footprinting methods. in vivo analysis of transcription was performed using reporter genes placed under the control of corresponding promoters. we demonstrated that the stationary phase sigma subunit induced efficient rnap pausing on both synthetic and natural dna templates containing promoter-like motifs in initially transcribed regions. in contrast, the sigma and sigma subunits did not affect rna elongation. we showed that the sigma -induced pausing depends on sigma contacts with both nontemplate dna strand and rnap core. the pausing results in formation of backtracked transcription elongation complexes which can be reactivated by gre factors that stimulate rna cleavage by rnap. our results for the first time reveal transcriptional pausing induced by an alternative s subunit. analysis of sigma -dependent promoters shows that a substantial fraction of them contains potential pause-inducing motifs suggesting that such pausing may be a widespread phenomenon. we propose that sigma -dependent pauses may play important roles in genetic regulation and modulate the binding of transcription repressors or activators to promoter regions. the crosstalk between streptococcus pneumoniae rnase r, ribosomes and translation c. b arria, s. domingues, c. arraiano instituto de tecnologia qu ımica e biol ogica, lisbon, portugal ribonucleases (rnases) are enzymes that ensure maturation, degradation and quality control of rna thus, contributing to the maintenance of the optimal amount of each transcript in the cells. escherichia coli rnb family of enzymes is present in all domains of life and includes rnase r, rnase ii and the eukaryotic rrp /dis , dis l and dis l proteins. in streptococcus pneumoniae only rnase r was identified. rnase r, encoded by the rnr gene, hydrolyzes rnas starting from the end. rnase r level is increased in several stress conditions such as heat shock, stationary phase or cold shock, conditions in which most of the proteins translation is blocked. moreover, rnase r is the only exoribonuclease able to degrade highly structured rnas without the help of a helicase which is critical at low temperatures. here, we investigated the role of this enzyme by comparing the wild type strain with an rnr mutant strain. for that purpose we performed northern blots analysis of transcripts involved in translation. also, we investigated rnase r connection to the ribosome and polysome fractions using sucrose gradient polysome separation and western blots. in this study, we highlight the importance of s. pneumoniae rnase r in translation. we show that this enzyme interacts with ribosomes mostly with the s subunit at °c. moreover, in the absence of this enzyme we have observed a decrease in the amount of the s ribosomal subunit, concomitantly with the increase of s and s subunits. rnase r seems also to modulate the amount of the elongation factors ef-tu and ef-g transcripts. nevertheless, preliminary results further suggest other roles of rnase r in translation. modified nucleotides are present in many rna species in all domains of life. the biosynthetic pathways of such nucleotides are well studied. however, much less is known about the degradation of rnas and the salvage of modified nucleotides, their respective nucleosides or heterocyclic bases. using an e. coli uracil auxotrophic strain, we screened the metagenomic libraries for genes, which would allow the conversion of -thiouracil to uracil and thereby lead to the growth on a defined synthetic medium. we show that a novel gene encoding previously uncharacterized domain of unknown function (duf) is responsible for such phenotype. we have purified this recombinant protein and demonstrated that it contains a fe-s cluster. the substitution of cysteines, which have been predicted to bind such clusters, with alanines abolished the growth phenotype. we conclude that this domain is required for conversion of -thiouracil into uracil in vivo. this work is supported by the research council of lithuania (lmt, mip- / modified nucleotides are present in almost all classes of rna. they have great chemical diversity and are critical for rna folding, stability, interaction with cellular proteins and thereby for various cellular processes such as translation, stress response, and signaling pathways. biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides and their modified derivatives in rna is well studied. nonetheless, not much is known about the cellular degradation of these compounds and the enzymes catalyzing such processes. using an e. coli uracil auxotrophic strain, we screened metagenomic libraries for genes encoding isocytosine deaminases. three novel genes were obtained, one of which encodes a protein similar to oxoguanine deaminases. the other two encode proteins resembling hydroxydechloroatrazine ethylaminohydrolases. we confirmed that these proteins are functional in vivo, allowing growth of e.coli on minimal medium with isocytosine. we also demonstrated that such purified recombinant enzymes catalyze the conversion of isocytosine, but not cytosine, into uracil in vitro. natural products display special attributes in the treatment and prevention of various human diseases, including cancer. a significant number of organic compounds from plants exhibit anticancer properties as attested by in vitro and in vivo studies. emerging evidence supporting the antineoplastic activity of natural compounds has rendered them promising agents in the fight against cancer. in this study, skin from limnio grape, a red greek grape variety that is indigenous to the greek island of lemnos, was extracted using mixtures of methanol, water and acetone; the apoptosis-inducing properties of these extracts were studied in the human ovarian malignant adenocarcinoma cell lines tov- g and tov- d. for this purpose, tov- g and tov- d cells were treated with limnio grape skin extracts at a range of concentrations, at °c, for , and hours. untreated cells incubated for the same time intervals served as controls. cell viability was determined by measuring metabolic activity (colorimetric mtt assay) and observing cell membrane integrity (cell staining with trypan blue). after the determination of the optimal concentration of the extract, total rna was extracted from treated and untreated (control) tov- g and tov- d cells. after determination of rna concentration and subsequent first-strand cdna synthesis, mrna expression analysis of apoptosis-related genes was performed with rt-pcr using gene-specific primers. an increasing percentage of non-viable cells was observed by increasing cell exposure time and extract concentration. distinct modulations of the expression of apoptosis-related genes at the mrna level were also observed, mainly concerning bcl , bclx, bax, bak and bcl l , along apoptosis induction. in conclusion, the cytotoxic properties of limnio grape skin extracts against ovarian malignant adenocarcinoma cells merit further investigation. the intrinsic apoptotic pathway seems to be the major mechanism of action induced by these plant extracts. almost all eukaryotic mrnas are polyadenylated by a complex machinery that recognizes the poly (a) signal, cleaves the mrna and adds the poly (a) tail. % of human genes harbor multiple poly (a) signals. alternative polyadenylation (apa) generates transcript isoforms with different utr (untranslated region) lengths due to the use of proximal or distal poly (a) signals. hence, tightly regulated apa has been observed in normal physiological settings as well as in diseases. considering that utr shortening cases have been linked to increased protein levels, we hypothesized deregulated apa to be one of the potential cancer related mechanisms. we investigated the utr alterations in er(+) breast cancer patients and cell models compared to normal breast tissue, using gene expression data and a probe-based quantification tool, apadetect. based on means of proximal to distal probe sets, slr (short-long ratio) were calculated as an indication apa. significance analysis of microarrays (sam) determined significant genes. the gse numbers of the datasets are gse , gse and gse . we analyzed two datasets of er(+) breast cancer patient samples (n = , n = ) compared to normal breast tissue (n = ) using apadetect and sam. a total of utr shortening and utr lengthening events were detected in breast cancer samples compared to normal breast tissue. ontology analysis suggested almost all the utr shortening genes were proliferation related and were indeed reported to be upregulated in breast cancer. to further investigate the connection between apa and era status, we used data from a cell line model; wild type or era transfected mda-mb- cells that are otherwise of triple negative nature. our results suggested that most of the genes are utr shortened or lengthened via direct binding of era to dna. our results suggest involvement of apa mechanisms in era action mechanisms. possible link between era regulated transcription and apa remains to be elucidated. contamination of nucleic acids (na) as a result of na extraction protocols may result an inaccurate measurement of dna copy number. agarose gel electrophoresis and spectrophotometric methods are commonly used to check dna purity. however, the resolution of these methods may not be good enough for special applications such as determination of dna copy number and separation of base pairs (bp) that are close in their bp number. in this study, we have developed a new method for separating na's ranging between - bp also detecting the impurities in dna solution in %, % and % ratios to the dna of interest. the developed method was validated using the in-house dna fragments of , and bp. the dna mixture analyzed using analytical hitachi elite lachrom hplc using the guard and analytical columns tskgel dna-npr, . lm, . mm id . cm and tskgel dna-npr, . lm, . mm id . cm, respectively. the validation of the analysis was performed by running each sample five times on three different days. the linearity of the detector response was established by plotting a graph to quantity versus area of bp dna. the lod and loq were then measured by calculating the minimum level at which analyte can be readily detected and quantified. the ratios calculated with hplc were compared to the ratios calculated by quant-it kit. recovery values were calculated for each measurement and the uncertainty were calculated for each ratio. the method was found linear for bp in the range of . ng to ng dna with the regression coefficient of r = . . lod and loq for the bp dna was found to be . ng and . ng, respectively. the recovery values for the %, % and % impurity ratios were found . . . and . , respectively. the purity of the synthetic dna was determined by hplc and related uncertainty was calculated. the developed method is a simple alternative to electrophoresis and spectrophotometric methods with higher resolution and separation range. physical and chemical factors can disturb the conformation of proteins maturing within the cellular secretory pathway. in response to unfolded proteins the cell activates several stress signaling and adaptive response mechanisms. the aim of our study was to investigate small non-coding rnas as the potential regulators of cellular response to unfolded proteins (upr). for this, we conduct the next generation sequencing of small rna and transcriptome analysis of mrna from jurkat cells exposed to dithiothreitol (dtt), which reduces protein disulfide bounds. analysis of mirnas reveals the differential expression of mirnas. we observe a decrease in the normalized amount of reads aligned to mirna loci in stressed cells. affymetrix analysis with subsequent gsea reveals downregulation of reactome mirna biogenesis pathway (fdr = . ). the length distribution of small rnas revealed nt-peak corresponding to trna-derived fragments, amount of which was increased by . -fold under dtt treatment. the trna isotypes that gave rise to almost % and % of all nt rna fragments in stressed and control cells, respectively, include glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid and valine. the vast majority of nt fragments produced from these trnas are precisely phased halves with the characteristic cleavage patterns generated by rnase a angiogenin (ang). observed upregulation of tirna in stressed cells is accompanied with upregulation of ang mrna and down-regulation of angiogenin inhibitor (rnh ). we speculate that translational repression, associated with observed tirna, is an additional mechanism of reducing global protein synthesis in response to dtt-induced stress. collectively, our findings reveal the increase in tirna, the differential regulation of mirna expression together with the global mirna downregulation as the most prominent small rnome reprogramming events and possible fine-tuned levels of post-transcriptional regulation upon dtt-induced cellular stress response. global gene expression changes after spinal cord injury j. k. hyun , , , j. kim , , j. y. hong dankook university, cheonan, south korea, institute of tissue regeneration engineering (itren), cheonan, south korea, the neuronal regeneration is hardly achieved spontaneously after spinal cord injury (sci), and the restoration of somatic and autonomic functions after sci is also challenging in the clinical field. the pathophysiology of sci is extremely complex and many in vitro and in vivo studies continued to report opposite results each other in spite of the same treatments, therefore a fundamental analysis such as an extensive assay of global gene expression is required to find a way for spinal cord regeneration. in this study, we aimed to detect the changes of global gene expression after spinal cord contusion in rats according to the time sequence. the spinal cord tissues at contusion site were sequenced after spinal cord contusion in rats using rna-sequencing technology. for time sequence analysis, five time points was determined; hour, day, week, month and months after spinal cord contusion, and sham operated rats at each time point were used as controls. quantitative rt-pcr analysis was also performed to validate expression changes of candidate genes in each category. we found that the pattern of changes in gene expression at acute and subacute stages was quite different from that at chronic stage, especially genes associated with with neurotrophin signaling and apoptosis pathways. most of gene expression levels of inflammatory cell markers were increased and peak during acute stage ( hour to week) and maintained until chronic stage. some of regeneration-associated genes (rags) including brain derived neurotrophic factor, glial cell derived neurotrophic factor and ciliary neurotrophic factor were increased at hour or day after sci. we concluded that the information of gene expression level according to the time sequence after sci might be useful to determine treatment strategies for spinal cord regeneration especially in chronic stage. p- . . - utr length isoform generation profile in a differentiation model alternative polyadenylation (apa) is the regulated selection of a specific poly(a) signal among other proximal and/or distal signals on the utrs (untranslated region) for the endolytic cleavage and addition of a poly(a) tail to form the mature mrna. consequently, position of the poly(a) site determines the length of the utr which is known to harbor microrna and rna binding protein sites. such apa isoforms have already been linked to altered protein levels and even functions. therefore we hypothesized apa to be one of the mechanisms to generate isoform diversity in proliferating and differentiated cells to better understand the molecular basis of cancer. we used a combinatorial in silico and in vitro approach to analyze a well known enterocyte differentiation model; caco- cells. initially we analyzed gene expression datasets for the proliferative and differentiated caco- cells using a probe based apa detection tool. to better understand the significance and to validate these results, we used proliferating and differentiated (day ) caco- cells and tested sample apa events by rt-qpcr. utr isoforms were identified by using race pcr. we identified genes ( % of all apa events) to undergo utr shortening in differentiated cells compared to proliferating cells. on the contrary genes ( % of all apa events) went through utr lengthening events. several genes have been validated to follow the pattern that was seen in apa detection tool so far. to begin understanding the mechanism behind these observations, we are investigating potential inducers of apa during the complex events of differentiation. our next aim will be to further validate and investigate the consequence of such isoform generation events both in the context of differentiation in colon cancer cells. recognition of phosphorylated threonine- of rna polymerase ii c-terminal domain by end processing apparatus o. jasnovidova, m. krejcikova, k. kubicek, r. stefl central european institute of technology, masaryk university, brno, czech republic rna polymerase ii has evolved an array of heptad repeats with the consensus sequence y -s -p -t -s -p -s at the c-terminal domain (ctd) of its largest subunit, rpb . phosphorylation of serines (s , s , and s ) and tyrosine- orchestrate the binding of rna processing and transcription factors in the site of transcription. several recent studies showed that also threonine- site can be phosphorylated which has a number of functional consequences. to reveal the structural basis for the recognition of threonine- phosphorylated ctd, we set out to investigate several proteins factors that were implicated with a high levels of threonine- ctd phosphomarks using integrative structural biology. one of them, a factor involved in the -end processing and transcription termination, showed a high affinity to the phosphothreonine ctd. using nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (nmr), we determined its structure bound to the ctd phosphorylated at threonine- that reveals a direct read-out of the phosphothreonine. altogether, our data provides the first insights into the recognition of this poorly understood ctd mark that plays important role in the ctd code of rna polymerase ii. the results of this research have been acquired within ceitec (lq ) project with financial contribution made by the ministry of education, youths and sports of the czech republic within special support paid from the national programme for sustainability ii funds. introduction: the treatment of brain tumor glioblastoma (gbm) is still one of the greatest challenge. anti-inflammatory drug indomethacin (ind) mainly acting through the inhibition of cyclooxygenase (cox) has also anti-cancer activity including brain tumors. the aim was to investigate how ind effects an immortality enzyme telomerases' activity. materials and methods: monolayer and spheroid cultures of t g human gbm cell line were used to evaluate the effects of ind ( lm) on cell proliferation, viability, apoptosis, cell cycle, camp levels, the levels of apoptotic and anti-apoptotic proteins, morphology (sem) and ultrastructure (tem) for hours. results were analyzed using the student's t-test. results: ind decreased cell proliferation (p < . ), cell viability (p < . ), cell rate at s phase (p < . ) and g + m phase (p < . ), camp levels (p < . ), the levels of pdgfr-a (p < . ), mrp- (p < . ), nf-jb (p < . ) and cox- (p < . ) in comparison to control group. ind mildly increased apoptosis (p < . ) and caspase- levels (p < . ). interestingly, ind increased htert levels ( %, p < . ; %, p < . ). sem evaluation showed that ind led to decreased and shortened microvilli, the lost of cell interactions and the conversion of many cell shapes from spindle to oval. many cell remnants in the intercellular area, intact cell membranes, many dense lipid droplets and few autophagic vacuols in the cytoplasm were observed under tem. discussion and conclusions: the effect of ind on telomerase activity can only be found in publications at pubmed research that they only showed its' inhibitory effect in colon, gastric, head and neck cancers. in contrast to previous studies, it was shown for the first time that ind increased telomerase activity in gbm cells and this increase was independent from cox- and other tested factors. p- . . - interaction between fibrinogen and insulin-like growth factor binding protein- under physiologic conditions and influence of diabetes mellitus type on this interaction n. gligorijevic, o. nedic institute for the application of nuclear energy, university of belgrade, belgrade, serbia fibrinogen is plasma glycoprotein and principle participant in blood coagulation. it interacts with many proteins, including insulin-like growth factor binding proteins (igfbps). one of them, igfbp- , is controlled by insulin. metabolic changes due to diabetes mellitus (dm) affect igfbp- . besides glucose regulation, igfbp- stimulates wound healing. we have investigated complexes formed between fibrinogen and igfbp- , their change in dm type (dm ) patients and involvement in fibrin clot. samples from adult healthy persons and dm patients were studied: plasma, isolated fibrinogen and fibrin. the amount of igfbp- /fibrinogen complexes was determined using immunoblotting. immunoprecipitation and lectin affinity chromatography were used to confirm interaction between fibrinogen and igfbp- . in vitro incubation of fibrinogen with excess glucose or methylgyoxal (mgo) was employed to demonstrate influence of glyco-oxidation on complexes. results have shown that igfbp- /fibrinogen complexes can be differentiated from igfbp- oligomers and igfbp- /alpha- macroglobulin complexes. the amount of igfbp- /fibrinogen complexes was lower in patients with dm . complexes participated in fibrin clot formation, the amount being significantly lower in patients' samples. the quantity of igfbp- monomer in fibrin clot was greater in patients' samples. in vitro experiments revealed that complexes undergo glyco-oxidative modifications leading to their reduced formation, cross-linking and increased acidity (faster electrophoretic movement). isolated fibrinogen from patients with dm was additionally able to bind exogenous igfbp- . since igfbp- stimulates wound healing, directly and by delivering igfs, igfbp- /fibrinogen complexes may be seen as igfbp- storage instrument, ready to participate in fibrin formation and to assist in damage repair. reduction of complexes due to glyco-oxidative stress in patients with dm may be part of the mechanism responsible for impaired coagulation process. human interferon gamma (hifnc) is a proinflammatory cytokine involved in the regulation of nearly all phases of immune and inflammatory responses. its abnormal expression is associated with the aetiology of many inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. recently we have been exploring the idea to counteract the over-expression of the endogenous hifnc by competitive inhibition with inactive hifnc mutants. they are designed to have preserved affinity to the hifnc receptor, but to be deprived in their capability to trigger the intracellular signal transduction. to this end a library of mutants was created and two potential hifnc antagonists were selected for further investigations: a single point mutant k q (q substitution for k in position ) and a double mutant with additional substitution in the n-terminus. both mutants and the wild type hifnc were expressed in e. coli employing the established by us methodology for large scale production of aggregation-prone proteins in soluble native form. the purified mutants were screened for interferon activity (antiproliferative assay), binding affinity (isothermal titration calorimetry) and ability to compete with the wild type for the hifnc receptor (competition assay on wish cells). the selected mutants demonstrated (single mutant) and (double mutant) times lower antiproliferative activity than the wild type. measuring the binding thermodynamic parameters, we proved that the receptor binding affinity of both mutants was preserved, which is an indication for their potential to compete with the wild type hifnc for its receptor. finally, the biological assay performed on wish cells showed a distinct dose-dependent competition between the wild type hifnc and the mutants. based on the results presented in this study we conclude that the two hifnc mutants are potential candidates for autoimmune therapy based on selective suppression of the endogenous hifnc activity. mesencephalic astrocyte-derived neurotrophic factor (manf) is an er (endoplasmic reticulum) stress-inducible protein and widely expressed in mammalian tissues. it has been identified as a secretory protein that protects cells against er stress-induced damage. er-stress is one of the main mechanisms that play a role in ischemia/reperfusion (i/r)-induced renal injury. recent studies demonstrated that manf can protect cardiac myocytes and cortical neurons against i/r-induced injury. moreover, it has been suggested that it has a restorative effect in ischemic injury. nevertheless, the function of manf in i/r-induced renal injury is still not known. in the present study, we investigated the function of manf by manipulation its expression level in ischemic acute renal failure model established in proximal tubular kidney cells (hk- cells). for this purpose, the cells were transfected with either manf sirna or manf encoding plasmids for silencing or over-expression of manf, respectively. then, the cells were exposed to hypoxia-reperfusion (h/r) induction for indicated times. evaluations of cell viability were determined with wst- reagent. the changes in protein levels of h/r-induced stress markers were analyzed byimmunoblotting. the results showed that the overexpression of manf has provided a significant resistance to h/r-induced cell death, whereas silencing of manf has rendered the cells more susceptible to death. it was also determined that the pretreatment of cells with manf conditioned medium caused a decrease in cell death. additionally, oxidative/nitrosative stress (os/ns) and er stress levels were decreased with over-expression of manf and increased by silencing of manf in hk- cells. taken together, our study suggests that manf may have a protective role against h/r-induced renal cell injury, possibly through the reducing effects on os/ns and er stress. p- . . - his-flag tag as a fusion partner in insect expression systemgain or loss? e. krachmarova , m. tileva , k. maskos , i. ivanov , g. nacheva institute of molecular biology "roumen tsanev", sofia, bulgaria, proteros biostructures, martinsried, germany human interferon gamma (hifnc) is a glycoprotein playing major role in the regulation of innate and adaptive immunity. glycosylation is not essential for hifnc activity but is important for its stability, half-life and protease resistance in blood. the commonly used hifnc in therapy and research is produced in e. coli and therefore is not glycosylated. bearing in mind the above mentioned shortcomings of the non-glycosylated hifnc we expressed it in mammalian cells and transgenic mice, however very low yields were achieved. to obtain glycosylated hifnc, here we employed a secretory expression of n-terminal his-flag fusion protein in baculovirus-infected insect high five Ò cells. this small hydrophilic tag is designed to not affect the proper folding of the target protein and to facilitate the detection and purification procedures. in parallel the same fusion was expressed in e. coli cells. the fusion proteins were purified to high degree of purity by affinity and size-exclusion chromatography. bioassay carried out on wish cells showed that the antiproliferative activity of both fusion proteins was times lower than that of the native hifnc. this result shows that, in contrast to the generally hold view, the n-terminal his-flag tag interferes with the biological activity of hifnc despite of the protein glycosylation. in order to restore the biological activity we attempted to remove the his-flag tag enzymatically. surprisingly, we found that the fusion protein obtained from insect cells was resistant to enterokinase, independently of the enzyme source and experimental conditions, whereas the protein isolated from e. coli was susceptible and the tag-free protein showed fully restored biological activity. we are prone to explain the enterokinase resistance of the fusion protein from insect cells with either the specific conformation of the glycosylated protein or with the interaction of the carbohydrate residues with the enzymatic activity of the enterokinase. p- . . - development of fluorescence assay for highthroughput screening system based on flow cytometry for directed evolution of cellobiose dehydrogenase cellobiose dehydrogenase (cdh) is an enzyme produced by phanerochaete chrysosporium and it has been already successfully cloned in other organisms. one of the most important roles of cdh is removing products of cellulose degradation. cdh is very important for biofuel and biosensor industry. for improvements of enzyme properties we have used directed evolution. the most important step is to develop screening system that reflects properties of interest. screening in microtiter plates (mtp) is expensive, time-consuming and has low throughput with a small number of variants detected ( - in months). the aim of this work was the development of screening system for mutant libraries of cdh expressed on surface of yeast cells based on fluorescent enzymatic assay and flow cytometry. the screening method should be capable of screening cellobiose dehydrogenase variants mutated for higher activity and higher thermostability by error prone pcr. the fluorescent assay was beta-galactosidase (ec . . . ) also known as lactase is the enzyme that typically catalyzes hydrolysis of beta- , -d-galactosidic linkages in beta-d-galactosides, including disaccharide lactose, with glucose and galactose as end reaction products. this enzyme is able to catalyze synthesis of oligosaccharides, in particular galactooligosaccharides via galactosyl transfer reaction. arthrobacter sulfonivorans beta-galactosidase of unique for prokaryotes extracellular localization may find application in food industry for manufacturing lactose-free dairy products and in pharmacology as bioactive principle of medicines prescribed for patients suffering from lactase deficiency. the study was aimed at cloning of the gene encoding a. sulfonivorans beta-galactosidase, purification and characterization of the enzyme. a novel extracellular beta-galactosidase from a. sulfonivorans was recovered with an overall -fold purification, a . % yield and specific activity uÁmg À protein. the subunit molecular mass of the enzyme determined by sds-page analysis equalled kda. it was found that the enzyme displays pi . , prefers ortho-nitrophenyl-beta-galactoside as substrate (km mm) and shows maximum activity at °c and at ph . - . . the beta-galactosidase gene was isolated from the genomic dna library of a. sulfonivorans, sequenced, cloned and deposited in the genbank database under accession number km . . it was established that the gene carries an open reading frame consisting of bp ( amino acids) and encodes beta-galactosidase referred to glycosyl hydrolase family (cazy database). p- . . - different splice-forms of tdrd protein mutated in cataract's and glaucoma's interacts with s k / o. skorokhod, v. filonenko department of cellular signalling, institute of molecular biology and genetics nas of ukraine, kyiv, ukraine ribosomal s kinases (s k) are important players in cellular pi k/mtor signalling network, deregulation of which has been associated with methabolic disorders, inflammation and cancer. previously we had identified a novel binding partner of s k -tdrd (trap). tdrd is a scaffold protein detected in complexes involved in the regulation of cytoskeleton dynamics, mrna transport, protein translation, non-coding pirnas processing, transposons silensing. it was reported recently that mutations in human tdrd result in cataract and glaucoma formation, defined by elevated intraocular pressure (iop) and optic nerve damage. the aim of our study was to confirm s k-tdrd interaplay and study its role in cells. bioinformatical analysis of tdrd sequence revealed the presence of potential phosphorylation sites of s k . using in vitro kinase assay, we have demonstrated that recombinant s k phosphorylate from fragments of tdrd . formation of s k -tdrd complexes in vivo was further confirmed by coimmunoprecipitation using anti-s k and anti-tdrd antibodies generated previously in rat brain lysates. this interaction was further confirmed by confocal microscopy, oleksandr had shown that tdrd co-localize with s k in hepg cells, predominantly in perinuclear region, enreached for one of the tdrd isoforms identified previously. moreover, we have detected that c-terminal synthetic peptides of s k with methylated arg interfere with tdrd from hepg lysates. the physiological characteristics of s k -tdrd interaction and the role of this complex formation in neuropathology's development need further investigation. many biological function of placenta are performed not just a set of individual proteins, but also different oligomeric structures and complexes. herewith, activities of complexes may considerably differ from activities of individual proteins. therefore, identification and characterization of placental multi-protein complexes is an important step to understanding the placenta function. the aim of the present work was to investigate a composition and biological functions of the very stable high molecular mass multi-protein complexes (spc) from placenta of healthy mother. we isolated spcs (~ kda) from the soluble fraction of three human placentas. light scattering measurements and gel filtration showed that the spc is stable in presence salts, acetonitrile and triton x- in high concentrations, but efficiently dissociates in the presence of m urea and mm edta. such a stable complex is unlikely to be a random associate of different proteins. it was shown the spc includes a number of proteins with molecular weights of to kda. several protein components of the spc were identified, including serum albumin, transferrin, iggs, annexin a and other proteins. serum albumin, transferrin and protein with molecular weight , kda are the main proteins of the complex. it was shown high the spcs from three placentas possesses dnsase and catalase activities. an addition, investigation of cytotoxic effect on human cancerous cell lines has shown that the spcs reveal high cytotoxicity. antibody-cytochrome b fusion protein, characterization and applications for antibody development process antibodies have recently become an essential tool being a part of immunodiagnostics, therapeutics and as a valuable instrument in life science research. an enormous number of options utilizing a various tags were used to create a universal antigen-binding domain, which can be easily detectable, highly soluble and might be produced in high yields with low costs, but no multipurpose solution exists yet. we addressed the question whether a single tag could be found for enhancing solubility of recombinant fab antibody fragment and providing its detection and accurate quantification by rather simple method. a new application for hemeproteincytochrome b as the antibodies fusion partner were proposed. we have constructed of recombinant fab antibody fragment cytochrome b fusion protein. we have shown that cytochrome b enhance expression of fab antibodies fragments in bacterial system, and could be a versatile tool for recombinant proteins folding, redox (oxidation) state studies and for their precise concentration determination in the turbid solutions. fusion fab-b protein has a stable red color and characteristic absorbance spectrum with the maximum absorbance at nm in oxidized environment. cytochrome b change its spectrum maximum depending on environmental redox potential and its folded state, so one can track these events in real time spectrophotometrically. binding activities of fab-b fusion protein and hybridoma secreted immunoglobulin were measured by biolayer interferometry and elisa. no significant difference between them was revealed. due to this feature we can distinguish the chimeric protein of interest in complex mixtures and control the process of recombinant proteins expression and purification in real-time. besides, cytochrome b fusion tags multiples recombinant antibody yield (from to times) and doesn't affect antigen-binding properties. the bb - site of fibrin molecule is the site of fibrin protofibrils lateral association l. urvant palladin institute of biochemistry nas of ukraine, kyiv, ukraine previously we showed that fibrin-specific monoclonal antibody i- c (monab i- c) inhibited the fibrin protofibrils lateral association. we suggested that the epitope of monab i- c in bb - of coiled-coil region of fibrin molecule coincides with the site involved in fibrin protofibrils lateral association. the aim of this study was to localize the site of protofibrils lateral association in fibrin molecule using the synthetic peptides bb - , bb - and both their scrambled version, and bb - peptide. monab i- c was isolated from hybridoma culture medium by affinity chromatography on fibrin-sepharose. turbidity analysis was used to study the effect of synthetic peptides on fibrin polymerization. the interaction between peptides and monab i- c was investigated by spr method using plasmon- device. we investigated the effect of synthetic peptides which corresponded to amino acide sequences of fibrin molecule bb - , bb - , bb - , and the scrambled versions of bb - and bb - peptides on a binding to monab i- c and on the fibrin polymerization process. in spr analysis was showed that bb - and bb - peptides, but not their scrambled version, binds to monab i- c, immobilized to a chip. turbidity data showed that only bb - and bb - peptides caused the -fold decrease of the rate of the lateral association of protofibryls at the concentration . À m and . À m, respectively. both of them decreased the final clot turbidity. our data let us to suggest that the bb - site is the site that involved in protofibryls lateral association. it has been recently shown that irisin immunoreactivity was altered in gastrointestinal cancers. as known hematological malignancies was one of the most common malignancies through world, but no study was present how irisin was changed in this type of cancers. therefore, purpose of this was to investigate how immunoreactivity to irisin was altered in hematological malignancies (blood cancers). we used an antibody from phoenix to demonstrate how a kda band after deglycosylation of irisin altered in hematological malignancies. here we first time showed that irisin tissue immunoreactivity from acute lymphoblastic leukemia (all) and acute myelogenous leukemia (aml) patients was increased when compared with unaffected biological tissue parts. from the immune-histochemical (ihc) investigations it is concluded that hematological tissue and blood cells may be another source of irisin and increased with cancer, thus this finding might help to enlighten pathophysiology of hematological malignancies. the value of urine neutrophil gelatinaseassociated lipocalin (ngal) in acute heart failure n. serdarevic clinical centre, sarajevo, bosnia and herzegovina introduction: renal dysfunction is very common in heart failure (hf) and neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (ngal) is used as an early marker of acute renal tubular injury. recent studies have been reporting that ngal is inhibitor of inactivation of matrix metalloproteinases (mmp- ) which results in enhanced proteolytic activity with prolonged effects on collagen degradation. due to its relation to extracellular matrix degradation in myocardium and infammation, we hypothesized possible increased ngal expression in hf besides it renal dysfunction etiology. patients and methods: in study were included patients hospitalised with signs and symtoms of ahf. urine samples for ngal analysis were collected at admission and analysed by the chemiluminescent microparticle immunoassay (cmia) for the quantitative determination of neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin in human urine (abbott, architect analyzer). refferent range for urine ngal is - ng/ml. on admission blood samples for bnp (brain natriuretic peptide) analysis were drawn and tested by architect bnp chemiluminescent microparticle immunoassay (cmia), abbott laboratory. results: the mean age of the patients (male= , female= ) was . years (sd . years). among them ( %) patients was diagnosed as a hf-pef (hf with preserved ejection fraction) while ( %) as a hf-ref (hf with reduced ejection fraction). mean bnp values was . pg/ml (sd . pg/ml) and mean lvef was . % (sd . %). mean urine ngal was . ng/ml (sd . ng/ml). we found significantly positive, but weak correlation among ngal and bnp only by pearson correlation test (r = . , p = . , wilcoxon signed rank test z = À . p < . ). conclusion: bnp levels are elevated in hf with reduced and preserved ejection fraction. urine ngal is not elevated in acute heart failure, but it is slightly positively correlated with serum bnp values. converging evidence implicates the intermediate and medial mesopallium (imm) of the domestic chick forebrain in memory for a visual imprinting stimulus. a number of learning-related changes have been found in plasma membrane and mitochondrial proteins of imm. for broader analysis of these changes we employed two-dimensional gel electrophoresis/mass spectrometry approach and identified differentially expressed proteins in membrane-mitochondrial fraction of the imm across chicks with different estimated levels of imprinting h after training. we further inquired whether the amounts of those proteins in the imm and a control region (posterior pole of the nidopallium, ppn) are correlated with memory for the imprinting stimulus. learning-related increase in the amounts of the following proteins was demonstrated in the left imm, but not in the right imm or left and right ppn: (i) membrane cognin;(ii) a protein resembling the p subunit of splicing factor sf ;(iii) voltage dependent anionic channel- ;(iv) dynamin- ; (v) heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein a /b . obtained results indicate that the molecular processes involved in learning and memory of imprinting cover a wide range of cellular activities, including stabilization of protein structures, increased mrna trafficking, synaptic vesicle recycling and specific changes in the mitochondrial proteome. the aim of this work is to study the substrate and inhibitory properties of uridine derivatives in the reactions catalyzed by e.coli up in order to shed some light on the substrate's conformation in the productive complex with the enzyme. we studied the e.coli up-catalyzed phosphorolysis of uridine and its derivatives modified in the heterocyclic base and the sugar moiety. the kinetic constants (km, ki, kcat ) of the phosphorolysis reaction of near uridine derivatives were determined. the combined kinetic (nnna, , ) and structural data (acta crystallogr., d , , ) provide clear evidence that up binds uridine in the most energetically unfavorable conformation, which, to the best of our knowledge, has no precedents in the enzymes of nucleic acid metabolism. this is possible due to multiple interactions between the substrate and the protein environment (active site residues) mainly through hydrogen bonds. these results are important for understanding the mechanism of action of this class of enzymes. an analysis of the conformations of nucleosides in solution and rotational barriers suggests that the energy difference between the ground state of uridine and uridine complexed with up may be high as - kj/mol. the binding in a high-energy conformation results in the weakening of the glycosidic bond. the observed conformation of uridine complexed with sulfate (mimetic of phosphate) may be very similar to its conformation in the transient state. until now, foxp (forkhead box p ) has been identified as a tumor suppressor in several correlation studies in breast cancer. although, foxp is defined as a transcriptional repressor that interacts with other transcription factors in various mechanistic studies, there is no study that explains its repressor functions in breast cancer biology. here we demonstrate the repressor function of foxp on nfat (nuclear factor of activated t cells) and the migratory effect of this repression in mda mb breast cancer cells. we performed co-immunoprecipitation experiments for the investigation of protein-protein interaction between two transcription factors. protein-protein interaction on dna was investigated with emsa and transcriptional effects of foxp on nfat, lusiferase reporter assay was performed. wound healing assay was used to analyse the effects of overexpression of foxp on tumor cell migration. our results showed that foxp has protein-protein interaction with nfat on dna and enhances breast cancer cell migration by repressing nfat transcriptional activity and foxp shows oncogenic function by regulating breast cancer cell motility. introduction: phosphodiesterase (pde ) is one of phosphodiesterase lead to hydrolyzing cgmp.the cgmp signaling pathway has an important role in proliferation of cells. previous studies showed pde was increased in cell lines cancers thus pde inhibitors can used as efficacious therapeutic option for treatment of cancers. the current study was to investigation the effect of hydroalcoholic achillea.wilhelmsii extract (hawe) on the pde gene expression and cgmp signaling in the mcf- er + and mda-mb- er À . methods and materials: the ed of the hawe on both cell lines were examined by using mtt viability test then the expression of pde and cgmp concentration were measured in timedependent manner (in the ed ) by real-time rt-pcr and colorimetric assay respectively. results: treatment with the hawe showed, lg/ml is ed for both cell lines and the hawe lead to reduction in pde mrna expression and evaluation of intracellular cgmp showed an increase pattern in the time-dependent manner. conclusion: our results showed that the hawe has anti-proliferative property in the mcf- and mda-mb- , cell lines of breast cancer through the cgmp pathway, these data suggested that the hawe can be potential source for the isolation of effective anti-proliferative molecules. keywords: achillea.wilhelmsii, breast cancer, anti-proliferative, phosphodiesterase, cgmp signaling pathway. outer membrane protein g (ompg) is a stable monomeric porin having -stranded beta barrel form from e.coli. its exact function is not fully understood; however, it allows the passage of molecules up to da in neutral ph but the pore is closed by going through a conformational change under ph . . as being monomeric and having ph-dependent gating characters, it is suitable for biosensor and targeted drug delivery applications. an attempt on ompg is to create a larger pore while its stability is undisturbed. ompg- s is obtained by adding amino acids to the primary chain in order to have a -stranded beta barrel porin. ompg- sl is formed by further adding amino acids to loop l and by replacing lysines with arginines. ompg- s and ompg- sl mutants are investigated by fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ftir) and compared with ompg-wild type (wt) in terms of ph-dependent conformational changes and thermal stability. each mutant is prepared in na-phosphate buffer pd . / . and infrared spectra are recorded. further, temperature profiling are recorded for the range between to °c. results show that both mutants are responsive to ph changes. while turning the ph from acidic to neutral, beta sheet signals shift to lower wavenumbers showing difference in secondary structure, implying the existence of closed and open states. on the other hand, mutant proteins show structural differences compared with the wt protein. porins are known for their remarkable thermal stability. the mutans retain this character by having transition temperature of $ °c, although this is less than the wt transition at $ °c. in conclusion, two mutants show signs of open and closed states as ompg-wt and even if the mutants are less stable than ompg-wt. this study shows that the attempted alterations in ompg structure are successful in terms of ph-response but it needs improvement in terms of stability when necessary. nad is a key factor in the regulation of mitochondrial metabolism. besides its vital role as redox carrier, nad serves as substrate for protein adp-ribosylation and deacetylation, modifications which modulate enzyme activities in mitochondria. these functions depend on how nad levels are maintained in this organelle. in human cells, mitochondrial nad is segregated from the cytosolic pool and can be synthesized from nmn, which is probably imported into the matrix. here, we tested whether the nudix pyrophosphatase nudt participates in the regulation of the mitochondrial nad pool. this enzyme has a predicted nadh pyrophosphatase zinc ribbon domain and a mitochondrial targeting sequence at its n-terminus. however, it has not yet been functionally characterized. we overexpressed nudt endowed with a c-terminal flag-epitope in human cells. to evaluate changes in the mitochondrial nad concentration, we used a reporter system which includes the overexpression of the catalytic domain of poly(adpribose) polymerase (parp ) within the organelles (mitoparp). thereby mitochondrial nad is converted into protein-bound poly(adp-ribose) (par). the extent of par formation correlates with the mitochondrial nad availability and is detected by western blotting. our results established that nudt is indeed a mitochondrial protein, as it was localized exclusively to these organelles. moreover, when nudt was overexpressed along with the mitoparp detector system, a dramatic decrease of par was observed. the obtained results indicate that nudt is enzymatically active upon overexpression in the mitochondrial matrix and that it might cleave nad, thereby modulating its organellar level. however, at this point we cannot exclude the possibility of direct par cleavage by nudt . further characterization of nudt will define its substrate specificity and clarify its role in mitochondrial metabolism. the incidence of increase in colorectal cancer (crc) worldwide has become a major health problem. early diagnosis and treatment of crcs are of importance for improving survival. in the present study, it was aimed to investigate chemopreventive effect of rosmarinic acid and evaluate the angiogenesis process in azoxymethane (aom)-induced crc model. male sprague-dawley rats were randomly divided into a control group, aom-induced rat colorectal cancer group ( mg/kg body weight aom; ip, weekly for four weeks), and rosmarinic acid ( mg/kg body weight; oral, daily for four weeks)-treated group. in addition to the standart diet of the all groups . % peanut oil was added throughout the experiment. the all rats were sacrificed at the end of weeks. biochemical examinations were performed in rat plasma. histopathological adenocarcinoma rates were observed in . % of aom group. the incidence of adenocarcinoma was showed a reduction in the treatment group. significant increases in plasma tos and mcp- levels were found in the aom group compared to controls. these increases were reduced in the treatment groups but no significant. a significant increase was detected in tas levels in the treatment group when compared to the aom group. significant decreases in plasma adiponectin levels were found in the aom and the treatment groups compared to controls. in conclusion, treatment with rosmarinic acid reduced the occurrence of inflammation and was helped to maintain the oxidant-antioxidant balance in the model of aom-induced rat colon cancer. mitochondrial genome, while being strongly reduced in course of evolution, still codes for several proteins. the vast majority of them are components of the respiratory chain complexes. to produce these proteins, the system of mitochondrial translation is presented in the organelles, which is in common close to that in bacteria. translation initiation in bacterial cells is orchestrated by three protein factors called if , if and if . the orthologs of the two latter proteins are commonly found in mitochondria. however, mitochondrial if could not been identified in several groups of organisms, including s.cerevisiae, for a long time. recently we have shown that baker's yeast protein aim p possesses a function of mtif . however, the mitochondrial translation has not been stopped in the yeast strain without aim p which is surprising taking into account the fact that if is obligatory for the translation in bacterial systems. instead of blocking of mitochondrial protein synthesis in absence of aim p, we observed the translational imbalance: the synthesis rate of the complex v subunits was increased while the synthesis rate of the complex iv subunits was repressed. thus, in addition to its general role in translation initiation, aim p might specifically affect the biosynthesis of individual mitochondrial-encoded protein species. our genetic experiments have revealed that, indeed, aim p is almost indispensable for cox p synthesis, and that it affects the translation of cox mrna through its -utr, like classical mitochondrial translational activators. this is in accordance with our measurements of complex iv activity which is several times less in yeast lacking aim gene than in the wild-type. taken together, our results point on the multiple role of aim p in mitochondrial translation: in addition to its function as mitochondrial if , it specifically regulates the amount of complex iv subunits and its activity. p- . . - the circulating betatrophin and irisin levels in polycystic ovary syndrome patients with and without insulin resistance introduction: polycystic ovary syndrome (pcos) is the most common endocrine/metabolic disease in women around the world, characterized by oligo-or anovulation, polycystic ovary, and/or hyper-androgenism. insulin resistance (ir) and obesity are common findings in patients with pcos. irisin is a recently identified myokine secreted from skeletal muscle in response to physical activity. irisin has been postulated to induce the differentiation of white fat tissue into brown fat tissue. betatrophin is a currently discovered new hormone proposed to stimulate b-cell proliferation. in this study we investigated the levels of irisin and betatrophin in pcos patients. materials and methods: our study group was consisted of patients with pcos and healthy volunteers. patients group was divided into two subgroups according to presence of ir. (pcos+ir and pcos-ir). the oral glucose tolerance test (ogtt) and the homeostatic model assessment (homa-ir) were performed to assess glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity. irisin and betatrophin levels were measured by elisa method. results: circulating irisin was significantly higher in the pco-s+ir subgroup than the control group (p < . ). circulating betatrophin was significantly lower in both patients subgroups than the control group (p < . ). there was no negative or positive correlation between irisin and betatrophin levels. discussion: these data suggest that irisin and betatrophin may act a role together in the ir mechanism in pcos patients. butyrylcholinesterase (bche) synthesized in liver has long been associated with hyperlipidemia, type diabetes and obesity. there are also reports on bche knockout mice becoming obese. the exact involvement of how bche interacts with lipids is still not clear. previously we displayed a correlation between leptin, waist circumference, fat mass and bche levels. recently, we have also shown that bche overexpression in hepg cells is regulated by alpha linoleic acid. as the next approach on the analysis of lipid metabolism and bche interaction, we considered the capability of bche to hydrolyze lipids. human serum bche was purified by subsequent deae-tris-acryl m and procainamide chromatography. the purified bche was utilized in a modified acid lipase assay with the acid lipase substrate -methylumbelliferyl palmitate ( -mu-palmitate). as the second alternative substrate trioleic acid was utilized. the triolein hydrolysis was measured by the nefa kit. verification that bche hydrolysis of these lipid substrates was not due to another esterase was done by iso-ompa inhibition studies. also, lectin binding studies with bche and rca were carried out to rule out non-specific esterase activity. using purified human serum bche and hepatic lipase as control enzyme we found that bche is able to hydrolyze the acid lipase substrate -methylumbelliferyl palmitate ( -mu-palmitate). we found that bche hydrolyses this molecule at ph rather better than at ph . . at ph values, purified human bche has a km value that was times bigger than that of human pancreatic lipase. with the bigger molecule the triolein, the difference between the km values of bche and pancreatic lipase was smaller. bche seems to hydrolyze triolein with an efficacy comparable to approximately % that of human pancreatic lipase. our results display that another function of bche may be its lipid hydrolyzing activity. p- . . - determination of regional reference ranges for erythropoietin with laboratory data mining serum erythropoietin (epo) levels are the main regulator factor of erythrocyte production and increase in response to hypoxia. our region is a location dominated by hypoxic conditions due to the high attitude. in this study we aimed to investigate the mean serum epo levels in the living conditions of our region. two hundred and eighty epo results from our laboratory data whose hemoglobin levels were normal were evaluated in the study. mean serum epo levels were analyzed via chemiluminescence method in beckman coulter dxi auto analyzer. the epo levels of samples was . ae . mul/ml (ranged between . and . ) mul/ml. when we performed ae sd for the studies population we determined normal serum epo levels were as . - . mul/ml. the upper limit determined by our results was % higher than that of determined by the manufacturer as . mul/ml and the lower limit determined by our results was % higher than that of determined by the manufacturer as . mul/ml. normal serum epo levels were considerable for our region and the upper and lower limits were higher than those of determined by the manufacturer. more detailed studies considering the physical properties of participants including a higher number participants are necessary. subclinical hypothyroidism is the precursor to hypothyroidism because it has a tendency to transform into hypothyroidism. subclinical hypothyroidism is considered one of the risk factors causing metabolic syndrome. metabolic syndrome can be characterized by plasma level of apelin released from adipocytes. in the present study, we aimed to measure serum apelin level of patients with subclinical hypothyroidism and compare them with serum apelin level from healthy individuals. our study group included patients diagnosed with subclinical hypothyroidism and healthy volunteers. serum samples were obtained from each participant for the measurement of apelin. these were then stored at À •c until the time of analysis. serum apelin concentrations were determined using an enzymelinked immunosorbent assay. the mean serum apelin levels of subclinical hypothyroidism and control groups were ng/l, control group ng/l respectively. there was no statistically significant difference in terms of the mean apelin levels between the groups (p > . ). apelin levels didn't show significant correlation with bmi (p > . ). in the present study, no significant difference of serum apelin level was observed between patients with subclinical hypothyroidism and healthy control subjects. however, the apelin levels were higher in the patients with subclinical hypothyroidism than in the control group. the possible relationship between thyroid hormones and apelins is critical to understanding the etiopathogenesis of metabolic disorders. the mitochondrial erv /mia import system does not impact cytosolic fe-s cluster protein maturation and iron regulation erv is a sulfhydryl oxidase that partners with the import receptor mia to import small cysteine-rich proteins into the mitochondrial intermembrane space. it has also been suggested that erv has an additional role in maturation of cytosolic fe-s cluster proteins and regulation of iron homeostasis in s. cerevisiae. however, these studies were performed on one particular erv mutant strain (erv - ) that we discovered has additional defects in glutathione (gsh) metabolism. since gsh is required for iron regulation and cytosolic fe-s cluster assembly, this complicates our understanding of erv s role in these processes. we discovered that the erv - strain originally tested for fe-s cluster defects was the only strain to exhibit defects in the cytosolic fe-s enzymes. mitochondrial and cytosolic fe-s protein activities in the other erv and mia mutants tested were similar to the wt control. in addition, while all the erv and mia mutants tested exhibit temperature-dependent defects in mia oxidation, only the erv - strain has significantly reduced gsh levels and more oxidized gsh: gssg redox state. we determined that the cause of gsh depletion in the erv - strain is an additional mutation in the gene encoding the glutathione biosynthesis enzyme (gsh ) that compromises gsh protein folding and/or stability. to address whether gsh deficiency in the erv - mutant is the underlying cause for the cytosolic fe-s cluster defects and iron misregulation for this strain, we measured fe-s protein activity, iron-regulated gene expression, and iron accumulation in erv and mia mutant strains. only the erv - strain exhibited iron misregulation and accumulation of mitochondrial iron, while exogenous gsh rescued these defects. these results demonstrate that the defects in cytosolic fe-s enzymes and iron homeostasis in erv - are due to gsh depletion and neither erv nor mia play significant roles in cytosolic fe-s cluster assembly and iron homeostasis. human c-peptide is a amino acid polypeptide, which is secreted into blood from b-cells in the pancreas where pro-insulin undergoes a post translational modification and cleaved into insulin and c-peptide. human c-peptide concentrations in blood plasma and urine reflect the level of insulin resistance associated b-cell function and can point out insulin secretory failure. the reference intervals in blood plasma and urine are . - . ng/ml and - ng/ml respectively. c-peptide measurement in urine and plasma provides a guide for therapy in diabetes. this study describes a method for the development and validation of picaa (peptide impurity corrected amino acid analysis) method for the determination of the purity of the human c-peptide which could be used as a reference material to measure cpeptide concentrations in plasma. two different methods were performed for the picaa; aaa-id-ms/ms for quantification of constituent amino acids following hydrolysis of the material and rp-hplc-esi-tof ms for determination of the peptide related impurities. the result of the aaa id ms/ms method was corrected for the amino acids originating from the impurities. id ms/ms-aaa was performed with zivak Ò hplc and zivak Ò tandem gold triple quadrupole ms equipped with a phenomenex ez:faast l aaa column ( mm i.d). the mobile phase was composed of, a: mm ammonium formate (af) in water, b: mm af in acetonitrile (acn). the intact peptide analysis was performed by a hitachi lachrome elite hplc and bruker microtof-q mass spectrometer equipped with a capcell pak mg-ii c column ( mm i.d., mm particle size). the purity of the synthetic c-peptide was determined by picaa analysis and related uncertainty was calculated. traceability to si was established using the amino acid standards of which the purity was determined by tub _ itak ume using qnmr analysis. picaa is a simpler alternative to the full mass balance approach which requires large quantities of the peptide material. p- . . - heat shock proteins: complementary therapies in brain tumors with viscum album e. onay-ucar, s. n. biltekin istanbul university, faculty of science, department of molecular biology and genetics, vezneciler, istanbul, turkey cancer is one of the lethal diseases in the world. different cancer types possess overexpressed hsps levels. viscum album extracts with their anticancer and antioxidant properties are being used in cancer therapies. biochemical composition of this plant is known to vary its features depending on the host trees and time of harvest. in our previous study, it has been found that v.album inhibited hsp expression and induced caspase-dependent apoptosis in c rat gliomas. the aim of the current study is to find out whether different v.album extracts have different effects on hsps expression level and apoptosis in c glioma cell line or not. in this study, three different extracts of v.album were compared for their potential inhibition effects on hsps. the cytotoxic effects of extracts have been determined via mtt test. different experiment groups were set up subjected to heat shock and/or incubated without any heat shock application. overexpression of hsps was induced by heat shock at °c for h in c cells. expression levels of hsps were determined by western blot analysis. the apoptosis inducing effect was also evaluated via caspase- activation in c glioma cells. pretreatment of the cells with non-toxic dose ( lg/ml) of v.album extracts prior to heat shock, reduced significantly the expression levels of hsps. similarly, pretreatment with the extracts prior to heat shock increased apoptosis via caspase- activation in c glioma cells. these results will be utilized in the determination of the relation between extract composition and stress protein expressions. these results suggest that different extracts of v.album are able to down regulate expression of hsps, and induce apoptosis. this warrants further exploration as a potential resource of bioactive compounds that can be used in cancer therapy. future studies targeting hsps for the development of chemosensitizers may help improve the treatment of cancer in combinational therapy. biological drugs (biologics) are the fastest-growing category of therapeutics among those approved by the agencies for drugs regulation. most biologics are proteins designed for parenteral use. however, proteins are characterized by poor pharmacokinetic and safety profiles. peg-coating (poly-ethylene glycol coating) of biologics provides several benefits, including an increased half-life related to reduced renal clearance, an increased stability to degradation, and a reduced immunogenic/antigenic response. preservation of the three-dimensional structure and activity of the pegylated form is a strict requirement for human use. the recombinant proteins used for this studies (as-sod, superoxide dismutase; mmp , matrix metalloproteases ; ansii, l-asparaginase ii) were cloned and then over-expressed in escherichia coli. pegylation reactions were performed using commercial reagents. all the protein samples were purified and analyzed by solution and solid-state nmr (fields from mhz to mhz). we developed new protocols to prepare samples of pegylated proteins, demonstrating that solid-state nmr spectra of exceptionally good quality can be obtained for pegylated proteins in the sedimented state (obtained by either ultracentrifugation or rehydration of freeze-dried samples); surprisingly, sedimentation of pegylated proteins to this end has never been attempted. the spectral quality is comparable toor better thanthat of the corresponding crystalline samples. the excellent quality of the solid-state nmr spectra would make it possible to perform extensive resonance assignment and even a conventional full structure determination of biologics. the proposed method is based on the comparison of a standard twodimensional solid-state nmr spectrum of the sedimented pegylated protein with that of the crystalline state of the native proteinfor which the x-ray structure is available. all eukaryotic creatures hereditarily have natural defense mechanisms and are protected from the infections with this defense mechanism. antimicrobial peptides (amp) contain - amino acid content, are positively charged with amphipathic feature. the antimicrobial activities of amps are thought to be depended on the microbiocidal effects by binding to the surface of microorganisms and creating pores in their membranes. defensins are both effector and mediator small antimicrobial peptides of the immune system. these peptides in cationic and amphipathic structure have broad spectrum antibacterial, antifungal and antiviral features. defensins regulate the innate and acquired immune systems by suppressing proinflammatory responses during infection. mammals have three structural subfamilies of defensins. these show differences according to the trisulfide arrays in their structure and are classified as a,b, h defensins. human beings have tissue-specific six functional a defensins. human hnp- and hnp- encoded by defa , defa and defa genes are firstly expressed in neutrophils. human hdp and hdp encoded by defa and defa are firstly expressed in paneth cells in the intestines and play important role in the defense and homeostasis. human beings have many pseudogenes such as defap and deftp in addition to these functional genes. according to literature data, defensins play an important role in defense against microbial placements on mucosal surfaces. in addition, the antimicrobial spectra of defensins include gram negative and gram positive bacteria, fungi and viruses. in addition to their antimicrobial efficiency, they can accelerate the wound healing due to their mitogenic effects on epithelium cells and fibroblasts. bile salt hydrolase (bsh) enzyme catalyzes the hydrolysis of glycine and/or taurine-conjugated bile salts into amino acid residues and the free bile acids that reduce cholesterol. however, some intestinal bacteria have an excessive deconjugation of tauro-conjugated bile salts and production of secondary bile acid having potential harmful side effects to the host. the catalytic mechanism and substrate preference of such bsh enzyme is not clear. in this study, bsh gene from lactobacillus plantarum gd strain was cloned, expressed, characterized in escherichia coli blr(de ) strain, and then val- and phe- amino acids, supposed to be responsible for substrate preference, were substituted for met- and ile- amino acids respectively by site directed mutagenesis. the hydrolysis activities and stability of the mutant recombinant bsh (mrbsh) enzymes were examined along with six different bile acids by ninhydrin assay and sds-page respectively. ninhydrin test results indicated that wild-type recombinant bsh (wrbsh) hydrolyzed six major human bile salts with an apparent preference towards glycine-conjugated to tauro-conjugated bile salts. however, the activities of mrbsh/phe ile enzyme are %, %, %, %, % and % of the activity of wrbsh against to glycocholic acid (gca), glycodeoxycholic acid (gdca), glycochenodeoxycholic acid (gcdca), taurocholic acid (tca), taurodeoxycholic acid (tdca) and taurochenodexycholic acid (tcdca) respectively. the activities of val met mrbsh enzyme are %, %, %, %, % and % of wrbsh against to gca, gdca, gcdca, tca, tdca and tcdca respectively. our findings support the suggestion that bsh enzymes recognize their substrates predominantly at the amino acid moieties and not at the cholate moieties. however, further pcr-based site-directed mutagenesis and structure-driven computational and theoretical approaches are required for the precise determination of their substrate specificities and the selection of probiotic bacteria. we deposited bacteriorhodopsin in purple membranes under applied electrical field onto ito (indium tin oxide) support. purple membranes film, highly oriented in one direction, was placed between two ito electrodes. we studied dependence of electrical properties of these films on light illumination. we argue that this setup can be used for functional studies of microbial rhodopsins. in opposite to already published results where this system was used as a photocondensor for studying functional properties of bacteriorhodopsin, we studied electric properties of such systems and we found strong light dependence of resistivity of bacteriorhodopsin in purple membranes films. optogenetics is already used in study of neuronal cells cooperation in vitro and in vivo by means of microbial rhodopsinsion pumps and channels incorporated in membranes of neurons changing their electrical potential while receiving a light quantum by laser or led source. best perspectives optogenetics will give after successful transfer to medical applications, such as the treatment of blindness, treatment of disorders like parkinson's disease etc. but to achieve these we need a broad set of tools, optogenetics tools, highly specialized to solve specific problems of neurophysiology. to the creation of such tools our work is dedicated. new optogenetic tools can be made by mutations in existing ones altering their properties (mainly spectral characteristics, selectivity and conductivity) or some promising mutations in conserved residues can be found in existing organisms. a halophilic archaeon halosimplex carlsbadens is a host of protein of our interest. according to the theoretical data based on the alignment with br and the d structure model of this novel protein, we suppose this protein functions like the light-driven h+ pump: all the key residues are the same or at worst have the similar properties, except one in the position leucine instead of the aspartic acid. a gram-positive bacteria deinococcus-thermus phylum syntheses rhodopsin with substitution of this aspartic acid to alanine. sphingomonas paucimobilis has rhodopsin where aspardic acid in position is changed to serine residue. and one yet uncharacterised guillardia theta rhodopsin even has the same as br motif (d , t , and d ) but according to alignment is closer to chr even the last one motif is e , t , n . it is expected that all of them will show us new properties. though the further experimental data are essential. the work is supported by rsf - - . evaluation of some thymus proteins in patients with crimean congo hemorrhagic fever i. b€ ut€ un , s. sahin , f. duygu university of gaziosmanpasa, department of biochemistry, tokat, turkey, oncology education and reasearch center, ankara, turkey crimean congo hemorrhagic fever (cchf) is a tick-borne viral zoonotic disease. it has a high fatal rate (% - ). tokat is one of the cities having the most reported cchf cases, in turkey. clinical presentation of the disease varies widely among patients. thymic peptides are small molecules synthesized by thymic epithelial cells. they play role in the immune response, as well as anti-inflammatory process. fourty patients referring to the hospital with tick-contact history and/or presenting clinical manifestations consistent withcchf and with positive pcr results for cchf virus in blood samples were included to the study. the wbc and platelet values at application and before the patients were discharged were recorded. the healthy control group consisted of age and gender matched healthy volunteer adults free of any chronic disease. thymosin alpha (ta ), thymuline and thymosin beta (tb ) were studied by the elisa method in this study. biochemical parameters were also analysed. ast and alt values were significantly higher (p < . ) and plt and wbc levels were significantly lower in the cchf group (p < . ). levels of tf, ta and tb were found to be significantly higher in cchf (p < . ). there was no mortality during the study period. duration of hospitalization was . ae . days. levels of tb were significantly correlated with duration of hospitalization (r= À . , p = . ). alt levels were significantly correlated with tf levels (r = . , p = . ). patients received ffp and apheresis for the supportive treatment, while patients received only ffp and patients got only apheresis. patients did not get any of these blood products. there was not a statistically significant differences in thymus peptides among these treatment groups (p > . ). we report survived cchf patients with elevated thymic peptides. pathogenesis of cchf has many points to be highlighted. thymic peptides may play role in the clinical situation of the patients with the disease. the effect of methocarbamol on the peroxiadse activity of human erythrocyte hemoglobin hemoglobin is released to blood circulation, after red blood cells lysis. it is carried in circulation by binding to haptoglobin. in normal persons, no free hemoglobin is observed in the blood, because most of hemoglobin is in the form of haptoglobin complex. in some diseases that are accompanied by hemolysis, the amount of released hemoglobin is higher than its complementary haptoglobin. as a result, free hemoglobin appears in the blood, which is a toxic compound for these patients. free hemoglobin has been showed to have peroxidase activity and considered a pseudoenzyme. in this research, the effect of methocarbamol on the peroxidase activity of human hemoglobin was studied. our results showed that the drug inhibited the pseudoenzyme by un-competitive inhibition. both k m and v max decreased by increasing the drug concentration. k i and ic values were determined as and mm, respectively. molecular docking results showed that methocarbamol did not attach to heme group directly. a hydrogen bond connected nh of carbamate group of methocarbamol to the carboxyl group of asp side chain. two other hydrogen bonds could be also observed between hydroxyl group of the drug and ser and ser residues of the pseudoenzyme. p- . . - dca reduces viability and down regulates mapk protein activations in human malignant mesothelioma cells and pericardium. microarray analyze results performed in mm patients revealed that one of the most prominent changes is upregulation of many genes involved in glycolysis and the krebs cycle. dichloroacetate (dca) is an inhibitor of pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (pdk) that enhances the oxidative activity of cells by activating pyruvate dehydrogenase (pdh) in mitochondria. dca has shown as a promising anti-neoplastic agent that re-sensitizes cancer cells to apoptosis. the aim of this study is to elucidate the coupling between pdk inhibition and mm cell proliferation and cell cycle. human malignant mesothelioma (spc ) cell line was used as a model for dca treatments. cell viability was measured by mts assay; mapk protein activations and expressions were assessed by western blotting; cell cycle profile was analyzed by flow cytometry. statistical analysis was performed by utilizing one-way anova test. results showed that dca reduced viability of spc cells in a concentration and time dependent manner. protein analysis indicated that mapk pathway was down regulated at concentrations greater than mm. moreover, primary cell cycle analysis has indicated arrestment at g /m phase in hours. our findings corroborate with recent reports where dca treatments resulted in reduction of viability and g /g and g / m arrest in other cell lines. abnormalities in mapk signalling play a critical role in the progression of cancer. here, we showed for the first time that dca decreased mapk activation in h. our results suggest that dca is an anti-prolifertive agents for mm cells in vitro. however, it requres extra analysis with other mesothelial cells. future study will focus on investigating relation between mapk and mitochondrial apoptosis. adrenomedullin (adm) is a vasodilator peptide consisting of amino acids. adm is synthesized in many tissues. and is a biologically active peptide that has various effects including vasodilatation, the regulation of vascular endothelial function and adjusting adipogenesis. hypoxia inducible factor alpha (hif a) is a subunit of a heterodimeric transcription factor hypoxia inducible factor . it is the master transcriptional regulator of cellular and developmental response to hypoxia. the dysregulation and overexpression of hif a by either hypoxia or genetic alternations have been heavily implicated in cancer biology as well as a number of other pathophysiologies. in our research, the adm and hif -a levels in heart, kidney and lung tissues of rats were investigated in control, hypoxia, control+adm and hypoxia+adm groups. rats in hypoxia groups were provided hypoxic environment containing of - % oxygen and - % nitrogen for week. rats in adm groups were injected intraperitoneally in a dose of . nmol/kg for four days before the collection of the tissues. the control group was oxygenated with normal air. the control and treatment groups were formed from - animals and adm, hif -a levels were measured in taken tissues with immunoassay method. the aim of this study was to investigate the reaction of the organism when exposed to hypoxic conditions and the effect of adm over hif -a level. adm levels and hif -a in heart tissue were found decreased in hypoxia group, and adm levels increased in hipoxia+adm group. hif -a levels decreased in hypoxi+adm group. adm levels in liver tissue were found decreased in hipoxia and control+adm groups than control group. hif -a levels were higher in control+adm group. adm has a role in angiogenic process, and our experiment showed that adm reacts earlier than hif -a, and affects its synthesis. organism increases its vascularization as a reaction to hypoxic condition, and adm treatment may provide a rapid adjustment. p- . . - covalent conjugation and characterization of immunogenic protein of toxoplasma gondii and polyacryclic acid as vaccine candidate r. c ß akir koc ß yildiz technical university, department of bioengineering, istanbul, turkey toxoplasmosis is a major medical and veterinary disease caused by toxoplasma gondii which infect approximately half of the world's population. this infectious disease especially gains importance in pregnant women and immunodeficient individuals. also t. gondii infection has economic importance. however, there are only one attenuated-live t. gondii vaccine for veterinary uses and no vaccine against t. gondii is available for humans. therefore development of an effective vaccine would be extremely valuable for preventing disease in human and veterinary medicine. subunit vaccines are very attractive vaccine candidates but there is low antigenicity problem when they are used alone. polymers themselves don't stimulate immune response while they used with antigenic structure of various infective agents enhance immune response because when proteins are covalently conjugated with hydrophilic polymers, ( ) their circulatory-lives and stability (in different ph and temperature values) enhance ( ) binding to proteases and clearance by the reticuloendothelial-system decreases. in this study, immunogenic protein of t.gondii and polyacrylic acid with immune stimulant properties was covalently conjugated and conjugation was demonstrated by size-exclusion chromatography (sec) and fluorescence spectroscopy. it is significant to detect time of death in case of a sudden death for medical and legal concerns. there is no known method that can be used for post mortem time detection. based on this deficiency pmi detection in narrow time frame is a big problem. in this study, we aimed to investigate and determine timedependent expressional changes of apoptotic markers by western blot technique. postmortem skeletal muscle were analyzed hour periods in first -hour after death. nd and rd -hour periods were statistically significant (p < . ). keywords: post mortem interval, time of death, apoptosis. hyaluronidases are excessively found in nature and involved in numerous biological functions. hyaluronidases primarily degrade hyaluronic acid (ha) and have significant role in fertilization during acrosomal reactions. therefore, the measurement of hyaluronidase enzyme activity may provide valuable information about acrosomal function and the fertilizing ability of the sperm. the aim of this study was to investigate the semen hyaluronidase enzyme activity changes among four different sheep breeds (akkaraman, suffolk, merino, and kıvırcık). in this research, ten ram testis tissues from each sheep breed, a total of , were cut and collected on ice. ovine testicular hyaluronidase of four different sheep breeds was purified from a crude ammonium sulfate-precipitated fraction of an extract of ram testis. the semen hyaluronidase enzyme activity differences between the sheep breeds were examined by spectrophotometrically monitoring the appearance of ha at nm. analysis of variance test was used to examine the possible mean differences among the four different sheep breeds. the observed mean differences in enzyme units for kıvırcık, suffolk, akkaraman, and merino were as follows . , . , . , and . , respectively. the observed mean differences in absorbance values for kıvırcık, suffolk, akkaraman, and merino were as follows . , . , . , and . , respectively. the results showed that the observed mean differences in enzyme units and absorbance values among the four different sheep breeds were not statistically significant. despite that, in average kıvırcık had higher values for the activity of each sample and yet it had the smallest values for standard deviation. therefore, in order to achieve higher enzyme activity and more homogenous samples kıvırcık breed should be preferred. what is extra to learn from protein drying measurements? hydrations of soluble proteins are crucial for their functionality. therefore elucidating the details of protein hydration is still of interest in the proteins' action mechanisms. this is the motivation of the present study. in order to study protein hydration, changing concentrations of the well-studied serum albumin protein was measured with the spectroscopic techniques like uv-vis and ft-ir spectroscopy. spectral data is analysed and calculations were performed on the data to extract the relevant changes in the protein. experimental parameters' variation in association with the spectral changes implies the involvement of protein structure and hydrogen bonding in the drying process. the protein's reactions may not be merely a feature of the protein structure in the common sense but it could be related directly to the protein hydration states as well. this is understandable since it is already known that enzymatic proteins lose their functionality when they are dried while this drying may or may not involve dramatic structural changes. on the other hand, here it is claimed that the role of water in gaining the functionality that was lost in the dried state is not just about enhanced diffusion processes and the dynamicity but could be related to the functionality of water in the energy transfer processes as well. investigating the cellular effects of the aldoketo reductases akr b and akr b in hct- colon cancer cells b. taskoparan, e. g. seza, m. s. ceyhan, s. banerjee middle east technical university, ankara, turkey aldo-keto reductases (akr) are nad(p)h dependent oxidoreductases are best characterized as glucose reducing agents, and have been implicated in diabetic pathophysiology. increased expression of akr has been associated with tumors of lung, breast, prostate, cervix, ovarian and colon. two members of the akr superfamily that have been associated with different cancer types are akr b ; aldo-keto reductase family , member b , and akr b ; aldo-keto reductase family , member b . both are -kda cytosolic reductases that are similar in both amino acid sequence identity ( %) and tertiary structure with the (a/b) barrel topology. while hct- , a colorectal cancer cell line, cells expresses akr b robustly, there is no expression of akr b . in this study, we have stably knocked down akr b through shrna technology and overexpressed akr b in hct- cells. comparisons were made with a known akr inhibitor sorbinil. with the knock down of akr b , we have observed reduced cellular proliferation, enhanced apoptosis, delay in cell cycle progression, reduced expression of mitogenic proteins and a decrease in activation of the inflammatory transcription factor nuclear factor kappa b (nf-kappab). interestingly, although akr b overexpression did not affect cell proliferation, apoptosis or cell cycle, some effect was observed with nf-kb signaling. our data indicate that, although closely related, akr b and akr b have very different contributions towards signaling pathways in colorectal cancer. comparison of different nisin quantification methods and optimization of nisin production by lactococcus lactis z. girgin ersoy, g. demir, m. f. cesur, s. tunca gedik gebze technical university, kocaeli, turkey nisin, which is produced by certain strains of lactococcus lactis, is the only bacteriocin approved by world health organization (who) as a food additive. it prevents the growth of foodborne bacteria which cause food spoilage. nisin research and applications necessitates developing an accurate and reproducible method for its quantification. the agar diffusion bioassay is the most widely used method for quantifying nisin, although it has limitations especially diffusion-related difficulties of the active substance. in the present study, "agar diffusion bioassay", "enumeration of colony forming units", "colorimetric assay" and "flow cytometry" methods were compared with each other to determine antibacterial activity of nisin on micrococcus luteus. moreover, this study also covers the results about the effect of different cultural conditions to optimize nisin production by l. lactis. galactose, lactose and their combination in m medium (ph ) boosted nisin production at °c, as the addition of . lg/ml hemin into the fermentation broth. to our knowledge, this is the first study showing the usage of "flow cytometry" method to determine nisin activity of fermentation broth filtrates. p- . . - coronaviral nucleocapsid protein is an antiviral target for drug development institute of genomics and bioinformatics, national chung hsing university, taichung, taiwan between and , the severe acute respiratory syndrome (sars)-cov caused a worldwide epidemic and had a significant economic impact in the countries affected by the outbreak. recently, the middle east respiratory syndrome human coronavirus (mers-cov) was found in patients with severe acute respiratory tract infections in the middle east and south korea. as is true for all coronavirus infections, there are no efficacious therapies currently available against coronaviral diseases, making the development of anti-coronavirus compounds a priority. the cov genome consists of positive-sense, single-stranded rna approximately kb, and it contains several genes encoding several structural and non-structural proteins that are required for progeny virion production with a conserved order. the n proteins exist in the center of the viral particle and represent a helical structure complex. nucleocapsid protein is most abundant structural protein of covs, binds the viral rna genome to form the virion core, leading to the formation of a ribonucleoprotein (rnp) complex or to a long helical nucleocapsid structure, that is important for maintaining the rna in an ordered conformation for replication and transcription. the cov n protein is also involved in the regulation of cellular processes, such as gene transcription, interferon inhibition, actin reorganization, host cell cycle progression, and apoptosis. two strategies to inhibit oligomeric n protein function have been reported. the first strategy is to discover antiviral agents that target the rna-binding site. the second one is to impair normal n protein function by interfering with monomer-oligomer equilibrium. our recent studies suggest that n proteins in infections caused by coronaviruses will be useful antiviral drug targets because they serve many critical functions during the viral life cycle. post-translational modification of vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) in colon cancer cells s. tunc ßer, e. solel, s. banerjee middle east technical university, ankara, turkey vascular endothelial growth factor a (vegf-a), commonly referred as vegf, is a potent secreted mitogen crucial for tumor initiation and progression. the gene for vegf is translated into a number of splice isoforms that lead to , , and amino acid proteins, with different receptor-binding and matrixbinding properties. in the present study, we discuss the functional significance of post-translational modification/processing of vegf isoform in hct- colon cancer cells. we also focus on the role of calcium in the post-translational modification of vegf . we show that vegf undergoes n-linked glycosylation in hct- cells. perturbation of cellular calcium may affect vegf driven malignant phenotypes. p- . . - novel methods for modulating the activity of bcl family proteins in apoptosis p. rowell, j. miles, a. wilson, t. edwards apoptosis, also known as programmed cell death, is an essential cellular process, but is implicated in several human diseases, including diabetes and cancer, when it is up-or down-regulated respectively. bcl- family proteins are major players in the control of intrinsic, or mitochondrial apoptosis; they respond to intracellular stress signals, function through protein-protein interactions and converge on the mitochondrial outer membrane to cause membrane permeabilisation, release of cytotoxic molecules, and initiation of an apoptotic cascade that leads to cellular demise. our work aims to identify molecules able to bind and modulate the activity of several key players in the bcl- family, including the pro-survival members bcl- , bcl xl and mcl , and the death promoting family member bax. adhirons, novel non-antibody peptide display scaffolds developed at the university of leeds, have been used to construct a phage display library containing over clones, and form a key part of the strategy to identify such molecular modulators. adhirons able to selectively bind individual bcl- family members have been identified, in vitro assays carried out to test for modulatory activity, and xray crystallography used to elucidate details of how they interact with their target proteins. more recently, studies have been carried out to identify adhirons able to target multiple bcl- family members, with the aim of selectively inhibiting defined groups of proteins in cells. this work provides opportunities to differentiate the activities carried out by different bcl- family proteins in apoptosis, enabling us to better understand how their dysregulation contributes to human disease. biophysical and evolutionary study of the structural flexibility of adp-dependent sugar kinases from mesophilic and psychrophilic archaea r. zamora , v. castro-fern andez , c. a. ramirez-sarmiento , e. a. komives , v. guixe facultad de ciencias, universidad de chile, santiago, chile, department of chemistry and biochemistry, university of california, san diego, united states of america the capability of extremophiles microorganisms to live at low temperatures is mainly attributed to the high structural flexibility of its enzymes. several sequence and structure features have been associated to a high structural flexibility that enables metabolic processes to occur at low temperatures. during evolution, the general mechanism adopted by these enzymes has been to reduce the free energy of the transition state rather than the michaelis constant, k m . increased structural flexibility and decreased affinity for its substrates in psychrophilic enzymes is compensated by an increase in the catalytic rate, k cat . few psychrophilic enzymes have been reported to performance the optimization of their catalytic efficiency (k cat /k m ) by decreasing k m values. we use the adp-dependent kinase sugar family of archaea as a model, to identify particular structure and sequence features of a psychrophilic enzyme that would make this enzyme more flexible than their thermostable homologues. we characterize the bifunctional psychrophilic enzyme phosphofructokinase/glucokinase from methanococcoides burtonii (mbpfk-gk) and the bifunctional mesophilic enzyme phosphofructokinase/glucokinase from methanococcus maripaludis (mmpfk-gk) by spectroscopic, biophysical and computational techniques. the comparison showed that the absence of two ion pairs is primarily responsible for the increased structural flexibility accounted in the psychrophilic model. this increase in structural flexibility is reflected in the exponential increase in the k m values with temperature. additionally, we reconstruct the sequences of all ancestral enzymes between the current enzymes and their last common ancestor, which was used to trace the occurrence of these electrostatic interactions during evolution in the adp-dependent sugar kinase family. our results suggest that electrostatic interactions are a dominant feature in the transition from psychrophilic to thermophilic environments. fondecyt . elucidating the domain swapping mechanism of the forkhead domain of human foxp fox transcription factors control gene transcription during key processes, such as embryogenesis and immunity, and feature a conserved dna-binding domain known as forkhead. while most forkhead domains are monomeric, solved structures of members from the p subfamily (foxp) show that they can oligomerize by domain swapping (ds), a mechanism where protein segments are exchanged between subunits leading to an intertwined dimer. the biological relevance of ds in foxp has been stressed by disease-causing mutations that impair this process. however, for many proteins ds takes days to occur and requires global protein unfolding. thus, the current mechanism impedes a conciliation of the occurrence of ds of foxp in a biological context. here, we elucidate the biological feasibility of this process by biophysically characterizing the ds mechanism of the forkhead domain of foxp using size exclusion chromatography (sec), circular dichroism, and hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (hdxms). our results show that ds of foxp occurs at micromolar protein concentrations, within hours and is energetically favored. remarkably, dimeric foxp follows a threestate n « i « u folding mechanism, where dimer dissociation into a monomeric intermediate (i) precedes protein unfolding, in contrast to other ds proteins. using sec and hdxms, we show that the i state of foxp largely resembles the native state, but has a larger hydrodynamic radius and a higher deuterium uptake in regions that maintain the compact monomer, suggesting that the i state is an 'open' conformation en route of ds. finally, we compared the local flexibility of the dimer and monomer of foxp , showing that only the hinge region connecting ds segments exhibits different deuteration rates. our results show that ds in foxp follows an unusual threestate folding mechanism that proceeds through transient structural changes rather than needing protein unfolding as in most ds proteins. (fondecyt , ). p- . . - the sustained release of growth factor proteins following their implantation in tissue engineering j. jang bone tissue engineering has become a promising approach for bone regeneration. however, insufficient vascularization during bone regeneration, particularly with large bone defects, results in poor and unsustainable bone formation due to central necrosis. therefore, vascularization following implantation in vivo is essential to the successful formation of new bone tissue. we evaluated the release profile of vegf from bgs using a novel fluorescence-based retention assay, which revealed that vegf loaded on bgs can be released in a sustained manner without an initial burst (near zero-order cumulative release) with a controlled release rate of . % per week for up to weeks. in contrast, an elisa-based release assay showed vegf to have an early burst-release profile for the first week. however, the biological activity of vegf released from the bgs was preserved over the -week release period, which is consistent with the sustainedrelease profile observed in the fluorescence-based retention assay. we developed a novel fluorescence-based retention assay to evaluate the release of vegf from bgs. this fluorescence-based retention assay, which detects the vegf that remains on bgs, reveals that vegf loaded on bgs can be released in a sustained manner, with a minimal initial burst, for up to weeks. these results indicate that the sustained biological activity of the vegf released from bgs over the full -week period promotes bone regeneration, and suggest its potential use for bone tissue engineering. irisin is a recently discovered myokine which regulates energy metabolism and is associated overweight. we aimed to evaluate serum irisin levels in the patients with morbid obesity. a total of sixty patients with morbidly obese and thirty healthy control subjects were included in this study. all participants were measured body weight and height, the lipid profile, and plasma glucose, hba c, insulin and irisin levels. irisin levels were measured by elisa method. serum irisin levels were significantly lower in morbidly obese patients than healthy controls (p < . ). there was no statistically significant difference in terms of age or gender. serum irisin was negatively correlated with bmi, insulin levels, and homa-ir (p = . , p = . , p = . , respectively). our study revealed lower irisin levels in morbidly obese patients with respect to control subjects. the lower irisin levels observed in morbidly obese patients might suggest a loss of browning of subcutaneous adipose tissues. p- . . - pka inhibition restores adenosine uptake in renal tubular epithelial cells under high d-glucose conditions w. garrido, j. catal an, s. alarc on, r. san mart ın universidad austral de chile, valdivia, chile introduction: diabetic nephropathy (dn) is the leading a cause of end-stage renal failure whose pathogenesis must to be elucidated. the progression of dn has been associated with elevated levels of adenosine. extracellular adenosine availability is regulated by the activity of the equilibrative nucleoside transporters (ents). due to the ents have putative sites of phosphorylation our objective was to evaluate the role of pka and ck kinases on ents activity. methods: adenosine uptake ( lm adenosine, s, °c) was assayed in hk cells preincubated with mm or mm d-glucose for h and exposed to lm -br camp, lmh or lm tbb for h. plasma membrane and intracellular proteins were fractionated by the biotinylation method and ent and ent contents were quantified by western blot. results: high d-glucose in hk cells inhibited the uptake of adenosine. this effect was reversed using a pka inhibitor (h ) through an increased ent uptake activity. we noticed this pka inhibitor did not regulate the plasma membrane localization of ent or ent under normal d-glucose ( mm) or high d-glucose conditions ( mm). also, we saw that tbb (ck inhibitor) decreased the activity of ent and ent under normal glucose conditions, decreasing the localization of ent at cell surface, while the membrane localization of ent decreases under the effect of tbb and high d-glucose conditions. conclusions: pka inhibition reversed the effect of high d-glucose, increasing the uptake of adenosine mediated by ent . this could be a new target for the restoration of adenosine levels in dn. relation between serum lipo (a), plasma fibrinogen, red cell distribution width and mean platelet volume in healthy adult men the aim of this study was to investigate the relationship between the serum lipo (a) and plasma fibrinogen, red cell distribution width (rdw) and mean platelet volume (mpv) in healthy adult men. for this purpose, healthy adult men have normal physical examination and laboratory findings and not use any drug were included to the study. serum lipo (a) levels and hematologic parameters (fibrinogen, rdw-sd and mpv) were measured by autoanalyzer and commercial kits. the mean of the age of the persons was . ; body mass index was . ; serum lipo (a) level was . and plasma fibrinogen level was . . there was significant positive correlation between the serum lipo (a) and plasma fibrinogen levels (r = . ; p = . ), significant positive correlation between the serum lipo (a) and rdw-sd (r = . ; p = . ) and significant negative correlation between lipo (a) and mpv (r= À . ; p = . ). the plasma fibrinogen and the serum lipo (a) levels have been known as the risk factors for cad (coronary artery disease) increase together in healthy adult men. similar findings have been reported in cad patients. it has reported that elevated rdw is associated with intracoronary thrombotic burden and may be associated with the severity and instability of acute myocardial infarction. in addition, mpv is predictor of severe atherosclerosis and may be used for the prediction and identification of cardiac risks in cad patients. our findings show that elevated rdw and decreased mpv may predict to increased risk of cad in the future, in healthy adult men. follicular fluid is rich in peptides, which significantly influence the growing oocyte. due to existence of a link between kisspeptin (metastin) cells and gonadal steroids kisspeptin might manipulate the gonadotropin axis and folliculogenesis. in this context, the study was planned to investigate for the first time that the follicular fluid (ff) and serum concentration of kisspeptin in high and poor responders undergoing in vitro fertilization (ivf)/intracytoplasmic sperm injection (icsi). biological samples were collected from twenty infertile women with polycystic ovary syndrome (pcos) and poor responder participants undergoing controlled ovarian stimulation (cos) with gonadotropin-releasing hormone (gnrh) antagonist protocol for ivf/icsi treatment. kisspeptin concentrations were measured in serum and follicular fluid by using elisa, whereas fsh and lh levels were detected by routine laboratory methods. it was found that kisspeptin levels were significantly lower in serum and follicular fluid of infertile women with pcos. kisspeptin levels were correlated with fsh and lh level in infertile women with pcos. it can be concluded that low level of kisspeptin might inhibit gnrh release that might cause to the inhibition of fsh and lh release and might disrupt folliculogenesis. decline in serum and ff levels of kisspeptin might be possible cause of anovulation and subfertility in pcos subjects. cryptococcus albidus d is a newly identified yeast isolates from petroleum area in _ izmir as a lipase producer. the molecular weight of the enzyme is . kda as found. optimum temperature was °c and half-life times were , , and . min at , , and °c, respectively. optimum ph value was . . however, it shows significant ph stability at ph values . and lower. the existence of acetone in the solution as a solvent enhanced lipase activity. cryptococcus albidus d lipase was able to catalyze the esterification reaction between fructose and palmitic acid to produce fructose palmitate using acetone as the solvent. due to its stability in organic solvents, we propose that in order to increase the yield of fructose palmitate, we could immobilize d lipase. therefore, the effect of immobilization on kinetic parameters of d lipase was investigated. different immobilization materials and methods were used to find efficient support materials for d lipase immobilization. additionally, fructose palmitate production processes will be optimized with immobilized lipase. introduction: the diagnosis of osteoarthritis (oa) is based on clinical symptoms and radiographic findings. it is known that the pathologic changes at the molecular level in the joint cartilage tissue start before symptoms appear in oa. c q tumor necrosis factor-related protein (ctrp- ), c q tumor necrosis factor-related protein (ctrp- ) and kallistatin are related to many different cellular processes including bone and cartilage tissue metabolism. the aim of this study was to investigate any probable association between the serum ctrp- , ctrp- and kallistatin levels and diagnosis and radiologic staging of knee oa patients. materials and methods: this study included patients with knee oa and healthy individuals for control purposes. the patient group was divided into four stages radiologically. ctrp- , ctrp- and kallistatin levels were measured in serum samples of patient and control groups with elisa method, and the differences between the groups were analyzed with statistical methods. results: the levels of serum ctrp- in the patient group were significantly higher than in the control group (p = . ), serum ctrp- and kallistatin levels were not statistically different (in order of p = . , p = . ). in the patient group, there was not a significant difference between serum ctrp- , ctrp- and kallistatin levels and radiologic stages (respectively p = . , p = . , p = . ). there was a significant positive correlation between the radiologic stage and patient's age, body mass index, western ontario and mcmaster universities arthritis index and visual analogue scale values (respectively p = . , r = . ; p = . , r = . ; p = . , r = . ; p = . , r = ). discussion and conclusion: serum ctrp- levels were detected significantly increased in patients with knee oa, but there was no significant difference in ctrp- and kallistatin levels. there was not a significant association between the radiologic stage and levels of ctrp- , ctrp- and kallistatin. enzymes in microorganisms, especially termophilic bacteria are more attractive in biotechnology and molecular biology due to the higher catalytic activity. turkey is rich in geothermal resources and it is important to determine unknown microbial content of geothermal sources. in this study, water and sludge samples were taken from ayder, kizilcahamam and gonen hotsprings. firstly, ph, temperature, salt concentration, gram reaction, mobility, endospore formation, oxidase and catalase tests were carried out as conventional characterization. molecular characterizations of isolates were achieved by fames, rep-pcr and s rrna sequencing. finally, test isolates were evaluated according to enzyme production capability by petri dish. as result of conventional tests, isolates were determined as gram positive, mobile-rod shaped, aerobic, oxidase, catalase and endospore positive. the growth range for ph and temperature of the isolates were determined as - and - °c. in consequence of the salt test, the test isolates were grown at - % nacl. of thermophilic isolates were selected by rep-pcr and according to s rrna sequencing analysis test isolates were belonging to bacillus, geobacillus, anoxybacillus and brevibacillus genus at a range of - %. enzyme tests showed that, some of the isolates were able to produce protease (f , f , f , f , f and f ), amylase (f , f , f , f and f ), cellulase (f , f , f , f , f and f ), xylanase (f , f , f , f and f ) and lipase (f , f , f , f and f ). it can be concluded that, geothermal regions are rich in bacillus and related genera. fame analysis was particularly insufficient for diagnosis of thermophilic microorganisms, but rep-pcr was successful in separation of organisms at species and even subspecies levels. most of our bacterial isolates have industrially important enzyme production capacities. it is a pioneer result to use bacteria for industrial applications which need higher temperatures. p- . . - warburg effect was investigated by studying various metabolic molecules and assays in mammalian cell lines z. i. kanbagli, b. kiratli, h. cimen yeditepe university, istanbul, turkey majority of the different cancer cells switch their metabolism from oxidative phosphorylation pathway to glycolytic pathway; in order to meet excessive energy requirement, which is also called warburg effect. acetylation is one of the most crucial post-translational modifications playing key roles in metabolic reprograming. in this study, the relationship between acetylation dependent changes in energy metabolism and apoptotic pathways were investigated in pnt a, du , hela, hep b, hek t, shsy y. immunoblotting experiments were applied by using antibodies against acetylated-lysine to examine the changes in overall acetylome. candidate proteins displaying elevated acetylation was identified with mass spectrometry based-proteomic analysis. glucose transporter (glut ) was used to detect insulin-stimulated glucose transport, total oxphos rodent antibody cocktail to identify variations in complexes which are responsible for most of the atp production. caspases (casp- , - ) to unreveal different activation levels of apoptotic pathway among the cell lines. mitochondrial membrane potential was measured by using rho-damine by employing confocal microscopy. the expression level of respiratory chain complex iv subunit mtco and casp- was higher in hek t compared to other cell lines. casp- was upregulated in cancer cell lines, mostly in hep b. glut- levels were downregulated in cancer cell lines in contrast to healthy cell lines. findings imply that these proteins might have significant roles leading to variable metabolic and apoptotic activity of each cell line during energy production. due to the results, mtco might be important in adaptation of different cell lines to regulate the overall respiratory chain complex activity. reduction in glut level demonstrates insulin desensitization in cancer cell lines, which might lead to metabolic defects in these cells. besides, since p has a repressive effect on glut , it also can lead us to study about p levels. the effect of inhibition of pi k/akt/mtor signaling pathway on receptor tyrosine kinase expression in breast cancer cells g. tunali, a. l. dogan department of basic oncology, hacettepe university cancer institute, ankara, turkey the increased expression and activation of receptor tyrosine kinases (rtk) (egfr, her , her ) play important roles in breast cancer pathogenesis. her /her interaction is the most potent heterodimer and it causes oncogenic pi k/akt activation. inhibitors of pi k/akt pathway (akt inhibitor and pi k/mtor dual inhibitors) lead to increase in rtk levels and activities while blocking signaling pathway. in this study, the time dependent effect of dual pi k/akt inhibitor pi- on receptor tyrosine kinase expressions' in breast cancer cells was investigated. two breast cancer cell lines, mda-mb- cells (which has egfr overexpression and pten deficiency) and skbr- cells (which has her overexpression) were evaluated for the effect of dual inhibitor. these cells were treated with dual pi k/akt inhibitor pi- for different time periods ( - h) . egfr, her her total rtks expression and pi k/akt pathway inhibition (p-akt and p-p s k expression) were evaluated by western blot. in mda-mb- cells, there were significant decrease in p-akt and p-p s k proteins' expression during the first h. this inhibition was followed by reactivation of the signaling pathway after h. in skbr- cells, p-akt and p-p s k proteins' expression were significantly decreased during the first h. the pi k/ akt signaling pathway in these cells were reactivated after h. basal expression of egfr and her in mda-mb- cells and basal expression of her and her in skbr- cells were found to be very high. transient inhibition of akt and mtor protein kinase activation in tumor cells followed by reactivation of signaling pathway did not result in a time-dependent difference on egfr, her and her expression levels. these results suggest that dual pi k/mtor inhibiton by pi- may trigger receptor tyrosine kinase reactivation due to the signal distruption without affecting total protein expression level. site-specific bioorthogonal reactions are one of the significant tools for discovering different aspects of biological systems in live cells. the reactions should be highly stable and rapid in physiological conditions. various chemical tools can be used in bioorthogonal reactions to monitor biological systems, therapeutics, microscopy and diagnostic applications in live cells. synthetic covalent chemistry in the study of biological systems has been used to label biomolecules selectively in their native environment. for example, small synthetic fluorophores can be added to biomolecules without disturbing other molecular biological pathways. aldehydes or ketone-based functional handles can be attached onto protein at specific sites via chemoenzymatic reactions. labeling of carboxy terminus of a-tubulin has been successfully studied in our previous studies by replacement of wild type tyrosine with unnatural amino acid -formyltyrosine in the presence of tubulin tyrosine ligase enzyme (ttl)-as its role can suggest whether certain cancer cells might grow more aggressively than others. in this work, we highlight the synthesis and spectroscopic properties of azacoumarin chemical probes to study tubulin-tubulin tyrosine ligase (ttl) system in live cells. significant increase in fluorescence quantum yield or a red shift on absorption and emission maxima is observed when the conjugated product is formed. bioorthogonal fluorescent labeling is such a favorable reaction to perform rapid kinetics, localization and high site-specificity in cell environment. newly synthesized azacoumarin fluorophores should therefore not only be useful for studying ttlbased biological systems, but also would enable broad range of high-yielding and fast diagnostics for future biolabeling applications in biochemistry, cell biology and beyond. binase is an extracellular ribonuclease from bacillus pumilus which shows antiviral and antitumor activities in cell cultures. however, the action of binase on intracellular functions and processes has not yet been identified. here, for the first time we report the whole transcriptome analysis of binase-treated human lung adenocarcinoma epithelial a cells. a plasmid-based reverse genetics system and colorimetric cell viability assay were used to identify the binase internalization and binase cytotoxicity towards a cell line, respectively. for the whole cell transcriptome analysis a cells were treated with lg/ml of binase for h followed by mrna extraction and library preparation. sequencing was performed on solid xl wildfire next-generation sequencer. we found that binase internalized into a cells after h of incubation. the binase at lg/ml was absolutely non-cytotoxic towards a cell line and was active in the cell culture medium during h incubation. the analysis of rna-seq data showed that among thousands of protein coding transcripts transcripts were up and down regulated by binase, among them transcripts were induced and repressed. binase repressed the production of s a and tnxb which act cancer biomarkers, scn a and drd which play a crucial role in cancer metastasis and responsible for pediatric tumors, respectively. the induction of transmembrane protein transcript abcb by binase can help binase to internalize into the cell as abc transporters are often account for transporting drugs across the cellular membrane. binase induced the production of nlrp , rasgrp and alpk transcripts which can activate apoptosis, cytokine or t cell activation in cancer cells. thus, binase exerts different effects in cancer cells. the rnaseq data obtained will help to understand the mechanism of binase anticancer action. . ) is a specific group of phosphatases capable of hydrolyzing myo-inositol , , , , , -hexakisphosphate (phytate) with the formation of less phosphorylated inositol derivatives (from mono-to pentaphosphate). three major types of phytases are recognized on the basis of the first phosphate group hydrolyzed by the enzymes: -phytase, / -phytase, and -phytase. due to the stereospecific way of phosphate release from the phytate molecule by the action of phytases, these enzymes by themselves and their composition may serve as a potential alternative for production of myo-inositol phosphate isomers with therapeutic properties. chemical synthesis of these compounds is inefficient and costly. pantoea sp. strain . . showing high phytase activity was isolated from the forest soil sample of the republic of tatarstan, russia. in this study the main objective was the cloning and expression of pantoea sp. . . phytase gene in e. coli. first, we amplified the phytase gene (agpp) from the genomic dna of the bacteria using specific primers phmh_dir and phmh_rev. size of phytase gene corresponded to base pairs. during the optimization of amplification conditions it was found that the optimum temperature for primer annealing was °c. this temperature increases the specificity and efficiency of annealing. then the pcr-product of agpp gene was cloned into the pbad myc/ his vector first. on the next step we carried out subcloning of the agpp into a pet a expression vector. multicopy plasmid pet a/agpp contained the sequence of the phytase gene of pantoea sp. . . under t promoter. the corresponding recombinant protein was expressed in e. coli as a fusion with a his-tag and was detected by western blotting. recombinant phytase was purified via affine chromotography on the ni-nta column and displayed high phosphomonoesterase and phytase activities. bag- (bcl- associated athanogene) is a multifunctional protein that interacts with diverse array of cellular targets and modulates a wide range of cellular processes, including proliferation, cell survival, transcription, apoptosis, metastasis and motility. in human cells bag- exists as three major isoforms (bag- s, bag- m and bag- l) derived by alternative translation initiation from a single mrna, which allows interactions with various molecular targets such as hsp /hsc molecular chaperones, components of the ubiquitylation/proteasome machinery, bcl- , raf- kinase, nuclear hormone receptors and dna. our work aims to investigate how altered bag- expression levels affect cell survival in mda-mb- (er, pr and her /neu negative) breast cancer cell lines. we first cloned bag- l gene to a cloning vector, later we transfected mda-mb- cells for overexpression of bag- . we also used bag- sirna to silence bag- gene. western blot analysis was applied to demonstrate relative expression levels of bag- , its interacting partners and certain proteins which are important for apoptosis pathway. we performed xtt cell viability assay for bag- overexpressed cells to checkbag- 's impact on cell survival, and observed enhanced survival rates on cells compared to that of the untreated cells with bag- overexpression. in addition, our study revealed that once bag- forms a complex with c-raf/b-raf/hsp /akt/bcl- , modulation of cell survival was observed. we believe that once the exact localization and involved molecular mechanisms of bag- and its isoforms are found, the role of each bag- isoform in cell survival can be understood better. this can further provide routes to study tumor development. the aim of this study is testing the recombinant glp encapsulation into a biocompatible material. we also tested if it can be a therapeutic candidate drug for type diabetes. the incretin hormones, which are also named as endogenic peptide hormones have become a more attractive therapy for type diabetes because of different physiological effects. in circulation, glp is cleaved by ddp in a very short time. if glp can be protected from cleaving, the effective time of glp would be increased and by this way it can replace the therapy of insulin. chemical synthesis methods of peptides are limited because of low efficiency and high cost. the production of peptides by recombinant e. coli is an alternative way because of effective production, simplicity and low cost. however, the major disadvantage derived from the recombinant e. coli is the frequent formation of inclusion body. for that reason, extra methods are needed for obtaining soluble recombinant peptides. glutathione s-transferase (gst) tag is commonly used as affinity and solubility tag to improve the solubility of recombinant peptides. in this study, we cloned and heterologously produced glp using the gst fusion system in e. coli. affinity purification of recombinant protein was achieved by using glutathione immobilized columns. characterization of the gst-tagged glp was performed by sds-page. the purity of fusion protein was found to be %, as confirmed by glp elisa kit. then, the fusion protein was encapsulated in a chitosan coated polygalacturonic acid. the different ph stability and in vitro release tests also in different phs was studied. morganella morganii is an opportunistic pathogen capable of causing a wide range of clinical infections. it is known that microbial metalloproteases play an important role in the development of bacterial infections. thus, investigation of m. morganii metalloproteases has a particular interest. bacteria were grown in lb medium at °c. as a bioinformatics tool blast was used. for molecular biological experiments, thermo scientific kits and sibenzyme enzymes were used. pbad/myc-his plasmid was used as an expression vector. bacterial transformation was carried out by heat shock method. bacterial cells were disrupted by sonication. gene expression products were analyzed by western blotting. to analyze the actinolytic activity of bacterial extracts sds-page electrophoresis was used. the putative metalloprotease gene (an cp . ) has been found in the genome of annotated strain of m. morganii kt. its amino acid sequence has partial homology ( %) with actin specific metalloproteases grimelysin from s. grimesii and protealysin from s. proteamaculans. using specific primers the gene with % homology was identified in the genome of clinical isolate of m. morganii . rt-pcr analysis showed that this gene had the maximum expression at h of growth. in addition, the cellular extract of m. morganii had small actinolytic activity. cloning of the gene into e. coli dh a cells led to the synthesis of the kda protein. it is known that the highest expression of serratia proteases is observed at h of growth, and the molecular weight of the mature proteins is kda. it was shown that metalloprotease gene of m. morganii expressed at the same time of growth. moreover, the recombinant e. coli cells synthesized protein with the similar weight ( kda) which perhaps is a mature form of the metalloprotease from m. morganii. as a result, in the genome of m. morganii the metalloprotease with similar properties to grimelysin and protealysin proteases was identified. the preliminary characterization of p-ii like protein glnk from lactobacillus brevis z. iskhakova , d. zhuravleva , a. laykov , k. forchhammer , a. kayumov kazan federal university, kazan, russia, eberhard-karls university tuebingen, tuebingen, germany the p-ii proteins in bacteria, archaea and plants regulate the activity of a variety of proteins in response to specific metabolic signals which affect their structural state and interaction ability. among various bacteria belonging to lactobacillus only some species have genes encoding pii protein in the genome. here we report the preliminary characterization of pii-like protein lbrglnk from lactobacillus brevis. while the amino acid sequence alignment revealed only - % homology of lbrglnk with other well studied pii proteins, lbrglnk also has the atp binding motive gdgk. trimeric structure of lbrglnk was confirmed in vitro by size exclusion chromatography, suggesting possible similarities of lbrglnk properties with pii proteins. the isothermal titration calorimetry revealed a preferential binding of adp (kd = lm) over atp (kd = lm) suggesting that they compete for binding to lbrglnk. neither -oxoglutaric acid nor other nucleotides were interacting with lbrglnk in itc measurements. the mutation gly ala in the atp binding motive completely abolished the interaction with both adp and atp. the pull down of lbrglnk with l. brevis cell extract allowed identification of chaperonin grol, transketolase and glnr-like transcriptional regulator from merr family as most probable partner proteins for interactions with lbrglnk. this work was supported by the russian foundation for basic research (project no. - - a background: hemophilia is a bleeding disorder due to the deficiency in coagulation factors viii (hemophilia a) or ix (hemophilia b). hemophilia patients are essentially treated with intravenous replacement of the missing or dysfunctional factors fviii or fix by recombinant proteins. these therapies often induce the generation of acquired antibodies, and thus, novel approaches are needed. most recent hemophilia strategies target the tissue factor pathway inhibitor (tfpi), which is the major inhibitor of the coagulation cascade, particularly of the extrinsic tenase complex. anti-tfpi agents have been empirically developed such as aptamers, peptides, monoclonal antibodies. we have followed a structure-based strategy, to design a mutated fxa that would show more affinity for tfpi, and thus trap this inhibitor. tfpi exists as two isoforms are folded as multi-kunitz domains related by linkers. the second kunitz type domain of tfpi (tfpi-k ) is known to bind the catalytic site of fxa. methods: the molecular complex of tfpi-k -fxa was modeled and submitted to molecular dynamics (md), allowing the identification of low-spots interaction. modified fxa with theoretically stronger interaction with tfpi-k were predicted using md. the mutants and wild type proteins were expressed in hek cells, and their processing status was checked. they were tested by western blotting, by chromogenic activity using a specific substrate of fxa, by thrombin generation assay in fviii depleted plasma. finally, their binding to a tfpi-k peptide array was compared. results: the mutants showed better efficiency to restore thrombin generation in plasmas from hemophiliacs and displayed stronger binding to tfpi-k than the wild type fxa. conclusions: the proof of concept of the synergistic approaches of md and mutagenesis was obtained and an efficient tfpi trap was designed. the mutated fxa is a candidate for a new hemophilia therapy. organophosphorus acid anhydride (op) nerve agents are potent inhibitors which disrupt the mechanisms of neural transmission. organophosphorus acid anhydrolase (opaa; e.c. . . . ) is a class of enzyme that potentially acts on phosphorus anhydride bonds, reported intracellularly in diverse organisms, albeit notably the enzyme belongs to alteromonas species are more extensively studied. whereas mass-transfer problem is a major issue in native whole cell biocatalysis, new anchor system derived from the n-terminal domain of ice-nucleation protein from pseudomonas syringe inav (inav-n) was used for the first time to display opaa onto the cell surface. tracing of the recombinant protein and its activity assay showed a successful presentation of opaa and its significant ability for biodegradation of organophosphorus compounds. further studies on bacterial fractions confirmed that opaa is remarkably located on the outer membrane. the specific activity of recombinant bacteria to degrade diisopropylfluorophosphate (dfp) was measured at u/mg of cell wet weight, which almost all was observed in the outer membrane fraction. recombinant cells could also degrade chlorpyrifos (cp) compound in . u/mg activity. it can be concluded that inav-n anchor is efficient for targeting opaa on the cell surface and can effectively eliminate the masstransfer problem in native whole cell bioconversion system. proper spatial and temporal organization of proteins involved in cell signal transduction is crucial for the specific and efficient information transfer. scaffold proteins coordinate the action of signaling molecules by their physical binding and organization in multiprotein complex assemblies. multiple protein binding is often mediated through intrinsically disordered regions of the scaffold, where the interaction epitopes are defined by linear peptide motifs. using a hub scaffolding protein axin as a paradigm, we have employed peptide microarray technique to identify the binding epitopes for axin interaction partners at high resolution. this enabled us to design axin-derived peptides corresponding to the respective binding epitopes that compete for the interaction in vitro. by transfection of chemically stabilized competitive peptides directly into the cells, we have shown the effect of specific interaction blocking on axin-mediated signaling in vivo. our data demonstrate a proof of concept for a rational design of inhibitors of protein-protein interactions that allow specific intervention with single function of the targeted protein (i.e. recruitment to the axin complex). contrary to the inhibitors that completely disrupt the protein function (e.g. inhibition of a kinase catalytic site), this approach provides a tool for investigating specific action within the axin complex, while the other cellular functions of the targeted protein remain preserved. the results of this research have been acquired within cei-tec (lq ) project with financial contribution made by the ministry of education, youths and sports of the czech republic within special support paid from the national programme for sustainability ii funds. de novo design of an artificial biocatalyst using immunoglobulin template became rather routine procedure due to the achievements of molecular biology and crystallography. recently the 'reactibody' approach was developed based on the chemical selection of catalytic repertoires from immunoglobulin library followed by expression of these biocatalysts in eukaryotic system. in this study we structurally characterize the a antibody, its kappa and lambda variants, in order to understand the difference on the active site between a and a which although there are two antibodies sharing very high homology and sequence identity their active residues are located in a different region of the antibody. the structures of the a antibody kappa and lambda variants have been already determined, there was no structural information though about the a antibody. the structural analysis revealed dramatically different angle in position of nucleophilic residue tyr and area of solvent accessible surface. the structural difference of active center reflects on kinetics of the a organophosphate modification. both variants of antibody bind with organophosphate throw induce-fit mechanism, but rate of the step of induce fitting is different (k obs are s À and s À for a kappa and a lambda respectively). this observation may hint at novel means of regulation of velocity and specificity of artificial biocatalysts. this study was supported by grant #rfmefi x . translation elongation factor ba (eef ba) is a component of a heavy form of translation elongation factor (eef h). it functions as a catalyst of gdp/gtp exchange in translation elongation factor a (eef a) restoring its active conformation appropriate for aminoacylated trna binding. eef ba forms a tight complex with translation elongation factor bc (eef bc) via the n-terminal domain, while its c-terminal domain executes the catalytic activity. eef bc has been shown to enhance the attributed to the c-terminal domain catalytic activity of eef ba. this suggests that the eef ba n-terminal domain may influence the guanine nucleotide exchange process. to test this hypothesis we prepared a set of n-terminal truncated forms of human eef ba and checked their activity in the guanine nucleotide exchange assay on both isoforms of eef a, eef a and eef a . we showed that recombinant eef ba is a non-globular monomeric protein in solution with an elongated shape by analytical ultracentrifugation approach. the truncation of the dispensable for the catalytic activity n-terminal domain of eef ba resulted in significant acceleration of the rate of guanine nucleotide exchange in eef a comparing to full-length eef ba. similar effect on the catalytic activity of eef ba was observed after its interaction with eef bc. in contrast, the effect of full-length eef ba and its truncated forms on the rate of guanine nucleotide exchange in eef a was similar but relatively modest compared to eef a . this can be explained by higher rate of spontaneous gdp dissociation from eef a comparing to eef a and lower affinity of eef a to eef ba. thus, we propose that the n-terminal domain of eef ba via flexible linker region may interfere with eef a binding to the cterminal catalytic domain that results in a decrease of the overall rate of guanine nucleotide exchange reaction. the formation of a tight complex between eef bc and eef ba n-terminal domains abolishes this inhibitory effect. p- . . - assessment of quantitative proteomics results in large-scale data-independent with fragmentation spectra reproducibility measure reduces variation and allows to use lowintensity signals organisms with reduced genomes that lack the vast majority of transcriptional or translational regulation systems tend to adapt to changing environment with a variety of subtle changes in protein abundances. as soon as relative changes for most proteins fall below %, the power of traditional label-free proteomic analysis rapidly becomes insufficient for robust profiling of hundreds of samples. intoduction of frament-by-fragment and sample-by-sample signal quality assesment in mrm and dia experiments helps to increase accuracy of methods and at the same time reintroduce cases which could have been excluded during bulk quality assessment due to lower signal-to-noise ratio for several fragments. samples of mycoplasma gallisepticum were acquired in data-independent manner on sciex tripletof + mass-spectrometer (swath acquisition) during the year. the samples were produced from mycoplasma gallisepticum culture cultivated at different temperatures. the signals for each fragment were extracted with vendor-supplied software with the theoretical fragment ions for each peptides instead of spectral library. the results were used for relative protein quantitation in two manners the first conventional method included direct use of peptides with top most intense signals. the second included selection of peptides and ions for quantification for each pair of samples based on the reproducibility of fragmentation patterns after computing the areas of chromatographic peaks for each ion. spectral angle was used as a distance measure for fragmentation patterns for clustering. further, a base set of detected ions was selected for each peptide and a subset for comparison of each pair of runs. the first method resulted in quantitation of proteins across all samples with variation across lc-ms replicates was % on average, and the second approach led to quantitation of proteins in total, of them across % of samples, all with the variation about % on average. p- . . - interaction of plasminogen fragments k - and k with fibrin fragment dd t. yatsenko, v. rybachuk, l. kapustianenko, s. kharchenko, o. yusova, t. grinenko palladin institute of biochemistry of nas of ukraine, kyiv, ukraine introduction: plasminogen interaction with specific binding sites in c-terminal d-domains of fibrin molecule initiates the activation process of proenzyme and subsequent fibrin clot lysis. the sites are exposed under fibrin polymerization. plasminogen kringle domains ensure the proenzyme interactions with fibrin clot. in this study, we investigated the binding of human plasminogen kringle fragments k - and k with human fibrin fragment dd and their effect on glu-plasminogen interaction with dd. results: kringle-containing fragments k - and k reduce plasminogen activation by tissue-type activator on fibrin fragment dd. the level of glu-plasminogen binding to dd is decreased by - % in the presence of k - and k . fragments k - and k have high affinity to fibrin fragment dd (dissociation constant is . lm for k - and . lm for k ). analysis of k - and k binding to fibrin fragment dd with reduced disulfide bonds showed the interaction of both plasminogen fragments with c-c-chains of fragment dd. k - interacts with complex of fragment dd-immobilized k as well as k with complex of fragment dd-immobilized k - . the plasminogen fragments do not displace each other from binding sites located in fibrin fragment dd, but can compete for the interaction. analysis of k - and k binding to fibrin fragment dd with reduced disulfide bonds showed the interaction of both plasminogen fragments with aand c-chains of fragment dd. conclusions: widely known specific plasminogen-binding site located in aa - region of fibrin molecule is not a single binding sequence of fibrin peripheral domains or plasminogenbinding site is not linear and contains amino acid residues from other polypeptide chains of fibrin d-domains. fibrin fragment dd contains different binding sites for plasminogen kringle fragments k - and k , which can be located close to each other. possible plasminogen kringle-binding sites are located in aand c-chains. p- . . - implementation of budded baculovirus particles for characterization of ligand binding to g protein-coupled receptors a. allikalt, a. rinken university of tartu, tartu, estonia g protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs) constitute the largest class of membrane receptors involved in regulation of signal transduction into the cell in response to various extracellular stimuli. for that reason, gpcrs have become important targets for variety of drugs. as these receptors are present in native tissues at very low concentrations, efficient recombinant expression systems are needed to produce sufficient amounts of protein. we have shown that budded baculovirus particles, which display gpcrs on their surfaces can be used as a source of receptors for the investigation of ligand-receptor interactions. this expression system can be used for radioligand binding assay as well as for fluorescence anisotropy-based assay (fa). we have validated the system with budded baculovirus particles produced in spodoptera frugiperda (sf ) cells expressing human dopamine d receptors using [ h]sch- and bodipy-fl-skf- as reporter ligands for corresponding assays. this system has many advantages, for example good signal to noise ratio, homogeneity of the receptor, high expression levels and long-term stability of the receptor preparation. fa method allowed real-time monitoring of reporter ligand binding in the absence and presence of different dopaminergic ligands, giving information about their kinetic properties. association, as well as dissociation of the bodipy-fl-skf- itself were rapid with an apparent half-life of t / = . ae . s for association ( nm) and t / = . ae . s for dissociation. we determined the pharmacological profiles of different dopaminergic ligands in displacement binding assays with membranes of sf cells or budded baculovirus particles. the data were in good agreement for both membrane preparations tested in radioligand binding as well as in fa assay. obtained results indicate that budded baculovirus particles can be proposed as a source of gpcrs for performing fluorescence anisotropy as well as radioligand binding assays. gastrointestinal (gi) cancer includes a variety of cancer types affecting the structures and functions of the gi system, encompassing the gi tract and the accessory organs of digestion, from the esophagus, stomach, biliary system and pancreas to the intestine, rectum and anus. despite the significant advances however, much remains to be learned in the spectrum of gi cancer. several investigators have shown that both gas and its receptors, axl, sky, and mer are expressed in various types of cancers. however, the expression level of gas in gi cancer remains unclear. the aim of the study was to determine and compare plasma gas levels in gi cancer patients. female and male patients were included in the study (n = ): colorectal, gastric, pancreatic, liver, ampullary, gall bladder and esophageal. from all gi cancer patients, ml venous blood was collected in citrate tubes before surgery. blood samples were centrifuged at g for min, and plasma samples were carefully removed and stored in À °c prior to use. the level of plasma gas was measured using a commercial developmental elisa kit (r&d systems, minneapolis, mn) which is validated by our laboratory. plasma gas levels in cancer patients were determined as follows: . ae . ng/ml in colorectal; . ae . ng/ml in gastric; . ae . ng/ml in pancreatic; . ae . ng/ml in liver; . ae . ng/ml in ampullary; . ae . ng/ml in gall bladder and . ae . ng/ml in esophageal cancer. preliminary findings indicate that there is a relation between gi cancers and plasma gas levels. taken together, these results suggest that gas may be a candidate biomarker for diagnostic use in gi cancer. inhibition of gas would be an attractive therapeutic target for slow down the progression of gi cancer. monday september : - : computational biology p- . . - computational approaches as an assay for blactam hydrolysis in class a b-lactamases c. tooke university of bristol, bristol, united kingdom b-lactam hydrolysing enzymes, in particular carbapenem-hydrolysing enzymes, are an increasing clinical threat. herein we show that molecular dynamics (md) and combined quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (qm/mm) approaches are a predictive tool of carbepenemase activity in class a b-lactamases. b-lactam drugs are the most prescribed class of antibiotics worldwide, especially in the treatment of gram-negative pathogens such as klebsiella pneumoniae and escherichia coli. these organisms produce b-lactamases, enzymes which hydrolyse the b-lactam ring, a key resistance mechanism. class a b-lactamases have the ability to hydrolyse carbapenems, termed 'last resort' antibiotics. in particular, the kpc (klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase) family are the most clinically important, and recently identified natural kpc variants show increased hydrolytic activity against ceftazidime, a third generation cephalosporin. here we use computational simulations of b-lactam hydrolysis by b-lactamases. in particular, molecular dynamics (md) combined with qm/mm approaches have been used to model the deacylation of the carbapenem meropenem across class a b-lactamases. this method has been extended to model cephalosporin hydrolysis across class a b-lactamases, including kpc variants. these approaches calculated the free energy barriers and correctly distinguished carbapenemases from carbapenem-inhibited enzymes. preliminary results suggest this protocol is also a predictive tool for ceftazidime hydrolysis. further, md simulations of kpc variants (single and double amino acid changes) were analysed to identify structural changes in the active site, highlighting that variants differ in the size of the active site opening, corresponding with experimentally derived kcat values. these computational assays provide a predictive tool of b-lactam hydrolysis and has potential to provide insights into important mechanistic differences both across class a b-lactamases and within the same families. p- . . - computational design of a novel polyglutamic dendrimer-based platform as an anticancer therapeutic approach poly (glutamic acid) (pg)-dendrimer as potential nanocarriers for cancer therapies, to specifically deliver tumor associated antigens (taa)mannosamine and melanato target cells and to modulate cancer antigen intracellular trafficking within the cytoplasm to promote an efficient and selective antitumor immunotherapeutic effect. the theoretical structures were obtained using x-plor software. the molecular dynamics simulation of pg-g -dendrimer and taas was performed using desmond. the electronic properties of the structures were determined by semi-empirical methods using mopac. docking studies of taa to pg-g -dendrimer to mannose receptor (mr ) were performed using hex . . software. taa lumo atoms were conjugated to homo atoms of pg-g dendrimer using maestro software. results showed that pg-g -dendrimer displays carboxylic end groups available for covalent interaction with taas. the homo molecular orbitals of the dendrimer was located on the a-carbon of the carboxylic acid groups from backbone chain and it preferentially interacts with lumo molecular orbitals of amine group from taas. no differences in the gap energy of homo/lumo of all pg-g -conjugates. taas bind preferentially to a-carbon of cooh of backbone chain instead of cooh from side chain. docking results showed that majority of taa conjugated pg-g -dendrimer binds to the core of the mr receptor. increasing of the number of mannosamine conjugated to pg-g -dendrimer more close and stable is the conjugated to the receptor. this system shows promising results as a novel functionalized pg-dendrimers for cancer therapy. theileria parva is one of the the economically important protozoan of the theileria genus belong to apicomplexa phylum which include plasmodium spp. and toxoplasma gondii, causative agents of malaria and toxoplasmosis respectively. this parasite is the disease agent of tick-borne east coast fever (ecf) ranks first among the tick-borne diseases of cattle in sub-saharan africa. the disease caused by the parasite affects a large proportion of domestic and wild animals and leads serious economic losses in the world. major problems in dealing with this illness are the high cost of drugs, development of resistance, and absence of effective vaccines. thus, it is important to develop an efficient and affordable antitheilerial agent. for this aim, -deoxy-d-xylulose- phosphate reductoisomerase (dxr) which subjected to identify novel drug aganist malaria and toxoplasmosis, of theileria parva was selected as potential target for improving novel inhibitors aganist ecf. a computational molecular modeling approach was conducted to determine the d structure of tpdxr by phyre . energy minimisation and root mean square deviation (rmsd) was performed by drefine and superpose servers. to ensure the quality of modelling, stereochemistry, energy profile and residue environment of modelled structure were checked by different servers and possible ligand binding pockets were identified by metapocket . server a reliable d model for dxr from t. parva was modeled by using au as a template. the ca rmsd and the backbone rmsd deviations for the model and the template crystal structure were found to be . and . a, respectively. the ramachandran plot for the predicted model by rampage reveals that model shows an acceptable stereochemistry. top three considered possible binding pockets have been identified. these results have important implications for future screens aimed at finding new and safe molecular entities active against tpdxr through docking studies. p- . . - molecular binding profile of protoberberine alkoloids on amyloid precursor proteincleaving enzyme (bace ) as a drug candidate for alzheimer's diseases g. yalcin , i. yildiz biotechnology institute, ankara university, ankara, turkey, department of pharmaceutical chemistry, faculty of pharmacy, ankara university, ankara, turkey alzheimer's disease (ad) is the most prevalent neurodegenerative disorder that leads to dementia and nowadays over million people live with dementia worldwide. because of the prevalence and economic burden of the disease, drug development studies have picked up speed and scientists especially focused on natural products. ad is basically characterized with tau hyperphosphorylation and accumulation of amyloid b (ab) proteins. ab proteins are generated from sequential cleavages of amyloid precursor protein (app) by b and c secretases, and b-site app cleaving enzyme (bace ) is a b secretase essential for ab production. the alkaloids represent a very extensive group of secondary metabolites, with diverse structures, distribution in nature and important pharmacological activities. protoberberine alkaloids, which belongs to isoquinoline alkaloid class, are widely arranged in many species of the berberidaceae, annonaceae, fumariaceae, papaveraceae, and other plant families. recent searches showed that some of the protoberberine alkaloids such as berberine, palmatine, jatrorrhizine, columbamine, magnoflorine prevents the progress of neurodegenerative disorder. however, the mechanisms of them are not absolutely clear. therefore, we have aimed to elucidate the binding and affect mechanism of these alkaloids on the bace open and closed forms in here. for this purpose, molecular docking studies were applied for these natural products to the both forms of bace by using autodock vina and it was subjected to explicit solvent simulations by amber molecular dynamic package. our preliminary studies indicate that gly , thr , gln , phe , tyr , lys , thr , arg , thr residues of binding pocket have affiliations with all of the mentioned alkaloids and the binding of them generates alterations on closed form of bace . the complexity of animal milk needs to apply numerous approaches and methods for its investigations. an understanding of the processes occurring in the milk can be used, for example, for quality control of the products. fat and protein are main components of milk which have a significant influence at its colloid properties, such as dynamic surface tension (dst). the application of regression-correlation analysis to milk data enables to develop a reliable quantitative model. the aim of our investigation was to perform the regression analysis to establish the relationship between above-mentioned parameters. for this purpose, we used a statistical software packages r version . . . dst was determined by bpa - p tensiometer. milk fat (f) and protein (p) contents were measured by analyzer bentley . this work was supported by the russian scientific foundation (grant - - ). obtained formulas characterized the degree of influence of fat and protein contents of a milk sample for each of the dst parameters (r , r , r , r , k , k ): r = . + . * p À . * f r = . + . * p À . * f r = . + . * p À . * f r = . + . * p + . * f k = . + . * p + . * f k = . À . * p À . * f these formulas show that the maximum total effect of fat and protein contents influences at r and r . a significant coefficient (> ) before the fat is observed in the formula, which describes the value of the tilt of final part of the tensiogram (k ). the resulting regression equations have fundamental importance. with their help it is possible to calculate the dst parameters without their experimental determination, positioning fat and protein contents data. obtained dst parameters promote more complete characterization of the properties of the milk that may be used for dairy products. p- . . - molecular studies of scorpion toxin and its mutants interactions with voltage-gated potassium channels the voltage-gated potassium kv . channel is mostly expressed in neurons and immune cells. its blockage has a high therapeutic potential, for example, specific inhibitor shk toxin is undergoing clinical trials on psoriasis. goal of the current study was an interface analysis in complexes of hybrid channel kcsa-kv . with peptide blockers agitoxin and its mutant forms. d structure was generated by homology modeling method using complex of mutated kcsa channel with charybdotoxin (pdb-code a h) as a template and equilibrated by molecular dynamic simulation in gromacs software. analysis of hydrophobic and stacking interactions, hydrogen and ionic bonds of the toxin and potassium channels was performed for representative frames with optimal toxin orientations using program platinum and apbs software package. we performed contacts energy characteristics estimation to predict key toxin residues for binding process and possible mutation sites for changing selectivity against kv .x channels. the results of investigation are in good agreement with the experimental values of binding constants, obtained by competitive binding assays. results of the conducted investigation may find an application in fundamental science and drug design. the research was supported by the russian science foundation grant no. - - . simulations were performed using the supercomputing center of lomonosov moscow state university. p- . . - homology modeling and molecular docking study of the paraoxonase- and its polymorphic variants q/r and m/l for non-statin lipid lowering drugs paraxonase- (pon ) enzyme is an hdl associated ester hydrolase exhibiting paraoxonase, arylesterase and lactonase activity, and reduces the formation of atherosclerosis blocking the ldl oxidation and reducing levels of oxidized lipids. in this study, molecular docking approach and molecular dynamics simulation were applied for finding the affinity of non-statin lipid-lowering drugs to pon and its polymorphic structures pon q/r and m/l . fibrates (bezafibrate, ciprofibrate, clofibrate, fenofibrate, gemfibrozil), phytosterols (beta-sitosterol, brassicasterol, campesterol, stigmasterol) and other lipid lowering drugs (ezetimibe, niacin, orlistat, probucol, and sibutramine) was obtained from pubchem database. x-ray crystallographic structure of human pon and its polymorphic variants pon q/r and m/l was generated via 'modeller', homology modelling software, from human-rabbit hybrid x-ray crystal structure of pon (pdb code: sre). ns molecular dynamic simulation analysis was performed using gromacs . . . affinity of lipid lowering drugs to pon and its polymorphic variants was predicted by molecular docking approach using autodock . suite. unlike other lipid lowering drugs that they have negative Δg values for affinity, probucol, orlistat and betasterol was calculated by positive Δg values ( . , . and . kcal/mol). these values suggest that they may have no affinity to pon q/r polymorphic structure. in all drug groups, brassicasterol and stigmasterol to pon -m/l and sibutramine to pon q/r were calculated as the highest affinity. in generally, phytosterols predicted by high affinity to pon and m/l polymorphic structures in comparison to other lipid lowering drugs. our study demonstrated that phytosterols predicted as high affinity compounds on pon structures may reduce the activity of antioxidant pon enzyme. this study need to be supported by in vitro and in vivo detailed studies. prolactin and its cognate receptor, prolactin receptor (prlr), are involved in over distinct functions in mammalians. the mammalian prlr gene consists of - exons and several and regulatory sequences. in this study, gaps and annotation errors in the rat prlr gene were corrected by comparing the genomes of mammals and rodents and new putative exons were identified. the rat prlr gene sequences from two different sources (rnor_ . , nc_ . and rn_celera, ac_ . ) were used and primary analysis showed that both sequences contain several gaps (varying from . to kbp), corresponding to about . % ( - kbp) of the gene. using the rat known prlr mrna exon sequences, it was found that the rnor_ . prlr gene has two exon- (one is about kbp long and the other immediately after this). comparisons of mammalian and rodent prlr gene structures showed that the kbp stretch is an assembly artifact. by comparing both gene sequences (and also other available rodent prlr genes), the gaps in the rat prlr gene were reduced from . % to . % (from kbp to kbp). functional annotation of the gene revealed that r. norvegicus prlr gene could have two more additional exons, exon- and - , similar to mus musculus prlr gene. in mammals, prlr mrnas contain non-protein coding exons in the utr (exon- and - ). in rats, there are exon- variants, resulting from alternative promotor usages. studies on the rat and mouse prlr genes revealed that both rodents share common non-protein coding exon- variants. in conclusion, it is found that the rnor_ . version of the prlr gene has the highest number of unidentified base pairs (corresponding to . % of the gene) and the second exon- is the assembly artifact. the rat prlr genes in both databases have several gaps and our corrected version is the best available and characterized form of the rat prlr gene. in silico affinities of some statins to paraoxonase- enzyme the structure of the statins (atorvastatin, fluvastatin, lovastatin, mevastatin, pitavastatin, pravastatin, rosuvastatin and simvastatin) was obtained from pub chem database, and x-ray crystal structure of pon (pdb id: sre) from protein data bank. modeller software was used for homology modeling of pon and its polymorphic variants that's called as pon q/ r and m/l . amino acid sequence of human serum pon (uniprot: p ) was used as the modeller template. all molecular dynamics simulations were carried out with gro-macs . . software. molecular docking calculations on each of the polymorphic structure of the pon was performed with auto dock . . suite. for each substrate, y residue showed open conformation in pon and m/l polymorphic structures while q/r polymorphic structure showed closed conformation. in comparison between structures of pon variants, in most cases statins had lower affinity to q/r polymorphic structure than to the other variant. in this study, among statins, atorvastatin showed lowest but simvastatin highest affinities to pon . by considering that the high affinity drugs can have reducing effect of pon activities, it may be more appropriate to use the low affinity statins in hyperlipidemia treatment. however, these findings need to be supported with in vivo and in vitro studies. p- . . - self-assembly of lipidoids for sirna uptake and release mechanisms studied by molecular dynamics simulations o. acar , d. alpay , a. r. atilgan , c. atilgan sabanci university, istanbul, turkey, northwestern university, evanston, united states small interference rna (sirna) has the ability to bind a specific mrna which provides silencing of selected genes. nanocarriers made out of self-assembled lipidoids encapsulate sirna and deliver them into target cells effectively. in this study, a library of lipidoid structures is constructed and studied by molecular dynamics (md) simulations in different solvents, including sodium acetate, to ferret out their self-assembling mechanisms. the effect of the protonation state of the head group of lipidoids on the final shape of the self-assembled carrier is also studied. we further examine the role of the size of hydrocarbon tails in the packing. we study the final topology and the geometry of the self-assembled lipidoids both in the presence and in the absence of sirna. we find that stable clusters form with as few as chains. for lipidoids having neutral head groups, clusters are in the form of dense bundles, while those with charged head groups form spherical capsids which are depleted of the salt on the inside and having a salt rich phase on the outside. in the self-assembled structure, lipidoids are arranged so as to expose the nitrogen and oxygen atoms to the solvent. while partial capsids with these properties also form at lower lipidoid numbers, chains are necessary to form a fully closed capsid. in the presence of the sirna, the capsid assembles around the nucleotide. the free energy to remove the sirna from the assembly is calculated via repeated steered md calculations utilizing jarzynski's equality relating it to the irreversible work along and ensemble of trajectories. we therefore determine an optimal tail length for the most stable nanostructure, paving the way for designing nanocarriers with high efficacy. milk is one of the most valuable products for humans and attracts a lot of interest of researchers in various fields such as biochemistry, biology, food science and technology. the methods of milk study are quite varied. we chose the combination of the ultrasonic and dynamic surface tension (dst) measurements with the possible correlations among the obtained parameters. the aim of this work is to study the correlation between the parameters of milk, such as a content of fat, protein, lactose, minerals, dry milk solids and dst parameters. for this purpose we used milk analyzer 'klever- m' and tensiometer 'bpa- p'. three groups of animals were formed from clinically healthy holstein cows at the age of - years according to the fat content in the milk sample. group i - cows (milk fat content . ae . %), group ii - cows (milk fat content . ae . %), group iii - cows (milk fat content . ae . %). this work was supported by the russian scientific foundation (grant - - ). the biochemical parameters of the milk samples of all three groups are in the range of the 'normal' values for healthy holstein cows: protein content varies from . % to . %, lactose and mineral content varies from . % to . %, respectively. the dst parameters (r , r and k ) for the group i have strong positive correlations with the fat content in the studied milk samples. at the same time for the groups ii and iii the fat content in the milk indicates only medium positive and weak positive correlations with the r , r and k . obtained absolute values of the dst parameters of the milk samples showed some differences between all three groups. thus, the dst parameters are changing in direct proportion to fat content in the milk sample that can be explain by the primarily role of the milk lipids in the formation of the water/fat surfaces (such as fat globules, lipid-protein particles, etc.). p- . . - exploration of allosteric paths in caspase molecules using energy dissipation e. n. bingol, o. sercinoglu, p. ozbek sarica marmara university, istanbul, turkey caspases are highly regulated aspartate-specific cysteine proteases that have major roles in programmed cell death; apoptosis. effector caspases are at the terminal step of the pathway, hence they are considered as death switches. with the discovery of the presence of allosteric sites, these molecules attracted the attention of the pharmaceutical studies and became drug targets. as a result of the binding of small molecules to the dimeric interface, active site loops are shifted to an unfavorable position. this is associated with a network between distal allosteric sites and the active site loop. an energy dissipation model was applied in order to analyze this matter in further detail. perturbation of specific residues enable us to determine a possible signaling network in proteins using external energy as an input, while focusing on the dispersion of this energy between residues throughout the structure. molecular dynamics simulations were performed with and without energy perturbation using namd software with charmm force field. energy perturbation was applied by increasing the velocity of a chosen residue at the desired time step of the initial md simulation. energy change of each residue was calculated upon the application of perturbation. as a result, residue response times, corresponding to the time of the response of a residue after the perturbation of another chosen residue, are obtained. combining reponse time data with a residue interaction network, it is possible to construct a final network that shows the communication started by perturbation within the molecule. it is shown that perturbation of allosteric sites result in the disruption of the catalytic sites given in literature. our findings support this and also gives a little detail of the possible communication between distal allosteric site and the active site loops. this finding enables the usage of this methodology for similar structures where the exact allosteric mechanism is yet not known. p- . . - effect of complex mammalian membrane models with multiple membrane components on ras protein nanoclustering a. farcas , , l. buimaga-iarinca , c. floare , l. janosi faculty of physics, babes-bolyai university, cluj-napoca, romania, national institute for research and development of isotopic and molecular technologies, cluj-napoca, romania ras proteins are essential for the cellular signal transduction that regulates cell proliferation and differentiation and act as binary switches between gdp and gtp forms. a wide range of human tumors are associated with defective ras protein signaling. the production of permanently activated ras proteins is correlated with mutations in ras genes. experiments and computer simulations have shown that membrane-bound ras proteins form nonoverlapping dynamic nanosized subdomains (nanoclusters) in activation state-/isoform-dependent manner. we performed coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the effect of complex mammalian membrane models on formation and evolution of ras nanoclusters. a fundamental part of the plasma membrane is the phospholipids bilayer, which contains phosphatidyl-choline (pc), phosphatidylethanolamine (pe), phosphatidyl-serine (ps), sphingomyelin (sm) and cholesterol (chol). the nature of lipid-lipid and protein-lipid interactions was studied in binary (pc:chol) and quinary mixtures (pc:pe:ps:sm:chol). because the polar lipids are not uniformly distributed between the two leaflets of the membrane, the construction of the plasma membrane with five-component lipid mixtures took into account the asymmetry between the outer and inner mono-layers. the phospholipids chain saturation (combined with the presence of cholesterol) constitute the dominant factor in phase separation and was, therefore, modeled in different lipid tail combinations for various headgroups. using microsecond timescale simulations of membraneembedded ras proteins, we have shown that the nanoclusters are spontaneously forming dynamic structures whose behavioral characteristics is modulated not only by the ras isoform, but also by the complexity of the membrane model. furthermore, we showed that variations in the plasma membrane lipid composition have important implications in the localization of ras protein nanoclusters. optogenetics comprises biological methods to achieve gain or loss of function of well-defined events in specific cells of living tissue by means of targetable control tools that respond to light and deliver the effector function. microbial rhodopsins (mrs) have been established as powerful light-sensitive tools for optogenetics. acting as ion pumps or channels, mrs are used to induce cell (de)polarization to control neuronal activity in a wide range of living organisms. mrs are membrane proteins found in a large clade of organisms, including eukaryotes, bacteria, and archaea. they share a common architecture of transmembrane a-helices and a covalently linked retinal, which is employed to absorb photons for energy conversion or the initiation of cellular signaling. major efforts are put into screening of natural and generating of synthetic mrs with desirable properties for optogenetics, e.g. ion selectivity. however, experimental study of mrs is difficult and resource consuming owing to, among other factors, low expression levels and protein stability. thus, there is a need in developing of computational tools for identification of mrs with desirable properties. we used non-redundant atomic structures of mrs taken from protein data bank to develop a set of numerical descriptors that reflects functional properties of mrs. then, we calculated the descriptors for non-redundant sequences of mrs with known function taken from the uniprot database, resulting in the feature matrix. we applied the support vector machine and the fold cross-validation procedure, using the feature matrix as the training set. as a result, we obtained the classifier that discriminates mrs in terms of the ion selectivity, e.g. na + , h + , or cl À pumps, with high precision. finally, we used the derived classifier on a test set of proteins and identified mrs for the further experiment in vivo. rational design of peptides with required stability and functional activity properties becomes a real instrument for the new generation drug development. the reca bacterial protein (and human rad homolog) is considered to be the central catalyst of homologous recombination, a mechanism essential for the accurate repair of double-strand dna breaks. dna repair via homologous recombination requires reca nucleoprotein filaments assembly. using seqopt (http://mml.spbstu.ru/seqopt/), a novel method for a-helix sequence optimization we present the successful design of peptide sequences capable to maintain a very stable a-helix structure and to inhibit reca activity. novel a-helical amino acids peptide is constructed based on reca-dna complex structure. we observed in vitro inhibition of reca atp hydrolysis, dna strand exchange reaction and reca filament formation. also, we observed lower e. coli resistance to uv and sos-response suppression in vivo. computational identification of promiscous enzyme activity for the morita-baylis-hillman reaction k. ozturk, s. sayin, n. celebi olcum yeditepe university, istanbul, turkey enzyme promiscuity attracts considerable attention in terms of enzyme evolution, protein engineering and biocatalysis. especially, development of highly efficient novel biocatalysts starting from promiscuous enzymes that have the catalytic machinery to perform desired chemistry is an intense area of research in recent years. in this work, we computationally explored the catalytic promiscuity of natural enzymes for the synthesis of morita-baylis-hillman (mbh) adducts, which display antitumoral activity against human cervical cancer cells, by mining structural protein databases using quantum mechanically optimized theoretical active site models (theozymes). catalytic interactions in the active sites of selected hit proteins with potential mbh activity were evaluated in solvated dynamic environment using molecular dynamics simulations. computational screening of the protein data bank for the quantum mechanically determined optimal arrangement of catalytic functional groups for the target mbh reaction successfully identified an enzyme with experimentally determined promiscuous mbh activity. ras proteins mediate a wide variety of signal transduction pathways that regulate cell growth, proliferation and differentiation. these proteins are small gtpases that act as binary switches between gdp-bound 'off' and gtp-bound 'on' states. oncogenic point mutations of ras are associated with~ % of all cancers and up to % in specific tumors and many developmental disorders. both experimental and in silico results showed that the membrane-bound ras proteins form non-overlapping dynamic nanosized subdomains called nanoclusters in an activation state-/ isoform-dependent manner. we performed coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations in order to investigate the formation and evolution of ras nanoclusters in mammalian model membranes. ras proteins were inserted into the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane model (di-c : -phosphatidyl-choline: di- : -phosphatidyl-choline: cholesterol : : ) where they formed highly dynamic nanoclusters, both in size and in composition. furhermore, we found that the presence of ras protein nanoclusters has a significant impact on the model membrane behavior. properties such as phase behavior, diffusion coefficient, surface tension and lipid tails order parameter are also influenced by the temperature variation of the model membrane. we have investigated dynamics in three different crystal forms of ubiquitin, as well as ubiquitin in solution, with particular emphasis on (i) conformational exchange between b turn type i and ii in the region - and (ii) rocking dynamics where protein molecules as a whole undergo subtle reorientational motion within the confines of the crystal lattice. experimentally, both motional processes have been probed using relaxation dispersion techniques, including recently developed near-rotary-resonance dipolar relaxation dispersion experiments. thereby it has been determined that rocking motion in one of the crystal forms (pdb id n ) occurs on the time scale of tens of microseconds, whereas the conformational exchange has characteristic time constant of ca. ls. using molecular dynamics simulations, we have shown that the similarity of motional time scales is not accidental: bi↔bii exchange and rocking motion appear to be coupled. we have investigated the mechanisms of this coupling and predicted a number of point mutations that are expected to abrogate (or enhance) rocking. the crystals of ubiquitin containing these mutations have been modeled in silico. we have also investigated the interactions (in particular, crystal contacts) that control the balance between bi and bii conformations in different crystal forms. finally, we have used md simulations as a basis for chemical shift calculations and illustrated how relaxation dispersion effects can emerge as a function of bi↔bii exchange in conjunction with the rocking motion. the md simulation study was supported by rsf grant - - . serine/threonine kinases are attractive targets in targeted cancer therapy due to their overexpression in several forms of cancer. flavonoids are highly bioactive plant secondary metabolites that are important in human health due to their antioxidant property. quercetin, a natural flavonoid derivative, has been shown to regulate several signal transduction pathways and is in phase i clinical trial as an anticancer drug. this study explored the inhibitory potential of quercetin and its derivatives using in silico methods like molecular docking and molecular dynamics simulations. quercetin and its derivatives were observed to bind to several serine/threonine kinase family proteins with binding energy significantly better than other known inhibitors and commercially available drugs. this study thus sheds light on the atomic level interactions that define the polypharmacological nature of quercetin and its ability to interfere with a number of cancer pathways. introduction: noninvasive prenatal diagnosis (nipd) of the fetal rhd status by rhd genotyping of the maternal plasma was initially applied in alloimmunized pregnant women. fetal rhesus d status detection for management of rhd incompatibility using circulating cell-free fetal dna from maternal plasma or serum is now accepted by many obstetricians in europe as reliable and useful. the aim of the study was to detect fetal rhd specific antibodies in maternal plasma using a nanopolimer based electrochemical biosensor. materials and methods: a three-electrode system, consisting of a gold electrode, an ag/agcl reference electrode and a pt counter electrode, was accommodated in a -ml electrochemical cell. anilin and jelatin were used for immobilization of rhd antibody. the polimerization was occured at nm uv light. antibodies of rhd antigen were detected using differential pulse method at between . and . v potentials by observing the differentiations in the current values. results: the rhd status of the fetus was predicted in rhdnegative pregnant women ( - th week of pregnancy). rhd antibody were detected in maternal bood using biosensor in of the fetuses. the results were confirmed with real-time pcr. the fetuses found rhd (+) for exon and of rhd gene by multiplex real-time pcr. discussion and conclusion: biosensors based studies might be useful, because they allow to monitor the molecular interactions in real-time providing qualitative and quantitative information, through kinetics, affinity and concentration analyses. we found that more advantages in comparison to other methods reported in the literature so far; it was determined that the method is sensitive, specific, economic, practical and less time-consuming. fetal rhd detection at low concentrations and in the early week of pregnancy is possible with this method. p- . . - investigation of phylogeography of cricotopus sylvestris (diptera: chironomidae) using mitochondrial and nuclear molecular markers the family chironomidae is one of the most widely distributed insect families of diptera, and this family is distributed in all continents and all habitats from the tropics to the arctic in lakes, streams and puddles. in this study, we aimed to determine the dispersal of c. sylvestris using molecular phylogenetic markers not only in turkey but in the world and to reveal from where this species may have entered to turkey in the past. c. sylvestris larvae were collected from lakes across turkey. after total genomic dna extraction from body of larvae, fragments of two mitochondrial genes, cytochrome c oxidase subunit i (coi) and cytochrome b (cytb), and one nuclear gene, carbomyl phosphate synthase domain (cps) of cad, were amplified and sequenced. in addition, several sequences of these three genes of c. sylvestris from different countries of different continents such as south corea, japan, canada, denmark, and sweden were obtained from genbank. all sequences were aligned using mega and bioedit version . . . and were used for phylogenetic analyses. neighbour-joining (nj) tree was created in mega and paup . b with bootstrap replicates. maximum likelihood (ml) analysis was performed in raxmlgui . using gtrgamma model with bootstrap replicates. beast v . . was used for bayesian analysis. our phylogenetic analyses indicated that the japanese, south corean and american c. sylvestris were different from european and turkish members. turkish members of c. sylvestris were closely related to european ones according to our bayesian, nj and ml analyses. in turkish members, c. sylvestris collected from hazar and c ß ıldır lake was more ancient than those from marmara, sapanca, c ß ıldır, aygır, beys ßehir, e girdir and sıhke lakes. in conclusion, our results clearly suggest that several transoceanic dispersal events among the continents may have occurred and that the entrance of turkish c. sylvestris to turkey may have been from southeast and northeast of the country. metagenomics is providing great help to explore world of unculturable microorganisms in the natural samples to enhance our knowledge about microbial diversity. here, we have performed metagenomic analysis of fresh water lake bacterial community using pyrosequencing techniques. we have observed a wide array of bacteria from phylum proteobacteria and family enterobacteriaceae as well as very few viruses from podoviridae, siphoviridae and unclassified phages. we have conducted a metagenomics analysis with the primary focus on the examination of the community of bacteria in a fresh water lake ecosystem. roche gs flx software gave us total reads (with an average read length of . bp). there were contigs having > bp sequence length whereas contigs with > bp sequence length. for further analysis we have taken contigs with > bp only. further, we have analyzed the microbial community composition using blastn/blastx against nt/nr databases with e-value cutoff of À . ≥ % of total contigs were mapped to the reference with ≥ % contig match coverage. the community analysis revealed that domain bacteria is predominantly present ( . %) in the water sample, followed by eukaryota ( . %), viruses ( . %) and other sequences ( . %). most abundant phyla was proteobacteria ( . %) and the most dominant family was enterobacteriaceae ( %) followed by xanthomonadaceae ( %), vibrionaceae ( . %), pasteurellaceae ( . %), shewanellaceae ( . %). we performed functional analysis of all contigs using rapid annotation using subsystems technology (rast) which detected coding sequences and rnas in subsystems. among the classified cds from rast showed major cds hits for enzymes involved in the subsystems amino acids and derivatives and the carbohydrate metabolism. the great diversity of microorganisms present in the lake may reflect the human activity in the area. maldi-tof mass spectrometry is a ubiquitous and widespread tool for protein identification. once the protein sequence is unavailable, unambiguous identification cannot be performed, and predictability is limited by the presence of sequenced homologous proteins. we present a statistical approach to predict a number of structural, localization and functional properties of unknown proteins by direct analysis of mass distribution shapes of their post-cleavage fragments obtained from maldi-tof mass spectrometry data. secondary structure of proteins is best predicted by their specific cleavage at the inertial hydropathy group amino acid residues (filmv), with thermolysin (afilmv) being the closest commercially available reagent, leading to distinguishing between proteins with presumably ahelixes or b-sheets with % accuracy. cellular localization of proteins is best predicted by their specific cleavage at the external hydropathy group amino acid residues (dehknqr), exemplified by gluc(phosphate)+lysc(dek) cleavage. protein location in the cell membrane and its localization character (monotopic/ transmembrane, single-pass/multi-pass transmembrane) are predictable with~ % accuracy by this single cleavage, with optimal combination of - cleavages improving the accuracy tõ %. functional prediction of proteins is the best among membrane-associated proteins with characteristic structural conformations. we attribute the differences in the mass distribution shapes to the characteristic clustering of amino acids residues with respective hydropathy properties that are involved in the formation of d structural conformations of proteins. the suggested approach allows for a non-parametric statistical prediction of uncharacterized proteins from their maldi-tof mass spectrometry data without knowledge or reconstruction of their primary sequence. potential applications include proteomic studies of organisms with unavailable genomic sequences and highly variable proteins analysis. the cancer genome atlas (tcga) represents a comprehensive database of genomic, transcriptomic and epigenetic alterations across more than tumor types. earlier we developed cross-hub tool aimed at multi-way analysis of tcga data in the context of gene expression regulation. in the present work, the software was updated with new features that are described below. crosshub is a python-based application. one of the features of crosshub is the combining tcga rna-seq co-expression analysis to encode chip-seq data in order to reveal most possible transcription factor (tf) targets and coupling mirna-mrna co-expression to several algorithms of mirna target prediction in order to enhance its efficacy. the key feature of the updated crosshub version is the analysis of the associations between expression ratio of tf to its targets and tf mutation status. this allows identification of tfs that are functionally (in)activated with driver mutations in a particular cancer type. the second novel feature of crosshub is the analysis of associations between 'tf-to-targets' expression ratio and tumor characteristics (tnm classification, pathological stage), patient follow-up, etc. in turn, this analysis may result in the identification of 'tf-targets' functional relations that are important for disease progression, tumor invasion, response to chemotherapy. thus, crosshub was supplemented with new features that can be useful for comprehensive tcga data analysis. the updated version of crosshub is freely available at http://sourceforge.net/ projects/crosshub/. this work was financially supported by the russian foundation for basic research (grants - - , - - and - - ) and ras presidium program 'molecular and cellular biology'. p- . . - mutations leading to increased rnase production and streptomycin resistance in bacillus pumilus bacillus pumilus strain - which was derived from soil-isolated b. pumilus p using chemical mutagenesis is characterized by resistance to streptomycin (str, up to lg/ml) and ability to produce extracellular enzymes in quantities almost -fold higher than the parent strain. these features make the - strain suitable for industrial production of rnase (binase) which is known for its antitumour and antiviral properties and can be used as an rna-degrading tool in molecular biology. the whole genomes of both mutant and wild-type b. pumilus strains were sequenced recently. to reveal the exact genetic features responsible for rnase overproduction and str resistance we have fulfilled comparative genome analysis of b. pumilus p and - strains. facilities of rast server, edgar platform and additional bioinformatics tools (plasmid finder, prophinder, bl seq) were used. it is found that both b. pumilus genomes under study contain an intact prophage, while only wild-type strain bears a kb cryptic plasmid. none of the systems is inactivated in mutant strain according to the results of metabolic reconstruction. . % of total cdss differ in - strain in comparison to p one, % of them are hypothetical. the altered genes are involved in membrane transport, cell wall composition, chemotaxis, spore formation, carbohydrate metabolism, dna metabolism, translation and transcription regulation. mutation (k n) leading to str resistance is identified in s ribosomal protein s p. regulatory and coding regions of binase gene have no modifications. candidate genes which can account for binase overproduction are selected. mutation k n is classical in str resistance and leads to enhancement of decoding accuracy while decreasing elongation speed. rnase overproduction is brought about by non-specialized mechanism since other hydrolases are also overproduced in mutant strain. genes encoding extracellular serine protease, sporulation initiation phosphotransferase f, gnat-family acetyltransferase and cell wall modifying enzymes are reported previously to increase production of degradative enzymes. the action of encoded by them proteins lead to increase of stability and release of secreted proteins to environment and to derepression of their transcription from negative regulators bacillus pumilus strain p has been identified on its ability to produce ribonuclease and different extracellular proteases. in order to increase inherent biosynthesis of proteases the p strain was screened on culture medium supplemented by streptomycin. derivative b. pumilus strain - gains the resistance to streptomycin and also shows the increased ribonuclease activity. we used genomes of both these strains to explore streptomycin susceptibility and increased activity of hydrolytic enzymes. whole-genome shotgun sequencing was performed using a combination of pyrosequencing and ion semiconductor sequencing, which provided x ( p) and x ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) overall genome coverage. assembled genome sequences of p and - strains included and scaffolds > bp with a calculated genome size of bp and bp, respectively. the gc content was %. both draft genomes have been deposited at genbank (jojx . for p and jhud . for [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] . detailed comparative genomic analyses of strains have been performed. we calculated average nucleotide identity (ani) values between the genomes of our strains and completed b. pumilus genomes deposited in ncbi database. two b. pumilus strains (sh-b and safr- ) revealed the max. ani value ( . % and . %, respectively). b. pumilus sh-b strain has been used as a reference for snp calling in strains p and - . snps for the p strain and for the - strain were classified as nonsynonymous variants. radical nucleotide substitutions from the - genome were not found in p genome. among them, the mutation in the codon of rpsl gene (coding s ribosomal protein s ) is probably associated with resistance to streptomycin. also, two mutations in rpob and nusa genes (coding rna polymerase and transcription termination factor rho, respectively) may be related to increased enzymes activity. both our strains contain protease-coding genes. twelve of them are encoding extracellular proteases. here we propose an algorithm that can predict an antibodies mutant forms with desired specificity. this algorithm allows to determine the position and type of amino acid residue for mutagenesis. approach is based on a hybrid method of quantum and molecular mechanics (qm/mm) that allows to understand the reaction mechanism and the role of active center amino acids. catalytic antibody a , that is able to hydrolyze pesticide paraoxon, was selected as a model. however, the hydrolysis efficiency of paraoxon by a antibody is only m À min À , that is insufficient for using this antibody as antidote. the main fundamental goal of our study is to determine the necessary conditions for improving the binding reaction of paraoxon by catalytic antibody a . the hybrid qm/mm method allows to study the reaction mechanism of interaction of a with paraoxon. it was shown that the reaction proceeds via the classical s n mechanism. the key step of the reaction is the proton transfer from the catalytic residue tyr- to paraoxon. qm/mm approach determines position for mutagenesis -leu- in light chain. for one of the mutant in this position -leu argwere predicted (i) increased probability of formation of a hydrogen bond between the catalytic moiety and paraoxon compared to the wild type antibody and (ii) smaller value of the diffusion coefficient, which reflects the best positioning of paraoxon in the active center. steady-state kinetic analysis shows that leu arg exhibits a -fold increase in k /k d compared to a ( m À min À vs. . m À min À ). double mutant leu arg/ser ala also has improved constants of interaction with paraoxon in comparison with the wild type antibody, however, a single mutant leu arg still binds paraoxon three times better, that may be due to the fact that the serine in position increase the nucleophilicity of tyr . thus, our results are in line with our computed predictions. this work was supported by rfmefi x . due to high prices of meat and meat products, low quality raw materials like offal tissues are commonly used in turkey. in the retrospect of the studies for evaluating and detection of unwanted tissues in the sample is basic histological examination. the light microscopy techniques are very strong method if a researcher qualification is enough. a new researcher-independent method must be developed. therefore, different tissues and organs constitute of unique mrna and protein. our method is based on this event, so the antigenic sites of the tissues can be detected by selected antibodies. the first set of the antibodies are for detecting muscle and adipose, consist on muscle actin and adipose triglyceride lipase. this set is used for calibration on standard meat sample. the second set of the antibodies are detecting of offal tissues, consist on trrap and casein. anti-casein antibody is selected because the mammary gland usage in grinded-meat is very common. immuno-staining started with hier (heat mediated epitope retrieval), then classical ihc method applied to slides with dab-chromogen. after all process completed the slides were photographed by las (leica application suite) on microscope. the capture settings were remained same on both sets. image capture size is x pixels and field of view (fov) is lm. all the image files were converted to binary for threshold operation. the threshold values of first set and second set were calculated and their ratios were compared. the formula is based on the distribution (dst) of pixel intensity (int) over threshold (thrs) values on all fov (axis: the results are good enough to detect the unwanted micro-structures on % raw meat and % offal tissue. calculations proofed with imagejÒ. future application of this method and opencv-based software algorithm is to port the source code to a single board computer (sbc) with a digital microscope connected. monday september : - : mechanisms of pro-inflammatory diseases p- . . - the effects of raas inhibition in rate limiting step by aliskiren on testicular torsion injury in rats testis torsion is a urological emergency condition that results in necrosis of the testis if the condition is not treated. unfortunately treatment of testis torsion is not fully understood, therefore clinical and experimental studies are performed continuously. reninangiotensin-aldosterone system (raas) contributed to pathophysiology of several diseases. aliskiren (als) inhibits the renin on the first step of this system. our aim is to investigate the protective effect of aliskiren on unilateral testis damage caused by experimental testis torsion and detorsion. the forty-eight rats were separated into eight groups of six animals: sham, sham+als mg/kg (oral) group, torsion group (tor), torsion/detorsion group (tor/det), tor+als mg/kg (oral) group, tor+als mg/kg (oral) group, tor/det+als mg/kg (oral) group, tor/det+als mg/kg (oral) group. in the tor and tor/det groups, the left testes were rotated °clockwise together with the spermatic cord and tunica vaginalis in the scrotal space. the left testes of the rats were subjected to torsion and detorsion during h. after experimental procedures, testicular tissues were examined by histopathologic and molecular analyses. the il- b and inos mrna expressions were increased in tor and tor/det groups when compared with sham group. both doses of aliskiren administration decreased these expressions in tor/det groups. the stereological results revealed that aliskiren administration promote the numerical density of mature spermatids in tor and tor/det groups. the numerical densities of tor/det+als and tor/det+als groups were similar and these two groups have significant difference when compared to the tor and tor/det groups. the administration of als may be useful for preventing ischemic damage on unilateral testes injury in rats. this study supported by a tubitak project, coded s . ) has recently been recognized as a potent immunomodulator which acts through regulation of gene expression involved in immunity response thus affecting various inflammatory and autoimmune diseases. the study was aimed at investigating hepatoprotective role of d in vdr-mediated regulation of pro-inflammatory factors in diabetic liver. materials and methods: type diabetes was induced in male c bl/j mice by i.p. injection of high-dose stz ( mg/kg b.w.). after weeks of stz-induced diabetes animals were treated with/without d ( iu/mouse per os) for weeks. blood serum ohd was assessed by elisa. rel-a, vpf, inos and vdr expression was measured by qrt-pcr and/or western-blot. results and discussion: diabetes caused two-fold reduction of serum ohd level, indicative of d deficiency. significant alterations in d -endocrine system were found as is evident from reduced expression of cyp a , cyp r , vdbp and vdr at transcriptional and translational levels. these changes were accompanied by a marked increase in mrna and protein levels of inflammation markers rel-a, vpf and inos in hepatic tissue of diabetic mice. diabetes also led to structural lesions in liver tissue. complete restoration of ohd content and partial normalization of liver tissue structure were achieved after d treatment. d administration partially normalized expression of cytochromes involved in d metabolism and hepatic pro-inflammatory factors. d treatment prevented overexpression of rel-a and phosphorylated p /rel-a translocation to hepatocellular nuclei that is most likely mediated through , (oh) d and vdr. conclusion: study confirmed that diabetes-induced liver abnormalities are associated with chronic inflammation that can be linked to impaired d metabolism and deficiency. our findings demonstrate protective vdr-mediated effect of vitamin d against diabetes-induced liver injury. p- . . - lavandula stoechas extract increased glucose uptake and protein levels of key signaling molecules in insulin resistant c c muscle cells s. savranoglu , h. ipek , s. arslan , h. delig€ oz , a. r. t€ ufekc ßi , i. demirtas , t. boyunegmez t€ umer graduate program of biology, institute of natural and applied sciences, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, turkey, graduate program of bioengineering, institute of natural and applied sciences, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, turkey, deparment of biology, faculty of arts and sciences, pamukkale university, denizli, turkey, department of chemical engineering, faculty of engineering, pamukkale university, denizli, turkey, department of chemistry, faculty of sciences, c ß ankiri karatekin university, c ß ankiri, turkey, department of molecular biology and genetics, faculty of arts and sciences, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, turkey introduction: the aim of this is to identify remedial effects of lavandula stoechas, anatolian traditional medicine, against metabolic disorders developed on the ground of insulin resistance. ethyl acetate extract (eae) of l. stoechas was investigated in c c myotubes which were made insulin resistant by free fatty acid (ffa) treatment, for its effects on glucose uptake and as well as on the activation of akt- (by pakt/ akt ratio) molecule which plays a central role in insulin signaling through serine ( ) phosphorylation. in addition, the protein level of lipoprotein lipase (lpl) enzyme was also evaluated. material and methods: c c cells were made insulin resistant by palmitic acid (ffa) and effects of eae on p-akt (ser )/akt ratio and lpl level were determined by sds-page/western blot. the effect of eae on glucose uptake in insulin resistant cells were determined by the -deoxyglucose uptake assay. results: eae at and lg/ml significantly increased the glucose uptake and % compared to insulin resistant control cells. metformin at mm increased this parameter up to %. eae increased pakt ser /akt level - % and lpl expression - % for and lg/ml, in insulin resistant myotubes, respectively (p < . ). discussion: eae of l. stoechas improved impaired insulin sensitivity through both enhancing glucose uptake and activation of akt molecule through ser phosphorylation. in addition, it also considerably increased lpl level which has very important function in lipid metabolism. conclusion: overall, results demonstrated that l. stoechas contain phytochemicals which can be effective for the prevention and also treatment of insulin resistance and associated conditions. our research group is on the way for the identification of these 'bioactive' molecules with bioassay guided fractionation studies. tubitak (projectid: t ) supports this study. achievement of complete pain control is very difficult task, which requires a search for new molecular targets during the analgesic substances development. considering the importance of glial cells and their signaling molecules, development of new gliotropic therapeutic methods is a promising direction in pain treatment. polyunsaturated fatty acids, including docosahexaenoic acid demonstrating anti-inflammatory and antioxidant activity are of considerable interest. docosahexaenoic acid (dha, : n À ) analgesic activity was studied using a chronic constriction injury (cci) rat model. animals were subcutaneously injected with dha emulsion at a dose of . mg/kg ( mm/kg) daily during weeks after surgery. collection of material for subsequent immunohistochemistry investigation was performed on day . we clearly demonstrated that the activation of neurokinin neurotransmission and nnos synthesis are coincided with the astroglial activation in the spinal cord dorsal horn (scdh) superficial lamina during neuropathic pain development. however, the detailed mechanisms of interaction between substance p (sp)-, no-ergic systems and astrocytes in the spinal cord remain to be elucidated. systemic administration of dha to cci animals reduced neurogenic pain intensity and duration, leading to an earlier stabilization of paw weight distribution and preventing the development of degenerative changes in denervated limb. this drug treatment reduced the level of the sp-and no-ergic neurotransmission and decreased astrocytosis in the scdh superficial lamina. thus, the ability of dha to affect nociception is a promising and safe alternative to current pharmaceutical therapeutics. immunohistochemistry studies carried out with the russian science foundation financial support (agreement no. - - ), obtaining dha and all manipulations with animals of the material was funded by rfbr according to the research project no. - - mol_a. p- . . - circulating endothelial-derived apoptotic microparticles and aopps are related to highsensitive troponin t in patients with chronic hepatitis c infection the aim of this study was to evaluate non-standard risk factors for cardiovascular events, such as endothelial dysfunction assessed by endothelial-derived microparticles (emps) (cd +/ cd + ), advanced oxidation protein products (aopps), and low-grade inflammation, that are potentially associated with elevated levels of high-sensitivity troponin t (hs-tnt) and n-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (nt-probnp) in patients with chronic hepatitis c (chc). methods and results: eighty-six chc patients and healthy control subjects were enrolled in the study. circulating levels of hs-tnt, nt-probnp, aopps-albumin (the ratio of aopps to albumin content), emps (cd +/ cd + ), hs-crp, and tnf-a were assessed. compared with chc patients, the chc patients with diabetes mellitus (dm) had higher levels of emps (cd +/ cd + ) and aopps-alb, which were associated with elevated hs-tnt levels (≥ . pg/ml). nt-probnp positively correlated with tnf-a level in all chc patients and this correlation was stronger in diabetic patients. in multivariate logistic regression analysis, the independent factors associated with the presence of elevated hs-tnt levels were the presence of dm (p < . ) as well as high levels of aopps-alb, apoptotic emps (cd + /cd + /an-v + ), and nt-probnp (p = . , p = . , p = . respectively). conclusion: the prevalence of elevated hs-tnt were increased significantly in the diabetic patients with chronic hepatitis c. hs-tnt was related to non-standard risk factors for cardiovascular events, and circulating endothelial-derived apoptotic microparticles (cd + /cd + /an-v + ) level was an independent predictor for elevated hs-tnt levels, potentially indicating some abnormalities in the myocardium. apnea; and healthy individuals; and assessing the connection between the pain and the dimension of the sleep disorder. material and methods: patients who were diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea and healthy individuals who were similar in terms of age and gender were included in this study. the patients, who were diagnosed with obstructive sleep apnea with the examination and sleep tests, were assessed according to the american college of rheumatology (acr) criteria in terms of fms. serum d vitamin level was measured by using the ultra performance liquid chromatography method. findings: when the fibromyalgia syndrome and obstructive sleep apnea and pure obstructive sleep apnea patient groups are compared with the control group, the vitamin d level was found to be low at a significant level (p = . , p = . , respectively). no significant difference was found between the vitamin d levels in fibromyalgia syndrome, obstructive sleep apnea and pure obstructive sleep apnea patient groups. a negative correlation was found between the number of the sensitive points and vitamin d levels in fibromyalgia syndrome patients (p = . ). results: it has been concluded that the obstructive sleep apnea and fibromyalgia syndrome patients have low vitamin d levels, and this situation must be considered in treatment modalities. on the other hand, the results obtained in the study make us consider that vitamin d metabolism is not influential in the pathogenesis of the fibromyalgia syndrome and obstructive sleep apnea togetherness. p- . . - decreased chitotriosidase activity and levels in familial mediterranean fever discussion: familial mediterranean fever is an inflammatory disease. several cytokines and inflammatory mediators are playing role on pathogenesis of the disease. although ıt has been demonstrated that the increased concentrations of cht in patients with fmf. we found lower cht activity and concentrations in patients with fmf. conclusion: serum cht enzyme activity and concentrations may not be considered as a biomarker in fmf patients taking colchicine. new studies are needed to evaluate the changes of the enzyme activity, concentration and the role of cht in patients with colchicines negative patients. chronic hyperglycemic state leads to an increase in subclinical systemic inflammatory response in diabetes mellitus type (dmt ) patients. inflammation-based scores, neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (nlr), platelet to lymphocyte ratio (plr) and red blood cell distribution width to platelet ratio (rpr) are biomarkers able to quantify systemic inflammation. the aim of the study was to investigate association of the inflammation-based scores with short-and long-term glycemic control markers, and whether they could be used as indicators of glucoregulation in dmt patients. the cross-sectional study included dmt patients, treated at the primary health care centre zenica from december to april , distributed into groups according to glycated hemoglobin (hba c) values: a (n = , hba c ≤ . %) and b (n = , hba c > . %). complete blood cell count, fasting blood glucose (fbg) and hba c measurements were determined at the primary health care centre zenica and at the department of laboratory diagnostics, cantonal hospital zenica by standard laboratory methods. all statistical tests were performed using spss . . p values fasting blood glucose and hba c were significantly higher in the group b compared to the group a (p < . ). there was no significant difference of nlr, plr and rpr between the groups (p = . ; p = . ; p = . , respectively). significant correlation of inflammation-based scores with fbg and hba c was found only between plr and hba c in the group a of dmt patients (r = . , p = . ). inflammation-based scores could gather meaningful clinical information, either diagnostic or prognostic, on a variety of hyperglycemic, inflammatory, cardiovascular and thrombotic disorders. since there was no statistically significant difference of nlr, plr and rpr between dmt patients with good and poor glycemic control, we conclude that these scores could not be used as indicators of glucoregulation in dmt patients. chronic inflamation plays a central role in the development and progression of diabetes and in the pathogenesis of its comlications. the neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (nlr) and platelet-lymphocyte ratio (plr) are indicators of subclinical inflamation. mean platelet volume (mpv) is one of the platelet function indices that reflects the platelet production rate and stimulation. we investigated the association of nlr, plr and mpv with prediabetes and type diabetes mellitus (t dm) and determine whether or not these are reliable markers for diagnosis. we evalueted people's results who were carried out oral glucose tolerance test (ogtt). acording to -h values of plasma glucose in the ogtt; . group (normal glucose tolerance: ngt): under mg/dl (n = ), . group (prediabetic: impared glucose tolerance (igt)): ranging from mg/dl to mg/dl (n = ), . group (firstly diagnosed diabetic by ogtt): above mg/dl (n = ). . group is clear diabetic without complication (taking treatment) group (n = ). we compered nlr, plr, mpv and some biochemical markers between four groups. there are significantly differences between all groups in nlr (p = . ) and plr (p = . ) values. nlr values are significantly higher in prediabetic ( . it is recognized that a chronic low-grade inflammation and an activation of the immune system are involved in the pathogenesis of insulin resistance and type diabetes mellitus (t d). this study aimed to analyze the long-term impact of altered metabolism in female t d patients at the level of mediators of inflammatory response. this study included femalet d patients and control subjects, which were recruited at the clinical center university of sarajevo and the general hospital tesanj. in this study the effects of glycemic control on markers of the inflammatory response crp, fibrinogen, leukocytes, sedimentation, and cytokine il- , were analyzed. all subjects included in this study were free of evidence infections, surgery, thyroid disease, polycystic ovarian syndrome, active liver and kidney damage. all biochemical analyses were performed by employing standard ifcc protocols. results from this study demonstrated significant increase of fibrinogen (p = . ), crp (p = . ), il- (p = . ), leukocytes (p = . ) and sedimentation rate (p = . ) in female t d population compared to control subjects. interestingly, a significant correlation was shown between crp and hba c (p = . ), il- and glucose ( . ), il- and bmi ( . ). in our study, female t d compared to the healthy population had significantly higher levels of fibrinogen, leukocytes, il , crp and sedimentation. other studies conducted in female population associated elevated levels of il- and crp with t d independent of other risk factors for diabetes. crp being most robust predictor of diabetes. studies have shown that crp is an important predictor of t d for the female but not the male population. thus, our data suggest that inflammation play an important role in the pathogenesis in female diabetic population. a more detailed study on a far larger number of subjects should point out fact if they can effectively be used as biomarkers in the primary prevention of t d in this population. objectives: bone and mineral metabolism disorders hold an important place among the complications after renal transplantation. the purpose of this study was to demonstrate the relationship between vitamin d, calcium, phosphorus metabolism with graft function and to measure , (oh) d levels with lc-ms/ ms in renal transplant recipients. design and methods: this study included renal transplant recipients ( female, male; mean age: . ae . ) from living related donors were transplanted. blood samples were collected immediately before and after transplantation at month . serum creatinine, bun, calcium, phosphorus, alkaline phosphatase, glucose, albumin, pth, (oh)d and , (oh) d levels were measured. gfr values were estimated by ckd-epi. plasma , (oh) d levels were determined in a lcms- triple quadrupole tandem mass spectrometer (shimadzu corporation, japan) by mrm. spss . software was used for statistical analysis. results: although plasma , (oh) d levels significantly increased (p = . ), we did not find any significant differences for serum (oh)d levels after transplantation. when posttransplant levels of serum phosphorus, pth, creatinin, bun and alp levels were found to be significantly decreased (p = . , p = . for alp), we observed significantly higher calcium and gfr values (p = . ). vitamin d insufficiency was present . %, deficiency . %, severe deficiency % before transplantation, insufficiency was also seen . %, deficiency %, severe deficiency . % after transplantation at month . conclusions: in our study, all patients were found to vitamin d deficiency and insufficiency. determination of vitamin d deficiency and consequently treatment with vitamin d supplements could lead to better graft surveys. free fatty acids (ffa) represent important link between obesity, insulin resistance, type diabetes (t d), and dyslipidemia. increased adiposity, as approximated by body mass index (bmi), correlates well with increased serum levels of leptin-adipocyte derived hormone implicated in the regulation of adipose mass and alterations in insulin action and secretion. the main objective of the present study was to investigate the potential association of serum ffas with leptin levels in healthy and newly diagnosed type diabetic subjects. this study involved newly diagnosed type diabetics and healthy subjects. all participants in the study were free of evidence of hepatitis, viral infection or active liver and kidney injury. for biochemical analyses of glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin (hba c), and lipid profile, standard ifcc protocols were used. analysis of free fatty acids (ffas) was done by gas chromatography, while serum leptin levels were determined by the elisa kit. in addition to the expected differences in glucose, hba c, and bmi, our results also showed significant differences in leptin, myristoleic, palmitic, linolenic, arachidic, and arachidonic acids between t d and control subjects. in healthy subjects, a significant correlation was demonstrated between glucose and lauric, arachidic, arachidonic acid levels, body weight, and bmi. newly diagnosed diabetics showed significant association between glucose and lauric, myristoleic and linolenic acid levels; with leptin being associated with myristic and palmitoleic acid levels. interestingly, in all participants, significant association was found between glucose and hba c, glucose and leptin, myristoleic, arachidic, and bmi as well as between leptin, arachidic acid, and bmi. thus, our data point out association of different types of ffas with leptin levels in newly diagnosed type diabetics. however, further studies should be done in larger number of patients to confirm our results. rheumatoid arthritis (ra) and ankylosing spondylitis (as) are chronic inflammatory diseases with distinct clinical manifestations in many ways. the aim of this study is to evaluate the serum levels of molecules which may be used as markers for angiogenesis and vascular leakage in the processes of two clinically different pictures, ra and as. ra patients, as patients and healthy volunteers with mean age of - were included in the study. serum levels of vegf, angiopoetin- and tie- were measured by enzymelinked immuno-sorbentassay (elisa) using a commercially available kit. serum nitricoxide levels were evaluated by the griessreaction. serum vegf, ang- and no levels were significantly higher in the as group ml, p < . ; p < . ; p < . ). no differences were found between as and ra for tie- (p > . ). vegf, ang- , tie- and no levels were positively correlated in both as and ra patients (p < . ), but no correlation was detected between clinically activation index das- , basda _ i scores and laboratory measurements such as sedimentation, crp and anti-ccp (p > . ). when the diagnostic performance of the parameters were evaluated with the roc analysisonly the performance of the ang- in as patients was sufficient (auc ( % cl): . , p < . ). elevation of angiogenic factors in the serums of as and ra patients supports the role of angiogenesis in the etiopathogenesis of these diseases. however, lack of relationship between disease activity leads to not to use these factors as a marker for clinical follow-up. only ang- measurements may be useful for the differantial diagnosis. the evaluation of ischemia modified albumin as an early biomarker of acute myocardial infarction introduction: acute myocardial infarction (ami), remains a leading cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. early diagnosis of ami is very important because early treatment may reduce the extent of injury to the myocardium. currently, biomarkers of myocardial necrosis such as myoglobin, ck-mb and troponins are highly sensitive and exhibit good specificity. however, these biomarkers increase after tissue injury, approximately - h after the cardiac event and detect only the consequences of prolonged ischemia. recently, ischemia modified albumin (ima) has been assessed and found to be very useful for the diagnosis of myocardial ischemia and it is considered as a serum biomarker. the aim of the present study was to evaluate the serum level of ima and determine the relation between patients with ami and control group, in order to verify its potential as a novel marker for early detection of mi. materials and methods: the study was performed with patients and healthy controls. blood samples from all subjects were collected by venipuncture in plain tubes, and immediately centrifuged at g for min at °c. the serum samples were stored at À °c until analysis. the serum levels of ima were determined using the cusabio biotech human ischemia modified albumin, elisa kit according to manufacturer's instructions. the results are given as international units/milliliter (iu/ml). results: our findings revealed that ima showed no significant difference between the groups. conclusion: our results suggest that ima assay is not a sensitive marker for early detection of ischemic hearth disease and cannot be used alone for the diagnosis of ami. prospective studies are needed to identify ima's potential as a biomarker for ami. p- . . - neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio and platelet-tolymphocyte ratio in polycystic ovary syndrome polycystic ovary syndrome is a complex and multifactorial disease with metabolic dysfunction and the etiopathogenesis is not well established. emerging data suggest that adiposity and chronic low-grade inflammation are involved in the development of the metabolic dysfunction. neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (nlr) and platelet-to-lymphocyte ratio (plr) have recently been investigated as two new inflammatory markers used in the assessment of systemic inflammation in many diseases. the purpose of the study was to investigate their relation with pcos patients. the study population consisted of patients with polycystic ovary syndrome and healthy women controls. nlr and plr obtained by dividing absolute neutrophil to absolute lymphocyte count and absolute platelet count to absolute lymphocyte count, respectively. the neutrophil count ( . ae . vs. . ae . , p < . ) and platelet count ( . ae . vs. . ae . , p < . ) were higher in patients with pcos compared to the control group. lymphocyte count was . ae . in pcos patient and . ae . in control group. the nlr and plr of pcos patients were significantly higher compared to those of the controls ( . ae . , . ae . p < . , . ae . , . ae . p < . , respectively). in this study we found nlr and plr were significantly increased in patients with pcos compared to healty control. nlr and plr were two useful inflammatory markers for assessment of patients with pcos. imbalance in neurotransmission in conjunction with neuroinflammation contribute to neurological dysfunction observed during acute liver failure (alf). own observations indicate that alf in a mouse model is associated with altered expression and/or intracellular distribution of synaptic proteins. since neutralization of tgf-b appears to improve the neurological score in alf mice, we examined the possibility that increased levels of tgf-b , caused by liver damage, may affect the expression of selected synaptic proteins. expression and/or cytoplasmic vs. membrane distribution of a number of functionally critical synaptic proteins in cerebral cortex and blood tgf-b were measured in c bl mice with alf induced by single i.p. injection of aom ( mg/kg of b.w.) and after neutralization of tgf-b induced by single i.p. injection of ab-tgf-b ( mg/kg) h before aom injection. in alf mice, blood tgf-b was increased, and the expression of presynaptic proteins: synaptophysin and synaptotagmin was increased in the cytosolic (s ) fraction by~ % and %, respectively, but was slightly depressed in the membrane (p ) fraction by~ % and~ %. aom induced an increase of postsynaptic proteins: psd- and nnos by~ % in p fraction. tgf-b neutralization resulted in a reduction in the expression of presynaptic proteins by~ % in s fraction and~ % in p fraction, in control animals and normalized their amount in the cytosolic fraction after aom injection, but was ineffective with regard to psd- and nnos. the results indicate that in alf mouse, neutralization of cytokine tgf-b normalizes synaptophysin and synaptotagmin expression in the synaptoplasm, without affecting their synaptic membrane content. effect of tgf-b neutralization appear to be confined to the presynapse. % of acute pancreatitis (ap) patients develop severe acute pancreatitis (sap), which is is resulted in multiple organ dysfunction syndrome. an extensive inflammatory response occurs due to inflammatory mediators synthesized and secreted during sap. since preventing the inflammation in sap is important in the prognosis of the disease, new drug candidates having strong antiinflammatory effects will provide a new concept for therapeutic strategies against acute pancreatitis. non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (nsaids) show their effects by inhibiting cyclooxygenases (cox- and cox- ) and they play an important role in the pathogenesis of acute pancreatitis. since conventional nsaids inhibit both cox- and cox- , they have serious side effects on gastrointestinal system. therefore, new highly selective cox- inhibitors having fewer side effects are needed. in the present study, selective cox- inhibitory activities and cytotoxic effects of new series of -benzoxazolinone and thiazolo [ , -b ]- , , -triazole derivatives previously synthesized as specific cox- inhibitors with no side effects on gastrointestinal system were investigated. permeability of the compounds was tested by pampa using caco- cells. compounds were found highly selective, non-toxic and permeable. ap was induced in rats via retrograde injection of stc into the pancreatic duct system. rats were pre-treated with saline or celecoxib or the new compounds before stc injection and sacrificed h later. the severity of ap was evaluated using biochemical and histopathological analyses. edema, inflammation, hemorrhage and acinar cell necrosis were detected in the pancreatic tissue of sap group. sap was remarkably increased serum lactate dehydrogenase, ast, alt, lipase and amylase activities and serum tnf-a, il- b, il- , il- and il- levels. tissue myeloperoxidse activity was also increased. pretreatment with the novel compounds reserved all these biochemical and histopathological parameters. alopecia areata (aa) is an inflammatory disease which is affects hair follicles, and sometimes nails. it is suggested that cytokinemediated immunity plays an important role in etiopathogenesis of aa. this study was planned to evaluate the serum ykl- and tgf-b levels of patients with aa. patients with aa and healthy volunteers were recruited into the study. fasting venous blood samples were collected from the participants and serum was obtained by centrifugation. serum ykl- and tgf-b levels were measured by enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (elisa). serum tgf-b levels in the patient group were significantly lower compared to the control group whereas serum ykl- levels were significantly higher in patient group. tgf-b levels of men and women with aa were found to be significantly lower than that of controls. while serum ykl- level of male control group is higher than the male patients, there were no significant differences between women groups. the increased serum ykl- levels in aa patients suggests that ykl- plays a crucial role in the pathogenesis of aa. arterial immune mediated inflammation participates centrally in all stages of the development of atherosclerosis, from the initial lesion to the end-stage thrombotic complications. although emerging evidence supports augmented cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in cutaneous psoriasis (psc) and psoriatic arthritis (psa) as compared to the general population its underlying mechanism is poorly understood. here we analyzed the inflammatory burden in recent onset of psa patients without traditional cardiovascular risk factors (cvrf) in a transversal study measuring carotid intima media thickness (cimt) (measured with ecodoppler), and proatherogenic inflammatory molecular markers like c-reactive protein (crp), interleukin (il- ), and soluble intercellular adhesion molecule- (sicam- ) in comparison with control patients. cimt values are similar in psa ( , ae . *) and psc ( , ae . ) patients. however, both of them were significant increase compared with control ( . ae , ). regarding inflammatory markers il- serum levels in patients with aps was higher than pcs ( ae . ) and healthy controls ( , ae . ) but the difference did not achieve statistical significance (*p > . ). on other hand mean of sicam- , value from patients with recent onset of psa is significant higher than controls. psc remain without significant changes compared to control (*p > . ). in addition mean value from patients with recent onset of psa is significantly higher than in controls (*p < . ) and psc group. overall, preliminary findings suggest for the first time that patients with early psa, without evident traditional cvrf have significant increased values of cimt, sicam- crp against the general population control group. this data strongly supports that early cv molecular markers are increased after the first symptoms and signs of this disease even in the absence of traditional cardiovascular risk factors. furthermore, this give new windows for a proper treatment. p- . . - protective effect of trail against proinflammatory cytokines on pancreatic beta cells correlated with decrease in dr and increase in dcr expressions universitesi, antalya, turkey introduction: proinflammatory cytokines are known to have destructive effects on beta cells, which contribute to type diabetes (t d) development. the combinatory effects of three of these cytokines in particular, namely tnf-alpha (tnf-a), ifngamma (ifn-c), and il- beta (il- b), are claimed to render beta cells prone to t cell-mediated destruction. the recently identified anti-inflammatory feature of tnf-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (trail), its possible protective role in this process. in this study, the effects of applications of trail with tnf-a, ifn-ᵞ, and il- b on beta cell viability and correlation of these effects with trail receptor expression patterns were investigated. methods: glucose-responsive insulin-secreting nit- mouse beta cell lines were treated with tnf-a, ifn-ᵞ, il- b, and soluble trail (strail) individually and in various combinations. cell viabilities were determined at and h by mtt assay. trail ligand and receptor expression profiles on nit- cells, and alterations in receptor expression levels following cytokine applications were determined by western blotting analysis. results: trail treatment did not have any cytotoxic effects on nit- beta cells at h, while increasing cell viability following il- /ifn/trail and il- /tnf/trail combined applications. substantial levels of death receptor (dr ) expression were detected on nit- cells before applications, yet it displayed decreased levels at h of trail treatment. lower levels of decoy receptor (dcr ) expression detected prior to treatments increased significantly in contrast. discussion: the fact that trail co-treatment with tnf-a, ifn-ᵞ and il- b increased cell viability in nit- beta cell lines along with reduction in dr death receptor expression and an increase in the decoy receptor dcr expression, points out to a possible protective effect of trail in insulitis, and strengthens its potential as a putative therapeutic molecule in prevention of beta cell loss. behc ßet's syndrome (bs) is a multisystemic inflammatory disorder with a strong and complex genetic background. being a prevalent disorder both in turkey and also in the ancient trade road 'silk road' countries, bs is an important cause of impairment and disability owing to its chronic and relapsing nature. besides, bs is reported to be an important cause of mortality among the young male patients. while the epidemiology of bs is substantially well documented, currently, the etiology, the molecular mechanisms underlying its pathogenesis, and the classification of the disorder remain to be elucidated. our aim was to disclose the disease mechanisms at molecular level in turkish bs patients by obtaining, comparing, and analysing the transcriptome data of bs patients with age and gender matched healthy controls. for this purpose, by using the affymetrix hg u plus . microarrays, peripheral blood cell mrna profiles of bs patients (b) and matched healthy controls (c) were obtained. following bioinformatics, gene ontology, and pathway analysis, validation experiments of the identified prominent mrnas were performed by qrt-pcr methodology. the comparison of b vs. c yielded differentially expressed gene numbers of and for the chosen fold changes of . and . respectively (p ≤ . for both). during gene ontology and pathway analysis, immune system process, immune system diseases, systemic lupus erythematosus, arthritis, and intestinal immune network for iga production categories/pathways were significantly enriched. clustering analysis revealed a molecular signature which accurately distinguished b and c samples, while the qrt-pcr analysis successfully validated the chosen mrna transcripts. this study documented differential expression of a large number of immune system and immune disease related genes in bs patients. the uncovering of the molecular disease mechanisms of bs will point to novel candidate molecules to be targeted for the treatment of the disorder. obesity is a public health problem in developed countries and worldwide with increasing prevalence through a relationship primarily with atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases as well as several metabolic disturbances such as increased insulin resistance and diabetes. although several studies identified obesity as an independent risk factor for atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases, the mechanism underlying the increased cardiovascular risk in obese patients has not been clearly delineated. adma, no, endothelin- and homocysteine are an indicator of endothel disfunction that plays an important role in the pathophysiology of atherosclerosis. in our study, obese children and the control group were compared in terms of adma, no, endothelin- and homocysteine, we also investigated whether there is a correlation between these parameters. obese and healthy children, participated in the study. when the obese group was compared to the healthy controls, the adma level of the obese group were significantly higher than those of the control group but there was no statistically significant difference in no, endothelin- and homocysteine. increased adma level might trigger the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis starting from the childhood years onward. that is why controlling obesity in this age group with diet and other treatment modalities will prevent the mortality and morbidities that will be seen in adult years. inh deficiency leads to the formation of bradykinin causing to dilation of blood vessels. furthermore, the study conducted by shagdarsuren, on the damage done by c -esterase, demonsrates that the complement system and triglyceride levels are affected. we investigated lipid oxidation and fetuin a levels in patients with c _ inh deficiency. materials and methods: people with c _ inh and people without any illnesses were taken into the study. fetuin a was studied using an el _ isa kit from raybio (usa). ferrous ion oxidation-xylenol orange test was used to find looh serum levels. sh (free thiol groups) test was studied with regards to ellmans method modified by hu. _ ibm spss . was used for statistical results. results: in assessments made between the healthy and the illness groups, there was significant differences in the levels of fetuin (p = . ), looh (p = . ) and sh (p = . ). when pearson correlation analysis was performed, we detected a significant positive correlation between fetuin a and looh levels (r: + . ) discussion and conclusion: in these patients, lipids is secreted from the adipose tissue. in response, anti-atherosclerotic fetuin a levels were risen. patients also possessed increased lipid peroxidation, this increase shows positive correlation with fetuin a levels. in conclusion, we identified that sh with antioxidant properties have increased levels. aim: high fructose corn syrups are found in soft drinks, juice beverages, breakfast cereals, most of the processed foods. it has been shown that high dose of fructose intake may lead to a reduction in the number of hepatocytes, deterioration of liver function, increasing reactive oxygen species and liver steatosis. the aim of this study was to explore whether caffeic acid phenethyl ester (cape) has any potential protective effect on high fructose diet-induced fatty liver model. materials and method: totally fifty rats were divided into five groups. control group, % fructose administered group, cape group, % fructose + cape administered group and ethanol group. after weeks, liver oxidant and antioxidant status, and blood tnf alpha, il- , and il- , tissue nfkb levels were quantified. protein levels were investigated against, nfkb and p-nfkb antibodies and normalized and analyzed against b-actin antibody by western blotting. results: serum tnf-alpha, il- , il- levels were found to be increased in fructose group compared with the control group (p < . ). in liver tissue of % fructose administered group, mda, protein carbonyls and no levels were higher than control group. however sod activity did not show any difference among the groups. in the fructose administered group, caspase showed liver apoptosis and was considered as positive. acquired data revealed that nfkb protein level was decreased in the presence of cape while increment in nfkb protein level was observed in the fructose administered group compared with control group. in case of pnfkb antibody, increment observed in fructose only and both cape and fructose administered groups, respectively. in cape only administered group, there was a decrement in the level of pnfkb protein. conclusion: depending on further analysis, experimental findings are expected to implicate the role of cape as a protective agent on high fructose diet-induced fatty liver model in relation of inos, nfkb and p-nfkb pathways. the investigating association of hepcidin levels with iron homeostasis and inflammation variables in pregnant women with intrauterine growth restriction a. g. agg€ ul , n. uzun , e. c ß inar tanriverdi , h. € un agri ibrahim cecen university, agri, turkey, nenehatun maternity hospital, erzurum, turkey this study was designed to investigate hepcidin levels and their associations with iron homeostasis and inflammation variables in pregnant women with intrauterine growth restriction (iugr). a total of pregnant women were included in this study. pregnant volunteers were divided into two groups ( healthy pregnant women and pregnant women with iugr). serum hepcidin, total free iron, ferritin, transferrin, transferrin receptor and interleukin- (il- ) levels were measured by elisa. also, hemoglobin (hb) and c-reactive protein (crp) levels were determined in serum samples from the healthy pregnant women and the pregnant women with iugr. there were significant differences in hepcidin, ferritin, transferrin receptor, crp and il- levels between healthy pregnant women and pregnant women with iugr. hepcidin, ferritin, crp and il- levels in pregnant women with iugr were significantly higher than healthy pregnant women (p). the mediators of systemic inflammation in lipopolysaccharide-induced neonatal sepsis rat model sepsis is an excessive inflammatory response that causes shock, multi-organ failure and high mortality. foreign bacterias and lipopolysaccharides lead to stimulation of endothelial cells to produce biologically active mediators such as proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, cell adhesion molecules, and growth factors. then these mediators could be act on targets, which were involved in the initiation of systemic inflammation in neonatal sepsis. our aim was to indicate a protective role of thalidomide and etanercept, which have anti-tnf-a activity on systemic inflammatory response in lipopolysaccharide (lps)-induced neonatal sepsis rat samples. thirty -day-old wistar rats were randomly divided into five groups: a control group that received normal saline, a sepsis group that received lps, thalidomide, etanercept and both thalidomide and etanercept treatment group that were administered with therapeutic agents hrs after lps injection. the rats were sacrificed at hrs after lps or normal saline injection (n = ). hepatic tissue tnf-a, il- , icam- and pdgf levels were determined by enzyme-linked immuno sorbent assay (elisa) method in all groups. in sepsis group, tissue tnf-a, il- , icam- and pdgf levels were statistically significantly higher than in controls (p < . ). at same time, pretreatment with both thalidomide and etanercept were found statistically dramatically decreases the levels of tnf-a, il- , and pdgf when compared to sepsis group (p < . ). there were no significant differences in the icam- levels between the all treatment groups and the sepsis group. higher liver tissue tnf-a, il- , icam- and pdgf levels are associated with severe bacterial infection. these proinflammatory cytokines and angiogenic factors may be important in the endothelial dysregulation seen in sepsis. therapeutic agents used in the present study can be help to avoid devastating effects of neonatal sepsis. n-stearoylethanolamine (nse)is saturated minor compound of natural origin that represents the large family of signaling lipids n-acylethanolamines, which belong to endocannabinoid system. considering the crosstalk between obesity-induced inflammatory response and its key role in synaptic dysfunction and neurodegeneration, our current study aimed to investigate the biological effect of nse on brain tissue under high fat diet-induced insulin resistance. previously we found that nse administration to insulin resistant rats caused normalization of liver and pancreas lipid composition followed by the improvement of glucose tolerance and insulin sensitivity (decline in serum insulin level and homa-ir value). moreover, this effect of nse correlated with inhibition of nf-kb translocation into the nucleus of peritoneal macrophages and decreased pool of serum tnfa level in obesity-induced insulin resistant rats. further experiments showed that fat overload triggered significant reduction in the level of main phospholipids (phosphatidylethanolamine, phosphatidylcholine and sphingomyelin), while there were no changes in cholesterol content. nse at a dose of mg/kg during weeks of administration to insulin resistant rats showed a tendency to restore the phospholipid level that was accompanied by increased neural cell survival ( %) compared to rats without treatment ( %). neuroinflammation accompanied by intensive reactive oxygen species (ros) production impairs neurotransmission in a wide range of neurodegenerative pathologies. flow cytometry is used for quantitative analysis of global dna methylation, but fluorescence microscopy is mostly preferred to qualitatively reveal intranuclear localisation of dna methylation and its copattern with other markers. both methods use a similar immunostaining protocol. in this study, we aimed to compare these methods concerning the detection of the global amount of dna methylation. for this, mouse embryonic fibroblasts were cultured either with or without phenol red and then stained for dna methylation or positive controls (histone, betaactin, phosphoakt) by specific antibodies, or nonspecific control antibodies. some cells were incubated with trypan blue before or after the addition of antibodies. fluorescence intensities were measured by the green fluorescence channel ( / nm). autofluorescence spectrum of cells was analysed, and fluorescence channel used for dna methylation detection was changed to red ( nm lp). a poor discrimination between signal and noise was detected due to cellular autofluorescence interfering with specific detection of dna methylation by flow cytometry but not by microscopy. it was also the case for the other markers examined. conventional advances to reduce autofluorescence such using phenol red free culture media or trypan blue quenching were not effective, but using the red channel regarding autofluorescence spectra allows detecting specific staining of dna methylation by flow cytometry. but, green channel did work well for microscopy analysis. findings show that flow cytometry detection of dna methylation requires much attention to quench cellular autofluorescence compared to detection by fluorescence microscopy. one reason could be that flow cytometry detects all cellular content, but manual image-based analysis can exclude cytosolic components. these results suggest the usability of flow cytometry and microscopy as complimentary methods for dna methylation detection, but optimisation to reduce autofluorescence is crucial for flow cytometry. objectives: lung cancers are divided in two main groups as small cell lung cancer (sclc) and non-small cell lung cancer (nsclc) . docetaxel (dtx) and cisplatine are chemotherapeutic that has an anti-tumor activity against various solid tumors. the growing resistance against dtx and cisplatine (cis) still continues to be the biggest obstacle for the treatment success of nsclc patients. deguelin (deg.) is a natural plant derivative and has an encouraging activity against a lot of human cancers. the comparison of the treatment activity of the separate and combined usage of deg., which is a potential chemotherapeutic agent, and dtx, cis which are used in standard treatment, is aimed in this study. material-method: the ic doses of dtx, cis and deg. on the a and h nsclccell lines were determined via the cell vitality tests in our study. the active concentrations determined were applied to nsclc cell lines as deg., dtx, cis and their combinations. the impacts of the medicine are studied by applying flow cytometric analyzes (apoptosis, cell cycle), glutathione and reducted glutathione, colony formation, migration and angiogenesis analyzes on the treated cells and measuring the oxidative stress index (osi). statistical analyse program, rstudio (v. . . ) and the r-script language were used to examine the differences between the agents. the states in which the pvalue was lower than . were accepted as statistically meaningful. results: we found that deg. has pro-apoptotic, anti-migratory and cytotoxic potential on lung cancer cells. deg. amplified cis and dtx-related anti-cancer efficacy (increased apoptotic cell content and cytotoxicity, reduced migration). also, deguelin pretreatment sensitized the cells dtx-treatment (reduced ic values). these effects were remarkable in p -mutant cells. conclusion: deguelin, solely, has anti-cancer potential on nsclccells. both deguelin pre-treatment and combinantion with standart chemotherapeutics result in enhanced anticancer efficacy. the % of the lung cancers are non-small cell lung cancers (nsclc). despite docetaxel (dtx) and cisplatine (cddp) are agents used in the standard treatments of these patients and the recent improvements in the treatments, the response and remission rates observed on the patients are relatively nominal. selenium (se) is an essential diet component and is introduced to have a preventive impact on different levels of cancer. the aim of our study is to investigate the impacts of selenium addition on anticancer feature and tumor prevention before or/and during nsclc standard treatment. the ic doses of dtx, cddp and selenium on the a and h (p mutant) nsclc cell lines were determined via the cell vitality tests in our study. the active concentrations determined and the stipulated available concentrations were applied to cell lines as dtx, cddp, se combinations. the impacts were compared by applying flow cytometric analyzes (apoptosis, cell cycle), glutathione and reducted glutathione, western blot analyzes on the treated cells and measuring the oxidative stress index (osi) and thioredoksin reductase activity. selenium pre-treatments reduced dtx-related ic concentrations at lower doses in both nsclc cells. however, cddprelated ic concentrations reduced dose-dependent manner. selenium supplementation also altered cell-cycle charactheristics at several concentrations and combination regimens. the remarkably higher osi values were observed after dtx treatment and osi levels were found to be lower in selenium pre-treated nsclc cells. selenium sensitizes nsclc cells to dtx treatment at lower concentrations. however, this effect is obtained dose-dependent fashion for cddp regimen. breast cancer is the most common female malignancy worldwide. human epidermal growth factor receptor (her ) is overexpressed in % of breast cancers in association with aggressive phenotypes. the prognosis of metastatic breast cancer remains poor in spite of advances in therapy. as such, her has long been studied as a potential target for anticancer drugs. the modulation of intracellular signaling pathways leads to altered cell metabolism that triggers tumorigenesis and adapts cells to cancer cell metabolism. this characteristic hallmark of cancer metabolism is known as warburg effect meaning energy production via enhanced glycolysis. despite of several studies in breast cancer metabolism, little detail exists on the link between her overexpression and warburg effect. we have committed examining the nature of aerobic glycolysis in her overexpression. in breast cancer cell line mcf , her overexpression (mcf-her ) results in mitochondrial dysfunction with low mitochondrial membrane potential (Δᴪm) and ros accumulation. intracellular iron levels are also higher in mcf -her cells than vector control (mcf -vec). additionally, mcf -her cells show enhanced levels of atp and lactate in association with increase in glucose levels. we have found that complex i activity increases in mcf -her and decreases in knockdown of her in hcc cells that is her positive breast tumor cell line. based on these results, we conclude that there is a link between her overexpression and metabolic indicators of warburg effect. expression and methylation analysis revealed microrna genes deregulated by methylation and new potential target genes of mir- and mir- - p in breast cancer micrornas (mirnas) and methylation of mirna genes play a great role in epigenetic deregulation in malignant tumors. the aim of our study was to assess the contribution of methylation to expression level alterations of mirna genes and to search for novel potential targets of these mirnas. to analyze alterations in expression we used qpcr technique with references (rnu , rnu ) and paired (tumor/normal) breast cancer (bc) samples. for methylation analysis a methylation specific pcr and the same set of bc samples were used. significant downregulation was shown for mir- b- p, - - p, - - p, - a- p, - b- p, - - p, - - p, and - - p (p ≤ . , fisher's exact test) in bc. we observed mirna genes to be hypermethylated and mir- hypomethylated. hypermethylation for of these mirna genes was shown for the first time: mir- , - , and - ( - % of bc cases). a significant correlation between methylation and expression alterations was revealed for mirnas with downregulation: mir- b- p, - - p, - - p, - a- p, and - b- p (spearman's correlation coefficient (rs) was in the range À . to À . , p ≤ . ), and for mirnas with both scene (down-and upregulation) as well: mir- a- p, - a, and - (rs = À . to À . , p ≤ . ). comparative analysis of the data on expression alterations of mirna genes and protein-coding genes, which were predicted as targets by mirwalk . , revealed the negative correlation between expression levels for some potential mirna-mrna interaction pairs. for example, for pairs mir- /rhoa, mir- /rassf (a), mir- - p/dapk (rs = À to À . , p ≤ . ). thus, both mirnas and methylation affect regulatory networks in bc. novel potential mirna-mrna interaction pairs could be useful in the development of bc therapy approach. this work was financially supported by grant - - from the russian science foundation. the authors thank the n.n. blokhin cancer research center for tissue samples. clear cell renal cell cancer (ccrcc) with metastases has pour prognosis: -year survival is about %. micrornas (mirnas) and methylation of mirna genes play a great role in epigenetic deregulation in malignant tumors. the aim of our study was to find out mirnas which methylation contributed to ccrcc progression, including metastasis, and to reveal potential target genes of these mirnas. to analyze methylation status, we used a methylation specific pcr as a method and a representative set of paired (tumor/ normal) ccrcc samples. we also used post-mortal renal tissues from individuals without cancer history as additional control. for expression analysis we used qpcr method and paired ccrcc samples. we observed mirna genes (mir- a- /- /- , - - , - - , - b/c, - - , - a, - ) to be hypermethylated, (p ≤ . , fisher's exact test), mirna genes to be hypomethylated and mir- a with both scene (hyper-and hypomethylation was detected). methylation of mirna genes (mir- a- /- , - b/c, - - , - , - a, - a) correlated with advanced stage and/or tumor size and/or dedifferentiation. hypermethylation of mir- - , mir- a, and mir- significantly correlated with metastasis presence (p < . , fisher's exact test). besides, preliminary data revealed the positive correlation between hypermethylation of mir- - and up-regulation of p protein-coding genes: rarb( ), rhoa, nkiras , and chl , which were predicted as targets by mirwalk . (spearman's correlation coefficients (r s ) was in the range . - . , p ≤ . ). in conclusion, novel supposed interactions of mir- - with target genes could be useful as missing chains in signaling pathways. tests for hypermethylation of mir- - , mir- a, and mir- could be suggested as markers of metastasis and pour prognosis of ccrcc. because of difficulty in diagnosis and treatment hc is a clinical problem: early symptoms of hc are often non-specific and surgical resection is the only curative treatment for hc. it is well known that epigenetic alterations are linked to cancer development. the purpose of this study was to determine potential mechanisms of epigenetic regulation of genes related to energy metabolism in hc. we have performed bioinformatics analysis of the cancer genome atlas (tcga) project rna-seq data with crosshub software and found a number of genes involved in glycolysis and differentially expressed in cholangiocarcinoma. qpcr analysis revealed significantly decreased expression of pgm and eno genes in a majority of hc samples which were known as up-regulated in other human cancers according to the literature date. on the basis of tcga methylation dataset ( k illumina microarrays) we supposed that cpg methylation of pgm and eno promoters may play a role in their inactivation. using bisulfite sequencing study we identified several regions within the gene promoters (pgm :~ bp and bp upstream tss; eno :~ bp downstream tss) that are frequently methylated in hc samples (up to %, / ) with down-regulated pgm and eno expression. thus, we demonstrated frequent and significant pgm and eno down-regulation associated with hypermethylation of the specific regions within the gene promoters in hc. the pattern of pgm and eno gene promoter methylation suggests a possibility of ones to be used for the hc diagnosis and development new strategies for therapy. this work was financially supported by grant mК- . . from the president of the russian federation. the work was performed using the equipment of eimb ras 'genome' center. introduction: the development of stomach cancer is a multifactorial and complex process and includes multiple epigenetic, genetic alterations and dietary/non-dietary factors. iodine as an antioxidant may play a protective role against gastric cancer. the aim of this study was to investigate the changes in iodine level in rat with stomach cancer induced by n-methyl-n -nitro-n-nitrosoguanidine (mnng). materials and methods: a total of sprague dawley rats were randomly divided into six groups. rats were administered with mnng ( lg/ml) by oral gavage on days , and to initiate stomach cancer. during the experiment, rats died and those surviving were sacrificed in the rd, th, th, th and th months of the experimental period (group i, ii, iii, iv, v, respectively). the control group (group vi) contains rat which are given only food and water for months. the stomach tissue was examined histopathologically. and also, iodine levels in stomach tissue was determined using the foss method. results: a decrease in iodine level was determined in stomach cancer tissue of rats in group i-v compared with normal healthy stomach tissue in group vi. when the control (group vi) iodine level was taken as % baseline, the % iodine levels of all groups were determined as follows . , . , . , . and . for groups i-v, respectively. the pathological diagnosis of gastric cancer was adenocarcinoma. discussion and conclusion: the iodine levels of group i were higher than those of group ii (p < . ) and of groups iii, iv and v (p < . ) and also were lower than in the control group (p < . ). iodine deficiency as one of the risk factors of stomach cancer strongly supports the necessity for the application of effective iodine prophylaxis in the areas with iodine deficiency. iodine supplementation might be useful in stomach cancer therapy and therefore, further research is warranted. this study was supported by ataturk university (project number: / ). effect of water extract of turkish propolis on mitochondrial membrane potential in human laryngeal epidermoid carcinoma cell lines propolis is the generic name for the resinous substance collected by honeybees from the buds of various plant sources and it is used by bees to seal holes in their honeycombs, smooth out the internal walls, and protect the entrance of bee hive against intruders. the aim of this study is to investigate what kind of changes the turkish propolis cause on mitochondrial membrane potential (mmp) of human laryngeal epidermoid cell lines (hep- ), by considering its anticancer features. water extract of turkish propolis (wep, - mg/ml) and ethanolic extract of turkish propolis (eep, . - mg/ml) were prepared and incubated with hep- cell lines ( , , and h). mmp was investigated with a flourometric method by using dioc ( , -dihexyloxacarbocyanine iodide). the most significant mmp decrease was seen on rd hour. both wep and eep extracts at all concentrations decrease mmp according to that of control. the recent studies have shown that propolis extracts have induced apoptotic cell death by decreasing mitochondrial membrane potential in various cancer cells. it was concluded that both wep and eep decreased mitochondrial membrane potentials on hep- cell series according to control ( concentration) depending concentration and time. there are numerous transcription factors involved in the regulation of the inducible gene expression. thus, transcription of proinflammatory genes, steroid hormone receptors, etc. is controlled by the group of factors triggering gene expression which includes nf-kb. another group of factors is involved in the formation of the structure of the chromatin of the inducible genes regulatory regions, providing competence for gene expression. it is expected that this group of factors includes the proteins of nf (nuclear factor ) family. there are few data suggesting that the nf factors maintain potentially active state of the chromatin of the hormone-dependent gene promoter regions. these findings initiated studies of the correlation between presence of the nf transcription factors on the chromatin of a gene regulatory region and the functional state of the gene in vivo. as a model we chose the rat tryptophan dioxygenase (tdo) gene which is expressed tissue-specifically in the liver under control of glucocorticoid hormones. three constitutive dnase i-hypersensitive regions are identified in the regulatory region of this gene. to conduct the study we used rat liver and kidney. the basic methods were electrophoretic mobility shift assay (emsa), immunoblotting assay and chromatin immunoprecipitation combined with real-time pcr (chip-qpcr). using emsa we found that the proteins of nf family interact with the constitutive dnase i-hypersensitive regions in vitro. immunoblotting assay of the protein fraction from rat liver used in emsa experiments showed the presence of the nf -b isoform. chip-qpcr revealed statistically significant differences in the level of the factor nf enrichment of the tdo gene regulatory region between the rat liver and kidneys at p < . . these data suggest the involvement of the nf proteins in the formation of the chromatin structure of the rat tdo gene promoter region. reciprocal ( ; ) translocation and bcr-abl fusion protein that is responsible for developing leukemia are observed in more than % of chronic myeloid leukemia (cml) cases. epigallocathecin- -gallate (egcg) is a green-tea flavonoid and egcg is proposed as a natural anti-cancer agent. histone modifications which contain histone deacetylases (hdac) and histone acetyltransferases (hat) are parts of epigenetic regulations. hdacs play important roles in different human malignancies including leukemia via activation of abnormal signaling pathways. hdac inhibitors have become remarkable therapeutic molecules for malignancies. the aim of this study is to determine the expression changes of leukemia-related hdacs with the treatment of egcg in k- cells. the cytotoxic effect of egcg on k- cells was determined in time and dose dependent manner by wst- analysis. total rna was isolated from k- cells. reverse transcription procedure was performed for cdna synthesis and gene expressions were detected by rt-qpcr. the expression level of hdac , hdac , hdac gene that supports cell proliferation was down-regulated . , . , . folds in k- cells treated with ic dose of egcg, according to control, respectively. our current findings suggest that is a polyphenol egcg may be a hopeful agent in treatment of cml by hdac inhibitory effect. chronic lymphocytic leukemia (cll) is a disorder of morphologically mature but immunologically less mature lymphocytes and is manifested by progressive accumulation of these cells in the blood, bone marrow, and lymphatic tissues. carbonic anhydrase (ca) is a metalloenzyme which is widely distributed in the living world, and it is essential for the regulation of acid-base balance. anti-ca antibodies have been reported in many disorders, such as systemic lupus erythematosus, sj€ ogren's syndrome, rheumatoid arthritis, endometriosis, idiopathic chronic pancreatitis, type diabetes and graves' disease. the goal of this study was to investigate carbonic anhydrase i and ii (ca i and ii) autoantibodies in cll. patients with cll and healthy controls were included in the study and ca i and ii autoantibody levels were investigated by elisa. the ca i autoantibody levels of cll group were significantly higher than the healthy group (p = . ) while there was no statistical difference between serum ca ii autoantibody levels of the groups (p = . ). we found a significant positive correlation between hemoglobin and hemotocrit levels in patients with cll (r = . , p = . ). cut-off value of . absu for anti-ca i was associated with % sensitivity and % specificity and a cut-off value of . absu for anti-ca ii was associated with % sensitivity and % specificity for predicting cll. the ca i autoantibody levels in patients with cll were found higher compared to control group and the results suggest that ca i autoantibody may be involved in the pathogenesis of cll. genetic and epigenetic aberrations can lead to the activation of oncogenes and inactivation of tumor-suppressor genes (tsgs) followed by the development of malignant tumors. in the present work we evaluated the frequency of alterations of cpg island methylation and dna copy number in paired (tumor/normal) breast cancer (bc) samples using comparative dna hybridization on noti-microarrays and original niman software. the microarrays contained noti-clones associated with chromosome genes. expression alterations were assessed with the use of qpcr technique, ddct method and original atg software. in total, noti-sites with high ( - % of cases) hypermethylation/deletion (hm/d) frequency were revealed in bc. among genes associated with these sites, there are both known tsgs and tsg-candidates (aldh l , vhl, ctdspl, etc.) as well as genes, which involvement in breast oncogenesis was shown for the first time (lrrn , foxp , prickle , etc.). noti-microarray data were verified selectively using bisulfite sequencing for vhl, nkiras , itga , lrrc b, and ctdspl genes. several genes with high hm/d frequency (aldh l , ephb , itga , and ropn ) were tested for expression alterations using qpcr. frequent ( - % of cases) and significant (> -fold) down-regulation was shown for all of them in bc. the most significant expression loss was observed for aldh l geneon the average -fold mrna level decrease in % of samples. the involvement of the majority of genes with high hm/d frequency in breast oncogenesis was shown for the first time. these genes are novel tsg-candidates in bc. functional hypermethylation associated with expression loss was shown for aldh l , ephb , itga , and ropn genes thereby strengthening the speculation on tumor suppressor abilities of these genes. methylation and expression analyses of genes, that were revealed by noti-microarrays, were financially supported by grant - - from the russian science foundation. functional hypermethylation of a number of chromosome genes was revealed in colon cancer using noti-microarrays cancer is a disease of genome caused by genetic and epigenetic aberrations. noti-microarrays, that were developed by prof. e.r. zabarovsky, is a unique tool that allows us to simultaneously detect hypermethylation of cpg islands and dna deletionstwo major reasons of inactivation of tumor suppressor genes (tsgs). in the present work, the frequency of chromosome genetic and epigenetic alterations in colon cancer (cc) was evaluated. noti-microarrays, that contained noti-clones associated with chromosome genes, were used for comparative (tumor/normal) hybridization of dna from paired cc samples. data analysis was performed using original niman software. expression alterations were evaluated using qpcr technique and original atg software. in total, noti-sites with % and above hypermethylation/ deletion (hm/d) frequency were revealed in cc. among genes associated with these sites, there are several known tsgs and tsg-candidates (for example, vhl, ctdspl, and itga ), but for the majority of genes, involvement in colon oncogenesis was shown for the first time (for example, lrrn , nbeal , and ube e ). the highest hm/d frequency was observed for ankrd , nkiras /rpl , itga , cmtm , and gor-asp /ttc a genes - - %. expression alterations were evaluated for genes with high hm/d frequency (plcl , prickle , and ppp r a) and significant mrna level decrease (> -fold) associated with hypermethylation was shown for all of them in the majority of samples. a number of novel potential tsg-candidates was revealed in cc. functional hypermethylation associated with expression decrease was shown for plcl , prickle , and ppp r a genes thereby enhancing the suggestion on tumor suppressor function of these genes. this work was financially supported by in many countries, radon is the second leading cause of lung cancer, which accounts from % to % of cases. it is obvious that the population of all the developed and industrial countries in the world spend most f their time, almost %. therefore it is necessary to explore the obtained radiation dose, because of the presence of radon in a room due to the radon emanation from the soil and exhalation from a variety of building materials. the developed countries solve this problem of radon pollution as well as create a special monitoring services. the paper presents some data of genes molecular-genetic analysis from patients with lung cancer who live in almaty located in a foothill area of tectonic faults. the object of research were blood samples obtained from patients diagnosed with lung cancer who are receiving a treatment at the almaty oncology center and living in the city of almaty, where the level of radon activity exceeds the norm approved by the international commission on radiation safety. as a control group relatively people living in the plains, characterized by a lower radon emanation have been considered. to determine mutations in the genes polymerase chain reaction with a subsequent analysis of restriction fragment length polymorphism has been conducted. the pcr products were subjected to hydrolysis by bstni restriction endonucleases haeiii, ras i. disturbances in the genes under consideration to variour types of cancer development. the analysis showed that examinees do not have mutations in the kras gene codons - , which corresponds to a control group consisting of people living in the city of balkhash. on the whole, molecular genetic studies have shown that examined patients do not have mutations in the kras gene. one mutation was been found in the egfr gene. aim: polyps are abnormal growths of tissue that can be found in gastro intestinal system. they are most often found in the colon and rectum. most polyps are noncancerous (benign) however, because of abnormal cell growth, they can eventually become cancerous. the aim of this study is to determine the concentrations of trace element contents in colon and rectum polyp tissues and whether there is any relationship between polyp tissue element levels and the disease. material and method: the present study was conducted on total of individuals including patients and healthy subjects. while receiving normal intestinal tissue from healthy control group; from the patient group both normal tissue and polyp samples were taken during colonoscopy procedure. the concentrations of the elements (al, cr, mn, fe, co, ni, cu, zn, as, se, ag, cd, hg and pb) were determined with induced coupled plasma-mass spectrometer. results: the mean concentrations of cr, mn, ni, se and ag in colorectal polyp tissues of patients were significantly higher than in colorectal tissues of control subjects (p is less than . ). on the other hand the mean concentration of cd and pb in colorectal polyp tissues of patients were significantly lower than in control colorectal tissues of control subjects (p is less than . ). there was no any significant difference between the groups in terms of concentrations of al, fe, co, zn, as and hg (p is more than . ). conclusion: the differences found in some elements between polyps and a control tissues may provide an indication about the role of trace elements in the early stage (polyps) in the colon carcinogenic process and encourages further studies to confirm the involvement of such elements in neoplastic processes. the use of herbal medicines is steadily growing, with approximately % of the population use herbs to treat various illnesses in the western world. vitex agnus-castus has been used since ancient times as a remedy. the aim of this study was to investigate the in vitro anticancer activities of vitexagnus-castus oil. for this purpose, the cytotoxicity of vitexagnus-castus oil in sh-sy y cells was investigated by crystal violet staining. ec was found to be . %(w/w) vitexagnus-castus oil for this cell line. this dose was applied to the cell for h, and the cells were harvested for further studies. vitex agnus-castus oil treatment increased bax and p mrna levels. on the other hand, bcl- , bcl l , erk- , jnk, caspase and mrna expression levels were reduced significantly withvitexagnus-castus oil treatment while p and pten remained unchanged. these results indicate that another effector caspase such as caspase or may be involved apoptosis process which remains to be elucidated. moreover, mapk pathways, p and erk, may be involved in vitexagnus-castus oil induced apoptosis in sh-sy y cells. these initial observations suggest that this agent might not be useful in treating cancers. further detailed studies should be carried out to elucidate the exact mechanism of vitexagnus-castus oil in neuroblastoma cell lines. melanoma is a skin cancer with a melanocyte origin that can occur in any part of the body that contain melanocytes. while melanoma is less common than other skin cancers, it causes the majority of deaths related to skin cancer. several gene expression databases have shown that interferon regulatory factor (irf ) is upregulated in melanomas, and genome wide association studies linked variation at irf locus with skin cancers. irf was first identified to have roles in lymphocyte development and function. studies have identified a 'non-oncogene addiction' of malignant cells to irf in various hematopoietic cancer types. the aim of this study is to investigate the role of irf in melanoma cell lines. lentiviral vectors were used to reduce irf levels in melanoma cell lines. a gfp competition assay was performed to study the competitive fitness of melanoma cells with irf knockdown (gfp positive cells) over melanoma cells with normal irf levels (gfp negative cells). cell cycle profiles were investigated in melanoma cells with irf knockdown by propidium iodide staining. migration potential was assessed as well by wound healing assay. our preliminary data showed a decreased competitive fitness for cells with decreased irf levels. cell cycle profiling showed increased g /g and decreased g /m levels in irf knockdown cells compared to controls. wound healing assay results showed no difference between controls for cells with reduced irf levels. taken together, these results indicate that irf knockdown affects the melanoma cell lines' survival and cell cycle profile, suggesting a non-oncogene addiction of melanomas to irf . these observations are largely similar to previous observations in hematopoietic cancers. unravelling the role of irf in melanoma will increase our knowledge about melanoma development and progression and thereby may lead to targeted therapy in melanoma treatment. humans are exposed to various chemicals having beneficial or toxic effects at a time in their daily lives. , -dimethylbenz[a] anthracene (dmba) is a carcinogenic compound produced during the incomplete combustion of carbon-containing compounds. endosulfan is an organochlorine pesticide used against insects on food. morin is an antioxidant, antiinflammatory and chemoprotective flavonoid. this study is aimed to determine the effect of morin in the presence of dmba and endosulfan. for this purpose, adult wistar male rats weighing - g were randomly selected and divided into eight groups. mg/kg body weight (b.wt.) morin and . mg/kg b.wt. endosulfan were given to morin and endosulfan treated groups three times in a week. the rats in dmba treated groups were gavaged with . mg/kg b.wt. dmba three times during the administration period ( days). cytochrome p a (cyp a) associated -ethoxyresorufin o-deethylase (erod) and glutathione s-transferase (gst) activities were measured in rat liver cytosols and microsomes. in addition, liver tissues were evaluated by histopathological analysis. erod activities of control, morin, endosulfan, dmba, morin+endosulfan, morin+dmba, dmba+endosulfan and morin+dmba+endosulfan groups were ae , ae , ae , ae , ae , ae , ae and ae pmol/min/mg protein, respectively. all treatments increased erod activities. gst activities of these groups were ae , ae , ae , ae , ae , ae , ae and ae nmol/min/mg protein, respectively. histopathological studies showed that endosulfan and dmba induced inflammation in the liver tissues and morin reduced their effects. in conclusion, morin treatment increased the metabolism of dmba and endosulfan by inducing cyp a activity. gst activities of morin+dmba+endosulfan group were not significantly different from those of dmba group. histopathological studies indicated that morin administration reduced the toxic effect of endosulfan and dmba in the liver cells. hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) is the sixth most common cancer and third most frequent cause of cancer-related death worldwide. molecular mechanisms of hepatocarcinogenesis is still unclear. the impairment of epigenetic mechanisms is implicated in the development of multiple cancers, including hcc. transforming growth factor-beta has been shown to play both tumorsuppressive and tumor promoting roles. transforming growth factor-beta signaling pathway involves activation of smad and smad by the type i receptor and formation of smad / / heteromeric complexes that enter the nucleus to regulate transcription. -deazaneplanocin a is an inhibitor of the histone methyltransferase ezh . we aimed to reveal the effect of -deazaneplanocin a on transforming growth factor-beta /smad pathway in hepg cell line. hepg , a human liver cancer cell line cultured in dulbecco's minimal essential medium supplemented with % fbs. the cells were seeded the day before -deazaneplanocin a administration and then the cells were treated with lm -deazaneplanocin a for days. expression levels of genes were analyzed by roche lightcyclerÒ . gapdh was used as housekeeping gene. apoptosis assay was performed by the muse annexin v and dead cell assay kit. the unpaired t-test was used to compare variables and p < . was accepted as statistically significant. -deazaneplanocin treatment was significantly reduced transforming growth factor-beta, smads - in hepg cells (p < . ). we also found that -deazaneplanocin induces apoptosis in treated cell line (p < . ). as a result, -deazaneplanocin a may take place in treatment of hepatocellular cancer by its inhibitory effect on transforming growth factor-beta /smad pathway and inducing apoptosis in liver cancer cells. brefeldin a (bfa) is a lactone antibiotic first isolated from the fungus eupenicillium brefeldianium. bfa inhibits the transport of secreted proteins from endoplasmic reticulum (er) to golgi apparatus, leading to disruption of golgi function, accumulation of unfolded and not fully incompletely processed proteins in er. bfa also inhibits cell proliferation, phosphorylation and migration of cancer cells. therefore in this study, we investigated the effects of bfa on breast cancer cell proliferation of various phenotypes. in we observed that bfa inhibited the proliferation of all three phenotypes of breast cancer cells, but the effects of bfa were seen at different times and doses. according to time and dose, bfa was observed more effective to mcf- compared to other cell lines. physiological, pathological and physical factors. moreover, nlr may represent the two opposing inflammatory and immune pathways that exist together in cancer patients. we aimed to investigate nlr in breast cancer in our population. methods: using data retrieved from the medical records, women diagnosed primary breast cancer met our study inclusion criteria as they had a complete blood count with leukocyte differential performed before any anti-cancer therapy. and women with benign mammary neoplasm/disease, followed up in the outpatient clinics of mammary disease and confirmed with sonographical/histopathological examination, made up our controls. exclusion criteria included laboratory evidence of white blood cells count (wbc) > . /l. differential leukocyte counts were obtained by bc (mindray medical international ltd., china), we examined wbc, neutrophil, lymphocyte, platelet counts, and hematocrite, nlr, mean platelet volume values. results: although there is lack of evaluation of tumor-associated neutrophils and lymphocytes, higher nlr median values and lower lymphocyte mean counts (lymphopenia) were shown in women with breast cancer (p < . ). there was a weak negative correlation in breast cancer between nlr values and platelet counts (r s = À . ; p = . ). holmboe] is distributed throughout southern mediterranean europe from spain to the eastern mediterranean on anatolian peninsula of turkey. present study was designed to investigate the in vitro anti-cancer activities of turkish black pine essential oil. the essential oil was extracted by steam-hydrodistillation and its chemical composition analyzed by gc-ms. the major components of the essential oil were a-pinene, b-pinene and trans-b-caryophyllene, respectively. the crystal violet staining method was used to investigate the cytotoxicity of essential oil in sh-sy y cells. ec was found to be . % (w/w) essential oil for sh-sy y cells. neuroblastoma cells were incubated at °c for h. after h, cells were harvested for further studies. bax and p mrna levels were significantly elevated in essential oiltreated cells. on the other hand, bcl- , bcl l , casp- , casp- , erk- and jnk expression were significantly downregulated. unlike these proteins, p and pten mrnas were not changed. in this study, apoptosis was enhanced by turkish black pine essential oil treatment which was activated by the involvement of another effector caspase subfamily, like casp- and casp- . additionally, erk and p mapks may be associated with upregulation of the level of bax. based on these results, we suggest that p. nigra subsp. pallasiana essential oil might not be well-suited in cancer treatment. however, further detailed research is necessary to establish the exact role of p. nigra subsp. pallasiana essential oil in sh-sy y cells. p- . . - the protective effect of newly derivatized compound naringenin-oxime and relative to naringenin against cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity and genotoxicity in rat background: the aim of this study was to evaluate the possible protective effect potentials of newly derivatized compound naringenin-oxime (ng-ox) relative to efficacy of free naringenin (ng) on cisplatin (cis) induced nephrotoxicity and genotoxiticity in rat. methods: totally, fifty six male wistar albino rats were equally divided into eight groups as follows: control; cis treatment ( mg/kg b.w., i.p.), ng and ng-ox ( mg/kg b.w., i.p daily for days) alone treatment; cis + ng ( or mg/kg b.w., i.p daily for days) and cis+ng-ox ( or mg/kg b.w., i.p daily for days) combination treatment. at the end of the study total antioxidant capacity (tac) levels, total oxidant status (tos), lipid peroxidation (lpo), total thiol, catalase (cat) were studied in homogenate kidney. peripheral lymphocyte cell dna damage was investigated with comet assay results: the results suggest that cis induces oxidative stress resulting in increased tos and lpo reduction thiol, tac and cat in kidney and increased peripheral lymphocyte cell dna damage. the treatment with naringenin and naringenin oxime alone or with cis treatment showed a protective effect against the toxic influence of cp on peroxidation of the membrane lipids and an altering of the total thiol status in the kidney of rats. from our results we conclude that naringenin and naringenin oxime functions as a potent antioxidant and suggest that it can control cp-induced nephrotoxicity and genototoxicity and ng-ox was found more protective than that of ng on cisplatin induced toxicity in rats. keywords: naringenin, naringenin-oxime, antinephrotoxic, antigenotoxic, comet assay. introduction: oxidative damage is considered to play a pivotal role in ageing, several degenerative diseases, and carcinogenesis. lung cancer is the most common type of cancer, resulting in over . million deaths each year worldwide. accurate and reliable determination of superoxide radicals has been widely investigated using spectrophotometric, electrochemical, amperometric, polarimetric, piezoelectric technologies. among these methods, electrochemical detection is a most promising approach to achieve accurate, separate and rapid superoxide radicals monitoring with using biosensor system. materials and methods: we used a new technic for detecting superoxide radicals in samples. superoxide dismutase (sod) enzyme immobilized on the surface of gold electrode with the help of gelatin, bovin serum albumin (bsa) and glutaraldehyde (ga) crosslinker. for the biosensor preparing benzoquinone selected as a mediator in working buffer and measurements were carried out at À . v. result: for the optimization studies, effect of the bsa, gelatin, glutaraldehyde, ph, buffer concentration on biosensor response. characterization of the biosensor commitment to the work process and answer reproducibility were evaluated. the analytical characteristic of the biosensor were evaluated by measuring the steady state current response to superoxide radical concentrations. the electrochemical response of the enzyme electrode was linearity gradually leveled of at higher concentration. we found that crosslinking of the sod (e.c. . . . ) with glutaraldehyde could be achieved over a wide range of relative mole ratios in mm phosphate buffer at ph . , glutaraldehyde concentration of % . . discuss and conclusion: in this study, a new technique for developed sod biosensors has been developed, which features effective combination of sod/gelatin/bsa/ga modified electrode, trapping of sod and glutaraldehyde cross-linking. this technique is reliable and cost effective. the effect of astaxanthin on apoptosis and cell arrest in u brain cancer cell line f. s€ og€ utl€ u, b. € ozmen yelken, c ß . kayabasi, a. asik, s. gonca, r. gasimli, s. yilmaz s€ usl€ uer, c ß . biray avci, c. g€ und€ uz department of medical biology, izmir, turkey a brain tumor is a collection, or mass, of abnormal cells in your brain. brain tumors can be cancerous (malignant) or non-cancerous (benign). the brain is one of the least accessible organ that active pharmacological compounds cannot be delivered. the two physiological barriers control and block the entry and exit of endogenous, exogenous compounds. one of these is the bloodbrain barrier and the other is the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier. this structures maintain protection of the brain. when there is a cancer case, it can lead to problem. astaxanthin with potent antioxidant properties can cross blood-brain barrier. in our study, we aimed to evaluate the effects of astaxanthin on apoptosis, cell cycle and also migration in brain cancer cell line. in present study, xcelligence real-time cell analyzer was used so as to determine cytotoxic effect of astaxanthin in u cell line. changes of apoptosis and cell cycle in u cell line exposured to ic dose of astaxanthin ( . nm- lm) are detected with annexin v-egfp apoptosis detection kit and cycle test plus dna reagent kit with facs, respectively. the result of apoptosis and cell cycle test was analysed in flow cytometry. the group to which active substance was not treated was used as controlled. the wound healing assay performed in order to measure migration ability of u cell line to which astaxanthin was treated or not. ic dose of astaxanthin was calculated as . lm at h by xcelligence rtca sp based on time and dose. astaxanthin decreased the migration ability at rate of % in u cells treated by ic dose of astaxanthin. astaxanthin had no apoptotic effect on viability in u cell line and astaxanthin caused an increase of g /m phase arrest ( . fold) and s phase arrest ( . fold). astaxanthin has cytotoxic effects in brain cancer. it determined that astaxantin decreases cell cycle potential at g /m even a little. the effect of anticancer of astaxanthin should be researched further. interferon regulatory factor (irf ) is a critical transcription factor in development and survival of different cell types including immune cells and melanocytes. furthermore, it has been demonstrated that irf expression levels are elevated in several lymphoid cancers, and irf is one of the key transcription factors for the survival of these cancers. several genome-wide association studies identified irf -linked genetic variants to increased melanoma incidence. in addition results from our lab and elsewhere have shown high levels of irf expression in melanoma cell lines. furthermore our preliminary results suggest melanoma cells are sensitive to irf expression levels. however, there are no published studies about irf target genes in melanoma cells. in this study, we are investigating the genome-wide target genes of irf in melanoma cell lines via high-throughput sequencing of immunoprecipitated chromatin (chip-seq). we have identified possible irf binding regions in loci with known key roles in development of melanocytes from neural-crest cells. one such key factor is mitf, which is the master regulator in melanocyte development and also plays critical roles in melanoma. integrating chip-seq and rna-seq data suggests irf as a transcriptional regulator of genes related to progression of melanoma. objectives: aim of this study was to evaluate prognostic importance of selected laboratory parameters (c-reactive protein (crp), gama glutamiltransferaz, ferritin (fer), potassium, chloride, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium, total protein, aspartat aminotransferaz, alanin aminotransferaz (alt), ifn-c, il- , tnf-a) in non-small cell lung cancer (nsclc). material and methods: patients with nsclc who were treated with chemoradiotherapy (crt) prospectively evaluated. all patients were newly diagnosed tumour. heparinized blood samples were taken from the patients before and after the completion of crt. fer analyzed by chemiluminescence method on beckman coulter dxi ; ifn-c, il- , tnf-a were analyzed with elisa kits (boster biological technology) and other biochemical parameters analyzed on abbott architect c . post-crt and pre-crt levels compared with survival. results: the lr cox regression analysis revealed that pre-crt ferritin was significantly associated with survival of patients with nsclc (hazard ratio (hr) = . , p = . , %ci; . - . ). it was also demonstrated by lr cox regression analysis, high levels of pre-crt crp was associated with worse outcome of patients (hr = . , %ci; . - . , p = . ). after crt, mean alt level was determined as . . there was survival difference in nsclc patients with high post-crt alt (hr = . , %ci; . - . , p = . ). conclusions: there exists a clinically relevant relationship between pre-crt fer concentration and the prognosis of survival in patients with nsclc. elevated fer is the result of inflammation rather than body iron overload. ferritin showed negative correlation with survival so it could be a useful biomarker to indicate bad prognosis of the patients with nsclc. additionally, crp which is easy to detect and feasible for the use in the routine clinical practice should be considered in the prognosis of nsclc patients. keywords: ferritin, nonsmall cell lung cancer, survival, c-reactive protein. epigenetic therapy tries to reverse the aberrations followed to the disruption of the balance of the epigenetic signaling ways through the use of natural and synthetic compounds, active on specific targets, such as dna methyltransferases (dnmts). we previously synthesized some benzoxazole and benzamide derivatives which might have anticancer activities on account of their heterocyclic structure. our studies showed that not only these compounds caused selective cytotoxicity towards cancer cells (hela) with little or no toxicity on normal cells (l ) but also were not genotoxic. in this study, we aimed to test whether these compounds changed global demethylation profile of normal and cancer cells. we used methylation specific comet assay (msc assay) to determine global methylation levels of cells. cells were treated with the tested compounds at ic concentrations for h. slides were prepared as did in alkaline comet assay, then they were incubated with methylation specific restriction enzymes (mspi, hpaii) before electrophoresis. differences in global methylation levels between nontreated control cells and cells treated with compounds were compared by using tail moment data. -aza-c, a demethylating agent, was used as reference drug. msc assay results revealed that none of the tested compounds caused hypermethylation on both cell lines. however, global methylation levels decreased statistically (p < . ) through both cells treated with c- and c- . only c- decreased methylation level on l but not on hela. consequently, c- and c- caused demethylation on hela cells similarly with -aza-c at low concentrations. for the reason that dna methylation is regulated mainly dnmt enzymes in the cell, c- and c- might cause global demethylation in the cell by inhibiting dnmt activity. further studies will be done to support this prediction. overall, macrophages and some subtypes of lymphoid cells are found in tumour stroma. these cells secrete a variety of growth factors, proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines, esp. tnf-a, il- b and il- , causing the formation of inflammatory microenvironment around tumour cells. tnf-a and il- b signaling increases activity of nf-kb pathway. at the same time, il- , triggers jak-stat signaling pathway, which effector is stat . nf-kb and stat activity facilitates hyperexpression of mir-nas mir- , mir- and mir- as well as down-regulates expression of mirnas mir- / , mir- and let- . this investigation aims to identify in what way these shifts in mirnaome can lead to epigenome reorganization supporting the cell transformation. mirna targets within gene transcripts were predicted in silico using targetscan software. transcripts of hdac / / / and sirt / genes encoding histone deacetylases carry targets for at least one of up-regulated mirnas mir- , mir- or mir- . also, these mirnas can silence ezh , mll, mll , nsd , setd / / , smyd , suv h genes encoding histone methyltransferases. mirna mir- suppresses gene encoding de novo dna methyltransferase dnmt b. at the same time, down-regulation of mirna mir- / can allow hyperexpression of gene encoding acetyltransferase elp . these shifts impair dna and histone methylation, cause the increase of overall level of chromatin acetylation and expression and, therefore, create epigenetic background for reactivation of silent transposons, oncogenes as well as other genes important for cell transformation. immune system can paradoxically facilitate the tumour growth instead of healing. cancer-related inflammation leads to the mir-naome and epigenome shifts contributing to the tumour promotion and progression. lysine acetylation is one of the key mechanisms to regulate chromatin structure and transcriptional activation. acetyl-lysine modifications are recognized by bromodomains, which are small interaction modules found on diverse proteins including histones. among these acetyl-lysine reader proteins is the family of the bet (bromodomain and extra-terminal) proteins which contain tandem bromodomains (bd and bd ). the recent discovery of potent and specific inhibitors for the bet family proteins has stimulated intensive research activity in diverse therapeutic areas, especially in oncology, where bet proteins regulate the expression of key oncogenes and anti-apoptootic proteins. several bet inhibitors are currently in clinical trials and reported to exhibit promising clinical activities. however, pleiotropic nature of bet proteins regulating tissue-specific transcription has raised safety concerns and suggested that attempts should be made for domain-specific targeting. here, we report the recent progress in the development of bet inhibitors in korea research institute of chemical technology (krict). we have identified the bet inhibitors with a novel scaffold different from the previously reported diazepine and azepine scaffolds and specific for first bromodomains (bd s). a medicinal chemistry effort is currently made to optimize the pharmacokinetic properties of these lead compounds for further drug development. the experimental data from the biochemical and cell-based assays for these bd -selective bet inhibitors will be presented. family of small c-terminal domain serine phosphatases (scp), which includes ctdspl, ctdsp , and ctdsp , plays a regulatory role in a number of vital processes. in particular, it is shown that ctdspl is capable to activate the retinoblastoma protein (rb) which is well-known tumor suppressor and one of the key cell cycle regulators. although the question on whether ctdsp and ctdsp dephosphorylate rb is open, high similarity of sequences and three-dimensional structures of phosphatases may indicate the similar function of these enzymes. in the current study expression of scp genes was evaluated by quantitative pcr in non-small cell lung cancer (nsclc) samples. using original crosshub software, that combines an analysis of high-throughput sequencing data of the cancer genome atlas project (tcga) and databases of mrna-mirna interactions (targetscan, mirtarbase, etc), the involvement of mir- - - microrna cluster in co-regulation of ctdspl/ / genes in nsclc was predicted. the significant ( -fold on the average) and simultaneous decrease of mrna levels of ctdspl/ / genes was revealed in the majority of nsclc samples ( %, / ). such unidirectional expression change and strong positive correlation between phosphatase expression levels (r s = . - . , p ≤ . ) allowed us to suggest a common mechanism of their inactivation. we evaluated the expression of predicted co-regulators of scp gene expression, mir- - - family, in examined nsclc samples. as a result, the simultaneously increased levels of all three mir-nas in most nsclc samples ( %, / ) and negative correlation with phosphatase gene expression was shown. the results suggest the ability of investigated phosphatases to exhibit tumor-suppressive activity and the involvement of mir- - - micrornas in the regulation of rb protein activity via inactivation of ctdspl/ / in nsclc. cancer is one of the leading causes of death in all around the world. cancer is defined as a disease involving abnormal cell growth with the potential to invade or spread to other parts of the body. tumor markers are substances that are produced either directly by the tumor or as an effect of the tumor on healthy tissue. tumor markers can be used for screening, determining prognosis and monitoring effectiveness of therapy and disease recurrence. the aim of this study is to investigate the frequency of tumor markers orders and the appropriateness of these requests. laboratory information systems data for were reviewed. for , a total of patients and tumor marker requests were included. carbohydrate antigen - , cancer antigen , cancer antigen - , prostate specific antigen, alphafetoprotein and carcinoembryonic antigen were measured by chemiluminescence method. according to the data from the year of , both positive tumor markertest resultsratio and the positive patient ratio were %. in the patients group with increased marker levels, % of the patients had no history of cancer. in the patients group with tumor marker levels in referenceranges, % patients with diagnosed cancer history in remission. the ratios of positive tumor markers were % forca - , % for ca , . % for psa, %for ca - , . %for afp, and . % for cea. in conclusion; unnecessary test requests increase laboratory work load and health expenses. laboratory and clinical staff collaboration is crucial to increase the appropriate use of tumor markers. dna methylation is an epigenetic modification that is involved in both normal biological and disease states. hypermethylation of promoter regions of tumor suppressor genes have a role in tumor development. therefore, the measurement of promoter methylation of genes can be used for diagnosis and prognosis purposes of cancer. to detect dna methylation alterations in a sample (biopsy, blood, saliva, etc.), sensitive detection systems and optimization of the methods are needed. as a part of a collaboration project between national metrology institute of korea (kriss) and national metrology institute of turkiye (tubitak ume). dna methylation status of apc and gstp genes were studied. dna methylation measurements were performed using stepone real-time pcr system and results were analyzed using hrm (high resolution melting) software. the parameters effecting the quantification of dna methylation were found as primers, annealing temperature, pcr cycle number, fluorescence dye and the commercial dna methylation standards used for quantification of dna methylation. since, the accurate measurement of dna methylation is very critical in early diagnosis of cancer and choosing the right therapy, optimization of the method is required. cancer is a disease that includes heterogenic and complex molecular changes. anti-carcinogenic effects of resveratrol, a natural polyphenol, have been proved in a variety of cancer cells. considering the effects of resveratrol, the influence of the signal transduction pathways in the presence or absence of p of colon cancer cells is gaining importance. our aim was to investigate the effects of resveratrol in the presence or absence of p on cell viability, apoptotic cell death ratio and fold changes of proliferative or anti-proliferative gene expressions, which may have important effects on colon cancer, in hct colon carcinoma cells. ic doses of resveratrol were determined by wst- assay. the apoptotic cell death ratios in treatments of resveratrol were determined by annexin-v-fitc/pi assay for flow cytomety . the changes of ccnd , fra , ppard, egfr, birc , pcna, mcl , stat , fos, jun, p , atf , trail, puma, gadd a, rb , faslg, tnf, socs , stat gene expressions were evaluated by real time pcr. all data were statistically analyzed by student's t test. our research has revealed that resveratrol ( lm) causes decrease in cell viability and increase in apoptotic cell death in hct p (+/+) and hct p (À/À) cells significantly (p < . ). the fold changes of the gene expressions have shown that resveratrol has significant (p < . ) and different effects on the expressions of the genes related with the existence of p in hct cell lines. therefore we proposed that resveratrol might show proliferative or apoptotic effects related with p mutation of colon cancer cells and we predicted that unconscious consumption of resveratrol in colon cancer patient might cause adverse effects. introduction: colorectal cancer (crc) is the third most common cancer worldwide. alterations in methylation profiles of tumor suppressor genes (tsgs) have been recognized as a key mechanism in colorectal cancers. in the current study, we investigated the hypermethylation status of tsgs in colorectal cancer tissues. materials and methods: formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded (ffpe) tissue samples obtained from patients with crc. methylation specific-multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification (ms-mlpa) technique was used to assess the methylation status of tsgs. the findings were evaluated in terms of age, mortality, survival, positive lymph node status, lymphovascular invasion, and perineural invasion. results: hypermethylation-detected patients and hypermethylation-undetected patients were called as group and group , respectively. hypermethylation was detected in atm, cdkn a, and gata genes. mortality rate was ( . %) in group and group (p > . ). mean -years survival rate in group was ae months and mean -years survival in group was ae months (p > . ). positive median lymph node count was ae for group and ae for group and the difference was statistically significant (p < . ). frequencies of perineural invasion and lymphovascular invasion rate in two groups were % (p > . ). discussion and conclusion: our findings suggest that tsg hypermethylation found in crc patients may increase the lymph node metastasis. further investigations with larger sample size are required to support our results. boron (b) is known to be important for cell replication and development, but the underlying mechanism remains obscure. recently b has also become important in some specific anticancer processes. some recent reports advise using of some boron compounds for the treatment of specific forms of cancer. for instance, boron-based drugs (bortezomib) are now being developed for use as therapeutic agents with anticancer activities and several other boron-based compounds are in various phases of clinical trials. it has been shown that bortezomib disrupts the regulation of cell cycle and induces apoptosis in both hematologic and solid tumor malignancies except for colon carcinoma. colorectal cancer (crc) is the third most common cancer in men and the second in women, accounting for % of all tumour types worldwide. cytotoxic effects of boron compounds on crc cells and changing of its effects related with p mutation, which is mutated % of cancer cases, have not take part in literature yet. for this purpose; the aim of the study was designed to investigate the effects of borax pentahydrate and disodium pentaborate decahydrate compounds on cell viability, apoptotic cell death ratio and parp protein expressions in p (+/+) and p (À/À) hct colon carcinoma cells lines. the effects of the boron compounds on cell viability were assessed by xtt assay and apoptotic effects and parp protein expression of the compounds were evaluated by flow cytometry and western blot analysis respectively. our results showed that borax pentahydrate ( mm) and disodium pentaborate decahydrate ( mm) significantly causes nearly % reduction of cell viability at h (p < . ). apoptotic cell death ratios and parp expressions revealed that both of the compounds might have a potential for a candidate of anticancer agent. epithelial-mesenchymal transition (emt) is a significant event for metastasis, and could be mediated by several pathways such as pi k/akt, map kinases and many epigenetic regulators. satb is an epigenetic regulator involved in emt and osteoblastic differentiation. since preliminary results indicate that there is a crosstalk between p and akt pathways in nsclc cells, we aimed to determine whether this crosstalk has a regulatory effects on emt and satb expression in nsclc cells. we used a and h cells as a model to evaluate the effects of the crosstalk between p and akt on emt of nsclc cells. therefore, cell culture, inhibition of p activation via sb , transient expression assay for (ca-akt), western blot analysis, sirna transfection for satb , wound healing and invasion assay were performed in this study. firstly, the expression statues of e-cadherin, satb , p-p , p , p-akt and akt was examined in a and h cells by western blot analysis. we observed that e-cadherin and satb are downregulated in a cells (highly active p , lowly active akt) compared to h cells (lowly active p , highly active akt), suggesting that e-cadherin and satb are associated with the crosstalk between p and akt pathways. our results demonstrated that p inhibition in a cells leads to decreased pten expression and subsequently increased akt activation. then, we found that p inhibition upregulated satb expression, and reversed emt in a cells. furthermore, alone satb knockdown is sufficient to induce emt, and prevented the effects of p inhibition on emt. all these results strongly indicate that the crosstalk between p and akt pathways might determine satb expression and epithelial characters of nsclc cells, and satb is a critical epigenetic regulator for emt in nsclc cells. therefore, it is also need to explore how p and akt signalling pathways could regulate satb expression. this work was supported by tubitak ( s , z ). introduction: lung cancer is a disease characterized by uncontrolled cell growth in the lung tissues. the most common causes of lung cancer are tobacco smoke, radon gas, asbestos, air pollution, and genetic factors. nitric oxide (no) has potential mutagenic and carcinogenic activity and may play important roles in lung cancer. endothelial no, synthesized from l-arginine by endothelial no synthase (enos), inhibits apoptosis and promotes angiogenesis and tumor cell proliferation. the aim of the present study was to examine the possible relationship between enos gene intron vntr and exon -g t (glu asp) the stressful ecosystems exert strong adaptive pressure and proteins that facilitate these adaptation processes are candidate drug targets. nucleotides are the core of biochemical pathway required for cancer cell growth and replication and genetic changes will lead in oscillation in their pools. although it is questionable whether the warburg effect actually causes cancer, impairing dglucose uptake and metabolism induces oxidative metabolism. lproline (lproline) homeostasis is critical in a constellation of human diseases, in parametabolic linkage between cancer, epigenetics (phang et al. ) and bioenergetics (pallotta ) where degradation and biosynthesis are robustly affected by oncogenes or suppressor genes that can modulate intermediates involved in epigenetic regulation. lproline-fueled mitochondrial metabolism involves the oxidative conversion to l-glutamate by a flavin dependent lproline dehydrogenase/oxidase and a nad +dependent l-d -pyrroline- -carboxylate dehydrogenase. in saccharomyces cerevisiae an important test tube, put p and put p respectively help cells to respond to changes in the nutritional microenvironment by initiating lproline breakdown after mitochondrial uptake (pallotta ) . in this preclinical study, low molecular weight compounds were tested for inhibiting lproline mitochondrial transport and put p/put p catalytic activities. thus, in seeking for natural bioactive compounds targeting lproline pathway and its substrate channeling (becker's group ), we report data using in silico screening and in vitro researches in saccharomyces cerevisiae with genetic background atcc but different phenotypic landscape induced by nutritional stress/ ph changes. cells vitality, dΨ measurements, nad(p) + /nad(p) h pool and flavine turnover were determined in spectrofluorimeter microplater reader and via hplc (pallotta et al. (pallotta et al. , (pallotta et al. , pallotta ; di martino pallotta ) thus in supporting of future cancer therapies with decreasing side effects. evaluation of lymphocyte to monocyte ratio (lmr) in patients with colorectal cancer introduction: inflammation may play an important role in cancer progression and a high neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (nlr) has been reported to be a poor prognostic indicator in several malignancies. the aim of this retrospective study was to evaluate the prognostic value of nlr, lymphocyte to monocyte ratio (lmr) and platelet to lymphocyte ratio (plr) in patients with colorectal cancer (crc). : patients who were diagnosed with colorectal cancer between january and january ; were evaluated retrospectively. the cutoff value was determined using receiver operating characteristics curve analysis. survival analysis was performed using the kaplan-meier method and log-rank test. the cox proportional hazard model was used to identify the influence of factors related to survival. (tnm stage, tumor differentiation, age, tumour size and lmr) results: receiver operating characteristic curves showed that lmr was superior to plr and nlr as a predictive factor in patients with colorectal cancer. the cutoff value for lmr was . . cancer-specific survival was not significantly different between the high-and low-lmr groups (p = . ). age was identified as independent prognostic factor in colorectal cancer (hazard ratio: . ; % confidence interval: . - . ; p = . ). discussion and conclusion: our preliminary study showed that the lmr was not an independent prognostic factor in crc patients, but additional large sample sized prospective studies will be needed to confirm these findings. the aim of this study is to investigate the effects of luteolin treatment on enzymatic activity of arginase, and ornithine and polyamine levels (putrescine, spermidine spermine) in serum and cancer tissues of ehrlich ascites breast cancer model. balb/c female mice were divided randomly into following groups: healthy control, healthy treatment, cancer control, treatment and treatment . . ml ehrlich ascites tumor cells was inoculated subcutaneously to medial part of left hind leg. healthy treatment and treatment groups, and the treatment group were given mg/kg and mg/kg dose of luteolin, intraperitoneally, for a days period, respectively. luteolin has a hydroxylated flavonoid structure and shows potent antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and anticarcinogenic properties. luteolin not only leads to cell death in various tumors by suppressing cell survival pathways and stimulating apoptotic pathways, but also sensitize them to cytotoxic therapy. supporting various previous studies, tumor implantation to healthy mice resulted in statistically significant elevation of serum arginase and polyamine levels (p < . ) indicating the tumor cells as the main source of this production. furthermore, luteolin treatment abolished this increase in serum arginase and polyamine levels (p < . ). tissue measurements of arginase and polyamine levels indicated that luteolin treatment resulted with an increase in these parameters of tumor tissue while the serum levels of them showed a significant decrease. our results revealed that increased tissue arginase and polyamine levels might be related with estrogenic agonistic effect of luteolin on utilized tumor model in this experiment; and decreased serum levels of these parameters while there is a significant increase of them in tissue levels might be a result of a suppression of polyamine efflux from the tumor tissue by inhibitory effect of luteolin on plasma membrane polyamine transporters. hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) is the third most common cause of cancer-related deaths. around - % of hcc patients are diagnosed at an early stage of the disease. hepatic resection, liver transplantation are common strategies in hcc treatment. even if, most of the patients present advanced-stage tumors and have a restricted survival rate. for the reason, resistance against existing tumor stress conditions have been demonstrated in hcc. hypoxia, hyperglycemia are general stress sources in hcc and result in aggressive cell phenotype, resistance to apoptosis and therapeutic drugs. thioredoxin interacting protein (txnip) regulates cellular responses under stress conditions. over-expression of txnip results activation of oxidative stress and apoptosis. in cancer models txnip is considered as a tumor suppressor gene. however, its role in the development, progression of hcc and mechanisms behind it warrant further investigation. in this study expression levels of txnip were examined in hcc cell lines by rt-pcr and western blotting. txnip expression was significantly high in poorly-differentiated snu- , snu- and snu- than the well-differentiated hcc cell lines such as huh- , hepg and plc/prf/ . besides, expression of txnip was examined in non-hcc and hcc tissue samples by immunohistochemical staining. txnip positivity was observed in % of well and % of poor differantiated hcc tissues. however, no txnip positivity was observed in non-hcc tissues. to investigate whether txnip might be involved in biological responses such as cell proliferation, motility and invasion, we used overexpression and silencing strategies. overexpression of txnip minimally inhibited adhesion and proliferation, whereas boyden-chamber motility and invasion assay showed that invasiveness of cells were increased. our findings suggest that txnip expression is increased in hcc and txnip over-expression is important for invasive phenotype during hepatocarcinogenesis. cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the western world. it was shown that ischemic tolerance of the heart can be enhanced not only by ischemic or pharmacological conditioning (pre-and postconditioning), but also by adaptation to chronic hypoxia. different studies have indicated that these cardioprotective phenomena may at least partly share the same signaling pathways. the jak/stat signaling pathway has been demonstrated to participate in the development of cardioprotection by conditiong apparently through the inhibition of gsk- b. the aim of our present study was to determine whether this pathway also takes part in cardioprotection induced by adaptation to chronic hypoxia. we investigated the effect of inhibitor of jak kinase (ag- ) on myocardial infarct size and the jak /stat signalling pathway and other effector molecules that may participate in cardioprotection conferred by adaptation to hypoxia. adult male rats were adapted to intermittent normobaric hypoxia ( % o , weeks, h/day) and part of them recieved ag- ( mg/kg) min before ischemia. control rats were kept under normoxia. infarct size was assessed in isolated perfused hearts. relative expression of the key components of the jak /stat signalling system and other proteins was detected using western blotting. preliminary data indicate that administration of the jak inhibitor ag- caused a significant increase in infarct size in hypoxic rats. western blot analysis revealed changes in phosphorylation of jak , stat and some other proteins involved in cardioprotection (akt, erk / , gsk b). these results suggest that the jak/stat signaling pathway could participate in the development of a cardioprotective phenotype in rats exposed to chronic hypoxia. however, further research will be needed to clarify in more detail the role of this signalling pathway in the cardioprotective mechanism. p- . . - detrimental effect of hypertension on myocardium was reversed by liver x receptor agonist gw hypertension is a cardiovascular disease that causes functional and structural changes in the heart. nuclear liver x receptors (lxrs) are involved in the control of cholesterol and lipid metabolism. however, effect of lxr activation on the hypertensive heart is not well characterized. in this study, the effects of lxr agonist gw on hypertension-induced damage of myocardium were investigated. hypertension was induced by deoxycorticosterone acetate (doca) injection ( mg/kg, twice a week) following the unilateral nephrectomy in male -week-old wistar albino rats for weeks. blood pressure was measured by using tail-cuff method. gw ( mg/kg/day, i.p.) was administered last week. expression of various markers (grp , perk, p-perk, ikb-a, nf-kb p , tnf-a, bax, bcl- , mmp- ) in the ventricular tissue were examined by western blotting. inflammation and fibrosis were evaluated in histopathological examination. gw treatment reduced systolic blood pressure of hypertensive animals. expressions of endoplasmic reticulum stress markers grp and p-perk were increased by hypertension and gw treatment reversed them. hypertension-induced increase in nuclear nf-kb p expression and decrease in ikb-a expression were reversed by gw treatment. while bcl- expression was lower, bax level was higher than control in the hypertensive animals. in hypertensive group, fibrosis marker mmp- expression was augmented and gw treatment reversed this elevation. hypertension-induced increase in interstitial and perivascular collagen deposition and inflammatory cell infiltration in left ventricle were prevented by gw treatment. these results suggest that lxr activation by gw restored the hypertension-induced structural changes of heart in the doca-salt hypertension. methylphenidate (mph) is a psychostimulant prescribed for the treatment of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (adhd), one of the most common neurobehavioral disorders of childhood and adolescence. in fact, despite the widespread use of mph the full comprehension of its cellular/molecular mechanisms is still elusive, including its effect on blood-brain barrier (bbb). this barrier is a key structure in the central nervous system since it protects the brain and its dysfunction has been described as a critical event in several brain diseases. thus, the aim of the present study was to clarify the effects of mph on the bbb function in both physiological and adhd conditions. for that, we used a rat model of adhd, the spontaneously hypertensive (shr) rats, and wistar kyoto (wky) animals as inbred comparator strain. also, to mimic a clinical dosing schedule for adhd treatment, rats were administered for monday-friday with vehicle or mph ( . mg/kg/day or mg/ kg/day, per os) from p -p . chronic mph treatment ( mg/kg/day) promoted cortical bbb permeability in both wky and shr animals; however, more prominent in wky rats. this effect can be explained by the downregulation of claudin- and collagen-iv, tight junction and basal lamina protein, respectively. noteworthy, wky animals also showed an increase in the expression of caveolin- and in both vascular cell and intercelular adhesion molecules. these bbb alterations led to subsequent infiltration of peripheral immune cells, including cd + macrophages. furthermore, hippocampal bbb disruption was only observed in wky rats with mg/kg of mph. here, mph decreased collagen iv expression and upregulated caveolin- , with no alterations in claudin- . overall, our results show that chronic exposure to mph can led to brain vascular alterations particularly under physiological conditions. this highlights the importance of an appropriate mph dose regimen for adhd, and also that mph misuse can have a negative effect. regulators of g proteins signaling (rgs) serve several cellular functions varying from tolerance, dependence, neuroprotection, transcription and tumorgenesis. despite their initial role as gtpase activating proteins, evidence suggests that rgs proteins are localized in the nucleus, interact with transcription factors thus regulating transcriptional responses. it was shown that rgs directly interacts with and interferes in opioid receptor (or) signaling. rgs is mostly expressed in brain and is implicated with brain structural alterations; however, the molecular mechanisms of how rgs could be involved in cellular differential functions remains unclear. based on these observations we examined whether rgs can regulate transcriptional responses mediated by the stat b transcription factor. isolated neural stem cells from rgs À/À mice were immunostained for the mitosis marker ph and the mrna levels of antiapoptotic genes were determined. proliferation assays were performed with brdu staining in neuro a cells stably expressing rgs . the functional assays of stat b transcriptional activation were performed in hek expressing either the erythropoietin receptor (epo-r) or the delta opioid receptor (d-or). the present data demonstrate that rgs blocks stat b phosphorylation and transcriptional activation by interfering in stat b heterodimerization upon epo-r or d-or activation triggered by cytokines or opioids administration. lack of functional rgs results in increased mrna levels of stat b target genes such as the members of the bcl anti-apoptotic family bcl- , bcl- and bcl-xl. this upregulation of stat b inducible gene transcription results in an increased proliferation rate of neural stem cells. this study demonstrates for the first time a non-canonical function of rgs in stat b mediated transcriptional responses and a novel selective role of rgs in transcription. role of the pre-molten globule structure in amyloid fibril formation a. eshaghi department of biology, faculty of science, islamic azad university, mashhad branch, mashhad, iran the major factor that caused extensive research on the protein fibrillation is their crucial roles in important diseases known as the amyloidosis diseases. neurodegenerative diseases, including alzheimer's, parkinson's, diabetes and huntington are the most important types of this disease. understanding the mechanisms of fibril formation and ways of treatment can be useful in reducing this type of disorder. in this project, the fibrillation of carbonic anhydrase protein was investigated as a model. carbonic anhydrase creates two stable intermediated known as pre-molten and molten globule, in different ph solution. this protein at ph between ph - molten globule structures was formed while the pre-molten form took place under ph . in our tests at ph . when the protein in molten globule structures only the amorphous aggregates were formed. instead, at ph . in pre-molten globule structure amyloid fibrils formed in the protein. there some reports, indicated the protein from pre-molten globule structure go toward amyloid assembly. even intrinsically unstructured proteins such as alpha-synuclein first took a structure similar to pre-molten globule and then made amyloid fibrils. it seems pre-molten globule structure have the major role in promoting to amyloid fibrils. perhaps drugs that prevent the formation of premolten globule structure have an important role in inhibiting amyloid fibrils. identification of compounds preventing the biochemical changes that underlie the epileptogenesis process and understanding the mechanism of their action is of great importance. we have previously shown that myo-inositol (mi) daily treatment for days prevents certain biochemical changes that are triggered by kainic acid (ka)-induced status epilepticus (se), [ , ] . however in these studies we have not detected any effects of mi on the first day after se. in the presented study we broadened our research and focused on ka induced other early molecular and morphological changes and influence of mi treatment on these changes. the increase in the amount of voltage-dependent anionic channel- (vdac- ), mitochondrial-plasma membrane cofilin and caspase- activity was observed in the hippocampus of ka treated rats. administration of mi h later after ka treatment abolishes these changes, whereas under the same time schedule diazepam treatment has no significant influence. the number of neuronal cells in ca and ca subfields of hippocampus is decreased after ka induced se and mi post-treatment significantly lessens this reduction. no significant changes are observed in the neocortex. obtained results indicate that mi post-treatment after ka induced se could successfully target the biochemical processes involved in apoptosis, reduces cell loss and can be successfully used in the future for translational research. references . r. . neuroscience letters, vol. , no. , pp. - . . r. solomonia, et al; . cell. mol. neurobiol. vol. , no extracellular deposits of amyloid-b peptide (ab) in brain parenchyma via proteolytic processing of amyloid precursor protein (app) are one of the typical characteristics of alzheimer's disease (ad). these aggregates mainly occur as a result of an increase in ab production or a decrease in its degradation. it was found that the neurotoxicity of ab aggregates is accelerated by acetylcholinesterase (ache). besides, ab-ache complex has a prominent neurodegenerative effect in brain. thus, cholinesterase inhibition and preventing ab production are current treatment strategies for ad. recent studies have shown that methylene blue (metb), a cholinesterase inhibitor with phenothiazine structure, inhibits the formation of amyloid plaques and neurofibrillary tangles. azure b, the major metabolite of metb, has been shown to inhibit ache and bche with ic values of . lm and . lm, respectively. in the present study, we tested whether azure b, may effectively lower the levels of ab / . we treated chinese hamster ovary cells, which stably express human wild type app and presenilin- (ps ) with - mm azure b or vehicle for h. to determine the effect of azure b treatment on ab / levels, we used separate sandwich-based elisas and normalized to total protein levels, determined by bca protein assay. azure b treated ps cells were also assessed by propidium iodide in flow cytometry for cellular toxicity. we observed a significant decrease in both extracellular ab and ab levels with a dose range treatment of azure b in ps cells. ab levels were reduced by . % in lm and . % in lm azure b-treated cells when compared to control. additionally, ab levels were decreased by % in lm and . % in lm azure b-treated cells when compared to control. overall, these preliminary results suggest that azure b may have beneficial effects for the treatment of ad. the effect of green silver nanoparticles (agnps) on the amyloid formation in alphalactalbumin and chaperone action of alphacasein a. ghahghaei, m. dehvari, j. valizadeh formation and deposition of protein fibrillar aggregates in the tissues is associated with several neurodegenerative diseases such as alzheimer's and parkinson's disorders. molecular chaperones are a family of proteins that are believed to have ability for inhibiting protein aggregation. in the present study the effect of different concentrations of green synthesis silver nanoparticles (agnps) from pulicaria undulate l. on the amyloid formation of a-lactalbumin (a-la) and chaperone action of a-casein have been investigated. the effects of the agnps were determined using light scattering absorption, tht binding assay, intrinsic fluorescence assay, ans binding assay, cd spectroscopy and sds-page. light scattering and tht assay results showed that agnps have the ability in preventing aggregation of a-la in a concentration-dependent manner. consistent with these results, sds-page results represented that by increasing the concentration of agnps the adsorption and interaction between agnps and protein have increased. light scattering and tht assay results, also, revealed that the amyloid fibrilation decreased in the presence of both agnps and a s -casein compared to presence of a s -casein alone. fluorescence results, however, show that agnps have no effect on the chaperone ability of a-casein and in fact they perform their protection of protein aggregation action independently. consistent with the above experiments, cd spectroscopy also revealed that agnps have decreased structural changes in reduced a-la in absence and presence of a-casein, both the tertiary and the secondary structure of the proteins. our finding represented that agnps have preventing effects on protein aggregation and have no effect on the chaperone ability of a s -casein. in the main, results of this study show that biosynthesized agnps mediated by >pulicaria undulate l. maybe could be affective as a therapeutic agent for inhibiting aggregation in treatment of amyloidosis disorders. pink is a mitochondrial kinase with multiple cellular functions. while loss-of-function mutations of pink gene lead to early onset parkinson's disease, its over-expresion is associated with cancer development. parkinson is a multifactorial neurogenerative disease, with a complex aethiology including various cellular stressors. it is now known that genotoxic stress also triggers the release of soluble factors able to induce changes in neighboring cells enhancing the initial lesions, process known as bystander phenomena. althrough the mechanisms are still unclear, recent studies point towards a role for mitochondria in this process. our work investigates pink role in intracellular and intercellular stress response, comparatively in various models: fibroblasts (mefs) and neuroblastoma (sh-sy y) used as a tumoral model or differentiated to a neuronal phenotype. pink role in this process was analyzed using genetically engineered pink deficient cells exposed to a genotoxic agent, bleomycin. the modified cell lines showed a reduced level of basal atp production. pink proved to be involved in cellular vulnerability to stress. despite differences in cellular sensibility between our models, genotoxic treatment of pink deficient cells induced consistently higher lesions compared to corresponding wild type variant. pink deficient cells showed altered intercellular signaling of stress, impairing bystander phenomena induction, by suppression of signal formation in treated cells, but also by altering the capacity to respond to the signals in neighboring cells. our hypothesis is that pink contributes to the management of cellular stress being involved in bystander transmission of detrimental effects through intercellular communication. this is determined mainly by its role in maintaining mitochondrial homeostasy and atp levels, pink deficient cells lacking the amount of energy required for rapid dna repair and stress signaling transmission. p- . . - intranasal administration of synthetic fragments from receptor for advanced glycation end products prevents memory loss in olfactory bulbectomized mice the receptor for advanced glycation end products (rage) is a member of the immunoglobulin protein superfamily. activation of rage causes brain inflammation, oxidative stress and secretion of beta-amyloid that has been recognized as an essential phase in the development of alzheimer's disease. it is known that the receptor soluble isoform (srage) which lacks the transmembrane and cytosolic domains binds to ligands and prevents negative effects of the receptor activation in in vivo and in vitro experiments. we proposed that potential ligand-binding peptide fragments from srage would demonstrate the same biological activity. we have selected and synthesized peptide fragments from unstructured surface-exposed regions of rage. synthetic peptides were intranasally administrated into olfactory bulbectomized (obe) mice with neurodegeneration of alzheimer's type. we have found that only administration of rage fragment ( - ) effectively prevents the obe murine memory from impairment, leads to decrease of beta-amyloid level and blocks the development of neuronal pathology in the brain of experimental mice. six overlapping fragments of rage ( - ) peptide were synthesized in order to find a site, responding for the therapeutic effect. tests in obe mice carried out with these fragments showed that only the n-terminal part of the molecule is responsible for preventing obe mice memory from impairment. all fragments which do not include n-terminal - dipeptide have been fully inactive in these experiments. we have proposed that active peptides can interact with beta-amyloid or s b protein preventing these ligands from binding with rage. this interaction can inhibit the development of neurodegeneration. the aim of this study was to examine effects of social isolation, enriched environment and exercise on learning in rats. the study included female day old wistar rats. the rats were randomly divided into four different groups; control, exercise, social isolation and the enriched environment groups. the social isolation group and the enriched environment group were housed under their specific conditions and the exercise group and the control group were housed in standard conditions during weeks. the rats in the exercise group swam for weeks. after weeks, the rats were evaluated in the morris water maze. brain and blood samples were taken and the hippocampus tissue was dissected. bdnf and ngf levels were measured in these samples. in conlusion, while enriched environment was a positive effect on spatial learning, social isolation was a negative effect on spatial learning and increase thigmotactic behaviors. according to the analysis results ngf and bdnf levels in the hippocampus and plasma did not change with environmental conditions and exercise. time of exposure to social isolation, procedures of the enriched environment, time of exposure to the environment, type and duration of exercise and gender may affect the results. alzheimer's disease (ad) was characterized by dementia that typically begins with subtle recognition failure and poor memory. it slowly becomes more severe and, eventually, incapacitating. the cholinergic system seemed particularly susceptible to synapse loss, especially in cortical regions associated with memory and executive function ( ) . recent studies showed that the main cause of the loss of cognitive functions in ad patients was a continuous decline of the cholinergic neurotransmission in cortical and other regions of the human brain ( ) . acetylcholinesterase (ache) and butyrylcholinesterase (bche) are hydrolytic enzymes that act on acetylcholine (ach) to terminate its actions in the synaptic cleft by cleaving the neurotransmitter to choline and acetate. both enzymes are present in the brain and detected in neurofibrillary tangles and neuritic plaques. it was suggested that ache predominates in the healthy brain, with bche considered to play aminor role in regulating brain ach levels. however, bche activity progressively increases in patients with ad, while ache activity remains unchanged or declines. both enzymes therefore represent legitimate therapeutic targets for ameliorating the cholinergic deficit considered to be responsible for the declines in cognitive, behavioral, and global functioning characteristics of ad ( ). we initiated a study to screen their acetylcholinesterase (ache, ec . . . ) inhibitory activities, which are the key enzymes taking place in pathogenesis of ad. newly synthesized chiral benzimidazole derivatives with thioure structure showed ic values in the range of . - . nm for ache. this study was financed by turkish research council-tubi-tak (kbag z ). p- . . - f -a h, novel fingolimod derivative, activates camp-dependent signalling pathway in sk-n-sh cell line g. celik turgut , a. sen , d. doyduk , y. yildirir department of biology, faculty of arts and sciences, pamukkale university, denizli, turkey, department of chemistry, faculty of sciences, gazi university, ankara, turkey fty , a sphingosine -phosphate (s p) receptor modulator, is the first oral disease-modifying therapy to be approved for the treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis. in this study, we have synthesized and characterized novel derivative of fty , namely f -a h, and have determined its underlying camp regulation in sk-n-sh cell lines. for this purpose, we first determined the regulation of the camp response element (cre) activity and camp concentration by f -a h along with fty using pgl . luciferase reporter assay and camp immunoassay, respectively. then, we have determined their effect on camp/pka-related gene expression profiles using custom arrays along with fty treatment at non-toxic doses. it was found that f -a h significantly activate cre and increase camp concentration in the sk-n-sh cell line, indicating that it activates camp pathway through cell surface receptors as fty does. furthermore, f -a h modulates the expression of the pathway related genes that are important in camp signaling pathway. in summary, our data demonstrate that the novel fty derivative act as a modulator of camp ultimately by influencing the gene expression via the camp and downstream transcription factor cre pathway. in conclusion, f -a h might contribute future therapies for multiple sclerosis. alzheimer disease (ad) results in memory impairment and accompanied by neuroinflammation, cholinergic deficit and amyloid-beta (ab - ) accumulation in brain. we found that bacterial lipopolysaccharide (lps) injections or mice immunizations with extracellular a nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (a - nachr) domain resulted in astrogliosis, decrease of a nachr density, accumulation of ab - in brain and episodic memory impairment. the aim was to reveal main event triggering ad-like symptoms development. c bl/ mice were injected with lps, immunized with recombinant a - or a - endoglycosidase treated to remove carbohydrates. two immunizations with week interval were performed. control mice obtained complete freund's adjuvant injections. mice were tested for memory performance, blood sera were examined for presence and fine specificity of a - -specific antibodies and brain preparations were studied for a nachr, ab - and il- levels. the original a - ('glyc') was more immunogenic than 'deglyc', and their epitopes were recognized with different efficiency. in contrast to lps and 'glyc' a - immunization with 'deglyc' a - did not stimulate il- elevation in brain and had no proinflammatory effect. immunizations with 'glyc' or 'deglyc' a resulted in similar a nachrs decrease and ab - accumulation in brain and significant episodic memory decline comparable to those after lps injections. a nachr interacts directly with amyloid-beta precursor protein and facilitates its proper processing and metabolism. our data indicate that decrease of a nachr density caused by a - -specific antibody is critical for ab - accumulation and episodic memory impairment while pro-inflammatory capacity of a - -specific antibody plays secondary role in ad-like symptoms development. in vitro antioxidant and antiacetylcholinesterase activity of achillea millefolium alzheimer diseases (ad) is a neurodegenerative condition without a current effective treatment. increase in reactive oxygen species and lipid peroxidation or decrease in total antioxidant capacity causes oxidative stress-induced tissue damage. it has been suggested that decrease in oxidative stress and inhibition of acetylcholinesterase (ache) activity play a major role in the prevention and slowing of cognitive symptoms of ad. recently, studies have been directed for the discovery of medicinal plants and natural substances that are known to have natural antioxidants. achillea millefolium (a. millefolium) is a traditional herbal medicine that contains natural compounds with antioxidant activity and has been used as a carminative, diuretic, menstrual regulator and wound healer, however the mechanism of its actions are unclear. the aim of our study was to investigate the effects of a. millefolium extracts on free radical production, acetylcholinesterase (ache) activity and lipid peroxidation in vitro. methanol (me) and ethanol (ee) extracts of a. millefolium were prepared to determine (a) in vitro antioxidant capacity (by using , -diphenyl- -picrylhydrazyl assay, radical scavenging activity, phosphomolibdenum-reducing antioxidant power, ferricreducing antioxidant power, and total phenolic-total flavonoid contents), (b) effects on ache kinetics (by using a colorimetric assay) and (c) effects on sodium nitroprusside-induced lipid peroxidation in mice brain homogenates. me showed a higher antioxidant activity compared with ee in the biochemical assays tested. similarly, me demonstrated significant inhibition of ache activity that was potent than ee. both extracts dose-dependently decreased malondialdehyde content in mice brain homogenates suggesting a strong inhibition of lipid peroxidation. these results showed that a. millefolium has a high antioxidant capacity and antiache activity, indicating a potential use as an adjuvant therapy in ad. b-cells are known to play a key role in multiple sclerosis (ms) progression and autoimmune response. cxcr is the main b-cell chemokine receptor that under normal conditions directs their migration to specific areas of secondary lymphoid organs. in ms, areas of demyelinating lesions have been reported to attract bcells due to overexpression of cxcl , the cxcr ligand. we aimed to determine whether snp rs located in the promoter of cxcr gene and associated with high risk of multiple sclerosis could have a direct effect on of cxcr promoter activity. mef c binding to dna was assessed using pull-down assay. b-cell stimulation was performed using lps, pma and ionomycin. activities of variants of cxcr promoters containing different rs alleles were estimated using luciferase reporter assay. we determined that minor rs allele creates functional mef c-binding site within one of the regions required for the basal activity of the cxcr promoter. cxcr promoter containing minor rs variant that is statistically associated with low risk of ms showed significantly decreased activity in stimulated human b-lymphoblastoid cell lines. mef c has been reported to play an essential role in b-cell survival and b-cell responses. we determined mef c as the main regulator of rs -dependent modulation of cxcr promoter activity in b-lymphoblastoid cell lines. this link may be directly related to pathogenic b-cell activities in multiple sclerosis. introduction: parkinson's disease (pd) is the second most common neurodegenerative progressive brain disease with increasing prevalence in aging population. the etiopathogenesis involves many cellular procesess, but is not fully elucidated yet. treatment of pd is based on levodopa and dopamine agonists, but mao-b inhibitors, comt inhibitors, amantadine or anticholinergics may be used as initial monotherapy or as adjuvant therapy. treatment related adverse drug reactions (adrs) are frequent, but cannot be predicted and/or prevented. non-motor adrs, such as nausea, somnolence, hallucinations and hypotension are frequent in dopamine agonist therapy, while dyskinesias along with motor fluctuations are the most common late adrs with levodopa. the aim of our study is to combine clinical data with genetic and epigenetic biomarkers in the algorithm for personalized approach to pd management. materials and methods: we are planning a clinical study to assess the combined impact of selected clinical, genetic and epigenetic factors on the progression of pd, adrs and treatment response. our study will have a retrospective and prospective arm. we will collect peripheral blood samples of pd patients and clinical data. single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) in the genes involved in dopamine, neurotransmitter and drug metabolism and transport, receptors and signalling pathways will be genotyped. snps within inflammatory, neurodevelopmental, antioxidative defense, synaptic transmission and immune response pathways will also be analysed. in the prospective arm we will isolate the exosomes and check their mirna content at the time of diagnosis and after the treatment initiation. the combined effects of clinical, genetic and epigenetic factors will be analyzed using lasso penalized regression analysis. conclusions: we hope to identify genetic and/or epigenetic biomarkers that may predict progression of pd, adrs and treatment response and may support personalized tratment of pd. most evidence indicates that g protein-coupled receptors form heteromers between them and with other receptors. by allosteric mechanisms, them acquire a multiplicity of unique pharmacological and functional properties. recently, we discovered that dopamine d receptors (d r) and histamine h receptors (h r) form heteromers through which h r ligands can inhibit d r function. d rs also physically interact and modulate ionotropic glutamate nmda receptors (nmdar). in the present work, we investigated if nmdar, d r and h r form a heterotrimeric complex in brain. the heteromer expression was studied in slices from both rat and mouse brain cortex by co-immunoprecipitation (co-ip) and proximity ligation assays (pla). the ability of d r and h r to interact with nmdar in transfected hek cells was analyzed by bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (bret) with bimolecular fluorescence complementation (bifc) experiments. heteromer properties were studied by analyzing erk / phosphorylation and cell death in cortical slices. endogenous d r-h r heteromers were detected in rat and mouse cortical slices, where h r ligands decreased d r signaling (erk / pathway) and were also able to block the cell death induced by overstimulation of either d r or nmdar. by bret experiments in transfected hek cells, we demonstrated that both d r and h r form heteromers with nmdar subunit a in the presence of subunit b. d r-h r-nmdar heteromers were detected by bret with bifc. endogenous d r-h r-nmdar heteromers were observed in rat and mouse cortex by pla. many systems, including the glutamatergic and dopaminergic, are involved in neurodegeneration. our innovative finding is that d r, h r and nmdar form heteromers that may be a point of intervention for cognitive disorders in neurodegeneration. d r-h r-nmdar heteromers are expressed in brain cortex and a complex interaction exists between protomers in the heteromer, where h r ligands act as a 'molecular brake' for d r and nmdar signaling. studies conducted on obesity and hfd (high fat diet) revealed hypothalamus have crucial roles on development of metabolic diseases. after chronic over nutrition or high fat diet, as a neurodegenerative condition, premise inflammation, neural stress and development of functional impairments are observed. these studies generally focused on changes in neurons, but it's effects on brain vessels are still unknown. in this study, as a neuronal damage infrastructure, changes in hypothalamic vascularity investigated. experiment initiated with weeks old total male wistar rats. in order to acquire obese phenotype, the rats were fed either cafeteria diet as hfd, or normal/chow (standard diet, sd) for months. intravenous glucose tolerance tests performed before sacrification. animals were exposed for s to co and then decapitation was performed with guillotine. isolated brains were directly immersed into liquid nitrogen and stored at À °c. the hypothalamic sections were acquired with the cryostat instrument at different. immunofluorescence was performed on serial sections through the hypothalamus using the antibody smi- and cd . changes in tight junction (tj) proteins (occluding and zone occludin- ) are evaluated via western blot (wb) analysis. the hfd-treated consumed significantly more food than did control animals, when examining average food consumption per day and rats that received the hfd diet weighted significantly more at the end of month diet treatment. there were no differences acquired for glucose tolerance tests. however, after hfd treatment, wb analysis have shown that tj proteins decreased even if hypothalamic micro vessel number increased and smi- staining have shown that increased. our primary results have shown that hfd diet can affect hypothalamic vascularity and such changes might initiate neurodegenerations and functional impairments as observed in neuroretinal degeneration in relation to vasculopathy in diabetic patients. defects of mitochondrial trafficking are common problem in many neurodegenerative diseases. its dysregulation can contribute to changes in bioenergetics profile of the cell and can lead to cell death. in our study we investigate distribution of mitochondria and their transport in primary fibroblasts derived from patients with sporadic form of alzheimer's (ad) and parkinson's (pd) diseases. our data revealed that in the most cases the velocity of mitochondrial movement is lower in ad and pd cells in comparison to the control. the most intense differences between ad, pd patients and control group are observed in the case of movement of large mitochondria. owing to the fact that mitochondrial trafficking depends on mitochondrial state, we investigated the 'age' of mitochondria. we observed a diminished mitochondrial turnover in ad and pd fibroblast. evaluation of the mitochondrial distribution within the cell in all groups (ad, pd and control) showed that in the perinuclear area are accumulated 'old' and 'worn out' mitochondria, probably dedicated to remove from the cell. because mitochondrial biogenesis, shape and size depends on fusion/fission proteins we assessed their level within the cell. to summarise, our results revealed alterations in mitochondrial trafficking in fibroblasts derived from patients with alzheimer's and parkinson's diseases in comparison to the healthy control cells. carbonic anhydrases (cas, ec . . . ) is a zinc metalloenzyme that catalyzes the reversible reactions of co and water. carbonic anhydrases (cas, ec . . . ) form a family of metalloenzymes that play an important function in various physiological and pathological processes. therefore, many researchers work in this field in order to design and synthesize new drugs. carbonic anhydrase activators are important as much as inhibitors. caas have polar groups to make hydrogen bond in the main body and the activation property of enzyme increaase in this way. caas are have polar groups to make hydrogen bond in the main body and the activation property increaase in this way. furthermore, recent studies suggest that ca activation may provide a novel therapy for alzheimer's disease. in this study ca activators are determined. human carbonic anhydrase isozymes ca i and ca ii are isolated from human blood erythrocyte. hca-i and hca-ii isoenzymes were purified using sepharose- b-l tyrosine-sulfanilamide affinity colum. finally, hca-i and hca-ii isoenzymes were eluted with appropriate elution buffers. enzyme purity was checked by sds-page. the enzyme activity system contained . m tris-so ph . , r-nitro phenol in ml total volume. effects of some macrocyclic thiacrown ethers derivates were investigated. enzyme activities were measured at constant substrate and different activator concentrations to find ac value. these compounds are thought to be useful for treating alzheimer's disease. introduction: gender differences in stress models are not studied in detail. we compared different stress conditions on brain bdnf levels, in social isolation (sit) and predator scent tests (pst) in rats. bdnf levels in cortex, hippocampus and amygdala were compared, effects of chronic fluoxetine (flu) treatment were evaluated. methods: rats were used. for sit, animals were kept individually for month and for pst, rats were exposed to dirty cat litter for min at the first day of month stress. flu was given ( mg/kg, ip) through stress. controls, stress and treated groups were evaluated in elevated plus maze (epm), anxiety scores were calculated. brain bdnf levels were determined in cortex, hippocampus and amygdala by western blot. p < . were considered significant. results: sit and pst induced anxiety in both male and female rats, females having greater anxiety scores than males (p < . ). flu restored anxiety scores in both sexes (p < . ) in two settings. male and female rats exhibited reduced cortical bdnf levels in sit (p < . ). pst reduced cortical bdnf in females, but increased in males. hippocampal bdnf expression was lowered in sit (p < . ) and pst (p < . ) in both sexes. female rats had % lower bdnf expression than males in amygdala in sit. flu did not restore cortical bdnf in females in both tests, but reduced incresed bdnf levels in males (p < . ). flu did not restore reduced brain bdnf in males in hippocampus and amygdala, but restored in hippocampus, in females. discussion: our findings indicate that sex differences must be considered in studies related to mood disorders of animal models, and suggest that bdnf expression in different brain regions are altered differentially in a gender-dependent manner in rats. antianxiety effect of flu is not mediated through increasing bdnf activity in cortex in both genders. increased bdnf in hippocampus and amygdala may reflect its antidepressant effect in female rats, but not in males. perineuronal nets (pnns) are special forms of neural extracellular matrix found around neuron bodies and neurites. hyaluronan and proteoglycan link protein (hapln ) is one of the major elements of pnns. hapln interacts with tenascins and aggrecan which are other essential pnns components. in most of neurodegenerative disorders caused by neuritogenesis defects, disrupted pnns structure and decreased expression of hapln were observed. however, the role of hapln in neural differentiation is unknown. the aim of this study is to determine mrna and protein levels of hapln during differentiation using pc cell line as a neural differentation model, derived from rat pheochromocytoma. after pc cells were stimulated to differentiate into neurons by nerve growth factor on days , and ; cells were collected, qrt-pcr and western blot were performed. also, in order to find out whether there is a physical interaction between hapln and proteins related to neuritogenesis defects, spinal muscular atrophy (sma) was used as a neurodegenerative disease model. therefore, a detailed hapln and survival motor protein (smn ) network analysis were performed in-silico. as a result, we analyzed fold increase in hapln mrna level compared to undifferentiated state. on the other hand, a decrease in protein level was detected. this decrease in cellular hapln level suggests that, hapln is required for formation of pnns structure, thus secreted to extracellular environment at early stage of differentiation. in addition, according to in-silico analysis, an indirect path between hapln and smn through fibulin (fbln ) was detected. fbln was also found to be an interaction partner between different matrix molecules such as aggrecan and hapln which form a macromolecular meshwork. the results of this study will pave the way for investigating the role of hapln and fbln in neurodegenerative disease models. also it will help us to understand the mechanism of neuritogenesis defects. determination of properties of bone marrow and tissue-derived mesenchymal stromal/stem cell population in neurofibromatosis type patients neurofibromas, complex tumors deriving from schwann cells and containing fibroblasts, vascular structures and mast cells, are part of the clinical picture in nf . the risk of malignancy is increased in nf , wound healing is delayed and keloid formation is frequent. because multiple tissues are involved in malignant and non-malignant manifestations of nf , we considered the mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (msc) carrying the nf mutation might play a role in the microenvironment. mscs affect the biological behaviour of other cells: they alter their proliferation, apoptosis and migration through various secreted growth factors, cytokines, chemokines, or by direct contact. we examined the msc of nf patients. methods: the adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation potential of mscs from nf and healthy subjects was examined in vitro and by rt-pcr. msc's migration potential was measured in the scracth assay. mscs' interaction with schwann cells and their effect on tumorigenesis was examined in co-culture by apoptosis markers on flow cytometry. results: nf -mscs' adipogenic and osteogenic differentiation potential was lower than healthy controls as assessed by staining aizerin red s and oil red o and rt-pcr for osteopontin and collagen . mscs cultured from dermal neurofibroma showed faster closing of the scratch compared to the same patient's normal and caf e au lait skin. on the other hand, mscs obtained from plexiform neurofibroma healed late, while mscs derived from the same patient's caf e au lait skin showed the fastest healing. hepatic encephalopathy with ammonium ions accumulation is accompanied by some disorder in the brain due to toxic material concentration being usually detoxified in the liver. one of the reasons for hyperammoniemia could be some imbalance in brain glutamine metabolisation induced by the key enzymes glutamine transferases (gts), which catalyze the reaction of glutamine transamination resulting in neurotoxic product of a-ketoglutaramate (akgm). akgm is hydrolyzed to a-ketoglutarate and ammonia by x-amidases. in the study, the dynamics of the enzymes activity in the tissues and biological liquids of experimental animals with hepatic dysfunction induced by thioacetamide (taa) was under investigation. white laboratory rats of wistar line (female, weight of g) chronically intoxicated with hepatotrophic toxine of taa. every weeks, some biological samples were collected to assess gt-k and x-amidase activities. x-amidase activity was the highest in the kidney tissue in the control and decreased by % in the experimental group. in the experimental hepatic x-amidase activity decreased by % compared to those in the control. the average x-amidase activity in the blood serum ( . nmols/ mg/min) and in the brain ( . nmols/mg/min) differed faintly. maximal gt-k activities were revealed in the kidneys; in the controls, it was about % higher than those in the experimental animals. the difference between average enzyme activities in the liver of the control and experimental animals reached %. the average gt-k activities in the blood serum and brain of the control and experimental animals were rather similar. the decrease in x-amidase and gt-k activities obtained in the study during hepatic pathology development could testify to imbalance of glutamine metabolism, possibly aimed at declining the level of akgm neurotoxicant under the hepatic dysfunction. acknowledgments: supported by the russian federation ministry of science and education (grant no rfme-fi x ). wilson disease is an autosomal recessive disorder of copper metabolism characterized as neurodegeneration and liver abnormalities. it is caused by defects in the atp b gene. atp b is responsible for the sequestration of cu into secretory vesicles, and this function is exhibited by the orthologous ccc p in the yeast. we aimed to characterize clinically-relevant novel mutations of p.t i, p.v i and p.r g-fsx in yeast lacking the ccc gene. the patients with these mutations have copper storage abnormalities in different parts of their bodies; p.t i mutation mainly affects the liver and the nervous system, p.v i mutation affects the nervous system, and p.r g-fsx mutation causes damages to the liver. to better understand the effects of these mutations on normal functions of atp b, we cloned human atp b gene onto a yeast expression vector and created the same mutations by site directed mutagenesis. then, wild type and mutated forms of atp b genes were transformed into yeast cells lacking the homologous ccc gene for functional comparison. first, we analyzed the expression of atp b and its variants in yeast cells by a real time pcr approach and western blot to make sure that transformed cells express the plasmids. expression of human wild type atp b gene in ccc d mutant yeast restored the growth deficiency and copper transport activity, however, expression of the mutant forms did not restore the copper transport functions and only partially supported the cell growth. our data support that p.t i, p.v i and p.r g-fsx mutations cause functional deficiency in atp b functions and suggest that these residues are important for normal atp b function. in recent years, attempts were made to develop miniaturized potentiometric biosensors which is particularly important to reduce the amount of enzyme and reagents needed. the miniaturization of a biosensor is possible by using an all solid-state polymer membrane ion selective electrode which is cheap, easy to prepare and allow micro-sized construction. the use of all solidstate polymer membrane ion selective electrode as the basic sensing element also has the advantage of providing biosensors that are easy to fabricate, exhibit rapid response and have long life-times. they are also mechanically stable and allow flow-through configuration. genetical and chemical modifications for the alteration of enzyme molecule characteristics are gained considerable importance. enzymes can be modified chemically by using water-soluble polymers or some chemicals. conjugates of natural and synthetic macromolecules with enzymes provides wide usage in medicine and in many fields of biotechnology. in this study, enzyme-polymer conjugates with different molar ratios were synthesized using urease enzyme. in this study micro sized potentiometric urea sensitive biosensor has been developed in which urease-polymer conjugates were immobilized on polymeric membrane ammonium ion selective electrodes whether pvc or derivatized-pvc via glutaraldehyde cross linking reaction. biosensor is not include inner reference electrode and inner reference solution. potentiometric performance of biosensor will be examined with a computer-controlled measurement system designated. the most important features of the obtained micro sized urea biosensor by using enzyme-polymer conjugations were being highly sensitive, having long life-time, easily built at a low cost, and having short response time when compared with conventional potentiometric urea biosensor. also, these biosensors were easily built at micro-construction. this study was supported by grant from the tub _ itak research fund (project number: z ). creative drama technique as a new tool to increase enthusiasm and to achieve learning objective for medical students e. y. sozmen , , e. erem faculty of medicine, ege university, izmir, turkey, center for continuing education, ege university, izmir, turkey, recently drama in education techniques have been implemented successfully in education program of primary and secondary high school and positive effects of these techniques on learning ability and attitude of students have been shown. the aim of this study was to organize an education program based on drama in education techniques in a special module of ege university medical faculty and to test any effect of this technique on achievement of learning objectives and student's perspectives on drama. the special module program was on the oxidative stress and antioxidants. the program covered the drama in education sessions (improvisation, role play, game) linked with learning objectives (understanding of free radical generation and free radical reactions in body, evaluation of the effect of free radical reactions in diseases as well as increase the ability usage of scientific information), laboratory work (antioxidant activity determination) and searching a special scientific topic on literature. students (in rd year of faculty) who had taken theoretical lecture on this subject a year ago, participated in this special module. the opinions of the students on the program were obtained through a questionnaire form and the increase in knowledge was evaluated via pre/posttest. the mean of pretest point was . / , that increased to . / in the posttest evaluation. % of students pointed that they enjoyed participating in drama activities in the pre-questionnaire, this rate was % in the final questionnaire. they all remarked that implementation of drama in education was beneficial for their communication skill, helping them to learn more about science and increased their enthusiasm to learn and discuss the scientific information. although the preparation process might take more time and need to hard work for teachers, we concluded that the drama methods as a new tool to increase of participant's interest might be proposed for students in higher education. laboratory-based performance assessment in medical education: an opportunity for connection between scientists and medical students h. tuncel cerrahpasa medical faculty, istanbul university, istanbul, turkey number of medical students who interested in basic medical sciences is declining and medical sciences literacy is falling, it is crucial to develop ways for students and scientists to connect. students need to know that science is an intensely human endeavor, and scientists need mechanisms to bring that truth to the community at large. based on continued interest and experience on the part of faculty, and on student feedback, the development of a more effective and stimulating interactive learning tool was undertaken. an in-depth knowledge of laboratory medicine principles is vital to all practicing physicians. great variation exists in the ways that medical students learn the principles of laboratory medicine. there are a number of programs for electronic media that emphasize laboratory-related skills. some of these are appropriate for medical students in the clinical years. programs that teach skills in common laboratory procedures, such as interpretation of peripheral blood smears and microscopic examination of urine sediment, have been shown to improve student performance. to ensure that important principles are addressed, medical schools should establish goals and objectives specifically related to laboratory medicine and experiment with optimal teaching and assessment methods. we also hope that this study will inspire dialogue among primary care and specialist physicians as to the proper degree of education in this area. ideally, it will encourage scientific studies that address evidence-based possibilities for improving critical laboratory medicine educational outcomes, that is, the training of physicians who optimally use laboratory diagnostics and therapeutics. engaging medical students in scholarly scientific activities and producing clinically competent and research-oriented medical workforces are essential demands, particularly in developing countries. an experimental special study module for medical undergraduate students: learning western blot analysis and detection of b-actin protein expression in tissue and cell culture samples learning, introduce basic principles of laboratory research and to present the results.b-actin is one of six actin isoforms which is mainly expressed in all eukaryotic cells. western blotting is a widely used laboratory technique to determine specific proteins and to evaluate protein expression in tissues and cells. in our study, different concentrations of rat spleen homogenates ( , , lg/well) and lg protein/well of human lung and ovary cancer cell lysates were used. the proteins were seperated by % sds-page, transferred to pvdf membrane, incubated with specific b-actin antibody and then with hrp-conjugated antibody. protein bands were detected with ecl and densitometric analysis of proteins was quantified by imagej software. differences in protein band intensities were compared using one way anova.a value of p < . was considered statistically significant. we detected b-actin expression in rat spleen homogenates, human lung and ovary cancer cell lysates, as a kd protein. the protein band intensities were in correlation with protein concentrations. the highest concentration resulted in the highest signal intensity in rat spleen homogenates.b-actin level was higher in ovary cancer cells than in lung cancer cells, although both proteins were loaded equally. the feedback showed that students were very satisfied with this laboratory ssm. they developed their independent study skills, planned a research, worked in a laboratory, learned and performed a technique, western blotting. the hands-on experience is very important for medical undergraduate students for their future scientific career. three-dimensional structure of truncated human kv . voltage-gated potassium channel kv . belongs to the ether-ago-go family. it has been proved that its mutants are involved in development of neurological diseases and some types of tumor. directed drug design needs knowledge of details of the threedimensional channel structure. the members of the kv - subfamilies are characterized by extremely long n-and c-terminal intracellular tails, which possess a number of structural domains. the n-terminal pas domain in kv plays an important role in activation, and is thought to alter the rate of deactivation, possibly by binding at or near the s -s linker at the inner mouth of the pore. here we present an improved d structure of the truncated human kv . channel, obtained by single particle em. this channel lacks its cytoplasmic pas domain but it still forms tetrameric particles. earlier we showed that the full length kv . channel is build according to the 'hanging gondola' type, and its cytoplasmic and transmembrane parts are connected by linkers. the cytoplasmic part includes the interconnecting pas and cnbd domains. deletion of the pas domain leads to the conformational change in the cytoplasmic part of the channel. for interpretation of the d structures we used homology modeling and molecular dynamics simulation. there are several templates available to the moment including eag domain-cnbhd complex of the mouse eag channel, full-length shaker potassium channel kv . , c-linker/cnbhd of zelk channels and others. but there are still no templates for many fragments that led to necessity of partial de novo modeling. analysis of molecular trajectory allowed estimating dynamical characteristics of channel, supposing interdomain interactions. results of the conducted investigation have a great interest at both the academic and the industrial levels. the objective of this task program is to enable students to gain scientific attitude and skills for them to be able to deal with the problems they'll confront in future research careers. it's been emphasized in various studies that medical students are keen on conducting scientific research, and it's been stated that they need to be supported in this respect, as they lack the adequate fund of knowledge. this study aims to share information throughout a -year performance of the research training program (rtp) conducted at ege university, faculty of medicine. rtp is an educational program applied in addition/parallel to the bachelor's degrees for establishing scientific thought, attitude, proceeding and knowledge of the willing medical students, and enabling them to adopt study skills. the dynamic program produced by the rtp committee in has been developing each and every year via feedback received from the students. an operating principles, a manual for advisor and an introductory booklet have been laid out. applications are being accepted at the end of first academic year, making announcement to the freshmen in advance. students are being admitted to the program, taking the assessment criterias into consideration. second and third year medical students attend the didactic part of the program during the terms devoted to special study modules. thereafter, they go through the project management phase, and accomplish their projects under supervision of a faculty member until their graduation. first graduates of the program, accomplishing their projects, received their certificates at the graduation ceremony of graduation. currently, there are students in total from all classes who perpetuate their studies within the program. an inventive training pattern of ege university faculty of medicine, rtp experience is being maintained as a dynamic process and successfully keeps the students advised of conducting scientific researches, cultivating scientific awareness. objectives: objectives selection and verification of blood collection tubes is an important preanalytical issue in clinical laboratories. in this study comparison with the reference glass tube of ayset plastic tubes containing separator gel and assessment for routine clinical chemistry laboratory testing in samples were aimed. materials and methods: thirty-four volunteers were included in the study. samples were taken into two different tubes by two experienced technologists according to the clsi protocol [tube : z (becton dickinson and company, franklin lakes, nj, usa); tube : ayset (lot , turkey)]. glucose, urea, creatinine, ast, alt, total-cholesterol, triglycerides and high density lipoprotein-cholesterol were analyzed subsequently (olympus au ) and randomised samples stored at - °c for and h. th hour sample was analyzed immediately after collection and accepted as the reference for the comparison of the other samples. a paired t-test and wilcoxon signed rank sum test were used to test the significance of differences between the reference tube and test tubes. results: the difference between the results of reference tube and test tubes for glukose, urea, creatinine, ast, alt, total cholesterol, tg and hdl-cholesterol at , and h were statistically no significant (p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , respectively). conclusions: no significant difference was observed between ayset tubes' results and the reference tube's results. e. akin c ß akir d€ uzen laboratuvarlar grubu, istanbul, turkey insulin resistance underlies the development of obesity which is a global health problem. obesity is a main concern of scientists because it's associated with type diabetes, hypertension and some cancers. recently, inflammation centered mechanisms are deeply investigated as well as the effects of anti-inflammatory diets which are highly rich in vitamins, minerals, fibers and healthy oils. these diets are proposed to inhibit or supress the secretion of the inflammatory mediators and also improve the intestinal microflora. the aim in this study is to highlight the increasing trend of publications in regard to insulin resistance and inflammation based obesity along with the effects of antiinflammatory diets used for its treatment in the last decade. we performed a pubmed search with key words of 'obesity and insulin resistance and inflammation' ( / / - / / ) (search # ). besides, we performed another search with key words of '(anti-inflammatory diet or dietary supplement) and (obesity or insulin resistance)' (search # ) to highlight the value of anti-inflammatory diets and dietary supplements in combating inflammation based obesity and insulin resistance. search # revealed articles; of these were clinical trials, were observational studies. human studies were while animal studies were . overall, there were review articles and meta-analysis in the field. search # revealed articles of which were clinical trials, were review articles, were meta-analysis. human studies were and other animal studies were . the relationship of metabolic diseases with a low grade inflammatory state has opened a new area of research to understand the consequent causes of inflammation in the human body. the increasing scientific data in the field indicates that antiinflammatory diets may serve as powerful tools to solve the inflammation and the consequent insulin resistance and obesity. medical and biological illustrations for life sciences education: is 'a picture worth a thousand words' in visualizing medicine and science? medical and biological illustrations (mbi) convey complex ideas with just an image and they are powerful intersections of science and art. the clarification of complex pathways via illustrations can be effective means in education as they help the student to visualize the biomolecular world and understand the mechanisms. our aim is to illustrate how a mbi is developed over the example of mechanism of insulin action, via the phosphoinositide (pi) kinase-protein kinase b (akt) pathway. organising one's thoughts and clarifying relationships and then using the optimal complexity level to illustrate the pathway most clearly are the basics of mbi. thus, we made a thorough investigation of insulin mechanism on glucose uptake in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue; a biochemical process that includes insulin receptor (ir), ir substrate, pi kinase, pi-dependent kinase and akt. then, we found the d structures of molecules via protein databanks and accordingly created drawings and diagrams of each component in both molecular and macrolevels by adobe photoshopÒ software. graphics tablets and a compatible pc were also used in the production phase. the use of computer hardware/software enables unlimited detail in images and provides the flexibility that classical drawing techniques can not. thus, the final diagram clarifies the underlying molecular mechanisms of a biochemical pathway along with the physiologic actions. recent improvements of computer technology have resulted in the creation, and reproduction of high-quality lower cost medical art. mbi's can be used in education to explain concepts/pathways to students to enhance learning. similarly, mbi's are great tools to show mechanism/procedures to enhance patients' understanding of their medical condition. considering their unquestionable contribution to education, research and patient care, the creation of mbi's should be promoted as a graduate level course and the discipline should be represented at academic level. biochemistry is a compelling field with broad applications in many disciplines like medicine, dentistry, pharmacy and bioengineering. biochemical research increasingly combines ideas from genetics, molecular biology, etc. and collaborates with many disciplines. our objective is to conduct a scientometric analysis of the last decade's postgraduate theses in the field of biochemistry (ptb) in regard to number, collaborations, subject area distribution, etc. to discover the characteristics and trends in turkey. we searched the turkish higher education council's theses database ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) which includes master of science (msc.), doctorate (ph.d.) and specialization (s) theses in all disciplines. an electronic search with the keyword of 'biochemistry' (in the thesis subject area) was conducted, thus it brought all theses either in the biochemistry discipline or theses in other disciplines but have a biochemistry component. we performed data cleaning and further quantitative analyses in excel. we also executed word count analysis on the titles of theses to derive the main subject areas in ptb. of the total of ptb ( s, msc, phd theses) . % was in natural sciences while . % was in health sciences. the theses output-growth measured by the compund annual growth rate was % over the -years. the top clinical disciplines in collaboration with biochemistry were pediatrics, surgery and cardiology, and the top science disciplines were biotechnology, bioengineering and biology. oxidants-stress and antioxidants ( ), endocrine-metabolism ( ) and enzymology ( ) were the top research areas in ptb, followed by genetics ( ) and cancer ( ). scientometrics is a powerful tool to understand the direction of science and research. our ptb analysis indicated that prominent areas like stem cell, biosensors, geriatrics are somewhat lagging in turkish biochemistry research while postgraduate education and research in total is growing fast with sound collaborations. the st turkish in vitro diagnostic symposium evaluation objective: in vitro diagnostic (ivd) medical laboratory tests and the equipment are closely related the public health, patient safety and the safety of all who utilize these tests. it depends on auditing of the process from the production to the consumption of these materials, that they do not pose a risk to individuals and society. upon these basic requirements; 'turkish in vitro diagnostic symposium: medical laboratory tests' was held in february , organized by the cooperation of turkish biochemical society branch of izmir, and dokuz eylul university health sciences institute. it was intended to shed light on some questions such as, what is the place and importance of ivd in turkey? what are the responsibilities of educational institutions?, what is the role of ministry of health? to put across the conditions of preparing a substructure that may provide achieving success in producing ivd medical devices and in this sector, in our country. material-method: invited speakers attended the symposium, along with the participation of both as lecturers and attendees; ministry of health, turkish standards institution; representatives of manufacturer enterprises; representatives of enterprises manufacturing in turkey; scientists conducting considerable researches on health technology; students and representatives from some of the non-governmental organizations. in addition to the presentations, gathering up the written opinions of the participants, a report was prepared. results: the symposium that lasted for days was realized with participants in total, of which from universities; representatives of their companies; from chamber-institute-public establishments and of which from public hospitals. of the participants were from izmir, of them were coming from out of izmir. conclusion: at the end of the symposium, % of the participants gave feedback. among the feedback selected; . % of the participants evaluated the symposium overall, as successful. . % of them found the symposium successful with regard to its scientific content. their feedback were . % positive in terms of the symposium's contribution to the situation assessment on ivd in turkey, and . % of them stated they would consider participating in the second of the ivd symposium if it is to be organized. perceptions of molecular life science master's students on their scientific and academic competencies and prospective plans for professional development the master's education (me) in molecular life sciences (mls) is aimed at strengthening the knowledge and skills base of the young scientist, preparing him for the competitive academia/industry positions. the rapidly developing pace of science and research forces the master's student (ms) to play a central role in monitoring and guiding his scientific education and professional development (pd). thus, the aim of our study was to examine the perceptions of ms of mls, regarding their scientific and academic competencies. with this data, we planned to analyse if this awareness channels ms to take action and/or matches with their prospective plans. we developed a item online survey with sections (demographic data, current data-contributions of me, competencies and prospective data-action for pd, future plans) and distributed it via e-mail to various postgraduate institutes. at the end of the -day period, ms students (in the thesis phase) answered the questionnaire (female: . %, male: . %). the most highly rated activities that contributed to their scientific knowledge and skills gained in the me were laboratory work ( %), visits with their mentors ( %) and theoretical lessons ( %). ms expressed low levels of sufficiency both in theoretical scientific knowledge and laboratory skills (only % and % sufficiency, respectively). communication skills ( %) and team work ( %) were rated as the highest professional competencies followed by literature search and research planning (both %). it was striking that ms perceived themselves as quite insufficient in scientific writing ( %), data analysis ( %) and project writing ( %) while proficiency in english ( %) was the first area they wanted to take action. despite their perceptions of insufficiencies in many areas, a majority ( %) wanted to continue to phd education. these and similar surveys may lead to an increase in selfawareness in ms and the data may contribute to the revision of me. the report of the st turkey in vitro diagnostic symposium results the following aspects and suggestions took place in the results report prepared after the symposium: about the national ivd-tc r&d, production, forming quality assurance and innovation strategy and policy the cooperation of the university and the industry is not sufficient most of the industrialists cannot take enough advantage of the support provided by the institutions like tubitak, the ministry of science, technology and industry and the ministry of development the statistics on the ivd-tc in turkey should be carried out as soon as possible national standards should be determined in parallel with the international standards the vat rate of the exported raw materials that would be used in ivd production should be decreased. about the education and training, the job titles and positions the related graduate programs, which would focus on all steps of the whole life cycle related to the ivd-tcs one by one, are not widespread there is no 'postdoc' application in turkey. 'postdoc' staff is needed for insufficient component human resources the lecturers should not be restricted to one discipline only graduate programs on laboratory medicine are needed to be established and spread, in order to train component labor specified on the ivd-tc about research and development there are almost no researches related to product development. this should be associated with the education and training institutions about the research centers currently, there is a real infrastructure on health technology in turkey, but there are difficulties in its instituonalism the insufficient cooperation of the university and the industry does not allow the inventions to turn into products the cooperation supports of r&d, being restricted to tech-nopark and r&d centers, are open fields for improvement p-edu- phd training in medical education: career profiles and satisfaction levels of graduates from dokuz eylul university graduate school of health sciences this survey was carried out within the scope of special study modules that is entitled 'phd training in medical sciences' by a group of medical students in deu. the purpose of the survey to investigate the members of health sciences that have successfully completed their phd training in terms of the levels of satisfaction and the status of their career. from this scope we generated two hypothesis: we expected that graduate phd graduates are mostly involved in academy and find their satisfaction levels at moderate level as to phd education. the study was designed as cross-sectional. we reached phd graduates who had graduated from deu graduate school of health sciences between and from different departments via e-mail. the survey was included questions, which were prepared in the light of the existing literature. among the phd graduates, ( %) participated in the study. through this survey, perception of phd students on supervisors' scientific and educational abilities, opinions on phd training, productivity of phd training, number of articles published, their position and related satisfaction levels after graduation were investigated. according to the results, more than half of the graduates (% . ) are well satisficed from the education they had taken. beside this, interestingly we found that % . of graduates prefers staying in the academic positions and % . of them sustains their communication with their supervisors. in conclusion, most of phd graduates were contented with phd training and their career profiles. as a result of this survey, we produced a novel and precise contribution to the literature. in a further study, this survey may extend to other parts of turkey and compile the results in order to get more accurate and inclusive data. phd is an international degree that is reached by conducting an original research after finishing bachelor or master's degree. doctoral degree (phd) can open the door of academic career; on the other hand, a person with a doctoral degree is equipped to carry out important work in research, industry, or public sector. today, gradually increasing number of phd students have brought some problems in phd training. the purpose of this study is to investigate and review activities that have been done by the following international organizations: orpheus: (organization for phd education in biomedicine and health sciences) eua-cde: european university association-council on doctoral education. febs education committee: federation of european biochemical societies these three organizations have done workshops on phd training to pay attention to the following points: *a phd student must take some courses and trainings outside her/his institute, should not be limited to the institute. *the phd training programme should include transferable skills courses. *clinicians, if involved in phd training, should be given free time from their clinic duties. *with regards to potential problems with the supervisor, the institute should provide the student an advisory system. *students should be encouraged to participate in the management of doctoral programmes in the institute. *the students should be given be opportunity to select their own supervisor (thus their thesis area). the phd training has gained quality thanks to these organizations. it is advised that graduate school of health sciences should follow the recommendations and report from these organizations. itsn and itsn are genes encoded adaptor proteins with multiple isoforms participating in clathrin-mediated endocytosis (cme), mapk signaling and reorganization of actin cytoskeleton. changes in itsns expression can lead to different neurodegenerative disorders and cancers. to date little is known about regulation of itsn genes on posttranscriptional level. the aim of our work was to predict and experimentally confirm target sites for micrornas that could potentially regulate itsns expression. using web servers we analyzed utrs of short and long isoforms of human itsn mrnas and found conservative target sites for mir- , mir- , mir- , mir- / , mir- , mir- and mir- in utr of itsn -s, predicted by servers, mir- predicted by servers for itsn -l, and mir- , mir- / , mir- , mir- and mir- predicted by - servers for itsn -l. to elucidate potential impact on cme, mapk signaling and actin cytoskeleton regulation by these mirnas we performed enrichment analysis by diana-mirpath server and found that mir- , mir- , mir- / , mir- , mir- and mir- were highly enriched for all analyzed pathways. using regrna . and scan for motifs services we predicted types of different regulatory elements in utr of itsn and itsn : k-box and brd-box, musashi binding element for rbps musashi and musashi , gu-rich element (gre) and au-rich elements (are) that regulate mrna decay. to confirm itsn -s regulation by micrornas we cloned utr of itsn -s into luciferase reporter vector and transfect hek cells by this construction and mir- a, mir- a and mir- a. for mir- transfected cells, we found - % decrease of expression of itsn -s utr-bearing construction. for other mirs we did not obtain strong reproducible effect in luciferase assay. these data may confirm mir- target site in utr of itsn -s mrna but needed additional research. objective: stroke is an acute neurological disorder that is mostly caused by ischemia in central neural system. % of stroked patients lose their life in year, and remaining / of the living patients continue to their lives as dependent to others. nihss and mrs are two scales which are used in prognosis studies because they can show stroke intensity and after stroke functional recovery. microrna's which have effects on transcription and posttranscription gene regulations are small rna molecules. their roles have been investigated on pathophysiology and treatment of diseases. in this study, it was aimed to detect changes in blood serum levels of mir- a, - , - , b, - , , - a and let- f of ischemic stroke patients and to investigate role in predicting prognosis methods: patients diagnosed by acute ischemic stroke admitted to neurology service of g€ oztepe hospital and healthy individual were included in the study. after stroke patients' blood samples were taken periodically in st day, st week, and rd month, and at the same time nihss and mrs scores were determined. set mirna blood serum levels were measured by rt pcr results: when compared to the control group, we found that after stroke st day peripheric blood levels of mir- a,- ,- a and let- f were significantly low; when st week and st day serum records were compared there was a significant increase in mir- level; and when st week and rd month records were compared we noted that there was a significant increase in mir- a,- and let- f levels. from prognosis point of view; after ischemic stroke measurements showed that mir- b in the st day, mir- a and mir- in the st week showed positive significant correlation with rd month mrs scores (p = . , p = . , p = . , respectively) conclusion: according to the outcomes of this study, after stroke st day mir- b, st week mir- a and st week mir- levels can be stipulated to use in predicting patients' rd month prognosis p- . . - inhibitory rna aptamer against lambda ci repressor showed the transcriptional activator activity s. ohuchi, b. suess tu darmstadt, darmstadt, germany because of the variety of functionalities on gene regulation and the easiness of molecular engineering, functional rnas are promising parts for the construction of genetic circuits. artificial affinity rna, or rna aptamer, is one of such genetic parts. in the previous study, an inhibitory rna aptamer against a repressor protein, tetr, was developed as a transcriptional activator [ ] . the expression of this aptamer abolishes the repressor activity of tetr, resulting in the elevated gene expression under the control of tetr. because of simplicity of the mechanism, similar transcriptional activators can be generated by using rna aptamers against other repressor proteins. here, we examined the generation of an activator based on an rna aptamer against one of the most frequently applied repressor proteins, lambda phage ci. in vitro selection (selex) was performed targeting a recombinant ci protein employing an rna pool containing -nucleotides of a random region. after rounds of selex, the pool rna showed the affinity, as well as the inhibitory activity, against ci in vitro. then, rna aptamers with the transcriptional activator activity were screened from the enriched pool in vivo employing a reporter plasmid on which the expression of a reporter gene, lacz, is repressed by ci. when the variants of the rna pool were transformed to e. coli cells harboring the reporter plasmid, about half of the transformants showed the elevated reporter expression. interestingly, all of these desired rna clones shared the same sequence. quantitative analysis indicated that -fold induction of the reporter expression was achieved upon the aptamer expression. our results suggested that diversity of artificial transcriptional activators can be extended by employing rna aptamers against repressor proteins to broaden parts for the construction of genetic circuits. [ ] hunsicker, et al. ( ) an rna aptamer that induces transcription. chem. biol., : - . p- . . - microrna expression signatures between non-atherosclerotic plaque and atherosclerotic plaque in cad with humans, and parallels whole blood rnas and represent a new important class of gene regulators. the present study was designed (i) to investigate the mirna expression profile in human atherosclerotic plaques from peripheral arteries aorta as compared to non-atherosclerotic left internal mamary artery (lima); (ii) to examine the expression levels of mirna in whole with correlation mirnas of aorta tissue. material and methods: thirty-one patients with cad were enrolled in study. lima and aorta tissue samples were obtained during coronary artery bypass surgery. whole blood samples were collected before cabg surgery. each patient with cad was obtained from whole blood, aorta and limas tissues. these tissue samples were immediately soaked in rnalater solution and homogenized using a magnalyser. the rna was extracted using the trizol reagent and the mirneasyÒ mini-kit. the expression profiles of mirnas were evaluated using highthroughput qrt-pcr. results: we found that mir- - p was expressed only in aorta. mir- - p and were expressed both aorta and whole blood. mirnas were significantly up-regulated in aorta when compared to lima tissue (fc > ). mirnas were significantly down-regulated in aorta compared to lima. conclusion: in conclusion, our study suggests that mir- - p, mir- - p and might be a potential for cardiovascular disease development. also mir- - p and might serve as novel non-invasive biomarkers for cad p- . . - mir b regulates cell proliferation and colony formation in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma n. gurbuz, e. isildar due to the strong metastatic potential, pancreatic cancer has the highest mortality rate of all major cancers. therefore, the investigators are in urgent need of developing the new alternative therapeutic approaches for the prevention of pancreatic cancer. mirnas, small noncoding rnas, regulates as an inducer or inhibitor in expression of key mediators related molecular mechanisms in cancer promotion. to investigate the effect of mir b on pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cells, we performed the cell viability and clonogenic assays by mts and crystal violet dye, respectively, in panc- and miapaca- cells transfected with mir b mimic. our data revealed that mir b led to decrease the cell viability depending on enhanced mir b doses, which are , , and nm, as the ratio of % , , and , respectively, in miapaca- cells and as the ratio of % , , and , respectively, in panc- cells compared with control condition of each cell. this inhibition mediated by mir b was also obtained in colony formation both of pancreatic cancer cells. when the induced effect of mir b on the death of pancreatic cancer cells was compared with gemcitabine, which is currently used as a clinical drug for pancreatic cancer patients, we determined that mir b was more effective than gemcitabine. based on our findings, it is clearly shown that mir b serves as a tumor suppressor in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma cells. we strongly believed that mir b gene therapy might be more effective and targeted approach than classical gemcitabine therapy for pancreatic cancer patients. *this work was supported by tubitak (the scientific and technological research council of turkey) grant s . breast cancer is the most common cause of cancer death in women. trastuzumab is a therapeutic agent frequently used against her + breast cancers, which has role in approximately % of invasive breast cancers. with the discovery of their activity in cancerogenesis, micrornas (mirnas) have become potential candidates to mediate therapeutic actions by targeting genes that are effective in drug response. recent studies have showed that mirnas are induced by targeted therapies. in this study, we aim to find out mirna-mediated mechanism, which is driven by common trastuzumab responsive micro-rnas in her + breast cancer. for this purpose, the common trastuzumab responsive mirnas were determined in treated bt and skbr cells by microarray profiling. two datasets were intersected to find out common mirnas for both cell lines. the overlapping predicted targets of common mirnas were provided by two different mirna-target prediction databases and then a mirna-gene network was built in cytoscape by using networkanalyzer plugin. the most shared target genes were chosen to be analyzed in the ebi-embl gene expression atlas for their expression patterns in breast cancer. common mirnas were found to have overlapped targets in two target prediction algorithms that were used to build the mirna-gene regulatory network. overlapped targets were determined as the most shared genes in the mirna-gene network. expression pattern of each shared gene in the gene expression atlas showed that out of the most shared target genes were strongly dysregulated in several breast cancer types. our results suggest that mirnas might show a common response to the targeted therapies and network analysis can be profitable to have a better explanation of the regulatory mechanisms between drug responsive mirnas and their target genes. revealing the mirna-potential target interactions might provide novel key players that mediate the mechanisms of action in drug treatment. chronic myeloid leukemia (cml) is a clonal disease of primitive pluripotent stem cells that identified with a specific t( ; ) reciprocal translocation that encoding bcr-abl oncoprotein. resveratrol (res) is a natural phytoalexin found in grapes and induces apoptosis, erythroid differentiation and autophagy in leukemic cells. micrornas are small, single strand, non-coding rna molecules that regulate post-transcriptional gene expression via disrupting the stabilization of target transcripts or inhibiting protein translation. in our study we aimed to determine cytotoxic effect of res in k human cml cell line and to evaluate the expressions of mirnas that are associated with genetics of leukemia after treatment with res; to investigate target genes of mirnas which show significant expression alterations and molecular mechanisms of res treatment. k cells were treated with lm (ic dose) res during h and cytotoxicity was evaluated by using wst- assay. the rt-qpcr is used for mirna and gene expression analysis. results showed that; res up-regulated tumor suppressor mir- - p level . fold and significantly downregulated hdac gene expression (p = . ) and upregulated p / sqsmt gene expression (p = . ), according to the control cells.p /sqstm interacts with lc and plays role as a critical player in the autophagic degradation of the bcr-abl fusion protein. our findings showed that resveratrol acts as a hdac inhibitor targeting hdac and p /sqsmt gene expression level. treatment with hdac inhibitors results apoptosis, cellcycle arrest, cell differentiation, anti-angiogenesis and autophagy. downregulation of hdac provides post-translational modification for expression of tumor supressor genes and leads to cell cycle arrest and increases apoptosis. these results could be linked to hdac dependent induction of gene associated with autophagy like p /sqsmt and resveratrol could be a therapeutic candidate as a hdac inhibitor for cml treatment. the mirna used in this study are hsa-mir- , hsa-let- a, hsa-mir- b and hsa-mir- . thereafter, we bought pre-mirnas and their mirnas commercially. we apply them to the a cell line in different combination and different concentrations. these mirnas applied solely onto cells or in combination as; four of them, let + , let + b, let + , + b, + , + let + b, + let + b. the cell viability was detected by wst- kit in a well plate elisa reader. cells were seeded as per well, mirnas incubated with cells for h in an appropriate atmosphere. according to our results some combinations and mirnas didn't alter viability, however + b and + combination increased the cell viability dramatically. on the other hand let + b and only applications decreased the cell viability. the other applications' viability results are not different from the control cells significantly. in this study, we used a cell line also called non-small lung cancer (nsclc) cell line and possibly effective mirnas on lung cancer. it is important to exhibit the mirna combinations should be effective on cancer cells' viability. the prospect combinations were determined which is crucial to develop new strategies for cancer treatment. competing endogenous rnas (cernas) act as molecular sponges for the same pool of micrornas through their mirna response elements (mre), titrate mirna levels and thereby regulate gene expression post-transcriptionally. smad interacting protein (sip ), a member of the zeb family is a regulator of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (emt) program, which is active during embryogenesis and tumor invasion and metastasis. hence, we investigated the regulation of sip by cernas in hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) cells. among hundreds of sip cernas listed at competive endogenous mrna database (cerdb), transcripts (pten, zeb , ptch , creb , acvr b, enah, robo , erbb , e f , foxo , rictor, klf , ets , cdk ) sharing at least common mre sites with sip were selected and their expression in hcc cell lines were determined by qrt-pcr. ets was found to be highly correlated with sip in hcc. furthermore, repressing sip expression by shrna in hcc cells resulted in decreased expression of ets , pten and zeb . our results suggest a possible bidirectional and post-transcriptional regulation of sip and its cer-nas in hcc. a meta-analysis for the identification of common microrna signatures in colorectal cancer n. sahar , , n. belder, h. ozdag biotechnology institute, ankara university, ankara, turkey, comsats institute of information technology, islamabad, pakistan colorectal carcinogenesis (crc) has quite frequent incidence and mortality rates worldwide, despite being studied for decades now. new biomarkers are needed to be identified in addition to the existing ones, due to heterogeneous nature of this disease. the regulatory molecular machinery of a cell, including micrornas (mirnas), contributes to this heterogeneity upon aberrant expression. herein, for a mechanistic understanding of differential gene expression in crc tissue we analyzed mirna expression profiles of crc tumors against normal colorectal mucosa samples, using raw data from e-mtab- and e-geod- (affymetrix microarrays), and gse and e-mtab- (agilent microarrays) datasets obtained from gene expression omnibus and arrayexpress. raw samples were normalized (different platforms separately) using quartile normalization in brb-array-tools. differential expression of mirnas was identified using cut-off values of p ≤ . , fold change ≥ . and stringent false discovery rates. mirtarbase and mirwalk . databases were explored to identify validated targets. we found thirty (including mir- and mir- ) and thirteen (mir- , mir- , mir- , etc.) mirnas commonly upregulated and downregulated respectively, in both affymetrix and agilent microarray results. predicted targets of these mirnas frequently belong to pathways related to cancer like b-catenin, phosphoinositol- kinase, and transforming growth factor-b, to name few. moreover, the target genes were significantly enriched in clusters related to cell cycle, cell differentiation and regulation of apoptosis. these promising results will further be compared with differentially expressed gene profiles from a cohort of turkish crc patients. hence the integrated study will refine the panel of diagnostic and prognostic crc markers. hsa-mir-x modulates motility and invasion in triple breast cancer cell line s. noyan , h. g€ urdal , b. g€ ur dedeoglu biotechnology institute, ankara university, ankara, turkey, department of pharmacology, ankara university, ankara, turkey breast cancer is a heterogeneous disease and expression levels of certain receptors have demonstrated subtypes which characterize clinically distinct breast tumors. a triple-negative phenotype lacks expression of er, her and pr and is known as basallike carcinoma. micrornas are a class of small non-coding rnas that participate in the gene expression in many biological processes. e-cadherin is an important mediator of adhesion in epithelial tissues, and loss of e-cadherin can play a critical role in tumor invasive behavior. another key player of cell integrity pip ( , , ) triphosphate is generated at the leading edge of the cell and leads to cell polarization. pip is generated by hydrolysis of pip ( , ) bisphosphate, which is synthesized by pip k . any dysregulation in these molecules may support the invasive behavior of the cells. the aim of this study is to find out the role of mirna precursor (hsa-mir-x) in invasion and motility in triple negative breast cancer cells. in this study a triple-negative breast cancer cell line bt- was transfected with hsa-mir-x or scrambled control sirna. to check its role in motility and invasion, wound healing and invasion assays were performed respectively. cell invasion was monitored over a period of h by xcelligence real-time cell analyzer using a double-plate and measuring impedance-based signals. additionally emt markers were analyzed by qrt-pcr to explain the molecular mechanisms beneath motility and invasion. we observed that cell motility and cell invasion diminished after transfection of bt- cells with mimic for hsa-mir-x. furthermore, qrt-pcr experiments indicated that transfection of hsa-mir-x decreased the expression level of pip k c while increasing the e-cadherin expression level. wound healing and invasion assays together with qrt-pcr results support the role of hsa-mir-x in cell motility and invasion. this process might be explained via e-cadherin mediated met or gsk- -beta related inhibition of invasion. expression level of five micrornas as diagnostic markers in glioblastoma situated in the main brain lobes, but can also be found in other brain regions. while microrna (mirna) as non-coding rnas, play a crucial function in the post-transcriptional regulation of gene expression by mrna degradation or translational repression. in the present study, we aimed to investigate the contribution of gene expression of the five mirnas and to unravel their role in brain tumor cell lines, the mirnas to the risk of gbm tumor. the five gbm cell lines (crl- , crl- , crl- , crl- and htb- ) were evaluated with non-malignant (normal) brain cell line (hcn- ) . determinations of expression level of five mirnas (mir- , mir- , mir- , mir- , and mir- ) were evaluated by monitoring quantitative rt-pcr (qrt-pcr) technique. the expression levels of four mirnas (mir- , mir- , mir- , and mir- ) were significantly decreased while the expression level of mir- was increased in gbm cell lines according to hcn- cell line. consequently, these five mirnas can potentially be used as biomarkers for gbm tumor; further studies are mandatory to a better understand and confirm our preliminary findings. background: noncoding rna are known to be crucial molecules with diverse regulatory roles in neural oncology and neurodegenerative disease. the recent study suggested that lncrna anril play role in the development of neuroblastoma and alzheimer disease via binding disease-specific micrornas. material and methods: we used lncrnadisease, hmdd v . , mir disease to predict lncrna-and mir-associated disease in our study. in addition, we utilize tardetscan to search lncrna-mirna interaction. results: disruptions of lncrna anril expression (also named as cdkn b-as, locus cdkn a/b (ink /arf), chromosome p ) have been associated with the development of neuroblastoma and alzheimer disease. here, we predicted interactions between noncoding transcripts encoded by locus cdkn a/b and their molecular partners -microrna. anril can act as decoy while containing sequences that mimic mirna target sites to titer these mirs away from their primary targets thereby act as molecular sponge. using targetscan . , we predicted target sites for hsa-mir- -p/ -p/ -p/ -p/ -p/ -p and hsa-mir- - p/ in anril utr. then, we used hmdd v . and mir disease databases to define if any of these mirs participate in alzheimer disease and neuroblastoma. according to both databases, mir- is implicated to alzheimer disease and mir- to neuroblastoma. as soon as anril participate in the development of both abovementioned disorders and can have microrna sponge activity, it could potentially positively regulate mir- and mir- targets by competing with them for micro-rna binding sites thus restoring the expression of target genes. in our further research we plan to experimentally validate predicted microrna sites in anril utr. conclusions: we predicted sites for mir- and mir- in utr of anril lncrna that could uncover its possible sponge activity in the development of neuroblastoma and alzheimer disease. aim: matrine excracted from saphora flavescens root and demonsrated that indicates pro-apoptotic and anti-proliferative effect in many types of cancer. acute lymphoblastic leukemia (all) is an acute form of leukemia, or cancer of the white blood cells which characterized by the overproduction and accumulation of lymphoblasts. mirnas play important roles in deregulated cell death mechanisms. we aimed to investigate the effects of critical mirnas during the development of matrine resistance on all cell line ccrf-cem. material-method: ccrf-cem cells were treated with different ( . - mg/ml) concentrations for h and cell viability measurements were carried out with xcelligence device to determine the cytotoxic effects of matrine. mirnas were extracted from treated and untreated ccrf-cem cells using the mirna isolation kit. cdna was synthesised using allin-one first strand cdna synthesis kit. expressions of selected mirnas were analysed with miprofiletm custom mirna qpcr array using the applied biosystem fast real-time pcr system. results: according to the cytotoxicity assay, it was determined that 'treatment with increasing concentrations of matrine, decreased the viability of the ccrf-cem cell line. expression levels of different mirnas were studied for indicated passages in two replicates. our results showed that hsa-mir- b- p (- , fold, p = . ), hsamir- - p (- , fold, p = . ), hsa-mir- a- p (- , fold p = . ), hsa-mir- a- p (- , fold, p = . ), hsa-mir- - p (- , fold, p = . ), hsamir- b- p (- , fold, p = . ), hsa-mir- b- p (- , fold, p = . ), hsamir- b- p (- , fold, p = . ), hsa-mir- - p (- , fold, p = . ), hsamir- a- p (- , fold, p = . ) expression were decreased during the development of matrine resistance. conclusion: these data suggested that especially hsa-mir- b- p plays a critical role in the matrine response. ericd (e f -regulated inhibitor of cell death) is a newly found lncrna. it is located at q . . it has two exons and its transcript size is bp. ericd is regulated by e f (transcription factor ) and modulates the cellular response to dna damage. arid a is a family member of the at rich interaction domain (arid) dna-binding proteins that participate in diverse biological processes like development, cell cycle control, chromatin remodeling and epigenetic regulation. both, ericd and arid a have just opposite roles in apoptosis in case of dna damage indicating a probability of reciprocal interaction between each other. till now, there is no work related to the interaction between lncrna and arid a in cancers. herein we try to find a probable interactive role between these in cancers. in this study, different cancer cell lines, osteoblast cell line and different types of normal human tissues rnas were selected for expression analysis of ericd and arid a. after rna isolation, cdna was converted from their rnas. expression profile analysis of ericd and arid a in different cancer cell lines and normal tissues was done using imagej program for semiquantitative and (-ddct) method for quantitative rt-pcr. among used cancer cell lines, ericd was highly expressed and arid a had lower expression in u- os (osteosarcoma), a- (glioblastoma) and a (lung cancer). at the same time, ericd expression was lower and arid a had high expression in hfob . (osteoblast cell line) and normal tissues like brain and lung . both ericd and arid a are cell cycle regulated and are commonly regulated by e f. they have just opposite roles in apoptosis during dna damage. these two genes have a probability of reciprocal interaction between each other in cancer. our results indicate that both ericd and arid a might have opposite roles in lung cancer, glioblastoma and osteosarcoma. ericd and arid a might act as cancer promoting and tumor suppressor genes respectively in these cancers. the importance of mirna expressions in infertilty implantation process is controlled with endometrium, factors secreted by the embryos and in accordance with these factors embryo and/or endometrium via receptors on. more than human microrna (mirnas) that are small noncoding rnas were shown to play an important role in intracelluler cycle regulation in both normal and pathological conditions. in this study we aim to identify mirnas and controlling molecules expressions in different time period of endometrium in fertile and infertile cases. the endometrial samples were taken from fertile and infertile patients in proliferation and early secretion periods. the samples are fixed and stained either with hematoxylen-eosin for morphological analysis or with immunohistochemistry for distributions of anti-dicer, anti-drosha, anti-eif a and anti-eif c. mir- - p, mir- a, mir- b, mir- - p, mir- , mir- a*, mir- , mir- a, mir- a, mir- b, mir- a/b/c were analyzed with qrt-pcr. while dicer immunoreactivity was detected weakly only proliferation phase of fertile group, this immunoreactivity were detected strongly in both proliferation and early secretory phases of infertile group. drosha immunoreactivitiy was also weakly detected in the proliferation phase of fertile group, it was moderately detected in both proliferation and early secretory phases of infertile group. eif a immunoreactivitiy was similar in each groups but there were a few differences between fertile and infertile group. eif c immunoreactivitiy was negative in all groups. mir- , mir- a* and mir- a were highly expressed in proliferation phase of fertile group, mir- a and mir- b were highly expressed in early secretion phase of infertile group. in conclusion, dicer and drosha immunoreactivities and different expression of mirna's were detected in all groups. implantation problems may be reason for different mirna expression which controlling with dicer and drosha in the infertile endometrium in both proliferation and early secretory phases. wheat is an important agricultural crop with an over . million metric tons harvesting capacity annually. drought and salinity are environmental stress factors that affect yield and quality of wheat, dramatically. there are different defense mechanisms against these stress conditions in plants. altering gene expression profiles by micrornas at post-transcriptional level is one of the most conserved mechanisms among plants. micrornas are an extensive class of noncoding rnas, approximately nucleotide length which regulates the expression of genes by binding to the -untranslated regions of specific mrnas. micrornas implicated under salt and drought stress have widely been reported in numerous plant species and wheat genomes in the last years; however, studies on einkorn wheat (triticum monococcum spp. monococcum) are not yet available. the goal of this study is identification of conserved micrornas from einkorn wheat using next generation sequencing technology and bioinformatic analysis. in this study, small rna molecules were extracted from pooled plant samples grown under normal, drought and salinity conditions. sequencing analysis revealed unique small rna sequences obtained from raw reads. after bioinformatic analysis based on comparative genomics approaches, we identified putative mature microrna sequences belonging to distinct microrna families. since chromosomal sequence data is not available for triticum monococcum spp. monococcum, we used available sequences from triticum urartu, a close relative, as template to extract precursor microrna sequences. of precursor sequences showing % homology to triticum urartu genome were analyzed for secondary structure prediction using mfold software. data provided in this study is critical to investigate transcriptional regulation of genes involved in stress metabolism in einkorn wheat. the role of vim-as , a natural antisense transcript, in cancer coding or non-coding transcript. in this regard, vim-as is nats located antisense to vimentin gene. in the present study, we aimed to determine tissue and cell line distribution of vim-as . materials and method: for the tissue expressions analysis, human total rna master panel ii (containing different human tissue samples) was used. total number cancer cell lines and normal cell lines included in the study. for the expression analysis rt-pcr and qpcr methods were used. results: as a result, expression levels of vim-as were found to be tissue specific. particularly, while vim-as was highly expressed in lung and thyroid gland tissues, its expression was not observed brain, stomach and adrenal gland tissues. also, vim-as was also found to be differentially expressed in cancer cell lines. vim-as expression was found to be lost in cal , pc , and hct and highly diminished a cancer cells. also, it is found to be highly expressed in bcpap, panc and beas b cells. discussion: results of the current study suggest that vim-as may have significant role in the regulation of vim gene in thyroid gland tissues, as it is highly expressed in both thyroid gland tissues and bcpap thyroid cancer cells. moreover, vim-as and vim axis can be involved in the formation of lung tumors because vim-as was highly expressed in normal lung tissues and beas b cells and expressed very low levels in a lung cancer cells. lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer related deaths in the world and approximately % patients with lung cancer ultimately die from metastatic disease. metastasis is the most dangerous step of cancer. in our recently published work showed that akt/nf-kb pathway is continuously active and induces cellular invasion and pten suppresses cellular invasion via inhibition of akt/nf-kb pathway. in this study we aimed to show nf-kb mediated induction of mirna expression can responsible for inducing nsclc invasion. we used chromatin immunoprecipitation (chip) assay kit for detection of tnf-a induced nf-kb mediated mirnas. therefore, h and pc cells treated by tnf-a ( ng/ml) for chip assay. chromatin regions, reading with chip-seq, were analyzed using bioinformatics tools. we also performed additional bioinformatics search to find nf-kb related mirnas which potentially take a role in nsclc invasion. we investigated the effects of mirna which determined at the bioinformatics analysis results on invasion using invasion chamber method. we found mirnas which potentially induced by nf-kb and related with nsclc invasion. our invasion results indicate that mir- a- p, mir- as- p, mir- , mir- , mir- - p, mir- q mimics can induce cellular invasion on h , mir- v, mir- h- p, mir- - p, mir- a- p, mir- as- p, mir- mimics can induce cellular invasion on pc . we also verified our results by qrt-pcr, because we want to sure that mirnas which can induce invasion, can also transcriptionally regulated by nf-kb or not. we found that mir- q, mir- a- p, mir- as- p, mir- , mir- in h , mir- - p, mir- a- p, mir- as- p, mir- in pc can induce cellular invasion by nf-kb. as a conclusion, our investigation indicate that nf-kb can induce nsclc invasion via mir- a- p, mir- as- p and mir- . (this study is supported by tub _ itak grand number s ). to understand of the molecular mechanisms of cellular invasion is very important for fight against cancer mechanisms and first step of invasion is emt. cells change phenotypical and genotypical in emt progress. in this study, we focussed on the explore molecular mechanism of tnf-alpha induced cellular invasion of nsclc. we use western blot, qrt pcr and mirna transfect methods for this purpose. we find that tnf-alfa treatment reduce the expression of pten and induce e cadherin expression in a cells. when we inhibit nf-kb activity by p targeted sirna tnf-alpha can not reduce pten expression means that tnf-alpha inhibits pten expression through on nf-kb. because tnf/nf-kb pathway change the transcriptional level of mir- as and pten untranslated region has recognition site for mir- as. therefore; we transfected a cells by mir- as. mir- as transfection leads to inhibition of pten expression. our results indicate that tnf-alpha mediated activation of nf-kb can inhibit pten expression on induction of emt through on mir- as. (this study is supported by tubitak grand nummber s ). introduction: the corpus luteum (cl) is an ephemeral tissue whose regulated secretion of progesterone is essential for maintenance and/or timely termination of pregnancy in rodents. our previous finding that cl of pregnant rats does not possess fas/ fasl system suggests that this tissue may undergo autophagic, but not apoptotic, cell death during regression. we here investigated the presence of autophagic system in cl and its any implications in rodent pregnancy and parturition. materials and methods: lc (-i and -ii) expression in cl was estimated by western blot analysis in comparison with progesterone secretion and luteal mass throughout pregnancy. lc was also tested by immunocytochemistry. functional implication of autophagy in this tissue was examined by local treatment with bafilomycin a (autophagy and v-atpase inhibitor, . pg/ . ml/ovary) on day of pregnancy. reproductive, biochemical, and morphological outcomes were evaluated. results: while the expression of cytosol-associated lc -i was not significantly altered throughout pregnancy, that of autophagosome-associated lc -ii increased significantly from day , showed a peak on day , and decreased on day (day of normal parturition). lc -ii / i ratio had positive correlations with steroidogenic activity and cell size. immunoreactive lc was found to be present in the cytosol of steroidogenic cells and showed marked aggregation in cells on day . in vivo treatment with bafilomycin a resulted in unaltered delivery, but in significant reductions in steroidogenic cell size and neutrophil infiltration compared to vehicle-treated control groups. discussion and conclusion: the ratio of lc -ii / i in cl was markedly up-regulated in the late phase of pregnancy. manifestation of this autophagy parameter was temporally matched with further structural and functional activation of cl. autophagy may contribute to activation, but not regression, of rodent cl and thus their female reproduction. apoptotic and necrotic effects of low dose bisphenol a in shsy y neuroblastoma cells b. ayazg€ ok, t. t€ uyl€ u k€ uc ߀ ukkilinc ß faculty of pharmacy, hacettepe university, ankara, turkey bisphenol a (bpa) is a commonly used chemical in industry to make plastics. 'low-dose' term has been expressed for the first time in studies with bpa in . the value of low dose bpa was received as < lm. in this study, matrix metalloproteinases (mmps) together with their tissue inhibitors (timps), involved in tissue remodeling after i- therapy, have been examined in patients ( m/ f) with ptc and ( m/ f) with ptc+ht. peripheral blood samples were collected just before and, subsequently, at days after i- administration ( . gbq). ptc+ht patients had positive titers of anti-thyroglobulin autoantibodies (tgab). the serum levels of tgab, mmp- , mmp- , timp- and timp- were measured by elisa. there were no significant changes in serum concentrations of mmp- , timp- and mmp- /timp- ratio after i- in the two groups. in ptc patients, i- administration resulted in an increase with % in timp- level (p = . ) and a reduction with % in mmp- /timp- ratio (p = . ). in ptc+ht patients it has been observed an increase with % in tgab level (p = . ), % in mmp- /timp- ratio (p = . ) and unchanged timp- serum concentration. tgab titers were positively correlated with mmp- /timp- ratio (r = . , p < . ). our data suggest that radioiodine therapy for ptc patients, but not for ptc+ht, modulates the balance of mmp- /timp- for anti-invasion and anti-migration by augmenting timp- . in criminal cases, the determination of the time of death of the bodies step in the analysis of events is making a big contribution. today, forensic and molecular methods utilized time of death rather than provide clear information offers potential death time interval. principally, 'time of death' is a term that should be avoided. in forensic science, the postmortem 'interval' is the term to be considered. nowadays, there is no precise molecular method that can be used alone in the determination of pmi. aim of this study is to analyze the usability of ecm components, adamts , and and mmp , and to determine pmi. for this purpose, with iliopsoas muscle tissues provided by ethical board of the ankara institute of forensic medicine, cases have been included in this study, divided into groups according to their pmis: ' - h', ' - h' and ' - h'. from these tissues, western blotting technique is used to analyse the expression of adamts , and and mmp , and . it is determined that when pmi increases; adamts- and amounts decrease. on the other hand adamts- amounts are examined to increased related to the interval., especially on the ' - h' dataset. additionally, considering metalloprotease levels, mmp- and amounts decrease as pmi increases. unlike mmp- and ; mmp- levels increase proportional to the interval, especially on the ' - h' dataset. these results are the first data on pmi determination from iliopsoas muscle tissue. in this study, it is suggested that adamts- and mmp- , proteases responsible for ecm degradation, can be used to determine pmi as markers. here we present the first observations of postmortem variation of mmp and adamts activities in skeletal muscle. in recently, popular mmps and adamts s pathways of the relationship between time-dependent changes to investigate the post mortem time interval determination to shed light on the future. the role of functional polymorphisms of matrix metalloproteinases and in spontaneous abortion samples capillaries, which are responsible for maintenance of implantation and placental nutrition, have major effects on mechanisms underlying abortion. matrix metalloproteinases (mmps) function in various cellular pathways. they play a role in patholohical conditions, metastasis; as well as normal physiological functions like tissue and bone regeneration, physiologic function of uterus, ovulation, embryogenesis and embryo implantation. mmp and mmp (gelatinases) have key roles at organisation of extracellular matrix and affect endometrial implantation. previous studies have shown that mmp - c>t and - c>t polymorphisms cause loss of gene function, and mmp - c>t polymorphism causes a decrease in gene expression, and also gene expression levels are lower in abortion specimens, compared to control specimens. the goal of this study was to investigate the potential effects of functional mmp - c>t and - c>t polymorphisms, and mmp - c>t polymorphism on etiology of abortion. restriction fragment length polymorphism (rflp) method was used to analyze the polymorphisms those evaluated in the study. study group consisted of samples collected from spontaneous abortion specimens, and control group consisted of peripheral blood blood samples collected from healthy subjects. the risk of abortion was . -fold higher in patients with heterozygous - c>t polymorphism (p = . ). combined genotype analysis showed that the risk of abortion was . -fold higher for patients with normal - c>t polymorphism, and heterozygous - c>t polymorphism (p = . ). functional polymorphisms of mmp and mmp may have a role in etiology of abortion. p- . . - changes in the specific extracellular matrix proteins and expression of adamts proteinases and effects of hypoxia in the adriamycin-induced renal fibrosis model renal fibrosis is a common cause of renal dysfunction with chronic kidney diseases. this process is characterized by excessive production of extracellular matrix (ecm) or inhibition of ecm degradation. adamts proteinases, which are widely presented in mammals, have very critical roles in ecm remodeling. we aimed to study the role of adamts proteinases in the pathogenesis of renal fibrosis and the effets of hypoxia by studying adamts expressions in rat kidney after adriamycin (adr) administration. adr was administered intravenously in consequtive two doses ( . and mg/kg) to the rats. in addition to control and adr groups, another rats were assigned into three groups as sham, min and min ischemia-reperfusion. after months following the first dose, the expression of adamtss were determined in the renal tissues using western blot analysis. additionally, renal nephropathy and fibrosis were assessed pathological and immuno-histochemical staining methods. in the adr group rats developed renal dysfuntion and tissue damage in favor of renal fibrosis pathologically. it is observed that occurred remarkable changes in the expression of adamtss. it is showed that hypoxia and hypoxia time enhanced tubulointerstitial fibrosis in the rat kidney tissues. expression differences were absorved also in the hypoxia groups, and especially the expression of adamts- and - genes were showed an increase in various rates. the restricted and different expression pattern of adamts protein profiles in the adr-induced renal fibrosis suggest that adamts family members are related with development and progression of fibrosis. moreover, our findings raise the possibility that the hypoxia promotes renal fibrogenesis. the monitoring of adamts proteinases might contribute to the early diagnosis of renal fibrosis and chronic kidney disease. adams (a disintegrin and metalloproteas) are transmembrane proteins that contain a pro-domain, a metalloprotease, a disintegrin, a cysteine-rich, an epidermal-growth factor like and a transmembrane domain, as well as a c-terminal cytoplasmic tail. they are involved in cell adhesion and they have protease activities. previous studies showed that some adam proteins act in a highly diverse set of biological processes, including fertilization, neurogenesis, myogenesis, embryonic tgf-a release and the inflammatory response. although there are more researches about adam proteins, still the function of all adam proteins remain unclear. we aimed to investigate the potential link of infertilty with adam , - , and - . in this study twenty four patients were included. the patients were classified as normozoospermia (ns; n = ), oligozoospermia (os; n = ), azoospermia (as; n = ) groups. adam , - and - protein levels in infertility indviduals were analysed by western blot. adam protein level was . fold lower in the os and as groups than in the ns group. adam protein level was . fold higher in the as group than in the ns group. adam protein level was fold lower in the as group accourding to ns group. we observed no change between protein level of adam and adam of os and ns groups . in conclusion, adam proteins may have a potential role in male infertility. our study is a preliminary and first study on this issue. keywords: adam, infertility. the role of tissue metalloproteinase inhibitors thymus chemokine and thrombospondin- on prognosis of crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever s. bakir, m. bakir, s. ersan, a. engin cumhuriyet university, sivas, turkey crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever (cchf) is a disease which is caused by an arbovirus carried by ticks and characterized by the sudden onset of high fever, severe headache, dizziness, back and abdominal pain. cchf pathogenesis is still not resolved today to fully open. therefore, in this study, to determine the level of tck- , timp- and tsp serum samples obtained from cchf patients and the control group is intended to be examined for the pathogenesis and prognosis of the disease. the study sample was created patients with diagnosis of cchf. healthy volunteers were chosen control group matched for gender and similar to in terms of age. tsp, tpc- and timp- levels of patients and a control group were analyzed using the human elisa kits. serum timp- tck- and tsp levels in cchf patients were measured significantly higher than the in the control group. cchf pathogenesis of today still have not provided fully open. therefore, it reveals the importance of this work. in our study, presence of high timp- , tck- and tsp levels indicate important direction for pathogenesis and prognosis of cchf disease. p- . . - activation of calpain and protein kinase ca promotes a constitutive expression and release of matrix metalloproteinase in peripheral blood mononuclear cells from cystic fibrosis patients matrix metalloproteinase (mmp ) is physiologically involved in remodeling the extracellular matrix components but its abnormal release has been observed in several human pathologies, including cystic fibrosis. we have studied if the alteration in intracellular ca + homeostasis, observed in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs), isolated from cystic fibrosis (cf) patients homozygous for deletion of phenylalanine in gene of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (f del-cftr), could be involved in the abnormal presence of mmp in the extracellular fluids of cf patients. pbmcs were isolated from healthy donors and cf patients homozygous for f del-cftr. mmp levels were evaluated following h of cell incubation. our investigations show that all cf pbmcs analyzed constitutively express and release high levels of mmp ; conversely, in pbmcs from healthy donors, expression and secretion of mmp are undetectable but both events can be evoked, after h of cell culture, by a possible paracrine stimulation. we have demonstrated that in cf and h-cultured control pbmcs mmp secretion is prevented by chelation of intracellular ca + and mediated by the concomitant activation of calpain and protein kinase ca (pkca) and also that mmp expression is mediated by the sequential activation of pkc and extracellular signal-regulated protein kinases and (erk / ). moreover, the rescue of active f del-cftr reduces the extent of mmp secretion, correlating the channel defect to the [ca + ] i dysregulation of cf pbmcs. our results indicate that the high level of intracellular ca + concentration in cf pbmcs, promoting the aberrant activation of both calpain and pkca, induces a constitutive release of mmp . these data characterize new alterations in mononuclear leukocytes of cf patients that may be of primary importance in the progression of the disease and indicate that pbmcs may contribute to the accumulation of mmp in fluids of cf patients. p- . . - aebp /aclp is upregulated in differentiation, injury repair and fibrotic degeneration of skeletal muscle c. € ozdemir , , u. akpulat , i. onbasilar , c ß . kocaefe department of medical biology, faculty of medicine, hacettepe university, ankara, turkey, department of stem cell, institute of health, hacettepe university, ankara, turkey, laboratory animal breeding and research unit, faculty of medicine, hacettepe university, ankara, turkey aebp /aclp is an ambiguous gene with several attributed functions and cellular events, adipogenic differentiation, cell adhesion, pattern development and fibrosis are the well-understood. aebp is the short isoform that acts as a transcriptional repressor by targeting the ap promoter and aclp, which is the long isoform that harbors a leader sequence that directs the peptide to the extracellular compartment. the latter is known to be associated with development of the connective tissue, injury repair and fibrosis in certain pathological conditions. aebp /aclp displays a moderate expression in skeletal muscle where the role is not known. we have investigated the spatial and temporal expression of aebp /aclp in defined models of skeletal muscle differentiation, injury repair and fibrosis. aebp /aclp expression is present in steady state dividing myoblasts. this basal expression is upregulated folds upon the induction of differentiation in c c cells. considering that differentiation and post-natal injury repair share several common aspects, we also investigated the expression of aebp /aclp in acute injury-repair model. in the course of cardiotoxin induced injury, aebp /aclp expression peaks up to folds in the th day of regeneration. this time point concomitantly corresponds to tissue remodelling. since aebp /aclp is also known to be associated with fibrotic events in chronic pathological conditions, we also have investigated its expression in tenotomy induced skeletal muscle degeneration which mimics endomysial and perimysial fibrosis. aebp /aclp expression is upregulated up to folds in early time-point samples. these results depict a novel role for aebp /aclp in extracellular remodeling of the skeletal muscle during injury repair as well as fibrotic degeneration. the source of this expression might come from fibroadipogenic precursers which reside in endomisial area of muscle. our current efforts are focused on presenting of this endomysial expression. the mprbp gene from b. pumilus - encoding a novel secreted metalloproteinase was identified. based on the primary structure the enzyme has been classified as metzincin metalloproteinase that combines the features of two families: astacin and adamalysin. representatives of the adamalysin family previously have not been described for bacilli. the aim of the work was to elucidate the mechanisms of the gene expression regulation of a new bacillus pumilus - extracellular metalloendopeptidase. promoter region analysis revealed the presence of potential binding sites for transcription factors spo a (sporulation) and degu (biodegradation). study of mprbp expression in strain defective in regulatory proteins degs and degu shows that the productivity of metalloproteinase biosynthesis decline in average % compared with the strain with a complete degs-degu system. we also studied mprbp expression in strains with a mutation in the gene degu, leading to stabilization of degu~p protein. it is known, that this mutation leads to a multiple increase in the gene expression level, positively regulated by degs-degu system. our data shows a -fold increase in metalloproteinase productivity in the recombinant strain. thus, deg-system participates in control of the proteinase synthesis but not only in the regulation of mprbp gene expression. the mprbp expression in the strain deficient in regulatory protein spo a remained at the level with expression in the strain with the complete spo a. a similar pattern we observed in the study of mprbp gene expression in strains defective in other spore-specific regulatory proteins (spo b, spo f, spo k, spo j, sigf, sigh, sigk). these data indicate that mprbp gene expression is free of spo-regulatory proteins. on this basis, we concluded that the expression of metalloproteinase gene is not correlated with the sporulation. p- . . - paricalcitol attenuate activity and expression of matrix metalloproteinases in a rat model of renal ischemia-reperfusion injury matrix metalloproteinases (mmps) are endopeptidases involved in the degradation of extracellular matrix. they have been postulated to have a role in the pathogenesis of ischemia-reperfusion injury (iri). in the present study, we investigated the effect of paricalcitol, a synthetic vitamin d analog, on mmps in renal iri. wistar albino rats were divided into three groups: sham operated, ischemia-reperfusion, and paricalcitol-pretreated. iri model was induced by bilateral clamping of renal arteries for min followed by h of reperfusion. the analysis of serum creatinine levels and activities/expressions of mmp- and - were performed after h of iri. the effects of paricalcitol on activities and expressions of mmp- and mmp- levels were investigated by gelatin zymography and immunohistochemistry, respectively. the pathological examinations were performed to score tubular damage by light microscopy. creatinine levels increased significantly in the iri group. rats in the paricalcitolpretreated group showed significant decrease in expressions and activities of mmp- and mmp- during iri. moreover, pathological examinations displayed significantly lower score of tubular damage in paricalcitol-pretreated group. in conclusion, paricalcitol attenuated iri by downregulating the expressions and activities of mmp- and - . p- . . - the changes of matrix metalloproteinase , activity and hyaluronic acid level in rat's heart and serum under cadmium influence o. fomenko , o. shaulska , y. kot , g. ushakova , a. shevtsova dnipropetrovsk medical academy, dnipropetrovsk, ukraine, kharkiv national university, kharkiv, ukraine, dnipropetrovsk national university, dnipropetrovsk, ukraine the changes in the molecular mechanisms of the extracellular matrix degradation under toxic factors are not well known. the main goal of work was the investigation of the mmp and mmp activity and hyaluronic acid level in the heart and blood serum under cadmium influence at different doses. the wister rats divided to groups were used for the experiment. cdcl x . h o in doses . lg/kg and lg/kg was given to rats intragastrically in drinking water during days. the rats were decapitated under isoflurane anesthesia according to ethical rules; the heart was quickly removed. the relative activity [in arbitrary units (au)] of pro-and active forms of mmp and mmp , total protein (tp) and hyaluronic acid levels were calculated. it was shown that low doses of exogenous cadmium ( . lg/ kg) lead to reduced activity of pro-and active forms of mmp in myocardium ( . ae . au/mgtp and . ae . au/mgtp compare to the . ae . au/mgtp and . ae . au/mgtp in the control rats accordingly) and in serum ( . ae . au/mgtp and . ae . au/mgtp compare to the . ae . au/mgtp and . ae . au/mgtp in the control rats accordingly), but pro-mmp activity in heart was increased ( . ae . au/mgtp compare to the . ae . au/mgtp in the control rats); level of ha was decreased in both tissues ( . ae . lg/ml and . ae . lg/ml compare to the . ae . lg/ml and . ae . lg/ml in the control rats accordingly). high doses of cadmium ( lg/kg) caused a reliable increase of both gelatinase activity in the myocardium: mmp increased from . ae . au/mgtp to . ae . au/mgtp, prommp to . ae . au/mgtp, mmp to . ae . au/mgtp. ha level was increased in serum ( . ae . lg/ml) and decreased in heart ( . ae . lg/ml). the results indicate the dose-dependent and tissue-specific effect of cadmium on mmp-depended protein degradation and level of hyaluronic acid. a disintegrin-like and metalloproteinase domain with thrompospondin- repeats (adamts) are a large family of proteoglycanase that show proteolytic activity towards proteoglycans like aggrecan, brevican, neurocan, and versican. interleukin- (il- ) is an il- cytokine family member that uniquely plays a role as a cytokine and nuclear factor. it is released by necrotic epithelial cells and activated innate immune cells as an alarming danger signal. adamts and il- implicated in brain cancer pathogenesis. we aimed to seek the amount of adamts in u proteolytic enzymes are able to speed up wound healing by removal of the necrotic tissues and fibrin. several investigations have reported that proteases damage also the microbial biofilms formed by opportunistic bacteria including staphylococci on surfaces of chronic and acute dermal wounds. therefore, proteases are seemingly perspective enzymes for biofilm eradication by hydrolysis of both matrix proteins and adhesins, proteins providing cells attachment onto solid surface and other bacteria, as well as by the cleavage of signalling peptides of intercellular communication of gram-positive bacteria. here we report that ficin, a plant protease, efficiently degrades the structural components of biofilm matrix formed by s. aureus and s. epidermidis at concentrations of lg/ml while trypsin and chimotrypsin are used as - mg/ml solution. the spatial structure of the biofilm was analyzed by atomic force microscopy. after ficin treatment, the biofilm structure became porous, with reduced viscosity. the congo red staining of the treated biofilms confirmed the hydrolysis of the protein component of the matrix. moreover, the biofilm treatment with ficin increased the antimicrobial efficiency of ciprofloxacin against biofilm-embedded cells of s. aureus and s. epidermidis. while h antibiotic treatment did not lead to the increase of dead cells of neither s. aureus nor s. epidermidis embedded into the biofilm matrix, in the presence of ficin the fraction of viable cells decreased significantly. accordingly, soluble ficin appears beneficial for outer wound treatment biofilm eradication and reduces the reinfection risk. the wound-healing activity of ficin requires further investigations. this work was supported by the russian science foundation (project no - - ). resveratrol (resv) is an antioxidant that belongs to the group of plant compounds, called polyphenols. resv is defined as an antimicrobial substance that is produced by several plants (red grape skin, peanuts and berries) to protect them from rough environments like excessive ultraviolet light, infections and climate changes. as an antioxidant, this polyphenol protects the body against cardio-vascular and cancer diseases. besides, resv has anti-inflammatory, neuro-protective, anti-diabetic and other pharmacological effects. although the positive pleiotropic effects of this polyphenol are well documented, there is a huge need to understand its influence on the biophysical properties of lipid bilayer. in the present work, the interaction of resv with membranes composed of palmitoyl-docosahexaenoyl phosphatidylcholine (pdpc) or palmitoyl-oleoyl phosphatidylcholine (popc), sphingomyelin (sm) and cholesterol (ch) was investigated by means of fluorescence spectroscopy. generalized polarization of the fluorescent probe laurdan (gp) as a function of temperature was used to probe the changes in the fluidity of lipid bilayer induced by different resv concentration. the obtained results showed decreased lipid ordering from to lmol resv and opposite effect from to lmol in pdpc/sm/ch mixtures as compared to the control without resv. the interaction of resv with popc/sm/ch mixtures caused only an increase in the lipid ordering as a function of resv amount. popc and pdpc have the same head group but different fatty acid chains at sn- . since resv changes the physicochemical properties of lipid bilayer by different ways one might suggest that the interaction of polyphenol with the membrane depends on the level of fatty acid unsaturation. this specific effect of resv on lipid organization could be related to its unique properties to prevent the cell from oxidative stress. neurodegeneration is the umbrella term for the deseases including progressive loss of structure or function up to death of neurons. beta-amyliod peptide is proteolytic fragment of the amyloid protein. the spontaneously formation of selective, voltage-dependent, ion-permeable channels in the lipid bilayers was reported as one of amyliod peptide toxicity mechanisms. the aim of our study was the investigation of the influence of the flavonoids (phloretin, phlorizin, quercetin and genistein) on the membrane activity of amyliod peptides. virtually solvent-free bilayer lipid membranes were prepared from mixtures of phospholipids in . m kcl (ph . ) using monolayer-opposition technique. using spectrofluorimetry we estimated prepared from phospholipids by extrusion the liposomal membrane permeability for calcein. we found that the addition of phloretin into membrane bathing solution led to an signicant increase in the channel forming activity of fragments - of amyloid peptide, fragment - of [gly ]-amyloid peptide and - of human prion protein. addition of other flavonoids did not cause any changes in the steady-state amyloid-induced current. it was found that the effect was caused by electrostatic interaction with the peptide. we found that time course of amyloid induced leakage calcein from liposome's is characterized by two components: the fast one is related to sorption of b-amyloid peptide on the membrane and the slow one is related to the oligomerization of the peptides on the surface of the lipid bilayer. addition of the phloretin simultaneously with b-amyloid peptide to the suspension of liposomes caused significant reduction in time parameters characterizing fast and slow components. from this results we can proposed that phloretin compensates the positive charge of the b-amyloid peptides and leads to the changes in their oligomerization status. the study was supported in part by rfs ( - - ) and sp- . . . ferritin nanocarriers: a focus on a metal-based drug encapsulated inside the protein cavity s. ciambellotti , c. bernacchioni , f. scaletti , p. turano cerm (magnetic resonance centre), florence, italy, department of biochemical sciences, university of florence, florence, italy, chemistry department 'ugo schiff', florence, italy ferritin is one of the main player involved in the iron metabolism. the biological role of ferritin is the storage of iron atoms inside the cavity preventing the uncontrolled accumulation of toxic species inside cells. ferritins are polymers constituted by subunits that self-assemble giving rise to an almost spherical nanocage. in vertebrates, ferritins are formed by two distinct subunits, the heavy chain (h), with oxidoreductase activity, and the light chain (l) without catalytic activity. ferritins are promising nanocarriers for the delivery of contrast agents for diagnosis and of drugs for therapeutic purpose. their endogenous origin and the possibility to stabilize and protect the enclosed cargo inside the cavity, make ferritin a biocompatible vehicle. moreover, there are specific receptors on cells that recognize and incorporate ferritin by endocytosis, prospecting a kind of targeted-delivery. following the increasing interest in nanotechnology, we studied the interaction between different isoforms of ferritin with an antimetastatic drug, called nami-a, which is the first ruthenium derived anti-cancer drug to have entered clinical evaluation. this molecule is a metal-based prodrug that can release the metal ion ligands. here, we describe nami-a hydrolysis in the presence of recombinant homopolymers of ferritin followed spectrophotometrically. thanks to characteristic time dependent changes of spectral profile in the uv-visible region, we could detect differences in the hydrolysis process. the formation of a ru-adduct with hferritin was established by uv-visible and circular dichroism spectroscopies, as well as by kinetics measurements that showed inhibition of the ferroxidase activity of h-ferritin. crystallization trials are in progress to identify the binding site of ru by solving the x-ray structure of the complex. finally, we planned to test the cytotoxicity of ferritins pre-incubated with nami-a, using different cancer cell lines. a. cort , t. ozben , a. sansone , s. barata-vallejo , c. chatgilialoglu , c. ferreri sanko university, gaziantep, turkey, akdeniz university, antalya, turkey, cnr, bologna, italy, universidad de buenos aires, buenos aires, argentina, national center for scientific research 'demokritos', athens, greece liposomes as biomimetic models of cell membranes were used for examining some novel aspects of drug-metal induced reactivity with unsaturated lipids under oxidative conditions. the chemical basis of cis to trans transformation was ascertained by liposome experiments, using bleomycin-iron complexes in the presence of thiol as a reducing agent that by incubation at °c gave rise to the thiyl radical-catalysed double bond isomerisation of membrane phospholipids. the effect of oxygen and reagent concentrations on the reaction outcome was studied. as a chemical biology model for antitumoral strategies, liposomes highlight the role of cell membranes, which are not spectators but important targets of the drug effect, with synergic roles for chemotherapeutic effects. indeed, fatty acid recruitment and membrane formation are attracting a lot of interest in cancer, and in this context the loss of the natural cis geometry and the oxidationinduced lipid remodelling are worthy of deeper studies in antitumoral strategies. furthermore, the interaction between drugs and lipids can be suggestive of novel aspects of chemical reactivity for liposome carriers when circulating in vivo. gpr is a g-protein coupled receptor (gpcr), expressed in cells of brain, heart and kidney. it is related to the leukotriene and purinergic subfamilies of the rhodopsin-like class a gpcrs. gpr plays controversial role in the brain and spinal cord cells recovery after injuries. it is assumed that gpr is one of the cell death regulators immediately following an injury but at later stages it also takes part in tissue regeneration. there are also data implying some role of gpr in glucose homeostasis. drugs targeting gpr may help with treatments of multiple sclerosis and ischemia. the damage of rat's brain in artificially induced ischemia disease decreased after gpr inhibition. in addition, gpr takes part in myelin sheath formation, the lack of which is known to be the reason of multiple sclerosis. to better understand functional role of gpr and enable design of more efficient ligands we initiated structural studies of this receptor. to improve receptor stability and facilitate crystallization we created a series of chimeric constructs using different fusion partnerssmall soluble proteins inserted into the native amino acid sequence. preliminary experiments were carried out to evaluate the influence of different ligands on the receptor stability and cell surface expression in insect sf cells. this work was supported by russian federal target sterols are significant for the structural and dynamical features of cell membranes. among them, cholesterol is the major sterol in mammalian cell membranes whereas stigmasterol is the predominant sterol in plant membranes. stigmasterol varies structurally from cholesterol in having both an ethyl group at carbon and an additional trans double bond between carbons and . dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (dmpc) is a widely studied synthetic lipid, which has a neutral (zwitterionic) pc headgroup and two symmetrical -carbon fatty acyl chains. the studies on the interactions of cholesterol and stigmasterol with dmpc membranes at molecular level are very limited. in the present study, a calorimetric comparison of the effects of the animal sterol cholesterol and the plant sterol stigmasterol on zwitterionic dimyristoylphosphatidylcholine (dmpc) multilamellar vesicles (mlvs) was investigated for the first time by using differential scanning calorimetry (dsc). our dsc studies indicate that with the inclusion of increasing cholesterol and stigmasterol concentrations from to mol% into pure dmpc mlvs, the pretransition disappears, the main phase transition shifts to lower temperatures and then disappears at cholesterol and stigmasterol concentration above mol%. the main phase transition enthalpy (dh) is progressively reduced whereas full width at half maximum (dt ½ ) gradually increases with increasing cholesterol and stigmasterol concentrations. moreover, the main phase transition peak consists of overlapping sharp and broad components, indicating the hydrocarbon chain melting of sterol-poor and sterol-rich dmpc domains, respectively. in conclusion, this study shows clearly that both cholesterol and stigmasterol interact effectively with dmpc membranes and cause changes in their structural and functional properties. p- . . - trh receptor mobility in the plasma membrane is affected by its interaction with its cognate signaling molecules and by cholesterol depletion r. moravcova, b. melkes, j. novotny department of physiology, faculty of science, charles university in prague, prague, czech republic g protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs) play a fundamental role in transferring information from extracellular environment to the cell interior. some gpcrs are supposed to form signaling complexes with their cognate g proteins and possibly other accessory proteins, which may facilitate the activation of g proteins and thus accelerate signal transmission. here we investigated the role of some components of thyrotropin-releasing hormone (trh) receptor signaling in hek cells stably expressing yfp-tagged trh receptor using fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (frap). we observed significant changes in values of the diffusion coefficients if expression of b -arrestin or gb subunit were suppressed by sirna. results of our frap experiments indicated significant difference between control and trh-treated cells as the diffusion coefficient markedly decreased after agonist stimulation. on the other hand, the same decline of the diffusion coefficient value was found after silencing with sirna and subsequent treatment with trh for most of the screened proteins. treatment of cells with À m trh led to fast internalization of trh receptor, which was revealed by real-time confocal microscopy. it is known that cholesterol is an essential component of the cell membranes and it exerts modulatory effects on the functioning of various membrane proteins. disruption of plasma membrane integrity by cholesterol depletion using b-cyclodextrin significantly reduced the apparent diffusion coefficient values. interestingly, addition of trh to cells treated with b-cyclodextrin did not further reduced trh receptor mobility. it can be concluded that stimulation with agonist and/or sirna silencing of some components of the trh receptor signaling cascade significantly affects the mobility of trh receptor in the plasma membrane. p- . . - l-opioid receptor mobility in the plasma membrane is diversely affected by biased ligands b. melkes, l. hejnova, j. novotny opioid receptors belong to the large family of g protein-coupled receptors (gpcrs), which are currently considered among the most important targets for pharmacological manipulations. during the past few years, a great deal of attention has been devoted to biased agonism. this phenomenon reflects the ability of different ligands to selectively affect the functioning of some gpcrs so they can display marked differences in their efficacies for g protein-or b-arrestin-mediated signaling. here we decided to investigate the effect of different agonists of the l-opioid receptor (l-or) on the lateral mobility of this receptor in the plasma membrane of hek cells which were stably transfected with l-or tagged with yellow fluorescent protein (l-or-yfp). it has been found previously that damgo stimulates g-protein-dependent signaling, endomorphine stimulates arrestin-dependent signaling and morphine does not show any significant bias towards these two signaling pathways. in our experiments, we used the fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (frap) method to estimate the diffusion coefficients of l-or-yfp in the resting state and after addition of the above mentioned specific agonists. we observed that addition of damgo increased the value of the diffusion coefficient and addition of endomorphin decreased the value of diffusion coefficient of l-or-yfp. addition of morphine or the l-or antagonist naloxone did not change the value of the diffusion coefficient compared to the resting state. these results indicate that different biased agonists of l-or may differently affect the mobility of this receptor in the plasma membrane. these findings provide new insights into the dynamics of l-or in the plasma membrane and contribute to better understanding of the mechanism of biased agonism at gpcrs, which is of central importance for receptor homeostasis and fine regulation of receptor activity. color tuning and adding potassium selectivity to a light-driven sodium pump k. kovalev , , v. polovinkin , , , v. shevchenko , , v. gordeliy , , moscow institute of physics and technology, dolgoprudniy, russia, research centre j€ ulich, j€ ulich, germany, institut de biologie structurale, universit e grenoble alpes, cnrs, and cea, grenoble, france recently a light-driven sodium pump has been discovered, characterized and tested as an inhibitory optogenetic tool. sodium pumping rhodopsin from dokdonia eikasta kr has an absorption maximum at nm at ph . and to create more redshifted variants we analyzed available structures of the kr (pdb codes: xtl, xtn) and did the rational mutagenesis of residues in the retinal proximity region (i.e. m , g and s ). the mutants of kr under investigation were: m a, g v, m a/g v, s a, s f, s g, s l, s m, s n, s t, s v, s y. the protein mutants were expressed in escherichia coli c strain, expression was induced by the addition of mm isopropyl b-d- -thiogalactopyranoside. the cells were then washed trice with unbuffered mm nacl or kcl solution. finally, the ph changes in cell suspensions (od = . ) were monitored. ph changes upon the addition of lm of protonophore carbonylcyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone were also measured. the following mutants completely abolished the protein function and were not used for further characterization: s f, s l, s m, s n, s v. the remaining mutants have shown sodium pumping activity and s a mutant has gained an additional potassium pumping activity. all functionally active mutants were purified using ni-affinity chromatography and the absorption spectra were collected for them at ph . ( mm na/na-pi, mm nacl). m a mutant absorption maximum is blue-shifted to nm. g v and m a/g vblue-shift to nm. s a, a potassium pumping variant,red-shift to nm. s g, s yred-shift to nm. s tno change in absorption maximum position. based on structural analysis of kr we discovered another potassium pumping variant and provided the variants with absorption maximum blue-shift up to nm and red-shift up to nm. human endothelin receptors belong to the g-protein coupled receptors (gpcrs) superfamily. this class is pharmacologically important, with more than % drugs targeting it. the human endothelin system, which includes endothelin receptors types a and b (etb and eta), plays a highly important role in the blood pressure regulation. endothelium cells produce peptides, known as endothelins - , which activate endothelin receptors and launch cascades of reactions that lead to vasoconstriction or vasodilatation depending on the receptor subtype and the tissue. additionally, endothelin receptors take part in such processes as transmission of nerve impulses, development of neural crest, and regulation of acid-base-salt balance in kidneys. in order to stabilize etb receptor for crystallization trials we introduced a compact soluble protein, apocytochrome b ril (bril), is the third extracellular loop of the receptor. bril is known to be an effective crystallization driver for gpcrs. the engineered protein was expressed using baculovirus system in sf insect cells, purified and subject to variety of pre-crystallization assays. localization of the overexpressed protein in insect cells was visualized via the confocal microscopy. thermal stability of the protein in the presence and absence of ligands was measured by the thermal shift assay. finally, the mobility of the receptor in lipidic cubic phase (lcp) at many different conditions was probed by the lcp-frap (fluorescence recovery after photobleaching) assay. these tests showed that the obtained protein is thermally stable, functionally active and diffuses well in lcp at certain conditions, making it a suitable candidate for proceeding to in meso crystallization trials. this work was supported by the russian science foundation (project no. - - ). mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation is the key metabolic pathway for the production of atp. mitochondrial respiratory chain (rc) defects are some of the most commonly diagnosed inborn errors of metabolism with a diverse spectrum of clinical phenotypes. the aim of the study is to evaluate the rc enzyme activities and histopathological findings in muscle biopsies of patients with suspected mitochondrial disease. muscle biopsy samples were collected from pediatric patients. the samples were homogenized in seth buffer using a glass/glass homogenizer. the activities of citrate synthase (cs) and rc enzymes (complex i, ii-iii, and iv) were measured in tissue homogenates by kinetic spectrophotometric assays by schimadzu uv spectrophotometer (uv- ). non-collagen protein was determined by the modified lowry assay. activities of complex (c) i, ii-iii and iv (cox) were normalized by cs. histopathological investigations included h&e, modified gomori trichrome, periodic acid schiff, oil-red-o, nadh, sdh, cox and atpase stains. deficiency of rc complexes was detected in biopsies ( %). c iv deficiency was most common ( %), followed by c i ( %) and c ii-iii ( %). multiple complex deficiency was present in % and isolated deficiency was present in % of the biopsies ( % c i, % c ii-iii, % c iv). cs activity was elevated in % of the biopsies. decreased c i/cs, c ii-iii/cs and c iv/cs ratio was observed in %, % and %, respectively. comparing with histological data, biochemical analysis revealed additional findings in % of biopsies. complex iv deficiency, either isolated or accompanied by other complex deficiencies, is most common in our cohort. rc analysis may reveal additional findings to histopathological results and careful clinical investigation with correlation of clinical, biochemical and histopathological data is mandatory for the challenging diagnosis of mitochondrial disorders in childhood. investigation of adipocytokines, activity of glut and na + /k + -atpase in rats fed glucose, fructose, starch-based sugars objective: all over the world, shows a significant increase in obesity and diabetes. intake of foods that contain fructose, glucose and starch-based sugar is a potential risk for metabolic syndrome. obesity and diabetes are important effects of high fructose corn syrup (hfcs). we aimed to research, activity of na + /k + -atpase in addition to glucose transporter (glut) , resistin, adiponectin and other biochemical markers in rats fed glucose, fructose and starch-based sugars. materials and methods: study was performed on rats and groups were included in the study. rats were fed with chows that were given either normal diet for control group ( % carbohydrate, % protein and % fat), high fructose ( % carbohydrate ( % fructose and % starch), % protein and % fat), or high sucrose ( % carbohydrate ( % sucrose and % starch), % protein and % fat). rats were fed with chows for weeks. in this process, the weight of the rats were followed. at the end of the experiment, blood is taken in all groups. level of hba c, glucose, resistin and adiponectin were studied. glut and na + /k + -atpase activity were studied in the liver tissue. results: a significant increase in adiponectin levels were determined in rats fed both hfcs and sucrose (p < . ). a significant decrease in level of na + /k + -atpase activity were determined in rats fed both hfcs and sucrose (p < . ). there was no significant differance level of hba c, glucose, resistin and glut in rats fed sucrose or hfcs (p > . ). conclusions: fructose-rich diet has an effect on changes in the atpase activity and is a major risk factor for obesity. keywords: adiponectin, fructose, glucose, high-fructose corn syrup, na + /k + -atpase, resistin. p- . . - nucleic acid-biomembrane lipid selfassemblies: from primordial soup to novel genome organization model and cellular nonviral nanotherapies f. k. demirsoy , n. eruygur , e. s€ uleymanoglu biotechnology central laboratory, biotechnology institute, ankara university, ankara, turkey, department of pharmacognosy, faculty of pharmacy, cumhuriyet university, sivas, turkey, department of pharmaceutical chemistry, faculty of pharmacy, gazi university, ankara, turkey turkey nucleic acid-cell membrane complexes has attracted research interest as models in gene regulation, cell cycle and division, as biosensors designs, as well as in molecular evolution. zwitterionic phospholipids, complexed with polyribonucleotides by divalent metal cations (mg +) are considered as genosome vehicles. their formations are studied by spectroscopic, thermodynamic, interfacial and microscopic approaches to build thermodynamic and kinetic models of their structural transitions. dna forms a mg +-driven ternary complexes with neutral liposomes both at the airwater interfaces and at vesicle surfaces. the described self-assemblies form relevant models for nuclear pore complexes and their further implications in gene expression and functions. such membrane contacts could be considered also in prokaryotic nucleoids important in bacterial segregation, whereas in eukaryotes these complexes can be regarded as focal points for transcription-translationtranslocation processes. the effects of ozone/oxygen mixture on citrate synthase and mitochondrial complex activities of striated muscle tissue of healthy mice we investigated the effects of ozone/oxygen mixture and oxygen on citrate synthase (cs) and succinate dehydrogenase (sdh) activities of striated muscle tissue of healthy mice. thirty-six mice were included the study. firstly muscle samples were taken from all mice's left thigh muscle in under anesthesia (group ). secondly mice were randomly divided in four groups as: group : oxygen was given once at days for days, group : ozone/oxygen was given once at days for days, group : oxygen was given once at days for days, group : ozone/oxygen was given once at days for days. ozone/oxygen mixture and oxygen were given at a dose of mg/ kg groups ( ) ( ) ( ) ( ) . after treatment animals were sacrificed, and muscle samples were taken and stored in À °c for until the analyses. muscle tissues were homogenized in . m tris-hci and . m kci. cs and sdh activities were measured with spectrophotometer. cs and sdh activities were expressed as lmol/min/g tissue. cs and sdh activity results were given as mean ae sd. cs activity has been found in group ( . ae . ), group ( . ae . ), group ( . ae . ), group ( . ae . ) and group ( . ae . ). sdh activity has been found in group ( . ae . ), group ( . ae . ), group ( . ae . ), group ( . ae . ) and group ( . ae . ). there was no statistically significant difference among all groups in terms of cs (p > . ) and sdh activities (p > . ). there was no difference between all groups in terms of inflammation, muscle fiber size, regeneration or necrosis. vascular structures, connective tissues, lipid and glycogen content of fibers were normal. cytochrome oxidase activity was also normal. ratio of ragged blue fibers of all groups were less than . %, so they were scored as . there was no difference among groups for ragged red fiber content. we have not found a significant effect of ozone/oxygen mixture and oxygen on cs and sdh activities of striated muscle tissue of healthy mice. lipidic cubic phases (lcps) consist of bicontinuous lipid bilayers and water channels. lpcs are widely used for membrane proteins crystallization and further determination of their spatial structures by means of x-ray crystallography. this approach was successfully used for studying g-protein coupled receptors structures. usually crystallization initiates by adding the precipitants (buffers with high salt concentrations). here we propose to use photo-switchable analogs of -monoolein to change lattice parameter of lpc. we synthetized a number of novel diazo-analogs of -monoolein. their structures were confirmed by nmr-spectroscopy and mass-spectrometry. being incorporated in phospholipid vesicles or detergent micelles they subjected to trans-to cis-isomerization under the light exposure at nm. also we characterized the lcp's structures and properties by small-angle x-ray scattering on the rigaku instrument. one of the synthetized compounds, -( -{-[ -(octyloxy) phenyl] diazenyl} phenoxy) propane- , -diol ( % mol), was incorporated into the -monoolein cubic phase. according to small-angle x-ray scattering data the structure of the monoolein cubic-pn m phase with lattice parameter . angstrem was not affected by insertion of this photo-switchable monoolein's analog. after the light exposure at nm we observed trans-cis-isomerization. in the same time the cubic-pn m phase was not changed but the lattice parameter reduced to . angstrem. this effect on monoolein lpc is similar to the addition of a precipitant to initiate protein crystallization process. the spontaneous return to the initial lattice parameter was completed after days in dark. thus, we demonstrated the possible controlling of the monoolein cubic phase lattice parameters by adding the photo-switchable diazo-derivatives of monoglyceride analogs, which can be used for crystallization of membrane proteins. evaluation of certain protein and phosphoprotein expression levels by using western blot technique in head and neck squamous cell carcinoma a. kalayci yigin , t. cora cerrahpasa faculty of medicine, istanbul university, istanbul, turkey, faculty of medicine, selcuk university, konya, turkey introduction: head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (hnscc) is a primer tumor type in head and neck cancers, characterized by aggressiveness, early recurrence and metastasis. while alcohol and smoking play an important role at pathogenesis of disease, deregulation of some signaling pathways, genes and protein levels related to these pathways are considered as important at contribution of development of hnscc. materials and methods: in this study, protein and phosphoprotein expression levels of the frequently phosphorylated sites (egfr, pegfr, igf-ir, pigf-ir, pdgfrb, ppgdfrb, pten, ppten, akt and pakt) were investigated by using a western blot to confirm the expression of mrna in the context of protein levels at normal-tumor tissues of hnscc and sccl-mt that is a hnscc tumor cell line and hek- that is a normal cell line. results: as a result of western blot analysis egfr, pdgfrb and igf- r were detected as highly overexpressed cell surface receptors in tumor tissues of hnscc. discussion and conclusion: the findings of this study revealed the overexpression of other cell surface receptors as well as egfr in hnscc. in conclution, potential pathways were identified by determining the cell surface receptors overexpressed in hnscc, these data support each other and may be important in pathogenesis of hnscc. introduction: the investigation of final products of lipid peroxidation is considered as the main mechanism involved in development of pathogenesis, diagnostics and prognosis of various parasitic illnesses. materials and methods: the concentration of lp-ap in the blood was determined in the study group considered of women ( %), and men ( %). results: before antiparasitic treatment, women infected with g. intestinalis showed a statistically significant . times increase of gpx activity levels; and . times ada level increase compared to the control group. after the treatment, the cat activity showed a sharp increase, whereas the ada activity decreased by . times, compared to the average level before the treatment. the results of the blood samples of the infected men with giardiasis, show the statistically significant increase in the level of all the studied parameters of lipid peroxidation, except the total primary production (tpp). the exception was the mda level, remaining significantly increased, in contrast to the control group and to the condition after antiparasitic treatment. in infected men, the level of cat activity was more than . times higher than that noted in control group. after treatment the levels of ada activity and gpx returned to the values of the control group, while the level of cat activity remained elevated. conclusion: an accumulation of primary and secondary metabolites in the course of giardiasis seems to confirm its involvement in the induction of oxidative-antioxidative homeostasis. antiparasitic treatment in giardiasis leads to normalization of the ap parameters studied in women and men, except the mda content in the blood of men. therefore, additional antioxidant treatment is advised for the antiparasitic therapy of men. in vitro effects of ethanol on rat brain synaptosome and dose-dependent antioxidative role of boric acid ethanol is a psychoactive drug that is very large and used frequently today. it has suppressive effects brain's comminication pathway. depending on its acute or chronic use and the dose, ethanol increase membrane fluidity and it causes oxidative stress. this study deals with the in vitro effects of ethanol toxicity ( mm) and potential protective effect of different doses of boric acid (ba) ( , and mm) on rat brain synaptosomes. with this aim, five male spraque dawley rats are killed by decapitation under anesthesia. after the frontal cortexes of the rats are taken out, each of them is divided into four pieces. these pieces were used as a sample in five groups (control, ethanol, ethanol+ mm ba, ethanol+ mm ba, ethanol+ mm ba) which include six samples. the synaptosomal fractions are prepared by the homogenization of the frontal cortex pieces and centrifugation for each samples. as markers of ethanol-induced oxidative stress in the synaptosome of the rats, malondialdehyde (mda), nitric oxide (no) and catalase (cat) levels were measured. mda levels in the ethahol group were a quantity increased compared with those in the control group but it unchanged significantly as statistically (p < . ). however the mda level in the ethanol+ boric acid ( mm) group was shown to be significantly decreased compared with that in the ethanol group (p < . ). the cat activity of the ethanol group was significantly higher than that in the control group and cat activity of the ba ( mm, mm) groups were close compared with control groups (p < . ). no levels in ethanol groups were decreased but unchanged compared with control groups as statistically. neverthless, no levels in ethanol+ boric acid ( mm) groups were increased (p < . ). these results demonstrate that ethanol ( mm) is capable of triggering damage to rat brain synaptosome and ba could be influential in antioxidant mechanisms against oxidative stress resulting from ethanol exposure. acute myeloid leukemia (aml) is the most common form of acute leukemia in adults and its incidence increases with age. carbonic anhydrases (cas) are zinc-containing enzymes. these enzymes catalyze a very simple physiological reaction, the inter conversion between carbon dioxide and the bicarbonate ion, and are thus involved in crucial physiological processes connected with respiration and transport of co /bicarbonate between metabolizing tissues and lungs, ph and co homeostasis, electrolyte secretion in a variety of tissues/organs, and biosynthetic reactions and many other physiologic or pathologic processes including reproductive tract. investigation of autoantibodies in aml patients have been popular research area in recent years. the aim of the current study was to investigate carbonic anhydrase i and ii (ca i and ii) autoantibodies in the serum of subjects with aml based on the information and considerations of autoimmune relation of acute myeloid leukemia. anti-ca i and ii antibody levels were investigated by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay method (elisa) in serum samples of thirty patients with aml and thirty healthy peers. anti-ca i and ii antibody titers of aml group were significantly higher compared with the control group (p = . ), (p = . ), respectively. we found significant positive correlation between anti-ca i antibody and anti-ca ii antibody titers in patients with aml (r = . , p = . ). we found significant positive correlation between anti-ca i antibody and anti-ca ii antibody titers in women and the men (r = . , p = . ), (r = . , p = . ), respectively. at an anti-ca i cut-off point of . absu, sensitivity was % and specificity %. at an anti-ca ii cut-off point of . absu, sensitivity was % and specificity %. the ca i and ca ii autoantibody levels in patients with aml were found higher compared to control group and the results suggest that ca i and ca ii autoantibodies may be involved in the pathogenesis of aml. aim: behc ßet's disease (bd) is a systemic autoimmune disease. recurrent oral and genital mucosal ulcers, uveitis, and skin lesions are characteristic findings for bd. platelet-lymphocyte ratio reflects a novel marker for romatological diseases. the aim of this study was to investigate the platelet/lymphocyte ratio in behc ßet's disease. methods: whole blood samples were collected from healthy control and patients with behc ßet's disease. the mean age for controls and patients were ae . and ae , respectively (p = . ). patients with chronic disease and inflammatory disorders were excluded. thrombocyte and lymphocyte counts were analyzed with abbott cell dyne heamotolgy analyzer. statistical analysis was performed with ibm spss v . results: platelet counts were higher but not statistically significant in patients with behc ßet's disease compared to control group ( ae vs. ae ) (p = . ). lymphocyte counts were lower in patients with behc ßet's disease compared to control group ( . ae . vs. . ae . ) (p = . ). platelet/lymphocyte ratio was higher but not statistically elevated in patients with behc ßet's disease compared to control group ( ae vs. ae ) (p = . ) conclusions: platelet/lymphocyte ratio (nlr) and mean platelet volume (mpv) as inflammatory markers recently became popular because of their simplicity, cost effectivity and their advantages to predict clinical prognosis of specific diseases. according to this study's results, platelet/lymphocyte ratio must be analyzed in vast scale patient populations to identify the disease. objectives: systemic lupus erythematosus (sle) is a chronic relapsing autoimmune disease characterized by production of autoantibodies against a series of nuclear antigens and by chronic inflammation. in recent years, neutrophil-lymphocyte ratio (nlr) was determined to be a good indicator of inflammatory status. nlr can be easily calculated from a whole blood count. introduction: neuroblastoma, an embryonal malignancy, is the most common extracranial solid tumor of childhood. untreated neuroblastoma tumors and cell lines are reported to have reduced hla class i expression, rendering them potentially susceptible to natural killer cell killing due to lack of engagement of hla class i-specific inhibitory killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptors (kirs). the aim of this study was to investigate whether kir genes could influence the risk of neuroblastoma and prognosis of the patients. materials and methods: study group consisted of neuroblastoma patients ( male, female, median age: months) followed at the pediatric oncology clinic of c ß ukurova university medical faculty. control group consisted of healthy children. patients had stage , , or s disease, patients had stage disease. different kir genes were analysed by sequence specific oligonucleotide probe (ssop) analyses. statistical analysis were done using fisher's exact test. results: compared to the control group, neuroblastoma patients had lower expression of activating kir gene, kir ds (p = . ), and higher expression of inhibitory kir gene dl (p = . ). additionally kir ds genes were more common in patients with early stages (stage , , or s) (p = . ) and kir dl genes were more common in patients with stage (p = . ). furthermore, there were no statistically significant differences between the rate of aa and bx genotypes and their centromeric/ telomeric regions of patients and controls. discussion: kir dl gene can have a triggering effect in neuroblastoma pathogenesis; whereas kir ds can have a protective role. investigating nk cell infiltration and kir receptors in neuroblastoma tissue samples will give more insight to the pathogenesis p- . . - neuroprotective and immunomodulatory effects of urtica urens s. arslan , g. terzioglu , b. kabalay , a. r. tufekci , a. sen , i. demirtas department of biology, faculty of arts and sciences, pamukkale university, denizli, turkey, deparment of chemistry, faculty of arts and sciences, c ß ankiri karatekin university, c ß ankiri, turkey urtica urens (small stinging nettle) has been used for medical purposes in turkey as an alternative therapy. it has been used in the treatment of inflammation that is early, non-specific immune reaction to tissue damage or pathogen invasion, plays an important role in the initiation of neurodegenerative disorders such as multiple sclerosis. however, there are limited studies that investigate anti-inflammatory activity of urtica. therefore, aim of this study is to find out theanti-inflammatory effect of chloroform extract in caco- cell line. for this purpose, firstly, chloroform extract of urtica leaves was prepared. chemical composition of extract was determined by lc-ms. the effect of chloroform extract on selected pro-inflammatory and inflammatory proteins such as tumor necrosis factor-a (tnfa), nuclear factor kappa b (nf-jb), c-x-c motif chemokine (cxcl ), and (cxcl ) were determined. whole genome transcriptome analysis was performed by using human ht- v beadchip. extract treatment caused % and % increases in protein and mrna levels of nf-jb, respectively. on the other hand, tnf-a protein and mrna levels decreased significantly ( % and %, respectively). similarly, cxcl and cxcl mrna levels decreased % and %. transcriptome analysis showed that probes were significantly changed (p < . ). pathway analysis revealed that the extract altered a group of genes involved in immune response, calcium ion homeostasis and transport, potassium channel complex, g-protein coupled receptor protein signalling pathway, etc. it is well established that calcium is very critical for brain cell death and formation of many brain disease including multiple sclerosis. these observations suggests that urtica maybe used in neurodegenerative diseases. in order to further test this hypothesis experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis experimentsand activity guided fractionations have been still continuing. this work is supported by tubitak t . p- . . - linear low molecular weight a- , -glucan from bifidobacterium bifidum bim b- d is implicated in pathogenesis of celiac disease the bifidobacteria are recognized as human commensals and widely used as probiotics. earlier, we have found (kiseleva et al., benef. microbes, , ( ) : - ) that bifidobacterium bifidum bim b- d contains low molecular mass ( - kda) a- , glucans (g anti-tpo and g anti-tg ) that interact selectively with human autoantibodies to thyroid peroxidase (anti-tpo) and thyroglobulin (anti-tg), recognized markers of autoimmune thyroid disease (atd). the aim of the study was isolation and identification of b. bifidum bim b- d biopolymers (bps) interacting selectively with autoantibodies to tissue transglutaminase (anti-ttg) and antibodies to gliadins (anti-gl), recognized markers of celiac disease (cd). we used affinity chromatography with anti-gl, size exclusion chromatography, h and c nmr spectroscopy, elisa with immobilized bps, tissue transglutaminase (ttg) and gliadins (gl) as positive controls. the bp isolated by affinity chromatography with anti-gl (as more available marker of cd) and size exclusion chromatography was identified by two-dimensional nmr spectroscopy as - kda linear a- , -glucan identical to g anti-tpo and g anti-tg . the functional activity of the bp named g anti-gl , viz., ability to interact selectively with anti-ttg and/or anti-gl was proven by elisa with (i) serum samples of cd patients containing either both anti-ttg and anti-gl without anti-tpo and anti-tg or anti-gl without anti-ttg, anti-tpo and anti-tg vs. serum samples of healthy donors without four types of antibodies and (ii) pure anti-gl vs. pure total igg (without anti-ttg, anti-gl, anti-tpo, anti-tg). since (i) serum samples of cd patients do not contain anti-ttg without anti-gl and (ii) pure anti-gl isolated by affinity chromatography with gliadins (gl) cross reacts with tissue transglutaminase (ttg), additional studies with pure anti-ttg are necessary to find out which of the two antibodies, anti-ttg and anti-gl, bind g anti-gl . in conclusion, we proved that b. bifidum bim b- d cells contain linear low molecular mass a- , -glucan, g anti-gl , that interacts selectively with anti-ttg and/or anti-gl. since g anti-gl is identical to earlier found g anti-tpo and g anti-tg , we hypothesize that the a- , -glucan is implicated in pathogenesis of both autoimmune diseases, cd and atd. influences of elevated serum ferritin levels on insulin resistance and non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (niddm) have predicted either because of increased body iron stores or influenced by several inflammatory diseases. low serum hydroxyvitamin d is known to perturb cellular function in many tissues, including the endocrine pancreas, which are involved in obesity and niddm. we planned to investigate the association between hydroxyvitamin d with hematologic parameteres and iron status in obesity vs. diabetic patients. study groups consist of control, non-diabetic obese, obese-diabetic and lean-diabetic groups. serum triglycerides, total cholesterol, ldl-c, hdl-c, fasting glucose, hba c, uric acid, creatinine, ggt, -hydroxyvitamin d, insulin, crp, esr, total blood count and iron status. apart from the three parameters, there were no significant difference (p > . ) between groups. serum ferritin and mchc levels were significantly higher in lean-diabetic patients (p < . ). on the other hand, rdw are determined to be significantly lower (p < . ) in the non-diabetic obese group. no difference was detected in -hydroxyvitamin d levels between the control and the study groups (p > . ). non-diabetic obese patients had significantly (p < . ) higher levels of tg and lower levels of hdl compared to obese-diabetics. insulin levels were higher in nondiabetic obese and obese-diabetics than lean-diabetics (p < . ). this study provides evidence that lean diabetic patients show higher ferritin and mchc levels than obese patients. the increase in serum ferritin and mchc levels is related with altered iron metabolism at cellular level. at late mitosis, the mother cell divides, leaving two daughter cells connected by a thin intercellular bridge (icb). during abscission of the icb, the ingression of the cleavage furrow is formed, and the central spindle microtubules are compacted into the structure known as midbody (mb). the mb is situated within the icb, with the abscission usually occurring at one side of the mb. as a result, only one daughter cell inherits the post-mitotic mb. these mbs can then either accumulate in the cytoplasm or be degraded. recent studies have identified mbs as novel signaling platforms regulating stem cell fate and proliferation. indeed, stem cells as well as cancer cells were shown to accumulate post-mitotic mbs, resulting in reprogramming of the cell fate and conversion to highly-proliferative, stem cell-like phenotypes. it has been proposed that regulated macroautophagy may be playing a key role in mediating pots-mitotic mb degradation. therefore, the experimental approach involved studying the dynamics and function of a protein known as fyco , which associates with postmitotic mbs and may regulate their degradation. in this study we identified fyco as a protein, which associates with post-mitotic mbs and may regulate their degradation. interestingly, fyco is also known to be present on autophagosomes, and overexpression of fyco can induce the formation of enlarged lc -containing autophagocytic structures. here we demonstrate that fyco knock-down leads to defects in autophagic mb degradation, and that fyco functions by targeting endocytic membranes to the autophagic phagophore during early stages of mb degradation. additionally, we showed that fyco depletion leads to increased proliferation and cell growth in soft agar. based on all these data, we hypothesize that fyco mediates selective mbs degradation via endosome-dependent extension of the phagophore around the post-mitotic mbs, and that mbs may be the regulators of cancer proliferation and progression. p- . . - proliferative effect of hypericine on human skin fibroblast cells and identification of the mechanism of action in molecular level to drawbacks associated with efficiency and viral genome integration. in order to improve reprogramming efficiency and compensate for viral transduction, new chemicals have been explored through ipsc research. the aim of this study was to investigate the proliferative effect of hypericine on human skin fibroblast cells (sf) in-vitro, and to identify the mechanism of action in molecular level. the proliferation was measured using the clonogenic and dimethylthiazol diphenyltetrazolium bromide (mtt) assays. real-time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qrt-pcr) was performed to detect the mrna levels of cyclins (d and b ) and cell cycle controller genes (p and p ). sf cells were treated with different doses ( nm- lm) of hypericine for h and h. a significant cell proliferation was observed in moderate concentrations ( . - lm; % -% ), but at high concentrations ( - lm) cytotoxic effects emerged in sf cells (ic = . m, r = . ). qrt-pcr results revealed that the most proliferative dose of hypericine ( lm) stimulates cyclin d . the anti-proliferative activity of hypericine was accompanied by inhibition of cyclin b mrna, whereas it induced expression of p and p genes, and thus apoptosis was observed by dna laddering at the same dose ( lm). overall results suggested that hypericine can compensate for viral transduction and improve reprogramming efficiency of ipscs by enforcing them in g phase. hence we report that hypericine can be a good candidate component for cocktails produced to trigger ipsc proliferation. glioblastoma (gbm) is the deadliest brain tumor. the mean survival time of gbm patients is approximately months, increasing to months after treatment with temozolomide, which is the gold standard chemotherapy. the resistance of gbm to chemotherapy seems to be associated with the blood-brain barrier (bbb) that limits the delivery of chemotherapeutics, and the presence of a population of cells that expresses stem cell-like properties, which are known to be chemo-and radioresistant, the glioblastoma stem cells (gscs). the difficulties imposed by these two factors could be reduced by the use of a targeted drugdelivery liposome-based strategy that allows bbb passage and reduces the side effects of chemotherapeutics. the present study evaluated the ability of the f peptide-targeted ph-sensitive lipid-based nanoparticle containing doxorubicin (dxr) to target gscs and non-gscs. we evaluated the expression of cell-surface nucleolin by flow cytometry, as well as of stem cell-like markers, in two gbm cell lines. we also determined the ability of gbm cell lines to specifically uptake the f peptide-targeted ph-sensitive lipid-based nanoparticles, by flow cytometry, and correlated it with the expression of stem cell-like markers. moreover, to ascertain the impact of intracellular delivery of chemotherapeutic drugs into gbm cell lines, cytotoxicity was further assessed by the mtt assay. our results showed that the f peptide-targeted ph-sensitive lipid-based nanoparticles successfully targeted glioblastoma cells and particularly gscs. in addition, the results also provided evidence of the nucleolin overexpression-dependency of this strategy, emphasizing the need to adapt the therapeutic strategy to the individual patient. this study showed that f -targeted ph-sensitive liposomes may constitute an appropriate strategy to overcome the chemoresistance associated with glioblastoma cells. p- . . - leukemic cell plasticiy as a resistance mechanism towards tyrosine kinase inhibitors chronic myelogenous leukemia (cml) is a hematopoietic stem cell disease characterized by the t( ; )(q ;q ) translocation, which encodes the chimeric tyrosine kinase onco-protein, bcr-abl. the tyrosine kinase inhibitor (tki) imatinib is the first-line treatment for patients with cml. unfortunately drug resistance is one of the main problems observed. while secondary resistance is associated with bcr-abl kinase domain mutations, oncogene amplification and mechanisms interfering with intra-cellular drug concentrations; primary resistance mechanisms haven't been elucidated. we generated high dose imatinib-resistant k subclones (k -ir) by clonal selection to study primary resistance mechanisms in vitro. drug resistance was shown by caspase and annexin v/pi assays. we also showed cellular uptake and function of imatinib with western blot technics. k -ir cells are not only resistant to imatinib but also to nd, rd generation tyrosine kinase inhibitors. we demonstrated that k -ir cells have a highly adherent character, proliferate slowly and are resistant to drug-induced senescence. microarray analysis revealed that k -ir cells differentially express tissue/organ developement and differentiation genes at high levels. we showed that k -ir cells forms intact tumor spheroids in d cell culture conditions which is a marker of tumor initiating potential. cell surface maker analyses and protein analyses of k -ir cell population, points towards an epithelial-mesenchymal plastic cell capable of adopting different morphologies. we hypotizied that imatinib and other tyrosine kinase inhibitors may cause the gain of phenotypic plasticity potential in leukemic cells, by interfering with signalling pathways; which in itself may lead to therapy resistance. hypoxia has multiple effects on cancer cells, which are critically involved in tumor progression. hypoxia leads to changes in tumor cell metabolism and can promote cancer cell survival, invasion and metastasis by its critically important role on maintenance of cancer stem cell (csc) phenotype. in this research, human cd + cscs isolated from human osteosarcoma cell line saos- using macs magnetic separation technique were characterized, and their stemness properties under hypoxic ( % o ) and normoxic ( % o ) conditions were compared in two and three dimensional culture conditions. two different d culture techniques (nanofibrous bacterial cellulose scaffolds and scaffold free microtissues) were used to evaluate effects of hypoxia on csc behavior, and the results were compared with the cell behavior in classical d culture systems. the morphologies of cells were examined by scanning electron microscopy (sem); rt-pcr and immunocytochemistry staining were used to examine the cancer stem cell phenotype maintenance under hypoxic and normoxic conditions. it is shown that hypoxia supports the expression of stemness markers such as oct / , nanog and sox compared to normoxic conditions in d cultures. although similar effects of hypoxia were observed in d cultured cscs, the expression levels of stem cell phenotypeindicative markers were significantly lower on d compared to d culture systems. this study is seen as an introduction to develop a more relevant d hypoxic cancer stem cell based tumor model to study csc behavior and tumor genesis in vitro for testing of novel cancer stem cell therapeutics and to understand signal transduction in cancer stem cells. prostate cancer (pca) is the second most frequent cause of cancer-specific mortality in the world. cancer stem cells (cscs) are a subpopulation of cells that involved in drug resistance, metastasis and recurrence of cancers. the efficacy of natural flavanone apigenin on cell survival, apoptosis and migration of cscs were evaluated. cd + cscs were isolated from human pca pc cells using a magnetic-activated cell sorting system. pc and cscs were treated with different concentrations of apigenin, docetaxel and combinations of the two agents for h. apigenin dose dependently inhibited cscs and pc cell viability, and this was accompanied with a significant increase of the cell cycle inhibitors p and p (kip ). the flavonoid significantly induced apoptosis via an extrinsic caspase-dependent pathway by upregulating the mrna expressions of caspases- , - and tnfa, but failed to regulate the intrinsic pathway as determined by the bax, cytochrome c and apaf- in cscs. in contrast to cscs, apigenin induced intrinsic apoptosis pathway as evidenced by the induction of bax, cytochrome c and caspase- while caspase- , tnf-a and bcl- levels remained unchanged in pc cells. the ability of apigenin to inhibit the proliferation of cscs through apoptosis was confirmed by tali image-based cytometer. the flavanone strongly suppressed the migration rate of cscs compared to untreated cells. significant downregulation of mmp- and - exhibits the ability of apigenin treatment to suppress invasion. the expressions of pi k/akt and nf-kb p / p were significantly decreased after h apigenin treatment. taken together, these data demonstrated that flavonoid apigenin is an invaluable chemopreventive compound that inhibits proliferation, invasion and the stemness properties of cscs. this study was funded by the scientific and technological research council of turkey (tubitak, grant no. s ). (pi k), are frequently found in patients with severe early-onset segmental overgrowth. whilst differences in timing and location of the founder mutation are likely to explain part of the observed disease heterogeneity, it is less clear whether and how quantitative differences in the strength and timing of pi k activity contribute to phenotypic variability. our aim is to characterise pik ca mutant-specific signalling as well as to explore the effects of varying the strength and/or temporal pattern of pi k activation on downstream output specificity in the cell. we are currently employing crispr/cas mediated gene editing in human induced pluripotent stem cells to generate isogenic disease models of three such activating pik ca mutations. these cells will be used for signalome profiling by reverse-phase protein arrays (rppa) to compare and contrast mutant-dependent alterations to candidate signalling networks. in parallel, ongoing efforts focus on developing an endogenously expressed optogenetic p a, allowing precise spatiotemporal control over pi k signaling to unravel the extent to which pi kdependent phenotypes are determined by strength of activation and/or dynamic encoding. ultimately, the outcome of this research will yield novel insight into fundamental aspects of pi k signalling and potentially aid the development of targeted therapies for human diseases of pi k hyperactivation. e. gov, n. kaya, k. y. arga cancer stem cells (csc) have been proposed to be the cancer initiating cells. because of their highly tumorigenic and drug resistant properties, cscs offer significant potential for developing novel anticancer drugs and therapeutic strategies. in the present study we analysed eight gene expression datasets for breast, ovarian, lung cancer and glioblastoma by comparing gene expression levels between stem cells and tumor cells and integrating them with genome scale biological networks. consequently, mutual molecular signatures (i.e: differential expressed genes, transcription factor, mirna) and biological characteristics were determined via integrative analyses, which might be feasible to uncover the mutual biological mechanism insights behind the cscs. it was identified twenty mutual differential expressed genes in four cancer types; jun and klf as transcription factors, egfr and cdk as receptors come into prominence as mutual signatures. molecules and pathways that were related to mapk, wnt, p signaling and pathways in cancer were the common indicators in csc types. our results provided similarities in gene expression profiles of various cscs and gave clues about the seed of tumorigenesis. this study proposed signatures and pathways that could be considered as effective therapeutic approaches in further experimental and clinical applications to eliminate subpopulation of csc. colorectal cancer (crc) is one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide. metastasis is associated with the presence of circulating tumor cells (ctcs) in the peripheral blood of cancer patients. ctc cut-off values have been shown to predict for poorer overall survival in metastatic breast (≥ ), prostate (≥ ), and colorectal (≥ ) cancer based on assessment of . ml of blood. in our study, ctcs were detected in blood samples of colorectal cancer patients, using with our modified convenient method for the strategies of ctc enrichment and detection. . ml peripheral blood samples were firstly collected and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) were isolated from the fresh blood samples by ficoll gradient separation. next, the leukocytes in pbmcs were removed by magnetic microbeads conjugated with cd for a negative selection. finally, the retained cells were labeled with anti-epithelial cell adhesion molecule (anti-epcam), cytokeratins (ck , ck ) and the leukocyte-specific marker as anti-cd . all samples were analyzed by bd facs aria iii flow cytometry. in total, patients and healthy people were included in this study. the results showed that ctcs were not detected in the blood samples of healhty volunteers, but - ctcs were detected with ck , , , -based gating strategy in the blood samples of colorectal cancer patients. it is accepted that the cut off value is ctcs for colorectal cancer and ctc is negative if it is below this value or ctc is considered as a positive, if it is equal to or above this value, which might be an indication for poor prognosis. thus ctc's detection may serve a representative surrogate tumor biomarker for real-time monitoring of disease status and tailoring personalized therapy. cells were grown in culture flasks in a humidified incubator at °c with % co and were used at the proliferation and confluent stages. cultured cells were exposed to the pemf and prfe. the proliferations of the cells are measured by mtt assay for the effect of emf on the cancer cells. on the other hand the wound healing was investigated by closure of the wound by the cell proliferation with cell morphology using inverted microscope images. the proliferation decreased significantly by the effect of pemf on the semi confluent mcf- and mda-mb- cells. this effect was observed more prominent on mcf- . considering prfe therapy this effect is much more pronounced especially for mda-mb- comparing with pemf. the phase contrast observations of these results were consistent with mtt analyses. similarly, this effect was seen less for pemf but the proliferation was more suppressed with prfe on the wound models. it was considered that the emf applications could be effective in cancer cells, but this effect has not been studied how it occurs in invasive cancers. in our cell culture study, the appropriate emf applications were found to be effective though the inhibition of proliferation of cancer cells even in invasive cancer but with lower effect. this means that emf applications may support the existing treatment methods of cancer patients and even people who suffer from invasive cancer. metastasis is the one of the most known causes of death in patients diagnosed with cancer. circulating tumor cells (ctcs) are shed from primary tumors and circulating in the bloodstream, and thought to play a key role in metastasis. a hypothesis that ctcs may contribute to metastasis was first introduced in the mid th century by thomas ashworth, an austrilian pathologist. in today's research, identification and molecular characterization of ctcs are thought to be a novel target for treatment of cancer and a key factor to understand the metastatic process. existing methods of ctc capture based on the cell search system, flow cytometers, laser scanning cytometers instruments, fiber-optic array scanning technology (fast), isolation by size of epithelial tumor cells (iset), and definition fluorescence scanning microscopy. ctcs are increasingly considered as a 'liquid biopsy' and when liquid biopsy is compared to tumor tissue biopsy, liquid biopsy for ctcs detection can be carried out routinely in patients due to accessibility and ease of blood collection. also, primary tumor sampling may not reflect the actual metastatic conditions, ctcs are thought to be a novel tumor biomarker for real-time monitoring of disease status and tailoring personalized therapy. with futher works, ctcs may be used as liquid biopsies and it might provide better understanding metastatic process, new approaches in cancer diagnostics and treatment. mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) are distributed all over the organism as a source of tissue formation and regeneration. glucose is vital for the proliferation and differentiation of mscs. glucose uptake is mediated by specific glucose transporters of two families, the na-coupled glucose transporters (sglt) and glucose transporter facilitators (glut). the presence and function of glut proteins in human placental amnion derived mscs (hamscs) is unknown. we aimed to investigate the presence of glut , glut , glut proteins and genes in hamscs isolated from term placentas. mscs were isolated from human term placenta amniotic membrane, the characterization of cells were provided by flow cytometry. mscs were used to assess their chondrogenic, osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation potential. the expression of glut , glut and glut proteins was detected in hamscs by immunofluorescence. glut , glut , glut protein and gene expression in these cells were investigated by western blot and real-time pcr, respectively. flow cytometry analysis results of isolated cells showed that they were positive for cd , cd , cd , cd (mesenchymal stem cell markers) and hematopoietic markers cd , cd b, cd , cd and hla-dr were negative. the presence of glut , glut , glut proteins and genes were identified in hamscs. in this study, for the first time in literature, glut , glut and glut gene and protein presence was determined in hamscs. therefore, gluts could mediate glucose transport in human amniotic membrane mscs. proliferation and differentiation of mscs in vitro are still not optimized. further studies are required to clarify the complex mechanisms regulating the relationship between glucose and mesenchymal stem cells. disclosure of this relationship may provide a better understanding of glucose-related pathologies such as diabetes. tumors have hierarchically organized heterogeneous cell populations and a small subpopulation of cells, termed cancer stem cells (cscs), is responsible for tumor initiation, maintenance as well as drug resistance. therefore, killing the cscs along with the other cancer cells is gaining an importance. in the present study, it was aimed to evaluate the cytotoxic and apoptotic activity of a novel platin (pt) (ii) complex [pt(hepy) cl ] on mammospheres obtained from mcf- human breast cancer line. elevated expression of stemness markers were determined by western blotting. cytotoxicity was assessed using the atp viability assay. effect of the pt (ii) complex on the formation and development of mammospheres was analyzed with sphere formation (sfa) assay. apoptosis was determined via cytofluorimetric analysis (caspase / activity, annexin-v-fitc and bcl- activity) as well as gene expression analysis. cytotoxicity was confirmed with the atp viability assay after the treatment with zvad-fmk (an apoptosis inhibitor) and necrostatin (a necroptosis inhibitor). in addition, alterations in mitochondrial membrane potential were evaluated by jc- staining. mammospheres exhibited increased oct- and sox (stemness markers) expressions compared to parental mcf- cells. cytotoxicity by pt (ii) complex was evident in a dose-dependent fashion ( . - lm) . pt (ii) complex significantly prevented mammosphere formation and disrupted mammosphere structure in a dose-dependent manner. pt (ii)-induced apoptosis was determined based on the presence of caspase / activity, annexin-v-fitc positivity and bcl- inactivation. apoptosis was also confirmed with increased tnfrsf a and hrk gene expressions. in addition to apoptosis, necroptosis was also present as evidenced with increased mlkl expression. mitochondrial membrane was depolarized. in conclusion, the pt (ii) complex seems to be a powerful apoptosis-inducing compound on cancer stem cells, thereby warrants further in vivo experiments. cancer is a disease which arises from destruction of growth and proliferation mechanisms in cells and is the second leading cause of death worldwide [ ] . in the development of primary cancers, the head and neck cancer is accounting for approximately . new cases annually around the world [ ] . laryngeal cancer is a type of head and neck cancer in which malignant cells arise from the mucosal tissues of the larynx [ ] . cancer might spread from primary tumor by getting into the lymph and blood vessel system and forms secondary tumor. greater than % of deaths in cancer patients are attributed to metastasis [ ] . circulating tumor cells (ctc's) provide an opportunity to understand the metastatic process of cancer patients. identification and molecular characterization of ctc's in the peripheral blood of cancer patients is a promising research area in the field of biomarker development and novel treatment targeting in today's cancer research [ ] . the detection of ctc methods include cell search system, flow cytometry, high-definition fluorescence scanning microscopy, fiber-optic array scanning technology, isolation by size of epithelial tumor cells, and laser scanning cytometers [ ] . in our study, . ml of peripheral blood samples were collected from larynx cancer patients and healthy volunteers and the samples were analyzed by bd facs aria iii flow cytometry via biomarkers epcam, ck , ck for positive selection and cd for negative selection [ ] . according to the results of our study; ctcs were detected in larynx cancer patients by our newly modified method whereas there was no ctc's detection in the samples of controls. thus, this study may provide us monitoring of the treatment process of larynx cancer and this method might be used as diagnostic, prognostic, and predictive biomarkers in cancer therapy as a liquid biopsy. prostate cancer is the second most common cancer and the fifth leading cause of death from cancer in men . circulating tumor cells (ctcs) present in the peripheral circulation of cancer patients with different solid malignancies including prostate cancer and have a potential as a liquid biopsy to monitor disease progression and response to therapies at cell and molecular level . one of the general methods in ctc detection is flow cytometry . radical prostatectomy is the most frequently applied procedure in the surgical management of localized prostate cancer. in this surgical operation, the surgeon removes the entire prostate gland with the seminal vesicles. a radical prostatectomy procedure can be done using the da vinci robotic system (intuitive surgical, sunnyvale, ca, usa) . robotic surgery has been suggested to have fewer complications, lower risk of infections and shorter recovery period following robotic radical prostatectomy , . in this study, our aim was to detect ctcs before and after robotic radical prostatectomy in clinical localized prostate cancer patients. the ctc detection study was performed with our modified method in which . ml of peripheral blood samples were collected from each prostate cancer patient and healthy individual; the samples, using with biomarkers epcam, ck , ck for positive selection and cd for negative selection, were analyzed by bd facs aria iii flow cytometry . according to our results, we detected ctcs in the peripheral blood samples of prostate cancer patients before robotic radical prostatectomy. however, following this surgical procedure no ctc or decreased number of ctss was detected. our study might contribute to understand disease progression after robotic radical prostatectomy in clinically localized prostate cancer patients that warrants further research. keywords: circulating tumor cells, prostate cancer, flow cytometry, robotic radical prostatectomy. p- . . - determination of effect cytotoxic, apoptotic, caspace- activity and mrna expression levels of apoptototic related genes of vulpinic acid on breast cancer cell lines n. kilic ß, s. aras, d. cansaran-duman ankara university, ankara, turkey breast cancer is the most common cancer types in women. several drugs used to treat breast cancer patients are developing resistance to the treatment for this reason success rate falls. therefore the discovery of alternative therapeutic agent and molecular detection of anticarcinogen effect because of treatment for cancer patients may be a source of hope for the contributions. in this study, different concentrations ( . , . , . , . , , , lm) vulpinic acid (va) lichen seconder metabolite was determined to cytotoxic, apoptotic effect and caspase- activity in breast cancer cells (mda-mb- , mcf , bt- , sk-br ) and normal cell (mcf a). in addition to the quantitative real-time pcr (qrt-pcr) using apoptose specific primers (tp- , bcl- , bax, birc- , gapdh, caspase- , caspase- , caspase- , caspase- ) and sybr green dye were performed to determine expression patterns of transcript level in cancer cell lines, using gapdh as a reference gene. the antiproliferative characterization of va effects identification of the gene set at molecular level and we determination role of va on apoptotic pathway. according to our study, va is demonstrated significantly (p < . ) effect cytotoxic, apoptotic, caspase- activity. beside this, dose dependent expression patterns decreased apoptose spesific genes (except of bcl- ) mrna levels from six to eleven fold change more than untreated va cell lines. va will be used as candidate molecule for effective treatment on breast cancer in the future. glycosylation largely determines the variety and functions of proteins. paucimannose, a mannosidic n-glycoepitope has long been thought to be specific for plants and invertebrates. recently, it has also been detected in mammalsin physiological conditions (stem cells) and in pathophysiological conditions (inflammation and cancer). in glioblastoma cells, paucimannose also seems to play a role in cell proliferation. glioblastoma is the most frequent brain tumor in adults with poor prognosis due to a lack of suitable treatments. we hypothesize that paucimannose could be a promising new biomarker as it is otherwise rarely found in mammals. therefore, paucimannose levels were investigated in different glioblastoma cell lines differing in their proliferation rate and tumorigenicity. the highest paucimannose levels were detected in low proliferating, nontumorigenic cells. furthermore, we found that modulation of paucimannose function by application of a specific antibody regulated cell proliferation and the capability of cells to form colonies in soft agar. these data support a functional role of paucimannosidic epitopes in tumorigenic processes. glioblastoma multiforme (gbm) is the most lethal type of malignant brain tumors. recently, gbm stem cells (gscs) have been studied in great deal and accepted that they have a legitimate role in tumor formation, development, chemo-resistance and recurrence. in this study, it is aimed to investigate new therapeutic targets within apoptosis related molecules to select and eliminate cd + gscs effectively. ten primary gbm cells were isolated from gbm tissue samples and they were cultured among with the gbm cell lines (u , u , u and t ). cd + and cd À cells were seperated by macs method via anti-cd (ac ) antibody from cultured cells and cell lines. rna isolation from cd + and (À) cells, cdna synthesis was performed. finally, by performing pcr array, mrna expression levels of genes were detected. proper results were collected and analysed statistically. according to the results of pcr array; it has been found that cd + cells express approximately fold tnfrsf and fold tnfsf when they are compared with control cells. tnfsf binds to cd that is expressed on the surface of tcells. cd does not have a death domain, instead it has a cytoplasmic tail which binds to trafs. trafs act as adaptor molecules that are related with jnk and nf-jb signalling pathways. tnfrsf (dr ) is a death receptor which are known for transmitting the pro-apoptotic signals from outside to the inside of the cell. it negatively regulates t-cell activation and the release of few cytokines. as a conclusion, tnfsf and tnfrsf both are found on immune system cells, mostly on t-cells, which may mean that gbm stem cells act as a immune system cells to avoid the elimination by the immune system. to conclude, acting as an immune system cell and promoting survival via tnfsf and tnfrsf , these molecules may be essential markers to target cd + gbm stem cells. the effect of docetaxel on p , sin a and mdm gene expression in mcf- breast cell line docetaxel is a cytotoxin effective in treating breast cancer. it stabilizes microtubules and causes catastrophic cell cycle arrest in g /m. it also initiate signaling through cell death pathways that result in programmed cell death. in this study, it was aimed to investigate apoptotic and cytotoxic effects of docetaxel has on the mcf- breast cancer cells line. in this study, mcf- breast cell line was applied different doses docetaxel ( nm, nm, lm, lm, lm) as h and h. mtt analysis was performed to the mcf- breast cancer line in control group and groups of docetaxel. afterwards, evaluation of apoptosis by tunel and levels of p , sin a and mdm gene expression by real-time pcr were determined in an order. it was observed cell variable was significant lower in docetaxel groups compared to control group (p < . ) in h as mtt analysis. the lowest cell viabilty was determinated in group applied lm docetaxel. while the lowest positive cell density was determinated in control group, it was observed apoptotic cell density gradually increased with increasing docetaxel concentration in groups treated docetaxel (p < . ). the highest p , si a and mdm expressions were apperared in nm docetaxel group compared to control group. human alpha-fetoprotein (afp) and afp receptor binding domain (afprbd) are able to bind and internalize effectively by wide range of human tumor cells and tissues. as other vector molecules afprbd has insufficient quantity of chemical groups which can be conjugated with drugs or diagnostic agents. conjugation of vector molecules with macromolecular polymer carriers like dendrimers aims to solve this problem. our study describes influence of afprbd-dendrimer-doxorubicin conjugate surface charge on intracellular trafficking routes and toxicity. the amineterminated (g ) and acetyl-terminated (g ) nd generation pamam dendrimers carrying doxorubicin (dox) were used to synthesize conjugates with afprbd. unmodified by afprbd g and g dendrimer derivates labeled with dox were absorbed by the cells at °c with different efficiency. g -dox derivate characterized much slower internalization rate than nonacetylated g -dox. only g -dox shown partial colocalization with lysosomal marker lamp after h of incubation. internalization of afprbd-g -dox and afprbd-g -dox did not show significant difference. at the same time, both conjugates contained afprbd wyкy almost fully associated with lamp already after min of incubation. cytotoxicity results revealed that ic levels of g -dox and afprbd-g -dox coincided and demonstrated a bit higher activity against sensitive to dox skov and resistant skvlb cells than afprbd-g -dox conjugate after h of incubation. at the same time, after h of incubation afprbd-g -dox and afprbd-g -dox were much more than g -dox and g -dox. we may conclude that there is significant difference in ways of dendrimers internalization by tumor cells depending on nature of surface chemical groups. on the other hand, chemical modification of dendrimer conjugated with does not afprbd influence dramatically on the protein trafficking and resulting cytotoxic effect. russian scientific foundation supported this study (no. - - . ) , a key enzyme in glycolysis, catalyzes conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate (pep) into pyruvate with regeneration of adenosine triphosphate (atp). the key regulator of the metabolic alterations found in tumor cells is the glycolytic isoenzyme pyruvate kinase type m that is generally expressed in all proliferating cells and overexpressed in all tumor cells investigated to date. during carcinogenesis a shift in the pyruvate kinase isoenzyme equipment always takes place, such that the tissue-specific isoenzymes disappear, and m -pk is expressed. breast carcinoma, the third most common cancer worldwide, accounts for the highest morbidity and mortality. breast cancer tissue analysis confirmed the upregulation of m -pk in breast cancer, and high m -pk levels were associated with poor prognosis of breast cancer patients. materials and methods: poly hema (mac) nanoploymers were immobilized by binding covalently with sulphur atoms on the gold electrod's surface. pyruvate immobilization was actualysed with cross linking reagent glutaraldehyde. biosensor was developed by preparing pottasiumferrociyanide, selected as a mediator. results: cyclic voltammograms have been carried out at between~ . and . v potentials vs. ag/agci. m -pk activty was detected by using differential pulse method at between . and À . v potentials by observing the differentiations in the current values. in the optimization studies, some parameters such as optimum ph, temperature, concentration of glutaraldehyde and p-hema-mac, were investigated. discussion and conclusion: the method developed for the measurement of the tumor m -pk activity by using biosensor. we found that more advantageous in comparison to other methods reported in the literature so far; it was determined that the method is sensitive, economic, practical and less time-consuming. piruvat kinase tumor m -pk activity determination at low concentrations is possible with this method. p- . . - tie /tek: a potential biomarker for targeting glioblastoma stem cells role in angiogenesis, endothelial cell survival, proliferation, migration and adhesion. therefore, tie /tek could be a potential target for therapeutic strategies directed against glioblastoma stem cells and their microenvironment. in this study, we investigated the gene expression levels of tie /tek in both cd + gscs and cd À gbm cells. gbm primary cells were freshly isolated from glioblastoma tissue samples and cultured in dmem supplemented with % fetal calf serum and % penicillin-streptomycin at °c in % co -humidified incubator. we isolated cd + and cd À cells from gbm primary cells using macs system. following rna isolation from healthy brain tissues, cd À and cd + cells, cdna synthesis was performed. finally, according to microarray protocol, cell surface marker panel array was applied. expression levels were analyzed using the delta delta ct method. statistical analysis was performed using spss software for windows version . . tie /tek gene expression was determined as . fold higher in cd + gscs than normal brain tissue (p < . ). morever it was determined . fold higher compared to normal brain tissue in cd À (p < . ). according to our results tie /tek expression was higher in gscs, indicating that tie / tek may be a potential marker for targeting cancer stem cells in gbm. this research has been supported by the scientific and technological research council of turkey (no: s ). adenosine inhibited the breast cancer stemlike cell population through erk / pathway s. m. jafari, m. aghaie cancer stem cells (cscs) are immortal tumor-initiating cells that can self-renew and drive tumorigenesis in various cancers, including breast cancer and others solid cancers. in a study indicated that extracellular atp reduces tumor sphere growth and cancer stem cell population. but at present, there are no reports available in literature on the effect of adenosine on breast cancer stem cells. in this study we evaluated the effect of adenosine inhibition and its mechanism of action in breast cancer stem cells isolated from breast cancer cell lines. our result showed that adenosine significant reduces breast cancer stem cell population. reduction of erk / protein levels was also observed after treatment cancer cells with adenosine. in conclusion, our results indicate that adenosine decreases the breast cancer stem-like cell population through erk / pathway. taxanes are commonly used for the treatment of many cancers as chemotherapeutic drugs that resistance to these agents has become a major clinical obstacle. taxane based chemotherapy drugs such as paclitaxel, docetaxel and cabazitaxel bind microtubules and inhibit to microtubule polymerization appear to stimulate programmed cell death. taxane-resistance to cancer has not been clearly in progression and development of drug resistance. multiple mechanisms are involved in the drug efflux proteins as multidrug resistance protein, differences in amino acid sequences among the b-tubulin isotypes. we investigated taxane resistance with different doses of paclitaxel, docetaxel and cabazitaxel in prostate cancer stem cells. we compared the expression level of apoptotic proteins, and its functional role in resistance mechanisms in cd + /cd + prostate cancer cell lines. taxane drugs were categorized as concentration-dependent or time-dependent. cabazitaxel caused a time-dependent and dose-dependent reduction in cell viability in all tested cell lines. resistance activity was consistently higher in docetaxel in prostate cancer cells compared with the other drugs. there are many different response of clonogenic formation cd + /cd + cells with resistance to docetaxel, paclitaxel and cabazitaxel in prostate cancer stem cells. the innate of prostate cancer resistances are important characterization steps and critically limits treatment outcomes therefore novel drugs must be focus on antiresistance and molecular based combinations. mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) are self-renewing cells with ability to differentiate into organized, functional network of cells. mscs isolated from various tissues including adipose tissues, bone marrow, umbilical cord, placenta and pancreas have different differentiation and proliferation potential. good knowledge of the metabolism and proliferation mechanisms of stem cells is required for stem cell therapies. glucose is an important molecule in the culture of stem cells. glucose concentration affects the differentiation and proliferation potential of stem cells. the aim of the study was to investigate the proliferation status by identifying the proliferating cell nuclear antigen (pcna) expression under normoglycemic and hyperglycemic conditions in mscs. mscs were isolated from human term placenta amniotic membrane. characterization of the isolated cells was performed using flow cytometry. chondrogenic, osteogenic and adipogenic differentiation potential of these cells were investigated. characterized cells were cultured in normoglycemic and hyperglycemic conditions for and h and the expression of pcna protein expression in these cells were investigated by western blot. flow cytometry analysis showed that isolated cells were positive with mesenchymal stem cell markers cd , cd , cd , cd and negative with hematopoietic markers cd , cd b, cd , cd and hla-dr. western blot result of pcna protein expression statistically significantly increased in human amniotic membrane mscs under hyperglycemic conditions for and h culture. the glucose content of stem cell medium is important because glucose is an effective molecule of the proliferation of stem cells. proliferation of mscs in vitro are still not optimized. when the relationship between glucose and stem cells be understood, it will provide a better understanding for the glucose-related pathologies such as diabetes during pregnancy. prostate cancer (pca) is the second most common type of cancer among men in the world. it is revealed that some gene, protein and metabolite sets control the pca, however the whole metabolomics changes are not completely understood yet. pca is common among older men, and this is an important health problem in developed countries. sarcosine is the n-methyl derivative of the glycine amino acid. glycine n-methyl transferase produces sarcosine from glycine. besides, it is metabolized to glycine by sarcosine dehydrogenase. in , high level of sarcosine in urine was associated with pca by sreekumar et al. they identified sarcosine as a pca biomarker that was significantly increased in urine during prostate cancer progression to metastasis. following this study, several studies have been published indicating sarcosine as a pca biomarker. in our study, a preliminary biosensor system was fabricated for determination of sarcosine in urine by using sarcosine oxidase. sarcosine oxidase was immobilized on au electrode surface using gelatin as an immobilization matrix. glutaraldehyde was used as a cross-linking agent to avoid the loss of the enzymegelatin mixture. optimization and characterization studies were carried out. sarcosine concentrations were detected carefully with the developed biosensor system. the fabricated preliminary biosensor is a promising system that can allow lower detection limits after surface modifications. activation of the epithelial-mesenchymal transition (emt) program in tumor cells is associated with invasiveness and stemness. recent studies implicate emt-inducing molecules in reprogramming energy metabolism. the -phosphofructo- -kinase/fructose- , -bisphosphatase- (pfkfb ) regulates glycolysis by producing fructose , -bisphosphate (f , bp). given that pfkfb is induced by several established emt-inducers in tumor cells, e.g. hif- a and ras, we hypothesized that pfkfb may be involved in regulation of the emt in tumor cells. silencing of pfkfb in pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell lines panc and s vp was achieved using specific sirna molecules. mrna and protein expressions of the cdh gene (encoding e-cadherin, an established epithelial marker), as well as zeb and snai genes, by real-time quantitative (q)-pcr and western blot, respectively. immunfluorescence analysis was performed to visualize e-cadherin protein expression on plasma membrane. in order to test the effect of pfkfb on the invasive ability of the cells, a matrigel invasion assay was performed. ectopic expression of zeb was achived by transfecting cells with a plasmid carrying zeb cdna. cells that were depleted of pfkfb exhibited markedly increased cdh mrna and e-cadherin protein expressions and reduced snai and zeb mrna expressions. immunfluorescence analysis confirmed the upregulation of the e-cadherin protein on plasma membrane. silencing of pfkfb caused approximately % reduction in matrigel invasion, compared to non-targeting sirna. inhibition of the matrigel invasion caused by pfkfb depletion does not appear to be associated with reduced zeb expression, as ectopic expression of zeb did not reverse the effect of pfkfb silencing on invasion. taken together, these data suggest that pfkfb may be required for the maintenance of the mesenchymal phenotype and associated traits in pancreatic adenocarcinoma cell lines. introduction: leukemias are neoplasms that arise from hematopoietic cells initially proliferate in the bone marrow, and then disseminated in the peripheral blood, spleen, lymph nodes and eventually to other tissues. lymphomas occur primarily in the lymph nodes, but can be extended in peripheral blood and bone marrow infiltrate. aim: to determine the values of haematological parameters the control and test groups. to determine the prevalence of types of chronic leukemia in relation to the experimental group. compare haematological parameters in relation to the type of chronic leukemia. materials and methods: a prospective-retrospective study included subjects who were made laboratory hematology in oj clinical chemistry and biochemistry ukcs. blood tests conducted on the hematology analyzer siemens advia hematology system and abbott cell dyn and microscopic analysis of the peripheral blood smear. results and discussion: according to the age of respondents test group was established mild form of anemia, a red blood cell count is totaled . ae . x , which is signifycantly lower compared to the control group. the average number of leukocytes was significantly higher in subjects studied groups and amounted to . x , with a maximum value of x . in the peripheral blood of patients with chronic leucosis has established a significantly higher number of cells compared to the control group (p = . ), while the number of monocytes was a significantly smaller. in the group of patients with chronic leukosis largest number had chronic lymphocytic leukemia ( %), and chronic myeloid leukemia had % of respondents. conclusion: subjects with cll were statistically older than patients with cml, and as regards the gender structure, men have dominated in cll and cml in women. white bloodline was found that the number of leukocytes in both forms of chronic leukemia high above the reference value. p- . . - effect of enzymatic and non-enzymatic isolation methods of endometrial stem cells on their cell proliferative potential and mesenchymal stem cell characteristics human endometrial stem cells (hescs) are responsible for the monthly renewal of the basal layer of the human endometrium by facilitating stromal and vascular regeneration. in this study, hescs were isolated with three different isolation methods including non-enzymatic and enzymatic digestion using trypsin and collagenase type . the effect of these three isolation methods on the acquisition of mesenchymal stem cells (msc) and on hesc proliferative potential was evaluated through flow cytometric analysis of cd surface markers and wst- tetrazolium salt assay. our findings indicate that hescs isolated with these three methods have statistically similar cell proliferation rate at h time point. however, at h time point, hescs isolated with the non-enzymatic and collagenase type method displayed a higher expansion in cell number when compared to the hescs isolated with trypsin. the late passage of hescs isolated with non-enzymatic and trypsin methods showed the highest proliferation rate in comparison to the hescs obtained via collagenase type isolation method at h, h and h. the three isolation methods for the early passages of hescs had a resemblance in their msc profile with no significant difference. on the other hand, late passage hescs isolated using trypsin non-enzymatic method showed a higher cd and lower cd profile. moreover, late passage of hescs isolated with non-enzymatic method displayed a significant reduction in their cell surface cd , cd , and cd surface expression levels. only hescs isolated with collagenase type did not present a significant shift in their mesenchymal cd marker profile from early to late passages, taken together results from this study suggest that the longterm maintenance of mesenchymal markers can only be achieved in cell isolation with collagenase type , while non-enzymatic method is more suitable to obtain higher msc cell yield for immediate use. hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) abundantly arises on the viral and/or chemical-induced cirrhosis in liver. cirrhosis is defined as one of the premalignant stage hcc in which microenvironmental changes occurred such as uncontrolled production of collagen type i and activation of hepatocyte growth factor (hgf)/c-met signaling. it has been shown that epcam+/cd + subpopulation of cells isolated from hcc tissue can initiate tumor at very low concentration in xenograft model and behaves as hepatic cancer stem cells. however, the molecular mechanisms supporting hepatic stem cell activation are not well understood and knowledge about the role of hgf/c-met pathway in this process is not clear. in this study, we aimed to define effect of collagen type i and hgf induction on the cell behaviours of epcam+/ cd . epcam+/cd + cells were sorted by magnetic separation from huh- cells. then proliferation and invasion of cells were analyzed under the hgf induction as well as branching morphogenesis in vitro. after hgf stimulation, phosphorylation level of c-met increased in epcam+/cd + subpopulation. moreover, presence of collagen type i enhanced significantly effect of hgf stimulation in the invasion of epcam+/cd + cells. we also have showed that hgf stimulation increased branching tubulogenesis capacity of epcam+/cd + subpopulation while it did not effect proliferation of cells. these effects of hgf reverted by c-met inhibitor, su , in vitro. all these findings showed that hgf and collagen type i regulates aggressive phenotype as microenvironmental changes via induction of invasiveness of epcam+/cd + subpopulation of huh- . in conclusion, we showed that hgf/c-met signaling causes to get more metastatic phenotype based on invasion and tubulogenesis in epcam+/cd + hepatic cancer stem cells in hcc and it might be possible to use c-met inhibitors to target hepatic cancer stem cells during hepatocarcinogenesis. endometriosis is defined by the migration of endometrial mesenchymal stem cells (emscs) into the peritoneal cavity or other site of body rather than uterus in a retrograde fashion. its previously known intracellular crosslinking enzyme called tissue transglutaminase (tg ) was shown to play important roles in the extracellular matrix (ecm) modelling, fibrosis, cell adhesion and migration. we have hypothesized that tg might be expressed in emscs and take part in the formation of endometriosis. the difference in the proliferation capacity of emsc isolated from endometrial tissue with/without endometriosis was determined using wst- assay and tg activity and expression levels were analysed by btc assay and rt-pcr. the biosynthesis and activity for mmp- and - were investigated with zymography and rt-pcr, respectively. although tg activity was found to be % less in emscs isolated from endometriotic tissue, these cells showed times higher tg protein expression than those isolated from the control tissue without endometriosis. emscs from endometriotic tissue have . times higher tg and . fold higher itgb mrna levels when compared to the cells of healthy group. similar results were observed in sdc- gene expression with a . fold increase. endometriotic emscs demonstrated an average of . -fold increase in the mmp- activity while a onefold increase was evident in mmp- activity when compared to the healthy emscs. emscs from patient group possessed a higher proliferative ability in comparison to that of healthy subjects within h. the fact that emscs from the control tissue showed lower tg protein levels with a high enzyme activity suggested that tg might be important in the development of endometriosis not only by destabilizing ecm but also enhancing the cell migration. in this context, the upregulation of tg along with itgb and sdc was evident in emscs of endometriosis which was possibly associated with the increase in the activity of mmp- and - . recent studies have indicated that pluripotent stem cells and some stromal stem cells such as mesenchymal stem cells (msc) are metabolically different from their differentiated counterparts. in this study, the cellular mechanisms controlling metabolic changes in stem cells was investigated using wharton jelly mesenchymal/stromal stem cells (wj-mssc). wj-msscs were isolated by the explant method and cultured in dmem-f with % fbs. endothelial differentiation was induced by the addition of vegf, egf, insulin and hydrocortisone for days. neuronal differentiation was achieved by using commercial neuronal differentiation medium (millipore) for days. in parallel experiments, cellular metabolic activity such as lactate production was measured. the msc characterization was performed by flow cytometry using antibodies against cd , cd , cd and cd (bd human msc analysis kit). the differentiation process was followed by measuring the expression of cd , cd for endothelial and gfap, neu and tyrozine hydroxylase proteins for neuronal cells by immunofluorescence. for gene expression, nanog, cd and gapdh genes were analyzed by rt-pcr. differentiation stimuli to endothelial or neuronal cells resulted in a significant decrease in msc marker proteins. expression of stem cell markers other than cd were decreased to - %. differentiation induced the expression of cd , cd for endothelial and gfap and neu proteins for neuronal cells. in vitro lactate production was decreased following differentiation in both lineages. neuronal differentiation increased glucose consumption by~ % and the extracellular calcium concentration of these cells was significantly lower than synchronous undifferentiated cells. glycolytic activity is decreased during in vitro differentiation of wj-msscs. metabolic reprogramming and glucose uptake of cells may be an early indicator of the differentiation process in wj-msscs, supporting the view on their metabolic plasticity. store-operated ca + entry (soce) activated by depletion of intracellular ca + stores has been shown to control intracellular ca + homeostasis in many physiological and pathological events. stromal interactive protein, stim , as endoplasmic reticulum (er) ca + sensor and orai protein as pore-forming subunit of soc channels play crucial roles in the activation of soce channels. stim and orai were reported to have pathophysiological roles especially in hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc). anticancer chemotherapy frequently falls back because of these tumor-initiating subpopulations, tentatively called 'cancer stem cells'. the purpose of this study was to investigate the roles of stim and orai on soce in differentiation of huh- hccs expressing epcam and cd surface adhesion molecules (epcam + cd + ). epcam + cd + subpopulations in huh- cells were separated via flow cytometry and transfected with stim and orai- over-expressing (oe) plasmids. expression levels were confirmed by rt-pcr. changes in intracellular ca + concentration were monitored via dual wavelength spectrofluorimeter in fura -loaded cells. in epcam + cd + cells, er ca + release increased without any change in soce compared to that of epcam À cd À cells. similar results were observed in stim -oe epcam + cd + cells. on the other hand, increase in orai has no effect on either parameter. cancer is globally one of the most death causes. recently, huge improvements occurred in the cancer diagnosis and treatment due to advanced technology, however recurrence occurs almost - % of patients and their survival times decreases. in this study, we aimed to investigate of relationship between the cancer stem cells which are strongly associated with chemotherapy and radiotherapy resistance and recurrence with the non-classical mhc i antigens which have immunosuppressive properties. for this purpose, we immunohistochemically evaluated the expression patterns of cd , cd , nanog, oct / , hla-g and hla-e in the advanced stage colorectal, gastric and breast cancer and also non malign biopsy samples. we detected that the cancer stem cell markers cd , cd , nanog and oct / significantly increased in the advanced stage cancer tissues. however, the immunosuppressive hla-g and hla-e expressions increased only in the colorectal and gastric tumor tissue. in addition to the presence of cancer stem cell like cells in the tumor tissues, increased expressions of hla-g and hla-e may indicate an immune evasive adaptation of tumor cells. according to our findings, the hla-g and hla-e may be potential therapy targets to elimination of cancer stem cells of colorectal and gastric cancers. however, more detailed studies are needed to support our findings and also to determinate of clinical values of these markers. endocannabinoids increase sdf- release from human mesenchymal stem cells s. k€ ose , f. aerts kaya , d. uc ßkan c ß etinkaya , p. korkusuz stem cell research and application center, hacettepe university, ankara, turkey, department of histology and embryology, hacettepe university, ankara, turkey lipid-structured endocannabinoids are endogenous morphine ligands and present widespread receptor-mediated effects at physiological and pathological levels on the nervous system as well as many other systems. these effects are partially realized through mechanisms affecting cell growth, differentiation, apoptosis and migration at the molecular level. the hematopoietic progenitor cells (hpcs) and mesenchymal stem cells (mscs) form a distinct niche in bone marrow where they interact with each other in harmony. the stromal cell-derived factor (sdf- /cxcl ) is a chemotactic factor in bone marrow and is released from mscs and their receptor cxcr is found in hpcs. with these rationale in mind, we asked if hpcs and msc interaction mediates sdf- release via endocannabinoidal system. bone marrow mscs obtained from healthy donors and passage mscs were induced with ng/ml lipopolysaccaride (lps) for h. antagonists for cb (am ) and cb (am ) receptors were added to cultures for days. after incubation with antagonists msc culture supernatants collected and processed with human sdf- beta in elisa medium. analyses demonstrated direct decreasing effect of endocannabinoid receptor antagonists on sdf- beta release from bone marrow mscs. in conclusion, endocannabinoidal system regulates sdf- release on mscs and directly act on hpcs mobilization in bone marrow microenvironment (niche). this may have a clinical implication on therapeutic mobilization strategies for hscs in hematology clinical applications. implantation is invasion of the embryo into the endometrium and occurs in three stages apposition, adhesion and invasion, via the complex cellular and molecular mechanisms. during these stages, both of maternal endometrium and embryo should be appropriate for the implantation which is the beginning of pregnancy. receptivity of uterine consists in the existence of growth factors such as tgfbeta- , igfr , vegf. it is indicated that damages of factors relesead from endometrium and blastocyst prevent implantation. recently, stem cells can be obtained from many sources to use for therapeutic purposes and mesenchymal stem cells derived from bone marrow are the most studied. in our study, it was aimed to investigate molecules play a role in blastocyst implantation after bone marrow derived mesenchymal stem cell application into the rat endometriyum. female rats were divided into three groups which were saline (sf, n: ), media (m, n: ), stem cell in media (m+bmsc, n: ). after vaginal smear technique, female rats in estrous cylcle were injected into the uterine and periton ll saline, ll culture media and cell/ ll culture media. the pregnant female rats on the day were sacrified and uterine samples removed and were stained with heamatoxylin-eosin histochemically and anti-tgfbeta- , anti-igfr , anti-vegf and anti-pcna immunohistochemically and obseved under light microscope. h-score results were determined using one-way anova test statistically. it was found that intraperitoneal administration of stem cells with media, was increased tgfbeta- , igfr , vegf and pcna parameters when compared with the intrauterine administration of stem cells. in this study, it was revealed that distribution of molecules play role in implantation were changed due to stem cell application. it is supposed that stem cell treatments can be cured the molecules caused infertility. many unconventional biochemical factors remain to be investigated for their potential effects on stem cells. among others, endogenous gasotransmitter h s, generated from l-cysteine and organosulfur-compounds (oscs) metabolisms, plays very important roles in the central nervous, respiratory and cardiovascular system. slow-releasing h s donors are viewed as powerful tools for basic studies and innovative pharmaco-therapeutic agents for cardiovascular and neurodegenerative diseases. exogenous h s administration is able to promptly scavenge ros, activate myocardial k atp channels and increase pro-cell survival signaling, very likely activating erk and phosphatidylinositol -kinase (pi k)/akt pathways. the effects of h s-releasing agents on the growth of stem cells are not yet widely investigated. therefore, stem cell therapy combined with h s may have great clinical relevance in cell-based therapy for regenerative medicine. the effects of slow-releasing h s agents on the in vitro cell growth and differentiation of human lin À sca + cardiac progenitor cells (hcpc) were here studied. in particular, the effects of h s-releasing agents, such as na s, gyy and water-soluble gsh-garlic conjugates (gsgaws), on the cell viability and differentiation of hcpc were here investigated by colorimetric assay, immune-fluorescence microscopy and western-blotting analysis. the treatment with slow-releasing h s donors increased the cell proliferation in a concentration dependent manner respect to the control. moreover, the treatment with gsgaws led to an up-regulation of the expression of proteins involved in the cell adhesion and differentiation processes. these preliminary results highlight on the effects of this gasotransmitter on the stem/progenitor cells and on the possibility to develop functional d-systems for cardiac tissue repair, that take into account the relevant biological role of h s in the cardiovascular system. p- . . - investigation of the protective effect of boric acid and omega- fatty acid in model of acute myocardial infarction changes in myocardial rats ischemic heart disease being the most common cause of the mortality and morbidity in worldwide commonly results from the occlusion or narrowing of the coronary arteries by atheromatous plaque and thus is named as coronary artery disease. male sprague dawley rats were used in the present study. rats were divided into groups with rats in each: control, mi, mi+boric acid, mi+omega- and mi+boric acid+omega- groups. control rats were treated with ml/day saline, boric acid-treated rats received mg/kg/day boric acid and omega- -treated rats received mg/kg/day for days by oral gavage. for the experimental mi model, mg/kg izoproterenol-hcl (iso) was administered subcutaneously two times with a -h interval in the last days of the boric acid and/or omega- treatments. twelve hours after the second dose of iso, general anesthesia was induced. under general anesthesia and spontaneous respiration, ecg recordings were obtained by using a computerized data recording and analysis system (mp , biopar) and d-ii recordings were used in the analysis. compared to the control group, serum ck-mb, bnp and tnf-a levels were higher in mi group (p < . , p < . and p < . respectively). in the heart tissue homogenate, biochemically measured calpain activation and mda were increased (p < . and p < . , respectively) and pon levels were decreased (p < . ). according to the ecg recordings, st wave and heart rate were found to be decreased (p < . and p < . , respectively). on the other hand, all above mentioned parameters were found to be improved in rats treated with boric acid and/or omega- after induction of mi. moreover, histological analysis including light microscopy and tem revealed a significant histological improvement in rats treated with boric acid and/or omega- after induction of mi. results of the present study suggest that omega- and/or boric acid treatment significantly decreases the cellular damage in mi. this is study is aimed at measuring the level of serum heart-type fatty acid binding protein (h-fabp) in patients presenting with diabetic ketoacidosis (dka) and diabetic ketosis (dk) and to determine its role in identifying early period cardiac ischemia by comparing this level with the level of a control group at a comparable age this study was planned to be a prospective study and it included patients diagnosed with dka, patients diagnosed with dk and voluntary pediatric and adolescent healthy control subjects. the h-fabp, creatine kinase-mb (ck-mb) and troponin-i levels were studied in patients with dka and dk as well as in the control group at the time of presentation. for dka patients, their h-fabp values were measured once again after acidosis correction and compared with the values they had at the time of presentation there were no differences among groups in terms of sex, age, height and weight. no statistically significant differences were found among groups with respect to troponin-i values ( . ae . , . ae . . ae . ; p = . ). no statistically significant differences were found among groups with respect to ck-mb values ( . ae . , . ae . , . ae . ; p = . ). the h-fabp values of dka patients at the time of presentation were found to be statistically significantly higher than those of dk patients and control group ( . ae . ; . ae . . ae . ; p = . ). the h-fabp value of the dka group at the time of presentation was found to be statistically significantly higher than the value at hour after acidosis correction ( . ae . ; . ae . ; p = . ) the fact that h-fabp levels were found to be high in pediatric patients diagnosed with dka at the time of presentation suggested that myocardial ischemia had been triggered. in diabetic patients, every ketoacidosis attack may lead to cardiac ischemia, thereby accelerating progress to necrosis. in conclusion, we would like to propose h-fabp as a potential marker for indicating myocardial ischemia. p- . . - genome-wide analysis of hypoxic stress response in human cardiomyocytes stress in human cardiomyocytes on a genome-wide scale remains poorly understood. this study aimed to identify the gene expression patterns of adaptive response of the human cardiomyocytes (hcm) to hypoxic stress. in vitro experimental models of hypoxia mimicking in-vivo coronary ischemia, are useful tools to identify molecular pathways involved in myocardial ischemia. in the current study, we cultured ac -hcms in dmem/f with %fbs. to simulate hypoxia model, cardiomyocytes were plated in hypoxia chamber ( %o , %co , %n ) for , , , h and the control group was incubated in normal conditions ( %co , %o ). cell viability was determined using mttassay. annexin-v assay was used to monitor apoptosis. gene expression profiling was analysed with affymetrix-hg-u -plus- arrays. following bioinformatic and statistical analyses differentially expressed genes (deg) were classified according to gene ontology using david and kegg pathway analysis tools. according to mtt, annexin-v and hif gene expression results, hypoxia time was determined as h. we identified genes ( down-regulated and up-regulated) (p < . , fold change ≥ . ) were differentially expressed in hypoxic-ac vs. ac . degs were mainly clustered in cell proliferation, regulation of cell death, cell adhesion and response to stress. furthermore, transcriptome analyses revealed that 'metabolic, cytokinecytokine receptor interaction, hif- signaling, tgf-beta, cell cycle and apoptosis' pathways were involved in the hypoxic stress response of human cardiomyocytes. this study provides molecular information regarding gene expression reprogramming of human myocardial hypoxia. the pathways identified in this study may pave the road for translational medicine. this study was supported by tub _ itak project number s . autologous ips cells after reprogrammed into endothelial progenitor cells (epcs) may offer several advantages in the treatment of cardiovascular disorders because of their cardiogenic and vasculogenic differentiation potential. to reach that purpose, we differentiated and characterized mouse ips cells into flk + , a well-recognized epc marker. further maturation of epc was characterized by the expression of cd and cd markers. purified ips cells were differentiated into flk + cells with the use of differentiation medium on type iv collagen-coated dishes in the absence of lif. we then analyzed flk gene expression and protein levels with qrt-pcr, western blot and immunocytochemical methods on days . to . . flk + cells isolated with macs system and then recultured these cells in differentiation medium with vegf to induce epc cells. following induction, cd and cd gene expression and protein levels were analyzed with genomic and proteomic methods. after isolating these cells and aggregate overnight, we cultured cells in three-dimensional condition in collagen type i and used differentiated medium including vegf and egf. we found that flk expressing cell number reached to a peak level ( %) on day . followed by a progressive decline subsequently. in the second step, cd and cd positive cells were generated and enriched during day of induction. we showed optimal time for harvesting flk + cells is day . of initial differentiation. following isolation of flk + progenitor cells they were further matured into functional epcs by vegf within days of induction. additionally for evaluation of angiogenic potantial differentiated cells, we monitored epcs behavior along vascular formation in d culture. our work demonstrates that epcs could be successfully derived from ips cells and these cells have vascular formation and angiogenic potential in d culture. epc drived ips cells play important role in the treatment of cardiovascular disease. p- . . - electrophysiological, biochemical and genotoxic effects of luna experience on heart tissue in rat model pesticides are widely used for the control of agricultural, industrial and domestic pests. however, the uncontrolled use of pesticides has diverse effects on ecological system and public health. fungicides are one of the pesticide type used to kill fungi or fungal spores. in this study, the effect of different doses of luna experience, a fungicide, on the cardiac electrophysiology and genotoxicity in rats were investigated. among five groups ( mg, mg, mg, control and positive control for comet assay) treatment groups received by gavage doses of luna experience for days. electrical activity of heart were recorded using electrophysiological recording techniques. tissue activities of paraoxanase (pon) and arylesterase (are) and level of malondialdehyde (mda) were measured using biochemical methods. comet assay was performed on heart tissue. we calculated genetic damage index (gdi) and damaged cell percent (dcp) from comet assay. it was observed that there is a significant decrease in heart rate in all treated groups as compared with control group (p < . ). amplitude of p wave and qrs complex did not change (p > . ). in all treated groups, statistically significant differences were found for values of pon, are, mda, gdi and dcp when compared to control group (p < . ). according to our results, exposure to different doses luna experience have a probable hazard potential for the cardiac system. the macrocyclic cage complexes iron (ii) clathrochelates are of the interest due to their bioactivity; they are able to inhibit t- rna polymerase, possess toxicity to leukemia cells hl- and suppress amyloid fibril formation. their binding to serum albumins was reported; the extreme binding affinity to albumins is observed for the compounds bearing carboxy groups. upon this interaction, clathrochelates quench protein intrinsic fluorescence and gain optical activity inducing circular dichroism (cd) signal in - nm region. here we examine the effect of spatial arrangement (isomery of substituents) of clathrochelates on their binding to globular proteins. we study bis-substituted clathrochelates bearing two same or different isomers (ortho-/meta-/para-) of carboxyphenylsulfid groups. their interaction with bovine (bsa) and human serum albumins, b-lactoglobulin and lysozyme are explored by cd and protein fluorescence quenching method. the binding of compounds to albumins evoked the cd bands of the same shape, but their intensities vary up to times depending on substituents isomery. in the presence of b-lactoglobulin, the intensities, shape, and positions of the induced cdbands differ for the compounds with different isomer groups. the cd bands induced by the lysozyme in the case of di-para substituted clathrochelate are shifted relatively to the bands of other isomeric compounds. the pronounced quenching of protein fluorescence by clathrochelates was observed only in the case of bsa, its intensity depends on the geometry of substituents ( - times). the different spatial arrangement (isomery) of carboxyphenylsulfid substituents in clathrochelates causes the distinctions in both their cd-signal induced by interaction with proteins and their effect on the protein fluorescence. the geometry of ribbed substituents is important for their binding to biomolecules (particularly proteins) and is suggested to determine the structure of the formed guest-host complex. d bioprinting is a new technology that revolutionized the field of tissue engineering and regenerative medicine, allowing reconstruction of living tissue and organs preferably using the patient's own cells. using a d printer we can design biological structures by controlling exact deposition of cells, growth factors and extracellular molecules in a spatially-controlled manner. the aim of this study was to evaluate the differentiation of human amniotic fluid stem cells (afsc) into endothelial progenitor cells using a bioinkÒ hydrogel photopolymerized in a d network resembling vascular tissue. characterization of afsc was performed by flow cytometry, followed by sorting of the cd + stem cell subpopulation. cd + stem cells were stained with cell tracker red cmtpx and then mixed with bioinkÒ hydrogel. printing was done using a lm diameter needle, under bar pressure, and mm/min speed. the network models with define distance apart were printed and analyzed by fluorescent microscopy. mtt test was used to evaluate the viability of the cd + stem cells. our results showed that afsc remained viable as shown by mtt assay. the fluorescent microscopy images confirm the viability biochemical test showing that the cd + cells viability is maintained after days of cultured in bioinkÒ hydrogel. furthermore, histological section of hydrogel showed that cells have a relatively uniform distribution forming network interactions between cells. flow cytometry assay showed that cd + cells expressed endothelial markers such as cd , cd , cd , cd and vegfr . in conclusion d printers are useful tools for creating three-dimensional scaffolds that mimics the cell microenvironment where different types of cells could proliferate, differentiate and crosslink with each other forming tissue-like structures. this study aims to reveal the biocompatibility, biodistribution and immunomodulatory impact on the production of inflammatory citokines of magnetite (fe o ) nanoparticles functionalized with natural compounds with proved antimicrobial and immunomodulatory effects. co-precipitation synthesized fe o were functionalized with plant-derived compounds: eucalyptol, carvone, limonene and b-pinene. characterization was done by ir, sem and hr tem, while in vitro biocompatibility was tested using endothelial human cells (fluorescence microscopy and proliferation assay). in vivo biodistribution was tested in a balbc mouse model at and days post-intraperitoneal injection, followed by experimental organ removal. tissue sections obtained from vital organs were stained with hematoxylin-eosin. production of inflammatory cytokines was assessed by elisa. results demonstrated that, at concentrations of lg/ml, all prepared nanosystems have a good biocompatibility in vitro and in vivo, allowing the development of cultured cells and also not affecting any visible behavior and organ morphology of the mice. microscopy evaluation of the organs sections revealed that nanoparticles are not present in vital organs such as brain, heart, kidney and liver, but aggregates were visible in the lungs and spleen. at days post-injection no visible aggregated were found in the lungs, few dark-brown nanoparticles clusters being visible in the red pulp of spleen. elisa results revealed that fe o functionalized with carvone and limonene significantly stimulated the production of il- , il- and il- , while reducing the production of tnfa. other nanosystems din not impact significantly on the cytokine production. functional fe o nanoparticles are efficient drug delivery shuttles, able to stabilize pharmacological compounds, such as plant-derived bioactives, and their biocompatibility, specific biodistribution and limited immunomodulatory effects recommend their use in pharmacological formulations. p- . . - new approach for cell imaging with fluorescent carbon nanoparticles m. dekaliuk, k. pyrshev, o. demchenko palladin institute of biochemistry, kiev, ukraine in the nanotechnology field, much interest was focused on the new carbon nanomaterials for cell imaging. recently discovered inorganic carbon nanoparticles ('c-dots') due to their excellent fluorescence characteristics and biocompatibility have ample opportunities for their use in imaging and functional transformations in living cells. their distinctive features, such as high brightness, small sizes, high biocompatibility, small negative charge on the surface and very easy methods of their preparation present a good alternative to other nanoscale materials. the focus of our research was to determine the possibility of using c-dots as the easily available probes for apoptotic cells detection. the carbon nanoparticles were prepared from alanine, citric acid, urea, etc by hydrothermal treatment at c. the studies were performed with adherent epithelial vero and hela cell lines (atcc). with these tools we demonstrate that both native and apoptotic cells can be easily visualized. the cdots uptake occurs probably by endocytosis, which allows for much larger their number to accumulate in apoptotic cells. using the different methods of sample preparation, they show the ability for labeling various structural compartments of the cell. for living cells there are the intracellular vesicles and lysosomes. in contrast, in fixed cells the nucleus is labeled preferentially. the fact that apoptotic cells accumulate strongly increased amount of cdots can be efficiently used in flow cytometry for characterizing the cell populations regarding the relative amount of apoptotic cells in different experimental conditions. the application of such cheap and easily accessible nanoparticles provides more opportunities to simplify the popular methods of cell labeling and detection. previously, our studies showed the possibility of using these nanoscale fluorophores for super resolution method sofi. a new electrochemical microbial biosensor for the fast detecting of dopamine and epinephrine based on candida tropicalis immobilized in a carbon paste electrode (cpe) modified with single wall carbon nanotube (swcnt) was described in this paper. the immobilized cells were used as a source of polyphenol oxidase (ppo) to develop voltammetric epinephrine and dopamine biosensor. voltammetric determination of phenolic compounds like epinephrine and dopamine is a simple technique available. direct oxidation of phenols can be used, but the oxidation potentials of this compounds are similar and they can not be detected distinctively. another possibility is the use of biosensors based on the polyphenol oxidase (tyrosinase) enzyme that oxidises the phenolic compounds into their corresponding quinones. by this way phenolic compounds that epinephrine and dopamine that used in this study were detected at the different potential. the effect of varying the amounts of swcnt and microorganism on the response to epinephrine was investigated to find the optimum composition of the sensor. the effects of ph and temperature were also examined. increases in biosensor responses were linearly related to dopamine concentrations between . and . mm and epinephrine concentrations between . and . mm. limits of detection of the biosensor for dopamine and epinephrine were calculated to be . and . mm, respectively. finally, proposed systems were applied to epinephrine and dopamine analysis in pharmaceutical drugs. objective: it has started a long time ago to search for a material that can replace blood. this material does not require special storage conditions, independently of the recipient's blood group and can be applied to all individual. milk, casein derivatives, starch, saline and ringer were used for this aim in the past. the determination of toxic effect of natural hemoglobin (hb) on human, researchers have focused on development modified blood. in this work, the development of an artificial biomaterial alternative of blood for using as preoperative and operative aims was aimed. material and methods: in our study, ultrapure hb molecules are immobilized on triethanolamine coated magnetic nanoparticles using various techniques. prepared nanoparticles were characterized by ft-ir, ctem, xrd and cyclic voltammetry (cv). the cytotoxic effects of artificial blood were tried on mtt cell proliferation. results: the characteristic peaks of hemoglobin were obtained from ft-ir spectra differently from support. particles size is concluded by using debye-scherrer equation as > nm from xrd spectra. sem and ctem images supported xrd result. cv results showed that hb molecule has À . v cathodic potential against ag / agcl standard electrode. significant differences were not observed in the mtt results (p < . ). conclusion: the nanoparticles were obtained in accordance with the intended desired method. it is determined that the hemoglobin molecules give the same potential with natural blood even after weeks of immobilization and carrying oxygen as natural blood. there are statistical differences between results of mtt tests due to used concentration. but, it is considered that decantation advantage of the artificial blood minimized cytotoxic effects. proteoglycans are among the most abundant molecules of the inter-cellular structure and they are present in extracellular matrices of connective tissues. these glycosylated proteins contain one or more (gag) chains that are covalently attached to the core protein and their hydrodynamic function is mainly due to the physicochemical characteristics of this gag component which provides hydration and swelling pressure to the tissue. gag levels excreted via urine are used as a marker to monitor different diseases (chronic renal disease, renal fibrosis, glomerular filtration abnormalities, bladder stones, breast and lung cancers, hypertension and diabetes, etc.) besides the well known mucopolysaccharidoses. however, their detection by using chromatographic methods is hard, because of the high polarity of negative charges and different functional groups such as acetyl sulfates that generate microheterogenity. in this study, we developed molecularly imprinted chromatographic hplc columns for specific heparan sulfate (hsa), chondroitin sulfate (cs) and dermatan sulfate (ds) detection in urine. positively charged acrylamide monomers were first polymerized by precipitation polymerization, to produce polymers which will show specific recognition for gag's via electrostatic interactions and hydrogen bond formation. these gag selective polymers were then filled in the steel hplc columns and columns eluents were chemically degraded. degradation products of gag's were examined offline column coupled with tandem mass spectrometry. the results showed that our imprinted columns separated gag's specifically and sensitively. thus, urine gag's can be specifically determined by using a gag specific molecularly imprinted column. in this study internal standart weren't used because the matrix effect was lower than % for each urine samples. %cv of ds, cs and hsa was calculated as; supported lipid bilayers (slb) were started to be used for cell culture studies to focus on cell adhesion, cell signaling etc. testing the stability of slbs is essential to utilize them as cell culture platforms. in this study, the stability of phosphatidylcholine (pc) lipid bilayers on glass was investigated under milli-q water, phosphate buffer saline (pbs) and dulbecco's modified eagle medium culture (dme) medium supplemented with/without serum. the stability was also checked by enriching slb with different lipids. pc-liposomes were prepared by hydrating the dried thin lipid film with pbs and then by extruding the suspension through a polycarbonate membrane. a negatively charged phospholipid, phosphatidylserine (ps, %); a positively charged phospholipid, dotap ( %) and cholesterol ( %) were also used for liposome preparation. liposomes were fluorescently labelled and series of slb imaging were taken for a week. in all experiments in milli-q water and pbs, the stability was conserved for days. pc bilayers in medium supplemented with serum showed hole formations on the second day and their number and size increased rapidly in time. when the bilayers were prepared in medium without serum, disruption was lowered but not completely removed as a result of other factors in medium. cholesterol providing an increased rigidity to the membrane caused higher stability. positively charged bilayer structures also showed increased stability. this can be explained by decreased mobility of bilayer as a result of electrostatic interaction between positively charged molecules and negatively charged glass surfaces. decreased mobility decreases the interactions within the medium. lastly, negatively charged bilayers did not show high stability. strong repulsive forces between the negatively charged surface and bilayer probably prevented the integrity of the bilayer and increased the deformation. in recent years the use of biopolymers has gained priority in tissue engineering and biotechnology, both as dressing material and for enhancing treatment efficiency. there is a demand for new biopolymers designed with protease inhibitors and antimicrobials. ll- is an important antimicrobial peptide in human skin and exhibits a broad spectrum of antimicrobial activity against bacteria, fungi, and viral pathogens. using lignin which is an abundant carbohydrate polymer in nature and a polyacrylic acid, we prepared a polymer film by plastifying caprolactone and polyacyrlic acid. films were actified to immobilize ll- . the structure was elucidated in terms of its functional groups by fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ftir), and the morphology of the film was characterized by scanning electron microscopy (sem) before and after the immobilization process. the amount of ll- immobilized was determined by elisa method. . % of ll- peptide was successfully immobilized onto the films. antimicrobial activity was determined in the film samples by quantitative antimicrobial activity method. according to the results, ll- immobilized film samples were effective on test organisms; gram-positive staphylococcus aureus and gram-negative escherichia coli. in bio-compatibility assays, the ability to support tissue cell integration was detected by using t mouse fibroblasts. samples were examined under transverse microscope, non-immobilized sample showed a huge cellular death, whereas ll- immobilized film had identical cellular growth with the control group. this dual functional film with enhanced antibacterial properties and increased tissue cell compatibility may be used to design new materials for various types of biological applications. p- . . [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] in vitro modulation of the cross-talk between macrophages and osteoblasts by titania nanotube-modified ti surfaces p. neacsu, a. mazare, p. schmuki, a. cimpean bone remodeling is a dynamic process that maintains a fine balance between bone formation and resorption, and is highly influenced by the inflammatory state of the local microenvironment. therefore, a proper modulation in the cellular interactions and cytokine expression is a promising approach to achieve enhanced bone healing. as the biomaterials surface has a major impact on cellular behavior, the goal of the current study was to investigate the influence of tio nanotube-modified ti surfaces (ti/tio ) on the cross-talk between raw . macrophages (mf) and mc t -e preosteoblasts (ob) in mono-and co-culture systems in comparison with flat ti (cpti). raw . and mc t -e cells were seeded on the test surfaces and grown in standard culture conditions for various periods of time. for co-culture studies, the cells were cultivated using a transwell system. inflammatory mediators released by raw . cells were measured using elisa technique, while the ob capacity to produce calcified bone matrix was evaluated by alizarin red staining. in co-cultures, lps-stimulated tnf-a, il- and mcp- release was significantly increased at h, while after days only il- exhibited higher amounts when compared with mf cultures alone. moreover, the secretion of these mediators by cells exposed to ti/tio was diminished, especially in lps evoked conditions. also, alizarin red staining demonstrated the presence of calcium deposits when ob were co-cultured with mf for h and days, whereas the presence of the mf for weeks significantly inhibited mineralization. on ti/tio surface elevated calcified matrix was observed, as compared with cpti. this study reveals that the overall effect of inflammation suppression induced by ti/tio may contribute to the enhanced mineralization. also, chronic inflammation may inhibit or delay the regeneration process. therefore, an adequate modulation of mf and ob interactions is vital for the biomaterials success in stimulating bone regeneration. p- . . - synthesis and characterization of the branched magnetic polymer for drug delivery systems t. tarhan , , b. tural , s. tural mardin artuklu university, mardin, turkey, dicle university, diyarbakir, turkey magnetic nanoparticles (mnp) have gained a lot of attention in biomedical and industrial applications due to their biocompatibility, easy of surface modification and magnetic properties. magnetic nanoparticles can be utilized in versatile ways, very similar to those of nanoparticles in general. however, the magnetic properties of these particles add a new dimension where they can be manipulated upon application of an external magnetic field. this property opens up new applications where drugs that are attached to a magnetic particle to be targeted in the body using a magnetic field. often, targeting is achieved by attaching a molecule that recognizes another molecule that is specific to the desired target area. in recent years, the development of the systems in which drug is delivered magnetically to the target is drawing considerable attention since it is a current issue. it is possible to eliminate the most of the problems caused by high doses of chemotherapy by using the magnetic drug delivery systems. therefore, it is important to design delivery systems with high drug loading capacity. it is necessary to increase the number of reactive groups on the surface of nanoparticles in order to increase drug loading capacity. in this study, we synthesized a novel magnetic surface for drug delivery systems. magnetic dextran-nta (md-nta) was synthesized by using magnetic o-carboxymethyl dextran (ocmd) and nana-bis (carboxymethyl) -l-lysine hydrate (nta) in order to increase the number of reactive carboxyl groups on the surface of biocompatible and biodegradable magnetic dextran. magnetic material (md-nta) which was prepared and characterized by the analysis of transmission electron microscopy (tem), scanning electron microscope (sem), vibrating sample magnetometer (vsm), fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ftir) and x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (xps). there are three subtypes of the tgf-b protein that has been reported to be involved in tissue repair process; scar tissue formation has been reported on tissues that has been affected by tgf-b and due to high collagen synthesis. on the other hand the other isoform tgf-b , suppresses the dense collagen production caused by tgf-b and prevents the scar formation. to be able to use these growth factors local or iv route, new drug transport systems are needed to protect the bioactivity during the treatment and controlled release. for this purpose poly(lactic-co-glycolic) acid polymer which is widely used in controlled release systems was chosen as the matrix material. aim of the project was to design, formulate, prepare and optimize tgf-b loaded plga nanoparticular and/or plga polymeric film drug delivery systems and to test their effect on cell proliferation. tgf-b loaded nanoparticles was prepared with emulsion-solvent evaporation method; whereas polymeric film systems was prepared with film castingsolvent evaporation method. following the preparation tgf-b loaded drug delivery systems was characterized. quantification and in vitro release of the growth factor tgf-b was studied with elisa. hepg cell line was used on mtt cell proliferation assay for both tgf-b loaded nanoparticles and films on a time course study. nanoparticles and films were prepared and loading efficiency of the nanoparticles were found to be . %. particle size, zeta index and polydispersity index for this formulation were determined as . ae . nm, . mw and . , respectively. thickness of the prepared films were ae . nm. additionaly prepared nanoparticles and films were found non-toxic. tgf-b nanoparticles and films which were prepared in this study are planned to be used as an effective treatment strategy for wound healing after injury. this project was supported by grand s from the scientific and technological research council of turkey (tubitak). polyvinylpyrrolidone (pvp) is a biodegradable material and natural polymeric biomaterial in such studies. ganoderma lucidum is a natural material containing triterpenes, polysaccharides, adenosine, polypeptides, and amino acids. these constituents have been shown to exhibit anti-cancer properties, enhance and regulate immunity, resist oxidation and ageing, and promote metabolism and cell proliferation. composites of polyvinylpyrrolidone (pvp) have been prepared by solution intercalation method using ganoderma lucidum at different loading amounts. the characterization of pvp/ ganoderma lucidum composites was made by x-ray diffraction (xrd) and scanning electron microscopy (sem); the interactions between ganoderma lucidum and pvp was determined by ftir-atr; the thermal stability was determined by simultaneous tg/dta. hemocompatibility of the prepared composite samples were investigated by a -well plate spectrophotometer. in addition, contact angles and antimicrobial activity of biomaterials were also determined. ftir-atr confirms interactions formed between ganoderma lucidum and pvp. xrd and sem results give evidence that ganoderma lucidum was well dispersed and homogenously in the pvp matrix. thermogravimetric analysis indicated that introduction of clay to the polymer network resulted in an increase in thermal stability. the results of in vitro hemocompatibility test were showed that pvp/ ganoderma lucidum composites are used as biomaterial. the development of synthetic materials, textured polymers and metals and their increasing use in medicine make research of biomaterials' hemocompatibility very relevant. composite material is a multi-phase system consisted of matrix material and reinforcing material. matrix material is a continuous phase and reinforcing material is a dispersed phase. the main two bioactive components of ganoderma lucidum can be broadly grouped into triterpenes and polysaccharides. despite triterpenes and polysaccharides being widely known as the major active ingredients at anti-cancer effect. this study describes the synthesis and characterisation of biocomposites of different molecular weight of peg (polyethylene glycol) as matrix with ganoderma lucidum as a filling material at different loading (% , % . , % wt). the composites have been prepared by solution intercalation method using ground and sieved ganoderma lucidum at micron scale. the characterization of composites was made by x-ray diffraction (xrd), scanning electron microscopy (sem) and fourier transform infrared attenuated total reflectance (ftir-atr) also in this study the hemocompatibility and antibactarial properties of composite investigated. when xrd and ftir-atr results discussed, all of the composites using the different loading amunt of ganoderma lucidum (% , % . and % wt) were shown a homogen distribution in the matrix (peg). and an interaction have occured between matrix and filling material. the sem photos have confirmed these results. peg and composites have been detected as hemocompatible. these results showed that they can be used as biomaterials. p- . . - evaluation of the genotoxic potential of some nanocomposites by comet assay b. yilmaz , s. dogan , s. celikler kasimogullari department of molecular biology and genetics, balikesir university, balikesir, turkey, department of biology, uludag university, bursa, turkey due to its similar nature to the bone, nanohydroxyapatite is a biocompatible particle and poly(methyl methacrylate) (pmma) is a polymer that has been used in dentistry and orthopedic applications for years. in this study, genotoxic potential of pmma/nanohydroxyapatite nanocomposite films composed of polymers having different molecular weights and nanohydroxyapatite fillers in different concentrations ( , . and %) were investigated by comet assay which is a kind of gel electrophoresis that can be used to measure dna damage in individual cells. if the dna is damaged we expect broken ends to migrate apart from the head. at the end of the assay performed after incubation with lymphocytes of healthy humans, we measured the dna damage index (ddi) and percentage of damaged cells (pdc). in addition, to prove the morphological properties of the nanocomposites scanning electron microscope was used and an interaction between the matrix and nanoparticles with a homogeneous dispersion was observed. protein adsorption on stimuli-responsive mixed pdmaema/peo polymer brushes a. bratek-skicki , , c. dupont-gillain universit e catholique de louvain, louvain-la-neuve, belgium, j. haber institute of catalysis and surface chemistry, polish academy of sciences, krakow, poland smart polymer brushes are made of macromolecules that are sensitive to stimuli from the external environment, including ph, ionic strength, temperature, etc. when stimuli-responsive polymer brushes are introduced onto material surfaces, their properties can be adjusted by tuning the environmental stimuli. these brushes can find promising applications across many areas of research, including surface science, nanotechnology, and biotechnology. in our work, the adsorption of human serum albumin (hsa, molecular weight of . kda, isoelectric point ip at ph . ) and lysozyme (lys, molecular weight of . kda, ip~ ) was studied on polymer brushes composed of poly(ethylene oxide) (peo) and poly ( -(dimethylamine) ethyl methacrylate) (pdmaema). peo is a protein-repellent polymer and pdmaema is a polyelectrolyte bearing a variable density of positive charges depending on ph. a gold substrate was modified by these thiolated polymers according to the 'grafting to' method. the obtained polymer brushes were characterized by xray photoelectron spectroscopy, static contact angle measurements and atomic force microscopy. polymer brush formation and protein adsorption were monitored by quartz crystal microbalance. surface characterization of the mixed brushes revealed the presence of both polymers at the surface. conformational changes of pdmaema/peo brushes were experimentally evidenced, and the results indicated that the brushes collapse at ph . (pdmaema is neutral in such conditions) and were swollen at ph . (pdmaema is positively charged). protein adsorption was performed at different ph values ( . - . ) and salt concentrations ( . - . m). it was shown that pdmaema has a high affinity to hsa at ph above its isoelectric point. however, the adsorption of positively charged lysozyme in a wide range of ph was not observed. these results indicate that pdmaema/peo brushes are promising candidates for selective adsorption from a mixture of proteins. clay-polymer nanocomposites (cpn) developed in recent years as a new type of inorganic-organic hybrid materials that were conceived for medical uses such as tissue engineering or drug delivery [ ] , [ ] . the understanding of the structure and physico-chemical properties of cpn is a first step in the investigation of biomaterials, but their potential in this respect is determined by their interaction with living tissue components. in this study, pure kaolinite was intercalated with dimethyl sulfoxide (dmso) and then intercalated kaolinite was modified pyridine, -amino pyridine and , -diamino pyridine to expand the interlayer basal spacing. modified kaolinite samples as filler and poly(vinyl chloride) (pvc) polymer as matrix were used in the nanocomposite synthesis. nanocomposites of pvc have been prepared by solvent blending method using thf as a solvent. the material characterizations were carried out by xrd, afm, ftir-atr, dta/tg and dsc. the xrd results reveal the formation of intercalation/exfoliation of modified kaolinite in the pvc matrix. ftir and afm results confirm the presence of nanomaterial in kaolinite/pvc nanocomposites. tga data show that the modified kaolinit/pvc nanocomposites have significant enhanced thermal stability. the glass transition temperature (tg) of pvc nanocomposites is higher than that of pure pvc. in addition, the antimicrobial activity of clay-polymer composites were also determined. introduction: polyhydroxyalkanoates (phas) are biocompatible and biodegradable materials obtained from microorganisms. they are produced in the cytoplasm of several bacteria as energy reserve. the physical properties of poly( -hydroxybutyrate) (phb), which is from the group of phas, make it a competitive source to petrochemical plastics. phb has potential in order to be used in a variety of application fields such as packaging industry, printing materials, agriculture and food industry. furthermore, phb meets expectations for tissue engineering applications, since it is biocompatible, biodegradable, non-toxic and has good mechanical properties. although its many advantages, blending approach could be needed in order to fulfill all expectations of a material. due to its flexibility, polycaprolactone (pcl) is a promising candidate to be blended with phb. the aim of this study is to construct a scaffold by using phb produced by extreme alkaliphilic b. marmarensis gmbe t (dsm ) and commercial pcl as components and investigate its properties. materials and methods: electrospinning method was used in order to construct scaffolds from blend polymer solution containing phb from b. marmarensis and commercial pcl. results: nanofiber structures were observed on scanning electron microscope (sem) images and fourier transform infrared resonance (ftir) analyses have shown characteristic peaks for both phb and pcl. discussion and conclusion: phb could be blended with other polymers in order to enrich its properties. in addition, nanofiber structure of electrospun phb-pcl blend makes it a rewarding material as scaffold for several tissue engineering applications. q fever is a zoonotic disease that is encountered widely around the world, the most common acute form of q fever shows the following symptoms; a sudden fever, shivering, lassitude, headache, anorexia. because this disease does not show specific symptoms its diagnosis is possible with laboratory tests. current diagnostic kits lack effectiveness; this is why the main goal of our studies is to come up with a new diagnostic kit that does not have disadvantages that current diagnostic kits show. with this goal, nine mile i strain (rsa ), s serologic virulent phase i, were obtained from slovak science academy, virology institute for rickettsia reference and research from who co-operation centre. these cells were purified and lipopolysaccharide (lps) isolation from coxiella burnetii was performed. the polymeric carrier, poly (n-vinyl- -pyrrolidone-co-acrylic acid) [p(vp-co-aa)] was synthesized and characterized. physical complexes of obtained lps and p(vp-co-aa) with varying ratios. ternary complexes of lps-cu + -p(vp-co-aa) were also synthesized with copper metal mediation. structure and interaction of lipopolysaccharide-p(vp-co-aa) complexes were investigated with zeta-sizer device using zeta potential analysis and ftir spectrophotometry according to the ratios of components, reaction environment conditions and chemical structure of the polymer. the best complex ratio according to analysis results will be used in the future studies for obtaining monoclonal antibodies which will be an important step for obtaining more effective and stable diagnostic kits that can be used for q fever. this in this study; new types of water soluble polymer-biomolecule conjugates were synthesized using covalent bonding techniques between polymers and co-polymers (varying monomers of polyacrylic acid and acrylic acid) with peptides. different compositions of polymers, varying ratios of biomolecule/polymer and different molecular weight of polymer has yielded new types of bioconjugates. conjugation mechanism, composition and structure were investigated with various physicochemical methods (uv, ftir, hplc, gpc, etc.). the peptide used in this study was the antigenic peptide epitope of sheep-goat pox disease (eakssiakhfslwksyadadiknsenk). whether this peptide series was bound to polymers or whether it was bound to polymer-protein carrier; peptide-specific immunogens that were capable of producing antibodies were synthesised. it is thought that using polymer-peptide bioconjugates that contain just peptide will yield a higher peptide-specific immunogenicity compared to traditional adjuvants. in vitro and in vivo investigations of bioconjugates effectivity is planned to be done in the future studies. p- . . - bioinert fluorinated ethylene-propylene copolymer modified for keratinocyte adhesion surface properties are crucial when adhesion of a cell to a polymeric material is required for a biomedical application. one of the methods for polymer surface tailoring is argon plasma treatment. this simple and reproducible method alters the surface properties such as roughness and wettability without affecting the bulk properties of the material. for the modification of the bioinert fluorinated ethylene-propylene (fep), related to teflonÒ, we employed argon plasma treatment with the powers of and w for - s. the human keratinocytes of the hacat cell line served as a model cell line for biocompatibility testing. we studied adhesion, proliferation and morphology of the cells on modified fep matrices as well as controls (pristine fep and standard polystyrene tissue culture dish) by means of fluorescence microscopy. further morphological details were acquired by scanning electron microscopy. furthermore, fluorescence microscopy with immunochemical labelling was used to determine the size and distribution of focal adhesions in cells grown on the modified matrices. the overall effect of the matrices on metabolic activity of cultured hacat cells was also evaluated using the wst- reagent. the ar plasma treatment of fep matrices improved significantly cell adhesion and proliferation and promoted spreading of the hacat cells compared to the pristine fep, on which cells were not able to spread properly. also, increased metabolic activity rates for cells cultured on modified matrices were found in comparison to the pristine fep. altogether, we found that ar plasma treatment improved the surface properties of fep to such extent, that it allows cultivation of adherent cells on its surface. we therefore propose that ar plasma treatment is a useful method for fep surface modification. p- . . - graphene oxide enriched biomaterials display potential for tissue engineering applications tissue engineering (te) requires more efficient systems that favor local tissue regeneration with minimum cytotoxicity. materials based on natural compounds ensure biocompatibility and have better effects for regeneration. graphene oxide (go) has been shown to enhance cell adhesion and to improve the rate of cell differentiation. in this context, the aim of this study was to evaluate if the addition of different concentrations ( . - wt.%) of graphene oxide (go) improves the properties of cellulose acetate (ca) materials for biocompatibility and cell differentiation, in the prospective of using these films for te applications. go-containing ca films were tested for cytocompatibility by quantitative and fluorescence microscopy assays, and compared to the ca control. cell cytoskeleton architecture in contact with biomaterials was revealed by confocal microscopy. furthermore, bioconstructs were exposed to in vitro osteogenic and adipogenic induction and monitored for days. histological stainings were performed to validate differentiation. osteogenic and adipogenic markers gene expressions were assessed via qpcr. ca/go wt.% revealed best biocompatibility among all tested scaffolds. adhesion proved to be dependent on the percentage of go in material's composition. cells cultivated on ca/ go wt.% expressed adipogenic and osteogenic markers earlier than cells cultivated on materials with lower go content. differentiation markers displayed an increasing profile of gene expression from to days post induction, with higher levels registered for materials with high go content as compared to films with low go content and to the control. go added to ca materials positively influenced cell survival, proliferation and cell differentiation. ca/go films represent potential candidates for te applications. the design of appropriate scaffolds remains one of the most important challenges for te. current idea is that the cell-scaffold interaction could drive cell differentiation and be linked to gene expression and protein organization. therefore, their quality is essential and should favour cell attachment, growth, migration, in situ vascularization and release of biochemical and physical factors able to address the cell fate. moreover, for an ideal scaffolding material an adequate and interconnected porosity is relevant for facilitating cell spreading and colonization of the inner layers. a combination of optimal mechanical and biochemical properties were here utilized to design a d composite hydrogel scaffold ( d-chs) in order to favour cell-scaffold interactions and promote a functional differentiation of human lin À sca + cardiac progenitor cells (hcpc). the biocompatible peg-diacrylate (pegda) was used to prepare hybrid protein-pegda hydrogels with embedded albumin-microspheres (ms) as protein component. ms were able to modulate the mechanical and biological behavior of the scaffold acting as air-reservoir, porogen agents and potential carriers of biomolecules. an increase of the hcpc viability in the ms-concentration dependent manner was observed. moreover, the microarchitecture of the d scaffold also plays a key role in the stability and functionality of cellularcomposite systems. therefore, pegda-honeycomb structures were fabricated using microstereolithography process and the hcpc viability and adhesion to the microstructures were assessed. d-chss were synthesized embedding honeycombstructures into ms-pegda hydrogel and the effects on cell proliferation, cell-cell interactions and cellular alignment were investigated. these results could be of relevant interest for expanding the knowledge on cell-scaffold interaction processes and to promote the development and the application of d-chs for tissue regeneration using the emerging bioprinting technologies p- . . - gene expressions of mesenchymal stem cells after osteogenic induction on ceraform bone substitute a. kilic s€ uloglu, e. karacaoglu, h. akel, c ß . karaaslan hacettepe university, ankara, turkey ceraformÒ, is a synthetic calcium phosphate ceramic with the chemical composition of hydroxyapatite % and tricalcium phosphate %, with - % pore volume and - lm pore diameter. in this study adipose tissue derived mesenchymal stem cells were differentiated into osteoblast cells and loaded on cer-aformÒ. in order to improve cell adherence, ceraformÒ was covered with fibronectin. the cells were cultivated for -day period by osteogenic induction medium. days , , , and were selected as specific intervals for incubations. total rna was isolated and cdna was synthesized. differences in the expression of runt-related transcription factor (runx ), bone morphogenetic protein- (bmp- ), and osteocalcin (ocn) were determined by qpcr. the peptidylprolyl isomerase a (ppia) gene was used as an internal control. according to the qpcr results, ocn gene expression was observed on the day th, continued to increase in day . bmp- gene expression was increased in , , day compared to day. on the other hand, runx gene expression was increased only on days and . these findings pointed out that the osteogenic induction was successfully activated on fn coated bone material. therefore, these results can be used in bone injury treatment and related disorders. p- . . - on the in vitro cytotoxicity of graphene oxide nanomaterials v. grumezescu , i. negut , f. sima , e. axente , l. e. sima national institute for lasers, plasma and radiation physics, magurele, romania, institute of biochemistry, romanian academy, bucharest, romania during the last decade, graphene and its derivates have proven unique physicochemical properties, several applications being continuously developed. among them, electronic, catalytic, mechanical, optical, and magnetic properties have attracted huge interests. however, the merging of graphene and graphene oxide (go) with biotechnology is still in its infancy, many challenges remaining unexplored. potential applications are related to biosensors, drug delivery or gene therapy and cells imaging. in order to use gos as drug release matrices for cancer cells targeting, it is necessary to ensure that these molecules do not affect normal cells within tissues. it was shown that the cytotoxicity of graphene nanomaterials is highly dependent on surface functionalization. studies suggest that pristine and reduced go with fewer surface functional groups tend to be more toxic than go. in striking contrast, it has been reported that functionalized graphenes, can significantly reduce the cytotoxicity even at relatively high concentrations. in this study, we report on the comparison between go and protein functionalized go when submitted to in vitro cytotoxicity tests. bovine serum albumin (bsa) was used for the noncovalent go surface conjugation. three case-studies were investigated: aqueous nano-colloids consisting of serial dilutions of both go and go-bsa conjugates, dropcasted thin films and laser-assembled thin films on glass substrates. safe concentration windows were identified by live/dead staining and mts assays for different human melanoma cell lines, while melanocytes and human dermal fibroblasts were used as normality controls. the predominant melanoma subtype is represented by cells bearing braf (v e) activating mutation. with a view to target this specific melanoma subpopulation, we embedded braf inhibitors into go laser-deposited scaffolds and tested their anti-tumoral effect. our results evidence the high potential of these nanomaterials for biomedical applications. osteoporosis is a skeletal disorder associated with low bone mass and increase in bone fragility due to increased osteoclastic activity. binding of rank ligand to its receptor on osteoclast precursor cells results in the osteoclast differentiation. sirna is a dsrna, used to inhibit the translation of the target gene. the aim of the study is to develop an injectable sirna-delivery system targeted to the bone for osteoporosis treatment. pei (polyethyleneimine) and rank complex was loaded into poly(lactic acid-co-glycolic acid) (plga) nanocapsules which are bound to hydroxyapatite (hap)-specific elastin-like protein (elp) for targeting to bone tissue. plga nanocapsules were prepared by w/o/w double emulsion technique. affinity of elp to hap was determined by ftir. elp was coated on the nanocapsules by using the transition temperature of elp. elp on plga nanocapsules were crosslinked by genipin and binding of elp on plga nanocapsules were studied by xps and tem. the optimum ratio of n (pei) to p (sirna) in the complexes to be loaded into plga nanocapsules were studied by etbr staining and zeta potential measurements with varying n/p ratios and finally pei-dnaoligo encapsulation efficiency of the capsules was determined by picogreen reagent. xps results of elp treated plga (elp-plga) nanoparticles indicated the presence of nitrogen atom ( . %) in the sample which appeared as a fuzzy halo in tem micrographs. n/p ratios up to show negatively charged particles. when n/p was , the zeta potential of complex was neutralized which also resulted in larger particles compared to the others. zeta potential moved to positive values when n/p was higher than . the migration of polyplexes with different n/p ratios ( - ) was analyzed by gel electrophoresis. dnaoligo complexes show the same patterns of complexation wih that of sirna and thus were used in the encapsulation efficiency studies instead of sirna. the encapsulation efficiency of pei-dnaoligo in plga nanocapsules was %. tuesday september : - : aging p- . . - novel benzenesulfonamides exhibit low toxicity on zebrafish embryonic development and selectively inhibit carbonic anhydrase ix with nanomolar affinity in xenopus oocytes introduction: the toxic effects of two recently discovered inhibitors (vd - and vd - - ) that selectively and with extraordinary strong, picomolar affinity bind to human carbonic anhydrase (ca) ix, an anticancer target, were investigated on zebrafish embryonic development and in xenopus laevis oocytes. zebrafish has emerged as a promising animal model to evaluate the toxicity of the drug candidates. xenopus oocytes do not natively possess any ca activity and thus became a convenient in vivo model system to study the ph effects and the selectivity of synthetic ca inhibitors. materials and methods: morphological changes in zebrafish treated with the compounds were studied by light-field microscopy and histological analysis. ca activity in xenopus oocytes was monitored by measuring ph in the cytosol and at the outer membrane surface and confirmed by mass spectrometry of lysed oocytes. the toxicity studies showed lc values to be lm for vd - , lm for vd - - and lm for ethoxzolamide (eza), a non-selective ca inhibitor commonly used in clinic. the zebrafish exposed to lc doses of vd - and vd - - showed fewer phenotypic abnormalities and less morphological changes compared to the zebrafish treated with the corresponding dose of eza. vd - - exhibited - nm ic for both intracellularly and extracellularly expressed ca ix in xenopus oocytes while exhibiting strong selectivity over ca ii, ca iv and ca xii. discussion: interestingly, the compounds exhibited -fold lower toxicity, induced fewer side effects in zebrafish than eza and the amount of vd - - needed to cause complete inhibition of ca ix enzymatic activity in xenopus oocytes was -fold lower than eza. conclusions: vd compounds did not lead to deleterious effects on the zebrafish embryonic development and reached the ic of nm for ca ix in xenopus oocytes. the compounds could be further developed as anticancer drugs. cacybp/sip is present in various cells and tissues, both normal and pathological. in normal tissues, e.g. stomach or colon, cacybp/sip is weakly or barely detected whereas in gastric or colon cancer this protein is expressed at a high level. there are also data indicating that the level of cacybp/sip expression correlates with tumor metastatic potency and multidrug resistance. taking into consideration data that suggest association of cacybp/sip with many vital cellular processes, in this work we decided to investigate the possible mechanism involved in regulation of cacybp/sip gene expression, mainly by transcription factors and, on the other hand, the influence of cacybp/sip on the expression of other genes. we have shown that nfat (nuclear factor of activated t cells) influences the cacybp/sip gene expression and that overexpression of cacybp/sip has an effect on the level of ap- and on the activity of nfat and ap- transcription factors. by analyzing the cacybp/sip gene promoter sequence we also found potential binding sites for transcription factors from the stat family, which are involved in interferon signaling. microarray data indicate that indeed overexpression of cacybp/sip affects levels of the stat proteins as well as of some interferons and interleukins. based on functional analysis we have found many genes the products of which are involved in immune response. to analyze in more detail the influence of an altered level of cacybp/sip on interferon signaling pathways as well as on factors involved in expression of interleukins, including nfkappab, we plan to apply methods such as luciferase assay, real-time pcr or immunocytochemistry. one of the pathological hallmarks of alzheimer's disease (ad) is the neuritic plaques occurred as a result of the extracellular accumulation of aß peptides formed from amyloid precursor protein (app) via the ß-amyloidogenic pathway. aß is more prone to aggregation to form plaques and more toxic to neurons than aß . in addition to change in app metabolism, the decline in levels of neurotransmitter acetylcholine and cholinergic dysfunction are also observed in ad. thus, current strategies for ad treatment focus on compounds with inhibitory effect on cholinesterases as well as preventive effect on aß aggregation. in our earlier studies, toluidine blue o (tbo), a phenothiazine dye, was shown to be a highly effective inhibitor of cholinesterases with k i values in nm range. we also found that intracellular app and aß levels are reduced in human neuroblastoma cells after treatment with tbo. additionally, an earlier study revealed that tbo has a selective inhibitory effect on tau aggregation, the other pathological characteristic of ad. the aim of this study was to investigate whether tbo may effectively lower the level of extracellular aß / in an ad-like cellular model. chinese hamster ovary cells that express human wild type app and presenilin , namely ps , were treated with a dose range of tbo ( - lm) or vehicle control for h. after treatment, aß / levels in cell culture media were assayed by separate sandwich-based elisas and normalized to total protein levels, determined by bca protein assay. besides, biocompatibility of tbo was evaluated in the ps cells using cell viability assay for flow cytometry. strikingly, all dose ranges of tbo inhibited both aß and aß secreted into the cell culture media. significant reduction for both aß species was evident at lm (p < . ), lm (p < . ), and lm (p < . ) of tbo vs. vehicle control. in conclusion, these results support the idea that tbo may be used as a therapeutic in ad. monitoring the changes of key molecules participating in the osmo-regulatory response of nucleus pulposus intervertebral disc cells during stress-induced senescence e. mavrogonatou, d. kletsas ncsr 'demokritos', athens, greece introduction: intervertebral disc cells are faced with a harsh extracellular milieu characterized by hyperosmotic conditions, nutrient and oxygen deficiency because of the absence of vascularization and oxidative stress due to the accumulation of their metabolism's by-products. we have previously shown that high osmolality is anti-proliferative for disc cells through the activation of the g and g cell cycle checkpoints by p and p mapk, respectively. in addition, we have shown the participation of nine solute transporters, with the a subunit of na + /k + -atpase being central in this response. here we assessed the changes in the expression of these key osmo-regulatory molecules during in vitro stress-induced senescence. materials and methods: changes in cell cycle progression were assessed using flow cytometry; overall transcriptional alterations were assessed by whole-genome arrays; differences in expression at the mrna and protein level were revealed by quantitative rt-pcr and western blotting, respectively; knocking-down of selected proteins was performed by sirna. results: high osmolality led to the differential expression of > genes, including nine genes encoding transporters. p mapk and p were demonstrated to differently participate in the regulation of the aforementioned transporters, while knocking-down of three selected transporters had a distinct outcome on the overall cellular response towards hyperosmotic stress. these molecules were found to show differences in their expression in senescent cells. discussion: given that the presence of senescent cells has been demonstrated in the intervertebral disc in vivo and could most probably attributed to the prevailing stressful conditions, here we showed differences in the expression profile of known key molecules for osmo-adaptation during senescence. conclusion: understanding disc cells' physiology is of outmost importance when designing cell-based therapies for disc degenerative disorders. p- . . - smad specific e ubiquitin protein ligase (smurf ) and its potential effects on inhibitory transmission in aging adams , , , interdisciplinary program in neuroscience, bilkent university, ankara, turkey, national nanotechnology research center (unam), bilkent university, ankara, turkey, department of molecular biology and genetics, bilkent university, ankara, turkey, molecular biology and genetics zebrafish facility, bilkent university, ankara, turkey, department of psychology, bilkent university, ankara, turkey smad specific e ubiquitin protein ligase (smurf ) is part of the tgf-b signaling pathway associated with cellular proliferation, differentiation, genomic stability and senescence. moreover, smurf , via its downstream partners, may regulate inhibitory synaptic transmission. our research group previously found that the smurf transcript is significantly higher in old zebrafish brains. thus, smurf may alter inhibitory synaptic transmission in aged animals. the focus of this study was to examine age-related changes in smurf protein levels and related key inhibitory synaptic proteins; gephyrin (gep), a scaffolding protein for gaba receptors, and gaba a , an ionotropic gaba receptor subtype. additionally, the levels of those proteins were studied in a mutant zebrafish line, which lacks acetylcholinesterase (ache) and is suggested to be a delayed aging model. whole brain tissues were isolated from young, middle-aged and old male and female zebrafish brains (ab/wildtype strain), as well as from old male and female ache mutant zebrafish (ache sb /+ ). animals were maintained and raised in standard conditions. the extracted brain tissue was homogenized in ripa buffer and subjected to western blot analysis to determine differences in the relative protein expression levels. our preliminary data indicated that smurf and gep levels remain stable in the aging brain (p = . , p = . ), and in the ache mutants gep levels are increased compared to the wildtype controls (p = . ). further analysis of the relationships between smurf and gaba a levels and brain aging is ongoing. we predicted that alterations in smurf levels would parallel changes in key synaptic inhibitory proteins during the aging process, which was the case for the gep levels. while smurf may regulate inhibitory synaptic transmission, the exact roles of those synaptic proteins in the context of normal and delayed brain aging are not known well-understood and the subject of continuing study. in recent years, express the hypothesis that aged individuals are vulnerable to infectious and other inflammatory agents and they become more prone to develop majority of severe age pathologies, including cardiovascular and oncology diseases, neurodegenerative diseases, type diabetes mellitus and inflammatory diseases, etc. one of the central components of immune response is the family of toll like receptors (tlr). there are several opinions that single nucleotide polymorphisms (snp) leading to a loss of function of the respective tlrs can be associated with age and increase the risk of age related diseases, especially cardiovascular diseases (cvd). however, many available studies focusing on tlr snps and cvd are with conflicting results. the aim of this study was to assess the potential interaction between genetic variants of tlr and tlr and ischemic heart disease (ihd) in kazakhstan population over years old. we evaluated patients with ihd and healthy subjects aged years and over (ethnical kazakhs and russians living in republic of kazakhstan). polymorphic loci of the genes tlr rs and tlr rs were genotyped by pcr with subsequent restriction analysis. our results indicated that the genotype and allele frequencies of tlr (arg gln) and tlr (asp gly) were not significantly different between the groups (p ≥ . ). statistical analysis didn't elicit any association between studied gene polymorphisms and predisposition to ihd in individuals over years old (p ≥ . ). for these polymorphisms, age, fasting blood sugar and serum lipid levels were not also significantly different among different genotypes in the ihd and control groups. in conclusion, the data shows that there is no interaction between tlr and tlr and ischemic heart disease (ihd) in kazakhstan population over years old. we plan to include other types of polymorphisms in tlr and tlr genes and increase the volume of patient cohort in our future studies. p- . . - evaluation of prognosis with total oxidant/ antioxidant status and some oxidative stress parameters in patients with acute ischemic stroke stroke is the third most common cause of death after coronary heart disease and cancer. strokes are classified into two groups according to their pathology: ischemic stroke and hemorrhagic stroke. ischemic strokes make up % and hemorrhagic strokes % of all strokes. during ischemic stroke, oxidative stress has been shown to play a major role in the occurrence and progression, formed oxidants also affect cell membranes and genetic material such asdna, rna, and various enzymatic events, and they lead to cell damage. some studies have shown oxidant-antioxidant status but have not shown the relationship with prognosis. this study has investigated the relationship between prognosis and total oxidant/antioxidant status and biochemical parameters in patients with acute ischemic stroke patients, with acute ischemic stroke and healthy controls we reenrolled in the study. blood samples were taken within st and th days, and after rd months in the patient group for analysing serum total oxidant status (tos), antioxidant status (tas), catalase, arylesterase, and thiol. prognosis was evaluated with national institutes of health stroke scale (nihss) and-modifiedrankinscale (mrs) scores. there was no significantly difference between groups by means of serum tas, tos and catalase levels. but arylesterase (p: . ) and thiol (p: . ) levels were significantly higher in first h blood samplingthancontrolgroup. statistically significant negative correlation was observed between the rd month values of tos and nihss score (r = . , p = . ). but there was no correlation between mrs scores and serum tas, tos, catalase, thiol and arylesterase. similarly, our findings suggested some serum oxidant levels were increased in acute ischemic stroke patients and total oxidant status might be used in evaluation of prognosis but larger studies are needed. p- . . - amylin and preptin regulate glucose homeostasis in infertile women with polycystic ovary syndrome and poor responders undergoing ivf/icsi disrupted glucose homeostasis leads not only metabolic disturbance such as polycystic ovary syndrome (pcos), but also influences oocyte growing. this study was designed to evaluate follicular fluid (ff) and serum levels of glucoregulatory hormones, amylin and preptin, in infertile women with pcos and poor responders undergoing ivf/icsi. human follicular and serum were obtained from infertile women with pcos and poor responder participants undergoing controlled ovarian stimulation (cos) with gonadotropin-releasing hormone antagonist protocol for ivf/icsi treatment. ff and serum amylin and preptin levels were measured by elisa. it was found that ff and serum amylin and preptin were lower in infertile women with pcos when compared with poor responder participants. ff amylin and preptin concentrations were lower than that of the serum amylin and preptin concentrations. decreased follicular fluid amylin and preptin levels suggest that amylin and preptin may have a physiological role in follicular maturation via controlling local glucose homeostasis. despite high serum levels of amylin and preptin in pcos their low concentration within the follicle may be main culprit of defective folliculogenesis seen in pcos subjects. similar to insulin resistance in pcos subjects existence of amylin and preptin resistance support the critical role of both peptides in follicular maturation in pcos. keywords: follicular fluid; amylin; preptin; polycystic ovary syndrome; infertility. the transcription initiation on p promoter of xp bacteriophage in presence of p protein, a modulator of rna-polymerase activity a. shadrin g.k. skryabin institute of biochemistry and physiology of microorganisms, ras pushchino, russia many bacteriophages are able to manage the transcription system of their bacterial host for their own needs. for example, bacteriophage xp , in the early stages of infection of xanthomonas oryzae inhibits transcriptional activity of bacterial rna-polymerase on majority of promoters via p protein, except of bacteriophage p promoter responsible for expression of the bacteriophage 'middle' class genes. the focus of this work is to study the mechanism of action of p protein in the transcription initiation and identification of the role of the individual elements of p promoter of xp bacteriophage, enabling x. oryzae rna-polymerase escapes inhibition by p protein. we have designed a set of promoter probes representing the combination of sequences of p -resistant p promoter and p sensitive t n promoter. using fret-based assay it was shown that the truncated probes corresponding to promoter dna downstream À position, relative to the transcription initiation start site, did not lead to dissociation of the sigma-factor. longer probes, containing À promoter element, induce dissociation sigma-factor. the in vitro transcription experiments show that the deletion of region , a sigma-factor domain responsible for interaction with À promoter element during the transcription initiation, is not critical for inhibition of rna-polymerase by p protein. promoter probe with up-element of p promoter had affinity to x. oryzae rna-polymerase a several times higher than a probe containing the consensus up-element for e. coli rna-polymerase . summing up the results, it seems like the transcription initiation on p promoter of bacteriophage xp can escape inhibition by p protein through a high affinity interaction between the up-element and c-terminal domains of the alpha subunit of rna-polymerase x. oryzae. p- . . - distribution of soluble form of glial fibrillar acidic protein in the different areas of gerbils brain during development and aging y. kovalchuk, g. ushakova oles honchar dniepropetrovsk national university, dniepropetrovsk, ukraine astrocytes are the most abundant cell type within the cns and play an important role in cns homeostasis and function. glial fibrillary acidic protein (gfap) forms the main astrocytic intermediate filament (if). the overall level gfap in different parts of the brain uneven and depends on the number of astrocyte cells. gfap is very sensitive to any kind of neurodegenerative diseases and aging. during aging, a glial reaction is observed in the human brain, as well as in rat and mouse brains. the aim of our study was to investigate the quantitative astrocytes-specific protein gfap in different areas of the gerbils brain at the first stages of postnatal development and aging. for the study gerbils brains were used and divided into groups (n = ): : newborn animals ( day), - : , and days respectively, : animals aged years. the animals were decapitated under mild anesthesia (thiopental), with isolated brain three divisions: the cerebellum, thalamus and hippocampus, which are then used to produce cytosolic protein fractions. the level of gfap in the obtained fractions were determined according to the method of competitive elisa. newborn gerbils found no significant content of soluble form of glial fibrillar acidic protein in all investigated parts of the brain, and a sharp increase of amount within days (in cerebellumamounted to . ae . lg/ mg tissue; to - days increased to . ae . lg/ mg tissue, and began to grow again in older individuals aged years). unlike the cerebellum, the level of sgfap in hippocampus and thalamus reached the maximum at days p.d. ( . - . lg/ mg tissue), and unchanged for days. these results revealed that the most intensive development of astrocytes in the cerebellum to p.d. of gerbils, and in the thalamus and hippocampus are formed within the first month of life. the plastid-nucleus located protein whiry acts as an upstream regulator of leaf senescence binding to the promoter of senescence associated genes (sags) like senescence marker gene hvs . in order to investigate the impact of whirly on drought stress-induced senescence, transgenic barley plants with a knockdown of whirly (hvwhy kd) were grown under untreated and drought stress conditions. the leaf senescence evolution was monitored by physiological parameters and gene expression studies of senescence and drought stress related genes. to reveal the epigenetic indexing at hvs at onset of drought-induced senescence in wild type (wt) and hvwhy kd lines, stress-responsive loading with histone modifications at gene regions of hvs ( regions in the promoter, one region around translation start site and regions located in the gene body) was analysed by chip and quantified by rtq-pcr. in barley, drought treatment caused acceleration of leaf senescence in wildtype (wt) plants, whereas why kd lines showed a staygreen phenotype. expression of senescence-associated and drought stress responsive genes expression was delayed in hvwhy kd indicating that whirly protein acts as an upstream regulator of drought stress-induced senescence. the chip results showed that drought treatment is causing in wt a significant increase in the levels of h k ac all over the analyzed gene regions, correlating with a massive induction of hvs expression, while drought stress caused no substantial increase of h k ac in why kd plants. the results suggest that drought induced expression of hvs is under epigenetic control, and furthermore that why is involved in this epigenetic control level. oncolytic viral therapy is based on the capabilities of selective lysis of tumor cells and is a prospective trend in cancer disease treatment. in vitro experiments showed that plant rhabdoviruses does not have any direct cytotoxic effect upon sarcoma cells, causes induction of apoptosis in these cells and does not pose any threat to somatic cells of warm-blooded animals, which makes it possible to use this virus for therapy of malignant neoplasms. buckwheat burn virus (bbv), the prototypic member of the family rhabdoviridae, contains surface glycoprotein and which is lectin-active. its carbohydrate branch can aid adhesion of lymphocytes to tumor cells. the present study has addressed the effect of bbv on cancer cell viability. all studies were carried out after week of inoculated with erlich cancernome ( cells/animal, i. p.) in months male balb/c mice treated at once with or without plant extract with bbv ( mg/kg, i. p.). by fluorescent microscopy and using two due staining by acredine orange and propidium iodide it was found that in the rd day of administration of bbv lead to increasing of necrotic and apoptotic cells on % and % respectively versus to untreated group. at the same time the viability of investigated cells was impaired too and according to flow cytometry analysis using propidium iodide the amount of dead cells was elevated by fivefold ( . % versus . % in untreated group). also as was shown in previously reports bbv decreased activity of macrophages in the early stages after injection and it may have a positive effect when using this drug in tumor therapy. when using this drug appears to slow down the possibility of a sharp activation of macrophages, and as a consequence of the development of cytotoxic effect will be prolonged. key words: rhabdoviruses, buckwheat burn virus, cancer, cell viability. plants are considered as one of most promising sources for new antimicrobials, based on the evidence of their use in folk medicine to treat various infectious diseases since ancient times. despite relatively small area size, armenia has large diversity of flora with many endemic species. the main goal of this study was the screening of various parts of herbs (widely being used in armenian folk medicine) for their antimicrobial activities in order to select most prospective plants for further comprehensive studies. plant crude extracts were obtained with maceration technique using five solvents: water, methanol, chloroform, acetone and hexane. agar well diffusion assay was used to evaluate antimicrobial properties of plant crude extracts at lg/ml concentration against escherichia coli vkpm-m , pseudomonas aeruginosa grp , bacillus subtilis wt-a , salmonella typhimurium mdc and staphylococcus aureus mdc , candida albicans wt- and candida guilliermondii hp- . statistical analysis was done using graphpad prism . . crude extracts of all tested plant materials expressed antimicrobial activity against at least one test strain. most of the tested extracts inhibited growth of both gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria. in contrast, only some plant materials exhibited inhibitory activity against yeast strains. according to obtained data sanguisorba officinalis, rumex confertus, hypericum alpestre, lilium armenum and agrimonia eupatoria possessed the highest and broadest antimicrobial activity. moreover, the results showed that acetone was the most effective solvent for solubilizing antimicrobial compounds from plant materials followed by methanol, chloroform, hexane and water. the results demonstrated high antimicrobial activity of medicinal plants used in armenian traditional medicine. five plant species were selected for further comprehensive studies. besides, acetone was proposed as efficient solvent in antimicrobial screening protocols. p- . . - effects of aluminum stress on photosystem-i apoprotein a gene (psab) transcription level in lichen xanthoria parietina (l.) th. fr. unal € ozakc ßa ege university, izmir, turkey in this study the effects of shortrerm aluminium (al) toxicity on the lichen xanthoria parietina (l.) th.fr. were investigated at physiological and transcriptional level. lichen thalli were treated with alcl in different doses ( . , . , and mm). lipid peroxidation and chlorophyll integrity were determined by spectrophotometer. expression level of psab gene was also investigated. chlorophyll a content was significantly (p ˂ . ) decreased after hours treatment with mm and mm of al, while chlorophyll b content was increased significantly due to treatment with increased concentration of aluminum. also treatment with . and . mm al for hours increased the gene expression level of psab by . % and . % respectively. our results indicated that aluminum treatment has decreased the chlorophyll biosynthesis and increased the lipid peroxidation depending on time and concentration. this study also demonstrates that the psi can be readily photo-inhibited by aluminum stress. in conclusion, mm al exposure for hours could damage the electron transport in photosystem i. p- . . - nigella sativa reduces paracetamol-induced nephrotoxicity and oxidative stress in rats: biochemical evaluation background: nigella sativa l. (ranunculaceae) (ns) is traditionally used to treat many conditions such as inflammation. this study evaluates the effects of ns seeds ethanol extract in paracetamol-induced acute nephrotoxicity in rats. material method: forty-eight female wistar albino rats were divided into eight groups: i = sham; ii = sham + mg/kg ns; iii = sham + mg/kg (n-acetyl cysteine) nac; iv = g/ kg paracetamol; v = g/kg paracetamol + mg/kg nac; vi, vii and viii = g/kg paracetamol + , and mg/kg ns, respectively. paracetamol administration (oral) was carried out h after ns and nac administrations (oral), and all animals were sacrificed h later. result: urea and creatinine levels were determined in serum, while glutathione, malondialdehyde levels and superoxide dismutase activity were determined in the kidney tissues. there were significant increases in the serum levels of urea and creatinine in the paracetamol-administered group. serum levels of urea and creatinine were decreased in all groups administered ns with paracetamol. ns administration dramatically restored sod, gsh, and mda levels in the kidneys. conclusion: the results suggest ns has a significant nephroprotective activity on paracetamol-induced nephrotoxicity. it may be suggested that the antiinflammatory and antioxidant effects of ns ethanolic extract originated from different compounds of its black seeds. p- . . - the study of problems of preservation of the birches e. shadenova , , e. zhumabekov , m. sembekov , m. burchaeva institute of general genetic and cytology, almaty, laboratory of genetics and reproduction of forest culture, institute of general genetics and cytology, almaty, kazakhstan nature of deciduous trees have a whole range of various medicinal properties. instead of synthetic hormone substitutes, you can use medicinal infusions and decoctions of natural phytohormones are widely used in both folk and professional medicine. one of these plants is birch, its young leaves and buds. however, they also must be used with caution because overdose of these compounds is very dangerous, not only can you not get the desired effect, but also face the opposite of his action. in our research to mass replication of plants (different types of birches (betula ajanensis, yarmolenko, jacguemontii, maximowiczii, ulmifolia, middendorffii, kelleriana, tianschanica)) we use nutritional medium excluding the application of phyto promoters in order to prevent mutation. the object of research serve as the old, the sick, being on the verge of extinction, mature trees as explant meristema. since from the moment of calling experience and most cultivation occurs at nutritional medium without hormones. as a result of molecular analysis we get without virus, genetically identical plants. molecular certification of different types of birches of interest, both in terms of organizing, and in terms of selection and genetic improvement of valuable forms, identification of lines selected from natural populations and clones obtained in vitro. relationship between clones and installed parent form by comparing profiles amplific pcr products using issr-marking. according to the results of carried out works really recovered clones obtained from one source tree, indicating the potential for certification of clones studied forms of birches pcr. a study performed in the framework of the state grant project "conservation of breeding valuable species of birches". p- . . - fractionated triterpenoid glycosides from sea cucumber inhibit invasion and metastasis in human cancer cells sea cucumbers are slow-motioned invertebrates. holothuria polii delle chiaje, is widely distributed sea cucumber in _ izmir coastline (turkey). it secretes saponins i.e. triterpenoid glycosides (ttg) as secondary metabolites. the aim of this study is to evaluate anti-invasive and anti-migrative effects of fractionated ttgs obtained from h. polii on ht- , t and upci-scc- cancer cell lines. the semi-purified ttgs was extracted from h. polii collected from coast of _ izmir-dikili. the four different fractions (fraction a-d) were collected by using hplc (high-performance liquid chromatography) and characterizated with maldi-ms/ ms. the fractions obtained from h. polii extract include holothurin a ( . m/z) and -dehydroechinoside a, scabraside a or fuscocinerosides b/c isomer ( . m/z). anti-invasive and anti-migrative effects of the fractions on the cancer cell lines were detected with xcelligence rtca dp system. the results showed that fraction a-d inhibited migration and invasion of human cancer cell lines at th and th hours compared to control group. this study shows that holothurin a, dehydroechinoside a, scabraside a or fuscocinerosides b/c isomer could be evaluated as promising anti-cancer agents for human cancers. acknowledgement: the authors acknowledged the scientific and technological research council of turkey (t € ub _ itak) for financial support ( z ). p- . . - alternative splicing regulation of sr proteins in response to environmental stress in chinese cabbage serine/arginine-rich protein (sr protein) family, which acts as rna-binding protein, plays a major role in post-transcriptional regulation of pre-mrna, such as alternative splicing (as). these proteins cause pleiotropic effect by regulating as of pre-mrna in a tissue and developmental stage-specific and stress-responsive manner in arabidopsis. here, we identified genes encoding sr proteins in chinese cabbage (brassica rapa chiifu- ) from brassica database and analyzed their phylogenetic relationship. b. rapa has types of sr protein that are classified into common (sr, rsz and sc) and plant specific (scl, rs z, rs and sr-like) subfamily similar with arabidopsis. interestingly, the as pattern of most sr genes changed at the late stage ( and days after germination). to verify the correlation between sr genes and environmental stress, we screened the as pattern of sr genes to various abiotic stress using rt-pcr and a microarray analysis. in particular, the expression level and the as pattern of bra and bra were affected significantly by heat stress. these results suggest that the as regulation by sr protein correlates with adaptation mechanism to the environmental stress in chinese cabbage. p- . . - characterization of recombinant prolyl oligopeptidase from myxococcus xanthus and potential use in gluten hydrolysis e. k. kocaazorbaz, f. zihnioglu faculty of science, biochemistry department, ege university, izmir, turkey a recombinant prolyl oligopeptidase from myxococcus xanthus was purified with a specific activity of u mg(- ) by using nickel-metal-chelate affinity chromatography and gel permeation chromatography. the recombinant enzyme had a monomeric molecular weight of kda. its isoelectric point, determined by two dimension polyacryl-amide gel electrophoresis, was close to . . the optimum ph and temperature was estimated as . and °c, respectively. the purified enzyme was stable from ph . - . and able to thermal stability up to °c. the k(m) and v(max) values were . mm and . micromol/ min per mg. the enzyme exhibited hydrolytic activity for suc-gly-ala-pna, suc-gly-pro-pna, z-gly-pro-pna, igf- , substance p, whereas no activity for h-gly-pro-pna, h-val-ala-pna, h-arg-pro-pna, h-ala-pro-pna, glu-ala-pna, pro-pna, leu-pna. its proteolytic activity was inhibited by activesite inhibitors of serine protease, z-pro-prolinal pmsf, and metal ions, cd + and hg +. the potential use of the enzyme was tested by the hydrolysis of the wheat gluten. the resulting gluten hydrolysate were characterized by means of their antioxidant, antibacterial, trypsin inhibition and prolyl oligopeptidase inhibition activities. keywords: serine protease, prolyl oligopeptidase, bioactive peptides, , , -trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid. proteomic analysis is probably the best approach to analyze seed germination. however, it is difficult to analyze complex samples and there are many obstacles that must be faced in order to achieve a reasonable proteome coverage. for example, the barley (hordeum vulgare) genome was fully sequenced in , but the uniprot database contains less than reviewed sequences, which is approximately -fold less than for arabidopsis thaliana. here, to improve the barley proteome coverage, we employed several fractionation methods including polyethylene glycol precipitation, strong cation exchange chromatography, off-gel separation, sds-page and acetonitrile elution gradient. proteomic analyses were performed using an lc-ms-based analyses and an uhr q-tof mass spectrometer. the candidate peptides were targeted via selected reaction monitoring (srm) and triplestage quadrupole (tsq) mass spectrometer. in total, proteins were identified, which represents a three-to four-fold increase compared with the standard shotgun analysis of the same sample. out of these, were only accessible by one of the techniques and, besides, the detection limits were not similar. we hypothesized that an srm-based targeted analysis will allow detection and quantitation of most of these proteins, even without the application of proteome fractionation. we can conclude that all peptides from the library with ms/ms spectra of the total intensity above , are easily detectable in the total protein extracts. p- . . - transcriptome sequencing based identification of alternative oxidase genes in white waterlily, nymphaea alba alternative oxidases (aoxs) are the terminal oxidases in the respiratory electron transport chain of plants. they reduce molecular oxygen to water with low proton translocation across the inner mitochondrial membrane. in plants, aoxs increase local tissue temperature to release volatile compounds thereby attracting pollinator insects and regulation of mitochondrial retrograde signaling pathway. regulation of retrograde signaling pathway is currently under investigation to improve cultivation studies in many plants. water lilies are aquatic ornamental and economically valuable plants classified under nymphaea family. nymphaea alba, white water-lily, has a special focus since its applications in landscaping of parks and gardens, farming as vegetable and medical applications. however, cultivation of n. alba is a challenging process. we hypothesized that by controlling alternative oxidases, success rate can be increased for n. alba cultivation. to identify alternative oxidase encoding genes in n. alba, we performed transcriptome analysis. by using transcriptome analysis data, aox gene sequences, subcellular localization of aox proteins and structural modelling of aox proteins were predicted. in transcripts, database search with trinotate tool revealed transcripts with aox domains characterized in known alternative oxidases. blast analysis of these sequences with known aox proteins revealed three distinct aox genes (nalba-aox , nalba-aox and nalba-aox ). after subcellular localization analysis of three identified aox proteins by using targetp server tool, nalba-aox , nalba-aox are predicted as mitochondrial while nalba-aox is localized in chloroplasts. template based structural modelling results showed that all identifed proteins are statistically similar to known structure models of corresponding aoxs. most environmental contaminants have toxic and mutagenic effects on living organisms as a result of the activation of free radical formation and inhibition of reparation activity. it is becoming relevant to search for protectors of natural origin from the effects of xenobiotics. many biologically active substances (bas) of inartificial origin are found to be antioxidants and can increase the body's resistance to the toxic and mutagenic effects of a wide range of pollutants. the aim of the study was to investigate the antioxidant and antimutagenic properties of bas from medicinal plants limonium gmelinii (plumbaginaceae) and inula britannica (compositae). the antioxidant potential of plant extracts was determined by the activity of superoxide dismutase (sod), catalase, and the content of malonic dialdehyde. mutagenic and anti-mutagenic properties of the extracts were determined in the test by counting chromosomal aberrations in root meristem of barley seeds. barley seeds were treated with an aqueous solution of unsymmetrical dimethyl hydrazine (udmh), which is highly toxic i class hazardous material, well known pro-oxidant. the results showed that udmh enhanced the process of lipid peroxidation and decreased the mitotic activity. treatment of barley seeds with extracts from i. britannica and l. gmelinii and their germination in the presence of stress factors stimulated antioxidant defenses in the primary roots of barley seeds. increase of the activity of sod and catalase, and reduction of peroxidation level of lipids were observed. cytogenetic study showed no mutagenic activity in plant extracts. when effects of plant extracts and udmh were combined there was a significant reduction in the frequency of structural mutations, induced by the toxicant. conclusion about the presence of the antioxidant and antimutagenic activity in the studied plant extracts is made. the work done within the framework of the mes project (no. gr rk ). p- . . - comparative analysis of cytokinin dehydrogenase inhibition and trans-zeatin treatment in arabidopsis seedlings j. nov ak , v. koukalov a , z. medvedov a , c. martin , j. hradilov a , l. sp ıchal , b. brzobohat y mendel university in brno, brno, palack y university in olomouc and centre of the region han a, olomouc, czech republic cytokinins are plant hormones regulating many processes during plant life ranging from germination to senescence. manipulation of cytokinin levels and their impact on plant vitality, production and ability to defend against stresses is in great interest of agriculture. in this work we focused on comparison of inhibitor of the cytokinin degradation incyde ( -chloro- -( -methoxyphenyl)aminopurine) and exogenous application of trans-zeatin on arabidopsis thaliana seedlings. transcripts of genes regulating cytokinin metabolism were analysed by rt-qpcr analysis. classical cytokinin root essay revealed that incyde effect is comparable to that of trans-zeatin in a similar concentration-dependent manner. besides a negative effect on the primary root length, both substances induce flavonoid accumulation and an increase in the root hairs formation. histochemical staining of transgenic plants expressing glucuronidase (gus) under cytokinin-responsive promoter of arr gene revealed increased gus activity in cotyledons following incyde treatment suggesting diverse localization of cytokinin modulation upon trans-zeatin and incyde treatment, respectively. possible molecular differences originating in different cytokinin population and distribution following trans-zeatin or incyde treatments were monitored on the level of gene expression and via an lc-ms proteome analysis in roots and shoots of -day-old plantlets. rt-qpcr analysis revealed an alteration in cytokinin metabolism that could explain observed differences on the proteome level between incyde and trans-zeatin treated seedlings. pharmacologically inhibited cytokinin degradation could be very efficient tool for modulation of cytokinin levels. interestingly, the application of incyde and trans-zeatin shows a contrasting spatial and temporal pattern on molecular levels. incyde represents potent growth regulator with interesting properties useful for agriculture. p- . . - the expression yield of prokaryotic alphaamylase is significantly magnified by molecular cloning techniques randomly hydrolyzing glycosidic bond alpha-amylase has been traditionally employed in bread and similar industries. in that regard, increasing the overall expression level of the enzyme is a crucial concern in biotechnology. to reach the goal, appropriate alpha-amylase producing species and expression vector were carefully selected. therefore, genome of bacillus subtilis was extracted and amplified by polymerase chain reaction (pcr) using specifically designed primers. subsequently, the extracted gene was inserted in expression vector pht and transferred to e. coli as intermediate host followed by bacillus subtilis host replacement. the recombinant vector was expressed in bacillus subtilis and the expression was evaluated by agarose gel electrophoresis. relative purification of the recombinant enzyme was performed by kda filtration to remove impurities. to identify the biochemical characteristics, starch was used as specific substrate to measure enzyme activity and the enzyme was exposed to various ph and temperatures. the extra-cellular expression of alpha-amylase enzyme was successfully elevated by folds in comparison to the native enzyme. the optimum temperature and ph for the enzyme was carefully determined as °c and , respectively. the enzyme was stable at °c, but thermal stability was dramatically decreased at higher temperatures up to °c. kinetic parameters were also measured; vmax was . u/ml min and km was . mg/ml. it is concluded that the elevated expression extent of recombinant alpha-amylase together with appropriate qualifications could make the clone a good choice for various industrial applications. flax seedlings of cultivars tmp , lira and lines g- / _o, g- / _k were treated for and hours with lm alcl solution or distilled water (control). twelve small rna libraries were constructed and sequenced using illumina gaiix. to identify known mirnas, obtained sequences were aligned with mirnas from mirbase (http://www.mirbase.org/). fold change value was calculated to identify up-and down-regulated mirnas under al stress. in total, about million raw reads were obtained and conserved mirnas from families were identified. significant expression alterations in flax plants under al treatment were shown for mir and mir . expression level of mir was varied in similar way in resistant and susceptible to al genotypes: mir was up-regulated after hours of alcl exposure and down-regulated after hours. mir expression was increased after hours of alcl exposure and decreased after hours in susceptible to al flax genotypes (lira, g- / _o), while in resistant genotypes (tmp , g- / _k) mir level was decreased after both and hours of al treatment. in other plant species, mir and mir were identified as al-responsive. mir targets mrna of tcp (teosinte branched/cycloidea/pcf) transcription factors, which control plant growth. mir targets mrna of tas protein, which regulates lateral root growth via degradation of arfs (auxin response factors). in flax, the involvement of mir and mir in response to al stress was shown for the first time. moreover, we revealed diverse expression alterations of mir in susceptible and resistant to al genotypes. this work was financially supported by grant - - from the russian science foundation. p- . . - association genetics of phenylalanine ammonia lyase (pal) and cinnamyl alcohol dehydrogenase (cad) enzymes involved in lignin biosynthesis of european black poplar (populus nigra) b. taskiran, z. kaya middle east technical university, ankara, turkey populus nigra l. are considered as one of the most economically significant forest trees with respect to production of wood, biomass, and other wood-based products. while wood quality and biomass are directly associated with high cellulose content, lignin emerges as an undesirable polymer for both pulp and biofuel manufacturing industries. the aim of the study is by choosing the superior and eliminating the inferior clones to make a contribution to woody feedstock development and to improve wood quality of populus nigra. to estimate association genetics of pal and cad enzymes which have important functions in lignin biosynthesis, the important germplasms of populus nigra has been sampled from year old poplar trees ( clones x replicates x ramets) which were grown in behic ßbey plantation clone bank in ankara. additionally, five commercially registered clones and six foreign clones were included to the study to make comparison. the average mean values of cellulose, lignin and glucose content were calculated as . ae . lg/ml, ae . lg/ml, and ae . lg/ml, respectively. even though for pal and cad enzymes, data gathering process have been still resuming, particular clones have been separated from all in terms of pal and cad activities as expected. key words: populus, poplar, lignin, pal, cad, genetic variation, feedstock p- . . - proteomic analysis of the molecular mechanisms of the response of plant seeds to pre-sowing treatment by stressors seed treatment with non-ionizing low-level radiation (nr), such as cold plasma (cp) or electromagnetic field (ef), is a modern eco-agricultural technology for stimulation of plant germination and performance. the molecular determinants of seed response to these treatments are not established and no genomic studies of plant seed response to nr have been reported. we studied the effects of pre-sowing seed treatment, using vacuum ( min), radio-frequency ef ( - min) and cp ( - min), on germination and growth of non-oilseed helianthus annuus. to gain an insight into the molecular mechanisms underlying effect of nr on sunflower seed germination and dormancy, we estimated changes induced in the balance of plant hormones and differential protein expression. the results of the germination tests and estimation of seedling morphology showed that response develops in time and is stronger when sowing is performed in days in comparison to days after seed treatment. the d dige analysis revealed differentially expressed proteoforms in kernels of seeds treated with cp or ef. proteins involved in biological processes of seed maturation, response to stress, response to abscisic acid stimulus, processes of organonitrogen compound metabolism and glucose catabolism were identified. while expression patterns for majority of the proteins were highly specific to cp and ef treated seed kernels, accumulation of several proteoforms of seed storage proteins (ssp), including vincilin-like, miraculin-like protein and albumin- were common for both experimental groups. this suggested that response to nr treatment could be at least partially associated to function of ssps in response to oxidative stress that protects proteins required for seed germination and seedling formation. variation of abundance of distinct proteoforms of helianthinin, vicilin-like and s globulin-like ssps suggested that post-translational modifications are involved in regulation of the function of ssps. p- . . - suppression of lipopolysaccharide-induced inflammatory responses in raw . macrophages by tuber extract of cyclamen l. turkey is a prominent centre of plant diversity, being the meeting point of three main floristic zones. geophytes which have underground storage organs such as, tubers, bulbs and rhizomes. cyclamen l. is a tuberous geophyte traditionally used by some people for treating whooping cough, headaches or sinusitis, and confirmed to have antioxidant, analgesic and anti-inflammatory properties by several reports. a prolonged inflammatory response is often associated with chronic diseases such as cancer, arthritis and autoimmune disorders. recently, plant based products are used as an alternative and complementary treatment of these diseases. in this respect, the present study was aimed to determine the effects of three cyclamen tuber extracts on lps-induced inflammatory responses of murine raw . macrophages. firstly, c. cilicium (endemic), c. pseudibericum (endemic) and c. graecum subsp. anatolicum were collected from different localities of turkey. the tubers of plants were air-dried and grounded to fine powder and then extracted with ethanol. cell viability assay was performed to evaluate the nontoxic concentration in cell line by mtt assay. several measurements were performed including tnf-a, no and il- concentration assay by elisa after treatment compared to non treated cells to determine the anti-inflammatory activity. also, tnf-a and inos mrna levels were evaluated by quantitative rt-pcr. the cytotoxic activity which is considered safe on raw. . cell were found as . - lg/ml. studied cyclamen taxa inhibited tnf-a and il- release on lps stimulated-raw. . in a concentration-dependent manner. among the three cyclamen tuber extracts evaluated, the highest nitrite-associated no inhibitory activity was obtained from c. pseudibericum compared to other two cyclamen l. taxa. collectively, these results suggest that cyclamen tuber extracts possess anti-inflammatory properties. p- . . - in vitro hypoglycemic activity of ziziphus jujuba recent reports have indicated that continuous treatment with nutritional jujuba (ziziphus jujuba miller) fruit extracts in diabetic rats improved glucose utilization and produced a significant decrease in the blood glucose. in the present study, hypoglycemic activity of z. jujuba was investigated using various in vitro techniques. the hypoglycemic effect of z. jujuba in phosphate buffered saline which grown in balıkesir was studied by measuring glucose adsorption, glucose diffusion and glucose uptake by yeast cells. the glucose content in the solution measured by spectrophotometrically with commercially kits. the adsorption capacity of the z. jujuba was found to be directly proportional to the molar concentration of glucose. the glucose binding capacity of extract increased in higher glucose concentratrations. there was significant differences were observed between the adsorption capacities of z. jujuba and control samples (p < . ). the rate of glucose diffusion was directly proportional to the time. diffusion rate was significantly lower in the solution containing z. jujuba compared to control (p < . ). the extract demonstrated significant inhibitory effects on movement of glucose into external solution across dialysis membrane compared to control. the rate of glucose transport across cell membrane in yeast cells was observed to be inversely proportional to the molar glucose concentration. z. jujuba inhibited glucose transport across the yeast cells. the results showed that z. jujuba reduced glucose levels at least by three mechanisms. first by increasing glucose adsorption capacity during postprandial hyperglycemia; second by retarding glucose diffusion rate and third, at the cellular level by inhibiting glucose transport across the cell membrane. all of these decreased the absorption of glucose in the intestinal cells and the concentration of postprandial serum glucose. p- . . - cucurbitacin b increased the anticancer effect of imatinib mesylate through inhibiton of matrix metalloproteinase- expression in colorectal cancer cells f. bakar ankara university, ankara, turkey several natural products have been investigated for their anticancer effects. among these, cucurbitacin b (cub) has been reported as its inhibitory effects on cancer cell proliferation. matrix metalloproteinases (mmps) belong to endopeptidase family and they are received as potential biomarkers for several types of cancer. the aim of this study is to investigate the effect of cub in combination with imatinib mesylate (im) on mmp- mrna expression of human sw colorectal carcinoma cells. the cytotoxicity analysis was performed via mtt assay. muse cytofluorimetric analysis system was performed to evaluate apoptotic cell population. the mmp- mrna expression was determined by quantitative real-time pcr. this study was supported by scientific and technological research council of turkey grant, sbag- s . data obtained from the cell culture experiments were expressed as mean ae sd and one-way anova test was applied for multiple comparisons. cub alone significantly inhibited cell growth at lm and higher concentrations. the most potent effect was observed in cub-im combination treatment with . lm ic value. in cub-im treated group, the apoptotic effect was higher than cub and im treated groups. cub-im induced apoptosis significantly at lm concentration when compared to control and lm (p < . ). cub alone showed inhibitory effects on mmp- mrna expression at lm and higher doses significantly (p < . ). the results showed that the combination treatment of cub with imatinib synergistically inhibited human sw cell growth and induced apoptosis by increasing the anti-histone antibodybound nucleosom levels and annexin v binding. although cub could inhibit mmp- expression alone at higher treatment doses, it enhanced the inhibitory effect of im on mmp- synergistically in a dose dependent manner. in conclusion, this study suggests that cub combined with imatinib mesylate may enhance the effects of chemotherapy in patients with colorectal cancer. plants are most important parts of natural resources that alternatively referred to synthetic drugs for reasons such as being less side effects and lower costs. ziziphus jujuba miller (z. jujuba), a plant used in traditional medicine, is one of the most important ziziphus species belonging to rhamnacea family. the fruit and seeds of this plant are used different purposes such as antiinflammatory, antioxidant, immune-stimulant and wound healer. in this study, we investigated the antibacterial effects of z. jujuba. the aims of this study were to screen the antibacterial activity of z. jujuba. the extract was obtained from z. jujuba fruits pulverized with the aid of ball mill using % aqueous-ethanol solution. extracts were screened for antimicrobial activity against six different standard strains of bacteria by determining minimum inhibitory concentration (mic) according to clsi criteria. serial dilutions are made between mg/ml and . mg/ml concentration range. the lowest concentration of wells that no visible growth has been accepted as mic value. materials in the mic and lower concentrated wells were transferred to % sheep blood agar petri dishes for calculation of minimal bactericidal concentration (mbc). the lowest concentration that no colony formation has been accepted as mbc value. jujuba showed the most potent effect on strain of s. aureus atcc is gram-positive cocci (mic: mg/ml). the mic values of other gram-positive bacteria s. aureus atcc , e. faecalis atcc , l. monocytogenes f and m. smegmatis cmm were detected as , , and mg/ml respectively. mic values of gram-negative bacilli were detected as > mg/ml. consequently, z. jujuba was found to be effective on grampositive cocci bacteria (s. aureus atcc , s. aureus atcc and e. faecalis atcc ). the strongest effect was observed on s. aureus atcc strain. in contrast, extract showed less effect on gram-negative bacilli. p- . . - selective cytotoxic effect of morus rubra extract in human lung cancer cells through enhancing apoptosis and cell cycle arrest cancer is a disease that develops as a result of unlimited proliferation of abnormal cells that occurs due to loss of control over the mechanisms of normal growth and differentiation of cells. morus rubra, known as "red mulberry" belongs to family of moraceae. for many years, the fruits of morus species have been used to treat many diseases in traditional medicine. biological effects of morus species is predominantly attributed to its content of polyphenolic compounds. many studies have evaluated the cytotoxic effects of different morus species, but there is no study about cytotoxic effect of m. rubra. in this study, we aimed to evaluate the cytotoxic effect of m. rubra extract in human lung cancer cells (a ) with regard to apoptosis, cell cycle and mitochondrial membrane potential. cytotoxic effect of m. rubra extract on human lung cancer cells was determined using mtt assay. then, mechanisms of cytotoxic activity of m. rubra extract on a cells were examined in terms of cell cycle, apoptosis and mitochondrial membrane potential using flow cytometric methods. m. rubra extract exhibited selective toxicity against a cells compared to normal foreskin fibroblast cells. we determined that m. rubra extract increased cell cycle arrest at g phase, the level of apoptotic cells and decreased mitochondrial membrane potential in a cells. our results showed that m. rubra extract has pro-apoptotic and antiproliferative effect in a cells. further studies are also needed to fully mechanisms underlying this effect of m. rubra extract. p- . . - dipeptidyl peptidase iv inhibitory activity of arctium tomentosum l. a. zeytunluoglu , f. zihnioglu denizli vocational school of technical sciences, pamukkale university, denizli, department of biochemistry, faculty of science, aegean university, izmir, turkey type diabetes mellitus (t dm) is rapidly growing metabolic syndrome of multiple aetiologies causing hyperglycaemia with insulin resistance at cellular level. a novel approach in the treatment of t dm is based on preventing of rapid inactivation of the incretin hormone glucagon-like peptide- (glp- ) and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (gip) by dipeptidyl peptidase-iv enzyme. in this study; dipeptidyl peptidase iv (dpp-iv; ec . . . ) inhibitory activity of the aqueous and methanolic extracts of arctium tomentosum leaves were successfully tested in vitro conditions. our study revealed that both aqueous and methanolic extracts obtained from test material had a significant dppiv enzyme inhibitory activity in changing ratio. the ic values were also determined by nonlinear regression curve fit using graph pad prism . with appropriately diluted of lyophilized arctium tomentosum. diprotein-a (ile-pro-ile) was used as reference inhibitor. a. tomentosum aqueous extracts showed ic . lg/ml while the standard (positive control) diprotin a displayed the ic value of . lg/ml. this study demonstrates that a. tomentosum aqueous extracts could be a good lead for further development as a new antidiabetic agent. p- . . - dna recognition determinants of arabidopsis thaliana b transcription factors g. sasnauskas, k. kauneckaite, k. lapenas, v. siksnys institute of biotechnology, vilnius university, vilnius, lithuania transcription, one of the most important cellular processes, is regulated by transcription factors (tf), proteins that often directly interact with gene promoter sequences. tf binding to dna is mediated by various dna binding domains. the b tfs constitute a large, plant-specific protein family (approx. % of all tf proteins in the flowering plants), which is characterized by the presence of one or several small (approx. amino acids) b dna binding domains. currently the b tfs are divided into four groups (lec -abi /val, arf, rav and rem). the preferred recognition sites were identified for representatives of all groups except the rem family. currently, only a single structure of a dna-bound b domain (arf , arf family) is available, thus the mechanism of site-specific dna recognition by the lec -abi /val and rav b domains remains poorly understood. based on the arf -dna structure (pdb ldx) we have built homology models of dna-bound b domains from a. thaliana abi (lec -abi /val family) and nga (rav family) transcription factors, mutated putative dna-interacting amino acid residues and characterized the dna binding ability of the purified mutants using electrophoretic mobility shift assay and a set of radiolabelled dna substrates carrying various variants of the optimal recognition site. we confirm the importance of several positively charged amino acid residues, which are conserved between the abi / nga b domains and structurally related dna-binding domains of bacterial restriction endonucleases ecorii, bfii and ngoavii; furthermore, we identify residues in the 'n-arm' and 'c-arm' loops that may be involved in specific interactions with the dna bases. our results therefore help us refine the homology models of the dna-bound b domains and in the future may help us predict the dna binding properties of currently uncharacterized b domains. p- . . - immunohistochemical analysis of inhibitory effects of origanum hypericifolium oil on dipeptidyl peptidase iv in streptozotocininduced diabetic rats p. ili , a. zeytunluoglu denizli health services vocational high school, pamukkale university, denizli, denizli vocational school of technical sciences, pamukkale university, denizli, turkey diabetes mellitus (dm) is a serious metabolic disorder with micro-and macro-vascular complications that result in a significant morbidity and mortality. glp- and gip have significant role in pancreatic beta cells and prevention of inactivation of them by dipeptidyl peptidase iv (dpp iv) inhibition is a novel approach to treatment of dm. origanum hypericifolium (lamiaceae) is an endemic turkish plant and its essential oil is mainly composed of monoterpenes including carvacrol and thymol. streptozotocin (stz) is used to induce diabetes in rats. the aim of this study is to investigate the inhibitory effects of o. hypericifolium essential oil on the dpp iv in stz-induced diabetic rats. the animals (female spraque-dawley rats) were assigned to four groups (group : control, group : stzinduced diabetic, group : o. hypericifolium injected, group : stz-induced diabetic and o. hypericifolium injected). dm was experimentally induced in groups and by a single intraperitoneal injection of stz at a dose of mg/kg body weight. in groups and , rats were intraperitoneally injected with o. hypericifolium oil at a daily dose of ml/kg body weight for consecutive days. at the end of the experimental period, all animals were sacrificed by cervical dislocation under ether anesthesia and liver and kidney tissues of each animal were rapidly excised. tissues were fixed in sainte-marie fixative. after routine histological processes, samples were embedded in paraffin, immunohistochemical staining for dpp iv was performed on sections and then they were photographed. the immunohistochemical reaction intensity differences were observed between the groups. in conclusion, the immunohistochemical distribution of dpp iv in the tissues that the test oil was applied in the diabetic rats may be important for the investigation of the inhibitory effects of oil on the enzyme. moreover, our findings suggest that o. hypericifolium oil may be used for prevention of diabetic diseases. introduction: all eukaryotic cells need microtubules for purposes of nuclear and cell division, organization of intracellular structure, and intracellular transportation, as well as ciliary and flagellar motility. microtubules are made of polymerized a/btubulin subunits. mec is important for microtubules, because it encodes the enzyme that adds acetyl groups to lysine (k ) of tubulin. k is largely conserved in a-tubulins of many eukaryotes, and acetylation is thought to stabilize microtubule structure. in algae, the effect of acetylation by mec on flagellar motility and phototaxis has not been tested previously. materials and methods: in this study, mec mutant chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells were compared to wild-type cells to see the effect on flagellar motility and phototaxis. we tested phototaxis, eyespot size and quantity under the microscopy. in addition to this, we fixed cells and examined them by immunofluorescence microscopy using antibodies to tubulin, acetylated tubulin, and photoreceptor. results: we observed that some mec mutant cells contain more than one eyespot. we detected no acetylated-tubulin (ac-tub) by immunofluorescence. the cells still phototax and have normal motility discussion and conclusion: interestingly, mec cells still have the ability to phototax and they have normal flagellar motility, even though they contain occasional additional eyespots and no ac-tub. chlorella vulgaris as a model system for screening of plant growth modulators p. volynchuk , e. marusich , r. chuprov-netochin , j. neskorodov , y. mishutkina , s. leonov life sciences center, moscow institute of physics and technology, dolgoprudny, center "bioengineering", russian academy of sciences, moscow, russia the discovery of new plant growth modulators became extremely important task as an alternative approach to overcome plants resistance to herbicides and pesticides, which leads to harmful action on plants and land rising, environmental and ecological problems. small molecules provide agricultural biotechnology with valuable tools, which help to circumvent the need for genetic engineering and offer unique benefits to modulate plant growth and development. we developed a system to explore molecular modes of action of plant growth modulators using chlorella vulgaris model. our model allows applying high content screening approach in well plate format for fast and robust effect assessment of large number of tested modulators. chlorella v. was grown in climate chamber under optimized constant temperature ( °c) and light conditions ( : hours/light:dark). modulating effect of tested compounds was estimated by spectrophotometric measurement of microalgae density at the beginning of the experiment (start point- . od) and hours later. to validate our system we used known cytokinins and auxins ( mm) as positive controls of growth stimulation. we showed that in presence of each compound the density of chlorella v. was increased in - times range, compared with only times increase in control group. eight new chemicals ( lm), which demonstrated modulation effect on nicotianatabacum l. pollen and arabidopsis thaliana models, were tested on developed chlorella v. model. positive controls showed no stimulating effect at this concentration, while tested compounds were confirmed as hits and increased the density up to %. we demonstrated that developed model system, based on chlorella v., is an effective system for primary screening of plant growth modulators. the main advantages of this system are short time of assay, simplicity of performance, possibility of automation and low cost. selected hits can be recommended as perspective candidates for future test on crop field. sunflower is under a big threat of downy mildew which is a fungal disease caused by plasmopara halstedii. the disease can cause up to an % yield loss in sunflower production. downy mildew resistance genes (r) denoted as pl has been discovered to date in sunflower. in recent years, single nucleotide polymorphism (snp) markers have become widely used in plant breeding programs. in this study snp markers have been currently developing for pl , pl , pl , pl arg genes by competitive allele specific pcr (kasp) assay which enables bi-allelic scoring of snps and insertions/deletions (indels) at specific loci. in total sequence tagged site (sts) sequences from ncbi were aligned for pl , pl , pl , pl arg genes to identify conserved regions for each gene. based on the conserved regions, specific pcr primers were designed in order to make sequencing of these genes in five crosses and their f progenies. sequence data will be used to design an allele specific primer maches the target snp and amplifies the target region with the common reverse primer provided by kasp genotyping assay. snp markers linked to pl genes which are being developed in this study, have the potential to be used in marker assisted selection (mas) for sunflower breeding programs. p- . . - investigation of the antidiabetic effects of hibiscus sabdariffa, teucrium polium and myrtus communis in hepg cells line s. altundag , pamukkale university, denizli, istanbul medeniyet university, istanbul, turkey some antidiabetic plants currently are used in alternative treatment of type ii diabetes. hibiscus sabdariffa, myrtus communis and teucirum polium plants are also known for their antidiabetic properties. hibiscus sabdariffa, myrtus communis and teucrium polium; depending on the impact on hepg - cells to investigate the possible mechanisms of type ii diabetes with researches on glucolysis and glucogenesis pathways gene expressions (pk m , glut- ,pepck). plants were obtained in dried state from reliable herbalists in denizli and mersin. plants treated with the extractor device. plants obtained aqueous extract was subjected to lyophilization process. human cancer cells have been used throughout the study. the cytotoxicity of the cells was measured by elisa plate reader . total rna was isolated using trızol Ò solution was carried out according to the instructions of the manufacturer's (thermo scientific) recommended procedures were performed, but we have to optimize our own laboratory conditions. pk m , glut- ,pepck genes were synthesized by b _ ioneer. during our study the activation of certain genes (pk m , glut- ,pepck) were examined by real time pcr. in our study hibiscus sabdariffa, mrytus communis and teucrium polium plant to extract applied hepg - cell line in the gluconeogenesis and glycolysis pathways in involved in some important genes (pepck, pk m , glut- ) analyzed the expression levels . teucrum polium plant extract is applied in hepg - cells the glycolysis pathway genes (pk m glut- ) an increased expression also genes of gluconeogenesis pathway (pepck) were not decreased. however hibiscus sabdariffa and the expression of genes involved in glycolysis and gluconeogenesis pathway mrytus communis plants were observed to have a full effect as diabetic or hypoglycemic . in this context, it is considered that the plant teucrum polium on the line hepg - cells showed antidiabetic effect. p- . . - purification of b-glucosidase from malatya apricot (prunus armeniaca l.) seeds and some of its biochemical properties h. kara , s. sinan , z. ekmekci , y. turan university of balikesir faculty of veterinary, balikesir, university of balikesir faculty of arts and sciences, balikesir, turkey introduction: b-glucosidases are one of the key enzymes in carbohydrate metabolism and located in glycosyl hydrolases (ec . . ) family. plant b-glucosidases have biotechnological significance as they are effective on glycosidic bonds of flavor and aroma precursors in plants. b-glucosidases that located in fruit seeds are important because they affect the amygdalin. aim of this study is purification and partially characterization of b-glucosidase from malatya apricot seeds. materials and methods: apricot seeds were homogenized with extraction buffer to prepare of crude extract. the enzyme protein was precipitated with % ammonium sulfate then purified by hydrophobic interaction chromatography using sepharose b-ltyrosine- -naptylamine gel. para-nitrophenyl b-d-glucopyranoside (p-npglc) was used as substrate to determine biochemical properties of the enzyme. the optimum ph was determined using buffers between ph - and thermal optima was determined using - °c temperature range. inhibitory effects was determined with mm substances. results: the enzyme was . -fold purified with yield of %. purified b-glucosidase from apricot seed was visualized about kda molecular weight on sds-page. the kinetic parameters were determined against p-npglc substrate as km and vmax values of . mm and . eu, respectively. the optimum ph and temperature were determined . and °c respectively. effects of cacl , kcl, nacl, mgcl , k so , na so , cuso , fecl , pb(ii) acetate, agno , zncl and glucose on purified enzyme activity were investigated. kcl, na so , pb(ii) acetat and cuso reduced the enzyme activity. discussion and conclusion: in this study, b-glucosidase was purified from malatya apricot seed and some of its biochemical properties were determined. because this enzyme has pharmaceutical importance hydrolyzing amygdalin. the results showed that immobilized almond b-glucosidase was used to break amygdalin and release -cn compound that effective to shrink cancer mass. p- . . - a new affinity gel for purifing polyphenol oxidase enzyme a. erg€ un , , o. arslan balikesir university, science and technology application and research center, balikesir, department of medical chemistry, faculty of science, balikesir university, balikesir, turkey polyphenol oxidase (ppo) enzyme, sometimes called as phenol oxidase, catecholase, phenolase, catechol oxidase or tyrosinase, is considered to be an o-dipenol. ppo (ec . . . ), a multifunctional copper containing metalloenzyme, is widely distributed in nature. ppo exists in many kinds of plants and fungi, such as banana, mushroom, butter lettuce, napoleon grape, potato, coffee, marula fruit, artichoke heads, longan fruit, tobacco, wheat flour. in this study, a novel affinity chromatography gel was synthesized for purifing ppo enzyme. the affinity chromatography gel was synthesized by coupling aniline as a specer arm to cnbr activeted sepharose- b. then, p-amino benzoic acid was coupled to aniline as a ligand. ppo was purified from musa sapientum var. cavendishii (banana) by using sepharose- b-aniline p-amino benzoic acid affinity chromatography gel. % . yield and . fold purification were achieved. sds-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the enzyme indicates a single band with an apparent mw of kda. the v max and k m of the purified enzyme were determined , u/ml min and . mm, respectively. p- . . - phenolic content and antioxidant capacity of gamma irradiated olive leaves m. e. diken , b. kocat€ urk , s. dogan , h. tuner balikesir university, balikesir, kavram vocational school, istanbul, turkey in this study, dried in diffirent ways (such as microwave, infrared, convection heaters and under normal atmospheric conditions) olive leaves has been used as experimental material. radiation has been applied to dried olive leaves in three diffirent dosages in room temparature. the amount of radiation to be implemented to the samples have , , kgy/min. in this study, how gamma rays (radiation) effects phenolic components, total phenolic content and antioxidant capacity of dried olive leaves has been determined. the phenolic components, total phenolic content and antioxidant capacity were analysed with hplc, folin ciocalteu and dpph radical scavenging method, respectivelty. gamma rays is well known as a decontamination method for many foodstuffs and plant materials, being an environment friendly and effective technology to resolve technical problems in trade and commercialization. for this reason, nowadays it is utilized as an alternative method of sterilization. gamma rays are of ionizing radiation. when ionizing radiation interacts with matter, generally it causes a break in the molecular bonds and/or breaks the bonds between the molecules. these intermediates have unpaired electron and called free radical. gamma radiation or the radiation-induced free radicals would break or cause damage to the dna molecules of living organisms. gamma irradiation is predict to change phenolic content and antioxidant capacity in living tissues. phenolic compounds are secondary plant metabolites naturally present in fruits and vegetables. in recent years there has been a growing interest in food phenolics because of their potential health benefits mainly due to their antioxidant and free radical scavenging activity. despite the controversy about potential risks posed by genetically modified plants on human health, environment and microorganisms, cultivation area of these crops increases day by day. this increment has revealed concerns especially related to hgt. hgt studies indicated that antibiotic resistance genes in gm plants have a potential to transfer to soil microorganisms. in this study, hgt of widely used genetic elements such as regulatory sequences, from transgenic plants to bacteria was investigated. three soybean feed and four seed examples from turkish feed manufacturers' association were used for genetic analysis based on foreign gene determination. gmo analysis were conducted by camv s promoter-specific pcr in genomic dnas. in gm positive samples, genomic dnas sheared into appropriate fragment size by ultrasonication for the purpose of bacterial transformation. presence of s promotor region in fragmented dnas was proved by pcr. escherichia coli dh a strain was transformed by fragmented dna samples according to cacl method. s promotor sequence screened by using pcr in bacterial genomic dnas. as a result of gm screening, all feed and three of the seed samples were found to be transgenic. ultrasonication conditions were optimized for shearing dna's to - bp for bacterial transformation. fragmented dnas confirmed for carrying intact s promotor sequence. none of bacterial genomic dnas were found to be s-positive. according to the transformation results, absence of s promotor sequence in all tested bacterial genomic dnas, proved the dna samples belonging to gm plants can not transfer into compotent e. coli dh under laboratory conditions. for verification of this finding, transformation studies will continue with acinetobacter baylyi bd strain which is naturally competent soil bacterium for natural transformation. we believe that all of our findings will contribute to constitute transformation system which can be used as model in hgt studies. p- . . - preliminary studies on differential methylation in a and d sub-genomes of upland cotton (gossypium hirsutum l.) four species of cotton (gossypium l.) provide raw materials for the textile industry. among the four species, two have diploid genome and another two have tetraploid genome. tetraploid genome consists of a and d sub-genomes. a sub-genome belongs to asian cotton while d-sub genome belongs to american cotton. previous studies revealed that d sub-genome of gossypium species contributes to the superior yield and quality of tetraploid gossypium l. species (atdt). dna cytosine methylation of four regions of dna sequences located on a and d sub-genomes of gossypium hirsutum l. texas marker (tm- ) was investigated using bisulfite sequencing technique. among the regions studied two could not be located on subgenomes due to sequence identity match between a and d subgenomes. on the other hand two dna regions could be located on a and d sub-genomes using the blast searches. some of the dna sequences located on different sub-genomes showed polymorphic nucleotides including c/t and g/a polymorphisms. in silico analysis indicated that some alleles located on different sub-genomes of cotton have c/t and g/a polymorphisms. c/t polymorphisms between the sub-genomes could be thought as unmethylated cytosine using the bisulfite sequencing technique. this indicated that an extra attention needs to be paid in dna total cytosine methylation studies in polyploid species such as cotton using bisulfite sequencing, methylation sensitive amplification polymorphism (msap), whole-genome bisulfite sequencing (wgbs). otherwise, t in c/t polymorphism between the subgenomes could be thought as unmethylated cytosine. based on the two genomic regions we could conclude that a sub-genome may be more methylated than d sub-genome. differential methylation of genes located on different sub-genomes may provide another mechanism responsible for differential gene expression of genes located on different sub-genomes. p- . . - cleaved minisatellite locus (cml) markers for fingerprinting of cotton cultivars grown in turkey e. u. gocer, m. karaca akdeniz university, antalya, turkey after their discovery by alec jeffreys in , minisatellites have been used in genetic studies of many organisms. minisatellites, also called variable number tandem repeats (vntrs), are composed of arrays of longer repeats mostly dispersed throughout heterochromatin (centromeres and telomeres). direct amplification of minisatellite regions of dna using a single core primer is a powerful method to amplify minisatellites (damd-pcr). although the damd-pcr technique has been applied to many plant species, the level of polymorphisms in cotton (gossypium l.) is very low due to very narrow turkish cotton genetic base. the objective of this study was to improve the level of polymorphisms by cleaving minisatellite loci by restriction enzyme digestion. genomic dna samples of twenty-one turkish cultivars, pima - , tm- and ps- were extracted. twenty-one minisatellite primers were screened using the damd-pcr technique. monomorphic amplicons were digested using several restriction enzymes. three to five micro liters of amplified products were digested with various restriction enzymes. digested products of minisatellite loci were separated in % high resolution agarose gels. comparison studies of digested and undigested markers revealed that cleaved minisatellite markers showed polymorphisms in those cotton lines that could not be differentiated by microsatellite and minisatellite markers. this approach was called cleaved minisatellite locus markers (cml). the amplification reactions of minisatellites used touch-down (td) cycling conditions. the use of td offered a simple and rapid means of optimizing polymerase chain reaction (pcr), increased specificity, sensitivity, and efficiency without the need for lengthy optimizations of minisatellite primers. the cml markers were obtained at a °c annealing temperature, which is a temperature higher than those used in random amplified polymorphic dna (rapd) inter-simple sequence repeat (issr) markers. p- . . - association between cytosine methylation and tissue specific expression of microsatellites a. g. ince, m. karaca akdeniz university, antalya, turkey heritable covalent modification of dna, rna or protein without altering their primary sequences is defined epigenetics. because all biological events are influenced by epigenetics, it is one of the most important fields in science. dna methylation is one of the most important epigenetic mechanisms. dna cytosine methylation is a process by which methyl groups are added to cytosine bases of dna. microsatellites, also knows simple sequence repeats are dna sequences consisting of - nucleotide repeats. there is a large body of information regarding the relationship between microsatellite instability and abnormal gene expression, and between dna methylation and altered gene expression. however, there is limited information on cytosine methylation of microsatellites. in the present study, we investigated whether there is any association between cytosine methylation and tissue specific expression of microsatellites. genomic dna samples of various tissues and developmental stages of pepper line demre sivrisi (capsicum annuum l.) and cotton line tm- (gossypium hirsutum l.) were extracted. cdna samples were synthesized using mrna expressed in pepper tissues. cytosine methylation levels were investigated using bisulfite sequencing methods. screening studies of microsatellites revealed that some genes containing microsatellites were differentially expressed in tissues and developmental stages of pepper. microsatellite containing genes that expressed differently among tissues had also showed different methylation levels in cg, chg and chh (where h refers to a, c or t) contexts. methylation level differences between microsatellites were also observed. as far as our knowledge, it is the first report on differential expression of genes containing methylated microsatellites. p- . . - pcr-lg: an alternative way to assign the chromosome location of genes/markers in cotton a. aydin, m. karaca akdeniz university, antalya, turkey assignment of genes and dna markers on chromosomes is very important in life sciences, especially for plant breeding and medicine. there are several methods for the assignment of a gene or dna sequence to a specific location on a chromosome. for example, the most widely used technique is the assignment of fluorescently-labeled gene or dna sequences (markers) on chromosomes using the fluorescently-labeled gene (for instance, fish technique). another example is the construction of a genetic map (linkage map) which orders the targeted genes along the dna strand based on recombination frequency. sequencing is the most precise technique in which coding (gene-containing) and noncoding dna region of genes could be located on a chromosome molecule. aneuploid lines could also be used to locate genes in a specific chromosome, but maintenance of these lines is difficult. here we report the use of chromosome substitution lines to indirectly locate genes/markers on chromosomes. we used chromosome substitution lines (csls) that carry a chromosome pair or chromosome arms from gossypium barbadense l. while the rest of chromosomes belong to g. hirsutum l. a total of chls, a homozygous cotton line tm- and a double haploid line pima - were used as plant materials. twenty microsatellite primer pairs were utilized in touch-down polymerase chain reactions. we developed a method, called polymerase chain reaction to locate gene (pcr-lg), to assign genes/markers on chromosome or chromosome arm. with the use of pcr-lg approach any polymorphic genes/markers between tm- and pima - (g. hirsutum and g. barbadense) could be assigned to a chromosome or chromosome arm. results indicated that if csls were used any polymorphic markers (genes) with known primer pairs could be assigned to cotton chromosomes. although we used cotton chromosome substitution lines to validate the proposed technique, it could be applicable all the species that have chromosome substitution lines. p- . . - pecularities of genome variability of antarctic hairgrass deschampsia antarctica desv. from the maritime antarctic deschampsia antarctica desv. (poaceae) is the only grass species native to the antarctic region, adapted to harsh environmental conditions. however, reasons for its unique success remain unexplored. stressful environmental factors can influence a plant genome and cause changes in the chromosome number and morphology and increase genetic variation. therefore, the purpose of our research was to explore alterations in the d. antarctica genome both at the chromosomal and molecular levels and to investigate species genome stability using in vitro tissue cultures. plants used for the study were grown in vitro from seeds collected in the argentine islands region during - . chromosome number was determined in plant root apical meristems and specimens prepared from tissue cultures. rrna genes localization were determined using the fish technique. moleculargenetic analysis was performed using pcr with polymorphic issr-primers. new forms of chromosome polymorphism, associated with aneuploidy ( n = - ), polyploidy ( n = - ) and the occurrence of additional b-chromosomes ( n = + - b), were observed. fish analysis also confirmed that genotypes with a different chromosome numbers varied in the number of s rdna and s rdna sites. assessment of genetic variation demonstrated a low level of diversity: differences between the plants with different chromosome numbers do not exceed the level of within-population variation. cytology analysis of d. antarctica cultured tissues revealed aneuploidy (up to . %) with predominance cells with diploid and near-diploid chromosome number irrespective of plant's initial karyotype (diploid, mixoploid or polyploid). we assume that discovered intraspecies chromosomal polymorphism is a manifestation of quick genome reaction to harsh antarctic conditions. whereas the results of molecular-genetic analysis and study of cell cultures of this species suggests on the relative stability of d. antarctica genome. p- . . - angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitory activity of morchella esculenta (l.) pers a. zeytunluoglu , i. arslan biomedical equipment technology, pamukkale university, denizli, turkey, denizli, biomedical engineering, pamukkale university, denizli, denizli, turkey hypertension is a multi-aetiological, chronic pathophysiology that leads to multi-organ dysfunctions like cardiovascular diseases, strokes, and renal complications. natural extracts play an important role in traditional medicines for the treatment of hypertension and are also an essential resource for new drug discovery. mushrooms are use as therapeutics in alternative and complementary medicine as functional food because of contain a large number of biologically active components that offer health benefits and protection against many degenerative diseases. morchella esculenta is one of the most highly priced edible mushrooms worldwide. it contains a wide range of active constituents which include tocopherols, carotenoids, organic acids, polysaccarides and phenolic compounds which exhibit a wide range of medicinal and pharmacological properties including anti-microbial, anti-inflammatory, immunustimulatory, antitumor and antioxidant. in this study; the in vitro angiotensin converting enzyme-i (ace-i) inhibitory activity of m. esculenta peptides were generated by alcalase hydrolysis were studied. the kda < peptides < kda in the ultrafiltration fractions displayed highest ace inhibition ( . ae . % at lg/ml). the results indicate that m. esculenta derived peptides may have potential as functional food ingredients in the prevention and management of hypertension. p- . . - modulations of antioxidant enzymes, gsts and catalase, by salvia absconditiflora in hepg cell line d. irtem kartal , a. altay yuzuncuyil university, van, erzincan € university, erzincan, turkey oxidative stress is considered to play a important role in the pathogenesis of aging and several degenerative diseases, such as cancer. in order to cope with an excess of free radicals produced upon oxidative stress, humans have developed several mechanisms for maintain redox homeostasis. these protective mechanisms either scavenge or detoxify ros, block their production, and include enzymatic and nonenzymatic antioxidant defenses. in enzymatic defenses include glutathione s-transferases and catalase enzymes. many epidemiological studies have revealed that there is a strong correlation between consumption of polyphenol-rich foods and the prevention of certain diseases like cancer, cardiovascular diseases and aging. phenolic compounds are abundant in all plants. so, they form an integral part of the human diet. salvia species, commonly known as sage, have been used since ancient times for more than different ailments ranging from aches to epilepsy. there are around species of salvia, of which are represented in turkey including salvia absconditiflora. in this study, s. absconditiflora collected from metu campus (ankara, turkey) is extracted with methanol and water. effects of the water and methanol extracts on the mrna expressions of antioxidant enzymes gstm and catalase in hepg cells were investigated by q-rt-pcr technique. it was also monitored the effects of the extracts on the enzyme activities of gsts and catalase by spectrophotometrically. water and methanol extracts decreased gsts mrna expression in hepg cells for hours and hours incubation and methanol extract decrease catalase mrna expression for only hours incubation. on the other hand, extracts highly increased the gsts and catalase activities in both hour incubation. overall, these results indicate that s. absconditiflora and/or its components have regulatory activities on antioxidant enzymes and they may have a potential as a therapeutic agent in the treatment of cancer. p- . . - transcriptomics and proteomics approach to drought stress mechanism in wheat b. cevher keskin tubitak marmara research center genetic engineering & biotech. institute, kocaeli, turkey birsen cevher keskin, yasemin yıldızhan, oktay kulen, bayram y€ uksel, selma onarıcı, _ ismail t€ urkan, as ßkım hediye sekmen, u gur sezerman, bu gra € ozer identification of novel stress-responsive genes and their role in drought response is an important area for the improvement of the crops. drought-related genes were investigated in leaves and roots of three wheat genotypes after different drought stress treatments by rna sequencing (rna seq) technology and de novo assembly was performed before comparative transcriptome analysis. analyzing gigabases of bp paired end illumina reads from a hexaploid wheat poly(a) rna library, we identified common and new differentially expressed transcripts. selected differentially expressed genes were confirmed by qrt-pcr. we also performed root proteome analysis with nano electrospray ionization source coupled to a high-performance liquid chromatography system (nanouplcÀesiÀqtofÀms) to identify drought-related proteins. totally proteins were differentially expressed in root tissues of tolerant and non-tolerant wheat genotypes. responses of antioxidative defense system to drought stress were comparatively studied in the same wheat cultivars. similarities between protein and rna levels help increase our confidence in novel biomarkers, differences may also reveal other post-transcriptional regulatory junctures. all these analyses will allow us to get a better idea about the possible role of these genes in the drought-response mechanism. the drought-related genes that are functionally characterized could be introduced into agronomically important wheat cultivars. this work offers a resource for accelerating drought-related gene discovery and improving this important crop. p- . . - isolation and characterization of a hexose converter from olive s. altunok , e. d€ undar department of biology, university of balikesir, balikesir, department of molecular biology and genetics, college of arts and sciences, balikesir university, balikesir, turkey introduction: hexose sugars are key components of glycolysis and photosynthesis. the genes regulating their conversion into one another, is therefore, of great importance for the control of carbon metabolism. in this study, we report isolation and characterization of a cdna associated with conversion of hexoses in olive. the cdna putatively named aldolase based on bioinformatic and experimental analyses. material-methods: characterization based on nucleotide and amino acids were conducted using bioinformatic tools such as nucleotide and protein blast, bioedit, primer , finchtv, clc genomic workbench, expasy, targetp, sosui and web promoter scan. comparison of the genomic and cdna sequence of the gene and detailed bioinformatic analyses including cellular location, hydropathy analysis, amino acid-nucleotide composition and predicted d structure were also conducted using the bioinformatics tools mentioned above. temporal expression pattern of the putative aldolase were conducted using real-time pcr experiments. sds and western blot analyses were completed while biochemical analyses are ongoing. oleocanthal is an important secondary metabolite that has been reported to be useful against important human diseases including cancer. the aim of this study was to identify and characterize the key biochemical and genetic components of oleocanthal biosynthesis. to determine the biochemical components of the pathway, multiple olive cultivars along with their spatial and temporal points were determined. the expression levels of multiple candidate genes were also aimed via real-time pcr. nucleotide blast and protein blast (for comparison of the similarity of the candidate genes with that of other organisms) were conducted on ncbi web page. phylogenetic tree construction, amino acid composition analysis, nucleotide composition analysis, hydropathy analysis and translations through expasy were conducted. primer was used to design forward and reverse primers to amplify the target genes from different olive tissues at different times. analysis of the first candiate gene with bioedit program revealed that a+t ratio was more than g+c according to the nucleotide composition analysis. according to amino acid composition analysis isoleucine, lysine and leucine were more than other amino acids while kyte&doolittle hyddropathy analysis revealed that the protein was hydrophilic. abundance of hydrophobic amino acids (leucine and isolecine) along with an abundant hydrophilic amino acid (lysine) suggest the existance of hydrophobic pockets in the protein which may mean a membrane bound protein or a sitoplasmic protein with a strong hydrophobic core. the molecular weight of the protein was kda with a pi of . . the protein was found to have a signal peptide. according to the sosui gramn , intracellular localization was found to be in the inner membrane. analysis of other candidate genes contiunes. acknowledgements: this study was supported by tubitak with grant number o . key words: olive, olea europaea l., secologanin, polymorphism, allele diversity p- . . - antioxidant potentials of propolis and its bioactive components, and their effects on cyp e gene expression in ht- adenocarcinoma cell line a. altay , d. irtem kartal erzincan € university, erzincan, y€ uz€ unc€ u yil university, van, turkey propolis is a resinous mixture that is collected by honeybees from plants, and is combined with beeswax and secretions from the bee's salivary glands plus some pollen. it is a rich mixture of polyphenols, flavonoid aglycones, phenolic acids and their esters. it has been used in traditional medicine for thousands of years because of these ingredients. propolis, just like honey, has been the subject of many studies due to its antimicrobial, antifungal, antiviral and hepatoprotective activities. the cytochrome p enzymes are involved in phase i xenobiotic and drug metabolism. cyp e is present in high levels in human tumors demonstrated by qrt-pcr and immunohistochemical studies. in this study, propolis collected from datc ßa (mugla, turkey) is extracted with % ethanol. phenolic contents of the propolis were measured by lc-ms/ms. cytotoxic effects of the propolis on ht- human colon adenocarcinoma cell lines were examined via xtt colorimetric cell proliferation assay. effects of propolis extract and its main bioactive component caffeic acid on the expression of phase i detoxification enzyme cyp e in ht- cells were investigated bu using q-rt-pcr technique. ic values for dpph radicals scavenging activities of the extract was calculated as . mg/ml. tpc and tfc were determined as . mg gae/g extract and . mg qe/g extract, respectively. caffeic acid content of the extract was measured as . lg/g extract. ic values for xtt assay in hours incubation with the extract and caffeic acid were evaluated as . mg/ ml and . mg/ml, respectively. propolis extract and its main phenolic content caffeic acid significantly dicreased cyp e mrna expression with . and . fold, respectively in ht- human colorectal adenocarcinoma cells for hours incubation. overall, these results indicate that propolis and/or its components have regulatory activities on cyp e expression and they may have a potential as a therapeutic agent in the treatment of cancer. p- . . - effects of histone h lysine inhibition on gene expression profile in tobacco (nicotiana tabacum l.) differentiation is the characteristic of multicellular organism. cellular dedifferentiation underlies topical issues in biology such as reprogramming in stem cell research, regeneration and nuclear cloning, and has common features in plants and animals. the state of dedifferentiation is evidenced by changes in cell morphology, genome organization and the pattern of gene expression as well as by the capability of plant tissues to differentiate into multiple types of cells depending on the type of stimulus applied. chromatin reorganization appears to be a fundamental theme in cellular dedifferentiation and reentry into the cell cycle both in plants and animals. the chemical modifications of histone proteins which are structural units of the nucleosome, generate 'codes' for the recruitment of proteins or protein complexes that affect chromatin structure and gene expression according to 'histone code' hypothesis. methylation of histone h at lysine residue by specific methyltransferases suv h in humans and kyp/suvh in arabidopsis generates a'code' for the recruitment of hp proteins. in this study, to enhance the dedifferentiation efficiency, chaetocin which inhibits suv h has been used at the germination stage of tobacco seeds in in vitro conditions. our results showed that chaetocin induced callus formation from leaf discs of tobacco in the early stage of the inhibitor application. chaetocin can enhance reprogramming of plant cells in seed development treatment as callus induction. it is known that the formation of callus which is the non-differentiated cell community in plants, is a consequence of the changes in the gene expression profile. it has been found that epigenetic modifications play a crucial role in some of these changes. the definition of the genes related to callus formation by the inhibitation of an epigenetic modification -h k methylation-in tobacco might be used to bear on various dedifferentiation-driven cellular processes. induction of tumor cell death by the use of some phytochemicals that consumed through diet, and derived from medicinal plants opens up new horizons for cancer treatment researches. rheum ribes species, which is studied in this research, is one of the commonly used herbs in pharmacological researches. the high content of phenolic compounds in r. ribes extracts were known to be responsible for the high antioxidant and antibacterial activities. our aim in this study is to assess cytotoxic and apoptotic changes by way of implementing methanol extract of the rheum ribes (root) to the mcf- breast cancer cell line. cytotoxic effect of rheum ribes extract was evaluated by using the xtt ( , -bis( -metoksi- -nitro- -sulfofenil)- h-tetrazolyum) test. in order to determine the dose of ic , plant extracts were applied as time and dose dependent in the range of - ug. in nd hour, the ic value is determined as ug. to examine the apoptotic effects of the extract, total rnas were isolated from dose group and the control cells firstly, then cdnas were synthesized. expression profile of the target genes(caspase- , caspase- , caspase- , caspase- , bax, bcl- , fas) are determined by qpcr. according to the results, when the control group compared with the cells, it was determined that, while . and . -fold respectively increase in the gene expressions of caspase- and caspase- of dose group cells, . -fold decrease in the gene expressions of bcl- . no significant difference was observed in the other genes examined. based on the obtained data, we believe that methanol extract of the rheum ribes induces apoptosis by activating intrinsic pathway. as a result, this plant species can be a new and effective therapeutic candidate for the medical world in search of alternative anti-cancer approaches, and could shed light on the work to be done in this area. p- . . - the effect of ferulic acid and -fluorouracil combination on apoptosis in pc- human prostate cancer cells prostate cancer is quite often seen in industrialized countries and has the second most common death rate due to cancer after lung cancer in men. -fluorouracil ( -fu) is a pyrimidine analog and cell cycle-targeting drug by inhibiting dna synthesis. it has been widely used for treatment of several cancers such as gastric, colorectal, and breast cancers. phenolic compounds found in foods are potential antioxidants of harmful oxidative processes related to cancer and also important due to induction of different mechanism such as apoptosis. ferulic acid (fa; -hydroxy- -methoxycinnamic acid), a phenolic compound, is abundant in fruits and vegetables. the purpose of this study was to investigate combination effect of fa and -fu on apoptosis in pc- human prostate cancer cell line. the effects of -fu, fa, and combination of both of them on cell viability were determined by xtt method. total rna isolation was conducted using trizol reagent. expressions of important genes in apoptosis including casp , casp , casp , casp , bcl , bax, fas and cycs were investigated in four groups by qpcr. the ic doses of fa and -fu were found to be lm and lm for hours in pc- cells, respectively. in order to determine combination effect, pc- cells were treated with mg/ml). on the other hand, p. lentiscus showed no cytotoxicity against cancer and normal cells. the results suggested that p. lentiscus may be natural source of antioxidant and antimicrobial activities. p- . . - antibacterial activity of and chemical composition of alcoholic extract of marjoram against some human pathogens m. ahanjan, m. rahbar mazandaran university of medical sciences, sari, iran herbs enjoy a unique value and importance in sustaining healthy communities in terms of disease prevention ( ) . in this regard, marjoram is a plant of the mint family which has antibacterial properties on microorganisms ( ) . the current study aims to investigate the anti-microbial activity of the alcohol extracts (i.e., methanol or ethanol) of marjoram plants on the bacteria of staphylococcus (atcc: ), aureus e. coli (atcc: ), and salmonella enterica (atcc: ) and p. aeroginosa through utilizing disk diffusion method. also, the minimum inhibitory concentration and the minimum bactericidal concentrationwere measured through tube. the measurement of minimum inhibitory concentration and minimum bactericidal concentration of ethanol and methanol extracts on e.coli were equal with and milligrams per milliliter, subsequently. moreover, the measurement of the minimum inhibitory concentration and of the minimum inhibitory concentration of marjoram ethanol extraction on staphylococcus aurous was reported to be milligrams and milligrams per milliliter, subsequently. in addition, the amount of ethanol and methanol extracts on salmonella enteric and p. aeroginosa was equal with and milligrams per milliliter, subsequently. the results showed that marjoram alcoholic extract enjoy antibacterial properties. also, among the alcoholic extracts, the ethanol extract has demonstrated to be the most effective extract on salmonella enterica and e. coli and p. aeroginosa. p- . . - molecular analysis of serine/arginine rich sc splicing factor from olive b. bas , e. d€ undar depertmant of biology, university of balikesir, balikesir, department of molecular biology and genetics, college of arts and sciences, balikesir university, balikesir, turkey olive (olea europaea l.) is an evergreen fruit tree adapted to mediterranean climate and rich in tannins, essential oils and organic acids. serine/arginine rich splicing factors are essential in seqeunce specific splicing of pre-mrnas. in this study we report molecular characterization of an serine/arginine rich sc splicing factor (oesarsc sf) that was isolated from a cdna library constructed from olive pedicels. nucleotide blast and protein blast (for comparison of the similarity of the candidate genes from other organisms) were conducted on ncbi web page. amino acid composition analysis, nucleotide composition analysis, hydropathy analysis, open reading frame determiantion, through, molecular weight and the isoelectric points calculations were conducted using online expasy software. primer was used to design forward and reverse primers to amplify the target gene from different olive tissues at different times. analysis with bioedit program revealed that a+t ratio was more than that of g+c. oesarsc sf was a protein consisting of amino acids. as expected, amino acid composition analysis revealed that serines and arginines were more than other amino acids. kyte&doolittle hyddropathy analysis revealed that the protein was hydrophilic. the molecular weight of the protein was kda with an isoelectric point (pi) of . . the protein was found to have a signal peptide. according to the predotar analysis results, intracellular localization was found to be in the mitochondrial. the combined results suggest oesarsc sf might function as splicing factor as its homologs from the other plants. confirming this hypothesis with futher experimental characterization including biochemical function analysis continues. acknowledgements: this study was supported by tub _ itak with grant number o . keywords: olea europaea l., oesarsc sf, alternative splcing, pre-mrna splicing, bioedit, pedicel specific cdnas. p- . . - application of three-phase partitioning for the purification of peroxidase from kiwano (cucumis metuliferus) z. denli , g. arabaci kto karatay university faculty of medicine, konya, faculty of arts and sciences, sakarya university, sakarya, turkey peroxidases are enzymes able to catalyze reduction of h o and oxidize various substrates. the kiwano is an oval shaped fruit which has an orange skin with lots of tiny horns. in this study, peroxidase isolated from kiwano is purified with three-phase partitioning (tpp). kiwano fruit was homogenized and obtained crude enzyme extract. the extract was saturated with % (w/v) ammonium sulfate ((nh ) so ) and added t-butanol with the ratio of : . (v/v). the lower and interfacial layer was collected. the influence of percent saturations of (nh ) so ( , , , , %) and tbutanol ratios ( : . , : , : . , : ) to the partitioning behaviour of peroxidase were analyzed. after dialyzed, the interfacial and lower phases were measured for peroxidase activity and protein content. the protein pattern of the peroxidases was evaluated by using gel electrophoresis. peroxidase activity recovery and the purification fold of interfacial and lower phases were . , . % and . , . . therefore, other experiments were continued with interfacial phase. at constant t-butanol with the ratio of : . , the enzyme activity recovery and purification fold of interfacial phase for saturations of (nh ) so ( , , , %) were . , . , . , % and . , . , . , . . the interfacial phase was not dissolved in % (nh ) so . at constant % (nh ) so , the enzyme activity recovery and purification fold of interfacial phase for t-butanol ratio ( : . , : , : . , : ) were . , . , . , . % and . , . , . , . . finally, at optimum conditions (% (nh ) so , t-butanol : . ) after dialyzed interfacial phase, the enzyme activity recovery and the purification fold were . % and . . the results of gel electrophoresis showed that the molecular weight of enzyme was between - kda. the applications of tpp gave the maximum recovery of . % and . -fold purification. as a result, for purfication of peroxidases, tpp is a rapid, simple and economical technique. accumulating the most robust genes and proteins in elite genotypes without any harmful effect on the potential plant yield is an urgent need to enhance productivity under various stressors. among the stressors, drought is a major challenge for agricultural productivity. brachypodium distachyon, with its close relationship to agriculturally and economically important crops, is an important model plant species. although ongoing transcriptomic analyses in brachypodium distachyon available, proteomic analyses are required to obtain an integrated picture of drought response. in the current study, a comprehensive proteome analysis was conducted on brachypodium leaves under increasing levels of drought stress. to screen gradual changes upon drought stress, brachypodium leaves subjected to drought treatment for , and days were collected for each treatment day. the cellular responses were investigated through a proteomic approach involving two dimensional difference gel electrophoresis and subsequent combined tandem mass spectrometry. for the validation of transcriptional expression, the genes encoding selected proteins were examined through quantitative real-time pcr. spot detection on cye-dyed gels revealed a total of distinct spots in brachypodium protein repertoire. a total of differentially expressed proteins (deps), with at least -fold changes in abundance, were identified by mass spectrometry and classified according to their functions. the biological functions of deps included roles in photosynthesis, protein folding, antioxidant mechanism and metabolic processes, highlighting the significant degree of overlapping between metabolic alterations induced by drought stress. identified proteins in this study and understanding the molecular mechanisms of drought response and defense mechanisms in plants will contribute to the researches on development of drought tolerant crop species. p- . . - immunohistochemical and electron microscopy investigation of tmv-based chimeric virus particles carrying conserved influenza antigen in nicotiana benthamiana recently we obtained and partially characterized set of viral vectors based on tobacco mosaic virus (tmv) genome displaying conserved influenza a m e epitope from matrix m protein. purified chimeric virus particles (cvp) conferred protection of mice against lethal homologous and heterologous influenza virus challenge. we revealed significant difference in symptoms of infections caused by tmv-m e recombinant viruses containing cysteine (cys) to serine (ser) or alanine (ala) substitutions in the human consensus m e sequence. accumulation level of m e-ala recombinant coat protein was significantly higher than m e-cys/ ser (ratio : ). tmv-m e-ser infection, in contrast to ala mutant, suspended growth and development of nicotiana benthamiana. non-inoculated leaves ( d.p.i.) were fixed with ethanol and histological sections were incubated with mouse serum to m e and secondary antibodies conjugated with either hrpo or fitc. cvps of all three mutants were detected in epidermal and stomata cells as well as in sieve elements and minor veins. electron microscopy analysis of mesophyll cells revealed typical rigid helical particles. cys/ser mutants mostly accumulated within ground cytoplasm as aggregates of discrete tubules in parallel arrangement, which were not delimited by lipid membranes. we discovered huge amount of cvps in the cytoplasm and lesser amount diffused in the central vacuole. essential part of ala particles was located in the cytoplasm, but mentioned aggregates were not found and only insignificant number of virions was revealed in vacuole. unlike wild-type tmv, none of the mutants was revealed in chloroplasts. diameters of cvps were as follows: sersingle particles in cytoplasm ae . cyanidin is a natural anthocyanidin found in a variety of fruits (grapes, blackberry, blueberry, cherry and cranberry etc.) and vegetables (red cabbage, red onion). this polyphenolic compound is a flavonoid with significant antioxidant activity. cyanidin and its glycosides have vasoprotective effects and can interfere with inflammation, carcinogenesis, obesity, and diabetes. one important role of the macrophages is the release of pro-inflammatory mediators, such as nitric oxide, various cytokines, in response to activation signals, including chemical mediators, cytokines, and bacterial lipopolysaccharide (lps). in this study, we investigated the role of cyanidin chloride in inflammation. anti-inflammatory effects of cyanidin chloride were examined in lps-stimulated murine raw . macrophages. we observed the level of various inflammation markers such as nitric oxide (no), inducible no synthase (inos), cyclooxygenase- (cox- ), tumor necrosis factor-a (tnf-a) and interleukin- (il- ) under lps treatment with or without cyanidin chloride. cyanidin chloride inhibited not only no production but also the expression of cox- and inos, without any cytotoxicity. cyanidin chloride also attenuated pro-inflammatory cytokines and other inflammation-related markers such as il- in a dosedependent manner. in conclusion, cyanidin chloride may be beneficial for the prevention and treatment of anti-inflammatory diseases. p- . . - the investigation of centranthus longiflorus plant extacts effects on cell proliferation and apoptosis activity in the cell lines of mcf- breast cancer h. askin ataturk university, erzurum, turkey introduction: in the u.s., breast cancer is the second most common cancer in women after skin cancer. current treatment of cancer can be done by surgery, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy. in addition, there is widespread use of complementary and alternative medicine in developed countries. plants and plant extracts play a critical role in the research into new anticancerogenic agents. centranthus longiflorus (cl) is used in alternative medicine for sedative and antispasmodic purposes. a plant of turkish origin, centranthus longiflorus used as traditional turkish medicine have remained uninvestigated for familial hypercholesterolemia, diabetes, coronary artery disease and cancer for their in vitro biological activity despite their use for sleep disorders. in this study, growth-inhibiting and pro-apoptotic effects of hexane, ethyl acetate and ethanol extracts of cl in mcf- breast cancer cell line were investigated. material and method: aerial parts of cl were collected in erzurum province. hexane, ethyl acetate and ethanol extraction were done by soxhlet extractor. the plant extracts obtained from cl was analyzed using a gc-ms system. dose-and time-dependent cytotoxic and apoptotic effects of cl were evaluated by mtt cell proliferation kit and cell death detection elisa kit, respectively. manufecturer's protocol was followed for analyses. then, apoptotic genes; caspase , bax and p and antiapoptotic genes; bcl- and pi expression levels were determined by rt pcr. results: according to our results, cytotoxic effect on mcf- cell was only observed in and lg/ml doses of cl. however, any of the application doses showed an apoptotic effect on mcf- cells. they exhibited a necrotic effect rather than the apoptotic effect. although alterations in expression levels of these genes were determined, this alterations was statistically insignificant. discussion and conclusion: consequently, we can say that cl have a cytotoxic effect on mcf- breast cancer cell lines. p- . . - reduction of the chloroplast genome and the loss of photosynthetic pathways in the mycoheterotrophic plant monotropa hypopitys, as revealed by genome and transcriptome sequencing e. gruzdev, a. mardanov, a. beletsky, v. kadnikov, e. kochieva, n. ravin, k. skryabin institute of bioengineering, research center of biotechnology of the russian academy of sciences, moscow, russia genomes of parasitic plants represent interesting model systems to study effects of relaxed selective pressure on photosynthetic function. previous genomic studies of nonphotosynthetic plants revealed reduction of their chloroplast genomes, but the corresponding changes in their nuclear genomes are less known. here we present the data on the transcriptome and the chloroplast genome of the non-photosynthetic mycoheterotrophic plant monotropa hypopitys. the chloroplast genomes were sequenced for two specimens of m. hypopitys, collected in different regions of russia. the cpdnas are , bp (mon- kalr) and , bp (mon- volr) long and rearranged with respect to each other. both genomes contains genes encoding ribosomal proteins, infa, matk, and ribosomal rna genes. and trna genes were predicted in two cpdna. genes encoding nadh dehydrogenase, plastid rna polymerase, all genes related to photosynthetic apparatus, clpp, ycf , ycf , accd, and some genes for ribosomal proteins are missing or became pseudogenes. the reduction of gene content is associated with extensive gene order rearrangement and the lack of inverted repeats. overall, the size and gene content of m. hypopitys cpdna indicates that it is close to the end of plastid genome degradation process. in order to get insights into the changes in the nuclear genome associated with the transition to nonphotosynthetic lifestyle, we sequenced and assembled the transcriptome of m. hypopitys. as expected for holoparasites, we did not found transcripts for the nuclear genes encoding the components of photosynthetic machinery, including photosystem i and ii, cytochrome b f complex, and ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase. contrary to the holoparasitic plant phelipanche aegyptiaca, almost all genes of chlorophyll biosynthesis pathway from protoporphyrin ix were not found in the m. hypopitys transcriptome. this work was supported by the rsf grant - - and rfbr grant - - (mon- volr cpdna sequencing). introduction: beta-sitosterol is a substance found in plants. chemists call it a plant sterol ester. it is found in fruits, vegetables, nuts, and seeds. it is used to make medicine. beta-sitosterol is used for heart disease and high cholesterol. the federal food and drug administration (fda) allows manufacturers to claim that foods containing plant sterol esters such as beta-sitosterol are for reducing the risk of coronary heart disease (chd). centranthus longiflorus (cl) is used in alternative medicine for sleep disorders. a plant of turkish origin, cl used as folk medicine have remained uninvestigated for familial hypercholesterolemia, coronary artery disease and preventing colon cancer for their in vitro biological activity despite their use for sleep disorders. we investigated of the chemical constituents from dried aerial parts of centranthus longiflorus. material and method: aerial parts of cl were collected in erzurum province. hexane, ethyl acetate and ethanol extraction were done by soxhlet extractor. the plant extracts obtained from the aerial parts of cl was analyzed using a perkin-elmer gc-ms system. results: ten compounds were obtained and identified as butanoic acid, hexadecanoic acid (palmitic acid), -methyl-z-tetradecen- -ol acetate, octadecanoic acid (stearic acid), diisobutyl phthalate, -octadecenamide, octacosane, nonacosane, alfa amyrin and beta sitosterol. the latter two were obtained in all extraction (hexane, ethyl acetate and ethanol). discussion and conclusion: all of these compounds are isolated from centranthus longiflorus for the first time. these findings may shed light on the design of new drugs, the cholesterollowering effect. p- . . - role of lutein for the high light-induced inhibition of photosystem ii related reactions in thylakoid membranes of arabidopsis thaliana, wt and lut k. dobrev, d. stanoeva, m. velichkova, a. v. popova institute of biophysics and biomedical engineering, bulgarian academy of sciences, sofia, bulgaria photosynthetic reactions taking place in thylakoid membranes of higher plants are extremely sensitive towards different environmental stress conditions such as high and low temperature, high light intensity, uv radiation etc. carotenoids are intrinsic component of photosynthetic pigment-protein complexes and are involved in performing multiple important functions. their role of accessory pigments in absorbing sun light, participation in photoprotection via dissipation of excess absorbed light, deactivating of stress-induced reactive oxygen species and structural role are well documented and recognized. the role of lack of lutein in high light-induced alterations in structural organization and functional activity of the main pigment-protein complexes was evaluated using isolated thylakoid membranes of arabidopsis thaliana, wt and mutant lut , deficient in lutein, subjected to photoinhibitory treatment for different periods of time. alterations in photochemical activity of photosystem i and photosystem ii were determined by a clark-type electrode in the presence of exogenous electron donors and acceptors. activity of oxygenevolving complex and of the grana and stroma situated photosystem ii reaction centers was evaluated by determination of flash oxygen yields and initial oxygen burst under constant light without donors and acceptors. low-temperature ( k) fluorescence was applied for unraveling of light-induced alterations in energy transfer and interaction between the main pigment-protein complexes. maximal quantum efficiency of psii was registered by pulse amplitude modulated fluorescence method. results obtained are discussed in respect to the importance of lutein for the organization and sensitivity of photosynthetic apparatus towards high light intensity treatment. modern agriculture relies heavily on phosphate rock fertilizer to improve phosphorus availability in many soils, but this approach is not sustainable long-term. phytate (myo-inositol hexakisphosphate) is an organic phosphorus compound often present in many soils. however, phytate can not be utilized by most plants, and its accumulation in soil leads to substantial ecological problems. phytases are enzymes that hydrolyze phytate and release inorganic phosphate. many microorganisms such as bacteria and fungi synthesize highly diverse phytases which are suitable for plant biotechnology. generation of transgenic plants expressing phytases of bacterial origin has been proposed as one option to improve plant phosphorus nutrition. in this study, we generated and characterized transgenic arabidopsis thaliana plants expressing a modified phytase gene paphyc from pantoea sp. under strong camv s promoter. three individual transgenic a. thaliana lines expressing the bacterial phytase gene, as well as negative control plants harboring the camv s promoter alone were identified. expression of phytase in plants was verified at both transcription and translation levels. phytase-expressing plants grown on media with phytate as the sole source of phosphorus demonstrated better than wild-type growth rates, shoot dry mass, shoot phosphorus content, as well as higher phytase activity in cell-wall extracts. overall, we show that plants expressing bacterial phytase are capable of better growth on phytate as the only source of phosphorus in laboratory conditions. further research investigating the applicability of using bacterial phytase expression to improve plant growth in soil is necessary to evaluate the different routes of solving the phosphorus deficiency problem in agriculture. p- . . - the role of elevated temperature in photoinhibition and recovery of photosystem ii in thylakoid membranes from arabidopsis thaliana a. faik, m. gerganova, m. velitchkova institute of biophysics and biomedical engineering, bulgarian academy of sciences, sofia, bulgaria photosynthesis of higher plants is the principle process to transform light energy into biochemical usable energy. in nature, plants are exposed to the environment where light, temperature, uv-b radiation varied and very often their extreme values that are unfavorable for effective performance of photosynthetic reactions. plant are developed various strategies to cope with stress including radical scavenging enzyme system, accumulation of protective compounds, etc. pigment-protein complexes of photosystem i and photosystem ii and their light harvesting antenna, situated within thylakoid membranes, are involved in the primary reactions of photosynthesis -absorption of light, charge separation and electron transport. photosynthetic process is sensitive towards higher than optimal temperatures, the photosystem ii and oxygen evolving complexes being extremely sensitive to elevation of temperature. in present work pam fluorescence was applied to evaluate the effect of long term action of elevated temperature ( / °c) on the quantum yield of photosystem ii, non-photochemical quenching and rdf, the latter quantifying the photosynthetic process. in addition, the activity of oxygen evolving complex was determined polarographically in the presence of exogenous electron acceptor , -benzoquinone. sds-page electrophoresis and western blot were applied to determine the damage of d -reaction center protein of photosystem ii. alterations of mutual organization within photosystem ii complex and its antenna and of energy interaction between them were followed by analysis of k steady state chlorophyll fluorescence spectra. the simultaneous application of high temperature and high light intensity resulted in a well pronounced reduction of non-photochemical quenching that restore to the initial values after recovery for days at optimal conditions. d was also restored while quantum efficiency of photosystem ii did not recuperate to initial values. p- . . - reorganization of the main pigment-protein complexes in thylakoid membranes from tomato (solanum lycopersicum) during long term exposure to elevated temperature the changes of earth climate resulted in unfavorable environment for plants. depending on the duration of influence of stress factors, the response of plants includes short and long term acclimation. the population, structure and organization of pigmentprotein complexes within thylakoid membranes are dynamic and flexible, thus providing for the acclimation of the photosynthetic apparatus to the changed environment. the main pigment-protein complexes, involved in energy transduction, are photosystem i, photosystem ii and light harvesting complexes. they are separated in grana and stroma regions of thylakoid membranes but it is well established that they can rearrange as a result of alterations of light intensity, temperature increase and decrease in order to balance the perception and utilization of excitation energy. in present work the effect of long term action of elevated temperature on organization and stoichiometry of main pigmentprotein complexes in the thylakoid membranes from tomato plants (solanum lycopersicum cv. m ) was investigated. three weeks old tomato grown at optimal conditions ( / °c day/ night temperature and light intensity lmol/m /s) plants were exposed for and days to elevated temperature at / °c. by means of blue-native electrophoresis the effect elevated temperature on the populations of psii (dimmer and monomers) and lhcii (monomers and trimers) was estimated and compared with the same parameters for control plants. the ability of plants to recover from this treatment was checked after days under optimal conditions. the changes of content of chlorophylls and carotenoids were determined at every stage of treatment. based on the results obtained it can be concluded that one of the mechanisms for regulating the energy balance and maintenance of efficient photosynthetic process involves a change in the organization and stoichiometry of the photosystem ii and oligomer state of light harvesting complex ii. aim of the study, was to evaluate the anti-tumor effects of silymarin, curcumin and propolis on leptin-induced mcf- cells. mcf- cells were incubated various concentrations leptin (physiological, obesity and pharmacologically doses; respectively , and ng/ml) . then different doses of silymarin ( , , , lm), curcumin ( , , , lm) and propolis ( . , . , . , . mg/ml) were added. after , , and hours incubation periods different area images were taken digital camera. then using dye release reagent we determined the intensity of apoptosis via colorimetric determination by elisa reader. absorbance was directly proportional the number of apoptotic cells (biocolor cell-apo percentageapoptosisassay). also, we examined the effect of these natural products on proliferation rate of leptin-induced mcf- cells for , , and hours (biovision cell proliferation kit) all experiments were carried out different days, at least times. all of three compounds were stimulate the apoptosis at all time points and all different doses of leptin. the differences was statistically significant at the level of p < . between and hours. it was found that there were not seen much cells at and hours time points. we thought that most of the cells were gone necrosis instead of apoptosis. the best effective doses on apoptosis of propolis was . mg/ml, silymarin and curcumin were lm. also, we evaluated the effects of on proliferation rate the mcf- cells, we found that only propolis was effective of inhibiting proliferation at all doses of leptin induced mcf- cells in hour. we hope this study will be a guide for the further studies in anti-cancer agent development field and show that the natural origin substances cause cancer cells apoptosis and provide targeted treatment for cancer therapy. p- . . - investigation of some lichen-derived substances' cosmetic potential for skin protection against ultraviolet b due to the depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer and chronic exposure, the occurrence of various skin diseases have been increased in recent decades. thence, people and cosmetic companies have progressively given more importance natural sunscreen products for the protection from harmful sun rays, especially ultraviolet b rays. we, therefore, isolated some lichen-derived substances; -hydroxyphysodic acid and protolichesterinic acid from hypogymnia tubulosa and cetraria aculeate, respectively. chemical characterization and identification of the isolated lichen substances were accomplished by using ftir, h-nmr and melting point analyses. the theoretical uv-vis spectra and d conformations of the isolated compounds were determined by using the gaussian software with hf theory at the b lyp/ - g level. the dark toxicities and ultraviolet b protection capacities of the substances were lighted up as previously described [ , ] on hacat human keratinocyte cell line by using mtt cell viability and ldh cellular membrane degradation assays. the obtained results from the assays showed that protolichesterinic acid has a more dark toxic activity on keratinocyte cells than hydroxyphysodic acid, and the toxic activities were found sufficient as much as % at the highest doses of the substances; lm. however, it was observed that the cytotoxicity of the substances were reduced at the rate of approximately % by the irradiation. consequently, we think that the substances block the ultraviolet b rays but their cytotoxic feature is an important limitation to their usage in cosmetic industry. references [ ] varol, m., t€ urk, a., candan, m., tay, t., koparal, a. t. ( ) photoprotective activity of vulpinic and gyrophoric acids towards ultraviolet b-induced damage in human keratinocytes, phytotheraphy research : - . [ ] varol, m., tay, t., candan, m., t€ urk, a., koparal, a. t. ( ) a great effort and financial supports have been consumed to explore and design novel sun protection factors due to the unhindered increase of malignant and non-malignant skin diseases caused by the chronic exposure and depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer. the testing of naturally produced compounds seems to be the best and inexpensive way to search for potentially photoprotective substances. on the other hand, as photo-resistant species, lichens are still poorly exploited. norstictic acid was, therefore, isolated from the acetone extract of pleurosticta acetabulum. ftir, h-nmr and melting point analyses were performed to identify the chemical features of norstictic acid. gaussian software with hf theory at the b lyp/ - g level was also performed to determine the theoretical uv-vis spectrum and d conformation of the isolated compound. the dark cytotoxicity and ultraviolet b-protection capacity of norstictic acid were comparatively tested as previously described [ , ] by using mtt cell viability and ldh cellular membrane degradation assays. as a result of the experiments, it is observed that norstictic acid has a dark-cytotoxicity as less as % at the highest dose of the substance; lm. however, ultraviolet b-induced damage on human keratinocytes was blocked by the lower concentrations of norstictic acid as , and -lm, and % of cells were protected according to the control experiments of irradiated cells. consequently, we think that norstictic acid might be employed as a sun protection factor at the low concentrations, and further studies should be performed. years, researchers have focused on the lichen acids because of their biological activities. it is also suggested that lichens can be used as anticancer agents. vulpinic acid, an important lichen seconder metabolite, has antimicrobial activity and strong antimutagenic, anticancer and antioxidant capacity. nanotechnology has the potential to offer solutions to current obstacles in cancer therapies, because of its unique size ( - nm) and large surfaceto-volume ratios. so, in this study we aimed to determine the cytotoxic and proliferative effects of vulpinic acid and magnetic nanoparticles loaded with vulpinic acid (fe there are four species of wild rice known around the world. zizania aquatica l., zizania palustris l. and zizania texana hitche are found in north america, whereas zizania latifolia (griseb) turcz) is native to east asia. cwr mainly grows in the areas along the yangzi river and the huai river in china without any cultivation and domestication. cwr was an ancient grain that has been used in chinese herbal medicine to treat a variety of ailments associated with nutrition, including gastrointestinal disorders and diabetes. our previous studies have demonstrated that consuming chinese wild rice can significantly improve blood lipid profiles and ameliorate high-fat/cholesterol diet-induced insulin resistance. however, compared to the well studied common dietary white rice, active composition and the associated proteomic information of chinese wild rice have yet to be investigated. in this study, we compared and analysed the different proteins between chinese wild rice and white rice by proteomics method. our study provides insights and experimental evidence for further exploration of this ancient medical food in disease prevention and therapy. the homology between cwr and n is %, but significant differences also exist between the two. we gained new insight by analyzing the biological function of the high reliability (credibility score or higher, p < . ) peptide mass fingerprint of cwr -de electrophoresis revealed differences in protein composition between cwr and n . information obtained from the pmf indicates that glutelin precursor, caffeoyl coenzyme a (coa) omethyltransferase and putative bithoraxoid-like protein can provide gene evidences for its biological function. p- . . - mir and growth-regulating factors interaction during maize leaf growth under low-temperature stress g. aktug, f. aydinoglu gebze technical university, kocaeli, turkey microrna (mirna) genes are a class of non-coding small rnas about nucleotide-long which are revealed as regulators of plant growth and stress responses. the mirna mir targets and regulates growth-regulating factors (grfs) which are plant specific transcription factors family and this regulation machinery is conserved among plant species. plant growth is a result of cell division and expansion which took place as spatial gradient zones throughout maize leaf which are meristem, elongation and mature zones. cells proliferate in meristem, migrate to elongation zone and finally reach to mature zone to get its final size. it has been shown that mir affects cell division by regulating grfs and changes leaf size which are determined by cell number and cell size of leaf. this study aims to investigate the role of mir and grfs interaction during maize leaf growth under low-temperature stress. maize seedlings were grown under low-night temperature for stress treatment to generate growth retardation and control conditions as well to make comparative analysis. length of the third and fourth leaves of seedlings was measured every day and leaf elongation rate was calculated to observe stress effects on the leaves. growth zones of fourth leaves were harvested during steady-state growth phase for determining expression level of mir s and their target by q-rt-pcr. we mined mir genes sharing sequence similarity and grf targets. the expression analyses of mir s and grf are proceeding for different growth zones. in conclusion, this is the first study investigating the regulation network between mir s and grf in different developmental stages of maize leaf under low-temperature stress. oeigpd cdna was isolated from a cdna library we constructed from olive pedicels. homology searches for nucleotide, amino acids and alternative open reading frames were conducted utilizing blastn, blastp, and blastx, respectively. nucleotide sequences of homologous genes from other plants were aligned using bioedit and the number of snps were detected. the alignment was then used to generate a phylogenetic tree using mega program. another alignment with amino acid sequences of the homologues proteins was also generated to construct a phylogenetic tree displaying oeigpd's position among other plants. various aspects of oeigpd including amino acid composition, hydropathy analysis, isoelectric point (pi) and three dimentional structure of the protein were determined using online software at expasy. multiple primer pairs to amplify the full length open reading frame of the gene, to clone the gene into the expressing vector plate , and to detect expression through real-time pcr were designed using primer . amino acid composition analysis revealed that oeigpd contained serine, arginine and isoleucine predominantly while hydropathy analysis suggested it was an hydrophilic protein. isoelectric point (pi) of the protein was calculated as . . the molecular weight of the protein was calculated as kda. analyses continue to determine the polymorphism of oeigpd among olive cultivars, and biochemical function of the gene in olive. p- . . - cytotoxic effect of fractionated triterpenoid glycosides from holothuria polii in human cancer cells sea cucumbers are the members of class holothuroidea and they have more than described living species all around the world. sea cucumbers secrete special secondary metabolites from their body walls and they are called triterpene glycosides (tggs). in this study, cytotoxic activity of fractionated ttgs from h. polii on different cancer cell lines were carried out. h. polii delle chiaje, samples were collected from dikili-_ izmir. the semipurified extracts were fractioned by using hplc. four different fractions (fraction a-d) were obtained. in order to characterize the fractions, maldi-tof/ms was used. the cytotoxic activity of the fraction a-d were tested on ht- , t and upci-scc- cell lines by using xcelligence rtca sp system. the cells were treated with three different concentrations of the fractions for hours. the cell index data were compared with the control group. ic values of the fractions for three cell lines were calculated. according to the results, the fractions have holothurin a ( . m/z), -dehydroechinoside a, scabraside a or fuscocinerosides b/c isomer ( . m/z). the fraction d was the most effective on all cell lines with ic value of . ae . mg/l, . ae . mg/l and . ae . mg/l for ht- , upci-scc- and t , respectively. in conclusion, sea cucumber ttgs are promising agents for colon adenocarcinoma, oral squamous cell carcinoma and colorectal carcinoma (metastatic) treatment. p- . . - effect of horse-chestnut (aesculus hippocastanum) seed extract on matrix metalloproteinases during diabetic wound healing impaired wound-healing in diabetics is a major public health problem. the expression and activation of matrix metalloproteinases (mmps) are also impaired in diabetic wounds according to previous studies. their main function is to degrade the various components of the extracellular matrix. also, they participate physiological processes such as inflammation, angiogenesis, tissue remodeling. horse-chestnut seeds (hc) are rich in saponins and flavonoids. it has been shown that hc has antiinflammatory, antioedema, vessel protective, and free radical scavenging properties. the aim of this study is to determine with molecular signs on cutaneous wound healing effects of the ethanol ( %) extract of hc (hce) seed in rats by excision wound model. this study was conducted on diabetic wistar albino rats, which were injected by a single dose ( mg/kg i.p.) streptozotocin. diabetic treatment rats were applied topically % (w/w) ointment with hce and control rats were applied topically simple ointment, once a day during the experimental period. the gene expression levels of mmp- , mmp- by qpcr and levels of nitric oxide (no), hydroxyproline and malondialdehyde in wound tissue investigated at the end of rd, th, and th days. wound closure was also measured. the hydroxyproline and no levels were significantly increased in the hce treated group versus control after the rd and th days. the malondialdehyde levels were significantly lower in the treatment group. mmp gene (associated with collagen processing and reepithelialization) expression levels in hce treated rats were increased in the th day while it was reduced in th day. mmp gene (associated with inflammation and gelatinase) expression levels in hce treated rats were decreased in th, and th days compared to the control. these findings indicate that hce accelerated the cutaneous wound healing process in diabetic rats via mmp and mmp regulation. p- . . - isolation and molecular molecular characterization of vps /vam from olive b. celikkaya, e. dundar molecular biology and genetic at balikesir university, balikesir, turkey vps /vam promotes aggregating and fusing of endosomes and lysosomes. it is a component of a protein complex that is found in vacuole membranes. this gene has been studied from various organisms including humans, drosophila, arabidopsis and rice. no studies on olive vps /vam , however, have been reported. the aim of this study is to report information of olive vps /vam including expression pattern and biochemical characterization. vps /vam was isolated from a cdna library we constructed from fruited olive leaves in july. to determine the putative name of the cdna, blast analyses were conducted for nucleotide, open reading frame and amino acid sequence comparisons. bioedit program was used to determine the nucleotide and amino acid composition along with its molecular weight and isoelectric point (pi). hydropathy analysis was conducted using kyte and doolittle program. phylogenetic analysis was done using mega . cellular localization of the product was predicted using sosui gramn. the three dimentional structure of the protein was calculated using i-tasser and compared to previously known structures using cn d. the blast and bioedit analyses revealed vps /vam had base pairs coding amino acids with a molecular weight of . kda, and pi of . . the at/gc ratio was very high ( . ) comparing to its homologs from other plants suggesting to expect significant differences of this gene's function from the others. amino acid composition analysis revealed high rates of serine, leusine and isoleucine indicating a hydrophobic property of the protein. the hydrophobic feature was confirmed by kyte and doolittle analysis while the cellular location was revealed to be extracellular. the hydrophobic nature despite extracellular location suggests it is a membrane associated protein which was confirmed by transmembrane domain analysis. as expected no signal peptide was detected. the d structure of the protein was similar to its previously reported homologs. p- . . - isolation and characterization of the ribosomal l protein from olive s. cinarli, e. dundar department of molecular biology and genetics, balikesir university, balikesir, turkey despite as a ribosomal protein, l is known as the inhibitor of the cellular aging gene and it has been reported to have roles in apoptosis. the ribosomal l protein is larger than the lsu of ribosome and contains domains as -layered alpha/beta domain and -layered alpha/beta domain. in ribosomes, it functions in translocation and orientation of trnas. although the ribosomal l (rl ) gene has been studied in many plants, reports on olive rl (oerl ) are very rare. this study presents molecular characterization of rl gene from olive. oerl was isolated from a cdna library we constructed from unfruited olive leaves in july. homology analyses were conducted using blast programs. nucleotide and amino acid compositions, molecular weight, isoelectric point (pi) and at/gc ratio were determined using bioedit and expasy programs. cellular location of the l protein was determined using sosui-gramn program. signal peptide detection, transmembrane domain detection, three dimensional ( d) structure analysis, and phylogenetic analysis were conducted using signalp . , thhmm, i-tasser/cn d and mega , respectively. oel was found to have an open reading frame of base pairs coding amino acids that constitutes a molecular weight of . kda and a high pi of . . lysine, leucine and valine had higher rates. the hydrophilic nature suggested by kyte and doolittle analysis despite high rates of leucine and valine suggests an amphipathic nature of the protein that can bind to both hydrophilic and hydrophobic proteins and / or function in both media. a . at/gc rate is significant comparing to that of its homologs from other plants. sitoplasmic location predicted by sosui-grann is in agreement with the hypothesis suggesting an amphyphatic nature for oerl . likewise, no signal peptide was detected and it was predicted to have at least one transmembrane domain. further characterization of oerl with respect to expression pattern and biochemical function continues. p- . . - isolation and characterization of an olive splicing factor b subunit m. nurcin, e. dundar department of molecular biology and genetics, balikesir university, balikesir, turkey splicing factor b subunit (sf b ) functions in the regulation of translation and gene expression. sf b forms u small nuclear ribonucleoprotein complex (u snrnp). splicing factors a and b binds pre-mrna at the site of the intron branching point. this binding joins u snrnp to pre-mrna. although sf b from various plants have been widely studied, no studies on olive sf b (oesf b ) have been reported. this study reports information on various aspects of oesf b . oesf b was obtained from a cdna library we constructed from fruited olive leaves in december. it was putatively identified as a splicing factor using blastn, blastp and blastx. to determine wheter oesfb was a sitoplasmic protein, sosui gramn was used. tmhmm was used to detect any transmembrane domains while signal peptide analysis was conducted by signalp. i-tasser and cn d were used to generate the calculated d structure and to compare it with experimentally generated models, respectively. nucleotide and amino acid compositions along with the calculated molecular weight and isoelectric point (pi) were analyzed using bioedit and online expasy software. the phylogenetic trees revealed genetic relationship of olive among other plants based on oesfb . the orf contained nucleotides coding amino acids that produce a . kda peptide with a pi of . . alanine, valine and leucine were found at high ratios suggesting a hydrophobicity which was also predicted by kyte and doolittle analysis. the at rich property of oesf b is not unusual comparing to most plant genes. cellular localization of the gene was suggested to be in mitochondria with no signal peptide indicating oesf b could be synthesizing in mitochondria. the predicted d structure of oesf b was similar to experimentally produced structures while some hydrophobic pockets were predicted. further characterization of the gene with respect to temporal and spatial expression pattern and biochemical function continues. p- . . - kafirin profile of turkish originated sorghum populations r. temizg€ ul, s. yilmaz, m. kaplan, t. akar department of biology, faculty of science, erciyes university, kayseri, turkey sorghum bicolor l. is the fifth important crop in the world with its high photosynthetic activity and resistance to unfavourable conditions as high temperature, drought, salt, and ph changes. sorghum has attracted great interest due to its intensive usage both as human and animal nutrition, and contribution to resistance against many diseases. some proteins of sorghum exerts reducing effect on nutrient digestion through making connetions with other proteins and/or carbohydrates. kafirin proteins have the highest proportion in grain with a range of - %. they are grouped into a ( - kda), b ( kda), c ( kda) and d ( kda) subunits depending on molecular weight, solubility and structure. in the current study, kafirin proteins from turkey originated sorghum populations were acquired through sequential extraction; first, non-prolamines were removed through application of % naci concentration, and second, kafirins were obtained using tertiary butanol ( %) and reducing agents. sds-page was conducted for seperating and visualising the subunits of kafirins. the a, b, c, and d subunits of populations were respectively estimated as , , , and %. of the total proteins, % was identified as a, % b, % c, % d, and % non-prolamines. non-prolamin group of proteins were visualised as different bands ranging from . to kda. c and b group of proteins were only viewed when treated with reducing agents as -me and dtt suggesting that they are connected with complex cross-links. however, a group of proteins visualized without using these agents due to not having intra molecular disulphide bridges and inter molecular cross-links. non prolamins, except for . , . , . , . and . kda, were able visualised in the presence of reducing agents. transcriptomic analysis of the genes encoding analysed proteins needs to be elucidated for better understanding of the genetic diversity and biochemical characteristics of sorghum. p- . . - untargeted metabolomic profiling of romanian and uk tomatoes varieties by high performance liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry c. socaciu , university of agricultural sciences and veterinary medicine, cluj-napoca, center for applied biotechnology ccd-biodiatech at proplanta ltd, cluj-napoca, romania tomato flesh is a rich source of many phytochemicals of high nutritional value, including a large variety of carotenoid derivatives with health promoting properties. metabolomics became the most adequate technology for an accurate chemotaxonomic classification and discriminations between different varieties, based on untargeted profiling or targeted, quantitative analysis. different varieties of tomatoes (b-carotene-rich, lycopene-rich, ketocarotenoid-rich) cultivated in romania and uk were comparatively studied using enriched fractions obtained by a preliminary fractionation of the whole pulp homogenate. two methods were applied for carotenoid extraction: a mixture of hexane/ethanol ( ) and chloroform/methanol ( ) . the dried extracts were dissolved in ethyl acetate and analyzed by uv-vis spectrometry and hplc-esi(+)qtof-ms (bruker gmbh). the base-peak chromatograms were processed by specific biostatistics software (data analysis and profile analysis) and the molecular identification were determined by comparison with the data base lipidomics gateway (www.lipidmaps.org). the content of carotenoids were significantly higher using extraction ( ) , ranging from . to . mg/ g. the major carotenoid derivatives, were represented by lycopene, hidroxy-lycopene, all-trans or cis-beta-carotene, echinenone, all-trans retinyl palmitate, but also sterols, phospholipids, di/tri glycerides and ceramides. the romanian varieties were more rich in polar carotenoids and lipids, in general, while the uk tomatoes proved to be enriched in non-polar derivatives, especially esterified carotenoids, keto-carotenoids and glycerides. new molecules were identified, as good discriminatory markers of each tomato variety. acknowledgements. this work was supported by a grant of the romanian national authority for scientific research and innovation, cccdi -uefiscdi, project nr. / , pncdi . glycogen is a multi-branched polysaccharide that serves as the main form of glucose storage in the body, where the main reserves are in the liver and muscle. it has been observed that glycogen metabolism is altered in many tumor types, and that glycogen content is inversely correlated with proliferation rate. in addition, it has recently been described that when glycogen accumulation is forced in glioblastoma u cells in hypoxia, senescence is induced and tumor growth is inhibited in vivo. our laboratory has various animal models with different parts of the glycogen metabolism pathway affected. most notably, we have two animal models lacking glycogen: muscle glycogen synthase (gys ko) and liver glycogen synthase (gys ko) knockout animals. we isolated mouse embryonic fibroblasts (mefs) from gys ko to perform replicative senescence assays. in addition, we induced hepatocellular carcinomas in gys ko animals via n-nitrosodiethylamine (den) injections in order to track tumorigenesis in animals lacking hepatic glycogen. lastly, we performed partial hepatectomies (phx), which involves the resection of two thirds of the liver, on gys kos to evaluate the effect of the lack of glycogen on hepatocyte proliferation. interestingly, we have observed that glycogen levels are increased in human and mouse fibroblasts under replicative senescence, and that mefs depleted of glycogen bypass senescence and immortalize faster than wts. we have also demonstrated that senescence pathways are down regulated in mefs lacking glycogen. furthermore, gys kos treated with den show higher tumor burden and mortality than controls. we also evaluated the effect of glycogen on hepatocyte proliferation after phx. gys ko mice present faster proliferation and liver regeneration rates, when compared to wt counterparts. collectively, our preliminary data suggest that glycogen metabolism plays a crucial role in the regulation of cell cycle in both physiological and pathological states. it is established that pineal is involved in circadian regulation of testosterone secretion from leydig cells. however, the precise routes of this regulatory involvement are still unknown. as cgmp has been also regarded as modulator of steroidogenesis we sought to study the effects of pineal removal on the circadian pattern of cgmp variations and expression of the genes that encode elements of no-cgmp signaling pathway in adult rat leydig cells. the analysis was performed on testicular leydig cells obtained from pinealectomised and shame pinealectomized rats, in six time point during hours. the pinealectomy was confirmed by serum melatonin eia measurement. the androgen levels were measured by ria; cgmp by eia and gene expression was quantified by rq-pcr. all results were analyzed by cosinor method. data revealed circadian transcriptional pattern of nos , nos (genes encoded no producers) and pde a (gene for cgmp remover) in leydig cells from adult rats. pinealectomy significantly increased expression of nos which lost rhythm and increased and delayed amplitude of nos expression. further, pinealectomy initiated cyclic transcription of gucy b and noncyclic transcription of gucy a (genes encoded cgmp producers) and increased mesor and amplitude of pde transcription. the transcription of prkg , the main effector in this signaling pathway was not affected with pineal abolition. additionally, pinealectomy did not influence the circadian transcription profile of coxi or other investigated genes (coxi , nrf , nrf a, pgc a) related to mitochondrial function and biogenesis. finally pinealectomy reversed phase of circadian cgmp oscillation in leydig cells, increased amplitude and slightly advanced peak of serum testosterone oscillation. results suggested pineal influence on circadian rhythm of no-cgmp signaling in leydig cells. further studies based on these data are needed to better understand the relationship between pineal and circadian rhythm of testosterone production. influenza is a contagious respiratory infection caused by a variety of influenza viruses. neuraminidase inhibitors is a new class of antiviral drugs that inhibit influenza viruses. the most popular antiviral agents is oseltamivir, having a commercial name of tamiflu, within anti-influenza antivirals. as well as tamiflu is a member of neuraminidase inhibitor group drug. therefore, this study was performed to determine the effect of tamiflu on cultured human peripheral blood lymphocytes. material and methods: for examining the presence of the indirect mutagenic effect of oseltamivir in iver s fraction mix was used. cells were treated with . , and lg/ml oseltamivir, the tamiflu capsule ingradient, for or hours in the absence or presence of an exogenous metabolic activation system. the test chemical did not demonstrate any genotoxic effect dose-dependently but it showed a weak cytotoxicity on cells in this study. on the other hand, some concentrations of tamiflu induced sce and also decreased significantly the proliferation index (p ˂ . ) in the absence of s mix. result: tamiflu did not induce significant increases of ca or micronucleated cells in vitro in cultured peripheral blood lymphocytes under the treatment conditions used but week sce induction was observed. on the other hand, the weak cytotoxic effects observed disappeared in the cultures treated in presence of the s mix. discuss and conclusion: tamiflu weakly induced sce at the highest concentration with/without added s mix in cultured human peripheral lympocytes. it could be assumed to be a sce inducer. sces can be increased by several agents that attack dna. tamiflu decreased the proliferation index and nuclear division index at some concentrations thus interferring it as being weakly cytotoxic, though this effect disappeared in the presence of s mix applications. this finding is important for showing the inefficiency of tamiflu metabolites on the cell cycle. introduction: chronic renal failure as a result of the progression of diabetic nephropathy is the main cause of mortality in patients with type diabetes. chronic hemodialysis is a life-saving therapy for patients with strong renal disorders. the main goal of hemodialysis is toxins removal from the patient. the monitoring of hemodialysis is the best way for biomedical evaluation of correctness and efficiency of this clinical treatment. according to the published data, the markers of development of diabetes complicated with renal failure are increased levels of glucose, urea and creatinine in the patient blood. today colorimetric and spectrometric methods are most commonly used for determination of the above metabolites in biological samples. however, these methods are complex in application, have low selectivity, and require pretreatment of samples. materials and methods: we propose for levels of glucose, urea and creatinine detection the potentiometric multibiosensor based on ph-sensitive field-effect transistors and immobilized enzymes developed in our laboratory. results: we developed a potentiometric multibiosensor and studied its main analytical characteristics. linear dynamic ranges of determination of substrates were following: . - mm of glucose, . - mm of urea, and . - mm of creatinine. it was shown that the potentiometric multibiosensor had good reproducibility, and its bioselective elements were working independently from each other, because test of substrates cross-selectivity was negative. discussion and conclusion: very sensitive, fast and selective multibiosensor for simultaneous measurement of three metabolites in a single cycle based on ph-sensitive field-effect transistors and immobilized enzymes is developed. the developed potentiometric multibiosensor was verified by quantitative analysis of glucose, urea and creatinine in blood serum of patients with diabetic nephropathy. p- . . - ph-dependent interaction of asymmetrically charged peptides with a protein nanopore over the past two decades, the ability to use natural or artificial nanopores to probe at uni-molecular level the structural and kinetic features of various bio-molecules (peptides, dna, rna) was successfully achieved. the operating principles of the nanopore-based single-molecule technique are simple: the single macromolecule capture, entry and subsequent translocations through a free-standing, voltage-biased nanopore, depend upon the physico-chemical and topological features of the analyte. the concentration, identity volume and charge of the analyte are then deduced from the analysis of the stochastic current blockade events caused by the trafficked analyte across the nanopore. herein, we used the a-hemolysin (a-hl) nanopore and set up an experimental model providing efficient control of a-hl-peptide interactions, in the presence of a ph gradient across the nanopore. for this, we engineered a amino acids long peptide containing a neutral asparagines-containing sequence, flanked by oppositely charged aminoacid patches at the n-(glutamic acids) and c-termini (arginines), whose length was set as to span a single a-hl protein. when the ph of the solution in contact to the a-hl's b-barrel opening is changed from neutral to acidic values, the electrostatic interactions between the protein's mouth and either the n-or c-terminus end of the peptide occurs, and this influences strongly the dynamics of a peptide translocating the nanopore. we further proved that during the same experiment, peptide entry into the nanopore can be set to occur with either n-or c-terminus end head on, by simply changing the sign of the transmembrane potential across the nanopore. nanopores are emerging as a powerful and broadly applicable tool in biophysics, which allows one to study the features of charged macromolecules under confinement. a few noteworthy examples are: determining the electrophoretic mobility, effective charge and diffusion coefficients of charged molecules; exploring the folding and unfolding of peptides and proteins; analyzing biopolymers trafficking, protein transport, dna translocation, rna and dna sensing and sequencing. herein, we employ single molecule analysis techniques using a wild-type ahemolysin (a-hl) protein nanopore to study the capture and translocation behavior of a short cationic peptide ( amino acids in length) at an extremely low ph value. our experiments revealed that an effective absorbing field is created by the electroosmotic flow, against the electrophoretic force, which enables the peptide capture inside the nanopore. furthermore, our findings show that the trajectory of a single peptide can be experimentally visualized and the main steps determined: the peptide capture, reversible translocation across the pore's vestibule and lumen regions, and the peptide release from the nanopore. also, the kinetic analysis of the main steps observed allowed us to describe the free energy profile of the peptide interactions with the protein nanopore. the presented work provides evidence for the ability of controlling the dynamics of a single-peptide, its capture and passage inside a a-hl nanopore, that underlie the processes naturally occurring in cells, thus proving a powerful approach for probing single molecule biophysics phenomena, in general. changes in the physical conditions of the cancer microenvironment driven by elevated tissue growth and angiogenesis, may introduce exposure of laminar fluid flow, which effect the key factors of cancer, such as progression, immune-escaping and metastasis. conventional experimental models fail to mimic the physical cues on tumor microenvironment. microfluidic culture techniques allow precise control of fluids, simultaneous manipulation and analysis of cultured cancer cells. here, we present a platform that can be used for the investigation of the role of flow mediated mechanical stimuli on cancer cells. microfluidic cell culture platform was fabricated using polymethyl methacrylate and double-sided adhesive films with mm dimensions. ovary adenocarcinoma cells (efo- and onco-dg- ) were used for the optimization of the platform. to understand the fluid and gas distribution patterns, specific modeling was performed. dynamic microfluidic cell culture and static conventional cell culture conditions were compared for the differences of cancer cell phenotype, such as proliferation, viability, epithelial-mesenchymal transition. we confirmed that, the proliferation and viability of cancer cells are increasing under dynamic fluid flow. the proliferation rate of ovary adenocarcinoma cells was correlated with the increase of fluid flow rate. immunocytochemical analysis showed that fluid flow causes decrease in e-cadherin expression, and increase in n-cadherin and vimentin expressions, which indicate mesenchymal phenotype of cancer cells. our results showed that, cancer cells present different characteristics due to fluid flow of tumor microenvironment. to understand the role of physical dynamics by using microfluidic culture techniques, is a key to elucidate the mechanisms underlying disease progression, and may lead to new diagnostics and therapeutic approaches. (this study was funded by turkish scientific and technical research council (tubitak- s ). high-sensitive detection of low-affinity antibodies by immuno-pcr with supramolecular olygonucleotide-streptavidin complex detection of low affinity antibodies in blood sera and cell surface outwashes is important both in the study of molecules that bind to cellular receptors (circulating tumor cell masking antibody, for example) and medicine (diagnosis of allergy). low affinity igm and ige antibodies can not sometimes be determined by conventional methods. we using supramolecular oligonucleotide-streptavidin complex formed from single-stranded synthetic oligonucleotide ( n) contains biotin on '-and '-ends, and sterptavidin in molar ratio : . this complex represents a structure with equivalent electrophoretic mobility of bp dna and preferred "valency" of streptavidin is . this universal immuno-pcr approach make it possible to increase a signal by using several oligonucleotides per one antibody. after the method optimization we achieved - times highter sensitivity than elisa. to reduce the matrix effect we used - fold dilutions of sera samples. this approach achieved a significant advantage, because it allows working with small-volume samples (need only mkl of serum sample). antibodies to the disaccharide galb - glcnac (le c ) are typical of the natural antibodies. the igm anti-le c antibodies are found in almost healthy people without the epitope specificity variation. we have shown that the concentration of igm anti-le c antibodies was higher (p ≤ . ) for health donor sera (n = ; . ae . pg/ml) compared with sera from patients with breast cancer (n = ; . ae . pg/ml). sensitivity of igm anti-le c antibodies detection was pg/sample ( mkl) ie . molecules. thus for the immuno-pcr detection of antibodies the - tumor cells are sufficient. such amount of cells seems to be a realistic one for detection of antibodies masking circulating tumor cells. this study was supported by a grant from russian science foundation (# - - ) and by russian federation president scholarships donated to d. yu. riazantsev (# sp . . bacterial pathogen detection and identification is of crucial importance for disease diagnosis, bacterial contamination surveys and water quality assessment. we propose herein a novel method for bacterial detection based on the interaction of single gram-negative bacterial cells (i.e.: escherichia coli and pseudomonas aeruginosa) with an ahemolysin (a-hl) protein nanopore embedded in a reconstituted lipid bilayer, at neutral ph. as a consequence of an applied voltage, the negatively charged bacteria suspended in saline buffer solution are electrophoretically driven towards the pore opening, inducing reversible blockages in the ionic current through a-hl. experiments were also performed in the presence of an antimicrobial peptide, cma , as well as in acidic environment. statistical analysis of the frequency and duration of blockage events allowed us to discriminate between the two types of bacteria. the frequency of interactions was higher for escherichia coli with respect to pseudomonas aeruginosa. adsorption of cma peptides on the membrane of bacteria increased the frequency of interactions with the pore, contrary to the expected effect induced by lowering the net surface charge of the cells. in experiments performed at ph = , the frequency of blockage events was found to be two orders of magnitude higher, with longer interaction life-times. the net negative charge ( uncompensated aspartate residues) localized at the entrance of the pore contributes an additional electrostatic repulsion interaction between negatively charged bacterial cells and a-hl. thus, adsorption of cationic peptides at the interface will reduce this repulsive interaction. the same effect was recorded at ph = , when the aspartate residues are partially protonated, confirming our understanding of the previously observed results. this method could be further developed and integrated with other techniques, making nanopore-based systems a fast and reliable bacterial detection and identification tool. this study was performed to analyze the effects of tunicamycin (tm) and taurohyodeoxycholic acid (tudca) on thle- cells. cells were treated with tm to induce endoplasmic reticulum (er) stress and tudca was administered as an er stress inhibitor. cytotoxicity was evaluated at different times of exposure by incubating cells with increasing concentrations of either tudca, tm or both. thle cells were cultured in fibronectin, bovine collagen i and bovine serum albumin coated plates. cell lines were grown in begm media supplemented with epidermal growth factor, phosphoethanolamine, fetal bovine serum, u of penicillinstreptomycin and maintained in a humidified incubator at °c and a % co atmosphere. cell viability was measured using the colorimetric -( , -dimethylthiazol- -yl)- , -diphenyltetrazolium bromide (mtt) assay kit. cells were grown to confluence in well plates and incubated with ll/ml dmso, - lg/ml tm, . - mm tudca, or lg/ml tm + . - mm tudca for - hours. control cells were prepared in plates containing only medium. at the end of the incubation period, mtt was added to each well and incubation was carried out for hours at °c. formazan production was expressed as a percentage of the values obtained from control cells. at all hours of incubation neither dmso or mm tudca was cytotoxic. at and hours incubations mm tudca and lg/ml tm + mm tudca were significantly cytotoxic compared to control, dmso and mm tudca groups. treatment of cells with . mm tudca hours before administrating ug/ml tm significantly decreased the cytotoxic effect of tm. we conclude that tudca may show cytotoxic effects at mm concentration when treated with tm. therefore . mm of tudca, administered hours before tm treatment should be applied to protect against er stress. acknowledgement: this study was supported by a grant from the scientific and technological research council of turkey (tubitak; s ). recent studies reveals that history of preeclampsia is an independent risk factor for cardiac events and stroke. lipoprotein-associated phospholipase a (lp-pla ) is a vascular inflammatory marker associated with cardiovascular diseases (cvd). we hypothesize that vascular inflammation (lp-pla mass, activity, index) related genetic variations (pla g ) increase the risk for developing future cardiovascular disease in women with pe. a group of preeclamptic patients and normal pregnant women were recruited from university of istanbul, cerrahpasa medical school, department of gynecology and obstetrics included into the study. the control group was matched for maternal and gestational age at time point of sampling. preeclamptic patients were starified into two groups; early-onset and late-onset according to the gestational weeks. enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay procedure was used to determine the serum lp-pla mass level. lp-pla activity were determined by kinetic method. plag snp genotyping performed by using the sequenom massarray iplex. the rs tt genotype had a higher lp-pla index (p = . ) for early onset preeclampsia, cc genotype had a higher lp-pla mass and lp-pla index for late onset preeclampsia. no difference were found for control. the rs gg genotype had higher lp-pla mass and index for late onset preeclampsia (p = . , p = . respectively). stepwise logistic regression analysis performed to identify cardiovascular disease related variables that independently and significantly contributed to the presence of alleles of rs and rs snps in early, late onset preeclampsia and control group. only lp-pla mass was independently and significantly associated with both snps in early onset preeclampsia. the association between lp-pla mass, index and rs , rs snps might be useful genetic markers to adress future cvd risk in patients with preeclampsia. introduction: b-thalassemia is one of the most monogenic autosomal recessive disorder characterized by defective production of the b-chain of hemoglobin. definition of the b-globin genotype is necessary for genetic counselling in the carriers, and for predicting prognosis and management options in the patients with thalassemia. dna-based diagnosis of b-thalassemias routinely relies on polymerase chain reaction (pcr) and gel electrophoresis. the aim of this study is to develop a new procedure, a dna-based piezoelectric biosensor, for the detection of b-thalassemia ivsi- mutation, the most common b-thalassemia mutation in turkey. materials and methods: b-globin gene of genomic dna isolated from whole blood, was amplified by pcr. bioactive layer was constituted by binding -hidroxymetacrilate metacriloamidoscystein (hema-mac) nanoploymers on the gold electrode's surface. single oligonucleotide probes specific for ivsi- mutation of b-thalassemia were attached to the nanopolymer via reactive cross-linker glutaraldehyde. the measurements were executed by piezoelectric resonance frequency which is caused by binding of pcr products in media with single oligonucleotide probe on the electrode surface. the results were confirmed by the conventional molecular method as arms. results: the piezoelectric resonance frequencies obtained by hybridization of the pcr products on bioactive layer were found ae , ae , and ae hz for the samples of normal b-globin, heterozygote, and homozygote of ivsi- mutation, respectively. discuss and conclusion: the developed biosensor serves as a specific result to ivsi- mutation. it could accurately discriminate between normal and ivsi- mutation samples. because of low costs, fast results, specificity and high detection/information effectiveness as compared with conventional methods, we can be offered this techique as an alternative to conventional molecular methods. the increasing use of nano-sized materials in the last several years has compelled the scientific community to investigate the potential hazards of these unique and useful materials. one of the most widely used nanoparticles is titanium dioxide. the objective of the research is to investigate the alterations in molecular and cellular responses in culture of primary lymphocytes to tio nps. human lymphocytes isolated from heparinized blood of healthy individuals were exposed to tio nanoparticles. viability, ros generation, the changes in the expression of genes encoding proinflammatory mediators tnf-a, il- b and il- and dna damage were assessed. human lymphocytes were incubated with nanoparticles of different concentrations and viability was determined in and hours after treatment, respectively. cell viability was decreased by a treatment with nanoparticles in both a time-and concentration-dependent manners. the ability of tio to induce ros formation in lymphocytes was evaluated using dcf fluorescence as a reporter of oxidant production. the fluorescence intensity of oxidized dcf was increased in cells treated with nps. this means that ros generation occurred in response to the treatment with tio . to investigate the expression level of mrna related to the inflammation responses in human lymphocytes real-time pcr was performed. the expression of il- b, il- and tnf-a genes were increased by the exposure to nanoparticles of , and lg/ml for - hours. tio nanoparticles were shown to induce the dose-dependent fragmentation of dna strands. much evidence of hazardous health effects of nps has been reported. in this study, viability was reduced under the exposure to tio . oxidative stress was elevated by the treatment with tio nps. oxidative stress can also trigger inflammation signals. induced by exposure to nanoparticles they may cause the translocation to the nucleus of transcription factors, which regulate proinflammatory genes, such as tnf-a, il- b, il- . background: endothelial cells (ec) represent one of the primary targets of the major pro-inflammatory cytokinetumor necrosis factor (tnf). development of the new approaches for the treatment of acute and chronic inflammatory conditions, including the strategies aimed to tnf neutralization, requires the usage of the adequate cellular models closely resembling the properties of the endothelium. the endothelium-derived ea.hy cell line expresses several inflammation and neoangiogenesis markers in response to activation factors however their expression can differ from the patterns demonstrated by primary ec. the aim of the current study was to compare the expression of the known endothelial cellular markers including receptor of vascular endothelial growth factor- (vegfr ) and a v b -integrin on d and d cultures (spheroids) of ea.hy . methods: the ea.hy cell line was used with permission from dr. edgell. the cells were cultivated in the presence of tnf ( ng/ml) or vegf a ( ng/ml) for hours. mrna was isolated using rneasy kit from qiagen and reverse-transcribed with revertaid kit (fermentas). rt-pcr was performed with specific primers. expression of vegfr and a v b -integrin was visualized by confocal microscopy using specific monoclonal antibodies and previously developed fluorescent hybrid proteins. results: the expression of a v b -integrin and vegfr- increased on the d culture compared to d according to confocal microscopy and rt-pcr. the aforecited methods revealed elevated expression of a v b -integrin in the d culture of the ea.hy cell line activated with tnf. also increased expression of vegfr in the d culture activated with vegf a. then by confocal microscopy, we analyzed our fluorescent hybrid proteins that bind a v b -integrin and vegfr on the surface of d and d cultures as well as antibodies with fluorescent label. conclusions: d cultures of the ea.hy cell line represent a promising model for the inflammation studies. tumor necrosis factor (tnf) is a trimeric cytokine associated with the inflammatory response to tissue injury and found to possess a key role in rheumatoid arthritis pathogenesis. spd is a highly toxic recently discovered tnf inhibitor that promotes trimer dissociation and lead to the inactivation of the protein. according to the traditional anti-tnf treatment of ra, we aim at extracellular inhibition of this pro inflammatory cytokine as an effective therapy. the project plan comprises design, synthesis and validation of candidate inhibitors (measurement of dissociation constant and aqueous solubility). because of the elevated percentage of insoluble compounds a solubility enhancement protocol has been developed. the experimental procedure was the following:: a. drug design. identification of novel drug compounds are based on two approaches: i) structure based drug design using the d structure of tnf and ii) design of more potent and less toxic spd analogues. b. drug synthesis. a series of spd analogues were in house synthesized while novel candidates discovered by in silico approaches were commercially available. the purity of the majority of the compounds exceeded %. c. solubility measurement and enhancement. samples were incubated under specific conditions that can enhance aqueous solubility and solubility measurement with a direct uv method pursued. d. measurement of the dissociation constant. a fluorescence binding assay was used in order to evaluate the inhibitory activity of the compounds. from our results it can be concluded that dmso, peg and b-cyclodextrin can be used for solubility enhancement without interfering with fluorescence assay. however peg -in contrast to dmso-is not suitable for isothermic titration calorimetry measurements. dissolution procedure also plays a crucial role in the levels of solubility reached. finally, it has been shown that some of the studied spd derivatives have better dissociation constants than spd . the effect of exercises on serum bmp- levels of knee osteoarthritis cytokines. more complicated approaches are expected to focus on molecular proteins as bone morphogenetic proteins (bmps) of the transforming growth factor (tgf)-beta superfamily. bmps associated with many cellular functions, such as proliferation, differentiation, and apoptosis. bmp- is significantly important for the endochondral bone formation. inflamation can induced serum bmp levels in oa patients. the aim of this study is to evaluate the clinical findings of oa patients after the isokinetic exercise together with the serum levels of bmp- to sustain the molecular approaches for treatments. a total of patients were included in this study. the groups are formed as follows: group , oa patients before the exercise; group , oa patients after the exercise; group , oa patients before the isokinetic exercise; group , oa patients after the isokinetic exercise clinical and biochemical findings were evaluated before and after weeks of the exercise programme. self reported severity of pain was measured using the mm visual analog scale (vas), womac scores were calculated and isokinetic knee muscle strength testing was measured using cybex dynamometer that a standardized protocol previously described was applied in a subject-specific range of motion. serum bmp- levels of all patients were studied by elisa method. results represented a better vas and womac scores for all exercise groups after treatment. the serum bmp- levels were significantly decreased in group compared to group ( . ae . ; . ae . respectively, p < . ) and in group compared to group ( . ae . ; . ae . respectively, p < . ). there is not any statistically differences between group and group (p > . ). as a conclusion, the decreased serum levels of bmp- may be suggested as a biochemical marker for oa patients during exercise programmes. p- . . - tnf-a blokade efficiently reduced severe intestinal damage in necrotizing enterocolitis c. tayman, s. aydemir, i. yakut, u. serkant, a. c ß iftc ßi g€ olbasi devlet hospital, ankara, turkey objectives: to ascertain the beneficial effects of infliximab an inhibitor of tumor necrosis factor alpha (tnf-a) on the development of nec in an experimental nec rat model. material and methods: thirty newborn sprague-dawley rats were randomly divided into three groups as nec, nec+ infliximab, and control. nec was induced by enteral formula feeding, exposure to hypoxia-hyperoxia and cold stress. pups in the nec+ infliximab group were administered infliximab at a dose of mg/kg daily by intraperitoneal route from the first day until the end of the study. all pups were sacrificed on the th day. proximal colon and ileum were excised for histopathologic, immunohistochemical (tunel and caspase- ), and biochemical evaluation, including, total antioxidant status (tas), total oxidant status (tos), malonaldehyde (mda), and myeloperoxdase (mpo) and tnf-a activities. results: we observed better clinical sickness scores, weight gain, and survival rate in the nec+ infliximab group compared to the nec group (p < . ). histopathological and apoptosis examination (tunel and immunohistochemical evaluation for caspase- ) revealed lower damage in the nec+ infliximab group compared to the damage in the nec group (p < . ). tissue mda, mpo, tnf-a levels, and tos were significantly decreased in the nec+infliximab group, whereas tas was significantly increased in the nec + infliximab group (p < . ). conclusion: tnf-a blockade with infliximab efficiently reduced the intestinal injury and preserve the intestinal tissues from severe intestinal damage by its complex mechanisms on nec. therefore, it may be an alternative option for the treatment of nec.keywords: tnf-a; infliximab; necrotizing enterocolitis; newborn; protection; rat; treatment p- . . - short-term diabetes causes cardiovascular inflammation: anti-inflammatory effect of resveratrol introduction: diabetes is a metabolic dysfunction and has been associated with various disorders including inflammation, cardiomyopathy and coronary artery disease. inflammation is a protective mechanism elicited by the host in response to infection, injury, and tissue damage. the aim of this study was to investigate the effect of intraperitoneally resveratrol administration on cardiac and vascular function in diabetic rats. materials and methods: diabetes was induced in sprague-dawley rats by using injection of streptozotocin ( mg/kg, i.p.). rats were divided into group i: control, ii: control/ mg/kg resveratrol; iii: diabetic/vehicle; and iv: diabetic/ mg/kg resveratrol. histopathological examinations with masson's trichrome and verhoeff-van gieson staining were carried out to reveal cardiac and vascular tissue damage and inflammation. in addition to plasma glucose and cardiac & vascular mda levels were measured by standard enzymatic kits while tnf-a, il- b, il- (mbl) were analyzed by elisa kit. results: final body weight decreased in all groups compared to control. in the diabetic rats, plasma glucose and vascular mda levels were enhanced while cardiac mda was unchanged compared to control. vascular tnf-a, il- b and mbl and cardiac mbl were increased in the diabetic groups compared to control. discussion and conclusion: it has been found that resveratrol has greatly normalized altered parameters. taken together, resveratrol partly improved cardiac and vascular inflammation induced by diabetes. this may be due to the healing activity of resveratrol on pro-inflammatory markers. p- . . - cytokine network is critical in growth hormone-induced resistance mechanism against curcumin which modulates jak/stat/ socs pathway in mda-mb- and mcf- breast cancer cells m. c ß elik, a. c ß oker g€ urkan, e. damla arisan, p. obakan yerlikaya, n. palavan unsal t.c. istanbul k€ ult€ ur university, istanbul, turkey curcumin (diferuloylmethane), a polyphenolic compound that triggers apoptotic cell death in various cancer cells such as prostate, colon, melanoma and breast cancer. a pituitary-derived hormone, growth hormone (gh) play role in elongation and differentiation of ductal epithelia into the breast terminal and buds. in this study, our aim is to determine the role of inflammation in curcumin induced apoptotic cell death via acting on jak/stat/socs pathway in wt and gh+ mda-mb- and mcf- breast cancer cell lines. according to mtt cell viability assay curcumin triggers cell viability loss in time and dose dependent manner in mda-mb- wt and mda-mb- gh+ breast cancer cell lines, respectively. selected concentrations of curcumin as lm (for mcf- ) and lm (for mda-mb- ) decreased cell proliferation and induced apoptosis through causing jak dephoshorylation, stat , , dimerization and acting on socs proteins expression in each cell lines. in addition, activated jak/stat/socs pathway, via forced gh expression has been suppressed following curcumin treatment for hours. lm curcumin-induced apoptotic cell death via dephosphorylating jak at tyr / residues and decreased phospho-stat , level in both breast cancer cell lines. although curcumin dephosphorylated stat in both mda-mb- and mcf- wt cells, no significant effect has been observed in mda-mb- gh+ and mcf- gh+ cell lines. in consequence, although forced gh expression induced cell proliferation in mcf- and mda-mb- breast cancer cells, curcumin overcame gh-mediated resistance mechanism via acting on jak/ stat/socs signaling, which is related to pparg-induced inflammation. acknowledgment breast cancer is one of the highest cancer type among women worldwide. various enviromental and genetic factors such as age, gender, family history, metabolic diseases and gene mutations are involved in the breast cancer pathogenesis. growth hormone (gh), a pituitary derived hormone, has essential role on postnatal growth and development. it is also established that signalling route of gh and its receptor (ghr) activity is increased in different cancer types. curcumin, a nutraceutical deriatives from rhizomes of turmeric (curcuma longa), has potential therapeutic activity against cancer cells, including breast cancer. curcumin inhibits proliferation of cancer cells such as prostate, colon, melanoma, cervical and breast cancer via induction of apoptosis and inflammation. stat , a major downstream target of gh/ghr signalling, is related to survival, proliferation and differentiation. in this study, our aim was to investigate curcumin-induced apoptotic cell death in gh overexpressed mda-mb- breast cancer cells via jak-stat/socs signalling and inflammatory response profile. according to mtt cell viability assay, curcumin decreased cell viability in time and dose dependent manner in wt and gh+ mda-mb- breast cancer cell lines. we found that lm curcumin-decreased in apoptotic cell death through inactivity at jak which led to dimerization of stat , stat , stat . concomitantly, curcumin affected stat regulating socs proteins in mda-mb- breast cancer cell line. in addition, we demonstrated that lm curcumin induced pparg expression and altered inflammatory cytokine signalling cascade. consequently, although gh overexpression led to agressive profile in mda-mb- breast cancer cells, curcumin overcame this resistance. inflammation is involved in many systemic disturbances, including osteoarthicular or skin diseases, coordinating the signaling network that contributes to tissue injuries. the aim of our study is to reveal pro-inflammatory messengers at the cutaneous barrier (keratinocytes, fibroblasts, endothelial cells), simulating the dermal impact of active principles, especially polyphenols and flavones from vegetal sources: salvia officinalis, asculum hippocastanum and calendula officinalis. we focused on il and il cytokines as main mediators of inflammation progression, correlated in keratinocytes with il a as skin irritation indicator and vegf as pro-angiogenic factor, as well as in endothelial cells with icam- and vcam- adhesion molecules expression. in order to in vitro mimic the inflammatory conditions, we used targeted stimuli for each type of cells: for fibroblasts and endothelial cells -tnfa, a systemic stimulus, single or combined with pma that activates protein kinase c and up regulates nadph oxidase, which lead to superoxide anion production; for keratinocytescontrolled uv-a and uv-b radiation, simulating the solar damages or potential uv interactions with active principles in light exposed skin. the main analysis technique was flow cytometry: beads bases assay for soluble factors and fluorescent antibodies staining. our results prove the different involvement of polyphenols and flavones in the anti-inflammatory mechanisms, depending of the vegetal source: active principles from salvia officinalis induce a strong inhibition of il and il in tnfa stimulated keratinocytes, fibroblasts and endothelial cells, reduce the icam- over-expression but have no effects on irradiated keratinocytes; biocomplexes from asculum hippocastanum inhibit only il release in stimulated fibroblasts, but protect keratinocytes from uv-a and uv-b radiation; compounds from calendula officinalis are active on il signaling in fibroblasts and counteracts only uv-b inflammation. ischemia and/or reperfusion injury is one of the most common causes of acute renal failure. ischemia-reperfusion associated with thrombolytic therapy, organ transplantation, coronary angioplasty, aortic cross-clamping, or cardiopulmonary bypass results in local and systemic inflammation. within the endothelium, ischemia produces expression of proinflammatory gene products (e.g. cytokines) and bioactive agents (e.g., endothelin), while preventing other "protective" gene products (e.g., thrombomodulin) and bioactive agents (e.g. nitric oxide). therefore, ischemia induces a proinflammatory state that increases tissue vulnerability to further injury on reperfusion. this experimental study was designed to investigate the protective effect of salvia l. extracts on kidneys from i/r injury. salvia lamiaceae have been used for treatment of some illnesses in turkish folk medicine. forty spraque dawley rats were divided into groups (n = ). right nephrectomy was performed to all groups. group i: control group; group ii: i/r group; group iii: i/r + mg/kg salvia l.group; group iv: i/r + mg/kg salvia l. group; group v: i/r + mg/kg rosmarinic acid. group. salvia l. and rosmarinic acid for days was given single dose as a gavage. minutes ischemia, minutes reperfusion were applied to groups except control. intracardiac blood samples were taken, high sensitive crp (hscrp), tumor necrosis factor-a (tnf-a), interleukin (il)- and interleukin ib (il- b) levels were detected. serum hscrp levels were also determined in our clinical laboratory using routine standard methods. serum tnf-a, il- and il-ib levels were evaluated using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay technique. mean values were evaluated by statistical analysis. serum hscrp, tnf-a, il- , and il- b concentrations were significantly increased after renal i/r as compared to the control group. our treatment group mg/kg salvia l. and mg/kg rosmarinic acid especially mg/kg of salvia l. were found to show a protective effect against renal structure and function. we concluded that salvia l. extracts could be beneficial in the treatment of renal ischemic injury. but mg/kg salvia l. extract were more effective than mg/kg salvia l. extract and used as synthetic mg/kg rosmarinic acid. acne vulgaris is a common chronic inflammatory skin disease of unknown etiology. excess levels of secretory phospholipase a (spla ) contributes to inflammatory diseases and studies indicate that lipoprotein lipase (lpl) has differential effects on several inflammatory pathways. the aim of the present study was to assess serum activity of spla , lpl and evaluate changes in circulating protein levels of angiopoietin-like protein (angptl ), angptl , cyclooxygenase (cox) and prostaglandin e (pge ). serum from control subjects and acne vulgaris patients with moderate and severe disease was evaluated for levels of spla , cox, pge , lpl, angptl and angptl . disease activity was determined according to the national health service (nhs) lambeth and southwark clinical commissioning group guidelines for the management of acne. lipid profile, routine biochemical and hormone parameters were assayed by standard kit methods using autoanalyzers (beckman coulter au clinical chemistry and unicel dxi immunoassay systems). serum levels of spla and lpl were significantly increased in acne vulgaris patients compared to age and gender matched controls. no significant differences were found for cox, pge , angptl and angptl levels between acne vulgaris patients and controls. the results of this study reveal the presence of a proinflammatory state in acne vulgaris as shown by significantly increased serum spla activity. increased lpl activity in serum of acne vulgaris can be protective in patients through its anti-dyslipidemic actions. to our best knowledge, this is the first study investigating spla , lpl, angptl and angptl levels in acne vulgaris. future studies are aimed to understand the regulation of spla and lpl expression in acne vulgaris patients. acknowledgement: this study was supported by a grant from the scientific and technological research council of turkey (tubitak; # s ). p- . . - -ohdg and hogg levels are as an oxidative dna damage markers in acne vulgaris treated with isotretinoin h. ecevit, m. izmirli, b. gogebakan, e. rifaioglu, d. sonmez, b. bulbul sen, t. sen, h. m. okuyan mustafa kemal university, hatay, turkey acne vulgaris is a skin disease that characterized by comedones, papules, pustules, nodules and cysts at face, back and body skin. isotretinoin is one of the treatment agents in acne vulgaris. about weeks after drug treatment, the amount of sebum which is produced by sebaceous gland reduces keratinization disorder and the number of propionibacterium acnes normalizes. however, isotretinoin is known that has a wide range of side effects. in recent studies, isotretinoin treatment has been shown to increase the oxidative stress. -hydroxy- -deoxyguanosine ( -ohdg), an important indicator of oxidative dna damage, hydroxyl ion is bound at the th carbon of guanine. this structure is repaired through a base excision repair mechanism and the human -oxoguanine dna glycosylase (hogg ) plays a key role in this processes. in this study we aimed to evaluate the dna damage and it's repair in acne vulgaris before and after months of isotretinoin treatment by measuring -ohdg and hogg levels. the current study includes acne vulgaris patients who are diagnosed in mustafa kemal university, department of dermatology. -ohdg and hogg levels were measured by enzymelinked immunosorbent assay (elisa) method for before and after months of isotretinoin treatment. the commercial elisa kits (cloud-clone corp; usa and cell biolabs; usa) were used for the assessment of hogg and -ohdg, respectively.both -ohdg (p as a conclusion, isotretinoin increases dna damage and high serum -ohdg and hogg levels as a result of isotretinoin treatment may effect on the amount of reactive oxygen species. the pineal gland is a circumventricular organ which serves as a major neuroendocrine gland in the brain. its primary function is the production of melatonin which is controlled by signals from the suprachiasmatic nucleus. melatonin codes the length of the night and it is well recognized for its anti-inflammatory effects. lipopolysaccharide (lps) is the essential component in the outer surface membrane of gram-negative bacteria and act as a strong stimulator of natural and innate immunity in all eukaryotic species. furthermore, lps reduces melatonin synthesis and induces the expression of the serine protease inhibitor (spi- ) in the stat -mediated manner in pinealocytes. however, the precise function of stat in the cell signaling in the pineal gland is not yet known. here we investigated the effect of inhibition of stat on lps-induced changes in melatonin levels, expression of arylalkylamine n-acetyltransferase (aa-nat) and spi- in the pineal gland. experiments were performed in vitro using organotypic and primary cultures prepared from the rat pineal glands. levels of melatonin and spi- were determined from tissue homogenate by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (elisa). the pinealocytes were used to carry out sirna stat transfection. the successful transfection and subsequent decline in stat expression levels were proved by sodium dodecyl sulphate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (sds-page). the changes in synthesis of aa-nat and spi- were studied by rt-pcr. in conclusion, lipopolysaccharide can affect the immunomodulators secreted by the pineal gland. the clarification of the effect of inhibition of stat on those immunomodulators is important from the clinical point of view because inhibitors of stat are nowadays used as tumour suppressors. silica nanoparticles have a great potential for a variety of industrial, diagnostic and therapeutic applications. in this study, we have evaluated the in vitro effects of amorphous silica nanoparticles ( nm) using human lung mrc- fibroblast as model. cells were exposed to . lg/ml silica nanoparticles for , and hours. the cytotoxic and inflammatory response, and matrix metalloproteinase expression were examined. the pro-inflammatory cytokine il- b, il- , il- , tumor necrosis factor (tnf-a), matrix metalloproteinases (mmp- , mmp- , mmp- ) and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase- (timp- ) were analyzed by western blot method. cytotoxicity was evaluated by lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) released into the culture medium by damaged cells. the level of ldh activity was increased after exposure to silica nanoparticles, in a time-dependent manner compared to control. the protein expression of il- , il- , il- and tnf-a as well as of mmp- and timp- , was up-regulated whereas those of mmp- , mmp- was down-regulated after and hours respectively. in conclusion, our data indicate that amorphous silica nanoparticles generate a cytotoxic and inflammatory response, as well as an imbalance in extracellular matrix due to the differential regulation of mmps and tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinase- in mrc-cells after and hours. p- . . - association of fto gene variant (rs ) with markers of t dm and obesity in population from bosnia and herzegovina and kosovo fto (fat mass and obesity-associated gene), recently discovered in a genome-wide association study for type diabetes (t d) encodes a -oxoglutarate-dependent nucleic acid demethylase and is mainly expressed in the hypothalamus. this gene may play important role in the management of energy homeostasis, nucleic acid demethylation, and regulation of body fat masse by lipolysis. the aim of this study was to analyze the association of this single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) with clinical and biochemical parameters of obesity, t d, prediabetes and at the level of healthy population from bosnia and herzegovina (bh). the study included patients with t d and prediabetes and healthy controls both sexes, aged from up to years. patients were recruited at the clinical centre university of sarajevo, university hospital of clinical centre in banja luka, general hospital in te sanj and health centre in prizren. genotyping of analyzed polymorphism was performed by rt-pcr method in cooperation with the department of clinical chemistry, faculty of pharmacy, university of ljubljana (ljubljana, slovenia) and university hospital of charles university (hradec kralove, czech republic). our results did not show significant differences in genotype frequencies of the analyzed polymorphisms between patients with t d, pre-diabetes and healthy population also, results of logistic regression analyses did not show significant association of risk a allele of fto gene polymorphism -rs with increased risk of t d (or = . , % ci . - . , p = . ). a allele was significantly associated with higher values of hba c, insulin, homa ir index, diastolic blood pressure and higher levels of inflammatory markers (fibrinogen and leukocytes). interestingly, a tendency of association of a allele with higher values of obesity markers (bmi, waist and hip circumference) was noted. further studies are needed on a larger population in order to confirm these results. the water extract of capparis ovata (cowe) has been shown to be used as an alternative medicine for the treatment of multiple sclerosis (ms). cowe was further fractionated and studied for additional anti-neuroinflammatory effects in sh-sy y cells. for this purpose, the dichloromethane sub-fraction of the cowe extract was tested for its anti-inflammatory effects on selected anti-inflammatory genes believed to be important in ms pathophysiology using sh-sy y cells. cell viability was assessed using lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) activity in the media conditioned by the crystal violet cell staining. in these cells, levels of the tumor necrosis factor-a (tnfa), nuclear factor kappa-lightchain-enhancer of activated b cells (nf-jb ), glial fibrillary acidic protein (gfap), c-x-c motif chemokine and (cxcl , cxcl ), matrix metalloproteinase (mmp ), chemokine (c-c) motif (ccl ) and tyrosine-protein phosphatase non-receptor type (ptpn ) were determined by quantitative reverse transcriptase-pcr assay (qrt-pcr). we have found out that the dichloromethane sub-fraction of cowe effectively inhibited the expression of all of the genes given above in sh-sy y cells. thus, phytochemicals present in the dichloromethane sub-fraction of the cowe extract could be beneficial in preventing/treating neurodegenerative diseases in which neuroinflammation is part of the pathophysiology. studies are underway to identify the individual compound(s) in this subextract of the cowe extract contributing to these effects. this work is supported by tubitak s and pamukkale university paubap fbe . p- . . - apigenin and luteoline were identified as active anti-inflammatory constitutents of lavandula stoeachas by bioassay guided fractionation h. ipek , s. savranoglu , a. r. t€ ufekc ßi , f. g€ ul , i. demirtas , t. boyunegmez t€ umer graduate program of bioengineering, institute of natural and applied sciences, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, graduate program of biology, institute of natural and applied sciences, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, department of chemistry, faculty of sciences, c ß ankiri karatekin university, c ß ankiri, department of molecular biology and genetics, faculty of arts and sciences, c ß anakkale onsekiz mart university, c ß anakkale, turkey introduction: lavandula stoechas, in the genus of lavender, has distinct therapeutic uses among anatolian people. rather than worldwide use of its essential oil in aromatherapy, specifically the aqeous portion as decoction has been traditionally used in anatolia against the components of metabolic syndrome, all of which share a state of chronic inflammation as an underlying cause. the anti-inflammatory constiutents of l. stoechas were isolated using a bioassay guided fractionation in lipopolysaccharide (lps) inflammed raw . macrophages. materials and methods: an aqeous extract was partitioned into ethyl acetate (eae) and n-butanol fractions. the eae, determined as bioactive extract was seperated into subfractions by column chromatography. e was identified as active subfraction subjected to sephadex column to get pure compounds which were then applied to nmr, ir, and uv analyses for structure determination. in raw . cells, the effects of extracts/fractions/subfractions/compounds on lps induced no production was determined by using griess method. the potential inhibitory effects of each compound on lps induced inos expression were determined by qpcr and western blot. results: p-coumaric acid, apigenin and luteoline were found in the e , and the first two compounds appeared to be primarily responsible for the anti-inflammatory activity. apigenin and luteoline at lm decreased no production and %-ic : and lm-by inhibiting inos gene expression and % as well as protein expression and %, respectively (p < . ). conclusion: this is the first time that luteoline and apigenin have been found in eae of l. stoechas, and the anti-inflammatory properties of the eae can be attributed, at least in part, to the presence of these two compounds. we are on the way to gain further insight for the action mechanism of these two active principles as anti-inflammatory agent. tubitak (project id: t ) support this work. the role of tip in the inflammation process immun response generates the first line of host defense during inflammation and plays an important role inducing pro-inflammatory response by generating early response against pathogens. il- (interleukin ) is one of the pro-inflamatory cytokines and its expression increases during the infection to activate the jak/ stat pathway. jak/stat pathway is regulated by hamp (hepcidin antimicrobial peptide). our previous study, we reported that hamp gene expression was decreased in liver-specific tip conditional knockout mice, so we thought that tip may have a direct or indirect role on inflammation mechanism. tip (tat interacting protein, kda) is a member of the myst enzyme family of histone acetyltransferases (hats) and plays an important role in multiple function including cellular signaling, dna repair, cell cycle and apoptosis. in this study, the quantitative gene and protein expression of il- were investigated by using taqman real time pcr, western blot and immunohistochemistry analysis in control group, lpsinduced inflammation group and liver-specific tip conditional knockout group mouse liver. according to our preliminary results, the gene and protein expression of il- was increased in lps-induced inflammation group (p < . , p < . ) and liver-specific tip conditional knockout group mouse liver (p < . , p < . ). our initial data suggest that tip may be essential for the inflammation process. this work was funded by grants from the scientific and technological research council of turkey (tubi-tak) (grant number: z ). although intracellular reactive oxygen species (ros) level is necessary to maintain cellular homeostasis, elevated intracellular ros level with the impact of unfavorable environmental conditions leads to oxidative stress that may cause damage to dna, proteins and lipids. in case of inflammation, organism seeks to provide cellular homeostatis by increasing ros levels via antioxidant molecules and enzymes. therefore, it was thought that there can be a direct or indirect relation between inflammation and oxidative stress. in this study, inflammation was performed by intraperitoneal injection of lipopolysaccharide (lps). the gene expression and activity of antioxidant enzyme including superoxide dismutase (sod), catalase (cat), glutathione peroxidase (gpx), glutathione s-transferase (gst), glutathione reductase (gr) and glucose -phosphate dehydrogenase (g pd). additionally, any change of reduced glutathione (gsh), oxidized glutathione (gssg), malondialdehid (mda), and hydrogen peroxide (h o ) level are accepted as an indication for the accumulation of ros, the relative levels of them were also studied. to show our inflammation model was performed in mouse kidney with lps treatment or not, the expression of interleukin (il ), which is accepted as a inflammation marker, was investigated by real time pcr. the expression of il was significantly increased in lps treated group. while the level of mda and h o was elevated in lps treated group, gssg was decreased. no changes was seen for gsh level. the correlation was observed between enzymatic and molecular levels. while the gen expression and the enzyme activity of sod, cat, gst, gr, and g pd were decreased, gpx was increased with inflammation. in conclusion, increasing ros level was observed in the inflammation process and, the antioxidant system was affected at the molecular and protein level. this work was funded by grants from the scientific and technological research council of turkey (tubitak) (grant number: z ). the aim of our study is to evaluate effect of vitamin d levels on hemogram parameters including neutrophil %, lymphocyte %, neutrophil % / lymphocyte % ratio (nlr) and mean platelet volume (mpv) in behcet's patients. fifty eight patients with diagnosis of behcet that applied to selcuk university faculty of medicine department of dermatology are recruited to the study. clinical and laboratory characteristics of the patients were obtained from hospital automation. t test was used to examine the differences between the parameters. p < . was taken to be statistically significant. there was a statistically significant difference between vitamin d values and age (p = . ) whereas difference was not significant between vitamin d and neutrophil %, lymphocyte %, nlr, mpv values. according to the literature, there are a lot of studies that show the relationship between vitamin d and hemogram parameters. however, contrary to the previous studies, we were unable to find any significant relationship between vitamin d and these hemogram parameters. these results serve the idea that the effects of vitamin d on the hematopoietic system should be further investigated experimentally and clinically. crimean-congo hemorrhagic fever is a tick-borne disease caused by the arbovirus and characterized by a sudden onset of high fever, severe headache, dizziness, back and abdominal pains. the exact pathogenesis of cchf has not been clarified yet. the aim of this study, clinical cases of cchf in cu, se and zn is to examine the relationship between the concentration of trace elements. the study sample consisted of patients which have been diagnosed with cchf. matched for gender, healthy volunteers were similar to the control group according to age. the patients and control groups, serum cu, zn and se levels were analyzed using atomic absorption spectrophotometer. cchf patients in the group, cu zn and se serum levels were significantly lower compared with the control group. in our study, the cofactor of the antioxidant enzyme cu, zn and se elements were lower. this shows us in cchf disease, a decrease in antioxidant enzyme activity, and suggest that they contribute to the immune system's degradation. p- . . - inhibitors of mdm ubiquitin ligase as prospective modulators of autoimmunity e. bulatov, a. valiullina, r. sayarova, a. rizvanov kazan federal university, kazan, russia ubiquitin-proteasome system is seen as a pool of promising protein targets for therapeutic impact in many human diseases. mdm is an e ubiquitin ligase widely studied due to its wellknown role in cancerit negatively regulates p oncosuppressor that mediates apoptosis in tumour cells. inhibitors of p / mdm interaction have long been known as potential anticancer therapeutics. however, recent advances in the field suggest that both mdm and p might be playing a substantial role in autoimmune processes. we used a small molecule p /mdm inhibitor nutlin- a to test the effect of p activation on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (pbmcs) from both healthy volunteers and patients diagnosed with multiple sclerosis. in our study we employed a variety of molecular biology methods, such as immunoblotting, real-time pcr, mts cell proliferation assay, fluorescence flow cytometry and confocal microscopy. we demonstrated that disruption of p /mdm interaction by nutlin- a alters the p levels and also affects the lymphocyte subpopulations within pbmcs. our findings suggest that p /mdm interaction inhibitors can potentially be used as prospective modulators of immune response in autoimmune diseases such as multiple sclerosis, systemic lupus erythematosus and other. the study was funded by rfbr research grant - - mol_a_dk. can ykl- be an inflammatory biomarker in vitamin d deficiency? object: the tumor necrosis factor (tnf) was found to be cytotoxic to tumor cells and to induce tumor regression in mice. except for one member, all receptors to the tnf superfamily bind tnf-related ligands and act mostly on inflammatory system. there are currently tnf superfamily ligands. tnf superfamily ligands share several common features. tnf ligands are generally type ii transmembrane proteins whose extracellular domains are be divided by enzyme to create cytokines. the tnf superfamily currently consists of receptors. tnf family receptors are type i or type iii transmembrane proteins that contain multiple extracellular domains. in this study, we investigated to presence, differences and effects of tnf superfamily and receptors genes in human and mice by using bioinformatics techniques. methods: the nucleotide and amino acid sequence of each protein in human and mice was determined using t-blast-n for homologous sequences. homologous sequences of human tnf family genes found an automated procedure by using psi-blast. the secondary structure of and three-dimensional of the protein were analyzed by psipred and ffas server. netcglyc . and netphos . program were used for post-translocation modifications. the web apoptosis database was also used for the lists of domains, proteins containing these domains and their associated homologs. results and conclusion: humans tnf ligands have genes encoding proteins that contain a conserved carboxy-terminal domain. this family of proteins is highly conserved between humans and mice. humans contain genes encoding tnffamily receptors. sequence data from the ncbi databases demonstrated the presence of mouse tnf-family receptors with orthologs in humans and one additional receptor found only in mice. the differences and similarities in the tnfs genes in humans and mice will provide information for understanding the utility and limitations of the mouse models of disease and comparing of immunology outcomes. the development of left ventricular remodeling after acute myocardial infarction is a predictor of shock. the genetic influence on cardiac remodeling, and shock in the early period after acute myocardial infarction are unclear. the aim of the present study was to investigate the relationship between angiotensin converting enzyme (ace) gene polymorphism and modified shock index (msi) in the early period in patients with acute anterior myocardial infarction. overall patients with a first acute ami were included in this study. dna was isolated from peripheral leukocytes. the id status was determined by pcr. based on the polymorphisms of the ace gene, they were classified into groups: deletion/deletion (dd) genotype (group , n = ), insertion/deletion (id), insertion/insertion (ii) genotypes (group , n = ). blood pressure and pulse measurements were performed in all patients within minutes admitted to coronary care unit. msi was defined as heart rate (hr) divided by mean arterial pressure (map). echocardiographic examinations were performed in accordance with the recommendations of the american echocardiography committee. one-way analysis of variance (anova) and chi-square analyses were used to compare differences among subjects with different genotypes. the study was approved by the local ethics committee, and each patient gave a written consent. there were no significant differences among clinical parameters of patients. msi was significantly higher in patients who have ace dd genotype than in patients who have ace id / ii genotypes ( . ae . and, . ae . , p < . ). presentation time hypotension or developing hypotension during admission was reported to be an important predictor of intensive care unit admission besides other vital sign measurements. our results suggested that, ace gene i/d polymorphisms d allele may affect modified shock index in patients with a first acute anterior mi. glucocorticoids (gcs) are widely used in medicine, despite their side effects, e.g. osteoporosis. however, precise molecular mechanisms of gc action, especially on bone marrow (bm) cells, remain controversial. given the osteoprotective role of vitamin d , the aim of our study was to examine prednisolone-induced changes in the rank (receptor activator of nuclear factor kappa-b)/rankl (rank ligand)/opg (osteoprotegerin) pathway of rat bm depending on the state of vitamin d endocrine system. female wistar rats received prednisolone ( mg/kg b.w.) with and without iu of d (for days). the levels of rank, rankl, opg, a-hydroxylase (cyp b ) in bm were determined by western blotting. vitamin d receptor (vdr) and rankl mrnas were measured by quantitative rt-pcr. ohd content in the serum was assayed by elisa. rankand vdr-positive bm cells were quantified using flow cytometry and visualized by confocal microscopy. prednisolone induced a marked increase in rankl and rank levels, while opg level was shown to decrease. this reflects disturbances in cytokine-mediated regulation of bm progenitor cell function. data from flow cytometry indicated a significant growth in the number of rank-positive cells (hematopoietic osteoclast precursors) compared to control. these changes were accompanied by a decrease in the levels of vdr and cyp b , which is responsible for , (oh) d synthesis, in bm and ohd content in serum. co-localization of vdr and rank in mono-and multinuclear bm cells was observed, indicating a close relation between vitamin d and rank/ rankl/opg pathway. vitamin d co-administration prevented prednisolone-induced changes in bm cells through restoration of vitamin d bioavailability and vdr signaling that resulted in a reduction of the osteoclast progenitor pool in bm. thus, prednisolone-induced imbalance in rank/rankl/ opg system components is associated with impairments of vitamin d endocrine system in bm and can be ameliorated by vitamin d treatment. p- . . - heat shock pathway in response to different stress factors the heat shock response is an emergency pathway of the cell, which mediates repair and protection from cellular stress and therefore guarantees the survival of the cell. this stress can range from heat or hypoxia to chemicals and heavy metals. it is highly conserved in all eukaryotic cells and plays an important role during atypical conditions. due to its high complexity, the pathway is not yet completely understood. most important, after activation of the pathway, is the refolding of proteins or, in case of severe misfolding, the depletion of proteins to maintain proteostasis. heat shock factor encoded by the hsf gene is known as the main switch point in heat shock regulation. after activation it trimerizes and binds to heat shock elements in target gene promoters. one of these promoters is the hspa a promoter (hsp promoter). the promoter was analyzed by dismantling it to its functional parts. especially three elements, the heat shock elements, were in the focus of this work. in first place parts of the promoter were multimerized and combined with different reporters, like luciferase, by cloning. also mutations in the natural promoter were designed by cloning. the focus now is on the heat shock elements, where hsf can bind as a trimer. the idea is that these different elements have various effects on different stressors like heat, chemicals (geldanamycine as hsp inhibitor, mg as proteasome inhibitor) or heavy metals (cadmium, arsenic, zinc) . this was tested on cells transiently transfected with those promoter variants. for promising variants stable cell lines were created. in these stable cell lines further experiments on mrna level can be conducted. in the last months experiments with the crispr/cas system were started. furthermore, experiments on transcriptional (qpcr) and translational (dual-luciferase assay) levels were done as well. in the end we hope to get a clear picture on the regulation of the hspa a promoter by different stress factors. invasive cancer cells form membrane protrusions, invadopodia, that facilitate cell invasion and metastasis. key players invadopodia include the adaptor proteins tks and tks , the actin regulators cortactin, wip and n-wasp, the kinase src and others. in spite that in the last two decades significant advances in our knowledge of the structure and development of invadopodia have been made, detailed mechanisms they are functioning is not yet available. we have identified a series of new tks binding partners including adaptor proteins itsn , itsn , crk and grb , kinase src, amph , bin , plcg and also another member of the tks family -tks . it may indicate the possible role of tks in transport and sorting of cell vesicles. current data are supported by interaction with the proteins of amph and bin , as their main functions are membrane trafficking and remodeling. adaptor proteins crk, grb and itsns are important for the actin cytoskeleton rearrangements, endocytosis and signal transduction. moreover, we have identified and characterized new tks isoform -tks -beta. we suggested that an active state of tks is regulated via intramolecular interactions between its proline-rich motifs and own sh -domains. we have shown the interaction between itsns and other prominent component of invadopodia wip. data from immunofluorescent analysis revealed co-localization of itsn and wip at the sites of invadopodia formation and in clathrin-coated pits. we have also demonstrated that the key protein itsn and wip and n-wasp can form a complex in cells. together, these findings provide insights into the molecular mechanisms of invadopodia formation and identify itsns as scaffold proteins involved in this process. we have shown the interaction between itsns and other verprolin family members cr and wire which play an important role in the reorganization of the actin cytoskeleton. we have demonstrated that cr and wire interact with sh domains of itsns in complex with actin. p- . . - correlation between proteomic and phenazine profile of pseudomonas sp. phenazines are widely known compounds with huge variativity of biological activities which are produced by pseudomonas sp. and some other bacteria species. the results of our work shows the correlation between the changes of proteomic profile of pseudomonas aeruginosa caused by a mutagenesis and the secondary metabolism of antibiotics (phenazine) profile. different strains of pseudomonas aeruginosa were obtained using mutagenesis, after that bacterial cells were destroyed by ultrasound. protein-containing fractions were isolated using methanol-chloroform method as well as phenazines compounds were extracted from culture media using liquid phase extraction. obtained proteome was analysed by shotgun-proteomics technique. as the result of the liquid phase extraction phenazine compounds were mainly extracted to the organic phase. this phase was evaporated and re-dissolved in % methanol. after sample preparation obtained solutions were analyzed by hplc-agilent with quadrupole tof mass-detector. results of the analysis were compared with the library of known phenazine compounds mass-spectras generated by cfm-id online resource. obtained phenazine profiles were compared with each other and correlation with the changes in proteome was analyzed. received results promote better understanding of mechanisms of phenazine production. this data opens possibilities for targeted changes in the methabolic pathway in order to obtain phenazine compound with required biological activity. insulators are genomic elements which block enhancer-promoter interaction and prevent spreading of heterochromatin. cp protein is an integral component of most known drosophila insulators, it interacts directly with ctcf and pita dna-binding insulator proteins using dimeric btb-domain, but function of cp within insulators still remains to be elucidated. recently we described an interaction between cp btb-domain and cterminal domain of ctcf insulator dna-binding protein, subsequent deletion analysis allowed us to isolate aa fragment within ctcf c-terminal domain sufficient for interaction with cp btb, but deletions of flanking regions also lead to the loss of interaction with cp in vivo. at the same time crosslinking experiments suggest that a dimer of btb interacts with one molecule of ctcf, presuming that it could recognize two peptide fragments within ctcf c-terminal domain. we solved crystal structure of btb-domain from cp insulator protein at . a resolution. overall structure is similar to other btb-domains. cp btb-domain has peptide-binding groove similar to that previously found in bcl btb domain. inspection of btb-domain surface revealed several possible binding sites for polypeptide fragments from ctcf protein. based on these observations a set of point mutations within peptide-binding groove of btb-domain has been designed and we tested ctcf-interaction abilities of these mutants using gst pull-down assay and yeast two-hybrid assay. the most significant impact was found with alanine-substitutions of hydrophobic residues whereas substitutions of hydrophilic amino acids were less effective. therefore our results support that cp btb-domain recognizes ctcf protein using peptide-binding groove. this study was supported by the russian science foundation (project № - - ). p- . . - comparative study of the fatty acid composition of lipids in the raw meat samples obtained from hybrid sheep one of the most important tasks in the animal biology and husbandry is to clarify the role of animal genetic diversity in providing nutrients to the diversity of animal products. the objective of our work was to study the chemical compositions of raw meat samples obtained from domestic (group i -purebred romanov sheep) and hybrid sheep (group ii -f hybrids of romanov sheep with . % of argali blood). the significant changes in fatty acid composition of the lipid fraction from the fat and muscle tissue of the hybrid sheep as compared to the control were found. the content of saturated fatty acids (sfas) in the fat samples of the hybrid animals was by . % lower ( . ae . %, p < . ), but polyunsaturated (pufas) or monounsaturated fatty acids (mufas) contents were by . % and . % higher ( . ae . and . ae . (p < . ), respectively) as compared to purebred romanov sheep. the most pronounced changes were found for palmitic acid (decreased from . % to . %) and for oleic, linoleic, arachidonic acids (increased from . %, . %, . % to . %, . %, . %, respectively). the last two acids together with the linolenic acids belong to the so-called essential acids and very important for the animal metabolism. a similar trend was observed on the composition of the lipid fraction of muscle tissue. sfas, pufas and mufas content in muscle tissue of hybrid sheep was . ae . , . ae . and . ae . %, that was . % lower (p < . ), and . % and . % higher (p < . ) compared to purebred romanov sheep. these results emphasized the difference of the pufas/sfas ratios in fat and muscle tissues, respectively) and characterized the biological value of the lipid fraction of fat and muscle tissue. the obtained data gave evidence of the positive changes in the fatty acid compositions of the lipid fractions for the hybrid animals as compared to the purebred sheep. supported by the russian scientific foundation, no. - - . foodborne illnesses resulting from the consumption of agricultural commodities contaminated with enteric pathogens are an increasing problem around the world. while various possibilities of produce contamination with pathogens exist, the global warming combined with a widespread use of animal manure in agriculture will likely contribute to an increased number of such outbreaks. thus, phages isolated from different agroecosystems may prove to be useful in detection/biocontrol of enterobacteria in produce. during the investigation of the impact of global warming on the diversity and co-evolutionary dynamics between microorganisms and viruses in lithuanian agroecosystems, a novel enterobacteria phage vb_ecos_nbd (nbd ) was isolated from agricultural soil using e. coli novablue for phage propagation. nbd genomic dna was isolated from cscl-purified phage particles, and was subjected to illumina dna sequencing. nbd is a virulent siphovirus that has a low-temperature plating profile (fails to form plaques at a temperature > °c). the genome of nbd is $ kb long, and has a total of probable protein-encoding genes as well as gene for trna ser . the genome analysis revealed that nbd orfs encode unique proteins that have no reliable identity to database entries. among the orfs that encode proteins with matches to those in other sequenced genomes, are similar to proteins from phages that infect different members of enterobacteriaceae, while nbd orfs are most similar to those from bacteria. based on the similarity to biologically defined proteins, nbd orfs were given a putative functional annotation, including genes coding for morphogenesis-related proteins, as well as associated with dna replication, recombination, and repair. phylogenetic analysis revealed that enterobacteria phage nbd is distantly related to phages belonging to the subfamily tunavirinae. this research was funded by a grant (no. sit- / ) from the research council of lithuania. p- . . - the antibiotic novobiocin affects the composition of the escherichia coli proteome n. e. arenas , j. williamson , v. schw€ ammle , s. douthwaite universidad de cundinamarca, cundinamarca, colombia, university of southern denmark, odense, denmark novobiocin (nov) is an aminocoumarin which competitively inhibits the atp binding site in the gyrase-b subunit of prokaryotic topoisomerase ii. nov remains a therapeutic choice for treating infections with bacterial pathogens that are resistant to more commonly used drugs. the aim of this study is assess the proteomic response of e. coli strain upon nov treatment. minimum inhibitory concentrations of nov were measured by standard assays. three different e. coli strains (as , as -rlma::aph and b) were grown aerobically in nutrient rich lb media at °c during one hour. the whole cell proteome (five biological replicates in each sample,) was assessed by lc-ms by using tmt labelling protocol. raw files were imported to proteome discoverer (thermo fisher scientific) and searched together with mascot against the uniprot e. coli reference proteome. mics for nov were determined to be > -fold higher the wild-type b-strain of e. coli than for the hypersusceptible as strains ( lg/ml). whole genome comparison of the b and as strains were characterized by an increase in proteasome components ( proteins), chaperones ( ), error-prone dna polymerase components ( ), ribosomal hibernation factors ( ), heat shock response ( ), electron transport coupled proton transport ( ), pentose phosphate pathway ( ), flagellar assembly ( ), oxidative phosphorylation ( ) and tca cycle ( ). whereas ribosomal proteins ( ), aminoacyl-trna synthetases ( ), rnases ( ), abc transporters ( ), mismatch repair ( ) and sec secretion pathway ( ) were significantly down-regulated upon nov treatment. the three e. coli strains respond similarly upon nov treatment and their proteomes showed upregulation of heat shock response with changes in the components of translation and transcription, the proteasome and atp biosynthesis. the changes observed can be used to define the processes that are required for antibiotic tolerance and survival of e. coli against aminocoumarin antibiotics. postnatal growth is under control of pituitary derived hormone, growth hormone (gh) that triggers bone, fat tissue growth and development via acting on protein, carbohydrate and fat metabolism. gh functions on postnatal development by jak /stat signaling following gh:gh receptor (ghr) dimerization. isolated growth hormone deficiency (ighd) is a medical condition of insufficient production of growth hormone (gh) that is caused by mutations on gh-n gene in different ethnic origin children. various mutations within gh has been determined in different populations so far, and glutamic acid to glycine (e g), asparagine to aspartic acid (n d), threonine to alanin (t- a) missense mutations, alanine to serine (a s) substitution, tryptophan to stop codon (w- x), gaaa insertion in intron of gh-n gene and both intron (+ c) and deletion of . amino acid of gh protein phenylalanine (f del) mutations were detected in turkish ighd children. the potential role of these mutations on cell growth, proliferation, emt via acting on gh signaling pathway has not been observed yet. all these mutations were performed on wild type gh-n gene inserted pc . vector by site-direct mutagenesis and stable cell line of each gh gene mutations were generated by neomycin selection. although w- x, e g, f del, a s and n d mutations suppresses gh signaling via acting on either jak dephosphorylation or stat downregulation, t- a, gaaa insertion and deletion of + c mutations have no significant effect on gh signaling. in addition, each mutation lead different growth suppression effect and colony formation potential and intracellular polyamine levels and odc expression profiles were essential role in emt potential of hek cell lines. as a result, w- x, e g, f del, a s and n d mutations prevented gh signaling and cell growth and differentiation via polyamine metabolism. pulmonary embolism (pe) is a common cardiovascular emergency and affects a large number of patients. acute pe-induced oxidative stress can lead to the accumulation of specific nitroproteins that may play a role in disease progression. the impact of nitration of a single tyrosine residue often has broad implications on the activity of biologically critical proteins, which has become increasingly related to pathological conditions. in this study, we used a proteomic approach to analyze nitrated serum proteins in patients diagnosed with acute pe and healthy controls. nitrotyrosine (no tyr)-containing proteins were immunoprecipitated from serum with a no tyr affinity sorbent. precipitated proteins were separated by sds-page and visualized by coomassie blue staining and western blotting with mouse monoclonal anti-no tyr antibody. among the numerous immunoreactive bands observed in disease patients, the kda protein band was in-gel digested and analyzed by maldi-tof mass spectrometry (ms). mass fingerprint data sets obtained from the peptide fragment ions matched human collagen alpha- (iii) chain (co a _hu-man) with mascot algorithm analysis giving a score of (p < . ). collagen alpha- (iii) chain is a fibrillar collagen that is found in extensible connective tissues such as skin, lung, and the vascular system. altered metabolism of collagen and its excessive deposition in the matrix of the connective tissue is a hallmark of chronic interstitial lung diseases. collagen can be measured in serum and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid from patients with numerous chronic interstitial lung diseases. given these considerations, future studies are aimed understand the relevance of no tyr modifications in co a relating to changes in protein structure and function. recent studies have shown that the genes involved in dislipidemia represent potential loci to be associated with diabetes as a disease. recent genome wide association (gwa) studies have associated rs in gckr gene and rs in galnt gene with parameters of t d and diabetic dyslipidemia. in this study, the association of these single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) with t d and dyslipidemia was tested in the population from bosnia and herzegovina (bh). our study involved patients with t d and healthy subjects. biochemical and anthropometric parameters were measured in all participants. after dna extraction, sequenom iplex platform was used for the analysis of galnt polymorphism (rs ), while polymorphism in gckr (rs ) gene was analyzed by using real time pcr. our results demonstrated significant association of gckr rs variant with waist circumference (p = . ) and fasting glucose levels (p = . ) in the control group. no such association was demonstrated for rs galnt gene. in the group of diabetic patients, significant association of gckr rs variant with levels of bilirubin (p = . ) and rs galnt variant with hba c (p = . ) and triglyceride levels (p = . ) was also demonstrated. our results suggest an association of variations of gckr and galnt genes with specific markers of t d and dyslipidemia. further studies would be needed in order to confirm these genetic effects in other ethnic groups as well. osteoporosis is the most common metabolic bone disorder affecting the normal bone turnover with low bone mineral density (bmd) and risk of fragility fractures. polymorphisms at the sp binding site of the collagen type a (col a ) gene is associated with low bmd. we examined the distribution of col a gene polymorphism in young osteoporotic women and in control group in turkish population. patients had low bmd with t score ≤ . sd and controls was healthy women ( - years). mean age ( . ae . ) and ( . ae . ) respectively. the bmd, as g/cm , was measured in the hip and the lumbar spine (l -l ) with (dexa). dna was isolated from blood. col a gene was analysed with genomica clinical array system. the x test was used to compare allele and genotype frequences between patients and controls. mean of t score in patients was À . ae . . mean bmd (as g/cm ) was . ae . , and ( . ae . ) genotype distribution were ( %) ss, (% )ss, (% )ss for patients, and ( )ss, ( )ss, ( )ss for control . patients had (% )s allele, ( %) s allele, controls had ( %)s allele, ( %)s allele. when genotypes and bmd were compared in patients, there was no significant correlation between osteoporosis and genotypes. the allelic distribution was not significant between patients and controls p > . . genotypic distribution in patients were significantly different. patients had a higher frequency of the ss(% ) than controls (ss % ) p < . . this study shows that high prevalences of the ss genotype at the col a locus, in osteoporosis . _ it is possible that the presence of the s allele causes variation col a and col a mrna's producing abnormal collagene protein. since collagen protein is major protein of bone, it is to be expected that a defect in this protein will produce bone fragility. col a gene should be detected early to initiate preventative therapy for bone health. the biological activity of nigella sativa seeds is mainly attributed to its essential oil component which is pre-dominantly ( - %) thymoquinone (tq). therapeutic effect of tq was exhibited in many diseases including inflammation, cancer, sepsis, atherosclerosis and diabetes. tq has been reported to exhibit antiproliferative effects on cell lines derived from breast, colon, ovary, larynx, lung, myeloblastic leukemia, and osteosarcoma and inhibited hormone refractory prostate cancer. tq induces apoptosis in tumor cells by suppressing nf-jb, akt activation, and extracellular signal-regulated kinase signaling pathways and also inhibits tumor angiogenesis. the aim of this study was to evaluate the anti tumor effects of tq on hepatoma cells. these antitumor assays include cell viability assay, clonogenic assay, scratch assay and molecular expression studies of death related genes. cells were treated with different concentration of tq in hep b for cell proliferation by mtt and clonogenic assay. in addition, the metastatic character of tq was investigated by scratch assay in hep b at - and hours. the effect of tq was also evaluated at mrna level by real-time-pcr. tq was treated on the hep b cells in three different concentration, namely - and . lm. tq showed the cell cytotoxicity in concentration and time dependent manner. the scratch assay revealed no healing in the scratched area due to the decreased cell viability. maximum permissible dose was lm. proapoptotic genes, bax and bad, and autophagy genes, beclin- and lc , were upregulated in hep b cells after hours treatment in contrast, antiapoptotic gene, bcl- , expression level was decreased for hep b cells after hours. p- . . - association of irs genetic variation with type diabetes and insulin resistance in patients from bosnia and herzegovina insulin receptor substrate- (irs ) encodes the irs protein, a substrate for the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase and has a critical role in insulin-stimulated signaling pathways. previous studies showed that irs single nucleotide polymorphisms (snps) were associated with type diabetes mellitus (t d). this is the first study performed in a population from bosnia and herzegovina (bh) in which we examined the association of rs (g>a), rs (t>c) and rs (a>t) with t d risk and related traits. our study involved t d patients and healthy subjects. biochemical parameters, including but not limited to insulin, homa-ir, hba c, glucose, and lipoprotein levels, were measured in all participants. genotyping analysis was performed by mass array sequenom iplex platform in cooperation with lund university diabetes centre, malmo, sweden. statistical analysis was done by spss . our results demonstrated a significant difference in frequency of rs (p < . ) and rs (p = . ) snps between t d patients and control subjects. interestingly, here we showed a significant association of irs rs risk t allele with increased insulin levels (p < . ) and homa-ir (p < . ) in t d patients. similarly, rs variant was also associated with the same markers of insulin resistance in diabetic patients, i.e. insulin levels (p = . ) and homa-ir (p = . ). no such association was demonstrated for rs . however, this irs variant was associated with changes in lipoprotein levels, where risk c allele increased vldl (p = . ) and decreased hdl levels. our results suggest that irs variants are associated with t d susceptibility in bh population, thus confirming similar findings in other population cohorts. furthermore, the associations of these variants with markers of insulin resistance and dyslipidemic metabolic changes point to their role as potential t d biomarkers. the adra a gene encodes alpha- a adrenergic receptor which mediates adrenergic suppression of insulin. a genetic variant in adra a was recently associated with defective b-cell function. the objective of this study was to analyze association of two adra a polymorphisms (rs a>g and rs g>t) with type diabetes (t d) and its related traits. in this study we have included t d patients and healthy subjects from bosnia and herzegovina (bh). biochemical parameters, including but not limited to insulin, homa-ir, hba c, glucose, and lipoprotein levels, were measured in all participants. genotyping analysis was performed by mass array sequenom iplex platform in cooperation with lund university diabetes centre, malmo, sweden. statistical analysis was performed by ibm spss statistics software. our data showed that frequencies of both, rs and rs , variants were not significantly different between t d and control subjects. however, rs risk a allele appear to increase insulin levels (p = . ) and homa-ir index (p = . ). furthermore, this variant also seems to affect vldl levels (p = . ) and waist circumference (p = . ) in diabetic patients. the genotype analysis of rs variant demonstrated that risk g allele decreased hdl (p = . ) and increased ldl levels (p = . ), as well as affected the waist circumference (p = . ) in diabetic patients. interestingly, haplotype analysis demonstrated the association of rs a / rs g with higher homa-ir index. here we demonstrated that although both, rs and rs , adra a polymorphisms were not associated with t d risk in our cohort, they were associated with markers of dyslipidemic perturbations and insulin resistance in diabetic patients. further studies in larger cohorts are needed in order to explore these possible interactions and confirm our findings. smad-interacting protein (sip ), also known as zeb is a member of zeb family transcription factors and was shown to regulate epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition, cell cycle, cellular senescence and cancer stemness. bipartite zing finger motifs at amino and carboxyl termini of the sip mediate its binding to ebox sequences in the genome. however, there are only limited data about sip target genes. by using a home-made anti-sip monoclonal antibody, clone e , we conducted chip-seq in three hepatocellular carcinoma cell lines, namely snu , plc/prf/ and sk-hep- and found receptor tyrosine kinase-like orphan receptor (ror ) as one of the targets. sip dnabinding consensus motif cacctg was found at + kb, + kb and + kb from ror transcription start site. chip experiments validated sip binding to all consensus motifs in the ror gene region. interestingly, the strongest enrichment was at + kb suggesting that long-range interactions play an important role in the regulation of ror by sip . sip knockdown by shrna in high-sip expressing snu cells resulted in the repression of ror expression. ror is expressed in embryogenesis and fetal life, and is absent within most of adult normal tissues. however, overexpression of ror was observed in many human cancers, from hematological malignancies to solid epithelial tumors. ror -positive cancer cells have enhanced proliferation, invasion and metastasis capacities, show resistance to apoptotic stimuli and display cancer stem cell characteristics. therefore, sip and ror act in similar pathophysiological processes. our finding that ror is regulated by sip at least in hepatocellular carcinoma cells adds another level of complexity to the molecular mechanisms of proliferation, invasion and stemness of cancer cells. hepatocellular carcinoma (hcc) is the most prevalent primary liver cancer and is one of the leading causes of cancer related deaths. smad interacting protein (sip ), a member of the zeb family of emt inducers, is involved in cellular proliferation, senescence, invasion and metastasis in human tumors. however, genes regulated by sip in hcc are yet to be identified. we conducted a chip-seq study in high-sip expressing hcc cell line snu by using a home-made anti-sip antibody, clone e . among annotated genes, we selected six for further studies because of its increased expression in multiple cancers and its association with poor prognosis. sip dna-binding motif cacctg was found at - kb from transcription start site of six gene. chip qpcr experiment validated sip binding to this region with , fold enrichment. compared to healthy liver, six transcripts were upregulated in of hcc cell lines included in this study. knockdown of sip by shrna in snu cells caused upregulation of six . immunohistochemistry studies in hcc tissue arrays showed increased expression of six in tumors and inverse association with sip expression in a tumor grade dependent manner. therefore, our results strongly suggest an inverse correlation of sip and six in hcc bone mineral density (bmd) and bone turnover are under genetic control and variations in the vitamin d receptor (vdr) are related to bmd. bmd is known to be affected by -hydroxy vitamin d ( (oh)d) and intact parathyroid hormon (ipth) levels. we aimed to determine correlation blood levels of vitamin d (vitd), ipth, and vdr gene effect in healthy turkish women. the subjects were healthy women in age - years. the bmd was measured as a t score in the lumbar spine (l -l ) with dexa. all subjects had normal t score between (- . to . ) sd. vitd was measured by lc- -at shimadzu. ipth was measured by chemiluminescence method, dna was isolated from blood. the fok i (vdrf-foki) and bsmi (vdrb-bsmi) polymorphisms of vdr gene was analysed with genomica clinical array system. the mean vitd level was ( . ae . ) lg/l, mean plasma ipth level was ( . ae . ) pg/ml. pearson correlation test showed no relation of vit d with bmd. there was moderately negative correlation between ipth and bmd (r = À . ). genotype distribution and allele frequency of subjects were as follows: ( %) ff), ( %) ff, ( %) ff genotype in vdrf -fok gene, ( %) bb, ( %) bb, ( %) bb in vdrb-bsmi gene. allele frequencies were f: %, f: %; b: %, b: %. when fok and bsmi were combined, %(ff-bb) and % (ff-bb) were found as the most frequent genotypes. bsmi frequency was in hardy weinberg equilibrium (p > . ). but foki was not (p = ). it was found that vit d, ipth levels and bmd were in normal levels in all carriers of ff genotype and in combined (ff-bb) type carrying healthy women ( %). the association vdr genotype and bmd may be different in various ethnic and geographical groups. therefore it is worthwhile to assess vdr polymorphism among turkish population. these type of distribution studies of vdr in healthy and in osteoporotic women may enlighten to earlier diagnosis and treatment planning. p- . . - determination of hb a c values in beta thalassemia f. g€ uzelg€ ul , g. s. seydel , a. e. yalin , e. s€ onmez , k. aksoy c ß ukurova university, adana, nigde university, nigde, mersin university, mersin, turkey introduction: hemoglobinopathies are most commonly seen hereditary blood diseases worldwide. our aim was to compare the hba c values measured on cation-exchange high performance liquid chromatography (hplc) in beta thalassemia cases. materials and methods: we collected ml of whole blood k edta containing tubes from forty-nine cases. arms, rflp and dna sequence analysis methodologies were carried out for determination of beta thalassemia mutations. hb a c values were measured using the agilent hplc system. results: forty-nine diabetic and non-diabetic patients were diagnosed with beta thalassemias: twenty-one ivs - /ivs - , one ivs - /ivs - , one ivs - /ivs - , two ivs - /ivs - , two ivs - /ivs - , one fsc /fsc , one fsc /fsc , two - /- , two cd /cd , one cd - /cd - , one cd - /cd - , two cd /cd -g/ cd /cd -g, two ivs - / ivs - , one ivs - / ivs - , one ivs - /fsc , one ivs - /cd , one ivs - /cd , one ivs - /cd - , one ivs - /ivs - , one ivs - / ivs - , one ivs - / ivs - , one ivs - /cd and one fsc /cd . cases were classified as diabetic ( ), prediabetic ( ) and non-diabetic ( ) introduction: members of aurora kinase family aurora a, b and c are conservative kinases of cell cycle which are encoded by genes aura, aurb and aurc respectively. overexpression of aura and aurb was found in human cancers, especially in prostate cancer. moreover, there is the evidence that aurb interacts with one of the major oncogenic kinases -braf. little is known about implication of aurc in cancer, but it was demonstrated, that it can overlap aurb function and shares its location. we studied expression of genes of these kinases in urine of prostate cancer patients aiming to evaluate their involvement in this disease and their potential as tumor markers. materials and methods: urine samples from patients with prostate cancer were gathered after prostate massage before surgical invasion. we used urine samples from healthy men as control. we obtained cells from each urine sample by centrifugation and isolated rna using standard approach with phenol and guanidine thiocyanate. cdna was synthesized and taken to qpcr reactions. data was statistically analysed. results: expression of all studied genes was detected in urine of patients with prostate cancer and of healthy men. expression of aurb and aurc in cancer samples each was higher than expression of aura. the cumulative expression aurb and aurc was higher than expression of aura in samples from . we observed positive correlation between expression of aurc and braf (rs = . , p = . ). discussion and conclusion: previous investigation showed, that for normal prostate tissue % of aurora family expression was presented by aura. we suppose that presence of aurb and aurc cumulative overexpression means presence of cell cycle deviations in prostate tissue of these patients and might be further studied as prognostic marker. in this study we first showed the correlation between aurc and other carcinogenic kinase braf expression, which opens the perspective for investigation of role of aurc in carcinogenesis. bacillus marmarensis sp. nov. is an extreme obligate alkaliphile isolated from mushroom compost near marmara region of turkey. it can survive at extreme ph values up to . . based on its genome sequence, metabolic pathways for proteases, amylases, cellulases, lipase, n-butanol and a biodegradable plastic poly-b-hydroxybutyrate were annotated. in addition to being a potential extracellular hydrolase producer, its ability to survive in the high ph range of . to . makes it an attractive microorganism for different industrial applications. in the current study, the adaptation strategy of b. marmarensis sp. nov. to alkaline conditions was investigated using proteomic tools. the organism was grown at two different ph values, . and ph . . for extraction of whole cell proteins, cells were disrupted with mp bio fast prep device. protein extracts were treated with protease inhibitors and a nuclease mix. salts were removed using a cleanup kit. obtained proteins were separated based of their isoelectric points in the first dimension and then based on their molecular weights in the second dimension. proteins maps of cells grown at these two extreme ph values showed significant differences in protein expression for alkaline adaptation. p- . . - biochemical and proteomic analyses of normal human astrocytes and glioblastoma exposed to dichloroacetate treatment f. c. atilgan, h. cimen yeditepe university, istanbul, turkey glioblastoma (gbm) is an aggressive malignant tumor composed of astrocytes in brain tissue. gbm cells utilize glycolysis rather than oxidative phosphorylation to support rapid growth rate which is called warburg effect. dichloroacetate (dca) is an antiglycolytic agent that inhibits pyruvate dehydrogenase kinase (pdk) activity and induces apoptosis via normalizing the mitochondrial activity. this study aimed to demonstrate the metabolic alterations between the normal human astrocytes (nha) and gbm cell lines which are exposed to dca, and to identify the differentially expressed proteins by ms-based proteomic analyses. nha cell line, u mg and u as gbm human cell lines were examined through analyzing the alterations in the glycolysis metabolism upon dca treatment by measuring the variations in the pyruvate levels, lactate dehydrogenase a, pdk . mts was performed to investigate the effect of dca treatment on cell viability. immunoblotting of pgc -a, oxphos complexes, and mitotracker green staining was employed to reveal the mitochondrial differences between normal and the cancer cells, and upon dca treatment of these cells. proteomic analyses were utilized for the identification of candidate proteins depending on the acetylation status. in this study, compared to nha, the pyruvate and ldha levels were elevated and pdk levels in u mg were reduced by %. due to mts results, ≤ mm dca treatment showed significant decrease in gbm cells compared to nha cells. immunoblotting and mitotracker green staining results showed increase in mitochondrial mass. elevation in the pyruvate and ldha levels and reduction in pdk level in u mg and u cells indicates glycolysis dependent metabolic switch in energy metabolism. proteomic analyses demonstrate that most of the differentially expressed proteins comprised of metabolic enzymes. this study provides novel information about metabolic alterations existing between nha and gbm, which can inspire further studies for therapeutic applications. kidney stone is a complex disease resulting from environmental as well as hereditary factors and principally composes of approximately % calcium oxalate (caox) crystals, which are formed through a multi-step process. vitamin d receptor (vdr) gene encodes the nuclear hormone receptor for vitamin d ; downstream targets of this gene are chiefly contributed in mineral metabolism though the receptor regulates a variety of other metabolic pathways. calcium sensing receptor casr plays an important role in sustaining mineral ion homeostasis. the aim of this study is to profile the expression level of vdr and calcium sensing receptor (casr) genes and to unravel their role in rat kidney stone induced by ethylene glycol, in order to explain the underlying molecular mechanisms. total rna were extracted from paired sample before and after ethylene glycol treated of rats. the mrna expression level of vdr and casr gene were measured employing quantitative rt-pcr (qrt-pcr). the mrna expression levels of both genes were significantly down-regulated according to before treated. in conclusion, our data suggest reduced mrna expression in vdr and casr genes might be a risk factor for kidney stone formation. further studies are necessary to verify these findings in different ethnic groups. p- . . - apj receptor a c gene polymorphism in turkish patients with coronary artery disease against different models of expected frequencies/counts to understand the evolutionary dynamics of saars in proteins. we obtained from ensembl the assemblies of genomes/proteomes of human and nonhuman primates (chimpanzee, gorilla, and rhesus monkey), rodents (mouse and rat), and birds (chicken and zebrafinch). the expected probabilities for the occurrence of saars based on their nucleotide frequencies in coding regions and amino acid frequencies in individual protein sequences or across the whole proteome were compared with the observed repeat occurrences. we found that with all three methods and in all eight species the correlation between observed and expected repeat counts decreased above a saar length threshold. the percentage of saar proteins for each amino acid also exhibited variability among species when both the repeat length and counts were taken into account. however, clustering based on saar characteristics generally reflected the known phylogenetic relationships between species. our comprehensive bioinformatics analyses reveal that saars show amino acid-specific occurrence patterns with respect to species as well as saar length. tissue proteins play important roles in biological metabolic processes. the qualitative and quantitative analysis of tissue proteins facilitates the understanding of molecular mechanisms that differentiate between physiologic and pathologic states. health and research institutions routinely prepare formalin-fixed paraffinembedded (ffpe) tissue blocks for histopathology. proteomics on ffpe tissue still requires standardization of tissue solubilization processes to overcome variability in protein extraction results. our aim is to compare the proteomic studies of fresh frozen and ffpe rat renal tissues. fresh frozen and ffpe preparations from renal tissues were included in this study. an adult rat was sacrificed and the dissected kidneys were divided two equal section. one immediately frozen in phosphate buffer, and the other tissue specimen not thicker than mm to allow rapid penetration of the fixative put in % buffered formalin for hours. the fresh frozen tissue was dissolved and homogenised in the cold phosphate buffer solution containing protease inhibitors. paraffin blocks were performed from formalin fixed tissue specimens. we have extracted the protein from the ffpe tissues using our previously verified method. we have utilized electrophoresis three times to compare protein yield, number, intracellular and intercellular of homogenised samples obtained from ffpe and fresh frozen kidney samples. the number of proteins identified from fresh frozen kidney tissue has generally been shown to be increased compared with ffpe tissue. decrease of the qualitative results in electrophoretic bands was found similar in all replicative studies. ffpe tissues undergo extensive cross linking between protein/ dna/rna molecules during formalin fixation, which creates inter-molecular crosslinks. on the other hand, ffpe tissues represent a valuable resource to carry out retrospective studies aimed to biomarker discovery in kidney cancer as well as other kidney diseases. background: development of atrial fibrillation (af) during the course of chronic primary mitral regurgitation (mr) is common and represents complex molecular mechanisms. however, the gene expression profile of human atrial fibrillation (af) in the setting of chronic primary mr remains uncharacterized. in the current study, we aimed to compare the gene expression profiles of patients with severe degenerative mr in sinus rhythm (sr) and af. methods: left and right atrial tissue samples were obtained from patients with chronic primary severe mr in permanent af (n = ) and sinus rhythm (n = ). we performed a novel micro-dissection technique for thin sections of atrial tissue samples and immediately fresh froze intra-operatively. transcriptomes of left and right atrial appendages of degenerative mitral regurgitation patients with sr versus af were compared by microarray analysis on affymetrix hgu- plus platform. bioinformatics, data mining and pathway analyses were conducted on partek gs and webgestalt. genome-wide gene expression profiles were compared between af and sr groups among . transcripts representing . well-characterized human genes. differentially regulated genes were evaluated according to fold change (fc ≥ . ) with a p-value ≤ . . results: most remarkable pathways altered in af atrial tissues compared to sr group, were extracellular matrix-receptor interaction; mapk, adipocytokine, and calcium signaling; apoptosis and cardiac muscle contraction pathways. conclusions: this is the first human study of comparative transcriptomics in left and right atrial tissues of patients with af versus sr associated with severe degenerative mr. the main findings of this multidisciplinary translational research provide novel candidate targets for the treatment and prevention of af. in order to acquire iron under iron-limiting growth conditions, bacteria employ specific mechanisms such as production and secretion of siderophores. siderophores are low molecular metalchelating compounds that contribute not only to iron scavenging, but also participate in other important processes including oxidative stress response and cell signaling. serratia marcescens, gramnegative bacterium, could be found in various environments, including wastewater, plant rhizosphere and hospital setting where s. marcescens can cause serious life-threatening infections. in this study, we performed a detailed characterization of the siderophores of the clinically important pigment-free s. marcescens strain sr - and environmental pigment-producing s. marcescens strain sm . bioinformatic analysis of these genomes by antismash software revealed the presence of several clusters involved in non-ribosomal peptides synthesis (nrps). we found four nrps clusters in genome of s. marcescens sm . cluster has a low level of identity to enterobactin gene cluster typical for bacteria producing catechol-like siderophores. second cluster has only % of identity to xantholipin biosynthetic gene cluster. clusters and of nrps genes of s. marcescens sm did not show any homology to known nrps clusters. in contrast, the genome of s. marcescens sr - contains only one genetic cluster of nrps genes. this cluster does not have similarity to any of the known bacterial nrps genes. thus, genetic analysis of two isolates of s. marcescens allowed us to identify nrps genetic clusters and showed that the repertoire of these genes is different between strains. we hypothesized that the strain isolated from environment has competitive advantage over clinical isolate due to genetic diversity of siderophores. on the other side, clinical isolate has specific genetic cluster of siderophores which may promote s. marcescens growth and adaptation to the extreme niches present in medical facilities. p- . . - the first glance on the genome's structure and activity in hibernator edible dormouse hibernation is a unique adaptive way of survival in extreme environmental conditions where mammals decrease their metabolic rate and demonstrate physical inactivity for prolonged periods of time (up to - months). remarkably, some hibernating animals have a long average lifespan and the ability to avoid muscle atrophy caused by disuse or immobilization. to identify main molecular pathways behind the protective musculoskeletal adaptation and genome structure in hibernator edible dormouse (glis glis), whole-genome analysis of mrna expression in muscles (m. soleus and m. edl) and lumbar spinal cord samples was conducted. three groups of the dormice: ) active animals ) hibernated animals and ) animals immobilized for weeks in laboratory, were examined. rna libraries have been sequenced using hiseq illumina platform. coupled with genome dna sequencing provided x coverage of the estimated genome, we have assembled de novo transcriptome of the dormice. differentially expressed genes in response to immobilization and hibernation were determined. transcriptional program of these phenotypes was similar. pathways enriched by differentially expressed genes were identified. gene expression of the key muscle proteins and muscle atrophy markers was analyzed. muscle-specific e -ubiquitin ligases murf and mafbx revealed no changes in mrna expression. our study represents the first attempt to elucidate changes in transcription profiles of skeletal muscles and spinal cord during hibernation and hypokinesia in edible dormice. in corroboration to the gene expression data, they demonstrated minimal morphological evidence for muscle disuse atrophy during physical inactivity. edible dormice, thus, can be considered as a novel model organisms in investigation of the genetic mechanisms of hibernation and prevention of muscle atrophy. the work is performed according to the russian government program of competitive growth of kfu and supported by rfbr jsps_a no. - - . in response to diverse environmental cues bacteria form complex structured communities called biofilms. the metabolic pathways activated by these cues are remarkably different depending on the species studied. however, they all lead to the formation of an extracellular matrix that holds the cells together. non-pathogenic gram-positive spore-forming soil b. subtilis strain is recognized as a model system for the study of biofilms. to discover the pathways regulating biofilm formation in b. subtilis, we studied the natural isolate of b. subtilis strain , and constructed the recombinant strains with knocked out genes of following regulatory proteins: abrb (global transcriptional regulator), degu (two-component response regulator of signal transduction system degs-degu), ccpa (regulator of carbon catabolism) and spooa (regulator of sporulation). in the minimal medium broth b. subtilis wild-type strain forms biofilm with its maximum on th hour of culture growth. ph-optimum for biofilms formation by the wild-type strain is in the range of . - . . the temperature optimum is in the range from °c to °c. this corresponds to the natural conditions of the b. subtilis habitat in rhizosphere. the level of biofilm formation by regulatory mutant strains with deleted abrb, degu, ccpa, spooa genes is on average % lower than by the wild-type strain. this indicates that global regulatory system controlls biofilm formation process. statistically significant differences in the levels of biofilm formation between regulatory mutants haven't been identified. ph and temperature optima of mutant strains are the same as for the wildtype strain - , - and °c - °c respectively. the crataegus genus which is a member of rosaceae family, has approximately species worldwide and species in turkey. all plant species in this genus have the common name "hawthorn". crataegus microphylla (c. microphylla) c. koch which is characterised by having erect sepals in fruit and smaller leaves in comparison with the other species, is one of the wild edible fruits in turkey. crataegus species have been used as food and also in folk medicine for the treatment of various diseases. for this purpose, the potential biological properties of crataegus microphylla were aimed to reveal by the preliminary work. in this study, prevention of oxidative dna damage using supercoiled pbr plasmid dna, acetylcholinesterase, tyrosinase, a-glucosidase inhibition and antioxidant effects: , diphenyl- -picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging effect, phosphomolibdenum-reducing antioxidant power, ferric-reducing antioxidant power with total phenolic and total flavonoid contents of the c. microphylla leaves, stem barks and fruits that extracted with ethanol, methanol and water were investigated. the experiments of oxidative dna damage studies and antioxidant activities of c. microphylla extracts showed that methanol and ethanol extracts possessed a strong ability to prevent dna damage and significantly antioxidant activities. methanol extracts of stem barks from c. microphylla exhibited the highest acetylcholinesterase and tyrosinase activities ( . ae . % and . ae . %, respectively), at lg/ml. in addition, ethanol extract of leaves from c. microphylla inhibited the a-glucosidase activity significantly when compared to acarbose. this study explained significant antioxidant, enzyme inhibitory, hypoglycemic, and neuroprotective activities of methanolic or ethanolic extracts prepared with stem bark and leaf from c. microphylla and also strong ability to prevent dna damage that corresponded to antioxidant potential of methanol extracts of leaf and stem bark. the yarrowia lipolytica species (yl) is nonconventional yeast widely used for recombinant protein expression due to its system of post-translation protein modification, which is the most similar to that of higher eukaryotes. yl appears the promising producer of recombinant proteins with much more complicated molecules compared to those of prokaryotic producers. however, an important feature for a producer strain of recombinant proteins is the genes, the expression of which undertakes under controlled conditions, and consequently, search of new effective inducible promoters in the yl genome is of great interest. proteome analysis of the yl cells grown at different ph values ( . , . , . ) showed that under alkaline conditions the amount of mitochondrial porine vdac (voltage dependent anion channel), one of the most abundant protein of the mitochondrial outer membrane, increased significantly. vdac is supposed to let reactive oxygen species out of mitochondria protecting the cell against oxidative stress. therefore, the por gene expression, encoding vdac should increase in the stress conditions. the promoter of the por gene was used to construct some new expression systems based on yl w . a new genetic construct bearing a reporter bgalactosidase gene under control of the por promoter. b-galactosidase activity was assayed in the cells grown in various ph conditions and exposed to exogenous oxidants such as hydrogen peroxide, menadione, and methyl viologen. it was shown, that in h o and methyl viologen treated cells b-galactosidase activity increased . - . -fold reaching its maximum in the cells, grown at ph of . . thus, we demonstrated high inducibility of the por promoter, which is essential for effective action of the expression system based on it and potency of application for transformed lines of producers. acknowledgments: supported by the russian foundation for basic research (grant no - - mol_a). aspergillus nidulans is able to detoxify and catabolize the toxic proline analogue, lazetidine- -carboxylic acid in nature, azc serves as a plant protectant against infections and consumption. we have obtained evidence that azc is not only non-toxic for the model ascomycete aspergillus nidulans, but it can be utilized as a poor nitrogen source. in order to elucidate the molecular mechanism underlying azc detoxification, we have constructed and studied a. nidulans strains deleted in the cognate genes involved in azc detoxification in pseudomonas and saccharomyces cerevisiae. these genes, found by in silico analysis, encode a putative hydrolase, acha, and an azc acetyltransferase, ngn , respectively. gene deletion was accomplished through double crossover. a cassette containing the~ bp ' and ' flanking sequences of each gene, with the afpyrg gene as a selection marker, was contructed. crossing the achad and the ngn d strains isolated the achad ngn d double mutant strain. rt-pcr was used for gene expression analysis in the wild type strain, area-loss of function and crea-derepressed mutant strains. our results clearly show that azc can be used as a poor nitrogen source by a. nidulans. this utilization requires a) acha, a putative azc hydrolase, and b) a fully active gaba catabolic pathway, as lack of either amdr or gata abolishes azc utilization. most importantly, the double mutant, achad ngn d, shows azc toxicity, suggesting that ngn is a true orthologue of mpr , able to detoxify azc, a phenotype that can be observed only in the absence of acha. as a final point, ngn was shown to be induced by the presence of azc and and to be under nitro the spatial genome organization plays a great role in the maintenance of the nuclear architecture and regulation of all processes occurring in the nucleus. this system is controlled by a set of special proteins having an architectural function. however, the mechanisms of their action remain unknown. among these proteins are, in particular, zad-domain-containing proteins. zinc finger-associated domain (zad) is a ubiquitous motif of c h zinc finger proteins of drosophila. genes that encode zad proteins are specific for and expanded in the genomes of insects. only a few zad-encoding genes have known functions, and the role of zad is being discussed. up to date there was only one known crystal structure of zad-domain from drosophila transcription factor grauzone (grauzad). here, we present for the first time the crystal structure of the zad-domain of serendipity-d transcriptional activator of the egg-polarity gene bicoid. zad-domain was cloned, overexpressed in e. coli, purified and the structure was solved at . a by mad technique. detailed analysis of the structure proved that the protein exists in dimeric form and revealed unique spatial organization of the protein, different from those for grauzad. this work is supported in part by russian ministry of education and science grant ( . . . ). mycoplasma gallisepticum is a convenient model object for studying the regulation of transcription because it has a reduced genome, lack of cell wall and many metabolic pathways and also easy to culture and non-pathogenic to humans. due to the nature of the genomic organization and the loss of many of the known regulators, the effect of disrupting the function of some proteins may be a useful tool for studying the regulation of transcription. the gene expression study was performed on agilent onecolor microarray with custom design and random-t polymerase primer for cdna synthesis. microarray represents probes for orf including genes and ncrna. in this work, we have investigated the effect of changes in the level of gene expression of m. gallisepticum for two different types of conditions: a genetic knock-out mutants and the cell response to treatment with sub-lethal concentrations of antibiotics. we characterized transcription of m. gallisepticum when the cell responses to dysfunction of proteins with metabolic potential, possible regulators of expression, in violation of permeability of membrane by cccp, inhibition of ribosomal synthesis by tetracycline, dna gyrase by novobiocin and atp synthase by oligomycin. the data obtained allow to characterize the transcriptional response under different conditions and to identify groups of genes that change expression together. major transcriptional changes were observed in the response of cells under cccp treatment due to uncoupling of the proton gradient and further reducing the membrane potential, as well as under novobiocin treatment due to changing the topology of dna. global problem of oil pollution forces scientists to search for a new safe remediation technologies constantly. careful attention is paid to bacteria, some of which possess additional biotechnologically valuable properties, such as utilization of hydrocarbons and production of biofurfactants. in this regard, we carried out proteogenomic characterization of tsukamurella tyrosinosolvens strain ps , which was isolated from chemical sludge and capable for alkane degradation and biosurfactant production. whole genome of the strain was sequenced on the miseq (illumina) platform, assembled and annotated. proteome on mineral medium with glucose, sucrose and hexadecane as a sole carbon and energy source was studied. shotgun proteomics approach was performed on hybrid chromatography-mass spectrometry machine (maxis impact). alkane oxidation genes (alkane- -monooxygenase, rubredoxin and rubredoxin-reductase) under genome sequence, as well as two pathways of trehalose synthesis and genes for mycolic acids production were found. emulsification activity of cell-free culture liquid was about four times higher on hexadecane in comparison with sugars. proteomic profile was different at various culture conditions. all glycolysis genes, beginning with glucose- -phosphate isomerase to pyruvate kinase, were found on the media with sugar. the medium with hexadecane helped to reveal enzymes involved in the beta-oxidation of fatty acids, for example , -dienoyl-coa reductase, -ketoacyl-coa thiolase and enzymes of the initial mycolic acid synthesis pathways. thus we have established that the strain t. tyrosinosolvens ps utilizes sugar by glycolysis. also, the bacterium is capable for alkane oxidation followed by beta-oxidation of fatty acids. based on the proteogenomic data, we assume that the bacterium is able to synthesize trehalose lipids, namely, trehalose mycolates. obtained results could be useful to create conditions for increased biosurfactants production. gestational diabetes mellitus (gdm) is a glucose intolerance firstly diagnosed during pregnancy. in this study, we aimed to investigate the association between serum adiponectin, resistin levels and insulin resistance in gestational diabetic patients. a total of patients; healthy pregnant women (control group) and pregnant women diagnosed with gdm (gdm group) were included in this study. serum adiponectin, resistin, glucose, insulin, hba c levels and lipid parameters were measured. insulin resistance index homa-ir values were calculated. in this study, serum glucose, insulin, hba c levels and homa-ir were significantly higher in gdm group compared to the control group (p = . , p = . , p = . , p = . , respectively). serum adiponectin levels were significantly lower (p < . ); whereas serum resistin levels were significantly higher (p = . ) in gdm group than in the control group. it can be concluded that resistin contributes to the formation of insulin resistance, adiponectin plays an important role in the regulation of this resistance and they also have effects on gdm pathophysiology. hematological cancers including acute myeloblastic leukemia (aml) and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (all) in terms of incidence and mortality, are the second most important cancer type in turkey. numerous studies show that cancer patients respond differently to treatment thus supporting the idea of personalized therapy need for individuals. renin angiotensin system (ras) have key roles in aml and all progression and it has been shown by many studies suggests that these system's genes might be good biomarkers for aml and all personalized therapy. we aimed to identify ras gene based homogeneous subgroups of acute leukemia and determine the most effective chemotherapoetic agent for each subgroup. after validation and verification of the results, more effective drugs can be recommended for the use in clinics for chemotherapy of aml and all. results of our preliminary studies showed that we are able to identify subgroups of aml and all as well as correlating each existing subgroup with fda approved drugs. considering the long and highly cost process of developing new drugs for cancer treatment makes the present study all the more valuable. in addition, there is a serious need for change in aml and all therapy since there is no highly effective chemotherapy protocol available for their treatment. welcome trust sanger (wts) and cancer cell line encyclopedia (ccle) databases will be used to determine subgroups of aml and all based on ras genes or whole genome expression using standard deviation and hierarchical clustering analysis. the most effective drugs for each subgroup will be identified using pearson's r correlation analysis with drug sensitivity data (ic , ic , amax, aare, etc.) available in same databases. further validation tests will be performed by in vitro validation using aml and all cell lines: drug sensitivity profiles will be determined and gene expression will be shown by q-rt-pcr. p- . . - functional polymorphisms of ephx in a turkish population h. pinarbasi, i. sari cumhuriyet university, sivas, turkey soluble epoxide hydrolase (seh; ec . . . ) is encoded by ephx and catalyses the degradation of endogenous fatty acid epoxides generated by cyp epoxygenases. these fatty acid epoxides such as epoxyeicosatrienoic acids (eets) have been shown to posses vasodilator, anti-inflammatory, anti-platelet, anti-hypertensive, anti-apoptotic, anti-thrombotic and natriuretic effects. it has been reported that eet levels are associated with hypertension, stroke and cardiovascular diseases. individual differences in the ephx gene that affect the seh activity may alter the circulating levels of eets. k r and r q polymorphisms have been known to cause increased and decreased seh activity, respectively. therefore we aimed to determine the genotype frequencies of these two polymorphisms in a turkish population. k r and r q polymorphisms were determined by the real time pcr using double-dye hydrolysis probes or pcr-rflp method. the observed genotype frequencies for k r polymorphism were . % wild type (aa) and . % polymorphic genotype (ag+gg) and for r q polymorphism . % wild type and . % polymorphic genotype (ga+aa). the genotype distributions for both polymorphisms were in hardy-weinberg equilibrium. pregnancy is one of manifestations for thrombophilia factors, which in its turn leads to various complications of its course. one of the markers of hereditary thrombophilia is mutations in the folate cycle mtr, mtrr and mthfr genes. insufficient intake of folate during pregnancy disrupts the functioning of the genome, leading to miscarriage, violation of embryogenesis and various fetal malformations. however, results of studies on the role of hereditary thrombophilia in the occurrence of complications during pregnancy are rather contradictory. aim of this study was to determine the frequency of alleles and polymorphic variants of folate cycle genes mtr a g, mtrr a g and mthfr c t in women of kazakh ethnic group with pregnancy complications. we used real-time pcr. blood samples for dna isolation were obtained from pregnant women. the main group consisted of women (n = ) which had a history of two or more pregnancy complications in the form of pre-eclampsia, eclampsia, missed abortion, miscarriage, and etc. control group consisted of women (n = ) with two or more normal pregnancy outcomes, and had no complications during pregnancy in history. average age of women in experimental group was . ae . years compared with control of the age . ae . . the analysis of the frequency distribution of alleles of genes in experimental group of women with complications of pregnancy revealed no significant differences relative to the control group. analysis of the distribution of polymorphic variants of folate cycle genes showed significant difference between the study and control groups in the occurrence frequency of heterozygotes for the mutant allele g in the gene mtrr a g (or = . , ci % = . - . ; v = . , p < , ). no significant differences in alleles between homozygous wild-type and homozygous mutant alleles were observed. this work was funded by the mes kazakhstan (gr rk project number). p- . . - a study on the association between rs polymorphism in connective tissue growth factor gene and pseudoexfoliation syndrome pseudoexfoliation syndrome (pes) is a disorder of the extracellular matrix characterized by the production and progressive accumulation of an abnormal fibrillary material in many ocular tissues. pes prevalence is . % above the age in turkey. since pes is characterized by excessive synthesis of elastic microfibrillar components throughout the body, growth factors can have important roles in the pathophysiology of pes. human connective tissue growth factor (ctgf) is a protein expressed in a variety of tissues, including the anterior chamber of the eye. ctgf coding gene has several genetic polymorphisms. rs g/c single nucleotide polymorphism (snp) is found at position À , in promoter region. the presence of a c allele for rs is critical for transcriptional suppression of the ctgf gene which would reduce ctgf production. aim of this study was to investigate if there is any association between pes and rs polymorphism of the ctgf gene. study population consisted of patients with pes and controls. blood samples were collected by g€ ulhane military medical academy, department of ophthalmology, ankara, turkey. genotypes were assigned by pcr followed by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. genomic dnas were isolated from whole blood samples using manual dna isolation. the frequency of ctgf rs polymorphic allele g was . in patients, and . in controls ( . , p = . ). distribution of genotypes was gg: . %, gc: . % and cc: . % among patients, while gg: %, gc: . % and cc: . % (or = . , p = . ) in controls. statistical analysis showed that there is no significant relationship between ctgf rs snp and pes. these are the preliminary findings of a research project which is the first study analyzing the relationship between ctgf rs snp and pes. this work did not point out a role for ctgf rs in the risk for pes. a significant relationship might be found when the study population is enlarged. p- . . - evaluation of rs single nucleotide polymorphism of clusterin gene in pseuodoexfoliation syndrome risk pseuodoexfoliation syndrome (pes), an age-related systemic disorder, is characterized by production and accumulation of abnormal fibrillar extracellular material in anterior structures of the eye. clusterin (clu) is a multifunctional glycoprotein produced and secreted by almost all cell types and is found in all body fluids and in accumulated pes material. under cellular stress conditions, clu provides inhibition of stress-induced precipitation and aggregation of misfolded proteins. clu expression level in pes patients is unexpectedly low and this could be due to single nucleotide polymorphisms (snp) on the gene coding for clu. rs c/t polymorphism has been found to be associated with alzheimer's disease and pathophysiology of alzheimer and pes are similar. this study aimed to determine whether rs snp of clu gene have a role in the development of pes. study population consisted of patients with pes and controls. blood samples were obtained from g€ ulhane military medical academy, department of ophthalmology, ankara, turkey. genomic dnas were isolated from whole blood of subjects using manual dna isolation. genotypes were assigned by pcr followed by restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. t allele frequency of pes patients was . and that of controls was . ( . , p = . ). the distribution of genotypes was cc: . %, tc: . % and tt: . % among patients while cc: . %, tc: . % and tt: . % ( . , p = . ) in controls. there was no statistically significant difference between pes patients and controls in terms of tt genotype and t allele frequency. these are the preliminary findings of a research project which is the first study analyzing the relationship between clu rs snp and pes in turkish population. this work did not point out a relation for polymorphic genotype in the risk for pes. however, a relationship between clu rs polymorphism and pes can be found when we enlarge the study population. the tumor suppressor tp is the most frequently mutated gene in head neck squamous cell carcinoma cancer and represents a known transcription factor and tumor suppressor gene that regulates different microrna and target genes. the aim of our work is to construct the transcriptional and post-transcriptional network regulated by tp and to evaluate the difference at mrna and protein expression levels of the tp target genes in hpv negative head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (hnscc) patients with distinct tp mutation states and to elucidate the molecular mechanism that underlie the poor prognosis of tp mutation. to show the tp mutation landscape and its prognostic relevance for survival, we used cbioportal for cancer genomic analysis. we downloaded mutational profiles of hpv negative hnscc patients. employing different databases we constructed the tp regulatory network. and then, to evaluate the effect on mrna, protein and microrna regulated by tp we used the mrna and protein expression profiles of patients from tcga. our results show that hotspot, truncating and missense mutations have statistical significance in the univariate analysis. the tp regulatory network show the involvement of important target involved in the progression of hnscc and the deregulation of protein expression of an important key epigenetic modifier ezh was significantly associated with tp mutational state. ezh is a member of the polycomb group protein enhancer zeste homolog which is known to be directly repressed by tp and indirectly by the activation of mir- a and mir- b. we found a significant up-regulation of ezh that depend from tp mutation. it is important to understand the difference in mrna and protein expression of tp regulatory network that could depend from its mutational state. this finding suggest that ezh might be a potential therapeutic target for hnscc. p- . . - next generation sequencing based approach for monitoring of minimal residual disease in acute lymphoblastic leukemia minimal residual disease (mrd) monitoring is widely used to evaluate efficiency of chemotherapy and to choose a strategy for further treatment in acute lymphoblastic leukemia (all). the most commonly used approaches for mrd detection are based on flow cytometry and qpcr. these methods have several important limitations including insufficient sensitivity, complicated experimental setup and false positivity. the newly developed next generation sequencing (ngs) approaches could overcome the existing limitations in mrd monitoring. here we describe a new mrd monitoring approach based on targeted deep sequencing of malignant rearrangements. first, we identified bcr/tcr rearrangements specific for the leukemic clones in initial bone marrow samples of all patients. for this, we used sanger sequencing of the products of multiplex pcr, performed with bcr/tcr specific primers combined according to the optimal frequency distribution of v/j-genes in healthy donors. second, we analyzed concentration of malignant clone rearrangements, identified at the first step, in dna samples obtained from bone marrow after days of treatment. for this purpose, we performed ngs of libraries for each identified leukemic rearrangement. four libraries were amplicons of bcr or tcr gene rearrangements generated using characteristic v and j segment specific primer combination. six additional libraries were amplicons of the same primer combination from the same dna sample which contained initial leukemic dna spike-in (in concentrations corresponding to per , and , cells) for a calibration curve generation. using this approach, we analyzed all clone specific rearrangements for three patients and calculated concentration of the leukemic clones by using the calibration curve. for one patient we didn't find any leukemic cells and for two patients we found leukemic cell per , analyzed cells. znf is considered as a transcriptional target for p and plays an important role in the homologous recombination, mitosis, centrosome dynamics. as was shown by gwas some snps in znf have strong association with the risk of breast cancer (bc). however, it was unclear whether the same snps are associated with risk of bc in kazakhstan. therefore two polymorphisms (rs , rs ) of znf were investigated in kazakh population in this study. the present case-control study was carried out with participation of kazakh females with bc and cancer-free donors. additionally, subtypes of bc, stratified by estrogen receptor (er+/À), progesterone receptor (pr+/À) and human epidermal growth factor receptor (her +/À) status were estimated. pearson p-value, odds ratio, % confidence interval tests were applied to data analysis. significant differences were found in allele frequency and genotype distribution at rs locus in znf between the patients and control groups (p = . for allele; p = . for genotype). moreover, significant association with bc was revealed for rs after dividing patients according to er+/ À, pr+/À and her +/À status of the tumor. the g allele was associated with er+ (p = . , or = . , %ci: . - . ), pr+ (p = . , or = . , %ci: . - . ) and gg genotype with her -bc carriers (p = . , or = . , %ci: . - . ). also, g allele can be considered as a risk factors in er+/ pr+/her -luminal type of tumor (p = . , or = . , % ci: . - . ). our findings correlate with the data of several gwas where the association of the rs polymorphism with higher mammographic density and the risk of breast cancer have been shown. the obtained results allow us to consider g allele and gg genotype of rs as a marker of bc risk with predictive value, restricted to er, pr and her status of the tumor in the kazakh population. breast cancer (bc) is the most common cancer among women in most of countries. alternative variants of low-penetrance genes such as fgfr (rs ), tox (rs ), map k (rs ), lsp (rs ) are shown to have high frequency in north america, south-east asia, australia, europe populations and a multiplicative effect on the development of bc. in this study was investigated assosiasion between alleles/genotypes combinations of these genes with increase/decrease of bc risk. the case-control study included bc patients and healthy women from kazakh and russian populations. genotyping was performed by pcr-rflp methods. combined effect of allele and genotype variations in four different genes on bc risk was assessed by apsampler algorithm. the fisher exact test, odds ratio (or) with % confidence intervals ( % ci) were applied to data analysis. according to obtained results combinations of allele c of tox rs and a of map k rs (p = . , or = . ), also allele c of tox rs and c of lsp rs (p = . , or = . ) associated with increased bc risk in the russian population. consequently, combinations with c allele of tox rs contribute significantly to bc risk with p-value = . , or = . . on the contrary, tt genotype of tox rs with p = . , or = . and its combination with allele t of lsp rs with p = . , or = . determine a bc risk reduction in russian population. in addition, a risk combination of allele c of lsp rs and a of map k rs was found in kazakh population (p = . , or = . ). studies have shown that a genetic predisposition to bc can be determined by the cumulative effect of individual alleles and genotypes and possible epistatic interactions of studied genes. obtained combinations of alleles and genotypes can be considered as complex genetic markers of bc and may be used as predictive. cancer that is caused by excessive proliferation of cells and reduced apoptosis is a pathological condition. currently, studies that are comitted with breast cancer are great important early detection and diagnosis of breast cancer. after the discovery of cisplatin as chemoterapy drug, new transition metal based complexes have been developed for treatment of cancer. in this study, anti-cancer activity of azo-azomethide ligand and its mononuclear metal complexes is studied on human cancer cell lines (mcf- ) and mouse fibroblast (l ) cell lines. cells were studied four different concentrations ( , ; ; ; lm). xtt ( , -bis-( -methoxy- -nitro- -sulfophenyl)- h-tetrazolium- -carboxanilide) protocol was applied after and hours. in our study % fetal bovine serum (fbs), % l-glutamine, iu/ml penicillin and mg/ml streptomycin in dmem (low glucose) were used. cancer cell lines in dmem medium is produced in % humidity and % co incubator at °c. anti-cancer activity of synthesized complexes were determined on mcf- and l . in the biological activity studies, synthesized compounds showed higher anticancer activity than positive control ( -fu). finally, our new synthesized complexes can be suggested that potent ajan for anti-tumuour for breast cancer drugs. large interindividual differences in response to chemotherapy present an important issue in cancer treatment. malignant mesothelioma (mm) is an aggressive tumor with poor prognosis, treated mostly with gemcitabine/cisplatin (gem/cis) or pemetrexed/cisplatin (pmx/cis) chemotherapy. as both clinical characteristics and genetic variability may affect treatment outcome, our aim was to construct and validate clinical-pharmacogenetic prediction models of treatment outcome in mm for both chemotherapy regimens and to develop an algorithm for genotype-based treatment recommendations. clinical-pharmacogenetic models were built on gem/cistreated and pmx/cis-treated mm patients. pharmacogenetic scores were assigned by rounding the regression coefficients. gem/cis model was validated on independent mm patients. model predicting outcome of gem/cis chemotherapy included crp level, histological type, performance status, rrm rs , ercc rs , ercc rs , and xrcc rs . values ranged between and . ; cutoff value of . had sensitivity of . and specificity of . . patients with higher score had shorter progression-free and overall survival (p < . ). in the validation group, positive predictive value was . and negative predictive value was . . model predicting outcome of pmx/cis chemotherapy included crp level, mthfd rs , and abcc rs with scores ranging between and . . cutoff value of . had sensitivity of . and specificity of . . patients with higher score had lower probability of good response and shorter progression-free survival (p < . ). clinical-pharmacogenetic models could enable stratification of mm patients based on their probability of response to gem/cis or pmx/cis and improve treatment outcome. this approach could be used for translation of pharmacogenetic testing to clinical practice as it would facilitate the selection of the best treatment option for each patient. p- . . - evaluation of anti-diabetic potential of circiliol and circilineol using caco cell line diabetes mellitus is a metabolic disorder, and many people are suffering from this disease in the worldwide. oral hypoglycemic agents such as sulfonylureas and biguanides are currently used for the treatment. however, studies searching for a more effective anti-diabetic agents are being carried out continıously. based on that we aim to investigate the potential anti-diabetic effects of circilineol and circiliol isolated from teucrium alyssifolium extract, using in vitro cell culture models. for this purpose, the anti-diabetic actions were investigated by applying model caco (colorectal adenocarcinoma) cell line. we determined the level of ag (alpha-glucosidase), sglt (sodium-glucose transporter- ) and glut - and glucose transport. neither ag activity nor sglt activity was increased with either circiliol or circilineol treatment in caco cells compared to positive control. similarly, neither the activity nor the expression level of glut *- was increased in caco cell line with either circiliol or circilineol treatment relative to control. in conclusion, these results strongly suggest that circiliol and circilineol do not possess any anti-diabetic potentials.supported by tubitak z and paubap fbe the purpose of this study was to characterize and assess the impact of a novel magnetite (fe o ) nanosystem functionalized with the natural origin compound eugenol (e) on the pseudomonas aeruginosa virulence, biofilm formation and qs signaling in order to advance research aimed to find alternative and personalized therapeutic approaches for severe infections produced by this opportunistic pathogen. fe o nanoparticles were obtained by a co-precipitation method and functionalized with analytical purity e. functionalized nanoparticles (fe o @e) were characterized by ir, sem, tga and hr tem. one laboratory and p. aeruginosa clinical isolates were utilized in the study. growth and biofilm formation were assessed by an adapted microdilution method followed by absorbance reads and viable count analysis in dynamics ( , , and hours of treatment). soluble virulence factors production was assessed by enzyme activity evaluation of bacteria grown on specific media. the expression of qs core genes was analyzed by qrt-pcr and a luminescence assay. results demonstrated that the average size of the obtained nanosystem ranges - nm, particles are relatively homogenous and have a low tendency to form aggregates. subinhibitory concentrations of fe o @e limited biofilms formation in a time and strain dependent manner, and significantly inhibited the production of toxin pore forming enzymes (haemolysins and lipases) in most strains. the expression of lasi and lasr genes was three fold downregulated, while the expression of pqsr was upregulated in planktonic cultures suggesting that pqs signaling may be involved in virulence modulation after nanoparticle stimulation. the modulation of bacterial virulence and molecular signaling by functional nanoparticles utilized in subinhibitory amounts offer valuable perspectives to develop personalized antimicrobial approaches based on molecular communication control that clearly modulate pathogenicity and progression of the infectious process. p- . . - specimen processing and handling for plasma ammonia measurement b. sarac ßligil , , s. abus ßo glu , f. aky€ urek , b. € ozt€ urk selc ßuk medical school, konya, biochemistry department, selcuk university faculty of medicine, konya, turkey objectives: ammonia requires special processing and handling conditions due to its' unstability. in this study, our aim to investigate a preanalytical factor (delayed analyze) affecting plasma ammonia measurement. design and methods: blood samples were obtained from healthy volunteers. for determining different handling and storage conditions, the following protocols were applied: first protocol (a) transportation on ice and separation (centrifugation at °c) within minutes of collection and analyze immediately. second protocol (b) transportation on ice and separation (centrifugation at °c) within minutes and analyse refrigerated - °c hours (a , b ) and hours (a , b ). all plasma ammonia levels was analyzed enzimatic glutamate dehiydrogenase methods by abbott architect c clinical chemistry analyzer. results: there were statistically alterations in all protocols compared to first protocol. prolonged centrifugation time for plasma ammonia lead to have higher results ( . versus . lg/dl, p < . ). in all protocols including a , a , b , b also cause an elevation in plasma ammonia results ( . , . , . and . ; p = . , p < . , p < . , p < . , respectively). conclusions: ammonia concentration in the blood sample increases over time due to high concentrations in cells as erythrocyte or platelets (three fold). blood samples collected for ammonia determination should be stored on ice, and measured immediately. the wnt/b-catenin signaling pathway has been considered to be a factor in the development and progression of colorectal cancer. many studies have demonstrated that the presence of mutations or polymorphisms in ctnnb (gene encoding b-catenin; mostly mutations in exon ) can lead to aberrant activation of wnt/bcatenin signaling at the onset of various types of malignancies, including colorectal cancer. the aim of our study was to assess ctnnb alteration in the patients with colorectal cancer and compared their tumor and normal tissues. a total of paraffin-embedded colorectal tumor specimens were obtained from department of pathology in cerrahpasa medical faculty. also a total paraffin-embedded normal tissue was used from same cases as a control group. ten-micrometer-thick tissue sections were placed on a glass slide and stained with he. then the tissue sections were dehydrated in graded ethanol solutions and dried without a cover glass. dna was extracted from the tissues with ll of extraction buffer at °c over night. the tubes were boiled for min to inactivate the proteinase k. ctnnb exon was amplified by pcr. sscp is used to observe any difference between the groups. genomic dna was isolated as described above. ll of each pcr products mixed with ll denaturating buffer and were denatured by heating at °c for minutes in, and then were rapidly cooled on ice. the denatured pcr samples are run on % acrylamide/ bis gel in . tbe buffer for . hours at v at room temperature with water cooling system. the gel was stained with silver staining method. migration and adhesion involve continuous modulation of cell motility, beta-catenin play major roles. beta-catenin gene alterations frequency range between and % in colorectal cancer according to the different published studies. in our study no significant differences were found in the ctnnb exon between the tumor group and normal groups. p- . . - theranostic approach in agressive recurrent meningiomafirst experience in turkey m. o. demirkol , b. uc ßar koc ß university, istanbul, american hospital, istanbul, turkey meningiomas arise from the meningothelial cells of the arachnoid membranes of the leptomeninx, which are attached to the inner layer of the dura mater. meningiomas can be classified into three grades (i-iii): grade i meningiomas which are benign, exhibit slow growth; grade ii (atypical) and grade iii (anaplastic) meningiomas, which have a much more aggressive clinical behaviour. meningiomas express non-steroid hormones, including somatostatin. in the brain, somatostatin-a cyclic tetradecapeptide neuropeptide-is believed to act as a neurotransmitter and neuromodulator. somatostatin performs its physiological functions by binding to specific receptors (sstri-sstrv). sstr exhibit high affinity for octreotate (tate). tate is a polar, watersoluble peptide that does not penetrate the intact bbb (brain-blood barrier). pet and scintigraphic imagings can only demonstrate somatostatin receptor positive intracranial lesions if the bbb is disrupted. in this aim, dotatate (dota-dphe , tyr -octreotate, tate) has been labelled with the positron emitter ga and the beta and gama emitter lu. in this case, we conducted a study to evaluate peptide receptor radionuclide therapy (prrt) planning based on pet/ct imaging of meningioma in the department of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging at the amerikan hospital. [ ga] dota -tyr -oc-pet/ct has been established as the imaging modality of choice for the diagnosis and management of patient with skull-base malign meningioma (rapid progress -to mm. from mm. in d.-after fifth operation). due to its high sstr selectivity, [ lu]-tate showed significantly lower uptake/dose delivered to normal tissues, gatate-pet represents the imaging strategy of choice for an accurate assessment of sstr expression levels. although some studies have not shown a clear advantage over pet/ct, there is some evidence that it will have an advantage in selected body sites such as the head and neck, liver, and the pelvis. p- . . - cardiovascular diseases can be treated by using 'tetr-odd-vp ' and 'hre' hypoxia inducible systems a. celik , t. kaya , s. cigdem , m. g€ und€ uz department of medical genetic, turgut ozal university, ankara, faculty of medicine, turgut ozal university, ankara, turkey ischemia is an insufficient supply of blood to a tissue or organ, usually due to a blocked artery by a blood clot. up to now, the number one cause of death worldwide is caused by ischemia and related conditions such as heart attack or stroke. hif- a is a transcription activator that functions as a master regulator of oxygen homeostasis. hif- a protein levels increase under hypoxic conditions as a result of decreased o -dependent prolyl-hydroxylation, ubiqutination and degradation. we aimed to break up clots in blood vessels and to prevent damage caused by ischemia by using hypoxia inducible systems. we added oxygen dependent degredation domain (odd) of hif a between and in front of tetr dna binding domain and vp transactivation domain, so that tetr-odd-vp or odd-tetr-vp could activate transcription of tissue plasminogen activator (tpa) controlled by tetracycline response element (tre), in a hif a independent manner. in addition, we also designed tissue plasminogen activator (tpa) under control of hypoxia response element (hre) of hif a target genes. western blotting and immunofluorescence assay results showed the expression and nuclear localization of tetr-odd-vp and odd-tetr-vp constructs under hypoxic conditions, but not normoxic. in addition, using fluorometric reporter systems and tpa enzymatic assay we proved functionality of these constructs under hypoxic conditions. final apporoach to our project is predicting kinetic enzymatic activity of tpa during break up blood clots by using matlab. the results of the present investigation showed, the developed hypoxia responsible systems that can be engineered into endothelial cells to prevent ischemia related cardiovascular diseases. p- . . - osteogenic potential assessment of some original scaffolds with magnetic properties new advances in bone tissue engineering demand the development of materials that can not only replace bone, but also regenerate the damaged tissue based on external or even internal stimulus. magnetic materials inside bone scaffolds are known to be a promoting factor for bone healing especially when the therapy is accompanied by application of external magnetic stimulation. based on a recent report, the presence of iron oxide in hydroxyapatite can improve the radio opacity and osteoblast proliferation. in this view, this study focuses on the development of silk fibroin-magnetite biocomposites for potential uses in bone tissue bioenegineering. such novel composites possess good mechanical properties, biocompatibility and biomineralization potential by in vitro tests and could become smart arhiectures, able to stimulate bone regeneration. a new culture model was developed by exposing a d cell/ scaffold bioconstruct to a continuous magnetic field during weeks of osteogenic induction. in this view, mc t -e murine osteoblastes progenitor cells were seeded inside the novel silk fibroin-magnetite biocomposites and subjected to osteogenesys in a magnetic field during days. osteogenic specific markers were evaluated every week in the presence and absence of the field. our results showed that the osteogenic marker's expression started earlier when mc t -e cells were exposed to the magnetic field. consequently, in our experimental model, the magnetic field had a benefic effect on the osteogenic differentiation process as mc t -e cells differentiated more efficiently in its presence. these results suggest that the bone healing process could be improved in the presence of a magnetic field. nevertheless, further in vivo studies on animal model should be employed for validation. p- . . - impact of physical activity performed on different times of day on cardiac and skeletal muscle damage in trained and untrained male subjects s. algul, m. kara, o. ozcelik y€ uz€ unc€ u yil university, van, turkey introduction: physical activity elevates creatine kinase (ck) and creatine kinase myocardial band (ck-mb) levels which have been considered to be an indirect marker of skeletal and cardiac muscles damage. purpose: impact of physical activity performed on different times of day on serum levels of ck and ck-mb were investigated in trained and untrained male subjects. materials and methods: trained (n = , . ae . yr, . ae . kg) and untrained (n = , . ae . yr, . ae . kg) subjects performed three soccer matches ( min) in field ( m versus m) in morning (m), afternoon (a) and at night (n) on separate days. the study protocol was approved by the local ethics committee. venous blood samples were taken at onset and at end of match. serum ck and ck-mb levels are measured using autoanalyser. data are expressed as mean ae s.e., compared by wilcoxon-signed rank and mann-whitney u-tests. p < . was accepted as statistically significant. results: ck and ck-mb levels increased in three matches in both groups (p < . ). importantly, there were significant increases in ck-mb levels in a and n exercises compared to m exercise (p < . ) in trained ( . ae . u/l versus . ae . u/l, % (m) . ae . u/l versus ae . u/l, % (a) . ae . u/l versus . ae . u/l, % (n) and also untrained groups ( . ae . u/l versus . ae . u/l, % (m), . ae . u/l versus . ae . u/l, % (a) . ae . u/l versus . ae . u/l, % (n). discussion: increased metabolic stress or muscle damage during physical exercise elevate serum ck and ck-mb levels. however, higher percentage of increase in ck-mb levels in a and n exercise may reflects additional increases in cardiac muscle stress despite the similar skeletal muscle stress as indicated by ck levels. conclusion: considering the observation of higher percentage increase in ck-mb levels in untrained and also trained subjects, the caution should be taken while performing an exercise in a and n time especially in subjects who has cardiac weakness. p- . . - regional assessment of hematological and discrimination indices of complete blood count for beta-thalassemia screening beta-thalassemia is one of the most common genetic abnormality causing health problems worldwide. blood count and film of beta thalassemia trait and iron deficiency anemia have similar features. therefore, several simple screening indices have been developed for differentiating between these diseases. it was to asaimed to assess the hematological parameters and discrimination indices in patients with betathalassemia trait who admitted to our hospital. the parameters of complete blood count (cbc) in subjects ( males and females) diagnosed by mutational analysis (pcr, gene amplification, dna sequencing) between and , were retrospectively screened and the thalassemia status of patients was assessed in terms of discrimination indices (eng-land&fraser (ef), green&king (gk), mentzer (m), ricerca (r), shine&lal (s-l), srivastava (s), ehsani and sirdah). the percentages of being above the cut off value were detected by ef . %, gk . %, m . %, r . %, s-l . %, s . %, ehsani . % and sirdah . %. the percentages of falsely negatives for the indices of ricerca and shine&lal were lower than others. morever, when the first three common mutations of our study were considered, out of , out of and out of patients were up to the cut off values in terms of e&f, g&k, m, s, ehsani and sirdah indices for ivs-i- (g>a), ivsii- (g>a) and heterozygous codon deletion (-aa), respectively. the molecular diagnosis and prenatal detection for families at risk is important because of the difficulties of treatment in this disease. however, the use of discrimination indices may be valuable for distinguishing of thalassemia trait from iron defiency anemia when the equipment of molecular diagnosis are limited. in our study, ricerca and shine&lal had lower falsely negative results than others. nevertheless, further studies to detect diagnostic perfomance of discriminant indices should be conducted. p- . . - novel therapeutic agents in the development of effective drug combinations to treat glioma s. avdieiev , l. gera , r. hodges institute of molecular biology and genetics, kyiv, ukraine, university of colorado, aurora, co, united states glial tumors are driven by multiple molecular aberrations that cannot be controlled by a single targeted agent. so, it is possible to expect that the combined multitarget anti-cancer therapy aimed simultaneously at different elements of tumor formation mechanisms will be more effective and will promote the extension of patients' life. to find out which drug combinations will enable the development of therapeutic regimens with improved effectiveness and decreased toxicity, the cytotoxic effects of several bradykinin antagonists (ba) were analyzed for different glioblastoma (gb) cell lines. among all the ba under investigation, bkm- appeared to be the most effective, with ic values of lm and . lm in rat glioma c and human glioblastoma u cell lines, respectively. bkm- suppressed erk / and akt phosphorylation in u cells. temozolomide (tmz), the firstline anti-gliomic drug used in clinics, has only a temporary positive effect and severe side effects in gb patients. we showed that the combination of bkm- and tmz led to significant potentiation of tmz cytotoxicity at sub-therapeutic concentrations. recombinant proteins with cytotoxic properties are promising agents for complex therapeutic applications. we revealed that the glioma-associated protein chi l inhibited the viability of u cells more effectively than tmz. furthermore, the combination of chi l and bkm- resulted in an additive cytotoxic effect. chi l -mediated decrease of cell viability was associated with a g /s transition arrest. chi l provoked the dramatic reduction of prb phosphorylation and a significant decrease of cyclin d expression, as well as a substantial increase in p level. in addition to the accumulation of p , we observed the upregulation of cdk inhibitor p . therefore, g /s arrest in chi l -treated cells could be realized via activation of prb, downregulation of cyclin d, and activation of p . harmful hereditary mutations in brca and brca are one of the most important risk factors of breast cancer. the aim of this study is to determine the mutations which are associated with breast cancer in people which is diagnosed breast cancer and/or have breast cancer-diagnosed family members by sanger sequencing and thus provide predictive and prognostic utility. our ongoing study is present the genetic variations in brca and brca genes in breast cancer-diagnosed patients, that one of them is male, and person yet healthy whose brca was sequenced by sanger sequencing. the data were analyzed by using seqscape software . and detected variations were compared with literature. in brca , we determined different benign genetic variations and variation with unknown significance and variation which has not in literature. in brca gene of patient and healthy person, benign variations, variations with unknown significance, variations which has not in literature and mutation were determined. this mutation is c. - delgtca and is located in occr. c. - a>c variation in brca gene, was determined in only male patient.c. t>a variation in exon of brca , was observed in only the youngest patient who has no family member with breast cancer and healthy person. while this variation takes place in literature as variation with 'uncertain clinical significance', an in silico program mutation taster speculated as 'disease causing' for this variation. also, almost all of variations with 'unknown significance' literature knowledge were determined in only one and different cases. this situation increases the possibility of being pathogenic of this variations. the our findings until now can contribute to variations with uncertain clinical significance in the literature. also the variations that have not in the literature but we suggest the possible relation with breast cancer as an estimate may be added to literature by expanding the study. p- . . - inhibition of the recombinant human butyrylcholinesterase with paraoxon and coumarin analog of soman organophosphorus compounds (op) represent a class of extremely toxic chemicals that are used as warfare agents. uncontrolled utilization of op is highly dangerous due to their high potential to be efficient poisons in terrorist attacks. current therapy of op poisoning include intravenous administration of atropine and acetylcholine reactivators however, it does not completely eliminate brain damage effects. alternative experimental therapy against op poisoning is utilization of bioscavengers that irreversibly react with op and rapidly inactivate them. recombinant human butyrylcholinesterase (rhbche) is one of the most promising candidates as bioscavenger due to its pharmacokinetic characteristics and broad spectrum of op neutralizing activity. here we investigated in vitro inhibition of rhbche with two model oppesticide paraoxon (pox) and coumarin analog of soman (gd c ). both op lead to rapid and irreversible inactivation of rhbche that was monitored using ellman assay and fluorescence measurements. bimolecular inhibition rate constants dramatically differ between pox and gd c that could be explained by steric hindrance in soman analog. the next steps forward creation of catalytic bioscavengers based on rhbche should be done based on mechanisms of op-rhbche interactions. this work was performed in frame of grant rfme-fi x . non-hodgkin lymphomas (nhls) represent a heterogeneous group of malignancies that arise from the lymphoid system. at the present time exist a lot of drugs for the nhls therapy, but mostly all of them are unsafe and there is no consensus regarding the best treatment protocol. to increase the efficacy and safety of therapeutic b-lymphocyte depletion in lymphomas and leukemia's it would be preferable to induce the death of pathological b cells without affecting normal b cells to prevent side effects. similar to other types of cancer, nhls arise by a multistep accumulation of genetic aberrations that induce a selective growth advantage of the malignant clone. all b-cells of organism have a unique cell surface markerantigen b-cell receptor (bcr). we generate novel approach for personalized non-hodgkin lymphomas therapy based on peptide specific to malignant cells surface receptor. for this purpose we designed new lentiviral peptide library screening technique based on fluorescent reporter cells system. herein aa peptide library was used for screening of nhl's malignant receptor agonist. patients' lymph nodes biopsy samples mrna was used as a source of malignant bcr nucleotide sequence. variable domain of the lymphoma bcr was used for chimeric receptor generation, where bcr vh/vl part responsible for agonist recognition and bottom part of receptor was retranslate signal to the reporter gene. in this embodiment of the method, very large numbers of candidate aa peptides expressing lentivirus and eukaryotic reporter cells are packaged together in a format where each is capable of replication, thereby forging a direct link between genotype and phenotype. after four rounds of screening we discover peptides specifically interacted with malignant bcr's. selected peptide ligands were fused with chimeric antigen receptor for expression on t-cells. modified tcells selectively eliminate nhl's malignant cells ex vivo. this work was supported by grant rfmefi x . introduction: pesticides are used to prevent damage of unwanted insects, rodents, plant, moss and other pests. excessive use of pesticides may cause adverse effects in animals and humans. chlorpyrifosethylene (cpe) is an organophosphate pesticide, used in many agricultural products such as figs, cherries, olives worldwide; caused acute poisoning and chronically oxidative stress. rosadamascena mill (rosaceae) is a rose, used for production of rosewater (rw) and rose oil worldwide. rosaceae products are consumed in food and cosmetic industries. materials and methods: in this study, we investigated that cpe and rw effects on kidney tissues of rats. this study was included adult male rats, divided into groups. each group included rats. i.group: control (regular feed), ii.group: cpe ( . mg/kg/day), iii.group: rw ( mg/kg/day) and iv.group: cpe ( . mg/kg/day) + rw ( mg/kg/day). following days, kidneys were taken after sacrificed. analyzes were performed that malondialdehyde (mda), nitric oxide (no) as oxidant; superoxide dismutase (sod), glutathione reductase (gr) as antioxidant parameters. results: as compared with control, mda and no levels in cpe were a significant increase was determined (p conclusion: cpe is shown that significant increase on oxidant parameters, but significant decrease on antioxidant parameters. rw occurs opposite situation. similarly results of cpe, rw + cpe increased oxidant parameters, but decreased antioxidant parameters. these changes are lower than only cpe. these results showed that positive effects both rw and rw + cpe increasing on antioxidant parameters, also decreasing on oxidant parameters. we provide the comparative analysis of the reduced glutathione (gsh), reactive oxygen species (ros), a-tocopherol levels, an intracellular labile zn + pool and esterase activity of red blood cells of patients with diagnosed components of the metabolic syndrome (ms)arterial hypertension and diabetes mellitus type ii (ah + dm + ). as the comparison groups were selected patients with one diagnosed component of msarterial hypertension (ah + dm À ) or without any diagnosed component of ms (ah -dm -). patients of all investigated groups were at the hospital treatment with a diagnosis coronary heart disease (chd) ii degree. human blood was obtained from normal donors and patients with chd ii stage. cytosolic esterase activity was assessed using calcein-am test. ros level was evaluated using cm-h dcf-da. gsh level was estimated using lowry method. an intracellular labile zn + pool was assessed using fluozin- -am. investigations were performed on the specord m , hplc system lc- prominence (shimadzu) and facscantoii (bd). a significant decrease of the intracellular level of labile zn + in erythrocytes of patients with ah + dm + compare with ah + dm À and ah À dm À was shown. this fact confirms our assumption concerning the important role of zinc homeostasis in the etiopathogenesis of diabetes mellitus type ii. a direct relationship between the intracellular zn + level modification and erythrocytes esterase activity of patients with chd ii degree was observed. moreover, in ah + dm + group of patients this relation was more marked. the unidirectional alteration in the erythrocytes redox state (gsh and a-tocopherol levels reduction, ros formation activation) was revealed at the whole of investigated chd patients groups (ah + dm + , ah + dm À , ah À dm À ). however, the pathological erythrocytes response on in vitro action of the different antioxidants (n-acetylcysteine, ascorbic acid, a-tocopherol, quercetin) had a diverse character that can be a significant test under antioxidant therapy prescription. it is known that long-term social isolation and the disorder of natural circadian rhythm is considered an important stress factors, which cause a variety of metabolic and mental disorders. it should be noted that the impact of the stresses takes up a larger area, according to, review of the action of their mechanism is one of the topical issues of modern science. it is estimated that as a result of stress the metabolic processes change in the organizm. because of this, we've studied the functionality of the antioxidant system in laboratory rat heart muscle cells and blood under psycho-emotional stress. it was found that quantitative changes of nitric oxide (no) was initiated the process of lpo, which caused oxidative stress in the cells and decreased antioxidant enzymes activity, such as catalase,sod, gpx and gr. the results suggested that psycho-emotional stress was accompanied by oxidative stress, causing a reduction in the intensity of energy metabolism in cardiac muscle cells, which was further strengthened by the fact that the activity of the enzymes involved in atp synthesis in mitochondria was reduced. also, we've studied exogenous creatine positive and negative affects on energy metabolism and blood lipid spectrum. based on this, we proposed that psychological stress is one of the factors contributing to the development of various cardiac diseases. the importance of free radical lipid transformations, which differ from the peroxidation processes, was pointed out for the first time in our laboratory studies. we have found that ros can induce free radical destruction processes of sphingolipids with c-c-bond cleavage [lipids, , : - ; lipid insights, , - ] . in case of acylated sphingolipids, they can undergo decomposition with c-c-bond cleavage upon direct uv irradiation [photochem. photobiol., , : - ] . it was of interest to establish the possibility of photosensitized decomposition reactions of not acylated sphingolipids, which do not absorb an ultraviolet. in this work we studied photosensitized reactions of sphingosines containing a free amino group, and low molecular compounds, which simulate their structure, such as aminoalcohols (serinol). as photosensitizers, the salts of transition metals, hydrogen peroxide, and acetone were used. oxygen was removed by bubbling with argon to reduce the probability of side reactions during photolysis of sphingolipids, such as oxidation processes (including oxygen reactions with alkyl radicals). we have shown that the action of uv-radiation on aminoalcohols and sphingosines in aqueous solutions in the presence of photosensitizers induces their destruction with c-c bond rupture. the main carbonyl product of sphingosines free radical destruction was an unsaturated aldehyde - -hexadecanal. it was found, that -hexadecenal possesses a wide spectrum of biological activity: it promotes reorganization of the cell cytoskeleton and modifies the redox state of the cells [febs journal (suppl. ), abstracts: mem. biol. s , lipid signaling & dynamics, p. .] . the results of this study can expand the frontier of research regarding free radical lipid damage, which could contribute to a better understanding of the origins of diseases associated with the activation of free radical processes in living organisms. structural basis for the - - proteindependent inhibition of apoptosis signalregulating kinase protein kinase ask (apoptosis signal-regulating kinase ) is a member of the mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase (map k) family that plays a crucial role in immune and stress responses. the activity of ask is regulated through homo-oligomerization and interaction with other proteins including the - - protein which binds to the phosphorylated motif located at the c-terminus of the kinase domain of ask and suppresses its catalytic activity through unknown mechanism. under stress conditions, ask is dephosphorylated at ser and the - - protein dissociates. this dissociation is then one of the factors that lead to the activation of ask . we performed low-resolution structural analysis of the kinase domain of ask (ask -cd) bound to - - using chemical cross-linking, analytical ultracentrifugation and small angle x-ray scattering. the low-resolution structural analysis shows that ask -cd binds to the - - protein in two to two stoichiometry through a small binding interface involving surface of - - outside its central channel and several regions from the c-lobe of ask -cd. the complex is dynamic and conformationally heterogeneous. phosphorus nmr and time-resolved fluorescence measurements, together with low-resolution structural analysis, indicate that binding of ask -cd to - - modulates conformation of ask 's activation segment. these results suggest that the - - binding suppresses the catalytic activity of ask through direct structural modulation of its activation segment. our study provides new insight into the interaction between the kinase domain of ask and - - and offers a plausible structural explanation for the - - protein-dependent inhibition of ask kinase activity. introduction: thymoquinone ( -methyl- -isopropyl- , -benzoquinone, tq) exerts a great antitumor activity against different types of cancer cells. a growing body of evidence indicates that reactive oxygen species (ros) generation followed by modulation of the akt and mapk pathways is a general mechanisms underlying the tq antitumor action. however, the data of tq effects on the mapk pathway are conflicting. to date, the activation or inhibition of the mapk protein family seems to depend on the cell type and on the tq concentration used. in order to elucidate the antitumor potential of tq against gliomas and the underlying molecular mechanism, tq influence on c rat glioma cells functioning was studied. results: it has been shown that the cultivation of c cells with tq in concentrations of - lm during hours strongly inhibits cell proliferation and induces cell death with id of lm. at the same time, tq induces ros generation and intracellular gsh depletion in a dose-dependent manner, that is followed by the mitochondrial potential decrease. interestingly, ros production has only cytoplasmic, but not mitochondrial origin in cells challenged with tq at the concentrations up to lm. two-electron reduction of tq by dt-diaphorase attenuates tq anticancer efficiency whereby inhibition of dt-diaphorase by dicumarol increases tq-induced c cell death by %. we analyzed mapk pathways involvement in c cells growth inhibition at tq treatment. it has been shown that inhibition of the erk pathway by pd and jnk pathway by sp does not influence on tq-induced effects. on the contrary, the specific phosphoinositide- -kinase (pi k) inhibitor (ly ) abrogates tq-induced growth arrest. conclusion: antitumor effects of thymoquinone on c glioma cells is a result of ros generation and intracellular gsh depletion, that is followed by mitochondria disfunction, and growth arrest via pi k pathway. assessment of oxidative stress and antioxidant defense activity parameters in patients with hiv-infection is of great importance, especially for hiv-positive women of reproductive age planning to have children. data of women of reproductive age with hiv-infection analyzed: patients with hiv-monoinfection (n = ) and patients with co-infection (hiv and hepatitis b and / or c) (n = ). as a control we used the data of healthy women (n = ). serum and hemolysate used as material for the study. lpo-aod products were determined by spectrophotometric and fluorometric methods. average value of initial lpo products -diene conjugates was significantly increased in the group with hiv-co-infected compared to control ( . times; p = . ) and group with hivmonoinfection ( . -fold; p = . ). the level of secondary products -ketodienes and conjugated trienes increased in patients of both groups compared to control ( . times (p = . ) and . -fold (p < . ), respectively). at the same time isolated double bonds and tba-active products content showed no significant changes (p > , ). total antioxidant activity parameter decreased . fold (p = . ) in the group with hiv-monoinfection compared to control. decrease in activity of the primary antioxidant enzyme -superoxide dismutase (p = . , compared to the control and p = . , compared with the group with hiv-monoinfection) and the level of a-tocopherol ( . -fold to control and . fold to hiv-monoinfection) was detected in the group with hiv-coinfection. . -fold higher content of retinol in hiv-coinfection group (compared to the control) revealed. in women with hiv-coinfection the oxidative stress was significantly higher than in women with hiv-monoinfection. suggested to include antioxidant supplements in the complex pathogenetic therapy in women with hiv-coinfection (hiv and hepatitis b and / or c), which will contribute to women's ability to bear children. p- . . - acute different doses of malathion induce cholinesterase inhibition, glucogenic enzymes and histopathological change in rat liver malathion, which is an organophosphorus compound, is a widely used pesticide all over the world. despite its benefits, malathion has many toxic effects on many tissues including liver. we designed to evaluate the acute different doses of malathion on cholinesterase (che) inhibition, gluconeogenic enzymes and histopathological change of rat liver. for this purpose groups were formed. rats in group served as control group animals which were only given corn oil. group , group and group were administered , , mg/kg of malathion, respectively, dissolved in corn oil by oral gavage. the rats were sacrificed after hours following administration and the livers of rats were removed. the liver che, alanine aminotransferase (alt), aspartate aminotransferase (ast) and lactate dehydrogenase (ldh) were studied using autoanalyzer. histopathological investigation was performed using microscope. the liver che activities of group , group and group were inhibition percentage of %, %, and % respectively, comparison of group 's che activity. the liver alt, ast and ldh increased in group and group compare to group and group (p < . ). we also observed that there was vacuolar and hydropic degeneration in liver of group . according to our result, acute administrations of malathion result in hepatotoxic effects with increasing doses. background and aims: an imbalance between free radicals and antioxidants is closely linked to the onset of an acute myocardial infarction (ami). the aim of this study was to investigate the antioxidant status and the lipid peroxidation in patients admitted to hospital immediately after ami. methods: the study population comprised patients with ami and healthy subjects. patients that had an acute myocardial infarction (ami) less than hours since onset were selected for this study. antioxidant status was assessed by lactonase activity of paraoxonase (pon dhc), trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity (teac) and plasma uric acid level. malondialdehyde was used as marker of lipid peroxidation. results: compare with the control group, the levels of mda and pon dhc were significantly higher in group with ami (p < . , respectively p < . ). elevated levels of mda (p < . ) were found in patients with ami compare with the control subjects. ami patients had also statistically significant reduced levels of teac (p < . ) comparative with healthy subjects. no statistically significance was found for plasma uric acid level in subjects from our study. conclusion: a high lipid peroxidation correlated with a decreased teac activity suggest an exacerbated oxidative stress in subjects admitted to hospital immediately after an ami. p- . . - dealing with copper toxicity: new insights into copper detoxification in yeast copper (cu), an essential metal, is a double-edged sword, as its essential nature is counterbalanced by the toxic effect that it can exert on cells when not properly controlled. as such, organisms have evolved defence mechanisms against cu toxicity, and in the yeast saccharomyces cerevisiae, the transcription factor ace orchestrates several of those mechanisms, by activating cu-detoxification genes. in s. cerevisiae iron (fe) uptake is partially dependent on cu, as the membrane multicopper-oxidase fet , which is part of the high-affinity iron uptake system, requires cu as a cofactor. aft , the low iron-sensing transcription factor in yeast, is known to regulate the expression of fet gene. however, we found that a strain lacking fet is more sensitive to cu surplus conditions than a strain carrying the aft gene disrupted. this finding suggests that under such conditions another regulator came into play and controls fet gene expression. we next evaluated whether ace could be the alternative regulator of fet under cu excess. to test this hypothesis we first constructed the double mutant aft ace and assayed its fitness under cu surplus. as expected, the double mutant is much more sensitive to cu than the single aft or ace mutants. we next monitored the expression of fet gene in cells lacking ace , using yeast-one hybrid and qrt-pcr approaches. our data clearly indicates that fet expression is dependent on ace when cu is overly abundant. altogether our data unveil a novel mechanism of cu detoxification relying on the activation of fet by ace in an aft independent way. experiments to understand the consequences of this regulation in terms of cu detoxification are currently being undertaken. in joint degeneracy, reactive oxygen species manifest their toxicity both through intrinsic reactivity and the inflammatory process activation, leading to cartilage dysfunctions, injuries of matrix proteins and cytokines stimulation. the study is focused on the identification of oxidative balance modulation (enzymes and oxygen free radicals) by a bioactive extract obtained from small sea fish. the cellular support was represented by the chondrocyte line chon- derived from human long bones (atcc Ò crl- tm ), that assure the reproducibility of a standardised biological system. the oxidative stress was induced through stimulation with il b, a cytokine-factor that promotes the protein catabolism and also with tnfa, the initiator of pro-inflammatory activation, combined with pma, the activator of protein-kinase c, triggering of oxygen reactive species generating cascades. the antioxidant effect was compared with known antioxidants: vitamin c, x fatty acid, n-acetyl -cysteine. the acellular antioxidant/antiradical screening was done using two complementary techniques for total antioxidant status evaluation and completed by measuring cellular catalase (cat) and superoxidedismutase (sod) activity, correlated with intracellular hydrogen-peroxide and superoxide anion monitoring through flow cytometry. the antioxidant properties of the bioactive extract proved in acellular systems are confirmed at cellular level by the involvement of the product in the enzymatic cascade cat -sod, potentiating the catalytic action of the enzymes, and by the decline of both intracellular reactive oxygen species (the hydrogen peroxide decrease with %, the superoxide anion is reduced with % compared with the stimulated control). the demonstrated antioxidant synergy assures a complete cellular protection induced by the small sea fish extract in human condrocytes. introduction: alzheimer's disease (ad) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by memory loss, cognitive impairment. oxidative stress is a contributory factor in ad pathogenesis. glutathione (gsh) is the main antioxidant cellular defence. the ratio of gsh/gssg shows the redox status of gsh, and plays important role in maintaining intracellular redox homeostasis. the current study was carried out to determine oxidative dna damage and ratio of gsh/gssg which plays an important role in protection of target molecules from oxidation in the patients with ad. methods: the study subjects were consisted of patients with ad (n = ) and age matched control group (n = ) who were treated and followed in the cerrahpasa medical faculty hospital, department of neurology and department of internal medicine/ geriatrics. dna strand breaks and h o -induced dna damage were determined in lymphocyte dna with comet assay. the gsh and gssg levels in the erythrocyte lysates were measured by using a commercial spectrophotometric kit. the ratio of gsh/gssg were calculated. statistical analysis was performed with spss software package. results: dna strand breaks and h o -induced dna damage were found to be higher (p = . for all), the ratio of gsh/gssg was found to be lower (p = . ) in the ad group than control group. there was no significant difference between male and female for dna strand breaks and h o -induced dna damage in the ad group, but ratio of gsh/gssg were higher in male when compared with female (p = . ). no significant difference was found between the men of ad group and men of the control group for gsh/gssg ratio whereas women of the ad have a lower gsh/gssg ration than those in the women of the control group (p = . ). conclusion: increased systemic oxidative dna damage and dna susceptibility to oxidation may be resulted from diminished gsh/gssg ratio in ad patients. this finding shows the importance of antioxidant support in ad management. p- . . - validation of a liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry method for the measurement of lipid peroxidation product iso-prostaglandin f a in urine m. kant , m. akıs ß , h. _ is ßlekel , department of medical biochemistry, school of medicine, dokuz eylul university, izmir, department of molecular medicine, school of medicine, dokuz eylul university, izmir turkey -iso-prostaglandin f a ( -iso-pgf a ) is a reliable indicator of lipid peroxidation resulting from oxidative lipid damage and is postulated as a gold standard biomarker for the evaluation of oxidative stress. the aim of this study was to validate non-invasive and highly accurate stable isotope dilution-multiple reaction monitoring liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (sid-mrm lc-ms/ms) method for identification and quantification of -iso-pgf a . twenty four hour urine samples were collected from healthy volunteers at medical school of dokuz eylul university for analytical performance studies. lc-ms/ms analyses were performed on conventional hplc coupled to a triple quadrupole ion trap mass spectrometer equipped with a turboionspray tm source. analyst software version . were used for data analyses. mrm transitions used were m/z? / for -iso-pgf a and m/z? / for -iso-pgf a-d . analytical performance of the method was evaluated by linearity, selectivity, sensitivity, precision and accuracy studies using pure standards and samples extracted from urine of healthy volunteers. the linear calibration range for -iso-pgf a was determined as ng/ml by using standards ranging from . - ng/ml. analytical sensitivity of the method was determined by lod with s/n of and loq with s/n of . lod and loq for iso-pgf a were . À and À ng/ml, respectively. the assay stability and reproducibility were assessed by the precision and accuracy of intra-and interday measurements (n = ). the intra-and interday cvs for -iso-pgf a were . % and . %, respectively. sid-mrm lc-ms/ms method for absolute quantification of -iso-pgf a was optimized and validated in our laboratory and therefore this highly accurate method can successfully be applied to clinical patient samples. p- . . - synergistic anticancer effects of sulforaphane and cisplatin through the induction of apoptosis and autophagy following oxidative stress in malignant mesothelioma cells malignant mesothelioma is characterized by poor responsiveness to current chemotherapeutic drugs, usually owing to high resistance to apoptosis. here, we investigated chemosensitizing effects of phytochemical resveratrol, in combination with cisplatin, on malignant meothelioma cells. cell viability was evaluated using mtt assay. cell apoptosis was detected with dapi staining, caspase / activity assay and flow cytometry. cell cycle distributions, ros levels and mitochondrial membrane potential were determined using flow cytometry. the expression of cell cycle-, apoptosis-, and autophage-related proteins was measured with western blotting. the combination treatment of cisplatin and resveratrol (cis/res) synergistically induced apoptosis, as evidenced by typical cell morphological changes, the appearance of a sub-g /g peak, an increase in the annexin v(+) cells and the cleavage of caspase- and parp. cis/res increased ros production and depolarization of mitochondrial membrane potential with an increase in the bax/bcl- ratio. these changes were attenuated by pre-treatment with n-acetylcysteine, suggesting that cis/res induced apoptosis through oxidative mitochondrial damage. compared with msto- h cells, cis/res was less efficient in killing h- cells. h- cells exhibited an enhanced autophagy to cis/res, as observed by an increase in viable cells exhibiting intense lysotracker red staining and up-regulation of beclin- and lc a. inhibition of autophagy by bafilomycin a rendered cells more sensitive to cis/res-induced cytotoxicity and this was associated with induction of apoptosis. these data indicate that the increased resistance of h- cells to cis/res is closely related to the activation of self-defensive autophagy, and provide the rationale for targeting the autophagy regulation in the treatment of malignant meothelioma. stress oxidative induced by chemotherapy with cyclophosphamide (cp) causes vulnerability in sperm and decline of fertility. this study was aimed to evaluate the role of ethyl pyruvate (ep) in the amelioration of fertility and growth of primitive embryo in animals that received cp. adult male mice ( - weeks) were randomly divided into groups: control group received normal saline ( . ml/day, ip), cp group received cp ( mg/kg/week,¬ ip), the cp+ep group received ep ( mg/kg/day, ip) along with cp, were treated for days. mice from each group were arranged for evaluation of sperm quality and in vitro fertilization (ivf) too. afterward, the separated oocytes from ovulation stimulated mice were conducted to evaluation of ivf and embryo development. the results revealed that cp caused notable decrease in percentage of fertilization in cp group, but administration of ep along with cp caused an increase in the percentage of fertilization in comparison to cp group. the percentage of the two cell zygotes in cp+ep group, and the percentage of blastocysts in control and cp+ep groups were higher than that in cp group (p < . ). results showed that the total number of arrested embryos in control and cp+ep groups was decreased in comparison to cp group (p < . ). the percentage of arrested embryos type i, ii, and iii in cp+ep group was decreased in comparison to cp group, but that decrease was significant only in types i and ii (p < . ). the average motility, viability, nucleus maturity and sperm morphology were decreased significantly in cp group in comparison with control and ep groups, whereas ep caused significant increase of these parameters (p < . ). also, the percentage of dna damage was increased significantly in cp group in comparison with control and ep groups (p < . ). the results of this study indicated that the ethyl pyruvate was able to suppress free radicals and enhance the ivf and quality of sperm in cp treated animals. malathion, which is a member of organophosphate chemical family, is used to control pests and is a widely used pesticide all over the world. however it is also known to be highly toxic on many tissues including pancreas. to test this we set groups to administer a single dose of malathion dissolved in corn oil via oral gavage at the doses of mg/kg (group ), mg/kg (group ) and mg/kg (group ). only plain corn oil was given to control group (group ). the rats were sacrificed hours after administration of the chemical and the pancreases of rats were removed. in an attempt to evaluate the dose dependent response, we measured amylase and lipase activities, insulin, malondialdehyde (mda), total oxidant status (tos) levels in rat pancreases. all of the parameters were measured spectrophotometrically. we found that pancreas insulin levels significantly increased in group compare to group , besides the insulin levels of group and group were significantly higher than group (p < . ). pancreas amylase and lipase activities significantly decreased in group and group compare to group and group (p < . ). however, there was no significant change in pancreas mda and tos levels (p > . ). according to correlation analysis, when pancreas amylase levels declined, lipase levels were decreased simultaneously and there was a strong positive correlation between them (p < . ). in addition, when the comparison was evaluated as a binary, while pancreas amylase and lipase levels diminished, pancreas insulin levels increased and a strong negative correlation between them was found (p < . ). according to our result, acute administrations of malathion leads to alterations of insulin, amylase, and lipase levels with a dose dependent manner, while it does not to change oxidant status. the aim of this study is to evaluate the potential toxic effects of mancozeb on the stress biomarkers such as catalase (cat) activity, malondialdehyde (mda) level and protein levels in the brain tissue of zebrafish (danio rerio). mancozeb, is a synthetic fungicide contaminating aquatic environments as a potential toxic pollutants, was investigated in the present study for acute toxicity. zebrafish groups (m-low and m-high) were exposed to different doses of mancozeb ( mg l- and . mg l- ) for hours except the control group. catalase (cat) activity, malondialdehyde (mda) level and total protein levels were determined by spectrophotometer. the results showed that cat activity and mda levels were decreased in all experiment groups. protein levels were increased in experiment groups when compared to the control group. in conclusion, the changes in the cat activity and mda levels were time and as well as mancozeb dose-dependent. furthermore, the biochemical parameters of mancozeb exposure on zebrafish, showed that mancozeb has significant effect on the zebrafish and/or aquatic organisims. paracetamol (para), which is antipyretic and analgesic, is widely used around the world. paracetamol can be recommended for moderate or mild pains especially in pregnancy as an analgesic. it is known that, paracetamol can cause hepatotoxicity or nephrotoxicity. we were aimed that in this study to show potential hepatoprotective and nephroprotective effect of betaine against long term paracetamol using at therapeutic doses. it has been prepared groups, control, para and para+-betain groups. paracetamol and betaine were administered by gavage to pregnant rats, from first day to the last day of pregnancy (aprox. day). ml physiological saline (% . nacl solutions), mg/kg/day paracetamol, mg/kg/day paracetamol and mg/kg/day betain was given by orally to control, para and para+betain groups respectively. the day of the birth, newborn rats anesthetized by ether and after decapitated. newborn rat's liver and kidney tissues used for biochemical analysis [malondialdehyde (mda), reduced glutathione (gsh), nitric oxide (no) and paraoxonase-arylesterase (pon-are)] and rat's liver and kidney tissues used for histological studies. we showed that, mda and no levels was significantly increased, while pon activities decreased. on the other hand gsh levels and are activities was decreased but these decline wasn't significant in the liver and kidney para group. these biochemical results showed hepatotoxicity and nephrotoxicity in neonates which can be formed in long term maternal paracetamol using at therapeutic doses. also our histological findings was support these biochemical results. we used betaine against potential hepatotoxic and nephrotoxic effect of long term maternal paracetamol using at therapeutic doses for neonates. betaine has antioxidant properties and also used as a methyl donor for transsulfuration reactions in the cell. biochemical and histological examinations showed that betaine protected the tissue injury relatively. p- . . - lipid rafts are involved in modulation of ca + responses induced by glutoxim and molixan in macrophages pharmacological analogues of oxidized glutathione (gssg) disulfide-containing drugs glutoxim Ò (gssg disodium salt with dmetal nanoaddition, «pharma-vam», st. petersburg) and molixan Ò (complex of glutoxim with inosine nucleoside) have found clinical application as a wide range immunomodulators and hemostimulators. however, the cellular and molecular mechanisms of these drugs action are still unclear. previously we showed for the first time that glutoxim and molixan cause biphasic intracellular ca + concentration ([ca + ] i ) increase due to ca + mobilization from thapsigargin-sensitive ca + stores and subsequent store-dependent ca + entry in rat peritoneal macrophages. it is known that key proteins involved in ca + signaling are localized in discrete plasma membrane lipid rafts domains. lipid rafts are cholesterol and sphingolipids enriched microdomains that function as unique signal transduction platforms. thus, the aim of the present work was to elucidate the possible involvement of lipid rafts in glutoxim and molixan effects on [ca + ] i in macrophages. [ca + ] i measurements were performed with fura- am microfluorimetry. to examine the involvement of lipid rafts in the effect of gssg-based drugs on [ca + ] i we used methyl-bcyclodextrin (mbcd), widely used to remove cholesterol from membranes, thus disrupting the lipid raft domains. we have shown for the first time that macrophage preincubation with mm mbcd for hours before molixan addition causes significant inhibition of both ca + mobilization (on average, by . ae . %) and subsequent ca + entry (on average, by . ae . %), induced by molixan. similar results were obtained in experiments with glutoxim. thus, we have demonstrated for the first time that mbcd significantly decreases both phases of glutoxim-or molixan-induced ca + responses in macrophages. the results suggest that intact rafts are required to initiate complex signaling cascade activated by glutoxim or molixan and leading to [ca + ] i increase in macrophages. plant-derived natural substances (phytochemicals) with potent pro-apoptotic activity towards cancer cells in vitro are considered as promising nutraceuticals in anticancer therapy. nevertheless, due to their relatively low bioavailability, administration of high doses of nutraceuticals that are not achievable in vivo seems to exert potentially negligible physiological effects in clinical trials. thus, there is a need for revealing novel cytophysiological effects of low doses of phytochemicals towards cancer cells. in the present study, we have considered thirty one nutraceuticals and selected four phytochemicals acting at low micromolar range ( to lm) against phenotypically different mcf- , mda-mb- and sk-br- breast cancer cells, namely diosmin, sulforaphane, ursolic acid and betulinic acid. nutraceuticals inhibited cell proliferation and caused changes in the cell cycle that was accompanied by elevated levels of p , p , p and/or p . apoptosis (annexin v staining, multicaspase and mitopotential assays) was observed exclusively when nutraceuticals were used at the concentration of lm, whereas at the concentration of lm, stress-induced premature senescence was noticed (sa-b-gal activity). nutraceuticals diminished the levels of glut- and selected glycolytic enzymes. nutraceuticals promoted oxidative and nitrosative stress as judged by increased production of total reactive oxygen species, total and mitochondrial superoxide, nitric oxide and protein carbonylation. nutraceuticals also stimulated dna single and double strand breaks that was accompanied by atm phosphorylation and to a lesser extent by histone h ax phosphorylation and bp foci formation. taken together, several responses to nutraceutical treatment were observed in breast cancer cells that may reflect the heterogeneous nature of cancer cell populations. this study was supported by grant from the national science center, / /d/nz / . nucleolus is thought to be a stress sensor and oxidative and ribotoxic stimuli may cause the inhibition of rrna synthesis by the inactivation of transcription factor tif-ia/rrn that is accompanied by the relocation of nucleolar proteins and p -based cell cycle arrest and/or apoptosis. as nutraceutical-mediated modulation of nucleolar activity may be considered an attractive anticancer strategy, in the present study, we have investigated the effects of three selected nutraceuticals, namely sulforaphane, ursolic acid and betulinic acid on nucleolus state in three breast cancer cell lines (mcf- , mda-mb- and sk-br- ). we found that low dose nutraceutical treatment resulted in p -mediated inhibition of cell proliferation, a decrease in rrna synthesis, shifts in lamin a/c and b pools, changes in the nucleolar protein levels and their carbonylation, and changes in nucleolus size and number. breast cancer cells differed in erk activity that resulted in different patterns of erk activation/inhibition, phosphorylation status of s and autophagy induction upon nutraceutical stimulation. nutraceuticals also affected dna methylation parameters, namely the levels of dnmt , dnmt a and dnmt b that resulted in both global dna hypo-and hypermethylation. taken together, after nutraceutical treatment, nucleolus-centered cellular response was revealed in breast cancer cells of different phenotypic characteristic that may be considered a potential target of anticancer therapy. this study was supported by grant from the national science center, / /d/nz / . p- . . - rate of apoptosis in human macrophages infected with leishmania tropica promastigotes infection of the cells with parasites or exposing cells to heat stress induces a cellular stress. in the present study human macrophages are infected with leishmania tropica promastigotes and exposed to heat stress. the measurement of cytoplasmic histone-associated dna-fragments was carried out using elisa technique. visualization of apoptotic cells was performed by the terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dutp nick end labeling staining method (tunel). degree of oxidative stress on cell is evaluated by measuring nitric oxide (no), malondialdehyde (mda), reducte glutathion (gsh) levels and superoxide dismutase (sod) activities. results of the elisa technique showed that infection of macrophages with promastigotes induced apoptosis rate significantly (p < . ), heat stress however decreased the rate of apoptosis in infected macrophages remarkably (p < . ). high levels of apoptosis rate in infected macrophages and drastic decdrease in apoptosis in heat subjected macrophages infected with promastigotes are confirmed by visualisation of apoptotic cells using tunel method. levels of glutathion (gsh) in infected macrophages decreased significantly (p < . ), while malondialdehyde (mda) levels increased notably (p < . ). however, no statistical significant alterations were detected in the nitric oxide (no) values and superoxide dismutase (sod) activities. results of the present study indicates that infection of human macrophages with leishmania tropica induces a cellular stress response, characterized by decreased values of gsh and increased levels of mda. increased rate of apoptosis in infected macrophages may be due to the increased cellular stress caused by leishmania tropica amastigotes. decreased rate of apoptosis measured in heat exposed macrophages infected with promastigotes indicates an extention in life span of macrophages. measurements of the parameters characterizing the redox and inflammatory processes in blood are essential for diagnosis and prognosis of type diabetes mellitus (t dm), but also for monitoring the effectiveness of medical treatments. along with other biochemical effects, hormonal imbalance leads to modified transport function of erythrocytes due to changes in enzyme systems involved in upholding of cellular homeostasis through a rapid degradation of altered proteins, being the second line of defense against the free radicals, which degrade and eliminate the damaged molecules. some of these enzymes are hemoglobin peroxidase (pa) and esterase (ea). the aim of this research study was to identify new parameters with a potential role of biochemical markers in t dm like hemoglobin peroxidase and esterase activity from erythrocyte. our data showed that pathological processes involved in t dm imply an increased enzymatic activity of pa ( . %), which correlates with increased levels of ea ( . %) and glycated hemoglobin (hba c) ( . %), compared with control group. the variables hba c, pa and ea are correlated: the identified pearson correlation coefficients r = . and r = . respectively, have an associated probability of p < . and p < . a value that indicates a strong positive correlation between the dependent variables pa and ea and independent variable hba c. based on these results we concluded that together with glycosylated hemoglobin assay, all the studied parameters can be successfully used as extra test for diabetes associated with oxidative stress and disorders in erythrocyte functions or blood rheology. the radioprotective effects of propolis and caffeic acid phenethyl ester on radiationinduced oxidative/nitrosative stress in brain tissue s. taysi , e. demir , k. cinar gaziantep university, school of medicine, gaziantep, haran university, sanliurfa, department of neurosurgery, medical school, gaziantep, turkey head and neck cancer patients treated with radiotherapy suffer severe side effects during and following their treatment. efforts to decrease toxicity of irradiation to normal tissue, organs and cells have led to searching for cytoprotective agent. investigations for effective and non-toxic compounds with radioprotective capability led to increasing interest in antioxidant such as propolis and caffeic acid phenethyl ester (cape). the aim of this study was to evaluate the antioxidant and radioprotective effects of propolis and cape on radiation-induced oxidative/nitrosative stress in the brain tissue. fourty sprague-dawley rats were randomly divided into five groups. group (irradiation (ir) + propolis) received total cranium irradiation and propolis was given orally through an orogastric tube daily. group (ir+cape) received total cranium irradiation plus cape, was dissolved in dimethyl sulfoxide (dmso) just before giving to the rats, intraperitoneally (ip) every day. group (ir) received gy of gamma irradiation as a single dose to total cranium plus ml saline daily. group received daily plain dmso. group received daily plain saline. at the end of the day time period, xanthine oxidase (xo), nitric oxide synthase (nos) activities, nitric oxide (no•) and peroxynitrite (onoo -) levels were significantly higher in ir group compared to all other groups. in conclusion, the results suggest the radioprotective ability of propolis and cape involving prevention of radiation-induced oxidative/ nitrosative damage. p- . . - role of leptin and adiponectin in obesityassociated oxidative stress e. becer , a. c ß irakoglu near east university, nicosia, cyprus, istanbul university, istanbul, turkey objective: increased oxidative stress is one of the major characteristics of obesity and obesity-related complications. adipokines also induce the production of reactive oxygen species and generating oxidative stress in physiological and pathological conditions of obesity. the aim of this study was to determine the association of leptin and adiponectin levels with body mass index, lipid parameters and oxidative stress biomarkers in obesity. methods: the study included obese and non-obese subjects. plasma leptin and adiponectin levels (ng/ml) were measured using commercially available enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits. serum lipid, superoxide dismutase, malondialdehyde and antropometric parameters were measured. results: obese and non-obese subjects did not differ in age, while plasma glucose, total cholesterol, triglycerides, ldl cholesterol and leptin levels were significantly higher and mean hdl cholesterol and adiponectin levels were significantly lower in obese than non-obese subjects. the plasma leptin (p < . ) and adiponectin (p = . ) levels were significantly correlated with bmi in both obese and non-obese subjects. in obese subjects, leptin levels were significantly correlated with superoxide dismutase (p < . ) and malondialdehyde (p < . ). strikingly, adiponectin was significantly correlated with superoxide dismutase (p = . ) and malondialdehyde (p = . ) levels in obese group. conclusion: our results suggest that leptin and adiponectin levels are associated with defective antioxidant status and increased lipid peroxidation which may have implications in the development of obesity related health problems. clinical trials of biologically active plant substances show a significant preventive effect in cancer, cardiovascular diseases and peptic ulcer disease in the form of both nutritional supplements and therapeutic intervention. anthocyanins contained in dark berries show great antioxidant potential, with the most important including a reduction in oxidative degradation of lipids or tyrosine oxidation by peroxynitrite. our previous studies of the antioxidant properties of extracts from vaccinium corymbosum, aronia melanocarpa and sambucus nigra, however, indicated that their activities largely depend on the method of extraction. while quantitative determination of anthocyanins pointed to a disproportionately larger content of anthocyanins in isolates from lyophylized berries, their scavenging activities against hydroxyl radicals was surprisingly the lowest. inflammatory processes, vascular damage, atherosclerosis and others are caused by oxidativenitrosative stress, so we tested their efficiency to scavenge no degradation products. we found that only purified extracts of lyophilized berries showed the most significant effects against no degradation products, with efficacy of around %. an extract from aronia showed greater than % efficiency, and a net ethanol extract from all the berries showed a % effect. cleaned ethanol extracts showed the lowest effects, while aronia initiated production at a concentration of mg/l. conversely, all acetone extracts consistently initiated no degradation products. these findings are in complete contrast to their determined action against reactive oxygen species. in summary, it follows that a particularly adjusted lyophilized extract of the berries could be responsible for the increased biological activity of no and the observed biological and pharmacological activities of anthocyanins in circulatory disorders. the study was supported by grant vega / / and / / . p- . . - attenuation of dysfunction, oxidative stress and apoptosis by resveratrol in benzo(a)pyrene exposed ins -e / pancreatic beta cell line s. c ß elik, b. baysal faculty of medicine, afyon kocatepe university, afyonkarahisar, turkey diabetes is one of the most important problems in the world. this disease is a very important health problem due to affects many different organs and systems. it has been well established that, environmental pollutants had deleterious effects on glucose metabolism, and caused insulin resistance and type diabetes. with this investigation, it was aimed to investigate the effects of benzo(a)pyrene on pancreatic beta cells and treatment affects of resveratrol. in this study, rat ins- e beta cell line was used. after reaching the appropriate number of cells culture operations by cell culture, benzo(a)pyrene ( lm, hours) application have been made after resveratrol ( lm, hours) application. after incubations oxidative stress, insulin secretion (in cell and in medium), cell proliferation and apoptosis were analysed in cells by biochemical and molecular techniques. b(a)p application resulted in no increase and resveratrol also increased this level of no. resveratrol increased the tas levels decrased by b(a)p, and tos levels were also increased by resveratrol interestingly. osi levels determined with tas and tos levels, has no significant change between groups. gsh levels were decreased by b(a)p while resveratrol increased its' level to control level. mrna expression levels of beta cell functions related genes ins- , ins- and sirt- were increased by resveratrol treatment. insulin levels in cell and in medium were increased after resveratrol treatment. mrna expression level of foxo- gene was increased while pdx- was decreased by resveratrol treatmeant. b(a)p suppressed the mrna expression of p gene, but resveratrol increased. the effects of b(a)p on pancreatic beta cells and the protective effects of resveratrol on this cells were investigated in vitro with this research firstly. the results obtained from this research showed that oxidative changes, functional impairment and carcinogenetic effects of b(a) p in pancreatic beta cells could be blocked by resveratrol. the protective effect of vitamin e (alphatocopherol) on ischemia-reperfusion injury in rat liver ischemia-reperfusion (i/r) process is usually used during transplantation and resection of the liver but liver dysfunction and cellular death due to lack of oxygen in tissues, changes in the balance of oxidant/antioxidant in favor of oxidants, and inflammatory response are inevitable during this process. in the present study, it was aimed to investigate whether vitamin e(alpha-tocopherol), an antioxidant agent, has a protective effect against liver ischemia reperfusion injury in rats by using morphometric methods. for this purpose, adult sprague-dawley male rats were divided into groups as; control, ischemia / reperfusion (i/r), and vitamin e+ischemia/reperfusion (evit +i/r). in experimental groups, the total hepatic ischemia was applied for minutes followed by a hour of reperfusion. in the treatment group, days before ischemia mg / kg dose of vitamin e was administered intraperitoneally once a day. after the termination of the reperfusion, the rats were perfused by cardiac way and liver tissues were dissected. following volume and weight calculations, the livers were subjected to the standard histological preparation methods and embedded in paraffin. serial sections at lm thickness were obtained from these blocks, stained with hematoxylineosin, and analyzed with morphometric methods. in light microscopic examinations of the i/r group, irregularity in lobules, dilatation in central veins and sinusoids, extensive areas of necrosis and pycnotic nuclei were seen in hepatocytes. the volume density of sinusoids to liver parenchyma was estimated as % in the control group, whereas it was % in the i/r group. this value was decreased to % in the evit + i/ r group. however, no significant difference was found among the groups in the lobule area calculated by the point counting method. these results show that intraperitoneal vitamin e administration for days prior to ischemia partially inhibits damage caused by ischemia-reperfusion injury in the liver. the leaves, fruit and bark of annona muricata, a member of the annonaceae family, are commonly used in the traditional medicine of tropical and subtropical regions. in recent years, many studies have shown their anti-cancer, anti-convulsant, antiarthritic, anti-parasitic, anti-malarial, and anti-diabetic activities. it should be noted that these characteristics have been described using different types of extracts from different parts of the plant. our studies have focused on the systematic characterization of activities most easily accessible from an aqueous extract of leaves, with hitherto documented antihypertensive and hepatoprotective effects. we found that the extract shows almost % efficiency against hydroxyl radicals. with increasing concentrations, the effectiveness weakened, reaching a second peak ( %) at a concentration of mg/l. the scavenging activity against no degradation products maintained a continuously increasing trend with a maximum at a concentration of mg/l. surprisingly, the extract initiated peroxynitrite production in a similar trend, except at mg/l, where it scavenged peroxynitrites with relatively high efficiency, up to %. these findings are consistent with the elevated levels of reduced glutathione detected after incubation of liver mitochondria with extract to a maximum concentration of mg/l, with subsequent sharp decline. the activity of glutathione s-transferase was decreased, although not significantly. this indicates a reduction of metabolic processes of compounds, allowing their action over a longer period of time. in a live system, even antihypertensive effects can be observed. however, a significant outflow of gsh to create the gsh adducts of active substances, and particularly s-nitrosoglutathione from increased production of peroxynitrites, can cause liver toxicity. the study was supported by grant vega / / and / / . the role of polyamine metabolism in curcumin induced apoptosis via reactive oxygene species (ros) generation in growth hormone (gh) overexpressed t d breast cancer cells r. genc ß, a. coker gurkan, e. d. arisan, p. obakan yerlikaya, n. palavan unsal, n. palavan unsal t.c istanbul k€ ult€ ur € universitesi, istanbul, turkey autocrine growth hormone (gh) signaling triggers cell proliferation, growth, metastasis and drug resistance in cancer cells. polyamines (pas) play an essential role in cell cycle, proliferation, growth and carcinogenesis of various cancer types such as prostate, colon and breast cancer. odc (ornithine decarboxylase) is the key enzyme in the pa biosynthetic pathway that is under control of antizyme (az) and antizyme inhibitor (azi) activity. pa catabolic enzymes polyamine oxidase (pao) and spermine/spermidine acetyle transferase (ssat) by-products triggers reactive oxygene species (ros) generation and apoptotic cell death. curcumin decreased cell viability in dose and time dependent manner in t d wt and gh+ cells. although forced gh expression induced cell proliferation, lm curcumin inhibited cell invasion. curcumin ( lm) induced apoptosis by acting on intrinsic and extrinsic pathway in both cell lines. moreover, curcumin supressed odc, azi expression in wt and gh+ t d cancer cells. although curcumin decreased az expression in t d wt cancer cell, increased az expression was determined in t d gh cancer cell. pao and ssat expressions were upregulated in t d gh+ cells. concomitantly, putrescine levels were increased in t d gh+ cancer cell compared to wt cells and curcumin depleted spermidine and spermine levels in wt and gh + t d cells. curcumin induced-apoptotic cell death via ros generation and co-treatment of n-acetyl cysteine (nac) overcame curcumin effect. conclusion, forced gh expression triggers cell proliferation and growth via acting on polyamine metabolism and curcumin-triggered ros generation was prevented by nac treatment in t d wt and gh+ breast cancer cells. acknowledgment: this study was supported by tubitak research project (project no: z ). the radio-protective effects of propolis and nigella sativa oil on oxidative/nitrosative stress in liver tissue of rats exposed to total head irradiation s. taysi our purpose is to investigate propolis and nigella sativa oil (nso) for their antioxidant effects on the liver tissue of rats exposed to ionizing radiation. a total of sprague-dawley rats were divided into five groups to test the radioprotective effectiveness of of propolis and nso administered by orogastric tube. appropriate control group was also studied. biochemical parameters in liver tissue of rats were determined by spectrophotometer. xanthine oxidase (xo), nitric oxide synthase (nos), superoxide dismutase (sod) activities, nitric oxide (no•) and malondialdehyde (mda) levels were higher in ir group while glutathione-s-transferase (gst), glutathione peroxidase (gsh-px) level in the ir group were lower in this group when compared to the other groups. gst activity in ir plus propolis group was statistically higher than in all other groups. propolis and nso clearly protect liver tissue from radiationinduced oxidative stress. the effects of royal jelly on the antioxidant parameters in the breast tissues of the rats with breast carcinoma treated with paclitaxel or not effects of royal jelly on the breast tissue antioxidant parameters in rats with breast carcinoma treated with paclitaxel or not. - weeks old female sprague-dawley rats (n = ) included in current study were divided into groups: control group (n = ) with healthy rats; breast cancer group (n = ); breast cancer group (n = ) treated with mg/kg paclitaxel injection (once a week for weeks); breast cancer group (n = ) treated with mg/kg royal jelly (by oral gavage for days); and finally breast cancer group (n = ) treated mg/kg royal jelly in addition to mg/kg paclitaxel injection. rats with breast carcinoma was obtained at th days after a single dose injection of mg/kg n-methyl-n-nitrosourea (mnu). all cancer groups were followed by days with treatment of paclitaxel and/or royal jelly. the antioxidant parameters in rat breast tissues, superoxide dismutase (sod) and catalase (cat) activities were determined by spectrophotometric colorimetric methods and glutathione (gsh) by high performance liquid chromatography (hplc). all the antioxidant parameters decreased in breast cancer group without any treatment (p < . ). but, statistically non significant increases were observed by paclitaxel and royal jelly treatment (p > . ). this study indicated that royal jelly supplementation can not be sufficient to increase the antioxidant parameters in breast cancer. we are going to continue to identify the effects of royal jelly on breast cancer detail. the effects of n-acetylcysteine on microsomal and serum paraoxonase activities at high fat diet induced obese rats obesity is a chronic disease that develops from the interaction between genotype and environmental factors and increase in the accumulation of body fat. it is related with glucose and lipid metabolism disorders, cardiovascular diseases and increased oxidative stress. paraoxanase (pon ) is an enzyme which plays a protective role in oxidative stress, inflammation and liver diseases. it has been suggested that pon has protective effects against high fat diet induced obesity and obesity related disorders. n-asetylcysteine (nac) is a potent antioxidant due to its ability to stimulate glutathione synthesis. the aim of this study was to evaluate the microsomal and serum pon enzyme activities (paraoxonase, arylesterase and lactonase) at high fat diet induced obese rats in the presence of nac. this study consisted of control, obese and nac-supplemented obese ( g/l nac) groups. eighteen sprague-dawley rats were randomized into three groups (n = ). control rats were fed by standart food and obese and nac groups were fed by high fat diet. the microsomal and serum paraoxonase, arylesterase and lactonase activities were determined by colorimetric methods. serum paraoxonase, arylesterase and lactonase activities decreased in obese and nac groups when compared to control groups. on the other hand microsomal paraoxonase, arylesterase and lactonase activities increased in nac group when compared to control and obese groups. however there was no statistically significant difference between the groups. it has been concluded that the microsomal and serum paraoxonase enzyme activities did not change at high fat diet induced obese rats in the presence of n-asetylcysteine. reactive oxygen species, playing an active role in the early and late course of acute pancreatitis, lead to dysfunction of cell membrane and releasing of lysosomal enzymes, and thereby to the injury in pancreatic cells. gallic acid, found in vegetables such as green tea, is an active component which has antioxidant, antiinflammatory, antiviral, anticancer activities. the aim of this study was to investigate the effects of gallic acid in experimental acute necrotizing pancreatitis (anp) model in rats. eighteen male sprague-dawley rats were divided into three groups ( rats in each group). group : sham + saline; group : anp induced by intraductal glycodeoxycholic acid and intravenous cerulein; and group : anp + gallic acid ( mg/kg/day, intraperitoneal). at the end of th hours, pancreas histopathology was examined. the levels of serum amylase as a diagnostic marker of pancreatitis, interleukin- (il- ), total antioxidant status (tas), nitrite + nitrate, total thiols as antioxidant marker and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (tbars) to measure malondialdehyde (lipid peroxidation product) were determined by spectrophotometric methods. serum amylase, il- , plasma tbars levels were significantly higher but total thiols levels were lower than sham group in anp group without treatment (p < . ). however; tas and nitrite + nitrate levels did not show any significant difference (p > . ). on the other hand, while serum amylase, il- and tbars levels were lower, total thiols levels higher in gallic acid treatment group than in the untreated anp group, but statistically insignificant (p > . ). in conclusion, gallic acid treatment is beneficial but not sufficient to treat the acute necrotizing pancreatitis in rats. p- . . - evaluation of oxidant/antioxidant system parameters, il- and il- levels in amniotic fluid of pregnancies with down sydrome b. _ imge erg€ uder , s. bahsi , t. bahsi , v. topc ßu , a. bakir ankara universty faculty of medicinel, ankara, zekai tahir burak research and training, hospital genetic center, ankara, turkey introduction and aim: down sydrome (ds) can be diagnosed at high-risk of down syndrome pregnancies by invasive prenatal testing. in this study we aimed to demonstrate antioxidant/oxidant system markers, il and il levels in amniotic fluid samples of pregnancies affected by ds. materials and methods: for this purpose we collected amniotic fluid samples from pregnancies affected by down sydrome and normal healthy pregnancies who applied to zekai tahir burak research and training hospital genetic center and were proceeded with amniocenthesis. in the amniotic fluid samples; malondialdehyde (mda), superoxide dismutase (sod), glutathion peroksidase (gsh-px) xhantine oksidase (xo), catalase (cat), adenozine deaminase (ada), nitric oxide (no), nitric oxide senthase (nos) enzymatic activities were evaluated by spectrophotometric methods, il and il levels are evaluated by elisa. for statistical analysis student's t-test and spearman corralation analusis are used. results: it was found that sod levels are significantly elevated in study group compared to control group (p < . ). besides this, in study group, cat and il- levels are found singnificantly lower than control group (p < . ). we couldn't find any significant difference between two groups in terms of mda, gsh-px, xo, no, nos, ada ve il- levels (p > . ). discussion and conclusion: there is an important decrease in inflammation compared to normal pregnancie in the amniotic fluid of pregnancies having ds. based on these results, sod enzyme may be used as a marker for prenatal diagnosis of ds. for this purpose these experiments should be tried on larger sample groups. the aim of our work was to compare prooxidant and antioxidant properties of linalool, which is the oxygenated monoterpene compound reported to be a major volatile component of the essential oil of several aromatic species, in hep g cells. cytotoxicity of linalool was assayed by celltiter-blue Ò cell viability assay. malondialdehyde levels result in membrane damage in hep g cells were assayed by using fluorometric method. hep g cells were incubated with linalool at , and hours. the viability of hep g cells decreased in a manner dependent upon concentration and incubation time. the ic values were calculated . lg/ml ( hours), . lg/ml ( hours) and . lg/ml ( hours). but, cell viability of hep g cells increased when the cells preincubated with linalool at lower concentrations (˂ic ) against h o cytotoxicity. membrane-damaging effects of linalool were increased with accelerating concentrations. on the other hand, membrane damaging effect of h o was decreased when the cells preincubated with linalool before h o incubation. oxygenated monoterpene linalool had both prooxidant and antioxidant properties showing membrane damaging and protective effects on hep g cells depend on concentration. postprandial lipemia is primarily characterized by increasing triglyceride levels after the lipid rich meal. postprandial lipemia may cause oxidative stress by increasing free radical production and increasing oxidative stress could be responsible for the development of many diseases. plasma oxidant-antioxidant status was evaluated in healthy individuals with postprandial hypertriglyceridemia generated by performing oral triglyceride tolerence test (ottt). the study group included subjects ( female and male). ferric reducing ability of plasma (frap), total thiol and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (tbars) levels were determined by colorimetric methods at fasting and nd, th and th hours following ottt. the levels of frap and thiol were significantly higher in males than females (p = . and . , respectively). thiol levels decreased significantly in both gender at postprandial nd, th and th hours as compared with fasting condition (p = . ). while tbars levels increased at postprandial nd hour, that was only significant for male individuals (p = . ). it has been concluded that postprandial lipemia may change oxidant-antioxidant balance in favor of oxidants and gender is an important criteria while assessing the oxidant-antioxidant status in postprandial lipemia p- . . - ischemia modified albumin and c-reactive protein levels in prediabetes prediabetes is a state of abnormal glucose homeostasis characterized by the presence of impaired fasting glucose, impaired glucose tolerance, or both. the aim of this study was assess serum ischemia modified albumin (ima) in prediabetes and determine its correlation with other risk factors for chronic complications such as inflammation and hyperglycemia. glucose, insulin, total cholesterol, hdl cholesterol, triglycerides, albumin, c-reactive protein (crp) and ima were measured in patients with prediabetes and controls. prediabetes patients had higher levels of ima and crp in comparison with control subjects but there was no significant difference between groups for ima. significant positive correlation was observed between crp and fasting glucose, insulin. there was no significant correlation between ima levels and the parameters tested. we have shown higher level of crp in prediabetes. these results support the hypothesis that chronic inflammation may be involved in development of hyperglycaemia. p- . . - the effects of s _ io nanoparticles of rat uterine smooth muscle specially used in textile field sio nanoparticles on uterus smooth muscle was aimed to be researched. in this study wistar albino female rats were used. rats were separated in groups as control, dose ( lg/ml), dose ( lg/ml) and dose ( lg/ml). nanoparticle's size was chosen as nm. preparations of four groups were evaluated for biochemical and histological examinations. all isolated uterine smooth muscle stripts except the controls were treated with sio for two hours. in biochemical examinations in order to evaluate oxidative stress level of malondialdehit (mda), activity of superoxide dysmutase (sod) and glutathione peroxidase (gsh-px) were measured. in histological examinations via electron microscope ultrastructure of uterus was examined as well as apoptotic cells detected with immunofluorescent labeling method. intergroups differences were defined by statistical analysis. while mda level increased depending on the dosage, sod level was decreased depending on the dosage. gsh-px rate was decreased for each dosage with respect to control. however, no significant difference is detected between groups. in electron microscopic examination no changes were observed in uterus ultrastructure with compare to control. however, in immunofluorescent labeling it was detected that apoptosis increased in dosage groups with compare to control group. as a result, it was thought that application of sio nanoparticles, in nm size and in , and lg/ml dosages caused of oxidative stress and apoptosis. this results suggested that sio has toxic effects on uterine smooth muscle. uterine myomas are the most common benign pelvic tumors arising from myometrium. they are rarely associated with mortality but responsible for significant morbidity and have adverse effects on quality of life especially in reproductive age women. reactive oxygen species and superoxide dismutases, as well as sex steroids play important roles in the reproductive physiology processes. in addition, oxidative stress and impaired antioxidant defense system have been linked to pathophysiology of various diseases including malignant gynecological disorders. clinical investigations indicate that women with myoma may have increased risk of developing malignant tumors particularly sarcomas. the present study aimed to investigate the possible role of oxidant and antioxidant status in myomas. blood and urine samples of myoma patients were collected. activities of erythrocyte antioxidant enzymes [copper-zinc superoxide dismutase (cuzn-sod), catalase (cat), glutathione peroxidase (gpx )] and levels of lipid peroxidation biomarkers [plasma malondialdehyde (mda) and urine -epi-prostaglandin f a ( -epi-pgf a)] were determined. the results were compared with those of controls. the groups were matched in terms of age, body mass index, smoking habit, coexisting chronic diseases, menopausal status and sex steroid hormone levels. all antioxidant enzyme activities were higher ( % for cuzn-sod, p = . ; % for cat, p . ) and the levels of lipid peroxidation biomarkers were lower (% for mda, p = . and % for -epi-pgf a, p > . ) in myoma patients compared to controls. correlation analyses showed a significant negative correlation between erythrocyte cuznsod activity and plasma mda levels (r = - . , p = . ). the decreased lipid peroxidation may be the consequence of elevated antioxidant enzyme activities and the data suggests a protective role of activated antioxidants especially cuznsod and cat in patients with myoma. p- . . - investigation of ischemia-modified albumin levels in patient with acute limb ischemia introduction: acute limb ischemia commonly occurs as a result of embolus caused by cardiac origin and which may end up with limb loss or even death if left untreated. thrombosis are usually seen where the arteries give branches and tendency to atherosclerosis is more serious at these sites. involvement of several arteries in either embolus or in situ thrombosis limits the adequacy of collateral circulation. restriction of blood flow due to arterial stenosis or occlusion often leads patients to complain of muscle pain on walking. any further reduction in blood flow causes ischemic pain at rest, which affects the foot. early recognition may prevent limb loss or death. ischemia can alter the capacity of the amino terminus of the albumin to bind free metal atoms such as cobalt, copper and nickel. this new, chemically changed albumin is called ischemia modified albumin (ima). ima is a sensitive marker of myocardial ischemia, skeletal muscle ischemia, pulmonary embolism, mesenteric ischemia and stroke. therefore, in this study it was aimed to investigate the ima level in acute limb ischemia. materials and methods: in this study, patients with acute limb ischemia (li group; mean age years) and healthy individuals (control group; mean age years) were included. ima levels were detected in control and li group by elisa (organo teknika, avusturya) using ima el _ isa kit. results: ima values were compared with nonparametric methods mann whitney u test, and significantly decreased ima level was statistically significantly different between li group and control group (p < . ). conclusion: there is a significant increase in serum ima in limb ischemia, so that alterations also might be clinically useful in the diagnosis of limb ischemia, but should be supported with further studies. object: polycystic ovary syndrome (pcos) is a multifaceted disorder with a pathogenetic pathway that is not fully understood yet. apart from hormonal derangements, insulin signaling defects and adipose tissue dysfunction, oxidative stress, defined as an imbalance derived from excessive formation of oxidants in the presence of limited antioxidants defenses, has been actively implicated in the etiology of the syndrome. the aim of this study was to determine of serum myeloperoxidase activity (mpo), paraoxonase activity (pon ) and arylesterase activity (are) in patients with pcos. material and methods: the study was carried out on women consisted of patients with pcos and healthy ones as control. serum pon activities were measured spectrophotometrically using diethyl-p-nitrophenylphosphate as substrate. phenylacetate was used as substrate for are measurement, and are activity was determined by measuring absorbance of the resulting phenol at nm. molar absorptivity coefficients were used in the calculation of pon and are activities as nmol phenol/ml serum/min. result: the mpo and are activities were significantly lower in the patient groups when compared with the control group ( . ae . - . ae . u/ml p < . , . ae . - . ae . u/ml p < . , recpectively). the pon activities are higher in the patient group ( . ae . u/ml) compared to the control group ( . ae . u/ml) are found, but are not statistically significant. conclusion: lower serum mpo and are activities might contribute to the increased susceptibility for the development of diseases risk in women with pcos. because free oxygen radicals are thought to contribute to the complication of many chronic diseases, the pcos may be related to oxidative stress. subclinical hypothyroidism, defined as an elevated serum thyroid stimulating hormone level associated with serum thyroid hormone concentrations within the reference range. free radicalmediated oxidative stress has been implicated in the pathogenesis of thyroid disorders. the ischemia-modified albumin (ima) has been proposed as a marker of protein oxidative damage, which has been found to reflect hypoxic stress. this study aimed to investigate the influence of subclinical hypothyroidism on serum ima levels. thirty-one subclinical hypothyroidism patients and control subjects were enrolled in the study. albumin, ima were measured and ima/albumin ratio was calculated. to determine the ima levels the measurement method based on albumin cobalt binding assay was used. serum ima levels of patients with subclinical hypothyroidism were . ae . absu, ima levels of control subjects were . ae . absu. ima levels were significantly higher in patients with subclinical hypothyroidism patients than in control subjects (p < . ). when ima values were normalized for albumin concentrations, the ima/albumin ratio was also significantly elevated in patient group compared to control group (p < . ). ima levels are increased in patients with thyroid dysfunction. elevated levels of ima can be a clinically useful marker of protein oxidative damage in subclinical hypothyroidism. p- . . - the effects on endothelial dysfunction of quercetin in streptozocin-induced diabetic rats excessively produced in pathologic conditions. ultimately, imbalance between oxidants and antioxidants results with oxidative stress (os). in this study, we investigated some os parameters in standard ( % protein, % ( % sucrose) carbohydrate, % lipid) and sucrose ( % protein, % ( % sucrose) carbohydrate, % lipid) diet fed bdnf heterozygous mice liver tissues. the male c bl strain wild type (+/+) and bdnf heterozygous (+/À) mice ( weeks) were obtained. the animals were fed ad libitum by special standard and sucrose diets. twenty four mice were divided into four groups and each group consist six mice. all mice were fed for weeks. first group involved in c bl wild type mice and fed by standard diet. second group contained c bl bdnf heterozygous mice and fed by standard diet. third group consisted c bl wild type mice and fed by sucrose diet. fourth group involved in c bl heterozygous mice and fed by sucrose diet. in first group, mda levels, sod and cat activities were higher than other groups. in second group, cat activities were lower than other groups. but, we could not find any statistically significant differences between all groups about mda, sod, cat levels in bdnf heterozygous mice liver tissues. in conclusion, standard and sucrose diet feeding may not affect mda, sod and cat levels in bdnf heterozygous mice liver tissues. brain-derived neurotrophic factor (bdnf) is member of neurotrophin family which plays critical roles in the development, differention, survival, maintenance of the central and peripheral nervous systems. bdnf also contributes to food intake and body weight control. bdnf heterozygous mice display increased body weight and mild hyperphagia. expression of bdnf is not limited to the brain, it also express some peripheral tissues like adipose tissue, liver, kidney, skeletal muscle, heart. even though roles of bdnf are well known relatively in central nervous systems, effects of this protein is not clear in peripheral tissues. as mentioned before, it is expressed in organs involved in energy, lipid and glucose homeostasis, including the liver, adipose and muscle tissues, but its role there remains unclear. in this study, we aimed to investigate role of bdnf on liver oxidative stress parameters in heterozygous mice model fed fat diet induced obese mice. in this study, we used c bl/ mice inbred strain wild type and bdnf heterozygous (+/À) mice. animals were divided to two groups: wild type (n = ) and bdnf heterozygote mice (n = ). the animals were fed ad libitum by high-fat diet during month. weight gain was recorded every th days. in liver tissues were measured malondialdehyde (mda), superoxide dismutase (sod) and catalase (cat) by spectrophotometric methods. liver mda levels decreased in obese bdnf heterozygous mice compared to obese wild type group and statistically significant difference between groups. bdnf heterozygous mice cat activities were higher than the other group and this difference was statistically significant. there was no statistically significant difference between the groups in terms of sod activities. it has been concluded that the mda levels and sod enzymes activities changed at high-fat diet induced obese bdnf heterozygous mice compared to wild type mice liver tissues. p- . . - disturbances of microelements profile in serum of overweight/obese adult females with acute and persistent pro-inflammatory chlamydia pneumoniae infection p- . . - determination of reactive oxygen species induced dna damage using modified cupric reducing antioxidant capacity (cuprac) colorimetric method s. uzunboy, s. demirci c ß ekic ß, r. apak department of chemistry, istanbul university, faculty of engineering, istanbul, turkey reactive oxygen species (ros) term is a common name of a group of species. hydroxyl radical and singlet oxygen can be taken into account as ros samples. ros may be formed as a result of endogenous or exogenous reasons. although ros have some beneficial functions, they should be balanced by antioxidants (aox). excessive amounts of ros can attack biological macromolecules including dna. dna damage is usually related with mutagenic and carcinogenic changes. that's why determination of dna damage is so important and there are a great many studies in literature comprising different techniques. one of the most common of them is the 'comet assay'. but application of the method and interpretation of the results is not easy. investigation of certain dna damage products is also very common. these methods usually need expensive instrumentation such as using tandem mass spectrometry. on the other hand, depicting total dna damage on a certain product may cause misinterpretations. in the presented study, dna was decomposed by hydroxyl radicals produced by fenton method. in the study while dna is not cuprac reactive the oxidation products can react with the cuprac reagent. the effect of aox was also investigated. for this purpose, selected aox compounds were added to the reaction medium. because of their radical scavenging effect, the cuprac absorbance decreased in the presence of aox. in the presence and absence of aox, absorbance differences were calculated. the calibration graphs between final concentration and absorbance differences were drawn for each aox. gallic acid was determined as the most effective one among the tested aox samples. for statistical comparison with the presented study, tbars was used as reference method. direct use of dna as a probe material to determine oxidative damage may be an advantage to understand dna hazard in biological systems. the proposed method can be applied in all laboratories having a spectrometer as a cost-effective and simple procedure. p- . . - effects of alpha- antagonists on oxidative system of rat heart tissue benign prostate hyperplasia is a progressive process occurring in the stromal and epithelial components of the prostate. alpha- receptor blocking agents are used for relaxation of the smooth muscles in the prostatic stroma. our aim was to investigate the effects of alpha- antagonists on oxidative system of rat heart tissue. male wistar albino rats were divided into groups randomly. ) tamsulosin ( mg/kd/day), ) terazosin ( mg/kg/day), ) doksazosin ( mg/kg/day), ) alfuzosin ( mg/kg/day), ) control. all drugs were administered every other day single doze via oral. rats were sacrificed after days. heart tissue was taken for biochemical analysis. malondialdehyde (mda), nitric oxide (no), protein carbonyl (pc) levels and superoxide dismutase (sod), glutathione peroxidase (gsh-px) enzyme activities were determined in supernatant samples. there was not an significant difference between terazosin, doxazosin, alfuzosin, tamsulosin groups in means of sod, mda and gsh-px levels. no levels were significantly different between tamsulosin group and the control group (p = . ). in addition, tamsulosin group and terazosin group were also significantly different (p = . ). according to these results we can say that tamsulosin group had higher no levels than control and terazosin group. tamsulosin's enhancer effect on no levels leads to relaxation of the heart muscle and vascular relaxation, and so fewer side effects than other alpha antagonists. the effect of rat liver tissue radical metabolism and the protective role of hippophae rhamnoides l. on cold and immobilization stress model cold and immobilization stress is a widely used model for study the changes that occur on oxidant-antioxidant balance. hippophae rhamnoides l. (seabuckthorn; sbt) a unique and valuable plant has recently gained worldwide attention, mainly for its medicinal and nutritional potential. this study was aimed to investigate the protective role of sbt which is a natural herbal product with high antioxidant content on oxidative and nitrosative stress induced by cold and immobilization stress in rats. wistar albino rats were divided into groups randomly. control (i.p. physiological saline), sbt (i.p. mg/kg/ hours sbt), stress (i.p. physiological saline; hours cold + immobilization stress) and sbt + stress (i.p. mg/kg/ hours sbt; hours cold + immobilization stress) groups were formed. nitrotyrosine levels were determined by elisa whereas total antioxidant capacity, total thiol, total glutathione, nitrite-nitrate levels and superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase activities were measured by colorimetric methods. sbt + stress group nitrite-nitrat (p = . ), total glutathione (p = . ) levels and glutathione peroxidase activities (p = . ) were found to be significantly higher whereas superoxide dismutase activity was found to be lower (p = . ) when compared to stress group. there was no significant differences between stress group total thiol and total antioxidant capacity levels compared with stress + sbt group. stress + sbt group oxidative and nitrosative stress marker -nitrotyrosine level was found to be significantly higher when compared with control group (p = . ) whereas there was no significant differences between stress and stress + sbt groups. all this data show that sbt has antioxidant properties on cold and immobilization induced oxidative and nitrosative stress in rat liver tissue. obesity is a major health problem with growing incidence and accompanying complications. its relation with diminished cognitive functions was reported. this study aims to evaluate the effects of obesity induced oxidative stress and metabolic alterations on the cognitive functions of children and adults. children and adolescents with obesity (age: - ); and age and gender matched healthy subjects were enrolled. all subjects completed the battery tests of cnsvs via computer. the scores were compared by using commercial software (ibm spss statistics ). biochemical parameters, malondialdehyde (mda) and protein carbonyl (pc) levels were estimated. mda and pc levels were significantly higher in subjects with obesity ( . ae . lmol/l; . ae . nmol/ml) than the controls ( . ae . lmol/l; . ae . nmol/ml) (< . ). there was statistically significant difference between study and control groups on all cognitive performance domains. significant correlation was detected between mda, pc levels and the cognition indexes. children with obesity should be evaluated for the cognitive functions, together with the metabolic follow-up. obesity induced oxidative stress may be the reason of the diminished cognition in children as well as the changes in the lipid profile and inflammation, but we need larger study groups to lighten these complex process. p- . . - relative contribution of nitric oxide synthase (nos) isoforms to oxidative/nitrosative stress in the cerebral cortex of rat with acute liver failure (alf) acute liver failure (alf) is associated with deregulation of nmda/cgmp/no signaling and oxidative/nitrosative stress in the brain. however, the relative roles of the different nos isoforms and the mechanisms underlying alterations in their activities during alf are not fully clear. here we investigated gene and protein expression of nos isoforms, nos activity, enos uncoupling and total no production in cerebral cortex of rats with thioacetamide (taa)-induced alf. sprague dawley rats ( - g) received three i.p. injections of taa ( mg/kg) at hours intervals. the brain cortex expression nos isoforms (enos/inos/nnos) was measured by real-time pcr and western blot, nos activity was tested by monitoring the conversion of radiolabeled arginine to citrulline. reactive oxygen species (ros) were quantified in the presence of nos substrate l-arginine, using the carboxy-h dcfda probe. no was measured with the griess procedure. the enos expression was decreased, whereas the enos dimmer/monomer ratio and nnos/inos expression were elevated in taa treated rats. while the total nos activity was decreased, the inos activity was elevated and no concentration tended to increase. ros production was elevated by taa. unspecific nos inhibitors l-name and l-nna attenuated ros production in both control and taa rats, but with higher efficiency in the latter case. ca + chelation had almost the same effect as pharmacological nos inhibition suggesting that ca + -independent inos activity is not the main source of ros. incubation with high dose of tetrahydrobiopterin (bh ) with which is critical for enos dimerization and subsequent no production also reduced ros production indicating the enos uncoupling phenomenon in taa cortex. the study points to enos downregulation due to lowered protein expression and uncoupling as a novel mechanism contributing to enhanced superoxide o anion formation, and confirms the role of inos/nnos in enhancing no synthesis in alf-affected brain. introduction: diabetes mellitus (dm) is an endocrine disorder of world which is characterized by altered blood glucose levels and related complications including hepatic injury. myrtus communis l. (mc) is widely used by diabetic patients in the folk medicine of turkey as well as they are used worlwide. it is known that of leaves, oil and fruit of myrtus communis l. (mc) have therapeutic effects on diabetes mellitus (dm). this study was aimed to analyze the possible antidiabetic and hepatoprotective effects of mc berries in streptozotocin (stz) induced diabetic rats. materials and methods: a total of thirty rats composed of six groups as each included five rats were used. mg/kg stz was injected once to animals to induce dm. after stz injection, rats were exposed to three different ethanol extracts of mc berries ( , and mg/kg) by oral gavage during days. alanine aminotransferase (alt) and aspartate aminotransferase (ast) levels were determined in serum and glutathione (gsh), malondialdehyde (mda) levels and superoxide dismutase (sod) activity were determined in liver tissue. results: mc administration provided significant reducement in the altered serum glucose, ast and alt levels in all diabetic groups. mc extract showed significant antioxidant activity by altering sod activity and gsh level and reducing mda levels in diabetic rats compared to controls (p < . ). serum ast and alt levels were reduced by mc administration in all diabetic groups. mc administration provided significance increment in sod activity and gsh level, and significant reduction in mda levels compared to controls (p < . ). the maximum hypoglycemic and antioxidant effects were observed at mg/kg dose of mc. background: human serum paraoxonase (pon ) is a calcium dependent esterase that hydrolyzes organophosphates and also arylesters such as phenyl acetate. pon prevents ldl oxidation by hydrolyzing lipid peroxides. pon is inhibited by various chelating agents, heavy metal ions, and sulfhydryl reagents. in our study we investigated the effect of calcium on ldl oxidation of purified pon q r isoenzymes. methods: pon q r isoenzymes were partially purified from human serum. both allozymic forms were treated by preincubation with mm edta for minutes. ldl oxidation was induced by copper ions. formation of thiobarbituric acid-reacting substances (tbars) was used as a measure of lipid peroxidation. homocysteine thiolactonase (htlase activity) and arylesterase activities were measured spectrophotometrically by using homocysteine thiolactone and phenylacetate as the substrates. results: addition of mm edta to partially purified hdl-pon q r isoenzymes inhibited % of htlase and arylesterase activities. inactivation of pon for arylesterase/htlase activity by the addition of edta did not reduce the abilities of both allozymic forms in protecting ldl from oxidation. conclusion: ca + -dependent inhibition of pon q r arylesterase/htlase by using the metal chelator edta, did not alter pon 's ability to inhibit ldl oxidation. pon 's ability to protect ldl from oxidation may not require calcium. p- . . - evaluation of cholinesterase inhibitory effect, anti-radical and anti-lipid peroxidation activities of mentha pulegium i. hamad , college of applied medical sciences, aljouf university, aljouf, saudi arabia, faculty of medicine, bahri university, khartoum, sudan introduction: many studies indicated that intake of dietary and medicinal plants is effective in preventing or suppressing many diseases, therefore, there is a growing interest in plant'sbioactive compounds. mentha pulegium, is widely used in gulf countries in herbal teas or as additives in commercial spice mixtures for many foods to offer aroma and flavor. the aim of this study is to investigate the in vitro radical activity, the total phenol and flavonoid content, anti-lipid peroxidation and the cholinesterase inhibitory effects of mentha pulegium methanol extract. methods: the acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase inhibitory potentials of extracts, were evaluated by colorimetric assay. the in vitro antioxidant activity was measured by dpph assay, the total phenols content was measured by folin-ciocalteau assay, the flavonoids content by the alcl colorimetric method, and the protective effect of menthe mentha pulegium extracts against lipid peroxidation was evaluated using a liposome oxidation system. results: the methanol extract showed a scavenging activity nearly equivalent to vitamin c which is attributed to its high phenolic and flavonoid contents. the extract possessed protective effect against lipid peroxidation in a dose dependent manner. the methanol extract shows very little anticholinesterase activity as compared to the standard compound, physostigmine. conclusion: results presented here indicate that mentha pulegiumpossess strong antioxidant activity and protective effects and they can therefore be used as a natural additive in food, cosmetic and pharmaceutical industries. type diabetes mellitus is a long term metabolic disorder that is characterized by hyperglycemia and insulin resistance. because of the hyperglycemia and free radicals, diabetes can cause cellular instability. micronuclei is a sensitive indicator of genetic damage and a marker of dna damage. micronuclei is also a morphological marker of chromosomal instability. in this study, we aimed to evaluate the frequencies of micronuclei in papanicolaou stained buccal cells of type diabetic patients. a total of type diabetic patients and healthy individuals were involved into our study. buccal smear samples that belong to these individuals were stained by using papanicolaou method for cytologic examination and the stained slides were evaluated by light microscopy (olympus bx- ). cells with micronuclei in each papanicolaou stained buccal smear sample were counted under light microscopy. the frequency of micronucleated epithelial cells were seen as significantly higher in type diabetic patients than the control group (p < . ). one of the boron compounds is sodium perborate tetrahydrate (nabo . h o), which the most widely used solid peroxygen compounds. it is used in safety bleach formulations, detergents and tooth powders. as known these products are commonly used in daily life. however, the actions on blood antioxidant defenses of sodium tetraborate against reactive oxygen species are not identified yet. it is reported that oxidative stress caused by ros damages. in this study, we searched enzyme activities of superoxide dismutase (sod), catalase (cat), glutathione-s-transferase (gst), glutathione reductase (gr), glutathione peroxidase (gsh-px) and glucose- -phosphate dehydrogenase (g pd) also the effect sodium perborate tetra hydrate on activities of these enzymes from human erythrocyte under in vitro conditions. according to our findings sodium perborate tetrahydrate caused significant (p < . ) increasing in the cat activity from red blood cell. the other antioxidant enzyme activities (sod, gst, gr, gsh-px and g pd) did not show any changing by influence of sodium perborate tetrahydrate. metabolism of obese individuals could be exposed to risk of chronic low-grade pro-inflammatory effect and oxidative stress. some inflammatory and oxidative markers have been studied recently. plasma total antioxidant status (tas) and total oxidant status (tos) parameters can be non-invasive markers of diseases such as fatty liver disease, laparoscopic procedures (pneumoperitoneum), accompanying inflammatory condition like urinary tract infection, diabetic neuropathy, chronic hepatitis. the study groups have been comprised of two groups with normal to over-weight children. tas and tos levels were detected and the oxidative stress index (osi) was computed as a marker of the grade of oxidative stress. the over-weight group displayed higher levels of fasting glucose, insulin resistance, the body mass index. also, we know that insulin resistance leads to increased lipolysis and free fatty acid output. higher tos as well as crp is related to the group, also lower tas than other group is shown. crp levels in plasma were positively correlated with insulin and glucose levels. in addition, there was a significant relationship between osi and insulin resistance in the over-weight group. tas and tos are together more accurate sings of oxidative and antioxidative status of people. as well as a raise over weight-related subclinical inflammation and a fall antioxidant capacity is significant even in children. this condition may eventually develop the risk of long-term vascular damage. the effects of hydrogen peroxide pretreatment on antioxidant enzyme activities in calli tissues of two eggplant genotypes under salinity o. yasarkan , e. aky€ uz , g. baysal furtana , s. s. ellialtioglu , r. tipirdamaz nezahat g€ okyigit botanic garden, istanbul, department of biology, faculty of sciences, gazi university, ankara, department of horticulture, faculty of agriculture, ankara university, ankara, department of biology, faculty of sciences, hacettepe university, ankara, turkey the effects of hydrogen peroxide (h o ) pre-treatment on catalase (cat) and superoxide dismutase (sod) were investigated and lipid peroxidation measured as malondialdehyde (mda) content of the calli from salt-sensitive (artvin) and salt-tolerant (mardin) eggplant genotypes under salinity stress. the seeds from each genotypes were germinated on ms medium for weeks and hypocotyl tissues from these plantlets were used as explants for calli induction on ms medium including mg/l , -d and . mg/l kinetin. as for the pre-treatment, the subcultured calli tissues were transplanted on the mediums containing and lm h o for hours and then transplanted on the mediums including mm nacl for hours. antioxidant enzyme analysis and mda measurement was carried out for the control, nacl-only, h o -only and h o pre-treated tissues. pre-treatment with h o decreased the deleterious effects of salt stress on mda contents. in comparison with salt stressed groups, h o pre-treatment with or without nacl reduced mda content especially in artvin. comparing two genotypes, a decrease was observed on sod activity in artvin genotype and an increase in mardin genotype by comparison of salt stressed groups. higher increase on sod activity was observed in lm h o + nacl groups on each genotypes. comparing two genotypes, a decrease was observed on sod activity in artvin genotype and an increase in mardin genotype by comparison of salt stressed groups. higher increase on sod activity was observed in lm h o + nacl groups on each genotypes. the result showed pre-treatment of lm h o induced acclimation of the plants to salinity. in addition, lm h o pre-treatment, as a stress signal, could trigger the activation of antioxidant enzymes in calli and in this way alleviated the oxidative damage in calli growth under salinity. the investigation of effects of ghrelin and cannabinoid cb receptor agonist and antagonist on oxidant and antioxidant mechanisms on brain tissues of penicillininduced epileptic rats the aim of this study is to investigate the individual effects of ghrelin and cannabinoid type (cb ) receptor agonist acea, the antagonist am- and the interaction of these two different systems on oxidant and antioxidant systems in the brain, cerebellum and brain stem tissues of penicillin-induced epileptic rats. in this study male wistar albino rats were used weighing - g. each group was consisted of rats. study groups: : control, :penicilin( iu), :penicillin( iu) + ghrelin( lg), :penicillin( iu) + am- ( . lg), :penicilin ( iu) + acea( . lg), :penicillin( iu) + am- ( . lg) + ghrelin ( lg), :penicillin( iu) + acea( . lg) + ghrelin( lg). than the levels of mda, gpx and sod are measured in plasma and tissue samples of these rats. penicillin was found to be induced lipid peroxidation in the brain, cerebellum and brain stem tissues in our study. ghrelin and acea, which both have anticonvulsant effects, were shown to be effective in reversing the oxidative damage caused by penicillin and proconvulsant am was found to further increase the oxidative stress caused by penicillin in these tissues. ghrelin also was found to suppress the oxidative stress caused by am in the cerebellum tissue but it did not contribute to antioxidant effects produced by acea. since the role of oxidative stress in epilepsy has been established, it may be suggested that ghrelin and acea may have anticonvulsant effects via their antioxidant features. the discovery of inhibitors for enzymes that metabolize endogenous ghrelin and cannabinoids through new studies may contribute to the improvement of seizure resistance in epilepsy. accelerated atherosclerosis in patients with ankylosing spondylitis (as) give rise to increased cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. endothelial dysfunction could be the initial process in the development of atherosclerosis. human endothelial cell-specific molecule- (endocan) is a novel human endothelial cell-specific molecule. therefore, we assessed serum endocan levels and carotid intimamedia thickness (cimt) as a surrogate marker of atherosclerosis in patients with as. a total of patients with a diagnosis of as according to newyork ctriteria and control subjects were included in our study. serum endocan, interleukin- (il- ), tumor necrozis factor-a (tnf-a), c reactive protein (crp) and cimt were measured in all participants. serum endocan, il- , tnf-a levels were measured with elisa. the other parameters were done by routine biochemical methods. as patients exhibited increased serum endocan levels and cimt compared to matched controls (p < . ). whereas, serum il- , tnf-a were similar between grous. in patient with as, there were no significant differences between active and inactive patients by means of il- , tnf-a, endocan and cimt. in as group, cimt correlated with disease duration and age (r = . , p = . ; r = . , p = . ). we could not find any significant correlation between serum endocan levels and parameters studied. our study shows increased cimt in as patients without traditional risk factors such as increased bmi, lipid profile compared to controls. although we found increased circulating endocan levels in patients with as, the other factors could affect increased atherosclerosis in this population because of lack of correlation between endocan and cimt. probable biomarkers could be related to increased cimt in patients with as should be investigated in larger study groups. keywords: ankylosing spondylitis, atherosclerosis, carotid intima media thickness, endocan p- . . - investigation of pentose phosphate pathway and oxidative stress in erthrocyte infected babesia ovis a. bildik, t. karagenc ß, p. a. ulutas, n. aysul, h. aksit adnan menderes university, aydin, turkey introduction: babesia infections occur in cattle, sheep, goat, horse, dog, cat pig and rodents. in this study, the effects of babesia ovis living and present in the erythrocytes to glucose metabolism was researched. at the same time, biochemical parameters were also associated with parasitemia. materials and methods: babesia ovis (israel) cell culture was provided from dr. abel martin gonz alez oliva (portugal). culture passaged or hours according to parasitemia state ( - %). biochemical analyses were performed in erythrocyte culture in which parasitemia between % and %. cell counts and hemoglobin concentration of erythrocytes culture suspension were measured at cell counter instrument and than it was washed times with physiological saline, erythrocyte suspensions were stored at- oc analysis. gssg (oxidize glutathione), gsh (reducte glutathione), nadph, glukoz p dehydrogenaz, gshpx (glutathione peroxidase), gshrx (glutathione reductase) were determined by commercial kits. all experiments were done in duplicate, the results were calculated by the number of erythrocytes. results: parasitemia was positively correlated with gsh, nadph and gshrx (p < . ). a correlation between other biochemical parameters was not observed. discussion: the pentose phosphate pathway in erythrocytes has an important role such as to provide pentose sugar required for the synthesis of nucleic acid, to reduce glutathione, to produce nadph and to protect from methemoglobin accumulation. in studie sthat naturally infected erythrocytes with babesia parasites, it was seen to be caused to oxidative stress, however gsh results in these investigation were obtained differently . conclusion: according to the results of this study that performed in vitro, it can be suggest that their glutathione metabolism and pentose phosphate pathway of parasites may active.key words: babesiosis, gsh, gssg, nadph, g pdh, gshpx, gshrx p- . . - in vitro protective effect of betaine on peroxidative injury caused by ethanol and aspirin exposure on rat brain synaptosomes i. sogut , g. kanbak istanbul bilim university vocational school of health services, istanbul, eskisehir osmangazi university medical school department of biochemistry, eskisehir, turkey aspirin intake of specific daily doses are advised by doctors to postmenapausal women and men above years of age to prevent heart attack and even cancer in recent times. in this study, the aim is to investigate the in vitro cytototoxic effects of different doses of ethanol ( mm, mm ve mm) alone and together with lg/ml aspirin, and possible protective role of mm betaine on rat brain synaptosomes. male sprague dawley rat forebrains were divided into equal pieces and pooled to form study groups. synaptosomal fractions extracted from pooled rat brains were incubated with different doses of ethanol, aspirin and betaine, and malondialdehyde (mda) levels, an important indicator of cellular damage, were measured. a significant increase (p < . ) was observed in mda level of mm ethanol group compared to control group. different doses of ethanol ( mm, mm ve mm) + aspirin exposure significantly increased (p < . ) mda levels compared to controls, whereas betaine administration significantly decreased (p < . ) lipid peroxidation caused by ethanol + aspirin treatment. we conclude that ethanol and ethanol + aspirin administration increases lipid peroxidation in rat brain synaptosomes while betaine helps prevent this peroxidative membrane injury.keywords: aspirin, betaine, ethanol, malondialdehyde (mda) p- . . - analyses of mitochondrial biogenesis in hepatocellular carcinoma treated with berberine f. aygenli, h. c ß imen yeditepe proteomics and mass spectrometry group (yediprot), genetics and bioengineering, yeditepe university, istanbul, turkey objective: berberine (bbr) has been demonstrated to have anticancer activities against various cancer types, particularly hepatoma. in this project, we aimed to reveal the effect of bbr treatment on mitochondrial biogenesis through sirtuins and hif- a in hepatocellular carcinoma cell line, hep b under hypoxia. method: hep b cells were subjected to normoxia ( % o ) and hypoxia ( % o ) in the presence or absence of bbr treatment. the amount of bbr was optimized via cell viability (mts) assay under normoxia. then, immunoblotting experiments were performed to identify the effect of bbr on hif- a, pgc- a, and sirtuins involved in mitochondrial stress. the variation in the oxphos complexes and the level of reactive oxygen species (ros) were also measured to investigate the effect of bbr on mitochondrial energy stress state. results: here, we present that cell viability was significantly decreased at lm. bbr treatment has shown significant reduction in hif- a and sirt which responsible for up-regulation of glycolysis. also, succinate dehydrogenase (cii) and cytochrome c oxidoreductase (ciii) of the oxphos complexes were downregulated without any change in nadh dehydrogenase (ci) or atp synthase (cv). bbr significantly abolished to oxidative stress under hypoxia, which was demonstrated as a reduction in the level of reactive oxygen species by decreasing on sirt expression. bbr induces the overexpression of sirt and its deacetylated-pgc- a, which might be an indicator of being a potent protective agent against hypoxia by normalizing mitochondrial function and inducing mitophagy in impaired mitochondria caused by deficiency of glycolysis and oxphos. conclusion: detailed information about the communication between hif- a and sirtuins and their relation to mitochondrial energy production was provided with the alteration of their activity by bbr treatment. it is highly expected that bbr and its derivatives might become important during the development of supplemental therapies. introduction: reactive oxygen species are involved in a variety of biological phenomena, such as carcinogenesis, inflammation and aging. among the targets of ros, dna appears most important in tumor biology since it is firmly established that cancer is a genetic disease. ros induce several kinds of dna damage, including strand breakage and dna-protein cross-linkage. fruit of zizyphus jujuba, a traditional chinese herb widely consumed in asian countries, has been reported to possess several vital biological activities. this study intends to evaluate their antioxidant activity on glioblastoma cells. materials methods: cell survival was quantified by colorimetric mtt assay. human gliblastoma cells were pretreated with lm h o after minutes lm ziziphus jujuba essential oil was added to the cells for three hours. then, the cell homogenates were taken and glutathione, total oxidant and total antioxidant capacity and nitric oxide levels were estimated using spectrophotometric methods. results: ziziphus jujuba treated cells could prevent intracellular glutathione from being depleted following an exposure of h o . also our data suggest that ziziphus jujuba is effective in preventing h o induced oxidative stress and nitric oxide levels. discussion: some research showed that h o was over produced in the pathological process of acute and chronic neuronal toxicity, the toxicity effect of b-amyloid on the cultured neuron and neuronal cell line was mediated by h o . the traditional medicine recommend several medicinal plants for providing relief from various inflammatory diseases. many research has been reported that the essential oil from seeds of helping to prevent the oxidative stress and neuronal diseases in brain. introduction: toxicity by oxygen radicals has been recommended as a major cause of cancer, heart disease, and aging. oxygen radicals and other oxidants appear to be toxic in large part because they start the chain reaction of lipid peroxidation. most of the analytical techniques for peroxide determination are generally time consuming and not very suitable for routine or on line analysis. we aimed to design a new biosensor for rapid determining of oxidant agent hydrogen peroxide. materials and methods: all reagents were of analytical grade unless stated otherwise, and were purchased from sigma aldrich. firstly, the -hidroxymetacrilate metacriloamidoscystein nanoploymers were immobilized by binding covalently with sulphur atoms on the gold electrod's surface. free nh groups of catalase enzyme make schiff bases between nanopolymer's carbonyl groups, then immobilization was actualysed with cross linking reagent glutaraldehyde. we developed a biosensor system preparing ferrociyanide, selected as a mediator, in the buffer solution. results: polyhemamac nanopolymer and catalase complex were immobilized by glutaraldehite to construct a hydrogen peroxide biosensor. the responses of the biosensor are therefore proportional to the oxidation peaks of the complex at + . v potential. the cyclic voltammograms obtained from the experiments showed that, pottasiumferrociyanide mediator complex positively affected the biosensor responses for hydrogen peroxide determination. discussion and conclusion: as a result of this study, the method developed by the catalase enzyme electrode was found to be more advantageous in comparison to other methods reported in the literature so far; it was determined that the method is sensitive, economic, practical and less time-consuming. since biosensor technology provides economical, practical, specific and sensitive results for the determination of hydrogen peroxide, it was improved very efficiently. p- . . - impact of amoxicillin, gentamicin and cefazolin sodium antibiotics on antioxidant gene expression and enzymatic activities in mouse liver p. g€ uller , h. budak , m. sisecioglu , m. c ß iftci department of chemistry, faculty of science, atat€ urk university, erzurum, department of molecular biology and genetics, faculty of science, atat€ urk university, erzurum, department of chemistry, faculty of arts and sciences, bing€ ol university, bing€ ol, turkey reactive oxygen species (ros) are highly reactive molecules, which are produced by living organisms as a natural byproduct of the normal metabolism and environmental factors. living organisms have the antioxidant defence systems to block harmful effects of ros. the imbalance between oxidants and antioxidants is termed oxidative stress. the antioxidant defence mechanisms are divided into two groups as enzymatic and nonenzymatic defences. enzymatic defence mechanisms consist of enzymes like superoxide dismutase (sod), catalase (cat), glutathione peroxidase (gpx), glucose- -phosphate dehydrogenase (g pd) and glutathione s-transferase (gst). the present study was designed to determine the effects of gentamicin, amoxicillin and cefazolin sodium antibiotics on the hepatic antioxidant system and to determine any possible correlation between enzymatic and molecular levels. for this reason, effects of these antibiotics on the transcription of the antioxidant system has been investigated by real time pcr, and then the enzyme activity of these enzymes have been measured in whole liver homogenate obtained from control group and the drug administered groups mice. our results demonstrate that administering antibiotics led to crucial inhibition of all antioxidant enzyme activity. while significant transcriptional activation for sod and cat was seen in the gentamicin treated group, the transcription of gst and g pd was decreased. however transcriptional activation was seen for sod and cat in amoxicillin administered group, the transcription of gst was decreased as compared with the control group. in the cefazolin sodium treated group, while cat and gst transcription were elevated significantly, the expression of sod and g pd were decreased. in conclusion, gentamicin, amoxicillin and cefazolin sodium affect the hepatic antioxidant system at the molecular and protein level. this work was supported by scientific research project of ataturk university of turkey (grant no: / ). p- . . - protective effects of curcumin supplementation on oxidant/antioxidant system changes created by organic phosphorus pesticide poisoning organic phosphorus pesticides (opp), widely used in agriculture or as insecticides in home, cause adverse health effects. chlorpyrifos is one of the most commonly used opp. we aimed to investigate the possible protective effects of curcumin (cur) supplementation, the principal curcuminoid of turmeric, on poisoning symptoms and oxidant/antioxidant system changes caused by chlorpyrifos. adult sprague-dawley rats were used. cur ( , and mg/kg) were administered orally for days. on the sixth day, chlorpyrifos ( mg/kg, s.c.) was administered. twenty four hours after chlorpyrifos administration, body weights, locomotor activities and body temperatures of rats were measured. following the measurements, rats were decapitated and the blood, brain and liver tissue samples were taken and prepared for the biochemical and histopathological measurements. chlorpyrifos administration increased the malondialdehyde (mda) levels but decreased catalase (cat), superoxide dismutase (sod), glutathione reductase (grx) concentrations and reduced/oxidized glutathione (gsh/gssg) ratio in the blood samples, brain and liver tissues compared with the control group (p < . - . ). the concentration of advanced oxidation protein products (aopp) were increased only in the brain tissue after chlorpyrifos administration (p < . ). cur administration reduced all of these changes (p < . - . ). similarly, cur at the doses of mg/kg reduced the decreases in body weight, body temperature and locomotor activity with chlorpyrifos (p < . ). additionally, the histopathological damage scores induced by chlorpyrifos (p < . - . ) were decreased by the administration of cur (p < . - . ). our findings suggest that cur supplementation can ameliorate the poisoning effects of chlorpyrifos via supporting the antioxidant mechanisms and cur could be used for protective purposes against oxidative stress and tissue damage caused by chlorpyrifos. the effect of ogtt applied for screening in pregnancy on adenosine deaminase and xanthine oxidase activity in normal and prediabetic pregnant women z. c. ozmen, k. deveci, i. benli department of biochemistry, gaziosmanpasa university medical faculty, tokat, turkey objective: it was reported that the activities of adenosine deaminase (ada) were different in normal pregnant women and pregnant women with gestational diabetes mellitus (gdm). it was also stated that the activity of xanthine oxidase (xo) was increased in pregnant women with gdm. the objective of this study was to evaluate if glucose have effects on oxidative stress in prediabetic women by affecting ada and ox after g ogtt which was applied in pregnant women for screening. methods: the serum specimens of pregnant women who applied to the outpatient clinic of the obstetrics and gynecology department and had g ogtt, were used in this study. ada and xo activities were analyzed in the serum specimens taken from the normal (n = ) and prediabetic pregnant women (n = ) in the th and th minutes of ogtt. ada and xo activities were measured with the spectrophotometric method and the u/l enzyme activity was calculated. findings: there was no significant difference between the th and th minutes regarding the ada activities in the normal and prediabetic pregnant woman groups. however, we observed a significant difference between th and th minutes regarding the xo enzyme activity in normal pregnant women (p = . ). in normal pregnant women, the median xo enzyme activity in the th minute was . ( . - . ) u/l and it was . ( . - . ) u/l in the th minute. nevertheless, there was no correlation between the xo activity and glucose level. as to the prediabetic pregnant women, there was no significant difference between the xo enzyme activities in th and th minutes. the results of our study showed that the xo activity increased as a response to ogtt in the normal pregnant women compared with the prediabetic pregnant women. this finding made us think that the oxidative stress caused by ogtt did not affect the xo response in prediabetic pregnant women and that there would be some adaptive mechanisms against the chronic exposure to high level glucose. rainbow trout (oncorhynchus mykiss) aquaculture continuously increases in turkey. the objective of the present study is to increase the productivity in fish farming of rainbow trout just via intervention in physical cases without the effects of any chemicals and investigate whether this conditions cause oxidative stress. in this experiment eight tanks were used and rainbow trout larvae were placed in each tank and these tanks were illuminated with light in different wavelengths; natural sunlight, and incandescent long-wave (red light), medium-wave (green light) and shortwave (blue light) led lights. the experiment took days. biochemical changes in rainbow trout exposed to light in different wavelengths (red, green, blue) were analysed via the variations in gr, gst, g pd, gpx, sod and cat enzyme activities, which are significant for enzymatic antioxidant defence system and in ache activity, which plays an important role on central nervous system. maximum activity change in liver tissue was observed for gst and g pd enzymes in fish grown under green light and for sod enzyme in fish grown under blue light. in gill tissue, sod and g pd activities were affected the most, and in brain tissue, these were gst and sod activities. it was observed that the average weight of the fish increased . times under red and blue lights and . times under green light. the highest weight increase was observed under green light, however, antioxidant enzyme activities increased in the liver and gills and decreased in the brain tissue under this light condition. in conclusion, it was observed that productivity was . times under red light when compared with control group and it was determined that the fish grown under red light can tolerate oxidative stress more than other wavelength. p- . . - effect of nigella sativa on biliary obstructioninduced oxidative stress and apoptosis in rats human safety concerns, since that these agents may not only cause acute toxicity via inhibition of acetylcholinesterase but they can also induce delayed toxicity in the nervous system. a key interest to the current work is the potential correlation between gene expression and cytoskeletal protein changes in differentiating neural cells exposed to sub-lethal neurite outgrowth inhibitory concentrations of specific ops, which was addressed by analysing the underlying changes in the levels of cytoskeletal gene expression and protein levels. to assess the molecular effects of op exposure, phenyl saligenin phosphate (psp), chlorpyrifos (cpf) and its metabolite chlorpyrifos oxon (cpfo) were applied at the point of induction of differentiation of rat c glioma and mouse n a neuroblastoma cells and incubated for hours. at sub-lethal concentrations ( , , lm) all three ops used in this study were able to inhibit the development of neurites with no significant effect on cell viability, as determined by neurite outgrowth and mtt reduction assays. to understand the possible effects of ops on cytoskeletal gene expression, primers for genes encoding glial fibrillary acidic protein (gfap), biii tubulin, growth associated protein (gap ) and neurofilament heavy chain (nefh) were optimized for qpcr analysis and the levels of the corresponding proteins were detected by western blot analysis. exposure to ops caused in most cases a reduction in the levels of cytoskeletal proteins, and the results from qrt-pcr analysis also indicated reductions in the gene expression of gfap in c cells, and of nefh and biii tubulin in n a cells, in a dose dependent manner. thus, the observed changes in protein levels are at least partly due to altered gene expression. curcumin is extracted from a perennial herbaceous plant known as curcuma longa. in recent years, considerable interest has been focused on curcumin due to its use to treat a wide variety of disorders without any side effects. earlier studies have shown that curcumin has anti-apoptotic, anti-inflammatory, antiproliferative, antiangiogenic, anticancer and antiplatelet activities. the goal of the present study was to investigate the effects of curcumin on peroxy radical-induced oxidative changes in human platelets. healthy volunteers were enrolled in the study. none of the study participants were on anticoagulation therapy. citrated venous blood samples were centrifuged at g for minute to obtain platelet-rich plasma (prp). the platelet pellet was washed and suspended with tris-nacl buffer. then, platelets were incubated with h o absence and presence of curcumin ( - lg/ ml) for hours at °c. to determine the preventive effects of curcumin on the oxidative stress and apoptosis induced by peroxy radicals in human platelets were determined by measuring levels of of lipid peroxidation, total antioxidant capacity, caspase , and activities, and mitochondrial membrane potential. additionally, we also studied the effects curcumin on platelet aggregation induced by adp. pre-treatment of platelets with curcumin caused a marked reduction in oxidative stress, activation and apoptotic markers in a dose-dependent manner. on the other hand, pre-treatment of platelets with increasing doses of curcumin resulted in inhibition of platelet aggregation induced by adp. in the light of our findings, we suggest that curcumin may have a therapeutic potential to prevent platelet activation related disorders. people have been using mushrooms in the treatment of diseases as well as food, for centuries. most of the edible and inedible mushroom species were used in important medical studies and their effects were begun to be used in the treatment of diseases. this study focuses on the hepatoprotective effects of tricholoma anatolicum, which is endemic specie in turkey, against oxidative stress based on hydrogen peroxide (h o ) on hepg liver cancer cell line. t. anatolicum used in this study was extracted with the help of ultrasonication and fraction methods. then the cytostatic effects of extracts on hepg cells were explored and their hepatoprotective effects were determined. moreover, various concentrations of aqueous extract (ehta) of t. anatolicum were determined by hepg cells's - - hours effect analysis on their cellular morphology, xtt and real-time cell analysis in of xcelligence device. ehta extract's cell pathway (apoptosis and necrosis) effects on hepg cells were determined with flow cytometry method with the help of annexin v-apc and aad fluorescent dye. finally, the phenolic compounds found in ehta extracts were determined with the help of hplc methods. according to xtt cytotoxicity analysis, the ehta extract values were determined as follows: hours ic > lg/ml, hours ic . furthermore, according to the real-time cell analysis made with xcelligence, ehta extracts were found to be; hours ic = . lg/ml, hours ic = . lg/ml, hours ic = . lg/ml. increasing concentrations of ehta extracts were determined to direct hepg cells to apoptosis. moreover, considering the hplc analysis -according to the reference point of mg in g sample-within ehta extracts, catechins and vanillic acid peaked. the final results revealed that t. anatolicum's effect on hepg was cytostatic at low doses, and cytotoxic at high doses. p- . . - relationship between serum ceruloplasmin levels and coronary blood flow background: there is growing evidence that oxidative stres plays an important role in the development of the slow coronary flow (scf) phenomenon. ceruloplasmin (cp) is a copper containing metalloenyzme which has antioxidant functionthrough its ferroxidese activity and is associated with cardiovascular diseases. we aimed to investigate the relationship between scf and serum cp level. methods: patients who underwent elective coronary angiography and had no significant epicardial coronary disease were included in the study. patients who had thrombolysis in myocardial infarction frame counts (tfcs) above the normal cutoffs were considered to have scf and those within normal limits were considered to have normal coronary flow (ncf). a total of patients ( subject as scf and subjects as ncf) were analyzed. ml blood samples were taken from the groups to study ceruloplasmin activity. serum ceruloplasmin levels were determined spectrophotometrically. results: the serum cp levels were statistically lower in scf group than in the ncf group ( ae versus ae ng/ml, p = . ). also there was a significant correlation between serum cp levels and tfcs (r = À . , p = . ). conclusion: the findings of this study suggests that patients with scf had lower serum cp levels correlated with tfcs. we concluded that reduced serum cp levels might represent a biochemical marker of scf. introduction: sleeve gastrectomy (sg) has been used for the surgical treatment of morbid obesity, as a first step or definitive treatment. alterations of thyroid hormones in gastrointestinal surgery were previously studied. the aim of the present study was to determine the effects of triiodothyronine (t ) supplementation on oxidative stress parameters in anastomotic tissue level. materials and methods: twenty-four male wistar albino rats were divided into control (n ), and experimental (n ) groups. rats were underwent a sg, with a hand-sewn suture. experimental group rats received a single dose of t ( mg/ g) in postoperative day. rats were sacrificed on postoperative day . serum thyroid stimulating hormone (tsh), free t (ft ), and free thyroxine (ft ) were analysed using elisa. each tissue was homogenized in ice-cold pbs (ph: . ) and centrifuged at rpm for minutes ( °c) to avoid contamination with cellular debris. the supernatants were used to measure total oxidant status (tos), total antioxidant status (tas), nitric oxide (no) and malondialdehyde (mda) levels. all tissue parameters were analysed by spectrophotometric methods. oxidative stress index (osi) values were calculated. results: rats given t hormone had not decline in ft levels compared with the control groups. a significant decrease in ft levels was found in t given rats on postoperative day . whereas tissue tos levels did not alter by thyroid hormone treatment, tas levels significantly decreased. osi values were not statistically different in tissues. tissue no levels were also similar in both groups. mda levels increased in t given rats compared with the control group. discussion and conclusion: this study showed that anastomosis after sleeve gastrectomy is associated with decreased ft level. although tos levels and osi values were similar in both groups, t supplementation induced lipid peroxidation by increasing tissue mda levels that might deplete tissue antioxidant level. reactive oxygen species (ros) are reactive chemical molecules, which are produced by living organisms as a natural byproduct of the normal metabolism and environmental factors. although intracellular ros level is essential molecules for the signal transduction pathways, elevated intracellular level of ros leads to oxidative stress that causes damage to dna, proteins and lipids. therefore, excessive ros levels have to be eliminated by antioxidant defence systems. tip (tat interacting protein, kda) is a histone acetyltransferases (hats) that catalyses multiple functions in metabolism such as dna repair, apoptosis, etc. we thought that if tip has a role in signal transduction and apoptosis, it might have direct or indirect relationship with the antioxidant system. the present study was designed to determine the impact of tip gene on the hepatic antioxidant enzymes including superoxide dismutase (sod), catalase (cat), glutathione peroxidase (gpx), and glutathione reductase (gr) both gene and protein level. for this reason, quantitative gene expression analysis on the antioxidant system has been investigated by real time pcr, quantitative protein expression has been investigated by western blot analysis, and then the activity of these enzymes have been measured in whole liver homogenate collected from control and liver-specific tip conditional knockout mice. additionally, since any change of reduced glutathione (gsh), oxidized glutathione (gssg), malondialdehid (mda), and hydrogen peroxide (h o ) level in the cell might be an indication for the accumulation of ros, the relative levels of them were also studied. our data showed that the absence of tip affects the antioxidan system both gene and protein level. in conclusion, our initial data suggest that tip may be essential for the (ros) homeostasis and redox regulation. curcumin is a major chemical component produced from the rhizome of the plant curcuma longa. lt has been demonstrated that curcumin has an antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and antiproliferative effects and, protects tissues against ischemia/reperfusion (i/ r) injury. i/r has detrimental effects on transplanted organs including uteri. the major consequence of l/r injury is oxidative stress leading to the generation of ros. uterine transplantation (ut) has been gaining popularity around the worid in the past few years. the aim of our study was to examine the antiapoptotic effects of curcumin on uterine l/r injury. the rats were randomized into three groups of seven rats each, group i consisted of rats that did not receive any treatment, group ll exposed to . hour of lschemia and hour of reperfusion, group iii of rats that received intraperitonealy curcumin ( mg/kg) . hour before the induction of i/r. then, the rat uterine tissue levels of mda, tac, and activities of caspase , and were measured. furthermore, the apoptotic index was determined immunohistochemically by the tunel method using light microscopy. biochemical analysis results showed that curcumin decreased the mda and caspase- and ieveis, and increased the uterine tissue levels of tac but, caspase activity did not changed by curcumin suggesting that curcumin induces apoptosis via intrinsic apoptotic pathway. on the other hand, an high apoptotic index was observed in i/r group ( . ae . %) and decreased after treatment with curcumin ( . ae . %). in conclusion, we demonstrated the protective effect of curcumin on apoptosis immediately after reperfusion induction in uteri and we can say that curcumin could improve ir injury and decrease apoptotic index. we propose that curcumin may be a novel approach for improvement of uteri i/r injury. glutathione and the related enzymes belong to the defence system of the tissues against chemical and oxidative stress. these enzymes especially glutathione s-transferase are often overexpressed in tumor cells and are regarded as a contributor to their drug resistance and are thought to play an important role in cancer progression. the purpose of this study is to evaluate the protective effects of chlorophylline as an antioxidant molecule which has inhibitory effects on gst p - on chemically-induced breast cancer model. in our previous work, we had observed that this molecule led to proliferation in breast cancer cells. in this study, n-methyl-n-nitrosourea (mnu) used for inducing carcinogenesis in eighteen, -day-old female sprague-dawley rats. chlorophylline and mnu solutions were injected intraperitoneally when the rats were , , and days old. their weight and tumor diameters were measured throughout the months study period. at the end of the study, all animals were sacrificed and determined both glutathione levels and related enzymes activities (gluathione s transferase, glutathione reductase and glutathione peroxidase) in tumor and tissues such as liver, kidney, heart and spleen were studied and analyzed. as a result, in breast cancer model, glutathione and related enzyme activities were protected by chlorophylline treatment whereas mnu made them decreased compared to the control group. in conclusion, chlorophylline with antioxidant features decreased the toxic effect of mnu by regeneration of glutathione and enhancement of its related enzyme activities. the use of antioxidant molecules, because of proliferative effects and defence-oriented behaviours, should be discussed in cancer therapy. p- . . - effect of overexpression of bacillus catalase on lactococcus lactis nisin production z. girgin ersoy, s. tunca gedik gebze technical university, kocaeli, turkey nisin, has been used commercially (e ) in food preservation for approximately years. it's the only bacteriocin which is approved by world health organization as a food additive. the fundamental problem that limits nisin usage in food preservation is low product yield by producer strains. because of high commercial potential of nisin, studies about increasing the production efficiency of nisin is kept in the forefront in recent years. since nisin biosynthesis and bacterial growth are occuring in parallel to each other, conditions that promote growth are also expected to encourage nisin production. it is known that, when supplied with exogenous heme, lactococcus lactis cells can respire under aerobic conditions and produce higher energy which in turn cause higher biomass. however, aerobic conditions also cause oxidative stress since catalase enzyme, which detoxify hydrogen peroxide, is absent in l. lactis. in this study, to complete the missing component of the defence mechanism of l. lactis, catalase (kate) gene of aerobic bacterium bacillus subtilis was overexpressed in facultative anaerobe l. lactis cells. for this, kate gene of b. subtilis was amplified by polymerase chain reaction (pcr). plasmid constructions were established in e. coli by using an e. coli-l. lactis shuttle vector and then the recombinant plasmid was transferred to l. lactis cells by electroporation. the presence of catalase activity in the recombinant strain grown on the solid medium was first detected by dropping hydrogen peroxide directly on the cells, then with enzyme assays. fermentation studies are going on to determine nisin production of the recombinant strain. to the best of our knowledge, this study presents the first preliminary results that shows the effect of overexpression of catalase gene on nisin production. cancer is among the leading causes of morbidity and mortality worldwide. chemotherapy is one of the major cancer treatment strategies. remarkably, natural products have garnered increased attention in the chemotherapy drug discovery field because they are biologically friendly and have high therapeutic effects. humic acid (ha) is a natural product which is forming during decomposition of organic matter in humus. in recent years, there are some resarches on the medical use of humic acid. the present study investigated anticancer effects of ha in several human cancer cell lines. ha was purchased from sigma-aldrich. in this study, we used several human cancer cell lines: the human breast cancer cell line, mcf- , colon cancer cell line, ht- , lung adenocarcinoma cell line, a , and servical cancer cell line, hela. the cells were maintained in dmem medium supplemented with % heatinactivated fbs and % penicillin/streptomycin. cells were grown in petri dishes in a humidified atmosphere containing at •c. five different concentrations ( ug/ml, ug/ml, ug/ ml, ug/ml, ug/ml) were prepared using a stock solution of ha. the cell proliferation and migration was measured. on the other hand, the apoptotic mechanisms induced by ha in cancer cells were investigated using "apoptosis antibody array kit". the effects of ha on cancer cell lines were evaluated over hours. according to our results, ha induced a decrease in ht- , a and hela cell numbers in a dose-dependent and time-dependent manner. contrary to this, ha induced proliferation of mcf- cells in dose dependent manner. ha inhibited cell migration in a dose dependent manner except mcf- cell line. it was also determined apoptotic pathways in cancer cells induced by ha. it was concluded that ha has an inhibitory effect on certain some cancers. since the effect of ha on tumor progression is unknown, further studies are needed to clarify the rol of ha on cancer activity. p- . . - chronic immobilization stress in rats: fluoxetine and amisulpride protects against chronic immobilization stress-induced biochemical alterations in the present study, the effects of amisulpride and fluoxetine on serum total sialic acid (tsa) and lipid bound sialic acid (lsa) levels was investigated in the rats exposed to chronic immobilization stress. the study was administered using male wistar albino rats weighing - g. rats were divided into five groups (n = / group). group i comprised the control group, group ii was exposed with saline + immobilization stress ( minutes daily immobilization stress for days and . ml saline was administered perorally minutes before immobilization), group iii was exposed amisulpride ( mg/kg/day) + immobilization stress, group iv was exposed fluoxetine ( mg/kg/day) + immobilization stress and v. group was exposed amisulpride ( mg/kg/ day) + fluoxetine ( mg/kg/day) + immobilization stress. statistical analysis showed that the saline + stress, amisulpride + stress and amisulpride + fluoxetine + stress groups was significantly higher than the control group with regards to tsa levels (p < . ). whereas, the fluoxetine group was significantly lower than the group regarding tsa levels (p < . ). on the other hand, saline group was significantly higher than the control group with regards to lsa level (p < . ). whereas, no significant differences in lsa levels were observed in the amisulpride, fluoxetine and amisulpride + fluoxetine groups, as compared to the control group (p > . ). the present study demonstrated beneficial effect of fluoxetine and amisulpride on the concentration levels of lsa and tsa in stress. p- . . - protective effect of borax and boric acid on total sialic acid and lipid-bound sialic acid levels against -methylcholanthrene and benzo(a)pyrene induced oxidative stress in rats s. ekin , g. oto, f. g€ ok, y. karakus, d. yildiz y€ uz€ unc€ u yil university, van, turkey the present study was performed to investigate total sialic acid (tsa) and lipid bound sialic acid (lsa) levels as possible in vivo chemoprotective effect of borax (bx) and boric acid (ba) again-st -methylcholanthrene ( -mc) and benzo(a)pyrene (b(a)p) induced oxidative stress in rats. the rats were divided into nine groups of six rats each. group i: control, untreated animals were given % . nacl, group ii: the b(a)p were administered mg/kg via ip. four times. group iii: the -mc-treated animals were administered mg/kg via ip. four times, group iv: ba was given mg/l/day with water. group v: bx was given mg/l/day with water. group vi: b(a)p mg/kg via ip four times + ba mg/l/day dosage with water. group vii: -mc mg/kg via ip four times + ba mg/l/day with water. group viii: b(a)p mg/kg via ip four times + bx mg/l/ day dosage with water. group ix: -mc mg/kg via ip four times + bx mg/l/day with water. the experimental period was continued for days. statistical analysis showed that the -mc + ba group was significantly higher than the control group with regards to tsa and lsa levels p < . , p < . ,p p- . . - effects of aluminum exposure on trace elements in rat tissues b. ozturk kurt, s. ozdemir department of biophysics, cerrahpasa medical faculty, istanbul university, istanbul, turkey aluminum (al) is the most abundant metal and the third most abundant element in the earth's crust. people are constantly exposed to al which is found in most rocks, soils, waters, air and foods, due to a result of an increase in industrialization and improving technology practices. the study was designed to examine the possible effects of aluminum exposure in different durations on trace elements in rat tissues. twenty-four healthy male wistar rats weighed - g were randomly divided into three groups: control group (gc) received only drinking water, short-term group (gs) and long-term group (gl). the study groups were orally exposed to mg/kg body weight alcl in drinking water for and weeks, respectively. at the end of the treatment period, rats were sacrificed and the kidney, liver, brain and cerebellum tissues were removed to analyse the levels of al, ar, b, ni, si, cr, cu, fe, mg, mn, se, cu and zn by icp-oes. the statistically significant increase were determined in cerebellum al, cu, as, b and cr levels in gl according to the gc. while as levels were statistically increased, ni levels were decreased in gl in the kidney and liver. while cu, mg and cr levels were higher, se and b levels were lower in the gs than gc in the brain. there were no significant difference in si and mn levels. as a result of our study, it may be concluded that al accumulation may lead to changes in tissue trace element levels. tacal, o., tacal, Ö., take, g., takic, m.m., taldykbayev, z., talim, b., tamashevski, a., tamer, f., tamer, l., , , taneva, s., taniyan, g., , tanrisev, m., tanriverdi, e.c., tanriverdi, k., tarhan, m., tarhan, t., tartar, s., tas, a., , taskin, a., taskin, t., taskiran, e., taskiran, b., taskoparan, b., taspinar, r., , tastan, Ö., tatli, Ö., tauraite, d., tay, t., tayman, c., taysi, s., , teker, h.t., tekes, s., tekin neijman, s., tekin, m.h., , tekin, g., , tekin, m., tekin, n., tekin, g., telci, d., , telefoncu, a., temel, h.e., , , temelie, m., temizgül, r., temlyakova, e., teplova, v., terashima, r., tercan avci, s., terekhov, s., tereshenko, o., terzi gulel, g., terzi, e., , terzi, e., terzioglu, g., terzioglu, o., testoni, g., tetik vardarli, a., tevdoradze, t., tevzadze, l., tezcan, Ö., tezcanli kaymaz, b., thielens, n., thomaidou, d., thomas, a., thornton, j.d., ticea, a.c., tikhonova, a., tileva, m., , timofeev, v., , timofeev, v., timofeeva, e., tipirdamaz, r., tiryaki, m., , tok, m., tokay, e., toker, a., , tokgun, o., toksoy Öner, e., tokyol, Ç., toman, r., tomasi, a., tombul, n., , tooke, c., topaloglu, h., topbas, m., topcu, b., topcu, c., topcu, g., , , topçu, v., topcu, c., topçuoglu, c., , topel, h., , toprak, b., toprak, m.s., torac, e., tosner, z., tosun, m., , toy, h., toymentseva, a., tozkoparan, b., trabulus, d.c., trantirek, l., trantirkova, s., trchounian, a., , trizna, e., , troshagina, d., tro t, m., truncaite, l., , tsakalidou, e., tsarkov, d., tsarkova, m., , tsigara, e.g., tsigara, m.g., tsverava, l., tsvetkova, e., tsyba, l., tsyganov, d., tsymbal, d., tüfekçi, a.r., , tufekci, a.r., tufenkci, h., tuglu, m.i., , tuglu, i., tuli, a., , , , tuli, a., tulubas, f., tunali, g., tunca gedik, s., , tunca gedik, s., tunçdemir, m., tuncel, h., tuncel, h., tunçer, s., tuncer, e., , tuncer, z.s., tuncer, b., tuncer, e., tuncez akyurek, f., tunçez akyürek, f., tuner, h., tüney kizilkaya, i., tural, b., tural, s., turan, i., turan, m., , turan, v., turan, y., turan, c., turano, p., , türel, s., , turhan, t., , turhan, y., , turk, s., turkan, a., türkcan kayhan, c., turkekul, k., türkel, s., turkeri, o.n., turkeri, n., turkkan, b., turkmen, s., türkmen, n., turkon, h., tutar, y., tüten, a., tutkun, e., , tüylü küçükkilinç, t., tuz, m.u., twardovska, m., tyapkina, o., tzartos, s., photoprotective activity of vulpinic and gyrophoric acids towards ultraviolet b-induced damage in human keratinocytes evaluation of the sunscreen lichen substances usnic acid and atranorin pleiotropic anticancer activity of selected nutraceuticals against mcf- bucharest, national institute for marine research and development "grigore-antipa uk in some adult and elderly populations the acute and/or persistent infection with the common intracellular respiratory pathogen chlamydia pneumoniae (chl) may be associated with increased risk of developing obesity or cardiovascular disorders. thus, microelements modifying oxidative stress status were determined by icp-ms/ms in the hno diluted serum samples collected from chl-positive adult females (n = ) living in urbanized area in poland. chl infection was confirmed by igg+ antibody elisa and real-time pcr assay. all females were classified under their body-mass index values to the normal-weight (nw), over-weight (ow) and obese group (ob) although there are many drugs currently used in the treatment of peptic ulcer, such a drug providing radical treatment without side effects is not available. since oxidative stress is involved in peptic ulceration, this study was designed to investigate antiulcerogenic and antioxidant effects of hippophae rhamnoides l. ether extract on indomethacine-induced stomach ulcer in rats. materials and methods: thirty-five sprague dawley male rats (weights ranging - g) were randomly divided into groups, as each composed of rats. after hippophae rhamnoides l. leaf ether extracts of mg/kg, mg/kg and mg/kg doses and mg/kg doses of famotidin orally administered, mg/kg doses of indomethacine were orally applied to rats in order to make ulcer. on the sixth hour of indomethacin administration all rats were sacrificed using thiopental ( mg/kg). the stomachs were removed, and ulcer areas were evaluated macroscopically. superoxide dismutase activity (sod), glutathione (gsh) and malondialdehyde (mda) levels in stomach tissues of rats were determined by elisa method with respective kits conclusions: we can conclude that the ether extract of hippophae rhamnoides l. leaves reduces free radical formation and has antiulcerogenic effects on stomach tissue control group; hours torsion/ hours detorsion group (t/d); all other groups were saturated for four days egcg, cape and egcg+cape ( lml/kg). sections were taken from bouine's-fixed and paraffin-embedded testicular tissue blocks and stained with h&e. immunohistochemistry was applied for the detection of pi k, akt and mtorc. intensities were evaluated as mild ( ), moderate ( ) or strong ( ). serum ohdg, plasma mda levels were analyzed using elisa method. results were analyzed by anova statistical test. testis samples in control group exhibited normal histological morphology. disorganization and separation of seminiferous tubule cells and accompanying interstitial edema and vessel dilation were while mda level decreased significantly in cape+egcg group, ohdg level showed significant increase in cape group. in conclusion, cape and egcg exerted protective effects on tt. effects may be achieved through pi k/ akt/mtorc pathway involved in cell proliferation, angiogenesis, apoptosis. prophylactic use of egcg prior to tt surgery improved testicular morphology, therefore could prevent destructive effects of tt lmol/l), c ( . ae . lmol/l)), respectively. conclusions: this study is important for konya region, mitochondrial fatty acid b-oxidation disorders studies subject areas. this study is the first study to assess acylcarnitine levels of patients living in our region. we believe that our results will be useful for future studies. key words: acylcarnitine, mass spectrometry, dried blood spot p- . . - binding of fas and cu(ii) ions to hsa changes its cys thiol group antioxidant capacity and carbonylation pattern with methylglyoxal binding of cu(ii) ion ( . mol/mol hsa) led to increase of k' value if fish oil extract was present, but for other fas k' value decreased. the content of free hsacys -sh decreased for % after cu(ii) ion binding, and during hours incubation at °c, it was further decreased for % (stearic acid, mixfas) and % (myristic, fish oil extract, oleic acid). carbonylation of fa-hsa-cu(ii) complexes with mg ( mol/ mol hsa), lead to decrease in cys -sh content depending on fa present: %- % for myristic and stearic acid, % for oleic acid and mixfas and % for fish oil extract. carbonylation of fa-hsa-cu complexes could contribute to further enhancement of oxidative and carbonyl stress in diabetes as well as other diseases pirto ek p- . . - anti-proliferative and inducing apoptosis of the hydro alcholic achelia. wilhelmsii extract on human breast adenocarcinoma cell lines mcf- and mda-mb- background: vitamin d deficiency is associated with several conditions and/or diseases like inflammation, atherosclerosis, cardiovascular disease and mortality. several studies showed that lower vitamin d levels were associated with high serum levels of inflammatory biomarkers. ykl- is a glycoprotein, secreted by macrophages, neutrophils and different cell types. it is also associated with inflammation and pathological tissue remodeling. in this study, we aimed to evaluate relationship between the vitamin d deficiency and ykl- levels. methods: our study group includes subjects with vitamin d deficiency (group ) and age and sex-matched healthy subjects with normal serum levels of vitamin d (group ). plasma (oh) vitamin d levels were measured with liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (lc-ms/ms) method. plasma ykl- analysis was performed by elisa. serum hs-crp levels were measured with nephelometric method. results: plasma vitamin d levels below ng/ml were accepted as vitamin d deficiency. although we could not find any significant differences by means of serum hs-crp levels between groups (p > . ), plasma ykl- levels were significantly higher in group than group (p < . ). conclusions: in literature, vitamin d deficiency is associated with inflammation. in our study, we found similar hs-crp levels between groups and higher ykl- levels in group . vitamin d deficiency may be related to increased ykl- levels in terms of causing chronic inflammation.keywords: vitamin d deficiency, ykl- , inflammation. evaluation and comparison of tnf-family ligands and receptors genes in mice and humans by bioinformatics techniques stance called plaque builds up inside the coronary arteries. apelin is a novel endogenous peptide with inotropic and vasodilatory properties and is the ligand for the angiotensin receptor-like (apj) receptor. we aimed to determine genotype and allele frequencies of apj receptor a c gene polymorphism in turkish patients with cad and healthy controls by rflp-pcr. this study was performed on unrelated cad patients and healthy controls. we obtained aa, ac and cc genotype frequencies in cad patients as . %, . % and . %, respectively. in the control group, frequencies of genotypes were found as . % for aa, . % for ac and . % for cc. we did not observe difference in apj receptor a c polymorphism between cad patients and healthy controls (v = . ; df = ; p = . ). the a allele was encountered in % ( ) of the cad and . % ( ) of the controls. the c allele was seen in % ( ) of the cad and . % ( ) of the controls. allele frequencies were not significantly different between groups (v = . ; df = ; p = . ). the frequencies of apj receptor a c genotype were not significantly different between control and patients. individuals with cc genotypes had significantly higher weight, systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels and systolic blood pressure than other genotypes, p ≤ . . in addition, hdl-c level was found decreased, but this reduction was not statistically significant. contrarily, the low levels of weight, sbp, dbp and tc were statistically significant in the subjects with aa genotype in cad. in conclusion, cc genotype carriers may have more risk than other genotypes in the development of hypertension in cad. we suggest that this polymorphism may not be a marker of cad, but it may cause useful in function of the apelin/apj system and may be a genetic predisposing factor for diagnostic processes and can be helpfull in finding new treatment strategies. p- . . - comparative genomics/proteomics analyses of single amino acid repeat containing proteins across different vertebrate taxa a. g. keskus, o. konu department of molecular biology and genetics, bilkent university, ankara, turkeyconsecutive runs of single amino acids lead to overrepresentation of certain physicochemical properties in protein sequences. researchers also demonstrated a link between single amino acid repeat (saar) containing proteins and neurodegenerative diseases as well as biological functions. moreover, saar frequencies were shown to vary across species based on selected orthologous proteomes and/or proteins. hence, analysis of whole proteomes across multiple vertebrate taxa may provide additional species-and sequence-specific trends for saars. in addition, there is a need for testing the observed saar occurrencesthe aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of quercetin (q) on liver injury secondary to cerulein induced-acute pancreatitis (ap). for this reason, rats were randomly divided into four groups ( rats for each group) control group received physiological saline, four time and dimethyl sulfoxide, two time, at hours intervals, intraperitoneally (i.p.). cerulein group received cerulein ( lg/ kg-rat weight, in physiological saline), four times, and dimethyl sulfoxide ( %), two times, at hour intervals, i.p. quercetin pretreatment (q+cer) group received quercetin ( mg/kg-rat weight, in dimethyl sulfoxide) one time, one hour before cerulein treatment and physiological saline, one time, six hour after cerulein treatment. quercetin post-treatment (cer+q) group received dimethyl sulfoxide, one time, one hour before cerulein treatment and quercetin, one time, six hour after cerulein treatment. cerulein treatment increased significantly vascular congestion in hepatic cells. quercetin treatment also decreased significantly vascular congestion. the liver mda and carbonyl levels in cerulein group were significantly higher than the control group (p < . , p < . , respectively). the mda and carbonyl levels in q+cer group decreased significantly compared to the cer group (p < . ). the mda, carbonyl, mpo levels in cer+q group were significantly lower than the cer group (p < . ). the gssg/gsh ratio of q+cer and cer+q groups were significantly lower than the cer group (p < . , p < . , respectively). the sod activity in cer group was significantly lower than the control group, but the sod activity in q+cer and cer+q groups was significantly higher than the cer group (p < . ).this study shows that quercetin treatment was reduced the severity of liver injury secondary to cerulein induced-ap as reflected by changes in the parameters of hepatic oxidant and antioxidant. p- . . - identification of water extract of propolis components by using different columns in gas chromatography-mass spectrometry propolis is a natural material obtained by honey bees from various plants. protective effect of propolis against damages of free radicals is due to different compounds within propolis. the aim of this study is to identify qualitatively and quantitatively the chemical composition of water extract of propolis (wep) provided by erzurum region using rtx- and rtx- ms column of gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (gc-ms) and to compare with two columns.in this study, wep of mg/ml was prepared, cleared by membrane filter of . lm and freezed at À °c. then, it was lyophilized up to dry form and derivatized to apply for gaseous form. mg of dry extract was reacted with ll pyridin + ll bis-trimethylsilyl trifluoroacetamide (bstfa) mixture including % trimethylchlorosilane (tmcs) and incubated for minutes at °c. all analyses were performed with shimadzu gcms-qp ultra by using a flame ionisation detector (fid). rtx- and rtx- ms capillary columns and helium for carrier gas at a flow time of ml/minute were used. injection was applied on split mode at °c. derivatized propolis sample was injected as ll, initial column temperature was adjusted as °c, then increased to °c with increments of °c. total analysis time was determined as minutes. relative percent amount of separated compounds was calculated from total ion chromatogram with computerised integrator. all components were defined by using nist and wiley libraries.peaks obtained from rtx- column were much more than those of rtx- ms. on the other hand, analyses performing with both two columns have similar carbohydrate, aromatic acid and other acid contents.consequently chemical constituents of wep were determined qualitatively and quantitatively with gc-ms. it was concluded that rtx- column among both columns differentiating for polarities may produce more compounds in the propolis analysis. introduction: aquatic environment can be mostly contaminated by mixtures of metals. biochemical parameters have gain importance to characterize the effects of metals on aquatic organisms. glutathione s-transferase (gst) and its substrate glutathione (gsh) are important parameters of antioxidant defense system of fish metabolism due to their vital role in xenobiotic conjugation. objective: the goal of the current study to evaluate the changes in gst and gsh levels in response to cd, zn and cd+zn effects after and exposure days. materials and methods: fish were obtained from cukurova university fish culturing pools (turkey). fish were exposed to . lg/ml of cd (cdcl .h o) and zn (zncl ), and their mixture, for , and days. at the end of the exposure period, liver tissues were dissected and homogenized in a phosphate buffer (ph . ). homogenates were centrifuged at , g ( min, + °c). supernatants were stored at À °c until the analysis. one-way anova was used to compare data (mean ae se) followed by duncan's test (p < . ). results: gst and gsh changes were recorded as decreases after all metal exposures at day . although day exposure was found as less effective, combined effects caused significant decreases in gst and gsh levels. also longer exposure durations were appeared to be more effective in that situation. conclusions: significant decreases in gst and gsh levels could be occurred due to increased reactive oxygen species caused by metals particularly their combined effects. metal type, their single and combined effects and also exposure duration should be also taken into account when considering the antioxidant system response. gst and gsh might be considered as sensitive biomarker in toxicity assessment of metal mixtures.financial support: this study was supported by a grant from c ß ukurova university (turkey).background/aims: the activation of lectin-like oxidized low density lipoprotein receptor- (lox- ) on endothelial cells leads to intracellular oxidative stress and inflammation and a feed-forward cycle of injury in diabetes, since both oxidized low density lipoprotein (oxldls) and glucose increase lox- expression. quercetin (qr) is part of a subclass of flavonoids called flavonols. polyphenolic compounds affect the development of atherosclerosis not only through antioxidant properties but also by modulation of serum lipids, thereby influencing the immune and inflammatory processes associated with the development of atherogenic diseases. we investigated the effects of dietary qr on endothelial dysfunction mediated by oxidized low density lipoprotein (oxldl)/lectin-like oxidized low density lipoprotein receptor- (lox- ) in animal model of type diabetes mellitus. methods: we compared groups of male adult wistar albino rats: a control group, an untreated diabetic group, diabetic groups treated with qr, and qr group. diabetes was induced by a single injection of stz ( mg/kg). animals were kept in standard condition. in day after inducing diabetic, serum was collected for biochemical parameters. glucose, lipid profiles, microalbuminuria, oxldl and lox- levels were determined. results: serum triglyceride, ldl, vldl levels in diabetic control group (without treatment) was significantly higher than control group (normoglycemic untreated group). supplementation with quercetin decreased serum total cholesterol and increased hdl-cholesterol compared with the control group. serum oxldl and lox- levels in diabetic control group (without treatment) were significantly higher than control group (normoglycemic untreated group). conclusions: consumption of quercetin reduced oxldl and lox- levels. thus, quercetin could be effective in improving hyperglycemia, dyslipidemia, and endothelial damage in type diabetes. p- . . - investigation of some oxidative stress parameters in bdnf heterozygous mice liver tissue a. bodur , i. ince , i. abidin , a. alver objectives: the aim of this study was to evaluate the possible protective effects of nigella sativa (ns) against cholestatic oxidative stress and liver damage in the common bile duct ligated rats. methods: a total of male wistar albino rats were divided into three groups:sham control, bile duct ligation (bdl) and bdl+received ns; each group contain animals. the rats in ns treated groups were given ns ( . ml/kg) once a day orally for weeks starting days prior to bdl operation. results: the changes demonstrating the bile duct proliferation and fibrosis in expanded portal tracts include the extension of proliferated bile ducts into lobules, mononuclear cells, and neutrophil infiltration into the widened portal areas were observed in bdl group. treatment of bdl with ns attenuated alterations in liver histology. the alpha smooth muscle actin (a-sma), transforming growth factor beta (tgf-b ) and the activity of tunel in the bdl were observed to be reduced with the ns treatment. bdl significantly increased the tissue hydroxyproline (hp) content, malondialdehyde (mda) levels, and decreased the antioxidant enzyme (superoxide dismutase (sod) and glutathione peroxidase (gpx)) activities. ns treatment significantly decreased the elevated tissue hp content and mda levels and prevented the inhibition of sod and gpx enzymes in the tissues. conclusion: the data indicate that ns attenuates bdl-induced cholestatic liver injury, bile duct proliferation, fibrosis, apoptosis and oxidative stress. the hepatoprotective effect of ns is associated with antioxidative potential. organophosphorous compounds (ops) are used widely as pesticides for agricultural purposes, as oil additives or as flame retardants. however, due to their widespread use, there are major introduction: in this study, the antiulcerogenic effect of a water extract (cawe) obtained from a spices sample, cinnamomum aromaticum, was investigated using indomethacin-induced ulcer models in rats. materials and methods: experimental groups consisted of six rats. antiulcerogenic activities of , , and mg/kg body wt. doses of the cawe were determined by comparing the negative (treated only with indomethacin) and positive (famotidine) control groups. results and discussion: although all doses of the cawe showed significant antiulcerogenic activity as compared to negative control groups, the highest activity was observed with mg/kg body wt. doses ( %). the cawe showed similarly antioxidant activity when compared with trolox and ascorbic acids used as positive antioxidants. in addition, the activities of catalase (cat) and myeloperoxidase (mpo) enzymes were determined in the stomach tissues of rats and compared with those of the negative and positive control groups to expose the effects of these enzymes on antiulcerogenic activity. the enzymatic activities of cat and mpo and lipid peroxidation (lpo) level in indomethacin-administrated tissues were increased significantly by indomethacin in comparison to control groups. these enzymes and lpo level were decreased, however, by the cawe. in contrast to lpo level, cat and mpo activities, glutathione (gsh) level was decreased by indomethacin and increased by all doses of cawe and famotidine. the present results indicate that the cawe has a protective effect in indomethacin-induced ulcers, which can be attributed to its antioxidant potential. introduction: thiol groups (-sh) are important anti-oxidants and essential molecules protecting organism against the harmful effects of oxidative stress. the aim of our study is to evalute thiol-disulphide homeostasis with a novel and automated method in patients with prostate cancer (pc) before and after radical prostatectomy (rp). material and methods: patients with prostate cancer and healty control subjects were enrolled into the study. plasma samples were collected from patients before rp and months after the rp operation. thiol-disulphide homeostasis was determined with a recently developed novel method. prostate specific antigen, albumin, total thiol, native thiol, disulphide and total antioxidant status (tas) were evaulated and compared between the groups. results: native thiol levels were . ae . lmol/l in the control group, . ae . lmol/l in the patients before rp, and . ae . lmol/l in patients after rp. native thiol, total thiol and tas levels were significantly higher in the control group than the patients before rp (p values < . ). native thiol, total thiol and tas levels were higher months after rp compared to before rp in patients, but these changes were not significant statictically (p values . , . and . respectively). discussion and conclusion: our study demonstrated that antioxidant defense mechanism was weakened as indicated by the decreased thiol levels in the patients with pc. increased oxidative stress in prostate cancer patients may cause metabolic disturbance and have a role in the pathogenesis of prostate cancer. p- . . - is there any relation between g oral glucose challenge test and serum total oxidant-antioxidant status in pregnant woman? the purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that any degree of antepartum screening for gestational diabetes mellitus with oral g glucose challenge test (gct) should be associated with oxidant-antioxidant status.in this prospectif study, oral glucose challenge test was applied to pregnant women aged - years and at - weeks of gestation. plasma glucose concentrations were measured initial, hour and in addition to test hours after ingestion of g glucose. at the same time serum insulin, cortisol, total antioxidant status (tas), total oxidant status (tos) levels were measured and the oxidative stress index (osi) was calculated.ten pregnant women (forty percent) had a positive glucose challenge test (gct). a positive moderate relation with initial and hour serum total antioxidant status (tas) levels (r = . ) and the oxidative stress index (osi) (r = . ) was found. there was a positive weak correlation with initial and hours total oxidant status (tos) levels (r = . ) but statistically significance difference was not found (p > . ).in this study after ingestion of g glucose serum total antioxidant status (tas), serum oxidant status levels (tos) and serum oxidative stress index (osi) levels were higher than the initial levels.the results of this study suggest that antepartum screening for gestational diabetes mellitus with g oral glucose challenge test (gct) weakly associated with oxidant-antioxidant status and to confirm this results the longer follow-up studies with more participants are necessary.wheat (triticum ssp.), cultivated for centuries in the middle-east, central asia, europe, and north-africa, is one leading staple crops around the world, and its marginally grown ancestor einkorn (triticum monococcum ssp. monococcum), possesses rich gene resources for wheat improvement and have bioactive compounds reducing and preventing chronic diseases such as diabetes, cancer, alzheimer, and cardio vascular diseases, beside their nutritional properties. however, as more attention has been given to wheat cultivars with strong gluten, protein content, starch composition, and resistance to biotic and abiotic stresses in bread wheat and yellow-colored pasta product in durum wheat health compounds such as fibers, phytochemicals, and bioactives have been underestimated so far. the aim of this study was, then, to examine the total phenolics and flavonoids, quantify their phenolic acids, a-tocopherol by high performance liquid chromatography (hplc), and their , -diphenyl- -picrylhydrazyl (dpph) scavenging activity of bread (triticum aestivum l.), durum (triticum turgidum ssp. durum desf.) wheat cultivars and einkorn (triticum monococcum ssp. monococcum) wheat populations collected from different provinces (bolu and kastamonu) of turkey. ferulic acid ( . - . -lg/g), p-coumaric ( . - . -lg/g), and total phenolic content (ranged . - . -lmol gae/g) of einkorn populations were significantly higher than bread and durum wheat cultivars. results suggested the possibility of production of einkorn wheat populations, and hopefully cultivars rich in particular health beneficial component(s) may provide benefit to the consumers. in addition, higher phenolic content of einkorn may offer novel wheat genetic resources for the improvement of new wheat cultivars and the development of wheat-based functional foods. oxidative damage due to ischemia and acute kidney injury (aki) after coronary artery bypass graft (cabg) surgery are the leading complication during this process. in the kidney, ischemia/ reperfusion injury contributes to aki that is a clinical syndrome with rapid kidney dysfunction and high mortality rates. some animal and clinical studies have demonstrated an increase in serum and urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (ngal) expression after renal ischemic injury.in this study, our aim was to investigate the relationship betwwen ngal and oxidative stress parameters due to ischemia caused by total perfusion time (tpt) in patients who have undergone on-pump cabg. materials and methods: the study was conducted in patients who received on-pump cabg at university of istanbul, cerrahpasa medical faculty, department of cardiovascular surgery. blood samples were collected prior to surgery and after hours following the termination of cardiac pulmonary bypass (cpb) . following centrifugation, serum samples were separeted and stored at - c until analysis. serum ngal, ima (ischemia modified alb€ umin), pco (protein carbonyl), nt (nitrotyrosine), lpd (lipid peroxide) levels were determined by elisa procedure. results and discussion: serum ngal, pco, nt levels in after hours following cpb were significantly higher than the before surgery (p < . , p < . , p serum ngal levels in after hours following cpb was found to have positive correlation with ima, pco, nt, and lpo levels (r = . , p < . ; r = . , p < . ; r = . , p < . ; r = . , p < . respectively). ngal levels were positively correlated with total perfusion time after cbp (r = . , p < . ).the results of our study show that, increased ngal levels hours after cpb were positively correlated with oxidative stress parameters and total perfusion time. investigation of the effects of thymoquinone against indomethacine induced gastric damage in rats introduction: incidence and high cost of acute stomach mucosa damages make this issue a very interesting issue for study. for this reason, it is aimed to investigate the effects of different dosage of thymoquinone (tq) against indomethacine induced gastric damage in rats. material and method: in our study, six groups of wistrar male rats were used. groups are named as healthy, ind control, famotidine ( mg/kg) and three different doses of tq ( . , and mg/kg). while any treatment or drug administration will done on healthy group, model was generated to other groups by giving fam or tq with tap water via oral gavage. min later, mg/kg ind administrated to each rat. animals were sacrified about hour later and stomach samples of each groups were collected for macroscopic study and gsh levels measurements. results: lower doses of tq is more effective and all tq groups exhibit reduced ulcer region with respect to the ind control group. gsh level of ind control group is lower than healthy group. the gsh level of tq, especially in lower doses, and fam groups statistically exhibit an increase in gsh level. conclusion: it is observed that ind induced gastric damage cause ulcer and increase in free radical. it is determined that lower doses of tq ( . , and mg/kg) is also exhibit a protective effect on ind induced model. it is tought that quinone in tq structure have a strong redox feature and this feature clean up the free radicals caused by ind, it reduces the oxidative stress and protect the stomach from ulcer. anzer honey is the most famous honey in turkey with many endemic species flowers. the anzer plateau is located rize province of eastern black sea region. in this study, antioxidant and anti-hyaluronidase and anti-urease activities were investigated of the plateau bee pollen. the antioxidant capacity was determined by total phenolic content (tpc), total flavonoids contents (tfc), ferric reducing antioxidant power (frap) and , diphenyl- -picrylhydrazyl (dpph) radical scavenging activity. atherosclerosis is the leading cause of mortality worldwide, and as a chronic inflammatory disease, caused by a complex interplay between inflammatory and oxidative events.quercetin, a plant derived flavonoid and a well-known antioxidant, has shown great promises with regards to its protective effects against oxidative stress.however due to its physicochemical properties, the optimum pharmacokinetic behavior is a challenging issue.herein, we aimed to fabricate quercetin loaded solid lipid nanoparticle (quer-sln) to improve the bioavailability and therapeutics efficiency. furthermore the in-vitro capacity of quer-sln for ameliorating tnf-a induced oxidative stress in human endothelial vein cell (huvec) was evaluated. quer-slns were prepared by simple hot homogenizing method and characterized by means of drug loading (dl), encapsulation efficiency (ee), cytotoxicity, size, zeta potential and morphology. antioxidant activity of plain quercetin and quer-slns were then investigated using intracellular reactive oxygen species (ros) detection method (dcfh-da assay) by facs flowcytometryin conclusion, the results here showed superior control of oxidative stress by quercetin nanosystem as compared to plain quercetin. precirol based slns as a biocompatible/biodegradable lipid, may provide a novel drug delivery system for quercetin with improved beneficiary impact in atherosclerosis. objective: zinc is known as an antioxidant essential trace element. we aimed to evaluate the dose-dependent effects of zinc on the oxidant-antioxidant system in liver, kidney and brain tissues of rats and the histological alterations in the absence of oxidative stress (os). material and methods: thirty-nine female weighing about gr wistar albino rats were divided into four experimental groups as ad libitum (al) diet (control), al diet + mg/kg zn sulfate (low dose; group ), al diet + mg/kg zn sulfate (middle dose; group ) and al diet + mg/kg zn sulfate (high dose; group ). zn sulfate solutions were administered . ml/day orally for days and in day rats were sacrificed and tissues were excised for detecting malondialdehyde (mda), advanced oxidation protein products (aopp), superoxide dismutase (sod), glutathione peroxidase (gsh-px), glutathione reductase (gr), and glutathione-s-transferase (gst) activities. histological evaluation was also performed to confirm the effects of zinc. results: in liver tissues aopp levels decreased in all groups receiving zinc as compared to the control group. liver mda levels were increased in group and ; sod and gsh-px levels were both increased while gst levels were decreased in all groups compared to control. gr levels were increased only in group . in kidney; aopp level was decreased only in group and sod level was only decreased in group as compared to control while gr levels were increased in all doses of zinc. in brain; aopp, gsh-px and gr levels were decreased in all groups receiving zinc as compared to control group. sod activity in brain tissues was increased by the administration of middle dose of zinc (group ). gst level was decreased in only group conclusions: the biochemical and histological findings of this study suggest that zinc has various effects on liver, kidney and brain tissues in the absence of os.key words: zinc, liver, kidney, brain introduction: this study aimed to investigate the effect of diabetes mellitus (dm) on oxidative stress and antioxidant capacity in humour aqueous (ha) and venous serum using total antioxidant capacity (tac) and total oxidative stress (tos) levels in serum and ha in cataract patients. materials and methods: in this study patients were divided into two groups. group was composed of patients with type dm and cataract and group was composed of patients with cataracts who are not accompanied by dm and cataract patients who are not accompanied by systemic diseases. each group consisted of patients, totally patients were included in the study. the ha which was collected from the eyes at the beginning of the cataract surgery and venous blood serum collected from the same patients were analyzed. in both groups, ha and serum tac and tos levels were measured with elisa. results: : serum tac levels in the dm group were significantly lower than in the control group (p < . ). tos serum levels in dm group was statistically higher than the control group (p < . ). differences between tac and tos levels were not statistically significant when compared the two groups' ha results (p > . ). group , divided into two subgroups according to their hba c levels, there was no statistically significant difference between the subgroups when hba c levels were compared with the relationship between serum and ha's tac and tos levels (p > . ). there was not an association between the gender, age and the levels of tac-tos in both groups (p > . ). discussion and conclusion: presences of dm is the only risk factor for increase of oxidative stress and decrease of anti-oxidant capacity in patients without a systemic complication of dm and diabetic retinopathy. in our study, diabetic patients without retinopathy showed similar ha tos and tac levels to healthy individuals, this finding indicates that blood-aqueous barrier is protected in these patients. the effect of ferulic acid against testicular ischemia/reperfusion injury in rats u. sac ßik , g. erbil , z. c ß avdar , c. ural department of histology and embriyology, school of medicine, dokuz eyl€ ul university, izmir, department of molecular medicine, health science of institute, dokuz eyl€ ul university, izmir, turkeytestis torsion is one of the urologic emergencies occurring frequently in neonatal and adolescent period. testis is sensitive to ischemia/reperfusion (i/r) injury and, therefore, ischemia and consecutive reperfusion cause an enhanced formation of reactive oxygen species (ros) that result in testicular cell damage and apoptosis. ferulic acid, known as an antioxsidant, is a phenolic acid found in seeds and leaves of the plants. we aimed to investigate potential protective effect of ferulic acid against testis i/r injury.thirty five wistar rats were randomly divided into groups; control, ethyl alcohol, ischemia, i/r, i/r-ferulic acid groups. animals were exposed to hours of ischemia followed by hours of reperfusion. ferulic acid was administered ( mg/ kg) before reperfusion intravenously. testicular cell damage was examined by h-e staining and pas. tunnel, active caspase- , inos and mpo were evaluated by immunostaining. malondialdehyde (mda), glutathione (gsh) levels, glutathione peroxidase (gpx) and superoxide dismutase (sod) activities were assessed by biochemical methods.histological evaluation showed that ferulic acid pretreatment reduced significantly testicular cell damage and decreased tun-nel, caspase positive cells; inos and also mpo expression. in addition, ferulic acid administration decreased significantly the mda levels increased by i/r. morever, ferulic acid increased significantly the sod activity levels, which was decreased by i/r. there were no statistically significant differences in the levels of gsh and gpx activity in all groups.the present results suggest that ferulic acid is a potentially beneficial agent in protecting testicular i/r. background: in heart failure (hf), angiotensin antagonists (aa), beta-blockers (bb), spironolactone, diuretics and acetylsalicylic acid are often used. top pharmaceutical groups reduce mortality. on the increased oxidative stress (os) in patients with hf, it is known to have beneficial effects of certain groups of drugs. however, the net effect of these drugs in os is unknown. the aim of this study was to investigate the effects of drugs used in hf on os. materials and methods: patients were included in the study. all of the patients had systolic heart failure and all of them were under treatment. drugs used by the patients were recorded. the levels of total antioxidant status (tos), total oxidant status (tas), the enzymatic activity of ceruloplasmin, paraoxonase- and arylestherase were measured according to erel's method. serum total thiol levels were measured with sh modified hu method and the lipid hydroperoxide levels were measured with the ferrous ion oxidation xylenol orange assay. the percentage tos / tas was determined as osi. results: in patients treated with acetylsalicylic acid (asa), spironolactone, beta blocker and furosemide, there were increased tos, decreased tas and osi (p < . ). in patients treated with angiotensin blockers, increased tas and looh, and decreased sh were found (p < . ). in patients treated with nitrates and ccb, tos and osi were found decreased. correlation analysis showed that increased tas correlated with the use of angiotensin blockers, asa, furosemide and beta blocker positively; and with the tos and osi level correlated with the use of spironolactone, asa spironolactone and furosemide (p < . ). conclusion: current medical agents that are being used in hf are effective in reducing os in hf patients. one of the effective mechanisms to reduce the mortality of some of these drugs may decrease os.key words: heart failure, drug use, oxidative stress p- . . - across adjacent ring formed titanium phthalocyanine-mediated photodynamic therapy alters and degrades filamentous actin cytoskeleton and internal membranes photodynamic therapy (pdt) is widely accepted as a promising and minimally invasive treatment strategy due to its applicability on a wide range of cancer diseases. this clinically approved treatment method relies on the dramatic production of singlet oxygen and reactive oxygen species (ros) in target tissue to evoke apoptotic cell death [ ] . we, therefore, focused on the intracellular ros accumulation, internal membrane degradation, filamentous actin cytoskeleton alteration and nucleus morphology changes induced by pdt-mediated across adjacent ring formed titanium phthalocyanine which was previously synthesized bis(ethane- , p-phenol- , -p-phenoxy) phthalocyaninatotitanium (iv).characterization of the synthesized metallophthalocyanine was accomplished by using uv-vis, ir, h-nmr and maldi-tofmass spectroscopies. the dark and pdt-mediated activities of bare and phosphonolipids (max. %) charged titanium phthalocyanine ( . , . , . , and lm) were determined on a human lung carcinoma and hacat human keratinocyte cell lines by using intracellular ros assay, dioc( ), tritc-phalloidin and dapi staining protocols. waltmann pdt l was used as the non-toxic light source at j/cm fluence and mw/ cm fluence rate. the experiments showed that pdt-mediated titanium phthalocyanine leads to significant and concentration dependent reactive oxygen species accumulation. moreover, internal membrane degradation, apoptotic bodies on nucleus and filamentous actin cytoskeleton alteration were observed. consequently, the activity mechanism of pdt-mediated titanium phthalocyanine seems to be in a tight relationship with ros accumulation-mediated internal membrane degradation, filamentous actin cytoskeleton alteration and apoptotic pathways activation. introduction: retinal vein occlusion (rvo) is a common retinal vascular disorder that can affect visual acuity and cause blindness in elder population. sulphur containing aminoacids such as cysteine (cys), cysteinylglycine, glutathione, homocysteine and c-glutamylcysteine are reported to be associated with the pathogenesis of rvo. thiols are organosulfur compounds that are formed of a carbon-bonded sulfhydryl group. sulphur containing aminoacids slightly contribute the composition of plasma thiol pool. thiols can undergo oxidation reaction via oxidants and form disulphide bonds our purpose is to research the relationship between a novel oxidative stress marker serum dynamic thioldisulphide homeostasis and retinal vein occlusion. materials and methods: rvo patients and controls were included in the study. native thiol, total thiol, disulphide levels are measured in the serum samples of rvo and control group by using an automated method described by erel et al. also disulphide/native thiol and disulphide/total thiol ratios were calculated. results: there were no significant difference between the rvo and control group in native thiol, total thiol, disulphide disulphide/native thiol and disulphide/total thiol ratios.(p > . for all) conclusion: our study is the first report evaluating the dynamic thiol-disulphide homeostasis in rvo patients by a newly developed method by erel et al. further large sample sized studies investigating the levels of sulphur containing aminoacids may additionally be planned to verify this study. purpose: the purpose of this study was to evaluate markers of systemic oxidative stress and antioxidant capacity in subjects with severity of osas. methods: a total of osa patients were included in the study ( controls, with mild, with moderate, and with severe osa). patients were grouped according to apnea-hypopnea index (ahi) as mild, moderate and severe osa. patients with ahi< served as control group. known risk factors for oxidative stress, such as age, sex, obesity, smoking, hypelipidemia, and hypertension, were investigated as possible confounding factors. plasma arylesterase, total oxidative stress (tos), total antioxidant capacity (tac), total thiol, catalase (cat) levels were measured for all patients. results: the mean age was . ae . years and . % ( / ) of the study population was female. plasma arylesterase, tos, tac, total thiol, and cat plasma values were not different between mild, moderate, severe osa groups and controls (p > . ). catalase levels were significantly lower in women patients with severe osa compared to healthy women controls (p < . ). there was a negative correlation between ahi and serum total thiol levels (r = À . , p < . ) in severe osa groups. conclusionthe present prospective study provides evidence that osa might be associated with decreased antioxidant burden possibly via catalase way. results: the sera -ohdg, mda and il- were significantly higher in diabetic group than control group (p < . ). although there was a notable positive correlation between mda and -ohdg, there was no a relationship between -ohdg or mda with il- . discussion: in agreement with previous studies our data illustrated that high levels of oxidative stress is associated with increased production of oxidized lipids and nucleobases in diabetic patients compared to control group. also enhanced proinflammatory cytokine, il- , induced inflammmation in these patients.conclusion: oxidative stress and inflammation play pivotal roles in the development of diabetes and can cause major complications in dm. so we suggest that early detection of these measurable indicatores can help to diagnosis the severity or presence of some complication in diabet. the effect of quercetin on erythrocyte glucose- -phosphate dehydrogenase enzyme activity in ethanol treated rats in this study, we aimed to evaluate the effects of ethanol on erythrocyte (g- -p-d) enzyme activity and the effects of quercetin on erythrocyte g- -p-d activity in the recovery of the effects of ethanol.rats were randomly divided into four groups. the control group (n = ) received physiological saline. the quercetin group (n = ) received quercetin ( mg/kg/ day) via i.g. route the alcohol group (n = ) received ethanol ( % v/v, ml/day) via i.g. route. the alcohol + quercetin group (n = ) received ml of ethanol ( % v/v) hours after quercetin treatment ( mg/ kg/day). experimental procedures were peformed for days. erythrocyte g- -p-d activity was found to be higher in the quercetin group than those in the alcohol group (p < . ). in the alcohol group, the erythrocyte g- -p-d activity was found to be significantly decreased than those in the control group (p < . ). statistically significant differences were observed in erythrocyte g- -p-d activity between the alcohol group and the alcohol + quercetin group (p < . ).as a conclusion, our results demonstrate that ethanol decreased erythrocyte g pd activity and quercetin was found to be beneficial in the prevention of toxic effect raised by ethanol.key words: erythrocyte, ethanol, g pd, oxidative stress, quercetin p- . . - effects of the sulphasalazine to the cerebral hypoxia reperfusion injury in rat background: cerebral ischemia/ reperfusion (i/r) injury is still a difficult process to treat and rehabilitate today. this study was designed to investigate beneficial effects of sulfasalazine in cerebral i/r injury in rat. methods: except control group (n = ), wistar albino rats were divided into four groups for acute and chronic stage investigation of i/r injury, and temporary aneurysm clips were attempted to both internal carotid arteries for duration of minutes. four hours later, except control, sham-a, sham-c groups, mg/kg once a day sulfasalazine was administered to animals, orally. animals were sacrified and then necrotic neuronal cells of hippocampal ca , ca , and ca region, and cortical necrotic neurons, perivascular edema, pyknotic neuronal cells, irregularities of intercellular organization (iio) were counted and scaled histopathologically. tissue il- b, il- , malonyldialdehyde (mda), myeloperoxidation (mpo), no, and tnf-a levels were measured by using elisa, too. results: sulfasalazine could reduce perivascular edema, iio, cortical and hippocampal neuronal cell death in both stages. it could decreased mda in acute stage, but not reduce il- b, il- , mpo, no, and tnfa levels. it could increased il- b levels in chronic stage but not affect to il- , mpo, mda, no, tnf-a levels.conclusion: sulfasalazine could improve histopathological architecture of hypoxic tissue in both stages of i/r injury. it could inhibit lipid peroxidation cascades in acute stage but not affect to tissue mpo, no, il- , and tnf-a levels in any stage in rat. these results suggested that therapeutic mechanisms of sulfasalazine should be investigated by using more specific laboratory methods in future studies.key words: antiinflamatory, cerebral hypoxia reperfusion injury, sulfasalazine, stroke. camel and horse milk xanthine oxidase (xo) was found to catalyze the reduction of nitrate and nitrite to nitric oxide (no) under aerobic condition. to date, mammalian nitrate reductase (nar) and nitrite reductase (nir) have not been identified. no, a gas, is found to control a seemingly, limitless range of functions in animals.one assay was used to determine nar and nir activities of milk xo: ( ) nitrite formation from nitrate by nar, and ( ) nitrite utilization by nir. nitrite concentrations were determined by using sulfanylamide and n-( -naphtyl)-ethylenediamine, which form red color measured at nm.these activities of the milk xo require nadh as a physiological electron donor. high xo, nar and nir activities are detected only after heat treatment ( °c, min) of the fresh milk in the presence of molybdate. in both camel and horse milk nar activity of xo was almost two times higher than its nir activity. it is well known that xo can be reversibly converted from the dehydrogenase form to the oxidase through the oxidation of sulfhydryl groups. cysteine and, to a lesser extent, glutathione increased nir activity of milk xo but not its nar activity. the mechanism of this increase of nir activity remains unclear and is currently under study. substitution of tungsten for molybdenum under above conditions gave no detectable nar and nir activity of milk xo. the molybdenum site-directed inhibitor, tungsten inhibited in a dose-dependent manner. therefore, nitrate and nitrite are clear to interact with mo center of xo.camel and horse milk are traditional drinks in central asia and kazakhstan. therefore, it is very important that xo provide a mechanism for generation of no in camel and horse milk where nitric oxide synthase, no producing enzyme, does not exist. p- . . - the influence of phytomedicine on metabolic processes of white rats undergone to ionized radiation the study of peroxide lipids oxidation (plo) process is used as one of stability parameters of organism's changes and as a key mechanism for understanding of adaptation reactions and of pathogenesis of different diseases. it's determined by high biological activity of products which are formed in the plo reactions, in this relation lipids with high contents of fat acids play important role. to investigate the influence of phytomedicine eminium regelii on the metabolic processes (peroxide lipids oxidation) of white rats' organism in conditions of ionized radiation.the animals were exposed to ionizing radiation (gamma-radiation co) on the radiotherapeutic equipment teragam in a dose of gy and received phytomedicine eminium regelii in a dose of . mg/kg orally within days following the ionizing radiation exposure. gamma-rays caused the increase of lipid peroxidation (lpo) primary (dc) and secondary products' (mda) concentrations in spleen, liver, thymus and adrenal glands.treatment by phytomedicine resulted in contents of dc decreased in times in spleen, in times in thymus, in times in adrenal glands, in liver in times, in lymph nodes of small intestine it in times. mda decreased in liver up to and times, in spleen in . times, in thymus in times, in liver in times, in adrenal glands in time, no changes in lymph nodes of small intestine.the effect of phytomedicine treatment of organisms exposed to sublethal dozes of gamma-radiation results in the lpo primary and secondary products concentrations decrease in spleen, liver, thymus and adrenal glands. p- . . - evaluation of serum levels of ischemia modified albumin (ima) in bipolar disorder patients k. € unal , c. topc ßuoglu , m. cingi clinic of biochemistry, ankara polatli duatepe public hospital, ankara, clinic of biochemistry, ankara numune training and research hospital, ankara, clinic of psychiatry, ankara numune training and research hospital, ankara, turkey introduction: bipolar disorder is one of the most debilitating psychiatric disorders characterized by disruptive episodes of mania/hypomania and depression. considering the complex role of biological and environmental factors in the etiology of affective disorders; recent studies have focused on oxidative stress, which may damage nerve cell components and take part in pathophysiology. aim of our study is to contribute these data about oxidative stress in bipolar disorder, by detecting ischemia modified albumin (ima) levels of bipolar disorder patients in remission and also by comparing these results with healthy controls. methods: study population consisted of patients meeting the diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, fifth edition (dsm- ) criteria for bipolar disorder i. healthy subjects were included as control group (hc). serum ischemia modified albumin (ima) levels of all participants were determined. results: statistical analysis on serum ischemia modified albumin (ima) levels did not show any significant difference between bipolar disorder patients in remission and healthy controls.conclusion: studies on oxidative stress in bipolar disorder have reached controversial results up till now. in this study, no statistically significant difference was detected between oxidative parameters of bipolar disorder patients in remission and healthy controls. in order to evaluate oxidative stress in bipolar disorder comprehensively, further studies are needed. keywords: bipolar disorder, ischemia modified albumin (ima), oxidative stress p- . . - xanthine oxidase and adenosine deaminase activity in patients with familial mediterranean fever (fmf) objective: fmf is an autosomal recessive dissease which is characterized by recurrent fever and inflammation of serous membranes. in this study we measured serum adenosine deaminase (ada) and xanthine oxidase (xo) levels in fmf cases. method: serum ada levels were measured with a sensitive colorimetric method described by giusti and xo levels were analysed by the method of worthington in fmf patients and healthy controls. results: there was a significant difference in xo and ada levels between controls and cases. ada and xo levels were higher in patents with fmf. humic acid (ha) is a natural product which is forming during decomposition of organic matter in humus. in recent years, there are some resarches on the medical use of ha. the present study was undertaken in order to evaluate the anticancer properties of the ha using a prostate cancer and osteosarcome cell lines pc- , sjsa as an in vitro model system.ha was purchased from sigma-aldrich. the cells were maintained in dmem medium supplemented with % heat-inactivated fbs and % penicillin/streptomycin. cells were grown in petri dishes in a humidified atmosphere containing at •c. five different concentrations ( ug/ml, ug/ml, ug/ml, ug/ ml, ug/ml) were prepared using a stock solution of ha. we measured cell proliferation and migration to understand of progression effects of ha in pc- and sjsa cell lines in vitro.according to our results, ha treatment caused cytotoxicity and induced cell death in vitro in pc- cells with an ic value of . lg/ml. contrary to this, ha induced proliferation of sjsa cells in dose dependent manner. ha demonstrated the highest proliferatif activity against sjsa cells with an ic value of > lg/ml. on the other hand, cell migration was reduced in pc- cell line and interestingly, migration was accelerated in sjsa cell line.our study may provide new insights into the regulatory effect of ha in cancer, but further studies are needed to clarify the role of ha in cancer pathogenesis. the febs journal (suppl. ) ( )